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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, February 4,

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Religious messages can
be refused in polite ways
DEAR ABBY: Your advice
to "Happy Hindu in the Bible
Belt," whose Christian friends
tuck religious pamphlets into
holiday boxes of baked goodies in an effort to convert her,
was off base. You ad vised her
to ignore the brochures and
enjoy the goodies - unless
she had lost her appetite- in
which case she should donate
the treats to a shelter or take
them to the office.
I disagree. That lovely lady
shol!ld politely tell her friends
that she likes her own religion
and ask them to please stop
with the religious literature. If
they continue, she should. end
the friendship. If converting
her is more important than her
friendship, there IS no friend·
ship. - BEEN THERE,
TOO, IN BEND, ORE.
DEAR B.T.T.: Your answer
is
better
than
mme.
"Hap.py
Interestingly,
Hindu's" problem appears to
be widespread. That letter
brought in a bushel of mail.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I am Jewish.
A friend from college kept
sending me "Jesus Loves
You" Christmas cards. I told
her it hurt my feelings that she
t:lidn 'I respect my beliefs. I
made it clear that I am Jewish
and will always remain
Jewish. as it is my religious
and cultural background.

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
Like "Hindu," I know that
some of these gestures · are
well-intentioned, but I would
never dream of sending my
friend Hanukkah cards. I send
cards that say "Season's
or
"Happy
Greetings"
Holidays." It's good to learn
about other people's beliefs
and be open to them - but
not when they're forced on
you. - JILL IN SACRA·
MENTO
DEAR JILL: I regret that I
did not advise "Happy Hindu"
to be as outspoken and
upfro~! as you and "Been
There.
·
DEAR ABBY: Your answer
to "Happy Hindu" offended
me as a Christian. If the cir·
cumstances were different,
would you tell me to ignore
my Buddhist friends, but
enjoy their treats if I didn't
gag first? Why is evangelical
Christianity the only religion
we shouldn't tolerate? MARYS., ELLUAY, GA.

DEAR MARY S.: It's not.
Anyone who proselytizes is
treading on "sacred ground."
It's re11arded as offensive,
e&lt;ven if 11 is heartfelt.
DEAR ABBY: Hard as it is
to live with some evangelicals, they are easier to take
than people who feel justified
in resorting to violence
against those they feel are
"lost." You have to understand that with evangelicals, it
is an article of faith, and it's
their Christian duty to preach
their version of the Go$pel,
especially if they care about
you and are genuinely concerned about your soul. DOLLY IN LACEY, WASH.
DEAR DOLLY: I am
aware of that. A devout and
very sweet lady once told me
she was "sad" because she
loved me and knew she
wouldn't see me in heaven. I
asked her why. She said,
"Because you haven't been
saved!" Once I got over the
shock that her heaven was
segregated, I assured her that
even though I might not be in
hers, she would definite! y be
in mine, so please not to
worry any further.
DEAR ABBY: Many people have stopped me on the
street or come to my door
with religious tracts, so I had
cards printed with the following: "I never' told my own

religion nor scrutinized that of
another. I never attempted to
make a convert, nor wished to
change another's creed. I am
satisfied that yours must be an
excellent religion to have produced a life of such exem·
plary virtue and correctness.
For it is in our lives, not from
our words, that our religion
must be judged." (Thomas
Jefferson to Mrs. H. Harrison
Smith, 1816) - KAYE IN
N.Y.C.
DEAR KAYE: I agree with
his timeless and profound
conclusion.
Dear Abby is wrinen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne 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.

2003

41 Knock
sharply
1 Twitch
42 BHihoven
4 Ooh.
place
companion 45 Good to eat
7 Called up 49 Smell
11 Actress
50 Den
- West
furniture
12 HuH ·
52 Before
14 Bahrain VIP
Sept.
15 Vanity
53 Whhewesh
16 Ex·frosh
component
17 Large lizard 54 Go In the
18 Snacked
~ .
20 Abridged
55 'l'hlrd·rate
22 Amerlnd
newspaper
23 Woolly
56 Antler
9 Pharaoh's 36 Kachlna
animal
wearer
river
maker
24 Connery
57 Summer In
10 Degree
38 Cloaer
and
France
holder
39 Bovary'a
O'Casey
58 Motor coach
13 Lunchbox
title
27 QuiZ·IhOW
partner
41 Equip again
DOWN
hosts
19 Barbarians 42 Marketed
30 Symphony
21
Delicate
43 Fat eat's
1
Fed.
agents
or tome
24 Graeay
victim
(hyph.)
· 31 Jade
aurface
44 ldltarod
2 tlthello'a
32 Ship's
25 DeMille fllm
terminus
foe
record
26 Car Import 48 Cutting
34 Accom·
3 Business
27 Napoleon's
remark
VIPs
pllshed
leland
47 Occaalon
35 Chores
4Good
28 HL
for lela
qualities
36 Greek
29 Peeved
48 Cullard
·goddess
5 Battery
31 Direction
bese
terminal
37 Movies
finder
51 Have a
6 Diet target
39 Budged
33 Wander
mortgage
40 Mind·
7 Govern·
about Idly
reader's
letters
· 8 ~~"""'12~35 Kid arou"n_d'To"...,::-""T':'li:-1

11.1((,
Reading the

.

.irn~:/~':,~~,:;keeps
you
and

in tune with
what's happening
now, whether
it's across the
globe or in your

go places where you can
make fresh contacts.
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL
TAURUS (April 20-May
A number of wonderful 20) - Something thai has
situation s that you never been bothering Y'!U lately can
thought could happen 10 you be successfully concluded to·
might become realities in \he day all because of a lucky
year ahead. Be optimistic. It ' break that happens your way.
pays to never give up on your You ' II be greatly relieved.
dreams. hopes or wishes.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. - You 're entering a period
19) -. Be optimistic regard- where friends Md associates
ing your involvements with could be quite lucky for you
others. Exciting news could concerning the realization of
~orne your way today pertainyour hopes and wishes . One ·
mg to some type of partner- . big one could. be fulfilled to·
ship arrangement you have day.
w1th several people.
CANCER (June 21-July
PISCES (Feb. 20- March 22) - A lucky happenstance
20) - Through the good aus- could oecur today that will
pices of a11other..something is have a posit.ve effect upon
stirring that will have a posiyour material well-being. For
tive effect uptm your earning
many Cancers, the amount inabilities. A raise. promotion
volved could turn out to be
or opportunity could be at
rather substantial.
hand.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ARIES (March 21-April
Conditions in general could
19) - Any new social conbe particl1larly happy for you
tacts you make today could
today. It actually may tum out
end up being more significant
to be a red-letter day.
than usual, so take advantage
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
of any ilpportunity you get to
- This is one of those un-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS ' Vol . 53, No. 120

www.mydailysentinel.com

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2003

Death believed suicide
Point Pleasant
man dies in
Middleport jail

Tuesday,
according
to
Assistant
Prosecutor
Christopher Teno~lia, who is
assisting the Metgs County
Sheriff's Department in the
· investigation into Sturgeon's
BY BRIAN J. REED
death.
Staff writer
Sturgeon's body was found
only three hours after he was
jailed on a parole violation
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs warrant from Georgia,
County authorities believe a according to Lt. Mony Wood
Point Pleasant, W.Va., man of the sheriff's department.
died in the Middleport jail
Wood said Sturgeon was
Tuesday as the result of self- pulled over by a Gallipoli$
strangulation.
City Police officer on a rouDonnie L. Sturgeon, 29, tine traffic stop, and when a
Lincoln Avenue, Point background check revealed
Pleasant, was found dead by the warrant, Sturgeon was
a Middleport Police employ- transported to Middleport jail
ee shortly after noon until
authorities
from

Georgia could pick him up.
Wood . said the Gallia
County jail was filled at the
time of Sturgeon's arrest, and
Middleport's was the only
local jai) willing to accept
him as an inmate.
Wood said Sturgeon was
booked into the jail at 9: 10
a.m., and was last seen alive
at II a.m: Hiifwas the onlY.
inmate incarcerated in the jatl
at the time of his death.
"The body was found by a
police employee · at lun~h
time,"
Tenaglia
said.
"Sturgeon appears to have
died from self-suffocation
due to an attempted hanging."

An

autopsy

has

ordered, Wood said, as part
of an ongoing investigation
into the incident to be conducted at the county leveL
"This will be a county·
level investigation to ensure
that there is no appearance of
a self-serving investigation
on the part of Middleport
Village," Tenoglia said. "We
want the public to be confi·
dent of a complete and fair
investigation."
The · Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Investigation and
Identification and Meigs
County Coroner Douglas
Hunter are also participating
in the investigation, Wood
been said .

Beulah "Boots" Hem, right, chats with Amerjcan University
graduate students Carrie Murphy, left, and Lea Preinsack after
casting her vote in Tuesday's special election for the dissolution of the village of Cheshire. Murphy and Preinsack are workIng on a documentary about the majority of the village being
sold to American Electric Power. (Kevin Kelly)

to retain village

BY J. MILES LAYTON
Staff writer

usual days when Lady Luck is
lurking in many places. It
could be your good fortune to
be in the right spot at the right
moment whe n benefits are be·
ing handed out.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Your open-mi ndedness
and nonjudgmental at.titude
will ingratiate you 10 all who
you encounter today. One of
them will be in a position to
grant you a big favor.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - · The bigger the issues
you have to encounter today,
the better you'll be able to
handle them and the greater
the rewards wi.ll be. When the

MIDDLEPORT - Three
were transported to the hospital following a head-on
collision on Mill Street
Tuesday.
.
Middleport Police said
that a Chevy Blazer and
1990 Dodge van cullided,
resulting
in
multiple
injuries to drivers and passengers.
Two passengers and the
driver of the Dodge van,
Latona
Thomas,
39,Middleport, were extricated. All three had reported

stakes an~ meaningful, your
deft touch will serve you welL
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) - Methods and procedures that proved successful for you in the past will
prove to be especially benefi·
cia I when applied today . Cash
in on your experiences, talents and skills.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Be optimistic regarding your present involvements, because starting today,
conditions that affect your
well-being and . happiness
should start to take a turn for
the better.

2nd00WN

31d00WN

WORD SCRIMMAGE.• SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
C: 1000 Unl~feltunt S'f"ddt•ll, lnu

1st DOWN

2nd DOWN
3rd COVIN

4lhDOWN
JUDD'S TOTAL

-·....!.!!L
• 79

• 83

-281

• 17

0
0
0

·~ OOWN

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

AVERAGE GAME 115-125
by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PlAYTOTAL

===

TIME UMIT: 20 MIN
OIAICTIONS: MMe a 2· to 7..... 'MII1I hom lhl '"''"'on NCh yardlne.
Add point~ to IICh word Of lift• USing scoring dlfecttonlat fiWll s...n-t.ltef
wordl get a 110i101nt DMJI. All words can bl lcuw:l in WtDitlr'l NIW WOfkl
~ llldlonooy.
JUOO'S SOLl/TIOII TOMORROW

....

mag~ ·

0 2003 UrAtdP............ Inc.

F'lc:IKtl, 11-\S\'010 I

'"'"''"4.1--

•

Collision results in multiple injuries Cheshire votes

own~rd.

Astrograph
VVedncsday. Feb. 5.2003

Southem defeats Wahama, 81

ACROSS

tAl IJOR(
1'\ 6£~ Il-l\S
'ItA~

•

b'by, ·was
MedFlight
Huntington
Hospital,
Huntington, W.Va. Thomas
and her other child were
transported
to
Holzer
Medical Center.
The names of the children
were withheld by police.
Thomas
Lester,
37,
Mason, W.Va., who was driving the Chevy Blazer, was
not transported from the
scene, but was believed to
have been transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital for
treatment.
·
Severe
damage
was
reported to both vehicles.
Police said there was a
small fire which was quick·

Dissolution
issue fails
by &amp;o-5 margin
BY ANDREW CARTER

Assistant managing editor
CHESHIRE - By an overwhelming majority, residents
of the Village of .Cheshire
voted to keep the municipality's government intact during
a special election conducted
Tuesday.
A late campaign waged by
soine~Chc;~fre residents to
reject dissol~tion of the local
government paid dividends as
the issue failed by a 60-5
count. According to poll
workers, 150 residents were
registered to vote in the election.
The special election was
called for on the advice of the

·

Middleport pollee and firefighters respond to the scene of a head-on collision on Mill Street
Tuesday. Multiple Injuries were raported. A 6-year-old passenger was transported to Cabell·
Huntington Hospital. (Staff P.hoto)

BY ANDREW CARTER

Suspect held in Tuesday
carryou·t robbery
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Index
2 Sections- II ,....

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
. Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Q

A3
85·7
88
88
A6
A3
AS
81-5
A2

2003 Ohio Volley PIJblishing Co.

ALBANY
The
Ridgeview Carryout on
Ohio Route 681 close to the
Meigs-Athens county line
was robbed early Tuesday
afternoon.
According to the Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department,
Robert
Workman, 28, Rutland,
allegedly walked into the
store wearing an overcoat.
With one of his hands in his
pocket,
he
allegedly
motioned to the clerk that he
had a ~un in this pocket.
Prehminary reports indicate that more than $100 in
cash was taken along with a
case of beer.

Workman reportedly left
the store and jumped into a
car where Angie Riley, from
Institute,
W.Va. ,
was
·
allegedly waiting.
As the charcoal grey
Toyota was pulling away
from the crime scene, the
clerk took down the West
Virginia license plate number and called the Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department,
which
responded immediately.
. Deputy . Scott Trussell
arrived within moments and
started searching for the
vehicle. A short time later,
Trussell was informed that
two unidentified people
were trying to gain access to
a home on Horner Hill
Road.

Please see Cheshire. A5

Citizens Against
.Pollution ·still fighting

ly extinguished by the Department.
the investigation, according
Middleport
Fire
Charges are pending in to Police Chief Bruce Swift.

Staff writer

.,.,--, state ·audi·
tor's office
s i n c e
Cheshire.
stands to
lose nearly
90 percent
of its popu·
lation after
all
sales
between
AEP and village residents are
finaL
For
all
involved,
no_ matter .
\$at side ~
tHey lined
up
on,
Tuesday
was a high·
ly emotion·
S. Harrison
al day.
"It hurts in

The . deputy sped to the
residence. Inside the home,
the resident and her child
denied entry to the suspects.
One of the suspects reportedly tried to back the car
into a bam on the premises,
but were unsuccessful.
Law enforcement officers
from Rutland, Middleport,
Pomeroy and the State
Highway Patrol, along with
off-dut_&gt;: Meigs County
sheriff s deputies, were
enroute to search and appre·
hend the suspects.
The resident and her child
escaped out the back door of
her
home. Alle~edly,
Workman then went mside
and made a phone call.
Please SH Robblry, AS

Assistant managing editor
CHESHIRE - Residents
of the Village of Cheshire
weren't the only ones interested in Tuesday's vote concerning dissolution of the
municipality.
Those who live in the surrounding area also took note
of the proceedings.
Paul Stinson is president of
Citizens Against Pollution
(CAP), a grassroots group
that has risen to the forefront
as residents' concerns have
increased regarding environmental problems at the Gen.
James M. Gavin Power Plant.
Stinson said he a~reed with
Cheshire residents decision
to keep the village government intact, despite the fact
he doesn'tlive inside the corporation limit. He and his
wife own a residence on nearby Roush Lane .
"This is a way that everybody can walk away with
their heads held high," he
said. "We did not destroy the
village." .
Stinson said while he does·
n't believe those who live
outside village limits should

have been involved in last
April's purchase agreement
between Cheshire residents
and American Electric Power,
he does think he and his
neighbors should have been
kepi in the proverbial loop
concerning
negotiations
between the village and AEP,
especially since residents of
Cheshire Township and other
areas joined with villagers in
protesting pollution levels at
Gavin.
"We were good enough to
help the village fight the
anhydrous ammonia, but we
weren't good for anything
else," he said. "We don't
know what the future's going
to bring, but the fight's still
on.'''

CAP has maintained regular
contact
with
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency. at both the state and
federal level. However,
Stinson said communication
between his group and AEP
has not been quite as steady.
"We have not had any
direct contact with AEP for
several months now, but the
plant manager (Greg Massey)
Please see CAP, AS

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0

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

Court rules prisoner
entitled to new
sentencing ·hearing

Thursday, Feb. 6

·Ieolumbua lm:IO" I

~
~~-W. VA.
_, Inc.

o w. ae.~••,_•
l,f 1;

'

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

Showers T-itorma

lit.

,;

Rain

AurrieS

•I' ! ' H O )

YV~

Soow

Ice

Vla Aasoclaled Press

Chance of light snow returns
chance of light snow from late
morning on. Highs 30 to 35.
Light south winds. Chance of
snow 50 percent.
Thursday night ...Cloudy with
a chance of snow. Little or no
snow accumulation expected.
Lows in the mid 20s. Chance of
snow 50 percent.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of snow showers. Highs
in the upper 20s. Chance of
snow 40 percent.
Friday night... A slight chance
of snow showers in the
evening, otherwise becoming
mostly clear. Lows in the mid
teens. Chance of snow 20 percent.
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs 34 to 38.
Sunday...Mostly cloudy with
a chance of snow showers.
Lows 20 to 25 and highs in the
mid 30s.
Monday... A chance of snow
showers in the morning, otherwise partly cloudy. Lows 20 to
25 and highs in the lower 30s.
Thesday...Mostly cloudy with
a chance of snow showers.
Lows in the mid 20s and highs
in the upper 30s. ·

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The cold front that caused
some snow showers and gusty
winds Thesday has moved well
off the East Coast. Clouds will
give way to partly to mostly
sunny skies except for some
lingering clouds over the north·
east counties.
Tonight, as high pressure
moves across the area. skies
will be mostly clear or partly
cloudy and lows will range
from I 0 to 20.
A cold front that will move
through Thursday night will
cause a chance of snow. Highs
Thursday will be in the upper
20s.
A ridge of high pressure will
build Friday and cause decreasing clouds.
Saturday should be generally
dry with a threat of snow for
Saturday night and Sunday as
another weather system affects
the area.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly
· clear
through midnight with clouds
increasing towards dawn. Lows
near 20. Light and variable
winds.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. A
A DAY ON WALLSTREET

10,000

Feb . 4,2003

Dow

Pet. change
,from previous:

.. 1.19

H~

8,104.61

DEC
~

7,935.12

7 000
JAN
FEB
'
ROCOI'd high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

Feb.4,2003

Council
urged to
expand
offenses

1,600

compos1t

---1,200

J1~A.rl
"--.,._~

Pel. change

trom previous: -1.33

NOV
H~

DEC
~

1,310.48 , 1,292.20

JAN

MarCh 1o, 2000
1,000

Standard

900

&amp; Poor's

BOO

-1~ta
frompreviOUs -1.41

1,OOO

Roconl high: 5,048.62

Feb. 4,2003

848.20
Pet change

FEB

700
FEB
AIICOrd high: 1,527.46
March 24. 2000

NOV
it~

860.32

AP

Local Stocks
AEP- 23.13
Arch Coal - 17.46
Akzo- 26.11
AmTech/SBC - 25.62
Ashland Inc. - 27 .56
AT&amp;T- 18.57
· Bank One - 35.94
BLI-11 .14
Bob Evans - 22 .63
BorgWarner- 54.15
Champion - 3.14 ·
Charming Shops - 3.39
City Holding - 27.94
Col - 20 .61
DG - 11 .23
DuPon1- 37 .60

Federal Mogul- .12
USB- 21
Gannett - 71 .62
General Electric - 23.05
GKNLY-3.35

Harley Davidson- 40.25
Kmart - .12
Kroger- 14.68
Lid . -12.55
NSC-19.20

Oak HI Financial- 24.25
OVB-21.99
BBT - 33.05
Peoples- 24.23
Pepsico - 41.20
Premier- 8.07

Rocl&lt;well - 23.03
Rocky Bools - 5.45 ·
RD Shell- 41 .78
Sears- 25.78
Wai-Mart- 47.15
Wendy's - 26.60
Worthington - 14.65
Daily s1ock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transac1ions, provided by Smith Par1ners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Center closings to be
announced Wednesday
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
closing of two centers for the
mentally retarded will be
announced Wednesday, Gov.
Bob Taft's office said
Tuesday.
Tafl spoke sman Orest
Holubec would not say which
of the 12 centers statewide
would close. Taft has .said that
because of a $720 million
budget shonfall, at least one
prison and one juvenile detention center must be closed.
Last week, state prisons officials said they would close the

Wednesday, February S, 2003

Closed to traffic

Tom Marks of the Parkersburg, W.Va., Public Works
Department cuts loose a hanging piece of · metal
Monday, clearing the way for traffic crossing the
Me~orial Bridge which spans the Ohio River between
Parkersburg, W.Va., and Belpre. The bridge was closed
Monday when a truck carrying bricks struck the span
three times as it attempted to cross from Belpre to
Parkersburg. (AP)

Voters decide on dissolving
village of 60 residents .
NEW ROME (AP) The village has 12 police'
Residents voted in a special officers who write speeding'
election Tuesday against dis- tickets on a I ,000-foot stretcli
solving the village known for of West Broad Street where
decades as a 0.2-mile-long the speed limit drops by 10
speed trap.
· mph. The tickets generate
With a record-high voter more than $300,000 a year in:
turnout for the village, 21 res- fines.
idents voted to keep the viiClerk-Treasurer
Connie'
!age intact, and II cast ballots Tucker predicted that · an
in favor of dissolving, accord- "overwhelming
majority"
ing to the Franklin County would vote as she did to pre- ·
Board of Elections. The previ- serve the villa!le.
ous high was 18.
Mayor Jamte Mueller and
The board normally l'l!ns councilman Ed Anthony have
special elections but in this led lhe campaign for dtssolucase took "special precau- tion and said they showed up
tions" such as assignin!l sher- early to cast their ballots.
.
"I voted to dissolve ... to :
iff's deputies for secunty and
u.smg poll workers from. out- take of! this black dot on the :
stde the area at the smgle West Stde" of Columbus, said .
polling place, Prairie Norton Anthony, who has owned a:
Elementary School, elections barber shop in the village;
b~ard Director 'Guy Reece · more than 20 years. He moved:
satd.
there a year ago, when•
The 12-acre village just Mueller appointed him to the'
west of Columbus has 66 reg- council.
.
If village had been dis- ·
istered voters, although the
2000 census counted 60 resi- solved, it would have mer!led:
dents. T~at haJ?pens when with ~eighborinll Pratrie :
people fat! to nottty the counc Townshtp. The vtllage still :
ty of address changes, Reece could be dissolved under pro- ·
said.
posed state legislation.

The Daily Sentinel

Local • Entertainment·

•
Lima Correctional Institution.
Taft also has asked lawmakers to raise cigarette and alcohol taxes and for other measures to balance the budget.
The Ohio Department of
Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities
houses 1,895 people in 12
centers.
Director Michael Ritchey
said the families of residents
at the centers to be closed
would be asked whether they
should be moved to another
center or to a group home. •

Cars, True SUVs,
0%
For
60
Months
&amp;
e
H
,
..
PIDa U -: :rea:;r.::c-w*~Puc.....
Foni-Unceln·Me•cury·Totola·

Athens, Ohiexcludes diesel and synthetic
CINCINNATI (AP) What does Pizza Hut's oils).
After nearly lhree hours of
emotional arguments from
new Stuffed Crust Gold pizza 2. Have potential buyen call
both sides, a City Council
have to do with a new Ford, Don Wood Automotive and
committee · voted Tuesday
Lincoln; Mercury, Toyota, we'll do the unheard of... we'll
in favor of expanding the
Chevrolet, GMC, Buick, quote sale prices right over the
city's hate crimes law to
Pontiac, Cadillac? . . . read on phone.
cover offenses on the basi s
you 'II be surprised.
3. We '11 also quote the customer
of gender. age, physical or
In the automotive industry trade-in right over the phone . . .
mental disability and sexucompetition
is keen but rarely sight unseen.
al orientation.
so keen as at this Athe1111 4. Wel.Jl take credit applications
The vote by the council 's
County Ohio dealership. They over the pbone and handle all
law and public safety comtake pride in exceeding paperwork.
mittee was 3-2, with one
member abstaining until he
national challenges. This one is 5. And, we'll deliver their new
receives more information
no exception because several of vehicle and take their old car
about the issue. It sends the
America's top auto away so they'll never have to
issue to the nine-member
manufacturers have issued a leave the comfort of their easy
council
for
a vote
L.!.,.
national sales challenge and Cwur.
Wednesday afternoon.
this one will be for all the
Until Wednesday,
The topic rekindled a
cookies!
But
how
does
pizza
February
12th, 2003,Don Wood
decade-old debate over gay
figure into it? JelfWood, owner Automotive will offer this very
rights in Cincinnati, which
of Don Wood Automotive unique sales plan.
is the only U.S. city with a
chaner amendment forbidstores in Athens and Logan,
That still begs the question
\ling enactment or enforceObio, explains: "This about pizza. Jeff Wood,
men! of laws based on sexcompetition is taken very clarifies: "It's simple. We've
ual orientation.
seriously bere. I instructed our reduced the cumbersome car
Activists who supported
sales team to create the buying experience to be as easy
the 1993 amendment told
impossible! I wanted them to as picking up your phone and
council members that they
assure
me that virtually every calling Don Wood and ordering
will file a lawsuit challenginll the change in the hate- " Ford, Lincoln, Mercury, a pizza (Ford-LincolnToyota, Chevrolet, GMC, Mercury-Toyota-Chevroletcnmes law if it is
Pontiac, Buick and Cadillac aMC -P on I i ac-Buickapproved. They also said
buyer in this territory would Cadillac ). Just ask for a
they will target supponers
of the expanded law for
give our sales team at least one manager, and guess what? With
defeat in the November
chance to satisfy their new every new Ford-Lincolnelection.
vehicle needs. The five step Mercury-Toyota-Cbevy-GMCThe city's Jaw departplan submitted to me was Pontiac-Buick-Cadillac we'll
ment has said the expanded
ingenious.
also deliver a fresh, hot Pizza
hate-crimes law would not
I.
Include
the
following
with
Hut Stuffed Crust Gold pizza."
violate the 1993 amendevery
,
n
ew
Ford,
I:incoln,
The offer dido 't end there
ment because the ordi Mercury, Toyota, Chevrolet, eilher. Until February 12th,
nance would be a criminal
GMC,
Pontiac, Buick, Cadillac besides the Don Wood low
enactment and would not
creale a !"ega! basi s for any
purchase: 3 years, oil, lube and price guarantee, be is offering
claim for monetary damfilter changes ( limit 4 per year, all Ford-Lincoln-Mercuryages in a civil suit.

Toyota-Chevy-GMC-Pontiac- ·
Buick-Cadillac extended
warranties at a full 50% off, all
after market products at 1S% ·
off, plus if you're driving anything other than a Ford- Lincoln-Mercury- ToyotaChevy-GMC-Pontiac·Buick"
Cadillac, trade it in and 4kduct '
an additional $SOO off Don ·
Wood'sfinalprice.
There is more good news . . . ·
buy a new Ford-Lincoln- .
Mercury- Toyota-Chevy· .
GMC-Pontiac-Buick-Cadillac
before February, 12, 2003, and ·
Don Wood will pay-off your
vehicle no matter how much :
you owe. If you owe less than ·
it's cash value, then your :
financed amount will be
reduced by that amount and if ·
you owe more it will be ·
restructured into a brand new ·
loan.

Finally, Mr. Wood said,
"Make no mistake about it, we :
are prepared to do whatever it
takes to win this national
competition."
This event ends Wednesday,
FebrQary 12th, 2003.
If you want directions or
prices quoted over the phone,
call Don Wood and uk for a
manager. Athena, Ford-Lincoln
Mercury _1-888-288-2798.
Athens, Toyota-OMC-PootiacBuick-Cadillac 1-888-~883S80. Logan, ChevroletPontiac-Buick-Cadillac l-888288-4!676. They'll deliver the
pizza!
ADVERTISEMENT

PageA3
Wednesday, February 5, 2003

Large-format landscapes at
Meigs SWCD earns
Metropolitan draw viewers into scen·es Excellent rating
: NEW YORK (AP) - The
l-am-a-camera approach of
thomas · Struth's wall-sized
landscapes and museum interiors induces an almost 3-D
effect: Viewers are drawn into
the scenes and get a sense of
being pan of the tableau.
: More than 80 of the
Gennan photographer's chroln~geni€ and gelatin silver
pnnls ; went1 on · display
Tuesday at the Metropolitan
Musemb,of Art, many in the
grand form~t that has brought
him qcclatm as one of
Europe's most innovative
artists.
: Struth, 48, is credited with
~elping to bring photography
tnto the mamstream of contemporlll)' an. His works have
been widely shown in New
York gallenes but this is his
ftrst m&lt;\jor New York museum
~etrospective. It runs to May
18.
"His museum photographs,
especially, are masterpieces of
observation that reach a sublime level of color saturation
and detail that, to my eye, are
unequaled except in painting," said Philippe de
Montebello, director of the
Metropolitan.
Sized up to 8 feet by 6 feet,
with most in the 4- foot by 6foot range, Struth's precise
compositions aspire to universal tnlths by encouraging
viewers to feel they are participants in the scenes.
Gallery visitors behold the
glory of Rome's Pantheon
seemingty with a group of
tourists gazing in awe at the
vaulted·. dome. An interior of
the Louvre encourages a feeling of being pan of crowds
staring at great paintings.
In a similar shot opening the

exhibit of Stanze di Raffaello,
Rome, crowds point excitedly
at frescoes and study
brochures about the works
that consume their attention.~
In another vivid encounter
with Struth 's camera. four
Italian art restorers strike a
pose in subdued light that is
reminiscent of Renaissance
paintings of groups. The an
restorers mirror maste(Works
around them at San Lorenzo
Maggiore in Naples.
One room is devoted to
Struth 's intensely vivid
"Paradise" pictures: A lush
rain forest in Brazil seems to
pulse with vegetation; the
Daintree
wilderness of
Australia is a curtain of greenery; the mystery of the
Bavarian Forest is captured in
soaring evergreens; and
mossy tree trunks and stones
on a foggy stream in
Yak1,1shima, Japan, induce a
sense of serenity.
Museum scenes in such
cities as London, Berlin,
Rome, Tokyo and Chicago
produce similar you-are-there
effects, as do scenes from
soaring Gothic cathedrals in
Paris, Milan and Venice. In
some photos, people are
blurred m movement by anistic use of time exposures,
adding more reality to the
scenes.
Urban vi!IWS are similarly
striking: the crush of a Tokyo
square filled with hundreds of
pedestrians; -a garish street
scene from Shanghai; a
desened Times Square around
dawn; and a rain-washed
parking lot in Dallas against a
backdrop of skyscrapers.
In contrast, many of
Struth 's
black~and-white
street scenes use severely geo-

COLUMBUS - The Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District received an excellent
rating in the Ohio Conservation
Awards Program, held during
the Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Conservation Districts'
60th annual meeting m
Columbus.
The awards program evaluates each of the state's 88 county-based SWCDs for program
delivery and service. Meigs
SWCD Board of Supervisors
member Marco Jeffers, who is
serving as the district's voting
delegate received the · award
from OFSWCD President
David Linkhan.
The SWCD Service Awards
Program, sponsored by the
OFSWCD, encourages soil and
water conservation district
boards of supervisors to evaluate their county-level natural
resource conservation programs on an annual basis.
"Pantheon, Rome," 1990, by Thomas Struth is seen in this
undated photo. More than 80 of the German photographer's
chromogenic and gelatin silver prints went on display Tuesday
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, many in the
grand format that has brought him acclaim as one of
Europe's most innovative artists. (AP)
metric lines and a midpoint
perspective in an effort to partray essences of cities like
New York;, Duesseldorf,
Edinburgh and Chicago.
Rundown apartment buildings, bare sidewalks and cars
parked at curbside are typical
subjects, and people are seldom seen - or only as tiny,
incidental figures in the background. The photos are arresting but sterile with the
absence of a human element.
On the other hand, his eight

Public Meetings
Friday, Feb. 7
POMEROY
- Meigs PERl
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30 74, noon luncheon at the
Senior Citizens Center with
p.m. Pageville town hall.
meeting to follow. Brett Jones,
Meigs County State Highway
Thursday, Feb. 6
POMEROY - Salisbury Department superintendent;
Township trustees regular · will discuss roads in Meigs
meeting, 6:30 p.m. Thursday County. Memberships are
at the township hall on being accepted for 2003.
Rocksprings Road.
Friday, Feb. 8
POMEROY - Burlingham
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council, 7 p.m. Modern Woodmen 5:30
p.m. Saturday at the hall for
Thursday.
a potluck meal. The camp
will furnish meat, beverage;
Saturday, Feb. 8
CHESTER Chester bread and table service.
Township Trustees, 9 a.m Those attending are to take
a covered dish. Friends and
Chester town hall.
neighbors welcome.
YVednesda~Feb.S

. family portraits from homes
in Germany, Japan, Scotland
and New York give warmly
personal aspect to the collection. The families chose the
surroundings for their portraits to best reflect their collective personalities.
In another personal touch,
Struth's video portraits of various friends are being projected in the Metropolitan's main
hall, the ftrst time work of a
living artist has been featured
in this public space.

Cedric The Entertainer, left, as Mrs. Cafeteria Lady anc;l JB
Smoove appear in a scene from Fox's hal(hol:lr com!!dy series
"Cedric the Entertainer Presents," in this undated publicity
photo . .The show airs at a new· time . . 9:30 p.m., EST,
Wednesdays. (AP)
·

'Cedric the Entertainer' works
hard at making variety fresh .
Everyone moves quickly
'i.:OS ANGELES (AP)- A
man washes his hair in the and efficiently, all in service
shower, a simple enough of a few seconds of laughs
for Wednesday's show (9:30
en~erprise.
Or not. lit this case, he's p.m. EST; a new time). It's
shampooing on a soundstage just part of a routine 12-hour
for · Fo;x 's variety series production day for the series
Cedric
the
"Cedric · the Entertainer starring
Entertainer.
Ptesents." A makeshift bath"Dying is easy. Comedy is
room, complete with running
water and a catch basin that hard," goes the theatrical
must be emptied every four saw. But can a taped, 30minutes, has been assembled. minute show be that tough?
Shaun Majumder lathers Didn't Sid Caesar and the
himself_ into exultation, over "Your Show of Shows" gang
and over, for this parody of a crank out 90 minutes of
commercial. One crew mem- humor, live, week after week,
ber jumps in to straighten in the 1950s?
That was then, this is now,
props for a retake; others
stand by with towels and a says Bowman. Prod11ction
values, audiences and expecrobe for the sodden actor.
Executive producer John tations have all changed.
"If you look at old variety
Bowman gulps down a bowl
shows,
old Jackie Gleason
of· cereal while keeping a
watchful eye on the brief skit. shows or Dean Martin shows
'!Hey, Shaun, get those eyes or go back to 'Your Show of
bugging. That's the money Shows,' just about anything
went," Bowman said.
shot," Bowman calls out.

BEVERLY HilLS, Calif.
(AP) - Sex on television is
heating up, but more TV
programs are including the
risks and responsibilities of
sexual behavior, a · study
released Tuesday found.
The percentage of shows
depicting or implying sexual
intercourse rose from 10 percenttwo years ago to 14 percent in the 2001-02 sea~on,
according to the Kaiser
Family Foundation study.
The rate was even higher
for the 20 top shows among
teenage viewers: 20 percent
of those programs included
implied or depicted intercourse, the study found.
The foundation's initial ·
TV sex study, · released in
1999, found that 7 percent of
shows overall included intercourse; P.revious studies did
not detail figures for shows
favored by teenagers.
If television is becoming
more boldly titillating, it's

Clubs and
Organizations

Saturday,Feb.9
POMEROY
Return
. :.
Jonathan Meigs Chapter;
YVednesday, Feb. 5
Daughers of the American
MIDDLEPORT
Revolution, 10 a.m . at Grace
Middlepon Uerary Club, 2 Episcopal Church. Winners
p.m., home of Ida Diehl. Olita of history essay contest will
Heighton will review "Fantastic be recognized and good citVoyage" by Isaac Asimov.
izenship awards wilf be presented.
Thursday, Feb. 6
TUPPERS PLAINS ·
Tuppers Plains Auxiliary, Post
9053, regular meeting, 7:30 at
the hall.
Sunday, Feb. 8
LONG BOTIOM - Harry
POMEROY AI Anon Bush of Pensacola, Fla. will
meeting 7 p.m. every Thursday speak at 6:30p.m. at the Mt.
at the annex building of Sacred Olive Church at Long
Heart
Catholic
Church, Bottom. Pastor lawrence
Bush invites the public.
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

also more honest, ac~ordin_g .
to the biennial study.
· '
Among shows with depictions or talk about intercourse, 26 percent had a
"safer sex" reference to topics such as abstinence or
possible fallout from unprotected sex, the study found.
That's double the rate found
four years ago.
A student facing an
unplanned pregnancy on
"BoSton Public," a man
diagnosed with AIDS on
''ER," and a mother-daughter ·sex talk on 'The Young
and the Restless" were
among examples cited by
researchers.
For shows with sexual
content involving teenagers,
34 percent included a safer
sex reference, nearly double
the 18 percent rate found
four years ago.

Church
meetings

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All AGE S, All TIME S

SWCDs are rated in a number
of areas of service: County
landowners and res idents,
including deliver of technical
assistance, conservation education and infonnation programs
and overall program planning.
This malt~ 55th year for the
awards program:-="'
Pauline Atkins of Rutland,
recently elected supervisor of
the Meigs SWCD wa~ sworn
into office by Ohio Supreme
Coun
Justice
Maureen
O'Connor during the annual
meeting. Elected to a three-year
tenn, Atkins joins Joe Bolin of
Rutland, Marco Jeffers of
Albany, and Chris Hamm and
Bill Baer of Racine in administering the SWCD's natural
resource conservation programs. Hamm wa&gt; re-elected
last fall to his second three-year
tenn and is president of the
Meigs SWCD Board of
Supervisors.

Community calendar

Television shoNs depict more
sex, but are more honest

'

Nasdaq
1,306.15

A Medina County Sheriff's Deputy and Erhart Fire and
Rescue personel pull a quarter horse named • Boris"
from the icy waters of a pond at the Double C Ranch
near Erhart Monday. The horse spent more than 45
minutes in the icy water waiting for rescue personel to
arrive. Boris is expected to make a full recovery. (AP)

.____:_ _ 8.000

NOV

would have left the verdict
intact.
Ohio Attorney General
Jim Petro hasn't decided
whether to appeal, said his
spokeswoman Kim Norris.
"We are reviewing the
decision , but it clearly
involves a technical view
of a jury instruction
involving
sentencing.
There is no question Wiley
Davi s committed ihis horrific crime," she said.
Davi s was convicted of
aggravated murder and
kidnapping. Investigators
said he kidnapped Amy
Perki ns in November 1991
from
a
downtown
Cleveland parking lot, shot
her in the head and left her
to die.
Davis' conv iction has
been upheld. Hi s lawyers
contend that he should be
sentenced to life in prison.
An executi0n date · has not
been set.

Boris needs a hand

- - - g,ooo

Jones
~·

8,013.29

CINCINNATI (AP)- A
prisoner sente[!ced to death
for a 1991 slaying in
Cleveland should be resentenced because jurors may
have been confused by
sentencing instructions , an
appeals
court · ruled
Tue sday.
The 6th U.S . Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled 2-1
that a judge gave unclear
sentencing · instruction s
that could have led jurors
to believe they had to
unanimou sly agree on a
les ser sentence of life in
pri son for Wiley Davi s Jr.,
43 .
The majority ruling by
appeals judges Gilbert
Merritt and Karen · Moore
sends the case back to
Cuyahoga
County
Common Pleas Court for a
new sentencing hearing,
unless the state challenges
the ruling.
In a dissent, appeal s
Judge Danny Boggs said
he found no fault with the
jury in structions and

PageA2

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PageA4

Nation • World

Testing patriots

\

Israeli soldiers watch the launch of a Patriot missile
during a joint U.S.-Israeli forces maneuver in the Negev
desert, southern Israel , Tuesday. Israeli and American
forces fired a salvo of Patriot missiles as part of a JOint
exercise, codenamed "Juniper Cobra", to test air
defenses ahead of a possible U.S.-Iraq war. The Israeli
military confirmed six launches and said more missiles
could be fired In the next few days. (AP)

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

Obituaries

Weak economy, donor wariness add up
to a daunting year for America's charities~
•

\

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

UNDATED (AP) - As economic troubles swell the ranks
of needy Americans, many
charities are contracting rather
than expanding- the result of
a distinctively daunting year
for fund-raisers.
Cbarity officials say their
task in 2002 was complicated
by multiple challenges - not
only the waves of layoffs and
stock-market plunges, but also
eroded trust in some institutions, anxiety over a possible
war and donor fatigue after the
generous response to the Sept.
II terrorist attacks.
Comprehensive nationwide
· donation statistics for 2002
won't be available for several
months, but interviews with
olticials of national charities,
and an Associated Press survey
of 126 charities in 44 states and
the District of Columbia made
clear the breadth of the problem.
Of the surveyed charities contacted from Jan. 11-20 by
AP reporters around the country - 66 said donations were
down from 200 I , 38 said donations were up, and 22 said their
financial picture was stable or

not yet determined. Some
hard-hit charities are laying off
employees or leaving vacant
posts open; others are considering possible service cutbacks.
Many local chapters of the
American Red Cross were
among
those
suffering
declines. National vice president Michael Farley said
direct-mail donations for most
chapters were down more than
20 percent at a time when
needs were mcreasmg.
"At the end of the calendar
year, you usually see a spike in
giving in the holiday season,
but this year that spike wasn't
as dramatic," Farley said.
Red Cross chapters in
Denver and the San Francisco
area each reported 26 percent
drops in donations. Montana's
Red Cross chapter - formed
just two years ago - cut its
budget nearly 10 percent as
donations fell30 percent below
expectations.
"Our major donors can 'I
give as much," said Montana
manager David Morikawa.
"They tell us they wish they
could give more, but with the

Bert W. Taylor
WORTijlNGTON -

: A 45-year Worthington resi: dent, he was born in Bedford
: Ohio, "to Bmce and Ariel Tayloc
He served as a Navy pilot in
the South Pacific during World
: War II. After flying for TWA, he
• returned to Ohio State
: University, graduating in Dairy
: Technolo= ·He managed
: Derrlick · in Delaware and
· Heatherw
s
Farms
in
Lansing, Michigan, reljlming to
. Co!umbus as sales manager for

~ ~~his

MS in
: Packaging from Michigan State.
Bert was a dedicated supporter
· of the OSU Food Science and
Technology
Department,
receiving their Award of
Appreciation.
~
· He was president of the
Central Ohio Dairy lechnology
Society. He was · elected
Director-at-Large
of
the
National Dairy and Food
Industry Supply Association
and received the Association's
Special Achievement Award for
· his outstanding service as
Chairman of the Student Dairy
· Products Judging Contest.
Bert loved his beautiful
woodland proi?Crty in Southeast
Ohio. He continually worked to
maintain and improve it as a
Certified Tree Farm and
received an Ohio Forestry
Award for his outstanding

Elvis Narvarte, logistic lead with the American Red Cross
Riverside County chapter distributes a private donation of
sodas to marines waiting their turn at the Deployment
Processing Center at the March Air Reserve Base, Calif. The
Riverside chapter expects its figures will be down $400,000
from 2001-2002, according to chief executive officer Pamela
Anderson. (AP)
uncertainty, they feel they
cannot."
United Way donations also
were down in La Crosse,
Wis., and Tampa, Fla.
"We rely on people 's generosity but that 's one of the
things people can eliminate

or reduce when they face
increased costs in other
areas," said the -Tampa
agency's president, Doug
Weber. "The future is not so
certain. We might go to war.
People are not sure if they'll
have a job."

woods.
Bert will be deeply missed by
friends and especiall his
Juliet Tayfor,
Schultz, Warren, Celeste
Danglade and Vmcent; · as well
as I f grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his wife Beverly, his parents,
brother, two sisters and . one

:n.

\

American Airlines
asks labor groups for
$1.8 billion in cost cuts
NEW YORK (AP) American Airlines pleaded
with employees Tuesday to
accept steep cuts in wages,
benefits and work rules that
. would save $1.8 billion
annually, stressing that the
company's future was at
stake.
"Our financial results
make it abundantly clear
that American's future cannot be assured until ways
are found to significantly
lower our labor and other
·costs," the company said
. after a private meeting with
labor leaders.
As losses pile up, a number of analysts have speculated in recent weeks that
. American is increasing!¥ at
. risk of joining Umted
Airlines and US Airways in
bankruptcy unless it can
dramatically reduce costs.
American, the world's
largest airline, said it is
.under "unrelenting pres' sure" from low-cost carriers
.and from larger rivals that
are currently shrinking costs
. under the protection of
bankruptcy courts.
American
called
its
request "a last resort" but
stopped short of saying that
. bankruptcy loomed.
The Fort Worth, Texasbased company is working
. to cut annual non-labor

Bert leaves a legacy of compassion, generosity, honor and
service. His Memorial Service
will be Sunday, February 9,
2003, at I :30 p.m. at Lord of
Life Lutheran Church, 2480
West Dublin-Granville Road,
Columbus.
Memorial contributions can
be made to the Bert and Beverly
..1)1y1Qf .J:,ndp~IJlCllt , .FIJild at
Development
Fund No. 1().4()3973.

expenses by $2 billion,
mostly through changes to
its flight schedules and
fleet. But executives have
said that it would take a
total of $4 billion in cost
cuts to regain profitability.
In 2002, labor expenses
totaled $8.4 billion.
Last month American's
parent company, AMR
Corp., reported a loss of
$3.5 billion for the year, the
industry's largest annual
loss ever. It is currently
burning through $5 million
a day and has roughly $2
billion in unrestricted cash
on hand.
The
company
also
announced that it would
close two of its 10 domestic
reservation centers, affecting more than 900 jobs in
Norfolk, Va. and Las Vegas.
The $1.8 billion in cost
cuts being sought would
come as follows: $660 million from pilots, $350 million from flight attendants,
$620 million from mechanics and ground workers, $80
million from ticket agents
and $100 million from management.
Labor leaders were not
immediately available for
comment.

by the Texas Board of
Pardons and Paroles.
Elliott was arrested for
taking part in a gang rape
and then whipping Joyce
Munguia, 18, two dozen
times on the head and face
with
a
chrome-plated
motorcycle chain that he
used as a belt.
His shoe prints were at
the murder sce ne . Two
other me n, who insisted
they did not take part in the
slayi ng, pleaded guilty to
rape c harges. One received
a I 0-year prison term , the
ot her 15 years.
Elliott had been senten ced to eight years in
prison in 1982 for killing a
man in the bar fight , but
because of severe prison
crowding he was released
under mandatory supervision after 4 112 months.
At least two other British
citizens have been execu ted
for murder in the United
States, both in Georgia , in
1995 and last year.

Sefir:

Slaying allegedly involving
Phil Spector shows two .
faces of Hollywood success
LOS ANGELES (AP) Record
producer
Phil
Spector and Lana Clarkson,
the actress found slain in his
mansion, reflected the two
sides of success that exist
within Hollywood's pop
culture landscape.
Spector, 62, the music
industry wunderkind who
struck it rich in his teens
and changed the face of pop
music, became an eccentric
millionaire with a castle
home in the suburbs.
Clarkson, 40, a B-movie
actress who sold her pinups
on the Internet and modeled
herself
after
Marilyn
Monroe, was a success
within the exploitation
movie world. She was nearly 6 feet tall, blond, buxom
and gorgeous.
She was discovered by Bmovie king Roger Corman
and starred in a series of
films that made her semicult figure. She played a
super-heroine
called
"Barbarian Queen," a character Corman said was the
model for TV's "Xena:
Warrior Princess."
"Lana was a beautiful
woman,
a
wonderful
actress, and an adventurous
spirit," . Corman
said
Tuesday in a statement.
"Always brave, she performed all of her owl\
stunts, and showed unusual
fortitude and athleticism in
her horseback riding and
fight sequences."
Clarkson had her own

a

Web site and a company
Doll
called
Living
Productions. She also had
appeared in many commerCialS and often made personal appearances. As
"Barbarian Queen," she
appeared at comic book and
pop culture conventions.
Spector, whose. "wall of
sound" technique transformed 1960s pop music,
was arrested before dawn
Monday for investigation of
first-degree murder after
Clarkson's body was found
in the foyer of his mansion,
about 15 miles northeast of
Los Angeles. He was freed
Monday night after posting
$1 million bail. No charges
have been filed.
Lt. Dan Rosenberg said
deputies found the weapon
used in the slaying but
declined to say where in the
house it was located.
Rosenberg did not return
repeated phone calls from
The Associated Press.
Clarkson began working
last month at the House of
Blues on the Sunset Strip
where she was a ticket collector and hostess, friends
and associates said.
"She wasn't thrilled to
have people from the industry see her doing that, but
she thought it was a good
step to get back into the
mainstream," said her
neighbor, Paul Pietrewicz.
"It wasn't exactly what she
wanted to do, but she
thought she could meet the

right person."
The investigation shows
that Spector and Clarkson
met at a nightclub in Los
Angeles, said Craig Harvey
of the Los Angeles County
coroner's office. No further
details were immediately
available.
Three flower bouquets
and a burning candle were
at the ~oorstep Tuesday of
Clarkson's modest onestory house along the canals
in the Venice area of Los
Angeles. Several cactus
plants and a statue of an
angel decorated the porch.
"The Clarkson family
would like to express their
deepest appreciation to
Lana's extended family,
friends and fans for the outpouring of love and support
that they have shown during
this extremely difficult
time," her family said in a
statement released Tuesday
night.
Spector's next court
appearance was set for
March 3. The district attorney's spokeswoman, Sandi
Gibbons, said the office had
not yet been presented with
the case.
Spector's lawyer, Robert
Shapiro, once an attorney
for O.J. Simpson, refused to
speak with a reporter for
The Associated Press and
sent word that he was not
giving any statements and
not speaking to anyone with
the media.

gr.mdson.

-wosu,. osu

Local Briefs
. I

RegUlar scent

Card shower
planned

Assorted va11et1es

BilK

tiii'OI

&amp;lqulll Bleach

51ft
llrlnks
12 Pack 12 oz. cans

96oz.

MIDDLEPORT - Friends
have planned a card shower
for Dorothy Johnson of
Racine, who is now confined
to Overbrook Center at 333
Page St., Middleport, Ohio
45760. Her room number is
210.

Board sets
special meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local School Board
will meet in special session at
7:30 p.m. Friday at the
admimstration office for a
discussion on personnel.

District
organizes

Convicted killer with dual
-citizenship set to die
HUNTSVILLE,
Texas
(AP) Prison officials
·prepared the Tellas death
chamber Tuesday for a man
convicted of beating a
woman to death with a
motorcycle chain while he
was free on probation after
serving 4 1/2 months for
killing a man in a bar brawl.
John Elliott, 42, main tains he did not kill the
woman in the June 13,
1986, attack .
Defense lawyers sought
to delay the lethal injection,
the seventh this year in
Texas, with appeals seeking
additional DNA tests. And
because Elliott held dual
U.S.-British citizenship he was born in England in
1960 while his father was
stationed at a U.S. air base
British
Foreign
Secretary Jack Straw and
more than I 00 ministers of
Parliament
asked
for
clemency.
" It 's given my family
hope," Elliott told BBC
Radio while the clemency
reque~ts were under review

Bert

W. Thyl~~ 82, .died Saturday,
January Q, 2003, after a brief
. illness with colon cancer.

RUTLAND Charles
Barrett was elected president
of the Leading Creek
Conservanct District at a .
recent organizational meeting.
Named vice president was
Fenton Taylor. Meetings were
set for the fourth Tuesday of
each month at 5 p.m.

12 ct. Double /loU or
24 ct. Regu~r 1/0IJ

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•

Another vehicle arrived and
picked up the suspects and
they left the scene, but not
before the vehicle could be
110sitively identified by witnesses, authorities said.
Officers scoured the area
searching for the vehicle. At
about I :30 p.m., officers
received a tip that Workman
was at Wayne's Place, 137 N.
Second Ave., Middleport.
When officers approached
Workman for identification
and he allegedly gave a fictitious name. Workman was
asked ·for his wallet, where
law officers discovered his
true identity and arrested
him.
·

•

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Virginia trooper shot during investigation
of alleged attempt to poison water
ACCOMAC, Va. (AP)Virginia state trooper
was shot and wounded and
another person was shot to
death as officers went into
a house to arrest a man
accused of plotting to poison water supplies, authorities said.
Phil Mann, chief division
counsel with. the Norfolk
FBI office, said the trooper
was shot in the arm and
was in good condition.
Virginia State Police did
not release the trooper's
name .
Mann said a shootout
erupted as officers were

A

attempting to arrest lpolito
"Polo" Campos at his home
on Virginia's eastern shore
Tuesday night. He said
another occupant of the
house shot and wounded
the trooper, and authorities
returned fire, killing one
person.
Campos was taken into
custody. Mann would · not
identify the . person who
was killed or g1ve any other
details.
filed
Charges
were
against Campos earlier
Tuesday in federal court.
They included accusations
of using phony immigra-

tion documents and a false
Social Security number.
An unidentified person
had
contacted
the
County
Accomack
Sheriff's Department and
said Campos was connected to a plot to poison
Virginia's waters, according to federal court records.
Mann said the reported
threat was being investigated by the region's Joint
Terrorism Task Force, but
added that no credible evidence exists that any plan
was in place to carry out
such an attack.

Two designs cho5en as finalists in plan to
replace terror-attacked World Trade Center
NEW YORK (AP) -The
world's tallest building would
soar over the New York skyline under two design proposals selected as finalists in the
competition to rebuild the
World 1\"ade Center site.
Both the plan from Berlinbased
architect
Daniel
Ubesldnd and one proposed
by THINK, an international
team of design firms, would
build structureS rising higher
than Malaysia's I ,483-foot
Petronas 1\vin Towers, the
world's tallest buildings.
The final selection will be
made at the end of the month.
''What we're doing today is
advancing two extraordinary
designs," said Roland Betts,
head of the redevelopment

Workman reportedly insisted upon capture that his associate, Riley had nothing to do
with the incident at the
Ridgeview Carryout
Workman is being charged
with aggravated robbery, falsification, possession and
drug paraphernalia. He is
currently being held in
Middleport jail and will be
arraigned thiS morning at the
Meigs County Court.
Riley is being held at
Woodland Centers. Charges
on her are pending results of
an investigation into her role
in the incident.
Deputies said both had
been previously r~leased
from the Southeast Ohio
Psychiatric
Hospital
in
Athens. It is reported that
Workman had received a furlough last week.

planning committee. Neither
plan is "set in stone," he said,
but officials will try to retain
the main conceptS in the final
plan.
Finalists selected Thesday
were praised for giving respect
to a memorial for the nearly
2,800 victims of the Sept 11
terrorist attack at the trade cen-

ter.
''I'he memorial site drives
the design," said Beverly
Willis, founder of the community group Rebuild Downtown
Our Town and president of the
Architecture
Research
Institute.
But she called the aim to
build the world's tallest towers
"ostentatious, impractical and
it's something that will only be

'

.

the tallest building in the world
for a couple of years until Asia
builds a taller one:"
A cluster of starlc geometric
buildings - one topped by a
spire reaching I,776 feet forms the core of Libeskind's
design. The THINK team, led
by architects Rafael Vinyl and
Frederic Stewart, conceived a
'World Cultural Center" with
two I ,665-foot towers.
The Ubeskind design calls
for 70 stories of offices, with
airy "ganlens of the world"
beckoning tourists above
office level. The THINK plan
envisions a library, museum
and other cultural attractions
suspended inside lanicework
towers with offices concentrated at the site's perimeter.

, .. "

". "'"'l;".. . ·-.•.•.·~·m'\1'"'·· ,
~~·~1f~

.

~=~·:;,
..

Cheshire
from Page AS
a lot of ways," said Samuel
Hurlow, a 72-year resident of
Cheshire who will soon leave
the village as part of a group
that agreed to sell their property to American Electric
Power in April 2002.
"I've got a lot of memories
here," he added.- "I got my
son out here in the cemetery;
that hurts me a lot. The house
I live in, me and him more or
less put it together. There's a
lot of memories I have to
leave."
Hurlow said he would
rather leave, though, than
expose his family to any
more pollution from the
neighboring Gen. James M.
Gavin Power Plant, which is
owned by AEP.
"With the way things are
happening here, I'm not
going to put my wife through
it, all the pollution, all that"
he said.
Tuesday marked Gladys
Rife's 67th anniversary living in Cheshire. She was one
of the 60 residents who voted
"no" on the issue and minced
no words about her decision.
"This is where I live," Rife
said. "I didn ' t want to go anywhere else. I'm going to stay
here."
Rife, unlike others who
live in and around the village,
said she has suffered no ill
effects from pollution emitted by the Gavin Plant.
"To tell you the truth, the
pollution hasn't bothered
me," she said. "As far as I'm
concerned, there isn't any,
but that's not what everybody
else says. I haven't had any
health problems from it. My
family hasn't had any health
problems from it.
"The plant hasn't really
bothered me."
According to Village Clerk
Jennifer Harrison, Cheshire
residents will now have to
piece together a new council
since current members, all of
whom have sold their property to AEP, will resign their
positions and soon move
away. She said new council
members will be appointed to
replace those who resign.
Harrison said Councilman
Randy Lucas was the first to
step down during a meeting
held Monday night. He was
replaced by Scott Lucas,
who she said will serve as
president of the new council.
"Mr.. Lucas and Jim Rife
seem to be heading the new
council," Harrison said. "We
inore or less told them to
make a list, because we need
to look at it and start talking
to those that are left behind
so we would know who we

r-----,..-, could

call
to fill the
nellt vacancy."
Harrison
confirmed
earlier estimates that
15 to 20
reside n fs
will remain
Rife
after
all
t ran s a c tions are complete and
remammg families move
out. She said state funding
for public services is intact
for the next five years, but
that the future of the municipaiity is unclear after this
round of funding expires.
"We just started that (local
government funding assistance) disbursement recently,
so that is locked in for five
years and that is where the
majority of our funding
comes from," Harrison said.
"They're probably going to .
be good for five years, unless
something unforeseen happens."
Harrison said up until
January, she thought the dis".
solution issue would pass,
but that the outcome was not
completely unexpected.
"I know that those who
campaigned to keep the vil!age waged a strong campaign, evidently, so I'm
probably not surprised," she
said.
Harrison, her husband
Steve and their two daughters have lived in Cheshire
for nearly 23 years. They're
moving to a new dwelling on ·~
Georges Creek Road.
Steve Harrison said the
main reason for his family
leaving is, as he said, "to get
some distance between us
and the plant."
·
Harrison said he believes
Tuesday's vote was the correct decision from a human
standpoint, citing the fact
that most of the residents
staying behind are age 70 'or
older and are in dire need of
the services the village provides.
·
, "I voted not to disband the
village," he said. "One reason
was so that they would be able
to keep the streetlights on.
They would still be able to
have police protection. They
would still have somebody -to
keep the streets cleaned in
town and keep the grass
mowed on the ballfields. So
the kids around town would
still have a playground and
still have ball diamonds to
play on, and that they'd still be
able to handle stuff for about
another four to five years. ·
"I feel like that's the best
way we could leave them," he
added. "We've lived there 23
years and we just don't wliQt
to turn our back on them anll
say, 'Tough."'

CAP
from PageA1
did make a visit to our
house," Stinson said. "AEP
is adamant, 'We're not buying.' And we're really not
selling. I don't have any
property for sale . I want to
leave on my choice.
"When 1· retire, I would
like to have that option,"
Stinson added. "If I were to
retire tomorrow, I couldn't
find anybody to buy my
property, unless AEP's buying and their money's not
enough."
Stinson said one family
on Roush Lane, which he
did not name, does have its
home for sale, but that it's
been on the · market for
about_eight months with no
takers.
"Nobody wants to live in
the sight of those smokestacks," Stinson stated
firmly. "Not belching the
stuff that they're belching

out."
As far as the $20 million
buyout by AEP, Stinson
said he doesn't think tliat
Cheshire residents acted in
good faith regarding their
·
neighbors.
"We knew nothing about
it until it was announced in
the newspapers," he said.
Stinson also said· he
thinks village residents didn't get a fair deal on their
property from the utility
giant.
"It sounds good on paper
- · 3 1/2 percent on yo.ur
appraised value - but ·if
you do some quick math, on
a $100,000 house, you pay
taxes on $35,000," he satd.
"Three and a half times
35,000 is only $129,500.
You can't take that money
and have what you've got
now.
"By the time you buy
· someplace new, all the
expenses involved in the
move and getting everything switched over, you
come out farther in the hole
than if you did staying."

·•

'·

. -~

.

If you think your
hearing has changed,
you're probably right.
If you think no one else
has noticed,
you're probably wrong.

•WIN•

2nuncms
..
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CIIEIII1

FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
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�The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
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www.mydallysentlnel.com

PageA6

0 inion

Wedneaday, February s, 2003

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

Powell holds talks with foreign leaders

Traces of Columbia

UNIVERSITY
ADMISSIONS
OFFIC'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be
signed and include address and telephone number. No
:unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be in good
. ·raste, addressing issue.,, not personalities.
· The opinions expressed in the column below are the con. sensus of the Ohio Vulley Publishing Co.'s editorial board,
·unless orheru..oise noted.

1

HENTOFF'S VIEW
NATIONAL VIEW

Curious
Bush stance on qffirmative
~action plays to conservative wing
• The Mississippi Press, Pascagoula, on Bush and affirmatil·e action: For an administration that has shown perfect
political pitch time and time again since taking office, there
~iis something off-key last month about President Bush's
\feighing in .against a race-based admissions policy at the
University of Michigan that is being challenged in the U.S.
Supreme Court.
: Affirmative action has taken hit after hit since the 1978
Qakke case. Quotas are gone, as they should be . New formula~ &lt;~re trying to ensure equal opportunity by looking at ecoriqrnic as well as racial disparities. Yet there persists in a wing .
df.the Republican Party a sense of mission to eliminate anyt~ing that strikes of giving historically disadvantaged people
&lt;r chance to level the playing field.
; George Bush campaigned as a new kind of compassionate
oonservative. As the governor of Texas, he had to play to· a
(bwerful Hispanic ethnic constituency.
The spinners at the White House point out that Bush pulled
ttack from opposing, as some wanted him to do, any sort of
ritcial preference. Instead they claimed they found a middle
oourse - to denounce the Michigan plan as too close to a
sbecific quota system without commenting on the overall
Ii:&gt;tion of racial preference.
.
.
; And they made sure it was leaked that (National Security
A;Jviser) Condoleezza Rice, usually concerned with foreign
(Wiicy, was in the debate and sided with Bush on the admis·
&gt;ions policy.
! Middle passage. Middle course. The case will be heard in
Ntarch, but the administration chose to make its pronouncerltent just before Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday and close
t" the beginning of Black History Month.
: That's what seemed tone deaf. Or maybe it was a bugle call
tp rally the right as the 2004 campaign begins to take shape.

1

•
i

:' TODAY IN HISTORY
•
'

~ Today is Wednesd~v/~~~s~~~;E~6~~~:y of2003. There are

l29 days left in the year.
·
i Today's Highlight in History:
(\.
i On Feb. 5. 1937, President Franklin Roosevelt proposed
ircreasing the number of justices on the Supreme Court; crities accused Roosevelt of attempting to "pack" the high court.
: On this date:
: In 1631 , the founder of Rhode Island, Roger Williams, and
tlls wife arrived in Boston from England.
; In 1783, Sweden recognized the independence of the United
States.
i In 1917, Mexico's constitution was adopted.
j In 1958, Gamel Abdel Nasser was formally nominated to
~come the first president of the new United Arab Republic.
• In 1962, French President Charles De Gaulle called for
Algeria's independence.
.
: In 1973, services were held at Arlington National Cemetery
tor Army Lt. Col. William B. Nolde, the last American soldier
i91led before the Vietnam cease-fire.
l In 1981. a military jury in North Carolina convicted Marine
Qvt. I st Class Robert Garwood of collaborating with the
~emy while a prisoner of war in Vietnam.
' Five years ago: Democratic fund-raiser Yah Lin "Charlie"
lrie pleaded innocent. in Washington. to charges he'd raised
illegal donations to buy influence in high places. (Trie pleadguilty in May 1999 to a felony count and a misdemeanor
.... d was sentenced later that year to four months' home detent~on and three years' probation.)
; One year ago: A federal grand jury in Alexandria, Va.,
indicted John Walker Lindh on 10 charges, alleging he was
t(ained by Osama bin Laden's network and then conspired
with the Taliban to kill Americans. Committees in both the
Bouse and Se nate decided to subpoena former Enron
Ghairman Kenneth Lay to appear to tell what he knew of
6nron 's complex financial dealings. At a Senate hearing,
Deborah Perrotta, a laid-off Enron employee, wept as she
described how her reti rement savings all but disappeared
· when the company fai led.
Today 's Birthdays: Comedian-actor Red Buttons is 84. The
Rev. Andrew M. Greeley is 75. Country singer Claude King is
70. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Hank Aaron is 69. Actor Stuart
Damon is 66. Financia l writer Jane Bryant Quinn is 64.
televi sion producer-writer Stephen J. Cannell is 62, Actor
David Selby is 62 . Singer-songwriter Barrett Strong is 62.
F.ootball Hall -of-Famer Roger Staubach is 61. Singer Cory
Wells (Three Dog Night) is 61. Movie director Michael Mann
is 60. Singer AI Kooper is 59. Actress Charlotte Rumpling is
.'l7. Actress Barbara Hershey is 55. Actor Christopher Guest is
.'l5. Actor Tom Wilkinson is 54. Actor-comedian Tim
!Yieadows is 42 . Actress Jennifer Jaso'n Leigh is 41. Actress
laura Linney is 39. Rock musician Duff McKagan (Guns N'
Roses) is 39. Rock singer Chris Barron (Spi n Doctors) is 35.
Singer Bobby Brown is 34. Country singer Sara Evans is 32.
, Thought for Today : "Many excellent words are ruined by
too definite a knowledge of their meaning." - Aline Kilmer,
~me ri ca n poet ( 1888-1941 ).

.oo

Heres the other story about Charles Pickering
.

According to vociferous Democrats
on the Senate judiciary committee,
Mississippi Judge Charles Pickering is
an especially outrageous presidential
nominee to the 5th Circuit Court of
Appeals. Minority Senate leader Tom
Daschle of South Dakota pledges that
"we're going to do everything we can to
stop that nomination." If .need be, say
Sens. Ted Kennedy (Massachusetts)
and Charles Schumer (New York), they
will paralyze Senate business and fili COLUMNIST
buster.
Whatever one's attitude about
whether Pickering merits the promotion, the way these Democratic senators able jail time was justified because the
have ignored- or deliberately misstat- defendant had sufficient racial animus
ed - the facts in their key charge to be punished under that law.
The ringleader had previously fired a
against Pickering reveals how scrofulous the partisanship on this committee gun into the borne of the interracial coucan become.
pie. The other defendants were not
This behavior is not exclusive to these · involved in that incident. And the 17senators. I also include in this the vari- year-old defendant also had a history of
ous anti-Pickering organizations who anti-black attitudes. Swan, clearly
imply that he is a racist, and who are involved in the cross-burning, did not
complicit in denying him basic fairness have a prior record of violent hostility
on this widely publicized accusation.
toward blacks.
Swan refused to bargain and pleaded
Indeed, I cite The Washington Post,
which last yearcalled the U.S. District not guilty. In a two-part documented
Court judge's first hearing "a degrada- account of why Pickering did not want
tion of the confirmation process."
to impose the 7-1/2 year sentence on
The anti-Pickering campaign's key- Swan - as appeared in the National
stone concerns United States v. Swan, a Review Online article "The Cross1994 case .involving three white men Burning Case: What Really Happened"
who burned a cross in front of the home - reporter Byron York wrote :
of'a white man and his black wife 'in a "When · it came time to sente11ce
rural Mississippi county.
Swan, Pickering questioned whether ·it
The Civil Rights Division of the U.S. made sense that the most~guilti defenJustice Department decided to make a dant got off with a misdemeanor and no
plea bargain with two of the three jail time, while a less-guilty defendant
defendants_ It made sense for 25-year- would be sentenced to 7-1/2 years in
old Mickey Thomas, because of his low Prison."
LQ. But the other, a 17-year-old whose
One of the prosecutors, Jack Lacy,
name was not released because of his wrote to Pickering that he "personally
age, turned out to be the ringleader. agreed with the judge that the sentence
Both pleaded guilty and, based on the is draconian," but added that Swan had
recommendations, "repeatedly chucked our (plea) offer in
Prosecutors'
our teeth."
received no jail time.
Pickering did try hard to get the
But the government insisted that 20year-old Daniel Swan be given a Justice Department to recommend a
mandatory minimum sentence of 7-1/2 lower sentence that would have more to
years under the federal hate crimes do with justice than with the prosecustatute. According to that law, the gov- tor's pique that Swan had refused to
emment had to prove that the consider- accept a. plea bargain.
"Fmally," York wrote, "Pickering got

Nat

Hentoff

.

word from Ci vii Rights Division prose- •
cutors, who said they had deciqed to
drop the demand that Swan be giv~n'the
five-year minimum portion ofthe rec- ,
ommended sentence. Pickering then
sentenced Swan to 27 months iri jail."
At the sentencing, Pickering told
Swan that he had committed -"a despicable act ... and it's an area ihat we've got
to stamp out; that we've got to learn to ;
live (together)." Yet, Schumer threatened to filibuster against Pickering's
elevation to the 5th Circuit because the
judge, Schumer said, showed ''glaring
racial insensitivity" in working to get a
lighter sentence . for Swan_ And , New'
York Times columnist Maureeti ~owd
writes that Pickering has "a soft spot fllr
cross-burners. "
Sen. Kennedy has also chal:g~cl .that
Pickering showed selective leniency
toward this white cross-burner, while
coming down hard on black defendants
before him.
However, I have copies of the letters
to the Senate Judiciary Committee from
four lawyers in Hattiesburg, Miss., who
represented black defendants before
Pickering. Each tells of cases in Which ·
Pickering made significant downward
departures from federal sentencing
.guidelines for these black defendants.
Are these the actions of a racist? · ,..
In one of these cases, the client, ·~a
first offender, did not have 'a -high•
school degree and admitted'·"'•Gmg use1
since age 8." Pickering went p!J.!side the ,
guidelines .recommended .by the U.S.
Attorney, "thus enabling my .client to
qualify for several rehabilitative oppor- .
tunities while incarcerated ;.. I .beheve·
my client's sentencing experience· with
Pickering may have been a positive life- .
changing experience for the defendant."
During their filibusters, will Sens.
Schumer and Kennedy include this·
information as they maintain that,
according to Schumer, Pickering's
nomin;~tion proves that "Richard
Nixon 's Southern strategy is alive. ... in
the White House"?
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned
authority on the First Amendment and
the Bill of Right$.)
, ,

PERKINS' VIEW

Bush brought best game to State of Union address .
George W. Bush brought his A-game
when he delivered his State of the
Union address this week to a joint session of Congress. The annual appearance in the Capitol occurred at a ti'l!e
when assorted polls indicate that the
stratospheric approval ratings he
enjoyed as recently as a year ago are
now merely tropospheric (which is still
pretty darn good).
The president's message was only
partly directed to the lawmakers who
gathered in the chamber of the House
of Representatives . His real audience
was the I00 million or so rank-and-file
Americans watching at home.
'1'This nation has many challenges,"
the president declared, tacitly acknowledgmg growing public concern about
the seemingly imminent war against
Sad dam Hussein's rogue regime as
well as the continued sluggishness of
the domestic economy.
The president went a long way
toward a llaying . those concerns not
only with the substance of hi s me,ssage,
but also with his remarkably adroit
delivery of that message . He did much
to reaffirm, to those whose fai th in his
leadership has wavered of late, that he
is equal to the awesome c h alle n ~es that
have been thrust upon him at th1s tenuous moment in this nation 's history.
As to the specifics of his speech, the
president lai(l out a broad four-part
domestic agenda that he wants the
Republican-controlled Congress to
address this year. He wants to strengthen the economy, he said, by creating
more jobs. He wants to provide highqual it~, affordable health care for all
Amcncans, he said, and prescription
drugs for seniors. He seeks greater
energy independence . while also seek-

The Daily Sentinel• Page A7

Pomeroy/Middleport. Ohio

the president offered the example of a
middle-class family of four with an .
annual income of $40,000. Their taxes
would fall from $1,178 to $45 per year,
the president said. That certaillly 'went ·
over well with folks at home.
..
Two-thirds of those who .viewed
0 S
Bush's State of the Union address said
,
. they believed his new tax proposals
would be good for tht economy,
according to a CBS News poll.
.
Meanwhile, the president used much
COWMNIST · of the second half of his speech to
renew his case again st Saddam
Hussein. "The dictator of Iraq js not
ing to improve the environment. He disarming," he said. "To the contrary,
also wants to apply the compassion of he is deceiving." And it is only a matter
America to the deepest problems of of time, the president warned, before an .
!America.
outlaw regime like Saddam 's gives or.
The president's tax cut plan, which sells nuclear. chemical or biological
he proposed earlier this month , falls weapons "to their terrorist allies, who
under the rubric of strengthening the would use them without the least hesieconomy. Bush made a strong pitch for tation."
the I0-year, $674 billion package durBu sh's strong pronouncements were
ing his speech, enunciating the reason- intended to re-galvanize public sentiing behind it. "Jobs are created when ment in this country that the oiltlaw
the economy grows," he said. "The government in Baghdad poses a gathereconomy grows when Americans have ing threat to America's security.- And
more money to spend and invest. And the president appears to have success,
the best and fairest way to make sure fully made his case. More than threeAmericans have money is not to tax it quarters of those who viewed his
away in the first place."
speech expressed support for U.S . mil·
Bush 's primer on stimulating eco- itary action to remove Saddam, accordnomic growth was net especially well ing to the CBS News poll. President
received by Democratic lawmakers in Bush had a lot at ,stake this weell.. with
the chamber, many of whom dismiss his State of the Union address. And the
his plan as some sort of giveaway to the overwhelmingly favorable reception it
rich. But Bush was making hi s case to re~eived from the viewing public
taxpaying Americans , 92 million of shows that he rose to the occasion.
whom would receive, on average, a
(Joseph Perkins is a columnist for
$1,083 tax cut in 2003 if the Congress The San Diego Union -Tribune and
approves the president's plan.
at
can
be
reached
As to Democratic insinuations that Joseph. Perkins@ UnimtTrib.com.)
the Bush tax cut j s tilted to the wealthy,

e ph

J

Perkins
'

A hazardous materials response team from the Longview, Texas, Fire Department
advances s lowly Tuesday riding all-terrain vehicles in a pasture east of Melrose, Texas,
searching for debris from the space shuttle Columbia. Search teams were out in force
again Tuesday combing the East Texas countryside for debris that could hold the secret
to the cause of the disaste . The shuttle broke apart Saturday as it re-entered Earth's
atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts aboard. (AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of State Colin
Powell, bidding for U.N. support, is set to present evidence that Iraq has hidden
large caches. of weapons of
·mass destruction from international inspectors and defied
calls on it to disarm.
Powell's public presentation Wednesday to the U.N.
Security Council in New
York will be the centerpiece
of a strenuous campaign to
enlist support from Russia,
France and other skeptical
governments as well as from
the American public. .
British Pnme Minister
Tony Blair, who has been
supportive of the administration on Iraq, has failed in a
fresh attempt to persuade a
reluctant France to join a
U.S.-led coalition ready to
move
against
Saddam
Hussein if necessary.
President Jacques Chirac ,
during talks With Blair in
France Tuesday, said he is
still adamantly opposed to a
war against Baghdad without
giving U.N. weapons inspectors more time to search for
outlawed weapons.
France and Russia are
prime targets for Powell, who
said in an article published
Monday by The Wall Street
Journal that "we will not
shrink from war if that is the
only way to rid Iraq of its
wea~ons of mass destruction. '

B u s h mented
tomorrow
by
talked by Secretary Powell."
.
phone ~ith
He said that while "I don 't
R u s s 1 a n want to o¥erstate it, for the
Pre s ident obvious reason," Powell
V I ad i m i r would also show "some interPutin for ·sections with various and
about
15 sundry terrorist groups and
m i n u t e s that is our real fear with
Tuesday , Ir-aq."
b e f o r e
In a rare interview, broadPowell
leaving to cast Tuesday, Saddam denied
lead
a that Baghdad has a relationmemorial service at the ship' with ai-Qaida or
John son Space Center in weapons of mass destruction,
Texas for the seven astro- saying it would be impossible
nauts who perished last to hide such arms.
Saturday.
·
"If we had a relationship
Powell also planned a with al-Qaida, and we
series of meetings with for- believed in that relationship,
eign ministers and ambas- we wouldn't be ashamed to
sadors from all 14 other admit it," the Iraqi leader said
Security Council nations in an interview for a new teleTuesday and Wednesday. And vision network called "Arab
all 14, plu s Iraqi Ambassador Television," an Arab station
Mohammed Al-Douri, are that has yet to be launched.
due to make statements The king of Bahrain, in
Wednesday to the council in Washington for meetings
what could be a critical test of with the administration leadsentiment for using force to ers, said Tuesday he believes
disarm Iraq.
Bush wants peace in the
CIA Director George J. region. Bahrain, an island in
Tenet, and his chief deputy, the Persian Gulf, is a· key
John McLaughlin, were U.S . supporter in the region
expected to accompany and is home to the U.S.
Powell at the United Nations Navy's 5th Fleet.
but not provide any testimo"The president's goals are
ny, U.S. officials said.
for peace in our region, and
Deputy Secretary of State peace means progress and
Richard Armitage the Senate development," King Hamad
Foreign Relations Committee bin I sa AI Khalifaf said after
Tuesday that .lraq's biological meeting at the Pentagon with
and · chemical weapons pro- Defense Secretary Donald H.
grams "will be welt docu- Rumsfeld.

...

Democrats·attack GOP
budget for _
deficit projections
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush's $2.23 trillion
budget for 2004 and its call for
new tax cuts was criticized by
Democrats and got a mixed
reaction from Republicans
Thesday as the White House
began defending its proposal
on Capital HilL
A day after Bush inttoduced
the plan, White House budget
chief Mitchell Daniels defend·
ed its $1.3 trillion in I 0- year
tax•CUIS for reviving the economy in an appearance before the
House Budget Committee.
The plan · also projects
~ficits of $307 billion this
year and $304 billion next year
- surpassin~ the record $290
billion deficit of 1992 under
the first President Bush.
''This is a tough pill to swal·
low," Rep. Gil Gutknecht, RMinn., told Daniels in com. plaining about the huge deficits
and the plan's call for4percent
growth in overall spending,
which he said was too high. .
Gutknecht also said that with
sizable deficits forecast for the
foreseeable future, .he's having

a hard time defending !ts proposed tax cuts. They mclude
$695 billion in cuts over II
years in corporate dividend
taxes and ·other levies, and
making permanent the $1.35
trillion tax cut enacted in 200 I
that will expire after 2010.
"It's very difficult for us to
justify borrowing another . $1
trillion or whatever the number
is in order to say yes to all
these national priorities,"
Gutknecht said.
The White House blames the
weak · economy and the fight
against terrorism for the shortfalls and says the red ink can
bemanaged.
·
J{ep. John .Spratt of South
Carolina, top Democrat on the
budget panel, said by driving
up deficits, Bush was passing
on huge federal debts to future
generations.
"I don't see any effort here to
develop a plan that will get us
out of the hole that's being
dug," · Spratt told Daniels,
adding, "Where' s the solution?"
The White House has said

only economic growth and
spending restraint can balance
the budget again, a stance
Republicans on the committee
rallied behind.
.
.
"What matters is that we
dori 't lose control of spend·
ing," said budget panel
Chairman Jim Nussle, R-Iowa.
"We must not commit to sttate·
gies that win popular support
today, only to balloon in costs
that will be imposed on our
own children."
Some Republicans in the
Senate, where the GOP has a
thin two-vote majority, were
more guarded.
Sen. Charles Grassley, chairman · of the Senate Finance
Committee, said he was
focused on finding ''tax policies that can deliver the most
immediate bang for the buck."
Grassley· has openly questioned whether he. can round
up enough votes for the centerpiece of. Bush's economic
stimulus ·proposal, eliminating
individual taxes on stock dividends.

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Er:woY from South Korea meets with top officials
WASI:DNGTON (AP)- The
State . Department's second
ranking official said Tuesday he
has no doubt that the United
States and North Korea will
open
a
dialogue
on
Pyongyang's nuclear development programs.
"Of course we're going to
have direct talks with the North
Koreans," Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage told a
Senate . Forei~n Relations
Committee hearing.
He said the initiative would
be canied out in concert with
other nations so that North
Korea's weapons pro.gram is not
perceived as stnctly a U.S.·
North
problem.
Annitage went further than
the administtation had previously in discussing the likelihood of
U.S.-North Korean talks:
Last fall, the administtation's
position was that there would be
no dialogue with North Korea in
response to its violation.s of
commitments not to develop
nuclear weapons.

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Secretary of State Colin Powell, right, .shakes hands with
Chyung Dai-chul, a special envoy of the- South Korean
President-elect Roh Moo-hyun, Tuesday, in Washington. Daichul is in town for meetings with U.S. officials to discuss the'
·communist North and Its push to develop nuclear weapons (AP)
Armitage ruled out U.S.
acceptance of North Korea's
demand for negotiations leading to a nonaggression treaty.
Noting that treaties require'
Senate ratification, Armitage
said there was "zero chance" of

a proposed treaty receiving the
required two-thirds majority
support for Senate confmnation.
Committee
Chainnan
Richard Lugar said he favors
direct talks with Pyongyang.

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Page A 8 • The Daily S~ntinel

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

r

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 83

'

'

'

NBA roundup, Page 82

.

·Page Bl
Wednesday, February 5, 2003

Bush asks for
Olympic team .
security money

College basketball

Prep basketball

Jordan Hill leads
Tornadoes to win
against Wahama

WASHINGTON (AP) The Bush administration is
asking Congress for $2.7 million to provide security for
the U.S . Olympic team that
will participate in the 2004
Olympic Games in Athens.

·NBA wants to
keep Bucks in
Milwaukee

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manslaughter charges against
the former NBA star.
An appellate panel is to
hear arguments March 12 in
Trenton from his lawyers and
the prosecutor's office.

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Mariucci to
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DETROIT (AP) - Steve
Mariucci was hired as coach
of the Detroit Lions, taking
over one of the NFL's worst
teams less than three weeks .
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Mariucci, born and raised
in Iron Mountain, Mich .,
signed a contract with the
Lions and will be formally
introduced at a news conference Wednesday. ,

Gallon

Ground Beef

BY GARY CLARK
to do with our poor oftenSports correspondent
sive showing hut our
--'-------'' - - - -- - · ·defense keeps improving
also becau se we were in
MASON, W.Va.
contention well into the
Jordan Hill proved to be the final quarter."
man cJf the hour for the vi sSouthern jumped out to a
. iting Southern Tornadoes on fast stan in .coring nine
Tuesday evening as coach straight points on its way to
Jonathan Rees' Meigs an early 12- 1 lead. Wahama
County cagers pulled away regained its composure late
from a determined Wahama in the opening period to
squad in the final period in close the gap to 17-12 by the
grasping a low scoring 47- conclusion of the first eight27 basketball victory.
minute span . Both teams
Jordan's spectacular per- experienced a poor shooting
formance included a game second canto with several
high 20 points for the turnovers added in on the
Tornadoes in addition to part of both squads that
directing the visitor's resulted in a low scoring,
offense during the stretch sloppily played quarter.
run when Southern was able Southern couldn 't shake the
to put the game away. Justin White Falcons as Wahama
Connolly added eight points kept hanging around and
and Jake Nease six for the trailed by 23-16 margin at
winners. Wahama got eight the half.
points from Aaron Faulk,
Third period play mirsix from Aaron Davis and rored the preceding eight
five each from Gabe minutes as both teams failed
Lambert and Chris Johnson to get into any kind of conin a losing cause.
sistent play. · Once again
"Obviously you won't turnovers plagued both
win very many games scor- opponents and another lowing just 27 points in a varsi- scoring quarter was the conty contest," Falcon coach sequence. Hill tallied five of
James Toth stated. "We the Tornadoes six points in
can't seem to get into any the second quarter before
kind of rhythm offensively adding five of Southern's
and we're not shooting the eight points in the third as
ball very well right now.
Southern's defense had a lot Please see Southem, 85

MILWAUKEE (AP) Local and national investors
are interested in buying a
majority stake in the
Milwaukee Bucks but the
league wants to keep the
team in the city, NBA commissioner David Stern said.
Stern
said
in
the
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
he is confident this car. be
done. He did not identify any
of the interested parties.

Red or White

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'''

Elam signs $9M
contract with
Broncos
DENVER (AP)- Broncos
kicker Jason Elam signed a
five-year, $9 million deal that
could allow him to finish his
career in Denver. His $2.6
million signing bonus is one
of the biggest ever for a kicker.

Mankamyer
resigns position
DENVER (AP) - Marty
Mankamyer resigned as president of the U.S. Olympic
Committee, succumbing to
pressure from colleagues
who blamed her for infighting that fractured the world's
most powerful Olympic organization.
The USOC's executive
committee was expected to
take a vote of no confidence
this weekend in Chicago after
seven of the 22 members · ·
asked for her resignation Jan.
21.

Under USOC bylaws, vice
president·secretariat William
Martin will serve as interim
president.The USOC 's board
.of directors will vote on a
permanent replacement after
a nomination is made by the
exec utive committee. No
date has been set· for an election.

Kentucky's Chuck Hayes looks on at bottom as Rorida's Justin Hamilton misses a dunk shot ·
during ttle first half of their game Tuesday. Hamilton was fouled on the shot. (AP)

No. 6·Kentucky
upsets No. 1 Florida
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) who had nine points and
- Kentucky dido 't think eight rebounds. "You really
this one would be this easy. don't· know how bad you've
But the sixth-ranked dominated a team until you
Wildcats' defense made it look at the stat sheet and see
look that way against top- you've held them to six basranked Florida on Tuesday kets. That's unreal."
night.
The Gators .( 18-3, 7-1) got
Keith Bogans scored 15 no closer than the final marpoints - all in the first half gin in the second half. They
- as Kentucky beat the finished 17-of-50 from the
Gators 70-55, snapping field (34 percent), including
Florida's 14-game winning 5-of-14 from 3-point range
streak one day after it moved (36 percent). and also comto the top of the poll for the mitted .19 turnovers .
ftrst time in school history.
. "Our guys hung our heads
Tile active, swarming when the shots weren 't
7-0 falling," Florida coach Billy
Wildcats
(17-3,
Southeastern Conference) Donovan said. "Our mindset
limited Florida to six field was too much on offense and
goals in the frrst half in takr scoring. They took us out of
ing a 45-22 lead.
our game."
Forward Chuck Hayes said
In other games involving
the Wildcats could hardly ranked teams on Tuesday, it
believe the margin as they was: Colorado 93 , No. 3
headed to the locker room.
Texas 80; No. 4 Pittsburgh
"We were kind of sur- 68, Providence 61 ; No. 13
prised. We thought they had · Creighton 84, Northern Iowa
more frrepower," said Hayes, 75; and No. 20 Xavier 80,

George Washington 68.
Donovan didn't
use
Florida's high ranking as an
excuse . .
"This was perfect timing
for us to be No:-1, because us
playing Kentucky overshadowed the ranking," he said.
"It's a big conference ·
matchup with both teams
undefeated and working for
first place in the league. We
didn't have to answer a lot of
questions about being No.
]."

Florida's ranking may
have meant more to the
Wildcats, who won their
11th straight game, their second-longest winnin~ streak
in coach Tubby Smith's six
seasons.
"We think we're the No. I
team. That's what we wanted
to show everybody," said
Gerald Fitch, who had 14
points and seven rebounds.
Please see Kentucky, 85

AKRON (AP) - King
James' next ~arne will in a
completely dtfferent court.
An attorney for LeBron
James will seek a temporary
restraining order Wednesday
from a judge, who could
overturn a decision by state
officials to banish the ISyear-old basketball star for
accepting free sports jerseys
from a store.
James, the 6-foot-8 senior
from St. Vincent-St. Mary
nicknamed "King· James",
was declared ineligible and his team was forced to
forfeit a win - last Friday
by Ohio High School
Athletic Association commissioner Clair Muscaro for
accepting the jerseys worth a
combined $845 .
James' attorney, Fred
Nance, will argue that James
did nothing wrong when he
accepted two "throwback"
jerseys from the owner of a
Cleveland clothing store.
"All LeBron did was
receive a gift from a friend
as congratulations for his
academic achievements,"
Nance said in a 32-page document filed in Summit
County Common Pleas
Court. "Had LeBron wished
to capitalize on his fame , the
recompense could be in the
millions of dollars."
Judge James Williams set
a hearing for Wednesday
morning. Nance said James,
who has since returned the
jerseys, would not attend.
The OHSAA found that

the store gave James the
Gale Sayers and Wes Unseld
trendy Jerseys in exchange
for posing for pictures to be
displayed on its walls.
Muscaro ruled James
broke an amateur by Ia w "by
capitalizing on athletic fame
by receiving money or gifts
of monetary value."
The dectsion came four
days after the OHSAA
cleared James of any wrongdoing for accepting a
$50,000 Hummer H2 sport
utility vehicle as an 18th
birthday gift from his mother.
Nance said in the court filing that James returned the
jerseys when he learned the
gift was controversial and
might threaten his amateur
status.
James sat out the first
game of his celebrated
career Sunday, and he seems
eager to rejoin his teammates.
Wearing a gray T- shirt and
blue shorts, James attended
practice on Tuesday in the
school's gym. He warmed
up with his teammates and'
was stretching in the middle
of the floor when coach Dru
Joyce closed the practice.
Joyce then ordered green
cloth banners to be hung
over the glass doors so no
one could see inside.
Joyce refused to comment
on James' situation.
Akron St. Vincent-St.
Please see lames, 85

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PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

NBA

Scoreboard

Kings once again display supremacy over Mavericks

Prep Basketball
.

DALLAS (AP) - The
Sacramento's
Hedo
Dallas Mavericks will ~o into Turkoglu missed a long 3the All-Star break With the pointer and the rebound went
NBA's best record. But they straight up. The long, lanky
sti ll
can't
beat
the Clark - who earlier had an
Sacramento Kings.
amazing one-handed, reverse
Keon Clark's high-flying alley-oop dunk - caught the
dunk off a missed 3-pomter ball and slammed it through
with 16.5 seconds lefl gave in one motion.
the Kings a 110-109 victory
On Dallas' final possesover the Mavericks · on sion, Dirk Nowitzki missed a
Tuesday night in a thrilling I 0-footer in the lane after
showdown
of
Western spinning away from Peja
Conference division leaders. Stojakovic and getting a
Dallas goes into the break good look at the basket.
38-10, four losses fewer than
Nowitzki had 28 points, 16
anyone
else,
but
the rebounds and five assists for
Mavericks can't escape their Dallas, which had won four
0-3
record
against strai~ht and seven of eight.
Sacramento
· and
San
"It s just a huge win for us,"
Antonio. That includes a 29- said Kings coach Rick
point loss to the Kings three Adelman, who punched the air
weeks ago.
in celebration when the buzzer
"We needed this win to sounded. "They kept coming
convince everybody we can back at us and it seemed like
beat them - and we didn't they were making every shot.
do that," Mavericks starter We stayed with it and got the
Raja Bell said. "The consola- ball to bounce the right way at
tion is _that we still have the the end."
best record."
The Mavericks felt they
lost at the beginning, when
the Kings made 13 of their
first 17 shots. Sacramento
eventually took a 16-point
At Indianapolis, ,Kobe
lead in the third quarter.
Bryant scored 35 points and
Sacramento cooled off and Shaquille O'Neal fought off
Dallas tied it at 64 early in foul trouble for 19 points and
the third quarter. Neither 12 rebounds as the Los
team led by more than six the Angeles Lakers won their
.resl of the way.
_
fourth in a row.
.
In other games, II was
The Lakers are at .500 for
Washmgton 93, Cleveland~ the first time since they were
84; the . Los A~geles ~ 2-2 on Nov. 3. Following a
97, Ind1ana 94, Portland 96, Christmas loss to Sacramento
Orlando 89; New york 105, the Lakers were 11 -19. Sine~
the Los Angele~ Chppers
then, they are 12-4 and are
Toront? 98, Milwaukee 95: only 2 1/2 games behind
Mmnesota 103, Houston 89, Houston for the eighth seed in
and _Denver I 02, Chtcago the West.
I 00 tn overt1me.
·
Five straight points by
Michael Finley, wh,o scored
28, put the Mavericks ahead
107-106 with 57 seconds left.
Then Bibby and Nowitzki
At New York, - Latrell
traded tough jumpers, leaving Dallas still leading by Sprewell broke the NBA
one.
record for most 3-pointers in a

Lakers 97
Pacers 94

92:

Knicks 105
Clippers 92

game without a miss, going 9for-9 from behind the arc.
Sprewell btoke the mark of
8-for-8 held by Jeff Hornacek,
Sam Perkins and Steve Smith, ,
making consecutive 3s midway through the fourth quarter to break the record after a
19-point lead had shrunk to
mne.
Sprewell finished with a season-high 38 points, shooting
14-for-19 overalL The crowd
called for him to take another 3
in the closing minutes, but he
did not oblige the one time he
had a brief open look with about
35 l)eC(&gt;nds left.

'lllnday

Akr. Centrai·Hower 97, Akr. E. 51

A R
kr. restone 86, Akr. KenmQre 58
Akr. Manchester 59, Akr. Coventry 40
Akr. N. 62,· Akr. Ellet 4~
Amanda-clearcreek 96, Harvest Prep 32
Andover . f'ymatuning Valley 65, Farport
Hardl 59
ng
Aurora 57, Twinsburg 54
Avon 62, Obertln 51
' Batavia 68, Batavia Clermont NE 54
Beallsville 52, Paden City•. W.Va. 39
Bedford 77, Parma 6t
BellairEi 96, Bellaire St. John 57

At Washington, Michael
Jordan scored 27 points in 43
minutes and the Washington
Wizards won their second
strai~ht despite the absence of
leadmg
scorer
Jerry
Stackhouse.
It was the second successive game for Jordan with a
high total of points and min- Sacramento Kings guard Mike Bibby, center, looks for the basket as he is guarded by Dallas
utes. He scored 45 in 44 min- Mavericks center Shawn Bradley (44) wl)lle Mavericks' Nick van Exel looks on at right, during
lites in a victory over New the first half Tuesday In Dallas . (AP)
Orleans on Saturday.
scored 30 points and Chris
the. arena's public address
announcer to call out the
Whitney hit five free throws
in the final 20.6 seconds of
time remaining in the game
overtime as the Nuggets won
and on the shot clock.
consecutive games for the
At Milwaukee, Vince Carter first time since Jan. 8-10.
At Orlando, Fla., Scottie
scored 25 points and blocked
Whitney also made the 3- Pippen recorded his ftrst doua potential tying 3-pointer by pointer that sent the game into ble-double of the year with 25
Ray Allen just before the overtime. Replays seemc:d to points and 17 rebounds as
buzzer as Toronto won for the show Whitney's foot was on Portland defeated Orlando for
At · Minneapolis, Kevin
fourth time in five games.
the 3-point line when he the eighth straight time.
Garnett scored 23 points,
Antonio Davis scored 16 released the ball.
The game was delayed for grabbed II rebounds and
points for the Raptors and
Donyell
Marshall
led several minutes when the added
as
nine · assists
Morris Peterson added 14.
Chicago, which owns the shot•clock buzzer became Minnesota avenged a 20-point
NBA's worst r~ad record at 2- . stuck following a violation loss to Houston on Friday.
25, w1th 21 pomts. It was the on Portland with 2: 13
Rasho Nesterovic added 19.
second straight night the Bulls remaining in the game. After points for the Timberwolves
lost in overtime. Phoenix the buzzer was fixed all and held Rockets center Yao
defeated Chicago 115-111 on scoreboards and shot cl~cks Ming to 12 points on 4-of-7.
At Denver, Juwan Howard Monday.
then malfunctioned, forcing shooting . .

Raptors 98
Bucks 95

Trail Blazers 96
Magic 89

T·wolves 103
Rockets 89

Nuggets 102
Bulls 100, OT

It'S Time TO

Brooklyn 71, Independence 50
Cambridge 63, Coshocton 43
Cardinal47, Maplewood 44
Carey 49, McComb 43
Centerburg 58, Johnstown
Centerville 84, Sidney 35
Chagrin Falls 72, Wictdiffe sa
Chardon 74, Bunon Be&lt;kehlre 45
Chesapeake 79, S. Point 28
Chillicothe 60, Portsmouth 55

«

Country Day 46
Gin. Jacobs Center 90, Cin. SCPA 42
. Cln. Landmark 64, St. Bernard 57
Cin. LaSalle 40, Cin. Purcell Marian 32
Cin. lockland 49, Cin. seven Hitlsf3

Cle. Heritage 62, Mentor Chr. 59
· Cle. Hts. 87, Mentor 72
Cle. VASJ 71, Avon lake 40
Cots. Brookhaven 69, Cols. Beechcron
67
Cola. Dublin Coffman 71, Gahanna 55
Cols. E.
Cols. Linden 66
Cols. Eastmoor Academy 60, Cin.
Harmony 44
Col w
Cols. Independence 71,
s. alnul

n,

eo

· Cols. Marion-Franldin 65, Cols. Briggs 53
56
. Cols. Mirdin '62, ols. Whetstone
! Cols. N.orthland 70, Cols. Centenf'lial62
. Cols. Ready 50, Bloom-Carroll 40
Cols. Tree of Life 74, Liberty Chr. 44
' Cols. W. 87, Cols .S. 59
Cols. Wellington 66, Cols. Academy 61
·
C
·
eo, E. pa1est1ne
·
, Columb1ana rest1vew
55
: Cortland Lakeview 54, Warren Champion

40
1

c

·

C~.,~yahoga Valley Chr. Acari. 51, Zoarville

Tusca rawas Vaflev 41
Danbury 84, Tol. Maumee Valley 67
Day. Belmont!
Day. Northridge 50
Day. Col. Wh~e 88, Spring. N. 88
) Day. Sti'lors 75, Sptlrig Valley 40
, Delphos·St. John's 69, Convoy Crestview

oo,

4§_ - .. 88 ByeBYilte MB&amp;~r&amp;Ji 4(f":

'
··y·
~: ~~~e4g,h:~~~.fn~e~ Hts. 63
~

Race lor the

Preview

arv 14, 2003

~allipolii JBailp Qtribune
446-2342 '
Joint Jlea,ant ~egiittr
675-1333

.The Daily Sentinel
992-2156
Don't miss out oli this great opportunity
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Advertising Deadline is h:hruary S. 2003

.
t'Evangel Chr. 61, DeltiWtlro Chr. 46
~ Fayetteville 58 Marlchester 52
JFenwick 78, Wayneovllle 7t
1,firelands 72, Wellington 54
::Fostoria 73\ Shelby 59
, Fredericktown 40. Ut~ 29
•.Fremont Temple Chr. 46, Findlay
H~ritage Qtr. 44
•, Ft. Jennlri :.~o. A8 , Otloville 47
,
..
Galion 1~i' tiorwalk72
Gates l.lijis Gilmour 73, Columbia 53 ·
1
Gates ~ills Hawken 64, University
~ool61' ,·
·
jGermant.oWn Valley VIew 64, Day.
~akwood 37

!

u

;Gioustei. Jrlmbla 83, Gallipolis Ohio
\Iaiiey Chi. 55.
• Grafton Miduiew 91 Brookside 4t
• Clranviilo'Chr. 81,
Deot 27
j Green 5Ef'Mecedonia Nordonla 39
: Grove Cit\. 55, Cols. Upper A~ington 53,

o\.i6

~T

, Groveport-Madison 59, Marion Harding

{!

.

, Hamiltori Badin 53, St Bernard Roger
Baoon ~7
;
; Ham Ilion New Miami 69, Cin. North
College Hill 43 I
• Hantlverton \tlnlted 71, Salineville S. 44
1Hilllan:l Darby 48, Grove City Central
1
ros~!'fl 39
.
Howiud E. Kn&lt;»&lt; 74, Danville 7t , OT
· Hubbs
, Glra rd 44
;,Jadkson , McArthur Vinton County 44
, Jamestown .
Greeneview
53,
Mechanicsburg, 49
1
Kalida87,VanBuren76
: Keystone· 56, LOrain Clearvlew 40
: LakewoQd 68/ Lorain Admiral King 40
~LaricastOJ
Westerv!lle N. 37
1Leetonlli'-67. Columbiana 52
I Lewistown Indian Lakli 68, Riverside 45
: Lima Bath~. Pemberville Eastwood 52
' Lisbon David Andereon 62, Sabring
t,\ckinley 57 ,
, Logan GO, ftiarietta 57
· Southv Iew 63 , Elyria 57
•Loratn
' Loveland 75, Cln. Turpin 53
~Luc8Svlll~ Valley 65, Wheelersburg 24
' Magnoli4'SI!ri~y Valley 88, Bowarl!ton
Conotton ~ailev 41
' Magnolta(.',Y.Va. 75, St. Clairsville 70
: Martins :Fairy 50, Hannibal River 34
t McConn~sville Morgan 65 , New
~xington
•
. McGuffe ·lJpper Scioto VaHey 59, Van
Wert Llrlcolnvlew 4B
•Middletown Fenwick 78, Waynesville 7~
: Mineral Aldge 66, Lowellville 48
, Mogadore 67, Wlndh&amp;'!' 64, OT
Mogado1e Field.7e, Stroetsboro 57
:'Morral Rldg8dale 58, ~arion Elgin 57
~Morrow ,Wtle Mlaml7o4, Monroe S9
: Mt. . VeiJ10f1 Aced . 94, Powell VIllage

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A'cad. 33 ·- • . .
! N . Ridgeville 68, Bay 62

Niles McKinley 56, Canfield 50
Normandy 60, Parma Hts. Valley Forge
57
t:Jorthside Chr. 59, Maranatha Chr. 49
Northwood 72, Oregon Stritch 70
Oak Glen, W.Va. 50, Wellsville 47
Okf Washington Buckeye Trail 59, Cadiz
Harrison Cent. 36
Orange Chr. 39, Lake Ridge 34
onawa Hill&amp; 58, Tol Chr. 47
Ottawa-Giendort 86, Napoleon 52
Painesville Harvey 75, Madison 70
Painesville Riverside 49, Geneva 35 1
p ndo -G 'Ibo 61 C 1 bus' G
55
a . ra I a , o urn
rove
Parma Padua 60, Chardon NOCL ·so
Peninsula Woodridge 89, Crestwood 58
Penry 74, Ashtabula Edgewood 46
Plain Clty Jonathan Alder 7,, Fairbanks

60

Rayland Buckeye Local 62, Richmond
Edison 59
Richmond Hts. 80, Beachwood 56

«,

Ridgeville Chr.
Day. Miarili Valley 39
Ridgeway Ridgemonl 55, Jackson
Center 48
Rocky River Lutheran W. 71, Cuyahoga
Hts. 42
Rootstown 64, Ravenna SE 56
Rossford 54 , Millbury Lake 42
S. Charleston SE 45, Cedarville 35
S. Webster 71 , Minford 59
S~rahsville Shenandoah 49, Caldwell 41

Spring. Cath. Cent. 83, N. Lewisburg
Triad 53
Stewart Federal Hoctdng 75, Nelsonville
York
52
Stow 59 . Tallmadge 57
Strashnrn..Franklln 58, New PhNadelphla
Tuscarawaspent. Cath. •9
Sugarcreek Garaway 55, Berlin Hiland
41
Sunbury Big Walnut 82, New Albany 44
Sycamore.Mohawk 67, N. Baltimore 86
Tal. . Emmanuel Baptist 55, Metamora
Evergreen 54
Trinity 69, Cetveland Cent. Cath. 42
Trotwood-Madison 80, Day. Meadowdale
72
Upper Sandusky 59, Norwalk 47
Vienna Mathews 60, N. Lima S. Range
58
w~c1,auga 61 , Eastlake N. 38
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 58, Malvern 39
W. Liberty Salem 61, Spring. NE 53
Warren Howland 51' Salem 42
Warren JFK 58, Struthers 47
Waverly 54, Oak Hill 41

WheelingPark,W.Va. 8~ . Steubenville79

Willard 90, Tiffin Columbian 74
Willoughby S. 56, Kirtland 52
WOOdsfield Monroe cent. 77, Barnesville
, OT
76
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 75, Olmsted
Falla 65
Yo
L'"- ty 67 Kl
B d
47
ungs. t~A;~r
' nsman a Qet'
Youngs. Mooney 64, Youngs. Chaney 4 ~
Youngs. Wilson 5B, Youngs. Chr. 43
zanesville Maysville 50, Crooksville 48
Zanesville Rosecrans 63, Summit Station
Licking His. 6t
,
Zanesville W. Musking1:1m S4, Thornville
Sheridan 45
SOuthUot Ohio Dlotrtct
Boy&amp; BUIIetbltiSOcllo 1 Plllri
Dlvlolon II no
ngo
81 w.ltoton High SchoOl

t.~· t,. '.!-ndii~,.Febfll!lry 17 . . • -:.
~'- · v8'lley (5-9)
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11'1-Valley 48 , Philo 47
.

This eye-popping new
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Columbus Dispatch.
Included are profiles of
the team's biggest
stars, coaches, and
other personalities,
making A Season to
Remember:
Ohio
State's 2002 National
Championship a cherished keepsake for all
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Newbury 86, Bloomtteld 39

"""'V

Cin. Moeller 58, Day. Cham nade·
Julienne 51
_
Cin. Mt. Healthy 63, Cin. Ta1{49
Cin. Norwood 69, Cin. Glen Este 48
Cin. Winton Woods 65, Xenia 42
· Cln: Withrow 67, Cin. Western Hills 59
. Cin. Woodward 66, Cin. Walnut Hills 54

•

Jackson-Milton 34
New Philadelphia 61, Uhrichsville
Claymont 36
Newark 64, Pici&lt;erington 53

Seaman N. Adams 47, W. Union 43
Shadyside 86, Bridgepor1 86
Sidney Lehman Oath. 60, Ada 34

Cin. Aiken 61 , Cin. Hughes 57
Cin. Country Oay 60, Cin. Summit

~idge

New Middletown Spring. 79, N. JacksOn

Racine Southern 47, Wahanlit,.W.Va. 27
Ravenna 46, Alliance Marlington 36

Belmont Union Local 60, Gnad. Indian
Valley 48 ·
Berlin Center We stern Reserve 32,
McDonald 27
Beverty Ft. Frye 41 , Belpre 35
Bristol101 , Southington Chalker 88

'

Fe

Boye

o-2 0, Smith 0 0-2 o. Total 11 t0:t6 47.
WAHAMA :- Faulk 4 ().() 8, Davis 3 ().()
8 •. Lambert 2 1-2 5, JOhnson 2 o-2 5,
R-rd 1 ll:-2 2, Roush 0 1-2 1, Mitchell 0
o-t 0. Total 12 2-9 27.
THREE-POINT GOALS - Southern 3
(Connolly 2, Hill). Wahama 1 (Johnson).

Wizards 93
Cavaliers 84

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Navarre Fairless 61 , E. Can. 31
New Concord John Glenn 62, Warsaw
River View 46

Southern 4.7, Wahama 27
Southern .. 17 6
8 16
47
Wahama .. 12 4
7
4
27
SOUTHERN - Hill 8 3-6 20, Connolly 3
().() 8, Nease 1 4-4 6, Randolph 1 2-2 4,
Nelgler 1 1·2 3, Crouch 1 0.() 2. Coleman 0

'

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Wednesday, February 5, 2003

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

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·V;nton Co'Tueadty. 1}11~2~)UII,Z 18
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L---------------~---------------------~

February 22

SGITrimble winner vs. Symmes Valley
(12-4), 6:15 p.m. (Winner advances to
Athens Convocation Center)
Miller/Eastern (Pike) winner vs. Southern
(11·5), p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
CQnvocation Center)
at Lucaovllle VaHay High School

a

Tuelday, February 18
Portsmouth Clay (6-11) vs. Portsmouth
Notre Dame (2-t3), 6:t5 p.m.
Western (5·1~) vs. Falrfie+d Leesburg {6tO), 8 p.m.
Friday, February 21
North Adams (1D-6) vs. New Boston (1D7), 6:15p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
COnvocation Center)
Sciotoville (t2-5) vs. Manchester (7-8), 8
p.m.' (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)
Saturday, Fobruory 22
PCIPNO winner vs. Whiteoak (,-2-2),
6:15 p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)
WesternJFL winner vs. Green (11-3), 8
p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)

Anoclated Pre11 B..ketball Poll
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a state
panel of sports writers and broadcasters
rates Ohio high school boys basketball
teams In the fourth weekly Associated
Press poll of 2003, by OHSAA divisions,
wllh won-lost record and total points (first·
place votes in parentheses) :

DIVISION 1
1 , Brookhaven (32) .... 15-1
2, Vandalia Butler (8) .. 18-0
3, Cin . Withrow . ...... tW
4. Olmsted Falls ... . .. 15-0

. .5. l Wortl}lngtOfl . ..... 17-1
· 6, N. Can. Hoover .. _.. 15-t
7 , Lancaster .. . .. . .•. 14- t

~~:: g~~n~~-

H
. e

Thurwdoy, Fttbruoty 20

Balpre (7-8) vs. NeiSOO'illle-York (3-13), 7
p.m.
Friday, February 21
Wellston!SP winner vs. FalrlandiOH winner, 8 p.m. (Winner advances to Athena
Convocation Center)
lrontonfCG winner va. FH/Crooksvllle
winner, 8:30 p.m. (Winner advances to
Athena Convocation Cen1er)
Saturday, Fobruory 22
Balpre/N-V winner vs. WheelerSburg (t .t 4), 3 p.m. (Winner advances to Athens

We have extra
~unba!'

Saturd~~y,

-·•rv

r-------------------------------------,
How to order:
·1

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Makes a great gift for Buckeye fans everywhere!

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Wednesday. Febmlry 11
Lucasville VaUey (13-2) vs . Northwest (412), 6' t5 p.m.
West'lalt (5· 10) vs. Huntington (7· 10), 8
p.m .
Friday, February 21
Peebles/Adena winner vs. PW/Unioto
winner, 6 p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)
ZTIPV winner vs. Piketon/Wu winner,
8:30 p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)
Saturday, February 22
LV/Northwest
winner
• vs .
West'laii!Huntington winner, 3 p.m. twinner
advances to Athens Convocation Center)
LC/ES winner vs. Southeastern P5·2), 7
p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)
'
_ Dlvlllon IV
at VInton County High School
Tuaeday, February 18
Souih Gallla (6-10) vs . Trimble (5-9) , 6:15
p.m.
Miller (8-9) vs. Eastern (Pike) (3-,3},
p.m.
Friday, February 21
South Webster (IQ-5) vs. Waterton:t (7-7),
6: 15 p.m. · (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)
Eastern (Meigs) ( 11-6) vs. Ironton St. Joe
(7·8), 8 p.m. (Winner advances to Athens
Convocation Center)

~!:;

366
364
289
262
200 .
t56
140

~

::
:::::
tO, Clayton Northmont . . 15-2
65
S:1&amp; p.m.
Others receiving ~2 or more poims: 1~ ,
Jacl&lt;son 19 •7 ) vs. Rocl&lt; Hill (S-8), 8 p.m.
Warren Harding 28. 12 (tie), Massiloo
Wtdne8day, February 19
·
washington, Ctn. Moeller 26. 14, Zanesville
.AV/Ath.en~ winner vs. GoUla Academy 24. 15, Fremont Ross 17. 16, Cin. LaSalle
15
m
12.
1 1 2Me·3~!(·6-8
P).m. Po--·th (6-IO).
..,.
vs. "~·~
• 8 P· ·
DIVISION 11
1 , Akr. SVSM (30) ..... 14-t
VCIW
Friday, FobruJe~ 21 n/RH 'n
362
arren Winner vs. -so
WI •
2 Pol S . ery (5)
15-0
322
7
(WI
adu nc
t0 Athens
'
· em;n
.. ner,
p.m.
nner
a as
3, Cham.-JiJiienne (3) .. 13-1
297
Convoc.tlo~e;;.ter) F b
4, Cent.-Hower (2) .... 14-t
267
22
RV/Ath e/~A ey, I "!'ry
5, c . Winchester(!) ... 16-t
197
"-"'·-~mouth· 1 w n7nar (WI vs. 6, Can. s ......... . .. 14-t
174
,._,IP''"'•• ·
wnner,
p.m.
nner
7 St Be A Bacon
14-3
162
aduancasto At!tana ConW&gt;CatiOn Center)
• · r. ·
·' · · · ·
It ChiHicolhe HI h kh 00 I
8, Cle. Benedictine .... , 1-2
~, 7
,......,_ ~
9, Port Clinton ........ 15-t
69
17
- - . . . . ory
1o, Willard .. ......... 13-3
62
WtNerty 16 •7 ) vs. Fatrtiel~ Union 14- 12),
Others receiving t2 or more points: tt ,
6:15p.m.
·
Cortland Lakeview 32. 12, Cambridge 28.
Sheridan (9-B) vs. New Lexington (2-~ 5), 13, New Concord John· Glenn 26. 14, Akr.
8 p.m.
Hoban 22. 15, Ollawa-Giandort 16. 16.
Tuead~~y, February 18
Cots. Watterson 13. 17, E. Uverpool ,2
HillsborO (11 ·4) vs. Greenfield McClain
DIVISION 111
(1t-6),6:E15p(.m. )
Ml l1i
(tt )
t, Loudonville(26) .... 16-Q
383
Logan lm ~2·5 vs . am race
•7 •
2, S. Gareway (4) .... 15·2
275
8 p.m.
3, Beverly Ft. Frye (3) .. 13-0
242
Wedneeday, FebCrul 1'Y 11 (I")
4, Manchester (2) . . .. ~5-1
239
Waverty/FU winner vs. rc1ev1118 ~ •
5, M. River Valley (2) ... 15-t
201
6:15 p.tn.
6, New Mid. Spring ..... 14-1
164
Sherldan/NL winner vs. Washington
7, Clinton-Massie
... ~ 5· 1
16~
Court House (12-4), 8 p.m.
8 H p tr·~ H
t05
F~-·
, . a ••• enry . . . . 13-3
Friday,
21
9, Bellaire
... 13-4
71
LEJMTwinnervs.SherldaniNL/WCHwln·
57
dva
Ath
10, s t. nry . . . . . . . . . 133
•
ner, 7 p.m. (Winner a
nces to
ens . Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Convocation Center)
Chesapeake 34. 12, Marion Pleasant 28.
Saturday, February 22
13 (tie), Middletown Fenwick, New London
Hillsboro/GM
winner
vs. 27. 15, Richmond Date SE 24. 16,
Waverly/FU/Circlevllle winner, 7 p.m. Lucasville valley 22. 17, Waynesville 20.
(Winner advances to Athens Convpcallon 18, Bedlord Chanel 19. 19, Cin. Madeira
Center)
17. 20, Ironton ~ 6. 21 , W. Alexandria Twin
Dlvlalon Ill
Valleys . ~4 . 22, versailles 13.
81 Unlverolly ollllo Grande
DIVISION IV
Monday, Flbruory 17
1 , Tiffin Calvert (32) ... 15-0
392
Alexander (7-tO) vs. Minford (6-9), 5 p.m.
2. M. s.Marion (3) ..... 14-t
318
Wellston (11-5) vs. South Point (3-t2), . 3, Yellow Springs (3) ... 16- t
315
8:45 p.m.
4, Berlin Hiland .
. ... 13·2
221
Falrtand (9-9) vo. Oak Hill (2-12), B:30
5 , S. Mc KlnIay (1) .. .. . 13-2
162
p.m.
Wednoodly, Fobruory 1t
11onton (13-3) vs. Coal Grove (t-14), 8:t5
p.m.
,
· Federal Hocking (9-8) vs. Crooksville (313), 8 p.m.
un ·

(6 tO)
- '

Convocation Cenler)
Ale.wander/Minford
winner
vs.
C hesapeake (1 5.·1) , 7 p.m. (Win ner
advances to Athens Convocation Center)
11 Waverly High School
Monday, February t7
lynchburg Cia~ (7-10} vs. Eastern
Sardinia (5·11), 5 p.m.
Peebles (12-4) vs . Adena (4-t3), 5,45
p.m.
Portsmouth West (8·5) vs. Unioto (5·1'1),
8:30p.m.
1ueaday, Fobntary 1B
Zane Trace (1Q-6) vs. P!iint Valley (2-14),
6:15p.m.
Piketon (8-9) vs. West Unoo (5-10), 8
p.m .

'QI:imes -&amp;entinel papers

with the blnco card
inside now on .yle for soc

GET YOURS NOW WHILE
SUPPLIES LAST!
®allipolis 1Ilaif!' 'QI:ribune
~oint ~Iea~ant ]!egister
The Daily
Sentinel
.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

6, Ft. Loramie ........ 14· 3
153
145
7, Delphos St. John's .. 12·3
B. Holgate ...
. t3-3
9, Russia . . . . .
. 14· 1
iOO
10, Windham (2) ..... 16.0
43
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Mowrystown Whiteoak 34. 12, Beallsville
29. 13, Southing t or;~ Chalker 27 . 14 ,
Bristolville Bristol 23. 15, Minster 21 . 16,
lakeside Danbury 19. 17, Convoy
Crestview 17. 18 (tie), Millersporl, Cin.
Country Day 14. 20, Lorain Cath. 12.

,,g

Girls
"~~~••day
Akr. Elms 58, Andrews 14
Akr. Hoban 60 , Can. Cent. Calh. 45
Andover Pymatuning Valley 36, Orwell
Grand Valley 17
Archbold 58, Defiance 34
Ashville Teays Valley 53, Canal
Winchester 41
Aurora 52, Wickliffe 41
Bainbridge Paint Valley 50. Williamsport
Westfall47
Baltimore liberty Union 54, Heath 53
Barberton 42, Stow 27
Bellaire 70, Rayland Buckeye Local 69,
OT
Bellbrook 60, Camden Prebl e Shawnee

31
Bloom·Carroll 52, Amanda·Ciearcreak
46
Brookville 40, Germantown Valley View

30
· Bryan 49, W. Unity Hilltop 35
Burton Berkshire 34, Lordstown 13
Can . Heritage Chr. 56, Massillon Chr. 51
Casstown Miami E. 59, Covington 52
Celina 52, Fl. f!eco""ry 45
Chardon NDCL 53, Warren JFK 44
Chillicothe HunUngton 50, Richmond
Dale SE 41
Chillicothe Zane Trace 43, Piketon 20
Cin. Clark Montessori ·54, Cin . Shrader
Paideia 33 .
Cin . Colerain 67, Hamilton 53
...
Cin. Hughes 47, Cin. Mount Healthy 34
Cin . Indian Hill 63, Cin. Taylor 50
Cin . Madeira 44, Cin . Reading 16
Gin . Mariemont 59, Gin . Deer Park 22
Cin . McNicholas 62. St. Bernard Roger
Bacon 58
Cin . MI. Noire Dame 58,Cin. Mercy 41
Cin . SCPA 51, Cin. Center Chr. 33
Cin . Seton 58, Cin . ursuline 43
Cin . St. Ursula 52, Cin. McAuley 42
Cin . Taft 53, Cin. Woodward 26
Circleville 55, Cols. Hamilton 'rwp. 49
Clarksville
Clinton-Massie
41,
Blanchester 39
Cle. East Tech 72, Cle. John Marshall 33
Cle. JFK 48, Glenville 42
Clyde 72, Sandusky St. Mary 52
Coldwater 51, Wapakoneta 37
Cols. Acad. 48, Cols. Cenlennial 38
Cols. Bextoy 44, Washington C.H. ' Miami
Trace 39
Cols. Franklin HIS. 74, Marantha Chr..41
Cots. Grandview 47, Cols. Briggs 31
Cols
Independence
(16,
Cots.
Brookhaven 55
Cols. Upper Arlington 63 , Grove City 38
Continental 77, Haviland Wayne Trace 43
Convoy Crestview 59, Sherwood
Fairview 50
Copley 60, Medina Highland 36
Crestline 56. Galion Northmor 52
Cuyahoga Falls 50, Kent Roosevelt 4~
DO)'lestown Chippewa 67, Dalton 45
Elida 58, Lafayette Allen E. 42
Fairfield 48, W. Chester Lakota W. 42
Fostoria 60, Port Clinton 51
Frankfort Adena 7,, Chillicothe Unioto 49
Franklin-Monroe 61, W. Alexandria Twin
ValleyS. 42
Ganaway Westland 55, Hilliard Davidson
45
Genoa 60, Northwood 54
Granville Chr. 55, Cols. Ohio Deaf 44
Green 56, Norton 43
Greenfield McClain 44, Chillicothe 31
Grove City Chr. 55, Cols. Tree of Life 34
Hamler Patrick Henry 70, leipsic 31
Hilliard Darby 54, Grove City Ce'ntral
Crossing 29
Hudson 71 , Ravenna 39
Johnstown Northridge 80, Harvest Prep
t7
Kings 6~ . Ross 33 Middletown
Lakewood St. Augustine 41, Hudson
WRA31
Lancaster 55, Westerville N. 30
Lexington 50, Orrville 44
Uberly Chr. 4 ~, Marion Cath. 20
Uma Temple Chr. 48, Bettsville 28
logan Elm 57, Failfiekt Union 43
London Madison Plains 57, Cols. Ready
46
Madison 59, Lewisburg li'i.County N . 43
Maple Hts. 70,. Cia. MLK 35
Marla S1eln Marion Local 45, Lima Cent.
Cath. 39
Marietta 66, Logan 40
MarlOn Harding 58, Ashland 40
Marysville 69, Dublin Scioto 63
Maumee 77, Rossford 49
Mayfield 57, Kenston 42
Medina Buckeye 49, Olmsted Falls 41
Middletown 64, Lakota E. 46
Middletown Madison 59, Lewisbu rg Tri·
County N. 43
M!llersport 54, Summit Station Licking
Hts. 50
Monlpelier 66, Pioneer N . Cent 22
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 52, Oola Ha~di n
N. 12
Mt. Vernon Acad. 34, Powell Village
Acad . 11
N. Ridgeville lake Flidge 38, Elyria FBCS
t6
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 30, Sycamore
Mohawk 25
New Albany 52, Granville 35
New Madison Tri·Village 6~, Eaton 32
New Richmond 46, Cin . Anderson 44
Oak Harbor 59, Bascom HopewellLoudon 36
Open Door 55, Cornerslone Chr. 18
Ottawa-Glandorf 7,, Paulding 58
Pickeri ngton 71, Newark 37
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 70, Laurel

54

.

Sofon 58 , Macedonia Nordonia 46
Spencerville 50, New Bremen 48
Spring . Kenton Ridge 93 , Tipp City
Tippeca noe 57
Stryker 62 , Uberty Center 61
Sullivan Black River 63, Rittman 26
Sylvania Northview El5, Perrysburg 51
Sylvania Southview 46, Holland . Spring.
31
·Tallmadge 61 , Richfield Revere 43
Troy Chr. 48, Ridgeville Chr. 35
Twinsburg 65, Brush 56
Van lue 5 l , Old Fort 42
Vincent Warren 54, Gallipol_is Gallia 52
W. Jefferson 54, Delaware Buckeye
Valley 38
Wadsworth 79, Lodi Gloverleaf 35
Wooster Triway 82, Kidron Cent. Chr. 46
Worthinglon Chr. 64 . Lewis Center
Olentangy 59
Worthinglon
Kilbourne
58 , Cots.
Eastmoor Acad. 54
Wyoming 45 , Finneytown 31
Zanesville 71, Cols. Whets1one 49

College Basketball
Men
EAST
Pittsburgh 68, Providence 61
Vermont 111 , Middlebury 75
Xavier 80, George Wash ington 68
SOUTH
Cen1enary 84 , Southern U. 56
ETSU 93, VMI 76
Florida Atlantic· 59, Gardner-Webb 57
Kentucky 70 , Florida 55
Memphis 73, East Carolina 49
South Florida 7~ , TCU 67
Southern Miss. 82, UAB 80, 20T
UCF 98, Campbell 69
MIDWEST
Austin Peay 82, Tennessee St 57
Creighton 84. N. Iowa 75
E. Ill inois 85, SE Missouri 73
lnd.-Pur.-lndpls. 77, lipscomb 6~
Valparaiso 73, Charlotte 59
Wichita St. 85, Illinois St. 7~
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 77, Texas A&amp;M 69
Texas-Pan
American
100,
SW
AssemtMies of God 63
Tulane 65, Houston 58
FAR WEST
Colorado 93. Texas 80

Women
EAST
Albertus Magnus 75, W. New England 63
Babson 57, Coast Guard 52
Baruch 54, Centenary, N.J. 43
Buffalo St. 61, Fredonia St. 56
Colby-Sawyer
Wentworth Tech 31
Connecticut 87, 'St. John's 46
Cortland St. 53, New Paltz 46
Dowling 66,
Post 54
Framingham St. 95, Mass. College 58

n,

c.w.

62
Denison 61, Earlham 52
Geneva 57, No,tre Dame. Ohio 54
Malone
Urbana 64
Ohio Dominican 86. Mount Vernon
Nazarene 45
Ohio Weslyn 63, Hiram 43
Park 63, Brescia 54
Rockford 82, Clarke 64
St. Scholastics 52, Northwestern, Minn.·
50
Walsh 78, Tif1in 68
Wilberforce 59. Rio Grande 56
Wittenberg 70, Kefl)'on 57
SOUTHWEST
Hardin-Simmons 76, McMurry 48
NE Oklahoma 56, Cent. Oklahoma 38
FAR WEST
Fort lewis 74, Adams St. 58

n.

·t Picture
·. your pet.·.
. ..·~~ .

~

· ~~ .·.· ~~

· ~~

.among the...

~·

~·

~Pet Valentines!~·.

... . ·.
.. .
~:
...~:...

~

6

6.
6

~

6
6

...

~­

6
6

6.~ "For Pets Only"
Our Special Page(s)

6

6

~

will be published

Friday
february 14th
•••
in The Daily Sentinel
6

~

Also a special section is available
for In Memory Valentine Pets

LOO·K FOR IT!! ,

Tessa The Cat

The
2003

Retirement
Edition
In Friday's
Newspaper!

falliiJolillailp atri•une
teotnt ~leaiant l\egtiter
The Daily Sentinel

.

'

Ithaca 74 , Oneonta 62
lebanon Valley 68, SUsquehanna 55
McDaniel 66, Franklin &amp; Marshall 60
Messiah 71 , Juniata 33
Mount Ida 69. lesley 58
Mount St Mary, N.Y. 66, Vassar 49
Nazareth. N.Y. 73, Rochester Tech 59
New England 69 , Endicot1 60
Newbury 75, Becker 53
Nichols 67. Anna Maria 61
Plattsburgh 83, N.Y. Tech 47
Rutgers 65. Miami 56
Salve Regi na 79, Rhode lsfand Call. 4i
Simmons 71 . Rivier 63
Smith 64, Clark U. 61
Springtield 66, Mount Holyoke 50
St. Joseph's. N.Y. 67. St. Elizabeth 53
St. Vincent 59, Point Park 52
Tufts 80. lasell 37
Utica 51, Keuka~
Virginia Tech 55, Seton Hall 46
Westfield St. 81 , Bridgewater. Mass. 55
Wheaton, Mass _49. Wellesley 45
Worcester St. 72. Fitc hburg St. 70
Yeshiva 63, Marymounl, Va. 35
SOUTH
Albany, Ga_62, LeMoyne·Owen 55
E.-Mennontle 75, Bridgewater, Va . 65
Elan 62, Winthrop 39
Fayetteville St 77 , N.C. Central 56
Guilford 77, Ferrum 70
Kentucky Christian 86. Circleville Bible
47
King, Tenn . 77, Montreat 59
Livingstone 54, Elizabeth City Sl. 49
Pikeville 89. Virginla·Wise 52
Shaw 77, St. Paul's 49
Transylvanta 90, Asbury 50
UNC·Greensboro 70, Davidson 63
Virginia St. 68 , Johnson C . Smith 64
Winston-Salem 83, St. Augusti ne's 60
MIDWEST
Ashland 72, Oakland City 59
Central St.. Ohio 94. Michigan-Dearborn
41
Columbia, Mo. 80, Hannibal-LaGrange

''

..~~....
.
~:

...~......
~­

~-

�Wednesday, February 5, 2003 .

V&lt;fWW.mydailysentlnel.com

·Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

Southnern·

behind the scoring of Faulk,
pulled to within eight on a
couple of occasions but
Southern maintained its ·
advantage from the charity
stripe to come away with the
41-27 triumph.
.
The White Falcons return
to action on Saturday when
they host fourth-ranked
Tolsia.
,
• Wahama emeJ!id with
the victory in the j6Dl,or varsity contest by posting a 67-62
win. Aaron Sellers scored 30
points with Derek Teaford
adding 13 for Southern in a
losing cause with Brandon
Fowler netting 15, Brant
Davis II and Roman Ward
10 for the Wahama JV squad.

from Page 81
:
:
:
:
:
:

''from ·Baja California to
the French Alps, we pick eight
perfect .places to spend your
winter holiday •. ·''

:
:
:
;
:
:
.
:

James
:
:
:
·

Mary, ranked No. 1 in the latest USA Today rankings, next
plays in the Isles Prime Time
Shootout in Trenton, N.J., this
weekend. Because of James'
. populaf!ty, the school has
· played m games around the
: country this season.
: Martin Johnson, president
: of the nonprofit group that's
· staging the tournament, said sion."
The school defended James
: Monday he was optimistic
; James would be cleared in and said the punishment was
• time to play.
too severe. ·
: The Fighting Irish have
"LeBron made a mistake
: four games left before the and accepts responsibility,"
: state playoffs.
James Burdon, chairman of
: OHSAA spokesman Bob the school's board of trustees,
t Goldring sau:l if Williams
• blocks the agency's ruling said Thesday. "He's apolo; and grants a restraining order, gized for the pain he's caused
• James can resume playing others. However, he has not
committed a crime, nor has he
: immediately.
· : Williams would then hold consciously hurt anyone."
Burdon said he's confident
: another hearing within the
• next 14 days, when he could Williams will issue the
; decide whether to make the restraining order. The school
~ injunction permanent or was initially named a defen: extend the temporary order. . dant by Nance, but Burdon,
• With James deciding to an Akrori attorney, said St.
: fight for his reinstatement
: through legal action, it is Vincent-St. Mary will be
: unlikely he will appeal his dropped from the lawsuit,
Nance also asked the judge
: suspension to the athletic
to reinstate the Jan. 25 win
: association.
over
Buchtel the school had
, Nance accused the OHSAA
: of being fmstrated that the to forfeit.

[One ofthem might surprise you.]
Sanibel and Captiva Islands, Florida
Antigua, Guatemala

The Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail, Alabama

Martiniqu~

Phoenix, Arizon,a

Baja California, Mexico

school is capitalizing on
James' fame by playing in a
larger arena, receiving fees
from playing in tournaments
across the country, and contracting with a cable network
to televise the games.
Steven Craig, a lawyer for
the OHSAA, said, "The commissioner is obligated to
interpret and enforce the
bylaws as written. That is
what he feels he's done in this
case and stands by his deci-

from Page 81

-November 2002 MONEY® magazine

Val D'Isere, France (French Alps)
Alta, Utah

the visitors extended its lead
to 31-23. with eight minutes
remaining.
The final quarter was Hill's
time to really display his
hardwood skills as the
Tornadoes went into its ball
control offense. Although
Wahama came up with several steals during the final minutes, Hill guided the
Southern offense to perfection that led to an easy
Tornado basket or a trip to
the free throw line. WHS,

378 championship holes on eight sites in Alabama

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Kentucky
from Page 81

'
Roberson made two free which beat then-No . 6 the Bluejays (20-2, 10•1
throws, but Daniels hit a Kansas 60-59 1on Jan . 22.
Missouri Valley Conferenceo\
fadeaway jumper with 2
Brandon Mouton and the first 01 VISIOn I team 10
seconds left.
James Thomas each scored reach 20 wins this &amp;eason. :
The Oators had no solu- 19 points for the Longhorns · The visiting Panthers
tions
for
Kentucky's (14-4, 5-2).
pulled to 76-72 on a. basket
defense in the second half.
After misfiring from the by Matt Schneiderman, but
Matt Bonner scored free throw line most of the Lindeman responded with :a
inside with 16:13 left to night, the Buffaloes hit 12 long 3-pointer, his third of
end a 10-minute field goal of their last 14 over the the game, with I :21 left io
drought and make it 50-25. final 3:19.
push Creighton's lead back to
Florida's deficit bulged to
seven points.
29 as steals led to consecuFreshman Ben Jacobson
tive dunks by Daniels and
scored· a career-high 26
Antwain Barbour.
points for Northern Iowa (6·13, 3-8). .
"We had them down and
we just wanted to keep
Ontario Lett had 18 points
to lead the Panthers (16-2, 6them there," Fitch said.
The Gatoh finally found I Big East), who held off a
a rhythm and hit six of
seven shots during a too- . late charge to win for the sev. late 16-4 run. A 3-pointer enth time in eight games. Lett
Lionel Chalmers, playiqg
by Roberson with 3:59 left gave Pitt the lead for good at just his second game . after
cut the lead 10 64-47.
56-54 with 4:10 remaining missing a month with :a
But Jules Caniara made and the Panthers outscored broken foot, scored l7
• vo free throws with 3:22 Providence 11-4 over the points ond David West had
remaining and Marquis next 3 1/2 minutes to his e' ( ~h straight doubleEstill scored inside a improve to 11-0 at home.
doublt with 13 points arid
Ryan Gomes had 26 points 13 rebounds to lead the visminute later to cue the
"Overrated!" chant from for the Friars (10-9, 3-5), iting ~ · 1sketeers (16-4, 7 ·I
the boisterous Rupp Arena- who have lost four of five .
Atlantic 10) to their sevrecord crowd of 24,459.
enth str;,' ght win.
Kentucky improved to 5Chris Monroe had 1,7
9 all-time against No. !points for the Colonials (8ranked teams. The Wildcats
11, 2-6), who lost for the
have won the two meetings
seventh time in nirte
with the No. I team at Rupp
Michael. Lindeman scored · games.
Arena, beating Indiana 69- a career-high 20 points for
58 in 1979.

"!think we did a good job
of showing them."
The Gators started out
well, hitting four of their
first seven shots before
Kentucky's defense seized
control. For the rest of the
half, Florida hardly got an
open look and the W1ldcats
seemed to track down every
loose ball.
Kentucky finished the
half on a 23-4 run as
Florida missed 21 of its last
23 shots and committed
ei~ht
turnovers.
The
Wtldcats scored 14 straight
points over one five-minute
stretch.
Bogans, a senior, shot 6of-11 in the first half. The
Wildcats went 19-of- 37
from the field (51 percent)
in the opening ·half, including 7-of-12 from 3-point
range (58 percent).
The Gators' offensive
struggles were summed up
in the final 1:22 of the first
half.
After a timeout, Roberson
overthrew an inbounds
baseball pass to Brett
Nelson on the Kentucky
side of the floor. Nelson
saved the ball right to
Hawkins, who calmly made
an uncontested layup.
Seconds later, Bogans
Morandais scored
stole a pass and threw down 24Michel
points, including the
a two-handed breakaway tiebreaking 3-pointer with
dunk for a 41-20 lead. I :58 left that triggered a
Nelson missed a 3-pointer, 13-0 run as the Buffaloes
the Wildcats rebounded and (13-7, 3-4 Big 12) beat a
Bogans lobbed an alley-oop Top I 0 team at home for the
pass to Hayes for a dunk.
second time in 13 days.
"We took them out of
Blair Wilson had 23
what tljey wanted to do and points and Stephane Pelle
executed our offense to a had 18 points and 14
'T,"' Bogans said.
rebounds for Colorado,

Pittsburgh 68
Providence 61

Xavier 80
G.Washington 68

Creighton 84
N.lowa 75

Colorado 93
Texas 80

Teying to do your :
own taxes is quite •

a lnlrden.

to help lighten
your load. Call

1-800-HRBLOCK
or visit
hrblock.com

H&amp;R BLOCK';

•
H loR Block
618 East Main St

Phone 992-6674
Hours: Mon-Fri. 9 to 6, Sat 9 to 5 ·
Other HoUrs by Appointment

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

HELP WANTED

•

••

Wi'n d ·Down, Catch up•
At the end of the day, take some time to relax and catch up on current
events with the newspaper. Subscribe today and get news from around the
nei•ahlt&gt;orhoc&gt;d and around the world delivered
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door

•

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Fortu,nately, we do;
it for a living to :
make sure you get •
everything you
'
have ooming. And :

HELP WANTED

~

Pleasant Valley Hosplta•

V

SUPERVISOR OR/PAcu:_

Front line management position with accountabi!ity for lhe daily funclioning of surgical service$ .
Mu!;t hold a current licensure io Wesr Virgini&amp; .
Bachelor's degree in Nursing (BSN) preferre~ ­
A minimum of 3-5 years experience in Surgical
Services preferred.
·
For more infonnalion:
Pleasant Valley Hospital

•

.

..
MONEY magazine called the Trail courses

•

•

"stunningly beautiful and well maintained."

\

"For courses of this quality,,

'

.

CARD OF THANKS CARD OF THANKS

•

••

:

:lfr.--'1:

t

:

•
•'

the golf is strikingly inexpensive."

•'

Get the November MONEY magazine and read
:
I

'
'
•'

••

AAJEOE

~~t

The
Erie E. Cox would like
to thank
Willis Funeral Homa,
Pastors, Friends, Staff 4-West,
Physicians, those who brought
food, sent cards, and visits in the
passing of our Husband and Daddy
on January 21 , 2003. What a glo1-~
ous entrance he must have made
In Heaven on that Tuesday
momingl
WU., trfa
Chlldrel!, Bob, Sue, Phil, Pam,
Danny and Grelndc:hf~gn

~

about the Trail or visit www.cnnmoney.com.
I

And you can call our Reservations Department at
1 800 949 4444 or visit www.rtjgolf.com.

•

The

''.
I

'

2M3

~

. ...

Ji,
Retirement ..f. .•
. I,
I

•
•
•

•

•
••
••

I

~--------~-~ ------·-

Edidon .
In Friday's
Newspaper!

J'

.

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,.

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,.
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~:'
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II

fall~oUi Jail, lribunt·

Jotnt ,lta-.m lt~ittr
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Gallla County

CORNER OF SAID
FRACTION; THENCE
N. 15 CHAINS AND 50
UNKS; THENCE W.
51 C,HAINS AND 33
UNKS TO A LOCUST&gt;
Associates Financial
STAKE THENCE S. 2
Services Company
Inc
CHAINS
AND
90
UNDS TO A LOCUST
STAKE,; THENCE W.
Plelntlfl
31 CHAINS AND 66
. LINKS TO THE W.
William K Powers,
LINE .OF SAID FRAC·
etat
Defendant
TfON, A COR~
FROM · WHICH
A
HICKORY TREE 12
caaatoOCV&amp;9
INCHES IN DIAME·
In p111auance to an . TER BEARS N. 12 1/2
order of sale directed DEG. W. 38 LINKS
to me fn the above AND A DOG WOOD 8
INCHES IN DfAME,
entitled action, f will
oflar lor ufa at public TER BEARS S. I DEO.
28
LINKS;
auction, at the front W.
12
door
of
tha THENCE . S.
83
Courthouaa
in CHAINS AND
TO
THE
Oallfpotla, Ohfo, In LINK$
the above named PLACE OF BEGIN·
county, on Saturday, NINO CONTAINING
HUNDRED
March
1,
2003 ONE
ACRES,
10:00 AM, the follow- TWENTY
Ing daacrlbed real MDRE OR LESS, AND
BEING THI! lAME
ulllta:
CON·
SITUATE IN THE PREMISES
TOWNSHIP
OF VI!VED BV MARIETTA
QUVAN
IN
THE COLE AND HUSBAND
COUNTY OF GALLIA TO ANNIE QJLBIIRT
BV DEED RECORDED
AND STATE OF OHIO:
BEING A PART IN VOL. 80 AT PAGE
AND PARCEL OF 448 .OF THE DEED
LAND, KNOWN AS ·RECORDS OF GALFRACTION -OF 282 LIA COUNTY, OHIO,
ACRE, LOT, ND. 35 IN TO WHICH REFER·
SECTION 14, TOWN 3 ENCE 18 HERE HAD
OF RANGE 11 OF FOR A MORE . COM·
THI! DHIO COMPA· PLETE DESCRIPTION
NVS PURCHASE AND OF SAID PREMISES.
PROP .ERTV
BOUNDED
;t.ND
DESCRIB.ED AS .FOL- ADDRESS:
LOWS: BEGINNING 1140 stale Route 553,
AT THE 8W CORNER Crown City, OH 411823
PRIOR
INSTRU·
OF
SAID
LOT;
THENCE
E.
83 MENT REFERENCE :
CHAINS TD THE SE
Located fn the Oallla

v

..

•

cLASS IFl EDS'!

c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Poinl Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340

County Recorda
THIS IS A SALE OF
REAL ESTATE ONLY
Said
reel
eatata
apprafaed
at
$35,000.00 and cannot be Rid for laaa
than twothlrda of lha
apprafeacl value.
Term• of Safe
The
aucceaaful
purchaur, sa aoon as
hl8 bfd Ia accepted,
ahall be required to
clepoelt on the day of
the Mle, fn cash or
check payabfa to lha
Shariff, 10% of the
amount
of
auch
accaptad bid but fn
no avant Jaaa than
S1 ,000.00. The balance of the purchaaa
prfca llhalf be due and
p!lyabfa to' the Sherlfl
within thirty (30) daya
from the data of
Confirmation of asia.
The purchaaar ahall •
be required to pay
Jntaraat
on
uld
unpaid balance at
1.0% p!lr annum from
the data of confirm•
lfon of the asia to the
data of payment of
the balance unlaaa
the balance ahall be
mada within eight (8)
day• frOm the data of

ura.

David L Mlrtln·
Qalfla County Sharlfl
Sara M Petaramann
Anorntly for the
Plaintiff

Woodyard's Mini Mall
Scrubs as low as $16.95
Also Tops and Bottoms
Levi's as low as $11 .95
,. , Also a new load of QVC

Electronic Tax Filing ·
Get your refund in as
little as 2 days .
446-8727

The Down Under
Wednesday Night
Buffet

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
For Computer, Professional Individual
and Business Tax preparation

ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC Fll,ING
735 Second Ave.
446-8677

LOAN CENTRAL
Express Tax Refund
Loans!
Enjoy your money NOW!
E-file now available!
Call Tim Brumfield, Mgr.
For Details 446-0965
or 888-446·FAST

4:30-8:00
313 Third Avenue Gallipolis, Ohio

Now offering Pedicures,
Manicures, Acrylic Nails,
Relaxation Facials.
Complete Line of
Merle Norman Cosmetics .
Call today and schedule an
appointment

Notice
Chris Wilson is
Half-Century old today
Happy Birthday!

January 28, February
5, 12, 2003

'

�~rtbune-

Sentinel -l\e
CLASSIFIED

BURN Fa!, IILOCK Cm- 10 1
&amp; 2 wide portable yard
lnge, and IDOBT Energy
buildings , available in 9'
Llke You HaiNever Ex- thru 21 ' metal side &amp; roof,
perienced.
8'&gt;6'8'
mini roll-up door:
40x
WEIGHT· L
64x13' shop building, 1REVO
3 entry, 3-12x12 overheads
New product launc Octo- gutter painted steel sides &amp;
ber 23, 2002. Call 'Tracy a1 root, Insulated roof, erected
{740)441-1962
pric;e
$20,106.00;
30x40x9'4• garage, 3-10X8
: - - : - - - - - - - - lnsul overheads, t ·3' entry,
Desk top computer, Dell 01Insulated roof gutter, 1'
menslon L Series, $600; overnan g pa 1n1ed steel
Ha Ines Brothers Baby sides &amp;
roo 1, erected,
Grand Plano, (740)446· $tO t 57 00 24 42x9' •
·.30pm.·
.
· ; x
-4 ga7893 .her 5
rag. , 1-3' enlry, 2 ·20x8' In·
sui overheada, lnaul roof,
painted steel sides &amp; roof 1.
Dining room suite &amp; hutch,
overhang
gutter, erected
very good condlllon, $200,

C1Uia Cev.. ty, OH

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

TO

Place

.vour
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@mydailytribune.com

tJfjlee /lo«~".f
Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
successful Ads
,
S]lould Indude These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lness Days Prior To

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day•a Paper ·
·
ln•Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sundays Paper

• Start Yaur Ado With A Keyword • Include COmplete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• lndude Phone Number And Addretl When Needed
• Ado Should Run 7 Doyo

Housekeeper/ babyslner,
WE NEED TO "TALK"
TOYOUII
with. eMper1ence, organized
female with own transports· A Great Opportunity Awaits!
lion. 2:30-4:30pm M,F,
ATIN: Point Pleasant.
Postal positions. Clerks/car- $t0.00 per hour. (304)675- The Ohio Valley Publishing
Company
is seeking a
riers/sorters. No exp. re- 4792 evenings.
highly motivated Individual
quired. Benefits. For exam,
salary, and testing Informs- - - - - - - - - - wt)o Is lntersted in an
tion call (630)393-3032 Ext HVAC company loo~ng for "OUTSIDE ADVERTISING
782. 8am-8pm. 7 days. , · ,PTIFT certified helpers to
SALES CAREER",
do Heating &amp; Coaling Instal- with unlimited
eaming
lation. Also looking for Ex· potentlall lntersted??
perienced Installer and
- - - - - - - -- Tech with 2 years or more .
WE NEED TO TALK!
Attn: We need help, $1200- Send resumes to P.O. Box
$!iOO()Imo. 1-866-736-7794 572, Kerr, OH 45643.
.Salary Plus Commission
www.heartofthegerden.com
-Great worl&lt;lng environment
HVAC: B·Service tech want- -Monday· Friday 8am-5pm
ed: Commercial experience
Better Payl a plus. Must be reliable &amp; Send your resume to:
own tools. Travel &amp;
Ohio Valley Publishing
Better Benefltel have
weekends .sometimes req.,
P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis, OH 4563 1
Better Hurryl 5 yrs. e~~:perience , $12·
$20hr. Send resume &amp; inFax (740)446·3008
qulrles to: G.C. Hunt, PO
or email:
We offer:
Box 43, Middleport, . Oh lboyer@mydailytribune.com
45760
• Up to $7/hour

().' 1

Beer Carry Out permit
frir sale. Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
o} inte rBst to: The Daily
S4lntinel, PO Box 72 9-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
FARRAGO
Now accepting your
~pri n g tSu mme r ctoth1ng for
,
consignment
• Call (304)675· 1059

•,

Farrago "Sale''
Ptices reduced on all Winter
c~thing as low as .50¢ per
item. 304-675-t 059

.

TUPPERWARE
Now
booking parties &amp;
orders from our
taking
'lEW Spriq.9 catalog. Call
10 find OUI
about aur
monthly specials.
lrlterested in becoming a
consultant? Call for more
information.
eecky Meaige
(740)446-3194

~

GIYEAWAY

I

'
Adorable l ab/ Collie Mix

•
puppies.
born Chri stmas
~· Black &amp; !an. (740)44138

Fi~e puppies, call (740)992-

~~9
1b go homes only- 1 male
~lie &amp; Lab dog, 1 female
~f Bull &amp; Cockerspaniel
"!1• , 1 male cat, cell

(~4{))992- 1909

rr

losrAND

FOUND

L~st American Bulldog, 4
mon. mate . about so lbs.
V{hite w/ Black spots, last
seen on 1-26-03 $250.00
r ard for safe return 304- "'
6 5-5653

+''--------

st- Boxer, 6 mos .. male,
c llarltags, answers to And ew. Reward! (740)9924405
Lbst- male whiteJtan Boxer,
r+d coll ar, on Crew Rd .
Ppmeroy, Sat. , fa mily pet,
!!40)992-6936
LbST- Reward, white male
Ppmeranian puppy, Spring
VB.Iiey area. missing since
2~3-03 . Childs pet. Please
coli (740)446-6194

' -

t

WAN1'FD

mBVY

BIJSINEX'O

• Paid Vacations

JMMEQJAJE OPENINGS
'I'RAINING
Local Office Has 25-50
• Paid training
Openings, No experience
Getllpalto c0
College
Needed,
$6-$9 Per Hour, 1·
• Higher salary
(Careers Close To Home)
888·974-JOBS
Call Today! 740-446·4387,
with experience
1-800-214-0452,
LOOKING
FOR LPN
RoQ 190-05-12748.
Monday- Friday, no week- n'l~;.::.;~.;;;;,.;.;,;.;,;;_""
If you are looking
1
SaiOOlS
for a better job call ends or Holidays. Apply In 1:10
person, 936 State Route I.,--ilr6n!iiiiiiiUCI10iii.iiiiN;.,,.t
today to set up an
160, (740)446-9620
~
interview!
Jennifer Hobtlck
7o&amp;OolMII-2189
MODELS
Children 2 years old thru
Congratulation•! You have
1-877-463-6247 adults of all ages. For local won 2 free movie tickets to
and national Catalogs, com- the Spring Valley 7 Gallipoext. 2454
mercials, TV. No experience lis. Call the Sentinel. for de~
necessary. Selections at
tails. (740)992·2155)
5pm. OR 7pm on Trur Feb.
or stop by:
180
WAN'fliD
6th. at Radisson Hotel,
242 3rd Ave
To
HunGallipolis , OH
tington, W.V. I-64E , Exit #8
OR 1·64W, Exit Utt . Mod· Chlldcare avaHable In down·
town Pomeroy, private pay
els Net (570)558-7925
only, providing 24 hr. serve~~:t#406
Avon
Rep resentatives www.hlghlite.com/Hunt
ice, call (740)992-5827 for
rnore information.
wanted. (740)446-3358
• Paid Holidays

,.r

Do

AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
sen. Shirley Spears. 304675·1429.
-,--------Bartender
Tralneel
needed. $250 a
day
potential. Local positions
1-800-293-3985 ext. 4060.
Company
C.onstruction
needs one or two experienced workers with building
trades skills. Send resumes
outli ning experience and
references to CLA 570, c/o
Gallipoli s Dally Tribune,
P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis.
OH 4563 1.
-,-------Driver make this yeE!r a suecess!
Up to 38¢ CTM. No forced
NE or canada . one year
OTA, 23 years old . COL
with Hazmat required. No
loading or unloading. Guar·
anteed home policy. 2000

MRIDDAdvocata
Protective services representative JXtSition, full·tlme,
in the Gallipolis office.
Bachelor's degree In human
services or related lield and
experience In mental retardation required. Send fax
resume to:
Mary Helen Swan
Advocacy &amp; Protectho'e
Services, Inc.
4110 North High Street
1st floor
Columbus, OH 43214
Fax: (614)262 -9752

EOEIAA
REGISTERED
SONOGRAPHER
Abdominal Sonographer,
registered or registry eligible
for a full -time or part-time
position, in an outpatient diagnostic center. E~~:cellent
salary (negotiable.) Fringe
benefits include Holiday &amp;

Absolute Top Dollar: u .s .
ver, Gold Coins, Proof·
s Is,
Diamonds, Gold
ngs.
u .s . Currency,~T. S . Coin Shop, 151 Sec·
ollli,Avenue, Gallipolis, 740~6-2842 .
or newer conventlonals, vacation Paw. 401 K pro·
Owner operators welcome, gram and Health insurance.
PTLB00-848-0405.
Hours are Monday thru Friday, with no after hours call.
.Due to Recent Earn good money wortc lng Send resume to CLA 571 ,
from home. PT or FT, $300· c/o Gallipolis Dally Trlbuno,
Growth
$800 weekly possible. Send P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis,
SASE 10: Empire USA, 782 OH 45631 .
Cap Lane, Columbus, OH
43085
Truck Drive,., Immediate
hire . class A COL required.
'· • Sales Con sultant
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT excellent pay, experience
PAY! Assemble Products ar required. Earn up to
• • Part s Dep artment
Home. Celt Toll Free· 1·800· $1,000. per WHk.Call304• Counter Sal es
467·5566 Ext. 12170
675-4005
. • Parts Depart ment
. D elivery
FOittr Care give,. NHdr Vinton Baptist Church Is
ad, Become a therapeutic currently seeking to employ
: • O il &amp; Lu be
foSter ca re giver. You will be a General Secretary/ Re tec hnic ian
Reimburse $30-$45 a day ceptionist on a part-ti me
tor the care of child in your oasis. The mi nimum re home. Training will begin quirements will be that of a
January. For more informa- high school diploma. ~xperi·
tion call Oasis Therapeutic ence is a plus. Successful
Care givers Network, Alba- candidate will need to be
ny, Oh. toll free 1-877 -325· pleasant, polite, and able to
1558
work we ~ with others as a

~

POSITIONS
. : AVAILABLE

Send Resume to

The B est Pr oducts.
Th e Best B en efits.
T h e B est W ork
, E n vironment.

Help wanted caring for the
elderly, Darst Oroup Home.
now paying mlriimum wage,
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am·
5pm, 3pm-t 1pm, 1t pm7am. call 740-992 -5023.

part of a te am. Please send
resume to: Vinton Baptist
Church, Attn: Board of
Trustees, P.O. BOx 38, Vln·
ton. OH 45686. Must be received by February .5, 2003.

Georges Portable
don't haul

I

II

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recomm ~ nds that
you do business with .people
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mail until
you have lniJestlgated the
offering

r

MONEY
rol.oAN

Second Chance Financial.
Looklng tor a Second
Chance lor borrowing manev or re-establishing credit
We can help. Good or bad
credit accepted. Call toll

~FBroBe~
. ~1~-8~66;-~5;76;-j(46;8i,:;5:;:"'Fo,I­
low the

L.,-...0
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888·582-3345
1&lt;1 \ I 1 .., I \I I

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@ mydai lyregister.com

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

iiriltiPa==::;:===;;;:;
HOMES
~.w-..,;IORillilaiiSiiiALEIIIi-.,.1

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes sel up
for Immediate possession
.all with in 15 min . of downtown Gallipolis. Rates as
tow as 6%. (740}446-32, 8.
1 acre. rlverlro nt. brick and
vinyl, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, 2
fireplaces, hardwood floors,
approximatel y 2000 sq.h.
Full basemen!, St60,000.
(740)446-0538
Hurricane 3br. 2ba Brick
and Vinyl, Mid Entry w/plenty of storage. 1 car garage,
large lot. Owner will finance
wfth $20,000 down, $800.
Per month. (304)582~5640

central air w/heat pump .
aerator system, 2 decks ,
new roof in fall 2001 . Country setting, only 10 minutes
from town . (740)446-7704

room, di ning room den .
mOdern kitchen , 2 car garage, hp, all e!EtCtric, within
walking distance Pomeroy
Golf Course. 3 acres,
$118,000,
call
Su san
3 Bedroom newty remod· (740)985-4291 , work 740eled, In Middleport, call Tom 446-7267.
Anderson after 5 p.m.
Rental house for sale locat992-3348
ed at 1410 Lewis st Pt.
3 bedroom, t bath, 2 story Pleasanl Make offer , call
home in Pomeroy, good after 5pm. 304-727-3318
condition,
fireplace .
· t998 3 b
St.ICk bUl·1I m
ed·
(740)992-9492
. 1•
3
b
lh
room ,
a f1rep ace, over
.
$104
900
3 bedroom , 2 baths in- 1 .cr. , as kmg
•
·
ground pool, 2 car garage. (740)983 0730
•
More information and phoM~ILER
s"ALEOMES
tos located online at:
I'U
.
www.orvb.com t0#011003B
or call (740)446-4262 for
details.
1988 14x70 3 bedroom, on
rented lot in Camp Conley,
3 bedroom, single bath , WV, $7,500 Owner !inanelarge family room , fireplace , ing
with $3,000 down .
large living room, complete (740)245-567t
new kitchen, utility room, 2 - - - - - - - - car garage unattached. 10 1989 Claylon Westwlnd,
miles South Gallipolis, in 2BR, W/0 hookup, range,
Eureka, close to Locks &amp; refrigerator &amp; electric fu rDam. Phone (740)256-6949 naco. Located on a rented
(740)256-1243 Serlous In· tot a 641 lake Dr., Rio
quires Only.
Grande, 7 minutes walk to
3 bedroom- t-1 12 bath, campus. $10,000 OBO.
w/new 30x30 addition. Lo· ~(6;_1_4:..)2_14;_-.:c5.:.:15;_1_ _ _ _
cated on 12 acres with 199S Skyline, 3BR , vinyl
stocked pond. Clty Schools, siding,
shingled
root,
(740)446·890t
$2t ,OOO OBO. (740)3888932
4
BEDROOM
HOME ·
Forecloeure, only $14,900, 2001 t4x80 Oakwood, 3
Won't 16st. 1-B(X)-719-3001 BR, 2 bath, all appliances
Ext. F144
Included. We 'll make down
payment, you take over
4 bedroom Brick Home in payments of 5370 month, or
the country on 4-acre lot b\Jy for $22,000. (216)351
(740)37~-2862
7088 or (2t6)257-t485.

Ir

l..&lt;m&amp;
ACREti.GE

I

w/city water, large lots for
Double &amp; single Wide mobile home. Vinyl siding &amp;
shingle roof only. Owner tlnanclng w/down payment.
$22,000. (304)5S2·5640

•Gooo;iliiiiii0--_.1.

er/ Dryer Hookup, Stove
and Refrigerator. (740)4411519.
--------1 or 2 BR Appt. for Rent,
Utilities Pd., ~ o Pets
992-5858

Rl '- I \I '

;;::::;~===~
~r 10

ul'o............

:roRo'-""-

~.oo--·rv-~"""'=0:.'-.,J
-3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $19gfMo., 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR. For lislings, 800-319·
1

_33_2_3_E_x_t._t_709_.-

-

--

1 SA House in Racine, with
water, sewer. trash $325.
M h N p
{7
oot ' o ets 40)992·
5039
c

Bedroom suit, ~d.$, droP
leaf table &amp; chairs, recliners,
roll-a~ away bed, hospital
bed, microwave. (740)446·
9742

For Sale: Reconditioned
washers, dryers and refrig2 bedrooms - 6 month lease
erators.· Thompsbns ApPII•
Garage Apartment, utilities anee. 3407 Jackson Ave~
paid, no pets, no parties. nue, (304)675-7388:
$550 month plus $550 deGood Used Appllahcea, Aeposit (740)446-024t
condltioned and Guaran3 bedroom, bath, washer/ t8ed. Washers,. ' Dryers,
dryer hookup, no pets, Can- Ranges, and Refrigerators,
tenary Road. Call (740)446· Some start at $95. Skaggs
9395 after 5pm.
Appliances, 76 Vine St.,
(740)446-7398
4 rooms and bath, stove/ refri9erator. Utilities paid, Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
$400 month. 46 Olive Chapel Raed, Port..-; Ohio.
Street. (740)446·3945
(740)446-7444 1-877-830- '
BEAUTIFUL
•p•RT- 9162. Free Estfrmit;lil: EasY
"' "'
MENTS AT BUDGET I'Rt· flnanclng,~dayt~ ~
CES AT 'JACKSO:N ES· cash. • VIsa!&lt;:. Master Card . .
TATES, 5? w_.twood Drive . Offite- ·little · $ave
. alot. ' . :

3 br. house at 2105 North
Main St. no pots, $425.00 +
dep. 304-675-2749
from $297 to $383. Walle. to
shop &amp; movies. Call 7403br. House located In Ma- 446-2568. 'Equal Housir)g
son , VW. $495. + Utilities. 0
.
No Pets. (304:) 773 _5AA 1
pportumty.
""
c lean warm 2 b•"room Furnished 3 rooms + bath,
cru

'

~o~e In =eroy, w/opl!'c; ~~~~~~~cl~ande:siiert!:

'

3901

i

r

lage Manor and Ai"Verside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $276·$348. Gall 74Q.
992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

0502.

PROM gowns- Hvtn droll·
ee: 2 ploce, eequln, bouffant
otyiH, alzH Jr. 7-9,
mad/tall.
· Reaoonably
prtcld, (740)1185-3820
WIIIrllne Special: 314 200
PSI S21 .00 Por tOO; 1' 200
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All
Bruo Compreealon Fittings
In Stock.
RON EVANS ENTERPRI!I!I Jackoan, Ohio, 1·800537-9526

r

BuiwiNG
SUI'!&gt;uE&lt;i

Faur Wheeler, 2000 Honda
Recan, $2000. Farm tractor,
2000 Ford, $4000. Call
1740)258-6883
--------Jahn DHro Compact Traators. Financing 81 low 11
4.5% and 0% dawn with
John Deere Credit Appro·
val. Carmichael Equipment,
Inc .
Huntlnglan,
WV
(304)736·2120. Qalllpollo,
OH (740)446-2412

, ·
sofa &amp; cl\air, $3gQ.,
91&lt;12 c8rpet,· room :eJz!3 SSO.
Mollohan Carpet &amp; Furniture
Ch
17 40 )446 7
- "'14· · fa(~ . apel R
. oad 1 Porter. OH, .

c

.;_..;:c;.:J..~~~;,...--

TupperWare constiti8nf.'now
In Galllpcillo. Ta•l8lim' how
you can get Yree'Tupp9;~
ware, Call HBath'et ·Hively
(740)".3136 . 'o ·
~
·
Used furniture itOro, t 30
Bulaville Pike.
sell mal·

r
·

laid DHil
You could be
eligible for FRE~
help gBttlng
back to work
For more Information,
call Gallla Mei9s
Communily Aclton
AIJ'lncy
(740) 992-2222 or

L.-iliiiiillliliillill-,.1

Tlma for Frost Seeding Pasture and Hay Fleldl. ATV
Broadcast Seeders, 12 voR,
High Ouallty. Fila mast ATV,
$295. Jim's Farm Equip·
mont, (740)446-2484

j

I50-BOt

LlvlmocK

Shaullo, (740)949·
2908 or (740) 949-2017

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
wfndow11, llntolo, etc. Claude Boarding, Training, CondiWlntaro, Rfo Gran&lt;fe, OH tioning, Indoor an&lt;! Outdoor
riding tacilltiaa, trails and
Ceii740-24S-5121.
wash bay. 1-740-446-47t0

ep, high mlleo, $2500 OBO,
(740)742-4011
-------94 Mltsublehe Montero,
SUV. Sunroof, all .auto, 7
ooator, 100,000 mllas. 4·
wheel drive. Call (304)6757965
79 Ford F·250, 351·M en- 85 SUburban $2500, 4• 4 •
glne, automatic, 410 rear 454 cubic Inch, automatk:,
gesrs, 93,000 miles. Sarna
bed rust. (740)256-t925
very
good
condition.
(740)379-22t8
87 Corvette, 28,850 mllea, - - - - - - - white with red Interior. For sale ar lrade. 1990 AsAlwaya garaged, loaded. tro van Ext., will trade lor
email car or pklk-up lruck of
1740)37g.2218
equal value 304-675-54 t 3
96 Hyundal Accent GT,
4cly, auta, air, sunroof,
MOIORCY&lt;U!S
73.000 mlloe, uklng $2450, ,
•
(740)99,2-2952
1988 Yamaha Blaster 4
98 Chevy Lumina, 39,000 wheeler. runs &amp; looks good,
actual miles, nice $5000 rebuilt motor &amp; stainless
firm. {740)379-9047
Fmh pipe, $1100, (740)992-

2001 lladge Durango SLT,
fronV roar air, Dual climate
control, 3rd uat, auto, keyloll entry, PIW, P/L, nerl
baro, ralnguards, 39,000
miles,
$20,500
OBO.
(740)448-6882

I

.ANriQuls · . ·i. •

Buy or sell. Rlv8rii)'e A'n~­
qu~s. 1124 East ~In ·9rl
SR t24 e. Pomerw. 740992-2526. Russ : Moore.
owner.

~=~;~~$~
1 Northman snow blade~

a

grav~ wagons, (two. · hun~
dred bushel). Please· . call

(740)245-5788 .lor monil.ln·
formation .
·
2 Railroad L.antems': 11 Coal
miners dinner bucket, Waterloo Wonder bopkL C&amp;!ll •
(740)446-829~ ' 'I . '

Twin Rivers Tower Ia ac· 2 three drawer -c~t. one
VCR chest, ~- e~tcf\ for ~fl·
ceptlng applications tor of !hem, (740)992-1909 ·
waiting list for Hud·sub·
sized, 1- br, apartment, cal l Affordlble • Con~Otent
675-6679 EHO
WOLFF TANNII:IQ·!iii!D6
Low Monthly Investments
Two • 2 BA apanments
Home Oelive~,
'
available In Syracuee $200 .
FREE
Color
9at~P,Q ·
deposit $330. per month .
Call Today 1·800·{~!10158 .
Rent Includes Water, Sewer
www.np.etstan.CO"'
.,
&amp; Trash, No Pots, appllcalion, Reference &amp; Suftlclent Brand new' Radio ·Shack·
Income to Qualify 74()..378· karaOke machine (onty Use
2 times) playa Clll'i , hali•2 tape decks, chango key ·&amp; ·
pltch. 4 microphones &amp; a
splitter, largq ,opoal&lt;,er. pal&lt;\
$400 wfll " tako $3op,
Mabile home apace lor rsnt (740)992-9579.
•
'
In Middleport, $t20 per
JET
rnonlh, (740)992-3194
AERATION MOTO,RS _,
Trailer space for rent. $125 Repaired, Now &amp; Rebu~t In
per month, pi Us deposit Stock. Call Ron EVans, 1·
Priest's Trailer Park. Witer 8()(]-537-9528.
Paid. Call (740)446·36#

I

r:;)

- - - - - - - 9966

-

98 Chrysler Cirrus LXI,
57,000 miles, $5250 080. 1998 Yamaha Kodiak, 4
(740)258-1618 (740)256- wheel drive, good cond~ion,
1252
$2900 080, (740)992-!1512

1.

fljSPfQ r/L.llrff,l

~}

f.&lt;

'

Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

(740) 446-1018

33795 'Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
Pomeroy Eagles

BING02171
&amp;

Every Thursday

PC DOCTOR

~

Sunday

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds

sllrt

6:30 1st Thursday
of every month
AU pack $5.00

We Makl HOUH Calle

750

East State Street Phone
Athens, Ohio

Nodces In Newspapers.
Your RJaht to Know,. Deliv-ered Rlahl to Your Door~

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump 6rinding
• Bucket Truck

(304) 675•5282
www.wvpcdr.com

octorOwv dr.com

MANLEYS
HARTWELL
SELF STORAGE
STORAGE
97 Beech St.
lOxlO
middleport, OH
10x20

(10'K10' &amp;10'K20r)

740-992·1717

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

Sl Rt. 7 Cioeglein Rd.

BISSEll

Best SeT1!ice at
the Best Price

Pomeroy

Dean Hlll

New&amp;Uaed

4715 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 215271

1-800-822-0417
"W.Vs #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

"I lost my shirt
In the stock
market!"

, • Replacement

"Not mel

Windows • Roofing
COMMEAClAL and
Open 9am-!ipm

Rli:SIOENTIAL
PUBUC NOTICE
The Melga County
Ohio Chlldran Truat
c-mm.. Ia taking
application• lor the
Melga County allocetlon of the Ohio
ChHdran'a Truat Fund
to Ill ulld lor pro-g r - thet prevent
abuH and neglect of
children.
The funding period
CDVtrl llala llecal
y11; 2003, ending
June 30, 2003.
Priority will be
given to 'program•
that pramohl perwnllll
blhavlora that lelcl to
the hMithy and poll·
live •valop1111nt of
chlldran and htmlflea.

Other kllnllllld

com--

munity - · arw progrime that provide
tnlnlng and aupport
to tHO and alngle
per1nta,
p1r1nt1ng
education tor htmlllea
with atuclenta at rlak·
of hiving problema
stud programs that
promote
poaltfve
IDCIII
blllllvlora
Including anger man11811111111 and rallllon:
ahlp aklll building.
Mor1 Information
aboid the fund• and
the grwnl eppllcllfon
Ia avalllllll by calling
tha Mllge County
Comml11lonera
at

(740) 11112•2885.
In order to be conel.red lor funding,
an orlgiNII completed
appllclltlon and two
coplea ahould be
r1turned In a aealed
-•lope to the Malga
County
Comm1111onera
by
1 :00 p.m. on the 20th
-d1y of February,

2003.
11) 30 12) 5 2TC

PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
CIH Number:
01 CV·145
lllnlftcfll OhiD Inc.,
dill lllnlftcfll

~Co. of
Ohio, lllntllf
VI

r - --

Timothy Wlllllm

&gt; ,.....,....-\)
~

Wlllll, ......

In purauance of an
All11 Order of Ball
directed to me from
. .ld court, In the
lboVI lillftllci!ICtiDn,
I witt olfw for aafl at

public auction II the

door of the Melga
County Courthouae,
Pomeroy, Ohio on
Thursday,
March
27th, 2003, II 10:00
a.m • . the following
dncrlbld reel 1111111:
Situated
In the
Townahlp of SUtton,
County of Mllga llld
Stahl of Ohio:
Elling the Eellaldl
of One Hundred Acrw
Lot numbered Two
Hundred Elghly·lhNI
(283), In Townlhlp
Two
(2),
Range
Twelve 1121 of the
Ohio
Company'•
Purchaee.
Immediately on the
South
aide
of
Bowman'• Run where
aeld line CI'OUIII oald
Run; thence down
oald Run with the
meandering• theraol
to the Public Roed
leading from Racine
to Cheater; thence
with aald Road to the
Ohio River; thence up
oald River to the
Southaaat corner ol
the above deacrlbld
Lot numbered Two
Hundred Elghty·thrae
(213) tD I ltake lland-lng be-n two elm
traaa
marked
aa
pointers (or,,.., that
were once and 10
marked);
thence
North to the place of
beginning, contain·
lng alx (8) acreo,
more or leaa. Save
and except tho Coal
underlying
aald
premiHa.
EXCEPTING AND
RESERVING
1.171
acre• conveyed to
the State of Ohio by
daed recorded In
Volume 283, page
245, Malga County
Daecl Recorda.

F U R T H E R
EXCEPTING
AND
RESERVING to the
Grantora Robert 0.
Wlllla, Sr. 1nd Shirley
A. Wfllll, the folloW·
lng dllcrlbed raaf

-·:

Situated In Melge
County,
Sutton
· Townlhlp, Still of
Ohio and being a port
of 100 Acre Lot No.
213, Town 2, R1n111
12, of the Ohio
Comp1ny'a
Purcheu.
Beginning lor rwf·
arwnce
It
the
Northeaat corner of
100 ecrl Lot 213 II I
celcufeted
corner;
thence
01 dig. 48'
17"
2103.05 ,...
to the true p i - of
beginning of the 101~

s.

w.,

lowing deecrlbecl par·
Appralaed
at:
eel, uld point being
$37,000.00
TERMSOFSALE:
merlrld with an Iron
To be auld for no 1111
plnaet;
Thence continuing then two--thlrda of the
along the lot line
appraload value. Till
purchaaar(a)
shall
01 de. 48' 17" W.,
$5,000.00
247.83 faet to the low depoalt
with the aherlff at the
water mark on the
time of aald oafe.
north benk of the
Ralph True8111,
Ohio River, paaalng
Sheriff
an Iron pin set at
FRANK
171.23 faet;
&amp;WOOLDRIDGE CO.,
:Thence following
L.P.A., D.L. Maino,
the low water mark on
Jr., and Laurance B.
the north bank of the
Landon, Attorneys
Ohio River, N. 33 dog. ·
for Plalnllfl, 800
40' 15"
210.95 feet
South Pearl St,..l,
to 1 point;
Columbus, Ohio
Thence continuing
43206, Tale: 614-221·
along 1111 low wider
1682.
m~rk on "the north
(2) 5, 12, 19, 26, (3) 5
benk of the Ohio
Rl-, N. 33 dig. 40'
15" W., 105.18 flit to
PUBLIC NOTICE
a point;
Thence continuing
A hearing hal been
1long the low weter
set for Thursday,
mark on the north
February 13, 2003, at
b•nk of the Ohio
1 :00 p.m. at the
Rl-. N. 39 dig. 47'
Commissioners'
52" W., 67.97 flit to a
Olllce which Ia local·
point;
eel on the third floor
Thence leaving the
of the Court House.
north blink of the
The purpoae of thla
Ohio River, N. 53 dog.
hlerlng 18 to dlacuaa
01' 31" E., 15.35 feet
to an Iron pin aet on
New Craw Road •• a
Townohlp/Publlc
the South Right of
Road
In
Cheater
Way line of State
Townohlp. Everyone
Route 124, paaalng
Ia welcome to attlnd
an Iron pin 111 at
thle hearing.
45.35 feel;
Thence along the
(2) 5, 12
Southern Right of
Way of State Route
PUBLIC NOTICE
124,
49 dig. 14' 22" .
PUBLIC NOTICE
E., 141.22 feat to an
NOTICE: Ia hereby
· Iron pin aet;
given
that
on
Thence continuing
Saturday, February 8,
along the Southern
Right oi, Way of State . 2003, at 10:00 a.m., a
public aale will be
Route 124, S. 31 dig.
held at 211 Weat
30' 48" E., 52.54 feat
Second
Street,
to the true place of
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
beginning.
parking lot of The
Containing 0.902
Farmera Bank and
ecrea, more or leu.
Savlnga
Company.
Parcel balld· on a
The Farmer• Bank
ourvey perlormlcl by
and
Savings
PlonHr Englnaerlng
Company Ia aefllng
and Surveying, LLC,
for Cllh In hand or
Iron ptna all by
certified check the
Robert H. Rouah PE,
following collateral:
1992 Ford Taurua
Bearing•
ahuwn
F
1
5
0
era to an eaaumed
1 FACP52U6NG21311
meridian and, are
1
uaed
to
denote
1881 Ford Eecort
angle• onlj.
1FAPP11J6MW3B387
Subject to 111 rlghta

s.

w.,

s.

Pss-me.

of way, ••••menta,
la1111 end reatrlc·
Ilona of record.
Permanent p~rcel
number: .
18·
00053.001
Property addreaa:
41240 State Route
124
RIICine, Ohio 45771
Prior
lnotrumant
reference :
.1iill000031183

7
The Fermara Bank
end
Savfnge
· Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reaerv11 the
right to bid et thla
aale, and to withdraw
the ebove colleteral
prior to aale. Further,
The Farmer• Bank
and
S1vlng1
Company
reaarvaa
the right to reject any

or all blda aubrnltted.

"'"' tltiml !eJ, rm In ~0010:'

pic k~p

Ctll ~for I ll y&lt;;~~~ r (O~lj)llltl n«dli

FREE ESTIMATi:S

(740)

The
above
deacrlbed collateral
will be aold "as fa· ..__ _ _ _ _~m,~

74D-992-7599

446-1812

Suvice Plam!

Hill's Self
Storage

matlon, or for an
appointment
to
Inspect
coll111eral,
prior to aala data con·
t.a ct
Cyndla
Rodriguez at 992·
2136.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
.
740-948-2217

PUBLIC NOTICE

John M. H118flllriY, at
al
Dafendanta
Cau No. 02 CV 124
NOTICE BY PUBLI·
CATION
To: John U. Haggerty,
whose laat known
addraaa Ia 2211 Parry
Ridge,
Netaonvllle,
OH 45764, present

address

unknown:

and
Cheryl
Haggarty,
whose laat known
addreas fa 2211 Perry
Rl~ge,
Nelaonvllle,
OH 45764, praoent
addrwtl unknown.
You are hereby
nodlled that you have
been
named
Dafendanta In the
action entitled The
Peoples Banking &amp;
Trust
Company,
Plaintiff, va. John M.
Haggarty,
at
al. ,
Dafandanta.
This
action
hae
bean
assigned ca.. No.
02-CV-124, and Ia
p111dlng In the Curt of
Common Pleas of
Malga County, Ohio.
The object of the
complaint damande
judg1111nt agalnat the
Defendant, John M .
Haggarty,
on
Ita
Second Clelm In the
•um of $45,961.19,
plua lntareat at a rata
ol $11.14 par day
from November 3,
2002, In order to lore·
cloae upon mortga111
upon
real
eatlte
located at 8115 Oliver
Streat and 677 Oliver
Street,
Middleport,
OH 45760, and 735

Beech
Strut,
Middleport, OH45780,

Take the PAIN
cut of PAINTINGI
Let me :k 1: f•or y~:- u '

IIU.S
flllllY
COimiCTIDI

UIIA'S PIIITII

Building aver 30 }'eurs
Footers, Foundation,
Add-Ons, New Homes,
Pole Barns, Concrete.
Elcclric, Plumbing

(2) 5, 6, 7

VI

My money is wllh
Rocky Hu~lnouronce
ond Flo- s.vtc.,
Box 189, Middleport. OH
Phone : 843-5264."

A.sk us abour our

where Ia", with no
axpraoaad or Implied
warranty given.
For further lnfor·

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
THE PEOPLES
BANKING &amp; TRUST
COMPANY,
Plillntlff,

(7410)~;93--66'711

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

BUILDERS IDC.

Publl~

TFN

~~~
HighBl Dry
Seff-Storage

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get5FREE

Reading the
newspaper keeps
you informed and
in tune with
what's
happening now,
whether
it's across the
globe or in your
.own backyard.

Cellular

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

·

Modem 1 bedroom apartment (740)446.0390
Now ~•ak1ng
·
AppI'!Cations35 West 2 Bedroom Town·
house Apartments, tnctudes
W
ater
Sewage, Trash,
$350{Mo., 74G-446·0008.
Tara Townhouse Apartments, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
tio, Start S3S5/Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus Secunty Deposit
Required , Days: 74~ 6 ·
3481 ;· Evenings: 740-367-

Wllkwayo. L&amp;L SCrep Mat·
all Open Monday, Tuellday,
Wodnoaday &amp; Frldoy, 8am·
4:30pm. CIGHd Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)448-7300

New

We

I

Arevou

rio

r

·a.

o, uy,
I a mo., g
quirad. (740)446-15t9
Ore ereb~-'es , 7o40h)69B-71244Bid Furnished small 1 bedroom
ne IINroom ouse n
•
apt Close to PVH an&lt;!
we II wllh reI rIgerat or &amp;
stove. Gas heat with now . shopping. No Pots, No
carpet For more Inform&amp;· Smokers: $270. + el'"'rlc.
don, please call Sharon &amp; References. $200. Deposit
ScoH Howell at 1740)388• (304)675-2651
lresses, bunk beds, .dreso9241
Garage apartment for rent, ers, couches, appliances,
bedroom suites, r,C.iners.
u .._. H
2 bedroom, stove, refrlgera- Grave .
monuments.
!TIUDILE
OMEli
·
FOR lbNr
tor furnished. Water paid, (740)446·4782 Gallipolis,
$275 month, $t50 deposit OH.
• 'i
(740)446-9061
.
141170, 2 bedroom, total
r

Century Homes, Holley and sands good unt•'I February (740)742-2714
Assoc. (740)286-HOME
29 . 1740)446- 3093
14x80 trailer located at
Brick Ranch , 2 bedroom. 2 ~Get Your Money's Worth" Glenwood, stove, retrldg.,
bath, garage, on river, 5 at Coles Mobile .Homes, St. microwave furnished 304miles south of Gallipolis. At. 50 East ot Athens. Deliv- 576·9991 .
(740)44t-88t7
.
.
er•es, set-ups, eJCcavatmg, 14~~:80 trailer, 3 bedroom. 2
foundations, sewage systams, driveways, heating bath, nice. yard, porch, star·
and cooling along with parts age building, central air,
and service . You should ac· Porter area, cl_ose to hospital, $400 mo &amp; $400 deposcept nothing less. Since
it. You pay all utilities, no
1967 we are Cole's Mobile pets. Applications available
All real eallte adwertlalng Homes where you ~aet 1403 Eastern Avenue, Gallillhle newspaper Ia
Your Money's W0!1h .~
lipolis. Call (740)446-4514
aub)ect to tht Federll
Land Home Packages avail· day or (740)446-3248 night
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
able.
In
yo ur
are a, for more Information.
which make• 'It Illegal to
{740)446-3384.
advertlae "any
2 bQdroom mobile home,
preference, llmltlltlon or
14
70
3
b
l2blh
0
1
Spring
Valley area. Extra
New x ·
r
· nY
t:Macrlmlnatlon btlaed on
$995 down and only nice, ell electric. $350 a
race, color, religion, •••
$197.62 per month, Call month, $250 deposit. Call
tamlllalltatua or natlonll
Nikki
740-385·767t
(740)441-6954 ar (304)675or~ln, or any Intention to
2900
m1k1 any auch
New 2003 Doublewide. 3
preferenct~, limitation or
BF\,8 2 Balh. Only $1 695 3 bedroom mobile home for
dlammln.tlon."
down and &amp;295/mO. .1-SDO- rent, no pets , (740)992691 ·6n7
5858
~~:-:-~----Thla neweplper will not
knoWingly 1ccept
Nice lots available for up to Beautiful River View Ideal
' advenleamentl tor real
16x80 mobile homes, $11 5 For 1 Or 2 People, Relere neat1te which II In
water included, (740)99 2- ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos2t67
ter Trailer Park, 740-441 violation of the law. Our
0181 .
raactara are hereby
Informed th.. 111
Trailer for sale with lot . iZ;j~"":'~~........-.,
dweUingeltd'lfitiHd In
14x80, very good cond
APARI'IIIENI'S
thll M'Nipiper' are
heal pump. prlvate lat .
FOR RENr
porches , very reasonably L
______,::~-..,1
available on In equal
opportunity bani.
priced to sell Hartford 304·
882-2389
Large 2 BA, 1 Bath Ranch
LoTs&amp;
on Ann Drive, 10% down ,
ACREAGE
owne r financed , $72,000.
(740)446-4784 (304)875Patriot area, 20+ wooded 1 bedroom apartment, kltch·
2164
acreg, county water &amp; elec- en, BR. LA, Bath , $275
Pomeroy, spacious, 3 bed- tric available , homesite .
(740)387-70t5. No pets.
room, 1 bath, large 'lot. Borders Wayne National
$22,500. Discount for cash. Forrest, excellent hunting, Downtown Gallipolis, apart(304)837· 7507 (740)709- $38,000 (740)379-9141
ment for rent. 1 or 2 bed·
0064
room. (740)868-7 t 74

~

Hondas, Che1JYS, etc! Cars/
Trucks from $500.
For
listings 1-800-719-3001 ext.

"--..i::oo:r=zliiliiiiiiiiliti-,.1 _

~~ Ir'" '10~HOltiEI OW; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;. ; ;;;.;;I.

5 bedrOom hoUse on tO Blowout sale on all Single electric, $300 a month, Gracious living. 1 and 2
acres, Rio Grande. Call Section homes save thou- $1 50 deposit, no pets, bedroom apartments at Vii-

Q.

POUCE IIIPOUNDSI

riO

2 BR wllarge rooms, oak New home- 4 bedroom, 2 Mason Co. 17 miles from 1 Bedroom Apartments ...__ _
cabinets, laundry room , bath, llvingroom, family- Milton exit of 1-64 tiE'i ar At 2 Starting at $289/mo, Wash- '

0
0

••~

.-,u

use, runs great, looks great,
1988 Ford Bronco 11, auto- S7500 jOBO.. (740)7424011
matlc, new rims, new tires.
.
79,000
original
miles. -,--,, - -.- . - - $2250 (740)446-7730
~
Slralos, 17 6 bass boat,
·
black &amp; silver with white bot·
tom, gray carpet, 120 hp.
1994 Ford Ranger Splash. Evinrude trolling motor, reelrtend cab, great condition, bultt last year from lack of
4 wheel drlva, amlfm casuse. runs great, looks great,
se.tte premium sound, alu$7500 080., (740)742·
minum tool boiC, bed liner, 40H
$6500 080, eveningS
"I In H I "'
{740)949-1014

au

POLICIES: Ohio VaHey-Publlthlng reserves the right to edit, reject, or e~ncelany ad at 1ny time. Enor1 mt11l be r~ on tht ftrlt day of
Trtbunt-S.ntlnei·Regltter wtll be.rtepontlble ror no more than the co11 of the •pace occupied by the error and only the flrt11nsertlon. We
any Iota or expense 1'-t resultt from the publlcalion or omiPion of tn advertisement. Correction will be made in the flrll awaUable edition.
are always confldantlal. • Current rate card appllea. • AH real estate advertlnmentl art tublect to the Federtl Fair Housing ACI of 1968.
accepts only help Wlnted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We will not knowingly accept any advertlllng In violation of the law.

r

~---iiiiiiiiiiiiiil-_.1

94 Stratos, 17'6'!- ba:ss boat,
black &amp; silver with white bOt·
tom, gray carpet, 120 hp.
Ev1nru
· de tro Ill ng motor, rebuilt last year trom lack of ·

price $9987 .00; Proclelon 1964 Chevy S-10 E~nded 97 F
Bl
Past Frame Bldrs, 740.742·
...
-150 ock 4x4 XLT,
HOME
4011 , 1-800-396-3026
cab 4x4, 2.8, 4 speed, ale, now
tires,
$tO.aoo.
I!III'ROVEMENili
Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp; IIIII'--~----. good cond ition. $1800. ~(711!i40~)3;;,79-;;.;9t~2;;5_~-....
8•m-6pm. (304)875-6325
Repalrt. Problema? Need
BASEMENT
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr.
l'lmi
'\'.4-ANSWDs&amp;
740-446_.525
1994air,
Buick
pow· ·
WATERPROOFING
·
er,
tilt, Rogal,
cruise.allam/fm
• - - - - - - · Unconditional
lifetime guar·
- - -- - - - - - AKC Boxer pups, 7 weeks cassette. 146,000 miles, in 1984 s.10 Blazer, 4x4 , vs, antee. Local references furJacqueline's "Uvtn• Dolll" old, shots current, Brindle greal condition, asking 5-speed, air, tilt, runs good, nished. Established 1975.
PrHentlng Apple Valley wnh beaU1IIul markings. $3,000, (740)992-()064
high
mllee ,
$ 1OOO. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
) 79(740 )441 «43
0870, Rogers Basement
Dolls &amp; KRe. Custom mado
1740 3 2639
babies &amp; toddlers for that
1997 Cavalier, 20, automatWaterproofing.
epeclal eomeone, or make AKC, 7 month old Male ic, $2495; 1996 Grand Am,
your own, your wayl Many
h h
20, $3495. Three 1995 1966 Dodge Ram Charger,
1acee, eye colors, hair color 0 ac s und, housebroken, Grand Ams. 17 others in 4x4, full size, auto, lots of C&amp;C General Home Mainteall shots, $200, no checks. slock. COOK MOTORS now parts, driven dally, nence· Painting, vinyl sid&amp; styles, skin tones, and (7,.0)388-9824
bOdy otyloe ta choose from. -------~- (7A0)446-0103
(740)992-0622
lng, carpentry, doors, win·
Clothing also available. For sale- old English
dows, baths, mobne home
Compare to Mkldleton and Sheepdog pups, first shots 1997 Dodge Neon, 2DA, 2001 Jeep Cherokee Clas- repair and more. For tree
My Twlnn Cuddly Babies &amp; wormed, lovable, 5200 automatk:, air, 83,000 miles, sic 4 wheel dr.,3,400 miles· estimate call Chet, 740-992Call for mare information. each, call (740)98 5•9823
runs good, $2850 OBO. like new $t7,500.
::63:::23::::..
. - - - - -(740)448 111!10
.
(740)256-t233 (740)256- 304-882-3333
Cuslom Building &amp; RomodLab puppies, AKC. Proven 1875
--------hunting stock, Champion -~~------ 2002 Extended Cab Dera- efing for all your home reIn the business
New &amp; Used Heat Pumps- bklodline. Boxhead, Ottertail 1998 Dodge Neon 4dr. au· max Dually Diesel 3500 LT. pair needs,
Aeady to , a1c, 74 ,ooo miles. Rod. Abeolutely loaded. 6,800 far
over t 8 years , (740)992Furnaces. Free Estl~ $150. (740)•••-2288
~
t119
nowl
Excellent Condlllon. $3,800. mllea. $38,000. (304)875· .:.:.:.:__ _ _ _ __
matH. (740)446-6308
8am-8pm. (304)675-6325 . 3012 anytlmd.
Superior Home Mainte·
I \ In I " I 1'1'1 I I "
nance. We do all repairs on
.\ 11 \1..,1111 1,
NEW ANO USED STEEL
t 998
Plymaulh
Neon, 88 Chevy t500 4K4, 340, 5 hameo .. Carpentry, plumbSteel Beamo, Pipe Rebar jiijr;;;;;;;~~===;;; 70,000 miles, 4 door, auto- sp, high mllos, $2500 080, lng, floors, water tanke.
Far Concrete, Angle, Chan·
FARM
malic,
$2750
OBO. (740)742~11
(740)441-0113
nal, Ftal Ber, Steel Grallng
"~--40
89
17
For Drolna, Driveways &amp;
_ _)2S6_-B_t_ _ _ _ _
88 Chevy 1500 4K4. 340, 5

~egister

Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for s-undlays"

i

FORAuro;S,w;:

Lw--IOR-~~S~ALE--_.1

It

HELP WANIED

~;r,~;;;;;;;;:~;;:==:;

F10

r

Publication

I \ II'ICI, \ 11 \ I
.., I I ~ \ H I ..,

fer&amp; 5 to 9 mo. old . Call after

(740)9411-2169

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

Word Ads

Hog ready to bUU:her. Call 1978 Ford F-150, 4 wheel
anytime, leave message. drive, new motor, transmls·
(740)25~1652
slon transfer case , goQd
-~------- body, $1000. (740)388Pollai1 Hereford Bulls &amp; He I~ 0436

/11J11rurk.'t WoTk lt~duded

(740) 992-3320
Email: bladesOzaplink.com

HOWARD l.
WRITfSEl
*101011

PUBLIC NOTICE
which Ia mora fully
described In daeds
recorded In Volume
69, Page 729, Meigs
County
Official
Recorda, and Volume
334, Page 807, Meigs
County
Deed
Records, respectively; and costs of thla
action; that the mortgage be foreclosed
and that the IIana and
/or Interests In or on
said property, If any,
be marshalled and
the real eatate title
quieted and said

*HOME
IIIITEIIIICE
dEIMlESS

IlTTEII

7122/TFN

-&lt;-A ..... ,
'W

Plaintiff be paid from
the proceeds of the
aale.

'

any woy during'
1ho sudden death
of
my
mom,

You are required to
ana-lhe Complaint
within twenty-eight
(28) days after the

'

Florence
'
Ta
· Brian
Horkneoo
end
Rick Rule for

laar publication of
thla Notice, which will
be published once

'

lhelr comforting'
words and the
Cremeens ·

each week for alx (6)
succeaalve
weeks.
The laat publication

'

Funeral Hame
a Job wall done.
Aloo for oil the

will be made on the
12th day of March,
2003, and the twenty·
eight (281 daya for

'

prayero,
vlalto,,
phont
cello,
food, cordo, flaw·
oro.
ond
the'

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomamr. o n1o
' l

com- _,

fa'

Syracua aquad

· for their prompt
respanoo. Aloa ta
'
tho lodloa of tho'
Boptlot Church
lor tholr wondor·

Ohfo Rulea ol Civil '
lui moot
'
Na wardo con
PrOCedure, Judgment
by delauH will be ren- ·
oxpNoo
haw
dared agalnat you '1honkful wa oro'
and for the relief
to - h ond
demanded
In the
ovary ona ol yau.
Complillnt.

Electrical &amp;: Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Guttara
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and Porch Oecka

0 ..._..,
'W

wo would like t a '
thank everyone
who helped In

will

•
•
•
•

CARD . OF THANKS

'

answer

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

property sold In the
foreclosure
action
and all amount due

menca on that date.
In the case of your
failure to answer or
otherwlaa respond aa
requeated by the

YOUNG'S
ROBERT CARPENTER
BISSELL
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
CONSTRUCTION Remodeling
• New Garages

Moy Gad BloTheO

1

Marlene Harrison
Florence {
Clerk 01 Courts
Monica
Freemen, '
AdamsO
Deputy Clerk
Family {
(2) 5, 12, 19, 28, (3)5,
12
........,.~

Sonshine Circle
Bake Sale
February 8th , 8 am
Dorcas Church
Feb. 8 11 :00 am - 7:00pm
Donations accepted
Tuppers Plains F ire
Thank you for supporting'

i

�Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Rescue workers left in dark
by poorly marked addresses
DEAR ABBY: I am a
police officer in a small but
very busy community in New
England. I would like to
impress upon your readers the
imponance of having their
address numbers clearly visible on their homes and businesses. On too many occasions, pol ice, fire and rescue
personnel have wasted pre·
cious time trying to find the
exact location of an emer-.
gency because the homes and
businesses in the area were
poorly marked - or not
marked at all. This could
mean the difference between
life or death for the persons
requiring assistance.
The numbers must be large
enough to be seen from the
roadway in all types of weather and lighting conditions.
Their color must contrast
sharply with their background. Put them directly on
or immediately by .the front
door. If the structure-is set too
far back from the road, place
the number at the entrance to
the driveway. Make them
large enough to be read from a
moving vehicle. Individual
apanment or condo doors
should be clearly numbered or
lettered as well. It is a wise
in vestment that could save
your life. - PUBLIC SE.R·
VANT IN RHODE ISLAND

I

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
DEAR PUBLIC SERVANT: You have written an
importa1it letter, and I'm
pleased lo pass along your
message. Address numbers
should be posted on both
sides of one's mailbox, or
near a porch light so they 're
clearly visible at night. Do not
allow hanging plants, overgrown shrubs or partially
opened doors to obscure
them.
Once 9-1-1 is called, if at all
possible. station someone at
the door or in the yard to
guide the police, firefighters
or emergency medical personnel in. It's also a good idea to
give the 9-1-1 operator a brief
description of the house. A
IS -minute search for an
address during an emergency
can be the difference between
life and death.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 20something new mother, as are
most of my friends. On New

Year's Eve, my husband and I WATER, FLA.
DEAR HEARTSICK:" By
invited all our friends who
have small children over to notifying your guests about
ring in the new year iogether. the unfonunate incident, you
The idea was that the children have already done the respon(all 20 months and younger) sible thing. You have preventcould play and fall asleep, ed it from happening again.
while the adults sal back and
Dear Abby is written by
enjoyed themselves.
Abigail Van Buren, also
The nursery was packed . known as Jeanne Phillips, and
with little ones snug m their was founded by her mother.
makeshift beds, as their moms Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
and dads sang "Auld Lang Abby at www.DearAbby.com
Syne." A good time was had or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
by all.
Angeles, CA 90069.
The next day, I received a
phone call from my cousin,
who attended the party. He's a
police officer. He told me that
two of my guests liad reported
$50 stolen from their purses
sometime during the evening.
I was flabbergasted. All of the
guests who attended are so
close that my husband and I
would have trusted them with
our children's lives. Now we
don 't know what to do. I've
called each guest. No one else
had money stolen, and any
one of us would have gladly
lent funds to whoever took the
cash from those purses.
What do I do now, Abby? I
have lost trust in my closest
friends. I had scheduled play
dates for our children, but
have told the other mothers
not to bring their purses. HEARTSICK IN CLEAR·

Pidure yourself
in a new career.
Find it in the
Classifieds!

Answer to Prevloua Puul•

Intended
41 Writing
1 Necessities
!lui&lt;!
6 Like a lot 42 Equine
(2 wds.)
fodder
11 type of
46 Wolltooth
computer 48 Long-eared
12 Suave
animal
13 Power
49 D'upllcity
14 Fruit cake 52 Wane
Ingredient 53 Delphi's
15 Baseball
god
teams
54 Feel at
ACROSS

16 11 M•A•s•H"

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

home

actor
55 Campus
17 Mock
buildings
fanfare
56 Buy
18 Gulf st.
DOWN
19 Inventor
-Sikorsky
23 Postal
1 Craze
delivery
2 Over1urn
25 Yep's
3 Place to
opposite
fish
26 Excavate
4 clothing
29 Act cranky 5 Watch
32 Absorbed,
secretly
as costs
6 Network
33 Very long
7 Get hold of
time
8 Not close
34 Creepy
9 Lennon's
35 Impatient
wile
chuck
10 Stimpy's
36 Ear cleaner
canoon pal
38 --lor the 11 Advanced,
money
as cash
40 Petruchlo's 12 Pac-10

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 120

with them from time to time
and share what's going on.

Bv BERNICE BEDE Dsot

In !he year ahead a change
in cin.:umstanccs: will allow a
testy suc itli situation in your

life to resolve i1&gt;elf in an extremely favnrable way. You" II
come out of it ha ving better

relation ships with all in volved.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - If there is a friend who
can't come to you but with
whom yo u' d like to share
your time today. make arrangemems to go to him or
her. It' ll turn out to be more
fun thnnvou expect.

PISCES (Pcb. 20-March
20) - A way may be found
today to acquire something
material that you didn't think
you could afford. Keep your
eyes &lt;&gt;pen for a sale or someone who is se lling the item

second hand.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - A project that is important to you is also important to others. so don' t leave
them out of the loop. It' s OK
to work alone on it. but check
f&gt;.C\1..1~\..L\ ,1
~t\\o\1

'

TAURUS (April '20-May
20) - Condit.ions are extremely promising today for
using your talents. know-how
and past experiences to help
your life right now. Rely on
the pas! to brighten your future.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Should you see that a valued friend of yours could use
some support today. speak up
on his or her behalF in front of
others so that everyone knows
where your loyalties lie .
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Be explicit concerning
your ~oals or ambitions today
and cfon't let your focus' drift
off onto something else. Assertiveness coupled with determination pays large divi dends.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're more than up to handling challenging situations
today . This includes involvements in sports. your social
life, affairs of the heart or the
commercial world.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

J\.lfi1

-. Even though you may at .
first have doubts about a
chanf!e instituted by

out~ide

influences today. conditions
will work out to your ultimate
benefit in the long run . Hang
in there.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23)
- Should companions have

County budget
woes cited
as reason

"and be~inning April I, my
office will be forced to close
one day a week- Friday."
"This closing will not only
reduce service to the public
and taxpayers, but will reduce
the total salaries of my
· BY BRIAN J. REED
employees
by $611.22 per
Staff writer
semi-weekly pay period, a
reduction of $12,224.40 per
POMEROY
MeigS&gt; year," he added. "This is the
County Treasurer Howard total amount needed to bal·
Frank hopes reduced· office ance my budget."
hours will alleviate a shonfall
Frank's operating budget
in his operating budget.
. has been reduced from
Faced with a 15 percent cut $103,688.14 in 2002 to
in his office appropriation, $88,124.94 for 2003.
Frank announced Wednesday
"This budget is less than
his plans to reduce his office that for 1986," Frank said.
hours to a four-day week.
"That year, we had 15,000
"Budget constraints iQJhe par~els of land to work with
general fund have created~ 95 investment accounts.
serious problem for county Today, we have 25,000
government," Frank said, parcels and 180 accounts."

suggest ions for today"s activi-

ties that oppose your desires.
go along w1th the will of the
group. All will work out well
for you if you let the majority
rule.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - When there are material rewards at stake, your ambitions will be easily aroused
and come into play. Let your

to produce today.

WORD®©®CD@@@@®·
0000000

ment s might have to be man-

aged with a delicate hand and
much consideration today.
It'll be worth it, because everyone involved wi ll appreciate the way you handle thmgs.
CAI'RICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - It looks like you ·
could be in for a pleasant surprise ioday in relation to a
situation about which you had
great skepticism. The out·
come w1ll be better than you
had hoped it would.

0000000

@@®®®@(9
0
9.2~¥.9.¥.
@@@@®@®

....

JUDD'S TOTAL

0

0

3roLeneoTotal

~'be ~Iigible to~
IS

~~~~~gg !'~~~1;otol 0
.

. previous
Word
Scrim·
AVERAGE GAME 115-125

from the Rocksprings Rehab from Dan's in Middlepon; a $20
gift certificate and a wax
Center; a heart pendant on a ·
dipped
bear
POMEROY - One lucky chain _
f r o m
shopper at a Meigs County bus!·
Hearts
ness will be the winner of a
Valentine's Day basket to
remember.
.
The basket is filled with
gifts and gift certij~~
worth more than
All anyone has to

2nd DOWN

+JPo1n1s

AVERAGE GAME 160-170

FOURPLAYTOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS : Make a 2- to 7-letteJ word !rom the leiters on aactl yatdllne.

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Add !)oirts to aadt word or Iutter using scoring directions at rtght. Seven-le!Jer
words get a 6C&gt;-polnt bonus. AM words can be found 1n WebSter's New workS
College Oictionary.
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

mag~

,_..,

II 20D31Jr!Rid FA!ure Syndlcall,lnr: .

5:*11( \:bzP 1'2&gt; 1301.11-\&lt;;l To CPIJ£

'd:JMt. l1 ME

A\P\-\6, i&gt;-\-\0

~lOt\£

1.3'U~t&gt;T 1\\/il

13\.\\313\.E !

(l fJUN~

IJALHlilNE!)

DON'T

ONE
I PLAN
10 E·~•AIL

CO~NT .

=

('I'M (riRL·
FRI~NO
IS ~ER~

THt"''RE
TOO

....

TO SE "PER50NAL; OTMtR
PEOPt..E HAIJE TO WATC.H
~0~ 5HOP .. . A&amp;OOJ!~E ... 6ET
t"5EtURE... f&gt;HOP ;om[
MORE ... OT"ER,.,15E, WHAT
&gt;i/li/E ~OU R•~ED ?" WHitT

PE~50NAL.

IMP!:ROONAL

ON
M~.

womEIII

FUN~TIOI\I

•s A &amp;ROUP.

PIEtE Oi' ~OUR HEAtrr
HA~E 'IOU GIVE!~ U~ '??

·

~

The basket contains a candle Middlepon; a $25 gift certificate gift cenificate from Judy

News editor

0

@@@@@@@ ·

to

47
-183

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

'"DOWN

Answer

..

with the loss in revenue from
sales tax, local government
and local government assistance funds, personal property
tax and inter-county personal
propeny tax," he added. "All
the reductions of these funds
contributed to the shortfall in
the general fund. "
"After all this loss, the budget commission cannot cenify
ll)ore money than is available
to operate county government," Frank said. "Only the
amount cenified to the county
commissioners can be appropriated for government operations."
"This budget commission
will never cenify more money
than the estimated receipts,
and the county will always
have a year-end balance, as is
required by law," he added.

Sentinel, merc·ha·nts launch
Sweetheart Basket giveaway

desires for ~ain provide the
type or motivation you need

41h DOWN

Frank said his staff of four
full-time deputies have not
received a pay raise for three
years.
"I run my office on a slim
budget anyway, and this is
difficult for my employees,
but they have agreed it must
be done," Frank said, noting
the cost of insurance for
employees is a single policy
plan at $21.74 every two
weeks, and $145.57 for afamily plan.
"Office receipts from tax
collections is $108,000 per
year," Frank said. "Receipls
paid into the general fund
from the investment of public
funds in 2002 were $250,000,
while interest this year will be
$160,000, a reduction of
$90,000.
"This reduction combines

'Be my valentine'

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Social involve-

www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2003

Treasurer's ·office hours cut No.dentist, no

to
39 Muss
41 Division
word
43 Firebug's
crime
44 Drift
45 Melody
47 Ia not well
48 Electronic
reminder
49 Not a dlt
50 Envlr.
monitor
51 Mountain
pass
52 FedEx
units

team
Enticing
18 Passion
20 Kind of
cheese
21 Casts a
vote
22 Terrible
smell
24 Mellow
26 Student's
need
27 Sioux City
site
28 Tiny Insect
30 Luxury
fur
31 Architect
I.M.37 Happened
16

Astrograph

Thursday. Feb. 6. 2003

Prep basketball roundup, Bl

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

to 81811 up at OllC

of ihe Participating local businesses.
The Daily
Sentinel and 25
local
merchants have
joined together
for
a
"Sweetheart
Basket" giveaway. The quality twig basket of
gifts will be
awarded to an
entry drawti on Feb.
14.
The winner will be
contacted by The
Sentinel to schedule a promotional photo which will
be taken at the business which
appears on the winning entry.
The rules specify that those
registering must be at least 18
and that tileir name, phone num·
ber and name of business must
appear on each entry fonn. No
purchase is necessary to participate.
The deadline for entering the
contest is Feb. I 2..

'

Gifts valued at more than $600 fill this valentine's Day
•Sweetheart Basket" to be awarded to some local shopper
whose name Is drawn on Feb. 14. (Charlene Hoeflich)
from

in Aglow in Middlepon; a $20

Acquisitions

Kay's in Middlepon; l $20 gift
cenificate from McClure's
Restaurants in Pomeroy and
Middlepon;
Clark's Jewelry Store of
Pomeroy, earrings; Precious
Memories of Middlepon, a
$30 gift cenificate; Pomeroy
Flower Shop, a $20 gift cer, tificate; K&amp;C Jewelry, a
'garnet and pearl pendant;
Weaving Sti!_ehes, hand
and body ~ons and
soap; Francis Florist
of Pomeroy, a fresh
cut floral arrangement;
Anderson's of
Pomeroy, a Cats
Meow of the
Pomeroy Bridge;
Hartwell House, a
twig basket; Fabric
Shop of Pomeroy,
place mats a:nd napkins; Hearth and
Candlelight
of
Middlepon, a candle;
Riverside
Golf
Course, a $20 gift certificate; Ingels Jewelry
of Middleport, a jewelry
box;
The Ohio River Bear Co. of
Middlepon, a bear; the
Middlepon Department Store,
an Ohio State flag; the Shoe
Place/Locker
219
of
Middlepon, a $20 gift certificate; Swisher and Lohse of
Pomeroy, a box of candy; the
Court Street Grill, a $25 gift
cenificate; .the Dairy Queen of
Middlepon, an ice cream cake;
ahd Crow's of Pomeroy, dinner for two.

service: Local
clinic closed
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

News editor
POMEROY - "We've
got the money, got the
equipment, got the building,
got the ancillary people, but
can't find a dentist."
That was Meigs County
Health
Commissioner
Norma Torres ' explanalion
about why the Appalachian
Dental Chnic is closed.
"We've tried every way to ·
keep it open," she said, "but
without a dentist, what can
you do?"
Torres said that the search
for an Ohio cenified dentist
has been extensive.
"We've
looked,
the
Governor's
Office
of
Appalachia and Joy Padgett
have been lookiQg, and
we've solicited help from
the Ohio State Umversity
School of Dentistry."
"It seems there's a national shonage of dentists, and
that's a real problem for us
right now ·when· we have
· hundreds of low-income,
underinsured and uninsured
people who need dental
care," she added.
After the county received
a $200,000 grant for dental
care from the Appalachian
Regional Corrurussion, the
clinic opened in the fall of
2001 in the Pickens property
on
.South
Third
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·Police physicals catch village short
BY

J. Mn.a

LAYTON

A3 . Staff writer
84-S
Classifieds
POMEROY - When a
86
Comics
fresh
recruit applies to
86
Dear Abby
become a yolice officer, the
A4
Editorials
AS
Movies
Village o fomeroy pays
for a physical to ensure that
Obituaries
AS
it has the best and most fit
Sports
81·2
people for service.
Weather
A2 .
This type of physical
C 2003 Ohio Volt.,. Publishi"' Co.
does not cost a mere $50

Down on the Farm

Pollc.. AS

M listed posiHons '*!Uire an Ohio Ucense, or Ohio License eligibility.

Excellent salary/benefit package

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BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer
POMEROY - Village
council took a step forward
in eliminating burned out
buildings and homes in
Pomeroy at Wednesday
night's meeling.
Currently, if propeny is
damaged or destroyed, the
owner is reimbursed for 95
percent of the property's
value if that person has
insurance. The insurance
company disburses the
remaining 5 percent to the
village.
If the property owner
repairs or demolishes his
propeny, the owner can then
collect the additional 5 per·
cent which the village
retained .from the initial
insurance settlement.
In a perfect world, proper·
ty owners would repair or
demolish their propeny, but
in some cases owners decide
that it is not wonh repairing
the propeny. There are a
number of instances where
propeny owners take their
initial 95 percent cut of the
insurance settlement and
head off to greener pastures

leaving the village stuck
with the problem of demolishing burned out structures.
Council member VictoF
Young lii estimates there
are 15 lo 20 burned out
structures that owners have
left behind for the village 'to
deal with.
· According to Mayor John
Blaettnar, 5 percent does not
cover the costs of demolition. To make matters even
worse, many insurance companies have not disbursed
the 5 percent retain age to the
village. .
Young said this is against
the law and would stop. He
said the village should look
into legal measures against
insurance companies who
do not obey the law and
claim ignorance of it.
The taxpayers have to
pick up the slack to eliminate the unsightly struclpres
if the property owners can-.
not be located. Costs for
demolition work can run
· several thousand dollars,'
depending on lhe size of the
job.
Council is in the process
of enacting an ordinance
Ple•se see Fire, AS

MEDICAL. CE.NTER

Discover theHolzer Difference

www.holzer.org

II inlerested, pleo5e conloct Kenny Coughenour at

446-5205

et::l

-

Ple•n -

Plene see Clinic. AS .

Repair or raze:
That is the question

CeaiiRell Occupullanulftaea 11 t AaiJtucal · Fuii·Time

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a number of applicants who
take the physical and get
hired, then leave for whatever reason a short time
later for another village or
city nearby.
Mayor John Blaettnar
said there have been at
least six or seven instances
when new hires leave. One
new hire left after working

Dr. . erben Rollins, a
retired Columbus dentist,was hired at $80,000 a year
plus benefits, new equipment was purchased, a denIal lab was installed and outside renovations to make the

Immediate Job Openings
X·Ray •chltllcl• - Full-Time
Plaplctll 'lheraplat- Full-Time
Plaplcal'lheaupy AuiJtaaal ·Full-Time

!T I::t 1 f-lOW OIOYOU KNQW7

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for a routine check like one
would give a high school
athlete, but is instead very
in-depth.
According Kathy Hysell,
clerk-treasurer, a physical
costs $1 ,000 or more per
applicant . This is money
the village is willin" to pay
"'
if the applicant is hued and
serves the village for a long
time .
The problem arises when

Middle~on.

building
handicapped
accessible
were completed. .
Fro .m
the tim,e
the clinic
opened in
::-...:.......-• I a t e
Torrea
August to
the end of
the year, 914 clients had
been seen, a clear indicatio'n
of the need .
Rollins left in May 2002,
the facility was closed .in
June because of the lack of a
dentist, and it was open
from
·July
thro1,1g~
September two days a week
with two part-time dentists.
Another dentist came in
afterward and was there
until he left in early
December. The clinic has
been closed since then.
During the months the
clinic operated, I ,461 visits
were made for dental work.
The clients were, according
to Torres, 52 percent low
income, 46 percent with a
Medicaid card, and 2 per·
cent with insurance.
"We've been beating the
bushes every since Dr.
Rollins left," said Torres,
who noted that the search
continues because funding
is intact until May 31.
In anticipation of locating
a dentist, the health commissioner said the · county has
applied fqr an addition
$200,000 ARC grant to con·
tinue the program.
"We've got everything in

_.__.=

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