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Page 88 • The O.lty Sentinel

.-

•

llondly,Peb.1I,IDOI

www.mydllltyaentlnel.com

Ohio breaks Marshall jinx Maryland .drops-Blue Devils:
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It had been 18 years since Ohio won a game
at Marshall. Until Brandon Hunter took over,
that is.
Hunter scored 27
points and had a
career-best
22
rebounds as the Bobcats beat the Thundering Herd 72-66 on
Saturday.
"They did not double-team me," Hunter said. "Nobody was
helping Q.R.) VanHoose out. When you're
used to being double- and triple-teamed_ and
then you have only one person guarding you _
it's like you're free."
All the key factors in the game seemed to
flow from Hunter.
The Bobcats (15-8, 10-5) outrebounded the
Herd (12-12, 6-8), 49-39. Hunter hit 9-of-12
free throws for Ohio, which was 21-of-27 at
the line to Marshall's 13-of-25.
"Brandon was just awesome,'' Ohio coach

Tim O'Shea said. "He carried us on his back
today."
After Marshall tied the game at 64 on two
free throws by Tamar Slay with I :39 left,
Hunter hit three free throws and Steve
.fsterkamp made two to clinch the win.
"He was just in the right spot all night," VanHoose said of Hunter.
In other Mid-American Conference
games Saturday, Lc;:mis Campbell scored 19
points and Buffalo hit a· season- high 12 3pointers as the Bulls defeated Central M•ch•gan 69-57; Steve Reynolds scored 30 points,
including seven 3-pointers, to lead Western
Michigan over Northern Illinois 97-87;
Theron Smith had 24 points and 10
rebounds and Patrick Jackson added 19
points as Ball State beat Toledo 81-63;T~evor
Huffman scored 27 . points in leading Kent
State to its 11th straight victory, beating
Miami of Ohio 73-57; and Steve 'Pettyjohn
had 25 points and nine rebounds as Eastern
Michigan ended an 1 1-game losing streak
with an 83-76 win over Akron.

Rio hoops squads prepare for AMC Tourney
FROM STAFF REPORTS

CEDARVILLE
The
2002 American Mideast Conference men:s
and . women s
basketball
tournaments are set to get
-.Junderway on Tuesday.
The University of Rio
Grande Redmen basketball
team, the defending champion, will host Malone on Tuesday evening at the Newt Oliver Arena. Rio (17- 15, 11-7)
enters the tournament as the
sixth seed. Malone (18-13, 9 9) is seeded 11th.
The Pioneers defeated the
Redmen, 73-72, on January
26 in Canton. Malone has
won only two road games all
season long. Rio was 8-1 at
home versus AMC teams.
Both teams enter the tournament coming off victories.
Rio defeated Urbana, 72-66

NAIA

and
Malone
downed
Cedarville on the road, 84-72.
Game time is set for approximately 8 p.m.
Saint Vincent is the top seed
and already heading to the
NAIA Division II N ational
Tournament. Walsh is the No.
2 seed, Shawnee State is seeded third and Mt. Vernon
Nazarene is fourth.
• Other first round matchups: No.5 seed Point Park versus No. 12 Daemen, No. 7
seed Ohio Dominican takes
on No. 10 Roberts Wesleyan
and No. 8 Cedarville hosts
No. 9 Tiffi'n.
On the women's side, the
Redwomen, seeded :seventh,
will play host to Houghton,
the lOth seed, on Tuesday. Rio
defeated Houghton, 68-53, on
November 30 at the Newt.
Rio enters with a record of
21-11 overall and 12-8 in the

AMC.Houghton is 13-12 and
9-1 1 respectively. Game time
is set for 6 p.m.
Shawnee State enters the
tourney as the top seed and
has punched its ticket to the
NAJA Division II National
Tournament. Ohio Dominican is the No. 2 seed. Malone
is third and Cedarville is
•
fourth.
Other first round match-ups
are No.5 Saint Vincent versus
No. 12 Carlow, No. 6 Walsh
hosts No. 11 Tiffin and No. 8
Urbana plays No. 9 Roberts
Wesleyan.
Rio Grande enters the tournament having lost two
straight games.
If the Redmen and Redwomen advance beyond the
first round, barring any upsets,
both teams will have to win
on the road ·t o earn a berth in ·
NAIA N atio nal Tournament.

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) -The last guy
out of the Cole Field House should have shut
the lights, closed the door and put a padlock on
the place.
It would be entirely appropriate if the final two games
scheduled fclr the venerable
building were held at another
venue. Such a move would
enable Maryland fans to further savor the lasting memory of one final upset at the arena
they've called home since 1955.
What can the Terrapins possibly do for an
encore after their emotionally charged 87-73
rout of toj&gt;-ranked Duke on Sunday?
Third-ranked Maryland led from the start,
and when the final buuer sounded, many in
the crowd of 14,500 stormed the court to celebrate the Terrapins' first win over Duke at
Cole in five tries since 1997.
"It was a great day," said Chris Wilcox. who
had 23 points and 11 rebounds for Maryland:
"At the beginning of the season, we came to an
agreement that We 'would not lose another
game at Cole Fieldlt!ouse this year. We wanted to close Cole with an undefeated recotd."
In other Top 25 gam~ Sunday, it was Rutgers 64, No. 13 Miami 61; No. 19Wake Forest
92, No. 15Virginia 70; and No. 22 Indiana 75,
Michigan 55. ·
The Terps improved to 13-0 at home this
season, with games against Wake Forest andVirginia to follow. Neither of those will generate
the kind of emotion from the players or fans

Top
25

Prep Hoops:

that this game did
.
"Every pass _ forget the possessions _ h'er)'
pass was big. • said Maryland coach Gary
Williams, who improved to 8-25 against the
Blue Devils. "Every defensive stop. too. When
you stop them, you're like building something:' •
Last year, the Terrapins lost
to Duke at :
home in overtime when they f:iiled to hold a •
I 0-point lead with a minute left in regulati~ . .
The Blue Devils won three of four agamst
M:u;yland last season, rallying from a 22-poin~
deficit at the Final Four on the way. to the ·
national championship.
.
'":
This time, Maryland let a 25-point lead
dwindle to 11 with 2:39 remaining. but the :
Blue Devils couldn't get closer in losing its grip ·,
on first place in the Atlantic Coast ·Conference. ·
Carlos Boozer had 19 points and 12
rebounds, and Jason Williams scored 17 for the ·
Blue Devils (23-2, 11 -2), whose 11 -game, wm- •
ning streak ended.
Juan Dixon scored 17 for the Terra?ins (213, 11-1), qff.to their best ACC start m school :
history.
·
. . "
Cole has been the site of seven games m ~
which a No. 1 team has been defeated. Notre !
Dame's Joyce Athletic Center is second in the •
nation with six.
The pbce was as lively as it's ever been Sunday. The student section was filled hours before
the opening tipoff, and the noise reached a ~
fever pitch as Maryland bolted to leads of 12-4 ;::
and 27-14.

•

at

98-?!'

Whars inside

Crews back
on the job
BY TONY M. WCH
TLEACH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

VISITS POMEROY- U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland visits JNith Sue Malson, chairman of the Meigs
County Democratic Party, prior to making his re-€1ection announcement in Pomeroy. (Brian J.
·
Reed)

Hlp: 80S. Low: 40s
Details, A2

Housing starts

Jump &amp;.30/o

: WASHINGTON (AP)
-: Construction of new
homes and apartments. rose

TAXES

worth using a credit card that
WE KNOW.
charges a high interest rate. An
WASHINGTON
(AP)
WE'VE
IRS installment agreement
Figure to owe the Internal currently charges 6 . percent
To learn more, call
1-800-HRBLOCK or
Revenue Service a big tax bill interest - the lqwest rate
visit www.hrblock.com
this year but wonder where since 1994 - plus a monthly
the money will come from? late penalty of one-quarter
H&amp;R BLOCK There is a wide array of percent · for taxpayers who
rapid refund
options for those who can't filed returns on time, one-half
.,,,_,.,.,..
pay all at once.
·
percent for those who didn't.
618 EAST MAIN ST.
Taxpayers who are unable to
- Electron'ic funds withPOMEROY, OH 45769
ftle their tax return by mid- drawal. Taxpayers who file
992-6674
night April 15 also can ask for returns electronically can have
an automatic four-month their taxes due debited by the
extension. Any taxes owed, IRS from a checking or savhowever, must be paid on tirrie ings account. Taxpayers canto avoid interest and late specifY the date for the debit,
penalties.
·
meaning they can file their
We're Always Here
Taxpayers
can
call
the
IRS
return early and then wait as
24 Hours·• Day 7 Days a Week
to request on automatic late as April 15 to pay the bill.
l -877-447-3617 . extension by calling 1 (888) About 363,600 taxpayers took
TOLL FREE . 796-107 4 beginning March 1, th is route last year.
or they can use IRS Form
- Installment agreement.
• ACCOUNT BALANCES
4868. For an additional two IRS Form 9465 is. used to
• TRANSACTION DETAILS months - the IRS doesn't request such a payment plan,
automatically grant these which is guaranteed for tax• TRANSFER FUNDS*
use
form
2688.
payers whose total liability
• MAKE LOAN PAYMENTS*
Now, about that tvt bill. doesn't
exceed $10,000,
• BALANCE CHECKBOOK
Here are some ways, to pay:
haven't had an installment plan
AVAILABLE NOW AT...
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payers can use American to pay the bill within three
or years or less, among other
Express,
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Discover to charge taxes due requirements. Interest, late
·by calling either Official payment penalties and a proPomeroy,OH
7401992·2136
Payments· Corp. at 1 (800) cessing fee also apply.
·
Tuppers Plllno, OH 7401~7·3161
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- Offer in compromise. For
65
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IRS may accept a lesser
ALLTAXX (255-8299).
About 284,800 taxpayers amount if the taxpayer can't
used the service last year, even pay. Form 656 is used to make
though Visa does not partici- such an offer, and the debt can
pate. Some tax preparation often be paid off over time
software integrates filing and with fixed monthly payments.
credit card payments into a If a taxpayer defaults, the
entire original tax liability plus
single data transmission.
O ne thing to consider, tax interest and penalties will be
experts say, is whether it is reinstated.
Check Cashing

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BY

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AP TAX WRITER

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Middleport, OH 45760

740-992·1818

CURT ANDERSON
AP TAX WRITER

WASHINGTON (AP)- Taxpayers with relatively modest incomes could take advantage this year of
a new 8 percent capital gains tax ·rate for long-ter111
investments they sold in 2001. Others will have to
wait until at least 2006 !O take advantage of another
lower rate.
Beginning in January, 2001, taxpayers whose capital gains tax rate is 10 percent saw it drop to 8 percent for assets they have held for at least five years.
But that tax break is expected to apply to relatively few investors on their 2001 tax returns because
income above $27,000 for a single taxpayer is taxed
at a 15 percent rate. · Only those ·taxpayers whose
income from sources other than the capital gains is
below $27,000 can quality for the 8 percent rate.
Far more people are likely to be affected by a new
18 percent capital gains rate on investments made in
2001 or later and held..for at least five years. Anyone,_
regardless of their other income, will be able to take
advantage of it. Most gains on assets held longer
than one year are taxed at a 20 percent rate.
A higher income taxpayer ·would have to wait
until 2006 at the earliest to sell an asset purchased in
2001 to qualify for the 18 percent rate.
It gets even more confusing.
When Congress passed the law authorizing these
new lower rates in 1997. it decided to give taxpayers a way to make their pre-2001 investments po:&gt;tentially qualify for the lower 18 percent rate without
actually selling and repurchasing them. · It's called a
"deemed-sale" election and it's irrevocable.
"What it means is, I can take something I bought
in 1993 and treat it as if I had bought it in 2001,"
said Jackie Perlman, senior tax research analyst at
H&amp;R Block.
.
There's a catch: The 18 percent tax on the gains so
far would have to be paid in this year. So taxpayers
wljo make the deemed sale election would owe taxes
on the difference between their basis in the asset and
its value on Jan. 1, .2 001. While gains are reportable,
losses are not allowed on a deemed sale. Future gains
also would be taxed at 18 percent, if the asset is not
·sold before 2006.

www.ovbc.com
Ask About Our On-Lioe Banking

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03

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Main Street

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(740) 992·CASH ·
(2274)

INCOME

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Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-9355
RETURNS.
ELECTRONIC FILING
FOR FASTER REFUNDS.

Savl! Time and Money
with

Department
'Al~i\fifli!Y that
builders broke
last
~lh:' on a bigger-than-

expe~~tt~on_.units,

at a se~
:idi.usted
annual rate. T a - ';;.,;n the
highe1t level since February
2000 and followed a 2.3
percent decline · in Dec,ember.
Low interest. rate are a key
reason that the housing and
construction marke~ have
remained stable even as the
national economy has been
suffering through a reces~on th'ac,began in March.

•

Pick J: 5-3-8

Jilek 4: e-o-N&gt;

a..ckey. 5: 1-16-25-33-35

Jilek 3 day: 3:2-e
~ck 4 day: 7-5-2-4

:W.VA.

· PII!Y :Ji .5•9-1

~ 25: ,12-13·17-18-23-24

,.

Index
•
•

992-2155

J. REED

POMEROY - "We're all
family and we've been
through a lot tog~ther."
U.S. Rep. Thd Strickland, DLucasville, called on Meigs
County for~ help in his
upcoming bid for reelection,
as he announced his candidacy
for a fifth term in office on
Monday morning in Pomeroy.
Strickland, accompanied by
his wife, Frances, met Democrats, union faithful and other
supporters on the steps of the
Meigs County Courthouse to
make his announcement official.
In addition to the county's
loyal Democrats, members of
t~e United Mine Workers,

- u:s.

S~rlckland, holding

Rep.

a slg·

nature cap .from the United
Mine Workers of America,
announced his r,eelecllon bid
In Pomeroy on Monday mornIng. (Brian J. Reed)
United Food 'and Commercial
Workers, carpenter's and
teacher's unions . attended
Monday's announcemertt.
The support of Meigs

Pluse see Politics, 3

O'Bieness Hospital takes over
cardi9pulmonary rehab program

1 satllon-

Calendar 1
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abl&gt;y
Edit9rials ··
Movies
Obltua rie~ · .
Sports
Weather.

to Pllps
2
6-8
' 9
2

4
3
3

5,1 o
3

, c 2002 OhiO wileY Publishing Co.

ATHENS -Heart Works, Athens' only carA cardi6pulmonary rehabilitation team prodiopulmonary re?abilitation program, has vides the .services at H eartWorks. That team
moved from ~he campus of~hio Uni~ersity i~i!ncludes an exercise physiologist, a cardiac
Athens to 0 BlenBss Mem?nal Hospital.
. rehabilitation nurse, a medi cal director, a regis. Although the nan;e remams the same, Heart- : ~red dieti~an ~nd a c6u'nselor.
Works IS now an O_Bleness program that. p_ro- •&gt;f Accordin.s to HeartWorks Program Director
Vlde_s complete cardiopulmonary rehablbta~on _oln Murray, transferring the HeartWor~s proservtces for mdtvld\lalS who have had a heart · ain fivm WeliWorks, OhiO Uthvemty s wellattack, have coro~ary artery dtseas,e, have ~ss. facilil)l. in Grover Center, to O'Bieness
undergone bypass or hean valve surgery, . or b!fers sever.tj benefits.
·
·11 b e more acceSSI·b·le to
who suffer from other cardiOpulmonary con- •· 'Th
. . e program w•
d. .
' •'"
-" h · ·
d h h ·tal can
mons.
an~ p YSICtans, an t e ospt
. h was esta bl'ISh ed m
. J an- p.,..ents
Tl1e program, w hIC
·
j
.
1
••
1
'th
rd.
d
&lt;?t'erate
thetprogram
more
cost
effeclwely
2001
I
h
I
O'B
h
h · ·
uary,
, o e p "eop e WI ca ta c an b
pulmonary diseases recover more quickly and _epuse
... ness asP ystclans on duty at, all
live full and productive lives.· 1·s base d on a nmes
l;leartWorks
had.dto contract for
h . where~
.
~i
"
holistic approach utilizing medical evaluation, P ys~nan co~rag~, Murray sa1 ·
0 ;n~ness s buddmg serv1ces department
' exercise, cardiac risk fa\::tor education, nutrition
counseling and stress managem~nt techlriques.
.
He Heart.

s,

,.

•

,

I

CONSTRUCTION RESUMES
- Work crews with heavy
machinery were back on the
job Monday as construction
resumes on Phase Ill of the
Ravenswood Connector project near Bashan Road .
According to Phillip Roberts;
ODOT project engineer,
Phase Ill of the project was
temporarily
delayed
because
of
inclement
·weather. (Tony M. Leach)

job . Monday following a
weather delay that tern"
porarily halted our construction
efforts,"
said
Roberts. "Despite the delay,
everything seems to be
operating smoothly :ind no
major problems have presented themselves."
. "We are currently focusing our attention on the
-~--drainage pipes,
il1.!"Pfa'Ceiiiffiu of embankments and the clearing of
more property and dirt,"
added Roberts. "Around th e
first week of March, we will
begin excavation work on
the
project's
highway
bridge."
Meanwtlile, work continues on the first phase, which
. involves six miles of "Super

County and other counties he
now represents will be vital to
Strickland's reelection bid,
because the lines of his Sixth
District have been redrawn to
lnciud
counties - new territory to
Strickland.
The current Sixth District
stre tches from near Paramount
King's Island in Warren County east to Marietta. Noble,
Monroe, Belmc;mt, Jefferson,
Columbiana and Mahoning
County are new additions to
the Sixth District, ahd
Lawrence, Meigs, Scioto, Gallia', Athens and Washington
counties remain from the old
territory.
Pike County and a portion ·
of Scioto County will be in
the Second District, now represented by Rob Portman, RCincinnati, and Vinton, Jackson, Ross ahd Morgan counties have been placed in Bob

'

Dlii!Y 41 6-6-o-o

To Advenlse.
vour
business In
·thlssnace
Call
lebbleCall
or
.Dave Harris
at

May face two
opponents
BY

OHIO
ANDrAIUJ'O

Strickland announces
·bid for reelection
BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pomeroy, Ohio

wecashlll

BASHAN - Following a
lengthy weather delay. ~rews
have returned to Bashan
Road · to continue work on
Phase III of the Ravenswood
Connector.
Phillip Roberts, Ohio
Department of Transportation (ODOT) project engineer for Phase III, said work
crews have resumed work on
the third section of three
highway segme nts that will
ultimately connec t U.S. 33
with the Ritchie Bridge and
Interstate
77
at
Ravenswood, w Va.
"Crews were back on the

Details, A3

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set for public
hearing Case No. 01-221-GAGCR, to review the gas cost recovery
rates of Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., the operation of its Purchase
Gas Adjustment Clause, and related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to be begin at 10:00AM on Thesday, March 19, 2002, at
the offices of the Commission, 180 E. Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio. All interested parties will be given an opportunity to be
heard~ Further information may be obtained by contacting the ·
.Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito, Secretary

BY

Phase IIII'Oad
construction
continues

Carol Jean Young, 70
Dallas Youn~ 62 ·
~layton A. 0 Neal, 91

~--------------------------------------------------~LEGAL NOTICE

116 W.

POLines

~Iizabeth Johnson, 83

;-

If You Can't Pay Capital Gains

Hometown .....,.,.,

M•las County's

in January

There are 441 new tax law
changes. No one understands
these changes better.

maul Panthers, Page 5 ·

Two" highway from the
Ritchie Bridge to the intersection of Ohio 124 and
County Road 35 (Portland
Road), and Phase II, which
will encompass approximately four miles of "Super
Two" highway, beginning at
the end of Ohio 7 near Five
Poip11111\l!.i!&gt;'~~'1ltiles
east ' of Sutton Township
Road in the Morningstar
area.
According to ODOT,
Phase III will fill the 4.5
mile gap between Morning
Star and Portland Road.
The total cost of the 16mile connector project, once
finished in 2004, has been
estimated at $75 million.

Bloodmobile visits
Pomeroy Wednesday
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - A goal of
60 productive blood donors
will be sought during Wednesday's visit of the American
Red Cross ijloodmobile at the
Meigs Senior Center.
According to Red Cross
spokesperson Cheryl Gergely, average collections have
been below 190 donors each
day; 240 dqnors are needed
on a daily basis.
"When we don't meet our
· collection goals, then we must
import blood from other
locations and we have to cut
hospital 'orders," she said.
"Most people don't realize ,
how much blood is required
by patients in our area. Since
each donation can save up to
three different lives, we need
to be ~hie to provide over 700
unitS of blood and blood
components every day to our
area's hospitals."
Gergely added the need
for more blood ·donors is
increasing due to more
complex medical procedures

and an older population.
"Both of these circumstances involve medical treatments that. require more blood
transfusions," she said. "There's
only one source, and that is
volunteer blood donors.''
According to Gergely, all
blood types are needed, but
individuals with type 0 positive and negative blood are
especially urged to donate.
Type 0, which is the universal blood type, is at less than
33 percent of the needed
amount .
To be a blood donor, indivi duals must be at least 17
years old, weigh 105 pounds
or more, be in good general
health, and not have donated
blood within th e past 56
days. Donors can give blood'
when taking most medications, including insulin and
high blood pressure prescriptions, if their medical
condition is stable.
The bloodmobile will be
at the center from ·1 p.m. to
6 p.m.

Hearl Month

is

Free Screenings! In MelgJi County
Non~Faslipg

Cholesterol and Glucose
Blood Pressure • Body Fat Analysis • Healll-j lnl'ormation

Wednes c~qy. Febrvary 20

• 1o AM - 12 Noon
,;,;.Reeds Country Sfbre in Reedsville .
ThursdQy, February 21 • 10 AM • 12 Noon
· Farmer's Bank in Pomeroy

HMC Communily Health
Counly Health

Wei/ness DePartment,
in~, coN

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
I

~-

'

...

�••

•
•

•

,.

1\ ndey, Feb. 11, 2002

ly.the Bend

-.mydllllyaentlnel.com

~

_Th_e_oa_H_ySe_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _

LOCAL BRIEFS

Ohio weather

EMS log calls

Dogs soothe aching hearts, anxious minds
DEAR ABBY: Since Sept. 11, I
have been re-evaluating my 'life. It
has been ·a traumatic time.
We all need compliments,
humor, and a reconnection to our
inner selves. I can nurture others
with a smile, a phone call, an invitation to go out for coffee, or allow
a stranger to .pet my dog.
What a wonderful equalizer my
dog is. I conjure up the image of a
dog lying in front of a warm fireplace, his expression quietly conveying calm and reassurance. I
believe we can reduce our anxiety
by creating peace in our minds and
hearts: R.C. DUNCAN,
COTTONWOOD, ARIZ.
DEAR R.C.: Being a nurturer
can be as simple as reminding ourselves that our needs do not always
come first . I love the mental image
of the dog in front of the fireplace

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
to symbolize peace and reassurance. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I want your
readers to know that there are no
bad dogs only bad owners.
Contrary to recent press coverage,
rottweilers are loyal, hardworking
dogs that origirated in Germany.
Here in the United States, they are ·
used extensively by· the police and
have received awards for their assistance.

I had the privilege of owning a
rottweiler named Otto for nine
years. He was trained to be loving
and obedient - not to attack.
I am epileptic and can attest to
Otto's loving loyalty. Because of his
acute sensitivity, he sensed exactly
· when I was going to have a
seizure. Otto would stay next to
me to protect me, allowing only
close family or friends to come
near. He -would gently lick my fac e;
until I regained consciousness and
recovered (rom my attack. Even.
after my recovery, Otto would
never be more than a few feet away
from me.
J'v!.y · loyal 160-pound friend
passed away last year due to cancer.
I will never be able to fiU the void
in my heart.
Abby, these .gentle and beautiful
dogs do . not get the recognition

Society·Notebook
students
rewarded
RACINE - As a part of
the American Electric Power
Sporn Plant "Partners in Edu-

cation"

program,

"effort"

awards were presented to students in the first through
fourth grades at Southern Eleme)ltary School recently.
Randy Humphreys, plant
general manager, and · Sam
. Hawley, senior clerk of the
Sporn Plant, made the presentations to the students. One
student from· each . class in a
particular subjec t for each
nine -week period is recognized.
Receiving the awards for
the first ·nine-weeks' grading
·p eriod were:
First grade - Dalton Spangler and Austin Johnson, reading; and Makayla Findley, all
subjects.
Second grade Nicole
Prunty and Amber· Hayman,
reading, and Chelsea Holter,
math.
Third grade - Tyler Wolfe
and Jessica Riffie, social studies.
Fourth grade - Alisha Sinclair, Cyle Rees, and Judd
Burke, math.

WINNERS.,.... Effort awards were presented to, front row from
left to right, Dalton Spangler, Makayla Findley, Austin Johnson,
Chelsea Holter and Nicole Prunty, and back row from left, Randy
Humphreys of AEP, Alisha Sinclair, Cyle Rees, Judd Burke, Jes·
sica Riffle, Amber Hayman ..Not pictured, Tyler Wolfe.
A dinner to be served at the
Pomeroy
,church
was
announced
for
Friday
evening. The program was a
6lm on Meigs County History with each person receiving
a history handout.
Next meeting will be at
1:30 p.m. Feb. 28, at Zion
Church. A heart theme will
be carried out, wirh devotions
by Pomeroy Church. Peggy .
Bole had the closing prayer.
Refreshments were served by
the host church.

Meln
students
,-,
.eligible for ·
sch0 IarshIps .

Pomeroy church

hosts meeting

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Church of Christ
hosted a recent meeting of the
Meigs County Churches of
Christ Women's Fellowship.
Group singing of "The Old
Rugged Cross," a prayer song,
' "Trust and Obey" and prayer
by Eleanor Hoover of the
· Dexter Church opened the
meeting with Hoover also
giving devotions, "On your
Knees."
Paula Pickens conducted !he
meeting during which a letter
was read from Deana Aldridge
the
Women's
regarding
Retreat to be held Sept. 19-20
at the camp grounds. Theme is
"The Bride of Christ." N ext
meeting will be held at the
Bishopville C hurch .

th~y deserve for the good they do.

pressure, possibly because those
We shouldn't condemn a mar- who owned dogs were more
velous breed of animal for the active.
malicious and abusive training of a • Arthritis
sufferers,
cancer
few bad owners. - PATRICK J. patients, and those suffering from
KENDRICK,
MORTON depression or chronic pain also
GROVE,IU.
benefit from having pets.
DEAR PATRICK: I agree.
I just finished a wonderfully
Please accept my condolences for readable arid informative book,
the loss of your stalwart guardian.
"The Healing Power of Pets," by
No one · should underestimate
Dr. Marty Becker and Danelle
the ability of dogs (or cats) to help
Morton. 111 is published by Hypertheir owners reclaim good health .
ion,lnd it's now available in bookA 1980 study at the University of
Maryland showed that heart attack stores. It made me laugh, it made
sufferers who owned pets were me cry, but most of all it educated
four times more likely to be alive a me about a benefit of pet owneryear later than people who were ship I had been unaware of before.
not pet owners. They also had . (Pauline Phillips and htr daughter
shorter hospital stays because they Jeanne Phillips share the pseudonym
wanted to get home to their pets. Abigail V..n Buren. Write Dtar Abby
Further, they took less medication at www.DearAbby.com or• .f.!(). Box
for cholesterol and high blood 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

ATHENS - The Athens
Chapter of International Association of Administrative Professionals (IAAP) will be
awarding three scholarships in
April for the 2002-03 acadenuc year.
1\vo $500 IAAP Scholarships and one $300 Joyce D.
Malone Memorial Scholarship
will be awarded.
Graduating students from
high schools in Athens, Hock-

.......__ _ _ C:LY\llt

ing, Morg&gt;n, MeigS; or Gallia
counties who desire to continue their education in
Hocking College or Ohio
University with a concentration in secretarial st11dies are
eligible.
'
Also eligible are students
Cl!rrently attending Hocking
College or Ohio University in
the secretarial science program.
For application forms, students . should contact their
business department teachers,
Student Financial Aid Office,
or Judi Rioch, Chair; IAAP
Scholarship Committee, Ohio
University, 236 Grosvenor
Hall, Athens, OH 45701. ·
Application deadline is March
15.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
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LOCAL
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TILT Tilt COCJNTIY.

EE. !-~L-33&gt;

MONDAY
POMEROY - Fraternal
Order of Eagles 2171, Monday, to vote on replacing the
roof and air conditioning unit.
POMEROY Meigs
.County Right to Ufe, 7:30

.

•

...
,
rv
'-·

••

'.

·Clayton A. V O'Neal

Meigs County intends to undertake a CDBG Water Line Extension project,
funded · through the FY' 01 CDBG Water and Sewer program, ARC, and
Leading Creek Conservancy District, for the purpose of a water line extension
for portions of Scipio and Columbia Townships in Meigs County. Portions of the
project may be located in the 100 year floodplain. The proposed project cannot
any other location as there is no practical alternative for the
be undertaken
locations of portions of the project. The water line extension can only take place
where there is a need and it is known that the need will be targeted in these
basE! flood areas. Therefore, it is the judgment of the Meigs County
Commissioners that the benefits to the residential househo,lds affected by the
project outweighs consideration of Executive Orders 11988 and 11990.
A more rdetailed description of the project and the FIRM Flood Maps are
available f9r citizen review at the Meigs Coun ty Grants, Office, 117 East
Memoria) P.rive, Suite 7, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
,,•
Meigs County Comm.issioners
r
J
Jeff Thornton, lfresident

- . .. . .• ,..

fh

,.(

... .. ..

.

Petting zoo
planned

ATHENS - Clayton A. "Tut" O'Neal, 91, Athens, died
Monday, Feb. 18, 2002 .
.
.'
Born Jan. 25, 1911, son of the late Noah E . and Imogene
Scott O'Neal, he was a carpenter. He also attended River Hill
United Melhodist Church.
. He was also preceded in death by his wife, Mary McCoy
BY lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS
::· Mild , southerly winds will produce springlike coQditions · O'Neal; two sisters, Gladys Jarvis and Aileen Welch; three
: across Ohio on Wednesday, !he National Weather Service said. brothers, Layman, Elwin and Gordon O'Neal.
He is survived by a sister, Delcie Seckman of Parkersburg,
~ The forecast called for showers and lhunderstorrns, strong
W.Va.;
and several nieces and nephews.
·
'• winch and high temp~ratures in the 60s. Lows Tuesday night
DARWIN - A vandalism
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in White Funeral Home,
~ were.to be mainly in the 40s.
.
incident at the Athens-Dar'
Colder air will spread into Ohio on the backside of a cold Coolville. Burial will be in the Centennial Cemetery. Friends win construction site is being
= front Wednesday night. Lows will be in the mid and upper 30s, may call at 'the funeral home from 6-8 tonight.
investig&gt;ted by the Meigs
: with rain becoming mixed wilh some snow showers.
County Sheriff's Department.
Then pardy cloudy skies with some rain .or snow. showers
Sheriff Ralph Trussell said
during the day Thursday with temperatures holding steady in
~ !he 40s.
VARNEY, Ky.- Carol Jean Young, 70,Vamey, died Sunday, the deparrment received a call
around 6 p.m. on Sunday
~ Sumettonightwill beat6:12,andsunriseon~esdayisat7:18 a.m Feb. 17, 2002, in Pikeville Methodist Hospital, Pikeville, Ky.
from
an ·employee of Jack's
~
Weather forecast:
Born Sept. 11, 1931, in Gallia County, daughter of the late
: Tonight... Becoming mostly cloudy. A 40 percent chance of Arthur· and Irene Rose_ Coughenour, she was a homemaker, Septic Service who informed
: showers toward dawn. Lows in the mid 40s. South winds 'tO 10 and a member of Pilgnm Home Regular Baptist Church m deputies that several pieces of
construction equipment near
~ 15 mph.
.
,
.
' Varney: .
~ . Wednesday... Showers, mainly through early afternoon.
SurviVmg are her husband, James Malcolm Young; ~ son, the Athens-Darwin construc~ Windy. Highs in the lower 60s. Southwest winds 15 to 25 mph. Mark (Debb1e) Coughenour of Langsville; two grandchildren •. tion site had been vandalized.
Upon arriving on the
~ Chance of rain 90 percent.
·
.
three step-granddaughters and a great-grandchild; a brother,
: Wednesday night .. .Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain showers James (Betty) Coughenour of Pomeroy;· and . three sisters, scene, deputies discovered a
: until midnight. Lows in the lower 40s. Chance of rain 50 percertt. Wanda Irene . McKinney of Delaware, Ohio, Patsy Ellen damaged track hoe , end
:
Exten~ed forecast:
Rothg:b ofWilliarnsport, and Ruby Lorraine Coughenour of loader and several overturned
portable toilets. Damage to ·
; Thursday... Pardy cloudy. Highs in the upper 40s.
·
Langsville. .
.
. .
.
the
track hoe· has been estiServtces will be 1 p.m. Wednesday m Pilgnm Home Regu' Thursday night ... Pardy cloudy with a chance of snow or rain
showers in !he evening, thea a chance of snow showers after lar Baptist Church, With Richard Staton, Elbert Ctsco and Gary mated at $100,000.
Trussell said a witness, who
midnight. Lows in the upper 20s. Chance of precipitation 40 Young offic1atmg. Bunal "!ill be m the Young Cemetery, Vatpercent. ·
·
ney. _Fne?ds may call at the church anytime today, with special saw a number of suspects get
semces m the ehurch at 7 tomght. Arrangements are by R.E. into the equipment and drive
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s.
them around, has photos that
~ . ~atu~y...Pardy cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s and highs in the Rogers Funeral Home, Beffry. Ky.
may help the . department
lower 40s.
identify the p'erpetrators.
!l!!:ft~Mosdf"CioildfWi'tll')(:atteied 'iltowen· dtinng' tire..... ~
"The witness took pictures
'~ then'scattered snow or r.tin showers during the night. Lows ·
..
..
.
!in the upper 20s and highs near 50.
·
POMEROY - Dallas Ray . Tony Young, 62, Pomeroy, died
1: .Moriday..•.Pardy cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s and highs in Sunday, Feb. 17, 2002, at Riverside Methodist Hospital m
!Jhe upper 40s.
Columbus.
fk
hom Nw. 16, 1939, mW&lt;" ColombO, W.V.., '"" of
·
the late Joseph Wayne and Desi Stewart Young. He was a truck
driver for United Parcel Service and FedEx.
Surviving are his children, Michael and Debbie Young, and
I
~Robin and Thomas Jordan, all of Point Pleasant, W.Va., Dwayne Ney's 18th District.
The new district includes
~ 1
Young of Bidwell, and Anthony Yol!ng and Sabrina Young, both
330 miles along the Ohio
of South Charleston, Ohio; a grandson; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Darrell and Eleanor Young of Lakewood, Fla., and River, Strickland said, earning
George and Elzetta Young of Delaware, Ohio; and several 'it a "river district" designation.
LUCASVILLE (AP) Byrd has insisted he can't nieces and nephews.
'
Strickland said Monday he
~onvicted killer John W. Byrd remember the events of the
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Judith Peoples
expects
·at least two oppor. arrived at Ohio's death night Tewksbury was killed Young; his sister, Veneida Knight; and two brothers, James
nents in the May primary, but
, ouse and prepared for what because he was under the Young and Charles "Tom"Young.
did
not indicate .which other
~ould be the last night of his influence of drugs and alcoSeiVices will be 1 p.m. Thursday in Fisher Funeral Home,
ifife.
hoi. He said the evidence in Middleport, with the Rev. Jim Stewart officiating. Burial will Democrats might oppose
him.
·
~ But until the state .carries the case does not prove he's be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
U.S. Rep. James Tra6cant,
~ut his execution Tuesday, guilty.
home froni 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.

.;.Mifd and wet for Wednesday

p.m. Monday at the Sacred Group, to meet7 p.m. MonHeart rectory office. Every- day, at the Athens County ·
Extension· office, 280. W.
one welcome.
Union St. Speaker will be
MIDDLEPORT - Ohio Dave Swanson research
Valley Crusade for Christ biologist. Water1oo Blologl·
meeting, Monday, 7 p.m. at caL-Experimental Station on
Heath United Methodist game species, primarily
Church, Middleport.
bear, deer, turkey . and
grouse. More _lnformaton,
POMEROY - Pomeroy call Doyle E. Melick, 740·
Chapter 186, Order of the 669-3131.
Eastern Star, 7:30 p.. m.
Wear chapter dresses for
TUESDAY
initiation.
POMEROY - Childhood
Immunization Clinic, TuesLETART - letart Town- day from 1 to 7 p.m. at the
ship Trustees, Monday, 5 Meigs County Health
p.m. at the office building.
Department. Take children's shot records. Chil· ·
ATHENS -· Southeast dren must be accompanied
Ohio Woodland interest by parent or guardian .

•
I

carol Jean Young

Dallas 1'ony Young

t·

Politics

w"

from Pagel

d. ·sche.duIed to. dl•e
d
t
L
•11
ri:l w~u
.e. s ay a ucasv.I e .
Vf

J

·r.

• Health
•
•

~

/River/
I Recreation I

•

l .

re

I

•

ltv 1Education
·Business

1

~yrd ycll ' hold out hope he
Ohio Public Defender
~on't rue, his sister said.
. David Bodiker said his office
~ "Johnny's not giving up,"
.j(ini ,Hamer said . Monday.
~·JohnnYs innocent."
~ Byrlr,'38, is to die by injec~ion at 10 a.m. Tuesday for
1he 1983 murder of Monte
~ewksbury, 40, who was
~tabbed during a robbery at
~he suburban Cincinnati
~onveiJien;ce store where he
)Wor~, Tewksbury, a Proct!Eer &amp; 'Gamble Co. employee;
as moonlighting to pay for
: is daughter's education.

would ask the full 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals to
reconsider a ruling Monday
night by a three-judge panel
that allowed the execution to
proceed.
.
The panel voled 2-1 that
Byrd could not start a second
round of appeals after his first
attempt to stop his execution
failed. 'Senior Judge Nathaniel
Jones a steadfast death
penalty opponent - was the
dissenter.

II

The.Daily Sentinel
·Reader Services

MEIGS COUNTY ST. RT. 143 WATER LINE EXTENSION PROJECT
NOTICE OF EXPLANATION FLOOD PLAIN DEVELOPMENT
.
.
:
;
··
.

COLUMBUS - Elizabeth "Granny" Johnson, 83, C~lumbus, died Friday, Feb. 15, 2002.
.
Born in West Columbia, W.Va., daughter of the late Hauy B.
an&lt;! Grace VanMeter, she was a member of Grace Ministries for
.more than 20·years.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Charles; and
a great-grandson, Brandon.
Surviving are two daughters, June Smith and Gilda (Harold)
Herb; two sons, Thomas (Katherine) Johnson and Jack ·(Elaine)
Johnson; 21 grandchildren, 25 great-grandchildren and three
great-great-grandchildren; two sisters and a brother; and many
·nieces and nephews.
·
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Wednesday in O.R. Woodyard
Co. Chapel, 1346 S. High St., Columbus, with the Rev. Bill
Blackburn ilfficiating. Burial will be in Graham Station Cemetery, Gr:tham Station, W.Va. Friends may c:ill at the chapel from
2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.
.

of the suspects 'during .!he
ipcident;' said Trussell. "We
are
examining the pictvres, ·
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service which, at this time, indicates
answered sev~n calls for assis- there were several people
tance on . Monday. Units involved with the vandaliun." ·
Trussell added one uitidenresponded as follows:
ti6ed
suspect has been ·arrestCENTRAL DISPATCH
12:02 a.m., Depot Street, ed and is currendy _ being
Iva Cremeans, Holzer · Med- questioned by deputies.
"The incident is still under
ical Center;
investig&gt;tion;·
he said.
1:22 a.m., Oliver Street,
Barbara Stahl, HMC;
2:29 a.m., U.S. 33, motor
vehicle accident, James Freeman, Michelle Cox, refused
treatment;
.
RACINE
The
5:34 a.m., Dyer Road, Racine/Southern FFA will~
Andrew Lambert, HMC;
holding a petting zoo on
2:00 p.m ., Racine Squad Wednesday inside the AgriHouse, Stella Sarson, St. culture Education Building at
Joseph's Hospital;
·
Southern High School as part
5:31p.m.. State Route 124, of National FFA Week, which
Betty Lowe, HMC.
runs through Saturday.
SYRACUSE
The event will begin at
9:03 p.m., Syracuse, motor . 10:30 a.m. and last until 2:30
ve hide accident, Alisha Bauer, p.m .
Rgchel Bauer, Ashton !huer,
refused trearment.

Vandalism
probed

MEIGS COUNTY CALEN -D AR
Community Calendar Is
publlahad aa a free service to no.,..proflt groupe
wishing to announce
meetings
and ' apeclal
.
events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
sales or fund-raisers of
any type. Items are print·
ed only aa apace ptl!'mlta.
and cannot be guaran·
teed to be printed a specific number of days.

Southem

The Dally Ientine! • Pege A 3

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Correction Polley
our main concern In all stories Is
to be accul'ltte. If you know of an
error In a etory, call the newsroom
at7o4Cl-892·2156.

ln the next "month', your advertising'
represen~ative will A
be, . con!at::ting. y~
about being ·a ·part·o f the blggest ~na rna'~
anticipated issue of the year.
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. (USPS 21J.IMIOI
Ohio Vlllty Publllhlng CO.
Publilhed every afternoon, Monday
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Pomeroy,
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Small business seminar
Thursday in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - · There's
help out there designed especially to. assist service-disabled
and veteran-owned businesses
and the Gallia County Chamher of Commerce will be
holding a workshop called
"Federal ·Dollars and Sense"
this Thursday where this ·
information will be shared.
Contracting officers and
procurement
professionals
from all over the country will
gather at the Bossard Memorial Library from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.
'The purpose of this partie-

ular seminar is designed to
familiarize service disabled
veterans and veteran owned
small businesses with various
topics relating to government
contracting and to assist them
in overcoming obstacles to
doing business specifically
with the federal government,"
said Kelly M . Lawhorn, director of Procurement Outreach
Center at the I:awrence Economic Development Corpor:ttion.
Lunch will be provided
along .with seminar materials
for $20.

aarlficatlon

RACINE
Rebecca
Hanstine, sixth grader at
Southern ·
Elementary,
received all "As" on Soulhero
Local's recent honor roll.

Urge caution
ATHENS American
Electric Power is cautioning
drivers traveling U.S. Route
33, and U.S. Route 50 near
Athens on Tuesday, about possible delays due to power line
work in the area.
AEP crews will be dropping
and removing overhead wires
across sections of !hose routes.
Drivers may experience
brief traffic delays between 10
a.m. and noon due to rolling
roadblocks !hat will be conducted by AEP and local law
enforcement units.The rolling
roadblocks will allow AEP to
safely ·remove spans of wire
strung across the roadways.
Drivers entering the area
should exercise caution.
No power outages are
expected as the result of the ·
work.
I

D-Youngstown, might run in
the · general election as an
independent
candidate,
Strickland said.
"We're working hard in the
new territory," Strickland
said. ''I'm telling people in the
new counties how hard I
work and how hard I try. I'm
nqt always successful, but
together, we're often successful."
Strickland, who announced
his candidacy in Gallia County on Friday, Was scheduled to
do the same in Athens and
Washington counties on
Monday afternoon.

"Cardiovascular disease
is the leading cause of
death in this country and ·
in Athens and Meigs counties, and more than 400
employees converted three scientific
reports have
rooms on the hospital's sec- touted the health benefits ·
ond floor into the new of c·a rdiovascular rehabiliHeartWorks facility. Murray tation .programs. I think
said the program is open for those statistics show the
cardiac rehabilitation services need HeartWorks is meetthree days a week. Murray's ing · in our . community,"
future plans include providing Castrop said .
rehabilitation services exclu- . Individuals who think
sively for pati en~s with pul- they would qualify for and
monary conditions two days a ben efi t from the Heartweek.
Works program should talk
O'Bleness
President with their primary care
Rick Castrop said he's physician, ask for a prepleased the hospital will scription for Phase 11 carhelp keep the HeartWorks diopulmonary rehabilitaprogram available in the tion and call ~HeartWorks
" at 740-592-9457.
area.

Heart

from Pagel

1110 Ohio N - Aaaodatlon.
P~r:

5end

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GREG SMITHS SHAWN HESSON
performing

Wednesday, February ZO
I

·
7pm-llpm
·
Pomeroy Eagles Club
Members 4 Guests Only
Ito II 1\Gf &lt;.,.

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The Daily Sentinel

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Opinion

Page A4 :~
........,. , .........., 11.2002

:~
•

The Daily Sentinel
.Retlmm slide in Dptnm, Page 7
College 6asltetball rounduP, Page 10

Page 5 .

The Daily Sentinel

Tu•diJ. February 11, 2002 .

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 740-992·2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

;HIGHLIGHTS

Den Dlckereon
Publl1her
Charlene Hoeflich

Diane Kay Hill

General Menever

COntroller

'

Utrtn to 1M «&lt;lltw tuW wlkOMI. TltiJ rhoulil bt ,., duM 300 ~. A.U ldnt

n.

Dlvtllon II
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limon St. Joe 69, South Gallla 58

NATIONAL VIEW

Class

"

It was lacking when CNN
pushed Paula Zahn ~ promotion
• Anderson (S.C.) Independent-Mail, on CNN's ad promoting Paula Zahn: CNN was right to yank the promotion for
Paula Zahn referring to the 20-year broadcasr news veteran as
"sexy,'' with the word immediately preceded by the sound of
a ztpper.
The ad, which .caused a chill to hit the spine of every female
in the news business, was created by a woman, oddly enough.
CNN was quick to point out it was not approved by top executives ....
The president of the Radio and Television News Directors
Association, Barbara Cochran. noted · any promotion of a
reporter or personality should emphasize professional abilities;
not personal attributes, and added this kind of promotion
would never been used with a male anchor or reporter. She's
right - except CNN did. The network is the originator of
that other tittle nickname, "The Scud Stud" in referring to one
of its anchors during the GulfWar.
CNN may want to promote itself and its shows and there's
nothing wrong with that. It's just good marketing. But they
need to use intelligence to do so. Otherwise, what's next? Larry
King giving marital advice? Talk Back Live as a racy hotline?
We know they're scrambling for ratings, what with all the
increased competition in the 24-hour news biz, but really show a little class.

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 19, the 50th day of2002. There are
315 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed an
executive order giving the military the authority to relocate
and intern Japanese-Americans as well as Japanese nationals
living in the United States.
On this date:
In 1473, the astronomer Copernicus was born in Torun,
Poland.
In 1803, Congress voted to accept Ohio's borders and. constitution. (However, Congress' did not get around to formally ratifYing Ohio statehood until 1953.)
In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was arrested in
Alabama. (!"le was subsequently tried for treason and acquitted.)
ln 1846, the Texas state government was . formally installed
in Austin.
In 1878, Thomas Edison received a patent for his phonograph.
In 1881, Kansas became the first state to prohibit all alcoholic beverages.
.
In 1942, about 150 Japanese warplanes attacked the Australian city of Darwin.
In 1945, during World War II, some 30,000 U.S. Marines
larided on lwo Jima, where they began a month-long battle
to seize Control of the island from Japanese forces.
In 1959, an agreement was signed by Britain, Turkey and
Greece granting Cyprus its independence.
In 1986, the U.S. Senate approved a treaty outlawing genocide, 37 years after the pact had first been submitted for ratification.
Ten years ago: The Labor Department reported consumer
prices rose by just 0.1 percent in January. Former Irish
Republican Army member Joseph Doherty was deported
from the United States to Northern Ireland following a 10year battle for political asylum.
Five years ago: Deng Xia6ping, the last of China's major
Communist revolutionaries, died. Detroit's daily newspapers
accepted a bacli-to-work offer from employees who'd been
on strike for 19 months, but the strikers charged the conditions for return amounted to a lockout.
One year ago: President George W Bush opened a museum commemorating the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.
Movie producer-director Stanley Kramer died in Woodland
Hills, Calif., at age 87.
Today's Birthdays: Movie director John Frankenheimer is
72. Singer Smokey Robinson is 62. Singer Bobby Rogers
(Smokey Robinson &amp; the Miracles) is 62. Actress Carlin
Glynn is 62. Singer Lou Christie is 59. Actor Michael Nader
is 57. Rock musician Tony lommi (Black Sabbath) is 54.
Actor Jeff Daniels is 47. Talk show host Lorianne Crook is
45. Britain's Prince Andrew is 42. Tennis Hall-of-Farner
Hana Mandlikova is 40. Singer Seal is 39. Actress Justine
Bateman is 36. Actor Benicio DelToro ("Traffic") is :lS.
Thought for Today: "There is, I think, nothing in the world
more futile .than th~ attempt to find out how a task should
be done when one has not yet decided what the task is." Alexander Meiklejohn, American educator (1872- 1964).

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------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ •'•
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

.••

GOP attack ads diminish Bushs·role as a (uniter'
They may" not be "despicable;' or constitute "political war profiteering," but
Republican attack ads against five
Democratic Senators certainly diminish
President Bush's claim to be a unifYing
wartime president.
. They also undercut his assertions that
he's seeking bipartisan solutions to the
nation's problems and wa'\ts to improve
the political atmosphere in Washington.
It's beyond imagining that the Bush
COWMNIST
White House did not sign o!f on the
spots that, in effect, charge five vulnerable Democrats with putting politics urging viewers .to tell the senator to do
ahead of national unity in the midst of a his or her job.
war.
Almost certainly, the White ·House
Of course, the ads never explicitly gave the National Republican Senatori~
mention the war on terrorism. But the al Committee at least the go-ahead to
announcer's voice says, "When times are use clips of Bush in such incendiary ads,
tough, Americans unite. We put aside though White House political adviser
our differences and do whaes .best for Karl Rove wouldn't answer questions on
the nation." The screen shows image! of the matter. ·
firefighters and American flags. It's not
Democrats erupted when the spots ·
subtle.
went on the air and demanded that Bush
Then comes an image of Bush, and repudiate them, which he didn't. Jim
the narrator says, "It's why President Jordan; executive director of the DemoBush and moderate Democrats reached cratic Senatorial Campaign Committee,
a compromise plan" for economic stim- called them "despicable."
ulus.
Professor Larry Sabato of the Univer"But, sadly, partisan Democrats like sity o!VIrginia said, "lnevitaply, the party
(Senator's name) voted against that com- ·whose president is leading a successful
promise." The ad continues with ·video war effort is going to try to take advanof Bush saying, "Ther6's something more tage of it, but you're always better off
important than politics and that's .to do . doing it subtly rather than blatantly.
our jobs:'
Those ads are blatant."
·
· Directed against Sens. Tim johnson
jordan ·acknowledged that the ads are
(S.D.), Paul Wellstone (Minn.),Jean Car- "potentially powerful" and "will cut
nahan (Mo.), Tom Harkin (Iowa) and through the clutter and. be noticed by
Max Baucus (Mont.), the ads end by voters," but Sabato thinks "they won't

Morton
Kondracke

Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

··.

' ' ',

--------------------------------------~--------------------------------------------------

j ..

WASHINGTON TODAY

."
&lt; ••

Democrats search for a national voice among many
.

BY WIU LEITER
WASHINGTON - Democrats are
fighting a tide of public opinion these
days - especially President Bl!sh's high
approval rating - without benefit of a
dominant figure within the party to rally
behind.
Party activists are more concerned
now, however, tl1at their troops rally
behind leading Democrats who are willing to speak out. They said it's not unusual fur the party out of the White House
to be at this stage without one dominant
figure, although former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich played that leadership
role for the Republiqns in the mid1990s.
"The reality is we have several spokesmen, all of whom are very good," said
Mark Mellman, who· polls fof the
Democratic National . Committee.
"When you don't have the White House,
you don't have a spokesman."
Democratic national chairman Terry
McAuliffe, Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle . and House Democratic· leader
Dick Gephardt have been leading the
' charge for the Democrats.
Potential presidential candidates like
Sens. John Kerry. of Massachusetts, John
Edwards of North Carolina and Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut are among
those who have offered their views in
policy speeches over the last few months.
The Democrats' 2000 presidential nominee, AI Gore, joined the debate this
mot;1th.
Gore's re-entry to the political debate,
including a foreign policy speech this
week, has activists watching to see what
political approach~he will take to make

---.
'

NC.U.Min'a
Mondlly'l Qama

,
' MAC
Tilleda 66,,BowllngGreen 62,,0T ·
OTHERS
.
Sl. John's 71, BoSton College 62
Morehead St. 66, Austin Peay 51
Oetrott 63, Youngstown St. 52
UNLV 96, Colorado St. 91, OT
.\)lah 66, New Mexico 65

McARTHUR - The Meigs
Marauders placed four players in double figures and opened sectional tournament play with a 70-61 win over
the New Lexington Panthers Monday.
The Marauders will now face a
tough Gallia Academy team Wednesday night at 6:~5 at Vinton County
High School for the right to play in
the sectional finals.
Meigs got out to a quick I 0-0 lead
and made it stand up in defeating the
Panthers. Coach Carl .\Volfe said after
the game "it wasn't pretty bit it is a

win and it's a win in
the tourrument."
Meigs jumped to
the early lead on a
Ryan Hannan basket
inside. Buzz Fackler
and Ryan Frazier
then teamed up to
drop two three-point
bombs on the PanWolfe
thers
and
the
Marauders led B- 0. A
Matt Williamson basket made it 10-0
with 4:40 showing on the first period
clock.
New Lexington did not hit the
scoreboard· until two free throws by

I

voters forget his 2000 failure.
Democrat, stood up to the White House :•
"Democrats want to rally around last month on tax cuts and their effect on ...,;.
tomorrow, and they don't know who the budget surplus, Republicans ..
tomorrow is,'' said political analyst Stuart responded with a withering assault that
Rothenberg. "Gore may turn out to be drove up hi.s negative ratings.
'
t&lt;;&gt;morrow, but right now he's yesterday."
Democrats note the overall competi- - Bush's job approval rating has been in rion between the two parties rtim.ains •· :
the 80 percent range since he rallied the close in the congressional races. Democ- " .,
nation after the terrorist attacks. of Sept. rats still have the advantage on issues like ' ·'
11. Republicans now have a big advan- Social Security and health care, which ', ·'
tagc in public opinion on fighting terror- could become influential issues cioser to ,' •
ism, an edge on handling the economy the congressional elections.
and generally break even on education. · "My only concern is that there aren't .· ·
Former President Clinton remains the enough people standing up and fight- •'·:;
hot draw on the Democrats' money-rais- ing,'' Begala said. "To win an argument, ' ' ..
ing circuit, and Democrats probably you have to engage it."
;: .
won't have settled on a dominant voice. Tliat debate remains a complicated '
on issues until the presidential nomina- task for Democrats given the current clition fight nears it&lt; close.
mate and Bush's popularity, said potitical
"No one's going to be appointed or scientist Ross Baker of Rutgers Univeranointed,'' said Democratic consultant sity.
Dane Strother, who noted the lack of a
"The Democrats' inessage has to be , '
national party theme can help conserva- very modulated and urgeted, and it's a ' , '
tive Democrats at the local level.
real test of political dexterity ofDemoc- ·: ~
The presence of many voices vyithin ratic leaders to !arid a few soft blows on ·•. '
the party is a good thing, because the president and soften him up a little,'' ~ .'
Democrats get to test the kinds of Baker said. ·"To be the loyal opposition ', :
themes that can work both in this yea~'s doesn't mean you have to be a lapdog to , '·
congressional elections and in 2004, said the president."
,
., .
AI from, founder and chief executive c,[
The budget debate, with its tax cuts , ~;,
the centrist Democratic Leadership and reductions in many domestic pro- , ".
Council.
grams, will be a rich campaign target fo~ , · ,
"Most congressional elections are Democrats·, said Democratic consultant :
fought on local and regional issues," James Carville. He said they will have to ; .:';
From said, "and for the Democrats there. figure out who is most effective at telling : ·
is no particular advantage to nationalize that story.
•
this election because Bush has such high
"When we 6nd out who can do that, ·,; ~
approval ratings."
·
bingo!" Carville said. "We've got a nom- :, ,:
Those willing to speak against a popu- inee."
~.
lar president have found it can be tough. , (Will Lesrer covers polirics and polling for ,_ ,
When Daschle, a Sout~ Dakota The Associated Press.)
•: •••

Raines invited
to Marlins camp
.,MELBOURNE, Fla. (AP)
-·, Tim Raines, hoping to
play his ·23rd season in the
major leagues, signed a minor
league contract with the
Florida Martins and was invited to spring training.
Raines, 42, came back from
a shoulder injury last season
and batted .303 with one
home run and nine RBis in
5·1 games for Montreal and
Baltimore.

:Kansas voted
~ newNo.l
·NEW YORK (AP) Kansas, the only team besides
Duke to be ranked No. 1 in
the AP college basketball poll
this season, moved back in'to
the top ,spot:
The Jayhawks (23-2) took ·
advantage of Duke's loss at
Maryland· on Sunday to
reclaim the top ranking,
relteiving 48 first-place votes
aJ!,d 1,745 points from the
national ·media panel.
·
Maryland (21-3) moved up
one place to second following
t!Ce 87-73- victory over Duke.
The Blue Devils had. been No,
1 for all but one week this season, including nine when they
were a unanintous choice.

..vo .

..• ,

'

Doug Dill, who played well off the
Marauder bench, pushed the lead to •
twelve with a trifecta that made it 2614 Meigs two minutes into the second
frame. The Marauder defense could
not seem to keep the Panthers from
scoring as the teams traded baskets
with Meigs able to maintain their
n.ine to twelve point advantage. Back
to back baskets by Ty Ault and fackler
gave Meigs a 36- 22 lead just before
halftime. When the horn sounded
ending the first half of play Meigs held
a 36 to 24 lead over the New Lexington five.
Ault, a 5-foot- 10 sophomore, con- .

Please see Marauders, 8

Ice dance champs
make their tribute
to United States

NBA
Monday'• Oamee
Housion 102, Washington 89
Utah 103, Cleveland 92
Philadelphia 110, Denver 83
Mlaml102, Chicago 80
Detrott 89, Toronto 76
Chal1olla 101 , Milwaukee 92
Portland 80, L.A. Clippers 79

CHILLICOTHE - Ticke~
for the SouthernWhiteoak
and
Easter.nAdeana girls' disttict games
slated for Thursday are for sale
at a cost of SS at both Eastern
and Southern High Schools.
The Eastern Eagles earned ·
top see!\ in the boys Division
IV sectional tournament
dra':'in~;, h~l~ !ec~ntly at Ja~~- .
:10n High School. On February . 20 at 8:45, Eastern will
play the winner of the IrontQn St. Joe/South Gallia
game.
, The second seed went to
Franklin Furnace Green, 123, who plays Beaver Eastern,
the No. 7 seed on February
.19 at Alexander at 6:15.
Symmes Valley got the No. 3
seed and will play No.6 Trimble, February 19 at 8 p.m.
Southern, 9-8, was the No.
5 seed and will play Waterford
February 20 at 6:15.
.~. Tickets for each game are
available at the respective high
~chools, and likewise tickets
for the girls' tourpament
games are also Ol) sale. Each
. school selling pre-sale tickets
gets 1/4 of the proceeds if
fans buy them at the school.

70-61 win ,_

Kyle O'Hare with
3:20 left in the period .The Panthers first
field goal. did not
come until Nathan
Wollenburg scored
with 2:34 left. A
three-pointer
by
Dustin Addington
cut the Marauder
Wllllameon lead to five before
Williamson nailed a
three and Frazier followed with a
two-point goal. Williamson canned
the. final two points of the quarter to
regain the ten - point cushion for
Meigs at 19-9.

:' 9ro Basketball
.

work politically" because "Bush won't ~~,
have coattails in the midterm."
:4'
Sabato does expect that Republicans .,,,
will keep control of the House in "''
November because the economy will ,·:·;
-~
have improved by the fall and because
redistricting has given the GOP an extra
half-dozen seats. He said he can't predict
who'll control the Senate, now Democ- •
ratic by a one-vote margin.
•
At the moment, Democratic consultants say johnson is their most-endan- '
gered candidate. Polls indicate that Car- ' ...
nahan and Wellstone are neck-and-neck ' ~
with their GOP challengers.
'
Meantime, the GOP has three seats in :I•.
some peril: in Arkansas, New Hampshire · ·
and North Carolina. Earlier, Democrats "
launched an attack ad against Republican candidate Elizabeth Dole, ·charging ; ;:'
that she raised money from Enron after :
she said she'd suspend ca111pa.i~ing in · '·'
the aftermath of Sept. 11.
· "' '
Bush is so popular that the GOP ' ,·, ·
attack ads probably haven't damaged his ", ..
reputation with the public, but repeated ' , ,
negativity and partisanship could dim his · :·:
halo.
He ought to be mindful of the exam- .,..
ple ofWoodrow Wilson, who called for. ..;.
a suspension of partisan politics during , .'
World War I, then declared that it was '
"imperatively necessary" that Congress · .·
remain in Democratic hands for the sake ' :·,
of national unity. Wilson lost control of.'"·'
both the House and Senate.
'
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of ~

Marauders advance _
BY JIM SouLSIIY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Prep Basketball

tll'f

. I

TUESL\W's

"''

HANG ON LADY_;, Marina Anissina and Gwenda! Pelzerat of France compete in the ice dane·
lng free program at the Winter Olympics In Salt Lqke City on Monday. (AP)

SALT LAKE CITY (AI')ft sure was nic e of French ice
dancers Marina Anissina and
Gwenda! Peizerat to honor
the United States during their
gold-medal · winning performance.
Without it, Americans
wouldn't have gotten close to
the ti1edals stand Monday.
Anissina posed like the Statue of Liberty at the start of the
routine and the pair ~nded by
holding up their anl]s as if
they had torches. Their music
also included snippets 1of Martin Luther King Jr.'s famed
freedom speech.
, ,
"This was the best: performance we ever did," J&gt;eizerat
said.
Most importantly, they
remained on their feet, something two of their top competitors failed to dO: Russia's
Irina Lobacheva and Ilia Aver-.
bukh also remained on their
skates and, in a tight vote, finished second.
·
It might not be that close at
the next Olympics. Under
sweeping rules changes proposed. Monday by the International Skating Union, the
6.0 scoring system would be
scrapped and judges' scores
would be randomly selected
by computer - a bid to eliminate the effect of any vote
fixing.
"It is time to find something
new," said lSU president
Ottavio Cinquanta. "This is a

total revolution."
World
champion
ice
dancers Barbara Fusar Poli and
Maurizio Margaglio of Italy
finished third . Naomi Lang
and Peter T chernyshev, winners of the last four American
championships, were 11th.
The United ' States is still
second in the overall medal
count with 18. Germany leads
with 24, including two golds
·
Monday.
Five medals will be decided
Tuesday, starting with men's
ski aerials. Other finals include
the men's and women's crosscountry sprint, m•·t ·, 1.500meter speedskati11s J ,d twowoman bobsled.
Also on the schedule aro the
women's figure skating short
program and women's hockey
featuring the
semifinals United States against Sweden,
and &lt;;:anada vs. finland - and
two consolation games.
Curling will have a showdown between three teams
vying for the final spot in the
women's semifinals.
HOCKEY: Team Canada's
mediocre performance has
turned the Great One into the ·
Grumpy One.
Wayne Gretzky, executive
director of the team trying to
win the first gold medal since
I '152 for the country that
invented hockey, had quite a
tirade following Canada's 3-3
•

'

Please see Champs, 8

Bucs finally get a
new head coach
TAMPA, Fla . (AP) -The Tampa Bay Buccaneers didn't wait for Steve Mariucci to turn them down before filling their coaching vacancy with Jon Gruden.
The sons of Malcolm Glazer, after a long, sometimes
embarrassing search, finished on a high note Monday.
Sensing Mariucci was going to reject an offer to
become Tampa Bay's ·coach and general manager, the
Glazers struck a deal to free Gruden
from the final year of his contract with
the Oakland Raiders.
The Raiders said the Bucs will give up
flrst- and second-round draft picks this
year, a No. 1 in 2003, a second-round
pick in 2004 and l8 million over the
next tbree years.
The price was steeper than the Glazers
would have paid for Mariucci, who has
Grudan
two years left on his contract. The 49ers
were offered .first- and third-round pick~
' in 2002 and second- and third-round picks next year.
"We let Jon make the decision," Raiders owner AI
Davis said. "If he wanted to go, we'd let him, p~vi\led we
· got our demands."
Gruden received a . five-year deal that ESPN.com
reported is worth $17.5 million. Mariucci was said to
have been seeking up to $42 million for seven years,
although it was unclear exactly what the Bucs offered.
"We talked about contract, but nothing had been
agreed upon as far as solid numbers,'' said Mafiucci, who
was offered the job after meeting with the Glazers for
several hours Sunday.
· By the time the 49ers' coach called the Glazers with his
answer ·Monday morning, the owners had already con-

PINieiNBUa,7

"

.

''

•

.

'

,.

,
NUMBER ONE
AGAIN- Tony
Boselli, right,
accepts his
team jersey from .
H&lt;;&gt;uston Texans
owner Bob
McNair on Mon·
day in Houston.
The five-time Pro ·
Bowl offensive
tackle was the
first pick in the
NFL expansion
draft to stock
the Texans. (AP)

Texans
HOUSTON (AP) -- The
•
Houston Texans put their
money where the talent was in
the NFL expansion draft.
They have the makings of a
competitive offensive line,
starting with, Jacksonville's
five-time .Pro Bowl tackle
Tony B&lt;Jselli, who became the
comerstone of an expansion
team for the second time in
his career.
The Texans got a good jump
on their defense M.onday ·by
grabbing s~ning cornerbacks

with Boselli
Aaron Glenn and Marcus starting defensive linemen,
Coleman from ·the New York two starting cornerbacks and a
Jets and jaguars defensive tack- playmaker like jermaine Lewis
les Seth Payne &lt;tnd Gary Walk- who have all been in the battie before."
er.
The first eight players on
The price tag for picking 19
players was more than $40 the Texans' list cost $38.5 milmillion, but the Texans were lion of the $71.8 million salary
congratulating themselves for cap. The Texans still have free •
agency and the April college •
a job well done.
"I'm e xtremel y e xcited draft to consider.
"These guys are going to be
about thi~ group for a number
the
foundation of our team in
of reasons,'' coach Dom
Capers said. "We have two
starting offensive linemen, two~.,

'

.

•
'

I

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•
Page A 6 • The'ilally Sentinel

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

Feb. 19,2002

Qr:ribune- Sentinel -lRe

111
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~......_,1 F..__i'dan:JilcY_&lt;US_,I Red men baseball stumbles out of the gate

i~ter

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FROM STAFI' REPORTS
Condition, Alkitlg $3,000.
CLEVELAND,
Tenn.- After opening the
(7&gt;10)379-2589
88
300 Four Tru season with a spilt at Bellarmine (KY) Uni"
utility model, very good convenity on Saturday. the University o( Rio
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1
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MTV Broadcast Seeders, 12 1994 Chevy half ton Sitvera· on cover, all accessories in- to a quick start scoring four times in the first
'fVoll, High Quality, Fits matt do, Olllontl cab, ohort bod, eluded, $4600.00 080. inning. The Lions plated three runs in the
~TVa, $295.
4x4, loaded, very good coo- 74().949-2727
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bottom of the first and went ahead 5-4 in the
lm't Farm Equipment Inc. dillon,
87,000
miles,
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2484
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2000 Chevrolet 314 ton, reoACCI'lfiORIES . Mars HjU exploded for six runs in the in
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ular cab, 4x4, Sllvoredo LS,
- - - - - - - - ' CO
player, alumJnum lludglt Priced T111nsml• third inning to gain an 11-4lead. The frame
wheeia, push buHon 4 alont All Types, AooeBI To was highlighted by a two-run home tun off
or Sale- Reglst~ Angus ¥ft\e8l drive, Rhino liner, fl. Over 10,000 Transmissions,
ifCiull· Cloamplon HUla Ell! bergluo tOilper, 14,500 Rebuild Kits, 740·245·5677, the bat of Karl Ruf.
line. (740)448-74t0
mlleo, $22,000.00 74Q.992· Coil: 339-376S.
Trailing 14-7 in the seventh, the Redmen
8849
eglotered paint ·lor ~;:.;.::,--.,----- llllil!"-~--~~"'1 scored four times before Mars Hill extin...le. (Black/White) 74(). 66 Dodge Ram. 4X4, 31811\R1 CAMI'DIS &amp;
guished the rally.
~42·202S
Auto. 4" UH, Have Elltra .30
MOJOR HOMES
over 360 to go with Truck.
Sophomore lefty Tim Sutton (0-1) took
HAY A
(740)441-0996 after Spm.
..
GRAIN
1971 Jayco camper 21ft. the loss, yielding 11 runs in three innings on
behind
$3500 ... the hill. Wes Hardin (1-1) gave up nine hits
. 97 Aatro Van, 56,000 mites, pull
air. cruise, tilt, PW, PL, (3041882·3507
t;rl800·18001b big round AMIFM Cuaeito, dual air
_/
and six runs in six innings to pick up the vicol good mixed hay. bags, ABS , seats 7, like
•
Ill load $t8.
bale. now, Must aalll $10,000
.... 1 1n u 1 ....
304)67S·7808
llrm. (7&gt;10)379·2134 leave rml"'"-~----,

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

In one week With us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
lRegt~ter
~rihune
. Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 (304) ·675-1333
Call Todav~-· ·or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To
992·2157
~--~~--~-----..

tf~rlcfo.l'e,r

Oearltire,r

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

Word Ads

Display Ad:;

Cally In-Column: 1: 00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

1

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
~Ubllcatlon

....... ,~In-Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display; 1:00 p.m.
Sundays P1per

Thursday for Sundays

Includes· Free Yard Sale Sign·! $.
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word .
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Private Party Ads Under $100 '
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced

~~-=~7=~~Y·p:OIORL"i&lt;US r'o IMftiO~ 1Gal'l

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third

~y: Mixed Gr!IIS, Square L,,_ _ _ _ _ _....1

__

1~.•1\.o·lfEL.p--W.-ANIID
__
. ,.Jwo ~ I L.r'_a_...!,.OMEllili
•s.,ALE
_ _.I ~.t.o_.~_RENr
__,.JI ~.r•
~
~

r

One Stop Shopping

PERSONAlS

The American CommUnity
• l'ng Network
Classified AdvertiS
Contacl Us AI:

Male Seeking Female pen

paL For acti1Jili8s &amp; ect. No

At. 3S Adull Video and
!NOTICE!
3br. 1 car gerage. located
Bookstore H;rlng Mldn;ghl OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· In Hartford area. $25,000.
ShiH, Possible Evening, Pll· lNG CO. recommends thet (304)882-8224
•
ny, wv. (304)937-4900 Call you do business with peoole

1 -800•821•8139

Orugs/Atcohol. Respond
too: PO Box 272 Point
Pleasant, wv 25550

Or

Moon Light Escorts. Full

ViSit

OUr

WebSite:

Semi- Tractor Trailer Driv- Beautiful 1996 mobile food Gal. Ohio. Good view of month

·•

,. · ShOp Online 0

· www.youravon.comflindallaiV
or can Unda for an your Avon
r,'l.t needs. Orders, Deliveries,
i...,. brochures, into. (740)388·
.)~

•

PART-TIME AND
FULL TIME
POSITIONS ...

8508

Art Vou Waiting For
, ,., You know you want to try it.
: ~, Star1 today. Jay Clark's
• r- .• ' Kenpo Karate (740)742·
I 2548
't-.f :tt f Young, 5 yr. old church In
r•l
' Gania County, looking for
~.
\ anointed &amp; experienced musicians for Praise &amp; Worship
team, any Instrument. Into &amp;
Appt. call (740)446-9043
1
Tue.. Wed., Fri. 9:00am• t :OOpm or call (740)366·
•· · Whit

CONCERNED ABOUT
THREATS TO THE
RIGHTS OF GUN
OWNERS?

94~9 .

We need more memben to
join lhc fight to protect our
2ND Amendment righiS!

GtVEAW!\\'
t:, ;~ :!·,~

Frea puppy to good home.
.,.. . Rottweller mix. Save me
lrom the poundl 740·992·
i0219

Currenily we ate

· m:ruiting/rcnewing
mcmbetS to lhe Nati&lt;lnal
Free to gOOd loviMg home Rifle Assoc:iatioll-llld our
only! 2 male puppies. Baa·
1 gle mhl, small. (740)245· employees get PA lD to do
• 90112.
il!!

';t

CAll TODAY!!!

-.

I

Top Tan
Conv6ence
manager,
Full Time store
&amp; Part
Time
Cashier, Full Time &amp; Part
Time Bookkeeper, Full Time
Cook &amp; Deli. Available to
work all shins. Send resume
clo Dally Sentlnei ·PO Box
729-08 Pomeroy, OH 45769
CustomBI Service
$1 000·$5000
. PT-FT
Training Provided
800·350-6188
--------t

ProcessDACia"lmEsNTtoRYrDoctors.
Training Available, PC
required.
1·800-240-1548, Dept.. 926

Proces~~r!:s~~~octors.

Training Available, PC ·
required
1·800·240·t548, Dept. 926
Dig Into a New Career!
Heavy Equipment Training
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or Programll Leam to operate
Sell. Shlr1ey Speers, 304- Trackhoes. Backhoes, Bull675-1429.
dozers.
Call
NOW
HIOQ-61 0·3520
Bates Bros. Amusement
Co. is looking for enthuslas· Domino's now taking appli·
tic individuals sprlno'sum· cations for safe drivers, Gal·
mer 2002 . Must be at least tlpolis and Pomeroy loca·
18 years and able to travel. tiona only. Apply In person.
Weakly pay, living facilities.
Contact us at 740·286-2950 Help warited caring ror the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
CNA-HHA, Cen. Homemak· now paying minimum wage,
ers needed to provide in new shills: 7am~3pm, 7amhome service for lhe Spm, 3pm·11 pm, 11 pm·
elderly/disabled in Mason, 7am, call 740-992·5023.
Cabell, Wayne, Putnam
Counties area. Call 1·888· Wyngate of Gallipolis. 'AU·
censad AISIIIed Living
453-4992 Wtll Train
COmmunity', Is aeeki~ a
Community Action is seek· part-time LPN and Residant
ing a case manager tor Its AssiStant available to work
Employment Program. 2 or all shlhs. You may apply in
4 year degree In soclal serv· person or send resume to:
Ices or related field. Com· 300 Bnarwood Dr., Galllpoputer, communication and lis, OH 45631.
organizational skills re·
qulrecl, Applications accept~
ed through 2125102 al 4:&gt;10
'I'1wNING
PM. Send resume and ref·
erences to Box 272, Galllpollo Cor- Collego
GMCAA Is an EOE.
(careers CloU To Home)
Call Todayt 740·446-4367,
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
1·800·214o04S2,
=ma donors, earn $50 to n~Ao;OS:~~,;fo;;IHl~.Q~S::;·o;t2:,:7;:4:;::B·;..,
2
hour:e:e::. ~~11 S~ra~ 1116 MauuNEous
Tee, '740-592-6651 .

·1'10

:::-':--':-~---

:~~~~~ 1.~~ 4 8:w~~t':
candv machine. Eight loot

, window and a cash
serving
register. Asking $12,900
(7&gt;10)742·3033
Start Your Business Today... Prime Shopping Canter · space Available . AI AI·
f rdable Ra Sprt V 11
Polaza, Call 7te40.
Oat .ey

r

..."9.,

~-v

u-.~~··

plus

deposit, Reference an&lt;! Deposit. No

son alter Spm, (740)992· (740)446-0722

3348.

Want your own home?
Ownyourownland?Wedol
Coil (740)446-3384 to quail·
fy lor your new dream

r

home.

I

MOBILE ..
~·nvma:...;,
FOR SALE

Pllol Program, flenters
Neoao..~vv,
~-· 304•736·7295 .
..
3 story older home In town;
greal condition; Close to IIbrary: Call Ubrary at 446READ, aKt235.
MOIID.EH~-

Ii

~

FOR llENr

=lerences

I

(740)446- For Concrete.' Angle, Chan·
nel, Flat Bar, Ste&amp;!; Grating "
For Dra Ins, DrIveways &amp;
SPACE
RFNr
Walkways. L&amp;l Scrap Mei J
R&gt;R ·
als Open Mollday, Tuesday,'
Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8am·
Mobile Home lot, Takes 12_ 4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
&amp; Sunday.•.
14_ 16 W6des, $1251 mo ·Saturday
Piuo ~-·.Good
Reier· (740)446-7300
'
0
""'~-'" "
enc&amp;s. (740)446.0175
Penn Reels, 320 GTI, 330'
Storage Spa- tor rant '"33 GTI $200.00 firm, .2 heavy~
••
nd '"
square feet. with metal rods, super level WI 7 ....r;
shelving. Located in City of 992·7242
,
. 1 Pleasant.
Inquire at Reoldontlal Homo Ownero ·
,Poin
•
"t02
304167..-v
l
Tappan HI efficiency 90 plus''
gas fumaces iOctudJng oitl
and
electric gas fuma··
s HI Eff'" le~ Hoao
u~~w
ce .
"" .....,
vu.xnv
Pumps, featuring TapPin$'
Goons
Free inbredible warranty
-.
package
.
BENNETr•s HEATING &amp;•

j

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,G:t

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·-------,J

1-aoo..a72-5817

1989 pruceridge 14x60. 2 bedroom mobile home FQr
SERVI~
good condition. Will help rent, n~ pets, (740)992·
'-~--lliiiiiiitiiiiiiiio-.,.1
wllh delivery. Call Harold. 5858
'
7ot0-385-7871.
LOANS, LOANS, LOANS,
Bed
Mobile H
for good or bed credit, call. 1991 Fl twood 14 80 2b 2
room
orne,
toll free 1-886·884-5758.
H
x
r. ·New Haven, (304}882·1107
... N
f II
(
2ba. all eleclrtc, new appli·
pup ron ees
ai1Cel new washer &amp; &lt;lryer 2 bedroom tnlller in Tuppe'l
•.. Fast reliable service
AU ne;._ carpet Inside ha~ Ptalna A/C nice porch
... Bankruptcies welcome
been remodeled extra large $325.00 piuS deposit and
--------•
llvingroom. MUst be moved. utilities. 740-667·3487
~u:~~~~R~~C:sl? $ 12•000· (304)1(58.1716 2 bedroom trailer, $250 Fno., ~~~so~a~~n~;~ COOLING (140}448~1~'
No Fee Unless We Win! $36,900.0(). 28'x48'- ·total ref &amp; dep, Mlnertvine, Oh Aefrigrators Up To 90 Days or 1-100-872·5967.
1~888~582·3345
electric· 3 bedroom- 2 bath· (740)992-llm otter Spnt Guaranteedi we Sell New www.orvb.com/btnnett
2x6 eKterior walls· thenno- Two B.R. MotMie Home in Maytag Appliances, French Smith Corona Electric Typepane wlndowo· Skylights City, $3251 mo. water Fur· City Maytag, 74().&lt;146.7795. wnter, $20. Microwave Can,,
and much, much more. Free nithed, Deposit and Refer·
WOod Grain wilt! Casters,,
delivery· Setup- concrete enca ReQuired. No Pets, For Sale: Reconditioned sao,. Weiqht bench, No
looters· underpinning and (740)44a- 1151
after washers, &lt;lryers and refrig- y.Je 1ghts mcluded, $15.;
up to !SOF oi uHUty lines. ~:30pm.
erruoro. Thompsons .,., 1, (304)674·5221
~"''
All rool01- ad....Ualng Now through March 15th,
choose
your
colora.
ance. 3407 Jackaon Ave· Walk- In Cooler, $200. 200.
In thle ntWIPIPif' II
Cole'o Mobile Homes.
ArAimmrrs
nuo, (304)675-7388.
Clark Chapel Road, Porter,
'tubfeet to 1M Ftdtral
15288 US 50 East. Athena.
FORilENr
• Good Used AppllaACH, At· Ohio. (740)367·7015
.:
Fair~ Act or 1111
whloh molloo nlllopl to Ohlo4570t, (740)592·1 972 ·
conditioned and Guaran· watenlne Spec;al: 314 200
r ldvertiM"Iny
1969 Mansion Limited II, 14 1 and 2 bedroom apart· teed. Washers, Dryers, PSI $21 .00 Per 100: 1" 200
~noo.llmllltlon«
x 70, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, menta, furnished and unfur· Ranges, and Refrigerators, PSI $35.00 Per 100; Alt
dltcrimlnatlon baled on whirlpool tub, washer &amp; dry· nlshed, security deposit re- Soma start at $95. Skaggs Brass CQffipfesaion FiUings.
raoe,-color, religion, HI
er,
partial
furnished, quired, no pata, 740-992- Appliances, 78 Vine St. , In Stock.
famlllalltltut or nM5onal $13,500.00 OBO 591-18~ 22t8.
(7&gt;10)446·7398
RQN EVANS ENf!!RPRIII',
origin. or any lrdentlon to
- - - - - - - - Hide-a-bed for sale burnt ES Jackson, OhiO, 1-800-:.
m.ke any tuch
1996 Mirage, 2 bedroom, 2
537 9528
p,.,_.nca, llrnll.thn or
bath, ref. &amp; stove, great :~~~~LBuoo:f... orange, $50, (740)992-t5S2 c:.:....;'" .:.:...._ _ _ __
Watkins Products: . Double
shape, 2 dacks included, CES AT JACKSON ES· after Spm.
dlscrtmlnftlat\."
$16,SOO, (740)949-4028
TATES 52 WHIW&lt;&gt;Od Drive Molloh C rpet 202 Clark strength white and dark va·
Irom SN7 to $383. Walk to Chapa:'"Roa~. P~rter. Ohio. nllla, extracts, pepper..
Tblo - p o t ' wjll nat
Butchett Mobile Home Late shop &amp; movleo. can 740- (7401448_7444 1-877•830 . •Pices, dessert mixes. sal·,
model 14&gt;:70 3br. 2ba. on 448 .2568 Equal Housing 9162 F E 11 t E
ves and Nnlments. Call 740 ..
l&lt;tvertlllltmentl ror Nil
rented
lot.
like
new
In
Ga.IUpOpportunity.
finanCing'"
,
~
';!:
=~a=~
.949·3027.
·
...... whlc:h itln
90 8 '
olio Ferry. (304)675-3689
Ylolldlan of thl t.w. Our
ask tor RoHmary
ca.sh. Vl~al ~aster Card. Wine color Aigner, hlgt1
ructtr. are hetHy
For the Dlacrtmlnatlng Ten- Onve- a- l1ttle save alot.
spike 3• hail knee high
Informed that Ill
Limited Or No CreQit? Gov· ant. Delu&gt;Ct 2 SA, Near
boola, cost S109. sell $20,..
-lingo-Iodin
ernment Bank Anance Only Holzer, CIA, Appliances
· ~
size 6 like new, (740)667·1
lhl1 newspaper.,.
At Oakwood In Barbours- Fumlahed Including w.&amp;D.,
. 3652
twahbllt on an eQUIII
ville, VN 3CW· 736-3409.
Carpor1, PriiJate Deck,
·
-unity-.
4
Now Double Wide on Prl· $ 89, Lease Required. Buy or sell. R;venne Anll· grea"'pl r, ~iooFull KSIIze Bed,
vale Property, 1-5 Acres. (740)4&lt;46·2957
quas. 1124 East Main on om ete, ., · ng Size
Call (740)446·3583 to pre·
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Mattress and Box Springs,
qualo'f•.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 992•2S26 . Russ Moore, $75. Microwave Stand, $25~
- ' - - - ' - ' - - - - - - bedroom aparimenta at VII·
Microwave, $2S. (740)446&lt;
Over 10 u&amp;ed homes pnced lege Manor and Riverside owner~
"97:-4=2-=-~----~
10
HOMES
under $3000. Will help with ~~a:s:~:s~~~~r~ Sue's Selectable&amp; on the "r Elec. Smokerama pressure
1.·--•FOHiliiiitSiiiALEiiiiiO._.I del;very. Call Mkk; 740-365· 992·5064. Equal Housing ;n Middleport. Dolls, glass· cooker. 220 volt. (304)576.'
•
c:.99:.48:.::.,.::---,.,--.,.--,
ware. Aladd;n mantels, and 2703
·
'
10.5 Acres with 1999 Fleet· Pi p
Opportunities.
flOra. (740)992.0298
wood Modular Home Near ~~t c·:~:a:r;d ~rrsf;:~ Newly Remodeled 2 BedFree Gas Fumacet and Air
Gallipolis. Excel,.nt Condi- H
B
FA5
d room Apt., Stove/ Aelrlgera·
Mlsc'El.iANEous Conditioner .eaumates. can
tlon. Private, CoUntry Set· G~:~~lter~Oans Av~~- tor Utilities Paid $4001 __ l\1ERcHANDISE . (7401446·6308 or 1-800J
ling. Stocked Pond. Addi- ble. Own your new home in· mOnth . 46 OU~e St.
291-oo98. If you don't oal(
tional 7.5 Ac::re1 Available. Stead of renting. C•ll (740)446-3945
' 10·Pfaltzroff
Yorktown&amp; , US WI both klsal
Call Janel! Call at Century (740)44€1·3216.
cups &amp; saucers ne er Or bb' PI
T 1 &amp;
21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular ' - - - ' - - - - - - - Now Taking Applications•
v
u s ano- un ng
(304)
We
heve
II(JI&gt;rOxlmately
35
w..t
2
Bedroom
Townused,
$3.
set,
(740)667·
Repairs.
Problema?
Nee~
1
20
6
1·800-731~~~rs
or 011Ice used homes for under house Apartments, includes 3652
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
74c;0-,·4:.:4c:.
6 :.:452:::;:S:-::-":----'
- - - - - - - - $2,000, call 1·800·837·3236 Water Sewage, Trash.
..,
3 Bedroom on Route 2, for Info.
S350JMo., 740·446..()008.
~r=tl&amp;c:~· ~~~~~~kn~~ Hldabad, $100.· Loveseat1 ......
(304)675-5332
One Bedroom Apt. VIne. ·St. ora, size 11 &amp; 12, $5 8 $tOO. Full Slz~ Mattress
&amp;
Gallipolis, OH . (740)387- piece, {740)867-3852
and Box Spring, $50. Micro-;
7 Rooms- Quiet NeighborLVI;,
7886
wave, $25. Baby Seat. $25,
hood, Rool &amp; Siding Less '-~--•AiiiiiCRF.AiiiiiiiGiiiEO._.I ;,.::c:.::..._ _ _ _ _ _ 25 ton wood splitter, $650. (7'10)448-9742
than5mt.old,Largoeat·ln ·
65 Ford F·l 50, Neede
kitchen, Gas FA·Heat, Cen· For Sale: 9 plus acfes,
.
Work, $500, Russlan SKS Household hem• &amp; Baby
tral .A:C, Ovoralzed 2 Car About SSOOO- $6000 worth Upstairs 1 Be&lt;:lrt)(lm Fur- Rilla, Navar Fired, 30 round ltema. (304)075·28Q1
Garage plus Largo Storage of
limber.
516,000. nloh;' ~a1mon~~~~ clip, $300, Marlin 30·30, ex· Independent HerbaNio Dli•
Bldg: (740)887-4060
(740)379·9257
bon ecoS350nI ve th I U I' cellent condition, $225. 44 tnbutor Gall For Proctuot Or
rary.
mon ~us '"magnum Blackltewk 10112
• · lty , ." ..
9 Room House 3 Baths .
lUes· (water/trash ls lnclud- inch combat gnp$ like 0 ppo ..un . ' 7......,1.,....1- 1982
CIA and Heat.' $45 ,000: t;ot for Sale: cleared, approx ad in rent). Call Debbie or New, $275. (740)388.9073
JET
(740)446·4734 (740)44t· 2 1112 &amp;acrelea, rlcgravelalroad, Judy at Library (7&gt;10)448- after 6pm
AERATION MOTORS
wa er
act
av labte 7323
.:;;.;;;;...;;=·'-----1337•'~ 740 ) 387 .• 70 IS
Porter area. $16,500. CoM ,
4 CGmett Lata Ohio Val· Ropeirod ..New 6 AebuUII~
Cozy 1.5 Story, 12!50 sq H., (740)446-4514 or (7&gt;10)446- Point Pleasant Large Apt. 3 ley Momo~ Ganions, "Gar· ~~3.f.:Jl2~on Evans, 1·
Open Loft, 1.5 acre, Porter 3248 after 5pf11.
. bed., appliances. Furnished. den of Everlasting LifeR,
·
Area. Asking $79,000.
$28S. month. Dep. Re· Level Lots Close to road. - - - - - ' - - (740)367·7193
qulred. (3040675--7783
· will spilt 2·2, $300 each. .Mauren and Box Sprlnge1
For Rent or sale, small
Pomeroy large 2 bedroom (740)867-4060
$95. Television Cabinets,
house 1br. $250. month+
Naytors ~Run, w/d, lhef,l fur~ 9 Cometary LOll for Sale. ~k, s;~ 1J~nT(7':1)~M;
Deposit.
(304)727~331 8
nlahed, lg. vard-patio, no Prime Localion, Mound Hill. 152~· ' . 8
!rom 6~m-ttpm.
HO!JS&amp;'&gt;
peta, (7&gt;10)992-8888 .
(513)553-273t evening.
rKUrl!miVriAL

r

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':-'==="'----

y

MOBILE HOME OWNERS·
lnlertherm &amp; Coleman ges,:
oil &amp; electric lumaces ;neluding hi efficiency heat·

concession. Trl·axle 24 feet town. (304)727-3318
(740)949-0012
Pets. (304)675·5162
:.W.orvb.co~nett ..
All
1
Brick
H
Bad
·
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
ong.
a an ess see Remodeled 3 bedroom In
ouse,
rooma, For Rent 2 rooms Apart- NEW AND usEo STEEL.
equlpmenl with deep fryer, Middleport, call Tom Ander- Bath, Large Kitchen. Call ment in Pt Pleasant. Oepos- Steel Beams Pipe Rel&gt;arl

We have started a new pro- ·
gram that pays you more for
•140() 410..9125.
"' lOll- Beagle dog 11 Hobson
your previous work experl·
$100.$25,000
1 traln yard, brown, black &amp;
ence. If you have bean CASH WHEN YOU NEED
.·! white, reward. (740)992·
IT
·working at your ourrenl lob
t497
tor SIK months or more you lrll!"--:~----,
may quality for our new Pay 1180
WAN'Jm
lnfoCision Mansoement For
Experience Program.
We can qay you morelhan
To Do
AUCDONAND
~lion
.
youaremaklngatyourcur- ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,
·-iFLEAiiiiiiMARKEriiiiiio_.l· ,L,-;-,~.,:.,-.,.,-.,-~ rent loll. Call lntoCislon All Makes ol Lawn Mowers:
•
'
Heir yvantedd· experl~ed Management Corporation Small Engines; Kerosene
. J Ak::lc Pearson Auction Com· roo er s an carpen era· and start earning more newt Heaters and Salamanders
~ pany, lull time auctio~er, must haiJe a valld driver's II· 1-&amp;n-463-6247 E)(t. 1841 . Repaired.
Call
Mike
complete auction seNICe. oonse, tools, transportation r--------, (740)448-7604
LlcenSSd 188 Ohio &amp; West and relerences. Local work,
Virginia. 304:773·5765 Or~ pay. Apply at ChrlsU'
ADVERTISING
Allotyourhomerapaira,ad·
304·773·5447
,an s Con•trucllon, 1403
SALES
dilfons &amp; rernodellng. 24hr
·
Eastern Ave., Galtipolls. Of.
emergency aervice, senior
WANJ'EI)
ltice hours 8' 5 M·F, REPRESENTATIVE c;~zena dh•count. 22 yrs.
(740)446·4514
'
exp. (304)S78·206S
• TO BUY
•--oiiiriiiiii-_.1 H
&amp; G den p rty 1
.For well established
,
orne
ar
a
s
Local"'".
David's Home '.Repair.
..~....,.:_.r,. Abtolute Top OoiJar: U.S. now hiring. Start your own
"""
Plumbing, EkK:tricaJ, PaintSliver. Gold COins. Proof· homo basad business with
lng, etc. (7&gt;10)256-9373 or
etta, OJamonda, Gold h~lato no investment. InterSERVING THE (740)441·5707.
~·• ''~ Rings, U.S. Currency,· VIOWI conducted Monday, .
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1St Sec· Match 4. Call Pat Miller lor
·TRI·COUNTY Georges Portable Sewmlll,
ond Avenue, G~liipolis, 740· an appointment. {740)379·
~:'J'u~rr~~~IJ.?~ 1t:5 j~
'· 448·2842.
9887
AREA
- - - - - - - - McClure'&amp; Restaurant now
Moving and Hauling: Clean
!,~:=-1~o/s::b~a~~ hiring all 3 locations, lull or
• Must have good
Out Bulldlngs, Basements,
Haul FurnitUre, TAG (Bump- part-time. .pick up appllcaGarages, Eatatea, Trash,
er Hltctl), Pull Condition. lton at location &amp; bring back Communication lkllll Etc. Odd Jobs. Call
Must be good enough to between
9:30am
&amp;
• Muat have good
(740)448·7604
Run lnlerslate. (740)44t ! I O:OOam. Monday thru Sat·
driving record I
1'
Bo
Cl ·
t026
~u:.:rdac..Y:..·-=::-=,.,-':-::-:~~~ ~ Profttom
eanlng For sale by owner: Nice bi-===-=-~
provide own
~IV-.
esaional clean· level home on 1 acre near
::Prol-lonal IHkl land Office Biller Wanted. Pool·
tr--~·tlon
lng at aftordablo prices. Cheater. Threa bedroom,
~ 1Person N··•
....,....w
Aesldenltal • on•tlve, Pu ,..,.ua
wit homt
cn:ru·
....-.;l t' --•·•
'VI'JUUvr two bath8, one-car garaba,
10118
h
•
Ollllon80or ed tor Part-time position In 'MUll hive ability to lng and construction clean · family room with fireplace,
• owner llnanctd. 60 " k Doctors office. No Experl·
be 1 TEAM plliyer
up. Conlklentlal. 992·2979 sun room. New central heat·
'•~ =76_ 1~. Ex~a1~ at a nee Necessary. Apply In
or 992~ 1391.
lng &amp; ale ayatem. One ml·
Person at Complete Care
nute ort Route 7, but still prt·
~·
Chlroprecllc. lOA Airport
vale. (7&gt;10)965·3961
1 '11'1 tn \!I''
Rd, Beh;nd Burger Klrig.
Stnd RtiUmt to:
riO . . B·~'&gt;I IC\it 1 '&gt;
~,..~
New Home. VInyl Siding,
D
T
lbu
RecepUon;st for busy doc· alllpolll ally r ne
OPfoJnuNrry
Shingle Root, 3 Bedrooms/
110
tor's oftlce. KnoWledge of
RE: Advef11alng
L.,-oiiiiioiiiiiiOiiiioii-,J 2 Bath. $499 Down. call
Har
WANI'fl&gt;
medical codlngi!&gt;llllng pre·
Sales. Rep
·
(740)446-3570.
1 ' - - - - - - - - ' ferred . FAX resumes to
"
AAA Greeting Card Route
675·3713 or 522·3612 or
825 Third Avenue
100 Top Lac's (Atl Locali Rnl Log Homea. · Cabins
Need 5 ladles to sell Avon . send lo P.O BoK 657 Bar· Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 $750 weekly. Free Into.
to customs. Free tnforma·
(740)446·3358
boursvllle. wv 26554
..,_"-'' - - - - - " -'--' ~ -868·504·7664/ 24hrs
lion. 740-558·2393 ·

1-888-237-5342
ext. 2341

f,.

car garage. 578,000. 4 country, yard w/garden
BENNETT'S HeAnNG 6 ,
is seeking experienced - - - - - - - - blocks f~om High Scho~ spot, all utilities pak:i, S800 a Clean 2br. WID Hookup . COOLING 1740 ~ 8 •8418

I

s -.

-

Hill, OH TRJCking Company offerlng.

·
l'.'0·------·~'11·
6 IIF.LPWANnD
Why wait? Start meeting
lbl.P WAJ"r((l])
Ohio singles tonight, call toll
~'::1 . 1·800·766·2623 BJIIt $6-8
RN's&amp;LPN'I
/HOUR TO STAAT
Even;ng &amp; Mklninht Shifts
ANNol.rNcF..Mmr (upon completion of training Fan1astlc Starting Wages
. Looking for a New JOB or Paymenun lieu of venefits
CAREER???
OptonAvaUable.
Then don't miss this oppor- Great Shift Differentiar at
Foster Parents.
tunltylll
Sunbrldgo Core 6 Rohab
Local Arwmcy
"""974.JOBS
For Putnam
•v in Ohio seek- CALL·. 1-ovo~ ing quaJilied couples to be· - - - - - - - - Gall Wanda Taylor
'1 come Foster parents in 100 WORKERS NEEDED
at 304·757-6805
Lawrence, Gallia, Jackson,
Assemble crafts, wood
To Schedule A
. • , 1 Meigs areas. There will be
items. Material provided.
Professlona11nte1VIew
5 to 10 families chosen to
To $480+ wk.
located AI
.
become part ol the pilot Free Information pkg. 24 Hr.
300 Seville Road
project. Qualified applicants
1-801-428·4750
Hurricane, WV 25526
EOE
' may receive up to $40.00
.
per day reimbursement In·
terested
parties , . Call
Att8ntion
(740)534·3379 ask for Rob·
Leaders Wanted
art If you have previously
I
I II d f
called, please call again.
n~rr:;:~~~n~~ ~:o~~~~e
Shop Onllnil @
www.marykAy.comtbspencer4 7.
I·800·218·7543
Your Mary Kay independenl
www.Money-Oreama.com
..... t eeauty Consultant, Bridget

I

Christy's Family Living,
33140 New uma Ad .. Rulland, Ohio, 740-742·7403.
Apartmanl, home and trailer

r ~a=

moneythroughthemalluntll Hom~ .... 4~'·· ~~~a., hwll h
~
ho
line ot Mob;,e'
1 fronts available for lease. comptete
semt- Driver Needed. Oak you have Investigated lhe scree,,... ~ pa 10 pore ' 2 3 or 4 .......room
UN n Vacancies now.
home partl &amp; accessoriea. ·

Escorts. Prompt Protessio·
ers. Over the Road, Exeatnal Olscreel &amp; Confidential.
lent Pay, Insurance and
6
t 6
(740)388
~~======~======::=::, ~eneflts.
Call (740)682·
pm o am.
· n
7 n 3 or 1_800 _523_0804 _
1799

r

.l

ArA!mmrrs_FOH_Il
_E_
Nr

\

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'-

I

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FORilENr

Tara Townhouse Apart. ments, Very Spacious, 2
1 ·3 Bedrooms ForecloSSd Bedrooms 2 Fk&gt;ora CA t
Homes From s199/Mo., 4% t/2 •·th
· ~.
oa ,' Fu11 y c arpetvv,
Down, 30 Years at 8.5% Adult Pool&amp; Baby Pool. Pa·
APR. For Llsllngo, 800·319· llo, S'-rt $385/Mo. No Poll,
3323 EKt. 1709.
Lease Plua 5ecurily Deposit
Required, Days: 740,...46·
2 Bedroom House. Pamer· 3481: EvJIOingo: 740-367·
oy. OH. Near End ol BrKige, 0502, 740j48-0101 .
S4500, Needs Repairs,
(740)387·7888
Twin River Towers accept·
lng appl~atlons now for
3 bedroom home M;norsvllle
Unlta available
a~, river view, $450 per
March 1, 2002
month, relererw::es required, tbr. Hucl SubSidized apt. lor
deposit required, . no pe1s, elderly and disabled EOH
740·992-E771 after Spm.
(304)675-667V

~

r

ATV Ramps, $50. Bear• 111!"--::~-.---...,
Compound 8ow W/ lrrow&amp;l
BUILIIING
••n El 110 D
. , _,_
125·
~
.
ec
r
ryer,
Wheel JJarrow, $15. Weed L._ _ _ ""rrur.&gt;
_ _ _ _ _.,l
Ealer, $tO. Runs. Call '
.
(740)379·23l!«&lt;
BlOCk, br~k. sewer plpeo,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Baby Stuff· Toys, Bath Winters, Alo Grande. OH
Seat, Play pin with carrying Call7ol0·245·5121.
ca,o,. Q.6 months clolhe8,
1
12·18 monthl clothes and
~ /1
girls. call (740)742·3017
FOR~

1

C·

Ceramic &amp; Gill Shop Apple
Grove. (304)'578·2800 . Ce·
ramie Molds used 70% off.
New 50% off. MovJng Not
taking molds.

·--iliiiitiiiiiiiiiiil'!-!
•
AKC Aeg. Black lab PUP:
plea rot sale ,OC)Od huming
prospects voice mall 441·
7193 or call :}04-675-4469

.''

.., Round BaiH. St.So
~uoro, $12,!50· $15.00 1881 Goklwlng GLIIOO bl·
iitRound. , (740)2511-6140 teratata Patriot Pearl red
. !'Crown City.
·
w;th gold pinstripes, runs
RoundSome
Baleslefto1 !rom
Hay,
51 o each.
882•3485
year batore last, se each. =-::-::::-=:--::--=--.,.
(740)245-5047
1998 300 E~ Good COndl·
Round balea, tJCXid hay, un. ~on. Naw n,.,;. &amp; Seat c,Y.
der cover, 8ilo·1000 tbo., er. $3200 0110. (740)379·
St5.001balel (740)985-3548 11266
_ _·_ _ _ _ _ _
1998 Hooda 4 wheeler 3flO.
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie 4 trax Uke New Green
Straw
Year 'Round Delivery
'
&amp; voiume Dllcount AvaHe· Garage
Kept, ' 53500.·
ble.
Hentage
Farm. (7oi0)448-2St 5

At;;'

you know, and NOT to send 4 ·Sale lg. Ranch Style ces required. 740-007·3487 rentals. Commercial store- pump systems. We carry a·

10:008m- 6:00pm

www.americancommunityclasSified.com

, Service . Male and Female

3 bedroom hou"' In Tuppere Plains, central air, 3
nice (lOI'Chea, $425.00 plus
deposit and utilltiH, reteran·

I

d

• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per P,rson

• Start Your Ads Wltl1 A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • AvOII2 Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Cays

For All Your Advertising Needs

r

I

Avenue, Gallipolis·, OH 45631

\\.\0 1 \( I \11 \. 1-..

I NAIA

I

h-ul1if

&amp;

i

I

1

C.UlaC.....,. OH

(){flee !fo~~

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

:l ~!"s8:~.ooLots~~

ner

h

tory.
Jake Sperry went 3-for-4 with an RBI to
lead the Redmen and Josh McMillen
smacked his first home run of the season,
Fred Brassfield, Matt Vandine and Jason
Wheeler all banged out two hits each.
In game two, Rio led until the sixth inning
when the Lions scored six runs in the bottom
of the inning to win the game, 7-5 .
Jason Willimu struggled but left the game
with t~e lead . He yielded seven hits, six runs.
(five earned) in five innings, walking tl\ree
and fanning one. Glen Hannah (0-1) took the
loss in relief.
Sperry had two hits, Brassfield went 1-for3 with 2 RBI and a stolen base. Cory Maynard and Brent Ewing also knocked runs for
Rio Grande. The Redmen swiped six bases in
the game.
On Monday, the Redmen faced the tough
Lee Univer.ity Flames and lost 9-4 . 1t was the
eighth straight victory for the Flames (Set).
Jason Wheeler went 3-for-4 and dubbed
his first home. run of the season. McMillen ·
knocked in two runs with a triple. Brassfield
went 2-for-5 with a run scored.
Dan Hepler (0-1) took the loss as he gave
up three runs in 3 .1 mmngs.

opes~

save toes

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
IDAHO. FALLS, Idaho night. "They said it didn't
Uncondltlonalllfe~m• guar·
·
·
anteo. Looal reteranoes tur· (AP) - Rulon Gardner gave look very good at first but
nlshed. EstsbUshed 1975. the blanket covering his dam- today they look better."
Call 24 1·800·287-0578.
Hro. (7401 446' aged toes the same kind of
Four days after being air0870,

Rogers Waletproot;ng.
-------C&amp;C General Home Malntononce- Pa;nung. v;nyl sld·
lng, carpentry, doors, win·
dows, baths, mobUe home
repair and more. For free
estimate
can Chet, 740·992·
6323 .

stare he had used hundreds of
times on his way to an
01
·
ld
d I
ymptc go me a .
The same will that helped
h h
. h
I b
t e eavywetg t wrest er eat
an un b eata bl e Russian in

though, there was damage to
the feet that support the 285pounder.

"The best case scenario is

lifted to safety af!er spending the toes will come back and
a night in the backcountry, everything will regenerate
Gardner d1'dn't look l1·ke itself," he said. "Then I can
someone who almost died of resume my career."
fi
b 'l
When Gardner was found,
exposur:e rom a snowmo 1 h
ing trip t at went awry near rescuer. didn't give his feet

ILri ~~~~· I
Wedneaclay Night Bowling
Lugue

MASON. W.Va. - Powell's
Super Value and T&lt;!Z'S Marathon
are again locked in a tight race
for the second half standings of
the Wednesday Night Bowlin·
gLeague . Pine Hill's Golf Club
claimed Jhe top prized both in
the team game and team series
standings.
Chuck Burton claimed boih the
Men's High Game and ~en ' s
· High Senes, while Do«ie Will
and ·Debbie Sayre combined for
Women's High Game, while Will
claimed the Women's team high
series.
SUMMARY
!.Powell's Super Value 40/24 ;
2 .Taz's Marathon 40/24; 3.Pine
Hills Golf Course 34/30; 4.Syra·
cuse Country Market 32/32:
5.Little John's of Pomeroy 30/34;
6.Meigs Industries 16/48.
High Team Game and Series Pine Hills Golf Course 704/2038
Mens High Game - Chuck
Burton 257, Loren Coleman 207,
Sam Smilh 201 .
Mens High Series - Chuck
Burton 581, Loren Coleman 573,
Sam Smith 507.
Women's High Game- Debbie
Sayre/Dottle Will 170, Dottie
Wifl168, Debbie Sayre 163
Women's High Senes - Do«ie
Will 488, Debbie Sayre 462, Lori
Burton 437
Thursday NJ9ht
No-Tap Bowhng
MASON, W.Va - In the Thurs·
day Night No-Tap league Taylor
Chiropractic holds a 22-1 0/18·14
edge over both Mason Family
Restaurant and 3·Men and No
Lady.
Sam Smith claimed the Men's
High Game and Men's High
Series, while Sue · Queen
claimed the Women's High
Game and the Women' s High
'Series.
SUMMARY
!.Taylor Chiropractic of Point
Pleasant 22·10; 2.Mason Family
Restaurant 18· 14; 3.3 Men and
No Lady 18·14 ; 4.Charlie's
Angels 14·18; 5.Wildcards 14·
18; (l.Ghost Team 10·22.
Men's High Game - Sam
Smith 264, Bill Slack 258, Steve
Buf1on 252
.
Men's High Series - Sam
Smith 741, Chuck Burton 631,
Bill Slack 258
· Women's High Game - Sue
Queen. 245, Carol McFarland
237, Rosalee Kerns
Women's High Series - Sue
Queen 574, Carol McFarland
543, Grace Winnings 440

Sydney two years ago had his family's farm in Afton, much hope . They had to cut
miraculously kept him alive Wyo.
his frozen boots off with a
tlon, 4 new tires, $2000, homes, lnskle and Out. Cor· through a frozen night in the
Sitting in a chair with IV's saw used for casts, and what
pantry, Plumbltlg. (740)441 ·
(7'")992 1018
II ~ \\l., l 'tJH I\ II()\
:....c-=:..·"'-'---- :.01ii;t3;_=:---~-.. Wyoming wilderness last hooked to his arm at the they found inside wasn't
'll!';,;;;;,;;;~---~ 2000 Polaris 400 Scrambler 11:
AUIUi
14 wheeler. Only 2 tanks ol
Eu.cnucAI1
week.
Eastern
Idaho
Regional promising.
FOR
SALE
goa
uSSd.
Brand
New
Con·
RtlFRIGERATION
Now
it
seemed
he
was
tryMedical
Center,
the
'30-yearHe's listed in fair condition,
.__ _ _ _ __, dillon . $4000. (740)379· ~
'
2801
ing to put it to use to save his old Gardner talked almost but the fate of his toes
Residential or commercial
1987
· $200. (304)875-4248
Volkswagon Fox 2001 Hartey Davidson 683 wlrlng, new servk:e or re· toes and his wrestling nonstop to a reporter about remains in doubt. Doctors
=::-::-=-:---..,.-, Hugger, 510 Actual Ml"•· pairs. Master Ucensed elec· career.
hi.s night, and the hope he have refused to talk about his.
1990 Oudl80 Auto Loaded Brand New Condition , triclan. Ridenour Electrical,
with sunrOot. ' 52000. $8500. (740)379·260t
WV000306, 304-675-1188.
"We're trying to do every- still has for his wrestling case specifically, but said toes
(740)446-2519
thing we can do to keep my future.
that are frozen badly seldom .
1992 Cemaro AS. teal. very
toes," Gardner said Monday
Underneath the blanket, recover circulation.
good cond;tlon, T·topa, CD
player, tinted wlndowa,
$4999 call (740)992·2459 or
"That person is Jon Gruden, the fine st
the laughingstock of football.
304-882·3407 .
First, they were rejected by Bill Par- young mind in the game. We took our
1~3 Buick Park Ave. Exo.
Condhlon, loaded, All serv·
cells, who went to the Super Bowl three time and got the man we really wanted ,
lcao. Lt.. Bronze metallic.
times and took the New York Jets from
and we couldn't be more thrilled ,"
100,031 miiH $4Soo.
(304)675-2924
1-15 record to the AFC championship
While some fear the ·team's credibility
.
tacted Davis to revive talks that broke game.
t993 Grand Prix Special
. was damaged, others insist the fran chise
Edition power locks/win·
down two weeks ago when Tampa Bay
Then, after making an unsuccessful bid will be fine.
dow&amp;, A/C, CD player, ,_
American Raolng rims.
and Oakland could not agree on com- to lure Gruden, the Glazers humiliated
"It didn't bother me one way or the
$3600 (740)992·2459 or
pensation for Gruclen.
general manager Rich McKay by reject(304)882-3407 . .
other," receiver Keyshawn Johnson sa id.
Dungy was the most successful coach ing his plan to hire former Baltimore
1994 CheYy Camara V-8,
"As football. player s, you're happy
Auto, tranamlaslon, 88,000
in Bucs history.•The team went to the assistant Marvin Lewis to replace Dungy.
'f'llles, in good condition,
playoffs four of the past five seasons, but
"We were determined not to let out- when a situation is settled b ecause it
nloe Interior, new tires, red
noons. (304)882·3358
the Glazer. viewed them as underachiev- side pressures derail us froni our goal to allows you to plan and know what to
er. the last two years.
find the best person to coach the Bucca- expect. What everybody has to under1995 Bare«a Automatic,
$249S. I 994 Cavalier,
Dungy was fired five weeks ago Mon- neers . Our fans deserve nothing less," said stand is it's a business. (The search) too k
$2495. 1992 Cutlaso Clera,
$2495. til97 Otda Achieve,
day. The way the Glazers handled the Bryan Glazer, the team's executive vice awhile, but I think they go t who they
$4995. 18 olhers to chose
wanted in the end."
search for his successor made the owners president.
from stsrtlng at 51~95.
COOK MOTORS (740)4480t03
t995 Cloryoler LHS. Exc.
condiiiOI"j. Loaded. One
OWner. Ok!BIIGN ·w/Char~
coal leather. 133k mnes
$5300. (304)675-712t
t997 Hondo Civic U(, Ex· ·
cellent ConcttUon, !'ower
Public Notices in Ncw.&lt;pa
Door Locka and WindOwS,
Your Righi to Know, Dcll•crcd Right to Your
Cruise Control, MIJ FM Ra·
dlo wllh a t 0 CD changer,
'
Power Sunroof, 51,000
miles, $699~ . (740)446·
4720
I
PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF fut; thonca Ellt 33 (218) 36Q.7200
t998 Honda Civic · OX,
feet;
Thence
weat
A viewing will De
REAL ESTATE
etsndard, $7,800.00. 740held on Thursd·ay,
about 98 laet to (2) 12, 19, 28, 2002
CASS
NO.:
00
CV
018
992·3187
Second
Street;
February 28, at 9:00
a.m
. to vacate Ours
thence
olong
Second
Benk
of
New
Tha
t999 HondO Accord U(, 4Public Notice
Road (TR40) In
Stroot
In
a
DR, 4cyl, Sllvor, 30,000
York, Aa Truatee
miles, PS, POL, Excellent
aouthweotarty
The VIllage ol Lebanon Township,
Under The Pooling
Condition,
St 4,1100.
direction
olong Rutland Ia pursuing followad by e hearing
and Sarvlclng
(740)379-2398 after &amp;pm.
MaUing Our s1.,1 Brochurell
Ag-mant Dated AI Second Strut 33 foot the Idee of one trash at 1:00 p.m., Feb. 28,
to Cron~ Lot. tho provider for the at the Commissioners'
87 Chevlllo S.F 3911 En·
Fraa Supplleo, Poatagel
or Novembar 30,
place (of) beginning. reoldents of Rutland. office In the Court
gina, 400 Turbo, auto, SUnStart lmmodatetyl
18i7, Sarlaa 1HN&gt;
set Red, Restored condl·
Genuine Opportunttyl
Property Addraoa: If anyone Ia Interested House.
Plalnt(ff
tlon. Appraised value
For FrN lnfonnatkm,
In submitting a A viewing to vacate a
570 S. 2nd Avanua
$22,400 asking St2,500.
Gall Ton Free:
Middleport, Ohio proposal, contact the portion of Putnam
Donald
Guthrlo,
alee,
(304)675-13t0 ,
1-888-815-t835.
45710
Rutland VIllage Olllca. Drive (TR278) In Olive .
Donald s. Guthrie,
Permanent Parcel Propooelo ohould be Township will be held
et 11.,
94 Shadow, 88,000 miiOI, IP&lt;ID.OO WEEKLY SALARY
No. : 15-00839.000·
10 :00
a.m.,
~lr, Tift, Auto, $12,000
presented at the at
Defendonto
OBO. (740)256-1233
Sale• Lenera From Home .
Prior lnatrument March
Council Thursday, February
COURT OF COMMON Referenced; Volume meeting . The Council 28, with the hearing at
;.c.':-'--'--::--:-:-::- IG•onulno Opportunity. FREE Suppt;oo.
98 S.turrt SL t • 4 Door,
Shelton Aoooclateo,
PLEAS, MEIGS
55, Paga725
mHIIng Ia at 6:30 p.m. 1:30, February 28 , at
5opd, AM·FM Cal88tt~, Tllt,
, Wel1cheotor, IL 60t54 Or Cali t·
COUNTY,
OHIO:
Current Owner'a Rutland
VIllage the Commissioners'
Crulae, 78,000 miiH.
DEBT CONSOLIDATIQNI
Nama:
Oonold reeldents
Everyone
are office .
$4200. (7401388-0334
$2000·$200,000
In purouanca of an Guthrie and Brenda encouraged to attend Interested In attending
97 OldomoDIIe Sllhoue«e
No AppllcatK&gt;n Foeo Save $$$$$
Order of Sale to rna J. Guthrie
thl1 meeting to voice these vlewlngs and
GL, 40,000 mlleo, $11,500.
Eliminate High Interest
dlr•cted from 11ld
APPRAISED
AT:
their Idees on thla httarlngs are welcome
(740)441·3000
(days),
Non-Profii.Csll Now
.Courlln the a bove
to attend .
matter.
(740)448·2252 (ovanlnga)
$35,000.00
1·881-88t-DEBT (332Bl••• 201
antlllod action, I will
(2) 19, 26
(2) 18,26
Tarm1
of
Sele:
,If
Star Auto Sales, acron
-_!1~~~!!!!!!!!!!~!___ expo·• • to aale at purch..od by • party
tram bank In Racine, Ohio,
public auction to be
other than plolntllf,
affordable used cars and
OVERNIGHT In
held on n tho Front
the llrol mortgage
trucka. 74Q.949-2451
Slapo of lhtl_ Mtllgo
. Lqano P""'lcled
Bank of Rehoboth Beach,
County Courthouaa holder. Ten percent
IMetmbor FDIC . Equal o~:;:';;!l on Thurodoy Morch (1 0%) down · at the
time tha bid 11
lower inte 11st. Nonprofit,
Call Advanae Nowl '
21, 2002, at' 10:30
eccapta d. Bolanca to
::,~:~~~:;,ed:, bondad. cau t·BOQ.B47·8192
a.m. ·Of Hid day, tha be paid within thirty
·following da1crlbad
1985 Chevrolet Truclc. KtO,
(305 daya. Any aum
premlua:
4x4 short bed, Ritbullt
not pold within 11ld
S&lt;TUATE
In
tha
GM350. (740)379·9256
VIII11Je of Mlddloport, thlf1y (30) day• ehell
County of Malg1 end bear lntere11 at tlie
1986 GMC 1 Ton Crew Cab
rota of ton per cant
Dually 8.2 Dleatl, $3200
Slltta of Ohio:
0110. (7&gt;10)446-3541
33 Feat Front&lt;ng on (10%) par annum
Saeond Straat of tha from tho data of 1111.
88·81 a-Pu. 350 V·8 Bored
VIllage of Mlekilapof1, RALPH TRUSSELL,
f!!} over RoJor Com. 7~D
tEL Brook ~rb .. MSD
Baing .Pne•fouf1h of · Sheriff
~ion, Headlra TurbO
X·
Lot No. 10 pun:haHd . Malga County, Ohio
!hluot, Trilotlon Bara. Tanby L.C. Davia from
noau oover, new urn and
CARUSLE,
Jannla
Haya1,
whOIII, Groat lntorlor, Naw
Chorlal Gaiger ond McNELLIE, RINI ,
•Paint ' Job. Vory Nice Truck
Et11 Galg.,, 1111 uma KRAMER l ULRICH
. 14,000. Pt.. (304)B7W10t
being the eouthweat. CO., L.P.A.
quortar of ao(d Lot BY: Harbert J , Kromer
~or sa~ n GMC s.te Sl·
10. Sold ona•lourth (0020342)
P~e, Rod. ·Auto,
beginning ot tha Anomoy for Plolntllf
R
r, Q9od Conctl·
Chlgrln
northweat corner of 25200
lion, S1
. 8Hortt " tha
Cr1n1
Lot Boulavord, Sullo 240
PU· Bluo, Ext. Call, 4 oyt, 5
Speed, 1 Ooad' Condlflon,
running porallol wllh Clavalond, Ohio.
$2000. Call. (140)446-4814
tha aama about 18 44122
or. (740)448-3248 - &amp;pm.
(304)675·5724.

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The
ily Sentinel
992-2155

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·· PUBLIC
NOTICES

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picked up auards J-nY McKinney &amp;om
lhe Qewland BIUWIII and Man Camp.
bell &amp;om rhe ~n Redlkirls ilnd
taclde Ryan Schau from Philadelphia.
Glenn and Coleman, both 'I'exan,
terms of ability and experience," Capen retlll'l1ill(l home, were exciced, about
said. "You haw to expect a lot of leader- being ehoten.
ship out of lhese guys. They will have a
"I think we haw a pretty~ chance
lot to say wid! how quickly we can come of being competitive," &lt;!&amp;Ieman said.
• L - as a team."
I&lt;JileuXT
"You~~ be competi!M in tbia Ieaaue
Boselli was !he fint p~ choten by ifyou don't have two good cornerbacks."
the expansion Jaguars in the t 995 draft
Lewis, a top kick returner, and lineand quickly·became a dominant offensive
backer Jamie Sharper came to the Texans

Feb.19,2002

••• ,...s

lineman.
"We have a ~ of Famer and we
haven't played a game," general manager
.
Charley Ca5serly said.
Texans fans, we.aring blue-and-red jerseys and helmets with bulls' horns,
cheered the choice· of Boselli, who
missed most of last season with a shoulder injury that makes him something of
a question mark.
" I've been with a group of guys that no
one thought could play before," Boselli
said. "The sooner this team comes
together and becomes cohesive, the
sooner we can be good."
The first eight choices came from just
three teams- the Jaguars, the New York
Jets and Baltimore, aU of whom have serious cap problems.
"Obviously, Charley knew the teams in
cap tro\lble - us, Baltimore and Jacksonville;' said Terry Bradway, general
manager of the Jets.
For their offensive line, the Texans also

from the Ravem.
The Texans are expected to make Fresno Sbte quarterback David Cart the first
pick in the coUege draft in April. In the
17th round, they chose quarterback
Danny Wuerffel from the Chicago Bean.
The Texans also have signed free agent
quarterback Mike Quinn.
Wuerffel has been a third-stringer for
most of his career, meaning Carr will
have to learn quickly. That was one reason the Texam concentrated on quality
offensive linemen - or, beyond Boselli
and Young, what passes for quality in an
exp.ansion draft.
Walker played at Jacksonville for
Capers, who was the Jaguan' defensive
coordinator.
·
.
Walker is the only link aniong Monday's selections to the former Houston
Oilers, who left after the 1996 season for
Tennessee. Walker played two seasons in
Houston and two more with the Titans.

NBA Cro ..word Puule
Hill '~

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Slor ·'9 r

MAl.YKAY

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In~·

Beauty

3m7 St ltL 7 NO!Jb • Pomeroy, OH 45720

and
brains

l!quiM12
1ft .................~....- ....•.oa.to
12%lwlltHallttlecl~.......,_ SUOIIO

.suuo

llrldl21% dog food ;_ ....
..., 1ft llocll fwd ..... $1.75110

BISSELL

BUilDERS IIIC.

New Homes • V;pyl
Siding • New G11111ges
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COIUIElCIAI. anolllliDIJOW.
FREE ESTIMATES

~7 Beedlst

middleport, OH
(11'110' 610'1120')

gg2-3194
992-6635 '

DIPOYIII
Plltl·

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts

Champs

••=·-.., ,=n

-·-.---

740-992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

..,,

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Marauders

young kids out of top seven · players,
Doug Dill and 'JY Ault stepped up and
played well when they were in."
Page 5
Wolfe had liCtle praise for his teanu
defensive effort saying "We didn't guard
nected on a three-point play to give anybody, that was the worst defensive
Mei~ a 39-25 lead in the early stages of effort, but it is stiU a win.
quarter number three. The Panthers
"We now have a tough game coming
switched to a full court press that up and hopefully we will rise to the
seemed to give Meigs some trouble and occasion," he added.
were able to cut the deficit back to ren
Williamson led a balanced Marauder
points. A quick time out by Coach attack with 17 points; Frazier patched
Wolfe seemed to settle the young 15 with Fackler scoring 13 and Ault
Marauder team down as they scored adding II. Ryan Hannan scored six
seven points in the next 63 seconds to with Dill tossing in five and Brandon
build a 46-29 margin.
Ramsburg adding two and David Boyd
Ault sbrted the run with Williamson one.
chipping in the next bucket and Fackler
Kyle O'Hare led the Panthers with 19
added the exclamation point with a while Nathan Wollenburg scored 15 for
three-point hoop to give Meigs 17 New Lexington.
points worth of breathing room. New
Williamson. pulled in seven rebounds
.. Lexington coach Jerry Bankes then · . with Ault and Prazie~ grabbing siX each.
called a timeout of his own and his team The Marauders pulled in 28 rebounds as
responded, going on an 8-2 run to end a team. · Fackle~ recorded five of the six
the period and enter the final quarter Marauder assists and notGhed three of
within striking distance of the Maraud- the seven Meigs steals:
.
ers .
New Lexington pulled down 26
The Marauders were at the free throw rebounds led by Wollenburg and Ryan
line most of the fourth period. Meigs Sidwel with 7 each.
fired up 23 free throws in the period
So, for the second time this season the
including 2! in the last 2:41 of the Marauders will face GaUiaAcademy.The
game. :rhe maroon and gold struggled two teams met on December 28th at
somewhat from the IS-foot mark con- Meigs High Sch9ol with ·the Blue Devils prevailing by six points over what was
necting on 12 of their 23 attempts.
' New Lexington . in the meantime at the time a winless Meigs team. The
would not go away, as the Panthers were Marauders played one of their best
able to close the gap to as little as seven games of the year in that contest, leadpoints during the. final period. But it ing much of the first half.
was the Marauders who would not fold
Tip-off is set for 6:15 Wednesday
and held on to grab the 70-61 victory night.
and advance to round two of tournaII McArthur
. ment play.
Dlvlolon ft _ _, " " ' " 15
13
24
81
"We jmt missed to many shots inside New Lex 9
"'aiga
19
17
12
22
70
and the rebounding hurt \Is;' coach NEW LEXINGTON - Kyle O'Hare. 8 6-8 19: Ouotln
Aadlnglon 2 Q.O 5: Nathan Wot-rg 5 4-5 15; Jakt
Bankes said after the loss. "That has been Stewart
2 Q.O 5; Ryan stdwel 2 1·2 5; Orww Connon 2
the story of our season tho11gh, we just Q.O 4; Travis Ughtfoot 3 2-4 8. TOTALS: 2212·17 81.
.J.. Man .Willlamoon 7 1'2 17; l\' Aull 3 5-9 11;
can't seem to get anything going in the Ml!llli
Ryan FraziO&lt; 5 4·5 15; Buzz Faol&lt;ler 3 5-7 13; Ryan .
first quarter, and that was the case Hanf11!n 3 0.1 6; Zaeh Bush p; Doug 01112 0.0 5; CaviO
Boyd 0 1-2 1; Brandon Ramlll&gt;urg D 2·2 2: Carl Wolfe o
tonight," he added.
0-2 O; Jeremy Roush 0. TOTALI: 23 17·30 70
Coach Carl Wolfe of Meigs said of his THREI·POIHT GOALI - Now lax 5 (O'Hare 2,
Addington, UghWoot, Wollanburg), Moigl 8 (WIIteams effort, "We were playing with six 2,
Fadder 2, Frazier, DIN).
'

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Wolfe Home

maintenance
(740) 949-1!!21

114 Hl&amp;h Strm
Pom.-oy,OH 45769

Advertise

In this space
for
525 per month

F~ 1!1111111101

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IJbl.
l'w · l'ua

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(740) 992•1705

~nllli

ndAve.
Oh
Tonia Reiber
Ucensed Massage
Therapist

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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141 ltHkl111

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34 OcNn
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35 "Kon-Tlld"
place
28
Ctlft
5 Singer Tori · 29
31 Loll
6 Wire
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lead: 9 2

Konrad Lor~nz, an
Austrian animal l&gt;~­
haviorist (etholo~ist)
who dic•l in 19fi 1J,
w rotc, "It i~ a good
1norning exerdsc tOr a
research ·scientist to
discard a pet hypothesis every day before
breakfast. It k~eps him

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Today. over breaklook at the West
hand. Against four
spadeS: you ·lead your
singk·tun ht·a rt. Portncr wins with the
jack, lhen cashes the
.heart act•. How do
you plan the defcnsl'?
In pMtirular, what
wilt you discard?
At f:tvoral&gt;l~ vulnerability. you arc· allowed some llexibility
with your pre-empts,
espcdally in first or
third position. (In S&lt;'rOJH.I !\Cat, vuu should
L
k"
h ave a li tcxtuoo
hand because you
have alre"dy got past
one oppon~"'t and
as likely to be upsetting your partner as
the opponent•.)
North makt·s a
takeout double, "nd
South jumps to game
with his good fivecard suit and · 12
working points. lle-·
member, South must
bid even with no
points (unkss he has
sutlil"it·nt in dubs to
pass, co nverting the
takeout double into a
P&lt;'nalry double). So,
Wt.tll de,·cnt values, he
"'
mak~s a jump bid.
It loa ks as though
you. (W ~st) will make
two discards on the
arc and king of hearts.
This should point you
in tht• right direction.
Throw first the diamund eight, then the
diamond three: hi "..hlow with a tloubleton.
If partn~r is paying attention, he will shifi:
to a diamond, whicl~
you will ruff to defeat
tlw contr~u.:t -- :md to
keep you both young!
Note that if partner
pl.tys a fourth heart at
trick four, hoping either to establish a
trump trick fi,. you or
to have you ruff away
dummy'• heart queen,
declarer cruises home.
He . rutr, high, tlnnvs
trumps, and claims.

___ ...
: BARNEY

Tree Service·
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump &amp;rinding
• Bucket Truck

Goo'D GRAVY!! WMY

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUaJON

DO WIMMIN C~Y Ai
TI-t' D~OP 0"1= A

HAT?!

•New Home(
·Ge~·

•Comprete
R8modellng

·:

Stop a Compare
FREE ESTiifATES
740-992·1871

TI'N

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'100 1-\C."~ ::ci'N:.TKtl'l&amp;, DOC..?

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Same As Cash Available

morris
Equipment

~taus.

104 Fifth Streel, Racine, Ohio

New Homes, Floom Addltlone,
Oarag.., Pole Bulldlnge, Root.,
Siding, Decks, Kltchene, Drywall
·
lc Mora

.FREE ESTIMATES!

740.742-3411

9-

Steve's Truck
Accessories
stew .11. White, OWner
at Zeoli's RV

WEST SHADE
BAR,ERSHOP
CIGIW J,.._ ~ Jbt,
Feb. lot

·&amp; days Manih ht
Sorry for Y,urlnconv.

(740) 892·5822

985-3616 Chris ·

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Sf.iE~S CUTE, ISN'T Sf.IE?
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CUTE ISN'T EVERVTI-IIN6,
CIIARLIE BROWN ...

I FALL IN LOVE WITH
ANV 61RL WlolO SMELLS
LIKE LIBRARV PASTE ..

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FEBRUARY19I

'URUKF

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XUBUKRUB

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CUiXF'B
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Every man has a lew mental h~lr
shirts and ... presldenls diller only by their larger wardrobe. •

Herbert Hoover

wan
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scrambled wards

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Two gold diggers were standing outside a very exclusive club.
One gnnned to another: "Knowledge is power, if you know it about
the right·· • · ·.I"

I--ri-TI-,lsr-TI-lllgrlIe
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Complete the' chuckle ouoled
by filling in the missing words

you dovelop lrom stop No. 3 beiow .

&amp; PR INT
NUMBERED LETTERS
THESE SQUI\RES

IN

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LE!TERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM.J.ETS ANSWERS
Length - Viper· Motif· Injure ·JOIN IT
Candidate to voter: "Our government is filled with
greed, corruptio~ and wastefulness! " Voter: 'You want
to fight it?" Candtdate: "Heel&lt; no! I want to JOIN IT!"

------lc
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;{h.:;hJ. .md )'ml might be
unc of tho5c lm.:kv. t.Hli.'S
"whtl'll h.wc m;my ~-h ,111J.[C~

~'ert:1ining lo :t fin :l.m:ial ~itl.l,l­
timt in,·oh-in~ yn ur wmk nr
cart'er. A ,,rtuunti(ln could be
in it for you .

GEMINI (M ay 21-Junc

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th.•t cuu\Wt into \'ktorit.•s.

I'ISCES (hh. 211-M.orch 20)
-- A \'t.•ibl 111.1tc1.'r th.tt is o11:.

ti.·l.'tlllJ.! oth~.·r r:nnil~- lllt.'lllht•rli
.u Wt'll as vom~df c.·an ht.• rt.· -·
snh-cd. 1 -h~w~.o·n..•r. it rnay he:

Ral'enswood, WV

~(304~
882·2342

IT IS.
61 NA!
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PEANUTS

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31345 Noble Summit
Rd. Middlepon, Ohio

Bill's Tire
Shop

Complete exbluot
IJittm, oomputer
IUIIJUIIIIIIB, &lt;OIIIplller
blloact. lllodll &amp;
lllrull, radlallll' aew &amp;&lt;
repair, do rod.!, ball
Jol•ll, tto.

740-992-7136

Bedllners •Nerf Bar ·
Tue, Frll~S:OO p.m.
• Thnneue Cover
SaL 8:30 • 12:00
• Ventvlsor • Bug
Georae K. Vac. ·
Sbleld &amp; Full Uno
Feli. l·fd•n:h 1 ·
of Other Accessories
Shop will be rea houn

740-992-5232

(304) 273·3271
We'ye added to

GOOD
GRADE.

.•

SVRE!

Lose 2-llbs.
Mill week

Open

Advertise in ~~~
this space for High&amp; Dry
Self·Storage
.$100 per
33795 HilllnJ RJ.
POIIUI'iiJ. Obw
month

New Haven, WV
•Residential
•Commercial

IS P., VEl&gt;.'(

HERBIIUFE
IDDfPEDDfOT
DISTRIBUTOR ·

• Good selection ol new &amp; used dns
~ ou ehauge $18.95·
We &amp;tact all majot brands

Forme~y

,., 'IP!,.. '10

•'
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vau. ,.. sllould lie

Owner

loiOTHINC.
WRONIO WITH

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Mike HW

THERE'S

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If !1011' weight Is

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(740) 949-1521
Financing &amp; 90 Days

'

'if.:) ... IT SOU~DS UKE. YOO
, f\1&gt;\D G\tU FOR Wt-10\ !

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Pd. I Mo.

by Luis Cempoe
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are createcl fro(Tl quotations by 1amou1
people, past anc1 present. Eadl iener in the cipher stande tor another:
Today's clue: K equals R

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t THE BORN LOSER

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·1-877-466-1234

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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17

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Servin&amp; Ohio IIIII W. V.
wv fo!l712

Owaer: 'hrry Lonna
(740) 992~0739

742-2455

.AKJJI
t I IJ 2

KJICIIJI. •

·Remodeling,
Drywall, and
Additions

Repairs 6 Parts
on 111 Qllkes of
ftnn Equip.
and Dozers

••

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Roofing, Decks

BryanRHv"

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL .
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
FTN Estimates
&amp;-1405 TFN

c-

~=7=40=·~9=92=·~28~0=2::!·1,;2i:I~3~N;I·~Seco~
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Sunset Home
Construction

(740) 992·3470

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L\l\1\I'S

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1111,• Walb

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PHILLIP
ALDIR

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COIICil1f./II.O

.. Cleek
... Paige

Crumbela

Dealers
won the bronze. The U.S. team finished
/(}()()St. Rt. 7 South
11th and hasn't won ~ ski jumping
Coolville, OH 45723
medal since 1924.
740-667-0363
faomPage5
FREESTYLE SKIING: Anyone
who saw the last Olympics knows what
a beautiful country Australia is, from Iustie with Czech Republic on Monday.
Instead of being upset by his team's cious beaches to wide waterways. So
mediocre results (1-1-1, third place in its what are the folks from Down Under
group), Gretzky went after rhe ream's doing winning gold medals here?
critics, induding "the Americans."While . Freestyle aerialist Alisa Camplin won
he was at it, he suggested that a hard hit the nation's second Winter Games gold
in Monday's game might lead to retri- just two days after short track speedbution in an NHL game next week.
skater Steven Bradbury got the first.
The United States beat Belarus 8-1
"Skiing in Australia isn't what it's like
for one of the top seeds 'in the quarter- in North America," she said. "h's a short,
finals and Sweden continued its surpris- · action-packed season. and we don't all
ing run with a 7-1 victory over Ger- get down the mounbin ~ gracefuUy as
many for the other top seed. They'll face they do over here. You see a lot of footthe bottom seeds on Wednesday, with baU teams out there. It's a little crary."
the Americans getting Germany and the
Canada's Veronica Brenner took silver
Swedes facing Belarus.
and teammate Deidra Dionne won
Canada will play Finland and the bronze.
CURLING: The U.S. women's curl- .
Russians bke on the Czechs.
SKI JUMPING: Martin Schmitt was ing team beat Norway on Monday and ·
hoping his new set of skis wo11ld make is headed to the semifinals along with
him soar.
Canac:!;l '~ and Switzerland. The fourth
"But there was a little dust and I did- team was to be determined Thesday
n't get to go as far as I wanted to," through a tiebreaker involving Sweden,
Schmitt said.
B'ritain and Germany.
He hesibted before looking at his
The semifinals begin Wednesday with
score. Once he peeked, he liked what he the Americans facing the Swjss and the
saw: Germany won the team j11mping tiebreak winner getting Canada.
The prelim,inary round of the men's
competition, albeit by the slimmest
margin in Olympic history.
tournament wrapped up with victories
"We're happy with silver;• said Fin- by Canada, Norway and Switzerland
land's Janne Ahonen. "But how it hap- . and a loss by Sweden, the four teams
pened is not so nice."
that will be advancing to the semifinals.
Interior &amp; Exterior
Slovenia, appearing in its third In a match between eliminated teams,
Free estimates:
Olympics as an independent nation, . Britain beat the United States 7-6.
, Insured
'•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 9

•

up to you to in~pin• L'n·rrdnc

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tu..da~Feb.11,~

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Redwomen advance in AMC toumey, B1
4,

Jayhawks dismantle Iowa State, 102-66; Toledo wins:
LAWRENGE, Kan. (AP) - The
•
top-ranked Kansas Jayhawks took
scisson in hand and approached the
nets with surgical care.
Their t 02-66 victory over Iowa
State on Monday night, in their first
·
game since replacing Duke atop the
.
poll,
actually
chnched only a tie fonhe Big 12 title
with three games to go.
·
But their next game is on the road
at Nebraska, and well, they didn't
·want to miss the ceremonial net-cutting altogether.
So in deference to their remaining
opponents, they carefully left a few
strings hanging.
"We thought about (whether to
cut down the nets) a great deal," said
coach Roy Williams; who pulled his
starters otrthe court with about six
minutes to go.
" We just got part of the conference
championship. We didn't want to
show any disrespect to Nebraska,
Kansas State and Missouri. Hopefully, they'll see it that way.
"But you're supposed to enjoy college basketball:'
Kansas (24-2, 13-0 Big 12), three
wins away from the fint perfect conference season in the Big 12, got a
combined 34 points from Drew
Gooden, Nick Collison and Wayne
Stmien en route to a 49-25 halftime
lead.
Gooden finished with 26 points,
Collison with 16 and Simien with
15.
"This is a great experience for
me," said Simien, a muscular 6-foot9 freshman. "I wanted to do this the
minute I came here and we really
wanted to do it for the seniors. It's FIRE AWAY - Kansas forward Drew Gooden (0) puts a shot up over the
always great to win it the way we head of Iowa St. forward Tyray Pearson (34) during the first half Monday at
did."
Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kan. (AP)
In just a few unforgettable hours, .
·
ang
out
his
superstars
and
putt!n.g
in (92 ·4) . an d fi1eId -goaJ percentage
the ay hawks became No. 1 in the
J
country, played one of their best his stan because this could have been (51.6). hit 63 percent (45-of-72) and
150," Eustacby _said. "They are a real, cracked the 100-pol.nt mark "cor the
games o f the season an d cut down
.
h
real solid team and as well coached as ninth tim e th.IS season w h'l1 e wmnmg
· ·
th e nets as B1g
12 c ampions.
"I don't think 1 could b e any
' h ap- any team that I have seen in a long their 12th in a row. It was Mon~cy
ua
night's only game involving a Top 25
pier," said Gooden, who fell one time."
rebound shy ofhis 20th double-douGooden, who scored a season-low team.
ble. "This is really wonderful."
11 points the previous game against . Early in the second half, Iowa State
Iowa State (11-16, 3-10), the two- Baylor while battling the flu , wa&lt; 8- went almost six minutes without a
time defending Big 12 champion, of-9 in the first half and got a put- field goal as the Jayhawks unleashed a
dropped to 0-9 on the road while back on his lone miss.
14-0 run and brought a constant roar
sutrering coach Larry Eustachy's
Th~. Big 12's scoring and rebound- from the sellout crowd 1 of 16,300
~ost lopsided loss ever. Eustachy is mg leader made dunks, tip-ins, feath- .while seizing a 66-34 lead. •
"They were ! unbelievable," Iowa
vartually guaranteed his first losing ery ·follow shots and · fallaway
season in 13 years as a head coach.
jumpers.
.
' St~te's Jake Sullivan said. "Drew and
"I told Roy I appreciate him takThe Jayhawks, who came intc;&gt; the Nick were re?lly on their game."
game leading the nation in scoring
Iowa States Omar Bynum, who

NCAA

·I

I

h

·
·
.
ad made 15 ofh1s previous 16 shots
commg m, was 4-for-4 before .finally
~smg. He fimshed 5-of-7 for 13
pomts. Sulhvan had 14 for the
Cyclones, and Shane Power and jared
.Homan each had 11..
Toledo 66, Bowling Green 62
TOLEDO, Oh1o (AP) -. Rica~o
Thomas scored 14 pom~, mcludmg
two free throws m overtime to put
Toledo ahead, and the Rockets held
on for a 66-62 victo':Y over Bowling
Green on Monday mght.
The Falcons had to play the final
1:18 without their best player, Keith
McLeod, who fouled out when he
buinped Thomas on the drive.
Thomas made both free throws to
give the Rockets (10-13, 7-7 MidAmencan Conference) a 63-62 lead.
After Bowling Green (19-6, 9-5)
threw the ball away on its next pQssession, Thomas hit a IS-foot fadeaway jumper over two defenden to
put Toledo up three with 43.4 seconds left.
The Falcons then missed a 3pointer, and Terry Reynolds hit
of two free throws for the Rockets
with 27.2 seconds remaining.
Bowling Green didn~t score over
the final 2:21 of overtime.
Len Matela and McLeod had 14
points apiece for the Falcons, who
have lost four of their last five against
Toledo.
.·
Reynolds, who scored 15 points,
sent the game to overtime tied at 59
on a driving layup with 8.7 seconds
left in regulation. McLeod had given
the .falcons a 59-57 lead with a 3pointer from the top of the arc with
16.6 seconds to go.
Detroit 63, Youngstown St. 52
DETROIT (AP) _ Greg Grays
and Terrell Riggs each scored 16
points Monday night to lead Detrol.t
to a 63-52 win over Youn&lt;&gt;&lt;town
State.
.,.
Marc Mazur added 11 points and a
career-high !7 rebounds and Willie
G reen a] so scored II points· for the
Titans (16-11, 1O-S Horizon
League) .
The Penguins, who lost their !Jth
straight game, were led by Ryan Patton, who scored 19 points. Bill
Mallernee and TeJay Anderson added·
eight points apiece.
Youngstown State (3 _22, 1_14) led
40-38 with !0: 45 left but were done
in by a 15_2 Titans' run over the next
4: 21 sparked by Green's three-point
play.

o~e

,·
:
1\vo straight 3-pointen by Grays:
and Darius Belin helped increase,
Detroit's lead to 53-42.
,
Youngstown State shot 46 percenl
(11-of-24) in.the tint halffor a 31-2Sl
halftime lead,' but was only 7-of-3~
(23 percent) fiom the field m the sec:
ond h~
..
;
Detroit, which outrebounded the
Pengwns 45-34, shot 25-of-62 (4~
percent).
!
. Heidelberg ?3, Wilmington 59;_
TIFFIN, Oh1o (AP) - Lucat
Messer scored 21 points and RudY
Wolf added 20 as Heidelberg be~
Wilmington 73-5.9 Monday night in
the first round of the Ohio Confer-'
ence tournament.
Paul Meyer added 13 points oft" the
bench for the 'Berg (10-16), whQ.
will play top-seeded Otterbein in thi.
quarterfinals on Wednesday night. :;
Deon Short scored 17 points, Greij
Liggens had 14 . points and 10
rebounds and James Mason had 11
points' for Wilmington. The
ended their season at 6-19.
:
Wolf scored eight straight points
start an 11-3 run th.at gave Heidel~
berg a 30-23 lead at the hal£ H~
made consecutive 3-pointers and a
jumper, then assisted on Messer's 3pointer with eight seconds left.
.
The 'Berg's lead never dip~cJ
below five points in the second hal£ .
Baldwin-Wallace 77,
•
Muskingum 66
NEW CONCORD, Ohio (AP)
- Shawn McCormick had 22 points
to lead Baldwin-Wallace to a 77-66
win over Muskingum on Monday·
night in the first round of the Ohio
Conference tournament.
McCormick shot 9-for-12 from
the field, including 2-of-3 on 3pointers, and made both free thro~
attempts. Thad Davis had 18 points,
J on C arro ll scored 14 and Craig
Budziak added 11 for the Yellow
Jackets (7 "'18) ·
·
J ustm
· c1·alliOrd score d 22 points on
seven 3 - pot'nters to lead the Mus k'tes
(1 0-16). Eric Sheck.scor~d t 5 points
and Clift" Sprang added 11.
· ·
Baldwin-Wallace shot 56 per..;,
~ent form the field (30-of-54);
mcludang 50 percent from behind
the arc, compared ~he 40 percent
(24-of- 60) ' shootmg for the
.Musk1es. The Yello~ Jackets also
outre bounded Muskmgum 38-20:
The Yellow Jackets advance to
play at Capital (21-4) on Wednesday.

The Charlotte Hornets waited three months to get Jamal
Mashburn back in the lineup. It
took him just 12 minutes to
remind them what they were
nussmg.
Mashburn scored 12 of his
22 points in the first quarter,
leading Charlotte past the Milwaukee
Bucks 101-92
Monday
night in his
first appearance since sitting
out 42 games with a lower
abdominal strain.

NBA

"I've said so many times, you
don't know what you miss
until the guy comes back and
gives you this kind of production," Hornets coach Paul Silas
said. "He came back just at the
right time."
Mashburn, the team's leading
scorer last season, was placed
on the injured list Nov. 20 after
he hurt himself trying to pivot
during practice. He was averaging 18 points, 6.8 rebounds and
3.9 assists.
Finally back in uniform
Monday night, the 6-foot-8
forward was in top form right
from the tip. He played 44
minutes and helped the Hornets grab the ·lead for good
early in the second quarter.
"I didn't have much rust,"
Mashburn said. "One thing
about this injury, I was able to
do some type of conditioning,
even though it wasn't basketball conditioning."
~ Ray Allen led Milwaukee
with 27 points.
Only six playen scored for
the Hornets, but all reached
double figures. Elden Ca.mpbell
led the way with 24 points, and
Baron Davis had 20.
The Bucks were without
point guard Sam Cassell, sidelined with a sprained toe for
.the third time in four 'gamesall losses.
Rockets 102, Wizards 89
Cuttino Mobley had . 31
I

I

points, and Steve Francis, questionable before tipotr with a
migraine, scored 16 of his 20
points in the second half for
Houston.
..Michael Jordan had 11
points and 11 assists one day
after his 39th birthday for the
Wizards, who had won four
straight at home and six of
eight overall. fluid buildup in
his right knee will keep Jordan
out ofWednesday night's game
at Detroit.
76ers 110, Nuggets 83
. Allen Iverson had 27 points,
mne rebounds and eight assistS,
and Dikembe Mutombo added
20 points on 9-for-9 shooting
for host Philadelphia.
Jazz 103, Cavaliers 92
Karl Malone scored 23 of his
35 points in the second half as
Utah won its fifth straight and
i111proved to 5-2 on its ninegame road trip forced by the
Olympics.
Malone shotr11-of_24 from
the field and made 13 of 16
free throws. He helped force
three Cleveland players _
Zydrunas llgavskas, Chris
Mihm and Tyrone Hill - to
foul out.
Lamond Murray scored 25
points to lead the Cavaliers,
who had a four-game winning
streak snapped.

FROM THE PROS Is IN ...

The host Pistons (29- 22)
have won three straight and
nine of 11 to move seven
games over .500 for the first
time since they were 14-7.
Heat 102, Bulls 80
Alonzo Mourning scored 23
points, and Miami won for the
13th time in 17 games.
With trade rumors swirling,
the visiting Ilulls dressed only
eight players, holding forward
Ron Artest and center Brad
Miller out of the game and
leaving injured forward Charles
Oakley at home.
Reports have linked all three

WE'RE WAITING ONYOUR INPUT.

~~~~~~~

DEATH AND

OUR REPORT CARD

help surging Detroit beat
injury-depleted Toronto.

to a possible six-player deal ·
with Indiana. The NBA trade
deadline is Thursday.
Trail Blazers 80,
,
Clippers 79
Damon Stoudamire's ju~nper .
with 3.2 seconds remaining
lifted visiting Portland to its
13th win in 18 games.
Michael Olowokandi had 15
points and 15 rebounds_for the
Clippers, who have lost 18 of .
~2 against the Blazers.

I

.

lO .DANTAX liGHTEN

INCOME TAX bV DANTAX
IS THE RIIHT CHOICE'

Spotlight: otiJs Bicentennial

School board
ponders new
Portland building
stipulations

Weather
Hlp: 40s, Low: 40s
Details, Al

BY ToNY M. LEAcH

at Capitol Hill as
among the best ·
new courses ;n
America.
c,!j.tlftr.'la::tilt
readers gave THE

PRA TTVILL£,

AI..ABAM'A

NEW YORK (AP)
Concerns over a widening
· BICENTENNIAL BELL PULL- Wilma Parker, _left, and Margaret Parker of the Meigs County-Ohio
congressional investigation
Bicentennial Committee display a· commemorative bell pull featuring pictures of eight historic
of En ron ·further soured
places In Meigs County. The bell pull, designed to raise awareness of Ohio's 200th birthday
the market's mood Tuesday
will be spld to finance bicentennial projects. (Sentinel staff)
'
and sent stocks tumblin.g.
The selloff pulled the
Dow Jones industrials.
down more than 150
points and sent the Nasdaq
composite index to its
lowest close this year.
The · mar~et · bas now ·
-grvrn"b-;.c'k" neaflY&gt;'"';j_l its
gains from this month's big
Ohio · Bicentennial Commis- 2003, for the Meigs 'County
BY CHAIUNE Holr:uCH
rally.
Analysts
said
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM sion, and local officials to fur- bicentennial homecoming to
investors, doubtful that the
be held on the Rock Springs
POMEROY . With th~r plans.
economic recovery will be
Ohio's 200th birthday just a
The
Cincinnati·based Fairgrounds.
as quick and strong as
Tentative plans call for an
year away, the Meigs County- Verdin Co., the world's oldest
hoped, didn't want to risk
old-fa.&lt;hioned
bean dinner to
Ohio Bicentennial Commit- and largest bell company, will
losing profits as the Enron
tee is moving into high gear be creating the bronze bell be. served, with folk dancing,
fallout continues.
on planning activities imd over a two day period from a costumed events and enterThe Dow closed down
events for the observance.·
40-foot trailer "foundry on tainment representative of the
157.90, or 1.6 percent, at
countries from which the setMeeting this week the com- wheels."
9,745.14, the lowest finish
Meigs County
mittee discussed the .April 1
Once completed it will be tlers of
since Feb. 7, · whe\ the
planning meeting for the dedicated and rung for the migrated. Schools and youth
index closed at 9,62 .44.
groups, such as 4-H members,
. The technology- . ased ' _commemorative bell · casting tint time on Sept. 28 and then scouts and church organizawhich will take place on the left.witb the county to decide
Nasdaq tumbled 54.59';0))
tions are being encouraged to
Pomeroy parking lot during where the 250-pound, two3 percent, to I, 750.61, it!!'
participate.
worst showing since Nov. · the Sternwheel Riverfest, foot high bell, personalized
Displayed at •the meeting by
with the county name, the
Sept.27-28.
,
2 when it fell to 1,745.73.
1
Margaret Parker, was a sample
Representatives of the local forging date, the Great Seal of
The Standard &amp; Poor's
commemorative bell pull crebicentennial committee will Ohio, and the . Bicentennial ated · by Ty Mawr in needle500 index lost 20.84, or
' meet with Nicola Moretti, logo.
1.9 percent, to 1,083.34.
Please see Bell, AJ
The committee set May 10,
southeast coordinator for the

Plans for Bicentennial·

di$Q.~Mcd .!dmeeting

.
r.
• r. • •
.
.
~ UDGE at Capitol
I !til a" out ol '-1 r.llmg. A G.1(( &lt;1faga::me ranked Grand
National in Auburn/Opelika and Cimbrian Ridge in
Crcpnvillc as among th·e Top 100 Courses in Americ~
A G'.•(l D(&lt;!'·'' named
the Trail as one of
the Top &amp;0 Trips in
I he woriJ. A Come
see lor you·r self.why

l·lr•t'""' Fl,wr ,1[,,,9,,_

Pick 4: 3-9-1-7
Buckeye 5: 7-14·27-31-34
Pick J day: 9·1-8
Pick 4 day: 3·6-8-7

W.VA.
Pally J: 0-{)-8

DailY 4: 3-8-4-5
cash 15:2-8-10-12-19-24

Index
GRAND NATIONAL
"Au•uttNionL.IKA ,
A~eAMO'\

"im· listcJ the To·ail as
one of I he Top I 0
Trips in the Wor·ld I

ALABAMA'S

. RO..BERT
(J()LF

1.600.949.4444
w r~w. rtjgolfrom

New deer regulations proposed

OHIO
Pick J: 5-6-0

2 Section• - 12 ......

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C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co,

properties were sold at any
time in the future, 40 perPORTLAND-. The fate cent of the proceeds would
of Portland Elementary go back to the school discould be decided as soon as trict.
next week.
Under the new revisio n,
Meigs County Commis- the time of sale was reduced
sioner Jim Sheets said Tues- to 7 5 years an d the district's
day the county has accepted proceeds would be based on
an offer by the Southern the appraised value at the
Local Iloard of Education time of the con tract signing.
for th e school's transfer ·of
The contra ct reads:
ownership. But before final- · • If the commissioners
izi.ng the deal, two stipula- sell th e property on or
tions must be approved by before Jan . 31, 2012, the
the board during its regular board shall be entitled to 60
meeting on ·Monday.
percent of the proceeds;
During last month's meet• If th e commissioners
ing, the board revised its ~II the property on or
options for the potential before Jan. 31, 2027, the
transfer of Portland Elemen- board receives 50 per~ent of
tary and Syracuse Elemen- the proceeds;
·
tary (see related story) .
• If the commissioners
The board's original otfer, sell the property before Jan.
turned down by both the 31, 2077, the board will colcommissioners and Village of lect 40 percent of the proSyracuse re spectively, pro- ceeds.
vided that if any of the
buildings or surrounding Please sH Portland, AJ
TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Dow slips
150 points

Lotteries

THE LEGISLATOR
CAPITOL HILL

SOUTHERN LOCAL

Portland Elementary Sc:hool

Gd/j DigtJI Lis ted

YOUR lOAD
COMPmRIZED BDURIIS IND EUmOIIIO RUlli
~ IEFIIIa Ill AMATTEI Of DIYSOI HOURS
DEPEIIDIIB 011 THE CHOICES YOI U1E

\Vhars Inside.

tq

.,

. Pistons 89, Raptors 76
Jerry Stackhouse scored 20
points, and Ben Wallace added
13 points and 13 rebounds to

I

Quake~

Mashburn shows no signs of rust
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

Hometown Newspaper

Melp County's

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· POMEROY - · Ohio deer hunters..Jl)ay
have the opportunity to take an additional deer
in some counties · this year, according to ·the
Ohio Department ofNatural Resources Division ofWildlife. . '·, , ,
Hunters in M~igs :~pd· Gallia counties will .be
allowed an additional deer under the new regulations. .
·
The proposed 2002 deer hunting regulations
were presented last night in Columbus to· the
Ohio Wildlif'e Council. As proposed, a fourth
deer hunting zone (Zone R) would be added
this year to allow for better management f
deer populations on a regional basis.
. ,
. "We try . 't~ , keep deer popldauons frO
going above established target levels. Ohio's
geography is so widely diverse thai you can't
manage a northwestern county the same as
you'd manage a southeastern county," sai~i
Mike Budzik, chief of ODNR's Division of

'

Wildlife.
"The addition of a new zone and increasing
the deer limit from two to three in Zone C
will help us manage on a more localized level,"
he said.
Proposals include:
• Zone R: (new zone) Hunters could take
only one deer during the 2002-03 deer seasons, which could be a deer of either sex during archery or primitive seasons, or during the
first two days of the statewide gun season or a
buck only during the last f1vc days of the gun .
season. Counties in Zone R. include: Auglaize,
Darke, Henry, Mercer, Ottawa, Paulding, Putnam, Shelby, Van Wert, Wood .
• Zone A: Hunters could take only one deer,
which .could be a de er of either sex. Zone A
counties include: _ Allen, Ashland, Ashtabula,
Carroll, Columbtana, C rawford, Cuyahoga,
Defiance, Erie, Fayette, Fulton, Geauga, Hancock, Hardin, Huron, Lake, Lorain, Lucas,
Plea" let Deer, AJ

Syracuse building
deal in limbo
BY BRIAN J. REED
8REEQ&gt;IPMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE - The Vil!age of Syracuse and South- .
ern Local Board of Education appear to have reached
3 stalemate over the sale of
the Syracuse Elemhtary
School building.
. The building was vacated
h&lt;t fall when students in
Southern
Local
began
attending a new consolidated elementary school. The
village would like to use it as '
a community center.
Duri.ng their February
meeting, members of Syracuse Village Cou ncil met in
exec utive session to discuss
their otfer to the Southern
Local l:loard of Education
for the purchase of the
building.
The school board has
offered to transfer the building to the vi llage on the
condition that a portion. of
any sale proceeds be
· returned to th e village in the
event that th e school building be sold. At its January
meeting, fhe board limited
the time on such a deal to 75

years.
The village has rej ected
the board's offers, based on
those tim e limitations , and
the sc hool board's last offer
remains in th e board 's hands,
said Robert Wingett, village
grants administrator~ who
has helped . coordinate the
sale otfer on the . village's
behalf.
Wingett did not outline
the execu tive session dtscussian, but said the village is
not willing to commit to a
75-year co ntract for the
building.
" From the beginning, the
village has said they didn't
want that long of a commit~
ment," Wingett said. "Our
initial offer in September .
was a 20-year .commitm ent."
"We're not go·ing to take it
to 75 years, so the board has
said they will sdl the building at au ction , and · they
appear adam ant about that,"
he added ..
Southern Local Superintendem James Lawrence was
not available to comment on
the board's position .

L9oking for something meaningful to do this year?

Consider
ng at
the Hospital!
For more information, contact
Dawn Halstead, Director of Voluntee'r Services, at

(740) 446-5056.
.'!-

MEDICAL CENTER
'
Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

..

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