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•
Tuesday, January

Www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

11, 2005_

NFL PLAYOFFS

·
continue at Belleville
locks and Dam,A2 ·

Nibert named
'Hometown Hero,' A3

Colts, Patriots have all the drama this we,ek
•

i n g' I e s s
Those two along with best shot at an upset, playing
final -week Richard Seyi-no.ur are the , at Atlanta, which beat the
Associated Press
loss
to most frequent playmake rs on Rams 34- 17 in Week 2. The
·
Denver in a team that always seems to Rams ·get to run on the sort
which subs make them ai the ri ght time. of fast field they I ike at the
The pregame_...billing will
be Peyton Manning vs. the
played . a That's why New England has Georgia Dome, Marc Bulger
Patriots: a team that has won
_good por- . won two of the . last three is playing well, and Kcv111
the last five meetings against
tion of the · Super Bowls and it's why Curtis and Shaun McDonald
game.
they won a record 21 straight give him four legitimate tarthe NFL's two-time MVP
ani! the Colts:
. H 0 w games over the last two sea- gets - Isaac Bruce and
sons.
·
, Torry Holt are the others - ·
Th e outcome might depend much did rhat me art')
on 1ndianapoli s' improved
In the Colts ' 49-24 rout of
Ye s, it will be colder if the game gets wide open.
defense.
the · Broncos on Sunqay, Sundav than it was Sept. 8,
But don't cou nt on the Jet s
Yes, Randy- Moss will be in Den ver . had 338 total yards when that Week I game was td upset Pitt sburgh, or the
Philadelph.ia on Sui1day for for the game, but just 103 in played.
·
Vikings
to
win
in
the Vikings' game at the the first half, when the Colts
But there are two reasons Philadelphia.
Eagles. If Terrell Owens built a 35-3 lead.
the Colts are underdogs by
The Steelers couldn't even
"I felt we were dominating only 2 112 'points, less than lose when they tried- playwere healthy, the playoffs
hype would center on which at times in every area,"' sa id the oddsmakers ·give for ing backups in Buffalo with
end
Dwight home-field advantage:
th~ Bills fighting for a playof the NFL's two most t;dent- defensive
ed showoffs would be more Freene y, the only marquee
J-. The new rules interpre- off spot. Pittsburgh has won
outrageous.
player on a dcfc1\sc built tation that makes things 14 straight games nnd domiBut even if Owens weren't · mostly from spare parts. harder on defensive Mcks nated the Jets in the first
sidelined, the NFL game of That 's because the offense stenimed from last season's meeting: That was 17-ti, but
the weekend would be the takes up more than 70 per- AFC title game, when the it wasn '\ really that close.
final one - late, Sunday cent of team's salary cap, the P&lt;)triots banged and bumped
The Vikings have the
afternoon , when Manning most lopsided proportion in Manning's receivers all over weapons to stay with the
and the Colts face the team the NFL
the field. It doesn't help New E.;jgles . .
that has beaten and befud- . Indianapolis nearly beat England that starting corner- 'l:lut Moss is still limping,
· died him five straight times. New Enoland on the season's backs Ty Law and Tyrone and Philadelphia's secondary
In those ganies, Ma,nning has opening~night but lost 27-24 . Poole are out for the season has three Pro Bowlers: . corthrown just nine touchdown because Mannmg threw an wtth mwnes.
nerback Lito Sheppard and
2.
The
improved safe'ties Brian Dawkins and
passes and nine intercep- interception in the end zone
lions, 40 fewer TDs than he on the Colts ' first possession Indianapoli s defense.
Michael Lewis. In fact, AI
had in· 16 games this season and then was sacked for a
•
G
. 1
Quick takes on the rest of Harris, reen Bay 's .best cor13
d
I
h
f
but just one fewer pick.
. -yar oss on t e lila one.
ner, was traded to the
The more relevant statistic, That sack forced Mike the weekend:
though, might have to do Vanderjagt to try a 48-ynrd .For the "first time ever, Packers by the · Eagle.s
with the Colts ' D.
field goal to tic the game.. three of the four games on because they didn't need
·
h'
.wl'ld-card weekend were him .
In the f irst e1ght gamest 1s and he mt's·sed.
B·
season, it allowed 2.06
Those plays also are won by the vi si tors.
While Owens is out, nan
There probably won't be a Westbrook is still a playmakpoints, inclucfing 45 in a loss indicative of what the Colts
to Kansas City and 28 in a will face .
repeat next weekend. even if er on offense after missing
win· over Minnesota. In the
Tedy Bruschi liad the. inter- Indianapoli s w'ins at New last season's playoffs .
next eight games, it allowed c_eption: Willie McGinest England.
Should make for a better
St. Louis might have the week for favorite s.
145, including 33 in. a mean- had the sack.

· · Salvage efforts

Bv DAVE GoLDBERG

j

·Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,) 0 \

I :\IS•\ni. .J..J.

NCAA president praises OSU
steps toward·athletic reform _

SPORTS

Meigs County included in disaster declaration

. • Badgers bite Bucks. See
Page 81

and Pike counties to a li st of
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
49 earlier-declared counties
affected by heavy rains,
POMEROY
- Meigs flooding , snow and ice
County is one of seven added Storms that began on Dec.
to a state emergency declara- 22 and continued through ·
ti&lt;;m Tue~day, becau se of last last week.
week's Ohio River flooding .
Residents of counties includOhio Gov. Bob Taft added - ed in the emergency declaraMeigs, . Clinton, Fayette, tion are now eligible for up to
Morrow, Noble, ·Pickaway $1,500 in state assistance

Associated Press .
COLUMBUS
Ohio
State has drawn rave reviews
from the NCAA's top official
for its p·Jan to separate several academic and oversight
programs from its troubled
athletic department .
.
"It is ve ry interesting
approach and Ohio State
may become a model in that
regard," said Myles Brand,
president of the NCAA. "It's
far reaching and it's thoughtfuL"
·
·
Ohio State's football and
men's basketball programs
are currently l;leing investigated by the NCAA after
allegations that athletes were
paid, had their classwork
done for them and received
high-paying, no-show jobs
from team boosters. ·
Athletic director Andy
Geiger announced last week
that he will retire on June 30.
University President Karen
Holbrook has asked· Geiger
to spend his final months on
' "important and difficult"
issues, including:
- Moving direction of
Student Athlete Support
Services, which provides
tuto;ing and other academic
help, to th~ university
provost
- Shifting more policing

J.

REED

through the Ohio Department
. of Job and Family Services,
. Taft's office announced yesterday. Eligibility depends on .
economic need .
Joint damage assessment
teams of _federal, state and
local emergency management
representatives will now
begin the task of conducting
.preliminary damage surveys.

Th~

Ohio
Emergency ture and agriculture cannot
Man age ment Agen cy sa id · be fully identified or quantiTuesday · there will be no fied, and that is needed for
efforts to seek a federal disas- the governor to substantiate
ter declaration from President a federal disaster declaraBush until damage can be tion ," ' EM A' s Rob Glenn
more f\lllY assessed.
· said yesterday.
"Until flood waters recede,
Such a federal declarat~e 'snow and ice melt ,' and 'tion was made following
more debris is cleared, the
impact on public infrastrucPlease see Melcs, Al

AP photo

New. England Patriots cornerback Asante Samuel (22) breaks
up a pass intended f~r Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Reggie
Wayne during the third quarter in Foxboro , Mass . in this Sept. ·
9, 2004 photo. . The NFL cracked down on defensive backs .
after New t:ngland battered the Colts receivers in last year's
AFC Championship game. But the Patriots vow they'll be just
as aggressive on Sunday when the teams play again.

BY BRIAN

BY ALAN ROBINSON

OBITUARIES,
Page AS
• James Russell Sarrett

INSIDE

Associated P,ress

PITTSBURGH - Steelers
coach Bill Cowher needs only
look to the New York Jets '
sideline to understand how
tricky and troublesome it can
be deciding how to spread
playing .time between two
productive running backs in
the playoffs.
That's why Cowher isn't
choosin g yet between the
Dt1ce or the Bus - Duce
Staley or Jerome Bettis - as
his, primary running bacle- for
Saturday's divisional playoff
game in Pittsburgh against the
Jets . .
Cowher wouldn't speculate
when pressed by reporters
Monday, cutting short questions about an' issue· that has
already caused friction with
Pittsburgh's opponent.
"We'll see," Cowher said.
"They're both going 10 play. 1
can't make any predictions
right no\v."
Cow her watched on TV as
Jets coach Herman Edwards
and running backs coach
Bi shop Harris ha_d a heated
exchange during New York"s
dramatic, 20-17 overtime victory Saturday night in San
Diego. The disagreement
may have resulted from
Edwards' edict that running
back LaMont Jordan become
more involved in an offense
· led by NFL rushing champion
Curtis Martin.
If Cowher has told hi s staff

• Rio offers Fast Forward.
See Page A2
. • Upcoming events
pl8nned for fri~ of
tM Davis Library. See
Page A2
• French Art Col~my sets
winter programming. ·See
Page A3
• Chernow's 'Alexander
Hamilton' reviewed at .
LiterarY Club. See Page
A3
• DofA installs officers.
See Page _A3
AP photo

-

••w

ELLEM LAw OFFICE

1..------------------....J

·--- -· ·.-· --· ---

I

REED

POMEROY -While an
Ohio River flood and the
mess it creates can overwhelm ·a "rookie" storekeeper in Pomeroy, for most, the .
experience is old hat.
The story . of Pomeroy 's
flooding proble'ms is one as
old as the town itself. The
weathermen begin warning
a ri sing Ohio River; and as
of
...
-'
the waters slowly but surely
overflow their banks, inven~
' i
tory goes into boxes. Display
''.
cases go up on blocks, or .to
higher ground, and the waiting begins,
As .s wrekeepers wait for
the waters to recede , they
begin planning their recovery. When is the 'best time to
begin cleaning up ? What
inventory should go b:)ck on
· ·B~an J. Reed(photo
shelves ' first? When can the
New Haven, W.Va. funeral director Jamie Anderson helped his father, Jim, "move furniture back , store re-open to customers?
into place on Tuesday at Anderson·s Furniture on Pomeroy's East Main Street: The store lost
At Anderson's Furniture,
at least two days' worth of trade due to last week's Ohio River flood , but for the Andersons , a
flood js-just a fact of retail life _in downtown Pomeroy. .
Please see Flood,.Al

Chamber hears about Relay For Life
·

,.,

BY BETH SERGENT

. BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

. !o·

'
Pittsburgh Steelers running back Jerome Bettis gains
yardage in this Dec. 12, 2004 file photo. Cowher isn't chaosing yet between Bettis and Duce Staley as his primary running back for Saturday's diyisional playoff game in Pittsburgh
against the Jets.

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

a

'

Bv BRIAN

Flood-clean-up: Practice makes perfed

abse nce with six I00-yard ( 1988, 2003 ). Not that it matgames in six starts. But a ters to Cowher, who recalls
sprained ankle kept h'im out only how physical and tightly
of the Buffalo game and 'played last month's game
might have hindered him had was.
thtSteelers
played last week.
The Jets outgained the
any postseason tournament if
·
Bettis'
comeback
~.
the
Steelers
296-262 but couldn't
asked, in order to mitigate
NFL's No. 5 career rusher take advantage of two inter•
upcoming sanctions from the
didn't
begin either of the last cept ions thrown by rookie
NCAA.
two
seasons
as a staner - has quarterback
Ben
"Andy and I hope that by
been one of the surpri sing Roethlisberger.
addressing these matters we
subplotso()fthe Steelers unexAfterward, as the two
can bring closure to some of
pectedly good 15-1 season.
coaches · shook
hands,
the significant issues of
whether' Bettis or Staley
"He's made a lot of conces- Cowher said to Edwards,
should ge,t most of the carries, · sions. He;s been the ultimate "We'll probably see each
recent months," Holbrook
he's not saying- and, almost
said during a news conferthe road."
certainly,
won't do so pub- team leader," -Cowher said. other down
ence announcing Geiger's
licly. Bettis- would seem 10 be "He's been very inspiralional
"It"s going to be a grind just
of athletes and c·oaclies to the retirement.
the logical choice given his for this team .... You're talk- like it .was the last time we
legal affairs staff. .
Geiger is ending his II- · recent
production
and . ing about a (potential) Hall of played them . We know it,"
- . Improving booster ed\J- year term because he said he
Staley's relative lack of car- Fame player -,vho became a Cowher said. "We knew it
cation with the help of the was beaten down by a series
ries since the first half of lhe role player and a great exam- goin¥ in the last time arid we
,
pie for a lot of players on this didn t feel any differently
of problems in the football
development office.
season.
team."
coming out of it."
The overhaul comes as the and basketball · programs
"When you h&lt;)ve two
Bettis led the Steelers' 17-6 ' The Steelers are in their
university continues to · deal over the past two years.
backs, it's not easy to keep
win
over the Jets on Dec. 12, bes't shape physically in
with allegations froin former
"Controversy is always
them both involved," said
replacing
· an ineffective weeks, wtth no player listed'
running
back
Maurice difficult," Geiger said.
Cowher, who was discussing
Staley
to
throw
for a touch- as any worse than probable,
Clarett that tutors wrote "Clearly, we are dealing with
the Jets' situation but also
papers and boosters arranged some 'difficult issues, and I _, cou.ld have beert talking about down and run for another in T\'vO defensive starters should
return : cornerback Dc&lt;hea
his own. "Someiimes there's the fourth quaner.
easy jobs for ' players. will work with my colThe
Steelers
are
6-0
in
Townsend,
who missed the
Starting quarterback Troy leagues -to see them through . a fine line, trying to keep peoc Pittsburgh against the Jets an(l. Buffalo game with broken
pie involved and ·wantmg to
Smith was suspended from to conclusion to the very best
get
them a feel for the game, 15-2 overal L losing only dur- hand , and linebacker Clark
'
las t month's Alamo Bowl of my ability."
but at the same time getting ing two of Pittsburgh's worst Haggans, who sat out three
after receiving improper
Brand, speaking from
the other guys in. It's not seasons in the last 35 years games with a sore groitl.
benefits from a booster.
Dallas where the NCAA was
always an easy thing to jug...............
Ohio State has denied having its convention, said
gle."
_
'
Hyot1 or •o•-• yau kaow
taktn
Clarett's
allegations, integrating athletics more
· Staley started seven games
·y.
'
although Geiger conceded at into the university makes
'
\1
before injuring a hamstring
the bowl game that Clarett's s~nse because it uses offices
Oct. · 31 against·: New
charges have gained validity within the university that
England, during hi s founh
since Smith's suspension .
already exist for the same
100-yard game in five
The NCAA is investigating reasons.
weeks. He has only 41 car- ·
"Why do you need someproblems in Ohio State's
uU Job fill• to lear•
ries for 123 yards since,
football and men's basket- thing autonomou~?" he' said.
lllout yotlr ltt•l ritJm.
including eight for 21 yards
62UOM
ball programs. Geiger and "This approach lowers the
Jan. 2 against Buffalo.
Holbrook announced last risk of things going wrong. I
Bettis, used mostly as a
month that . the basketbal!--thl~ Ohio State is ahead · of ·
goal-line runner early in the
soo&lt;4t&lt;Sllll1 ·- -.w. 1610i U&lt;IHI!D~wva"''
team would not participate in the curve:"
season, responded to Staley 's

· BY MARK WIWAMS

•n \ d . uh ·.~~~~~~ ~ ~~ ~·· •• •

'

Browns interview Robiskie · The Bus or The Duce? Steelers
as fourth coaching candidate hoping two backs not too many

•

\\ \\ \\

.,

'

CLEVELAND (A P) . - Butch
Dav is resigned, Browns won't rush their
. The Brpwns took a look at inspiring hi s players to a win decision, and Savage said
one of their own Monday, in the final game, ending a the club is willing to wait
interviewing interim coach nine-game losing streak.
until afler the Super Bl)\VI
Terry Robiskie, who says
"I firmly believe that I did for the right candidate.
The final call on a coach
he's done everything he can all I could do. It was a
to show why he should be tough, · tough situation to will be Lerner 's, but Savage
Cleveland's next coach. · · take over," Robiskie said a will have a major role in the
Robiskie met with owner 'day after .the Browns beat decision.
"If we find the right guy
Randy Lerner, president . Houston.
Robiskie is the fourth can- quickly, we'll probably go
John .Collins and general
manager Phil Savage in New dictate the Brown s have ahead and do so mething ,"
York for his interview. The interviewed. The other .can- Savage said last week.
location was picked to pro-· dictates - New England "Right now, I don 't think
vide a change of scenery defensive
coordinator there is a specific timeline. "
Crennei.
The Brown s could find
outside the team's offices.
Romeo
Robiskie has the backing Philadelphia offensive coor- them se lves in competition
of the Browns players, who dinator Brad Childress and · with · San Francisco for a
have been outspoken in sup- Pittsburgh offensive line coach. The 49ers fired coach
porting him as their- candi- coach Rus s Grimm-· are all Dennis Erickson and disdate:· But the 4-12 Brqwns involved 'in the playoffs, missed general· manag~r
struggled .on offense with which could delay a deci- Terry Donahue last week.
Robiskie as coordinator, sion.
·
49ers owner John York
which could work against
Savage has said the team interviewed Crennel in
him.
now will asse~s where it's at Boston on Saturday, with
He led the Browns to a 1-4 before deciding how to con- both sides say ing the conreco(d as interim coach after tinue in its search. The · versation went wc;ll.

\\I . I,~I .SIJ\, , .J\:'\j\ 1 \R\ 1:!,:!00.1,

:\o.1oo

POMEROY
-At
Tuesday's Business~ mind­
ed Luncheon, the Meigs
County
Chamber of
Commerce heard a presen. tation ·about the American
Cancer Society's (ACS)
~pcoming Relay For Life.
The Relay For Life
· ian Mclilemar(pholo
· 985 d · h
bega? · 10
l.
an •s_ t e
Denis R. Schuler signs a paper acknowledging the murder
. charge against him last week in Gallipolis Municipal Court ACS s maJor fundraJser.
Local money raised goes
'
directly into research, prevention and education: .
Last year the .Meigs
County Rel ay For Life

WEATHER

Schuler bound over to grand
jury in Cardwell shooting

Detallo on P"'e A&amp;

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

· Calendars ·
Classifieds

...

BY

A3
B3-4

Bs

Dear Abby
.Editorials

A:3
A4

Obituaries

As

Weather

MALONEY

Please see Chamber, AS

lit.
·

~

~

..,...

'

Ia •
~

Beth.Sereentfphoto

Pictured from left are · Jennifer
McGuinness and Julie Ellenwood from the
American Cancer Society, JoAnn Crisp,
Meigs County Relay For Ute chairwoman,
Steve Beha, Relay For Life of Meigs
County Sponsorship chairman. All · four
attended the ,Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce luncheon to educate the pubtic on the upcoming Re lay For Life in May.

Disbursements to come
through local CAA
NELSONVILLE - The
Corporation
for
Ohio
Appalachian Development
(COAD) and the Foundation ·
for Appalachian Ohio (FAO)
have formed the Family
Emergency Relief FlHld,
which is now accepting donations to help the victims of
flooding in Appalachian Ohio.
As· some residents are still
recovering from severe
Pleese see Donetlolis. A5

Treasurer reports on
2004 tax
collections
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY -A total of
$684,186 in delinquent taxes
was collected in 2004,
.according to a report from
Howard
Frank,
Meigs
County treasurer.
Frank ·said
that of the
total amount
I0
percen!
went into the
general fund
of the county,
75
percent
Howard
was distribFrank
uted to school
districts, ·and the remainder
Please see Treas~rer. Al

TMALONEY@MYDAiLYTRIBUN E.COM

12 PAGES

Comics

Sports

TtM

~

,,

...

Donations being
a&lt;;cepted to help
flood victims

BSection
A6

GALLIPOLIS - Denis R. ·Schuler of Langsville in
Meigs County was bound over to a Gallia County grand
jury Tuesday for the murder of Bennie Cardwell, but not
before evidence was introduced which ultimately may
reduce that charge.
.
.
Apparently, Cardwell may have shot first.
During testimony in a preliminary hearing in
Gallipolis Municip~l Court. Gallia County Sheriff's
Capt. John Perry said he had no evidence to contradict
Schuler's explanatio.n 'of the events of late Dec. 30 and
early Dec. 3 I.
In a confession videotaped on Jan. 6, the day Schuler

. Sheriffs Department· .
receives ballistic body annor
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department recently
received eight ballistic body armor vests. Meigs County
Emergency Management Agency Director Robert Byer
purchased the armor through a Homeland.Security
grant Byer has purchased other equipment for the
Sheriff's Department with Homeland Security grants
such as pagers and sh ields which will._be issued at a
later date: Pictured with the ball istic body armor vests
is Deputy Adam Smith,
Bet~

@ 0004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Pleese SH Schuler, AS

S.I'JI8ftl( pholo

�PageA2

COMMUNI1Y

The Daily Sentinel

Salvage dforts continue at Belleville Locks .and Dam
HUNTINGTON
Salvage. efforts continue at
t)le Belleville Locks and Dain
to remove five barges trapped
against the dam.
Salvage equipment has
been moved into position at
the dam · and salvage operations have begun.
Due to salvage operations
and the possible loss of the
navigation .pool, locking is
restricted through Bellevi lle
and · Wfllow Island Locks
and Dam, which is located
upriver from the Belleville
project. .
Lockages will 'conti nue and
w\11 be managed on a case' by
case basis. The traffic will be
controlled by an industry ·
traffic and safety control center at 740-374-8710.
Loss of the navigation pool
would close the river
between Belleville and
Willow Island to navigation
traffic, including coal shipPhoto courtesy Corps of EnJ:Ineeno
ments to power companies
Six
oarges
oroke
loose
Jan.
6
after
the
Motor
Vessel
Jon
J.
Strong
locked through at Belleville
along t~e Ohio Riyer, arid it
may affect the stability of .Locks and Dam . One passed through the dam safely, one is floating on the upstream side of the
barges in fleeting areas along dam, and four barges sank.' leaving five of th.e dam's eight gates blocked or partially blocked.
the river. It also could shut
down public water supply level, some areas along the and towing company are mak- impact on the public.
For more information, conintakes and other industri'al river m~y suffer severe bank ing every effort to remove the
barges as quickly and safely tact the Public Affairs office
intakes. In addition, with the failure and slips.
rapid reduction of water
The Corps, Coast Guard as possible to minimize the at 304-399-5353.

RIO OFFERS FAST FORWARD
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
will soon offer its first class in
the new Endeavor Center in
Jackson.
The first class offered at the
Endeavor Center will be the
introductory course for Rio
Grande's unique Fast Forward
program for adults 23 and
older. The program gives students the opportunity to earn
academic credit for their life
and work experiences, after
they create a portfolio detailing their experience and
knowledge. The first course
of the Fast Forward program

is the Portfolio Completion
cours"!:, and this class will be
taught at the Endeavor Center
in Jackson beginning on Jan.
18. The Portfolio Completion
course will also be taught on · •
the · Rio Grande campus
beginning' on Thursday, Jan.
B, and at the Rio Grande·
Meigs Center in· Middleport:·
beginning in late January.
The Endeavor Center is a
cooperative effort between
Rio Grande and Ohio State
University, Located south of
Jackson on Ohio 93, the new
center is a .business incuba-'
tor that also provides class. room space for Rio Grande.

Upcoming events planned for
friends of the Davis Library

RIO GRANDE - · The hold its next dinner/lecture
Friends of the .Davis Library on Saturday, April 2. Fred..
at the· University of Rio Anderson, professor of histoGrande/Rio
Grande ry at the . University of
Community College is plan- Colorado will speak on that
ning a full slate of activities . day at 7 p.m. at the Iron Gate
for the spring semester, and is restaurant in· Pt. Pleasant.
looking for area residents Anderson will also speak on
interested in getting involved campus at Rio Grande during
with the group. ·
the day on April 2 as part of a
,The Friends of the Davis history conference.
The Friends of the Davis
Library is a group dedicated to·
Library
is also planning addipromoting the programs and
services offered by the library, tional events during the spring
holding special event~ and semester, including a possible
. lectures. and raising money to second dinner/lecture. This
help the library purchase new event tentatively will .feature
an Appalachian writer and
books and materials.
On Jan. 19, the Friends of will be held in April, most
gus normally lives on the skin Your physician. might pre- · the Davis Library will hold likely during National Library
··
· and causes no problems. This scribe ttiese. Some physi· its first meeting of 2005 Week (April 10-15). .
The group is alsQ tentatively
natural "fungus reservoir" is dans treat initially with oral beginning at 5:30 p.m. in
felr to be at the root of many antifungal agents. These Room 205 in . the Davis planning a Celtic night comcases
of
reinfection. work well, but there are side Library and will feature food, plete with Celtic music, Welsh
Reinfection may also occur effects and risks with these fun and fellowship as the food and drinks, and several
because these fungi can live medications that should be group completes plans for its other activities. Information is
for exteuded periods of time weighed and discussed ·by spring calendar of events. available from Amy Wilson at ·
on dry surfaces and in cloth- you and your physician. Everyone is invited to lhe 245-7382 or awilson@rio.edu ..
ing. This may be more of an Recurrence can some1imes be · meeting, even if they have
issue now that many people prevented by avoiding overly never been active with the
do all their wash using only hot and sweaty environments library or the Friends of the
cold water, which may not be as well as by using the topical Davis Library.
adequate to kill the fungi.
dandruff shampoo weekly.
Although the Friends of the
from Page A1
Initial treatment- for tinea
Family · Medicine® is a Library ·has been active since
versicolor is usually with a weekly column. To . submit 2003, the group needs to
topical antifungal agent. questions; write to Martha A. focus on its plans for the the September flash ·and
Selenium sulfide lotion- the Simpson, D.O.,· M.B.A., Ohio f\ltu~e. and get more people . ,Ohio River floods . which
base compound for many University
College
of involved. The members also caused severe damage to
dandruff shampoos - can be Osteopathic Medicine, P.O. plan to elect office~s at the Meigs County . public and
used. This shampoo is spread Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701, upcoming rile"ting.
private property. It· qualiover the infected skin, left in or via e-IIUJil to readerquesThe Friends of the Davis fies public entitities and
place for I 0 minutes, then tions@familymedicinenews.o Library currently hold at least private residents for addirinsed off. This can be done · rg. · Medical information in . one dinner/lecture each tiona] flood relief.
daily for about a week, and is this column is provided as an semester, and has presented a
Meigs
County
EMA
usually quite effective. The educatioool service only, It total of three for the commu- Director Robert Byer was
light spots usually slowly · does not repku:e the judgment nity so far. In the spring assessing public property
return to normal color over a ·. of your persoool physician, semester, the group plans to damage on Monday.
period of several months. The who should be relied on to
NOTICE TO PUBLIC OF NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT ON 1liE ENVIRONMENT
rash tends to recur in the suni- diagnose and recommend
(FONSI)
mer when it is hot and humid. treatment for any medical
COMBINED NOTICE
Dale: Jan. 12, 2005
There are also· topical anti- conditions. Past columns are
Meigs County Commissioneni
Meigs County Courthouse
fungal medications that are available online aJ www.fam·
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
available by prescription . . ilymedicinenews.org.
(740) 992·2895

Tinea Versicolor is a common fungal rash affecting'youth·
Question: I had this msh a.
while back that was called
tinea versicolor. I treated it and
now it is b.ack. Please tell me
more about this rash and how
to prevent it. Is it contagious?
Is it common? Win the wliite
spots that are left behind when
the rash is gone ever go away?
Answer: Tinea versicolor is
a common fungal skin disorder that affects up to 8 percent of the population of the
United States. Caused 'by a
yeast-type fungus named
Pityrosporon orbiculare, ,it is
more common in people
between ages 15 and 24.
Race and skin color do not
seem to be factors in who
gets this infection.
The Pityrosporum orbiCulare fungus normally lives on
the skin and does not cause
infections in most people.
Except i·n the cases of people
who are known to have conditions that compromise the
iriunune system, we generally
don't unde{stand why some
people are more prone to
these infections than others.
However, if ·you have oily,
moist and warm skin, it is the

perfect environment for ~he
development of small fungal
"col(lnies" on the surface of
the skin. These colonies can
· then begin to grow rapidly, as
this happens they leach out an
acidiC bleach,.which produces
a rash. The spots, or patches,
of this rash are a light.reddish
brown on very pale skin.
' Since these areas don't tan,
they look like white spots on
darker or tanned skin.
The rash is usually on the
upper back and chest, as well
as the upper arms and upper
thighs. Tile rash looks like
oval, flat patches, tl)at may
have a fine scale on them.
The patches vary in size.
Most people seek medical
advice about tl)is· condition,
in part because the spots can
linger for months.
Tinea versicolor is usually
easy for an experienced practitioner to recognize, and
extensive testing is not generally needed. The treatment is
also fairly straightforward, but
the rash frequently recurs probably because of re-infection rather than treatment failure. Remember that this fun-

Flood
from PageA1
the process of moving stock
OUt Of flood Waters and on tO
higher grouild is one that
goes back generations. In .a
"routine" flood, waters generally get as high as .1.5 inches throughout the first floor
-. just over the bottom step
leading to the second floor.
. Jim AMerson and his family have dealt with Ohio River
floods all their ' lives:
·Elberfeld's Department Store
was founded by Anderson's
great-great grandfather, and ·
operated for almost I00 years
in the furniture store's location
on PomeroY's center block.
Elberfeld's endured the worst

Treasurer
from PageA1
went to villages and townships, the Meigs County
Board of Health, Senior
Citizens Center, Thberculosis
Clinic and the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation.
The amount received by
each of the school' districts,
Frank explai~ed, . was determined by the location of the

tloods of a century, including
the 1913 and 1937 floods,
which carried flood waters as
far as Mulberry Avenue.
This
time'
around,
Anderson's store was closed to
customers for two days. He,
hi s family and employees
began moving furniture to the
store's second floor on
Thursday, when news reports
began to predict a flood similar to September's, - the
worst in 40 years. The store
was closed on Friday and
Saturday, and the .crew began
the clean-up effort on Sunday.
By Monday, his store was
opened again, although fumi·
ture was still being moved into
place on Tuesday inoining.
Eloise Drenner experiences
deja-vu when the river
floods, too, but for a different

Meigs

reason. It was a year ago, in
the midst of a January flood,
that she moved her Weaving
Stitches specialty shop into
its location on the lower West
Main Street · block. Since
then , she's experienced two
more flood s, and with each
one ,. the · process of moving,
cleanup
and
recovery
becomes easier for her. But
because her line of merchan. dise includes so many small
items, and elaborate displays,
it is a massive undertaking,
no matter how much practice
shl' gets. She also will lose a
valuable week of tratle.
"It's just like I've moved
all over again," Drenner said.
Tuesday, as she folded placemats on a display. "I won't be
able to sell merchandise until
the end of the week, because ·

all of my displays had to be
torn down and put away, and
now must be re-built."
Just as the moving process
is different for each merchant
- depending on the type of
merchandise sold - it's different with each flood, too.
Anderson said he has
learned the easy way to clean
up after a flood is to start
before the water' ever leaves
his store.
"When it gets down to about
aJ1 inch in the store, we begin
sweeping the water out,"
Anderson said. "That way,
you can. ~weep the worst of the
mud out while it's easier."
Merchants say this round
of -flooding was ''cleaner"
than the ·flood in September,
leaving .less mud and debris
in its wake.

property on which the delin- receipts. and $68,000 reprequent taxes were collected.
senting the county's 10 per- .
Mark Rhonemus, treasurer cent share of the delinquent
of the Meigs Local School taxes. That made a total of
District, said his district's $30 I,000 put into the counshare was received in the Jy's general fund in 2004 by
February settlement. "That the ire~surer.
· money represents part or' the
As for the treasurer's budcarryover balance the district get for operation, Frank
had into the 2004-05 year," reported that in 2004 it was
said Rhonemus. ·
$88,000 and fQr 2005 has
Total to the county's gener- been increased by $12,000 to
·a] fund by the treasurer for $100,000.
2oo4, included $125,000 in
He noted, however, that in
interest, $1 08,0Q0 in office 2002, it was $1 15,000, so

only a portion of what was
taken back earlier has been
returned for the operation of
the office.
Interest paid into the county in January was $50,000
which means that as of now
total receipts to the general
fund from the treasurer's
office total $351,000.
Frank said that ~igs
County is unusual in lhat
"there has never been a voted
increase for the general fund
in 70 years."

v

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,Januaryt2,2oos

FAMILY MEDICINE

.

. I

TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS, AGENCIFS, AND GROUPS:
The Meigs County Commissioners. proposes to request the State of Ohio to release
Federal funds under Section 104 {g) of Title I, of the Hou si n t~ and Community
Developmem .Act .of 1974. as amended; Section 288 of Title II of the Cranston
.Gonzales National Affordable Housing Act (NAHA), as amended; and/or Title IV of
the Stewan B. Mc Kinney Homclefl.s Assistance Act, as amended; to be used for the
following pruje~t( s):
CDGU 04 Water and Sewer
Village of Syrac:use Water System Improvement Projet:t
Soun:e &amp; of Fuod5: COBG-OPWC-VIIIage of S)·racuse 0
Single Year Projet:t
Vllloge of Syno&lt;USO, Meigs County
Estbpaled total COS I or the Project $703,100
h has beerf'detennined that such a Request for Release of Funds wi ll not constitute
an action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment and accordingly
the Meigs County Commissioners have decided not to prepare an Envi ronmental
Impact Statement Under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969. as amended.
,t· En\lironmcntal Review Record(s) (ERR) for eac h of the Project(s) listed above have
been conducted by th~ Meigs County Commissioners. The ERR(s) doc uments the
environmental rev ie ws Of the Project(s) and more fully sets fonh lhe reasons why
s.uch statemem is pot required. The ERR(s) are on file and avai lable for the public's
CJilamination and copying, upon request, betwe en the hours of 9:00am. 10 4:00 P.M.
Mond~y .thru Friday (e.llccp) holidays) at the office of the .Meigs County
CommJ SSJOIIefli, Court House, 100 East Second Street. Pomero)', Ohi o 45769
No further environmental review of ~ uch project iS proposed to be conducted. prior
to the request for release of Federal funds.
·
The Meigs County Commissioners plan to undertake the projectis) described with
th e Federal funds . cited above; An)' persOJl, agencies, and/or groups, who have any
~omments regardmg the envnonment-or Who disag ree with this finding of No
Significant !~pact decision. are illvited to submit written comments for consideration
to the Meigs Coumy Commissioners, Courthouse. Pomeroy. Ohio 45 769 by 4:30P.M .
on Jan. 28. 2005, which is at least 15 days after the publication of this combined
notice.
NPTICE OF INTENT TO REQUFST RELEASE OF FUNDS (NOIIROF)
TO ALL INTERFSTED PERSONS, AGENCIES, AND/OR GROUPS:
On or about, bu~ no~ before. Jan. 31. 2005 the ~eig.~ County Commissioners, will
reque;'lt the State of Oh.Jo to release Federal funds under Section 104(g) of Title I of the
Housmg and Communuy Development Act of 1974. as at'IKnded; Section 298 of Title
II of the Cra nston Gonules National Affordable Housi ng Act (NAHA}, as 8.mended:
andlor 1it1e IV of the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act, as amended; to
be used for the projC(t(s) described above.
'
The Meigs County Commissioners is certifying to the State of Ohio. that Meigs
Coumy and Jeff Thornton. in his/her official capacity as President, Meigs County
Commissioners, consent to accept the jurisdiction of Federnl courts if an action is
brought to enforce responsibilities in relation to environmental reviews, dedsion~mak·
ing, and action; and that these responsibilities ha\'e been satisfied.
The .leJal effect of the certification is that upon its approval, the Meias Counry
CommiSSioners may use the Federal funds, and the state of Ohio will have satisfied its
resporuibilities under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended.
'The State of Ohio will ac;cept an objection to, its approval of the release of funds
and !ICc~pt~ce of the ce_nificat1on only if it is on one of the tw~ following bases: (a)
the ccrtJficabon was not m fact, executed by the County of Meigs chtef executive officer or olher offiCer of tl!e County of Meigs approved by the State of Ohio; or {b) that
the environmental review record for the project indicates omission of 1 required deci sion. finding. or step applicable to the projett in the environmental review process.
Wrjtten objections must be prepared and submitted in accordance with tbe required
procedure {24 CFR Part 58), and must be addressed to: State of Ohio; Environmental
Off~eer; Comrriunity Development Division; P.O. Box 1001 ; Columbus, Ohio 432660101.
Objections to the Release of Funds on basis. orher than those stated above will not
be considered by the State of Ohio. No objections received u.ftcr Feb. 18. 2005 (which
is 15 days after if is anticipated that the Stale will receive a request for release or
funds). will be considered by !he State of Ohio.
The address of the chief e,.;ecutive officer is.:
Jeff Thornton President
Meigs County Commissionefli
Meigs County Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

••

/

BY THE BEND

·Community Calendar
Public meetings·

meeting of Meigs County
Trustees and Clerks' Assoc., 6
p.m. 1 · Meigs
County
Wednesday, Jan. 12
Multipurpose
Senior
Center.
POMEROY -Salisbury
Thesday, Jan. 18
Townsh1p Trustees will meet
in spec ial session, I p.m. · POMEROY - A college
Wednesday at the township financial aid workshop for
bu 1ldmg on Rocksprings seniors who are planning to
road. Tentative appropria- attend college in the fall and
tiQns will be reviewed and their parents will be held at 7
other regular business' trans- p.m . in the Meigs High
acted :
· School library. A representaSYRACUSE
-Sutton tive from the Universitv of
Township Trustees, special Rio Grande will be. speaking.
meeting, 6 p.m ., Syracuse
Village Hall.
ALFRED -.
Orange
Township Trustees organizational meeting will be held at
Thursday, .Jan. 13
7:30 p.m . followed by an
TUPPERS
PLAINS
appropriations meeting at the
VFW
9053
will
meet m 7
home of the clerk, Osie
P.•m. at the hall. Meal will be
Foil rod.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The served at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Eastern ·Local Board of
Eciucation will have a budget Masters will meet at 12:30
hearing at 4:30p.m. followed p.m . Thursday a the
by an organizational meeting Wildhorse . C:lfe for a lunat 6 p.m. at the elementary cheon.
RACINE
- Sonshine
school library conference
will
meet
at 7 p.m. at
Circle
room. The regular meeting of
the
Bethany
Church.
Fruit
the board wi II follow. .
PORl'LAND - Lebonan baskets will be made. All area
Township Tru s.tees will hold ' women are invited to attend.
an appropriations meeting
at 9 a.m. at the township
building. ·
Thursday, Jan •.13
Friday, Jan. 14
ATHENS - · The AthensBIDWELL - A gospel
Meigs Educational Service sing will be held at 7 p.m. at
Center governing board will the Poplar Ridge Church at
hold an organizational meet- Bidwell. Singers will include
ing at 7 p.m. in the offices at Ray and Delores Cundiff,
507 Richland Ave., Suite 109, Earthen vessels, and Sharon
Athens. The regular meeting Faye.
of the board will follow.
LONG BOTTOM - Dan
Frjday, Jan. 14
Hayman and the Gospel
POMEROY
-A nnual Hymntimers will be at the

Clubs and
organizations

Church services

Faithful Gospel Church,
Long Bottom, at 7 p.m.
· Saturday, Jan. IS.
POMEROY - Services at
the Clarks Chapel Freewill
Baptist Church , 6:-30 p.m.
Brian and Connections
singing, with his father doing
the preaching,
Sunday, .Jan. 16
POMEROY - "Pack a
Pew Sunday" will be held at
9:30 a.m. at Hyse ll Run
Community Church. ·
POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
Thomas M. Brown of Port
Clinton,
formerly
of
Pom~roy, will speak at the
10:25 a.m. service at Trinity
Church. It will be his first
official . sermon since hi s
ordination.
POMEROY -Special services . at the Old Bethel
Freewill Baptist church at 5
p.m. Guest speaker, the Rev.
Herman VanMeter.

Other events
Saturday, Jan. 15
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County H~mane "Society, free
giveaway of straw for pet
bedding, .10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
behind T,hrift Shop in
Middleport.

Birthdays
Tuesday, Jan. 18
MIDDLEPORT
Josephine Smith will observe
her 95th birthday on Jan. 18.
Cards may be sent to her at
Overbrook Center, 333 Page
St., Middleport 45760.

Nibert named 'Hometown Hero''
GALLUPOLIS - Riley
Nibert, 10-year-old daughter
of Tammy and Todd Nibert of
Gallipolis, has been named a
"Hometown Hero" by WSAZ
NewsChannel 3.
Riley was nominated and
selected for the honor .following a birthday party in which
she asked her guests to contribute to Hope Intervention
ot' the Autism Association
instead of giving gifts to her.
Carlin Short, a 5-year old
victim of .autism, lives next
door to .Riley. She said that
~eing able to make a contribution to the national organization to honor her friend
was better than getting gifts
for herself.
·
After a WSAZ interview
with Riley, several people
sent in. money to be adqed to
the fund.
Riley is the granddaughter

..
~rench Art

DEAR ABBY: I have been
depressed.
married almost two years ~nd
Just thinking about Jane in
'
· am having problems with my
another man\ arms. and. how
wife'.s ·male friends. She has
alone I was. tears me up inside.
never had a lot of female
Why does she have these old
friends. and she has had physDear
things if I am supposed to be
· ical relationships w.ith some·
Abby
her true love? She neYer speaks
of her male friends in the past.
of them with longing. but her
,We have had several argutalking abou1 them at all is
ments over her rehttionships
hurtful to me. How can 1 gel
with these men and my inabilpast her past and mo ve on with
ity to: trust the.m. I agree with everyone . "Sweethean." the prc,cm~ - WA NTS NO
her on that point; however, I "Honey" or "Sweet Pea.·· I REMINDERS
would feel awkward if she suspect it's because the y
DEAR
WANTS
NO
confided in a male fri end if · aren't very good at remem- ·REMINDERS : Many· people
she and I ever got into a till bering names.
·
keep mementoes because they
I am really troubled by
Plt:ase talk tl1is out with are souvenirs of happy times
this . I believe it opens a win- your wife: You married some- or memories. I'm sorry your
·dow of opportunity for the one who had a life before she past was lonely and sad, hul
guy to make 'advances when met you. Neither one of you for you to expect your girl·
she's at a low point. I recently was born yeslerday. She was friend to come down with
was forwarded an e-mail from honest with you about it. amnesia is· unreaJiqic . Since
one of her male friends that Tru st her unless she gives you the souven irs bother you. tell
referred to her as "Sweetie" reason not to do so.
.
Jane how you feeL .If she .
DEAR ABBY: I have met cares' about your fee lings·.
.and "Puddin'. Pop." Is that
right? Should I confront· her the woman of my dreams, the she ' ll put them away and
on this? What should I do? - one who· was made just for store them with other dusty
UNEASY INMJLWAUKEE me, and the one I was made memorabilia.
DEAR UNEASY: Do not for. I am 29 and shy by nature.. When you feel yourself
"confront" your wife. but do Before meeting "Jane," I dwelling on the past. rememdiscuss your feelings with her. never had a long-term rela- ber thi s: Most people are as
That you are uneasy about·her lionship. Nothing lasted more happy as I he y make their
continuing a relationship with than two dates. I never took minds up to be. Concemrate
old lovers is understandable. the chance bec~u se 1 was on the present. and the future
However, to expect a woman afraid of getting hurt.
will take care of itself. The
who has always related better
Jane, on the other hand, is surest way to trip yourself up
to ·men , than to women to the opposite. She has had is to keep fook ing over your
forgo friendships with men boyfriends since the age of 1.3. shoulder. Please don't make
seems unrealistic.
We are both havi ng trouble that mistake, or you' ll ruin a
It is important that you forgetting the past. Although I good thing.
evaluate what is (or isn't) know Jane loves me and her
Dear Abby is written by
going on with your wife that ex's mean nothing to her now, Abigail Van Buren, also
has aroused your insecurities. she still mention s their names know~ as-Jeann'e PhiUips, and
"Sweetie" and "Puddin' Pop" in passing every so often. She . was founded by her mother,
are familiarities, but they're a still · has photos of them . old Pauline Phillips. Write Dear .
far cry from "My Darling," or . letters, gifts, etc. It's a · con- Abby a1 www.DearAbby.com
. something more explicit. J· stant reminder of her past, and or P.O. Box 69440, Los
know several people who call of mine, which was alone and Angeles, CA 90069.

Riley Nibert receives Hometown Hero award from Carrie Cline
ofWSf&gt;Z NewsChannel 3.
of Paul and June Eichinger, She is also the granddaughter
and the great·granddaughter of Gordon and Donna Goble
of Polly Eichinger and Fay of Gallipolis and Pete and .
Wildermuth, all of Pomeroy. Yvonne Nibert of Georgia.

GALLIPOLIS
The p.m.-5 :30p.m. The insiructor
French Art Colony will be will be Agnes Hapka, and the
holding several .classes this tuition of $44 includes supwinter. They are as follows:
plies. Registration i;leadline is
: ;, Watercolor and Ink. This Jan. 19.
six -week class will discuss
• Youth Drawing . The
and demonstrate various class, open to stu.deills ages
watercolor techniques. The 7-13. will deal with shadstudents, age 8-12, will learn in g. perspe~ti ve and other
techniques .·
how to vary intensity and drawing
how to bring light and dimen- Students will need to bring
sion to their paintings. By the . a sketch p;~d, drawing penend of the session. they will cil and an eraser.
complete paintings of stillSessions will be held from
life objects, landscapes and · 4:30 p.m.-6 p.m. on Tuesdays
living ·things. Students need. from Jan. 25 to March I. The
lo wear old clothes or bring a instructor is Jan Haddox , and
painting smock.
tuition . is $48. Regislration
: The class will be held on deadline is Jan. 20.
Mondays from Jan. 24
• Painting on Glass. Learn
lhrough Feb. 28, from 4:30 the art of painting on glass
'

VVednesday,Januaryt2,2005

·Husband resents·competing
with wife's male·friends ·· ·.

Chernow~

Colony sets winter programming

PageA3

{Alexander Hamilton' reviewed at Literary Club

MIDDLEPORT
Middlepon Literary Club
members heard a review of
Ron Chernow's "Alexander
Hamilton" by Olita Heighton
at last week's club meeting
held at the. Pomeroy Library.
Published less than a year
ago, . the lengthy volume is
the latest in a series of
Chernow's biographies of
financial titans. "In all probability," writes Chernow,
"Alexander . Hamilton is the
foremost political figure in
American history who never
attained the presidency, yet
he probably had a much
deeper and more lasting
effect than many who did."
Hamilton 's was described as
having the mosi dramatic and
improbable life among the
founding fathers.
The book begins with
Hamilton's childhood as a
poor, illegitimate orphan on a
Caribbean island, and chron-

and he co-authored the
Federalist Papers. He puq]icly
feuded
with
Thomas
Jefferson, John Adams, and
James Madison.
Chernow demonstrated that
politkal rivalries and backbiting are Mihing new. Although
seemingly happily married,
Hamilton had at least two
affairs and was involved in a
blackmail scheme because of
one of them.
A long-running feud with
Aaron Burr, going back to the
days when both men were
young. lawyers in ' Albany.
brought about his death in a
famous duel. Burr. blamed
Hamilton for his defeat in the
Presidential election and in
his bid for Governor of New
York. The quarrel culminated
in
'Burr's
challenging
.' Hamilton to a duel , and in
1804, Hamilton was killed in
that duel.
Chernow wrote, "No other

founder articulated such a
clear and prescien! vision of
America's future political,
military, and economiC
strength or crafted such ingenious mechanisms to bind the
nation together."
At the conclusion of the
review, members answered .
roll call . by naming another
person who had overcome a
deprived background and to
make his or her life a success.
, Officers elected for the
2005-06 program year were
Olita . Hei ghton , president;
~ana Kessinger. vice-president: Jeanne Bowen, secre- ·
tary; and · Nadine Goebel.
treasurer. Installation of the
officers will take place at
the last meeting of this year
in May.
The next meeting ·will be
held on Jan . 19 at the home of
Sara Owen. Frankie Hunnel
will review "The Colour" by
Rose Tremain.

and welcome Valentine's Day.
Instructor Bonnie Penix will
teach a variety of techniques
with the final scene being
hearts and t1owers.
Students will need to bring
a smooth glass piece s11ch as
icle s his rapid rise through · """"""""""""===="""'===="""e""=="""'="""~Sil
a clear glass cookie jar, . his heroic service as an 10
wine/beverage glasses or a artillery officer in .the
vase. A vase would · be per- Re·volutio,n, his friendship
fect. Once you create your with George Washington. his
painted vase. all you will appointment to Washington's
need is flowers from your staff, and hi s appoinimenr as
sweetheart to fill it, or you · the first · Secretary of the
can put flowers in it to give Treasury ih the United _
as gift. All other supplie s States. Hi s political and
•.Beginner Pilates ClasseS starting at Rocksprings
will be provided.
. financial strategies created
The class will be held on public finance in. the fledgRehab Center
Thursday, Feb. 3, fr9m 6-8 ling United States and made
p.m. Tuition is $20, and regis- it possible for the struggling
tration deadline is Jan. 27.
young nati on to survive.
• Starts January 16th and lasts for 6 weeks
Heighton said the book
., fully described the public
achievements of Hamilton. as
• Sundays and Wednesdays at 5p.m.
well as showing his compli '
cated and flawed private side .
Janet Depoy, Arden Depoy. In addition to being the first
• Onl~ $75 for the entire session
Inzy Newell. Kathryn Baum, Secretary of the Treasury.
.
•
Laura Mae Nice . Erma Hamilton was part of the
Cleland, and Tllelma White. . Constitutional Convention

a

·n ofA installs officers
. CHESTER - New officers
:were installed -at a recent
meeting of Chester \Council
:323, Daughters of America,
held at the Masonic hall.
: Meetings wiJI be held there
lor the next several months
Nihile renovation is raking
place at the former Chester
Academy. Only one meeting
i.vill be held each month.
: Deloris Wolfe conducted the
meeting which opened with
' pledges to the flags and read·
lng of scripture. It was reportl:d that Keith Ashley had knee
l;urgel)'. and that Everett Grant

•

-- - - - - - -

--

had eye cataract surgery. a let·.
ter was read from Mary Ann
Humhreys arid Doris Williams
State Council secretary.. The
audit report was read.
Goldie Frederick and Deloris
Wo.lfe were escorted to the
altar and presented past coun-·
eilor and American flag pins.
Refreshments y;ere served.
Attending be sides . those
named were Opal Hollon .
Esther Smith, JoAnn Ritchie.
Mary Holter, Everett Grant.
Mary
Barringer.
Julie
Fleming. Dori s Gruescr.
Charlotte Grant. Ruth Smith ..

------ -

r

I
1

. H you or soouH&gt;nt you klow bft bkll

i·

\

• Contact Erin Roush at Rocksprings Rehab
992-6606 to sign up

'·

.IOXX

ull Jolt• EH•• to loti
about yCJUrltgal rlglt1s.

ELLEM LAW OFFICE

'--------------------.....1

- - - - - - --··-· -

&gt;OOGilE NI'O£(!

iWf!l\10-"'.wvl•"' LKt'illo""' ' "'

.

• Given by Allison Barnett, CPI

· Rocksprings
REHABIUTATION CENTER
Equal Opp&lt;Jrtllllily Pro1·Ukr ofS.rvias

740-992-6686

�. .

PageA4

OPINION
,.The wrong way to citfordable 'housing

The Daily Sentinel·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.myclallysentlnel.com'
'

. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher '
/ •.

Charlene Hoefiiclh

General Manager-News Editor

· Congress shall make no laav respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
· of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to fZSSemble, and to petition
the .Govertlment for a redress of grie11ances. .
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Jan. 12, the 12th d~y of 2005. There
are :153 days left in the year.
Today 's Highli ght in History:
· On Jan. 12. i945, during World War II, Soviet forces begafl .
a huge otfen ~i ve agai nst the Germans in Eastern Europe.
On this date:
In 15i9, Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian 1'died. ,
In 1773 , the first public museum in America was estab-.
lished. in Charleston, S.C. ,
In 191 5, the U.S, House of Representatives rejected a proposal to give women the right to vote.
In I 932 , Hattie W. Caraway became the first woman elected to the U S. Senate.
In 1942, President Roosevelt created the National War
Labor Board.
In 1948. the Supreme Court ruled that states could not di scriminate against law-scHool applicant s because of race.
In 1964, lefti_st rebels in Zanzibar began their successful
revol t against the government. .
.
In 1971 , the groundbreaking situation comedy "All in the
F~mily:• premiered on CBS television .
In 1986, the ~huttle Columbia blasted -off with a .crew~-~lt ·
included the first Hispanic-American in space, Dr. Franklin K._ ,.
Chang-Diaz.
·
'
TeA years ago: In Port-au-Prince, Haiti , an American soldier
was killed, another wounded, in a shootout with a ·former
Haitian army officer who was also killed. Qubilah Shabazz,
the daughter of Malcolm X, was arrested in Minneapolis on
charges she'd tried to hire a hit m'l.n to kill Nation of Islam
· leader Louis Farrakha)l (the charges were later dropped in a
settlement with th€ government).
Five_ years ago: The U.S. Su~reme Court gave police broad
au tho~1ty to stop and question people who run at the sight of ·
an ofhcer. Forced to act by a European court ruling, Britain
lifted its ban on gays in the military. Charlotte Hornets guard
Bobby Phills was killed.in a crash during a drag race.
,,
One year ago: President Bush and Mexican President
Vicente Fox forged agreement on the ·co-ntentious issues of
immigration and Iraq. meeting in Monterrey before the opentng of a 34-nation hemispheric summit. Singer-songwriter
Randy Van Warmer died in Seattle at age 48.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Luise Rainer is 95. Former
South· African President P.W. Both a is 89. Former heavyweight boxing champion Joe Frazier is 61. Singer-musician
George Duke_is 59. Rock musician Cynthia Robinson (Sly
and the Family Stone) IS 59. Actress Kirstie 'Alley is 54.
Country singer Ricky Van ·shelton is 53. Radio person·ality
1-loward ·Stern is 51.Rock singer Rob Zombie is ·39. Rapper
TBird (B-Rock and the Bizz) is 38. Model-actress Vendela is
38. Actress Farrah Forke is 37. Rock singer Zack de Ia Rocha
IS 35. Rapper Raekwon (Wu Tang Clan) is 35. Singer Dan
Haseltme (Jars of Clay) is 32. Singer Melanie Chisholm
(Spice Girls) is 31. Ac!Or Will Rothhaar is 18. Actor Andrew
Lawrence is 17.
·
Thought for Today : "That is happiness; to !xi dissolved into
something completely great." - Willa Cather, American
author ( 1873-1947).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel
cusPs 21a-95oj
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

,

Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon , Monday
accurate. It you know of an error in a through Friday. 111 Court Street,
story, call the newsrt&gt;Orfl at (740) 992- Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class poslage
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Department extensions are:
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'·

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
AeP&lt;&gt;ner: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13

Advertising
OUialde Seleo: Dave Harns. Ex!. 15
Dutotcte Sates: Brenda Davis. Ext 16
CtaooJCtn: .: Judy Clark, Ex!. 10

'

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Dlotrtct Mgr.: Jason Panerson, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
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Web :

www.mydaitysentinel.com

ordinances and laws that man- California? By simply allowdate inclusionary zoning, that ing more ·new home construc1
encourage construction of tion throughout the Golden
affordable housing, such ordi- State.
nances and laws have failed to
By reducing the excessive
produce d~s ired results, fees, rolling back the onerous
Joseph
according to a pair of studies regulations 1111d curbing the .
·
Perkins
· authored last year · by extortionate litigation that disBenjamin Powell and Edward , courages homebuilding, that
Stringham, economists at San drives up the cost of housing
Jose State University.
- In a survey of 45 cities in trrroughout California.
Powell and Stringham
housing in California. Prices the San Francisco Bay area.
are high up and down the .£Qwell and Stringham found explain that, when the overall
housing ladder, trom the .cor- -' th"at new housing construction supply of homes increases,
porate executive rung to the .. decreased 31 percent the year ex isting homeow11ers often
hourly-wage earner rung. So following the adoption of upgrade to newly constructed
homes. That. in tum , fnies up
state and local lawmakers in inclusionary zoning.
California are tryi,ng to mitiThey also estimated that their previous homes for those
gate the high cost of housing inclusionary zoning caused with lower incomes, allowing
for the state's least well-off the priCe of new homes to rise them tl) move up the housing
residents. More than I 00 in median cities by $22,000 to ladder.
lnclusionary zoning intercommunities throughout the $40,000, and by more than
. state have so-called "illdu- $100,000 in high market-rate • fere s with that upgrade
sitmary" ~oning ordinances cities .in the Bay Area. The process, the economists conon their books, requiring same results were document- tend, by artificially damping
homebuilders to sell a certain ed in . Southern California, or eliminating new home conpercentage of the homes they where Powell and Stringham struction. And "with fewer
build at below-market prices. studied eight cities in Los new homes available, middleSuch mandates are sup- Angeles and Orange counties and upper-income families
posed to increase the stock of . with affordable housing man- bid up the price of the existing
"affordable" hou sing avail-. dates.
able to those with lower
Seven years of inclusionary stock of homes, thus making
incomes.
zoning in those eight cities housing less affordable for
Meanwhile, a new state law created 770 affordable units, everyone."
Jncluding middle-manager
takes effect this month that they found. while 17,296
types,
!.ike those with whom I
opts to encourage, rather than homes were not built as a
have spoken in' recent months.
coerce, homebuilders to build result of the mandate.
affordable housing. It offers
"One must -question ," the who woold love to li~e in
certain "density bonuses" economists stated. "whether California, with its heautiful
increasing the allowable num- 770 uni ts are worth the cost in vistas, temperate climate and
ber of dwellings that can be terms of 17,296 homes. By ll)yriad attractions. but who
built on a certain pieces of discouragi ng producti&lt;;&gt;n of · are chased away by the state's
property - if homebuilders 17,296 homes in those eight prohibitive housing prices.
agree to construct so many cities, $11 billion worth of
(Joseph Perkins is a co/um- .
affordable housing units.
· housing . was essentially ni,,t j;ir ThP San Dit'go UnionYet, however .well-inten- destroyed."
7h6une and can he reached at
tioned state and local lawSo how best to increase the Joseph.Perki11s @Union Trih.c
makers may be in passi ng stOck of affordable housing in 0111.)

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Donations

James Russell Sa11 ett

from Page A1

James Russell Sarrett, 94, ·of ~=====---..,
Gallipolis, Ohio, passed away
on Monday, Jan. 10, 2005 , in
the Arbors at Gallipolis.
Russell was born on Sept.
13, 1910 in Oak Hill , W.Va .
the son of the late James ·T and
Blanche Davis Sarrett.
,
Russell was married to
Lucille Lilly Sarrett, whom he
married on Dec. 31, 1935 in
Greenup, Ky. They moved to
Gallipolis in 1941 , when. they
purchased , the Ohio . Valley
Launders and Dry Cleaners,
aod operated it until 1979.
They operated the Robinson
James Russell Sarrett ·
· Dry Cleaners in Pomeroy up to
1987. His wite, Lucille, preceded him death on Aug. 23,2000,
along w1th three brothers, and three sisters, Porter, Kemper,
and Robert; Cynthia Hicks, Ruth Boster and Grace Sarrett.
. Russell was a member of First Bapti st Church in Gallipolis:
a World War II .U.S. Navy and Marine Corps veteran serving
as a medic in the Marines. He participated in the invasion at
Guadalcanal and was present at the signing of Japan 's·surrender to end World War II. He was a member of Morning Dawn Lodge No. 7 Masonic Lodge and the Gallipolis Shrine Club ;
a past president of the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club, and for 12
years he was a Gallipolis c1ty commissioner, serving froiTI
1948 to 1960. Russell attended The Ohio State University, and
was on the football team for one year. , ·
Surviving Mr. Sarrett is a son, Marc A. Sarrett. pastor of the .
Trinity Baptist Church in Rio Grande, Ohio, and a daughter,
Shelley Weathers and her husband John of Savannah, Ga. Two
grandsons, Heath McBride of Dayton , and Rett McBride of
Atlanta. Two sisters-in-law: Betty Lilly of Charleston, W Va!!,
and Helen Mitchell of Longmont, Colo.; several nieces and
nephews survive.
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. Friday, Jan. 14,
2005, at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Archie Conn and
Pastor Alvis Pollard. Burial will follow in Mound Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at Willis Funeral Home on
Thursday from 6-8 p.m. Full military rites will be given at the
cemetery by volunteers of area .veteran lodges. In lieu of flowers please consider a donation to First Baptist Church building
fund or to Trinity Baptist Church. Mr. Sarrett 's pallbearers
will be Charles McKean, Rod Gordon, Jiin Halley, Heath
McBride, Rett McBride and John Weathers.
. Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

floodin g m September of
2004, the region was hit
again last week with heavy
rainfalL Wide-spread flooding has affected m·any counties in the Appalachian·Ohio
region. As, a result, residents have sustained a large
amount of property damage
and lo sses onc e again .
Though some flood victims
qualify for assistance, others do , not. Even after
rece1vm g ass1stance , most
flood vi ctim s still hav e
unmet needs. .
.
Roger McCauley, COAD
executive director said ,
"Once . again we are fa,ced

Local Briefs
Office closed

•

•

I&gt;

•

with the effects of floodin g
in our region. All financial
assistance
the
Family
Emergency Relief Fund
. receives will be provided to
victims of flooding in our
region."
..
He said I 00 percent of
donations to the Family
Emergency Relief Fund will
be used to assist families who
have unmet needs as· a result
of flooding in the affected
areas.
To help the tlood victims
, who
need
it
most,
Co mmunity Action programs in the affected coun·tie s.. will screen applicanis
and disperse the funds as
needed.
Marianne
Campbell ,
FAO's board president, said,
"When disaster strikes any-

POMEROY - The Mei gs County Tuberculosis Clinic will
not be giving skin tests on Friday due to the office being
closed on Monday in observance ·of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Day. The clinic will reopen at 8 a.m . on Tue sday.

Health Department closed .

Chamber

(

Tuck~r and band to perform

Committee to meet

ni&lt;)l persmi and buy any old
tree.
"Who is going to know the
difference? It's a dumb old
pine tree, for god's sake.
And you're going to decorate it within an inch of it's
life so no one will even
know if it 's a pine or a
spruce or maple free. I'm
freezing, can we hurry it up
and let's cut down a tree
alright alreact'y?"
But Josephina would
know. Everything in her
house is just so, she vacuums .so often it's a wonder
the color hasn't been sucked
.out of the curpets.
When they finally got the
tree home there was always
a , day-long shouting match
over how much to cut off the
bottom, how much to cut off
the top. It went on like this
for years but finally even
.Josephina couldn 't stand it
any longer. She started taking other people with her to
buy the tree instead of
Ralph.
Josephina liked to get her
tree a month before
Christmas because it would
take her almost a week to
decorate it. to get all the
Christmas decorations out of
the attic.
This year it was Sue 's turn
to go with Josephina to cut

down her tree. I expected her
to be gone all day, but Sue
-returned in only three hours.
"The one she wanted was
. pr~ctica lly in front of the
place where we parked," Sue
· said. "She loved the shape, ,
she goi out her step ladder
and measuring tape and . it
was the right height and we
cut it down and brought it
home. I don't think I' ve ever
seen her so happy in my .
life."·

· ,

By chance, the very next
day I drove past Ralph and
Josephin a' s house. There
was a forlorn; naked tree
lying out by the curbside
that looked a lot like a 7foot-3-inch-tall Fraser ftr. I
knew right away that Ralph
had once again cut too much
off the bottom or too much
on the top; that they must
have had the screaming
match to end all screaming ·
matches;· th~t this poor tree
was cause of it all.
'
H•w different· things
might ha ve been if she had
spent as much time looking
for a husband as she ·did· for
a tree.
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "It Takes a Village ldio_t:.

Complicming the Siniple
Life" and . "Baby 's First
Tallon. " · You can rea('h him
at jim_mul/en @myway.com) •

For the Record

Divorces

Foreclosures

. Appointment

these scholarships and attends
the University of Rio Grandt.
The ACS has recently
reached out to Meigs County
with the Patient Navigator
Program which provide s
infonnation and education
about dealing with cancer;
assistance and support to
ensure a better quality of life:
connection to local resources:
understanding i finanCial,
. health care, community,
social and other systems.
The local coordinator for
the
Patient
Navigator
Program is Coleen DietschKrubl located at O'Bieness
. Hospital in Athens. She can
reached toll free at the ACS
hotline at I-888,ACS -OHIO.
Ellenwood is interested in
organizing a Meigs County
task force \hat will meet bimonthly to discuss c,ancer
related issues. ,
Anyone interested in these
issues may call Ellenwood or
McGuinness at the ACS toll

free hotline.
In other chamber news,
new chamber President Tom
Reed introduced the new
assistant treasurer, Kim
Dettwiller.
Reed reminded of the coffee chat held at the Meigs
County Chamber office at 8
a.m. every Friday.
Erin
Roush .
of
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center announced that the
facility will host a beginners
pilates class. at 5 p.m. beginning Jan. 16 every Sunday
and Wednesday. An advanced
class will be held at 6 p.m.
Class rate is $7 5 to be paid in
full on the first night of class.
Call 992-6606 for more
information .
The
-Red
Cross
Bloodmobile will be at the
Meigs Senior Center from 1
p.m. to 6 p.m. on Jan. 19.
The next business-minded
luncheon will be held Feb. -8
at the Wildhorse Cafe.

'·

Schuler
from PageA1

wa,s released from Holzer
POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Department will Medical Center, he told Perry
be closed Monday in observance of Martin Luther King, Jr.
and Detective Chad Wallace
Day. Normal business hours will resume at 8 a.m. Tuesday.
that Cardwell had shot him in
the stomach before he .
returned fire .
Schiller said he had been
POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees have elected
Ronald Wood as president and Robert Hawk as vice president drinking at his brother 's
: for 2005. Regular meetings will be held at 7 p.m. on the sec- house in Bidwell and thinking
: ond Tuesday of each month at .the town haiL
about a dispute he had with .
Cardwell over rent money.
Without his brother 's permission, Schuler took a .32GALLIPOLIS -Adam D. Tucker and the Custom Built Band caliber semi-automatic gun
. with special guests, Bub WiUiams, wiU be performing at 7:30 Jan. out of his sister-in-law's
. 22 at the Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis. Reserved seats are $15: gen: eral admission, $12, and students 8, and children 5 and under free. drawer, and took his.Qrother 's
car. He drove to Cardwell 's
house, where he knocked on
the back door.
"Bennie Cardwell came to
MARIETTA - The Di strict 18 Small Government
Committee will meet at 10 a.m. on Jan . 20 at the Holiday Inn the door," Perry said. "They
in Marietta to select 10 small government-eligible projects for exchanged pleasant greetsubmission to the Ohio Public Works Commission. The pro- ings, and he invited him in ,
jects will compete for small government funding with projects They both went to the basefrom throughout the state.
ment, where they exchanged
pleasant conversation."
Eventually, Schuler brought
up the issue of ihe owed
money, and a heated argument ensued. He told Perry
aitd Wallace that he decided
to go upstairs and get a Coke
POMEROY - Divorces have been granted in Meigs O\lt of Cardwell's fridge.
County Common Pleas Court to Patrece E. Beegle from
"He said he went back to the
Rodney L. Beegle, Jenny Jo Thomas from John S. Thomas,
landing at the top of the stairs
and Amy Triplett from Timothy J. Triplett.
to ask Bennie Cardwell if he
I.
wanted a Coke, too," Perry
s&lt;!id. "He said he saw a gun in
POMEROY - Foreclosures have been granted in Meigs Cardwell's hand, and then felt
County Common Plea~ Court to ABN AMRO Mortgage Group, like someone took a fist and
Inc., against Michael E. Lester, and others; and to Chase Manhattan hit him in the stomach."
Mortgage Corp., against Donald L. Bennett, and others.
At . first , Schuler said his
original thought was to escape.
"He said he decided to
.
.
.
·return fire," Perry said. ''He
POMEROY - Douglas W. Ltttle of Racme has been re-appomt- stuck his arm around the cored as a trustee of the Meigs County Disuict Public Library, for a ner and shot several times,
seven-year term, by Common Pleas Coun Judge Fred W. Crow In. ,

Trustees organize

where in our 29-county neighbor. We believe if peoAppalachian area of Ohio, ple will give from the spirit
the compassion of individu- of abundance, they will find
als
and
organizations room to accomplish helping
becomes apparent, and peo- both neighbors globally and
ple want to help ease finan - right here at home.".
cial stre ss ·and handle tfie
Donations to assist flood
unmet needs oJ residents victims can be sent to :
who are tlood vic tims.
Famil~ Emergency Relief
"FAO's
aciive · role, Fund, c/o Foundation for
assisting in this situation, Appalachian Ohio, 36 Public
• concern and Square,
reflect s our
P.O.
Box,
provides an opportunity to Nelsonville, OH 45764. The
help our neighbors in a_ phone number is (740) 753meaningful way."
1111. Vi sa and MasterCard
Leslie Lilly, FAO's presi- contributions also will be,
dent and CEO said, "We rec- accepted.
. The Foundation works with
ognize the demand ·and
appea,l for .charitable giving donors and others to create
is high right now, especially · access to opportunity for } he
given the worldwide call to region' s citizens through the
· aid victims of the tsunami. power of charitable giving.
It has been a tradition ·in this · All gifts to the Foundation
region for neighbor to help are tax-deductible .

Julie
Ellenwood
and
Jennifer McGuinness of the
ACS told the chamber about
from Page A1
programs that local money
helps support such as the Look
rai sed $30,000. This year's and I:eel Better Program which
relay will be begin at noon on helps cancer patients feel better
May 13 and ends at 6 p.m. on · about their appearance.
May 14 at the Rocksprings
The ACS is currently
searching for a licensed cosFairgrounds.
At 3 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. me.tologist to help bring this
15 at the Meigs·county Libr~ program into Meigs County.
in Pomeroy, a relay rally will
The I Can Cope progmm
be held. Wendy's of Pomeroy holds worksl)ops and provides
will provide free chili.
educational materials to.cancer
The event will raise aware- patients and families about
ness about the
ACS. everything from coping with
Information also will be pro- the disease to financial matters.
vided on how to become · . The Hope Lodge acts as a
involved in.the Relay For Life: hotel or respite for families to
Steve Beha, the Relay For stay free of charge if they are
Life of Meigs County receiving -treatments in
Sponsorship chairman, said ·Cleveland or Cincinnati.
there was a need ' for teams
The ACS also awards scholwhich is not limited to busi- arships · to ~ollege bound stunesses or corporations but dents who were diagnosed with
includes families and groups cancer before the age of 18.
of individuals. There are Jametha Willford ·of Rutland
seven to 15 people on a team. was recently · awarded one of

..

We took down our
Christmas tree today, a few
weeks after the holiday,
packed up all the lights, put
away all the silver balls. We
could have done it sooner,
Jim
but it smells nice and the
Mullen
lights. are cheery oil these
short winter days.
We may hang on to our
tree too long, but others
don't hang_on to them lol,lg , . Unfortunately; her- hu s-. .
enough. I started seeing forlorn, empty Christmas trees, band is not as much of a fan
of Christmas as she is.
· some still sprouting tinsel, 1
on the curbsides of town the osephina is a perfectionist
when , it comes to her tree.
day afte.r Christmas. They She always goes to the same
looked perfectly green, per- "cut your owrt" place an
fectly shaped, kicked out of h
the house before their time.
our away and she spends
hours , poking and judging
What was the big rush? Do and measurjng to get just the
parents think their children right specimen. It has to be a
will expect to find more pre- Fraser fir. It has to be 7 feet,
~ents unde~ the tree each day . 3 inches tall. She's a tiny
11 stays m the house?
woman so she brings a
On t-he other hand, we · stepladder and a measuring
know people who wait way tape and a saw ·with her.
too long. One woman we Over the years she has built
know won't take her tree up quite a little tree cutting
·down until April. It seems k1t.
odd to go to her house on St.
Her husband Ralph used to
Patrick's Day to ,eat her · go with her with all the
yearly corned beef and cab- . enthusiasm of a man who
bage dinner and find a full y has been asked to carry his
decorated Chri stmas tree in wife's purse into the men 's
her living room, the lights room. The hours away from
blazing, surrounded by a liv- · the television set nearly
ing carpet of 50 or so poin- killed him . He could be
settias; but where's the harm home watching The Game if
in Jhat?
only she could be like a nor-

.

Correction Policy 1

I've received inquiries in
recent months from several
acquaintances who are considering a move to California.
They want to kno.w whether
the Golden State is a good
place to settle.
The tirst thing I tell them is
to take a hard look at the real
estate listings for San Diego
and LQs Angeles, San
. Francisco and San Jose. And
prepare themselves for sticker
shock because C11lifornia
,boasts seven of the nation's
I 0 most expensive housing
markets.
according
to
Coldwell Banker's annual
home price comparison index.
The index compares the selling price of simili!f homes in
similar neighborhoods in
nearly 350 markets from sea
to shining sea.
In its latest index, Coldwell
Banker looked at houses in
neighborhoods "typical for
corporate middle-management transferees." That would
be a 2,200-square-foot house
with 4 bedrooms, 2-1/2 bathrooms, a family room and
two-car garage in an upwardly.mobile zip code.
The national average for
such a house is $354,372. But
in affluent La Jolla, according
to Coldwell Banker. that
house sells for a whopping
$1.7 million. That same house
sells for it sky-high $1 million
in Santa Monica, the upscale
Los Angeles neighborhood, a
staggering $1.2 million in San
Francisco and a hefty
$952,000 in San Jose. according to the index.
It's not just middle managers who face expensive

Obituaries

Tree strikes and you're out

· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be s'igned and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
. be published. Letters should b~ in good taste,
: addressing iss.ues, not personalities.
.

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VVednesday,Januaryt2,2005

The Daily Sentinel

,·

,)Vednesday,Januaryt2,zoos

and said he didn ' t know
whether he hit him."
Schuler had hit Cardwell,
twice. Gallia County Coroner
Dr. ()an Whitely testified that
either of two bullets which
entered Cardwell's chest
could have killed him.
Before leaving, Schuler
pulled the telephone out of the
walL He then drove back to his
brother's house, and passed
out for about two hours.
By 3 · a.m., . an ambula,nce
was called, which uiggered the
first involvement of the Gallia
County Sheriff's Office.
By the time , Wallace
arrived at the Bidwell home ·
of Schuler's brother, Schuler
already had been taken to the'
Holzer Medical Center.
it was 5 . a.m. before
Wallace- spoke with Schuler
as he lay in a hospital bed.
Defense attorney William
Eachus quesiioned Tuesday
why his client wasn't read his
Miranda rights then, bu,t
Wallace said he wasn't a suspect at the time , just a victim.
Wallace testified that
Schuler told him a false story
that he had been shot in a
parking lot outside a bar.
Six hours later, · at II a.m.
Dec. 31, Cardwell's girlfriend discovered his body,
face down in his basement.
By )2:30 p.m., .the Gallia
County sheriff's office had
learned that Schuler had been
a tenant of Cardwell's.
There were no questions
asked of Schuler during the
next five days while he recuperated from an operation to
close entry and exit wounds
in hi s abdomen.
On Jan. ·6, Schuler was
released fro m the hospital,
and taken directly to the sher-

iff's office, where hi s confesThe next session of a grand
· jury has yet to be scheduled.
sion was videotaped.
Eachus said Tuesday, how- Schuler will continue to be
ever, that what Schuler had held in the Gallia County Jail
confe ssed to . was voluntary on a $1 million bond.
manslaughter, not murder. .
During cross-examination
"There.is absolutely no evi- of Perry, Bachus questioned
dence to support that charge," his credibility as a law officer
Eachus said. "There is noth- because he had been dising. There is zero. He didn't missed from the Bureau of
say it, and (the officers) did- . Criminal Identitication .and
n'tSeejt."
·
lnv.estigation in London,
Prosecuting Attorney Jeff Ohio, after a long career there.
Adkins admitted that Eathus
Perry admitted he had been
had a point, but asked Judge . fired from the BCI for alleged
Margaret Evans to send the dishonesty and allegedly
case to a grand jury on a arranging a plea agreement in
charge of murder, 'any:way. · a case ,without a prosecuting
"It's possib1~ like Mr. attorney's knowledge. Perry
Eachus said that it's a. close was dismissed from the BCI
call," Adkins said .
on July 2, and hired by Gallia
In sending the case to ,a County Sheriff David Martin
grand jury, Evans saicj "many as captain and chief deputy in
arguments can be made here November.
concerning self-defense.';
.Perry said his firing was
However, she said there was the subject of both a lawsuit
substantial credible evidence and a hearing aefore the Ohio '
to bind the case over to · Board of Personnel Review.
Common Pleas Court, and said He said he never has done
Tuestlay's hearing was only to anything dishonest, and
establish probable cause. and expects to ·receive a settlenot to ptove the case beyond a ment offer from the BCI for ·
being fired unjustly.
reasonable doubt.

H .ear the whole story

E
A
R

SAVE A LIFE BY GIVING BLOOD!
• Thursday, January 13, 2005
FREE GIFT TO
e11:3Q a.m. to 5:30p.m.
ALL DONORS!
• Trinity United Methodist Church
(615 Viand Street Point Pleasant, WV)
• Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary

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�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

lVednesday,January12,2005

Prep Scoreboard, Page 82

VVednesday,January12,2005

NewsChannel

Meigs
Rebels top Tornadoes for seventh straight
soaks
Watertord
High School Basketball

By, Sco.TT WoLFE
Sports corre$pqndent

STAFF REPORT

AP photo
Snowplows clear the tarmac near Concourse A at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky -International
Airport, Dec. 26, after a severe snowstorm in Cincinnati. Keeping runways open· at the airport.
even while airlines weren't able to fly far mast of a week because of storms, computer shutdowns
and work slowdowns, took about one-fourth of the airport's annual snow removal budget.

sports@ mydailytribune .com

Holiday snow removal cost
airport despite shutdown
Bv. TERRY KINNEY

"It doesn't take long before US Airways.
. you can ' t get that many
More than 2,500 people
planes in the sky.".
have called or e-mailed the
CINCINNATI. ~ The airDelta Air Lines was able department since it sought
port filled with angry, str;md- to maintain some flights, comments on the two airlines
ed travelers during the holi- but its regional subsidiary staning Dec. 31., said David
day snow and ice.~ blew Comair shut down when Barnes,
sppkesman
for
one-fourth of its annual snow repeated delays and cancel- . depanmeut Inspector General
removal budget clearing run- . lations overloaded and Kenneth Mead. However, the
ways for th~ few planes still crashed its scheduling com- complaints have been about
puters. Meanwhile, US several airlines, he said.
able to take off.
Several airlines weren't able Airways canceled hundreds
"Information is coming in.
totlyoutofCincinnati/Nonhem of flights and had a massiv~ We are still compiling it,"
Kentucky International Airport baggage tie-up when an Barnes said.
for most of the fmal week of unusual number of employHe declined to elaborate on
December because of snow and ees called in sick..
specific .complaints, and said
ice storms, computer crashes
Comair, headquartered at it was too soon to draw any
and work slowdo\vns.
the .airport in Hebron, Ky., has conclusions.
Meanwhile, airport crews not said how much the shutComair is conscious of
kept runways usable, spend- down cost the airline. Delta the ill will created by the
ing $500,000, spokesman typically does · not break out shutdown, and is trying to
Ted
Bushel man
said ·profits or expenses for its . make amends when cusTuespay. Half the cost was regional carriers.
tamer&amp; call, spokesman
forpotassium.acetate, an.icePort
Columbus Nick Miller said.
melting
agent,
which International Airport was"still • Some will be t;ligible for
requires repeated applica- t;lllying storm costs, spokes- . reimbursement for the cost of
tions to keep ice from stick- woman Angie Neal . ·said. · hotels and meals while they
ing to the. pavement.
Runways remained clear in were stranded, and some will
"Snow's easy; you can push the mix of snow and freezing have an undetermined numit · off
the
runways," · rain that socked central Ohio, ber of credits added to their
Bushelman said. "Our guys but some airlines ran out of frequent flier accounts, qualiwould love to have snow; deicing fluid and others can- t'ying them for bonus travel ,
they hate the ice."
celed flights because sched- Miller said.
"We believe .i t's very
The cost doesn't include uled incoming planes were
what airlines paid to remove ·stuck .at other ajrpoits.
important to let them know
A message seeking com- that we are very . sorry,:·
ice from their planes.
~o-went out there to get a ment was left . at Cleveland Miller said. "We will be
International cooperating
with
the
picture of a plane being Hopkins
deiced, and we couldn't Airport.
Department of Transportation
The federal Transportation to find out why it happened
believe ·that a (usually) 15minute deicing took 'an hour Department is investigating and to ·make sure it never
.and a half," Bushelman said. the disruptions at Comair and happens again."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Wednesday, January 12
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

It's going to be a cloudy momin g. Temperatures will linger at 60
with today's low of 58 occurring
around 6:00am. Winds will. be 10
to 15 MPH from the south.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will hover at 64
with today's high of 65 occurring
around 3:00pm . Skies will be partly cloudy to cloudy with I0 to 15
MPH winds from the southwest
turning from the south as th~ after·
noon progresses.

It will be a cloudy evening.
Temperatures will remain around
61. Winds will be 5 to 15 MPH
from the south.
Overnight (l-6a,m.)
It's going to be a breezy and
cloudy overnight. Temperatures
will stay near 61. Winds will be 15
to 20 MPH from the south.
Thursday, Jatmary 13
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
~ It looks like a very windy and
cloudy morning. Some light rain
showers are predicted. The rain will

of rain by lhe end of this morning.
Temperatures will hold steady around
63. Winds will be 15 to20 MPH from ·
the south turning from the southwest
as the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should be a cloudy afternoon.
Expect moderate rain. The rain should
reach 0.39 inches by the end of this
afternoon. Temperatures will dimin·
ish from 63 early this afternoon to 46.
Winds will hoi 5 to 20 MPH from the
southwest turning from the northwest
·· as the aftemooo progresses.

Local Stocks
ACI-a3.75
AEP~33.48

Akzo- 41.54
.
Asbland lnc •.r- 56.17
AT&amp;T-18.54
BU-11.14 ·
Bob Evans - 25.04
BorgWarner - 51.40
Champion- 3.73
Char!l'llng Shops - 8.13
City Holding - 33.73
Col- 37.49
DG -20.21
DuPont - 4 7.44
Federal Mogul - .353
Gannett - .81.67
General Electric - 35.40
GKNLY- 4.80

Harley Davidson ~
59.18
JPM - 37.90
Kmart - 93.44
Kroger - 16.63
Ltd. - 22.19.
NSC-35.97
Oak Hill Financial ....._ .
38.00
OVB-33.63
BBT-41.26
Peoples - 26.03
Pepsico- 53.47
Premier - 11.92
Rockwell - 51.85
. Rocky Boots ..;, 29.15

.·Serial rapist pleads guilty to all counts
COLUMBUS (AP) - A charges in the case was 1999,
• man accused . of raping 37 five years before DNA tied
women since 1987 pleaded · Patton to the rapes.
guilty Tuesday to' 135 charges
O'Brien said prosecutors
of rape, kidnapping, burglary . insisted that the 43 charges be
and robbery.
reinstated if Patton Were to
Franklin County Prosecutor plead guilty and that Patton
Ron O'Brien said Robert N. waive ~any claim under the
Patton, 42, entered the plea statute of limill!tions .
duiing jury selection for the . "He said he was finally
first of what was expected to pleading guilty becau~e he
be four trials. Patton was wanted to take 'full responsi·
known as the "Linden-area bility for what he had done,"
.
rapist" and has confessed to 0' Brien· said.
news agencies and police that
The charges to which
he has raped several dozen Patton pleaded guilty include
women in Columbus.
71 counts of rape, 37 counts
Sentencing is scheduled for of aggravated burglary and 22
Wednesday at 10 a.m. counts of robbery.
O'Brien said he would neeA message seeking comommend a 50-year sentence. ment was left Tuesday for
Prosecutors
originally defense
~torney
Terry
dropped 43 charges against Sherman. --~
Patton in October because
Candy Brewer s -case was
they were filed too long after one of ·the charges initially
the crimes occurred. The thrown out. She was attacked
deadline for filil)g smpe when she answered the door

• stut around noon. Expect 0.02 inches

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)

.at her home on Christmas
Day in 1991.
"I'm gla«;( he finally realized
what he did," Brewer said
after Tuesday's plea agreement. "I'm glad he finally
woke up from his little dream
that he said he was innocent."

Jan. 11. 2005

11,000

Dow Jones

10,SOO

Industrials
10,556.22

from

: ~.81

Thursday's Games
Girls Basketball

Belpre at Meigs ·· - ~·-­
Eastern at Waterford
Gallia Academy at Athens
Rock Hill at River Valley
Federal Hocking at Southern

10,000
OCT

CEC

NOV

fiW&gt;

Low

1M19.77

9,500

JAN

R.....d,hiW.: !1,122.98

10,531.54

Friday's Games

Jon. 14, 2000

JIIJl. 11,2005

Boys Basketball

Athens at Gallia Academy
Vinton County at Meigs
Miller at Eastern·
River Valley at Rock Hill
Trimble at Southern .
South Gallia at Cross Lanes Chr.
Girls Basketball
South Gallia at Cross Lanes Chr.

2MIO

Nasdaq
composite

--Pd.=
2,079.62

from

OCT

..., ~.83

CEC
JAN
Record high: 5,0&gt;18.62
Morch 10, 2000

NOV

L.,.

fiW&gt;
2,090.62

2,072.62

Jan. 11, 2005

AP Boys Poll

1,300

Standaid &amp; .
Poor's 500

--::.=..,
.

1,182.99

1,100

NOV

1.190.25

JAN

CEC

Low

HIWI

.0.61

COLUMBUS(AP) - How a state panel

ot sports writers and broadcasters rates

1,200

· OCT

lloc:onlhl~:

1,180.43 •

1,000
1,527.48

Mordl24, 2000

N'

RD Shell - 55.77
SBC -24.65
Sears - 49.73
USB-30.15
Wai-Mart - 53.72
wendy's - ·38.19
Worthington - 19.95

Dally stock "reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, prcivlded by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc.
.of Gallipolis.

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·.

WATERFORD - Meig s
placed four players in double
figures in a 68-56 win over
Waterford in interdivisional
match up in the Tri- Valley
Conference Tuesday.
The Marauders (5-6) led
31-26 at halftime and slowly
extended that advantage over
the course of the second half.
Eric VanMeter led Meigs
with 16 points, while Carl
Wolfe, Jr. recorded a doubledouble with I 0 points and 10
rebounds ..
VanMeter also had three
assists and 'three steals.
In addition
for
the
Marauders.
Jeremy
Blackston scored 15 points
and Jared Casey netted 12.
The Wildcats (3-8) were ·
led on the night by Matt
Schott and . Matt Townsend
with 12 points each.
Schott also hauled in eight
boards while Townsend had
five assists.
Meigs, going 30-50 ~~ the
charity stripe, made more
free throws than Waterford
. ( 12-for-20) attempted.
Meigs plays host to Vinton
County Friday.

Prep Schedule

A DAY ON WALL STREET

·Pd.=---.

Bl

The Daily
Sentinel
.
.
.

INSIDE·

Ohio high school boys basketball teams in
the first wee~ly Associated Press poll of .
2005 , by OHSAA divisions, with won-loSt
record and total points (first-place votes in
·
parentheses):
DtVtSION I
1, Can. McKinley (24) 9-o ........287
2. Cin. Moeller (2)9·0 ...........216
3, Lima Sr. (3) 9-Q . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
4, Tol. St. John's to-t .... : ... . .. 169
5, Spring. S. (3)12·0 . . . .. ...... 167
6, Warren Harding (1) 9-Q . . . . . .. 116
7, Tol. ScOH 6-Q . . . .. .
. . .. 67
a, W. Chester Lakota W. 9-0
.. 84
9, N. Can . Hoover 9-0 .
. .. 83 _
10, Cin. St. Xavier, 9-1- . . .... .....82
Others receiving 12 or more 'points: 11 ,
Pickerington N. 47. 12, F!eynoldsburg 39.
13, Solon 33. 14, Cols. Brookhaven 29.
15, Beavercreek 25. 16, Olmsted Falls 24.
17 (tie), Barberton, W. Carrollton 23. 19,
Manslield 18.

· OtVISION II
1, Akr. SVSM (21)9·1 ....... c • • •261
2, Akr. Buchtel (1) e-o ....... , ... H2
3, Van Wert (2) 6.0 .......... .. .. 164
4, Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit {2) 9-1 ... 153
. ...... 151
5, Willard (1) 8-0 . .
6, Upper Sandusky (2) 7-0
. .. 130
7, St. Paris Graham (2 ) 11-0 .. .. .. 117

8 , Cln. Taft (1)9"1 .............89
9 , Cambridge 10-1 . . . . . . . . . . .. 75
10, Tlpp City Tlppeoanoe 9·0 .. ....62
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Day.· Dunbar 58. 12, Painesville Harvey
44 . 13, Oberlin Flrelands 39. 14, Wooster
' Trlway 34. 15, St. Matys Memorial 30, 16,
Day. Cham1nade-Jullenne 21 . 17, Dresden
Tri-Valley 20. 18, E l ld~ 19. 19 (tie) , E.
Liverpool, Orrville 18. 21 , Greentielel
McClain 14. 22, Carrpil1on 13.
.
DIVISION tH
1, Sugarcreek Garaway (4~\.9-0 ... .159
2, Cin. N. College Hill (8) 7·1 .. . ... 152
3, St. Henry (4)5·1 .. .... .... .. ... 146
4, Cheaapeake (2) 9·0 ....... .. .. 145
5, Versailles (B) 7· 0 .
. .. 142 .
6, Ironton (1) 9-0 . . . . . . . . . .
. .129
7, Day. Oakw00d(1)1D-1 .. ...... 119
8, independence {4) W - 1
.. 118
9, Rod&lt;y River Lutheran W. 9·0 ....92
10, Bellaire 8-2 . . . . . . . . . . . : ..78
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Delphos St. John's 75 . 12, Archbold 68.
13, W. Salem NW 62 . 14. Cle. VASJ 56. 15
(tie), '(oungs. Ursuline , · Jamestown
Oreeneview 31 . 17, Loudonville 22. 18,
Akr. Manchester 19. 19, Middletown
Fenwick H . 20 (tie), Worthington
Christian, 04d Washing1on Buckeye Trail,
JoMstown-Monroe 16. 23 ~tie) , Marion
Elgin, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 12.
DtVt8tON IV
t , Van Buren (8) 8-0 ............216
2, Cots. Alrlcont,rtc (5)7·1 ... ... .. 165
3, Pettiavllle 8·1 .......... , .... 152
4, Sel&gt;ringMcKinley(4) 6·1 ....... 141
5, Laktoide Danbury 9-Q ......... 124
6, New Bremen (3)6·1 .......... 122
7, Defiance Ayersvilte (2) 7-&lt;J .. ... 119
8, S. Wtbstor (4)9-Q ............75
9, Cln. Coumry Oay (1)9·1 .. .. ...70
(1) &amp;-1 ••...••70
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 .
AniOrlia 86. 12, Tiffin Calvert 58. 13, N.
Robinoon Col. Craw1ord 57. 14, Sidney
Fairlawn 56. 15, Zanesville Rosecrans 43.
16, Troy Christian 38. 17 (lie) , W.llovllle.
Minster 32 . 19, Holgate 28 . 20, Lancaster
Filher Catn. 23. 21 . Dalton 16. 22,
McDon•ld 14. 23, Shadyside 13. 24,
Mowrystown Whiteoak 12.

-·"'"Eo.,.,

A~JII..,..

po$nts.
Call tor u apptlntmeot.

MERCERVILLE - Behind a 31 -point effort
from Gearld Cade, the South Gallia Rebel s (8-3)
rode to a 72-68 non-league win over the Southern
Tornadoes (2- 10) Tuesday night in 'boys varsity
basketball action at South Gallia.
·
· Cade scored the last· II points of the game for the
Rebels. who fabricated an exciting late-game rally
for their seventh straight viCtory.
Southern led 68-67 with 34 seconds left after

working the clock to wind
out the game·. The Rebels
fouled Jake Nease who
missed the first of a bonus.
then to add insult to injury
a Southern player went
over the back of Gerald
Cade, who hit two
straight .· to give South
Galli a the 69-68 lead.
Southern then set · up
two straight ,plays to their post men , but
each possession went awry, one ending in
'

College

· Cade hitting the fir st of a bonu s fr~e throw and a
late field goal to acwunt for the 72-68 finish for
Coach Don Saunders winning club. ·
BehindCade 's 31 points from the offensive side,
he had three blocks and 12 rebounds for a doubledouble ln a great overall effort. The Rebels placed
three more in double fi gure s with credible floor
gaines-David Bayless 12, Josh Wright II , and Curt
Waugh 10: Josh Skidrnore .added four. Paul Combs
two. and Bernie Fulks two.
Southern was led by Craig Randolph with 28

.

B~sketball _

Please see "Does, 82

- - -- - - -

Badgers.bite Bucks
MADISON, Wis. (AP)
- Wisconsin coach Bo
Ryan walked down to the
end of the bench late in
the Badgers' 72-66 Big·
Ten victory over Ohio
State Tuesday night with a
message for injured star
A lando Tucker.
"I told him, ' You'll be
lucky to gel back on the
floor again," ' Ryan said.
"I was kidding, of
course."
Mike Wilkinson scored
a career-high 29 points
and added I 0 rebounds as
the Badgers extended the
nation's longest home
winning streak to 37
games, even without their
leading scorer.
T~ckeQ. _ ~J!tus is dayto-day after injuring his
foot in practice Sunday.
Ryan said the problem is
not related to a right foot
injury that caused Tucker ·
to use a medical redshirt
last season after he missed
all. but four games.
Wisconsin ( ll -3, 2- 1
Big Ten), which also got
14 points from Clayton
Hanson and II from
Sharif Chambliss , still
managed to maintain the
status quo at the Kohl
Center, improving to 25-0
in Big Ten home games
under Ryan.
"We don't have that guy
to go to, but other than
that we still had that same
focus ," said Wilkinson,
who took over the role of
go:to guy with Tucker
out. "Our game plan didn't change all that much."
That game plan ·centered around getting the
baH to Wilkinson, who
was matched up with
Terence Dials , . Ohio
State's foul-prone leading
·
scorer.
"He 's such a good playAP
er on the offensive end, Wisconsin's Mike Wilkinson, left, and Oh io State's J .J. Sullinger battle for
a rebound during the second half Tuesday in Madison . Wis. Wilkinson was
Please see Bucks, 82
the game's leading scorer with 29 as Wisconsin won 72·66.

Si.xteen games into the season,
Matta still doesn't have a contract
Bv RusTY MtUER

with
athletic
director Andy
Associated Press
Geiger and Ohio
State when he
COLUMBUS
Halfway
was hired last
throu~h his first season as Ohio
summer .
States head men's basketball
Vannatta said the
coach, Thad Matta is still work·
two side s are·
ing without a contract.
negotiatin g
O~io State's legal affairs office
wording and fine
confirmed Tuesday that tt does
points.
not have a signed contract with
Matta
Geiger said he
Matta. Nonetheless, he has
had not spoken
already had a· year added to what to Matta about the contract for a
was originally a seven-year while .
agreement with Ohio State.
"That hasn 't been on the front
"It's not like we're having any · burner recently, ·so I haven' t even
unusually heated ne¥,otiations on checked with .him," Geiger said.
issues or anything,' said Julie "Usually what we do - ind I
Vannatta, Ohto State 's associate don't spend much time with the
legal CO\Insel for athletics : "It 's coaches on this - it 's usually
typical."
lawyer to lawyer.''
The Buckeyes are a surprising
Matta was traveling with .the
12-4 overall and 1-2 in the Big. team in Madi son, Wis., and could
Ten after-losing at Wisconsin 72- not be re·ached for comment. A
66 on Tuesday night.
member of Ohio State' s sports
Matta is still being paid under information depanment did not
the verbal agreement he reached respond to an e- mail requesting

comment from Matta.
Asked if the contract would be
finalized soon, Vannatta said,
"I'd say it's hard to ·gauge."
Matta was hired on July 9 to
.replace seven-year head coach ·
Jim 0 ' Brien, who was fired a
month earlier. Geiger fired
o·Brien after he said the coach
admitted to giving $6.000 to a
,recruit in 1999. O'Brien denies
making the admission and has
sued Ohio State for up to $6 million over hi s firing.
The NCAA is investigating the
program under O' Brien . Another
lawsuit dealing with expenses
incurred by a Columbus ·woman
who housed. fed and clothed former Ohio State player Bohan
Savovi c for two years , has
brought to. light allegati1ms that ·
players were paid and that nonstudents did class work for ath·
Jete&gt;.
At a news conference last

PIHM' MeMIItta.Bl

Brad

Sherman/photo

Rio Grande's Matt Simpson goes for two during
·a 71-57 win over Wilberforce Tuesday.

Redmen
.-subdue
Wilberforce
BY MARK WIWAMS
Special to the Sentinel

..

Ri!O GRANDE - The Un\vers'ity of Rio
Grande Redmeh basketball team took care of
business on Tuesday night at the Newt Oliver
Arena, defeating Wilberforce. 71-57, in
American Mideast Conference South Division
·
play.
Rio Grande (15-4. 4-2 AMC South) used a
balanced attack with only two .players scoring
in double figures .. Reggie Williamson was the
man early, notching eight of his game-high' 12
points in the first half. Williamson helped spur
the Redmen to a 13-0 'lead out of the gate.
Sophomore guard Jeremy Di~hman added I 0 .
points and pulled down five rebounds . Junior
guard Kris Wilson nailed three trifectas to end
the night with nine points and seniors
Dawayne Mcintosh and Jarrod Haines added
eight each. Mcintosh corralled eight rebounds
and Haines gathered . in five caroms . Junior .
guard Cedric Hornbuckle chipped in · nine
points as well.
Mcintosh also did the job defensively on
Wilberforce 's top scorer Clarence Tubbs.
Tubbs entered the game averaging over 14
points per contesL He was held to four and did
not score his first hoop until five minutes were
left in the gafTie. Tubbs was 2-for-1 0 from the
field and 0-for-5 from three-poipt land. .
The Bulldog s struggled mightily f~om
beyond the arc. nailing only 4-of-22 attempts
( 18 percent).
Rio led 35-25 at'the half.
Wilberforce (4-15, 0-7 AMC South) placed
two players in double figures with Cameron
Philltps ;J.nd Dome Bell scoring 10 points each .
Daniel Balwigaire· was on the verge of double
,
figure s with nine.
Dwight Cass and Victor Caner pulled down
eight rebounds each to lead the Bulldogs in
that category.
The ~edmen ascended to a 20-point lead
(69-49) with five minutes nemaimng in the
game ~allowing a lay-up by senior swingman
Matt Stmpson.
. .

....... _....__ .1
'

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Prep Scoreboard
Boys Boxsc:oras
South Gallla 72, Southern 68
Southern
23 10 18 17 - 68
south Galha
is 17 22 15 - 72
SOUTHERN - Derek Teaford 2 0 0 5
Crarg Randolph 10 3 3 28 Chns Tucker 0
0 0 0 Josh Pape 0 0 0 0 Oust n Bnnager
2 0 0 5 Tyler Roberts 1 0 0 2
Brad
Crouch 2 00 6 Darn Teaford 512 11

Jake Nease 5 1 3 1 l TOTALS - 27 58
68
SOUTH GALLIA - Bernre Fulks 0 2-4 2
Seth Wrlhamson 0 0 0 0 Gerald Cade 10

11 13 31 Curt Waugh 4 2 4 10 Davrd
Bayess 5 co 12 Josh Wrght 5 0011
Josh Skrdmore 2 0-Q 4 Paul Combs 1 0 0
2 TOTALS- 27 15 21 72
3 poml goals - Southern 9 (Randolph 5
Crouch 2 Roberts OeTeatord) SG 3
(Bayless 2 Wrtght)

Meogs 68 , Waterford 56
Mergs
14 17 15 22 - 68
Watertord
14 12 12 18 56
MEIGS - Jared Casey 2 1o 14 12
Jeremy Blackston 5 4 7 15 Carl Wolfe Jr
261210 Er cVanMeter4 71216 Adam
Snowden 1 1 2 3 Enc Cullums 2 0 1 4
Dav1d Poole 2 2 2 6 TOTALS - t a 30 50
66
WATERFORD- Jerrod Sampson 1 2-4 5
Matt Townsend 5 2 4 12 Caleb Snyder 4 o0 9 Kyle K1nca1d 0 1 2 1 Catlm Ball 3 2 2
9 Cra1g Stmms 3 0 0 8 Matt Schott 3 58
12 TOTALS-19122056
3 pomt goals Me1gs 2 (B lackston
VanMeter) Waterford 6 (Stmms 2
Sampson Snyder Ball Schott)
Ohio High School Boys Baskelball
Tuesdays Results
Akr Buchtel 65 Akr Kenmore 63
Akr Ellet74 Akr E 63
Akr Ftrestone 56 Akr Central Hower 54
Akr Hoban 53 Cambndge 51
Akr Manchester 50 Cuyahoga Falls
CVCA43
Akr N 61 Akr Garfte d 57
Albany Alexander 6a Wellston 65
Alliance 69 Struthers 59
Andover
Pymatunlng
Valley
53
Bnstolv1lle Bnstol 37
Ashtabula Edgewood 55 Newbury 47
Ashtabula Lakestde 79 Willoughby S 71
Ashville Teays Val ey 60 Amanda
CJearcreek 57
Atwater Waterloo 60 Mogadore 41
Beavercreek 80 Fatrborn 47
Bedford 73 lakewood 44
Bedtord Chanel 61 Chardon NDCL 38
Bellevue 73 Fostoria 61
Beloit W Branch 54 M1nerva 51
Berltn Httand 42 Strasburg Franklm 30
Blanchester 52 Betl'1el Tate 46
Bloom Carroll 74 Lanca ster Fatrfteld
Umon 52
Bowerston
Conotton
Valley
61
Newcomerstown 48
Brooldyn 68 Cuyahoga Hts 51
Cadiz Hamson Cent 41 Rtchmond
Edtson 33
Can Cent C8th 64 Berlin Center
Westem Reserve 47
Can GlenOak 98 Masstllon Washtngton

94
Can Hentage 52 Youngs Chns1 an 39
Canal Fulton NW 55 LouiSVIlle 53
Canal Wtnchester 63 Ctrclevllle Logan
Elm 59
Carrollton 69 Alliance Marltngton 53
Centervtlle 87 Sidney 37
Ch11rdon 47 Wicklttfe 46 OT
Chesapeake 60 Ironton Rock Hill 24
Cheshire Rtver Valley 60 South POint 55
Chesterland W Geauga
Geneva 45
Ctn Clark Montessorr 73 Cm Country
Cay 46
C~n Colen11n 49 Fau1teld 4S
Cin LaSalle 57 Cm Oak Hills 44
Ctn Shrader Paideta 14 Ctn Hills
Chnstian Academy 46
C1n Western H1lls 57 Ctn Atkan 41
ClarksV•IIe 1
Clmton Masste
55
Waynesville 43

sa

Cle Coli nwood 64 Cle S 45
Cle E Tech 92 Cia Lincoln West 39
Cle Glerwllle as E Cle Shaw 74
Cle Hts 88 Gatfteld His 72
Cle JFK 85 Cle MLK 64
Cle John Marshall 53 Cle Max Hayes
47
Cle Rhodes 67 Cle E 53
Cle VASJ 71 Parma Padua 58
Clermont NE 65 Williamsburg 32
Cols Afncentr c 69 Cois Independence
51
Cots Beechcroft 69 Cols E 68
Cols Briggs 68 Cos Eastmoor 67 OT
Cols Brookhaven 97 Cols Cen1enn1al
49
Cola Hamilton Twp 64 C1rc1evtlle 5b
Cols Harvest Prep 63 Grandvtew 44
Cols Manon Franklin 73 Cols South 51
Cots Mtfflin 112 Cols L•nden 7 1
Cols Ready 45 Caledonia R1ver Valley
42
Cols St Charles 53 Cols Frankhn His
46
Cots W 67 Cols Walnut R1dge 49
Cols Wellington 57 Sparta H1ghland 33
Copley 67 Lodt Cloverleaf 51
Crown C1ty S Gall1a 72 Rae ne Southern

66
Oanvtlle 62 Fredencktown 43
Day Jefferson 79 Yellow Spr1ngs 56
Day Stebbtns 58 Monroe 54 OT
Day Stwers 53 Xenta Chnst an 51
Do a Hardm Northern 62 Old Fort 43
Dresden Tr Va ley 59 Crooksv1t1e 31
Elyna 61 Amhe st 59 OT
Ft Jenn1ngs 72 Kalida 49
Gahanna Chrts! an 55
Delaware
Chnsttan 46
Gahanna Cos Academy 58 Granvtle
53
Garrettsville Gari eld 51 Pentnsuia
Woodridge 44
Gates M1lls Hawken 58 Cornerstone
Chr 34
Georgetown 69 New Richmond 65
Goshen 61 G en Este 53
Greenlteld McClain 67 Peebles 42
Grove Crty Cent Cross ng 46 RIChwood
N Umon 45
Hamilton New M1am1 64 C1n Deer Park
55
Hartvtlle Lake Center Chr stan 54
Ktngsway Chnst an 38
Huber Hts Wayne 67 M am sburg 62
Hudson 74 Maylteld 42
Independence 100 Gates M1lls Gilmour
82
trenton 69 Ash and Ky Paul Blazer 37
Jackson 62 Potnt Pleasant W Va 20
Johnstown Monroe
67
Johnstown
Northrtdge 32
Kings M1lls Ktngs 76 Ml Healthy 73 30T
LaG range Keystone 59 Elyria Open
Door 51
Lancaster FISher Cath 65 Sugar Grove
Berne Umon 35
liberty Unton 56 Newark Cath 49
Ltma Perry 72 Ridgeway A tdgemont 48
Ltma Temple Chrtsttan 50 Waynesfteld·
Goshen 47
Lockland 69 Ctn Jacobs 56
Loudonvtlle 66 Centerbu rg 47
LOUISVIlle AqUinas 53 Kidron Cent
Christian 51
Loveland 83 Middletown 70
lyndhurst Brush 66 Cuyahoga Falls 54
Macedoma Norden a 60 Kent Roosevelt
47
Mansfield Sr 69 Wooster 52
Maple Hts 67 Pa nesvllle Alvers1de 55
Marysville 07 Delaware Buckeye Valley
63
Mass lion Tuslaw 63 Navarre Fatrless 55
McArthur Vtnton County 73 Vmcent
Warren 69
McConnelsville Morgan 63
New
Concord John Glenn 43
Mecltna 66 N Atdgev111e 51
Medma Chr 59 Lawrence 38
Med1na Htghland 54 Wadsworth 52
Mentor Lake Cath 60 Tnmty 41
Mlltofd Center Fairbanks 65 DeGraff
Atverstde 63
Mowrystown Whiteoak 67 Fayettevtlle
64
M1 Blanc~ard A verdale 63 Kenton 48

'Does
Mt Orab Western Brown 67 FeliCity
Franklin 60 OT
Muskrngum Chnsttan 68 Ohto Deal 64
New Albany 68 Be)(ley 53
New Phtladelphla 63 Coshocton 41
Newark Ltckmg Valley 64 Hebro n 1
Lakewood 51
Newton Falls 62 Warren Champ1on 78
Norton 61 A chfteld Revere 58
Norwalk 72 Galton 51
Old Wash1ngton Buckeye Tratl 79 New
Matamoras Frontier Local 33
Olentangy l1berty 49 Manon Pleasant
47
Olmsted Fa Is 74 Falrv1ew Park Fatrv1ew
46
Orange 89 M1ddlefteld Cardtnal 63
Oregon Stntch 62 Monclova Chnst1an
42
Pa1nesvtl e Harvey 77 Perry 45
Parma His Holy Name 68 Elyna Cath
47
Parma Val ey Forge 64
Parma
Normandy 60 OT
Plymouth 64 Ashland Mapleton 2a
Pomeroy Me1gs 68 Waterlord 56
Portsmouth Clay 53 Willow Woo d
Symmes Valle~ 45
\ Proctorville Farland 50 Coal Grove
Dawson Bryant 47
Ravenna SE 76 Mantua Crestwpod 50
Rtchmond Hts 68 Columb1a 46
R dgevllle Cl'1r shan 69 M1am1 Valley 57
Rocky Atver 61 Avon 30
Rocky Aver Lutheran W 73 Beachwood
50
Rootstown 49 Mogadore F eld 35
S Charleston SE 50 Spnng Ke nton
Ridge 35
Sandusky 71 Avon Lake 54
Shadystde 70 Belmont Un1on Local 42
S1dney Lell man 73 Newton 29
Solon 59 Barberton 54
Spr ng NW 65 LewiStown lnd1an Lake
0 53
Spr ng Shawnee 69 Sprmg NE 62
St Henry 49 Convoy Creslvlew 44 OT
Stow 47 Chagnn Falls Kenstof'l 46
Sugarcreek Garaway 58 Magnolia
Sandy Valley 44
•
Sullivan Black Rtver 73 N Aidgevtlle
Lake R1dge 45
Summ t Stat on L1ckmg Hts
59
MHiersport 42
Sycamore Mol'1awk 62 Manon Elg1n 56
Tallmadge 62 Green 54
Tol Scott 60 Ftndiay 49
Trotwood Madtson 50 Dav Chammade
Julienne 43
Troy Chnslian 87 Mtddletown Chnsltan
43
Tuscarawas Cent Cath 52 W lq.fayetle
Ridgewood 41
'TWinsburg 74 Ravenna 69
Upper Arlington 54 Dublin Jerome 41
Upper Sandusky 88 nfftn Co lumbiBn 77
UtiCa 16 Howard E Knox 50
W Jefferson 53 N Lewtsburg Tnad 51
Warsaw R1ver V1ew 6-4 Mtllersburg W
Holmes 51
Wellington 66 Medma B1.1ckeye 59
Whttehouse
Anthony
Wayne 75
Defrance 65 •
Willard 66 Shelby 63 OT
Wtlmlngton 49 Washtngton C H 47
Wrndham 69 Streetsboro 49
Wooster Tnway 84 Can T1mken 66
Zanesville 64 Grove C ty 53
Zanesville Maysvtlie 52 Phtlo 42
Zoarvill e Tuscarawas Valley 40 Akr
Coventry 37
Ohio High School Girls Basketbsll
Tueaday a Resulte
AshvtUe Teays Valley 53 Pataskala
Watkrns Memortal 46
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 53 Oak
Harbor 40
Bloomdale Elmwood 61 Mtllbury Lake
35
Bluffton 65 Delphos Jefferson 60
Bowling Green 40 Rossford 34 OT
Brookville 53 New Pans National Tra1ISO
Bucyrus Wynford 52 Ontano 32
Burton Berksh1re 52 Orwe ll Grand Valley
31
Cln Clark Montesson 73 Ctn Country

Day 46
Cin Summit 29 St Bernard 27
Cln Withrow 75 Ctn Aiken i 6
C1n Woodward 61 C1n SCPA 28
C n Wyom1ng 26 Ctn Madetra 24
Cle Cent Cath 77 Lakewood St
Augusttne 27
Cle Chnst1an Commumty 72 Cle
Chnst an Fam tly 2
Cle E Tech 46 Cle Lincoln West 33
Cle Hts Lutheran E 64 Thompson
Ledgemont 60
Cle JFK 91 Cle ML~ ~0
Cle John Marsha 1 62 Cle Max Hayes
23
Cle Rhodes 72 Cia E 65
Cle S 69 C e Coli nwood 53
Coldwater 47 Lima Sr 35
Collins Western Reserve 59 Greenw1ch
S Cent 22
Cols Brookhaven 85 Cols Centennial
29
Cols E 72 Cols Beechcrott 3S
Cols Eastmoor 83 Cols Bnggs 31
Cols Independence 68 Cols Afncentnc
57
Cols Mifflin 85 Cols ltnden McKtnley
56
Cols Nortl'11and 45 Cols Whetstone 30
Cols S 61 Cols Manon Franklm 57
Cols Schoof for Grrls 55 Gahanna Cots
Academy 46
Colurribus Grove 61 N Baltnnore 44
Copley 53 Medtna H1ghland 45
Cresthne 43 Bucyrus 34
Oat Meadowdale 66 Day Dunbar 56
Eaton 42 Lewtsbmg Trl County N 32
Fairport Harbor Hardtng 55 Cornerstone
Chr 35
Freder cktown 47 Mt Gtlead 34
Fremont St Joseph 39 Norwalk St Paul
31
Ft Loramie 52 Ft Recovery 35
Gahanna 52 Westervtlle S 43
Gtbsonburg 62 Kansas Lakota 47
Gtlead Chnsttan 42 Fremont Temple
Chns1tan 2t
Gorham Fayette 61 H cksvtlle 48
Ham ton 59 C n Purcell Marian 51
Htlltard Davtdson 65 Spnng N 30
Jeromes'vtlle Hillsdale 43 Dalton 27
Kalida 71 Deftance Ttnora 28
London Mad1son Plams 41 Cedarville 32
Mansfteld St Peters 52 Mansfteld
Chnsttan 40
Mana Stetn Manon Local 56 Calma 39
Med1na Chr 49 Mogadore Chr 37
Metamora Evergreen 60 Hill top 43
Mtller City 62 McComb 22
Mtllersburg W Holmes 49 Lexmgton 45
Morral Ridgedale 46 Cardtngton Lmcoln
34
New Washmgton Buckeye Cent 46 N
Robtnso n Col Crawford 40
Ohto Deaf 39 Musktngum Chnsl an 35
Ottovtlle 73 ~andora-Gllboa 31
_
Painesville Rrverslde 63 Madison 3o
Parma Padua 51 Eastlake N 36
Pemberville Eastwood 77 Genoa 50
Perry 57 Chardon 53
Plain Ctty Jonathan Alder 69 Cols
HamtHon Twp 39
Preble Shawnee 4 i New Lebanon Dtx1e

from Page 81
pomts and ftve asststs, wh1le
Jake Nease and Dan n
Teaford put together good
msode games wtth eleven
poonts each, whole Brad
Crouch added sox, Derek
Teaford ftve, Duston Bnnager
ftve, and Tyler Roberts two
Neaseos II rebounds gave
htm a hard-fought doubledouble performance
In what looked hke ot
would be an offensiVe explosoon by both clubs, Southern
took a 23-18 lead m the first
penod Randolph led the
. Tornadoes woth eoght, but
much of the Southern success
was because of an established msode-outsode game
Teaford and Nease each had
four from the post m the fray
Southern's Bnnager also had
a bog three pomte~ Waugh
and Bayless led the Rebels m
the streak with sox and five
respecl!vely, whtle Cade had
four and Wnght three
In the second frame, South
Galha developed some
rhythm with Wnght and
Skodmore getting some good
floor tome Cade was m foul
trouble and dtd not score a
pmnt, endmg the half wtth
JUSt four pomts
Southern led 35-33 at the
mterm.-soon
In the thud penod, Cade
put on a show Cade was
aggresstve on both ends of

Red men
from Page 81
The game stayed withm
12-14 poonts most of the
mght Wtlberforce would get
as closeas none pomts on
four separate occasoons but
could come no closer than
that
Roo held a 39-32 edge m
rebounds and Was plus-3 m
turnover margm (15 18)
Roo shot 46 percent (23-of50) from the held and 35
percent (6-of-17) from threepomt land The one trouble-

38
Sandusky St Marys 32 Lakes1de
Danbury 31
Spencerville 60 Rockford Parkway 42
Spnng Emmanuel Chnsttan 53 l m~
Temple Chrtstlan 45
~tryker 31 Wauseon 29
Swan10n 38 Pett SVllle 25
Sylvama NOrthv1ew 61 Perrysburg 43
Sylvanta Southvtew 53 holland Spnng
32
Union Ctty ( ln d) 52 Union City
Mississinewa Valley 36
Van Buren 44 Fostor•a St Wendelln 40
Van Wert Lmcolnvrew 49 Antwerp 40
Versatlles 51 Delphos St Johns 42
Washmgton C H Mtamt Trace 39,
Clrtlevllle 31
Westervtlle N 47 New Albany 41
Whttehouse
Anthony
Wayne
53
Maumee48
Worthington Christian 72
Marton
Pleasant 49

Matta
from Page 81

Women's College Basketball

Redwomen hoops down Wilberforce·
Bv MARK

WtutAMS

Specoal to the Sentonel
RIO GRANDE - The Umversoty of
Roo Gr3lll!e Red women basketball team,
ranked 16th m the latest NAlA Dovosoon
II Top 25 poll, squared off wtth vtsmng
Wolberforce on Tuesday evenmg at the
Newt Ohver Arena, gammg an 80 71
hard fought wm m Amencan Modeast
Conference South Dtvosoon action
Roo Grande (16-4, 5- l AMC South)
played a sohd first half, shootmg 50 per
cent (14-of-28) from the fteld m the
opemng 20 mmutes of actoon S~mor
guard Angel Allen contmued her out
standmg pli1y of the late, sconng lO first
half pomts to guode the Redwomen to a
38-30 advantage at the break Allen
ended the mght woth 20 pomts
Jumor center Ttffame Hager also
played extremely well, sconng eoght of
her game-htgh 21 pomts m the first half
of play Hager also npped down etght
rebounds and handed out five assosts

Semor forward Alkoa Fountam recorded
a double double woth 15 pomts and II
rebounds Jumor forward Jessoca
Worwell chtpped m II pomts off the
bench
Sophomore guard Carlesha Chambers
contmues to develop at the pmnt guard
spot, dostnbutong a game-hogh stx asSISts
Wolberforce (7-5, 3-4 AMC South)
recetved lantasuc efforts from Shamarah
Thomas and Jasmm Jones Both players
scored m double figures Thomas tossed
m ll of her team-hogh 18 pomts and
Jones notched 10 of her 17 pomts m the
first 20 mmutes Jones registered a double-double as she collected 10 rebounds
Two other Wt lberforce pi ayers
notched double ftgures wtth Kamsha
Coward sconng I4 poonts and Kmdra
Jay lor addmg 10
It was fast placed game wuh both stdes
tallymg
numerous
turnovers
Wtlberforce totaled 19 turnovers whtle
Roo commotted 17 mtscues on the mght
The Redwomen bUJlt the lead to 12
pomts (61-49) m the second half and

looked to be on control The Lady
Bulldogs were a long way from fimshed,
however They clawed thetr way back
mto the game and pulled to wtthm two
pomts on the final two mmutes
Hager scored two b1g hoops late to seal
the deal for Roo Grande
RIO held a shght edge on the glass, 4240
The Redwomen shot 49 percent (31of-63) from the field and dtd not make a
three-pomt attempt They were 18-of-25
(72 percent) from the free throw !me
Wtlberforce countered With 38 percent
(27-of-71) from the floor, 35 percent (6of-17) from beyond the three-pomt arc
and 61 percent ( 11-of-18) from the hne
RIO os 3-0 on the current home stand
and woll now prepare for the rematch
wtth Cedarvolle woth AMC South
supremacy on the hne Thursday at the
Newt
Cedarvolle defeated Roo, 88 75, Nov
30 at Cedarvolle It IS the only conference
loss of the season to date for the
Redwomen Game tome os set for 6 p m

Bucks
from Page 81

No.5 Buckeyes trounce Michigan, 84-56 .
ANN ARBOR, Mtch (AP) - Catty
Matter needed less than 5 mmutes to
erase any thoughts of a Mochtgan upset
-and send Ohoo State to Its best start m
20 years
Matter scored IS of her 28 pomts durmg a 4 50 stretch m the first half and No
5 Oh1o State erased an early deficit to
rout the Wolvennes 84-56 on Tuesday
mght
The Buckeyes (15-2, 3-l B1g Ten)
haven't played thts well to stan a season
smce the 1984-85 team went 28-2 before
losmg m the Eastern Regtonal final
"I thought the key was that we made
the extra pass and got some good floor
spacmg," Ohto State coach Jim Foster
satd "When you do that, 11 can be a very
simple -arne "
Mich1gan (4·12, 0-5) hung tough early
and led 19-17 wtth 6 55 to play m the
opemn$ half But the Buckeyes scored
14 stratght pomts m JUSt more than two
minutes to erase the modest deficu
Matter- Ohio State's all-ttme leader
m 3-pomters and 3·potnt percentage hn tTve consecuttve shots from beyond
I

the arc dunng a 2'1-6 run at the end of the
first half Matter finoshed 8-for-1 I from
3 pomt range, !ymg her career htgh
"Eoght for II ts pretty darn dommant,"
Burnett satd
Jess1ca Davenport opened the run wnh
a layup and Brandoe Hoskms htt a 3poonter before Matter took over By the
end of the half, the BUckeyes owned a
46-25 lead
"I really thmk, hke coach satd, when
you make that extra pass It really opens
thongs up," Matter satd "I had some
great looks tomght"
The Wol vennes had no answer for
Ohto State's balanced attack When the
Wolvertnes cheated outstde, the
Buckeyes pushed the ball mstde to the 6·
foot-4 Davenport When Michtgan collap:;ed and fronted Davenport, Matter
and Hoskons were alone outstde
Davenport and Hosktns each fimshed
wtth 19 potnts
"We pnde ourselves on defense,"
Mtchtgan coach Cheryl Burnett satd,
"but you dtdn't see that tomght"
Tabotha Pool had 23 pomts for

Mtchogan,' whtch has lost etght consecuuve games Teammate Ta'Shoa Walker
added 11
Ohoo- State shot 50 percent (12-of-24)
from 3-pomt range and 56 7 percent
from the field
"Once we started spreadmg the ball
around, there were far more opportumues," Foster sa1d
The Wo\vennes fell to 6-38 all-tome
agwnst the Buckeyes.

Meigs eighth grade.
boys fall to Alexander
STAPI' RII'ORT
sporta 0 mydallyaentlnel com

ALBANY - The Metgs etghth grade
boys basketball team lost to Alexander m
overtime, 46-41
The Marauders were led by Aaron
Cordell wtth 15 pomts and Damoen Wtse
wtth eoght

month, OhiO State announced
11 would self-ompose a oneyear postseason ban on the
team Ohoo State Presodent
Karen Holbrook sa1d the ban
and O' Bnen's fonng were
steps taken to mol!gate further sanctiOns agamst the
program
At the lime the postseason
ban was announced, Ohoo
State extended Matta's term
another year through the
2011-12 season
Getger satd he dod not thonk

1

we JUS I wanted to make hom
work on the other end "
Ryan saod of Dials
Dials led Oh10 State wtth
15 pOints but played JUSt 24
mmutes due to foul trouble
He scored lO pomts m the
openmg 7 40 of the game,
but pocked up hos second
foul and sat out the final
6 08 of the ftrst half He
ptcked up hos thml. and
fourth fouls early m the second half
Wt\kmson was 8-of-8
from the fteld m the second
half and scored I0 straoght
pomts for Wosconsm at one
po10t Wtth Doals on the
be,? ch
d
fb
1 mosse a 1ot o unmes
10 the ftrst half, satd
·woJkmson, who fimshed 12of-18 from the field "The
~uys kept giVIng me the ball
m good position to fimsh
and I knocked some of them
down Once I knocked down
a couple, I JUSt got on a roll "
The Buckeyes' offense
also struggled without Dtals
Matt Sylvester had 14
pomts off the bench for Ohto
State, but no other player
scored 10 double figures
Tony
Stockman, the
Buckeyes' second-leadtng
scorer at 14 6 points per
game, fimshed wtth mne on
4-of-17 shooung.
"Playin~ wuhout Terence
1s tough, satd Ohto State
coach Thad Matta "We have
to find a way to sttll be producllve (wtthout htm)."

the floor and garnered 14 oe
hos 27 second-half pomts m
the run to give hos club a 5751 advantage
That set up a CadeRan.dolph battle m the finale.
Randolph got SHS back m
the ~arne woth none pomts on
treyts, whtle Crouch added
another from the opposite
side Cade, however, countered with 5-6 at the hne and
four foeld goals, mciudmg
those that lea up to the 72-6S
wm Curt Waugh had the
only other Rebel field goal m
the last penod
Southern hot 27-51 overall,
hntmg 18-31 twofs, 9-20
threefs, and 5-8 at the hne
Southern had 22 rebounds
(Nease II), seven steals
(Randolph 2, Darm Teaford
2), 13 assosts, 21 turnovers,
and 14 steals
South Galha htt 27 51
overall, htttmg 14-38 twofs,
3-10 threefs, and gomg 15-21
at the !me South Galha had 9
assists (Waugh 3), 31
rebounds (Cade 12), 11 steals
(Bayless 3), ten turnovers,
and 15 fouls
South Galha won the
reserve game 45-42 led by
Steven Call with 13, Demck;
Beaver woth ll Mochael
!'ope etght, and Travos
McCarty, seven
Ryan '
Chapman led Southern woth
lO pomts, N1ck Buck had
eoght, and Patnck Johnson
mne for Southern
Southern play host to;
Tnmble Fnday, whole South
Galha travels to Cross Lanes
Chnstoan
some stat for the Rto Grande
coachtng staff, 54 percent
( 19-of-35) from the charoty
stnpe
Wolberforce
countered
w1th 41 percent (24-of-58)
shootong from the fteld and
50 percent (5 of- I 0) from the
foul hoe
Roo IS now 8-0 at home on
the season
The Redmen now gear up
for the rematch wtth
Cedarvolle on Thursday The
Yellow Jackets beat Rw
Grande, 92 72, Nov 30 on
Cedarvtlle Game time ts set
for 8 p m followmg the
women's game
It was a maJor problem that
Matta had not stgned the contract
"The deal pomts are essentially sohd, I thonk," Geoger
saod "I don' t thmk there's
anythmg gomg on "
Matta, 37, has a 114-34
record m 4 I /2 seasons as a
head coach at Butler, Xavter
and Ohoo State He gmded
Xavter to the NCAA's
Atlanta Regoonal champoonshop game a year ago
before losong 66-63 to Duke
Geoger also confirmed that
when htred, Matta receoved a
$250,000 s1gmng bonus to
buy out the rest of hts Xavoet
contract
Matta saod he wasn't surpnsed to see the Badgers
step up thetr play woth
Tucker out
"Guys step up," Matta
satd "Thts os college basketball They're gettmg thetr
educatoon paod for, they better be able ro step up"
Wosconsm used a 26-9 run
that stretched over both
halves to take control of tht:
game The Badgers led by as
many as 13 pomts m the secbnd half, but Ohoo State used
a 10-3 run to cut Wosconson's
lead to 61-57 wtth 242
remammg after a basket by
J J Sullinger
Wtlkmson answered wttll
a 3-poonter woth 2 08 left
and Wosconsm's Kammron
Taylor hot a free throw to
gove the Badgers a 65-57
lead woth 1 41 left
But Ohw State scored the
next four poonts, mcludmg &lt;1
3-pomter by Sylvester, to
pull wtthln 65-61 wtth 55
seconds left
Hanson was 5-of-6 from
the free-throw hoe m the
ftnal 45 seconds as the
Badgers held off the
Buckeyes to extend thet~
dommance at home, even
though Ryan downplayed
the streak afterward
"I really haven't talked
about II, and that's true,
Ryan satd, "I JUSt don't let
my mtnd wander Maybe it's
due to lack of capacity.
"I think our guys know
They're prour;l. Our fans our
proud, they're every btt a
part of thts "
The Badgers haven't lost
at Kohl Center smce Dec 4,
2002, when Walle Forest
beat them 90-80

The Paily Sentinel •,Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, January 12,'2005

utrtbune- Sentinel - l\e tster
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G•ll., Count}' OH

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HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

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NOUNCEMENTS

rI

As of January t 1 2005 we
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• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
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• Ads Should Run 7 Days

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

AN

/}eacllfire.f'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
HELPWANJID
lwrlght@1c

net

Black &amp; LA·n·E·,·,·e,·le.nt·w·a·y-to-ea'""
rn

Wh te Border Col he Female
Pup 3/months old st1ll
needs two senes ol shots
last seen at home on Henrys
Ad across from aeale
School She was 8 Chtlds
Chnstmas G ft &amp; became
m1ssmg on that Childs
Btrthday Please help Nikki~
ftnd her way home Reward

moneY The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Ass1stant Manager local
electronic/cellular store pa1d
vacatiOn &amp; holidays salary
pl~:~s comm1sston
send
resume to Oatly Senttnel
PO Box 729 11 Pomeroy
_o_n_4_57_6_9_ _ _ __

Money 101' tnforma!IOn 01d
you wttness or has someone
bragged about cutting or
keymg a new red N1ssan
350Z sports car? The cnrne
(304)675 7545 or (304)593- AVON I All Areas To Buy or
occurred at Skyline Bowltng
Sell
Shuley Spears 304
Lanes last Saturday ntght
675 1429
There s a reward Be
an ace ano er ay a
anonymous PLEASE ca I
Debbie (740)446 2451
your current Job?

~:r::::-------.., Absolute Top Dollar

us

Sliver and Gold Cams
___
Proofsets Gold Rmgs U S
Currency M T S Cotn Shop
1 Lab Puppy must go th1s 151
Second
Avenue
week to a good home Gall polls 740-446 2842
j304)882 3554
Wanted Land tn Galha Co
4 male 4 lemale m1xed Htlls &amp; valleys okay Ca ll
breed pupptes to a good (740)388 8228
home Take one or take
I \11'1 0\ \ II \ I
etght JUSt lake one All must
" IH\HI "
gol (740)256 1419
AKC male Chocolate Lab t
year old (740)446 1062

We are offenng up to
$8/hr w1lh no expenence
and up lo '$9 25/hr wtth
qualified expenence

t..------_.1

1110
•

Jo n us 1n recru t ng new
members for the NRA or
recrtuttng volunteers for
maJor non proftt
orgamzattons
Don t miss out on this
great opportunity!

Female black Lab m1x 9
monthS old wormedlshots Addresses wanted tmmedt
very lov1ng needs room to atelyt No expenence neces
run {740)245 9677
sary Work at home Call toll
(405 )447 6397
Free 2 year old Engltsh
Pomter fema le (7 40 )388
0182
Set of queen s1ze boJC spnng
and mattress (740 )446
1062

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Call tod11y to schedule
an tntervlew·

1-877--463-6247
BKt 2455

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale
Announcement
Antiques

725
030
530
440
080

&gt;

Apartments for Rent

Auction and Flea Market
Auto Parts &amp; Accessor1es
760
Auto Repair
770
Autos tor Sale
710
Boals &amp; Motors tor Sale,
750
Building Supplies •
550
Business and Buildings
340
Business Opportunity
210
Business Training, ., .,
., 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment
780
Cards otThanks
010
Child/Elderly Care
190
Electrical/Refrigeration
840
Equipment tor Rent
480
Excavating
830
Farm Equipment
610
Farms tor Rent..
.430
Farms tor Sale
-330
For Lease
490
For Sale.. • ,.
585
For Sate or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Fumlahed Rooma • ..
450
General Hauling
.850
Giveaway
.040
Happy Ada
050
Hay &amp; Grain
.640
Help Wanted ....
.. .. 110
Home Improvements • .,
810
Homes tor Sale.. • ......... .... ... •• • •••• •..... 31 0
Household Goada
, 510
Housu tor Rent
.. 410
In Memoriam
....... 020
Insurance
130
Lawn 1o Garden Equipment .... ..,
.. 660
Uveotock •
.. .630
Lost and Found
, 060
Loll 1o Acreage
... .350
Miscellaneous
.170
Mlocellaneous MerchandlH .. , .... .. .. 540
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Hameo tor Rent
.420
Mobile Homeo tor Sale
..320
Money to Loan •
..
• 220
Motorcycteo &amp; 4 WhMieno, , ..,. .,. ......'740
Muolcal lnotrumenta
570
Peraonale •

Pall tor sale •
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Proll11lanat Sllrvlcel.
Redlo, TV lo CB Repair
RHI Eollta Wanted.....
Schoola Instruction
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer
Slluallono W111ted... ...
Space lor Rant
Sporting Goodo
suv ator sate
Truck• tor Sate
Uphalotery..
Vano For Slllo
Wanted to Buy
.........., ....
Wonted to Buy- Farm Supj)lteo
Wanted To Do
Wonted to Rant
Yard Sate· Galllpotlo
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle , •
Yard Sole-PI Pleannt

•

.oos

580
820
•......230
.160

...... 3410
• ., 150
• 860
•... , 120
480
.... 520
720
715
870
730
.090
620
180
.. 470
072
.074
076

,_, ...

We have full time and
parl·llme positions
available now wtth a
complete benef•ts
package

www lnfocision com
C lass A COL dnver w1lh
Mechanu::al skil ls needed
call or apply @ Gheen
Rentals (740)992 143a

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE

APAKI'\ItXIS

fUll

1-A'?-P-'"\
ol:l 2005 by N EA Inc
\NR.l~

www comics

com

11'70
NOW HIRING ResCare

a

lead1ng prov1der to 1nd1v du
als wtth mental retardat on
and developmental d1sabil
t1es 15
ookmg lor a
AN/SuperVISOr II nterested
please call Kelly Chne at
{740)645 1539
or
lax
resume to (740)446 3987
An Equal Qpportuntly
Employer FIMI DN
Paramed cs
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354
Jackson P1ke Gall polts

~MNFDlN IF'"·tb-0-~-US.INESS
___.

H1gh
School
Juniors
Semora and Pno r Sarv1ce
you can f1ll vacant pos1t1ons
tn the West Vtrgtma Armv
Nat1onal Guard If you are
between the ages ol 17 35
or have pnor mtttary serv
1ce you wont want to pass
th sup For OpportunitieS n
your area call
304 675
5837

~

(l5

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bustness wtlh pea
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
a1t unttl you have 1nvest
ated theoffenn

l!li

~~::~~:::::~
MONEY
IO LoAN

lulil ~Aor&lt;riDDo I ~=:;;;;;:~
••NOTil:E**
A'

Clmsttan lady would love to
Satellite
Tech n1c1ans he p care for elderly 1n then
arrow Smart Contact th
Needed Must have own home (740)388 9645 call
h10 DIVISIOn of Fmanc1a
Established Healing Cooling
lnst tuttan s
Off1ce
o
Company tn Galha Co look truck good dr VlnQ record 8am 9pm
full
hmo
w/
Benelt!s
pad
onsumer
Affa1r
mg
for
EKpenenced
EFORE you refmanc
Install ers &amp; techmclans 11 tramlng Industry compe11 eBay CQns1gnmen11
ttve wages II you have a Do
ur home or obta n a loan
In terested send resume to More Earn More Work 1Will se l your stuff on eBay
EWARE of requesls to
CLA Box 548 c/o Gallipolis Ethtc
You re
a
Good My servtees tnclude PJck up
ny large advance pay
Dally Tribu ne PO Box 469 Candtdate Call M F 9AM of the item valuation pro,.
ants of lees or 1nsurance
Gallipolis OH 45631
5PM 877 682 8324 OptiOn lesslonal photography wnt
all
!he
Olftce
o
Full ttme front desk pas han 8
ng clear descnpttons ol the
Must have outgomg person
tam handhng questtons
ahty Apply 10 person Wanted and needed n nvo1c1ng and payment col
Holiday Inn No phone calls Pomeroy Ohto Fu t1me ltve lec110n and u ttmately ~htp
n care taker lor spec1alty ptnQ the 1tem All you have to
HELP WI\N:rED Customer bed and breakfast rt you are do 1s wa t tor a check• A min
Serv1ce Support Clerk PfT of English Welch lnsh 1mum expected value ol $50
needed lor growmg local decent and an accent 15 the only requ1remenl If
bustness Please stop by or enjoy cooking house kee}l you are tnteresled please
send resume to
McD sh ng and general canng for contact me at (740)645
LLc 2121 Jackson Avenue others thi S pos1t on ts made 0065
~
Po1nt Pleasant
for you We oHer a salary - - - - - - - - - - : : - - - - L _ _
Jtm s Carpentry
Home health ad needed tor P us and upsca Ie enwon We do remOdeling and most

238 Ftrst Avenue 1BA 1
SAVE SAVE SAVE
k1tchen turn tshed
Stock models at old pr ces bath
2005 models arr vmg Now R1ver v1ew New carpet and
Coles
Mob1 e
Homes pa nt Easy wa lk downtown
15266 US 50 East Athens No pets $350 month plus
House 3 Bedroom 1 1/2 on o 45701 (740)592 1972 ut httes Aeterence depostt
Bath Heat Pump
new Where You Get Your (740)446 4926
Carpet Wtndows &amp; Roo! Moneys Worth ~
2br Apr t 112ba Ut1l1t es
R1ver V1ew 12 Sm1th St No
Pa1d near PVH ca I before
Money Down to quality ng
Bpm (304)675 8872
Buyer $425/month why Rent
(304)675 2749
3
room
and
bath
stove/retr gerato1
down
Buelness
Opportunitysta1 rs all uttlttes pa1d 46
IORIIDIT
Three rental propert1es for
O!tve
S1reet
S450
sale Duplex each w•th 3
(740)446 &gt;G945
2
bedroom
1
bath
$300
8/A UR 0/R Kttchen Bath
month Cal (740)446 348t Apartmenl lor Rent $350
&amp; Porcl'l House 3 BIR UR
K tchen Bath Cottage BIR 2 or 3 bedroom house tn plus depoSit Water &amp; Sewer
pa1d phone (304)675 6668
K ttcl'1en
Bath
Re ntal
Pomeroy for ent no pets
rncome lor all three App rox (740)992 5858
APART
BEAUTIFUL
$900 per month Prtce for aU
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
three $75 000
Located 3 bedroom house for rent
PRICES AT JACKSON
104 106 7th Street Po tnt Horse properly 3 m les ffom
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
P leasam
(304)675 2495 Holzer on 160 Just remod
Dnve lrom $344 to $442
eled
after 6 00
can
after
Spm
Watk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
(740)645 6157 (740)446
740 446 2568
Equal
2012
HOJ;JSinQ Opportuntt',l
3 bedroom house for rent Clean Ground Floor 2br
Call (740}446 1279
WID nookup Ref &amp; Dep no
3
bedroom hOuse
1n Pets (3041675 5162
All realeateta advertlalng
Pomeroy depostt &amp; refe r CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
In lhla newspaper Ia
ences requ1red no an1ma!s ED &amp; AFFOROABLE f'o.-.
aub,ect to the Federal
(740)949 7004
'Townhouse
apartments
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
and/or
small
houses
FOR
which makaa It Illegal to
3 bedroom 1 1/2 bath
advertlu any
house
2 story $350 RENT Cal (740)44 1 1111
preference llmHation Of
(740)446 7620
depOSit for app lcatton &amp; mtormat10n
dtseriminatlon b11ecl on
requ~red
references For Lease One bedroom
rece, color, religion sex
(740)441 9672
n ce 2nd floor apt Corner
familial status or national
Ptne
and Second Large
ortgtn or any Intention to
3 br house $450 00 a mon
k tchen wtlh d n ng area
make any such
+ S300 00 dep 304 sa2
New range
refngerator
preference, limitation or
2858
discrimination
Water ncluded References
Clean 3 bedroom no pets requtred $300/mo Secunty
Thll new1paper will not
No pets
Call
Reference &amp; depostt Patriot depoSit
knowingly accept
(740)446 4425 or (740)446
area Call (740)379 2540
actvertiument• for real
3936
I!II!Me which 11 In
House 3 bedroom 2 baths
violation or the law Our
ava1lable now
Patnot Gractous liVIng 1 and 2 bed
reader• are hereby
(740)379 2254
room apartments at Vtllage
Informed that all
Manor
and
R1verstde
dwelllnga advertised In
'Racme $500 depos t $500 Apartments n Middleport
lhhl newapaper are
rent plus gas &amp; electnc From S295 $444 Cal l 740
available on an equel
(water trash sewer 1ncluded 992 5064 Equal Hous ng
opportuntty bell!ls
10 rent) 4 bedroom &amp; 2 lull Oppor1umt1es
bath ca/heat must have ref
- - - - - - - - erences
(740)9492217 Nee 2 BR apt Certenary
7am 10pm
Ad water11ras1'1 patd fur
Inventory Blowout
kttchen
nrshed
All s ngle w1des must go!
Racme 3 or 4 bedroom washer/dryer hookup no
Oakwood
Homes
house 1 bath gas heat AC pets
depos1t1references
Barbour sville
(304)736
washer/dryer large back requ red
$375
month
3409
yard $450 deposit S550 (740)446 9442
rent plus ut1hltes HUD ::-'~-------­
accepted (740)992 2335
Tara
TownhOu,se
Apartments Very Spx1ous

r

r;;:::::===:::::
l!i

MOBFOIRLEn~C:\tE'i

___

IU.l"'t

I

_.S;;ER;;,\'IOSiiiiiiiio-,.J

local area lull ttme/part time
plea.se call between 8AM
4 30PM (740) 992 2971
lmmed1ate
Openrngs
Restdantta l
Treatment
Faclli~ tor boys now hiring
Youth Worker posilton Pa td
Med•ca l Insurance
Ca I
between 9 OOam 4 oopm
(740)379 9083
LICENseD SOCIAL
WORKER
~ookR h "I
0 ve.ur
e au ttatron
I
enter s now accepttng
resumes tor the posttton or
Director of Soctal ServiCes
• qua II•"
T ue
1l~:rV can d1date
must be a LS W possessmg
strong verbal and wntten
communlcatton skll s
MecfiC8td Med1care and
MDS knowledge Long
ter m care expenence pre
ferred but not reqwed
Ouahfled candtdates may
send resumes to Charla
Brown McGutre AN LNHA
Admlntstrator 333 Page
Street Middleport Oh10
•5760 EOE

c

Rrl'T

HouSFS

Need ng more money to
cover the btlls?

GlvF.AWA\

HOMES
FOR SALE

ment lifestyle Non smoking
.....
non d nn k tng cu Ituri:'V per
son(s } destred Please con
tact us at Dr and Mrs M
Dellavalle 8227 Blueberrr
Drive New Port RIChey Fl
34653
727 808 4021
DAOOKTA@ att net
-------WANTED Part t1me position
available to ass sl lndtvtdu
als wtth mental retardatton
at a group "ome m 8 1d'"""l~
27 5 "rslwk" 4 10 3Dpm-F.rl
''
8 45am 6 45pm Sal 9am
6pm Sun Must have htgh
school dtploma/GED valid
dnver 5 license and ttue e
years good drtvmg expert
ence $ 7 00/hr Pre employ
ment Drug Testing
Send
resume
Buckeye
10
Community Servtcas PO
Box 604
Jackson OH
45640 Deadline for appl
cants 01 /14/05
Equal
Opportunity Employer

OIRECTV
Free DVD Player
Fret HBO &amp; C1namax
(740}446 2506 ( 740 )367
Free Professiona l
':04_3_7___-::--:::-:::-lnstallat on
Snuggle Bugs Childeare
up to 4 Rooms
1140 2nd Ave Galhpol s
Call 1-800.523 7556
Openmgs all shtfts securtty ----;---1-or_d_e,_a_' ' ' - -vtdeo cameras for every
ones seturtty Installed tn Jewelry Buy Sell Gold
latter January Open house DlamonCfs
Gemstones
every Sunday after cl'1urch Repa 1r Appraisals Gem
Test ng
Graduate
1pm to 5 30pm Please call "
(740)446-7122 fof brochure Gemologtst
Jeweler
(740)645-6365 or (740)448tnfcrmation
r.IZI!'"":':~":"':~~~-:, 3080
• • ClflwEu&gt;F.RLCAKt:~
==----~TURNED DOWN ON
1
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W nl
Oaycare prov der has open
1 888 582 3345
lngs Spring Valley area
I~ I \ I I " I \ I I
Home certtfled CPR fenced
y~rd meals Call (740)446
6340

2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA 1
112 Bath Newly Carpeted
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Patte Start $385/Mo No
Pets Lease Plus Secunty
Depos t Requtred Days
740 446 3481
Evenings
740-367 0502

any unfintshed work also
small
tree
removal

I

----~-

take care of your
one tn your hOme
WANT EO
Satellite and
15 years experience 10
Broad Techn ctans Must
yea rs state tested Call
have own truck good dnvrng
Y110nne at (740)949-1029 or
record FIT Industry com
(740)lm 1092
pe!IU'.·e wages P lease call
Need extra money? Become
or stop by Mc:Dtsl'1 212~
an Avon Representative lor
II'\ \\t 1\1
Jackson
Avenue
Pomt
just $5 Contact Sheri
Pleasant 675 5100
(740)448-3744 or (740)645
2966

Wtll

belo~Jed

Now h1rlng Smtllng wattress
es Apply 1n person HOI1day
Inn No phone calls

Galllpolla Career Collqi
(C8reers Ck&gt;se To Home)
Wanteef Bar Ma1ds Double Call TOday! 7 40 -«6 4367
1 BOO 214 0452
D Lounge Pt Pleasant WV
~ gal !pOl ~ rt~erco~ege com
Apply tn Person 10 OOam to
5 OOpm See Davy wills Ace ed ted Membe Accrecl ~ng
Counetl ~ I~ COII&amp;gea
E~tpenence a plus wtll tra n
and Schl;x)l• 1274B

•

OCAL
ESTAB~ISHE
USINESS (15 YEARS)
ERY UNIQUE/NO COM
ETITION WILL TRAIN
7~)992-&lt;1236 (7401 992

45e

1982 Shultz 14x70 $6 500
coli (304)675 6349

00 a mon
s3250b r00 $350
dep 304 882 2858

j

SPACE

For rent 2 and 3 oearoom
Fl)R lbNr
mobile homes starttn~ at L~--ooiiliiitiiiiiio-.,1
1995 14)(72 Indies Sultan $260 00 per mon tn Call
For Lea.se Offtce or retail
All electrtc CIA completely 1740)992 2 157
spaces 1n ~Jery good cond1
furntshed 2 bedroom 2 ~--=----------­ liOn Downtown Galltpohs
bath lots ol extras Rented N1Ce 2 bedrOI:lm mob1le
lot can stay Less than 2 home No pets 1740)446 App rolo. 1600 sq ft each 1
or 2 baths Lease pnce
mtles from town on State 2003 or (740)446 1409
negot able to encou rage
Route 141
$1 2 500 Call
bustnes&amp;
Call
(740)4411583 or (304)593 Two Mobtle Homes lor Rent new
Both two bedrooms
One (740)446 4425 or (7 40)446
5393
w1th den &amp; pullou t tn hvmg 3936
room
$350 &amp; $450 No
\II H« II \'\111"1
t995 Clayton DouOie Wide
52X24 Jbr 2balh Total Pets Depostt &amp; references "!111!""~~:":'::~":"'....,
Electr&lt; $22 DOD (304)675 required Located tn Point
Pleasant
Cali (304 )6 75
~
2907
3423

r,o

r

HOUSEl-tOLD

2000 Oakwood 32x76 home
APA~
For Sale 12 ptece sentng of
for sale W1H sale on land
f'()R RJ....'VJ'
Nortak1 Ch1na closed pat
1 Bedroom House on 5 contract Owner wUI tinance ~~--lllliiiioiiiiiio-r' terr\ 1n t995 Never used
acres 1n country City water wtth 20% down Call for 1 and 2 bedroom apa rt $450 hsteef around $1100
cablt $28 000 (304)773 details (740)446~1
ments furniShed and untur (740)992 3487
5103
ntshed securr!y depos1t
For sale 14X70 Windsor 3 reQUired no pets 740-992 Molloh an Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Poner Oh1o
2br
House
In
West bedroom set up In Country
2218
(740)446 7444 1 877 830
Columbia call (304}773- Homes $6 995 oo Move In
;_52_8_4_ _ _ _ _ _~ to&lt;fay• Call (740)992 2167 or 1 bedroom $250 month plus 9162 Free Est1mates Easy
uttlltles $250 depOsrt 1005 tmanc tng 90 days same as
3
bedroom
balh &lt;7401385-40 19
Third Ave Call (740 )256 cash V1saf Mester Cares
detached garage Green
Onve a little save alo1
area lmmed1111e possess10nl Only 6661
schools
n1ce
$213
68
permo
New
3
bed
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
(740).41.()818
1BR Apt 1n Spnng Valley
room 2 bath mob1le hOme
Repa r 675 7388 For sale
$290 per mont!'l+l1eposlt
automatic
3Bdr 2Ba on 6 acres Only minutes from Athens W/0 hookLJp Pets welcome re cond1t10ned
washers &amp; dryers retrlgera
1nQround 1 BOO 837 3238
w/28 ,;48 barn
wtlh add!ttonal deposit
tors
gas and elactnc
pool hot ouo (304)576 2920
(740)339.()362
ranges alf c:ond1tl0ners and
Mob•le home &amp; land fQr sa le
3Bd r 2Ba on 6 acres 405 Walker Alley Racine 2 or 3 bedroom apartment 1n wrmger wyhers Will do
no
pgts repairS on major brands 1n
w/28x48 b~;un
tnground On •o $15 DOD (7•0)992 Mtddleport
~
shop or at your home
(740)992 5858
pool hOIIub (304)576 2920 6762

~-----__!_---:----- ~--·----'

�•

'

c

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4. • The Daily Se~tinel
Announcements

Wednesday, January 12, 2005
ALLEYOOP

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WWV{.mydailysentinel.com _

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING
Pleasant Valley .. Hospital Privote Duty is
occepling applications for nursing assistants
to provide home core _to ciienls residing in
Meigs, Mason. Gollla and Athens Co.u nlles.
Applicants should have one-year experience
or received o nursing assislant certificate of
training or be o state-tested nursing
assistant.
• Excellent Pay .
• Mileage Reimbursement
• Flexible Scheduling
• ; Primarily Days

Located at the corner of
St. Rt. #7 and St. Rt. #143
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5114

9Agg~~l~o;:~~~~e~~~~~:ie~t

~!!!!!!!!!!H!iours : M-F 9-6, Sat 9-4:30

or

sel L

.

Rivfi!rine 5 male Jack Russell pup-

Antiques. 1124 East Main pies. 5 weeks old. (740)446on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740· 34 13.

992·2526 . Russ
owner

r

~

Moore,

MiscELLANEOUS

MERCHANDISE

8 weeks old Flame Point ,
Himalayan, female, CFA
registered. 5 month old Ted
Tabby, male, flat

faces.

(740)992-9947
work
(740)742·3144 Reward

JET

Pomeroy E:agles Bingo
Free Fish _Fry Dinner
for Bingo Players Only
Thursday, Jan. 13th

location by calling
:
·
304-675-7404 or 1-866-992-6916. · ,
Applicants may also conlocl this numberfor

2000 Hon da xA ·8o. goo d
condition. low hours, $1250
OBGJ (740)441-1034

· questions

or to orrang.e a specific time to
apply.
AAIEOE

For · Sal9: 2000 Honda
'Rancher ES 4-wheeler; 350:
2 WD, excellent condi-

- cc,

~~:::::=====~~==:;:===~

rli

LMSJOCK

I

[flo

1

lion, $2,200.00. (740)985·

ies. 2 lisll fi nders, $2.700.

Medicare

AlJIU&gt;
FOR SALE

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
.

r____

YOUNG'S

.CARPENTER

HOME
IMPROVEME!'-ITS
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

an1ee. Local references lurnis~ed . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Remodeling
· • New G11rage1
• Electrical I Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gunere
• vtnvl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka
We da It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG

Ill

Pomeroy, Ohio

25 Years Local Experience

New Homes • Viny_l
Siding • New Garages

Dr. Westmoreland sealing
also Ford aooQ Tractor, 1 03HPRemington 1100. 16 ga ., totally rebuilt with cab,
vent rib $650, or both tor $5,900 spent on working
$640. Both excellent! Ironton pa rts by Keefer's. Cabin
(740)533·3870
rebuilt. Call tor specifics Best ·
Reasonable Offer Lli&lt;e new
BUILDING
daytime (304)773-5333 PM

a baki. (740}992-2067

r

.~

~ monkey

SIJPI'Im&gt; .

Block. brick. sewer pipes·.
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. QH

304 773-6000
LIVE',UCK

COMMERCIAL and

Mini~Re)( Rabbits , Breeding
5 full . blooded Rat Terrier .Age. All Colors. Bucks and
puppies. 6 week~ . old, Does, $5 .00-Eech _ After
wormedltalls docked. $100 5:30pm (304)895·3577 or
each. (740}367-7058.
(304}59 3·507~-anytime

ANY .NUMBER
OF REASONS,
ELVINEY !!

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

1979 GMC 4x4 , 112 ton pickup and a 165 Massey
Ferguson· diesel tractor.

·--IOioiiRiiSiALllliii;;.,_. (740)256-1671.
'

97 Beech Street .
Middleport. OH

$50.0! Honda's; Chevy'S,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police 2000 Dodge eKI. cab dually
Impounds! Cars from $50Q diesel. flatbed , 5 sped, 4
for listings 800-391-5227 wheel
drive.
$18,500.

THE BORN LOSER

10x10x10x20
992·3194
or 992-6635

~o,...........~ - _EX_T_3_~~~~-------- (740)446-9317.

laying Hens Several different Bre~ds, of Brown Egg
layers, Over I 00 head, All
are 10/months old and laying, $3.00 -eacll or can be
2 AKC female golden price Grouped. after 5:30pm
Retrievers. 9 wks. old, hact (304)895-3577 or (304)593first shots, $100, (740)992· 5073 anytime
"'

7557

Amos

The leader - . lhe ·declarer - al lhe
·bridgelable ""ually conlrols his desliny.ln
lhis deal. lhough. it is imporlanllo-see the
need to change direction in midstream.
Against lour hearts, West leads a trump.
South wins it and ducks a spade , but
West takes lhe tricJt and plays another
hear1 , East discarding a high diamond.,
How should the declarer proceed?
When South rebids two hearts, North's
hand suddenly improves cons iderably; '
hence, liis leap to four hearts.
First, declarer sees these 10 tricks : live
hearts, twO clubs and three spade ruffs In
lhe dummy. Bul Wesl has ~lied thai plan.
(Nolo hiS excellenl opening lead. When
you are strong in declarer's second suit. it
is normally best to lead a lrump.)
.
There are two ways to get home. South
· can concede a diamond, planning to ruff
diamonds in his hand . This works
because dummy's club nine sels up.
Alternatively, declarer aijns 1or 10 winners
via five hearts, four clubs and one spade
ruff. (Taking two spade ruffs in the dummy
doesn't work; try it and see.} At trick four,
South leads the club jack: queen, king,
two. Declarer draws Wesrs last trump,
plays a club to his 10, ruffs a spade on the
beard. and discards two spades on the

Windows • Rooling

11{\ \WIJI(I \1141 \

1981 Olds 98, 4dr. Good - - - - - - - , - -

work car call (304)675-l264 · 200~ Ford Ranger extra cab,
,
loaded, 2 wheel drive .
'
•
(740)441-t583 or (740)645-

17"HOW

IT OUT W\11-\
TR~SH, WJE.':{) I

OU&gt; BIC.'&lt;CLE.

Seii-St~rage•

~""t-~oP( -)'OU
IZ..E.C'&lt;CLE.II!

"You JU~\ PUT

DO '&lt;OU

G(,U.H&gt; Of' N-1

"Middleport's only

$1 000

1985 - 98 Olds. 69.000 3230.
miles, Garage Kept $2,295

(304)773-5394
1997 Chrysler Seb•ing JXI,

loaded
ss.ooo. Call
(304)675-2888 or (304)5935659

,g

4x 4

· I· ~, ~ 7

1--oiFiiORiiiriiiiSiiALEiiiiri-r·

ace-nine of clubs.

L..

,

1989 Chevy 314 ton 4x4, VB, 5sp., ale, very good con89 Dodge car, V·6. 3.0 liter. dition,
107,000
miles,
$600. (740)446·4426
$3650. (740)992-7584

.Sheriff's Sale
to freely pass and directed from said
rep9;ss on foot to an . Court in the above
Real Estate
Case
· Number fro thareovar.
·entitled action, I will
04CV118 Mortgage · Also the right and expose'to sale at ~pub­
privilege ol excavat- lic auction on tho
Electric Reg. Syslem
ing under said three front steps· of ·the ·
Plaintiff
· foot strip from the ·r.teigs County Court
VS
Pamela Benlz el al
property herein and House. on Friday,
above conveyed to February 25, 2005, at
Defendants
Court of Common
Mechanic Street for 10:00 a.m:, of said
day the following
Pleas, Meigs County
sewer purposes . .
Far a more particular described real estate:
Ohio.
· rn pursuance of an description of said
EXHIBIT A:
.
The following real
right-of-way
and
Order of Sale to me
directed lrom said
sewer privileges ref~ estate situated In the
Court in the above
erence Is hereby County of Meigs, In
made to Deed of the Stete of Ohio and
enllded action, I will
expose to sale at pubBartha Mees Lee and in the Vtllaga of
husband to Ellen V. Pomeroy and boundlic . auction on the
front steps of the
Church, ·said deed, ed and described as
Meigs County Court
being dated April 1st, follows:
House of Friday, Feb. '1916 and recorded In
Beginning at a
t8, 2005 altO a.m., of
Volume 113, Page 417 point on Horton or
said day. the followof the records of Fisher Street 63 feet
Ing described real
deeds
of
Meigs north of 'the northCounty, Ohio.
eotale.
wast corner of Lol
The
following
Premlaes commonly Number 27 of the
described real estate
known
as: 128 Martin
Eberabach
aRuated In the VIllage • Mulberry
Avenue, aurvay; thenu nort~
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789. atong said Horton or
of Pomeroy, CoUnty
·owner:
of Meigs and Stele of Current
Fisher Street oavanOhio, and being part
Pamela Bentz et al
ty-flve (75)
feet;
of LOI No. 167, of said
Property
at:
128 thence
east
to
Village and bounded. Mulberry Avenue
NayiQro Run Road or
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
as follows, to·wlt:
Spring
Avenue;
PPI 16-01391.000
Beginning el the
thence aouth oevennort~aast ' ,corner of
Prior
Deed ty-flve (75)
teet ; .
Lot No. 166 on
Reference: Volume thenca weal to the
Mulberry
Slreet:
144, Page 82t
place · of beginning.
Appraload
Thence norlh 38
· at The property horeln
degrees, west 25 feet $15,000.00 Terms. of conveyad being a
along the wast line of . Sale: Cannot be sold strip ·of land oeventysaid Mulberry Street lor leoo than 213rdo of flve (751 feet wide and
to a point; then~ tho appraised value. extending
from
south 65 c1eg;-, 30
10% down on clay of Horton or Flshar
sale, caah or certHied Street
to
Spring
minute~ west at right
cheek, balance on
Avenue. Being 1 part
angles
lo
said
.Mulberry Street, 60 confirmation of sale. o1 a tract of land conleet to a slake; thence Ralph E. Truaaell, v.yed by Martin
south 38 degreea , Meigs County Sheriff. Eberobach to William
·~uorney
for
the Hines by deed datod
east 26 feet to a stone
February 17th, 1897,
Plolntlff.
wall · on aald norlh
McNellie, recorded In Volume
line of Lot No. 166; Carlisle ,
81 at page 437 of the
!hence along said
Rlnl, Kramer 6 Ulrich
nOrth line of Lol No. 24755 Chagrin Bvd., Meigs County Deed
Records; oloo pert of
166 and wall north 65
Suite 200
Ohio the same tract that
degrees, 30 minutes
Cleveland ,
wa1 conveyed to
eaot 60 feet to the 44t22
William Hlnao and
place of beginning.
216-36().7200
Emma Hlnea by Leroy
Alto a . right of way (t) 12, 19, 26
Hlnea and Kathryne
over a strip of land
Hlneo by - d 10
three feet In width
Public Notice
r.Corded In Volume
and extending from
133 Plge 241 of the
Mulberry StrHt to
SHERIFF
SALE, Melga County Deed
Mechanic Street In
REAL ESTATE CASE Raconlo:
· 11ld VIllage which
NUMBER 04CV019
PARCEL NUMBER:
oald three toot strip
Beneficial
Ohio, 1H1354
odjolna end run• parPlaintiff
PROPERTY
otlll to and wllh the
ADDRESS: 12 Flahlr
north olde· of the part .va
Eric
&amp;
Roberta ' Street, ~. Ohio
of Lot No. 187 above
Diddle,
at.
al., 45789
described,
ond
Defendenta
Current
Owner:
extends "'•• herein
Court of Common Eric and Roberta
before alated through
Pleat, Malgo County,
Diddle
from Mulberry Street
. Property at 12
to lllchllnlc Stteet at OH
In pursuance of an · Flther
Street,
the same width with
the right at all tlmH Order of Sail to me Pomeroy, Ohio

Home National Bank
PP• 16-01354
Prior
Deed Plaintiff
Reference: Volume vs .
· Bruce Cottrill et al
106, Page 137
Appraised
at Defendants
$30,000.00. Terms of Court of Coinmon
Sale: cannot be sold Pleas, Meiga County.
for less than 213rds of Ohio ,
tho appraised value.
In Pursuance of an
10% down on day of Order of Sale to me
· sale, caah or certified directed from said
check, balance on Court In the above
confirmation of sale.
entitled action , I will
Ralph E. Trussell, expose to sale at pubMeigs County Sheriff
lic auction on the
Attorney
for
the front steps of the
Meigs County Court
Plaintiff
Frank a. Wooldridge House on Friday,
Co .• 600 South- Pearl February 18, 2005 at
Street,
Columbus, 10:00 o'clock a.m., of
said day, lhe .f ollow.
Ohlo43206,
lng described real
(614) 221-1662
(1) 12, 19 &amp; 26
estate:
PARCEL ONE: 2993
Filth
Street,
Syracuoe, OH 45n9
Public N.o tlce
Situated In the
A viewing hao been VIllage of Syracuse,
set for Thursday, County of Melgo and
January 20, 2005, to State of Ohio and
and
vacate -1 69 teet of bounded
Township Road, 388, described as lollowa:
Ski Run Road, In
Baing Town Lots
Orange
Township. Number Five (5) and
Tho .._lng will be at Six (6) In Carleton's
the road alta at 10:00 Addition tci the town
a.m. The hearing hn of Syracuae, Ohio
been scheduled lor and being the aama
1:00 p.m. Thursday, property conveyed to
January 20, at the Honora Carleton by
Commls•loners' Isaac Carleton, Sr.
Olllca during their during his lifetime.
Reference:
regularly scheduled Deed
meeting. Everyone Volume 49, Page 53,
lntorestod In thla I'OIId Malga County Oftlclal
vacation Is welcome Recorda.
to 1ttand bottl the Premloea known ao
viewing and the hear- 2993 · Filth Streel,
Ing.
Syracuee,
Ohio,
1/5,t2
45779.
The above deocrlbed
real eatete hao been
' Public Notice
assigned Audltor'a
Parcel Numblra: · 2QMiddleport VIllage 00233.000 end 20Rentol F - of $12.00. · 00234.00.
per rentel""' due by PARCEL TWO:
February 1, 2005. II
Tha
following
you own and ·rent de1crlbed premises;
prof*ly In .l he VIllage 1llualed In the Vlllsga
of Middleport, you of Syracuoe, County
muol p.y thll lee. · of Maigl and Stela of
ThOle IMS mull be Ohio, to-wit:
p1ld no later than Town Lot Number
Fllbruary 21, 2005 or Four (41 In Carleton
1 fine of $100 will be Addition to the said
lmpoeed.
town til Syrocuoa.
Sandy
. lannaralll, Alto the following
"""""
deocrlbod reel oohita
VIllage of Mlddllpor1. 1ituatod In t~ VIllage
1/10,12,14
of Syracuse, Sutton
Townlhlp,
Melgo
County, Ohlo, In 100
Public Notice
Acre Lot No. 297, of
the Ohio company's
Shortff'o Sail
Purchall,
lnd
Root Eolate
bounded
ond
N~mblr 04 CV100
deocrlbod 11 follows:

•

c..,

Beginning on the
South slda of an alley .
at the Northwest cor~
ner of what was for~
marly
Elizabeth
Jones' real estate:
thence North 88" 45'
West 194.4 feet to the
center of the road
leading ·rrom State
Route No. 1.24, North
passing
the
Methodist Church;
thence South 106 feet
along the center of
said road to the North
side of State Route .
No. 124; thence al&lt;;&gt;ng
the north side of silid
State Route No. 124,
South 56' 00' East 264
feel; thence North
149 feet; thence West
25 feet; thence North
100 feet to the place
of beginning, containIng 831100 acres,
more or tess, subject
to
the
following
exceptions and reser·
vatlons:
The
aforesaid
clescrlbad reol estate
is covered by a cor~
teln on and gas lease
made by Wm. F_
Bartels to J.C. Canter
and Jas. B. Combo,
which lease Ia dated
July 5th, 1921 and Ia
recorded In Volume
17, Page 417 of tho
records of leases of
Meigs County,. Ohio,
which lease has since
been aSsigned and It
Ia not Intended by
this deed to convoy
any title, right or
Interest In and to said
lease, and according~
ly, there Is excepted
and reserved Ia the
said Grantors, .their

GrantorS', their heirs
and assigns forever,
all the coal, oil, and ,
gas in and under the
aforesaid described
831100 of an acre,
more or less, together with all reasonable
mining rights and
privileges to mine
and
remove
the

same;
Except .631 acre,
conveyed to Green
Hill Homes, Inc., by
deed dated April 14,
1971, and recorded in
Volume 245, Page
779, Meigs County
Deed Records.
Refarence
Deed:
. Volume 154, page
561, Meigs county ·
Official records.
Premises known as
2301 Fifth Street,
Syracusa,
Ohio,
45779.
Auditor's
Parcel
20Numbers:
00102.000 and 2Q00103.000.
Current Owner: Bruce
Codrlll
Property at: Parcel
One : 2993 5th St.
Syracuse, OH 45n8
PPt 20-00233.000

NO T

!l.EAL WOMEN

R:EAL WOMEN

L IKE

IMMEDIATE
VICINITY.

r-----:-----'1

TH IS?

IN

ANY

YAk

THE

Whaley's Auto
Parts
Darwin.

OH .

740-992-70 i3 or 740-992-5553

· flL.stncki'!') l.n te Model Sal• n,ge
and .4fter Jhrket ~rls

PEANUTS
VES, M~AM .. l-IE'S M~ DOG ...
NO IF l-IE SITS WAY IN TI-lE
BACK, HE WON'T 60)11ER ANVONE

See Brem o r Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sal. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed ·

~~~ ­

IJ..II4AT WAS THAT Ti-liNG
ABOUT '' I 8EFOR E C '' OR
SOMETHING? I s.lOULD KNOW
IN CASE Si-lE CALLS ON ME ...

''E BEFORE M E)(CEPT AFTER 6,''
!SIT ''TI-IREE f!EFORE TWO
E)(.CEPT AFTER TEN"?

' Hill's Self
Storage

High&amp; Dry
SeU~Storage

SUNSHINE CLUB

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

OJ.'10J~

740·992-5232

.VACUUM

1 KNCW, DfAR.BIJI' (}(THAT
C,W WILL I4..W.D I3E.
ALLCW ME 10 HElP ?ERRIFI(,

., .$11E.I.£FT

ll:RHA~

A 131G

ltUJ WfTMWAT

/

I~'T

j(WIIJOO,V

1l&gt;CHM1E
IT..

"'

~20-00234.000

and
Parcel Two:
2301 5th St.
Syracuse, OH 45n9
PPI 20-001026 and
20-00103
Prior
"'
Deed ·
Re.ferencl:
Parcel
One- Volume 49, Page
53 , · Melgo .C ounty
Olllclal
Recorda . .
Parcet' Two - Volume
t54, Page 561, Malgo
.C ounty
Olllclal
Recorda.
helra,
execulore, Appraised at Parcel
adminlatratora and One$15,000 .00,
assigns forever, all
Parcel
Two
the rights, titles and
$20,000.00
lntereste of the eatate ·
Term• of Sale :
of Wllll~m F. Bartals, Cannot be oold for
Dec., In and !O Olld leu than 213rdo of
lease, end further- tho oppraloed value.
10% down on day of
more all the rlghta,
tlttlo and lntereote of
sale, caoh or certified
the said Grantoro In check, balance on
and to uld leasa and · confirmation of sail.
furthermore there· Ia Rolph E. Truoaoll,
excepted
and Melgo County Shariff.
ra1orved
all
the
Attorney
for
the
rights, tltlea and
Plolnllll
lntor11to In and to Llttla
Sheata
•
oald leooe of the
Warner ·
preaent. owner or 213 Eaot 2nd St.
Owners of aama 11 Pomeroy, OH 45769
the caoe moy ba.
740·992-6669
Furthermore , (1) 12
excepting ond reoorvlng to the said Iormor

DON'T

NOTH IN u

Athens

St. Ri.681

I
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GARFIELD
1 CP&gt;N'f FIGruRe f~&gt;~l5

R11711l-E OUT

..

-•
Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month .
'

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISTIICTIII

50 Once

named ·
51 Pair
52 Truck floor

Ovaezeatoua
Some vlneo

I

ANP THe'r' PRI NfEI7 "fHe
P,N~WeR UPSII7e 170WN!

·Graph

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity C~ cryptograms are aeated trom qUCttatiOns by lamous ~, pall and PI8Mnt .
E!ICII 1et1er in tnelti~ 9t8nc!S l0111'1ttl"W .

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"iour'lllrthdo.Y:

Thuraday, Jan. 13, 2005
By Bernie• Bede Oeol
Many opportunities are likely Ia come
your way In the year ahead, but yau'll
need to be discerning as to which you
chOQse. Once you focus in on one, give II
your full concentrati9(1 unlit it becomes
reality.
'
.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan: 19) - Don't
underestimate the competition today,
especially in business or rivaling matters.
Unless you keep your guard up every
minute, you could be outmaneuvered by
the opposition.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Limit the
obligat.iOns you take on today io what Is
practical and feasible. You 're not going to
impress anyone by attempting to go
beyond tile point of your abilities and/or
expertise,.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - There
could &amp;kist a real conflict today between
your need tor self-expression and your
desire tor good fellowship. Neither must
be alloWed to win out at tile B)(pense ol
the other.
ARIES (March 2t -April 19) - Before you
take on· anvthing huge tOday in wh ich
you'll need the support of others, make
certain they'll be there for you. Tilers 's a
good chance they could be tied up else·
where.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Don 't permit yourself to be intimidated or pressured today by people or circumstances
Into making a commi1ment you want no
part of. Keep yourself from being over·
whelmed by events.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ~I t might be
very .easy lo talk yourself tnto belleving
that the world owes you • living today, but
deep dowrl you know you're kidding your·
self. You'll get all that's due to you- no
mora, no tess.
CAN CE R (June 21-July 22) - Trying to
m(!!lch Wits ~ith ~sharPies~ today, iJSpe·
cia lly when they are on their home turf
and you're not. is just plain foolish. Wait
until you 're back in your own bailiwick.
LEO (July 23 -Aug .. 22) - It's ImpOrtant
tOtlay that you don't treat lightly matters
or chores that should be taken serfously.
By the same token , try' oo_t to let your
responsibilities overwhelm yOu, either.
, VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Keep in
mind that BVerybody from time to time
has good ~ and bad days. Even it' you
don't understand another's fee lings
today, It'll help you greatly to be more tol·
&amp;rant of a friend,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) - Being the
sign of the scales, you land to want to
balance things out. In trying to do so
today, you could be harsh II'\ one lnatance
then give the .store away In the neiCt. Be
COOII.t4mt 81 atl Hme•.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2"'·Nov. 22) - Watch
your atrong pa..ionate tendenclea to
ove!TNct today. It could take only • r.w
wrong worda from another to •et you off
and ignite your temper. Avoid individuals
who unnel'\le yau .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov: 23•0.C:. i 1J - Be
realliltlc•lly aware ot your •pending
habl1• today and don't faiH~ think you
have unllmltld funds at your diiPO'al. If
,you try to •trftch your bt.Kiget too tar, the

tiring oould JUIIdenly -

m--+-+-1---+-+,-

LAIN

VYIAODAWF

J NV Y R;
DB

V8J

YRVB
YRV Y

r ·N VI." .

DWIDN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Trouble shared is trouble halved."
- Dorothy Sayers
"Only a lilelived lor olhers is a IWe worthwhile .' - Albert Einsleln
(C) 2005 by NEA, Inc. t-t2

A .s tr()-

.:.:.:.,-~---,-,-~-:-:--­

P u b l i c Not.lces In Ne""NI&gt;UP~• -s­
Ve&gt;ur R.lght. t.o Kno""'· Dell';'ercd R.laht. t.c.. Ynur Uc,•!'•-·

45 KlckOft
atando
47 Bud holder
48 Dwindle
49 Eur. nation

, running in ·another direction.~

youl

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

Round bales for sate, ·$5.00

Say grace
Draws
Sp.mlos
BuiKight
ahouta
Mad
emperor
Barbecue
extras
Pack ij
away
History
Anroctlve
Mini-play
ChRs
Dallaa hrs.
Broughl up
Dodge
Grlaved

It is easy to be wise after the even't. But
occasionally someone puts his foot into
his own mouth. In the late 1950s, Richard
Nixon said. 'I don't lhlnk lhal a leader can
control to any great extent his destiny.
Very seldom ·can he slop in and change
the situation if the forces of history are

• Replacement

rou nd
bales.
Jackson Farm,

~ 10

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI
de 1t for

Don't look back;
look forward

Wt'llE N~')(T 'TO Ttl~ 'llO.fSv/Oill&gt; PlJZ.ZL~
Tdl&gt;AY, EllNI~. WtiAT'S A FIFntN LriiOill&gt;
I
PtlllA.f~ fOil
..NAVAL
· ~LOC~A&amp;&gt;E"1.

992~6215 WV 0~725

(740)288-1592.

$90;

Opening lead: • 2

• Bucket Truck

Let me

4.

2.

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

BUILDERS.mt

Delano Dr. Westmoreland sealing
304-675- 2000 Flrebird , V6 totally
redone, like new , T- Top,
i743 .
69,000 miles, must see lo
Hay- · 1st &amp; 2nd cuttings. believe, Best Reasonable
square bales. 1st cutting- Ofter Tires 2/wks old.
St.25/bale; 2nd cutting- Daytime (304)773-5333 PM
$2.00/bale. Call 740-256- (304)773·6000
1995.

I.

JONES'

BISSEll

For
Concrete. · Angle. females. $275. Will be ready
Channel, Flat Bar, Ste el 1/21 /05. Taking depositS.
Grating
For
Drains. (740)388-0182.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
I \H \ 1-.1 1'1'1 11 "
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
S II\1-.I (Hh
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; li'l::--~~--...,
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed i10
. FARM
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
EQuiPMENT
Sunday. (740)446-7300

6

Dealer : South
Vulnerable: East-West
South. West North Elst
Pass I NT
Pass
Pass
All pass

Tree Service

(740)247·3.042 .
96 - Neon $1.500
.
{304)675-7074
N~W ANO USED STEEL
Reg. English Setter pups, 7 t{ay for Sale: Square and
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar

wrench "

.J74~2

• J 10

no papers. PhOne (740)446- li:::"--::':""-::~-., 1233.
Uncoln W.:llder 250, electric
2_4_B_o.______ _
HA~nriirY.,iil&amp;.,_
. _,... miles,
aoo1 Dodge Neon. 83.000
AC·DC, straight or reverse.
rwUJ'I
auto, air, tilt , CD,
$3,000 OBO. (740)256-1233
220 si ngle phase. (740)446- Reg . American Rottweiler
or (740)256~9031 .
7845 or (cell) (740)339· pUppies for sale. Mettler and
lather on premises. Call Ear corn, $3.00 Bu ..

Winchester

• Cancer • Accident

• 6
t A Q 10 9 5
.76432
Soulb
•

&amp;

4395
,.._ _ _=-:-:;.-.::---, Unconditional 'iletime guar-

AERATION MOTORS
AKC Stud Doberman, 4 '-~-------..
Repai red , New &amp; Rebuilt In · years old, $ 125 .. (740 )388Stock. Call Ron Evans. t.
Reg . Quarter and · Pain! 2000
Plymouth
Neon,
0 182
aoo-537-9528.
' - - - ' - ' - - - - - - - llorses. Priced to sell. Also 34,000 miles, auto, air,
Full blooded Lab puppies. Haflingers. (740)446· 341 .3. $2.800 OBO (740)256-

3923

K8 2
Q B

.AKQJ4

~ • RoomSEirliCE
Additions
HIO

AK 9 5

Q 10 9 • 8 5

932

4

or appointments con be scheduled from
9o30 am. llo30 om a1 our Middleport, OH

10 8 7 5

East

A K

r.......re~~&lt;:US
I
iiiiiiiiiiiii.......Ir Bo~:s~~RS
'
1996 Yamaha XT350 Dual 89 u -Hau 1ba ss trac ker boat .
SpM. 761 miles. like new. 40 horsepower motor, rlip
.$2250080. (740)441-1034 down trolling mQtor, b_atter-

6

•

• IRA • 401 KRoll overs • Major Med • .

&lt;&gt;

•

•

+J74· 3 .

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement

lOll Viand Slreet, Pt. Pleasant, 'IN

I

PElS
mRSAtE

Alder

NURSING ASSISTANTS

top dollar for it!

--•ANTI
__:;rn•.:-~.·_.,~1. j~

'

36 Cooler
38 L!ean-toa
1 Mongol
40 Chapeau'o
dwelling a
place
8 Pry open
41 Unoeld
11 Tough
of the NBA
quHIIona 42 Subpoena
12 Big peta
46 Broed ota.
13 Shoelace
48 Interlace
hole
49 Catch
14 Corduroy
In a sting
.feature•
52 Beateelllng
15 "Satchmo"
doll
Armstrong 53 Latest
16 Customer ·. 54 lsjeatous of
come-on
55 Hollow rock
t7 Roclpe
56 Feats
amta.
of courage 12
ta Whereto
16
aee stars
DOWN
18
t9 Hit on the
20
noggin •
1 Fluctuates
23 Dog(hyph.)
21
2 Exhaust '
owner's
shout
(2 wda.)
22
25 MOMA
3 Really enjoy
artist
24
4 Uno y dos
26 Gateway or 5 Fast Jat
Datlwarae
6 Shiny wrap 26
7 Up next
29 Top story
27
3Z Joule
(2 wds.)
28
Iroctlon
8 Oil-drilling 30
33 Web-looted
platform
3t
9 Fair grade
bird
37
34 Tax-Mex
10 Wlncflng
39
curve
41
snack•
35 Emergency 11 Throw
43
signal
rocks at
44

Phillip

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAYS
for the month of January, 2005.
We will pay 604 a pound for
aluminum cans- also top dollar Ior
catalytic converters, aluminum
wheels, # 1 &amp;#2 copper, as well as,
cast aluminum &amp; aluminum sheet.
If ifs aluminum, we pay

Buy

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

is having

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

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and rested. He claimed there
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SCRAtol-lETS .t.NSWlliS

Italic -AwaSh-Omega-Geoder · DJr,EST
--pnde has no taste. no color. and has no pantcular
.size :· my very ooinionated husband mumbled. 'So why
,. it so hard to DIGEST.,.

ARLO .&amp; JANIS

il-l£ IUT~/JtT
I~ C.OIUcio TO Kl(,(, '!!lO.

·

BOUPTONUTZ

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J48-982-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

I

•
-~ ----

�..

FULL-COURT

Games through January 9

nlinois
Michigan St.
Minnesota
Michigan
OJ;tio State·
Wisconsin
Nortllwestern
Indiana
Iowa
Penn State
Putdue

1·0 10·1 0·1
1:0 11-3 0-1
1·0 10·5 1-1
1-1 12-l 1·1
1-1 · 10-l 2·0
1·1 8·6 0-1
1-1 6-7 O·l
0·2 11·3 1·1
0-2 6-9 0-2
0·2 4·8 ·o-3

PA .
61.8
84.4 61.3
76.4 63:4
66.3 61.3
76.9 63.2
70.9 59.0
59.0 58.7
61.7 63.6
79.1 69.1
68.2 69.0
63.7 68.2

Ci!OOS Longwing Pub\i~ations Inc .

GAME Qf . THE WEEK

FIELD-GOA&amp;. DEFENSE
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .403
. . . . . . . . . . . . .' . .404
.. . .. .. .. .. .. .411

Wiscotisin . •. · . . . . . . . . . . . . · ... 420

REBOUNDING MARGIN
Michigan State . . ; . . . . . . . . . . . +7. 7

Minnesota ... , . . . . . . . . . ... +5.8
Wisconsin •· . , . • . . • .• .. .. . . . +5. 7

ntinois .. - .. - - . ...... - .... +4.0
Ohio State · . , . . . . . . . , , .. . .. +3 .3

ASSISTS
filinois .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . 20.1
Michigan State ... . . . . . . . : . .. 18.9
Minnesota .
. . . . . . • . . . . 17.4
••

••

16.7

BLOC:KED SHOTS
Iowa·... . ·. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . 6.4

Minnesota ... · . . . . . . , . . . . . . . 6.1
Indiana .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . ... 4.9

Michigan .... ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.1
Utino~ . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . 4.2

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Average per game

POINTS
Bracey Wright . Indiana . . . . . . . . . . 18.8
Carl LandJy, Purdue .. .... . .. . . 17.9
Pierre Pierce, Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.9

Luthe'r Head, fllinois .. , .•.. , . . . 15.6

Aaron Johnson, Penn State . . . . . . . 10.3
Terence Dials, Ohio State . . . . . . . . . 8.3
Greg Brunner, Iowa . . . . .
. .. 7.9
Carl Landry, Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.4
James.Augustine, fllinois . . . . . • . . . 7.4
Paul Davis, Michigan State ... ·. • . . . 7.2
Mike Wilkinson, Wisconsin .... • . .. 6. 7
Courtney Sims, Michigan . . . . . : . ... 6.5
Alando tUcker. Wisconsin . ..... . ' ... 6.4
Brent Petway, Michigan. ; . . . . . . . . 6.1
ASSISTS
Deron Williams, Dlinois ... , .. .. .. 6.6
Jeff Homer, Iowa •.•.... , ...•. 5.9
Dee Brawn, lllinais . . . . .

1 • • ••••

5.1

Chris Hill, Michigan State .... . ... .. 4.7
Luther Head, filinois . . . ·, . . . . . . ·.
Brandon Mr::Knight, Purdue , . . . . . . .
Pietre Pierce, IoY,~a ... . ..... . . . . .
Brandon Fuss-Cheatham, Ohio State ...

4.6
4.2

4. ~
3. 7

Dion Harris, Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . 3. 7
Sharif Chambliss, Wisconsin ..... . .. 3.2
S'I'UI.S
Piene Pierce, Iowa . . . . . . . . . . .. .. 2.6
Brent Lawson, Minnesota .. . ... ... 2.2

Rico Tucker, Minnesota. · .. . . . . . .. 2.1
Chris Hill. Michigan State ..... .. .. 1.8
Tony Stockman. Ohio State .. ...... 1.8
Dee Brown, Dlinois ... , .. , •.... 1.8

Jeff Homer, Iowa . . . . . , . . . . . . . 1.7
Luther Head., lllinois . .. . . . . . . . . 1.6
' Robert Vaden, Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . 1.6
'vincent Grier, Minnesota . .. . . . . ... 1.6

BLOCKS
Ere~ Hansen, Iowa., .. . . . . . . . . . .
· Jeff Hagen, MPtnesota .. . . . . . . . .
D.J. White. Indiana ..... . . . . . . .
Brent Petway. Michigan . . ·. . . . . . . .
Courtney Sims, Michigan . ... . .. . .
James Augustine, lltinois . . . ; . ·. . . .
Vedran Vukusic , lllinois . . . . . . . . . .
Greg Brunner, Iowa . , ... . . . . . . .
Patrick Ewing Jr., Indiana . . . . . . . . .

3.9
3.0

2.1
1. 9
1.6
1.4
1.3

0.9
0.9 .

FIELD·GOILL PCT.

..

James Augustine, nlinois , ..... . .. 642
'Brent r.tway. Michigan . . . . . . . . . . 622
carl LandJy, Puidue . . . . . . . .... .619
Paul Davis, Michigan State . . . . . . . . .618
Roger Powell Jr.. illinois .... ...• ...615
Terence Dials. Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . 607
J.J. Sullinger. Ohio State . . ... .. ... 602
Jeff Hagen, Minnesota . , . . . . . • . . .600
lelvir. Torbert. Michigan State . . . . . . ~ 585
D.J. White, Indiana .... . . . . . . . . 517
l'ltEE•T'IIItOW reT.
Shannon Brown, Michigan State . . . . . .909

Spartans seek revenge
T

hree years ago. Wisconsin ended Michi gan State's nationalbest 53-game home winning strea].;;. Now it's the Spanans'

chance to return the fuvor1

The Badgers lead the nation wirh 36 consecutive home
victories at the Kohl Center, but thai mark will be on the line when
the Spartans, one of the league' s deepest teams , come to town
Sunday.
Perh&lt;ips the most highly motivated player will .be Michigan
State guai'd Kelvin Torben, who had a potential game~ winning
shot.disallowed w.hen the teams met on Jan. 12,2002. Now,
Torbert is among a group of'Michigan State guards who ron in
and out of the starring role . Torbert, Chris Hill, Drew Neitzel,
Alan Anderson. Shannon Brown and Maurice Ager give the
Spartans the depth to pressure WisconSin.
The Bitdgers, who use the half-court slowdown game to their
advantage, will try to keep the score low. Wisconsin's Mike
Wilkinson , Alando Tucker and Sharif Chambliss will have their
hands full. The Badgers have held seven opponents under 25
points in the first half this season. and they will need to repeat the
feat to stay with the Spartans; who are averaging a league-high
84.4 points per game along with a rebounding advantage of 7.7
per game.
a )!eeords: Michigan State !0-2 (2-0 Big Ten); Wisconsin 10-3
(1 -1 Big Ten). • Coaches: Michigan State's Tom Izzo (217-92):
Wisconsin 's Bo Ryan (461-94). • Tip-off: Sunday : I2:30 p,m.
CT. a TV: CBS.
Key for Michigan State: Use depth to its advantage. With the
absence of Boo Wade , the Badgers are hurting at the guard
position . .Michigan State can pressure Wisconsin and rotate
players in to OtJtrun th~ Badgers.
Key for Wisconsin: Contain Michigan State's Paul Davis. The
Badgers' Mike Wilkinson will have to get the best of Davis,
.tak ing away the Spartans' ability to pound the ball inside .

The Rest of the Matchups
As the leagu~ season fini~hed its first weCk , Illinois remained
the team to beat, while Iowa dropped to the bottom of the
conference standings after a 12-1 nonconference start.
This weekend , Hlinois will look to outscore Northwestern ,
which runs- a PrincelOn-style spread offense that has become
famous for its ability'lo generate upsets . The No.1 Illini will need
to be wary of Bill Carmody's team , which is built around Croatian
center Vedran Vukusic .
In-state rivals Indiana and Purdue will match up Saturday in~
game for conference pride . B91h teams are under .500 and have
struggled to begin the year.
lo.\:'la will loOk to break out of its 0-2 funk while Minnesota and
Michigan are looking to improve on l-0 conference starts as the
season heals up.

Kelvin Torbert, Michigan State. . . .. . . .89 7
Robert Vaden, Indiana . · . . . . . . ·. .. .S97
Illinois at Northwest~m ·
Alan Anderson, Michigan State . . . . . .860
Adam Haluska, Iowa ... , .. .. . .. .825 · • Recorda: Illinois 16-0 (2-0 Big Ten): Northwestern 8-6 (1 -I
Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern ·. . . . ...816 . Big Ten). • Coacheo: Illinoi s' Bruce Weber (145-61):
Northwestern's Bill Carmody (153-95). IIi Tip-off: Saturday, 5:37
Vincent Grier, Minnesota ... . . . . . . .815
Dion Harris. Michigan . . . . . . . . . . .812
p.m. CT. • TV: ESPN Plus . ·
Maurice Ager. Michigan State . . .
.796
Key for llUnoll: Force the ball inside. The lllini need to get
Kamron Taylor. Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . 791
the ball in James Augustine; 's hands, forcing Northwestern 's

Vedran Vukusic and Mike Thompson to play tough defense in the
paint. If the ball goes inside , it will create opponunities 10 kic~k it
back outside to guards Deron Williams and Dee Brown and
swingman Luther Head .
Key for Northwestern: Slow the game down. Illinoi s l~ves 10
run, and the Wildcats can't run with them. If Northwestern can
slow Dee Brown and the Illinois transition garne ; playing a flalf- ,
court game and keeping the score low, they will have a shot at
upsetting the nation's top team.

Indiana at Purdue · '

• Records: Indiana 6·7 ( 1-1 Big Ten): Purdue 4-8 (0-2 Big Ten).
• COac:hes: Indiana 's Mike Davis (87-60) ; Purdue ' s Gene Keady
(547-276). • Tip-off:· Saturday. II a.m. CT. • TV: ESPN.
ley for Indiana: Get guard Bracey Wright involved early.
When Wright scored 30 poinls last week , his team won .. W_fen he
was held to seven. the Hoosiers lost.
·
Key for Purdue: Spread out the offense. Carl Landry and Matt
Kiefer have scored early, but lhe Boilermakers need more. of a
team effort to beat their rivals.
•

Minnesota at Iowa
• Records: Minnesota II-3 (l-0 Big Ten); Iowu 12-3 (0-2 Big
Ten). • Coaches: Minnesota's Don Monson (142-95): Iowa's
.
Steve Alford (2.56-151). It Tip-off: Saturday, I :32 p.m. CT. • TV:
ESPN Plus.
.
Key for Minnesota: Win the 3-point shooting battle. Aaron
Rich~dson had the hot hand las I game, and he and Vincenl Grier .
will need to outshoot Iowa's excellent guards.
Key for Iowa: Forget the opening week . The Haw keyes started
the season hot bui hit a bump in the road as they opened league
. pl ay . They neect to remove the 0-2 conference start from their
mind s and start over.
~

·•

Michigan at Penn State
• Records: Michigan 10-5 (1-0 Big Ten): Penn State6-9 (0-2 Big
Ten). il Coaches: Michigan's Tommy Amaker ( 129-102); Penn
State's Ed DeChehs ( 111-103). 1t np-off: Saturday. 12: 17 p.m ..
ET-. • TV: ESPN Plus.
Key for Michigan: Improved guard play , Daniel Horton ,'back
from a knee injury, must begin to mesh' with Dion Harris. They
seem to be competing for shots, and they must play ·as teammates .
Key for Penn State: Keep the Wolverines off the offensive
boards. Aaron Johnson must use his size to keep Michigan 's Brett
Petway and Brandon Hunter from getting many second
opponunities.

· Ohio State at LSU
• Records: Ohio State 12-3 (1 -1 Big Ten); LS\J 6-5 (0-1 SEC).
a CoecheJ: Ohio State's Thad Matta (I13-34): LSU 's John Brady
(215-1(4). 1ll Ttp-o.ff: Saturday, 7 p.m. CT. • TV: ESPN Plus.
Key for Ohio State: Make the open shots . Tony Stockman and
Brandon Fuss-Cheatham with benefit from the stellar inside _play
of Terence Dials, getting opportunities on kick~out passes. They
need to knock those shots down for the Buckeyes to win.
'
Key for LSU: Force Ohio ~tate center Terence Dials to giVe up
the ball. If Dials is allowed to have his way under the hoop . the
tigers will have a long day against the surprising Buckeyes.

VukUik has led the Wildcats for most of
the season, he found $Orne help during a
87-58loss to Michigan State last Saturday.
With Vukusic out with a right shoulder
injury, Duke transfer Michael Thomp1on
. took over, scoring a team-high 16 points .•
Vukusic returned to finish the game.

.....,n
S.j.A'TE
.-rnu

The·Buckeyes have
&amp;n
started the season •
strong, led by the inside presence o(
Terence Dials; who dominated in an
81-69 victory over Iowa last Saturday,
making 8-of-12 shots and leading Ohio
State with 22 points. He also made 6-of-7
free throws in the game, follol'(ing up a
2-for-5 field-goa\ performance with seven '
points in last Wednesday's 84·65 loss to
Ulinois.

see

~r ST;A'TE The Nittany Lions
n
opened the season

II;PIIJ'U1

with two losses.'to,Michigan State and
Minnesota, but began to see contributions
!rom freshman Geary Claxton. With
starting point guard Marion S!nlth out
with illness, the Lions got a career-high
20 points from Claxton against the
Spartans. Against Minnesota, Claxton
added 12 points.

WEATIIER

• 111MRDUE

t.s the conference
season started, the
Boilermakers continued to struggle.
Purdue jtimped out to a 39-33 halftime
lead over No. !·ranked illinois, but the
Boilennakers couldn't hold on, starting
the conference season 0-2. Purdue got an
earlyjo\t from Matt Kiefer, whose fiery
dunk and then dish to Carl Landry got
the West Lafayette. Ind .. crowd on its
feet. Kiefer scored 13 points in the game's
first 10 minutes and finished with 17
points and six rebounds in the 68·59loss.

'

Please see River, AS

INDEX
'

'

'

.

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS

2 SECTIONS.,.. 12 PAGES
Calendars
A3
Classifieds

I

Beth .S.rpntjphotos

,_

Above: Employees at City
National Bank in Pomeroy are
still unsure about unpacking all
their boxes from the recent flood·
ing for fear of facing round two
from mother nature later this
week. Fear or not, the bank will
be open today for ·business.
Pictured from left are employees
Jeff Martin, Marlene Radford,
Lana Smith, Frances Wood.
Right: Fona Smith of Riverfront
Past and Present is still cleaning
from the latest flood while keeping a watchful eye on the Ohio
River which is expected to rise
above flood stage again in
Pomeroy. The river is expected to
crest early Saturday morning but
there are . conflicting reports
about the height it will reach.
Smith, left, is shown with friend
Betty Kleinert, who helped with
cleaning the flood waters from
the antique store.

·Please see Byer, AS
'

B3-4

Comi~

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

A5

Places toGo

B6

B Section
A6

,........,1'":"'.,...,,..,......,

s 1 u d ·e n t .........,........,__,..,"""" was $2 a
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEA.1CH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
achievepupil for a
fund from
ment liaiwhich to
POMEROY
Roger
son
for
pay board
Abbott was .elected president
2005.
expenses.
of the Meigs Local Board of
Meelings
of
the
The· treaEducation at the Wednesday
night organizational · meeling
surer was
school
held in the board oftice.
board were
authorized
Named vice president was
by board
Roger Abbott set for 7
Norman
vote to pay
Norman
Humphreys.
p.m. on the
Humphrey•
bills as preAppointments made included second and fourth Tuesdays
Scotl Walton as the Ohio in the ·board office. The sented, secure tax advances
School boards legislative liai- salary for school board mem- · from the Meigs Coun\y audison for 2005, and Ron Logan bers was set at $80 pe( meetas the ·Ohio School Boards ing attended. Also approved
Please see Abbott. AS

Hearing set on vacating eroded Ohio 338
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Meigs
Counly residents will have an
opportuniJy 10 express their
opinion on the proposal ,to
vacate and abandon a section
of Ohio 338 in Lebanon
Township at a public hearing
here on Jan. 27.
The hearing has been
scheduled for I p.m. in the
office of the Meigs County
commissioners located on the
third floor of the courthouse
in Pomeroy.
The proposed action specifically pertains to the section
of Ohio 338 which has been

-.

closed to traffic since June
due to erosion and damage
along the Ohio Ri ver.
- "AI \he time the section
was closed the pavement had
shifted more than 18 inches
and I'm sure il has worsened
since then,'' said Stephanie
M. Filson. public infonnation
officer for District I0, Ohio
Department
"of
Transportation (ODOT).
Slw pointed out that that
section of Ohio 338 has
been repaired many times
before but that movement
and slippage continues. "We
can't allow this to be a safe- .
PIHH -.

.

H..rln(l. AS

Free Health Fair

UFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPI~AJ,IZAnON

'
- - - -- -

RACINE - Most of the
damage to private property
from last weekend's Ohio
River · tlood occurred in
Racine, according 10 Meigs
. Eme.rgency
Management
Agency Director Robert
Byer, but some of that damage reported probably relates
to the September flood.
Byer spent mos\ of Monday
and Tuesday asses&amp;ing damage along river
communi lies
and preparing
a .preliminaryreport
for
Ohio
EMA
officials. Byer
said he is
working with . Robert Byer
Mayor Scott
Hill to detel1lline the extent of ·
damage. to homes and businesses in Racine. Byer said a
report of damage · to public
infrastructure, such as roads,
bridges and culverts, is due at
the Ohio EMA no later than
the close of ·business on '
Thursday.
"Based on eslimates from
· Mayor Hill , we know of 14
home s which were damaged as th!! result of the .
weekend tlood," Byer said.
"Tm of those homes suffered minor damage and

Abbott elected Meigs Local
School Board president

Details on Page AS

J.

R.EED .
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
BY BRIAN

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

. © 20o4 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

\

bee n no s~riolis slips crealed patrolled.
by last week's hi gh water in
"If \here's a lol of saturaMeigs County. but said slips tio n. we have 10 wa\ch closealong publi c roadways are ly," ODOT' s Stephanie
always a concern after heavy Filson said Wednesday. 'This
rains or a tlood.
. is a pro-ac1i ve approach to
In Meigs County. ODOT avoiding problems."
crews are closely monitoring
''In the past, we h~ve seen
Ohio 124 and .Ohio 7. Ohio slips after heavy rains and
144,near Coolville in Athens
County, is also being closely
Please see ODOT, AS

Byer: Most
flood damage
in Racine

POMEROY ~ For \he second
time in a week Pomecoy faces the
reaJ .possibility of more flooding .
The Pomeroy Police Department
received a fax at noon Wednesday .
from the Racine Locks and Dam
· that Staled \he Ohio River was rising al four-tenths of a foot per hour.
Also contained in the fax . was a
predicted _flood cr&lt;;.st from the
·· •· School hoSts first family Na\ional Weather Service of 46 feel
reading night See Page
at Racine at 7 a.m. on Saturday.
This translates into a cres\ of 48 10
A3
49 feet in Pomeroy, placing the
• Rio to celebrate Martin
water over the street and possibly
Luther King Jr. Day. 5ee
into some bus_inesses, again.
Page AS
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E .
• Supreme Court dismiss- Proffitt dispatched officers to warn
businesses on Main Street of the
es challenges to presidenpossibility of more flooding.
' tial, chief justice elections.
According to the Pomeroy Police
Page A&amp;
Departmenl, the Ohio River was at
39.2 feet as of I p.m. Wednesday.
John Sikora, hydrologisl with
the National Wealher Service in
Charleston, W.Va. said the press
release that the Pomeroy Police
Department relayed · from the
Racine Locks and Dam was sent by
his organization. He went on to
clarify that it was a "guidance
product." The "guidance producl''

Weather

'

POMEROY - The State
of Ohio is coordinating
efforts in response \o floodrelated problems in Meigs
and 55 other Ohio counties
affected by winter storms and
flooding last week.
The 56 Ohio counlies,

because . of problem ~ and
potential problems relating to
the Ohio River flooding of
Jan. 6-9. according 10 in formalion from the Ohio -Emergency
Managemcnl Agency.
·
ODOT is palrolling Meigs
County roadways for slips.
ODOT's
Dis1rict
fo
Spokesman Slephanie Filson
said Wednesday there have

Page AS
• Sara J. Warner, 67
• Bertha .zamorano, 92 ·

Sports

992·3381

which also include Athens and
Washington, are unde·r a stale
of emergency because of
seve re ice storms, heavy
snowfall s, and flooding which
began in late December and
continued through last weekend. In Meigs Coumy, the
Ohio
Department
of
.Transportation and U.S. Corps
of Engineers are on site

BY BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES

looking for more sources of offense, and
senior Aaron Robinson gave them a
reason to smile in an easy 83·62 victory
over Penn ·State last Saturday to open the
conference season. Robinson hit six
3-pointers and led Minnesota with 19
points as the Gophers won their ninth
consecutive game, the longest winning
streak in cocich Don Monson's tenure.

THIS PAGE PROUDLY SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING BUSINESSES:

111 UIT IECIII It • PIMEIIY, II

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Part 11_ ·

II IINNESOTA ~:;~rl:~:re

~CONSIN After lea'"'!g the
....,.-;::J
team early m the
season and retwning in December, Boo
Wade left the Badgers for good last
Thursday. Citing personal reasons, as he
did when he took an absence from the
squad earlier this season, Wade decided to
\eave the ·program and the university,

ODOT, Corps of Engineers ~n Meigs
flood
duty
.

Rising
River,

For the first
time since they
won the national championship in 2000,
the Spartans started the Big Ten season
with two victories. Senior swingman Alan
Anderson led the Spartans with 17 points
in an 84·58 victory over Penn State and
later in the week scored 13 in an 87-58
win over Northwestern.

Terence Dials. Ohio State . . . . . . . . . 16.1
Alando .Tucker. Wisconsin , . . . . . . . 16.0

REBOVNDINO

• Roethlisberger cjoesn't
want Steelers' ride to end
just yet. See Page B1

A"' ST·
. I"lll\ll
H

·vincent Grier. Minnesota . . . . . . . . . 17.5
Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern ... .. . 16.3 ·

Aaron Johnson, Penn State .•. , . . . 15.2
Tony Stockman, Ohio State ... .. •. 14.3

SPORTS

~HI"' A ·u After missing six
~
~n games with a sprained
knee, Michigan point guard Daniel
Horton returned to the lineup this week
in a 65-63 upset of Iowa. The junior scored
nine of his 13 points in the first half to
lead the Wolverines to a 44·30 .halftime
lead. -The Bawkeyes carne back to tie the
game with two minutes remhlning, but _
John Andrew• hit four consecutive free
throws to lead Michigan to the win.

Ohio State ..... .... .. : .... 16.9
J

'

·lANA

Michigan State at Wisconsin

Michigan. , : .. ...•. .. , . . •. .• .397

Iowa ... . . . . . .. . ....

The top-ranked mini got
a scare !r~rn Purdue last
Satiu-day but remained undefeated,
running their streak to 16 wins to begin
the season. illinois trailed 39-33 at
halftime, but guard Dee Brown took over
in the second half, leading illinois to a
68-59 victory. Brown S(ored all 14 of his
points in the second half.
Guard Bracey Wright
mamtamed his leagueleading scoring pace (18.8 ppg) and
helped the Hoosiers break out of a funk
with a 74-61 conference victory over
Wisconsin last Saturday. Wright scored a
team-high 30 points as the Hoosiers won
their seventh consecutive conference
home opener. In the conference-opening
loss at Northwestern, Wright was held to
seven points.
A They ran off 12 of 13 wins to
begin the season, but when
the l;fawkeyes began the conference
se~n last week, their luck ran out. Iowa
lost both of its opening-week games, to ·
Michigan and Ohio State. The Hawkeyes
did get .an impressive perfonnance from
guard Pierre Pierce, who scored a careerhigh 31 points in the loss to the Buckeyes.
~

TEI!.l\1 LEADERS
Ohio State
Indiana . .
Utinois . .

.

IIMLJNOlS

BIG TEN STANDINGS
Big lit All Top 15 PF
2-0 16-0 l -0 ·a u

Holzer Hospice
hosts annual
volunteer dinner, A3

Health fair for
senio~ set, A3

WednesdaYz Januaryll, 2005

www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

P!IJ!t!·86 • The Dally Sentinel

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

•

Point Pleasant Senior Center : 101 Second Street
Friday, January 14 • 9:00 am · 12 Noon
Non-Fasting Cholesterol and Glucose • Blood Pressure
Heor.ing Screenings by Mel Mock of Advanced Hearing
Free Health lnformolion

All a,re welcome!!

'.

Sponsorad by the Point Pleasant Senior Center, Holzer Medical Center
Marketing and Wei/ness Departments in collaboration with HCJizer Clinic of West Virginia.

-

--

MEDICAL CENTER

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard".
.

'

~ .holzer.o:.;g
·•

-------- ~·--------

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