<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="6931" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/6931?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T23:13:48+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17333">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/6aceef7ddfddb48f81e6f9ea02502d99.pdf</src>
      <authentication>92f1878fca75eb21e9fe0268b9cb43ee</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22729">
                  <text>••

AEP addresses Gavin 'plume,' A2
··-"'-

.,

I'

••

Melp County's

What's

Hometown News,.,.,

Commission retums funds to vso
BY BRIAN J. REID

"For our veterans, we have no problem adding

BREEDOMYIMILYSEHTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Ron Eastman and
Mick Williams 'of the MeiSi Couocy
Veterans Service · Commission m(t
with the county commissioners on
Thursday. to discuss the commissioners' 5 percent c~t in the Veterans Commission's 2002 budget.
The VSO submitted' a budget req1,1est
of $119,139, and the commissioners
appropriated. $1 11,200.
· The Ohio ReVised Code mandates
that the county' general fund use up to
a half-mill of the county's inside millage
to piovide vetetaru services funding. .
In making their 2002 appropriations, commi~ioners cut all general
fund departments by 5 percent to
make up for projected shortfall in

. lCIOO~

MOIIIJMIEBl

144230, leather, moonroof,
!!_l~r

StWf 1HOOSANI&gt;S!
Meigs humbles N-V. B1

Jean Smeltzer, 58 .
William Taylor Sr., 59
Details, A3

a

'

I

the additional funding
revenue.
The board agreed to replace the
$8,000 ·cut from the veterans commission budget, and explained that equal
cuts were made in all departments.
The VSO's request for 2002 · was
$2,700 below the half-mill cap.
Last year, the VSO returned $1,600 to
the general fund, representing supplies
line items ·and other unspent money.
"We run a tight budget, ·and we
think efficient budget," Williams said.
"We think we submitted a fair budget,
and would like to see it approved."
Conunissioner Mick Davenport, who

if it's needed. "

presided at Thursday's meeting in the
absence of President JeffThornton, said
the funds will be replaced if needed.
,'.'fo,r our veterans, we have no problem adding the additional funding if
it's needed," Davenport said.
The Veterans Services Commission
provides transportation services to veterans and other services, iQduding
grave markers and Memorial Day
remembrances .
Commissioners opened bids for new
"Jaws of Life" equipment for the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department. Bids
were received from Howell Rescue

'

CLEANING UP POMEROY

RACINE

Village Council
raises water rates

Weather
HIP: JOa, Low: 20.
· Details, A2

I

.

. $17,950

ft021Z

$2.1,832.

zu

#CM96

$11,988
·~
LINCOLN

2802 TA1J8118 8E8

AMERICAN

LUXURY

,n.s

#C022S

$17,661

$11

RACINE - An increase
in village water rates was
approved during the recent
meeting of the Racine Village CounciL
Council approved an ordinance that will raise the village's current water rates.
The new rates are as follows:
Resident, $14.50 per month
for first 4,000 gallons plus
$.35 per hundred over 4,000
gallons; non•resiqen_~S 16.90
per month for .first 4,000
gallons plus $.35 per hundred over 4,000 gallons; light
commercial, $14.50 per
month for first 4,000 gallons
plus $.25 per hundred over

II··

:

·Lotteries

Protection on

all .llew and Uled

()HID
Pick :S: 2-9-7
Pick 4: 3-9-5·9
Buckeye 5: 3-6-19·25-30
Pick dey: 4-4-5
Pick 4 dey: 8-4-1·9 .
•

vehlclee.•

:s

O•lly :S: 4-9-5
Dilly 4: 9-o-8-5
.cash
4-7-11-16-21•22

Check and adjuot camber an&lt; toe. Add~onal poru and
tabor rnav be required on aome vehicles.

:zs:

----~------------------95 M4TOliiCU"

·Index ·

PMTWBI

• Service lncluciU· up to 5 quarta of Molot'cratt o!l and new
Motorcran oil filter • PortDtm Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection
• Lube • Check and til nacaaaary fluids • Allin 29 minutes
or lass • Diesel vehloltie
be extra.

. 2 Sedllftl - 12 ,....

BED RAILS -

$242

Starting
at

Calendar
·classifieds
:comics
!:lear Abby
Editorials .
Movies
Obituaries

:Sports

Weather

AS
82-4

85
AS .
A4
A3
A3
81
A2

; . C 2002 Ohio Valley Publlshi"' Co.

BURNT
- Several ~relict and burned-out structures, like this one on West Main
Street, are sc~1~dtJied to be demolished next week as part of a clean-up campaign Implemented by the VII
of Pomeroy. (Tony M. Leach)

.

.

'

''

.•

,

oe oli'Qon project
to rt ' ext week
·Mayor .~ays .
'eyeso'ref will be
torn 4own ·
BY TONY M.

Mulllerry

avenues,

Main summer. However, a constant

·st~ ' , Mechanic Street, and barrage of thunderstorms and

WCH .

TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
.
I

POMEROY&gt;-'- Eradication
efforts on a n~mber of rundown buildings throughout
the village is sef tb begin next
I
week.
Mayor John : Blaettnar said
crews will star,t tearing down
several abandyned structures
located on Butternut and .

TJ)lfi( and Fourth streets next
weelfas part of clean-up campaign implemented by the
village.
"We have recently leased a
trackhoe and will begin razing these eyesores on Monday
or '11 sday," said Blaetmar.
·"The buildings are .a safety
hazard and have been detracting· ftf&gt;m Pomeroy's better
qualitif:s for sometime now::
ViU~ge oflidals had intended on removing the dilapidated or burnt-out structures last

!

J.

REED

accumulating precipitation
halted the project's progress.
"We are currently working
. with the ·county to remove
remnants of the old Masonic
Temple Building, as well as a
burnt-out apartment building
that sits adjacent to the tempie, in order to make room for
the new courthouse's parking
lot," said Blaettnar.
·"Once that has been completed, we will concentrate on
removing the remaining rundown structures," he added.

Pebruary 3, 2002

I

HOLZER

· CLINic · .

.. . .
',

AIV~ti"AI

~

~

Holzer Medical Center
and Holzer Clinic give

"Baby Love"

PREMIER

• •

•

a wholt:t new meaning.
}

\
1

I

PluH ... hdne,AJ

senting the northwest tip of ·
the Appalachian region.
ATHENS -The number
Now, more than 66 perof graduates from the Ohio cent of the OU-COM
University
College
of alurrtni practicing in the
Osteopathic Medicine who . southeastern Ohio region
remain in southeastern Ohio are practicing in one of the
to practice medicine has primary care disciplines. ·
nearly doubled in the past
The American Medical
six years, and is expected to' Student Association, last
continue to increase.
year, ranked the Athens colA new study of OUlege as the
COM
number
alumni
one osteoshows that
path ic ·
one OUmedical
COM
sc hool in
of
graduate
terms
practices in
the
per• Meigs
centage of
County,
graduates
and four in
going into
Gallia Cou nty, and that 98 family practical residencies.
have chosen to practice in a
Among aU 142 D.O. and
23-county area surrounding M.D. medical sc hools, OU- ·
Athens.
COM had the second-highThe .Ohio General Assem- est percentage of graduates
bly established the college in in postgraduate training in
1975, with a mandate to both family medicine and
produce doctors who would pnmary care.
provide medical ca re_ for
The 2001 OU-COM
underserved areas of Ohio.
Alumni Study found 41 perAt that "time, no area of cent of the college's graduOhio was more underserved
than the 23 counties reprePle•n ... Docs,AJ
BY BRIAN

BREEOOMYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

CoMIIIg .Super Bowl Sunday

LINCOLN

4,000 gallons; heavy com.merdal, $24 per month for
first 4,000 plus S2.30' per
1,000 over 4,000 gallons.
The rate increase will go
into effect with the March
billing.
Voting against the rate
increase was Councilman
Henry Bentz Jr.
In other matters, council
approved the first reading of
an ordinance requested by
the EPA requiring a CrossConnection ControL There
is already a tequirement in
the water service ordinance·
for a back flow preventer,
however, the EPA is requirin,g a separate ordinance.

OU-COM docs staying
in Appalachian Ohio

W.VA.

2·wheel$2495 4-wheel $4995

$19

BY ToNY M. WCH
TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

lxtendecl service

WttoHer
Ford Motor
Company's
....p ..

WASHINGTON (AP)
- Americans cut back on
their spending a bit in
December as free-financing
· offers for cars and other
incentives began to wane.
The Commerce Department reported Thursday
that consumer . •,spending
drtipj:jed ·by
December. That
a
revised 0.3 percent decline
in November, a much
smaller decrease than p~evi­
ously reported. ·
. At the same time, Americans'
incomes,
which
include wages, interest and
government benefits, rose
by a solid 0.4 percent in
December.
On Wall street, stocks
surged higher for the second straight day on the
Federal Reserve's positive
outlook for the economy.
The Dow Jones industrial
average dosed up I 57.14
points at 9,920.00.

o:z

......,.

#COI63

I -·
I I

Spending dips~
lncomes up

GDND M~U~Qms

4X4, A/C, Cassette, #C024 7

.

Systems of Kettering, in the amount of
$26,457.50, and Advanced Rescue
Systems Inc., Mayfield Heighrs, in the
amount of$27,500.
The equipment will be financed
through the Community Development Block Grant Formula program.
The commissioners also:
• Approved a bid for bituminous
materials for February from Asphalt
Materials Inc., Marietta;
• Approved payment of bills in the
amount of $295,698.83;
• Approved an appropriation of
444,843 for the county engineer;
• Approved resolutions authorizing
the county to apply for $300,000 in
CDBG Community Distress program.
Also present were Commissioner
Jim Sheets and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

'

..,;

�•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
•

AEP addresses concerns.over pIum.e'.

Ohio weather

I

Saturdly, Feb. 2

•

.1 Col-. 121·137" I

W.VA.

0

KY.

c 2002 AccuWeather,lnc.

...

__
Hey, winter! You're back
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cold westerly winds will
send temperatures plunging in
the area tonight, the National
Weather Service said.
The mercury will dip into
the 20s by Saturday morning.
Any remaining rain will
turn to snow showers.
Highs on Saturday will be in
the 30s.
Temperatures ·will stay at
normal levels in the 30s on
Sunday.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:51, and sunrise on Saturday
is at 7:39 a.m.
Weather .forecast:
doudy.
Tonight ... P~rtly
Lows in the upper 20s. Northwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Saturday... Mostly sunny and
colder. Highs in the upper 30s.
Northwest wind around 10

•

.

•

'·

FROM STAFF REPORTS

CHESHIRE Local concerns
over a . ~hanged appearance of the
"plume" arising from Gen. James M.
Gavin's Power Plant last summer are
being addressed, American Electric
Power officials hid.
John F. Norris Jr., AEP's senior vice
president of operations and technical
services, said Thursday three separate
injection · systems stemming the formation of sulfur trioxide (S03) will
be installed on generating Unit 2 by
May, the start of the 2002 ozone season.
The installation will cost AEP about
$7 millioll, Norris said.
The utility's plans were shared with
Cheshire officials in an ongoing effort
to keep .the community informed on
tech11ology u~ed at G_avin. ·
.
Since the mstallatton of selecttve
catalytic reduction technology at
Gavin last May, which created the
plurne, residents · have noticed a
changed appearance that at times hit
ground level.
SCR was installed to reduce levels
of nitrogen oxide from the coal-burning process and allow AEP to earn
"early reduction credits" under federal clean air rules.
·
. The new equipment,' Norris said,
will inhibit formulation of S03 during the combustion and environmental control process.
Operation of the SCR system iti
conjunction with the plant's flue gas
desulfurization
(FGD)
system;
increased the concentration of S03
and was responsible for the changed

I ~~~~- IIO'm· I •

INO.

PapAl

appearance of the pI ume.
The new systems will be placed on
Unit 2 and bypass the SCR system on
Unit 1 this year, Norris uid. .
··our goal is to first demonstrate
the S03 ·solation on one unit and
gain important operating experience
b~for.~., ~~ng the commitment to
install and operate the system on both
units," he said.
Plant employees and residents
noticed the exhaust plume from the
830-foot high stack changed during
the startup process last year. The
change, officials said, seemed to be in
connection to the SCR installation in
,conjunction with the operation of
FGD systerns.
Subsequent analysis confirmed that
the same rnechanism used in the SCR
systems to reduce nitrogen oxide produced a srnall increase in the level of
S03.
"'eather'
conditions periodically
vv•
forced the stack exhaust plume to the
ground, producing a "blue haze" that
irritated nearby residents.
At no time during the plant's operation did emissions in the plume
exceed any health -based air quality
standards or permissible exposure
limits, officials said.
"But we fully understood t h e community's concerns, and we wor k.e d as
quickly as possible to resolve the situation," Norris said. ·
The search for a solution was comprehensive, said Gavin General Manager Greg Massey.
"We spent a great deal of time from
July through October testing a variety

mph.
Saturday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows near 20.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 40s:
.
Sunday
mght ... Mostly
cloudy With a chance of snow
showers. Lows in the mid 20s.
Monday... Partly
doudy.
Highs in the lower 40s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of snow showers during the night. Lows in the mid
20s and h1ghs m the lower 40s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy day, accused federal agents of civil rights_ violations, including
with a chance of snow show- alleged witness intimidation and alleged mducements for Wit·
ers. Lows in the mid 20s and nesses to commit peljury.
There was no immediate word on a hearing on the suit before
·highs in the lower 40s.
U.S.
District Court Judge Peter C. Economus in Youngstown.
Thursday... A chance of
snpw showers, otherwise part- Trial Judge Lesley Wells in Cleveland, who has repe~tedly
ly cloudy: Lows in the upper warned Traficapt to stick io co4rt schedules, plans to begm the
.
20s and highs m the lower 40s. trial Monday as planned, her office said.
Tr:~ficant, whose one-minute House speeches ag:unst perceived government abuses are standard fare on C-S~AN, faces
trial on I 0 charges that include bnbery and racketeermg.

Ashland
reassures shareholders_
•

Alnnan rearranges·his life

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Ashland Inc:s chairman told
shareholders Thursday that the strength of the oil refiner's operations and its strategy of balancing. businesses puts the company
in an excellent position to withstand the economic and energymarket slowdown.
"We have created a solid mix of businesses that tend to be
countercyclical to one another," Paul Chellgren, who is also
CEO of the Covington, Ky.-based company, said at the annual
shareholders meeting. "The resulting balance provides some
degree of stability for the corporation during the ups and downs
of both the economic and refining cycles." .
,
He said that while operating income from APAC, Ashland 1
group of construction companies, ~early tripled in the first '!ua~­
ter of2002 from the previous years first quarter, Ashland Dlltrlbution and Ashland Specialty Chemical continue to suffer from
the weak economy.
,
"We have seen some margin improvement in these businesses
due primarily to falling hydrocarbon costs and efforts to· lower
expenses;• he said,

ELYRIA (AP) - · Recendy, Air Force .Staff Sgt. Kevin Crisp,
who ;; single and without ch~ldren,'~· ~re~aring •for ~ next
military assignment Now ·Cnsp, 25, IS thinking about diap~.
child care and a college fund for his half-brother.
.
Last week, Elyria police found their mother, Karen Crtsp, 44,
dead in her ,apartment. Police also found her s~n, Aile~ Shackleford, toddling about. The 21-month-old survtved for four days
on chips, cookies and possibly toilet wa_ter.
.
. .
.·
On Monday, Karen Crisp was bur1ed. While 8fleYlng his
mother's death, Kevin Crisp is rearranging his life. He bepn
doing that as soon as he started driving from McGuire Air FOrce
Base in New Jersey to Elyria. Disbelief about her deatl! was fol.
lowed by fear for Allen.
"I was scared for him, but relieved when I heard he was OK;'
he said, josding Allen, who was tucked in the crook of his arm.
"And I was proud. He was so smart."

Of alternatives to address this
d probld
!em;' Massey said. ••we hire wor
experts. on SCR syst~ms and gas testing firms to assist us m developmg an
appropriate mitigation strategy.
"In November and December we
focused on an'alyzing the data and
determiniU:g the best combination of
systems to achieve the S03 ,reductions we needed to reach," he added.
AEP will inject water, magnesium
hydro~ide and calcium hydroxide_ at
specific points along the combustion
and emission control path to produce
the chemical changes needed to
reduce S03 levels.
"We obviously learned a great deal
from this experience, and we'll be
able to adapt a lot of what we've
learned for other HiD-equipped
power plants that will install SCR sys- .
terns," Massey said.
A decision to equip Unit 1 with a
similar or mo d'fi
1 te d system . WI'II b e
made following a review of Unit 2's
performance this summer.
"This situation was totally unexpected and required a concentrated
d
effort by our own staff, supp1emente
·
d
'd
by industry experts, to . un erstan
h .
exactly what was happ enmg, _wh y d tt
was happening and what we m1g t o
to return things to the way they
were,"·Massey said.
"We regret · that the situation
occurred, but we had no way of antic· ipating it," he added. "We appreciate
the patience of nearby res1dents as
we've worked to resolve the problem."

.

Regulators
order penal1y
for phone
company
COLUMBUS (AP) - State
regulators on Thursday ordered
S13C Ameritech Ohio to pay
$8.5 million for failing to meet
minimum customer service
standards and to reduce charges
for some services to encourage
competition in the local phone
industry
SBC Ameritech Ohio President James Smith said he would
ask for a rehearing of the case, at
least on the charge reduction. ·
The penalty is in addition to
the $8.7 million ,the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
ordered the phone giant last
year to rerum to cU$tomers for
. · ·d or ..,._
..........tl'''i' I ~ 4 ""
tmssc
and rt'pair appointments.
·
The commission on Thursday 1a!so ordered Ameritech to
lower the wholesale rate it
charges competitors to use its
equipment and lines from
$13.14 a month to $11.64. _

•

Racine, Reedsville ·
hosting blood drives ~
•

FROM STAFF REPORTS

RACINE- In an elfort
to sustain inventory levels
of Rh-negative blood, the
American Red Cross will
be holding blood drives in
Racine and Reedsville.
·"We are fast-approaching
ail emergency situation;'
said Pam Sharpe, director
of product management.
"We're only able to provide our smaller hospitals
with rwo units of O-Negalive each. At a minimum,
we're trying to provide our
larger
hospitals,
who
require 'Jlorc blood, with
50 percent of what they
request," she said.
The Greater Alleghenies
Region currently houses
less than a olle- day supply
of 0-Negative blood and
barely above a day's supply
of aU other Rh-negative
types.
According to Ted Mazza,
senior director of donor
services, attempts at raising
Rh-negative inventories
that have worked in the
past are not ·. producing the
results they once did.
."Efforts to recruit 0-

Negative donors to blood
drives, including special
mailers and increased telerecruitment, have yielded
slow results;' he said.
Across
the
Greater
Alleghenies Region, only 7
percent of donors have 0Negative blood, whicp
makes their donation a precious gift. 0-Negative
blood is considered the
universal type, as it can be
transfused to most patients
in an emergency without
taking time to cross-match
blood types.
"In a situation where
seconds could mean the
difference between life and
death, there's no time to
investigate a patients blood
type. Having 0-Negative
blood on the shelves during an emergency is critital," said Mazza.
The blood drives wiU
take place on Wednesday at
Southern
Local
High
School in Racine from 10
a.m. until2 p.m. and Saturday at the Fellowship · ·
Church of The Nazarene
in Reedsville from I 0 a.m.
until 2 p.m.

Driver hits Gallia Co.
GALLIPOLIS GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol is seeking the publie's help in apprehending the
driver of a pickup truck that
struck a Gallia County Local
Schools bus and . then fled
Thursday, leaving the bus driver injured.
Donald Fillinger, 36, 239
Cora Mill Road, Gallipolis,
operator of the bus, was transported to· Holzer Medical ·
Center by Gallia County
EMS following the 3:40 p.m.
crash on County Road 7
(Georges Creek).
Fillinger was treated and
released, a hospital spokesman
said.

Ten students were aboard
the bus when the crash
occurred, but none required
treatment, said Lt. Richard
Grau, the G-M Post's comrnander.
Troopers said the bus was
westbound when it stopped to
drop off a srudent. A white
Dodge pickup failed to stop in
time and struck the rear of the
bus, a 1996 International, then
left the scene.
. ·The pickup was driven by a
white male and had Dodge
written in red let~rs on the
tailgate.
Anyone with information
on the driver or ·about the
crash is urged to call the patrol
at 446-2433, Grau said.

LOCAL STOCKS
· AEP - 41.74
Arch Coal- 1S.90
Akzo- 43.33
AmTech!SBC - 37.45
Ashland Inc. - 46.76
AT&amp;T...., 17.70
Bank One- 37.60
BLI-10.72
Bob Evans- 29.01
BorgWamer - 55.40
ehamplon - 2.95
Charming Shops - 5.89
City Holding - 14
Col- 22.35
DG -15.80
DuPont- 44.17

Slit plies stiU lntad

Federal Mogul - 1.03
USB-20.82
Gannett--: 67.45
General Elec1r1c- 37.15
GKNLY-3.87
Ha~ey Davidson - 57
Kmart-1.49
Kroger- 20.60
Lands End- 49.16
Ltd. - 18..55
NSC -22.55
Oak Hill Financial - 17
OVB -23.80
BBT -35.24
Peoples- .19.05
Pepsloo- 50.09

Premier- 6.55
Rockwall ~ 19.25
Rocky BOOts - 5.40
AD Sholl - 49.97
Seam- 52.64
Shoney's - .34
Wai·Mart- 59.96
Wendy's - 31.20
Wortlllngton- 14.78
Dally stOCk roports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of lhe previous
day's transactions, provided by Smllh Partnem
at Advest Inc. of Gal·
llpolls.
'

Urgent Carel!
No Appointment Necessary
7 Days A Week • 9:00am - 9:0,0pm

Network Providers For
• Medicare
• Aetna
•Anthem
• OU Employees
• ·Central Benefits
·• Ohio Health
• Medical Mutual
At

Tessa The Cat

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main oon~rn In all storlos Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

News Departments
The main number Is 9.92·2156.
Department extenllons are:
General manager

Dr. Eric Hasemeier
Medical Director

f:!IJ.
.?10 w. ~!l.iC?" Street
Medtvaf· ··

11rv ·e.·

..

·a

FROM STAFF REPORTS

CLEVELAND (AP) - U.S. Rep. James A. Traficant Jr. asked
a court to halt his bribery trial next week, but prosecutors dismissed . his claim of a government vendetta as repetitive and
annoying.
Traficant, a ·Democrat and non-lawyer who plans to defend
himself on the criminal charges, included the request in a $250
million lawsuit against the government. The suit, filed Wedne~-

.

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.school bus, then flees

Trlflcant sues pvemment

'

Friday, Feb. 1, 2002

· Ext. 12

NeWI

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

'

Other services

Advortlalng

Athens, Ohio

Assovi~s (~40) 594-7979

Published every attemoon, Monday
through

Friday,

Ext. 3

Circulation

Ext. 4

Claatlfled Ada

Ext. 5

news c mydallysentlnel.com

OnthaWeb
www.myc:tallysantlnel.com

•

•

•

Court St.,

Pomeroy,

Ohio.
Second·dass
po01ag0 palo al Pomeroy.
Mombor: The Aosoclalecl Pross and
lht Ohio Newspaper Association.
Poetmaater: Send addnl88 oorre&lt;:-

Uons to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court.

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ,

Su blcrlptlon rates
By carrttr or motor route

Ono-k
$2
One monllt
SB. 70
Ona ,..,
$104
Dolly
50 cenla
Subacrlbera not desiring to pay the
carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel. Credit will be given
carrier each week. No subscription by
carrier service Is available.

-

Deaths
NEW HAVEN,W.Va.-Jean Smeltzer, 58, died Friday; l'eb.
Home, New J:Iaven.

. ·,.

'·•

William laylor Sr.
REEDSVILLE -William Arthur Taylor Sr., 59, Curtis Hollow Road, Reedsville, died Thursday, Jan. 31, 2002, at his residence, f.,llowing an extended illness.
He was born April 28, 1942, in Long Bottom, son of the late
lzaak Atthur and Linriie May James Taylor.
Surviving are his daughter and son-in-law, Amy and Tracy
Hein of Pomeroy; rwo sons and daughters-in-law, William
Arthur Taylor Jr. and Heather of Reedsville, Clark and Susie
Taylor of Columbus, and Ronnie Taylor .of Columbus; two sisters and brothers-in•law, Evelyn and Stan Watson of Jacksonville, and Zelma and Delmar Grady of Nelsonville; four
bJQthers, Harold Taylor of Cincinnati, Joseph Taylor of Akron,
Delbert Taylor of Akron and Eddie Taylor, whose address is
unknown; and eight grandchildren.
.
•He was also preceded in death by a daughter, Teresa Jean Taylor; a brother, Clifford Taylor; and an infant sister.
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will
be in Bald Knob Cemetery in Pordand. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Saturday from 9 a.m. until the time of service.

Racine
from Page AI
Council passed the annual
appropriations ordinance in
· the amount of $461,613.41.
Mayor Scott Hill said he and
clerk/treasurer
had
the
checked the figures after
receiving the amended certificate from the County
Budget Commission and
there had to be an increase to
cover the village's share of
PERS and the principle and
interest on the OWDA loan
for the water meters.
David
Spencer
. Clerk
reported · to council on the
worker's compensation meeting he recently attended in
Cambridge. Spencer said the
village saved $1,800 by his
presence at the meeting and
that the village could get an
additional 15 percent savings
if it joins with another group.
Following Spenc~r·s r~~ort,
'council agreed to request
joining with the Ohio
Municipal League for worker's compensation coverage.
Spenc.e r added he also
attended a training session on
the Uniform Accounting
Network and the state program will be operating on
Windows after.June I.
Racine Fire Chief David
Neigler met with council to
report the departmentUs '
firefighters have recently performed some plumbing
repair on Engine 23, thus sav-

ing on labor costs.
Neigler also said that
through the Meigs County
Emergency Management
'Agency, the department will
host a drug lab class on Feb.
7. Representatives from
several counties are expected to atten.d this training
session, he said.
Council met with Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Schultz ofVine
Street who are concerned
about cars being parked in
the village alley and the
number of junk cars in the
community.
Council informed the
Shultzs that actiop will be
taken in the spring to get
residents to clean up their
properties and remove cars
from the alley.
Council also:
• accepted the resignation of Councilman Larry
Wolfe. Council has 30 days
to name a replacement;
• approved the purchase
of the village's insurance
from Kinder Insurance in
Ironton . Since 1989, -the
village has participated in
The Ohio Plan with Government · Risk Management;
• approved a request to
place Jack Lyons Jr., on fulltime status;
.
n discussed the possibility
of joining the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce;
• voted to remove a telephone pole that is blocking
the entrance to Walker .
Alley.

established practices or as
residents, followed by Fairfield and Ross counties.
OU is pleased that a
from Page AI
growing number of OUates in family practice, 12 per- COM graduates are remaincent in general internal med- ing in Ohio.
icine, and three percent in
"Soon
we'll
see
it
general p~diatrics. Many · increase," said Sharon Zim·other graduates are in fields merman, OU-COM directhat also deliver "grassroots" tor of alumni affairs. "Over
hfcjllth Care - . emergency the past few years, we've
medicine and obstetrics and seen a steady climb in the
gy;i'ecology, for example.
number of graduates choosAthens County has the ing Ohio as their residency
highest number of OU- state, and choosing primary
CQM graduates pract1cmg care as their residency
in·'" the region, either in choice."

Docs

THIS
YEAR
THERE
ARE 441
NEW
TAX LAW

CHANGES

LOCAL BRIEFS

EMS los calls

I, 2002 at James Cancer Center in Columbus.
'Arrangements will be announced by Anderson Funeru

MaD.subsalptJon

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered five calls for assistance on Thursday. Units
responded as (oUows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :23 . a.m., Rocksprings
Road, Amy Thorneburge,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
7:54 a.m., Arbaugh Road,
Helen Sprague, Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
2:36p.m., State Route 681,
Scott Browning, CCMH.
SYRACUSE
· 8:54 a.m., Melba Icenhower, Pleasant Valley Hospital.

TUPPERS PLAINS
9:03 a.m ., Overbrook Nursing Center, James N . Depoy,
1-lolzer Medical Center.
·

Man injured

Orders are still being taken
for pies and noodles and can
be placed with Kathryn Hart,
949-2656, or Lois Sterrett,
949-0032.

Issued licenses
POMEROY Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Robert Matthews, Jr., 72,
and Rita A. Lewis, 62, both of
Pomeroy; Linden John Kelly,
22, Middleport, and Jennifer
Lee Hanes, 19, Proctorville;
Norman Patrick Smith , 33,
and Sherri Ann Frederick, 24,
both of Syracuse; and. Derek
Mitchell Warden, 19, and
Sarah Anne Brauer, 20, both
of Racine.

Men sentenced
POMEROY Charles
Whittington, Jr. was sentenced in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to 18
months in jail on a count of
vehicular assault.
James Minshall was sentenced to 18 months on a
charge of receiving sto len
property, based on a motion
to revoke probation.

POMEROY A local
man was injured following a
recent auto accident.
According to reports from
the Meigs County Sherilf's
Department, Radley Faulk of
Pomeroy was traveling southbound on Ohio 7 in a 1991
Chevy pick-up truck when a
deer ran into the left-hand ·
side of the vehicle, damaging .
the windshield.
Faulk, who complained of
minor injuries, was transportPOMEROY - American
ed to an area hospital by a Electric Power forestry offifriend in a private automobile. cials plan to begin right-ofway maintenance activities in
and around Pomeroy on
Monday. The effort, which
will involve contracted work
to trim trees from the
crews
MIDDLEPORT The
Meigs County Chamber of company's power line rightsCopunerce will hold its of-way, will begin around
monthly luncheon on Feb. 12 7:30 a.m., and conclude by
from 12-1 p.m. at Overbrook 5:30 p.m. each day.
Nelson Tree Service will
Nursing Center in Middleport.
Local Elvis impersonator perform the work for AEP,
Dwight Icenhower will be and plans to be in the
the featured speaker for the Pomeroy area through March
event.
Icenhower,
who 4. Maintenance activities may
recendy placed third in the conclude earlier or later than
"World's Best Elvis Imperson- March 4, depending on the
ator" competition in Las amount . and type of WQrk
Vegas, Nev., will discuss his encountered, weather condir,=cent trip as well as perform tions and/or other .circumstances.
for those in attendance.
Rights-of-way to be serAU members of the chamviced extend from Spring
ber are invited to attend.
For information, or to Street to Laurel Cliff Road
RSVP, contact the chamber at and from Mulberry Heights
Road to Union Ave.
992-5005.
During the effort, it is possible that some customers may
experience isolated, shortterm power outages ·as crews
work to safely remove trees,
RACINE - The Racine branches, limbs and/ or overAme'rican Legion will have a hangs that threaten overhead
fried chicken and noodle din- power lines. Customers who
ner Sunday, with serving to experience an outage should
begin at 11 a.m. Cost is $6. call 800-277-2177 . .
The public is welcome.

Maintenance
begins

Luncheon
scheduled.

Dinner to be
served

Officers elected
LETART FALLS - .Dave
Graham was elected president
of the Letart Township Board
of Trustees, and Bob Morris
vice president, during the
trustees' recent organizational
meeting. Chris Wolfe is the
third member of the board.

Attention!!!
Do you need a job
or G.E.D.? We are
here to help
1
you succeed in
· doing that.
Contacl Cindy Shull
111 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(740) 992-6600
Ser~i11g

ages 14·11

Bake sale
planned
RACINE - A
planned for Feb. 9
rescheduled to Feb.
Bethany Church,

bake sale
has been
16 at the
8 a.m.

There are 441 new
tax law dtanges.

these dtanges uc"'""l

WE KNOW.
WE'VE
READ'EM.
To learn more, call
1·800·HRBLOCK
or visit hrblock.com

H&amp;R
BLOCK
just plaln smart•

lnoldo Molgo CO&lt;Inly
13 Weeks
$27.30

26 Weeks
$53.82
52 Woeka
$1 06.66
Ratet- out1lde Melge County
13 Weeks
$29.25
28 Weeks ·
$56.68
52 Weotcs
$109.72

..

,.

111

majl permitted In areas where home

Tosand•mlll

~~

(USPS 213-KO)
OhiO Volley Publlohi!IG Co.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

818 EAST MAIN ST
POMEROY, OH 45769

992·8874
· HOURS: Mon·Frlll to 6
Sat 9·5

'

.·

�..

...

'

'

..

' '

'

" '

;the Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

.

By

Page AS

an

The Daily Sentinel

\

111 Court It, ~lo
7.0 812·2188. , . ;
117

.'

Ohio Valley Publishing CO.

••

Dtin Dlcker10n
· Publleher

...

Charline Haefllch
Oen1rel Maneg•r

DIIM Kly Hill

Contr'olltr

Lnt•n to tlr• tdilor tut wdcolftt, TlttJ 1lwwlll b. 1111 ,... 3DfJ tH1'A AU,.,.
to editilrg '""' "''"' bt Jitlltd a11d bttlflth IIMNI1 tutd trlqbflt ".,.....

IU'f 1tlbj«l

N• IUuiglfNI ltllm will •• pllblillltd. IAtttn tltOMIII N lit IOfM ltllllt, ......,,,.,
iltNtl, IUH fHntnudltiu.
Tlltapinlom t:tprnnd i11lht r:uluMniHiow tut tht coiUtltiiU ofdtt OlllD 'MIIIIJ
l"ultliJIIIIfl Cn. 'J edUurlill boord. unlnr olhtrwht lUlled.

NATIONAL VIEW

Futile
Trying to legislate gun makers'
marketing ploys is ridiculous

,• .

1lUi KIL\.ER PRETZEL
SAINTS AND SINNERS

Saft driving: Has·it become a virtue ofpast days?

Throughout Israel's history, violence
hundred things other than your driving,
• The Charleston (S.C.) Post and Courier, on gum with
has been waiting in the wings eveh
and that you are likely to take chances
a~ui-tmoris t messages: Some congressional gun control advocates
when it was not occupying center-stage
behind the wheel or lose sight of what
object to gun manufacturers peddling their wares with anti•
as it is today.
you are supposed to be doing.
terrorist messages. But the gun makers are only responding to .
Incessant horn-blowing is not only a
During my first trip to Israel 30 years
the marketplace.
'
,ago, one could walk safely and without
tip-off that the tooter is nervous and
The Washington-based Alliance for Justice recently held a
fear in the streets day and night. While it
edgy, but it gives other drivers jangling
pr~ss conference with Rep. HenryWaxman,D-Calif.,and Rep.
was nice to feel secure l'rom muggings
nerves. You know how it is when the
Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., to complain about marketing for
on
Israel's
streets,
pedestrians
did
not
driver
behind you lays on his horn. It
weaponry such as Ithaca's "Homeland Security" pump-action
. enjoy the same protection from the
can get you flustered and make you forshotgun, Tromix Corp.'s 50-caliber "Turban Chaser," and
'
Israeli
motorists.
_get
all you ever learned about safety
Beretta's "United We Stand" 9 mm pistol.
Horn-honking is the mark of a bad
COLUMNIST
behind the wheel.
.
Nan Aron, president of th_e alliance, complained about
driver and Israel is a country of hornThe connection between horn-blowBeretta making' donations to terrorist victims based on
honkers. So it was not surprising to be "putting the peqal to the metal" when 'ing· and auto accidents can be backed up
increased sales. ...
.
told
that Israel . has the world's highest they are behind the wheel. It gets a laugh by statistics. It isn't just somebody blowBetter that Beretta should be uncharitable? Some of the maraut0·ac¢ideht rate. The jerusalem Post -like the clergyman stopped for speed- ing exhaust in our faces.
'
keting tactics may be in poor taste, as in the "Turban Chaser."
carried
:c\vo·letters
to·
the
editor
about
ing
who
told
the
officer,
"You've
go
to
The
last
time
I
saw
Paris
mentioned
in
For one thing, the headdress is endemic to the region, with
go fast to catch souls these .days."
. the travel broc~ures there was a ban on
the driving probl~m while I was there.
more worn by our Afghan allies than by the apparendy defunct
One correspondent, obviously hoping
When.·! wrote about driving ona on hom-blowmg m the C1ty of Light. As a
ranks of the Taliban.
to
catch
'
t
he
attention
of
youthful
road
the
church pag~ of the newspaper 1 resu~t, Paris has achieved big gains in
But to teU gun makers they can't retool their marketing to
· offenders, wrote, "Young boys )night like worked for, a minister wrote to rhe edi• cmullg dow_n on h~ghway aCCide~t&lt;.
reflect circumstances is an exercise in futility. not to mention
. (O r:nakAI a hotethat aggressive drlying is · tor demanding tp know, "What has this Fmland ~as.~ .la\1( agamst horn-blo"{mg
sanctimony. If patriotism is big now, Madison Avenue will be
known to be , a sex substitute and I'm got to do with religion?"
and the a~ctdent ratem that country has
near the front of the parade..
sure most of them wouldn't like to That, 1 have discovered, is fairly typicai been cut m tow.
It's as American as armed self-defense.
advertise their shortcomings in this of the unimagipative dergy. Most · of
Most of us, of course. (even the horn- .
direction!"
'
them fail to ·see the connecti6n between h~nkers among_ us), think we a.re good
: .(Could . publicizing this fmding. cut morality and our behavior on the high-. dnvers. There IS one test to Illustrate
. . .
down. on the te~n lllayhe~t~, on the htgh- . ~y, which is ,responsible for killing how a f!OO~. ~~!Yer d~1ves.
w;wt m ~he, Umted Stlltes?) .
· . more people than all of our wars.
. Suppose you bave JUSt won $5 null10n
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
But l11sn t only the young drtvers who . You can get a due to how safe a dri- 1n the lottery•. but you could only colle~t
Today is Friday, Feb. I, the 32nd day of2002.There are 333
pose a.m~nace on the toa~.The Unlte.d wr you are by counting the rtumber of r~at amou~t 1fyou pas~ed a.3?-day dn- .
days left in the year.
,, .
S~tes 11 a;nation of bad drtvers. Our drt; times you blow your horn. 1~ you honk vmg test With atl examtner s1ttmg beSide
Today's Highlight in History:
. .
. .,· , , vm~ \s. a mo~al sc.andal but you wouldn t your horn more than three nmes on an you grading your pen:ormance.
On Feb. 1, 1960, four black college studen~ b~gan a ,llt•m · .. know It by-list.enmg to the clergy. When average day it probably indicates YPU are
H~ you would drl~ for that month
protest at a lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C., whe~·. they'd . . , Wl!J , t)t~ last .ttme . yo.u hea~ a sermon not a good driv~r. The best drivers use . -:- .With your .55 nullton lotte~ wm.. been refused service.
· ·~ . ' ·
···. ·., .. ,,ab!ilut b,ad drMng bemg a sm? Adultery, their heads, not their horns.
'· .mngs ~81118 m the .balance- 1s how
On this date:
.
, ;yet. ~tealing, yes. Not. ~onoring your
Horn-blowjng .tells the world that you a safe ~tver dnves;
..
In 1861, Texas voted to setede from the Union.
.
, ·,pa~nl;s, yes. ,But bad dnvmg, no.
. are nerv'ous impatient occupied with a · . (George R. . Plagenz IS a columnist for
In 1893, inventor Thomas A. Edison completed work ·on the .· . Some ini.nisters even brag about
'
'
Newspaper En(erprise Association.)
world's first motion picture studio, his"Blaclt Matia," in West ·:· ' . ' ..' ,.
·
·. . ,.. , .·
·
Orange, N.J.
.
·. . · •. . · ' ·: ·..;·-.....,...,;._--'-.;.;_....,..._____....;...,..-..,..--------''-------'---,-:-.._,.-.._,._ _ _ _ _ __
In 1920, the Royal Canadian Mounted Poli~e came irito. ,, :·
existence.
·
In I 943, one of America's most highly decorated military
units of World War II, the 442d ~egimental Combat "learn,
made up almost entirely of Japanese-Americans, was authorized.
In 1946, Norwegian statesman Trygve Lie was chosen to be
,
the first secretary-general of the United Nations.
One way American residents used to
but money for the latest in explosiveIn 1968, during the Vietnam War, Saigon's . police chief
get money into the pipeline for Islamic
packed belts for the well-dressed suicide
jihad terrorists was to make a check out
bomber. That is, there is little that is "aca(Nguyen Ngoc Loan) executed aViet Cong officer with a pistol shot to the head in a scene captured in a famous news'photo the Islamic Committee for Palestine.
demic" about activities that end up aid-'
togrdph.
. .
The ICP was once "the active arm of the
· ing and ~betting those who seek political
Islamic jihad Movement in Palestin~." as
gain through the routinely · grotesque
In 1979,Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini received a tumultuous welcome in Tehran as he ended nearly 15 years of exile.
a Cleveland imam named Fawwaz
slaughterofunarmea civilians.
In 1979, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst, whose prison
Damra put it while pitching for the ICP
Simple, right? just leave it to the acadsentence for bank robbery had been .commuted by President
at a 1988 fundraising event that was capemics to complicate things. Rather than
Carter, left a federal prison near San Francisco.
tured on video and made public awhile
call for a definitive investigation into Alback by the Imnugranon and NaturalCOLUMNIST
Arian's activities, Genshaft fired him not
In 1982, 20 years ago, "Late Night with David Letterman"
premiered on NBC TV.
. . . ,, . . ;- :· i~UI&gt;~ Set;Vi~e. "We like ~o. call it the
for his connect-the-dots terrorist ties,
, , In 1991, 35 people . ~ere killed when a US Air Jetlli!e~ &gt;.:;.: ~~la~ti);~)M\It,~e.e for Pal~.rme here for .
.
.but' for , a :bogus·sou.nding conrracrual
; crashed atop a commuter plane on a runway at Los Angi!lcs . ·, ·· secutlty.. reasons, he expl:uned. .
Factor" last fall. Maybe it was. because AI- dispute_.. lomething about his failure to
, International Airport.
Securtty reasons? No wmk-wmk or Arian sounded so unconvincingly stipulate that he wasn't representing the
T~n . ye,ars a.go: President George H.W. Bush and Russian·
nudge~nudge ~,ecess.ary:Th~ lCP, a U.S.- shocked, shocked that one of his institute university when speaking publicly -:
. , Pres1dent Bons N. Yeltsm met at Camp Davtd. Ron Carey was
based char:ty .affiliated With t)te s~te- invitees, Ramadan Abdullah Shalah, had and safety concerns over his presence on
; sworn in as the first Teamsters president elected by the union's
funded Umverstty of Southern Flonda, become Islamic Jihad's top dog after campus. Meanwhile, the St. Peterburg
· : rank-and-file. Federal Judge lrvmg R. Kaufinan, who senwas_ a front orgamzauon for Islam1c j1had returning from the university to the Times reports that the faculty union has
; tencedJulius and Ethel Rosenberg to death, died in New York . . until the FBI shut It down m 1995. So, Middle East; or maybe ir was because of voted overwhelmingly "to throw its full
' at age81. .
.
too, was. the World and Islam St~d1es his classic response to Bill O'Reill 's support" behind the fired prof while the
Five years ago: Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori said he
E!]terpns~, anot~er campus-affihated query whether it was true that AI-Ar~n American Association of University Pro~
would open a "preliminary dialogue" with rebels holding 72
group unt1l the mtddle 1990s.
h d
· d "J'h d ·
h v·
fessors has threatened to censure the uni•
·
B h ICP ' dWISE
d
·
a once ~Qare , 1 a ts our pat . tchostages in Lima, but again rejected their main demand that the
· ot.
an
poppe up In a tory to !slain. Death to Israel. Revo~u- versity. The AAUP's chief concern: that
kovernment release their jailed comrades Pulitzer Prize-winWall Street Journal roundup ofAmen can t'
R 1f
.1 .
R II'
AI-Arian have "the academic freedom a5
! hing columriist Herb Caen died in San F;ancisto at age 80
outposts of terrorism written by Daniel ' Jton.al ev~. u(AllonAu~tl Vlc~oryd. ho mglto a citizen to speak out on controversial
' · as attorney
· ·
p·tpes an d Steven· Emerson 1ast year. Th e. erus
nan pretace
ts exp
•' One year ago: John Ashcroft won confirmation
. em.
b
. - "L
.
. .- a- topics." .
. p rest'd_ent G eorge.
two
groups
described
nation y... saymg,
me JUSt
It mro
Is th'ts case teall y about " academ1c
. freej' genera I on a 58-4 2 Senate vote, compIetmg
.
{ . were
..
.
. . , by
• William
"
context
") In any et
event,
the put
professor's
1 W. Bush's Cabmet over strong Democratic opposition. .
·
West o ,the INS as havins been fi:Qnts
dh
. f
dom"? Is working In support of lslaD).iC
, Today's Birthdays: Actor Stuart Whitman is 74: Former Russ- •· •Ot
" t he purpose
·
·. offun d-ratsmg
· · acttvlles
· · 't'
appearance
prompte
undred~ o angry
h
.
h
.
.
.
.
Jihad
and Hamas just a "controversial·
1
'ian President Boris N. Yeltsin is 71. Singer Doii Everly .is 65.
for the Islamic Jihad and the Hamas ter- Pd one ~ails tp tdc uhntvlerstry, mcludmg_a topic"? Americans have learned the hard
'
. .
.
·
· t'
" B th
ozen or more eat t 1rcats and a dtp tn
h.
.
k h
: Actor Garrett Moms ts. 65. Smger Ray Sawyer (Dr. Hook and
rom~. organ~ ~o~ .d ~th ~e~~~ both donor contributions and student . way dow east1y ~ ter;;'r networ s ';.,.~
: the Medtcmc Show) IS 65. ~ctor Sherman Hemsley IS 64. ~lueabc~o tmg t~ ts .",:to• ,;,
tryer (' . d- · applications. USF president Judy Gen- turne oudr own ree ohms agamst,us. rde
· grass smger Del McCoury ts 63.Jazz mustctanJoe Sample IS 63.
rmg errorts In ;ms ,oun · me1u
. . now nee to 1earn ow to saoegua
·, Comedtan
· Terry Jones ts· 60 . Smger
·
· James 1s
· 50. A ctor•
· th
Rick
. mg
. . e . 1eadership of Jslamt'c. J1'had) by . shaft was persuaded to .fire Al-Anan m th ose firee d.oms, to· un derstan.d' when
· writer-producer Bill Mumy is 48. Rock musician Mike Campkelpmg procure entry visas. And both ~e~ember. Now, Al-Artan vows to get thetr abuse ts nor a· test of our v1rtue, but
~ bell (Tom Petty &amp; the 1-leartbreakers) is 48. Rock singer Exene
groups were run by a tenured Uni~ersi- hts JOb bac~.
.. ,
. a smokescreen . for their enemies. lly
. Cervenka (X) is 46. Princess Stephanie of Monaco is 37.
ty of Southern Flonda computer sctence
Questton. Should Al-Anan s role m · fudgmg, not facmg, the facts agamst AI~
: Actress Sherifyn fenn is 37. Lisa Marie Presley is 34.Jazz musiprofesso~ named Sami Al-Arian .
two terror-linked orgamzatl?,ns come Arian, the Univ:rsity of Southern FloriAI-A~••!II• who has. never been accused under t~~ protective cl~ak of acadenuc da 1s hardly leadmg by ex:uuple.
: cian joshua Redman is 33. Comedian Pauly Shore is 32. Rap, per Big Boi (Outkast) is 27.Actor Jarrett Lennon is 20.
of a cnme af!d demes an); links to t~r- freedom 1 In a wo~. heck no. F~rst
(Diaru~ l#st is a columnist and edUorial
: Thought for Today: "Every 10 years a man should give himrorim, wasn't well. known out11de Amen~ent protecnons stan wear~ng
: self' a good kick in tlie pants." - Edward Steichen, American
Southern Florida until he appeared on pretty thm one~ .the spee~h m questton writer for The Washin.r~ton Times. Sl1e can be
; photographer (1879-1973).
·
Fox News Channe_l's "The O'ReiUy goes toward ramng not JUSt eyebtows, contacted via dwest@WilShingto~•times.co m.}

George
Plagenz

TODAY IN HISTORY

WEST'S VIEW

',1

University~

action was hardly leading by example
Diana

West

!

:0

·.
..

DEAR ABBY: You help so
many people. Please help me. I
am a 14-year- old girl who has
been through a lot this pa~t year.
Just a li.ttle over a month ago, 1
had a miscarriage. It was really
sad, because I· wanted my baby
really qad. The father - I'll call
him Bob - didn't want anything
to do with it because 'he claimed ·
it wasn't his. I ·was very hurt by
his reaction because I was so
happy about the baby.
After that, everything changed
between me and Bob. He told the
whole school I was a whore.
When I told him about the loss of
the baby, he was very happy, but
now he hates me more than ever.
I am so depressed and alone.
Some mornings I don't even
want to wake up because the pain
is so bad . Sometimes I just want
to end my life. [. can't go to my
mother about this because I

•'

examined by a doctor to make
sure you are all right, physically
I
and emotionally.
A giant step in that direction
'
would be fo,r you to tell your
Dear ~••1·
mother what .has been going on
this past year. She needs to wake
up to reality, and although she
. won't be pleased to hear how out
:t\DVICE
of touch you have kept her, she
won't "kill" you.
No one should have to go
never told her about anything. If
she found out that her baby girl through what you have been .
was even thmk1~g about· having through alQIIe. You need more
sex, she would kill me.
. help than 1 can give you in a let! have nowhere to turn. Abby, if ter. An adult in whom you can
you can help me, please do.- ALL . confide will make the process
ALONE IN TUCSON, ARIZ.
much easier. If you cannot bring
DEAR ALL ALONE: I am yourself to confide in your mothsorry that your relationship with er, I urge you to find someone
your . mother is so poor that you you can tru st - a school nurse, a
experienced a pregnancy and teacher, the mother of one of
miscarriage right under her nose your friends. You have a lot of
and she never knew the differ- growing up to do before you
ence. It is important that you be become a mother with all the

.

Abby.

Society Note~ook
Gauls announce
birth .
CHESTER - David and
Bethany Gaul of Chester
announce the birth of their
second child, a son, Christian
Eldon Blaine Gaul, Thursday,
Jan. 24, 2002, at CamdenClark Memorial Hospital in
Parkersburg, WVa. The infant
weighed seven pounds, five
ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Gaul have a
daughter, Meredith Rae, age
6.
' Maternal grandparents are
Sue Floyd of Pomeroy · and
Mike Blaine of Gallipolis.
Paternal grandparents are
Dick anq Bet~ Gaul of
Chester.

,Alfred pe'·'irsonals
ALFRED - Wilbur and
Marilyn Robinson traveled to
Loveland recently · for an
observance of the first birthday of their granddaughter,
Olivia Fick, who recently
underwent a liver transplant.
Alfred and Pat Wren of
Mount Gilead spent New
Year's weekend here with
Warren and Charlotte VanMeter.
Debbie Barber attended a
tumbling competition in Peoria, Ill., last weekend. 1\vo of
her athletes, Dianna Jarvis and
Ariel Brinker from Will Power
Tumbling, wire placed on the

Hunter or Dr. james Witherell.
·They include speech and
hearing, vision, blood test for
lead poisoning and low iron
levels, and urinalysis, along
with vital signs.
Skidmore said that nutrition
education,
developmental
evaluation and social assessments are also included in the
well · child examinations. Last
year the depanment completed
286 health screenings on
with pic e-mailed
children.
The target population
includes infants, children, and
adolescents up to the age of21
years, especially those at-risk
for poor health and/ or those
Who are uninsured or underPOMEROY -"Even chi!- ' insured.
dren who are · well need to ' She also noted that the
have an ann~al checkup;' said ·' Ohio Department of Health
M. arg_1e Skidmo.re, R.N., ·' ;,.comm~nds children birth to
dir~ctor of nursmg at the years ;f age receive examiMe1gs ~ounty He~th Depart- nations '\t one week, 3 to 4
m~nt, m announcmg a well weeks,thenat2,4, 6,9,12,15,
child clinic to be held 18, and 24 months of age.
Wednesday.
'Children 2 and older should
Skidmore said that early lie seen once a year.
asses~menr o~ a child's heal.th is
Skidmore said the program
cruc1al for disease prevennon. focuses on rhe population
Delayed identification of which cannot afford well child
health disordtrs in children ,visits or in situations where·
places them at risk fer poten· the deductibles are high or the
tial problems that include, but ramily 'insurance does not
ate not limited to; academic cover well child visits. Cost is
difficulties, poor peer rela- based on ability to pay, she
ti~,&gt;ns, behavioral problems, or stressed.
emotional-behavioral · probAppointments may be made
lems.
,
. by calling the health departComplete physical exami- ment at 992-6626. Hours of
nations are done by one of the the clinics are from 8:30 a.m.
clinic doctors, Dr. Douglas to noon, and 1 to 3 p.m.

.

responsibility it entails
and
you need to slow down .
DEAR ABBY: Thank you for·
printing the letter from Alan I.
Leshner, director of the Nati'onal
Institute on Drug Abuse. It made
me realize that I am not the only
person who has returned to old
habits after the Sept. 11 attacks. I
have a history of drug abuse and
self-mutilation. (I cut my arms.)
Sadly, I now combine them to
relieve my anxiety. '
Why didn't 1 receive treatment
as soon as these habits surfaced?
Bec.ause I am only 16, and adults
(and some of ·my peers} dismiss.
my behavior as "just one of those
stages teens go through."
Can you tell me, Abby, why is it
that right now I can walk outside
and within minutes get an ounce
of heroin - but it would t~ke
two weeks to convince anyone I

need help to . stop my selfdestruction?- RECOVERING
TEEN IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA
DEAR
RECOVERING
TEEN: I'm sad to say this, but it
. may ·be because the illegal drug
trade is better funded than our
mental health system.
Howeve.r, that's no excuse for
continuing the self-destructive
behavior. If your parents won't
accept the fact that you need
help to break the cycle, please
talk to another trusted adult
about your need 1;o get some professional counseling. The longer
you put it off, the more difficult
the habits will be to break.
(Pauline Phillips and her daughter
Jeanne Phillips share th e pseudonym
Abigail Vtm Buren . Write Dear Abby
at www. DearAbby com or P. 0 . Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

's Valen-time

USTA Elite National Team.
This is a top honor as no one
from southeastern Oho has
ever been on this team, it was
reported.
Eva Johnson is recovering at
home
following
recent
surgery.
The January meeting of the
Alfred WMU was canceled
due to inclement weather.

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

"'Your Way,...., On February 14th
With A Sentinel Love Message!
Examples of Sizes and Prices

1 INCHAD ..... $5.00

1'/dNCHAD .. $7.50

(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)
0

Happy

Happy Volentine's Day

1st Valentine's Day

Well child dinic
slated for
Wednesday

.

Grandma, Grandpa,

Tessa!

Mom, Dad, Sister, and
Brother...
Thanks for belnQ such
o oreal family!
I Love You Very Muehl

~Mommy &amp; Daddy

3 INCHAD ... $15.00
(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

..

0

2 INCH AD ... $10.00
Happy .Valenit~e·s Day
. Cupkfs arrow Is •
• stra1Rhta11d true, . ·
In brlngTng this thought
ofloVe to you.
I'm sorry abOut the

2"

olher night.
When we had that
terrible Hght.
A Sendnellove message
was a good Idea.
To show you just how
much I love you, Marll.

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVEA ·
WONDERFUL UFE
TOGETHER!

(APPROXIMATELY 40WORDS)
Q

"

MY HONEY

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON.
FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 8,

Writing this love
message gives me the
opportunity to tell you
just how much I love
you and enjoy being
your husband. I know
!sometimes
It but I
Valentines

2002.

···-·-·-·-·-·---~---·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·--Write your Message Below:

"

I

LOCAL EVENl'S
Community Caland1r 11 publllhed •• a ff'll Hrvlcato non·
profit g'roupl wl1hlng to
announce m11tlng1 and •~»­
clal av1nt1. The calendar 11 not
designed to promote 11111 or
· fund-rellll'l of any type. Item•
ere printed only 11 apace per·
· mlta end cannot be guarint11d
to be printed 1 1peelllc number
of day1.
FRIDAY

POMEROY - Meigs County
· Chapter PERl Ia meet at Meigs
· County Multipurpose Cenler, Frl·
. day. Lunch al noon, followed by
program. Dues to be paid.
GALLIPOLIS - Board of
Directors of Oallia·Meigs Com·
munlty Aclion Agency lo meet at
6 p.m., Holiday Inn, lor bl·month·
ly meeting. Public invited. Annual
dinner to follow the meeling lor
· board tm~mbers, stall and
. guests.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878, Saturday, ·polluck
, suppe1, 6:30 p.m..: regular meat·
lng and degree team p1aclice,
7:30F.m .
PORTLAND
.Lebanon
Township Truslees, Saturday, 7
p.m. at the township building.
MONDAY

POMEROY -

••

Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

Republican Party, Monday, 7:3o Township Trustees, regular meetp.m. at the courthouae.
Ing, Monday, 7:30p.m. at the lira·
house.
LETART - 'Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6:30 p.m. at . RUTLAND - Rulland Town·
the office bulidlng. Appropriations ahlp TruaiMs will mMt Monday,
to be approved prior Ia the ragu- Feb. 11 Instead of Feb. 4 as reg·
ia1 meeting. .
ularly scheduled. The meeting
will be held at the fire depart·
CARPENTER - Columbia ment.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1
1

Address:
'Size ofValenline:
Total Amount Enclosed:

~

u;

··-·-~---·-·-·-·-·---~---·-·-·-··
a ·a a a a a a a a a ~ ~

~

a

1
1

~~

Citizens First
Bank

601 Washington Street • Ravenswood, WV
• Limited Time Specials APY (Annual Percentage Yield)
$1 ,000 minimum deposit
Penalty for early withdrawal.
fees or other conditions
reduce the

Meigs County

•

'. .

�•
•

,_

Pa AI• Ibt'Dilly '·ntlotl

ol-

Momiq worship II am £venifll - 7 pm
Wedntsdly 7 p.m.

A,VanlMdlllld Wild Rd.

Clolldo

Wedneldly Service•- 6:30p.m.

( .illlcllil
-

Hoort ~ Clooordl

llvtrV811ey
ApoilOH.C Wonhip Ccnlcr
873 S. Jtd Ave., Middlepon
Ke\'ln Konkle, Putor

'--

OJ. White Rd. off SL Rt. lliO
Pwor: PJ. O&gt;opman

Pulot: Rev. Walter e. Heinz
Sat. Con•• :.. ~!li:I.Sp.&amp;n.; MMJ- !li:JO p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9: I~ a.m.,
Sua. Mus·9:30a.m.
o.uey Mill· 8:30a.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Wonhip- II

•.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Cburd of Jesw; Christ

Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

\ ~ ~~· mhl~

ol' ( ;od

Uberty Assembly of GOO
P.O. Hox 467, Dudding Lane
Ma_o;on , W.Va.
P&lt;~ slur: Neil T~nnant
Sunday ~f'\·ic~s· I 0:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

~

Bapli-.1

Pomn-oy Olurth or Cbrist
212 W, Main S1.
Minist~r: Anthony Morris
Sunday Sdtool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne~.Y Services- 1 p.m.

326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Nlster
Sunday School and
Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.

llolinl·~~

Middleport Churcla of Chrilt .
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartslin •
YoUih Minisler: Bill Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8: IS, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
)Vedncsdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wal\84.:t
1st and 3rd Sullday .

Rut111nd ··irst Hapdst Chun"h
Sunday School · cuo a.m.
Worsh ip - 10:4:'i a: m.

Pomero)' First Raprist
F..ust Main S1.
Sunday S.:.·hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Harrison ville Road
Pastor: Charl es McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00 p.rD.

Btarwallow Ridge Church Gt Cbrilt
Pas1or:Terry S1ewart
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Woi-s.hip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 6:30 p.m.

first Southern Baptist
4lK72 Pomeroy Pike
P'dstor: E. Lamor O'Rryam
SunU01y Sd10ol ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15a.m., 9:4~ am &amp; 7:00 p.m.
WeUn~ay Servi~·es ·7:00p.m.
First Baptist Cburtb
Pastor: Mark Morrow
flth and Palmer St.. Mlddlepon
SunUay s~ hool -9:15a.m.
Worship- 10: 15a.m., .7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Radne First Bapdsl
Paslor: Rick Rule
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WorShip- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · HlO p.m.
Run Baptl!lt
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worship· !I a.m., 7:fK)'p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Hyse'l Run HoUDe:l8 Churt.h
.Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:4.5 a.m .. 7 P.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth • 7 p.m.

Rutland Church of Christ

Sunr.liy School. 9:30 a.m.N
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : David Wiseman
Sunday School·9:4.5 a.m.
E\'ening- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

LIUrel CUll' Free Methodist Churdt
Paamr: Donald Bali!;
Sunday S~hool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00 p.m.

Bradfonl Churth of Christ
Comer of Sc. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mini1ter. Doug Shamblin
Youlh Minister. Bill Amberger
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesdlly Services - 7:00p.m.

Betlrleh~m

Baplist Church
Bend, RoUie 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecca
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Womhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · &amp;:00 p.m.

G~at

O(d Btthel Free Will Baptlrit ChUn:h· · I
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School ~ I 0 a.m.
Evening-7:00p.m.
Thursday Services. 7:00
1

Hillside hptisl Cburdt
St. Rt. l&lt;t3justoffRt. 7
Pasror: Rev: James R. Ac~e. Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Hkkory Hllll Cllurch or Orht
-- ~ViU1geliSt Mike Moo~
Sunday School- 9 a-. m.
WQn;hip - 10 a.m,. 6:30p.m.
.. Wednelday Services · 7 p.m.

Langnllle Chriltillll Churth
Pa.~ 1or : Robert Musser
Sunday School· 9!30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi~e 7:30p.m.

l .ulhl'ran
SL John Lutheru Churth
Pine Grove

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Hartl'ord Churth or Chrilt In
Chrl11lan Union
Hanford. WVa.
PaslOr:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wollihip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdne!~)' Service!- 7:30p.m.

Mt.. Moriah Haptlsl
Founh &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Ciilben Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · CJ: 30 a.m.
Wor~hip - 10:4!1 a.m
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - \0:45a.m.
Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Marie McConw

Mt. Moriah Chun:b of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine:
Pastor: James Satterfield
Sunday School • 9:4.5 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m . .

Salem St.
Pastor. R,:v. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -.7 p.m.

w:

Hocld.port Church

WoOihip- 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (Jrd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Grand Street

1030

'\atan·nl'
Middleport Churt.h ot the Naumae

Airred

. PIUI:tor: Aile~ Midcap
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Pastor:.AJ!en Midcap

Chester
pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursdoy Services - 7 p.m.

ReednWe Fellowtblp

S)'nt'Uif: Flnt United Prabyterlu.

'

I

y

\dl(' llli , l
'

'

Mt. Hennon U•tted Brtthrtn
In ChrUt Cbul"'!h
Texas Community. off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunduy School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servlce1- 7:30p.m.

UnJted Faith Cbun:h
Rt :7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pa&amp;tor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.·
Sunday School - 9;30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedn~y Service- 7 p.m.

F..den United Brtthrtn In Chrill
2 112 mi\CI north of Reedsville
on Stale Route 124
PastOf: Rev. Roben Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wedne!lday Services· 7:30p.m.
WedncWy Youth Service- 7:30 P..m.

South Bethel New THiament

ATTEND THE

Bill Quickel

992-66n

Ingel's Carpet
Ave.
Middleport, OH
169 N 2nd

992-7028

White
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
II 0
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Service &amp; ::Ju~1p1 Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
PHARMACY
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
1
SERVICES ~.
We Fill Doctors'
214E.Maln
~
Middleport, OH
.Prescriptions
992-5130
'992-6376
Pomeroy
992·2955
Pomeroy
Florist
MeitJ• Cduntys 0/de" Flornt
352 East Main
~

Pomeroy, Oh

W

*ltt 11• c&amp;nd yuur lhOt.tgh~ with ~~lal eart•

E'WING FUNERAL
HO:ME
Dignity •nd Service Alw•y•
l;:etabllehed 1913

992·2121

74(1.992-2644

Ave.
•

.:flf{Jn .:funeral Jfome
264 Soll1l SOCOIIII Avo. • Wll 1111, 011 45760

74G-992·5141

740·992·5444

106 BU'ITERNUJ AVE.
Po~OY,OH

992·6454

"Flowers for all occasions"

..

?'"'e,al ';l/o--.e

.

.,_ R.lhllor- Dl590 IAYIIWI Slfoot • r-oy, OH 45769

FLOWER

-· ~

.. &amp;noulfrr'f
:firr &amp; ii111lrtp

...........

. . . . . . . .17

174 Layne Street

New Haven, WV 25265

Blessed are the pure
in heart; jQr they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
My Qrace Is sufficient for
thee; for my stren9th
Is
I
made perfect In
weakness

11 Cor. 12:9

1-1arnes H. Anderson
Fax:

.

,

Olrle
Thuredlly'e Ge~

SEOAL

Athens 56, Pt. Pleasant 54
Gallia Academy-56, Jackson 15
Warren 57, Logan 31
Marietta 47, River Valley 38
TVC

Vint!&gt;n County 5 f. Belpre 40
Meigs 47, Nelsonville-York 41
. Southern 55, Miller 24
F:ederal Hocklng 65, Trimble ~7
Waterford 54, Eastern 34
Wellston 55, Alexander 35

OTHERS
·south Gallla 51, Ohio Valley 32

NCAA Men'l
Thundlly'e Game•

Maine 80, Binghamton 69
Saint Joseph's 71, R. Island 58
AUstin Peay69, Tenn.-Ma!tin68, OT
Duke 87, North Carolina 58
b -Lafayette 73, S. Alabama 68
La-Monroe 72, N'westem St. ll4
j'.4aryland 91, VIrginia 87
N. Mexico St. 64. N. O~eans 62
Tenn. St. 72, SE Missouri 65
Tennessee Tech 97, E. Illinois 92
W. Kentucky 66. Ra. lnler'nal 64
Winthrop 68, Coast. Carolina 49
Bradley 60, Indiana St. 57
Clewland St. 61' Loyola Chicago 60
Detroit 74, 111.-Chicago 67
lnd.·Pur.-lndpls. 92, Chic St. 59
Indiana 66, Purdue 52
M. Tenn. 90,1nd.-Pur.-Ft Wayne 80
Wright St. 76, Youngstown St. 69
Nevada 64; Rice .56
Sam Houston 96. SW Texas 82
Staph. F.Austln 72, Nicholls St. 56
Tx·Mington 73; SE Louis. 66 ,
Texas-San Antonio 78, Lamar 72
Tulsa 78, Fresno St. 63 ·
Arizona 68, California 58
Cal Poly-SLO 56, Idaho 54, OT
Hawaii 67. Boise St. 56
L Beach St. 77, cal St.-Fullerton 80
Montana St. 76, Montana 56
Oakland, Mich. 64. S. Utah 60
Oregon 91 , UCLA 82
Pacific 74, CS Northridge 58
San Jose St. 67. UTEP 62
Southern Cal 64, Oregon St. 51
Stanford 90, Arizona St. 81
UC Irvine 72, UC Riverside 64
Utah St. 72, UC Santa Balbara 64
Wsshlngton,St. 81, Washington 79

Pro Basketball
NBA
Thursday's Gem11

l nill'd Brl'thrl' ll

Full Goopd Llplhowe
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy
Ptutor: Roy Huflter
Sunday School - 10 am.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tue~ay &amp; Thursday - 1:30 p.m:

Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Wald«k
Supday School-9:30a.m.

l'n · ~ln tnian

Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

Mt. Oll,.e Community Church
Putor: L.awrence Bush :
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wcdncday Service - 7 p.m.

Northeast Cluster

· Pastor: Jane B~ttic
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wurship - II a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Syracuse First Churth of God

.

Church

Peritteooslal A.Demhly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday S~hool • 10 a,m.
Evening - 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

1' \( ' llill - ll . ll

Follh Goopd Church
Lons Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WWncsday 7:30 p.m.

Thn::h Chun:t,
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday SChool - 9:30a.m.
h'

Faith FeDowshlp Cnuade lor Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Otckens
Service : Friday, 7 p.Jri.

Middleport Prabyterlan
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship- tO a:m.

Mono Chopol Chun:b
Sunday ~~ehool . I0 a.m.
Worship ~ .II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Y/Qn;hip - 11 a.m ..
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

w.

Pastor. Edsel Han.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&amp;hip- 10;30 un., 7:30 p.m.
Dyen111t Community Chureh
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

. Belhel Clwn:b
Township Rd. , 468C
Sunday School~ 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Melp Cooperative Parish

RutJand Church of Cod
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood, WV
Pastor: David
M&lt;.:Ciain

Pastor: Helen Kline
· Coolville Church
Main &amp;. Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
TUesday Sel'\'ices - 7 p.m.

Graham United Methodist

ML Olive United Metllodbll
OIT I 24 behind Wilkesville
Pa8tor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday S~rvices - 7 p.m.

( 'hurrl1 of ( ;od

Rutland Free WUI Baptist

\klhodi~l

Wollhip - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7.:00 p.m.

Harrllon rille! Pmbyterlan Chureb
WoT!lhip- 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 9:4.5 a.m.

Haul Community Churdl
OffRt 124

CoolvUie Unlled Mo-t Parish

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St. ~ Pomeroy

Prep Basketball

Pastor. Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WoBhip - II a.m.

Syncuse Ml!Jslon
1411 Bridgtman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wedneiiday Service - 7 p.m.

Rodno

.Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnu1 and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sun!iay School - 10:00 a.m.
Wonbip • II a.m.

l uill'd

Faltb Valley 'JI,bemade Cbun:h .
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. EITUllCtt Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 1 p.m.

Pastor: Brian tb.rtness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
Wcdne5day 7 p.m.

Worship- 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

( ' hri~lian l 11ion

Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday S(:hoollO a.m .
Evening -7:30p.m.'
Wednesday Service~ 7:'JO J't.m.

Lady Tornadoes notch ·victory No. 15
BY ScoTT WOU'E

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
. Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship I 0:30a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m·. · · ·

.57~

Eat Letart
Pasror: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- lO a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

-Pagea_i;

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Middleport CommunJty Church

Momln1 Star
Pastor: Dc\l{a_yne &amp;tutlc'r
Sunday S~hool - 1i·a.m.
Won hip • I0 a.m.

Sacrament Service 9-10: 15 a.m.
Home milking meeting. Ist Thunt. - 7 p.m.

Chun!h at Chrilllt
Intersection 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennia Sargent
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30 a.m.'
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 7 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Pewayne Stuller
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Carmel-Sutton ·

11000

Dexter Otun:h of Cllrilt
Pastor: Na1han Robinson
Sunday school 9:30 a.m.
Nonnan Wm. superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St. MallOn
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worsh ip . llo .m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.·

Salem Center
PMtor: William K. MarshAll
Sunday School - I0: llo.m.
Worship-9:15a.m.
Bible Sludy: Munday 7:00pm
Snowville'
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wor&amp;hip- 9 a.m.

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, OhiO
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 9:30 un.
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.in.

The Churdl of JINIII
tChrlst of L..t~Day Salnll
St. Rt 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
•....:O)',~'fM~··f!JeJid')'lScbooiiO::zfi.ll a.m.
Relief . Socl~ty!Pricsthood II :05-12:00

Rccdsvllk Chun:h of Chrt.l
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Scrvi": 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Vidor')' B11ptl!tt Independent
525 N. 2nd Sl Middleport
Pwnor: James E. Kee~
Worship · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne~da)' Service!! - 7 p.m.

RuU.od
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday'Servicc::s - 7 p.m.

75 Pearl St, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug CoJ.
Sunday Wonhip- 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bradbury Chun:b of Christ
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39558 Brudbury Road, Middleport
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Sll~er

RotkSprinis
Pustor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • 9: \5 a.m.
WDnlhip · 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Waleyan Blble Hollnetlll Church

HIGHLIGHTS

P.astor: Wayne R. Jewell
·
~Sired Church
Sunday Services . 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Ash St .. Mnidleport· Pastor: Glenn Rowe
Thu~y _7: 00p.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:00p.m.
RejolclniJ Llle Cbun:h
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.
t. 500 N. 2nd Ave., Middkport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Hanttt Outruch Minbtriel
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
47439 Reibel Rd., Chesrt:r
Worship- 10:00 am
Pastoni: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.
CUrt. Tabtnaade Chun:h
Clifton. W.Va.
A.ppe Life Center
SUnday Sc.hool - 10 11.m.
"Full·GOspel Church"
Worship- 7 p.m.
Pastors, John &amp; Pt~ny Wade
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
New Lite Vldory Cenlt:r
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
W~nesday 7 pm
Pastor: Dill Staten
Sunday Services - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Abundant Gl'llte R.F. I.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
923 S. Third St .. Middlepon
Pastor Teresa Davis
Full Gospel Church of the Lh1q
Sunday serviCe, 10 a.m.
Sarior
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Rt.338. Antiquity
Pll!ltor: Jesse Morri5
Faith Full G01pel Cburth
Long Bouom
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.
Pll!ltor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
God'1 TemPle or Praise
Worship -9:30a.m. and 7.p.m.
3166.5 McQuire Rd . Pomeroy, Ohio
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.
Services: thura. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday serVice
The Bellnen' Feltowlhlp Ministry
established.
New Lime Rd .. Rutland
Pastor: Re;v. Margaret J. Robinson
, Salem Communit)' Church
Servlce1: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Lieving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
Sunclay, 2:30p.m.
Pastor: Clyde Fem:ll
Sunday School 9:30am
U.rriiOftyllle Community Churt:h
Sunday evenina: service 6 pm
Pastor: Theron DurhHm
Wednesday IICrvice 7 pro
Sunday ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Pastor: ROO Brower
Worship -9:30a. m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Pine Grove Bible HoUneu Chun:h
tn mile off Rt. 325
Pastor. ReY. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 1:30 p.m.

FRIDAY'S

F.tf¥1ew Bible Churdl
Letart. W.Va. Rl. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday ~hool- 9:30a.m.

Sdvers~Uie Cornm~t)'

Pomeroy

Leading Creek Rd. , Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kins· ·
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plain Ch~rdl of Christ
Instrumental
Worship Ser.·ice - 9 a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Colnnlullh)' of Chrilt
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael DuhJ
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Purl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

RUH of Sharon HoUneu Churtb

Zion Churrh or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisorwille Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pn1otor: Roger Wnl!IOJI
Sunday School'- CJ:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

( IIIH·r ( 'hu rd11 · ~

PaslOt: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WOfship- 10 a.m.

Coi""'Y p;1,.-1"' Chapel

~bool· 9:30a.m.

PutOr:: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won;;hip . 10:30 a.m.
Wedneflday Service - 1 p.m.

PortlaOMI flnt Ctoom. ultbe N...,...
Pastor. WiUiam Justis
Sunday SChool -10:00 a.m.
Morning W001h ip - I0:45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30p.m.

MinenviUe

-

Fttay. ,....,..ry 1. 2012

While'• Chapel We*yan
Coolville Rolld w

Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Set\'icet - 1 p.m.

Htalh (Middleporl)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - II :OOa.m.

;

••
·

Worship- 7 p.m:

Rutlud Cbun:h oltbe Nazamae
Pl!liOt: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

Sunday Sc~l - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 un.

Kentucky jtNJtball sl4pped, PtJge B3
NBA roundup, PtJge B6

Rev. RopWtllford

Sunday

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - It a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Foral Run

Robort-

The Daily Sentinel

F-~­
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31

Pulor. Rev. Hahert Gnllt:

Pastor: Bob Robinson

DlilnviUe HoUness Church
310.57 State Route: 325, Langsvlle
Pn.&lt;;tor: Gory Jack.o;on
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship: 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
.Wedna&gt;day pray~r service - 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Christ

EaterprloO
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 am.

Pult&lt;':

Sunday'Schoof - 9:30a.m.
Won.hip Service !0:30a.m..
EveninJ Service 6 p.m.

Pa~

a....er Clt.lll'dl .r tk Naureae

a.m.

Flalwoodo
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Cooununlty a-urd
Pos10r: R~v. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Wonhip-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Sm·kc-7 p.m,

''',1·'... ~ '-:t•

Wedneldly Servk:ea • 1 p.m.

Cefttrlll CluMer __
Asbury (Syracu50)
Pas10t: Bob Robinmn
Sunday School - 9:4$ a.m.
Worship - II Lm.
Wedne!day Services - 7:30p.m.

Gnc:e EplKopal Churt:h ..

,

..._,QoudootdoeN
....... J.. Lavcndor
~ School · 9:30 un..
Wonbip ~ 10:30 Ull. and 6 p..m.

Wonbip. 10 a.ia.
Thesday Servk:el ; 7:30p.m..

&amp;econd &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Craig Crossman
Won;hip 10:2.5 a.m.
Sunday School9: 15 a.m.

Pomerey Westside Churt:h ol Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School- II a.m.
Wonihip - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Hope Baptist Chun::h (South~m)
.570 Grant St.. Middlcpon
Sunday !iehool - 9:30a.m.
Wun;hip . 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesd!ly Ser.·ice · 7 p.m.

S~nday School· 9

l'rioll)' CHI'dl

lk lrtkGrenGrtltiaaCll•rdl
PaMOr: Richard Nease
Sunday S(:booJ. 10:30 a.m.
·Worship - 9:3Q a.m.
Bible Study- 7 p.m.
Community of Chriat

AJMitolic Faith
New Lima Road
Surnlay. 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.

.

............... Sc. ....
Putor: Jant BatUc

Suncby, 10 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:)0 p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

p.m.

S1fiiCIIOOCiioldo o l d o e r-MibAdtiaa
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
WoRhip - 10:30a.m.. 6p.m.
Wedneo.lay S...ku · 7 p.m.

Suodoy Sd&gt;ooi·I&gt;.JO '-"'·
Wonllip - I 0::111 LID.
Rud • •
\Yorlhip • 9:30 l .m., I
SWldly School- 10:30 a.m.
Fttal SYnday of MOIIIh - 7:00p.m. lei'Vict

C.utdl.tGocl atPrar' r ,

161 Mulbmy Ave .• """""'Y· !192-5891

w~-icoo - 7

zona

Silver Ridp:
-.RollenBSuod.ly School • 9 a.m..
SUIL Wonhip • I0= 10 1.m.., 6 p.m.
W.....oday Servk:c • 7 p.nL
Cartetoo r.tert
....... d.utll
Kin-~-- Rood
.,
.....,_,
''l~·k !~

Wonhip . 10:4$ ua.., 1 p.m..

Wonhip . 9:l0 Lift.
Sundty School· 1&amp;-30 LIL

Suodoy Scboollod Wonbip- 10 o.m.
Eveni.nJ Services- 6!10 p.m.

Cloriol

Putor: James Mi.,
Sunday School - IO:JO Lm.
Evcnin1 • 7:30p.m.

Friday. Ftb, 1.

PoiJWQy. Mlddlemd. Oblg
"""" l l l d - s...
....., Bob llondolpll
Rn.David ......u

S&amp;mdly School 10 1!11-

Washington 93, Cleveland 92
New Jersey 125, Milwaukee 100
Toronto 97, Boston 92
"'l&gt; L.A. Clippers 91. San Antonio 87
Dallas 95, Houston 91
Sacramento 99, Seattle 95
Portland 105, Phoenix 97

Brandon Hunter
suspended for
Ohlo-Manhall
ATHENS (AP) -Brandon
Hunter, who leads the Ohio
Bobcats in scoring and
rebounding. was suspended
for Saturday's home game
with Marshall for violating
team rules.
.
.
· "·Brandon is a wonderful
kid who simply used poor
judgment after a very difficult
loss;· coach Tim O'Shea said ·
Thursday. "Hopefully he will
grow and we· will grow as a
team funrt this laps~ in judgment."
O'Shea didn't say what
Hunter did wrong after a lastsecond 7 4-7 3 loss to Akron at
home Wednesday night.
Hunter, a JUmor from
Cincinnati, averages 17.8
points and 9.4 rebounds a
game.
The Bobcats (11-6, 6-3
Mid-American Conference)
are in · second place in the
MAC East Division, two
games behind Kent State.

Corey Dillon
ping to Pro
Bowl

\

CINCINNATI (AP) Cincinnati Bengals · running
back Core§ Dillon replaced
Pittsburgh's injured Jerome
Bettis on the Pro Bowl roster.

RACINE - Behind ano~her great
passing game and good teafll effort,
The Racine-Southern Tornadoes hit
the landmark 15-win plateau by
defeating Hocking Division fpe
Miller 55-24 Thursday night in
Racine. Southern is now 15-3 overall
and has posted one of its best records
since 1982.
In 1996, Southern won the sectional under Jenni Roush then lost out to
Crooksville in the district.
Southern was led by sophomore

Wildcats
drops
Eastern
BY

Katie Sayre who
tossed in 16 points
and
added · five
rebounds in a limited
role; while another
sophomore Ashley
Dunn, tossed in
eleven points and had
five rebounds. Junior
Rachel
Chapman
Sayre
added nine points
and
had
seven
rebounds · and four steals; Brigette
Barnes and Deana Pullins each added
six points, and Tara Pickens added

three points and a ieam-high eight
rebounds. ,
Southern's bench got a good deal of
playing time as eight of eleven players
hit the scoring column. Brooke Kiser
·and Jessica Hill each had two points
apiece, while Hill hauled down six
rebounds. Other contributors were
Joanne Pickens, .Asl;lley Roush, and
Susan Brauer.
Miller was led by a strong effort
from Sam Britton who notched
eleven points and five rebounds, Ashley Hinkle added seven points, while
Amanda Gill, Megan Osborne, and

Brianne Hinkle each added two
apiece. Brianne Hinkle also had 'five
rebounds.
Southern flexed its muscle early in
establishing an 18-2 lead. That attack
was ·Jed by Katie Sayre who drilled
two long three pointers and had a
couple two point goals to pace the
Tornadoes. Brigette Barnes did a great
job running the Southern offense at
point guard, while making some great
passes and gaining some early SHS
rebounds.

Pl•se ... No. IS. B4

Meigs beats Nelsonville
BY JIM SouLSBY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

JON WILL

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

The Lady Eagles of Eastern
had played four outstanding
basketball games prior to last
night, including a doubleovertime bout with Belpre.
The Eagles came skidding to
a halt against the Waterford
Wildcats last
night, 54-34 .
· Eastern
managed
only a mere
two points in
the second
quarter
in
comparison
to the WildRobertaon
cats' 20. The
Eagles were
never able to fully . recover
after the knoc~out punch delt
to, them in the second quarter. Thus ' the Wildcats completed the twp-game circuit
and came out rwith their second victory over the Eagles.
Eastern jumped to an early
8-2 lead, and things were
looking promising for the
Eagles. However, a Wildcat
time-out smoothed out the
wrinkles in the Waterford
· defense and offense. The
Wildcats proceeded to score
14 unanswered points, and at
the end of the first quarter,
the Eagles trailed 8-16.
Things didn't get much
better for the Eagles in the·
second. The Wildcats came
ou't purring and that pur
quickly grew from a low
rumble to a loud roar. Scoring
six quick points, Waterford
forced Eastern to burn another time-out. Coach Paul
Brannon then replaced all five
starters, and Waterford continued its torture of the Eagles. ·
Mallory McCutchen drained
two big three-pointers as the
Wildcats outscored Eastern
20- 2 in the second quarter.
Eastern got back on its feet
in the second quarter, looking
mainly to run some offense,
and slow down the fast break
tempo that Waterford had
forged in the first half. Much
to their surprise, the Eagles
played quite well the third
quarter, and outscored Waterford 8-7 in the third period.

PIHse ... Eaal*m, B4

, MEIGS WIN- Meigs guard Shannon Soulsby reels in the ball during Thursday's TVC basketball game at Nelsonville. The Lady Marauders won 47-41. (OVP photo)

NELSONVILLE - With
tournament
time
fast
approaching the Meigs Lady
Marauders are playing some of ·
their best basketball at the right
time. Meigs went to Nelsonville Thursday night to face
the Lady Buckeyes who defeated Meigs four weeks ago by
twelve points.
The Marauders coming off a
big win over a fine Southern
team all but knocked Nelsonville out of the TVC Ohio
Division title hunt with a 4741 win. The game saw three
players from each team foul out
in a tough physical game. The
Marauders used a balanced
attack led by Mindy Chancey
with 14 points and some good
free throw shooting down the
stretch to post the win.
Meigs broke on · top early as
Chancey connected for two
points at the 6:53 mark to open
the scoring. Nelsonville would
not break the scoring ice until
an Ashley Standall basket at the ·
4:41 mark made it 4-2 with
Meigs on top. A Chancey steal
and assist on a Shannon Soulsby lay-up put Meigs up 6-2
with 3:33 left in the first quarter. But Meigs would score no
more points in the first frame
and when Courtney Porter
drained a three point shot late
in the period Nelsonville had
the lead .at 9-6:
A tough man to man defense
by the Marauders held Nelsonville without a ppint for the
first 5:14 of the second period.
Katie Jeffers who played well
off the Meigs be11ch connected
on a two pointer and Chancey
added ~ three ball and a two in
that same span to push the

Pl..seseeMelp.BJ

Past Super B_
owl QB's endorse Brady
"As a football player, especially this .
NEW ORLEANS
time of year, I don't think
(AP) - Tom Brady
lot of guys are 100 pera
admits the ankle is
cent," Brady said, adding
sore.
that he expects to wear a
"It's a little tender.
brace on his left ankle
But I think there's a lot
for the game.
of body parts of mine that
Pool
reports said
are sore," he said.
Brady appeared to have
The New England quarterback
no
problems
during practice.
doesn't expect to be fully healed from
his AFC championship game spra Bu former San Francisco quarterback
when
faces the St. Louis Rams in atld cu . nt ESPN analyst Steve Young
pool ·deo provided by NFL Films
Sunday's Super Bowl. Stilt, he is 't
d said h thought Brady was "defiabout to take himself out of the lineup.

lle

Ja.,;

nitely hurting."
"I just saw him drop back," Young
said."! think he's hurting."
New England coach Bill BeliChick
was not available to respond to Young's
com~nts, and Patriots spoke,man
Stacey James declined to do so.
"I don't think the ankle will be an
issue.'' Belichick was quoted as saying in
Thursday's pool report, which said
Brady rolled out "withou·t· any sign of a
limp" and stayed after practice for five

Please ... Brady. B4

Southern to honor 1982 state finalist team
' BY ScoTT WOLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RACINE -. It seems like only
yesterday wh~n a line of cars ne~rly
three miles lopg. stretching along the
four lane from Darwin towards
Pomeroy, assembled to greet the
returning st;lte runner-up 1982
Southern Tornadoes. But the calendar
indicates it has been 20 years since
that memorable &lt;:lay, and tonight during .i11termission of the SouthernMeigs in R~cine, the 1982 team,
coaches, and cheerleaders will be
honored.
Southern had gone 19-1 during the
regular season, losing only to Nel-

~·

'
sonville-York during
that stint. Regular
season Wins including
victories
over
Alexander,
RossSoutheastern,. Point
Pleasant,
and
Wahama, as well as
victories over some
pretty tough Southern Valley Athletic
Confe1;ence teams.
1
Southern's first test came against
Eastern, who was a very athletic team,
coming off of one of its best' records
in several seasons with a senio~ oriented tean·l. Southern claimed 'a hard-

..

J

•

I

fought 48- 44 win
over the Eagles, the
went on to claim a
49-34 win over
Kyger Creek to
claim the Sectional
crown
at Rock
Springs.
In 1982, Ohio was
stilt divided into
Caldwell
'Class A, AA, and
AAA wit!] A noted as
the small school . div'ision. , This
arrangement precluded the present
day four divisions, which meant
Southern defeated several opponents
from much larger schools.
I

The first foe at the district level at
Chillicothe High School was Peebles.
Southern defeated the Indians 84-74,
then earned the right to face the
Unioto Sherman Tanks. Souther)l
again claimed a hard-fought win 7066 and claimed the District Championship.
·
From there it was on to the
Regional . Tournament at the Convo
on the campus of Ohio University:
There Southern's Kent Wolfe, an aUstater himself, was pitted against Kevin
Smith, the Class A player of the year
from Buckeye Trail. Southern . trailed

Pl..le ... Finalist. B4

'

II

�..
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Feb. 1, 2002

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

----------------------------------------~
~ribune - Sentinel -

--diiiiai'leiiiiilu....,.l

AKC

CLASSIFIED

·--

"-1

t•

~ Ir·

Laba. 1887 ~ 8-10 Ploil"''1. 18117 -

Rogloltrod

=~~~,or
=~~~~
=-----Ford Ranger, Sport - ·
CFA Hlmolayan Kitlono 4 cyt 5 opood, $2498. KC

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

CII after epm
(740)448-3188

-yL

FrMhwater Angoiflth. Buy 1
or Buy 50. (740)448 0038
aflar4pm _

M»CXYOD

IKentucky grid

TRX400 F.,.. '

=~~:

4x4, V..., Clasn and
Ex:1 1 1 .. $2900. 1flllll SU.

lrax.

program na·tled

f&lt;uiO Slllat. (7401446-St72, Z&lt;id 0580 Dirt Bike, V...,
. 2000
Uwruzui&lt;i
New,

r

ir(7•40)8112~--~~-·~-....., JA50
~.
~

I

y~
.,...., LID

days,

•

...., '

In one week With us

I \H\1 ..,, 1'1'1 II...,
.\ 11 \l...,ltiCI,

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~ribune
·Sentinel
1\.egtster
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) .675-1333

To Place
Your Ad, .
Call TOday...

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

()ffiee llorv-cr.

. or Fax To

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

Ad~

992·2157

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

Oeo.rltirM
Word

..

Display Ads

Dally ln· Column: 1:00 p.m.
A.ll Display ~ 12 Noon 2
Mondey·Frlday for Jn5ertlon
8u51ne55 Days Prior To
In Next Day's Paper
Publication
Sunday In·Column: 1: 00 p.m. Sunday Display: 1: 00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper
Thursday for Sundays

t(flll'ricfaiM

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

Private Party Ads Under $100
; 20 Wprds 7 Days • Each Item Priced

6

• No Commercial Ads
•
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sillies-• Limit 3 Per Person
M~ll

•
•

To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

.......,, .. HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description.• Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

·
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\'\\01 \1 I \ II '\ to,

1
110

l.,r___i'ERsoNALs
___. --,1'

Iro

IWWANm&gt;

llfuWANm&gt;

POLICIES: ONo V....,. P.M'...... reMrVM 1M ...... to ec1t, ,..._ or!*"* 8/I'IM 11 MY U... !non m;uet be repora.c( on ttM IWt day of
NlPQll,.for nc:l morett.ntheco.tof h ...-oooYpled by 1M .,.lind only IMflral ~
any IOU rK•xpenee IMt rMulte from tt.pqH!c Ua 1 or OMinlon ol.n ~ Coirec&amp;k:Hr wll be ft\MIIr In lhe ftnll n~
Boll
.,. Way• confldlntlal. •C...,..,t,... Nnl ~ •AIIrMI MIMe edNrlllll1lelrtr..
to the Fedlnll Fair.Housfna.Act oi1Hl. •Thl• 1
~only hlllp Wllnted . - m.ting EOE.......,., We Will not
of IMIIW.
~nef.AegltW. be

r

....on. •

r

r

I ~ Ieo ~ I ~~ I

~ . I ·~ I

DRIVER TRAINING
Part·T1mt!Temporary
LOANS, LOANS, LOANS, Hoose For Sale In Hartlord For Laue: 3000 10 5000 sq Nice Clean, 3 BR . Mobile Bod Sprifigo, $5.00 for Bin: Pllllllps Web TV· Get E·moll·
INSTRUCTOR
Position Opening
for good or bed credit, call WV. 3br. IMng room. Klld&gt; " office on Retail Space. Home In 1ht Country, glo bad. 2P235 15 Inch and lntemel, Excellent Con·
Moon Lighl Escorts. Anen· Naolonal Organization need· Clinic Support Stall ...,.. toll free 1~ 864 5756
en, balh, 1 car garage. 352 2nd Ava. Modem Real· (740)256-6574
tiM, $30. Gun BYmer for dillon. H&amp;P pnnler, Very
tlon Ladies. Full Service lng inslructor to work In lhe Hn: Rural Developmental •u No up front fees
(304)882·2955 .
rooma, Walk- In Vauh. Csn
Furnace Complete. $50. Mce. Both $100 tirm. Elec·
Male Escorts. Prompt Pro- Galllal Meigs Counly area Clinic seeking an Individual '"Foal reliable service
Remodel lor Pooolble Anll·
ArAiriMmmi
(740)387·7'729
trtc Typewriter• used lx,
fessional Discreet &amp; Confl· to teach Driver Education. for a part-time/temporary ...Bankruplclea welcome Nice Lot with 3 Bedroom que Stone, RBita.urant, ProFOR lbNr
Uke New, $65 finn. Please
denllal. 6pm to 6am. Flexible hours including position to assist wtth the
house within City Umlt. Cell feutonal Offieee, Many - For Sale: Reconditioned Call (740)446-3235
(740)388·1799.
evenings an~ weekends. coordinallonofclinlcsandln
TURNED DOWN ON
(740)256·8000, (740)258- Posilbllltleo. Sea GrOJI
washers, dryers an&lt;! ·AIIrlg- _...;__..::.
- -'---Prior teaching experlence providing support to feml- SOCIAL SECUIIITY 1881? 6005.
Smith at Smith BYick f'on. 1 and 2 bedroom .,.,rt. orator.. ThOmpsons Appll• Prom dresses, 1 lavender,
Why wait? Start meeting ptelerred, but not required. lies. Aelponllbllltlea ln.
No F,~D~~582-·334We5Winl
u~FOR--~:u~cr phone (740)446- mente. fumlahed and unfur~ ance. 3407 Jackson A"Ye~ size 14, 1 red beaded, size
Ohio singlestonighl, call toll Will lraln. Must have good elude: Assist wilh cc&gt;IBCIIon
~
""""""' ~=
nithed, MCUrl1y depolll , . nue, (304)675-7388.
lg., $125 tach, (304)882·
lree 1-600·768·2623 exl driving record and no crlml· .of records, data enlry, clinic
&amp;
qulred, no poll, 740-992·
::3354::::::_ _ _ _ _ __
1621 .
nal history. Submit rHume coordination, and case
22t8.
=it=~~~,:~: R"ldentiiiHomeOWnera
w55111h ccloverGielllller lito: DCLAII mal nalllgomenat of laelllrvicetls for
t2x50 New Kitchen, Bath,
1 Bedroom, All Utllllfea, teed. Washers, Dryers, Tappan HI efficiency 90 plus
•·--~·~·~-. o a po 8 a Y am ea.
uo co ono:
and Carpel, CiA, t6x8
S
........,,
o.~
......,.
1 dl oil
""'"""'""'"""""'3
Trlbune, Gallipolis, OH Applicant must have comP h $4 ooo (740)«t 55 acres of larmllnd, 1121n 375
plua
_,_I. ._..,.., and Re... .,..rators, gas furnaces Inc u ng
' - - - - - - - · 45631 or lax to (740)351· puler ol&lt;llls and experlence
9~~ . • .
. woodland, bihar 1121n pea- (740)245-5100
Some otart .at $95. Sl&lt;aggs and
elactrlc gao fuma·
working with families of
t
Appliances, 78 VIne St., ces. HI Efficiency Heat
,
0537.
11 electric
S
A h~per a Para~i~e new
young children with special All retl Hl8te adWrtlalng
ure, gas we '
' WB· IEAUnFUL
APART- (140)446--7398
Pumps fealuring Tappans
webs•te, merchand1se SO~
oed Sa . Com
12X60 Mobile home, ap- tar available, on Vance MENTS AT BUDGET PfU..
Free incredible warranty
8
· ,llry.
SO%ottmanufacturerlssug~ FuU time Waitress Needed. n
mensu~
lnthlenau;apeparla
prox. 10 acres land, very Road, Pomeroy, Ohio, CES . AT JACKSON ES. Hide-a-bed for sale, burnt package
geslad relail. Will add new Ap~ly In Person. Holiday ralo wrth experience.
oubjoct ~~the F-.1
secluded, by owner. 740- ~.000. 00 an acre, 992· TATES, 52 W881wood Drive orange, $95, (740)992·1552 BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;
produclsregulany Check~ Inn· Gallipolis.
PluM oubmllolotter ol Folr-I~Actollllll 992·3539
.
9844
from$29710$383. Wolk10 altar.Spm.
COOLING (740)446-9416
ho
·
dl
lnlereot and reoume lo: which- n HlogoiiO
shOt&gt; &amp; roov~es. Coil 740or 1-8()0.872•5987
1
out
as pperspara se. Gallipolis located home John 0 . Con&amp;lanzo, Superecfwr'UM"'eny
14x80 slap/aiding 2x6 80 Acres Henderson on 448-2588. Equal Houalng HJdebed, ·$125. Loveseat,
orvb COflll'bennett
com
heolth agency -lng FT lnt&amp;ndenl Athens Meigs Ed· pttiOotriOO,IImltlllon or walls., 14x70 llap/aldlng New Four Lana a11ntarsec· Opportunity.
$100.
OreBOer,
$75. -="'.:"'.:"'::
· :.:::::·
Mom tired of the trash on ·office assistant lyping skPis ucatlonal' Service Center,
dllerlt'NNUon bnad on 2x6 walls 3br. 2ba., late don with city water. $80,000
(740)446-9742
Bunkbeds Red Tubular
TV? ·
required. Accepllng appllca· 507 Richland Avenue
,_
modal double . wldes 3br. (304)937·2516 (304)545· Chrloty'a Family Uvlng,
'
Stylo Fuil Size Bonom
Make your volca heard. lions for PT StNA. Apply In Suite 108, ' Alhons, Ohl~ r. .ni.i atoiu. or ..U....,. 2ba lree delivery &amp;setup. In 11491
33140 New Uma Rd.. Rut· IBM Thlnkpad Lab-top PC,
'
(lo 10 onem•lllonmoms."'?m peraon a! 3084 St Rt 150, 45701 . A""'AIIon Doedhouoe 11norw:lng to qualified
land Ohio 740-742·7403 P 11!11 wiU1 case Greal lor Twin Size Top. Greal
.
on lhe .lntar~etlor more rn· Gallipolis
or
phone 11 0· F.bJ'
8 2002 origin, or onr
buyoro. (806)474·4391 or Lot for sola 112 aero lo1 jull Apoitmort;'hOmo and 1111ief E-mail, 1275. '(740)448· dillon, Manresses Included.•
lo. Particlpabon lslree.
(740)441-1393.
e"'quo1' Oppouartu'r.ty 'employ:
moM onr(806"747588 after 5
off Dshal Rd.Some raatric· rentals. Conwnorolal store- 00311 after 4pm
~.!:40) 38 7-7 152• leave
Pit,..tnce,lknftallon or
~
11o
~· ~
Shop Online o
or/Provider.
-lnatlon."
no call ~·5-77511 af· fron1a available for laeae. , ~ •L•-• Whl"l::': w-·•. "--~ ·
1880
Hlllcreal,
Nice
Cond&gt;
tar
5 pm .
11acancoaa
• now.
~-Dryer
· Dl.sney Area. 7 Days, 6
www.maryklly.con\lbspeneer47.
Hair Styllolo
The "·'n• Soli and Waler
tlon 2 BR Gaa Fu.............
er/
$150" aet.-GE
Your Mary Kay lrdepenaenl Fleste Salons, a leading Conaervallon
- - Dislrlct has a Tfllao•a - t i l l no! Central,
'
'
"
·
w-~
'lmond
Whl"
Nogh1 lor
Holel$ Stay.
Paid $600,
AC, . t ' Owner, Lot for Solo: Cleared. liP- Cl01n 2br. WiD Hookup. pooi--Sel·f ..::_
R •• Sell
199. (614)898·
00nulling olrlg·
Bea"ly Consultanl. Brldgot provider of ha~ and tanning full-time opening for ·lhe poo
1a10a~IQIJ$7500. (740)2511-1914
prox. 2 112 acres, gravel Rd, Reforeuce and Deposit. No
299
Spencer.
services, Is celebrating It's sltlon of Olstrk:t Technician. .ctverttaementl
Waler &amp; Electric AvallatmJ, Pets. (304~75--5102
erator, $75. Tappan Dryer, ::;
::::::4_ _ _ _ _ __
Grand Opening aarty Febru- Some of ttle activities In. . . which leln
1 Perter area. $18,500. Call .
$80. Ca.ll after 6pm. Free Oas Furnaces and Air
~1!"'"'..,...-----. aryl II you are a highly crea· elude: survey, design, draft· violation olthe low. Our
1987 Claylon, 14•80. I 1/2 (740)448-4514 or (740)448· Gracloua living. 1 and 2 (740)448-9086
Conditioner Estlmatea. Call
~r A
ltlve slyNallookblg ror a fresh lng. layoul and checking . Bath, Gas Heal, CIA, Call 3248 after 5~. m.
bedroom -mon11 a1 VII·
(740 )448 6308
1 _ ........_
1·800·
UCI10N AND
·--•
Mollohan Carpel • (740)...
lage Manor and Alverolde Modlcll
Cha~. 1-40: 291 ~sa• If
or•--'t
st~rt. we have positions conatructlon ol ero·'on con·
1~••-Moil
~
call
F'LEA MARKEr
·~·
7•"
•"·•menta In· Middleport. 2 uear
old Queen Manrau,
-vu ·
you
available for management lrol pracl~ea and~ moving - 1"'~~
- • ---•In
...... or (740)367•7187
.
.,.._,,
'
both 1088
1 UUfl
8
d f II II
~
...
RFAI.Esl:\11!
From 1278·1348. Call 740- $100. 36 looh Indoor oxer· u we
an u me and part Ume and assisting with conservalhla r•w•p•per..
~room
nr
~ ~· E
Ho ling c11e trampoline (740\..ua.
1990 Floalwood 2 IJVU
Rick Pearson Auction Com- Stylists! We off&amp;f a $300. tlon till- equipment and
.,a~..._ on In
n:AN'I"'m
;,• 2""""'"· qua1 u
·
~
Full Size Mattress lhcl Box
pany, lull time auctioneer, hlrlng bonus, hourly wages progra,;"' DegM of work·
-unlly
hOrne-call Cheryl 0 740Opportunities.
1822. Call Early or Lalt.
Springe, $9~. Quilling
complete auction s8fVice. up to 50% . commission, lng knowledge 1n ~lneer·
:'~~~:..~ ~~npol•~ Wanted to rent· Christian Modem 1 Bedroom Apart- Sears Kenmore Washer, 3 Frames, $25. Fiberglass
Lk:ense&lt;1 •66.0hlo &amp; West 401(K) . ~rolrt sharlng, va- lng, agrtcuHure and/or natu·
muat ;H.;;;.iiMike 0 740- couple looking for house 10 mant. (740 , 446 0380
years old, Uke New, $150. Truck Topper, 91" long •
1
Virginia, 304-773-5785 Or cation, health, vision, dental raf resources Is preferred.
385rent or buy on land contract.
(740)256-8338
so· wide, $50. (740)2562434
304·773-5447.
and llle Ins .. froa advanced Forty hours per week. Coli rio
·
No kids 01 poll Non amol&lt;· Newer Specious, 2 BR, 1
.:.;15::2:.:9_ _ _ _ _ __
W•~
~o1'f~orr,and:l"='~~ for awllcallon and position
FOR~~
1199418ll803br/2ba. Mobile ora, Call Jim; (740)992· Bath, Anached Garage, Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
~ .. ~
yrna
• • dosorlpllon IO Meigs SWCD
""""'
, Home many extraa. 2 Car 3167
$4001 month. DeposiV Rei· Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Aepelra. Problems? Need
·
TO Buv ·
6363x 3010 schedule an at 992-4282. Deadline for
Garaga.On acre lot In Go~
'
erenco Required. (740)448- (740)446·7444 1·877·830· Tuned? Cell The Plano or.
•nlervlewl
applications Is 4:30 p.m. on 1 Acre. ,_ lrorl, Brick/~- Hpollo Ferry (304)875·7937
2801
~162. tree~:,matas, Easy 740-446-4525,
14
Absolule To~ Dollar: U.S. Hal~ wanled caring for the Thuradati,!'~
.,;:'e nyl, 3 BR, 2 Balh, 2 Flrepla· 1995 ClayiOn 14•70 21lad· .
l'l~e 2 l&gt;adroom apartment ,:;:cn~;w M&lt;i':.::'~~ Independent Herballle Dis·
0
Silver, Gold Coins, Proof· elder1y, Darst Group Home, ::erve
ng
rea er· ces, Hardwood floors, Ap- rooms, 2 full baths, central
for rant, $300/month, Drive- a- IIHia save alai.
.tributor, Call For Product Or
sets, Diamonds, Gold now paving minimum wage,
·
prox 2,000 sq h. Full Base- air, underpennlng ax 16 COV·
HOIR!S
SlOO/d
It Mlddl rt
op rt lty ( )
992
Rings,
U.S. Currency,· new shills: 7arn-3pm, 7am· URGENTLY
NEEDED· mont, $180,000. (740)446· orad poroh, 8x10 building.
FOR RENr
epoa '
opo . Very Nice Queen Size Bod· . po un . 740 441 - 1
M.Td.SA. Coln·ShGoplll• 11511 S8c· ~~m. ~p7~11992pm,502131pm· plasma donors, earn $50 to 0538.
(304)675·7116
~59Hl849, ' 740.598· room Sullo- Bad, ~ Nl~
'ERA?IOJNETMOTORS
on venue, a po s, 740· am. ca
· ·
·
$80 per we8k for 2 or 3
.
Stands, D.l'8888r with mlrroJ,
~
,,
446·2842.
Help wanted
hours weekly. Call Sera· 3 Bedroom on ROUie 2. 1998 Claylon Mobile Home ~ ·3 ~room;,=~ North 3rd Avenue. Middle· cheat of dra-., maHreos· Repaired, New &amp; Rebulll In
·
Sec 'ty G rda- l
Tee 740-592-81151
(304)1175·5332
14x70 2br. 2ba. vinyl siding, ornes """
·•
.port, 1 &amp;21&gt;adrnom fumlah· ea lncludod. Greal buyl All Slook. Call Ron Evans, 1·
Wanted: Old Pinball Maun
ua
empora-d
·
· sNngre roof, 2 decks, on .24 Down, 30 Years at 8.S% ed apartments, Geposlt &amp; ror $400. Call (740)368- 800-537-9528.
chines, Juke Boxes and , ry securitv guards lor up to 1141
lluiiNEss
Bedroom, 2 Bath, Set up acres In Gallipolis Ferry APR. FOJ Ustlngs, 800-319- references
no
pets 8470
Olher Coin Operate&lt;1 Equip- 4 months. Musl be able to
"'-·-- ·~
on Prlva10 Properly. Take $3S 900 (304)6 75 . 5754
3323 Ext. 1709.
·
(740)II82-o1ss
'
ment. Hunlinglon. (304)429· work any shill lnclu~lng
•"""'"""
ovor paymonll. (740)446·
'
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
3333
most woekendl. Mull have
35113.
·
95 18x70 Floalwood and lol, 1 Bedroom, $2501 month Now Taking ApplicationsAN11Qumi
lnlertherm &amp; Colemen gas,
clean pollee record, good . Galllpollo co- Collogo
Racine, OH, 3 bedroom. 2 plus deposit, References 35 Well 2 Bedroom Townoil &amp; electric fumaces In·
t 1\11'111\ \ll\1
work history, rollabla tran• (CI...,. Close To Home) 3br. lba. CObin In Country bath, lotal elaclrlc 949· ~aqulrad, Stove. Refrlgara· house Apartrnen1a, Includes
eluding hi efficiency heat
... 11( \1( 1 ....
portatlon, 8- 10 vears driving Call Todayl740-446-4367, ~?!:':antiGal:l~lla. (~~~ 2991
tor, AIC, 142 4th Ave., Gal- Water
Sewage, Trash, Buy or &amp;el. ' Rlvarfna Anli· pump avatema. We carry a
eiCI)Orlencewllhgoodrecord
1·800-214-0452,
Room w/FP, Lg. Upstairs
llpollo. (740)448-38117
S3501Mo .. 74Q.446-0008.
quoo, 1124 · Eaal Main an com~lele line of Mobile
110 lbu WANJED I g;,~: ~o;:, ~u~·:
RO!! N9().()5·1274B. . Bedroom &amp; Balcony over· ~o;:.~~- :'7~~m;; 1br. House $250/monlh. Ono Bedroom Apt. Vine St SR .124 E.- Pomeroy, 740- I:E"N~~~&amp;H~=e~
1.
. slflngenl ~riVIng record,,iil
WANJED
looking Pond. Detached ga· ask lor Cheryl.
References end Depoah re- Gallipolis, OH (740)367· :::0~528 · Rvea Moore, CODLING (740)ol4fl.s418
hOme phone and must have
To Do
··aga 1 1/2 acres MIL. Mov·
qulrad. No Pelo. Ruttencul· 7888
·
·or 1-800-872-5987
black steel loa salol)' llhoao.
ing Mull $ell. $63,900 080 IRS S~eclall We'll malch lor Lane. Mason. (304)773Sue's Selectablea on the 'T' www.orvb.c-nell
$6-8
Pay starts at $8.50 per
(304)578-2849
. your tax return up to 12,000. 9) 6V
Studlolafflclency apartment, in Ml&lt;ldleport. Dolle, glan· ;;;.:.:=::.:.::;.;.:=:.:::.:=/HOUR TO START
Coli (740)448·3093 lor de·
$225 unfurntahad, 1250 fur··
Ala"'" mantel and
SA
SA El
(upon completion of training hOur. 32·40 hours per week. All Makoa ol Lawn Mower*:
ca
.
•
Monda
.
Small
Englnoo;
Kerooene
4
112
year
.old
cepe
cod
In
lalla.
31&gt;adroom
hOme
MlneravUie
nlohad, $300 deposit, water, ware, ...n
a,
LEISALEI L
11740 669 2674
looking for a New JOB or
area, river view, $450 per trath included, Middleport, more. (740)Q82-Q2Q8
Gas Cook stove, RefrigeraCAREER7?7
· Friday 8am· 4 m for 8 Y_ Heater&amp; and Salamanders Maaon near river and warp
~ Ae~alred. Call Mike mart. Large porch, fenced Limited Or No Credit? GOV· monlh, references required, (740)S9HlS4S (740) 698 •
MJSCI1IJ.AN~i'X&gt;US tor, fire place, wall heater,
Then don't miss this oppor- polntment
·
(740)448·7804
yard. (304)n3-5452
emment Bank Finance Only depoall required, no poll, 3488
'
u.;..-···-- wringer waohar. Mlacollanetunltylll
MeCiurt's Restaurant nOw
·
At
Oakwood
In
Bafboul'l- 740·992-em after 5pm.
·
JY~I..IL.'M'..
oua merchandise new and
CALL: 1-888-874-JOBS
hlnng all 3 local Ions full or All of your homo ropolra ad- 81 8 Main Street, Pt. Pl. vUie, WV 304·736·3409.
Tara Townhouoo Apart· utad. February I and 2, 4
pe"·tlme, p~k up lppllca· dltlono &amp; remodeling. 24hr Com!&gt;olaty Refurblahed. 2
3 Bedroom, 2 beth houuln mania, Vety Spacloua, 2 •••• Prom Drooo •••• and 5. 8:ooam to 5:00pm
100 WORKERS NEEDED lion
al locallon &amp; bring bacl&lt; emergency oervlco, ,10enlor aiOry, 2 ~ull Both. 3 Bod·
Aaclno, control hall &amp; olr, Bodroomo, 2 Floora, CA, 1 "Morr-Lao' Colo A berglne dally. 553 Jackson Pike, •
Assemble cralls, wood
between
9:30am
&amp; citizens discount 22yra. roomo. Largo Kllchon, Must ooll· 14x70 mobllo no lnaldo poll, ooll740-884- 112 Balh, Fully Corpoled,
·
r· uoncforl. Galllpollo OH (740)448·
llemo. Malerlal provided. I O:ooam Monday lhru Sal· oxp. (304)578-2065
Large Utility Room, LRI DR/ homo call 740·385·2434 4385 or 740-858-4384
AduH Pool &amp; ••'- Pool Po· (Light S"!Qkoy Lava or), ·8308. Building Out Back
·E
To S480o wk.
rd
'
Family Am. Now Carpet
llo Slart ••• :;:".! No p'~ Paid $150- Worn once ea 1 ,
·
Free lnformallon pkg. 24 Hr. u ay.
Georges Portable Sawmill, lhroughout. F/1&lt; &amp; AJC, ask 1or Iaino.
3 BR. 1 Bath, Groen ...U. pr,;;"""s.c:.fiy
Brldoornald droea, Slzo Treadmill, $85. Roll· away
1·801-4211-4750
Mllllo'ola now accepting ap. dan1 haul your logs 10 tho $78,900. (740)4441-11&amp;85 or Mull aoll· 19V7, 16x56. School. $500 ~luo UtiiHioo. Raqulrld Oayo· '740-448· 18120, 11011 for 1100. &amp;o. bad. $15, Bar Stool, $10.
3481 . Evonlng1: 740-367• lo match- . olzo 8112,$20. (740)441.0708
2 LPN'a Day Shill, No plk:aUono and rooumoa lor mlll)ustca11304-875·1V57. (740)448-2205 or(740)4441- trort kitchen, oxoellont con· (740)245-11020
Wesktndo. Apply In Poraon gnll cool&lt;, prop cook, and Movln and Hauling· Clean 2083.
dltlon. Call Karona, 740· 3br. Houoe In Clllton. No 01102; 740-448-0iQ1 .
(740)448-7083 or (740)44$·.
VERA BRADLEY
31114
at Medical Plaza, 936 Slate wallrwltoa.
Out egulldln 1 saaim.nto Clun 2 bedroom ho1110 In 385 ' 9948
Smoking. No Polo. $385. lWin Rivet Towers - I ·
'
Now Sprlng Colioctlon ol
Aoulo1BO.
Garagoo, ~otatoa, Traoh: Pomeroy, will ooll or rant New 14&gt;&lt;70, 3 brl2blh. Only Month + Dopotll, 1385. 1 1pplloltlona
for
Flbrlcl. •
MLT,
wookdoyo.
No
week·
Elc.
Odd
Jobo.
Call
wllh
opllon
lo
buy
on
ian~
$V75
down,
$189.84
por
(304)77U88t
ng
unlta
avo11a'l:'
4
Naocar
T1Cke11
for
1ho
Downtown Merlo Norman,
AHentlonl
contract, (740)898·7244
month. Call Nikki, 740.385· , Houoo tor Rant. 3 · Bod·
Marah'1, 2002
Y~~~O~i (~~rt)~':~~ VA. (Noxt1 oog ~ "••~..
• tor),'
Eam 2n~ . lncoma wllhOut ond0. f&lt;pply In poroon, Mid· (740)44ll·7804
leal Plua, 838 Sl Rl 160,
... .
F
b
Nl bl 7871.
.
roomo 2 Sathl. Nloo and 1br.HudSublldllodapl.for ·"t'::;:._:;:;.·.:.;.::::;:;.:_;;;;;.;__
2nd )Ob up to
1
Golllpollo.OH.
Top to Bollom vloanlng or Ill Yowner: co .
Clean' Groll L-11on In . ~·-~r: and dlllblldl EOH •
Hunllngton, WV.
$25.·$75./hr. PI·Ft.
SaNioo. Prof. .lonal olta'l- ·loval hOme on 1 aero noor One Only
•
~
All- dOir Pro modal. brond '
(304)522-38 11 ,
7
1·800·218·7543 .
NH&lt;I 5 lodlao to all Avon. ln8 at affordable p~coo. Chaltar. Throe bedroom. Utad doublowldo.
City. Phono (740)448-8538
304)8 5-1!878
now, $100. Applt 17' color --.!::::!::=..:::.:;~www.Monty·Dreams.com (740)440·3388
Rolldontlal cfflol rwmodal- two balha, ono-car garage, 80/!8x28128, 3 bedroom, 2 Pilot Program, Ronttrw Vary nlca 2 3 bedroom monitor for Maclnlooh, Watarllno Spacial: 314 200
N-• Full T1m' , 01111 Hord· lng aConfndoOnotruoilon clean family room with flraplaot, balh, goo heat, control air, N - . 304- 738•7285 .
opartmonl.' In ·town, largo !!~~~ raHdloP JAM/FomadaM PSI $21.00 Par 100: l ' 200
•'
up.
ldantlal. 882·2878 oun room. Now control hall· llro~laco wRh gu logo,
kllchtn LR 180Qimo. Rot· -·~· .....
PSI 535.00 Par 1OO: All
AVONI All Aroaal To Buy or wore Clark, '•nd Ruumo or882·138l
lng &amp; lie oyatom. 0no ml· 1V87 modal,
Pcmerov 1 bldrOOm wiU1 -.oM 1 cl.po.n roqulrld PDA, 32 mag ram, oolor Brait Comprwlllon FIWnga
Sail. Shlnoy Spuro, 304· lo: CLAM&lt;' c/o GaUipollo
.
nultcffRou117,butlllllprl· Prlctforlmmldlatolllo
~go f2eo001montllplut (740)4483844
. 10,_, lllct now, 1300. M· In Stock.
575-14.28.
Dilly Trlbl o, 825 Third
vatt. (740)886-31181
Colo'o Mobllo Homll
deposit' 7«J.iea.0175
F. (740)ol41•1871
liON EVANI ENTIIIPRI.
Baautlclln, FT &amp; PT Help Avo, Galllr ,.. OH ~15831.
For Sale ~ Ronch Homo us 110 Eool, f&lt;lhona, Oh
u--- u-WAHTID TO Ill NT
Amazing .
Malaboll am ::7-~:rn, Ohio, , .aooNoldld. Pokl Vacation/ Now Hlrllljj, Eotl of Chicago
4br 3ba
rHnocll' 740-582·1872
,•.......,'""'""""
Now Pu- lor the Ohio. -rougllll
Hourly Wage Vo. Cornml• Pizzo Com~ony, f&lt;pply al
poliO porch, 2 :r gorw~ Only $880 down an~ •
FOR RI!Nr
r~~l:"r!\1'
Lo18 10 pound• 200 WhHI Chair lor aalo. A&gt;
r~~~Je~;~l57CEU hourt, 1540 Eulom AWl, Gollpoo
178,000. (304)727-331 B
$181.38 per month go11 you
.
to rant for 3-4 month I. pound I llty, quick, Fool rnotl Now. (304)875-77j1
:,..;:.:...:..:.;..;;;;;;_ _ _ _ llo.
INOnCII
a now homo. calf 1-aoo- 14K70, lhrH l&gt;adroom, oleo- Should ha pr1v 11 .,.,. .Dramollc Rooulto. tOO'!Io •r-~----.,
Domlno'a Plzz• ol Point NURIING IUPIRYIIORI OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH• For Sola: Now hOUH- n. 837·32381111&lt; lor Mlko.
trio hla1. 1300 1 month,
Gall'"'- Naluraf, Dr. R-rondld.
•·- __
~
lNG CO ~-~ that nanolng available O'!lo down•1110 dopooll no Pl11 room
.,... •All&lt; about Pllll Sample'
PloaunVEioanor/Winllold Scenic HIMo Nurllng Cantor
. ~...... - 1800 aq ft. 2 112 batho. 3 Pilot Progrom, Single Pa· (740)74.2·2714'
' ol(71!~&amp;!!.a~ D(dalckeroon) a1 (740)ol41·1982
.
SUP!'!..nis
now hlnng Fuii·T1me &amp; Part· Ia R• Stn.rolurlng lor opll· VOU do bual 1110 with pooplo BR, all ouatom oak lrlm &amp; ron1. No Crldltl Bod CrodH,
-,.....,. VO •
1.,~--.;~;;;--,J.
Tlrno aolo drlvoro. Compoll· mal RN Suparvlsor Cover· you know, and NOT to send oablntll, o•• flroplaoo, and Government LOino lor 2 bedroom mobile hOmo lor
Ul
Baby !led Mallrooo,
.
llvo Pay &amp; Flexible Sohod· ago.
money lh~ lho mall~ Iorge kltohon &amp; DR, 2 112 Rontaro. Own Your Now
'")""
$25
Firm.
Toddlor
Car
Saat,,
Blook.
b~ck.
aowor
plpoo,
(
•
1 no po11 • 7- ••2
ulo. Apply In parson -420 V&gt; We aro looking lor dodlcal· you havo lnvettlgalod ·~ cor gorago on 1.5 acroo. Home Todayl (740)«8· ~':.~~
ro RENr
. 120 Firm. (304)8V5-3738 wlndowa, llntola, ate. ClaUde
and Slreet Pl. PL
o~ • . dapondablo, corln¥ cfforlng.
$117,500· Porter/ Sl~woll 3570.
•
Wlntorw, Al6 Granda, OH
Tho Gallla Cou
.
n"' Soli and oRhNI:•. Nfoorwthw'a3,;.!1andandBo1n1•· Start Your Buolnoea To- aroo. (740)445·4514 or S I I Fl
I
D
2 bedroom, lor 1111 or rwnt, Looking for 3·4 bldroom N- •uo UIID ITII Coll740-245·5121 .
w
''
"
•·
(740)4441-3248 after 5pm
pee a
nanc no- own qulot COR)munlty nice clean hou
n1
~" ~
L
a11r Conaervallon Dlatrlcl 111 Package . Ploaao Call day... Polmo ShOpping can.
Paymanto aa low u 1'!1.. homo. (7740)~2 :2187
•
-~'to'"-- oou1 byry Stael Baamo, Plpo Rober
1111
lo aeoklng an Adrnlnlotrativa Pam Cakiwtll at (740)448· tor Spooo Available At Af· Partially RtmOdllad homo, Pr"luollfy by phOM.
•
••
lng, ·~
,_ n
For Concrell. f&lt;ngle, Ch,lnAoolstant. T~lo poaltlon Ia 7150 for moro lnlorrnollon. fordable Ralo~ Volley 2 Bedroom, 1 ·Both, Full (740)448·3870.
2 btdloom. Eloclrlc, 14x80 I ~ nol, Flat Bar, Stttl Grd'j
~
:~~::'~:;~~~:~~ Part-T1mo Holpars neodod Plua, 0117
101 . · Largo Unal1ach- We have appraxlmaloly 20 Sn\11 Trailer Park 1250/do- - - ~ralno, Drlvowoya
..__ _ _ _ _ _...
2 car gorago. , 27 Kl,... Uood hOmo• for unaor potH $350/Ronl. 314 milo
rooumo will 1&gt;1 accepted lor Cleaning. Leave Nama &amp;
~
,.._!!· L&amp;L Scrap Mil· 2 AKC Fomale Paklngall
lhrough February 8, 2002. Phone Numbar. Coil COp·
!ii!RvK:D
on ~r.. le&lt;l,OOO. (740)oWI· 12.000. colll-60().837-3238 Holzer Hoopllal. (304J875• riO
HOUillltow
~ado~~!~~
Pupplea, I Female Poking·
048
2900
lntoroo1ad a~~llcanlo can lain Sioomor. (304)875·
for Info.
·
GooDs
. 4:30pm. 2'1oood T~urtday, oM dag. 2 Toy Poodle
Obtain a copy of lho vacan· 421 B
R•l Log - .. Cabins
2br. For rant In New Havan
Saturdoy
&amp;
Sunday. Dogs.
Male/Female.
~ Announcement and JOb .;::;.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ ACounlry Crolllman Valen- to cuolomo Free lnlorrna
(~•J•••t107
(740'.."-7300
(740)448-3398
Oeacrlptlon by calling Wan1ad Soamotrott· For In· llno Sjitclal lhru Feb. 17th. lion. 740-558.2383
· 8
S 11 1: d - -·
'Appllanc01: Roc;ondlllonld
,.......
.
(740)448-8173 or stopping duol~al machine. 5 ~aid 15'!1. on Slnpplng &amp;·RolinUy, 8 Or r8 8 Boaullful River Vlow Ideal Waohorw, Dryers, Aangoo, Peal/ Pond Pump, $75 2 male AKC AO!!. mini
by lho cffk:e at 111 Jackaon holldayo, 1 WHk vacallon, lahlng kllehon cablneta or RomOdtled 3 bedroom, In
In thf
For 1 Or 2 People, Roferori- Rolrlgratoro, Up To 110 Daya 080, leak noado ropalr If Plnchor, black &amp; tan, ears
Pike, Sullo 1569. Galllpolla, group lnoursnce available. 1O'!lo on Slnppln(l &amp; Rolin- Mlddlopo"· call Tom And&amp;r·
cas, Doposll, No Poll, Foa· Guorantoodl Wa Sail: Naw ullng for Pool Brand: Amorl· clipped, lallo dockld, aholo,
OH 45631 .
Slartlng pay $8.50/hr. lahlng
Furniture. coli aon altar Spm, (740)992·
tor Trailer Park, 740·441· Maylag AppllanctO, French can PrOdUCio. (740)843· 4-1/2 months old, $225
EOE
(740)388-1!310
· ·(304)743-1100
3348.
0181 .
City Maylag, 740-448-7798. 1025
OBO, (740)742·0310

i

'

... Hav &amp; Bright Wlra Tie
.. Straw, Year 'Rou.nd OelivEHy
&amp; Volume Discount Availa-

ble.
Herllage
.. (304)675·5724.

II{\ \lo.,I'OH l \ IIO \

r

G:t
=

I

r

I

AI!IUi
FORSAIE

53995.00
or LESS.
all wilh
6
month 7500
miles warran-

·

ty,

1993 Ranger, 1992
Ranger, 1995 Nis.san truck,
auto &amp; ale, 1994 Grand AM,
1993 Grand AM, 1996 Cav·

-to

p•re,

r

to

n;...------.
-------j

I

I

oep;;

10 4 0101

i

.;m,

I

=

r

;:n,.=

and:-•to
••ANniD

I

I"'

1

eaoa
Star

aarou

trucks.

TRUCKS
FORSALI!

I

CLASSJFJEDSJ

AulD Sal11,

from bank In Racine, Ohio,
affordable used cera · 1ncl

•r------.,
j
·

to- _,_

r

r . .,. . . ,.

.

152,000 miles. Runs Well,
$1000080. (740)448-61113
1989 Chevrolet K1500,
4WD. 4.3 Engino, 4 speed,
138.000 · miles. $3500.
(740)446.Q425 anornoon.
1990 Ponllao Sunblrd, 4 cyl.
Aulornallc, $750 OBO.
(740)441·1083
1991 Olds 98 Regency, All
Options, Plus Moonroot,
78,000 miles, E11.tra Nice,
$4300. (740)448·2300
1992 Ford T-Bird 92,000
miles, In good cond. asking
$2SOO.pnce neg. 304-675·
7273
1994 Red Toyota Corolla.
All Power Options. 83,000
miles, Auto, New Tires ,
$3900. (740)245-5908 after
6:00pm.
1900 Chevy Monle COno,
63K, $5900. 1995 Pontiac
Frreblrd, Black, V6, 5 speed,
90K, $5900. 1995 Chevy
Camaro, V6, 5 speed,
$4900. 1997 Chevy Cava·
liar, Black, Ground Effects,
80K, 5 speed. 4 cyL $5495.
1997 Chevy Cavalier, Automatic, 4 cyl, $3900. 1992
Ponllac Flreblrd, T-Tops,
V6, Auto., $3200. KC Auto
Sales.
(740)448·8172,
(740)992·9491 .
1998 Ford COntour GL, 80K
miles. $5000. 1994 Ford
Tem~o GL, 8cyl., 142K.
$2200. (740)448·2624
2000 Silver Dodge Neon,
Automatic, Loaded, 34,000
miles.
$5000
080.
(740)256·1233
89 Cornaro RS, T-to~s. 305 .
Engine, Rebuilt Transmls·
slon, New Tlras, $1700.
(740)388·8128
94 Geo Tracl&lt;er, 4x4, l!opd,
AJC, 48,000 miles, Now
Paint, Now Top. $3700.
(740)387-7253
i7 Chevy Motrolo, f&lt;ulo, Air.
&lt;Icy I., Rod, e1K, New Allor•
nator, Brakto. Lopicl Good,
sae5o. (740)441·0&amp;~2 ·or
(740)440·338&amp;.
88 Chryolor Clrruo IJCI, CD
F'lay•r, Leather Interior,
•7!00 oao . ~2.000 mlloo.
7~012!8·1282 or (7.0)2!8·
1 818
Llvoly'a Auto 81111· 1882
Oldo Achleva, 11800. 1803
Plymouth Acclaim, •1~00 .
1j88 Ford Mulling, 11200.
1888 Ford F·180 Plokup,
S1200. 180t DodJII Ram
Van, 11 000. 188&amp; Dodge D·
·2110 Pickup. 11000. 1890
Ford Tempo, 2 Door, 1900.
1988 Chovv Borwrta, 1900.
1885 Oldo Cutlaoa Su·
promo, 1800. 1&amp;88 Mazda
Plokup, 1800. 18110 Goo
Slorm, Black, MOO. 1985
Ford E350 van, 15 - n·
ger, $800. , 0 mol'8 oara un·
dtr 11000. Call (740)388·

I

r

have

•

Marauders.The Buckeyes lost Stan- ·
dall. Hill and Emily Carlson due to
fouls.
Coach Dave Wilcoxen praised his
team after the game saying. "the
Marauders in front by a 13-9 girls played hard , they played smart
count. Jaynee Davis who battled and they used the clock weU".
rnsid~ all pight for Meigs before W i.koxen went on to say "the
fouling out added two free throws starters (Bolin, C hancey, Davis,
to make it 15-11 with 2:20-to go in Soulsby and Pierce) all played good
the first half. Samantha Pierce games and Alicia W erry and Katie
wr:apped tWo buckets around an jeffers played weU coming off the
Emily Hill basket and M eigs led at bench. It's good to get two in a
the end of the tint half 19-13.
row," he concluded.
Soulsby who hung 21 on the
Chancey led the winners with
Buckeyes in the first meeting con her 14-point effort, Pierce added
nected on a trifecta from the top of nine with Soulsby and Davis each
the key two minutes into the third scoring seven .
,
quarter to stake the Marauders to
- Standall led the Buckeyes with
an eight point advantage 23-15.
13; Hill added 10.
The Buckeyes cut the lead to 24The Marauders were 12-of-42
21 before Alicia Werry who played
from two-point range and 2-of-9
a fine game off the bench, sank a
from downtown. Meigs made 29
foul line jumper to make it 26-21.
trips to the line hitting on 17. Davis
Werryis second goal of the night
pulled down nine of the 24
off ilie perfect pass from Davis gave .
Marauder rebounds, C h ancey and
Meigs a 30~ 23 lead. Mter 24 minDavis each had four assists as Meigs
utes of play Meigs led by a 30-25
totaled eleven on the night .
count.
C hancey recorded SIX of the 18
Nelsonville, who rallied from a
Meigs thefts and the M araUilers
13-point deficit in the first meeting
conunitted 24 turnovers.
between the teams, came storming
Nelsonville hit o n 13-of-42 twos
out to start the fourth quarter. The
and
2-of-8 three point attempts.
Lady Bucks scored the first seven
Meigs made it a clean sweep by
points to take a 32-30 lead when
StandaU put an offensive rebound winning the JV game 34-18 .
back in. Pavis then found Jeffers Chrissy Miller led M eigs with 15 ,
for a Marauder hoop and the game Werry added seven .
Meigs (11-7) will host Federal
was tied again. Chancey and WhitHocking
on Monday and wrap up
ney Maiden traded baskets and
Standall added a free throw for the regular season at home on
Nelsonville to give the Bucks their Thursday when Belpre visits. The
last lead of the game at 35-34 with Lady Marauders will b e in sectionjust over four minutes remaining. A al tournament action at Katie
Chancey lay-up and two Davis free Smith Gymnasium in Loga n on
throws gave Meigs the lead back Thursday . February 14th at 6:15
and Pierce added two more free- when they face the 14-4 Shendan
bies to make it a five point Meigs Lady Generals.
lead. Hill then connected on a
ot Noloon~lla
three-point basket to cut the deficit
. Molga 47, Noloonviii•Yortc 41
to two points. Pierce and Soulsby Meigs
6
13
11
17 - 47
4
12
16 - 41
each hit one of two from the line Nelsonv111e 9
MEIGS- Unctsav Bolin 0 0·1 O; Brook Bolin 01before a Lacy Whitlatc h hoop 2 1; Mindy Chancey 5 1·3 14; Katie Jeffers 2 1·2
brought the lead b ack to two 5; Samantha Pierce 2 5·7 9; Shannon Soulsby 2
2·4 7; Jaynee Dav1s 0 7 ·10 7, Alicia Werry 2 0·0
points . But free throws from 4 TOTALS 14 17·29 47.
Chancey, Brook Bolin and Soulsby NElSONVLLE - Ashley Stardall 5 3-4 13:
Emily Hill 4 1·3 10; Whitney Maiden 1 5-6 7; Lacy ·
in the final :13 iced the win for Whitlatch 4 0.2 B; Courtney Porter 1 0 -1 3.
Meigs. Lindsay Bolin, Katie Jeffers· TOTALS: 15 9·19 41
Three-point goals- Me+gs 2 (Chancey,Soulsby),
and Davis all fouled out for the Nelsonville 2(Hiii,Porter).

Meigs

•umAipBl

1988 Saab 900 Hatch beck,

s-.

13

all

4 evl.. automatic, sunroot,

5

r'o

Cavalier,

1987 Pontiac Bonneville
$600. 080. Runs Great.
(304)675-6966

for,..,

I

91

3011

m'

i

~~imm;Uiimm~UDllUUJlUDllUUDIID~
I

been through service dept.,
Malil:'s, Pomeroy, (740)992-

con:

-·..J
..=:

flrked Run
Sportsman CtOO
Gun Shoot
Fri., Feb. 1st, 2012,
7pm

alier, 1996 Breeze, 93 Cut·
lass, ·93 Cavalier wagqn, 96
Neon. 98 Barena. 94 Aa-

====-

colo&lt;......., ...

r~1

Farm.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,I

t&amp;i4 8·10, 12885. t9e7
Rongor. 13485. 1803 Rong·or 12285. 1887 Ford XLD,
si785. 188&amp; SllvorodC, 4X4,
Ntw GM 350 molor. 1-4888,
1&amp;87 8·10, 11895. COOK
MOTORI, (740)445-0103
I WI F·1 50, EKIOndod Cab,
111,000 OBO. (304)575·
~8114

will be having a Fried Chicken
and Noodle Dinner
Feb. 3 ·11am. Cost Is $6.00
Public is Welcome

'

SUPER BOWL SALE

'

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door. ...

Once Again
Consignment Shop
End ol Sea~on Sale

Up to 75% Off
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
February 1,2,3
10:30.6:00

Pomeroy Eagles
· Aerie 2171 Election for
1'\ff;,,,. of Vice President
February 4th at 7:30

.
SHERIFF'S SALE
(Caoe No. 00145)
· The Slate of Ohio,
Meigs County, ss.
Purauanl Ia the
command of and
order of •ale Issued
from lhe Court of
Common Pleaa ol
sajd county, and lo
me directed, II\ the
e~llon of LaSalle .
Nollonal Bank, Ao
Truatee, Plalnllfl va.
Bobby McConaha, et.

11, Defendlntl,

ATTENTION
Rt. 7 Pizza Express
has merged with

Racine Pizza Express.
We 11re continuing to deliver to
our valued customers in the
Pomeroy area. With an
expended menu and fast,
courteous service.
Open 7 days a week
Sun·Thur 4 pm - 9 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat. 4 pm • 10 pm
For Delivery call

992-9200
949-4900

Feb. 1st &amp; 2nd
8·12
"Ghostrlders"
RACINE PIZZA
EXPRESS
&amp; AT. 7 PIZZA
"Superbowl Party Trays"
Sm!iii·Medlum·Large
Order before Feb. 2 for
Saturday or Sunday
pickup and get a free
16" one Item pizza!
16" or 18"
Deluxe $2.00 OFF!
Sunday ONLY

992-9200
949-4900

Rolph

I,

E. Truooell ,
S~erlll, ahall offer for
oale
at
public
auction, on the front
steps of lhe Melgo
County Courthouae,
on February 20, 2002,
at 10:00 a.m. of aafd

·,· ··:

··'

day, the following
described lands and
tenements to wll :
Situated In lho
County of Meigs and
Stale of Ohio:
The following real
eslale allualed In lhe
County of Meigs,
Slalo ol Ohio and In
- lhe
Village of
Mlddloporl,
and
bounded
and
described •• lollows:
Baing fifteen (15) 'reel
off lho south aide of
lol no, sixty nino (89),
and lwonly (20), feel
off lho north olda of
lol no. oevonly (70).
Said detcrlbed
promloeo laco lhlrty
live (35) foal on the
wost aide of Third
Street and exlends In
a wealerly dlrecllon
10 the alloy back ol
W
ted
H I
. said lola In BEAN'S
-;:;::::;:•:;P:;;;;:;';:;n;:;·:i:::=;
i&gt;
THIRD ADDITION to
Velerans Memorial 1 8,
1945 a n d
Middleport, Ohio.
Parcel Number: 15· .
SkUied.Nunlna
recorded In Dood
Public Notice
00651.000/1500650.00
Center
Book 185, 11 Pogo
114 ol oald Dead
Tho
abova
has immediate
Recorda.
SHERIFF'S SALE
deacrlbed property lo
opcninas for the
Parcel Numbero:
(Caoa No. 01CV077)
lurthor known ao 749
Third Stroel.
followinJ:
~=~~:oooo and 18· Tho Biola of Ohio, South
Mlddleporl,
OH
Tht
ebove Molgt Counly, oo . 45710.
cletotllltd property II Purauanl to the
A dapoalt of a
Skilled Nunlna
furthar' known 11 310 oommand of and CERTIFIED CHECK,
Canter- Pull time,
Wataga II
II real, otdar of oala loauad payobla Ia lhe
from the Court of Shariff, or CASH , lor
mldnlaht shlfl
Pomeroy, OH 45717.
A
depoolt
of
I
Common Piau of tan (110%) parctnt of
I II
New Sllllr)l Scae
CIIITI~II!D CHICK ; sold oounty, and to , the purohlaa prloa
If lniOresiOd, please
payeble lo tha m1 dlttotad, In the will be requll'l1d 11 the
contacl
lhtrlll, or CASH, lor ootlon of Lol111a 1!ma tht bid 11
Human Resources
ten (10%) poroent of National lank, Aa laoaplad.
It
the purahlta prloa Truetee, Plllntlff vo.
Tile FULL purohua
.will lit required et lho John Matteo, al. al ; prlao ohollllt plld TO
740·992-:U04, lime lhe bid II Dalendonto, I, Relph THE IHIRI~F wllhln
Monday lhrouah
- - - - - - - - 1!. Trua1111, Sheriff, THIRTY (30) d1y1
oholl offer lor oelt at from the dalt of the
publlo auotlon, on the 111a, and unleea p1ld
front IIepa of lhe wllhln elght (8) daya
Malga
County lrom the dale of u1a
Courlhouoa,
on ehall · bear lntaraal al
February 21, 2002, 1t lha rate of ton (10%)
10:30 a.m. ol uld per oen1 until plld,
-~-----..,
end on llllura Ia do
Eetablllhad "' buoy aplomotrlot'l om.. II -kina
eo, the purchooor
a rtllablo fuU·dmo Doc:l,or'o AlllatanL DuliN
ANNooNCEIIIENDi lhlll ba ldiudged In
~
. contempt of court.
lnoludo potlont pn·IMIIna and hlaloey taklna.
Approlaad
al .
padanlayowur d•lan and Y~rllkadoa, and mlac.
'S
$40,ooo.oo. Terma of
ol'llct dull-. Tnlalna will bl pro•ldad. Honnly, .
Sola: Caeh ;
dadlcadoa, and atllnllon 1o dtllll ara raqulrad,
Mlnl111um ell flll'l work expariOIIc:a and lor I ·
Ralph I! Truoaoll,
yMr poot·hlah achool educadon ara aiiO roqulrad,
sheriff
Salaey baoad on quallftoadono. If you oiiJoy
Mlchaol J. Llndan
warklna "'lh now pooplo, ara aopr 1o l•ra. and
Attorney lor Plalnllfl
ora lnllitllld In lana linn full limo omplaymon~
1111 Ch11ter Avenue,
pi- """ a 00111plota IW1lmo lnoludlna
VII
Suitt 400 Clavellnd,
joblaobool nft,.._ and ulaey raqulrwmont by
Ohio u1u
Februll)' 8. AblolllfOiy no phone calli piiML
15,25,2002
Doc:tar'o A11lotant
1• 2002
J - L Schmoll, O.D.
443 Gon, Hll'llnpr Pk'W)'
Mhldloporl, OH 45160
Go

dey, lhe following lho width of sixty
deocrlbed lands and leal, One Hundrtd
Feat, lying belween
tenements to wit:
Situated In lhe the lol now ownad or
VIllage of Pomeroy, once owned by A.
County of Meigs and Rappold ort which he
Stale of Ohio and erecled a dwelling
houaa; also the
being further
Company•
Purcheae.
doacrlbed at lollowa:
Thai pari of 100 In the Vlllego of
Melga
acrea Lol No. 303, In Pomeroy,
Town 2, Range 13 of Counly, Ohio, and
the Ohio Compony'l described ao follows'
Purchaae, In lhe lloglnnlng al the
Village of Pomerox, Nonhwost corner of
Melga County, Ohlir. the lot on which A.
once
and mol'l1 p~~nlcularly Rappold
thence
deacrlbed ao lollowo: ruldad,
Sixty fat In lronl on Soulh 88 degrees
the street leading Wtal 85 f.,.l; lhonce
from a lol known aa South 7 dogreel Eael
lha B Woodrufl lol 120 feel to the place
lowarda lho Coal Hill of beginning, savings
uceptlng,
and running· beck and
form a a ld a treat at however, from the

110 Help Wanted

"••

above a canaln piece accepted.
oil of lhe North end
The FULL purchase
which wae aold to price ahall be paid TO
Adem and Bernice THE SHERIFF within
Eberoback and Ieier THIRTY (30) days
sold by them to from. lhe dale of the
Albert H. Eberaback sole, and un1eao paid
by deod
doled within eight (8) days
Oc)ober 23rd, 11111 from the date of sale
and recorded In ahall bear lrtteresl a1
Recorda of Deeda, the rale of len (10%)
Volume 107, Page p•r cent until paid,
289. And being lho and on failure to do
aame
properly so, the purchaser
conveyed by Chao, oholl ba od)udged In
Eberoback and Ella contempt of court.
Eboraback, hie wife
Appraised
al :
to Joaoph Ebersbach, $20,000·00 Torma of
by doecl doled . Sale: cuh Ralph E.
September 16, 1920, Truoooll, Sheriff.
recorded In Book
122, Deed Records of Michael J. Lindon
Meigs Counly, Ohio, Allornoy lor Plslnllll
at Page 207, and 1111 Cheater Avenue,
thereafter conveyed S~llo 400 Cleveland,
by Joaeph Eberebach Ohio 44114 ·
Ia · Frank M. Fugalo
and Gertrude Fugata, (1) 18, 25, 2002
by deod dated May (2) 1, 2002

RN/LPN•

DUE TO OUR CONTINUED
GROWTH, TURNPIKE
OF GALLIPOLIS IS
LOOKING FOR
SALES PEOPLE.
Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We will train the right person.
.. We seek aggressive, self-starting
·professional salespeople with the
· desire·to earn well above average
income. We offer a benefit package,
including 401k, medical and
retirement benefits, a five day
work week and no Sundays.

NO Phon• Calli Pl•a••

See Pat Hill
or Brian

Roll

••tw••n 10 a.m. a 7 p.m~

~:F:ri:da:y:,9:1:m::.4:p:m=;_;:=He=lp::W:•::"::'td=~
OPTOMETRIC
ASSISTANT

i

I

Here to
John Krowsczyn
ond the

Cleveland Browns
for O"better?"
seiSOn th•" the
Bengols.

Congratulations,

Bryan Zl1111e
Bengals In 2002

�-

. Pav- a 4 • The Dally Sentinel

.

.,•'

ins job when. lt!cilloe aMwitd

1

.... .

..

..

..

.

;

.

Fl'lday, Feb. 1, 2002

Pometoy,

&lt;

and led

New EM!i ulcl fa lhe AFC llalc rille. .
· Blidy .aautd in a 16-13 CIYI!time vi~
ry OYer !he Oakta Raiden in the ~ai­
ou'lint ~~but he- hurt in die
minulleS with No. 3 quarterback Damon second quatter of the con&amp;RiiiCe champj..
; Huard.
onship. This time it wa Ble.lloe coming off
The Patriou h&gt;ve won eight consecuti~."e
the l'elnl.
games with Brady as the si:arter.and h&gt;ve ~ bench to That fun:ed Belichick to pick one to stut
• gone 13-3 since he took over for Drew
in the Super Bowl. and he chose Brady.
Bledsoe, who this sununer signed the richGood move, according to Young and felest contract in NFL history.
Young. appearing at a )'&gt;Uth center the low Super Bowl MVPs Montana and Joe
, NFL is helping to renovate, endorsed Namath.
"I liked him from the first day 1 ~
Belichick.'s decision to start Brady &lt;M:r

PHILIJP
ALDER

Hill'~

Srlf

28870 lluiW1 Road

RIICine, Ohio
45n1
740-t41-2217

""

,,.

..
'

~

...
'

;~,

'-"'~"

_)

.

.'
_.,

·

.

~~

"!"

p

Shade River AG service
"Ahead In service"

Stonge

·"'-

Houra·

hini," Namath said "He~ tough and hi!
Bledsoe.
But Young. who developed a fiosty rela- · teammates love him and he's got a. great
tionship with Joe Montana while waiting future. I think its a great luxury to ha\oe
to succeed the future Hall of Farner with Bledsoe, too. I know the team has confithe San Francisco 49ers, said he though.t the dence in both of those g11ys:• .
"They can do it and I hope they do,"
Patrioo should keep both quarterbacks.
"I worked through it for five yean. It's a Namath said. "It's not just because they're
tough situation, but )UU 've got to work underd~. But I enjoy seeing underd~
through it," Young said. "Those are their win. Maybe people around the country see
two biggest a5leiS ... They've already need- that and think they can win, too."
One former Super Bowl MVP doesn't
ed both of them."
Bledsoe was the starter for 'eight years, share that view.
breaking virtually every one of the Patriots'
"I'm hoping his Cinderella story stops
passing reconk But after he was injured in one game short:' Rams quarterback Ku'rt
Week 2. Brady replaced hini, held the start- Warner said.

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
111411 mo.

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

74CJ-815.3148
COIKiflf/llOWIIKl

lquD12
12% BWMt HolM fMd ................ $5.00150
IWM!Siulf
.
12% BWMt HOlM IHcl... ............. SUOIIO
tlllntn fll'ldl21% dog food ......,••$5.11150
Economy Bltl 12% stock WI! ..... $8.75/SO
Mineral Blockl .................... $4.751100
18% Layer Crumbela ..................... $&amp;.

' Footers. Walla. S1eps •
Aao Wortc.
Replacemcnta, • Walk•
qnd Drives • Stencil

HOUSE
PH lUTinG

fverv 1bursdag

BUILDERS IIIC.

6 Sindey

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

li:30
Progressive top line
Thursdays ·

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAl. ond IBIOIHTIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

l'ragress(ue

Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates:
Insured

Wolfe Home
maintenance

74()-992·7599

CMreU en Sundays
H

Eastem

and 1 hope she will continue to do so in the
tournaments. Stacie Watson was released to
play today, so we are glad to have her back
in action. We know we can play well, we
from PageBI
just ha\oe to prove.it,'! said coach Brannon.
In the fourth quarter, Eastern continued
Eastern will travel to South Gallia on
to play hard, despite ic; 41-18 deficit. Katie Monday and down to Racine on Thursday
Robertson pumped in six fourth-quarter for the final regular $1'&lt;1S011 game.
poinll to bring her tally up to IS on the
54, EMlein a4
. night. This marks Robertson's fifth game in Eastem 8 Wltotfonl
2
8
16 - 34
•, a row that she's led all scorer.; for the Eagles. Watertortl 14
20
7
13 - 54
Aiy8oa Holler 2 2·2 8, Terri Wolle 1 1·5 3.
Robertson again led in rebounding as well EASTERNKaUe Robartson 8 3-415, Sindy Powel13 0.0 6, MofgM
with seven.
Weber 1 0.0 2. TOTALS: 13 &amp;.11 34
WATERFORD - DooltM \lanOylco 1 0.0 2, Elaine
The Eagles were glad when the buzzer Mltklr
2 1·2 5, Mallory MeCu1chln 5 0.0 14. JlcenCia
sounded, and took to the locker room leav- Sml1h 2 f.2 5, Heather F.....,. 5 0.0 10, Kaylo Mllttr 1
0.0 2, CUIIe McKown 1 1-:14, Aliclll Pu!Rno 5 2·2 12.
ing a 34-54 beating behind them.
TOTALS: 22 $-8 54
''We didn't aCtnally play that bad tonight. Th~nt 110111 - Eutom 2(Powell 2), Walertord
S(McCu!Ct\en 4. Moi&lt;Own)
We just had one bad quarter, and every Rot&gt;ounds Eutem- 3 2 ( - 7 )
team has a bad quarter once in a while. Sleall- Ea-.. 7(Powell2, HoHor 2)
Aalsts - Ea.- 4(Hottar 2)
Katie played another nice game tonight, Tumov110 - Eu1em 22·

from PageBI

.

Deana Pullins netted two poinll and
Ashley Dunn had one of her best &lt;M:I3II
games, sparking the Tornadoes early with
four points, several key rebounds, and a
steal.
Miller's lone points came from two Brianne Hinkle tree throws.
Southern played a 1-2-2 zone the whole
game, occasionally delving into a full court
1-2-2 alignment. Rachel Chapman had a
breakout second period with 9 of Southern's 13 points. Chapman drilled a three
and also picked up a couple big steals.
Southern had a good shooting game l1lllike
the frigid performance from Monday
night.
Tara Pickens neaed a point in the second
canto along with Dunn one, and Sayre two.
Pickens, the game leader in rebounds, and
Dunn combined for I3 caroms from that
position.
Sam Briaon hit nhree ·pointer to start
the second fuune, cuaing Southernis lead
to 13 before the Tornadoes :got back on
track. Megan Osborne and Ashley Hinkle
also hit goals as Southern rolled to a 31-9
lead a the half
Brigeae Barnes did a great job in the
t:urd quarter, hiaing a couple big buckets
and also hiaing several key passes for assists.
Pullins also notched a couple big jumpers,
while Dunn was owning the offensive
. boards. Pickens added two in the stretch.

.

I 0 '\' flU I 110'\

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Aulhoriud
Casc-IH Parts
Dealers

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall, and
Additions ·

Sou..

mEIGS IIISSII&amp;E
THERfiPY

INT

740-667-0363

(740) 992-1705

o~AY. #'lOW

'9 92·5479

from PageBI
by as much as five points late in the game,

..
.• .

but fouled and ironically Smith missed
With each time Southern dropping in a
score.
Southern trailed 46-4 7 with under.four
seconds remaining. Kent Wolfe unleashed a
·jumper from near half ~ourt and swished it
at the buzzer to give Southern the dramatic 48-47 triumph. Next came RossSoutheastern who Southern defeated 5755 earlier in the year. The Southern quintet made the Ross County giants look feeble in posting a 64-44 win to earn a berth
at the state.
In the state-semi finals Friclay night,
Wolfe got iii early foul trouble and Southern trailed at the half. That set the stage for
one of the most mernot;able comebacks in
state toulilament history. In a 39-point
effort, Wolfe led Southern to a decisive 7466 win, a 28-point second-half effort that
left Wolfe with two state foul . shooting
records. His 15 consecutiv~ tree throws in
that game remains a state tournament
record yet today
From there, Southern advanced to the
Saturday morning finals, where they lost to
Middletown Fenwick 64-44.
Team members on the 1982 team were
Tollll1l)r Roseberry, a 5-foot-1 0 guard;
Kent Wolfe,
,. Richard.Wolfe, a 5-9 forward;
.
a 5-9 ,point guard; Robert Brown, a 6-3

••

'l 1..:..1.~:!..~~~
: THE BORN LOSER

740-992·1671

~....

·~,.~

·

'; ' ,

Mitior
Soulhem

··~

lot. ...............:u '
2
7
8
7-24
18
13
14
10 ·- · 55

MILLIIII- Emily W~o!Oiibelg 0, Kayta Post 0, SIIITa .
Tolh o 0.2 o, a.tonno Htnldo 0 N 2, Sara HlllltV o.
Mandy~ o. ,.._
1 Allttr
2 o ().4 o. Amanda GKI1

o.o
2, ~ oamo o.o • ~ Hlnklt 3 o.o 7,
s.m-41·211 . TOT4LI:•:~-1224.

,

I·

·

'

..

olfaullna ol.lmea10111
&lt;Gravel• Sand •Topaoll
tf'lll Dirt ...ulch
""

center; and Jay Rees, a 6-1 forw:u:d. That
group made up the starting five.
Rounding out the line-up was Zane
Beegle, Rusty Cummins, Scoa Frederick,•
'!yrone Brinager, Nick Bostick, Chtis

1-877-466-1234
(740)'949-1521
Flnl!lidng &amp;.90 Days
Same.As C1111h AvaUable
.

Bostick,andADen .~~\0':';

m~~~~,;~~ ~;:.r:m~ as lUted

OR Bi!nel Qri.

·'

NIC.E .lO&amp;,
I 'M
'DONE

nyour weight Is

NATE! YOU
PLA'c'E() WELL!

WITH

11Y
t'\ATCH .

unbecoming to

· HfRBfiUFE
lnDEPEDDEDT
DISTRIBUTOR

• Good selectloo .of new &amp; uRd dres
• Oil change $18.95·
We stock 1U Dlljor .bi1Jlds
Mike HID
Owner

104 Flftb Simt, Radne, Ohio

Lose 2·81bs.
.eutr! week

. PEANUTS

740·992·7036
7 • 49.
Pd. 1 mo. 1110
r--~---~~-----, r~----- r"'!"!':==~~~~
WEST SHADE

Sunset Home
ronst...Uctl"on
I 1

steve's Truck
Ac
1
cessor
es
-··A.,...._ "'"ner

Bryan Reevei
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Po~ Buildings, Roofa,
'Siding, Decki, Kitchens, Drywall

BedUners • NerfBar
• Tonneue Covero
Venlvlsor • Bug
Shield &amp; Fuii Une

"'I

;HIM: •

•••c,-

or Other Accessories
llJ.45NullleSuDIIIRd.
Mlddltporl, Olllo

74nV'"742•3411 ·

(740) 992-5822

'{00~

BA'"BER
SHOP
"

Cio...IJan, 30, 31st,
"'-L.Ioi
\
rou
Open
The, Frll0-5:00 p.m.
Sat. 8:30 • IZ:OO ·
Georae K. Vac.
· Feb. l·March I
Shop will be "'' hours

I FRIDAY

Sorry ror your lncon•.
985·3616 Chris

.,.
•

.
.~.

•... ··•··'·.

'\

..• .

'

ReplacementlVindows
American Ut•tnj~J
Patio Ro,1msl

Advertise
·, .·
, . in this .
space for $100
.Per month.
'

't,;,

I

''

•

\

'l t

~~

!

I'

~ ,

•

: ,_

.' ....

'

\&lt; •

i

Satmday, Feb . 1!2, 2002

Conditions for thC' yenr
aht:oHi look more favor::&amp;ble

than u~ual in Kaining knowledge :md infonnntion that will
prove to be very us.eful down
the line in your field of endeavor. Gnther i1 in.
AQUIIRIUS O~n . 20-Ftb.

Phone 992.:.;; 2155 ·.· \. ' :'

)'(1U unJcntand what tO· do to
111ake the relatiomhip work.
M01il S2.75 to Matchmaker,
clo this ncrW~papcr, P.O. Uox
1758. Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156.

-- Someone you know, not

involved m~cds to be success1

.,
'

...

- -.....
Aline:"-~

12 Olllce

31 Cltolla8 a
IIIII1MN of
44 t~..n.·

2e Wound

11 Ullrera

41 Tl'lfliiDrm

21 UlaWIICDIM 47 W-ean

24 wrttar ~
domiJn
2S Sloe
13 Kid TV t.w

-

.

oblltioltlon

DOWN

COiW~Ig

28 fed,

aooclllgn
23 Thlnp "" .... Ciollr

1 Stray dag

2 Slugger'•

1111

. '

3 Aunn,ID

Soaatw

34

........

trelnpulllr

48 lid or

22 Wllf
palnllng

4-llMiup
35 PlaW8
37 YiJdng lelllt 5 Gaotoglc
lealute
311ullltng
I "Shogun"
lhaut
40-111

ICriPI

24 ...,_,
25 ·Give up
'D GrwDN!'a
malady
21 Threed
pufCh=
311 Yalea
.

50 -OI'Inoco

31 ·-

57 ....'1

Flow"
linger

~-=rr--lr""'t'r'-1:1-

·

53 Thallillp

5S - Paulo,

Brazil
Takyo .

541 Anc1lnt

7:'Pan• 31 Ovwcome

41 Nugent ond
Tumw

band...

. .....

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by Lula campo•
~Cipher cryp~og'"""' ""' oroaltd 1rom q - o by lamoue

_,r., put IIIII ~. Eoch le1!-'ln !he elpher otando lor onolher.
Today"s clue: C3 oquars R

'YX

KNXR

LT

AGXLXPR

RYRP ' i.

LFWL

YX

YFXP

NTOXTPX

NTOXLfYPU
RT

YTGRN

vx

JWGX

NWVR

KPDVPR,

HKL

FKGL.'-

UTER·

F W YP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I considered preaching, but

preachere don't make a lot and they have to work hard." ,, , · WIIIINelaon
.
.;.......;;~~;:;"-=~~~-7'"-;""'i::'
!)-::;:-:;::~-:=":""::::""

'::~:t;~r S@~cij}A..;.. ~ '£.q•S11

------

0

UHo4 ~r

,Reorronge 1otfera of
•., four ocrambled wordo
low ro form four simple

I

::::

'OLLAN

----

E RT I AT

- r__,,..1,.,,-,- T,2 1. 1_ 1. 1. 1.

1-·

~~=~~~=:;-Cy RED
...,:--~lr--,-,. -1

I1-.r•
.

.14 .

1 .1

.

~=====~

"You don' worl&lt; an you're
lazyt'" one worker complained to
~~ another. "Laziness," smiled the
goof off, "is just getting your rest
. before you·-- - · · · . ''

I I . I' I I: _;.,
I U .R T E I V Ie
GET 0 B

.

.

.

.

.

~.,,,.;,,,....:.;lr!'';..-.ri;.....;TI-rl--1
_ _

Complete lhe chuckle quoted
by fill ing in the mining words

L...-...J..--1'-.L-~-~-' you develop from step No. 3 below.

-

·neccssilrily thro~gh a friendship, will let you 'know that
·r,n cm)eavor in which you're ·

' ~

t

10 VOlUme

--·~--~c ...

PISCES (Fob. 20-March -20)

1

by their nwden names- Melodi Cundifi;
Cindy Evans, Missy Cununins, 'liacy Rif4
fie, Lori Warden, and Michelle Johnson. ·
~. ~~, ~
•
Managers
·
were
Dwayne
Dill
and
Elirl
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
~ _
. .• _
.1 ,....
Pickens.
· .__ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____...;,;_......;_ _ _ _ _...-..;.
~

FEBRUARY 1 I

Grllph Matchmaker can help

J.

:finl

20
10
22 c.lf-llnglh 11 llavll oil.
lldrta
12 lleinwld'e

spade, bringing your
queen back to life and
giving you 10 tricks.
Pe.rhaps
West .
should be suspicious
when you don't make
. .SCIIAIMETS ANSWERS
a holdup play at trick
Unsold· Craze - Plaid- Kitten· TOASTER ·
one, bm that is much
"Over·
the last several years our economy tias gotten
easiet said away from
·
very
wei(d."
one fellow said . "My bank has failed long
the table and after you
see the deception before my new TOASTER has."
adopted by South. ·

way. T1'Ying to patch up a
broken romam:c? Tho A~tro­

!-\'1

=:...

four . tricks. How do
you dissuade West
from leaving the
spade suit?
Try the effect of
winning the first trick
with the spade ace.
You cross to du1J1my
with a heart and take
a club finesse. Here it
loses, but any normal
West will. assume his
partner has the spade
queen. West will con-

lades will be comiflg your

'

pol1lon

17 --~ 5I Queker
11 Duellr'a
-.1

Bas&amp;
Alpul

compensation in way of acco-

~======~===~=:::==:;::;::=:;::!.::;~=========~~
·A vertlse your.. business on this page r
"
'
fOI" One
m'onth
for aS (OW
aS $25· •:~:;.,?~:~\, ?
,. . ' , . •
. ..
.. .
~) w.,, · ':. . . · ;;
\

NMtll
:aNT

IIJ) .... UccausC' yon won ' t
measure wha~ yuu do for othen toliay by what you hof~ to
gain in return, surpmmg

.

1

......

tinue with a low

&amp;daysM1rchlst

•

HOWARDL.

TllERE'S AN ECIIO IN ~ERE ...

'·

i·•

740-992-5232

1 •CAN'T !-lEAR '(OlJ, M~AM

.
'·

•

33795 Hil.nJ 1/J.
Pommy, OhiP

NEW J.IAIRDO IS SORT

OF IN MV FACE, SIR ...

t
t
•·.

Self-Storage

'

j,

BIG NATE

High&amp; Dry

Free Estlmatt~

,._ ·.

you, You should be
amlnghus.

sea-

400th·career
Carl,picking
Jr. is nowhis:
a
honor two win.
yearsHis
agosonafter.

Cellail! sJ,Siti~t
S 'I' •ugna!leed,
IJalma Wlmrty
FftlG Esti ttatis

~~~

Roofing· Home·
Maintenance- .
·Gutters· Down
. Spout

.

~

740-378.6349

··we feature Valvoline Products••

··:,ft . .

. The Thmadoes ·~ . tQadred 'that
son by Carl Wolfe, head·coach, and Howie
Caldwell, assistant. That duo also guided
the 1980 team to the state in 1980.
Plans for a reunion worked out perfectly as Coach Wolfe is now the head mentor
of the Meigs Marauden, and will be in
town as the opposing coach tonight; likewise, Eastern had an off night, thus allowing Coach Caldwell to also be in town for
the ceremonies. That duo owns a huge
chunk of Ohio l?asketball history with
nearly 400 wins at Southern coUecci~ly ~
head coaches of the TornadOes, and at· all
schools they have nearly 700 wiils betWeen
them.
·
Last season; Coach Caldwell .earned · a
similar tate when he rook the ·&amp;stern ·'
Eagles to the state sellli·fimls :with a . 23~3.
overall mark.
·
:. ·
Wolfe is a Naismith Award wiruier in the
Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame, earning that

1·16
Pd, I Mo.

RHCIOE SERUICE CEnTER

FREE ESTIMATES!

(740) 992·3470

~TOIN...POI~~~~ II£~?

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

D

....,

I

·

r-----::=-WJCIP'I

.

t-IU~ 0\DYCO ~W

!

. 111.'Pd1mo

Roc ky A Hupp. Agent
Box 11l9
Mi ddl e port O h10 45760
LOC!Il 843·5284
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40IK Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home ·

,WAAT

~ BOWl?
1.......--:;~r:::il "'1---1

fjft Oft'~ ft ~

JL\VLDfCaad
.
· IXCAVA'IiftiC
'11"

IOUTHERN - CNipmln 4 0.0 8, lltiQe!t•
Bamoo30.08,tlNntPulltna30.08,KalloBa)!11170.
2 18, Athloy Dunn 5 1o3 11, Joanne Picl&lt;.,.;o, Tata
Plcklna 1 1·23. ~ RC!Uih oo-1 o,llrool&lt;o 1&lt;11or 1
0.3 2. suoan Blauer o, Jllllca Hll1 o.o 2. TOTALS: 25
2·11 ss.
·
Thr...polnt goats~ Miller 3 team Brlllon 2. Aohloy Htn·
Ide), Southern 3 (Kille Sayre 2, Rochtl Chapman).

.

.,

• ~YOU I('I 01'-1 T\-\E.CfFK£.1-W..
, feli: TOIN.. R:lii'&gt;I'D~,--......
: 1(11 11-\t:

7/WT

·· ·, &amp; More

Finalist

••
i

•Complete
Remodeling

FREE ESTIMATES

ft

,.

At the bridge table,
deception is rarely
necessary, bu.t ir can
generate points that
· count
on
the
scorcsheet even in a
well-lit back alley.
How would you plan
the play in three notrump after West
leads a low spade and
East puts up the jack?
Even opposite a
modern 15- 17 notrump, North should
bid three no-trump,
counting one point
for his five-card suit.
llut if North only invites game, South
should accept.
If the club finesse is
working, th"ere are 11
easy tricks: two
spades, four hearts and
five dubs. However,
i( ,t,i)~ . slu~ ..fin"e~\e
loses, ·a though.t ful
West might well shift
his attention to the
diamond suit, where .
the defenders can .
probably cash at [east

•Garages

.Stop a. Compare

.,,,t,

f 7 I J
A J 11 I

of good. intentions. u

•New Homes

Jeff Warner Ins.

·

'

CONSTRUOION

::=::::

of-6 three's and 2-of-11 at the lii1e. Southern had 47 rebounds (Piclcens 8, Dunn 5,
Kiser 6, Chapman 7); 19turnavers; 18 steals
(Chapman 4, Barnes 4, Pulliiu 3); 12 assists
(Barnes 5); and 14 fouls. . ·
Miller hit 9-of-49 Ol'erall, hitting 3-o€- ·
11 three~. and 3-of-12 at the line. Miller ·
had 26 rebounds (Britton 5, Hinkle 5); 28
turnovers; 4 steals, 4 assists, and 15 fOuls.
There was no reserve gan)l;.'
Southern pil!ys Eas~ Thursday.

- - flJif~. 8lJT fllf5T
YOlJ TfL&amp;..
GtfAVITY TO

ROBERT BISSELL.

l!f.!J llt!!J lli!!J lli!!J

.

MlJ$CL~5
TO Pit~ IT VP.

(740) 992-0739

a

sco~uthern hit 25-of-63 overall,hiuing 3-

TeL,;··YOlJif

Owner: 'Jerry L1mnl

Southern outsCored Miller 14-8 in the
fuune.
TFN
In the final round, Southern~ &amp;esrunen
played big as Joanne Pickens made a couple AM:\ M:\
6:\ M:\ ~
slick passes through the Miller defense to iJ.!!J
~ !J1i.J
connect with Sayre and Pullins for scores.
Pickens didn\ soore ·but had a good tloor . ~ . .
gllllle, and at 5-foot-3, Bmolce Kiser hauled
.
••.· · '~••1a Lot"'- ot .
dawn !ix total n!bounds while notdlitig ~
· · ·· . : · .._leil6• .
two points.Jessica HiD also had a bia basket . . ;,
Gorip,. Pole
ConcnM
and had seve~ rebounds on the d:fensive
· loott. a Sidi• ·
ea.-ow
a e rr w
end of the tloor in leading 'SOuthern to a.
• ,
1.... - · II
10-7 third period rally, and 55-24 fhW . . .
.Oolir.tCI!**.Jolltlltoo
.

•a•

• J. J

Joan J)idion .wrote,
"Most of our platitudes notwithstanding, self-deception re' nl~ins the most difficult deception. The
tricks that work on
others count for
nothing in that very
well-lit back alley
where one keeps assignations with oneself: no winning
smiles will do here,
no prettily drawn lists

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

t\ :
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Buc~t Truck

-..
•
•

Tat1.1!plr

l'lu'niM

. 33c-"•

213 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh 45760
· Tonia Reiber
Licensed Massage
Therapist

~erGo.

Tree Service

47

.
32=::.
Deceiving?
C*"'

.. ...

JONES'.

... 011111

I ,.....

p' 2 • • •

Opeolna iNd: • "

•

.

Wnt.

Pau

41·"-_....

11Ypeaf
.....

14 Vlfllr
1Z Tu.fonn ID
11 1111...- 54 A•
d
11 ,.....
5I Reily , _

o..m,Solith

SpcdaU,Iag lp;

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

QJIII

. ....-,-

..,....-

Plltl

Q II

AAitlt

(740) 949-1521

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•

•

•.t.QU

wv ll'031712

42 Plel!lila1c

· - - IOOUI1tWWI..
11 LlniCIIn
51 Act=

u

ltJ

.A Q 1

Fr&lt;cEslimateo
ServinaOhio and W.V.

BISSEll

811602171

ACitOIS

..........

•

·-.,.

c..~e

r,_

lllors Open 4:30
Early birds start

(10'1110' &amp;10'x20')

-.Ohlo45n1

3~337 Si. Ri. 7 Nonh • Pomeroy, OH 4~720

· l'emeroy Utlles

...

COIIJUCTOIS, IIC.

L\i\11\I'S

No.15

The Dally S&amp;ntlnel• Page a 5

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

ful.
/\IllES (March 21-llpril 19)
·-- You could run into some-

one today who i~ a.s ex.citcd
:in idea as yott a·rc. c;:ol-

a~out

'

.
.
'1llrtbm\Y

lenively working togc:thtr for
·this common IJO~I. you both

can reaHzr ~l1CCe1,,
TAURUS (April 20-M'y
20) -- The greatest coun~el
you can 14ive another who
asks for advice (rom you todily
is the truth . Tell It like it is
Without gilding the lily and
1urprilingly, this penon will
be very grateful.
.GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-· Socializing with friends today could bring some kii1d of
pleasant surprise with it . lt.
1\li[:tht be in way of being in-

troduced to someone new
who you will instantly like.

. CIINCER (June 21-J uly
22) --Your judgment in dealing with your family today
will be both ~nerous and ac ..
curate. Hbw well yOu homdle
whatever comes up will be

apprecia.ted by all.
. LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22) ·This is not a dhy fot the timid .
or uninspirrd if you'd like to
take advantllge of the wond~r­
ful 115pecu, today offers. Out~tanding .achievements are
pdS!ibl•.
VIRGO (/lug. 23-Sopt. 22)
-- One of your ·better as~ets.
today will be yonr ability to

lkill(ully manage or reorganize
any llnproductive develop- ·
ment that may pop up .
You're a quick thinker.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Although mmething might
come up tod~y that may be
totally out of your control, it
will induce you to become
more auertive in positive and
effecti{le wnys . It could be a
bles.,inR in di ~guise.
v
SCORI'lO (Oct. 24- Nov .
22) ·- You , are especially
~fted today in qukkly grasping situations . othen can't
quite discern . Your ~ bility to
sc~ the hidden aspects is what
makes you s&amp;. etTectivc.
·
SAGITTIIRIUS (Nov. 23Doc. 21) ··Try to be picky
about your associations today,
· because whomever you mingle with can have a significant
influence over you. You 'll
want it to be a good influence .
CAI'RICORN (Dec . 22J an. 19) -- Owing to your
ability today to di5cern between worthy ohjcctive5 and
those which have more sizzle
than substance, greater rewards than usual are indkated
for you ilt this time.

�•
•

Pllgii B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Feb. 1, 2002

...

SPORIS

TEMPO

Super Bowl XXXVI

M

\Nho will win

Tea anyone?, Cl

Money follows
Mothman's trail, A2

the trophy?, 81

,:·Past Super Bowl quarterbacks endorse Brady decision
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Tom
Brady admits the ankle is sore.
"It's a little tender. But I think
there's a lot of body parts of mine that
· · ;are sore;· he said.
: The New England quarterback
doesn't expect to be fuUy healed from
his AFC 'championship game sprain'
when he faces the St. LouiS Rams in
Sunday's Super BowL Still, he isn't
about to take himself out of the lineup.
"As a footbaU player, especiaUy this
time of year, I don't think a lot of guys
are 100 percent," Brady said, adcling
that he expects to wear a brace on his
}eft ankle for the game.
Pool reports said Brady appeared to
have no problems during practice. But
former San Francisco quarterback and
current ESPN analyst Steve Young
'Saw pool video provided by NFL

,..------. Films and said he
thought Brady was
"definitely hurting."
. "I just saw him
drop back," Young
said. "I think he's
hurting."
New
England
coach Bill Belichick
was not available to
Brady
respond to Young's
comments,
. and
Patriots spokesman Stacey James
declined .to do so.
"I don't think the ankle will be an
issue," Belichick was quoted as saying
in Thursday's pool report, which said
Brady roUed ollt "without any sign of
a limp" and stayed after practice for
five minutes with No. 3 quarterback
Damon Huard.
The Patriots have won eight con-

secutive games with Brady as the
starter and have gone 13-3 since he
took over for Drew Bledsoe, who this
summer signed the richest contract in
NFt history.
Young, appearing at a youth center
the NFL is helping to renovate,
endorsed Belithick's decision to start
Brady over Bledsoe.
But Young, who developed a frosty
relationship with Joe Montana while
waiting to succeed the future HaD of
Farner with the San Francisco 49ers,
said he thought the Patriots should
keep both quarterbacks.
"I worked through it (or five years.
It's a tough sit11ation, but you've got to
work through it," Young said. "Those
are their two biggest assets ... They've
already needed both of them."
Bledsoe was the starter for eight
years, breaking virtuaUy every one of

the Patriots' passing reco!ds. But after to have Bledsoe, too. I know the team
he was injured in Week 2, Brady has confidence in both of those
replaced him, held the starting job guys."
when Bledsoe recovered and led New
Namath, the architect of one of the
England to the AFC East title.
greatest Super Bowl upsets when the
Brady starred in a 16-13 overtime Jets beat the Colts 16-7, said he
victory over the Oakland Raiders in wouldn't count out the Patriots, who
liTe-Patriots' first playoff game, but he ·' are~14-point underdogs. That's one of
was hurt in the second quarter of the the biggest spreads since the Jets
conference championship. This time it entered the 1969 game getting Ill
was Bledsoe coming off the bench to points.
·· .
"They can do it and l hope they
rescue the team.
That forced Belichick to pick one dO;' Narnath said. "It's not just because
to start in the Super Bowl, and he they're undenlogi;. But l enjoy seeing
chose Brady.
underdogs win. Maybe people around
Good move, according to Young the country see that and think they
and feUow Super Bowl MVPs Mon- can win, too:'
tana and'Joe Namath.
One former Super B'owl MVP
"!liked him from the first· day l saw doesn't share that view.
.him," Niunath said. "He's tough and
"I'm hoping his Cinderella story
his teammates love him and he's got a stops one game short:' Rams quartergreat future. I think it's a great luxury back Kurt Warner said.

s1.25·
NevJSmaker
BY TONY M. LEACH
TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -A Reedsville man,whom law enforcement officials consider "possibly ·a rmed and dangerous,"
is s.till at large and local residents are
being urged to report any information of his whereabouts.
David M . Persons, 39, of
Reedsville, is being sought by law
enforcement officials in Meigs,
Athens, Gallia and Washington counties as well as Jackson and Wood
counties in West Virginia, for his connection in numerous auto thefts and

Rams used foresight and fortune to build champion
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Anyone
who marvels at how the St. Louis
Rams rebuilt their defense this season
should think back a few years. In 1999,
they clid the same thing to their
offense. ·
That produced a Super Bowl championship. And now the Rams are back
In the big game, heavy favorites to beat
the New England Patriots on Sunday.
It's aU been according to a grand
design that has included strong drafts,
wise free-agent signings and that pro
foot.ball rarity, trades.
"You have to use aU the resources at
your clisposal, and I think we've do11e a
good job of that," said Rams president
of footbaU operations Jay Zygmunt.
"Sometimes it's not signing the original player, this is the right decision."
That was a reference to defensive
end Kevin Carter, who feU from AU-

Pro to aUdisappointment
and, last
year, was
traded to
Tennessee
for a firstround pick. Had Carter accepted the
Rams' offer, the team wouldn't have
been able to sign safety Kim Herring
or trade for cornerback Aeneas
Williams.
"It's the value of players, being selective and signing certain players you
can't replace qr must have;' Zygmunt
added. " It's as much a qualitative analys~ as quantitative.
"We have to ·be cognizant we can't
keep everybody, but we have to keep
the right guys:'
That would mean quarterback Kurt

Warner, running back MarshaU Faulk
and wide receiver Isaac Bruce. After
that trio led the Rams to their first
Super Bowl crown in '99, the organization made certain to sign them to
long-term contracts.
Bui the Rams als&lt;:r made sure they
clidn 't mortgage the future to do it, the
way the Cowboys and 49ers clid, causing their demise in the Ia!~! 1990s.
"It's where you want to move your
money:' Zygmunt said. "San Francisco
and DaUas kept pushing it back and
their day of reckoning came. We are
not in that situation."
Indeed, 37 Rams are under contract
for next season, at least. Zygmunt projects the team 'will not struggle to stay
under the projected 2002 salary cap of
$72 million .
Even if the three prime free agents
- middle linebacker London fletcher,

wide receiver A:z Zahir-Hakim and
defensive Leonard Little - are not resighed, it would not be a devastating
blow.
~
Few pro sports'tearns these days have
as many stars as the Rams. Here's how
the Rams, first under coach DickVermeil and now under Mike Martz, did
that:
-They dealt a 1999 second-round
and fifth-round draft pick to Inclianapolis for Faulk, who was the perfect
back for the high-speed offense Vermeil was installing. Today. Faulk would
be ·worth, well, at least what New
Orleans paid for Ricky Williams.
-Warner was signed as the thin!string quarterback in 1998 after
bouncing around the Arena League
and NFL Europe. When Trent Green
wrecked his J,nee in the '99 preseason,
Venneil gave Warner a shot. The rest is

two-time MVP history.
-Thanks to a 4-12 reconl in '98, St.

Louis owned the sixth overall pick,
which it used for Torry Holt, a gamebreaking receiver who fit right in from
the outset.
- · In 1997,Vermeil so coveted tackle
Orlando ·Pace he traded up to the first
overall slot to grab the Ohio State AUAmerican who has turned into an AUPro.
-When the defense let them down
in 2000, the Rams rebuilt through the
draft, free agency and .trades.They hired
Lovie Smith as coordinator. They dealt .
Garter, freeing up more than $5 mil· lion.
They also drafted rookies Adam
Archuleta and Tommy Polley and
signed free agent Don Davis - aU
major . factors on the league's most
improved unit.

other criminal activity
taken,
was
eventually
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph E.
TrusseD said Friday that Persons is
recovered by
deputies near
also a suspect in an automated teUer
machine theft that occurred in
the
Shade
. December at the Citgo station in
River Forest
Tuppers Plains.
area.
Trussell also
According to TrusseD, perpetrators
smashed through the business's front
said
he
door with a pick-up truck, .wrapped a
recently
chain around an ATM machine locattalked to the
ed inside, and pulled it free from its
Jackson
foundation.
.~
County Sher~
The ·ATM machine, which ha~ ~~~·s Department and was informed
been broken open and its contents Persons may be driving a stolen. yel-

caucus
considers
more public

Deaths
Charles T. Barton Jr., 75
Dale D. Hudnall; 71
Ruth E. Johnson, 89
Elsie P. McCoy, 83
Carl 'Sonny' Simpkins, 60
Mildred Smeltzer, 58
Agnes Smith, 85
Hilda, Stewart,, 69,.
Marvln StQII~r...SA..... ·

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ODOT to award bid for bridge
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO&lt;G'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Hlah: 401, Low: 10s
Qetails, A3 ·

$pedal meeting

128,150

• 5300 v.a, Z71

• CD Syttem,
Dill.
• CruiM Control, Tlh

RIO GRANDE - GaUiaVinton Educational Service
Center Governing Board will
meet in special session on
Feb. 14 at 7. p.m. in Room
155 of the Human Resources
Building at . Buckeye Hills
Career Center,
The board will discuss legal
and personnel matters, and
any other business presented.

• Sections - !2 Pqu

2001 Pontiac Grand AM
SE Coupe Or Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Alero GL Sedan

2001 Chevy Tracker
2 Door 4x4

2001 Buick Regal
LS Sedan

2001 Chevy Monte
Carlo LS Coupe

· ,950* qt,95D* q2,25o· q2,55D* q4,75D*

q4,95o~·

Automatic, Air Con d.
Cruise Control, Tilt Steering
CD Stereo System

• Alum .. Whitis, CO Syllem
• Power Sea~ Windows, Locks
• Cruise Control, Tilt Steering

• Automatic, Air Condhlonlng
• Power Windows &amp; Locks ·
• CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Power Seat, Wlndowt,
• AutOmatic, A~ Conditioning
• CD System, Tih &amp; Cruise

• Automlllc:, Air
• Power Windows, Locks, CD
• Alum. WhMII, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• 3800 V.fl, CO Sytlem
.
• Power Seat, Wlndowa, Loeb
• Cruise Control, Tilt Steering

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weath!lr

POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Transporta\ion
plans to awarcl a bid for the construction of the PomeroyMason Bridge by the end of this
year.
ODOT District 10 officials
IT\et Tuesday in Marietta for a
planning session ·on tlie bridge
project, according to ODOT
spokesman Stephanie Filson.
Among those attending the
mee1ing were Susan Wyant, with
ODOT's Office of Environmental Service, · and Karen
Young, the major new construction coordinator for ODOT's
Columbus headquarters.

cs
D2-6

insert
CJ
A4

A6
A2
. 81-8

A3

C 2002 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

agreed to the extension to assist
families wanting to participate in
GALLIPOLIS - The deadline the project, coordinated by the hisfor submission of family histories rorical society and French Colony
to the upcoming Gallia Cq11nt~ Chapter of the Daughters of the
history book has been extend~ to American Revolution.
March 31. said Roberta Roush of
"Gallia County History Book
the Gallia County Historical and Vol. II" is designed as a fcfllowup to
Genealogical Society.
"Gall!a County: People in History
The original deadline was Jan. to 1980," which focused entirely on
31 , but Roush said the project's family histories.
backers and the publisher have . The new volume, pJanned in .
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

C2-4

,

..,

CHIYIOLil

Buick

@I

0

Oldsmobile.

••••• ••~••••oe·

conjunction with the bicentennials
of Ohio and Gallia County in
2003, will also contain . family histories, but is also looking for
accounts of schools. churches.
clubs, businesses and other organizations, Roush said.
Family histories can be submitted
at no charge if under 500 words
and with one photo. There is a
charge for business, club or o rganizatlon histories, Roush said.

Holzer Medical Therapy Center and lnforma~on Systems
1
Computer Training Lab

Thursday, February 7, 2002
4:00PM
Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Confere~e Center
All are welcome!

.. .'

The book will be published by
MT Publishing Co. , Evansville,
Ind., which helped in conducting
several workshops last week at the
historical society for those needing
assistance in preparing their histones.
Since its original release, "Gallia
County: People in History" has
been a much sought-after resource
for historical research, Roush said.
PIHH .IH

History, AI

To a Ribbon Cutting, Dedication and Open House of the new

(Open House and tours will continue until 6:00 pm)

I

Pluse see ProfHts, A&amp;

You are Invited•••

,J

• Taxes, Tago. Trtle Fees exira. Rebate Included in sale price o1 neW veh~le liSied where applicable. "Orrapproved credit. On selected models. Not responsibie for lypo!j,apbicale"onJ.
l'llces Good January 30ih lhroug, February 3rd.

The appearance of the project
The design will allow for dechas been a major priority for the orative lighting to make the
bridge's designers since the pub- bridge more eye-catching.
lic hearing stage.
The aesthetic considerations
Of particular concern are the are the result of ODOT Direcapproach areas, and attractive tor Gordon Proctor's pledge to
landscaping areas ·and lighting "not build 'ugly' anymore,"
have been included in the plans. Young said in a meeting in
Attractive signage, the design of · Pomeroy last year.
Elsewhere in the state, civic
piers and other •bridge components, and the color of the organizations and garden clubs
bridge · itself will also weigh have played an active role in
beautifying new state road and
heavily in the finished product.
bridge projects, and the new
The newest bridge type the cable-stay design - was an Pomeroy-Mason Bridge's. ")"
overwhelming favorite of those intersection on . the Ohio
members Gf the public who approach will be an area where
responded to an ODOT survey creative landscaping and other
conducted in The Daily Sentinel improvements ca n be easi ly
in 2000.
Pl••se- Brlclp, A&amp;

GALLIPOLIS -Additions to the package of
public improvement projects Gallia County orga~
nizations hope to get funded were sought when ,
the county caucus of the Ohio Valley Regional
DevelopiT\ent Commission organized for the year
Thursday.
OVRDC. based in Waverly, assists a number of
southern Ohio counties, including Gallia, is
obtaining federal and state funding fur major projects. The caucus, consisting of local officials and
citizens, meets throughout the year.
Meeting with the caucus at tbe county commissioners' office, OVRDC Executive Director
Jeff Spencer said state budget cuts will impact, but
not eliminate, Gallia projects already proposed for
funding.
"Projects are on hold until July with the state
budget cnts," Spencer said. "The good ·news is we·
haven't lost any projects. We're delaying them
until the start of the new fiscal year."
Due to additions to the listing of what'are considered economically distressed counties in Ohio,
Spencer said there is increased competition for
development dollars. But those funds may also
increase due to the need, he added.
The current top five Gallia .Prokcts are led by
a $300,000 utilities replacement project for Gallipolis' 2 1/ 2 Alley, sought by the city, in which
5240,000 in Appalachian Regional Commission
funds are requested.
Following is the Kanauga/ Addison sewer project proposed by the county, estimated at $6.9
million, for which S300,000 is sought from ARC.
Completio.i1 of the new access road in GaUipo~

Deadline extended for Gallia history book

Index

2001 Chevy Pontiac
Sunlire SE Sedan

Please see Penons, .U

Ga

A WAVE GOODBYE - Presi·
dent Bush waves as - he
departs the White House from
the Oval Office. The president
spoke with Republican leaders in West Virginia before
heading to Camp David for the
weekend. (AP Photo/Hillery
Smith Garrison)

Details, A6

Brand New 21102 Chevy ·
Z71 Avalanche 4 Door 4x4

low Carl Smith Ihe. truck.
'"That particular company services
many gas wells throughout Meigs
County and •it is not uncommon to
see one of their vehicles in the art:a;"
he said.
Persons, who has prior convictions
for assaulting a polict: officer and
other multiple thefts, is six- feet taU,
weighs 180 pounds and has brown
hair and green eyes. He may have
·recently cut his hair and could be
sporting a goatee.

·-1·

•

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holze1·D(fference
www .holzer.org

(

be served.

...

-

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="462">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9907">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22731">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22730">
              <text>February 1, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="631">
      <name>smeltzer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="75">
      <name>taylor</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
