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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt, WV

Kneen
•••

•
•

Are you interested in a new
farm venture? You are invited
to attend an "Organic ·Grain
Production" session on March
5 beginning at 9 a.m. at Clark
State Community College,
100 Limestone St., Springfield.
Due to changing times,
successful gnin farmers are
looking at "traruitioning" into
farming without chemicals.
Organically- grown
grain
commodities (corn, wheat
and soybeans) are being sold
throughout the United States
in ever-larger amounts. If you
are interested in growing

organic commodities. plan to
attend this cbss.
Learn the rules for producing organically, management
pnctices to help you through
the tnruition period and a
basic production practices.
This worlahop is being sponsored by OSU Sustainable
Agriculture Team, Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association, Innovative Farmers of
Ohio and the North Centnl
Su&lt;tainable
Agriculture
Research and Education Prognm .
Registntion is-S15 per person: Piea5e call 937-548-5215
for signing up and more
information .

(Hal Kn&lt;m is Meigs County~
Exttmion agent for agriculture
and natural resourtes, Ohio State
Univer&gt;ity.)

MORE LOCAL

NEWS

Prep Hoops: Meigs, Eas~m boys fall, 81

SUnda~Feb.3,20U~

·Demoaats hit Bush for project cuts
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional Democnts are complaining about
-a Bush adininistntion plan to chop 1,612
home-district projects !hat lawmakers
worked into a spending billla&lt;t year.
In !he process, Democnts have taken
the unusual step of releasing a list of the
effort to
projects and their sponsors in
defend them from -administration attacks.
They say the projects - mostly for day
care centers and other school and health
programs - are valuable because lawmakers know what is needed back home.
Included in !he list are 18 projects
sponsored by Senate Majority Leader
Tom Daschle, D-S.D.; 14 by House
Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill.; four by
Senate Minority Le-ader Trent Lott, RMiss.; and five by House Minority Leader
Dick Gephardt, D-Mo. . President Bush's budget, to be released
Monday. will propose including !he projects among $2.1 billion worth of programs he would cut to tree up money for
the Pell Gnnt prognm for low-income

an

college students.
He will ask
Congress
to
choose enough
cuts to save $1.3
billion.
The projects,
sponsored
by
lawmakers
of
both parties, are
worth
$905.8
million, according to · congressional
figures.
They were inserted into !he $123 billion
labor, education and health bill for this
year that Congress passed overwhebningly in December.
Citing Bush's appeal for bipartisan
cooperation in his State of !he Union
address, Rep. pavid Obey, D-Wis., said of
the proposed cuts, "This is exactly the
kind of beha'vior we don't need if we
expect to su~eed."
The Education Department, which
0

announced !he proposed cuts, said when
lawmakers write such projects into
spending bills, it "undermines carefiilly
crafted laws and procedures governing
how to distribute federal funds designed
to ensure that taxpayer dollars support
nationaJ interests."
Critics deride the spending as "pork,"
and Bush has been trying unsuccessfully
to eliminate many of the projects.
According to the White House budget
office, !here were 7,803 such projects in
regular spending bills Congress passed last
fa])., compared with 6,454 the year before.
Meanwhile, it seemed unlikely that
House Republicans would propose a balanced btldget this election year, despite a
continuing effort by conservatives to urge
that on their colleagues.
At a private retreat Thursday for QOP
lawmakers at the Greenbrier resort in
West Virginia, House Majority Whip Tom
DeLay, R-Texas, was among several who
argued in favor of a balanced budget for
2003, participants said.

\

Melp CoUnty's

HoMetown Newspaper

.

What's iiiSicle

Program aids eld
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HO~FLICHIII'MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

. POMEROY - A Caregiv:
er Advocate Program has been
added to the continuum of
servic~s now offered to elderly
Meigs .Countians.
.A:ccording to an announcement from Joetta Lane, director of the Area Agency on
Aging, systems are being put
in place to address the needs of
those serving as the primary
caregivers for senior citizens.
Susan Oliver, executive
director of the Meigs County

Pats shock Rams, ·81

Deaths
Mabel Cheesebrew, 90
Walter Barrett Sr., 53
Roger Snyder, 54
Wilaa Snyder .
Mildred J. Smeltzer, 58

Council on Aging said that the
local agency has been contracted to provide respite services under the program.
Other counties in which the
additional services will be
available to senior citizens
through the new program of
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development
District are Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, Perry and Washington
Counties.
Funding for the special program intended to address
many of the needs of informal

-residents

caregivers is provided through
additional fedenl dollars made
available when the Older
Americans Act was reauthorized.
Lane explained that th e
Caregiver Advocate Program
will "offer case management
services to those informal
caregivers caring for a loved
ones."
"The case manager will be
able to coordinate services for
individuals and in some cases
to provide services . to caregivers through contracted ser-

'

Weather
Hlp: 40s, LoW: Teens

ll•lk•r
3.11%•

Details, A2

11111:1 .
•••1111

BMV-ma~kes

changes
COLUMBUS - The
Ohio Bureau of Motor
Vehicles will no longer
print Social Security numbers on driver li~enses and
• 'i!liteJ~i'iien'tificatloil' cal'ds, · '
unless asked to do so. Als'b,
Ohioans who hold a
Commericial
Drivers
License (CDL) will no '
longer be required to have
their Social Security number on their license.
The" move stems from
the passage of House Bill
46. The law prohibits the
display of a person's Social
Security number on tht;
person's driver license,
CD'L, temporary instruction permit or identification card unless the person
requests the number be
displayed.

..............
'

·muS2ooo111in

they· plan. .
upcoming trip to Dtsney World, r.ourtlloOIV
tion. Eric .Is pictured with his sister, Haley, left, and his mf:J,the•r.

MasonCounty boy's

wish comes true
by his caretaker, Marjorie Walburn of Middleport. !:lis parents were unaware of the
MASON, W.VA. - If you had one wish, nomination until representatives from the
what would-it be?
Make- A-Wish Found-ation appeared at·
Many people may get asked that, but very their home and asked what Eric's wish
few ever have .dteir answer fulfilled. ..
..._ . ., .... ·v''"b"·· ·
,.~.-.
n
,
.
. •
wotua e. .
1
ctic Davls,!S,ofMason,W.Va., however,
since'dieirson ._.;as unable to make 'the
will get just what he -:vants through the decision hiinself. his par~nts decided that a_
Make7A-W1sh Founda~qn - a trip to trip to Disney World would be something
D1~ney World m_ Flonda.'
.
.
he would' really enjoy.
The son ofTtm and Conme Davts was
"He's always liked roller coasters and
h . b'
h b
· h f:
h
born ,With a neurological disease that pre- 'd
· h 'd f h' b . rt es, t e 1gger t e etter, t e aster t e
d
h
I
ft
d
"h'
h
'd
vente t e e an ng t S1 e o IS ram b
,
. . O·li. h
h h
etter, ·~ m\)t er sa1 .
- D · f: ·1y w1'II enJoy
· th e
•rom commumcatmg. - ~~r
· t Ce years
- e has ' Th e entire
had numerous operano'lls.
urrent1y, e
.
Fl 'd 1av1s am•
h'
h Th
·n
attends the Mason County Career Center. trtp to on a ater t IS mont . ey wt
Davis was nominated
Make-A-Wish
Please see Wish, AJ
BY PAM WIWAMSON

PAMWOMVDAILYREGISTER.COM

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 9-0-3
Pick 4: 5-4-Q-1
SuperLotto: 2-7-28-29-39-41

Kicker: 4-8-4-2-0-9
Pick 3 day: 7-0-7
Pick 4 day: 8-9- 1·8

.

W.VA.
Daily 3: 5-7-4
Dally 4: 8·4-9-1
~·-=bit 12-19-27-43-45 (28)
Cash 25: 3·5·14·16·2Q-23

:a Sec:tlolll - u ......
Cla:;sifieds
82-4
Comics
85
Dear Abby
AS
Editorials
A4
Mo~es
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports _
81
Weather
A2
C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

IYTHE IIORN5 ·~

Five Sllr 81111 T11111: Al1111 Durat Ntll .,..,., John Saunclert Jot n1111
Larry Pllrct ~mle Adlm1011 SllenMn Grtln
I

&gt;

Manager Pete Somerville
•

POMEROY
One
lucky shopl?er will win a
Valentine's Day gift to
remember,just by signing up ·
at participating local businesses. The Daily Sentinel
and 34 Meigs County mer- ·
chants have joined together
for a 'Sweetheart· Basket"
'
.
gtveaway.
The qualiry twig basket is
filled with over $700 in
ValentineUs Day gifts, and SWEETHEART BASKET will be awarded to an entry Filled with jewelry, candles.
drawn on Feb. 14.
clothing, gift certificates and
The basket contains a other ValentineUs Day gifts
journal and vas~ from Office from participating mer·
Service and Supply; a $20 chants, The Daily Seng ift certificate from Middle- tineiUs Sw,eetheart Basket
port D~partment Stdre; a will be aWf!ft!M to a lucky
sterling silver pendant with winner drawn on Feb. 14.
chain from Acquisitions Fine (Brian J. Reed)
Jewelry; a $10 gift certificate
Bear from Hartwell House; a
from Judy Kay's Restaurant;
set of three scented wax
a jewelry box from lngel's
heart ornaments from WeavJewelry; a one-hour massage
ing Stitches; a Valentine cake
from Meigs Massage Theracandle with plate from
py; a Valentine bear with 14Hearts Aglow; a necklace
kant earring$ from Clark's
Jewelry Store; a Winter and earring set from K&amp;C
Jewelers ; an Ohio River
Wonderland candle set from
Valentine Bear from Ohio
Candy's Hobbies and Gifts;
River Bear Co.; a Recordtwo $5 gift certificates from
A- Bear from Middleport
McClure's Family RestauFlower Shop; a Yankee Canrants.
dle from Fruth Pharmacy.
Two $5 gift certificates
from Dairy Queen; a Boyd's Plun see Valenti-. Al

Cleaning up Pomeroy

isn't doing enough."
·Three incidents last month
tou ched off calls for the walkout.
In two incidents, female students were attacked in residence halls. The other
involved a gay female student
who said slie was beaten by a
group of men as she walked
home from a dance.
·
In all three cases, police are
continuing their investigations.

HOUSE DEMOLISHED -

Meigs County Department of
Transportation demolished a three-story house located
behind the Meigs County Courthouse on Friday, to make
way for a new parking lot. The house, which sat behind the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple Building, also now history. was
destroyed by fire last year. (Brian J. Reed)
·

Holzer· Ho.lce Benefit Concert
.
. . Saturday, February 9, 2002 • 8:00PM
~ Theahe - Downtown Gallipolis

Silver Brldfe Plaia If # 7
'.!!!!!!~~~
.

www.norrlsnorthupdodge.com
View olllnventorv, oet ftnonc:id, and buy online
252 Upper Rlvtr Road 800•446•0842 Gelllpol1t, Ohio
.
.
----ownerMike Northup

ATHENS (AP) - .. So
many students are against hate
Ohio · University studen
crimes and sexual .assault;' said
called for a call)puswide wal
Suzanne Seelman, a sdnior
· out t~is morning to deman. 'from Gaithersburg, Md., who
the school do more to prole
iS helping organize the walkthem ·against sexual assaul
out.
"The university does have a
and hate crimes.
Organizers asked students, lot of programs for men and
· faculty and staff members
women who have been vicleave their classes and offices
of · sexual assault. But
11:30 a.m. to congregate
are going to be lots of
College Green for a rally.
~:ditre~ent groups at che event
· "We want to show hOIW.\1\vho are saying the university

THEilE ' S ONLY ONE

Visit us on the web ot ·

-

f

CaU for be · er campus safety at OU

Jeep

·

I

'

e

Index

GRABLIFE H

Pluse see Elclerfy, Al

FROM StAFF REPORTS

.......
....

111111 &amp; Cllmler llnlll•
'

.

Valentine's Day . ;
promotion begins

II lew 2812 Fill Size
IIQIIIIITrucbl

0% lr 82188 lilliE M SIIICI

"The program was designed
to meet the. needs of care~
givers in this district," said the;
director, "because informal
caregivers provide the majori•
ry of long term care to olde~
adults.
"Family care is recognized as
a critical factor in preventing
or delaying nursing hom ~
placement. Families are pro~
viding an estimated 80 percen! .
of care for older adults. FamilY,
caregivers provide unJ"ai4

l

Details, A3

........
SUII

vice providers (such as the
Meigs County Council on
Aging) ," she continued.
In addition to case management, other services provided
will be caregive r education
and support, information and
referral, legal assistance, and
short term respite assistance
including, homemaker, personal care and adult day services t said Lane.
To be eligible for this program, the caregiver or care
recipient must be at least 60
years old, she e1&lt;plained.

'

featuring
Ohio University Percussion Ensemble and
'Los Viejos Blanquitos" - OU Faculty Latin Jazz Group
.-

'

IIWit, Wll, AIIIIIIIC.II' CAD ACC1111., 110IVIIWIIIIIIIOI
VII . .- · CIIDII.
I
IIIIUIIS, lllllllf HIICIUIIIIo AIL .nil LIIID 10 IIOCI OIMIILIILIIIIIIL
\.

nCKETS- $10 advance purchase

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

Call (740)446·5217.01' (740) 446·5074 for more information
'

.......

··- .

""""'_, ....

---...

-----

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�.

.

The Daily Sentinel

'

Monde~Fib.4.2002

Page ~a.·

Ohio

'

~

•••nn'l 4, 2002
Audit say5 Olympics group misused state money

'

Ohio weather
1\leect.y, Feb; 5

Monatuy.,

Meigs County

land transfers

I ...,_ 111'/32" I •
110.

.rc_ ...

..

· V

·Ieo~.m~~uo 114'/38'

1

W. VA.

Inc:

•

o~••..,••••

Soony Pt ~

Cloody

ShaMtrl T-II:Dmll

RUl

Runies"

......

Ice

Snow

...... .

...~...

Winter returns with snow, cold winds
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Snow showers will linger
over northeast Ohio overnight
after accumulations on Monday of 1-3 inches. Skies will
clear over the rest of the state,
which received just a dusting
on Monday.
Lows Monday night will be
10-15 degrees, but brisk
northwesterly winds will make
it feel much colder, · the
National Weather Service said.
Tuesday will be partly
cloudy over the north with
highs in the low 30s and mostly sut:tny over the south with
highs in the mid and upper
30s.
· The record high temperature for Feb. 4 at the Columbus weather station was 66 in
1946 and the record low was 9 in 1985: Sunset Monday
night will be .at 5:54 p.m. and
sunrise on Tuesday at 7:36

a.m.
Today... Windy and cold.
Mostly cloudy. Sqttered snow
showers · through early afternoon. Temperatures steady or .
slowly falling into the mid 20s.
CLEVELAND (AP) -A missing investment broker susNorthwest wind 15 to 25 pected of stealing millions of dollar&lt; from clients has sent a
mph ... With gusts to 35 mph. two-page handwritten letter to his , mother, a newspaper
Chance of snow 40 percent . . reported Monday.
.
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
Prank Gruttadauria said in the letter his mother rece1ved
Lows 8 to 12 above. North- Thursday that he wants to apologize ~·for the shame and hell
west wind · 10 to 15 mph I have put you through."
becoming light.
Gruttadauria's mother, Elvera Gruttadauria, allowed her
Tuesday... Mostly
sunny. lawyer to read portions of the le.tter ~o a reporter for .The
Highs near 40. West wind 10 Plain Dealer on Sunday. She has 1dent1fied the handwntmg
to 15 mph.
as her son's.
Tuesday night ... Clear. Lows
"I don't know how to live as a fugitive:' the letter conJn the upper teens,
cluded. "I'm really terrified, but please remember me as a
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. happy young boy.''
'.
.
Highs in the lower 40s.
Elvera Gruttadauria asked The Plam Dealer to pnnt a mesWednesday night ... Partly sage to her son in hopes of arranging his surrender to the
cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s. FBI. She last spoke directly to her son on Jan. 11, the day he
Thursday... A chance of disappeared. .
.snow or rain showers during
Lawyer Carl F. Gillombardo Jr. turned the letter over to
the day..: Otherwise partly FBI special agent Joseph Persichini Jr. ~n Friday.
.
cloudy. Highs m the lower 40s.
Gillombardo declined to tell The Plam Dealer the locatwn
ofletter's post11:1ark. He said the family does not know Gruttadauria's j,Vhereabouts.

......

·~

Missing broker sent letter

Inmate recants confession
AKRON (AP) -A Summit County Jail inmate who has
claimed since October to be a serial killer, resulting in detectives going to supposed crime sites but finding nothing, has
admitted his story was false.
"I want people to believe me, that it's not true;• Jason West
told the Akron Beacon Journal by phone from jail Sunday.
"No more of the game thing. I played that to the hilt. It's
false."
West 28, said his motivation in concocting that he has
murde;ed 29 women in several states was to delay facing six

'\
......

Our Speci~l Page(s)

~'For

......

Pets Only"

~

will be published

......
......

Thursday

~

n:aficant will defend himself

Guards upset over way
flag is ~orn on uniforms
. LIMA (AP) - Some guards
at the Lima Correctional
Institution have threatened to
leave their jobs because they
say the state has made them
. wear American flag patches on
their uniforms the wrong way.
They are being ordered to
wear the flag on their right
shoulder with the blue field
closest to their back.
The guards, many military
veterans, said the correct way
to display the patch is with the
blue field closest to the chest,
so the flag appears to be flow. jng forward.
~ I The state has given them
~ntil Monday to comply or
'rce disciplinary action.
, Officer&lt; have been told they
lvill be fined two days' pay the
.tint time they're caught wearlug the flag against state polisaid Craig Bradford, presi!lent of the union that repreJents the guards.
' A fourth .violation can get
an officer fired.
"Some have said they are
willing to lose their jobs for
what they say is patriotic and
right, especially the veterans."
he said.
"They are saying, 'If I'm
going to wear it, I want to
:wear it properly."'
• Ohio Department of Reha-

should be wearing it with
pride and not arguing over it."
She said the union is following guidelines set 'up for the
military.
"We are not a ·branch of the
military, therefore there is no
prescribed way that the patch
has to be worn;' Dean said.
"The way they're wearing
the flag is not distasteful or
unpatriotic, so they need to
accept it." · "

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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· Correction Polley
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to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom
al (740) 992·2156.

News Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlons are:

Goneral manager

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LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS log aills

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
TUPPERS PLAINS
RIO GRAND - Mobel Ora Soyre Cheesebrew, 90, Rio answered five calls for assisGrande, formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died on Sorurday tance over the weekend. Units Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies
Auxiliary willll).eet on Thursafternoon, Feb. 2, 2002 at the home of her son.
responde~ as follows:
Bette C. Althof to James R.
She was born July 19, 1911 in Mason County, W.Va., daugh- ·
hall.
CENTRAL DlSPA'l'CH day at 7 p.m: at the
Young, Barbara A.Young, deed, ter of the late Wesley and Ida Miller Sayre. She was a retired
be
held.
A
silent
auction
will
Saturday, 9:36 a.m., Maples,
cook at Ordnance Elementary School and a member of the Sara Truit, O'Bieness MemorSalisbury.
Joyce S. Porter to Larry E. Bellemead UJli&amp;ed Methodist Church.
ial Hospital;
.
Porter, deed, Rutland.
Surviving are five daughters ond sons-in-law, Connie J. Grn1:24 p.m., Dom Road,
Aileen Wehrung, . .:leceased, ham of Pt. Pleasant, Phyllis and Bill Stevens of Apple Grove, Marvin Dorst, Holzer MedTIJPPERS PLAINS' - A .
to Thomas Craig Wehrung, W.Va.,Rosemary and Bill Cook of Pomeroy, Beverly and Don- ical Center;
benefit auction and spaghetti
affidavit, extinguished · life aid "Woody" Boyce of Canal Winchester, and.She.rry and Dale
5:29 p.m., Lincoln Heights, dinner to assist Michelle Westfall
estate.
Bryant of Live Oak, Pia.; two sons and daughters-in-law, - Glassco Fairow, treated;
Bartimus with medical bills will
Robert
D.
Williams, Edward F. RSonnyS and Carolyn Cheesebrew of Pinellas Park,
10:17 p.m., Broadway and be held ot the Tuppen Plains
deceased. to Patricia E. Fla. and Larry Walter and Sharon Cheesebrew of Rio Grande; Elm, Esther West, Camden- Elementary School building on
Williams, affidavit, Rutland. . . :!1 grandchildren; 37 great grandchildren and three great-great Clark.Memorial Hospital.
Feb. 16 at 5 p.m. The cost is $5
Patricia E. Williams to Scott grandchildren .
SYRACUSE
for adults and $2.5o for dinner.
A. Williams, Brenda K. Dequa- · .Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husSaturday. 9:29 a.m .. Second Barti:mus is rhe wife of Harvey
sie, deed, Rutland. .
band. Edward Franklin Cheese brew; a daughter and son-in-law, Street, Don Hendrix, dead on Bartimus Jr. and rhe daughter of
Patricia E. • Williams to Opal and Russell Boyce; and three grandchildren.
arrival.
Roger and Sheila Westfall.
Robert D. Williams, Jr., deed,
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2002
Those who wish to donate to
Rutland.
at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Pt. Pleasant. Burial will folthe auction can contact Tmcey
Patricia E. Williams to 'Gre- low at Kirkland Memo~ial Gardens in Pt. Pleasant.
Chevalier at 378-9801.
gory A. Dequasie, Brenda K.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6 to 9
CHESTER
The
Dequasic, deed, Lebanon.
p.m.
Chester Township Board of
Robert
D.
Williams,
Trustees recently elected
deceosed, to Patricia E .
officers for the year. Alan
Willia1m, affidavit, Salisbury.
Holter was elected predsiPatricia E. Williams to Scott
POMEROY -Walter "Mike" Barrett, Sr., 53, Pomeroy, died dent and Blair Windon was
CHESTER Chester
A. Williams, deed, Salisbury.
Sunday, February 3, 2002, at the home .of a family !'lember in elected
vice
president. Council No. 323 Daughter&lt;
Virginia Hayman, Clarence Ravenswood, W.Va .
Elmer Newell is the third of America will meet at 7
Hayman, Lisa Johnson, Lisa
Born June 18, 1948, he was the son of the late Isaac and Edna member of the board. The p.m. on Tuesday at the Lodge
Hayman, Robert Johnson, to , Knapp Barrett and was employed as a timberman. He was also
regular monthly meetings Hall. The charter will be ·
Keith G. Ridenour, Lila L. a veteran of the U.S. Army and a member of the Tuppen Plains
will be held the second draped in memory of Ella·
Ridenour, deed, Letart.
V.EW. Post 9053.
·
Tuesday of -every month at Osborne and all members are ·
Richard A. Vance, Michael L.
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Alina and Dean the Chester Town Hall at 7 asked to wear white .
Vance, Timothy J. Vance, to Colwell of Pomeroy; two sons and daughters-in-law, Michael
p.m .
Larry Allen Vance, Sharon L. and Rachel Barrett of Pomeroy, Walter, Jr., and Joy Barrett of
Vonce, deed, Scipio.
Ravenswood, W.Va.; a brother, Don Barrett ofVinton; and a sisEugene Ancel Singleton, ter, Naomi Hunter ofThe Plains.
deceased, to Vivian D. SingleFuneral services will be held at il a.m. on Wednesday at the
CHESTER - The Chester
ton, affidavit, Olive.
McCoy-Moore Funeml Home in Vinton. Burial will follow in Township Board of Trustees
RACINE -The Southern •
Conseco Finance Servicing, the Miller Cemetery in Meigs County.
will hold th,eir regular month- Athletic Boosters will meet
Green Tree Financial Service,
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the Tuppers. ly meeting on Feb. 11 at the Wednesday at 6 p.m. in the
to Charles F. Chancey. Melissa Plains V.F.W. Post 9053.
ChesterTown Hall at 7 p.m.
high school cafeteria.
Lynn Chancey, deed, Salisbury.
Friends may visit on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral
Tony Hutton, Tony M. Hut- home.
ton, to Terry Lee Hutton,
munity has supported and
assisted the Davis family in its .
.:lDmmy K. Hutton, deed, Rutland.
effort to provide for Eric's
B.
Chaney; ·
William
special
needs. At one time
from PapAl
CHESHIRE - Roger Snyder, 54, Cheshire, died on Monwhen he was younger and
deccase4, Florida A. Chaney. day, Feb. 4, 2002 at the Holzer Medical Cent"r, Gallipolis.
deceased, Frank E. Chaney, Arrangements are being handled by Fisher Funeral Home and be picked up in a limo, and involved in a . program . of.
deceased, Harold E. Chaney, will be announced later.
taken to the Columbus Air- , brain and behavwr patternmg
port for the flight to Florida. there were almost a 100 peodeceased, to Gladys Wolfe,
Once there they will be pro- pie who asSisted.
Kenneth E. Chaney, Robert
Chaney,
Shirley . Chaney
vided special accommodaFor now the family is looktions
inside
Disneyworld.
ing
forward to the trip.
Church, Gary Chaney, Sharon
RACINE -Wilda Scarberry Snyder, Racine, "died on Sun"For whatever rides he
"I can't wait to see him and
Chaney Lippert, Glara Chaney, day, Feb. 3, 2002 at Wintersong Funeral Home in Delaware.
have
a
his
sister at Disneyworld," said
wants
to
go
on,
we'll
~· Arrangements are under the diredion of Cremeens Funeral
affidavit, Bedford.
Gladys Wolfe; Dorothy, Home in Racine and will be announced.
·special pass so he doesn't have c;:onnie. "He d~esn 't .get to go
·
to wait in line," his mother out and do things like other
Chaney. Robert Chaney. Eliza~
explained.
kids.''
beth Chaney, Shirley Chaney
Over the years, the comChurch, Rodney Church,
Gary Chaney, Gary Chaney,
WESTERVILLE - Mildred Jean Smeltzer, 58, of WesterKay Chaney, Sharon Chaney ville, died Friday, Feb. 1, 2002, at James Cancer Hospital in ·
pottery mug from Anderson's
Lippert, Clara Chaney, Ken- Columbus.
Furniture; two candle crocks
She was born Dec. 30, 1943, in Hartford, West Virginia,
noth E. Chaney. to Kenneth E.
and two mason jar candles
Chaney, Dorothy Chaney, daughter of Dorothy Lee Oliver and the late Charles W. Warth
Country Candle Shop; a
from
fromPageAl
deed, Bedford.
Sr.
framed print from Sue's
George W. Yonker, Ramo nil
In addition to her .father, she was preceded in death by her
A Nike backpack from Selectables; a heather candle
L. Yonker, to Peggy L. Roush1. grandmother, Hilda Warth.
.
Shoe
Place/Locker 219; din- from By Heorth &amp; CandleSurvivors include her mother; two sons, Joseph Dean
Steven A. Yonker, Melissa A.
Sauters, deed, Sutton.
Smeltzer and Daniel Ray Smeltzer, both of Columbus; one ner for two from Millie's light; a box ofValentine's Day
Jed Webster, Jr., deceased, to daughter and son-in-law, Anna and Richard Sines of New Restauctnt; dinner for two at chocolates; a teo towel from j
The Fabric Shop; Redken
BettY J. Webster, affidavit,."" Haven, W.Va.; two brothers and one sister-in-law, Charles Hart's Kountry Kitchen; a gift
FoxUs
Pizza
hairspray from A Cut Above; a :
certificote
from
.. William Jr., and Cherie Warth of Pomeroy, and Anthony Wayne
Pomeroy Village.
Boyd's Bear from Francis ·
Daniel Roush to Dennis L. Warth of Lakin; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Ann lola and Den; a Carhart! sweatshirt
Roush, Susan L. Roush, deed, Charles Collins of Reedsville, and Darra and Joe Oliver of from Dan's; a bisque heart Florist; and a rainforest ~an die
from Pomeroy Flower Shop.
Lebanon.
Coalton; three grandchildren, Desiree Ann, ·and Clayton and . candleholder with candle
Entries will be taken Feb. 1
Harry K. Clark, deceased, to · Kyle Sines of New Haven, West Virginia; several nieces and from Candle Creations; a $20
through Feb. 12 a~ participatgift
certificate
from
Nails
By
Frances E. Clark, deed, affi- nephews; ond many close friends in Columbus as well as in this
Pam; a $20 gift certificate ing merchants. No purchase is ·
davit, Lebanon.
area.
from Court Grill; a patriotic necessary.
Diane R. Meyer, . Lysle
Services will be 11 a.m. on Monday, Feb. 4, 2002, in AnderMeyer, to Diane Meyer Revo-'' son Funeral Home, New Haven, West Virginia, with Pastor
cable Trust, deed, Pomeroy Vii- .•. Mike Foreman and Pastor Lawr~nce Foreman officiating. Bur'lage.
., ial will follow in Graham Cemetery.
0
L. Dean Harris, Robin Har- , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ris, to Brian Harris, Paula Har- 1
those taking care of them• is
ris, right of way, Rutland.
getting
older which means
Randy Butcher, Robin
provisions have to be made to
Butcher, to Steven S. Lukasik,
assist
the caregiven, said Lane.
from PapAl
Linda M. Lukasik, deed, Scipio.
Primary caregivers may
· William ·G. Anderson, Jr. to
contact
the local Senior CitiTonya M. Anderson, deed, assistance seven days a week,
four to six hours a day at least, zens Center 992-2161, o r . - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . .
Columbia.
and 30 percent of caregivers Mechelle Adams, R .N., the
are actually caring for tw,o or caregiver advocate .at the Area
Agency on Aging at 1-800·more relatives."
While the older population 331-2644 to schedule a case
,is growing twice as quickly as manager's visit to the home or
other age groups, and the to secure further information
. (USPS 213-1180)
fiumber of frail elderly people about the new program.
Olllo Volley Publlohlng Co.
ii\ need of care is increasing,
Published every afternoon. Monday

town

Benefit auction

Officers eleded

Meeting
planned

Walter "Mike" Baa aett Sr•

Trustees meet

Roger Snyder

Boosters

to meet

Wish·

Wilda Snyder

Mildred Jean SmeMzer

Valentine

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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992-2156

Elderly

The.·Daily Sentinel

·Bank

cy,

;bilitation
andAndrea
Correction
;~pokeswoman
Dean
~aid the union should focus its
:Onergy on other topics.
; "This is a matter of a unio.n
playing politics with th~ um-

POMEROY
Meigs
County Recorder Judy King
reported the following recent
transfers in real estate:
Howard D. Larkins, Donna V.
Larkins, to Pamela S. Ballard,
Cheryl A. Baylor, deed,
Lebanon.
Billy R. Hall, Billy Ray Hall,
Ruby S. H.all, to Jonathan
Brockert, Jana C : Brockert,
deed, Salem.
Charles
W.
Cornell,
deceased, Charles W. CorneD,
Jr., deceased, to Beulah G. Cornell, affidavit, Racine Village.
Penn)( Preston to Hal.!
Grandcili!drenUs Trust, deed,
Pomeroy Village.
•
Eugene Harvey Newland,
deceased, to Patty Sue Carroll,
Harvietta Gribble, Renilda
Ann Hamilton. deed, termination of life estate.
Michael K. Gabbard, Marvin
D. Gabbard, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way,
Lebanon.
· K&amp;O Hunt Club, Inc. to
Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Lebanon.
Brad Steele to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way,
Scipio.
Paul Thaxton, Cathy Thaxton, to Columbus . Southern
Power, right of way, Sutton.
· Sonya L. Ray to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way,
Olive.
Waldo Allen, Martha Allen,
to Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Chester.
Ralph E.' Ferrell to Columbus Southern Power, right of
way. Bedford.
Leonard E. Dailey. Jr. to Jennie Dailey, to Columbus
Sourhern Power, right of way.
Olive.
Karl R . Russell, Linda L.
Russell, to Columbus Southem Power, right of way, SalisburyI Chester.
Kenneth F. Mitchell, David
L. Mitchell, to. Columbus
Southern .Power, tight of way.
Rutland.
Paul D. Mitchell, Donn• M.
Mitchell, to Columbus Southern Power, right of way, Rutl:lnd.
Barrie R. Phillips, Carol L.
Phillips, Joyce E. Grimrn,
Robert R. Grimm, to Charles
F. Chancey, Melissa Lynn
Chancey, deed, Pomeroy Village.
Deborah J. Gilmore to
Arnold Grate, Mildred Grate,
affidavit offact.
James C. Heater, James
Heater, Karen D. Heater, to
James C. Cochran, Steven J.
Cochran, 'Thomas E. Banyas,
Richard E. Siegfried, deed,
Rutland.
Betty Tyree, deceased, to
James H. l)rree, de•eased, to
Linda K. .Ryan, affidavit.
Joseph Beegle, 'deceased, to
Cora Beegle, Arthur Harold
Beegle, Shirley Yvonne Beegle,
affidavit.
Arthur H. Beegle, deceased,
to Shirley Y. Beegle, certificate,
Sutton.
Shirley Y. Beegle to Bethany
United Methodist Church,
certificate, Sutton.
Shirley Y. Beegle to Paul
Black, deed, Sutton.

The Deily Sentinel • Peal A3

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The Daily Sentinel

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PllgeA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Ma•dny, PIPINiry .. 2002

Den OlckertOn

DEAR · ABBY: When I was 20
and still living at home, I gQt a tattoo
I never told my parenrs about. I am
now 25, married, and have never
regretted it.
When Mom was visiting recendy,
she saw my tatloo. What followed
was an eight. hour attack on my "bad
morals, low self-esteem and corrupt

Publleher

DIIM Kly Hill
Controller
'·

Ut1m to th• tdltor Mf wdcotn•. '111•1 shflll" H Ius lluut JIJO ltOI'fh, AU ltam

character."

..

I never knew a· small picture of a
butterfly could cause so much trouble. The scene with Mom got so bad
that my husband and I finally decided we'd had enough. We packed her
suitcase, took her to the airport, and
happily paid to get her on the next
flight home.
Now most of my family is
lnvolved in the fight and everyone is
taking sides. It seems there's no end
to this. Did my husband and I make

tiH lllb}«tla ftlih'ng affd m.ut bf litllftla~td includ• «&lt;ldrft• . - t.kpluHI•IUUffbfr·

Ntl .,.,,,,.,d lctttn wlll b• publisl1nl. IA/ttn sfuHIId k '" 10041 UUtl, eMnul•l
IB~~n, 11ul ptnonaiJiits.
~ 6plnltHU uprrnftl ill tlct C(llumff btlow 4ll"t tlr.t ClHfUIUII.I oftM Olllo Mdl•J
I'Mblhltln1 Cu. 'J editorialllotml, unku olllerwl.rt "Oied.

•

NATIONAL VIEW

Faimess
Greenspan scomments on
lending appropriate and effective
• The Times-Picayune, New Orleani, on tile bottom Iitle otJ
race:·Discrimination in the housing lending market not only
offends the black Americans who are disproportionately denied
home loans, but as Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
recently pointed out, such bias also drags down the overall
ccon01ny.

Mr. Greenspan made his comments recently to an economic
development summit in Oakland, Calif. Redlining, the practice
of denying applicants loans based on their ZIP code or individual neighborhood, has been described as a problem across
the counrry. This may be the first time, though, that someone
with Mr. Greenspan's clout has openly accused lenders of racial
prejudice and ·admonished them to stop.
As chairman of the Federal Reserve Mr. Greenspan has
unparalleled influence on the market. He speaks and inves,tors
act. Time will tell whether he has as much sway with. individual loan efficers, but considering the nature of this issue, let us
hope he does. .. .
·
By avoiding sentimentality and instead using the dispassionate language of economists, Mr. Greenspan is disputing those
:who would suggest that denying loans to certain ethnic groups
makes good business sense.
Data indicate ... that black applicants often fail to get loans
their white counterparts receive even if their credit ratings are
identical.
·
·
Deciding who can borrow moneyds not an exact science and
there is no way to make that process totally objective. Still,loap
officers need .to be made aware that the consequences of their
actions affect not just individual familie5 or aspiring entrepreneurs, but the country as a whole.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

j

Today is Monday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of2002.There are 330
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Feb. 4, 1789, electors unanimously chose George Washington to be the first president of the United States.
On this date:
.
In 1783,Britain declared a formal cessation ofhostilities with
its former colonies, the United States of America.
ln 180l,John Marshall was sworn in as chief justice of the
United States.
In 1861, delegates fiom six Southern states met in Montgomery, Ala., to form the Confederate States of America.
In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt opened the
Winter Olympic Games at Lake Placid.
In 1941, the United Service Organizations (USO) came into
existence.
In 1945, President Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader josef Stalin began a wartime
conference at Yalta.
In 1974, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was kidnapped in
Berkeley, Calif., by the Symbionese Liberation Army.
In 1976, more than 22,000 people dieJ when a severe earthquake struck Guatemala and Honduras.
In 1977, 11 people were killed when two oars of a Chicago
Transit Authority train fell off elevated tracks after a collision
With another train.
In 1982, President Reagan announced a plan to eliminate all
medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
Ten · years ago: President George H.W. Bush defended his
economic recovery plan before a National Grocers Association
meeting in Orlando, · Fla. (During his visit, Bush appeared
intrigued by an electronic checkout machine, leaving reporters
won~ering if he'd ever seen such a device before.)
Five years ago: A civil jury in Santa Monica, Calif., found O.J.
Simpson liable for the deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown
·Simpso.n, and her friend, Ronald Goldman, awarding $8.5 million in compensatory damages to Gold1'1an 's parents. (Six days
later, the jury added $25 million in punitive damages to· go to
Nicole Brown Simpson's estate and Coldman's father.) . President Clinton delivered his State of the Union address. Seventy-three Israeli soldiers were killed in the collision of two helieopters, ·
·
.
One year ago: In the NHL All-Star gJme, the North America team beat the World squad 14-to-12. In the Pro Bowl, the
AFC defeated the NFC, 38-to-17.
Today's Birthdays: Civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks is 89.
Feminist author Betty Friedan is Sl.Actor Conrad Bain is 79.
Actor Gary Conway is 66. Movie director George Romero is
62. Singer Florence LaRue (The Fifth Dimension) is 58.
Comedian David Brenner is 57. ·Former Vice President Dan
Quayle is 55. Rock singer Alice Coop&lt;;r is 54. Actor Michael
Beck is 53. Actress Pamela franklin is 52. Actress Lisa Eichorn
is 50. Rock singer Tim Booth is 42. Rock musician Henry
Bogdan (Hehnet) is 41. Country singer Clint Black is 40.
Counrry musician Dave Buchanan (YankeerGrey) IS 36.Actress
Gabrielle Anwar is 32. Singer David Garza is 31.

•

Dear Editor:
I believe the time is ripe to a~'ieSS the values of the Capitalist economic system that
has been imposed on this counrry for the
past few hundred years.
To start with, the Enron boondoggle
. puiS an end to the ill-gotten theory of
turning the Social Security system over to
the casinos on Wall Street.
In 1935, they passed the Social Security
Act and the Wagner Labor Act in order to
quell the on-rush of the Socialist and
Commumst parties in this cotinrry.
Then, in the early 1980s, they increased
the payroll caxes to create surpluses iri the
Social Security fund under.the pretense of
correcting an earlier mistake in the system,
but really they over corrected and created a
group, now called the "Notch Babies;·
born between 1917 and 1926, with some
losing as much as $1,000 a year in benefits.
Since then, the Social Security surpluses
have been used to beef up the military
whlch in turn has been used to subvert
democracies and dictatorships ~ the third
world that disagree.with our way of thinking in ·the treatment of their people or who·
did not fullow the Capitalist line of governing. Abo, the Notch Baby group catches a large number of the World War II veterans.
It is sort of hypocritical for a capitalist
government to be using a socialist entity as
Social Security to raise funds and use the
surpluses to finance the world's most powerful military that is used to keep Capitalist
governments in power all over the world.
The Wagner Act ·sort of helped to level

Mondlly. February "· 2002

the playing field for organized labor, but in
1938, it was amended to allow management to hire permanent replacement
workers in case of a strike. But management did not exercise this right very m)lch
until Ronald Reagan showed them that
the goverrunent would back them up
when he fired the air traffic controllers after
they struck in 1981 and hired "permanent
replacements.
.
Today it takes a pretty powerful union to
get its membefl! to strike if there is a chance
of being permanently replaced, let alone
the threat of having the factory moved to a
slave plantation operated by a multinational corporation in the Third World.
The Capitalist economic ,system is
fraught with fiaud and corruption. The
exposure of the Enron Corp. is a good
example. How many Enrons are there in
the Capitalist closet?
A Capitalist government is nothing shon
of an economic dictatorship. The people
have no say in the prices they have to pay
for the goods they have to buy. In reality,
Capitalism is a Legalized Black Market
(LBM). To prove this, all you have to do is
ask a free marketer h6w the prices are set
and they will tell you the price for an)( item
is sc.t at what the market will bear. Which is
as much as they can get the public to pay.
That is exactly a&lt; a black market works.
Then, when a company goes "belly-up;'
like KMart, the executives go away with
the spoils and the company takes bankruptcy, leaving its customers with no
choice but to go to Wal-Mart, which now
ha&lt; no competition and is anti-union in
dealing with its employees.
The working-class people, and this
inCludes the small fatiner, in this country,

are going through an austerity program
better kno\lin as "working your WJY to the
bottom."
Businesse-s and corporations are becom~
ing first-class panhandlers on the promise
of creating new jobs or maintaining a certain job level. They demand tax breaks,
low~interest loans or a downright handout.
Then when a Jitde recession comes along
in our yo"yo Capitalist economy, they go
belly-up, take bankruptcy and leave the
community holding the bag. In other
words, the Capitalist economic system is
just a well that is always going dry.You have
to keep priming it.
Many corporations pay their CEOs multimillion dollar salaries and then we have
the combin.ed charities drives to make up
for the money the corporations have pilfered fiom their employees and d1e community. Then we will have a picture in the
paper of some executive giving a donation
to the combined drive which i.&lt; nothing
but returning stolen property.
The statements in this letter are not
intended to reflect on either political party
in particular, because both the Dernocrdt
and Republican. parties condone the fiaudulent and corrupt Capitalist system.
What we need is an economic system in
this country of the people, by the people
and for the people instead of what we have
where the poor get poorer and the rich get
richer.
Roger S. Wilson
Director
Alternative Conununications
(www.ippn.org)
Celina

State-sponsored terrorism still afact ·oj life in Vietnam
..

controIs.
Although I was opposed to our
The same unremitting persecution of
involvement in the war in Vietnam, I had
Catholic churches that will not convert
no illusions about the N~rth Vietnamese
to official government "religious" instigovernment. 1 have been a hardcore
tutions continues in China - . our peranti-Communist since I was age 15 and
manent trading partner, thanks to Conread Arthur Koestler!s ''Darkness at
gress and the president, all of whom, of
Noon," (Bantam Books, !984), an
course, ardently believe in free exercise
unsparing dissection of Stalinism and all
"of religion.
other forms of state imprisonment of
The U.S. Commission on Internationindividual conscience.
al Religious Freedom tells Vietnam to
I also had no illusions about ihe corCOLUMNIST
"uphold its international human rights
rupt, undemocratic government of
and religious freedom commitments."
South Vietnam. And long before the
·release of the Pentagon Papers, I knew
The Jan. 7, 2002 issue of Christia_n The same message was sent to the Chithat our government was not telling us Today reports that the government of ne~e government, which has been
the truth"about the conduct of the war Viemam, while seeking more trade ben- rewarded with trade advantages and the
that could have prevented the loss of efits and international loans, continues to Olympic Games for doing exacdy what
many more lives on both sides.
conduct state terrorism against those of Vietnam is doing.
Will om' president, occupied with our
When the war was over, I was asked by its people who insist on thinking for
.human-rights activist Joan Baez and the themselves and adhering ,to their own war against international terrorism,
answer Nguyen Hong Quang? Are any
late Ginetta Sagan of Amnesty lnterna- religious beliefs.
The report points out that "under- of our clergy preaching on Sundays
tiona! to join their· attempts to protest
the horrifYing abuses of human rights by ground leaders . tell of police raids, about the "war on religion in Vietnam?
the victorious Vietnamese Communist church closings and torture ... The gov- What abobt newspaper editorial writers?
Amid the silence, how about sending
ernment usually reserves torture, harassregime.
to H.E. Nguyen Tam Chien,
letters
. Put in actual cages under brutal treat- ment and church closings for ethnic
ment were not only South Vietnamese, Christians living in remote villages, such ambassador of the Sqcialist Republic of
who had fought against the North, but as Hmong .. according to · Free8om Vietn.am to the USA, 1233 20th St. NW;
also Buddhlsts, labor leaders and other House." That human rights organization Suite 400, Washington, DC 20036. The
advocates of freedom of conscience (a has obtained "fpur official documents fax is (202) 861 -0917.
crime against the Communist govern- showing that the government intends to,, Were all those lives, on both sides, lost
ment).
eliminate Prot~stant Christianity in a in Vietnam for thls?
Last October, Vietilam's government
Ginetta, Joan and l had been actively district of Lao Cai province."
involved in anti-war worlc here, but now,
Last year's Amnescy International Slit- sentenced Roman Catholic priest Rev.
some of our fellow resisters were furious vcy ofVictnam noted that "political dis- Thaddeus Nguyen Van Ly to 15 years in
at us for publicly criticizing the very sidents and religious critics of the gov- prison for "undermining national umty."
nation to which America caused so ernment were subjected to surveillance, Hisl crime: giving written testimony to
much destruction.
harassment and denial of basic freedoms, the American Congress about religious
persecution .in Vietnam. He was also
But, as Joan said to our bitter critics, including freedollls of expression ."
charged
with the "public slandering" of
"To a priso ner, it doesn't matter what
Although more than ·54 percent of the
the · name of the government is that Vietname,;e are Buddhist, C hristianity the Vietnamese Communist Party.
(Nat Hetrt'!!J is a nationally renowt~ed
hired his or her torturer." And torture Today reveals that "the government has
was being repeatedly inflicted in those . band the Umfied Buddhist Church of authority on the First Amendment and rhe
Vietnamese "education camps."
Vietnam for refusing . to submit to state Bill if Rights.)

Nat
Hentoff

year-old son, "Tommy," started dat- MOM IN MILFORD. OHIO
and Blanca, but Eric and I still talk
ing a young lady from rus communiP.S. T&lt;irnmy has bot yet moved on severo times a week.
1
ty college. I'll call, her June.
.
to another girl.
Abby, should I stay with Steven?
"
From the start, my husband and I
DEAR TORN-UP MOM: I'm tempted to leave him after what
liked June. On occasion we would From the way your son is behaving, he has done. - GETTING EVEN
take her and our son out for dinner there's more to the story of the wiTH STEVEN
or to a family function. june and I breakup than he has revealed to you.
DEAR GETTING EVEN: I
don't
blame you for wanting to get
shared many interesrs and became Although you may yearn for a
good friends.
daughter, June isn't gQing to be her. even, but if you're asking my permisADVICE
Six months later, Tommy
Allow your relationsrup with June sion, the answer is rro. The fact is,
announced that he was breaking up to cool . a litde. If you· don't, your neither you nor Eric is really avail·
the wrong call by sending her home? with . her because their relationship relationship with your son will suf- able.
- POOR UTTLE BU'ITER- was gQing nowhere. I was disap- fer. His feelings should take priority.
Before making any final decisions,
FLY IN OKLAHOMA
DEAR ABBY: Eighteen months try marriage counseling to see if you
pointed but accepted his decision.
DEAR POOR UTTLE BUTNow Tommy doesn't want me to ago, I discovered that "Steven," my can rebuil\1 a ·loving, trusting relaTERFLY: In your mother's day, tat- b~ friendly with June. He won't husband -of 27 years, had been tionship with your spouse. That way,
toos were not accepted as they are speak ·to her and wilj not allow me secredy visiting "Blanca," the girl he fewer people will be hurt.
today. She overreacted to your tat- · to mentiOlJ her name in hls pres- wanted to marry 30 years.ago. Since
(Pauline Phillips 11nd her daughter
too. Now take the high road: Apolo- ence.
then, I have been talking to Blanca's Jeanne Phillips share rhe pseudonym
gize for sending her away and head
What should I do? june seems to . husband, "Eric," and have fallen in Abigail V..n Buren. Write Dear Abby at
offWorld War III.
enjoy our mother/da11ghter rela- love with him. ·
www.DearAbby.cvm or P.O. Box
DEAR ABBY: Last year our18- tionship, and so do I.- TORN-UP
The affair has ended for Steven 69440, Los Angeles; CA 90069.)

Dear

Abby

POMEROY - It's time to
register for a variety of programs offered at the Meigs
Senior Center thls month.
Residenrs intereste d in any
of .the classes are to contact
Patty Pickens, activity director
at the Senior Center, for further information or to register
for a class.
Among those are ballroom

~;.~~gp~:=~~;~:~e~~~;nh~~

consist ·of six week with class-

Robert Reel, ·Mathew Spurlock, Aimee Watson, Jesse
Whittington, Jonathon Young,
Jacob Zuspan, A/B.
Grade 3: Hayley Aanestad,
Chantel Bauer, Devon Baum,
Megan Carnahan, Ashleigh
DuffY, Morgan Hall, Roqert
Warner; all A's; Ryan Amos,
Jonathan Barrett, Jessica Cleland, Briar Dill, Nathan
Gheen, Scott Gilbride, Abbie
harris, Caleb Hensley, Rachel
Kille, Timothy Markworth,
. Danielle Maxey, Beverly Maxson, Kelse Miller, Ashley
Miller, Britney Morrison,
Braydon Pratt, Savannah
Pullins, Allie Rawson,Jennifer
Reed, Sheena Riffie, Zari
Roush, Kayla Simpkins, John
Tenoglia, Matthew Whldock,
Morgan Windon, A/B.
Grade 4: Breea Buckley,
Wade Collins, Hannah Hysell,

Ill, Mallory Guthrie, Casey recen~ quarter:
Hannllm, Zachary Hendrix,
Grade 12: Bradley Bran-.
Ashley Life, Kaylee Milam, non, Ben Holter, Garrett
Anthony Putman , Kayla Rus- Karr, Chris Lyons, Sara
sell, Katie Wilfong, A/B.
Mansfield,
Mary
Grade 6: Nathan Carroll, Marcinko, and Jon Will,
Ryan Davis, Kelsey Holter, All A Honors; Holly
Kyle Rawson, Morgan Werry, Broderick, Tricia Congo,
all A's; Megan Broderick, Darlene Connolly, Tina
Daniel Buckley, Alexander DeLaCruz, Kayla Gibbs,
.Burroughs, Joshua Collins,
Rachel Hupp. Tiffany
Kyle Edwards, Lindsey Grate,
Cassie Hauber, Kathrine Hay- Kidder, Tiffany Spencer,
man, Samantha Parsons, Saral- Stacie Wilson, Amanda
isha Powell, Trista Putman, Yeager, A/B .
Grade
11:
Nichol
Jared Ruisell, Cortney Scyoc,
Carri Simpkins, Kenneth Honaker, Thomas SimVogelsong, Nikita Young, mons, All A Honors; Krystal Baker, Brent Buckley,
A/B.
Grade 7.,: Sarah Boston, Carrie Crow, Brittany
Ryan Davis, Dane Eichinger, Davis, Tara Fisher, Beth
Nathaniel McGrath, William Gregory, Erica Lemons,
Owen, Corey Shaffer, Erin Nicole
Phillips, Tyler
Weber, Derek Weber, Amber Simmons, Chris Wilson,
Willbarger, all A's; Jessica AlB.
Amos, Stephanie Baker, BritGrade 10: Jessica Boyles
tany Biss~ll. Justin Brow.mng, and Alyssa Holter, All A
Kimberly Castor, Linsee · Honors; . Rachel Elliott,
Davis, Evan Dunn, Steven
Chrissy Gregory, Brittany
Hudson, Tyler Lee, Derek
Hauber, Kass Lodwick,
Putmall, Hollie Richard,
Jonathan Owen, Sandy
Trista Simmons, A/B.
Powell, Tia Pratt, Katie
Grade 8: Brandon Bartee,
Robertson,
Becky . Taylor,
Nicholas Kuhn, Taylor Russell, all A's; Brian Castor, Andrea Warner, A/B.
Grade 9: Brittany BarChristopher Davis, Shawn
Reed, Derek Roush, Dennis nett, Derek Baum, Chris
Sargent, Charles Wilson, A/B. Carroll, Cody Dill, Jennifer
Hayman,
Katie
Hoxie, Jessica Kehl, Bryan
Minear, Jaime Reel, Darren Scarbrough, Casey ·
Smith, Morgan Weber,
Krista White, Chelsea
TUPPERS PLAINS The following stude.nts Young; All A Honors;
were named to the honor Adam Dillard, · Carrie
roll at Eastern High Elberfeld, Andy Francis,
School for the most A/B . .

es starting on Feb. 5 ·and continuing on Tuesdays through
March 12. Classes wiU .be held
from 8 to 9 p.m.
Sweatshirt lainting classes
will be held Feb. 19 and 2d6
from 6 to 8 p.m. A flower garden theme will be used on the Whitney Putman, Amapda
. shlrts.
Roush, Breanna Taylor, all~·~; .
Andrea Buckley, Lawrence
Health related classes to be Collins, Karissa Connolly,
conducted include "Bone Up Samantha Cummins, Erin
on Calcium" by Becky Baer, Dunn, Samantha Cummins,
.Meigs County Extension Erin Dunn, Samuel Evans,
agent. Mel Mock will be at the Kimberly Faulkner, Matthew
center on Feb. 12 to do hear- Friend, Ashley Laudermilt,
ing screenings. He will speak Kimberly Minear, Phillip
at 11 a.m. and then begin the Morehead,Audrionna Pullins,
screening starting at 12:30 Devin Rig~. Katie Shepard,
p.m.
Hannah West, Jordan Wood,
Joshua Young, AlB.
Grade 5: Zachary Carson,
Alexis
Hirzel, Matthew
Hosken, Michael Moore, Kyle
Sargent, Kadyn Sauvage,
TUPPERS PLAINS Amber White, all A's; Keith
The following students have · Aeker, Terry Bailey, Samantha
be'en named to the "All A" Baker, Tasha Barber, Danielle
· and "A/B" honor rolls at Barnhart, Heather Brooks,
Eastern Elementary School Morgan Burt, Brittany Casto,
for the second grading period: Tina Drake, Herbert Grate
Grade 1: Marshall Aanestad,
Alex Amos, Randall Arrries,
Maxwell Carnahan, Rebecca
Chadwell, Samuel Collins,
Victoria Gcible, Breanna Hayman, Melame Miller, Timothy .
· Minear, Christopher Morris,
· ' Mallory Nicodemus, Kiana.
Osborne, Shanda Welch,
Emily Wilson, Kyle Young, all
A's; Hannah Adams, Nettie
Brooks, Christopher Chaney,
Caitlyn Cowdery, Larissa
Cunningham, Troy Gantt,
·Nicole Gilbride, Bradley
Goeglein, Layla Graham, Gar,ret Hall, Kayla Hawthorne,
TwlnM.pc.
Zakkary Heaton, Alexandria
Hendrix, Addie Hall, Jason
Kelley, Rachael Markworth,
· Dylan Milam, Krista Miller,
!than Nottingham, Thomas
Pullins, Larissa Riddle, Garr~tt
Ritchie, Trevor Russell,Jord.in
Ru!sell, Maria Sharp, SavanSpeelman~Hawley,
nah
William Taylor, Sara VanCooney, Emily Wheeler, A,'B.
Grade 2: Janae Boyles,
Baylee Collins, Cheyenne
Doczi, Brenna Holter, Marie .
Powell, Jenah
Sampson,
Courtney Thomas, a.l) A's; .
Christian Amsbary, Dominic
• •• pc....
Barnhart, Christopher Bissell,
oet .....$599
Set Bond, Kayla Chaney,
Damelle Cline, Taylor Cline,
Emily Davis, Scout Facemyer,
Leslea Frank, Sliannon Goh,
Justin Hill, Arik Horner,
Layaway
Parking
Brooke Johnson, Luke Kimes,
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
Mon-Sat9to5
Kayte Lawrence, Savannah
"IIRAND NAME I'UANITVRE AT DISCOUNT PRICES"
9-7
Moore, ' Kelsey Myers, Jacob
Ate
wv 675·1371
Parker, Cassie Randolph,

Named to honor

Eastem H.S.
honor roll

roll

.
HENTOF ·F 'S VIEW

,

1.

Society Notebook

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Reconsider economy

the Bend

Page AS

Daughter branded immoral because of tattoo

THE COOK
AT ARntUR
ANDERSEN

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co. ·

Chlrlene Hoeflich
General Manager

__
Pl_eo_ai_IySe_n_tin_e~--~··B=f

IWAS

111 Court lt., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 812·21H • llu: IIJ-2117

•

............

859

~;:

FREE

FLAIR

SJ_9_9. .

FREE

•

,,

jOIN US
ASWE
CELEBRATE

lOOYEARS.
OF SERVICE.

C(;o &amp;how out: thanks
to each anB ePet:lj.CU.Stomet:
mho hetpeB make
a centut:y ot
rJ}Jeoptes 6ankintJ
po&amp;&amp;ibte, you't:e inviteB to f
a cete6t:ation. @Join u.s at
any tutt-&amp;ewice offfiice

FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 8
9 A.M. - ClOSE
tm: t:er6t:eshment.s anB a
bifj hetpintJ ot tjt:atituBe.
OOe coutBn't have Bone it
without you!

Peoples
BankftJfl

Every bank has assets..
We named ours aj/er the most important one.

�'
P8Qe A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, Feb. 4, 2002

'

News About Senior Citizens
In Meigs County
I

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM

Evening Dinners

The Senior Nutrition Meal is served Dally al,121!10. , Swiss Steak with Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
· Frozen Ambrosia
Harvar.d Beets
White or Brciwn Bread

Evening meals are served every
Bring ypur whole family to
Tuesday and Thursday from the Center for an enjoyable meal
4:45 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. The at a great price. All ages are
·
·suggested donation for the meal welcome!
is $5.00

.

12
Beef Stew
Coleslaw
Biscuit
Apple Dumpling with Ice Cream

7

Soup Beans &amp; Ham
Oven Fried Potatoes
Com Bread
Strawberry Tunnel Cake

Pears Oatmeal Ra isin Cookie

Chttstb~JrRer

'

1~

Chofs Salad &amp; Broad Stick

Roast Beef with Gravy
Mashed Potatoes ·
Buttered Carrots
Blushing Pear Salad
Whi_te or Brown Bread

BLT

Meatloaf
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Glazed Carrots
Roll
Lemon Lush

13

Ham &amp; Soup Beans
Com Bread
Coleslaw
Pear$ ,in Jell-0
White Or Brown Bread

Sauce

MONDAY's

.

Biked Potato

Pizzo

.

15
Meatloaf
Spaghetti with Meal Sauce
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
tossed Groen Salad
Com &amp; Green Beans
Tropical Fruit
Peaches
Gartic Bread
Roll
"
Cooks Choice

Tuna

21

BBQ Beef &amp; Onion Rings

Sa/ad

22
Sausage Gravy
Hash Brown Potatoes
Warm Fried Apples
Biscuits
•
Orange Juice
BoefStew

iJi(i1,
- Je!1

·~

~L

'

l

~·

'

·h

-. •.· ( ''

I

NBA
Sunday'• Gamea
Washington 109, Indiana 89
Miami 94, New York 83
San Antonio 105, Oriando 98, OT
Sacramento 112, Minnesota 107
L.A. Lakers 101, Dallas 94
Chariotte 97, Memphis 79
Boston 104, L.A. Clippers 91
Portland 101 , Chicago 96
Phoenix 98, Golden State 97

L----~~--~-------------------------~----~
Sweatshirt class
Valentine celebration

; '•

I .

Ballroom dance

Bone up
on calcium

BINGO

AAR P tax assistance

-Painting classes

Georgia Tech
embarassecl
again
ATLANTA (AP) - Less
than two months after George
O'Leary's deception, Georgia
Tech is embarrassed again by a
misleading biography.
The man who replaced
O'Leary as football coach hired
two assistants with erroneous
information in their backgrounds and one, defensive
coordinator Rick Smith, was
forced to resign after a threeman committee concluded he
misrepresented himself in his
biography.

0

---Support groups--

Birthday parties

Investment representative
to be at Senior Center

Hal Kneen-Fiowers &amp;
Vegetables

Social Security

THI: .MI:DICAL SHOPPE

HI: leliJ rl J,',l

WE HONOR

SALES &amp; !ENTALS
FREE DELIVERY

446·2206
POMEROY, OH

JOLLFIIEI

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

I·IOD·US·2206

•.Sleep. pnea Equipment
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen •
• Overnight Pulse Oximetry
• Hospital Beds
• Wheel Chairs
• Bathroom Aides

i\'A

•

1410 Jacklon Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

(740) 446-7283
1-800-458-6844

486 lillington Road
Jacksoa, Ohio 45640

70 Pine Street, Gallipolis, Ohio

World team
tops N. Americ;a
LOS ANGELES (AP) Nikolai Khabibulin saved all
20 shots he faced in the third
period of the All-Star Game,
as the World All-Stars defeated North America 8-5.

BIG PLAY GUY- Patriots' receiver Troy Brown (80) is tackled and forced out of bounds by the Rams' Adam Archuleta (31)
after a 26-yard gain during the final drive of the fourth quarter in Super Bowl XXXVI Sunday. (AP)
.
'
.
'
'

Patriots -slow the (Greatest Show
on .Tuif' for 20-17 win
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
-The New England Pattiots picked the perfect Super
Bowl for one of the biggest
upsets ever.
Adam
Vinatieri's
48-yard
goal as time
expired capped a
thrilling final two
minutes Sunday and gave
the Patriots a 20-17 win over
the St. Louis Rams for their
first Super Bowl victory on a
day of red, white and blue.
The winning kick came
after the Patriots had lost a
17-3 lead in the final '10
minutes. But MVP Tom
Brady drove them downfield
53 yards after St. Louis had
. tied it on a 26-yard pass fiom
Kurt Warner to Ricky Proehl
with 1:30 left.
The key play was a 23-yard
pass from Brady to Troy
Brown to the St. Louis 36.
Three plays later came the

..

•••

w

· · - · · - - - -..- -

•

Please see Pltrlots, 84

New England kicker Adam Vlnatleri screams in triumph after
nailing the game·winning field goal Sunday (AP)

PIHse see Brady, B4

Chesapeake
claws Eastem

Alexander drops Meigs~ 61-53
up hill all night as they finally tied the score
early in the fourth quarter only to see AlexanROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs Maraud- der senior Justin Brooks step up and ·score 12
ers coming off a tough game at Southern on o( his 19 points in the last six minutes of the
Friday night returned home game to keep the Marauders at bay. Meigs got
Saturday night to face another another tremendous performance out of senior
very worthy opponent, the Matt Williamson with 20 · points and- eight
Alexander Spartans.
rebounds. Freshman Zach Bush also played big
The Marauders playing for Meigs with a 10 point seven-rebound
without one of their leading
effort.
scorers in freshman Ryan FraIt looked like it would be an Alexander
zier who suffered a wrist blowout early as the .Spartans built a 12-2 lead
injury at Southern, played in the first quarter. The Marauders could manwith heart and stayed with the
age only t\vo free throws from Williamson in
Williamson Spartans until _the final four
minutes before falling by a · the first 6:11 of the game as the maroon and
gold committed eight turnpvers in the first six
61-53 score.
The Marauders had several key shots rattle minutes. The Marauders f&lt;lught back late in the
out of the hoop at critical times in the game as period however as Ty Ault hit the first Maraudthey tried to keep pace with the Spartans who er field goal to make it 12-4 and Freshman
-built an early 10-point lead in the game. Coach Zach Bush tallied four points in the last :30 to
Carl Wolfe's young team seemed to be battling
Please see Melp, B:J BY JIM SOULSIY

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

BY JON WILL SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

CHESAP-EAKE - The long, winding road known as
• State Route 7 lias not been a kindly one tQ the Eastern
Eagles.
It was a little over a month ago that they traversed this
road down to Portsmouth, where they were delt thei'r first
loss of the season. Saturday night, the Eagles once again
loaded the bus and headed deep into the heart of the
Ohio Valley. The Chesapeake Panthers were lying i11
ambush, and thus were able to pull off a 47-39 upset_Of
the Eastern Eagles.
·
In last year's contest, it was the Eagles who spoil,ed the
Panthers' perfect season when Garrett Karr nailed a shot
at the buzzer to give Eastern the win. But not even the
skill of Karr, Chris Lyons, Brad Brannon and company
could overpower the giant post players of the Panthers.

PIHH HI Eestem, B:J

G.B. Com, MD will be seeing~ and estabUshed ~~ts five dayS aweek. kl a &amp;mlly_pnctitioner, Dr. Corn will be tremng:
• High blocid pressure

e Asdtma

e Diabetes

• OOPD (empbesemalchronk bronChitis)

'

• Dep~

• High cbolesterol
1 Heart disease

e Routine GYN care

1 Routine newborn &amp; child care
1 Gerbttics
1 Skin conditions (Including mlnor surgery)
I Sports &amp; DOT physicals

2411 Jalllrs.A•u•·· PeiiiPII•salt, WV • 13141 615-1111
&lt;

•

kick by Vinatieri, who had
made two field goals -in the
snow to give New England a
playoff win over Oakland.
·
The Patriots were
5-1 1 last year and
this season
at 0-2, losi'!g
starting qi.tarterback Drew
Bledsoe in the
process.
Brady, a fourth-stringer as
a rookie a year ago, took 'over
and led them to the AFC
East title with an 11-5
record. But few expected
therp to beat the Rams, who
at 14-2 had the league's best
record and best offense and
were trying to win their second Super Bowl in two
years.
' The Patriots had twice lost
in the Super Bowl, both
times in New Orleans. And it
was the first championship as

NEW ORLEANS (AP) Outside the Superdome, an
unprecedented security force
was protecting the NFL'•
showcase
game. Inside
was all of the
singing and
dancing
that's come
to. be expected of the
Super Bowl's
lengthy
Brady
pregame
show.
In the New England Patriots' locker room- and inside
Tom Brady's head - everything was calm.
Waking up from a pregame
nap just before gametime, the
24-year-old
quarterback
played with poise and effi~
ciency on Sunday, leading the
Patriots to their first NFL
championship with a 20-17
victory over the St. Louis
Rams.
"The locker room was
quiet, so I just put my head
back and had a little snooze:'.
Brady said after becoming the
youngest quarterback to win
the Super Bowl. "I woke up
calm and confident."
The sore-ankled former
fourth-stringer was named
the game's Most Valuable
Player,
completing
an
improbable season for himself
and a team that went from
worst to first in the AFC East
and advanced through the
playoffs with an air of destiny.
"He did a great job all year
long," said Rams quarterback
Kurt Warner, who wrote a
similar script two years ago
when he went from undrafted
backup to Super Bowl MVP.
"The big thing that I think he

..

24 Hour Emergency -Service
Medicare • Medicaid

RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT

Gogel redeemed
at Pebble Beach
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Redemption fur Matt
Gogel came in the right place at
Pebble Beach, and it was just as
stunning as his setback.
1\vo years after he was victimized by Tiger Woods' incre&lt;iible comeback, Gogel holed a
25-foot birdie putt on the 18th
hole and won the Pebble Beach
National Pro-Am when Pat
Perez took a triple bogey on the
final hole.
Gogel, who closed with a 3-under 69 for his first PGA Tour
.victory, became the third
str.light player to come fiom at
least four shots back on the final
day to win at Pebble Beach, and
he picked up $720,000 for the
victory.

Sweetheart dinner
dance with George Hall

------HEAP------

MVP

Pro Basketball

2002

~

cool

NCAAMen'a
Sunday'• Games
Notre Dame 63, Seton Hall 61
Rider 82, Niagara 67
St. Peter's 83, lana 81
Maryland 89, N.C. State 73
NYU 83, Emory 73
St. John's 72, VIrginia Tech 63
W. Kentucky 92, Morris Brown 53
Michigan St. 67, Illinois 61
Missouri 81, Virginia n _
St. Bonaventure 81, Dayton 75
Baylor 97, Texas A&amp;M 45
UNLV 90, DePaul 75

r---------------------------------------,

ACTIVITY SCHEDULE

Brady a

NFL
Super Bowl XXXVI
Now England 20, St. Louis 17

-

I Your paid membership to the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc. is a measure of support for the I
I Multipurpose Senior Center and the services provided to older adults residing in Meigs County. Each
1paid membership received verifies to regional, state and national funding agencies that the ·
I
Multipurpose Senior Center is providing needed senior programs.
Are you having trouble

a

Tom

Pro Football

'

Hearing
problems?

Super lbriller in the Superdome

Boys
s.turday'a Gamea
Alexander 61 , Meigs 53
Chesapeake 47; Eastern 39
South Gallia 48, Hannan 36

1~

I

Moncbly. FebnNiry 4. 2002

Prep Bask~ll

hearing? If so, be sure to come
The cost for each membership is $5.00. You may purchase your membership at the Senior Center
to the Center on February 12 for lor by mailing to: Meigs County Senior Center, 112 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy,
free hearing screening.
10H 45769. If possible, please include a stamped, self-addressed envelope so that we can forward
Mel Mock, owner of 1your membership card to you. Thank you for your support.
·
Advanced Hearing Center in
Thursday February 21, Blood Pressure Checks
Gallipolis, will speak at I I :00 I
4:15p.m. - 4:45p.m.
a.m. on "Buying Tips for IName--~--------------------------~-------------------- · Hearing Aid Consumers." Mr. 1
Jtilembersbtp
Mock will also provide 'hearing IAdd~~---------------------------screenings beginning at 12:3,0 1
p.m.
using
his
new I CllyiState/Zip Code--------------------computerized testing equipment.
The Meigs Multipurpose Wednesday from I 0:00 a.m. No appointment is necessary
and it will only take about 10
Senior Center is open Monday until noon .
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
Older adults are invited to minutes of your time.
Pam Schatz will be the
Mark your calendar for
until 4:30 p.m. Regularly altend the activities scheduled.
instructor for a sweatshirt class
scheduled activities · held Join us for lunch and select what
Th~rsday, February 14 so you'll
on February I9 &amp; 26 from 6:00
be sure to join Gerald Powell
throughout the week include you want from the a Ia carte Beginner ballroom dance class p.m. • 8:00 p.m.
with
easy listening music &amp;
sewing. quilting, pool, bingo, menu or you can enjoy -the will 1;Je held at the Center with
The cost will be $20.00 for the ~
dancing.
regular meal. Ala carte items are .Gerald Powell as the instructor. · kit and instructions. You need to
cards and games.
The music will begin at 10:30
Dance team practice is held individually priced. The The cost .is $60.00 per couple bring a sweatshirt that has been
a.m.
each Monday at I :00 p.m. Cpst suggested donationJor the ~.oqn and will begin .,February 5 and W'ashed without .. ~l)Y fabric •·
is $1.00 per session attended. meal is $2.00.
finish on March 12.
softener.
The Knitting Circle meets on
Couples must wear leather· You'll make a spring bouquet
sole shoes and registration is design for the front of your
required. Call Patty at 992-2161 sweatshirt that will stand out in
for more information.
a crowd.
Call Patty Pickens at 992-2161
The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP), is one of several
to register.
Bring your sweetheart and be $15.00 per person. If you will
programs offered by the Ohio Department of Development
dance the night away at the only attend the dance, the charge
(ODOD) to help low-income Ohioans pay their utility bills.
Center on February 14. George is $10.00 per person.
Households may be eligible for assist~nce if the household's
· Hall will perform from 6:00 The menu consists of - Baked·
income is at or below the I50% federal poverty guidelines.
p.m. - 10:00 p.m. with songs steak, green beans, mashed
Becky Baer, OSU Extension
Below are guidelines for the 2001-2002 HEAP program:
from
the past.
potatpes and gravy, roll, seven
Join us on February 7 to play
Service, will present a program
Size of Household
Total Gross Household Income on calcium in the Conference bingo at the center. Game iime is
Dinner will be served from layer salad and cherry torte
I
up to $12,885
Room. The program begins at scheduled for I I :00 a.m. and' 4:45 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. The cost cake. Hope to see you!
2
upto$17,4l!Y
II :00 a.m. on February 5. prizes will be awarded to the for ihe dinner and the dance wi II
3
upto$21,945
winners.
Everyone is invited.
up to $26,475 1
4
5
upto$31,005
6
up to $35,535
Income tax assistance will be offered by Herman Carson and
7
up to $40,065
provided.
The
class
will
be
held
offered_
to low income senior Leafy Chasteen from February
A
one-time
class
will
be
held
8
up to $44,595 _
For households with more than 8 members, add $4,530 per with Michele Garretson as the on February 18 from 6:00p.m.- citizens (age 60 and over) that 5- April 15 on Tuesdays and
instructor. Come and enjoy 8:00 p.m. Basic painting skills cannot afford to go to a paid Thursdays from 9:00 a.m. •
member.
income tax preparer.
painting
a large decorative piece are required.
11:00 a.m.
If you need more information, or if you would like an
Drop
by
the
Center
and
see
the
Complicated
returns
or
returns
Taxes will b'e taken by
application, contact Kathy Arnott at the Meigs Multipurpose of wood with a checkerboard
Senior center at 740-992-2161. Kathy is also available to make scheme of sunflowers, daisies or sample on display_. Call Patty at that require more than two fonns appointment only. To make an
992-2161 to reserve your' spot, ,\)r schedules will be referred to a appointment, call 740-992-2161.
the American flag.
home visits for any individual that is disabled or homebound.
The cost for the class is $15.00 There must be at least 12 people •paid preparer.
and all materials ·will be registered to have the class.
· Persons using the tax service
must bring copies of their
The monthly birthday party
federal and state tax return from
last year, tax forms for the will be held on February 28.
The Caring and_ Sharing
Nancy Stevens, from Holzer
current year and other relevant Dana Johnson will be the
Support Group meets the fourth Medical Center, is the facilitator
materials showing income for entertainment with singing at
Thursday of each month at the for the Diabetes Support Group.
the year.
II :30 a.m. Come and have some
Meigs County Senior Center at The meeting will be held on
Elizabeth Schaad, Investment investment questions.
The tax assistance will be cake with your friends. ·
I :00 p.m. At the February 28 February 21.
meeting, Ruth Colgrove, RN
The discussion at the February Representative with Edward
Appointments are necessary
from Pleasant Valley Hospital meeting will be how exercise Jones, will be at the Center on for this service. Call Patty
February -12 from 10:00 a.m. -. Pickens at 992-2161 to make
will talk about "Ways to have a can help your diabetes.
Healthy Heart."
Serenity House, Inc. is the II :00 a.m. Ms. Schaad will do your appointment now.
The Stroke Support Group will sponsor of the Meigs County private consultations concerning
meet February 13 at 1:00 p.m. in Support Group to provide
. the conference room at the support, sharing and information
Center. Lia Tipton, Occupational for residents of Meigs County
Therapist, HolzerRehabilitation whose lives have been affected
Center, is the coordinator.
by domestic violence. The
Support Group gives everyone
the opportunity to learn about
the effects of domestic violence
and ways to deal with it. The
group meets every Wednesday
Hal Kneen will be at the
from 6:00p.m. -8:00p.m. at the Center on February 19 with a
Meigs Senior Center.
slide show titled "All America'n
Selections."
The program will begin at
ll:OO.a.m.
Representatives , from the
Athens Social Security Office
will be at the Meigs Senior
Center to assist people with
Social Security problems and to
j :lij '~t4'11 j lfll
provide information. The dates
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SUPPUES and BRACES
are February 13 &amp; 27 from
10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
HOME OXYGEN and

I

HIGHLIGHTS

8:

Amish Vinegar Chicken
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Seasoned Graen Beans
Apricots
-White or Brown Bread

Chicken Patty
Broccoli Soup
Tomato/ 'Onion I Lettuce
Grapes
White or Brown Bread

Bakerf Potato

.

Roast Turkey, Dressing
Mash&amp;d Potatoes &amp; Gravy
BuUered Green Peas
Mandarin Oranges
Cranberry-Sauoor
White or Brown Bread

20

Vegetable Soup

•

7

BBQ Rib
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Ripe Banana
Creamed Com
White or Brown Bread
White or Brown Bread
Taco Salad
Soup Beans &amp; Com Sre•d
Cooks Choice .
Home Stvie Breakfast
25
26
27
28
Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Baked Chicken
Scalloped ~olelo8$ and Ham
Liver &amp; Onions
Seasoned Green Beans
Mashed Pota~oes &amp; Gravy Cranberry Banana OeHQht Salad Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Creamed Tomatoes
Lima Beans
· Bishop's Cake
Bu'tered Mixed Vegetables
Frui1 Cocktail
Strawberry Hash
White or Brown Bread
Purple Plums
White or Brown Bread
.
White or Brown Bread
White or Brown Bread

21

28

Coolrs Choice

1!1

Salmon Loaf
Augratin Potatoes
Buttered Peas &amp; Carrots
Pineapple Chunks

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Seasoned Green Beans
Seven Layer Salad &amp; Roll
Torte Cake

-

-

Hot Dog with

18

Chicken
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Corn &amp; Lima Beans
Roll
Cherry Cheese Cake

26

-

Chicken N' Noodles
Ume Perfection Salad
Cranberry Juice
Brownie
White or Brown Bread

Tom•to Soup &amp; Grilled Cheen

19
Baked Ham
Scalloped Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
Biscuit
Cobbler

Monroe County Broccoli Salad

12

Orange Glazed Ham
Scalloped Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
Mandann Oranges
White or Brown Bread

Pork ChOp
Baked Potato
California Blend Vegetables
Croissant
Cherry Pie

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Ga~ic Bread
Earth Quake Cake

Bacon

. - · · BBQ Chicken
. Potato Soup

11

-

5

-

Sub Sandwich

THURSDAY

TUESDAY

.

Beef Stew
Apple Juice
-Biscuit
Cherry Delight

6

,

Page Bl

Menu'• are prepared by Cynthia McMannl•. RD. LD

s

4

''

Ohio routs the Herd, Page 83
College; NBA roundups, Page 86

..... ,. •••J..... c,.,..

February 2002

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Reforral elsewhere for chronicpain • Most insurances accepted
'

' '

· ··~-----·

1

PLEA-SANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�•

P8ge 82 • The Dally Se1lllnel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

----------------------------------~~
ar:rtbune.- Sentinel - 1\e

Monda~Feb.4,2002

•

Monda~Feb.4,2002

t =:-1 t• ~ lr l~ IRio Grande Redmen win, Redwomen fall to Dominican .\
.

1

FIM ou F - nAir 197~-• . 2 11187Chovroletl'k*up, 4x4,
Co-•
.,_.... Cal Ooot, Llkt Now, 44K. Aut6matle,
t350Q.
(740144&amp;-6308 or HIOO· $4995. 111115 Grand Am, 4 (740}256-6740.,.,dlrk.

CLASSrFIED

291.Q088. If lfO&lt;J don1 caw
us wo t&gt;ct11oool
VEllA IRADUY
Now Spring Collection or
F -.
Dow•-•Modo Norman
1030411lAveniJO
•
(Nelli ~ - &gt;

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

10

HuoUnutoo, wv.
(304)522-38tl

In one week With us

537-9528

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

=5~e:1 :;·~~~

.

car ond true~&lt;~ In atock. 1897 Fonl FH!O XLT pocilOOOK IIOTOR8. (740)44e- ago. llloclc. Ax4, T1nled win0103
-~. AMIFM rodlo COl·
ootto.
F..,.,.
19811 Fori! Contour GL. iiOK ry lift C.UioeConlroi,
ldi, AJC, 4.2 111or
v.e,

$5000. 1119:4 Ford 5opood. $10.500. (304~ avenged a loss to Ohio Dominican that
Tempo GL, Bcyl., 142K, 2588
rred J
occu
on anuary 24 ·
811 Dodge van. 314 1on, D·
Th
.ed 9 9 h
th R - ~
250, convenoion. (740)985e score was t1
- w en e
c:u3447 "'740-9fl5.4308
men went lethal from the field, nailing shot-

-......

111

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116

lliLPWANnD

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542

COME 6110W

McCiure·s ResiSurant now All Makes of Lawn Mowers; For sale by owner.

bl·
hiring all 3 locations, full or Small Engines; Kerosene level home on 1 acre near
part-ttme, pick up appllca- Heaters anct· Satamanclers Chester. Three bedroom,
tion at tocation &amp; bring bael( Repaired.
Call
Mike twa baths, one-car garage,
between
9:30am
&amp; (740)448-7804
1amily room with flr:epface,
10:ooam. Monday ttlru Sat:- sun room. New central heaturday.
Georges Ponablt Sawmill, lng &amp; Nc system. One ml·
don1 haul your logs to the nu1e off Route 7, but still prt.

GALLlA COUNTY

moe11~

r

:J"'St"~i ~

~~~:oc;'(aJ!~~~;J"ry

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rio

I"

s:'f,;.;:e ,.

~""e::O"'t~n
1 typeS of maoonry brick. · left the court under. his own power but did
ger, $600. 10 more cars un· blocl! &amp; - . 20 yra. expo- not rerum to the game due to a bac k ayury.
der $1000. Call (740)388· Mance , free estimate, Jason Warren who had a huge game for
9303
(304)n3-9550
.
TRUCKS
Alexander inside with 18 points. Scored seve!'

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SAVE TIME AND MONE
SI/01) THE

CLASSIFIEDS! ·.

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--==-=--

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his

. The third quarter started with an offensive
explosion as both teams came out ofthe locker mom red- hot. Alexander hit on their first
five shots and Meig. connected on four of
their first six attempts. For Alexander it was

oo,.fn

our;..;.;: .k

set.

r

DUE TO OUR CONTINUED
GROWTH, TURNPIKE
OF GALLIPOUS IS
LOOKING FOR
SALES PEOPLE.

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1

Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We will train the right person.
We seek aggressive, self-starting
professional salespeople with the
desire to earn well above average
income. We offer a benefit package,
including 40 Ik, medical and
retirement benefits, a five day
work week and no S1,1ndays.

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No Phone Calli Plea••

s-Pat Hill

c.m.r,

or Brian Roll
..tw. . a.m. a p.m.

10 points each.
Ohio Donurucan
. .
(14-12 , •o-v
' AMQ was
led by R)::!ll Wilson,s 18 points and nine

,_,

night a t the Newt Oliver Arena.
'
Rio G rande placed five players in double
figures, led by senior Renee Turl"" with 14 .
-'
points. Turley :oJso claimed seven rebounds :
~
and dished out .our
..Wts. Alkia Fountain ·
tossed in 12 points and collected eight :

rebounds. Br.ui Cupito added 17 points and ,boards; Annie Tucker poured in 12 points :
,.,,__
six assists.••
Fiebig scored 14 points (four and hauled in five rebounds off the bench, .
trifectas), Ryan West chipped in
points while Emily Cooper and Angel Allen each :

w..c

li

and hauled dOwn

six

boards off the benc h

and Mike Lee tossed in 10.

c hipped in II points.
Ohio Dominican

·

'

was

led

,

by Amanda .
·

Redwomen lose
Lewis with 28 points and eight rebounds, .
The Universiry of Rio Gr.mde women's Jennifer- Kish scored 24 p o ints and pulled ;
basketball p"""'m lost fo r the third time in down five boards.
·-tt~-··

I

!

I :06 le ft in the quarter cut the lead to one at
42-41 ~. h
C
k dded "- thro
• .xep e n roo a
a m:e
w to
give the Spartans a 43-41 lead after 24 minutes ofpby.
.
·
•
Bush tied the game as he c onnected o ff

and Doug Dill each scoring two.
:
AIexand ergot 19 "B
ks
d 18 "uvm roo
uvm •
W arren. Thomas scored in double ·digits with ;

another offensive rebound jwt nine seconds
into the final period. Alexander was .able to
extend the lead back to four points at 47- 43
before Ryan Hannan and Fac kler scored back
to back by ups ~or Met·"' to n·e the score ~or
"
.,.
.
"
the last time with 6 :32 to play. Alter a three
ball by Brooks "-m the n·ght c omer St"de~

Williamson

•11 .

:

Me;""' connected on 20-of-49 ~hots :
.., •
including 4-&lt;&gt;f- 13 from long range. The ;
Marauders hit 9~f-13 free throws. Meig; ;

took a pass from Fackler and laid the ball in to
brm
· g the c ount to AIe xander 50 M etg;
· 49.
The Marauden woilld end the game on the
short eod of an 11-4 run as Brooks took over
down the stretch and Meig; committed sev-

don Ramsburg led Meig. with 15 points, ;
Jeremy Blackston and Carl Wolfe added II ;
each. Terry Holbert scored 18 for Alexander

uo

eral costly rumoven in the

•

.,

last six minutes.

Alexander Coach Dr. Frank Doudna
praised the play ofJason Warren and said lour
·
d
t th
d f the game to
semon steppe up a
e en o
seal the win . Dounda also praised the
Marauden by saving " Me;.,. hurt us with
.,_.
...their rebounding. Meig. and Eastern
the
two !&gt;trongest.offensive rebounding teams we

are

back games probably hurt us fatigue wise.

point shots. When Warren scored inside for

Williamson, Fackler and Bush all played good

.

an

held a 30- 21 rebounding edge with ;
Williamson pulling in eight rebounds; Bwh ;
~"bed
d F kl
· F kl
~--'t
5'~
seven an
ac er SIC. ac er """' '
out three of the five Marauder assists and :
recoruc:u
-~ - ~ three f th
Marauder """""·
-•--'- •'
o
e seven
Meig. committed IS rumoven.
AI
. exan·d er won the
g;ame 71 - 58. .,
..,.__
..... ·

Siden and Williamson all connecting on three

did Thomas. Brooks added a

u
"
np

led the Marauden with 20,!
Bush scored 10, and Fackler eight, Siden :
seven and liy Ault added four with Hannan ',

three pointer. For the Marauden the poinis
c ame 6:nm long range with Fackler, Travis

close, as

g;ame&lt; and the team pbyed well defensively.!
W.e n eed to
rove on the offie"•'" e end • n d 1,
·~·
- ·
improve our shooting."
•

A Williamson three from the top of the key
brought Meig. to within three points and a
Bush basket off an offensive rebound with

have faced this season. Williamson hurt us
with his s&lt;:oring and rebounding."
Coa h"' 1fc ·d fhi
· "I
1 d
c wo e 5al o steam, wasp ease
with the effort; I thought that playing bac k to

from in

.

BA

r

1

of the last nine second quarter points for
team as Alexander led at the break 30-24.

:0: the inside game as Warren and Brooks hit

r

i

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_1_94_·-----~

I

~ra:;.:.;.~ :~:~ ~aH'(\.,1.:,~~- ~~~~

r

from Page.B1

:Udge!AII":
clad Spartans incre.sed the lead to 19- 10.
av"!'r'1
Tra'nsmr....,: W ith Meig. trailing 2 1- 12 at the 5 :30 mark,
Rebul'" KJ•• 7••2••sen
throws, folCall· aSII-3 ~ ~
Buzz Fackler c anned two .:....
u:c:e
·
·
lowed by two Williamson charity tosses.
·AI
·
h
th
.
exander lost semor Zac Lustgarten at e
HoME
4:44 mark of the se&lt;:ond quarter as he went
•·~--·
..........,.""""''~
. d own hard under his own basket. Lustgarten

75s

points and six rebounds.Joe Debney added
13 points (II in the !eeond half), Cain Vandall, Randar Luts and Joe Martin all scored

teams then cooled off the rest o f the period.

I
th
12 0 - " "od .
c o se e gap to
-&lt;&gt; illu:r one pen •
ATS ., ••~
, Tyle r Thomas came out smoking for
FOR~
·1 '
·
·
. ll!exander m the second frame.The t&gt;-fuot- 1
For Sale or Trade. 36"x12 junior canned two field goals from in dose
112 ·House boot and trailer.
d th
ba ked
·d th -L- · lin .
740 an
en
c
OUISI e
e uu= pomt
e
~----all m
" the '=t
- 1 OS f b
·
Auro PAKrS &amp; . to nail a &lt;nL.c:ua
: o t e penAo•wiiiJFS
od . Bush scored the lone Meigs goal in the
early going of the quarter as the blac k and red

o.ooo

j"unior forwml

Alexander the Spartan lead was 41 - 35 with
4:04 showing on the third period c lock. The

'

&amp;M

Do

1895 Clay1.on 14x70 2 bed- 1 Bedroom House In Oak Tara Townhouse ApM· ••n PJom Droaa ••••
-..
WITH US!
rooms, 2 futl baths, central Hill. Aererenc11, Oepoalt, menta, Vary Spacious, 2 "Mort-Lee". Color-Aubergine
DOG SHEta a:.K
Moon Light Eticorts. Aften- we are expanding our circuair. underpenning 8K18 cov- Rental LHH. No Pets, Bedn::M)r111, 2 Floora, CA, 1 (light Smokey Lavender),·
non Ladles. Full Service latlon staff 1o better seNe
ered porch, 8x10 building. 1235. (740)288-340e
1/2 Bath. Fully Cerpeted, Paid $150- Wom once u a
·~~44ij:1~·0207
FOR S!.u;
WA~":~~NG
Male. Eaoorta~ Prompt Pro- our customers. We are look·
(304)675-7116
·
1 a.droom $2501 month AduH Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Bridesmaid drass, Size
!:!
M·F
Unconditional lifetime guar·
plus dtpoill Rtltrtncee tlo, Start S365/Mo. No Pets, 18120, sell tor $100. Shoes
fellional DIICt88t &amp; Conti- lng lor a person that has
L.ocll rtfetences fur·
dentlal. 6prn to 6a.m. high energy level, seH- mou1996 Clayton Mobile Home
•
Lease Plus Securtty Oeposlt to match- size 9 1fJ: , $20.
1988 S-10 Truck, low rider aniH.
nlshed. Established 1975.
. (740I368·l789.
valid and enjoys working
14x70 2br. 2ba. Ylnyf siding, Required, Stovo, Refrigera· RO&lt;julred, D&amp;yl: 740·448· (740, _.7553 or (7401446.
very sharp, red with black Call 24 Hr&gt;. (740) 446·
- - - - - - - - with people. Must have do- MLT, weekdays, No week· mHIIust call304-675·1957. vale. (740)985·3981
llhlngla rool, 2 decks, on .24 tor, AIC. 142 4th Ave., Gel· 3481 ; Evenings: 740·367· 3
Interior. Roll pan front &amp;
1-B00·28Hl576.
raer. Mag Wheels new lira. 0870.
Rogera Weltrproottng.
Why wall? Stert
perxtat;e kansportatloo. ba· :lsi&gt;::
Moving and Hauling: Clean . For Sale: New house- H·
llpollo. (740) 116 3687
0502, 74().416.0101 .
4c:yl.
Ssp.
30
miiH
to
the
Ohio singles tonlgl'lt, call I sic computer knowledge. Galllpolls.6H.
.
• Out Buildings, Basements, · nanclng available O% down•
.
1br. Hou&amp;l 5250/month. Twfn River Towel'l accept- 4 Nascar Tlcketa for the
galloo $21 oo. (304)773· --~--,---..,.
frH 1-800-766-2623 e1tt Thll II a full time salaried
Garages, Estates, Trash, 1600 sq ft. 2 112 baths, 3 For sale-.16K70, 3 bedroom, Retarencee and Depollt re- lng applications now for
VASOO, · Martinsville, VA.
5054
or leave message.
C&amp;C General Hori1e Malnt&lt;!1821 .
poattlon and ofttf'l all com· Mothers Dreamt
Etc. Odd Jobs. Call BR, all custom oak trim &amp; 2 bath, call 740-38S:.9621 qulred. No Pets. Ruttencut·
Unltl available
Aprll18. (740)256-1304
pany benefits . Including Stay Home
(740~6·7604
cabinets, gas fireplace. ask tor Cheryl.
tar Lane, Muon. (304)n3March 1 2002
1897 F-150, Extanded Cab. ~~,::~~~~~~
ANNouNcEMI!'Nl' hNtth Insurance, vacation, Be Your Own Boss!
la
kl h
&amp; OR 2 112
9169
1br. Hud Subsidized apt. tor Ab- doer Pro model, brand
ptr10nal da)'l, and 401K Eam up to ·
·
Top to Bottom Cleaning rge lc en
·
lAS SpeclaH .We'll match
nd
EOH new, $100. Apple 1T color
$11,000 080. (304)1175· dows. baths, mOblla home
' - - - - - - - · plan. we are part of a large $500-$8000/Mo
Service. Professional clean- car · garage on 1·5 acres. your tax retum up to $2,000. 3 bedroom home Minersville Blderlf~) 6~':-~;g
monitor for Macintosh,
4994
repair and more. For free
';·WDs~&amp;
eouma. to call Chet. 740·992·
A Sllopper'a ParadiH new company thai offens excel· PTIFT
lng at affordable priCits. $117,500· Porter/ Bidwell Call (740)448·3093 for de- area, river view, $450 per
$100. Toyota radio AMIFM
·
(1)
Choc.
lab
(f)
446
4514
740
6323
website merchandise 50- lent career advancement 1-800-810·0705
Residential, office, remodel· area . &lt; ) •
or tails.
month, referencea required, Very nice 2·3 bedroom cassette, $30. HP Jomada
,:.~~
1
(1)
Black
lab
(m)
80'% otfmanutacturer'a aug- opportunlllaa. For Interview www.CashNowAndForever. lng and construction clean (740)446-3248 after 5pm
depOIII required, no pete, apartment.' In town, large POA, 32 meg ram, color
,...._, ratall Will add new consideration send a cover com
up. Confldenllal. 992·2979 Panlally Remodoled horne . Umlted Or No Credll? Gov· 740·892.en7 after !!pm.
kitchen, LA. $500/mo. Ref· screen. like new. $300. M·
(1) Beagle (f)
~ ~arly Check 11 lett• telling us why you are
or 992-1391 .
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Futi :~~':~:dk ~na~~~
erences &amp; deposit required. F, (740)441 ·1971
1986
Ram, 0·50 4
(1) Yellow lab (m)
0
wi!HI
drive.
$400, 1,~-aiiiiitiiiiiiiiiii.iiiii_.l.
(1) Collie (m)
outl .ashopparS,aredlll. :::
Basemen1, Large Unatlach· ville, wv 304-7:38·3409.
(740)448·3844
Amazing
MOIII&gt;ollom
(1) German
com
to Paul Bort&lt;er, Circulation 1540 Easlem Ave. Gelllpoed 2 car garage. 127 Kin..
·
~
FOR
•
WANTED TO RENT
Brukll1roughll
(740)247·2981
Residential or commenMI
iO
on Or., $60,000. (740)44,· Must Hll· 14x70 mobile
.
New Publisher for the Ohio Lose 10 pounds- 200
Sheppard (m)
1986 F350, 4X4, 480, 4 wtrlng, new service or reMom tired of the trash on Director at Ohio Valley Pub- lis.
B~
0465
home, call 740-385·2~34 14x70, three bed1oom, etac- VaiiAV Publlsh!nn COmpany pounds easy, quick , Fast
(1) Dacshund Mix
1 1376 Patriot Ad Patriot ask for Elaine·
speed,
heavy
duty, pairs. Master Llcenled eltc·
' ake ~•r
voice heard · Gallipolis
llllhlng Co.,Ohlo45631
825 Third Ave., p art· 11 me Hoi pers r--..,
---~•
n......-~
1rc
1 h ea,1 $300 a monlh • seeks
-· fum'shed
··• apartment Dramatic Rnulls · 1DO%
TV? M
,~
vrn~.... ...,r.. u•
$3450.00
892·3394
or
742· trlclan. Ridenour Electrical,
(m)
Go to onemHIIonmoms.com
'
'
for Cleaning. Leave Name &amp;
OH 2 S1ory 3
2 tt2 Must sell- 1997, 16x56, $150 dtpoeil, no pete, to rent for 3·4 months. ~atural , Dr. Recommended~
3020
WV000306. 304-675-1788.,
(1) Rottwleler
on the Internet for more In'
Phone Number. cau CapINOncEI
Bath, .67 acre lot. Will Con- front kitchen, excellent con- (740)742·2714
Should have private bath- Ask about FREE Sample ' .
44
740
962
Sheppard
Mix
(m)
fo. Parlfclpatlonlafree.
~omlno~e'lzza ~~~~~~lain Slearner. (304)675· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· alder Land Contract. Down dillon. Call Karena, 740··
roomandbacloootoGalllp- &lt; ) 1-1
·
Shop onnne o
leasan leanor n ~ 4218
. lNG CO. recommends that Payment and References 385·9948
2 bediOOfn mobile home lor oils. Call Den Olckarson at Baby Bed with Mattress.
(1) Collie Mix (I)
www rnarytc.y convb•JMnct~r·U now hiring Full·Time 6 P~you do buslnell with people Required.
No
Pets. ·
rent, no pets, (740}992- {740)448-2342 (daya) .
$25 Firm. Toddler Car Seat,
PUd lor 111 Ga1l1a eo.,
vooi Mary Kay lndependeni ;;'.':'P~yfe&amp;d~r:;~,.C::
P';'~:roOpenem'fn"ry
you know, and NDT 1o ~nd (740)379·9887
New 14x70, 3 ~rl2blh. Only 5858
.,...
$20 Firm. (304)895-3739
Boa ty COnauttant Brldcttt
11ng
moneythroughthemalluntll
$975 down, .~89.84 per Jr:
.
t'ID~
~a
u _
•
ule. Apply In peraon 420 VI· Clinic Suppol1 Stafl Per• you have lnveSIIgated the 3 Bedr.Om on Route 2. month. Coli Nlk~. 740-365· 2 oooroom, for sale or rent,
FOR Rmr
BoauiHul Carolina Counlry,
8 plncet.
and Streel. Pl. Pl.
eon: Ru~ Oe_velopmental offering,
•
(304)675"·5332
7671.
quiet community, nk:e clean - • RuHied Curtains. 1 PR·
Red Long·Halred Female
Clinic seeking an Individual
homo, (740)892·2167
200"xaa• wllh Valance· 1
Chihuahua,
2yrs old. $175.
GivEAWAY
Full nm~ ~N, 7~·3PTiand for a pan·tlma/tomporary
A
bad
Electric 14x80 1 Mobile Home Lot, Takes12· PR· 100.x86 • Light Ecru
1 3 Bedroom, 2 Both, Set up Ono Only
2Smat
Has papers, 1oo1u1 like small
L._ _ _ _ _ __ , 3p-P 11pR
ing'aSndhl" ~fn •me pooHion to assist with the garberCholtyp(7:) 256•~ 95 n on Privale Property. Take Uoed dOut;ewlde.
roomT1,: P N • 501•• 12· 16 Wldea, $125/ mo wllh Rose Rufft.es and n ..
red lox. (304)n3-9181
•
L N, otat
"• or 100 coordlnatlonofcllnlcsand In rown
·
·
over psyments. (740)448· 80/58x28128,. 3 badloom. 2
ra~r a.. 52 Plus depoelt, Good Rotor· backs 5250
5125 f
bath, gas hea~ can1rel ol•.
$350/Ront. 314 mila ""'"· (740)4-48-0175
all •
new,
or
5 Mixed Beautiful Puppies bad nursing htclllty. Excal· providing suppon to faml· Sian You r Business To· 3583.
To good homes- 2 French
to GIVeaway. call (740)441· len1 opponunlly lor chal· lloo. Rooponolbllltloo In· day... Prima Shopping Con· 3br 1ba C Ill I Cou ~ fireplace with gao logs. mer Ho!IPIII. (304)1175W.
- ·- - - - - - Bulldogs;
1 1f2 yr. old fe1859 or (740)448-8280
lenglng ond rewarding IX· elude: AloiSI with collection II&lt; Space Avallat;e At Af·
.
. a n n
n., 1987 model,
ANJD)
male Boxer; Golden Chow
--..,.--'-- -..,..,-·..,...- perience. Sign on bonus, of records, data entry, clinic IOfdable Rate Spring Valley 10mln
to .
Point Price for Immediate sale
Beautiful River VIew Ideal
1Q JbNr
Full Size Mattress and BoK
miK; 6 mo. old male black
F,.. kl11ent to good Indoor great stan rale, oxcallonl coordination. and case Plaza Call 74o.446.CJlOl . PleasanVGelllpolls. Living Cole"o Mobile Homes
F . 1 Or 2 People Reteren- ~
Sprlnga. $95. Quilting
lab; 8 wk. old Bassett
home 992 1179
regulatory compliance hlato- management of services for
'
Room w/FP, Lg. Upstairs us 50 East Athens Oh
or:
F
·
Frames, $25. Fiberglass
Hoond pup; please call 740.
•
ry, lntereatec:l candidates lamlllas. Du•llllcallona:
~
Bedroom &amp; Bafcony over· 740-592·1972
'
:'·r:fe~lrP!':: ;~~: Looking for 3~ bedroom Truck Topper, 91 " long K
667-9712 or 740·992·3354.
should apply to: Rook- Appllcanl must have comS
looking Pond. Detached ga•
house to rent, P er country 60" wide, $50. (740)256· .
AUCilONAND
springs Rehabllltal&amp;on Cen- puter skills and experience
ERVICIS
ra~ 1 112 acres M/l ..Mov- we have approxlmatetv 20 0181 .
setting, need to move In by 1629
1 u nl ... tl'l'lll...,
F'LEA MARKET
ter, 36759 Rocksprings Ad, workln with . famtlles 01
lng Must Sell. $63,900 OBO used homes f!)r under
Mar. 1st. 740·5~
,\ I I\ I -. 101 1-..
"--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia...r Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Kyla young gchlld,.., with special LOANS LOANS LOAN8 (304)578·2849
·
$2,000, call 1·600-837·3236 Nice Clean, 3 BR Mobile
Grubbs Plano· Tuning &amp; :
Rick Pea_, Auclloo Com· Lee, Director of Staft Dovel· n - Slllry: Commensu· lor ~ .or bed'credit, call 4 112 year old cape cod In for Into.
.
rr:')~~~ ~e Country,
~~:\~·c:~~m~~~e~
pany, full time auctioneer, opment.
740·992-fJ606. rate wllh
experience. ~~·~I free1-868-~84-5756
Mason near river and WalllousEHorn 1740-446-4525
.
complete auction tervlce. Equal Opportunity Employer PIMM IUbmlt I IIIler of ••• No up front fees
mart. Large porch, renced
BI!SINE$
,...~
L.lceneed ffl8 Ohio &amp; Wes1 Encouraging Worl&lt;place 01· lnllraot lnd raoumt IO:
Fast raiallle serv~e
ard (304)773-5452 .
Bun.mNGs
AI'AKriiiFMs
JET
' VIrginia, 304 ~n 3 • 5785 Or verall)'.
John D. Constanzo, Super· ...Bankruptcies welcome
Y •
•
AND
FOR RtNr
AE.RATION MOTORS
450 C John Deere Dozer. 8
304-n:l-5447.
Intendant, Alher1s Meigs Ed·
4·Sale lg. Ranch Style
~
Appllancea: Recondltlooed Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In .
Way Btade, . E)lcellent COn·
Gallipolis located homo ucatlonal Service Center, 80CITUARLNEDECDOURITYWN ~a'? Horne, 4br.. 3ba., wl1h For l.aaoe: 3000 to 5000 sq 1 · and 2 bedroom apan- wallhers, Dryera, Ranges, Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
diUon. (740)379·2427
8
WANnD
health agency - n g FT 507 R~hland , Avenue,
, _ sc,..ned In petlo porch, 2 ft oftlce on Retell Speco. mento ft.mlllhed and unfur· Refngrators. Up To go Days 80().537·9528.
offk:e assloiSnt typing akllls Sullo 108, Athans, Ohio No Fee Unless We Wlnl car garage. $78.000. 4 352 2nd Ave. Modem ROSI· nlshod IOCUrity deposit ,.. Guaranteed! .we Sail New - - - - - - - Allee Chambers B. Wide
,
required Accepting appllca 45701 . Appllcatjon 1-888·582-3345
blocks from High School rooms, .Walk· In Vaull. COn
Ired•
_
·
740-892 Maytag Appii!U1Cn French
Front
End. Rebuilt motor.
Gal. Ohio. Good view of Remodel for Po"bla Ant~ qu
· no .--.
• City M y111 740-44a.n95 Kenmora side by side refnlt ·
·
· Uno: February 8, 2002.
Cultivators,
Brushhog.
Alloolute Top ~lar: U.S. 11 ""!ntorar~N~j
Equal Clpponunlly Employ.
town. (304)727·3318
que S1one, Reslat.Want, Pro- 2218 ·
a g.
. eratornreezer, aPilrOK. 15$1600.
Also P~k·up Disc.
Pomeroy Eagles
SIIver, Gold Coins, Proof- pa 1
' er/Provlder
fesslonal Offices Many
Bod Sprl
$ 00 f 1 20 yl'li. okt, good condition
(740)388-6183
1811,
Olamonds, Gold Gall polls
or
phone
.
4-Sale lg. Ranch Style Poaalbilities. Se8 Greg 1 Bet:lrooty'l, All UllliUes,
ngs, 5.
or an- $225. 992-1179
Aerie 2171 Election for
Ringo.
U.S. Currency,· (740)441-1393.
Home. 41lr.. 3ba., with Smith al Smith Buick Pon- $375
plus
deposll. gle bed. 2P235 15 Inch ~7::"-:::.::=-'7===Ford 600 trac101' one owner,
. MTS Coin Shop 151 Sac·
H 1 Styllols
Full time Waitress Needed
screened In pe11o porch, 2
.._
(740) 446 (740)245-5100
tires, $30. Gun Burner for MOilLE HOME OWNERS
real nice $3800 ..
-~··A·
G lllpol
' 1 7 .. ""
ar
A
p
·
$78 000 4
or ~~""'ne
•
Furnace Compiete $50 lntartherm &amp; Coleman gas ·.
office of Vice President on
VIP I
venue, a
1, oou- Fiesta Salons
a leading PP1'I 1n arson. Holiday
car garage.
• ·
2 Bedroom Apt St0'18 and (740)367 n29
'
· oil &amp; lectric f
1'
Troy Bill tiller horse elec.
___2_842_.- - - - - provkter of hair' and Ienning Inn- Gallipolis.
All rNI Hille~ blocks from High School
Refrigerator. ~t. $250.
•
cludln e hi efflc~;:cesh nstart, good cond. $600. 304·
February 4th at 7:30
aarvlcss Is celebrating Irs
In lhla nowopopor 1'
Gal. Ohio. Good view·· of
Rent $275 (740)44 Hlll72 For Sole· R~ondltloned
g
Y 081
875·3624
Wanted: Old Pinball Ma· Grand ci,.nlng early Febru· The GaiUa County Soil and
to tho Fodorol
town. (304)727·3318
or (74o)44i 7620.
washerS, dryers and relng· pump ayolems. Wo corry a ,
chlnea, Juke Boxea a.nd aryl If you are I highly crea- Water COnaervation District F•lr Housing Act of 1118
eratora Thompsons Applt· complete line of Mobile
John Deere 13' Grain Drill,
$550. (740)643-2265
Other Coin Operated EIIUI!r · tlvt olyMIIIooklng for a fraah Ia see~ng an Administrative whld! ""'kH h Ulegel to
Root Log Homoo. Cabins 55 acres of farmland 112 In BI!AUnFUL
APART· ance. 34o7 Jackson Ave· =Nr~s&amp; H"ii~:'~·~
menl. Huntington. (304)429- start, we have positions Asalltant. This pooitlon Is
odvortiH •ony
to customs. Free Inform&amp;· .•~land other 112 in~·· MEN111 AT BUDGET PR~ nue, (304)875-7388.
CDDLINQ 1740)446•.9416
3333
available for management 40 houra per week with ex- p,...r.nce, llmlbdion or tlon. 740-558-2393
"I,IU\o!
•
_...
CES AT JACKSON El· .,:.:::..::..:..::.:c.:...c:.cc...-::and full time and part Ume cellant benefits. App1Hla11o,.t dlocnmlnSIIon OOHd on
lure, gas well. electric, wa· TATES, 52 Wo81WOod Drive Good Used AppUanceo, Re· or 1-IIIJ0.872-1967
11 0 Help W111111d
I \l l' l in \ 11 \ I
Styllstst we offer a $300 resume will be accepted I'I!C., calor, rellglan, HI
Remodeled 3 bedroom, In ter available, on Vance from $297 to $383. Walk to conditioned and Guaran- www.orvb.comlbennett
-.1 It\ II I "'&gt;
hiring bonus, hourly wagei through 'February 8, 2002. f8mlll81ttatu• or Mllontli Middleport, call Tom Ander· Road, Pomeroy, Ohio: shop &amp; movies . .Call 740· teed. Washers, Dryers, NEW AND USED STEEL
1n aam, Navtr wet, 900 lb.
iriJ~-----~ up to 50% commllalon, Interested applicants can arigln, or •nr Intention to son altar 5pm, (740)992· ~OO.OO an acre, 992 446·2668. Equal Housing Ranges, and Refrigerators, Steel Beams Pipe Rebar ·
Boles, $18.00 per bale. Ap116
401 (K) , profit sharing, va- obtain a copy of the \lacanMilke any such
~.
OpportunHy.
Some start at $95. SKaggs For Concrote.' Angle, Chan· ·
prox . 80 Bales Lett.
•
JIEuloWANim
cation, health, vl8ion, dental cy Announcement and .Job ~nc., llmlbltlon ar
MOBII..E HOMFS 180 Acres HenderSon on Christy's Family Lt~lng Appllanc~s, 76 VIne St ., nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
(740)245-9480
" - - - - - - - · and Ute Ins., free advanced Description by calling
dlacrtmlnltlon."
SALE
New Four Lane at lntersec- 33140 New uma Ad Rut~ {140)446·7~
For Drains , Driveways &amp;
education, and dlsqouniSI (740)448-6173 or stopping
FOR
lion wlth .clty water. $80.000 land Ohio 740-742~7403 Hide-a-bed for sale bumt · .Walkways. L&amp;L ·Scrap Met·
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
-OUR TO·. sr•RT
Call Myrna 0 800·825· by 111e olfJCe at 111 Ja~koon Tl1lo nowapopor "!!ll nol
(304)937·25 18 (304)545· Apartment, ·home and trallo; orange 595 (740)m· 1552 alo Open Monday, Tuesday,
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery
/H
I'\
03tl3x 3010 to; schedule an Pike, Su•le 1569, Gall•polis,
knowingly acqept
12K50 New Kitchen, Bath, 6491
rentals. Commercial 11ore- aner s.)m '
Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8am&amp; Volume Discount Availa(uponcompletlonoftralnlng Interview!
OH 45631 .
ec:tvertiMmenttforreel
and Carpet, CIA, 16x8
.
trontt IYIUable tor lease
·
4:30pm. Closed ThurSday
ble.
Heritage·
Farm.
=~~~;?a New JOB or Help wanted caring lor the
EOE
•tat.whk:hlaln
Porch. $4,000. (740)441· lot for Sale: Cleared, 81&gt;" Vacanci8lnow.
· Hldebed, $125. Loveseat, Saturday
&amp;
Sunday:
(304)675-5724.
. • .
·
URGENT' v
NEEDED
violation of t11e law. our
9369
prcx. 2 112 acras, gravel Rd,
$100.
Dresser,
$75. (740)446-7300
L1
•
•
Wa1er &amp; Electric Avallaltle, Clean 2t&gt;r. .WID H kup. (740)446·9742
;:-7;--:;--:'-·-::----:-Then don I m•as this oppor· elderly, Darst Group Home,
lf {\\'1'111{ 1\11 1"
lunltylll
now poylng minimum wage, plasma donors, eam $50 to
,.....,..,. hofoby
14x80· olaploldln
2xe .Portor ·area. $16,500. Call Refersnca aold
No
.
PooV Pond Pump. $75
CALL: 1-88H7WOB8
newSp
,
sh~: 7~~·3pm. ~am· ~ par w~k ~r 112$: 3 ~:=::'1!, 1 n walls 14, 70 sla~sldlng (740)446-4514 or (740)448- Pels (304)1175-5162 · . Late Model Whlripool Wallh· ' 080, leak needs repair 11
8
Auros
m,
P ':(,.~~5o23 pm- 11
ra·
thltnewtpt~perawe
2x8 :;,ails 3br. 2ba., Late 3~after5pm.
')I ·
•
er/ Dryer, $150 tor
GE ualngforPoo1Brand: Amerf2 51 •
FORS!.u:
100 WORKERS NEEDED 7am, ce 11 7
·
ec.
l!rellablo on •n equal
model double wldes 3br.
Garage Apt. on Roullh . St. Wallhar, $75. Almond Whln· · can Producla. (740)843·
Asaemble crafte, wood
VACANCY: Health Occupa·
opportunll)' 111111•.
2ba free delivery &amp; setup. In
REAL HsfATE
1br., kitchen, living room, pool Self Defrosting Ref rig· 1025
tions Coordinator. Quallflca·
house financing to qualified
WANI'FD
.--1furnished, real nice quiet erator, $75. Tappari Dryer. ::"'.:...,._ __ _ __
llama. Material provided. Help Wanted
1987 Pontiac Bonneville
To $480+ wk.
Security Guards- Tempora· tiona: BSN and MSN rebuyers. (806)474-4391 or
street $275. per month + S60. Call alter 6pm. R•ld81'1tl•l Home OWnert
$800. OBO. Runs Great.
FIHI1.;;aJ~~2~ Hr. ry -eecurity guards for up to qulred. lnstructQr expert·
(606)4747568 after 5
Wanted to rent· Christian ~l~es + Oepq~h. (304)n3- (740)446-9066
.
~:~~n'!:':!'slcl=d~/~
(304)875-8986
-.._.-...,..--:-'--- 4 months. Must be abla to ence preferred. Contact
980
Hll~
Nl
Condl
couple
Jookif!Q
for
se
to
Me&lt;f'•al
Shower
Chair,
$40.
and
electric
gas
fuma·
1..
1988 Slab 900 Halchllack.
2 L.PN's 0 ay Shift• No workI anykend
llhl""Mlncludln
H~
1 lion,
""rest,Gas caFurnace,- rent or buy .on land con1rae t. Graclous living. 1 and 2 2 year
~ old Queen Mattress, ces. HI Efficlw:y Heat
I ha g Superintendent's
Gallla- Jackson- Office,
VInton rlO
2 BR,
4 cyt.. automatic, ~LW~roof,
Weekandl, Appty In Person .mos wee
s. us
ve
FOR SALE
Central . AC 1 Owner No ~Ids or peta. Non amok· bedroom apartments at VM· $100. 36 Inch Indoor exer- Pumps, featuring·lappans
152,000 miiH. Runo Well.
al Medical Plaza, 938 State clean pollee record, good JVSD, PO Box 157, Rio
s7500 (?40)256 •1914 ' ers, Call Jim, (740)992· lage Manor and Rivarsl~ else rrampoline. (740)446· Free Incredible warranty
$1000 OBO. (7401448-8813
Route 160.
work tlletory, reliable trans- Grande,
OH
45674.
·
3187.
Apartmenta In Middleport. 1822. Ca.ll Early or Ulte.
package.
1 Acre, river front, Brick/ vi· 1987 Clay1on, 14x80. 1 1/2
_.;..;_:......;..:.._ _ _ _ _ ponatlon. 8·10 years driving (740)245·5334. EEO.
From $278-1348. Call 740BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;
1989 Chevrolet K1500,
Anentlonl
experience wl1h good record
nyl, 3 BR. 2 Balh, 2 Flfepla· Bath, Gas Heat, CIA, COli
992·5064. Equal Housing Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clarl&lt; COOLING (740)446-8416
4WD, 4.3 Efllline, 4 opeod,
Earn 2nd. Income without (need 2), one for guard
ces , Hardwood floors, Ap- Mollohan c8rpet, (740)446OpportunltiJta.
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. or 1-I00-8n-5917.
.
138,000 mnn. $3500.
2nd Job up to
house doel not require asl 141
B..prox 2 ·000 sq ft. Full Bose· 7444 or (740)367·7187
•-- (740)446·7444 1-877-830· www.orvb.com/bonnett
(740)446.Q425 lftemoon.
160
000
740
446
$25.-$76./hr. Pt..ft.
stringent driving record '
~
ment, S · · &lt; ) •
~
Modem 1 Bedroom ""tJCJrt· 9182. Free Estimates, Easy -'::7:':::'7:".;:;c;:-=-=:::::.::..
1-60Q.21fl-7543
home phono and mull have
0536.
1990 FleeiWood 2 bedroom
FORRmr
mont. (740)446.Q3go
financing, go ctay1 same as
SALEISALEI SALEI
1vee Dodge oynuty a.a
Englnt. Auto, tranemlallon,
www.Money·tifeamo.com t;ack 11101100 safety llhoes .. Gllllpollo CarHr conho ":~"':!' 11. C2he 2ry1Su0npo7l4n018•
• N • Spa lo
BR 1 cas h. VIsa/ Msaler Card. Gas Cook stove. Refngera·
2
00 .
new ttm, new ltrutt, all ftu·
- -- - - - - - Pay starta at $6.50 per scareers-l-e•o
Hom-e~)
816
Main
Street,
Pt.
Pl.
"ed"':,.m12•·th
x
•
.
ewer
c
us,
'
Drive·
alittle"
save
alot.
tor,
fire
place,
wall
heater,
3 u •uu ua 14 70 1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Bath, Attached Garage ,
hou 32-o40 hou
k
·v...,.,. 1'
wringer washer. Mlscellaneld chlngoo, new fiftefl, .car
AVONI All Aroa1L To B"lc: can\4Q.88 9 •28~t:;:!
all Todayl740·448-4367, Completely Refurl&gt;lhed. ' 2 must aell-oall Mike o 740- Homee From Sliiii/Mo., 4,_ $4001 month. Deposit/· Ret·
oul merettandlsa new and
rune roal good. 11 ,ooo.
Sell. Shlrt&amp;y Spearo,
F ld
fo Y"
1·80Q.~14-0452.
&amp;lory, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed· 365' 2434.
Down, 30 Years at U% erence Rsqulred. (740)448·
ANTIQUES
usad..Fabruary 1 and 2, 4
8
4
OBO or trade for 11111. open
875-~1~4211=.- - -- -"
r ay am· pm or apR~•90.05-1274B.
rooms. Large Kllcnen,
·
APR. For Llslln-. 80().319• 28C1
. and 5. 9:00am to 5:00pm
car lrallor. (304)773·5084 or
.,.
polntmont.
Large Ullllly Room. LRI DR! 189!116K80 3br/2ba. Mobile
Boaullclan, FT &amp; PT Holp Ho
Fomlly Am New Carpet Home many ell!ral 2 cor 3323 Ext. 1709.
Newly Remodeled, 2 Bed·
·
dally. 553 Jock110!1 PilOt,
I88Yim-.
Noeded. Peld Vacation/ paM"::,~~..",~ry =~:
M!!a:UANI!OIJS
throughout.· F/A &amp; AJC, Garago.on aero lot.ln Gal·
room Apt., Slovtl Rttngero· Buy or 1811 · Riverine Anll· GaHipollo, OH (740)446·
1124
11190 Pol11100 Bunblrd, 4 oyl.
HoulonrlyFWago CVoE.UCorrwni1- habilitation ~-"""1er 11ngo 'ng ·
· $79,900. (740)446·8585 or llpoll1 Forry (304)875-7837 3 BR, 1 Both, Grun tor. Ulllhlll Paid, $400/ quoo,
East Main on .:c8308
=·c.:B::uc.:
lld':-lng::-=O.:,utc.:Bo=ok;;.._
·
Aulomatlo,
1750 OBO.
I
rH
nouro
-·
llookl
4-48-220S (7 40)448
Scl1oot. UOO plus U1111tf... monlh. 46 Ollvl Sl. SA 124 E. Pomoroy. 740·
(740)441·t013
(740j446•7287
' for a motlveltd oupoMoor R-11ood Wedding Chip- ~40)
or
. •
(740)246-9020
(740)446·384e
• 882·2jl26. Ruu Moor1, Treadmill, $85. Roll· away
lor our laundry and hou...
Huntington Wool VIrgin· 883.
owner.
. .
l&gt;ed. 115, Bar Stool, 110.
0 1 1850 do
11181 Oldt N Regonoy, All
NUIIIINQ IUIIIIMIOM kllplng drJ::artmonl . Tho
SUic to l01"e:
·
Wedn Y por monthwn
and
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boor, AJC, 17.000 mlloo,
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For Flont or ulo, email and Clovemmont ~oan1 for rooml, 2 Sllho. NIOa ond Now Taklna illl!lllcatlcno2t14
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low:!;• Tra1h , lunkbodl. fled Tubul1r for oolo . Almoot Now.
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7
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led ,·ts •- - ~our games by dropp;"g
· an ,..,..
rm "
u•
21 decisio n to Ohio Dominican on Satu..l-. :

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HOW IQ WRITE 8!i AQ.

The Dally SentiMI • Page 83

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

JV

and Jake Hale scored 13.
Meig; will travel to River Valley to face the ·
R.aiden on Tuesday.
II Rock.Sprtngo
Alennctor e1, Motoo 53
Alexander 12 18 13 18 - 81
Meigs
8 16 17 12 - 53
MEIGS - Travis Sidera 3 o-o 7; Matt Williamson 7 4-6 ·
20; Ty Aun 2 0.0 4; Doug 01111 ().() 2; Buzz Fackler 2 :J. ·
4 8; Ryan Hannan 1 0-Q 2; lach Bush 4 2·3 10. TOTALS: .
20 9·13 53.
•
ALEXANDER- Mike Hawk 1 ().() 2; L. C. Gnll&gt;y 0 0.1
0; Justln Brooks 6 S-6 19; lach Luslga'!en DD·OO; Ryan •
Lawson 0 0.0 O; Shawn Be111 .0.0 2; Andy Dounda 0 ().()
o: Tylor Thoma• 5 ().() 11 : Stephen Crook 3 H 9: Kirk ,
Crow 0 0-0 0; Jaaon warren 7 4·518. TOTALS: 23 12-16

.

~-

Three-point goals- Meigs 4 {Williamson 2, Siders, Fack· ,
fer), Alexander 3( Brooks 2 Thomas 1)

---------------------------------------------Eagles never really established ·.
in attempt to slow down the
ample time to come up with the
tempo of the game.
eight points by which they
their offensive game, nor any sort :
trailed.
Lyons
foul
shots
tied
the
Following the time-out, the
of post g;ame to combat the low- :
Panthen put heavy pressure on
game at 14-all, with the momenscoring Panthen.Without points, •
tum in favor of Chesapeake.
the Eagle shooten of Karr and
games aren't won, and thus the .,.
Brad Brannon was sent to the
Easte rn quickly jumped ahead Lyons. Their g;ame plan of slowfate of the Eagles as they hung ,
charity stripe with 2:15 left to
of the Panthers, as Garrett Karr ing down the tempo was relative
their heads in a 47-39(05.1 .
to the flowing of molasses on a play in the second frame, and by
once again became the thorn in
"This game has definitely '
cold February day. The Eagles his penect two for two e ffort, the
the Panthen' side. Karr could not
shown w what we need to work '
Eagles were able to retake the
be stopped in the first minutes of p1"9Ceeded to go eight scoreless
on when the tournament role&lt; •
minutes; from 2 :15 in the first to
lead 17- 18. Lyons became the
the game. He nailed two threearound. When we get behind, or ,
next victin1 to be hammered by a
2 :30 in the sec ond quarter, the
point goals, and was fouled on a
get a little bit anxious w e shoot
Panther, but was able to retain his
third which he c onverte d into ball did not fall between the irons
tbree's. We shot more three's than .
composure and make the lay- in.
on the Eagle end. Chris Lyons
three additional points. Karr taltwo's tonight, and that is not our :
On the ensuing foul shot, Lyons
finally broke the ice that had so
lied nine of the II Eagle firit
offense. We do not rely that heav- .
thickly formed over the Eagle
put the Eagles up 22- 20 with less
quarter points . After the nineily on the three point shot," said •
than a minute remaining and
point nm by Karr, and a field goal hoop by hitting 2 - for- 2 from the
Coach Caldwell.
foul line. The Eagles' cold streak
gave the Eagles a 22-20 half-time
by Cody Dill , the Panthers
"We were a little worried
lead.
gave the Panthen more than
bu111ed a time-out trailing 11 - 3
about how tired we would be :
In following the Eagle&lt; this
coming into tonight's game. Last .
season, one would think that they
night, our. game with Rockfield ;
Would come out in the second
went down to the wire and ·
half and put the game away like
ended up being a one point '
they have so many times this season. Much to the amaze ment of game, and Eastern h ai a better ,
all, that second half surge didn't club than Rockfield. Neither
te am could score tonight. we
come at all. It was more like a
rebounded and played g&lt;iod
second half let-down, with the
defense, that was the key to our ·
Eagles dragging their feet, and
11
Melling Dele:
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
FOR
IMPROVING
win,
said coach Norm Persin ofmissing shots off the front of the
STATE OF OHIO
01/1512002
SECTION GAL-7·
Chesapeake .
·
rim. For not playing since TuesDEPARTMENT OF
VARIOUS,
STATE
Aaron
Gqssen
proved
to
be
·
day, the Eagles looked very worn
TRANSPORTATION
Sealed propoaolo AOUTE
7
AND
will be accepled from VARIOUS IN GALLIA,
out before the second half ever the Panther with the loudest : ·
all
pre-quallllad HOCKING, MEIGS,
Columbul, Ohio.
growl as he tallied seven first- :
started.
Olllce ol Conlracto
blddero 11 the Olllce MONROE, MORGAN,
quarter
points and rounded off 1
Brad
Brannon
connected
on
ol Conlracta ol lha NOBLE, VINTON ANO
Legal Copy Numbor: Ohio Department ol WASHINGTON
the
evening
with eight points in :
2-of- 3 foul shots :30 in to the
Trenoporllflon,
COUNTIES, OHIO, IN second half to put the Eagles up
0200S9
the fourth quarter to finish with ,
Columbus, Ohio, until ACCORDANCE WITH
by
four.
Aaron
Gossett
of
Chesa21
pomts.
·
·
,
AND
UNIT PRICE
10:00 a.m., Thuraday, PLANS
CONTRACT
February 21, 2002, SPECIFICATIONS BY peake quic kly e rased the fourGarrett Karr and Brad Bran- :
HERBICIDAL
point Eagle lead, and tied the
non paved the way for the Eagles, ·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - SPAAYING.
Karr netted 12 points, all from .
"'The dolo eel lor game with two quick buckets " t
110 Help Wanted
24all.
Garrett
Karr
spe
nt
his
last
complellan al lhla
three-point goals e xcept three ;
- - - - - - - - . work .shall be aa let droplet of ene r.gy dra ining a
fo ul shots, and Brad Brannon
forth In lha bidding
three- pointer, the reby g iving
netted 10 p o ints, including one
propotol." Plana .and
Easte
rn the last lead they would
Speclllcatlono ore on
three point goal, and five from :
lila In lhe Department have on the night, and rounding
the foul line.
ol Tranoportellon.
off.Kan's scoring for the e ve ning
The Eagle reserve fell to the
with
12
points.
Three
minutes
GORDON PROCTOR
same fate as the varsity in a 24-41
later, the Eagles were trailing 30DIRECTOR OF
bout. Derek Baum was the .
TRANSPORTATION
27 when a dismal foul atier a shot
Eagles' main man as he tallied 12 .
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Relhal1llll:allonl
sent Rucker to the line for a
points. Daniel Thompson led the .
Cenler.ls a dynamic Long lerm care
(1) 21, 2002
chance to eomplete a three- point
2002
4
Panthen with ten.
t
facility that provides Intermediate and
~~ •
play. By making the shot, Rucker
Eastern
will
travel
to
Federal
skilled care needs to residents. Come join - - - - - - sent the Panthen up by four, their
our. health care O'llanlmllon where we
Hocking on Friday, February 8 to
HelpWent.d
largest lead of the game. A 1-forprovide excellence .In care.
b attle the Lancen. The foll&lt;&gt;Wiilg
2 effort from the line gave the
VeleraDI Memorial Panthen a 32- 27 lead at the end evening they will return home to
host the Meig. Mmuden.
SkWed Nunlna
of the third q~er.
Center
The fourth quarter looked
II Chtolpoako
hu immO.IIate
bleak fur the Eagles, as they
Chi-"- 41, - m a t
openlna• for lhe
Eoltern 11 7 5
12 .- 311
scored a total five points in the
'P11kl
12
8
12
47
. rollowlna:
third quarter, and Chesapeake i!AITIIIN- Garrol1 Ka" 3153-1 12, CMI
•
IBENEii"fTS INCLUDE:
was gelling difficult to stop. East- Lyonl 22·3 7, Alox Slrrj&gt;IIOO 1 0.0 2, Brad '
Brannon 2 H 10, !!ram Buckltf1 2-8 5,
• $1,000.00 SIGN·ON BONUS
ern continued to pby physical Qody ~11120.0 4. TOTALI: 11 t2,1UI.
Skilled
Nur~lna
• FOR LICENSED NURSES
and 1ent numerous Pmthen to CHIIAPIAU- Adam Skltne 0 1-21 ,
Center- Pull dme,
• FLEX SCHEDULING
the foul line. The fuurth quarter Aaron Clooootl 111 ·1 • 21 , Nlok Karle 1 0·
mldnlpt lhlft
(INCLUDING U HR. SHIFI'S)
o a, Lukl Broch 1-2 1, llrld Fullc!&gt; 38·
wu scorelw for both teams unt:il 8 12, Tommy Hill f 1·2 3, MIK fiUOI&lt;O&lt; 2 3·
• SHIFT Dll1FERENTIAL
New Salary Scalel J
7. TDTALI: 12 113-34 47.
:
• WEEKEND POSITIONS
!f lnterelted, p l - the 5:20 mark when Rucker hit eThrao-polnl
Goals - 111111m 8 (Karr 3.
2-fur-2,lengthening
their
lead
to
• TRAINING PROGRAM
Brannon, lyono)
conlact
FOR NEW GRADUATES
fleboundl- Choeapoak131 (FUlton 1),
seven.
Human Reaourcee
Eaotlm t e (lluokloy e)
•HEALTH INSURANCE
Eastern's de&amp;pentiou thmughIt
111111 - Chosapooko 8(Goaoel1 2,
SINGLE/FAMILY PLAN
out the final five minutea of the Thooltlr 1), Ealllm 3(Bueklly 3)
'740-992·2104, ball
. f111111C gave them 10 more -11 - CNMpoakl 3(Fu110n 1),1111·
Apply, In penon or call
Monday throuah
om 8 (Karr 3)
points, but sent Chesapeake to Tumovtrl - Chellptakt ,3,EIIttm
Anaela Cleland • DON at (304) 675·5236.
friday, 9 am • 4 pm
the foul line tao f)lliiY timcs .The
1&amp;.

Eastem
flomPageB1

.

.

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

RNILPN·

o

.

'·

�'

llonday,Feb.4,2002

~~Feb.4,2002

._,_1111;:;..84
__
• The
__o.;.;..lly.;...;;S.;.•ntl...;;.ne.;_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;...;.Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

Bobcats rout Thundering Herd
Hill's Self
Storage

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Racine, Ohio

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740 Ill 2217

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backup. When Bledsoe w~s hurt Sept. 23
74D-992·7599
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(740) 949-1521
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for seven games -_Brady came on in
relief and sparked New England's turnfromPageB1
L.\1\1:\I'S
around.
l 0'\' II{( l 110'\
did was he didn't make any mistakes."
"At that. point, we were 0-2. We
SwiM!Idqg lp:
Brady completed 16 of 27 passes for weren't thinking of the Super Bhwl. We All Makes Tractor &amp;
Roonng, Decks
145 yards and led the Patriots on a 53- were trying to win some games,"
Equipment Parts
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yard drive to the Rams 30 to set up Belichick said. "We've come a long way
Drywall, and
Fac1ory Authorized
Additions
Adam Vinatieri's game-winning 48-yard since that point."
Case-lH Parts
field goal with no time left. But mostly
The Patriots, who went 5-11 in 2000,
Dealers
what Drew Bledsoe's former backul' did were 5-4 when Bledsoe was ready to
J()()() St. Rt. 7 South
was steer the offense with a steady hand return. Belichick made a halfhearted Coolville, OH 45723
and convert the opportunities handed attempt at a quarterback competition,
740-667-0363 Owner: '1\rry Lomm
him by the defense and special teams.
but after a loss - to the Rams - on
(740) 992-0739
"You can't say eriough about that kid. Nov. 18, he decided he couldn't do that
He has a tremendous amount of confi- and adequately prepare for the week's
dence. He has led this team:· said David opponent.
Patten, who caught Brady's 8-yard
The job was Brady's for the rest of the
touchdown pass to make it 14-3 with 36 season, but Bledsoe never let his demoTree Service
seconds left in the first half.
tiot1 become a distraction. The three• Top • Removal • Trim
" Maybe he doesn't have the most time Pro Bowl selection helped his
• Stump Grinding
impressive statistics, but it doesn't mat- understudy in meetings, at practice and ,
• Bucket Trllck
ter. The kid knows how to win. He on the sidelines, and was there coitgratknows how to motivate othe.~ players."
ulating Brady after New England beat
Although Brady completed only one the Rams.
,
NFL pass coming into the seasotJ, he is
"He's been one · of my 'biggest supno stranger to big crowds, having played porters:· Brady said. "He sets an examTFN
in front of 100,000-plus fans in college pie for all of us, and I got a tremendous
at Michigan. Perhaps that's why he was- amount of confidence from him. He's a
n't fazed by either the Super Bowl huge part of the reason why we've been
hoopla or the Rams, a season removed successful this year."
from a championship victory and conBrady led the Patriots to an 11-5 regsidered "The Greatest Show on Turf."
ular-season record, then keyed a 16-13
"I ilept telling myself all week that this overtime win over the Oakland Raiders
was just another game, even though in the playoffi. But Brady sprained his
everything leading up to the game said ankle in the AFC championship game,
1-877-466-1234
it was a bigger game," Brady said. "But it and the Patriots needed to be rescued by
1-16
just came down to playing good foot- · · ,_Bledsoe. .·
(740)
949-1521
Pd.
IMI).
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ball, and that's what we did."
When the time came to pick the:
Financing &amp; 90 Days
Brady had trouble holding onto the starter for the Super Bowl, though,
Same As Cash Available
starting job at Michigan - one reason Belichick went back to Brady.
he msn't picked by the Pmiots until
Again, Bledsoe handled the news with
the sixth round in the 1999 draft. But grace.
MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
coach Bill Belichick saw enough in him
"Obviously, I would like to have been
Rocky R Hupp. Agent
to ke~p him on the roster for all of last on the field," he said long after the game
Box 189
year as a rare fourth quarterback.
as a handful of lingering fans wearing
M•ddlcport. Ohio 45760
This summer, Brady started training his jersey chanted his name. "But I'm
camp as the No. 4 quarterback before very proud of the contribution I've
Local843·5264
being promoted to Bledsoe's .primary' made to this team:'
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Mike Hill
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terback uuloaded - right to 1Y Law, • Nursing Hon1e·
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from Pip 11
who raced untouched 47 yards down
the sideline to give New England a 7-3
a head coach for Bill Belichick.
lead.
WICK'S
Steve's Truck
As defensive coordinator of the New
The second TO came after the Rams
Accessories
York Giants, 11 years ago, he won a ring got the ball on their own 15 with 1:52 BAUUNGand
when Buffalo's Scott Norwood missed a left in the half.
Steue H. White, Owner
EXCAVATING
47-yard attempt in the final seconds.
On the third play, Warner found
oHaullng oL.Imntone
Bedliners • Nerf Bar
Bryan Reevea
-Gravel
•
Sand
•Top10il
New England . won on a day filled Proehl over the middle. He was hit by
• Tonneue Cover
New Homea, Room Additlona,
ofHI Dirt
Ventvisor • Bug
with patriotic themes inside the Super- Antwan Harris, who scored in the AFC
Garagea, Pole B,ulldlnga, Roofa,
Shield &amp; Full Line
championship game last week on a
dome and high security outside.
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
There w~ plenty of drama, too, espe- blocked punt. This time Harris knocked
of Other Accessories
&amp;More
31:14! Noble SIUIUIIIt Rd.
dally at the end. · No Super Bowl has the ball loose and Terrell Buckley picked
FREE ESTIMATES! '
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ever gone to overtime, though this game it up and returned i.t 15 yards to the St.
(740)
992-3470
740-742-3411
(740) 992·5822
seemed headed that way when the Louis 40.
Rams tallied in the fourth quarter.
Hve plays later, it was 14-3 as Brady
Warner's 2-yard sneak with 9:31 left found· David Patten in th'e corner of the
-· his first rushing TD this season end zone for an 8-yard score. Patten
pulled St. Louis within 17- 10. After made a leaping catch after turnin Dexholding. the Patriots, the Rams got the ter ·McCJeon around with
double
ball back at their own 45 and needed move. ·
·only 21 seconds to tie it.
New England continued to stal'. Favored by 14 points, the Rams were the Rams through the third quarter
billed as the "Greatest Show on Turf." Richard Seymour's sack of Warn r
But if they expected to breeze, they dis- · ended a drive that reached the Patriots'
. J3795 HiltlnJ RJ.
covered early that the Patriots wouldn't 41 on the first drive.
PomnYIJ&gt; Ohio
let them.
The Rams turned to the run to try to
T_he Patriots showed their tenacity get New England out of its nickel and
early, giving up yards grudgingly and dime defenses as Marshall Faulk ran four
moving from their own 3 to near mid- times for 30 yards. But on third -down
field after · being pinned deep on their came what seemed to be the inevitable
HOWARDL.
first possession.
turnover - Warner missed Torry Holt
WRITESEL
New England stiffened on St. Louis' and Otis Smith picked it off; returning it
Rnenawaod,WV
second possession, limiting the Rams to 30 yards to the St. Louis 32.
Roofing- Home
(304) 273·3271
Jefi'Wilkins' 50-yard field goal after they
Three plays later, Vinatieiri's 37-yard
W•'ye added to
Maintenancefield goal made it 17-3.
had moved from their own 20.
gur acryJces;
The Patriots let the Rams reach their
The Rams then put together their
Campllla
oxhautt
Gutter• Down
tyltmt, eo..potor
34 early in the second quarter, but' this first sustained drive, getting inside the
ollptHnll, compollr
Spout r
time Wilkins' 52-yard attempt was short. · New England 32 for the first time. On a
b&lt;doace, oba&lt;ltt II
New England had trouble moving, fourth-and-goal from the 3, Warner
otrull, rodhitor oow &amp;
but it was still the Patriots' pac,e at this fumbled and Tl:bucky jones took it aU
repaiJl Ill ""''· boll
1tage of the game. Everything was slow tjle way back for what appeared _to be
as the Patriots' varying defenses - as the clinching touchdown.
many as seven defeniive backs on some
But Willie McGinest was called for
plays - made Warner and the Rams holding Faulk - replays showed it was
work for everything.
·
obvious - and the Rams got the ball
With 8;49 left in the half, New Eng- back at the 1. On the second play, Warnland got the break it was playi!lg for.
er went in for the touchdown .to cut it
On .a first-and-! 0 from the St. Louis to 17-10 with 9:31 left to cap a 73-yard,
39, New England linebacker Mike Vra- 12-play drive.
"

Brady

-.....

• Q. s

.ALLiiL
Cellular

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479 ·

.Patriots

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Construction

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Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil

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Flit E1tlmstu month.

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you, You should be

W+-1'(? ... WH"( ?

t1EI'\OP.tZE THE ElGAO:T
YEAR IT HAPPENED?

unbecemlng to

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ltse 2-Bibs.
eueryweek

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DOWN
1 OlympiC&amp;
chlnl
2 PHch a tent

30 Rapltr
31 Greaoe

3 Bear's pad

33 Wallet IIIIer

• Tummy -

~

5 Fix
IOftwall

Bringo

acllon
35 Augur

6 Upon
7 Ewe's

38 Wantedpolllf
word

\

38 Border

40 "Dream
on!"

(2 Wdl.)
41 Summon to

court

· hours

2• llvy'o road
25 Welln'
Clllzon
2e Wonlloot
27 Cheer on
28 -one'o

•2 Squadron

•3 Robuot
44 Chew
Author

•s

Ferber

46 Clown'o
need
47 Oliver

lime

30 EEC

Stone film
currency
32 Conductld 49 -and yang

plaint
8 Bilk

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
peopte. past and present Each letter in the cipher stands lor another.

Today's clue: M equals G
USXK

T J T P

IXRKTY

z
-

NR H

cu

H U

GLSC

B Z H G , '

RSY

ranking first. Here,

RBBUPY

D U. LX Y

zs

MUXe

IXRDT

B Z PH C

COT

z

PTRHUS

'C G T

HRF

H S TRY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "We used to pretend that we didn't
ca1e when someone said aomet111ng unkind, but words do hu~.·
- Goldie Hawn

O Reorronge
letters of
four scrombled words

the
be-

low to form four simple words.

I

OELENE

Open

The, Frll0-!:00 p.m. '

I I -1 I I I I I I

Sat. 8:30 - ll:OO
George K. Vac.

I MONDAY

FEBRUARY 41

'lxJr

~

.
A br:md m:w l' }'dc r ould bt•
birthin~

for ym1 ~Ltlllt'time
durin~ th e Yl..';J r alu:ad. U ~e
yuLir t;tk•uts. imaj.l ination ;mJ
at'l)llirt.•d ~ k•ll ~ tn dt•n.•lop the
npp nrt.l llli ti t·~

that will he

t"ll lllin~ ~·our W,J ~·.

.

A&lt;) UARI US U·"'· 20-Fd &gt;.
ltJ) -- Sotm• thill!-: llw t:-nuld
~i vt· you ;1 ~rc.lln ~t'll~C of
ll l.ltt•ri:~l ~cc urit y rould ~l.nt to
happ C1 1 f11r )"U\.1 tmby . How- .
evc..·r. tlli~ i~ jll'-( che bc..·~innin~ .
~o be..· pal ic..• ttL Tryi n~ to parch
up a brokl'll r unMtt ~.: c..·? Th ~·
Astro- C;r.1ph M.1td 1nl .th·r c.."an
lic..;l ~; you und e t ~ t.llld wlir~t tt.l
do to makl.' tilt' rL· I.tt iomhip

wurk . Mad S2 .75 to Matrhmakc..•r. ~.:/n thi~ t t t·w~ pap t' r,
1' .0. Box .175H, Murrav Hill
Station. N ~w York ,' NY
1015(o.
.
PISCES (ft'l, , 211-Mmh 20)
-- Todli Y mMk~ the bc..•tiinninN,
of a. fil\'ornblc cycle pcrraining
to thinK' that you mi~inat~ ,
tmum~C m control. This posih tiVI.' lonM JanI
.-.RI f .S (Mardr 21 , 1\loril 1'1)

tive inp\lt will
I n~

tlfor,.,

-· YCHI will
nity tml.ty

t (l

l:tl't th~:

uppurtu -

tlw

hnll mil-

~t..'t

in)( hi try ru I\C1flll1"c 11lwpc or
wl.~h yma ' vt• tint~· n·tt. lim\'•
. ~·vcr, h will h~· hl your lnh•:m -

ta~e to · kN·p Y''ur Ho:t l hl
you nc lt:

ate with yolt,

TAURUS (Apnl 20- M :~ y
20) -- The timin).t is ri)H~ to-

LIBRA (Scp&lt;. 2J.Oc&lt;. 23)- Yvu shouldn 't bC hcsit:mt to
t:tkc ou ;1 n ew a SSI!-!;111llcnt tod:~y. hc..•cau~e you' re more than
up tn 1he tas k. What's more.
you r boss · will thsrovci how
v.1 hub k )'m t rc..•ally .m• .
SCll lti'I O (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) --There's :1 go&lt;,d ( hance
your popul.mty Wi ll t:~ k c on :1

day tu itnprovc..• up c..m the c..· or t ~
t.litiuus iuvnlving L• ilh w\ ;~ \' al -

ucJ rd;1tion ship of ~ome kind,
or your sot:i:tl life in gcner:1L
Mnvr on 1it .
&lt;;EM INI (M.•y 21-Junc 211)
-- Fucm soldy un your most
im)HHt:lflt , ambit io us objective. mlby , bc..•t::1 mc that which
yo 11 ~·o uldn ' t

llt'W

la unch .previ-

achie,·ed.
CAN C El~ Oune 21 -J ul y
22) ·: by out your ~'lan~ to day lor som~t hin(t fl("ilr to
)'OUr hc:t rt that you'd lik.c to
:~c co mplhh
soo n. Your
d1 .mce~ of :n·hi ... vin~ thi~ de-~in: arc- bcu~r when you h:t\'C
il TOolc..\Ulilp .
Lro O"IY 23-An~. 22) ..
Any promi ~ intc 'iu1ation thilt
llluks likr it cm1lr.l ~~:rw ;u rm
nthlitional d1atmcl to ~~~~' plc ­
lllt&lt;l1t your ~arnlnN:~ 1hou r.llJ~

f.ICI , two ne w in vul v~· nH' n t~

T

r (H tr

Jut

in life, m.tkr t'Vl'ry t•tliHt to
tlli~ tlntc..'. V\Ht 'n·
au~ p id cHt( k.lrllllt~ ~"Y·

;1\"lln irc..• it at

in .m
dt•.

6

II

onl·~

coul d )wJp you bCUt'r

~nmtthlnw lnJt
~rlh;~Uie In rour ~,n·u~ nno tn ~
d:ly tl111t wU altr.tl"t llth~·t·.~ tu

/

fOil·

( h!d.cd and two r.1rw

J:m . 11,1) ~- l f ; t h t·r~· i~ ~O t \ 11.'
kind of,pet·ial kmi\Vll•dt-~t' that

VIIWO (Au~. 2.1 -S•I''· 22)

ro

m ight be ~llt:(cufull)'

5tl1rtClf .
CAI'It iCOH.N (IJ.-c . 22-

Wh"
you find will be valuable .

yo~ . Fti~'lhl~ ,l~·•irl'

l ife tmby wt t h bot h

Dc c. 21) -- Today co uld m.trk
the rndin~ of Qlll' rh in ~. but
the bc~iam i11~ " f .11wtlu·r. In

to,lny .

•• Tlum.• h

will people

tn cmlwrs of the upposltt' ~l'll·
dtr. T hey 'll ~l't' tJ Jort• dcarly
the - l ovcl in c~~ rlw's :~lw,1 y~
been in yo11.
SAGITTAH. IUS (Nov. 2.1-

o usl y can now be ~ucccssfully

fully e&gt;plur&lt;•d

a~

you meet for the fi rst time.

nu~11.: 1 ..

I.

•'

wor~

propose a trump suit.
And he will tend to
... PRINT NUMBERED It
g l1 TTfRS .
show a minor because
he knows that if you
A UNSCRAMBLE FORI
W ANSW ER
had four spades, you
would have been
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
happy to bid that suit.
Attire -Decry: Begot- Vrrtue- GET TIRED
What happens after
"You don'l work and you're lazy!" one worke r comthat is anyone's guess!
plained to another. "Laziness," smiled the goof off, "1s
Finally, note that in
just getting your resl before you GET TIRED ."
he am West is held to
six tricks if South g e t s l )
,
a spade ruff.
'

Feb.lst

Sorry tor your lnoonv.
985-3616 Chris

23 Choapallate
26 Deluxe
29 Comedian

20 Ring
boundoty
22 Tlnta
23 Col~.

.....

minor; ask partner to

Clo.oo'Jan. 30, 31s~

Feb. I·March I
Shop will be reg hours
&amp; days Marth 1st

bird

Wloeone

Rummage

37 Huro lhe
alarm

19 _l'rl~lng

nockod

Lou rei

you have 4-4 in the
black suits, respond
one spade. Uut with
4-4 in the minors,
you dl two clubs (if
strong enough for a
' two-over-one).
Now, though, suppose you are answering partner's takeout
double. Look at the
South hand in the
diagram. After partner
doubles one heart and
the responder passes,
would you bid diamonds or clubs? And
what would you do if
East rai~ed to two
hearts'
If weak, bill the first
four- card suit you
come to as you
moum the bidding
ladder. However, if
you are happy to act
twic&lt;: . hiJ the hi!!hcr-

with almost enough
to jump, you should
start with two diamond s, planning to
continue with three
dttps.
With such a strong
Dt D you EVER- :&gt;Tor
hand , West will douTO THINK N!OUT
ble two diamonds for
THE S.IMILARITIES
tokeout.
Partner, dee.ETIIEEN SCHOOL !'.NO
THE IN~UAANCE
spite having only 13
"- '- INDUSTRy&gt;
high-card points, will
raise to three diamonds; and then
probably you should
head for game. Note
that five diamonds
makes easily when the
trumps split 2-2.
If East raises to two
l_tearts over North's
double, make a responsive double. You
. don't wish to guess a

~\

22 Ad- com-

girl

35

upt•ns one heart and

~~~-.:;::;~~( Ff~LING.

-~~~J

~

9 Stall
member
10 Unhearlng
11 Total

mltloe -

Obviously, the an swt•r dt•pt•nds on the
situation. If you are
the re sponder, you
normally bid the first
suit you rcac.:h as you
mount the bidding
l.tdder. So, if partner

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(qul1)
51 Sunohlill

18 Brace
lpoliSO
(2 wdo.)
53 Acqulrn
20 Snorkel olio 54 . Enter data
2.1 EldW _ 55 .l.ongM~ch

choose?

IT'S AN IN~T ANT
,_fPLAY ··-Of COU~S~
IT GIVH YOU A

741).992·1671

w..,t Nr&gt;rth t:... t
4 A,_ SJJ', • All~•~-'

It is your turn to
act. You have 'two
four-card suits and
will bid one of them.
Whi ch
do
you

• ,.. ........, 1}1/t

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Opening &amp;Pad: '!?

(740) 992·1705

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUcnON

~

Wlllloma

so Poek - -

17 Wu-c:oated
at
cheeoe
52 Ralah'o

WAKJI 0 4

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wv 11031112

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•t Sa....

I ShotHivod
veggle
luhlono
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12 lmpottcar .- Zllftlldol,
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o.g.
baird Info. U Chill

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Tonia Reiber
licensed Massage
Therapist

38 Couldn't
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5 Apply

\

Recine, Ohio 45771

a.er

111602171
fuery 'flnndev

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(OIIJUCTOIS. INC.

3SS37 SL Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equine 12
12'11. hMI Horte feed ................ $5.00150
IWMI81ull .
l2% Swwt Horte feed ................ $4.40150
Hunltfa Pride 21%dojj food .........$6.15150
Economy
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ACROSS
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Shade River AG service
"Ahead In service•

Sentinel • Page BS

NEA Cronword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

ATHENS (AP) - Steve Esterbmp IS field goals, 5-of-9 3-pointers and 7had a career-high 29 points as Ohio beat of-7 IRe throws. Tamar Slay added 14
Manhall 94-78 Saturday points, Latece Willianu had 11 points
despite missing leading and 11 rebounds andJ.R.VanHoose 10
scorer and reboynder points and 10 rebounds for the ThunBrandon Hunter.
dering Herd.
Hunter, who avenges 17.8 points and
The Bobcats took a 49-35 lead at half9.4 rebounds, was suspended for one time, and it took the Herd nearly twogame by coach Tim O'Shh for violating thirds of the second half to get their
team rules.
deficit under 10 points.
Esterkamp more than made up for
But after Blackshear made a 3-pointer
Hunter's absen~e. H~ hit 9-of-13 shots with 5:48 remaining to make it 79-70,
, &amp;om the field, mcludmg 7 -of-9 fro~ 3- Ohio went on a 11-3 run behind
pomt range, got rune of the Bobcats 15 . Esterkamp and-Johnson to put the game
steals and had six assists.
away.
Sonny Johnson addod 26 points off the
Johnson made a 3-pointer and a
bench for Ohio (12-6, 7-3 Mid-Amerijumper, and Esterkamp hit two 3s to put
can Conference). Jon Sanderson and
the Bobcats up 90-73 with 3:30 to play.
Patrick Flomo each had 12 points and
Jaivon Harris scored 11 for the Bobcats. The Herd committed turnovers on their
Ronald Blackshear led Marshall (1 0- next four possessions and didn't score
10 ~ 4-6) with 30 points. He made 9-of- again until Blackshear hit a 3-pointer to
make it 92-76 with 59 seconds to play.

,. I

The Daily

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

�The Daily Sentinel

Sacramento hands T-Wolve$
the rare home loss, 112-107
BY !liE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Sacramento Kings didn't celebr.tte after beari.ng the Timberwolves in Minnesota. They were more concerned with their
place in the Pacific Division standings.
''I'm happier about staying in fi~t place," Chris
Webber said. "That's not to say it doesn't mean a
lot to win here. It does. But this team is focused
on bigger things."
Webber had 31 points and 14 rebounds, and Mike Bibby had
24 points and five assists as the Kings defeated Minnesota 112107 fortheir 17th victory in 18 games.
.
Sacramento, which has the league's best record at 36-10 and
leads the Los Angeles Lake~ by .2 1/ 2 games in the division, won
in Minneapolis for the fi~t time since Jan. 28, 1997 - a span of
nine games.
The Kings are 25- 1 in Sacramento, while the Timberwolves
are the NBA's second-best home team at 19-3.
Kevin Garnett had 32 points and 12 rebounds, and Joe Smith
added 22 points and nine rebounds for the Timberwolves, who
have lost five of eight.
·
Lakers 101, Mavericks 94
Shaqui!le O'Neal scored 31 points, including two dunks that
ended Dallas rallies, and visiting Los Angeles beat the Mavericks
for the 40th time in 43 meetings.
With O'Neal out of the game, Dallas used an 11-0 run capped
by Wang Zhizhi's two free throws to tie it at 76 with 9:45 left.
Kobe Bryant added 24 points and 10 rebounds for the Lakers,'
who have won four straight.
Wizards 109, Pacers 89
Michael Jordan scored 23 points, and Richard Hamilton had
21 in his tint start in six weeks as Washington beat Indiana.
The Wizards had lost six straight and 15 of 16 to the visiting
Pace~. including a 108-81 loss on Dec. 27, when Jordan scored
a career-low six points. The victory was a big one in early playoff maneuvering, with both teams entering two games over .500
and riding two-game winning streaks.
Heat 94, Knicks 83
•
Alonzo Mourning scored 21 points, Eddie Jones had 18 and
Jim Jackson 15 as Miami won at New York and moved within a
half-game of the Knicks in the Atlantic Division.
Allan Houston scored 28, and Kurt Thomas had 21 points and
11 rebounds for the Knicks, who will be without Marcus Camby
for at least three weeks because of a bruised hip.
.
Spurs 105, Magic 98, OT
Tim Duncan had 29 points, including a crucial three-point
play iri overtime, and 15 rebounds as San Antonio stopped a
three-game losing streak by winning at Orlando. .
David Robinson added a season-high 27 points, 14 coming in
the fourth quarter and overtime, and seven blocked shots as the
Spu~ rallied from a four-point deficit in the final 45 seconds of
regulation.
Tracy McGrady had 26 points on 12-of-36 shooting and a
·
·
career-high 17 rebounds.
Celtics 104, Clippers 91
Antoine Walker scored 27 points and Paul Pierce 24 as Boston
ended a three-game losing streak.
Hornets 97, Grizzlies 79
Baron Davis had 18 points and 10 assists, leading Charlotte p~st
Memphis for its third straight victory.
Elden Campbell led the visiting Hornets with 19 points. Stromile Swift led·,Memphis with 13.
Suns 98, Warriors 97
, Penny Hardaway scored with 2 seconds left as Phoenix
snapped a three-game road losmg streak.
Trail Blazers 101, Bulls 96
Bonzi Wells scored 19 points as Portland beat Chicago.

NBA

Missouri upsets Virginia, 81'-77
BY !liE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Johnson's
improvement
almost
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) Mis· matched that of Rush, who topped his
souri's Arthur johnson wanted to win 1.3-point performance against Kansas
so much, it drove him to by halfiime and wound up scoring
tears.
more than 20 points against a ranked
Johnson scored 16 points team for the first time this season. ·
to go with Kareem Rush's
"He (Snyder) challenged me and A.J.
26 Sunday, leading No. 22 a couple of days ago and told us to give
Missouri past No. 8 Virginia ·more," Rush said. "In the last couple of
. 81 -77.
days of practice I've been trying to gi~e
"Before the game: AJ.'s got tears run- my all. You practice how you play."
ning down his face," Missouri coach
It was the third straight loss for VirQuin Snyder said of his sophomore ginia (14-5), which started the season
center. "Before the game, he wants it so 9-0. Chris Williams led the Cavaliers
bad. I think it's really easy to forget with 18 points. J. C. Mathis and Mason
what we're talking about here with added 13 each, and Elton Brown had
some of these guys and how young they 12.
are."
"We're beat up emotionally · ~nd
Johnson was happy after the win; physically," Gillen said. "But for them to
which could keep Missouri (16-6) in put forth that great of an effort against
the Top 25 even after a 105-73 loss to a good team like Missouri, I couldn't
No. 2 Kansas last week.
have asked for anything more."
"I was a little emotional;' a smiling
The Cavaliers were down 40-38 at
Johnson said.'" I wanted to win real bad. halftime, despite shooting 61 percent.
It's never happened to me before.lt was They finished at 55 percent, but comright before we came in.''
mitted 20 turnovers to Missouri's 10.
It · was the first win for Missouri in
"Turnovers killed us," Gillen said.
five tries against Virginia, which lost a "We dribbled too much and didn't take
regular-season nonconference game for care of it. It was a physical game, a lot
the first time since Dec. 4, 1999.
of hand checking, but you have to
The Cavaliers won 27 straight regu- adjust to that. In a game like that, you
lar-season games outside the Atlantic have to be strong with the ball, and we
Coast Conference, including a 85-72 weren't."
home win against the Tigen last year.
The game was the Tigers' third in the
"We lost, but I couldn't ask for my last four against aTop 10 team.They get
team to do any · more," Virginia coach something of a · break in their next
Pete J;illen said.
three, with .games against Iowa State,
In other Top 25 games Sunday, No. 3 Baylor and Nebraska- a:U the in lower
Maryland beat North Carolina State half of the Big 12 standings.
·
89-73, and Michigan State defeated
"There are very few teams that get
No. 12 Illinois 67-61.
better in February," Snyder. said. "In my
After scoring just seven points with experience as a player and assistant and .
four rebounds against Kansas, Johnson a coach, if you can improve in February,
returned to form against the Cavalien. you give yourself a decent chance at the
He shot 6-of-9, made aU four of his free end of the year." .
throws and grabbed eight rebounds.
Missouri's Clarence Gilbert had 11

Top
15

points and moved past John Brown into
1Oth place on the Missouri career scoring list with 1,432 points. He's 16 short
of Ricky Frazier in ninth.
Missouri freshman Najeeb Echols
missed his first game of the season with
a stress fracture in his left foot. Echols,
expected to be out 3- to -4 weeks, was
averaging 3.3 points and 3.3 rebounds ·
in 17 minutes.
Virginia's Adam Hall, who returned
earlier this week after missing five
games with torn tissue in his right foot,
did not play.
·
No. 3 Maryland 89,
North Carolina State 73·
Juan Dixon scored 27 points, including seven in a 16-2 second-half run that
carried Maryland past North Carolina
State.
Lonny Baxter had 16 points for the
Terrapins, who kept pace with topranked Duke atop the Atlantic Coi!St
Conference. Maryland (18-3, 8-1) is off
to its best start in the ACC since 1980. ·
Anthony · Grundy scored 19 points
for the Wolfpack (16-6, S-4), who have
lost 20 of23 to Maryland, including 13
straight on the road. N.C. State had
won five straight road games since losing at Ohio State on Nov. 27.
Michigan State 67,
No. 12 Illinois 61
Scoring leader Marcus Taylor left the
game with. a concussion after banging
his head on the court early in the second half, but Michigan State ended
Illinois' 28-game home winning
streak.
Adam Ballinger scored 18 points for
Michigan State (13- 8, 4-4 Big Ten) .
Taylor, averaging 15 .3 points, finished
with 12. Michigan State held Illinois
(15-7, 4- 5) to 39 percent shooting.
Brian Co.o k had 22 points and Frank
Williams 19 'for lllinois.

How the Top 10

fared this week:
1. Duke (20-1) beat North Carolina
87-58; beat Clemson 98-88.
2. Kansas (19·2) beat No; 22 Missourl105-73; beat Colorado 100 - 7~ .
3. Maryland (18·3) beat No. 8 Vir·

glnla 91-87: beat North carolina
State 89·73.
·
4. Cincinnati (20-2) beat East Carolina 75-48; lost to Marquene 74·60.
5. Florida ( 16-4) Iosito No. 10 Ken·
lucky 70-68; beat Mississippi State
78·48.
6. Ol&lt;lahoma (17·3) beat'No. 9 Okla·
homa State 58-53; beat Texas 8584, OT.
7. Alab8ma (19-3) beat Arkansas
I Q9.94: b.eal LSU 57·48. .
.
8. Virginia (14-5) Iosito No.3 Maryland 91-87; lost to No. 22 Missouri
81·77.

sty]ish sof~ls

now at
incredible

savings

9. Oklahoma State (17-5) lost to No.
6 Oklahoma 58-53; lost to Kansas

State 70·«11 .

While they lud S..ve on • fantuti&lt; oele&lt;tioa or

10. Kentucky (16·5) beat No.5 Flori·
da 70-68; beat South carolina 91·
74.

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At Pleasant Valley Hospital,

.

v

Rora Brewster, 61
Melba Icenhower, 78
Amanda Nicholson, 20
Roger Snyder, 54
Wjlaa Snyder, 75

HoRMtowiiNewspaper

CHEmR ACADEMY

..

·ODOT
projed
Bypass is ·last sedion
of 'Capitol Corridor'

Deblils, 3

•,

8v BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Weallaer
Hlp: .tell. Law: 101

Persons

captured
POMEROY
A
Reedsville man who has
eluded police officials in six
counties for several months
has been captured by the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
According to Deputy
Kevin Dugan, David M.
Persons, 39, and his girlfriend, Toni Givens, 45, were
both arrested around 11 :56
p.m. Monday night at the
Meigs Motel on Goeglein
Road following a rip by an
unidentified informant.
"The sheriff's department
received infurn1ation from an
informant who said Penons
may be staying at the Meigs
Motel;' said Dugan."Deputies
were immediately dispatched
to ,the scene in order to stake
qut the premises.
"Police surveillance later
confirmed Persons was, in
fact, at the motel," added
Dugan. "Deputies entered
the motel room and arrested both Persons and Giv.ens
without incident."
Besides being sought by
law enforcement officials in
Meigs County, Pe~ons was
wanted by authorities in
Athens, Gallia and Washington counties, as well as Jackson and Wood counties in
West Virginia, for his connec-.
tion in ·numerous auto thefts
and other criminal activity.
Givens, who was charged
with obstruction of justice,
and Penons are both being
held at the regional jail await. ing their court appearance.

OHIO
Pick 3: 0-9-8
Pick 4; Cl-4-8-6
Buckeye s: 1-4~24-30-32
Pick 3 dey: 3-3-3
Pick 4 uy: 7-8-7-4
W.VA.
Dally 3: .9-6-1
· Dally 4: 6-9-o-5
Clsl115: 2-3-7-9-15-19

2
Calendar
6-8
Classifieds
9
Comics
Dear Abby
2
4
Editorials
3
Movies
Obituaries
3
5,8, 10
Sports
3
Weather
c 2002 Ohio Vol.ley Publishinl Co.

RESTORATION- After six years and $180,000, the Chester Courthouse restoration project is
nearing completion, and work on the companion Academy building is about to begin.

Chester residents
.plan to restore old
school building ·
Courthouse
.
. .. .:... ·
projed nears
completion

NELSONVILLE-. Progress on the design of the U.S. 3~
bypass at Nelsonville is a good indicator for final comple.:
tion of the "Capital Corridor."
·
Nelsonville's bypass is the final portion of the highwa~
corridor to be bid. The remaining portions of the route:The
Ravenswood Connector, to be built in three phases, the
new portion of U.S. 33 between Athens and Darwin, and
the bypass of Lancaster are now under construction.
Pomeroy attorney Steven Story, who serves as chairmaq
of the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council's Highwa)(
Users Committee, has described the Nelsonville bypass •1
"the cork in the bottle" in terms of the corridor project, an~
Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe said tha~
officials and economic development staff from Jackson
County, W.Va., and Meigs, Athens, Hocking and Fairfield
counties, have always supported the construction of the
bypass as an important part of the overall corridor.
''It's now the last link in finishing the project from
Columbus to the interstate," Varnadoe said. "We have supported its construction, and the people in Nelsonville have
been in agreement that it needs to be built."
.
"The debate has primarily been about the access,"Varnadoe said.
Last month, ODOT agreed to the recommendation of
District 10 and the consulting firm of Parsons Brinckerhoff
Ohio Inc., about the location and type of access to the
future project.
After hearing extensive safety·and cost information from
the consulting firm, ODOT opted for two interchanges:

PluH-OD01',J

U.S. 33 r~location job_
·.running onschedufe
BY ToNY M. LEAcH
TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BY CHARI.EfiiE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICHOMVDAILYSENTINELCOM

CHESTER
With
restoration of the 1823
Chester Cou~thouse nearing
completion, attention is now
being turned to needed work
·on its companion building, the
Chester Academy.
Built in about 1826 on a lot
adjacent to the courthouse,
the two buildings stand on the
hilltop
overlooking
the
Chester Commons.
..
The two-story brick ·struc- FIRST CONTRIBUTORS - Among those contributing toward
ture with a basement where the cost of restoring the 1826 Chester Acad~my as a fund
Chester Council, Daughters of drive got underway last week were center front, Alberta Lewis,
America (D of A) have met district representative, Modern Woodmen of America, who presince 1959, is in desperate sented a $2,500 check to Erma Cleland, D of A representative; and back, second from left, Russ Mozingo and Delbert
need of major repairs. . .
Blake, Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion; Paul Reed,
The foundation needs work
Farmers Bank; and Ernest Imboden, Mason VFW 9926, all giv·~ust · to keep the building OD
Ing $500 each . Others pictured are Doris Grueser, left front, D
the. hill," said Erma Cleland, D of A representative; and JoAnn Ritchie, right front, and Dale
of A member. ·
Colburn, left back, project ccrchalrmen.
The roof leaks, some of the
windows have been knocked of the Chester-Shade group rna Hayes, $1,000 .
Colburn says plans are movout and are boarded up, the will meet with Randall
ing
forward to apply for
floors are weak, and the interi- Breech, a Gallipolis architect,
or is in disrepair.
· to discuss the propose·d grants, and state repres.('ntatives are being contacted for
Recently, · Chester-Shade restoration project.
help in getting funds.
Historical Society arid the 1:..
Fund-raising begins
Having worked on . the
Daughters of.America; which' ~· Meanwhile, fund-raising is
Chester
Courthouse renovastill meets in the building, got ~ready under way.
together and decided some- ·"'' Last week, more than tion project, and been
thing bad to qe done about '~,500 was contnbuted by five involved in raising more than
the deterioration of the .his- Gf.gantzattons and busmesses, $180,000 for improvements
the Modern Woodmen of there over a six-year period,
toric building.
. The two groups agreed to ~merica, Middleport-Gallipo- he is optimistic that the same
combine their efforts to raise hs Camp 6336, $2,500; the can be done for the academy.
The land on which the
money for restoration of the. Veterans ot Foreign Wars,
old academy which has played Mason, W.Va. 9926. $500; courthouse and the academy
such an historic role in the life Feeney-Bennett Post 128" were constructed was donated
of the Chester community. . American Legion, Middle- by Meigs County pioneer
Next . week, . a cbmmitt~e port, $500; Farmers Bank and Levi Stedman. The building to
chaired by JoAnn Ritchie of Sa':'ings C?., $500; We sam
the D of A and Dale Colburn Construction, SSOO; an~ The!- · Please - CMster, J

DARWIN - Construction continues on the relocation
of U.S 33 between Darwin and Athens as work crews focus
on moving dirt and implementing erosion-control tech.
mques.
William Stanforth, Ohio Department of Transportation's.
project engineer, said Monday progress on the first phase of
the 13-mile project, to ultimately link Athens and Darwin
with a limited access two-lane highway constructed on a
four-lane right-of-way, is "moving along as scheduled" and
no significant problems have been detected.
"We are still involved with the laborious task of removing dirt and rock," said Stanforth. "Current estimates indicate that we have completed around I 0- 15 percent of the
overall earth-moving work that is contractually required."
Stanforth added crews are also busy laying pipe and, most
importantly, addressing erosion control issues.
.
"Erosion control is very important, especially with thi•
kind of project, and we are concentrating on applying the
most .up-to-date techniques available to prevent the deterioration, or slippage, of soil," said Stanforth.

.

Please see Darwin, 3

WORK CONTINUES - Work crews with heavy machinery
continue to move dirt as construction on the relocation of
U.S. 33 betWeen Darwin and Athens moves along. The first
phase of the project includes the building of a six-mil~
stretch of Super II highway between Darwin and Alexander
Township Road 68, just north of Shade. (Tony M. Leach) '

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· You are lnvltecl•••
To a Ribbon Cutting, Dedication ..:md Open House of the new
Holzer Medical Therapy Center and Information Systems
Computer Training Lab

Thursday, February 7, 2002
RT. 2
GALLIPOLIS FERRY ·
WV25515

4:00PM

Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

(Open House and tours will continue until 6:00 pm)
. All are welcome!
will be served.
~---___:_:::::..::::.::....:.::=:::.:.:::.:._::::.:::::.:.:.:.~~:::..::.:.:::.:.:=----------,r-------_...:.--1 ./

'

I
I

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