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                  <text>•
~age B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

girls boxaeore
Malge 33, Federal Hocking 29

Metgs
8 12 6 7 - 33
Federal Hocking 4 6 7 12 - 29
MEIGS (9-4, 4-2)- Renee Bailey 3 i-2 7,
Justine Dowler 1 3·4 5, Sammy Pierce 52-

4 12. Angel Harter 0 0·0 0. Jaynee Davis J
().56. TOTALS- 13 7-17 33.
. FEDERAL HOCKING (3·9. 1·5)- Ashley
Johnson 0 0-0 0, Natalie Williams 1 0·0 2,
Terry Wolfe 1 0·1 2, AmanQa Stover 7 0-0
14, Kelsey Lackey 3 2-6 8. Faith Guilders 0
0·0 0, Kritie Manning 0 3·4 3. TOTALS _:_
12 5-1 4 29.
3-point goals- none.

Southern 71, Vinton County 68
Sou t~e rn

10 17 14 .20 10 - 71
V1 n1on County 13 13 15 20 7 - 68
SOUTHERN (1 1-3, 4-3)- Ashley Dunn 3
1-4 7, Jessica Hllt1 0-0 2 , Deana Pull1ns 5
4-7 15, Katie Sayre 5 7-10 17, Susan
, Brauer 1 0-0 3, Brooke Kiser 5 4-4 15.
' Joanne Pickens 0 2-3 2, Ashle~ ~ou sh 3 00 8, Kristiina Will iams 1 0-o 2. TOTALS 24 18·28 71
VINTON COUNTY (4· 10. 4 ·~ 1 - Kally
McCorkle 0 1-2 1, Bn«a ny Sowe~2 t-4 5.
Heather Ousley 0 0-0 0. Kayta Jewett 5 22 14 . Kelsey Day 0 0-0 0, Kr istin Coll1ns 2
2-3 6, Erin Hillman 0 0.0 0, Amanda
Aatclifl 5 2-2 t 3. Holly Pr1demore 2 2-2 6,
Tricia Hew1tt 0 0·0 0, Tiflany Patterson 4 14 11. Hayle So wers 4 3-4 1'2 TOTALS 25 14·2 1 68.
3-point goals - SO 5 (Roush 2. Putlms,
Brauer and Ki ser), VC 4 (Jewett 2, Ratcliff.
and Sower s).
Ohio High Sc~l Girls Basketball
Monday's Results
Albany Alexande r 46. Nelsonville-York 23
Beaver Eastern 54, Fran klin Fur"nace
Gre'en 45
Bellaire 64, Steubenville 60
Bellsville 60, Caldwell 57
1•
Beverly Ft. Frye 42. Wa! erlord 36
Bridgeport 6·1. Bishop Donahue (W.Va.) 42
Centerburg 48, Worthington Chr. 45
Cin. Mother of Mercy 53. l ancas ter 26
Copley 42, Berlin Hiland 38

~- Chaminade-Julienne 56, Mentor 31
Evangel
Christian
45,
Gahanna
Muskingum Chr. 25
Glouster Trimble 83, Gallipolis Ohio Chr. 29
Hannibal River 53, Paden City (W. Va .) 26

Jackson 58 . Athe ns 39
Kalida 58, RichwOOd N. Un1on 45
Kenering Alte r 63. Cuyahoga Falls Walsh
Jesuit 46
.
!11akewood 57, Lora1n Admiral King 36
L1ma Cen t. Cath 52. Lima Temple
Chr1sllan 20
·Logan 51. Gallipolis Ga!lia 40
Mansfield St. Peter's 62 . Young. Ursulme
49
•
McConnelsvnle "Morgan 43. New Lex1ngton

.

-

M1llord Center Fairbanks 47. C1n N
College H1ll 31
Newcomerstown 46, Zanesv1lle Rosecrans
40
Oak Hi1171 . Wheelersberg 50
Old Washington Buckeye Trail 62, Bella1re
St. John's 41
Olentangy Liberty 46, Warsaw River V1ew
45
Parkersburg (WVa.) Calh. 63. BeJpre 62,
QT

Pickenngton N. 54. Sandberg (tii.J 42
Pomeroy Meigs 33, Stewart Federa l
Hock1ng 29
Racine Southern 71. McArthuf Vinton Co.

68.0T
Raytand Buckeye Local 56, Steubenville
Cenl. Cath 53
Shadys1 de 51. Mart1ns Ferry 43
Spflng . Gath. Cent. 34, Sprin g. NE 26
Stow 49, Reynoldsburg 43
Stow-Munroe Falls 49, Reynoldsburg 43
Tal. Bowsher 82. Spnnglield 48 •
Tot Libbey 53, Tol. Emmanuel Baptis t 43
Tal. Scan 55, Wooster 48
Vi ncent Warre n 50, Marietta 42
W. Chester Lakota W. 30 Hudson 20
Wanerso(l 43, Pickerington Cent. 38
Waverly 49. McDermott NW 44
Zanesv111i:l Maysville 43, New Concord
Johr"l, Glenn 33
· Ohio High School Boys Basketball
Monday 's Results
E. Canton 65. Malvern 51

Newark Cath . 69, Millersport 47
O\tawa·Giand0rl62, Clayton Nor1hmont 53
Pk:kerington N. 61 , Canal Winchester 59
Sebring McKinley 51 , Berlin Hiland 47, OT
'Tipp City Tippecanoe 49, St. PBns Graham
43
.
Tol Libb ey 69 , Trotwood·Mad1son 61
Tol. Scan 80, Lorain Admiral King 49
Warren Harding 80, Olmsted Falls 74, OT
Warrenville Hts. 54. Stow 53
Wooster 68 , Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesu1t
53
Monday's Results
Girls
Bndgeport. Oh1o 61 , 81sh op Donahue 42
Charleston Catholic 60. Chapmanville 37
Elk Valley Christian 30. Gauley Bridge 22
Elkins 4:5. Philip Barbour 41
Franklon 42. Northern. Md .- 22
Graham , Va. 71, Bluefield 63
·Grafton 47 . Tyler Consoldiated 36
Greenbrier East 39. Summers County 37
Hannan 55. Williamson 19
"Harman 65. Trinity Christian 26
Ironton, Ohiq. St. Joseph 48, Hunt1ngton
St. Joseph 4"1
Keyser 47. Paw Paw 25
Musselman 51 , East Hardy 33
Nitro 92, George Washing ton 66
Parkersburg Catholic 63, Belpre, Ohio 62,
OT
Pendleton Cou nty 59, Highland Co.. Va ..
37
Poca 53. Po.nt Pleasant 37
Ripley· 55, Hunt1ngton 48
River, Ohio 52, Paden City 26
Shady Spring 63, Uberty Raleigh 47
St. Clairsville, Ohio 64, Oak Glen 50
Tygarts Valley 61, t.lk&gt;ore lield 43
Westside 55. Gilbert 40
Wheeling Park 74, Union Local, Ohio 4B
Wood County Chrislla n 6 1. Beth Haven
Chr 1stian 39
.
Boys
Lewis Coun ty 65. MoUnt Hope 48
Mountain Mission, Va. 62, Ballard Christian
47
Shenandoah Valley, Va., 80, Pendleton
County 39
· Sherman 84. Hannan 79

NFL case, Alan C. Mil stein, has maintained his academic
said he is ··supremely " confi- eligibility throughou( hi s susden! that Clarett will win penston .
COLUMBUS •_ The moth- entry to the draft.
Clarett's future is in his own
The Clarett family is unwa- hands. Geiger said.
"We would welcome him
er of suspended Ohio State vering in its support of the
running back.Maurice Clarett NFL legal challenge but back if he wants to be back
said Monday that her son wants Clarett to be able to and does what it takes to be
remains committed to trying return to co 11ege .,.
t he 1·oses back," he said . "But if he
to force his way into the NFL h'ts 1awsull· or ts
· not ta ken ·111 wants to do the other thing.
ht' m to' do ,·1·
draft while not slamming the an early draft round. Milstein that's·. there &lt;or
1
'
door on a return to his collesaid .
that opiion comes available
g iate ·career. ,
"He is try_ing to keep his for him ."
·
. "What . Maurice continues opttons
open.·· he sat·d·.
.
The NFL recently said it is
to do is to look at the options
Anot her Cl arett 1awyer, look ' g
t'tlto
whether
111
· sa;·d 1ast wee k Unt·verst
that are before him." Mi chelle percy squtre,
' ty at· Pt.ttsburgh AIICiarett told The Associ'ated t hat the 20-year-o Jd from Amert'ca wt'de recet'\•er Larry
Press. "Nothing is carved in Youngstown wants to play for Fitzgerald is eligible for the
stone, on any arena. That is Ohio State even if he
. 'bl . . h d f April 's draft. Fitzgerald has
the intent. So. yes. we are b
. .
h
ecomes e 1tgt e 1or 1 e ra l. playe_d J.ust two seasons at
contmumg to pursue t e lawsqwre
· represen ted Cl are tt Pittsburgh, but spent a year at
suit."
·
last week when he pleaded.
Maurice Clarett. who guilty to lesser charge after a prep school before entering
.
helped Ohio State win the being accu sed of lying on 11 Pitt.
2002 national championship police report about the value
Milstein, a Philadelphia·
as a freshman , was suspended of items stolen from a dealer- antitru st laM' ~ peciali s t,
from the team before last sea-. ship car he burrowed. He was a:gued that F;tzgerald sh?uld
son because he accepted fined $100 on a charge of fail - have to play one more ye.tr 111
money from a family friend ure 10 aid ll law enforcement · college because hts ttme 111
and lied about it to university otlicer, which will not llppear prep school ~h~~ld not count
and NCAA investigators.
on his criminal record.
toward hts ehgtb!hty.
Clarett filed a federal lawOhio State officials have set
ESPN.com, cttmg unnamed
suit · in New York in goals and incentiv_es that need league sources, reported
September challenging the to be met for Clarett to regain Sunday
that
Fttzger~ld
NFL rule that says a player eligibility. .
apphed for t~e drafl before
must be three years removed
"All of the outstandin~ last Thursdays d~adltne and
from his high school gradua- issues with the NCAA stuff would be ruled eltgtble m the
tion before he can be eligible has to be cleared up, restitu- next _wee.k.
.
.
for the draft. Under that rule, uon and all those kinds of
Mtl ste111 satd Fttzgerald
the sophomore would hllve to things." Ohio State athletic being ruled eligible would
wait at least one. more season · director Andy Geiger said underscore "the arbitrary
before entering the draft.
Monday . .."And he has to do manner in which the NFL
I The league wants the case what a student has to do at interprets and applies its cligithrown out . Judge Shira Ohio State. He has to be eligi- bility ri.tles. And it cenainly
Scheindlin is scheduled to ble academically."
confirms that sophomores are
rule by Feb. I.
Geiger said he could not ready and able to star in the
' Clarett's attorney in the comment on whether Clarett NFL."
BY RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press

I

Redmen·take top spot _in ..
AMC.South to Shawnee St.

· charge,B~

I

North Division
Conference
L Pet.

s ports @ mydailylribun~ .com

w

Daemen
Saint Vincen t
Ro berts Wesleyan
Notre Dame, Ohio
Point Park
Seton Hill
Geneva
Houghton

RIO GRANDE - Th e University of Rio
Grande R~ dmen basketball team will tak e
their firsf place record in the Ameri can
Mideast Conference South Division into
Shawnee State today.
The Red men ( 11 -6. 5-l AMC South) are
coming off a 65-61 victory over Tiffin
"
, .Saturday to
maintain a
half game
lead ove r
Cedarv.i lie
(14-1, 5.2)
and a com plete game over Ma!o'ne (13-6, 5-3) and
Mount Vernon Nazarene ( 13-7, 5-3).
Today 's game will'be the second of three
regular season 111eetings between the two
school s. The Redmen downed the Bears,
55-52 , in the finals of the Bevo Franci s
Classic , Nov. 15 .
On Saturday, Rio · Grande continued its
winning streak against Tiffin. With t.he win ,
the Redmen won their fifth straight AMC
South contest.
Junior center Sean Plummer paced the
Redmen with 12 points and six rebounds
off the bench . Junior forward Dawayne
Mcintosh added 10 point s off the bench for
the Redmen .
Guards Kris Wi)son and Seth Deerfield
were on the verge of double figures ror the
Redm en with nine points each . Junior
swingman Matt Simpson chipped in eight
points and sophomore center Reggie
Wi-lliamson tallied seven points and pulled
down five caroms.

Rio Gran de
Cedarvi lle
Malone
Mt. Vernon Nazarene
Ohio Dominican
Shawnee Stat e
Tiffin
Urbana
Walsh
Wilberlorce

5
0 1000
4
1 .800
2 600
3
2
3 400
4
333
2
4
333
2
4
333
2
2. 4 333
South Division
Con ference
1 .833
5
714
5
2
5
3 .625
3 .625
5
4
3 .571
3 500
3
4
4 .500
2
5 286
2
6 .250
143
1
6

All G ame~
Pet.
L
13
6 • .684
I
14
.933
8
9 .471
7 14 .333
11
7 .611
7 .563
9
10
9 .526
3 13 ,188

w

All
11
14
13
13
10
7
6
5
7
-3

Games
6 .647
7
.667
6 .684
7 .650
11
.476
11
.389
10 .375
15 .250
13 .350
15 .167

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
1 ( l l ) " \ I S • \ t t l. , )- J '"\ n

Williams, Federer open
Australian Open with easy wins

..

MELB,OURNE, Au s.tralia
On the women's side, 'ni'nth,;It 's been a long, lo~g time,"
(AP) , - Venus Williams is ·seeded Chanda Rubin had a 6-3. the tour-time Grand Slam winready to make up for lost time. 4-6,6-3 win over Sweden's Asa ner said.
Showing no ill effects from an Svensson and moved into a secWilliams was given the No. 3
extended layoff, ·williams. and-round match against Qenisa seeding here, despite her rankretW11ed at the Australian Open Chladkova of the 0Lech ing dropping to No. II at the
witha6-216-l victoryThesday Republic, a6-4, 6-2 winnerover end of last season. The WTA
ov~r American teenager Ashley Stephanie Foretz of France.
Tour made the recommendation
Harkleroad.
Williams' only slips were a ba&gt;ed on Williams' "protected
Sidelined for almost six twisted ankle in the fourth game ranking."
months last season because of and one dropped service game,
"I'm really grateful, I supan abdominal injury, the third- in the fifth game of the second pose. for the seeding ... I think
seeded Williams won in her first set.
it's pretty consistent with the
major since losing the
"I was going for my swing WTA rules," she said.
Wimbledon tlnal to sister volley and twisted my right
Her la~l match at Melbourne
Serena last July.
ankle," she said. 'Til monitor it, Park was a loss in last year's
"I wa' real excited out there, see how it goes - I'm not fin al to Serena. who withdrew
today," said Williams. Before expecting it'll cause any prob- from this tournament because
the match, she was feeling "a lit- lems."
she hadn't recovered from a
tie sentimental."
.
She served at ~peed s up to 119 . knee operation.
Afterward, "it 'wasjust like a mph and won 75 percent of "I wanted to dowell, do what
breath of fresh air," she said.
points on her first serve. She my coach said - which is my
In men's play, Wimbledon didn 't wa,te any time, between · mom , so I had to," said
~hampion Roger Federer found ..points or on them, pro9ucing 27 Williams.
his range with his powerful fore- winners against Harkleroad,
Her mother. Oracene Price,
· hand and beat Alex Bogomolov r&lt;mked No. 51 last season.
exchanged text messages with
Jr. 6-3, 6-4, 6-0. Also, fotiner
Williams closed in 51 min- Serena during the match. Venus
world No. I Lleyton Hewitt was utes. approaching the net. atld said she was missing having her
leading Cecil Mamiit 6-2, 6-4, opting not to jump for sister around.
1-0 when the American retired Harkleroad's despt;rate lob on
"It's just not the same. We' re
after he crashed into the t'r)atch point. She smiled as she always together - it's like a
umpire's chair while chasing a watched it drop behind the base- piece of the link is mi ssing," she
drop shot.
line.
said.

\\11'"\l'-ll\\ .1\ \. l \t{'

oS

• Ten-race battle to determine NASCAR title. See
Page B1

Tiffin (6- 10; 4-4 AMC Snuth) missed two
chances to take the lead jn the final 14 seconds but were not able to capitalize. The
Dragons had four pl uyers in doubl e figures .
Steve Beretich and Lucius Sullivan po sted
IQ points and seve n rebound s each . Nick
Scheutzow and James Ball ulso (assed in I 0
points for the Drugnns.
The game wu&gt; tied at 2K- 28 at halftin1e .
Rio Grande sh ot 45 .5 perce nt (20 -of-44)
from the field, 50 percent &lt;7 -of- 14 l from
the three-point arc and 67 pem:nt ( I X-of27) from the free throw line .
Tiffin shot 43 percent (26-of-61) fromJhe
floor. 30 percent (6-of-20) from beyond the
arc and 75 percent (3.-of-4) from .th e foul
lin~.

Tiffin handled Rio Grande on the gluss,
out-rebounding the Redmen 38-28. but
'turned the ball over three more times than
Rio (18 -15)

Tuesday.
thi s."
The 6-foot , 195-pound
Cribbs is considered one
junior set school records for of the top players in the
both season and career total Mid-American Conference.
offense last fall.
In 2003 he completed 49
Kent State athletic direc- percent of hi s passes ( 178 of
tor· Laing Kennedy said 364) for 2.424 yards and 14
Monday that Cribbs, a team touchdowns with nine intercaptain, had heen suspended . ceptions. He also ran for
from the football squad but · 701 yards on 264 carries,
will' maintain his scholar- scoring 14 of Kent State 's
ship pending the resolution 22 rushing touchdowns .
of the charges.
Cribbs also caught a... 29"Right now it 's a very dif- yard touchdown pass to finficult time for Joshua and ish as the team's top scorer
his wife, Maria," Kennedy with 90 points .
said . "As an athletic departThe Golden Flashe s went
ment and university, we arc 5.-7 overall and 4-4 in the
supporting them as they MAC last fall
the
seek appropriate counsel to school's second -best record
work their way through in th e la st 15 seasons.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscr~be

today -992-2155

•

Bush sets
re-election
themes in State
of the Union

a joint session qf
Congress.- Bush said the
nation faced important chal lenges and chpices.
He said it was tempting but wrong - to think the
danger of terrori st attac ks
had passed even though it
WASHINGTON (AP) - . has been more than two
President Bush, wrapping years since Am erica was
the themes of hi s re-election attacked.
campa~n in his State of the
"We have come tl)rough
Union address, asserted recession and terrorist attack
Tuesday night that America and corporate scandal s and
is strengthening its economy the uncertainties of war." the
and successfully combatting president told lawmakers at
terrorism . "We have not the opening of a campaign ·
come all this way .- through . year. "And because you
tragedy and trial and war acted to stimulate our econoonly to falter and leave our my with
relief, this econwork unfinished," he said.
omy is
and growing
In a stay-the-course appeal · stronger."
to

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Rogelio Averion, M.D.
• Lucille Potratz

INSIDE
• New funeral home plans
open house. See Page A3
• State aecredits Meigs
County Board of MRIDD.
See Page A6

' The old Carper family home burned down early Tuest:lay
morning. The two-story farmhouse was at least a 100 years
old and left quite a legacy in Meigs County. (J. Miles Layton)

Fire destroys old farmhouse

173

BY

\j

OHIO

Fleet Liquidators
of America

Disposal

Regional

Asset

JAN. 21
JAN. 22
JAN. 23
JAN. 24
JAN. 25

SAM· SPM
SAM· BPM
SAM· BPM
9AM • 7PM
NOON • 6PM

The Bank Mandated Repo &amp; Used Car Disposal is open to the general public. First come,
first served. No dealers or exporters allowed until Monday, January 26th. Bank ·
Repo &amp; other used vehicles have been galhered from several locations for immediate disposal.
BANK REeO-&amp; USED VEHICLE PRICING Prices from $500 to $30 ,000. Payments will be
clearly marked . Vehicles .sell to the first buyer where purchase offer is approved . Offers
may be below the posted settlement amount. Payments listed below are possible.
$79/month PAYMENT with $59 DOWN PAYMENT*
$139/month PAYMENT with $59 DOWN PAYMENT*

$59 DQWN PAYMENT All BANK REPO'S &amp; OTHER USED VEHICLES available for $59
. down payment, then pay cash priGe or start making payments.*
·
TRADE-INS ACCEPTED Appraisers will be present to take trade-ins during the inventol),
disposal. To ensure the disposal of all inventory, appraisers have been ordered to offer
top-dollar for trades.
FINANCING/SPECIAL FINANCE NEEDS Bank and finance representatives will be
available to assist buyers in receiving lowest possible finan ce rates . Bring a currenl
payroll stub, utility bill and valid driver's license. ·
Inventory varies dally. Over 173 Bank Repossessed llo Other Used vehicles on site.

**************************************

.

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OPEN TO THE PUBliC. 5 DAYS ONlY:
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY

Democrats were quick to
take issue. noting that 2.3
million jobs have been lost
under Bush , lhat deficit s are
soa rin g and casualti es are
clim~n g in Iraq. Democrats
sat ~ ilently through mos\ of
Bush 's 54-minute . speech
while Republicans applauded repeated! y. ·
Bush 's
speech
was
designed to cast hi111 as the
commander in chief. grappling with lhe nation 's problem s and above~olitic s
while Democratic ri vals for
hi s office race around the
campaign trail . trading
charges.
With a $500 billion budget

Plt!'ase see Nation. AS

BY

BANK MANDATED
,I}ANKS
REPO
&amp;
USED
CAR
DISPOSAL
·LENDING INSTITUTIONS HAVE RELEASED LIENS ON OVER
VEHICLES
Authorized Dlsposa·l

\\ H \ \ 111\tl .n h ... i -n lu wl,nl ll

1

• President Bush delivers his . State of the Union speech to a
, joint session of Congress at the ·capitol. (AP) .
·

J. MILES lAYTON

JLAYT 0 N@M YOAIlYSE NTINEL. COM

·WEATHER

&amp;

. ' 11 0

Nation sti II at war

SPORTS

KSU qua r erback jailed on drug,
domestic· iolence charges
KENT (AP) - Recordsetting Kent State quarterback Joshua Cribbs is in jail
on charges of trafficking in
marijuana and domestic violence, the university 's athletic director confirmed
Monday.
·
According to a Kent
police report , Cribbs was
arrested at his home at 9:53
a.m. Saturday and charged
with trafficking in marijuana, a fifth degree felony, and
domestic violence , a first
degree misdemeanor. He is
being held w,ithout bond. ·
Cribbs. 20, "a native of
Upper Marlboro, Md., will
be arraigned in Kent
M(tnicipal
Court
on

:• 1

•

FOR IMMEDIATE PUBLIC DISPOSAL PRIOR TO AUCTION SALE

Tennis

Senate moving
quickly on bill, A6

American Mideast Conference

STAFF REPORT

W.Va. prep basketball scores

Clarett's mother says son hasn't
ruled out NFL or Buckeyes ·~

I

KSU QB pleads innocent
·to domestic violence

College Basketball

"Prep Scoreboard
Mon~ay'a

Tuesday, January 20, 2004

INDEX
2 SECI10NS -

12 PAGES

c;alendars
Classifieds
Comics

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Sports -

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ROCKSPRINGS A
fire destroyed the old
Carper homeplace located
on Cook Road . early
Tuesday morning at around
4 a.m. No one was hun and
. Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Chief Rick . Blaettnar said
the home was a total loss.
The home was owned by
Jami~ Nicholas, who lives
in Columbus and uses the
home as a weekend retreat,
but prior to that it was the
Carper family home for
decades. The two-s tory
farmhouse had a tin roof,
tlreplace, basement, character and charm. There is a
fro zen pond nearby, a l~rge
whtle barn, and open ftelds
once used for raismg cattle.
Wendy
Carper-Halar
-grew up in the hills surrounding the home where

ROCKSPRINGS - One
promising young arti st· has
put Meig s County on . the
map.
Dane Eichinger, 15 . was
the ninth grade winner for the
lOth River Sweep Poster
Contest.
At least 1.800 studetil s
from more- than a dozen
. states bordering the Ohio
River competed in the contest
to create a poster promoting
the a;\nual River Sweep
which will t11ke place in June .
There were prizes awarded
the winner of each grade
from kindergarten to 12th
grade . Eichinge~ won a $100
savings bond.
.
Eichinger 's poster featured
carefully drawn cartoon characters cleaning the Ohio
River. The Meigs High ·
School freshman spent nearly
two days creating the poster.
"I like to draw, especially
·cartoon·s," he said. "I see
myself as an artist · when I
grow up, but more along the
lines of being a cartoonist."
Eichinger has been drawing since he was old enough
to hold a crayon. Still. he
-credits Meigs High School
art teacher Matt Kinnard with
some of his succeSs. Kinnard
said Eichinger is a promising
student who has the potential ·
to be a great artist.
" I would say if Dane
wants to have a great career

her grandmother, Helen,
raised a large family. She
said the farm once hoasted
goats, chickens. pigs and a
lot of cattle.
Please see Artists. AS
Carper-Halar remembers
going over . to ·her grandmother's house as a little
girl when she got sick. She
said
her grandmother
always knew the secret
BY BRIAN J. REED
BR EED® MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
remedies that would cure
anything. The home saw
birthdays, meals, marriage
RUTLAND - An Athens '
and death, and now it is ·contracting rirm ·has been '
gone .
awarded a $99,4&lt;)9 contract
Carper-Halar, who lives for the expansion of the
nearby, heard the firetrucks Rutland sewer system.
and saw the lights in the . Meeting in recessed scsearly hours of the morning, _s ian on Tue sday, Meigs
"I'll miss that place." she County
Commissioners
said. " It is__a sad day."
awarded th~ ~id ~rmn J .C
Units from both Pomeroy Tme~t Excavatmg tot the
and- MiddlepaFt respended- .. proJect. destgn_ed to provtde
to the call. Blaettnar said sewerage servtce to the
f
·. ·
Metgs Elementary School
the cau se of the tre ts sttll and the planned Heave n on
under mvesttgat;on .
·
..

MHS/Art: Meigs H;gh School freshman Dane Eichinger ancl art
teacher Matt Kinnard I'(Ork together to craft a picture which will
·grace the walls of the high school. Eichinger competed against
1.800 students to win a $100 savings bond from the Ohio River
Valley Water Sanitation Commission to promote the 10th River
SweeP' coming .up in June. (l Miles Layton)

Athens firm awarded expansion bid
'

.

Earth Senior Living Center.
begin in early February. and
Bids on the project were take 60 days to complete.
opened last week and were
The Meigs Local School
submitted
to
Omni District is now spending
Engineering
·•
Co .. $14,000 each month to haul
Indianapolis, Ind. , for review. sewage from the new eleBids were also received from ·men'tary school to the vilp.Y. Weber Constrvction !age's sewer treatment plant.
Co ..
Reedsville. P erry
Construction on the new
Reclaiming. Inc. , Corning... senior living complex. to be
Rose's Ex cavating, Inc.. built by The Legends Realty
Racine, and D.J . Group. Inc.. Co .. also of Indianapolis, is
Beverly.
expected to be completed in
Work on the installation of February. hut occupancy will
"a new four-inch sewer line not be poss ible until the
along Ohio 124 and Little
Leading Creek is expected to
Please see Bid, AS

Looking for something meaningful to do in 2004?

Consider .-

~

BANK MANDATED REPO &amp; USED VEHICLE DISPOSAL SITE:

Volunteering

NORRIS NORTHUP CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
252 Upper River Rd. • Gallipolis • (7 40) 446-0842

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Norris Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep. &amp; their agencies may act at the direction of local agencies to effect lhe sa le of

at the Hospital!

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variou s properties &amp; assets. As an auth orized agency for veh icle sal e, this office is licensed, bonded &amp; insured un der
Ohio laws. T his inspection &amp; sale is .for the purpo se of disp osal of assets from various transactiohs (recovery actions,
tra de~ins. auctions and other arrangemenls}. Sales req Uire a charge lor ti lle prep ar atio!1 1 associated transfer of lags &amp;
titles and sales ta.11 (unless buyer IS exempt!. "W ith approved cre dll. $59 down paymenl plus ll +l
Add itional down
payment may be required for credi t approve . See deal er for detail s.· Subject to lender app ro\lal. "Exam ple : 19 98
Ford. Tauru s, Sale Price $3174 . $79/m o for 48 mos . @ '10.0% AP R. $59 down payment .plus ta x. Tota l amounl
finaneed $3115 plus tax. Subject to cre di,t ·approval &amp; lenders fi nal ap proval. Copyright G&amp;A Markelin,g, Inc . 2003

'

MEDrCAL CENTER
Discover tile Holzer Difference

www ~holzer .org

For more information, contact Dawn Halstead,
Director of Volunteer Services at (740) 446-5056.
'

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�••

NATION • WoRLD
'
Research.team to study one of Alaska'sghost villages

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2.
Wednesday, January 21, 2004

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 21,

' '

BY RACHEL D'ORO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ANCHORAGE, Alaska
(AP) - Retun1ing for the
first time in three decades to
the crumbling Eskimo village
where she was born, Helen
Pushruk was struck by how
much more rugged it was
than she remembered.
· "It was scary, you know,
real steep," Pushruk, 76,
recalled of her 1983 visit to
King Island, a village builr
on stilts. "Every time I went
to the top of the island. I
thought, ' Gee, we were just
like monkeys."'
It was. home. and like so
many other elders, Pushruk
would like to go back for
another look at the communi•
ty that was abandoned almost
40 years ago and is now just
a ghost town.
Now she will get that
chance, thanks to Oregon
State University anthropologists who are ·launching a
four-year study of King
Island and its former inhabitants.
The project is being funded
by a $5 17,000 gmnt from the
National
Science
Foundation.
Researchers
plan to document the oral
history of former villagers
while training ·Inupiat young
people to collect samples for
a scientific look at the vegetation and wildlife of the
island, a tiny spot in the
Beri~g Sea about 625 mile ~
nortliwest of Anchorage.
"There are things elders
know that they can teach to
the western scientists. They
have a pretty intimate knowledge of how their environment worked," said Deanna
Kingston, the lead researcher
and a descendant of King
Island villagers.
"My oldest·uncle was said
to be able to predict the
weather from ihe top of-!(ing
Island," Kingston said. "He
would go up there to observe
the conditions and then tell
the others that 'in three days,
it will be safe to cross to the
m~inland .' And sure enough,

The deserted stilt village of King Island, Alaska, about 625 miles northwest of Anchorage, is
shown in this June 1978 photo released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration. Researchers from Oregon State University are launching a four-year study of the
Eskimo village, and its former inhabitants. The project is being funded by a grant from the
National Science Foundation. (AP Photo/ NOAA Corps, .Capt. Budd Christman, File)
in three days, they could
cross."
·
Next summer, researchers
will scout the 2 112- mile
island to see if any of the ·
buildings, are ·stable enough
to serve as quartecs for about
50 participants, including I0
scienti sts and 15 elders. If
not, they will use tents during
field research the following
· two summers. In the fourth
year, Kingston hopes to produce DVDs docum~nting
place names and stories, village and burial sites, wildlife
arid vegetation.
Volunteers will be enlisted
to help frail elders get around
the rocky terrain. It is crucial
to have old-timers along
bec~use they gave names to
every rock, nook and cranny,
Kingston learned. Most of
the names reflect a bountiful
subsistence lifestyle: "qalu. aqtuik" is a place to hook

tom cods, "taiyaguk" is
where birds called crested
auklets might be found. The
lnupiaq word for the .island is
Ugiuvak, which means "a
place for winter."
"I' ve hear~ King Island
called a place next door to
heaven ," Kingston said.
"People say it was special
because it provided them
with a variety of food,
including greens, fish, birds.
sea mammals and berries."
Kingston, 39, an assistant
professor of anthropology, is
half lnupiat. Her mother was
born on King Island and
shared early
memories
Kingston hopes to validate
during her field research. For
example, she hopes to find a
cave that kept meat frozen
year round.
"Each family had its own
spot in the cave," Kingston
said. "It may be iced over

after 40 years. But there may
also still be meat caches in
there."
The island was named in
1778 by British explorer
Capt. James Coo~ for James
King, a member of his party.
It is unclear how long
Inupiats lived there.
A centUTy ago, about 200
people dwelled in walrusskin homes tacked to the face
of the cliffs. They hunted
walrus, seal and seabirds and
collected berries and plants.
Every summer, they traveled
by kayak and skin boat to the
mainland 40 miles away,
camping near Nome, where
they sold ivory carvings.
Pushruk recalled the trip taking 12 hours. .
Starting in the 1950s,

Couple .
charged in
death of 6year-old girl
following
possible
exorcism

fewer people returned to
King Island. The 1960 census counted only 49 residents . The 1970 census
found none. King Island is
among 16 federally recognized Alaska Native villages
that are deseried or us'ed as
seasonal camps.
Today, many former King
Island residents and their
ATLANTA (AP) A
descendants live in Nome.
·-husband
and
wife
have.
Kingston said several factors.contributed to ihe demise been charged with murder-·
of King Island. Pregnant ing a 6-year-old girl . whose
women chose to stay in back was broken in whaJ
Nome, where there were doc- police said may have been
tors. Many of the men were an exorcism gone wrong.
The couple was arrested .
drafted during World War II .
In the late 1940s and '50s. Monday after being spotted
tuberculosis killed some peo- on the street naked in the·
ple and hospitalized others. freezing cold along with
And payi ng jobs became two other chi ldren .
Pol ice said the dead girl,
available elsewhere.
whose
body was discovLooking back, Pushruk
said life on King Island was ered in a motel room, had
difficult, given its isolation been strangled and stabbed,'
· and the harsh storms. The and her back was broken.
family relied on whale blub- An autopsy was planned.
Based on what the adults
ber.for lighting their weather· beaten wooden house. She told authorities, investigaremembers having to melt tors be Iieve "they were
snow and ice to wash clothes, involved possibly in a rituhours spf¥11 bending over to . al of some sort," police
pick salmon berries and spokesman John Quigley
greens, and endless climbing. said. "It may have had
In the early 1950s, when so mething to do with
· she was 27, Pushruk was undembnizing the ' child in
· stricken with TB and left the so me manner."
island for a hospital in Sitka . . Christopher Carey, 29,
Her oldest sister and her and Valerie Carey, 27, .,
grandmother died of the dis- were charged with murder
late Monday, The Atlanta
ease.
Pushruk was hospitalized Journal -Constitution reportfor 2 1/2 years and decided ed on its Web site. They
she had had enough of King initially were charged with
Island. She now lives in cruelty to children, public
Palmer, a town of more than indecency and obstruction
5,000, about 40 miles north- of police and were taken·
to a psychiatric ward. They:
east of Anchorage. .
"l love liv'ing where you were later moved to a jail.:
Police learned of the
can push u button to do
things, like washing dishes in death around 12:30 · a.m.
a washing machine ," she when the unidentified man.
said.
and woman we'fe seen:
Pushruk cannot turn down walking naked down a city:
an opportunity to revisit with street with two children, a·
the researchers: "If they pick 2-year-old boy and a 7_:
me I would go, maybe for the year-old girl, Quigley said. ·
last time.''

Community Caler:"~dar .
Pu61ic meetings
Wednesday, Jan. 21
MIDDLEPORT
·Regular meeting of Board
of Middleport Board of
Public Affairs, · 5:30 p.m.,
council chambers. Meeting
changed due to holiday.
'
Thursday,
Jan.- 22
POMEROY - Salisbury
· Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the township building on .Rocksprings Road.

. RIO GRANDE -The
· Ohio Bo.ard of Regents
will hold its monthly meeting on th~ University of
Rio Grande campus for . the
first time in their 40-year
history on Thursday. The
meetings are open to the
public. The meeting will
be held in Conference
Room C in the Student
Center Annex. Committee
meetings are at 9·, I0 and
II a.m., and the board
meeting is from I :30 to 3
p.m.

Clubs
and
.
Organizations
.

Wednesday, Jan. 21
MIDDLEPORT The

1'/2 INCH AD .. $7.50

(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

~alltpoli1)

Church services

hous~ Hoovers
announce birth
MIDDLEPORT - Ricky
and Monica Hoover of
Rockbridge announce the
birth of a daughter, Jenessa
Rae, born Nov. 19, at
Fairfield Medical Center in
Lancaster.
The
infant
weighed 7 pounds, 3 ounces.
Grandparents are Rick and
Jacqueline
Hoover
of
M id'dleport and Dean and
Cathy Dickson .of Junction
City. Great-grandparents are
Ivlanford and Peggy Hutton
and Herbert Hoover of
Middleport .

2 INCH AD ... $10.00

"

.........

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

MYHON

PROUD
'

T'O. ·BE A

YOUR
LIFE.
.

BRIAN.

'

THE DAILY
.
.
SENTINEL
'

Tax changes noted
MIDDLEPORT - Ohio
House Bifl 95 has required
the following changes to the
Middleport tax code. according to Tax Administrator
Carol Howe Cantrell:
• The due date has been
changed to April 15, and the
same due date applies to Lie filing of declamtions for the new
tax year. Quarterly e'timate paymenl' due dates are now April
14,July 15, 0ct. 15,andJan. 15.
Any taxes paid after Dec. 31 of
the calendar yew· are not eligible
for deduction tinm fedeml tax in
that year. · - ·
• Wages for taxation and
withholdin,ll will now be
called qualtfyit~ wages , and
will appear on tsox. 5 on W-2
forms.
• The ta x office is required
to accept any generic form
sent as long as it contains all
information required on village fonns.
• The date has changes for
W-3 with~olding reconciliations. Previously. the village
allowed until April 30; they
must now be l1led by Feb. 28.
• The village will go by the

date items are received rather
than the date of postmark. as·
in the past.
• All l&lt;mdlords are to notity
the tax adminisU&gt;otor in wri ting
within 30 days of a new temmt
in his property, giving mune.
address arid telephone number.
if available. umdlorJs must also
notify the ' tax administrator
within 30 days after the tenw1t
vacates the. propcny. The information requoreJ .in writing is the
date of vacation ti:om ti1e rental
and a torwardin g address.
• The village ha' eliminated the
withholding sa.le harbor. Under
prior law, a municipality wuld not
require a non-tesident emplover
(not siruated in the municipality)
to withhold a t]JX from employee
compensation unless the total
amount required 10 be withheld
from all the employer's employees in the municipality e)(ceeded
$150 tor tl1e calendar year. The
sale harlJOI is eliminated beginnino in taxable vear 200'1.
Que stion s · about · th e
changes may be directed to
Cantrell. from 8:30a.m. until
3:30 p.m. , Monday through
Friday, at 992-2R2'7.

'

SUBSCRIHE
TODAY
6 7 5-1333.

You feel

To advertise
in this special

Writing this love
· message gives me the
opportunity to tell you
just how much I love
you and enjoy being
your husband. I know
I sometimes don't
show It but I really do.
Valentines

J. REED

planning and cremation grad uate , Acree attended
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM
services will be available.
the University of Rio
The funeral hom e ts Grande before Btudying at
MIDDLEPORT - Acree located In the former the Mid-American College
Funeral
Home
In
Captain's House in down- of Mortuary Science in
Middleport is open for town Middleport , which Jeffersonville, Ind . He, his
business, and owner James was remodeled extensive ly. wife, Kristin, and their
R. Acree, Jr. plan s an open The converted Victorian sons. Layne and Landon,
house from 4 to 8 p.m. on home provides a · viewing will res ide in private quarSaturday.
area and seating for I00 ters at the funeral home .
The new funeral home at people, a small · parking lot
Acree's phone number is
244 North Second Ave. , in for family ·clients, and a 992-7900.
downtown
Middleport, location convenient to onoffers all traditional funeral street parkiryg and the
home services in a com- municipal parking lot on
fortable and attractive set- First Avenue.
ting, Acree said. Fu II - A Meigs Coumy native
funeral services, pre -need and Meigs High School

1!\atlp m:rtbu,ne
0

. 2004.

Birthdays

New funeral home plans open

BY

Joint Jleasant ltegt,ter
The Paily '

(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

ABBY
My
DEAR
mother''
boyfriend and I have been
I wan·t to help the yo ung
Thursday, Jan. 22
seeing each other for three
POMEROY
Alpha
woman because the long
years . We moved in togeth- .
Iota Masters will meet at
road' ahead will be difficult.
er
eight
months
ago
and
6:30 p.m. at the St. Paul
But I al so want to keep the
have been talking about
Lutheran Church for a
congregation from dividing
Dear
marriage as soon as we're
soup slipper. A white eleover the matter. - MINISAbby
'phant to be conducted by
financially stable.
TER IN GEORGIA
Donna Byer will follow .
Abby, we both have hot
DEAR MINISTER: There
tempers . We don't get viois no rule of etiquette th at
TUPPERS PLAINS lent, but we flare up at the
prohibits an unwed mother
VFW Post 9053 will meet
drop of a hat. We tend to
from being give n a shower.
at 7 p.m. at the Tuppers
take things personally and mean I'm getting fat'!") In And because of her unrnarPlains hall.
· '
become defensive. When we other words. the pe.rson ried status, she is go ing to
fight ,- it's all-out · war. might not have liked the need all the help she can
REEDSVILLE
Neither of us seems to be color or style, but how will get. Babies are expensive.
Thursday, Jan. 22
Riverview · Garden Club
able to stop until it's too you know if you don ' t ask''
Since she repented. perPOMEROY
Caring
Another helpful technique haps
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at
late, and by then, we have
you · should re mind
Sharing
Support usually said hurtful things is to as'k yourself. before your flock of:
the home of Frances Reed. and
venting, "Is it true? Is it
Group, I p.m. at the for which we're sorry.
An auction will be held.
I. The Golden Rule . (Do
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
How do people learn to kind'' It is hurtfuP Is it unto others as you wou ld
helpful''" A trial lawyer
Sunday, Jan. 25
Center. For more informa- fight fair and control their once told me , "You can't have them do unto vo u.)
HARRISONVILLE
2. Judge not lest ye he
tion call 992-2161. Topic tempers? We love each unring the bell." This hold s
meeting
of
Special
other
very
much
.
HURT
.
true in relationships as well judged. And ...
Harisonvi lle Lodge 411, 2 of discussion will be stom- IN NEW JERSEY
3.
Let
he
(or
sl1e)
who
is
as courtrooms.
p.m. · for practice in the ach disorders,
DEAR HURT: Learning
DEAR ABBY: I am a wi thout sin c ~ s t th e first
E.A. degree for in spection.
to "light fair" is an acquired gospel minister, and mem- stone .
All officers are • asked to
skill , and like any other bers of the congregation are
Your work is. cui nul for'
attend.
skill it takes self-control and divided over whe ther to you. because yo ur congregapractice. When people dis- hold a baby shower for an tion seems to ha ve forgotten
Friday, Jan. 23
agree, it is helpful to stay
a principle of thei r religion:
POMEROY - A card on the subject when talking unwed mother who is a Love one another.
· member of the congregashower for Sylvia Midkiff it out, That means refraining tion. I have been told that it
Wednesday, Jan. 21
Dear A!Jbr is "riltm hi·
who will observ,e her86th from dragging in baggage "is just not done ." The Ahigail Vai1 Burm. "1.,.;!
LONG BOTTOM
Ruth Eshenour, mission to birthday on Jan . · 23 is from previous arguments.
eKpectant mother has made k11nll·n as Jeann e Phillit1s,
Another technique that it right by repenting . and and was ./(mnded br her
South Korea, will be pre- being coordinated by famican avert misu nderstanding ask ing for prayer.
senting a program on her
moth er, Paulin e Phillips.
work at 7 p.m. at the ly members. Cards may be is to "mirror" what the
Dear
Ab!H
a/
Is there any rule of eti - Wri1e
Faith Full Gospel Church. sent to her at 42603 other person has said. ("I quette that prohibits having "'"'w. DearAbbr.com rjr PO.
Eshenour has · been in the Midkiff Road, · Pomeroy, heard you say you didn't a baby shower for an unwed Box 6944 0, ·Los Angeles.
mission field for · 28 years Ohio 45769.
like my outfit. Did you
CA 90069.

Jam(ls R. Acree, Jr.• has renovated the former Captain's House at 244 North Second Ave.,
Middleport. and is now operating Acree Funeral Home there. An open house is planned for
S!lturday. (Brenda Davis)
·

[February G, 2004 ·]

Happy Valentine's Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dod, Sister, and
Brother ...
Thanks for belnq such
a great family!
I Love You Very Much! .

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 6,

to find w~y to·fight fair ·

PART OF.

\

liNCH AD ..... $5.00

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid 's arrow I~ .
straight and true,
In bringing this thought
of love to you.
I'm sorry about the
. other night. ·
When we had that
terrible fight.
A Senrtnellove message
was a good idea.
To show you just how
much llc:&gt;ve you, Marla.

Sunday, Jan. 25
MIDDLEPORT - Lloyd
Middleton will be preachong
at
the
Hobson .
Christian
, Fellowship
&lt;;:hurch in Middleport, 6:30
p.m. There will be special
s1on ging.
Pastor Hershel
White invites the public.

News and information Rdl
for your retirement yea.rs. l$~1

With A Sentinel Love Message!
Examples
of Sizes and Prices
.

3 INCHAD ... $15.00

having served ·in Kenya,
Paki stan, and India.

: : - - - - - - - ~-

--Your Way,..._, On February 13th--

I st Valentine's Day
· Tessa!
-Mammy &amp;Daddy

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

Literary Club
will meet at 2 p.m. at the
home of Sara Owen. Dana
Kessinger will review " Bel
Canto" by Anne Pratchett.

'

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Sp·ecial Way

Retirement
'
Edition

contact y6ar
Advertising .

Hou-rs · of Operation:

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Address: _ _ _ _ _...!...__ _ _ __,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Size ofValentlne:_ , - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - Total Amount Enclosed:
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c!&amp;alhpolis 1JBailp ~ribune Daily Sentinel
740-446-2342
740-992-2156

• Special Occasion -Bu.Det Bars
priced .o il Req11est

~oint ~leasan.t 11\egister

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2004

Support Groups

CHESHIRE - Board of
Directors of the GalliaMeigs Community Action
Agency will meet at· 4:30
p.m. at the Cheshire qffice.

It's Valen-tirnel

Hpppy

Middl~porl

BYTHEBEND
Hot-tempered lovers want

VIA Rt.

���I

'

1:'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel "

COLUMBUS -How a state panel
of sports write&gt;s and broadcasters
rates Ohio high school boys basket·
ball teams In the second weekly
Associated Press pon or 2004. by

OHSAA divisions, w1th won-lost
record and total ·points (first-place

votes in parentheses):

6, Clay1on Northmont (1) lD-0

178

7, Wadsworth 9-0
e. Cols. Brookhaven 9·2
9. Lakewood St Edward 8-2
10, Uma'Sr. B-2

150
124
68
40

Bv RusTY

MILLER

Associated Press

I
/

With. the .Jack of respect they've gotten the
past JW O years in ·the poll. the Sylvania
Nonhview girls basketball team must fee l like
Ohio's version of Rojlney Dangerfield.
Despite reaching t~e regionals the past two
seasons and staning 11 -0 this season, the
Wildcats ha ve ye1 to crack the top 10 in
Division I.
Their siiUation underscores the fact that vot·
ers tend to give more w~ight to teams that make
it into the biggest spotlight of them all, the state
tournament .
In 2002, a young 19-6 Wildcat team lost in
the regional semifinal s. Last season, the
Wildcats avenged their only defeat from a 19-1
regular season by beatin1g state poll champion
Toledo Central Catholic, t 4-0 at the time, in the
district finals .
They would ultimately Jose to Mansfield
Senior in the regional championship game but
returned all five starters from that team and
have begun with II wins in a row, all by comtonable-margins.
The Wildcats have been led by Niki McCoy
(17.2 points per game). Indiana University·
bound Nikki Smith ( 10.7) and Brooke Amstutz
(11.5). the daughter of University of Toledo
head football coach Tom Amstutz.
Jerry Sigler. Nonhview's coach the past 28
seasons, . is approaching a major milestone.
With a 497-1 36 career mark, he is three wins
shy of becoming Ohio's tifth girls basketball
c_oach to record 500 victories.
If Nonhview continues its unbeaten run,
Sigler is set to reach No. 500 on Jan. 31 at
Oregon Clay.
· PRODUCTION LINES: Top-ranked
Canton McKinley had its string of 30-point
quaners snapped at four but came close with a
28-point third quarter in a 72-53 victory at
Youngstown Boardman; acclaimed freshman
O.J. Mayo totaled 59 points in two weekend
victories to lead Cincinnati Nonh College Hill
- which was 2-18 last year - to an 11 -0 stan;
Andrew Brackman totaled 48 points in two
wins for Moeller, keeping alive the Crusaders'
mark of winning each of their 12 games by at
least 18 points; Akron Hoban freshman Nick
Gross had consecutive games of 36 points and
31 points; Deseree Byrd scored 30 points to
lead Cincinnati Taft past Clark Mortessori in a
battle of unbeatens; Brittany Woods had a

DIVISION II

,
336
2, LaGrange Keystone (9) 12-0 283
3, Cols Bexley (3) 10· 1
268
4, Newark UcK1ng Valley (4) 8·0 237
5, Ottawa·Giandorl (2) 9·1
215
6, Dover 11 -1
17.?
7, Lewis town lnd1an Lake 10·1 12 1
8, Willard 9·2
11 3
9, Port Clinton 1().. 1
93
10, Cols. Beecllcroft 6·4
38

1. Akr. SVSM (20) 9-2

Otllers receiving 12 or more points.
t 1, Day. Chaminade-Jutien'ne 30. 12,
Lisbon Beaver 27. 13, Shelby 24. 14,
Wauseon 21. 15, Circle... ille Logan
Elm 19, 16, Van Werl 16. 17. Canal
Fulton NW 14. 18. Youngs. liberty
13 19, Cambridge 12.
DIVISION Ill
1, Cin. N. College Hill (28) 11·0 356
2, Versai lles (4) 9-0
296
3, Akr. Manchester (3) 9·1
254
4. Johnstown-Monroe (1) 10·0 222
. 204
5, Day. OakWood 10-t
6. Findlay L1ber~-Benton 9·1
174
7. Loudonville 9-1
134
8, Middletown Fenwick 10·1
133
9, Bellaire 10-4
· 56
10, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 9·1 41
Others receiving 12 or more points:

11 . Louisville AqUinas 33. 12 ,
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 22 13,
Youngs. Mooney 16. 14, Chesapeake
15 15, Ironton 14. 16, Archbold 13.·
DIVISION IV
1, N. Wash. Bucl&lt;eyeCenl. (16) ~
2, Sebring McKinley (8) 8-0
3, Fl. Loramie (7) 9-1
4, Berlin Hiland~1 ) 8-1
5, Arlinglon (5) 12·0
6, Russia 9·2
7, M1nster 8-2
8, Lakeside Danbury 10·1
9, Dalton (1) 7-3
10. Cols. Tree of Life l0· 1

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rtbune

The Daily

S~ntinel

• Page 83

.. Sentinel - l\e

CLASSIFIED

'.

353
327
293 .
248
191

Others receiv1ng 12 or more points :
11 , Mansfield 17. 12 (tie), Hamilton ,
W86terville South. Warren Harding,
Wooster 14.

..

Wednesday, January 21,2004

No.·9 ·Kentucky
Wildcats gain wins but survives Vols
little statewide.respect in·overtime

Basketball Poll

Q

Wednesday, January 21 , 2004

Ohio Prep Notebook

AP Prep Boys

.
DIVISION I
1, Can. McKinley (2 1) 9..()
2, Cin. Moeller (15) 12-1
3, Cin. LaSSila (1) 11-0
4, N. Can . Hoover (1) 11 -0
. 5, Troy 10-1
.

Www.mydailysentinel.com

337
305
297
235
21,7
153
137
11 4
76
73

Others receiving 12 or more points:
11. S. Charleston SE 23 . 12.
Mansfield St. Peter's 21 13. Mt.
Vernon Academy 20. 14, Van Buren
16. 15, Can. Heritage Christi an 15.

..f6,. Zanesv111e Rosecrans 13.

career-high 30 points in Cincinnati Country
Day's 48-24 win over Cincinnati Christian; and
Van Buren's Tyler Faine scored a girls singlegam~ school record of 38 points in a 67-37 win ·
ove~Fostoria St. Wendel in.
T REE'S A CHARM: Liberty Township
Lako a East's James Dews scored 91 points
over t~e weekend - 24 Fridar in a win over
Cincin~ati Colerain, then 32 m an ovenime
Joss to Our Savior New American '(N.Y. ) and
35 mo in a win !JVer Champlain St. Lambert
of Can~da: Louisville .St. Thomas Aquinas won
thr~-e gfU]leS in three days in three different
venues,'. winning at Kidron Central Christian
56-48 Friday, at Akron Hoban 59-52 S~turday
and tyle~or 97-50 at r-&lt;onh Canton on Sunday.
TRIP E-DOUBLES: Chillicothe Unioto's
Will Bes nen had 38 points, 19 rebounds a1id
nine bloFked shots in a 79-64 win over
Williamsport Wc;stfall, then came back the ne ~ t
night with 18 points, 14 rebounds and 13
blocked s~ots in a 76-53 win over Peebles;
Elyria Op~n Door's Brittany Alaksa had 10
points, 12 tebounds and 10 steals in a 41-27
win over Community Christian; and Manstield
St. Peter's guard Marcus Butler. an Evansville
signee, had 26 points, 12 rebounds and I0
assists in a 72-67 ·win over Massillon Jackson.
ELECTRIC: Philo's boys trailed by 15
against Crooksville with 3 112 minutes left but
stormed back to win 66-63 win behind Andrew
Geyer's eight points and 2 3-pointers. Geyer
then scored an amazing 18 points in the founh
quarter as the Electrics nearly rallied from a IQ.
point deficit at Warren Local the next night
before falling 78-73 .
,
SHOWDOWN LETDOWN: Mel Thnmas
had 28 points to lead Cincinnati Mount Notre
Dame past (our-time Division Ill state champ
South EuClid Regina 80-48 in the Classic in the
Country at Berlin Hiland. Mount Notre Dame
is 12-0 and winning by 34 points a game.
NOTEWORTHY: Tyler Lough became
Marietta's all-time leading boys scort'r; Lakota
.West's Josh Chichester set a school record with
seven blocked shots jn a game; Bainbridge
Paint Valley's Drew Bobb became his school's
top career rebounder with 576; Ontario's Bobbi
Brkovic pushed her school record for 3-point·
ers to I00; the Die bier brothers - freshman
Jon (35 points) and junior Jake (28) - combined for 63 points Fostoria's 80-58 win over
Bellevue; Dayton Oakwood 's girls ended
Franklin's eight-game winning streak with a
49-45 victory; and Elyria's girls have won II
straight after losing their opener to Amherst.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
G a H11

At Knox vi lle, Tenn ., Chuck Hayes scored off hi s own
miss with 3:49 left . in overtime to lead ninth-rank@d
Kentucky to a 69-68 victory Tuesday ni ght over Tennessee~
Erik Daniels had 19 points and Hayes added J8 point~:
and 16 rebounds for the Wildcats ( 12·2. 3- 1 Southeastern·
Conference), who nearl y had another scare after their 19-.:
game SEC home 'winning streak was ended Saturday bY:
Georgia.
·
Tennessee ( 10-4. 2-3) trailed until it put together two 9-0
ru'ns midway through the second half, the last giving the:
Volunteers their fi rst lead at 52-51 with 7:37 remaining. •
Kentucky got the lead back and was ahead by three;
points with 3:53 left.
~
.
•
Tennessee's Scooter McFadgon made two frec;hrows to:
make it 61-60, but neither tean1 cou ld score ove; the next
three minutes.
C.J . Watson broke the drought for Tennessee with 55.3
seconds left on a fast-break lay up off a turnover Brandon:
Crump grabbed from Kentucky's Gerald Fitch.
,
Watson extended Tennessee's lead to 64-61 with two freethrows with 22 seconds to go, but the Vol s couldn't hold on:
for the upset.
·
Cliff Hawkins hit a 3-pointer with 16.3 seconds left to tie
it at 64. McFadgon missed a shot as time expired.
McFadgon had four points in overtime, but a 3 by.
Daniel s and Hayes' rebound and basket was all Kentucky:
needed to get its fourth strai ght win over the Vols.
.
McFadgon led Tennessee by scori ng 19 of hi s 33 point,;.
in the first half, and Crum p added 14 points and I J
rebounds. ·
Hawkins had 13 points and six assists for the Wildcats.
who overcam'e 23 turnovers and·"~ personal foul s to avoid.
:
a second straight Joss.

No. 11 Georgia Tech 73,
No. 10 Wake Forest 66
· At Winston Salem, N.C., Will Bynum scored 20 points to
lead No . II Georgia Tech to a 73-66 victory Tuesday ni ght
over I Oth-ranked Wake Forest. snapping the De mort
Deacons' 24-garoe home winning streak .
.
Wake Forest ( 11 -3, 2-2 Atlan(jC Coast Conference) was
looking to ti e its school record of 25 consecuti ve victories.
at Lawrence Joel Coliseum. Instead. the Deacons dropped
their third straight game and first at home since Feb. 21,
2002.
The Yellow Jac kets ( 15-2, 3-1) we re agg ressive early.
from 3-pOint range to take a lead they relinquished only
once in the second half.
Georgia Tech shot 9-for-17 from 3-point range, Jed by
Marvin Lewis, who was 4- for-4 and fini shed with 14
points.

Cavs win without LeBron
CLEVELAND (AP)
Carlos Boozer matched a
career-high with 32 points and
added 20 rebounds as the
Cleveland Cavaliers survived
their first game without rookie
LeBron James, beating the
Seattle SuperSonics 99-94
Tuesday night.
Boozer picked up the slack
with the Cavaliers mi ssing
their top two scorers, James
(sprained ankle) and center
Zydrunas llgauskas (susperi·
sion). to help Cl!!veland sweep
the season series with Seattle
for the first time.
Tony Battie added 17 points,
Dajuan Wagner had 14 and
Kevin Ollie hit two big free
throws down the stretch for the
Cavs, who went 38-of-42 from
the line.

The victory was the 300th
for Paul Silas, Jllaking him the
46th NBA coach to reach that
plateau.
Rashard Lewis had 27
points and Ray Allen 20 tor
the Sanies, who pulled even at
91-91 · on
Vladimir
Radmanovic's 3-poiiller - his
second in a row - with 2:17
left. .
Darius Miles. who skipped
Cleveland's practice on
Monday. soared down the
baseline to dunk a miss by
Battie, and after Lewis misfired on a 3, Ollie made his
two free throws to put the
Cavs up 95-91 with 27 seconds to play.
.
Lewis converted a threepoint play as the Sanies crept
back within one, but Boozer,

who was coming off a 32point, 18-rebound performance in a win at Utah, made
four straight foul shots in the
tina! 21.3 seconds to ice it.
Allen shot 9-of-25, missing
badly on his final four
attempts in the last 2:22.
James said he would take his
time and not rush coming back
to 1Jiay · un~il his right ankle
was I00 percent.
"It's a long season and I've
got a long career," said James,
who has not run on his ankle
as yet and was limping as he
walked back and forth to the
Cavs' locker room.
Lewis, who scored 14 points
in the second quarter, h1t a 3pointer to close a 14-0 run that
gave the Sanies a 43-30 lead
midway through the period.

•

Bucks

cou~Je of minutes," Terence Dials said.

"Not,hing was working out."
•
wright made two free throws with I:38 left
to pu~ h the lead to 6 1-56, more than enough
from Page B1
to get1the Hoosiers to the finish.
'4:42 left but turned the ball over on their next · ''We1willed this one o.ut," IU swingman A.J.
Moye ~aid. "VIe finally realized what it takes
six posse~sion s.
to
defensively. I think everybody 's buy"We gave up those six straight turnovers, ingwin
into what coach is preaching and Wright
but our defense saved us," Davis said.
and Strickland are now veterans. It's defense
While Indiana had trouble pulling away, that's doing it."
Ohio State couldn 't gain ground because of
lndiai1p hit half of its 14 3-pointers and
ballhandling miscues of its own.
made 24 of 25 free throws. The Buckeyes
With so me pressure from the lndjana made just 2 of 16 behind the arc.
defense - but also several unforced errors"It kind of went the way we hoped it would
the Buckeyes made just one of their next - we f11und our big kids and went inside to
seven shots from the field, missed three of take adv~ntage of our size," 0' Brien said.
four free throws and had three turnovers over "We need,ed to get something outside but we
the next four minutes.
couldn't. There were points to be had but we
"The game just seemed to stand sti II for a just co uld~ 't get them."
1

I

NASCAR
from Page B1
championships that my father wo n?" he
asked. "Will it be the same, better, not as
good?"
Kenseth led the standings most of last season, built a huge lead and ran away with the
championship - the final Winston Cup title .
Ryan Newman wa~ sixth despite winning a
series-high eight races.
.
Under the new system, Jimmie Johnson
would have won the t'itle by 55 points over
Jeff Gordon instead of finishing second .
Newman would have been third, followed by
Earnhardt, .Kevin Harvick and Kenseth, 406
points behind the champion.
Those drivers, of course, would have
changed their strategies if they had been racing under different rule s. For e;w;((mple,

Kenseth used ah experimen'tal engine in the
season fina le at Homestead, Fla., and finished
Iast when it failed .
The first-place driver will now begil) the
final 10 races with ·5,050 points, the second
driver 5,045 and so on, with incremental
drops of five points for all those involved in
the championship showdown.
Drivers also will get a new five-point bonu s
for winning a race, beginning wi~h the sea·
son-opening Daytona 500 on Feb .• l5 .
"It does give everybody new hope with I0
races to go, particularly the guys who might
be
couple of hundred points behind,"
Earnhardt said. "This is going to force you to
change the w.ay you win championships, your
. strategies."
The champion will ·be guaranteed a minimum of.$5 million, while' each of the other
drivers whofinish in the top 10 wili earn _$ 1
million. The II th-place finisher will get a
$250,000 bonus.

a

D E'.NGINE~ . ....
lnl

Race lor the Naxtel

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Homeowner, White mille
age 73 (looks 60), Weight
170, 5'7" Looking lor white
female ,
age
60· 75.
Everyone needs somebody!
Call 740 245-5778.

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, GIVEAWAY
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HotSES
FOR RENl'

lwrlght@llc.nel

a bedroom brick in
Ga llipolis, 1 5 baths. base·
menl,
carport,
$650.
References. deposit. no
pets. (740)446-9209.

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304675- 1429.

~A'I~ rrr51iMc 1o
cAMaL- MY M~M01:i¥4HIP IN

3 br. 120 Howard St. New .
Haven WV. Rental applical ion &amp; ref. reQUi red 1-yr min .

1~ Mout£ -o~ ~1~~ -Morrrtt

aue.

lease (304)675-3458
4 rooms . I bth. stove ,
' relridg., AIC furnished. No
pets. 260 State St , $350 per
mo. , $350 dep. Renter pay s
ut1l , Ret. required. (740)4460076.

0
()

•

403 Main Street Oakhi ll,
Cape cod. 4 BR . 1 bath, 1
car garage . Call (740)3578452, $475/month, deposit
&amp; references .

o'

WE.NffTJ TO
1\TALK" TO YOU!!

446-2342 .

"'"'""&gt;&lt;•I

www.comlcs.com

AWESOME CAREER
FOR 2004
Postal Positions
$1 4.80-$36:00+/hr_,
Federal hire-lull benefits
Happy Hooker We Buy Junk Call 7 a.m.-7 p.m. CST
Cars Ed Riffle Owner 1-8Q0.651 -7024 Ellt. 2Q721 .
(304)695·3327 or (3041674Bookkeeping &amp; accounting
0695
lull &amp; part time . send re su me
to The Dally Sentinel. PO
Older used school band Box 729-8, Pomeroy, Oh
musical instruments. Also
45769
wan ling older baseball
ca rd s. 1975 and before. Co. Drivers &amp; 0 /0P's! We
(740)3Bii·6692 .
can get you home 90% of
the weekends! Must be 23+
I \I PI
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w/C iass-A COL, 2 yrs . e)(p,
..,1 R\ It I ..,
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Beautilul wh1te female cat t'o
good home. 2 years old, " GOV'T POSTAL JOBS"
gray eyes , been spayed. ANNDUNCEMENTiiPS247
9. UP TO $54.481 YEAR.
(740)441 -9563.
NOW HIR ING SELECT
G1veaway to a good home. 7 ARE AS . . FREE
CALLmonth old ChOcolate Lab. APPLI CAT ION EXAM INA·
(740)446 -2141.
TI ON INFORMATION. FED ERAL BENEFITS. 1·800·
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692·5549 EKT. 92 , 7 DAYS .
good home. Female 2 years
&lt;&gt;ld. (740)245-9142.
"U.S. POSTAL JOBS"
Lo.•
PUBLIC
, ANNOUNCE·
FOUND
MENT· U!PS15LO. UP TO
$29.16 PER HOURS. FREE
Found : li'ench Beagle mate, CALL/ APP LIC ATION
frie ndly, 12 A nne Street. INFORMATION. NOW HIRPomeroy. (740)992·2076
ING 20031 FEDERAL HIR EFULL
BENE FIT,
PAID
Found : Medium s1ze dog , . TRAININ G. 1·800·892·5144
black/brown: white ring EXT. 94.
l!lrounO his neck. (740)446-------(&gt;s64 .
An Excellent way to earn
t:.ong·haired Black cat , mate , money. Lets talk !he
boes by Buddy, No co llar. NEW AVON.
Lost around Powell's area. Ca ll Mar1lyn 304 -882-2645
Pomeroy. (740)416·0824
Joyce 304·675-6919
April 304-882-3630
Losl older, female co111e
Are you lOOKing ror a
called lady, la st seen
stable job?
fllendy's parking lot. call
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(304)675·7603 or (304)675You could earn up to
~51
$8/hour plus bonuses _
We also offer paid training ,
Lost:
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holidays and va callons .
Blanket-bac k. Black, While &amp;
Full or part lime shifts
Tan .
Near
Gallipol is
available. Call Today.
·Reward. {7 40)645-2377 .
1·877-463·624 7 el&lt;t. 2456.
Lost: Siberian Husky, black '
~nd w.hlte male , Pleasnnt Aul a delail person needed .
Hill Rd. and St. Ate. 141. Experience and reterences
requ ired. Salar y based on
(7401379·2616.
experi ence. Send references/resume: The Da11y
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PO Box 729·32 . Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769

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(740)441 -0194
apartment at 65 1· 2nd Ave ,
2 Furnished small apart- GallipOlis . Rent: $350 per
ments tor rent Living room, month &amp; $350 depos1 t
Kitchen . bedroom, 8. bath . required. 6 mos lease
$275. each all util1t1es paid water/t rash
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Cal l
except electric. (304)675· Debbi e or Judy at {740)4461365
7323 (L1brary).
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apt. furnished kitchen , no
pets. 2 br. 1 balll. $365/mo.
plus utilities. Deposit and
refemnces (740)446 -~926.

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AT
BUDGET
area, 3 car open garage , PRICES AT JACKSON
$450 per mo., (7 40)985ESTATES , 52 Westwood
3649
'
Dnve from $344 to $442.
For Rent: 2 bedroom house . ~alk to shop &amp; movies. Ca ll
(740)992-6445
1; 40· 44 6·2 56 8 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Nice 2br House for rent in \ ·
West Columbia area. $400 CONVENIENTLY LOCATmonth plus depo$11304-773- ED &amp; AFFOROA~LE!
t-ownhouse
apartments.
5284
hQuse s &amp; mob1le homes
Pt Pleasant , la rge 4 br , 1 FQR RENT. Ca ll (740)441 112 ba , very private. fenced 11\11 for applicatiOn &amp; inlor·
yar,d, lease, reterences &amp;
m~IIOn .
sec. dep required $550. a
man ., no pels . (304)674- Delightlul I &amp; 2 BR 'un1ts
n ~ar Holzer. CiA hiQh etl 1·
6 t4 6.
ciffficy gas 1urnaces. Quiet
Two 2BR, 18th homes, locatron. $359 to S485.
K1ngsbury
Ad
_near (740)446-2957
• Harrisonville. Both relahvely -+--~~-­
new, $400 . per month plus For ase: 2 floor, spaciOIJS,

\IIIH II \\1&gt;1'1

10

' HoUSE HO'-D
Gr•~JS

Couch &amp; Love seat for sale
t yr. old excellent condil101l
576-266 3
Good Used Appltances,
Recondit 1onec:l
and
Guaran teed.
Washers ,
Dryers.
Ranges.
and
Refngerators, Some start at
$ 95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vine St.. (740)446-7398
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Chapel. Road . Porter. Oh 10
(740)446-7444 1-877-830.9162 . Free Estiri1ates. Easy
lin~nCif!.~ · 90 days same as
cash Visa/ t-;1aster Card .
Dnve· a· l1ttle save alot.

The Village of Middleport is r--;,.,;;-l.tl'ITll'&lt;r~;;;---, House w/ 3 acres in country,
accepting applications for
HIO VALLEY PUBLI SH has 2 yr. old garage 28x32,
the pos1 tion of Fiscal Officer, lNG CO. recommends _th!;l has 7 rooms $45,000 pnce
accountmg ·
experience
ou do busineSs w1lh peo neg 2 miles from Mason
needed, pick up appllcalion
le you know, and NOT t
Sea1s stereo. LXI senes.
Walmart 304·773·5 343
at Village Hall, 237 Race end money ·lh rou9h th
$150, rad1o. CD. &amp; speakers.
St reet. No phOne ca lls! m ~il until yol.l have investi
record player
cassette.
MoBILE HoMI:S
ated the oflenn .
for an shitts Full and par t- AppUcations due 1128/04
SealS
26.6
cu.
It
time . Send resume to Daily
ITIRSALE
retriglfreezer $400 Maytag
Sentmel,
PO Box 729·~.
uti lilies, security. Utility lro 1aJII1y . r?~o debleadlh. s,2 b eudr: gas range . $200 . Zenith tvJ'RUtlSSIONAL
00 1
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Therapist
1995 R edman, 2 bedroom, 2 deposits required. No pets, 00 5 , ,
21 in SI OO , Maytag washer
- - - - - -- - OTR
SER\'K-'Eli
bath-3-ton Ileal pump. Front no smoking, (740)742-3033 nish d apt. New HVAC and &amp; dryer, $250. Cherry coffee
Leave the cold behind now PAN
·
app ll~nces. $600!month. tab le &amp; (2) end tables $100.
wrap-around decK &amp; back 1420
hi r1 ng girls/guys to work &amp; Opportunities
1·MOBII.E HO\U"'S
plt.Js '\ utilities
Downtown
TURNED DOWN ON
deck . Ca ll (740)24 5-5071 .
sectiorial sofa w/Queen
travel the USA 2 wks paid PT. OT &amp; SLP!
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
·--mliiiRiiRiiiiENTiiio-r'
Gallipojis. Security and Key sleeper. S 175, Hollywood
training trave l expenses paid Arb ors at Gallipolis is
97 mob,ile ~orne reduced to
No Fee Unless We Win!
'
deposi~requ1 red. ~o pets. bed, $50. dresser. $50,
call Alice (866)517-8577
se ll 14x80 3)br.,2 ba. , AC, all 1977 12M60 Oak Wood 2br. Aefere ces
reqUi red Recmd cabinet wirecords.
see~1 ng a part-time OT
1·666-562-3345
appliances. W/0 , ready to electric heat. ale $250 a (740)44 -6662. 6:00-lo 5:00
to
toin
our
exceptional
Ill II I ' I Ill
$50, desk, $25. tpat10 table
Leave The Cold Behind!
move in Lot124 Family Pnde monlh+utitiUies. no pets or
tn·house rehab team!
&amp; chair s, w/umb) Dmmg
Now hiring girls and guys to
Furn1shed
one
bedroom
Apt.
MH Park 27.4-1833. or 304- FOR SALE ask1ng $3000
Great pari-lime benetils.
~10
work and travel the USA 2
HOMI'N
clean, no pets Must De wlil- room table wlcha 1rs, $125.
261-3816
fir m (304 )675·4874
Please contract Beth
weeks paid trammg , travel
!'OR SAIJ.:
mg to g1'»'e references. Call (74"0)446-2030. leave .
Carlson, ProStep Recruiter,
message will retum call.
expenses paid. Call Mary
New 3 bedroorn 2 bath Only 2 Bedroom mobile hOme 1n Phone (304)675- 1386
at: 1-866-368·7620. Fax:
(666)671-2274
$995
down and on ]y Racine area NO PETS.
813· 926·68 74.
Email· 3 bedroom house. 2 bath
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
1
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed w/allached garage, on 1 $194 36 per month . Call (740)992' 5656
Repalr-67 5-7388. For sale,
bcartson@extendicare
com
Make 50% selling Avon.
room apartments at Village
acre, S! AI 124 out Qf Karen·a 740-3¥·767 1.
re-conditioned automat ic
time
ONLY. EOE
L1m1ted
and
Riverside
Rutland . Close to new Vary clean Used 3 bed- 2 bei:lroom mobile home. Manor
wash ers &amp; dryers . refrigeraExtendlcare Health
(740)446 -3356
Spring
Valley
are a. Apa rtments m Middleport.
school.
$48,000.00
Services, Inc
room/2 bath. $9995 00. Will $300/rent • $250/deoSit From $295-$444 Celli 740- tors . gas and · etectr1c
o• •••o •
(7 40)992-3 194
help with del1very, Call Nikill, Cal l (740)441 -6 954
or 992·5064 Equal Housing ranges . air cond11ioners, and
NE ED ED tor busy salon.
wnnger wash~rs . W111 do
740·385·9948
(740)675·2900
Opporlunities.
5ASSY
SCISSORS
repairs on maJOr brands m
3
bedroom
,
remodeled
740)441-1660
0
Winter Sale
2 Bedroom. all electric. m Middleport. North 4th Ave . 2 shop or at your home.
2003, new heat pump.
.
74oi256·6336
Stock # 0·308 44;x2a
county. (740)742·2014
br lurf\jshed apt.. dep . &amp; ret..
plumbing , electrical, carpet ,
Used Furn11ure Store. 130
3 bedro om 2. bat!l
no pets, (740)992·0165
Medi Home Health Agency, Gall!polls Career College hardwooo floors Middleport
Bulavllla P1ke . mattresses,
2 BR . c~rpet, A/C, porch.
Delivered
and
sell
up
on
(740)992-2321 (740)416·
Inc
seeking
part-time (Career s Close To Homo)
very mce. no pets. In New 2 'bedroom, klfcllen. dressers ,
couches
A
five
coarse
lourldation
Administrative Support per· Cali Today! 74D-44 6·4367, 08 15
GalliJX&gt;Iis 740-446-2003 or LA. bath . Porter Ohro bunkbeds. recline rs. what ·
with he~l pump
1-800-21
4·0452
son in the Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446 1409 .
only $39,900.00
$450+deposlt. No
pets nets Grave monument s
area . M ust h1gh a High www.gat!ipoliscareercoltege.com 4br, 2 112Ba.located al ~906
(740)446-4782 Ga ll ipoli s.
Before
Bpm
740-367-7746
Cole's
Mobile
Hom
~s
·)
Ae #90-05·12748.
mObile
,2000 Oakwood
School Diploma and three
OH . Hrs 10·4 (M·S) Sun
Anniston Dr. Pt . Ple a 1 526~ US 50 E
.740..367. 7015
home. 14XBO 3 bedroom , 2
years rela ted business 160
WANllll
by appt.
$79,500
(3041617- Athe ~s . Ohio 45701
· bath , total electric . central New Haven, 1 br. furnished
experience , payroll and
23801(304)6 17.9922
Do
(740)592·1972
air. Asking $21.500 00 Can apt , dep . &amp; ref.. no pets Whir lpool washer &amp; dryer
billing preferred
E O.E.
"Wh~re You
Get Your
S150, Whirlpool washer
move or rent lot for $100 (740)992·01 65
Ptoase send resume 'to 35:2 -· EJCperienced Chi ld Care a rm Ranch , tull basement, :cM:o:;.ne;.:y.;'s.;W-:o~
rt;.,h"~::-~., Call (740)992-926,;l
dryer. S65 ·
$75: Almond
Second Avenue, GalliJX)IiS,
OH 45631 _ Attn· D!ana Provider. Will provide qual1ty 3 bedroom. 2-1/2 baths. 2·
N1ce 2 br apt in NeW Haven Call alter 6:00pm (740)446l.ont·&amp; .
Child care In my hOme On 1/2 acres, F.R , covered
3 bedroom mob1le home 1n 19 rOoms fu lly equ kitchen 9066.
Harless.
AcREAt;t:
McCormick Road. {740)446· deck. $99,900, no land con- L,-"""'..,;,;liiiiiiiiiliii-rl
Mi.ddleporL
$400
Plus ce ntral
heatmg/coo 11ng ,
depos1t , (740)992·3 194
SI,.KI'IN&lt;;
4945.
tacts_(740)446-2 196.
washer dryer . hool&lt;uo balMedi Home Health Agency,
For S~le 79 .106 Acre s.
(,;(lOllS
cony upsta1rs pnvate parkInc seeking a full-time AN
River v\ew. producing oil &amp; Beautiful ri'»'el '»'iew. 1deal lor
one or two people No pets. Ing (304)88 2-2523
lor the Gallipolis , Ohio area. Not A Company just an hangas w~ll~. $125.?00. 304·
references.
(740)44t -ci18 1. Pleasant VaJiey Apart men t NWTF Kn1ght In lrne Muzzle
Must be licensed bolh in ·est handyman. Ha uling •
529-71C)6 after Spm.
Loading Shot Gun New 1n
OhiO and West Virg1nla We Gutters - chimneys t&gt;OO
Mob1le Home for rent 2 bed - Are .now takmg App11cat1ons box
$400
t1rm . Cal l
Land
for
sale·
90
acres
offer a competitive sa lary. jobs. (30~882 ·21 96
room s $350/monlh S200 tor 2BR , 38A &amp; 4BR. , (740 245-5047
developm~nt land along SA
benefits package, and 4011&lt;;. - - - - - - - are
taken
Depos1t located m Po1 nt App licat ions
143 near ~arrisOnville (high
E.O.E Please send resume Pleasant Call: (304)675 - Monday thru FridE,Jy, tram
All real estate advertlafng
Home
Setv1ces
Teri's
AN'Ilt)ll:S
&amp; dry) , (740)742-3033
to 352 Secon!j Avenue,
9:QO A . ~ . -4 P.M. OIIIC€ IS
in thl• new.peper Is
3423
1
1
Gallipolis. OH 45631 . Ann: Q
u
a
i
y
Located at 11 51 Evergreen
•ubfecllo !he Federal
Nice mo ite home s11es
Diana Harless, Clinical Re siden tial/Commercia l
Nice 2 or 3 bedroom mobile Drive Pomt Pleasant. WV Buy or sell. A1venne
Fair Housin g Act of 1968
avarlable 115 per month,
Man~r.
Cleaning , Proless1ona1 , Fasl
home includes water, sewer. Phone No IS (304)675-5806. Antiques . t 124 East Ma1n
which makes It lltegatro
includes ter , sewer, trash,
Service, Affordable Rates.
Hash , no pets, starling at E.H.O
advartl" "any
on SA 1:24 E Pomeroy. 740Free Est1mates. (304)593·
call (740)9 2-2167
preference, Umitatiot:~ or
$300 per mohth. call
992-2526
Russ Moore.
Overbrook Center is current· 230 1 (Leave Messa[JO)
HI \ I \I o,
sm91e
bridroom
dlacrlmlnetiOfl baaed on
apt owner .
(740)992·2167
ly accepting apptic8tions tor
rac:e, co1ar, reUgiJ?n , sex
Gallipolis.
Washer-dryer
a pari lime RN for 7pm-7am.
Semi - Private mobile home hOok- up. Appliances, offfamlllel etatUii or natl~nat
1\-IL'il 'EI.I .,\ Ntl )l iS
Wanting to sit with elderly
lnteres!ed applicants shou ld
orl;l n, or any Intention to
lof fo r rent· 2 miles from Pt. street parking Water paid.
MEKl'llANiliSE
lady
daily
from
8·2
:30
Call
contact CassV Lee, Staff
make any auch
Pleasant on Sandhill Road no Pets, deposit $370
Tobl
Hill
(Leon
458-1088)
Oevetopment Coordiriator al
preference, limitation or
call 675-6678 ,
month After 6pm 740-446- $25,000
cash
grants·
11\\'\CI\1
dltcrimlnatlon."
(740)992·6472. Appl y in perGUARANTEED!
All
U.S.
Tra
iler
for
renl
,
excellent
.
4043,
Day
740-339;
3063.
2 BA water/trash paid, no
son !J.I 333 Page Street,
residents qual1ly! Money for
This
new.,..,..will
nol
condition.
ideal
lor
one
or
Middlepo&lt;l , Ohlo.- E.O.E.
pets. references &amp; deposit
Tara
Townhouse billS: bllsfness. schooL etc .
. kn owingly accept
reqwred. ·near porlar 388- two people, no pets. large Apartments , Very Spac1o.us. ' Ca ll · •
ng
peop • oca
1 800 .363·5222 ext
adveriiM~Minta ror !'HI
lol,
(740)992-6144
1100.
ho want to earn mon
2 Bedrooms , 2 Floors. CA , 1 637
estate which le In
hile losing weight show
Very nice 3 bedroom in 1!2 Bath , Newly Carpeted . __· ----~--:-­
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
violation of the law. Our
nQ
others
how. 60 Vendfng machlnet wlltl
Adull Poo l &amp; Ba by Pool , Eng lander pellet burrling
rudl.-. are hereby
238 1/2 1st Ave . 2 br. 1 bath, Fairland &amp; South Gallia
nlormatlonat ·
DVD/C
Patio.
Start $385/Ma. No . stove heattuP to 2200 sq . ft.
excellent locations
Informed that all
furnished kitchen , off slreet school d1Sir1ct. $350/mo.
...ailable upon request 740
Pets.
Lea
se Plus Security built in airwash &amp; blowe1
plus
deposit
No
pets.
all for $1 0,995
dwelllngJ advertleed In
parking. No pets. $3S5Imo.
41·1984.
this n.wap~~per are
(740)256-1666
• Depos 1t Required. Days · system brass louvers &amp; win·
800-234-6982
avi.llabla on an -.uat
plus utilities . DepoSil and
740-446-3481: E'»'enings ·oow tr1m . corner stand &amp;
Substitute Teacher Aide for
opportufltty base..
refer-ence (740)446·4926 .
740·367-0502 .
exhaust system $650 call
A I'AKI'T&gt;IEii&lt;TS
Child Care Genter must Heaven
Best
Carpel L..;;.:;;:;;;.;;;;;•;;;;;;;._, 2br References &amp; deposit.
458·2552 •
IUK R EN'l'
have an interest and desire
Twin R1vers Towe r is accept Cleaning franChiSe , e)(cel· - - - - - - - - No Pels. (304}675·5162
to work wilh young children lent Income. equipment,
Ing applications for waitmg Full Srze Mattress Set. New
FORECLOSURE!
, &amp;2 br. apt 1n downtown Pt .
Reply to Maglt Years Day training , support, $15.900, 4 bed 4 bath hOuse Df'IIV
3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath , near Flleasant no pets &amp;. sec dep list for Hud·subslzed, 1· br. in plastic w/warr. SacrificE!
Care Centef 201 HlgJ:'l St. financing
apartment , call 675-E!S79 $119.fCell phone 304·412· ,
available, $9,900. for listings call
Holzer. S?OOimo., Deposit , required 740·446·2200
Pomt Pleasant WV 25550
8098 or 304·552· 1424
EHO
(800)359·2095
1·800.719·3001 ext f144
r~ference. (740)446·0885.

12

To

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G):

I

..'

I

GE

�The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydallysentiilel.com

Wednesday, Jar1u.a1rv 21 , 2004
~ ALLEY OOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle ·

BRIDGE
JET

Beautiful minlature collie, 6
month old, AKC Sheltle
, AERATION MOTORS
·Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In male , sable A white, good
:stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- bloodline. price redu&lt;;ed for
quick sate, Please call
•800-537-9528.

'
·-·----:-:----.,---=-(740)698-6049

'

'

' Ki.n g-Size
Pillow . Top
. :Mat1ress set. New still in
·plastiC . Sale $299. Cell
phone 304·412-80981 304·
552·1424.

New Holland 3 beater
Silhage Wagon on i'o ton
NH Gear. $2,90£1, e~Ccellent
condition . (740)643·2285.

r

ACROSS

Square bales for sate. 1st
and 2nd cutting. $2.00 and
$3.00 per bale. ~740 )2 45 9044 .
•

Phillip
Alder

I U \ \"' 1'1 ll { I\ II! I\

Ll~OOCK

1

CKC regtste'red . Cocker
Spaniel
puppi.es .
Ta tls
clocked and dew claws
removed. First shots and
wormed . Asking $250.00
(740)742-2525

r·o

AlJ'I'O)

•UR SALE

For stud services border col· "t•••iiiiliiiiiiio•rl
lie regislered. 3 years old.
Chevys,
black &amp; white markings $1 DO S500!. Hondas,
or pick of the litter (304)895- Jeeps, ~t c ! POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars from
3577 atter 6:00pm M·F
Ge~man short hatr AKC pup$5()0 _For lislings 1-800 -719liAv&amp;
pies. 11 weeks old. Call for
3001 ext 3901
GR-\IN
appointment
(740)441·
8826
1983 Chrysler Cordoba
1.000 lb. Round bale of depEmdable. runs good.
Purebred femal e Bassett
m11C.ed grass hay. '$15. Call 5300. (740)696-0284
Hound 2yrs Old not regis·
(7401245-5047,
terod . excellent breeder,
1989 BMW e~&lt;cellent condibeclutitul markings moving
For Sale: Hay, $2.00 a bale. tion 567·2663
must sell $ 150 . (304)675 About i 500 bales. eau
6606
1989 Chevy Truck . V/8, auto.
r

. Modular S7 ,000. 24)(32 FT.
·Portable class room, stale
:approved , tiled flOOr, heat
pump. aKies. eKcellen\ condition . (740)245-03 t0.

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concre te.
Angle,
Channel. Flat Bar, Ste.e:l
Grating
For
Dratns.
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

r

I \1{\l"ill'l'l 11 ...,
~\ I I\ I SlOth

Sul'l'l..nll

BlocK, brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels. etc. Claude
:winters , Rio Grande, OH

NOW OPEN
Under New Ownership

M-Thur 5-9 pm
Fri - Sat 5-1 0 pm

(7401446-71\57 .

miniatures
Schnauzers.
AKC . champion si red pups. Hay Auctions held 1116104
black , salt &amp; pepper, Flemingsbura, KY. 1!24/04
AA Truck Stop In Lewis
(740)667 -3404
County. KY. and 2/7104
Sunday. (740)446- 7300
FoR SALE
Mavsvltle KY. Buy and Sell
Hay
or Straw by the square
Queen·Pillow Top Mattress . . . . . .uii·iiRoiT,;,RAiiiiiJfii;• •
bale or roll in various tot
se1. New in plaslic w/warr --,
Will accept $199. Cell phone House tratler on 1 acre tot sizes. Auctions begin at
304-412·8098 ,
304·552· with deck and central air. noon , rain or shine. Contac1
outbt.uldmg. $32,000. Call Auction Manager Jim Grifllt
1424.
for more detai ls 606-883-

BuDDING

The Down Under .
Restaurant

F&lt;RM

300 Second Ave. Gallipolis
For reservations ·
· call 44 i ' 9923

$2.495: Two 1996 and 1999
Saturn . Starling $2,495;
1995
Corstca ,
$2 ,195.
Others in Stock. We Take
Trades.

6:30
Lost Thursday of

c.,·ery month
All pack $5.00
Bring this f;OUpon
Buy $5.00
' Bonanza Get
SFREE

How Avolloble at
Hydraulics
• Farm Pro Tractors
2 0 H p 2 Wheel Drive
25 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive ,
Each has full 1 year warranty on parts and labor.
Pricrd frnm !iS,OOO &amp; $13,000 w/options available.
Also~ Hawkline Brushogs. box blades, grader
hl"des utility trailers 1 goosenecks, and nmn!.
And ... ~ Massey Ferguson Tractors.
'
Ca ll for detail
'
As alwllys· " 'e slilllunc hydraulil' hoses. oil and
replltir cylindrrs. ·

•MONTY

1

•
•
.

A 9 6
10 7
• Q 3 2
... K t O 6 5
AJ9732
Souc.h
.
QJ9832
•

10 5

. . .'
+

K 8 4

Dealer: West
Vulnerable : Neither

,.2. ,.

CALL T&amp;D HYDRAULICS,
ask for Terry @ 740-985-4384

Soulh

West
Pass

North

Pas!;
Pass

Pu s~;

Pass

E11s1
1 NT
DUI.
D bl.

Pas s

3NT

Pus~

Opening lead: •

5

The lead changes
hands on deal 120

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

3289 OR 606-584.0143. '

liCE MY AG{,OlJNT TO

.I't&gt;

t:::=AN I tJt=

Hay tor sale: large round
bales, 740-992·70t5.

~Ot.L OVt~.

fAN~

EguiPMEI\T

"'-. . .

ANP

HoME

Trucking

Let me do 1! for yout

1'989 Ford Bronco. full size,
V-8. 4x4 . asking $1,000,

(740)992-0924
2000 S-550 Diesel. 4 door.
4~~:4 . $24,000. Call (740)446-

9317.

r40 Mmooa&lt;i~

I

304-773-5098

(740)446-2805

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417

"Not me!
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Saovices. ·
Bax l89, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264.·

Public Notice

0

"'"l C.N·-1"1 :,n:_ Tf\C. eNT\~£.
PICTURE f\T Ot-.ICL I

:'£1 \:'&gt; :'&gt;0 51G ... '

~~~~1
II.

r

t~

A
&amp;L.I'NK OUT THERE!

COMEBI\CK. I C.OULD
Tti1NK. QF WAS .
" oti.YE ....H &gt;"'

I CAN'T PLAY SALL
WITHOUT TALKtNt;,
SI'IA.C.K' THAT 's LIKE
SAMSON WllHOUT HIS
HAIR! POPEYE WITHOUT
HI S SPINACH' t10E
AND LARRY WITHOUT ·
C. URL'( ';· -=::::

~~)#!~~~~~

Hartwell House
Gifts &amp; Gift Baskets for all of

1

fj:
holiday needs
t.
· . UPSyourShipping
Services

it

·. ~
..

PEANUTS

Holid-ay Hrs.~ Mon 10.-S.pm: T-Th 10-6 pm ~
Fn. &amp; Sat. 10-5 pm; Sun. Noon- 4pm

j,j

~

t

tj
tj

.

TELL THE TEACI-IER TO BRIN6
THE CLA55 1"1 ERE TO M'(
' 'ROOM, AND I'LL JUST STA'&lt;
UNDER TI-lE COVERS ...

IT'S TOO COLD TO 60
TO SCI"IOOL TODA'&lt;...

Located;, 1-lb;turic IJtJwtrluwr~ Pomeroy . J·
100 E. Main
··
.
.

6EEN? 'IOU AL~~Q51'{
MISSED THE 9U5,

::::;:::::~
Sunset Home
Construction

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs ,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

·BETTY

74G-742-341

1/®~
High&amp; Dry

Public Notice

·Self·Slorage

.-..'

J&amp;L

'L

,.Eiedric

•"
'

Licensed &amp; Bonded

"

.&lt;

Ph 740-991-0933

-::,c;ARFIELD
·"

Ceii740.511·107J

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

740~992·5232

December 31, 2003 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
hal been completed'
and Ia avallll.,... lor·
publiC ·lnopectlon II
the Clerk's office
26310 LegiOn Road,
Langavlllo ,
by
appointment. A copy
of the report can be
• New Homes
provided
upon
•
Garages
requeot.
Bonnie
•complete
Scolt, Clerk Salam ·
'Townlhlp Trustees.
Remodeling
1121,28

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISTIICliOII

J40·912·1m
Stop &amp; Compare

•

·

l FE:U- DOWN SIX'TY·iHRE:E

., 'fiMES, BUi [_f&gt;TIL-1. L-IKE THE~

!

!

IMPORTS
Athens

91X'fY·
FOUR!

L.APIES ANP
GENTL-EMEN,
THE INVEN'fOR
OF BANANAPEEL. 5LIPPERS!
0

PJ\TEL CLINIC
Halesh M. Patel
MD~FACP
Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology
'

.530 West Unif)n Street
Suite C
Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone: (740) 592-5918

•GRIZZWELLS

&lt; I ~ To STARt 'OOCH\t-'6 'NI-IA1
" IW~

NoW oN

If medical care ·is all about earing with

''"

'

SOUP TO NUTZ
LOOk' aT .I Hai' GIGal--lli C
1----\af'loGtn OFhl

.CC IC [e

THE' HOV5e, 1'\r\~W

Oflll:e Hours: 8am-5pm (Mon-Fri)

heart's tender loueh and warmth of
tears and smiles along with the eultlng
· edge care, well, you can count on us!

Thursday; Jan. 22, 2004
By Bernl&lt;:e Bede Osol
It's quite possible that yo u may become
involved in two very worthwhile projects in
!he year ahead. Each will be operated from
the wing s wit hout seeking the limelight, yet
you 'll be duly cre dited lor yvur contributionS.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- .By underplaying you r presence at a gathering
today, you'll become th e cenler of attention. Your charm is en hance cl by prOJeCting
a lqw·key effect
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Cond itions
are especially propi tious today lor advanc·
ing a secret ambition you've been harboring. Once you get the signals that things
are lo oking posilive, move vigorously
ahead.
ARIES (March 2 1-April i 9)- Don't hesi tate to olfer your suggestion s should a
friend ask for your input. You have a marvelous facu lty today lor helping otherS sort
out their complica1ed alta Irs and will do so
by teaching.
TAURUS (Ap ri1 .20-May 120) -Challenging
conditions may be responsible lor stimulating your finer qualities today_ Once you put
them into action, you'll achieve your objectiv es without trampling over olh ers.
GEMINI (May 21-Jur'le 20) - One of the
smartest things you'll Know how to do
today will be to draw upon others for good
ideas and then use them in ways that
make you look good in the eyes of your
peers.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - Be on your
toes today: il you're alert you will be able to
spot a new way to add to your resources or
earnings. 11 could come about lhr oug t1 a
joint venture 1n which you 're involved
l EO (July 23-Aug . 22) - If you tak e the
ume today to get together with someone
you'd like to build a more meaningful relationship with , your chances ol doing so are
good. Bonds can be strengthened
VIRGO (Aug; 23-Sept. ·22)- An imix&gt;rlant
work matter can be worked out today 1o
your satiSfacti on, proVided you are diplo, mat1c enough to ge t past the obstacles
that have conlronted you . It 1'1/ay be now or
never
LIBRA (Sep1 23·0Ct. 23) - A get-together with a number of acquaintance s today
may provide just the atmosphere you've
been looking lor to talk to someone 1n the
crowd abou1 an id ea you've been amious
to· promote.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22) - Don' t rest _
on your laurelS today if a money- savmg
idea pops into your head . At the very least.
check it out and lay the groundwork 101 it
so that you can proceed toward your goal
when rea dy.
SAGITIAAIU S (Nov. 23 -Dec. 21) - One
of your greatest 1a1ents is l:jeing able to
oller some sage advice to blh ers 1n a manner none can lind ollensive. Today you r
suggestiOf1S, may be needed as wall as
heeded.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your
possibilitie s !or ending up in I he prol tl cot LJml'l today took very encouraging. Usmg
both your logic and your in1uition when _
assessing situations is what wi ll do the
trick.

. r c anH1T r'rwnH

..,.'

Noisy fan
·Pep up

c

- . . . 'lllrthday :

MY 1"\IND

alliance

co

Astro- ·
Graph 0 four

~~~=~~~- ~~~ b.~~:~~~:..~J~
992-6215

Public Notice ·
' Pursuant to Se'c llon
121.22 of the Ohio
Revised Code, lhs
Malgs County Board
of Revision will hold
an
organlzallonal
meeting on January
26 , 2004 al 9:30 am In
lhe Auditor's Office of
lhe Meigs County
CGurthouoe.
Meigs County Board
of Revision
Nancy
Parker
Grueaar, Secretary
1121

PUBUC NOTICE
The 2003 Annual
Financial Repprt· of
Salem Township for.
the
year
ended

WHAT'S WRON{; Wrrl1 MY
TAASH - TALKINEo» A.
KtD .JUST BU STED ON
ME, -"ND THE ONLY

· Ol!la •IJO

CARPENTER
SERVICE t.

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•

BIG NATE

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

Reduced Winter Rates

r.---,l.--1

&amp;

~11\Y t--IEW 5\GSC.RE.m TC.LE· ,
Vl:'l\0~

w.·

Hemisphere

Aller 119 ol the 128 boards in the fin al ol
las1 year's Bermuda Bowl, the Uni1ed
States led Italy by 12 international match
po~nts (omps). ThiSl)'aS deal120.
At the other table. Eric Rodwell (Nor1h)
opened a characteristically aggressive
.one diam,ond, which might have been on
only a doubleton. Goorg1o Duboin lEast)
passed , Jell Meckstroth (South) respond ed one spade,' and Norberlo Bacchi
(Wes1) overcalled two clubs. Now North
doubled. promising exac.tly three-card
spade support. East oedaubled to show
his values. South ran Ia two spades. West
dOubled to say tha1, although he couldn't
open, he liKed his hand . East jum~ed to
three no-trump. which ended the btdd ing.
East won Irick one with the spade ace and
took his 10 top trick s, North carefully
Keeping all of his heans: plus 430 to Italy.
At this table. Paul Soloway (Eas1) opened
one 14-16 ·no-l rump. Alfredo Versace
· (South) overca lled two diamonds, show·
ing a tong major suit. Over Bob Hamman's
by Luis Campos
three no-trump, Lorenzo Lauria contested
Ce!eb1rl'/ C1pll;;!r crlptograms are cre a1ed lrom-QIIllalr:lf'ls by tam01.1s peojh past anc; pu~senl ·
with four hearts. wh tch said .he waS happy
E~ch leiter l!lllle c1phllf starlds lor anOIII!!r
to play in either major. So loway doubled
Today s due · i' equalsW
that and South's lour spades.
EHFCDM
HRIOWCKIP C AD
" P6 SH
Hamman led a trump. Soloway won with
the ace and returned his second spade.
CAB
P Z H KATTM
DHCPZHB
IP
{Would you have shoMed to the heaot king'
Then, East-West could have cashed out
p
WASBPM .
EHFCCM
C D YARIC ' M
for one down, giving Italy only eight imps.)
Reading the tayou1 penectly, Versace won
H R' R I
FATORIC
MAST ."
trick two in the dummy and ran lhe dia mond jack through East. So, he ended
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Some people are always grumbling because roses
with an overtrick-for plus 690 and a whophave thorns ; I am thankfultha1 thorns have roses .· - /',lphonse ·Karr
(cl2004 by NEA. Inc. 1·21
ping 15 omps 1o Italy. ·The te.ad had .
changed hands.

~l!ormngc

(10'K10' 610'K20')

Remodeling

,

· ~

: ' \ f\11-lK YOU CJ\t-.1 f\t-.VE. TOO Ml.iffi
Of f-.. GOODTI\tNG 7

•

"lfeellike
l'mout
~:l\K onalimb!"

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

• New Garages
• Electrica l &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; GuHere
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Potlo and Porctt De~::ks

•THE BORN LOSER

# 1· Chevy, Pontiac, Buick , O lds
&amp; C u s t om Van Dealer·~
·

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Goosecreek - Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Said
Premises
Appraised
at
$17,000.0Q and cannot be sold for less
than . two-thirds of that amount.
Terms of Sale: $5,000
down ,
r.e malndar
upon tender of deed.
Ralph Trussell
Sheriff. . of
Meigs
County, Ohio
FRANK
a
WOOLORIOGE CO.,
L.P.A.
Altornays for Plaintiff
600
Soulh
Pearl
Street
Columbus,
Ohio
43206
(614) 221-1662
(1) 21, 28, (2) 4, 11, 18

.t.....:L.-.aJ:ri.---'----=-..1

0

Sun-dried '40 Social
bricks
stratum
Cqnsumer ·41 ~wyer,
gds.
briefly
Playground 43 Lean-loa
gear
45 Coop up
Canal ·site 46 Flour sack
Actress '
abbr,
- Hepburn 47 Mine
Kebab holder . product
Fiddle with 48 Preserve
Bohind,
50 ·Pul down,
on a ship
slangily
Met produc- 51 CPR giver
lions
52 - Molnes
Insect resin

CELEBRITY CIP.HER

~

Hours
7 :00AM - 8:00 PM

County of Meigs ,
der of deed.
ed at the Soulhwesl County, In the Slate of
Ohio, In Section 18,
Stale of Ohio, and In
Ralph Trussell
corner of .sald section
Sac. No. 8, township
Sherif!
of
Meigs
18;
Towns~lp 7 North,
no. 3, range no. 13, of
County, Ohio
range 14 West of the
Thence along the
South line of said 50 Ohio
Salisbury Township,
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
Company
and bounded and
Co., L.P.A.
acre parcel South 86
Purchase and being a
described as foHows:
Attorneys for Plaintiff . degrees 19 minutes
parcel created out of
Beginning at a 600 South
Pearl
24
seconds east
the Wanda Wyeth and
·986.89 feet to an Iron
point on the north
Robert Wellman propStreet
side of the Pike Road
Columbus ,
Ohio pin set by this survey erty (Described in
leading
from
Volume 338, Page
43206
and assumed to be
(614) 221 -1662
175 , Meigs County
Pomeroy to Chester,
on lhe Soulh line of
(1) 21,28 (2) 4, 11, 18
which point Is 150
said secllon18;
Deed Recorda, hereThence · Norlh 03
teet was~ of the east
Inafter relerred to as
line of sec. No. 8;
degrees 40 minutes the Grantor's land)
above entitled actlon 1 thence in a northeastPublic Notice
25
seconds East
bounded
and
1 will offer lor sate at erly direction parallel
dascrlbed as follows:
400.00 feet, passing
public auction, al lhe with lhe easterly line
Sheriff's Sale of an Iron pin set by this
Commencing at an
of said section no. 8,
Courthouse
in
Real Eslate
survey at 200.00 feel.
Iron pin set py lhis
one hundred lilly
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
Tha Stale of Ohio,
To an iron pin ael by
survey at a fence corabove named County, (150) feet; thence In a . Meigs CounJy
this survey at the rner, said fence comer
o tho 261h day of westerly direction American General point of beginning of being
81
the
March, 2004, at 10:00 100 feel; thence In a
Flnanctal Services , . lhe
Real
Eslale Southwest corner . of
southwesterly direca.m., the following
Inc. Plaintiff
described herein ;
a 50 acre parcel of the
vs . · Rosalie
A.
described real eslate, tion parallel with the
Thence continuing
Grantor's land and
east line of said sec·
Rayburn, et. at.
to wit:
North 03 degrees 40 assumed to be locatSituated In lhe lion, 150 fe~t to the
minuteS 26 seconds ed al the Soulhweal
Defendabls.
~
north aide of the
Stale of Ohio, County
Case No.03CVO
East 200.00 feetlo an corner of Bald secllon
18;
.
&gt;
Pomeroy
Chesler
of
Meigs
and
In pursuance o an
Iron pin set by this
Township
of Pika Road; thence In
Ordor of Sale In tha
survey;
Thence along lhe
Sallobury and being an easterly direction
above entitled action, ·
Thence North 89 South line .of said 50
I will offer for sale al
further described as
along . said road I 00
degrees 26 minutes acre parcel of land
public aucllon, el the
leeI lo the, place of
follows:
38 • seconds East South 86 degree~ 15
beginning. This Is
Courthouse
In
926.99 feel, passing minutes 34 seconds
Being In secllon
no. 8 , town 2, range part of the same Pomeroy, Ohio In the an iron pin set by 11111 Eaat 986.29 feel lo 'an
property that was
abOYti nametl County, survey at .889.06 feet, Iron pin set by this
13, and bounded and
described as follows:
deeded by F. M. Baas
on the 19th day of to the be~l boundary
survey and assumed
and S.E. Bass lo
March, 2004 al 10:00 of a 5.8 acre parcel of · to be on lhe South
Beginning at a
a.m., the following the Grantor's land line of aald Secllon
point. which Ia 150 Emmell and Mary
Windon , grantors, In described real estate, near the center of 18;
feel northeast of the
Pomeroy
Chester deed dated October
lo wit:
Gook Creek Road;
Thence North 03
Exhlbll "A"
Thence along lha degrees 40 minutes
Pike Road, asld point 3, 1917, and ·recorded
SHuated In Scioto East boundary olaald 26 seconds East
being lhe norlhealil In volume 116, page
Records
of
Township,
Meigs
6.8 acre parcel and
200.00 feel , to an Iron
corner of a lolaold by 494,
Counly; In the Stale of running near the can.. pin sat by lhla survey
tormer grantors to Deeds, Meigs County,
fOrmer grantoa· by Ohio .
Ohio: 5 .000 Acra
tar of Goose Creek at the polnl of begindeed recorded In vol- Also all of our rights Parcel.
Road
South
42 ning of lhe Real
Eatate
ume 120, page 111 , and lnloresls in a
described
Being In Section degraas 36 minutes
thence In a norlhaaal- water line running
18, Township 7 North, 20 seconds East herein;
erty direction parallel
Range 14 West of the
from
the
above
74.00 faet and South
Thence continuing
wllh the eall line of described premises
Ohio
Company
28 degraea 36 min- North 03 degrees 40
Purchase, and being utes 20 aeconda Eaal m~n:utes ~ seconds
section no. 8 nearby along Slate Highway
110 feel; thence In a
No. 7, to the Meigs
a parcel created .oul 201.00 fHI ;
East 200.00 feel to an
weolarly
dlrdl:llon Water
Company
Thence Norlh 88 Iron pin set .by this
.o f tho Wanda Syeth
100 feet; thence In a water main running
and Robert Wellman degr,ea 49 minutes survey;
·
oouthweolerly direc- from Pomeroy lo lha
property 1described
11 seconds West
Thence South 88
tion parallel with lhe former Forest Run
In Volume 338, Page · 1085.032 feet, pass- degrees 49 minutes
.
· 176 Meigs County Ing an Iron pin ·s et by
aald aut line of aec- Coal Mine.
1i aacondl _Eaot
Uon no. 8 ninety 190) Parcel Number: 14~
1086.32 fell, passln
Dead Records, herl- lhls survey at 23.04
nafter referred to as feel, to the polnl of an Iron pin aalby lhla
feel; thence aaollrly oooso a 14-00051
along the north line Properly
Address :
ourvey al 1062.29
lhe Grantor's land) beginning, conllllnlng
of the tot above men- 33375 State lloute 7
Bounded
and 5.000 acres, 3.213 feet, to .tile East
Pomeroy, OH 45769
deocrlbed. a1 follows:
tli&gt;ned, •• conveyed
acria out of a 50-acre boundary ~of a 6.8
Said
Premlaea.
by deed recorded In
Commencing ·at an parcel
ac.r a parcel of the
of
.the
volume 120, page
Appraised
at
Iron pin by thla sur- Grantor's land and Grantor'• land near
111 ,
to
former $45,000.00 and can- vey at a fence carrier, 1.787 acrea out of a the caQter of Goose
not be aold lor leas
said . fence corner · 6.8 acre parcel of the Creek Road; Palrcel
grant•••· one hundred 1100) leet lo lhe than ' two-thlrda , of
baing
al
th'o Grantor's land.
Nos. 17-o0173.003,
17'00173.004 • 17place of beginning.
that amount.
Soulhweljlt comer of
Subject to le~P~I
· Al10, the following . TERM SOFSALE :
a 50 acre parcel of the eaamenls:
00173.005 '
deocrlbed real iatlle $5,000.00
down,
Premises
Sllualed In Scioto Said
Grantor's lind and
ettuated
tn
the
remaln~e.r 'upon len-· assumed to be localTownship,
Meigs Located at 42028

GLINT
!I

i

I;r

29670 Bashan Road

• Room Addi1ions &amp;

i

BUT EVENTUALLY YOU'LL JES'
SETTLE FER AN uccP

I

Hill's Self
Storage
45771
740-949-2217

(&gt;ubll c Not:lccs In Nc'\-Vsp~~::::~~:f

f
I
~

Pl•nv.Dille -

Racine, Ohio

You•- lolight to Kno"".. Delivc•·ed R .ight to Your

••

YEP, THAT'S WHAT
I SAID, TOO, _ __....
MARY
BETH !!

.740·985-3564

YOUI'!G'S

IT.

BARNEY

•limestone
·Said·•in

Unconditional lifetime guaran tee . .Local references fu rnished . Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rog.~rs Basemen!
Waterproofing.

Superior
Home
Maihtenance. We do all
repairs on homes. plumbing.
2003 Artie Cat 400 $4500. ca rpentry, etc. water tanks.

I

Hauling

IMPROVEMEN"Ili

~·t.a.. 60
'F~T(,..

T'".lr

R.B

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Ta~e

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

UBLIC
TICES

East
• A 6
¥ K Q 3 2.

ua

•

(7 40)446-01 03

(7 40)992-2623

StKorlff's Sale ol Real
Estate
The Stale of Ohio,
Meigs County
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.
dba
Beneficial Mortgage
Co. oiOhlo
Plaintiff
vs
· Terry N. Waugh, el at. .
Defendants
Case No. 03CV1 01
In pursuance of an
Order of Sate In lha

... Q
W est

COOK MOTORS

Hay !or Sale:, Round an~
Square bales. Barn kept.
·caii74Q-245-5121
EICtra nice 130 International Ph: 304-675- 1743 or 740·
Wttast . · hitch, cultivator &amp; 446· 1104
side dresser. $2~250.00,
Round bales $ 12.50 Square
(3041743-3248
ba les 2nd-cutltng grass
2 Rat terrier pupp1es. on ly 2 p,:~~"l!i~l'l::llr=i"m $2.50. Ear corn $2 50 a
born .in litter, 6 weeks old. 1bushel. Ground ear corn
:male 1-female . (740)256·
$4.50 for 100 pounds.

' 1997

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
, &amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Earl y birds start

North
•
K 7 4
¥ .18 7 4
+. AJ96 5

42 Mad.
personnel
1 Jewelry
43 Checkroom
fastener
Item
6 Seer's deck 44 Muscle
11 FeH hal
~pasm
13 Surround- 46 Grassing•
hor,per
14 Pounced
49 .Sk rled the
15 Banllh
Issue
.
16 Insurance 53 ll~behaved
gp.
54 Govemmant
17 Family mom. 55 Sixth'
18 Masseuse 56 Wasps ' "
emplo~er
homes
21 "Peer ynt"
drama ost
DOWN
12
23 Cosmic
1 Grey Cup
force, to
sports org. 13
Lao-Tzu
2 Bruce 26 - de
18
of kung lu
cologne
.
27 Cartoon
3 Nabokov
19
shriek
novel
20
4 Ex-frosh
28 Mispronounce "s" 5 Prime
22
29 Sign
minister
31 Poker slake 6 Connection 23
24
32 F1rst name
(hyr.h-)
In cakedom 7 Swas
33 Tow truck
mountains 25
36 Iowa town
8 "Ro.i'd
mo.Jt1 "
28
37 Uniold
30
locale
centuries
38 Hl9torlcal
9 Above,
period
to poets
34
39 Method
10 Famous
40 Sing
mummy
35

SNO\'lB8LL

R

~--,----.-

10 .,..

leiter $ ol Ihe
sc rornbltd words
1o form foyr word'
be

r---0-.~-~-0_R_A_C----,\

1-~·

IH C E P
.------:-~-=--·~

A:-S"''-1 ~
1--Rr-HTH----r.
I' I

Grandpa says that a dog's
size doesn'\ mean any\hing in
L..L·--L--.t,_l-'---' ~ a ftght, i\'s \he size of \he f1ght
.---:-=--:--::--::-------, in !he dog that- -----.

I I

I0 ( .

KUTBEC
l---~r:5 ---,I-;I-TI-r.:l6-1
_

_

.

L..J....J'--+---''--'---'

II:&gt;
'l;ll

II:&gt;
1:1

0 ., 0 ieo•

ohe &lt;ho&lt;kle qvoled .

by l11iing in 1he m1Hif19 words

_

yo u

dt!velop lrorn s1ep No. 3

b~l ow .

NUMBfRIO t[11ERI IN
1HESE SQUAR ES

P~ IN1

UNICi~MBIE

ABOVE t[lllRS
TO GH ANSWEI
.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Mafri} - Lapel- Chill- Unfair- FULL ~ART
One old timer said to the another wh1le wmttng 1n check
ou\ line -"Do you remember' the days when you spent
$20 al \he grocery and had a FULL CART?'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�..
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel .

__,

www.mydailysentinel.com
,

.SuPER

80\M.-XXXVIU

.'

Wednesday, January 21, 2004

.

'

College Basketball

Redmen suffer loss at
Shawnee State, B1

little separates
Two Weeks·is perfect for Belichick Bearcats, Cards
Houston. Texas. Sunday, February I

GoLDBERG
Associated Press
BY DAVE

Bill Belichick is pleased his New
England Patriots have two weeks to
prepare for the Carolina Panthers in the
Super Bowl. Even though he won a title
two yems ago with ll short break. .
"Last time. there was so much
urgency. playing one day and flying
down to New Orleans the next day:: the
coach says.
" It totally changed the scope of time
that we hlld to work with. Now we have
more time. We will try to use it wise]y."
Players might worry about breaking
momentum, and fans might wonder
why they have to wait so long for The
Big Game. The delay is just fine with
coaches and telev ision executives:
Coache&gt; like the time to plan: TV types
like the time to hype . •
Indeed. a two-week break has been
the norm since the first Super Bowl in
1967 . This is the 38th. Super Bowl, and
31 have been played after a two-week
break ; three of the last four were played
only one week aftet" the conference title
games. however.
Two of the &gt;even one-week breaks
wcren"t s&lt;: heduled . One "was in 1983
after the players' strike s~ortened the
season and ex tended the playoffs; the
other was two season ago after the sea. son was pushed back by the Se,pt. II.
terrorist attacks.
Recent hi story makes the longer time
off seem a little strange.
But not to the networks . who need the
time to prepare and familiarize . the
nation with the· teams and players. This
time, CBS wants to spread the word
New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick about the Panthers, a small-market team
with few recognizable stars.
. watches from the sideline during the AFC • "It helps whel] you have to get reqlfy
championship game
against the for seven hours of programming,
Indianapolis Colts Suoday in Foxboro, in~ luding features on two teams that
Mass. Belichick is pleased his New weren 't identified until Sunday," Sean
England Patriots have two weeks to pre- McManus. president of CBS Sporis said
pare for the Carolina Panthers in the Super Monday.
B9wl. Even though he won a title two years
" It especially helps with Carolina, a
ago with a short break. "Last time. there team that most people don't know much
was so much urgeni:y, playing one day and about. We have an extra week to get
flying down to New Orleans the next day," them familiar with the players and the
the coach says. (API
story lines."

Belichick actually has been very succ·essfu l with one-week breaks. He's
been to fom previous Super Bowls.
three as an assistant, and has done two
of his besr coaching jobs when he had
only one week- as defensive coordinator of the Giants in 1991, and as head
coach of the Patriots two seasons ago.
In the Giants-Bills game 13 years
ago, he designed a defense with just two
down linemen and six or seven defensive backs to~pw (!own Jim Kelly and
Buffalo's no-huddle offense. New York
was a 6-point underdog but won 20- 19
when Bills kicker Scott Norwood's 47yard field-goal attempt sai led wide right
with seconds"left.
Against the St. Louis Rams in 2002,
Belichick used a similar alignment
against Kurt Warner and Marshall
Fiaulk . Rams coacti Mike Martz underutilized Faulk. and New England; a 14- .
point underdog, won 20- 17 on Adam
Vinatieri's 48--yard field goal ·as time
expired.
That 1991 ganie was the first of four
straight Super Bowls - all los ses for the Bill's. They also had only a
week's ,break be(ore their final Super
Bowl , a 30-13 loss to the Cowboys in
1994.
" It is a little tougher with the oneweek break," said Marv Levy, who
coached those Bills teams.
·
"You're working on contingency
plans, because you don 't know if you're
going to play or who you're going to
play. And you've got to have so meone
dealing with all those di stractions: tickets for players. getting their familie s to
the site, all the rest of those things. That
works better with two week s."
It will stay this way ; the next four
Super Bowls all have been scheduled
with two-week breaks. The first two
will be in February' and the two after
that probably will be - the league
decided to extend the season after play ing in February for the first time two
years ago.
"People like to complain about the
hype and the delay," McManus says.
"But from our standpoint, all it does is
build interest and build excitement.
That's the way it should be. "

Prep Scoreboard
Ohio High School Boys Basketball
Tuesday's Results
Ak1. Centrai·Hower 103, Akr. E. 57
Akr. Ellet 71, Akr. N . 60
Akr. Kenmore 62. Akr. Firestone 56
Akr. SVSM 88, Youngs . Mooney 51
Alliance 67, Struthers 42
Andover Pym atuning Valley 65. ·
Bristolville Bristol 52
Archbold 93, Pion eer N. Cent. 53
Athens 51, Jackson 40
Aurora 66 , Cle. Hts · Lu ther;;ln E. 6
Austinburg Grand River 68. Thompso n .
Ledgemont 52
Au stintown-Fitch 60 , Uniontown Lake
42
Beaver Etistern 51, Portsmouth Clay
49
.
Bedford 61, Painesville Riverside 52
Bedford Chanel 79, Chardon NDCL 44
Belpre 65. Parkersburg (W.Va .) Cath .

57

.

Berea 76, Avon Lake ,60
Botkins 49 , DeGraff Riverside 37
Brookfield 68, Newton Fans 61 . OT
Brooklyn
97 ,
Will oughby
Hill s
Cornerstone 25
Caldwell 65. Waterford 32
Cambridge :so, Warsaw River V1ew 47
Can . S. 52, Akr. Spring . 27
Canal Fulton NW 49, Louisville 41
Ca rrol lton 62, Wint ersvil le Indian
Creek 49
Casstown Miami 1:. 66, New Carlisle
Tecumseh 61
Chagrin Falls 70, Independence 64
Chesterland W. Geauga 95 , Mantua
Crestwood 46
Cln . Anderson 63, Cin . Harrison 34
Cln . Christian 78, Milford C::hristian 30
Cin. Country Day 52 , Will iamsbiJrg 22
Cin. Jacobs 51 , Cin . Harmony 48
Cin. Mason 70, Cin . Glen Este 57
Cm. N College H1ll 78. M~
- ealthy.6
.5
Ctn. NW 79. Little Mt ami
in . Htlls
Cln. Shroder Paidela 45,
Christian 33
Cln . St. Xav ier 53 , Day. ChaminadeJulienne 43
Cln. Sum!nit 62. Cin . SCPA 49'
Circleville 51, Pottsmouth 49
Cle. Collinwood "71, t:::le. Max Hayes 38
Cle. E. 63, Cle. E. Tech 39
Cte. Glenville 89, Cle . Lincoln· West 66
Cle. R hodes 91 , Cle. MLK 47
Cle. S. 74 , Cle. JFK 56
Clo. VASJ l1o Cle . Hts. 68 . OT
Cols. Beechcroft 63 , Cols . E, 52
Cols. Briggs 69 , CCl ls. Eastmoor 57
Cols. Brook haven 75, Cols. Centennial

52

'

Cols. Hamilton Twp. 69. MI . Gilead 47
Cots. l nllependence
75..
Cols.
~,
Afncentric 67 '
Cols. Marion-Franklin 85 , .Cols. S. 60
.• r Cols. Mifflin 87 , Cols. L;lnde n 57"
Cola. Northland 71. Cols'. Wheston e 56
Cols. w. 60, Cots. Walnut Ridge 48
Cols. Watterson 56 . Upper Arl ington

43
C61s. Well ing ton 69, Gahanna Cols.
Ac.ademy 58
CoshOcton
ayesville
59.
Meadowbrook. 50
Crooksville 71 , New Le.1dngton 52
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 63. Hudson
WAA 60 ,
Dover 60, Gnadenh1.,1tten Indian Valley
. 47
Dresden Tri-Valley 47, New · &lt;;oncord
John Glenn 45, OT
Eastlake N. 50. Solon 48
Elyria High 64, Amherst-Steele 61
Fairfield Christian 57. Torah Academy
42
.
Gallipolis Gallia 49 , logan 45
Gallipolis Ohio Valley Christian 54.
· Coal Grove OawsCln· Bryanl 42
~
Garrettsv ille Garfield 71 , Burton
Berkshire 67
Gates Milles Gilmour 69 , Fairport
Harbor Harding 42
Gates Mills Haw~e n, 56 , KirJ&amp;man ·
Badger 45
Geneva 53. Wickliffe 26
Hermitage {Pa. ) Kennedy Cathol ic 74 ,
Massillon Washington 56

•

HOlland Spring. 58, Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne 46
Jamestown Greeneview 66, Cedarville

Worthington Christian 68, Centerburg
54
Yellow Springs 62. Xenia Christian 60

52
Jefferson Area 64, Chardon 53
Johnstow n-Monroe 60, Johnstown
Northridge 45
Kent Rooseve lt 67, Streetsboro 61, OT
Kings Mills Kings 70, Cin. Turpin 65
laGrange Keystone 74 . Oberlin
Firelands H
lakewood 55. Akr. Hoban 33
Leavittsburg laBrae 57. Hubbard 54
Lima Shawnee 88, Upper Sandusky
62
Locklan d 66, Cin. Clark Montessori 42
Lodi Cloverleaf 62, Medina Buckeye
36
London 72, Sunbufy Big Walnut 71,
OT
·
lorain Clearview 70, Avon 62
Loudonville 71 , Millersburg W Holmes
64
·
loveland 58, Amelia. 48
Lucasville Valley .56 , Whe elersburg 51
Lynchburg-Clay 65, Bainbridge Paint
Valley 63
·
Madison Christian 79, Muski ngum
Christian 36
Marietta 61 , Vincent Warren 54
Marysville 41, Bellefontai ne 37
Massillon Christ1an 70, Wadsworth
Reimer Road Christian 55
M'c Arthur Vinton County 57, Wells,on
SO .
McConnelsville Morgan 100, Philo q6 •
Mechanicsburg 68, N. Lew1sburg Triad
63
Mentor Chr. 64, Cle. Heritage 49
.
Mentor Lake Cath . 7 1, Garfield Hts.
Trinity 67, OT
.
Miamisburg 55 , Fairmont 44
Minerva 62. Beloit W. Branch 58
Minster 58, New Knoxville 52·
Monclova Christian 41 . Northwood 25
Mow rystown Whiteoak 73, Bethel-Tate
44
Mt. Vernon Academy 115, P9We11
Villag61 Academy 13
New Ph iladelphia 69. Uhrichsville
Claymont 52
New Ri chmond 73 , St. Bernard 54
Newark Licking Valley 77, Plain City
Jonathan Alder 49
Norwood 71 , Cin . Goshen 54
Oberlin 74 , Lorain Brookside 47
Parma Holy Name 63, Elyria &lt;;;ath . 52
Perry 61 , Madison 35
Perrysburg 67, Maumee 56
Portsmouth Sciotoville 74, Latham
Western 64
Portsmouth W. 65. Wavfl rly 50 .
Ravenna 51 , Atwater Waterloo 45
Richmond Hts_71 , Kirtland 67
Rocky Rive r Lutheran W. 62 , Rocky
A1ve r 56. OT
Rootstown ?J. Jac k ~on~Milton 58
S Charleston SE 48 . W. Liberty-Salem
44
S. Webster 73, Mmford 59
Scioto McDermott .NW 58. Oak Hill 34
Sharon (Pa .) kennedy Ce th . 74,
Massi llon "Wa shington 56
Spring . Emmanuel Christian 71 ,
Sidney Chris tian 41
Spnn g. NE 62. Spring. Cath . Cent. 48
St . Clairsvi lle 62. Cadiz Harrison Cent.
51
· Sylvania Northv.iew 67 , Bowling Green
60
·
Sylvania Southview 74, Rossford 48
Thornville Sheridan 62 , Zanesville
Mays~ille 45
Tol. Ottawa Hills 62 , Gibsonburg ~9
Utica 72, Howa rd E·. Kno)C 62
Vermil ion 76 , Sullivan B"lack River 49
W. Jefferson 54, Richwood N. Union
43
w. Latayette Ridgewood 53, Zanesville
Ro secran s 40
Wellington 61 ," Gralton Midvlew 51
Westerville S. 85, Ash land 41
Wil lOughby S. 72, Bainbridge Kenston
61
Willow Wood Symmes ~Valley 79,
Frankf1n Furnace Green 68
Windham 75, McDonald 71

,.

Ohio High School Girls -Basketball
Tuesday's Rtaulta
Akr. Buchtel 59, Akr Garfield 53 ·
Akr. Central-Hewer 56, Al&lt;r. E. 31
Akr. Ellet 70 , Akr. N. 36
Akr. Elms 41, Willoughby Andrews 34
Akr. Firestone 50, Ak r. Kenmore 36
Akr. Manches ter 61, Akr. Coventry 34
Baltimore liberty Union 43, Grandview
35
Bloom -Carroll 52, Canal Winches1er
49
Bloomdale EIJ!lwood 60, Kansas
Lakota 41
BrYan 45, Defiance 39
Bucyrus Wynford 48. Kenton 35 .
Carey 45 , McG uffey Upper Scioto
Valley 29
Chardon 47 . Orwell Grand Valley 34
- Chillicothe Unioto 51, Rich mond Dale
SE 44
•
Chillicothe Zane Trace 55, Franl&lt;1ort
Adena 40
Cin. Christian 44. Milford Christian 35
Cin. Landmark Trinlty 63, Cin. Summit
27
Cin . Madeira 55. Cin. Mariemont 19
Cin. McAuley 56, St. Bernard Roger
Bacon 30
Cin . Princeton 62, Cin . Colerain 39
Cin. Ursuline 45 , Cin . Purcell Marian
36
Cin . Western Htlts 53, Cin . Wood~a rd
33
Cin. Wyoming 39, Cin.lnd1an Hill 27
Circleville 47, Ashville Teay s Valley 37
Clarksville Clinton Massie 45 . BethelTate 37
Cle. Collinwood 85, Cle. Max Hayes 9
Cle. E Tech 55, Cle. E. 36
Cle. Glenville 63, ,Cie . lincol n-West 28
Cle. His. Beau mont 46, lorain Cath.
34
Cle . JFK 80. Cle. S. 30
Cle . RhOdes 61 , Cle. MLK 56
Cle. St. Joseph 52, Willoughby S . 40
Clermont NE 62, New Ric hmond 57
Cols. Beechcroft 69, Cots. E. 51
Cols. Brookhaven 80. Cols. Centennial
21
Cots. Eastmoor 92. Cols . Briggs 31
Cols. 1--jamilton Twp. 40, Circleville
logan Elh-1 35
Cots . Independence
91.
Co ls .
Alri ce ntric 35
Cols . Marion-Franklin 83. Cols. S. 47
Cols . Mifflin 71 , Cots. Linden 49,
Cols . Northland 43, Cols. Whetstone
27
Cols . W. 79 , Cols. Walnut Ridge 72
Cuyahoga . Falls CVCA 50, Zoarville
Tuscarawas Valley 29
Day. Christian 38, Spring . Shawnee. 35
Day. Meadowdate 65, C1n . Stivers 59
Evangel Christian 59, Li berty Christian
21 •
Fairlield Christian 57, T,orah Academy
29
Findlay Liberty-Benton 37, Ada 33
Fremont ~t. Joseph 56 , Norwalk St .
Paul 40
Ft. Recovery 56, Ft. Loramie 43
Gallon Northmor 49. Gallon 34
Oates Mills Gilmour 56, Lakewood St .
Augustine 34
•
Georgetown 52. Blanchester 34
Granville Christian 52 , Maranatha
Christian 47
Grove City Christian 45 , Tr.ee of Life 38
· Hamler Patrick · Henry 55 , COntinenta l
52
Heath 50 , Granville 40 ~·
Johnstown-Monroe 51 . Cols. School
for Girl s 31
Kalida 69 , Def1ance Tinora 44
Lancaster Fairfield Union 62, AmandaClearcreek 57
lima Perry 58, Dola Hardin NOrthern
49
lodi Cloverleaf 58, Richfield Revere
36
.
Manon Pleasant 61 , CardingtonLincoln 43

Massi llon Perry 46 , Louisville Aquina s
37
.
Massillon Tuslaw 42, Can.-Timken 30
Middlefield Cardinal 69. Painesville
Harvey 61 . OT
Middletown 38, Milford 37
Miller City 43, McComb 37
Millersp ort 68, Cots. Harvest Prep 62
MI. Vernon 62, Newark 27
Mt. Vernon Academy 44 , Powell
Village Academy 19
N. Bend Taylor 63, Cin . Deer Park 45
Navarre Fairle,ss 40. E. Can. 36 ~
New Albany 58, Hebron Lakewood 33
New Riegel 53, Bucyr1.,1s 39
Newark Cath. 78, Sugar Grove Berne
Union 31
Oak Hills 44. Lib erty Twp. Lakota E. 23
Old Fort 58, Fostoria St. Wendel in 36 ·
Oregon_Stritch 56. Liberty Center 46
Ottawa-Glandorf, 61 , Wi lla rd 42
Pandora-Gilboa 61, Ottoville 54
Plain City Jonathan Alder 51. London
48
Reading 67, Finneytown 24
Seton 49, -Cin·. Walnut Hills 48
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 65,
Hudson WRA 34
Sparta Highla nd 46, Marion Harding
40
.
. Spencerville 64. Rockfo rd Parkway 60
Spring. Emmanuel Christian 69 ,
Sidney Christian 15
Summit Station ~ick ing . Hts. 48 ,
Lancaster Fisher Cath 46
Swa nton 55."Pettisville 27
Sycamore Mohawk 54, Van Buren 49
Upper Arlington 60, Groveport 59
Upper
Sandusky • 51,
Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon 33
Van Wert 38, Delphos Jefferson 37
Wadsworth 73, Tallmadge 46 .
Williamsport Westfall 66 , Piketon 41
Willoughby Hills Cornerstone Chr. 46,
Can. Heritage 39
Wil mi ngton 46, Ross 28
.
Youngs
Christian 52, Massillon
Christian 34
1

•

BY CHRIS DUNCAN

Associated Press
LOUISVILLE. Ky. - This season, the closeness
between Cincinnati and Louisville goes beyond their
geograp hi c proximity.
The Cardinals ( 13-1. 4-0 Conference USA) are
ranked fifth, and the Bearcats ( 13-0. 4-0) arc sixth .
Both teams have 13-game winning streaks heading into
Wednesday's showdown at Freedom Hall.
" It is very e·xciting because you have to be great at
every facet of the game." said Louisville coach Rick
Pitino. 2-2 against the Bearcats since
arriving
at Louis,ville in 2001. " It 's
•
two teams highly ranked . It should be
· a hell of a game."
.
Louisville ranks 16th and Ci ncinnati
17th in the nation in scoring defense,
with both allowing just over 58 points
per gwne. l'he 6i-rdinals are first and
the Bearcats· second in Confere nce
USA in field -goal percentage defense.
Both teams ca n wither opponents
TM
with full -court pre"ure. ge nera tin g
turnovers and easy baskets. And both
· teams have the depth to sustain the
pressure for 40 minules. one reaso n
why Cincin nat i is fir.st and Lou isvi lle

•••;
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o C F:\TS • \ u I. .1--1. :\ u .

• Cincinnati falls from
unbeatens. See Page 81

BY

J. MtLES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Ka ra Myers. 7th grade . and
Zach Davis. third grade. prac·
lice and sharpen· their reading
skills after school with Vicki
Northrup. the parent coordinator fo r the Study Buddy program a( Southern Elementary.
Each school district in Meigs
County has an after school
tutoring program to help stu·
dents and better prepare
them for proficiency tests. (J
Miles layton)

RACINE - More than
53 percent of third graders
and half of all fourthgraders in Ohio public
schools have achieved
"proficient" scores on
reading proficiency tests,
but Meigs County Schools
still lag behind.
According
to
the
October 2003 test results

Ramsey
charged
with third
DUI offense
BY

Crusade Jot Chris{ brings
illusonist to Meigs County

J. MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
' • Extension·corner.~
PageA2
..
• Law you can use. See
PageA2
• Tips on dinning
with
..
Diabetes. See Page A3
• Mason considers sewer
rate increase. See Page
A5
• Senate approves samesex marriage ban. See
PageA6

WEATHER

'
POMEROY - George
Ramsey, 30, of Pomeroy,
has been charged with his
third DUI offense and he
will be arraigned in Me)gs
County Court today 0
Pomeroy Police Officer
·Shannon Smith spotted
Ramsey at 10:35 p.m.
Saturday driving on Union
Avenue with Eula J.
Stumbo, Juanita Lane, .and
a child less than two years
old. Smith pulled over the
vehicle because it !lad a
defective exhaust.
Ramsey was charged
with DUI,, child endangerment, driving under suspension, and driving with
a defective exhaust. If convicted , he could serve
between 30 days to a year
in jail and face a fine of
between $550 to $2,500.
Both Stumbo and Lane
were charged with open
container.
Lane. was
charged with wrongful
entrustment
because
Ramsay was driving her
vehicle while he was
allegedly intoxicated. Both
Stumbo and Lane will
answer for these charges in
front of magistrate Charles

.Please see Ramsey, AS

A video showing illusionist Gill Brock. the BMX bike team• and the band Inhabited . being
brought here by the Me igs County Crusade for Christ in April, is viewed by committee members ,
from the left, Bill Quickel, Bob Miller, AI Hartson and Lamar O'Bryant. (Charlene Hoeflich)
BY CHAilLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHil'MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY -. With a goal
of raising Christian aware.ness in Meigs County, the
Ohio Valley Crusade for
Christ will be sponsorin.\\ a
three-day event featurmg
illusionist Brock Gill of
Nashville, Tenn.

The Crusade committee
repre senting area · churches
are planning three evening
events, April 5, 6 and 7 in the
Meig s High School gymnasium, along with daytime
assembly programs in Meigs,
Southern and Eastern High
Schools, and Meigs Middle
School.
Gill is said to captivate stu-

dents and then when he has
gotten their· attention with
illusion or comedy deliver a
messag~ that is crystal clear
from God's own heart.
He wi II be sharing his ·awn
story of ·how staying away
from drugs and alcohol as a
teenager made a difference in

Please see Crusade. AS

Partnership saves.two /~cal shops
Details on Pace A6 ·

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS'.
Subscribe today -. 992-2155

INDEX

Purina Mills ... America's Leader in Animal Nutrition.

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Places To Go

B6

Sports

Bt

Weather .

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publi!!J,hlng Co.

'

Sue Stone and Tom Dooley are enjoying a new-found partnership
they credit·with saving Sue's Selectables and the Middleport
Department Store. Stone has located he r antiQues and col'tectibles business in the department store , crE)ating an unusual
but complimentary blend of merqhandise. (Brian J. Reed)

.t., I,""" ''"··!.· "'"

Frank:

bills
will be
mailed
Tax

/Cite
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYO!\ILYSENTINEL.COM

•

POMEROY
Meigs
County real estate owners
may wait a while before the
arrival of their tax bills this
winter.
according
to
Treasurer Howard Frank,
and the delay may cause
cash flow problems for
coun~y government.
Frank said Tuesday ~is
office is prepared to mail the
bills, but they have not yet
arrived from the computer
company which prints them.
"I just don't know when
they'll be here," Frank said
yesterday. "The information .
· the company needed from us
to print the bills was provided over a month ago."
Accardi ng to Frank, the
bills have been delayed as
the result o'f a three-county
joint vocational school
assessment shared with
Athens and Vinton -counties.
Because the company which
prints the taXo bills on behalf
of the county has not
received the reeded information from those counties;
the bills cannot be printed.
"Even when that inforrnatior.J is made available, we' ll
have to wait in line," Frank
said.
Frank said taxpayers used
to receive their bills as an
"early Christmas card" in
December, but said the
process of printing the bills
is now co mpleted shortly
after the new year. This
year's wait for the bills is
eve n longer than usual.
"We usually have the bills
mailed by this time," Frank
said.
"We've
already
received an extension on the
tax books because the bills
aren't in the mail yet."
The county relies heavily

the department store· next
door, and both she and
Dooley, along with longMIDDLEPORT- A new time department store clerk
partnership · between two Nola Swisher, will staff the on the collection of first-half
Middleport merchants has new combined business.
real estate tax payments for
likely saved their respective
According to Dooley. the cash !low, and the delay in
businesses, and has resulted deci sion to.combine the two collecting taxes could put a
i~ an unusual. new !Jybrid businesses carne at a time burden on the general fund
business for the &gt;hopping when both owners were
considering closing their budget. The, cou nty will rely
district.
Tom Dooley, owner of the doors. In fact, Dooley had on a S200.000 2003 general
Middleport
Department already announced hi s plans fund carryover to meet paySfore, and Sue Stone of to close the century-old roll and other financial
Sue's Selectables have com- department store early this needs until real estate revbined · their businesses Into year, b
· ·
"Neither of us were doing enue begins arriv ing.
one. While they're billing
their partnership as "Two on as well as we wanted to.
Meanwhile, Frank said his
the 'T, "' both businesses business wise, and we were office staff has begun to
will remain intact, and will contemplating closing our stuff envelopes for tax bills
continue to bear their doors." Dooley said. "We . with return envelopes, and
respective names'
had many talks about what ·
Stone has moved her we could do to save both of will begin mailing bills as ·
soon as they arrive, whenevantiques and collect ibles
Please
see
Shops.
AS
inventory into a portion of
er that may be.
BY BRIAN

J, REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM .

2 SEcnONS- 12 PAGES

50 lb. Bag

"" " " "

...

Please see Levels. AS

rive.

Where Cincinnati l]lOre cleai·ly owns the rivalry is in
the program s' respective hislories in .Conference USA.
The Bearcats had won or shared the first seven
Conference USA regular-seaso n championships before
Marquette won the league outright last year. Louisville
has never won the league regu lar-season t,jtle .
Hugg in s, isn 't ready to co nsider Wednesd&lt;ty"s game
pivotal in this year's league race.
" You'd rather win than lose , but I'm. not convinced it
will decide a champion ship," hi! said. ''They've still got
to come back lo our place (Feb. ·2 1), and we' ve both
still got a lot of hard conference games to play, We're
just beginnin g."
·

I Ill . RS U \' , .I.\ N l ' ·\ R\ :!:! , :!004
.

&lt;J'J

Tutoring initiatives seek to raise proficiency levels

SPORTS

i~ second in the nali o n in scori n_
g rr\ar-·

gill .
"We're not "·Oin " to fatinue them ·
"' to fatigue
"' us ,"
and they're not" going
Pitino said ~
In a matchup of dominant defenses, offense becomes
the key, Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins said .
"It comes down to what it always CORle down to: The
winning team has to mak e shots," he said . "They're
going to defend, we 're goi ng to defend. they're going
to rebound, we ' re going to rebound. People are goi ng
to have to make some key shots . Whichever ream
makes key shot s is probably go in g to win.'"
Pitino said shootin g is where the Bearcats hav e made
their biggest le ap forward from las t seaso n.
The Cardinals have held seven of the ir last nine
opponents below 40 percent shoot ing , but . Ci nci nnati
ha s scored 80 points or more in nine of 13 games - the
most since 1959-60. when the Oscar Robertson-led
Bearcats topped SO in 10 of their first 13 games.
·'They 've gtme from a deficiency to a major stre ngth.
They have tremendous outside shooting," ' Pitino said.
Huggins points to reserve guard Tony Bobbitt. who's
averaging 14.5 point s, as the cata lyst of the improved
offense. Bobbitt is shootin g 49 percent, compared with
37 percent last season. His production has opened up
opportunities for Field William s. who ave rages 13.5
.Point s per game.
Point guard Nick Williams has also co ntribut ed, with
his ability to create offense oil the dribble, Huggi ns
said.
"And then .I think we're better inside .'' he said.
"\Yhen that happens , there are more openings. and then
you can go back to pla ying a lot faster. Trying to create
so me offense from our defense has helped as well."
The Cardinals, meanwhile, have labored on offense
in their last two games, shooting le ss than 37 percell( in
sluggi sh wins over East Carolina and Tulane.
Pitino isn't concerned.
" I don't ever worry about offense. because defense
dictates what they ' re go in g to give you in a given
game," h~ said. "We've ·lwd good shot s, and some .
night s shots go down and some nights the y don't."
The Bearcats have won II of the last 16 meetings in
the serie s, althou gh Louisvill e has won three of the last-

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