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iunbap lim ·itnttnel

·Sunday, January 25, 2004.
A "fT HOUSE

Q!

THE

SoutltCaroHna
fire kills six, A2

·-

WEEK ·

Easten1 pounds
Southeastem, Bt

This Victorian ·h·a s fresh elements
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
For AP Newsfeatures
.his Victorian home bears no
resemblance
to forebears
.
.
once considered stodgy or old.
Plari APWB-143 is neither of .
those.thi(lgS.
Here, homeowners find a
·classic Victorian plan (turrets,
wraparound porch, stylistic trim) I
that is up-to-date with good traffic
flow and creature comforts • all '
on a single floor.
Of note are volume ceilings
which are vaulted in the great
room and dining area. There is a
fresh treatment to kitchen design
with its distinct V-shape. Angularity
is used in the approach to the
master suite and bedrooms. ·
The master suiie is well
conceived , wi.th its •tray._ceiling ,
generous closets, and private
THE
sitting room.

T

•

.

,

I

SPORTS
• Meigs p ull~ away from
Raiders late. See Page 81

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

· PO Mt;: ROY - Scioto
County Probate/Ju venil e
Magislrate Matthew W.
McFarla nd ·
of
Whee le rsburg
has
announced
hi s cand idacy fo r the
F o urth
Di s tri ct
Court
of
Appeals .
The court
se r ves
M e i gs,'
Ad a m s,
A t h e n s , McFarland
G a I I i a •.
Highl and .
Hocking,
. Jackson.
Lawrence,
Pickaw ay; Pike, Ross,
S.cioto,
Vinton
and
Wasbington Counties.
A
Republi can,
McFarland is entering hi s
I ~th year" as an attorney.
He graduated from Capital
University. Prior to being
appointed to the bench as a
magistrate,
he
was
Assistant
County
Prosecutor in Licking and
Scioto Counties , and had
his own private law practice . He al so served as special council for the Ohio
Attorney General.
He now serves on the
facult y at both Capital
University and Shawnee
State Uni versity as an
adjunct professor.
He and his wife, Lynn ,
'have
two
children ,
Mitchell and Mataiyn .

CRANBROOK . This claaslc VIctorian design, complete with turrets and stylistic trim details , m·e rlts a look !rom homeown·ers attracted to
llmelesa styling and allordabla construction costs .

APWB-143 Details

Designer Comments
• overall, this is a very comfortable plan thats also
IJ&gt; Arch itectu rat style: IJ&gt; Laundry: main level
Ranch with Victorian IJ&gt; High ceiling entry customizable for those who want a fourth bedroom
and more baths. My intent was good flow without
elements ·
fayer
..
reliance on right angles. Such variety within the .
IJ&gt; Main level total:
IJ&gt; Exterior material(s):
confines of a traditional home appeals to people ..
2,367 sq. ft.

PATIO

1().1'

Jl'.()"•

your choice, shingles
IJ&gt; Garage: 2-car
or siding
attached
IJ&gt; Foundation: slab,
IJ&gt; Overall width : 67ft. crawl space or full
Overall depth : 58 ft . basement
IJ&gt; Recommended lot IJ&gt; 2 in. x 6 in . stud
size : 70 fl. wide,
exterior walls
140 fl. deep
IJ&gt; Roof material :
asphalt shingles
IJ&gt; Bedrooms: 3
IJ&gt; Baths: 2
IJ&gt; Attic: yes

,. ."
0

a

a

a

.

.TWO CAR GARAGE
.

8

20'-4"x 21'-4"

rov. POliCH

-~

Jerold .Axeirod ······
Cost of" Construction Architectural Glossary
Tray ceiling • A
$224,865 • $260,370 .. recessed ceiling created
$198,828 . $227,232 by lines moving upward
$210 ,663 . $241,434 · from the walls. They ·
$201 '195 . $222,498 commonly appear in
$227 ,232 . $248,535 bedrooms.

Estimated
lot)
Northeast
Southeast
Midwest
Northwest
Southwest
(excludes

For a study plan of this house, send $5 to House ofthe Week, P.O. Box 1562, New York, NY 10116-1562, call
(877) 228-2954, or order online at AP~com. Be sure to Include the plan number. For downloadable
study plans and construction blueprints House of the Week before April2003, see www.houseoftheweek.com.

or

INSIDE
• Army charges Ohio
National Guard soldier for
refusing anthrax vaccine.
See Page AS
• Community Calendar.
See Page A3 ·

I

WEATIIER

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

RuMtlon Oncotog,
ol Holftr •edlal c.aw 0 colofy.DfP'Itmtnt el HoiHt' Clink - 741J.U.· I474

74f..U.·IIf•

.

11Milltpo~~ltiii .~Clll\lfor_, IIII'Fnl 1
ilf!ll

rJII'imltY tul tltw a.dldan OIICIGIIQgy ·or111
HaiMr M.ldicll eMir,

allllll •

.-n ~ nal owt
,.

EVJ~Y

,._..._ror.
-Will • 10 *'' 11 • •

•ri1111 4ftd-.liiltl•~aalrlt-.

'

~•••aVitlty brltll,..w. •
•noli,. n•lltllt ln·radldoft MI!Pf ••nn~~W.

•

• ·-··- -

Calendars

A3

classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

Sports

81

Weather -

A6

© 2004 Ob io Volley Publishing Co.

··~·~-..·~

....

--~.-.-

..._.....

-----~~ - -~

Winter weather causes level _t~o travel advisory
.

BY CHARLENE. HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAJLY)ENTINEL.coM
,
POMEROY - \Wit h ahout
three inc hes of snt&gt;w on the
ground and predict ions of
· more to come. [the Meigs
Coun ty Sheriffs t;)epartmcnt
issued a Level 2 trave l advisory Sunday aftern~on.
Th'€ advisory m~a ns that
the roadways are I;Jazardous
and onl v those who fee l" it is
necessary to drive should be
out on theni. It was suggested ,
that employees co ntac t their
employers before reporting
for work Monday morn ing.
· A dispatcher at the sheriff's
depart nient said last night only
one minor snow-related ve hicle incident had been reported. Neither Pomeroy nor
Middleport reponed any accide nts. He also notetl that all
The Gallipolis Park a few hours after the s now began falling. three school districts. Eastern.
Meigs ai1d Southern , haye
(Charles Shepherd)
.

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cance led s(:hooi for Monday.
The street departments of
both Pomeroy and Midd leport
were out Sundav afternoon
and eveninne plowinoe and
treating the slick streets with
salt: as were count v and stale
highway crews. ·
Brei! Jones. state highway
superintendent. described the
roads as snow covered and .
sl ick. He sai d his depa rt ment"
has had I 0 truc ks out since
the snow started ·earl y
Su nday afternoo n plowi ng
and (rearing the highways
wi th salt and cinders.
"Our pl&lt;m," Jones said. is to
continue working tl1rough the
night and hopefully have the
highways in good shape for peopie going to work in the morn- ·
ing." He did ex press some con-·
cem about the temperature
which at 8 p.m. was standing at
18 degrees. ·~just borderline on
the effectiveness of salt," he said.

.

Sewer problem in Rutland

Eagles spotted
locally in
ODNR survey
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POM EROY - A record
number of bald eagles .
were observed for the second year in a row during
Ohio's annual Mid-Winter
· Bald Eagle Survey, including one in Meig s County
and three in Gallia County.
A preliminary total of
352 bald eagles we re
observed, including 27 1
mature bald eagles and 8 1
less than five years old.
Las t year, 304 were identified during the mid-winter
survey, according to the TwicE( a day sewage generated oy the Meigs Elementary School's 950 students a nd staff is
Ohio
Department of Rutland's treatment pl ant at a cost of about $9,000 a month. (Chajlene Hoeflich)
Natural
Resources
Divi sion of Wildlife,
•
the school for another load.
They fo und out the l,j nes
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
which conducts the s ~rve y.
H O ~ FLI C H ®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
The
whole
process
is
being
were
not adequate when the
Last spring, 105 eaglets
repeated day after day, month testing began in June, j ust
fledged from a record 88
RUTLAND
It
happens
after
month , and is by any- two months before school
nests statewide .
every
day,
in
fact,
twice
a
one's
measure. expensive.
started. '.T he ex isting lines
The assessment includes
It is costin g the Meigs · j ust wou ldn'1 ha ndle the
a stan4ardized aerial sur- day.
A
big
red
truck
with
a
tank
Local
Sc hool Dist rid thou- pressure.'' he said .
vey and observations from
And there begins t ~e story
the ground by field per- on its bed pull s into the sands of dollars - in fact
sonnel and voluntee,s, and school parki~g lot near the about $9.000 a momh and ' of thousands of do ll ars being
observation s reported by sewage storage faci lity at the it's bee n gg in g on si nce spent to handle 1he sewage
new $ 15
millionElementary
ultra-mod- August.
the public . Meigs Count y ern
Meigs
genera1ed bY the 950
· · or ·so
Wildlife Officer Kei th . School and begins pumping
The problem wa'i not amici- stude ms· and staff and the
Wood said Friday he has raw sewage out of an in- pated when the school was built. waiting .fo r something to be
no documentati on of ground holding tank. ·
In fact the Meigs Local engi- done to remedy the
~h ere the eagle .was spotIt takes an hour or so to neers conferred with the
Last week ·after
ted in Meigs County.
· pump out the first load of Rutland Village enginc:e~&gt; _and st rugg l in~ , to gel
"We are looking forward 3500 gallons to be tran~port- they all agreed the extstmg hnes fund1ng lor .
to reaching a milestone of ed. to .Rutland's treatmeru..,.. could h;mdie the sewage flow. t~e . . f\'le tgs
pl ant. Once th at load , is said Mark Rhonemus, Me1gs Comm1ssJoners .
a
Please see Survey, AS
dumped, the truc k returns to LocalJrea,urcr.
$99.499 contract lor sewer
'

.

WINNING

~r

.YITIM8
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.. ·--_. ..... __
• .,.,..... .ro-r. •• · , .,c·•-• ••
,.-~.

McFarland
announces
candidacy

hauled from a holding tan k to
.
line expansion to J C. Trivett
.Excavati ng of At hens. It is
being funded th rough a gr"ant
fro m
the · Appalac hian
Reg1onal Commi ss ion Slipple memed
by
Ru tland
.Vi ll age.
Work on the install at ion of
a new four- inr h -sewer line
along Ohio 124 and Li nlc
Leadin~~ Creek is expected to
begin ear ly nex t month and
take abo ut 60 days 10 complete.
Meanwhile. tl1e truck with the
big t;mk continues to come twice
a day. the raw sewage gets
hauled to the treatment plant.
and Meigs Local just keeps paymg:.

J

�• The Daily Sentinel
.

PageA2

NATION
·
·WoRLD
.

·Monday, January 26, 2004

on·e hostag,e released
People jump from windows to flee South
Carolina motel fire, toddler among six dead from prison guard tower
. BUCKEYE, Ariz. (AP) officer was to be kept at the
One of two correctional hospital
overnight,
but
officers held hostage by two Gibbons wouldn't elaborate.
inmates for nearly a week on why.
.
Fellow correctional officlimbed down from a prison
guard ,tower to safety cers were heart~ned by the .
Saturday.
release.
The guard, a man who
"The · negotiators are doing
was not immediately identi- a fine job. Th is is a good
fied, was taken to a Phoenix ·sign th at they «&gt;'ere a bl e to
hospital after his release. co me to · so me kmd of
Department of Corrections agreement ,"
said . Jcre
spokeswoman Cam Hunter Ma sella. ·president ul the
said she had no immediate Arizona Correctional Peace
details on hi s condition but Officers' Association.
said
authorities
were
The release ot' the correc- ·
encouraged he was able to tiona! officer occurred after
walk down the ladder on his an inmate; wearing a
•
own.
· guard's uniform jacket. lowHe was released• .after ered a bucket over the side
negotiators delivered an of the three,story tower and
item demanded by the then pulled it .back up .
Inmates, Hunter said . A secA ladder was plac ed
ond item was delivered as against the side of the tower
part of the exchange agree- and a short time later, an
ment after the ·hostage was officer could be •Seen putting
let go.
on a backpack and climbing
She did not reveal what down the ladd er as the
the inmates were given.
inmate held the top of the
Negotiators were still ladder.
working for the freedom of
After the guard descendthe other hostage, a woman · ed, the inmate · shoved the
who remained With the two ladder away from the side·.
inmates in the tower, which
The inmates took the
is believed to be stocked guards hostage early Jan: 18
with weapons. Department m the tower at the Anzona
of Corrections spokesman State
Pri so n Comp l ex~
Alan Ecker said the officer · Lewis, in Buckeye west of.
was believed to' be OK.
Phoenix.
,
"The safe return of one
At least one inmate over.;
Firefighters use sheets to block the front entrance of the Comfort Inn &amp; Suites, Sunday, Jan . 25, 2004, In Greenville_. S.C., as corrections officer is. very came two guards and a
bodies are removed after an early fire killed s ix people, including a toddler, and Injured at least a dozen others, authonttes satd. encouraging and we are worker in the kitchen during
(AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)
making sure that this brave breakfast preparation that
person is receiving the best day before making hi s way
of care,"
Gov. Janet with another inmate to the
Bv JEFFREY COLLINS
been acti-vated and no fire to have fallen as they were over for them."
in a state- tower at the edge of a
Napolitano
said
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ext ingui shers were used walking or running down
Downey said some people
ment.
"But
this
is
not over. prison yard.
:
before emergency crews the hall , some of them dis- on upper floors lowered
GREENVILLE, S.C.
Authorities have not dis-:
arrived, said Wade Hampton oriented and moving toward themselves to the ground There is another officer
Fire broke out in a five- Fire Chiet Gary Downey. where the fire was ll)OSt u~ng bed sheets and others· being held, and this remains cussed the inmates ' possible
have not
a delicate and dangerous sit- motive and
story ·motel early Su nday He didn't know the last intense, Evans said.
jumped from the windows.
uation."
released any details on their
while guests were asleep . time the building was
Those injured suffered
Terry Letterman of Spruce
Napolitano
and
Dora
identities
or
previou ~
killing six and forc ing oth- inspected but said it was not from smoke inhalation. Pine, N.C., climbed down
Schriro,
director
of
the
crimes.
They've
also
ers to leap fro m windows or required to have sprinklers.
burns and cuts received try- from the third tloor using a Corrections Department. met declined to say how the
climb down bed sheets to
"If there had been sprin- ing to get out the windows, rope made of knotted sheets. with the officer and his fam- inmates got into the tower. ·
safety, authorities said.
kler sy.stems in the _hall- Downey said.
"I wasn't scared,"· he said. ily at the hospital, said DOC
Until
the
cri sis
is
At least a dozen people ways, probably the fatalities
Wilson said she called the "I didn't have titne to be spokesman Patrick Gibbons. resolved, the other 4.400
were injured, including at and injuries would not have front desk and was told to scare d."
Gibbons said the officer inmates at the medium- to
least five in critical condi- been near what they were," escape down the front stair"There was fire right out- was doing fine given what high-security facility are ill
tion at a burn unit in Downey said.
well.
. side the window, coming up he had been through. The lockdown-.
Augusta. Ga.
"We couldn' t see. There the wall," Taran Hurley,
The blaze began abo ut 4
Guests and authorities a.m. on the third floor of were people falling all over who was staying on ' the
,, ..
said smoke filled the motel the hotel, which had 46 reg- each other. We just kept fourth floor. told WYFF-TV.
quickiy. sending guests in istered guests. The cause going until we saw some ,. "Everybody had wet towels,
I
their pajamas into a chaotic was under inv.estigation.
light," she said.
·and we just kind of ran for
scramble for the exits and a
All the bodies were found
Greenville
County it down the stairs. We all
cold rain outside.
on the third floor. A young Sheriffs Sgt. Shea Smith fell, we tumbled over each
"I opened the door and all boy was ·found · lying close said deputies arrived before other, but we got out that
we saw was smoke," said to the body of a woman, firefighters and ran into . the way."
Donessa Wilson, who said along with two other · building to evacuate people,
All ·the victims appeared
she and her boyfriend were women . found in · the hall , but they couldn't get past to have been sleeping when
awakened on the fourth Greenville County Coroner the second floor becauS'e of . the fire started, Evans said.
floor by a fire alarm and Parks Evans said. TWo more the smoke.
Greenville, the home of
then heard a woman running people - a man and a
"The people that came out Bob Jones University, is
down the hall screaming.
woman -· were found in of their rooms, they didn' t about I05 miles northwest
The Comfort Inn had separate rooms, Evans said. have much · of a chance," of Columbia. A 'Democratic
standpipes arid wall-moumThe smoke overcame the Downey · said. "They get the presidential candidate debate
'·
ed hoses in the hallways victims so quickly that at smoke filled in there, and is scheduled in the city this
and stairwells, but none had least two or them appeared they panic, and panic takes week.

BY THE BEND

!he Daily Sentinel

.

.

Commun.ity Calendar .
Public meetings
Monday, Jan. 26
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commission, 9 a.m., 117 E.
Memoril)l Dr., Pomeroy.
Tuesday, Jan. 27
POM EROY Bed fo rd
township Trustees will
meet in spec ial session, 7
p.m. at the town hall.

Clubs and
Organizations
Monday, Jan. 26
HARRISONVILLE
The Harri sonville Senior
C it izens will meet at II
a.m. at the Scipio firehou se .
All seniors welcome.
··

and suppocters are invited
to attend.

Members asked to take a
pte .

CHESHIRE -C itizen s
Against Pollution, monthly
meeting, 7 p.m . at the
Gallco w·o rhhop, north of
· Cheshire . Public invited .

Church services

POMEROY
The
Meigs County Library regular board meeting willbe
held at 3 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.
1\Jesday, Jan. 27
RACINE - . Racine area
Conlmunity . Organization
(RACO) will meet at 6:30
p.m . at the Star Mill Park
building. There will be a
potluck . New members are
welcome.

Saturday, Jan. 31
CHESTER
Annual
. RACINE
Southern
Band Boosers will meet at . inspection of Shade River
7 p.m. in the high school Lodge 453 in -F.C. degree.
band room AII band parents Dinner
at
6:30
p.m.

Thursday, Jan. 29
POMEROY
David
Stockwell,
international
evangelist, will be holding
serviceS: at
the
First
Sou.thern Baptist Church.
48172 Pomeroy Pike, 7
p.m. each evening through
Thursday. Pastor Lamar
0' Bryant extends a special
invitation to. the public.

Other events
Tuesday, Jan. 26
POMEROY. - Childhood
immunization clinic to be
held at the Meigs County
Health Department, 9 to II
a.m. and I to 3 p.m. Take
child 's immunization record
and Medi ca id card, if
applicable. Parent or legal
guardian must accompany.

Black Diamond Girl Scouts
donate gift to Rifes

.

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Celebr&lt;tting special·
·· ·..· · · ·with you!

Second Mars rover lands successfully,
begins sending pictures back t~ Earth
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - · to be the smoothest, flattest
NASA's Opportunity rover region on Mars. Me1idiani lies
zipped its first pictures of Mars 6.600 miles and halfway around
to Earth early Sunday, deli@:ht- the planet from where
ing and puzzling scientists JUSt Opportunity's twin. Spirit, landhours after the unmanned . ed Jan. 3.
spacecraft successfully landed
Initial analysis of the images
on the Red Planet three weeks suggested Opportunity landed
behind its identical twin. ·
within a shallow crdler. Its low nm
· .n,e pictures showed a sur- shouldn't block the mlling robot's
face smooth and dark red in JXIIh once it gets going, Squyres
some places and strewn with said
fragmented slabs of light
"It's smooth sailing to the
bedrock in others. Bounce horizon," he said. ·
marks appatentl~ left by the
More immediately, the
rover'srurbag~on landing were
rover's path to the martian
clemly visible in .the fore- surface from its lander also
ground.
appeared unobstructed by its
"I am flabberga sted. I ani deflated air bags, mission
astonished. I am blown away. manager Matt Wallace said.
Opportunity has touched (luffed-out pieces of air .bag
down in an alien and bizarre delayed Sptrit's roll-off for
landscape," said Steven several days.
S9uyres, the mission 's main
Together, the twin, 384sctentist, at a news confer- pound rovers make up a sin ence early Sunday. "I still gle $820 million mission to
don't know what we're look- seek out geologic evidence if
ing at."
Mars ever was a wetter world
The National Aeronautics capable of sustai ning life.
and Space Administration NASA launched · Spirit on
began receiving the first of June 10 and Opportunity foldozens of black-and-white lowed, July 7. Each carries
· and color images from nine cameras and six scientif. Opportunity about I a.m. ic instruments.
PST, or four hours after its
On Wednesday, Spirit
apparently flawless landing. developed serious problems,
Mars at the time was 124 cutting off what had been its
million miles from Earth .
·own steady flow of pictures
Mission members hooted -and other scientific data.
and hollered as the images
Scientists said Saturday
splashed on a screen in mis- they should be able to fix the
ston control at NASA's Jet problem in coming weeks.
Propulsion Laboratory.
NASA administrator Sean
.'~ The pictures just· blow me
O'Keefe broke open a bottle
away. We ' ve certainly not of champagne and toasted the
been to this place before," mission - just as he did after
deputy project manager Spirit's own landing. ''
Richard Cook said:
. "As the old saying goes,
The unmanned, six-wheeled . it 's far better to be lucky than
rover landed at 9:05 p.m. PST good, but you know, the
in Meridiani Planum, believed harder we work the Iuckier

,.

we seem to get," O' Keefe
said. adding "no one dared
hope" Jhat both' rover landings would be so successful.
NASA sent Spirit to Gusev
Crater, a broad depression
believed to once have contained a lake . It landed
Opportunity in Meridiani
Planum, which scienti sts
believe abounds in a mineral
called gray hematite . The
· iron-rich mineral typically
forms in marine or volcanic
· environments marked by
hydrothermal activity.
NASA launched two rovers
to double it s chances of successfully landing on Mars.
Just one in.three international
efforts to land on the planet
has succeeded.
As of early Sunday, .there
were a record five spac~craft
operating on or aroun~ 1).1ars.
Two NASA satellites and one
from the European Space
Agency are orbiting the planet.
Just 24 hours earlier, .'with
Spirit's prognosis ~ncertain and
Opportunity still thousands of
miles from Mars, NASA seientists had been unsure what the
day would bring.
"There was a good chance
we would be t1ghting a war
on two fronts," Wallace, the
mission manager, said.
" Instead, we have the best
party in town."

•

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_Recently, a needs survey was circulated in the village for
residents opinion as to what projects would be of utmost
importance within the Village of Middleport Public hearings
were also held to ascertain the needs.

DEAR ABBY: I am 19 and
have been with "Mike': for
four years . We became
engaged a year ago. This is
my first and only Iong-term
relationship. Mike is kind ,
loving and would do anything for me.
In the beginning I was in
love with him, but now I
realize that I'm not ready for
a serious commitment, especial ly since I've had no experience dating anyone else. I
stopped wearing my engagement ring because I'm not
sure I' ll ever marry him .
When Mike asked me
about the ring, I said, "I
bought it, so I can choose
when to wear it." (Mike didn't have credit, .so we used
my credit card, ~nd I make
the monthly payments.) I
began thinking. "What if?"
when another guy I know
told me I was cute and asked
for my phone number.
I care about Mike and
don't want to hurt him, but
I'm not in love with him ·
anymore. How can I end thi s
without starting World War
III in our families? My parents love him more than they
love me, and when he and I
argue, I get a guilt trip from
. them and feel like I have to
apologize to him and make
everything better.
Sometimes I wish he
would break up with me and
move out so I don't have to
be the one to do it. Mike says
I treat liim like dirt. Could I
be doing it subconsciously ''
Abby, please help. I want
out. ~ IN OVER MY HEAD
DEAR IN : What Mike is
interpreting as being treated

~,

Dear
Abby

like dirt is your effort - conscious or otherwise - to distance your,self from' the relationship . It is not abusive to
admit that you have made a
mistake. The time has come
for you to level with Mike
and your. family, and t9 tell
them plainly that you are not
ready for a permanent com·
mitment.
I don't know which of you
signed the lease on your
dwelling, but the one who
didn ' t should move. And let
this be a lesson to you. It
appears you were so desperate for commitment fcom
Mike that you were willing
to pay for your own engagement ring . So c,lon 't blame
Mike, and don't blame your
parents . You got yourself
into this t1x, and it's time to
accept your responsibility
and put things right.
DEAR ABBY: I am ·a 16year-old male, and I have
this problem telling the truth .
I lie mainly about my grades.
I am a good student, but I
just don't put forth a lot of
effort.

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Keeping
·Meigs
in'formed

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Street Improvements
Fire Equipment &amp; Facilities
Sidewalk Repairs
Demolition of unsightly structures
Historic Preservation
Water &amp; Sewer bnprovements
Stonn Drainage bnpro!~ments
..
DOYOUWANTTOADDYOUROP~ONi

.
DO YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT PROJECI'S ARE BEING CONSIDERED? .

THERE WILL BE A PUBLIC HEARING ON Th~y,
January 27,2004 at 7:00 at the Middleport American Legion
HillooMillStreet
~
.

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YOURATIENDANCE IS NEEDED TO MAKE TinS
GRANfPOsSffiLE! SUPPORTYOUR~LAGE!

will be published

Friday
February 13th
in The Daily Sentinel

lo the Pleasant Valley Hospital Obstetrics Depar,tment in honor of Juliette Gordon Low, founder
t&gt;f the Girl Scouts of the USA. The gift was awarded to Cheryl and Charles. Rtfe of Gallipolis who
welcomed their daughter, Christa, into the ""orld on Thursday, Jan . 8. Chnsta, shown here w1th
her mother, was the first female child to be born at PVH in 2004.

Fundralser
·planned
· MIDDLEPORT
A
fimdraiser luncheon to benefit Angie Swift will be held
in Peoples Bank's Middleport
Friday and
branch on
Saturday. The cost is $3 for
two hot dogs, potato chips
imd a soft drink. Baked
items will also be available.
Swift was the recipient of a
. pancreas and Jddney trans- ·
plant in Dece mber, and is
recovering at home. She is

j!. '

~~· ,$ 800

the wife of Middleport
Police .Chief Angie Swift.

Seed
applications
available
POMEROY
- Meigs
Cooperative · Parish will
take applications for garden
seed from Meigs County
residents
throughout
February, from · 9 a.m . to I
p.m.,
Tuesday
through
Friday, at 311 Condor St.,
Pomeroy.

. ·celebrotlng specia!

· days wilb you!
Sunday linie~-Sentinel·
740-992-2155.
.

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•

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Also a special section is available
for ·ln Memory Valentine Pets

.
:rhe Black Diamond Girl Scouts of Mason County recently donated a deluxe box of b&lt;Jby items

.,..

Dear Abbr is wrirren br
Abigail Vait Buren, · also
known CIS · Jeanne Phillips,
and 1va s fo unded bv her
morhe~
Pau1ine Phillips.
Dear
Abbr
ar ·
Wrire
www.DearAbb r.com . r;r P.O.
Box 69440. Los Angeles. CA
90069.

"For Pets Only"

.

JEAN TRUSSELL
•
MEIGS GRANTS.ADMINISTRATOR

I got a progress report the
other day and was failing
Spanish with a 67 . When my
dad asked about my grades. I.
told him J. had gotten a 70 in
Spanish because that is a·
passing grade. When he saw
the report. he yelled at me.
He was disappointed about
the grade but even more so
abo ut the lie.
I feel comfortable telling
my mom the truth because
she and I are really close.
But I can't seem to tell my
dad ' the truth , ever. I don 't
know wh y.' I don't know how
to stop lying . Please help me,
I'm begging you . - PINOC:
CHIO
DEAR PINOCCHIO: You
and your fath er need to work
on your relation ship . He
doesn't trust you because
yo u li e. You lie because you
don't trust him enough to
honestly discuss your difficulties. Clip this letter, show ·
it to him and· tell him you
wrote iC You and your father
cou ld both benefit from professio nal counseling ·to
improve your level of communi cation and resolve your
trust issues.

Our Special Page(s)

Sunday .
Times-Sentinel

Routines

The following areas of need were chosen by the public survey
as the most important:

Monday, January 26, 2004

Teen is ready to disengage
from unfulfilling engagement

MIDDLEPORT RESIDENTS!
· The Mei~ Grants Office is preparing a $300,000 CDBG
Community Distress Grant for the Village ofMid()leport.
This grant is designed to improve your residential community!

Page!A3

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Meigs. 992-2155

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Per Ptcture
Pre-Paid

II
Tessa The

CaJ

�Monday, January 26,

&lt;.,

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My e-m,ulbag was bnmnung wnh responses to l.1s1
week\ column .tbout J.tcques
Chtr.tc\ proposed ban on
lsldmtL helldsc,trves - diong
"tth jtunho ctlJCiftxes and .til
yamllllkes - m France's public schools 'Good gnel · one
con-espondent decl,tred, LOlleluding a negative Cll tlquc,

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-21.57
, www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-lntenm Publisher

Diana
West

ll S JUSt .1 Sl:dff 1•

Charlene Hoeflich

GO&lt;'d ~nd. ll's anylhm~ hut
A.nd I s.t) that n01 so much to
repn ~l' l.lst week\ clrgumenh

General Manager-News Ed1tor

Co11gress slra/1 make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religio11, or prohibiting tlte
free exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom
of speecl1, or of the press; or the right of tilt'
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tire Go11ermneut for a redress of griel!ances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Confused
GIVING CREDIT

WHERE CREDIT
IS DUE ...
NOVEL IDEA.

mouth lul from an old
s,uurday send I, btll then ag,un.
m o~v he 1he multi has a pntnl
Th.1t '' tl women were ever to
,tch,cw equ.tlity thll&gt;ugllout
hl.1m - and lhat means
,tdltC\ mg a t.mge ol extreme\\ h. h ll nghl s. Irom lhe ability

hut 1.tthl'l tl) LOll..,Jde t tnte t \l'll JJJg dcvdopments - sm:h .1s

1l1c IC.tcllon ol Gi.tnd Mu tll
Shctld1
Ahdul.1111
h111
' A bdull.th ,d-Shetkh In .t ne11 ,_
p.qJCI pho1ogr.1ph ot ,, k.t&lt;.llll ~
SttuLiJ

wom.ul

A1 db tan

bU'\JllL'ss-

tlhout her hc;~dsc,ul
I hts. s.ud the grand multt
S.tuc_il Ardht.t\ le.uJm g ~ ~ 11 11

g.tous .tuthor 1ty. tefcrrmg to the

hc,tcl-exposc•d
Muslun
II'Om.!n, ·" prohiblled lor all I
severe!} condemn tillS m.!IICI
.111d w.trn o t gr.tve LOt1Se'luences I ;~m p.uned by such
sh,unettll beh.tVHH 111 lhc
cotuttry ot the two hol y
mosques Wh,tl was published
111 some newsp.tpers about IhiS
betng the st,trt oll1beratmg lhe
S,tud' womctn
such lalk "
null and \Old. One's dut) " to
obey sha11 ,1 by complymg
wtth otder&gt; and shunnmg tlldt
v. htch ts forbtdden · Not domg
so. he contmued, wtll 'cause
the &lt;.lours ol evil to open
bel ore the people ol Islam '
The doors ot ev il '' Th1 s
sounds like .1 melodr.ml.lltc

hJ \Ole to bemg

c~hl e

'""e'' l1cense ~

to get .l

m.~ybe lhe
v.hok ot lsl,un v.uuld um.tvcl
Sll.llt,t. c&gt;r lsl,umc law, wh1ch
t:mhl1cs the tn eq uallly ol
\\ome-n .md non-Mu sluns.
"ou ld IJC sh1 cdded. and I he
l10,u 1'111\~rarc hy would lurch 11
not !llppk

A htg ·11 · but nor mronce1\-

able ThiS nMy explatn somethmg .thotlt the mtenstty of the
opfXN IIOII to France's hqah
b,m among Muslim .tCliVISts.
I10m r-,,mce\ olliq;~lly recoglllled Cmmul ol 1he Muslim
F,1111l lo B11ldtll s ex tremist
g1oup AI-Muhalffoun. The
qucst1un 1s, 111 reJectmg the
Mushm headscwf. do Western
governn1en1 s .tftirm secLtlar
values - n,unely, Westelll
·t:IVIItzatton's htghly evolved
trudtllons of tolerance, equality ,md liberty'&gt; Last week. I
wrote lh,lt, given Islam's trad1-

I sltll don'l h.tve ,t probl~m
lion of repres-mg women Wld
wnh
the French ban on he,tdnon-Muslims, a resull of lhe
tw1n precepts of Jihad and scarves or even beards m thetr
dhimm1tude, lhe headscarf '" publtc schools Alter all , my
,1 lr&lt;~ppmg ol tiMt tmditton own secul,tr school unt\Qml,
could we ll be banned lrom an L A -does-Gre,ll Brnam
secul.u schoob Wlthoul sacn- costume of blue bl,tzet s. pleatticmg Western pnnc1ple s I ed skuts and saddl~ uxlords.
sttll think so But 10 v. h,u end' mcluded a h.urcut mde lot
TI1i s week. French educ.tllon boys that b,tnned bedrds - .\S
m111tster Luc Fen-y noied thdt 1f - and sti pul.ttecl sidebum
be;ttds. lou. tl they were dcler· lenglh Bul l\&lt;11 Spencer 1.JISes
lllllled to be stgns of fatth ,1 lhought-pwvokmg pomt
could be outLtwed under the 1ha1 France's act1ons - ,md
school b,m on rehg1ous sym- stm1lar act1ons contempl.tied
bols Thts p10mpted author across Europe - are stn cl ly
and lsl,umc experl Rubert cosmettc p,ttches to mask lhe
Spencer to explam on hiS Web underlymg conlltt:t between
site (www flh.tdw,uch org) the West and lsl.un. between a
v.hy he belie, es the French European Chns11anny th.tl IS
apprn.tc h - undc1 constderu contJ'ICttng .md ,, Ewopt~~m
tlon 01 m cl let:! 111 Bl'lg1um lsl,un tll.llts e,p,111dmg.
&lt;1nd c~ l.uge pan o! Gcrm.mv
A.nd wh.u of sccula11 sm '
Also til ls Wt.-"'ek. Lu1 ottogcnLu·l·
- '' '"'} otl the m,1rk
In .111 cntrv duhbed ·A close .111 French p11est w.ts tined
sh,tve ln1 FIL'Illh Muslims ,. ne,uly $1.000 to1 a letter to
M1 Spc•nt'l'l Willes 'lnsteudol lJar!Shtoner!Cih.!l l.!ikd ag.unst
gn 111
' lhe mot ot the a Mu shm ideology !hat
pr"h
1illL' ll eiKhj.u-e 1,11 · lhre.tlens 1he whole world' and
gL'It n ~ oi llllutl.te They c..m't or
called the Koran a ·nl.lllUal for
wont ~ct Mu,hm~ to renounce the extenston of the ktngdom
1hc sh.ttl.t ;~nd .tcccpt Wesletn of the devil Assummg that
pnnnptcs ot tolerance and secul.tr Frnoce WIShes to
eq u.tln v lltslc.Jd . Europea n pohce the reli g1ous speech of
Mw~hm g tmtp~ dtC loudly
th p11esls, ,ts M1 Spencer
Jenoun1.:i ng ll :-,~ tl'ml.ttton So noles. 11 should .tbo pohce the
the Ftench 111stead go ,tgamst tcltgtous speech of tis tmams.
the oUiward mamfest.tllons Ill Will n'' Should 1t'? It would
Ihe Islamtc re1eCt1on of those seem that lhe real banle over
thmgs But does l the French liberty, equahty and fraternity
govem rnent] really thmk that has yet to begin
(Dwna We&gt;! 1.1 a m lwmml
beardless.
bareheaded
Musltms wtll not try to mslt· ]01 lite W(/\/ungron Times
tute an lslamtc slate 111 She can be &lt;ontoc!ed 11(1
France?'
dicmcm w@ \'el t;.on net )

~~

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Recorder Judy King
reports the loll ow111g lransfers uf real eslate recently
posted by her oftice
Montte R. Sanders; Lola F
Sanders, to Ruger L Hawk,
Shtrley Hawk, deed, Ohve
Lavina
C.
Brannon,
deceased, to Paul Dean
Brannon. Joy
Kathleen
Btannon. deed, Ohve.
1
Brune1 Land Co to Kevm
C Harn s, C.trroll L Harns,
deed. Orange
George W Pulltns. Lmda
S Pullins, Angela L Pulltns,
Angeh,t L Pulhns. to
Columbu s Southern Power
Co , e,tsement, Sahsbury.
G.uy
L
G1bbs
to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement, Sutton
M A Sldtet , Anna J. Slater.
10 Columbus
Southern
Power, e,tsement. Sctpio.
Clyde Slone. Wanda Lee
Slone , to Kenneth Lee Slone,
deed. Columbta
Ronald D Hage tty, Judy
..A.... H,Jge 11y. to Davtd ~­
Connll. deed, Salem
Norm,t J F011ney. K.tthryn
M -Fortney, Bnan Connolly,
Tony.t Connolly, Robe11 J.
Fm tney. Robett Lee Fortney,
to Tnnothy J Sellers, Ambet
M Sellers. deed , Olive
Edward R Foreman to
Eber I Pickens. judgment
en11 v Lebanon
Ciutrles Franklin Gardner
to LISa Ann Dust, Melissa
Lynn Warth
James R Sheets, J Sheets,
Jenmfer L Sheets, to John B
Loh se. Mary Beth Lohse,

easement, S~io
Cassandra A Bowen to
Tuppers
Plams-Chester
Water Dtstnct. nghl of way,
Orange.
Larry Wtles, Ann S. Wiles,
to TP-CWD, right of way.
Sutton.
James Satterfield, Marjone
Satterfield, to TP-CWD,
nght of way, Sutton
Rtcbard E Weaver, Mary
Margaret Weaver, to Paula L
Hart, deed, Sutton/V1llage of
Racine.
Ora
Paulme
Myers,
deceased, to Boggess Real
Estate, deed, Olive
Myers,
Ora
Pauline
deceased, 10 Mark D.
McCoy, Rebecca McCoy,
deed, Ohve
Ora
Pauline
Myers,
deceased, lo Eldon McCoy,
Loretta McCoy, deed, Ohve
Myers,
Ora
Pauline
deceased, 10 1 Jeffrey B.
Russell, Pamela M. Russe ll ,
deed, Ohve
Carmel)o L Btlikam Trusl
Agteemenl to Gayle L. Estes,
affidavit, Orange/01 ive.
Gayle L. Esles, Johnny A.
Estes, to Joe D Boyles,
Laurie G. Boyles, deed,
Orange/Oh ve
James C. Birchfield lo
Oakwood Mobtle Homes,
Inc., deed, Salisbury
Famtly Homes, Inc , to
Mason County E Corp ,
deed, Pomewy.
Ace Htgh Music, Inc , to
Wayne Dent, deed, Salisbury
Winfred L Dent, Evelyn
M. Dent, to Wayne Denl ,
deed, Village of Middleport

THEN

I

I

NOW

I
WI&lt; I'll% YOU

CAI'TAlN I&lt;.'IIV6A~"'·

CAPTAIN
KANGAROO

SAYS TO
ALWAYS VSE

GOOD

MANNERS.

SPoN6E

eoe

JUST

FAR TEO

County
Auditor
N,mcy
Parke1 Gruese1 IS acceplmg
appliCations
lor
lhe
Homestead
Real
Estale
Exemptton Program. The
state-reimbursed program
provtdes rea! cslate tax
retluctton tor se ntor ctllze ns and d1sabled
In order to qualify, a
homeowner mu sl be at
least 65 ye,trs of age durmg 2004 or be permanent~~
and tot.tlly dtsabled,
have a total household

res1dence as of Jan. I,
2004 Appltcatlons are also
avatlable tor owners of
manufactured homes (the
quahficauons are the same
as for real estate)
The deadline to apply for
the program for tax year
2004 ts June 7.
Those who m1ghl quahfy
are asked to contact the
audttor's offtce al 9922698 Office hours are
8 30 am to 4 :30 p m ,
Monday through Friday

·ABC says Barbara Walters will
step down as co-host of '20/20'

Prison sentencing needs to account for children

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letten to the edt tor are welcome. They .should
he Ins than 30Q H'ords. Allle/lers are subject to
editing all(/11111\t be 1igned and include addre.11·
and telephone IWmbn: No

un~igned

/etten wt/1

he published. Letters should be• in good ta.lfe,
addressing tssues, not personalitie.1.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valle y Publishing

s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

Co.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 213-9&amp;0)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published
every
afternoon,
Our mam concem 1n all stones IS to be Monday through Fnday, 1t 1 Courl
accurate If you kr1ow of an error m a Street, Pomeroy, Oh1o Penod1cal
story, call the newsroom at (740} 992

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Our main number Is
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Department exte'nslons are:

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Member: The Associated Press
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Editor: Chanene Hoeflich Exl t2

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Pomeroy,

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Mall Subscription
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Em.tm DaVIs Sipped he1 coltee at the Butterc up rest.1ur,tnl
111 0dkland, C.tlil , on Mond.ty
murnmg us she conSidered hc1
answer I had asked wh.ll she
1hough1 of lhe plea b.ug,un
stmck bel ween the U S altm ·
ney genewl ,md Lea .tnd
And1ew F,tslow. lhc multumlhon.me couple ch,uged wnh a
slew ot lelomes m lhe Enron
sc,un The Fasto\\s likely will
be allowed to set ve thetr sentences one afler the othct. so
one parent w1ll be able to sl.ty
home wnh thetr two young
sons
·My fit stleaclton was complete out1 age," she sa1d.
l w.ts surpnsed. Isn't thiS
how she wants the system to
work, tor prosecutors and
Judges 10 take chtldren mto
account when senlencmg parents?
'Yes. but I don't tlunk this
case Will set a standard," Davts
smd 'This tS how they deal
wuh two rich wb1te people
TI1ey are still nol goin~ to care
about the black molhtr m
Oakland who sold drugs '
Dav1s knows about ch1ldren
and prison She remembers
wmtmg all day for"her father lo
show up al her stxth-grade
gmduatwn. He had been m
prison smce she was 6 years
old, bul Emant had convmced
herself he wout, come home
that day Stxth rade marked,
for her, the en of childhood,
and wasn't that enough lime to
be Without her father? She
became angry when she real,
ized she would \ be spendmg
her adolescence iw
~ ithout him,
too
For a year afte the gradualion, EmWlt refu1sed lo drive
the mne hours with her mother
from thetr home in New York
to the pnson in Virginia But
she m1ssed him. He was her
father. She loved him. When
she began vtsitmg ~gain, she

• York to the Bay Area th1s tall
in part because the Bay Area is
a hotbed of ,tcltvism around
lhc 1ssue. Her group ts part of
a Bay Area coalition, the San
FranCISCO Partnership for
Joan
lncrucetaled Parents. that Ryan
after two years of sludy - has
come up w1th a B1ll of Rtghts
for ch1ldren of tmpnsoned p&lt;~r·
ents It .1lso supports lwo
,was oltl enough to wondct pieces ot legislat1on sponsmed
Ctltforma
State
why there wet-e no games m by
the ;JSitmg room, why Assembl~woman
Wilma
mmates were so often tmpris- Chan, D-Oakland, who will
oned fw from home She won· hold hearmgs on the bills Feb
dered why the rules suddenly 5 m Sacramento, Calif
One call s for pohce and
t:hanged one day and fathers
were no longer allowed even shenfl's depuhes to develop a
to hold hands w11h the1r chil-" protocol when arrestmg a pardren. She wpndered why ent with chtldren presenl
pohce often left children alone Amazingly, only 42 percent of
at home when they arresled law enforcement agenCieS 10
parents.
California address lhe caretakEmam IS now 25 Her father mg needs of children during
ts sltll behind bars in Deeitield arrests, accordmg to the
CorrectiOnal
Facility in California Research Bureau.
Virgmta. And, 111 her JOb with Only 13 percent of law
the Caltfomm pnson-relorm enforcement personnel even
group Centerforce, she's trying ask whether an arrestee has
to change a system that is dependent ch1i'dren
A\though natiOnal sta!lstics
breathlakingly indifferent to
duldren whose parents are aren't available, Cahf&amp;nia's
pohce protocols - 01 lack
tmpnsm1ed.
thereof
- seem representaThe Faslow chtldren will
soon jom the more than 2 mil- tive. 'The greatest number ot
lion children in Amenca who agenc1es don't deal wtth it at ,
have a parenl behmd bars. all They don't ever ask
to
Amnesty (an:estees), 'Do you have chilAccordmg
International, a recent U.S dren at home and are they
study found that more than OK?' That's the norm," says
half of the chtldren of women Diane Johnston, executive
pnsoners dtd not visit their dJtector of the Center for
mothers while they were Children of Incarcerated
mcarcemted. OVer 60 per&lt;:ent Parents
The second bill encourages
of the ch1ldren who didn't vtsit
·hved more than I 00 miles judges lo take parenting
from the prison where their responstbtlities mto account
'
during sentencing.
mother was iri prison.
'1
remern,be(
one
of
my
ftrSt
'Children do the lime, too,
and they're mnocent," Davts cases I had a client taken into
srud. 'Bul the system deals custody for testing diny for
with them as an extension of drugs," said San Francisco
lhe way they treat the r,ublic defender Jeff Adacht.
He was the smgle parenl of
mmates."
Dav1s moved from New 1wo young children When I

told the JUdge the man had 10
ptck up h1s kids from school
that day, tl1e JUdge said, 'Call
the orphanage.' There 1s
almost no consideration tm
how the children are affected '
By Apnl, Adachi expects lo
h1re a socml worker 111 the
PD's oftice ass1gned specttically to coordmate the needs
ot children ol p.uenl' m the
county jatl, the firsl of 1ts ktnd
m a pubhc defenders office
Allottmg resources to chtldren of convicted cnmmals
tsn't aboul being soft on cnme,
or about ennchmg lhe hves ot
people m pnson They
screwed up They're paymg
the pnce
This is about common sense
and common decency. By fostenng the 'connection belween
parent and chtld, by offenng
parentmg cla~se s and allowmg
parents to put the lessons into
practice dunng their chtldren's
vistls, by malting mmates lake
respons1btlity for the damage
they have done to thetr children, we send home sJronger,
more nunuring parents who
have a fightmg chance of
keepmg 1he1r own chi ldren
safe and out ot trouble.
' I look hke the poster ch1ld
of children ot incarcerated
parents," said Davt s, a college
graduate who speaks on the
issue all over the country. 'But
I'm not OK. I have abustve
relauonsh1ps. I ballooned up to
225 pounds 111 college. l go to
extremes in everyrhmg.
'Even now, when I go 1nside
San Quentm to work w1tl1 the
inmates, tt's overwhelmmg. I
don't see the cold-blooded
cnmmals other people see. l
see my father 111 all of them ' ·
(Joan Ryan is a colrllmW/
for the San FrwlCIS£'0
Cluvnicle Send commems to
her m care of this newspaper
or send Iter e-mail at panryml@sjcltronicle.cmn)

Bv

LISA

CRUMP

MANAGER, ATH[l.IS SCC!AL.. SE~URITY OFRCE

Question Please explam to
me how l would qualify f01
Soctal Secunty wtdow's ben·
eftts
Answer · To get Soc1al
Secunty w1dow's benetns.
you must have been marned
(generally at least a year) to
your husband before he died
Obvtously, your hu sband
must have worked and patd
Soctal Secumy taxes, usually
for at least 10 years You also
must be "full retirement age"
(so mewhere between age 65
and 67, depend111g on you r
year ol blfth) to recetve a full
benefit on your husband 's
Soctal Secunty record. But
Widows can lake red uced
benefits as early as age 60. or
even as e&lt;~rly as age 50 1ft hey
are disabled
Also, you can get ,t
wtdow's benefit at any age tl
you are can ng tor your
deceased husband's chtld
who ts younger than age 16
or disabled These are the
baste rules, but, of course,
there are many more Call 1800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800325-0778) and ask for a copy
ot the , booklet, What Every
Woman Should Know You
can fmd the same booklet
online at www soc talsecun -

ty gov/pubs/1 0 I 27 html.
Que stiOn . Can I draw
Social Secunty on my .
deceased wt!e's record ' She
died three years ago "' age
61 I
am 55 She WdS not a Citizen, but a permanent resident
of the Umted Slates and had a
Socwl
Securny Number smce the
1960s She worked and pmd
Social Secumy taxes most ot
thalli me
l have not renMrrted, and
we do not have any minor
children
Answer. Generally, you
would nave lo be age 60 to
quahfy lor Widower's benelits on your Wife's Soc1al
Secunty record But you
cou ld gel those benefits now
it you .tre diSabled A dtsabled widower (or Widow)
can get benefits as early ,ts
age 50.
The fact that your Wtfe
wasn 't a clltzen " not an
tssue. As long as she was ltvtng here legally, and worked
and paid SoCial Secunly
Iaxes fot at le.tst I0 yea rs.
the n you' re potentially ehgt ·
ble lor \vtdower's benefitS If
you me also due rettremenl
bcnelits on your own record,
one of our representative s
can explain how we coordinate benefits on two Soctal

NEW YORK (AP)
Barbara Walters, ,who has
Interviewed scores of the
famou s and mfamous m a
legendary television career,
satd Sunday she will step
down thts fall as host of the
ABC newsmagazine "20/20"
after 25 years.
Walten;, 74, wdl do about six
intetview specials a year for ABC
News, mcfuding her annual preOscar show. She' II also stay as
executive producer and co-host of
the daynme talk show "The View"
"Startmg m September, I
want to have lnore flexibility
in my hfe wuhout the res ponstbthtles of a weekly newsmagdztne ," she satd in a
stalement ISsued by ABC.
The Walters mtemev., often
done w1th a soft-locus camera
atld featunng teary subjects, ISa~
much a part of telev1sion news
lore a' Mike Wallace bonng m
on a crook on "60 Mmutes"
''20/20," wh1ch she currently co-hosts wtth John
Stossel, is likely to contmue
but be less focused on maJor
interview subjects.
The •·get," the grab of a
telebnty mtemew subject, IS an
mcreasmgl y tmpott&lt;mt part of
nelwork news operatiOns and
Walters, along wtth ABC News
colleague Dtane Sawyer and
NBC's Katie Coone, has been
an10ng the fi ercest competitors.
Among Walters' major
"20/20" mterview s~bJect' were
Cuban Pres1den1 Fidel Castro,

Christopher Reeve after his ridmg acctdent, a post-indictment
Martha Stewart, Sen. Hillary
Clinton about her autobiography, and Patricia Hearst.
Her March 1999 interview
with Monica Lewinsky drew
a staggering 48.5 million
vtewers.
Walters told The New York
T1mes that she's become
uncomfortable with the pressure to find mterview subJects
appealmg to young people who
are less interested m news
"We dtd Castro and 11 was a
huge mtervtew," she told the
Tunes. "But we did much better
in the mtings with Courteney
Cox and Davtd Arquette "
Wal~er.; was co-host of "'lfJI2fJ'
Wlth Hugh Downs until his retirement in f999 Downs wa' repl=d
by Jolm Miller, and Stt=l lOOk
over wren Miller left ABC News
Walters wa' upset m 200 I
when ABC network executives
moved "20/20" from its usual
Fnday perch to Wednesdays, TI
change thai proved short-hved.
The ep1sode only served to
make ABC executtves look bad
and stren~then Walters' hand
''20/20' is averajling just
under 10 mtllion vtewers a
week thts season, up from 8.8
tmlhon last year
Walters was co-host of NBC's
"Today" show for 13 years
before joining ABC News m
1976, where she was the first
woman to anchor a, network
evenmg newscast.

TV /Ch.mnel 44 m Cambrtdge
one cable channel WOUB II.
and SIX r,tdio stattons
WOUB- 1140 AM , WO U\3'91 3 FM , WOUC-89 I FM,
WOUH 91 9 FM. WOUL89 I FM ,md WOUZ-lJO I
FM The Cen1e1, .t trusled
communit~ resource. uses the
Beginmng powe1 of noncotl)lllCICial
ATHENS Feb. 7, WOUB-TV will air leleviSton , radto and other
the new GED Conneclton medm. such as lh e World
series offenng area restdents W1de Web, to ennch the lives
a second chance at rece1ving of chtldren ,tnd adults m
thetr high school equtvalency so utheastern Ohto, , western
West Virgtntd , ,md e;u•tern
diplomas
GED Connection IS targel- Kentucky through qual11y
ed for those adults who programs and ed ucattonal
would like to obta111 their servtces that mtorm, enlightGED, but are unable 10 attend en. msptre. and entertam
tegular GED classes The
program allows mdtvtduals
to study for the Gen er.tl
Equtvalency Dtploma (GED)
test in their own homes, at
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
their own paces
College ha~ released the
Career
The senes IS d1vtded mto
reading, wrmng, and mathe- hst.. of student' named to the
matics
sections
GED achievement list for Fall quarter
ConnectiOn begms atring on 2003.
WOUB-TV Feb. 7 at 6:00 Those students obtaJrung a pera.m. and 6:30 a.m. wtth a fect 4:0 grade pomt average
repeat broadcast the follow- mcluded: Pamela Alkire, David
Belmda
Bates,
ing Monday at 3 p m. Barnes,
Cassandrd
Brumfield.
Amy
Students can reg1ster and
choose to purchase inexpen- Clonch, Nalasha Daniels,
sive workbooks, $15 each or Robert Dougherty, Kelly
$40 for the set of three, by Eichinger, Amanda Fields, Amy
F1fe, Pat Gay, Dale Gtbbs,
calling 1-800-228-READ
Homework help is also Deruse Gibeaut, Crystal Gibson,
available to siUdents m the Xanthe Glassburn, Susan Goad,
pmgram Local Aduli Baste Amy Harden, Juanita Hunter,
and Literacy Educalton Damelle Jackson, Rae- Mash,
groups w1ll staff a toll tree Amanda Mtracle, Chandra
Mullen,
homework hotline, and w1ll M1tchell. Ahsha
assist with reg1 s1ration tor the Amand.t Mulhns, Veron tca
GED test when students are Nelson, Mel,mte Qualls, Jesstc&lt;t
Roush, Lmd,t Stbley, Lora
ready
Produced w1th humo1, Sn1ith, J,ull}C Supple, ,md Tin.t
Imagination , and crealivlty Tompkins
Students .tchtevmg a 3 5 01
by the Kentucky Network.
bettet
gr,tde pmnt dVCrdge
Kentucky's pubhc teleVISIOn
network, GED Connection ts mcluded lmts Amnch. Mary
funded
by
the
Oh1o Be.tver, Lottte Boggs, Belly
Umverslty
Off1ce
of Collms, Y1ck&lt; Cox, Mat y
Reg10nal Htgher Education DWliels, Delorse Elliott, Tammy
and by the Ohm Ltleracy Garber. Amy Gnftith. Mchss"
Network
· Hooten, Sharon Hurt. Chnstte
The Ohw Umverstty Johnson . Demse Keyes, Kevm
Telecommumcat1ons Center, Kuhn , lenmfer Mum mg.
a uml ol the College of Stephame McKenzie. JonatiMl
Commumca110n. operdtes O'Dell, Tracy Price. Fr,mt:esca
two
televi siOn Roush. Becky Shamblm, Tony.1
statwns-WOUB -TV /Channel Sinclatr. Alison Smtth, Johnn~
20 m Athens and WOUC- Spauldmg, Megan Te.tchoui.

Great Lakes stales have contributed to the mid -winler
count increase
State wildlife officials confrom Page A1
duct the survey each January.
It Is coordina1ed nationally
I 00 patrs of nesting bald by the U.S. Fish and Wtldhte
eagles m Ohio," satd Steven Serv1ce. It documems trends
A. Gray, ch1el of the wildlife m wmtermg populations of
diVI sion . :·Jf not lh1s summer, eagles 111 the lower 48 states,
we should reach the goal in mcludmg both bald and goldthe nexl few years "
en eagles.
Bald eagles were observed
The state's bald eagle man- ,
in 57 of the state's 88 coun- agement program is funded
ues, with the largest number by contnbullons lo the state
along the western shore of mcome tax check-off proLake Ene. Sandusky County gram for Wildlife Diversity
reponed 67 btrds.
and Endangered Species and
State btolog1sts believe by the sale of Ohio conservaincreased nesting populations tion license plates lhat
and the ex'-'ellenl reproduc- mclude the bald eagle and
tion success 111 the state, cardinal plates
Canada and the northern

Survey

Secunly at:counls.
Que stton I am 75 years
old. but receml y learned l do
not ha ve much longer 1o live
My grown daughter h ves
wflh me She 1s di sabled and
ts recel\ 111g SSDI Ca n I
leave her my en11re estale
(home and annu1t1es) when I
d1e Without her be m~J pen,illzed by Sot: tal Securll y' Are
!here restncli(lll S to how
much she can mhenl '
Answe r It yo ur daughter ts
getltng "SSDI." wh1ch st.111d s
for Soctal S ecunt~ dts.!btlny
tn surance. then !here " no ·
lnntl on how much yo u c.tn
leave he1 or how much 111
assets or proper! y she c.tn
ha ve
But 1t she ge ts
Supplemental
Se cunt y
Income dtsah tltl v. wh tch
some people cal i 'SSID "
then money you gtve her will
gene tally
reduce
her
Supplemental
Se curlly
lnwme
checks
That s
because
Supplemental
Sccunty lnwme payments
are based on lhc mcome and
resources ot the rec 1p1ent
Q~ es t1on Will you p.ty
Soc1al Secunty benetiiS 10 ,,
person who has severe menta l disabtht1es &gt;
Answer Any phySical 01
mental tmp.tll men I mtghl
quahty for Socwl Secunty or
Supplemental
Sccunty

Income dtsabiltty benefits .i(
1t ts seve re enough to ~eep a
person from dmng substanllal
work for at least 12 months
It a person '' approved for
dtsab tlny payments, and tf
med1cal records show that
person ts not ~ a pable of handling bt s or her own funds.
we will tss ue the Soct al
Secunty or Supplemental
Secu11t~ Income payment 10
the n.tme ol a respons tble
person we 'd e"gnate as the
-i-ltepresentat1ve payee"
Quesuon- My netghbor ts
on Soc1al Secu111y d1sabiltt y.
.tnd l ~now he IS work111g
Hov. do I reporl hun to Soctal
Secu rt l) mvestt galors 1
Answe1 . Before callmg the
tnvesltgalors. you should
know 1ha1 people who get
Sonal Secunty dtsabllny
bene ills .tre encouraged to try
work1ng. wllh a lorrg-r~nge
goal ol bet:ommg financtally
sell sufftc tent once agam In
lact. there are many mcentl\es built mto the disab1ltty
program tntended to help
people Wtlh dtsabtlittes to ICen ter
the
workforce
However. 11 you really
believe there 1s some wrongdmng c.1ll our traud hothne
.tt I· 800· 269-02 71.

S,mdr,t
Weethee,
Lmda
Mitchell. ,md Karen Waller
Students ach1e;mg a 3 U 01
betler grade pmm average
tncluded· Dmna Angel, Dav1e
Arnt. Sheila Atha. Robm
Atv.ood. Carolyn Barcus.
J,unes Barcus. Amanda Boggs.
M,trk Bov.en. Belinda Bowen,
Crystal C.tdc , Ahce Cremeans.
JesSica Davts, Tom,t D,lVIs.
Jmme Doellet, Shetla Doss,
Hope F1c1rett:h. Jilhan Gardnet,
Hcathe1 Hmless. K11nbeli y
H1 vcly. Angela Jelfers. Bmndy
Johnson, Debr,t Johnson.
Jtmmy Lambert J1 . Ntcole
Lambert. Chastty Mande ville,
Lydm Marr, Chandra Moon,
Knstal Myers. Rachel NewelL
Demetras
Patsons.
Ron
Parsons, Shelonda Petty, Devin
Radchtl, N1cole Ramey, Leshe
Rtchard, Do11s Rose. W,tnda
Rupe. Sharon Rutherford,
Wilham Saxon, tonya Stders,
Roy Smnh , Shauna Spires,
Amy Thompson, Florence
Tomlinson, Kelly Wooldridge,
and Tnna Young
'

and ts a semor maJonng m
athletic uam mg.

School News

GED Connection
offers another
Homestead applications available chance for a
mcome of not more than
STAFF REPORT
$25,000 for tax year 2003, high school
own and occupy the home
POMEROY
Metgs as the pnncipal place of diploma
NEWS@M YDAILYSENTINEL COM

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

·,Land transfers posted Social Sec.urity questions and answers

2004

VVhen is a scaif not just a sct7:if?

The Daily Sentinel

-

PageA4

PINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, January 26,

GCC posts
achievement list

Keeping
Meigs
informed

OnOSU

honor roll
COLUMBUS ~ Kelly Txler
Johnslon of Langsville,
Amanda Rae Hagberg of
Long Boltom, Emily Lmnea
Story of Middleport, Garrett
Clayton Karr of Pomeroy. and
Austin Tylet Litlle and Jesse
Clayton L11tle. both ol Racme ,
have been named 10 Ihe honor
roll al The Oh1o S1,ne
UmverStty for Ihe tall qu.u tet
Sllldents on the OSU Honor
Roll earn a gr.1de pmnt ;~vel ­
,,ge of at le.tst 1 5 on .1 scale
oT 4 0. and v.ere em o iled 101
,ll le,ISI 12 Cl edll hOUI s

Named to
council
POMEROY
- John
H.tgge rty at Pome10y IS , ,
membe1 of the Spott s
Med1ctne Leadership Council
,\1 Wilmmglon College
A 2000 'gr.tdu.lle ot M~1 gs
H1gh School. Haggerty "t he
son of George .tnd M ~11 y
Stewart ol Bunernnt Ave .

Training
program airs
ATHENS - Students are
now bctommg beller ptep.trcd 1m bus mess m the dtgtt.1l ,tge
through
Ace
Networks'
Student
Entreprenuersh 1p Tramtng
1SET) p1 ugrum
The prog1 .tm IS cu1 rently
bemg tattght 111 14 are,l h1gh
schools 111 five southeastem
Ohw counttes SET g1ves stu dents the oppm tumty to learn
dal&lt;l management software.
tnvent produch, and utthze
communication lechnolog)
The next "ThiS Ttme
A1ound
Reinvenlmg
Commumty," .111111g 8 30 A M
onTuesday on the WOUB
Radto Network , locuses on
Student
Entreprenuership
Trammg and us 1mpact on
schools in southeast Oh10
Producer Jenmfer Curry talks
with Vmton Coumy h1gh
school students and thetr
teacher, Judy Banoe, about the
program. Curr~ also speaks
w1th
curnculum coach,
Jenmfer Barden. who explams
the Learmng Cycle model and
how lo facJhtate a student-run
classroom. Cathy Chambers,
Tech
Ventwe s p10gram
&lt;idnumstatoJ. w1ll also ptov1de
tnfurmatton on the h~&gt;tory and
success ol the SETprog1am
ThiS
Tm1e
Around
RemventHH! Corntnlllllty.. 1s a

ye,rr long ,;;,,eo; ~1.11 explores !he
ldblll ol cnmmumty. how (u1d
\t\hy ~.:ommumne ... ch.mge. and
"IMt the future mav hold tot
App.tl.tch,,lll Oh1o · Fe,tlures
locus on

comnum1t1e~

wnhm the

WOUB R.tdlo Netwc~ k cmer·
.t~e ,u-e,t .md mcludes tour quartei I] c.tll-111 dtscusston prog~&lt;uns.
The second dtscusswn progr.tm wtl l &lt;11r on Tuesday. Feb
24 A compamon website "
.tv.nl.tble at
wwv. thiSlJme~uound

(llg and ~Uiuws cotn-

munny members to mter,tel
online The pwgrarn repe.1ts on
Tuesd,tv alwmoons .tt 4 p m
dunng ·th~ aftemoon edtt1on on
the ~OUB R.td1o l\etwo1 k

All styles of carpet are included:
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Sunday .
'Times-Sentinel
Meigs. 992-2155

C::all Ul or atop in.
We'D come to your

home ancl meuure
fora free no
obltgation quote.

Pomeroy, OH • 992-3671

'

•••

•

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�•

PageA6

·OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Prep Scoreboant, Page 82
Iowa tops OSU, Page 86
Bench leads Herd past OU, Page S6

Monday, January :.6, :.oo4

.

Army charges ·Ohio National Guard
soldier for refusing anthrax vaccine
COLUMBUS (AP) - . An on Sunday. He could go to
Ohio National Guard mem- jail and be discharged if conher has been charged by the victed.
_Army with disobeying a fawPfaff said the charge is
ful order after he aga!!J- separ&lt;~te from Hickman 's
refused to take -the anthrax court martial in Ohio last
vaccine.
month. Hickman. 20. of
Spc. Kurt Hickm~in refused Granville, becari1e the ' first
to take the series of shots on Ohio National Guard memJan . 14 after his unit was ber to be court-martia led
deployed to Camp Atterbury ·after he was convicted of
in Indiana in preparation for disobeying a direct order in
going overseas. He has -said November to take the vaccithe vaccine can cause serious nation.
side effects.
A militarv judge recomHickmun was formally mended he serve 40 days in
·charged on Friday as an jail, be demoted from speactive duty member of the cialist to private and receive
Army, which place~ .the case a bad wnduct di,charge.
under the federal tlliiform
Pfaff said any penalties
code , ·o r military ju stice. incurred from the latest
Army Maj. Chris Pfaff sai.d charge could be added to

those from Ohio. which are
currently under review. .
Hi ckman's previous penal ty was put on hold after U.S.
District
Judge
Em met
Sullivan ruled that the mili - .
tary could not force troops to
take shots against their will
withm1l an order of the president.
Sullivan l.ifted his ban earlier this momh ahcl' the FDA
said the vaccine was safe
and ellecti1·e for usc against
inhaled anthrax .
More than 900.000 servicemen and women have ·
received the shots. and hun:
dreds of service members
have .bee·n punished or discha rged for refusing them,
according 10 the Pentagon .

BY

CONNIE MABIN

ASSociATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND ·HEIGHTS
Doug Braun .a nd his
partner of 14 years can't
wait for Monday morning
when they'll go to City Hall
and add their names to a
registry recognizing them as
domestic partners.
They ' II take home a notarized 1 application from the
c1ty, ,the first 1n the nat(or
to ore ate the non binding
·
registry through a vote.
The couple and an estimated 100 ~thers will walk
away with a\ piea; of paper
that legally r\ieans nothing.
But to Bra?n, 42, and his
partner, Brian DeWitt, 48, it
will be the ~ost important
day of their lives.
"It's not a marriage,"
Braun said. 'For us, it's a
show of our cimmitment to
each other, i 's something
concrete that we can hold
on to and sh w all of ttie
thousands , of hours we put
in to work on \his."
Voters of t~JX Cleveland
suburb of 50,oup people in
November ap roved the
first ballot-box rec\)gnition
fot gay and strai ht unmarried partners by · margin of
55 percent to 45 rcent.
On Monday - less than
. a week after the Legislature
passed one of the country's
most-far reaching gay marriage bans - . the city will
open the first domestic partner registry in the s.tate.
The recognition is not
marriage and it's not binding on courts, governments
or private. companies. But
supporters hope n will make
it easier for couples to share
employment benefits, inherit
property or get hospital visiting rights.
Oppon~nts, including the
Cleveland Heights Family
First Initiative, say it's
wrong for a city to legitimize a lifestyle many disagree with. A statement
from the group said the registry attempts to "redefine
marriage" and that "wi II
have very serious negative
effects ort . our society as a
whole."
Keli Zehnder, 37, and her
partner, Deborah Smith, 44,
know that the registry won't
have any legal weight. The
couple of seven years has
powers of attorney and wills
spelling out their wishes
regarding · each other and
!heir two young daughters.
But Zehnder' said its
important that they register
on the first day as a payoff
for the intl!nse campaign
that led to the ·vote.
·"This piece of paper feels
more meaningful than th,e
other stuff even though the
other stuff is more valid in
some ways. This is something that I worke9 on for
18 months," she said.
Cleveland Heights is university town that also is
home· to middle- and upperclass professionals. lt boasts

Boys basketball
SEO~L
SEQ

Team
Marietta
Gallia Academy
Logan
Jackson
Warren
Athens
Point Pleasant

Tr~mble

Easte'rn
Southern
Federal Hocking
Miller
Waterford .
Nill!l
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley
Fairland
South Point
Coal Grove

.

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It's Valen-timei

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•

With A Sentinel Love Message.!

Team
Chesapeake
Fairland
South Point
Rock Hill
River Valley
Coal Grove

Examples of Sizes and Prices

funky clothing shops, artsy
cafes, family owned restaurants and historical homes.
According · to the U.S.
Census, 52.5 11ercent of its
residents are White and 42
percent black. The rest are
Hispanic, Asian · and other
backgrounds. Only 970 people, or l. 9 percent of the
citize.ns, · reported living
with an unmarried partner.
Mayor Edward Kelley
said the registry issue was
fought passionately on both
sides but hasn' t divided the
city that already weathered
a similar controversy two
years ago when it adopted
Ohio's first municipal ordinance giving health !)enefits
to same-sex partners of city
employees.
·
"In Cleveland Heights,
not only do we have racial
diversity, we have religious
diversity, we have this
diversity. I' m yery proud of
that," Kelley said.
The regi stration is open to
all unmarried couples who
live tosether. It costs $50
for residents and $65 for
nonresidents. · .
Kelley said he' s taken
calls from gay and straight
couples from New York,
Pennsylvania, California and
elsewhere interested in registering. Eventually, the city
will offer the registration
online and through the mail,
he said.
"
Community
services
director Susanna Niermann
O'Neil said the process will
take about I0 minutes for
each couple,• many who are
planning to take photos or

.

.

have family attend.
"They' ll be brought in,
one partnership at a time,
and they will sign. It's a
one-sheet document," she
said. "We just want it to be
nice."
The city will file copies
of applications and mail
certificates. The ' couples
will take home notanzed
originals. To cancel the reg,
istration , couples must send
a certified letter to the city.
If the 100 people expected show up Monday morn,
ing, they ' II be allowed to
wait in City Hall chambers,
and if needed, in a spare
court {Oom, Kelley said.
"We' re not going to make
people stand in line like
they're in a post office
waiting to buy stamps," the
mayor said. "We want to
make sure that they be
treated in a fair and just
·
, manner.',
Domestic registries bave
been created by municipal
councils or state legislatures
elsewhere but not through a
ballot issue, according to
the National Gay and
Lesbian Task Force, a
Washington,
D.C.-based
civil rights. group that tracks
such · issues in every state.
Vermont's Legislature created the first-in-the-nation ·
law recognizing the relationships of same-sex couples. Ex-California Gov.
Gray Davis signed a bill
that created a statewide registry for same-sex couples
and .gives them some of the
legal standing of married
·
spouses.
•

1 INCH AD ..... $5.00

l 1/1 INCH AD .. $7.50

(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

(APPROXIMATELYJO WORDS)

Happy

Happy Volentine's Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dod, Sister, and
Brother...
Thanks for being such
a greatfamily!
ILove You Very Much!

3 INCHAD ... $15.00

HAVE A

•

Mall Your Love Message and Totai .Amount Due To:

I

The DaUy Sentinel

· Ohio Northern inade 19-of33 shots from the floor in the
first half to build a 46-30 lead
at the break. The Polar Bears
finished the ganie shooting
53.3 percenf and Marietta
~hot 41.8 percent.

'

.....

.,

'• I'

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESHIRE- Meigs has struggled
on the road this season, but perhaps a
familiar face in the crowd made it feel
a Iittle more at home.
· ,
The visiting Marauders scored 11
straight points midway through the
fourth quarter Saturday to pull away
from Rtver Valley, and take a 74-57
boys basketball decision.
Strangely, the run began just seconds
after three Meigs High School students
brought a taxiderrnic mountain goat head,
a regular in the student section at home
games, into the RVHS gymnasium.
·
"We would like to tell our kids it was
the goat. but he didn' t help us last night

(in a 70-59 loss to Alexander).'' joked
·
Meigs coach Carl Wolfe.
Instead, Wolfe was lnore practical, and
credited his team's press and i1nproved
defense "with the game-altering lUll .
"[ think the press wore on (River
Valley) a little bit," he explained. "We
stayed in that the whole second half.
they used a lot of time and energy tryin¥. to get the ball down the fluo r,
' I thmk our kids just played better
defense in the second half than they
did in the first half"
The run, whi ch spanned. a little over
three minutes, broke a 49-49 tie and
brought an end to a back-and-forth battle that had been raging since late in
the first half.
River Valley coach Gene Layton's

squad h&lt;Jd rlayed well through three
quarters. and held the lead for much of
the ga me.
But his Raiders scored just one field
goal over the first four and a half minutes of the ri nal stanza. a problem that
Layton. says has haunted his team on
more than one uc&lt;:asion

"That's something that we've had all
yea r. I can't explain it.'" he admitied.
"We' ll · be playing ri ~ ht al.on~ with
someone . then we don t "ore l'or two
or three minutes. and then we find ourselves down eight or I 0.
"You can't have those lon g st retches
without scor in g. ~·
.
The non -con ference win improved

Pleilse see Meigs. B2

Wednesday's game

.13.

N a m e : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --'-----.,.-Address: _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _~-----------~-Size ofValentlne:: _~-------------------Totai Amount Enclosed: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:

--.. .

...

: ADA (AP)- Mark Killian
'had 19 points and 11
rebounds to lead Ohio
Northern to a 78-55 victory
over Marietta on Saturd(ly.
Chad Bostelman added 15
{JOints , Jim Conrad had 13
and Sam Mikolajewski I 0 for
the· Polar Bears (12-5, 6-4
Ohio Conference).
Scott Laslo led the
Pioneers (7 -10, 2-8) with 19
points and Cody Lane added

I

,I

14·1
9·4
8-4
6·5
2·13

Wrestling

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ··

Meigs pulls ~way from Raiders late

ALL

Ohio Northern 78,
Marietta 55

'I

I

8·5
7·6
4-8
3-8
2·10
7·6

Logan . Gallia Academy at Athe ns

I

I

4·1
4-1
3·2
2·3
2-3
0·5

Boys Basketball
South Ga11ia at Piketon
Ohio Valley Christian at Trimble
Jackson at Point Pleasant
Gau ley Bridge at Hannan ·
:
Girls Basketball
Meigs at Wahama

I

I

15·0
9-4
9-6
11·4
3·1 0
2-11

Tuesday's games

I

I

ALL

QYQ ALL

Meigs at Southern
Point Pleasant at JacKson

I

I

10·5
11·3
9-5
4-12
2-11
1-10

Ohio VallEly Christia n at Eastern !Pike)

Writing this love
message gives me the :
opportunity to tell you '
just how muth I love
you and enjoy being
your husband. I know
I sometimes don't
show it but I really do.
Hrtr&gt;nv Valentines

I

' ··";'~

•

MY HONEY

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

I

2-10

South Gallia at Sciotoville

I

I

2·9

Girls Basketball
Galli a Academy at Eastern
Rock Hill at Aiv9r Valley

WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

I

6-5
6-5
5·6

Today's games

,.

MAY WE ALWAYS '.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ALL

Prep schedule.

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

.
'·
'
'·

URG bounces
back with win
over Ohio
Dominican

12· 1
8-4
3-9
6-7
5·9
4-8

Team
Oak Hil.l
Hannan
Wahama
Ohio Valley Christian
South Gallia

2 INCH AD .. :$10.00 ,

ADS' MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
FRIDAY, ·
FEBRUARY 6,
2004..

10·3
8-5
9·4
7-5
2·11
0·12

Others

(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
straight and true,
In bringing this-thought
oflove to you.
I'm sorry about the
other night
When we had that
terrible fight
A Sen~nellove message
was a good Idea.
To show you just how
much I love you, Marla.

ovc

Pleilse see Eilstem. B2

ALL

QYQ ALL
5-1
4·1
3-3
2-3
2·3
0-5

.

'

2·9

INm
Belpre
6-1
Alexander
6·2
Meigs
4-3
Vinton County
4·4
Nelsonville· York
2·6
Wellston
1-7
Hocking Division
Team .
TVC
Trimble
8-0
Eastern
5·3
Waterford
5-3
Southern
4·4
Federal Hocking
1·6
Miller
0-7

.

1st.Valentine's Day
Tessa!
~Mommy &amp; Daddy

a solid 11 -point ga1ne and a block .
Adam Dillard and Chris Myers
ea&lt;h added live point'&gt; for Eastern.
while Derek Baum notched four,
Alex Simpson three. and Mark Guc"
two.
Sou.theastern was led by Tommy
Womb who nelled eleven points,
while Drew Prater nelled seven . Josh
Cooper fi,e . Justin Sever five. Chris
Mi1vis four. Jason Day four. and three
by Zach Hoylman .
Grubb went on a Panther hunt

Ohio Division
TVC ALL

·,_Your Way,_ On February 13th--

Doug Braun, right, and his partner of 14 years, Brian DeWitt,
stand outside Cleveland Heights. City Hall · in Cleveland
Heights, Ohio. Cleveland Heights domestic registry begins
Moilday. Jan. 26, and will officially recognize straight and gay
couples. (AP Photo/Ron Schwane)

.pointers. Gru.bb also earned praise
f&lt;ir his great floor game that netted
him s(x assists iri a wmpletely
unselfi,h effort. The senior guard
· capped off the near-perfect night wi th
a 4-4 effort from the line .
Senior Robert Cross complimented the Gmbb- led Eagles with a 15,
point game, five rebounds. and two
assists. Crossis accolades included a
good inside game, two blocks. and 5,
6 night at the line. The Panther
defense had
a close watch on
Easternis Cody Dill , but despite the
double teamis h~ faced Dill managed

Girls basketball
SEOAL
SEO ALL
' IIDI!!l
8-0 13-1
Warren
Jackson
6·2 11-4
7·3 12·4
Marietta
3-5 7-9
Logan
Gallia Academy
3·6 6-7
2·7 4· 11
Athens
Po111t Pleasant
0·6 0·1'0

Tell Someone You Lov~e Them
In A Special Way

\I

ALL

of Southeastern) against one another,
the game perhaps superficially was
expeclfd to be a little closer, however, Eastern dominated from the onset.
Between the coaches lie over 700
victories and several trips to the slate
tournament.
Eastern turned the
expected chess mulch and match of
wits into a cakewalk.
· Bottled up all season by the attention he receives from o~sing
defenses, Nathan Lee Grubb broke
free Saturday night tor a 24-point
explosion that included a 4-5 night
from ·two point range and four three

TVC

,

au o

TUPPERS PLAlNS -Coming .off a
big win the night before at Federal
Hocking. the Eastern Eagles (9-5)
took advantage of a 13-0 run to start
the game and never lookeq back in
defeating the Ross-Southeastern
Panthers Saturday night 69-41 in an
important non-league basketball contest at Eastern High School.
Pitting two of the winningest
coaches in the staJe of Ohio (Howie
Caldwell of Eastern and Larry Jordan

10·2
8-3
9·3
8-5
5-8

Team
Ohio Valley Christian
South Gallia
Hannan
Wahama
Oak Hill

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-~ ·~

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Others

Sunday Times-sentinel
;~;~,;·;I

Bv ScotT WoLFE

11 -2
10-4
9·5
4·8
5·8 ·
4-8
2- 10

5·0
4-1
3·2
2·3
1·4
0·5 .

ovc

'·. '

,•

•

ALL

TVC

-'""!"'...,....---------------------,
·~ ... Celelirating special days with you!·

\

8·1
7-1
6·2
2-5
2-6
2-6
0·6

Ohio Division
Team
TVC
Alexander •
4·0
Vinton County
?-1
Belpre
3·2
Meigs
2·3
Wellston
2-3
Nelsonville· York
0-4
Hocking Division
Team
TVC

\ r.~
,

,I

Bl

Eastern pounds Southeastern, 69-41

Prep Stardings

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
In June
2002 , City Brown
was
111
Los
fugitive developer accused Council approved $220,000 Angele s, tryin g to get
of illegally accepting thou- in loans and grants for the hired by Dennis Rodman's
sands of dollars m city project. Pettus-Brown dis- new basketball team. the
loan s and grants to reno- appeared a year ago. '
• Long Beach Jam.
A search warrant for a
vate a theater has been
Council man Pat De Wine,
Petllls-Brown's a Republican who voted
arrested in New York, fed- raid on
eral authorities said.
office stated that nearly against
le11ding PertusLaShawn Pettus-Brown, $93,000 of the $184,000 · Brown the money. doubts
27, a former profess ional that ·the city paid him was the .city will get back ihe
· basketball player .in Japan, . mi ssing. Federal -investiga- money.
"My sense IS that it's
was arrested on Friday. He tors have said PettusBrown
wrote
five
bad
is charged with wire fraud
go ne," he said. " He went
and · accused of obtaining checks totaling $33,850 to throu gh the money and
money from the city under a contractor for work at now has no assets.
false pretenses.
the theater site.
FBI
otTi&lt;ials
said
Pettus-Brown had proNo details about Pettus- Saturday that Pettus-Brown
to
posed renovating the 90- Brown's arrest were avail- ·· would be returned
year-old Empire Theatre in able on Sunday' A message Cincinnati.
the city's Over-the-Rhine seeking comment was left
The cha rge carnes a
neighborhood and using it with the FBI in Cincinnati. maximum penalty of 30
for comedy, mus1c and
The FBI said last week years m pnson and a $1
karaoke performances.
that it thou ght Pettus- million fine.

I

•

Monday, Jartuary 26, 2004

Fugitive developer arrested in New York

Long lines·expected as·same-sex
couples prepare to register

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

•

Redwomen.downed by Lady Panthers, 72-58
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE ~ The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen basketball team
was beaten Satunjay ni&amp;ht by
the visiting Ohio Dommican
Lady Panihers 72-58 at the
Newt Oliver Arena. The loss.
was crippling for the
Redwomen in their quest for a
post-season berth.
Rio Grande's sophomore
center Tiffanie Hager played a
solid firsl half for the
Redwomen.scoring consistently m the palnt on her way to a
20·point
effort.
The
Redwmnen shot 70 percent
( 12-of-17) fro.m"the field in the
period. Hager ended the game
as the only Rio player in double figures. She also collected

eight rebounds.
Angel Allen, Lauren Fox,
Alkia Fountain ·and Marcia
Smoot all ended the game w.ith
nine points each. Fountain and
Allen each corralled five ·
rebounds.
Despite Rio's hot shooting
they were unable to take the
lead going in to the half down
31-28 . at intermission. A big
reason for being behind at the
break wa,s Rio's inability 1o
maintain possession as the
Redwomen committed 20
turnovers in the first half.
The Redwomen defense
was picked apart in the second
half by the Lady Panthers. .
. Amanda Lewis scored 17
points and dished out six
assists, and Becky Richter
pitched in 16 points and
blocked two shots. Sarah

Wheeler and Brandy Caldwell
each added II points. Caldwell
also h~d , a team-high. six
rebounds. ··
,
The Rio offense was unable
to hang qn to the basketball all
night as they committed · 31
tumovers in the gmne, which
proved to be their undoing
do;.vn the stretch . ODU recorded 24 turnovers.
Rio shot 4 7 percent (24-of51 ) from the floor for the
game, but only nine percent ( 1of-11) from beyond the threepoint arc and 53 percent (9-ot~
17) from the free throw line .
ODU countered with 51 percent (24-otA7) from the lield,
44 percent (4-of-9) from threepoint land and !l7 percent ( 20of-23) from the charity sllipe:
The Redwomen did manage
to out-rebound the Lady

Panthers. 3 1'-26.
With the loss the Rcdwomen
dropped to 14-7 overall and 3·
5 in the ,Amerie&lt;m Mide.ast
Conkrcnce South . Division .
Rio hus lost live of last six
games on 1he season . The
Lady Panthers improved to 11 7 and 6-4 respectively.
Rio Gnmde will next be in
action at home on Janumy 27
against the Urbana Lady Blue
Knights. TI1e game is a mustWill for the Redw&lt;&gt;men if they
wmu to remain alive in the
chao;e lor the AMC Touimment.
Tip-oiLis set lor 6 p.m
· Urbana
defeated
Rio
Grande. Januarv 6 in Urbana.
68-56. The Lady Blue Knights
also enter Tuesday's ~ame.
coming off an upset vlc:tury
over NALA Division ·11 No 4
Shaw nee State .•

RIO GRANDE - NAJA
Division II No. 17 Rio
Grande bounced back from a
·disappointing road loss at
Shawnee Stale on Tuesday to
score a hu'ge X5-72 triumph
ov'er ·Ohio Dominican on
Saturday 1right at the Newt
Oliver Arena in American
Mideast Conference South
Division basketball action.
Rio Grande ( 12-7 . 6-2
AMC South) fe ll behind by
five points e;;rly. but was able
to storm ahead of the
· Panthers with a barrage of
three-point shots in the final
moments of the ·first half of
play. Juniors Ca1 n Vandall
and Matt Simpson drilled
three trife ctas in the final
th ree possessions to give the
Redmen a 10-point cushion
(43-33) at the break. Simpson
hit back-to-back triples that
se nt-Ohio Dominican reeling
to the locke r room.
Rio again used its' trademark balanced attack with
four players scoring in dou·
ble figures, Simpson paced
the Redmen with 15 points
(a ll in the first hal f). He
pulled down six rebou nds
and shot 6-of-9 from the tield
and 3-for-3 from long range.
junior
ce·nler
Sean
Plummer added I-I po1nts and
seve n boards oiT the bench
and was an impi·essive 6-of-7
from the fre e throw line .
Sophomore guard Cedric
Hornbuck,le tossed in 12
points and hit two big trey s in
the second haiL Hornbuckle
was a perfect 5-f'or-5 from the
field.
Senior sv.ingman Seth
Deerfield chipped in I 0
points and played stellar
defense.
Centers Reggie Williamson
and Jarrod Haines were both
on the verge of double figures
wi th nine and .eight points
respecti\ely. Williamson was
tops in rebounds with nine
and Haines scored all of his
baskets in the final five minutes of the game.
Ohio Dominican ( 10- 13. -1, 5 AMC 'south 1. had solid
efforts from junior g uard
Mike - Fiebi~ and senior center Jeremy' Renner. Fiebig
poured in 16 points ( 13 in the
second half) to lead all scor·
ers. Renner a&lt;)ded 15 points
1 I0 in the first halt! and six
rebounds. Aaron Gossett
tossed in II points off the
bench (all in the second halt!.
:panther leadin·g sco1'e r
Ha'l.e Massey ( IJ.5jJpg.) wa'
held to eight points (on 2-of13 shoot in" ) with. fou r points
coming from the foul line in
the second half.
Rio Grande . with the
exception of , 13 turnovers. ·
had the offense cl icking on
all cvlinders . The Redmen
shot 52.5 percent (32-of-61)
from the field , 50 percent (6ofl2) from three-point land
and R3 percent ( 15-of-18)
fnlm the charity stripe.
Ohio Dominican cooled
somewhat after a hot start
and ended the game shooting

Please see URCi, B1

I'

�Monday, January 26,

·Prep scorebqa~d
Melga 74, River Valley 57
Meigs

River Valley 15 18 12 12 -

57

MEIGS (8·51 - Jon B:llli:J 10 9·15 29 .
Jeremy BlacKston o 2-2 2, Carl Wolfe 2 24 6, Enc Van Merer 0 0-0 0 Da11e Boyd 0
{}() 0, Corey Woods 0 0-0 0. Ty Ault 1 5·6
8, Adam Snowden 0 2-2 2 Dak~a OeWrl1
8 3-5 19. Ryan Hannan 3 2-2 8 T0TALS-

24 25-36 74.
RIVER VALLEY (3·9P- Chrrs Roush 3 0·
0 7, Danrel Berry 2 2-4 6, Darren Clark 2 0
0 5, rared Swarn 4 0-0 8. Trace Fraley I 2·
2 4. Colby Reese 3 3-4 9. Stephen Harder

3 3·4 9 . TOTALS - 16 19·27 57
3-pornt goals - MGS 1 (Ault). RV 2
(Roush and Clark)
Eastern 69, SOutheastern 41
Southeastern 3 14 14 10=4'1
Eastern
18 21 16 14 =69
SOUTHEASTERN - RIChard Adams 0 0-0

0. Josh Cooper 3 0-0 7. Justrn Sever 0 0-0
0. Tony Young 2 1-2 5 Jake Clever 0 0-0 0,
Chrts Junk 0 0·0 0, MaM Monroe 0 0-0 0,
Tommy Woods 4 1·2 II . ChriS Mavts 2 0·
o 4. Ja son Day 2 0·0 4, Jarr\'es Sparks o O·
0 0 Zach Hoylman 1 1-1 3, Drew Prater 2
Three Potnt
2-2 7. T01als 16. 5-7 41
Goals. WoOds two Cooper one . Praler one.
EASTERN- Derek Baum 2 0-1 4, Nathan
Lee Grubb 8 4-4 24, Alex Stmpson 1 1·2
3, Adam Dillard 2 1·3 5, Mark Guess 1 0·0
2, Chns Carroll 0 0·0 0. Chris Myers 2 0·0
5. Robert Cross 5 5-6 15, Cody Dtll 4 3-6
11 Totals 25 14·22 69 Three Potnt
Goals Fiva• Grubb lour Myers one
Oh1o High School Boys Basketball
By The Assoctated Press
Saturday's Resul!s
Akr SVSM 73, Tol ltbbey 42.
Anna 55, Covtngton 50
Arlington 54 Rtdgeway Rtdgemont 29
Bascom• Hopewell-Loudon 58 Kansas
lakota 38
Ba1av1a 69 , Wtlltamsburg 35
BreCksvtlle 47, Parma Val ley Forge 36
Bucyrus 73, Galton Northmor 45
Campbell Memorial 82. N Ltma S Range 39
Can Cent Cath 59. Can Ttmken 43
Can Hentage Ch11s!lan 70, Mansfteld
Temple Chnsttan 66
Carlisle 85, Arcanum 66
Centerburg 60, Spana Htghland 57. 20T
Centerville 50. Beavercreek 44
Chillicotlle 55 Fatrfteld Umon 47
Chtlhcotlle Untoto 55, Sctolo McDermott
NW48
C1n McNIChOlas 58, Balavta Amelia 47
Ctn Mt Healllly 69, Ctn Woodward 59
C1n Pnncelon 88. Galloway Westland 50
Ctn Tall 83 Day Dunbar 64
Ctn Western Htlls 56 , Cm A1ken 52

75. OT

39
Manon Elgm 57, Carey 51 ·
Manon Hardmg 52, Napoleon 37
McGuffey Upper Sctolo Valley 58, Dola
Hardin Northern 46
Medtna 47. N R1dgevtlle 43
Mentor 66. Euclid 50

from Page 81
40 percent (26-of-65) from thdloor, 36 per·
cent (5·ofl4 ) fro m three-poin! land and 68
percent ( 15-of-22) from the charity stripe.
Rio Grande dominated the glass. 42-32, but
failed to collect more offensive rebounds than
·ODU as the fant hers held a 16- 15 edge in
that category. ODU also committed only
eight turnovers.
Ri o is 2-0 versus the Panthers this season

Eastern

.'

Flage 81
I

early and brought back a plentiful harvest.
Grubb hit a two-pointer then followed up
with his first trey to give the Eagles a 5-0
lead. That fea! laid the foundation for a Cross
free throw and Myers tri-fecta that pushed the
score to 9-0.
A Simpson deuce and Cross jumper from
the lane made it 13-0. Eastemfs defense and
Southeasternfs fri gid \s hooting allowed the
hosts to hold the'Panthers scoreless inside the
!wo- minute mark of !he frame until Tommy
Woods finally nailed down a three for !he visitors, the score 13-3.
1
•
Eastern pushed on to an 18-3 lead and was
never seriously challenged the rest of the
game.
.
Eastern outscored the visitors 21 · .14 in the
second round Jed by Grubbfs nine, and four
each from Dill and Crdss. The Easte rn
defe nse was once again strong as Southeastern
failed to hit double digits un!il some eleven
and a half minutes into the game, when a
Prater tri-fecta made the score 28-10 at the
4:45 mark of'the second period. The Eag les
waltzed graciously !o a 39-17 lead at !he hal f.
1

Meigs
from Page 81
Meigs to 8-5 overall. River Valley, who had
won three of its last four ga mes, dropped !0 3·

9.

I

Stephen Harder was the lone Raider in dou·
ble figures with 18 points, 12 of those coming
from the charity stnpe, .while teammate Colby
Reese added mne. Jared Swain went for eigh!
points, all in the first half.
But the offensive star of the night was
Meigs guard Jon Bobb. The senior led hi s
Marauders and all scorers with 29 points.
"When· a team plays man '(defense), Jon
Bobb is awfully hard to guard," added Wolfe.
Former Raider cen!er Dakota DeWitt, who
transferred to Meigs this season, · scored 19
points and collected nine rebounds against hi &amp;
former mates.
" It wus kind of weird, I've never been in a sit·
uution like this," De Witt said of ihe return to his
old school. "Once I hit a few shots, I felt pretty

good.

•

"After (the crowd) started cheering against
me, It §DVe me the Incentive to play a little
hllrder.
DeWitt scored seven of his tcam:s first I0
points, us the· Murauder.s staked claim to an
early I0·3 cushion .
·
Ho\l'!lver, RVHS chipped awuy ut the lead
and pulled to within a single point by quarter's ena. Chris Roush sparked Raiders'
comeback with seven points in the quarter.
b'ut was held scoreless the rest of.the way.

.,

•

Monday, January 26, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

College baS.ketball Top 10·roundup
.

'·-

Miami Valley 70, Spnng Valley 53
Middleburg HISt. Mtdpark 47., BrunSWICk 41
Mtnerva 104, Mal~~:ern 74
N Royalton 67 . Parma Sr 60
New Bremen .74 Spencerville 53
New KnoiC\IIIIo 47 , Botkins 36
New Matamoras Front1er 65. Hann1bal
AtVel 64
Newark 52, Mt Vernon 42
Newton Falls 49, Hubbard 40
Norlhslde Chnsttan 57 . Grove C1ty
Chnsttan 51
Ottovtlle 47 . Ftndlay Liberty-Benton 33
Pataskala Watki1.1s Memona l 57. Hebron
lakewood 48
Petttsville 50, Metamora Evergreen 45
Ptekenngton N
Gals Walnut Atdge 44
Poland Sem1nary 80. Struthers 47
Rtchwood N Umon 52, Man on Calh 46.

64:

OT
Russta 71 M1nster 66
S Charles ton · SE 66 , Mtlford Cente,r
Fatrbanks 45
Sandusky 73, Tol Whitmer 69
Seaman N Adams 60, Bethel-Tale 54 .
Shelby 63. Ontario 51
.
Stdney Lellman 69. Frank lin-Monroe 47
Spnng Calh Cent 59. Spnng. NW 57
Spnng. Emmanuel ~-chnstlan 61 , TrtOily
Fnends 42
Sprmg S 67 , Lima Sr 65, OT
Spnng Shawnee 59, Sprtng Kenton Ridge

49
St Bernard 63 Ctn Clark Montesson 55
Sl Marys 60 Ltma Perry 31
St Marys·Memonal 60, Ltma Perry 31
St Pans Granarn ~4. P tg~a 3~
Strongsvtlle 71, Berea 47
Tol Cenl Cath 54, Elida 48
Tol Chnstian 72, Tel Maumee Va lley 58
Tol Emmanuel 45, Northwood 33
Tol. Ottawa HillS 49, lakeside Danbury 43
Troy 68, T1pp C1ty Ttppecanoe 28
Urbana 72, Wap@.kone18 67
van Wert 64, Delphos St John's 61
Vermilion 66, Port Clinton 55
Versailles 77 New Mad1son Tri-Village 30
W. Ale~~:andna Twm Valley S. 69, New
lebanon Ot)lle 4 7
W Carrollton 63 , Day Northridge 46
W Salem NW 68, Smithville 53
W_Union 52, Bainbridge Paint Valley 47
Warrensvt lle 68 , E Cle Sllaw 66
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 70, Londop
Madison Platns 49
Wauseon 61, Della 52
Waynesville 62, Bellbrook. 59
Wtlm1ngton 50, Hamilton Ross 34
.wooster 72, LeKmgton 59
Youngs. Rayen 52, Youngs Wilson 41
Youngs Ursuline 52. Massillon Washlngtqn 50
Zanesvtlle
Rosecrans
77,
Albany
Ale)lander 69

wit h ODU getting one, fi nal crack at the
Redmen,. February 21 at Ohio Dominican.
With the victory, Rio Grande keeps pace
wit h Cedarville in AMC South Division play,
and washed away some of the bitter taste of
the Shawnee State loss.
The Redmen will face an improving
Urbana squad on Tuesday at the Newt Oliver
Arena. Rio Grande defeated Urbana, 80-58,
Jan. 6 in Urbana. The Blue Knights will come
into the conte st, riding high after upsetting
Shawnee State on Saturday.
Game time is set for 8 p.m., following
women's action.

In the third canto Dill and Grubb piloted the
victory fli ght with six points each.
Southeastern squeezed a little more movement
from its offen~e and likewise had a better shot
selection, but still was unable to gain any
ground on the Eagles. When the game was
three-quarters complete Eastern led 55-31.
The finale was a formali!y ( or the hosts
who continued their blue-collar work ethic in
· an effort to put more points on the board. A
feather in the cap of the Eagles came in the
fact that the defense held Southeastern scoreless the last 3:45 seconds of the game. At the
3:45 mark Eastern led 65·41 before closing
at 69-41.
Eastern hit 25-54 overall, hitting 20-43
twois, 5- 11 threeis, and 14·22 at the line.
Eastern collected 24 rebounds (Simpson 5,
Grubb 5), seve n steals, 11 tUrnovers, 14
assists, and 13 foul s. Southeastern hit 16-54
overall, 12-39 twois, 4- IS threefs, and 5·7 at
the line. while collecting 19 rebounds (Young
6), four steals, eight turnovers. six ass ists ,
and 22 fouls.
Southeastern won !he re serve game 43-37
led by Shannon Rohn with 12 points. Eastern
was Jell by Justin Browning with nine, Mark
Guess eight, and Bri&lt;m'Cas!or eight.
Eas!ern plays Waterford at Eastern next
Friday then goes to Southern on February 3.

Williams leads Blue De\lils past Georgetown~
WASHINGTON (A P) Shelden Williams had a
career-high 26 points and
Chris Duhon added 17 for
No. I Duke in an 85-66 vic·
tory over Georgetown on
Saturday.
Williams fmished 12-for15 from !he field, and his,
jumper at the first-half
buzzer was hi s firs! 3-point·
er of this season. Duhon w'as
7-for-9, and J.J . Redil:k
added 15 poin!s for the Blue
Devils ( 16- 1), who shot 6 1
percent in the firs! half and
56 perl:ent for the game to
wi n their 13th straight.
Brandon Bowman scored
19 poin" for the Hoy as ( JJ .
4 ), who have lost four of
five. George!own lost to the
No. I team for the second
time in I0 days, having lost
94-70 at then-top ranked
Con necticut on Jan. 14.

a .school record wi!h their
17th consecutive win. Pat
Carroll added 17 points in a
game that was decide d 8
minutes in when the Hawks
scored 15 straig ht points to .
open a 20-3 lead.
Kern Carter had' !4 point~
for St. Bo11aventure (6· 10,1
2-3), whicH missed 17 of its
first 18 shots .
1

Providence 66,
Connecticut 56

·Jasper Joh'nson had 13..
pomts to lead the Golden:
Eagles (9· 7. 2-3), who lose
their IOth straight regu lar-:
season game to Cincinnati.

North ·Carolina 96,
Virginia 77
CHAPEL HILL. N.C:
(AP) - Rash&lt;1d McCant~
scored 26 points !o lead s·ix:
Nort h Carolina players 111
double li gures.
Sean May sl:ored 17.
pomts for the Tar Heels ( 124, 2-3 Atl;uni c · Coas'
Conference), who improve&lt;!
to 17-2 again st the Cava li er~
in !he Sm ith Cen ter.
Raymond Felton added II
points and eight assists
.
Devm Smi th scored I(r
points to lead V1rg inia 112·5;
2-4), while J.R. Re yno ld~.
added 15.
•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

'

To Place
l\egt~ter
'lCrthune
Sentinel ·
Your Adw
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To
992-2157

Offtee llo~~
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

'-II

paying:··~
,,
'
,ooHtf;h
y,

, ..
f'

&gt;,&gt;

I '-1

.
1

Wolf -Shepard cross Fre e lo
good home Female 2 years
old (740)245-9142

r

UNt' ANU
FOtJNil

Full or part ttme shltls
available. Call Today.
1-877·463-6247 e)( I. 2'456.

AS SEEN ON TV
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTO R· TRAILE R
NEW PROGRAM

Found Small ta male long
flat red dog Blue lick/Beagle
• mtx, found on Mobley Road
Free
to
good
home.

No Experience Needed
Placement Dept
Ftnancmg Available
CDL/Tratntng
(740)245·9034
-.
ALLIANCE
Tractor-Trailer
long-haired Black cat , male. Traimng CenterS'
goes by Buddy. No co llar Wytheville, VA
Lost around Powe ll's area Call Toll Free
1·800-334- 1203
Pomeroy (740)416-0824

~~~~

Absolule Top Do llar U S
Gold
Cams.
Silver,
PrQOfsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rmgs ,
US Currency,·
M.T.S
Com Shop, 15 1
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
740-446-2842

•

'

Auto detail person needed.
E)lpenence and references
required Salary based on
e)lpenence . Send referenceSi resume
The Dally
Senttnel

~~~:~~!s~9·32 • Pometoy ,
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304-

675· 1429.
Bookkeeping &amp; accounting
full &amp; part lime send resurne
to The Da lly Senhnel, PO
Box 729-8. Pomeroy, Oh

45769

Happy Hooker We Buy Junk
Cars Ed R1ff le Owner Counter Sales person needt304)695·3327 or 1304)674· ed for local e~c lrt c dtslnbu·
tor E leclncal background,
0695
and good communication
Nice mtenor 32" door s, skill s preferred. EOE Send
resume to HA Depar tment,
(740)992·0165
PO Box 6668, Huntington

' '

Older used school band
musical In st rum ents Also
older baseball
wantmg
cards , 1975 and before

(740)366·6692.

wv

25773·6668

Overbrook Center IS currently accepting applications for
a part t•me AN tor 7pm·7am.
Interested app licants sh_ouk1
contact Cassy Lee, Staff
Development Coord1na1or at

HtLP WANTED

p••pe·•l

•

\ lwright@ic.net

Leave The Cold Behind!
N ow lltnng g1rls and guys to
work and travel th e USA 2
weeks patd traming. !ravel
expenses pa1d Ca ll Mary

AGreat
Opportunity Awaits!
The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company
is seeking.a .higbly motivated
individual who is·interested in an
"ADVERTISING
SALES CAREER",
with unlimited earning potential!
Interested??

WE NEED TO TALK!
• Salary Plus Commission
• Great Working Environment
• Monday · Friday Sam·Spm

Ten's

'

H ome

u

0

SCISSORS
0

740)256·6336 .

a

I

10

0PI'QR1\JNITY

.t..--iioio""iiiliiil..

I
·

Now Hmng full and part
_.l
t1m e
McC lure's Loca Vendmg Roulet 60
Re stau rants In GalltpOIIS, \I~I'IOJng machmes 1 el(cei·
Mtddleport and Pomeroy lent locattons all for $ 10,995
Monday
lhru 800-234 -6982
Apply
Saturday. 10-11 am .
&lt;.0 ·
e ng
peop e oca

PUBLISH

STNA's

11

1

n~:;oii""-~-----,

Bt.NINI-::\...,.

·--oi'fRAiiiiiiNiiiJN(iiio
; --'
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)

Cell Today! 740·446·4367.
1·800·2 14·0452
www galltpOitscareereollege com
Res lf90-05-1274B.

Babysit In R1o Grande or
Gallipolis srea, In
your
home. Aeterences ava1lable.
(740)379·2 183 for details
Cl'llldcare Slate ll&lt;:ensed.
Focus helping low·lncome
families obtain chUdcare
With Bhrs. sleep time for
non·lradltlonal sh1fts as Q111
of your BIGHTS 74(}.245-

9242.
E•perlenced Child Care
Provider. Wtlf provide quality
child care In my home on
McCormick Road . (740)446·

W ill do babysitting in my
home. Full or part time Non
smoking. Call {740 )367-

0429.

PRot-.-ssJONAI.

StiliVJQ:S
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Winl

1·86a-562·3345
I( I \ I I .., I \ I I

Thompsons App ltance &amp;
Repaa 675-7388 For sale
re-condtttoned
au1omattc
washers &amp; dryers . refngera
tors, gas and ele:::lrtc
ranges. atr cond1t1 oners. and
wrtnger washers Will do
repatrs on maJor brands tn
shop or at your home

_____

wv

. MOJl!Lt: HOMES

2000
Oakw ood
mobtle
home 14X80 3 bedloom. 2
bath . tolal eleclrtc , ce ntral
a1r Askmg $2.1,500 00 Can
move or rent lot for $100
AU real estate edvertlslng
In this newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which make• II illegal to
advertlae "any
preference, llmlhltlon or
dlacrlmlnation basad on
race, color, religion, aex
famllle l status or national
origin, or any inkmtlon to
make an.,_suc h
preference, llmhation or
• discrimination."
'This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaements for real
• estate which Is in '
vk)lallon ol the law. Our
reader• ere hereby
Informed thai all
dwellings adver1l.ed in
lhia newspaper are
avallsble on an equal
apportunlty bases.

Call (740)992·9263
3 bedroom, new balhroom &amp;
1/2 bath, new furnace, wrap
around deck, appliances
mcluded, some furnitur e
very good cond tlton . 740992·5267 or (740)247·2 1 13

For lease or sale· mce 2
bedroom house, $25,000 or
trade for huntlr1g land
(740)698-7244

Stock # D-308 44X28
3 bedroom 2 bath
Delivered and set up on
A live coarse loundatton

FORECLOSURE!
4 bed 4 bath house only
$9 ,900 tor listings call
1 ·600·7~ 9-3001 BKt 1144

with heat pump
only $39 900 00
Cole's Mobtle Homes

FORECLOSURE!

HoMt:s

15266 US 50 E

lot (740)99H144

'!40

•

APAKIMtNJ]';
tnHRtNJ

(740)592· 1972
"Where YOu
Get
Money's Worth "

r

L&lt;m&amp;

Your 2 bedroom apt St AI 160
past Holzer. $475 mo
(740)441 ·0194

House w/ 3 acres tn country
ACRFAG~~
has 2 yr. old garage 28~~:32,
FOR SALE
has 7 rooms $45,000 pnce
For Sale' 79 106 Acres
neg 2 m1les from Mason
1600Sq ft 3yearoldRanch
River vtaw, producmg ott &amp;
'style home. 2 1/2 car Walmart 304-773-5343
gas wells $125,000 - 304 garage, 3 bectroom, large Older 4BA
1 5 bath 529-7106 alter Spm.
kitchen , dinning room, living Pomeroy, Oh1o V1ew phO·
room , 2 112 baths. laundry tos!tnlormation
onltne Nice level lot. 90 'x200'
room , lront porch, a ll custom www.orvb.com' code 80603 located at 201 A1rlme Road
oak trim doors and cabinets . or call (740)992 -3650
tn the Porter area. Prtced at
All electric. Very well layed
$15,000. Call (740)446 out, beaut1lu l Interior on 1 Quality br ick build hqme, tn 451 4 or alter 5pm call
neighborhood t740)446·3248
112 acres ... Won't last long at great
only $115 000 . Call 740- Convienent to Holze rs and
446-4514 or 740-446·3248 RIO Grande SpaciouS 3br Nice mobile home sites
2112 bath, features updated available $115 per month.
after Spm,
kitChen w1th t1le floors . family tnclude&amp; water. sewer, trash.
- - - - - - - - . , - room with fireplace, over· can (740)992·2167
3 , bE!droom , remadet8d Sized !·car garage. Thts Is
IU '\ I \I ..,
2003, new heat pump, A Must See
$120,000
plumblhg , ~lectrlcat, carpet, (740)441-1237
hardwood floors . Mi&lt;kfleport.
(740)992·2321 (740)416· Ranch, 3BR, New Haven,
W.Va .. VIew photos/Informs·
0815
FOR Jb:Nr
tlon online www orvb.com
code
111503 or
call
3· 4 br, full - basement.
238 .1/2 1st Av8. 2 br. 1 bath,
(304)882·2770
garage, rg. deck overlooking
furnished kitchen , off street
river can be seen at 403 1111.
parking No pets. $355/mo
St. New Haven also 1990
plus utilities Deposit and
Ford Escort . 1992 geo
reference (740)446-4926
Storm can b'e seen at same
1980 Skyhne 12K65, 2br,
address
neat pump, storage building. 2bf. 'References &amp; deposit.
Completely
remodeled, No Pets. (304}675·5162 ·
Gallipolis.
erose
to $5600 (740)546·5695
3
bedroom
br~ck
In
town/ hOspital 3BA . 2BA
VIew:
photos/Information New 3 bedroom 2 .bath Only Gallipolis, 1 .5 batns. base·
$650
and
only ment, · carport,
online www.orvb com , code 5995 down
60303 or call (740)446· $194.36 per month , Call References . deposit, no
pels. (740)4~6·9209.
Karlina 740-385·7671 .
3032.

HOUIDl

F M~":s~~ I

/

r

1 and 2 bedroom apart ·
ments furn tshed and unfur
mshed, secunty depoStl
reqUired , no pets, 7.40-992·
2218

Athens, Ofno 45701
4 bed 4 b!'lth house only
$9 .900 for hstmgs call
1·800·719-3001 8)(1 1144

2 B'R. carpel, AIC, porch, New H aven .1 br furn tshed
Whnlpool washer &amp; dryer.
very ntce. no pets . In apt.. dep · &amp; r.e1 . no pets .
$150 , Whtrlpool washer,
1740)992·0165
_
_
_
_
Gallipolis 740-446-2003 or
$75. Almand GE dryer $65
740-4461409
Pleasant Valley Apartment Call alter 6 OOpm 1740}4463 bedroom mobtle hom e in Are now taktng Appllcat tons 9066
Middleport.
$400
plus 1 for 2BR . 3BR &amp; 48R ..
depoSit (740)992·3 194
App1 1cattons
are
taken
AN'IlQllt:S
Monday thru Fnday. from
8eput1ful nver vtew tdeal for 9'00 AM ·4 PM Olltce IS
one or two people No pets Located al 11 51 Evergreen Buy
or
sell
Rtverme
references. (740)441 -0181
Dnve Poml P leasant, WV Anltques. 1124 Easl Ma1n
Mob11e Hom9 tor rent 2 bed· Phon e No Is (304)675-5806 on SA i24 E Pomeroy. 740rooms $350/month $200 E.H.O
992-2526. Russ Moore
n-gl_e___o_e_d-ro_o_m---a-pt . ~
ow
in~e~r~--------~.,
Dep osit located in Poml -S,Plea sant Call (304}675· GalltpOIIS
Washer-dryer j5«J Mt..,.._."I-:II A.NEOI IS
3423
hook- up Appltances . oH
M•:H.UIANiliSI·:

70·72 mobt le home, 2 bdr , 1
bath , eleclric heal. settmg
on 50~~:200 lot. has one star·
age
bwtding ,
$15,000 , Ntce 2 or 3 bedroom mobtle
(740)742·401 1
home mcludes water. sewer.
trash, no pets starling at
Trailer on 1 acre lot wtlh $300 per mOnth , call
deck, AC', and oul but ldmg t740)992·2167
For $32 ,000 Call (740)256Sem1 · P11vate mobtle home
6663
lot for rent 2 mtles 1rom PI
Pleasant on Sandhill Road
Very clean used 3 bedcall 675-6678
room/2 Oatil, $9995 00 Will
llefp Wtth deli ve ry, Call Nikki. Tratler for rent. excellent
740-385-9948
Condtlton. tdea l tor o'he or
two people no pets large

~::::::::::::::~ " -w_m-,e-,-s-,-,.--·---------

4H9B4 .

NeW 1 BR Apt Furmshed all
2 bedroom tn Pomeroy, No uttlities pd $500/month.
pets, $325/month ; water $500/depostl tn PI Pleasant
1304)674·0031
tncluded.
Secunty
deposit/references
Hud
New 2 be~room. Kttchen .
approved. (740 )992-5477
LA , bath
Porter Ohto
pel s
2 Bedroom mobtle home 1n $450 +depostt No
Ractne area NO PETS Before 8pm 740-367-7746
740-367-7015
(740)992 ·5656

HlH. Rrxr

From $295-$444 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Houstng
OpportuntlleS
..:..;...

·-lll!li.iiiiiiiiio-.,1

I

Medt Home H eallh Agency.
Inc. seektng a full-t1me AN Ten's
Home
Servtces
lor !he Gallipolis, Ohto area . Q
u
a
1 1 t
y
Must be licensed both lin Res 1denlla i/Co mmercia l
Ohio and West Virginia We Clea mng, Pro1ess 1onat, Fast
offer a competiltve salarY. Serv1ce , Affordable Rates
benefits package, end 401 K \ Free Esttmates (304)593·
E 0 E Please send resume 2301 (leave Message)
to 352 Second Avenue. I
11\1\11\1
Gallipolis, OH 45631 Ann 1
o.ana Harless~ Clintcal \r~;;ir;;;;~;;;;;;;;.;;;;..;~
Manager.
BU"'lN~"i

1740)446-7444 1·877·630·
9162 Free Esttmale~ Easy
financing , 90 day s same as
cash V1sa/ Master Card
Dnve - a- little save alol

Middleport North 4th Ave . 2
br furn1slled apt . dep &amp; ret ..
no pets, (740}992-0165

Momu~ HOMI~

Services
1

I

ho want to earn mone
hlle lostng weight , show
ng
others
how
lnformattonaf
DVD/C
vailable upon request 740

(\\~'-

Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter. Ohto

Sears stereo LXI senes,
$ 150 radto. CO. &amp; speakers.
record player "cassette
Sears
26 6
cu
It
refrtg, freezer $400 Maytag
gos range, $200. Zentth rv21 tn $1 00. Maytag washer
&amp; dryer S250 Cherry coffee
table &amp; (2) end tables S100.
secltonal sofa w 10ueen
sleeper $175. Hollywood
bed. SSO dresser $50.
Record cab.net wrrecords.
$50 desk $25 (pa110 table
&amp; chatr s w ' umb) Dmtng
room table w/clli.WS $125
Call 1740)J46·2030. leave
messag e Will return call

5284~~-~~--.,

mHSAtE

y
A e s 1den !Ia 1/Co m mereta I
Clea ning. Professional, Fast
Servtce. Affordable Rates.
Free Estimates (304)5932301 (l eave Message)

" ''LIO

Goous

Ntce 2br House for rent m
West Columbia area $400
mortt1 plus deposit304-773·

110

WANIEIJ
To Do

tvt!ke 50% selling Avon
Limited
t1me
ONLY.

740)441 · 1880

I

www.comlcs.com \

45631

for busy salon

H ov.;EIKJW

t'ORIU:NT

6 room &amp; bath house. Allred
Furmshed one bedroom Apt
area, 3 car open garage
clean. no pets Must be wtl l·
$450 per mo. (740)985111 9 to gtve references
3849
Phone (304}675· 1386
N1ce 2 bedroom house on
Gractous hvmg 1 ancl2 bed·
wooded lot m Pomeroy.
room apartments at Vtllage
$425 per mo plus depostl.
Manor
and
Rwerstde
740·5 17·5388
Apartments m Mtddle port

~rY11

legal Secretary needed
E11.perience IS a pl us, but not
requtred. Please send a
re sume to
CLA 566 clo
Gall1pohs Datly Tnbune PO
Box 469 Gallipolis, OH

4945.

Send your resume to: Ohio Valley Publishing,
200 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV 25550
No Phone Calls PletiSf

\ \

(866)871·2274

~~ EDED
~-ASSY

f\.PAK~tN IS

For Lease: 2 floor, spactous.
to lally rem odeled 2 bed;
rooms. 1 1/2 baths . unfurntshed apt New HVAC and
appliances
$600tmonth
40 3 Mam Street Oakhil l plus uttllltes
Downtown
Cape cod 4 BR. 1 bath. 1 Galltpolts .Security and Key
car garage Call (740)357· depostl requtred No pets
8452, $475/monlh, depostt References
reqwed
&amp; references
(740)446·6862 6.00 to 5 00

•

(740)446·3358.

HO!Jl,E&gt;
HJRRENT
3 br 120 Howard St New
Haven WV Renlal applica ·
I ton &amp; rei. reqwed 1-yr mtn
lease (304)675-3458

o

son at 333 Page Street, rently seektng State tested
Nurs1ng Assistants for PT &amp;
Mtddleport. Ohio E 0 E.
FT POSIIIOns
We ofler
- - - - - - - - - 1Master schedu ling, health.
Help Wanted
dental. VISton, life 1nsurance
&amp; compet1t1ve wages Please
stop m fo complete an applicatiOn.
Contact
Stacy
Wright, ANJSDC al 740.4418320 with questions. EOE
170 Pmecrest Drive
GallipOliS, Ot1io 45631

WE NEED TO
''TAlK" TO YOU!!

i

POLICIES. Oh!o Vall&amp;"t Publlehln g r•ervea lhl right
, reject, 011 c:.encel any ad
time Err011a muet be reported on the flrat day of publication itnd
Tribun.Sentl.1ei·Regiater wm be raaponalble lor
the coet of the apaea occupied by the error and only the flrat lnl8rtlon We al\.all nol be Ill••blo to•l
any loet 01 expenee that results hom the publication or omission of an advertidmanL Correction will be made in the first available edition • Box number ada
are always confldantlal. • Cu rrent ~ate card eppllea • All real eatate advertlaamanta era aubjaet to the Federal Fair Houat ng Act of 1968 • Th•a ne•..
accept• only help wanted edt muting EOE ttandardl. WI will not
accept any advertlllng In violation of the law

() •

(740)992·6472 Apply m per· Arbors at GallipoliS IS cur·

Help Wanted

ff;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
-s 1.00 for lar~e

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Kawasaki
Suzukt
Motorsports m Galltpolls has
C- 1 Beer Carry Out permtt
open1 ngs tn th e lollow1ng
tor sa le, Chester Townshtp, 3 dr~vers wtth COL &amp; haz· areas · part s, experte nced
Me1gs County send letters ·mat, ca ll (740)985·3307
mechanic, sales, and manof tnterest to · Tile Dally
agement. Know led ge of
Seniinel, PO Box 729·20. An Excellent way to earn
prdduct and ability to multiPomeroy, Ohto 45 769.
tas~
essentia l
Send
money, Lets talk I he
NEW AVON
ReSume to
1140
Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
I Kawasaki suZuki
Joyce 304-675·69 19
~otor sporls Center
4367 State Route 160
Aprtl 304-88.2·3630
Free ll
Shephard
M1x
G~ll 1 po lis Ohio 45631
Are yo4 _1~1n g TOr a
Puppms, 10 weeks old 4
sl able Job?
males and 2 females.
Leave\llle cold behmd now
Gtve us a ca ll!
(.740)245 -5914
hmng ~trls/guys to wo rk &amp;
You could earn up lo
travel 1~e USA 2 wks pa1d
S81hour Qlus bonuses
To GIVeaway 7 Pupptes. We also oHer patd training , tra1mng travel expenses paid
(304)773-5732
c811 Alice (866)5 17·8577
holidays and vacattons

r
•I

1{\ I I

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete
Description • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

110

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Day s Prior To
Publlc::atlon
Sunday Dl. play: 1:00
Thur•day for Sundays. PiopoJr

.

=~-":':':"'"----,

•

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
Monday- Friday for JnsertloQ
In Next Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 P. -m.
Frldev For Sundays Paper

~. ANNoUNCEMENTS I. i:,,ili.o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
•-----"""
L..:
HJ.lAP WAN1FD

lostblack
female
Pomerantan ,
Naylors
Run /Starcher Ad &amp; surroun dmg area, ( 7401992 _
1942

' '

I \11'1 0\\11 \I

\\\Ill \1 I \II \ I "

/}ear/tirt!4
Display Ads

Word Ads

-Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.

The mo mentum carried over and RVHS
scored the first eight .poin!s of the second
frame . A short jumper m the lane by Daniel
Berry gave hts team its first lead at 17-16.
"Our.game plan was to attack and get the
ball to the basket ," said Layton . "When we
did get the ball to the basket, when we came
back in the second quarter and took the lead."
A pair of Swain bucket~ and Harder free toss·
es gave RVHS its largest lead of the night at 2316, but the Raider lead dwindled to just a deuce
by in!ermission. ,
Darren Clark opened the second half scoring
with' a 3-pointer from the wing that put RVHS
up five , but an old fashioned 3-point play from
Bobb ai)d a Ryan {iannan jumper evened the
score at 36 apiece.
Those two Marauder scores were part of a
14-2 run that gave Meigs a seven·potnt edge,
but RVHS closed out the third frame with a 72 run of its own to pull back to within a bucket.
The score was tied at 47 and again at 49
over the initial minute of the fourth quarter,
but Meigs cl'almed a·27· 12 scoring ed$e In
the pivotal final stage.
Meigs returns to Tri· Valley Conference
Ohio Division play Friday at Belpre.
RVHS plays h·ost to Wahatna (W.Va .)
Friday.
Meigs won the junior vursity game br a 50·
42 count. David Poole scored 12 potnts to
pace the winners while Andy Kinnan and Eric
Van Meter contributed .II apiece.
Brian MoJTOw Jed River Valley and all scorers
with 19 markers. Semald Cortias was the next for
the Raiders with six. ·

'

CLASSIFIED

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)
- Ryan Gomes had 26
· points and 12 rebou nds to
lead Providence !0 its fifth
straight victory.
The Fnars (13-3. 4·1 Big
East) are 2· 1 agains! ranked
!eams this season and hand ed !he Hu skies ( 15·3. 3·1)
!heir fi rst conference loss of
the season.
Emeka Okafor had 19 .
Stanford 7-7,-USC 67 points
and 13 rebounds for Pittsburgh 66,.
the Huskies, who shot 40.7 Syracuse_45
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) percent from the field, their
- Chris Hernandez had 18 second lowest mark of the
SY RACUSE, N.Y. (A P)'
points, seven assists and five season.
- Chri s Taft and Mar~
rebounds, and Stanford
McCarroll scored 15 poin!~
stayed unbeaten by pulling
apiece , and Pittsburgh held
away
from
Southern Cincinnati 83, .
Syracuse to its lowest point
California.
Southern Miss. 47
total in 36 years.
Nick Robinson scored all
It was the fewest poin!s
13 of his points in the secHATTIESBURG, Mi ss. the Orangemen have scorec.l
ond half as the Cardinal ( 16· (AP) - Tony Bobbitt scored since losing 71-4 1 m Kansa.,
0, 7·0 Pac- 10) received their 19 points and Cincinnati in 19~8 . Syracuse ·s prevum~
biggest test yet at home, made a robust recovery from low in the 24-year history of
where a sellout crowd of its first loss of tlie season.
the Carrier Dome was se! iri
7,391
r&lt;;&gt;cked
Maples
The B ~arcats (14-1, 5-·1) a 51 -50 loss to Connecticut
Pavilion from the opening had more turnovers forced on Jan . 16, 1988.
tip. Robinson was 6-for-6 in (16) than field goals allowed
Clievon Troutman had 1.2
the second half.
(14) in their most lopsided points and II rebounds for
Desmon Fanner had 19 Conference USA victory of the Panthers ( 19-1, 5·1 Big
points, three assists and the season.
East). who bounced back
three steals for USC (8-9, 3·
Jason Maxiell h~d 17 from their only loss of the
5), which lost its third points and James White season at Con necticu! o n
s!raight game.
added 13 for the Bearcats, Monday.
who were knocked .hard
Syracuse ( 13-3. 3· 2),
Saint Joseph's 114, . from the ranks of the unbeat· which lost i! s second
en with a 93-66loss at No. 5 straight game, was Jed by
St. Bonaventure 63
Louisville on Wednesday Hakim Warrick with 16
night.
·
points and I0 rebounds.
OLEAN, N.Y. (AP) Jameer Nelson was perfect
from the field, hitting all six
attempts for 19 points, and
.
so . remain s No. 3 Saint
Joseph's.
Delonte West had 21
Subscribe today.
points, aliDwing the Hawks
992-2155
( 17-0, 7-0 Atlantic-10) to set

•

une - Sentinel - l\egi~ter

'"

..:ill

'

lees Creek E. Clmton 80, Blanchester 70, OT
Uberty Center 44, Htlltop 33
l~a Cent Ceilh 56, Ft Recovery 48
logan 63, lancaster 43
Lynchburg·Ciay 69, Manchester 47
Madtson Chrisltan 50. Granvtlle Chnshan

URG

f~oll')

·'

C1n. Withrow 84, Day. Meadowctale 66
Ctrclevtlle Logan Elm .66 , Williamsport
Westfall 59
Clarksvtlle Cllnton-Mass•e 52, Clermont j
NE 41
Cia. Hts 55. Shaker Hts 47
Cle Hts. lutheran E 65, Ashtabula Sis
John &amp; Pay! 58
Cle St. lgnattus 78, Youngs Boardman 47
Cle VASJ 61 , Chardon NDCL48
Cols Alncenlnc 55. Westerville Cent 47
Cols DeSa/es 65 , Summit Statton ltcking_
Hts p2
Cols Eastmoor 64 , Cols St Charles 55
Cols Frankltn.Hts 73, Cols Ready 64
Columbus Grove 72, Kalida 61
Convoy CrestvteW 76, Rockford Parkway 54
Gory-Rawson 70, Ada 44
Day Belmont79. Day Col Whtte 78
Oel~hos JeHerson 60. Rossford 43
Doylestown Chtppewa 49 Dalton 40
Dublin Collman 60, Zanesville 37
Edon 72 .'Montpelter 42
Elyrta 78. Parma Normandy 56
Elyna Catn 53. Mentor la'ke Cath 48
Elyrta Lake Rtdge 74 Medtna Chr 32
Fatrfteld 65 Ltberty Twp La kota E 60
Felicity 60 Georgelown 44
Ftndlay 78, Tol Woodward 50
Fredencktown 65 Manslteld Chnsltan 59
Ft Loramte 46, Coldwater 42
Gtrard 70. Warren Champ1on 65
Greenfteld McCia tn 58, Washtngton C H 4 t
Grove Ctty 65. Olent.angy Ltberty 60
Ham11ton 66, Middletown 35
Hamler Patnck Henry 53. Miller C1ly 45
Hanoverloll United 67, E Can 60
..
Havtland Wayne Trace 49, Conttnenlal 42
Healh 57 Zanesville Maysvt lle 53
Htlltard Darby 55. Cols Wanerson 53
Huber His Wayne 76, Day Chnst1an 32
Jackson Cenler 45. Waynesfteld-Goshen 36
Jamestown Greenevte¥V 54 Oay Oakwood 38
Kennedy Cath (Pa) 52, Warren JFK 45
Ktdron Cent Chnsllan 61 , Shektnah
Ch rtStlan 53
Ktdron Central Chrtsltan 61 , Shekinah
Chnstlan 53
l akewood St Fdward 79 Can. McKmley

16 15 f6 27-74

The Daily Sentinel • Page 82

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

'-

street parking Water patd.
no pets depostt S270
month Aller 6pm 740-4464043, Day 740-339·3063

55 Gallon Ftsh Tank &gt;Ao tth all
accesso rtes
afl d
black,
woo'"den
sta nd
Good

Ta ra
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spactous .
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors, CA. I
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
Paho. Start $385/Mo No
Pets, Lease P lus Security
Oepostt Requtred 'Days
740-446-348 1: Eventngs
740-367-0502

Cond tlton $75 (74012561090
-~-------AtleniiOn Men•• Lool(tng for
I hat perlecl Valen! 11"1e s gtft?
How aboul a Beaultlul
Dtamond Rtng? 114 caral .
round cut solttatre on 14K
gold band
Stze 7-112
Comes tn red . 11eart-sl1aped
case Pertec1 lor a proposal
Twm RIVers Tower ts act:eptor
spectal
gtft
$300
tng apphcalton s for watttng
1740!388·0868
Its! for Hud·substzed 1~ br
apart ment. call 675 6679
Full Stze Maltress Set New
EHO
tn pi.1Sttc · w/warr Sacriltce
Two 2 bedroom apts for rent 51 19 Cell phone 304-412·
tn Syracuse. $200 depoSit. 8098 or 304·552-1424
$330 per month renltflclude
wate r, sewer &amp; trasll sufft · Full stze truck topper to r sa le
Ctent mcome requtred lo wtll Itt model 90 phone 458quahly for renl ,' 740-378- 1541
6 11 1
alter 2 30 p m

2 Furnished small aparl ·
ments for rent l1v1ng room,
kitchen. bedroom, &amp; bath
$275 eacll all ulihltes pa1d
e~~:cept electnc (3 04] 675·
1365

Upstatrs
one
bedroom
JET
apartm ent at 651 2nd Ave .
AERAT IO N MOTORS
Galltpolls Rent" $350 per
Repatred New &amp; Aebutll In
month &amp; 5350 depostt
Stock Call Ron Evans. 1-'
requtred 6 mos lease,
800 -537-9528
water/t rash
pa td
Cnll
238 1st Ave large upsta1rs Debbte or Judy at (740)446apt. lurmshed kttchen. no 73n (ltbrary)
Ktng-Stze
Ptllow
Top
pels, 2 br 1 bath. $"365/mo .
\II R4 11\'\IJI ~ I
Maltress set New S!tll 1n
plus utiltttes OepOstl and ~~;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, plasttc Sa le 5299 Cell
references (740)446-4926
H
phone 304·412-8098. 304·

r10

OUS~JiOI.Il

BEAUTIFUL
APART· t.,.--·Goo
--os~~·-_..1
MENTS ' AT
BUDGET "
PRICE S AT JACKSON 3-plece sectronal Wllt1 sola NEW ANO 'LISEO STEEL •
552- 1424

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; movies Call
740-446-25 68
Equal
Hous1ng Opportuntty
Clean 2 tledroom upslatrs
apartmenl
trash/water
stove/re1ridgeralor.
$285
rent $285/deposit (740)446·
7620 after 7 leave message.

Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
For
Concrele
Angle.
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains
Couch &amp; 2 chairs $100. Dnveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Whir lpool electric range $50 Scrap Metals Open Monday
t304 )882·3129
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4 ·30pm Closed
For Sale Wooden kitchen
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
table wllll 4 chairs extra
Sunday (740)446-7300
leaf, $75 Call (740)446-

bed &amp; love seat In gray witll
bulll·m end table Good condttlon $125. (7401446-8972

8972.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Good
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE! 4

Used Appliances
and
TownhOuse
e.parlmenl s Reconditioned
Washers .
houses &amp; mobile homes Guaranteed
Ra nges ,
and
FOR RENT Call (740)441· Dryers .
Ill t for applicat ton &amp; tnfor- Refngerators . S om e slart at
$95 SkHggs Appliances. 76
mallon
V1ne St, (740)446·7398
N1ce 2 br apt tn New Haven
tully equ kitchen central Kenmore Stackable washhealing/coolin~.
washer er/dryer. excellent condilton.
dryer
hookup
balcony 5700 OBO. full size couch &amp;
upstairs pnvate parking 2 chatrs (flo rat prtnl) $ t 25

1394)882·2523

OBO. (740)949·28Qol

Oue&amp;n-P tllow Top Mattressset New in plasttc wl warr
W1il accept $199. Cell phOne
304-412-8098
304-5521424.
•

Bt ~I.IJIN(;
St.1'1'lli:S
BlocK, brick . sewer ptpes,
wtndows,, lintels. etc Claude
Wmters, A1o Grande. OH
Call 740-245-5121

�•

Monday, January 26, 2004

. ~onday, January 26, 2004 ·

'
The
Daily Sentinel •

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

. ALLEY OOP

ACROSS

Pole Building Special

Phillip
Alder

Registered Lha sa
··- J.ated roof, gut1er. erected Apse puppy's Vet checked
1-shotl t -wormmg . 3/males.
price $ 10,15 7.00
2/femates. Rf!ady t o go
740-7 42-40 1, '
(740}388· 88 56 . (740)388·
800-J96-3026

r

BISSELL

R.B

10'M8' , non-insulated. painted steel , 12" O'ferhang, insli- AK C

NOW OPEN
M-Thur 5-9 pm
Fri- Sat 5-10 pm

•Sand•Din
740·985-3564

300 Second A ve. Gall ipolis

Pomeroy,Ohla

6:30

• Replacement

•limestoae

Under N e w Owne rs hip

Please g1ve one of these
grea t dogs a forever homesmall
white/Jan
female
Terr 1er mix, app ro• . 3- 4 yrs.
old ; lemale Bl ack Lab muo: ,
appmx 4 yrs. old; 9-1 0 wks
old female Blac~ Lab Pup.
Saint Bernard pupp1es. 1-M. f
ea
m a
I
e
2-F, AKC, Ready Jan. 26. Basse tthounsJ Beagl e m1.oo: ,
POP.
$ 30p·$350
. C al l approx 9mo.- l yr. (740)992(740)256-1090.
3779

Adorabl e Poodles. AKC
mal e- 2 mon ths. femal~- 4
months. Vet checked. sho ts
current (7 40)3 79-2639

Every Thursd ay
&amp; · Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

N(·w H ome ~ • Vi nyl
Siding • Ne w Garages.

Hauling

8 441

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171

BUILDERS IHC.

Trucking

The Down Under
Restaurant

Now Available at T&amp;D Hydraulics
· • Farm Pro Tractors ..
20 Hp 2 Whee·l Drive
25 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive

L ast Thu rsday of

\\'i n J ow~

• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RES IDENTIAL

every .month

Each has full I year warrant~· on p art s a nd labor:
Prit.W from $5,000 &amp; $13,000 w/options available.
Also ~ Hawkline Orus h~gs. box bladt'S, grader
blades utility trailers. ~oosent'ck s, and mor.t.
And ...IS£».: Ma~y Ferguson ·rradors.

All pack $5.00

""

Buy $5.00

740·992·7599

~ ... DOE

'(o tot; LAY!

call 441-9923

F\H\1 '&gt;l 1'1'1.11·.S
l~

to

7

• J '
4 QJ 9R:I

So uth

+

A7
. K I076.J2

•

,.3.

-

Deale r : South

Vulnerable: Norlh-Soulh

J&gt;ass

AF IIJO;
1'01&lt; SAU:

II\ 1-.S I OCk.

•

A J I0
., 5 4 2

Call for tletail

South

10

East

1!1 K Q 98l

,J fl :1
KQI O !I .l l65

t

For re serva tio n s
1

"' A

'
· -A

As always wt• s111l ~a\l' hydraulk host&gt;~. oil a nd
r epair cylinders.
CALL T&amp;D HYDRA ULI CS,
ask for Terry @ 740-985-43114

Bring this coupon

FREE ESTIMATES

.. 5
Wut

MONTY

Nort h
01 -Uo- ~
A A 65 4 :J
¥ KQI0 8fi
• 42

West :\lurlh
I I
. 2t
3 t
Pass
Pass 4 ¥

East
Pass
Pi:!-Sl:i

All pa ss

Opening lead: t Q

FARM

1999 Ford W1ndsta r. very
nice. low miles. Owner ill.
need-s so meone to, take·over
1996 John Deere Back hoe payments. i740 )44 t -1236 it
4x4 and Ex! Hoe, 4000/hrs no answer leave a message.
(740)446-8044

EQIJH'MENT

Ext ra n1ce 130 International
w/fa st hitc h. cultivator &amp;
sid e dre sser. S2 .250.00.
(304)743-3248

,

'

OJI

[720

TKIJC:KS

t 990 Ford Ranger. 4 Cyi, 5
sp,
asking .
$1 ,000,
7 40)992-0924

this pdg~, for as low f!s

Massey Fe rguson hay rack t989 Ford Bronco. full size .
for sale. S75. Call (7 40)379· V·8 . 4x4, asking $ 1,000,
2351.
1740)992-0924

·_s_.g~ pfr,mont~!
"'iii,"'~

,}

r

1984 Goldwmg \"Interstate,
tully loaded, CB. 1n'e w tires ,
Ron
Russell
For Sale: H ay. S2.00 a ba le. $4,000 ,
Ab out 1500 bal es . Call (740)949-2909
(740)446·7857
If you want a G reat Deal
Hay for sale 860 ib bales
Call (740)446-8972
$ 15 barn kep1 (304) 576 - 2000
Harl ey
Dav idson
3 135
Sportster, 1200 c.c . Lots of
e)(fras, like new.
Hay lor Sale: Round and
Harley
Davidson
Square ba les. Ba rn kept . 2003
Sportsler
1
OOih
Anniversary
Ph: 304-675- 1743 or 74012 c.c . Lots of extras, 355
446- 1104.
miles, like new
Round bales S1 2.50 Squ21 re 2003 Harley Davidson Buell .
ba les 2nd-culling gra ss li ke new, 2.700 m il es.
$2 .50
Ear corn S2 .50 a
50 BOATS
MOTOR~
bus hel G ro und ea r corn
mHSALE
$4 .50 fo r 100 pounds .
(740)992·2 623
9 4 Slratos bass boal. 120hP
Square bales tor sa le .~ 1-sl
troll ing motor, !ish Iinder &amp;
an d 2nd culling. $2.00 and
trailer, $6800 lirm, (740)74 2$3.00 pe r bale. (740)24540 t 1
9044.

60

tUKSALE

''"

26310 Legion Road,
La·ngsville,
by
appointment. A copy
ol the report can be
provided
upon
request .
Bonnie
Scott, Clerk Salem
Township Trustees.
1121 ,26
PuBlic Notice
Notice to Bidders
Bid for Truck
.
(Legal Ad)
The
Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water
District is Inviting
bid s for a one-ton
2004
Cab
and
Chassis . All specifi cations for the truck
bid can be picked up
at the Tuppers PlainsWater
Chester
District's main office
located on SR 7, 3
miles
south
of
Tuppers Plains. The
mailing address Is
39561 Bar 30 Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772.
We will also Jllail' or
fax a copy 1 of the
specification sheet to

anyone calling.
The phone number
Is
1-740-985-3315.
Blds will be opened
Thursday, February 5,
2004, at 10:00 a.m . at
the District's main
offlce. The District
reserves the right to
waive any informality
and reject any and all
bids ,
By ·Howard Caldwell
President
of
the
Board of Directors
(1) 22, 26, {2) 2

' The 2003 annual
financial report of
Salem Township for
the
year
ended
December 31, 2003
has been completed
and Is available for
public inspection at
Clerks
office
the

owner excell ent
s'ha pe
$4000 call (304)773 -6076·

The Syracuse Racine
Sewer
Regional
District has the position
of
Sulton
Township
Representative open
for the unexpired
term . Interested parties must live outside
ot each Village but
still within the Sewer
District. Please send
"i~ller of Interest along
with telephone number to : Syracuse
Racine
Regional
Sewer District Attn :
Board of Trusteas
Sutton
Twp
Representative PO
Box 201 Racine , OH
45771 by February 10,
.
2004.
. (1) 26, 27 , 28

·;

&gt;! 1(\ I&lt; I

to

s

HoME
L11PROVEMENTS .
BASEMENT

1995
Bu ick
Lesab re ,
WATERPROOFING
148.000 miles. runs great.
Uncon ditional liletime guar$ 1200, (740)742-2803 leave
antee. Local refere nces furmessage.
ni shed . Establi shed 1975.
24 Hrs. (740 ) 44686 Escort , 4 dr. , 4 cyl .. auto. Call
new li1es. fuel purn p .. brake s. 0870. Rog ers Basem ent
engine has been repl aced. Waterproofing.
$ 1150. {740)?42·4011

lion, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

• New Homes
·Garages

BARNEY

• Complete

(10'Kl0' 6 10'K20')

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

740-992·1671

'ZACTLY

EL VINEY, HOW DOES
THIS CORN
RELISH
TASTE
?

Stop &amp; Compare

$ ·-~-

45771
740-949-2217
'

THE BORN LOSER
r

475 Sou~h Church St.

• Sizes S'x10' ,

·· 't(!:lO'x30'
,
.
\•

A..____,__~..=&gt;........._..__.__.

Dean Hill '
New&amp;: Used

Racine . Ohio

Ripley, WV 25271 ........_

1-800·822-0417

·'

Hours

.7 :00AM - 8:00 PM
1/ 14/1 mo. pd

YCYV KNOW, &amp;LI'\OY5,
:)Otv\E.IItA£~ l Tf\lt-\K.

l jl):)\ DOJ'.l'\
G'EI \\!

'WYs #I C h evy . Pontiac. Bui ck . Olds
&amp; C u stom Va n Dea ler ·

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
Backhoe. Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

i

"lfeellike
I'm out
on a limb!"

O Graph

"Not mel
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance

-... &lt;Birlhdayt

T HE COUNTDOWN TO
MR~ . 60DFREY
REtURHINCO FROM

and Financial Services,

HER S ASBATICAL..

Box 189, Middleport, OH 11-'i.',%.'1
Phone: 843-5264 ."

d 1 me

r •

F~~~~~1i
CARPENTER .
Hartwell House" ·
1
SERVICE
YOUNG'S

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

fi;...
fj:

.~

Gifts &amp; Gift Ba., kets for all of
your holiday 11 ~eds
1

· ;U

fi;.. . , UPS Shipping Services

• Patio and POrch Decks

l#:· Holiday Hrs.: Mon 10-8 p1n; '1'-Th 10-6 pm
it Fri. &amp; Sat. 10~s pm': Sun. Noun - 4pm

Reduced Winter Rates

~ Lucaled in Histr1ric Downtown Pnmeroy

V.C. YOUNG Ill

fi;._

.

PEANUTS

tj

m
;·t£
-~.

I WONDER WI-IAT I CAN
DO TO MAKE TI-IAT LITTLE
RED-1-\AIRED GIRL NOTICE ME ..

tj

IOOE:.Main

MA'{6E IF I WALK AROUND
THE ROOM A 61T ... I'LL BET
51-lE NOTICES ME NOW ...

74. 0-·9·9
· .·2.-7..69.6
~
~~~~~~~~

Sunset Home
Construction

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

· BETTY

AND I'M WIU.l~ ~rr===""'
AND. iHoSE MONKE:Y PJ.
AND '/OJ 1l\OIJGI.IT
ARc 'A'6\G PART Of
10 seT YOU FEI..T
WOJ~Of.l'f li BE.
GOOOF~iHE
MOMW!" '(ciJ .

WOKE. UP

740.742-341

J&amp;L
Eledric ~

•

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
·. (740) 992-2155
•• ~oint ~lra~antl\egi~ter
(?04)675-1333

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing· All types

740-992-7953
I

N01 Evt:N

'fH15 15
WHA'f t

A I.XfTL.E:
'fl ME: 5'ff:P?

0

PATEL CLINIC

740·992-5232
~~Uipoli~ iai!~ ~ribunr

. GARFIELD

~~~
High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

NICE IF YOU
COUI.O I(EEP \i
GOIIIIG f1IJ. ~'(

ma
anewcar

licensed &amp; Banded
Ph 74D-992-093l
Ceii74D-591-107l

DAY!

ESPECIALLY AFTER I GET
M'{ SLEEVE CAUGI-IT IN
THE PENCIL SHARPENER ..

~..

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohi o
22 Years Local

FREE ESTIMATES!

MAKf
SOMfONf'S

oo•

· Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP ·

. GAIZZWELLS

Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology

p All AI • •prlnQ boerd .

1.\~iE\-\ , Cb ~ cSUY5 RE'SI'ECi
ME JrJ A~l. o'il. Q:l 'tl..l 'J\!5i

·---··._,,........,

'lbLruit
ME?

530 West Union Street
Suite C '
Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone: (740) 592-$ 918
Office Hours: 8am-5pm (Mon-Fri )

Ir m edical care is all about ·c aring with
heart 's te nder touch a nd warmth of
tears and smiles along with the cutting
edge care, well, you can count'on us!

mo

I

"

Conditions look . boner than ave rage tor
you in the year ahea d where your ambi'tions and goals are c"oncerned. Your abilities and talents wi ll fuse har.mon1ousty 1n
ways that allow what you desire to be
achieved
AQUARIU S (Jan . 20-Feb. ~ 9) - Hopes
and w1shes ca n be reali zed today if you
ho ld firm to a positive atti tude . Don'! allow
any negatiVe thought s to ente r your mind :
think ol yo urselt as lu cky and lite will come
up "7's ."
·
PI SCES (Feb. 20-Ma'rch 20) - There Wil l
be a favorable shi ft in con diti ons today
that coul d benefit you greatl y in financial
or work·related way s. Wlie n indicators
make themselves known . follow their dictates.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) - A matter
that had bee n taken out of your hands
may be placed back in your cont ro l today.
This tim e around . make certam the rein s
remain secu rely in your care tor as long as
you want.
TAURUS (Ap ril 20-May 20 ) - Yo u are now
entering a brief cycl e where you cou ld
benefit grently from situati ons that have
bee n initiat ed by othe1s. Get ready to take
advantage ot somet h1ng good that crosses your path.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20 ) - Someone
you liked very much may re-e nter yo ur life
aga1n at thi s time. It'll be good to have th1s
indiv1du.l 1bac k. and you'll have no trouble
picki ng up where you left o ff in your relationship
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Sal your
sights a lew notches higher than usua l
today and don't even think abo ut sett11ng
lor second best . Believe 1n yo urse lf,
becau se you have what 11 takes to be a
wmner.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) - Your greatest
asset today is your ab11ity lo success fully
get along with people !rOm all walk s of hfe.
II won't matte r io you if they are b1g shots
or one of the little people · you' ll be gracious to all
V IRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - Someone
w1 th whom you've had succes sful dealings 1n the pas t may once again come to
you today with another great 1dea. You'll
welcOme the un1 on, and thing s shou ld
work out once aga1n
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - An opportunity may arise today to win over fo your si de
someone who is both bold and c"apable of
helping you fur ther a cause you find your·
sell workmg on . This person will be a good
ally.
SCORPIO (Oct 24 -Nov 22) - Any po sitive co rrective measures you take today to
better your productivity at wo rk Will have
uplifting effects on your pos ition and
career. II co uld. be more mea ningtulth an
you now rea lize
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23-Dec. 2 t ) - Ava1l
yourself today if someone IS eager to
introduce you to someone _she or he
th l n~s .you 'd like Chances. are it could tur n
into someth ing far more e ~o: cit ing thsn
you 've got going lor you now.
CAPRICORN (Dec. :Z:i! ·Jan . t 9) - Rather
than clin ging to venture• or lnvq!vemAn tll
th at up until now have proven to be uriproduotlve , let them Qo • nd ... k out new
w11 y' to r11e.ch your obJ•ctlveA Uae the

' r

SOUP TO NUTZ

measure

1 Base
1 5 " Nova"
network
8 Gear tooth
11 Ruler
marking
12 House top.
14 Solar - know
15 MOreno or
Hayworth
16 Nobleman
17 "Bien "
opposite
18 Bandleader
- Dorsey
20 Kansas
capital
22· Daughter
of Hyperion
23 Clay pot
24 Jewelry
fastener
27 Not there
29 DC figure
30 Filmy
34 Suburban
event
(2. wds.)
37 Olympics
chant
38 Vogue
39 Skiltlsh
41 Verb

46 "I don't

mind - -"
49 Underwater
shocker
50 Vein of coal
52 Secure
54 Crack pilot
55 Strapless
lop
56 Mince
57 Writer
.- Bunt line
58 Dell wares
59 Clumsy
vessels

13 Knocks
tor a loop

DOWN

preceder

39 Project
40 Kampala's

19 Janitor's
nation
tool
41 Sister's
21 " Not guilty,"
daughter
e.g.
42 Gawked at
24 Shed tears 43 Mystery
25 Grassland
writer
26 Spring mo.
P.O. 27 Links
44 Harlow
leature
of film
28 Flight dir. 45 Do another
30 Joke
hitch
31 Shaggy
. (hyph,)
flower
47 Refuge
32 Sixth sense 48 Dampen a
33 Moonbeam
stamp
35 The D in
51 TV network
FDA
53 Brown
36 Most
of renown
rational

1 Pine cousin
2 ''I'll get
right - -! "
3 Prefix
for pod
4 London's
river
5 Hunts
for food
6 Jungle
snake
7 Classify
8 Bedouin 's
mount
9 Japanese
port
10 Arlzon8
river

43 Flagon

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Ciptler c~tograms are c1eateo hom q!.IO!atlons tJi lamous oeople. pa sl and present
Escn 1ene1m theCIPher stanos lor arother

Today'S clue: Requals P

" XN

X

UV

KMF

JXNT

X'F

YB

MGF

UXZZ

EBWNTL

SKBBZT
UV

R.PYYTL .

KTL. "
EMLV

ATYJTTG
JTWW ,

SKMURXBG

RWMVTL

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "II it 1sn t lhe sherill, it's the finance company . l've
got more attachments on me than a vacuum cleaner." - John Barrymore

.

(c) 2004byNEA . Inc

1·2¢

THAI Di ll!

IU!lLI!

O

~ earr :J nGe ie·teors d
~~~
four " rambled wor-:::'5 bl!·

low •o fcrm lo ur mno le wcrci1

Tuesday, Jan. 27 , 2004
By Bernice Bede Oso l

No! NO!

44 Whiskey

'·

A~tro­

BIG NATE

740-992·7953

&amp; More

aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this wide~ read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
previde a Tbank
You, and ~ace an
ad "In Memory"
I of aloved one.

CONSTRUCTION
Remodeling

29670 Bashan Road

(,

We .have reached the tas l boa rd of the
2003 Be rmuda Bo wl fmal. Italy led the
U nited States by 303-2 92. When the deal
was put onto the sc reen 1n the Vu-G raph
theater. ther'e was an eruption ol noise
from the packed audi ence ; anythi ng co uld
hap pen
In second seat, Eric Rodwell (Wesl )
opened one diamond. This pro mised only
two cards in ttle suit. Rodwell and his
partner, Jeff M eckstroth, use a homegrown version of the Precision C lub system. in which one diamond shows 11 - 15
poi nts and denies a one-no-trump open ing. a five -card major. or a six -cafd club
su it.
Norberta Bacc hi (Norltl) made a Michaels
· Cue·Bid , indicating at least 5 -S In the
maJors. Afte r Giorgio DUboin (South) gave
preference to hi arts. Wes t con tested with
three diamonds. One fee ls that South
should have passed this out, but he com·
pe ted with three hea rts , T hen, North
ma de an undisc ipli ned raise to lou r
hearts.
West led the diamond queen, promising
the king. Declarer won w ith his ace."
pl ayed a trump t9 dummy's king . cashed
the club ace. and called lor a low spade.
East went in with his quee n and retu rned
the diamond jack, West overtaking and
exiting w i t~ the heart nine. Afler going up
w ith dummy's queen , declare r could have
escaped for th re e down by playi ng an olh·
er low spad e. But. understandably he tned
to cash the spade ace. West ruffed, took
the heart ace, and ex ited with a d iamond,
leaving dec larer in the dummy w ith three
losing spades. So, South we nt fo ur down:
minus 400.
What happened at the other table? .Tune
in tomorrow. same time. sa me channel!

MOMfNTUM.

ROBERT
·aiSSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, RQofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall

For more informa·
Public Notice

2
studded
tires .
P215/75 R 15. mounted on
rims. $50. (740)992-7242

$500!.H ondas.
Chevys.
Je eps , etc I POLIC E
C atapiij er molor 34 06· lor
IM POUNDS Ca rs
from
sem i new rebuilt 9 speed
$500. For fiSIIhgs 1·800-7 19·
Eaton new clutch. moto r &amp;
3001 ext 390 1
trans complete
1985 SS Monty Carlo 1 (304)5 93·4665

1995 Bu1ck Century, Good
Co ndit1on , $ 1500 . (740)25 61928.

Public Notice

Public Notice

·I

Auro PAKI'S &amp;
AL..CHiSORI~

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

GRAIN

Auras

Public Notice
The Financial Report
for Letart Township,
Meigs County Is available for review at the
home of the clerk,
Joyce
White
by
appointment only.
4740) 247-3125
1126

Let me do it for youl

HAl'&amp;

I R \ \SI 'Oi{ I \ 110'\

a

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

r«&lt; Mm'ORCYLU~

/JJ

in Volume 318, Page
587, Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio.
PARCEL I.D. NOS : 0600021 ; 06.00022; 0600023; AND 06-0002A
Said premises have
been appraised at
$110,000.00 and must
not be sold for less
than two thirds of
said amount.
Terms of Sale- 10 per·
cent down by cash,
certified check , or
bank check · (no personal checks will be
accepted) on the day
of the sale with the
balance due upon
confirmation by the
court and delivery of
the Deed.
The full purchase
must be paid withiri
30 days olthe dale ol
the sale; otherwise
the Purchaser shall
be adjudged to be In
Contempt of Court.
THIS SHERIFF'S
SALE
OPERATED
UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR , THE MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF
MAKES NO GUARANTEE AS TO STATUS
OF TITLE PRIOR TO
SALE.
Ralph Trussell , Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
John E. ·sowers (No.
0021415)
North
Court
233
Street
Circleville ,
Ohio
43113
(740)
417-1361
Attorney for Farm /
Credit Services of
Mld·America, FLCA
(1)19, 26&lt;\(2)2
"

Ta~e

200 1 S-10 4)(4 , 4.J. Vortex.
ZA2 . auto. cd and cass .. 3rd
door. lull power. new ba nery,
30 bred Angus Mainea n1 au new ti res. low miles. "price
reduced .'1 wi ll se ll lor payoff,
e ros ~ and Clmmental cross.
aller 4pm
(740)992-2358
easy ca lling AI bred sfonfs
(a
ny
time
weekends)
calf in Feb or March also 20
mature cows 14 ol the m AI
bred (30 4 )576 _2890
88 Ec onoline van . Ford ,
runs good, good il')terior, no
For stud services bo rder .col;.. rust. 58,00 or trade for car ;
lie registered, 3 yea r's old. male Po m er&lt;~ nlan . $ 150 ;
black &amp; whiie marki ngs SI OO (740)992·2563
or pick of the Iilier (304)8953577 after 6 :00pm M-F

.Daily:_.
tin.el ·

SHERIFF'S
SALE- nor of the Southwest
REAL ESTATE
Quarter of said sec·
CASE NUMBER
tlon; thence south on
02-CV-064
the line between said
FARM CREDIT SER- German and Park, 100
VICES OF MID-AMER- rods to a North 100
rods to a post; thence
ICA, FLCA at al
lis
East 17 rods and 9 ·
ROBERT E BURDINE links to the place of
alai
beginning, containing
Court of Common 10 acres.
PARCEL NO 3;
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
Beginning at the
In pursuant to an northeast corner of
alias order of sale to the
Northwest
me directed from said
Quarter of Section 33,
Court in the above Town 3, Range 11,
entitled action, I will
Ohio
Company's
expose to sale at pub- Purchase ;
thence
West 30 rods to . a
lic auction on the
steps of the Meigs stake; thence South
County Court House, 122 rods to a cqrner,
100 . East Second thence East 30 rods
Street, Pomeroy, OH to a corner; thence
45769, on February North 122 r.ods to the
20, 2004 at 10:30 place of beginning,
o'clock a.m. of sate
cOntaining 23 acres,
more
or
less.
day, the. following
Excepting 10 acres
described real estate:
Situate
In
the
heretofore sold to
Township
. of w.c. Orr off the south
Lebanon, County of end , and except a
Meigs and Slate of right of way heretoOhio:
fore deeded to J.C.
NO.
1: Ross by the window
PAI'ICEL
Baglnning at
the and heirs of John
southeast corner of German, deceased.
the
Southwest
PARCEl NO. 4:
Quarter of Section 34, Beginning 30 rods
Town 3, Range 11, West of the northeast
Ohio
Company's corner
of
the
thence Northwest Quarter of
Purchase;
North
166
rods ; Section 33, Town 3,
· thence West 86 rods;
Range
11 , ·Ohio
lhapce South 166 Company's Purchase;
Rods; thence East to !hence South 56 1/2
rods; thence West 29
the place of beginning, conll'inlng 90
rods
4
feet
to
acres excoptll)g · 10 Harrison Darst's east
acres out of the line; thence North 56
· northeast corner and r 1/2 rods to the north
: 8 acres out of the line of said section;
· northwest
corner. thence East 29 rods 4
'· Also, a piece ot land feel to the place of
20 feel wide for the beginning containing
purpose of ·road or
t'b acres, 59 square
outlet from the 90 rods , excepting a
· acre
lot formerly right of way heretoby
John - fore granted to J.C.
owned
German , deceased, Ross.
· and situated In the
PARCEL NO. 5:
· southwest one·forth Being the East 50
of Section 33, Town 3, acres
In
the
Range 11 , said road Northeast Quarter of
to begin at the east Section 34, Town 3,
aide of said 90 acre Range
11 ,
Ohio
lot and rupnlng In a Company's Purchase,
aoutheaaterly dlree· saving and excepting
. lion along il ridge to therefrom
44 3/4
· Intersect . the county acres heretOfore con·
: road near i home lor· veyed.
· morly owned and
Being the same
· occupied by John real estate ·described ·
In deed fr.om Pamela
German.
PARCEL NO. 2: Proffit, nka Pamela
Being In Section 34, Burdine, and Robert
Town 3, Range 11 , E. Burdine, her husOhio
company's band, to
Pamela
· Purchase. Beginning Burdine and Robert
· at the northeast cor- E. Bur~lne, recorded

750 East State Street Phone (740)5.93-6671
Athens, Ohio

VANS&amp;

4-WDs

TtJe first half of
the final deal

YOU W~IGt't 218
POVNI&gt;S IUT,
OI&gt;DL Y ~NOUGtt
YOU t'tAV~ NO

l~lKSALE

30

..

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

BS

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.BRIDGE
30x48ic9, ~ - 3' entry, ~ -1 4!19
sliding door, painted steel,
'guner. erected, $8189.00
24 x 32 :.: 9 _ 4 ~ , ' t -3' ' entrv. 210')18' insulated over.heacts.
t ~· 0\1911'\ang , guners painted steel, roof &amp; walls insulated, erected , $9247.00
30x40x9 _4", 1·3' .entry. 2·

~age

~ 8 BUL E

,,
I"

I
l

L O !~ HE

I 1· I I

-"-

L--J----l.--1...--L--l :

My brother was dal irrg a r~a l
cutie bu t she kept filling his
head With too r1uch fl attery
One . day cur dad counseled
him. "Fiatte.-y 1s like perfume ,

1---rS:-.~-,-D_Hr-I.,..R___,--i,
7

_
1

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.

19
.

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:1_~~~~~~ _b,e smelled not

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.-~mo le'e '1-:s . c ~u c k l e quored
;, y i d:111'; m !he , ,ss1ng wcr ds

.L.....L_ .L-..l.__..J ycu develoc ircm ste~ No 3 below.

I' i' I' I' /' I' I' I
3

1

I I I4I

II

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Prayer - Vault - Heacr- Mortal - DO LATER
Old limer to anolher 'I don 'l do alllhat needs ld be
done. I mighl not find anylhing lo do when I look for somethlnQ to DO LATER' .

ARLO &amp; JANIS

w'A,il, WA I1, WAI'f '

I 1J.IOUC. KT ! WOIJW
JOIIJ YOU-'

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