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                  <text>Page 06 • 6unllap U:tmn -6mttntl

W,;,T~iiiiiiDo_ _..l

"'r___
iO

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

r M~S~ l"'r•io--~~~Oiiilbm'iiiiU'iES r

GRAIN

Drum Lessons- Snare or 2 Modular Units tor sale- 1 Small 1 bedroom home in Two

2 BR apartments
Drum Set $10 Half Hour. uM is 24x36 with mel aI sid- Middleport,
~oo
plus available in Syracuse $200.
$20. Hour. Call Nathan ing and Is in fair conditiorl Is deposlt
&amp;
references deposit $330. per month.
asking $6,800; 1 unil is required, (740)992· 6154
Vollmar 13041674-0023
Rent Includes Water, Sewer
2411.36 with wood siding and m~~--::---., &amp; Trash, No Pets, applicaGeorges Portable Sawmill,
tion, Reference &amp; Suffk:ient
also in fair condition but
M~
. nl!~
don't haul your logs to the needs
Income to Quality 740-378some minor repairs
.. ....,... nr.r&lt;~l
mill just call 304-675-1957.
Thev wou ld be good tor
6111
I I \ \ \ t I\ I
Sunday
School
Class 14x80 trailer located at c:cr--~----,
Rooms. Work Shops or as a
S••
~
Glenwood, stove, refridg .,
,............_
10
·B~
Cabin. Delivery of Units also microwave furnished 304 •
FOR RfNr

1 Northman snow blade; 2
gravity wagons, (two hundred bushel) _ Please call
17401245-5788 lor more
information.

I

1Ox5 utility trailer, 4 loot foiO·
down ramp gate, $700.
17401742-2780

j

i

OPP6R1UNI1Y
Lw-..iii-liiiliiii.iiii;..,.l
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that

you do business with people
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mail until

you have inveStigated the
Fing

!:~

Second Chance Financial.
Looking lor a Second
Chance
for borrowing
money or re-establishing
credit. We can help. Good or
bad credit accepted. Call toll
Free.

1-866·576·4685

Follow the prompts.

230

PRoFESSioNAL
SERviCES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

No 'Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345
I \I I ..., I \II

I~

HOME&gt;

HJRSAIE
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for immediate possession all

576~9991 .

cen be added . Make all
esquires to Steve Pullins at - - - - - - - - (7401992-2478
2 bedroom mobile home,
Mine rsville area, newly
2001 ~4x 80 Oa~wood, 3 redecorat ed.
references
BA, 2 bath , all appliances required , deposit require d,
included. We'll make down $300 per month , ca ll
payment, you take over pay- !740)992-6777 after 5pm.
ments of $370 month, or buy
for $22,000. (216135 1-7086 2 bedroom mobile home,
or 12161257-1485.
Spring Valley area. Extra
nice, all electric . $350 a
~Get Your Money's W orth~ at month, $250 deposit Call
Coles Mobile Homes, St. At. (7401441-6954 or (304)675·
50 East
of
Athens . 2900
Deliveries, set-ups, excavat·
ing, fou ndations, sewage 2 bedroom, air, very nice, no
systems, driveways, heating pets. in Galllpolls. (740)446·
and coo ling along with parts _
2003 (740)446-1409
and service. You should
3 bedroom mobile home for
accept nothing less. Since
1967 we are Cole's Mobile rent. no pets. {?40)S92 -5858 Bedroom suit, beds, drop
leaf tabkt &amp; chairs, recliners ,
Homes where you "Get Your Beautiful River View Ideal
roll-a·away bed, hospital
Money's Worth ."
For 1 Or 2 Peopte ,
bed, microwave. (740)446- - - - - - - - - References. Deposit, No
9742
Land Home Packages avail- Pets, Foster Trai ler Park,
able. In yoJ'r area, (740)446- 740 •441•01 Bt .
For Sale: Reconditioned
3384.
washers, dryers and refrig- - - - - - - - - Mobile Home tor rent. Next
New 14x70. 3 br/2blh , Only to City limits in Point erators.
Thompsons
Appliance. 3407 Jackson
$995 down
and on ly Pleasant
1304)675-2359 Avenue,
(304)675 _7388 _
$197.62 per month, Call between 6-9pm.
- - , - - - - - - - -"
Nik~ 740-385-7671
washer &amp; dryer set.
APARTMENTS
150·, Whirlpool washer,
$
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR ·
FOR RENT
&amp; 2 Balh. Only $1695 down "'~---iiiiiiiii-r $75; Kenmore Dryer, $65, all
and &amp;295fmo. 1·800-691- 1 and 2 bedroom apart.' white after 6:00. (740)446·
6777
ments, furnished and unfur- 9066

r

within 15 min . of dowritown N
- ,-.ce
- IO-Is_a_v-ai-la_bl_e_for
_ u_p_t_o
Gallipolis. Rates as low as 16xBO mobile homes, $11 5
6%. (7401446-3218.
water Included, {740)9 92·
1 acre, riverfront, brick and 2167
vinyl, 3 bedroo ms, 2 bath, 2
lms&amp;
fireplaces, hardwood floors,
ACREAGE
approximately 2000 sq.ft.
Full basemenl. $160,000.
Bruner Land
(7401446-0538
74D-441·1492
3 Bedroom newly remod- Melga Co.· Five tracts that
eled, in Middleport, call Tom adjoin
state
forest
Anderson after 5 p.m.
$16,000+up! Alfred, SAS81,
992·3348
22 acres on the Shade
3 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 story River, great rec land
home irl Pomeroy, good con- $22,000 or on Carr Road, 7
dition, fireplace, (740)992· acres, $14,000. Chester,
SA248+ Bashan Roads, 13
9492
acres, $22.000 or 7 acres,
3 bedroom, single bath, $18,500, co water. Danville
large family room, fi replace, 5 or 1 acres $9,900!
large living room , complete
new kitchen, utility room , 2 Gallla Co.· Dodrill .Road ,
car garage unattached, 10 very
nice 5 acre lots,
miles South Gallipolis, in $14,000+ up or 14 acres
Eure~a. close to Loc~s &amp; with pond, wood s, field, sepDam. Phone 17401256-6949 tic + water, $30,000. Rio
Serious Gr_
(740)256-1243
ande, sc enic 9 acres.
Inquires Only.
$25,000. Kyger, 28 wooded
acres, $28,000. Off Teens
· 3 bedroom- 1-1/2 bath,
Run , 11 acres, $17,000.
w/new
30x30 addition.
Located on 12 acres with
More parcels available. Call
stocked pond. City Schools.
now for maps and other list·
(7401446-8901
ingsl Owner financing with
4
BEDROOM
HOME slight property markup! We
Foreclosure, only $14,900, buy land 40 acres and up!
Won't last. 1-800·719·3001
Ext F144

t

4 bedroom Brick Home in Patriot area. 20+ wooded
the country on 4-acre lot. aCJes, oounty water &amp; electric available, homesite.
(7401379-2862
Borders Wayne National
Forrest, excellent hunting,
$38,00017401379-9141
l{l '\ I \I ...,

All rul lltate ldVII'IItlng
In this newep11per le
tubleCitO the Federal
Felr Housing Act of 1968
which m1kM h llltg1l to
edvertiH "1ny
preference, llmtt.tlon or
dlecrlmlnetion beHCI on
race, color, reHglon, HX
tamllllll 1tatu• or netlon•l
origin, or eny Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnetlon."

"--------_.1

25" RCA Color console with
Flemo1e. $100. (3041675·
Mobile home space for rant 1661
in Mtddleport, $120 per
Affordable • Convenient
monlh, 17401992·3194
WOLFFTANNING BEDS
Low Monthly Investments
Trailer space for rent. $125
Home Delivery
per month, plus deposi t.
FREE
Color Catalog
Priest's Treiter Park. Water
Call Today l-8CJ0.71 1-Q158
Pald. Call 17401446-3644
www.np.etstan.com
\II t:c II \\01"1
Brand new Radio Shac~
HO!J!OOi&lt;JW
karaoke machine (only use
2 times) plays CO's, has 2
Gooos
tape decks, change Key &amp;
Beautiful overstuHed sofa pitch, 4 microphones &amp; a
from Topes, light gray with splitter, large speaker, paid
$300,
dusty rose pattern . $350. $400 wm take
l 740)992"9579·
(7401388-9916 after noon.

1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR. For Listings, 800-3193323 Ext. 1709.
--------1 BR House in Racine, with
water, sewer, trash $325.
Month , No Pets 17401992·
5039

BURN
Fat,
BLOCK
·
d BOOST
C rav1ngs
, an
..
Energy like
You Have
Naver Experienced.
WEIGHT- LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launch October
23, 2002. Call Tracy at
(7401441-1962
--------Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
Repairs. Problems? Need
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
740.446·4525

Ge

nished, security deposit - - - - - - - - required, no pets, 740-992· Good Use d Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
2218.
Guaranteed.
Washers,
Dryers,
Ranges .
and
Bedroom Apartments
Refrigerators, Some start at
Starting
at
$289/mo,
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Washer! Dryer Hookup,
Vine St., (740)446-7398
Stove and Refrigerator.
17401441-1519.
.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio
1 or 2 BR Appl. for Rent,
(740)446-7444
1·877-830Utiliti_
es Pd .. No Pets
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
992-5858
financing, 90 days same as
2 bedrooms- 6 month lease cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Garage Apartment, ulilities Drive- a- liHie save alot.
paid, no pets, no parties.
$550 monlh plus $550 New sofa &amp; Chair, $399 .
deposit 17401446·0241
9x12 carpet, room size $50.
Mollohan Carpet &amp; Furniture
4 rooms and bath, stove/ (7401446· 7444.
ClarK
refrigerator. Utilities paid, Chapel Road , Porter, OH.
$400 month. 46 OliVe Street.
17401448-3945
Paul Bunyan bedroom suite,
dresser, night table , queen
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
siza bed, mattress, Boxed
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
springs. $600. 17401446PRICES AT JACKSON
0208
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383.
Used furniture store, 130
Walk to shop &amp; movies . Call
Bulaville Pike. We sell mat740~446-2568 .
Equal
tresses.
bunk
beds,
Housing Opportunity.
dressers. couches. appliDowntown Gallipolis, apart- ances. bedroom suites,
ment for rent, 1 or 2 bed· recliners . Grave monuments.
(7401446-4782
room . l740)88ll-7174
Gallipolis, OH.
Garage apartment for rent, 2
bedroom, stove. refrigerator Wingback Recliner; Ethan
furnished. Water paid, $275 Allen Dresser; Poster Bed,
month,
$150
deposit. 40" Oak Dresser base; 50"
' (740}44 6-9061 .
Style Maker Hutch; Waterfall
- - - - - - - - - Chest and Desk. (740)286 Gracious living . 1 and 2 bed- 6522
room apartments al Village ~=--....,----"""!
Manor
and
Riverside
SPOKilNG
Aparlments in MiddlepOrt. ~
Gooos
From $278-$348. Call 740•
992 -5064. Equal Housing Remington Auto
10GA
Magnum (camo) $975. Also
Opportunities.
Hawthorne Apartments and lnline.50 CAL. Reminglon
Storage now taking applies· 700 ML (camo} $425. (304·
lions tor 2 bedroom apart- 675-2809

j

men1s. (7401441-1519
MOdern 1 bedroom apart·
men I (7 401446-0390
Now Taking Application s35 West 2
Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartments,
Includes Water Sewage,
Trash, $350/Mo. . 740-446·
0008.

r

ANnQuES

,...----..,....-,---Hide-a-bed, $50; .Baldwin
Organ, $100 · 174 0124 5- 5064
Jacqueline's "Uvln' Dolls"
Presenting Apple Valley
Dolls &amp; Klls. Custom made

Pomeroy, spacious, 3 bedroom , 1 batH, large lo t.
$22,500. Discount for cash.
13041837-7507 17401709·
0064
Stick built in 1998, 3 bed·
room. 3 bath fireplace, over
1 acre, asking $104.900.
17 401983-0730

6 MILLION READERS
With Only One Phone Call?

The American Community
Classified Advertlsln9 Helwork

1-800-821-8139
www.cnhl-can.com
AUCTION

10 used homes under
$2000, Call Karena, 740385-9948
1988 Carrro llton 14x70
Mob1le Home 2 bedrooms, 1
bath (3041675-3615
1989 Clayton Westwind ,
2BR. W/D hookup, range,
relrtgerator &amp; electric fur·
nace. Located on a rented
lot a 641 Lake Dr., Rio
Grande. 7 minutes walk to
campus. $10.000 OBO.
(6141214-5151 •
1995 Norris Mobile' Home
Like New. 16x76,
2br.
Appl iances, 3 ton heat
pump. ax 10 wooden storage
bid. 13041675-5727
Blowout sale on all Single
Section homes salle !housands good until February
29. 17401446·3093

Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2526. Russ Moore,
owner.

$500 POUCE IMPOIJNOSI

Hondas, Chevys, atcl Car&amp;'

i

2000 Artie Car, 2WD with
Waren Wrench, good condi·
tioo, $2500 OBO. 17401992·
4163 after 5pm, leave mes·

r

sage.

___

BoA~!'s~
. OfORS
v
l'vn.

:I'U..£

I

94 Stratos, 17'13" bass boat,
black &amp; sliver with wMe bot·
tom, gray carpet. 120 hp:

VAH&gt; &amp;

4-WDs

heads, insul roof, painted
steel sides &amp; roof 1' overhang gutter, erected price
$9967. 00; Precision Post
Frame Bldrs, 4 742· 4011 ,
1-800-396-3026

Trucks from $500. For · list- " - - - - - - - ·
ings 1-800-719-3001 ext.
3901
1986 Dodge Ram Charger,
4 x4 , full size, auto, lots of
1984 Chevy S-10 Extended new parts, driven daily,
cab 4x4, 2.8, 4 speed, ale, (7401992·0622
a:--~~---, goodconditlon. $1800. 8am- -19_8_9_S_n_ve-ra_do_B-Ia-ze-r.-4~x4-,
6
63_2_5_ _ _ good condition, may trade
l'lrrs
_P,.m,.._l304
.,..._16_7_5·_

Evinrude trolling motor,
rebuilt last year froin lack of
use, runs great, looks great,
- 7 5 0, 0
740
0742-4011
BO

FOR S,.u...,E
~~---iiiiiiiiiii;,._.l

Lw-iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii;;;.rl

r o.

i

1985 Pontiac Bonneville,
runs good, $500 OBO,
AKC Boxer pups, 7 weeks phone 17401992-5803
okl , shots cu"ent, Brindle
199001dsCierra, 4cyllnder,
with beautiful markings.
{740)379·2639
auto, runs good: ~98 9
Plymouth Van , 6 sylinder.
auto good co ndition, low
AKC Ren. Siberian Husky
w
miles. Call (304)675·5612 pr
pups, 9 weeks old, already (304)675-5859
have 1st shots, wormed &amp;
vet checked. 1 BlackiWh!te 1994 Buic~ LeSabre. drives
female,
1
Gray/White great, one owner, well cared
female, 1 BlackM'hite male, for, 150,000 miles, $2500.
parents on the premises (740)446-6970
$250.00 304-773-5730
1994 Buick Regal, all power,
- - - - - - - - - · till
1
mit
AKC , 7 month old Male air,
• cruse, a m casDachshund, housebroken, sette. 146,000 miles, in great
all shots, $200, no checks. condition, asking $3,000,
17401388-9824
1740)992-0064
- - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - 1997 Cavalier, 20, automatFull grown Calltornian rab- ic, $2495; 1996 Grand Am,
bits, 17401985-3833
20, $3495 . Three 1995
Grand Ams . 17 others in
Lab puppies, AKC. Proven stock. COOK MOTORS
hunting stock, Champion (740)446-0103
bloodline. Boxhead, Ottenau
$
1998 Dodge Neon 4dr. auto,
no1w501. (740)643-2288 Ready ale, 74,000 ml' les. Red .

tor
camper,
(7401742 -2307

$4000,

rib

HOME
IMPROVEMF1'11'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
2001
Jeep
Cherokee
c las81c ..• wee
h 1 d 3 400 Unconditional lifetime guarr., ,
·1e II"•
antee. Local references fur17 500
~-~;' ~~~
'
·
nished. Established 1975.
- " - - - - - - - - Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·

3

s

88 Chevv 1500 4x4, 340, 5 0870, Rogers

Basement

sp, high miles, $2500 OBO, Waterproofing.
{74.0)742·4011
94 Mitsubishe Montero,
SUV. Sunroof, all auto, 7
seater, 1oo,ooo miles. 4_
wheel drive. Call (304 )675•
7965

C&amp;C
General
Home
Mainte nance- Painting, vinyl
si ding, carpentry, doors,
windows. baths, mobile
home repair and more. For
95 Suburban 2500, 4x4, free e~timate call Chet. 740454 cubic inch, automatic, 992-6~23.
very
good
condition.
1740)379·2218
Cuslom
Buil ding
.&amp;
~~~-------, Remodel ing for all your
home repair needs, in the
MOTORCYa.ni · business for over 18 years'.
,
• 17401992· 1119

I

lrr4)

198 8 Yamaha Blaster 4
Hom&amp;
wheeler, runs &amp; loo~s good, Superior
rebuilt motor &amp; stainless Maintenance. We do all
repairs
on
homes-.
Fmh pipe, $1100, (740)992·
Carpentry,
plumbing,
floo!),
9966
water tanks. (740)441 ·01 13

'

New &amp; Used Heat Pumps- Carmichael Equipment, Inc.
Gas
Furnaces.
Free Hunlington, WV 130417362120.
Gallipolis,
OH
Estimates. (740)446-6308
17401446-2412
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Time for Frost Seeding
Fo r
Concrete,
Angle, Pasture and Hay Fields. ATV
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Broadcast Seeders, 12 volt,
Grating
For
Drains, High Quali1y. Fits most ATV.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L $295.
Jim's
Farm
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Equipment, 17401446·2484
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
lJvEsroa(
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. 17401446-7300

t

HOLLEY'S AUTO SALES
Tax Time Specials
1987 Mercury Topaz $695
1986 Dodge 050 truck $795
1988 Ford Ranger $1295
F-150 $6001991
1984
S-10, 4x4, $39951996 GMC
Jimmy, 4dr, $7995; 1996
Plymouth Neon, 4 door,
auto, $2995. (7401448·2000

II""

~~~

If you ·are looking for a home In Gallipolis,
now is your chance to visit some of the
houses we are offering. All are conven-.
iently located in town and just waiting for
the right family to come along. Visit all four
in one aftemoon then make your choice.

I

1988 Ford Renger, V-6, 550-60# Shaulis, 17401949- speed, PB, P.S, runs excel·
Pioneer auto/truck CD playlent, $1400 OBO l740144t2908 or 17401949-2017
er &amp; amp, 2 mpx speaker
-0131
after 5pm.
boxes &amp; monster cable.
Boardi
ng,
Training,
$400. Complete. (304)675ConditkJning, Indoor and 1992 GMC, 1 ton, single
6485 after 6pm.
wheel, diesel, auto, air, runs
~-------- Outdoor riding facilities,
great,
good
condition,
Waterline Special: 314 200 !rails and wash bay. 1-740$2699, 17401992-7584
446-4710
PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1' 200
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All
2001 F-250, Superduty, XL
Brass Compression Fittings Hog ready to butcher. Call package, 4x4, 5.4 V-8, tow
anytime, leave message. package, 29,000 miles.,
·In Stock.
(7401256-1652
RON E"ANS
ENTERPRIS
AJC, cruise, tilt, $18,500.
•·
•
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1-800·
(7401379-2757
537-9528
HOlstein Angus Cross Bred
in truck camper for
~~~rs and bulls. 17401245- Slide
sale, 17401992·2623

SuPPU£S
~ock. brick, sewer pipes,

AUCTION .·

built to last
· the 1920's and lovingly maintained by it's
1m.vm,rs, this home is ready for you ro move
Fearuring, on the main leyel, a large LR
fireplace and built-in bookshelves: formal
· remodeled, eat-in K; and large master BR
private bath. The second floor provides 2
&amp; I bath, and an open landing area. Also,
-car detached garage: a lovely front porch &amp; a
maintenance yard. Call today for your pri.
viewing. Priced at $115,900.
#624

windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Cali74Q-245-5121 .

AUCTION

FURNITURE
Brick Fireplace
9' Center Ceilings
2x6 Exterior
Thermopane
Total Appliances Pkg.
Den wl Computer Center
Glamour Bath

Walla
Windows

Trades Welcome
24 TRACTS

f70 ACRES PICTURESQUE fAINT CREEK VALLEY
3 Home a- 1 Cabin • Timber- Tillable • Barns
' Cruelt ' Artwork • Truck - Llvtatock Trallar

!070 Spargursvllle Rd.,- Bourneville,

0~

, March 1 2003 at 10 AM

Independent Supply Co. Billards pool table
w/oak· Diamond inlay &amp; brass w/leather
pockets made in 1892- 1932 must seel!l
Sells w/reserve, Duncan Phyfe sofa, fancy
mahogany dresser, Waf. Viet. M.T. drop
well dresser, 5 pc .. mah. BR suite, oak ice
boK, oak 2 pc. step back cupboard, fancy
oak secretal)l, sev. ladies drop front
secretal)l, leaded glass secretal)l
bookcase; leaded glass side board, oak
side board w/mirror, 4 pc. BR suite, oak
bachelor's chest, oak dresser, oak chest,
oak DR suite, oak buffet, oak pie crust
table, wal. cabinet, oak table , oak ward
robe, claw &amp; ball piano stool, green &amp;
white pie safe, painted wal. wash stand,
Red &amp; black blanket chest, prim. cherry
cradle and much more.
GLASSWARE
Lg. amount of American Fostoria- 4 1/2 oz.
Oyster cocktail · 2 1/2 oz. wine glasses ·
Hurricane lamp base · 6" footed bud vase12 custard /punch cups - 12" Footed Tom
&amp; Jerl)l Bowl · 16" Footed fru it bowl· 14"
punch bowl - creamer &amp; sugar - 7" Footed
Tid Bit Plate· Pitcher wflce lip • Vinegar
cruet w/stopper and other pieces, old glass
bar set, Depression glass, misc.
glassware, 5 gal. crock, caboose lantern,
miners lamp, Aladdin lamp &amp; more.
COLLECTIBLES
Lg. blue wooden tool box, vel)l old
saleman's case, old pictures, mirrors,
wicker hamper, coal hood, misc.
graniteware, ong. Barbie dream house,
kitchen items, railroad items, wooden coke
case, churn, old gas heater and much
more.

POMEROY - Gas prices
have steadily creeped up during the past several months to
squeeze more money out of
peoples walle.ts. There is a
petroleum worker strike in
Venezuela and a war looming
in the Middle East
Prices have begun to reflect
the reality that shortages may
be looming because prices
have increased eight percent
since the start of the year. The
wholesale price of gasoline
on the New York Mercantile
Exchange rose 3.09 cents to
$1.032 per gallon last week,
which IS the highest level
since May 200 I. The price of
crude has been above $30 a
barrel since mid-December.
Ruth Shain, Letart, is not as
concerned as others are about

the price of gasoline, but she
has noticed that prices have
changed. She drives a Buick
Century which she said gets
good gas mileage during her
short three to four mile commute to work at Southern
High School where she is a
secretary.
"The prices bother me
some," she said. "But it doesn't bother me as much as it
does someone else because I
don't have far to travel each
day."
Shain is skeptical about
price increases the oil companies pass down to the consumers.
"Actually, I think they look
for excuses to niise gas
prices," she said. "They use
excuses like it's the weekend, Gas prices are steadily creeping upward with the prospect of
or it's the nolidays to raise gas war in the Middle East and a• petroleum worker strike in
prices."
Venezuela. Currently regional gas prices start at $l.60 per gallon of unleaded regular, $1.70 per gallon of plus, and $1.80
Please see Gas. AS
per gallon for premium. (J. Miles Layton)

Jacob D. Boston of Eastern Elementary was first place winner in the fifth grade DAR essay contest. He was presented
his award medal by teacher Nancy Circle. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

Money
man
gives time
to the

describe the condition of this immaculate 2story home, bu t it is definitely one you have to
see for yourself. 2500 sq. II. of spacious living
area and everything has been remodeled.

Includes LR, FR, den, bonus room with bar,
eat-in kitchen, 3 BRs and 2 baths, 3-car garage
and 'c ompletely main te nan ce free ex teri or.

Location is perfect for kids.
!-Ut~U~;J

#110

ST., "'"LLII

.;- "·"""!
,,

:·.'

"'

,.

r.,~. '"' ~,... ".....,..~·i ~ ~ ·· ·

BY J; MtLIS lAYTON
Staff wrijer
I!.OMEROY~ ·mone .
. - ' ., .
. '·-.. y
man is a teacher!s pet when he
visits . classrooms .
over
Meigs County.
Bob Graham, an avid coin
collector, takes bags of vintage
coins and hands them out to
students as he teaches them a
little bit about history.
For instance, nickels during "Money man" Bob Graham teaches students at Salisbury Elementary School the historical
World War 11 changed form. value of money. Grah~m, an avid coin collector and an officer of the Oh Kan Coin Club ,
The copper and nickel metals hopes to inspire future generations to collect coins, by teaching them that money has meanwere taken out the five-cent ing beyond the paper or:metal that it is printed on . (J. Miles Layton)
pieces and repiaced with sil'\
American history they learn
ver. This was due to the war things like bread, milk and rare coin.
·effort. Nickel was found to be meat was much cheaper. A Jacks smiled, P.leased with from just looking at coins."
One of Graham's ·favorite
better as a material used in person might pay nine cents himself. That smile is the reacoins
is a half dollar with a
son
Graham
said
he
does
this.
bomb casings.
for a hamburger. A nickel had
"Just seeing the look in their picture of the Oregon Trail on
Copper had various uses. more buying power back then.
The five-cent pieces changed.
Graham passed around eyes•· is why I keep coming 11. Another coin that Graham
What was then worth only a antique coins and World War back. I really get a charge out happily displayed was one
made in Syracuse, Ohio.
nickel is now worth more than n ration books, asking ~­ of it."
Crow loves having Graham
a quarter.
lions of the students to · p
During and after the Civil
Students in Pam Crow 's them engaged in learning visit the classroom. This is the War, merchants might coin
second year he has visited.
their own money because
fifth-grade class at Salisbury about the past. .
.
coins
were in such short sup"The
students
reallX
do
look
After answenng a questiOn
Elementary School were
amazed. They further discov- about the war correctly, forward to his visits, ' he said.
ered that pnces of ordinary · Graham awarded Ben Jacks a "It's amazing the amount of
Please see Money, AS

an .

EMA class scheduled for Feb. 20

Index
IN TOWN CHARMER-loaded 1\&lt;ith the
1940's charm, this home otTers LR with FP &amp;
buih-in bookshelves. DR with two buih-in
hutches, FR wilh paneling, eat-in kitchen, 3
BRs, I 1/2 baths. and a detached
Priced at $97 ,000
422 FOURTH AVt:.,

-; -

BY MtWSStA RUSSEU
Staff writer

2 Sedl0111 - .1 1 Pllpl

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

Editorials
Movies

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
BS-6

87
87
A6
A3

AS

Bl -3
A2

e 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Emergency
Management Agency is
sponsoring
a
Cost
Documentation Workshop
for county, village and
township officials responsible for documentation in
compiling application pack·
ets for State Disaster Relief

Programs.
The four-hour workshop
will begin at 8:30 a.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 20 and will
be held in the Emergency
Operations Center, courthouse annex, 117 Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy.
According
to Meigs
County EMA Director Bob
Byer, the class will assist
potential applicants with the
cost documentation requirements needed for cost recov-

ery following a declared disaster or major emergency.
The course is limited to 30
attendee s and deadline for
registration is Friday; Feb.
14.
Pre-registration
is
required and there is no cost
Lunch will be provided following the workshop.
Anyone interested may
contact Byer at (740) 9924541.

lels;ea·· Freeman, a seventh
Her presentation was also
made by teacher Nancy 'Circle. The eighth and sixth grade
winners were not present. for the recognition ceremony.
(Charlene Hoeflich)

DAR announces
•
essay w1nners
BY CHARLENE
News editor

HOEFLICH

POMEROY - More than
100 Eastern and Southern
students took on the role of a
Revolutionary soldier and
wrote "A Jetter from Valle~
Forge: Winter, 1777-1778 '
in this year's annual
American History essay
conies! sponsored by Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution.
Taking first place awards
in their respective grade levels were Jacob D. Boston, a
fifth grader at Eastern
Elementary,
Alexis
Jacquelyn Hirzel, a sixth
grader at Eastern; Chelsea
Freeman, a seventh grader at
Southern, and Adelle Y.
Rice, an eighth grader at
Southern.
Second place awards went
to Jeremy Todd Lee, fifth
grader at Eastern, and
Zachary Stephen Carson,
sixth grader at Eastern.
Chairman choice awards
went to Samuel R .. Evans,
fifth grader at Eastern, and
Aaron Moore, a sixth grader
at Eastern.
The first place winners
were presented medals and

gifts of money, and the oth~
ers received certificates and
cash awards. Judging was
based on historical accuracy,
adherence to topic, organization of material, interest,
originality, spelling, grammer, punctuation and neainess. Pat Holter chaired the
contest for the DAR.
The essays described the
activities going on, the conditions the soldiers lived in,
the emotions they felt and
their longings to be home.
Chelsia Freeman, in a letter from a soldier to his wife
at Christmastime, described
his yearning for home and
fam ily.
"Tell the family that I miss
them so very much and that
it is the thought of them that
keeps me going. I so look
forward to the day when we
are all at home again. I find
myself dreaming of the
warmth of the fire and good
company."
"Sometime I think I just
can't bear it. I can't kill
somebody. I can't stand the
cold any more and I don't
know if I can watch my
friends die unnoti ced · any
longer," wrote Alexi s Hirzel.
"I hate to bring bad news
Ple1se see DAR. AS

Fa

sporuoreci by il1a HMC Community Haahh and We/lna55 Departrnanl and HMC Cardiopulmonary Uni~

IN TOWN CONVENIENCE- Grea1 l oca:tion,·l
on ~th Ave. Kids walk 1o school. Walk over
Jown. Walk to ball games. You get the idea. 3
BR home wi1h 1.5 baths. Large family room,
LR, eat-in kitchen. Exira deep lol with in-

Friday, February 14, 2003 • 8 AM • 12 Noon
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

J)iscover the Holzer Difference

AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON #66
~73-57 85 OR 773-5447

8 AM · 71:30AM - MUST CALL 446-5055 FOR AN APPOINTMENT
12 Noon • 1 PM • Special Presentation by Michael A. Englund, DO

www.holzer.org

Terms Cash or Check wilh ID .

"Cardiac Risk Fe :tors"

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
www.stanleyandson .com
Henry M. Stanley, Ill. CAl

BY J. MtLES lAYTON
Staff writer

FREE SCREENINGS • Non-Fasting Choleslerol and Glucose, Blood Pressure,
Body Fat Analysis and more. Free health info will also be available,
SPECIAL UPID PROFILE SCREENING MEASURING TOTAL CHOLESTEROL

Auction Concluctecl b!l:

STANLEY &amp; SON,

www.mydailysentinel.com

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 200l

High gas prices stalk area

_pr~•ent·,·,

AUCTION

mason,wu.

Sat

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 122

·-lliiiiiiiiiiii!.--,.1

IMaled at the Rudlon Center on Rl. 33 In

AIISOI.UTEAUCTlON

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

TOWN ELEGANCE. Many words

Saturday. February 15. 2003
10:00 a. m.
US 21, 112 Mile North of Ripley
(Skating Rink)
Emmit Allen #1038 Bonded in State WV

K•ill he one of the BEST Auctiom oflhe Year
for Home, Collector, and Dealer

~

$2900 OBO, (740)992-0512

r16

REAL ESTATE

Estate · Antique Auction

Thi~·

,thing works ; 79 Rogue
camper, 33 foot, $3000,
great condition, everything
Orchard grass hay for sale- works; 82 Chevy 112 ton
$2.50 square bale, $20 tor shor1 bed, 6 inch bodyllft,
round bale, (740)992-2623
4x4, 350 iebuilt, 35,000
miles, $4000; 79 Ford Ton
4x4, flatbed w/Sth wheel
FOARIIJ!!!
hitch. 390 molor, $3000. Call
~
(740)256-1 648 5pm-9pm or
(740)709-0944 anytime.

F,o

•

Slide In camper ror 8ft. bed, 1998 ·vamaha Kodiak, 4
$500, great condition, every- wheel drive, good condition,

lllili:!'--::lluJwiNG:-----,

~~--------'

AUCTION

Ocprc!ision G lass. Fiesta. Rosev ille, Hull, Fenton,
Blue Ridge. McCoy COokie Jars, O ld Toy Tonkas,
Nylints, Hubleys. Battery operated Toys, (all near
mint} Stone Jars. Old Quilt s. Costume Jewelry,
Vintage Purses, Pepsi Clock. Royal Crown &amp; Pep!ii
Thermometers. Old Fly Rod. Wicker Creel. Reverse
Painting, Old Pictures, Poslcards, Ad\·enising Items.
Ra ilroad lantern. Enamel Ware, Photo Albur'n with
se11eral Civil War Soldier Pictures, Old Sword, bayonet~. Military Rifle . Old Trunk. with WW li papers
and lencr~. Furniture. Sofas. Table/Chairs, Recliners,
End Tables. Early Aatwall lamps, bar Stools, China
Hutch. Bedroom Sui te. And Much More!!!

Haylage round bales 60-90
% Alfalfa about 2000 iba
$35-$40.00 p:er bale 304882·3251

babies &amp; toddlers for that
Sr=~""ial
someone, or make
,.., ....
your own, your wayl Many
Excellent Condition. $3,800.
faces, ~e coi()(S, hair color
8am-6pm. (304}675·6325
&amp; styles, skin tones, and
body styles to choose from. i:m~;;;;;~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 87 Co1'118tte, 26,850 miles,
Clothing also available.
FARM
·white with red interior.
Compare to Middleton and
F'..QuJPMfNr
Always garaged, loaded .
My Twinn Cuddly Babies
(740)379-2218
Call ·for more information.
IH684, Diesel, AOPS, with 96 Hyundai Accent GT, 4cly,
(740)448-8640
caraopy, 8F-4R trans:, dual auto, air, sunroof, 73.000
remotes, runs &amp; looks good. miles,
asking
S2450,
JET
$9,500. 1740)379-2757
17401992·2952
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RebUilt In
Deere
Compact 98 -Chrysler Cirrus LXI,
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- John
Tractors. Financing as low 57,000 milee, $5250 OBO.
800-537-9528.
as 4.5% and 0% down with (7401256·1818 17401256·
John Deere Credit Approval. 1252

Thla newapaper will not
knowingly eccept

Town house
3br. Housa located in Tara
Mason. WV. $495. +Utilities. Apartments, Very Spacious,
adverllaementl tor reel
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
No Pets. 13041773·5881
eatate which Ia In
1i2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
violation of the taw. Our
Clean warm 2 bedroom Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
reade... are hereby
home in Pomeroy. w/optlon· Palio, Sta rt $385/Mo. No
tnror\oned thet all
to buy, $400 a mo., good ref- Pets, Lease Plus Security
dwelllnga advertiHd In
erences, (740)698-7244
Deposit Required, Days:
thla ne.-paper 1re
740-446-3481 ; Evenings:
av•l•ble on en equal
One bedroom house in 740-367-0502
opportunity baaea.
Bidwell with refrigerator &amp;
stove.
Gas heat with new Twin Rivers Towe r is acceptMust se ll - 3 bedroom
carpet.
For more in1orma- Ing applica tions for waiting·
Ranch, new roof, in Bidwell
area, shown by appoint· tlon, ple~se call Sharon &amp; list lor Hud-subsized. 1- br,
Scotl Howell at 17401388 - apartment, call 675·6679
ment, (740)742-2062
EHO
924 1
New home- 4 bedroom, 2
bath, li vingroom, familySERVICES
SERVICES
room, dining roo m den.
modern ~ itchen, 2 car
garage, hp, all electric, within walking distance Pomeroy
Golf" Course, 3 acres,
Do You Have A Business, Service,
$118,000,
call
Susan
Or Product You Would Lllce to
17401985·4291, worK 740Advertise to
446-7267.

10 &amp; 12 wide portable yard
buildings, available in 9' thru
2t' melal side &amp; roof, 6'x6'6"
mini roll-up door: 40x64M13'
shop building, 1-3 entry, 312x12 overheads gutter
painted steel sides &amp; roof,
insulated roof, erected price
$~0 , 1 06.00;
30x40x9'4"
garage, 3-10x8 insul overheads, 1·3' en1ry, insula1ed
roof gutter, 1' overhang
painted steel sides &amp; roof,
erected,
$10,157.00;
24x42x9'4" garage. 1·3'
entry, 2-20x8' insul over·

Meigs boys top River Valley, B1

IF

HAY&amp;

..._..l

i

Sunday, February 9, 2003

. #liS

446·5679.

MEDICAL CENTER

�PageA2.

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 10, 2003

S~~!w~~k ~~lo!~!~!s~!t Added fees to cover malpractice upset patients·
Snow spread across the Mid- winds I0 to 1S mph. Chance of
Ohio Valfey overnight lea'1n8 snow 40 percent
arou_nd 31,1mch across the regJ.On. Thesday... Partly cloudy with a
NI!lhrum~
tempera~s chance of snow showers. Uttle
remained fairly steady o.venught or no snbw accumulation expectthanks to cloudy . skies .and ed Continued cold with highs 29
southerly winds wtth readings to 34. West winds around 10
were m the lower 30s.
f
50
Snow will continue across the mph. Chance o snow
perarea through much of the day cent.
.
.
although accumulations will
Thesday mght..Cloudy wt!'J a
remain
generally
light. chance of snow sho~ers. Uttle
Accumulations will reach up to 3 or no snow accumulalion expectinches to the south. Highs will be ed. Lows in the lower 20s.
in the lower 30s. A winter weath- Chance of snow 50 percent
er advisory is in effect for today.
Wednesday...Mostly cloudy. A
Overnight look for a few more slight chance of snow showers in
snow showers. Lows will drop to the morning. Highs in the lower
between l0 to 15 degrees.
30s. Chance of snow 30 percent.
Thesday will start out with a
Wednesday
night...Partly
mix of clouds and sun but clouds cloudy. Lows near 20.
will quickly thic~n. ahead of
Thursday...Partly cloudy. A
low pressure movm~~ from ~ slight chance of snow late. Highs
nonhwest. Snow IS
IY. dunng in the upper 30s.
~ afternoon. Highs will reach
Extended Fo~
mto the Weather
20s.
Friday...a ou.dy WI'th a ~hance
FOI"I!ICml
Wmter weather adl'i!ory of snow or ram. Lows m the
Today...Snow likely... Mainly upper 20s and highs m the mid
through early afternoon. Total 30s.
.
snow accumulalion 2 to 4 inches.
Saturday...Partly cloudy wtth a
Highs in the mid 30s. Southwest chance of snow or rain. Lows in
winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of the upper 20s and highs near 40.
precipitation 70 percent
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows
Tonight..Mostly cloudy with a in the upper 20s and highs 35 to
chance of snow showers. Colder 40.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Some patients
are finding a surprise in their medical
bills - which insurance often doesn't
cover.
Sharon Forsch, 59, a retired preschool
teacher, was billed an extra $30 by her
doctor for her annual cervical-cancer
screening. She says Beachwood OB
GYN Inc. in Lyndhurst added the charge
to help pay for malpractice insurance.
Dr. Steven Klein, one of Beachwood
OB GYN's four owners and the corporate officer who signs the annual reports
that the practice files with the state, said
the char~e was "a matter of our private
business ' and that it "is not related" to
the cost of malpractice insurance.
Dr. Kevin Geraci, president of the
Academy
of
Medicine
Cleveland/Northern Ohio Medical
Association, said local doctors consider
the fee "specifically a malpractice

tp pay the surcharge. The office contin-·
ues to bill her.
·
"I still believe that doctors aren't hurting financially, compared to, say, retired.
teachers," Forsch swd. Yet Forsch said an:
office assistant told her the doctors "just·
can't afford to practice without that fee."
Her health insurance doesn't cover the
fee, but her insurer, Medical Mutual of.
Ohio, said that its customers don't have .
to pay the charge because it's a violation.,
of Its contract with doctors.
•
A doctor that added a charge "would be,
violating his agreement with Medical:
Mutual," said Michael Taddeo, the vice .
president who negotiates the company's.
contracts. "The patient would not have to
pay any add-ons to that bill."
State Medical Board of Ohio spokes-~
woman Lauren Lubow said the board is_
already looking into a patient's complaint
·
about a malpractice surcharge.

Burglary suspect shot, killed by police in

CINCINNATI (AP) - City officials
worked to get information out quickly to
the public in the wake of a police officer's fatal shooting of a burglary suspect.
It was the third fatal shooting involving white police officers and black suspects since an April 2001 shooting that
sparked three days of riots.
There were no reports of disturbances
in the city following the latest shooting
early Sunday when a police officer being
beaten with his own nightstick shot and
killed his assailant after chasing the burglary suspect down an alley, said police
spokesman Lt. Kurt Byrd.
"It's kind of silly for us not to
Byrd said Officer Michael Schulte, 26,
be allowed to have a boat," said frred six shots as Andre Sherrer, 35,
Abe Kruger, the club's 21-year- repeatedly struc6 him in the head.
Sherrer, was a convicted burglar and
old commodore.
The club, founded in 1948, robber who'd spent nearly all his adult
was defunct when Kruger began life in prison. He was paroled from an
efforts in 2000 to revive it. Soon Ohio prison in July after serving 14
after that, a sailor donated sails years for aggravated robbery. Schulte is
for a J/24 racing boat. Kruger a four-year veteran of the police departand other club members then ment.
Schulte responded early Sunday when
found another sailor willing to
a
police
dispatcher said a private securisell his J/24 boat for $2,000.
ty
company
reported someone had broThe deal fell through because
the college was concerned about ken into a clothing store. The officer saw
liability and Oberlin's vice pres- a man running from the store about 4
ident of fimmce refused to a.m. and chased him into an alley
between two stores before struggling
authorize the purchase.

Sailing club has sails, no boat
OBERLIN (AP) - The
members of the Oberlin College
Sailing Club don't have to
wony about shipwrecks, sinkings or being lost at sea.
They don't have to worry
about maintenance, upkeep or
even scraping barnacles off the
hull.
They don't have to worry
because they don't have a boat.
The eight sails belonging to
the club are in a closet at the college student union building,
because the college so far has
refused to authorize the purchase of a boat.

charge," The Plain Dealer reported on
Monday.
Cleveland-area obstetricians typically
paid from $74,000 to $152,000 last year
for malpractice coverage, up from
$32,000 to $69,000 in 2000, accordin~ to
Medical Liability Monitor, a publication
that tracks the rates.
Doctors lobbied successfully last year
to have a cap put on malpractice insurance costs in Ohio. The cap takes effect
in April.
When Forsch went for her annual cervical-cancer screening, she expected to
be charged her normal $10 co-l?ay. But, a
clerical worker pointed out a s1gn saying
the practice was charging a $30 "practice
administration fee."
"It's a big problem, and I understand
that," Forsch said. But she said "that it's
just wrong" for doctors to add the fee.
Forsch paid the $10 co-pay, but refused

with the suspect, who grabbed Schulte 's
nightstick and hit the ·officer repeatedly,
Byrd said.
Schulte was recovering at home after
being treated at a hospital for multiple
cuts and bruises to his head, Byrd said.
Sherrer's family declined comment to
reporters pending completion of the
police investigation.
The killing was the first by a
Cincinnati police officer since new procedures were put in place after the police
shooting of Timothy Thomas in April
200 I. The shooting of the unarmed
Thomas, who was wanted on traffic
charges and was fleeing police, led to
riots and an investigation. by the
Department of Justice. Officer Stephen
Roach was later aquitted of misdemeanor charges in Thomas' death.
Last year, Cincinnati signed an agreement with the Justice Department and
settled a separate lawsuit against the city
to revise use-of-force policies, improve
monitoring of complaints against police
officers and work with the community to
redt~ce crime.
.
Byrd said police had reported
Sunday's shooting to the group that
monitors the police department, Mayor
Charlie Luken and City Manager Valerie
Lemmie.

Cincinnati ~

Lemmie then passed along details ofthe shooting to black activist groups that
sued the city, Byrd said.
"We got out as much information as"
we could as soon as we could," he said. ··
Monitors from the Human RelationsCommission walked throu~h the neigh-,
borhood where the shooting occurred.
Sunday and talked with residents.
"We're here to really help get the story
out," said Lesley Jones, program coordinator for the commission. "We just can't.
let rumors run through the neighbor-.
hood."
Although police were still investigating the shooting, there were no indications it was not justified, Byrd said.
A spokeswoman for the Cincinnati ·
Black United Front said that her organi•
zation is hearing a lot of questions from
the black community about the circumstances of the shooting.
"A lot of people are asking why the
policeman didn't wait for backup," said
Juleana Frierson. "Also, did a police
slowdown contribute to this brother·
being killed?"
Frierson said her organization is ask-:
ing that Schulte submit to a polygraph:
test and that the investigation be com-·
pleted within 90 days as specified in the
collaborative agreement.

Rio
Grande
staff,
alumni:
Test, not severity is key
to diagnosing strep throat featured in journal
A. SIMPSON
Guest columnist
BY MARTHA

bacteria and viruses. Because It can, in fact, be relatively
strep can have much more mild. That's why your doctor
serious, long-term health may do a throat swab in conconsequences than these junction with the Rapid Strep
other types of sore throat, Antigen Test to quickly ideoyour doctor will want to tify the presence of strep hacidentify the cause of any sore teria. Sometimes a more relithroat that lasts for more than able but slower traditional
a day or two. Some compli- culture may be used, or your
cations of strep throat can be doctor may choose to treat
pneumonia, tonsil infection your child with antibiotics
(peritonsillar
abscess), based on his or her physical
meningitis and middle ear exam. Strep or not, treating
infection (otitis media). the pain consists of topical
Rheumatic fever sometimes anesthetic throat spray and
develops within weeks of a lozenges available over the
strep throat and can cause counter. Smooth wet foods,
permanent damage to the like Jell-0 and popsicles can
heart. Another complication be helpful. Warm salt water
of strep-- acute post strepto- gargles, while resisted by
coccal glomerular nephritis - most children , can ease sore
-can cause kidney damage. throat pain. Tylenol or
That was the bad news. Ibuprofen may also be given
The good news is that strep is for pain as well as fever. If
usually very responsive to your child's throat pain is
antibiotics, and a complete severe, your physician may
cure can be expected if prescribe stronger pain medantibiotics are started in the ications. If antibiotics are
first nine days of infection. prescribed, make sure the
Symptoms of strep are simi- entire prescription is taken as
Jar to those of other types of directed. That is the only
sore throat and include diffi- way to eradicated a strep
culty and pain with swallow- infection. ·
ing,
fever,
malaise,
Family Medi cine® is a
headaches and sometimes weekly column. To submit
nausea and vomiting. Strep is questions. write to Martha A.
frequently associated with Simpson, D.O., M.B .A .. Ohio
pus on the tonsils, tender University
College
of
swollen glands in the front of Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
the neck and fever but not Box 110, Athens, Ohio
cough.
. 45701. Or, e-mail Dr.
Contrary to what many · Simpson
at
people think, a strep throat is simpsonm @ohio.edu. Past
not necessarily more severe columns are available online
than a "regular" sore throat. at www.jhradio. org/fm.

Question: My child has
~trep throat. Many of the kids
m her school have it too. This
seems to happen every year
at this lime. Is there a strep
season? How can I keep her
from getting this every winter? Should I worry about
strep throat?
Answer: Winter is the
peak of the "strep season,"
which lasts from late fall to
early spring.
But, strep
throat is not limited to these
months, and you can, indeed,
come down . with it at any
time of the year.
This illness - known as
"Group A Streptococcal
pharyngitis" in doctor jargon
-- is most commonly seen in
elementary school-aged children, but people of any age
are susceptible. It is spread
by direct person-to-person
contact· via nasal secretions
and saliva. In crowded settings, like schools, it spreads
more easily. Other crowded
settings are shopping malls,
grocery stores and movie
theaters. Generally, there is
an incubation period of two
to five days after exposure.
Strep throat is an infection
caused by bacteria -- specifically Group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus pyogenes.
Other kinds of sore throat or pharyngitis - can be
caused · by many different

SOCIAL SECURITY

Social Security questions and answers ·
BY Lou HORVATH

Social Security Manager
Q. I'm a 36-year-old
widow and receive monthly
Social.~,. S,~:~.udty., c,hecks .
becaQse I have three
..., dlt L .. coh'ld
.
lf!!es . qp.,· 1 · ren ID ··my
«are. l.f' I were to go to
work, would we stop
receiving Social Security?
. A. ' Your children will
qot Jole· their benefits if
b k
k

liivors benefits are subject
tO the annual earnings
limit, so your benefits will ,
l:le reduced $1 for every $2
you earn over $1 1,280
annually.
l' Q. When I applied for
~ocial Security benefits on
my ex-husband's Social
Security record a year ago,
tpe repre.septative ~aid I
wasn't:'ehgllile because I
had to"6e 62 yGars old. My
ex-husband passed away
last month, and a friend
tbld me that I only have to
age 60 to get benefits

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Entertainment briefs

luckrldge Read
Bld•••ll, OH 45814

I

$ceoes cut
from .rrwovie

; HAGERSTOWN,

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(AP) ...., The Civil War movie
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dual ..mot.., wat brakaa, Ina
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Advertising
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'foods and Generals" won't
include' ·scenes of the Battle
qf Antiiitam, (he war's bloodips! one-day clash, director
Ronald Maxwell says.
: Those scenes, shot in 2001
on• faniiland near Staunton,
va., w~re cut to bring the
f}Jm's h,!nning time to 3
hours · and 35 minutes,
Maxwell told an audience in
Shepherdstown, W.Va., last
week . ·

RIO GRANDE - The
Fall 2002 volume of the
for
Ohio
Assoc iation
Supervision and Curriculum
Development Journal featured articles about improving cla ssroom in struction
written by Rio Grande faculty and alumni who have
been involved with the
Master 's of Education program.
Dr. Greg Miller, profe ssor
of fine arts and graduate
program coordinator, and
Larry
Ewing,
adjuncl
instructor, edil the ASCD
Journal.
Dr. Sam Wil son , profe ssor

"Gods and Generals," a
prequel to Maxwell's 1993
epic, "Gettysburg," opens
nationwide Feb. 21. The
movie stars Jeff Daniels,
Robert Duvall and Chris
Conner.
Maxwell said the Antietam
battle,
fought
near
Sharpsburg, Md., in 1862,
will be included in a six-hour
DVD version of the film.

JazzFest will move to DeJtOlt ;
this year because an ongomt,
economic boycott o(..dowotown Cincinnati by bl®k
activists has hurt profits.
The two-day eve~ will
take place in July at Detroit's
Comerica Park.
There was no festival last
year because of artist cancellations and a shrinking audience. The 2001 event lost
$550,000.

of hi story, wrote an article
" Applying
the
Hero's
Journey to a Historic
Figure." Hi s article app lies
Joseph Campbe ll 's theories
on mythic heroes to the life
of Hungarian revolutionary
Joseph Kossuth .
Amy Landrum, adjunct
instructor of art and English
at Rio Grande and doctoral
student at Ohio University,
authored "Maieutic Art: A
Traditional Approach to
Contemporary Classrooms."
Maieutic artists who produce process-o ·en ted art
forms provide a model for
teachers wh0 become arti sts

of leaching.
Aimee Branham-Sw it zer;
Rio Grande alumna , wrole
"Music Makes Their Mind "
Go Around" which focuse'
on kindergarten teac her
Bonnie Grove of Chillicothe
who use s music lo leach stu ,
dents a variety of subjects.
Grove and her daughter:
Dana. both alumnae of Rio
Grande 's program , devek
oped the children's play
"Ml Brainy Kid s," which.
focuses upon !he multiple
intelligence theory, which is
the philosophical co re ot
Rio Grande 's graduate program.

Law enforcement courses scheduled·
RIO
GRANDE
Continuing law enforcement
education courses are being
hosted by the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Co ll ege
Community
throughout 2003. The sessions are an effort to bring
local free and low-co st
training to area law enforcement agencies to alleviate
extended . travel time and
associated
expenses.
Certification from the sponsor fbr each officer in attendance is an additional benefit to departments. All sessions are held from 9 a.m. to
noon.
The Ohio Peace Officer
Training
Academy
(OPOTA) in London, Ohio,
and the Ohio Attorney
General's office offer train ing to Ohio 's law enforcement officers through free
teleconferencing
and
regional training in addition
to offerings at the central
location in London, Ohio.
teleconferences
OPOTA
during March will include a
Juvenile Justice Update on
March 7, and a Designer
Drug Update for the Patrol
Officer on March 20.
OPOTA on-site sess ions at

Rio
Grande
includ e
Clandestine
Labs
and
on
Methamphet ami ne s
March
7.
and
Death/Homicide
Investigation on April 28.
Additional sessions will
be scheduled throughout the
year.
The National Center for
State and Local · Law
Enforcement ' Training
(NCSLET) of the Federal
Law Enforcement Training
Center (FLETC), in partnership with the Southern
Poverty Law Center and
Auburn
UniversityMontgomery, offers tuition free, advanced training
opportunities to state and
local law enforcement officers. The March FLETC
teleconference is Approach
Procedures and Interview
Techniques, scheduled on
March 6.
"Live Re spon se" is a
recurring bi-monthly live
and interactive satellite
broadcast offering Weapon s
of
Mass
Destruction
(WMD) related awareness
information to the nation's
civilian and military emergency response communities. \\Live Response" is a

the
collaboration
of
Department of Justice,
Office
· of
Ju stice
Programs/Office
for
Domestic Preparedness, and
the Federal Emergency.
Management Agency .
"Live Response" is produced by the National
Terrorism
Preparedne ss
Institute, a division of the
Southeastern Publi c Safety,
Institute at St. Petersburg
College, St. Pelersburg, Fla.
Additional support is furnished by the Army.
National Guard and the US
Army Satellite Education
Network at
Ft.
Lee,
Virginia.
"Live
The
March
Response" teleconference
will be March 26 at th6
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College campus, Wood Hall, Room 229:
For more info rmation or
to register for any of these
or other upcoming session s,
contact Dan Day or Vicki
Canan, University of Rio
Grande Campu s Poli ce
qep~rtmem • . (7 40) 245-:
7j286 :
~·
•

.i

Community Calendar
Public Meetings
Friday, Feb. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in special
session at 7:30 p.m. Friday at
the administration office for a
c!iscussion on personnel.
Saturday, Feb. 8
CHESTER
Chester
Township Trustees, 9 a.m
Chester town hall.
Monday, Feb. 10
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
the town hall.

Clubs and
Organizations

.

~nt(etam battle

To advertise
in this special

based on his work since he fits instead of di sability
is deceased. Is this true?
benefits.
A. Yes. Benefits can
Q.
I'm thinking about
be paid to divorced widows getting disability protecor widowers who are age tion from a private compa60 or older (or age 50 to 60 ny. If I become disabled
and· disabled) if·th~~ m~et ··Mif''haVe a · private 'policy; ·
Jhe ' other
'ehgibil_~tx . would it r~uce my .SO..:ial
requu.ements. Call~ Social . Securl·.:v disabili'ty beqeflt?
secunty at 1•800"772 • 1213 .. A. •J.'No. You( eli'i~ibiliiy
(TTY 1 • 800 • 3 ~ 5 - 0778 ) to for Social Security disabiliapply .for bene~lls or ask for ty payments Is not affected
more mformauon.
by private insurance you
Q. Is It true tha~ some may have. But worker's
people w~~k and shll col- compensation arid certain
le~.dis~~~.ty benefii~~cial ' other public di sability paySecurity has special rules . me~ts may . affect . your
designed 10 help disability Social Secunty benefit. .
beneficiaries go back 10
Q. I received a Social
work. Social Security can Secunty Statement, and
provide cash income . and one of my previous
medical assistance while employers has not reported
beneficiaries attempt to my . wages to Social
work on a regular basis.
Secunty. What s~ould I d.o?
Q. I receive Social ' A. Call Social Secumy
Security disability benefits. toll-free at 1-800-772-1213
Will my Social Security (TTY 1-800-325-0778) and
benefits change when I turn be prepared to show proof
age 65?
of your wages , such as your
A. No . When you turn W-2 forms and income tax
age 65, your benefits will statements. Social Security
be called retirement bene- will investigate.

I

311

Monday, February 10, 2003

FAMILY MEDICINE

~~~e~~r: . :~ur ~wnw~~r~

News and information for your wedding

Local • Entertainment

The Daily Sentinel

Page A3

Friday, Feb. 7
POMEROY - Meigs PERl
74 , noon luncheon at the
Senior Citizens Center with
meeting to follow. Brett Jones,
Meigs County State Highway
Department superintendent.
will discuss roads in Meigs
County. Memberships are
being attepted for 2003.

Friday, Feb. 8
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen 5:30 p.m .
Saturday at the hall for a
potluck meal. The camp will
furnish meat , beverage, bread
Saturday, Feb 8
and table service. Those
RUTLAND - Revival ser:
attending are to take a .cov- vices at the Free Will Baptist
ered dish. Friends and neigh- Church, now in progress, i
bors welcome.
·
p.m. nightly through Saturday;
with Jamie Fortnier, evange~
Saturday, Feb. 9
list. Pastor Paul Taylor, pastor;
POMEROY
Return invites the public.
:
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughers of the American
REVIval , Rutland Free Wit
Revolution, 10 a.m. at Grace Baptist church , Jamie Fortnie~
Episcopal Church. Winners of is the evangelist , 7 pi.m . con~
history essay contest will be trunuioght through Saturday:
recognized and good citizen- Pasdtor paul taylor invites the;
ship awards will be presented. public
Sunday, Feb. 9
Monday, Feb. 10
LONG BOTIOM - HarrY,
POMEROY
Meigs Bush of Pensacola, Fla. wilt
County-Ohio Bicentennial speak at 6 :30 p.m. at the Mt;
Committee, 5 p.m. at the Olive Church at Long Bottom:
Meigs County Museum, Pastor lawrence Bush invites:
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
the public.

Church
meetings

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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afternoon,
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Yo

and Education

PageA4

in a particular subject. Awards were presented to:
Chris Barton. Dillon Blankenship,
Wyan Jarrell, first grade mathematics;
Jeremiah Warden, Tedra Sayre, Kody
Wolfe, second grade mathematics; Bobby
Goode, Tiffany Fnmcis, Abbie Williams,
thrid gmde mathematics; Zachary Manuel
and Katey Panerson, fourth grade mathematics.

Nate Lehmond, Austin Reitmire,
Mirande Holter, Cody Thcker, art; Trenton
Cook, Austin Hill, Bobby Goode, Katey
Panerson, music; Rowan Holsinger, Sara
VanConey, Dylan Bass, Zachary Manuel,
physical education. .
Reading award were presented to:
Jamie O'Brien, Drewlyn Lemley, Tyler
Barton, first grade; Cole Graham, Austin
Reitmire, Shelby Pickens, second grade;

Marcus Hill, Brady DeLong, Clayton
Moore, fourth grade; Katelyrm Smith,
Ttffany Cundiff, fourth _grade.
Taylor McNickle, Adam Pape, Bobby
Good and Joyce Romine were honored
for outstiinding effort in music, Jody
. Barnes, Kody Wolfe, Justin Engle, and
Katie Barr, music, and Jordan Huddleston,
Ryland Michael, Timmy Wanner and
Dartiel Jenkins, physical education.

Meigs Local announces honor roll
POMEROY- The names of
students in Meigs Local School
District schools who made a
!!raclc of B or above in all their
subjects lObe listed on the second nine-weeks honor roll have
been
announced
bv
Superintendent
Willimn
Buckley.
They are as follows:
Bradbury
Grade 4: Morgan Howard,
. Shelhy Johnson, Shannon
McLaughlin, Olivia Bevan,
Josh CarJehall, Kyle Johnson,
Colt Kerr. Angel Lemley,
Brenton Southern. Chandra
Stanley. Daniel Stewart and
Tanner Tackett.
Grade 5: Tyler Andrews and
I .a Tricia Smith, Autumn
. Ebersbach,
Charles
·. Fitchpatrick. Aaron Little and
Jacob Well.
Harrisonville
Kindergarten:
Cheyenna
Lewis, Mitchell Metts, Brittany
Qualls, Breahna Thompson and
Dakota
Wilson,
Shania
Gilrrv,re, Colton Hannah, Paige
Phillips and Courtney Wheeler.
Grade I: Josiah Beha and
· . Christian Romine, Sierra
Atwood, Daniel Morman,
Samantha Spires, Donnie
Stutler and Trevor Williamson.
Grade 2: Casi Arnold, Ashley
Jeffers. Ashleigh Sayre and
WilliamTaylor,
Brittany
Cremeans.
Grade 3: Zach Sayre,
. Stephanie Hoa.lcraft
. , Grade
4:
Francesca
, Buechner, Danielle Dalton,
Ashley
Edwards,
Hope
Hajivandi, Julia Lantz, Tiffany
Lee, Krista Pearce and Melanie
Taylor.
Grade 5: Dawn Bissell, Cody
· Hill. Dean Hively, Michael
. Wallace and Hailey Williams.
CC 2 . Class:
Steven
· Caldwell, Jamie Jeffers and
Fancy Markin.
Middleport
Kindergarten: Sammy Ash,
· Mc Kayla Baqrrett, Hannah
Cremeans, Danell Dixon,
. Haley Kennedy, Misti Lee, Bre
Mitchell, Taylor Northup,
Taylor Palmer, Austin · Wolfe,
Chadsity Abbott, Jenny Casto,
Michael
Davis,
Mariah
· Shoemaker, Kelsey Hudson,
· · Kwesi Lane, Reuben Lawson,
. Issac Watson.
Grade I: Dill an Andrews,
Dylan Bass, Bre Bonnett,
Tishea Boothe.
Kimberly Casci, Rocco
Casci. John Casto. Devon
Cundiff. Courtney Holley.
Olivia Lane. Taylor Rowe,
Shannon Walker, Dominique
WaLson. Levi Smith, Dayanaira
Amott. BelL Morgan.
Michaela Davidson. D.J.
Dixon. Isaac Gibbs. Patrick
Evans. Cheyenne Hall. Bradley
Helton, Andy Stein, Valerie
Wolle, Tilhmv Withrow.
Grade 2: ~ Robbie Dillon.
Harley Fox. Makenzie Greene,
Treay McKinney. Rachel
Payne. Nakayla Ratliff. Tiaira
Richmond. Kyrie Swann. Tyler
Triplett. Zach Yeauger. Braden
Baker. Matthew Casci. Ally
Dav1s. Erika Fox, Jessi
Meadows. Jacob Mulholland,
Emnia
Perrin.
Keanna
Rohinsnn. Bradley Wills, Adam
Little. Nikkie Rayburn.
Grade :1: Carly Carpenter,
Bruno Casci. Desirae Cundiff,
Michael Davi s, Zach Fink,
Raynee Herman, Marlee
Hoffinan. Austin King, Ben
Reed.
DiJaun
Robinson.
Nathan Rothgeb. Kay!a Shane.
Travis Tackett. Rasean Whin. J.
· R. Jewell , Jeffrey Kimes.
Stephanie LeMaster, Jesse
Wi&lt;,eman. Tori Wolfe. Colten
McKinney.
Pomeroy
Kindergarten:
Savannah
Ah&gt;hire. Destinee Blackwell.
Sariah Brinker. Emily Deem.
Isaiah English. Matthew Foster.
Vlatthew
Fuller.
Dylan
Lavender.
Kyle Lemley,
Samantha Loar, Jared Long,
Cameron Mattox , William
Milliron. Sara Morgan. Lindsay
Patter,on.
Ty
Phelps.
DeSha\\na Robi nson. Jeremy
Stump. Zachary Test. Timothy
VanCooncy.
Mikayla
VanMatre. Sydney Walker.
Victoria Walker. Joseph Wines.

Kay lee Howard, Taylor Hysell,
Brianna Will.
Grade I : Garrett Barton. Chelsea Kelley, Meranda
Shandi Beaver. Ryan Brothers, Lambert.c Brody Peyton,
Brett
Cast-,
Kimberly Maggie
Barley,
Jaquille
Cunningham, Trenton Deem, Cordell, Jarret Durst, Rheanna
Brittany Durst, Adrianna Harmon, Jordan Hutton,
Hutchinson, Vada Johnson, Bran don
Mahr,
Kelton
Damon Jones, Sara Klein, Anna McCloud, Taylor Mitchell,
Little, Ciera Marcinko, Austin Selena Reynolds, Cassidy Rose,
Miller, Jack Reitmire, Cody Megan Snodgrass, Taylor
Rice, Gabrielle Rice, Kaylee Stewart, Morgan Tucker, Kyle
Rowe, Jessica Ryder, Carolann VanMeter,
Tara
Walzer
Stewm1. Carly Taylor, Patricia Kuharic, Hailey Hand, Jennifer
Swiger, Jamie Walters, Saige Reicher, Matthew Ward, Cody
Taggart.
White.
Grade 2: Tyler Eblin, Hannah
Grade 2: Alyssa Cremeans,
Shestan Cunis, Haley English, King, Anthany Lane, Shawnella
Cody Fink, Kacy Fink, Amanda Patterson,
Christopher
Grant, Kendra Haning. Eddie Clemente, Odessa Jacks,
Hendricks, Christopher Jones, Gunner McKinney, Jordan
Corey King, Thomas Klein, Meadows, Megan Dyer, Shana
Chandra Mattox, Alexander Gorslene,
Sarah Ashburn,
Morris, Tess Phelps, Tyler Paula Barthelmas, Dillon
Price, Sam Scherfel, Maggie Boyer, Shane Engle, Matthew
Smith, Bethany Spaun, Amber Keesee, Kayla McClure,
Steinmetz, Rachel Stiffler, Kirsten McGuire, Chad Searles,
Steven~ · ump,
Madelyn Breanna Snowden, Sharon
Thomas, Justin Tilli s, Jesse Wright.
Woodyard, Tisha Zeigler.
Grade 3: Karl Gueltig, Steven
Grade 3: Darienne Betzing, Mahr, Kassandra Mullins,
Olivia Cleek, Andy Fairchild, Cassidy Tucker,
Robbie
Shawna Price, Jeffrey Roush, Cundiff, Stephany Durham,
Zachary Sheets, Cayelynn Tanisha McKinney, Jacob Nitz,
Smith.
Brady Norville, Jennifer
Grade 4: Brianna Buffington, Robinson, Chelsey Eads, Cody
Hannah Cleek, Nathaniel Hysell.
Gilkey,
Brandon
King,
Grade 4: Alex Ackerman,
Johnathan Michael, Chelsea Austin Sayre, Shellie Bailey,
Patterson, Bo-Dara Powell, Jessica Rowley, Cameron
Ravenne Reed, Garrett Riffle, Bolin, Angela Keesee, Curlee
Kasey Roush, Katelyn Stacy, Smith, '!yson Morris, Braden
Sarah Thomas, Christian Prater, Shannon WalzerWoods.
Kuharic.
Grade 5: Ian Bullington,
Grade 5: Chelsey Arms,
Ashley Carey, Caleb Davis, Dusty Eads, Kayla Graham,
Kristine Davis, Taylor Deem, Brad Hood, Micki Barnes, Ben
Kristen Eblin, Veronica Grimm, Hood, Annisha Kopec, Joey
Holly Jeffers, Ryan Jeffers, Morgan.
Cody Lee, Shelby Ohlinger,
CC: Talmadge Lewis.
Erin Patterson, Jacob Riffle,
SaHsbury
Cayla Taylor, Ryan VanMatre,
Kindergarterr David pavis,
Men VanMeter, Ashley Walker. John Davis, Nikki Dickens,
LD: John Pierce, Jodi Sierra Hill, Cody Kinzel, Dillon
Scarberry, Mary Scarbrough, ·Mayes, Hailey Roush, Brandon
Teresa Schartiger.
Young!
· DH: Dale Ellis, T.J. Smith,
Grade I: Cody Casteel,
and Carrie White.
Olivia Cremeans, Alyson
MH: Patricia Clark, A.J. Dettwiller, Devan Dugan.
Kopec, MaJjorie Lewis Nate Chase Hayes, Andrea McGrath,
McBane, and Emma Swiger.
Eric Smith, Katlynn Stanley,
Rutland
Lauren Swick, Brianna Werry,
Kindergarten:
Alexis Damn Will.
Coleman, Jordyn Elliott,
Grade 2: Kaitlyn Collins,
Matthew Small wood, Scotty Kenzie
Shuler,
Autumn
Stewart, Tanner Vanaman, Williams.
Collen
Young.
Clinton
Grade 3: Courtney Baker,
Lambert, Austin Pierce, Cody Dartiel Collins, Emalee Glass,
Robinson, Jeffrey Teachout, Cody Hanning.
Christopher Wise, Dakota
Grade 4: Alaine Arnold,
Cordell , Amber Davidson , Heath Dettwiller, Miranda
Jamie Elliott, Jack Lemley, Grueser, Marissa McAngus,
Brooke Reynolds, Bruce Davis, Jonathan McCarthy, Connor
Cheyenne Gorslene, Stephanie Swartz, Jose' Whitlatch.
Kauff, Arryn Stout.
Grade 5: Darby Gilmore,
Grade I : Courtney Burnem, Colby Hayes, Breana Hemsley,
Megan
Cleland, Abigail Scott Kennedy, and Jennifer
Houser, Chelza McMillin, Payne.
Sandra Painter, Trenton Prater,
Meigs Middle School
Taylor Tucker, Cassie Davis,
Grade 6: Jamie Bailey,

William Barcus, Clayton Bolin,
Chad Bonnen, Megan Bush,
Jesse Carr, Elizabeth Cremeans,
Crocken Crow, Le'Anna Davis,
Hailey Ebersbach, Jennifer Fife,
Shawntay Games, Laura
Gheen, Robert Grover, Amber
Hockman, Lian Hoffman,
Jessica
Holliday,
Sarah
Hubbard, Lilly Jacks, Terry
Jewell, Jessica Jewell, Morlan
Kennedy, Cara Lawless,
Stephanie Lawson, Morgan
Lentes, Caitlin Leslie, Courtney
Mayes, Jared McKinney,
Mason Metts, Jason Morris,
Andrew O'Bryant, April Oiler,
Aaron Oliphant, Raymond
· Patterson, AJexandia Panerson,
Erin
Perkins,
Samantha
Pridemore, Calee Reeves,
Zachary
Schwab, Jaime
Simpson, Melissa Snowden,
Merissa Snyde- Caitlin Swartz,
Tess Thomas.
Grade
7: ·
Samantha
Ackerman, Jacob Barnes, Amy
Barr, Talisha Beha, Emily
Davis, Joshua Eakins, Robert
Foreman, Jr., Christopher
Goode, Bradley Jones, Kaylee
Kennedy, John Landak.er, Bryce
Laudermilt,
Kirk
Legar,
Lindsay McKinney, Chelsey
Noel, Brittany Preast, Lesley
Preece, Tiffany Simpson,
Phillip Sisson, Steven Stewart,
Lacey Stobart, Caitlyn Thomas,
Alexa Venoy, Louie Wilson.
Grade 8: Daniel Bookman,
Cory Dill, Andrew Games,
Keilah Jacks, Matthew Landers,
Gabrielle Lester, Chalsie
Manley, David Poole, Jesse
Price, Robert Reed, Bobbi
Smith, Whitney Smith, Krysta
Stitt, Michelle Weaver, Ashley
Zielinski.
Meigs ffigh School
Grade 9: Miranpa Beha,
Derek Bricldes, Travis Butcher,
Carita Gardner, Brittney Jacks,
Nathan Jeffers, Julia Johnson,
Joshua
Kennedy,
Jacob
Kennedy, Kayla McCarthy,
Brandi
Reeves,
Buford
Smallwood, Whitney Thoene,
Jacob Venoy, Joshua Venoy,
AdamWilson.
Grade I 0: Grant Arnold,
Renee
Bailey,
Jeffrey
Baughman, Jeremy Blackston,

Raymond Colwell, Brittany
Cremeans, Eric Cullums,
Michael Davis, Justin DeMoss,
Trevor Depoy, Jodi Donohue,
Patrick Dowell, Peggy Duff,
Keri . Evans, Eddie Fife,
Brandon Grover, Randy Hart,
Joseph Howard, Aaron lhle,
Glena Jarvis, Gary Kauff,
Matthew Krawsczyn, Cassie
Lee. Samantha Pierce, Katie
Reed, Kimberly Reynolds,
Zachary Shuler, Kasi Smith,
Adam Snowden, Natashia
Tem~leton, Nichole Varian,
Nicki Wilson, Natasha Wise,
Carl M. Wolfe. Jennianne
Young.
Grade 12: David Barnes,
David Boyd; Jaclyn Bradbury,
Nicole Burman, Alisia Burton,
Benjamin Collins, Brandi
Dailey, Jaynee Davis, Maegan
Dodson, Andrea Fetty, Jesse
Gates, Nichole Harper, Jessica
Howell, Randall Hudson,
Aubrie Kopec, Elizabeth
Landers, Sarah Lee, Rachel
McDaniel,
Erica
Poole,
Brittany Powers, Jessie Sargent,
Ryan Stobart, Corey Vaughan.
Grade 12: Senior-Dwight
Apperson
Ill,
Rachel
Argabright, Bridget Balser,
Deadra Barnette, Brook Bolin,
Cassie
Braun,
Miranda
Buckley, Jassiline Carter,
Melinda Chancey, Nicole
Davis, Kayte Davis, Juley
Eblin, Clinton Faulk, Hollie
Candice
Fetty,
Ferrell,
Jacqueline
Frechette,
Chnstopher
Haning,
Christopher Haye, Meghan
Haynes, Jessica Hooten,
Crystal Jacks, Katie Jeffers,
Sebastian Kaiser, William
Kauff, Mallory King, Crystal
Mauntel, Danny Morgan,
Ja&amp;.on Murdock, Mathew
O'Brien, Heather Phalin,
Brandon Ramsburg, Mary
Rankin, Chelsea Ray, Jason
Rosier,
Jeremy
Roush,
Michele Runyon, Abram
Sayre, Joshua Simpson,
Amber Spradling, Emily
Story,
Samantha Tilley,
Jennife~ Walker, Marcus Ward,
Elizabeth Wilfong, Allison
Williamson, Hannah Woolard,
Jennifer Zielinski

Southern
Local
honor roll
Students in the Southern
Local School District making
the honor roll for the second
nine weeks honor roll were
announced today. _
The~ are as follows:
Semor'S: Rachel Chapman,
Crystal Cottrill, Curt Crouch.
Jimmy Eakins, Miriam
Eldabaja, Brittany Fortune,
Jeri Hill, Jordan Hill, Amy
Lee , Amanda Miller, Alan
Moore, Curtis Neigler.
Ttffaney Patterson, Tara
Pickens, Brandon Smith ,
Josh Smith , Tom Theiss.
Juniors:
Bethany
Amberger, Shawn Barnhart,
Jordan Bass, Stephanie
Bradford , Bento Cunha, Codi
Davis, Chelsea Dilcber, Stacy
Eakins, Sarah Hawley, Emily
Hill, 1Y Hill, Tabitha Jones,
Paige Musser, Amy Norman,
Deanna Pullins, Henry Rider,
Chris Roush, Katie Sayre,
Andrew Smith, Jamie Smith,
Jeremy Yeauger.
Sophomores: John Bentz,
Susan Brauer, Ashton Brown,
Heather Duffy, Holly Duffy,
Jordan Neigler, Philip Pierce.
Craig Randolph, Ashley
Roush, Ryan Smith, Chris
Thcker, Nicki Thcker.
Freshmen:John · Bentz,
Gene Buckley, Brad Crouch,
Heather Jones, Kristina
Williams.
Eighth Grade: Ryan
Donaldson, '!yler Harlmess,
Amber Hill, Mallory Hill ,
Jacob Hunter, Katie Kibble,
Nathan McClure, Jesse
McKnight, Adam Phillips,
Allie Rees , Adelle Rice,
Jacob Stacy, Ashley Teaford
Seventh Grade: Bonnie
Allen, Morgan Brown,
Lindsey Buzzard, Heather
Cundiff, Stephartie Cundiff,
Sarah Eldabaja, Becca
Hanstine, Emily Ohlinger,
Whitney Riffle, Kaylyn
Spradling, Derek Trimmer,
Sixth Grade: Merri
Collins, Brody Aint, Bryan
Harris, Hannah Hawley, Chris
Holter, Emma Hunter, Robert
McCarty, Brittany Meledau,
Chelsea Pape, Samantha
Patterson, Rachael Pickens,
Weston Roberts, Jamie
Warner, J.D. Whittington
Fifth Grade: Dylan Bass,
Alexis Hill, Gabby Johnson,
Michael Laudermil~ Michael
Manuel, John Powell, Cyle
Rees, Dustin Salser, Jessica
Shelton, Lynzee Thcker, Katie

Woods.

Obituaries

For the Record

Raymond
Lambert

EMS calls

RUTLAND -Raymond
0 . Lambert, 87, Rutland,
. died Saturday, Feb. 8, 2003,
at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis, following an
extended illness.
He was born Jan. 31,
1916, son of the late
Andrew
and
Maggie
He
Kitchen
Lambert.
. .. worked as a coal miner for
. most of his adult life and
• attended the Church of God
· in Rutland .
Surviving are two sons
and daughters-in-law, Ray
· and Juanita Lambert of
Rutland, and Douglas and
Shirley
Lambert
of
Okeechobee, Fla.; two
· daughters and a son-in-law,
Jenny
and
Charles
Williamson of Rutland and
Pat Harmon of Rutland; a
: brother and sister-in-law,
· Earnest and Mary Lambert
. of Rutland; a sister, Virginia
Kolette of Rutland; and a
sister-in-law, Edith Lambert
of Rutland; II grandchildren; 16 great grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by
his wife, Lucille Lambert;
two infant children, Mary
and David Lambert; three
brothers, Drexel, James and
Andrew Lambert; and a sis- ter, Mary Fry.
Services will be held at II
a.m., Tuesday, Feb. II,
2003 at the Church of God
in Rutland with Rev. Ron
Heath officiating. Burial
• will follow at Miles
Cemetery in Rutland.
Friends may call at the
Fisher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy from 2 to 4 and 7
: to 9 p.m. Monday.

Local Briefs
Trial canceled
POMEROY - A jury
· trial scheduled for Tuesday
· "in Meigs County Cou·rt has
· been canceled and jurors .
need not report.

Plan meeting
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township trustees will
conduct
their
annual
appropriations meeting at
6:30p.m. Wednesday at the
township garage on Joppa
Rd. A business meeting
: will follow.
•

: Trustees
: organize
:
:
:
:
•
:
:
:
•
:
:
:

REEDSVILLE Bill
Osborne was elected president and Jack Westfall vice
president during the recent
organizational meeting of
the
Olive
Township
trustees. Randy Boston is
the third trustee, and
Martha Durst the clerk.
Meetings were set for the
first Thursday of each
month, or as announced. ,

:• Club meets
•

•
:
:
:
.
;

ROCKSPRINGS - Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club
will meet· at 7:30 p.m .
Monday at the secretary's
office of the Rocksprings
Fairgrounds.

•

: Special
~ meeting set
.
;
:
•
•

CHESTER Chester
Township Board of Trustees
will hold a special meeting
Tuesday at 5 p.m. in the
Chester Town Hall.

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 10, 2003

:Southern students honored by Sporn Plant
RACINE - Randy Humphreys and
· Gary Jones of AEP' S Sporn Plant were
pres.:meu with award~ for their participation in the Partners in Education program
m Southern Elementary School.
Spom Plant has been partners with the
school and Syracuse Elementary School
since IW'i.
During the ceremony, students in grades
I thmugh 4 were honored for their efforts

Monday, February 10,2003

POMEROY - Units of
Meigs Emergency Services
answered the following calls
for assistance over the weekend:
CENTRAL
1~:48
a.m.
Saturday,
Wagner Lane, Rae lynn
Bradley, Holzer Medical
Center;
10:19 a.m., Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, Edith Barton,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
10:55 a.m., Elmwood
Terrace Apartments, Opal
Cummins, Pleasant Valley;
10:55 a.m., The Maples,
William Booth, .Holzer;
3:37 p.m., Bashan Rd.,
Betty Fnend, Holzer;
7:09 p.m., Gannaway Rd.,
Virginia Hanson, Holzer;
12:18 a.m. Sunday, Ohio 7
and U.S. 33, Keith Nibert,
Pleasant Valley;
2:0 I a.m., Rocksprings
Center,
Rehabilitation
Glasgow Farrow, Holzer;
5:49 a.m., Texas Rd., Sarah
Hoffman, Holzer;
9:08 a.m., Pard St., Flo
Tedlock, Holzer;
II :08 a.m., South Second
Ave.,
Middleport,
Joe
McCloud, treated;
3:23 p.m., Hudson St.,
Middleport, Greg Knapp,
Pleasant Valley;
3:38 p.m., Ohio 681,
Thelma Lantz, CamdenClark Memorial Hospital;
6:49 p.m., Village Manor
Apartments,
Gloria
Simpkins, Pleasant Valley;
7:43 p.m., Holzer Meigs
Clinic, James Circle, Holzer;
9:27 p.m., Ohio 143,
Patricia Humphreys, Holzer.
POMEROY
4:09 p.m., Holzer Meigs
Clinic,
Newaza Smith,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
RUTLAND
4:04 p.m., White's Hill Rd.,
motor vehicle accident, Jason
Miller,
George Miller,
Amanda Priddy, treated.
TUrPERS PLAINS
I:42 p.m., Saturday, Ohio
7, motor vehicle accident,
Marilyn Fowler, St. Joseph
Hospital; Delton Fowler, St.
Joseph, Wesley Sanders,
treated.

Bush says anti-terror campaign expanding
to Iraq because 'the world changed' on 9/11
WASHINGTON (AP) President &amp;sh says the Sept.
II terrorist attacks redefined
America's approach to international affairs and increased
the urgency of dealing with
growing threats abroad.
At a policy conference
Sunday of Republican members of Congress at a West
Virginia
resort,
Bush
explained his reasoning for
expanding the war on terrorism to Iraq.
"Prior to September the
II th, there was apparently no
connection between a . place
like Iraq and terror," he said.
There were concerns about
terrorists in Iraq, but no fear
about a threat to the
American homeland. " ... We
were confident that two
oceans could protect us from
harm."
But, Bush added, "the
world changed on September
the lith."
"Obviously, it changed for
thousands of people's lives
for whom we still mourn. But
it changed for America, and
it's very important that the
American people understand
the change. We are now a bat-

tleground. We are vulnera- Mohamed E!Baradei said he
ble."
expected
the
Security
That, he said, is the reason Council to give the inspectors
"we cannot ignore gathering more time "as long as we are
threats across the ocean."
registering good progress."
"It used to be that we could
Asked later about Blix's
pick or choose whether or not statement, White House
we would become involved," spokesman Ari Fleischer
the president said, but the noted that Bush has said that
direct potential of an attack "given the fact that Saddam
on the United States has Hussein is , not disarming,
changed that philosophy.
time is running out."
Iraq has fooled the world
Blix and E!Baradei are to
for more than a decade about make their next report to the
its banned chemical and bio- U.N. Security Council on
logical weapons and the Friday. That could be pivotal
United Nations now faces "a toward determining whether
moment of truth" in disarm- the United States should
ing Saddam Hussein, he said. launch military action against
"It is clear that not only is Iraq.
Saddam Hussein deceiving, it
Secretary of State Colin
is clear he's not disarming," Powell said on NBC's "Meet
he said. "And so you'll see us the Press" that if the report
over the next short period of shows Iraq is still not coopertime working with friends ating, "then the Security
and allies and the United Council will have to sit in
Nations to bring that body session immediately and
along."
determine what should hapBush s~oke as chief U.N. pen next" and "start considerweapons mspector Hans Blix ' mg a resolution that says Iraq
said in Baghdad that he saw a is in material breach and it is
beginning of Iraq's under- time for serious consestanding that it must serious- quences to follow."
ly observe demands for disarIn his speech to the GOP
mament. U.N. nuclear chief gathering at the Greenbrier

Bush steps up push for
WASHINGTON (AP) -.
President Bush is stepping up
efforts to ~et religious groups
involved m the delivery of
social services while pushing
new initiatives for mentoring
children and helping drug
addicts.
Bush on Sunday urged
Republicans in Congress to
work with him on several
areas he considers key components in his vision of "compassionate conservatism."
The president was speaking
Monday to a convention of
religious broadcasters in
Nashville, Tenn., on programs
that recognize "in our plenty,
there are people who are
hurt."

program~

"There are people who need
love and compassion," Bush
said Sunday at a GOP congressional retreat at the
Greenbrier resort in White
Sulphur Springs, W.Va.
'There are people who wonder whether or not the
American experience is meant
for them,"
Bush outlined plans to push
for programs that would help
these people.
"I'm going to call for focus
on those who are addicted to
drugs," he told the lawmakers.
"We'll work hard to continue
to drive the demand for drugs
down and interdict supply, but
there are sad souls in our society who are hooked on

Prescription drug plan up in the air
WASHINGTON (AP) Joseph Williams is skeptical
about enrolling in another
Medicare HMO, even if it
means the government would
start picking up a good part of
his prescription drug costs.
At 72, Williams returned to
Medicare's traditional feefor-service program last
month after bouncing around
among five different health
maintenance organizations in
recent years.
His experience is an example why even President
Bush's allies in Congress
have shown no enthusiasm
for his proposal to condition
prescription drug benefits on
older people joining HMOs or
other private insurance plans.
"lf they'd only treat you
like people and not a number
in a computer ... ," Williams
said from his home in
Massapequa, N.Y. "The doctors were good. It's the plans.
They don't know what they're
doing."
In his State of the Union
address last month, Bush
broached the idea of giving
Medicare recipients an option
for getting government help
with their pharmacy bills,
saying "seniors should have
the choice of a health care
plan that provides prescription drugs."
Immediately
afterward,
Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Charles Grassley,
R-Iowa, said he refuses to
"draw lines on drug coverage." Sen. Olympia Snow, RMaine, accused Bush of
"harnpering" efforts by her
and other lawmakers to get

those benefits for all older
people.
Senior
House
Republicans expressed only
befuddlement.
Since then, administration
officials have been loath to
provide any details.
Lawmakers in both parties
remain anxious to pass a
Medicare prescription drug
benefit, particularly before
next year's elections. Last
year, the House passed a $350
billion, 10-year plan that, like
Bush's, relied heavily on private insurers- a concept that
Democrats
vehemently
oppose. It died in the Senate.
"Its exactly the opposite of
what seniors want and need,"
Senate Democratic leader
Tom Daschle of South Dakota
said recently.
Older people initially
signed up for Medicare's
HMO program when it began
in 1999 because many of the
plans offered enhanced benefits like drug, dental and hearing coverage not provided by
traditiohal Medicare.
But in the time since, many
managed care plans have fled
areas and abandoned beneficiaries, complaining they are
not getting enough money
amid rising health care costs .
Just this ye!lf, 33 health plans
withdrew from the program
or reduced their service, dropping coverage for nearly
200,000 people.
Setween 1999 and 200 I,
nearly half the HMOs participating in the program with·drew or scaled back their services, affecting sonle 1.6 million Medicare recipients,
according to a study last year

by
Mathematica Policy
Research, Inc.
About 5 million of
Medicare's 40 million beneficiaries are still enrolled in the
HMO program.
Karen Ignani, president of
the American Association of
Health Plans, said the private
plans were having difficulties
because the "funding formula
hasn't kept pace with the
increase of health care costs."
"Plans have been forced out
because Congress hasn't done
its part to fix the. formula
glitch," Ignani said. "Only in
Washington do entities get
underfunded and then get
blamed."
Williams said returning to
traditional Medicare has
brought him and his wife,
Mary, a sense of stability after
facing rising premiums and
reduced services while
enrolled in different HMO
plans. One plan gave him
only a $500 allowance for
drug costs. In another, his premiums rose from zero to $71
each for himself and his wife
in a matter of months.
While he left his most
recent plan after it took more
than two years to clear up
billing problems following
heart surgery, he admitted that
a strong prescription drug
benefit could lure him into
back in private insurance
plan.
"I take about four different
prescriptions. That would be
an incentive to get me back,"
he said. But, he added, "they
are very poorly run. I'd have
to think about that."

resort in White Sulphur
Springs, W.Va., Bush said:
"It's a moment of truth for the
United Nations. The United
Nations gets to decide shortly
whether or not it is going to
be relevant in terms of keeping the peace, whether or not
its words mean anything."
"But one thing is certain:
for the sake of peace and for
the sake of security of the
United States and our friends
and allies, we will disarm
Saddam Hussein if he will
not disarm himself, " he
declared.
Earlier Sunday, national
security adviser Condoleezza
Rice dismissed movement
toward compliance by Iraq as
another attempt at "cheat and
retreat."
"We have seen this game
with Iraq many times before,
throughout the '90s," she said
on CBS ' "Face the Nation."
Powell said a reported
French-German proposal to
increase the number of
weapons inspectors in Iraq in
hopes of averting U.S. military action is "a diversion, not
a solution" to disarming
Saddam.

to help those in need

drugs."
And he said he looked forward "to working with the
Congress to empower programs which work, particularly faith-based programs
which work, to help save
Americans one heart, one
soul, one conscience at a
time."
He said it was important to
Pursue such rrograms domestically, but a so "to show our
compassion abroad as well."
The president also talked
about the thousands of children living in orphanages in
Africa because their parents
died of AIDS, and he asked
Congress to approve quickly
his proposal to sharply

increase U.S. aid to the global
battle against the disease- tc
$15 billion over the next five
years.
"It's a vital initiative.
· because we're talking aboUI
saving human life," Bush
said. "We're talking about
showing the world the greal
strength and compassion o1
the
United States
of
Am
, erica."
Democrats have questioned
how Bush can push for programs to help the needy.
improve education and provide prescription drugs at the
same time he is pushing tax
cuts repeatedly and planning
for a war with Iraq.

Gas

per gallon for unleaded, $I. 70

Pomeroy range between $1.60

for plus and $1.80 for premium.
The administrative secretary to
from PageA1
the
Meigs
Local
Superintendent
thinks
"there
is
Donna Carr, Pomeroy,
something
wrong
with
this
thinks there is no rhyme or price system." She is glad that
reason to fluctuating gas she has a short commute to
prices. She has seen high prices, work each day.
low prices and everything in
Gas prices in the United
between at stations everywhere. States have shot upwards, but
She said one day prices are high prices per gallon overseas are
in Athens and low in Gallipolis, enough to make a pedestrian
while other days it i.s the oppo- out of anyone. The most expensite. Carr said she has seen sive gas prices are found in
prices from $1.47 to $1.67 in Hong Kong which boasts $5.50
one day.
to $6.00 per gallon. Gas in
"It changes daily," she said. Britain is priced at just over
"It is atrocious. When one place $5.05 per gallon. Of course,
decides to raise prices they alJ some of the lowest prices in the
do. There is no rhyme or reason world are in the Middle East
to any of it."
where gas is 55 cents per galAs of this moment, gas prices lon. Kuwait City, Kuwait,
in Athens, Gallipolis and boasts 76 cents per ga.llon.

DAR
from PageA1
and heartbreak, to the family
but I have to tell the truth.
This is the most horrible place
in the earth. I long to be home. l
have seen men that were once
strong and healthy, and now due
to the biner cold, with nothing,

Money
from Page A1
ply.
Graham said he learned that
from a book, inspiring students
to seek out knowledge.
When Graham asks which
modem-day president is on the

not even shoes on their feet die
a slow and painful death.
Sometimes I wonder what we
are truly fighting for, times like
this I just want to come home
and forget the word independence." Jacob D. Boston.
The writers of the winning
entries and their parents were
honored at a luncheon meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter DAR held Saturday at
Grace Episcopal Church.
face of a half dollar, honor roll
student Darby Gilmore raises
his hand and answers. John F.
Kennedy.
Jennifer Payne provides the
coin man with research she
gathered from the Internet the
night hefore. Everyone is
engaged in the history lesson.
But, time is money, and even
the coin man must move on to
another class.

CHILDBIRTH EDUCATION CLASSES
•
•
•
•
•

Third Saturday of every month (All Day)
Taught by a Certified Childbirth Educator
FREE to PVH patients - $25 charge to patients from other facilities
Expectant mothers need to be at least 32 weeks (8 months) for class
Loved ones are encouraged to participate

FOR MORE INFORMATION: (304) 675-4340, Ext.1232

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�•1n1on
•

The Daily Sentinel ·

PageA6
Monday, February 10, 2003

:The Daily Sentinel

"

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

i"~E AMERIC~N ?EOfJ~f

Of WAR Wt1~

~~~Q ~Nt' 1\l,~ ~\\Y I.~

Publisher

Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

j

Shuttle investigative board stepping
up whirlwind fact-gathering mission

War protest

!. 111\NK Of WA~
Wlil-\ 1ft"'-Q ANV
A$K W"''l N01'~~ •·

SPACE
CENTER,
Houston (AP) The
board investigatin¥ the
Columbia shuttle d1saster
will speed up its efforts in
the coming days as it
embarks on a whirlwind
fact-gathering mission that
may ultimately determine
what caused the spacecraft's destruction .
Board chairman Adm.
Hal Gehman said the panel
would meet with engineers
at Johnson Space Center on
Monday before fanning out
to other NASA centers. He
said the pace of the probe
will triple after Monday
because members will split
into three teams, each tak-

Lmers to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
JOO uwds. All letters are subject to editing and must be
. sig11ed and include address and celephone numbu No
.unsigned /ettas wi/J be publi.1·hed. Letters should be in good
rasre. addressing ijsues. not personalities.
7hf ·opiniofls expressed in the column below are the con.n 'mus o{ the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s editorial board,
unless ofherwise noted. .

NATIONAL VIEW

wait?
But VVhite House needs
strong case to prosecute
war with Iraq

ing Qn differcn-. a~e!ls of
the complex investtgation.
The
NASA-appointed
board has less than two
months to complete the
investigation, but Gehman
said that deadline may be
extended because "the first
imperative is to get it
right."
Gehman said Sunday that
investigators were looking
into data from military
radar of an object detected
speeding
away
from
Columbia on Day 2 of its
mission. Gehman said the
object - detected by Air
Force Space .Command
radar - could have come
from the spacecraft and

sized that more study is
needed .
"These
rep9rts
are
emerging right .now," he
said. "It's too early to say
they mean anything ."
NASA began a detailed
search for evidence that ice
!nay have formed on the
shuttle's waste water vent
during its mission - a
problem that plagued a
·Discovery mission in 1984 .
The vent, which is under
.s.
the shuttle cabin in front of
Harold W. Gehman Jr. meets the left wing, is used to
with reporters to discuss the expel into space both urine
space shuttle Columbia inves· and surplus water generatligation Sunday. (AP)
ed from the shuttle's fuel
could be ice, but empha- cell power system.
•

'

Muslim charity director going on trial.in terror ~
funding case that carries possible 90-year sent•~~e
.
armed violence in Bosnia.
from its storefront office in subCHICAGO
Enaam
Monday.
'

(AP) -

Amaout says his charity raised
millions of dollars to help widows, orphans and the poor in
Muslim lands ravaged by war
and famine.
Prosecutors say he duped
well-meaning U.S. Muslims
into giving to a charity lhat was
secretly used to support Osama
bin Laden's ai-Qaida networlt
and other violent groups.
Amaout, a U.S. cittzen who
was born in Syria, faces racketeering and fraud charges in
what would be the first U.S.
trial since the Sept 11 terror
attacks of anyone with alleged
links to bin Laden. Jury selection was scheduled . to begin

White House just might be right

Bv MORTON KoNDRACKE
annually between 2003 and 2008, while
The Bush administration should quit the Con~ssional Budget Office and the
Blue Chtp Economic Indicators consensus
ducking and say - with dollar signs . • The Philadelphia Inquirer, on potential war with Iraq:
exactly what it expects its Sl!pply-side eco- of pri vale forecasters is 3.2 percent.
What is that waftin~ over Iraq?
nomic policies to do for t:he economy and
The Bush budget anticipates that unemIs it the telltale w1sps from the smoking gun inspectors may
the
federal
budget.
Who
knows,
the
White
ployment
will average 5.3 percent during
have detected recently in the form of 12 empty chemical warHouse might be right on the money.
that period, while the ;~BO and private
heads in an Iraqi desert ammunition dump?
.
forecasters
expect 5.5 J5ilrcent.
.
As
a
matter
of
ideology,
Bush
&amp;
Co.
· Is it allied troops kicking up dust and spray as their planes
believe
that
more
deep
tax
cuts
won't
ultiIf
this
is
truly
all
that
can
be
expected
of
and ships land in staging areas for a potential Baghda~ battlemately reduce federal revenues and wors- supply-side economic policies - led by
field? Is it the huffing and puffing of Saddam Hussem as he
en deficits, but will cause the economy to new tax cuts totaling $1.3 llillion on top
seeks to porttay himself to the world - especially the Arab
boom, bring in higher revenues and of Bush's already enacted ·$1.6 trillion
street - as a warrior ready to fight all comers?
restore the budget to balance.
cut~ - then maybe the country should
·The cause of the smoke may not be as important as what
Yet, Bush's new budget doesn't reflect tum back to demand-side Keynesianism
could burn beneath it.
this conviction. Instead of using "dynamic and try to spend its way to prosperity.
Face it, Saddam Hussein is probably hiding weapons of
scoring,"
which Republicans keep saying
In their heart of hearts, members of the
mass destruction or materials to make them.
they favor as giving a true picture of the Bush team expect their policies to proBecause he has been so reckless in dragging his country into
vlar, because he is a master Qf miscalculation and deception,
boosting effects of tax cuts, Bush's budget duce better results than this. They are
uses traditional bookkeeping - so-called counting on a boom like the one that probecause he supports PalestiiVJar terrorists and the unholy
"static" scoring.
pelled President Ronald Reagan to re*apop l?.f~icide bmpbins. l!lld most of all, because earlier
iO(efn1iti~ : 'in~ ec_tt\)ns found evidence &lt;ff worrisome
As a result, the budget shows that election in 1984.
v{eaRonry, · sse1K's control over such a deadly arsenal canBush's new tax-cut proposals and spendIf so, they should make their estimates
npt 8'e ignored.
ing priorities will result in deficits totaling public by publishing a budget based on so•Protecting .,access to oil reserves may be a legitimate factor
more than $1 trillion over the next five called "dynamic scoring" along with one
f,Pr the Unite'/! States -. but Mr. Bush must make that case
based on "static scoring."
years.
~ithout seeming,) ike he's sinw.ly an insatiable oil man.
For the first time, this Bush budget
The dynamic sCore would estimate the
' If the Presidenl's naw.ks ·· a~'wlill*g 'and fighting.-&lt;Jrags Qn
· stops counting after· five years, so effects that tax cuts would have on
vSith mounting American casui\lties, the White House will
Democrats and other Bush critics are free growth, tax revenues and the budget
n~ed ~s much J&gt;Ub!ic support as possible. Besides •.A~i~ans .
t~~~Ula,te_. that over I 0 years the deficit deficit - . putting numbers behind the
ate w1sely cauuous.
•'l!ltllll•l .,,.
will be$:!: I 'trillion ~n $8 trillion rever- administration's claims.
:Setting a precedent of fighting a preemptive war should not
sal in budget projections from just two
Granted, this would open the adminisbl! done without strong evidence of an urgent threat that can
years ago.
tration up to the risk that it is relying on
b~ contained in no way other than through military action,
Citing such numbers, Senpte Minority "rosy scenarios." But if it published both
v{ith allies at our side.
,
Leader Thomas Daschle (D-S.D.) calls a static and a dynamic estimate, comparBush's "the most fiscally irresponsible isons with actual outcomes would instruct
'
administration in history," responsible for voters as to whether supply-side econom"the worst fiscal collapse in our history."
ics has validity.
The administration has answers to such
Publishing both sets of numbers would
I
charges - that current deficit~. represent- be akin to the "A-team, B-team" exer'
BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS
ing 2 percent of the gross domestic product, cise undertaken at the Central
!Today is Monday, Feb. 10, the 4Jst ·day of 2003. There are
are
far smaller than those in the 1980s, at 6 Intelligence Agency when Bush's father
3~4 days left in the year.
· .
'
percent, and that recession, war and the was director, testing out competing esti;Today's Highlight in History:
stock market collapse ure the main causes mates of the Soviet Union's strategic
:on Feb. 10, 1967, the 25th Amendment to the Constitution,
of the evaporation of the former surplus, not might and intentions.
d~aling with presidential disability and succession, went into
Bush's tax cuts.
Ever since the Reagan administration,
effect.
Still, despite Bush's claims that his plan supply-side Republicans have disparaged
:on this date:
is designed to spur "jobs and growth," static scoring and boosted dynamic estii In 1846. members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Lattereconomic projections accompanying his mates. Now is their chance to demonday Saints, the Mormons, began an exodus to the west from
budget don't reflect much more optimism strate whether the concept is valid.
Illinois.
than those of outside economists.
Some dynamic exercises may be
:In 1942, the former French liner Normandie capsized in
As
The
Wall
Street
Journal
reported,
forthcoming from CBO under its
New York !:!arbor a day after it caught fire while being refitBush's
Office
of
Management
and
Budget
incoming director, Douglas Holtzt~d for the U.S. Navy.
expects
growth
to
average
3.3
percent
Eakin, who moves over from the staff of
· In 1942, RCA Victor presented Glenn Miller and his
Qrchestra with a "gold record" for their recording of
"Chattanooga Choo Choo," which had sold more than I mil libn copies.
· In 1962, the Soviet Union exchanged captured American U2: pilot Francis Gary Powers for Rudolph Ivanovich Abel, a
SDviet spy held by the United States.
Bv RACHEL BECK
·~
start of the economic decline almost
:In 1981 , eight people were killed, 198 injured, when fire
NEW YORK - The jump in coqje- three years ago, companies have been
broke out at the Las Vegas Hilton hotel-casino.
rate earnings last quarter didn't ~orne. (orced to slash staff, curb C~J&gt;ltal spendi In 1989, Ron Brown was elected chairman of the
because there was a sudden surge id" ihg, close unprofitable facthll.e~ and sell
Democratic National Committee, becoming the first black to
business. Much of it was fueled by cost- or shutter underperformmg dtv1s10ns.
h~ad a major,U.S . political party.
cutting across corporate America.
The result has been a surge in produc·Ten years 'Bgo: The Clinton !14lministration said U.S. troops
Profit growth far exceeded sales tivity that has helped boost profits. The
cou ld be sent to enforce peace in former Yugoslavia provided
growth for many companies that recent- output per hour of work for all of 2002
warrinlffacthms there negotiated a settlement.
ly reported their quarterly results. That grew by 4.7 percent , the strongest
:Fi ve years ago: Dr. David Satcher was confirmed by the
means they successfully lowered showing since 1950, the Labor
senate to be surgeon general. Voters in Maine become the first
and were more productive Department said.
expenses
ui repeal a state gay rights law. Monica Lewinsky's mother,
But while productivity has improved,
with the resources they had, but still
Marcia Lewis, testified before the grand jury investigating her
struggled
to
sell
more
goods.
raise
companies
haven 't been able to grow
daughter's alleged affair with President Clinton. Speedskater
prices
and
find
new
customers.
their
businesses.
And that is really cutHiroyasu Shimizu won Japan's first gold medal of the Nagano
At least many were making money, ting into sales.
d!ympics, in the 500-meter event.
but
it's tough to keep profits growing
They can't raise prices because finan :One year' ago: A spokeswoman said former Enron chairman
way
over
time
.
Operating
efficiencially
strapped customers will flock to
this
~enneth Lay would refuse to answer questions when he
cies don't help much m the long run if cheaper alternatives. Those who are
appeared before Congress under subpoena. Snowboarder
there isn't corporate expansion.
buying aren't going above and beyond
~ll y Clark won America's first gold at the Salt Lake City
"In
a
bad
economy,
cutting
costs
is
what
they absolutely need. And new
Olympics in women's halfpipe. Claudia Pechstein of Germany
how companies achieve profits, but you clients are hard to come by.
' !lattered her own world record in the three-thousand-meter
still want to see your revenues grow,"
That 's what is going on at Cisco
,peedskating event, crossing the line in 3:57.70. The Western
said
Marc
Gerstein,
director
of
research
Systems.
Its profits grew 50 percent over
Gonference defeated the Eastern Conference, 135-120. in the
at the investment strategy firm last year, compared with a 2 percent drop
t'{BA All-Star Game. Former U.N. ambassador Vernon A.
Multex .com.
in sales amid a continued meltdown in
\}'alters died in West Palm Beach, Fla., at age 85.
Operating
earnings,
which
excludes
spending
by large corporations and
1 Today's Birthdays:
Opera singer Leontyne Price is 76.
special gains and charges. jumped more telecommunications companies.
r.lovie composer Jerry Goldsmith is 74. Actor Robert Wagner
than 16 percent this fourth quarter over
To compensate, the leading maker of
i{ 73. Singer Roberta Flack is 64. Singer Jimmy Merchant
last,
compared
with
about
a
6
percent
networking
equipment has dramatically
(Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers) is 63 . Olympic goldgain in sales, accordi ng to a study by cut costs, slashing its work force, improvmedal swimmer Mark Spitz is 53. Actress Kat hleen Beller is
Prudential Securities of the more than ing manufacturing efficiencies and asking
48. Country singer Lionel Cartwright is 43. ABC's "Thi s
300 companies in the Standard &amp; suppliers for lower component prices.
\feek " host"George Stephanopoulos is 42 . Actress Laura Dem
i136. Country singer Dude Mowrey is 31. Pop singer Rosanna
Poor's 500 stock .index that have
At Kimberl y-Clark , earnings rose I 0
Taverez (Eden's Crush ) is 26 .
already reported earmngs.
percent in the fourth quarter while sales
:Thought for Today: "Morality is moral only when it is volThat stark difference exemplifies the were fl at with a year ago. The ti ssue and
uiuary. " - Lincoln Steffem, American journalist ( 1866weak economy's effect on business.
diaper make r said be lt -tightenin g,
19:16 1.
Since the dot-com collapse and the including the shutdown of four plants,

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

"'

,.

•
i~INK

Den Dickerson

'

~Th~e~~sm~oo~d~~N~•~~~·o~n~·~~~o~d~dL·~·~
· ~.

PageA7

Glenn Hubbard, chairman of Bush's
Council of Economic Advisers. ·
Holtz-Eakin was picked by House .
Budget Chairman Jim Nussle (R-Iowa), ·
who criticized former CBO Director
Dan Crippen for producing only "static" estimates.
At a Budget Committee hearing .
Tuesday, though, even Nussle said,
"I'm not sure anyone can define
'dynamic scoring."'
In testimony he prepared last year that
Hubbard gave to the House Ways and
Means Committee, Holtz-Eakin wrote that
dynamic scoring is "conceptually correct"
but "fraught with difficulty" in execution.
Holtz-Eakin said he favored dynamic
scoring "as a supplement to (as opposed
to a substitute for) current procedures."
If the CBO starts publishinl'l a dynamic ·
supplement, at least it will be more ·
informative than the White House.
· ,
In addition to publishing two budget·'
calculations, the administratiol) shoul4.
provide two other reports - one on
economic history, the . other , on lq()g.:,;
range planning.
,, .,, .. , :~.
Bush alhes assert that Reagan s 1980s
tax cuts not only caused the economy to
grow temporari)y, but also launched the
producti vlty boom that produce&lt;! the
prosperity of the 1990s.
.
·
Democrats claim, of course, thaf
President Bill Clinton's 1993 tax increas,
es began closing budget deficits, lowered ·
interest rates and produced the boom.
It would be instructive if Bush's
Council,of Economic Advisers would go
through the old numbers and try to prove
the GOP case. And if Democratic economists would produce a counter-case.
Even more important, the administration should say how it proposes to get
the country started on meeting the
retirement costs of the baby boom generation, estimated by the Concord
Coalition at $60 trillion over 75 years .
If the Bush administration is so confident
that supply-side economics works, it should
put out numbers to back up its rhetoric.
.
(Morton Kondracke is executive edi- ;
ror of Roll Call. th e newspaper of
Capitol Hill. )
·

Cost cutting, not new business, is lifting prqfits
helped boost the bottom line and offset
a decline in its prices.
American Express also said cost-cutting helped its earnings double during
the quarter, while sales rose 6 percent.
The travel and credit-card company has
cut 13,400 workers, or 15 percent of its
.staff, since the end of 2000, and expenses fell 5 percent during the latest quarter.
But while cutbacks have helped lift
recent profits, it will become more difficult tor companies to rely solely on
that to fuel earnings gains. With so
many expense controls already in place,
they will be pressed to find new ways to
make their businesses more efficient.
Already, there's some indication of a
plateau in productivity. On Thursd;ly, the
government reported that the amount of
output per hour of work at U.S. companies dipped in the final quarter of 2002.
It was the biggest decline since the ftrst
quarter of 200 1, when the economy was .
heading into a recession.
"It's like asking how much more juice
can you squeeze out of an orange?" said
Sung Won Sohn, an economist at Wells
Fargo &amp; Co in Minneapolis.
"Productivity alone will not be enough
to boost profits. You have to have volume gai ns and pricing power."
So unless the economy 's pace picks up
and businesses start to expand a~ain ,
earnings growth will be harder to ach1eve.
(Rachel Beck is the national business
columnist for The Associated Press.
Write to her at rbeck@ap.org)

Arnaout,
40, is not
accused of
having anything to do
with Sept.
11 or other
specific acts
of terrorism.
But
, Amaout
prosecutors
hope to present evidence showing contacts
between Amaout and bin
Laden's network going back to
the late 1980s to bolster their
case that he supported al-Qaida,
as well as Chei:hen rebels fighting the Russian army and

If convicted, Amaout could urban Palos Hills was aimed at
be sentenced to 90 years in providing humanitarian aid to
prison without parole.
the needy in Muslim couritries.
Experts say the case could be
Defense atto~ey Joseph
key in the legal war on bin Duffy has said Alnaout is the
Laden's ai-Qaida network.
victinl of an ov~•·lous hunt
"This is very important
._....,.
because one of the principal for terrorists stei!lmin~•from
ways ai-Qaida raises money passions let loose by the Sept.
around the world is through 11 attacks.
charitable giving," said William
The defense concedes ,
~echsler, ~ Clinton ~stra- . Amaout may have ');no")"! bin
bon authonty on terronsm. . ~Laden years ago in Afghanistan ·
Amaou~ wh~ .has been m but notes that, i n . days, bin
cust?&lt;~Y s~ce his arrest .last Laden and the tlirltect State~
April, demes he ever rrused
.
'th •·&amp;~hon ......._,
money for terrorists. He says both , stded WI . ""'15'-\ ""'
everything
Benevolence dom fighters trymg ,to expel the .
International Foundation did Soviet army.

BIG BEND .
Activists of various Indian communist organizations stage an
anti-u.s. protest In New Delhi, India, today. The activists
demonstrated for world peace and condemned the United
States for Its war plans on Iraq. (AP)

Former congressman
convicted of.fraud
to start prison term
PHILADELPHIA (AP) On his last day as a free man.
former congressman Edward
M. Mczvlnsky said he had
never expected to get caught
and sent to prison for defrauding investors of more than
$10 million.
"I had thought It would all
work out," Mezvinsky said on
the eve of his flight early
Monday to Eglin Federal
Prison Camp in Florida, a
minimum-security facility
where he will serve an 80month term. "I thought that
they (the business deals)
would succeed."
Prosecutors said the former
Iowa congressman began
soliciting cash for fraudulent
schemes in the 1980s and
eventually collected millions
for business ventures that
never materialized, including
an oil deal, a coin trading
company and an effort to sell
bracelets in Africa.
Mezvinsky blamed his
actions on his manic-depres'
sion and the side effects of an
anti-malaria drug that he took
on trips to Africa.

700 West Main St., Pomeroy

At times talkative and
courtly, Mezvinsky said ·
Sunday that his legal woes
have brought him closer to his
family. · including
wife
Marjorie
MargoliesMezvinsky, a former U.S.
representative and one-time
NBC news reporter.
Mezvinsky hopes to I!Se the
years - he'll be 71 before
he's eligible for parole - to
read. study, get counseling
and perhaps write a book
about his experiences, which
include casting a pivotal
House Judiciary committee
vote for President Nixon's
impeachment.
Mezvinsky pleaded guilty
in September to 31 counts of
bank fraud, wire fraud. mail
fraud and other offenses. He
vows to try to make restitu· tion, although prosecutors
acknowledge he has few
assets.
"I didn 't realize at the time
that this was all going to
come about the )'Vay it has,
but yet it happened, and I
have to accept responsibility
for it," he said.

Memorial of those killed
in submarine collision
HONOLULU (AP)
Survivors and family members of those killed . when a
U.S. submarine collided with
a Japanese fishing vessel
gathered to mark the second
anniversary of the accident.
U.S. Navy representatives
were also at the Ehime Maru
Memorial
at
Kakaako
Waterfront Park on Sunday. A
moment of silence was
observed at I :43 · p.m. , the
exact
time
the
USS
Greeneville surfaced beneath
the Ehime Maru on Feb. 9,
2001.
Nine of the 35 men and
boys aboard the 190-foot

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training vessel were killed in
the collision that sent the
Ehime Maru to the ocean
floor.
One of the speakers at the
memorial was Tatsuyoshi
Mizuguchi, the father of 17year-old Takeshi, the sole victim whose body was not
recovered.
"Every time I come here, I
feel your cordial sincerity. I
feel my heart has gradually
been softened," Mizuguchi
said.
The eight bodies were
recovered duriit a $60 million salvage operation conducted by the Navy.

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�www.myaattysenttnet.cam

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Scoreboard, Page 82
Redman, Reclwomen lose, Page 83

CAREER AND TECHNI
Opportunities
Electronic It
Instrumentation
Electronics is a two-year program
starting the Junior year. Students
leam many skills including computer
repair and radio building. The junior
instrudor is Mr. Brinker and the
senior instrudor is Mr. Longsworth.

Accountln1
Accounting is a 2 year program starting
the Jr. year of high school. Students complete transadions dealing with payroll,
accounts payables, accounts receivables,
discounts and much more. Upon graduation, students are prepared .t o enter the
workforce as accounting clerks or bookkeepers or they may further their acc:outllt-1
ing study at the college of their choice.

Page Bl
Monday, February 10,2003

CosmetoloiY

Nune Assistant

Cosmetology is a two-year program.
Students may start their Junior year or
when they have reached the age 1&amp;.
After completing the program,
a student is qualified to take the
State Board Examination. The junior
instructor is Mrs. Proffit and the
senior instructor is Mrs. Yonker.

The Nurse Assistant program starts
senior year and trains the student In
nurslnc skills and allows for job
experleri~ · in a nursinc home or
on the EMS. After graduation a $ludent
will be prepared to go to college for a
degree in. nursing or related fields.

carpentry
Teclinology

cultural
Clucatlon

Carpentry Technology is open to all
students and offers four courses ra1111il'gl
from beginninc carpentry to advanced
carpentry. In these classes students will
leam projed construction, wood finish- .
lng. portable power tools, in depth .studyl
of project works in all areas, house
wiring A construction, and floor-walland roof

111ere are two programs a student may enter
for Aplcultunl Educrion: AplcuHunl
Science and Horticulture. 111e mission of
Agricultural Education Is to prepare and
support Individuals for careers, build.
,waren•ss. and develop leadership for the
~. fiber, and natural resource syst.IIL
Students will have classes In crop sdence.
animal science, welding, basic 1!1foocl workInc. landscape desip. greenhouse produc- ·
tlon, and wlldiHe
• recreation.

James goes
for 52 In win

Boys basketball

Marauders live up
their name in win
over River Valley

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) Sitting out more than a week
didn't diminish LeBron
James' basketball skills, but
the forced time off seemed to
make the 18-year-old a little
wiser about potential off-thecourt problems.
In his first action since an
Ohio judjle restored his high
school eligibility Wednesday,
James scored a career-high
52 points in an amazing display of talent in St. VincentSt. Mary's. 78-52 win over
Westchester of Los Angeles.

BY SUTCH COOPER

Staff writer

USOC to form
task force
CHICAGO (AP) - After
months of scandals that splintered the organization and
took public attention away
from athletes, the U.S.
. Olympic Committee's executive committee announced it
has formed a task force to
create a blueprint for major
reform.
The governance and ethics
review task force will examine virtually every part of the
USOC for ways to streamline
the organization and improve
its operation. Its recommendations are due before the
USOC's April board meeting.

Love wins at
Pebble Beach
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Davis Love III surrendered a three-stroke lead
over Tom Lehman with six
holes to play in the Pebble
Beach National Pro- Am, but
made a short birdie putt on
the 18th hole for a one-stroke
victory - his first win since
his first Pebble Beach triumph in 200 I.

Washington Wizards Michael Jordan and the crowd react after his shot pulled the East
ahead by two towards the end of the first overtime Sunday in the :Z003 NBA All Star Game
In Atlanta. The West's Kobe Bryant made two of three free throws to send the game into
the second overtime. The West went on to win, 155-145. (AP)
'

East falls short in

Jordan's swan song
.;~

'Teenager excels
at Pearl Open

lnformatlop Support Network·Systems Interactive
A+ Net+ ·
Serv1ces
111is program area will prepare students
This proll'•• will prepare students for careen
for careers in the highly demanded field
dealing with network systems analysis,
of Information Technology. Students will
planning, and implementation. Students will gain
gain the ne~essary skills to implement
necessary skills to analyze network system
computer systems and software, toprovide
needs for design, lnstaB.Uon, and
technical assistance, and to manage infor- maintenance/management of Network Systems.
mation systems. Job opportunities
Job opportunities Include LAN Technician,
include computer technician, technical
Network Adminlstrlltor, Hardwal'tl Installation
support engineer, computer 1rogrammer Coordinator, and Telecommunications Technldan.
and computer operators.

Automotive

Technology

Automotive Technology Is a two-year
program starting the Junior year. In this
program students will be trained In
malntalnlns vehicles, the operation of a
motor, diagnostics, and repairing
automobiles. At the end of this
prosram, the student will be well-trained
in the field of automotive technology.

General
Marketing

'

Weldln1
&amp; Cuttln1

Industrial
Maaufacturlna

Juniors start a :JV. hour block and
seniors finish with a four hour block of time,
In the shop experiences as well as related
classroom lnstrudlon of one and one-half
hours dally. The shop and l'tllated Instructions
shall be based upon an occupational analysis
which Includes the skills, attitudes. and
knowledge required ta achieve the
instructional obJectives for the progr1m.

Career Based

This proaram contains classes In
drafting. engineering technology
foundation~uansportation

engineering. construction en1lneerlng.
manufadurlng systems, and
communications systems.

Jobs far Ohio
Graduates (JOG)

Intervention

This pro.,am consists of two related courses:
Marketing 1 and Marketlngl and
employment at a local business
during the studenfs senior year.
Students may enroll In Marketing I during
their junior year as a regular academic
course or may enroll In both Marketing I
and l during their senior year.

IM students will become competent In
creating, designing, and producing
Interactive multi-media products and
services. This program of study
emphasizes the deve,opment of digitally
cenerated or computer-enhanced media.
Jobs Include lmagins Specialist, Graphic
Designer, Animator, Media Deslper.
and Web Designer.

111is prosram is a state-sponso~.
vocational two-year, work study program
for students 16 years or older. It Is an
effort to bring together employers who
need unskilled or semi-skilled help and
students who are prepared to accept the
responsibility of a job under school
supervision. A minimum of 15 hours
on-the-job training per week Is required.

JOG is a non-profit public/private
partnership founded to provide
comprehensive school-to-work training
for individuals who seek employment
immediately followingcraduation.
This program offers support services
for continuing education and Job
attainment, such as help with Job
searches, resumes, and cover letters.

For More Information call your Guidance Office
Meigs High School992·2158 • Southem High School949-l611 • Eastem High School985-3329
•

•

AIEA, Hawaii (AP)
Thirteen-year-old Michelle
Wie shot a 5-over 77 in the
Hawaii Pearl Open final
round, finishing with an 8over 224 to tie for 43rd place.
Playing from the cltampionship tees, Wie was the only
female in the tournament
field of 192, and the youngest
overall. Greg Meyer, a
Japanese tour player who is
the assistant golf pro at Pearl,
shot a final round 2-over 74
to win the 54-hole tournament at 7-under 209.

Barr ends
frustrating run
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(AP)- Dave Barr ended 16
years of frustration and
became the first Canadian
winner in Champions Tour
history.
Barr birdied the final four
holes in the Royal Caribbean
Classic to win his frrst title
since the 1987 PGA Tour.
Barr shot a 5-under 67 on the
Crandon Park course to finish
at 9-under 207, one shot better than Gil Morgan and
Bobby Wadkins.

Dixon takes
Pomona flag
POMONA, Calif. (AP) Larry Dixon won the Top
Fuel event at the K&amp;N Filters
Winternationals at Pomona
Raceway.
He made event history by
becoming the first Top Fuel
driver to repeat as a winner at
the Winternationals. Dixon
won the Budweiser Shootout
a day earlier.

·Gardner falls
in tourney
COLORADO SPRINGS ,
. Colo. (AP) - Rulon Gardner
blamed hi s stubborn right
foot for losing the final of the
Dave Schultz Memorial
International - his first full
tournament since he lost a toe
to frostbite last yea r. The
26 7!pound Gardner lost to
Cuba's Mijain Lopez 3-0 .

......

...., Bryant made two free
Associated Press
throws to force a second
overtime, and the West beat
ATLANTA - Michael Jordan's East team 155-145
Jordan lowered his head, Sunday night.
His Airness sat glumly on
gave a slight shove with the
bench for the final five
forearm and flung his aging the
minutes, the farewell script
body into the air.
ruined by O'Neal's silly
The ball left his right foul or overzealous officialhand, rotating perfectly in a ing, depending on your
towering arc we'd all seen point of view.
so many times before, bare"I wanted to win the
ly touching the twine as it game," Jordan said. "I felt
fell through for the winning like we had a chance to win
basket.
and I was a part of it. I think
The perfect ending to everybod~ wanted me to be
Jordan's final AU-Star a part of it."
,
game. Only it wasn't.
At the end, he wa~n t. In
A few seconds later, Kobe an appropnate passmg of.
Bryant was sprawled on the the guard, Kevm Garoett
court, sent flying by ~ominated the second overc
Jermaine O'Neal after fling- lime, fm1shed With 37
ing up a desperation 3- points and took home the
MVP award.
pointer.
BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Jorcfa;.j'was just one of the
guys, watching along with
the other stars as Garnett 13 years younger- accepted his trophy.
Garoett was an astonishing 17-of-24 from the field.
And Jordan? He missed his
first seven shots, had four
others swatted away, blew a
dunk and was 9-of-27 overall.
Only the sheer volume of
shots - three more than
anyone else - allowed him
to score 20 points and surpass Kareem Abdul-J abbar
for most points in All-Star
history.
Jordan shrugged off a performance that would have
been totally forgettable if
not for his 15-foot fadeaway

Ple•se see Jordan, 8]

NASCAR

Rain
stalls
Dale Jr.'s
quest
8Y MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press
DAYTONA BEACH,
Fla. - Dale Earnhardt Jr.
didn't get the chance to
give his Winston Cup
competitors another reason to consider him the
favorite in the Daytona
500.
Rain forced the postponement of Sunday's
pole qualifying for the
Feb. 16 race one day.
NASCAR also said second-round time trials,
originally set for Monday,
will not be held. The lineups for Thursday's Twin
125-mile qualifying races
will also be determined on
Monday.
Earnhardt Jr., coming off
an impressive victory
Saturday night in the nonpoints
Budweiser

Please see NASCAR. 8:J

Crew members from the number 90 car driven by Winston
Cup driver Kirk Shelmerdine , from Winston-Salem , NC. prepare the car for technical inspection in s pite of rain showers
Sunday in Daytona Beach. Fla. Winston Cup drivers were
scheduled to qualify Sunday for the Daytona 500, wh1ch wtll
be run Feb. 16, but rain has delayed qualifying. (AP)

CHESHIRE - Meigs truly
lived up to its marauder nickname Saturday night.
To maraud, according to
Webster's Dictionary, is to
roam about and raid in search
of plunder and one who
marauds is a marauder.
The Meigs Marauders spent
little time roaming and most
of the night on the attack as
Meigs defeated River Valley,
86-73.
Meigs' Buzzy Fackler led
all scorers with 20 points,
including four 3-point goals
in the first half.
Also for the Marauders, Jon
Bobb scored 18 points, Dave
Dill 16 and Brooks Johnson,
wno transferred from River
Valley last year, scored 12.
Jared Swain led River
Valley (5-I 0) with 17 points,
followed by Steve Harder
with 16 points, Derrick
Layton 14, including three 3pointers, and Trace Fraley
with 13 points.
This was only the second
road win for the Marauders
this season.
"With all the problems
we've had the past two years,
it's just good to be close to
.500 (winning percentage),"
said Meigs head coach Carl
Wolfe. "This was a good win
for us."
With the help of a pair of
Fackler 3-pointers, Meigs
jumped out to a 21-l 0 lead
late in the first quarter.
River . · Valley, though,
closed out the opening period
with seven straight points to
make it a four-point game
going into the second quarter.
At one point early in the
second quarter, thanks to a

pair of Dakota De Witt ba.skets, the Raiders were only
down by two, 23-21.
The Marauders then lived
up to their name as they
outscored River Valley 22-6
in the final 5:20 of the first
half as Meigs led 45-28 at
halftime.
"Arter three quarters over
there (at Vinton County in a
68-51 loss Friday), it was a
one-point game," said Wolfe.
"Our kids played a lot of min- .
utes. I was a little concerned
about how they'd come out
here (Saturday), what their
legs would be. They really
sucked it up and came out,
even when the game was
close there at the beginning,
we still hung in there and did
the things we had to do."
Meigs exte.nded that lead to
72-44 at the end of the third
quarter, and led by as many as
29 points early in the fourth
quarter.
"We come out in the zone
and they hit some shots," said
River Valley head coach Gene
Layton. "Fackler got open
and we know when he gets
his feet squared up, he can
shoot it. He was able to hit a
few shots and spread our zone
out. Then they got that lead.
"We felt like we had to
come out of (the zone) and
play man against then, and be
honest with you, we don't
match up very well man-toman with our size and they
have
. .. more .quickness than we
d o.
River Valley, while down,
was not conceding defeat as
the R,aiders : dominated ,all
aspects of the game in the
fourth with six steals and held
the Marauders to 14 points,
while scoring 29.

Ple•se see Name. 82

Girls basketball

Warren tops Meigs
BY JIM SOULSBY

Sports correspondent
POMEROY - The Meigs
Lady Marauders 2002-2003
regular season came a close
Saturday with a 44-37 loss to
the Warren Lady Warriors .
Meigs ends the regular season
with a 6-13 record winning
four of their last five games.
The Marauders traveled to
Warren on Dec. 23rd where
Warren used a 25-0 run to
build a big lead before a
Meigs comeback cut the final
score to 55-44. This time
around the Warriors found a
slightly different Meigs team.
The Lady Warriors had trouble putting away a muchimproved Meigs squad. The
closing minutes of the first
period and the opening minutes of the final frame cost the
Marauders tremendously as
the rest of the game was
played on even terms.
Shannon Soulsby gave
Meigs a 4-2 lead by hitting a
three pointer from the top of
the key by way of a Samantha
Pierce assist. Over the last
4:55 of the period Meigs
would be outscored by a 10-0
margin. With 61-51 center
Ashley Clay triggering the
Warren fast break off the
boards the Warriors ran to a
12-4 lead after one quarter of
play. Unlike the team that
Warren ran off the floor in the
first half in December the
Marauders fou ght back in the
second eight minutes.
Ju stine Dowler, Renee
Bailey, Jay nee ·Davi s and
Pierce sparked a 9-3
Marauder run . Davis' bucket
with 4:58 on the clock narrowed the Warrior lead to 1513. Clay made her presence
felt again by scoring eight of
her twelve points in the last
2:46 of the half. Clay converted three offensive rebounds
into baskets as the Warrior~

built a 28-18 halftime lead.
Jaynee Davis kept Meigs in
the game in the third quarter
by recording ei$ht of her team
high twelve pomts. Although
the Marauders never got closer than seven points at 32-25
the game was sti II very much
in doubt heading to the final
period with Meigs on the
short end of a 37-29 score.
The opening minutes of the
fourth quarter all but dashed
the chances at a Marauder
win. Soulsby connected on a
jumper from the elbow at the
2:43 mark. The shot was significant for two reasons, it
was the first points of the
quarter for Meigs and it was
the first field goal attempt in
the quarter for the Marauders.
Eight of the 17 Meigs
turnovers came in the first
5:17 of the fourth period.
Warren used a patient offense
to run valuable time off the
clock as Meigs battled to
close the gap.
Late in the period Meigs
coach Paul Brannon pulled
the ' four seniors who were
playing their last home game
for the maroon and gold.
Maria Drenner. Michefle
Drenner, Kayle Davis and
Shannon Soulsby received a
nice round of applause for
their efforts as they came off
the Larry R. Morri son
Gymnasium hardwood for the
final time.
was
Coach
Brannon
pleased with his team's effort
despite the loss.
''We played ' well: Warren is
a good ball club. This isn't a
bad game to head to the tournament on," he said.
Jaynee Davis led a balanced
Meigs scoring attack with 12
points: Pierce added 9 with
Soulsby notching 8. Renee
Bailey scored 6 and Justme
Dowler 2 to round out the
Meigs scorin g. Ashley Clay
Please see Melp. 81

�Monday, February 10, 2003
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Boys basketball
Molgo Ill, AI- Yoi'-J 73
Meigs ...................... 21 24 27 14 - 86
RiverValley ... ........ .. 17 11 16 29-73
MEIGS - Jon Bobb 5 8·13 18, Carl
Wolfe 1 1-4 3. Dave Dill 6 4-4 16, Dave

lloyd 1 1·2 3, Ty Au~ 1 3·5 5, Buzzy Fackler
7 2-2 20, Brooks Johnson 6 o-o 12, Ryan
Hannan 3 3-4 9. TOTALS- 30 22·3C 86.

RIVER VALLEY- DerrM:I&lt; Loyton 4 3-4
Jav Jenkins 1 0.
0 3, Jared Swain 6 4-6 17, Trace Fraley 5
2-6 13, Dakola DeWitt 3 1-4 7, Sieve
Harder 7 2·2 16. TOTALS - 27 12·22 73.
3-polnt 110als - Meigs 4 (Faclder 4), RV
7 (Layton 3, Clark, Jenkins, Swain, Fra)ey) .
14, Darren Clark 1 0-0 3 ,

Soturdlly
Akr. Manchester 73, Louisville Aquinas 67

Akr. St. Vincent-St. MBry 78, Los Angeles
{CA) Westchester 52

Alliance 60, Salem 51
Arcadia 52, Basoom Hopewell-Loudon 47
Archbold 62 , Defiar'ICe Tlnora 45
Ashland 53, L~lngton 44
Ashland crestview 62, Mansfield Chr. 58

Apple Creek Waynedale 53, Jeromesville.
Hillsdale 42
Arcadia 43, Old Fort 40
Arthbold 60, Holgate 51
Arllng1on 44, UmaTomple Chr. 38
Ashl&amp;r&lt;l
59, Ashland Mat&gt;eton 35
Avon Lake 48, Amherst 42
Beachwood 43, Cuyahoga Hts. 40
Boallavillo 55, 1\'lar, w_
va. 44
Bedford 43, Maple His. 29
~Ire St. John 73, Cadiz Harrison C. 54
Beloit W, Branch 46. Corrolfton 34
Brecksville 49, Brunswick 46
Bristol 53, Southington Chalker 51
Brooklyn 52, Rocky River lutheran W. 44
Brookville 40, Carlisle 31
Bryan 75, Sherwood Fairview 39
BucyrUs 43, Crestline 36
Bucyrus Wynford 72, Ontario 40
Burton Befkahire 45, Orwell Grand Vall. 15
Caldwell 89, Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 34
Corrbrldge 49, Bucl&lt;eye Trail 33
Can. McKinley 56, Massillon 51
Can. S. 39, Navarre Fairless 35
Carey 57, Dole Hardin N. 23
Castalia Margaretta 47, New Riegel 37
Chagrin Falls 47, W. Geauga 37
Chardon 52, Willoughby S. 35
Chardon NDCL54, Elyria Coth. 39
Chesapeake 49, Coal Grove 44
Cln. Chr. 42, Day. Miami Valley 35
Ctn. Hills Chr. Acad. 80, Country Day 20
Cin. Hughes 52, E. Carter 46, OT
Cln . McAuley 54, Cin . Harrison 53. OT
Cin. Purcell Marian 84, Cin. Norwood 25
Cin . Reading 46, Batavia 45
Cln . Sacred Heart 61 . Cln. St. Ursula 52
Gin. St. Bernard 54, Cin.Lockland 24
Cin. Taft 30, Cln. Clark Montessori 26
Cle. M.L. King 55, Mogadore Field 49
Cle. VASJ 79, Mognllicat 48
C~ NE 55, Summit Coor&lt;ry Dey 47, OT
Cols. Bexley 41 , Miami Trace 30
Cols. Hartley 56, Cols. Whetstone 35
Cots. Watterson 44, Cots. Sd1oot k&gt;r GI~S 29
Continental GO, Defiance Ayersville 43
Copley 68, Norton 32
Coshocton 49, Uhrichsville Claymont 47
Covington 43, Jackson Center 38
Creston Norwayne 42, Kidron C. Chr. 38
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 65,
Louisville Aquinas 44
Danville 58, Delaware Chr. 26
Day. Jefferson 87. Xenia Chr. 38
Delphos St. John's 50, Ottoville 49
Dover 57, New Philadelphia 45
Dresden Tri-Valley 67, Rosecrans 49
Edgewood 52, Sts. John &amp; Paul41
Eoolld 50, lakewood 40
Findlay 76, Sandusky 40
Frankfort Adena 51 , Zane Trace 44
Franklin 51 , Springboro 42
Fredericktown 37, Newark Cath. 32
Fremont Ross 38, Napoleon 3S
Fremont St. Joseph 59, Gibsonburg 4S
Ft. Loramie e5, Franklin Monroe 51
Gnadenhunen Indian Valley 42, Byesville
Meadowbrook 39 ·
Goshen 55, Cln. TIJrpln 33
Granville 51 , Utica 31
Greonfleld McClain 81 , Felclty-Franklln 44
Grove City Chr. 50, Maranatha 49, OT
Haml~on Badin 44, Deyton Chr. 26
Hlckavllle 92, FJioneer N. Cent 19
Hllllord Davidson 62, Grove City 54
lndependanoe 58. Gatos Mil~ Gilmour 44
John Marllhall, W.Va. 71, lanesville 86
Kalida 53, Lolpolc 41
Kettering Alter 67, Clayton Northmont 43
Loke Cath. ~5. Clo. Cent Cath, 37
Lancaster 59, Newark 31
Lancasle&lt; Fisher Coth. 69, Harvest Prop 18
Lewisburg Tri-County N, 43, Union City
Mlsslsatnawa VaHey 32
Lewlolown Indian Lake 56, Rldgemonl37
Liberty 1\vp. Lakota E. 60, Haml~on 50
Lima Coni. Cath, 51, McComb 49
lime Shawnee 81, Tot Woodward 51
Lodl Cloverleaf 52, Green 50, OT
London 54, Hebron Lokowood 48
Lorain Admiral King 57, Shaker Hts. 52
Lorain Southview 67, Clo. His, 48
Loveland 55, Cin. Indian Hill 50
Magnolia Sandy VaiL 61 , Ridgewood 40
Marla Stein Marion Loca164, Parkway 25
Marion Cath. 47, Attica Seneca E. 34
Manon Pleasant 55, Mt Gilead 44
Marion River Valley 52, Marion Elgin 37
Mason 50, Centerville 38
Massillon Jackson 62, Lake 35
McConnelsville Morgan 54, Philo 36
Medina 52, N, Ridgeville 51, OT
Medina Buckeye 61, Wellington 48
Mentor 78, Elyria 52
Miamisburg 55, Middletown Fenwick 34
Middleburg His, Mi&lt;Wr'r&lt; 56, N. Royalton 32
Mld&lt;tlelleld Cardinal 44 , Hawken 41
Miller City 60, Bluffton 47
Millersburg W. Holmes 49, Garoway 41
Minerva 63, E. Can. 55
Minster 67. Anna 23

c-

W, Pa, Deaf 41, Colo, Ohio De&amp;l40
Wadsw0r1h 73, Revere 42
Warren Harding 83, Younge. Chaney 51
Warsaw Alver VIew 50, Maysville 45
Washington CH 44, Cola. Grandview 32
Way,.ovllle 79, Day. Northridge 18
Westlake 47, Bay 45
WltUamaport WesHall 51, PiketOn 50, OT
WOOIIor 46, Maoolllon
2S
Worlhlng1on Chr. 79, ~ Highland 38
Xenia 56, Vandalia Butler 'Z7
Youngs. Mooney 72, Contra~Howor 33
Younge. urautlne 69, Kannody Cath . ole
Zoar~i lle Tuscarawas Valley 46, New
Philadelphia Tuacarawas Cent. 41

""rry

College basketball
Men
Sundoy
EAST
Boston U. 85, Binghamton 82
lona 65, Siena 64
Martst 72, Loyola, Md. 65
Niagara 85, Fairlleld 74
Seton Hall 97, Sl. Peter's 80
SOUlH
Duke 65. Clemson 55
Georgia Tech 90, Maryland 84
Virginia 61 , I'I.C, Statt 58
MIDWEST
Ball St. 78, Miami (Ohio) 70
Cincinnati 61, Oklahoma St. 60
Illinois 76, Ohio St. 57
Marquet1e 68, Wake Forest 81
Missouri 82. Texas Tech 73
Noire Dame 66, Pittsburgh 64
FAA WEST
Southern Cal 98, UNLV 73
Stanford 84. Oregon St. 73

Bainbridge Paint Vall. 58, Huntington 50
Balavia 68, Williamsburg 39
Bedfofd Chanel 81 , Youngs. Rayen 55
Bellville Clear Fork 42, Fredericktown 40
B&lt;&gt;mont Ur&gt;on Loc. 67, lluclcs)'o llaJI60, OT
Berlin Hiland 78, Centerburg 55
Bettsville 67, Monroeville 64, OT
Beverly Ft. Frye 62, Walor!Ord 30
Botkins 62, Newton 35
Bowling Green 65, Qak Harbor 49
Bridgeport 67, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 62
Bucyrus 90,·Gallon Northmor 63
~ .. 63, Sl1enandoah 36
Caldwell 62, New Matamoras Frontier 50
Can. Harttage 94, Tuscarawas C. Catn . 58
WotMn
Can. McKinley 65, Can. S. 58
Sunday
Castalia Margamtta 78, Fromon1 St. Joe 43
EAST
Celina 57, Sidney 48
Charlotte 80, Lou~vllle 65
Chillicothe 50. Mariet1a 44
Delaware 53, Va. Commonwealth 50
Chillicothe Unloto 68, Westfall 61
Drexel 68, Towson 58
Cin. Colerain 69, Milford 87, 20T
Duquesne 68, Saint Joseph's 64
Cin. Moeller 70, Cln. Walnut Hills 53
Fairfield 54. lona 63
Cln. Princeton 78, Cin. Sycamore 52
Fordham 67, Rhode Island 41
Cln. St. Bernard 33, Cln, lockland 27
N. Illinois 78, Buffalo 64 ·
Cin. Withrow 85, Day. Meadowdate 61
Rutgero 60. Seton Hall45
08lt&lt;svlle Cllnb1-Masslo 64, Bothel-T&amp;l8 48
Stene 89, Marlst 38
Cle. Benedictine 47, Tol. St. Francia 46
St. Bonaventure 56, Masnchuset1s 50
Cle. Cht. 61, P&amp;rdes 51
Temple 67, Lo Salle 63
Cots. Brookhaven 53, Our Savior, N.Y. 51
SOUTH
Cola. W. 95, Galloway Westland 43
Clnclnnoll 83, Eaot Corollna 68
Colo.Walnut Ridge 64, Colo. Welilng1on 56
Clom&amp;9n 85, Maryland 87
Cots. Watterson 61, Upper Arflngton 43
DePaul 89, Tulana 50
Crestline 71, MariQn Cath. 53
Elon 74. Coaotal Corollna 58
Cuyshogo Follol'/aloll Je0Ut80, /'W, Nor11153
Georgia 78, Auburn 87
Dey. Chr. 60, Eaton 39
Jamae Madloon 118, Old Dominion 95, OT
Dey. Dunbar 77, Troy 76
LSU 77, Mlal!ulppl St. 72
Delllwrn !lJdeio "*'!59, Wslldn8 Mem. 44
Memphlo 70, UAB 54
Dolo Hardin N. 70, Riverdale 63
N,C, Statt ~7. Florida St. 52
Elida 60. ToL St. John's 44
N.C.-WIImlngton 68, George Muon 84
Elyria Cath. 54, Lorain Cath. 46
~
New Ortoono 83. Loulolano-Laflyottt 47
Euclid 59, Shai&lt;er Hit. 58
North Caroline 87, Walro Foralt 57
Evangel Chr, 52, Cln, Chr. 49
South caroline 48, Alabama 34
Fairfield Union 63, Amand&amp;.Ciearcreek 58
Scuthern Min. 82, Marttuetta 79, OT
Fairview, Ky. 79, Fran~ln FumiiCO Graon 88
Tennosoos 79, Florida 40
Findlay 69, Lima Shawnee 60
VandOII&gt;Ih BS, Kantucky 63
Findlay llbarty Benton 60, Bluffton 47
Virginia Tech 153, Notre Dame 50
Ft. Jennings 80, Delphos Jefferson 52
MIDWEST
Ft. Loramie 57, Cofdwater 41
Bradley 70, llllnole St. 54
Fuche Mlzrachl 55, Horizon Science 52
Creighton 64, Wietlltt St. 76
Germantown VBI'-Y VIew 64, Brooloil" 45
Dayton 61, Richmond 59
Gorham
FayeHe
58,
Metamora
Drake 57, SW Missouri St 40
C11argrean 47
Illinois 73, Iowa 58
Greontlekl McClain 85, Follcl1y-Fran~ln 51
Indiana St. 101 , 1'1, Iowa 73
Greenville 72. St. Marys 54
Minnesota 59, Indiana 56
Graonwlch S. Cent 62, Altlco Seneca E, 47
Nonhwostem 67. M~hlgan 38
Hamilton 52. Middletown 40
Ohio St. 63, Wisconsin 40 ·
Hannibal River 52, Paden City, W.Va. 40
Penn St. 54, Mlchlgon St. 60
Haviland Wayne Trace 62, Crestview 56
Saint Louis 81, South Florida 73
Hillsboro 54, Westam Brown :rT
Xav"r 94, G=;:~n 92, 40T
Holgate 42, Hamler l'atrk:k Henry 39
Houston 57, Ansonia 52
Arkansos 62, MIB81eslppl 60
Ironton 59, Boyd County, Ky. 50
Houston 60, TCU 51
Ironton St. Joseph 51 , W. Latham 44
Oklahoma 87, Oklohoma St. 71
Jamestown Greenaview 61 , Day.
Texas Tech 70, Iowa St. 48
Oakwoo045
Johnstown Monroe SB. Sparta Highland 45
Kenton 67, Tal. Woodward 63
Kidron Cent Chr, 51, Sho~nah Chr, 44
Kings Milia 66, Waynesville 64
Nlllonltl Baakllblll Aaaoclatlon
lakewood St Edward 64, N, Royalton 50
EASTERN CONFEAENI;E
Lancaster 52, Westerville S. 46
Atlontlc Dlvlolon
Loncaoter Fisher cath. 42, Uberty Union 35
W
L Pet.
QB
Lewisburg Trl County N, 72, Co~isla 54
New Jorsoy .. ,, .. 34 15 .694
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 48, Falrltetd 47
Booton .,,.... ., ... 27 22 .551
7
Lima 55, Wapakoneta 37
Phlladotphta ....... 25 24 .510
9
Lima Cent. Cath. 55, Wapakoneta 37
Washington , ,, .. 24 25 .490
10
logan Elm 72, Ashville Teays Valley 43
Orlando ............ 24 26 .480 10 112
Lorain Admiral King 106, Linooln-Weat 45
Now York ... ,,., ,21 27 ,438 12112
Loudonville 70, Howard E. Knox 45
Mlaml. .. , ., .. ., , .. 17 32 .347
17
Lucasville Valley 74, Portsmouth W. 47
C.ntrot Dlvlolon
Mansfield 92, Vermilion 51
WLPctGB
Maranatha Chr. 51 , Granville Chr. 39
lndiana .. .............34 15 .694
Maria Stain Marion Local 80, Arcanum 50
Dotr&lt;&gt;t.. , .... , ...., 32 15 .681
1
Marion Pleasant 65, Johnstown
.23 .521 8 112
Monal~55. ~530f MUwaukBe .........25
Nonhrldge 55
N. Can. Hoover 72, Alliance 23
New Orleans ..... 26 24 .520 8 112
Marton RNor Valley 61 , Bucyrus Wynb&lt;l56
15
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 42, Buckeye 32 Atlanta .. ,,.,. ... .. , 19 30 ,388
Massilkln 61. M&amp;BBillon Perry 42
Chicago ............. 17 32 .347
11
New Lexington 56, Crooksville 43
Massillon Jackson 51, Akr. Coventry 38
Toronto ,. .,. .. .,,.. 14 34 .292 19112
New london 58, Monroeville 28
Massillon Tuslaw 44, Smithville 41
New Mktdletown Spring. 58, Mineral .Cieveland ..... ...... 10 40 .200 241/2
Miller City 54, Leipsic 43
Ridge 42
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Millersport 74, Granville 56
Mldwwot Dtvlolon
Newark Licking Valley 59, Whitehall 46
Minerva 73. Can. Cent. Cath. 62
WLPciQB
Northwood 39, Tal. Emmanuel Baptist 23
Minster 65, Anna 50
Dallas ,. ... ,. .. ,..,,.,38 10 .792
Olmsted Falls 47. Fairview 40
Mogadore Chr. 49, Orange Chr. 39
San Antonio ... .... 33 16 .673 s 112
Orange 56, Aurora 45
Mt. Gilead 69, Mansfield Temple Chr. 56
Minnosota.,. .. ..,.,29 20 ,592 9 112
Orange Chr. 35, Heartland Chr. 27
N. RObison Col. Crawford 60, Old Fort 57
Utoh ...... .... .., .. .,.,29 20 ,592 9 112
Orrville 62, Marion Harding 57
New Albany 68, Sugar Grove Berne
Houston .... .. ....... 26 22 .542
12
OKford Talawanda 80, Fairbom n, OT
Union 46
Mo m ~ i s ., ..., .. ..., 13
35 ,271 _ 25
Pandora-GHboa 62, Cary-Rawson 35
New London 72, Sullivan Black River 62
Parma Hts. Holy Name 65, Bedford Denver .............. 12 37 .245 26 112
New Paris Nationa l Trail 79, New Chanol 61
Poclllc Dlvlolon
Lebanon Dixle 54
WLPctOB
Parma Padua 59, Trinity 38
New Richmond 70, Clermont I'IE 88
Sacramento ....... 34 17 .667
Perry 64, WM:I&lt;Iiffo 37
New Riegel74, Kansas l.$kota 62
Porlland .,., .. ....... 32 16 .667
112
Pickerington 8~ , Westerville N. 32
Newark Cath. 72, Markin Elgin 54
Phoenix ...... ... .... 29 21 .580 4 112
Plain City Alder 40, Madison Plains 34
Norton 79, Akr. Spring. 49
l.A. l akers .., .., .. 24 23 .511
8
Plymouth 75, Cclllns W. Reserve 61
Oregon Clay 60, ToL Waite 55, 2DT
Goklen State ., ... 21 27 .436 11 112
Poland Seminary 82 , Struthers 38
Ottawa-Glandorf 84, Paulding 28
Seattle ............. .21 27 .439 11 112
Portsmouth Clay 44, Green 28
Parma HIS. Valley Forge 62, Berea 59
L.A. Clippers .. ., .. 17 32 .347
16
Portsmouth NO 37, Symmes Valley 35
l'itsburg Franklin-Monroe 62. MiltonSunday'o Gome
Richmond Hts. 40, Columbia 36. OT
Union 49
West AII·Siars 155, East All-Stars 145,
Richwood N. Union 44, Buckeye Vall. 36
Plain City Jonathon Alder 75, Madison
2CT
Rocky River 44, N, Olmsted 41.
Plains 57
Monday'• O.mee
Rootstown 44, Ravenna SE 36
Portsmouth 49, Logan 42
No games schedured
S. Charleston SE 67, Spring . NW '32
Reynoldsburg 65, Lima Sr. 63
11Jooday'o Gomeo
S. Euclid Regina 67, Boaumont28
Richmond Dale SE 65, Zane Trace 54
New Jersey at Orlando. 1 p.m.
S. Webster 54, Oak Hill 45
• S. Webster 78, Beaver E. 69
Cleveland at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Salem 47. Jefferson 33
Sandusky 66, Tal. Bowsher 58
Golden State at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Seaman N. Adams 50, Ripley 22
Shaw 91 , Bodford 79
New Orleans at Mtaml, 7:30 p.m.
Shadyside 57, Whoollng Cent, W,Vo. 42
Shelby 75, Tiffin Columbian 48
Dallas at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Shaw 51, Normandy 49
Sidney Lehman Cath. 38, Russia 37
Utah at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Sidney Lehman 57, Houston 46
•
Spencorvillo 68, Rockford Por'r&lt;woy 48
Detroit et Ch6cago, 8:30 p.m.
Smithville 49, Doylestown Chippewa 34
Spring. Cath. Cent. 81 , Triad 68
L. A. Clippers at ~hoenlx, 9 p.m.
Spring. N. 62, Spnng. S. 54
St. Henry 44, Van Wert 33
Boston at Saanle, 10 p.m.
St. Clolrovll" 74 , Bellaire 59
Summit Station LICking Hts. 76, Heath 46
Washington at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Strongsville 41 , Berea 34
Thornville Sheridan 57, River View 56
San Antonio at Portland, 10 p.m.
Sulli11an Black River 38, Loudonville 25
Tiffin Calvert 72. Clyde 70
Denver at L.A. Lakera, 10:30 p.m.
Thompson l.edgemont 43. lutheran E. 41
Tol. Libbey 57, Dublin Scioto 54
Tol Chr. 80, Tal. Maumee Valley 60
Tol. Start 63, Listowell, Canada 43
Tal. Whitmer 68, Tal. Notre Dame 48
Union Cfty Mississinewa Vall. 44, Tri·
Troy 46, Troy Chr. 35
Village 43
Urbana ·57, Tlpp City Tippecanoe 33
Uniontown Lake 85, Can . Tlmken 68
Natlollltl Hockey League
W. Ale~eand ria Twin ValleyS . 54, Eaton 48
Urbana 70, Belleft\nlaine Benjamin
W. Jefferson 44, Cola. Acad. 23
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Logan 42
Utica 41 , Cols. Grandview 31
Van Wert llncolnvlew 50, New KflOXVille 44
W. Ale~eandri a Twin Valley S. 61 , Preble
BecoUBe the Roth
Shawnee 45
W. Che&amp;l:er LakOta W. 59, Cin. Qak Hills 50
IRA ia dilfenwat
W. l!a, Deaf 50. Cole. Ohio Deaf 45
from any other
Warrensville 62, Maple Hts. 56
IRA, it briap up
Waynosflold 65, Bradlord 48
Wellsvll)e 65. Lisbon David Anderson 55
eome oontilaina
WhllehaU 66, London 50
tuiaueo,At
Willard 75, Norwalk 54
H"'R
Block, we
Woodsfield
Monroe
Cent.
61 .
Newcomerstown 53
am. anawer your
Wonhing1oo Kilbourne 39, Colo. Brilioa 2t
questiana about
Zanesville 56, Cle. St. Ignatius 44

THE ROTH IRA

IS FOR RETIREMENT.

BUT THE TAX

Worron 44, Molgo 37
Warren ..................... 12 16 9 7 - 44
Moigs .................... .....4 14 11 8 - 37
WARREN - All F'ostlewalte 1 1 3, Kylee
Swaney 1 0 2, Leigh Ann Buzzard 0 1 1.
Jennifer Coffman 3 o 8, Lyndsey Lemon 2
0 4. Stacia Shrider 3 0 8, •ohley Clay 8 0
12, Miranda Tompkins 2 2 8. TOTALS 18 4-

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MEIGS - Renee Beiloy 2 2 6, Marla
Drenner 0 0 0, Justina Dowler 0 2 2,
Samantha Pierce 1 6 9, Shannon Soulsby
2 3 8, Michelle Drenner 0 0 a, Jaynee
Davis 5 2 12, Kayte Davis 0 0 0, Jill Jenkins
0 0 0, Foliohe Stumbo 0 0 0. TOTALS 10
t S-22 37.
3-point goals - Warren • (Coffman 2.
Shrider 2). Meigs 2 (Pierce. Soulsby)
Saturday

HH ILOCK"

H&amp;R BLOCK
618 Main 51
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

DMolon
TOLPio QFOA
3 4 75 143104
9 2 69 128115
5 2 57 147154
4 5 53 14~ 162
7 2 51 147 180
Not 1'-81 Dlvlolon
W L TOLPtaQfQA
Oltawa ............ 34 14 7 1 76 182127
Toronto ,.,.,.., .,30 20 4 1 85158133
Boaton .. , .... .... 27 20 5 2 61161144
Montrea1 ......... 22 23 7 5 56 160 167
Buffalo ,.,.,.,. ,.,. 1527 7 4 41113141
lloulhooot Dlvlolon
W L TOLPtaGFQA
W08hington ,.,.26 21 7 3 52 161152
Tampa Bey ..... 22 20 8 5 57 152158
Florida ., ... ,. .. ,. 16 20 11 8 51 128164
Atlanta ,. .....,..,. 19 28 3 4 45 148 191
Carolina ,. .. ,. ... ,17 28 8 5 45 120 163
WESTERN CONfEAENCE
C.ntral Dlvlalon
W L TOLPtaGFQA
Stloule.. ...... 29 15 8 4 70 160 143
DelroiL-.... .. .... 27 17 9 2 65 157 136
Chicell" ---·"""231 9 10 3 59132130
Nashvllle... ...... 16 23 9 4 49124144
Columbus ., ,. ..,2026 6 2 48152167
Nortll-t Dfvlolon
W L T OLPio OFOA
Vancouver ...... 3118 8 0 70 170143
ColoradO.. ....... 24 14 11 5 54 1S7 134
Mlnne-.. .,..27 19 8 1 63 134123
Edmonton ....... 25 18 6 6 62 151 148
Catgary ........... 18 27 8 3 47 122 159
PacHic Dlvlalon
W l TOLPio GFOA
Dollos .,.,.,,. ..... 3211 12 1 77 173111
Anaheim ......... 25 ~9 7 4 61 135 135
Los Angelos ... 22 25 4 4 52 141 152
San Jose .. ...... 20 23 8 5 51 147162
Phoeni~&lt;.. ........ 19 24 7
4 49 134 148
Two pointe for a win, o,. point for o
lie lnd overtime loea.
Slturday't G1me1
Pittsburgh 5, Boston 2
Colorado 5, Detroit 3
Philadelphia 2, N,Y. .Aangers 1
Ottawa 3, Atlanta 1
N.Y. Islanders 3, Buffalo 1
Toronto 3, Montreal 1
Tampa Bay 4, Florida 4, tie
St. Louis 4, San Jose 1
Nashville 3, Columbus 2
Dallas 3, Phoenix 1
Chicago 3, Edmonton 0
Sund1y'e Gamel
New Jersey 3, Minnesota 2
Montreal 2, Washington 0
Dallas 3, Loo Angolea 1
Anaheim 2, Carolina 1
ColoradO 4, Calgary 2
Monday'o Gomoo
Minnesota at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Sen Joae at Detroil, 8 p.m.
Chk:ago at vancou1111r, 10 p,m.

Name
from PageB1
But, the deficit was too
much to overcome.
"You can't say enough
about the effort," said Coach
Layton . "They definitely
gave everyt_hing they had and .
left it all on the floor. That's
all you can ask of them in that
situation."
"River Valley really played
well in that fourth quarter and
they shot the ball extremely
well, better than they did in

Meigs
from PageB1
led the way for WaiTen with
12 points, Jennifer Coffman
and Stacie Shrider each tallied eight points for the
Warriors.
Meigs went 10 of 36 from
the floor and 15 of 22 at the
foul line. Warren canned 18
of 53 field goal attempts and
4 of 10 free throws, Warren
held a big 42-26 rebounding
edge led by Clay with 14.
Jaynee Davis collected 9
rebounds for Meigs while

-

Pierce grabbed 8, Meigs
committed 17 turnovers with
the Warriors having 15 miscues.
WaiTen won the N game 4823 behind Lace Holbert and
Cassie Kidder who each had
eight points. Jill Jenkins scored
seven to lead Meigs with
Brittany Hysell scoring six. :
Meigs will travel to LoganHocking Middle School
tonight to face River Valley'
in sectional tournament
action , Tip-off is set for 7
p.m. The winner of that contest will face undefeated'.
Sheridan, which carries a No;
3
state
ranking,
on_
Wednesday night.

Piton. H2olll74
Hours: Mon-Frl . 9to 6. Sot 9 to 5
Other Hours by Appointment

Houston Rockets Yao Ming (11) controls the ball off the backboard during first half play of the
-

2003 NBA All Star Game Sunday in Atlanta. (AP)

Jordan

rable moments from Jordan's
career were shown as Bryant,
Yao Ming and basketball's
future stood and watched.
from Page 81
When No. 23 finally took
the microphone, the building
with 4.8 seconds left in the shook with an ovation that
first overtime.
lasted more than a minute ,
. "I have not played since
"I leave the game in good
Thesday," he said. "I have not hands," Jordan said. "Now I
picked up the ball. So it took me can go home and feel at peace
a while to get a rhythm. I know with the game of basketball."
everybody wanted me to take
But there was still some basshots and make a lot of shots, ketball to play on this night
but I'm no different than guys Jordan-kept on shooting, misswho have had four days vaca- ing a jumper that could have
tion. Sometimes you come won the game at the end of regback to work and you've got a ulation, He got another chance
lpt of Jl&lt;lperwork on your desk." in the first overtime, creating a
l Jordan, pushing 40 in his little space on Shawn Marion
Second&gt; comeback, insists he and launching a shot that just
pllt'away his sneakers for cleared the defender's hand and
Jlood a\ :the end of the season. swished through the net, giving
f!laturally, this game meilllt so the East a 138-136 lead as
much !llore than his mediocre Jordan stumbled into a row of
line on.!be stat sheet. .
photographers.
( Just i)efore the ·East team
Suddenly feeling young
took the court, Vince Carter again, Jordan bumped chests ,
ihsiste!l · on giving up his with Iverson - who led the~
Starting, spot to Jordan. After East with 35 points - and·,
¢buffi1:1g offers from Tracy slapped hands with the rest of
McGrally and Allen Iverson, his teammates.
Jordan ~~ccepted this one.
There were ~till almost five
) Carter was criticized for seconds left to play, The West
$ying .he wanted to keep his inbounded, the ball was knocked
!!POt out. of deference to the away and Bryant chased it down
fans ~bo v.oted him to the in the comer. The Los Angeles,
Starting lineup, even though Laker.; star threw up a despera:.'
l)e has )played only 15 games lion 3-pointer that was well short.;
~~ecaus,e· o~knee ~;~roblems .
of the basket, but O' Neal gave'
. "Wh¢p' lt all.boiled down to him a body shot that send Bryant
il this~fs a storybook ending twnbling out of bounds.
fPr Mi¢hael J91'¢!A," Carter
'Jed Bernhardt - who didn't
said. ''I'm sure I'll have aneth- get the Jordan script, apparently
6r: opportunity to be in the All- - immediately whistled for a
~game. He's supposed to be , foul, brushing Q~ ~complaints
&lt;1!~:there on the coUrt:.' ' , · · , of Ea&amp;t cqaclr ISiilh Thothas,and•
' At halftime, Mariah Carey sending Bryant to the line for
lieited out "Hero" and memo- threeshotswithasecondremain-

will

11JNdoy'o 01meo
St, Loulo ot Bufflllo. 7 p,m,
Tampa Bay at N,Y.Iolandora, 7 p,m.
Bolton at Montreal, 7:30 p,m,
Edmonton at Toronto, 7:30 p,m,
Loa Angeloo ot Nuhvllle, 8 p.m.
Carolina al Dallaa, 8:30 p,m,
Now Jeraay at Colorado, 9 p.m.

Transactions
HOCKEY
Nollonol Hockey Looguo
LOS ANGELES KING8-Recalled 0
Jason Holland and C Chris SChmidt from
Manchester of the AHL.
MONTREAL CANADIEN&amp;-flocallod D
Mike Komlsa•ok from Hamilton of the AHL,
Asalgnad LW Sytvaln Blouin to HamHton.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Assigned LW
Raitt Tonras to Bridgeport of tho AHL
SAN JOSE SHARK&amp;-Traded 0 Shawn
Heino to Pittsburgh for • conditional 2003
draft choice.

i

ing.
Ever the competitor, Jordan
stepped in close to Bryant and
mumbled some trash talk after
the second free throw clanked
off the rim,
"I didn't want him to make
it," Jordan said . " I was
needling him to miss it."
Even Bryant was torn about
ruining Jordan's ' jx#;f.ect ·ending, but the last tree throw
dropped through the l10i'lp to tie
it at 138. Jordan had, a third
chance to win it, but his 2-1 -foot
turnaround jumper was partially blocked by Marion and collapsed well short of the rim.
That was it. The final AllStar shot for the greatest player
of the generation - maybe
ever, Jordan went to the bench
and didn't return.
"I had a job to do because I'm
in the situation where I need to
make the free throws," Bryant
said. "But the other part of me
was like, I just didn't want to do
it, to be honest with you,''
In the second overtime.
Jordan watched Garnett dominate, outscoring the East all by
himself with nine points.
The crowd felt cheated, but
not Jordan. He didn't want anything handed to him. Outside of
Carter's generous gesture,
nothing was,
"The important thing, as I
told my teammates and v
everybody should have
known, I wanted to be competitive," Jordan said. "I didn't want it to be where one
guy let one guy score and
then let tht; other guy comec
l'iowb and ~ore."
· :·
Even if one of those guys
was Michael Jordan.

Red men lose fifth
straight road game

Redwomen lose to
Malone in overtime

CANTON - It was Malone from stan to
finish on Saturday night as they defeated
Rio Grande , 89-63 , in American Mideast
Conference basketball action ,
The Pioneers (I 0-16, 6-8 AMC) gained
control of the game wi th a 33-25 lead at the
4:09 mark of the first half and were never
headed , Malone pushed the advantage to
42-29 at halftime .
Rio Grande ( 16- 11 , 7-5 AMC) struggled
from the floor as they placed three players
in double fi~ures , led by Seth Deerfield
wi th 14 pomts. Nat Moles and Chri s
Ballenger each added I 0 points. Ballenger
now stands · at 995 for his career. Jerry
Barlow, still beset by an injury to his pelvic
bone, managed . seven poi nts and six
rebou nd s in 18 min ute s. Randar Luts
tossed eight points on 4-of-6 shooti ng from
the field . Rio connected on onl y 25-of-66
shots from the floor. Sophomore Rashad
Cooper was the top board man for Rio
Grande with seven and fre shman Reggie
Williamson scored five points and grabbed
five rebounds off the bench for the
Redmen,
Malone blistered the nets with 5 1 percent
(33-of-65) shootin g, including 12-of-27
(44 percent) from beyond the three-point
arc . Shane Conwell was nearly perfect in
scori ng 27 points . Conwell was 11-of-14
from the field _ Jason Mishler added 16
points and handed out seven ass ists while
Tim LaFleur and Sam Leatherberry each
scored II points, Lafleur and Jason Hess
controlled the glass with eight rebounds
eac h.
Malone's win ave nged a last second 6968 loss to Rio Gra nde on Jan. II at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande will return home on Tuesday
night to face Shawnee State in a crucial
AMC South Division game, Tip-off is set
for 8 p.m. Raci ne Home National Bank is
sponsori ng the game.

CANTON - Rio Grande let a 12-point
halftime slip away Saturday and lost to
Malone 88· 78 .
After falling behind 12-5. the Redwomen
( 13- 14, 3- 11 AMC) put together a 15-0 run
to grab a 20-1 2 advantage at the II :O&lt;J
minute mark of the ftrst halL They pushed
the lead to 41-29 at halftime and looked t0
be in controL
Malone ( 11 - 13, 7-9 AMC) slowly began t0
mount a comeback. Kim Mast popped a
three-pointer with a 10:40 remaining in regulation to cut the deficit to 54-47 _
The Lady Pioneers completed the comeback in the final minute when Joy Wilkinson'
and Mary Wittmer canned treys to tie the
game at 74-74, Mast missed a jumper at the
buzzer, which sent the game to ovenime,
Rio Grande could not mount a charge of
any kind in the extra session as Malone went
to work at the free throw line and stole the
victory away from Ihe Redwomen.
De spite the loss, Rio Grande was dominating in the low post TitTany Johnson poured
in 26 points and collected I 0 rebounds. Alkia
Fountain netted 14 points and pulled down
II caroms and Annie Tucker added 14 points
and eight boards. Emily Cooper scored
seven points and dished out, a game-high,
six assists,
· Wittmer led the Pioneers in scoring with
25 points, nailing seven 3s. She also pulled
down eight rebounds. Mast tossed in 24
points and collected seven boards, Michelle
Ling added 14 points, six rebounds and five assists and Wilkinson chipped in II points,
Linnea Skipper was the top rebounder for
the Pioneers with nine,
Malone wins the season series over the
Rio Grande and now has four straight wins
over the Redwomen.
Rio Grande will return home on Tuesday
night to face Shawnee State, Game time is
set for 6 p,m_and the game is sponsored by
AEP,

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the season-opening event was running into all these situations
second in that fateful 2001 • and understanding . certain
race, wants to gain the sam€} i' things that I've seen over the
kind of stature, and he doesn't_ years. He was really, really
from Page 81 . ,
expect to wait for his 20th good at fllnning at this track. I
Daytona 500 to win.
always just thought it was a
Shoot&lt;iut
the first
Between the talent he inher- mind thmg, but, of course, you
rjiASC~ event of the new sea" ited from his father and lhe car have to have a good car."
son - ~ likely to be the favorite his team has put to~ether, Little · So far, Junior has made his
any ~his powerful red No. 8 E figures that win 1sn't very far biggest splash off the track as a
Chevrolet takes to the Daytona away. But he insists he feels no pop culture icon - sporting a
l)ltematipna! Speedway oval in added pressure at Daytona.
' scruffy beard, hanging with
~ COillljlg week
"It don't make Jlle try harder I rock stars, wearing his baseball
' That !:WQUid have delighted coming here," Earnhardt Jr. said ' ~aps backward and doing inter!)is Ia~ father, who loved to ''It makes me feel like I come , views for publications like
P,syche 11out o,ther drivers and from a better breed than most of "Playboy" and "Rolling Stone."
was known as The Intimidator. the guys I'm racing against
What he really wants,
Gor Utt)e E, being 'The Man"
''I watched (Earnhardt Sr.) though, is the kind of success
i$ a li~ embarrassing.
real close, I learned a lot about his father enjoyed in stock car
: "I don' t think that is really how to drive race cars by rac ing.
Qly style:• Earnhardt Jr. said watching him, and I was prob"This is a lot of pressure
after pc)wering past four-time ably watching him more than because, I don't know, I ain't
sl!ries champion Jeff GOrdon he knew or anybody knew."
the greatest," Earnhardt Jr.
and Jea(ling the last five laps of
The son said he tried to analyze said. "I got a long ways to go
the ShOotout, "I don't like eveiy rnce his father drove in,
before I am the greatest, and I
tleing the favorite. 1 like being
"I had a lot of practice just hate to be the guy that don't
'l!e surpriSe.
trying to think about, 'Man, hold up h1s end of the deal, so
' "I think·it's a whole lot more how did he lose that race or it's tough being the favorite.
tlm w~n you really come out how did he win that race and
"The car is the favorite,
d surpnse people, because
why did the car do that?'
maybe not the driver. ,____,_ how
at is what I've been used to
"Now that I'm driving, I'm about that?"
I my life."
: Eam\lardt Jr, and Dale
eamhru;dt Inc., teammate
r;tichael.Waltrip have won six of
the !ast:•eight races at Daytona
and Talladega - NASCAR
biggest ar¥1 fastest tntcks - but
Waltrip hl!5 lhe only Daytona
~ wm between them.
:. That victory came two years
!(go in tjle race in which seventime Wmston Cup champion
Dale Earnhardt was lcilled.
. Waltrip ·is considered one of
~ handful of drivers with a
legitimate shot at beating his
Tuesday, February 11, 1003
teammate for the pole and in
the big race,
8:00 p.m. Game Time
: "I was reflecting the other
Home National Bank pays all admission!
morning ,., I sat on the pole 20
years ago for the Dash Series
Four Cash Drawm!:!s
race, so this could be the
ll)ngest drought between poles
lzy any driver in the history of
tjle sport at a particular track,"
Waltrip said.
It took Earnhardt Sr. 20
years to win the ~na
although he woif.-'}USt ·abo.o't
everything else here muluple
times, taking the checkered
Syracuse
Racine
flag . in a record 34 different
740-949-2210 740-992-6333
Daytona events. He was a bigger-than-life presence on the 2
1/2-mile oval,
Junior, whose best finish in

Race tor the

~aUipolis Jlail!' Qt:ribune

L-------------------------------------~

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Cup Preview

Februarv 14, 2003

~

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Rio Grande basketball

the first three quarters,":
added Wolfe, "That's unusualwhen you get tired running uP:
and down the floor."
:
The Marauders will close;
out their regular season with apair of home games, Tuesday:
against Nelsonville-York and;
Friday against Alexander.
:
River Valley plays host toAthens
Tuesday
anct:
Chesapeake Friday. ,
:
Behtnd Chris Roush's 27•
points, River Valley won !hi
JUnior varsity game, 48-41.:
Roush was 15-for-17 from:
the free-throw line.
•
Adam Snowden led ·Meigswith 12 points.
:

Pro basketball

Hockey

Girls basketball

Monday, February 10, 2003

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Scoreboard .

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~allipolt' J9ailp Qtrtbune
•
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Joint Jlea•ant 1\,egii~ter
675-1333

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 10,2003

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Baja California, Mexico

In One Week With Us
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m:rthune
Sentinel

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Val D'Isere, France (French Alps)
Alta, Utah
The Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail, Alabama
Phoenix, Arizona

CLASSIFIED

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0{-{-iee lloaJ~-cf

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

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HOW
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WRITE AN AD

Tn
-'..ll!

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

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

Word Ads

Start Your Ads With A Keyword 1 Include Complete

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Descrlpllon 1 Indude A Price 1 Avoid AbbreviiUons
Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Ooyo

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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@ mydallyreglster.com

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

Dally In•Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Inaertlon
In Next Day•a Paper
In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
sundays Paper

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

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l\egtster

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POUCIES: Ohio 'IIIIey Pul&gt;llthlng IMII'III tilt rig hi to odlt, rtjlcl, or cancel any ld atony tlmo. Erroro must be reportld on tho flrst dly o1 publication and
Trl&gt;u,.Sintlnel-lllillatM will be ruponsibll for no mort fllln tilt coat ot thupoco occupied by tho"'"' and only the flrstlnoer1ton. We tholl not
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any tou or uponulhlt r111111o from tilt publication., omt 11 ton of an
COtrtct!on will be maaeln the ftrot avallobleldltlon.• Box number
, . -ys contldontlll. • Cutnnt ratt coni oppllll. • All 1111are oubjlct to tho Flderal Fair Houotng Act of 1968. • Thlo na"apoporl
ICCtfllo only help wontldlllo mtellng EOE ltlndlnlo. We wnt not knowingly eceept any advlrtlotng tn violation of the tow.

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HOMES
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3 78 championship holes on eight sites in Alabama

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ANNouNcEMENrs Bartender
Trainee•
•
needed, $250 a
day
• C·1 Beer Carry Out permit potential. Local positlons
: for sa le, Chester Township, 1·800·293·3985 ext. 4060.
.. Meigs County, send letters - - - - - - - - w
of Interest to: The Daily Bates Bros. Amusement
•. Sentinel, PO BoM 729-20, Co. is looking for enthusias·
.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
tic individuals, Spring/Sum·
; - - - - - - - - - mer 2003, must be 17 ~r
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FARRAGO
older and able to travel,
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Now accepting your
weekly pay, living lacililies,
: Spring/Summer clothing for Season End Bonus, contact
•
consignment.
us at 74()..266-2950
Call (304)675·1059
:
Construction
Company
: Farrago "Sale"
needs one or rwo experiPrices reduced on all winter
• clothing as low as .50¢ per anced workers with building
trades skU!s. Send resumes
: item. 304-675·1 059
outlining experience and
references to CLA 570, c/o
Gallipolis Dally Tribune,
P.O. Box 469 • Gallipolis.
1
: FOUND- Female Black lab, OH 4563 • near Spring Valley. Call Domino's Now Hiring all lo·
cations Pt. Pleasant, Gallip·
: (740)441-()445
oils, &amp; .Pomeroy. Safe driv·
• Lost American Bulldog, 4 ers, .must be 18. Apply in
• man. male. about 60 lbs. person at locations.
• White w/ Black sPots, last "'Ex:::.P:::E:::.Rc.:I:=-E:.::NC=E:::D=C- a-r-p e- n-: seen on 1·26·03 Rt 62 area. tars wanted- Familiar in all
• $250.00 reward for safe re- phases of residential con: turn 304-675-5653
structlan, kitchen &amp; bath re•
modeling. siding, windows,
decks, additions, sunrooms,
111
W._..~
etc. Must
have valid
~.... ·~
drlver'e license, tools,
1U BUY
truck &amp; references. Local
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wor1&lt;:, pay based on experl: Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. ence. Applications available
• Silver, Gold Coins, Proof· at Christians Construction,
: sets,
Diamonds,
Gold Inc. 1403 Eastern Avenue,
• Alnns,
U.S.. Currency,· G ll'pol's M Fl 8 5 Coli
tt
a t t ·
• ·
• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Secw (740)446 45141 more info
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or
r ond Avenue , Gallipolis, 740! 446-2842.
Exper5enced BookkeeperPan-time-to start. Computer
experience a must. ARJAP,
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F&gt;ayroJI~ Job Costing. Quali·
I \11'1 I I \ \ II '\ I
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fled
applicants please sel')d
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resumes to Christians Construction, Inc. 1403 Eastern
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
45631 . No phone calls
please.
" ACT NOW! New office in
: area needs 24 CRAZY peo- Footer Core glvoro Need·
• pie with no experience. Will ed, Become a therapeutic
: train for management posl~ foster care giver. You will be
Reimburse $30·$45 • day
• tions, Must be 18 and ambi· for
the care of child In your
• tlous. Cell Mon 9am-5pm.
home. Training will begin
: (740)441 -0352
January. For more information call Oasis Therapeutic
" ATTN: Point Pleasant.
~ Postal positions. Clerks/car~ Care givers Network, Alba·
ny,. Oh, toll free 1-Bn·325·
w rlersisorters . No exp . re• quired. Benefits. For exam, 1558
: salary, and testing Informs· Help wanted caring for the
• lion call (630)393-3032 E•t. elderly, Darst Group Home,
: 782. 8am.Spm. 7 days .
now paying minimum wage,
•
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am~
--------------~• Attn Wa need help, $120Q- ~pm, 3pm· f 1pm, 11 pm·
; $5000/mo. 1-866-736-7794 7om, call740.992-5023.

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MONEY magazine called the Trail courses
"stunningly beautiful and well maintained."
"For courses of this quality,
the golf is strikingly inexpensive."
Get the November MONEY magazine and read
about the Trail or visit www.cnnmoney.com.
And you can call our Reservations Department at
1 800 949 4444 or visit www.rtjgolf.com.

HEu&gt;WANJED

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1111"--:':"!"----,

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j l"''~~loi-·lfliu--w.-ANIF.D--..,

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www.heartofthegarden.com

~.,ln.o-HELP--W·ANIED--.,..1 ea

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1989 Clayton Westwind,
2BR, W/D hookup. range,
refrigerator &amp; electric fur·
nace. Located on a ranted
lot a 641 Lake Dr., Rio
Grande, 7 minutes walk 10
1 acre, riverfront, brick and campus. $10,000 OBO.
vinyl, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, 2 (614)214·5151
fireplaces, hardwood floors,
approximately 2000 sq.ft. 1995 Norris Mobile Home
Full basement . $160,000. Uke New. 16x76, 2br. Ap(740)446-0538
pllances. 3 ton heal pump,
__• 8x10 wooden storage bid.
" -'B"'e-'d"'ro:..o:.:m=ne-w-ly-r-em_od
3
1304)675 5727
eled, In Middleport. call Tom
•
Anderson after 5 p.m.
2001 14x80 Oakwood, 3
992-:3348
SR, 2 bath, all appliances
included. We'll make down
3 bedroom , 1 bath, ~ story payment, you take over
home In Pomeroy, good payments of $370 month, 01'
condition,
fireplace, buy for $22 000 (216)351
·
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(740)992-9492
7086 or (216)257 _1485_
3 bedroom, single bath,
large family room, fireplace,
large living room , complete
new kitchen, utility room, 2
car garage unattached, 10
miles South Gallipolis, in
Eureka, close to Locks &amp;
Dam. Phone (740)256-6949
(740)256·1243 Senous in-quires Only.

All reel estate Rvtrtfllng
in this neweJMiper Is

The Best Products .
The Best Beneftts.
The Best Work

Environment.

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LPN, Full-time position with
benefits. Must be able to
work a flexible -,chedule.
Call Dorothy Harper at
(740)446-71 48 or you may
apply at Middleton Estates ,
8204 Ca~a Onve, Gallipolis.
OH.

Thll newtpiiPir wtll not
knowingly .ccept
advertlaementl for f'UII
• • which It In
vloletlon ot the law. Our
reedere .,. hereby
tnfonrted thlt 111
ctwelllngsltdvertiMCI In

Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the

thle newtpiper ere
eV.IIable on en equal

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TURNED QOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /881?
No Fee Unless We Win I
1·888·582·3345
HI \I I --.. I \ I I

H~

FOR SALE

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14x80 trailer located at
Glenwood, stove, retrldg.,
microwave furnished 304576·9991 .

2 bedroom mobile home,
Mlneravllle area, newly redecorated, references required, depoalt required,
$300 per month, call
(740)992-Bm after 5pm.

=-"-=====---"Get Your Money's Worth•
at Coles Mobile Homes, St.
At. 50 East of Athens. DeN11~
aries, set-ups, excavating,
foundations, sewage syshealing
t.m.' d "veways.
"
and cooling along with parts
end service. You should accept nothing less. Since
1967 we are Cole's Mobile
Homes where you ~Get
Your Money's Worth.ft
New t4x70, 3 br/2bth. Only

p:m

2 bedroom, air, very nice ,
no pets, In Gallipolis .

(740)446~2003

(740)446~

1409

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Lors&amp;
ACREAGE

Patriot area, 20+ wooded
acres, county water &amp; elec·
tric available, homesite.
Borders Wayne National
Forrest, eMcellent hunting,
$38,000 (740)379·9141
Ill '- I \1 --.,

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r i i i i i oo-,.1
·--i
H~

FOR RENr

1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo., -4%

Bedroom

Apartments

Starting at $289/mo, Washer/ Dryer Hookup Stove
'
and Relrfg-tor (740)441
.... g
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1519
.
1 or 2 BR Appt. lor Rent,
Utilities Pd., No Pets

lM~~~~
10 used homes under
$2000, Call Karena , 740385·9948
1988 Carrrollton 14x70 Mobile Home 2 bedrooms , 1
both. (304)675· 3615

4 bedroom Brick Home in Land Home Packages availthe country on 4-acre lot. able .
In
your
area,
(740)379·2862
(740)446·3384 .

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·n on lhru 21' metal side &amp; roof.
Apart- ques. 1124 East M a1
·
SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 74()- 6'x6'6" mini roll-up door;
8
ments,
paclous, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 992·2526 . Russ Moore, 40x64x1 3' shOp building , 1-

vary

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Ba
C
owner.
3 entry 3-12x12 overheads
1/2
th, Newly arpeted, i'i:ri"'i~-----,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby F&gt;ool, PaMlscEuANF.oo;
gutter painted steel sides &amp;
tlo, Start $385/Mo. No Pets,
"'"........
roof , insulated roof, erected
'll'IJU(CHANDISE
price
$20,106.00;
Lease Plus Security Deposit
30x40x9'4~ garage , J..10x8
Required, Days: 740 "446 " 1 Northman snow blade; 2 insul overheads, 1-3' entry,
3481 ; Evenings: 740 -367 - gravity wagons. (two hun- insulated roof guuer, 1·
0502
:;;
=:.·---...,.---- dred bushel). Please call overhang painted steel
Two • 2 BR apartments {740)245· 5788 tor more in- sides &amp; roof. erected,
available In Syracuse $200. formation.
$10,157J)(); 24x42x9'4" gadeposit $330. per month.
rage, 1-3' entry, 2-20x8' inRent includes Water, Sewer Brand new Radio Shack sui overheads. insul root,
&amp; Trash, No Pets, applica- karaoke machine (only use painted sreel sides &amp; roof 1'
lion. Reference &amp; Sufficient 2 times) plays CO's, has 2 overhang gutter, erected
Income to Qualify 740·378· tape decks, change key &amp; price $9967 .00; Pre cision
6111
pitch, 4 microphones &amp; a Post Frame Bldrs. 740-742~imr--"!!S~----. splitler. large speaker. paid 4011 , 1·800·396·3026
PACE
$400 wi ll take
$300,
FOR

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--=::--~----,
BUUJ&gt;ING

Townhouse

Mobile home space for rent
in Middleport, $120 per
month, 17401992_3194
--------iio-pl Trailer space for rent $125
per month, plus deposit.
Nice lots available for up to 1 and 2 bedroom apart· Priest's Trailer Park. water
16x80 mobile homes, $115 menta, furnished and unfur- Paid. CaU (740)446-3644
water Included, (740)992· nlshed, security deposit re·
2167
qulred. no pels. 740·992·
2218.
l'lill""""'!!~-----.

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Watenine Special: 3/4 200
PSI $21.00 Per 100: 1' 200
PSI $35 .00 Per 100: All
Brass Compression Fittings
In Stock.
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS·
ES JacKson, Ol'lio, 1-BD0537-9528

35 West 2 Bedroom Town SUPI'I.IE'&gt;
house Apartments, 1ndudes
ANriQUEs
Water
Sewage, Trash, - 10 &amp; 12 wide portable yard
$350/Mo., 740·446-Q008.
Buy or sell. Riverine Anti- buildings , available in 9'

2 bedroom mobile home, Tara

Spring Valley area. Extra
Blowout sale on all Single nice, all electric . $350 a
Sectl
h
tho
month, $250 deposll. Call
U·
on ames save
sands good until February (740)441-69154 or (304)675·
29. (740)446-3093
_2900
________

Pioneer auto/trUck CD player &amp; amp, 2 mpx speaker
boxes &amp; monster cable .
$400. Complete. (304)6756485 after 6pm.

1

110USEJ10ID
GooDs

Bedroom suit. beds, drop
leaflable&amp; chairs, recliners,
roll-a-away bed, hospital
bed , microwave. (740)4469742

(740)992-9579.

BloCk, brick , sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc . Claude
BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav·
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
ings·, and BOOST Energy Call 740-245-5121 .
Like You Have Never Ex· l!l!ll"---:::~---,
perlenced.
PEls
WEIGHT· LOSS
FOR SALE
REVOLUTION
-New product launch OctoAKC ~OMer pups , 7 weeks
bar 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
old, shots curren t. Brindle
(740)441-1982
with beaut1lul markings.
Grubb's Piano - Tuning &amp; (740)379-2639
Repairs. Problems? Need
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr. AKC Reg . Siberian Husky
:c74:::0o.c-44=6·.:4::52::5'---- pups, 9 weeks old . already
have 1st shots, wormed &amp;
Hide-a-bed, $50 ·, Ba ldwin vet checked . 1 Black/White
Organ. $100 . (740)245· female, 1 Gray/White fe5064
male, 1 Black.M'hite mala.
Jacqueline's "Livln' Dolls" parent s on the premises
Prese nting Apple Valley $250.00 304- 773-5730

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992 5858
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F
2 bedrooms· 6 month !ease or

58 1e: Raeon dlt'tone d
Garage Apartment, utilities washers, dryers and retrigerators. Thompsons Applipaid, no pets, no panies. ance. 3407 Jackson Aile$550 month ptus · $550 deposit. (740)446-o241
nue, (304)675·7388.
!:::::::..!:..::!.:..:::.::.:..;__ _ GE washer &amp; dryer set,
4 rooms and bath, stove/ re- $150: Whirlpool washer,
trlgerator. Utllltlea paid, $76; Kenmore Dryer, $65,
$400 month. 46 Olive all
white
after
6:00.
8
17401448 3945
treet.
(740)446-9066
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET PR~ Good Used Appllences. Re·
CEB AT JACKSON Ell- cond itioned and Guoran·
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive teed. Washers, Dryers ,
from $297 to $383. Walk to Ranges, and Refrigerators ,
ohop &amp; movies. Coli 74(). Some start at $95. Skaggs
446-2~68. Equal Housing Appliances . 76 Vine St. ,
Opportunity.
(740)446·7398

Dolls &amp; Kits. Custom made AK C. 7 mo nlh old Male
babies &amp; loddlers for that
Dachshund , housebroKen .
special someone, or make all shots. $200. no checks.
your own . your way! Many (740) 388 _9824
faces. eye colors. hair color
&amp; styles, skin tones, and Lab puppi es. AKC . Proven
body styles to choose from. hunting sto ck. Champion
Clothing also available. bloodline . Boxhead, Otterta il
ConY,:~are to Middleton and $1 50. (740)643-2288 Ready
now!
My Twinn Cudd ly Babies "i:i--':':"--~~-"1
Calf for more information.
FRUITS &amp;
{740)446-8840
VEGETABLES
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Debra Young
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Congratulations! You have
Stock. Cell Ron Evans. 1- won 2 free movie tickets to
•
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800 537 9528
the Spring Valley 7 in Gal·
lipolis. Call the Ae gisler toNew &amp; Used Heat !=lumps- day tor de tail s.(304)675·
Gas Furnaces . Free Esti- 1333
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark mates. (740)446-6308
I \1{\1 ._,1 1'1 ' 1 II...,
Chapel Road, Poner, Ohio.
(740)448·7444 1-877·830·
,\ I I\ 1 . . , I c li 1,
NEW AND USED STEEL
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
Steel Beams , Pipe Re bar
financing, 90 days same as
For Concrete, Angle, Chenw
cash. VlsaJ ~Master Card .
net, Flat Bar, Steel Gralin g
Drive- a- little save alot.
For Drains, Driveways &amp;
- - - - -- - - - - Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met·
New sofa &amp; Chair, $399. al&amp; Open Monday, Tuesday, IH684, Diesel, AOPS. with
9x12 carpet, room slza S60. Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam- canopy. 8F-4R tran s.. dual
Mollohan Carpet &amp; Furniture 4:30pm. Closed Th ursday, remotes. runs &amp; looks good .
&amp;
Sun day. $9,500. (740)379·2757
(740)448·7444. Clark Chap· Satu rday

Down , 30 Years at 8.6%
APR . For ~lstlngs, 800-319New home· 4 bedroom. 2 3323 Ext 1709.
bath, livlngroom, temlly- "'":-:-~--:-::-:----:­
room, dining room den, 1 BR HoUSe In Racine, with
modem kitchen, 2 car ga- water, sewer, trash $325.
rage , hp, all etectnc, wtthln Month, No Peto (740)992·
walking distance Pomeroy 5039
Golf Course, 3 acres,
$118,000,
call
Susan 3br. House locatacl In Ma(740)985·4291. work 740· son, wv. $495. + Utilities. Downtown Gallipolis, apartment for rent, 1 or 2 bed~
44.,..:.::6_·7.=26::.;7.;.
. - - - : : - : - No Pets. i304)n3-5881
Pomeroy, spacious, 3 bed- Clean warm 2 bedroom room. (740)888·7174
room . 1 bath. large lat. home in Pomeroy, w/optlon- Garage apanment for rent,
$22 ;500. Discount tor cash. to buy, $400 a mo.. good 2 bedroom, stove, refrlgara·
(304)837-7507 (740)709· refertincea, (740)698·7244
tor fumlahed . Water pold,
$27&amp; month, $150 deposit.
0064
(740)446•9061 .
Rental hOuse for sale locat- One bedroom house In Bided at 1410 Lewis St Pt. well with refrigerator &amp; - - - -- -- - Pleasant Make offer , call stove. Qas heat with new Twin Rlvere Tower 11 &amp;C·
carpet. For more informa· ceptlng application• for
after 5pm. 304·727-3318
tlon, please call Sharon &amp; waiting list for Hud-aub·
Stk:k built In t 998, 3 bed·
Scott Howell at (740)388· sized, 1· br, apartment, call
room, 3 bath fireplace, over
el Road, Porter, OH.
924 t
875·8879 EHO
1 acre, asking $104.900 .
(740)983-0730
opportunity .,...._

Housekeeper/ babysitter,
Avon
Representatives with eMperlence, organized
female with own transports·
INDnCEI
wanted. (740)446·3358
lion. 2:30·4:30pm M·F, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or $10.00 per hour. (304)675- lNG CO. recommends that
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304w 4792 evenings.
you do business with people
:.:.;:::..::=:::.:!!::.:..- - - - you know, and NOT to send
675· 1429.
HVAC company looking for money thrOugh the mall until
PTIFT certlflod helpers to you have Investigated the
do Heating &amp; Cooling Instal·
latlon. Also looking for Ex- ·
perlenced Installer and
Growth
Tech with 2 years or l'T)Ore. ..__ _
Sand resumes to F&gt;.O. Box ·
572, Kerr, OH 45643.
Second Chance Financial.
!MMEQIATE OfENINGS
Looking for a Second
Local Office Has 25·50 Chance for borrowing mon·
• Sales Consultant
Openings, No eMparlence ey or re-establishing credit.
• Parts Department Needed, $5-$9 Per Hour, t. We can help. Good or bad
888·974·JOBS
credit accepted. can toll
Counter Sales
~~~~~---- Froo. 1·888·576·4685 Fol·
• Parts Departmen1 LOOKING
FOR
LPN low the prompts.
Monday- Friday, no weekDelivery
ends or Holidays. Apply In
~
• Oil &amp; Lube
person. 936 State Acute
SEavi.as
Technician
160, (740)448·9620
~

Send Resume to

Feir Hou1lng Act ot 1868
which mekeslt iiiiQII to
edv.rtiM "'1ny
preference, llmltllton or
dlecrlmln..lon bnecl on
rece, color, reHglon, HX
flmlllel etatue or n.tlon~~l
origin, or 1ny Intention to
m8ke any euch
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon."

Childcare available In downtown Pomeroy, private pay
only, providing 24 hr. service, call (740)992-5827 for
more Information.

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MOBILEFOR.au.~'~
of!~
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Used furniture store. 130
Butavllle Pike. We sell mattresses, bunk beds, dressers, couches, appliances,
bedroom suites; recliners.
Grave
monuments.
_99-2--5-0-64_._E_q_u_•_•
-H-ou-s;-in-g (740)446-4782 Gallipolis,
Opponunities.
OH .
Hawthorne Apartments Jand
Storage now taking applica- Wingback Recliner; Ethan
tiona for 2 bedroom apart· Allen Dresser; Poster Bed,
ments. (740)441-1519
40" Oak Dresser base; 50"
~M;:o;.;.de"'r'"'n"-=b:.ed"r-'oo::.m.:.:..a_p_art-- Style Maker Hutch ; Water~
fall Chest and Desk.
ment (740)446-D390
Now Taking Applications- (740)286-6522

BR

1180
WANIF.D
•
To Do
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,..

POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

i

Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at VII~
lage Manor and Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $276-$348. Call 74().

New 2003 Ooublewide. 3
&amp; 2 Both. Only $1695
down and &amp;295/mo. 1·80069 t ·6777

Galllpolle CarHr College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740·446·4367,
1-800·214·0452 ,
Reg #90·05·1274B.

ii!iii

Small 1 bedroom home in
Middlilport, $300 plus de·
posit &amp; references required,
(740)992-6154

3 bedroom mobile home tor
17401992
bedroom- 1-1/2 bath,
rent , no pets,
w/new 30~0 addition. Lo58
58
::::::::'---- - - - - cated on 12 acres with
Beautiful River View Ideal
stocked pond. City Schools,
·For 1 Or 2 People, Referan(740)446·8901
ces, Deposit. No Pets, Fos4
BEDROOM
HOME
ter Trailer Park, 740·441·
1
Foreclosure, only $14,900,
0181.
Won't last. 1-800-719-3001
$995 down and only Mobile Home lor rent. Next
Ext. F144
$197.62 per month , Call to City limits In Point Pleas·
Nikki 740·385-7671
ant. (304)675-2359 between
~

aubject to the Fed«al

-

GooDs

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for immediate possession
all within 15 min. of dow,ntown Gallipolis. Rates as
low os 6%. (740)446·3218.

The University of Rio
Grande inviles applications
for the position of secretary
for the Graduate Education
Department. Responsibili·
ties for the full·tlme position
include, but are not limited
to, providing general sec:retarial and receptionist duties
for the Graduate Education
Department: assisting with
admissions processes for
Graduate Education, assist·
ing with registration proc:asses and working directly
with the Mentor Program
Coordinator. Must have high
school diploma or equiva·
lent. Associate degree pre·
ferred. Must have excellent
organizational and interpersonal relationship skiH~ and
be able to work under pres·
sure and meet deadlines.
Must have the ability to prl·
oritize work and projects
and work independently. All
applicants must submit a
letter of Interest and resume
including the names and ad·
dresses of three references
on or before February 17,
2003 to Ms. Phyllis Maeon,
SPHR, Director of Human
Resources, University of
Rio Grande, F&gt;O BoM 500,
Rio Grande, OH 45674,
email pmason@rlo.edu Fax:
740-245•4909 · EEO/AA emplayer.
Truck Drlvera, Immediate
hire, class ACOL required,
excellent pay, experience
required. Earn up to
$1,000 . par week.Call 304·
675-4005
1140

to Recent

•

HOUSEHOLD

FOR SALE

"'-"===:.:______

r

(740)446-7300

•

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

e

rgl~

I~10

John Deere Compact Tractors. Financ1ng as low as
4.5% and 0% down with
John Deere Credit Approval . Carmichael Equipment,
Inc .
Hun tington,
wv

A~

r'o ~~ I
~ol--iiFOiiRiiSALEiiiii.__.l96
OT,
'
5500 POLICE IMPOUNDS I
Kondas , Chevys, etc! Cars/
Trucks from $500.
For
listings 1-800-719-3001 ext.

(304)736·2120. Gallipolis . 3901
OH (740)446-2412

~~~~~~~

98

Chrysler

Cirrus LXI ,

cab 4)(4, 2.8, 4 speed, ale ,

Tlme for Frost SeM1ng Pasture and Hay Fi elds. ATV
Broadcast Seeders , 12 volt,
Hig~ Qu ality. Fits mos t ATV,
$295 . J im' s Farm Equipment, (7 4o)44 s-24a4

good condition
$1800. - - - - - - - 8am-6pm . (304)675-6325
HOLLEY'S AUTO SALES
Tax Time Specials
1990 Olds Cierra, 4 cylin· 1987 Mercury Topaz $695
der, auto, runs good; 1989 1986 Dodge 050 truck $795
Plymouth Van. 6 sylinder, 1988 Ford Ranger $1295
auto good condition. low 1984
F-150
$600
LIVI:SIOCK
miles. Call (304)675-5612 1991 S- 10, 4x4, $3995
__
pr (304)675-5859
1996 GMC Jimmy, 4dr,
---'--~~~-- $7995: 1996 Plymouth Ne·
1994 Buic~ LeSabre , drives
$
50-60# Shaulis, (740)949·
on . 4 door, auto, 2995.
great, one owner, well cared
2908 or (740) 949·2017
(740)446·2000
lor, 150,000 miles, $2500 iOr.;.;.;.~;.;...--;....,

r

r

1740)446·6970

Bo~rdin g,

Tra inin g, Condi·

tioning, Indoor and Outdoor

riding f acilitie s. trails and
wash bay_ 1-740-446-4710

Hog ready to butcher. Calt
anytime, leave message

il
(7:140~)2_5_6·-t6~5~2~~-.,
HAY &amp;

r

GRAIN

1..~-------'
•

Haylage round bales 60-90
% Alfalfa about 2000 lbs

$35-$40.00 per bale 304-

882·3251
-~~~~~~

Orchard grass hay for sale$2 50 squ are bale. $20 for

round bale. (740)992-2623

r

r~

TRUCKS

Mondey, February 10, 200J

IrlloA::s~~ I

Hyu nda• Accent
1988 Dodge Ram Charger,
4cly, · auto, air, sunroof , 4x4, full size, auto, lots of
73.000 miles, asking $2450 , new parts, driven daily,
(740)992-2952
(7 40)992·0622

57 .000 miles. $5 250 OBO.
(740)256· 1618 (740)256·
1984 Chevy 5· 10 Extended
1252

good condition. may trade $7500
for

camper,·

(740)742·2307

OBO..

(740)742·

S.OOO, 4011

"-""-'--'=::::....---

r'o

Arevou
laidoHP
You

2001 Jeep Cherokee Clas· iiiiji;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
sic 4 wheel

ctr.,3,400

milee

like new $17,500.
304-882·3333

HOME

IMPRoVEMENIS

88 Chevy 1500 4x4, 340, 5
BASEMENT
sp, high miles, $2500 OBO,
WATERPROOFING
(740)742-401 1
Unconditional lifetime guar94 Mllsublshe Montero, antee. Local references furSUV. Sunroof, all auto, 7 nish9Q. Established 1975.

back to work

For more information,
call Gallia Meigs
Community A,ctmn

="-------

'

'

''

.

'

-.,'

.·_,, .,

If so, you qualify for a

10% Discount
on your home delivered subscription!
Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

classified

High8l Dry
Self·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
'Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
of every month
Ail pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
GetS FREE

Phone_ _ __

Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675-5282

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones

www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctorctwv dr.com

Free Estimates

740-992·1717

·BISSELL

Best Service at
the Best Price

740-992·7599

l Rt. 7 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy

Open 9am-Spm
Fre~

eslirootc&gt;, lrce in horne pic~wp

C•ll u s for 1111 your m 111put.:r 1\fe&lt;ll

(740) 446-1812
A.Jl; IM abQtll our
Sen1u Plmu/

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

740·949·2217

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

~

Pleasant Valley Hospital

V

SUPERVISOR ORIPACU

Front line m;:magcment position with accountabil~
ity for the da il y func tio ning o f surgica l servi ces.
Mu 't hold a (.; Urrent lice nsure m West Virg inia.
Bad1c lur"' degree m N ursin~ (BSN) pre ferred .
A m1n 1111U m uf 3-5 yea r~ t:)lperience in Surgica
Sen-JcC&lt;i preferred.
For more m formatnm :
l'leasant Valley Hospital
du H uman Re~ource&lt;.,

\ ,\IJ I Jf

2510 V~llev Dme
Po11H Plca;ant. WV 25550
1)( ~ ) f. 75-41-tfl

Dean Hill ·
New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.

Ripley, WV 25271
1-800-822-0417
"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
Van Dealer"

"Nofmel
My money Is wnh
RoCky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services,
Box 189. Middleport, OH
Phor1e : 843-5264."

MILLS
FAMilY
CONSTRICDOI

Ta~e

the PAIN

out cf P~INTINGI
Le: me .:lc 1t fo r youl

Building m•er 30 years

.

DEAR READERS: Friday
is Valentine's Day. While we
celebrate that special day with
cards and flowers, remember
also to send a message from
home to our brave youn~ men
and women in the mtlitary
who, in great numbers, have
been deployed to places far
away from loved ones.
Re~ardless of one's personal
political beliefs, our troops
deserve all the support we can
j:ive them. So don't forget to
JOin me in sending a
Valentine's Day greeting via
www.OoerationDearAbby.net
DEAlt ABBY: All too
often, ignorant people make
racist jokes or comments to
me, assuming I won't be
offended because we are of
the same race (Caucasian).
They may be co-workers,
classmates or others with
whom I must remain civil.
The truth is I am highly
offended by any racist comment. I have an AfricanAmerican brother-in-law and
a biracial nephew, both of
whom I love dearly. It is
. because of them that I have
become acutely aware of the
..Jciamage that disparaging
remarks "of color" can do.
However, each time it happens in my presence, I never
know how to respond.
Normally I just shrug and say
nothing •• then end up feeling

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

terrible about my silence.
How would you suggest I
respond next time, Abby? FEELING UNTRUE TO
MYSELF IN MARYLAND
DEAR
FEELING
UNTRUE: Tell it like it is:
I'm sorry you feel the way
you do. My brother-in-law is
African-American and my
nephew is biracial, and what
you' re saying certainly isn't
true of them.
DEAR ABBY: I am an
ambitious 22-year-old college
senior. Two years ago, I met
the man of my dreams. His
name is "Wayne" and he's a
youth minister. I feel like I've
met my life companion.
The problem is that Wayne
has a huge fear of commitment.
On two separate occasions. we
were engaged and about to
make the announcement.
However, at the last minqte
Wayne changed his mind and
broke off our entire relationship with, "I need time."

Tuesday, Feb. i i, 2003
BY BERNICE BmE OsOL
There are indications that in
· the year ahead you could find
yourself involved in handling a
project much larger than you
have ever undertaken in the past.
You ' ll be up to the task and will
do a good job.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
- Someone in your group who
has n knack for creating waves
might try to involve you in one
of his or her fiascos today. Don' t
allow yourself to be one of this
person's JlSWns.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
- Timing wiii be essential 1o·
day, so be careful not to tip your
hand prematurely . If you do.
your competitor will end up with
more clout than you and be the
victor.
ARIES (Murch 21 -April 19)
~ Don"t believe everything
that's told to you today, espe·
cially if it 's a fascinating story
relayed by a promoter attempting to sell you his or her wares.
lis worth may be grossly exaggerated.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
- Before you mcur one more

penny of additional debt, start to
work on clearing up what you
already have on 1he books. ll's
imperative today that you try 10
lessen the pressure, not increase
it.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20)
- it"s ulways good to consider
another point of view. but once
done. ·be your own person today
and don't let others decide
what's best for you. Stand lirm

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It will be eKtremely important

...-....-~-

siOns.

today that you evaluate even1s
realistically and, if you do spot a
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
problem, that you don'1 kid 19} - Be careful not to take on
yourself into believing that it any more assignments or jobs
doesn't e&lt;it.
than you can comfortllbly manSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) age today. Should you find your- You're a bit ton vulnerable· set f under pressure. chances are
today and someone who spots you'll not perform any of them
this could abuse your generosity . too well.
See to it that people with whom
you have dealings pick up their
Know where to look for roon _your own convictions.
CANCER (June 2 i -July 22) fair share of the responsibilities. mance and you' II find it. The
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Astro-Graph Matchmaker wheel
- Try not to full behind today
Dec.
21) -- Judgments based instantly reveals which signs are
where your work is concerned.
upon
sparse
information aren't romant1cally perfec1 for you.
What you think can be done or
made up later will not be so easy likely to serve your best interests Mail $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this
today. Insist upon taking all1he newspaper, P.O. Box 167. Wickto do, and problems will result·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- if time you need to gather the full liffe, OH 44092-0167.
a1 all possible don't bank on
someone else carrying the ball
WORD SCRIMMAGE"C' 201»
SOLUTION BY JUOD.l:tAMilRICK
for you today when it comes to a
Unlltd '•llur. Syl'ldlclilll , lr~;.
Answer
relationship situa1ion. There's a
strong likelihood she or he will
E,
1SI DOWN ._!L
to
fumble.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) previous
It is always possible to achieve
Word
your objectives. but it isn't al·...!L
ways done with ease. Today
Scrim·
might be one of those days
·....!.!!!..
mag\\ ·
where the going gets tough .
295
Hang in there and you'll succeed.

:JrdOOWN

0

4th DOWN

C) "

@

AVERAGE GAME 110-120
by JUDD HAMBRICK

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE
The 2002 Annual
Financial Report of
Salem Townahlp for
the year ended
December 31, 2002
haa been completed
and Ia available lor
public Inspection at
the "Clerk '&amp; office
26310 Legion Road
LangsVIlle,
by
appointment. A copy
of the · report can ba
provided
upon
raqueat.
Bonnie Scon, Clerk
Salem Township
Truoteea
(2) 10

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

==

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7-leHer wotd lrom the letters on each yardllne .
Add pointS 10 taetl word or letter USing sconng directions at Oght. SINen-IMter
words get a ~point bonus. AI word! can be lound n Wab!lta(s New Wl?l1d
Colsge Ole1ional\'.
JUDD'S SOLUnON TOMORROW

.....

l'LI. TAI&lt;E ~EE
CA~D£ PlEASE.
OO€TDP, ONE
MIDDl-E , ONE

ecrrOM

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

dree hanltll*

• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp;Compare

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garagea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roollng &amp; Clutterw
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

PRI~C£

• Patio and Porch Decks

WILL

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 .

COME!

50i!tE·
DA~

""

e n c e s . .;

Envelope's must be
marked "Bid for mow·
lng cameterlee" Bidewill be opened at the
March 6, 2003 Twp.
meeting at 6:30 pm.
Bids must be mailed
or
delivered
to
Townahlp
Clerk,
Richard Bailey, 483
Hooker
St.,
Middleport, OH 45760,
no later than 4:00 pm ·
on March 8, 2003.
Salisbury
Twp.
Truateea hal the right
to accept or ralect
any or all bide.
(2} 10, 17, 24

J

blades@zapUn~ . com

• New Homes
• Garages

949·1405

36 Disputes
39 Torso,
Informally
40 WWII subs ·
(hyph.)
41 Tibet's
-Lama
42 Freeze over
(2 wds.)
43 teeth
44 Contended45 Atlas abbr.
47 Antarctic
explorer
48 Name in
asays
51 t~' In
. • lli'ls
53 Fine (hyph.)

facts before y'6u make any deci-

Wmi l&lt;iduded

dOORIIIG
*HOME
IUIIITEIIIIICI
idEIMliSS

GUnER

21 Before, In
combos
24 College
degs.
25 Iron or
Bronze26 Natural
resin
27 Horne of
jazz
28 Officeholders
30 Lawn piece
~ Fin.
-"/ neighbor
~2 TV news
· tloutce
33 Snp on
35 "Swan
Lake"
costume

Footers, Foundation,

ln~llfiiiWr

'HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

ACROSS

Astrograph

I

Pole Barn s, Concrete,
Electric, Plumbing

The
Daily
Sentinel

ter

.

Please tell me what to do. I
am beginning to have difficulty
trusting him with my feelings
because he has hurt me twice
by bailing out. - HEART·
BROKEN AND CON·
FUSED IN ALABAMA
DEAR HEARTBROKEN
AND CONFUSED: Wayne
may be the man of your dreams,
but he clearly is not ready to
make a lifenme commitment.
Give him credit for being hon·
est and all the time he needs, but
in the meantime, date others and
don't isolate yourself. ''Mr.
Right" for you may be just
around the corner and as ready
as you are to settle down.
DEAR ABBY: I have been
reading your column for as
long as I can remember. Now
I'd like to tell you our story.
Close to Christmas, my hus- Angeles, CA 90069.
band received a telephone
message from a woman in
Tennessee. She said she had "a
special something for him." Of
course, all kinds of thoughts
raced through our heads. My
husband returned her call and
was told that she had purchased a box of books several
years earlier and had found his
baby book among them. She
had been trying to contact him
ever since. She asked if he
would like to have it back.
Ap~arentlr,. when my husband s fanuly moved years
ago, the book had been mis-

Add-Ons. New Homes.

Email:

ment. Included wflh
bid must be a copy of
liability Ina. policy

The Dally Sentinel • Page 87 .

46 Brick type
49 Seine vlata
1 Greek "Z" 50 007's alma
5 Crowd
mater
8 Sty
52 "The
matriarch
Mammoth
11 Cheers
Hunlers"
12 Locality
heroine
14 Fasten
54 Water, In
15 Skiff's need
Quebec
16 King of
55 Cozy
placed. So on his birthday this
gornlas
56 Threesome
57 Chip's
year, he was reunited with his 17 Goal
comP.anlon
baby book after 58 years. Our 1B Family
member
58
Femily
heartfelt thanks to our "An~el 20 Predatory
nickname
in Tennessee" for canng
59 Nebr.
fish
enough to go that extra mile 22 Fitness
neighbor
to track down my husband.
center
23 Beattie and
DOWN
We are truly grateful. Blyth
HELEN AND MONTY 24 Ligh1 wood 1 Menagerie
HARMON, PHOENIX
27 Roster
2 Verve
DEAR HELEN AND 29 - Khan
3 Garr of "Mr.
MONTY: It's nice to be 30 Paragraph
Mom"
part
4 Estimate
reminded that people are will5 --face
ing to go out of their way to 34 Districts
37
(grimace)
do kind things for strangers.
shoestring 6 Gonzalez's
It's the highest form of giving. 38 Prodttce-lngold
Dear Abby is written by
specting grp. 7 Uncle
Abigail Van Buren, also 39 Charred
- Rice
known as Jeanne Phillips, and 41 Morae code 8 Seve.re
signals
.,. 9 Hog
was founded by her mother,
43
Watch
aounds
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
pocket
1D Marries
Abby at www.DearAbby.com 44 Cleaning
13 Spaachless
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
appliance 19 Audit ace

(740) 992-3320

NOTICES

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

• Stump"Grindirrg
Bucket Truck

Computers, Repairs,

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

······---------------------------··········

&amp;ra

Top • Removal • Trim

We Make House Calls

Mall or drop off this coupon along whh a copy ol your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Saving
for
your nest
egg
Try looking
in the Classifieds!

Tree Service

&amp;I

-'-------------~

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Transportation
STATE OF OHIO
(2) 3, 10
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
PUBLIC NOTICE
Columbus, Ohio
Ofllce of Contracts
The 2002 annual
Legal Copy Number:
financial report of the
030172
or
Townahlp
UNIT PRICE CON· · Salisbury for the year
TRACT .
ending December 31,
Mailing Date:
2002 has been com0112412003
pleted and Ia avail·
Sealed propoaala able
for
public
will be accepted from ln1pactlon at the
all pre-quallflad bid· Clerk's ·olflca at 463
dare at the Office of Hooker
Street,
Contracta of the Ohio Middleport,
Ohio,
Department
of between the hours of
Transportation , 10:00 am and 2:00 pm
Columbus, Ohio, until Monday lhru Friday. A
10:00 a.m.
copy of IIIII report can
Wedneaday , be provided upon
February 26, 2003
requeat.
For
Improving
Townehlp of
Sections
GAL-7·
Salisbury Richard
0.00/Varlous, State
Bailey, Clerk
Route 7 and varloua, (2) 10
Gallla,
Hocking,
Melga,
Monroe,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Morgan,
Noble,
VInton
and Sallabury Twp
Waahlngton Truoteea will be
Countlea, Ohio, In accepting bldo for
accordance
with mowing the following
plena and apeclflca- cemeterlee:
llona by herbicidal Rockoprlngs
apraying.
Cematery located on
"The date oat lor Goegleln Rd. (Twp.
completion of thla Rd 664}, Bradford
work shall be as set Cemetery located on
forth In the bidding Co. Rd 5.
propoaal." Plans and
Cemeteries ahould
Speclllcallona are on ba mowed approxl·
file In the department mately 10 tlmea per
of Transportation.
year.
Gordon Proctor
Contractor must
Director of provide own equip·

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

MANLEYS
J1ARTWELL
SELF STORAGE
STORAGE
97 Beech St.
lOxlO
middleport, OH
10x20

Call
-------------------------------------------Subscriber's Name ______________
The Daily Address _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
Sentinel City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

992·2155

T~N

~~~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

fluttbap lime• -6enttntl

992-5479

(740) 446·1 018

BUilDERS InC.

The Daily Sentinel
&amp;aturbap ltmel -imtinel

Jeff Warner Ins.

Agency

(lO'xlO' 6 10'1120')

fallipoU• Jaatlp Qtrlbune
Joint tBiea•ant l.egtlter

Cellular

(740) 992·2222 or

s

.

..GWIL ,:

could be
eligible for FREE
· help getting .

seater, 100,000 miles. 4- Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
wheel drl·ve. Csll (304)675 . 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
7965

Are yottt65 Qt~6id!t1 .....

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Send a Valen ine greeting
to our troops overseas

94 Stratos, 17'6" bass boat,

black &amp; silver with white bottom, gray carpet, 120 hp.
Evinrude trolling motor, rebuilt last year from lack of
1989 Silverado Blazer, 4x4, use, runs great, looks grea1,

95 Suburban 2500, 4x4.
FUR
SALE
454 cubic Inch, automatic, -----~~1994 Buick Regal, all pow- __
very
good
co ndition. C&amp;C General Home Mainte·
er, a1r. lilt . cruise, am/lm
nenca- Painting, vinyl sictcassene. 146,000 miles, in 1988 Ford Ranger, V-6, 5· (740)379·2218
speed,
f'B,
PS,
runs
excel·
~«!
llng,
carpentry, doors. wingreat condition,
asking
lent, $1400 OBO (740)441 ~
MOIORCYG.ES
dow~ , baths, mobile home
53.000. (740)992·0064
Ot 31 after 5pm.
~-,_ _ _ _ _ __.! repa!r and more. For free
1
1997 cavalier. 20 , au1oma1estimate call Chet, 740-992·
ic. $2495: t 996 Grand Am . - - - - - - . . . . . , . - 1988 Yamaha Blaster 4 6323.
20 . $3495. Three 1995 1992 GMC, 1 !on,~~gle wh.eeler, runs &amp; looks goOd,
Grand Ams . 17 others in wheel, diesel, aulo, air, _uns rebuilt motor &amp; stainless - - - - - - - stock. (\09K MOTORS___.great-;"- good
con 11on, Fmh pipe, 1100, (740 )992 . Custom Building &amp; Remod(740)446-~3
;: .....-··- $269!9, (740)992--758"4
eling for all your home re9966
- - - - - - - - pair needs, in the business
1998 Dodge Neon 4dr. au- 2001 F~2 so, Superduty, XL 1998 Yamaha Kodiak , 4 lor over 18 years, (740)992·
to, a'c. 74.000 miles. Aed . package, 4x4, 5.4 V-8, 1ow wheel drive, good condition, 11 19
Excellent Condilion . $3,800. package, 29,000 miles .• $2900 OBO, (740)992-0512
8am-6pm. (304)6?5-6325
AJC, cruise, tilt, $18,500. 2000 Artie car, 2WD with Superior Home MainteWaren Wrench. good condi- nance . We do all repairs on ·
87 Corvette. 26 .850 miles. (740)379-2757
tion,
$2500 080. (740)992· homes. Carpentry, plumb·
white with red interior. . , . - - - - - - - - Always garaged, loaded. Slide in truck camper for 4163 after Spm, leave mes· ing, floors, water tanks.
(740}441 ·011 3
sage.
(740)379-2218
sale, (740)992-2823

with a

Monday, February 10, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

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�Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Girls basktetball action, B1

Monday, February 10, 2003

waakiV WriUn'p.
corner
IC 2003 by

Vicki Whiting, Editor

February is the month to IP

~

Write On I &lt;'c-Magic Seed

Jeff Schinkel, Designer/Illustrator

Draw a heart around
the healthy snacks.
Draw an X through
the unhealthy nn~~c:

One I day I planted
a magic seed ...
Finish this story.

'

'

Fe bruary is Heart Month and Dental Health Month.
U se the tips on today ' s page to exercise your heart and
be sweet to your teeth!

825

0

Cut out these shapes. Can you put them together to
make a heart? What does the Valentine message say? ·

45631

Please include your school and grade.

POMEROY
A
Middleport man convicted
10 years ago of food stamp
trafficking and receiving
stolen property has re·filed
a civil law suit against former
Meigs
County
Prosecutor John Lentes and
former
Sheriff
Jame s
Soulsby.
Robert D. Fife filed a sec '
ond complaint in Common
Pleas Court, demanding
compensatory and punitive
damages s temming from a

Hom• National a.nk
Racine, OH
Sponsors of : Mrs. M cNickle's 3rd grade crass
Southern Elementary

OH

American Eled:rk Power • G.vln Plllnt
Cheshire, OH
Sponsors of: Ms. Crum's 3rd grad!! dass
Addaville Elementary
Addison, OH

S1andards Link: Health: RecogniZe the fitness benefits from various types of foods .

Toler &amp; Toler
Insurance Services
Gallipolis, OH
Sponso rs of: Mrs. Perry's 3rd grade class

My Funny Valentine

Rio Grande Elementllry
Rio Grande, OH

Make a Valentine Puzzle for your special Valentine.
Cut a heart shape out of some pink or red paper.
Write a message on your heart. Then cut the heart
into four or five puzzle pieces . Put all the
pieces in an envelope and give it to your
Valentine!
Standarda Link: Reading Comprehension: follow simple written
directions .

REED

StaH writer

Stat. Farm lnsurenC.
Point Pleasllnt, WV
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ooeffinget' s 3rd grad e cl ass
No nh Point Elementary
Point Ple asant, WV

Racin ~ .

J.

BY BI!IAN

TySomHYIIe

Are you making pictures of hearts and giving little
he art-shaped candies to friends for Valentine's Day?
Whe n you make a promise you really, really mean,
&amp;.. ~ do you "cross your heart?" Or, do you listen
y
to songs about bro.k en hearts?

Broken Heart Puzzle

Lentes,Soulsby
named as
defendants

Jlallp tn:ribune

Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Middleport man renews suit Republicans

Den Dickerson

cl9allipoli~

Do you feel with your heart?

Standards Link: History/Social Science: Understand the purposes of and events
honored in holidays .

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 123

Deadline: March 9, 2003
Published: Week of April6, 2003
Ser1d your story to:

I

Your heart is a muscle. And, like all
of your muscles, it works best when
you exercise, rest, drink water and
eat healthy. Love your heart, and
your heart will love you!

We see and hear about hearts everywhere. Long
a g o , people thought our feelings came from
W our hearts. Maybe because strong feelings can
make our hearts beat faster. Now we know feelings
come from the brain, not the heart.

Ml~dleport • Pomeroy, Oh.i o.

1993 raid
of
his
home and
the seizure
of personal
property
and cash
by
law.
enforcem e n t
·
authorities.
Lentea
Fife , who
also
has
filed a suit in Federal
District Court
against
Lentes and Soulsby, alleges
breach of contract, menacing conduct and illegal
search and seizure in his
latest suit.
An identical suit was filed
in 2001, and voluntarily
dismissed last year. with the
right_ to re-file within one

year.
Fife and
hi s wife,
G I ad y s ,
who has
since died,
were subjects of a
raid and
forfeiture
10
Soulaby
case
years ago.
Fife was
accused of running an illegal pawn shop from his
home. He later admitted to
a charge of trafficking in
food stamps and two counts
of receiving s.tolen property,
and wes sentenced to· three
suspended jail terms. He
also forfeited a firearms
collection seized in the raid,
and $245,000 in cash held

in ba nk accounts.
Fife later mai ntained he
was innocent of any wrongdoing, and asked Common
Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill to allow the withdraw a! of his guilty plea .
Crow denied the request.
Fife alleges that he feared
retribution from Lentes and
Soulsby if the lawsuit had
been filed while the officials were in office. He
accuses them of depriving
him of his rights to freedom
from illegal searches and
. seizures, and their rights to ·
freedom from unlawful
arrest, detention and imprisonment. They also allege
the defendants made personal use of some seized
items .

Skylin• Lan•s
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sandrll Wlllker's 3rd
Pomeroy Elementary
Pomeroy, Ohio

gr&lt;~~de

da55

Cattleman's
Association
plan annual
steer, heifer
preview

BucHye Rural EIHtric CO-Dp
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Becky Woodyard's 3rd srade da55
Southwestern Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

Rio l1re
Ri o Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Phyllis Brandenbeny's 3 rd grade class
WMhington Elementary
Gallipolis. OH

Hola•r Clinic
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sheila Bevins' 3rd gr.!!de class
Middleport Elementary
Middleport, OH

Bv

TONY

M.

·celebrate
Lincoln's ideals
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

POMEROY - A U.S. president celebrated his !94th
birthday Monday at Meigs
High School by the Meigs
County Republican Party.
A
large
crowd
of
Republicans old and young
came together at the annual
Lincoln Day dinner to discuss
the principles that made
Abraham Lincoln more than
the 16th president, but the
founder of a political movement based on the ideals that
came to symbolize America.
Newly-elected first term
State Rep. Jimmy Stewart
gave the keynote speech
detailing Lincoln's life.
Stewart said the rail splitter
from backwoods America
was a man whom few could
deny lacked intelligence, persistence and perseverance .
Lincoln lost far more elections than he won. His businesses collapsed, his legal
career had high points and
low points, but sun he kept

lEACH

Charlie Barrett, chairman of
the Meigs County Republican
Party, awards Dale Colburn
an award for faithful service
to the party. (J. Miles Layton)
struggling on with the \loat of
making something of h1mself.
Beaten in one race after
another, the future president
would not give up. Stewart
quoted Lincoln, who told
about a slippery road to the

Please see Republicans, AS

Staff writer

Holaer C11nlc
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ours' 3rd grade
Washington Elementary
Gilllipolis, OH

Every day a terrible troublemakerhides in your teet:h,
waiting to carve holes in them- PLAQUE!
(Sa y it like plak, rhymes with tack.) You must
remove it everyday, or else it will cause your
teeth to decay.

dess

Holnr Clinic
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Little's 3rd grade dass
Central Elementary
Point Pleasant, WV
V•u&amp;h•n's Superm•rk.t
Middleport, OH
Sponsors of: Sandy Needs' 3rd grade class
Eastem Elemen ~ary
Middleport, OH

How do you get rid of it? Use the secret code
to to find the names of the Mighty Plaque
Fi g hters and you will learn how to keep your
s mile dazzling!
·

V•~t~han's Supt~rm•rk•t

Middlepon, OH
Sponsor! of: Mrs. Struble's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary ·
Middleport, OH
D•rr.ll Norris •nd M8rsh.tl Roush CrHnhouMS
letart Falls, Ohio
Sponsors of: Ms. Holter's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport, OH

Do this after every
meal to keep germs
off your teeth:

25, - 9 - 6 - 8 - 19

Va1~ntin~

Or. A Mrs. &lt;i•r•ld Shu ..
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of; Jerry Howell's 3rd grade class
Green Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

'
Jividen's
Powaor Equipment

Pah

Jill and Phil are pals . They like many
of the same things . How many ways
can y o u find that Jill and Phil are the
same ?

HEART
EXERCISE

·t:ncourage
eat or drink tlt!rlgSI
::;, mat are bad
your teeth.
you find anything
in the newspaper

e~~{:i:~~J

that a
eating
things that a,re
good for vmtr

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponwn of: Mrs. Davenport's 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this week's Kid Scoop
stories and activities.

SWEET

0

s

E

I

PLAQUE

G N

I

L

z z

CANDIES

y

E

u Q

PICTURES

Jividen's Powar Equipment

A D

c
s

N

A L

p

I

E

1

s

H T E E T

c

L R T

K

p A p

I

T

DAZZLING

c

A

SNACKS

A

L

CARING

N

w X s u
s E c R E

TEETH

s

G N

VALENTINE

SECRET
PAPER

L

y

D N A

E R

E E M 0

I

R A

u

E

N

R T E

c

L

T E I

A

c

v

R A

H p

Standards Link: Recognizing similarities and patterns in

Standards Link: letter sequencing. Recognizing Identical
words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

PALS

objects .

Gallipolis, Ohi o
Spomors of: Mrs. Sar~ Spurlock's 3rd grade class
Vinton Ele mentary
Vinton, OH

J R Morrison 6 AJ~oet.t••
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Fellure's 3rd grade class
Hannan Trace Elementary
Mercerville, OH
Jlvld•n's PowMr Equipment

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponson of: J u ilo~~ Vauaha n's 3rd arade dass
Rutland Ele mentary
Rutland, OH
Ltltart COrporlltion
Leta rt, OH
Sponsors of: A 3rd grade daS!o
Be ale Elementary
GallipOlis Ferry, WV

Wom•n's lhllke'IHII Tum
University of Rio Gr•n•
Rio Grande, OH
Spo n sors of: Mrs . Price 's 3 rd arade class
Washington Elementa ry
Gallipolis, OH
Dido V•lley Tech PMp
Ga llipolis, OH .
Sponsors of : Mrs . Saunde rs' 3rd grade clas1
Bidwell El e menta ry
Bidwe ll, O H

Have a Heart!
Look th rou g h the new s pape r for a n
example o f some one who was " heartless"
or tota ll y lac kin g c ompass ion or c a ring.
Is there a w a y the y c an make up for their
beh avior ?

Ohio V•lley T.ch Prep
Gil llipolis, OH
Spo nsors of: Mrs. Sh ort's 3 rd grad e class
Add aville Element ary
Addaville, O H
Ohio V.lley Tech Prep
Ga llipolis, OH
Spo nsors of: Lou Ann Sha wver's 3rd srade dass
Green Elementary
Ga llipolis, OH

Standard s Link: Social Science: Recognize behaviors th at
demonstrate good character.

Beautiful Butterfly
8y ; JAMIE JEFFERS , HARRISONVILLE ELEMENTARY, 4TH GRADE

tiny cocoon said, "Come by
often and watch me as I
grow and cha nge into a
bea utiful
butterfly.

Gallipolis, Ohi o
Sponsors of: Mrs. Love's 3rd grade do~~ss
Roosevelt Eleme ntary
Po int Pleasant, WV

Edw•rd Jones lnvutm1n11

SMILE

One day I heard a tiny
voice. Looking around, I
'&lt;JW that the vo ice came
from a lillie cocoon. The

Actv•nced H••rinl Clfltjlr
Gallip olis, Ohi o
Sponsors of: sandra Mock's 3rd grade class
Ohi o Vo~~lley Christian School
Gallipolis, OH

Someday when you' re out
wa lki ng, you may look up
hi gh in the sky, or wa tch as
a fl owe r blooms in the

bright sunshi ne , and you
wi ll see me and know that I
was that tiny cocoon you
watc hed grow into this

beautiful butterfly."

For more information on becoming a classroom sponsor, contact Dft ....,..,. at (740) 44e 2M2

Melp COunty Economk DII'Miapment otnu
Pom eroy, O H
Sponsors of: Marge Gibbs' 3 rd rrade d an
Salisbury Elementary
Pomeroy, OH
Gallla RHCI1
Gallipolis, OH

Sponsors of:
Juila Vaughan's l rd grade
Mindy Younts 3 rd grad e
Marge Gibbs' 3rd grade
Plus 9 add ition al
3rd grade clo~~sses

•
•

•

•

GALLIPOLIS - Plans for
County
the
Gallia
Cattleman' s Association's
12th annual Preview Open
Steer and Heifer Show were
finalized during a special
meeting held Monday night.
Members of the association
the C .H.
met
inside
McKenzie • Agricultural
Center to finalize preparation s for theupcoming cattle
preview show ·which will
take place at 9 a.m . Sunday at
the
Gallia
County
Fairgrounds.
Li sa
Saunders,
secretary/treasurer of the
association, said the show is
the association's main fundraiser and one of the largest
shows of its type in the ·state .
"Besides the huge number
of local people who attend,
farm families from all over,
including Indiana, Kentucky,
and
West
Virginia,
Pennsylvania, make the trek
to Gallia County to participate," she said.
"The preview is an excellent way for individuals,
especially younger people, to
show their animals before
exhibiting them in August at
the fair," she added. "Points
can also be collected and
prize money won ." ·
Saunders also said the
event is growing by "leaps
and bounds" every year. and

PleaH see Cattleman. A5

•
·-r'·

-""···
I

'

'·

•

I
I

•

•
I

I
A1

84-5
86
86
A4
A3
AS
81 -3
A2

0 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

I

l

•

Tyler Simmons &amp; Nichol Honaker

Musicians earn double honors
Chosen for two
state-wide
honor bands
J. REED

Stafl writer

l Sections - 12 Pips

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

BY

J. MILES lAYTON

Staff writer

BY BRIAN

Index

Local government,
.
school cuts irk Stewart

TUPPERS PLAINS
Two Eastern High School
senior musicians have sei
records as the school's first
members ever selected for
both The Ohio State
University
and
Ohio
University honor bands .
Tyler Simmons and
Nichol Honaker, both
eight-year band members,
represented 't he school 's
award-winning
concert

band in two of the most
prestigious ensembles in
the state, according to
Band Director Chris Kuhn.
The clarinetists qualified
for the two honor bands
throu~h highly competitive
audition processes, and
performed together· on the
Columbus and Athens campuses last month, following
weekend rehearsal and performance schedules.
"These are accomplished
musicians, and they went
through a tough audition
process and very intense
rehearsals," said Kuhn.
"To be accepted into one
honor band is a great
accomplishment, but to be
accepted into two in one
season is a rare honor."

Simmons and Honaker
performed
at
Ohio
University's TempletonBlackburn
Alumni
Memorial Auditorium with
78 other high school musicians, on Jan. 12, and at
OSU's
Weigel
Hall
Auditorium the following
weekend, with 123 other
band members.
The Ohio University
Honor Band's performance
was recorded for a compact
disc release.
Simmons is a son of Tom
Simmons and of iDeedrah
Simmons of Reedsville.
Honaker a daughter of
Pamela Boyd of Tuppers
Plains and Dwight Honaker
of Reedsville.

POMHROY- A state budget shortfall has legislators
stuck between a rock and hard
place. Gov. Bob Taft has proposed· filling a $720 million
budget hole by cutting local
~overnment and school fundmg .
In an interview after the
annual Lincoln Day dinner at
Meigs High School Monday,
State Rep. Jimmy Stewart
said the state budget was not
going to be balanced on the
backs of local governments
and schools.
He said legislators " are
under a lot of pressure" to
enact the govemor's proposals or face cuts in school
funding. Stewart said Taft's
tactics are "political maneuvering" in order to get the
Legislature on board with his
budget proposals.
The governor's office
released a statement to the
Daily Sentinel stating Taft's
intentions on school funding.
The statement said Meigs
County stands to lose
$463,758 in elementary and
secondary education funding
if quick action is not taken.
The school districts which
would be affected by these
cuts are: Eastern Local, which
would lose $105,744, Me igs
Local , which would lose
$273,564, and Southern
Local which would lose
$83 ,450.
"To save education from
these cuts, Meigs County citi·
zens need to contact their
state representative and senator and urge them to ac t ·
quickly on the proposed budget shortfall legislation ," said
Taft.
"The
Ohio
General
Assembly needs to raise revenue now, rather than forcing

State Rep . Jimmy Stewart
speaks at the annual Lincoln
Day Dinner. (J. Miles Layton)
cuts that will hurt Ohio's
school children," the governor added.
Taft has proposed cutting
local government funding by
2.5 percent or $30 million.
Prior to this proposed cut,
many local governmental
entities, who rely on this
money, had already made out
their yearly budgets.
A cut to the amount of
fundin~ expected from the
state w11l impact many spending decisions, possibly foreing more cuts in counties,
townships and municipalities.
Stewart will sponsor an
amendment to Taft's budget
package which will eliminate
this 2.5 percent cut from budgeAt.
b
f th f.
s a mem er o e mance
committee, Stewart is critical
of Taft's budget and said the
$720 million deficit which
appears to be overstated by
more than $70 to $90 million.
He said that before Taft hits
and
local
go vernme nts
school s to shore up the
Please see Stewart, AS

Questions about your medications??
Prescription Concerns??
6

Ask

the Phannacist" will be a special

feature at the Hospital 's Heart Fair on

Friday, February 14. A Holzer Medical Center Pharmacist will

be available for

one-on-one consultation, and can answer questions or concerns about your medications.

An appoinhnent is needed.
If you would like lo schedule a consultation with o pharmacist during the Heart Fair, please call

446-5393

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Ho lzer Difference

www.holzer .org

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