<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="6948" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/6948?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T23:14:14+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17350">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/862030b8115e51094a75663ec5bd34ba.pdf</src>
      <authentication>86b6e26d741a0cbc066be1b3131e4ee8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22780">
                  <text>f1ll"'

o• o

•

fl

I

Blue Devils rattle ' Marauders. 81

www.myd!l!yMntlnel.com

Melp County's

•

Meigs students die in c8r

The farms of tomorrow will be more
successful and secure because of the
hard work and dedication of our lo·c al
Future .Farmers ofAmerica.
.

.

Two killed, tivo
others injured
BY TONY M. LEAcH · '
TLEACH4PMVOAILV$ENTINEL.COM

ALBANY ~ Two Meigs
High School snidents were
killed and !Wo have been
taken to the hospital following a Wednesday night auto

.

•

.

NADONAL FFA WEEK

Bolin, 16

Wilham F. Fol~. 69
Bonna MarguliS
Edna Westfall, 88
Details,· A:S
•

Weare proud
to salute our
future farmers
during
National ··
FFAWeek,
February 17-24.

Weather
• Hlp: loS, Low: :101
.. .
Details, A2

. themlcal spill
:;• on u.s. 35

::cENTERVILLE - 11.
portion of U.S. 35 was
c!Psed Wednesday as local
~ponse .team dealt with a
cl\emicalleak from a tanker
tmck.
Just after II a.m., Gallia
County 911 received a
phone · call from Ohio
Depamnent of Transportation employee Kenny Soles
that he was following a trac·tor-trailer headed westbound
35 towim:l Gallipolis.
·; "The truck emitted a
strong chemical odor from
hls tanker, Soles told 911.
· The truck, owned by
'Enterprise Transit Co.,
Houston, Texas, was hauling
40,000 pounds of a highly
flammable and toxic chemic3.1 called ethyl · arcrylape
from Nitro, W.Va.,
to
Chlcago.

SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE

Qua[it~

992-3345

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Rime, R. Ph.

Middleport

992-6491

BAD

112 East Main Street

Funeral Home

White
Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street • Coolville, OH
740-667-3110

CROW'S

Route 248, Chester, OH

985-3308

DOWNING
CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE
992-2342

Valley

Middleport
Pomeroy ·

BroganInsurance·

sUped.oao: 6-20-32-39-43-45

St,iOE PLACE

·Bonus hll: 3
·Kicker: 4-8-4-0·7·9
Pick :s d11f: 5-7-9
Pick 4 dllf: 7-Q-3-5 '

""'

W.VA.
.Dtllly :s: 8-6-9
DaiJY 4: 6-H -7 ·
.
'l!w•ablll: 8-9-19-22-25 (11)

9.9 2-5627 .
'

.

: ; 3,'Sedl••- 11 ,.. .

SHADE RIVER·
AGSEIVICE

Callt!dar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
E!litorials
Movies
Obituaries
Spo~
Weather

Pomeroy 985-3831

Bank
l:.!J .aFarmers
savtngt c~

Pomeroy

992-6611 · 949-2210

A6
86-7
88
A6
AS
A3
A3
81
A2

' ·• C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing CO.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY -· A smoking ban similar to Meigs County's, but less restrictive, ,has been dismantled by a West Virginia judge.
Earlier this week, Cabell .County Circuit Judge John L.
Cummings issued a permanent injunction against Cabell's
Clean Indoor Air Act, and ruled that criminal penalties
imposed under the act were improper.
Cummings also took issue with a reasonable distance
clause, which prohibited smoking within · 10 feet of any
public place.
Cabell County's smoking ban, like that in Meigs County
and other cmmimnities across the region, drew fire from
smoking advocates, restaurateurs ·and other business owners,
who claim the ban will drive customers out of their dining ·
room s and shops and into · communities without such
restrictions.
Cabell County health officials may still enact a ban on
smoking, C ummings ruled, but may not impose Friminal
penalties.
Meigs County's Clean Indoor Air Act, approved by the
Meigs Board of Health in September, outlaws sinoking in
all public places and within five feet of the main entrance to
a public place.

Plaase see Smoklna. A:S

0

Senior Outreach

Q

"Reaching Out to Meet Senior Needs"

Ill

~YRACUSE

992-6533

992-2136

Gallipolis

446-2265

,I

Reassuring·Phone Calls and Home Visits
Prescription Reminders • Loan Library

Tuppers Plains

985.,.3161

.i

'

.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

:www.holzer.org

For more information, please call

(740) 446·9560.
.

•

t •• , ,

RACINE

Pomeroy 992-5432
.

71e .

r.;:}

Co.

Judge·halts Cabell :
County smoking ban
Huntington ban is less
restrictive than Meigs'

RACINE - In conjunction with National
FFA Week, members of the Racine /Southern
FFA have scheduled a number of activities
throughout the week to promote the importance of agriculture.
The Agriculture Education Building at
Southern High School was filled with dogs,
chickens, rabbits, goats and ducks on Wednesday as the organization's members held a petting zoo to inform the public on the care and
maintenance of domesticated animals.
According to Aaron Sayre, Racine/Southern
FFA advisor, the petting zoo is one ot:Jrlany
activities being held throughout the week to
celebrate National FFA Week, which runs "from
Feb. 16-23.
"We're trying to schedule some fun activities
that eoucate the public about the importance
.of agriculture," said Sayre; "We held a staff
appreciation dinner on Tuesday, and of course,
the petting zoo on Wednesday."
.
"A tractor/truck day Ius been planned for
Thursday and students are encouraged to wear
gold and blue, FFA's official colors, on Friday,"
he added.
Later in .the day, students from Southern Elementary were given a tour of the petting zoo
and a brief lecture on the different kinds of
animals and what food they .eat.

1bur Bank~"'~!···

·&amp; Supply

FAMILY
RESTAURANT

'OHIO
'Pick :S: 2·8·0
'Pick 4: 5-6-2-7

•

Pomeroy 992-6682

Racine/Southern FFA
hails agriculture·

Please see Gallla, A:J

TLEACHCMVOAILVS~NTINEL.COM

'LotterieS

992-

992-5141
992-5444 Middleport

PmiNQ ZOO- Braxton Thorla, third grade student at Southern Elementary, checks out a pen
of ducks while jUnior Alan Moore, below, showcases the talents of lils dog, • Bear, ' during the
Racine/Southern FFA petting zoo held Wednesday at Southern High School. The petting zoo, as
well as several other activities, are being held throughout the week in conjunction with National FFA Week, which runs from Feb .. 16-23. (Tony M. Leach)

GALLIPOLIS - A Vinton-area man remained in the
Gallia Councy jail today on $500,000 bond in connection
with the slaying of a neighbor.
R andall ].Johnson, 39,678 Woodruff Road, was arraigned
Wednesday in Galli'polis Municipal Court on one charge of
murder in Tuesday's shooting death of Kenna Lynn Rain·ey,
24,720 Woodruff Road, and two counts of attempted rimrdet. involving people who were nearby when Johnson
allegedly shot Rainey shortly after 3 p.m. ·
The names of the people were not revealed during the
brief hearing before Judge William S. Medley, who set a preliminary hearing in the case for Monday at 2:45 p.m.
Medley will decide at the preliminary hearing if there is
enough evidence to bind the case over to the next session
'o f the Gallia County grand jury. If Johnson is indicted, he
will enter a plea when arraigned in Common Pleas Court.
, Murder carr.ie•. LmJ'Iimum .penalty of 15 years to life in
Ohio.
Represented by Gallipolis attorneys William N . Eachus
and Jeffi-ey Finley, Johnson waived reading of the charges
and the hearing moved to the question of bond.
"l know this is a serious case;· Eachus said. "We ask the
court to set as reasonable a bond as possible."
Assistant Gallia County Prosecutor Jeffi-ey Adkins requested bond be set at $500,000, citing the need to protect others at the crime scene.

. BY TONY M.• LEACH

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3785

·fisher

MBER
StRte248
Chester 985-3301

Pomeroy

dent.
Bill Buckley, superintendent
of the Meigs Local School
District. said classes at Meigs
High School will be held
today and that counselors and
members of the Meigs Ministerial Association will be at
the school to talk with students.
The accident is still under
investigation .

Gallia murder
susp~ct put on .·
$500,000 bond

.

"n

Middleport

lier southbound on 160 when
she failed to yield for a stop
sign, driving into the path of a
commercial tractor-trailer that
\Vas heading westbound on
32.
The driver of the semi,
Donald A. Thompson, 35,
Woodsfield, refused treatment
at the scene.
Bolin was wearing a seat
belt at the time of the acci-

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLV@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

,,

212 E. Main Street

Two passengers in Bolin's
vehicle, John Stanley, 17,
Pomeroy, and Samantha J.
Pierce, 15, Rutland, were
transported to O 'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens.
Pierce is currently listed as in
· guarded condition, and Stanley is being treated for a braken hip and internal injuries.
Troopers said Bolin was driving a 1990 Chevrolet Cava-

t

,
tin~say K.

Wrint Sftop

accident in Vinton County.
Lindsay K. Bolin, 16, Rutland, and Brad S. Runyon, 15;
Albany. were pronounced
dead at the scene by the Vinton County coroner, according to the Jackson Post of the
State Highway Patrol, following a two-vehicle accident
around 8 p.m. on Ohio 32
near the intersection of Ohio
160.

.

'

.,

I

I

�'

"'.

........

·I

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Frld8y. Feb. 22

COLUMBUS

• •
•
•

'A ,
•••
••

•••••
·I Colo

I

·lft!M• I

•

•••••

•••••

..
••

o •••- ~••••
r-. -

"""" Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

lhUI'IUy. r••niR'J 21. 2002

Bill- would. help Ohio EPA enforce'.laws

Ohio weather

•••••

Page~

s-

-

"'

Colder, flurries possible Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.It will be mostly cloudy on Friday with some snow showers
or flurries lingering, the National Weather Service said. Highs
will be in the 30s, forecasters said.
Sunset tonight will be at 6_:14, and sunrise on Friday is at
7:15a.m.
Weather forec:alt:
.Tonight ... Mostly ~loudy with a chance of rain showers early,
then a chance of snow showers from late evening on. Lows in
the mid 30s. West winds around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation 30 percent.
Friday... Consider:~bly cloudy. A chance of flurries through
early afternoon. Cooler with highs in the upper 30s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph . .
Friday night. .. Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 40s. .
Saturday rught... Partly cloudy. LOws in the mid ·3os.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers during the
night. Warmer. Highs in the upper 50s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers during
the day, then ·a chance of snow or f2in showers during the .
night. No snow accumulation expected. Lows in the upper 30s
and highs in the mid 40s.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. No
snow accumulation expected. Lows in the mid 20s and highs
in the mid 30s.
·
Wednesday... A chance of snow showers, otherwise partly
cloudy. Continued cold, Lows near 20 and highs in the lower
30s.

iMJu cause of action is based." That's too
broad, Shaner said.
•.
not lui~ to·be a hrtalla'tltic
"A five..ynr statute of limitations ' is
quagmire that talru forever. Hi fair, but fuzzy language in this bill coUld
want to protect the mllironme~~t, keep all but the tip of the iceberg covbut ~ 've got to do it in an expe- ered up;• Shaner said. "Investigations can
dient manner JO we're not Jetuling take years and the bill could hanutring
enforcen."
away jobs atul people.,
The EPA is officially neutral on the
"Enl1ii'OII~t41 pn~ttdion

threat of EPA action against them has
undermined their attempts to grow or
expand, Tr:~kas said.
"Environmental protection does not
have to be a bu.reaucr:~tii: quagmire that
takes forever;' Tr:1kas said. "We want to
protect the environment, but we've got
" so we're
to do it in an -expedient manner
not sending away jobs and people."
Passage of the bill in its current form,
however, would give businesses an unfair
edge, environmental advocates said.
When businesses report a problem ~o
the EPA, they often play down its severity and it may take much longer for
investigators to learn the extent of the
problem, said Jack Shaner, a lobbyist for
the Ohio Environmenral Council.
The bill states that the five-year clock
starts ticking when the agency "actually
knew or was informed of the occurrence, orni~ion, or facts on which the

bill but can live with the language, ~d
Laur:1 Powell, the agency's chie£1obbyist.
The agency has made progress jn
resolving cases and should continue to
do so within the bill's limit, and without ·
losing potential fines, said Joe Koncelik,
assistant agency director. Currently, the
EPA has 239 cases under i.nvettigati~.
with none going back more than five
years, Koncelik said. The avemge case- is
less than one year old, he said.
r
"It's certainly not our intention to
forgo civil penaltie5 on any case where
we think it's appropriate. Those wiU
become priority cases that will needao
be addressed;' Koncelik said.
.
·
The bill also applies the restrictions to
cities and counties, which often pursue
cases the EPA does not, said Marc Conte
of the Sierra Club~ Ohio chapter, ;
"As the bill stan&lt;¥ ~ght now, it ·~ppttes
to state and loci! governments and we
don't think it should apply to local governments," Conte .said.
4

COLUMBUS (AP)
Mary 0. Boyle, a former
Cuyahoga County commissioner and. unsuccessful candidate for the U.S. Senate, said
Wednesday she_·will run for
state treasurer.
Also, former Cleveland City
councilwoman Helen Smith
will run for state auditor, the
Ohio Democratic Party said.
The Democrats earlier
endorsed candidates for governor, attorney general and secretary of state but had not yet
fielded candidate$ for the two
remaining statewide posts.
Treasurer Joe Deters, a
Repilblican, is running for reelection this year.

Last ,.;eek, Democr:~tic U.S.
Rep. Tom Sawyer announced
he will seek re-election in the
newly drawn 17th district that
includes the heavily unionized
Youngstown area. Sawyer, 56,
has represented the A!Uon area
for 17 .years.
" I don't have time to do
anything, I don't !lave time to
. blow my nose;'Traficant said.

Panhandling law
considered ·

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
city official is trying to get
panhandling restricted in
Cincinnati four years. aftef a
federal magistrate ruled -~n
earlier anti-panh~dling cift
ordinance unco~tstitutional.
In 1998, U.S. MagJStra,t e
Judge Jack Sherman ruled that
· the lime, place and manner of
the restrictions on panhandling
were unreasonable and arb1~
trary. He also _S3Jd Cmcmnall s
CLEVELAND (AP) - A qrdman_ce failed to p_rovJde
man has been sentenced to al
b
hi h h
ternanve means. Y w c t e
four years in prison for rape, homeless and poor can legally
even though the woman
t
[I d
00
·
11, 1984, str:~ngulation death described as the victim could req~es money or.
·
City
Councliman
Pat
of Tonnie Storey, 15, of not testify against him at trial. D w·
· duce d a , ne":'
e
me
mtro
Cincinnati. The second was
woman anti-panhandh'ng proposal on
. The 31-year-o_ld
h
d
for the July 13, 1984, .beating d d f
1e o a erom over ose Wednesday that he believes
death of Marlene Walters, &gt;14, before the case went to tnal. t ·would be constitutional.
of suburban Cincinnati.
Prosecut~rs deCided to try
Under DeWine's proposal,
An execution date for Cole- the case Without her by rely- begging for money after sunman could depend on the res- mg on comments she made set or hefore sunrise and on
olution of conflicting rulings right after the attack.
private property or at a bus
by the same federal court.
Cuyahoga County Com- stop would be illegal.
A three-judge panel of the moo Pleas Judge Christopher
6th U.S. Circuit Court of A. Boyko sentenced Jason T.
Appeals threw out Coleman's Fallat on Wednesday. At trial,
death sentence in the Storey Fallat acknowledged he had
case after concluding that sex with the woman, but he
Coleman's attorneys didn't said it· was consensual and that
G~OWN (A~ -adequately represent him in a she accused him of rape when · People in this southwest Ohio
1985 trial. The court, howev- he balked at paying her.
village will be allowed to talk on
er, upheld Coleman's conviccellular phones while driving.
tion.
Village council memberS
A different three-judge
voted 5-2 on Tuesday to reject
, panel of the court had,
a proposed ordinance that
already upheld Coleman's
would have allowed police to
CLEVELAND (AP} death sentence for Walters'
issue citations tp drivers using
Democratic U.S. Rep. James
death.
cell phones.
Tr:~ficant Jr. said Wednesday
A.
Coleman's attorneys have
"Police .will stop (ceUular
asked the U.S. Supreme he will run for re- election as phone users) only if they're
Court to review the Walters' an independent in the newly involved in an accident;' said
formed 17th congressional
Councilman Richard Pettit.
ruling. They argue that since
district.
.the same two attorneys rep·"There were opinions each
made
the
resented Coleman in both . Trafical!t
way. A lot of people said they
announcement as he left his
had to use phones because of
Ohio cases, it is inconsistent
federal corruption trial, which
that his sentence be overtheir jobs."
was entering its third week.
turned in the Storey case and
The ordinance would have
He said his trial leaves him no
upheld in the Walters' case.
exempted drivers who' had to
time to mount a primary camcaU police and fire units.Viola· ~ It would be very unfair to
paign for the Democratic
tions would have been a
execute someone when two nomination.
but no
different panels of the same
court · reach
conflicting
DEITH ·Ill TilES· WilT I
results;' Baich said. "We hope
the U.S. Supreme Court will
resolve this conflict."
'
Senate President Richard ·
Finan, who helped write the
law reinstating Ohio's death
penalty, on Wednesday criticized the long appeals'
process for Death Row
inmates.
"Deterrence is a problem
:.vhen the person sits there
for 19 years, and they write
two· books.. they find God
and they join the junior
chamber of commerce and
then aU of a sudden they're a
good person," Finan said.
•

Coleman could ·be
next inmate executed
COLUMBUS (AP)- Serial killer Alton Coleman, convicted of slayings in the Midwest in 1984, could be the
next inmate scheduled to die
in Ohio.
The state asked the Ohio
Supreme Court on Feb. 6 to
set an executio'n date for
Coleman, 45, who also faces
death sentences in Indiana and
!Uinois.
"We believe that his case is
the next one up, but there's no
guar:~ntee with the court systern and different issues he can
raise;' Bret Crow, a spokesman
for Attorney General Betty
Montgomery, said Wednesday.
T he state on Tuesday executed John W. Byrd, the third
inmate to die since Ohio reinstated the death penalty in
1981 and the first to proclaim
his innocence. It was the secOQd execution in eight
months, ·foUowing Jay D.
Scott's execution by injection
in June.
The Ohio Public Defender's
Office said that as many ast 0
Death Row inmates could
exhaust their appeals this year.
Most are awaiting a revieW
of their case by the U.S.
Supreme Court. Such reviews
are very rare, said David
Bodiker, the Ohio Public
Defender.
"The chances of getting one
of those things heard is greater
than the lottery," Bodiker said.
Coleman's attorney Dale
Baich would .not discuss the
likelihood of an execution
date for his client this year.
" I don't think it's appropriate to make predictions;' he
said Wednesday. "Circumstances in ·these · cases may
change, and it doesn't serve
the public, the victims or Mr.
Coleman to engage in such
speculation."
Coleman, ofWaukegan, IU.,
received two death sentences
in Ohlo. One was for the July

(AP) - A bill that
places a five-year limit on the time the
Ohio .Environmental Protection Agency
could seek fines for businesses that pollute would reduce case backlogs at the
EPA and help create jobs, backers said
Wednesday.
However, environmentalists who
oppose the bill sai4 its language is vague
and that it should exclude local governments from its provisions.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Jay Hottinger, a Newark Republican, would
give the EPA five years fium the discovery of a problem to begin an inyestigation that could result in a court- or
agency-ordered penalty. It would help
resolve cases quickly, said Rep. James
Trakas of Independence, the No. 5
Republican in the House.
The EPA would also have two years
from the bill's enactment to impose fines
in cases where it was aware of a problem
for at least three years.
The Senate passed the bill Nov. 15. It
currently is in the House Energy and
Environment Committee, where it was
scheduled for a hearing on Thursday.
The committee likely will vote on the
bill next week, committee Chairwoman
Nancy Hollister, a Marietta Republican,
said.
Businesses have complai!!ed that the

.pOiiipl: GWiwh liiJn

Village nixes cell
phone ban

Traficant plans ·
independent run

10 DANTU LIGHTEN ·

YOUR

CIIPUTUIZID 11111111 liD EUCTBIIIC FIUII
Will IUUIU II I 1111 d OF DAYS ill lOUIS
DEPEIIIII 01 THE CHOICES YOU rft.Q

TAXbVDANTU

IS TIE RIGHT CHOICE

specific fines had been set.

cia! nominees to the president.
Frost would succeed ~S.
District Judge George C.
Sniith, who took senior status
Jan. 1. Senior status allows fed- ·
era! judges to hand!~ a reduced
CINCINNATI (AP)
caseload; but stiU collect full
Voters in Hamilton County salary.
.( .
wiU have a chance to vote in
May on a proposed 18 perunt
'Wi-.1&amp;
taX increase to fund mental
liiiH
health services.
County
comrmmoners
voted unanimously Wednesday
COLUMBUS (AP)- Gev.
'to place the proposed levy on Bob Taft on Wednesdiy
the May ballot.
appointed William Klatt, his
Annual levy proceeds, if chief counsel, to the Ohio 10th
approved by voters, would D.istrict Court ofAppeals. ·
increase fium $27.6 million to · Klatt, a Republican, replac'es
$32.7 millio~t.'l;'he levy .w ould Democratic Judge John "P.
r:~is~ a total 9f $.165 niillion Ke!'nedy, who resigned 'to
. over its five-year lifetime. · .. . return to private pr:~ctice. The
, If the levy is approved, the court handles appeals ofi &lt;!ases
owner of ·a $100;000 home that originated in Fr:~nklin
would pay abou't $54 pe'r year County.
·•
an increase of about $8
As Taft's chief counsel, Klatt
from the last levy period.
advised the governor on leJr-11
Patrick Tribbe, president of issues and managed legal serthe Community Mental Health vices to Ohio's adminismtiire
Board, said the levy is needed to agencies. He formerly W.s
cover about $2.4 million in ser- Attorney
General
Betty
v1·ces sh1'fited to the ~·ental M
' fi
· t:i
..,
ontgomery s rst assJS l)t
health board fium other. agen- attorney general.
cies start a mental health court
Klatt received his law degree
'
and offiet inflation.
from Notre Dame University
d b
1
an · egan practicing aw in
ol)lo in 1981.

Vctas get mental

health levy

.

-

Judge·
recommended

WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio Sens. Mike DeWine and
George Voinovich asked President Bush to nominate a Licking County judge for the U.S.
District Court in Columbus.
The senators, both Republicans, urged the Republican
president Wednesday to nominate Gregory L. Frost, who has
been a Licking County Conimoo Pleas judge since 1990.
If Bush nominates Frost, it
would require Senate confirmation before lie could join
the federal judiciary. :rraditionaUy, the senators of a president's party recommend judi-

Immigrant .,
faces charge ' .

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Syrian immigr:~nt arrested by
federal authorities in September was indicted by a federal
grand jury Wednesday in an
alleged sham marriage.
Mohammed I. Refai, 40, of
Akron, was charged with
count of marriage fraud, five
counts of immigr:~tion do~u­
ment fr:~ud and two counts ..of
lying to federal agents.
The indictment said Ret'ai
was marriedApril2711998.,to
an American to aUow him ·io
remain in the United States~

.one

.'

s

,-

'

Edna WestfaU

IW1LAND - Lindsay Kae Bolin, 16, Rutland, died on
,,Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2002, from injuries sustained in an auto-

t ..

j ·mobile accidenL

•: · Arrangements .ate under the direction of Fisher Funeral
· Home in Pomeroy and wiU be announced upon completion.
"
1., .

WIIDa111 Foley

: t POMEROY· William F. "Bill" Foley, 69, of Pomeroy, died
'·it his residence on Wednesday, Feb. 20,2002.
; · Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher Funeral
1• Home and will be announced upon completion.

·• · COLUMBUS - Bonna Sue Margulis died on Friday, Feb.
.. 15, 2002 at Mt. Carmel East Medical Center.
· · · She was the daughter of the late Henry and Navada Beaver
•:or Chester, and was also preceded in death by her husband,
Leon Margulis.
, .. Surviving are her brother and sister~in-law, LoweU ·and
• Nancy Beaver of Middleport; two nieces and a nephew.
i•, Graveside services were held on Sunday, Feb. 17, at New
1• Tifereth Isr:~el Cemetery with Rabbi Harold Berman officiating.

.. .

i~-~creenings
~- ' .

Screenings set
for March 20
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

. HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Taking
;l'.are of your health is one of
.' Jbe most important things
Y·}[OU can do.
; •. , To assist with that, the
Meigs
County
Health
;'J;&gt;epartment offers a variety
;.•of preventive and early
,detection measures at low or
~~0 c,o~.t. . ,
"
• •'
· ~,· . In . M~rch, a free prostate
.,plinic to include an examination by a physician, along
, ;With blood work will be held
;,:,at the health department.
·
.,. Screenings are available for
..50 Meigs County men .aged
; c45 or older at the clinic to be
'·held on Wednesday, March
from noon to 4 p.m.
To participate · in the
··screening, appointments are
'do be made with Courtney
·;,Sim, BSC, administrative
assistant, who can be contacted at 992-6626.
While the clinic examinations are free, Sim said that
"donations are appreciated,
, but are not required" from
. 'those who want to partici-

l·,zo,

Supreme Court

pate in the screening process.
She said the screening will
include a digital rectal examination by one of the three
doctors working .in the
prostate clinic. They are Dr.
Douglas Hunter, Dr. Scott
Smith . and Dr. James Witherell.
The blood work,' prostate
specific antigen (PSA), will
be done prior to the clinic
through an appointment by a
Holzer Clinic phlebologist.
Those appointments . are
being scheduled by Sim -for
Monday, March 11, from 2'lo
6 p.m. at the Meigs County
Health Department.
Sim said that Riverside
Hospital is contributing the
actual cost of the PSA tests .
Each participants' PSA
result will be available for
physician review at the
March 20 clinic."
In addition to the rectal
examination and the blood
work, more routine tests to
determine other health conditioris will be included.
Height, weight and blood
pressure measurements will
be taken along urinalysis by
health department personnel
using biological supplies provided by Continuity of Care.·

~,{.

,,~---------------------------------------

1.'

.'

.1 ' .

'LOCAL STOCKS
'

' 'Arch Coal- , 8.02
• ·Aia:o- 42.81 ·

USB- 19.87

Aocl&lt;y Boola- 6. 75
Gannett - 78.90
General EIICtllc- 'S'/.57 AD ShaD- 49.34
Searo-53
GKNLY-4

.AmTIICh/SBC- 37.05
: Aahland Inc. - 44.91
i ' AT&amp;T- 14.81

aan1c one -

Hlrloy Dllll!llon- 51.91

Shoney'a - .33
Wai·Mart- 60.02
Wendy's - 30.39
Kroger- 21.29
Wonhlnglon- 14.70
Lands End - 49.82
DaHy siOCk reports are
LUI.- 17.78
NSC-21.08
the 4
closing
the previous
OlkHI~-17.8!1 quotes
day's lraneactlons, proOVB-23.88
vided by Smith Partnero
BBT-35.82
. al Advesl Inc. of Gal·
PaopiH- 20.09
llpollil.
Pepaloo- 48.92

34.85

Kmart-1.13

, BLI- 12.03
'' !Job Evana- 27.31

t ·tlorgwamer - 58.31
11phomplon- 2.89

J.m.

Chlrn*lg Shope - 8.28
City Holding -14.10

Col-21.35
DG-1~.64

'i·

Premier- 8.55
ROCkwell- 18.76

Federal Mogul - 1

'AEP-41.59

.

Reader Services
$3~e.p.

Correction Polley
Our main oonoern In allltor1elll
to be IOCUrate, II you know olin
error In a tlory, calllhto .-.room

4" Doubles

$599
.
Ally Erp.

~~ (740) IIV2·2158.

The mal~

General manag«.

Ext 14

or

Other ..rvlcae

PHAR~ACY

Ext. 3
Clroulallon

HOURS
Moll- rrt .... ·lpm
Sal. lam- Spm

Sun. IDam-olllln

Ext. 4

(UIIPUI._)
01o1o Volley 1'11bH1hlng Co.
Publlohed eve!'( .ollemoan, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-dul

'

fromPapA1

po111Qt pold It PO!Mfoy.
Memblr. Tho Auoclated. Prno ond
tho Ohio N-PII' Auoclatlon.

tloril
to Tho
Semlnol,
11t-Court-r
.Dol&lt;y
Send
·-·
. 51., Pomeroy, 0111o 457811.

Subacrlptlon ratn
ly carrier or motDr route

OneOnemonth
one-

·
~ -

$8.70
$104
eo oonta

cam. may ..,.n In od&lt;ionoo direct to

Tho Dolly Stntlntl. Cltdn will be glvon

eam.r oacl1 weok. No IUbocripllon by
moll pormlltad In .,... nome
conW- lo lYfliloble. .

,. ..

~

-Molp

claitmed Adl
Ext. a
To Hlld a-nuill

13W-

www.mydaNy8ei~Unel.com

110 ~~~~-

,....omydaNyMIItlnel.oam
On the Web .

Open WeekniQhls 'flll9 • ·

•

Ext. 12

Gallia

.

Ext. 13 . DallY
&amp;lbloriblnl not dtllrlng to PIIY the

SWISHER • LOHSE

Pomeroy, Ohio

number II IIV2·2158.

Oep~nment eXtfntlon• art:

HAVl6 ROLLS DEVELOPED AND
'
GET THE SEVENTH ROLL DEVELOPED FREEl
Try uafor all your photoftnlahlng neaclar ·

Kenneth McCulloUQh, R. Ph.
Charles Rlflle, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street ·

.

· New• Dap~~rtmantl

From Original 110 or 135 C-41 proce11 rolla:
Sn one of our clerka for detalla of the
Full True Color Film Club Card.
·

WASHINGTON (AP) Teachers, which opposes
For Ohio families gathered school vouchers. "The CleveWednesday on the steps of the land schools are failing
U.S. Supreme Court, th~ because they're taking all the
national debate over Cleve- money away for vouchers."
land's school voucher program
Ann Pallotta agreed. As a
can be summarized in one Cleveland parent, PaUotta says
word: Children.
the problem with the city's
"That's ~hat it's all about;' educational system is that the
said Doris Durica of Cleve- voucher program has diverted
land. "We hope the S~preme needed funds away from her
Court understands that we as children's schools to support
parents value education."
religious institutions.
As a widow and a mother of
"It's a diversion of public funds
two, Durica used to spend that are supposed to be used for
most of her paycheck sending public schools:' she said. "I want
her children, Monica, 12, and my public tax money to support
Michael, 14, 1o private public schools for all."
.
Catholic schools. Now, thanks
Cleveland City Councilto Cleveland's pilot voucher woman fannie Lewis said the
program, Durica and others program was started to give
give their children a private ·parents an alternative to one
education on the public dime. of the worst-rated public
The U.S. Supreme Court school systems in the country.
"It was about the poor peaheard arguments Wednesday
over whether the 6-year-old pie in the inner city who didtest program gives parents n't have a choice," she said
legitimate alternatives to pub- after the hearing. "We're here
lie education or whether it arguing .today for a choice and
violates the separation of · the Supreme Court seemed to
church and state.
have an ear for that."
For Jennifer and .Kevin { Ohio Attorney ·General
Karn, sending their children Betty Montgomery said she
to a private school in Cleve- felt the justices understood
land is about giving their chi!- why the voucher program was
dren what they didn't have.
started in Cleveland and that
"I'm glad that they don't the prQgram· is not a subsidy
have to go to the Cleveland for religious schools but propublic school ·because I went vides real choices.
,
there and I hated it;' said JenIt's a choice Marlene Bishop
nifer Karn as she watched her wouldn't have had to make. As a
four children waive signs pro- single parent, the voucher proclaiming "School Choice" to gr:~m has allowed her to provide
passing motorists. .
more for her son Jimmy than
Across the street,Akron native her salary would allow.
Jamie Horwitz stood with a
"I am a result of the Clevecrowd gathered in fiunt of the land public school system," she
U.S. Capitol. Chanting "Say no said. At the Catholic school,
to vouchers;' the group of reli- the kids get more attention.
gious leaders. and civil rights "The teachers are wonderful."
activists waived green signs proGov. Bob Taft' said lowclaiming their motto: "Public income families in Cleveland
"deserve this opportunity to
funds for public schools."
"It's ridiculous," said · Hor- exercise greater parental
witz, spokesman for the choice in selecting a school
American
Federation of for their children.".

'

the Daily Sentinel

w-

110
82 Weeki

.

n1y

$27.30

$53.82
$105.58

~~--MolpCOUnly

, Woof&lt;l

$2U5
$!58.68
$109.72

•

EMS log calls
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered four calls for assistance on Wednesday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DlSPATCH
10:01 p.m., Baker Rd. , Barbara Pratt, Holzer Medical
Center.
11 :37 a.m., McKenzie
Ridge Rd., Alice Bush, Holzer.

Correction

March prostate . over vouchers at·

"Not to get into the facts of
the case, but other people
were in proximity of the victim at the time of the incident;' he said.
' Johnson, who allege.dly fled
foUowing the shooting, . was
arrested . by GaUia County
sheriff's deputies abo.ut an
hour later following a search.
Deputies and EMS were
called to the scene near the
Gallia-Vinton county line at
3:23 p.m. and upon arrival,
found Rainey had been spot
in her front yatd.
She was pronounced dead
at the scene by Dr. Daniel H.
Whiteley, GaUia County
coroner. Services for the victim are 11 a.m. Friday in

P•ae A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

AKRON - Edna A. Westfall, 88, Akron, went home to be
with the Lord on Monday, Feb. 18,2002.
She was born in Meigs County on March 14,1913, and Jived
in the Akron area most her life. She was a member of the
Goodyear Heights Baptist Church. She was a homemaker who
took great joy in her family and who will be missed by all who
knew her.
She ·was preceded in death by her parents, John and Bertha
Lewis Shumway; her husband, Herman WestfaU, in 1997; a sonin-law, Lawrence BrookS, in 1998; her brothers: Leland, Guy,
Victor and L. Eugene Shumway; and her sisters, Rubal Deem
RUTLAND
and Evelyn Barringer.
.
6:58 a.m ., Meigs Mine 2,
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Rodney and Gloria
Gary Johnson, Holzer.
Westfall of Stuttgart, Ark.; her daughter, Karen Brooks of
12:52 p.m., Main St., Mark
Uniontown; her grandchildren: Rodney Westfall, Steven
Richards, treated at scene.
Brooks, Kathryn Brooks Young, Larry and David Hinton, and
2:21 p.m.; Kingsbury Rd.,
Glenda Finley; her great gr:~ndchildren: Colten and Camden
William Foley, dead on
Westfall, Rebecca Young, Joel, Amanda, Brittany and Nathan
Hinton; Kasa , Debbie and David Raab; and several nieces and arrival.
nephews.
Funeral services will be held on Friday at 11 a.m., at Hopkins Lawver Funeral Home, 547 Canton Rd.,Akron, with PasRACINE
Andrew
tor John Phillips officiating. Burial will follow at Hill~i de
Smith, sophmore at Southern
Memorial Park.
·
Friends may caU at the funeral home on :rhursday from 2 to High School, was omitted
from the recent Southern
. 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.
·
Local ' Honor Roll. Smith

,Health unit plans Ohjo parents rally

DuPont - 48.33

3 1/2" Doubles

· The D•llv Sentinel •

Obituaries

uw•., ....

COUnsel.

appoiidicl

· www.rnydllllyuntlnel.com

· l"huNdey, Feb. 21,2002

received all A's.

Survivon iueet
ATHENS - Survivors of
Suicide:. Support Group will
be held at 7 p.m. on Feb. 28 at
the Athens Church of Christ,
765 W. Union St. AU are welcome to attend. Information
is available by calling 5937414.

Clothing oHered
SYRACUSE - Free food
clothing wiU be offered at
the First Church of God in
Syracuse on Saturday from 11
a.m. until noon . Information
is available by' leaving a message at 992-1734:
a~d

Initiative meets
POMEROY -The Meigs
County Cancer Initiative
coalition will meet on Friday
from 1:30 to 3 p.m. at the
conference room at Veterans
Memo rial Hospital.

CNHI to buy four
newspapers
FROM STAFF REPORTS

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. has reached an agreement in principle to purchase
four daily newspapers and asso. ciated ancillary publications
from Ottaway Newspapers Inc.
for an undisclosed prke.
CNHI will acquire The
Globe in Joplin, Mo., The
Herald in Sharon, Pa., The
Daily Independent in Ashland,
Ky. , and The Free Press in
Mankato, Minn. , along with
ancillary publications in each
of those markets.
"We are vety pleased to have
the opportunity to add these
four newspapers to the CNHI
family.'' said Mike Reed, CNHI's
president and chief executive
officer. "They are extremely
well-run operations with good
people that fit perfectly with our

Smoking
from PageA1

It does not, according to
Health Commissioner Norma
Torres, carry criminal penalties, but allows for written
warning.; to business owners
for the first three alleg~d violations, and $100 find for subsequent violations.
Local police and county sheriff's deputies are charged under
the Meigs County regulation
for the enforcement of the act.
Mason County, W.Va.,
imposed a Clean Indoor Air
Act in August 2001, designating a minimum of 75
percent of the seating areas
in re!taurants and other
businesjes for non-smokers,
and limiting smoking in
other public spaces as well .
The Mason County ban
also exempts bars, private
residences, hotel and · motel
rooms, retail tobacco stores,
public assembly. and meeting rooms, fraternal organizations and private, enclosed
offices from the restrictions.
McCoy- Moore
Funeral
A Clean Indoor Air Act in
Home in Vinton.
Toledo, which serves as the
Investigators and a techni- basis for the Meigs County
cian from the state Bureau of ban , has been blocked by a
Criminal Identification and. U.S. District Court judge,
Investigation processed the and is now before the Ohio
site Tuesday night and on
Wednesday. The sheriff's
office was assisted by the
State . Highway Patrol and
Vinton County sheriff's
deputies.
Charges against Johnson
were filed with the prosecutor's office prior to .t he
arraignment.
The Asso~iated Press, quot~
ing Vinton County Prosecutor Tim Gleeson, reported
Wednesday that Johnson had
been released from the
Southeast Ohio Regional Jril
in Nelsonville on Feb. 14
after serving 26 days. for
resisting arrest and driving
with a suspended license.

acquisition strategy.
"As we enter our sixth year
of operation, it is very gratifying to be able to continue to
grow and expand;' he added.
Ottaway is wholly-owned subsidiary ofDow Jones &amp; Co., publishers of the Wall Street Journal.
The transaction is expected
to close by mid-year. After
completion of this · purchase,
CNHI will opeme 109 daiiy
newspapers with more thari 1.1
million daily circulation, as well
as 78 non-daily and 113 specialty publications in 21 states.
A privately owned operator
of daily ~nd non-daily newspapers and
publications,
CNHI is the publisher ofThe
Daily Sentinel in Pomeroy,
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point
Pleasant (W.Va.) Register and
the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Supreme Court. At issue 1s
the authority of non~e lect­
ed health boards to enact
legislation.
Late last year, the Ohio
House and Senate passed
Senate Bill 128, which
wo4ld pro hi bit those boards
of health from enacting legislation affecting the sale and
use of tobacco. Gov. Bob
Taft does not support the
legislation, and negotiations .
continue in an attempt to
reach a compromise.

I:IO,tJS

II n11111001•

{Thrllltr/Orarnel S!a•y Spaellk

Of nE DIUEI •

7~5. tJs

....
Ali AGES All TIMeS S·l 00

�..

•Wodd

The Daily Sentinel·
'

•

Court asked to
mle executions
of menta

retarded people
unconstitutional
WASHINGTON (AP) - time, had more than 20 previWhen the Supreme Court last ous felonies and was aware of
considered executions of the his wrongdoing, she said.
menblly retarded, only two
"We're · not looking at
st2tes banned the practice. -£omebody whose culpability is
Now, 18 st2tes prohibit it, and any less than yours or mine;•
that math will weigh on the Rumpz told justices.
·
court as it reconsiders the
Justic~ Stephen Breyer said
issue and the fate of a con- there are defendants with low
demned man with an IQ of IQs who have a hard time
59.
functioning. "Maybe they are
The court debated Wednes- not so culpable as you or me,"
day how much public sun- he said.
dards have changed since Justice David H. Souter
1989, when the court upheld asked if it was also appropriate
those executions on a 5-4 to execute 5-year-olds.
vote.
Atkins has an IQ of 59, conmenully
Justice Sandra Day O'Con- sidered mildly
nor wrote then that there was retarded. People who test 70
"insufficient evidence of a or below generally are considnational consensus" . against · ered menrally ret2rded.
the executions to determine
There are more than 3,700
that they ·were unconstitu- people on death row. None of
tionally cruel .and unusual the attorneys could say
punishment.
Wednesday how many of
That question has been set- those might be retarded.
tied, the lawyer .for convicted Other groups have said anyVirginia killer Daryl Renard where from 10 percent to 25
Atkins told the court.
percent of death row inmates
. "What is your definition of could have low IQs.
consensus?" asked Chief JusIt's estimated that about 1
rice William H. Rehnquist, a percent of the general populaquestion repeated later by lion is mentally reurded.
·
other court members. "How
Scalia said that even without
many states out of the 50 do restrictions,. juries can now
you need for a consensus?"
de~ide whether someone is
Attorney James Ellis didn't "not playing with a tiill deck"
provide a number, but he said and shouldn't be put to death.
But Ellis argued that mental
there are clear moral concerns
about putting to death men- retardation would more likely
tally retarded killers. They work against a defendant, and
· should be punished, just not jurors could use that to justify
a tougher penalty.
by death, he said. ·
'IWelve states do not execute
Ellis did not know how
any murderers and 18 othen many states have executed
don't use their death penalties mentally retarded defendants
since 1989. Breyer said by his
for'"the reurded.
"That's a super majority;' count, that number may besaid Justice Ruth Bader Gins- only two or three states.
burg.
.
O'Connor, who could be a
"We have to be very careful sWing vote in what is expectabout finding a new consen- ed to be a close ruling, noted
sus. We can't go back," Justice that if the executions are
Antonio Scalia said.
declared
uneomtitutional,
President Bush has said he states could make their own
opposes executing the mental- . rules for determining who is
ly retarded. Texas does not reurded.
have a ban, and the state exeIn addition to Georgia,
cuted two retarded defendants Maryland and the federal govwhile . he was governor, ernment, which had bans in
according to the Death Penal- 1989, new laws were adde4 in
ty Information Center. Prose- Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado,
cuton have disputed the !Qs Connecticut, Florida, Indiana,
of some executed Texas Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri,
inmates.
Nebraska, New Mexico, New
Pamela A. Rumpz, a Virginia York, North Carolina, South
assistant attorney general, told Dakota, Tennessee, and Washjustices that public opinion ington.
would change overnight if
Virginia's Legislature debatOsama bin Laden was cap- ed a ban, but decided to await
tured, brought to America for the outcome of this case. The
trial and argued that he was court should tule before July.
mentally reurded.
The victim in the case, 21She also said that the death year-old Eric Nesbitt, was Itapenalty is appropriate for pea- tioned at Langley Air Force
pie like Atkins, convicted of Base in Hampton, Va,
killing an airman in Virginia.
The case ls Atkins v. VirAtkins, who was 18 at the ginia, 00-8452.

Dow Jones jumps
up 200 points
NEW YORK (AP) - . Bargain hunting gave the stock
market a· generous boost
Wednesday as investors took
advanuge of lower prices after
a two-day selloff and sent the
Dow Jones industrials up nearly 200 points.
Investors traded more cautiously in the tech sector, however, troubled by reports of
improper accounting at Computer Associates.
The Dow rose 196.03, or
2.0 percent, tq close at
9,941,. 17, partly recovering
from a drop of 256 .85 in the
previous two sessions.
The Nasdaq composite
index lagged behind the Dow
for much of the day, but in a
late surge gained 24. 96, or 1.4

.. ..,

... ...

percent, to finish at 1,775.57.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500
index rose 14.64, or 1.4 percent, to 1,097. 98.
Depressed prices, not hopes
for the economy, have served .
as the only catalyst for buyi11g
on Wall Street f()r several
weeks. 'frading so far this year
has largely been domin4ted by
selling on fean about poor
business/ earnings and corpo~
rate bookkeeping in the wake
of Enron's collapse.
"The market appean to be
one where we are seeing lots
of rallies, lots of sellof!S:' said
Alan Ackerman, executive vice
president of Fahnestock &amp; Co.
"There's little conviction and
little leadership needed to get'
the market going."

PageA4
ThundiiJ. FeiHury 21. 2002

Consmuer Price Index up slightly
WASHINGTON (AP) Higher· the stock market a boost. The Dow Jones
prices for gasoline, medical care and industrial average gained 196.03 points
some food items contributed to a mild to close·at 9,941.17.
rise in consumer inflation in January. But
To 'revive the economy, which slid into
prices for clothing, cars, lodging and recession in March, the Federal Reserve
· computen all fell, p.,mdin~ shoppers slashed interest rates 11 times last year.
with some bargains.
The Fed could act so aggressively
The Consumer Price 1Index, a closely because inflation hasn't posed a risk to
watched gauge of ii;ltlation, rose O.Z per- the economy.
cent last montlj af~ dipping 0.1 percent
Last month the Fed opted ti, leave
in December,, the Labor Department interest rates unchanged, citing signs of a
reported Wednesday.
recovery as the reason. Many economists
Excluding energy and food prices, believe the Fed'~ rate cuts will .pave the
whi~h can swing widely from month to way fer solid economic growth in the
month, the "core" rate of inflation second half of this year.
increased 0.2 .percent in January, up . But if the rebound turns out to be a
slightly from a 0.1 percent advance the lot stronger than expected and threatens
month before.
.
to ignite inflation, the Fed might start
Even with _!he modest advances in raising interest rates later this year, econboth overall and core inflation in Janu- omis.ts said.
ary, many economists believe consumer
Higher gasoline prices were responsiprices will remain steady in the. months ble for much of the increase in january's
ahead beeause companies will continue CPI, economists said, Mter falling in
to find it difficult to raise prices even as November and December, gasoline
the economy tries to pull out of reces- prices rose 2. 7 percent in January, the
\ sian.
biggest increase in four months. Even
For the 12 months ending in January, with the rise, gasoline prices remain 22.7
consumer prices rose by just 1.1 percent, percent below levels seen a year ago.
the smallest increase since the 12 months
Gasoline prices, while still considered
ending in Dec_ember 1986.
moderate, were lifted l:iy a firming of
"Inflation remains completely under crude-oil prices last month, reflecting
control," said Bill Cheney, chief econo- produciion cuts by oil-producing
mist at John Hancock Financial Services. nations.
.
.
"Goods and even services are cheap, and
Natur.ll gas prices rose 1.2 percent in
businesses are eager for sales at almost Januacy, the largest advance since May,
any price. Bargains abound."
but are still considerably lower than they
011 Wall Street, bargain hunting gave were a year ago. Fuel oil prices, mean-

while, dropped 1. 7 percent and clectricity prices declined 1.2 percent, the
biggest decrease in almost four years.
Food prices rose 0.3 percent in January, after being flat in December. Higher
prices for vegetables, fruit and pork outweighed lower prices for beef, veal,
poultry and dairy products.
Prices for medical care rose 0.5 percent in January, up from a 0.3 percent
increase in December. January's advance
was led by a 0. 9 percent increase in
prices for hospital and related services,
the sharpest. rise since December 1999.
Ken Maybnd, president of ClearView
Economics, said that while inflation
probably won't be a worry for most of
this year, the rise in medical care costs is
troubling.
•
"With more people unemployed and
uninsured and with profit-starved companies looking to cut and shift costs, we
are on the cusp of another health care
crisis," he said.
On a more positive note for consumers, lower prices were reported for a
number of goods and services. Clothing
prices fell 0.7 percent in January. Newcar prices were down 0.6 percent, the
biggest decrease in nearly 15 years.
Lodging prices dropped 0. 7 percent and
computer prices declined 2.8 percent.
Economists said the lower prices
reflected heavy discounting and to some
extent the imp~h of cheaper-priced
imports, including foreign-made clothes
and cars.

Bush vows to work for release of hostages
WASHINGTON (AP) It's become a. coilUnon uctic
among · extremists and criminals. bedeviling countries like
Pakistan, Colombia, 'Ecuador
and the Philippines: Grab an
American hosuge, either for
ransom or to draw attention to
a political cause.
It happened to journalist
Daniel Pearl in Pakistan and
missionaries Gracia and Martin Burnham in the Philippines. A year ago, it hapj!ened
to American· and other foreign
oil workers in Ecuador.
The U.S. government, grappling with .how to solve such
cases without provoking lllQre,
announced a policy shift
Wednesday to . "make every
effort" to gain the release of all
Americans kidnapped overseas, even private citi:iens.
But- in a restatement of a
long-sunding U.S. ban, officials again ruled out paying
ransom or maijng other conceuipns, and advised corporalions with kidnapped employees to heed the advice.
"Paying ransom, allowing
the terrorist to acquire benefits from hostage-taking, only
encourages further hostagetaking," said Sute Department
ipokesman Richard Boucher.
Both the new U.S. hosuge
policy and the 1995 policy it
replaces state that the U.S.
government will make no
concession! to hostage-taken.
· But in a crucial change, the
ne\v policy removes a paragraph thJt said U.S. Foreign
Service posts "will limit their
participation" to. helping make
contact with foreign governments in cases in which private organizations or citizens
negotiate ransoms.
The old policy also stated
flatly that the "U.S. government cannot participate in
developing and implementing
a ransom strategy." The. new
policy says if the hostage-tak~
ing is resolved "through concessions:• the U.S. government
will find and prosecute
hostage-taken.
This shift could entangle the
United States in hostage situations in which companies,
desperate to free their worken, are prepared to pay ransom
in violation of U.S. policy.
Under the new policy, a
committee known as the
Host2ge Subgroup will examine every case in which an
American is taken hosuge
overseas and determine the
most appropriate action.
"It may be pounding on a
foreign qlinistry door, it may
be working with law enforcement authorities," Boucher
said.
A 1996 law requires that if
the president deterinines · ~n

American is wrongfully held that the us. government would administration, and reflects ~
prisoner by or for a foreign seek the arrest of ·kidnappen consensus of the Central Intelgovernment and is .qot afterwatd, who he said "go from ligence Agency, the Penugon, ·
released at the U.S. govern- one crime to another, if they the Justice Department and '
ment's request, the president keep getting away with it."
the FBI. It was approved by
"shall use such means, not
Public attention clearly President -Bush.
amounting to acts of war ilfld helped influence the policy.
A U.S. official, speaking on
U.S. officials decided to give condition of anonymity,
not otherwise prohibited by
law" that he thinks n.ecessary the same scrutiny to the kid- described some internal
to obtain that penon's release. napping of private citizens deb~te as vigorous, and said
The JiiCW policy leaves open "because ·these cases matter to the Pentagon was particularly
the use of force, but Boucher us as Americans, as individuals, adamant in urging careful
said: "I don't want to imply in as we've seen with some of the consideration of when miliiny way that rnilitaty actiorl is present ones;• Boucher said. . tary force might be used.
a fint or preferred way."
The change arose from a
Since Pearl's kidnapping, the
Even in cases where compa- review begun at the National U.S. government has worked
nies disregard advice and .pay Security Council in the clos- closely with Pakistani: officials
ransoms, Boui:her•e•m•p•h•as•iz•e•d-inlligiill•dlia.y~s-of the Clinton trying to gain his release.

Your

. •4gg

Pag'AS

.::The Dail;r Sentinel

21,2002

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-ft2·21 H • Fu: 740 812·2157
www.mycltlllyMntlnel.com

ROtiU£

NAT10~

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

CLIJ)

DenDic~n

..

Publlaher

Charl.nt Hotfllch
Oenel'll Manager
'

D!Mt Kay Hill
Controller

l.llttrr IG liN MiiiW IW wtlc..,t.

'l7N:1 11tHU H

1411 . . . J011 ..,.·Allldtn

.,..
•••Jm liD~~ •114 '""" H ril~ttd _. IMIM .,_, . - :NI; "'" ~
Nt~ ""'lpM ,._,., wiU H p~tblh"M. 1Attm Motdfl h Ill JH4 lak; Mi s 4r
i111111, ltDI ~ou~Jdft.

-...

1ltl o,UIIoiU uprntM U. lltt tfllruM Jdnr IITf tiN c.~•111• -JIM 0111. ,..,.
hbliJIIiM1 Co. ~ tdllorW boat( ultn odwnril• ,.,.,_

.

...

NATIONAL VI-EW
'

Refonn

KONDRACKE 1 S VIEW

Watch for pitfalls in changing
.401 (k) plans for the better

Lieberman leads the way in foreign policy primary

Based on their post-Sept. 11 foreign
policy speeches, it would be good for .
the Democratic Party if both former
• Chicago Tribune, on r&lt;forming 401(/e) plans: .. : More than
Vice Pre.sident AI Gore and Sen. Joe
half the funds in Enron's plans were invested in company stock
Lieberman (0-Conn.) run for presi· as it sank like a lead balloon last fall and the company head~d
dent in 2004,
for bankruptcy court. That left thousands of Enron employees
The two memben of the 2000 pres. with worthless 401(k)s.... But as -the reformers begin drafting
idential ticket have enunciated a forchanges to protect workers' retirement plans, they had better
eign policy that's simultaneously tough
make sure they don't "fix" the problem by making it worse....
arid idealistic - one that would give
These plans and Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
Democrats credibility in a contest with
COLUMNIST
were excluded from the limits on company stock and were
President Bush.
given other taX breaks because the government wanted to
Even they probably couldn't erase
, enc'ourage companies to offer them to their workers.
the wide lead that Republicans hold. ·Both Lieberman and Gore have
... But there are problems that have been exposed in the glare
over Democrats on dealing with ter- come out strongly for ending the
. · of the En ron scandaL They revolve around the lack of diversirorism and foreign policy (up to 40 threat pose&lt;¥ by Iraqi dictator Saddam
• ty in investments :g&gt;d restrictions on when employees may sell
points in some polls), but they might Hussein -and doing so unilaterally if
'· company stock, eilber through- age requirements or lockdown
narrow it some.
·
allies w111 not follow America's lead.
periods.
.
Lieberman offered this opinion, in
Most other Democrats, as Will MarIn the case of Enron, employees under age 50 were restrictshall
of
the
centrist
Progressive
Policy
fact,
before Bush did - actually on
:· ed from selling stock. On top of that, all employees were preInstitute notes, have opted for a "me Oct. 15. Gore did so in his speech
. vented from selling their 401 (k) stock for several weeks last fall
too" stance, saying .they support Bush Tuesday at the Council on Foreign
' · during a change of pbn administrators. All they could do was
on
terrorism and then trying as fast as Relations in Ne'Y York.
·.: watch helplessly from the sidelines as the stock plunged in
possible to shift the conversation to . Lieb.erman has said he won't run in
'' value.
·
, 20.04 if Gore does, out of a sense of
domestic policy..
· ::. A larger question may be what can be done to save workers
"Democrats
1houldn't
cede
the
.
loyalty to the !Jlan who picked him for
·from their own· worst impulses--namely, becoming • and '
nation's top-priority issue · to the the 2000 ticket. Based on their foreign
· ''remaining overly invested in their own company's stock. ·
Repul;llicans;~ Marshall said he's been policy statements, I hope Lieberman
i · ... This comes just as the mammoth baby boom inexorably
can find a way around that promise.
telling
Members of Congress.
.. ' ages into retirement. Thus, the reformers must perform a bal- .
"They've got to craft their own
Gore's speech was deeply derivative
ancing act--protecting employees while not discouraging their
alternative
policy
on
tpis
new
threat,"
of
Lieberman's- right to the edge of
~·employers from 'offering these volunt2ry plans in the fint place.
he told me, "drawing on the rich tra- plagiarism, in fact - and Lieberman's
~.
'
dition of Harry Truman and Dean was much more strategic-minded.
'
~}
Acheson in devising the containment
Both Democrats, while endorsing
poli.cy at the outset of the Cold War." Bush's forceful military stance toward
~: TODAY
Actually, some Democratic leaders America's enemies, added a call for
••"
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
notably Senate Majority Leader aggressive U.S. action to promote
~~ Today is Thunday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day .o f 2002. There are
Thomas Daschle (S.D.), another human rights, economic development
~ 313 days left in the year; . ·
·
·
potential 2004 candidate have and respect for other cultures in the
~ Today's Highlight in History: . ·
.·
· .
sounded an even more uncertain note Muslim world.
~ - On Feb. 21, 1965,former Black Muslim leader Malcolm X,
·
.
than "me too," questioning 'whether
Lieberman said on Jan. 14, "As we
~ : 39, was .shot to ·death in New York by assassins identified as
, Bush should mount an attack on Iraq continue the critical work of rooting
~: Black Muslims.
and other nations he has labeled part out our terrorist enemies militarily, we
~:
On this date:
of an "axis of evil."
must launch a long-ter-m · geopolitical
f. In 1878, the first telephone directory was issued, by the Dis~ trict Telephone Co. of New Haven, Conn.
&lt;: In 1885, the Washington Monument was dedicated.
~ In 1916, the World War I Battle ofVerdun began in France.
• In 1925;The New Yorker magazine made its debut.
:
In 1947, Edwin H. Land publicly demonstrated his Polaroid
~ Land camera, which could produce a black•and-white photo~ graph in 60 seconds.
· '
•( In 197~, P':sidetit N~on ~egan his ~storic visit to China as
~·· he and h1s w1fe, Pat, arnved m Shangha~. ·· .
;i' In 1973, Israeli fighter planes shot down a Libyan Airlines jet
~ over the Sinai Desert, killing more than 100 people.
·
In 1986, Larry Wu-tai Chin, the first American found guilty
:
• of spying for China, killed himself in his Virginia jail cell.
;. In 1995, Chicago stockbroker Steve Fossett became the first
person to fly solo across the Pacific Ocean in a balloon, land. :: ing in Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada.
;
In 2000, consul)ler advocate Ralph Nader announced his
" entry into the presidential race, bidding for the nomination of
: the ·Green Party.
·
·
~
Ten years ago: Kristi Yamaguchi of the United States won the
" gold medal in ladies' figute skating at the Alber~e Olympics;
~ Midori Ito of Japan won the. silver, Nancy Kerrigan of the
$· United States the bronze. John Frohnmayer announced his resj' ignation as chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts.
:' Five years ago: Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth .· Starr
! reversed his decision to resign. The space shuttle Discovery
• returned to earth after a mission to upgrade -the Hubble Space
! Telescope. A bomb exploded at a gay and lesbian nightclub in
: : Atlanu, injuring five people.
!;· One year ago: The Supreme Court ruled that state worken
; · cannot use an i_mportant federal disability-rights law to win
:; money damages for on-the-job discrimination. At the Grammy
,: Awards, Steely Dan won album of the year for "1\Vo Against
! Nature,". plus be.st pop album and best pop performance by a
;: duo or group for "Cousin Dupree"; contrOVersial rapper
•: Eminem won three awards, all in rap categories.
.: : 1 Today's Birthdays: Fashion designer Hubert de Givenchy is
;.· 75. Movie director Bob Rafelson is 69. Singer Nina Simone Is
! 69. Actor Gary Lockwood is 65. Actor-director Richard
; Beymer is 63.Actor Peter McEnery is 62. Recording executive
.!:: David G~ffen is 59. Actor Alan Rickman is 56. Actress 'JYne
~-Daly is 56. Tricia Nixon Cox is 56. Sen. Olympia J. Snowe, RMaine, is 55. Rock musician Jerry Harrison (The l"!eads) is 53.
t=Actor William Petersen Is 49. Actor K~lsey Grammer is 47 :
Country singer Mary-Chapin CarP,enter is 44. Actor Jack
~· Coleman is 44. Act!Jr Christopher Atkins is 41. R~k singer
~ Ranking Roger is 41. Actot William !Jaldwin ~ 39. Rock
,..: musician Michael Ward is 35. Blues musician Corey Harris is
"'33. Country singer Eric Heatherly Is 32.

Morton
Kondracke

IN HISTORY

and ideological initiative - akin to
the great campaign that won the Cold
War - .to combat the despotism,
poverty and isolation th'at terrorists
exploit." .
·
By contrast, Lieberman recommended a series of specifi c political strategies for addressing the ills of the Islam- ·
ic world, putting more emphasis on
human rights in U.S . diplomacy, promoti!1g free trade and free economies
in the Arab world, and re-energizing
America's public diplomacy and foreign aid programs.

Moreover. while Gore endorsed
action against "evil axis" adversaries,
there was a distinct "yes, but" quality
to his remarks.

About Iraq, he said, "If we resort to
force, ·we must absolutely get it right.
It must be an action set up carefully
and on the basis of the most realistic
c on c epts,~'

not of "best- case scenarios

or excessively literal transfers from
recent experience" in Afghanistan.
If foreign policy speeches constitute
very early pre-primary positioniqg by
presidential candidates, I'd say Lieberman is in the lead.
Democrats are, and likely will
remain, far behind the president as
long as he executes U.S. foreign policy
successfully. What's more, Bush's State
of the Union address suggested a new
long-term dedication to hum an rights
an·d nation-building previously missing from administration poli cy..
But to pass a threshold of electability, Democratic candidates ne_i:d to have
a forceful, coherent foreign policy.
Right now two of them do - only
two.
(Mortolf Ko11dracke is executit;e editor of
Roll Call, the lletvspaper of Capitol Hill.)

RYAN'S VIEW

-Flawed system has created ice follies at Olympics

f

ff

1

.

.

.

'

.,
'

.

�-.

-

.. ' ..

~Daily Sentinel·

. .....

~····-,,

·

By_!th~e!..· .!!!Re~!!n~d!!!.,__~~~~Page~A!!!!E

Thuradtly, Feb. 21, 200_2

(Other woman' oses out
DEAR ABBY: I am the other
woman you rarely hear from. I had
an affair with a married man · and
married him after he -divorced his
wife.
Please warn your female readers
that even when an affair leads to ·
marriage, it isn't going to be what
they expect.
' My husband and I have been
married nearly nine years. We have
a beautiful daughter. She is the only
good thing that has come out of
this mess. My husband is selfish and
cares only about his own needs. His
ex-wife still won't speak to me (not
that I want her to), and their son
barely acknowledges my existence.
All I feel is guilt over breaking up
their marriage and remorse for the
mess ! made of my life.

hard lessons lately.
If people truly love each other,
A married man (or woman) who they should wait until tlosure is put
pursues a new relationship before on -the fint relationship. It will
TEXAS
DEAR SORRY: 011, ~he lessons putting closure on the previous one allow time fer healing. One cannot
that people learn too late. I find it displays several character flaws: dis- commit fully to a new job until
interesting· that you describe only- loyalty, immaturity. dishonesty, and notice is given and the allotted time__
spent. The same holds true for a
men as craving the thrill of the an inability to commit.
I was Ray's third wife. He left relati~mship. RAY'S THIRD
chase. Women, too, get caught up in
the excitement and melodrama of each of us under the same circum- WIFE
DEAR WIFE THREE: To
seducing another woman's husband. stances. When the going got tough,
As in your case, they usually wind he bailed. Like most people, Rlly quote a well-known advice columup· getting less than they hoped and had a pattern. He would meet a nist, "Oh, the lesson• we learn too
woman, start a relationsl)ip, then . late." Yours was a painful one. But
more ·than they bargained for.
leave
his wife. Yes, I won the grand please don't place the blame entireRead on for a letter that arrived
prize, but what a mistake! I would ly on Ray. After all, he had a cothe day after yours:
· you. .
DEAR ABBY: This letter is for have been better off if I hadn't. I conspirator(Pauline Phillips .and her daughter
all the "other" women out there. I have no doubt that Ray loved me
dated "Ray," who claimed his mar- very much. However, he lacks the ]ean11e Phillips share the pseudonym
riage was over. Ray did leave his skills. to maintain a healthy relation-. Abigail V.n Buren. Write Dear Abby at
wife, but he was dishonest with her. ship. No relationship can be healthy www.DearAbby.com or P. 0 . Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)
In fact, I have learned some pretty if it starts in a deceitful manner.

POMEROY Students in
schools of the Meigs Local School
District making a grade of B or
above were listed on the honor roll
for the second nine-weeks grading
period.
Making the honor roll were the
following students from their respec·
tive schools. ·

knew he was married. - SORRY
FOR
EVERYTHING
IN

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
So, Abby, if any of your readers are
dating a married man - give them
this warning: Run for your life
now! He may seem sweet and caring, but that is only because he likes
the chase. Once he gets you
hooked, you will be treated the
same way he treats his present wife.
If you complain , he will tell you
that you "asked· for it." After all, you

~

Bradbury
Grade 4 -1)oler Andrews, Latricia
Smith, Autumn Ebersbach, Michael
Gomez, Megann Halley, Nikki
Smith, Bub by Wills.
Grade 5 - · · Amber Hockman,
Chad Bonnett, Beth Cremeans, Jen. nifer Fife, Kayla Gheen, Laura
Gheen, Nicole Haley, Lian Hoffmim,
Shawn Hudnall, Jared McKinney,
Courtney Moyes, Tess Thomas, and
Jessita Wagner.

Harrisonville

f

VALENnNE ROYALTY

www.mydllllyMntlnel.com

Meigs

I

MEIGS COUNf'Y CALENDAR
Township Trustees special
SATURDAY
meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday,
MIDDLEPORT
The
at township office on Joppa Forgiven 4 will be singing at
Road.
the Ash Str,eet Church, Mid·
dleport, 7 p.m., Saturday.
FRIDAY
Pastor Glen .Rowe invites
POMEROY - Pomeroy public.
Church of Christ, free com·
munity dinner, Friday, serv·
REEDSVILLE - Free
ing 5 to 7 p.m. Everyone
clothing day at the Fellow· .
welcome.
ship
church
of
the
Nazarene, Reedsville, 9
GALLIPOLIS - Benefit
a.m. to noon, Saturday. For
songfest and chill supper,
Information call Jill Holter,
THURSDAY
New Life Church of God
POMEROY Meigs (located off Airport Road 949·2603.
Senior Citizens Diabetes behind Car Quest Auto
MONDAY
Support Group, Thursday Parts), 7 p.m. 'singers
POMEROY - Pomeroy
1o a.m. at the Meigs Senior Faithful Followers, Frank
Center.
and Ida Martin,· Mike Durst, Alumni Association, Men·
Ruth Walker and Pastor day, 7 p.m., home of
Yvonne Young.
REEDSVILLE
Olive Rick Towe. Public lnv~ed:

Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce
meetings and special
events. The calendar Is
not designed .to promote
sales or fund-raisers of
any type. Items are printed only as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

Arthur Reeves and Doshie. Sydenstricker were named king and queen at the Valentine's Day
party held for residents, their fam1ly members and staff at Veterans Memorial Skilled Nursing
Center. (Submitted photo)

LEGION DONATION

' Kindergarten - Josiah Beha,
Amber Laudermilt and Autumn
Preast, Derik Hilj, Daniel Morman,
f.• Samantha
Spires, Brando11o
i

Thompson and Trevor Williamson
f Giade 1 - Casi Arnold, Ashley
I Jeffers and Ashleigh Sa)ore, and Britt tany Cremeans,
.
1 Grade 2 -· Stephanie Hoalcraft,
Zachary Sayre, Samantha Chabot,
Vicki Lenigar,Brianna Markin,Kayla
McKnight, Timmy Parsons, Michael
Satterfleld, Michelle Satterfield and
Kayla wyant.
I Grade 3 - Julia Lant:i and Tiffany
•L
\ ee
l Grade 4 - Halley Williams, Dawn
~Bisseil, . Alisha Chapman, Becca
! Donohue, Dean Hively, Christy
! Lewis and Zachary Young
·
'
\\ Grade 5 - Bethany Lee and
\Mason Metts.
·
C C Class-. Christy Wheeler and
Jacob Workman.

McCombs.
Grade 2 - Stephen Barcus,
Desirae Cundiff, Michael
Davis, Zach Fink, Shelby
Fitchpatrick, Marlee Hoffman,
St~phanie
Hudnall,
Michelle Johnson, Jeffrey
Kimes,
Nathan
Mohler,
Nathan.Rothgeb, A.J. Rowe,
Kayla Shane, Haley Tripp,
McKenna ·warner, Cady Carpenter, Bruno Casci, Kimberly Curl, Halli Hall, I.R. Jewell, Austin King, Stephanie
·LeMaster, Ben Reed, Travis
Tackett, Jesse Wisem.an.
Grade 3 Olivia Bevan,
Valerie
Conde,
Taylor
Dowler, Amber Evans, Colt
Kerr,
Kayla
LeMaster,
Jonathan McCarthy, Shannon
McLaughlin, Ryan Payne,
Tanner Tackett, -Angel Lemley, Brandon Bachner, Nikki
Davis, Kyle Johinson, Shelby
Johnson, Amanda Meadows,
Misty. Morrison, Joseph Pow. ell, Brenton Southern, Chandra Stanley, Daniel Stewart ,
Carrie White.

Pome.I'Of

,

'

M
' iddlepo
· rt

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

I honor rolls announced

Kindergarten - Shandi Beaver,
Jacob Browning, Ron Capehart,
Brett Casto, Emma-Lee Chapman,
Kimberly C11nningham, Trenton
Deem, Brittany Durst, Meredith
Gaul, · Adrianna ' Hutchinson,
Damon Jones, Sara Kle!n, Ciera
Marcinko, Morgan Marnati, Cody
R'
K. 1
h
tee, · ay ee Row,e, Nat an
Starcher, Carolann Stewart, Saige
Taggart, Carly . Taylor, Johnathan
Young.
Grade 1 - Rachel B~uer, Ryan
,.
Caruthers; Alyssa Cremeans,
Haley
,
English. Kacy . fink, ,. Amanda
Grant, Kendra Hanin'g, Eddie
Hendricks, C!)ristopher Jones,
· Corey
King, Thomas
Klein,
.
·
1
Nathan Laudermilt, Alex Morris,
1,
Tess Phelps, Devin Price, Tyler
t Kindergarten _ Bre Bon- Price, Sam Scherfel, Maggie
• net, l).J. Dixon, Bradley Hel- Smith, Bethany Spaun, Robert
I'G4!f·~~~·Q.I.i-v4-a.----Lan-.e, ... ~ay.Jor .S.tn~~lt-.Jrutin.. .:J:illis •.:... Jyiadelyn
)Rowe, Levi Smit, Andy Stein, Thomas, Damelle Walk~~· Cattlyn
:valerie Wolfe, Rocco Casci, Wtlj;Je~se Woo4ward. •:,.
,Cheyenne Hall, - Courtney · G'rade 2 - Cheyemle Beaver,
: Holl~y. Brennan Klein, Zach Darierine Betzing, Olivia Cleek;
:Petrv, Shannon Walker, Dylan Caitlin Cordell, Danielle Cullums,
::Bass, ·. Kimberly
Casci, Andy Fairchild, Catherine Grady,
:Micha,ela Davidson , Patrick Jessica Grant, R~mnie Haning,
;Evans, Isa~c Gibbs, Jonathan Morgan Johnson, Taylor Jones,
fReitmire, Jamie Walters .
Latesha Klein, Colton ¥~Kinney,
; Grade 1 - Bradley Bone- · Cody Mattox, Jeffrey· Roush,
:cutter, Matt Casci, Allys on Ma~kenzie Sellers, Zachary Sheets,
:Davis, ~olton ,Hall, Justin Cayelynn Smith, Sean Walker.
:Jeffers; Treav
McKinney,
-Grade 3 - · Brianna Buffington,
:Jacob , Mulholland, Rachel Hannah Cleek, Nathaniel ' Gilkey,
' Payn~ • .Emma Perr'in; 'A mber Brandon King, Cheliea Patterson,
.Steinmetz;
Kyrie
Swann, Ravenne Reed, Garrett Riffie,
;Tv'Ier Tr.iplett, Jacob Braley, Kasey Roush, Katelyn Stacy, .Sarah
: Robbie Dillon, Harley Fox, Thomas, Christian Woods.
:Emily Kirman, Jessi MeadGrade 4 Chelsea Arms,
: ows, . Keanna
Robinson, Kristin Ballard,Joy Billings, Ashley
:. Kiesha Rowe, Bradley Wills, Carey, Ivy Conde, Caleb Davis,
: ·Z ach
Yeauger,
Indigo Kristine Davis, Taylor Deem, Kris-

f

•

-

~

ten Eblin, Veronica Grimm, Ryan
Jeffers, Patience Johnson, Erin Patterson, Samantha Prater, Shelby
Ohlingl!r, Jacob Riffle, Ryan VanMatre, Meri VanMeter, Cayla Taylor, ~shley Walker,
Grade 5 - Alex · Cullums, Dee
Cundiff, Lucreshia Howard, Sarah
Hubbard, Jessica Jew.ell, Tiffany
Jolinson, Cara Lawless, •Alex Patterson, Erin Perkins, Calee
Reeves, Kelsey Sauters, Zach
Schwab, Josi VanMeter.
LD - T.J. Conlin, Talmadge
Lewis, Teresa Schartiger, Bradley
Stone.
~H Eric Cranston, Kim
Deaver, A.]. Kopec, Marjorie
Lewis, Nate McBane.

Dugan, Jonathan McVeY! Angel
Russell, Eric Smith, Katlynn
Stanley, Lauren Swrick, Bria nna
Werry, Darrin Will.
Grade - 1 Jorden Evans,
Christopher
Folmer, Jenny
Gheen, Kenzie Shuler, Hillary
Stone, Autumn Williams , Jared
Williamson .
Grade 2 - Courtney Baker,
Breanna Gheen, · Emalee Glass,
Kayla Green, Cody Harming,
Bethaney Ulbrich.
.
Grade 3 Alaine Arnold,
William
Folmer,
Miranda
Grueser, Nicholas Ingels, Marissa
McAngus, Connor Swartz.
Grade 4 Jacob Dunn,
Darby Gilmore, Breana Hemsley,
Scott Kennedy.
Grade 5 Jamie Bailey,
Crockett Crow, Ruche! Davi s,
Kennedy,
Andrew
Kindergarten
Courtney Morgan
O'Bryant,
and
Caitlin
Swartz.
Burnem, Jarret Durst, Taylor
Hysell Sandy Painter, Jacob
Pierce, Megan Snodgrass, Jackie
Tanner, Morgan Tucker, Cassan·dra Davis, ·Wyatt Hysell, Makina
McCloud, Deianeira Oliver, Selena Reyn_olds, Cassidy Rose, Cody
Grade 6 - Samantha AckerWhite; Megan Cleland, Rheanna man, Michael Ball, Jacob Barnes,
Harmon, Abigail Houser, Jordan Amy Barr, Talisha Beha, Brittany
Hutton, Brandon Mahr, Chelza Chapell, Corina Cross, Emily
McMillin, Taylor Mitchell, Tren- Davis, Elizabeth Doczi, Joshua
ton Prater, Keenan Goble, Eakins,
Ashley
Ebersbach,
Meranda
Lambert,
Kelton Robert
foreman,
Bethany
McCloud, Brody Peyton, Taylor Gibbs, Christopher Goode, Alice
Tucker. ·
Hess, Nicole Hill, Brittany JefGrade 1 Paula Barthelmas fers, Bradley Jones, Kaylee
Tyler Eblin, Shane Engle, Hannah Kennedy, Kyle Kinnan, Natasha
King, Benton McCloud, Jordan Knapp, John Lamb, Kirk Legar,
d
Lindsay MicKinney, Breanna
Mea · ows, Mickayla Nottingham,
Sharon Wright, Megan Dye, Mitchell, Chelsey Noel, CassanNatalie Michael, Shawnella Pat- da Patterson, Brittany, , Preast,
terson,
Shana Gorslene, M.J. Lesley Preece, Kori Priddy,
Hutton, Kayla McClure, Gunner Jonathan Runyon, Tiffany Simp·
son, Phillip Sisson, Molly Smith,
McKinney, Chad Searles, Breanna Steven Stewart, Lacy Stobart,
· Snowden, Anthany Lane.
Caitlyn Thomas, Alexa Venoy,
Grade 2 Paige Barrett, Patti Vining, James Ward.
Steven
Mahr, Kassandra Mullins,
·
Grade 7 - Clayton Blackston,
Cassidy Tucker, Tessa Petrey, Jor- Daniel Bookman, Valerie Cardan Jeffers, R . J. Scarbury, Karl penter, Caleb Cherry, Cory Dill,
G)Jeltig,Jennif~r Robinson, Cody Heather · Eagle, Heather Elam,
Hysell, Holly McGrath, Tiffany Andrew
Games,
Courtney
McKinney, Jacob Nitz, Sharaya Haggy, Jessica Haggy, Jennifer
,White. ,
. .
''
,· · · Hendricks, Keilah JackS, Sarah
· Grade 3 Cameron Bolin, Jeffers, Cayla Lee, Gabrielle
Austin Sayre, · Carlee Smith, Lester, Tasha Lester, Chalsie
Joshua Miller, Tyson Morris, Joe- Manley, Joshua Partlow, David
Ian Nutter, Jessica Rowley; She!- Poole, Jesse Price, Bradley
lie Bailey, Bradert Prater, Saman- Ramsburg, Robert Reed, Casey
tha Goble.
Richardson, Katie Rodehaver,
Grade 4 Ian Bullington, ~ritnee Sauter, Amanda ScharBenjamin Hood, Jessica Shelton; tiger, Samantha Shontz, Alexan Micki Barnes, Justin Cotterill, der Sisson, Bobbi Smith, WhitKayla Graham Brad Hood, ney Smith, Jennifer Smith,
Annisha Kopec. ·
Bradley Soulsby, Krysta Stitt,
Grade 5 Clayton Bolin, Gregory
Taylor,
Jordann
Morgan Lentes, Jason Morris, Thomas, Kristin Trader, Amber
Eugene
Patterson;
Chelsea Ward, Michelle Weaver, Kasey
Carp\nter, Lilly Jacks, Wyatt Ball, Winter, Jerod Wyatt, Ashley
Adrian Bolin, Brittany Collilis, Zielinski.
April Oiler.
Grade 8 Wesley Ault.
Miranda Beha, Derek Brickles,
Rosetta Brooks, Samantha Cole,
Kayla Fetty, James Fife, Robert
Kindergarten Olivia Cre- Games, Tyson George, Brittany
means, Alyson Dettwiller, Devan l:;:lysell, Britmey Jacks, Nathan

Rudand

Meigs Middle "
School

Salisbury

Jeffers, Jilian Jenkins, Julia John son, Kimberly Johnson, Joshua
Kenneay, Jacob Kennedy, David
Kuhn, Kayla McCarthy, Autumn
McLaughlin, Kelly Napper,
Brooke O'Bryant, Adam Pines,
Adrean Reese, Margaret Rupe ,
Ashley Savage, Jordan Shank ,
Roxanne Spears, Abby Stewart,
Whitney Thoene, Scott Tobin,
Joshua Venoy, Jacob Venoy, Lula
Webb, Miranda 'Young.

Meigs High School
Grade . 9 - Emily Ashley, Renee
Bailey, Jeffrey Baughm~n. Jeremy
Blackston, Justin Demoss, Trevor
Depoy, Patrick Dowell, Edd1e
Fife, Brandon Grover, Randy
Hart , Aa ro n !hie, Billy Joe Jon es,
M adison King, Katie Reed, Adam
Snowden, Eric Sydenstri cker ,
Chester Wigal, Jennianne Young .
Grade 10 David Barn es,
David Boyd, Jacl yn Brodbury.
Nathan Brickles, Kara Buffington, Jaynee Davis, Maegan Dod son, Andrea Fetty, Wesley Fields,
Tyler French, Jesse Gates, Ashley
Halley, Nichole Harper, Randall
Hudson, Steven Kauff, Au'bri~
Kopec, Sarah Lee, Christinla
Miller, Bobbie Napper, Eric~
Poole, Miranda Stewart, Leanfl
Stewart, : Ryan Sto bart, ·Brandi
Thomas, Carrie Walker, Jorda~
Williams .
'
Grade 11 - Deadra Barnett
·'
Lindsay Bolin, Brook Bolin,
Rachel Buckl ey, Andrea Bu~­
dette, Melanda Cha ncey, A'hle~
Colwell, Tirzah Codson, Maria ·
Drenner, Juley Eblin, Candice
.Fetty, Meghan H aynes, Courtney
Hicks, Jessica Hooten, Kati.e ]elfers, Melissa Johnson , Kelly Joh~­
ston, Jessi ca Ju stice, Amanda
Langdon, Anthony Martinez ,
Valerie McClinti c,
Mathew
O'Brien, Jessica Preast, Jason
Ros)er, Jere my Roush, Michele
Runyon, Amber
Spradling,
Emily Story, Samantha Tilley,
Jennifer Walker, Elizabeth Wi,\- .
fong, Allison Williamso n , Jennifer
Zielinski.
Grade 12 - Bradley Baylot,
Nicole Black, Danny Buffington,
Zach Davis, Amb er Ellis, Joshua
Glaze, Je ssic a Gray, Ashley
Hamilton, Corrie Hoover, Ashley
Hoschar, Jameson J ohnson,
Melissa
Kirk,
Ni cholas
McLaughlin,
Chris
Neece,
Mindy O'Dell , Krystal Pennington, Travis Powell, Kristy Puckett, Misty Puckett, Erin Ralston,
Jennifer Reeves, Leslie Runxon,
Elizabeth
Ru sse ll , Amanda
Saxon, Jessi ~;a Schuler, Evan
Shaw, Stacia Sims, Marc Smith,
Terry1 Smith, Jacob Smith,
Rebecca Smith, Amber Snowden, Crystal South, Allison Story,
Scott Taylor, Shauna White, Daisy
White , Tara Wyatt.
.

ill:

'

·~~----------------------------

EDUCATION

Serta Medium Finn

A check for $800 was given to Gallco Sheltered Workshop MRDD to be used for client activitY ·
p~ograms by the Rutland Post 467, American Legion, Thursday. Tim Stout, center, workshop
director, accepted the check from Eugene Fink, left, and Dennis McKinney, legionnaires: (Sen·
tlnel staff)
·
.

~119-

Happy Birthday!
MIDDLEPORT
Brandon Bachner celebrated his ninth birthday with a
party at the Mason Bowling
Lanes. His parents, Steven
and Tammy Bachner arid his
grandmother,
Carolyn
Bachner hosted the '}larty.
Attending
were
his
grandparents, Bob and
Jonetta Davis, Kevin, Ann,
Ryan and Mikayla VanMa· tre, Laurie, Paul and Ben

•

Reed, Kay and Kyle Johnson, Terry Spencer, Damon
and Dylan Fisher and Colt
Kerr.
Sending gifts and cards
were his aunt and uncle
. Tina and Brian Manning,
his
great-grandmother,
Pauline Cunningham, Carol
and Don Diddle, Lorna
Johnson, Joan Tewksbary,
Helen and Clyde Belcher
ahd Mary K. Roush . .

Fullea.pc.

till

O...Ht
l(lngHt

....
.. .

rspring class
!explores science
1fiction movies_

1

Full Ill

Queen Ill
. MingMI

l'lrllct SIIIPif" Pillow Tap

-..,.

~399 ·. ~~199..
FUI1se1
OtJeon Ht
l(lng Ht

FREE

.......
Perking

-MMyl11'7

-=
.,..

I'IIIIM. pc.

Otloln Ill
lOng Ill

..,.

·-

t''

Course to·be
t &lt;ffered at
i. · Washington St.
,,
•

'

~ MARIETTA.
How
~ much •,&lt;teal" s_ciet\ce actually
~ goes into popular science
l fiction such · as "The X[ Files" and "2001 -A Space
·l' Odyssey" 1
; This spring, a unique class
; at Washington ~tate Com:·munity College focuses on
; the connections between
I; science,' science fiction .and
.
' 'i SOCiety.
.
, The Science of ·Science
~ Fi~tion will be offered on
:.;w$ di!~Jday., evep.ip,gs ff~m
6:30 to 10 p.m.
v

'

.

'

'

Teom-taught by Dr. Dean
Hirschi, assistant professor
·of physics, and Ralph Tepe,
general studies professor,
the . course explores the scientific soundness of science
fiction and the effect of
new · technology, such as
artifiCial intelligence, on
the 'genre. ·
Topics include cloning,
computers,
· mutations,
robots, black holes, and
space exploration, as well as
aliens, plagues and other
fun topics.
The course will draw on
examples from literature
and . filtn, including "The
Time Machine" and "War
of the Worlds." 1
· The four credit · hour
course begins on April 3

and is open .to the community as well as college students. Cost is $62 per credit hour for Ohio residents
and $124 per credit hour
for . non-residents; plus registration and technology
' fees and any books or materials.
For more information on
The Science of Science
Fiction, call Dean Hiqchi
or Ralph Tepe at 374-8176,
or
email
them
at,
dhirschi@wscc .edu
or
· rtepe@wscc.edu.
To register for the coune,
contact the Division of
Continuing ·
Education
Monday through Thursday
from 1 to 8:30 p.m. and on
Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.

2001 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
will be here Thursday, March 15th
Supplement to:
The Daily Sentinel
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Don't Miss Out On This.... ·
• Hardware
• Paint
• Construction

• Appliances
• Electrical
• Plumbing

Call Dave Harris Or Debbie Call at
992~2156

1

�..

.

.. _ ......

----.......

'

....... ............ ... -....... ,._. . ...
'

··--'--~- -

,.-

Www.rnyallyltJIIInel.com

·Inside:

llluriUy, Feb. 21' 2002

The Daily Sentinel

:d.hio drops UNC, Prlge B2
~ketball

roundups, Prlge 84
'Easttm girls prwitw, Page 85

Page B1
thursday, Feb.,.•ry 21. 2002

. 'I'HuRsnt\v's

..&amp;..A...oiNT

HIGHLIGHTS
YOU CAN STill GET UP TO 0% FINANCING ON NEW CARS- PlUS UP TO $2500 REBATE*!!

~

.

Eastem dq,es it with defense Southern

Basketball
'

BY DAN Pou:YII

. Wedl 11d1y'e Glmee

,I

•
'

-I ll
-Cl
-II

'2002

2002ZX2

#COI02

$11~988

$11:1375

2002 VILLAGERS
SAVINGS UP TO

•

lOOl TAURUSSE

2002
EXPLORER
4 Door, #C0253

$17}662

$23~802

#C0163

ESCORT

(two)

(two)

2001

2001

MUSTANGS

i
LINCO.LN
L• UXU.Y

$5700·00 ·

SABL-ES

TAURUS ·

..

WINDSTAR

~OdD

•

15 Passenger·

...

J4YsttQ.ut·

(0.
20 1

2001
F·350

2001
"

AME.ICAN

UPTO

(two) .

· . l.001

2001
TOWNCAR

2000

2000

COUGAR

MOUNTAINEER

WEEK'S SPECIAL!!
Any of these for only
$6789

And «II htn'e less th«n 69,000 miles
143487

Escort • Auto, A{C, 11 door

'98 Sable · V6, A{C, 11 Door
tsoJm '98 Ranger XLT ~ one owner
144290 '97 Ranger· Grape color/

1sosm

FORD
EXPLORERS
HURRY!!
ONLY 2 LEFT!

$1095

==

• servtce inif. up to 5 quarts or Motorcraft on and new

Motorcratt oil liner • Pertorm Mulll·Polnt Vehlcl~ Inspection
• Lube • Check and tin nec8188fy fluids • All ·ln 29 minutes
or less • Diesel vehicles
be extra. ·
·

with less th«n 16,000
miles thllt we'll sell

·oo Mystique

$25_,995

-----------------------

11.•Pre-Owned

IUMD

Only
Hurry In For Best
Selection

Check ana adjust camber 111d toe. Ad&lt;ltiooal parts ana
labor may.be required on some vehicles.

THREE-AUTO
4DOORCARS

$9876

All have 3m Seat

2-wh"l $24 95 4·wheel $4995

I'OWfr &amp;r•IPIMI!t .
141710

'Ol Escort· cr~~~M, mt
#UJJJ

'00 FOCUS· Br1g11t 11e11

Powarstroke
Diesels
In-Stock

·fUll SIZE
FORD &amp; CHEVROLO

. IIURRY!!

ONLY 3 LfFT!

Selection
HURRY!! · OfL.Qrge
Supercab 4x4~s
ONLY! LEfT!
Call .orJust stop In

more

&amp;·RANGERS
&amp;DAKOTAS

NBA

'

,,

'
WedMadily'e
~~
Philadelphia 114, G; Slale'1o'1
L.A. Clippers 81, Miami 71
Detroit 97, Washington 90
Milwaukee 115, Houston 76
Cheriotte 78, Toronlo 77
Chicago .113, New York 109
Utah 110, Denver 99
Portland 90, Seattle 84

·

~=::.rc:rAO~a..~=~~nv·~u.:.··

----------------------Starting
at

Starting
at

$1 0

Pair .

CA~LSBAD, Calif. "(AP)
- On a day of shockers in
the opening round of the
Match Play Championship,
:none was bigger than Tiger
Woods heading to the club- ,
house to clean out his locker after a stunning loss to
~eter O'Malley, the 'p udgy
Australian who wasn' .f:Ven
supposed to l)e here. ·
· :/\.bout 15 minutes after
Woods tipped his cap and
ilwok hands with O'Malley, Phil Mickelson watched
)i~lplessly as John .. :Cook
r~J!led in a 35-foot' birdie
~~tt on the 16th hole . to :
~d L~fty home early for
tJre third tournament in a

Wow.

We will meet or beat any competitor's
advertised e~~C! on tl:le same tire.

SPLASH GUARDS
Starting
at

Pro Basketball .

:. tiger Woods
·dears locker

FOrd Motor
companv•• ..BSP"
.

Arizona 83. Arizona St. 75

EXPLORERS

we offer

'

WediiHday'a Gamn
MAC
!ikron 86; N, Illinois 80
Bowling Green 65, Miami, Ohio 50
Cent. Mlohlgan 76, E. Michigan 57
Toledo 54, Buffalo 42
W. Michigan 80, Ball St. 65
Ohio 86, N. Carolina 78
BIG TEN
ldinols 83, Penn St. 56
indiana 63, Ohio St. 57
Northwestern 61, Purdue 48
OTHEI'IS
Temple 67, Xavier 56
Florida 89, Auburn 61
Florida St. 86, Virginia 59
Georgia Tech 65, N.C. Slate 59
Maryland 84, Clemson 86
Memphis 71, South Flori$ 59
Mississippi St. ~·· \(anderbllt 43
South Carolina 86; I;SU sa .
Notre Dame 89, Weet Virginia 76
Arkansas 67, Alabama 59
Ne!:lraska 82, Texas ·A&amp;M 72
Oklahoma St. 85, Texas 80
Teicas Tech 91, Missouri 86
UTEP 85, New Mexico St. 81

SAVINGS

.....,.

2001

I

NCAA Men'e

$4~000

NAVIGATOR

'

Dlvlelon IV
Southam 74, Waterford 69
E;_aatem 81, Ironton St. ..19$ 49

#C0096

2002 LINCOLN

'

• Mcclain 61, Fairfield Union 49
Mc:Oennott NW 61, Athens 49
\'j'alhi1glon C.H. 62, Vlnllln CO. 50

$21~470

KEYLESS ENTRY

Sta~ing

$18 0

.

DPOL~LYTRIBUNE.COIII

. •.Sectlonll Toul'lllrnentl
. .
Dlvlelon II
Gallla Academy 86, Meigs 51

IC0212

.:bavid Duval was 2-up
with two holes to play
~ain~J Kevin Sutherland;
'&gt;!ho 1 birdied the 17th and
~g~h holes, and sent Duval
p,icking with a two-putt
birdie on the 20th hole of
the match.
· :rhe other top seeds had
~nly · minor difficulty as
Sergio· Garcia, Ernie Els,
R'etief . Goosen, David
T6m.s, Vijay Singh and
Dkvis Love III ;~II advanced. :
Only Toms was taken to the
18th hole, where he defeat!
ed Rory Sabbatini.

ALBANY - Eastern's
attempt to return to the.
Ohio Division IV final
four . began Wednesday
with the same emphasis
that it had during last year'i
run.
Defense, and defense,
and defense.
The, Eagle press defense
took apatt Ironton St. Joe
· · and set up
a
third
meeting
with
Meigs .
County
foe
Southern
in the sectional final
on SaturLyona
day with
an 81-49 dismantling of
the Flyers.
"The pressure got us out
of our offense,'' said Flyers'
coach Adam Simpson.
"Going in, we had worked
on that yesterday; we knew
the,re was going to be
heavy pressure. It's one
thing to work against it,
but when they got the athletes they have, it's.different
to play agaifist it."
· Eastern coach Howie
Caldwell makes no bones
about how his team wilt be
successful.
"For us to be successful,,.
our defense ntak~s our
· offense,'' he s3id; "I woukl
· say in our hour~artd-a-half
of practice, we spend at
le'l$t 50-55 minutes on
nothing but defense,
because . we have always .
had the philosophy that if
you are gonna win, your
defense is gonna win. it for
you."
The defense was the key
in the third period when UP HIGH - Eastern freshman Cody Dill leaps over Ironton St. Joe defenders during
PIMH 1H Ellsbm. Bl the Eagles' 81-49 win In sectional play Wednesday. (Bryan Long)

comes back
to advance
BY Seem WOU'E
. SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ALBANY - Trailing the Waterford
Wildcats 27-6 at one point in .the
game, the Southern Tornadoes all but
looked eliminated and on their way to
the bus. Determination and all-out
husde eliminated
the
need for a
as
trip-ticket
Southern blasted Waterford in
the second half
52-38 to post a
dramatic 74-69 ·comefrom-behind victo1 ~· ry Wednesday night
ip the first round sectional game at!ilexander High SchooL
Hitting 25-36 from the line, 20-26
in the second half, Southern came from
a 21-point deficit to claim the win.
Balance, aggression, and patience in the
second half were key ingredients to the
wtn.
"This was a total team effort,'' said an
·elated coach Jonathan Rees. "Our kids
really hustled .and never gave up. They
just kept believin' and kept coming
after Waterford defensively. It was our
defensive tempo 'that allowed us to get
back into the game."
Although it won't show up in a statistical column, it was perhaps one of
the biggest keys of the game. Southern ·
senior Macy Rees was placed on Billy
Lee, Waterford's 16-point shooting
guard. Not 'only did Rees hold .him
·under his average, but he held tlu: talented guard scoreless over four quarters
ofplay.
.
Offensively, every Tornado was a
hero. justin Connolly was in early foul
trouble and shot only a few times,
going scoreless in the first half. Connolly came out with a vengeance in the
second half, however, hitting his second
shot and only missing one more

PINH see Advance, Bl

Gallia Acad·.emy sends Maruaders packing, 86-51
BY BurcH ·CooPER

3-point goals.
Geiger and McKinnis lit it up in the first
McARTHUR- There would be no sur- half from the outside as Geiger had four 3prises this time.
pointers in the first half, while McKinnis
In December, Meigs jumped out to a 10-0 nailed two.
lead and only lost to Gallia Academy by six.
"Both of those two guys just lit it up from
· In Wednesday's sectional · the perimeter and they've been doing that
game between the two pretty regular here the last part of the season,"
teams, however, the Blue said Osborne.
Devils made a statement.
Geiger led all scorers with 17 points, folGallia. Acaden\y jumped lowed by McKinnis with 13 and Tony Moore
out to a 19.- 0 lead, and dom- and Tom Bos.e each with 11.
inated the first three quarters. Meigs finally scored with 2:35 left in the
of play, C:,n their way to a 86- first quarter as Ty Ault .stole a Galli~ AcadeiJlY ,
51 win over the Marauders pass, and Derric}c f:aclder was foulea attemptat Vinton County High ing a 3-pointer.
School.
· Fackler made one of his three foul shots.
FICkler
The Blue Devils will' meet
"We're a much better basketball team than
Northwest 7 p.m. Saturday in the sectional we played like tonight,'' said Meigs head
finals. The Mohawks defeated Athens, 61-49, t:oach Carl Wolfe. "We've still. got a long way
in the late sectional game Wednesday.
to go and G;illipolis is an excellent basketball
"We've said all year that .our play has been team. They grew up last year, and hopefully;
based on defense, and we wanted to set the we 'II grow up th.is year."
.
tone early and a little bit of tbat was from the
Fackler finished with eight points, wh1le
first .time we played them," said GalliaAcade- Ryan Hannan led the marauders with 13
my head coach Jim Osborne. "Our goal was points.
.
to completely dominate them defensively and
"We knew them better this time, because
I think in the end, that's what we. accom- we have seen the~ enough to do that, so we
plished, partiaUy in that first quarter. The first were a litde more familiar with what they
seven or eight guys we played were just phe- were trying to do," said Osborne.
nomenal defensively."
At the end of th.e fmt quarter, the Blue
In that first quarter run, David Finney had Devils (18-3) led 23-5 and 44-17 at the half. IN YOUR FACE- Meigs' Matt Williamson fires a shot which is
all seven of his points on the night, while
challenged by Gallla Academy's Tom Bose Wednesday during
.
.
Andre Geiger and Travis McKinnis each had
Division II sectional tourney play. (Doug Shipley)
PleeH see Peddn~o Bl
BCOOPEROMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

For
PREMIER
EXPERIENCE

.TIME!

·verv Bastin

•

2520 IIIII DriVe • Polll PIIMIDI, WI • 13041 615·1222

PLEASANT
·VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�•

Thursday, Feb. 21, ~

www.myctallysentlnel.com

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Ohio drops emotionless Tar Heels Eastem
•.

,J

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Ohio treated it like a trip of
a lifetime. North Carolina was its unemotional self.
· The result was Ohio's 86-78 victory Wednesday night as the
Bobcats joined a list of schools &amp;om mid-major conferences
th•t have made the Tar Heels look less tiwl ordinary this season.
The Bobcats got 23 points fiom Steve
Esterkamp and 20 points and nine
rebounds &amp;om Brandon Hunter and
shot 63 percent in the second half to
send North Carolina to its 12th loss in
•
'14 games.
.
"We didn't seem to be emotionally
into it for the first 32 minutes," North
C•rolina coach Matt Doherty said. " For what reason, I have no
idea. Only the guys know why.
"Our defense stunk;' Doherty •dded. "When we finally got
into it we were too far back. Our teom can't afford to come out
that way. They fought real hard for 40 minutes and we did not."
· Ohio got an emotional lift hours before the game when
co•ch Tim O'Shea •rranged for former UNC coach Dean
Smith to visit his team during its shootaround.
" If we went .to UCLA I would certainly try to see if John
Wooden would say hello to my team," O'Shea said. "I felt it was
a nice gesture on Coach Smith's part to take time to say hello
to our guys. But he told us that he was going to root real hard
for North Carolina."
The visit impressed the Ohio players and made them think of
the history of hoops along Tobacco Road heading into the
game.
"It meant a lot," Esterkamp said. "I've always wanted to meet
him since I was a little kid. That was something very special."
North Carolina was far &amp;om special for most of this night.
The Tar Heels (7-17) scored 95 points against Florida State on
Sunday, but couldn't string together their first winning streak
· since late December.
Meanwhile, the Bobcats (16-8), one of the better teams in the
Mid-American Conference, used a zone most of the night just
like Hampton and Davidson did in early season shockers over
the once powerful program from the Atlantic Coast Coriference.
Ohio led by four points at halftime, then reeled off 10 straight
points and hit seven of its first eight shots to quickly send the
Tar Heels behind by double digits. ·
At one point during Ohio's 20-8 run to begin the half,
Esterkamp scored nine straight points on three drives and a 3pointer. .
. Esterkamp's fifth straight basket of the half, a driving layup by
Zach Kiekow and two free throws &amp;om Sonny Johnson put the
Bobcats up by 17 with 10:39 left.
"We came out and made shots," said Esterkamp, who had
scored a combined 31 points in his last five games before going

POWER MAC - Ohio's Brandon Hunter (34) dunks over
North Carolina's Brian Berstlcker, left, and Will Johnson, right,
In the first half WednesdaY. (AP)
9-for-12 against the Tar Heels. "The last few games I've· been
shooting it pretty badly. Having a wide open look to start the·
half felt pretty good and that got me started taking it ·tO the
hole."
The margin reached 18 before North.Carolina went on a 216 run to pull to 73-70 with 2:08 left.'
"I felt like I was on the Titanic and ·we were about to go
down," O'Shea said. "We were about as close to collapse as you
can get."
But Patrick Flomo slammed home a dunk and Jaivon Harris
added a driving layup 36 seconds later to help take the ctowd
out of the game. The Bobcats then went 9-of-10 from the foul
line over the final 50 seconds to seal it.
Melvin Scott led North Carolina with .17 points.
The loss dropped the Tar Heels to 5-9 at .the Smith Center
this season.

Packing

turnovers, and of course with .Gallipolis' paying the price now for what hopefully
defense," said Wolfe. "There is just so he'll accomplish next year." ,
much pressure there. Our kids a.ren 't use
IIMcArll!ur
to that kind of pressute."
PlgeB1
· Dtvlllonll-onol Toumoment
. Golllll Acodomy M,llllgl 51
Osborne agree that Meigs is going
Meigs
5
12
4
30
5i
"We got down,. and being young, through what Gallia Academy went
Gallla
23
21
19
l!3
··1111
there's no way we came back," said through last year when the Blue Devils MEIGS- Ca~ Wolle 3 1·2 7, MattWIIUamson 2 tHl 4, Ty .
Aull1 0.0 3, Doug Qll o 2·2 2, David Boyd 1 0.0 3, JereWolfe. "Our defense was nonexistent and . struggled with a young team.
my Aou&amp;h 0 1-2 1, Ryan Frazier 2 0.0 5, Derrick Fackler
Gallipolis shot real well:'
"It's a good young group of kids with 2 2·5 8, Joman Williams 1 0-0 3, Ryan Hannan 5 0.0 13,
Meigs (5-17) was hoping for so much (Wolfe)," said Osborne. "We had those Zach Buah 1 tHl 2. TOTALS: 18 6-11 51.
CIALUA ACADEMY- Andre Geiger 6 1·2 17, )'ravia
more, not only considering their earlier growing pains last year. Now we've got a McKinnlss 51·1 13, Anthony Dey 3 0-0 6, Donnle,John·
· performance against the Blue Devils, but more mature group, so that's helped us. son 2 0-0 4, Cody CaldWell 3 o-o 6, Nlkola 111o o 2-4 2,
Ryan Hudson 1 0-0 2; David Finney z 3-5 7, Tony Moore
after the Marauders' sectional win over For them, it'll pay dividends in the 5 M 11, Tom Booa 5 1·1 11 , Zach Shawver 3 1·2 7.
35 9-15 1111.
New Lexington Monday.
future. We saw it towards the later part of TOTALS:
THREE..f&gt;OINT GOALS- Meigs 8 (Hannan 3, Fackler Z,
"When you're down like we were the game. They shot the ball real well and Aull, Boyd, Frazier, Wllllama), Gallla Academy 7 (Geiger
early, every bit of confidence that you they didn't give up in that aspect of the 4, McKinnlsa 2, Moore). Rebounds - Malgs · 28
(WBiiamson 1O), Gall Ia Academy 45 (Shawver 9. Boat 8).
·
got from Monday night in the win ... It game."
Asslsll- Meigs 3, Gallla Academy 19 (lllo 4, Johnson 4).
just all went down the drain in the first . "We paid the price last year for what Sleals- Meigs 8 (Fackler 3), GallIa Academy 14 (Gelger
3, McKinnlss 3, Johnson 3) . Turnovers- Meigs 23, Gal·
few minutes of the game with the we're accomplishing. Coach Wolfe is lla Academy 14.

from

,,

Advance

extent of Southernls scoring.
Darin Sampson put Waterford
up 2-0, then four free throws
from Seth Arnold and 1l:avis
Harra pushed the score to 6-0.
Arnold then hit a baseline
jumper before Randolph
scored for Southern.
Waterford went up 12-2 ori a
Harra goal, then Jordan Hill hit ·
. a break-away lay-up and a freethrow to complete an old-fashioned three point play. That
score stood to the buzzer, 12-5.
Waterford continued to
dominate as Coach Rees consumed three of his time .outs
before the half Southern feU
behind 27-6 early in the second quarter and was ice-cold
from the field. Southern hit just
3-17 threes for the half and was
just 4-16 &amp;om two-point
range. The buckets just would
not fall.
·

fnnPapBI

throughout the entire ·second
half Connolly ended the night
'with a game-high 19 points.
Nate Manin and Jordan Hill
each connected for 13 points in
sparlding performances, while
Dally Hill netted twelve points,
Craig Randolph ten, Macy
Rees five, and Jake Nease two.
Curt Crouch and Wes Burrows
had good stints coming off the
bench.
"We were very balanced in
scoring, but our defense was
die key;' said Rees. "Waterford
diqn't handle the pressure well.
We threw a couple types of
presses at them and the kids just
busted it all over the court.
· Waterford got frustrated and
we were able to convert the
turnovers into scores."
Waterford was led by Darin
Sampson with sixteen. points,
Seth · Arnold added 13, Joey
Baker eleven, Travis Schaad ten,
TraviS' Harra nine, and five each
from Travis Barth and Ben
Cunningham. Billy Lee was
scoreless.
Southern had ten points

from field goals in the final

'.

.I

trey, 42-38 and Connolly hit 1y gave Southern its biggest
his third in a row for a 42-41 lead at 59-49, but each time
tally. Travis Schaad of Water- Waterford would climb back
ford then got another old- into it with a three pointer.
fashioned 3-point play. RanOverall, WHS had four treys
dolph then hit a lay-up for a in the stretch and nearly
45-43 tally, then at the 2:03 climbed back into contention.
mark Jordan Hill hit a pair of Two treys came from Baker
free throws to tie the game, and two from Sampson, the
45-45.
. last a shot that ·came from
The last one minute and a Baker, cutting the score to 72half Southern had three fresh- 69 in the dosing seconds. A
men on the floor in Ran- pair of Martin free ·throws
dolph, Nease, and Wes Bur- however sealed the game for
rows. Behind a Randolph Southern at 74-69.
"We are glad to be in this
goal, a pair of free throws by
Big Jake, and a pair of Jordan · position, playing for a sectionHill safeties, Southern went al title," said Coach Rees. "We
oo a 6-0 run to end the frame feel like we are going to come
in ~king a 51-46 command out and be ready to play for
into the final round.
the title. We have no pressure
Southern continued its on us we are happy to be here.
pressure and because ofWHS We are going to come to
turnovers went up 57.-49.That win."
came as a result of Dally
Southern hit 4-of-6 threesin .
Hill, Justin Connolly, Nate the second half. Connolly hit
Southern picked up the Martin ,combination. Connol- 3-of-3 treys in the stretch.
defensive
mtensity
and
switched completely to man to
man and to full court pressure.
The players responded. Southern went on a 17-0 run over a
two-minute period in cutting
the score to 29-22. Southern
• All School Fleecewear. ....... ........
made some hasty shots after
that, giving up several opportu' Regular $38,95-$44.95
nities to furthe&amp; cut into the
score. Waterford converted on
'• All remaining sweatshirts.
the misses and p115hed the score
• Nllong sleeve T;shirts ..... 30%
back to 31-22 at the half,

40% OFF
OFF

Waterford come out early
and went up 36-22 seemingly
putting Southern out of reach.
But a SHS time out soon set
'
thin~ straight. Rees hit a Iayup,Jordan Hill hit a lane driver,
and Connolly got untracked
with his first three.

In the early going it looked
like Craig Randolphis early
field goal ·was going to be the

By the 4:35 mark, Connolly
hit his second trey for a 42-35
score, then Hill hit another

&lt;

trated during a two-tnlnufe
stretch near the end of tqe
first quarter wh~n t~e
Eagles
forced Flyer misf•umPit&amp;eBI
takes on three inbounas
'
the Eagle shooting went plays.
The first time resulted ln
cold for a stretch · but they
a five-second turnover arid
pulled away anyway.
Ea5tern opened the half the second one a forc~d
with a 40-19 le•d, and then time out call by the Flye(s.
failed to score a point in On the opening inbounc;ls
the period's first three play of the, second quart~r.
minutes. The defense held BuckJey stole the ball ~t
the Flyer run to just nine half court and converted •it
'
points though, and St. Joe into ·a lay- up.
Caldwell,
well-recogtrimmed the lead to 40-28.
Then, just add pressure, nized for his yelling,
whistling and stompirig
per Caldwell'! philosophy.
"Lf you look at what we during the course of :a
did in the third quarter," he game, admitted that ~e
, said, "what we did was we does much more of tho$e
got some steals; we got up- things to grab his player;.'
tempo. We pushed the ball; attention when the Eagl~s
we were able to get in the are on the defensive end.·
"One of the things vi'e
press, get another steal."
.And when that cycle · have always told the kids ;is
ended at the third buzzer, that we will · never take
Eastern led 61-33, having them out of the game for: a
gone on a 21-6 run over a bad shot," he said. "Thciy
know what a good shot :is
five-minute stretch.
That
defense
also and a bad shot. We encourslammed the door on ·the age the kids to sh.oot die
:
Flyer's leading scorer, basketball.
"But one of the' things
senior swingman ~ill Dreswe
will take them out 9f
sel. The Eagles held Dres~
sel, who averages 22 per the bask~tball game for is ~f
game, to just seven points, they make a mistalte on t~e
his lowest total of the sea- defensive end," he added.
"We really get QJl thein
son.
about
the defense:'.
1
Dressel had scored 32 in
The Flyers
finish at 7-15.
·Monday's sectio.nal versus
•
'
4
Eastern, now 18"3, Will
South Gallia, but Eastern
did not allow him to score ' take on Tri-Valley Conferuntil a minute had passed ence foe Southern' in die
in the second quarter of sectional final at 7 p.m. Saturday in the Alexander
Wednesday's game:
,
Eastern also wore the gymnasium.
Caldwell
delights
in
tlje
Flyers down, as Caldwell
rotated as many as nine . fact that his players hate
come to strongly believe jn
players into the mix.
"This was our fourth the role that defensive pl.y
game in six nights," said will have , in any sort ~f
;
Ironton's
Simpson. tourrtament run.
"One
of
tlie
'
things
'
we
"Fatigue was a factor. We
told them at haJf-tillle was .
did what we could."
Ten Eagles tallied points that last year's grt&gt;up gave
in the gam~ led by Chris up about 48.6 a game," lie
Lyons' ' 18 and Nathan Lee said. "Right now we are
·G rubb's 16. Garrett Karr, giving up 49.1. So ifyou~ll
Alex Simpson, and Brent hear at the end of the
Buckley each scored eight. game, the. kids are really
The only Flyer to enjoy encouraging · one anoth~r
any real degree of success to get
. ort the defense." . I'
, against the Eagles was 1
•
IIAiblny
: j
DIYIIIOn IV 8ectlonaf"'J'ou,i , . ,...
junior center Chris Laber, · El....,
11, Ironton 81. . . _ ,.. 4il
who
rebounded
and st.Jce 8 · 11 14 18 ,- ~
Eaalem 18 22 21. 20 - 81 :
banged his way to a team- IRONTON
ST. JOE 17·15) - CMo
Carte o, Matt Wilson 1 0-0 2, Kyle Jolin.
high 18 points.
4 0-0 9, Bill l:lre.- 3 0.0 7, ~
Eastern built its first half son
Laber 2 3-4 7, Chrll Laller B 6-7 18,
lead on a pair of 8-0 runs Shawn Hacker 3 tHl 8. TOTALS: 19-911 49.
'
and 12-0 run, with Buck- EASTERN
(1~) - Juan Kimoo 3 '().
ley scoring all eight of his 0 6, Garrett Kllr 3 0-0 8, Chrll L~ 6
5-6 1B. Nalhan Lot Gnlbb 7 0.0 16,
points in t~e second peri- Ale&lt; Slmpoon 4 ().1 8, - llraMol1 1
BUqk·
od. Lyons also added eight 1·2 3. ArwJy Hysell2 (H) 4, ley 4 0-0 8, Travis Wlffortl2 ().() 4, Cody
in the first half.
Dlll3 0.2 8. TOTALS: 35 6-11 81.
The, nature of the East- THREE-POINT GOALS - St. Joe' 2
(Dressel, Johnaon), Eastem 5 (Kan ;z,
ern pressure was well-illus~ Grubb 2. Lyons):

Southern had 22 rebounds
(Dally Hill eight, Jake Nease
four); ten assists Qordan Hill
five), eleven steals Q. Hill four,
Randolph three) and nine.
turnovers. Waterford had 31
rebounds (Arnold 12, Baker
seven), 17 turnovers, six steals, ·
and eight assists (Baker three).
Southern now plays in the
sectional finals at Alexander at
7 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are
available at the high sch9ol:

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
s~pport of these area
businesses who make
this page possible ..
'•

• Don't Forget our SALE ROOM

................ 30.% OFF EVERY DAY!

,..,_,.._

1 p.m. · Sai\Jiday • Fox

-

12 :30 p.m. • Sund t!1J '

p.m. • March 15

4:30

Subway 400

WMM: North Carolina

~~
rw.

Speedway, RocklrJiham, N.C.

• c..r.w,,... Truck. u.111Ct '" 200
• ESPN2

(1.011·mlle track), 393
laps/399.681 miles
vWMn: Gre'en nag dtops at
1 p.m., Sunday
LMt year'a winner. Steve
Park
Event •• IF)tnc rtoOnt:
Rusty Wlllete, Ford, 158.035

mplt, Feb. 25, 2000
~ l'llConl!

Not81M: Perk, who won last
year's race, missed tl'le
Daytona 500 due to Injuries.
... Chevrotets swept the two
races at Rockingham In 200 1.
... Richard Peny has won the
most races at "The Rock" with
11 .
.

(1.017·mile track~. 197
laps/200.349 miles
When: 1 p.m .• Saturday
Lal yaar's winner: Todd

Series debuted at

Rockingham In 1982.

Bodine
Event qulltfylni record:

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

What: Darlington 200
Whtrt: oarllngton Raceway,
Oar!lngton, S.C. (1.366-mlle
track), 146 laps( 199.436
1996
miles
Notllble: FQrds have won 13
Whtn: 4:30 p.m .• March 15
races at Rockingham, more
Greg Biffle, Ford, 156.368
mph, Feb. 23 , 2001
R~tte record: Mark Martin,
Ford, 124 .397 mph, Ott. 19,

IUSCHSERIU
Whllt: 1-866RBCTerm.com

200

Jeff Burton.

than any other make ....
Chevrclets have won the last
· three, hOwever.... The Busch

• •••••••••••

YourTurn
IMttn fnll Olr Reatltn

"

DeM NASCAR Thi' Week,
J wmrld like 10 know wll~ .w
many NASCAR reams are based in
Norlh C11rolinn llruund the Chn-

j

TOP TEN
•NASCAR This Week wrltet Monte Dutton ranks the
toP 10 drivers heading Into this weekend's race. Last
week's rank lni, It In parentheses.

I

lottc ll!'ell.

Jeremy Ethrhtae
BrUIIWkk, Ga.
Clwrlutlt is mrt of rlv anra of
rhr J{Xm,IN'orlrtw thar /Ill£ ltfswrh vflvbunrht rult
iht NASC AR ind;mry u an
Important parr of tht OU11:S tronamy. Tht Jluws of Churlomt !/)' u
l!dvtn {11r tlw ttmns 1ui.J bttrr tvalr-

1 . (1) Joff Gordon

2. (2)

3. (3)
4. H
I. (4)

e. (I)

One of moor who lot
tho Dorton• 500 1llp OWlY
Tony Stowort Alowodr ploylrtC ootoh-up
In tho polnto otMIIInco
D. lomhordt Jr. Alao hid o troubl•ftllod 500
Word Burton
Comlnc off tho b i - t
victory of hl1 career
Sto~lnl Morlln T~od to be 1hod•tree
meoh.nlo under rwd ti8J
Kovln Hlrvlok lpol with Gordon touohod

lnllfllr }'tom and w/11 pmbobl}' crmrinut. If for 110 olhtr rr.UIHI tht111 '
rhr rmruntrotinn nf dri•·trJ and
· mrchanks who migra'rt 10 CharIn/It [Nmr all aro101111 tftt WI/III')'
It I no/ j rr11uniqu1 tn NASCAR.
f illltr. Mmry Indy car ltams l lrt
lltrldq~tJrltrtd ilr uoul llrowrd lluli·
anapolis .

off• meal
1. (8) Dolo lorrott
,

-

"

"•
·'

I. (7) . ....., ..-nte

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

9. (I) llloiiY Rudel
1

Hod tho day'l lilt doH
of bod luoto
Fow mode It lhroUih
thoiOOunllenl
Cor lookodllkolt hod bien

tllrouiJI • hurricane

FROM LASTWEEK
WINITONCUP

··. Kentucky
Fried Chicken

DAYTONA BEACH. Fla. The Oaytona ·500 was as
herd to understand es the
man who Won lt.
Ward Burton, a 'softspoken VIrginian with the
dialect of his native state,
was almost the last man
standing at the &amp;r'ld of a
tumultuous day, and good
fortune paid $1.383,017.
Burton's Dodle finished
first, followed b)' the Fords
of Elliott Sadler, Geoffrey
Bodine and Kurt Busch .

.... •·

228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window
·•

992-5432

lUSCH SERIES
DAYTONA BEACH, ~o.- In
. lht EAS/GNC Live Well300
on Saturday, Michael
Wattrtp'a Chevrolet pushed
Dale Earnhardt Jr.'a Chevrolet
acrass the flnllh line.
01'&lt;, ~ltrlp did not literally
puah Earnhll}rdt. They
drafted totether.

· IIAlblny

T -·

See ua tor Your StlhP
Power Tools &amp;
Accaasorlea

In the 2001 Daytona 500,
Waltrip finished rl~st and
Earnhardt second. In the

St.. Rt. 248

Chester

Kendra ReiM

2001 Popel 400 (In July),
Earnhardt finished first and
Waltrip second.
The wlnnln&amp; car was also
owned by Richard Childress,
the owner of the cnevrolets
In which the late Dele
Earnharm won al• of his
seven championships.

Sttrllna,lll.
Dem NASCAR ThiN Week ,
In m8ny roci n~~; seri~s. tllty h!lvt
a stand~rd ~ur !hot e~· eryone buys
frum one IOUTl"e . h ha~ a ~ummun
running ae~r. and ,•uc·h team decomte~ nnd t\loellks 11. nnd they go roc lng. This ift'llliy rec.Jucn w•l.
Cnn.oider
how
ei ptnli•·e
NASC.~ R is gettintt. Consider the

CRAmMAN TRUCK

•••••••••••

Fan Tips

••••••••••••

• Over the years, we've

WtlldiHot-

Wito'sNot

received a number or musical
collections devotOd to recln&amp;.
But recently Jim Youn(l gave
ue e copy of hit "Dirt Track

1. What all-time &amp;reBt won two •
championships In 11 Ford Qnd one In e Dodge[
2. When Rloharc:l Petty became NASCAR's all -time
Ieeder In victories In 1967, whoee record did he
surpass?
3. W1'1a1 four·tlme Ind ianapolis 500 winner also won the
Daytona 500 ana the 24 Houra of Le Mana?

• IIOTl ln the tpan of

985·3308

juat over sJx months.
Wlllrd Burton has won two
of ractna'• most prized
race1, the Southern 500
and the Daytona !100.
• NOT1 Torry Stewart
flnllhed last In the MO.

. \AO,:J TY 't ,

.

.li~~V~ SILl '~l8d 8i1

Heroes : which, 11 the name
Implies, Is dedicated to the
racas held at short tracks all
across the country.
If you're Interested In "Dirt
Tra ck rleroee " or a colleotlon
of Youn&amp;'! other recordlnas.
cneck out l".le Wet:J site at
www.raotsonp.aom.

,

'Z:: UOIIJVid Pll\liiQ 'l

••••••••••

\

(Beside Goodwin's
Auto Sales)

mike Bing, Owner
·Randy Bing,
Technician
Jim Bing,
Technician
7 40-992-1998
7 40-667-6133

how many sponsors have 10 dmp out
nnd how muny driven aR being lo:;t.
Are we killing the Gnlden
Goose of opportunity? What if the
COllis r.:ould be lowcmi? What if the
~ver~ge fan could afford to ~ee a
ru~e? Whot If the ~~elle dule dld rl 't
have to be quite so loaded In urder
to pul' In .tn much TV .,pon~hlp?
BIH Cook
Laaro, Ind.

.113 of a eecond.

'

Bing's
Auto
Repair

factth~tthc rQn are ~li the 1~me.
just pRinted differently_ Con~ 1dtr

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .When RObert Pressley won
the Florida Oodp Dealers·
250, It was more than
be&amp;lnner's luck.
Pressley became the
second driver ever to win his
fil'lt race In the Craftsman
Truck Series. The veteran or
204 Wlnaton Cup races took
thlli 'Ia ad with two lap!l to ao
and held off another former
Cup drtver, Ted Muacreve, by

Ridenour
Supply ·

,,

Dear NASC..\R Th.is Week.
Tht commenb that li•ve been
said about Kevin Hat"Yick mre gettin&amp; oid. E~ei)'Ont knows Ke~in is
not lr~ i ng to reptac e.. Dalc Earnhudt . The comn'IOI\15 from Bobby
Hamllton aOO Ricky Rudd lll't poor
5 poi'llm~nsh ip. The type of racin&amp;
he doea may not be what they do,
but to come and Jtart th~ Winston
Cup Series his rint yellf and get in
the top 10 fur the points mmdin~~:s
and win two racu, he know1 what
he hu to do; win!

10. (9) Ru1tr Wolloco Rooklnpom C.uld bl
an lmporbnt allftlil

F•~turlng

CPU
I
110 Court Street·
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E·Mall jma10frognel,nel
WW'!'·Pirfcrmanctupgradll.com

Diecilst
Collectible Shop
niiSCilr

(acroaa from Rutland
Bottle Gu)

Main Street,
Rutland, Ohio

AROUND THE GARAGE

Startln• lineup for Daytona 500 rich with coincidences

•r-•DIIII""

NASCAR Thll Wttk
Daytona !100 qualiMOf wu riro

with colaolden~•·
·
Rookl1 Jlmm\1 Johnton won !he
pole in • Chm'olet. It wu the Cirtt
500 pole Cor ttooklo 1inc1 Mlb
Skinner In 1997. When Sklruatr \Wn
lht pole, hl1 Chm'Oitt waa apon·
. 10red by Lowe 'I, lhe aame 1pon10r

now fetturtd on Johnton'I Chovto·

lot.

Skinner lh.arod lhe ftont rttH with
Dale Earnhardt, who wu 8f)(in10red

by OM-Ooodwren~h. John10n will
.flare the tittnt KNJ with Kevin HuvK:k, now 1ponaorod by OM-Good·
wrench.
The fint rookie ever to win tho
Olytrma 500 polo w11 Loy Allen in

HURRY IN TODAY ,\\

COptrlf'tl: 200:1 n. Gattor~

And Save Up To ... ·

50% OFF

~N.C. I

'

Place Your

Selected
Furniture
.
'

TIME IS RUNNING OVT!!
.HURRY IN NOW!

,,

MASON FURNITURE
Quality • Selection • Seroice

"Tl\trc w.erc tirn ct when I dread.
cd teema that black No. l in n.y
mirror, and thm were time1 that I
X
didn 't. If you were n.dna him, you
SPEAKING Of' EARN· knew you were racin11 the best there
HARDTtlcffOonlon apokc or the wu . lfyou beat him. r,ou knew you
lb'lnJtneuheinafeltb)'everyone• .ccomplllhedaome~na: fararcater
yetr 1fter 1 ~00 cruh toOk the life of than yuu ~ould ever llnPilltlt. lfyuu
arven-tlme Wln1ton Cup champion 1101 btat b)' him;, YOU lmcw you aot.
Dtle Earnhardt
bent by the bc1t.
"lt'l not tho ume, that 'I for turo,"
)C
Gordon 11ld. ''He ataned out as the
guy that I learned from, and then he
CLOSE CALL: l'f:am owner Joe
turned into the lillY that I km:w Wlltl Gibb• Wu1 wll iting for 11 helicopter
IIOinJ to be the_touahut cumpeti- thatcrashHISarurdaymomi!li&amp;bout
tlon oul there every time I came to IS mile&amp; south of D!l)'tOM Deach,
Oayt~na . To me, it'a not the wnc: Fla., killi~ tlw pilot and co-pilut.
without him. I know wt:'ll move on
The helicopter luld b«11 hi red to
and the tporl will continue to v;row. take Gibbs, the former W.uhinjjton
but !11 m~ mind there I aomcthin11 Re4-lkin'• cow; h. from Orlando, Fl11.,
mlaalnJ.
'
to Tarpon Sprina•. Fla,, for a &amp;peak-

1994. He tlto Wred th" ftont
with Earnhanlt.

I'{M'

Gazette • Oialrli!UiaciiJot Un!Wrtll Pl'lea S)'l'ld1Citel8001 ~&amp;H734 · For re lene wuk

Business~s

~February

u ride offered

740·742·2289
1·800·837-8217

THE ROY.\LVJEW: Ri~hlld
Petty made his view1 known on the
11111h ufNASCAR ro lea chiUlll~tthil
)'ell' resardlns atrodynamlc packa11e1 and tpodeu .
"The playing field hn,never boen
level ~ and h sure ain't this time,"Thc
Kln1.!8\d. "I don't think there'll ony
one an11wer. NASCAR lookM at 1t
different 1h11n os n1een. NASCAR
lookaat it like n1how: 'We need to
throw tl\e ~heckered Oajatthe end
of ~00 miles, and 43 cars need to be
runnina side by •ide.' That '5 what
they're looklnj fur."

to moka

ins enp~mcnt at a brukfiiC meet·
iiiM· When the helicopter r1iled to

show, Oibb8

hil~hcd

by a local pilol.

18, 20o2 • O..s)irl: CartaOraphlcl lr;c .. Saruote , Fle .

..i

Ad here

z

0

g

·call The Da:i ly Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbi·e Call

CD
CD

5

en

992-2155

(304) 773-5592
I ;

219 N. Second

WhtN: North Carolina
Speedway, Rockingham, N.C .

Ford,131.103 mph, Oct. 24.

• w..t. Cup, lut..y 4oo

DlvloiOn IVSoctloniol
SouUllm74,WIIM&lt;MdBII
;
Soult&gt;Om 5
17 29 23 - 7~
Waler!onl 12
19 15 23 - ea
SOliTHERN - Nate Martin 2 8-8 13,
Craig Randolph 3 3-8 10, Joroan ~~~ (-4-5 13, CurtCrouohO, Macy Rjl0821·1 ,5,
Jualln Connol~ 6 &lt;4-419, Daliaa HIU 4 3-7
12, Jake Smltlt 0 2·5 2, Weo Bui!OWI 'O.
1
TOTALS: 21 25-36 74. ·
WATERFORD - Bon CuMiiv- 2 Q.o
5, 811~ Lot 0 ().1 o, Amoki31H113,
Joey. Baker 3 2·2 11, Travta Ha1T112 6-7·9,
Dartn Sampson 6 0-0 16, Travis Schaa4 3
4-8 10, Tnovls Barth 0 ~ 5. TOTALS: )9
22·28 89. Three point goals: .
,
THREE.POINT GOALS - Soulhem • 7
(Jullln Connoi~ 3, Martin, Riludolph.' J.
Hill ; • D. Hll 1). Wat1~onl 8' (Baker :3,
Sampoofl 4, Cuonlnghlm, Amold).
1

• Other in-store specials

.

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

• - - ~Torm.-:zoo _ _.::Wio::NS=TON::;.,;CII=
·' - - 1999

a

$25 ·

round, but the Tornadoes hit
13-of-17 from the line in the
·final round to preserve the lead.
Nate Martin led the SHS
charge with a perfect 6-6 at the
line in the fourth quarter, going
8-8 overall. Connolly hit both
of his attempts and Craig Randolph ,hit 3-4 when the game
was Oil' the line.
·

•

I '

......'I

.... '

.

-

'

~· -~

,,

I

1\)

Q)

i

t!I

•

1\) 1:

. ') '

-- - _.......__ ...........-''

-----~ --~·

II
I

I I
~

992·5627
TI

1\)

r

J
I

--~ - -- -----·

•

,,

_........._
\

__

-

�Page B 4 • The O.lly Sentinel ·

-'

Thurtday,Feb.21,20C1

www.myeJallyMntinel.com

'Thurtday, Feb. 21, 2002

Alabama finally runs Hoosiers take Big Ten lead from OSU
dry on tomeoacks
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Alabama's last two wins featured impressive. rallies after
long scoring droughts. The Crimson Tide couldn't come
back for another one.
Charles Tatum scored 16 of his carel!r-high
20 points in the first half, and Arkansas, using a
revamped starting lineup, beat No. 5 Alabama
67-59 Wednesday night.
A week ago, the Cr.imson Tide trailed South
Carolina 28-15 at halftime and went on to
win 52-51. On Saturday, Alabama missed its first 13
shots in the second half before pulling away from Tennessee.
The Crimson Tide fell behind by as many as 17 points
against Arkansas (13- 12, 5-8 Southeastern Conference)
by shooting 4-of-33 in the first half.
The Razorbacks won even though they didn't have a
field goal in the final 7:40.
"It is tough to come out of a hole on the road," Alabama coach Mark Gottfried said. "When you shoot 16-of64, you just can't win. Over a 40-minute game, if you
· hold your opponent to 38 percent, you ought to win,
but that wasn't the case.
"I give them credit on defense, but we had the same
shots we had last game."
The loss kept Alabama (22-5, 10-3) from wrapping up a
share of its first Western Division title since the SEC
expanded in 1992.
In other games involving ranked teams Wednesday, it
was No. 2 Maryland 84, Clemson 68; No. 8 Florida
89, Auburn 61; No. 13 Oklahoma State 85, Texas 80;
No. 14 Arizona 83 , Arizona State 75; No. 16 Illinois
83, Penn State 56; No. 23 lndian.a 63, No. 19 Ohio
State 57; and Florida State 66, No. 22 Virginia 59.
Arkansas was on a three-game losing streak that
included a home loss to LSU on Saturday. Against
Alabama, Richardson used his 14th starting lineup, a
group that was averaging a total of 16 points pet
game. Richardson called it his blue-collar lineup'.
Jannero Parga and Brandon Dean, the Razorback&amp;'
leading scorers, played a total of 14 minutes and combined for three points.
Earnest Shelton Jed Alabama with 18 points, while
Rod Grizzard, who averages almost 15 points, missed
all nine of his shots.

Top
25

BLOOMINGTON, Ind.
(AP) - All season, Indiana has
relied on jared .Jelliies, jamd
Odie, Dane Fife and Tom
Cowrdale to lead them.
But with those four struggling Wednesday night, the
Hoosiers had to
find someone else,
.
and that was jeff
Newton.
1•
Newton "SCored
16 points as the
23rd-r.mked Hoosiers defeated
No. 19 OhiG State 63-57 to
take sole possession of the Big
Ten lead. Newton also had four
rebounds, two assists and three
blocked shoo.
"I'm just letting it come to
me," Newton said. "When they
double him Uelliies), they're
leaving me open and I'll take it
like it comes."
Newton's perfOrmance came
iq the Hoosiers' biggest game
this season and arguably their
biggest home game in almost a
decade.
Indiana (18-8, 10-3), which
has not won a Bjg Ten title ,
since 1993, took I big step in
that diiection Wednesday night.
With three games remaining
for both the Buckeyes and
Hoosiers and a schedule favoring Ohio State (18-6, 9-4),
Indiana had to w_in to stay in
·contention.
Indiana coach ·Mike Davis
criticized Newton's energy
level early in the season, but was
ready to put that in the past
Wednesday night.
"That was a long time ago;•
Davis said. "He~ playing basketball. His goal is to get to the
NBA, and to play at that level,

Another wild finish for Ohno caps memorable day

difference.
Ohio State wa.s held to its
third-lowest scoring total of the
season after averap,ing i3
points. In the first half, the
Buckeyes shot just 37.5
cent, and the only player to
n:ach double figures was Brian
Brown, who had 23 points.
"The ctefense played well:'
Davis said. "I think the scote
was 11-5 until' about ei~t
minutes to go in the first half.
.
'
We weren't hitting shots and
they weren't hitting shots."
"They play hard and they are _
· a ver}' good defensive team:·
Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien
said.
To open the game, the
Hoosiers were just 2-for-15
from the field and 0-for-7 from
3-point range.
Newton helped change that.
His two free throws with
6:55 to go in the half ignited 'a
13-0 run that allowed lndiaria
to take a 23-15 lead with 4:20
left.
· Ohio State rallied early in the
second half with a 10-2 run to
take a 38-37 lead.
Ohio State led 41-40 before
being held scoreless for more
than five minutes. Indiana, led
by two 3-pointers from Jeffiies,
a 3 from Kyle Hornsby and
two more baskets from Newton, wen't on another 13-0 run
rp take a 53-41 lead. Ohio
State never challenged again.
"They basically put one run
together in the second half
where we had a really hard
time scoring," O'Brien said.
"They got some breakouts, Jeffries got two 3s and that wa.s
bascially .it."

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Love wild
· finishes? Tlten take heart: Apolo Anton
'b hno still has two events left.
The 19-year-old American crossed the
'finish line second in short-track speed. skating's 1,500 meters Wednesdayonight.
. But he won the gold when the skater
ahead of him was disqualified for an illegal b~ock, ~n~ a · victory lap by the
perce1ved wmner mto a fit of anger.
. "I just did my best, and I shined like a
' ~tar," said Ohno, who on Saturday got up .
:from a crash and stuck a skate over the
' finish line to win silver in the 1,000.
. Ohno's performance capped a day of
-fabulous finishes and one that produced
. ~e most medals (five) and most golds
(three). for Americans at a Winter
. Olymp1cs. The U.S. medal count IS up to
, 26, double the previous record. The team
,has nine gal~. three more than ever.
The collecbon 1s sure to grow Thursda · 'th th US
• h k
. Y WI
e : · women s oc ey team
,m the finals
aga1nst Canada.
Also,
~
'fi
k three· of
the top .our
women s gure s aters gomg
·
th fre k
fi a1 ·
A
·
1nto e e s ate n e are mencans.
··. Jimmy Shea started the memorable
moments Wednesday .by winning the
·
·d h · · d
hed
. skeIeton 1~ a II e e 1ns15te was watc ,
. over by his late grandfather, an Olymp1c
c~mpion Tristan Gale and Le Ann
·
. .
~
.Pa sley foUowed by firushing 1-2 m the
•
d. J -'~
dr'
. women s event an emwer Ro 1guez
: added~ bronze in women's ~peedskati~g.
, Foretgners also made the1r mark With
·,unheralded Belarus stunning unbeaten
Sweden in men's .hockey,' Norway's Ole
.Einar Bjoerndalen becoming only the
.third person to win four gold medals at a
Winter Olympics and German sp~edskater Anni Friesinger winning the 1,500
meters in world-record time.
The first medal to be awardedThunday
·is in Nordic combined. Other finals
mclude men's slalom, women's cross. ·country relay and women's curling. Curling and hockey also have bronze-medal
games.
SHORT-TRACK SPEED SKATING: The six stitches in Ohno's thigh
weren't a problem. South Korean Kim
Dong-sung was.
: Ohno hung back for most of the 1'3
'1/2-lap race, then darted to second with
two laps to go. On the next-to-last turn,

per-

BlI

...en

BIG TEN WIN - Indiana's Jeff Newton slams down two of his
team-high 16 points !n the first half against Ohio State
Wednesday. Indiana defeated Ohio State 63-57 . (AP}

you have to play with a 'lot of
energy. If he plays .this way. we
have a chance to be in it."
. Newton made five of 12
shots, including four dunkS, He
made all six of his free throws
- a problem area his first three
seasons.
For the other players or\' the

court Wednesday night, it was a
struggle. .
Jeffries, Fife and Odie were
each held to 10 points .
But on a night when the
Hoosiers shot 38.9 percent
from the field and were 6-of- 23
from 3-point range, it was the
Indiana defense that made the

Rose bloorris in Bulls debut
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS '

Detroit's Ben Wallace finished with 14
Jalen Rose suddenly went from being on a points, 15 rebounds and five blocks: Richard
playoff contender to a team with half as many Hamilton Jed the Wizards with 22 points.
wins.
.
At first he didn't like it, but after a few hours,
Bl!ckl US, Rockets 76
things didn't seem so bad.
Michael Redd scored a career-higl! 29
Rose scored 36 points, 13 in the fourth points, 26 in the fourth quarter, as Milwaukee
qqarter, of his Bulls debut, to lead Chicago to beat Houston.
.
a 113-109 victory over the New
Redd made nine of 13 shots from 3-point
York Knicks on Wednesday range, doing most of his damage after Milwaumght.
kee bqilt a big lead. Sam Cassell returned from
That effort came one day after a toe injury 'to score 16 points in three quarthe Indiana Pacers (26-27) shipped him to ters ..
Chicago (13-40) as part of a seven-player trade.
Glenn Robinson added 21 points, and Ray
"Nobody circles the last-place team i.n the
Allen had 17 for the Bucks. Kenny Thomas led
standings and says that's the place you want to
visiting Houston with 21 points.
·
go," the 29-year-old forward said before his
first game with the Bulls.
,CUppers 81, Heat 71
Reserve Quentin Richardson had 25 points
But then he played as if he was happy to be
there.
"When 19,000 fans are cheering for a team and 11 rebounds as the Los Angeles Clippers
with 13 wins, it shows you they have faith in won in Miami for the first time in eight years.
The Clippers' reserves, the third-highest
the future;' Rose said, ·
Rose, traded to the Bulls along with Travis scoring unit in the NBA, outscored the Heat's
Best and Norman Richardson, wa.s 13-of-24 reserves 41-16.
from the field and 10-of-t 1 from the line in his
Miami lost for only the fifth time in 18
successful debut.
games and for only the second time in seven
"I have to send Indiana a thank-you card," home games.
Rose said. "It's a blessing to be in a city that
The Heat, which shot just 33 percent, had
believes in you and is starved for a champi- their second-lowest point total of the season.
on ship."
Best didn't disappoint either, scoring 12
Homet1 78, R.aptors 77
points in reserve and making a key steal and
Elden Campbell scored 18 points, anP Jamal
rebound late.
· Mashburn added 15, including Charlo~e's last
"Jalen played great for them, especially in six, as the Hornets beat injury-depleted.Thronthat second half," said Knicks guard Latrell to.
Sprewell, who scored 30 points. "Jalen and . Baton Davis had 17 points for the ,visiting
Travis took over the game."
Horneu, who have won four of five since the
Allan Houston scored 34 points for the All-Star break.
Knicks, who were 15-of-27 from 3-point
Thronto'a Antonio Davis had a season-high
range. Mark Jackson had a triple-double for 29 points and 14 rebounds for the Raptors,
New York, which blew a pair of double-digit who have lost six straight since Vince Carter
leads.
went on the injured list.
76en 114, Warriors 107
Jazz 110, Nunwta 99
Allen Iverson scored 46 points, reaching 40
Andrei Kirilenko and Scott Pl!dgett scored
for the fifth time this season and the 38th time
in his career as Philadelphia defeated turnover- 21 points each as Utah held off Denver.
prone Golden State.
Six Utah. players scored in double figures to
Matt Harpring tied his season-high with 25 lead the Jazz to their sixth straight victory, all
points, Dikembe Mutombo had 18, ana Eric on the road.
Snow added 12 assists and 11 rebounds for the
Nick Van Exel, the Nuggets' leading scorer,
76ers.
did not play for the fifth straight game because
Danny Fortson had 18 for the Warriors, who of an inllamed elbow.
lost their fourth in a row overaU, ninth straight
on the road and 19th in 22 games.
1nJ1 Bl•zen 90, Sup•rSoDic• 84
Rasheed Wallace made two shots and two
Pistons 97, Wizll'dt 90
free throws in the final 2:16 as Portland beat
Corliss Williamson scored 22 points, and fel- Seattle for the third time this season.
low reserve Damon Jones added a season-high
Wallace finished with 18 points, including
17 ·as Detroit beat Washington, which played nine in the final q~ter, for Portland. Damon
without Michael Jordan:
.
Stoudamire added 14, and Dale Davis had nine
The host Pistons won their fourth in a row points and 13 rebounds.
and 11th in 13 ,games.
The host Sonics lost .for the first time in four
The Wizards have lost both games that Jor- games since Vin Baker was sidelined with three
dan has missed this season with a sore knee. He dislocated toes.
is expected back in the lineup Thursday.
Rashard Lewis tcored 24 points for Seattle.

. I'•

Follow your teams into ihe postseason with us...

lhe Daily'Sentinel
•

'i

Finland.
WOMEN'S SlALOM:Janica Kastelic: is making it hard· for her big brother to
keep up.
Kastelic \!von the slalom for her second
gold and third medal of the games. Her
brother, Ivica, will compete in the slalom
Saturday, hoping to make them the first
siblings to win Alpine skiing medals at the
01
· ,_, 22
same ymp1cs u•
years.
Laure Pequegnot of France was second
d
the
an d An'ga Paersono f weenwon
b
Th u s ·
• AI ·
ronze.
e . . women s pme team
·
h
·
·
·d
agam ~ no~ eret m ~n~nt~~n :::St
~ost . . y19w88 no me
or e
arne smce
.
SPEEDSKATING: B failin to
dal ·
· yhi h h g
me
m two events m w c s e was
favored, Friesinger wa.s close to going
h
kn
~ h
h
ome own more .or er glamour t an
thl .
·
Th
h
d · 3 3/ 4
fa ~~be prowess.
at c ange m

s

P

.

'

"'

,

t~·

TIMn\- booa a benor

tWM co ..w oa pnW...
La-Z.IIa)4 • ..Uty and

....n.n~ s... •• lloo.r , 17"1BIIIR6a
....,to., ........d..cl
I '
011d .....,f+ldad Ito....
But hllft}'·· with pd. . thU

.

.

.

.

low...,. ....... wtlonaf

~Hudson out 2-to-3 weeks; Dave

Martinez to miss whole season
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Tim Hudson hopes to be ready to pitch by
the fint week of the season. D~ Martinez will
have to wait a lot longer to play.
Hudson was on crutches
•
Wednesday because of .a
•
.
sprained ankle. He hurt himself
~ day earlier during fielding drills at Oakland's
amp in Phoenix.
.
: Martinez will miss the entire se~n with a
lmee injury. The Atlanta Braves had counted on
him being a key reserve.
: With every team trying to get through
~ring trail)ing healtQy, the Chicago White Sox
jllso had a minor setback when reliever Kelly
;wunsch injured his hanutring.
• Hudson will be out 2-to-3 weeks. X-tays
i .

i MLB
from$499·
'FREE DELIVERY
'FREE SET•UP
'FREE PAR KINO
'FAEI! LAYAWAY

from$399
PHONE (304) 675·1371

FLAIR

RT.2
QALLIPOLIS FERRY
WV21511

.

(

,

-- ~

----

......

't

ihowed a second-degree sprain ofhis left ankle,
and he's expected to be on crutches for several
~·

.

"I feel it's not going to take that long to get
ready." he said. "I'd need a good two weeks of
throwing batting practice to live hitters and
playing in game &amp;ituations to get prepared."
Hudson 'was 18-9 with a 3.37 ERA la$t year.
He was a 20-game winner in 2000.1n the last
three seasons, he's 49-17 with a 3.61 ERA.
Martinez will be sidelined all season becawc
of an injured right knee. He ~ diagnosed
With chronic tendinitis ~te last season.
The 37-year-old outfielder will undergo
surgery March 1 in Tampa. Fla.
Martinez hit .328 in tlie fint half of the 2001
season, but only .233 after that.
'

- .. - --·· ....

'I

-~- '·~-- -·-

·- -

·-

· - · -·-··- ·· -· . ....p-

O!f YES - Apolo Anton Ohno of the United States reacts after
learning he has won the gold medal, for the men's 1500 short
track speed skating race .Wednesday. (AP)

. .

ICE MEN COMETH - Andrei Nikolishin (33} of Russia and
Milan Hejduk (24} of the Czech Republic battle for posession
of the puck during the third period of the men's hockey quarterfinals at the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics in Provo, Utah,
Wednesday. (AP}

Gruden has high expectations for Bucs

: Prep

'

.

The vtctory gives. Fnesmger . a gold
medal to go along With the Celtic flame
tart~~ above her navel, "':hlch IS especl~­
ly VIsible In the erotic pictures of her m
German magazm~s.
Teamma.te Sabme Voelker was second
and Rodr1guez ~nudged te~ate Chn~
W1tty out of third for the Uruted States
e1ghth long-track medal of the games,
matching the standard set in 1980. Heiden led th~ way then; this t1me, SlX skaters
have contnbuted.
.
.
CURLING: U.S. women curlers will
play Canada for.a bronze medal after lo~­
mg 9-4 to Switzerland m an Olymp1c
semifinal. Britain and Switzerland will
meet in the finals.
· Canada will play Norway in the men's
finals and Sweden will face Switzerland
for bronze.

which are seniors, The 5-8 Arica Harris
rounds out their starters being the only stut. The Ea_stern Lady Eagles ad":'nced ·~o DIS- ing sophomore in the guard position.
;tr1ct Serrufinals last Thursday With a wm over
The Warriors appear to be in very good
East~rn Pike County for the shape, and will test the Eagles in that region
,
Sectional crown. The Eagles of play. Adena likes to get out and run with
played a very tough game the ball, and scoi:es in transition very well.
.
. agamst Eastern Pike, one that ·Whereas the Eagles work the ball a little
·:was character!zed by·an 18 p~mt second half slower up and down the court, but pound the
.:effort by Semor postman Stac1e Watson. . ball inside as well as getting some good looks
: T~e 5-foot-11 Watson was a key factor m from the three-point line.
:gettmg her team to come around and play
The Eagles will need to capitalize on their
.better the second half &lt;;&gt;f the game. The Eagl~s quickness advantage when it . comes to the
.were able to push theu lead to 10 pomts m guard position. Alyssa Holter, Terri Wolfe, and
the second half, but m the end they pulled S d p
ll will all 1 Ice
1 · b ak
out with a slim four point victory. Katie . an thy halfowe
rt
P ay fyArod es m re ,.., b ·
talli d 11
·
fo th E g1
mg e
cou pressure o
ena.
:r -o ertson
e . pomts r e . a es,
Sara Mansfield, Powell and Holter will
~d Sandy Powell hit two three's for stx; Sara
'.
.
Mansfield also hit one three pointer for East- need to open up the o';lts1de shooting game
to help take some attenbon off ofWatson and
er~he Eagles will meet up with past-foe Robertson inside. Robertson and Watson will
,Franfurt-Adena Warriors. The 14-6 Warrion, have to control the boards and the paint if the
who are coached by Lee Snyder, are no Eagles are to win this game.
~trangers to the Eagles having met in past
Defense will be what .makes or breaks
-District Tournaments. Both clubs will travel either club. The :Eagles have shown tenacious
&lt;to Huntington-Ross High tchool where the defense in the .past, the q';lestion is can they
'tip-off will take place at 8 p.m., following the · come throu~ m crunch bme?
Racine Southern Girls game.
·
The Warn~n show pat half c:ourt p~s­
·. Head Coach Paul Brannon said that his ' sure, and are m good shape, but are they qu1ck
team needs to control the ball when making enough defensively to guard the :Eagles?
the transition up and downolthe court. Bran"A~ena has a great ball club, and you expect ·
)l.on expects that the Adena Wartion will that m the tournament. We need t~ ~ontrol
bring heavy pressure along with a . deadly the ball, keep the turnovers to a JIUrumum,
11~-court trap.
· and capitali~e on t?e~ ~stakes in order to
; The Warriors bo:Ut a full lineup of height, come out With a wm, sud Coach Brannon.
and experience. Snyder's Warriors are a very
"We need to play defense .like we did
fundamentally sound club. The cluh uses their against Belpre, and offense like we did against
height to their advantage and force teams to Southern, if we give our best efforts on both
play man to man defense. The Warriors ~re offens.e and defeme li~ we have .in the p~;·
led by S-9 Erin Zurmehly a~ ·post, 5-S L1sa we will come out of this game With a wm.
tightle at guard, S-9 Layne Rowland at cenGame time is set for eight-o'clock at Huntter, and S-8 Megan Bethel at post, all of ington-Ross High School.
'

from$799
_.....,_

"BRAND NAME FURNITIJRE AT DISCOUNT PRICES"

•

Ohno dipped imide Kim, the defending
World Cup champion, but die South
Korean mowd into his path.
Sensing a possible violation, Ohno
threw up his arms and finished second.
Kim celebrated by carrying his flag
around the ice but referees announced
he'd been tossed Down went the flag .
"This is far-fe~hed," said South ~rean coach . Jun Myung-kyu. "It doesn't
make any sens~. The level of lhe referee
was not up to the level o( what an
Olympic referee should be:'
Li Jiajun of China won the silver and
Marc Gagnon of Canada took the
bronze. Asked about Kim, Ohno said: "He
definitely came over on me. Good call." ·
SKELETON: Jack Shea would've
loved this.
.
.
.
, .
His son, ]1m, was bCSlde the startmg
line• smiling as he watched his son Jmuny
·
plow headfirst down the bobsled chute in
a skeleton sled and overcome a narrow
deficit to catch the leader with a blazing ·
finish .
"I think his Gramp was there giving
him that little extra push,'' said Jim Shea
S
h
d . .L-- .
r., w o compete m """" cross-country
events at the 1964 Innsbruck Games.
·
. ,
The Sheas are Amenca s tint threegeneration Olympic ~y and the s~cond with two generations of gold wmners. Jack, who won two speedskating
events at the 1932 Lake Placid Games,
died in a traffic accident last month at 91.
Skeleton returned to the Olympics
after a 54-year absence largely with
Jimmy Shea's help, and a women's version
~ added for the first time. Gale gave it
a red, white and blue tinge -from her
hair to the letters on her cheek.
HOCKEY: The 22nd anniversary of
the United States' m,iraculous hockey
victory over Russia will be celebrated
with another U.S.-Russia game. Once
again, it will be an Olympics semifinal on
American ice.
The U.S. team beat Germany 5-0 and
Russia beat the Czech Republic 1-0,
avenging a loss in the 1998 gold medal
game, to set up Friday's rematch of a
pool-round game that ended in a 2-2 tie.

BY JoN WILL

While they lud Saw oa a fantutic telecti~a of
l.a·Z.IIoy" oofu 11 incredlble cleannco prical
Choooe from oil theta..., •tyle. colon, and t.bri&lt;&gt;l

.

•

SENTINEl CORRESPONDENT

savings

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

• :&gt;.f

r,

incredible

rr..ucc 611 rtp-.rar~ ot 11ock. s.1.a1on m•r....,.~!)' .,._

On the other side of.the bracket was an
upset that ranks with the "Miracle on
lc:e" shoc:ker in 1980. Belarus beat undefeared Sweden 4-3 in a quarterlinal on a
70-fOot shot by Vladimir Kopat that
bounced off goalie Tommy Salo's head
and landed in the net with 2:24 remain- .
ing.
•
"It is a miracle for us;· winning goilie
Andrei Mezin said.
Belarus, which has no NHL forwards,
next plays Canada, a 2-1 winner over

OlympiCS• ·

jEastem Preps for Adena

·stylish sofas
now at

NBA

The Dally SenUnel • Page B 5

www.mydally1111HMI.com

TAMPA, Fla. ,(AP} - Jon tiate ·with Gruden in the mid- last week for
the Atlanta
Gruden resisted taking any die of the nig~t.
"I
wasn't
sure
if
it
was
a
Falcons'
GM
parting shots at the Oalcland
Raiders. Instead, dream or reality;' said Gruden, job.
"He's dishe focused on his who was awakened at 2 a.m.
future as coach of "Honestly, it was a shocking tinguished
turn of events , .. a night I'll himself as a
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
top-flight
''I'm not shy. I don't have never forget."
The Glazers feel they got football
thin skin," he said Wednesday
man," Gruwhen asked if he was looking the perfect fit for the Dues Gruden
forward to working for "hands an offensive coach for a team den said. ''I'm
off' owners after spending the that thrives on defense but has eager to see
past four , seasons under AI had a sluggish offense. The job him back with us ."
was especially attractive to
With an average salary of
Davis.
Gruden
because
of
family
ties
about
$3.5 million per season,
f' 'I'm going to coach with
Gruden will be the fourththe style that I've always to Tampa.
Malcolm, Joel and Bryan highest paid coach in the NFL
coached with," Gruden added,
"and I welcome any input I Glazer joined Gruden and his behind Washington's Steve
wife, Cindy, at a news ~onfer- Spurrier ($5 million), Seattle's
can get from ownership."
ence
Wednesday, but did not Mike Holmgren ($4.5 milThe sons of Bucs owner
lion) and Denver's Mike
Malcolm Glazer smiled. The answer questions.
One
person
who
didn't
·
Shanahan
($4 miUion).
youngest coach . in the NFL
attend was general manager
The price to pry Gruden
kept talking.
Rich
McKay,
whose
future
from
Oakland was high, too.
And while he didn't make
The Raiders will receive
any bold predictions about with the team is uncertain.
!he Glazers pursued Bill two first-round draft picks, a
winning the Super Bowl right
away, the charismatic Gruden Parcells as Dungy's replace- pair of second-rounders and
pronili~d to approach his new ment without McKay's input, $8 million.
Gruden was 40-28 in four
job with the fervor of a cham- vetoed the GM's recommendation to hire Mavin Lewis seasons with the Raiders,
pion.
Gruden said it was an easy two weeks ago and finished including a 2-2 mark in the
decision to return to the city the search without McKay'~ playoffs where he led · Oak·
land to a berth in the AFC
where he spent part of his help.
McKay, who has a year left championship game in Januchildhood. He shrugged off a
question about whether it's up on his contract, interviewed ary 2001.
to him to restore some of the
credibility the team lost during a long, sometimes comical
search for Tony Dungy's
replacement.
"There's .always pressure.
That's the great thing about
,
Public Sutlcc~ In 1'\c"'~lll)pllr.~.
Yuu r lt luhl h1 Knnw, Ucli,·crcd Klathllll \'nu r Uoor.
being in the NFL. You either
feel pressure , or you apply
pressure," Gruden said. "And,
PUBLIC NOTICE
reject o~y or ell bldl 8
hopefully with the group of NOTICE: 11 hereby oubmltted.
1181 Cadllloc, Vln
players that we have assembled given thlt
on The obova detcrlbed t1GOADei18BI13412
Saturday, Ftbru•rv 23, colloterol will be aold 4
'
.
b bl
h ere, were
gomg to. e a e to · 2002,1110:00 1.m., 1 ••• II·Whlrtll", with 1113 Ford, Vln
apply a lot of pre11ure to the publlo Hie will be held no expreued or t2FALP73W2PX20272
other team."
11 211 W111 Second Implled warranty e
'-·
1
d
G
de
Strwt, Pomeroy, Ohio, given.
1115 S1turn, Vln .
The G ....enure
run T11tf'II'IMI'1IIInklnd For
further t108Z062805Z214121
from the Raiders on Monday laving• Company, 11 lnform1t1on, for en 1173 While Dump
with a five-year, $17.5 million ~lUng for c1eh lhe •ppolntment
to truck,
V In
.L
following
collaterel:
lnepect
colllterlt,
tBJ071A782741
deal th e owners put toge 1111er 1tll Chevy C•v•llor prior to 1111 dele 1n1 Chevy Du111y, Vln
jutt hoitn after making a pitch 101.!C14411N7208T740, contec,t
Shell• 1120CHC31N4M113115
for San Francisco's Steve Mar- Auto, elr, AM.J'M
Buohlnenet1124131. 1
1tll OMC 1135 (2) 20, 21,22
The ltrml ol the
iucci.
,
IIOLLIACK
.... 11'1 01111.
Gruden went to bedSunday 1cmtRUN3JJI1102,
The Home N1tlon11
· h
h'111ki
M ·
· Red In color.
link roeervee the
mg t t
ng
arluCCI
The l'lrmlrt link
Public Notice ' right to l'ljiOI 1ny or
a. v 1n g ,
· all bide or to rtmove
might be close to moving to en d
Tampa Bay as coach and gen- ComJieny, Pomeroy, On ~ Mllroh eny unit !rom the Hit
era! manager.
Ohio, r1eerv11 the a, 11101 It 1o.0o e.m. 111ny time.
. ,
But sensing the 49en' coach rlgllt to bid It thll thl Hilmi Netlonel . Arrengementa mey
•le, 1nd ttl wl!hdi'IW llenk will oller IDr •le be melle to lnlpect,
was not going to accept their thl above collaterel et puiiUo euotlon on any ol tha 1bove·
offer, the Glazm called Davis
111 ule. l'urther, 1M lhnk Jllrlclllli len nemed vehlolee prior
clcly
wo...__,
outa
.·
aeal
.
l'erlnln._.lllll
tltelo"IIW'II~IIIIIIu: to the elll by ceiling
'
and qul
,,_.
nta Compuy 1• 11 MetO!!_f}' Vln 7....1-2210.
to obtain permilsion to nego- swerv11 the rlgllt 1e f1MICMII47IIIANset (2) 20, at, 28, (3) 1

NFL

· - - - - - · - -·-··- ..

PUBLIC
NOTICES

s:

---~

. ,,,

~

. .

�--·
,. _ ., .--,. ..............
,.., . . . . . I_ - ---•'"'--.

_.__

~

~

~---

·.

"

~ii~F;eb£.j21 ,=200:~2~~~Si:~~~~~ ~~~~w-iww.mydallyeentlnel.com
L
1r~,.·....~-s.uz-.._.~·Ir ~ Ir5~ I

Qtribune- SentinelCLASSIFIED

:t
;""'.....t =: 11200
i.'!i..r*:n~
::Z· ForPU· -·Ext.
118 Food
116 - . .... 1100 ...
·080 &lt;* ·
Cob. 4cyl., s
'

-

31112

.

;;,;..;;,._

.

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

Dati~

In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
MoRda y·Frt day for lnsertton
In Ne)(t Day's Paper
Sunday ln·Cotumn: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

411 Display: 12 Noon 2

Business Days Prior To
Publica tion
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

Ilia

Lt___

Ito

IJruo W.oom

.,J, /HOUR
SH
TO START

IJwo WANim

IIIia

IJwo WANim

It. '.o.....OP oimJNm'li i~- i i!i ;

r

nal Ollcreet &amp; Confidential.

1821 .

r

SALES

'----~--~

"""""""'.........,,.

REPRE.SENt"A"TIVE
,.
For well established
Local CO.

Shop Online 0
www.marykay.com/btpencer47.

Your Mary Kay Independent
Beauty Conounanf, lrldgof
8pa11011.

SERVING THE
TRI·COUNTY

Wlla1 Are You Walling for
You know you wont 1o try H.

AREA

Star1 today. Jay Clark's
Konpo Karole (740)742·

.,I

..

• Muat have good
Communication 1kll..
• Mutt llfte good
driving record r.
provide own
transpot1allon
• Mull have ability to
be 1 TEAM player

2541

Yoilng, 5 yr. old church In
Gallla County, looking for
~

I experienced mu·
afolana for Pralae &amp; Wo111hlp
..,, ony lnet111111enl Info &amp;

nlor Resource Center, 1187 and stort eaming more nowl
State Route -180, from 1-877-183-8247 Eld. 1841 .
7·001m
lo 300pm
Monday .
.
;
through Friday. AU poslflono
Customer Service ·
are lmmedialely avOIIable.
$1000:S8000
Please contact GenOie
PT·FT
Plantz for an appllcaflon.
Training P'9vlded
Aployn Eerq. ual Oppor1unlty Em·
800-350-8188
~PN needed for Tampo"r•N Dig Into a New Careerl

-' Heavy Equipment Training
FT position. Pedlalfi!:l AP- Progromll Loom 10 operate
r:~~~::.~x:~~~
Trackhoes. Backhoes, Bull·
Keama. Modi Home Cai8, dozt111.
Coli
NOW
1-B00-61o-3520
Po
. . Box 987 , .Ga lllpoII s,
OH 45631 or call 1-800- Dornlno'o now toklng oppll481-8334or(740)448-3880 cotion01orM1&amp;driveni,Gal·
iocely.
llpollo and Pomeroy loca·
Moln1enonco
l)lrector. Ilona only. Apply In person.
Must poosess e&lt;cellent vr&gt;r· Top Ten

jJ:;

TURIED DOWN ON
.,..,.1., SECURITY /881?
· ..,..
~·
No Fee
Unleu We WinI
1-888-582·3345
Will Do Ironing In my homo.
Pickup &amp; Delivery Mailable.
(304)875 ....
~
.. ,

(304)675-5332
. .
,
Ranch S•""
.,_ 3 Bedroom ' 1
Bath, ~rge ~. DR, Klichen, CIA, 3 Car Bora~, 3
Aoreo, "$75,000. (740)3792127
---~---Ho-m-,.--Co-1·
- 1 Log
blno
to culforno. Free lnformo·
lion. 740-558-2393
Worn your own noma?
Own your own lend? Wa dol
COU (740)448-33&amp;1 to qiiOIIly lor your new dl'tam
home.

G:t ·r

&amp;

. .,~;;;~;;;;;;,

tion skirts. must be able to Full nma &amp; Part Time

All,... "tltfi advtt1lelng
1" thfl new•r P ' 11

aubjocllo '"' F-.l
Fllr Houllna Acl at 18M
whlcll-.. Hlliog011o
- I H •an~
pn1-noa, llmill1fan or

carpentry Cook &amp; Dell. Available to

work, plumbing rapalr, alec- work all shlfta. Send resume
trical repair. painting, equip- c1o Dally Sentinel PO Box
mont maintenance, grounds 729-08 Pomeroy, OH 45769

~
•

L

B
.
oK

lWin Rlv« T.-IIOCipf· (740)445-8742

Hot Tub, $800. camper,

c

-Lil-

.

;·

~
gu,

i

"liio 0

I
I

f

1

All·

riO

""""""'

'*·

.•

'

l.

Free Estimates
949-1405 TFN

Pomeny Eagles

mac~~s Pocket

111160 2171

Ellefli Thunday

&amp; SUndly
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

6-JO
Pnaresslue top Une

Tlllrsdllys

Progressive
toueraU 111 SUIIdoys

BUILDERS lot
New Homes • Viny l
Siding • New Gar·agesl

"IIIMdllllldness"

Racine, Ohio 45n1

740-985-3948
CONCRm!BLOCK/BRICK
• Footeni, WBlls, Slcps •
Flal Work.,

Replacemen1s, • Wo.Jks
and Drives • Stencil
Crete
Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W. V.

WV fj()JI712

TF

Advertise
in this

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

space for

COMMIROAL !ltd IIS!DBIIW.

$SOper

FAEE ESTIMATES

month.

740.992·7599
(NO SUNDAY t,;II~IL.:i

110\

Srr1•11Jiqg lp;

Equipment Parts
factory Authorized
Case-m Parts

Drywall, and

RemodeUng.
Addllions

teaJers

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
CoolviUe, OH 45723

740-667-0363
L..----...IJ~

'

Owner: Terry Lamm

(740) 992-0739

"'•••••••••••••••

Advertise in
Cellular this space for
s100
per
Jeff Warner Ins.
month
992-5479
.

.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION
•New Homes

•Ga~ages
•Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

74(1.992·1671
7122fTFN

TFH

Public Notice

IID1111ad lhl1 you llllva
been
named
Defandanta In the
action entitled
Paggy Sue Storta,
. Plaintiff, va. H. D.
Carpentry, Masonary, Roofing,
lllvaly, • t al. ,
Plumbing,
Electrical, Painling, Dacks,
_,D,e lenciJ!nta. , Thla
action · hu baen
·Siding, Gutters, Pressure washing,
alllgnecf
Heating/Cooling, Concrete
Cue No. 0 1 ·CV•
178, 'and Ia pendlnA
(740) 949-1521
In 1ho Court or
Common Plell of
1-877-466-1234
Melga County, Ohl!l.
The object of 1he
· $16.00/bala, (740)1185-$48 84,000 miles. Mull see, To: THE UNKNOWN · Complaint ·damanda
74
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, 111111 the !Hie to noal
:,: Square BaiQ ol Hoy lor (740)256-85
eatale be qulo1ad In
-' SOle. L.ocotlon- Patrlof · Rd. 11165 Ch011role1 Truck, K10, DEVISEES,
the PlolnUfl, Peggy
(740)37t-2839
. 4K4 ohort bed, Rebulll ADMINISTRATORS.
Sua Storta, and that
Hay &amp; Bright Wlra· Tie GM350. 17401379-92 56
. EXECUTORS,
Paggy Sue Storta be
' , 'Sfraw, Year 'ROund Delivery 1887 F·150, Exfendlad Cob, SPOUSES,
found
to be tho
· &amp; Volume Dlecount Avalla· Very
Good Condition SUCCESSORS AND
ble.
Heritage . Farm. $10,995 080. (304)875· ASSIGNS OF DAVIS ownar In fM 1lmple
abaoltrta ol the real
(304)175-5124.
41194
'
. GEDRAL.
aata1a d11crlbecl In
-'" I H \ """' l'i HU \ IH 1"\
DECEASED,
. tho Complaint; or In
• Good ~~flection of &amp; used tires
:~~ D~~ta, P'L:· 1~; Acldne-• Unknown; tho- avant that the
Condlf~n,'
'
,
.
JEFF
GEORAL,
Auros
51 700
•OU change $18.95• (740)441-04&amp;4.
Addne•• Unknown; Court ohould find
FORSw!
11111 tho Dlfendll118'
We slqck all major brands
. tltla Ia auperlor to
84 Chevy K-f500 Silverado, THE UNKNOWN
1886 Plymouth Reliant, 1 350 auto, loaded, R-. HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, Plalntlft'e, Plaintiff
Mike Hill
104 Firth Street, Racine, Ohio
owner, 4 cyl., OU1o, 48,000 hlfch, bral&lt;e control, 82,000 DEVISEES;
ntqUIIIa 1hll Court to ·
Owner
740~949-2700
ocfual milia, $1,500.00. miiQ, $10,000, (740)849- ADMIIIISTRATORS,
lind
that
1he ..__ _ _ _ __.
740-742-2852
2110
.
EXECUTORS,
Defendant• have
,...---------------,
SPOUSES
unjua11y
Steve's Truck
SUCCESSORS AND bun
"'·
~
ASSIGNS OF JEFF enriched and . that
Accessories
Help Wanted
GEDRAL, AcldniiMI Plolntlft Ill entHiecl to
noc:elva tha VIIUI or
Steve R. While, OWner
Unknown; LISA
thla
unlu•t
GEDRAL, Addnt. .
Formeriy of Zeoli's RV
anrlchmen1. Plaintiff
otlaull •Limaat .
Unknown;
THE further
Bryan Reevaa
BedUners •Nerf Bar
raquaata lhat
ng
011e
Must possess excellent verbal and UNKNOWN HEIRS., aha blgran1ecl coata - oGmel• Sand •Topaoll
Naw Homes, Room Additions,
• Tonn~ue Cover
NEXT OF
KIN, . and all "o ther rollef,
•All
Dirt
ofolulch
·
• Ventvlsor • Bug
written communication skills, must be DEVISEES,
GaragaB, Pola Buildings, Roofs,
alther In law or
Shield
&amp; Full Line
ADMINISTRATORS,
able to · complete reports and
Siding, Decke, Kltchena, Drywall
aqulty, which lllllli be
EXECUTORS,
or Other Accessories
proper.
' "documentation, must have' knowledge
&amp; More
SPOUSES,
The noal 111111 Ia
31345 Noble Summit
of carpentry work, plumbing repair, SUCCESSORS AND dllcrlbed In deed
FREE ESTIMATESI Rd. Middleport, Ohio
electrical repair, painting, equipment ASSIGNS OF
racordecl In Volume
USA
GEDRAL, 11,
Page 371, or lhe
•
(740) 992·5822
1 1
:. maintenance. grounds maintenance Add-HI Unknown;
Official Record• of
UNKNOWN the Reoordar of
•and general repaIr. Knowledge of long THE
EMIRS, NEXT OF KIN, · Molga COunty, Ohio,
•· term care: State and Federal rules DEVISEES,
balnll 2.832 acr. .
ADMINISTRATORS,
. ~nd · regulations and building code.
looe18d In Sec. 24, T
EXECUTORS,
7, R, 14, Scipio
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE AREA
1· "P lease send resume or apply In
SPOUSES,
''
.
'
'
Townahlp,
end
person;
SUCCESSORS AND
a11lgnad Audltor•a
ASSIGNS
OF
,.
Overbrook Center
Parcal. No. 1T•
RICHARD
.
003115.004.
.
,. ·'3"33 Paga St., Middleport, OH 45760 FREDERICK
You 1111 raqulrecl to
'
• 7411-992-6472 .
HOLZER,
an•w•r
the
DECEASED,
Complaint wllhln
.,
Equal Opportunity E,Pioyer
Many Income Tax Vehicles 10 Choose From Plus
Adclne- Unknown; twonty•elght (21)
33795 Hi/.znd 1/J.
THE
UNKNOWN daya after the 1. .1 A Greal Selection of Dependable Pre-Owned Cars
PollltrWJ, Ohio
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, publication ol thle
2 Blocks above McDonalds Lower Pomeroy, OH
DEVISEES,
Noflca, which will Ill
YOUR LAST STOP CAR SHOP
ADMINISTRATORS,
publlahecl onoe each
MON-FRI9
AM - 7 PM SAT 9 AM- 2:30 PM
EXECUTORS,
w11k lor alx (II
SPOUSES,
IU-HIVeWMica•
SUOCISSORS AND
Thl .
. laat
MARY KAy·
ASSIGNS OF ALICE publlcallon will be
HIVELY,
mada on the 2 1 at
DEcEASED,
day ol Februiry,
MARJORIE
2002, and 11:11 IWinly·
405 5th S1raat
Ral'tDI'.food, WV
MATHEWS,
eight (28) daya lor
New
Haven,
WV
DI!CEASED, ROBERT anawer
will
(304) 273-3271
•Residential
MATHEWS,
commence on lha1
We've added to
DECEASED,
date. In lhe oaaa . ol
our services;
Fmm
uuron
11
mok.up
VIRGINIA HOLZER, your r•uura to
lo bNalltloiougt&gt; lk~
Complete
exhausl
DECEASED, . AND 1n1war or othorwl. . ..... - ·good
system.
computer
-. Eagles,2171 Dance
RICHARD HOLZER,
raapond
•• hOQICI~ totclotntlflcally
allglimenta, c:omputer
octtonced formulal.
DECEASED,
raquea1ed
.
by
1ho
Feb. 22 &amp;23 ·
balance, sbocks &amp;
Moly
loy
...
all
you
Acldn&amp;IHI Unknown; Ohio Aul . .., ol• Civil
stn~U, radiator new &amp;
.....
g&lt;..oond
THE
UNKNOWN Proceclune, judgmao\1 Hve1111011.
"S~dden
t'OPIIr, de rods, baU
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, by dalaul\ will ba
olnts, ek.
Paige
Cleek
,.-ndanecl allliln11 you ,
DEVISEES,
'8 pm • midnight
and lor ill•-' rallaf
ADMIIIISTRATORS,
Independent Beauty
demanded In the
EXECUTORS.
Consultant
Complolf!L
SPOUSES,
I 14 High Street
Dated thla 3rd daySUCCESSORS AND
ASSIGNS OF P.R. of January, 2002.
Pomeroy. OH 45769
Forkad Run Sportsman Club
BEASLEY "lt.KA FRED
740·991-2802
BEASLEY, Marlena Horrlaan,
R.
Clerk ol Courta
DECEASED,
Addrelll.
(1117,24,31,2002
·unknown
You are haraby (2 7,14, 21,2002

.

.,

...._

morris

in this Equipment
spabe Repairs 6 Parts
on all makes If
for
farm Equip.
$50 per and Dozers
month 742-2455

,

BAULJNC A_,.
·EXCAVATING

and
brains

..

Knives 6CollecU~es

P/1
CONTRACTORS, INC.

L\l\I~I'S
CCI\~IIIlC

Roofing, Dec:ks

Beauty

I

HOWARDL
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

Spout

Economy Blal12% IIOCk feed ... $6.751100
Trace Ml118111 Blocka ...................... $4.75150
16% layer Crumbtla ..................... $6.2

new

Sunset Home
Construction

740.742-3411
L,------------..ll:.l.llli!U.I

740-992-5232

r

='

a-t Stuff
12% s-t Hor11 feed ................ $4.40150
Hoollfl Prtda 21% dog food .........$8.95150

Self-Storage

1

asoo,

Equine 12
12% s-t " - feed ................ SS.OIWO

High&amp;Dry

a

1

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

RIVERVIEW MOTORS ~ ~e«tiitt

·aso.

7

Shade River AC Seivlce
"Ahead In Service"

AIIMakesTractor&amp;

(740) 992 3470

' --'·

=

E'uX:nucAIJ

RI!JiuGERA110N

• ·
ROllidentlal or commerolal
wirinG. new aarvloo or re"polra. Miller Uicenaed elec·
trteion. RidenoUr Electrical,
WV000306, 304-67$-1786.

MAINTENANCE DIRECTOR

I

r'o

r

ar-~---"'!"'-,

,.,

1

'""'"IOH.

e&amp;C General Horne Mllrtienence- Painting, vinyl lldlng,.calpOIIfry, doora, win- · betho, mobile home
repair and more. For free
Hllmete call Chof, 740-992·
:8:::323:::..·- - - - - Superior Home Malnlllnce
we ' do all Aepolra on
homeo, In- and Out Corpomry, Plumbing. (740)441·
0113

Pllft

WJC.,'S ra..

·e.,

:jj

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

I

I

r

(1 0'1110' 610'1120'1

Advertise

O
.
o k w o o d

r

aASI!MI!NT
WATEIIPIIOOFING
Unoondltlonol llleflme guar·
antee. Local ..,....... fur·
nlahed. Establlohed 1975.
Coli 24 Hra. (740) 44110870,
1·800·287-0578,
Rogo10 WatelpiOQflng:

I

j

I

.s.:

.·

·I

ol &amp; - ~I . Ofllolonoy
f u -.._.\
' lnolud'-•
......;;--.... Wo oarry a

I

-

"m:s;n::go:;._ _ _....,
II
1995 Chrysler LHS. Exc. ·r · ••~~
. condHion. Loaded. One
,• .,,._.,~
Owner. Dk/BVGN w/Char·. · - - - - - - •
cool loalhar. 1331&lt; mllea 1_ 1 .............. G'ffOO ~$5300 (304)67$-7121
- --.. "
...
.
toroJata Patrlol Peart red
1995 Jeep W111ngler 8aha111 with gold plnotrtpq, runs
Hint Top - Ioili ol Eatru. and looka . greel. Lolli o1
18ft Goooenoc:k S1ock Trail· add ana S3,500.00 304er. (740)256-1718
. _882_-3485_...__..,....__
EK
"1883 Hartey Davidson
!iPorlll*· 44000- (7-40)441 C,rulaa Control, AMi'FM Rl~ .9521 Leeve Mnaage.
dlo _with a 10 CD changer, flliB 300 EX. Good CondlPower Sunroof, 61,000 tion,NewTlreo&amp;SooiCovmiiH, . $89116. (740)448· or. $3200 080. (740)3794720
=82:.:56::.:..._ _
· ---1899 Whfle Bonneville SE, 1998 Honda 4 - r 300Loaded, ·co Player, Aluml· 4 trex, Ukl Now, Gr-.
num Wheels, Low Mlleo. Garogo Kept
$3500.
Great Condition, Muaf Sooll (740)448-2e15 '
(140)441·9838
2000 Potana 400 S c - r
87 Chovllle S.F 396 En- 4 - .Only 2 tonka of
gino, 400 Tullio, auto, Sun- gu Ulad. Brand New Con11111 Red, Reatored condl- dillon. $4000. (740)379Uon. Appraised value 2801
$22 400 ooklng $12 800.
,(.304=')8:.:7..:5..:·1=.31:.:0:__...,·_ 2001 Hortey Oavldoon 883
HUQOOr, 510 Aofual MIIQ,
84 Slladow, 88,000 mllel. Brand New CondHion,
Air, Tlll, Aufo, $12,000 $8500. (740)379-2801
080. (740)256-1233
.

I

· ··

r

-nil

r

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

-...1 I&lt;\ It I . ._,

HAY&amp;
Uvely'a Aufo sales- 1982 - - - - - - .~
.GRAIN
Mareury Topaz, seoo. 1_1165 __P_u_b_n_c_Not_lc_a_
· . .
Dodge .D·250 Pickup,
1· ~ ,
.· Hey: MIKed Grus, Square $1000. 11100 Ford T..npo, 4 . IN THE COMMON
. . or Ricund BaiH. $1 .50 door, $800. 1187 Plymoufh
PLEAS COURT OF.
: aquara; 1$12.50-" · $15.00 Horizon; $480. 11164 Dodge
MEIGS COUNTY,
Round.
(740)25e-6140 Mini Ram Von,. 1480. 11100
OtRO
· Crown City.
. ChoMr Bervne, $1800. 1991
~
·
·
.
.. Ford AarOitar .Van.-. $1400. .F!EGGY SUE STORTS
PLAINTIFF
,
.
1985 Food Ranger Pickup, .
. •PI'!
.: .. '·"·'.·.' HAY &amp;
$800
. • (740
.. )388-9303
&gt;••I'"'
, (H .Gttt.JN:·~..
.
. H, O. HIVELY,.!!:_AL.
1· li!JIIr, Aind'~ ~~ • .;aor:otoa ·
DEFENDAno" .
,,. .
•. ·
·
from ~ In Racine, ()!llo,
,. ~rga Round Balao qf Hay, offontable used cora and .
; 110 ·eact&gt;., Some 1e11 lrom trucka. 740-849-2451
CASE NO.
01.CV·178
&lt; yoo!
befOre
-~
88
each.
·~
(740)245-8047.
• ..........
"'
.
.
FORSw!
NOTICE BY
~ Round bolal, good hey, un·
'
PUBLICATION
f dar cover, "800·1000 lba., 1972 Chevy 3/4 Ton,

electric- 3 bedroom· 2 baln·
·,
oomplete line of MobUe
2K6 exterior walls· theftTlo- 2 Bedroom Mobile HOme, Appl,.ncu: Recondltlontd home part~~ a IOJIC MOrtee.
pane window&amp;· skylights New Haven, ~304)882·1107 Walher~~, Dryera, Rangea. I•NNI'n'"S MUTING a
and much, much more. Free
.
Refrlgrat0111, Up To 80 Oeya COOUNG (740)...-11
delivery· letup· concrtte 2 bedroom trailer In Tuppera Guarant81dl We Sell New .ot 1~

r ·----

UvilriocK ·

Registered poln1 -for
, - - (lllaci&lt;IWhi_IB) . 740' 742·2025 .

84

.
=•-

,

::

• - " ' a· Ccl*"in

r

_..;~:~~=~..J

.. Tlme lor Froot Seeding Pu·
• hlno and Hay Fleklo.
ATV Broadcaot - · 12
V011, High Quality, Fllo most
. AlVa, $295.
.
"• Jlm'o Farm Equlpmenf lno.
. F401446-2414 . . .
'.
·
I

nionlh, . , I _ required,
Ma!oh 1, 2002
. Pop-Up, 87&amp;0. Cholf· "TYPo
depolft roqulrod, no peto, 1br. Hud So-ndapt tor Fru.tar, 1100. (740)2f5tl·
740-992-llm-&amp;Pm.
eklortyandotNbledEOH :8=-=-----....,.~
In Tu~(31M)I7&amp;-e879
Houllhofd
.
llama 1 Baby
3 bedroom ,.
_ _.
_
para Plalno, - 1 air, 3
SrAOI
~~- (-)17f5.•-1
nlca pon:toea, 1426.00 pluo
PORRINr
lndtperldtnf Horbollfe D,._
dopooltllnduOIHiel,reflrJn·•~·"For~"··-'Or
cos-··~ 7•• ••7 3487
' .....
r··-·-· ~ •
alloe,
,
00/rno,
40OppollunHy.
(7-40)441·11162
151180
1
7
Brick Houll, 3 Bedroomt, 1 992_2187,
JET
Balh, Largo KHclten. Coli
AERATION MOTORS
(740)448-0722
Mobile Homt l.ol. ,.,.._ 12, R-lrod,- &amp; !llbuiM In
14- 18 Wldol 112151 1110 -~
PII01 Program, Renlt,.
•
Sfook._ ~ Ron E - 1·
Neoded 304-7311-7295
Plul depOOII, Good · 801).837•11828.
'
'
(740)441-0175.
· .;....;...,____
3
Old hom I ~ . ::.::::.!:..::!::::.:::.:.::....___
OIOry or . •· n N"'" -~ Spaoo tor rem 4033 MIU 11eno1 a1t'IPielt Hquln
~If~~
oquarw IH1. Wllh molal 10p wiCII.f\IIIIUrquofM - ·
8ld 235.
~.:!'"G.. ~ed.lnquln~rw aofl eldr1(7••;,.J':4•,18(,7••~~
~d Plelee,.,
-,........
•
-~
(304)874-0f!K!
.

M&lt;IJu~
~·-·
..-- " .. - ·
• .,. """""' f'
2 bed100111 mollie( home tor
.J

mliol,

"'ci!t"!!:

~j.:::;;=:;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;

waw. $25. Bib)' Seat, 125.

1J:

71:

g~K MOTORS (740)445-

·

LoY-~

lng appKaltlal• now far
Unite avail8ble

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

dOg;

2 Bedroom House Pomar· Cloan 2br. WID Hookup. Hldobed. •100. •
ay, OH. Near End 0t llrldga, Rolerence ond Deposit. No S100. Full Slzt Man$4500, Needs Repaflll, Pllfll. (304)875-&amp;112
and
Splfng, 180. Mlcro3 bedroom horne Mlnei'IVIIe
IIU'84, rtver view, $480 per

1

$4500. ;;;86:;.:,:.0.-odi_go_Rem_,
6848
-4.-4,...,-31-8

~

~;~=~

:-:-='-'--..:.:.:......:-:----,-:::-

Self
Storage

eag~o

8 • Shih Tzu Match 1· 1916 Beretlll Automatic,

1

(7..cl)387~7888

I,. a::,,s:__

Hill'~

(740) 992-3194
Of'jy. 740-742-oo03
52485 1884 Cavalier 97 Aotro Van, 86,000
992-6635
. T1
524116 · 1882 Cutleao·Ciora' air; crulso, lilt, PW, PL,
To Good H
omao. ny ,.,.
·
• AMIFM C....tte dual air iiifr-000:::-....-...., '-:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:::;;:!~
o
rlor hOull
5 mo. Old $24116. 1997 Otda Achieve, bogo, ABS, leata 7, like rio
u-r
Auo- S4895, 18 .olbenJ 1o choee now, Muot eOIII $10,000
"""""
DIPOYIIB
· lrom llfllrtlng at $1495. flrm. (740):l79-2134 IHve
(MI'IIOVI!MI!N1

IOOiort· undort&gt;innlng-&gt;ind Plolno, A/C, nice poroh, Meytog Appilanooa, Frencll - - - up to 5DF ol uutlty .llneo. $325.00 plus dopooh and CHy Meylag, 740-4411-7785.
N through March !Sih utlllflea. 740-887-3487
·
Watldna P - ; Doublo
maintenance artd general
dlacrlmlnltlon bMICI OA
ohC:se your ~olora. ',
' •
Duncan Fire Dining Room llrength whttt Mel '*"i·Y&amp;•
repair. Knowledge of long URGENTLY
NEEDED- raco, cotor, rallglon, oex
Cole'a Mobile Homes, 2 bldloom trailer, $250 mo., Tobli Chelra EJdra nllla, llllracta, - r .
tem1 care. State and Feder· ~- donora, eem $50 lo llftllllalollhll or natiOnll 15288 us 80 Eaal, Athens, rof l dep, Mlnemlllo, Oh ~a11' S380 Twin ~ lploao, miKM, ~~~
alrulesandregulatlonsand
$60 per week tor 2 or 3 artgln,onnytm..flaftfo Ohlo 46701 ,(740)liU2·iB72. (740)882-Bmonor&amp;pm.
aa
xor)mg,
·$25.
(740)~
_
~~1ntma.
nil;
COII740GivEAWAY
Send Anume to:
building code. Please send houra waekly. Call Sera·
..-:e any 1uch
Bea tlful River View Ideal 4830 ,
_,
Gallipolis Dally Tribune reoume or apply In poraon: Tee, 740-592-6651 .
prefoNnoo, ltmltllloft or 1989 Spruoerldge 1,4K60, For 41 Or 2 Pecpte, Rolaren- .;::::;___ _ _ _ _...:.; --~-----RE: Advertlalng
Overbrook Center, 333 Wyngate of GOIIIpolla, "AU·
.dlocrlmlnllion."
good condition. Will, hotp ca. Depoolt, No Polo, Foe- For Sale: Reoondltloned 8 Comallry Lolli lot ~~~Frae puppy to good home,
Page Straet, Middleport, OH cenaed. Asalefed Living
with dallvel)'. Call ifaroid. tar Troller Park, 740-441· wolhora, dryera and refrfg- Prime Locafion, Mound Hill.
Rottweller mix. Save me
Salea Rep
45780.
740-992-8472. Community', Is eeeklng a ' 'IIIIo nowepapor lll)tt nol ' 741).385·7871 ,
0181.
erafora. Thompoono Appfl· (513)553-2731tvenlng.
from tho pound! 740·882·
Equal OpportunHy Employ- port-tlmeLPNand Rftl,.,.
knowfnglyoCCtpl
: 1991 AHIWOodf 4ldiO 2br.
ones. 3407 Jlckoon Ave·
825ThlrdAvenue
021D
er.
•·alstant available to work
lor rwol .
Two B.A. Moblo Homo In nuo, (304)875-7388. .
ATV RamPO, 150. BHr
Q I I Oh ••••
Ill pol a, lo ......1
' 2bo. all elaetrfo, ~·eppll, Clfy, .S325/ mo. Waler Fur· .
Compound w/ arrowa.
Fnoe to good loving home
Merk'o Plumbing &amp; HHtlng all ohlfta. You may apply In
101818 whloh II In
ancao, ~ wuher &amp; dryor. nllh4icl Deposit and Rafor- GOod Uled Apple- R• 1140. .E~ Dryar, 125.
only! 2 malo pupploa. Baa· 100 WORKERS NEEDEO lo looking for someone with person or und reoume 10: vlolaflon ollho lew. OUr All now OIIPII. lnilde hll onco Required No Polll oondiUonld and Guaran- WhNI Barrow, 115. Woad
f)lo mix, small. (740)245·
Aaaamble cralta wood
some plumbing &amp; heating 300 Brlarwood Dr., Galllpo-~~ a111 ""'"Y
· boon rwmodeled, Oldfllarga (7401448•1151 ·
oho; 1ood. Waohora, Dryora, Ealar, •10. Runs. Coli
11082. .
IIams. MatarlOI p;.,.,lded. experlenca, (740)378·6571 Ill, OH 45831 .
Informed IIIII oil
IMngroom. •Mull be moved. 5.30pm
· Aangot, and Rolrlgera10111, (740)37D-2380 ,
.•~old Mo h
To $480+ wk.
6-4:30 M·F.
dwotllngu-.lldln · $12,000. (304)4511-1718
'
'
&amp;
Soma 1CIIIliS88. Slclaal
Pu
8
' w- . I or- F 00 II
u pk 24H
1,..,
lk.rsiNJ!li8
lllllrtiWIPIPI'I&lt;W
Appllancae. 78 Vlna !11., Baby Sluff- Toys, Balh
Oac und •. Fatho~ Boxor, .' n orma426
on 4780
0·
r. McClure's Raotaurant now
1t
Burohon Mobile Horne l.alo
"=~a
(740)4411-7388
Boat, Ploy pin wllll OlriYing
AeOI Cult. (7-40)448-48481
f.SOf· •
hiring all 31ocoUons, full or ,
TlwMNG
·~.~·=~ : model 14ll70 3br. 2bo. on
• .,......,..,
0101, o-e montho ololhei,
(740)448 8548
All Pooluono FTIPT Day &amp; port-time, pick up eppllcarented lot. llko now 1~ Galllp1
LilY Boy Couch &amp; L.cwt 12·18 rnontha and
Evenlngi. Apply In' Peraon Uon aliocoflon &amp; bring back Qollipollo CorHr ColillJo
olio Ferry. (304)875·3888 1 and· 2 btdroom eparl· 8111, 1101h Ftooilno, 8yrw glrta. call (740)742·3017
._...,AND
Glno'o 2nd Slreet Muon
between
9:3oam . &amp; (CO...,.. Clau To Homo)
Uk lor ~mary
manit, fumlohed and unlur· old. l380. (740)258-1428
Bed Uner for Sharf Bad lull
~
FotiNJl
10:0Dam, Monday thru Sal· Call Todoyl740·448-435?
nlshed, IICUrlty dlpoott No. MollOhan Co'""', 2D2 Clerk llzo Chov. Truok OU1 of
Apptloetlono lor Claas A &amp; uroay.
.
.
1-800-214.0452, ' r10
HoMEs
Uonlted Or No Credit? GOY· qulred, no polo, ?40·552 C"•""' R--~....~·., Ohio. 2001 m~-1. '1"0.10"0.
Ctaoo B INck drlvora are
R:N90-0!·f274B
FORS··~
ommont Bank Flnoi\CI Only 221 s
,_.., ·~···
o
o
Found: Golden Rotrlovor, now bolng. sccopted. Con· Moonlight Escort Saekltog
·
~ ·
At
In BaltOurw·
'
(740)4411-7444 1-877·8~, (304)882·2814
Reddish Color,
Malo, lacl Aloxlo Taylor Gardena Female Modal Eacort, Sorr. 117V
13br 1
, ted vlllo, WV 304·73844011.
0112. Fnoe ElllmaiH, Eoey
LoGrandll/ Neighborhood 1740-943 1248
ouo
lnqulrlea
OnJy.
~
· car oorago . • ooa
For Rtnl 2 roomo Apart• flnoncng, 10 dlya oomo u Coromlo &amp; Qlft lhop Applo ·
Rd area, Call (740)448· a
· •
·
(740)388·1799 between S:
· In Halflont orea.
$26,000. Now Double Wide on P~· manfln PI Pliaaanl. Dopoo- oaoh. Villi Mulor cant. Grove J:!ll78·2800
7888
AUanllon
&amp;pm.
(304)862·8224
(740)448• Drtv• I•IIIUI eo.- tlot. • rarttlc
uled 70% oil,
Vlft Property, 1·5 Acrwo. IURIItrenooo
Aocm~;:;-,
Loadero wanted
'1olllfl.4110-5121'
·
-~~~~· Moving Nol
4 11 10 Ranoh Style COli (74014*3583 1o pro- 2200
lntamaflonal mall ontor lroo Now accepting applications
$100·$25,000
Homa 4br 3ba with qualify.
.
.
For tho Olocnmlnotlng TonANI1QIJII
1.:,....:::;.:
_••!::mo::;
. ::"'":::..·- - - booklet prinflng provided! fWor Dental AlllotanVSmOIIIC~ CASH WHEN YOU NEED so.r..ned In "pstlo PQ&lt;Oh, 2 0... 10 Uled homos prlood onl. Doluxo 2 BA, Noar o-t, 180. fuli 81zo Bed, .
orkor, Dr. David
It ·
IT
cor garogo. 176,000., 4 undor 13000. \'!if holp with
1
Cl
• CGi
.
895 Jackoon Pike, Sulto ,1b
blocks lrom High School dallvary. COli Nlkkl .740-38f5. Ho zor,
A, Appllanooa
• .
.
A41'-• •100. King 81zt
Rick Poarwon Auction Com·
1-800·218·7643
101 .
WANim
Gal. Ohio. Good vlow of .....
, .
Furnished Including w.ao., lluy or Mil. FtiVIrtna Anti- MaUriN and ·llolc ~nga, .
pany fuN lima auotlonHr
Monly-0
To Do
•~
Corporl, Pnvafo Cook, quoo, 1124 Euf Main on .75. Mlomwa.- 811nc1, US. .
1
oompltft auction oorvtoo: www.
rwamo.com O.T.R. loom Drlvor, 2 yearo
town. (301)727·3316
. Uad Home, 3 Badroom 1488, ~aoo . Floqulred. ·.IR 124 I. Pome!OV, .740- Mlolowavt; ue. (740)441·
Llolnled fl88 Ohio 1 Will
••~rlenoe Good M.V.R.
7 Roomo· Quiet Neighbor• F~or UpPOr Wllf -nlllor the (740)4411-2887
8112·2528. FIU4!t Moort, 87~ · ·
'
·
7
4
Virginia, ~773·5785 Or AVONI All Aroool To Buy or W H.
( 401662'!'2 0, ~~~r~~g~h~~nK~r~~=~~ hood, Rool a Siding ~ fll ,1,000 C.,. (740)441· Graolous living. 1 and 2 ownor.
·
Frwo 0u FUrnllllll and Air
304-773-6447.
.Soli. Shlrtey Spoara, 301· 1740)352·2121
Healera and Salamondora than 8 yra. old, Lorge Qt•ln 3883.
bedroom eportmonto ll VI~ Suo'oSel- on lhl"T" Cond- Ellimlftl. COli "
WAN11!D
875·1428.
Ofllco Biller Wonltd. Pool· Repaired.
Call
Mlko kltchon, Gao FA Hoot, Con·
!ago Menor and Rive...,. In MkldltporL Dollo,, ~ l740)448.e308. Of 1·800·
.....
BatH Broo. Amusement five, Punctual Poraon Nled· (740)448-7804
tral AC, OVoralzed 2 Cor PII01 Program· No CrodiV Aportmonll In Mlddloport. ware, Aladdin manttfl, and 281-oote. II you don't oan 10
Co. Is looking for onthuolu· ed tor Port-time poaHion In
Garage pluo Lorga Storaga Bad Credl ond Flral limo From $27W348. Cali 740- mort. (740)IIllo0218
us wo bolllloMI
.
L-----o-~
tic lndlvlduall aprtngloum· DOetOro office. No Expori- All of your noma ropalra, ad· Bldg. (740)887-4()80
Homo Buyara. FA! lnd &amp;&amp;2·50114 Equal Houolng r:];~~;fJ
.
3 _....,, 0no SIOry In mar 2002. Mull bt at loaot onca Nooeaoary. Apply In ditlona &amp; romorlollng. 24hr
CounfN Homo
Governmant ~n• Avolio· Opponunliloo.
.Grllbb'o PlofiO· Tu"I"G a
oounlry eetUng In Gallla 18 yQro and ll&gt;lt to ~ovot . Poraon 111 Complete Cora emerganoy eervtoo, senior· 10 Wlndoor Cl. 6/roomo
blo. Own your now homllnAtpelra. p'*"""' Nltd
eoumy or Polnl Plo-m WHkly poy, living loollltiH. Chiropractic, 10A Alrpo~ oltlzono dlocounl. 22yra: 2 112 batho, Fuli Baument, otaad ol ronUng. Coli Newly RomodlleG, 2 Bod·
•Tuned? Col Th8 l'llno Dr.
arwo on Lond Controct. Conllol uaai 740-2II·2&amp;50 Rd, BaMind Burgor King.
I&lt;P- (304)575-208~
(740)448·32t8.
room Apt, SCovil Rotr1at111·
7~
2 cor garage, ScrHned
Down Paymonl Amounf
.
Po h C
"
tor, UUIItloa Paid, f400/ •••• Prom Dreoo •••• NIW ANII Ullll ITUL
(Nogotlablo), 1350 par CNA-HHA. Celt Homomak·
RN'a I ~PN'a
David's Home Repair. "' . all (3041875·2386 , We havt api)I"OI&lt;imaloty 20 mon1h. •e Oliva St, ' t.lori·Lw Aubtrglno (Lighl laarne Atbar
momh. Con~.or Todd or ora nleded 10 provide In Evening &amp; Midnight Shlfta Plumbing, EloCtrfcal, Pelnf· for appointment.
Ulld liomao for under (740)441-3e45
Smokey Lavondar) color F -~-- '&amp;.Z:.' "'-··
Fantaatlc Ste~lng Wageo lng 110 (740)286·&amp;373 or
$2,000, callf-800-837·3238
· S
.
• or ""'"'""'' ~.,...., ,.,..,.
homo oerv Ica for th a Payment
Jllnrtller. (740)256·1028
In Lieu ol ~enellta (7.~)"1. ·5707
Cozy 1.5 SIOry, 1250 oq h., .lor lnlo.
.
Now Taking Appliostlone- Paid 150- Wom onca • a nol, Fla1 Bar, 81111 Gliding
- - - - - - - - alderlyldlaabled In Mason,
OptonAvallable.
~~
·
Open Loft, 1.5 aero, Porter
35 w1112 Bedroom Town· B~daamald dren, Slza ~or Dralna, ' D~vawaye
Aboolufo Top Donar: U.S. Cabell, Wayne, Putnam Groat Shift Dlfforentlalaf Georgoa Portable Sawmill, Area. Asking $79,000.
Wi"s
&amp;
·
I
·
houso Aportmonta, Inc
. ludlo . 18120
. , sail for 1100, Sholl Walkwaye. LIL Scrap Mol·
Sliver, Gold Colno, Proof· Counfloe area. Call 1' 888' Sunbrldgo Cara a Ronab don't haul your logo to the &lt;740)38 7•71 93
ACI.il:'AGB
Woftr
Sowogo, Trash, 1o matdh· olzo &amp; 1/2, 120. Ole 0pon MGMay, -TUIIldlty,
Hit, Dlamondl, . Gold 453-4882 Will Train
for Putnam
mill jull call304·87f5.1957. For Renf or sola, small
$350/Mo., .740-448oOOOB.
(3714084)4411-7583 or (740)445- ~.-ay &amp; Filc!IY. lan\Ainfll.
U.S. Currency,· Commun"" Aollon lo - '
Coli Wandl Taylor
ho
fb S250
th
·
·
·
.•. IIOpm. ClaHd ~.
M.t"S. Coin Shop, 181 9oo- lng a co;~ manager for Hs
Moving and Hauling: Clean uoo r.
· mon • For Sale: .9 plus aoroo, Ono Bedroom Apt, Vlna St,
. ••IUnloy
1
Sunday.
11 304•757-eeo5
ond Avtnuo, GOIIIpolla, 740- Emplayment Program. 2 or
To Schedule A
-Out · Bulldlngo, Baoemtnto, Deposit.
(304l727·33f B Abouf $8000:. $8000 wa~h Golllpollo, OH. (740)387· 1O•Pfalfzrotf . Yorktawno : (l'40)44-7aotl
4411-2842.
·
Proleealonallntorvlew
Garages. Eotateo, Trash, from 6pm-f,pm.
of
limber.
$18,000. 7885
cupa I aaucora, never ·
·· 4 yHr degraelo noclelaarv·
EnoiOIOd Corgol Bo• Trei· lcM or rallied llald. Com~ocaled At
Etc. Odd Jobs. Cali For salt by owner: Nice t&gt;i- .(740)379-&amp;2r7
Porn
I
2 bod
=~· $3. sot, (740)117· Ook Fl:a;- Spill&amp; 0....
foot. sultabla to puter, communication and
300 Seville Road
1740)448·7604
laval homl on 1 acre n.. r
'
oroy, •ro•
room,
·
IIIIQ. 811. Bad.
• r' ~2•
·~ •
Ch
Th
bed ·
for Sale· cloared approx Nay10111 Run, wid, airel, .fur.
(304)875-2013
·
Haul Furnllura, TAG (Bump. organizational okllls ,..
Hurrlcono. wv 25526
Top to Bottom Cleaning es1sr.
rea
room. Lol
2 112 oo.O., gravel road, nlihed lg yant-potlo no 2 Olcth COIUI, onl&lt;lo lenglh, ·::=..::.;.:.:..:::.;:;_,.._..,.._
ar Hitch), Pull Condition. qulred. Appllcatlono sccopt·
EOE
Service. Pror..,fonal clean· ::.\ubay:mon:~~~lr.p~~· water &amp; &lt;iloolric avaRablo, Pllll, (740)H2-8888 '
grwen &amp; biu1• ~ ~~ . Ponn Aaola, ·$20 Gn, ·330
1 11· m •· 00 a GTI 111100.00 firm 2 hllll)'
Mull be good enough to ed through 2125102 II 4:40 AI. 35 Adult Video and lng at affordable prlcn
' Porter aroa. $18,500. Cell
ora, 111
Run lnltraflta. (740)441· PM. Send roaumo and ref· Bookstore Hiring Mldnl~ht Residential oHice rsmodsl· sun room. Newcertlrol hHI· (740)448-4514 (740)448- Tara Townhouao AparC· plica, (740)187·3852 .
,.,qa, -lovtl Wind 'f4Dr
orenoea to Box 272
nd. ' truc'lion clean lng &amp; ale syotem. One ml·
" or
menlt Very Spaolouo 2
- -··
11
,;,;~=·------ GMCM loan EOE"
, Shift, Poaslble Ev=, II· no ~onf:;:'u I 992 2979 nuto on Route 7, but atill pr" 3248 ahor opm.
Elecf...;.,o 2 Floora CA 1 2 prom- ~ZII 7 • $, -·r•.
.
ny, WV. (304)937•
Call
•1391 a .
•
vote. (740)88!·3981
n- .. "'~•1112 · Ba1h,' Fully CarpotOd, bfll~~ ~i!lnob,01_!!dnlalll
.
lloold!Otllool'....,...,._,
Profollfonal oookl land .
92
whll homo, 1 - option or Hllp wanted· oxpertencad 1o:ooam· S:OOpm
·
........... ,ft.~
AduH Pool l Baby POOl, Po· u~purp~.
u.,.. N&gt; ~HI ~to p1ua
owner flnonced . 60&gt;80k roofor'e and carj)onttro· Help wanted coring for tho
Now Homa. Vln~Sidlng, · .
WANim
tlo, Slarl. S385/Mo ..~o Pllfll, . drta't In Jaokoon, -Pd- ... fu"- lnoltidlnli olf
range. Call Don al mullhlvoavallddriver'all· elderly, oerat Group Home,
Shlngla Roof, 3
roomo/
LoasoPiua "SoourityD-'111400.00 llll for, l110.~, and '' otoolrlo &lt;QUfltml•
(304)175·1333, Eat 18
...... 10011. tranlportiUon now paying minimum wage,
llvsiNii'ss
b:~-~~~g Down. Call HAVING TAOUBL.E HIJing Req~lred, Oaya: 740-446' ::::~n!F;':li~~ .HI ' ~ .....
w ,
and
Local work, new ahiHI: 7am-3pm, 7om·
OfrolmJNrry
yqurhome~ Balilndonpoy· 3481 ; Evenings: 740·387·
· ·.
,Pumpol ftoiii.HinO , . _
8833
.:.Otedbunk
~'"!~: good PlY· Apply at ChrfiU· 5pm, 3pm·11 pm, 11 pm·
PartlaUy Remodeled hol118, . manto?
Don1 go Into 0802, 740-448.0101.
Frwo ncrocllolo INirlah!Y
Wrfto Info 10. Jo on'o Conllructlon, 1403 7am, oall740-992·8023.
2 . Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full FORE~OSURE: and ruin ·
85 lon !lfiiiUll, MsO•·........
.
1T'tral 117 N 4th APt 2 Eaoltm Ave, Galllpollo. Of·
Baautllul 11168 mobile food Baoomenf, Largo Unellach· your clldiL I buy houao. IIAUTIPU~
APART· 85 Font F·f&amp;O, Noldl Bl~ HIATIN~ •
Midcfilpo", 0H 457&amp;0. . ' (1~A-..~~:.. 8·5 M·F, II _.!l_!n~bple-ERiorVIII0
haRdollv- conceulon. Tri-ola 241eet ed 2 car_ga111ge. 127 Kino· Any aroa, PIHse coli Jim, MIINTII AT IUDQIT Pill- Work, tedo, RUIIIon SKS : ~,~11
~,........,.
·~ ~
long. All ofelnloso stool on Dr., 150,000. (740)441· 7-40·982-3187
Cll AT JACKION n- Rlfll,NovorFIIId,30round "
....... ---=-..
I \11'1 il\\11 \ I
Horrlo • G. rd P rty 1 ory of all nuraing nerv~eoln equipment with deop fl)'er, 0485
.
TATia 52 w - Orlva clip,
Ml~ln 30-30, ... · .,.
. -=-.:::::w.::~:.;:-.:::::.:::::•~::.::;·-=.... lli\lll'""l
a on a
I four homoo. Provides oup- shallow fl)'tr 4 bowl alnk,
f
$1\&amp;7 1 $383 Wolk 10 c011an1 oondltion $228 44 Walk In Coole&lt; aOM 100
--;jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j now hiring. Start your own port, and aupervlalon to exhauet hoOd and cotton , yr. old house, 3 bldroom,
rom &amp; ~ ... Call ?40-- magnum Blldchiwk, 1ci 112 011,t
~-Potter.
. --W.··~ home baled r&gt;uotneas with LPNo. Aulsto In nurolng candy mochlne. Eight foot 2b.ath,c/a,vaulltdcelllhga,
"'~...!.,
~2568 Equal Housing lnoh combat gripe, ~lkt Ohio (7403e7~ti
·
.....,. ~"~
llnlt lono lnvelllmlnt. lnltr· IIMnomento, -HASSP
aervlng window and a cesh located In the ooulitry on 4
Opportunl.
·
Now, 1275. (740)388·8073
'
vlawa- conducfed Monday, oeumenfo, Care Plans, and register. Asking $12,900 acres, $75,000, daytime
roR Rlil&gt;!l
ty.
after 8pm.
WOiertlno Spoolaf: &amp;'4 100
Mardi •· COli Pat Miller for PEER Reviews. Admlnlatera (740)742·3033
740·9&amp;8·88011, after 740·
Chrllfy'l Family Living, .
.
PSI 121 .00 Por100: 1'100
Cuatocllon al Point Plelunt on appointment. (740)379· med!coUone and t•eatmonts
.
742·1807.
33140 Now umo Rd., Rill· 4 Celniloly Loll. Ohio VOl· PSI t:se.oo Ptr- 100: · Ali
Mooll Lodge. Approxlma"' 9887.
when needed. Muat be . Slart Your Buslnene To1 -3 lledroomo Forecioeed land,- Ohio, 7o40·742·7oCD3, ley Memory Ganllno, ~- llfpo Oornprmion Fi11frlgl
1y 3s-40 hre a wee~. Apply . ·
available lor on-call hours, day... Prima Shopping Can· 9 Room House, 3 Bathe, Homes From $199/Mo., 4% Aportrnenf, homo and lrajlor don ol E'vortllllng ~ua , . In a-, .
r. •
al Polnl Pleaoanl MOON
· · mostly PM ahllt. Contact tar Space Available AI AI· CIA and Heat. $45,000. Cown, 30 YearJ at 8.5% 111ntala. eommorolal otore- Loval Lolli CioN to
RON IVA. . IN'Tillll!'llll&lt;
Lodge office Chorieaton Noed 5 1odlea1o sell Avon. Dorothy
Harper,
RN- fontable Rate. Spring Valley (740)448·4734, (7401441· API!. For llilllnga, 800·319· fronta available tor laaoo. wiH apih ·2·2, •300 each. i l Jecbor1 Ohio, 1Fid.
'
· (740)448:3358
(740)446-7148.
Plaza, Caii7~·448-D101. 1337, (740)367-701 5
3323 E~t1709.
·
voconclel now.
(740)1!87·4080
·
,
837•11628 '

Appt. call (740)448-9043
Tue., Wed., Fri. 9:00am·
1:OOpm or call (740)3888459.

100,031
mllel
7$-2924
(304)1

-

Private Party· Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days o Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads •
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To : Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

·
40 992
S38,UOO.o0· &amp;'a•x48'· ~total ~~~18! 1)0 . Plfs,-· 7• ) -

complete rei)Of1s and docu- Cashier, Full Time &amp; Part
mentation, must hove lima Bookkeeper, Full Tlme
or

3 Bedroom on Route 2,

__,.
·
~OANS, ~OAI'IS, ~ANI,
for """"
"""" Of -~ crodH ' coII
toll freof ·Bee 884 &amp;756
"'No up front feeo ·
"'Fast reliable service ··
'"Banlcrupleles walcome

bal and written eommunlca- convlence store manager,

knowledge

S.

["'bTSAM:nolsl

Ru.-t Tarrtor Pup- 1m Grand Prix Special - · 4' Uft. Have EKtra .30
7 Wk
ld Sf80 EdHion power locko/Win· ...,. 380 to go whll Truclc,
0
'~-:1!~~~~·-=·~-=· American
1&gt;/C. CD
now (740)441-o996after5pm. 1971 Jeyco Compor 21H.
' Raci
' rims. 91 GMC Jimmy 4x4 Runs pull
behind
$3500 ...
tor - · with pe- $3800 (740)992· 4S9 or Good
Mok~ ' Ollar (304)882-3507
Toy Poodles needy (304)882-3407
(7-40) 118 8044
'
COih

•a-·F·~-RI!Nr--·

o~~MnCES

cations available at the Sa· Management Corporation

tntemevmall order.

1~2~·;;;
rf~~~~:o~~~:~97:
~
or

___,

.....l..,r.'b-·FOR·HOMI!S-Swtiiiii._.lr
....

Home -.th Aldeo and/ or We hove atarted a new proINOncer
10.5 Aorea with 1999 Fleet·
Certified Nursing Asalotanta gram that poya you more·tor OHIO VALLEY PUB~ISH· wood Modular Home Near
Mail Seeking Femele pen (upon """"'etlon ol training Wanted.
your previous work experi· lNG CO. recommondl thai GaiHpolla. E-lanl Condl·
pet. For acllvllln &amp; oct. No Loo,klng tor a New JOI or Gallla County Council on ence. If you have been you do buaineaa with people tion. Private, Country Set~
Aging (Senior Resource working at your curran! job you know, and NOT 1o lind tlng. Stocl&lt;ed Pond. Addi·
Oru~..Aicohol .
Reopond CAREER???
foo: PO Box 272 Point Then don't mlas this oppor- Center) is currently accept- lor six months or more you money thrOugh the mall until tiona! 7.5 Acrea Available.
tunltyt1!
lng applications for Home may qualify for our new Pay you have lnvettlgated the Call Janell Cal at Century
l"'eooam, wv 25550
CAL~: 1-188-874-JOBS
Health Aides imd Certified For Experience Program. offertng.
21 Homeo &amp; Land (Cellular
Moon Llghf Eacorta. Full - - - - - - - - Nursing Asalslents. Muot We can pey you more then
• (304)834-25116 or 0111ce
Servloo Male and Female SEamwhafyouarewonh have own transportation. youa111maldngatyourcur·
~ 11-800-731·90111.
E100rta. Prompt Profeaslolrom home,
JOb descnptlons and appll- rent )ob. Call lnloCislon
.,_.

8pm to lam. (740)388·.. 11500-$5000 per morrtfl.
1788.
Fre8Boo~et
1-"~241·77••
~
~
Why Walt? Start m••tlng.
Ohlo alngloe 1onlght, call toll . - - - - - - - - .
free 1_800_788_2623 ext
ADVERTISING

I

or....,..,.. thlt,...,...

Pl!JisoN.us
____

~

old

POUCIII: Ohlo-, ... --tt.rtohl~- ....... o r - _ ,
Tttbunel1nllnlf Atgl..., wll be: ; ::atbk for no moN1hM the ..C of lhl
any toN
from tht
are
• Curnnt ,_.,.

• Start Your Ads Wtth A. Kerword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\\.\ 111 \C I \ II "\I..,

Includes F"r ee Yard: Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words. 3 Da.ys
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads M4st Be Prepaid

~

IWr:

Sentinel • Page B 7

ex.as.ooo.
Good

j

'f~;d:Aj;;;~i;~

t(~r/cfafu ·

Display Ads

St&gt;oecl. Good ~.
FQII $2000. Col (740~14
or(740)441-3241-lpn.

:100
(7o40)37t-2511

Dally

~ ~

~.~·-~
28870 Salhan Road
4 · · - - -·~- ,..,.
Racine, Ohio
45771
11167 4••$1100.00. Station
. . 1877
. - . Wlnnel&gt;lgo
lll&lt;l boat,
Wogon,
740- 1or,
$3000;
74044t-2217
882-2553
mo10r home, 24' compor,
$2000 080, (7-40)742-1803
1881 GMC Jimmy 4x4, ---,.---,,.---,--,Rune Good, $2500 080. . 2000 •--- T-~
1"
~ ,-.er, • •
-'--"~· $'550
• . ·~·
· - FOfd (740)44811044
opon V-hull
gg Evlnrudo CLid 2. ·vs, 4 Door. 83.000
fro1i1nG _
.....,
actual mllel, $995. 11167 1881 .._ ' Wrangler, on ...;., all ..,.,....,;.,.lnToyola Corolla, Aufo, A/C, 118,000 miiQ, Hont and eluded ' $4800 00 080
Uko New, Low Millo, Soft Top $5,000. (304)67$- 740-8o49-2727 ·
·
$2100, 1994 Toyo~a T10. 8882
L,....;.,_ _.;;,;;:.;,
vs. Aufomatic, $5700. 11161 2000 Cl1evrolo13/4 ton
Auro P.um &amp;
:z:"~d'U'.w=: uiar cab, " '· su...ldO ~
A« +WIIW!S
CD ployor, Olumlnum
8012
wheels, pulh r&gt;unon 4
1m Buick "parf&lt; Ave. Exc. - · Rhino llner, fl. c.cc"-'·
COIIdltion, loaded, All..,... berglelo topper. 14.500
·~:~:~~~
Ices. LL · Broiua -lc. mlill, $22,000.00 7 - ·
K1

AKC Flog Bloclc Lab pup.
ploo tor aile good hunting
piOIII8CII voiCe mal 441 •
7193 orCIII ~7s-4488
------AKC Roglotored Lobo,
Choeotalo
or
Black.
(740)44Hl831

m;rtbune
Sentinel , . Register
ca~r;:,::v... (7!?.~ To~!~;~42 · (7!?1 To992;~~56.. . (3~!! 67~;~3433___....,._
Word Ads

.

V1200.(304)1=

iii_ _..

To Place

Oeo.lfilfU

'

I lb ,_, (7-401887• 1187

Good- Cor. 1100. Cal
....... (304)e37-2541
· OH 18QO Oudl80, Aufo, Loaded
whll
SUnroof. $2000.
"'(7:-:-40-:-)o44i-:-::-5_25_18-:--~cc
1882 N1uan Stanu, Fully

REACH OVER 285~000 PROSPE~TS
PLUS YOUR AD
ONLINE · ·

()jlee lfofi!l'~

11ongor

t =: I=~~C!M~ r
~~~~~~~~~·•:rc:';""~ldo:·
~

•

In one week With ·us

~

The

lml).act"

. Gun Shoot

Friday Feb ..22nd

7pm

81

fiELDS

PLUMBING

Bill's Tire
Shop

Siriugb1
$ali¢Kii~ 1guanneed,

Ualine Watrarm;
F100 Eslinales
DR Sissel Qrt
740.378·6349

HERBALIFE
· Independent
Distribuior

I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.
100%
natural/Gu aranteed

740·992-7036
IWNI.IIf!lbs4illes1
m

WEST SHADE
BARE[IER SHOP
Clo.td Jan. 30, 31sl, .
Feb. lsf
Open
The, Fri 10-5:00 p.m.
Sal. 8:30 • 12:00
George K. Vac.
Feb. I·Man:h I
Shop will be reg hours
&amp; days Man:h 1st
Sorry for your incom·.
985-3616 Chris

�...

·- -- .....

,

,__.,.

.......
•

Thuntdly,flb.21,~..

~.mydallyeelltiMI.corn

Page B I •The Dally Sentinel

__

INSIDE: 2002 BRIDES SPECIAL EDmON

I

NBA Croaawor!l Pu ..le .

...
....
_....
, ..... _.......
,,....,

PHILLIP
ALDBR

ACIIOit 17 C.10111&amp; J
"

.. ....

....
.....
...
.....
ll H

..... , 1

• 412

.AKQJI

•

• .• f

• KqUtf•

,.~
54Poat1t "http:/lwww
Allin Poe
.•••
55 Entnop

6AU

21 WhMI

5I

22

57

.• '7.'

=-23=t.

Duler: Sol.atb,
y ..,
able: &amp;Qtb
.....
••

W_.
Pall

twdl
••

EMI

IJipau

o,..run,-·.

/

..., ft401JLl&gt; wf INISt4

Tttf ~~S MANY
· t4APPY ,eTUilNS7

BARNEY
HOWD'(, SMif --I-lAVE A"
FERSHE"RIFF' PENCIL.
DON'T FE"RG-IT TO USE IT

-bal

251'1N28 ThaaW ,
IIUdllllCI

Not instant

IT fAY~ tt,~e T~' INGOMt TAX wAS
EST AIL1St4fl&gt; wt4fN AN AM,Nl&gt;MfNT
wAS RATiflfl&gt; 8~
YfA~S AGO Tt41S MONTtt.

.Melp County"s

13llllgla ....
.:.
.. IX I
41Prlllw
15Avlllar
ollllore
£ertwt
con~ llted
11 Huge
80 Iring
tlgfitly
101111

6 K Q J lf

-·

lufscdtln

-unit 42 Senc~Y•
12reply
~
43"
••

••••

'

• 11114

40ZM

., VINe

11 POIMI

"I:QJU

t

U4

.......

30-

-

1

"*-

~1

Llgend
21 DIWn
I WICUd
~ codJ II
10 Unhl ... ... Tllln
,. Gr8CIIul
eoolde

:r:c- ..... _,
rudaly

DOWN

17 All at once 43 SW.Wtro

2 IIINicle
3 Actr.-

JIIIIIn
iEMWIIItl
4 Wlnl8rtliM
31 Bolllflty

11 ., ' 7

•
• Klricl of

.......

=

*'"

44 Arp'l

47 AI wall!l

unltl

24

c:omn- ... Old41o!w

Cipher=""'".,.

THE BORN LOSER

....

Ki'oiOW '(()IJ~ ~
.h--" 11\~1'1\1'1 WeN\ ~...

r
""'
BUT'&lt;OU Cf'oN WII'E:. 1\11&gt;,\ 5\U..'(
Gll:.lt-1 Off '(QUI':.

FK€:

~W ...

T~~:t.~' S(rf\\.cSUlA-~t.~s·

Flii.ST I THOU&amp;HT SHE
WAS JOI&lt;.lMG! C"'N
YOU &amp;ELl f:Ye Tl1!'.-

.,

.l..

PEANUTS

1--,lgr-lrcG-,1;-,1---l ·

I

51-le's 601N6 TO CALL ON
ME NEXT, MARCIE .. QUICK,
WAAT'S Ti.IE ANSWER?

ITHURSDAY
:

.. .., .

WSAZ

Newt

IJ) IJ

CCI

WSYX

Hews

&lt;D O
WCHS

Ne.,

(1) 0

WPBY

CIJ

legislatura

Wh.- c&lt; JeopaiCiyl 0~ Winier Games(Uve)ICC)
F""""' (CCI
ABC Wkl En1.
Wsaklt31 MyWi!a Accordi!WJ Crew
Whose
r;~ohl Uok (CC) and Kids IOJim
Hews
Uno?
Ca1ty
ABCW~ Weakest En:.
My Wile According Crew
Whose
News
lillk (CC) Toniaht and Kida to Jim
Carey
l ...?
Business Newshour With Jim
Ooct0111 Law
Frootl110 iCC)
R]li.

@ Cli)

News

News
Seipfeld

WOWK

-

(CCI
CBS
Nows
• NBC

Dragon

News·

&lt;lli GI (CC)
WTAP
Qll

WOUB

News

I'

·

Nows

C8S

® CD

News

lehttr (CC)
on Call "WOO;t
..
Jeopa1dy! Wheel ol Rayii"Oild Kirl9 ol
CSI: Crime Scare
(CC)
Fortune
Oooerls ln.,;tiQ~I... ICC)
Friendt Raymond Glutton Bowl: The World's Greatest Eating
(CC)
C011test {CC)
Extra
Frasier
RaymoOO King of
est Crime Sc:ero
(CC)
ICC)
Queens hwesligailor\ (CC)
Wheel~ Jeopardy! Olympic Winter Games (live} (CC)
Fortune ICC)

News
ICC)
FrO&gt;elme Thursday News
(CC)
My••'li (Fan 1 ol 2) World
ICC) (OYS)
Newl
IOTV
AvereriCC)
Newl
N..,
Raymorrd

P1imetlme Thursday

FAM

m

USA
@
NASH
~)g)

TNT

Full

Family

House
Slop by
Siep

Wonder
Years

1

America'• Funniest

Hc:me Videos
JAG(CC)

R"''t'ICCI
Real TV

AtatTV

(CC)

iCC)
N'II'O B:U.(CC)

Mad TV

Mad TV

iCC)

ICC)
P~tlender

(CC)

ESFN

S;&gt;or1Kooter ICCJ

Col\ege Baskelbil, MiMHOia at Michigan
S~to (Uvo) (CC)

NICK

Ro::ket

Rockel

IPJ

Power

UFE

l'uwer
Golden

Rugrats Spoll]le- ToOl bY
Amold!
bob Sq. GOil]lt'
ICC)
Intimal&amp; POfirail {CC) UnsotvtQ M~sterieS

~

Girl1

Ager&gt;cy (CC)

N1ght .

fYJJ

Couri
~o(CC)
Moroyine iCC)

~~

TBS
t!Ji

Cosby
Show

Newsra·

ChtfJI'I ICh&amp;efl

Kids·

low &amp;Ordtt (CCI

Derlldesl Oo""'st iCC)
(CC)
MOVIE: ~ ol Sill: lito W~lam Coil SiOty
(1995, DrM~a Neil Paltick Harris. (CC)
MOVIE: longitude {2000) u John Harrlsqn_

SOOw
Draw

l'r'
CCI

(:35) latt
Show

(CC)
BOl;iiBPhy (CC)

"'

I I
100 Club (CC)
LMng
s;ll]lle

Marlin

(CC)

Star Trek: The Next
Generation (CC)

Kids-

Sporlscemar (CC)
Allil the

AI in the

Family
Golden
Golden
GITI5
Girla
law&amp; Order (CC)
Family

worlls on a way to CJICutatelc),;gllll:le. (CC)
'

W~l

Blilzer
Roseanne friends

(CCI

(: 35)J.!~

NBA BaskelbaU. Sacramento KinQI at San Antonio $puiS lnsiclltlt
NBA

.(LOB) (CCI
Co3egt Basketball. Duke at Wake FOte!l
(Uvo) (CC)

Hey

Girls

A&amp;E
CNN

i

Gokleo

lllrt

carey

g
=.~obin Hood: Menlo T~hiS (1993.
Who!Je IWhose
lille?
i.ltlt?
I u CBif Elwes, Richard Lewis.
JAG (Pert 2 ~ 2)
Nash Br'dges (CCI JAG (i'an 1ol2)
iCC)
(CC)
StarTrK The Next MOVIE: A Foret of One H Und&amp;rcover cops
are menaced in the Cat~omla drUg aetnt.
Gaoeratklo(CC)
low &amp;Order (CCI

rrD

rnr

N hlllne
legisla·

•

Matters

Walk&amp;r, Ttuas

( 35)
Selnfeld

·l:t

~
WGN
(!)

I

FEBRUARY 21

.

NliC

IOTV
King of
the Hill

.

'

WBNS
WVAH

::::

0

I ME.O.N, IS THAT THE
WIEMEST THI~G 'I'Ol.i"VE
EVER HEARD? AT ·

ltCi

1

Crollsfire

u...

(CC)

From...

The Pont Lany Kin9 Uvo (CC)
ICC)

Newsnlght

Green·

!e~·Lrge

Moneytlne

(cci'

~seanne MOVIE: The Ameri:an Pres~nl (1995. Comedy·Dtama) l(:.tS) UOYIE: Twins {1988) tu
-ut A U S. president rish his pd1ticel ruture tor love.
Arnold Schw8rl6fleQ911'.
CCI

I

----~-~C qb..,
.'Birtbclt\v
Frida\", Fch. 22. 2002
Objc~tive~ you found to be
impossible or umattain~ble in
chc p11st l"Ould !luddenly be·
Ct)lllC' rt.&gt;al jtics in (l,~ year
ahead.. Ym1 m.1y he 'qotably
fortunate iu matte~ concrrninK fric11~bhip and m111anc:e.
l'lSCES (F&lt;b. 20-M•rch 20)
~- Y0\1 wo11't m·ed anv surrog;1tcs or delegates to l;t•lp ym•
aJv:mre your personal intt"rr~t~ . You have everything it
~ke5, and thi:-11 some, Eo call
all th~ important- sh()t~ yourself: Get a jump on lifr by un dcr~t:mding the influence!&gt;
that'll gov4.•rn you in the year
alu:ad. Send for your AstroGr;\ph predictions by mailing
$2 tu Astro-Graph, c/n · thj~
nc\\i~pap4.•r, P.O. Bo:t 1758,
Murray Hill Stati~lll, New
York, NY 10156. Ue sure to
~tat e your Zotiiac si~J;II.
AlU ES (March 1 1- o'.pril 19)
~~ Someone to whom you"ve
bl•en kind recently might do
something t.•xccptiona1\y nice
fnr ym1 fm111 out tlf the blue .
It t.:oulJ \~;~ve to Uo with yom
1.
f.·unily.
.
TAUitUS (April 20- M,,y

2fl} -- A desire of yuun that
you·vc been anxious to bring
ab9ut ha5 0111 c.xcdlt• nt dunn•

of bl' COlllC

&lt;1

rt:;tlity in a. most

unexpected manner. T\Vn ·

lo)·al friends might help bring
it about.
GEMINI (M'y 21-Juue 20)
-- Someone you know who is
in a position to etfll,mce your
C:Ul'l' r, or hriug: about aJdcd
financial C!'ouning~. misht single you out for ju~t such :m

advancc1nem.
CANCEl( (juno 21 -July
22) -- Get goinll: on advancing a personal endeavor, becau~e h im't likely that you'll

encounter any ob5tructions
along the way. Lady Luck ill
up front ~ ricking up all the
,;tulnhlinp; blOcks.
LEO (july 23-Au~. 22) -·
Although the- whole thing
might be hu.~h-hu~ h. you
could ~t:ct invited to pnrticipate in ;m e!ide:!.\'Or that ·holds
the rossihilitV of large retun1S.
Jt'll be i WOilderfuJ chance for
you.
VlltGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
.... A surpri~ &lt;"Oldd bt~ in the
offint; when negotiating aJ• .
agrcemcuc chat involves a uew
project .m mconc wmtld like ·
1tl l:n mch. Yop could be offcrt'd far more than you expect"ed ..
LIUltA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Th~·rc i~ a KoOd t.:houu.:c that

Thursday, Meigs County com- ers to impose a sales tax hike,
missioners approved a resolu- without a vote, immediately.
tion placing the taX increase
"(We) don't believe in slapon the l'rimary ballot. ·
' ping a tax on the pe_ople of
The sheriff's department has Meigs County," Board Presifaced an operating deficit for . dent J ~ff Thornton said. "We
several years, and in Novem- do believe the ci tizens of
ber, Sheriff Ralph Trussell Meigs County have the right
BY IIRIAN.·J. REiD
BREE~MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
came dose to laying off his to vote on the issue, so we are
POMEROY , - Voters in entire staff because of a budget putting this up for a vote."
the May primary will deter- -shortfall.
The county currently ·colAt that time, Trussell and lects 1 percent in sales tax revmine the fate of a half-percent
sales tax hike for sheriff's members of the local Ohio enue for county operations,
office operations.
. Patrolmen's Benevolent Asso- and, by law, can impose an
At their regular meeting on ciation urged the commission- additional one percent with-

Half-petcent sales
tax supplement
to ·sheriff's budget

20~
...
22 E11ctrtcal 41 Pnnnt

Do yon agree with .
........
It ONIthis c~nunent by Jean
~Ia
...,_
5
22 Tumbler'a
21 .,.,_
12 Flei'ol
apool
llaudrillard? "If eve28 lunclle ol
.,...,
33 ~ndlbl 1 Runelnlo
. rything on television
papan
113 llllblllar
7 Tlle-ol
31 Clpllel'
27 Anller
Wlllllllll
Aquerlua
is, without e:s.ccption,
axpart
part of a low-calorie
(or CVCn · IJO-ca)orie)
diet, then what good
is it ···complaining
about the adverts? lly
their worthlessness,
they at least help to
make the programmes .
around them seem of
a higher level."
As you are aware,
bridge has survived
for so many years because there are, without exception, deals
in which it is wrong
to follow the noimal
"rules." What is the
exception in this deal?
You are sitting East.
Against four spades,
CELEBRITY ·ciPHER
your p;1rtner starts
by Lull Campo~
with the three top
COiobrlly
croattd !:om quollllona bl' flmaul
diamonds .. Atier .play- " • put and
EICII ilttorln lhl cipher lflndlloi . . - .
Today'lclue: Pequall K
..
ing high-low to show ·
your
dou blcton,
which card do you
'R BYDIIDKIRSY OL R
play at trick three?
LFOIFII.
RZDAB
R
LFOIFII
South opens with a
weak two-bid, showaFMIIL
TDA
BY F
XDIF
011
ing a decent six-card
suit and some 6-10
TDA
P W D J .• '
MFLL
II Y F
high-card . points .
NOIIWI'
Now, if North jumps
BYDII .D KIRSYI'I
to three-no-trump
Fe I Z A L
he'd probably all
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION: "Caatlelln the ..r ·they a,.ao euy
right. It is highly im10 lakl ..ruge ln. And eaay 1o build, too.'- Hanrlk lbHn ·
likeiy East ~vould lead
a ·diamond .. North
might use the twolciiiO&lt;I lor CLAT l. POLLAN
no-trump inquiry,
Rtbrrang• le11ors of th
planning to stop in
ocrambloct" worda bethree spades if South low four
to form four simple words.
shows a :ninirilum
opening.
Here,
though, when South
rebids three clubs, an·nouncing a maximum
A GY NT
. with a feature (ace or
· king) in clubs, it
makes the defense too
T~~ new
1 ner nuseasy.
A
L
T
0
G
I:;:
band
and
held
the
screaming
llack to East's trick~~ baby to the phone. Hours later the
. three problem. PerL-...J.L-J.
.
.......J.L-.J..-.
husband called·back and sa.id , • 1
haps you discarded ei.--,....,.,...,..-----"'....,
was
in a meeting and got a mesther an encouraging
SUDNUE
sage that my --- ---- --. •
heart three or a dis.'_:,.,le;-T.Ig::--l Q Com~ltle the ·chuckle quoted
couraging club seven. f---TI:.....;;I..:...,Ir;,
•
•
.
.
_
by filling_ In the miuilig ·wordJ
But are you sure partyou develop fll)rn step. No. 3 below.
ner will recognize the
three as high or the
seven as low? It is
better to save partner
from err!'r: Ruff the
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
diamond queen and
t:moody - Poise - Riser- Zealot - PROMISE ·
cash the heart ace.
A
kids
soccer team coach had · trouble inspiring the
Don't n1ff partner's
team.
After
a rousing defeat he shrugged and said, 'Winwinner -- unless ·it is
ners make a commitment while losers only make a
the correct play!
PROMISE."
·

=r:.. .

I on

Appoo..,,.

WfiP
15 In I eull·

o-

What's Inside

'Mtiteoak stops Southern, 81

Deaths
tindsay Kae Bolin, 16 ·
Eva Virginia Cooper, 88

Brad Runyon,

15

blc.

.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Even though you
might not make any tfTort to
seek tht spodight or ~pecial
attemiou, you will easily outpoll others in the popularity
contt.'5t oflire.
SAGITTAitiUS (Nov. 23Dec. 121) -- Although you
may ,not set out to do so,
events could n1akc you the
condull fCJr developments that
will be very beneficial for ·
you, your ramily or ocher
loved ones.
CAPltiCORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) --You have justification for optimistic expectations in your important oneon-one dealingJ: lc i5 now a
spectacular lime ror negotiating mutually-favorable situa~ions.

ballot
out a ballot initiative.
On the ballot, the proposal
will read, '"for th e purpose of
providing additional general
revenue ·for criminal and
administrative justice services
and paying the expenses of
administration of such a levy,
for ~ continuing period of
time beginning July 1, 2002."
While Ohio law allows the
co:nmi~ ·oners to spend the
revell".: ~ the additional
tax for other criminal justice
services. including the opera-

tion of the Common Pleas,
and Probate and Juvenile
courts, prosecutor's Office and
derk of courts' office. the
commiSSIOners said
they
int~nd to earmark any additiona! revenue for the opera· tion of the sheriff's depart:nent.
Last year, Trussell spent
5663 ,000 for salaries, housing
and other expenses for his
department, not including

Please see Tax. A3

·HEALTHCARE

Spotlight: Fur Peace Ranch

William F. Foley, 69
Elizabeth Johnson, 83
Edward Burdette, 62
Details, A3

Weather
· ftlp: 401, L-: lOs
·
~etalls, A1

~ecession

may
. be ofer (AP)

~;WASHINGTON
~ The recession, shaping

tip as one of the shortest
and mildest · on record,
could already be' ov~(,pri~ .
vate economists say.
The National Association for Business Economics said that 60 percent of
the ewnomists on its forecasting panel believe the
economy has turned the
corner and is growing
again.
· Only two of the ,37 fore- .
casters said they believe the
downturn will linger into
the spring .
. The NABE's newest
forecast put economic
growth at 1.5 percent for
this year and an even
stronger 3.8 percent in
2003.

Lotteries

omiNG READY- John Hurlbut, manager of the Fur Peace Ranch, checks a stage monitor in
preparation for Saturday's grand opening of the Fur Peace Station Concert Hall. To celebrate
the opening of the new concert hall, Hot Tuna, with special guest Roy Book Binder, will hit the
stage at 8 p.m. to perform befor~ a sold-out audience. (Tony M. Leach)

Fur Peace unveils new
concert hall Saturday
Inaugural show sold out
Bv ToNY M. lEAcH

OHIO
Pick 3: 8-9· 7
Pick 4: 6-1+7
Buckeye 5: 1Q-11-15-3!J..35
Pkk 3 day: 8-7-9
Pick 4 dey: 8-0-9-7

W.VA.

D•lly 3: 8-4-6
Dlllly 4: 7-5-2·6

Index
'

.• :a Sedlans -12 ......
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

,,

TLEACHtii&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Cllsli 15: 3-7-14-20-21-22

yuu lll;IY fmd yourself in rhe
right place ai the right tim~• .
whkh will mak.e an ambiliou~
objective far ea~i"er co attain
that you ever thought pO~si-

Hometown Newspaper

AS
·83-5
86
A5
A4
A3
A3
Bl
A2

~ports
weat~r
_o 2ool Ohio Valley P\lbllshing Co.

. DARWIN - In _re~p'?l).se to, an inc.~ase ~n
concet1·.attendance, the Fur Peace R'Niitll wtll
unveil its niw concert h3ll on Saturdlty.
Owned and operated oy Jorma Kaukonen,
former guitarist for the 1960s rock and roll
band Jefferson Airplane and me:nbe ,:Pf the
Rock and · Roll Hall of Fame, and his wife,
Vanessa, Fur Peace Ranch is a seasonal music
instructional facility that offers workshops in
guitar, keyboards, bass, percussion, fiddle, and
other musical instruments for both the
advanced and entry-level musician.
cllf""'•·
Located on St. Clair Ro~d near Daiw.the ··
·
camp. consists of a year-round
restaura~· 17
double occupancy cabins for student and , est
housing, classrooms, recording studio, t nd
·
library/lounge.
"The success of our concerts was the n\ain .
reason why the new building was constr~ted;' said John Hurlbut, manager of the gliitar
camp. "The concerts were originally ~rformed in a classroom that seated 80 peop'F,
however, &lt;!emand to see the concertS eventulilly surpassed our seating cap~cjty." ·
:
The new concert hall; which measures 44 bY

'I

CONCERT HAU- The Fur Peace Station Concert Hall, which. measures 44 by 84 feet, is
the newest addition to Jorma Kaukonen's Fur
Peace Ranch Guitar Camp, located on St. Clair
Road near Darwin. ·

84 feet and exude~ the ambiance ot an old train
station, comfortably seats 160 ' people and
includes major improvements that will benefit
both the audience and performers.
"Everyone who attends our concerts will
have an excellent view of the stage, thanks to
the amphitheater effect generated by ~ur
three-tiered seating arrangement," said Hurlbut,

TOURING THE SITE- Space formerly occupied by the Veterans Memorial Hospital behavioral unit suggested for use
as a Community Health Center was toured by steering com·
mittee members and others following Thursday·s rnegting.
• 0ne group included, from left. Skip Young and Ward Howe
. of O'Bieness ·Memorial Hospital; Christy Lynch, field. repre·
sentative for U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, Dodger Vaughan of
Overbrook Center, Leroy Hushak , steering committee member, Bob Bauer, VMH administrator, and Dr. Harold Brown,
committee member. (Sentinel staff)

Committee studies
Meigs Community .
Health Center progress
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Progress on several froms toward establishing a Meigs County Community Health C:entff ,it Veterans Memorial Hospital were no ted at a mcctin14 uf the
steer ing conlJnittee Thursday morn ing.
The question of using the VMH buildin~; - lc," cd for '1'1
years to Holzer Consolidated Health Syste ms - . for a
health center appear to be resolved, according to Mick Davenport, who met this week with Thomas E. Tope, -president
an d chairman of Consolidated.
.
Davenport. said that after"talking with Tope, he was satisfied that use of the building tor the heal th center is agreeable with Consolidated, and that he '"foresees no problem."
With that, he asked Pomeroy attorn ey Uernard Fultz who
serves on the steeri:ng committt't..', to work with him to dra'Y
up a proposed agreement. ·
Tentative plans are for using the examining and treatment
rooms on the east side oft he bu!lding formerly occupied by
the behavioral unit.
Perry Varnadoe, Meigs County economic development
director and steering committee member, advised that an
architect had visited the building last week to discuss
redesign .
;.
It was the architect's opinion, accordink to Varnadoe, that
it would be used just the way it is, or could be taken to "top
of the line" with renovations costing about $95 ,000.
Susan Isaac of ILGARD, who was a facilitator for the
committee early on, is- now serving as a. consu1tant on the
grant applicatio~.
She confirmed that Meigs will be the o11ly county in
Ohio applying for a federal grant of up to $690,000 for a

Pln1e see Fur Peace. A:J

Pluse see Health, A:J

·Therapy Center
Physical
• Occupational Therapy
Therapeutic Ma~sage Therapy • Speech Therapy
' 'When you choose your therapy provider, consider Holzer Medical Therapy Center•
We accept a~ forms of payment INCLUDING AETNA

1

AQUARIUS Q3n. 211-Feb.
19) - - Focu~ your energy on
your wmk, and grL'ater re w1rds than utui\l will be the
result of ydur efforts. You
ma'y even have ·enough to acquire somethi ng expensive
you've been waming.

MEDICAL

Holzer Medical Cenler in Gallipolis

Discover the Holzer Difference

(740)446-5121 • 1·800-816-5131

www.holzer.org

Velerans Memorial Skilled Nursing Center in Pomeroy
992-2104

-- ------·

...

..

CENTE~

"

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="462">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9907">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22782">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22781">
              <text>February 21, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="204">
      <name>beaver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2561">
      <name>bolin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3369">
      <name>foley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5379">
      <name>margulis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4018">
      <name>shumway</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1782">
      <name>westfall</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
