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                  <text>Page B 6 • The ~ally Sentinel

www.mydallyseQ_tinel.com

Wednesday; January 15, 2003

ACROSS

Wife loses sleep-when man's
libido works the night shift
DEAR ABBY: I need to
know if I'm being unreasonable. A few nights ago around 3 or 4 in the morning
- my husband got into bed
and woke me to have sex. I
had only been asleep for a few
hours. He knows I have to get
up for work by 7 a.m. It's not
the first time this has hapADVICE
pened. When I tell him I need
· my sleep, he ~ets mad and
say s I'm rejectmg him. Then
DEAR ABBY: I'm a colhe gives me the silent treat- lege student attending school
ment.
across the country from my
Abby, I have never been a family and friends. My parmorning person and have ents were in Europe for
always needed my sleep. This Christmas this year, so my
is a recurring problem that Aunt Louise invited me to
affects other parts of our rela- spend the holidays with her
tionship. My husband and I and Uncle Harry.
have been manied 15 years
Aunt Louise lived far from
and have quarreled continu- us when I was growing up, so
ously over his "nocturnal I didn't get to see her often
needs." I should add that he is and I welcomed the chance to
unemployed and can sleep get to know them better. Aunt
any time he wants.
Louise operates a bed and
How do you suggest I ~et bteakfast, and knows just
my hubby to be more consid- what touches in the room
erate without hurting his feel- make her guests feel at home.
ings?
SLEEP- Abby, on my nightstand was a
DEPRIVED IN THE MID- delightful little booklet of
WEST
yours - "Keepers." I read a
DEAR
SLEEP· piece or two from it each
DEPRIVED: You and your night before I turned out the
husband should hash this out lights.
in the cold light of day, preferI would like a copy of your
ably with a marriage coun- booklet for myself- and also
selor. Intimacy is an important one for each of my sisters
part of marriage, but it has to 'who live out West. How can I
be mutual to be enjoyable.
get them?

Dear

Abby

I

'

Thank you in advance for
the information , and happy
new year. - AMANDA IN
BUFFALO, N.Y.
DEAR AMANDA: I'm
delighted you enjoyed the
"Keepers" booklet. It contains
some of my favorite inspirational and humorous pieces.
To order the booklets, send a
self- addressed envelope, plus
a check or money order for $5
(U.S. funds only) for each
copy, to: Dear Abby Keepers, P.O. Box 447,
Mount Morris, IL 610540447. (Postage is included.)
DEAR ABBY: My wife
and I invited another couple,
whom we had not previously
entertained, to our home for
dinner. When my wife told me
what she planned to serve, I
told her she would do well to
ask our guests if they liked
that particular "exotic" dish,
or if they had any dietary or
religious restrictions or dislikes.
My wife insists that to do so
would be impolite and unnecessary. Now there's a quarrel
brewing over this. Who's
right? - IRON STOMACH
SPOUSE, SUN
CITY,
CALIF.
DEAR SPOUSE: You are.
A thoughtful hostess lets
guests know what she's planning to serve in case they
have food allergies or medical

Cleaned
house
6 Where
Lhasa is
11 Pet shop
squawker
13 Fiesta decor
14 Sl. Francis'
town
15 Missed a
_syllable
16 Natural elev.
17 Make after
taxes '
18 Cammer·
cials
21 Vinegar ancf'
vitamin C
23 Kennel
1
sound
2
26 Earth, In
3
combos
27 Rather of
4
CBS
5
28 Verdi work
29 Delight
6
31 Throng
32 Reebok
7
rival
33 Wined and 8
dined
9
36 Big bucks?
37 Not their
10
38 Court
12
1

condition s. Not only is it
thoughtful, it's good insurance .
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren. also
known as Jean,ne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0 . Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

Do You Feel the
Need to Read?

OSU falls to Mlchl1an, ·81

39 Tack on
Explorer
- da Gama
42 Hog pen
43 Untold .
centuries
44 Baseball's
- Plnlella
46 Contribute
(2 wds.)
49 Hinder
53 Sheep's
coat
54 Itemize
55 Nearby
56 Undergrad
digs
40

evidence,

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
13
18
19

DOWN
Resort
Used to be
Hosp.

20
22
23

areas

Oecorous
Mexican
menu item
Linoleum
pieces
No future

24

25
28

30
Wretched
Dog days In
Dijon
34
Little kid
35
Food
container
(2 wds.)

sometimes

40

Wait
41 Murray or
Schedule
Rice
Contra43 -out
dieted
(barely gets
KO'd
by~
Lead·ins
45 "It's-Provides
you"
Commence- 46 Fast·food
ment
chain
Friday,
47 Unfavor·
often
able
"- Daba
48 Corporate
Honey·
exec
moon"
50 Pitcher
That
handle
woman
51 Faint
Geometry 52 Chicago
pioneer
trains
Brushed
the dog
Express
--r;-""T:;""-r,:---r,"~

Whether your favorite
subject is math or music,
science or social studies,
you'll find something
interesting in the
newspaper. In fact, the
paper is such a reliable
source for the information
you want, you can even use
it as a homework and
school research tool.

Astrograph

Thursday, Jan. 16, 2003
fill your heart with joy.
LEO (July 23- Aug. 22)-- This put to a contest. You know how
BY BERNICE BEDE 0SOL
ARIES (March 21- April 19)-- is one of those days when your to perform under pressure.
There is a good chance you What will be an enormous asset intuitive perceptions will be SCORPIO (Oct. 23- Nov.
could be more on the go in the to you today is your ability to right on target. If you get a 22)-- In order to feel fulfilled
coming year than usual. Your gauge the wants and needs of hunch about something, don 't today, you need to engage yoursojourns won't necessarily be the public. You'll instinctively hesitate to follow it to the letter. self in things that will help
long in duration, but they will be have a handle on this and know VIRGO (A ug. 23 · sept. 22). -- widen your perspective instead
meaningful and appease your how to use it to your benefit.
Make it a point to look out for of restrict it. Break out of the rut
wanderlust. .
TAURUS (April 20- May 20) the interests of others today and and do something interesting.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan. ·- Although you usually thrive they, in turn, will focus on your SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2319)-- It's important to take the on routine, today you will func- needs It's the old wisdom of one Dec. 21) --If you're looking to
broaden your ability to find
time today to weigh and balance tion more effectively with a hand washing the other.
free-flowing
schedule.
Give
LIBRA
(S
23
Oc
23)
additional
ways for garnering
any important issue on which
ept. - t.
-you have to take action. With yourself plenty of latitude to You won't purposefully seek financial benefits, team up with
·d
·
'II operate without a set agenda.
.challenging situations today, but someone successful who does
proper cons1 erat10ns, you
GEMINI (May 21- June 20)-move in the right direction.
by the same token, you won't things differently and who can
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb. Your shopping concerns today back off from one should you be open up new avenues.
19)--Ciean house first before may be more on the needs of the
you begin any new work project family than on your own desires.
today. With the clutter out of the With them in mind, you'll make \\'ORO SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
r 20DJ Unlt•ll f ..
way, you'll have a clear vision it a point to utilize the resources
Answer
at your disposal very prudently.
as to how to proceed on your
CANCER (June 21 _July 22 )to
new venture.
PISCES (Feb. 20- March ZO) · It is important today that you
previous
-- It won't take an exhilarating personally direct events and
Word
3rd DOWN "' 25
social event to satisfy your com- ~i~;~t~~~:t'n(e~~ ~i~;s~~~~~'::~i
Scrim·
munal needs today. Spending
~th DOWN :::: 23
time with ·Joved ones in a com- · you allow others to call the shots
mag~
AVERAGE GAME 140.1SO
JUOO'S TOTAL
225
fortabie home atmosphere will on your behalf.

WORD ®©®0@@0®®-

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0

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2nd DOWN

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"''~ Si'nd~all . lllt.

AVERAGE GAME 160.170

byJUDD~AMBRICK

-

~~Rtf~~~~~~=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7·1etter WQrd hom the letters on each yardllne.
Add points to eacl1 word or I&amp;Uer USing scoring directiOns at right. Seven-letter
words get a 60-polnt bonus. All words can be found In Webster's New World

-

College Dlctionery.

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORR_
OW

1-U -M

1. \.):1.\'T Kf1:M/ .,.---..
W~AT '\'OJ
ME.~\4

f!IC!V. WATCHING ~&lt;SE
COOKING SHONS, !'liE
I.EAIINED WH~T ITTAKES

TO Be A GREAT COOK

I KNO/J ABOUi SPIC&lt;S,

COOKING ~~IQI.ES,

AND ·l'llOPER FOOD
1'\lESOO,I,iiON fOR

•
SPEAKING OF WHICH

LOT'S OPel! A \WO OF Q\II'S

TO TI[)E US OVER UNT1'

li\\G&lt;1'Tit\G HUNGR{.

YO~

MoM GefSI!OME

HUNDREDS OF
I)IS~~S AND
AP?CTIZeRS ...

·n115 15 ~ow
1'1~ OFFICE

WILl LOOK
lllHt~

I'M

FIN15KED

I~ \'OU AND I WERE TO
GET MARRIED, DO \'OU
SUPPOSE WE .. .

o~e

DlE'5! LOOK.

SUPERIII00EL5 OOI'l'T ~
11\E, 1'HEIR !&gt;GRAWI&gt;I'i

AT THE SLEt~ ,
OPEN 5PAGE~ !

Ui!Lt Dt5K5 llliLL.

PRI~TIN£
ol"iLE 1

THE

DON'T SAV ANOTHEK
WORD! WE'RE NEVER
601N6 T06ET MARKtED
SO T~ERE'S NO SENSE
IN TALKIN6 ABOVT IT!

NOW 1 I=OK60T WllAT I
WAS 601NG it&gt; SA'(..

AEP, state reach
Old schools expected to
accord
on
Gavin
be vacated by mid-summer
BY KEVIN KELLY

POMEROY- Plans for
transfel'fhtg ownership or
demolishing school buildings to be abandoned
when the new Meigs
Middle and Elementary
schools are completed this
summer were made at
Wednesday night's meeting of the Meigs Local
School Board.
The schools will be
vacated at the end of the
school year, and it is anticipated that the ownership
transfers will be complet,
ed by mid-summer.
The board adopted a resolution of intent setting
forth terms of the transfers
as follows:
Meigs
Middle and
Middleport Elementary
Schools will go to
Middleport
Village;
Bradbury
Elementary
School to the AthensMeigs
Educational
Service
Center;
Harrisonville Elementary
Pomeroy
and
the
Elementary schools to the
Meigs County commissioners; and Salem Center
Elementary
to
the
landowner, Richard D.
Macomber of Langsville,
accordinjl to a provision
of the anginal deed.
The
Rutland
Elementary School is the
oi'lly'school which -»111 tie
demolished . The land will
then be transferred to the
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department.
The Salisbury building
will be retained by the
school district and used
for administrative offices
and storage. The plan is
to completely renovate
the building before moving in.
Superintendent William
Buckley said that one rea"
son for having the school
board adopt the resolu·
lion of intent to transfer
the buildings is to be sure
"the
Ohio
School
Facilities Commission and
the district are on the
same page insofar as
demolition money is concerned."
"This will allow us to
pretty much get etched in
stone with the OSFC
what's going to happen to
the buildings. We can then
request use of the money
which the state ha~ designated for demolition of

ON~

FOil

Tl'l~

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

News editor

Scott Walton, center, is new president of the Meigs Local Board of Education. He is pictured with Roger Abbott, left, new vice president, and Superintendent William Buckley.
(Charlene Hoeflich)
buildings for use in other
areas of the project," said
the superintendent.
"The buildings will
technically be sold for $!,
betause we're not allowed
to give them away," he
added.
Tentatively, Middleport
plans to use the elementary school building for
office space. The middle
school building will be
turned over to a citizens
group and the Middleport
Planning
Commisswn ,
which are now working on
ways to attract an institution of higher learning
into the community.
The two buildings
which the Meigs County
commissioners will accept
from the board also have
designated purposes. The
Harnsonville school will
be turned over to the
Common '
Ground
Community
Outreach
Center, a faith-based
group with an ultimate
goal · of establishing a
Bible college there.
The commissioners will
Pomeroy
turn
the
Elementary School over to
the
Meigs
County
Cooperative Parish, which
plans to consolidate the
food pantry, God's NET
and other facets of their
ministry there.
The
Athens-Meigs
Educational
Service
Center is looking to operating a Head Start program, the alternative
schools, and the severe
behavioral handicapped
units in the Bradbury
building.

Scott Walton to lead
Meigs board in ·2003
Abbott.
Mark E. Rhonemus
was given, a four-year
POMEROY _ Scott contr~ct.as treasurer for · .
Walton is new president the district at a salary of
f h M .
L al . $60,000 for 2003,
0
t e
etgs oc
$62,500 for 2004:
~chool Bo~d:
·
$65.,000 for 2005, l\lld
He )"'as. elec~d at ~e $67 .~oo for 2096. , · ,
orgamzallbrtal. meetlnf
lion Logan, ' w11s
"".Yf.,e~1 Il~~y) 11-w.&amp;.bHt~~~j! •appointed')ll$-··the- Ohio··
rep aces 0 1,1 , oou, School ·"-~ Boards
who, served as· board Association'~ .legisla·
p_restdent for th~; p~st tive liai$Oll .. lll'l&lt;V ·th"
s1x years. Elected Vtce
. · . . ,f ""*~;!!.· /h ~,.,..-;:; ,
president was Roger Plellse ... ~-.;~i;r;:,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

New&amp; editor

CHESHIRE -· A settlement
between
the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency and American ·Electric
Power has been reached over
fly ash leaks from the Gen.
James M. Gavin Power Plant
AEP will pay the state
$40,000 as part of the agreement, which AEP officials
noted includes no admission of
violations or liability by the
Columbus-based utility giant
Following inspections by
OEPA and citizen complaints,
the agency documented more
than 60 reported and unreported
leaks from Gavin's fly ash handling system over 47 separate
days between August 200 I and
June 2002.
On some days, the agency
said, more than one leak
occurred.
AEP said the leaks were
caused by wear in components
of the fly ash handling system.
The system includes five miles
of piping in trenches on Gavin
property.
The system pneumatically
delivers fly ash, a byproduct of
burning coal, from Gavin's
boiler operations to storage
silos on plant property.
AEP said in a news release
Wednesday the leaks "at no

time .presented any environmental or health risk to employees or community residents."
The company has since oorrected the leaks, Gavin
Manager Greg Massey said.
"Once the problem was identified, we put together an
expanded, aggressive preventative maintenance plan, which
was submitted to the Ohio EPA
for review and concordance, to
address the problem," said
Massey.
"We continued to work with
the agency and are pleased that
our cooperative plan appears to
have successfully addressed~
problems we were experiencmg," he added. 'The fly ash
handling system has been oper,
ating normally since June 2002,
and no further corrective
actions have been ordered by
the Ohio EPA."
In its announcement of the
settlement, OEPA said the company's actions "appear to have
successfully addressed the
leaks from the system."
Paul Stinson, president of
Citizens Against Pollution, a
group of Cheshire-area residents living near Gavin seeking
tighter environmental enforcement on it and other coal-burning power plants, found .fly ash
leakage the least of the problems associated with plant
Pleese IH AEP, A5

Reedsville
man
...
pleads guilty to
.:· seooK budget c:n4tflil· vehicular homicide
. for new bus ga~ag~~:;;/
I.

· B:v CHARLINE HOIFUCH

News editor
·
'1 POMEROY
_ A
b'l,ldget of $600,000 for
... construction of a bus
garage behind the new
Meigs
Local
Elementary
School
was approved by the
Meig·s Local School
Board ·
Wednesday
·night.
Plans prepared by
&amp;
Noel
Panich
Architects of Athens
for the 60-by-150 foot
structure with 9,000
feet
were
· square

.,,)••("'d.'•l••''
,:·...·.'· . .:~ ·:Ol~'l '··' ''\ '

Staff report

reviewed by the board,
The exterior of the ,
building will be con~
crete block facing
eight feet high. 'With ,.
metal above. It will
have a metal roof.
Inside there will be
three bays for washing
and general repair of
the buses.
A large storage area,
offices and restrooms
will be on the first
floor, and more storage
lind a meetin~ room for
the drivers wtll occupy
the second floor.

Please see Ius. AS

POMEROY - Jason L.
Richards, 24, Reedsville,
entered a plea of guilty to one
count of aggravated vehicular
homicide when he appeared
Monday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court before
Judge Fred W. Crow IlL
Meigs County Prosecutor
Pat Story said Richards was
charged in a bill of information following a fatal automobile crash on Jan. 5. The victim was Richards' brother,
Jonathan L. Richards, 30,
Coolville, who became Meigs
County's first highway death
of 2003.
Aggravated vehicular homicide is a felony of the third

degree, and carries a maximum possible sentence of five
years.
Crow, according to a release
from the prosecutor's office,
accepted the plea of guilty,
and sentenced Richards to the
maximum of five years in
prison: Crow also ordered that
Richards' driver's license be
suspended for life.
Attorney John R. Lentes
represented Richards at the
hearing while Assistant
Prosecutor Christopher E.
Tenaglia represented the state.
Richards was remanded to
the custody of Sheriff Ralph
Trussell to be transported to
prison to begin the sentence
ordered by Crow.

Rutland man's sentence.suspended in sex case

Index

Staff report

2 s.ctlons - 12 P8p1

l.'l&gt; Ll~~ TwO GfT·wf£.L
CAill&gt;S ·-- ONf FO~ A
/ SNAPPING TllllTLf ANl&gt;

fly ash leaks

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
News editor

A3
B4·5
B6

B6
A4
A3
A3
B1-3
A2

Cl 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - Jerry J.
.Lewis, 22, of Rutland, was
sentenced to a maximum
term of 18 months in prison
for unlawful sexual conduct
with a minor, but the sentence was suspended under a
plea agreement with the state.
Lewis appeared Monday
before Judge Fred W Crow
III in Meigs County Common ·

Pleas Court for sentencing.
Meigs County Prosecutor
Pat Story said Lewis was
charged and indicted by the
~rand jury as the result of an
mcident on July 2002 involving a 14-year-old female . The
crime is a fourth -degree
felony.
Crow pl aced Lewi s on
community control . (probation) for five years.
Crow, according to a news
release. found that Lewis is a

sexually oriented offender
subject to statutory reporting
requirements.
He specifically noted that
upon release from any
imprisonment, and for a period of I0 years thereafter,
Lewis must register in person
with the sheriff of the ·county
in which he establishes a residence within seven days of
coming into that county.
Lewis mu st also annually
thereafter verify his residence

address in person at the office
of the county sheriff, provide
notice of change of residence
address to the sheriff with
whom he is most recently
registered at least seven days
prior to such change. and to
register the new address with
the appropriate law enforcement authority of the new
county and state at least
seven days prior to such
change.
Tommy Lane. who is to be

sentenced at a later date, and
Lewis were both charged in
connection with the same
incident, and according to a
release from the prosecutor's
office, both entered pleas of
guilty.
Lewis was represented at
the sentencing hearing by
attorney John R. Lentes.
Prosecutor
Ass istant
Christopher E. Tenaglia represented the state.

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�PageA2

Local• Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 16, 2003

The Daily Sentinel

•

Ohio weather

EXTENSION CORNER

Friday, Jan. 17

Know what foods bird prefer to eat
How are the birds in your
life? Unlike man's best friend
the dog, birds decide where,
when, what and how much
they will feed. Your ability to
attract your favorite birds may
be improved if you know what
foods they prefer, the location .
of the feeder and when they
normally are in our area.
EXTENSION AGENT
Did you realize that some
birds prefer fruit, suet, nut
meats and bakery goods to attract which birds due to their
seed? The American robin is fruit. This chart is available
one such bird. The cedar from the Extension office.
waxwing prefers fruit. Niger
Location of the feed is
seed is commonly placed out important. Some birds prefer
to attract gold finch, darked to eat on or near the ground
eyed Junco~ ho~se finch, pur- . like grackles, junco, mourning
pie finch, pme s1sken and rose dove, cardinal and sparrows.
breasted grosbeak.
By placing the bird feeder five
Sunflower seeds are eaten foot or higher, ground feeding
by many of the best known of birds will be less attracted to
our winter birds like the cardi- the feed and thus fewer will
nal, blue jay, downy wood- visit your yard. Try placing
peeker, nuthatch, tufted tit- your bird feed near an evermouse, sparrow, mourning green tree or bush. Many
dove and even the yellow bel- times the evergreen will prolied sapsucker.
· teet the birds from both predaRemember that you may tors (hawks) and cold wmds.
plant shrubs and trees around
The Ohio Biological Survey
your yard that bear fruit. In the published in 1987 the booklet,
USDA conservation bulletin, "Abundance and Distribution
"Invite Birds to Your Home," of the Birds of Ohio," written
a chart describes which plants by Bruce G. Peteljohn and

Hal
Kneen

I M1nlfltld I10'/:12' I •

• •
•••

•*••
*

* *

·····························-1···· .............,

• 1''""""'''''"
Columbu•
13'1:12' '
................ ,,,,.,_ .... ,•••.•. .1

•

•••
••

Sunny PL ClOUdy

Cloo&lt;ty

Snowers T·stOmtS

Rain

F1urries

Snow

I&lt;"

Via Auoda\ld Press

Brace for snow tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Clouds increased across the
area overnight ahead ' :a storm
system moving through the
Tennessee Valley.
A low in the Tennessee
Valley will spread deep moisture into the area. Amounts will
range up to around 3 inches.
Highs will reach the 20s.
Snow will continue through
the evening, bringing storm
totals to the 2 to 4 inch range
before tapering to scattered
snow showers. Lows will range
from 10 to 15 most areas.
. Look for clouds and flurries
on Friday as the cold air deepens across the area in the wake
of a cold front.
Weather forecast:
Winter weather advisory for
this afternoon and tonight for 2
to 4 inches of snow.
Today... Occasional snow,
mainly from late morning on.
Accumulation I to 3 inches.
Cold with highs in the upper
20s. Light and variable winds.
Chance of snow go percent.
Tonight...Snow, mainly until
midnight. Storm total accumulation, 2 to 4 inches. Cold with
lows in the teens. Light and
variable winds. Chance of snow
80 percent.
Friday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of snow showers from
late morning on. Continued
cold with highs in the mid 20s.
Northwest winds around I 0
mph. Chance of snow 30 per:
cent.

Friday night .. Brisk and cold.
A chance of snow showers until
midnight. Lows 10 to 15.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday...Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of snow showers
in the afternoon. Continued
cold. Highs in the upper 20s.
Chance of snow 20 percent.
Saturday night...Snow showers likely. Lows in the teens.
RIO GRANDE - The
Chance of snow 60 percent.
University
of
Rio
Sunday... A chance of snow
Grande/Rio
Grande
showers during the day, otherCommunity College theatre
wise partly cloudy. Highs in the
arts program is producing
lower 30s.
"How Boots Befooled the
Martin Luther King Jr.
King," a musical for chilDay... Mostly cloudy with a
dren, written by Shirley
chance of snow showers. Lows
Pugh and directed by Dr.
in the upper teens. Highs in the
Greg Miller.
upper 30s.
Auditions will be held at
Thesday...Mostly cloudy. A
7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 21 in
chance of snow showers in the
the John W. Berry Fine and
· Lo · th
·d 20s
Performing Arts Center.
morrung. ws 10 e nu
Auditions will be open for
and highs in the mid 38s.
five adult women, six adult
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
men , five young women
with a chance of light snow.
and four young men.
Lows in the lower 20s and
highs near 30.
· . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

others. It notes that the following list of birds can be expected to remain all .Year round in
Ohio: Canadian Geese,
Mallard, Black Vulture, Redshouldered Hawk, Wild
Turkey, Mourning Dove,
Downy Woodpecker, Pileated
Woodpecker,
Northern
Flicker,
Red
Bellied
Woodpecker,
Blue Jay,
Amencan Arrow, Blackcapped Chickadee, Carolina
Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse,
White Breasted Nuthatch,
Carolina Wren, Eastern
Bluebird, American Robin,
Northern Mockingbird, Cedar
Wax wing, European Starling,
Northern Cardinal, Song
Sparrow,
Eastern
Meadowlark, House Finch,
American Goldfinch and
House Sparrow.
So enjoy feeding the birds.
Remember that once you start
feeding, you need to continue
to feed throughout the winter
and especiailr in early sllring
when the buds are raising
their young.
•••
Interested in the latest
power tools and equipment
mnovations?

Auditions scheduled
for children's musical

Mayor
looking for.
answers
about
pollution

Mondays 6:00-B:OOp.m.
January 20 to March 24
At Meigs Sr. Citizen's Building
$2.00 per class
Open to all ages!
Cal/992-2681, Ext 233
for more information
and to register.

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OFF

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Deluex Dishwasher $599 S419
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Wide by side refrigerator
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ALL 30% OFF

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• Brand Names

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Your Hometown Dealer!
ri Credit Terms
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Kenneth McCullouqh, R. Ph.
Charles Rime, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - frl8am - 9pm
Sat. Sam- 5 pm
Sun. CLOSED

11119 •

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Public Meetings

Regular Prices

Saturday, Jan. 18
PORTLAND - Portland
Community Center semiannual community meeting,
1 p.m. at the
Community
of
Christ
Church, corner of Portland
and Lovett Road behind
the township garage.

Clubs and
Organizations

Thurs. 9-12
Sal 9-2:30

gave grace before the carry-in
dinner. Joy Simpson sang
"County.Your Blessings" and
Sandra Walker chaired the
business meeting. January
birthdays were recognized.
Jean Ward, Esther Maerker
and Myrtle
re hostesses. The Feb. 22 m ing
will be at the Oak Hill R ·
in Jackson

Worship Center in the former Chester grade school.
LOGAN The First
Presbyterian Church of
Logan in. the Hocking Hills
will host the Earls of Lester
and Dave Marshall for an
evening
of
bluegrass
gospel music in the church
sanctuary 6:30 p.m. A free
will offering ·will be taken.
The church with an illuminated lantern in the bell
tower, is located at the corner of Hunter and Market
Streets.

Saturday, Jan. 18
SALEM CENTER- Star
Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878, potluck
Friday, Jan. 17
supper and fun night, 6:30
RACINE
God's
p.m. at the grange hall.
Clothing Parish in Racine
will beg,in a week long 25cent sale of good winter
clothing . The shop will be
open 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Sunday, Jan. 19
CHESTER
John
Elswick will be speaking at
10 a.m. at the Bethel

Reetonlc Bedding

Other events

Full Size
SET!

Church
meetings

ONLY •11gaa

RCA TVs

PageA3
Thursday, January 16, 2003

Book, new movie tell of
Austrailian Aboriginies' plight
NEW YORK (AP) - On
Christmas Eve · in 1962,
Doris Pilkington took her
childr~n for a surprise visit lo
see their grandmother in
Balfour Downs Station,
western Australia.
They arrived very early in
the morning and found Molly
Kelly asleep. Pilkington nervously tapped her mother on
the shoulder to awaken her.
"Do you know who I am?"
Pilkington asked.
Her mother shook her
head. She did not recognize
her daughter.
Pilkington, 65, had last
seen her mother in 1941,
when Kelly escaped from the
Moore
River
Native
the
Settlement, where
Australian government was
holding Kelly and her two
daughters ,
Doris
and
Annabelle, captive. Kelly
had managed to take
Annabelle with her, but had
been forced to leave Doris
behind.
Kelly and her children
were being held because they
were
Aborigines
and
Australia was determined to
assimilate the continent's
indigenous peoples into its
white majority.
Besides
confining
Aborigines to reserves - a
system that devastated traditiona) lifestyles - the government forcibly removed
great numbers of Aborigine
children from their parents,
raising them in orphanages
· until they were adopted by
white families, often to be
used as servants and laborers.
It was hoped that these
abductions, which continued
until the 1970s, would force
the children to forget about
their heritage. A 1997 government study estimated that
between 1905 and 1970, I
out of I 0 indigenous children
were taken from their homes:
about I 00,000 people were
affected, according to historian Peter Read.
"The policeman - our
protectors; supposedly had total control to fulfill the
government's plan of breeding out abonginal people
within several generations,"
says Pilkington, who wrote
about the "stolen generations" in her book, "Rabbitroof Fence." Published in
I 96, the book was recently
released in the United States
to tie-in with a new movie by

Miramax Films.
"Because of brainwashing,
we were forced to believe
that we were unintelligent,
that our culture was evi I, thai
our mothers had given us
away because they didn 't
love us."
When Kelly left Moore
River with her baby daughter, she faced a daunting trek:
More than 1,500 miles of
Australian outback, much of
it inhospitable, stretched
between her and home. But
Kelly knew the way - she
had figured it out in 1931 ,
when she escaped the first
time, a frightened but determined 14-year-old pulling
her reluctant 10-year-old
cousin, Gracie, and her 8year-old sister, Daisy, behind
her.
With no supplies and nothing to eat but what they could
catch and scavenge, the three
girls eventually learned to
follow the No. 1 Rabbit
Proof Fence, built to contain
Australia's exploding rabbit
population.
Police trackers went after
them, and on Iy Gracie who had separated from the
others so she could find her
mother - was recaptured.
About nine weeks after they
left Moore River, Kelly and
Daisy were reunited with
their family.
"It's a real story that, in
many ways, is more fantastic
than the made- up screen
plays I deal with," says
Australian director Phillip
Noyce, who was shooting
"The Sum . of All Fears"
when he read Pilkington 's
book, which sold 60,000
copies in Australia.
"It seemed so far away
from these huge blockbuster
productions I had been
doing. But the story wouldn' t
leave me."
Throughout the film's production, Noyce says cast and
crew had a mission: They all
wanted to celebrate the
amazing feat of the girls, as
well as the skill of the indigenous actors who portray
them. The film earned just
over $4 million in Australia
during an 18-week run, plus
two preview weekends. To
date, it has earned nearly $2
million in North America.
"For some Australians,
given the ignorance in which
we' ve celebrated our halfhistory, it's been very hard to
accept this new history that

Doris Pilkington, author of "Follow The Rabbit Proof Fence,"·
poses for a portrait in front of contemporary aboriginal art
from Ramingining, Australia, at the Asia Society in Nov. 12
New York City Nov. 12, 2002. Pilkington, 65, is herself an
Australian Aborigine . (AP)
has emerged in the last 15
years through indigenous
writers and historians people who ... didn't think
their experiences mattered,"
Noyce says.
Australia is .beginning to
take pride and interest in its
indigenous people , and more
Aborigine writers are emerging and being recognized.
"The number of published
aboriginal writers grows
each year," say s author Anita
Heiss, whose works include
a historical novel, "Who Am
I? The Diary of Mary
Talence, Sydney 1937," and
a poetry collection, ''Token
Koori."
Pilkington has just finished
writing
"Under
the
Windamarra Tree," the
sequel to "Rabbit-Proof
Fence" and the final•book in
a trilogy that began with
"Caprice: A Stockman's
Daughter." Now, she plans to
write children's stories based

Entertainment briefs
History Channel
to give $1 million
to city schools
NEW YORK (AP) - The
History Channel will donate
$1 million worth of scholarships, materials and staff
hours to city schools in a
partnership brokered by the
school system's chief fundraiser, Caroline Kennedy.
"It was really through reading history that my father got
interested in politics and
became the president that he
was," Kennedy said Tuesday
at a news conference.
Under the four-year partnership, the History Channel
will provide training sessions

for middle and high school
history teachers, award
$1,000 scholarships to outstanding students and teachers, supply tapes of some of
its own documentaries, produce
public
service
announcements and help
develop history curriculum.
"We applaud excellence in
education, and it is our great
privilege to extend our
knowledge and resources to
the New York City schools
and to the dedicated teachers
who strive to enrich and nurrure the love of learning in
our students, who are our
future," said Dan Davids,
executive vice president and
general manager of the
History Channel.

The arrangement is the fust
of its kind to be announced
since Kennedy, daughter of
President John F. Kennedy,
was appointed chief executive of the Office of Strategic
Partnerships by Schools
Chancellor Joel Klein last
fall.
"This is especially meaningful to me because history
was really such a big part of
my life in my childhood,"
she said. "In our family, history was not just names and
dates but really the stories of
men and women who built
our country and the kind of
challenges
and the '
dreams
thatthey
theyfaced
dreamed."

on Aborigine creation myths.
Pilkington "is finally being
recognized for the work she.
has done in bringing stories.
of history, survival and aboriginal life to a mainstream
audience," says Heiss.
And Pilkington is deter-mined to reintroduce the cu):
ture that was kept from so
many Aborigine s.
.
Unlike
her
mother,
Pilkington remained within
the enforced welfare system
until she was an adult. Her
mother-in-law persuaded her
to seek a reunion with Kelly.
"She told me, 'I've just lost
my mother, you go find
yours,"' Pilkington recalls. ·
The 1962 homecoming,
though, was bittersweet.
Pilkington has become close
to her parents but her
younger sister, Annabelle,
was recaptured by the gov-.
ernment in 1965 and has
refused all contact with her
family.

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and can't modulate; he gets
involved for stupid reasons
sometimes, and doesn't
always end up helping."
Moral : No cabbie, any
more than the rest of us,
knows a short-cut to redemption .
"Hack" is a drama that
lurks in shades of gray, particularly thanks to Olshansky's
former partner, played by
Andre Braugher ("Homicide:
Life on the Street").
Marcellus Washington stole
money, too, but wasn't
caught. His job and reputation rest dn Olshansky's continued silence.
Beyond this strained relationship, Olshansky's circle
consists of his estranged wife
(Donna Murphy) and young
son (Matthew Borish), both
of whom he loves but keeps
letting down, and his priestdrinking buddy, Father Tom
"Grizz" Grzelak (George
Dzundza).
Olshansky isn't exactly
admirable, or even likable.
But he's a rarity in television
drama: a protagonist who
made mistakes and is held
accountable. For that, all by
itself, he's a champion worth
rooting for.
"In a genuine way, not a
forced way, I think we can go
in a lot of directions with this
guy," says Morse. "That's not
true with a lot of series."
Another distinction "Hack"
can claim: It is the first
prime-time series to be based
in Philadelphia, not just set
there, like "thirtysomething"
and "Philly."

Community Calendar

Jewelry .
Dept.
50% OFF

NOW

NEW YORK (AP) - Few
characters grab viewers like
someone unjustly accused.
Consider Dr. Richard Kimble
of "The Fugitive," pursued by
authorities for murdering his
wife while he chased the man
who really did it
Mike Olshansky doesn't
have the luxury of a bum rap.
He really did what he was
nailed for.
The tarnished hero of thi s
season 's new CBS drama
"Hack," Olshansky was a
decorated Philadelphia cop
who collected "hazard pay"
on the sly. Then he got caught
pocketing $4,000 in drug
money at a crime scene. He
was booted off the force.
Now jobless and alone (his
marriage coll;tpsed with his
career), he's forced to drive a
cab to make ends meet. But
for an ex-cop, old habits die
hard. He can't say no to his
desperate fares .
A minister persuades Mike
to help find his runaway
daughter. Another passenger
leaves $10,000 in the back
seat, supposedly meant for a
mother to reunite with her
child: Mike tracks down the
man and returns the money. A
homeless man expires in the
back seat, whereupon Mike
feels compelled to locate his
family.
"But
it's
not
'The
Equalizer,' it's not 'Touched
by a Cabbie," ' declares David
Morse, who
stars . as
Olshansky
on
"Hack"
(Fridays at 9 p.m. EST). "He
isn 't thinking how to be a
good guy, how to help people.
It's more like he's an addict

POMEROY - A note of
appreciation from Serenity
House for gifts to women and
children was read at the Jan.
II meeting of Alpha Omicron
Chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma
at the McArthur Methodist
Church.
For the program members
commented on changes they
would I ike to see in themselves this year. Nellie Parker

Stay together!

WAS

New drama 'Hack'
has tarnished hero

Serenity House·sends
note of appreciation

Families who exercise together

Friday &amp; Saturday ONLY

Swisher &amp;

(Hal Kneen is Meigs
County s Extension agent for
agriculture and natural
resources,
Ohio
State
University.)

Beginning Yoga Class

Auditions will consist of
singing, acting and some da
ncing.
Performances will be held
as weekday matinees in late
February for area school
children. Home-schooled
chi ldren are welcome to
attend. Performances will
also be held at some local
schools. An evening performance is scheduled for 7
p.m. on Feb. 21 at the Berry
Arts Center. Admission is
$2.50 for adults and $1 for
children.
For information, call 740245-7364.

Maytag Appliances

NEW BOSTON (AI')
Mayor James Warren planned
to ask the Ohio Environmental
Protection
Agency
on
Thursday to send someone here
to discuss the hazards of benzene emissions by the old New
Boston Coke plant.
Warren said he would like to
call a public meeting as soon as
possible to discuss residents'
concerns.
"I'd just like for them (EPA
representatives) to come down
and clarify some of the questions being asked by the citizens concerning the coke
plant," Warren said on
Wednesday.
''They're concerned over
how hazardous the benzene
levels have been and if it still
poses a hazard now," he said.
The Ohio EPA earlier estimated that one of every 500
people exposed to airborne
benzene and other chemicals
from the plant has a higherthan-normal risk of developing
cancer.
By contrast, the cancer risk in
most wban areas is· between
.one ca..e ·per I 00,000 people
and one per 1 million.
The EPA won a $2.6 million
court judgment against New
Boston Coke last month. which
until last spring operated the
processor in this Ohio River
village 9f 2,340 people about
85 miles south of Columbus.

111) ofl-71.

ATTENTION
COUNTY RESIDENTS

Tllere are all•ltld SIPPIV II
Ceverall Binge Cards lehl
IIIIIUnlllhe
The Daily Sentinel
mClllrllbeet ••••
IIIII

Plan on attending the 33rd
Annual Power Show Ohio
Jan. 24-26 at the Ohio Expo
Center located in Columbus.
The .event brings together 270
exhibitors · demonstrating
equipment from over 600
companies.
Some of the items on display are tractors, skid steers,
commercial mowing equipment, computer software,
fencing, hay equipment, backhoes, livestock equipment and
much more. Educallonal seminars will be presented
throughout the days by Ohio
State University Extension .
Gates are open from 9 a.m. to
4p.m.
Tickets are $5 each, with
children 12 and under admitted free. Local dealers do have
tir;;)&lt;:ets, check for a listing by
looking on their website www.omeda.org. The_ Ohio
Expo Center is located on the
Ohio State Fairgrounds just
off the 17th Avenue exit (Exit

•

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The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Thursday, January 16, 2003

The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries
Richard K.
Harmon

W
. H&amp;.N
. X. GROW UP, :t

WANt ,1C BE' 9:)MEONE WHO
8ENIF1Ti FROM TAX CUTS.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Thursday, January 16, 2003

POINT PLEASANT
Richard K. "Rick" Harmon,
46, of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., died Tuesday, Jan.
14, 2003 at the Ohio State
University Hospital in
Columbus.
Born on May 15, 1956 at
Logan, W. Va., he was the
son of Richard Carl
Harmon and Joann Cabell
Harmon of Mason, W.Va.
He was employed in the
coal yard at AEP Philip
Sporn Plant in New Haven,
was a graduate of Wahama
High school and attended
the Faith Baptist Church of
Mason, W.Va.
Besides his parents he is
survived by his wife,
Connie Harmon of Point
Pleasant;
a
step-son ,
Wesley Durst of Leon, W.
Va., a brother and sister-inlaw, Danny and Delia
Harmon of Leon, W.Va., a
nephew, Trevor Harmon of
Leon; a special aunt, Sadie
Bryant of Chapmanville ,
W.Va., and uncles, Eddie,
Tommy and Harry Harmon,
and Albert , Donald and
Roger Cabell, along with
· several cousins.
Funeral services will be
held at II a.m. Friday, Jan.
17, 2003 at FoglesongTucker · Funeral Home.
Pastor Ron Branch will
officiate and burial will be
in Forrest Lawn Cemetery
at Pecks Mill, W.Va.
Committal services will be
held at 2:30 p.m . in Forest
Lawn.
Friends may call at the
funeral home 6 to 9 p.m.
Thursday.
E-mail condolences may
be sent to the family at
foglesongtucker@ ci tynet. n
et

p.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson

Publisher
Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

..

Lerrers to the editor are welcome. 11~ey should be less than
300 •rol'(/s. All lel/ers are s11bja t to editing and must he
signed and include address and telepho ne number. No
unsigned lellers will be published LRnus should be in good
ta SU! ,

addren·ing issues, not personalities.

Tire opinions expressed in the co/wnn be low are the consensus of tire Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s ediwrial board,
unless othen vise floted.

NATIONAL VIEW
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Positive1

Daschle's departurt; opens up field for (talent' primary

Questions about legitimacy
qf human cloning will linger
• The Times, Shreveport, La., on what drives us to clone •
lrumans ! Questionable credibility of the claim notwithstanding. it is hard to cast the idea that a group has successfully
cloned a human being as a positive achievement for mankind.
There is the statement made by' Brigitte Boisselier, a
chemi st and head of Clonaid, the company that did the experiment: "I do believe that it is the choice of every parent to
choose the child they want, even if they don ' t have any infertility problem," she said. That statement almost smacks of
"master race" thinking.
And ... consider the group behind the work.
Clonaid was founded in the Bahamas in 1997 by Claude
Yorilhon, a former French /·ournalist and leader of a sect called
the Raelians. Raelians be ieve aliens visited Vorilhon in the
1970s, revealing they had created all Earth life via genetic
engineering ....
While the Rae! ian effon lacks confirmation, scientists know
that cloning, while possible, comes with serious risks of
abnormalities. Sheep, mice, cows, pigs, goats and cats have
been cloned, yet the old-fashioned way of reproducing those
species seems to have worked just fine for centuries.
The advancement of science should be tempered by some
realization of the effects of the discoveries. Is society willing
to create new life at the expense of children who might otherwise be available for adoption? In a world still debating the
morals of ending pregnancies via abonion, what substantial
cultural demand is there for initiating a new controversy about
how life should be staned1
With an almost endless list of other advancements needed
- ranging from a cure for cancer to a cure for the corruuon
cold - the push for human cloning ap~ars to be fueled more
by self-aggrandizement than pursuit of legitimate science.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Jan. 16, the 16th day of 2003. There are
349 days lett in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan . 16, 1920, Prohibition began in the United States as
the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution took effect. (It
was repealed in 1933 by the 21 st Amendment.)
On this date :
In I 547 , Ivan the Terrible was crowned czar of Russia.
In 1883. the U.S. Civil Service Commission was established.
In 1944, Gen . Dwight D. Eisenhower took command of the
Allied Invasion Force in London.
In 1964, the musical "Hello, Dolly I" opened on Broadway,
beginning a run of 2.844 performances.
In 1967, Alan S. Boyd was sworn in as the first secretary of
tran sportation.
In 1978, NASA named 35 candidates to fly on the space
shuttle, including Sally K. Ride, who became America's first
woman in space, and Guion S. Bluford Jr., who became
America's first black astronaut in space.
In 1989.. th~ee days of rioting erupte9 in Miami when a
police ofhcer tatally shot a black motorcyclist, causing a crash
that al so claimed the life of a passenger.
In 1991 , the White House announced the start of Operation
Desert Storm to drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. (Because of
the time difference, it was early Jan. 17 in the Persian Gulf
when the attack began.)
In 1992. ofticials of the government of El Salvador and
rebel leaders signed a pact in Mexico City ending 12 years of
civil war that had left at least 75 ,000 people dead.
Ten years ago: U.S. Attorney General-designate Zoe Baird
and her husband paid a $4.,900 fine for employing illegal
aliens in their home. Regardless. controversy over the hirings
still derailed Baird's nomination.
Fi ve years ago: NASA officially announced that John
Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth, would fly aboard
the space shuttle later in the year. The tobacco industry
reached a $15.3 billion settlement with the state of Texas.
One yea r ago: Richard Reid was indicted in Boston on federa l charges alleging he he'd tried to blow up a U .S.-bound
jetliner with explosives hidden in his shoes. A gunman went
on a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law in
Grundy. Va .. killing the dean, a professor and a student; a
Nige ri an student , Peter Odighizuwa was arrested; he was later
found incompetent to stand trial.
Today's Birthdays: Opera singer Marilyn Home is 69. Auto
racer A.J . Foyt is 68. Singer Barbara Lynn is 61. Country
singer Ronnie Milsap is 60. Country singer Jim Stafford is 59.
Movie direc tor John Carpen ter is 55. Actress-dancer-choreographe r Debbie Al len is· 53. Singer Sade is 44. Rock musician
Paul Webb (Talk Talk ) is 41. Rhythm -and·blues singer
Max ine Jones (En Vog ue) is 37. Actor David Chokachi is 35.
Actor RichardT Jo nes is 31. Actress Josie Davis is 30. Model
Kate Moss is 29. Actress Yvonne Zima is 14.
,Thought fo r Today : "A fa natic is a man that does what he
th ink s th' Lord wud do if He kne w th ' fac ts iv th ' case." Finley Peter Dunne, Ame rican humorist (1867- 1936).
0

-~

- -

O·• -··o .

'

R ,,..,, . _ ••

Sen. Thomas Daschle's (S.D.) decision not to run for president has set off
a scramble among other Democratic
contenders for the allegiance of the talented corps of political operatives who
were planning to work on the Senate
leader's campaign.
Daschle was set .to run at least equal
to the other four top contenders in the
so-called "talent pnmary" with a team
headed by former White House Chief
of Staff John Podesta and former
Deputy Chief of Staff Steve Richetti.
Others on the prospective Daschle team
would have included former White
House aide Ron Klain, former Senate
staffers Joel Johnson and Anita Dunn,
and Steve Hildebrand, who ran thenVice President AI Gore's Iowa campaign in 2000,
On Tuesday, within minutes after
Daschle aborted plans to announce his
candidacy this weekend in South
Dakota and head out for a tour of early
primary states, o.ther candidates and
their top aides staned making recruiting calls to the Daschle team. Despite
rumors of decisions, it's not clear
which of the other candidates will pick
up members of the Daschle squad. .
Some are, in effect, "interviewing"
Sens. John Kerry (Mass.), John
Edwards (N.C.), Joe Lieberman
(Conn.) and Rep. Dick Gephardt (Mo.)
with the idea of making a choice.
Others may join the ranks of the "I'll
help whoever asks" club, which
includes several former high-level
Clinton administration officials, especially foreign policy aides.
While the "talent primary" is a key
pan of the buildup toward the actual
caucus and primary season now just
over a year away, other "primaries" are
under way as well.
.
Lieberman seems to be well ahead in
the "ideas primary," having beaten his
rivals with proposals on foreign and
economic policy and homeland security. A former chairman of the centrist
Democratic Leadership Council,
Lieberman identifies himself as "probusiness," but his criticisms of
President Bush's economic and environmental plans have been as harsh as

Morton
KOildrocke
COLUMNIST

'

wealthy Hollywood liberals who are
leery of Lieberman because of his
vinues - centrism, hawkishness, and ·
gutsy criticism of violence and sex in
the media.
Gephardt's includes his present and
former chiefs of staff, Steve Elmendorf .
and Tom O'Donnell; California political consultant Bill Carrick; his 1988
Iowa campaign manager, Steve
Murphy; and John Lapp, who ran Iowa .
Gov. Tom Vilsack's campaign last year. .
Kerry has Jim Jordan, outgoing executive director of the Democratic ·.
Senatorial Campaign Committee;
media consultant Jim Margolis; leg'endary field organizer Michael
Whouley; and his associate Jill Alper, .
who helped elect Michigan Gov. :
Jennifer Granholm last year.
Edwards' team includes Gore's 2000
New Hampshire operative Nick
Baldick, and Steve Jarding, who managed Virginia Gov. Mark Warner's suc·
cessful campaign in 2001.
Still unclear, according to Edwards '
aides, is the role of liberal "message"
guru Bob Shrum. Contrary to appearances, aides say, Edwards' claim to rep- -· ·
resent "regular folks" as opposed to "insiders" was not Shrum's formulation, but Edwards' own,.
Daschle's exit seemingly leaves the ·
Iowa field open for Gephardt, who is ~
from a neighboring state as well, but it • ·
also raises expectations for Gephardt's ,
performance there. In fact, Kerry
reportedly leads in some early private .
polls in Iowa and former Vermont Gov. _·
Howard Dean is showing traction
among liberal anti-war activists.
New Hampshire is thought to be
Kerry's state, possibly with a challenge ·
from Dean, but Lieberman plans to ·
make a stand there by attracting inde- ~
pendents who supponed Sen. John
McCain (R-Ariz.) in 2000.
·.
I accept the conventional wisdom
that there is no frontcrunner. But my .
bones tell me that Gephardt will prove ·
the candidate closest to the Democratic
Pany's center of gravity.

any liberal's. Edwards is striving
mightily to catch up to Lieberman on
the ideas front, issuing a stream of position papers, especially criticizing Bush
from the right on homeland security.
Edwards was leading in the "press
primary," having received the most
glowing coverage prior to his Jan. 2
announcement of his presidential
exploratory committee. The coverage
lost a bit of its glow, however, when the
press, in response to Edwards' endless
repetitions that he was the "champion
of regular folks," called attention to his
status as a millionaire former trial
lawyer with limited political experience. Still, the sheer volwne of coverage - and Edwards' guick start seems to have boosted htm in the polls
to almost equal name recognition with
better-known candidates like Kerry,
Lieberman and Gephardt.
All of the top four contenders are
expected to run about even in the allimponant "money primary." Each is
expected to be able to ratse between
$15 million and $20 million this year.
Edwards has a powerful fund-raising
base among his fellow trial lawyers.
Lieberman expects to raise money
among fellow Jews, including many
who regularly contribute to community
charities but have not previously given
to political candidates. Gephardt has a
natural base among the nation's trade
unions, but has also spent years raising
money for House candidates, giving
him a large donor list.
(Morton Kondracke is executive ediKerry, Edwards and Gephardt will tor of Roll Call, the newspaper of
presumably have equal appeal among Capitol Hill.)

- Paid N01ice

Local Briefs
\

.

ATHENS - The Ohio
Department
of
Transportation
(ODOT)
announces its second public meeting to address concerns about blasting on the
Athens U.S. Route 33 project.
The meeting will be held
at 7 p.m., Thursday, Jan.
23, at the Ohio University
Inn, 331 Richland Ave.,
Athens.
ODOT, its general contractor Smith &amp; Johnson
Construction Co., subcontractor Austin Powder Co.,
an independent blasting
consultant and an independent air blast and vibration
control specialist, will be
available to describe anticipated drilling and blasting
operations and to answer
questions about blasting
activities on the 33 project.

RYAN'S VIEW

Ulhen supporting education means enabling equality
A letter arrived from the foundation
of our local K-8 public school, as it
does every year. It asks each family to
donate its "fair share" to close the gap
between the government funding and
the actual cost of operating the school.
The requested donation has climbed
each year; now it's $2,500 per student,
an amount that once could cover the
entire tuition for a year at parochial
school.
The donation comes on top of money
raised through gift-wrap sales, scrip, a
weeklong book fair, sales of entertainment discount books and an elaborate
auction.
This is what public education looks
like in more and more towns ift
California and across America. Public
has come to mean parents - varents
footing the bill for an and mustc, foreign-language teachers, librarians,
classroom aides, building renovations,
playgrounds, computers, field trips .
Parent groups across the country paid
for $2 billion worth ilf products and
services for public schools last year,
according to the naqonal Parent
Teacher Organization.
With a sagging economy and rising
state deficits, schools will be leaning
on parents more than ever to cover
deep budget cuts. And parents will continue to come through for the sake of
their kids.
They shouldn ' t.
At least, that's what I want to say. But
I' II pony up, like many parents ,
because the clock is ticking on my
son's education and he can 't afford to
· - · -·· - · ........ -

..

..... ~

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

than ever on the fund-raising capabili- •
ties of parents, the scales tip even more
heavily in favor of the affluent.
The quality of education should not
depend on where a child lives or how -·
adeptly his parents can sell cookie
dough or stage a gala fund-raiser. When .
some schools have access to outside .
·resources and others don't, we widen .
the gap between rich and poor districts.
- - - - - • · We solidify a caste system of education
that was struck down as illejlal with ..
COLUMNIST
Brown vs. the Board of Educal!on nearly 50 years ago.
Few would argue that we ' re not
wait for our politicians to come being
good citizens by contributing to ·
through. As we write our checks and
local schools. But in showing our
order our scrip, we ought to consider our
goodwill,
we're creating a voracious
the long-term consequences of serving
monster.
The
we l'ick up_ the tab
as enablers of a government that refus- for shonfalls more
in
our
chtldren s educaes to spend enough money to ensure
tion, the more reliant the government • ·
that "no child is left behind."
becomes on this outside revenue- and ·
Education was always supposed to be the less likely it will ever meet its :.
the great equalizer. If everyone had responsibility to provide a solid educa- ;:
access to a quality education, then tion to every child.
·
everyone had a chance to succeed, no
As governors, superintendents and
matter what one's background or principals
slash their budgets, educaincome level. We know, of course, this tional equality
--that most fundamental
hasn't been the case.
of Amencan values - seems more eluAn a~hievement g~p between black sive than ever. As the bumper sticker
and whtte students has been document- says, "It will be a great day when our
ed since the 1960s. One can reasonably schools get all the money they need,
blame family life. One can also reason- and the Air Force has to hold a bake
ably blame the inequity among schools. sale to buy a bomber."
Wealthier white communities llenerally
have had public schools wtth more
(Joan Ryan i.1 a columnist f o r the Sarz
am~niti es , better-qualified teachers ;md
Francisco Chronicle. Send commellfs
richer experiences than poorer black
to her in care of this newspape r or send
\..'
communities.
her e-mail at joanryan @sf gate.com.)
Now that schools are more dependent

Hamm elected
SWCD board
chairman

... ........

-- . .......

_

.........

..

- -~

--

....

.,. ,..

'

''"

'

"' '

URG Meigs Center plans
rec~1ved program information meetings

Bids.

.

on f1re
truck

Staff report

RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande CommUnity College has
BY J. MILES LAYTON
scheduled information sessions
Staff writer
regarding four different academic programs for prospective stuPOMEROY - There were dents.
four bids received to provide
"These meetings are in
financing for a new Pomeroy response to a program expansion
fire truck at Wednesday's vil- survey to which over 400 resilage council meeting.
dents responded," said Dr. Greg
Council members discussed Sojka, Rio Grande Provost "We
the proposed terms and interest look forward to adding additionrates involving the loan paekages from two local banks, al programs for Meigs County
Farmers Bank and Savings Co., restdents. These meetings with
People's Bank and two non- prospective students will provide
us with the focus we need to prolocal institutions, American ceed.'.
Finanee Co., in Cleveland, and
All students who indicated
Leasing Company 2, located in
their interest in any of these proAorida.
grams
on the survey will receive
Council President Victor
a
personal
invitation to these sesYoung IU said he wanted to
sions.
The
public is also invited
keep the loans in the community and use one of the local to attend.
banks which offered bids. If the
bid is accepted locally, it could
cost the village more than
$25,000 extm when compared
to the lowest bid.
Council member Larry BY J. MILES LAYTON
Wehrung said the law requires Staff writer
the village must take the "lowest and best offer" possible even
POMEROY - Village counif this was not a local bank.
cil
unanimously
voted
Young also suggested that if
Wednesday
to
not
discuss
raisanything went wrong with a
ing
the
water
rates.
future shortfall of finances, then
Since an ordinance seeking a
a local bank would not be as
quick to repossess the ftre truck. water rate increase was not
Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar said aUowed on the table for discusthe non-local fmns had sion, technically it did not fail.
Therefore, the ordinance can
informed him earlier that they
eome
up again at any time in the
had never repossessed a ftre
future
without having to go
truck from a community that
had fallen behind on the pay- through the three required readments or was in dire fmancial ings needed to enact an ordinance.
ditliculties.
council was dividThe truck would be available edPreviously,
on the issue of whetherto
within a year. It will replace a raise water mtes. There was a
1975 truck which has a leaky shaky 4-2 majority in favor of
400-gallon tank.
the
ordinance
before
Wednesday's meeting.
Council
member Todd
Norton, who had previously
voted in the majority, said that
he was uncertam as to which
way he was going to vote before
the meeting took place.
of each month beginning at
Norton said he would seriousI I :30 a.m.
November ly consider the effect a rate
through April and 8 p.m. increase would have on people's
May through October. All pocketbooks, particularly senior
meetings are held at the citizens.
Meigs Soil and Water
Council member Brian
Conservation
District Shank, who has voted against
office, 33101 Hiland Road, the mte increase in the past,
Pomeroy, unless otherwise expressed similar sentiments.
He said if the rate hike passed,
announced. The public is
people would be faced with a 9
invited to attend meetings.
Plans were made to host percent increase in costs. When
the
Buckeye
Hills combined with last year's 9 perResource Conservation and cent rate increase, this would
Development
quarterly mean water customers would
meeting in May.

Bolin named
trustees
president
POMEROY- Joe Bolin
was re-elected president of
the Rutland Township
Trustees when they held
their organizational meeting . Steve Lambert was
elected vice president.
Charles Barrett Jr. is the
third
trustee.
Reguhir
meetings were scheduled
for the fir st Monday of
each month at 5 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Station.
All meetings are opened
to the public, according to
Opal Dyer, clerk.

Dinner to
be served

I

The Daily Sentinel
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Get voun at the
The Daily Sentinel
While SIPPIIIII81d

•

and Camille McNeil. phannacy
technician instructor, will provide details on these two programs, which Rio Grande currently offers on it• main campus.
ln addition, Tracy Boggs, mdiologic technician and physical
thempist, will discuss her careers
and the educational requirements
of each. An a&gt;sociate degree in
mdiologic technology may begin
in FaU 2003.
Business &amp; Information
Technology
6p.m., Monday, Feb. 24 - Dr.
David Freitas, dean of the
College of Professional Studies,
and busines-; faculty will provide
details on both the information
technology and business management associate's degrees
which Rio Grande currently
olfers at Middlepon. New inter- .
ested students may begin a&gt;soon
as the summer term.
For information. contact Gina
Pines at 992-3383.

Bus

is completed.
Buckley also reported on
progress at the Memorial
Fieldhouse under construc tion at Meigs High School.
He said work has been
delayed by the rain, but
there is still hope of having
it completed next month.
The door and windows
are in and the plumbing and
electrical work are being
finished. Once the hc;ating
units are in place, the
superintendent said the
interior drywall work can
begin.

from Page A1
Superinteudent William
Buckley said the plans are
nearing completion and the
project should be ready to
take to bid in February.
The goal is to get construction
underway . in
March and have the garage
ready for occupancy in
July, about the same time
the new elementary school

AEP
from Page A1
emissions. ,
"It's interesting that the leakage that was cited happened so
long ago and EPA is just getting around to fining the AEP
system," he said. "AEP has
never admitted to any violation. Their standpat answer is,
'We are in compliance."'
The organization was formed
in the wake of AEP's plans to
purchase most of the village of
Cheshire for potential plant
expansion. The majority of its
members live outside the village who maintain the plant
and a synthetic fuels operation
built on its grounds contribute
to lingering air pollution problems.
"We still emphasize we are
not against the folks in the village or the people who work at
the plant, but to the pollution

coming out of the plant,"
Stinson said.
AEP has said Gavin, the second-largest coal-burning electric generation plant in its
seven-state system and its
largest in Ohio, complies with
state and federal environmental
standards.
"You can see the nitrogen
oxide pouring out of the place,"
Stinson said. "It's as brown as
brown can be. They claim to be
removing 98 percent of the
nitrogen oxide. but what would
it be like if it wa~ 92 percent?
"It's not a good situation," he
added.
OEPA said $8,000 of the
penalty will go to urban tree
planting projects planned by
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources' Division of
Forestry. The remaining
$32,000 is directed to OEPA
for the Ohio Environmental
Education Fund and administration of air pollution control
programs.

OFF

the Lowetlt Sale lrlce!

Vall8hnBauett
Oak Hand Carved

Hanel rub- •I•Jah -

ln«.·ludes rHII!fl. lrlpll' dres~tcr,
cheNt with jewelr.t' box
and trl-vlew rnlrn1r

VaupnBusett
OakllatBed
Headboard. Footbonrd.
S DrAwer Ch~ l .
Triple Dresst&gt;r with Mirror

Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14

Thera are a llmhad SIPDIV ol
Coverall Bingo Cards lahl

!&gt;fOUP may be formed if enough
mterest is shown.
Careers in Nursing
6 p.m., Monday, Feb. 3 - Dr.
Janet Byers, staff and students
will provide an overview of
careers in nursing, various nursing programs &lt;)lld the educational
requirements needed to qualify.
Rio Grande currently otlers both
the associate's degree in nursing
required of aU RNs as well as the
bachelor's degree in nursing.
Early Childhood Education
6 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. II Valerie Valentine, instructor, and
former students will provide
details on this associate degree.
The degree is currently offered
on the main campus. The program may be offered at the
Meigs Center if there is enough
interest.
Allied Health Professions
6 p.m., Monday, Feb. 17 Russ Cheadle, medical laboratory technology (MLn instructor,

.2003

News

I

face an 18 percent increase in
water rates.
Council President Victor
Young III has always voted in
the majority on this issue.
. He has said he supports a rate
increase because it is a necessary investment for the village.
He feels a rate increase will be
offset by the things the new
water treatment facility will
offer u~n completion.
To him, a few extra dollars a
month will be offset by the savings from no longer needing to
purchase water softeners, bottled water or repairing appliances clogged up with mineral
manganese.
A vote in one direction or
another could have either passed
or failed the ordinance for consideration. By in effect postponing the water rate hike, the measure is still in play and can be
voted on in the very near future.
Incidentally, in the case of a
tie vote, there is a question as to
whether the mayor would be
allowed to vote. Statutory
authority suggests that the
mayor would not be allowed to
be the tie-breaking vote.
Mayor John Blaettnar has
asked Law Director Chris
Tenoglia to look into the matter.
If the mayor's vote is considered
legal, then it could potentially
imj)aCt the passage of the water
ordinance.
In the past, Blaettnar said he is
a fmn supporter of increased
rates because he considers it an
investment in the village infrastructure.

was established for board
expenses at a maximum of $2
per pupil.
Other personnel matters hanfrom PageA1
dled at the meeting included
OSBA student achievement the hiring of iutors for health
handicapped students at the
liaison.
rate of $15 an hour, Catherine
Regular meetings were set Han, Ron Hill, and David
for the second and founh Ramey; and substitute teachTuesdays of the months of ers, Erica Allen, Emily Bain,
March through November, the Emma Bancroft, Kerry Hines,
second and fourth Wednesdays Andrea Renzelli , Troy Weaver
for February and December, and Melissa Whaley.
and the third and fifth
Parent volunteers appmved
Wednesdays in January.
for the Meigs Middle School
Salaries for board members were Dreama English, Brenda
were set at $80 a meeting Neutzling, and Michelle
attended, and a service fund Sisson.

Ed~or: CM~ene

'

At each meeting, faeulty and
staff from Rio Gmnde will be
present to explain program
requirements and answer questions. Current and past program
graduates will also be available
to provide a student point of
view.
Interest generated at these
meetings will identify additional
programs to be offered in Meigs
County by Rio Grande. All sessions will beheld at Rio Grande's
Meigs Center at ISO M iU Street,
Middleport.
The meetings are as foUows:
Master's in EducationClassroom Teaching
6 p.m., Monday, Jan. 27- Dr.
Greg Miller, graduate program
coordinator, faeulty and students
will explain the purpose of this
program which is designed primarily to help teachers enhance
their students learning. Much of
~~J:rogram is offered online for
s
nt convenience. A cphou

Water rate vote put on hold

POMEROY
Chris
Hamm was elected chairman of the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District
Board
of
Supervisors at the recent
RACINE Chickenorganizational meeting .
Other officers elected noodle dinner will be
were Bill Baer, vice chair- served Sunday at the
m!ln and Pauline Atkins, Racine United Methodist
Church . Food can be eaten
secretary-treasurer.
Regular meetings were there or taken out. Serving
set for the fourth Thursday will begin at II :30 a.m.

Joan
Ryan

.

ODOT public
meeting in
Athens

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
t 3 Weeks .............' 30.15
26 Weeks ............ ' 60.00
52 Weeks ... . ....... ' 116.80
Rates Outside M~i'tga County
13 w eeks .
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26 w eeks ......
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52 Weeks ............ '200.20

Vaupn Bassett
oak Politer

Bedroom lulte
Headboard, Foothoard,

5 Dr~wer Chest,

Triple dresser with mlrrur

�'

Page A6 • The

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 16, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

AFC, NFC preview, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 83

PageBl
Thursday, January 16, 2003

Familiar names
dominate in first
state girls poll'
COLUMBUS (AP)
Three-time defending state
champion South Euclid
Regina, perennial powers
Beavercreek and Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne
and
Division IV's Mansfield St.
Peter's are the top teams in
the first Associated Press girls
Ohio high school basketball
poll of 2003.
In the rankings released
Wednesday,
Regina,
Beavercreek and ChaminadeJulienne all hold comfortable
leads, led by Regina's 101point differential on Morral
Ridgedale. Beavercreek leads
Toledo Central Catholic by 96
points and ChaminadeOttawaJulienne
tops
Glandorf br 25 points.
St. Peter s is ahead by just
five points on the No. 2 team
in Division IV, Minster.
Changes are expected in the
rankings over the next week
with many of the state's hi~h­
est ranked teams seemg
action in a tournament at
Pickerington High School.
Trailing
Re¥ina
and
Ridgedale in Division III are
Worthington
Christian,
Waynesville and Smithville
- all of whom have perfect
records except for Regma.
Beavercreek and Toledo
Central Catholic are followed
by Hudson, Youngstown
Boardman and North Canton
Hoover in Division I.
Rounding out the top five in
Division II are third-place
Canal Fulton Northwest,
Thornville Sheridan and
Millersburg West Holmes.
The top four teams in
Division IV are all bunched
within nine points. St. Peter's
has 225 points, Minster 220,
Berlin Hiland 218 and
Cincinnati Seven Hills has
216. South-Webster. is in the
No. 5 spot with !51 points.
Southern (10-2, 6-1 TVC
Hocking) _Picked up 16 points
in the voung and was ranked
18th in Division IV.

15'1'11

IHuntington I
-

Ice skating

TexMex
concert·

Galactic skating is
offered Fridays at ln-State
Ice Arena, 610 28th St
Elementary school ages
participate from 7 to 9
p.m., follOwed by liliddle
school ages from 9 to II
p.m. and high ~I ages
from ·II p.m. to.I am.
cost is $5 per .5essJQn,
which includes skate

• Randy McC~~~

will present

roots
to

:the

n:~ntal. Games, -~ 8{ld a

live OJ are featured

Charges pending
against Goodrich

1\JbD.IDly

DALLAS (AP) - Police
considered more charges
against Dallas Cowboys
reserve
defensive • back
Dwayne Goodrich, accused in
a hit-and-run accident that
killed two people.
Goodrich, 24, was released
from jail after posting
$50,000 bond on two felony
counts of manslaughter.
Authorities said he also could
be charged with failure to
stop and render aid.

.. exlilbif
'

-~The MummYIexhib4.

itU:n~mrM. ' .~~seum
at ....

lhe
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.

Art on Slllilrday ~ a
3.•~year-ol,d «@rt and
mummy oo·lOB!l'fil:ln tJ!e.-

. Carlos

MichaeP

C~

Museum

,of ..

Emory

University . ·and
20
Bg}'J)tiaq antiqul~ on
loan from 1he Mellqx)litan
Museum in New YOit
City. The exhibit rulis
~$h Jan. 9,

Armstrong on
injured reserve

2005. the

exhibit· opens at . 2 ·. .,.m.

Fainily Day actiVIties
iilclude 1eamin&amp; (Q ~:

ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) Oakland Raiders defensive
end Trace Armstrong was
placed on injured reserve with
a ruptured groin, ending his
successful comeback season.

r.ao:n~ln~

as an l:lgypli.an pharaoh or
queen, games, jJIIZlJes and

more. Admission on opening day is free.

On Friday : The annual battle to see who the
toughest
men
and
women in the Tri-State
returns for the 15th
Annual
Tri-State
T o u g h m a n
Championships. A full
evening of all out war
is on tap as the battle
tor the Tri-State belt
converges
on
the

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when It comes to...
Gifts for all occasions, Home

Huntington
Civic
Arena . Tickets for the
big show are only $18
for the ringside seats,
and $15 and $13 for
reserve seat tickets. In
addition
to
the
Toughman battle , fans
will also see some of
the top area protes sional fighters as well .
It will be the war to end

all wars with some of
the toughest gu'ys and
gals in the area!
On Saturday: This will
be the night when the
King and Queen of the
Tri-State
Toughman
Championships will _be
crowned. It is going to
be a battle to the very
end as the top men
and women fighters in

the area enter the
squared circle for a
fierce showdown that
is going to prove who
takes home the belt
from the 15th Annual
Tri-State
Toughman
Championships at the
Big Sandy Superstore
Arena (formerly the
Huntington
Civic
Arena.)

·•

Owners agree
to Selig's plan
SCO'ITSDALE, Ariz. (AP)
Baseball owners appear to
agre~ with ~ommissioner Bud
Selig's proposal to have the
league that wins the All-Star
game get home-field advantage in the World Series.
As the two-game meeting
began, the committee on the
future of the Montreal Expos
met. Baltimore Orioles owner
Peter Angelos, who is not on
the committee, said he
remains opposed to a move to
the Washington area.

-

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Connecticut ties
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(AP) - Although it was just
barely, No. 3 Connecticut tied
the NCAA Division I
women's record for consecutive basketball victories at 54
with a 53-48 victory over
stubborn Seton Hall.
The 54 straight victories
tied the mark set by Louisiana
T\ch between 1980-82.

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--..--~~ - -- --·- · -·- --·~·

College football

College basketball

OSU expecting
thousands for
celebration
of
.
national champs

Ohio State guard Brent Darby (4) charges into Michigan's Graham Brown (25) while driving
to the basket In the second half Wednesday in Columbus, Ohio. Michigan's LaVell Blanchard
(30) looks on. (AP)

Buckeyes fall to Michigan
COLUMBUS (AP) Maybe Michigan isn't a year
or two away.
The Wolverines, starting
three freshmen and with a couple more contributing off the
bench, stretched their winning
streak to 10 in a row with a 6150 victory over Ohio State on
Wednesday night.
The Wolverines (I 0-6, 3-0
Big Ten), who lost their first
six games this season, won for
the first time at Value City
Areria while snapping a sevengame losing streak to their
rivals.
"We had five freshmen on
the floor at various times,"
coach Tommy Amaker said.
"That gave us confidence that

we could fight through it and
make a game of it."
They did more than that. It
was the worst loss for the
Buckeyes (8-6, 1-2) in their
five years in their new home.
Freshman Daniel Horton hit
just 4-of-15 shots from the
field but led Michigan with 17
points. La Veil Blanchard
added 13 and Bernard
Robinson Jr. had 12.
The Wolverines used stifling
defense to post their longest
win streak since winning 12
straight during the 1992-93
season. Ohio State managed
just 14 points over the final
18:27.
Michigan native Brent
Darby scored 12 points for the

Stokes leads
Bearcats past
Billikens
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Leonard Stokes had
a season-best 25 points, seven rebounds
and five assists, fueling a pullaway run at
the start of the second half as Cincinnati
beat Saint Louis 66-56 Wednesday night.
Cincinnati (10-3, 3-0 Conference USA )
has won five in a row overall , and 16 of the
last 19 in the series. Field Williams added ·
15 points, hitting four 3-pointers, and
Taron Barker had 12, and both players had
five assists.
The Bearcats were 8-for-15 from 3-point
range.
Marque Perry had 20 points and Josh
Fisher 18 for Saint Louis (6-8, 0-3), which
collapsed in the second half for the second
straight game. The Billikens led by two
points at the break before losing 73-54
Saturday at Louisville, and also have lost
two straight at home.
Saint Louis was without head coach
Brad Soderberg, who was at home with a
case of stomach flu . Assistant coach
Anthony Beane, in his first year with the
school, served as the fill-in head coach.
Stokes had seven of his points in a 14-4

Pleue IH ...rclb, 82

--- ...

'

.

Buckeyes - well under his
18.8 avemge. He hit just 2-of12 shots from the field.
"It all revolves around Brent
and they did a ~ood job of
guarding him wtth a bigger
player," Ohio State coach Jim
O'Brien said. "They had
Robinson on Brent and they
made it very hard on him."
Every time Darby made a
move tt seemed a Wolverine
was in his face.
''The key was the team
defense and everybody bein~
in the ri~ht position, '
Robinson sa1d. "Everybody
was there to help me out when
he was coming off those curls.

Pluse su OSU, 82

O'Shea frustrated
by N.lllinois loss
ATHENS (AP) - Losing is starting to
wear on Ohio coach Tim 0' Shea.
The Bobcats' coach expressed frustration
with his team after a 68-61 setback at home
to Northern Illinois on Wednesday night.
Selected by media covering the MidAmerican Conference as the _Preseason
favorite to win the East Divtsion, the
Bobcats (4-8, 1-3) are just one spot above
last place:
"It was not our finest hour. All in all, not
a performance I'm particularly happy
with," O' Shea said on the team's Web s1te
after the game. "I've got some issues I've
got to deal with with this group and anybody at the game could see that.
"This team has got to play the way I want
them to play. If we start rebuilding this program a year earlier than we thought we'd
start rebuilding, so be it."
With defending MAC champion Kent
State losing several key players and Ohio
having its top performers back, the
Bobcats seemed to be an obvious pick to
contend.
Yet a team that has senior leadership
from Brandon Hunter, Steve Esterkamp
and Sonny Johnson just can't seem to gel.
The Bobcats shot just 39 percent against
Northern Illinois and lost any chance to

Ple•se 1ft Bobceb, B2

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
celebration of Ohio State's
national championship will
be similar to a fall Saturday
afternoon at Ohio Stadium.
About the only thing that
will be missing is a game.
With thousands of fans
expected, Ohio State officials say they will be ready
with a full complement of
game-day management staff.
"If we don't, we run the
risk of not bein$ ready for
the crowd that mtght come,"
spokeswoman
Elizabeth
Conlisk said Wednesday.
The 45-minute celebration
begins at I P..m. on
Saturday. Gates Will open at
11 a.m.
The event is free. Seating
is first-come, first-served,
though about 16,000 seats
have been reserved for students.
Conlisk said fans are
advised to arrive early in
case of a big crowd at the
stadium,
which
seats
I 01,568.
"There is no overflow
location," she said. "If people do not get into the stadium by the time the program
starts and there is no space,
there is nothing we can do."
Players, coaches and ofticials will gather on a flatform near the center o the
football field. Athletic director Andy Oeiger will lead the
event and ihe speakers will
include coach Jim Tressel
and players, along with univers!ty President Karen
Holbrook, Gov. Bob Taft and
Mayor Michael Coleman.
As it does before a game,
the band will come out of the
tunnel on the north side of
the stadium and will pc:rform
"Script Ohio." Conhsk said

Tressel asked the band to
perform because the players
have never seen the band
come on to the field since
they always are in the locker
room then.
Holbrook said the event
was chosen for a Saturday so
that . more people could
come.
"The whole purpose of
this was to really allow
everybody to celebrate," she
said.
The university would prefer people did not tailgate . .
"We're not encouraging it,
we're not discouraging it,"
Conlisk said. "But the issue
it it's going to be very, very
Cold ...
Ohio State is anticipating
that many at the celebration
do not normally go to football games since they have
not had the opportunity to
follow the team like those
who have had season tickets·,
Conlisk said.
·
That means there may be
fans not as familiar with traffie and parking around the
stadium and what they are
allowed to bring into the stadium.
Like the event\ parkin~ is
free. But univemty officials
say to allow plenty of time to
park.
A bridge near the stadium
has been closed to vehicles
and many streets leading to
' the stadium may become
one-way before the event if
traffic warrants . After the
event, most streets headed
away from the stadium will
be one way to clear traffic
quickly.
The university wants the
parking lots cleared by 3
p.m. so they will be available for evening events.

Pro football

49ers fire Mariucci
SANTA CLARA, Calif.
(AP)
When Steve
Mariucc i joined the San
Francisco 49ers exactly six
years earlier, he knew all
about the organization's
exacting standards of success.
As the seasons rolled on,
the genial coach learned
more than he ever wanted to
know about the institutional
impatience and infighting
that are part of the territory
in one of the NFL's highestprofile jobs.
The 49ers fired Mariucci
on Wednesday, ending a
prolonged clash of egos and
visions that diminished an
otherwise successful tenure.
Three days after the 49ers'
fourth trip to the playoffs
under Mariucci ended in a
31-6 loss at Tampa Bay·,
owner John York released
Mariucci from the final year
of his contract. The men
hugged Wednesday morning
after a 90-minute meeting in
which Mariucci tried to talk
York out of the decision.
Mariucci had a 57-39
record and three playoff victories while also presiding
over a remarkably brief
rebuilding period, but it
wasn't enough to save his
job - even with a year left
on his contract. He was the
loser in a battle of wills featuring York, general manager Terry Donahue and Hall
of Fame coach-turned-advisor Bill Walsh - none of
whom were around when
Mariucci was hired in 1997.
"I didn't think it was best
to have a lame duck coach,"
York said. "I thought it best
to have a coach we were
fully committed to. There
- --1--- - -

Marluccl

was enough
noise about
S t e v ;e
Mariucci aS
our head
coach,
about Steve
VS.
Bill,
about Steve
vs. Terry
Donahue ,

a b o u t

whether or
not we love Steve.
"There was too much
noise. You can' t have all that
and move the team along."
The
reasons
for
Mariucci 's departure were
murky - perhaps by design
for an organization that
apparently felt Mariucci
wasn't the man to lead the
young, talented team he
helped to build from scratch.
Mariucci 's flirtations with
other jobs in the last offseason also didn't engender
feelings of loyalty from
York.
But ruthless firings are
nothing new for an organization that annuaUy expects
to add to its collection of
five championships: To
make room for Mariucci in
1997, San Francisco parted
ways with George Seifert-.
who won two Super Bowls
- after the 49ers lost in the
second round of the playoffs. ·
"It's a very emotional and
unpleasant sttuation for both
of them," Donahue said.
"Dr. York has a very strong
idea about how he wants thr
49ers structured .... This is a
philosophical split between
what John wanted to do and

Plu•• ' " M•rlucd, 82

- ·---·---

~

.,

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Raiders bring ·gaudy reputations, resumes to big game
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) - Jerry
Rice . Tim Brown. Rich Gannon. Rod
Woodson. Bill Romanowski.
Hollywood is 400 miles away, but
for stars - football stars - the
Oakland locker room is like no other
in the NFL.
Raiders mystiq11e? Take a look
around:
Rice is the most prolific wideout in
league history.
Brown is second behind Rice in
yards receiving.
Gannon? He 's the Most Valuable
Player - of the entire league.
Woodson'' He's one of the four
greatest cornerbacks in the NFL over the first 75 years.
Romanowski.
Sebastian
Janikowski. Charles Woodson. For
good and bad, everyone knows who
they are.
"When I got here, I looked
around," little-known Raiders receiver Alvis Whitted said. "I asked

Bearcats
from Page 81
run to start the second half,
turning a 33-30 advantage
into a 47-34 bulge with 13:34
to go. Consecutive 3-pointers
by Stokes and Williams in a
48-second span stretched the_
lead to 16 at 55-39 with 9:06
left.
It was the third straight
impressive game for Stokes,
who had I 0 of his 20 points
in the final 6:33 of a victory
over Texas Christian on
Saturday and helped clinch a
victory over DePaul with five
points in the last three minutes.
Saint Louis closed to six

Mariucci
from Page 81
what Steve wanted."
According to Donahue,
Mariucci wanted a bigger
role in the 49ers' football
decisions, including the position of vice president of football
operations.
But
Mariucci's agent, Gary
O'Hagan, said Mariucci
never made those demands,
and he desperately wanted to
return.
York didn't attend the news
conference
announcing
Mariucci's firing, choosing
instead to conduct a conference call from the second
floor of the 49ers' training
complex with reporters who
were on the first floor.
"You can't have that much
difference between the owner
and the head coach," York
said. "We need to go find a
head coach that fits into our
structure."
The firing is the boldest
move yet by York, who has a
medical degree and many
successful business ventures,
but no significant experience
in running a pro sports franchise. He is married to
Denise DeBartolo York, the
sister of former 49ers owner
Eddie DeBartolo.
"John's a really big football
fan," said York's spokesman,
Sam Singer. "I don't know if
he would characterize himself as a football expert, but
he's a successful businessman who knows what he
wants out of an organization ."
The Jacksonville Jaguars
have the NFL's only other
coaching
vacancy, and
Mariucci was thought to be a
prime candidate for the job.
But Jaguars spokesman Dan
Edwards said the team doesn't have any plans to interview Mariucci, and he isn' t
considered a candidate.
"I was as shocked as anyone el se," Jaguars owner
Wayne Weaver told The
Associated Press. "Hi s agent
told us that Steve's interest
right now is taking some time
off and doing some broadcasting."

myself, 'Why am I here? What could
they possibly want from me?'"
Indeed, all those names, all that history and all that talent can make it
almost as hard playing for the
Raiders as it is playing against them.
The Tennessee Titans, who face
Oakland in the AFC championship
game Sunday. are saying all the right
things.
"Raiders mystique?" Eddie George
asked. "I don't get all caught up in
that."
But he acknowledged that he was a
huge fan of the Raiders when he was
growing up. And he is, he concedes,
"familiar with the rich history the
Raiders have."
Still, the Titans insist they are not
intimidated - by the players; the
fans, the whole notion of playing
Oakland in a huge game during a season in which the Raiders look to be
the best they've been in two decades.
Nor do they think their overwhelm-

ing 52-251oss here in September was
a matter of being psyched out.
"We did not play well," Titans
coach Jeff Fisher said. "We had a
number of injuries. and we were just
kind of struggling finding ourselves
back then. Things just got out of hand
real quick. We obviously feel like
we' re better than we were then."
Although the Raiders are historically the team known for stirring
things up, it was Titans safety Lance
Schulters who got off the first shot
this week when he said Rice and
Brown get more breaks than the average receiver, and he called Brown "a
crybaby."
A blatant show of disrespect?
Maybe not, considering Schulters
has an autographed jersey of Rice's
framed and hanging on a .wall in his
house. For the record, none of the
Raiders have signed jerseys of any of
the Titans hanging in their homes.
"When you see the questions about

osu

points on Fisher's 3-pointer
with 33 seconds to go before
Stokes hit a pair of free
from Page 81
throws.
lzik Ohanon, a 6-9 sophomore, struggled in his first We had to slow him up a little
start for the Billikens after bit because he's very smart out
coming otT the bench his tirst there."
Ohio State led 46-45 on
five games. Ohanon, who
Shun
Jenkins' three-point play
was ineligible the first eight
games because he played for with 8 minutes remaining but
a professional team in Israel, the Wolverines countered with
was held to one point and an 8-0 run.
Blanchard hit two foul shots,
five rebounds in 18 minutes.
then Chris Hunter stole the ball
Saint Louis jumped to a 9- from Darby and Blanehard hit
2 lead in the first 3 1-2 mil)- a follow at the other end.
utes, getting five points from Blanchard's bucket was set up
Fisher. A 9-0 run . gave by an athletic save by Abram as
Cincinnati its first lead at 20- the ball was going out of
18 with 9:43 to go and the bounds.
"You saw a lot of our kids
Bearcats led 33-30 at the
make
a lot of phenomenal husbreak.
tle plays," Amaker said.
Horton stole the ball at the
other
end and went coast to
Donahue said York will
choose the 49ers' next coach coast for a layup. After the
from a list Donahue expects teams traded possessions,
to draw up. The team didn't Horton hit two more foul shots
have any immediate candi· with 3:53 left for a 53-46
dates, but Donahue will .con- Michigan lead.
Ohio State never got closer
sider assistants on Mariucci's
staff, including defensive than five points again as
Michigan hit six consecutive
coordinator Jim Mora.
Dennis ' Green,
who
coached the Minnesota
Vikings from 1992-0 I, is a
logical candidate to replace
Mariucci. Green was on
Walsh's staff when Walsh
from Page 81
was coaching the NFL team
and Stanford.
beat the Huskies (7-8, 3-2) in
"I've always considered a five-minute scoreless
myself part of the 49er fami- stretch late in the second half.
ly," Green told ESPN, which
"I think that anybody at the
employs him as an analyst. game saw some of our play"''ve got some interest in that ers get frustrated to a degree
job for a couple of reasons." that was partly counterproThis season, San Francisco ductive to being a good baswent I0-6 and reclaimed the ketball team," 0' Shea said.
NFC West title before mak"You look for a. certain
ing the second-biggest come- maturity from guys and when
back in NFL playoff history you don't see that, especially
to beat the New York Giants from some older guys, you
39-38. As recently as have to decide which way
Monday, Mariucci spoke you're going to go as a
with optimism about the coach. That's what I talked
upcoming offseason, when with the team about briefly in
he planned to help San the locker room . It's going to
Francisco take another step.
be an interesting couple of
Mariucci repeatedly said he days for us."
wanted to keep his family in
P.J. Smith scored 16 points
the San Francisco Bay area, and Marcus Smallwood
and he would be willing to added 14 points and 15
take a minimal raise or even rebounds for
Northern
coach the final year of his Illinois.
.contract without an extenThe key stretch for the
Sion.
Huskies started with 8:35
Mariucci still will be paid remaining, when they scored
the $2.2 million from the six straight points - four on
final year of his contract two Smallwood jumpers an amount that would be to take a 59-52 lead with 5:22
reduced if Mariucci takes remaining.
another job next season. .
Smallwood dominated the
The history of Mariucci's paint, getting eight of his 15
conflicts with the front office rebounds
on
offense.
IS
long and winding. Northern Illinoi s had 16
Mariucci angered the 49ers otlensive rebounds to six for
last winter by campaigning Ohio and won the board batfor a new contract through tle 42-30.
the media, and then talking to
"Our effort on the boards ..
Notre Dame and
the particularly on the offensive
Buccaneers about their end, made the difference in
vacancies.
the game," Huskie s coach
The teams worked out a Rob Judson said.
compensation package. but
Hunter led the Bobcats
when Mariucci waffled on
his decision, Tampa Bay
hired Jon Gruden away from
Oakland instead. York and
Donahue both admitted they
felt betrayed by Mariucci's
interest in the job.

Bobcats

Jerry and his work ethic, man it 's
true . It's real ," said Schulters, a former teammate of Rice's in San
Francisco.
Running the show behind the
brand-new fence the Raiders erected
around their complex before the playoffs began is AI Davis - the eccentric owner who, through all his trials
and travails over the decades, has
taken the NFL and its fans on a
strange and entertaining ride.
If it's true, as some NFL purists say,
that the league is at its best when
teams like the Raiders are winning,
then the NFL is having a mighty good
·
year this season.
"It's a championship game in the
Black Hole, in Oakland, against the
Raiders," George said. "It's exciting."

Of course, any team with so much
talent, big names and eccentrics is
bound to have at least one flaw. In
this case, it's pretty obvious: These

free throws in the final I: II.
"It's big time. This is Ohio
State," Robinson said. "How
many teams come in here and
beat Ohio State at home? It was
big for us in tenns of confidence and keeping our streak
alive."
Jenkins added 12 points and
lO rebounds for Ohio State
while Jernigan had 10 points.
Darby missed all seven of his
shots from the field in the second half and scored two points.
Jenkins added five points after
halftime on 2-of-5 shooting.
"I don't believe I got one
open 3 today," Darby said.
'They did a great job on the
defensive end. It's the best I've
seen from them."
Michigan hasn't lost since a
22-point defeat at Duke on

guys are old.
Rice, Gannon, Brown and
Romanowski alone have 63 years of
NFL experience between them. This
is, by almost every account, the last
chance for this group of vetenans.
Age and salary-cap problems have
pretty much assured the Raiders of
that.
Remember the movie "Space
Cowboys," in which Clint Eastwood,
James Garner, Donald Sutherland
and Tommy Lee Jones play aging
fonmer astronauts who get together
for one more trip into space? This is
the NFL's version of that: One more
chance to add another championship
chapter to the Raiders legacy.
"The way I look at it is, the old
Raiders are retired and gone, and I
want to call this the new Raiders,"
offensive lineman Frank Middleton
said. "It would be great to be known
for what this group can do."

McNab·b prepared
for Bucs' defense

The Eagles have won the last
PHILADELPHIA (AP) First, they said he wouldn't four meetings, including playreturn. Then, they said he off games the last two years.
McNabb threw for 161
couldn't
run
anymore.
Donovan McNabb is enjoying yards and two TDs, and ran
for 32 yards and one TD in
proving his doubters wrong.
In his finit game after miss- Philadelphia's 21-3 victory
ing two months with a broken over Tampa in a 2000 wildright ankle, McNabb showed card game. He had 194 yards
few signs that he'd been away, passing and two TDs and ran
leading the Philadelphia for 57 yards in last season's
Eagles to a 20-6 playoff VIcto- 31-9 first-round win. ·
In a 20-10 victory over the
ry Atlanta.
The two-time Pro Bowl Sues earlier this season,
quarterback completed 20 of McNabb passed for 127 yards
30 passes for 247 yards and and one TD. He had just 4
one touchdown. He also ran yards rushing, but scored
Dec. 7.
for 24 yards; including a 19- once. Duce Staley ran for 152
"It's a statement for us, a yard gam on his second play. yards in that game.
statement around the league,"
"We have to establish a run
But that was against
Amaker said. "One of the Atlanta's
19th-ranked game," McNabb said. "In
things we talked about is this defense. Running away from order to put you~self in a posiwas our first road game (in the Keith Brooking and Patrick tion to score pomts, you have
Big Ten). It was against the Kerney is easier than escaping to be able to run the ball. And
defending champions of our Tampa Bay's Simeon Rice, in passing the ball, make sure
league, so let's go in with some Warren Sapp and · Derrick you're able to spread the ball
confidence and some tough- Brooks.
around."
ness and see if we can make a
McNabb set the tone for last
McNabb, faces the NFL's
game of it. And we did."
top-ranked defense Sunday year's playoff victory with a
when the Eagles (13·4) play 39-yard run in the first quarthe Buccaneers (13-4) in the ter. His run set up a 40-yard
with 16 points, all in the sec- NFC title game at Veterans pass to Todd Pinkston later in
the game. On the play, he
ond half. Johnson scored 15 Stadium.
'They
have
great
core
linefroze
the defenders by scramoff the bench and Jeff Halbert
hackers,
their
defensive
line
bling,
then stopped and threw
added 13 points for Ohio.
You
have
to
be
downfield.
plays
great.
Elsewhere in the MAC on
Against the Falcons last
Wednesday night, Kent State able to attack them," McNabb
said.
"If
you're
able
to
do
that,
week,
McNabb proved ri~ht
edged Buffalo 69-68 and
then
you
put
yourself
in
great
away
his
ankle was fine wtth
Western Michigan defeated
to
do
other
things."
the
19-yard
scramble. He did·
positions
Ball State 71-52.
Led by Brooks, The AP's n't run much after that, but he
For the second time in two
Defensive
Player of the Year, moved around enough to keep
seasons , the Bull s' home
and
Rice,
the NFC's sack the defense off-balance.
game with the Golden
leader
with
15 1/2, the Bucs
On a fourth-and-! play in
Flashes came down to the
final ·seconds. But this time, allowed just 12.3 points and the fourth quarter, McNabb
252.8 yards per game. They rolled to his tight, faked runKent State came out on top.
Bryan Bedford hit his first had 43 sacks, forced 38 ning and hit James Thrash
3-pomter of the season as turnovers and scored five with a 35-yard TD pass that
time expired to give the defensive touchdowns. Tampa iced the win.
"He has the ability to stay in
Golden Flashes (10-2, 3-1) ranked first in seven defensive
categories,
including
pass
that
system and run in that
the victory.
system,
and he has the ability
Antonio Gates had 24 defense.
McNabb, however, has had to break loose," said John
points and II rebounds, and
against the Bucs, Lynch, Tampa's Pro Bowl
success
Eric Haut scored a careerespecially
m the postseason. safety.
high 23 points for Kent State.
B.J. Walker had careerhighs with 21 points and · 10
rebounds, and Turner Battle ~
scored 18 points for the Bulls Unlimited mght and weekend minutes
(3-10, 0-4), who have lost si"
tn a row.
you might even talk in your sleep.
Buffalo hit the clutch shot
against Kent State last season, with Louis Campbell
providing a 66-65 win on a
• Unlimited night and
jumper with a second to play.
weekend minutes
Western Michigan dominated Ball State from start to
• 550 Anytime Minutes
finish, keeping the Cardinals
odd- Adytimowinless in MAC play.
• Nationwide long dilltllnce
"'" ,., ,.,
Terrance Slater scored 14
points for the Broncos (I 0-4,
2-3), who held the Cardinals
(5-9, 0-4) scoreless for the
first five minutes and built a
40-17 halftime lead.
Western Michigan had 13
Nokht!HO
For only S4.11D o month, 1'0" con assists to Ball State's one in
uwAnl'*"'i tut '' 1
J" lnd tend,
the r1rst half and shot 7-of-9
$0
torw.d. Met replr 10 up to 100 n
SJM
from 3-point range.
CRog, . ...
Chris Williams scored 14
points for Ball State.
C..dit~...ct

--... ..........
.,.,.,..

....

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TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN!

There are alimbed suppiJ of
Coverall Bingo Cards leHI
Get vours at the
The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard
Prep Basketball
Boys
Wednesday
Bellaire 76, Wheeling Park. W.Va. 58
Cin. Jacobs 67, Cin. School for Creative
&amp; Performing Arts 46
Cols. Ohio School tor the Deaf 72, Torah
Acad. 58

New Boston 90, Portsmouth Notre Dame

p6

St. Bernard 75, Bellevue, Ky. 63
Vision Ouest, Pa. 74, Youngs. Compass
58

Girls
Associated Press State Polls
COLUMBUS (AP) -

How a stale panel

ol sports writers and broadcasters rates
Ohio high school girls basketball teams in
the fi rst weekly Associated Press poll of
2003, by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost

record and total points (first-place votes in
parentheses):
DIVISION I
1. Beavercreek (22) ... ....... . 12..0
283
2. Tol. Cent. Calh. (2) ........... 10-0
187
3. Hudson(2) ...... .. .. .. ......... 12-0
167
4. Youngs. Boardman (3) ... ... 10-Q
154
5. N. Can. Hoover (2) ........ .. 12-2
107
6. Cols. Brookhaven ...... ........ .9-2
104
7. Cin. Mother ot Mercy ...... . 11-1
97
8. Cin. Mt. Notre Oame ...... .. 11 -1
90
9. Zanesville (1) . .. .... ...... . 12-2
75
10. Lancaster (1} .. ................ 10-1
73
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Cots. -Independence 57. 12, Oregon Clay
47. 13, Tol. Start 44. 14, Mt. Vernon 36. 15,
Stow-Munroe Falls 28. 16, Mansfield Sr.
25. 17 (tie) , Warren Howland, Xenia 21 . 19,
Cols. Mifflin 18. 20, Pickerington iS. 21 ,
Canton McKinley 12.
DIVISION U
1. Day. Cham :-Julienne (13) . 11-1
216
2. Ottawa-Glandorf (4) ... ... 10-0
191
3. Canal Fulton NW (1) .... . 11-0
156
4. Thornville Sheridan (5) . .. 13-0
135
5. Millersburg W. Holmes ( 1) . tQ-1
123
6. Kenering Alter .
. .. 11-2
104
7. Cle. VASJ (3).
. . .. 8·3
60
8. New Albany (i) .... . . . 12-1
72
9. Spring. Kenton Ridge.... . 12-1
66
10. Beloit W. Branch {1) .. . .. 12-1
62
Others receiving t 2 or more points: 11,
Bellevue 56. 12, Copley 44. 13 (tie).
Hubbard, Salem 41 . 15, Wauseon 39. 16,
Poland 35. 17, Cols. Bexley 28. 16 (tie),
LaGrange Keystone, Day. Dunbar 27. 20,
Youngs. Mooney 23. 21 , New Concord
John Glenn 21. 22. Akr. Hoban 16. 23,
Orrville 15. 24, Willard 13. 25 (tie), Athens,
Greenfield McClain 12.
DWISION lll
I. S. Euclid Regina (18) . .. 11-1 279
2. Morral Ridgedale {4) . . . . . 12-0 178
3. Worthington Chrls1len (3) . . 11·0 162
4. Waynesville (1} . . . . . . . . 12·0 181
5. Smithville (1) .
12-0 135
6. Bucyrus Wynford (1) . . . .. 13.0 123
7. Hamler Patrick Henry . ... tD·1 110
8. Youngs. Ursuline .. . . . . . 11·1
~04
9. W. Uberty Salem .. . . . . . 12·1
59
10. Castalia Margaretta . . . . . 10·1
52
Others receiving 12 or mora points: 11,
Martins Ferry 48. 12, Milford Center
Fairbanks 34. 13, Girard 31. 14, Wallington
30. 15, Archbold 25. 16, St. Clairsville 23.
17, Apple Creek Waynedale 22. 18, Cin.
Madeira 18. 19, Richwood N. Union 17. 20,
Versai lles 15.
DIVISION IV
1. Mansfield St. Peter's {9) .... .10-0
225
2.Minster(9) ...... .... ............... .13-0
220
3. Berlin Hiland (5) ...... .. ........ 12·0
218
4. Cln. Seven Hills (6) .. .... ...... 12-0
216
5. S. Webster(1) .. .. ....... .. ....... 10-D
151
6. Norwalk St Paul (1) .......... ...9·1
98
7. Shadyside ..
___ ,. .. 9·2
90
8. New Riegel. .... .. ..... ... ......... .. .9-o
80
9. Kallda .................................1()..1
53
10. StHenry .. .............. .......... 1Q.2
47
Others receiving 12 or more points : 11 ,
Bealls\lille 39. 12 (tie), Berlin Center
Western Res erve, Lowellville 35. 14,

Pitsburg Franklin-Monroe 28. 15, Miller City
27. 16 (tie), Ft. Loramie 22. 16, Holgate 22.
18. Racine Southern 16. 19 (tie). Delphos
St. John's, Edon 14.

Wec:tnaaday
Amherst 71 , N. Ridgeville 51
Avon 49, Brookside 32
Beloi t W. Branch 85, Alliance Marlington
24
•
Brecksville 70, Medina 52
Bridgeport 53, Paden City, W.Va. 38
Brunswick 45, Cle. St. Joseph 41
Cambridge 44 , Gnad. Indian Va11ey 31
Canal Fulton NW 55, Can. S. 36
Carrollton 52, Akr. Springfield 31
Chillicothe Huntington 54, Jackson 47
Cin. Hilts·chr. Acad. 50, Cln . Milford 37
Cle. Hts. 71 , Shaker HIS. 58
Cots. School for Girls 46. Cols. E. 44
Coshocton 34, Byesville Meadowbrook
30
Day. Chaminade -Julienne 48, Xenia 33
Day. Dunbar 69 , Day. Belmont 27
Day. Meadowdale 94, Day. Col. White 54
Dover 58, Uhrichsville Claymont 51
Dresden Tri-Valley 57 , Crooksville 39
E. Cle. Shaw 64, Parma 36
Elyria 36, Lakewood 20
Garlield Hts. Trinity 55, Cleveland Cent
Ca1h . 49
Garrettsville 44, Peninsula WOOdridge 36
Grafton Mtdview 46, Keystone 35
Independence 59, Aurora so
John Marshall, W.Va. 64, St . Clairsville 44
lockland 54, Hamilton New Miami 33
Louisville 47, Minerva 45.
Maple Hts. 52. Parma Hts . Valley Forge
37
McConnelsville Morgan 35, Warsaw
River View 33, OT
Mentor 75, Euclid 49
Mogadore Field 61 , Ravenna SE 46
New Concord John Glenn 49, Philo .:33
Parma Normandy 61, Bedford 3B
Pepper Pike Orange 55 1 Cardinal 23
Poland Seminary 52, Niles McKinley 3t
Richmond Edison 71, E. Liverpool 44
Rootstown 60, Windham 46
S. Euclid Regina 82 , Can. Cent. Cath. 41
Salem 75, Struthers 25
Sidney 55, Trotwood-Madison 52
Thornville Sheridan 72, New Lexington
16
Warren Howland 51 , Canfield 43
Warrensville Hts. 55. Garfield Hts. 45
Waterloo 71 , Mogadore 47
Welllngton 38, Oberlin 16
Wintersville Indian Creek 52, Wellsburg
Brooke, W.Va. 39
Youngs. Boardman 69, You ngs. Mooney
50
Zanesville W. Muskingum 26, Zanesville
Maysville 24

Prep Wrestling
OHSWCA State Polls
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) - The third of
eight weekly state wrestling polls for 2003,
as compiled by the Ohio High School
Wrestling Coaches Association wtth total
points (first-place \IOtas in parentheses):
DIVISION I
1. Lakewood St. Edward (10) ... .. ....... 100
2. Massillon Perry.....
.. ..............77
3. Wadsworth ..... ........ .... ...... ... .... ..... .... 64
4. Mayfield Village Mayfield . ...... ... .....58
5. Pickerington ............ ... ......... . ............ 52
6. Garlleld Heights .... .... ........... .. ... ...... 41
7. Mentor . ... ....... .. .......... ....... ..... ..........40
8. West Chester Lakota W. .. .... ... -.... 23
9. Cln. Moeller ....................... .............. .18
10. LibertyTwp. Lakota East .... ..... .. ..... 13
DIVISION 11
1. St. Paris Graham (8) ........... ... ... ....... 80
2. Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesuit.. .... .. .. .. ..... 69
3. Akron Sl. V.Sl. Mary .. ......................56
Cols. DeSales ............ .
....... 56
5. Chagrin Falls Kenston ............. ...... ... 50
e. Beii&gt;Jue ..... .. .............. ................ . ...... 23
7. Sandusky Perkins ..... ,.. ....... ..... .. ...... 16
8. Maumee ... ..... .... ...... .. ............... .. ........ IS
9. Mentor Lake Catholic..
......16
10. Clyde ....
.. ...... 11

Rayland Buckeye Local 11
DIVISION ll1
1. Sandusky Sl. Mary (7) ..... .... . ...... 68
2. Bedlord Chanel (1) .......................... 76
3. BeachWOOd ....... ........ .,......... ........... 61
4 . Grandview Hts. (1) ........................... 53
5. Massillon Tuslaw .... .... ....... ......... ...... 33
6. Del10 .................. .... .... .............. ...... ... 32
7. Martina Ferry .................... ................ 29
8. Cadiz Harrison Cent
........ 26
9. Cuyahoga Hts......................... .......... 26
10. Doylestown Chippewa ..... ....... ........ 19

College Basketball
Men
Wedneaday
EAST
American U. 70, Na\ly 53
Binghamton 55, Hartford 52
Boston U. 81 , Stony Brook 66
Cent. Connecticut St. 85, Sacred Heart
80
Drexel67, William &amp; Mary 51
Holy Cross 86, Colgate 43
Kent St. 69, Buffalo 68
Lafayette 73, Army 59
Lehigh 60 , Bucknell 56
Maine 90, Northeastern 76
New Hampshire 62, Dartmouth 57
Providence 67, Louisiana-LafayeUe 58
Rhode Island 60, Massachusetts 53
Towson 6 t . Holstra 54
Vermont 63, Albany, N.Y. 53
Villanova 82, St. John's 73
SOUTH
Alabama 68 , Mississippi St. 62. OT
Appalachian St. 99, Gardner-Webb 98,
OT
Auburn 67, South Carolina 60
Bethune-Caokman 66, Sa\lannah St. 54
Birmingham-Southern 88, N.C.-Asheville
71
Delaware 75, Old Dominion 74, OT
Duke 104, Virginia 93
Fl01ida 77, Tennessee 64
LSU 112, Centenary 65
fvbrris Brown 84, Clark Atlanta 81, 20T
N.C.-WIImington 73, James Madison 58
Va. Commonwealth 68, George Mason
56
Wake Forest 81 , Maryland 72
MIDWEST
Bradley 72. Drake 57
Cincinnati 66, Saint Louis 56
Creighton 93, Evansville 56
Dayton 66, Richmond 53
Indiana 71, Northwestern 57
Iowa 68, Illinois 61
Kansas 96, Wyoming 70
Michigan 61 , Ohio St. 50
N. Illinois 68, Ohio 61
S. Illinois 69, Wichita St. 64
SW Missouri St. 60, Illinois St. 46
Te~eas A&amp;M 53, Nebraska 52
W. Michigan 71, Ball St. 52
Wisconsin 66, Minnesota 50
SOUTHWEST
TeMas 82. Baylor 71
fAR WEST
Colorado 69, Kansas St. 63
Oregon 69, Portland St. 63
UC Irvine 75, Utah St. 73, OT

Women
Wedneeday
EAST
Babson 66, Amherst 65
Binghamton 59, Hartford 54
Boston U. 88. Stony Brook 76
Brandeis 73, MIT 53
Bryant 62. Assumption 46
California, Pa. 70, Clarion 47
Catholic 69, Mary Washington 57
Connecticut 53, Seton Hall 46
Drew 68, Lycoming 58 ,
George Washington 72, Fordham 59
Georgetown 82, Syracuse 75, OT
Gwynedd Mercy 77, Neumann 42
Keen 76, Rutgers-Newark 60
Kutztown 68. Mansfield 59
Lake Erie 59, Penn St. Behrend 58
Lehigh 74, Bucknell 67
Lock Haven 73, Indiana, Pa. 61
Maine 64, Northeastern 50
Marywood 57, Cedar Crest 36

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•

McDaniel 76, Haverlord 46
Millersville 76, Bloomsburg 71
Misericordia 73, Arcadia 53
Moravian 62, Elizabethtown 53
Muhlenberg 65, Gettysburg 57
Old Westbury 62, Purchase St. 56
Pitt .-Greensburg 77, Frostburg St. 64
.Pro'.lidence 75, West Virginia 61
Ramapo 73, N.J. Clly 53
Richard StOCkton 67 , College of N.J. 50
Rutgers 58, Villanova 57
Rutgers-Camden 73 , Rowan 63
Slippery Rock 79, Edinboro 73
St. Joseph's, L.l. 68 , St. Elizabeth 49
Sl. Peters 54 , Loyola . Md. 49
Susquehanna 54, Juniata 50
Swarthmore 63, Dickinson 44
Tufts 72, Johnson &amp; Wales, R.I . 41
Vermont 61, Albany, N.Y. 48
West Chester 67 , East Stroudsburg 39
Westminster, Pa. 74, Carnegie-Mellon 61
William Paterson 64, Montclair St. 58
York, Pa. 54, Goucher 53
SOUTH
Barry 76, Eckerd 60
Boston College 79, Miami 61
Carson-Newman 73, Mars Hill 49
Catawba 76, Tu~lum 60
Chowan 73, N.C. Wesleyan 52
Christopher Newport 73, Shenandoah 42
Clerk Atlanta 79, Morris Brown 50
Columbus St. 57, North Florida 53
Dallas 58, Millsaps 55
Georgia College 52, Claytof1 St. 50
Greensboro 51, Methodist 46
Lenoir-Rhyne 114, Newberry 92
Liberty 80, N.C.·Asheville 45
Lincoln Memorial 85, Converse 56
Maryville, Tenn. 95, Fisk 72
N.C. Central 69, Livingstone 63
N.C.-Pembroke 52, Francis Marion 49
Norfolk St. 81, Gardner-.Webb 58
North Greenville 74, Southern Wesleyan
49
Rollins 61 , St. Leo 55
Tampa 68, Florida Southern 59
Virginia Tech 61 , Pittsburgh 53
Wingate 64, Presbyterian 70
MIDWEST
Adrian 80, 011\let 70
Akron 59, Marshall 49
Albion 57, Calvin 49
~
Baldwin-Wallace 61, John Carroll 57
Ball St. 76, Cent. Michigan 70
Bethel. Ind. 69. Grace 51
Briar Cmt 78, Northwestern, Iowa 72
Buffalo 71, E. Michigan 65
Capital 62, Muskingum 60
Carleton 69. St. Thomas, Minn. 67
Cent. Missouri 70, Missouri-Rolla 54
Concordia, St .P. 69, Hemline 64
Dakota Weslyn 62, Mount Marty 56
Eureka 75, Clarke 55
Franklin 100, Manchester 57
Heidelberg 75, Ohio Nortnern 70
Hope 89, Alma 66
Indiana Tech 72, Cornerstone 69
Indiana Wesleyan 72, St. Francis, Ind. 57
Judson 64, Kendall 56
Kalamazoo 60, St. Mary's, Mich. 53
Kansas St. 68, Iowa St. 60
Marietta 46, Mount Union 44
Midland Lutheran 88, Doane 80
Missouri Western 60, Truman St. 70
Mount St. Joseph 74, Hanover 67
Ohio Weslyn 70, Denison 65
Park 99, Hai'ris-Stowe 19
Pittsburg St. 59, Missouri Southern 52
Spring Arbor 87, Concordia, Mich . 48
St. Ambrose 82, William Penn 74
St. Mary's, Minn. 50, Augsburg 45
St. Olaf 68, Macalester 52
Thomes More aa, Bluffton 76
Toledo 70, Bowling Green 62
Tri-State 60, Siena Heights 61
Washburn 72, NW Missouri St. 58
Wis.-Eau Claire 72, Wis.·Oshkosh 56
Wis.-Green Bay 95, Youngstown St. 53

Wis.-River Falls 76. Wis.-Superior 61
Wis.-Stevens Pt. 84, Wis.-Whitewate r 67
Wis.-Stout 93. Wis.-LaCrosse 78
Wittenberg 65, Earlham 55
Wooster 71 , Hiram 40
SOUTHWEST
Oklahoma St. 60. Kansas 56
Te)(8S 74 , Te)(&amp;S A&amp;M 47
Texas A&amp;M ·Kingsvllle 67, Incarnate
Word 42
Te~eas Tech 80, Oklahoma 71
FAR WEST
Long Beach St. 73, Idaho 61

Pro Basketball
National Basketball Aeaoclatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlenttc Division
W
L
PctGB
New Jersey .. 27
11
.711
Boston ...... 2t
17
.553 6
Philadelphia .. 20
18
.526 7
Orlando .. ... 20
20
500 8
Washington .. 19
t9
.500 8
New York .. . 14
22
.389
12
Miami.
. 13
26
.333
1411
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Indiana
. 28
10
.737
Detroit . .. . .. 25
12
.676 2},
New Orl eans . 20
20
.500
9
Milwaukee ... 18
20
.474
10
Atlanta . . ... 14
24
.368
14
Chicago
.. 14
24
.368
14
Toronto .
. 10
29
.256
18 't~
Cl8\leland . . .. 8
32
.200 21
WESTERN CONfERENCE
Mldweat Dlvlalon
W
l
PctGB
Dallas .. ... .. 31
6
.838
San Antonio .. 24
14
_632 7h
Houston ... . . 22
15
.595 9
Utah .
. . 22
15
.595 9
Minnesota . .. 21
17
.553 10',2
Memphis . . 12
26
.316 19',2
Denver. . . . . 9
29
.237 22:'2
Pacific Olvleton
W
L
PclGB
Sacramento . . 29
10
.744
Porllend .. . . . 23
14
.622 · 5
Phoenix . . . . . 24
16
.600 5'b
L.A. Lakers . . . 18
20
.474 10&gt;
Seattre . . . . . 16
20
.444
11 l~
Golden State . 16
22
.42 1 121
L.A. Clippers . . 14
24
.368 14 ·,.~

Tuesday's Gamaa
Toronto 84, Washington 75
Miami 68, Detroit 85
New York 98, Chicago 86
Milwaukee 97, Atlanta 88
San Antonio 108, Phoenix 100, OT
Wedneaday'a Games
Milwaukee 99, Toronto 87
Indiana 104, Miami 61
Boston 66, Atlanta 66
Philadelphia 108, New Jersey 107
L.A. Lakers 90, New Orleans 82
Houston 102, Phoenix 96
Sacramento 123, Dalf8s 94
Utah 92, Denver 61
Portland 100, Memphis 92
MlMesota 95, L.A. Clippers 64
Golden State 106, Cleveland 80
Thuraday's Games
Orlando at Washington. 7:30p.m.
Seattle at Utah, 10 p.m .
Friday's Game•
Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Indiana at Boston, 7:30p.m.
Toronto at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
New York at Detroit. 8 p.m.
Atlanta at San Antonto, 8:30 p.m.
Chic&lt;Jgo at New Orleans. 8:30p.m.
Dallas at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Cle\teland at Denver, 9 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Houston, 9:30p.m. ·
Memphis at Seaule, 10 p.m.

Minnesota at Golden State. 10:30 p.m.

Transactions
BASEB,.LL
American League
ANAHEIM ANGEL5-Agreed to terms
with 1B S"ott Spiezio and LHP JarrOd
Washburn on one-year contracts.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX- Acquired RHP
Orlando Hernandez and cas h from th B"
New York Yankees for AHP Antonio Osuna
and RHP Delv1 s Lantigua_ Traded AHP
Orlando Hern andez. AHP Rocky Biddle,•
OF Jeff Liefer and cash to Montreal lor
AHP Bartolo Colon and INF Jorge Nunez
Agreed to terms with OF Arm ando Aios ona one:year contract
CLEVELAND INDIANS-S igned OF
Wendell Magee to a minor league contract.
Designated INF Earl Snyder for assignment.
SEATTLE MARINERS-Agreed to terms
with INF-QF John Mabry on a one-year
contract.
TEXAS RANGER S-Agreed to termswith AHP lsmael Valdes on a one-year
contract.
TORONTO BLUE JAVS-Signed SS
Chris Woodward to a oneMyear contract.
_Nallonal League
CHICAGO CUB8-Agreed to terms with
AHP Kerry Wood on a one-year contract.
CINCINNATI RED5-Signed LHP Jimmy
Anderson to a minor teague contract.
FLORIDA MARLINS- Acreed to terms
with OF Juan Encarnacion on a one-year
contract.
LOS ANGELES DODGER5-Agreed to
terms with SS Ale)( Cora on a one -year
contract.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Agoeed lo
terms with INF Tyler Houston on a oneyear contract .
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Aeeociation
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS---Activated
G Marko Jaric from the injured list. Placed
F Tremaine Fowlkes on the injured list.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINAL5-Promo1ed Pe1e
Hoener from tight ends coach to offensi...e
line coach . Signed Hoener, Johnny Roland,
running backs coach , and Mike Devlin,
oHensive quality control coach, to two-year.
contracts. Fired George Warhop, offensiVeline coach .
DALLAS COWBOY8-Named George
Warhop offensive line coach, Tony Sparano
tight ends coach and Mike Macintyre assistant secondary coach.
MIAMI DOLPHIN $-Signed FB Obatemi
Ayanbadjo, T ·Mark Bristol. LB Devin
Lemons, CB Bashir Levingston and T
Davis Sherrod.
OAKLAND RAIDERS-Placed DE Trace
Armstrong on injured reserve. Signed S
Keyon Nash. Signed DE David Warren and
T Joe Wong to the practice squad.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Fired Sieve
Mariucci. coach.
WASHINGTON
REOSKINS-Named
George Edwards defensive coordinator.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ATLANTA THRASHERS-Recalled G
Milan Hnilicka from Chicago of the· AHL.
Reassigned F J.P. Vigier to Chicago of the

AHL

BOSTON BAUIN5-Recalled RW Martin
Samuelson and D Rich Brennan from
PrO\Iidence of the AHL.
CALGARY FLAMES-Recalled LW Dave
Lowry from Saint John of the AHL.
Assigned F Robert Dome to Saint John.
COLORADO
AVALANCHE-Named'
Rick Tocchet assistant coach .
'

~and

q)ay q)reams
&amp; Cl'{!fJFtt
in as

Nursing Center

ern

The Renaissance

Unil at Scenic Hills
a S()e(ialized, seco;red
unit where highly
professional

ALPHA

DRY

' compassionate care

is given to those
face Alzheimer's
Disease and related

Great for:
*Weight Loss
* Metabolic Stirnuhatio·n* Detoxification
Relaxation &amp; Stress
* Pain &amp; Injuries
* Enhances Deep
* Increases Blood
Circulation and Much mu• ., ...

dementia.
Our goal is to help our rYsidents

A WIRED WORLD COMPANY

maintain their independence

*
2003 Pontiac

Aztec
Power Sunroof, Power Seat,

2003

2002 Pontiac
2 or 4 Dr.
Managers SDI,Ci;fll

· as long as pos.liiiJie.

+ Private Dining Room
~

740-446· 7150

4 Speed Automatic
Transmission, Rear Spoiler,

Stainless
Steel
APPliances
Nowln
Stock!

I74~!Mo.

MASON
FURNITURE
COMPANY

No Money Down 72@ 7.49

615-1812
Point Pleasan1.WV
· U3-552u

•.Q11a/ity • Selection • Service!

304-773-5592

•

Bright, open, airy "Florida 0 ~··-"
+ Nutritious Meal SuppleHlenb:
-&gt; Professional Nursing Staff

311 Buckrldge Road
Bidwell, OH 45614

Spring VAII••v

GrandAm

Mason, WV

Delivery restriction•
with other ort.ra. i I

Pre-Owned Buick Park Avenues
• '02 Lt Bronzmist w/leather, 6000 miles
• '01 Medium Blue, leather, gran touring pkg,
12000 miles
• '00 Lt. bronzmist, cloth interior, 21,000 miles
• '99 White, taupe cloth interior, 27000 miles

~ Addilic ;ul
,.,....,..
t I r mide ~ Dlel ow p g; :! w CMift.
ahloiD,.,..1.......... - ............. ......... -L:: .-.....! ....... ,. '._,
. . . ... Q
I h liir ~Cit _
. . . . -'":"'""' "";' """"'-!
lD . . ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

---2011

•WIN•
2FRHnCim
SPRIIIIIUEY
CIIEMAJ

Thursday, January 16, 2003

Thursday, January 16, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~
.~

~r&amp;-

Not v.. ld

Gallipolis
Chiropractic
Center

Dr. Joey D.
WeAre A
Full Service
fllclllty
Offtrln1:

t NIASI;ey FERGUSON'
2002 MF471, 2WD, Bx2
dual remonea, wet brakee, lese
than 30 hro., lull warranty,
. 5.9% aa low u $289 per month.

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT,
1150 Eestem Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-9777 or 446·1484

HOLZER
CLINIC
www.holzercllnlc.com

• Diagnostic X-Rays
• Personal
1----..J
Rehabilitation
• Nutritional Counselihg
• Personallnjul'f
• Workers Compensation
• Most Insurance Accepted

7 4o-441·0200
1-888-451·2225

990 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis

�Thursday, January 16, 2003

r

.FORAum;;s. •.

~

iO

'

mrtbune - Sentinel - ~e

I

riO

• '

A

~~

IF
40

MOI'ORCYCLE&lt;;

I

4x~

1995 Pontiac Sunflre, 4 cyl. ,
auto, air, ground effects,
runs good. $1950, 740.992·
1113.

89 Cavalier, 4 cyl., auto, 1999 Honda Foreman
100.000 miles, runs good. 120 hrs. excellent condition.
ready to go {inspected,) garage kept. (740)446-8088
$550; 87 Plymouth Horizon,
new battery, alternator, au- - - - -yz-t"2--a-ft-er_m_a_rk-el
5
1996 S·IO LS, exlendod to, runs but needs work. 1999
pipes/graphics. Runs great.
cab, $4395: 1997 Ranger $l75 , (740)949 _2700
Must go! (304)6754275 or
XLT, automatic, $4295;
(304)593·0801
1996 Ca11alier, 20, automat.
$2,700. OBO
ic, $3395; ~ 8 cars In stock
starting at $1295. COOK 90 Corsica LT. 4 c~tinder. 4 - - - - - - - - door, some new parts, ask· 2002
Honda
300-EX,
MOTORS. (740)446.01 03
ing $900. (304)675- 4784 (740)742~2404
1997 Mercury Sable GS , before 7pm.
35K miles, PW, PDL, AT, :Jl
VANS &amp;
·1 2002 Honda Rubil&lt;on AIV,
PSeat. , AM/FM CB'ssette,
1400 miles, good cond. ask·
white. $5500. (740)446·
ing $4 ,500, 304 -773- 5098
2375
1999 Jeep Ranger, soft-top ~vO,jivoji.n~in;::Q:;,8_~~---.
2001 Dodge Durango SLT, 4 cylinder, automatic , CD.
BoATS &amp; MoroRS
tronV rear air, Dual climate air, cruise, tilt. chrome
J&lt;l)H SA.J..E
control, 3rd seat, auto·. Key- 68,000 miles excellent conless entry, P/W, PIL. nert dillon $12,500. 1·740·388·
bars, rainguerd s, 39,000 8023 after 5 p.m or Leave 97 Stratos, 17'6" bass boat,
black &amp; sliver with white bot~
miles,
$21,000
080 Message
1om. gray carpet, 120 hp.
(740)446·6962
Evinrude trolling motor, re2002 Sa!urn, 4 door S.W. L
built last year from lack at
Series, loaded. 26,000 88 Chevy 1500 4)(4, 340, 5 use, runs great, looks great,
miles ,
$13,500.
Call sp, high miles, $2500 OBO, $7500 OBO.. (740)742·
(740)446·2300
4011
(740)742·4011

CLASSIFIED

r
·-------,..1
i

"llnlll"riO

1.--IMmiiiliiiOiioViillMmiiiiiiioiiliiiS...,
'
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local re1erences fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofi ng.

4-WJls

CaDi• COWity, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
2
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
m:rtbune
Sentinel

Place
Your
Ad •••

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lytribune.com

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••
\\\01 \t I \II\ 1..,

r

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Word Ads

Disolay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Inaertlon

All Dl•play: 1 z Noon 2

I'

r

In Next Day'• Paper

Publication

~~:~ay_JI••n-Column:

1:00 p.m.
Sunday• Paper

· STNA's
Are you a dedicated, caring
indi11idual who would enjoy
a part-time job that offers
great fulfillment arid creative
opportunities? Scenic Hills
Nursing Center has a new
position available. You must
be a state tested nurse
aide. It is from 4:00pm to
8:00pm . Your responsibili·
ties would Include assisting
with e11ening meals and doing evening activities with
the residents. If you .are interesied, please call Krlsti
O'Dell at (740)446·7150. Or
stop by and apply in persOn
at 311 Buckridge Road, Bid·
well, OH (Right behind
Spring Valley Cinema). We
are and equal opportunity

r

.!!.."-.-~-.G

r16

rid

Laid on;a
You could be
eligible for FREE
help gettl ng
back to work

PRECISION DEER
PROCESSING

For more information,

Skin, cut, wrap
All boneless cut

call Galha Mei~s
Community Act1on
Agency

740-949·0706
74D-949-7600

(740) 992-2222 or
(740) 446-1018

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyreglater.com

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.

Thur•day for Sunday•

Self·Storage

B

no-..---·

2br. 1ba. with basement.
Ave.
2312
Madison
$30,000. Owner will finance.
(304)675·2749

6

1995 Clayton 14x70 3br.
2ba., all electric ·w/heat
pump-; Covered porch in
Ctilton, wv. (304)n3-6074

2 bedroom house, 29 Evans
Heights, $425 month plus
dopoall. No pets. (740)44 t ·
1519

.ALLtEL
Cellular

bath, garage, on river, 5 Now 2003 14 wide. Only 6 room house &amp; bath, demiles south of Gallipolis. $799· down and only posH &amp; references, goa heal
(740)441-8817
$159.43 per month. Call &amp; central air, no pets.
Harold. 740-385-7871 .
(740)367·7553
House
lor rent t 506 Ohio
Nice lOis available for up to
Street,
Point Pleasant. 2-3
t 6x80 mobile homes, $115
1
bath .
water Included, (7401992· Bedrooms,
$375./monlh.
(740)441·
2167
0720
All,..,_ octmtlatng
FARMS
House tor rent. (740)379·
In thle newepaper le
FOR "• • ~
•ub)ecttothel"ecteral
131\U!.
2254
Ftlr HOUIIng Act of 1IISI
State Route 141, 2~3 bed·
.......
...
95.61 ac+/·ln Mason Co.
wh1~· mlkH" lllogollo
roomo. kitchen. dining. living
ldv•rtt• ''tny
WV off At 87 which Includes room. Garage. all appllan~
11 Hotl
1850's 1 5 siOfY lafm
,.. •••••nco, m on or
·
cos Including washer/ dtyor.
dlecrtmlnatlon biNd on
house, sm fram'e bam, met- $475 per month plus $400
,_.,color, religion, HX
al storage bldg, equip. sheet d
N
)
r.mllltlstttu• or nltiOMI
pond, 4.3 ac+l-w/elec. epos1t. 0 pets. 1740 446 •
46 -4 254
orlgln, or•nylnt.ntlonto
fence, holding pen &amp; 0R205 or (740 &gt;4
ed
mllkt any euch
prlferenc., llmltlltton or
dlecrimlnetlon."

Thl:=.~.~~optlll
not
......

8dv..
~H• ..,.,whlctoh ,'".rrn'"
w•
violation of the law. Our
rtldtrllrl hereby
lntonned that 1u
dwtllllng• •dvertle.ctin
this ntwlpeper are
•v•11abl• on an equ. 1

1

r MOIIILEFOR

1
1
23ac+l· of open fields. Price ~erences requ r ·
reduced
to
$135,000.
D~~

Shown by appt. only, sarious inq only, for more de·
tails (3041675·1838

r

lluslNE9i

ANDBUILiliNGS

I

Commercial building. with
large office space. and 2
apartments downtown. 512
2nd Avenue. Gallipolis.
~~op~po~rt~un~lty~b~·~·~·~ $102,000. (740)286·2828 or
...;
(740)286-0189.
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre ift~,;,;..;;;_,....-....,
tract, $500 down to qualified
l.ors &amp;
buyers. Call (740)446·3570
ACREAGE
lor a quick sale.
L~---iliiiiliiliiO..-J
_ _;..._______ t
1
· Ap
L d h
ka
N
$ere more or ass 1n
·
an
ome pac gas. o piAnrove. Call (304)675·
payments while under con-~~
Ot66
olructlon. Lmle
or no - - - - - - - - down payment r..., uired.
.,
1/2 acre
lot on Tycoon Lake
(7 40 ~_ 3218
112 OOT .1 ,... 18 500 00
·--'-------- w x
raJ e., ·
·
$13 500 00
Must See! New 2-stofY now
'
·
247 1100 _ _ _
home , 3 bedroom, 1· 1/2 '(740)
:...:.::C..:..:.c_·:.:.:c::.....
bath, open floOr plan. cus- -30 wooded acres, 32x40
tom cabinetry, circle drive- block building, $60,000.
way. Convlel')tly located, (740)379-9257
Bidwell. $97.000. (7401645· ' - - ' - - - - - - - 0102 (cell}
4 Commercial lots 1410
;.;__:_:__ _ _ _ _ Lewis St. wl small rental
New 2000 sq ft home, 10 house. Maka Offer. Call afminutes lrom Hospital. ter 5pm. {304)727-3318
Complete above ground
Property for sale close to
pool wtth porch, driveway
•
and garage foundation . Green School ' 1/2 acre with
Price below
appralaal. ·2 mobile home Iota. Great
(740)446-3384 .
Investment- Own 1 &amp; rant 1·
99;.1.-090::0
2•4 ...,_,..
~CIIall'll!;.4"!19::&gt;.0
Ranch Style Home 3 BR, 2
~~TE
BR, LlvingA, FamllyR with
E.U
Fireplace 52 x 111 lot Mid·
dlaport, OH 992-9145
Stick built In 1998, 3 bed· Will pay top dollar tor prime
llind. New heme builder.
room, 3 bath fireplace, over 1740)446•3093
~ acre, aoklng 1104 •900 .
(740)963·0730

j

i

r16

.

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques, 1124 East Main on
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 741)..
992·2526. Russ Moore,

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET PR~
CES AT JACKSON ES·
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive 5pc. Ice Cream Parlor Table
lrom $297 to $383. Walk to &amp; chair set. (reproduction).
shop &amp; movies. Call 741J. (304)675·2359 after 6pm.
446·2566. Equal Housing
BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav·
_Op.:.;_port_u_nl..:ty_.- - - - - lngs. and BOOST Energy
Gracious living. 1 and 2 Uke You Halle Never Ex·
bedroom apartments at VII· parlencad.
WEIGHT· LOSS
lage Manor and Riverside
REVOLUTION
Apartments In Middleport.
From $278·$348. Call 740- New product taunoh Octo·
992·5064 . Equal Housing ber 23, 2002. Call Tracy al
(740)441-1982
Opportunlllos.
Modem 1 bedroom apart- Crattaman, 10" Radial Arm
S.w. VOfY good condlllon.
men1 (740)44~390
Rarely uaod. $225 Firm ..
Modern 1 br Apt. 740· Call (740)441·3131 (leave
1740)446.0390
message)
Grubb's
Plano- TUning &amp;
Now Taking Appllcotlons35 Wast 2 Bedroom Town~ Repairs. Problems? Need
house Apartments, Includes Tuned? Call The Piano Or.
Water
Sewage, Trash, 74()..4.46.4525
$350/Mo .• 740-446.()()08.
High-bay lights. Hublo, 400
Tara Townhouse Apartmenlo. Very Spacious. 2
Bedrooms, 2 Fkxlrs, CA, 1
112 Bath. NeWly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Pa·
tio, Stan $375/Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Oepostt
Required. Dayo: 741J.4o46·
3481; Evenings: 740-367·
0502.
·

.-.I'V....

nr.r&lt;~I

Twin Rivers Tower Ia ac·
cepting applications ror
walling list lOr Hud·IUb·
sized, 1· br, apartment, call
675·8679 EHO

I

14 x 80 Trailer, 3 bedroom,
2 bath, front porch, storage
bldg, au electriC:, Pof'\er
area. $400.00 per mo .
$400.00 dep. you pay utili!·
lesltrash PU, no pets. .....
.....,
plicatlons available M~F, 8-5
0 1403 Eastern Ave , Galllpolls. Call 446·4514 for
more Into.

992-5479

BUIWING

SuPPLn;s

Block, brick, sewer pipes, •
_windows, lintels, etc. Claude :
Winters, Rio Grande, OH ·
Call741l-245·5t2t.

/cH,VROi~Tj

750 East Stale Slreet

Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

Two • 2 BR apartments
available In Syracuse $200.
deposit $330. per month.
Rent includes Water, Sewer
&amp; Trash, No Pets, appllcalion, Re1erence &amp; Sufficient
Income lo Qualify 378-8111
i4llll

,~

~
LH"ACE

FOR Rmr

r

APA.KJME!IUS
FOR RENT

1

Bedroom Apartments
Starting at $289/mo, Wash·
art Dryer Hookup, Stove
A
and etrlgara1or. (740)441·
1519·
1 or 2 BA Appl. tor Rent,
Utllltl · Pd N0 p
gg 2
ata

.:SO .,

Used furniture store, 130
Bulallllle Pike. we sell mat·
tresses, bunk beda, dressers, couches, a·ppllances,
muc h more. Grave monu1
ments . (740)446 ·4782 Ga·
lipo11 s, OH .
Washer, $15; Dryer, $75;
Electric Range, $75; FI'08t
Free Refrigerator, amall,
$75; GE Washer &amp; Dryer
sat, S250: Norge rafrigerator, nice, $150; Kenmore ra·
frlgerator, white, same as
new, S350; Dining table with
4 chair$, $135; We .also
have bargains on other
Items. Skaggs Appliances.
76 Vine Street, (740)446o7398

J

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Doberman pups 4 females
10 weeks old. $250 1st
&amp;hots/wormed. Parents on
Premises. (304)675-8196
Full

blooded

~

Australian

~heppJlrd puppies (no pa·

pars). Stoo. (740) 742·2728
Guinea Pig 8 man. old. ~
Cage with accessories 304~ .

WITH THE
CLASSIFIEDS!
The Daily Sentinel

87!i5!:!·2~0o:
35
~
:!....._ _ _ __

Registered
Pomeranian
puppy, male, 6 weeks old,
had 1st shots, .vet checked,
$250.00 (740)44 1-()368.

992-2155

I

.

t1 2 ads this size with picture in Saturday
or Sunday's newspaper.
t1 15 word line ad for 15 days.

OR

·

;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;I _
O

FORA~·~

~

~

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS!

Hondas . Chevys, etcl Cars/

1992 ChfYolor Imperial.
$1200; t 993 D.odgo Dynas·
ty. $1200. (740)379·2368

•
:
~

1997 Dodge Neon , 82,000
milo~. air, $2.600.00 obo.
256·1875 256·1233

It

·

·
·
•·
·
•
·

-

FREE FISH FRY
Thursday, January 16th
Pomeroy Eagles 2171

-

• ' The band Wild Fire will be
.

1994 Mitslbushl Expo, runs good.
120.000
miles, •
$t
(740)258·9080

.ooo

BINGO
January 18th
6:30pm
All packs $5 each
Star burst $1700
Middleport American
Legion

•

j

Insulated roof gutter, 1'
overhang painted steel
sides &amp; root, erected,
10,157.00; 24x42x9'4• garage, 1·3' entry, 2-20x8 , in·
su 1 overheads, ·rnsu1 roo1,
painted steel sides &amp; roo11 '
overhtng gutter, erected
price $9967.00; Precision
Post Frame Bldra, 740-742·
4011 . 1-800-398-3026

For more Information, call
the Sentinel at 992·2155

.

Wooden futon, Play Station Trucks from $500.
For
One, --v
e:.,...,a, glass chandelier listings 1-800·719~3001 ext.
blleba!l cards, (740)992· 3901
7933
1987 Plymouth Carevlle, 2.2
engine, pil, pb, auto, good
old car, (740)992·2666
--1988 Ford Mustang 4 cyll n·
10 &amp; ~12 wide portable yard dor. $1 .000. (304)675-7441
buildings, a11allable in 9' 1989 Pontiac Grand Am,
thru 21' metal side &amp; roof,
6'x6'6~ mini roll·up door; amltm, air, 5 speed. Runs
40xtl4xt3' shop Duildtng. 1· good, i 17,000 miles. Gets
3 ent~. 3·12x1.2 overheads great gas mileage, has
gutter painted steel aldea &amp; been a very dependable
cor. Aoklng $400. Call 740·
roof, Insulated root, erected
price
$20,106.00; 992·3722 on weekdays and
30x-40x9'4• garage, 3-10x8 (740)992·1844 In evenl ~g
lnsul overtt.ads, 1~3' entry, and weekends.

s

I

t1 4 ads this size with photo in the Sentinel.
t1 15 word line ad for 15 days.

Boarding, Training , Condl· ~
tion\ng, Indoor and Outdoor
riding facilities , trails and .
wash bay. 1-741J.446·4710

r

1-800·746·0076
AAIEOE

performing at the
Pomeroy. Eagles Aeril #2171 ,

Friday, January 17 and
Saturday, January 18.

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, DH

M

Tha Area Agency
on Aging at Buckeye
Hllls·Hocklng Valley
Regional
Development District,
Route 1 Box 2990,
Marlallll, Ohio 45750,
Is requeatlng propos·
als to provide sarvlc·
aa to persona 60
yeara of age and
older. The service all·
glble for funding Ia
Congregrate
Meals
ntla-ltl C1, In Hocking
County.
Details of
oervlce and funding
for tha 10 month peri·
od beglnlng March 1,
2003, are Included In
lhe RFP.
Technical
asslatance available
upon requast.
RFP
will be available after
January 17, 2003.
Complete RFP dead·
line Is 5:00 p.m.
February 7, 2003. Call
(740) 374·9436 for
RFP Packett.

(740) 992-3194
992·6635

(304) 675-5282

~

www.W'IIpCdr.com
cdoctorOwv dr.com

!m-2'm

IBSON
HARTWELL
fiR4PHICS

I-IOU DAY
~Pt.CIAl

10%

STORAGE
lOxlO
10x20

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

740-992-1717

1-800-822-0417

BISSEll

Depoy'sAg Pal1s

BUILDERS IDC.

1000 S.R. 7 South
Coolville, OH

New Homes • Vinyl

45723

aurvayi

Siding • N ew Garages

1-7 40-667·0363

2.

• Replacement

Shop early for the

(1) 16, 2003

PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Area Agency
on Aging at Buckeye
Hlllo·Hocklng Valley
Regional
Development District,
Route 1 Box 2990.
Marietta, Ohio 45750,
Ia requasllng propos·
ala to provide servlc·
ea to persons 60
years of age and
older. The service ell·
glble for funding Is
Congragrate
Meals
end Medical Escort
for Title-Ill B and TitleIll C1 , In Athens
County.
Details of
sarvlce and funding
for the 1 0 month peri·
od beglnlng March 1,
2003. are Included In
lhe RFP. Technical
aaalatance available
upon requ.st.
RFP
will be available after

(1) 16, 2003

PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
The Bank of New
York as Trustee c/o
HomeEqfThe Money
Store
VS.

Robert Coe and
Lisa Coe, et al.
Meigs County
Common Pleas Case
No. 2002..CV..Q46
In pursuance of an
order Issued from
Common Pleas Court,
within and for the
county
of
Meigs,
Stale of Ohio, I will
offer for sale at Public
Auction on February
6, 2003 to be held on
the Courthouse steps
at 10:00 am of said
day, the following
Real Estate to·wlt:
Being In Sscllon
23, T.9N, R.15W of the
Ohio
Company
Purchase and being a
parcel created out of
the Riehle A. Coe
property (V. 23, P. 577,
Meigs Co. O.R), said
new parcel being
bounded
and
described aa follows :
Beginning
at tha
Intersection of S.R.
143 and C .R. 55 (Old
S.R. 345); thence
along the cenlerllne
of C.R. 55 (Old S.R.
346)
55 " 40' 46"
West277.06 feet to an
Iron pin set by lhls

s.

survey, paaelng an
Iron pin set by this
survey at 25.26 feet:
thence
along the
Beulah Crabtree and
Thelma
Woodrum
property (V. 293, P.
139, Melga Co. Deed
Recorda) the follo'!ll·
lng two calla:

s. so·

49" 1t'"
East 369.84 feet to a
point In tho centerline
of S.R. 143, passing
an Iron pin set by this
aurvay at 330.55 feet;
thence along the
centerline of S.R. 143,
09" 50'
East
41.37 feet to the point
ol beginning. conlalnlng 1.110 acres.
Subject to all legal

s.

oo··

easements.
Tha above description was made In
accordance wllh an
actual survey con·
dueled by Eugene
Trlplatt, P. 5 6766 on
April 19. 20, 24. 1996.
Bearings are baaed
on the Rolling Hills
Subdlvl1lon and are
Intended
only
to
express
angular

Now Renting
A-JMINI-SIOIWI

Pomeroy

January 17, 2003.
Complete RFP dead·
line Ia 5:00 p.m .
February 7, 2003. Call
(740) 374-9436 lor
RFP Packets.

or visit website;
www.herbsndlet.com

PC DOCTOR

St. Rt. 1 Goeglein Rd.

PUBLIC NOTICE

product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
74D-992-7996

Top • Removal • Trim
· Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

(10'K10' 610'1120')

811~ittP~': (' ll td~

s.

Recommended

Get this AWESOME

Tree Service

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

~~lV(l

1.
76" 55" 35'"
East 5.70 feel to an
Iron pin set by this

All Natural/Doctor

. We Make House Calla

Oil

You will get...

3 Miniature Oonkevs. 740· •
..S.1158.

Trlna Hannan
Dlre&lt;tor of Home Health

,:&lt;1$11*

sgg

I.

..,,V\..1\

For more information:

ONLY

"m!,jo~n;;.l·,::!7~4;;0):;:4;;:46:;;·:;248;;:;:4_....,
'...,..,.._,...._,
..,. •

PHYSICAL THERAPY ASSISTANT;
Full time. Completion of a two-year Physical
Therapy Program from an accredited inslilu·
lion. Curren! Physical Therapy Assistant
license in the Slates providing care.

Sell Your House YourseH
... end SAVI MONEY!!

Tlmo lor Frost Seeding Pas·
lure and Hay Fl'elds. ATV •.
Broadcast Seeders. 12 volt.
High Quality. Fits most ATV, :
$295. Jim's Farm Equip-

nr

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Health is
currently accepling resumes for:

1011 VIand Strtet Point Pleasant, WV 25550

STEEL

Mollohan Csrpet, 202 Clarlt:
Chapel Aoed, Porter, Ohk).
(740 )448 _7444 1_877 _830 _
9162. Free E1tlmates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. VIsa/ Master Card.
Drive· a- little save alot.

:&gt;:.::==="------

Bos1on Terrier... . AKC pups •
lOr sale. $300 &amp; $350. Also :
have
male for
stud. •
(740)387·7564

ii;;

:.:...===;.;_____

HELP WANTED

AKC Great Dane pups,
$400 (740)388·9SI3

.

nished, security deposit re·
qutred , no pets, 740·992·
2218.
~ bedroom and 2 bedroom
apartments, air conditioning ,
downtown location. Call
(740)446·4859

2
br.
mobile
hOme
Waahoo/DfYor. $300.00 a
+$300 00
d
mon.
·
ep.
(3()4)882·1107
8811utltu1 'River Vlow Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People, Refer-~·
ces, Deposit, No Pets, Foster Trailer Park, 740·4410181 .
t'

HELP WANTED

launched!!!
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Burns FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
JUST

JONES'

992-297

AKC

27

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and unfur-

2 bedrooms, air conditioning
very nice, Gallipolis, References, no pets. (740)446·
2003 or (740)44•t409
u-

(740) 992-0739

B. D. COnSTRUCTIOn

r

NEW AND

Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling,
Siding, and
Additions
Owner:
Tarry Lamm

For all your Home
Improvement needs
"No Job To Small"

Golden Retrievers,
$200 each. (740)643·0013 :

..

LARRY SCHEY

CONSTRUCnON

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring thls coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
GetS FREE

watts, shades, hanger and
bulb. Units complete. $135. UKC Registered Toy Aat
(740)446·2359
Terrier, male, 3 months old,
JCPenney
Baby
Bed ahots, wormed, $125.
w/drawors and mattress. ~17:,;40p:l2;;:56-::;::9080=:~--­
$300 new. $100; Toddler
MtsiCAL
car seat, $10; Bassinet,
fNsrRuMENrs . ·
$10. Bears &amp; Balloons ac· ~
•
cessorles: Prom dress. Rich vance
atraploss sequin top. lull La· 7•• ~ • •••
• bo
1
$
~•• me
ttom, sze 18 • 100· Congratulations! You have
(740)44&amp;·B&amp;4Q or &lt;740)446• won 2 1ree movie tickets to
4648
h S 1 V 11
G 111
::::::.::.
· - - - - - - - t o pr ng a oy 7 a po·
JET
lis. Call the Sentinel for de·
AERATION MOTORS
tolls. (740)992·2155)
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In _ _ _..:___ _..:____
Stock. Call Aon Evans, 1 ~ Set of Drums, (740)742·
2404
800 537 9528
" .
·
I \ H \I ..,I 1'1' 1 II "'
--------,\ II \ I " I lie 1,
New &amp; Used Heat Pumps·
Gas Furnaces. Free Estl· r 10
p;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;jl
mates. (740}446-6308
FARM
•
USED
L--·F.Qu~PM~Nr-----.,1.
•
SFo108
r eo'~.,.a•• APnlgpele, CRahbaan~ New
Hetland
Manure
......
nel, Aat Bar, Steel Grating Spreader,
Model
213,
~or Draine, Driveways &amp; P.T.O.
driven,
$1600.
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met· _&lt;7_40..:__)2_4_5·-57_6_a_ _ __

Trailer space 1or rent $125
per month, plus deposit.
Priest's Trailer Park. Water
Paid . Call (740)44·3644
alsodOpen Monda~. TueSday,
v- ·
W neaday &amp; Friday, Sam·
4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
lrii1or~H~OlSD!OW;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;. Saturday &amp; Sunday.
&lt;740 )446-7300
..,._ _..;Goooiiiiiiiii--• Oak Student desks· very
sturdy, Oak veneer on ply·
5pc. Blue sectional sofa, re- wood, 4-drawers. Can be
cliners on each end. In good used as a computer desk.
Condition. $300. (304)882· 42"124·, $40. Call 6-Spm,
3570 a•o 5pm
" r
·
M·F No Phone caMs Wed.
!740)245-9047
For Sale.· R-ndlllo··•
- and retrtg· - atnce ptttttona, daeka, and
washers, dryera
lllln
era1ors. Thompsons A~ll·
9 cobinot s. (740)4••
~
"~""
2359
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave· -·::~------nue, (304)875· 7386.
Watontno Special: 314 200
Good Used Appliances, Re- PSI $21 .00 Per 100; 1" 200
conditioned and Guaran· PSI $35.00 Per 100; All
teed . Washers, Dryers, Brase. COmpression Altlngs
Ranges, and Refrigerators, In Stock.
Some start at $95. Skaggs RON EVANS ENTERPRIS~
Appliances, 76 VIne St. , ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·BQO.
(740pt46-7398
537·9528

·
WanI0dl Good crodlt CUI·
tome111 to 'purchase new
~
home wllend. $0 down to
qualified customers. 1. 5 ·--FORilliiioiRmriiiiliio-r 1br. Apartment Available
acre
tracts
available.
now. 2br. Apartment avalla(74 0)446·30QJ
1 -3 Bedroom• Foreclosed bte Feb. Water, Trash InHomes From $t99/Mo., 4% eluded. (304)882·3131
Well maintained Ranch Down , 30 Years at 8.5%
I home in Rseine, 3 APR. For Listings. 8()().31 9- 2 bedroom apartment in Rio
stye
Grande,
$300/deposlt,
bedroom, 1 b at h, 11 11ing- 3323 EJ(t. 1709.
,
.
h
$325/month
(740)245·9060
room. ~uc en , laundry
room , 1 car garage, large 1 BA House in Racine, with Furnished 3 rooms + t?ath,
deck. storage building, all wate r, sewer, traSh $325 . upstairs, clean, no pets.
electriC w/alr, (740)949- Month, No Pets (740)992· Reference &amp; deposit re·
3090
5039
qulred . (740)446·1519
\'

.

It

•

Jeff Warner Ins.

LAMM'S

Sunday

remOd~

j

I

It

2 bedrooms- 6 month lease
Garage Apartment, utltltles
paid, no pets. no parties.
$550 month plus $550 do·
posit. (740)446.0241

1998 SChuR 16 X 80 2 BR 2 BR· H/2 bath, CIA &amp;
elecl. in Middleport, call Tom w/ Heated Garage 1-740· heal,. 6 While Avenue. Gal·
992·1967
Anderson after 5 p.m.
llpolls, $375/mo. Reference
992·3348
2001 t 4x80 Oakwood, 3 &amp; depoall. (772)486·3561
3 bedroom, 2 baths mobile BA, 2 bath, ell appliances 3 bedroom farm house for
home, fenced lot, 30x40 included. We'll make securi- rent. $400 monlh, $300 do·
metal building suitable for ty deposit, you take over posit. Gas heat. (740)446·
payments of $370 month. 0118
b~slnoss. (740)256·8613
(216)351-7086 or (216)257· 3 bedroom hoose In Pomer·
3 bedroom· 1· 112 bath, 1485 .
oy, HUO lpproved, $300
wlnrm 30x30 addition. Lo·
cated on 12 acres with "Get Your Money's Worthw per month, deposit $200,
required,
slacked pond. City SChools, at Colas Mobile Homos. St. references
Rt. 50 East of Athens. Dellv· (740)742·2896
(740)446·8901
erlea. set~ups , excavating. 3 bedroom house, Rio
4
BEDROOM
HDMI foundations , sewage sys- Grando
area. $500 plus
Foreclosure, only $14,900, tems, driveways , heating dopoall. no palo. (740)441·
Won"t laal. t-801J.719-0001 and cooling along with parts
1519
ext. F14o4
and service. You ahoukl &amp;c·
3br. House located In Ma·
4 br.• tr. &amp; ar.. 2 batha. 112 cept nothing leas. Since son, WV. $495. + Utilities.
1967
we
are
Cole's
Mobile
basement, lg. kitchen wllots
No Pels. (304)773·5861
of cupboards, ate-fan &amp; Homes where you "Get
Your
Money's
Worth
.~
5
rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St.
heat, water softener, new
mo. 1740)446. 3945
5325
windows. lg. front porch Good used 14x56. Only
overlooking river, will con- $5995· will help with dellv· 8 room Furnished house tor
sider trade, (740)992·9012 OfY. Call Nikki. 740·385· rent in Mason. (304)7735764
Bflck Ranch, 2 bedroom. 2 9948.

3 Bedroom newly

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;

""''""'-1

Ir M~~OME'i IL.t_'~ -·FOR·"-~--.1 r

.I '

'

~~in~ean:.~i:e.P~:~~:Y n~!~

Jim Ruark
Electric, Plumbing,
and Small Home
Maintenance .lobe
(340 773·5412

~'R~
High &amp;Dry

POLICIES: Ohio Vdty Pubtl1hing reHI\'fl the right to Hit, rtJtcl, or Clncel 1ny tid at any time. Erron m..t be reported on thl first day of publlc1tlon 1nd
Trlbu..s.nttnet-Regleter wfll be rwepon1lble for fto more ~n the colt of the epEe occupied by the error lnd only thl first lntertlon. WI 1hlll not be II• loll•• f..·l
any 1011 or txpenH thlt multi from thl pubiiCitfon or omi11ion of en ldveniHmtnt eorr.ctton will bl midi In the ftl'lt available edition. • Box number
1re. 11w1y1 confktentlll. • Current r11ta Clrd 1ppl11. • All real eltdt .clvtrtieem.rt• n eubject to the Flcleral Fair Houelng Act of 1188. • Thl1
1ccept1 only help Wlm.d adl milling EOE atllndfte. Wt will not knowingly ecctpt tny ldvlf'tlalng In vtolltlon of tht llw.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • lnc:lude A Price • Avoid AbbrevlatkJn•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Shouklltun 7 Daya

Free mi)(ed breed puppies Construction
Company
born 11 -19-02 304-675· needs one or two experi3126
enced workers with builtjing
trades skills. Send resumes
Lorr AND
outlining experience and
FOUNIJ
re1erences to CLA 570, c/o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
FOUND- Bassett Hound P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis,
with collar. Black , Brown , OH 45631 .
and tan on Stale Route 588
Help wanted caring lor the
(740)446·6587
elderty, Darst Group Home, employer.
now paying minimum wage,
new shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am· - - - - - - - - WANIID
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pmWE NEED TO ""TALK""
roBuv
7am, call 740-992-5023.
TO YOU II
1950's. 1960's. 1970's. 45. Housekeeping/Laundry Full A Great Opportunity Awaits!
33 RPM records, antiques &amp; time &amp; Part Time. Apply In
collectibles (937)675-2930 Person at Arbors of Oalllpo~ The Ohio Valley Publishing
Is seeking a
(937)372·6453
lis 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gal- Company
highly
moti11ated
individual
lipolis, Oh. Ask for linda
who is intersted In an
Dennis
"OUTSIDE ADVERTISING
Absolu1e Top Dollar: U.S. HVAC: 8-Service techlin·
SALES CAREER".
Silver, Gold Coins, Proof- stallers wanted: Commercial with unlimited
earning
sets.
Diamonds.
Gold experience a plus. Must be potential! intersted??
Rings,
U.S. Currency, - reliable &amp; ha11e own tools.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- Travel &amp; weekends someWE NEED TO TALK!
ond A11e nue . Gallipolis. 740.. limes req. 3-5 yrs. experi446·2842.
ence, $10·$15 hr. Send re· •Salary Plus Commission
sume &amp; inqui ries to : G.C. -Great working environment
Hunt. PO Box 43, Middle- •Monday- Friday 8am·5pm
Wanted· White Pitt Bull pup, port, Oh 457~0
6·8 weeks old, also, white, :..__:___-'----Send your resume to:
male cat to gille away. 740 _ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
Ohio Valley Publishing
PO. Box 469
208~7359 ..
Local Office Has 25-50
Openings. No experience
Gallipolis. OH 45631
I '11'1 In 'II \I
Fax 1740)446 •3008
Needed, $6·$9 Per Hour, 1·
..,1 IH IC I..,
688·974·JDBS
or email:
lboyer@mydaily1ribune.com
110
1140
•
HELP WAN"J'EI)
1
Apartments. aoo State
=~
1
Route 325, Thurman, OH
Applications are being ac- 45685 . Apply at office or
cepted lor In-Home Service submit resume (740)286- Gallipolis Career College
Aides Applica nts should 5676 or ( 740 ) 384 ~ 5319
(Careers Close To Home)
have a h1gh school diploma
Call Today! 740-446·4367,
or G.E.D., reliable lranspor- McClure's Restaurant now
1·800-214-0452,
"12748
R .90 ·0;,;;~.;,;;;.;,;;.;.
tat1on. telephon e in the hiring all 3 locations. lull or r,r:,r.;e~g:.;;,;~
· _,
home and willing to work part-time, pick up applica - ,180
WANTED
weyk-ends &amp; holidays. Must tion at location &amp; bring back
To Do
be motivated and tl exible.
between
1O:OOam
&amp; ..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _•
· . Expenence
·
· pro- 10 :30am, Mon day thru Sat - ··
W1'lll ratn
m
·d·1ng d.1rec t ca re or working
·
21 yrs. Exper1enced care
v1
urday
wtlh older adults a plus. _....:..._ __ _ ___ giver IQiJking for part time
Stale tested nurstng assis· Office help wanted: must be work in your home, day or
tants encouraged to apply. neat, courteous &amp; reliable. night. Contact me at
Applications are available at Wlgood writi ng &amp; communi- (304)675-6183
the Meigs Multipurpose Se- cation skills. Able to learn &amp;
nior Cen ter, 112 East Me- grow withe business, com· - - - - - - - - morial Dnve. Pomeroy, Oh puter sk.11 1s a plus. $8 hr. to Georges Portable Sawmill.
don't haul your logs to the
An EOE Employer.
start. Sen d resume &amp; inquines to: G.C. Hunl. PO Bo. . mill just call304-675· 1957.
• --------Avon
Representatives 43, Middlepon. Oh 45760.
Magic Years Day Care Cenwan1oo (740)446·3358
Medr. Horne Heat1h Agency, ter spaces now avaII able frir
Inc . seeking full -time ti- enrollment. Age. s 2·5. For
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
censed Physical Therapist more
information
call
Sell. ShirleY Spears . 304·
far Ohio and West Virginia (304}675-5847
675-1429.
clien t based . We oHer a - - - -- -- - Carleton School/Meigs In- competitive salary, benefits Will Babysit in my home 1Q
duslrleS seeks a substitute package, 401 k, flex lime, mile North o1 Pt. Pl. on At 2
Health Services Coordi nator and SIGN-ON BONUS. North. Private pay or link.
(AN or LPN) 10 work With Please send res ume to Call (304)895·3277
studerlts and adults with de· 68150 Bayberry Dri'lle, st.
Clairsville, OH 43950. Attn :
velopmental
diSabtlilleS. Greg Varner Admi nistrator
Musl be a regtstered nurse
~
Or I1
Cens e d PraeIICaI nurse Scenic Hills Nursing Center .._ . .VI'I'VI&lt;_illiiiii'uliii"'iio"_.l
curran IIY I Jce nse d 1n t he has an Immediate opening
State ot Ohto
Preferred lor a part-time dietary aide
!NOTICE!
qualifications. E &gt;~penence tor the 5:00am to 11 :30am OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHin public health nurs ing. e)(- shift, or 11 :ooam to 7:30 lNG CO. recommends that
perience workmg wllh chit- pm. We are an equal oppor- you do business with people
dren and adults with devel- tunrty employer.
you know, and NOT to send
opmental d•sabtltties Send 11 you are 8 friendly, ener- money through the mall until
resume to:
getic person who would like you have investigated the
Steve Beha, E)(6cu11ve
to join our dedicated team p;~;;;;;;~;:~
Olrector,CarlelonSchooi/Mel f
.
1
o ca regtve rs , Pease
ca 1I
gslndustrles, 1310Carleton Justin Frum at (7 40) 446 _
Sl ree I· Po
· · Box 307 · Syra- 715.0 or stop by and apply In .._ _ _
cuse, nuh 10 45779
person at 311 Buck ridge
Road. Bidwell, OH. (Right
TURNED DOWN ON
Carleton School/Meigs In- Behind Spring Valley Cine· SOCIAL SECURITY 1881?
dustries seeks substitute ma)
No Fee Unles&amp; We Win!
employees for various posi· _.:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _
1_888_582 _3345
lions 1n the agency working Truck Orlvara, lmmedlt~te
With Children and adults with hire, class A COL required. ..,.......;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
developmental disabilities. excellent pay. experience
Must have high school d1- reqUired
Etrn up to
H~
ploma or equivalent Send $1,000. nar wHk.Call 304FOR SALE
resume to
675-4005•·
Ste11e Beha . E~~:ecutJve Dt2 story home. Middleport,
rector, Me1 gs County Board Temp
Full·t•me laborer $30,000, will do land conat MRDD 1310 Carleton Clements Nursery Ss 15/hr tract
(740)286·2828 or
Street. Bo)( 307. Syracuse Apply at Pt Pleasant Job (740)286-0189.
Ohoo 45779
Servoco by t -24·03
I
••

r

740-667-0363

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

Bualn••• D•v• Prior To

16
6
Lr.IO_IIELP
__W._ANflilJ_. Ll'._11ELP
__w._ANI1ID
__ Lr_'-·FOR·"·OME'i·SAIE,_....

. Carpenter-rooter needed,
(740)378-6349
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit - - - - - - - - lor sale, Chester Township, Church Housekeeper NeedMeigs County, send leners ed. Light cleaning 15 hours
of interest to: The Daily week
on Monday. WedSentinel . PO Box 729·20. nesday, and Friday. Send
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
resumes to Grace United
Methodist
Church. 600
GIVEAWAY
Second A'lle. , Gallipolis, OH
__
45631
---

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
I000 St. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

Arevou

PlUmBinG

740-992-5232

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

l\egt~ter

DEPOYSIG
PABH

33795 HilandRd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Of/tee l!o«P-~
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

I

C&amp;C General Home Mainte·
nence· Painting, 11inyl siding, carpentry, doors, win·
dows, baths, mobile home
repair and more. For free
estimate call Chat, 740-992·
6323
·

•

~: ....?..

TO

HOME

Windows • Roofing

holidays!

COMMER&lt;(IAL and

New Shipment
Farm Toys &amp;
Conslruction Toys

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

MillS

FAMilY
COimiCDON

"Not mel
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance
ond Financial SerVIces,
Box 189, Middleport. OH /..... ""•
Phone 843-5264."

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let rre do 1\ for youl

Best Service at
the Best Price
"}~.. .lt; //'..1~ ~~ ,. .• rA;fr ..~ , ..

Skin, Cut, Wrap
&amp;Freeze
All this for only

Footers. Founda[ion,
Add~Ons,

New Homes,
Pole Bams, Concre te,
• Electri c, Plumbin g
Wo r~

Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

All Brands

Buildin g ova 30 }'ears

/fl.ourarlt"&lt;'

··w.v·s #I

$45.00

Open Ynm·5rm

31645SR325
Langsville, OH

l rwlul ll'J

(740) 992·3320

740-742-2076

Email: btadea@zaplink.oom

I a-.:

•n .,,.,,.. JIIC ~u n

l'all '" t"r o~H )'"u'

""''f"!'' nc-.:J&lt;

h"·

.,,, , ..,,~ • .

!740) 446-1812
.1 sk '" "''"U
Imr r
S t•r\'1!'1'

1'/mt.l'.'

measurement.
Being 1.110 acres
surveyed from Parcel
1.0 . 110500550.005.
Located at 28490
Old State Route 346,
Albany, Ohio 45710.
Said property has
been appraised at
$25,0110.00 and can·
not sell for lass than
lwo·lhlrd•
of
appralaement.
Terms of Sale: Ten
percent of the highest
bid, cash or certified
check, due on the day
of sale, balance due
upon confirmation of
the sals by the Meigs
County
Court
of

com1non Pleas, the
deed will be luued
upon the balance
being pald.
Ralph D. Trussell.
Meigs County Sheriff
Theodore K. Manley,
Attorney
Manley &amp; Deas, LLC
243 North Fifth Street,
3rd Floor
Columbus. OH 43215
(1) 16. 23, 30

Hill's Self
Storage
Bedliners • Ncrf Bar
• Tonneue Cover •
Vcntvisor • Bug
Shie ld &amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories
'

"

t I

"

I

•

I. '

\It. [,[1, 1)•111 t l l11',

(7 40) 992· 5822

Ball Logging
&amp;Firewood
Bob Ball
Dump Truck Delivery

1·740.992-6142
a Message

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
4577 1
740·949·2217

s'*s'x10'
to '10'x30'

- ·- .

.-...

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

YOUNG'S
ROBERT
Wolfe Heating &amp; Cooling
CARPENTER
BISSELL
SERVICE
~
• 10 yr parts &amp; labor
•
Room
Additions
~
• Service on all brands
CONSTRUCTION
Remodeling
• Residential &amp; light commercial ·
&amp;

• www.americanstandardair.com
GAS, FUEL OIL &amp; HEAT PUMPS
"SALliS &amp; SERVICE"
CUSTOMER CA RE DEALER

Toll Free: 1-877-466-1234
WVOJ4Sl6
(740) 992-JJSS

• New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutter,,
• VInyl Siding • Painting
• Patio &amp;nd Porch Deckl
Free Eslimal es

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp;Compare
7/22/TFN

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pom•roy, Qnlo
Ye11r
I

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