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Bas

The Daily Sentinel

Slay, VanHoose ,put Herd back on track
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) -Tamar Slay scored 22
points and J.R. VanHoose had
IS points and
19 rebounds as
Marshall
beat Akron
78-63 Tuesday night.
Marshall
(11-10, 5-6
Mid-American Conference) ended Akron's fourgame winning streak and put
the Zips (8-14, 4-7) alone in

last pl2ce in the . East Division.
Latece Wil!i~ms KOred 18
points for the Thundering
Herd and Monty Wright had
16 points and six assists. The
Herd outrebounded the Zips
44-31.
David falknor led Akron
with 17 points, hitting 5-of-13
3-pointers. Darryl Peterson
added 16 points and Andy
Hipsher scored 1 I.
Marshall led 36~~ at halftime.
Siay, who played only the
first four minutes of the first

Page 1 .
WeclnesciiiJ. February a.

20of

Meigs grapplers gear.up .for tourney, 81

•

Yellow Jackets sting Redmen

half because of foul trouble,
got Marshall goiP_g in the
BY MARl! W• 1••MS
chipped in 10 (two treys) off the bench. Barry
second half. He hit three
SPECIAL lP OVP
Chamberlain was held to two points, but
consecutive 3-poimers ro
CEDARVILLE
T~e
University
of
Rio
pulled down a game-high 11 rebounds.
put the Thundering Herd up
Grande Redmen basketball team suffered a
In addition to Barlow's 19 points, Rio
54-3&amp; with 15:05 remaindisappointing
78-61
loss
Grande had two players reach doumg.
ble figures, Joe Delaney (11
Akron responded with a , Cedarville on Tuesday. .eYtming at
the
Athletic
Center.
points) and Brandon Hess (I 0
10-4 run and pulled within
Rio Grande (15-1.4, .9 -6
points) . Joe Martin coinine points· :with I 0:13
AMC)
lead
twice
in
tile
leered
six rebounds.
remaining, but Slay was too
Cedarville won the batgame, 4-3 and 6-4. from
much down the stret~h.
then
on
it
was
all
.
tie
of the boards, 38-33
He· scored seven straight
Cedarville (15-12. 8-6
and 14-5 on the offensive
points in the last three m\nAMC).
B A S K E T B A l l end. Rio Grande was
utes to ice the game for
The
Redmen
pulled
to
again plagued by turnovers,
Marshall.
with in a point (30-29) at halftime when racking up 20. Cedarville committed 15
junior forward Jerry Barlow banked in a turnovers.
three-pointer at the buzzer. Barlow led the
Rio shot 49 percent (24-of-49) from the· ·
Redmen with 19 points and eight rebound~. field, 22 percent (2- of-9) from thtee-point
Cedarville got inspired play. from David land and 55 percent (11-of-20) from the .
Dingeman,
off the bench, .as he sparked the
10 rebounds.
charity stripe. Cedarville counte red with 44 .
Yellow Jackets, scoring 20 points in 23 minVillanova, which trailed by 12 at halftime,
percent (31-of-71) from the field, 30 perutes. The Jackets rained in 12 trifectas en
took its first lead since early in the first half on
cent (12-of-40) from beyond the arc and 67
route to the convincing victory.
1
a pair of free throws by Ricky Wright that
percent (4~of-6) from the free throw line.
Josh
Gast
scored
_18
points
(four
treys),
Greg
made it 40-39 early in the second half.
Rio Grande returns home on Saturday to
Guiler had 16 points (three treys), seven assists
Buchanan added two free throws after a techand five steals, Jason Weakley added 12 points face Daemen College. Game time is set for
nical foul on Clark for a 42-39 lead.
(two treys) and seven assists and Ju stin Lower 8 p.m.
But a 3-pointer by Marcus Barnes tied it at
44, and Tyler made a layup and hit a 5-footer
to give Miamj a 48-44 lead. After a jumper by
Snowden, Tyler made two more free throws,
and Barnes had a dunk off a steal to 'm ake it
·•
~
52-46 with 6:24 left.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
scored 26 points and
Iverson
finished
th«
Villanova went on a 12-2 run to· start the
Allen Iverson and Vince Carter finished .w ith 29, night 7-of-31 from th
second half, closing to 34-32 on a 3-pointer by
Carter had their usual All- but their games deserted field, while Carter score ~
Snowden. Buchanan, who had just two points
Star
perfor- them.
only four points in th
on free throws in the first half, hit three conmances
for
''I'm a scorer, that's what final period.
:
secutive 3-pointers before Snowden made one.
three quarters. 1 do," Iverson said. "My
The Pistons trailed by a&amp;
Buchanan also missed two free throws for
In the end, team depends on me ·to many as 11 , but after lver ~
the first rime this season. He shot 3-of-14 from
Michael Jordan and Jerry shoot the ball.
son gave Philadelphia a 623
the floor.
Stackhouse got the victo- , "When 1 leave h ere, I'm
54 lead with 3:24 left in
No. 8 Florida 72, South Carolina 63
ries as Iverson and Carter
faltered.
going
to
go
looking
for
my
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) During florithe third quarter, he didn~
Iverson missed his last 11 shot because it just left me. score agam.
,.
da's three-game losing streak, Matt Bonner
shots as Stackhouse and the This is one of those games
would get the ball at the top of the key and
Williamson
Corliss
.
·
p·
t
d
m
my
Six-year
career
that
I
panic. Bad decisions and turnovers followed.
D etrolt
1stons s orme
ld 1,. ke
,
t scored eight points in a 1
wou
to
wrge
Coach Billy Donovan told Bo11ner to be a.
back to an 86-82 victory .. b
..
0 run that closed out th~.
little more patient. And in the past two games,
over' the Philadelphia 76ers a tut. h
NBA
· period and gave Detroit ii~
on Tuesday night.
n ot er
games, It first lead since it made 'the
Bonner's game returned, and the No. 8 Gators
Carter went 1-for-5 in was .Boston 82, Charlotte
are back on track.
game's first basket. He fin~
the fourth quarter as Jar_: 79; Atlanta 76, Miami 73;
Bonner led all scorers with 19 points as
ished with 18 points.
,
dan and the Washington Orlando 106, Cle~eland
Florida (17-4, 6-3 Southeastern Conference)
"This
was
a
real
big
wiq
Wizards rallied for a 99-94 98; Los Angeles Clippers
beat South Carolina 72-63 Tuesday night.
victory
over Toronto.
112, New York 110; Mem- for us; especially afte(.
florida's Brett Nelson shot 4-for-8 from 3Jordan scored 20 of his phis 86 •. Utah 79; Dallas being down .s o much,';
point range and added 16 points and seven
23 points after halftime, 141, lnd1ana 140 111 double Williamson said. "We set ll
assists as the Gators survived second-half rall ies
and Stackhouse led the Pis- overtime; Denver 97, Port- goal to get 25 Wins by the.
by South C•rolina to win their second straight
tons with 29. Iverson land 96; ·and Seattle 113, All -Star break, but now w~••
game.
•
•
can get 26."
Golden State 87.
Chuck Eidson and Jamel Bradley each

Melp County's

What's Inside

IOIALLY COOL

levy rejection~
would bankrupt

Miami defeats Villanova, 65-56
VILLANOVA,Pa. (AP) - James Jones had a
new approach, and he c?uldn't wait to use it.
Jones scored 16 points, including Miami's
first 11. and John Salmons added 13 points and
six assists, leading the
12th-ranked Hurricanes
to a 65-56 v1ctory over
Villanova on Tuesday night.
"I decided I was going to be more offensiveminded," said Jones, who entered with a 13.3
scoring average.
It took him less than five minutes to score 11
points, including three straight 3-pointers.
Meanwhile, Salmons didn't score a point until
che second half.
"It seems every time l come here, the first
half is bad," said Salmons, who went to nearby
Plymouth Whitemarsh High School and needed 24 tickets for the game. "It's like a family
...
aff:atr.
Miami (20-3, 7-3 Big East) has won six of
seven since losing two straight month ago.
The Hurricanes reached 20 wins for the eighth
time in school history and the third time in
four years.
Villanova (12-8, 4-6) has lost four of five, .
including a 76-58 loss in Miami last month. Ii
was the Wildcats' second straight loss to a
ranked opponent, and they play No. 15 UCLA
• on Saturday.
"I would've hoped that by this point, w~'d be
ready to beat teams like this, but we're not,"
Villanova coach Jay Wright said. "I'm very
impressed with · their team and their poise.
They're outstanding on defense, very disciplined and well-co•ched."
In the only other game involving a Top 25
team, No. 8 florida defeated South Carolina
72-63.
Gary Buchanan had 16 points, and Derrick
Snowden added 15 for the Wildcats. ·
After Villanova closed , fo 52-51 with 4:02
left, Salmons hit two free throws, Elton Tyler
made a layup off a pass from Salmons, and
Salmons iced it with two more free throws that
made it 58-51 with 1 :05left.
Mi.:lmi's leading scorer, Darius Rice, was held
to seven points, and didn't get his first basket
until I :57 repJained in the first half. He added

TOp 15

v

a

Iverson, Carter·stumble at finis~
NBA

..

o;

scored 14 points for South Carolina (13-9, 36). Marius Petravicius had 11 points and seven
rebounds.
The Gamecocks' last comeback try came
with the Carolina Coliseum crowd roaring and
Florida clinging to a 53-48lead with 7:30 left.
Bonner responded with two foul shots.
Then, after Eidson's 3-point attempt missed,
Nelson countered with a 3 for Florida.

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municipalities
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

•'
THE NEW COOL SPOT- Located along Ohio 7 in Tuppers Plains, the Cool Spot Country Store
is. a newly-opened convenient store that offers a plethora of low-priced items for the consumer
on the go. (Tony M. Leach)
·

Weather
HIJh:SOs.~:lOs

Details, A2

..

·Tough day on
Wall Sbeet ·
NEW YORK (AP) -·
Wall Street waded through
~nother disappointing session Wednesday, dropping
for the · fourth straight day
as investors looked in vain
for firm indications that
&amp;usiness is improving and
corporate accounting can
be trtlsted.
: Stocks drifted lower on
news that federa\ regulators
were
looking . into .
Calpine's book.ke'eping. .
The market's mood was·
also gloomy because of lingering uncertainty about
the timing and robustness
of a recovery.
The Dow jones industrial average closed down
~2.04, or 0.3 percent, at
2,653.39 for a total los.s of
266 points since friday.
The technology-focused
Nasdaq composite index's
4rop was more significant.
It fell 25.81,-or 1.4 percent, to 1,812.71, while the
Standard &amp; Poor's • 500
·ihdex slipped 6.51, or 0.6
percent, to e1,083.51.

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C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

in Tllppers a1ns
BY TONY M. lEACH
TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Contrary to irs
name, the Cool Spot Country Store is the
place for hot deals.
Located along Ohio 7 in Tuppers Plains, the
newly-opened 6,000 square foot convenient
store offers a ·ple~hora of low-priced items for
the consumer who understands the meaning,
and importance, of one-sto_E, shopping.
from ice cream to. gasolij1e, one can· -- ••
find what they need lllld-ge!'tiJI!l!"".S!I't!Ie ·
in no time fiat.
According to Brian White, owner and proprietor, the success of his first convenient
store/restaurant in Coolville prompted the
opening of a second in Tuppers Plains .
"The success ofThe Cool Spot in Coolvill e
provided us with a unique opportunity. to
open a second store somewhere in the area,"
said White. "When deciding a location for the GOOD EATS - Malvina Marcinko, left, and
second store we immediately thought ofTup- Sherri Fink prepare the delicatessen/bakery,
pers Plains because it has a real potential for ·· found inside the store, for the large number of
growth,.esp,ecially with the opening of the new people expected during lunch . Besides fried
East Meigs Industrial Park. ·
chicken, hamburgers, deli sandwiches, and a
"We also took into consideration that many vast assortment of salads, -hungry .patrons
people drive Route 7 on their way to. work in can also choose from a large selection of
Athens or Parkersburg," said White.
homemade pies, cookies, and pastries. (Tony
M. Leach)
However, besides filling their tanks with
some of the cheapest gasoline around, cus- our lun ch specials.
tamers can also fill their stomachs at the deli"From !Tied chicken and pizza ro )1amburgcatessan/bakery located inside the store.
ers and hot/cold deli sandwiches, we have just
"During the lunchtime hours, it's nonstop about anything a person wants. to satisfy their
around here," said Malvina Marcinko, hearty appetite," she added.
cook/deli employee. "It's not uncommon to
The Cool Spot CoUI~t ry Store is open seven
have lines of people in here wanting to order days a week from 6 a.m. until 10 p.m.

Please -

Taft pushes technology plan
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
Bob Taft on Wednesday visited
high - tech companies that have
high ~growth potential, .h oping
to drum up public support for
his $1.6 billion technblogy
and job-creation plan.
Taft visited LeadScope Inc.,
a 4-year-old company on
Ohio State University's science and technology campus.
Company officials say LeadScope's software, created
through a collaboration with
Ohio State researchers, helps
drug manufacturers reduce the
time it takes to get their products to market.
,
"They're 'doing it right attracting top talent by providing well-paying jobs to create

a company
that's going
to continue
to grow,"
·
Taft
said
after touring · the
company.
At LeadScope,
Taft
. which
works with
drug-making companies such
as Pfizer Inc., employees make
an average of $85,000 a year,
and new hires
average
$52,000.
The
company
employs 32 people, a number
that it hopes to double by
2004.
In. his State of the State

address Tuesday, Taft outlined
his· " Third Frontier Project,"
which calls for research centers to be built and more partnerships between colleges and
businesses to convert university research imo commercial
ventures. ,
Universities and companies
would compete for research
dollars, and a governing board
would award grants.
The plan would be paid for
over the next i 0 years, provided currellt ani! future Legislatures appropriate the money.
The state already has committed investing $500 million
111 research and development
Pluse see .Taft. A3

Sandra Edwards, Community Services Director, Tammy Sigman and Gene Klein, Weatherization . prograrri supervisor,
are pictured with an award received by the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency's Weatherization program from
the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development. The
Productivity Award was presented for performance over
100 percent, and was presented at the agency's annual
dinner last weekend. Debbie Utt and Ralph Gueltig were
presented with l().year service awards, Pam Franklin a 15year service award. and Edwards a 20·year service award,
at the dinner, and United Mine Workers representatives
were recognized for their work with the Min11 Closure
retraining program. (CAA photo)

J

'

Levy, A3

Program honored

Saturday, Februa,.Y 9, 2002 • 8:00PM
Ariel Theatre • Downtown Gallipolis
. - featuring
Ohio University Pf'rcussion Ensemble and
'LOs Vieios 18lanquitos" • OU Faculty Latin JaZf Group

304-675-4340
'j

.

·cool Spof o

POMEROY - Some Meigs County townships stand to
lose every cent of local revenue to the 13oard of Health next
year if voters reject the boanl's one~ mill levy request.
The board is expected to place · a rcplacc·ment one-mill
levy on the May 'ballot, accordin g to Meigs County' Health
Commissioner Norma Tofres.
The law requires that townships · and villages pay the
expenses of operating the health department from the rev ~
t:::nue they receive from inside millage.
Because voters have approved a tax levy for the department continuously since 1')82, those funds have been freed
up for townships and vi ll ages to use.
Opponents of the board's Clean Indoor Air Act, which
was approved last year aod outlaws smoking in all public
places and outdoo" within five feet of the entrance to a
public place, haw pledged to vote against - and campaign
against - th~ department's levy. If their efforts succeed,
s~mc township~ will l~ave no money for opt·~ations after
paying their share of the health ·departmentUs budget,
accord in g to Treasurer Howard Frank.
In Columbia Township, for instance, the inside millage on
real estate tax collections totals $18,000, while their share of
timding for the health departmentUs operations is $16,379.
According to Nancy Parker Campbell , the following are
the township and vi llage obligations to the department,
totaling 233,000: l:ledford Meigs Local, S 10,393; llcdford
Eastern Local, 79; Chester Eastern Local, 19,177; C hester
Meigs Local, 2,828; Columbia, 16,379: Lebanon Emern
Local, 1,03\1; L~banon Southern Local, 8,3117; Letart,
34, I 89; Olive, 14,202; Orange, 8,713; J~utland , 13,742;
Rutland Village, 2,625; Salem, 17,465; Salisbury, 16,3J7;
Middleport Village, 16,98 1; Pomeroy Village, I il,360: Scipio,
7,703j Sutton, I 3,371; Racine Village, 4,7H6; and Syracuse
Village, 6,.124.
Those figures are based on real estate valuanom, and rc·present those funds which would be required to Ofle'f,\te the
department at its current st;lffing and service levl~is . Frank
said.
Several townships stand to lose ins ide millage revenue
next year without the added burden of ti.mding public
health services. Colu mbia and Salem Township. in particular, will be hard hit next year due to the removal of mining
equ ipment fi·om the Southern O hio Coal Company property, and Letart Township will lose revenue on personal

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�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

.. 'I

lhum'.,. F.. n

I

I

Universities opposed to ca.ps, increases

Ohio weather
Friday, Feb. 8

.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Whether it's
answering e-mails personally or writing
opinion pieces fbr newspapers, presidents of Ohio's 13 state-supported universities ar.e trying to explain why they
oppose a tuition cap and why some want
to boost tuition higher than usual.
"In some way, shape or form, they're
all reaching out," Jim McCollum, executive director ' of the Inter-University
Council, said Wednesday. "The more
information that's out explaining why
we're doing what we believe is necessary,
the more beneficial it is for us to have a
more informed discussion or debate."
The extra outreach comes as the organization, made up of the universities'
presidents, and Gov. Bob Taft's administration try to reach an agreement about
how to keep tuition increases reasonable.
"I think we're making progress;' Taft
said Wednesday.
But McCoUum said it's too early to say that

ol Columbua 121'/51' I

0
•
W. VA.

·• 2002 AocuWealhtr, lne.

0 ---~-·~·

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

PageJU

Cloudy

Show&amp;rt

T·lklmll

AU'!

Flurries

SnGW

lee

Mild in region again Friday

ment on a possible motive for the
shooting ofRobert Price, 75, who
suJfered fiom prostate cancer.
His daughter,Vicki L. Glick,
51, didn't speak during her
arraignment on a charge of
aggravated murder Wednesday
in Hamilton County Municip~l Court. Judge Guy' Guck- ·
enberger set bond at $250,000
and scheduled a Feb. 15 hear-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Ohio Valley's roller coaster winter weather pattern continues on Friday, when sunny skies and mild conditions are
forecast. Temperatures will climb into the 50s, the National
•
Weather Service said.
Snow showers are possible on the weekend, then a return to
springlikc conditions is possible next week.
Temperatures were expected to dip into the 20s under clear
skies tonight.
Sunset tonight wiU be at 5:58, and sunrise on Friday is at
7:33a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 20s. West wind 5 to
10 mph.
Friday... Mostly sunny and warmer. Highs in the mid 50s.
Southwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Friday night... Mostly dear. Lows in the lower 30s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy and continued mild. Highs in the
upper 50s.
Saturday night. .. Cioudy with a chance of snow or rain showers. Lows in the upper 30s.
Sunday... Brisk and colder with a chance of snow or rain
showers during the day, then a chance' of snow showers-during
the night. Highs in the mid 40s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Morning lows in the upper 20s.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Tuesday. .. Pardy cloudy. A chance of showers in the afternoon. Morning lows in the lower 30s. Highs in the lower 50s.
Wednesday. .. Mostly cloudy with t chance Of rain. Morning
lows in the lower 30s. Highs in the upper 40s.

Inmate getting Puerto Rico sets
new trial
up office
COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Ohio Supreme Court .on
·Wednesday ordered a new trial
for an inmate convicted of
killing a guard in the 1993
Lucasville prison riot.
The court ruled 5-2 that
James Were was improperly
denied a hearing on his competency to stand trial. Were
had appealed his conviction
and death sentence for the
death of prison guard Robert
Vallandingham.
Were's lawyers were never
aUowed a hearing on the evid~nce ofWere's incompetence,
despite a court record full · of
suggestions that he was
incompetent, Justice Francis
Sweeney said in the majority
opinion.
"Fundamental to our adversarial system •of justice is the
due process right of a criminal
defendant who is legally
incompetent not to be subjected to trial," Sweeney
wrote.

Student
released on
bond
ZANESVILLE (AP) - A
college student charged with
killing her newbocn and
putting his body in a trash bin
concealed her pregnancy.
"No one, not even · her
roommates, knew she was
pregnant;' Ransom Clark, vice
president for administration at
Muskingum CoUege, said of
jennifer Bryant.
Bryant, 21 ,. of Frankfort,
appeared Wednesday in Muskingum C.o unty Court on
charges
of
involuntary
manslaughter, endangering a
child and abuse of a corpse.
Sh e faces up to 16 years in
pri&lt;.:un if co nvicted.
Judge Jeffrey Hooper set
bond for Bryant at $50,000,
but said she had to wear an
electtonic monitoring device
after being release~.
'

CLEVELAND (AP)
Puerto Rico has opened an
office in Cleveland as a link to
the more than 66,000 Puerto
Ricans living in Ohio.
The office offers Puerto
Ricans help in obtaining official records, such as birth and
death certificates, or to offer
legal assistance on matters such
as family inheritance.
• to help
It also will work
Puerto Ricans economically
and on political issues.
Census figures show there
are about 30,000 Puerto
Ricans living in Cuyahoga
County and B,OOO nearby in
Lorain County. fuerto Ricans
reside in 14 of Ohio's 88
counties.

Slaying susped
·faced
·
CANTON (AP) - A man
who was arrested and charged
with killing two people said
he knew he would be let out
of jail once a grand jury
reviewed the case against him.
While jailed, Darrell Mote
said, he depended on support
of family and friends and his
daily Bible readings.
"I knew I ·was going to get
out, I just didn't k11ow when,"
Mote tOid The Repository on
Wednesday in his mother-inlaw's Canton apartment.
Mote, 44, of Cleveland, was
released Friday from the Stark
County Jail, where he had
been held under a $1 million
bond since his arrest Nov. 21.

Daughter
accused in
killing

ing before Glick was returned
to the jail.
Hamilton County sheriff's
officers said Glick shot Price
c
·
·h
alib
.our t1mes w1t a .357.-ch er
h an d gun Tues day mg t at
·
·
b b
Mercy Hosp1ta1 m su ur an
Ad
'D
h'
n erson owns 'P·

Widow makes·
theft allegation

1

CINCINNATI (AP) The widow of a Cincinnati
millionaire says the charitable
foundation he left is being
plundered by its directors.
Ann Dater, the third wife of
Charles H. Dater, claimed in
court papers Wednesday that
the directors of her husband's
foundation ,have deprived
charities of millions of dollars.
Directors have paid themselves
excessive
salaries,
depriving the foundation of
more than $3 million that
would otherwise have. been
available for charities, Mrs.
Dater alleged.
The Charles H. Dater Foundation, with $60 · million in
assets, has donated millions to
hospitals, youth programs and
other charities since his death
in 1993.

because the two sides have met only once.
sonally has responded to dozens of eLast week, Taft told universities he mails and lettm he receives daily from
would be forced to ask the Legislature to . concerned · students and parents, both
re-impose a cap if universities failed to current and prospective.
show restraint when raising fees. Then
In one ~sponse, he writes to a stuthis week, Sen. K~vin Coughlin, a dent:"! hate to raise tultion,especially'by
Republican ftom Cuyahoga Falls, intro- this much, but you want to get a gobd
duced a bill that would permanently education and you want your degree· to .
lirrUt the amount universities
raise mean something. This, I'm afuid, is ihe
tuition annually.
.
'only way we can assure that"
'
Both Taft's warning and Coughlin's
Ohio State President William Kil'Wan
bill were prompted by Ohio University sent letters to all members of the state
and Ohio State University proposals for Legislature on Monday, asking them to
two-tiered tuition systems. Under the examine Ohio State's entire plan and not
plans, freshmen would see higher tuition just focus on the percentage increase.
hikes next year than upperclassmen. It Kirwan also has met with lawmanrs
would be 19.5 percent at OU and 35 · individually and in small groups to get
percent at Ohio State..
the message across,
Presidents at OU and Ohio State also
"That communication . is important
are reaching out to the public, but main- because there's good deal of misunder1)1 to explain their rationale for their pro- standing about what the university's
posed two-tiered tuition systems.
proposing," said William Napi~r, .'an
OU President Robert Glidden per-· Ohio State lobbyist.
'

em

a

Mother feared
suiddetry
LEBANON (AP) _ A
woman whose son apparently
hanged himself in the Warren
County jail says she warned
authorities that her son had
thre
atened to kill himself in his ·
ceU - just as his father had done.
Jeffrey Tomlinson, 32, of
Dayton was found hanging in
h
is cell Tuesday.
H'
th D b St ha
1s mo er, e ra ep n
· hts, sal'd
. o f H u b er H e1g
,T,
d
d
th
h
we nes ay a1 er son was
.
· dh
ld t ·t h 1
warne . ewou no .ge ep
for his substance abuse problems and was troubled by the
death of' his father, Delbert,
who hanged himself in 1972
in the Greene County jail.

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0 ;, COLUMBUS

(AP)
lawmak~rs should consider
-u~tripping the Department of
,:jEduca9on of its ~uthority over
~Jjharter schooJs if the depart" ,mem 4oesn't show substantial
., .,rogress fixing problems within 60 days, according to a state
r.,~udit to be released Thursday.
0 ,. Auditor Jim Petro criticizes
c, the .department's oversight and
,, ,plonitorjng of charter s~hools,
•.,which are publicly funded,
,..,__privately run schools, accotd,. ing to two Education Depart'ment officials who have seen
i ,. _
the report.
._;,, "I guess what he's saying is,
{ ..;Get your act together in 60
,, ~days, and there shouldn't be a
separate board;" said David
Varda, director of the depart- ment's Center for School
.,Finance,, and Accountability.
:1 In one example from the
•laudit, Petro notes the departl!ment has changed its payment
lr.ystem for charter schools
:l~hree times, creating "an overilly complex process," according
: toVarda.
Petro and some lawmakers
! have suggested the state consider creating a board or
agency independent of th~
I Education Department to
i oversee charter schools.
: Charter schools, called com: munity schools in Ohio, were
I created !&gt;y state law in 1997.
•:Free froin some state regula1 tions, they receive basic per
i upil aid buc-' no money for

school const'ruction or reno- Columbus-based Electronic charter school office should
va~on.
Classroom of Tomorrow $1.7 report directly to the superinOhio has 92 charter schools million during its first two tendent's office.
with a total enrollment of months last year, providing
Charter school officials who
22,730. The state estimates it money for · students even met with state auditors in
will pay them about $131 mil- though they did not meet offi- October complained that the
lion this year.
cia! enrollment standards.
state was asking them to do
The report ,also will recom• In May and July, state too much too fast.
·
mend that the state give up audits found that two Colum"The overriding theme was
direct sponsorship of charter bus schools run by the same
schools, said Varda and J.C. company, By His Word, owed we were being told to do
Benton,
a
department more than Sl.2 miUion in things late in the game," said
taxes, benefits and funding for Jim Cowardin, chief executive
spokesman.
students
who weren't enrolled. officer of Millennium ComInstead, all, school districts
• In April, an audit said the munity School in Columbus.
- including joint vocation:il
Cowardin said the state took
schools and educational ser- founder of Riser Military
vice centers - along· with Academy in Columbus owed _$1 00,0~0 back from the
cities and not-for-profit orga- the state more than $5,000 in school in January after the
nizations · should be able to misspent funds, and owed · school failed to produce edusponsor charter schools, $11,000 to the teachers retire- cation plans for special ed stuaccording to the report.
men! system and $3,600 in dents . .The state g~ve the
Currently, only the state, federal taxes.
school ' only eight weeks,
Lucas County Educational
Varda said the department Cowardin said.
Service Center, the University welcomes the audit. "We real"It's not a bad rule," he said.
ofToledo and schools in acad- ize it's pointing out problems "They just put it into place so
emic emergency are permitted we've had managing it and quickly and we.weren't able to
to sponsor schools.
. places where we can do a bet- comply."
The goal would be to ter job, and we're prepared to
Rep. Jon Husted, a Daytonincrease accountability over do that."
area Republican. has proposed
charter schools by putting one
In response_to the audit, the an overhaul of Ohio's charter
sponsor in charge. of each department will announce a
school, Benton said. Now, the new charter school division school law including the creation of a State . Board of
state alone is responsible for at Thursday, Benton said. The
department has hired Steve Community Schools.
least 75 schools.
Thursday's audit puts presPetro reviewed the state's Burigana as executive director
handling of community of the Office 0 f Conununity sure on the Education Department "to act and it shows the
schools because of probleiJls Schools.
Burigana
will
report
directly
shortco1nings
of their overhe encountered when doihg
earlier audits of individual to Roger Nehls, the No. 2 sight to this point, but at the
schools, spokeswoman Kim person in the department after same time, it· shows there.'s
Norris said.
,
the state schools .superinten- some shortcomings in the law
that's nut given them some
• In November, an audit dent, Susan Tave Zelman.
found that the state overp;~id
In November, Petro said the clear guidance," Husted said.

.

!jCap on farm paymentS threatens Democratic
bill
.
~

190Z

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
murder trial was. abrupdy halt- · · ~
ed when the defendant blurt- 1! 1,
ed out that he kille4 his girlfriend, her 12-yeai-old 'daughter and a neighbor and wants
to be put to death.
·
"I plead guilty. I killed ·
them;• Stanley Fitzpatrick, 34,
i•
of Cincinnati, said moments
'
before opening statements
were to begin Wednesday.
·"Stop this (court proceeding)
right now."
Jurors did not hear Fitzpatrick. They had been ··
excused while lawyers dis- n
cussed the case with Hamilton ··
County Common Pleas Judge · ·
Patrick Dirtkelacker.

WASHINGTON (AP) However, some southern
;,A leading Republican's claim senators worried that the cap
;Ito have the votes to impose a would mean deep cuts in sub:1$275,000-per-farO' cap on sidies to big cotton and rice
• agriculture subsidies threatens farms are threatening to drop
lithe futur~ . of _a', De_mocratic their _support for the ~eg!slafarm billm th~ Senate. '
-· t1on . 1f the pay':"ent linu!· "
Under eX!stmg rules r farms • approved.
l1can receive unlimited subsi'.'It's going to devastate
l•dies for production of grain, (farms) in our neck of the
cotton and soybeans, and woods," said Sen. Blanche
1 growers can get $80,000 more Lincoln, D-Ark.
; under a program that provides
Midwest populists propose
! fixed annual payments. ,
new subsidy restrictions n~ar; "We're just trying to stick )y every time Congress cpn1 with the principle that the siders an extension of f~rm
taxpayers of the United States programs, every five years&lt;'or
; ought to target its help so.
t:
1 towards the traditional family · But the idea has gotten new
I farmer," said Sen. Charles support after a series of news
Grassley, R-lowa.
stories last year about six-fig1 Grassley, the . senior Repub- ure and seven-figure payments
: lican on the Senate Fipance that some farmers and
1 Committee, and Sen. Byron landowners have been collectI Dorgan, D-N.D., expected to ing.
.j offer the payment amendment Under one program, a
j on Thursday.
Florida real estate developer

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to each ana (J})e'l'lj cw;tomer
who helpea make _
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a celebration. @)oin w; at

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CINCINNATI (AP) - A
woman accused of shooting
her father to death as he lay in
a hospital bed dropped the
gun and waited to be arrested,
her lawrer said.
Authorities would not com-

Every bank has assets.
We named ours afler the most important one.

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Levy

from Page A1
property at the Racine
Hydroelectric Power Plant
because of electric utility
deregulation.
"Some townships will
have nothing to operate on
if this levy fails," Frank said.

Sub~rlptlon ratea
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ono-k

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A•••

,.

EMS n.ns

File foredosure

POMEROY. - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered six calls for ..si,..
tance on Wednesday. Units
responded a&lt; follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:21 a.m., Country Mobile
Home Park, Dallas Young,
treated;
1:45 p.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Oris Hubbard,
Holzer Medical CenteF; - ·
.3:31 p.m., Maple Street,
Debra Snyder, treated;
8:5 1 p.m., Naylors Run,
Lorena Pierce, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
REEDSVll.LE
1:41 a.m., Ohio 124,J'\remy
Young, refused treatment.
RUTLAND
5:57 p.m., Meigs Mine No.
· 2,James Lambert, HMC.

POMEROY - A foreclosure action was flied in Meigs
County Common Ple3s
Court by Bank of America,
Westerville, against Larry D.
Lyons, Pomeroy. and others,
alleging default on a loan
&gt;greement in the amount of
$31 ,433.68.

Issued license
POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to James Albert Rose, 17,
Middleport, and Precious Ann
Moore, 26, Middleport.

Neff sentenced
POMEROY - Roy Jack
"Jick" Neff was sentenced to
a year in prison for his role
in a breakmg and entering at
Little John's, Citgo in Tuppers Plains .
Neff appeared before
Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
on a ·count of breaking and
entering, a fifth-degree
felony.
According to Prosecuting
Attorney Pat Story, Neff was
ordered to pay $16,600.10
to the Citgo station for
items stolen; including an
ATM .

Taft

.

(USPS 21 3-110)
Ohio Volloy Publlahlng Co.
Publllhed fNtry olltmcon, Monday
till&lt;&gt; ugh Friday, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·clall
pootoge paid at Pomeroy.
Mtmbor. The AIIOclattcl Preaa and
the Ohio Nowll'apar AIIOclollon.
Poatmaater: Send addreaa correo·
Ilona lo The Daly Sen11nel, 111 COurt.
St. , Pomeroy, Ohio &gt;15789.

LOCAL BRIEFS

could no longer get payments.
The measure would cut
farm spending by $1.3 billion
over 10 years, or $130 million
annually, and use the money
for food stamps, agricultural
research and other progranJS.
from Page AI
The Bush administration
has not taken a position on
the measure, although ofii- through the Biomedical
cials have argued that exist- Research Fund and the Teching programs unfairly bene- nology Action Fund. Another
fit large farms and encourage $500 million would be approthe overproduction o( crops priated in two-year capital
budgets to pay for new
that are . already in surplus.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a research centers. And the
Democrat who could hold a Department of Development
key vote oti the payment will issue bonds backed by
cap, said the measure was liquor profits to create a S100
"pretty realistic," but rice million fund to tinance highgrowers in her home state of growth industries
California have been lobby- · A major part of the puzzle,
Taft said, is getting voters to
ing 'her to oppose it.
"These payments really approve a bond issue that
have to be for the needy. They would allow the state to raise
can't be for the rich and an additional S500 million to
recruit top researchers and
famous," Feinstein said.
fina nee projects. The issue
won't go on the ballot until
"(Fiscal year) 2003 already fall 2003.
"We need son1e time to
promises to be one of the
worst years in the county's develop and build the support
financial history."
for it. It wiU take a major
Many health department campaign. We'll have to raise a
programs
are
funded lot of doUa':';'Taft sai,d.
.
through state and federal
But, he satd,lt wont be dJfgrant, but office operations, tt ficult to convmce the pubh~
equipment costs and some that the future of OhiO s
salaries are paid through economy depends upon a
levy funds, Torres said last . large mvestment m technolo-

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
.

I L-~--------------------------------~-----~
,.

who controls 130,000 acres of
farm and ranch land received
at least S1.2 .million in subsidies for the 2000 crop, according to Agriculture Department records. King Ranch
Inc., a !clouston-based company that owns 825,000 acres,
got more than $638,000.
"We've · been struck by the
number of members (of Congress) who have publicly and
vocally associated themselves
with payment limits in a way
that has never happened
before," said farm program
critic Ken Cook, president of
the Environmental Working
Group.
· Grassley's
. amendment
would limit such payments to
$150,000 per farm and also
tighten rules that aUow absentee landowners to .qualifY for
subsidies. In addition, anyone
whose
average
income
exceeds $2.5 million a year

~-~~~
at
Advest Inc. of Gal·
llpolls.

Pepsico- 49.10

Correction Polley

~ot:

i
Rocky Boots- 5.41
AD Shell - 50.09
Sears- 51.83
Shoney's- .32
Wai·Mart- 58.88
Wencly's- 31.94
Worthington -14.18 •
Daily atock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of lhe previous
day's transactions, pro-

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S}J4S Carton

State has to improve
flandling of charter schools ·

'

Defendant
confesses

·~s

sps Pa~k

The Dilly Sentinel • Pqe A 3

~ditor:

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File divorces
POMEROY Divorce
actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Henry A .
Thorne, Middleport, against
Loretta Tina Thorne, Jackson,
N.J.; and by Robert E . Bishop, Middleport, against Sandra
Bishop, Montrose, Colo.
An action for dissoluti on of.
marriage has been filed by
Janes N. Biggs, Middleport,
and Cassy L. Biggs, Middleport.

Plan meetings
· TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High Sc,hool will
hold a financial aid information night on Feb. 12 . at 7
p.m. in the cafeteria. Julia
Murphy of Hocking College
. will speak on FASSA, scholarships and student loans.
The school will hold a
post-secondary
education
option meeting on Feb. 28 at
7 p.m. in the cafeteria. The
meeting will be for parents
· and students interested in
attending college next year.

Board meets
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District wiU meet on
Feb. 11 at 7 p.m. Late fee
charges and definitions of a
business will be discussed.
Ohio State· partnership as. a
model for what Taft's plan
proposes on a larger scale.
Scitech is an independent
nonprofit affiliated -with Ohio
State and set up to develop
the university's research park,
which has' about 20 companies, including LeadScope,
Smith said.
Glenn Myatt, LeadScope's
chief executive, said the company has benefited from previous state support, such as
the job-creation tax credits,
and is depending on future
state support as well as continued collaboration with
Ohio State.
"It wiU help companies like
us be more successful," Myatt
said of Taft's proposal. "The
technology industry produces
very high paying, quality Jobs,
which is exactly what the
governor's plan seems to push
fior."

gy;,n,
· to se U1t
· base d
we ,re gomg
on a vision for Ohio of highpaying jobs, breakthrough
research ~nd making Ohio a
leader in the high-tech economy," he said.
Ora Smith, president of the
Science and Technology ·
Campus Corp., or Scitech, ~~~filii
said he sees the LeadScope-

�PageA4

.The Daily Sentinel

1hundey. Febnaary 7. 2002
I

The Daily Sentinel

~·r
Hu~T!

DEAR ABBY: I am a 16-year-;old girl , raised to be old-fashioned. I
,-:am very uncomfortable with how
:-(he rules of courtship have changed
' over the years. It used to be that
.
;' guys pursued
the girls. Now, the sit•:uation has reversed and girls have
•:become the aggressors.
~ ·Most of the guys I know won't ask
·:me out unless I make the first move
&gt;and call them. They are lo used to
being chased that they think if a girl
doesn't do it, she's not interested.
~ How can I encourage a guy to ask
:-me out without being the aggres·"sor?
OLD-FASHIONE.,
GIRL IN INDIANA
DEAR OLD-FASHIONED:
Most males like to be t hased . It's
. flattering, and that way they know
· they won't be. turned down. However, there are ways a girl can let a
guy_know she's interested without
coming on like a shark that smells

iT WoN'T

LeaVe,
eillfeR.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
DenDicM!won

Publleller

•

•

ot.ne K.ly Hill
Controller

,_..,,.,.._.,..,,.._, n.,.- .. ,_, _ _ _ N I _

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No UlfiiNt ,_, will Hlf'b/lrhL Ulrrn · - H bo , . - - · &amp;Mou~
, _ , . . . ,.... . . . .L

_,..c.

lTie.,U.Iou r.,Nuo4 mllu- Nlow.,. tJN _ . , t{t.U OMo IWiq

,

~--.-.-.-

--

NATIONAL VIEW

Bad move
Good intentions disappear in
alteration of Sept. 11 memorial

Bend
Girl doesn't know dating rnles

·_The_n_any_Se_nt_ine_I

THaT t:os

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Olllo
740 1ez:21H • Fu: 740 112-2111
www.mydallytentlnel.com

Chat'Mn1 Hoeflich
General Mallllgll'

--~By the

Dear

Abby

Morton
Konchdcke

i

TODAY IN HISTORY

N~

.

light, after which she finds that
she has a gift of healing. She
becomes skilled In the use of
medicine and midwifery, but
this later leads to her beiJJg
accused of witchcraft.
She is sentenced to walk on
hot coals, bu.t the miracle of
POMEROY - "A Vision the light vision saves her from
of Light," by Judith Merkle harm. Eventually, Margaret
Riley, was rev1ewed by Sara had to stop the healing that
Owen .at the recent meetmg of she is so good at, because of
. the Middleport Literary Club , the superstition of the .time
.at the home of Betsy Parsons. and the efforts of those who
. The book IS hmoncal fie- tried to destroy her. It was her
· t10n, set In 14th Century Eng- second busband who encourland,_ Wlth an unforgettable aged her to follow her dream
herome, Margaret of Ash bury. of telling her story.
The reVIewer told . how the
The reviewer told how,
.. woma? wanted to wme a book throughout the story, the voice
recording her _expenences and of Brother Gregory Is heard,
thoughts of a lifetnne: and how with his. view~. typical of
this seemed alniost nnposs!ble medieval times that women
for someone with little educa- are lower creat;res by nature.
llon and at a tune In history
This novel Is full of details
when it was believed to be on life In the 1300s, from the
hereacal for a woman to have horror of the Black Death to
.
the splendor of castles.
.such an a~bition.
·· According to the rev!ewer,
Owen concluded her review
. Margaret felt that . God was by quoting the words of the
telling her to do .this, and she heroine, "Maybe some day
finally finds a friar by the name someone will read this and
·of Brother Gregory who understand what I wanted to
. accepts the JOb of wnang down say. And when they do, well,
. her story, only because h~ has maybe things wiU be different
no other work and IS starvmg. then. Maybe it will be a differBetsy, Parsons, readmg_ the ent world, the kind where
'W~rds of Brother Gregory, people can listen to what
·asSISted Ms. Owen In a eli~- other people have to say, even
·Iogue between the two mam If they are not men."
characters.
For roll call members respondThe reviewer continued by ed by telling their childhood
tellmg how Margaret of Ash- ambitions for adult life.The roU
bury had had a very difficult call response for the group was
. life, suffering the early death of for each to tell about childhood
. her mother, the negl~t of her ambitions for adult life.
father, a forced marnage to ·a
Leah Ord, president,. led in
cruel older man, and nearly the club collect. There ·was a
, dymg .herself In the ternble report on members who had
Black Death plague.
. been ill. The next meeting wiU
The title of the book IS be on .Feb. 13 at the home of
drawn from a vision that Mar- Martha Hoover.
garet had of a glowing veil of

Literary hears
view of Riley's
AA Vision
of Lighf

Birth announced
POMEROY -Chad Burton and Amy Weidner of
Athens announce the birth of
their first child, a daughter,
Haley Dawn Burton, born on
Nov. 17, 2001, at O'Bieness
Memorial
Hospital in
Athens The
infant
weighed
five poJ!nds
15 ounces.
Paternal
grandpar! - - - - - - - '. ents
are
Haley Dawn · Connie
Burton and
Ron Ferguson of Pomeroy,
and Steve and Lori Burton of
Racine. Paternal great-grandparents are James and Elizabeth Roush of West Columbia, W.Va., and Robert and
Del aries Burton of Pomeroy.
Maternal grandparents are
Kim and Randy Page of Ada,
and Chris and Melody Weidner of Rockhill, S.C. Paternal
great-grandparents ate Wayne
and Barbara Henry and
Roberta Weidner, all of
Athens, and Don Weidner of
Hockingport.
·

Grange practices
· for contest
SALEM CENTER
Fourth degree, opening and
closing, and draping the charter were practiced for ritualistic contest when Star Grange
778 met recently at the hall.
Master Patty Dyer conducted the meeting following
potluck refreshments.
·
Nomination of delegates for
State Session was held with

.

She said that residents can
bring their mercury thermometers · t&lt;Y"""the health
department and receive a free
digital replacement.The supply
is somewhat limited, she said.

Refresher course
for older drivers

Digital
thennometers .
still available
POMEROY - Exchanges
of mercury thermometers for
digital ones are still being
made at the Meigs County
Health Department.
Ma~orie Skidmore, R.N.,
director of nursing, said that
while mapy families have had
a mercury thermometer in
their medicine cabinet for
many years without breaking
it, there is always that risk.
Skidmore warned that a
broken mercury thermometer
can pose a serious risk to a
family's health and the environment because mercury is a
toxic substance . ·
"Even if you have never

POMEROY - A refresher
course for older people interested
in improving their driving skills is
being offered by . O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens.
O'Bleness is offering 5.5
ALIVE/Mature Driving Tuesday, Feb. 19, from 8:30 a.m.
until noon and · from 12:30
until 5 p.m. in O'BJ,eness'
basement conference room BIt. Participants are asked co
attend the morning and afternoon sessions . All drivers,
especially those who are 50
years old or older, are invited
to participate in the program.
Developed by the American
Association of Retired Persons
(AARP), 55 ALIVE/Mature
Driving is a comprehensive
classroom refresher course
geared toward the specific
needs of drivers who are 50
years old or older.
According to, AARP, the
course helps diivers update
their driving knowledge . and
skills, prevent traffic crashes and
violations, and maintain mobil~
ity and independence. As an
added bonus, those who complete the course may be eligible

for 55 ALIVE / Mature · Driving, will present information
about the following topics:
The impact of aging and med.ications on a person's driving

abilities, basic driving rules,
license renewal, local traffic
hazards, adverse road conditions, "road rage," energy savings measures, proper vehicle
use and ·tnainte nance , . and

accident prevention tactics.
More than 6 million people
have completed the 55
ALIVE/ Matute
Driving
course since it began in 1979
To enroll in th e course,
which has a S10 enrollment
fee, call 740- 592-9337,

.Eams dean's list
POMEROY Beverly
Burdette, a first-year student at
NorthlanQ College in Ashland,
Wis., has been named to the
Dean's List for the 200 I fall
term. Qualifying students must
earn a grade point average of at
least 3.5 on a 4.50 scale, with
no grade less than a RC.S
Burdette is the daughter of ·
Sharon and Robert Burdette
of Pomeroy, and is a 200 I
graduate of . Meigs High
School. She is studying natural
resources, biology and outdoor
orientation at Northland.
Northland is an environmental liberal arts college near
the shore of Lake Superior. It
enrolls 800 students.

AdeutJ~e4- 11~ Sate

••••••••••••••••••••••••
Gliaer Rockers·

titles may start an era of modesty for Olympics

,.

ing them about the1r job or family.
Abby, I have had two women tell
me they had a crush on me in high
school. and yet these same two
women dated only popular athletes.
· I don't re111ember either of those
beautiful girls looking my way. If
women want to miss out on the
"shy guy" and continue to date the
wolves out there, it's very easy just continue doing nothing. Nice
guys are everywhere. - ROBERT
IN CARLSBAD, CALIF.
DEAR ROBERT: WeU said. To
which I add:· If nice guys would
simply look around instead of focusing solely on their own insecurities,
they might discover they have a host
of admirers.
(Pauline Phillips and her daughter
jeanne Phillips share the pseudonym
Abigail J.iln Buren. Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby. com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

broken a mercury thermome- to receive a discount on their
ter, it doesn't mean you never auto insurance prenriun1S.
wm;• said Skidmore.
Burton DeVeau , instructor

Tom Barley and Ray Midkiff
being nominated. An appeal
for aid for a sister from Eaton
Grange in Lorain County was
answered.
·
Carl Morris, legislative agent,
reported that Pfizer Pharmaceuticals is starting a new prescription drug program. He
also repo1ted that he has the
phone numbers for the White
House, Senate and Legislature
if anyone has problems and
would like to contact them.
Practices for the degree
teams were set for Feb. 10 and
17 at 2 p.m. and Feb. 9 and 16
at 7:30 p.m. each following a
potluck meal one hour prior.
There were 29 members and
juniors present for the meeting.

RYAN'S VIEW

Otrk and Ataer, Assortea Fabrics
Reg. $269.00
Reg. $309.00
Reg. $469.00

SALE
1219.00
'249.00
1379.00

FINANCING SPECIAL

Joan
Ryan

.

could have stepped up and asked
Todd, the shy- guy, out for a cup of
coffee. (How simple!) This somewhat current - in the scope of
moderp history- mostly American
habit of women playing coy rarely
works out well.
·
I believe that a woman waiting for
her knight on a white horse is a stupid f~nrasy th1t has been sold u 1 us
by the entertainment industry for
the last 75 years. Someone once
said: "Where are all the nice men?
Well, they're usually standing right
next to you:·
I have talked to inany senior citi·
zens, in particular senior ~men. I
always asked them the same question: "Did you court or somehow
'go after' your husband"? About 75
percent of these women admitted
they had made the first 'move to get
their man's attention - dropping by
the pond where they fished, or ask-

Society Notebook

Use Medicare to woo the vote ofAmericas seniors

made permanent and their effective dates
Senior citizens" could emerge as the
accelerated, which Bob Bixby, executive
most important swing group in this year's
director of the Concord Coalition, says
congressional elections, giving Democrats
would cost about $1 trillion, including tax
a chance to use Medicare and Social Secufound pride and inspiration in the Sept. 11 photobenefits Congress is expected to , extend
graph of three Brooklyn firefighters raising an Amer- . rity as issues to offSet Republican advanon
its own.
tages on defense and homeland security.
ican flag amid the rubble of the World Trade Center.
Tom Klhn, minority staff director of the
Democrats can argue, truthfuUy, that
.The now-famous photo taken by Thomas Franklin ...
House Budget Committee, said the past
President Bush's past and recommended
captured in its unspoken thousand words the spirit of
and
proposed tax cuts "drive a hole right
tax cuts will leave too little money to prothrough the Social Security and Medicare
our nation's unity, strength and courage. It ran on the
vide seniors with a generous Medicare
trust funds and threaten fiscal responsibiliprescription drug _benefit.
front page ofThe Sun Herald on Sept. 13 with the
COLUMNIST
ty.
More demagogically, they can claim that
headline "America rises."
"The old saying is, 'If you're in a hole,
ihe tax cuts are forcing a "raid" on the
, When a memorial to the 343 firefighters killed in '
dwindling Social Security surplus, endan- his staying Speaker to pass a drug benefic;• stop digging.' But ihey've brought in a
· · the terrorist attack was proposed, the image was a
gering retirement benefits. In fact, no cur- said AARP Policy Director John Rother, bulldozer," he continued. On top of new
·
natural.
rent retiree will suffer any loss of benefits; · "but his benefit is not going to be attrac- tax cuts, Bush is proposing new defense
But on a clay model of the bronze sculpture that is
tive co seniors who expect the kind of and homeland security outlays of about
though young people probably will:
Formerly a solid Democratic voting benefit they had when they were $570 billion over 1'0 years.
· to .b e placed in front of fire department headquarters
All this would lower the projected 1agroup, seniors have been trending Repub- employed."
in Brooklyn, the facial feature$ of white Firefighters
Moreover, Rep. Ellen -Tauscher, D- year surplus to less than $1 trillion - all
lican in recent elections. But indications
, George Johnson, Dan McWilliams and Billy Eisenare that they are swinging back toward the Calif., points out that competitive House of it derived from Social Security revgrein have been alterecl to reflect one white, one
·. Democrats this year out of economic con- districts tend to be middle-to-upper enues.
black and one Hispanic firefighter. For all its good
income, whose seniors would not benefit
This would . not · affect any current
cerns.
from
a
GOP
drug
plan
targeted
at
poorer
retirees'
benefits, but it would prevent sigintentions, the decision to alter reality is a bad one.
According to the bipartisan Battle.
nificandy paying down the national debt
gro\md survey Ia.t mo;,th, Republicans people.
· . New York firefighters of many races died in the
No
proposal
has
yet
been
introduced
in
or
a prepayment of Social Security benen.ow enjoy a 2-point advantage on the
attack, and an impressionistic memorial in their
generic congressional ballot among all Congress that provides an.adequate bene- · fits through retirement savings accounts.
· honor would rightly reflect their diversity. But a
fit covering all seniors, Rother said A
Republicans, of course; wiU argue that
voters. But voters aged 65 and older memorial based on a historic event should reflect it
"modest"
phin,
he
added,
would
cost
accelerated
and extended taX cuts will
who make up 22 percent of the voting
with as much accuracy as possible....
· population but are likely to represent 28 "north of $400 billio·n, maybe $500 bil- make the eConomy grow faster, creating a
brighter fiscal future and making all beneOn Sept. 11, Johnson, MeWilliams and Eisengrein
percent of the N6vember turnout - pre- lion."
That kinf of money is going to be,hard fits more affordable.
represented their firefighting brethren of,every race,
fer Democrats by 7 pomts.
But the fact is that Bush proposed only
The overwhelming concern of senior co find in light of current long-term budas they would have had all three been black or Hisget
projectionsan
argument
Denioca
$190
billion drug benefit, even when the
voters is the economy, according to . the
panic or female . An accurate reflection of history
surplus was projected to be $5.6 trillion.
poll, and within that category, it's the ris- rats are sure to make.
would in no Way diminish the bravery and the sacriyear
ago,
the
Congressional
Budget
Hastert clearly believes that's not adequate
A
ing cost of health care - which means
fice of those New York firefighters who died' at
drugs, which are not paid for by Medicare. Office estimated that between 2002 and politically.
.
'Ground Zero.
The AARP's Rother said, "TheoreticalThe president is proposing to phase in a 2011, the government' would Il\0 a surplus
of
$5.6
trillion
($2.5
trillion
from
ly
it's possible for Democrats and Repub_
drug benefit along with reforms of the
· Medicare system, but its emphasis is. on excess Social Security revenues and $3.1 licans co bridge their differences on prescription drug; if they want to."
helping low-income seniors, and its cost is trillion from the rest of government).
This year, because ofBush's $1.6 trillion
But the prospects are not good, he
only $190 billion over 10 years.
in
tax
cuts,
the
recession
and
the
war
on
·
noted.
"The Republicans just Want a vote
Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-111., has
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
served notice that he plans to push terrorism, the CBO estimate is down to on this to protect themselves, and the
Today is Thursday, Feb: 7, the 38th day of2002.There are 327
through a pricier plan this year, costing $1.6 trillion fur those years and S2.5 tpl- Democrats want the issue to run on in the
days left in the year.
$300 billion, but an official of the AARP lion for the years 2003 to 2012, the differ- faii."You can har:dly blame the Democrats.
Today's Highlight in History:
seniors' lobby says that would pay for only ence being that the Bush tax cuts are sup- It's one of the few issues they have.
On Feb. 7, 1964, the Beatles began their first American tour
a "thin" benefit with high co-pays and posed to lapse in 2011.
as· they arrived at New York's jphn F. Kennedy International
In his State of the Union address, the
(Morton Kondrcuke ts exewtive editor of
deductibles.
Airport.
president
called
for
the
tax
cuts
to
be
Roll
Call, tile newspaper cf Capitol Hill.)
Hastert "clearly believes that it's key to
On this date:
In 1812, author Ch~rles Dickens was born in Portsmouth,
England.
.
· In 1931, aviator Amelia Earhart married publisher George P.
Putnam in Noank, Conn.
'
rn 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt authorized a flag for
the office of the vice president.
In 1943, the governme-nt announced that shoe rationing
•
would go into effect, limiting consumers to buying three pairs
f
per person for the remainder of the year.
·
The crotch shot is gone.
.
'· .. Now the ISU "Yants to go legit and
In 1944, during World War II, the Germans launched a counrun the sport like, well, a sport.
You ought to know this before you
·
teroffensive at Anzio, Italy.
Naturally, the fans are shocked and
tune into the Olympics next weekend,
In 1948, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower resigned as Army chief
angry. Conspiracy theor ies abound on
in case you're a figure-skating purist.
of staff; he was succeeded by Gen.' Omar Bradley.
the !SUWeb site's discussion groups.
No more splayed legs around a dancIn 1971, women in Switzerland won the right to vote.
"The judges are only bowing to the
ing partner's neck. No more holding a
In 1984, space shuttle astronauts Bruce McCandless II and
Mormon-controlled Salt Lake City
partner upside down while she performs
Robert L. Stewart went on the first untethered space walk.
Olympic Committee," wrote "Chezcdsplits. No more above-the- head, handIn 1986, Haitian President-for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier
to-groin holds. .
·
diesf" "They are way too conservative."
fled his country, ending 28 years of his family's rule.
"Kobi" offered a different theory. '·' I'm
The ~udges have had enough .
In 1999, Jordan's King Hussein died of cancer at age 63; he
not sure that we can blame this on th.e
At .this Olympics, those crowd-pleasCOLUMNIST
was succeeded by his eldest son, Abdullah.
Mormons - the Bush ·administration
ing poses can cost an ice-dancer or pairs
· Ten years ago: Russian President Boris N.Yeltsin and French
has given the religious right a strong
team a tenth- of-a- point deduction
President Francois Mitterrand signed a cooperation treaty in
under new rules that penalize "undigni- and Dean seducing each other to voice in the USA. They are,,after all, his,
· Paris. Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike 'tYson tesfied" moves. The new rules, instituted "Bolero." It's the sport that gave us Kata- 'voting constituency. No flames please,
tified at h1rrape rrlal in Indianapolis that his accuser, a Mils
last year by the International Skating rina Witt posing for Playboy, Tonya just re!)eating a well-accepted fact."
Black America contestant, had consented to having sex with
Change is the rule
Union, would also cover pelvis pump- Harding having Nancy Kerrigan
Perh~ps we should acc ept that nothing
1-!im.
.
ing, crotch-grabbing, lap-dancing and all clubbed (and a few years later, Tonya's
Five years ago: The Air Force suspended all its flights in
.simulated acts as well as any move wedding night videq), Qks~ . Baiul stays the same forever. Rules change.Valrestricted training areas on the East Coast after a pair of dose
rc!quiring a stripper's pole or an exam arrest~d for drunken driving and Nicole ues change. We have to adjust·with the
calls between National Guard jets and civilian airliners. Mindtable.
Bobek convicted of burglary. It has sup- times.
But there is one thing at th e Win~er
ful of Russian President BorisYeltsin's ailments, President ClinThis is, needless to say, an outrage, not plied us with a steamy pilrade of love
ton agreed to shift their March summit meeting from the Unitto mention bad for TV ratings.
stories and fiery breakups between pairs Olympics that never changes. We can
count on it like the lighting of th e
ed State\ to Helsjnki, Finland.
Figure skating officials are trying to and ice-dancing skaters. •
Olympic
flame and th e parade of athOne ·year ago: The Senate voted to release $582 million in
put a pinafore on a pinup, turn a soap ·
Kin and cry
dues owed th e United Nations. The space·shuttle Atlantis blastopera into an after-school special. Why
This is a sport that has an actual place letes in the Opening Ceremony. And
ed off on a trip to the international space station.J.ean-Bertrand
do they think figure skating draws more called the "Kiss and Cry" area, where now it is here, just ~s always:
Figure' skating has a controversy.
viewers than any other sport in the Win- skaters and their coaches sit 'and wait for
Aristide was sworn in as Haiti's president. Death claimed
Let the Games begin .
ter Olympics? The music? The spins? the scores. And it dresses its athletes not
singer-actress Dale Evans at age 88 and author Anne MorroW
aoan Ryan is a columu ist fo r the Sau
The jumps?
Lindbergh, wife of aviator Charles I,indbergh, at age 94.
in uniforms but "costumes," often
OK, sure. But it's mostly the sex and designed to give the . illusion of partial Francisco Chronicle. Send conuuwts to Iter in
Today's Birthdays: Actor Eddie Bracken is 82. Country singer
care of this newspaper or send /zer e-mail at
tbe gossip.
.
Willl).a Lee Cooper is 81.Author GayTalese is 70. Blues singernudity.
joanryan @sfgate.com.)
This is the sport that gave us Torvill
musician Earl King is 68.

1hursct.y. Febn~•ry 7. 2001

DEAR ABBY: I'm wnnng
regarding a letter from "Regretful in
SpringfieJil:· who said she would
have married "Todd" if be had only
let her know how he felt. Her moth}
er revealed on her deathbed that
Todd had left the state on "Regretful's" wedding day because "Texas
wasn't big enough to hold his grief."
ADVICE
He probably told her mom
believing the way to the calf is
blood.
through the cow, thinking she
(1) Be friendly.
would tell her daughter. Unfortu(2)' Have a reason for calling other nately, many of us are too trusting
and indirect. Believe me, the best
than just to talk.
.
(3) If you share a genuine interest way to get a message across is to
in something he's interested in, let deliver it yourself and not count on
someone else to do it for you. Leave
him know it.
(4) If you want to see him outside nothing to chance. ~ BEEN
of school, ask him to join you and a THERE, DONE THA'r, LAKE
'
group of your . friends. It will take WALES, FLA.
the pressure off.
.
DEAR BT/DT:You're 100 perLast, if you think you're alone in cent right. Read on:
~
DEAR ABBY: ''Regretful"
having this problem, read on:

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

..
• The Sun Herald, Biloxi-Gulfport, Miss., on
bad dedsion for good intentions: Millions of Americans

Page AS

%
APR

$} o~~WN $} o~~R
MONTH

•
''

,.

FOR ONE YEAR

our missiQrli~ to be

.Recliners

'

Berkllne ana Flexsteet
SALE
Reg. $419.00
Reg. $469.00
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,.
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0

�..
P~~ge A 6 •

Thu~~Feb.7,2002

www.mydllllyMntlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel

'

Medicare raud costs taxpayers $13 billion
BY EUZA81n1 CltUMP
Each year, about S 13 billion dolIars in taxpayer money is lost
~hrough Medicare fraud . ·
.
A health care professional charges
for services that were never rendered. A doctor bills at a rate much
higher than is actually justified. A
health care provider gives services
or sells products that are not medically necessary, or that are below
professional standards. •
Most health care professiqnals are
honest, trustworthy and responsible
and most retired persons take comfort in knowing that medical services will be there when needed,
thanks to Medicare. However, due
to the unscrupulous practices of a

small percentage of health care
providers, Medicare is being
drained ofv~able resources.
Medicare fraud affects everybody.
It affects those who depend on
Medic•re and their caregivers by
· decreasing the funding available for
important programs and ultimately
by diminishing. the quality of the
treatment patients receive. And it
affects everyone who pays taxes by
wasting billions of tax dollars.
The Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services are working
with law enforcement officials,
other government agencies, contractors, providers and Medicare
beneficiaries to combat fraud and
abuse in key areas. The goal is to

make sure that Medicare ohly does
business with legitimate providers
and suppliers who give Medicare
beneficiaries high quality service.
These actions save money and protect Medicare for future generations.
Medicare beneficiaries can help a
lot in the fight against fraud I suggest the following measures:
• Treat your Medica re number as
you would your eredit card number. Handle it with care. Don't give
the number on your Medicare card
to anyone, except your doctors or
other. Medicare health professionals.
• Review all the payment noti~es
you rece1ve from Medi care for

erron.
•
• Read your explanation of benefits statements carefully. Call your
provider or Medicare insurance
company for an explanation or
cla.rification of unusual or questionable Medicare charges. Make
sure Medicare was not billed for
services or supplies you did not
.receive.
• Don't let anyone review your
medical records or recommend services, except appropriate medical
health professionals.
• Be cautious if you are offered
·free testing or ·Screening in
exchange for your Medicare card
·
number.
If you see a charge on a payment

notice that rnay be wrong, call the
health care provider and ask ab9ut
it. If you think that a provider may
be cheating or abusing Medicare,
call the Medicare carrier or fiscal
intermediary' whose telephone
number appears on the notice.
Finally, if you •have called your
provider and your Medicare insure
ance carrier and continue to have
questions, call the Medicare Fraud
Hotline at 1-800-447-8477. For
more information about Medicare
fraud, or about the Medicare program itself, cali 1- 800-633-4227, or
visit www.medicare .go on the
Internet.
(Elizabeth Crump is manager of the
Social Security office in Athens.)

New machine that can .warp time
isn't embraced by television
NEW YORK {AP) - It's
called a Time Machine, and
the television industry only
wishes it was as benign as the
device that sent Michael J.
Fox back to the future.
Instead, the new box that can
warp TV rime is making
many people grumble; while
others see only dollar signs.
Invented by Bill Hendershot, an engineer from San
Jose, Calif., the Time
Machine enables television
stations to compress their
programs to fit' in more commercials.·
It works by going · through
these programs ·frame-byframe, and when two identical frames appear side-byside, one is removed. Usually,
this can be done enough in a
,22-minute program {the
actual length ofmost sitcoms
without commercials), to ·add
30 second• of time.
Viewers ate none the wiser,
,said Hendephot, president of
·Prime Image Inc.
"It is so good, that you can
take the original · artists and
directors who made the piece
and they cannot tell the difference," he said.
He's sold about 100 Time
. •Machines to television sta•
tions across the United
States. They cost $93,000,
each . .If a station uses ir twa
or three times a day - Henl

Bill Hendershot, inventor of television's Time Machine, poses for
a portrait at his company, Prime Image Inc., in San Jose Calif. (AP)
dershot warns against overuse
- the machine would pay
for itself through additional
advertising revenue in two
months, he said.
"There's never, ever been a
single unit returned, not for
any reason,"he sa1'd .
The Time Machine's existence might have gone unnoticed by the public at large if
it hadn't been for a reporter
who was covering a Pittsburgh Steelers football game
last October. He noticed that
the game in front of him on
the field ; didn't match the
game being broadcast on

KDKA, the CBS-owned television station.
,
KDKA got in trouble with
CBS network executives,
sjnce the National Football
League limits the number of
commercials that can be
shown during their games . .
Beyond · that, the Time
Machine has so troubled the
American Association of
Advertising Agencies that it
has started an investigation
into how widely it's being
used.
If stations can use the Time
Machine to compress the
programs, they could shorten

the commercials, too, said
Kathy Crawford, executive
vice president ·of the ad firm
Initiative Media. Advertisers
that pay for a 30-second
commercial better be getting
30 seconds, not 29, she said.
Hendershot said stations
don't use the machine to cut
commercials.
Advertisers are also concerned
that the Time
Machine adds to .t he clutter
on television. They're already
worried about additional
commercial time added over
the past decade by networks:
the more commercials there
are, the lesser the chance that
one will stand out.
"It may mean that there is
going to .be l~ss use of television and more use of other
media" by advertisers, Crawford said. "What · television
has done to itself suggests it is
losing value."
CBS has been quietly discouraging its stations from
using the Time Machine, and
the public spotlight may scare
some station managers away.
Hendershot said that he
doesn't understand the problem.
The machine's very nature
subtly tricks viewers about
what they're seeing. Hender•
shot said that deception isn't
nearly as bad as television stations chopping scenes out of

movies to fit in more ad time,
or artificially coloring a previously black-and-white.tilm.
The machine has other uses
that have not been fully
explored, he said.
Major advertisers have long
sought to be able to run a
commercial simultaneously
on all of a TV market's broadcast outlets, so viewers would
see the same thing if they
tried to click away from an
ad. Advertisers have tried this
before, bu·t stations have
never been able to coordinate

the time precisely to make
the ads effective.
Use the Time Machine, and
that would be no problem.
Hendershot said there have
been some big advertisers
that are considering paying to
outfit TV stations with Time
Machines just to arrange
simultaneous ads.
"This is a commercial
industry," he said. "The rea- ·
son you get to see.free television in this country is
because somebody ' is paying
for it."

The
Joint Implant Center
-11~1·

f!~~

Nation • ·world

~Daily Sentinel

1'11,_ offer JFK

Grant Medical Center
OhioHealth

lnsllht
BOSTON {AP) - President Kennedy saw nuclear
1tbckpiles as a deierrent
against attack and worried that
the United States would fall
behind th~ Soviets in building
its arsenal; according to ·newly
released tape recordings.
Kennedy discusJe d the
stockpiling of nuclear weapons
in a Dec. 5, 1962, meeting
with
Defense
Secretary
Robert McNamara, Joint
Chiefs
Chairman
Gen.
Maxwell Taylor · and' other
high-ranking officials. .
Kennedy said the nuclear
buildup had a stabilizing
effect, and that it would be lost
if the Soviets developed the
ability to annihilate the United States.
"And that being true, then
they will use their conventional force to take whatever
they .want, anyplace - well
not in this hemisphere - but
in Europe and Asia," Kennedy
said.

extensive search of surrounding streets and canyons, there's
been no trace of her and no
arrests in her disappearance.

Police discount
claims

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The
15-year-old boy who crashed
a stolen plane into a skyscraper
left a note saying_ that al-Qaida
terrorists had tried to recruit
him . Bur police said Wednesday there was no truth to the
claim.
Charles Bishop was killed
when the single-engine Cessna slammed into the 28th
floor of the Bank of America .
Plaza on Jan. 5. His family has
disputed authorities' belief that
his note was a suicide not~ and
said the boy had never ~hown
signs of depression or other
emotional troubles.
In a police report issued
Wednes6y, investigators concluded that the crash "appears
to have been an intentional
act" on the boy's part.
The police report drew no
conclusions about what might
have motivated Bishop, but
said investigators. found no
evidence to support the claims
he made in his two-page,
handwritten note, found"in his
NEW YORK {AP)- Pres- flight bag. They said the crash
ident Bush is assuring New was suicide, not an act of terYorkers they can expect the ronsm .
full $20 billion he pledged to
help the city recover from the
Sept. 11 attacks.
"When I said $20 billion, I
meant $20 billion.'' the president told reporters Wednesday
GARDENA, Calif. {AP) as he toured a police com- 1\vo students were wounded
mand center.
Wednesday during a robbery
White House budget c\irec- attempt outside a high school
tor Mitch Daniels said earlier near Los Angeles, authorities
; this week that money for indi- said.
: vidual victilfls would be · The victims, ages 16 and 19,
: counted against the $20 billion were hospitalized in fair con: package, but Bush said his aide dition.
: misspoke. ..
The shooting at Gardena
; "Mitch· understands my High School occurred in an
J pie~,'' he said.
outdoor area near a classroom
after · one of three men
demanded money from the
t'
••
19-year-old, said Los Angeles
police Sgt. John Pasquariello.
When the victim said he
, SAN DIEGO (AP) - The didn't have any cash and
• bedroom walls are swathed in turned to walk away, the rob: her favorite colors, pink With ber fired. The 16-year-old girl
: purple trim. A lacy white was standing next to the 19: qnopy covers the bed. A Bar- year-old.
' hie doll sits near a basket of
: stuffed animals .
k But on the wall by the light
t switch lies inky smudges left
by crime scene investigators
: while dusting for fingerprints
ANCHORAGE,
Alaska
reminder of the mystery (AP) - 1\vo sharp earth·that surrounds the disappear- quakes rattled Anchorage early
: ance of 7-year-old Danielle Wednesday, knocking objects
off shelves, setting off alarms
' van Dam.
l "It's like we're in a fog of and making buildings shudder.
insanity:' the girl's father, No serious damage or injuries
• Damon van Dam, said were reported.
I Wednesday as he and his wife, "It's just one. of those things
I•, Brenda, waited for news of that reminds you you live in
: their daughter with an increas- Alaska," said Bruce Turner of
the Alaska Tsunami Warning
l ing sense of dread.
Police believe the 4-'foot-tall Center in Palmer.
! girl with shoulder-length The first . quake hit at 8:18,
: blonde hair was abqucted from .a.m. and the second followed
1 her second-floor bedroom 45 seconds later.
I Friday night or Saturday "The first one wasn't bad,
I
.morning. But despite an but the second one .
'
;
•

Bush renews
· aid pledge

Allegd robber
wounds2

Hunt intensifies
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Ektension
of unemployment benefits, the one
item to rise from the ashes of the failed
economic- stimulus package, is now up
to the ·House.
The Senate voted without dissent
Wednesday to extend those benefits by
13 weeks beyond the 26 weeks in current law. As of January, there were 7.9
million jobless. people in America, an
unemployment rate of 5.6 percent, and
benefits are running out for many:
"These people lost their jobs through
no fault of their own," said Rep. Dennis Moore, D-Kan. "They're not look'
.
ing for a handout, but instead a helping
hand until they are able to get back on
their feet."
Under the plan, people would be eligible for the extended aid if they
exhau.s ted regular . benefits be tiNe en
. S·ept. II, 2001, and the week· of Jan. 6,
2003-. Abour 5.6 million people would
likely qualify for an estimated SI 0.8
billion in benefits, according to Congress' Joint Economic Committee.
The Bush administration expressed
frustration and disappointment that a
broader economic stimulus package
will not pass but nonetheless voiced
support for the benefits extension.
"Passing an extension of unemployment benefits is the least they can do,"
said Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill.
Still, it was· not certain when House
Republican leaders would allow the
extension to come up for a vote.
Although it is supported by the GOP
and Democrats, many Republicans
adamantly wanted to couple it with tax
cuts for individuals and businesses .
One GOP source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there was
concern among. some about going
along with a measure pushed by Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D.,

LOCAL EVENTS
Commu'nlfy Calendar 11
publlehed •• a .f ree eervlce
to non-profit groupe wlehIng to announce meetlngl
and epeclal evente. The
calendar Ia not deelgned
to promote ealea or fund· .
raleere of any type. Item•
are prlnt8d only ae apace
permit• and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a
epeclflc number of day1.

Township Trustees, Thurs- mentary School Library. Hisday, 6:30 p.m., , township tory essay winners will be
recognized.
office on Joppa Road.
.

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DIAMOND EARRINGS

TUPPERS PLAINS
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Ladles Sig,n up for baseball/softball
Auxiliary, Thursday, 7 p.m. leagues for Tuppers Plains,
Chester and Reedsville chll·
at the hall. Silent auction.
dren Feb. 9, 9 e..m. until
noon at Eastern Elementary.
FRIDAY
POMEROY Widow's
WEDNESDAY
Fellowship Frii:lay, noon,
POMEROY -Trinity ConCraw's Steak House.
gregational .Church, Lenten
THURSDAY
breakfast,
7:45 .
a.m.
Tl!IPPEAS PLAINS
SATURDAY
1
Wednesday. Use entrance
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW to meet
on
Second Street. Re,erva- ·
Thl.lrsday, 7 p.m. at the hall. Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter. Daughters of the lions to bil made with Peggy
Silel']t auction willqe held.
American Revolution, Satur· Harris, 992-7569, or Diane
Olive day, 10 a.m. at Eastern Eie· Hawley, 992-2722.
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whom they blame for killing the overall stimulus. package. The fear was that
the House could be fo(ced into accepting other popular Democratic priorities and ·g et little in· return, the source
said. ·
Daschle, the nation's highest-ranking
elected Democrat; was portrayed by
Republican leaders as unwilling to
compromise even after the House
twice passed GOP-written stimulus
packages and President Bush has
pushed for one for months as a tonic to
the recession .
"Tom Daschle decided to thwart the
will of the Senate majority and kill further consideration of an economic
stimulus bill that would have actually
helped millions of Americans,'' said
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R -lll.
"I think that is a real shame."
It was Daschle's legislation providing
$69 billion in stimulus this year that
got 56 votes Wednesday, which represented a Senate majority but fell short
of the 60-vote procedural thr~shoia.
That bill included unemployment aid,
Medicaid money to help state budgets,
a 30 percent depreciation tax break for
business investment and a new round
of tax rebate checks aimed at lowerincome people.
A competing $89 billion Republican

package contained more business and
individual tax cuts. Passed by the
House in December and included in
Bush's.new budget, it managed only 48
votes.
"We made every effort, at every
level, to come together," said ,Daschle,
of South Dakota. "And the Republicans- said no. They killed the opportu:c- -nity to bring together a· compromise."
Democrats contended the GOP was
using the stimulus legislation as a vehicle for favorite tax cuts that had little to
do with fighting recession. An example
they gave is that R epublicans sought a
vote Tuesday on an amendment that
would guarantee permanent repeal of
the estate tax, which would have had
no impact for almost a decade under
the $1.35 trillion tax cut enacted last
year.
"It was phase two in their tax campaign,'' said Sen. Jack Reed, D-R .l.
Republicans replied that for all
Daschle's talk of common ground,
there was never a real effort to le t the
Senate work its will.
"There was a shutdown, and the Senate can't operate when it's shut down .
So if the Senate majority leader wants
to get things done. he's going to have
to · let votes occur, amendments be
offered,'' · said Sen. Charles Crassley of
Iowa, senior Republican on the Senate
Finance Committee.
The administration-backed stimulus
p~ckage
would have accelerated
income tax cuts now set to take effect
in the future and provided a 1iew round
of rebate checks of up to $600 aim ed at
lower-income Americans . It included
the ·n-week benefits extension, help
for laid-off workers to pay for ·health
insurarice and . i11ore gene rous tax .
breaks for new investment by corporations and small businesses .

CIA: lhreat may

continue

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Saharan Africa that lack stable also said the educational systhought it was going to turn
the pie case over," waitress
economies that will provide .tems in many Islamic counMemory Moore said at the
them meaningful work, Tenet tries breed hatred for the
Sunrise Grill and Pancake
said in prepared remarks deliv- United States.
House. "It was a jolter. I ran
WASHINGTON (AP)
ered to the Senate Intelligence
and got underneath the door Between describing threats of C?,mmittee on Wednesday.
fra me."·
hurtling missiles and potential . . The problems that ter~or­
'·
terrorist attacks, CIA Director 1sts explmt - poverty, alienGeorge J. Tenet and othe~ top ation and ethnic tensions U.S. intelligence officials are w1ll grow m~re acute ov~r the ·
warning of worsening eco- n~xt decade, Tenet sa1d. T~1s
nomic conditions and demo- w1ll especially be the case m
WASHINGTON (AP) graphics in parts of the world those parts of the world that
The Daily Sentinel
About 2.1 million Black &amp; - . conditions that stand to have served as the most fertile
Subscribe today.
Decker toasters are being create more terrorists.
recruiting grounds for Islamic
992-2156
Some of the largest popula- extremist groups."
recalled because they can fail
to shut .off and could start fires. tions of young people in the
The CIA chief, who is
Apphca C?ns~mer Products . world are groWing up in parts directing much of the U.S.
Inc., of M1am1 Lakes, Fla., of the Middle East and sub- covert war against al-Qaida,
which made and sold the
toasters under the Black &amp;
VALKHTINB"S
G J P T
Decker brand, knows of nine
I D E A
(gil
reports of the toasters starting·
fires and causing minor damage to kitchen cabinets, the
Consumer Product Safety
99
Commission said Thursday.
The recall includes both
two-slice and four-slice VersaToast wide-slot toasters.
Writing on the side 'of the
toaster includes: "BLACK &amp;
DECKER," ·"VersaToast" and
"WIDE SLOT."
The toasters, which come in
white or black plastic, have
model number T1200, T1250,
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Benefit extension up to House now

4
•'
VISITS SCHOOL - Shawn Arnott of Farmers Bank and Savings Co. discussed the job search
process with students at the SEM School In Pomeroy on Monday. Arnott discussed the impor·
tance of good presentation; good manner!! and enthusiasm when applying for a job. {Brian J.
Reed)

•

�Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

National Signing Day, Page B2
College Basketball,·Page B3
Winfield denies allegations, Page B5

Page Bl
thursday, Febru•ry 7, 2002

'THuRsDAY's

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
~The tattered American flag
ie.covered ·from the rubble at
ground zero will be carried at
the Winter Olympics' openip,g ceremony Friday night in
a compromise of patriotism
~d protocol.
:~:A group of U.S. athletes,
J.!.lew York City firefighters
iid Port Authority police will
lie aUowed to take the flag
i~o the ceremony in a
'~olemn, dignified entrance,"
tile International Olympic
c17P•nnlittee said, reversing an
&lt;i;lrlier decision.

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NCAAMan'a
· Wldneldlly'a Gem81
BIG TEN
Penn St. 81, Purdue 68
NOrthwestem 6i , Michigan St.
49
Wisconsin 94, Ohio St. 92, OT ·
MAC
BOwling Green 80, Ohio 64
Miami (Ohio) 66, Buffalo 52
Toledo 58, Cent. Michigan 42
W. Michigan 101, E. Michigan
94, 20T
OTHERS
Creighton 64, Indiana St. 63
· Marquette 70, East Carolina 58
Missouri 76, Iowa St.· 73
Notre Dame 89, Rutgers 72
S. Illinois 78, Wichita St. 58
SW Missouri St. 65, Drake 51
American U. 74, Army 59
Bucknell 76, Navy 56 ·
Colgate 84, lehigh 52
Dayton 92, Fordham 78
Duquesne 78, Massachusetts 69
George Mason 69, Delaware 57
Holy Cross 76, lafayette 70, OT
Maris! 79, lona 7i
Richmond 78, St. BonaventUre 66
Saint Joseph's 80, La Salle 7i
St. John's 95, Falfllelll 56
St. Peter's 7~, CJ!.nisjus}i
Temple 71, Ah~ lslalkf 42
Alabama 79, Mlssl~lppl59
Cincinnati 85, Cha~'eB I · '
Georgia 86, MississipPI :Sf. 68
Georgia Tech 74; Cll!mSon 50
Hampton 64, William &amp;'Mary 59
J .Madison 67, VCU 65
N.C. State 85, Virginia 68
Tennessee 76, Kentucky 74, OT
Vanderbilt 68, lSU 63
Virginia Tech 76, Bos1on College 73
Wake Forest 90, North Carolina 66
o~tahoiTlB 70, Bavlor 01
Oklahoma St. 64, Texas Tech 62
TCU 92, DePaul 83
Texas 66, Texas A&amp;M 52
New Mexico St. 77, Fla. i 11Btl'llllialllll70
UCLA 67, S.outhem Cal65

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COmmision
Erecommends
·banning Tyson .·
NEW YORK (AP) -!he
Association of Boxing Commissions is recommending
that other states follow Nevada by denying Mike '!yson a
boxing license.
The ABC's suggestion isn't
l)inding, though, because
while state commissions
uphold other states' license ·
revo cations or suspensions of
boxers, they are not bou.nd to
honor a license denial.
. Shelly Finkel, Tyson's adviser, said seven states ·have
expressed interest in a Tyson
challenge
to
WBC-lBF
heavyweight
champion
Lennox Lewis.

•••••

D V A1N

•

" PoUow your teams into the
posHeason with The Daily
Sent;\,e!.

·- · -·----~--

BY JiM SouLSBY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT •

With regular season· action coming to a
close, Wrestling coaches Troy Brauer, Danny
Davis and the Marauder wrestlers are gearing
up for sectional, district, and stattr&lt;'tompetition.
~
On Feb. 2, Meigs traveled to Athens to participate in the John Deno · Cla~ic against
teams from Prestonsburg, KY,~I Fairfield
Union; Athens, and Coshocton, ani.ong otherS. The Maroon and Gold fared well, with
seniors Nick McLaughlin placiyird in the
132-pound class, Joe Rupe se~ond, at 171
pounds, and Zach Davis capturing first in the

189-ppund bracket.
Both coaches said that, all in all, Meigs had
a very successful season. High marks were
given to the four senior leaders: Zach Davis,
with a 27- 2 record; Nick McLaughlin, 24-5;
Joe Rope, 24-6; and John Krawsczyn, outmost of the season due to an injury, at 9-2.
According to Coach Davis, the four have
placed in every tournament so far.
Tough sledding is ahead for the Marauders,
however, as they travel to Nelsonville Saturday for the Tri-Valley Conference meet.
Following the TVC action, sectional com- SENIOR WRES1l.ERS - These senior wrestlers make up the back:
bone of the successful Marauder season: front, Nick Mclaughlin,
Matt O'Brien, Curtis Arnold, Bruce Adkins, Matt Mullins. Back, Jack
Please see Wrestllnc. 85
Templeton, Joe Rupe, Zach Davis, and Jon Diddle. (Jim Soulsby)

Badgers upset Buckeyes
Wisconsin
takes OSU to
OTJorwin
MADISON, Wis. (AP)
An overtime game
against the Big Ten's top
team · wouldn't seem like
the perfect elixir for two
fatigned freshmen .
' But Wisconsin beat No·.
16 Ohio State 94-92
'Wednesday night because
Devin Harris and Mike
Wilkinson came up big.
' Wilkinson made 13-of16 free throws, including
four in the last minute of
regulation, and Harris sank
five in the final 19 second~
of overtime ~the high~.
scoring game ever at the 4- ·
year-old Kohl Center.
Harris also missed his last
free throw intentionally so
the clock would run out
on the Buckeyes' hopes for
a miracle comeback.
"I politely asked him to
miss the last one," said W is;$
consin coach Bo Ryan,
who noted that Ohio State
was calling for a timeout as
soon as the ball left Harris'
hands with 0.6 seconds
left.
I
By the time Bohan
Savovic - whose 3-pointer had sent the game into .
overtime - ~me down
with the miss, the buzzer
had gone off.
Wisconsin (13-11, 6-5
Big Ten) dropped Ohio

PIHH -

Badpn. 85

Wahama
beats
South
Gallia
BY fRANK CAPEHART
REGISTER CORRESPONDENT

EAT
Ohio State's Terence Dials, left. blocks Wisconsin's Charlie Wills shot duirng
the second half of Wisconsin's 94-92 victory Wednesday. (AP)

Matela's 25 put away the Bobcats
Brandon Pardon had
BOWLING
13 assists as
GREEN (AP)
many
as
the
Len Matela scored
enti
re
Ohio
·
25
points
for
tea m .
Bowling Green as
Sonny Johnson
the
Falcons
off the
ca
me
defeated Ohio 80bench to score 25
64
Wednesday
points and Jon
night.
Sanderson, also a
MateJa also had
non - starte r, had ·
eight rebounds to .
13 for the Boblead both teams. Keith
cats
(12-7, 7-4).
McLeod
added
20
Ohio's leading scorer, Branpoints and Josh Almanson 10
for the Falcons (17 -5 overall, 7-4 don Hunter, was hdd to nine points
Mid-American Conference), and as he return ed from a one-ga me sus-

pens'ion for an unspe ci fi ed violation
of team rules .
The Falcons were 14-for- 22 fur
63.6 percen t from the field in the second half and had a 59.6 percent
shooting 1ilark for the game, wh il e
holding Ohio to 43.9 percem.
Bowling Green never trail ed after
taking a 20-1·9 lead with 9:52 left in
the first half and was ah ead 35-31 at
halftime.
The sco re was tied at 41 e arly in the
second half. The Fa)cons took the lead
for good with a 9-0 run that made it
50-41 with 12:15 to play. M cLeod
had five of th e nine points.

MASON - It took a concerted team effo rt to overcome adversity in a brutal
physical enco unter Wedn esday with the visiting South
Gallia Lady R.ebels , but the
Lady Fa4cons of Wahama
High School rose to the task
for a hard-fought 47-37 win.
. From the very start, punishing coUisions and banging was
the order of
the day, and
the referees
really
let
them play in
this one. Just
2:23 into th e
conflict, ·
Wahama's
.....__ _-'-......., leading scorer, C.J. lllessSayre
mg,
was
rocked in a fierce collision
and had to be transported out
to th e hospi tal, where she was
to remain overnight.
Hampered by the loss of
their leader, the Wahamans
had to regroup. Th at they did.
A change in defense, and
aroused emotions ignited
local cftom that brought out
the heart of Falcons.
Kathy Shi)tz and Kara Sayre
combined for a sc intillating
offensive punch, along with
Katie H end rickson and Jessica
Young , with d~t ermined
resolve that thwarted 1he
rough inside play. Then, ai ling
Whitn ey Kni ght was an
absolute dynami c pest on
defense, chasing the ball and
disrupting ·the
Ohioans
attack, while Sayre, Young,
Shiltz, H endrickson and all
challenged everything on half
court.

During the night, the Falcon gals really up to meet tl1e
challen ge on the boards, and
elsewhe re. Shiltz hauled down
11 caroms to lead the
Waham ans and give hc•r a
sc intillati n g double-double
when 1hust needed. S~yre and
Yo unt; al so responded with
eight each in th e group of 38
Falcon team rebounds.
Joan ie Fellure · and Julia

Please see Wahama, BS

Buckeyes pull in 25 signatures.on big day
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
pie that had
Even one of the crown jewhigh ratings
els of ·Ohio State's · 2002
and they fell
recruiting class doesn't think
off and I've
much of those who say the
seeil people
Bu ck.eyes pulled in one of the
walk on and
top groups of signees in · the
make
an
country on Wedne sday.
impact.
I
"Those ratings are based on
don 't think
. potential;' said Ohio's Mr.
the ratings
Football last season, Maurice
hav~
too
Clarett of Warren Harding. much to do with anything.
"The ratings don't mean too They're just for the public and
much because I've' ,&lt;e,e n peo-

the media to hype people."
Clarctt, a bruising_ 6-foot,
230-pound running back, was
one of 25 names received on
th e first day for the signing-of
national letters of intent. He
carried 139 times for l ,369
yards and 22 touchdowns in
the 2001 regular season . . He
also had 14 catches for 253
yards and three touchpowns,
returned four punts . for
touchdowns and had another

r

on a kickoff return .
Coach Jim Tre;sel. welcom ing his second recruiting class,
said he was exci ted by the
presence of C larett and 17
other Ohioans on his list.
" It all tell into place," said·
Tressel, whose first Ohio State
team went 7- 5 a year ago.
"Our coaches did a good job
of recruiting the state of Ohi o
and of identifying the type of
young men we want to have

here.'' .
C larett is already enrolled at
Ohio State and has spent the
past few weeks j ust waiting to
set' who hi s new tt•ammates
would be. He sa id he is rea dy
to co mpete for the job vacated by the· gr,1d uated Jo n.lthan
Well s.
"It's a ti·iend1y competi tion ,;' he said of the battle
between he· and lydcll Ross,

Please

~.ee

Buckeyes, 81

�Thursday, Feb. 7, 2002

.
The Daily Sentinel

'J, 2002

The Top 10 teams on signing day as rated by SuperPrep Magazine, The National Recruiting Advisor,
Prep Football Report and National ~lue &lt;;:hi~ - t.our of the country's top recru!till!J reports:
SuporProp
PNI&gt; I'Go~ llopotl
TJie Notlonol ROCNIUIIIJ
- 1 0 1 - c;~
'rom Lomrillng,
SChaumbu'll. Ill.

1. Texu
2. Miami
3. Ohio Stall

1. Texu
2. Ohio 3. Miami

4. Tennessee
5. UCLA

4. Tennessee

6. Ol&lt;lahoma
7. MIChigan ·
8. Soulhem Celffomia
9. Vi'llinla
tO. Fk&gt;ridla Slate

5. VIrginia
6. UCLA
7. SOUtt1 Cerofina
8. Fk&gt;ridla State
9. Michigan
10. Notre Dame

AdYIIOr
Bobby Burton, Austin, Texas

5. Miami

6. Fk&gt;rida State
7. Aubum
e. Ofdahoma
9. UCLA
10. Virginia

NC ama answere ast ye~ 5
the ~h~ou;na~ent snub wuh
db
ol 5 ~lghest ranking
1
, anE est Dstardlt111 2ha5 years. .
rwm u ey d 22 pomts
and I 0 rebounds Wednesda
h
Y
.mg t
as
the fifthI
ranlced
,
·'Crimson Tide beat Mississippi
79-59, tlleir sixth straight win
and 14th in t 5 games.
, , Alabama (20-3, 8-1 Southeastern· Conference) reached
20 wins the quickest since
starting 20-3 in 1977; The
Tide ~re one win shy of the
best start in school history, in
,1974. That was the season
, Alabama reached No. 3 in the
1 ; Pth~ll, its khighe!t ranking until
,
IS w~e .
·
I "WIe kn
. ow there are nq gifts
1
out ~here;' Crimson Tide
coach Mark Go~tfried said. "If
I we want It, :-v:, ve got to go
out and take It.
. On Wednesday night, that
meant shpotmg 52.6 ~ercent
-: from the field and sconng 22
pomts off 19 turnovers by the
R~bels (17-6 •. 6-4). .
.
It seems hke,the1r. t~am I~
• on a miSSIOn, M!Smstppt
. • ' coach Rod B
'd
: &lt;• Alabama lo~r~~~~~ ~~ Mis', ., sissippi last season, one of the

straight wm over the Bears.
throws with. 33 seconds left
Matt Sayman and Wendell put visiting USC (16-6, 8-4)
Greenleaf each had 15 points ahead 65-64 afier trailing 6 tfor .visiting Baylor (13-9, 3-6), 50 with 5:53.remaining.
h' h h
b
h
w tc
a~ not eaten t e
Jason Kapono scored 26
Sooners smce the 1977-78 points for UCLA while Sam
season.
Cl
h d 24 '·
ancy a
. pomts and 14
Tennessee 76 •
rebounds for USC, his eighth
,, , No. 7 Kentucky 74
'gh d bl d bl
Marcus Haislip scored 24 straJ t ou e- ou e.
points, including the game, No. 17 Georgia 86,
winner with 18 seconds lett in
Miasillippl St. 68
overtime, 10 lead th~ Volun- · SteVe Thomas had 21 points
teers (12_10, 5_4 Southeastern and 10 rebounds, lifting the
Conference) to their fourth Bulldogs ,(18-5, 7-3 Southeaststraight win .
ern Conference) to their first
Tayshaun Prince had . 22 win at Hutpphrey Coliseum
points for the visiting Wildcats in II years.
(15-6,s_4),whosentthegame , Mario Austin had '15 points
into overtime 00 a 3•pointer for Mississippi State (17-6, 4by Gerald Fitch.
5), which was 4-for-27 from
N c Stat 85
3, point range.
e ' 68
No.· •10•Virginia
No. 18 Marquette 70,
Anthony Grundy had · 25' •
Eaat Carolina 58
points and Scooter Sherrill
Dwyane Wade was 9-of-12
added a career-high 20 for the from the field and scored 24
Wolfpack (17-6, 6-4 Adantic ·points as the Golden Eagles
Coast Conference), who . (20-3, 9-1 Conference USA)
played without suspended ·won their ninth straight and
freshman
forward Julius improved to 13-0 at home.
Hodge and swept the Cava~
Gabriel MikUlas and Kenyhers in the regular season for atta Brown each had 15 points
the first time since 1987-88. · for the Pirates (8-14, 2-8),
Travis Watson had a careerh I t th · 1·4th
w o os
e1r
consecuhigh 29 points and 12 live road game.
rebounds for Virginia (14-6, 4No. 19 Wake Forest 90,
5), which lost its fourth
N 0 rth C
lin 66
', ... ]asses down the stretch that straight overall and fifih in a · 1 h H
aro
a d 24
d
os
owar score
Played a part in the Crimson row in Raleigh.
ts th D
D
•Tide , ,not playing in the
No. 14 Oklahoma St. 64, pam as e emon eacons
NCAA tournament.
No. 24 Texaa Tech 62
(17-6, 7-3 Atlantic Coast
"Th..v came in here with
Con. ference) won the.i r fourth
-,
Terrence Crawford's putgh
d
h
high intensity that they were back with 5 seconds remain- st~t t an swept t e. season
going to get another win in ing capped a comeback from a senes from the TarZ Heels for
our place, but we weren't 15_point deficit for the. Co"~,V- the lint time in 32 years.
Kris Lang had 14 points for
Kentucky's Chuck Hayes, center, has hi shot blocked by Tennessee's Vin·
going to let that happen;' said boys (18-5, 5-5 Big 12), who
·' Rod Grizzard, who had 10 of raUled despite losing leading visiting North Carolina (6-14, cent Yarbrough, right, as Marcus Haislip, left, and Thaydeus Hoden (10) look on during their
his 12 points in the second scorer Maurice Baker to an 2-8), which has lost nine of10 game Wednesday In Knoxville, Tenn. Tennessee won In overtime 76-74. (AP)
half.
ankle injury midway through and can tie the school record ~-~----------------------------.....,
Alabama outscored the the second half.
for losses in . a. season against
··Rebels· 38-22 in the paint.
Andre Emmett had .29 No, 3 Maryland on Sunday.
"0~ problem is stopping · points for the visiting Red .
No. 22 Mi11o11ri 76,
.
de
v
them," Barnes said. "If you're Raiders (16_5, 4), who beat
Iowa St. 73
A l""."'tS•f•i~'-.·
·going to have a chance to win, Oklahoma State 94 _70 00 Jan·.
Kareem Rush scored 23 of
you've got to get their shoot~ 19.
his 27 points in the second half
ing percentage ~own in .~he
No. 15 UCLA 67;
for the Tigers (17 -6, 6-3 Big
' 40s. And we dido t do that..
No. 25 Sollthern Cal 65 12), including four in the final
Justm Reed had 19 pomts
Billy Knight's 3-poimer as 1:31 as they rallied from a
, ···and t2 rebounds for the time expired . capped UCLA's seven-poim deficit.
.. ,, three.~sho.t.. final possessi6n as .'IY;.ay Pearson had 26 points
: Re\11/;~·.
I ·':''" · ,. 0 ' •
ahoma 10,
the Bruins (16•6, 8~4 Pac-10) for the visiting Cyclones (9.i
,. Baylor 57
. avoided their first swe~p by 15, 1-9), who had a charu:e to
1
~aron McGhee scored 23 the Trojans since the 1991-92· tie·at the buzzer, but Jake Sui1 pam~ to lead the Sooners (18- season.
· d.
livans• 1ong 3-pom
· 1er m1sse
,
.. ..
1

COLtttBUS.

I .•

Max Emfinger, Ccvlngton,

:

1. Texas
2. rennes100
3. Georgia
4. Ohto Stlte

OHIO PREPFOOIBALL

Uo.

I NCAA

1. Texas
2· !!1!1 Ohio s -

~·

g:r..-=--

s: Miami
,

6. Fk&gt;rida Stato
7. UCLA
.S. Southern California
9. Au!&gt;IJm

18:
!l::l f:',.~ fg~lna
10. hie Virginia

Second-year coaches shine on recruiting day
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Second-year coaches a\ Oliio State, Miami and
Virginia gave fans at Notre Dame and Aorida
something to look forward
to.
.
While new coaches for
the Irish and Gators had mixed results, the Buckeyes, Hurricanes and Cavaliers recruited loads of
talent on national signing day Wednesday. .
But there's no doubt which school signed the
top class. All of the major analysts agreed that
Texas hooked the nation's top football recruiting
class.
Longhorns coach Mack Brown signed almost
every player he pursued, keeping the best players
from talent-rich Texas at home an&lt;\ picking up a
few key out-of-staters.
"They just dominated everything;'Toni Lemming of Prep football Report said: "They are
head and shoulders ahead of everyone else. They
helped themselves at every single position:·
Ohio State coach Jim Tressell, who replaced
John Cooper in January 200 I, signed seven of the
top eight players in Ohio and finished in the top
·
three nationally.
The Buckeyes' top recruits are All-Americans
Maurice Clarrett (RB, Warren, Ohio), Del'l'k
Morris (OL, Huntersville, N.C.), and Mike
·
D'Andrea (LB,Avon Lake, Ohio) .
Larry Coker capitalized on his national tide
with Miami to bring in the No. 2 class in SuperPrep's ratings and a consensus .top five pick.
The Hurricanes got four ofSl)perPrep's top 50

NCAA

The Dally Sentinel • hge B 3

Page Bl

Top 10 Recruiting Classes
Allen WallaCe, Laguna
Beach, Celli.

-.mydllllysentlnel.com

players: tight ends Eric Winston (Midland, Texas)
and Curtis Justus (Perry. Okla.), and ill"state wide
receivers Ryan Moore and Devin Hester.
Virginia was one of th~ biggest surprises under
former New York Jets coach AI Groh. His experience in the NFL helped attract some of the top
in-state talent away from Virginia Tech, like linebackers Ahmad Brooks (Woodbridge Hylton,Va.)
•
and Kai Parham (Virginia Beach).
The success of the three second-year coaches
could bode well for Notre Dame's Tyrone Willingham and Rorida's Ron Zook, who had shortened recruiting seasons in their first ye..VS on the
job.
Willingham closed well after taking over at
Notre Dame on Dec. 31, following the firing of
B_?b Davie and George O 'Leary's. resignation for
lymg on his resume.
The Irish got commitments from two talented
receivers in Mari:us Stovall (Radnor, Pa.) and
Rhema McKnight (La Palma, Calif);but lost out
·on All-American running back Lorenzo Booker,
who decided at the last minute to sign with
Aorida State.
·
The Irish got three top defensive lineman and
four highly regarded offensive lineman.
"Notre Dame's class top to bottom is excellent.
What it lacks a bit in skill positioos, it makes up
in big players," Lemming said.
BYU signed quarterback Ben Olson, rated the
No. I player in the country by Lemming, but saw
All-American defensive lineman Haloti Ngata
switch at the last minute to Oregon.

.

I

s-

from$699

'
PRIZE CATCH - Warren Harding's Maurice
Clarett, who signed a
letter of intent to play
football for Ohio
State, speaks to the
media, Wednesday in
Columbus, Ohio.
Clarett, a bruising 6foot, 230-pound running back, carried
139 times for 1,369
yards and 22 touchdowns in the 2001
regular season and
was named Ohio's
Mr. Football. (AP)
He'll come in and do his

ing (a quarterback) , from
best."
Alpharetta, Ga.
Mid-American ConferElsewhere around Ohio,
Tressel's former . school, ence
champion Toledo
from Page Bl
State, picked up 23 signees includYoungstown
Meurice Hall and others for announced it had signed 16 ing Toledo St. Francis runplaying time. "I just came incoming freshmen and ning back Rodney Gamby,
down here like everybody three transfers . Miami of one of the heroes of the
else to compete for a start- Ohio got signatures from 13 Division II state champiing position. That's every- recruits including twin onship team.
one's intention."
brothers John (an outside
Ohio State missed out on linebacker) and Ryan Buswide
receiver Richard
Washington of Fort Mye.rs,
Fla. , who had verbally committed to the Buckeyes but
)000 niafrt and weekend minutes
·
backed out at the last
6oo anytime minutes
minute and signed with
. . . •._,_.....-c. - - . t ., ""'tor.,...., OWUIAMI!arft ,_
North Carolina State.
l'lll.•lllllllsil a? lllr
Among · the other highprofile recruits locked up by
• Unllmlttd nlaht and wetkend rnlnuttt
' the Buckeyes were line• Hltlonwkte lonl dlttance
backer Mike D'Andrea of
SOO mobl~to-mobUe minutes
• 100 J•way text messases
Avon Lake, linebacker Stan
White Jr. ....,. son of the
Ohio State All-American,
and last-minute addition
Derek Morris, a 6-6, 350pound offensive lineman
5aW1 1111 on • Noldo 5'65.
- o f our most-'"',..;...
from Huntersville, N .C.
Wt'l evtft walvt the$)! Kthtatlon fee.
Perhaps
the
most
(111111 cNclllfllll rw.,- .... ,.........
' acclaimed is quarterback
Justin Zwick of Massillon
Washington. Many Ohio
State fans have already .
embraced the 6-4, 210pound passer as an immediate starter - if not a future
: · Heisman winner.
'
Tressel smiled at all the
, talk about Zwick and said
1 he was overjoyed that peo~
i pie were talking about the
' recruits and the program.
,
" In some towns they don't
• · even know who the quar: terback is," Tressel said.
l He said of Zwick, " He's a
big, strong guy . with an .
excellent ability to move. 1 L.....-------~-~-~=---.,-..:._ _J

Buckeyes.

-

••••-•s a

............ a

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

_

stylish sof~ls

'''"oici' · '" .

·now at
incredible

savings

I

I

I

'

i .~ Bearcats ·bounce

L

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)- Cincinnati
,;!doem~t• be&gt;lieve losing breeds winning. Try
telling Charlotte that.
Leonard Stokes scored 30 points and
Steve Logan added 24 as
i
Cincinnati bounced back
from its loss to Marquette
with an 85-66 victory over Charlotte on
Wednesday night. The Bearcats snapped
Charlotte's seven-game winning streak.
"! don't believe that losses help you, I'm
not a firm believer in that," Cincinnati
'I coach Bob Huggins said. "We had two good
·
practices before the Marquette game and
1
practiced just as hard after the loss. We just
playeclj;l&gt;etter here then we did against Marquette. ' ,
·
.
The Bearcats (21-2, 9-1 Conference
USA) knocked Charlotte (14-6, 8-2) out of
a threl=-way tie for first place in the American Oivision.
· Cinqnnati now holds a· share of the top
spot with Marquette, which snapped the
Bearcats' 20-game winning streak with a
74-60 victory on Saturday.
The Bearcats · came out· firing against
I Charlotte, with Logan hitting a pair of 3pointer that qui~kly silenced his taunters in
, the soldout crowd.
I
Cincinnati never trailed and never
I
1 allowed the 49ets ariy control. Everytime
I Charlotte made a slight run, the .Bearcats
1 answered with a driving layup or a sky-high

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slam dunk., that automatically toned down
the crowd ~··
."Whenever you play them it's hard, but
after a loss is even more difficult," Charlotte
coach Bobby Lutz said. "They had tremendous focus and concentration and I don't
think we matched it."
I
The· Bearcats relied on their stingy
defense, which ranks first in the nation,
holding Chatlotte well below its average of
74.8 points ~ game, forcing 15 turnovers
a11d outrebounding the 49en 43-31.
Jobey Thomas led Charlotte with 18
points, including four 3-pointers that made
him Charlotte's all-time leader from beyond
the arc. He has 311, breaking the record of
308 Henry Williams set from 1988-92.
The accomplishment drew a rousing ovation from the crowd, which tried desperately to rattle the Bearcats and Logan.
But Huggins was the only one to ever
lose his cool, yelling across the court at fans
in the second half and later drawing a technical foul for chasing an official down the
court to argue a no-call .
Told later it was believed the technical
was on one of his assistant for throwing a
coin on the court, the intense Huggins
finally laughed. ,
"My assistants are too cheap, none of
them would give money away," Huggins
said. "I got the technical, they didn't get it .
It was me and I didn't throw any coins,
either.
The Bearcat's had several chances early to
put Charlotte away, but the 49ers came up
with big baskets at critical times to stick
around. After Cincinnati opened a 37-22
lead, Thomas made a 3"pointer then scored ·
on a fastbreak dunk of his own steal to pull
Charlotte within I 0 points.
.
Later, when Cincinnati made it a 15point game again on Field Williams' 3pointer, Curtis Nash responded with consecutive 3s to close it to 42-33 .
·
But Charlotte couldn't answer the runs in
the· second half and never recovered after
Logan scored five straight points to put
Cincinnati up 64-50.
HAPPY GUY - Cincinnati'S Leonarq Stokes
(13) reacts after hitting a three point shot late
. In the second half of the Bearcats' 85-66 win
. ..ovl!r Charlotte at Helton Arena In Charlotte,
N.C., Wednesday. Stokes had a game-high 30
points In the win . (AP)

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Otribune - Sentinel •
CLASSIFIED

Thur.adey, Feb. 7, 2002

)

It ~ Itb::~"-1 Wahama
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'IO!Y 11wp. rod Roll pon """' •
.oao.
;.4-112 {740)742.o:J1D
old. $225 4cy1. Sop. 30 .._ "' tho

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

-=:Mall---·

sY- ond

AKC.

.(304) 675-1333

Ir10

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l\egtster

:ro
k
Private Party Ads Under $100

Dilly In•Cotumn: 1:00 p.m.

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Mondty-Frfday ror InsertiOn

20 Words 7 Days • each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred An i mals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • limit J Per Person

In Na•t O•y's Paptir
SundiV tn· Column: 1:00 " .m. Sunday Display : l :OO·p.m.
l'or Sundayt Paper
Thursdly tor Sundays

Ali All

=

• Start Your Adl Wltl'l A kevword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. :

t

1118 IIDIWAN'IED
I'EAsoNAJ.Ji

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

• Include Pnone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

Iro

12 LPN'o Day Bhln, No
Woalcanda, Apply In POfiOfl
Matl 81 yrt. old Retired. ot Medical Piau, 938 State
-Pen Pal frlondlhlp to Roule180.
atart with fornale. Pon Pal
PO Box 272, Polnl P AUontlonl
ant, wv 25550
Eam 2nd. lncomo wiUloul
2nd)obuplo
Moon L~hl EICOrtl. Allort$25.·$76./hr. Pt·FI.
tton LldiH. Full SeNice
1-80()-218-71143
Moll Escorta. Prompt Pro- www.Monoy-D....,.com
IIUianol OiecrHI &amp; Canfl·
dantlat. 8pm to Bam. ---~~~:-(740)388-1799.
AVON! All Aroaol To Buy or
Sell. Shlrtoy Spurs, 304Why walt? Slart meeting 875-142~.
Ohio slngtoo tonight, call toll
lrH 1·800-788·2823 ext
ADVERTISING
1821.

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1987 Clayton. 14x80, 1 1/2 · 3Dol-136-7296.
:_~...~. Cl(7:,...~
MoaulloMFs
WANTED TO RENT
7444., (7'40,§87.7187,....FOR Rmr
Now Publishe&lt; IO&lt; tht Ohio
---'-....:..-...,--- "'~--liiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l Valley Publishing Company
1990 F - 2'badroom '
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Wmfield's curreqt agent, Peter Schaffer of All Pro Sporn in
I:lemler, said Wednesday that Wmfields interview wi!h
News and WJrld Report irM&gt;Md how much money he lOt!!
with Dunyasha Mon Yem.
Schaffer saidWmfidd talked about the lessons he ·leamed and
that he hoped nQ olher plajoers ~uld have to go through what
he had.
"He never told them at any time that he toQk money illegally because it never happened," Schaffer said SchaJfer said Winfield would not be commenting.
"We stand by the quotes attributed to Mr. Winfield," U.S. ·
New&gt; and World Report spokesman Ken Frydman said
The magazine reponedWmfield said he violated NCAA rules
by accepting cash, aips to the Bahamas and Las Vegas, suits valued at $1,500 and Ohio Stare foothall ticket! that he resold for

u.s.

profit
"We knew it was wrong;'Wmfield, a first-round drui pic~ in
1999, said in this w..eH isrue of U.S. News. "If )'QU got caught,
)'QU would be in trouble:·
·
Schaffer said Wmfield did s;ry he knew Yem while in coUege
and that he went' with Yea:s to Las Vegas aftet the 1999 draft, but
that trip was legal' because it was atier Winfi~ld had used up his
eligibility.
•
Violations would have made Winfield ineligible for the 1998
sea10n, when !he Buckeyes went 11-1, shared !he Big Ten tide
with Wisconsin and Michigan and finished with the No.2 ranking in the AP poll.
Ohio State athletic director Andy Geiger said Wednesday that
he was not aware of the allegations until he read the U.S. News
account.
''I'm sure we'D talk with Antoine," Geiger said.
Geiger said he did not know whether there. would be any
penalties if the allegations are true ..

State (17-4, 8-2) into a tie
· with idle Indiana atop the
conference standings.
Wilkinson, who had not
reached double figure s . in
scoring in three of his previous four games and who had
grabbed just two rebounds in
each of his last · two games,
finished with nine rebounds
and a career-high 19 points.
"I made my first couple (of
free tbrows) and that kind of
set the tone for the night;'
Wilkinson said. "I got more
confidence the more I made.
It came down to the end of
the game and I wanted to be
at the free throw line because
I felt I was going to make
every one I shot."
So did Harris, who finished
with 10 points, the first double-digit performance by the
Badgers' second-leading scorer in four games.
Ohio State coach Jim
O'Brien said the Buckeyes
didn't pick out the freshmen
to foul.
"I firmly believe the clock
is your enemy more than
who's shooting and if you
start trying to be a little bit
selective I think so me times
you lose a little too much

time," O 'Brien said.
Senior . Charlie Wills, who
scored a career-best 19 points,
said the Badgers needed a
jump-start to break out of
their midseason funk and it
was doubly good that it came
from two freshmen .
" It's very big when you're
going to them and they're
making those kinds of plays,"
Wills said. " It not only gives
them confidence but as a
team we know we can rely on
them at •Crunch time.

Wrestling
LomPIIp85
pettt1on will take place at
Warren on Feb. 16. The four
top wrestlen in each weight
class will then advance to the
District Tourney at Spring-

"We came together in the
huddle right before overtime
and said we're not going to
lose this."
Wisconsin was 36-of-46
from the line with H arris
going 8-for-10 and Wills 9of-11.

Kirk

Penney also scored 21

points as the Badgers. won for
the ninth time in 10 games at
the Kohl Center.
Brent Darby had 22 points
for Ohio State and Savovic
added 17, including a w ideopen 3-pointer w .ith 2.4 seconds left in regulation that
capped a I 0-point secondhalf comeback.
H arris

made

two

free

throws with 19 seconds left in
overtime to break an ,8 9- 89
tie. After Brian Brown missed
on a drive and Terence Dials
misfired o n the tip. Harris got
the loose ball and was fouled
with I 0 seconds left. He made
both free throws for a 93-89
lead .
But Brown hit a 3- p'ointer
with 2.7 seconds left before
Harris iced it.
The Badgers had six players
with at "least three fouls but
only Travon Davis fouled out.
Three

Buckeyes

had

five

fouls .
"Nobody blinked," Ryan
said. ''I'm really proud of
them. That's a he c k of a
demonstration to play the
No. 1 team in the league for
that many minutes with that
kind of foul trouble and come
away with a

W That's some

gutsy play."

field
South, where
16
wrestlers in each class will
compete. From District, the
best of the class w ill go on to
the state level.
"I feel our seniors liave a
very good chance to · advance
to the state tournament
against some very talented
competition," Davis said. '

Sales oriented individual ·
with ability to take direction.
Must have sales experience.
Apply In person to

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Badgers

THE
UNKNOWN tuceet~alveWHkl.
The
laat
HEIRS, NI!XT OF KIN,
publication
will
be ·
DEVISEES,
I
made on the 2 1 at
OHIO
ADMINISTRATORS,
1984 Porscha 944, auto, ;:=====11=0=He=lp~W;•;:n;:lld:;::====;:, PEGGY SUE STORTS EXECUTORS,
day of February,
80,000 miles, excellent con2002, ancllhe
PLAINllFF
SPOUSES,
dillon, $4,800.00 OBO.
~ .
.
elg~t
(28) deya lor
SUCCESSORS
AND
740-949-2&lt;148
will
H. D. HIVELY, ET AL. ASSIGNS OF F.R. anawer
commence
on
that
DEFENDANTS
BEASLEY
AKA
FRED
1988 Hcinda CflX, Sporty,
A. ·
BEASLEY, dale. In the c11e ol
your !allure to
DECEASED,
CASIENO.
(7401388-9855 toavo mos·
anawer or otharwl..
01.CV·171
AclclrwHa
reapond
aa
Un: : saab 900 HalcNlack.
raqueated by the
NOTICE
BY
You
ar•
her•by
4 cyl., autoniatlc, sunroof,
liCIIIfted 1hal you have Ohio Rulee or Civil
PUBLICATION
152,000 miles. Runs Well,
Pleasant
Valley
Nursing
and
Rchabilltation
bean
namad PrOOidura, Judgment
$1000 OBO. (740)-13
Center
Is a dynamic Long tenn care·
To: THE UNKNOWN Delendanta In the !&gt;Y default will ba
1989 Dodge Dynasty 3.0
rendered egllnll you
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, . acllon
facUlty that provides Intermediate IUid
Engine. Aulo, transmission,
and
lor tha rallef
DEVISEES,
Peggy
Sue
Storta,
skUied care needs to residents. Come Join
new tiras, new struts, all flu·
demanded
In the ,
ADMINISTRATORS,
Plaintiff,
VI.
H.
D
•
.
our
health
.care
organization
whereld change&amp;, new tlltana, car
Complaint.
EXI!CUTORS,
Hively,
.
et
al.,
l'uns real gOOd. $1 ,000.
provide excellence In care.
Dated thla 3rd day
SPOUSES,
Delendlnll. Thla
OBO or trade tor 16ft. open
of
January, 2002..
car ~aHer. (304)n3-5054 &lt;&gt;r
SUCCESSORS AND action haa been
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
leave message.
ASSIGNS OF DAVIS uelgnad
RN - PTIPER DffiM
GEDRAL,
Caae No. Q 1 ·CV· Mlrl•n• Herrlaon,
1993 8\l~k Skylark. 4 Door,
LPN
IT/PTIPER
DIEM
DECEASED,
171, and Ia pending Ciet11 or Courta
C...n. Excellent tonditibn.
AddreaMa Unknown; In the Courl of
$3500. (740)379-2214
CNA • IT/PTIPER DIEM
JEFF
GEDRAL, Common Plaaa of 1)17;24,31,2002
RATE WILL BE BASED ON
2)7,14,21,2002
Addrooa
Unknown; Malga County, Ohio.
1993 Grand Prix Special EXPERIENCE
THE UNKNOWN
The ob]ect of the It
Edition powe_r locks/win- ·
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, Complaint demanda
clowt, NC, CD playor. new BENEFITS INCLUDE:
American Racing rlms.
DEVISEES,
that the IHie to real
Public Notice
$399~ (7401992-2459 or .
•$1,000.00 SIGN-ON BONUS
ADMINISTRATORS,
eatata be qulated In
(304)882·3407
• FOR LICENSED NURSES
EXECUTOAB,
the Plalntlll, PeotY
THE
ANNUAL
• FLEX SCHEDULING
SPOUSES,
Sue Storti, and that
1994 FO&lt;d Escort LX, 4
(INCLUDING 12 HR. SHIFfS)
FINANCIAL REPORT
SUCCESSORS
AND
Peggy
Sue
Storla
be
7
ASBIGNS OF JEFF found to be the OF THE VILLAGE OF
~~":~. ~~4
SHIFf DIFFERENTIAL
GEDRAL, Add_..a owner In fH almple SYRACUSE FOA THI!
Truck V-8, NC, $2700.
• WEEKEND POSITIONS
FISCAL YEAR ENDED
Unknown; LISA
abaolulll of the ,_1
(740)258-8012
• TRAINING PROGRAM
DECEMBER 31, 2001
GEDRAL,
Addreaa
eatata
daacrlbed
In
1994 Rod Toyota Corolla.
FOR NEW GRADUATES .
HAS
.
BEI!N
Unknown;
THE the Complelnl; or In
All Power Options. 83.000
• HEALTH INSURANCE
COMPLETED AND IS
UNKNOWN
HEIRS.,
the
evenl
that
th•
miles, Auto, New Tires,
SINGLFJFAMILY PLAN
NEXT OF KIN, Court ahould lind AVAILABLE FOR
$3900. (7401245-5908 after
PUBLIC INSPECTION
6:00pm.
DEVISEES,
that the Delwndanta'
IN THE CLERK'S
Apply,
in
person
or
call
ADMINISTRATORS,
title
Ia
auperlor
to
1998 Nlsaan Sontra GXE, Angela Cleland· DON at. (304) 675-5236. EXECUTORS,
Plalntlll'a, Plaint Ill OFFICE, VILLAGE
power doors, power win·
AAIEOE
SPOUSES,
requutalhll Court to HALL, 2111 THIIID
dowl, crulaa, auto, remote
SUCCESSORS
AND
lind
thai
the STREET BETWEI!N
mirrors, 78,500 . miles,
HOURS 01' 12
$5,500.00. 740·949-2537
ASSIGNS OF
. D•lendantl have THE
NOON
AND 4 P.M.
LISA
GEDRAL, baen
un)ually WEEKDAYS
-1997 Oklsmoblle At:.hleva , 2
T H I!
Add- Unknown; •nrtchad and thlt FIRST THROUGH
Door, Like New, 44K,
THE
UNKNOWN Plalntlllbe tanUtled to
..995. 1995 Grand Am, 4·
EMIRS, NEXT OF KIN, reaelvll tha velue ,of THE TENTH AND
Ooor. 72K. $3795. 1994
TIMI!B BY
Grand Am, 2 Door, 86K.
DEVISEES,
lhla
unjuat · OTHER
APPOINTMENT.
$3895. 1993 Cavalier, 4
ADMINISTRATORS,
anllohmant. Plaintiff
Door, 981&lt;, $2195: 17 Other
EXECUTORS,
further requaall that A COPY OF THE
.oar and· trucka in etock.
lhe be granted oolll REPORT CAN I I
SPOUSES,
COOK MOTOR8.j740)4ol8SUCCESSORS AND
and all other rallal, PROVIDED UPON
0103
A881GHS
OF elthar In law or RI!QUEIT.
1998 Forll Conlour ClL, 8DK.
RICHARD
equity, whloh ahlllbe
SHARON
S.
' mlloo, $6000. 1094 Ford
FREDERICK
proper
Tempo GL, llcyl., 142K,
HOLZER,
. The •raal •lllte 11. COTTRILL
$2200. (7401446-2e24
DICI!ABED,
deacrlbed In dead CLERK·TREASURER
Add- Unknown; recorded In Votuma (2)7, 2002
ChOVY Nova, Ono DwnShoot
oo, 42,000 mlltl, 350 V·8,
THI!
UNKNOWN 81, Pega m, ollhl
.Auto, PS, Air, $2000 OBO.
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, Olllolal Reoorda ot 1tc
Forked
Run
(740)3711-2708
DEYlii!I!S.
the Aa corder or
Sportsman Club
ADMINISTRATORI,
Melga County, Ohio,
118 Unooln Town Car, Now
EXICUTORS,
being 2.131 aora1
Bra"'-, Mu«lar, 011 Pump,
Fri.
Feb.
Bth
Will Clean. JVC CD Player,
SPOUSI!I,
looated In leo. 24, T
1780. (7401388.0159
BUOCESIOAS AND 7, R. 14, lolplo
7p.m.
AISIGNI OF AUCE , Townahlp,
and
·87 CheVy Mttroll, Aula, Air,
· HIVI!LY,
aaalgned Audllor'a
4oyl., Rod, 81 K, Now Ahor·
DECI!ASID,
Percel No. 17~
Eagles 2171
. ~ator, Brakoo, I.O&lt;IIca Good,
. J28!•0. (740)441·05~2 or
MAAJORII!
1103111.004.
Dance Feb. 8 &amp; 9 ·
·(7401448-33CIIi. •
MATHIWI,
You are required to
DECI!AII!D, ROII!RT 1 n a w u
,- t h a
98 Chryllor ClrNt LXI, CD
8
pm
·12
mid
MATHEWS,
Complaint
within
Playar, Leather lnler1or,
DECEAIID,
lwanty•elght (21)
$7500 OBO. 42,000 mMN.
"Rhythm Station"
VIRGINIA HOLZER, daya altar lht 1111 .
(7401258-126.2 or (740)2561618
DECEASED, AND publication ol thla
RICHAII'D HOLZI!R,
Hollot, which will be
Uvety'o Auto Saln· 1992
· Clrd
DECEASED,
publlahed onot HOh
Oldt Acltlova, Sl800. 1993
WV State Farm
Add- Un-n; week lor tlx (I)
Plymouth Acclaim, $1400.
~986 Forll Muatang, $1200.
The family of
Museum
Monthly
1988 Forll F·150 Pickup,
Clara
Powell would
$1200. ·19112 Dodge Ram
Board
Meeting
for
Van, 11000. 1986 Oodgo Dlike to thank each
250 Plokup, $1000. 1990
and every
Feb. will be held
Forll Tempo, 2 Door, $900.
·
Individual
who
1989 Chovy Borotta, 11100.
Monday Feb. 11
1985 · Olds Cutlau Su·
called on the ramlly,
p....,, $800. 1988 Mazda
sent flowers end
·Pioltup, seoo. 1990 Geo
instead of
Storm, Blaclc, f&amp;OO. 1985
·oerda, prepared
FO&lt;CI E3110 van, 18 pMUn·
Tuesday,
food 1nd helped
gor. 1800. 10 mort cora undor $1000. con (740)388111•
family In any
February 12
·8303
.
way pollibla
Star Auto Selea, acrou
during our ,_nt
from benk In Racine, Ohio,
Iota. We eapaclally
anorllablo uood cero and
Slug Shoot
ti\ICka. 740-949-2451
·would like to thank
Forked Run Sportsman Club
Crol!liAN Funeral

I

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02.1btala-1211·1737.

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,

I

12

t-15, Tem-

COLUMBUS (AP) - Buffalo Bills cornerback Antoine
Winfield denies violating NCAA nlies while playing for Ohio
Safe and said a magazine that reponed he accepted gifu from an

ple 2 G-2 4, Failure 0 2·2 2, Cromoona ·l C).

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109. ~30-Q8,Clwlrvl2

\\...,1'41!{1 \I H J\

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Wnfield denies wrong-doing

facwn Page 81

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split the cords from thr:eepoint land in the final frame

Farm. · ·

Pakl $150- Wom once as~
Bridesmaid dress, Size
18120, sell for StOO. Shoos
to match· size 9 112, $20.
(740)446-7553 or (74014463194.

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1~)875-5724..

12x50, 2 BR, $2000; NIIW 1 bedroom houtt In RIICfnt New 2 Bedroom Apartmenl .,... Pr'om Dr1u11 •••'!
Wann MomlrlQ Wood Bum· $32&amp;/month (740)992-5o39 with Wuhar/ Dryer hookup. 'Mon·Lao". Color-Aubergine
er, $300. (740)379-9257
7 mltn from Hospital. (light smOI&lt;ev Lavender);

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&amp; Vol~me Discount Avails· (740}446-976,

keeping department. TM 8\lporlntonclont'l Office,
rtght candldato wilt hOVe Gallla· Jackson· Vinton wftlah- R lllogol to
tiCMrtlM"aoty
.,..,--~-" JVSD, PO Box 157, Rio ·
45874. P'••a,lllnltltlon Of
OH
OI1CO and Do willing 10 Grande,
be a worlciiiQ IUpaMIIOf. (740)245-5334. EEO.
home-call Cheryl ·0 140· 2 bedroom mabie home for to rent lor 3·4 months• .,--,---:-:--:-:,.., color, ,..lgkln. ...
Prevloul IIOOr-cate - " Work,romHoma
385-9821 . 2002 Sunpol,.o rent, no pall, (740)992· Slioukl have private bath· Amazing
Mo1obollom
Of100 a plua. e--.1IMillialetaiUIO&lt;- 3 bedrooml2be.th 14 • 70. 58&amp;8
room
and
be
close
to
GallipBreakthrough!!
fHa and ulary. Into- itODO,seoOD/ Mo. P.T/FT origin. or any Intention to must sell-call Mike 0 740olia. call Den D~korson at Lose 10 'pounds- 200 ·
- - ohoulcl apply to: 18881233-4988
lllllke any auch
385-2434..
'
2 bedroom, lor aate or rent, (740)446-2342(daysl.
pounds easy, quick, F~st
www.WorkToYourFullest.co
RocklprtnQo Rehabilitation
.,aa,.wnc~, Hmllllllon or
qulat
community,
nice
clean
.
Dramatic
Results. 100%
c-r' 38579 Aocklprl:;,tj! m
dlocrfmlnatlon. •
1994 14x70 Ookwood, 2 homo, (740)1192·2187
SPACE
Natural, Dr. Recommended.
Road Pomeroy, 011
BR, 2 Full Bath, Wuharf
. FOR Rflllr
"Ask aboul FREE Sample"
8!.1SINF.$
457s0. Equal Opportunhy
Dryer. Stove, 3 Ton Heat 2- 14x70 Trallani lor Rent
(740)441-1982
·
Thll
MWiplpor llljll nat
TltAtNJNG
Pump,
Now
Carpal
in
UvlnQ
Both
hava
Total
Elocbfc
and
Emplcyor
Encouraging
knowinglyRoom, .$14,000. (740)367· Cenual Air. Both In Very Mobile Homo Lot, Takos12- aaautilul Carolina Country,
WOrltplaca Dlvoralty
SALES
ldYertleernenta tor Nttll
0907 •
Good Condition. ~utoly 14- 18 Wides, $125/ mo Ruffled Curtains. 1 PA·
Galllpolla ea- Collage
ntoto
which II In
·
No lnlkll Pt... $3501 Plul Cleposil, Goocl Refer· 200"xB6• with Valance- 1
REPRESENTATIVE McClure'• RlltaUrant now
Cloao To Homo)
violation olthe .... Our
FO&lt; sale- 18x70, 3 bedroom, month, 1350 dopool1 each. onces. (740)446-0175
PA- 1OO"x86" Light Ecru
~lrinQ Ill 3 IOCatlont, lull 01
I Todllyl740-«6-4367,
For welleatablilhld
2 bath, call 740-385-9621 (740)2-45-IM81 baforo llpm.
with Rosa Ruffles and TieA Shopper's Paradise new
part·timo, plclt ~
1-1100-214-0452,
lnronn.d that ell
aoldD&lt; Cheryl.
Storage Space lor rent4033 backS, $250 now, $125 for
local Co.
webslt•, merchandise SO..
11on at location &amp;
bacl&lt;
A:ll 19().()5-12748.
dwelllntJI Mlw .. lllad In
80% orf manulacturer'a augbetween
8:30am
o-lal
Financing·
Down
APAlm.!JoMs
iquoro loot. with molal all. (7401256-6445
thla Mlilll p pr . .
_...
FOR RfNr
ahelvlnQ. Located In City ol - ' - - ' - - - - - 10:00am, Monday thru satgootod retail. Will add new
SERviNG
THE
.vallabll
on
an
.qull
Paymente
u
tow
u
1%.
Point Pleasant. Inquire at Craftsman 14.5 H.P. 42" cut
urilay.
products regularly. Check H
Proquallty
by
phone.
(304)67&lt;HltD2
ndlngmower. Naw condition.
_,.nhy-.
oull- a·shoppers·paradlae.
TRI.COUNTY Noodad: Ptfl0f1 to take
(740)446-3570.
f and 2 bedroom apart·
1800., Kenmore sell-cleancom
'tng gas
care of m&amp;, moiMr In Aoaoooocl Wedding ChapHOMES
We have ·approximlltty 20 monta. lumllhod and unlur·
. New Cond'•· .
AREA
Cltotlltlra. 6: a.m. to 12 ef. HunUIIQion, WHI VIrgin- r'D
used homes for under nilhed, MOUrlty dlpod ,.
lion. $300.,
Heavy Duty
Mom, tired of the trash on
10 Eloganr Wed·
noon, 7 dayo/Wic. 740-3f1- Ia. TV? Mal&lt;e your voice heorll.
FORSAul
$2,000,
caii1-800-837-S238
~~·
no pall, 740-992· riO .HOVSiiHOIJ)
WNashaeo'
_
'
Dryer
G$600as
Orycer.
C&amp;JI for Valentine's
0302.
Go to onemuwonmoms.com
•
for lnlo. ,
.
·
GooDs .
ew
nd-lon
. all
• Mull have good
1
on the Internet for more· In4·Sale lg. Ranch . Style
1 BOdroom, All Utilities,
.
13041675-5662
'
Communication
akllla
NUIIIINO
IIUPIIIVIIOIII
fo. Panicipation Is free .
'----., Home, 4br., 3ba., 'with
Bt.5INE\Ii
$378
pluo
doposh. Appliances· Reconditioned Disney Aree. 7 Days, 6
Scanlc HUla Nurtlog Cortllr
• Muat han good
screened In patio porch, 2 ~ ·AND JkiJuliNGs _ (740)2-45-51 DO .
, Waohert. Dryers, Rantoa. NlghJ Hoiel Stay. Paid $600,
II Ro- Struclurlng lal optl·
Shop Online II
driving record I
mal RN Sujlorvloor Covw· --~~2j:.._J car garage. $78:000. 4
Refrlgralorl Up To 90 Days Son tor $199. (6141898,
www.marykay,c:om/b•penc:er47 ,
provide own
blocks lrom High School Proleaional office bullcll~ 2 BA apartmant· lllovtl ·and Guorantoodi We Sell New 2994
Your Mary Kay Independent
Gal.
Ohio.
Good
view
o1
·
...
..,frtgoratol.
Dopoalt
$250:
:;.:-:-:----:::·.,.. lOoking for dtdk:llt·
-uty Consuffant, Bridget
trln.porlallon
town (304)727-3318
available lor ntnl. Convon· R.,. $376. (740)441·9872 Moytag Appliances, French Free Gas Fumacos and Air
d~ble, oan~ All M-ol LAwn Mowers;
lponcar.
·
lently located In downtown ., (740)448-7620
City Moytag, 740-446-7795. Conditione• Estimates. Call
• Mullhlvallblllty to od,
AN'a for tht 3-11 and 11· SrNIII Englnea; Kerosene 8~8 Main Street, Pt. Pl . Pt. f'Jealant. Plenty of parte(740}446·6308 or 1-800·
be I TEAM player
What Arw You WaftlnQ For
111111. Now Wlgt and Bona- Hoalara and salamanders Completely Refurbished. 2 lng. Call(304)e75-22 9-13 3 Bedroom Apt., Bot11, CIA lied Springe, $5.00 for aln· 29HXI98 11 vou don't caU
You 1&lt;now vou want to try it.
lit Packa~. PI_. Call Repaired.. Colt
Mike story, 2 FuN Bath. 3 Bad· Monday-Friday or (~)675- and Gao · Heat, $400 par gla bad. 2P235 15 Inch ua we both k&gt;sel
.
Stan today. Jay Clark's
Pam COkfwoll
(740)olol8-7804
rooms. Largo Kitchen, 6785
monlh
and
dapcalt. tires. $30. Gun,Bumer tor - - - - - - - Konpo Karate (7401742·
71 !0 lor mO&lt;O lnl
. . ,;_..:.__ _ ___,-- Large Uflllty Room LRI DR!
l..Ors &amp;
(740)387·7016
Fumaco Complete, S!iO. Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
Sand RHumeto: '
2548
:
:
m
r
=
r
l
r
s
Family
Am.
NoW
Carpal
A~•GE
I!AUTIFUL
APART•
(740)387·7729
Repairs. Problems? NOOd
-ry -for
2
lllpolla Dally trlbu .. Office
F/A &amp; NC,
,__
·
..
Tuned? Call The P1ono Dr.
I.Ooal Vaterintrlan OHioa. - -r 10rvica,IIG·aonloor throughout.
~
)olol8or
MENTI
AT
IUD&lt;IET
PA~
For
Sate:
Rocond•t•oned
740.44e.4525
1100 1740
9585
RE: Adverllllng
GIVEAWAY
Will Alto Porlorm Bomo clllzana dlecount. 22yra. 5740)446.
or
(
40I44e·
ol
land
Cll
AT
JACKION
Elwaahora,
dryllfll
end
refrtg:..:;:_;,.::...;.:=---7
2205
17
55 acres 1arm • 112 1n TATU, 52 WMtwaod Drive orators. Thompoons Appll- lndeponda,. Hort&gt;alife Dis,
Sllel Rep
Claanl'1¥. and Kon!lfl Du· oxp. (~)578·2065
2683
till.
ay
and
Evonlng
•
woodlancl, other 1/2 in pll· from S2Q1 to 1383.
to ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- trlbutOf Cell For Product Or
821 Third Avenue
Free A&lt;ID&lt;abla Ia()! Aualral· Oalllpolla, Ohio 45831 Hourt and OOmt WHk· G~-• p~·•ie sawmill Clean 2 bedroom hOuse In ',u.r,e, agvuallawb~e"' eloocn~;aWince- ohop &amp; movlao. Call 740- nue, 13041675-7388.
Opportunity. (740)441·19~
ends. Pan time Po!li1lon On- 'IN'·- VII_.
ian Shepherd Mix Puppies.
• Pomeroy, will nil or rent·
·
•·
448-2588. Equal Houaing
,
.
To Good Home Only.
Good Ulod Appliances, Re- NEW AND USED STEE~
Iy. Flitnd1y and Warm Por·· don~ haul your loga lo Ilia with option 10 buy on land Road, Pomoroy, Ohio, Opportunity.
(740)379-2280
sw
.
OONlllty 1 Mull. Ploaao mill lull call304-675·19~ . contract (74016 ga.7244
$2,000.00 · an acra, 992·
conditioned and Guaran- Stool Beams Pipe Rebar
: - - - - - - - - /HOUR TO STAAT
bllng Reaume Ia: Rlvorber'd
'
9844
Booch St-. Mlcldlapcrl, 2 teed . . Wllhora, Dryers, For Concrete' Angle Chan•
'Free klttons lo good indoor (upon complellon ol ~alnlng Arllmol Clinic, 11120 8tal8 MoviOut IIG lldand HouBaUng: Clean For Rani 0&lt; aalo, amall
._
H
bedroom, fumlohod apart· A._. and Relrlgorators, nel, Flat Bar.' Stool 'orating
8 u ings,
home. 992·1179
Looking for 1 New JOI or ·Route 180, Ga~ CHo.
Hments, ttou~a tbr. $250. month + 80 "'"""' enderaon on ment, utllltlea paiCI, deposit Some start at S95. Skaggs For Drains, Driveways &amp;
CAREER???
G11a~1, Eota1ea, Traoh, Dapcsll.
(304)727-3318 New Four Lane allntoruc· &amp; retoronco, no pala. 740- Appllanooo, 76 VIne st., W&amp;lkwaya L&amp;L scrap Met·
lorr AND
. Then don't miM lhlo- OWn a computor? Eam Etc. Odd JOba. Call from 6pm-11pm.
lion wf1lt city Wllar. S80,000 992.0186
(740)olol8-7398
ala Open Manooy Tuesday
~
FOUND
tunityl!l
• ::lo"l=(740)olol8-7804
For ..lo by owner: Nice bl· ~~~)937-2518 (3041545· Newly Rentocltlod, 2 Bad· Mollohan carpet, 202 Clark WednetiOay &amp; Friday, Ba.,;
CALL. 1-111-174-.IOa
379-11112 « vlllt
Top to Boltom Cloonlng !oval homo on 1 acre near
room Apt., s- Ratrigora· Chapel Road, P-, Ohio. 4.30pm. Closed Thuosday,
FOUnd· Orange and Whffa
ouccna400.oom
Service. Prolnolonal clean- Chell8f. Throe bedrooM, Lot for aale 112 acnolot )uat tor, Utllltlll Paid, $400/ (740)&lt;148·7«4 1·877-830- saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
malo bobtail kitten near Top Ton ltofe- Menlng at affordable prices. two balha, ontHlllf garage, off Oohal AII.Somo rMtrlo- monlh. 48 Olivo 51., Q162. Froa Estlmololl, Eaay (7401446-7300
·
Senclhll Ad. Vory Frllndly. agor, FuU Tlma &amp; P~ nma R~ lal ~ AMklondal, olllce, remodel- lamlly room with llroplace, tiona coli 304-675-7758 al· (740)448-3846
flnanclog, 90 doys aame ao , Auldantlol Homo Dwnoro
Frtt to good home II not CUhler, Full Tlme &amp; Par1 tor 1 otHoe. Knowltdgl of lng and construction clean tun room. New central heat· ttr 5 pm.
Now Tlkln Applloationt- calh. VItal Matter Card. Tappan HI efficienCy 90 plua
claimed. (7401245-5985
Tlmo·BookkiOpor, Full Time modical coclll~Wb~IIIIIQ prt- up. Confidential. 992-2979 lng &amp; lie oyatem. Dna ml· Lol lor sale· -rod appro• 35 Wnt 2 'h.:iroam Toom· Drive- a-1~ uve alot.
goa 1umacu Including on
Cooil &amp; Doll. Avallablt 1o ltrrld. FA• mumoo to or 992-13QI .
nuta off Route 7, but 11111 prl·
·
...:.. -·"
nd
loctrtc
1
12
worlt all oltllli. llond ,....... 675-3713 or 1122•34112 or .
vate (7401985-3981
2 1 . ocroo, gra~ · -· hOuao Apartmanto, lnoludal Sola and Lo-t. $200. a
a
goa uma·
YARD SAu:
·
water &amp; olaclrlc avallabla, Water ~· Traoh, 1740)olol8-2479
coa. HI Efficiency Hoot
l_c/o Dally Sentinel PO Box aonc1 Ia P.O llo!t 867 Bor•
::~;:::;::=: 728.()8 PomtlUY 6H 48'188 IIOurwllla, WV HaM
Panlatly Atmddtlod hOme, Porto; .~roo. $1 8,500(7 ."~II $31101Mo., 7
-oooa.
PFumpsl. teadtulbnlng Tappan,•
B~
Btctroom, 1 Bath, Full (740).._,.._514 or 40,-v-•
ree ncre
e warran r
·9
URGENTLY
NI!EDED·
......._
Buamont, Large UNltloch· 3248 alter 6pm.
Specloul 2br. 1be. Ouplax
AN'nQuEs
packago. ,
YARD SALEplaoma donora um 1110 to CNA claUM to ba ollorod
vrrvimJNI'IY
aaon 2Droar$SO
garage 127 KineWaohor/Dryor
Hookup.
BENNITT 8 HIATING '
. l'uMERoY/Mmou! 1
_ S80 par -k for 2 01 3 oi .Laldn Hclljlllal. Pro)octld
· 17401441 • Wantod to buy or looM In 1450 month. Dopoaii!Roltr·
COOLING (740)448-8411
000
"-oitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir houra · wttldy. Call Sera- ot.rt- !0 rna"*" 4, aooa,
INDTICEI
' '
Meigs Co. 8 ocrtl, 1/2 oncaa Raqulrod. No Palf. Buy or aoll. Riverine Anll· or 1-100-872-5987.
0465 .,
,B
Feb
Toe
740-582-88111
for
I
WHkl
.
hm-4pm
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISH.
woodl,
112
pa11uro (304)878-2048
quoa, 1124 East Main on www.-.com/bonnatt
S
1·
1
1::,•~: .:~ 3:00ru;:,v
,
·.
MondaytlirouQ~Fifday.~ lNG co. recommends tliat Real Log Homoo. COblna j7:o&gt;992·91118
Tara Townhouao Apart• SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Upright lrsozer, excel!.,.
528
RuHand Church ol God ap· Full lima L~N. 7a·3p and ~tky~r.a~ : : ::.!llar:.ed~~:.go:,:~ Won". u~~:is8~'::3 1 ~ 10 rmaREALFBrATI!
m'""· Vary Spaclouo, 2 :~, · Auu Moora, conditio~, 5200.00 OBO.
prox2mllasoutStA1_124 3p-11pf/llfll,andPa~Tima lion a- . FII)Nafy ll,
th hthe 11 til
WANI'I!D
. -oomo, 2 Flooro, CA, 1
.
7_40.:..:-36~7:...;..:708~7,;__ __
:---:-~--- LPN, Rotating Shih, for 1DO 2002 All '!'PJ,IIcanta muol ~v!"~~...u~!o ut~e
MOBilE HOMES
1/2 llalh, Fully Carpalod, Suo's Soloctoblao tha "T" Watortlne Special· 314 200
Rutland Fire House, baby bod nulling laclllty. Exctl·
'
aohool
FOR S" ~
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa- In Middleport. 00111, glaaa· . ,
clolhH lumlturs Avon ale lonl opportunity · lor cllil !lava • lllgll
diploma
ng.
·
~
Lool&lt;lng for 2·3 bedroom tiO Slart 11386/Mo No ware Aladdin mantela and PSI ' 21 ·00 Per 100· 1 200
~ndsy &amp;Saturday ~,oo'.? · ,.nalntl and rewarlllnQ ox: "'GI!D.
llart&gt;arohop for Aont In
=-~to ~-.,
t.al.. Plua Stourtiv DopoiH moN'. (74011102.0288 '
:~••s~opr:.::on'~?~lngA:
porfoneo Sign on bonua CNA-HHA, Ctr1 - · C
Cl 17")2••-•o 9•
_
Aaqulrod, Dayo. 740-448·
7
• AUCI10N AND
groat atan rate, ioxctlitnl ... lc. j)lllviCia In IOWrt ty. ~ ~ 0 IRS Special! Wo'll matoh ...-3 8
3481; EvonlnQO: 740·3417·
MlscEJANEOUS lin Stock.
.
-oiF'
l
.IAiiiiiiMI.RKEriiiiiiii;,;,.,.l
ffi)UIItory compiltrtoo hlalt&gt; homo ..rv~ lOr lho Slarl Your Bualnou To· your lax ratum up 10 $2,000.
01102, 740-448.0101 .
MJiRcHANnJsE
ADN EVANI ENTEAPAII...
•~- da Primo • .........,ng Con Ctll (740)448-3093 for deEl Jackton, Ohio, 1-800·
ry· ln18rtllod candldolu ~ In .
· · y...
~......
· lajs ·
,.,.n River TOMrt aocopt·
837·9528
Rick Poaraon Auction Com· ahould
to: Rock• ·Cabo I, Wayne, . Putnom tor 9paoo Avallabll At AI·
·
lng appl- now for
JET
· iillr'"'""':~~~--,
pany, lull Umo auotlonoor, aprtnQI
Illation Can- Counllea liN. Call 1.... fordoblo Rett. SPI!ng Vllltoy Limited Or No Crodl1? Gov· lb
UnHo avollabll
AERATION MOTORS
j5IID
BUILDING
ocmpltto auction llrviC.. tor, 341788 Roc~~ Ad, ~992 Wll Tllln
PIUI, Cat1740-448-Q1 01 . ammo.. Bank Finance Only
Morclt 1' 2D02
F!opalrod, Now &amp; Aobulll In
~
76 ' Kyla
Llconlod te&amp;,Ohlc &amp; Wilt POIIIOI'CY, Ohio
·
·
l'llon:ssloNAL
A~
Oakwood
In
Barboura·
~
JIOR Rmr
1
br. Hud Subaldlzod apl. for Slock. c&amp;!l Ron Evans, 1- ~
Vlrt~lnlo, 304-773·878_8 Or ~~~~0'~o~r~=
[
"-·
vllla,WV304·738-3409.
·
.
'ldortyanddlublodEOH 800·637·9628.
Block, br~k. oower pipes,
304-773-5447·
Equal Opponunlly Employor
COME $AOW
~
...,....CII!i
• ~uot aoll· 14x70 mobllo 1 ·3 Badroomo Foreo(304)1175-6679
.
wintlows,.llntola, otc. Claude
WAN11!D
e._,rag~ng WorkpiaiOo tll· w
.WITH U$1
homo, 0111 740.388-2434 . Homq From 1199/Mo., 4'11i Vllry nice 2·3 bedroom Konmoro lido by olde rolrlg· Wlnltrl, Alo Granda, DH
-ally.
,.i_ni.Xp.ttndlnQdurCirOOJ· LOANI, LDANI, LOANI, ask for Elaine.
Down, 30 Vaort al U'lli apartmtnt' In town ll'lll aratornroeziu approx. 1S· Cal1740·245-8121.
ro B•~
"
•
.
. •-• ot.ff to aorvt for flOOd or bad credit, call
APA. For Uallnga, 800-318·
A' •·~· a~ 20
old gooc~
'
dill
Hair Styillll
our culllcmo'l'. Wt nlook· tOll liM 1-884-6756
Must sell- 1997, 16x58, 3323 Ext. 1709.
klleltort, L • ""'"'C"'o. ~·· . yro. :1179 oon on
26
992
Abtoiull Top DoUar: U.S. Flt118 Salona, a llodlng lnG for a poraon lltat t)H '" No up lion! loti
' lront kitchen, excellonl conlronctl ~ dapolh raqullod. $2 ·
3844
Sllvtr, Gold Coins. Proof- provldtr of hair and tannl~ high tnorgy - · ttlf· mot!- '"Fall ralloblo urvlce
cll\lon. Call Korona. 740· 1 Bad
h
(740)448
Largo pickup lood mixed
~
521501
00
1
aoto, Dlamondt, Gold ttr'ollcta. Ia clllbrtUIIQ Ill valod and oniOVI wot1dnQ "'llonkruplelao wtlcoma 385-9848
pluo J0 po~h Atft mon Chn""''a· Fomlly· l;lvlng· ftrowOQd, will deliver. "'~--oiiiiiiiiiiil-_.1
Rlnga, u.s. currency,· Grand Opening tlrty Fet&gt;ru- - ptOplo.
havt dah
roneu
"''
Uma A A ' (74019411-2567 Evonlngo &amp; •
•
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 161 Sto· aryl II you ara a hlghlycroo- pondtllo. t.._...,, btl•
1UIINID DOWN ON
New 14x70, 3.br/2bt . Only Required, Stove, Atfrlgtra· 33140 Now
d:, ut· Wooktnda
2 AKC Female Pekin eu .
ond Avanue, Clalllpollo, 740- uva ttyllatiOoklng lor alrtlh tiO compultr knowlodQo. IOCIAL IICUAITY /181? 1875 down, $169.84 per ~'· IF(7~~~~";" Gal· ~~
PupptH, 1 Fornale Paeloe448·28ol2.
alart, WI have pooltlona. Tl111 II a .... time lliiMd No FH l.lniiH WI Wlnl mon7871th.. can Nikki, 740-385- po a.
·"-'••
'
Ill ::,.:.· Mol)ogany Jowolry Armoire. tao dog. 2 Toy Pooclfo
avallablo lor management pot1t1on and o11or1 111"'"""
1488 582 3346
·~·-•·
81111 In Box, $150 OBO.
M lo/F 1
---~-.::--:-~-:-:3 bod~m homa ~;'0 ravllla I~
wanted'
Old PlnbaU Ma• and lull Hme and pa~ lima pony benattiO lnoludlng
• •
available lor 1-. (740)448-3880. Alk tor An· 00
&gt;g~••_3398 a emu.
1740,......0 ,. Only
.
'""'I I ~ ~
• - ltaallh I
I~
area, ,var 111ow, "" 110 par Vtoanclta oow. .
ft./
.
.
Chlnoo, Jukt Boxtl and y,,ata n• un•r a ,_,
nauranct, - ~'
Ulod doublowlda.
month roltronooo roqtirod
·
:7-·~=-~:-::--Ollttl Cain Oporttod EquiP- hlrl11t1 bonUI, hcuriy wagoa ptraoNII doy,a, and 401K
80/!58x28126 3 bedroom 2 dopooit roqulrod ·no pa~a' Cltan 2br. WID Hookup. MOlal Doak, 4 Drawora on 4 MalliN Pupa, All Whffe,
"''ftt. Huntlnglcn.(3041ilai· up to 50% oomm1111cn, plan. Wo aro part of alargelo
·bath, goa !tO.t, central alo, 740-992-8m arttr epm. ' Aottronct and Dtpotlt. No ono olclo, Shllve on Bottom, Grow to e lba. can
3333
401(K) ' prollt that111Q, .,.. _ . ,, that olltfl ....,.
HOMES . lllrtploce with gao logo
Ptta. (~)117~51112
30x20, Vory Nice, Pot1tol 1~0)845·0683. Available
oatlon, hoolth, vlalon, danlal 18nt ·oarHr ~tlvanotment
. FOR SAul
_ 1987 modal
' 3 Bedroom Houao ond 3 Clara- •~ on Rou·• St for Studonta Homework, lor.Voltntlno'a Day.
I \1 1'1111 1' l "\ I
and lift Int., frat advanctd -'unlllet. For lnltrvlow
Prtao for lm;,odlato aalo
Bedroom Mobllo Homo.
.. """
~· • $20. (7401985-4409
'-I I:\ II I ,,
education, and dlloountol oontkltrltlon aond a oovor
Colo'o Mobllo Homoo
Roftroncto and Dopooh 1br., klloltan, living room,
AKC Groat Dana Pupa, tot
1
7
Clll Myrna 0 800·121- 1 - ttiHng ua why you ara 3 8 Patrlol Ad, Patrlol, US 50 Eul At~eno Oh
Raqulrod. . No
Peta. fumloltod, roal nlca qulot MOilLE HDMI OWNERI Sholl lnd 'Normod, llltpk,
1
1:0
183831t 3010 to tchOCIUit an thf··pa_, wa ara ,_IIQ OH. 2 Story, 3 BR, 2 12 740-592-1972
'
(7401388-8371
l!rOOt. $278. per month + lntortltorm &amp; Coltman gao, Hartaquln &amp; Merlo. Born
·llnPWAN'I1D
lnltMawl
tor ilong -your ,..umo Bath, .17 aero lol. Will Conutllltloa + ~~~. (~)773- 011 &amp;· oltctrlc lumtoM In•. 1212G/01 . (740)388-9813 ·
1;~~~~~; ·
10
Paul
Borllw,
Clrau'•Uon
!lldall.and
Controct.
Down
Only
$850
down
and
3
BR,
·
1
Bath:&lt;
Groen
••••
1 dl hi · • lflclonoy h001 .:::c;:::.;;.:.:.:c.::::c;::..::::.:._
cung
fOr ••
•• Dlrootoral Ohio Vllltv "'~ub- Paymant andAI
o oronCJII $181 .38 per month gota you School. 1500 plua Utllltloo. ~
pump ayetorna.
wo carry a -;-K¢"""81
~
•._. ack Lab pup"ac~tlciril :;;,; p•vfrig •~nln.UmHomt, liahlnQ Co., 828 Tl111d Ava., Raqulrod.
No
Poll. a new homo. Call 1-800- (740)245-9020.
Graclouo living. 1 and 2 compltto !Ina 01 Mobile pill lor Hll ,flOOd hunting
"
·~
• Goillpollo, Ohio o4eell1 .
(740)3711-9887
· 837·3238 ask lor Mike.
bedroom apallmtn1o ot VII- homo parta &amp; accoaaortoo p,_,s volca man &lt;141·
E~~n~~t~~r-::'-:----:-~:-2 :;::.:..::;.:==c""=-::- 6 Bedroom ...... IO&lt; ltnl, !ago Menor and Al\ltr!llda IINNITT'I HIATINQ .: 71930&lt;call 304-676-4469
Ll- r~;:;~~n Aouto · ~~: ~:~:;V :.7'cr~: ~~ wllcomo. !·773- =;~:~M:\"r~ C~~~)~ll-8418 AKC Aiglallrod Labo,
;,;..;.=..;..;..;..;_c__ _ _ .and Govommont Loano for
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Pege 8 6 • The Dally Sentinel

• Thw.d.ty, Feb. 7, 2002
• 1

It's lights out for ~akers against Bulls
BY THE

ASSOCI~TED

PRESS

the run that gave the Mavericks their
seventh straight road win and ended the
Nets' eight-game home winning streak.
Dallas, coming off a double-overtime
victory in Indiana the previous night, set
a ream record by hitting all 27 of its ~e
throws. The Mavs won for the 23rd time
in 28 games.
Dirk Nowitzki scored 22 points and
Steve Nash had 18 points and 12 assists.
Dallas played without Juwan Howard,
who was sitting out ·a one-game suspension. Wang Zhizhi had a career-high 15

Punches were thrown the last time the
Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers
mer. The two-time .
defending NBA champions showed little fight
in the rematch.
Missing Shaquille O'Neal. who sat out
to rest his aching feet, the Lakers seemed
uninspired against the lowly Bulls. .
Marcus Fizer scored 15 of hiS 21
points in the second h,alf. ~nd Brad
Mil!er had 12 points and nme rebounds
as the Bulls sent the Lakers into the AllStar break with a 97-89 defeat Wednes- po~:~~on Martin scored 26 points;
day night.
·
Keith. Van Horn added 21 and Jason
The Bulls, who have the NBA's y;orst
Kidd had 14 points and I 2 assists for the
record at 11 -36, beat the Lakers twice in NetS, who were shut out in the final
as many games this season - the only
team Chicago has beaten more than 4 :25.
once. Chicago's 3-22 road record is also
SuperSonics 90, Suns 79
Bren1
the league's worst.
·
.Barry scored 21 points and Vin
It's nice to get a sweep of the Lakers,'' Baker added 17 points and nine
Miller said. "It shows any team can beat rebounds as Seattle snapped a threeanother team on a given night. Tonight game home losing streak with a victory
was that given night."
over Phoenix.
.
Kobe Bryant scored 38 points and
Gary Payton matched a season low
Slava Medvedenko added 11 for the with 11 poi,nts for the Sonics.
.
Lakers.
Shawn Marion led the Suns with 19
"Nobody seemed like they were ready points.JakeTsakalidis had his first career
to play;• Miller said. "Mark Madsen came double-double with 16 rebounds and 10
in with a lot of energy, and Kobe played points, and Stephan Marbury added 16
hard. Everybody else seemed lackadaisi- pointS and 12 assistS for PhoeniX.
cal, like they were· looking forward to
Timberwolve1 113,
the break."
Trail Blazen 103
It was the first game between the
Wally Szczerbiak had 30 points and
teams since O'Neal, Miller and Charles ·Joe Smith added 21 to lead Minnesota
Oakley were suspended for fighting dur- past visiting Pordand.
ingtheJan.12game-inChicagothatwas
Joe Smith had 21 points, and Gary
won by the Bulls, 106-104 in overtime. Trent added 14 in a reserve role for
Asked if he was embarrassed about Minnesota, which won for the third
getting swept by the Bulls, Bryant time in nine ~mes. ·
replied: " It's not embarrassing, it's very
Bonzi Wells scored a career-high 35
upsetting."
points for Portland, which lost for ju_st
Bryant acknowledged the Lakers were the fifth time in 17 games.

NBA

lackadaisicaL
"That's what it looked like;" he said. "I
don 't think we matched their intensiry."
In other NBA games, it was Dallas
112. New Jersey tOO; Sacramento 102,
Boston8S;Cleveland 111,Houston 109;
Minnesota 113, Portland 103; and Seatde 90, Phoenix 79 ·
Bryant tied the game at 72 with 7 1/2
minutes to remaining, b\,\t five points by
Fizer, a basket by Trenton Hassell and ·
two 'ree throws by Miller gave the Bulls
"
lead with 5:24 left.
an 81-72
The Lakers scored the next eight
points - four by Sainaki Walker- to
· . draw within a point, but that's as close as
they would get.
,
"I knew 1t was going to be a very difficult game," Lakers coach Phil Jackson
said.
"It was like pulling teeth out there to
execute during the game. I was just frustrated with our offensive display."
·Kevin Ollie matched his career high
with 15 points and went 9-for-1 0 from
the foul line in the final I 9 seconds as
the Bulls snapped the Lakers' four-game
winning streak.
Mavericks 112, Nets 100
Tim Hardaway's 3-pointer started a
game-ending 16-2 run that lifted Dallas
past New Jersey.
Hardaway had seven of his I I points in

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Divac had IS points, 14 rebounds and ·
10 assists
the Kings,
who have the
NBA's
bestforrecord
of 37-11.
Antpine Walker scored 26 points for
the Celtics, who lost for the fourth time
in six games.
.
Th e Ki·ngs PIaye d WI!. hout Ch r1s· ,.,
web· h stomac h flu.
. d Wit
b er, si deIine
Cavaliers 111, Rockets 109
Andre Miller scored 31 points, and
Lam~md Murray s~ored the go-ahead
basket with 21 seconds remaining and
blocked a shot with 9 seconds left as
Cleveland snapped a three-game losing
streak with a home victory over Hous- .
ton.
Steve Francis took Houston's last shot,
a running 14-footer. The ball bounced
around the rim and fell through the basket, but the referees ruled the shot came
after time expired.
.
Miller finished with 13 assists, and
Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored all 12 ol his
pointS in the fourth quarter for the Cav- ·
aliers.
'
Cuttino Mobley scored 29 points, and
Francis added 25 for Houston.

NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball players the money to be distributed, and Steve
want owners to pay for their failed Garvey is still trying to get more, his case
attempt to fold the Minnesota 1\vins and going all the way to the U.S. Supreme
Montreal Expos.
Court last year.
The players' associaIf arbitrator ·shyam Das agrees with the
non IS pressmg ahead union 's contention that owners violated
with itS grievance that claims owners the labor contract and damaged the freeviolated their labor agreement when agent market, the grievance would move
they voted in November to fold two on to how much money players lost. •
teams, and the union said Wednesday it
"We have some familiarity when it
intends to seek damages.
comes to determining what are the dam"That's one of the issues in the case," ages," said Orza, who participated in the
.
said Gene Orza, the union's No. 2 offi- coll\,\sion cases. ·
cia!. "Obviously, there is a Iiabiliry phase."
Lawyers for both side~ met with Das
AgentS claim lt.has been harder to find op Wednesday, and the union asked ownjobs for 1lieir playen during this offseason ers to spe'ed up their production of docthan in the past, and cite the uncertainly uments the players have asked for. The
caused by contraction and a possible dis- sides agreed to recess the case until Feb.
persal draft.
.
26 and set a schedule of 10 hearing dates
"I believe that it affected every smgle through April 10.
.
free agent this year;' said Tommy Tanzer,
Manfred pointed out that the damage
whose clients include John Burkett and claim has been part of the case all along,
Sterling Hitchcock. "What they attempt- but the overriding issue was the furure 'of
ed to c1o was glut the· market with play- the Twins and Expos.
ers7'
Faced with an injunction that forced
Owners claim they can eliminate Minnesota to honor its lease at the
teams .and must bargain only on effects, · Metrodome this year, baseball commissuch as a draft. Rob Manfred, the own- sioner .Bud Selig gave up Thesday on his
ers' chief labor lawyer, dismissed talk of plan ro eliminate teams. this season, but ·
damage to the market.
·
said he will push forward with contrac"1 haven't. seen anything that would tion for 2003. Das, who already has heard
indicate that," he said. "Players have
d
.
12 : days of testimony, will etermme
signed this winter just as they have every whether owners can eliminate teams
other winter.''
·
without the union's permission.

M LB .

Paul Beeston, baseball's chief operating
their labor contract by colluding
not tod officer,
witnehss
in
·
the case,was
butthe
thenext
sidesscheduled
decided not
.to ave
sign free agents. Ar~itrators agn;e?, an any testimony Wednesday. Beeston has
owners
1991 to gave
setde the
the umon
cases. $280 ·million m told baseball officials in recent weeks that

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1!'\'Cryot ll' will haVl' a good
time. (;~·t a :iul1l}' VII Hfc by
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somc:onc U1i~IH ~hmv mmcsuil ~.· d ll'ndctu: ic~. h ut if you
put bli1Hit:n on mat let i! be.
nol h in~

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P.Q . Bm: 17:1K.
M urray llill St,ltiun. Nt'W
Ynrk , NY 101511. Bt• ~me tu
-tt·w~p :l,pt·r .

statl' ruur Zodiac ~igu .

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(!or one month lor as low as $25 ', ·.· ':.
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'It is better to suffer wrong than I~ do ·
n, and happier to be sometimes cheated lhon not to lrust. -

Samuel Johnson

0 four
Rearrange lettan of
scrambled words

the

be-

low to .form four .simple wordt .

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1

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The woman's date ha.. d piacec .
;' h1s hand on her knee. 1 guess 1
,. should look and not touch ," he
;, smiled . "At my age ," the woman
,. ').. f) N E.· f'
1_a_u_gh_e_d.. _"Y.ou shou ld touch and
1
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Complete the chuckle q uoted
by filling rn the missing words

L-...L~L-L-L~--1. you de'lelop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Greedy· Livid· Oasis • Fungus • GRAVY

Two old gents were having breakfas t at a local
cafe ."il's been years since we've done lh1s w1thout our
w1ves." said one. "Yea," the other answered, "lets do
something wild and have biscuits and GRAVY I"

'1buJ' .

-'Birthday

•

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(304) 273-3271

TJB

'Y F W

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Ucinv; mmT .n nb tt nnl ~ .md
r~·r\istt.'llt i ll tltL' yc,l r aht:ad
will ~·rnpha~izt' LlLI.llitit·~ that
will rontrihutc t(, yo ur ~ucccss
tn ;u.:hi l'\"C ohjc~.· tivc~ )'VIl CLt.lUib.h t(,r yo~m.df. G1..nld for

WV

Todsy's clue: D equals G .

maining heart: one

•'
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by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are creatacffrom quotations bv famous
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands fpr another.

.

••

!' ITHURSDAY

CELEBRITY CIPHER

two -.. or

However, East wasn't

'

Bill's Tire
PLUMBING
Shop
405 5th Strwt
Ravon~wood,

the hea rt

fooled . He knew how
to defeat the contract.
He. rmhcd to win
with the. spade ace
and to return his re-

1

I'ISCES (F&lt;•b. 20 · M:~tcil ~II)
-- Trl'ilt with r c~}H'L· t tlmsc
t lti l l b~ that lh~~ l'l'\'l' td tw t.1hn
~crinu ~l y today. Thio; is C\pcl ial\y trul' iu im·oiH'tll('llts, or
L' th\r.t vn r ~ whci'L'
mi~lnlu1rt .molh ..·r.

fri\'tllity

ARIES (M.1rd1 21-Aptil 11J)
- - Tr v n ot t t1 hl' an " I tL1ld
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gancl..

three-card hol'd ing.
So, in the hope it was
the latter and to
n1aintain coJnntunicatipn with her partner,
West dropped the
hean two, announcing an initial five-card
heart holding.
After winning with
dummy's kin~. declarer immediately
called for the spade
jack, feigning someone who was about to
t ·tk e a finesse Sottth
·
.. ·
knew that he needed
a misdefense -- and
· the quicker o ne tries
for that, the better the
ch:mce of success.

Fnle Estiu •
DR lllrlll!l cat
740-378-83411

' ft~~~~~cl~~~b~~dsto~~-~~.i._
office, perhaps as soon as April or May,__ s ~---~-~-----------------~-~---------~-

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original

740-992-5232

949-1405 TI'N

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· tool

54 Glide

21 Blulhlng

five. Dcdarcr tried
th e eight fr om the
dummy. but East produ ce d his queen to
win the trick . llack
came the heart seven,
South pl:tying a
smooth, deceptive
j;tck. I lowcver, West
wasn't fooled. She
knew th:ot if her husband had started with
Q-10-7-3 of hearts,
he would have returned the heart
tluet&lt; his original
fourth-high.cst, not
lhc seven. That card
was consistent With an

LIMfiUGK

unbecomtng to

&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

882·2342

ll&gt;orth
k..'4bl.
!' aU - :1 · l';ollll ... ..

~t ro1.1gc s t :

I

1·16
Pd. I Mo.

Same As Cash Available

Bryan Reivea
New Homea, Raom Addltlona,
Garagea, Pole.Bulldlnga, Roofa,
Siding, Decka, Kltchena, Drywall ·

~

"

11 Contln·

deal. How did the
play i;o?
The auction wo1s
simple and straightforward. And W •·st led ·
fourth - highe st from
her longest and

'••

Pllmmy, ObW

Free&amp;tlmat11

KQ I II U Hii

like a married couple,
with minds working
in t:ondcm to find a
way to defeat the

JUGI4AID.

33795 HU.nJ RJ.

Gutters· Down
Spout

~ ~

J '

Well
!Jill.

"The ~

Good dl'fCndcrs are

NEVER HURT

1-877-466-1234 . -

,J(If..

• ltetldenttal

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All th e air is thy
Diocese.

I

Self-Storage

Malntenance-

5

IS,

[jl~j

Ntw Haven, WV

~

Wlw.n .Lady Elizab.-th and Count !'alatine married 011 this
,J.,y i:r lh13, John
Donne wrote:
Hail , Uishop VaJ,•n ti:re, whose d_ay this

High&amp; Dry

ROofing· Home

K

Opening lewd: ? ~

~~~

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL

•

1 t
3 •
~ •

11f:..

Sunset Home
Construction

(740) 992·3470

A J IU l

The - 1 downtum

I· oc~

Owner

EXCAVATING

K II 4 J

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Ho!llb
I 6

If your weight Is

HAULING and

t :illil
6 A J!
. • J \t 1 !

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nitrogen

43

Addl11111
13 On lttTI flr·
Ftmlly"
1111
couain
15 Upholalwry 48 Mogle word
.
llbrlc
48 Strfng
16 Tlllllowera
bead•
18 LL.D. hold- 50 Corponter'o

Vulnertble; Ea~r~t · Wil~l
De11ler: &amp;uth

WC:re- JOrry...

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Iff:.. e., .tfn.. 4fli':t.. ,.,_ ,.,_ !lli!J fll.!!J !I[;•J !ll•.•J !II..!.!! ~~~·.1 til))f

WICK'S.

A(.l iU M7i J 2

11
12

• Q.
• Kgr•~

· ..... 11

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

.

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FREE ESTIMATSS

il.!!J lli!J il.!!J

(7«1Jm·m7

A

.!klllth

&amp; EARNEST

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fll.I!J' tit~
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.

•
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(740) 992-0739

Jeff Warner Ins.
992• 5479.

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&lt;i1118o1. Polell&lt;iidi.,., c-.te
r...!:!J:~

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Owner: ~rcy Lomm

Rubbdooll"

"-! ,,,.,.

co ntract -- as in thi s

..

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SpeclaiWQB In;

J.D. CONSTRUcriON
New Homco .t Ranodelioa
·s~InLotllometl:

Dlmlllce
40 Con .
1 snowed
neighbor
....
41 0et,a011d
I~
lunln
btclerla
42 Htllum 01

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Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall, and
Additions

Cellular

Iff:..

.
...
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'

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ACROSS

ALDER

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PHILLIP

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. . , . . ._ _ _ ,

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NEA Crosaword Puzzle

'

L\\li\I'S
((1\ ~ lllll

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

••
..
,•

I

!{)(){)St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

·

in this
space
for
$50 per
month

35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720

All Makes Traclor &amp;
Equipment Parts
'Factory Aulhorized
CIISe·lH Parts
Dealers

740-667-0363

Advertise

"Ahead In Service"

•

Kings 102, celtic• as
Peja Stojakovic scored 24 points and
Vlade Divac had his seventh career
triple-double to lead Sacramento at
Boston.

Union to seek damages
over contraction attempt

sr!~v:~~esmi:~I ~l~~~~a:~e~e~o~~:~

29870 Balhan Road

Shade River AG Service

www.mydallyMntlnel.fOm

ALLEYOOP

•

Hill's Self
Storage

•

'

br:an ~1ut .:t~ yo u prcdkt~o· t l.
This p cr~011 docm't nn :d J
lcuurc; ~he or h L· nc~.Cd s ll ll·
dcr..t.11 1ding.
TAURUS (April 211- M.1y
20) - - Maintain wn trul l)f
ymH tin.llld.tl ,,(fair~. ttlhl
Litlll't IL· t otht•rs Llircc.:t you
u tlu.• rwi(&lt;. The\' m.w mc;111
Wt•ll, but dt:ll1 t"~S :lrt: thC'y' ll

be.• \\'1"01 1 ~ .
GEM INI (M.•y 2 1-Junc 20)
· ~ lk (.tit, hut firn1 tt,J ay

'' hL' ll nq,to t i.Hin~ or wnrki ng
with otlu.·r( on .1 Lit•:•!. If .1 11Yon~ i~ .lilow L'd tu ~t·t st'lfish ,
tlm·~t mul d bt: .1 ti n:mr i.d lo~s
fur :all.
C ANCE l&lt;. (lune 21 -July
:!2) - Slmt yum muulh tuday

roncl'rni t l~

nnyt hing that h a~

to Lin with vuu r bu s lllt'~~ af-

f..lir~. hL' it \\:h.H \'CHI.fl' dmng
ur what na1r ti rn.1 1 ~ l' ll ilt" li n~.
l . t' .lk:~ "nn' vum he half 11 1ny hL'
dL•trill u·m.il.
I.EO (ltdy 1.1 - Aug. 22) -U, ti .llly

yo11.T1.:

a V\:ry l l·v~· l ­
but tod.1 y you

hcoHh•d pt·r~tlll,
cmdtl brm~ t'llln t io n~ inf l) the:'
pldUrt'. whi r h w011ld Ji~tort
th ~ pkwrc ti1r ynu .md clnud
yonr jud ~nH: Ilt .

VlltCO (Auv;. :!J -S,•pc 11)
-- The l\llly w:ty :l lltH hL'I" r .m
bd il'\'l' in you [\Hby ~~ if yo u

li r~r

helicw in youn L·lf. Any
tlll your j1art will br;:
pkkcd up hy other~ ami l ":lmc
1 1mtn1 ~1 uf vm1 .
LIB I~A (Se pt . 2J-O r t. 23) - Ue ,1krt tmlay, l'CC'l UH" an

duubt ~

.I U]Uault .IIH"l' uf your~ lll.IY ·
sl'l·k your hdp fw pu rd y sd f1 ~ 11

n 'iJSom . Yo11 rom fi1_1d .1
t\) ~.1 y " no " ;llld ~;~ d l. rcm .nn ,l,~ll( l ,li L'd W1t h th 1.· p c r w~y

if\'Oll wi, h.
~ c c.)J-!. 1'1 0 (Oct . 24-Nuv .
~:! ) -- Yo ur w.1y ~~r' doi ng

•on

~llii1L'thin~ ,\, Wl lrk

tutb y

rould hL· f.u ~~ 1p ni D r to tin:
id ~.u o f othe r~ w ith w hom
ym1 wo rk.. It ma y tak1.· ,, lot of
gu t~ m t Yl)Ur p:m h .&gt; prove
you 're ri~ht.
S A&lt; ; I TTAI&lt;.IU ~

(N&lt;&gt;v.

2;1.

Dec 2 1)
Jl lljln rt :lll t to. ,bv th.1t vo u tn::1t .111 lllt port~t ;t ~ ~~ w: ' \\ it h JU\lgmclll .nn l
J -

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r&lt;llllhi L t t h.1 t i~ r i ~ h t ;l nd
J'ml' c r 111\ tl' .ld o f 11\ ,lk ill~ 11 11 ~ll ll . lh il' ro n n·~~ HHl ~

w .1ppc.m•

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C: AI'lti CU il..N (1 kc 2:!.].111 llJ) -- W l t l' ll .tl lll t i :H tlll).!
Wlll k 0 1" H"l" \' ( l ' fl _lf ,IJ1\I Ih l'r
wd ,1y. put )(ll"l f t l.'l"l\1\ in w ri_t in ,t.: .u1d ~d c h ~· o t hL' r ro .1tl o.:
ht, or lwr ~ l l.:; ll ~ t u r ~· to u .
lltlll ' t j mt 11 ;,1kl' .1 \'l' rh.ll
~~ rt' t ' ll

ll' lll . .

�•

'nte Daily ~tinel•

.Pomeroy/Middtlport, OhiO

•

..

AMERICA AT WAR

• •
U.S miSSI e
The military acknowlC1A say·~" sooen edged
Wednesday what
,/h · Is some .Afghans have been
a1-Q. at'da C!v
~aa
saying for close to two
The 27 peopl_e
killed so for Jeeks:
ro"'unded up in a nighttime
~;..v•

,

WASHINGTON (AP) A missile fired from a
remote-controlled CIA spy
plane may have killed a
leader of Osama bin Laden's
al-Qaida terror network, a
U.S. official said.
The pilotless Predator
fued a Hellfire missile at a
group of people in a rural
area in eastern Afghanistan,
the official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
The group was in an area
where vehicles had been
observed gathering, th eir
occupants gelling o ut to
meet, the official sai d .
At least one person
believed to be a top alQaida leade r - was kill ed
in the altack Monday, the
official said.
Word of th e :mack came
Wedne sday as CIA Direc'tor
George Ten et ca me under
criticism in Congress for
not penetrating Saudi-born
fugitive bin Laden's network . Tenet said such accusations were not true but
would not elaborate publicly.
U .S. officials have said
s~ven top ai-Qa ida officials
. have bee n killed and three
· . captured since military
action began in Afghanistan
Oct. 7. An additional 15 key
al-Qaida leaders are unaccounted for, inCluding bin'
Laden.

raid Jan . 23 were not members of ai-Qaida or the Tali ban militia that sheltered
the terrorists.
The Central Command,
which oversees U.S.-Ied
operat ions in th e. Afghan
war, is con tinuing its investigation
to · determine
whether any of the estimat~
ed 19 people killed also
were innocents , Maj . Ralph
Mills, a spokesman for the
comma nd, s~d Wednesday.
After two weeks of confusion
and
conflicting
accounts of what happened
in the raid north of Kandahar, th e Pentagon made no
official
an nouncement
Wedne sday. Defense Secre- ·
tarv Donald H. Rumsfeld,
ask.ed abo ut it by reporters
during an appearance on
Capitol Hill ;said he did not
know the· 27 had been
released.
"It's a very complicated
sirua~ion on the ~round" in
Afghanistan , Rumsfeld said,
especially as the new government works to overcome
feudal divisions within the
co untry and empower people once loyal to the routed
former rulers, the Taliban
militia. "So how anyone
would identify people: at
any given moment is nor
simp]c/' he said. "It's com...
p1ex.
·The 27 captured in the
Jan. 23 raid by Army special

"It's a very compli~ated situation o•· f}.p {.&gt;tOJmd"
in Ajghanistan, especially ·tu the new go111tmment
works to overcome .feudal divisions witlti11 tlu
c01mtry and empower people once loyal to the
rorlted former rulers, tlte Taliban militia. "So
how a11yone would identify people at a11y given
moment is not simple. It's complex."
sec. or~ Doneld Rummld

forces were released to
authorities
of Afghan 's
interim government at
about 6:30
a.m. EST
Wedne sday, Mills said.
"We were able ro determine that they were not
Taliban forces and they
were not affiliated with al Qaida," Mills said.
Asked to confirm Afghan
claims that two were local .
police officials, he said: "We
do believe that some of
them were criminals, (so)
we decided we will ·not
release names or other
identifying information."
Gen. Tommy
Franks ,
overall commander in the
war, ordered an inv~stiga"
lion last week in response
to assertions by Afghan
government officials that
people opposed to the Tali ban were among those
killed or captured.
U.S. forces in Afghanistan
were preparing Wednesday
to . rake possession of as
many as 60 more Taliban
and ai-Qaida prisoners held
by Afghan forces, a senior
U.S. defense official said.
The number of prisoners in
'
. ,';·
U.S. custody m Afghamstan
has stood at 324 for more
than a week; there also are

I 58 al-Q,ida and Tali ban
prisoners beld at the U.S.
Navy base at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba.
It was not clear whether
any of the additional 60"

prisoners to be turned over
later
this
week
in
Afghanistan -were senior
figures in ei ther &lt;~1-Qaida or
the Tali ban militia that supported it. Officials said it
was possible that U.S. officials ·would not accept all
the prisoners offered.
. The transfer o( ai-Qaida
and Taliban prisoners from
Afghanistan to Guantanamo
Bay resumed Wednesday
with an . Air Force C-17
transport plane raking off
from
Kandahar,
Afghanistan. It was due to

Melp County's

arrive in Cuba on Thursday.
At the Pentagon·, ~ senior
defense officia.l said about ·
30 prisoners were aboard
the C-17, the first flight in
a planned series of about
five· to Guantanamo Bay
over the next 10 days to
t~o weeks.
· ·
After a series of flights
between Jan . 11 and 21,
Rumsfeld halted the process
while more · temporary cells
were built. A new group of
160 cells is now ready to
receive prisoners~ officials
said Wednesday.

Whars inside

MHSawarded

grant for new
computers
Meigs falls to Belpre, Bl
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEfLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

FIELD TESTING- Toby Brown, a fourth grader at Chauncey Elementary, helps field test
the new "History Comes Alive in SE Ohio" interactive CD-ROM produced by The Ohio Un~
verstty Telecommunications Center. (Submitted photo)

CD-Rop1 helps students
learn f Ohio history

Hlp: lOs. Low: JOs
Details, A2

Wall Sbeet ·
suffers·again
106 North 2nd Avenue • Middleport, Ohio • (740) 992-2635
F/.IUulelltf&amp; Ltqtlwtf1 A...U.W.
IJ.ICI.lW!IIIIIt .23 i1 JllW

.,..

NEWYORK (AP) -Wall
.Sireet's losing streak stretched
ID a fifth session Thursday, with
iim:srors unable to find any jw.illication for a rebound. The
Nasdaq composite index
~ched its (oo.yest dose ~.

.....

_... _
frDmll

ExperienCe the NAICAR feel

POMEROY - While Meigs Local
Schools Superintendent William Buckley
says he hasn't seen the "History Comes
Alive in Southeast Ohio" CO-Rom yet, he
forsees irs use this spring in" the district's
fouqh-grade social studies classes.
One of the reasons he's ·interested is
because the Ohio University Telecommunications Center, which produced the
interactive CO-Rom, claims it is helpful. to
teachers in providing their students with
the tools and knowledge necessary to succeed on the citizenship portion of' the
Ohio Proficiency Tests.
Since ' it will be provided free to lowwealth ·districts it's . expected to also be

~ ~-:.~~~~~~u~~~~ ~:0~:?~:00~~ :o-:~~l'oc-:.~~~JHARP...........;............... $5,800

1996 :\1onle Carlo . #6086A STAEAtLtiT F04Rd•••••••••B
...I••••.•.•.•d••••..•• ~···········t·,················O·····I· .. $4$1',999550
199.' Chevy Corsica · 1161298 u o rans.,
oor, ue an runs grea •............. n y
1995 Plymouth Voyager Minivan ·116l30A V6 and extra Clean 7 passenger................ $4,350 :

1994 Lincoln Town Car · #56688 Luxury Ride, Runs Great! ...................~........ ~ ............ $3,80&lt;11
1993 Pontiac Gr:and Am • #565SD 2 Door, Automatic, Teal, Sharp looking car ........... $2,800

~~~~~~==~~~~

Pit Crew Speclalll
Rotate &amp; Computer Balance ~-4 $q

2
IIi;

3 section - u hps

·comics
Dear Abby

85
AS

. Editorials
· Movies
: .Obituaries
..Sports
· :weather

A4
A3
A3
81
A2

C&gt; 2002 Ohio Valley Publiohlna Co.

BOARD- N!!W officers for· the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce were recently elected. Pictured
from left, Woody Stines, treasurer; Patty Pickens, secretary; Gina Pines, vice-·
president; and Sue Malson, president. (Submitted photo)
·

are,

.

Saturday, February 9, 2002 • 8:00 PM
'1 Ariel Theatre • Downtown Gallipolis

GRAB LIFE

BY THE HORNS

Vlew~~~~~!~!J!~!!~~~~e~e~!'~~Tonilne
800-446-0842

month.
Meigs County Commis- action on the bids pending
Triplett's review
sioners opened bids on. the
In other business, the
bndge replacement proJect b d
. d C
..
·
·
·
oar . appomt.e
onumsat t he1r regu1ar meetmg on .
.
~
n·1a1 C onstruction
· • s10ner Jim ·'Sheets to prepare
Th ursuay.
d b .
~
10
Company of Stockdale is the an. su 111It add - stop sa ekty
1
apparent Iow b 1'dder on t he action p an a ressmg
. war .
place safety and nsk manprojec t.
.
Dial bid $142,611.96 for agement, 111 an ~!tempt t~
the work. Other bidders on lower the countys workers
the project included Double compensation premiums . .
Construction
Co.,
Last year, th e county paid
Columbus, $145, 156; Alan $32,000 from the . general .
Stone Co., Inc., Chesterhill. fund tu pay premiums and
$195,523.52; Tom Mayle other workers' com pensaand Sons Construction Co., tion costs - up from $8,000
in 2000. The &lt;ammissioners
Bartlett, S 149,466; and
have attended several workMaiden and Jenkins Coners' .compt:nsation meeting.;
slruction,
Nelsonville,
and worksh c ps in prepara$154,248.65.
Piease see Melp, AJ
Engineer Eugene Triplett

Holzer· Hospice Benefit Concert

''.

VIsit us onthewebot

252 Upper Rlwr Road

POMEROY Construction of a new bridge on
Meigs County's portion of
Union Avenue in Pomeroy
could begin early next

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.up
CH R.YSLER

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

estimated the project cost at
$148,000, and said Thursday
the work couiJ begin as
early as March 1.
The replacement of the
bridge will require the road
to be closed to traffic, and
traffic could remain closed
during the duration of the
project - up to 120 days,
Triplett said yesterday.
The commissioners tabled

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-

Union Avenue
bridge project
bids opened
Dial is apparent
low bidder

Index
82·4

COUNTY

Ple•se see History, AJ

CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

· Oassifieds

At Washington State,
$57,000 will fund a new 10station power Mac G4 lab
where students will learn
graphic design and interactive multimedia using software from Adobe, Quark
Xpress and Macromedia.
The new equipment and
software will expa nd the
high school students' skills
and better prepare them to
enter an associate degree
program of multimedia
technology, according to
Sheri L. Fleegle ofWashington State Community College.
·
A new lab at Washington
State will be parr of a proposed interactive multimedia
option for the mass media
technology degree and a
graphic design oPtion for
the computer systems te chnology maJOr, and will also
enhance co urses for the
newly-reva mped marketing
and e-commerce maJor
studies program, said Fleegle.

'

W.VA.
Daily 3: 9-7-8
Dallj 4: 4~ 1·4·8
Cllsh 15: 2·7·8-13-16-25

$10,995 .

THIS PAICi CAN'T II MHm?7

1114-Wheels and Tires

~ CttAIIUNE1tOENCH.

added to the curriculum of b oth Southern
and Eastern School Districts.
The CO-Rom is now being "field rested" in preparation for rel ease to school districts, according to a release from Olivea
Oldham, public information coordinator.
She says it is not only interactive, but has a
we\&gt; ..si-.;, and contains nljiUerous workshops, along with a teacher's guide.
The project focuses on history in and
around southeastern Ohio, and the content
fat the project was planned iri conjunction
with local elementary sc hool advisors and
E~ucational Tec hnology Services of Ohio
(ETSEO).The goal of the project is to provide fourth grade students with a "live"
perspective of Ohio through interviews
with Ohio residents.
The purpose, as described by Qldham, is
to obtain · personal historical accounts as
well as discussions of roles and responsibilities in society. There is a special emphasis
placed on the exploration and development

OHIO
' Pick J: 4-1-5
Pick 4: o-o-2-4
Buckeye 5: 3-HH7-18-28
. Pick J day: 4-7-4
Pick 4 day: 2-7-9-3

1999 Doct,ge Intrepid
Two to c

Coal to helP,:improve
dtizenship ph!fidency
. .
test sc~es
HOEFLlCii...,YOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Lotteries

fO'

POMEROY Meigs
High School will share in a
grant of $158,600 awarded
to the Washington-MorganMei gs Tech Prep Consortium for the purchase of new
co mputer equipment and
instructor development.
Others sharing in th e
grant funds will be Washington State Communiry College, Morgan High School
and Washington County
Career Center.
'The money will go toward
the purchase of new computer equipment and software and will also fund professional developm ent and
summ er intern ships for·
instructors in the new
courses.
Meigs and Morgan high
schools will receive $25,000
each for additional equipment and software. The
ca re er center will receive
$13,000 to complete its new
information technology lab.

Details, A3

Stocks drifted progres1ively
lower throughout the day,
unable to hold early gains.
· · Analysts said the losses reflected investors' unwillingness to
get involved in a market with
so much uncertainty.
:The technology-focused
Nasdaq fell 30.60, or 1. 7 perc
cent., to I,782.11.
The Dow Jones industrials
closed down 27.95, or 0.3
percent, at 9,625.44 for a total
loss of 294 points in the five
Sessions including last Friday.
The Dow fell six straight sessions in January.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500
index dropped 3.34, or 0.3
percent, to 1,080.17.

~

EDUCATION

Harold F. Crowder, 67
John D. Caldwell, 39

'

·~

Newsp~~per

Deaths

Lindh stays jailed;
e-mails reveal ·
disdain for America
lows wrote in his brief to keep
Lindh in jail.
In a September 1998 letter
to his mother, the government
says Lindh wrote that the
1998 bombings of U.S.
embassies in East Africa "seem
far more likely to have been
.carried out by the American
government than by any Muslims."
Lindh allegedly suggested in
a February 2000 e-mail that
his mother should move ro
England:"! really don't know
what your big attachement to
America is all about. What has
America ever .done for anybody?"
• Another e-mail sent in 2001
discu!Ses family life in Pakistan, and Lindh was said to
have written that the contrast
with the United States "really
makes me look upon American society with pity."
At Wednesday's hearing,
Lindh 's attorneys attacked the
government's case as weak.
Attorney James Brosnahan .said
the only hostile action Lindh
took was as a member of the
ruling Taliban militia against
the northern alliance. He said
that when Lindh joined the
Taliban, its government had
been a recipient of American
aid, while the northern
alliance was composed of exCommunists that were . enemies of the United States.
"Until early November ...
the U.S. government had not
taken sides with the northern
alliance, and that is the only
group John Lindh ever
fought," Brosnahan said.
Lindh's attorneys repeated
prev~ous claims that their
client's admissions to an FBI
agent should be tossed out
because they were obtained
"under outrageously coercive
conditions" in whiCh Lindh ·
was denied food and proper
n1edical treatment.

Hometown

·Spotlight: History comes alive

year.

ALEXANDRIA , Va . (AP)
- Even John \Valker Lindh's
father .was surprised when he
learned the depth of his so n's
hostility toward the United
States, according to e-mail
excerpts released by the government.
Lindh, the American citizen
accused of jt&gt;ining the Taliban
and al-Qaida in Afghanistan
and conspiring to murder U.S.
nationals, sent an e-mail to his
family after a terrorist attack
on the USS Cole in October
2000. The e-mail apparently
expressed a lack of sympathy
for the 17 sailors killed in the
explmion.
"I confess l was taken aback
somewhat. by your lack of
compassion for the Americans, who after all are only
young people your own age
who happened to have taken a
job that involved being on a
Navy ship;' responded Lindh's
father, Frank Lindh.
The government introduced a series of e-mails.it says
Lindh wrote to .his family as
· evidence that he should
remain jailed while he awaits a
trial that could result in multiple life sentences. Government officials would not say
how · they obtained ,the emails.
At a hearing Wednesday
morning, a federal magistrate
agreed with the government
and ordered that Lindh
remain in custody.
· "I find that the ,defendant
has ' every incentive to flee,"
said U.S. Magistrate Curtis
Sewell, rejecting a requ est
from defense attorneys . to
release Lindh to his . parents'
custody.
'
The . correspondence Lind~
sent to his family "repeatedly
expressed what can orily be
termed a ·hostility toward his
country of birth and citizen~ ship," prosecutor Randy Bel-

Southem tops Eastem in lOT, B1

•

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•

'I

Galllp.olla,,Ohlo

Five Slar S1l11 Tum: Alan Durst Jamie Adamaon Nell Peller Larry Plen:e
Joe Tillis John Saunders Brandon Uaher John Bennett
·•
Internet Sales: Sherman Green

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

MEDICAL CENTER
Piscover the Holzer Difference

~· TICKETS • $10 advance purchase
Call (740) 446·5217 or (740) 446·5074f0r more InfOrmation

www .holzer.org

·~

THERE'S ONLY ONE

Pete Somerville

I.

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·- - __ _______,;,;____________ __ ,.;__ __.:__!'- -----

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