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                  <text>Sunday,Jan.13,2002

Pomel'oJ •llldMapart • Oa"~Dife, Ohio • Point PIIJUnl, WY

Law
ginia University in 1901,
F. G. returned ro Point Pleasant aod set up practice in
the Franklin building on
downtown Main Street.
F.G. Musgrave partne-d
·~
with R.A. Blessing, who
w.ent on to become attorney
general
in
Charleston,
extending the reach of the
·law firm to the capitol city.
':The Jaw firm really
spread out.'' Raymond said.
~It was Musgrave and Blessing in Point Pleasant, and
lllessing and Musgrave 'in
Charleston."
F.G. believed that law was
lhe only thing his two sons
would do. ·
..Raymond F. Musgrave
began practicing law with
.his father in the 1920s in a
law office set up in Mullens,
W.Va. Chatles Edwin Musgrave was attending law
school
in Washington,
went into the FBI and later
into the SIS.
R aymon d G . M usgrave
was born ·the son of Rayinond F. in 1935, then later,
a~ther brother, John, was
born.
· It was during this tinie
F. G. was suicken by a heart
attack in 1942, calling his
1on back into Point Pleasant
!O help with his father's law
firm.
"We carrie hack- tp Point
Pleasant so dad could pick
up grandad's practice," Raymond G. explained. "And
we've been here ever since."
Raymond F. went on to
serve in . the West Virginia
State Senate from 1942 to
1948, and practiced law in
the law offic~ of Musgrave
·and Musgrave.
· ... I was fortunate to be
rai!ed in at my father's knee
lri .Politics and I can remember at the ag~ of 4, passing
out his cards," Musgrave
saia, laughing.
. Raymond F. also served as
Mason County prosecutor
from 1948 to 1956, but was
defeated when he ran f&lt;;~r
judge in 1960.
Raymond G. had originally planned to go into ·
· psychology but close to

graduation, changed his
mind and entered into law,
.following in his father's
footsteps.
"I took my undergraduate
degree in what iJ now the
University of Charleston,
where I started college."
Raymond G. said. "And in
19 6 1, I went into Jaw
school.''
John Musgrave went on to
·
b
·
. .•come 1ouery_ co~mu!loner for West V1rg1ma.
· Raymond G. returned to
Point Plea~n~ in 1964 and
began p_racttcmg law 1n the
family law offices on Fifth
Street.
Now, Raymond G. Musgrave has 38 years of general law practice under his
belt, and maintains ail active
trial and admiralty maritime
law practice...
"I am hoping, if my health
holds up, to practice as long
as 1 can," Raymond G. said.
"My grandfather and father
practiced umil they died."
Raymond G., like his
father, has also held various
..
. I al
pOSitiODS 10 OC govern.
d'
.
.
. ment, me1u mg stmts as c1ty
attorney for Point Pleasant
and Henderson, and at one
time, served as minority
clerk of the House of Delegates.
"The community of Point
Pleasant has been so good to
my family at all times,
because of my grandfather's
practice, my father's practi~e
and my practice, that we
owe a great deal·back to the
community," Raymond G.
said. "We really have been
very fortUnate not to have
had lee time."
The future of the practice ·
is unsure, but Raymond G.
would like to see the name
of .Musgrave and Musgrave
continue.

·:Fanners
•

fnNIIPI&amp;eD1

••

Show.
· ·Called a "high tunnel"
because of jrs elongated, ·
peaked ceiling, the structure
~onsists of a plastic sheet
treated to repel ultraviolet rays
that is stretched over a steel
and wood !keleton.
Combined with raised
growing beds,-it costs a fraction of its glass, climate-controlled cousin - ~e conventional greenhouse - but provides many ofthe same benefits, researchers say.
·
.. "This is cutting-edge, but it
_lloesn 't seem like it because
'It's so low-tech," Steve
Bogash, a commercial horti-

"What happens after I'm
gone, I would. hope that
possibly I could find someone to come in and continlie the firm," Raymo.nd G.
!aid."! don't have any family members right now that
are interested, but any type
of condition that 1. would
transfer any interest ·at all jn
this firm is they would have
to maintain the name."

culture agent with Penn
State's CoUege AgricultUral
Sciences, said on Monday.
About 50 or 60 high tunnels are in use on 20 or 30
Pennsylvania farms, Bogash
said.
Researchers say the tunnels
should be attractive to both
commercial farmers and hobbyists, but growers who
stopped by the exhibit Monday said they doubted it was
cheap enough to fit into their
slim profit margins.
Only growers who- have a
niche market, retail their own
produce, or ·specialize in
plants with a high markup
like cut flowers or herbs,
could afford it, they said.
"You'd have to sell a lot of
vegetables to make it profitable," said Gary Smith, a

of

.

supporting the commumbes cations capabilities, equipping
GALLIPOLIS - ne.pite a in which we live and operate the state and its residents for
weak
economy1
SBC is more important now than success now and in the future.
• Ameritech Ohio, has con~ ewr before,'' said James C. · SBC Ameritech Ohio
rributed nearly 12 billion to Smith, president of SBC reaches Ohioans through
the state's economy through a Ameritech Ohio.
more than 4.2 million access
variety of investments.
"In this challenging eco- lines looted in portions of 56
Officials said the firm put in nomic climate, we must of Ohio's 88 counties.
11.8 billion through ~sinesi, ensure the continued• develSBC gave mo" than $1 i .2
economic d4;Velopment and opment of our communities million to charitable organiphilanthropic initiatives.
and delivery of exceUe~t cus- zations and important comThe company said its com- tomei service in Ohio," he munity initiatives statewide
mitmen! to Ohio in th~ past added. "We will continue to through the SBC Foundation,
year includes:
be there for our customers corporate
contributions,
employee donations, alterna~
• More than $500 million in and neighbors."
infrasuucture
Smith said part of SBC's rive regulation commitments,
technology
improvements to offer a investment throughout the · merger commitments and
greater array of services to state is in its people. SBC other community investOhio consumers, includivg companies employ-more than ments.
high-speed data;
11,000 Ohioam, with a !tate
Through its . philanthropic
• More than $11.2 million ~ayroU exceeding S~40 mil- ~ ~tre~ch and efforts of SBC's
through charitable contribu- bon. SBC compames have ' lbarly 200,000 strong voluntions, 'alternative regulation also given . more . than $185 teer organization, SBC Pioand merger commitments to . million to critical state pro- !leers, the company stepped
· initiatives focusing primarily grams through annual taxes.
up in 2001 to serve Ohio in
on technology access, ecoAs part of SBC's ongoing times of greatest need.
nomic development and edu- network infrastrucnire investSBC Pioneers donated
cation; ,
ment program, designed to nearly 71,000 hours of their
• More than $725 million in enhance service to all time throughout the state,
taxes paid and employee pay- Ohioans, the company invest- eq)lating to roughly $1 milroll;
edmore than $500 million in ~ in sweat equity. Pioneer
• $600 million in purchases its central offices and sur- activities intluded the Safe
with Ohio businesses;
rounding telecommunications cpnnectors program, which
. • Nearly 71,000 hours in infrastructl.ire in 2001.
f!!ches children the basics of
volunteer efforts thro&gt;~gh
By investing in· Ohio tech- ~ng 911 arid helps them .
SBC Pioneers.
nology, Smith said SBC pro- retnember the proper way of
"SBC's commitment .: to vides the latest in communi- u~ng the emergency number,
-STAR' IIEJIORIS

Kneen
fnNII,...DI
The trade show doors are
open from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m
on Monday and Tuesday, and
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Wednesday.
The CENTS trade show is
fi:ee to the uade; however,
you must register for a uade
show badge before you are
admitted. The Nursery Short
Course has more than 90
educational classes offered ·
over the three-day event.
Admittance to the educational classes are restricted to
coded attendees who pay
additipnal fees ($60/day or
1100 for the three,day event
per person). This is trilly a
great opportunity for !hose
individuals intere!ted in the
Chester County grower who

also serVes as executive direc-

...

Gteen Industry.

Does ,y our farm, greenhouse operation, orchard, or
vegetable patch require the
use of restri~ted pesticides? In
o~r to purchase restricted
pesticides the Environmental
Protection Agency . requires,
through the auspices of the
Ohio Department of /&gt;griculture, a pesticide applicator's license.
For operators who are
spraying pesticides on · their
own · property or rented
ground, this -license is
obtained by passing a written
exam. Review of training
materials for this exam will
be given on Jan. 15 from 6:30 :
to 9:30 p.m.
·
The Ohio Department ef
Agriculture representative
will be in Meigs County on
Jan. 23 at 6:30 p.m. to give
the various exams. Both
review and testing will be at
the Meigs County Extension
Office, Mulberry Heights,

and "A Book About Me!"
prognm, which distributed
personalized books to kindergartners to fOster self-esteem.
The programs reached thousands of students. ·
Nationally, SBC, through
corpo~te and foundation
·giving, employee donations
and other investments, contriibuted more . than S110 million to community organizations in 2001. More than $65
million of this was through
SBC Foundation grants.
In the aftermath of the
Sept. lt diwter, SBC contributed S1 million to the
New York Times Fund and
another $1 million to various
relief organizations by matching dollar-for-dollar the contributions made by the company's ntQre than 390,000
employees and retirees.
Through a $250,000 donation to Veterans of Foreign
Wars' Operation Uplink program at the end of2001, SBC
provided more than 30,000
calling cards to connect current military service members ,serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and hospitalized
veterans with their families
during the holiday season.

Pomeroy, next to Holzer
(Hal Knetn is.Meigs County~
· Mligs Clinic.
.
Extension agtnt for agricultun:
•••
and natural n:souras, Ohio State
~·l
, : d of just sitting around University.)
'
th .,. house? Interested in
p
r equipment? Plan to
Au.ro- Owner• lruu.rance
d the annual Power
Life Home Car Business
Ohio, Jan. 25~27, that is
'?* ";f.
iZ' ;t~.
held at the Ohio Expo
· r, 17th Avenue, Colum- .
INSURANCE PLUS
m 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. '
than four ·buildings are
AGENCIES, INC.
'
· with equipmeilt for
114
Court
Pomeroy
agrif~tural, construction and
outilior use. This show is
operi;to the public, but does
hav( ~ entrance fee.
.

fnNnPtlpD1
. exchange.
The first ETFs were
SPDRs. Introduced in 1993,
l~ey're pegged to . the S&amp;P
SOO index. Today, there are
toughly 100 ETFs around ,orne' represent domestic
\l%9ad-based ·indices, such as
lhe S&amp;P 500 or the NASDAQ 100. Some represent
1e~tors or 'various industries,
such as ~eal.'estate or technology. Others are global or
international indices, like
· 1}1ose found in Canada or
· South Africa. .
; ' The Invesnnent Company
Institute, the trade association
for the mutual fund' industry,
· ~ tabs on 92 different
· domestic and global ETFs.
Their latest figures show that,
at t~e end of September
.200'1, · ETF assets totaled .
$64.35 billion. '
: . ~ut, like all investment
frOducls, there's more to
ljTFs than initially meets the

·r
I

'

Whars inside .

Youth ~ay YES' to
n.ew job p~ogram

FIRST BABY

Emphasis on training,
community involvement .
BY BRIAN

MIDDLEPORT -A new youth employment program
promotes activities, work experience and an appreciation
for community among its clients, and provides a ready
work force and wage subsidies for local agencies and business owners.
Youth Employment Services (YES), operated through the
University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community
· College Crossroads program, serves young adults aged Ill to
25 with employment training . and placement. Participants
must meet financial and other guidelines ·in order to quali-

Deaths
.

Henry G. Wells, 86
David Napper, 62
Vivian Godwin, 69
Charles Kirsch, 73
Ella Osborne, 83
·
Details, 3

fy.

CaitiYdln Ilene Delacruz born on Jan. 2 at 1:40' p.m. Is Meigs CountyUs
Rrst Baby of 2002. The
of Justin and Je!'slca Delacruz of Reedsville is shown here
with her mother. As winners .of the "Rrst Baby' contest the parents received a variety of gifts
from local merchants. (Charlene Hoeflich) ·

Details, 2

.

. We're sorry
..

Ohio Valley Publishllig Co.
lias received severnl phone calls
eoncel)ling an editorial cartoon that appeared in Friday's
editions offie Daily Sentinel,
~t Pleasant Register and
Galli lis Daily Tribune
. In ~dsight, we ~ with
·
d
ho 'd the
our rea ers w sa!
tOOn, which dealt with carthe
;.....J.,• c.
d
"-death ofWi"'~7 s 10un er .......,

Delaq,.z fint baby
of 2002 in county
I

HoEFU~H

Swisher Lohse Pharmacy of
Pomero.y and a free case of
.
Pampers diapers from Fruth
Pharmacy in Middleport
.&lt;&gt;. · .
~·· Thoiif:!;::"WWS't·liOch"\ipdmely"" ....5 .~~-~a
cw..~&lt;~f-..Ree_ds_;i.~!$\~tn,t;.SJ:C:If" ··.· )'hey will'~o·rt::cei~ :t'jlM"
and taSieJ
'
·
ent1n ap oca mere .u,ts grandparents are George of baby Ntkes from The Shoe
~.
·
·
.
·
are
· M'ddl
• The
·
decision to run the carf RJustin
ds and
.11 Jessica Delacruz Hens1ey o f Thppers P 1ains, ana-' PIace m
1 eport, a $20 g1·ft
0
toon was based on the pertiThee v~ e. h
C .I
Deldres King of Parkersburg, certificate from Powell's
II
eir abug ter, J alt ynnt W.Va.
SuperValu of Pomeroy, a stainnent statement it made about
• sed
""--tyl
ene, was orn on an. 2 a
I
I
. .
b b
Ameri~s . entary 111t:&gt; es
Mr. and Mrs. Delacruz have ess stee ~o:-ptece a .y set
1:4 0 p.m. at St. Joseph Hospi- a sen~us lSSUe, espeaally m
tal in Parkersburg, W.Va. She a son, Trenton, age two.
fro111 AcquiSitiOns of Mlddlehp~hia - not the artist's
weighed 7 pounds, 2 ounces.
As winners the parents will port, a free meal to the paren~
QPUIIOn ofDa':"'Thornas.
Maternal grandparents are receive a $25. gift certificate of the first baby .from Crows
We apologtze to anyone
Donnie
Barringer
of from Vaughan's Supermarket Family
Restaurant
of
~ho .was offended · by this
Reedsville and Kathy Miller in Middleport, a baby arrange- Pomeroy. a $50 savmgs bond
lha~rial. TI:e cartoon did not
of Racine, and great-grand- ment from Francis Florist of from the Farmers Bank and
deptcttheVtew.iofOhioValley
parents are Harlan Whitlatch Pomeroy,astuffedanimal from Savings Company of Pomeroy
Publishmg Co. concerrung
of Mason, W.Va., Keitha Whit- Hartwell House of Pomeroy, a -and $25 worth of baby formuDaveThomas.
latch of Chester, and Ernie $20 gift certificate from Ia from Kroger of Pomeroy.
We welcome written trib·
wres to D~~ mthe
--------------------------~-----------------------------------;,rm of letters to the editor.
'this wonderful man w.&lt;&gt; a
gecorated Mason and a hem to
i;tte adoption community.
!; He will be missed by many.

and Ferra Lou Barringer of
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF ·
Reedsville.
POMED•OY
w·
.
10
.. . ''&lt;
m'!ers
The paternal grandparents
the F1rst Baby of 2002 con- are ,Dave and Angie Delacruz
test suo ored _byJ"s;.,.Qailv
BY CHARUIIE

-,rtJilr \lercK ..

*"""11

.

'

WoH joins Peace Corps
. BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

lotteries
.
.,
DHIO

Jib;k 3: 8·5·3
Rick 4: 8·7-6·1

~ 2·19-24-25-37-41

BOnus B•ll: 49 .
l(tcker: 5·6·1·3·8·2

,Y.vA. .
Dally :s: 3·1-9

PtliY 4: 2·2·1·3 ·

,. '·

8Jii'JIIINII: 13'19-22-41-47 (5)
...

At Pleasant Valley Ho$pitai,·
·little things ~atter.

Index
:' I SHtlan - 10 Ptlpl

C~lendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
editorials
Movies
Obituaries

.r·'

Spbrts

Weather

2
6-8
9

3
4

·

3
3
5, 7, 8, 10
2

,o 1001 ohio.volley Plibllshlna co.

. CHEST~R -With back- .
packs of 'practical clothes;·,
some personal items, ano;J :i .
pan to cook in, Anna Chris-•
tine Wolf of Chester left last
week for Africa where she'll )0
spend the next tWo years
serving with the Peace Corps. '
She will be living in one of
the small viUages of Niger.
• The Ohio University graduate, with a bachelor of science degree in telecommunications, is an agricultural volunteer whose work will
:invoive helping th~ natives
"grow gardens with a valued
diet, make goat cheese 'and
raise sheep and goats."
Her parents, Pat and Gary
Wolf, like to call it an assignment dealing with small animal husbandry and horticulture.
:cepted a
Wolf flew from .Columbus tlon with the Peace Corps and will serve for the next two years
. ,....... wolf,:s
In Africa as an agriculture volunteer. (Contributed photo)

,..-'"

304·675-4340
'

"

•

'i

The program, funded through the Workforce Investment
Act ·of 1998 under contract through the Department ofJob
and Family 'Services, operates from the University of Rio
Grande Meigs Center on Mill Street:
Brenda Phalin, a licensed social worker, is the case manager for the program.
YES incorporates a youth activity group' into its core
program, to foster a sense of community among its participants and to afford participants an opportunity to discuss
the problems unique . to young adults in transition from
school to work.
Meeting educati1mal goals is also a primary objective· for
the clients. Those without a high school diploma are assisted in obtaining their :GEDs, and those who have graduated are assisted with the p~perwork and other steps necessary to enroll in co1kge, technical school or other vocational training.
Clients are placed in real working environments, includ- ·
ing public agencies in the county courthouse and beyond,
and retail establishments such as convenience stores and
supermarkets.
Employers help train the clients, while the clients' wages
are paid from· the program for their first 120 hours on the
job.
"Our.hope is that these opportunities turn into full-time
employment opportuniti~s;· Phalin said. "The businesses
. and agencies who are working with us have been terrific in

PleanneYES,J

.

.

Military wants to
cease air patrols
over U.S. cities
WASHINGTON (AP) - The military · .is exploring
ways to stop the around-the- clock anti-terrorism patrols
that fighter jets have been flying over American cities since
Sept. 11, defense officials said .. ·
But four months after the devastating attacks on U.S.
soil, any decision on ending the combat air patrols may
come 'down to largely a political calculation of how safe
Americans would feel without them, they said.
As a part of heightened homeland. defense, the missions
began after terrorist hijackers crashed jetliners into the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon. They !}ave flown
constantly over New York a~d Washington since then.
Other patrols are flown randomly over other m,Yor metropolitan areas and key infrastructure, and jets are on alert
at 30 bases across the c()untry to scramble if called.
The military also has been authorized to order pilots to
shoot down commercial aircraft if necessary.
Officials have been looking to cut back on the program
for some time, knowing from the outset that the hightempo use of manpower, equipment and money couldn't
be kept up for long...with the existing people and budget,
. one defense official said on condition of anonymity.
Now that four months have passed and aviation security has been improved somewhat, some wonder it if might
be time to start rethinking the patrols, the official said. ,
The operation uses 11,000 people and 25Cr ·aircraft,
another official said, also in return for anonymity. Those
figures include maintenance crews, pilots for 100 F-15 and
F-16 fighter jets, as well as crews for tankers needed for
mid-air refueling and AWACS - Airborne Warning and
Control System - planes to provide radar information.
The pilots, mostly from Air National Guard units, go up
for flights of two to six hours. The jets are refueled about
every two hours, meaning some go through two mid-air
Pluse-u.s~:s

.

Rights

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
·2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant) WV 25550 ·

J, REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

·

992-6677

I

Melp County's

A•tt.

tor of the county's economic
development council.
Researchers have grown
greens, strawberries, raspberries, tomatoes,.eggplants, pep.pen, and cut flowers inside
, the high tunnel, where temperatUres are 8 to 20 degrees
warmer than those outside.
That allows planting four to
six weeks earlier than usual,
similar to conditions in
nortliern Virginia, Bogash
said. .
·
A greenhouse 25 feet by 96 .
feet costs about $20,000 to
$30,000, and includes fans for
ventilation and a heating element, Bogash said
A high tunnel of the same
size costs about $4,000,
Bogash said.

eye. Consider the foUowing, lar basis), mutual fund investfor instance:
ing will be more cost efficient
• Buying and selling. Pur- than ETn. The same is trUe if
chasing or redeeming ETF you like trJding you~ investshares means paying commis- ments.
siqns. Unlike mutual funds~ in
And then there is the queswhich a sales charge is
tion of' risk. Just because an
· incurred . once, you'll pay a
commission both. when buy- investment represents . an
index doesn't mean it's free
ing and selling ETF shares.
• Expenses. Commissions from risk. In fact, the sector or
aside, ETFs,like mutual funds, industry-related ETFs AJaY
have annual expenses. The carry ·more risk than the
good news is that they are broad-based ones, depending
considerably lower than those upon market conditions.
To learn more about ETFs,
you 'II find on funds. According to Morningstar, the annu- you can go to three helpful
al expense ratio for SPDRs is Web
sites:
0.12 percent, and for iShares, http://www.exchangeuaded0.09 percent. Annual expense funds.com,
ratios for mutual funds typi- http://www.lshares.com, and .
cally range between .1.25 per- http://www.Jllomingstar.co
cent and 2 percent.
m.
• Capital gains distributions.
While considered· more tax·Dian Vujollich~ most .n:cml
efficient than murual funds, boolts inc/udt "101 Mutual
ETFs can and do make clivi- Fund FAQs" (Ch11ndkr Houst,
dend and capital gains diJtrib- 1999) and "10-Minult Guidt
utions.
to tht Stoclt M11rlttt" (MacMiiETFs also aren't for every- /an, 2000). To /tam mon: 11bout
one. If you're into dollar-cost- mutu11ljimds, 11isit htr mb silt at
averaging-(investing the same http: I !IVWIJI.diansfondfretbits.co
amount of money on a regu- m.

4

· Hlp: COt, Low: :SO.

0

m

Great-grandma dispproves of younger setr l

SBC Ameritech's stake in Ohio_nearly $2 billion ·

..

The next time you vi:&gt;it the Hosp1tol, be :&gt;ure to see the Potierit
Rights po~ted in the lobby areas, or pick up a pamphlet at the
Front Desk. Holzer Med1cal Center rerogmzes the imparlance o.f
. respecting your right!. as o patient. .If you hav.e quesrions or
concerns' be sure to call the Ho$pila('.&amp; Pohenl Representative
.
.
for assistance.
C7~0)

446·5568

www.holzcr.org

I
I

�•

•

•

_Th_e_o_ai_Iy_Se_n_ti_n_ei_·_ _ _ _ _,.;;;;;l;;;;...ly

the

Pagel~

,\

..

MQnday.........., 14. ~002

DEAR ABBY: Haw is a gteatgr.mdmother supposed to feel when her
gteat--grandchild calls to teR her he has a
child who was born out of wedlock?
The father is 18 and the mother is
16. Both are school dropouts, no
jobs and no place to call home.
l do ·not resent the baby. It did not
ask to .be born. But I do resent the
idea of bringing an innocent child
into the world out of wedlock.
My great-grandchild was baptised
and brought up in the Catholic
Church, but once·he g&lt;?t out of our
sight, he strayed and thinks nothing
of"shacking up."
I don't care to have the baby's
mother come to visit.lls,-but I cannot
turn them away if they come to my
door. Please respond, before they call
"'to say they're coming. PISGUSTED IN NEW tdEXJCO

Dear
Abby

.

COLUMBUS -The Rev. Dr. Charles Dee Kirsch, 73, of
Columbus, died on Dec. 21, 2001.
Kobacker served United Methodist pastorates, including
Apple Grove, Letart Falls, Fairview, Plants and East Letart,
before retiring in 1990. .
He is survived by his wife•. Katherine "Kitty" Kinch; his
daughten, Marilyn Gems and Diane Corbett; three grandchildren and a great grandchild; and a si~ter, Janet Killian of
Cincinnati.
.
,
'
He was preceded in death by his wife, Janice Kinch.
Services were held' at Worthingron United Methodist
Church on Dec. 23 .
' ·

VIvian
Godwin
COOLVILLE-Vivian C. Godwin, 69, of Coolville, died.on

Sunday, Jan. 13;2002 at the Camden-Clark M~mo~i:U Hospital
in Parkenburg, W.Va., following a brief illness,
She was born on Feb. 26, 1932 in Aiken, S.C., daughter of the
late James Olin and Rosa Lee Murrell Cook. She attended
Torch Baptist Church.
Surviving are two sons,JJoseph Edmund Godwin and
Richard Wayne ·Godwin, 'both of Coolville; a daughter and
son-in-law,Victoria Elaine and Steven Anthony Varner of Parkersburg; four grandchildren; a great granddaughter; three sisten: Mary Elizabeth Whittle and Rosale~n Burnette, both of
Aiken, S.C., and Myrtle Lou Burkholder, Somerville, S.C.;
three brothers: James Gene Cook and Robert Cook, both of
Aiken, S.C., and Tommy Cook of Bluffton, S.C.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph Benjamin Godwin, and her son, . Donald Lee
Godwin.
Services will be held on Wednesday,Jan. 16,2002 at 11 'a.m.
at the White Funeral Home in Coolville, with burial following
at Torch Cemetery.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6 to 8
p.m.
,

a

------~----------------------------------~----------------------------~.

'

Unwary self-employed may lose credlt with Soda[ Security
..

Bv EUZABEI'H CRUMP

Form W-2 (employer's statement of
. It's tax-filing time and if you're your earnings) listing your earnings
self-employed, it's up to you to make as you do when you work for· some'sure you ·report your earnings accu- one else. To get Social Security credrately and on time for Social Securi- · its, you need to report your earnings·.
ry credit. Otherwise, when it's time on an IRS Schedule SE along with
to collect .Social . Security benefits, your regular tax form , IRS-1040.
you may not get all the benefits you
You must pay Social Security taxes,
are entitled to receive. Social Securi- if you're ·self-employed and your net
ry benefit amounts are calculated on earnings from self-employment
the earnings you report.
.
income are $400 or more a year. You
You're considered self-employed if ·can earn up to four credits each year.
you operate 'a trade or business, full If your net earnings from selftime or part 'time, either by yourself employment income are $3,320 or .
or as a partner. B1,1t, because you're more, you earn four credits - · one
self-employed, you don't receive a for each $830 of ear.nings. Even if

you don't owe any income tax, you
may owe Social Security · selfemployment tax.
All of your earnings covered by
Social Security are used in figuring
the amount of your Social Security
benefit. It's important that you report
all of your earnings up to the maximum as required by law.
The Social Security tax rate' for
2001 is 15.3 percent of your net
earnings from self-employment up to
the maximum amount taxable, which
is $84,400. If your net earnings
exceed $84,400, you continue to pay
the Medicare portion of the Social

URG's MLT program passes te$t
RIO GRANDE- Repre- of concern ·and sited eight areas
sentatives from the National of strength," Cheadle said.
Accreditation Agency fur Clin- ' Areas of strength cited by
ical
Laboratory
Sciences NMCLS include: administra(NMCLS) made a site visit to tive support of the program,
inspect the Rio Grande Com- congeniality offaculty and staff
munity Cpllege/Univenity of at the university, strong com' Ri'o Grande rwo-year program munication lines betW;een
in medical laboratory techno!- administration and MLT faculogy recently as the second step ry and staff, dedication of protoward reaccreditation for gram director and clinical faculty, state of the art equipment
seven yean.
Russ Cheadle, director of the at clinical affiliates, organizaMLT program and associate tion of clinical rotations, beauprofeSsor, was pleased with the tiful campus well suited for
outcome of the -.risit.
study and enthusiasm of part"The visitors fou~d no areas time faculty.

NAACLS is the national
accrediting body for collegiate
programs of study · in medical
laboratory technology. The site
representatives visited adminiscraton and faculty on the Rio
Grande campus and all four
clitiical sites (Holzer M~dical
Center, Holzer Clinic, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, and the Veterans Administration Medical
Center in Huntington, W.Va.).
The site visitors also monitored
the 24 essentials mandated by
NMCLS that define the standards set out by the profession
for educational programs.

TODAY
POMEROY - Regular
meeting of the Meigs
County Republican Party,
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs

County Courthouse.
· POMEROY Meigs
Band Boosters, 6:30 p.m.,
high school bandroom.

Full Service
Pump

and wUI odd olenl ofproriodoullom to Ted's BP. Ho
wolcomot you to otop I~ onchoo him! Hit boun on ·.

Monday-Saturday
· 8AM·8PM
Cloud Sunday

· Ted .Dexter, Owner
· s4o General Hartinger, Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-1400

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tonight...Mosdy cloudy. A chance of sprinkles tluough rnidmght
I..crM in the mid 30s.w~ wirid around 15 mph. ·
1
· Tuesday ..Partly cloudy. Highs 40 to 45.W~ wind around 15 mPh
Thesday night ..Mosdy clear.l..crM in the upper 20s.
Wednesday. ..Panly cloudy. Highs in the mid 40s.

·

Wednesday l)ight. ..Mosdy cloudy with a chalice of Clin. Lows in the
lower 30s.

LOCAL STOCKS

Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sister, cind
Brother...
Thanks far belilvsuch
a vreat family!
I Love You Very Muehl

3 INCH AD ... $15.00
(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

AEP-43.87
Arch Coal- 21.69
AJ&lt;zo-43.80
AmTech/SBC- 37.83
Ashland Inc.- 45.78
AT&amp;T -19.13
Bank One - 37.81
BLI-9.98
Bob Evans- 26.99

"
•

D

2 INCH AD ...$10.00
Happy Valentlne's .Day
CUpid's arrow Is
straight and true,
In brlngTng this thought

oflooie to you.
I'm sorry about the
other night.
When we had that
terrible fight;
A Sentinel love message
was a gooclldea. ,
To show you just how
much I love you, Marla.

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL UFE
TOGETHER!

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

-.
0

MY HOI'IEY
Wrldng this love

message gives me the

opportunity to tell you
just how much I love
you and enjoy being
your husband. I know

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
FRIDAY;
FEBRUARY 8,

I'
I

:
.
(

II

I.

''

Correction Polley

Our mal~ concern In all stories Ia
to be accurate. H you know of an
errDf In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

News Departments
The main number Ia 992·2156.
Department extentlons are:

.

Gener•l mauger

Ext. 12

I

New.

Ext. 13

'
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''

or

Ext. 14

•

Mail Your Love Message and Total Amoimt Due To:

The Daily Sentinel

"

Reader Services

I

2002.
•

Other services

I

Ext. 3

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769

Ext. 4

Name:

'

Addres-s:---,~--------------~--------------------------

1

Size ofValentine:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......,,. - - - - - - - - ' - - - Total Amou11t Enclosed: _______f______________________________

.................
.------------~------~------·---··

Cl•oaJhd Alii .
I
I

Premier - 8.35
Rockwell- 18.07
.Rocky BooiS - 6.45
AD Shell - 48.27
Seqrs - 51 .35
Sl)oney's - .31
Wai·Mart - 55.80
Wendy's - 29.89
Worthington - 14.20
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
,day's transac11ons. pro·
vlded by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gal·
. refueling; o~ a single sortie.
llpolls.

u.s.

Ext. 5

To aantl e-mail
news 0 mydllllyael1tlnel.com

. On the Web

www.mydallyMntinel.com

!USPS 21MIO)

tions to The Dally Senlliliil, t1t CouO.
Sl.. PometOy. Ohio 45769.

Subacrlptlon rates

ly ..rrlor or . . - route .

Oneyc~~r

s2

$8.70

$104
Dilly
.
50 cents
SUblcritlenl noo desiring to pay the
carrter may remit In act.rance direct Jo
The Dally Son~nol. Credit will be given
ca- each-· No oublcripllon by
mall permitted In .,.. wi)0&lt;8 hOme
camar oerv1ca II available.

Mals~

·-llofg•

132652 w"*"

periodic ll"View
rnil1ions is &gt;tandurl proctrllre in the
militacy

$27.30

$53.82

stos.56

- - Mt~e-CGunty
13W"*"
$29.25
26Weeka
$56.68
52Weeka
$109.72

I .

. NORAD says that tluough
Page 1
Dec. to,its jets responded 207 times
tO problems such as unidentified
aircrnti,
planes viQlating teltlic:ted air
From Sept 11 to Dec. 10, the
. qJC&amp;llioo 11ew t3,00J
The space and in-flight emergencies.
In 92 of the cases, jets on alert
ro;t w.IS $.324 million, IJeli,me
Depu:tment ~ .Susan on the ground ~scrambled to
respond.
Harren said
Air Fon:e officials ·had no inune- · 1}., a:nt.t air )Did; ;re the first
of their kind to fly over the Unitdiare comment Sunda)&lt;
The Nolth Americm Aau;pace ed States since the Cuban missile
.Ddinle Command, which IUlll the crisis in 1962.

mmons.

. Ohio Ylltlly Publlohlng Co.
Publil!lled every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, t11 Couo St..
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-ctass
postage paid at Pomeroy.
MMn.,...: The Associated Pres&amp; and
the Ohio Newspaper ~latloo .
P01tmuter: Send addre88 correc-

oOne
.. ..-th
-

a

~ said

f1om

The Daily Sentinel

'•

I sometimes don't
show It but I
do.
Valentines

Federal Mogul - .99 ;

USB-20.37
Gannen- 67.50
General Eledtlc- 38.23
GKNLY-4.62
Hlllley Davidson- 52.72
Kmart-3.30
Kroger- 20.56
Lands End - 49
Ltd. - 15.67
BorgWamer- 52.68
NSC-18.98
Champion - 3.03 ·
Charming Shops-.5.80 Oak Hil Fnanclal -15.90
OVB-23.65
.
Clly Holding - 13
BBT-34.90
Col-19.50
Peoples - 18.50
DG -' 16.24
Pepsico - 48.45
DuPont - 43.02

l

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

Mondly throuah Frldoy, 8 o.m. to 5 p.m.

"Quick &amp; Cour,teous Service"

Cloudy, rainy tonight

Happy Valentine's Day

~ Mommv&amp; Doddv

Rollback ·
·services

InC•

0

Ist Volentine's Day ·
Tessa!

Shocks

X.Yia bM 13 yoora of cerdllod men:honl&lt;alt•porleaco

"~
• 02002

'
(APPROXIMATELY
30 WORDS)

Happy

~ WELCOMES:~
· Kevin Hudson

ICY.

1'/dNCH AD .. $7.50

(APPROXIMATELY 20WORI&gt;S)

in a few months, so follow-up
services are very important."
Collin Roush is a YES
alumnus, and now, as activifrom Page 1
ties coordinator, will organize
the activities group, which
helping our clients."
Assessing a . client skills and will include guest speaken,
interests. is a vital part of the career counseling and comprogra7;11.
111unity projects, designed to
"It's·•· important that we assist in the job. transition, and
match skills and interests to foster an appreciation for
before we place a client, the community. Many partiebecause we don't want to let ipants tend to blame the
either the client or the busi- communiry for their someness owner dpwn," Phalin times unfortunate· circumsaid.
stances, P~alin said.
· Follow - up
is
another
"We want this to be perimportant aspect. ·
sonalized, and to 'belong to
"Some of these kids don't our participants,".Phalin said.
ha,ve a stable. place to live or "We want these young peofood in their stomachs when · pie to feel hke they belong to
the enter our program," Meigs County and take pride
Phalin said. "It's hard to undo in their contribution to the
a lifetime of home i~stability community."

YES

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way ·
Examples of Sizes and Prices

.

Also surviving are five great grandchildren, Danielle and Jason
Peckham, Jesse and Madison Woodard, all of Pomeroy, Alex Lents
ofDyenburg, Tenn.
Funeral services will take place at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 15,
2002, at the Sacred Heart &lt;;:acholic Church in Pomet?Y· Officiating
will be Father Walter Heinz.
·
Burial will follow at the S•cred Heart Cemetery.
Friends may visit on Monday evening fi:om 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at
the church. A vigil service and rosary will take place at 8:30 p.m.

•I Columbuo 133'1311' I

.

1 INCH AD ..... $5.00

Ted's BP

Brakes

bus.

With A Sentinel Love Message!

'

_ Tune-~ps

.Ohio weather

,..,.,Your Way~ On February 14th,..,.,

POMEROY - Junior
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trust~es, appro- class parents meeling, 7
priations meeting, 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs High
p.m. at the home of Osie School Library to discuss
the junior prom.
Foil rod.
•
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - BrooksMIDDLEPORT - Mid~
Grant Camp, Sons of the dleport Literary Club,, 2
Union· Veterans of the . p.m., home of Sara
Civil War, and Major Owen. Gay Perrin to
Daniel McCook Circle, review "The Sisterhood of
Ladi'es of the Grant Army Women in History," "The
of the Republic,
7:15 Red Tel)!" and "Cane
p.m. at the Riverbend River."

Tire Sales
&amp; Service

(Elizabeth Crump is manager of the
Soeial Security ~ce in Athens.) .

.

.

Henry Georn Wells ·

Ella ·Osbome

t's Valen-time

Arts Council building in
Middleport. Program will
be on the Johnson's
Island Civil War prison.

RUTLAND- David E. "Gabb;ayes" Napper, Jr., 62, Rutland, died on Sunday, Jan. 13, 2002, at Holzer Medical Center ill
Gallipolis:
He was born on July 7, 1939 in Cincinnati, son of the late David
E. Napper, Sr. and Mary E. Searles Napper.HeWdS employed fur over
35 years as a truck driver at Jaymar, Inc. He attended Rutland Church
of the Nazarene and Zion Chun:h of Christ.
Surviving are his wife of 41 yean, Lena P. Hysell Napper, Rutlahd; four daughten. and sons-in-law: Julie and Steve Stanley of
Chillicothe, Beverly Napper and her fiance, Don Hunnell, Middleport, Becky and Bobby Foster ofPomeroy and Roberta Young
of Gallipolis; rwo grandchildren, Emily and Andrew Stanley of
Chillicothe; three sisten and brothen-in-law: Shirley Might of
'Harrisonville, Dolly and Bobby Bright of Columbus and Betty
and Lonnie Taylor of Harrisonville; three brothen and sisten-inlaw: Darrell RButterbaliS and Bonnie Napper of Rutland, Raymond and Christine Napper of Rutland, and Leonard and Brenda Oiler of Waverly; his mother-in-law, Margaret Hysell of
Pomeroy; and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
Besides his parents, he WdS preceded in death by his sisten,
Mary Still and Violet Riggleman, and rwo infant brothen,
William Arthur Napper and Elmer Franklin Napper.
Services will be held at 11 a.ni: on Wednesday,Jan. 16,2002 at
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Doug Shamblin
officiating. Burial will follow at Homer Hill Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the fune(ll} home on Tuesday fi:om 2 p.m.
to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart
Association, Meigs County Division, Attn: Joan Wolfe, P.O. Box
586, Pomeroy, Ohio 452769, or to the American Diabetes Association, 1221 -A Ohio Avenue, P.O. Box 1115, Dunbar, W.Va.

POMEROY -Henry George 'llr.lls, 86, Pomeroy, died Saturday,Jan. 12,2002, at Veterans Memorial Hospital 's Skilled Nursing
Center.
Born April 10, 1915, in Pomeroy. he was the son of the ·late
William and Lena Klein Wells and was a mechanic with several different garages.
REEDSVILLE - Ella Osborne, 83, of Reedsville, died on
He was a 1934 grnduate of Pomeroy High School and a charter
Saturday, Jan. 12,2002 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in
member of the Meigs County Beagle Club; a Meigs County
Parkersburg, WVa.
Commissioner for I and 112 'yean; and a member of the Meigs
Arrangements are under the direction of White Funeral
County Board of Elections and Senior Citizens Association.
Home in Coolvill~ and will be anno!lnced upon completion.
He also attended the Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
He is survived by his wife, Kathleen Fi~k Wells of Pomeroy; rwo
daughten and sons-in-law, Doris and Michael Mertz of Pomeroy,
.
Sandra and Delmar McCallister of Cuder; a brother, Edward Wells
I
&lt; •
•
of Pomeroy; a brother-in.-law, Richard (rv)icll,ey) Fick of Chester;
. :r.,_esday, Jan. 15
i
two sisten-in-law, Jane Fick of Long Bottom, Dorris Fick of
Columbus; five grandchildren, Deborah Woodard (Kenneth) Utt,
Bryan (Barb) Woodard, both of Pomeroy, Kimberly Spencer, Scott
Spencer, both ofDyenburg,Tenn., Christopher Spencer of Colum-

POMEROY - Savannah Rose Bailey celebrated her fuurth
birthday wid! a "Monsters Inc:' d!emed party at d!e home ofher
grandfather, Roy Bailey, on Dec. 15.
·
Attending were James, Crystal. J.D. and Steven SeOers, Roy Lee,
Crystal, Sabra and Alison ~ey, Tom, Crystal and Braxton Bailey,
Wendy and Elizabedi Shuler, Dawn, Cody and Garrett Jones, Shell};
Dal&gt;ota and Sydney Adams, Jack, Rhonda and Stacy Lyons,Tommy
Vanmeter,Joni Fisher,Jamie .Jones, Dorothy Bailey, Heather Hill and_
· Zach Plowers.'Sending gif1s Were Angie Sv.iiger, Kimberly Swisher,
Evelyn and Frank Wmgrove, Steve and Angel Young, Nikki, Vikki
and Justin Young, Margaret McCoy and Christie Smith. ·
·

·

Oil Changes

erally, the deadline for receiving s~lf- ·
employment income credit for Social
Security purposes is 3 years; · 3
months and 15 days after the last day .
of the tax year in which the self- ·
employment income was earned.
If you need more information'
about reporting self-employment
income,
visit
us
at
www.ssa.gov/pubs/I 0022.html to
view the fact sheet "Social Security
- IfYou're Self-Employed." Or, call
1-800-772-1213 and ask for the fact
sheet.

Savannah Bailey tums .4

LOCAL EVENTS
Community Calendar
Is published aa a free
service to non-profit
groupa
wishing
to
announce meetlnga and
apeclal events. The cal·
endar Is not designed to
promote sales or fund·
raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be prlntad
a specific number of.
daya.
·

Security tax, which is 2. 9 percent, on
the rest of your earnings.
If you operate a family-owned
business, for example, a husband and
wife are partners in the business, you
should each report your share of the
business profits as net earnings from
self-employment on separate SE tax'
schedules, even if you file a joint
income tax return. The amount each
of you should report depends on
your agreement.
If you find that you have not
reported all of your self-employment
income in a particular year, you may
have time to corre~t the error. Gen•

Boll advisory
Issued

Davld~er

··

Chillies Klndl

n't free themselves! We grabbed a family camping and fuhing ttjp.
colander and scooped crabs onto the
When we got to the river, we disdeck every 15 minutes until we had covered the men had forgotten tO' .
reached our limit. After checking for bring their net to catch minnows·:
correct size ,a nd gender, we kept th&lt;; for bait. Well, sometimes a person
legal ones, boiled and cleaned them, has to get inventive. I went into the:
and had a Crab Louie feast for din- camper and came ou~ wit? a pair of ,
ner. Leave it to an engineer to figure pantyhose. My son snapped a •
out the most compact crab trap for branch from a tree and attached the
seafood lovers. ELAINE
pantyhose to it. It made a first-class ,
JACOBS, TACOMA, WASH.
minnow net. Our fishermen got a
· DEAR ELAINE: That was ingepantyhose full of minnows, which nious! And if you also have an
attracted lots of delicious catfish.appetite for catfish, read on: ·
MARY
THOMPSON,,.
DEAR, ABBY: The letter from
WATHENA, KAN.
the lady who was on the .road in an,
DEAR MARY: Now .that's one
RV in ·Arizona prompts my own.
·
They had a broken fan belt on their heck of a fish story if I ev.er beag!..
.'
engine and a truck driver repaired it one.
Pauline Phillips and her daughter
temporarily with
pair of pantyje_anne
Phillips share the pseudonym:
hose. The story reminded me of an
experience we had years ago on a Abigail Kin Buren.

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

Great-grandma·. disapproves of younger generation
Fifteen yean ago, we rented ~ sail·ing yawl with several friends to see
the sights of the San Juan Islands in
Washington state. When we arrived
in Friday Harbor, my cousin Dave, an
' , ingenious chemicarengineer, bought
several pair of cheap pantyhose at the
local drug;tore. When we asked why,
he said mysteriously, "You '11 see."
ADVICE
A few days later, we were moored
in a shallow harbor off one of the
DEAR DISGUSTED: Your islands. David had been fishing earlifeelings are understandable and you er that week and had saved some fish
are entitled to them. However, being guts and heads. He stuffed them into
kind and friendly doesn't mean you the toes of the pantyhose, tied the
have to approve. You are under no waist to a rope, and lowered the rope
obligation to invite them to your into the calm waters until the pantyhome - but if they show up. be hose and 1\aifhit the bottom. Fifteen
charitable. They need all the kind- minutes later, he pulled the rope up
ness they can get.
-and there· were several crabs danDEAR ABBY: While you're on gling fi:om the pantyhose. Apparentthe subject of pantyhose, this story ly the claws of the crab caught in the
mesh
may win the blue ribbon.
of the hosiery and the}' could.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Jan. 14,2002

Rooking Chair Dayoare
B&lt;perlenoed Quality Car"8 for your Child.
24 how·e ~ 7 daye a week
Hcllnf QOOUd mMia I
e
tftlll•
• RlokoUI,) from but stop avalilble . • Plaid» GfU
0

All Ages Welt;dfnel

v..r-o~c~e "''•!Ot

All methods of payment accepted.

105 13~rnut Mtll'lUtl
~ldll fsrmMe Bri)

PollWroy, Ohio

1

.

RUTLAND Leading
Creek Conservancy District
had a water! ine leak on Bailey Run Road Friday. All customers on the Ohio 124 side
of Bailey Run Road will be
under a boil advisory until
further notice.

Tal Chi classes
offered
MIDDLEPORT -Tai Chi
classes will be offered at
Riverbend Arts Council, 239
N. Second Ave., Middleport,
by Eric Chambers .
There will be fou( sessions,
Jan. 17, 24, and 31, and Feb. 7
~tarting at 7 p..m.The cost is $20.
Tai Chi emphasizes relax~
ation, balance, breathing, correct posture, visual and mental
concentration. It is considered
a health promoting endeavor
for the young and old.
Residents may call 9925386 for additional informaton or may just come to the
first class .

Arrests made,
lnddent probed·
POMEROY . Several
arrests were recendy made and a
burglary incident investigated by
the Meig; Counry Sheriff's
Department.
Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell said
Shandi Bobb of Pomeroy was
arrested for driving under the
influence, persist~nt disorderly
conduct and rwo counts of contributing to the delinquency of a

mmor.
Bobb is Cllrrendy being held
in the Southeast Regional Jail.
Matthew Warner of Racine
was arrested for underage consumption along with .two juveniles at the home ofDoug Bobb
on Blake Hill Road m
Pomeroy.
Also arrested were:
• James Minshal for a bench

one had entered his home
through a bedroom window.
Williams said several guns and
jewelry were taken in the breakin.
The incident is currendy
under investigation by the Sheriff's office.

To meet
TUPPERS PLA:INS - ·
Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District Board will .
meet on today at 7 p.m . in ·
regular session.

Meeting held
POMEROY Pomeroy ,
Village Council will hold a
brief meeting at the M !'nicipal
Building today at 7 p.m. to pay .
bills and apr.ropriate funds.

Meetings
scheduled
RUTLAND - Various Rutland organizations have planned
several upcoming meetings. ·
A Rutland Civic &lt;;:enter
meeting will be held on Tuesday at 6 p.m.; a Rudand Parks
and Recreation meeting will
also be hdd on Tuesday at 7 .
p.m.; and a Meig; County Soc- .
· cer Board :Ueeting will be held ,
on Jan. 22 at 6 p.m.

Dance dasses
to start
Gerald
POMEROY
Powell will be having a six
week beginner ball room dance .·
class .starting Feb. 5 and contin- '
uing through March 12, fi:om 8 '
to 9 p.m. at the :Senior Citizens ·
Center. It is for couples only.
Those attending are to wear
leather-soled shoes. Advance
registration with Patty Pickens
at 992-2161 is required.

Meeting
planned

Star Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878 will hold a .
fun night and potluck supper ,
warrant;
,
•.Jeremy Buck for failure to on . Saturday with supper at . .
6:30 p.m . followed by the ,
pay old fines.
In other matters, Lewis Fourth Degree team practice ,
Williams of County Road 7 A and open and closing team
in Pomeroy reported that some- practice at 7:30p.m .

WoH
fromPage1
to Philadelphia last Thursday,
then to New York where she
was one of 56 volunteen on a
flight to Paris. They left for
Africa mi Sunday.
The volunteers are now in
Niamey, the capital of Niger,
where they will spend ,the
next two months in preparation for the lifesryle cbanges
they are about to experience.
They will be trained in the
aultural lanS!Jage, skilled on
how to esdblish rapport with
th~ natives, given coping
techniques for overcoming
obstacles of chapge and
offered personal survival tips
on handling the lifestyle
. .
shock.
The volunteers will be
scattered around Niger in different villages. Each one will
live on an allowance in her
very own hut. The Peace
Corps will provide a bed, a
gas stove and a lantern for
each one, along with a ,bicycle for getting around.
Wolf said t)jat her motivation for serving came from a
friend in Athens who had
returned from Africa last year
and "couldn't stop talking
about her experience."
She told Wolf she missed
being there "terribly," that the
people were very helpful and

protective and ·"treated her '
like a God."
So after months of listening
to her friend go on and on
about life in a small African
village, Wolf decided that
joining the Peace Corps was
right for her.
· She also said she had dated .
international students in col- '
lege and loved learning about ·
other cultures.
The graduate of Eastern
High School belongs to .
Sigma Alpha Lola, a music .
society, plays trumpet, is in :
her church choir, doe s clay
sculpting and dances.
.
She is now one of more
than 7,000 Peace Corps vol- '
unteers working in 77 coun-'
tries to improve the lives of'
the impoverished and disadvantaged.
Since President J ohn F.
Kennedy founded tl}e Peace .
Corps on M arch I, 1961,
more than 155,000 Americans have joined the Peace
Corps-serving in 134 nations.
As for Wolf, she says she
knows this will be a "lifechanging experience" for
her.
· "Thanks to t!"lose who
encouraged me to pack my
bag; and go," she said.

�..

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•
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The Daily .Sentinel
•NfL playoffs, Pdge tO

M••dlf. Jnutry 14. ;112

•

Pages

The Daily Sentinel

Mondlly...nuary 14.2002

I

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·21157

•

MoNn\v's

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

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Meigs
avenges
RV loss

HIGHLIGHIS

•

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor ,
Charlene Hoeflich
Genenll Msn.ger

•

PapA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentir).el

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_· Jack8on 54, Meigs 44
Eutem 71, Wahama 46 .

BY

Glrla
Meigs 40, River Vel~ 30
Southern 67, Eastem 62

NATIONAL VIEW

ROCK SPRINGS - Ugli
That one word best suins up the game
between the Meigs Lady Marauders and
the Lady Raiders of River VaJley at
Meigs High School Saturday night.
Meigs was able to stop a three-game
losing streak with the 40-30 win in a
sloppy game that saw the winning team
conpect on only eight field goals in the
entire game including just two in the
first half.· Meigs did get 22 points at the
foul line with freshman point guard
Samantha Pierce s1=oring 11 of her
game-high 18 points from the line. The
Raiders put I 0 points on the board in
the first quarter but managed only 20
the rest of the way, including only 12 in
the last two periods.
Nicole Watkins -. who .Jed her tearn
with 13 points - opened the scoring
with a jumper at the 7:14 mark of the
first quarter. Meigs - who scored aU four
of its points in the quarter at the line got on the board 1 :30 into the game

NCAA Men's Basketball ·
'

·sed?
Obesity study offers telling
iriformation about our society
··Clarksburg (W.Va.) Exponent-Telegram: A new study
shows American children are getting fatter and fatter, faster and
{aster.
Who's really surprised by that? · .
Wben was the last .tim e you saw the neighborhood kids out
playing basebaJI, basketball o r football?
And when· was the last time you saw them gathered around
a Nintendo or an XBox?
How many kids do you know who would ask for vegetable
stew instead of i Happy Meal? How many kids today even
know what a vegetable stew is?
Kids don't roam the hiJls much anymore. They don't play
imaginary games in the woods. They don't throw base baJls at
barn doors for hours on end. Instead, they watch TV. Or they
batde it out with some reaJly weird-looking creatures on video

monitors.

·

Ask them where the dining room is, and they just might say
it's at Burger King or McDonald's.
Many of us adults are at fault.
It's tough to change, but we could.
We could eat at home more and out less.
We could shut down the TV and the video games and have
our kids play outside more than just once in a while.
Why, w~ , could even play with them. Novel concept there,
granted.
Calorie-counting, exercise regimens and the like aren't necessary.
It's not reaJly a complicated equation.
Eat better.
Play more.
Be healthier.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday,Jan. 14, the 14th day of2002.There are 351
days left in the year'.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on Jan. 14, 1952, NBC's "Today" show premiered, with Dave Garroway as the host.
On this date:
·
In 1639, the first constitution of Connecticut - the " Fundamental ·Orders"- was adopted.
•
, ·
In 1742, English astronomer Edmond HaJley, who observed
the comet that now bears his name, died at age 85.
; In 1784, the United States ratified a peace treaty with England ending the Revolutionary War,
.
' In 1858, French emperor· Napoleon III escaped an attempt
bn his life.
.
: In 1898, author Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known as
~'Alice in Wonderland" creator Lewis Carroll, died in Guildford , England, less than two weeks before his 66th birthday.
: In 1900, Puccini's Opera "Tasca" received a mixed reception
its world premiere in Rome.
•
, : In 1943, ·P resident Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime
· tvlinister Winston Churchill opened a wartime conference in

at

NBA
SUndey'a G1ime1 LA. Cllppenl 79, Toronto 72
Sacramento 103, Phoenix 100
Portland 98, Cleveland 64

NFL

Suncl8y'a o.m..
Ravens 20, Dolphins 3

. HENTOFF'S VIEW

Clinton corifronts the challenge of his own posterity

PackeJS 25, 49'eiS 15
'

Ever mindful of his place in history,
Peace Prize laureate Kofi Annan - then
Bill Clinton assembled his Praetorian
in charge of the United Nations peacekeeping office Clinton was foreGuard in his Harlem office on Dec. 19
- as The N ew York Times reported in a
warned in 1994 of the immin.e nt gena-·
front-page story - "to devise ways to
cide in Rwanda in which 800,000Tutsis·
remind the public of his accomplishwere to be slaughtered in one month.
But Congressional elections were
ments and defend his legacy." '
coming up, and the White House
His faithful former retainers have
"agreed to compile a list of the Clinton
ordered that the word "genocide" was:
administration's achievements that his
not. be used because the. president had
supporters could have handy when
COWMNIST
decided not to intervene. Indeed, he.
defending the president. They hope to
de(ayed action .by the United Nations,
build a· staff that will coorclinate efforts to
even though it would have . taken only.
enlist former cabinet secretaries and stitution of the Unite\~ States."
5000 troops to stop the killing. A subseothe.r Clinton surrogates to appear on
Of co urse, with his wonderful sense of quent investigation by the United
television· talk shows and deliver speech- humor ~ an asset his defense team Nations admitted -that the unfortunate
es."
~
should highlight -Clinton also said to a situation could have been better handled·
It is a daunting challenge, even though dinner of radio and television correspon- if Kofi Annan had done his job. Clinton:
these hagiographers have · had much dents:"Don't you newspeople ever learn? as well.
experience in creative revisionism. They It isn't the mistake that killi you. It's the
However, Bill Cijnton, with an aplomb·
may. be counting 'o n the fact that so cover-up." His audience laugh~d on cue. that few other presidents could have·
much has happened since the impeachAs for his devotion to the Constitu- equaled, actually said fo4r ye~rs later.in·
ment proceedings that they can slide by tion, the public should.be reminded _that . Kigali, ~wanda's capiw: "All over the.
Clinton's artful sidestepping of the it wasn't Attorney General John Ashcroft world there were people like me sitting
charges of o)?struction of justice and who instituted roving wiretaps in the in offices, day after day, who did hot
tampering with witnesses.
. current war against terrorism. In Octo- appreciate the depth and speed with
On one of these television testimonials . her 1998, Clinton signed a bill authoriz- which you were being engulfed by this
to the former, president, some churl may ing that surgery on the Fourth Amend- unimaginable terror." Not even Henry
bring up the fact that Arkansas Federal ment. And before President George W. Kissinger could have matched that.
District Judge Susan Webber Wright Bush dispensed with habeas corpus in his
It takes a person of extraordinary
ruled Clinton in contempt of court for original order setting up military tri- resilience and capacity for self-renewal to:
undermining "the integrity of the judi- bunals, Clinton had already greatly weak- have 111,1de that speech . in that place..
cia! process" with "false answers" in his ened that fundamental right of judicial These are qualities that should inspire thedeposition in the Paula Jones case. But review in the Antiterrorism and Effective truth squad he has summoned. Also, [,what did that have to do with the eco- Death Penalty Act of 1996.
remember an ennobling moment on :
nomic prosperity he brought us?
That Clinton law also preceded the television when Denise Rich presented•
Despite his serial lies, it was William Bush-Ashcroft discounting of the Bill of this jazz-knowledgeable president with a
Jefferson Clinton, it should be remem- Rights by allowing suspected terrorists to gleaming saxophone. The theme for the
bered, who declared at the end of his first be deported without they or their urgent current renaissance of William'
term, "One ·of my highest goals as presi- lawyers being informed of the evidence Jefferson Clinton could be that vintage ·
dent of the United States has been to against them. So much for the charge New Orleans jazz anthem, "Oh, Didn't '
protect the Constitution." Moreover, that Clinton was soft on terrorism. It was He Ramble:• It was played at funerals, '
after the Senate declined to convict him the Constitution he was stJft on.
but the brass band swung exultandy
of the articles of impeachment, although
In its mission, to bring The Comeback the way back to town.
·
the evidence_was clear, Clinton toll!, the Kid closer to Mount Rushmore, his
American Society of Newspapers edi- inventive band of acolytes ought to point
(Nat Hent~ is a nationally renowned
tors: "On impeachment, I'm proud of out how he avoided excessive entangle- authority on the First Amendment and the;
what we did. I think we saved the Con- ments abroad. Like subsequent Nobel Bill of Rights.) .

Nat
Hento:ff

on·

BUSINESS MIRROR

,

·Overseas hot spots spell trouble for US. economy

.

I•

I.

~asablanca.

BY EILEEN ALr PowaJ.
collapse of major Japanese banks or the
Oil prices
; In 1953, Josip Broz Tiro was elec ted presiden\ ofYugoslavia
NEWYORK- Most Americans don't failure of big corporations could ripple
Thanks to warmer-than-usual weather:
tlv the country's Parliament.
·
pay a lot of attention to foreign al!ai.rs. through financial markets around the and weak global economies, oil prices ·have'
\ ·In 1963,· George C. Wallace was sworn in as governor of
After aU, it's going on "over there" and world.
been tame.The Organization of Petroleum~
j\labama with a pledge of"segregation forever."
The risk to U.S. markets is that Japan Exporting Countries last . month ·
, doesn't seem to have much impact on life
1 In 1969, 25 crew me1!'bers of the U.S. aircraft car rier Enterwould be forced to repatriate considerable announced a 6 percent cut in output to try ,
here.
prise were killed in an explosion that ripped through the ship
Yet what happellS to the Japanese bank- capital, reducing liquidity here and push- to boost them to the group's benchmark:.
off Hawaii.
·
price of $22 a barrel.
ing system, for example, could hurt U.S. ing up interest rates.
! Ten years ago: Historic Mideast peace talks continued in .
financial markets. An unexpected increase
'Thrrorism
C. Fred Bergsten, a former U.S. Treasury:
Washington, with Israel and Jordan holding their first-ever for"World
events
are
key
to
what's
happenofficial
who heads the Institute for Interin prices by Middle Ea.t ..,il producers
~al ·negotiation&lt;, and the Israelis continuing exchanges with
· could slow the nation's economy recovery. ing in our economy including, unfortu- national Econornics.in Washington, D.C.,,
Palestinian representatives.
.
Recessions in Europe and (\sia could nately, terrorism," said Gary R . Thayer, noted that oil prices play a rnaior role im
Five years ago: The House ethics committee's ranking ·
chief economist at A.G. Edwards &amp; Sam
"
·
the U.S. economy.
Democrat,Jim McDermott ofWashington state, removed him- • dampen trade and slow U.S. industrial I . S Lo .
"Th
ike · !999
fth
·
nc. m t.. u1s:
expans1on.
self from the investigation of Speaker Newt Gingrich, bowing
Th~ Sept. 11 attacks seriously dampened
e sp m
was Ofle o e causHere are some of the trouble spots ana.
es of our recession:' he said. :'The drop was:
to pressure that built quickly concerning his role in die hancomurner spending, which accounts for
·
lysts are keeping an eye on:
about two-thirds of the U.S. economy, and one of the reasons we're likely to have a
dling of an illegally taped phone call involving the House
Japan
it remains weak.
pretty sharp reC&lt;overy this year."
leader.
The
Japanese
economy
recendy
slipped
One year ago: The match up for Super Bowl 35 was decided
"Federal Reserve interest rate cuts, the
Argentina
into its third recession in a decade, and few drop in energy prices, tax cuts _ a11 those
While painful for a number of U.S.~
as the New York Giants shut out the Minn esota VikingS, 41-toeconomists see signs of recovery anytime things under other conditions would be banks - such as ·FleetBoston, J.P. Morgan0, to win the NFC' championship and the Baltimore Ravens
soon.
Its banking system is in big trouble, boosting.the economy quite a bit,"Thayer Chase and Citigroup -the collapse of the
beat the Oakland Raiders, 16-to-3, to gain the AFC title.
and there are rising bankruptcies among said. "But concern about terrorism and the Argentine economy is not expected toToday's Birthdays: CBS commentator Andy Rooney is 83 .
.corporations and individuals.
Former CBS newsman George Herman is 82. Country singer
fight agai~st terrorism have been keeping have a major.impact on the overall Arner-·.
':Japan's
problems
hang
over
the
world
people very cautious."
ican economy, Bergsten said.
Billy Walker is 73. Blues singer Clarence Carter is 66. Country
cloud,"
said
Allen
economy
like
a
dark
singer Billfe Jo. Spears is. 65. Singer Jack Jones is 64 . Singer"When it comes to the (American)
The Bush administration war on terrorSinai, chief global economist for Decision ism songwriter AJlen Toussaint is 64. NAACP C hairman Julian
from maintaining forces in banks, the absolute number look big, but
Economics Inc. in New York.
Bond is 62. Actress Faye Dunaway is 61. Actress Holland Taylor
Afghanistan to steppi[lg up domestic secu- the share of capital is very modest," he said..
The
United
States
and
the
nations
of
is 59. Actor Carl Weathers is 54. Singer-producer T-Bone Burrity - will be a two-edged sword, the
He added:"I don't think it will spill over·
Southea.&lt;l A&lt;ia are major trading partners, analysiS said. Higher government spending to emerging markets .... I don't think it wiiJ,
nett is 54. Movie writer- director Lawrence Kasdan is 53. Rock
but will have trouble increasing exports as will stimulate the U.S. economy, but the affect the whole of the U.S. economy."
singer GeoffTate (Queensryche) is 43. Movie1 writer- director
)ong
as Japan 's economy remains in the reduced budget surpluses or even deficits
Steven Soderbergh ("Traffic") is 39. Rapper Slick Rick is 37.
(/s!hn Cunniff is a business analyst for The
Actor Dan Schneider is .36. Actress Emi ly Watso n is 35.
doldrums, he said.' At the same time, the could lead to higher interest tates.
• Associated Press.) , ·
.

'

..,

.

'

, I

'

II

Shaq finally
. aacks
CHICAGO "(AP) -After
years and years of being on
the receiving end of the
J-:lack-a-Shaq
defense,
Shaquille 0 'Neal finally
snapped when he was fouled
hard by Brad Miller ·and
Charles Oakley of the Chicago Bulls.
O'Neal · .immediately went
after Miller and threw two
roundhouse punches while
j\&lt;tiller had his back turned.
rhe first punch was the most.
ferocious, and fortunately it
missed. The second one con·nected before O'Neal and
Miller fell to the floor and a
full-scale melee broke out. A
multi-game
suspension
~ecmed likely.
'

.

LATROBE, Pa. - NAIA
Division · II No. 17 Rio
Grande had its 20-game
American Mideast Conference winning streak snapped
on Saturday, suffering a 63-57
loss to Saint Vincent College
at Kennedy HaJI.
Rio , Grande (12-9, 7-1
AMC) held a 35-30 halftime
lead, but could not sustain the
advantage as the Bearcats
outscored the Redmen, 33-22
in the second half. It was the
fourth straight victory for
Saint Vincent (8-6, 4-3 AM C)
over Rio Grande.
The Redmen were led by
junior forward · Jerry Barlow ·
with 20 points and seven
rebounds. Sophomore Joe
Martin chipped in 10 points
off the bench.
Saint Vincent placed · three
players in double figures scoring, Chris Williams netted 20
points on 8-of- 13 shooting
from the field, D~ttona
Washam added 13 and Ananius . Jackson tossed in I 0
points and pulled down six
rebounds. Washam also had
four steals.
Rio Grande shot 46 percent
(21-of-46) from the field, 37
percent (7 -of-19) from threepoint land and 73 percent (8. of- 11) from the charity stripe.
Saint Vincent also shot 46
percent (24-of- 52) fn?m the ·
field, 43 percent (6-of-14)
from beyond the . arc and 69.
percent (9-of-13) from the •
free throw line.
·
Rio Grande won the •batde
of the boards. 31-21, but
turned the baJI over 15 times,
compared to just seven miscues for the Bearcats.
Rio Grande keeps its hold
on first place in the AMC
however, . as Tiffin lost to
Shawnee State. Tiffin, Walsh
· and SSU all sit one game
behind the Redmeri in the
race for the conference
crown. Rio currendy holds
the tie- breaker with Walsh as
they defeated the Cavaliers in
what was their only match-up
of the season .
.' })

JIM SouLSBY

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

I

Pl•se see Melp, 7

SET THE OFFENSE- Eastern's Sara Mansfield, at left, looks for an opening against Southern's Brooke Kiser.
~he Lady Tornadoes won the game, 67-62. (Jon Will)
.
.

Southem.nabs Eagles·
BY Seem WOLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

'
TUPPERS
PLAINS \.._ Spreading its scoring atratk 'almost evenly
among seven players, the Southern
Lady Tornadoes led by Amy Lee's
20-point effort grounded the Eastern Eagles 6 7-62 in the traditional
Batde of Meigs County Saturday
afternoon at Eastern High School.
The win planted Southern, now 102, 4-2, solidly in 's econd place in the
Tri-VaJley Conference two games
back of division leader Waterford (50) and one half game ahead of Federal Hocking (3-2) in the win column.
.
Southern's victory was the first
over the tradition-rich Eagles since
the 1996-97 school year, when University of Rio Grande star Renee
Turley was still in Southern purple
and gold.
So).lthern's Amy Lee ran the

Southern offense to perfection, getting numerous penetrating. dribbl e's
in posting a· game-high 20 points,
seven steals, and six rebounds. Lee
had several clutch baskets in the Tornado victory run, including 15
points the second half.
What has made Southern solid all
season long was its ability to spread
the offensive stats over the entire
line-up. That again proved true Saturday as junior Brigette Barnes
pounded in ten points and had a
couple key assists, sophomore Deana
Pullins added nine points and three
steals, sophomore Katie Sayre
notched nine points, four steals and
three assists, and Rachel Chapman
had eight points and seven
rebounds.
Another sophomore, Ashley Dunn
notched eight points and had a
game-high 14 rebounds in clearing
the boards of many crucial

rebounds, especially in -t he second
half. Freshman Brooke Kiser had
three points, but her three-point
play cam e at pivotal point in the
game and allowed Southern to
maintain its lead.Junior Tara Pickens
got a couple key rebounds and contributed a couple key defensive
stands for the Tornadoes.
Eastern was. led by one · of th e
area's top post players in Stacie Watson. The senior· grabbed 7 rebounds
and a team- high 19 points in leading the Eastern charge. .Freshman
Terri Wolfe, hitting 6-of-8 at the
line, notched a career high 14 points
in a great effort as Eastern also had a
well-balanced attack. Although not
scoring a point and going down
with a serious knee injury early in
the second quarter, senior Whitney
Karr had a great defensive effort and

Eagles drub.
White Falcons
BY JoN WIU
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

.'

TUPPERS
PLAINS
The
Wahama White Falcons had hoped to
catch the Eagles while their wings were
· still broken .
After losing to the Alexander Spar-tans, the 'Falcons were right that the
had
some:
Eagles
mending to do. (The
Eagles must have taken'
more out of the
Alexander
Spartans
than they ·thought, for
the following night,
Alexander was defeat-..
ed by the i' ederal
Hocking Lancers 6867.)
Karr

However,

Eastern

tended to its wounds and was soon back
into the groove, sending the Falcons.
back to their nest empty-handed by a
score of71-46 :
Aside from other games, _the Eagles,
made quick work of the White Falcons.
Garrett Karr pumped in 23 points for

PleeseseeEeps,B

Pl•se see Southern, 7

Marauders fall to

Jackson,

54~44

BY JIM 50UUIBY
SENTINEL .CORRESPONDENT

JACKSON - A combination of cold shooting and the
lois of their leading scorer and r'ebounder due to an injury
led to a Meigs Marauders· Joss at Jackson to the lronmen at
Jackson Saturday night by a firial courit of 54-44.
Mo,re important· than the outcome of the game is the fact
that Meigs senior Matt Williamson was not seriously injured
ina fall during the second quarter.
Williamson took a nasty fall with 4:59 to go in the first
half and the game was halted for some twenty-five minutes
as the Meigs senior was being cared for. Williamson was
taken to Holzers iri Jackson where he was treated for a
whiplash-type injury and released. He will be sore for several days but hopes to be ready when the Marauders travel
to Eastern next Saturday night.
. Ryan Hannan put Meigs in front with a bucket less than
a minute into the game but Meigs was colder than yesterdays' leftovers the rest of the period, going only one for their
last eleven during the qu'!rter that saw the maroon and gold
post only four points. Jackson on the other han&lt;l, ~it on six
of their last seven field goals in the period building a 16-4
lead. The Ironmen used .balanced scoring in the opening
frame as five different .players hit the scoring column.
Robbie Pugh opened period number two with a threepoint goal and Jackson had a 19-4 lead over the visitors.
Ryan Frazier then tried to rally his team as the freshman
connected on ·consecutive two pointers and a three-point
basket to cut the lead to 19-1.1 with 5:38 to go. The
Williamson injury then occurred with the Marauders having the momentum. Jerry Harris hit the next bucket after
the game was restarted and the. Ironmen had a double-digit
lead again. Ty Ault answered a Jackson field goal by Ryan
Whiteside to bring the score to 23- 13 with Jackson on top.

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-·
Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, J•n. 14, 2002

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, JM.- 14, 2002

m:rtbune -·SentinelCLASSIFIED

.._.....:m-~liwl;;;._.ll
" II -

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Coun~ies like
No One
Else Can!

-

'a!:ribunt

...

A-

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8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

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Dail y ln · Column : l :IJ O p.m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion

In Ned Day's PaJ)•r
Sunday In- Column : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays

P•per

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Are you Serious About
1
• WOf'klng Fl'om Home? Call
: Now For Free lnfliJrmatlon.
1 888-60 1-4356
~ 4me
1
www.
u .com
Anentionl
Eam 2nd. Income without
2nd Job up to
$25.-$75.Alr. Pt-FI.
l..aoo-218·7543
. www.Money-Dreams.com

Health Aides, CNA's. quale automobile l~ur~nce
Apply In Person. 859 Third rBQUired. Must live w1th1n 30
Ave.. Gallipolis.
minutes/ 30 mile• ot home.
Aexlble 11oura. Llbet'al benScenic Hills Is accepting a~ alit package. Salary: ·S2:J.
plications for 3-11 Full- time 25,0001 y9Br. Send resume
RN SUpervisor and a 3- 1~ to: Buckeye Community
P•rt· time AN Supervisor. Services. PO Box 604,
Please slop by and _
1111 out Jackson. OH 45640·0604.
an application or call Pam Ali resumes must be postC&amp;ldwell fOt more Inform&amp;· ma.r1&lt;ed by 1116/02. Equal
lion. (740)448·7t50
Opponuniry Employee,
Home

late
moUel doubte' wid~~ 3br.
2b&amp;lree delivery &amp; setup. In
house financing to qualilied
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Set up buyers. (606)474·439t. or
on Private Property. Take (806)4747568 after 5 1
over' payments. (740)4461970 Champion 12x80 2
3583.
. bedrooms. $3,000 OBO.
4 BA, 3.5 Bath ranch w1th Call (304)675-2470
·over 3000 sq It, large.
fenced yard , new kitchen, 1980 Hillcrest, Nice Condi·
new roof, 2 car at1ached ga- lion, 2. BR, Gas Furnace,
rage.
$1 48,000. Call Central AC , 1 Owner,
(740)446-2311
$7500. (740)2~- 19t4

7a:.1a~· lndtptl~ ~~. ~..

r

of outside area. Call _ERA (740)256-6574
*.
··
TQwn a Count!')' Real EsI •
tate 304a6r5-5548
APARrM;ENTs
VlfiJ nice, 2·3 bedroom
FOR RENr
apartmanl,. in town. large
For Lease: 3000 to 5000 aq
kitchen, LA, S500/mo. Ref·
tt office 00 Retail Space. 1 br. Fumilhed Apt. L.Mng ereooas &amp;deposJt required.
352 2nd Ave. MQdem Rest· room, kitchen, balh. AH utlllt· (740)448-3&amp;44
rooms. Walk· In Vautt Can les ~· Except Elecb1c.
Remodel for Possible Anti• (30'}8f'5-t365
SPACE
que Slone, Restaurant. Pro-. Sludloleffldency apartment,
FOR R1Nr
tession~l. Offices, Many $225 unfumlshed $250 fur· -Posslbiflties .. Se~ Greg nlshed, $300 de,X,sll, water,
Smith at Smith BuiCk Pan- trash Included, Middleport, Trailer Spot for Rent. 2
tiac or phone (740)448· (740)591-o&amp;49, (740) 598- Miles 9'Jt of Northup on Un2292
3466.
coin Pike. (740)446-8044

j

lriJutor, Call For Product Or

Opportunity. (740~1 -1982
.

JET

AERATION MOToRS
Repaired, New a Rebuilt In
Stock. Cal Ron Eva111, 1·
SOO..S37-8528.

1--'

1- - - - - - Large pickup load mixed
firewood, will dalivw locally,

$45.00 949-2587 evening~

Firewood tor sale, (7~m47~

298t .

Davldocwt

I

2001' Harley
SUper Glide, Ilea oldru on ~

-on

Mligllnclultrillllf18.

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-'•Hill!--

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410, ~W1147t , llll:l:leliiiYf0442

Meigs

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play N.Y. Mets)

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CLEVELAND (AP) -'The Clewland Indians will play host
their former second basenwl,Roberto Alomar, and the·defellrling
· World Series champion Arizona Diamondbacks tiW season.
Alomar and his new team, 'the New York Mets, will come t(l
Jacobs Field June 7-9,and the Di.amonclbaclcs wiH be in Cleveland
June 28-30, according to the schedule the Indians ~leased Satur:- .
day.
It is the first time the Indians will play teams from the Nation~
al League West and East. They also will play Philadelphia at ho~
and play at Colorado, Florida and Montreal in their interleague
schedule.
·
· :
The Indians open their home schedule April 8 aga1nst f.o!jn~
nesota, a team that may not exist tiW season.
Baseball owners have said they plan to eliminate two teamS
before the start of next season. Although the !argeted teams haven't
been officially identified, the 1\vins and Expos are thought to top
the list because of their low revenue .and inability to secure financing for new ballparks.

Southem

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from Pllp5

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DUETOOtJR
CONTINUED GROWTH,
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS
OPENINGS IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:
DET\IL SPITI \I.IST

r

~~:o 1 :1:fosid~~•ld~~: ::Oraoe~~~.~m:~= ~=~· ~n ~hr:o'"cC:~~

11188 -300 EX. ~
Goad, Runo Goad. St900
080. (740}44t·1718

f

I

2x6' ~ails 3br 2ba

~

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call (304)6¥'5·2902

~ Vllua .11111; Tu'l t1111; Plno Hll'o Ooll
Caine 12/t2; Llllloo Jolwt'l ol'"""- 10114; ~ Counlry- 10/14;

""""*Y - -

,.

Per Hour

,.ra

PT/FT for FREE lnfo"IT\8UOn Care Cenler, 380 Cotonlal slon preferred Valid drivM's 3 bedroom 1 bath No 5 Jrd.
~all
1-886·616·08SM Or., Bidwell. OH 45814. . license. three' years good st~ Mason, wv $25.000.
.WWw.SimpleCa9hBiz.com Now Hiring. Part time PCA, drfvlng experience and acle- , (304)895·3349

Willi lldl) ..._.. IIIMIW ......
-,1,200a

$6 $S

rib

i

-lite-.

1¥ Olma wf1h • 111- MIIVnl E'"""'l
174, bul E)'fton - - Wolt,.t'IHIWt- wilh a410- ~WWI471 .

HIRING

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1111. - - ........ . . , _ _ 11101 _ _ _ _

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ln~ians to

ln . . . .di+lor . . _.

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~. U500, (740)w.!·
.
287V.
Alllih:I'IOH:TJII'NII'MT•- &amp;
81 GMC Jimmy 4114, Runa...:co.~Good.
S30DO
080. Z-2001 15"-VInl
(740)118 11044
. t.ow'- t1oon
Coi!AmJc.rtw
81 Plymouth Acclaim, .tl
lbmplke Ford
~. r~'m8~ $2000
(740)ttllm

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P•:• g' ..5itt
_.,......,.DWIG lTho,.,
•..,..
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t f t a l l o - . . T-·i ¥ - ... .,1170.

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Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

I.VONI All Areasl To Buy or Ohio OpeeaUng Engineers STNAI CNA Part· time pool·
For sale· 16x70, 3 bedroOm, Commercial Building lor IIEAUTIFUL · APART· Nice Iota. quiet country 1181!
Sell. Shlt1ev Spears, 304- Apprenlicaship &amp; Training Uon available on all .shifts. AJtr..t ...... - . -••' - 2 bath, call 740-385-9621 Rant. cedar Street, Gallipo- MENT8 AT 'IUDOET PAl- tlng, wtu accommodate
~tleman Seeking WNie 675-14~.
Program
Scenic H;Ks Nu,,.;ng Cente1.
In IIIIo
ul&lt; lor Cheryl.
lis, OH. (740)~t
CEI AT JACKSON Ell- t6x80, $100 per month, call
·Female Ouer so VealS Foe
Local18
Stoo by and 1111 out an appll·
~·
.
·
TATES, 52 Westwood Olivo Ed at Country Homeo, 740Walks And Friendll&gt;p. A.. Beautician. FT &amp; PT Help
4 Year Apprenticeship
cation oe call Pam Cak!wel
oubjod to lholIRS Spec:lall We'll match
l..ors &amp;
ltrom $297 lo $383. Walk to 992·2167.
pJy To: 553 2nd Avenue, Nee&lt;ied. Paid Vacat~n/
for more Information. F•lrHou•lngActof1 . . yourtaxrelumupto$2,000.
A
shop &amp; movies. Cell 7-40- . _ - - - - - - ·Gallipolis, Oh;o 45631 . Hoully Wage Vs. Commos· 2002AppllcotlonDotn (7.W)448-7t50
Gal (740)446-3093 lor de446-2568. Equal Housing Trtlilot' Lot In Maaon WV.
·AQanment 403 .
slon, Free CEU hours, Jan. 26, 211. 30, Feb. 7, 8, 9
"ony
talllo.
o.,portunlty.
$100. monlll. (304)882·
. . . . - - - - - -- - (740)446·7267
.
9:00am to 3:00pm
Wanted~ drummer for rock,
preterence,llmftatton or Limited Or No Credit? Gov· 2 Level Acrea 'Jt'Hh Mobile
2817
:
r Llght E~·
AHencountry, 78 blues
band, cherlmlnatlon ~on emment Bank Finance Only Home and 2 strvu
· D·-•
St., Middle-,
2
MOOn
~-·
DATA ENTIIY
(74Jl)992
6
_, ~·
~·
\II IH I! \'\Phi
'uon Ladles. Full Service Process Claims for Doctors. ()p&amp;rating Engineers are the
- t
n~e~~, color, r.ligiDn, • • AI Oakwood In Barbou,.. Mason 80 Road, Ast'llon bedroom furnished apart·
Male Escorts. Prori'lpt Pro- Will Train, PC Required. men and y.oomen who oper- WANTED· Full time am· 1......, ....ut or Mttonal Yllle WV 304·736-3409
Lesa lhlln 2 . mltea from ment, utilities paid, depoail: iii'o"":-:............-.,
fdsslonal Discreet &amp; Conli·
G-at lnco'melll
ate and repair the equip- ployment in you~ own home arigln, or.nylntentiDn to
'
·.
Route 2 148,000 (3CM)273- &amp; references, no peta, .
llouiiuloul
:dentlal. Bpm to earn. 1-socr24o.8197• Dept. 956 . ment that builds America! .as a Home Service Worlc.er
mike •ny euch
Must aetl· · 14x70 mobile 0918
(7-40)992-o165
· · ··
(74Jl)388 t799 ·
lth B k
c
lty - - Hmltatlon or homo, call 740-385·2434
Lw--·Gooosiliiiiiii_ _.
'
.
www.hpnmed.com
·eam As You Leam"
w . uc eve ommun
rdiiCffmlrwtlon."
ask for Elaine.
Chrlaty's Family living, ---,
Why
~alt?
St~rt
meeting
Domino's
now
taking
appliServices.
We
provide
salary
33140
Naw
Uma
Rd.,
AutAppliances: AecondiUoned
1
Ohio Singles lorught, call toll cations lor safe drivers, Gal- We will be accepting appli· plus benefits and a daily Thl. new.p~~perwlll nol New 14x70 3 br/2bth Only
land, Ohio, 740-742·7403. Wilhera, Dryers, Aangn,
dree 1·800·766-2623 ext Upolls and Pomeroy loea· cations. with a $10.00 cash room and board rate. You
-k wt tv
$975. down and $189.64 r16
H~
I Apartmtnt, home and lrailer Retrlgratorl. Up :ro 90 Days
t621 .
lions only. Apply in person. non. refundable fee, at lhe provld.e . a hof'!1 8• guidance MJV:r.::.n~:'real
per month: Call Nikki, 740fOR RENr
rentals. Commercial store- Guaranteecll W• Sell New
,...
following locatiOn:
and lnehdshlp In a !amlly at·
nute which llln .
~-7671.
. front~~: available for .lease. Maytag Appliances, French
b
Drivers wanted, no COL, 23 ·
mosphere . R~quues the
Vacancies now.
City Maytag. 740-448-7785.
._~...;,..
I yrs. Old or older, good drlvloganTralnlngCenter ability to teach personalllv· v~C~Mionotlfti~Our New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 1 ·3 Bedrooms Forecloaed
·
nL"~I'IU\Jr~CP.MFlVI'S ing record, benefits, drug
lng skills and a commitment
,...,. .,..,.._,
bath. Only· $995 down &amp; Homes From $199/Mo., 4'% Gracious living. 1 and 2' For Sate· Aacondllloned
30410 Strawn Road
~.._,_ _ _ _ _ _.... screen, seniors welcome. 1•
Logan, Ohio 43138
to the growth and develop' lnformtdthaUII
$189.82/month. Call Cheryl. Down, 30 Vearl 81 8.5'% bedroom aparlmants at VII· washara dry, .. and..;,.;,._
'
800-S3HIS5 3.
EOE
mont olan ;ndivk!ual with -llng•--ln 740-365-7671 .
APA.ForUIIIInga,B00-31&amp;. llogo lolanor and A - arotors 'Thompooota :;pj;li:
ADOPnON
mental retardation. II Interlhleneuu 1 ruare
3323 Ext. t709.
Apartments In Middleport. ance 34o7 Jlck8on Ave· ~lrthmothar/ we ptomise to Experiencad Cashier Need..
ested, contact Christy at 1·
avtll•bleon•n.,qual
New 2002 14 wide only
From $278-$348. Cell 740-.
·( )6
love your baby uncondition· ed (304)895·3603
Need 5 ladies to sell Avon. 800·53H302. Equal Op·
opportunity-·
$799 down &amp; $155.38/mo. 1 bedroom, $3001 mo. plus 992·5064. Equal Housing nue, 304 75-7368.
ally theoughout Hies Joys G Ill.
M 1 Co
. (740)446-33S8
portunity Employee.
Gall Nikki, (740l365-7671 · deposit. Aelllt'encea ra· Opportunities.
· Mollohon Carpot, 202 Ciarlo.
nd .... ~._IJennAtll Confiden- a ae gs
mmuMy
Ne. 2002 t4 ld
1
quired. Stove &amp; A. efn.-ra,............ R....... Pone,, ~·-.
' ls ·~tl~ ~, 0 "lleyBa k 18
'
WantedForHalrstytlsllor
new r10
H~I $799
w
w&amp; e ony
''W"'
Vtoa.- uau
VfiiU
~ Legal. Call Margaret "'-too' n A~ncy
tal.
vw
.._ ... r- ... "'" va
n
now ac· salon
more lnfOfmatlon
~~
down
only tor.
AJC,
Gallipolis. 3 Aooma and Bath, Newly (740)446·7444 1-8n-830·lnd Leo , ·866&gt;-203-()333 appltcatlorts lor: ~&gt;&lt;;counts cepllng applications lor the pieaso call (740"••·3747
FOR""""'
$t55,38/mo. Col Kavena, (740)446-3687
Remodeled. OownOIIaiiO. 8162. Free Ellllmoteo, Euy .
.
.
Payable (11erk. High IIChool polltlol'i ·· Qf Commercial
,._...
.
. Stove and Refrigeralor, .~ ftnanclng,, go dayll.eama.a
7
7871
·~Jner •' B'rush &amp; Stanley diplr;na wltfl ~years. non~ l~n Clerk •ln our Gallipolis Would love · td clean your Room Home with. t acre. 40-385- ~
· 2 bedroom house In Pomer- · utilities "Paid. 48 Olive cash'. Viaa/ Master C.rd:
. Ftome Products buy/sell prof1t accounting expenence Off1ce. Applicants should home, older Christian lady 8lot. Handymans Challenge. New 2002 14 wide. Only oy, $375 per mo. plus de- Straet. $475. (740)448-3945 Drive· a-lillie save •lot.
(740)843-1025 '
' preferred. Computer axperl· possess the following quali- has 10 +- years e)lperience As Is ·~.·~ CenteM'IIe, $899 Down &amp; $155.38 per posit, with option to bu)' on
.
.
ence a must. wm process tles:
~
month Call Harold 740 land contract, no pets, 1 and 2 bedroom apart'I
*Considerable tact with and
·
'
· (740)698-7244
manti,· rumlshed and unfur·
"~.w.
·_fun EMrcl• Prlvat. Lea- Accounts Payable, Payrnll,
r
time, references,
(740)992·976tcall any- OH {740)245-9771
365-767t.
,..,...,.....,
cuslamers
=..:..:.:..;;..-~-=~
nlahad, security deposit re- · - - - - - - ·
1eona. Leam self defense at Purchasing and maintain all
·~ur own pace. Jav Clark's rec9rd.s. Resumes with ref•Good oral ana written
URGENTLY
NEEDED· 818 Main Street, Pl. Pl. Nice 28x60 Double Wide 2·3 bedroom t)ouae lor rent qulred no pets 740-992~ • .
1 Kenpo Karate School. 740- · erences and applications
skills
plasma donors, earn 550 to Completely Refurbished. 2 sening on rented lot In in Pomeroy, no peta, not 2218. '
' ·
Buy or &amp;ell. Riverine AnU' 142-2548
will be accepted at the *Ability to use a computer $60 per week for 2 or 3 story, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed· Point Pleasant' area. 2x8 Hud approved, P'ck-bp liP"
·
ques, 1124 East Main on
·
Cheshire Ofllce. 8010 North •
rooms. Large Kitchen, walls, thermal pane win.- plication at 5 Cave Street, 1 Bedroom Apartments, SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Galn Con11dence In An State Route 7, until 4:30pm Ability to oompute1lgu•es hours weekly. Call Sera· la•QO Utility Aoorlt, LA/ DR! dows. prtced to 11810. Call Pomeroy.
$269 month. llepo~t &amp; Ret· 892·2526. Run Moore,
Uncertain World. Leam et· on January 23 2002 Bnd Rlace In a logical and Teo. 740- 592·6651 ·
Family Am. Now Carpet (304)675·3689 (606)474· 3 ~m ~-- Ml-"lle arenoe. HUD Approved. - ·
,,Jtctive self defense moves GMCAA Ia
'1
·
understandable format
throughout F/A &amp; AIC, 4391 ask for Rosemary.
,_,.uu ,...,.,,.. •-•111 (74QYA1 1519
-:-:c-:-C"':'c-:--c~=
-•- at JaY'Ciarlo.'• Kenpo tunlty employee.
an equa oppor~ ·. *Abll'tty ·to worto. extra hours 1140 ·.. B
•I $79,900. (74Jl)446·9585 or -,--..,.,---,.,_ _..:...._ araa, river view, $450 per
,_ - S
-ue·a - o n tho 'T"
t-Y
~·=
Karate SChOOl. 74Jl·742·
as needed lo meet
TRAINING
(740)446·2205 or (74Jl)446· Only $850 down and month, ratarenoea fWCltJin!d, 1 Bedroom Apt. Gallipolis. 1n Mkldleport. Dolllo, glass·
, 2546
Help wanted cartng for the ·
deadlines.
. 2683.
$181.36 per month gets you depoltl required, no pets, Water Paid. $275 nionlh ware, Aladdin mantels. and
elderly, Darst Group Home.
a new home. Cell HIOO· 740-892-em after 5pnt.
plus deposit. No Pete, more. (740)992.(1296
now paying minimum wage, We offer a generous bene- O•lllpolla C•reer College By Owner-Cape Cod on 1 837·3238 ask for Mike.
Bed
E
(740)446-4043 after 6:00pm
GIVEAWAY
I
3
room house, astern
.
Ml!lijCI11.J.ANilX)l5 I
I new shifts: 7a~m, 7am· fits package Including 4Q1 ·K (Careers Close To Home) acre level lot wllh trHs. 4
!;~
_ _ _ _ _ __.. 5pm, 3pm~ ttpm, 11pm· retirement and career ad- Cai1TOday1740·446-4367, bedrooms, t 1/2 baths, Pilot Program, Single Pa· Sd'iools, large yard, Out· 108 Locust Street, upstalra
~
· l saett H . nd
old 7am, call740-992·5023.
vanc~ment
1·800·214.()452,
large kitchen with double rent, No Credit/ Bad Credit, aide Buildings, Carport, garage apartment, 2 bed· __
•
Ba
ou . 2 years .
Reg N00-05-12748.
ovens and lots of cabinets, and Government Loans for Rent + Oepoalt. 740·985- room. stove &amp; refrigerator
. . {740)256~
Instructional assistant need· Experienced and qualified
WANTED
I large 11\ing room. CA and Renters. Own Your New 4308
fumilhed, $275/mo., $150 171nch Aims and Tlres. Fits
ed to WOfk wllh atudenl(s} persons should send reCentral Heat, TP&amp;C water, Home Todayl (740)«6·
deposit, {740}448-9061
C.V.liar and Neone, $800.
·Give to a good home. Pe· with visual lmpalrmants suma to:
To Do
, Easlem Local Schools, 1o- 3570.
4 Rooms &amp; Bath, $3001
(74Jl)446 6669
ikeneaeAustrallan Sheppard andlor other developmental
Ohio Valley Bank
cated on Route 7 near
month. 52 Olive Street. 15 Court Street. 2 Bed·
"lx Small temal• dog disabllllles Please send re
PO Bo
.
Spacial Financing· Down (74Jl)448·3945
rooms. 1 112 bathe, Kllclton 4 Sheo11, While Ma-le
w ' 37 2280
·
- 1
·
)( 240
All of your home repa1rs. act- Chesler. _All rooms have Payments as low as 1%.
·
with atove and refrigerator. 60x25x1 $100 oeo C.1
1
dltions &amp;, remodeling. 24hr good carpet, storm win· Prequallfy by phone. Pilot Program, Renters on Street Parking, Cloae to' (740)982·3452 no aOawer
~ (740) 9~~~Sc~~: ~ t~a~r:~ Gallpoii~JkH 4563
·' C·
ID.T AND
I Stn~el, Syracuse, Oh 43779
emergency service, senior dows, lull basement, plenty (740).u&amp;-3570.
Needed, 304-736·7295.
Sch[Qs and Downtown leave 1T18118~
F
citizens discount. 22yrs. of closets and storage, hal!l
Area $5951 month plus de·
OUND
UFE YOU DESERVE I
Part-lime RN and full-lime eKp. (304)576·2065
garage with opener. hOme We have appro)llmately 20
Mollu..E HOMES I posli and Reference. No 'AmazJng
Metllbollam
a. YOUR OWN BOSSI and part-time LPN lor 100
was well malnlalned wllh used homes lor undae ·
FOR lblolr
PelS 40)441HB26
hll
Foun'd: 2 puppies, Come
Income potent6allll
. bed nursing facility. Excel· Georges Portable Sawmill, good paint and wallpaper- $2,000, call t-800-837-3238
· (7
LOH
pounds~ 200
, Mh(? MIF. Brown .and White, FREE 'Info. Full
lent opporlunlty lor chal· don't haul your logs to the ing, aeklng price $89,000 tor Info.
2 Bedroom Apartment In poundl Billy qulc:k Fast
Clark
Chapel
~oad,
lenglng and rewarding e)(- mill jusl call 304-675·1957. untll we llst with realtor.
12x60
all
electric. Centanary, app_llances tur- Dramatic Rfsults. ' 100%
(7.W)388·1520
perlence. Sign on bonus.'
.
Quick aalels needed. Z40- 1985 SkyUne.14K70, 3 bed· $:150/monlh, lncludel waler nllltotl, utlideo paid exoepl NalUral Dr Recommended
~-----,-- - ,...,-----'--- Great start rates, excellent Top to Bottom Cleaning 985-4335
room. Good Condition. CAll &amp; sewer fees.· Located be· ettctrlc, dean, $2851 month- .Aek about FRE! Sa pie;
U.t or stolen-male GokSen McCiur~·s Restaurant now regulatory compliance hlsto- Service. Professional clean·
Harold, ·740·385·994\
hind Fox's Plzza In Point ca.ll ~740)258·1135 after (740)441_1982
m
' Retriever &amp; female black hiring all 3 locaUona, full or ry. Interested candidates lng at allordabla pr~ea. 3 bedroom 1 bath, 6 Ann.
Pleasant. Call (304)875- 6:00.
.
. j..ab (needs medication} part·dme, pick up appllca· should app'ly to: Rock- Residential, office, remodel- St. Clifton, WV 525,000 Cali 1987 14x70 mobile home, 3 3423
Baby bad Complete Cherry
both are wearing red collars lion at locaUon &amp; bring back springs Rehabilitation C8n· lng and construction clean {304)895·3349
be'drooms, 2 full baths,
2 Bedroom Apartment, al Wood $60 Cell (740)992·
With my name &amp; number between
9:30am
&amp; tar, 38759 Rocksprinqs up. Confidential. 992·2979 3 bedroo h
f
stove. refrigerator, heat 2 bedroom mobAe home for utilities Included. $4001 3452 'no anSwer leave mealaSt seen Jan. 6th at ::;r.' 10:00am, Monday thru 5al· Road,
~omeroy, Ohio or992·1391 .
I nd m ouse or sale pump, some new carpet, rent no pets (140)992· month, $100 deposit. sage'
~~ a contract, (740)992· new water linea. new vinyl 5858
·
(7-40)367.()811
45769 , Jackie Newsome,
home nea' Che.tee' Chi . urday.
-..o58.
house replacement winDinette Set $75 Oreua~
dran &amp; I miss our dogs very Mothers Dream!
RN Director of Staff Devel·
.
dows, vary good condition, 2 Bedraom Trailer, All alec· 2 bedroom, 2 llory apart· $715. Entertltnrnant Center:
fnuch, please retum them, Stay Home
opment.
740·992-6606.
B~
13 Bedroom on Route 2, silting on rented lot; lric, $300/mo. ~ $200 deposit. ment for rent in Syracuse, $35. Sweeper, $20. Pal
no
queellons asked, BeYoueOwnBossl
Equal~rtunltyEmployer
OPPolmJNrry
(304)675-5332
.
St2,000 or beat onar. Gall (740)367-o847.
$200 depoail, $330 per GaQO. Boby Slroller, $25.
Earn up to
;="'gong Wortcplace 01·
Crown City. 3 Bedroom, 1 (74Jl)367-0521·
.
monlh rent, rant lnc:IUdel Microwave, $25. (740):146rj74Jl)985-4t39
~
$500-$8000/Mo
112 Baths. Owner Financing
2 bedroom,-for aale or rent, water, sewer &amp; trash, 97~2
·
3
1
00
down.
clean
Aoart·
Trwk
L~--.-o-iiiiiiiiii;,.,J com
Y-OU do business with people F.or sale by owner: Nice bl· ~·
~=ry·, Feu"J~~mc'm~~ ment. (740)448-0390
Flof'al Print Couch w/malch·
1
L
. S&amp;las Position. Immediate you know, and NOT to send level home on 1 acre naar 1990 Fl ........... 2 bed
~
'Hk::k Pearson Auction Com·
Need a JOB?
Opening. Apply In Person. money through the mall until Chester. . Three bedroom,
"'.......,...
room plus $200 deposit and utHit- New 2 BR, Wuhar, Dryer lng ¥818ncet also chair to
740
0
"P8ny, tun "me auctioneer,
Want a career in
Bring Resume. AcqUisitions you haVe lrwestigated the two baths. one-car garage, home-call
Ch.ryl
" lea. Call (740}256·8202
Hookup, Appllancu Fur· match. Exoallent Condldon.
complele auction service
365-11821· 2002 &amp;onpolnle
.
nlalted, C1oee lo HoopHal.. $700. (30ol)674-3837 or
·
. NURSING?
Jewelry, 151 2nd Ave., Gal· offering.
family room with fireplace, 3 ·bedrooml2bath 14 x 70- 2 BR, All Electric, StAt 7 s. References
Required.
n
L6cenMd .sOO,Ohlo &amp; West Nursing Assistanl Classes llpolls.
'
sun room . New central heal11 • Mik 0 7'"
~1 5
lvirginla, 304·773-5785 Or are belnn offered on Jan.
Start Your Business l'o· Inn &amp; ale sustem. One mf- must se -c:a
e
oov- 10 miles from town, Refer· (740)44t.0117
. =--=-~--:c:--,..304·173-5447
•
See 1c HI
•
•
385-2434.
enc,a and Deposit Re·
For Sale: Lawn Mower En. ~
·
14, 2002. If vou are a 'car·
n lis Is accepting ap- day... Prima Shopping Cen· nute btf Route 7, b~ still prt.
qulrad. No Pets. $2751 North 3rd Avenue, Middle- vtna. Ask tor Jr., Phone
WANilD
I ing compassionate person pllcallons for a 32 hour a ler Space Avalla~le AI Af· vate. ~740)985·'!&amp;1
1991 Mansion 14x70, 3 mOr.lh. (740)441~1569. can port,1 &amp;2bedroomtumlsh· (740)256·1102
y00 could be a part of OUR week fill- in LPN for the 11 -7 fordable Rate. Spnng Vallev FS· B nd New Hom 1
bedroom eKcellent c:ondl· after 3:30pm
· _ ed apartments, deposit &amp;
·
TO Buv
Healthcare Team! Contact shift Stop by and 1111 out an Plaza: Call 740·446-0t01 .
· 11ra 1 112
e k;t' tlon, call Kavena, (740)385·
relerences
no pets Free Gas Furnaces and Air '
Judy 'Hart, LPN, Instructor application or call Pam
sq .,
acre
' 9946.
~ &amp; 2 BA Mobile . Home h1 (740)992-Gi65
·' Conditioner Estimates Call
'Absolute Top Dollar. us at 740-992·6606 or 740· Caldwell tor ""ore lnlonnaI'Ro~AL I $115,000. Call lor Into.
Porter. You Pay Deposit
(740)446-8308 . or t ~80().
Silver Gokf Colns 'PRM,I . 742·23711
tion. (740)448-7150
SERVICES
(740)446·45t4/ (740)446· t991 Mansion 14x70, 3 and UIHIIIes Gall (740)368- Now Taking Appllcallona- 291.()()96 II you don't call
' .
.
.
OR
3248.
bedroom, will help ~th d&amp;- 9t62
.
35 Wasl 2 Bed
~
both ~-1
,_.ta, · Diamonds, Gold
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
,
livery, call Harold, 740-~
room own- _us~we~.=.::-:::.:;_ __
Ringo, U.S, Currency,· Slop By Rocksprings Reha· Is now accepting applfoa·
TURNED DOWN ON
Morcervllla. Th18e Unll 9948
3 bedroqm 1 bath an elec- houoe Aoartmento, lnciUdel Full Size Matt
t.1.T.S. Coln Shop. 151 SOc· bllllallon Centee lOcated at IIOnl lor 2 AN's lor 11·7 SOCIAL SECURITY /SBI? Apartmont building With .one
.
trio nice clean home no water Sewage, Trash, S rl
- and Box.
.ond Av8ftue, Gallipolis, 740- 36759 Aockspeln~s Road, shift. Houes will be 24· 32 a No Fee Unless we Wlnl acre
m/1.
$59,000. t995 16x80, excellenl con- petS (74Jl)992·2167 .
$350/MD., 740-4ol&amp;0006.
Fra.:::· s~:S · F~ull:ng
. ·448-2842.
Pomeroy, and fill out a week. Please stop by and
1-888·582·3345
(740)441•1108
dillon, wiU help with delivery,
.
.Tafll Townhouse .Apart· Truck ~
. • rg II
1
I \ 11'111\ \ II'\ I
g~u~f&amp;11i8~g~ye~~~~ fill out an application or call
Partially Remodeled home. call Nikki, 740-385-9948.
Animal lovers wanted· 2 menta. Very Spacious, 2 60" w~Sc~ ( 7 ~
"I I&lt;\ 14 I ...,
couraglng. •Worto.place 01· Pam GaldwsH at &lt;740):146- ·
on eonman Slrael In Jack· t995 C1ay!M 14x70 2 bed- bedroom, t 4X70 mobile Bedrooms. 2 Floorl. CA. 1 ;.;1529::=:-:::--:::---::--:c,ro------~ veraily (EOEEWD)
7150 tor more lnlormatlon.
Nl
t Bulldl
coomo 2 lull balha dining home on tO eorn, 15 min. 1/2 Beth, Fully Carpeted, ~
116
I
·
son. ce 0 u
ng.
'
N. of Pomeroy, $425/mo Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool p 8• Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
1 ndry
HELPWANilD
NOW HIRING
SOCIAL WORK.POSITIO'!: rtO
HOME'!
$42.000. (740)448-7899
:~.;..:
'nn; roo;;'~1c:::~ plus dapos;t &amp; ulllltles, tlo, Start S385Mo. No Peta, Aapalro. Problema? NOOd
..__ _ _.,__ _•.
PART TIME WARD
~~~:~~~;:n:t~;s=· · '
SALE
, Aemodsled 3 bedroom. In 8 ~ po,:l;,. 8~0 building.' ~~er Realty, (740)992· Leaoe Plus Security~ ~uned? Gall The Plano Dr.
·'
CLERK/ RECEPTIONIST ll&amp;l program lor people ~th . .
Middleport. call Tom Ander· (304)675-7118 oe (304)675·
· Required, Days: 740-446- ::40...;~4..,46::-4.;;5;::2:..5,__ __
,A10 you earning whai you EVENING I WEEKEND menial retardallon In Bk!· 2 bedeoom unllnlshed up- son alllr 5pm, (740)892· 5018 •
Beaulllul River VIew Ideal 3481; Evenings: 740·367· Hardy t.bnl s:J.OO eoch 4
are won)l? S1.500·5klmo 11
HOURS
.
well. Responsibilities in- stairs. large deck, new wa- 3348.
For t Or 2 People, ~elaren- 0502 • ?40-446-Ct 01 ·
for $.10. Open Sat. 8-5pm. &amp;
Free Into 800-221·t467.
Ou as to Include answenng elude the day· to· day SU· terfgas line, new healinb &amp;
Moll H
I
B~
I ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· Twin RiverTOW8fll now ac- IV8t1ing:l. Dewhurst Gfllno
,
the phone, Strong Accounl· pervlsion of the homes. cooling system, newly paintILES OMf8
AND Blln..JliNGs ter TraHer Park. 740-441· · ceptlng applications for . houee Mt. Alto. (304)885-'
Are, You Eamlng What lng Skills, a~ M~ical Ae- Musl have on year eKperi· ed, dish washer, chain link
FOR ALE
0181.
1BR. HUO eubtldized apt. 3740 leave menage. or
You re Wor1h??7 Choose cords ~esponslb•lilles. 11 ence and a lour year degree fence.. 99 Burdeue Addition.
·
tor
(304)895-3789

_-::.!;''"

·.

' www.-:- .•

No commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

.,.a~npoonncMnt..t •CUINIII,_I!*'f._ln. •All ,.....-.&amp;elta..,"Mt1a. ......... lott. Fedln!IF*Hou.tng Act of
.c:cep~Sonlyhelp..,....,.IMMing.EOE....un:!s. W.w1Hnatluiaw6nf'y--.-riiiiduulllilnglnvllililllanarftt.rr..

'

'

MA80N--Iupar--........
Diamondbacks at home
-.
==~:-~.::.':".:::.:::..., .;.::'a!:':"'t.ooeua
=,"""---· ~
~ ~ ~--1 Cl"l.

. . - . 4 dr., 41.000 ,_, t1:ioo

:=n.s

•

u.. .. GCMtafU..,...oooupllldllythellinw..,ontythefhllneerUon. WI
_ _ _ bo_on.,.lhloloy
ahn~ CanwllnwtlbeiMdefntheflrM.......,..edfUon,

· MollnEIIOME'i I
FOR SAlE

euuau su.

. -·:·

. .

good at 33-30. Mindy
Chancey followed with · a
liZ _
'l'la!als
lO,
. , .. _
and hao only tour..,_
left
wing jumper to push the
•• 1 1 1 t a 1 - ~~
H, aaldng S1MOO,
1
o 'Jiil:pan Hi-tey 10 plul
.
(740)742-3302 Ilk lor
lead to 5 at 35-30; Katie Jef: IIMancl " ' " - lncluclng oil 111117 FOld Rongor, 4x4. 5 · Da"";;A;:;;;;:P.;:;m;-&amp;;"1
fers picked up the assist on
'
. gooluma- opoed. (740)2when
Mindy
Chancey
hit
both
buckets. Meigs hit 5, - · HI Elllclency Ho1t1 ~-:-::------: Pllmpo, IN1Urtng T - 111118 Bronco II, 4K4, 89,000
one of two from the charity of-6 free throws in the' last
~ Fr" incredible Wlrranty mKel. Excellent Condition.
stripe.
Mter two Jaynee 1 :41 to seal the 10 point
HEATING I (740)387-0689
.
lludgol Pr1oMI Tlanll10! COOLING (740)441-141t 111111 Chevy SIIVorado Ex· -All Typeo, - T o Davis foul shots tied th~ win.
, or 1--.a72.-T.
, _ Cab, 4:&lt;4, 4.3 Vor· OVer 10,000 Tranam,_,.,
Meigs placed six players in
..a lee, 5 IPMd. Amarioan Rebuild l&lt;lta, 740-245-!e77, game at 4-4, Watkins hit
back to back field goals fol- the scoring column led by
!, Snow blower, Ranchklng urea.
Aoclng Rlmo wiUt 32 Inch Gall: 330-3765.
Many Ex1ras, $5700
'-I J( \ IC I '&gt;
led the Eagles for the game
lowed by a Bridget Harder Pierce with 18, Davis added
'• wide,
Pro, two-ttage,
8
HP,
26" OBO. (740)446-2124 leeve •r-~~---'1
with
9 rebounds.
electrtc atart, . new, meaage
hoop to put the Raiders in 7 ,Jeffers and Chancey had 5 •
• $500. (740)892·2389
""~;;;.·':':"'~:-.....,
"""""
Katie Robertson notched
front 10-4. Meigs was a dis- each, Soul! by 3 and Werry 2 .
sur~nann~ng Bod. ssoo. j'2
VANS &amp;
iMJolloV»dd!NN'S
eight points, Sandy Powell six,
mal 0-13 from the field in Watkins headed the Raider
~ (304)773-80110
•
4-WDs
·
IIAIEMEHT
Dillon six points, and
Jessica
the period as nothing would . offense with 13, Minnis had
• wateot1ne Sper:tal: 314 200
·
Sara Mansfield six points.
; .PSI $21.1111 Per 100; 1' 200 1871 FOld F·t50, Autaxnat· Uncoudltlortal Nfotlme guor· fall for the hosts .
7, Caldwell 4, Harder and
, PSI $37.00 Pet tOO; All lc, V-6, 83,000 OCiual mllel. aniM local ref-fur·
Alyssa Holter added three.
The second stanza opened Naylor had 3 each.
: ~c~ Filtingo :
".'!"5ooExcolieni(
.W)~
nloned.
eotabllohod
1975.
The game also marked the
Meigs struggled from the
tn
·
' ~ · 7
. Call 24 H10. (740) 446- with a Rachel Naylor free
RON EVANS
4053
0870
1-800·287-0576 throw to up the Raider lead field hitting only 8-of-44.
homecoming of SHS coach
Ohio, 1-800- 1982 FOld Bronco, V-8, ~u- ~ Watarproollng.
. to 11-4, after two Pierce free
Scott Wolfe, who . prior to
The Marauders hit on 22~
to, 4 wd , mtehenlcally
.
coming to Southern, was the
Watklno Prooticta- double IOUnd, very 11111 rust. came C&amp;C ,__ 1~-- Mal- throws, Katie Jeffers hit the of-36 foul shots. The hosts
lb•tgth daft~: f t while VA• from ClllfarNa 5 )'881'8. 8go.
.....,,.,ra nuu19 t......,. first field goal of the night
mentor at Eastern with Easthad 32 rebounds led by
nllla, op~ce 1 , Mlveo. llnl· $1,500. 080. Week Days nenc.. Palnllng. vlnyt aid·
ern head man Paul Brannon
manta and many Other prod- (304)675-311112
lng, carpentry, doors, wtn· for Meigs from the right . Davis with W, Soubby and
as his assistant. That duo won
UOIO, Call (740)11411-3027
1985 IS-10 Blazer, $90,000
~O.:.~or'"::: wing ?:45 into the game to Lindsay Bolin added 6 each.
Whlta Frtglda,. w-ldry· rnlleo; No Aull, Goad Con- eotlmate call Chat, 740-892· pull Meigs back within 3. Meigs
many . games
together
committed
20
or Nl. $200. WMe Hotpolnt dillon. $2.800 (304)862· 6323.
throughout
the
early
to mid
atove 1100. Almond GE Ao- 2221
a:--::---""'!'-.. Pierce then hit 4 of 6 from turnovers and was whistled
19~'s.
lrlgerator $150. (304)675- t966 FOld Rangoe 4 ~ I the line over the next for 1 6 fouls.
2709
drive, V-6 ·englna, long bed, ~ REFluGI!RATION , minute including 2 of 4
Additionally, Wolfe was
The Raiders went 12-ofWood for Sole. II3S a load goOd condftlon, $t200,
coaching against his first
de1lverod. Call Randy Cox. (740l849-2249
Realdentlal or commercial when River Valley was whis- .50 from the field and 5-ofcousin Terri Wolfe, who as a
(740)367·7833
189t Chevy Blazer Silvera- ~rtng, new IIOfYice or re- tled for ~ technical foul to 13 from the line. Harder
freshman was a thorn in
-,~;;:;;;--1 do, 4x4, 350, auiO, loaded, palro. Master Uoensad olac- put Meigs ahead 12-1 1. The pulled in six of her teams 28
very goixl oondltlon, S31160, lrlclen. Ridenour Eleotrloal,
Southern's side the entire day.
(740)992·7584
WV000306, 304-675-1788. lead was short-lived, howev- rebou.n ds. The Raiders comWolfe's speed and penetrating
er, as Tarra Minnis hit a field 'mitte&lt;l 16 turnovers and
Block, brick, pipes.
dribble picked apart Southgoal to put her team back in were ~ailed for 25 fouls.
~-llntslt, tiC. Claud8
ern's interior defense and
Wlnh!IO, Rio Grande, OH .
front 13-12. An Ashley
The Raiders gained the
Call740-245-512t .
allowed
EHS to keep pace
Caldwell bucket with 1:22 split by · winning the JV
going down the stretch.
left in the half brought the game 33-23. Leslie Ward led
Southern · initially got the
halftime score, to River Val- the · winners with seven
baD off the tip play, b1,1t Easipoints; Nicke Tracewell,..
ley
Meigs 15.
ern shut down Southern's iniAlicia Werry opened the · Jenifer Colburn and Sharon
98% Hybrid Wolf Pup. 10
tial penetration. The ball went
old, $200. (740)446second half with a bucket in Johnson all had 6 points.
6689
into the post, but was kicked
the paint with the assist Meigs was led by Chrissy
ltKC ChineN Puua, Shota,
·
D
ald II d Miller with 7, Meghan Garback
out by Brigette Barnes
WOrmed,. Naw . ~no
gomg to . ~vis. C we an .
who fed Rachel Chapman on
Depilollo 10 ito1d. $:150.
Watkins responded by hit- nes added 4, Xanthe Smith,
the right wing for a three(740)3811.11:125
$8.00 column Inch weekdays
ting consecutive baskets and Renee Bailey and Maria
ltKC Male Pug PupplH.
h R 'd I d
b t.
pointer to start the game.
Sholl, Wormed, Wll take
$10.00 column inch Sundays
t e al er ea was ac.. to Drenner each had 3.
Eastern quickly countered
paymonto. $350. (740)368five . Mter a Minnis hoop . Meigs will host the Vinton
when St~cie Watson took the
9325
with 3:22 to go in the quar- County Vikings next Thurslob pass from Alyssa Holrer
AKC Peklngeee Puppleot 3
ter, Meigs went on a 6-0 run day at Meigs High School.
Femakll, 1 male, 7 - ·
and
powered it in for a quick
Marauders
have
2 Toy Poodle doge, male - - - " - - - to finish the period with a The
score, 3-2. Southern weqt up
and temale. (740)446 3398
Htllp W•nllld
27-25 lead;· a Pierce three dropped two games to the
5-2
on a Barnes lay-in from
AKc lor
Rag.
lab pup- ;,
with less than a minute Vikings this season includplea
...Blact&lt;
304-675-4469
the block, but Watson again
AKC Regletared labrador
remaining put .t he Maraud- ing a loss in the champiresponded
with
another
Pupplao, Excellanl HuntlnQ
.
ers in front 27-25. The score onship game of bracket # 1
score,
this
time
a
follow-up
Proopocla. Flral Shola i ·
remained the same as the at the ·Logan Holiday Tourdouble off the rebound, 5-4
Wormed. (7.W) 446 00110
teams headed to the ·final nament. The Vikings are curSHS.
To good - · 3 Au81rlt~
rently tied with Nelsonville
1an Shepherd pups; 6 St. ·
ei gh t minutes .•
Southern's Katie Sayre
Bemard/Australlan Shep•
Watkins nailed a trey from atop the Ohio Division of
herd mix pupa; aduft Yallow
nailed a short lane jumper and
lab mix: black lab pup: call
the top of the key with 5:42 the TVC. The JV game gets
Sayre
and Eastern's Mansfield
740'867·9712 or 740-992·
left to tie the game at 30-all. underway at 5:55.
traded three pointers before
3354
Full/Part Time
'But these would be the last
.
·
Watson
went back to work on
Motgo 40, A!Vw Vllllor 30
b
I I,
OFFICE
.Raider points of the night as .
tO 8 7
5 - 30
her game, picking apart the
~
. ENVIRONMENT
the visitors went 0 for 12 the RV
Malgo 4 11 12 13 - 40
Thrnado
defense. Whitney
Plano. Sto&lt;y &amp; Ciarlo. Con-' 1-888-974-JOBS .
rest of the Way from the field IIIVIR VALLI!Y- Ka~ 1lty1or O: 1ltm1
MIMII S t-3 7; Aechal Naylor t 1-4 3;
Karr helped ignite the Eastc
101t
In make
Goadme
. Condition.
and 0-of-2 from the line. Alhlay Coldwell 2 0·0 4; NIOholl ·
$500 or
an otrer. · ~====;:;::~;::;:~====
•
ern zip fast break with many
Weti&lt;IO'ol 5 2·2 13; llrtdgel Htl- 1 1-4
(740)446-2236
Help Wanted
Meigs went on a 10-0 run 3;
Hatmony Phlllpl 0; !lriltanykey rebounds early · in the
I \ I ~'. I "I 1'1 'I I I "
0; Alltley Davin O; Erica Tay1or o.
-:=;;;;:;;:;;;~~:;::~;:::;::::;;::;
to end the game.
game, and Watson ended the
,\. I I \ I ' Ill ! h
TOTALS t2 5-t3 30.
CONSUMER LOAN OFFICER
Shannon Soulsby, who MI!IGI- Undlly Bolin O; Brook Bolin
frame
with nine of her 19 ,
iir=~JIA;~Y;;::&amp;~~
had averaged 16 ppg over 0; Mindy Cl)lncoy t 3-5 6; Kalle .lat1M
· points for the game, the score
,
GRAIN
·The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company the previous three contests, 1 3-4 5; Samantha Pla!co 3 11-14 tB;
Shannon Sou111by t D-2 3; Jaynao Davia
~
of Pomeroy, Ohl«1 Is seeking an
tied 14-14.
experienced Consumer Loan Officer for ns ignited the run with a tri• 1 5-8 7: Alicia WOrry t D-22. TOTALS 8
Rachel Chapman hit some
22·35 40.
4x50 1000 pound round
fecta from the right corner T'hraJe.polnl goals -' RV 1 (Watl&lt;lno);
bale&amp;; llored lnalde, S20, Gallipolis, Ohio Branch location. Qualified
early free throws that put
(740)988-3949
candidates will have 1·3 years direct
to give Meigs the lead for Malgo 2 (Pieooe, !lc:uloby).
Southern up 18-16,thenAsh80 Round Baleo ol hay. 600 lending experience In personal and real
ley Dunn hit a follow up
lb. 62 Chevy Truck, 2 wheal estate (1-4 family) financing transactions,
drive, king bed , _ worto..
jumper from the block to give
be computet literate and possess good
$500. (740)387·7566 '
Southern its first four-point
customer
relations skills. The Farmers
Hay tor 111e, IICjuare baleo.
lead.
Deana Pullins came off
AIID, 3 good Cradco wln- Bank oilers a . competitive salary,
the bench to again jump start
doWI. 740-992-5833
commensurate with experience, and lringe
Southern's transition game,
Quality hay tor Nle, $1.50 benefits package. Send cover letter and
bala; trea mixed dog to detailed resume to:
grabbing a steal and going
good ltorna (740)8115-3610
ccwt-to-coast to give SouthFarmer• Bank &amp; Saving• Company ·
Hay &amp; Bright Wlra Tie
ern
a six point advantage and
ATTN: Human Reaourcei Director
Slrew, Year 'Aound Delivery
&amp; Volume Dilcount AvailaPO Box 826 Pomeroy, o ·hlo 45768
prompting · an Eastern time
NOTICE TO
74e-tt2·21t5
Mlitll Coilnly
ble.
Heritage
Farm.
Farmers Bank Ia an Equal Housing Lendar
out. .
.
CONTRACTORS
A depcialt ol 0 Commlulonlra
(304)675-5724.
Member FDIC and an Equal Opportunlb'
Se1l1d propo111a doll11a will be Coulthouu
"(atson and Wolfe hit 6-of,_
lor tho Purch111- required lor 11ch ••t ~y, Ohio
8 free throws to cut the SHS
Delivery
1nd ol
plen•
and ~711
II (\ \'-l'c H~ I\ lie 1'\
lead
\P four, but Pullins hit
I
n
atallall
on
ot
apaclftCIIIolla.
Allantton
ol
bldcllra
.GALLIPc:JLIS
epeclllld
Pleygraund
The
,tull
amount
will
11
c1lled
to
111
ol
the
another key bucket to make it
Auros
,.,, "'W .• ' --.r- ,. ·:r--•
equipment at the returned within thirty raqul-nll oonllln~
FOR SALE
Sandy •Powell hit a three
six.
,, I
Southern
LoC81 (301 Cllye efler receipted In thla bid pecut,
Ellmenllry
ol blclll.
par11oularly to the pointer that . cl't the lead ·in .
t966 Nova II o1 ~th alot
Pl•yJiround
Prolact
,
Eech
bid
muat
be
Federel
Llbor half at three, 30-27 and Sayre
new parto $7000. 304-895Melge Coun1y, Ohla.
accompenlld by illhlr Btendarda Provlllone
3076
.
will be I'ICIIYICI by lhl 1 bid bond In 1 n and Dlvle•laoon put SHS up four with a free
t873 Plymouth !lui*, AJs.
Melee
County amountol1~ol1he W.gee,
verlaue throw. Eastern's Powell added
Commlaalonen 11 bid amaun1 with 1 lneurenoe require• a free throw for"a 30-28 tally,
tonialtc
with slant six 2 - ·
hard top, Excellonl worto.
lhll r Dlllce e1 I hi 1Ui'11y lllilfiCIOry to llllnll, YlriOUI lqUII
car. (304)675-2547
. CaurthouH, P01111roy, the aiOIIIIId MIIJII opportunity pro- but ·Southern's Dunn folOhiO ~7ee untll10:00 County c-w.inla 11111 vlelona, •nd the . lowed up with a rebound and
1g74 4x4 ClMC Dual Wltaol
A.M, Thuradly, Feb. 7, or by certlllld chick requirement lor 1 score for the Tornadoes 32P1ckup. 4 opoed 31!Q.
(304)675-2547•
2002 1nd then 1111:00 ouhl•r• oheak, a; · peyment bond end .
A.M. •t ••ld olllce letter o1 ol'ldl1 upon 1 perlormeilel bond lor 28.
11163 Ford Ranger 2 Wd.
opened and re1d ealvent blnk In 1hl 10Q'I&lt;o ol the oontnot · Jessica Dillon hit a jumper
302, Aulomal1c, tnoo.
aloud
lor
the emaunt ol not leu prtae.
(304)87U733
following:
than 10% ol tiM bid No 'bidder mey from the right wing to cut
1887 lincoln Town Car,
Purch111, Delivery 1mount In favor ollhe wl1hdrlw hie bid Southern's lead back to two,
Very Good Condition,
and ln11111111on ol eiO(Mikl MeJp
wllhln thirty (10) d•v• but Chapman and Lee hit a
...ooo mllee, $3100.
Vlrl
oua
ol
County
Com"lnlanera
liter thellolulll dlla o1
(740~718
couple key goals that • ulti~;,;;~:n~; lid Bonde 111111 be 1111 Oflllllng lhlftiol.
II!
ere 1000mpenlld by Proof · The Mllge Counly mately put Southern up 35bid at .\uthorlly of the Commll1101*11
r 30 at the half. Watson had 14
olllclal or 1 11 ent rtaerve th• right to
at the half for the Eagles,
lljiCI1ny or 111 bide.
Bpecllloellona, and aiJ1nlng1hl bond
.1111 Thornlan, while Southern had near
bid forma mev be Bide 111111 be Hillel
Praeldlnl equal scoring amo,ng ChapIICUred 11 1hl O!flCI 1nd llllrked ee Bid tor
~Clarence
8au1hem
Elemenllry
•
ol
M1i111
County
Mill•
County
111116 Chevy Lumina, Au)o.
man, Barnes, Pullins, Lee,
Commleela....,..
Pley•Jiround
Prlijlot
.comm1u1-.
pw/pb. GrMt wor1&lt; Car.
Sayre,
and Dunn . .
CourthoUH,
Po1111roy,
end
mell1d
or
11114.
21
.
1
o
:aUT
Rn good. $2500 or neg.
I,
I 1
•
:...._....;._ _ _.... Ohio 417ee, Phone • diiiYef'lcl lo!
(304)458-tnS
.
&amp;
(740)4ole-7300
R ,.

:J~;:~e/~~t:s ~d~.~~d~~~!~~~~d

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§§~~~~~~·tet~•~to~-~;·ol~oo~~~.~-~oou~l~...,.,.ol...,

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• M .s Should Run 7 Days

. (740)256- 233

t1117 01a1o

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Antiqualord 1979LTD 0no
' . all ()pert Monday, T-y. OWner Black and ia In'
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h-u 1/tk

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign! •
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~a·
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Tflursdav for Sundevs

...-1

1 For D~Uto, Drt._yo &amp;
; Wd&lt;wltyo. l.&amp;L ~Mel-

t(~cfo.le.r .

Djsolay Ads
"" oiSolly: 12 Noon 2
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sunday Display: 1:00

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t8eJ'
11,000 II32QO
/ltii,Ciuioa,s.......,.

0BO

t•

.

'. NEW AND UIED STEfL
TIMtH111110onol- PlnoHihOoi1Colnee48
• Sleel Beotmo, Pipe
ro.n H11111-- Pine Hlll'o Golf Colne1170
For car-. Angie, ctwt- 115Bulck SkViork. V-6, 4 dr.,
1\i)roACY&lt;US
Mon'a
Jin Baan1t81, Rk:l!y-180, 111m Smllht78. ·
: no1. Fill Bar, SIMI Grating ~very good condllkxt, 1..,_ _ _ _ _ _,... illln'a H1alllartoa- Sam 8mlllt1101.- Burlon 475, Jim BoMI 4113

~egister

Sentinel

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home pMa &amp; N.
111.
BENNITT'S HEATING &amp;
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..
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()ff!ce !loaJ~-.t.

onc1

· 81'1Dna X W' - ·
M0.(740)256-fll28
- · ~htiOtl•m&amp;c:l ,,.,_
~..!...- h• " " ' - In_.,. I Olllclenoy heat
......, ~ W. cany a
compie1a line ol Mobile

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD
ONLINE

Place

ond 1lclc 8DI1ra. 111117 -

r.!:t.OtT~~~- ~~ta300Flrm.

In one week With us

To

The O.Uy S.ndnel • , . . A7

Fielder
••twHn 10 a.m. a 7 p.m.

Early in the third peri~,
Ea5tern cut Southern's lead to '
one point on a pair ofWolfe
drives, but freshman Brooke
Kiser hit a lane jumper and. a
free throw to complete a
three point play to put Southern's lead back to four, 43-31!.
Both dubs played intensely
and earned much praise fro~
their coaches. Coach Brannon said, "We knew this
· would be an intense game.
Both teams played very hard.
Southern has several good
players and it was hard for us
to stop· them all •.It was also a
huge blow to us to lose Whitney Karr so , early in the

game:'

at , . _ . Plaine
lloulhamt7,Eulom62
Southam 14 21 14 18 "
67 •
eaotam 14 16 15 11- ez
IOUTH!:ItN - Rachll Chapman 8,
Bngotto Barnoo tO, CNna Pulll,.. 8, Amy
1M 20, Kalle lillyrw 8, AlltiiiY Dunn 8,
lltro Plckonl 0. Brooke Klsef 3. Thtalo t3
t&amp;-3467.
IAITIIIN - Atylla Holte&lt; 3, Whitney
Kerr D, 1ltrr1 Wolla 14, SilO Manlltlld 8,
T1111:111 0, K&amp;Ho A-100ft 8, - ·

o,

Sandy P -

e. -

Dllon I , Staolo W&amp;iaOn t8. TOTAlS 23

t3-23112.

ThiN poinl goale -

Southern 3 (Chap-

man. S.yrw); Eoolom 3 (Manlltlld 2,

f'owlji) .

I

I

Amy Lee began to take
charge for the Tornadoes in
the third frame, getting several key, driving lane buckets off
Barnes and Sayre screens.
Southern also did a good job
passing the ball around ,to get
the open shot. A Pullins steal
and lay-in gave Southern ·a
46-40 advantage, but Eastern
came back with another key
Dillon bucket and basket by
Robertson. Lee hit a key layin in the closing seconds as
Southern led 49-45 at the
buzzer.
Southern's biggest lead was
at seven 55-48, but a Mansfield tally quickly erased any
breathing room the Tornadoes
had at 55-51 and the game
remained on the line until the
finatSeconds . Lee connected
on two driving lay-ups, and
Dunn mastered the offensive
boards and had two mo;.. follow-up bank shots to help
preserve the win.
Meanwhile , Eastern kept
pace as Watson, Wolfe, Holter,
Robertson, and Powell all
added buckets. One key in the
closing moments was that
Southern's Chapman, Sayre,
and Dunn in a combination
of double teams held Watson
to just two fourth quarter
points and five for the second
half in a great defensive effort.
Additionally,
Southern,
who had sUffered through a
miserable night at the line, hit
the free throws when they
counted, hitting 8-of- 1 2
going down the stretch.
Pullins, Lee, and Sayre hit
crucial charity tosses.
Southern hit 23-of-54
overall for 43 percent and 19of-34 at the line. Southern
had . 37 rebounds (Dunn14,
Chapman 7, Lee 6); 19
turnovers, 24 steals (Sayre 4,
Lee 7, Chapman .7), eight
assists (Sayre 3, Lee 2, Barnes
2), and 18 fouls.
Eastern hit 23-of-55 with
13-of- 23 coming at the charity li~e. Eastern had 41
rebounds (Karr 9, Watson 7),
24 tUrnovers, 3 steals (Wolfe
2), five assists, and 26 fouls .
Eastern won the reserve
game 48-15. Eastern scorers
were Jenny Armes and Krista
White with eight each.
Southern scorers were Ashley
Roush with 10, Brooke Kiser
three, and Susan Brauer two.
Southern goes to Nelsonville- York Monday, while
Eastern is idle until its Thursday tilt at home against federal Hocking.

gon

I

~

I

I

(

�•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A9

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, J8n. 14,2002

I'

A8•The

Sentinel

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Kent State tops
KENT (AP) - Andrew MitcheU and
Antonio Gates each scored 14 points to
lead Kent State to a 71-56 win over Ohio
on Saturday night.
Kent State (10-5, 3-1 Mid-American)
forced the confermce's top-scoring team
into its lowest point total of the season.
Ohio (8-4,. 3-1) shot 32 percent fiom
the field, 22 percent ,fiom 3-point range
and 62 percent from the foul line - all
season lows.
R~rve Eric Haut hit all five ofhis shots

Jackson
fnNII Pap 5

Ohio, 71 ~56

fiom the field and finished with 13 pointo
for Kent State. His three 6nt-half3-point-.
ers helped the Golden Aashes build a 3522lead.
Kent State took its brgest lead at 58-39
w'hen Mitchell hit a 3-pointer with 8:37
remaining.
Mitchell, Gates and Demetric Shaw
combined to go 6-for-6 from the foul line
in the final minute for the Golden Aashes.
Br.mdon Hunter le~ the Bobcats with
17 points and 12 rebounds.
are struggling . but will strive to
· improve" he said.
Frazier led Meigs with 14 points; Ault
added 11 with Fackler adding 7. Dill
finished with 6; Bush had 4 and Hannan
2.
'
Robbie Pugh netted 15 for Jackson
and Ha(ris pitched in with 14.
Meigs went 18-of-48 from the field
with 3-of-6 coming from behind. the
arc. The Marauders hit only 5-of-16 at
the line and committed 16 turnovers.
Jackson hit .on 19-of- 46 with 3-of-12
coming from three-point land. The
Ironmen were red hot at the foul line
hitting 13-of-17. Jackson committed 14
turnovers.
· Coach Travis Abbott's JV team
dropped a heartbreaker to the Ironmen
reserves 44-42 in the night's first game.
Jordan ~illiams and Carl Wolfe hit double figures.for Meigs with 14 and 12
respectively. Max Morrow led Jackson
with 19 and Zach Hoover added 15.
Meigs is ·off until next Saturday when
they make the trip out Rt. 7 to face
cross-county rival Eastern.

A Zach Bush basket 1.\'ith less than a
minute to go in the half cut the Jackson
halftime advantage to nine at 27-1 8.
Jackson - behind six points by Harris
- outscored Meigs 12-8 in the third
period. Ault scored half of the Meigs
points in the quarter with Buzz Fackler
and Bush adding a hoop each, as Meigs
was able to close to within five points of
the hosts at :i1-26 on Facklers bucket
with less that five minutes to go in the
period. The Jronmen finished the quarter on an 8-0 run to stretch the lead
back to 13 at 39-26 heading to the last
eight minutes.
At the 2:56 mark. in the final stanza
Meigs ·again managed to pull to within
five at 43-38 as the Marauders went on
a 10-0 run. The offensive spurt was
fueled by 'Frazier and Ault who had four
and five points · respectively and Doug
Dill added a free throw. Whiteside
counter with a basket for Jackson and
It Jackton
the lronmen went 9-of-10 from the line
Jackoon 54, Molgo 44
4
14
8
18
«
down the stretch to offset three pointers Meigs
Jackson
16
11
12
15
54
by Fackler and Dill to secure the win.
MEIGS Ty Aull 10; Doug 0111 3; Ryan Frazier 14;
Coach Carl Wolfe said the loss of Buzz Fackler 7; Ryan Hannan 2; Zaeh Bush 4; Matt
Williamson 0. TOTALS 16 5-18 44.
Williamson hurt the Marauders. "We JACKSONRQbble Pugh 15; Jon Evans 6; Jerry Har·
had a good week of pra~tice, but it was rls 14; Steven carlisle 4; Ryan Whiteside 7; KYJe Loftus
Granl Lloyd 2. TOTALS 19 13-17 54.
certainly not evident in our first quarter 6;Three-point
goals - Melga 3(Frazier. Fackler Ault);
performance. We are a young team and Jackson 3 (Evans 2, Pugh 1).

.Eagles
from PageS

The Falcons began to replace their
players with some younger, fresh legs
towards· the end of the third, for the
game was all but out of reach with the
Eagles leading 61-34.
Eastern followed suit and replaced the
second string with some other players
who hadn't seen as much action in .the
past. Eastern placed all playc;rs in the
scoril'lg column including Andy Hysell
who hit a perfect 2-for-2 from the foul
line, along with Austin Cross, who hit
one of two from the line. Travis Willford
appeared to score two for the Eagles as
well.
JR Parsons added four more . for the
Falcon&lt;, and Simpkins his final hurrah of
four points to give him .20 points on the
night. Simpkins and Barnitz crashed the
boards hard throughout the second half,
racking up 5 and 6 rebounds, respectively.
"I 'thought that it was very important
that we come out tonight and play with
tremendous intensity after our loss last·
night," said Caldwell.
",Our seniors needed to step up and
lead our team tonight. Garrett, Bradley,
and Chris did an excellent job leading
the team."
Things. cook a different twist for the
reserve contest.
The Eagles served as .the punching
bag for the. talented Falcon reserves. Led
by R.T. Roush and Aaron Faulk with
fourteen points each, the Falcons trampled the Eagles 70-44. Eastern's meager
scoring , was led by Will Woods with
eight points, and Josh Hayman and
Derek Baum with six apiece.
Eastern has Tuesday off, and will host
the Waterford Wildcats at Eastern on
Friday.
01'111-a.PIIIno
....., 71, Wlhlma 4e
Eutom 12
29
20
10- 71
Wahamll e .
16
12
12- 4e
WAHAMA- A, Bamllz 1 0·1 2, I. Cadavld 3 3-5 11, 0.
Lambert 0 1-41 , H. R-od 0 2·6 2, J. Simpkins 9 2-5

the Eagles. Karr hit a perfect 7-of-7
from the foul line as he was firing on all
cylinders after a sub par performance
the previous night. Up-and-coming star
Nathan Grubb earned a starting position on the Eagle team, and rightfully
so. Grubb was second in scoring for the
Eagles with 15 points including a perfect 4-4 from the foul line.
The White Falcons were led by Jason
Simpkins who became the third player
to score 20 or more points on the
Eagles. Simpkins netted nine field goals
and went 2-of-5 from the foul line.
Simpkins teammate Cadavid followed
up with 11 points, going 3-5 from the
line, and also 'hit two treys .
Karr revved his engine early, and put
the Eagles up 3-0 with a three-point
bomb at the 6:00 mark of the first
quater. Wahama soon answered, and
Simpkins teamed up with Roach to put
the Falcons up by one, 4-3.Jason Kimes
. tied the game up at 4-all when he hit
the second of two free throws with 2:00
remaining in the first. Karr hit the accelerator and scored on three straight trips
giving the Eagles a six-point lead at the
end of the first quarter, 12-6.
Cody Dill dropped in a hook shot to
open up the second frame, and from
then on, it was all Eastern. Eastern
jumped into i!S famous full-court pressure that so many teams dislike, including Wahama. The Eagle pressure forced
10 Wahama turnovers in the second
quarter. Meanwhile, the Eastern offensive juggernaut continued to sail downstream as Eastern went on a 10-0 run.
Wahima was forced to regroup arid
called a time-out with 4:00 remaining
in the half, trailing 26-1 1.
Eastern continued to sail through 20, JA P&amp;ISOI'IS ~ 0·0 8, S. Roach 1 O.Q 2. TOTALS 18
4e.
calni waters. while the White Falcons' 8·21
EASTERN - Jason Kimes 1 1_. 4, Garratt Kerr 7 7-7
met with raging tempests. At the half', 23, Chris Lyona 3 O.Q 7, Nathan Grubb 5 4·4 14, Bra&lt;l
Brannon 1 2·4 4, Andy Hysell 0 2·2 2, Brent Buckley 0 2·
Wahama trailed 41 -22.
2 2, Travis WIIHOn:l 1 1).() 2, Brandon WOrry 0 3-4 3,
Eastern called off the press in the · Auslin Cross 0 1·2 1, Cody DIU 4 1·2 9. Totals 22 23-29
71 .
third, though they still scored 20 third- Three·polnt
Goal;"J - Eastem4 (Karr 2, Lyons, Kimes)
quarter points. Wahama fa~red slightly Wahama 2 (Cadavid 2).
Rebounds - Eastern 32(Karr 5); Wahama 2B(Bamitz 6,
better, slowing down the game and run- Simpkins 5).
. ning their offense. Parsons, Rickard, and Steals- Eastern 14(Grubb 4); Wahama 4 (Parsons 2)
A$SiSts- Eastern 12(Brannon 3, Grubb 3, Kimes 3);
Simpkins combined to roll out a 12- Wahama 11 (Barnitz 2, Lambert 2).
Turnovers - E8stem 15; Wahama 32.
point third quarter for the Falcons.

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service•
35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equllnt 12
12% Sweet Horseleed ................ $5.00/50
s-tstuff
12% Sweet Horn feed ................ $4.40150
Huntera Pride 21% doglood .........$8.95150
Ec0110m~ Beel12% IIOCk l..d..... $8.75/50
TraC. Mineral Blockl .................... $4.751100

PHILIJP
ALDER

Commercial
fl

Relldeatlal

Call
740-992-3470

Pomeroy Eagles ·
81060 2171
Euery Thursday
6 Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

farly blnls start
6:30
Progresslue top Une
Thursdays

Progresslue
Couerall on Sundcl~

41 Crue
42 Food

1 Protrude

4 Rtv.

29870 Buhan Road

Racine, Ohio

...,..,.

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YOUNG'S

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740-t4~2217

... ..... ...
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• FREE INSTALLATION
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• 50 YEAR WARRANTY

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· 97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(lO'xtO' 6 10'x20')

(740) 992-3194

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1-800-291-5600
.
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992·4119

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1·12 DOUILE WAll
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FIRSTCOMl,
FIRST SERVED
'$200.00 PER JOINT

l~cAvse :t
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(740) 992-0739

MY IAGIC

REGUURlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

'

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

Ill Bini Willi
$31 Truclllllll
$100 Da.._ Tncll

"'THE BORN LOSER
~

11401 992-3049

HElLO!

. '"you f&gt;.f.E. T~

•

Wtf&gt;.¥.Ci\ Llf'Uo("..

11111 '""'· "

.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R . Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401 KRoll overs;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room AddiHons,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
1: More

If your

unbecoming to
you, You should
coming to us.

FREE ESTIMATESI
740-742-3411

740-~2-7036

,..

loiERE COMES THE
5CioiOOL BUS NOW ..

,,,,

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio
10AM-4PM Mon·Sat .

can relieve a debtor of financial obligations and
arrange a fair distribution of assets among
creditors;A person going through bankruptcy
may retain cenain propeny, known as
"etempt'' property, for his or her jlersonal use.
This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods. You should direci any
questions rcaanling bankruptcy to an attorney
before proceedlns. For lnformalion regarding
Banbuptcy contact:
WWiam Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025
Athe01

OF CARRV-ON, AAD FIVE OTHER
PIECES HERE WIIIC~ I'LL eE

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(740) 992-5908

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CONtRACTORS, INC."

BISSfll

Racine, Ohio 45771
740-985-3948

BUILDERS lOt

i:;.;

Free Estimo1cs •
Serving Ohio and

W.V.

wv #()31712

1/®'R~
High 8J. Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hillllld RJ.
Pomtroy, Ohio .

. 740-992-5232

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COMijEICIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES
740·992·7599

I' I

I MONDAY

I

I

16

hc.arts. This can be

beaten if the ilefendCrs are · passive. For
cxampll', alter a spade
lead to the jack and
ace, West exits with
either a trump or
spaue. Howcwr, the
contract w;~s allowed
to succeed, so Wold's

JANUARY 141

L

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Home tmprovemeau

Siding • Remodeling
Pon:hu • DecluJ

~

Add·on'R • Roofinl

Quality Work
FREE ESTIMATES
Bill Dot,fer

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise

''

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for
s25 per month

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Advertise your busin~ss on this page for
Jeff Warner Ins.
one month ,fQr as low as $25
992~54?'9
Phone 992·21 SS

Tuesday. jan. IS. 2002
Mcqt:rlly you :llrt':tdy ,ha\'C
drawn the hluqlriuts.•1111..1 in
the yc:1r al1l' .1tl ynt~'ll h:1vc tht•
t:tHrr:r..:c to put tla•m to wor.k.
Your SC"l'rl't :unhitinn will
spring intn .u.:tiun with cvcl)'botly sumlin~ in :1\Vl' .
.
CAI'IltCORN (I &gt;•L 22j;m. 11)) -· Sm:1ll ,;.Kk :t~~..·s em
t•o main the l:ngt•st n:wanl~ tu~by, .~o be tmrcurka·d and
unprejuLlil:cJ as tu how you

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below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

____· --1~=------...,..

1'.0. Box 175M, Mumy Hill
St.llion, New York, NY
1015(.,

.

deve loo from slep No.

gain points.

m:tkcr, L"lu this m•w spap1:r,

.·

you

Complete the chuckle quoted

by filling in the missing words

"Things really have gotten crazy" an old timer mused .
"People think competing is too risky. They want somegood decisions didn't ' one else to take the chances and then SUE: HIM !"

view things. A piJ't'lim· you
dithr't know rxiuc.'li n1uld he
uuc::overcc.l. Tryin~-t w patt.:h ,
liP a hrukcn rornauJ.:c.•? The.•
1\lltro-Gr.rph MiliCh milker can
hl.'ip yuu umlc.•rst.ual what to
dn to 11111kc the.• rcl:rtiuruhip
wurk. Mail S2.75 to Matdl -

•

O

Legume- Dress- Ghoul- Knight- SUE HIM

.,;,

I know why my hometown is so

~ . ~~~~0~~~~~~~es~~~~rdJ~~ ~~~~~

II

4

At the other table, r---:--:--:--:--:---, cold air and our Capitol from the
North Wa&lt; in four r.::.-_,,-N 0 c I R I
,.south sends up all the--- - - -!"

Case o Remington o Buck • Schrade
Guitars • Some Furniture o Crafts
Now Available· Tiger Sharp Knives ·

and Drives • Stencil
Crete

P XYR J

'E

~:~~k brought out the

'(ES. SIR .. I IIAVE TWO PIECES

l~t---...,

!\larks Porket Knins
&amp; ( 'olledihks

Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks

TO&lt;Isy's cJue: H equals G

spade. Wold claimed ~======·~·
the n•mainucr for au "
overtrick when his ,.
D 0 I T I I:;:

~ PEANUTS

CHECKING 'fi.IROU6H ...

• Footers, Walls, Steps •

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, pa11 8ncl preaant. Each leHer In the cipher atandr for another.

I

HfRBftllfE
IDDEPEDDEDT
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t

LYRK
PRDYPROO
OYRHtY
West led the club
Z Y Y B J
PEGO
four, 'won with deASWYX)
darer's 10. ·Wold
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He triumphed, because on !heir linal
cashed two hc.trts
album hla aonga were the highlight." - George H'rrison
ending
in · the
biographer Alan Clayson
.
dummy, th&lt;'ll ran the
club nine to Wt•st's
WORD
T::~:~~y scrrtt~
~ ~"NSs GAM I
jack. As he was out of
ldltod ~y CLAY R. POLLAN
ht'arts; whichever suit
Rearrange leners of tl"re
West led now would
four JCrambled words begive South his ninth tow to form four simple words.
trick. West tried the
diam on d kin g. Wold r-nF-iAr-T,..:S_,.Y..,..::E~-ll.·
won with dummy'·s
12
ace and played a sec. .
.
.
Qnd diamond. Ea·st
went . in with the . . 0 · U T y H
qun·n and returned a
j'

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The final was "
one-sided affair, with
Gabriel Chilgas-Di&lt;·go
Urenner· (Urazil),
Geoff Hilmpson-Et!dic Wold and Mi.chad Passdl-Michad
Seamon (U.S.) win ning 120-4CJ.
In this deal from
the fmal, Wold's twosp:ulc cue-bid announced a maximum
j&gt;ilSS with at leilst
thrre-c:ml heart support. Thc11, wh1·n his
partner showed JiamouJ vah'•cs, Wold
put the contra't into
the unbcat:lblc three
no-tmmp .

JONES'

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r.:'!'ldn

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I'LSCES (Fch . 2lt-Mardo 211)
-- Ymr'll h e ;1b\c.• tt) sin• lll'
crilical ~inwiom \\'it h n.• m.ukabl~ lll'n)r:Ky tud.ly Whl'll no

~.

one i&lt;&gt; luukir1g. hut! a ~t·at 111
till' h ou : k~rtHrntl ;md wardr rhe
p;~r.1dl' ltlllillcl .
AlliES (Ma1do 21 -Apnl 1'1)
-- Ah cnratc ruh:s tmlay with ·

you and your fril'mls -ptty t~:u.:hL·r

lir~t

then pl.ly mtckm . You'll hL· :H tluctl ;u

what will

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in pru-

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TAURUS (April 2&lt;&gt;-M'Y
20) -- ~cVl'ml lruitjUt' opimrtunitie~ may prcsl'tl r thcmu~lvc~ t(ld.ly th ilt wuld further
your VNrk or t':\rccr . Yl1lr
lll:\ke ~orne fmwnrd-lo,,k in~ rcfelrm~. how-

migln ha ve to
t.·v~r.

GEMINI (May 21-Jun, 211)
from somr:oru: yo u
havcu ' t ~l·~u in tJllltc sume
thnc mi~ht ~·ome :t~ a Sll'llfi~c
to,by, ·and t'&gt;nce you mm

.-- Hcoll'ill~

!4harin~

l'&lt;lt&lt;k

the news, you'll be
oltt timt'~ .

ffl

CANCER Qune 21 -July
22) -- Ucc;m~c of your inrmte
ahiliLy tu ~tll'iC wh.at ill l&gt;ehind
the thmrghtll of othL•r.;, you'll

be.• able.·

tl)

me thif;

k1mwled~C'

in produ ct ive and advauta ~cuu~

w!\ys .fur

cwrybudy'.~

hL·ncfit .

tEO Quly
y,,lr

C:olll

2~\-Au ~.

22) --

J.l:lrlll.'r an oppnrtu'-

nity lllCiay to win ~~'meont:
over who ha~ hL•t·n ur•n·arh, able thrmrg'lr Lmbia~cd drscmSio n o n a matt er of mutual
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.md

illll'TCH.

VlllGO (Au~. 2J -Scpt. 22)
-- If you're lo ukin~ fur \vays
to increase produnivity while
luwcrinp; .;tn..·s~ at wurk. tod;ty,
try braimtormin~ w it h yom
cu- workcn . Some r.1thcr su rpri ~i ng idt•as c.·mrld cmne out

uf it.
LIBRA (Sq&gt;1 . 23-0ct. 23)-

- Ull\r sua l t.:in: umstan' c~
might involvt• you wri:tlly 'to dory · with

~onrt•mw

yvu 11t!'Vt"r

l\HHtlotllt ymr'J llll't't. Stt rpr i ~­
in~ly. yon t:t, uld find you
h.lVC much Ill COUlfllOII.
SCOltl'lO (0". 24-Nuv.
22) -- AhhtHtgh it mi~h t r~­
l]lrin· the (~dl \1~~ nf your
imagination ~tnt rc~ourrcfu l­
nc5s, somclh in~ can be lin:~l~
iz~d

to your S&lt;rtisf:\ctiun tuday .

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SAC;LTTAIUUS (Ntw. 2J• Dl't:. 21) -- An umt~u.tl turnahtHlt co u ld on:u·r toJ.1y .
Somt•nnc ynu tho1r~lrt you

wac ~m11~ l\J hdp t·nd~ 11)'
h,t• rn g )'tlltr lll'-'lltur tnttcad .
~icr n s of wi~du nr r:1 11 Cll llll'
fwnr thl· r 1H 1~r ttnlik,·ly pl.Kt'' ·

.,'

�•

?

•••

Page 10

The Daily Sentinel

Packers pUt away Ravens ·movin' on to

OWens, San Fran ·

'I

I

.I

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - Just when Terrell Owens was
about to break the Packers' hearts with late heroics again, Mike
McKenzie did what Green Bay coukln't three yean ago.
With the Packers clinging to an 18-15 lead with just under
five minutes left .Sunday, Owens got behind McKenzie and was
wide open down the right sideline for the go-ahead score.
But Jeff Garcia's pass hung ever so slighdy and McKenzie
clo~ed in to punch the ball away and right into the hands offellow cornerback Tyrone Williams at the Green Bay 7.
Brett Favre then, engineered an eight-play, 93-yard touchdown drive that sealed Green Bay's 25-15 wild-card victory
and secured a trip to St. Louis for the semifinals.
"I'm not going to sit here and say I tried to tap it to 'fYrone,"
McKenzie said. "But I definitely was able to get a good play on
the ball and I was able to kind of tap it up in the air."
Besides, the Packers (13-4) will take a lucky bounce after
what happened the last time these teams met in a playoff.
On Jan. 3, 1999, Owens caught a 25-yard touchdown pass in
the midst of four defenders with three se~onds left to give the
49ers a 30-27 wild-card victory over Green Bay.
The remarkable reception quickly became known as "The
Catch II," in San Francisco after the original, Dwight .Clark's
game-winner against Dallas in the 1982 NFC championship.
"That would have been like The Catch Ill," 49en coach
Steve Mariucci lamented. "McKenzie got his hand up at the
. end and the darn ball. bounced into their player's hands, and
that doesn't happen very often."
McKenzie acknowledged his fortune, from the lucky bounce
to the fortuitous manner in which Garcia floated the pass after
Owens beat him off the line of scrimmage.
·"He was so wide-open, so I believe Garcia said, 'This is easy
pickings.' He didn't W.nt to overthrow him," McKenzie said.
McKenzie's play came two weeks after he sealed a victory
over Minnesota with an interception return for a touchdown,
which helped the Packers secure a home playoff game, where
they improved to 13-0.
This one meant mucn more. '
Owens, who led the league with 16 tbuchdown catches this
season, was held to four receptions for 40 yards and didn't get
into the end zone.
The Packers heeded their quarterback's call to open up the
passing game and they scored 19 points in the second half after
trailing 7-6 at halftime.
Favre, who improved to 31-0 at home when the temperature .
is 34 degrees or colder_ it was 28 at kickoff_ completed 16
.of 21 passes for 226 yards in the second half ~nd 22·of-29 for
269 yards overall.
He had five completions of 15 or more yards after halftime,
including a 51-yarder to Corey Bradford and a 19-yard touchdown to tight end Bubba Franks.
Ahman Green, who had 86 yards on 21 carries for 86 yards,
capped the Packers' 93-yard drive with a 9-yard ~ouchdown
run with 1:55 left.
After Shennan:s decision to go for a 2-point conversion that
failed with Green Bay ahead 15-7, the Niners tied it on Tai
Streets' 14-yard touchdown and his wide-open catch on the
two-point conversion with 12 minutes left.
Ryan Longwell, who had his first extra point blocked in the
first quarter, kicked a 45-yard field goal with 7:02 left for an
18-15lead.
The Packer.., who surrendered an average of 170 yards rushing the last four weeks _ all to non-playoff teams _ shored up,
their run defense with linebacker Nate Wayne (back) and nose
tackle Gilbert Brown (foot) returning to health.
:Brown set the tone on the first play from scrimmage when
he dumped Garcia for a 4-yard sack, his fim since 1997.
The 49ers ran for just 71 yards, and comeback player of the
year Garrison He:irst finished with just 42 yards on B carries.

MIAMI (AP) - Bruising defense, a
grinding ground game and one pivotal
pass put the Baltimore Ravens one victory closer to a possible return to the
Super Bowl.
·
Baltimore scored on touchdown
marches of 90 and 99 yards and allowed
only 151 yards to beat the Miami Dolphins 20-3 in a wild-card playoff game
Sunday.
The Ravens, who needed a win last
week over Minnesota to make the playoffS, advanced to a second-round game
Sunday at AFC Central champion Pittsburgh. Baltimore won at Pittsburgh 1310 on Nov. 4, but lost 26-21 at home to
the Steelen on Dec. 16.
It was a painfully familiar ending for
the Dolphins (11-6). They're the only
team to reach the playoffi each of the
past five years, but they've made an early
exit every time by a combined score of
164-16.
Miami still hasn't advanced to the
AFC championship game since the
1992 season or the Super Bowl since
the' 1984 season.
The Ravens played the sort of smothering defense that took them to the
NFL title last year. Miami's lone score
came after Baltimore fumbled the opening kickoff, and the Dolphins managed
just one first down in the opening 23
minutes.
The · defending champions also
showed surprising punch on offense,

Steel Town

OuCH- Dolphins' quartelback Jay
Fiedler Ia brou&amp;ht down by Rawos' Ray
Lewis (5:2) and Corey Harris (45) during
their AfC playoff game Sunday. (AP)
rushing for 226 yards and converting 10
of 16 third downs. Terry Allen carried
25 times for I 09 yards and a score, and
Jaso11 Brookins added 65 yards in I 0
attempts.
The Ravens went ahead to stay with a
17-play, 90-yard march that began midway through the first period and took
8:51.Allen scored on a 4-yard run, cap~
ping a drive that included seven first
downs, four on third down.
A bold call helped the Ravens put the
game away in the third period. N uning
a 7-3 lead and facing a third-and-1 at
the Baltimore 10-yard line, Elvis Grbac
fooled Miami by throwing deep to
Trav~ Taylor, who beat Patrick. Surtain
for a 45-yard gain.
Eight plays later, again on third down,
Taylor beat Surtain for a 4-yard touchdown catch. The two drives were the
longest of the season for the Ravens.
The Ravens' defense slipped this season from its 2000 level, but was still
ranked No. 2 in the NFL, and it was in
fine form against Miami. Baltimore
stuffed the Dolphins' feeble ground
game, blanketed their receivers, harried
Jay Fiedler and forced three turnovers.
Miami's Lamar Smith; who rushed for
158 yards last week against Buffalo, was

Malp Couraat(s

-(

limited to 6 on six carries. The Dolphins
·totaled 46 yards on the ground.
AFC sack leader Peter Boulware
sacked Fiedler and forced a fumble
that Sam Adams recovered. That led to
Matt Stover's 35-yard field goal to
make it 17-3. Stover added a 40yarder with 2:01 left. .
Miami's last gasp came with eight
minutes to go. Fiedler hit James McKnight in stride with a 40-yard pass to
the 3, but the ball bounced off the
receiver . and was intercepted by
Duane Starks.

Still recovering
in hospital
BY BRIAN

J. REED

Deaths

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioner Jeff
Thornton was reelected president of the Board of Commissioners during their organizational
meetil)g Monday
mormng.
Commissioner Mick Davenport was · reelected vice
president, and presided at the
meeting
in
Thornton's
absence.
Thornton, who was first
elected president of the board
in 2001, is hospitalized at St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va., following emergency . surgery earlier this
month.

David E. Napper Jr., 62
Henry ·G. Wells, 86
Details; 3

Details, A2

Investors

COUNTY EMS

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TRAIL with golf and

Cillll.800.949.4444 for airline

Fly Northwest to
Trail stops in

and golf packages. Visit the Trail .
web site at www.rygolf.com.

Huntsville,
KNOCKED AWAY- 49ers' Lance Schulters (30) breaks up a
pass intended for Green Bay Packers' receiver Antomlo Freeman Sunday. (AP)

.

NEW YORK (AP) Investors succumbed to
' worries about .earnings and
sold stocks sharply lower
Monday while they awaited
~rthcquarter results that
~egin in earnest this week.
The selloff resulted in the
Dow Jones industrials'
lPnge,'t losing streak since
September. ·
. · Investors, who don't anticJPate an earnings turnaround
until the second quarter, are
cxpectes:f to keep selling for
the remainder of January a5
slumping profits remind
them of the weak economy.
'The Dow closed Monday
~own 96.11, or nearly I percent, at 9,891.42.
The blue-chip index has
ij:Jst 368.32, or 3.6 percent in
six consecutive losing sestlons, a streak not seen since
September, when it fell for
three sessions before the
Sept. 11 attacks, and then
~other five sessions after~rd .
J .

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WASHINGTON (AP) - TWelve months ago, owner Dan
Snyder declared that the Washington Redskins . were "Marty
Schottenheirner's organization from the standpoint of the final

eight Trail sites. Experience 378

word."

affordable golf on earth.

holes of some of the best and most

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Flyer magazine listed the Trail

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c 2001 Ohio Vollr/ Publlshinl Co,

BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

"MIDDLEPORT- Linda Haley was appointed to Middleport Village Council during Monday's regular meeting.
Council members Roger Manley and Kathy Scott took
their oaths of office and new Clerk/Treasurer George Hoffman was welcomed aboard.
Haley fills the seat of Rae Gwiazdowsky, who chose not
to seek reelection in the November election. Manley was
reelected in November, while Scott was elected to her first
full term.
Gwiazdowsky was mentioned Monday . as a potential
nominee for her old seat on council, but was not nominated. Scqtt voted against Haley's appointment.
,
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli administered the oath of office to
Manley, Scott .and Haley, and to Councilman Stephen
Houchins, who was reelected president pro tempore of
council.
Council also appointed Bernard Gilkey and Tom Anderson to the Board of Public Affairs. Gilkey will continue
serving after choosing not to seek reelection last year, and
Anderson will replace Myron Duffield, who resigned his
posti.tion at year's end.
A measure introduced last month to dismantle the BPA
and replace it with a working village admi,;istrator will go
back to the drawing board, and is expected to be introduced
at council's next meeting.
Iannarelli, who along with Gwiazdwosky and Councilman Bob Pooler, opposed the measure, said last night
Councilman Bob Robinson had improperly introduced the
proposal, that it was not approved at committee level prior
to being introduced, had not been placed on the meeting's
agenda, and that the Dec. 26 at which the ordinance was
proposed had not been properly advertised as a "special
meeting."

EMSlRS CHECKUST- Chris Barnes, paramedic, left, and Brian Diehl , EMT, review their Emer·
gency Medical Services Incidence Reporting System (EM,SIRS) questionnaire. (Tony M. Leach)
'

EMS will ·ask for ·rn·ore
patient information
POMEROY - Effective
immediately, Meigs County
residents in 'need of emergency medical assistance will
be asked to give adclitional
information.
.
Gen,e Lyons, administrator
for the Meigs Emergency Service in Pomeroy, said EMS
penonnel will begin asking
·patients for additional information so that it can be submitted to the Emergency
Medical · Services Incidence
Reporting System (EMSlRS),
an extensive database of all
EMS runs that occur in Ohio.

The database is operated
and maintained by the Ohio
Department of Public Safety
Division of EMS for the Ohio
State Board , of Emergency
Medical Services.
In November 1992, Senate
Bill 98 became law modifying
the Ohio Revised Code
(ORC) to include a requirement that the EMS Board create an EMS incidence reporting system to collect information regarding the delivery of
EMS in Ohio and ·hqw frequently EMS is used.
According to Lyons, the collected data will be used to
provide statistical reporting of

EMS care in the state, ensure
EMS care for citizens of Ohio,
provide data for injury pre·
vention programs, allow for
better allocation of grant
money and provide guidance
for future funding needs.
"We want everyone to
know that our EMTs will be
asking these additional questions when
transporting
patients during an EMS incident," Lyons said.
An EMS incident, as defined
by the Ohio Administrative
Code, means any ground or
air response to a call for emergency · medical services by a

PluH ... IMS, :J

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern High School Principal
Rick Edwards and.Elementary Principal jody Howard were
awarded three-year contracts when the Eastern Local Board
of Education met in regular session.
The board also employed Janice Weber and Larry Heines
as teachers for the 2001-02 school year, with pay retroactive
to Aug. 20, 2001. Linda Faulk was approved as a fourthgrade intervention teacher and Joan Calaway as an aide for
student preparation for the fourth-grade proficiency test.
Melissa Wilfong, Maria Frecker, Matthew Aerni, Gregory
Jeffers and Kristen LaSor were approved as substitute teachers, pending certification.
Edwards and Mark Griffith were approved as chairman
and vice chairman, respectively, of the Interactive Video
District Learning. Consortium representatives for Eastern
Local. ·
Charles Daniel Crisp was approved as a substit\lte custodian.
The board approved the following volunteers: Gail
Eichinger, Marlene Kuhn and Darla Zuspan, Ohio READS;
Phebe Roberts, Mary Powell, Rosalie Johnson, Maxine
Whitehead and Joy Ben dey, RSVP; Danielle Spencer, Suzi
Milhoan and Josh Price, University of Rio Grande students.
The board approved posting for an additional special education teacher at Eastern Elementary.
The board's next regular meeting will be Feb. 20 at 6:30
p.m.
During its organizational meeting, the board elected John
Rice as president, J. Greg Bailey as vice president, Sheila
Taylor as Legislative Liaison and Bailey as student achievement liaison.
Bailey and Howard Caldwell were administered their
oath of office.
.
Regular meetings were set . for the third Wednesday at
6:30 p.m., at the district's administrative office.
Those present at the meeting included board members
John Rice, Greg Bailey, Hqward Caldwell, Rick Sanden and
Sheila Taylor, Clerk Lisa Ritchie and Superintendent Deryl
Well.

Therapy·Center
Physical Therapy • Occupational Therapy
Therapeutic Massage Therapy • Speech Therapy

by"'*'""" 30.

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'

'l

I
I

FROM STAFf REPORTS

of yours.

Rates will va.ry depending on point of departure, season, and hotel. Price lo per person, based on double occupancy at
pre-selected hotels. Does not Include taxes and surcharges. Some restrictions may apply. Subject to availability. May not
be available In ail areas. These adlnlrtlsed prices will Increase
after February 14, 2002:
I .

I'

Eastern Local Board
approves personnel

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

index
'.

Montgomery, and

Gilkey, Anderson appqinted
to BPA posts

......... eoun~LJ

BY TONY M. WCH

W.VA.
Dflly 3: 8-6-3
DeilY 4: 6-1·5·5

Ci•li
,. 25: 2·5-14-19·20·23.

Birmingham,

Davenport and Commis- estimated a deficit in sales tax
sioner Jim Sheets· set their reg- · revenue of $33,000 for the
ular meetings on Thursday at I , year, based on a "downward
p.m.
trend which began last year.
Gloria Kloes was reappoint- The 2001 closings of Pamida
ed to serve and Jerry Bibbee Ford, in paras
board ticular, are blamed for most of
clerk.
the shortfall.
Frank said that local merIn other
business,
chants' reports of a successful
Treasurer
holiday shopping ·season, comHoward
bined with auto dealers' "noFrank met · interest" incentive offers are
-the expected to provide for a betwith
commister February sales tax receipt,
sioners and
The commissioners also:
reported a
&amp; Approved appropriations
S7 ,850 shortfall in January in various special revenue line
sales tax collections compared items;
to 2001. The $100,000 cols Approved a contract with
lected in sales tax revenue this Teeter Financial Consulting
month represents November, on behalf of Auditor Nancy
2001 collections.
Parker Campbell.
s ·Recessed their meeting
The commissioners, in mak-.
ing their 2002 appropriations, until Thursday at 1 p.m.

SENTINF.L NEWS STAFF .

Hlp: 40s, Low£ lOs

'
TRENT jONES GoLF

I

·MIDDLEPORT COUNCIL

Scott take oaths

'

Now you can fly

Ho•.tawn Newspspar

Haley, Manley,

""

Snyder later decided that he'd given the coach too much power,
and last week asked for some of it back. Schottenheimer refused
and was fired Sunday night, setting the stage for Snyder to hire his
preferred choice all along: Steve Spurrier.
. Spurrier, who rejected Snyder's overtures before ·Schotten- ·
heimer was hired a year aga, has reached an "agreeJ:llent in principle" with the owner for a five-year ~on tract )"Orth about $25 million, a source with knowledge of the Redskins' negotiations 'said
on condition of anonymity.
.
Snyder met several times during the last week with Scholtenheimer, including twice Sunday. in an attempt to get the coach to
renegotiate a clause in his contract that gave him the ultimate
authority over player-related matter.&gt;.That clause was highly touted by Snyder when he gave Schottenheimer the tide of director
of football operations, but debatable personnel moves made the
owner decide that he'd swung too tar from hands-on to hands-off.
"Coach Schottenheimer gave I 00 percent of his efforts to the
Redskins and. made positive contributions to the team," Snyder
said. "Our decision was a difficult one and was based on philosophical and management issues, not on coaching ability.':

•
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)Nhafs inside

Northwest Airlines Takes You To\\brld-Ciass Golf ·

·

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Marty out, Spurrier in

Tomadoes topple No. 15 .Buckeyes 6D-59. 5

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04

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'

•

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