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I

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlckllepoc;t. Ohio

nme
to
move
on,
my
son-in-law,
AS
r

TUesda~Jen.15,2002

•
'

Syracuse holds off Irish; WKU.still winning Duke back on top
.

'

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - Pmton
Shumpert w:u a nlarked inan even before
the seawn beg:m. So far, he's shrugged off
the extra attention.
Leading eighth-ranked Syracuse in
scoring with a 22-point average,
Shumpert managed
only 15 on Monday
·
night against Notre
Dame. Unfortunately
for the Irish, seven came during a 13-1
second-half run that led the Orangemen
to a 56-51 victory.
"Corning into this year, I didn't think
it was going to be as tough as it's been so
far," said Shumpert, who was 1-for-7 in
the first half. "But I've been working
hard at practice, doing extra conditioning, so I've been able to take it. I've shot
the ball pretty poorly on some days, but
I've stuck with it. In the second half, we
caine alive and I found some opportuni-

NCAA

ties."
Shumpert took charge after Ryan
Humphrey hit consecutive baskets inside
to close the Irish to 39-38 with 12:04 to
go. Shumpert converted a layup off an
inbounds pass from Kueth Duany, hit a 3
off a steal by James Thues and made a
tough shot in the lane for a 48-39 lead at
8:35.
" Even though they're playing that
tough on defense, trying to single me out
every single play down the floor, that's
ju~t something I need to do for my teamm,ates," said Shumpert,_ who also had
seven rebounds and two steals. "I found
some gaps and took advantage of some
opportunities." .
buany led the Orangemen with 19
points, Shumpert finished with 15, and
QeShaun Williams had 10 points and
11ine assists.
It was the -seventh straight win for the
Orangemen (16-2), who lead the Big
E:!st West at 5-0. Notre Dame (12-4, 22); which rallied to win its previous two
!ia.mes on 'the road, couldn't pull off
another comeback inside the raucous
Carrier Dome.
. Humphrey, who missed his first five
·shots, kept the Irish in the game with 28
points and 11 rebounds, but they never
got their 3-point attack going against the
tough Syracuse zone. Notre Dame
entered the game hitting 40.6 percent
and finished just 5-for-24 (20.8 percent),
with its trio of David Graves, Chris
,thomas and Matt Carroll taking every
3-point shot.
Graves, 2-for-1 0 from 3-point range,
finished with six points, Thoma! had
eight and Carroll, who missed three 3s in
the final seconds, scored five. Together,

DIVEIDIVEIDIVEI - " Notre Dame's Chris Thomas, right, chases a loose ball .
against Syracuse's Kueth Duany (13) during the first half In Syracuse Monday. (AP)
they were averaging more than 43 tucky.
The lead changed hands five times in
points.
the first eight minutes before Western
. Western Kentucky 83,
Kentucky went on
13-0 run. Mike.
New Mex St. 67
Wells' 3-pointer from the corner finished
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP)
the burst and gave the Hilltoppers a 25New Mexico State's modest winning 13lead with 10:35 left in the first half.
streak was no match for Western KenWestern Kentucky extended a 36-23
tucky's homecourt edge and 3-point halftime lead to 18 in the first seven minshooters.
utes of the second half and were never
Filip Videnov scored a career-high 19 threatened the rest of the way. The Aggie,s
points and Western Kentucky shot 53 never got closer than 11 points in the
percent in an 83-67 win over New Mex- second half.
iao State on Sunday.
The Hilltoppers hit 20-of-35 shots in
Todor Pandov scored 15, Patrick the second half (57 percent) and finished
Sparks had 1 I and David Boyden scored 1 I -of-20 from 3-point range (55 pert 0 for the Hilltoppers (14-3, 4-1 Sun cent). The Hill toppers went into the
Belt), who have won 16 straight at Did- game leading the NCAA in 3-point
die Arena.
shots made. ·
Brandon Mason scored I 7 and James
"I've never coached against a ·team that
Moore and Dennis Trammell scored 14 . has six guys capable of shooting the
each for New Mexico ·State (10-7, 4-2). three-point shot," Henson said. "They
The loss snapped the Aggies' three-game are the best three-point shooting team
winning streak.
I've ever seen. We couldn't get out and
':This is a very skilled ballclu\&gt;. They defend it."
remind me a lot of Gonzaga," NMSU
New Mexico State hit 7 · 3-pointers,
coach Lou Henson said ofWestern Ken- including 6 of 11 3s in the second half.

a.

ev THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Duke returned to No. 1 in
The Associated Press coUege
basketball poll Monday, while
four schools moved into the
Top 25 after a week in which
ranked teams lost 17 games.
The Blue Devils (14-1) had
been on top of the poll all season, including five straight
weeks as a unanimous choice,
un,til the loss at Florida State
dropped them one spot;
Kansas took over at No. 1,
but the Jayhawks (13-2) were
there just one week. They lost
87-77 at UCLA on Saturday
to snap a 13-game winning
. streak and dropped to fourth.
Florida (14-1) and Maryland (13-2) each moved up
one place to second and third.
Duke, which plays host to
Maryland on Thursday night,
received 50 first-place votes
and 1,77 6 points from the
national media p·anel. The
Gators, who have won 13
straight games, were No.1 on
21 ballots and had 1,744
oints.
P
Maryland, with one, was the
.
nl
o y other team to rece1ve a
first-place vote.
·.
.
" Four teams joined the Top
25 this week: Southern California and Indiana had been
ranked before 'this season,·
Georgia and Oregon are both
in. for the first time.
Oklahoma and Oklahoma
State held fifth and sixth ·and
were followed in the Top Ten
by Cincinnati, Syracuse,
UCLA and Virginia.
Illinois dropped two spots to
No. · 11 and was followed by
Kentucky, Gonzaga, Wake
Forest, Arizona, Alabama,
Iowa, Southern California,
Stanford and Georgia.
~~---•

AGE.

IS A t\KiH

PliCt 1t) ?AY...

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22. Booton Col.

13·3

=·

15-2
11-5

265
226

23.

ar_.

24. Miami
25. Indiana

12-4

287

Deaths
John Jeffers, 66
Ella Osborne, 83
Details, A3

Hlfh:401,L~:JOs

Details, A2

. Dome 49, ~neetk:ut 41, - n g Groen
37. MarqueHe 32, MIIIIDippl 30. Hawaii ·
23. TeiCio Tech 16, Mlllllllppl St. 15, w.
Kenlueky 15, N.C. Slate 14, GW!getown
11, Arl&lt;lnoas s, uc Irvine 5, Wyoming 5,
BYU 4, Utah 4, Calllornla 2, Saint
Josaph'a2.

·Multi-state·

lottery draws
opposition

CLYDe. r S"VIE _ _ _ _...._

E§.: J-=3

POMEROY- A slip at the
building site behind the Meigs
County
Dimict
Public
Library in Pomeroy and
· Craw's Family Restaurant has
delayed work on the library's
new addition.
Library Director Kristi
Eblin said an engineer with
Burgess ,and Niple, the library
board's architect and engineering firm, has visited the
construction site and will
report to the board later this
week on ·the condition of the
site, and when construction
can resume.
The · board began construction on the Charles Blakeslee
addition late last year. When
completed, the new space will
house additional reading areas,
a children's area, ro.o m for
stacks and computer laboratory, and will make additional
space available in the existing

.

wltllout ~tleture
(Actual size 1 col)( Z')
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only

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' 1 S4JdloM - 12 Pllps

'Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Oear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

A6
82-4

85
AS
A4
A3
A3

.Sports .

81, 3, 4, 6

.Weather

· A3

c 2001 Ohi~ Valley Publlthina Co.

quiet for the time being, until engineers can assess dcimage
caused by a hillside slip behind the Meigs County Public
Library In Pomeroy, where a new addition Is l&gt;elng constructed.
' (Brian J. Reed)
· '
library for offices and other are also planned.
The renovations are being
facilities.
funded
through the library's
Basement-level ·conference
rooms, an enclosed play area building fund.
and an expanded parking lot
PIHH IH Llbrarj, AS

,.

Please..- RHine. AJ

New retraining
.program on tap
State funds for non-miners
qffected by SOCCO closing
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF.
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

POMEROY Gallia-Meigs Communiry Action
Agency and Tri-County Community Action Agency of
Athens, Hqcking and Perry counties have received an ancillary grant of $1 .1 million to retrain those affected by the
closing of the Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Mines.
The· agencies will collaborate with the Gallia County
Department of Job and Family Services in administering
the program.
Trish McCullough, dire ctor of Gallia-Meigs CAA, said
Wednesday the funds will be used to provide jQb .retraining
for workers whose jobs will be eliminated or companies
downsized as a result of the mine closing.
The two Community Action agencies have already
received. about $6 million in funds for retraining of ,;,ine
employees and payment of their needs~related living
expenses while training is underway.
·
The latest ancillary grant will serve those working for
mine suppliers and other businesses aflected by the gradual ·
closing of the two SOCCO mines in Meigs County.
CONSOL Energy Inc., the mines' owner s\nce July 2001, .
announced last momh that the mines will cease operation
in February.
Based on a Penn State University study, the agenciesanticipate that as many as 11 people could lose their jobs for
every coal miner who loses his as the result of the mines'
closing.
Miners were fir tt offered on-site training in "Uniied

Please see Mlnen, AJ

Community Health
and Ytellness Deparlanent .
~-'

uDed;cated 1o Promoting Wei/ness for lhe Entire Famify"

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Message:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

L=Jr more information about co~munity screenings
and!events, please call Bonnie McFa~and, RN, BSN at

Phone: _ _- _ _ _...,..,..,ddress: _ _ _ _ _ _,.-_ _ _ _ _ _ __

!

City, State, Z i p : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - .t

boys - is showy, proficient
and a credit to the community. Add red, white and blue
costumes and the whole
troupe makes the audience see
"Old Glory" marching to victory.
And keeping everything
light and a little on the zany ·
side will be th e Series' newlynamed niistress of ceremonies
Lynn Hopkins, whose showbiz side calls for apologies-aplenty at Paul Davies Jewelers
of Gallipolis, where she works.
Tickets are $10 in advance
and $12 at the door. Tickets
are avai lable at Dixon Tax,
Montgomery's Barber Shop,
Oak Hill Banks, Tawney's and
The Purple Turtle.
Doors open at 6 p.m. For
details, call th e Ariel at 446- ·
ARTS (2787) .

RACINE - Racine Village Council has scheduled a
town meeting for Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Southern High
School cafeteria to discuss the village 's water storage and
treatment facilities project.
An'!ouncement of the public me~rig was made by
Mayor J. Scott Hill at a recent meetiQg of council following a discussion on the funding application for an Ohio
Qepartment of Development grant filed with the Meigs
(;ounty Comn1issioners.
Richard Samson of Sieco Engineering who is handling
the planning phase mN with council to discuss 'the project.
A review of his work and the importance of the improvement were ·discussed as well as an anticipated ·increase in
water rates.
The grant, if awarded, will help fund water tank and
treatment facility improvements as well as the purchase of
a new fire truck.
Councilman Bob Beegle said in regard to the public
meeting, he said, "We encourage everyone to attend this
meeting because no matter what stance you take on the
issue, the more people present at the meeting, the more
points we get to credit the grant application."
At the recent council meeting, Mayor Hill administered
the oaths of office to incumbent council members Beegle
and Joe Evans, as well as newcomers Henry Bentz,Jr., and
Charlotte Wamsley. Bentz and Wamsley was elected, and
Beegle and Evans, re- elected, during last NovemberUs
general election.
,
It was noted by Hill , that, acco rding to law, since no one
ran for the office of mayor, he will stay at .the position until
a successor is elected and qualified.
Council also confirmed the following appointments:
John Holman, street commissioner; Douglas Little, village
solicitor; David Neigler, fire chief. .
Following the confirmation of appointments, council
adopted the annual appropriation ordinance as a temporary
measure because the village did not have the certificate
'fr0n1 ilie Meigs Col1hty Budg~t Commission. Mayor Hill

The Holzer Medical Center-

111 Court St.iPomero~Oit 45769
\'\1 \In

WORK DELAYED - Bulldozers and other heavy equipment are

FROM ·STAFF REPORTS
\IJ!uegrass series that began at
· GALLIPOLIS - Bluegrass lfbe Ariel in November, 2001music returns to the .Ariel ' d is at the mid~ay point of
Theatre Saturday. Jan. 19 with ·
season, which concludes in
area bands "Idletymes" and
ril.
"Retrograss"
performing
on't expect Todd Sams,
along with the Ariel Theatre
vin . LePort and Ke.nt and
Cloggers.
vin Jolley the ' Jolley
Showtime is 7 p.m.
thers" as LePort often calls
"ldletymes," formed 16· em - to be anything like
ir "ldletymes" counteryearsago, is a virtual old"timer
in the come and go world of
~s.
bands.
.
either .suave nor smooth,
Perfo~ming their own style
trograss" wriggles thrpugh ·
of Bluegrass and Blue . Grass t ' repertoire, often leaving
Gospel, "Idlctymes" members o member or another in the
Danny · Boencutter, Markel dl$: as to what's next.
'
Fertig, Chris Long, Roy
~tween bands look for the
Mayes and Don Titus display Af!el Theatre Cloggers to add
rich harmonies and versatile a big dash of sparkle.
Under the direction of
musicianship, whether playing
original numbers or tradition- Paulette Harrison, the precia! favorites.
sian octet from Pomeroy "Retrograss" is the host of a which includes two teenage

Go Team C/o The Daily Sentinel
\\ H l '\I S I&gt; \

TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
TLEACH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ARTS &amp; ENTERTAINMENT

------------------------·
· Please fill out and return with your payment to:
~: 00

BY

. COLUMBUS (AP)
Anti-lottery
opponents,
s\ling to prevent Ohio from
j9il)ing a multistate lottery;
s~id they also plan a $50,000
to $100,000 ad campaign
this year to eliminate all
. state:jponsor:ed. gambling, .
: The Roundtable, sup~
ported by contributions .
from individuals and businesses, helped defeat ballot
~sues in 1990 and 1996 that
\.vould have brought casino
~mbling to the state.
The group ·intends the ad
campaign, on radio and
cable TV, as the first step
~ver the next several years
to persuade lawmakers to
stop funding state government with a lottery.
Church groups and anti- .
gambli!)g activists sued
Tuesday over the state's
TO PERFORM SATURDAY - Tile Ariel Cloggers from Pomeroy will perform Saturday night dur·
decision to join a multistate
· lng a llluegrass concert at the Ariel Theatre In Gallipolis . Also scheduled to appear are bands
lottery to help erase a $1.5
ldletymes and Retrogress. (Contributed photo)
, .l:rillion budget deficit.

OHIO
.
Pick :S: 2-8·9
Pick 4: 4-3-Q-3
Buckeye 5:5-1-3-13-24-30
Pick 3 day: 6-5-1
.
,Pick 4 AY: 1-1-1-4
.
W.VA.
Dally J.: .3-8-Q
Dally 4: Q-9-9·6
Cash 15: 1·4-10-17-2D-21

Your Me••.age. ·

JHo \I&gt; 1.1 '\I :

Meeting planned
to discuss ¥illage
water issues

BY BRIAN J. REED

. Plttsb!Jrah 123, Toxas 92, Butler 63, NOire

(740) 11112-3381

RACINE COUNCIL

.

SENTINEl NEWS STAFF
6REEbc&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

' Oihora .-vtng vota: Ohio at 151,

1lllilot ...ond at • Pomot 01'

LIBRARY
. CONSTflUaiON

Bluegrass back at the Ariel

,.

~or

What's inside

21

Work SMARTER, not
HARDER! .
Get ALL YOUR
INSURANCE from ...

Hometown News,.per

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17
18

361

Volleyball, Basketball, Football, Wrestling,
Cheerleaders, Band Members, or any other winter
sport with a special ad In the Tuesday, January
29th Edlt1o11 of th~ Daily Sentinel.

.

.

p-·

Show Your Appreciation To
Your Favorite Team Member!

'

Melp County"s

The top 25 teams In .The Asooclat.d
men'• COIIegt balk- 11 poll, wttn
firat·plaot w»et In paron- recoodo
lhrou~ Jan. 13, Iota! polntl booed on 25
polntl lor a lltll'!&gt;loca vote through one
point lor a 25th-place vote and prevlooa
ranking:
ROCOfd Pta
Pv
1. OUI&lt;e(50)
14-1
1,771! 2
2. ~(2t)
14·1
1,741 3
3. Maryland (1) 13-2
1,596 4
4. Kenou
1:1-2
1 ,530 1
5. OtclahOma
1:1-1
1,15011 s
e. OldahOma s1. 1s-1 1,457 e
7. Clncinnlltl
15-1
1,363 10
e. Syraou•
15-2
1.222 12
9. UCLA
12-3
1,174 11
10. Vl'lllnia
1().2
1,021 7
11. 1111no1o
13-4
11114
9
12. Kentucky
1Q..I
Ill
I
13. Gonzaga
.15·2
931
18
14 · Wake FOI'sot 13-3
838
19
15. Arizona
11_.
583
20
16. Alabama
' 14-3
541 · 14
17 · towa ·
• 13-5 ,
505 · · 13
18. SOUthom Cal. 13-2
492
19. Slanlora
9-4
441
14

\

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The last five ranked teams
were Missouri, Boston College, Oregon, Miami and
Indiana.
Michigan State (9-7), which
has lost four straight, fell out
from 25th, the first time the
Spartans haven't been ranked
since Jan. 25, 1998, a run of72
consecutive polls.
The other teams to fall out
- No. 22 Mississippi State,
No. 23 Pittsburgh and No. 24
Butler - had much shorter
5tays in the Top 25. Mississippi
State and Pittsburgh were
ranked for one week, Butler
for three. Butler hadn't been
in the poll since the 1948-49
season.

Downing Child• ln•u111nc. Agency

FOl MATUlrrY.

•

I.

. '.

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•
"

..

MEDICAL CENTER
•
Discover the Holzer Dijfer~nce
www .holzer.org
1

446·5679
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PageAl
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The Daily Sentinel

w.dne1d.,.....ury 11. 2102

Anti-smoking campaign funds in doubt

Ohio weather
Thursday, Jan. 17

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- - Ia't~1' J •

KY.

, Inc.

02002

__

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~

,.SufVIY

:'2&gt;-o.
~ .," .•.''. .• ~
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·;~ .... R·
pt. cooqy C~c:M.ctt
soo-r. r..k)nre Aaln
F~t~me~

•..

"

Light snow, rain in forecast
•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain showers after midnight. Lows in the mid 30s. Light southwest wind increasing
late this evening to I 0 to 20 mph and gusty. Ch.ance of rain 40
percent.
·
Thursday. .. Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain or snow showers
in the morning. Highs in the lower 40s. West wind 10 to 15
mph . Chance of precipitation 30 percent.
Thursday night... Mostly cloudy with a chance oflight snow
or rain. Lows 26 to 33.
Extended forecast:
Friday... A chance of light snow in the morning, otherwise
partly cloudy. Highs near 40.
Friday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of light snow. Highs
34 to 39.
Sunday... A chance of light snow during the day, otherwise
partly cloudy. Lows 25 to 30 and highs 34 to 39.
.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows 27 to 32 and highs 41 to 47.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s and highs in the
mid 50s.
'
·
·

Map would move
more Republicans
to Brown County
COLUMBUS (Aj&gt;)
Republican leaders in the Legislature would give Democratic U.S. Rep. Sherrod Brown
more of ilieir voters under a
congressional map expected to
be made. public Wednesday.
A draft of the map, obtained
Tuesday by The Associated
Press, showed that Brown's district would include eastern
Lorain County, the Republican-rich suburbs of Cleveland
in southern Cuyahoga County
and eastern Summit County,
including much of Akron.
Republican members of
Congress were shown drafts of
their districts Tuesday night,
but were told by state GOP
leaders that the districts might
be changed slightly, said U.S.
Rep. Dave Hobson, a Republican from Springfield.
The GOP-controlled Ohio
House and Senate, as well as
Republican Gov. Bob Taft,
niust sign off on the plan.
The map-drawers worked
late Tuesday to keep Summit
County from being represented by four members of Congress. Senate Minority Leader
Leigh Herington, whose district includes part of Sumrriit
County, said having that many
representatives in one county
was unacceptable.
The map protects most
incumbents. One 11th-hour
. change pushed Democratic
Rep. Marcy Kaptur's Toledoarea district to the east to
include an area along Lake Erie
to the Erie-Lorain 'county line,
. , but it will still include Toledo.
Democratic Rep.James Traf: . · icant's Young:&gt;town-area district
· would be split up among
Republican Reps. Steven
LaTourette and Robert Ney
and Democratic Rep. Tom
Sawyer. Ted Strickland, whose ·
southern Ohio district would
wind along the Ohio River,
would also add southern
Mahoning County, including
Traficant's hometown . of
Poland.
•
Rep. Tony Hall's Daytonarea district would become
more Republican by pushing
toward th; ..southwest to

- -......

_.....,_

..

include northern Warren
County, and Highland and
Clinton counties, all formerly
in Strickland's district.
Republican Rep. Paul Gillmar would pick up GOPleaning Fulton County in
northwest Ohio.
Democrats were debating
whether to provide the votes
that majority . Republicans
need to pass me bill as an
emergency and avoid moving
the congressional primary past
the May 7 primary for state
and local offices. Democratic leaders said a final decision
would be made Wednesday
after they had seen the final
verst'on of the n1ap.
(
The GOP holds a 59~40
majority in the House and a
21-12 edge in the Senate.
H
owever, a two-thirds majori "ty is needed in each chamber
_ 66 votes in the House and
22 in the Senate- to enact an
emergency clause.
Herington, a Ravenna
Democrat, said the iSfan that
includes Brown, S;twyer and
LaTourette all representing
parts oiSummit County might
give Democrats the best deal.
"If they. give us what we
tbink is the best map that can
be p~t together, we'll give
them our vote. We'll hold our
rose and we'll do it and we'll
have a May. 7 primary," Herington said.
Republicans in Congress
and the Legislature lobbied
Senate President Richard
Finan and House Speaker
Larry Householder for more
GOP territory. However, the
leaders said it was impossible to
satisfY each member.
"I think we have done the
best we can do for Republican
congresspersons in this state.
This is a very competitive state,
politically, between Republicans and Democrats," said
Finan, a .Cincinnati Republi- .
can.
Householder said many
Republicans didn't understand
the difficulty beating .in cumbents of either party in congressional elections.

- ----·· -...--·.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The state
could lose nearly $30 million in federal grant money aimed at discouraging
young smokers because too many
retailers are selling tobacco to minors.
Inspections of ·tobacco retailers in
Ohio show that for the first time since
1998 sales to minors are above the federal compliance level. About 23 percent'
of retailers sold tobacco to minors during inspections that ended Sept. 30.
That could endanger 40 percent of
Ohio'• $71.5 million grant.
"It would be extremely harsh," said
Stacey Frohnapfel, spokeswoman for
the Department of Akohol and Drug
Addiction Services. "The majority of
that money is going into treatment of
alcoholism and addicts and prevention
of youth smoking."
The state might be able to avoid fines
and still get the federal grant if more
money is spent on enforcement programs, said Mark Weber, spokesman for
the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration .
A national report released Tuesday

1\vo bodies
found in home
DELAWARE (AP) -

A

man and woman were shot to

death Tuesday night at a home
in Genoa Township, north of
Colmnbus in Delaware County. Police arriving at the scene
were met by the woman's husband, who had called 911.
Delaware County Sheriff AI
Myers identified the dead
woman, found in· the living
room of the home where she
lived, as Jill Hand, 58.
The dead man was not identified immediately. His body
was found in the driveway, shot
·several times, Myers said.
The husband, Gerald. Hand,
Wa5 not shot but was taken to
Mount Carmel St. Ann's Hospital in Westerville for treatmei\t for shock. Hospital officials wouldn't release information about him.

·shows Ohio dropped more than any
other state - from eighth to 31st- in
commitment to spend tobacco settlemeht money on smoking prevention
programs.
Ohio's fall was attributed to the General Assembly's move last year to use
the next two years of !abacco settlement money to fill holes in the state's
budget.
''Last year, we gave Ohio credit for its
strategy. But they are playing around
with their long-term plan," said Peter
~isher, an assistant director at the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.
State Sen. Doug White, a southwest
Ohio Republican and tobacco farmer
who chairs a tobacco oversight commim~e . said using $240 million in settleme11t money for the budget 'shortfalls didn't hurt the state's rating. ·
"That had zero impact in my opinion," White said.
.
The majority of states have committed less than half the amount for prevention programs urged by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention,

with organized crime in the
Youngstown area, said Akron
Police Maj . Paul Callahan ,
who led the inve•tigation.
Batcho pleaded guilty to
shooting and wounding then
prosecu tor-elect Paul Gains in
1996 to try to keep him fro1n
taking office.

Events han·
founding of 4-H

CONOVER (AP) - Albert
Graham started an agriculture
club in the basement of the
Clark County Courthouse a
century ago,' hoping to teach
youngsters a few thing:&gt;:
He never imagined the first
meeting on Jan. 15, 1902
would be the start of something big - the 47H movement.
"I think he'd be surprised at
·how much it's grown and
spread out," said grands~n Jim
Graham.
. Events celebrating the tOOyear anniversary are being held
this month. at the Graham
memorial center in the Miami
AKRON (AP) -The state County village of Conover, at
will settle a lawsuit filed by Graham High School and in
inmates who say their con- Springfield and Columbus.
finement is inhumane at
Ohio's only super-maximum
security prison.
The lawsuit accused prison
officials of failing . to provide
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
adequate medical qre and
An unregulated
(AP)
holding prisoners too long at
the Ohio State Penitentiary in chemical used at DuPont's
Washington Works plant to
Youngstown.
The supermax was ouilt in make products such as Teflon
1998 in response to the has been detected in an Ohio
Lucasville prison riot of 1993. town's water supply.
State environmental regulaIts roughly 335 inmates are
tors
said the discovery of
confined alone for 23 hours a
perfluoroocday in small, steel and concrete ammonium
cells. Any time an inmate tanoate, commonly referred ~o
leaves his cellblock he is as C8, in wells that supply
shackled, placed in a cage and water to Little Hocking, Ohio,
could expand an ongoing
strip-searched.
In the tentative agreement, study of the chemical's potenprison offi~ials acknowledge tial impact on me environthere are deficiencies at . the ment and public safety.
Testing for C8 could be
prison involving medical and
expanded
to other locatiom
mental health ca re and . exeralong the Ohio River that are
cise.
downstream from the DuPont
plant, said Allyn Turner, director of the state Department of
Environmental Protection'i
Division ofWater Resources.
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) Turner said the level of CS
A man serving 18 years in found in the Little !-locking
prison for •hooting the wells was 0. 8 to 7.7 parts per
Mahoning County prosecutor billion. Groundwater samples
will serve another 10 years in taken earlier in the Lubeck
th ~ killing of a Youngstown area in Wood County showed
business owner.
C8 at a level of 1 part per bilMark Batcho, 35, of lion .
·
Youngstown pleaded . _guilty
Tuesday to en~agirig in a pattern of corrupt activity in the
March 1996 shotgun killing of
66-year-old Lawrence Sissman .
CADIZ (AP) - An 81 Batcho is reputedly affi liated year-old man was charged

according to ilie report issued by the
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, the
American Heart Association, the
American Cancer Society and the
American Lung Association.
Ohio is spending about $22 million,
35 percent of the minimum recommended by the CDC this fiscal year,
the report said. The state had intended
to spend S60 million ~nnually on prevention.
The tobacco industry agreed in
November 1998, to pay out $206 billion to 46 states over 25 years to s~~ttle
Medicaid lawsuits for recovery of .
tobacco-related health-care costs.
Tobacco use is the leading cause of
preventable death in the United States,
killing more than 400,000 Americans
every year, according to Tobacco-Free .
Ohio. The anti-smoking group claims
that the annual cost of treating tobacco-related disease exceeds $89 billion.
Prevention programs have been
proven to reduce smoking · rates and
ultimately save money on smokingrelated illnesses.

with one count of aggravated
murder for alJegedly shooting
his 78-year-old girlfriend.
Salvatore Taravella was
charged
Monday
and
ordered held without
bond by Harrison County Court' Judge Mike
Nunner. A preliminary
hearing was scheduled
ior Jan . 24.
Taravella was taken into
custody Saturday when

he was stopped by State
Highway Patrol troopers
outside rnearby Smithfield .
Maxine Luyster was
pronounced dead Saturday at Harrison Community Hospital. She had
been shot two or three
times at her home in this
community
90
miles
south of Cleveland.

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.111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 4571111.
For more Into: 9112·2166

VALENTINE PETS

•• · .·~Owner's
•.
.

(740) 985-3539

(DonVorget)'tJ•rrejil/s/)
·1

·

Name:

\~· ~·: City/Sta;e/Zip:

.~
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·

slowed for a left turn . A
northbound car driven by
Chad L. Mourning, 17, 600
Grant St .. Middleport, was
unable to slow in time and
struck the rear of Shoemak er's car.
Moderate damage was
reported to both cars, and
Mourning was cited for
assured c!ear distance.

to Donald P. Carnahan, Kelly
D. Carnahan, deed, Chester.
George A. Hensley to Max
H . Long, Deanna M. Long,
deed, Orange.
Kenneth R . McFann, Marilyn H. McFann, to Kenneth,
R. McFann, Marilyn H .
McFann, deed, Racine Village ..
DEXTER Ricky A.
'. Gary E. White, Luz E.
Priddy, 41, 33298 Corn Hoi- ,
White, to Gary E. White, Luz
low
Road, Rutland, was cited
Eneida White, deed, Rutland.
for driving under the influFred B. Smith, deceased,
ence and failure to control by
Bertha F. Smith, deceased, to
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Barbara
Tripp, affidavit,
State Highway Patrol followChester. Barbara S. Tripp,
ing a one-car accident early
Alvin D.Tripp, Kailiryn Smith
Tuesday on Co unty Road 10
Windon, Virgil Windon, to
(Dexter).
Barbara S. Trip.p, Alvin Tripp,
Troopers said Priddy was
deed, Chester..
eastbound on Salem TownLarry Allen Vance, Sharon L.
Road 18 (Parker Run) at
ship
Vance to David L. Slisher,
12:20 a.m. when he turned
deed, Sci;&gt;io.
·
onto Dexter, went off the left
David A. Davis, Shelby J.
side
of the road and struck a
Davis, to David A. Davis, Shelditch.
by J. Davis, Gene A. Davis,
The car was slightly damdeed, Rutland.
aged.
Mary ·K. Yost to Roscoe
Mills, Sandra J. Mills, deed,
Lebanon.
Roscoe Mills, Sandra J.
Mills, to Elizabeth Ann
Shaver, deed, Lebanon.
POMEROY - Units of
Roscoe Mills, Sandra J..
the
Meigs Emergency Service
Mills, to Mary K. Yost, deed, ·
answered four calls for assisLebanon.
den-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., foltance on Tuesday. Units
Jennifer Berkhimer, Jennifer lowing an extended illness.
responded as follows:
Jackson, to Lester L. Stewart,
She was born December 8, 1918, in Clarksburg, West
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Amy J. Stewart, deed, Orange. Virginia, daughter of the late Ed!lbert Luellen and Lessye
I 0:05 a.m .. Powell Street,
Orpha Scott Queen. She was a graduate of St. Petersburg
ATHENS- Ohio Univer- Mildred Meadows, Holzer
Senior High School in St. Petersburg, Florida .
sity's performing Arts Series Medical Center;
man hours was put in during
She was a charter member of the_ Community Better- will present "Annie Get your
2:09 p.m., HMC Clinic,
2001, not including hours men.t Club and a member of the Riverview Garden -Club,
Gun"
at
Templeton-BlackPaul Eichinger, HMC::; .
spent in training, cleaning serving as scrapbook historian for many years .
burn
Alumni
Memorial
Audi4:43 p.m., Ohio 7, Mary
equipment and other. activiPage AI
A. member of the Chester Council No. 323, Daughters of torium on Wednesday at 7:30 .
Shoemaker, HMC;
ties around the fire station.
. America (D of A), she held many offices, belonged to the p.m. Tickets may be purI 0:36 ·p.m., Butternut
. Council also:
said the measure would be
Past Councilors Club of the D of A, and was the Outside chased at the auditoriumUs
Avenue,
Mary Garnes, HMC.
readopted at the next meet- .
• elected Beegle as presi- _Sentinel of District 13. When her children were in school,
ticket
office
noon
to
5
p.m.
or
ing when the certificate ts dent pro tempore;
she was a band booster, and. worked with the PTA. She was _ on the night of the perforavailable.
• approved an ordinance also a 4-H advisor.
·
mance. The show is spo nsored
The annual budget · is under emergency measure
As a young woman, Ella was a member of the Keno in part by the Hocking Valley
$454,650 .95; general fund, authorizing Ohio pepartChristian Church, and later served in the Christian Church Bank.
of Transportation
$107,010.01; street fund, ment
in Long Bottom. Prior . to her death, she attended the
JI,11DDLEPORT - A ''Just
$42,445; state
highway, (ODOT) to resurface. Stat~
Hickory H.ills Church of Christ, and participated in the
Girls" Health Day will be
4
$4,300; fire, $82,045; ceme- Route 338 within the village;
ReedsvlHe Church of Christ Ladies' Fellowship and Hickco nducted Saturday from 3
• authorized the mayor ory Hills Ladies' Fellownship.
tery, $6, 118.25; law enforceMIDDLEPORT
A p.m. to 5 p.m. for pre -teen
ment trust, t59.06;· fire home and clerk/treasurer • to
. Surviving are two daughters 13nd sons-in-law, Janet ~nd F. · Cheshire-area woman was · and teen· girls, sponsored by
.~· pay'..OO,l_!,, .~ 1-6,.746. 5~ ; w:i!er~ ~.ttend 1 an . upcolt)ing
Edwin Doherty of Belpre, and Ronaleen and Wilford injured in a two-car accident Meigs County Girl Scouts.
' . $128,302.71; leak insurance, · Bureau ·of Workers e ·omGapetz of Salisbury, Marylalld; two sons and a daughter-in- Tuesday on Ohio 7 near
The event will be held at
deposits, pensation meeting in C;~m­
•. S1 ,000; · water
law, Thomas and Nancy Osborne of Seward, Alaska, and . Middleport, the Calha- the Middleport Church of
$1 ,000;
refuse
service, bridge; and the clerk/treaMartin Osborne of Los Angeles, California; five grandchil- Meigs Post of the State Christ Family Life Center.
$41,480. 72 ;
cemetery surer to attend a Uniform .
dren, Monte Doherty of Christiansburg, Virginia, April Highway Patrol reported.
Ohio .University medical
Atcounting
. Network
endowment, $24,143 .62.
Reese
of
Takoma
Park,
Marybnd,
Derek
Reese
and
his
Mary A. Shoemaker, 40, students and other health
Mayor Hill added the fire (UAN) meeting in Marietwife,Dawn,
of
Delmar,
Delaware,
Jean
Osborne
Auberzin27233 Old Lower Route 7, professionals will be on hand
fund includes $50,000, which ta;
sky and husband, Jason, of Tiffin, and Brian Osborne of was transported to Holzer to discuss vital signs, handis anticipated to be borrowed ~ • agreed to allow the
Seward; and three grear-grandchildren, Shane, Dustin and Medical Cenrer by Meigs washing, dental health, nutrifor a fire truck should the clerk/treasurer to contaci
Ryan Reese of Delmar, Delaware.
EMS following the 4:25 tion, with an emphasis on the
grant filed last week with the . Ch~rter Communications
is
also
survived
by
her
twin,
Edward
L.
Queen
of
St.
Ella
p.m. crash, the patrol report- importance of calcium. ear,
Meigs County commission- so as to install an Internet
Petersburg,
Florida;
a
sister,
Ruth
Severe
ofTakoma
Park,
ed.
nose and throat screenings,
connection for the village;
ers be approved.
The hospital had no vision screening, exercise,
Fire Chief Neigler met
• announced that leak Maryland; and by two special cousins, like sisters, ClaraKnight
of
Marietta,
and
Doris
Fick
of
Columbus;
five
belle
record of treatment, a smoking prevention , stress
with council to discuss the insurance for the new year
brothers-and-sisters-by-marriage,
Herald
and
Josephine
management, and a hands-on
spokesman
said.
departmentU s 2001 Fire is due. A $12 fee will be
Osborne
of
Long
Bottom,
Paul
and
Carol
Osborne
of
Lanexperience.
Troopers said. Shoemaker learning
Report. Neigler said the fire good for the entire year.
Harmon
of
Clarksburg,
West
Virginia;
caster,
and
Mildred
Refreshments
will
be served,
was
northbound
at
the
department responded to 101 Th·e fee pays for water
several
nieces
and
nephews,
including
Lee
Queen,
Kenneth
intersection with Salisbury and an event fee of $3 for
calls, which is a new depart- usage due to leaks, llut not
Queen,
Sandra
Bennett,
James
Sypholt,
Gary
Osborne,
Township Road 375 (Lower adults and children will be
toward the payment of
ment record.
Roger Osborne. Gale Osborne, Philip Osborne, Polly Old Route 7) when she collected.
Neigler added over 1,200 repairs for residents' lines.
Stringer and Sherry Romanowski; and several cousins,
Nile Barnett, Che.s ter Barnett, Berl Barnett, Ila Ingold,
course s and
short -term
Frankie Maxwell, Bernice McClain, Virginia Pullins, Exel
training
or
certification
proQueen and Eva Miller.
grams.
She kaves behind two very special long-time neighbors
. "The grants are a direct
Federal Mogul - .99
Premier - 8.35
from Page AI
AEP-44.56
and friends, Marilyn and Roy Ha~;~num, Jr.
USB -: 20.70 .
Rockwell - 18.40
Arch Coal - 19.96
result
of
collaboration
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
Gannett- 68 .63
Rocky Bools - 6.25
Akzo -43.30
·husband of 64 years, Ronald Osborne; a sister, Helen Community College" classes among the Coni'munity
AmTech/SBC- 37.79 · Generel Elec1ric- 38.71 AD Shall- 48.35
GKNLY- 3.82
Sears- 61.30
at the SOCCO facility Action agenctes, coun ty
Ashland Inc. - 45.71
Sypholt; and two brothers, Wendell and Denver Queen.
Har1ey Davidson- 53.14 Shoney's- .3:l
AT&amp;T~ 18.82
Visitation is Th\lrsday,January 17,2002, from 2-4 and 6- through a U.S. Department of commissioners in Gallia a11d
Kmert- 2.45
Wai-Mart - 56.87
Bank One - 38.60
Meigs
counties,
the
8 p.m. at White Funeral Home in Coolville. The memori- Labor training program.
Kroger- 20.52
Wendy's - 30.27
BLI-9.94
Lands End - 48.36
Worthington- 13.86
Miners and their wives can UWMA, SOCCO, and tl; e
Bob Evans - 27.91
al service wil be held at noon on Friday, January 18, 2002,
Daily slock reports are
BorgWamer - 51.09 · Ltd. -15.94
at White Funeral Home, with graveside rites to follow at now receive educational Ohio Department of Job and
NSC - 18.69
~ he 4 p.m . closing
Champion - 3.25
training at Ho cki ng College, Family Services," McCul Reedsville Cemetery.
Charming Shops- 5.90 Qak~FNncial-16.10 quoles of lhe previous
ovll _. 23.80
day's lransaclions, pro·
Tri-County Joint Vocational lough said.
City Holding - 14
BBT- 35 .12
.vided .tn' Smilh Partners
Col-19.71
Person al ca re er assessSchool and the University of
Peoples -18.50
at Advest Inc. of GalOG -14.03
The project is to be com- Rio Grande, and can be eli- ments, job search skill assisPepsico- 48 .62
llpolis.
OuPonl- 42.27
pleted by September, but gible for mortgage assistance, tance and job development
Eblin said . yesterday the pr~­ utility payments . and other , services are also ava ilable.
ject may take longer now that expenses while they are in
Those i1iteres ted in particfrom Page AI
the hillside behind the library classes.
· ipating in the program may
The slip is located at the site has begun to slip, and will also
Services · through
the contact Gallia-Meigs CAA at
IUSPS 213-880)
of the home of the late Dr. likely cost more than the newest grant will include up 367-7341 or 992-6629.
Ohio Yllloy Publlohlng Co.
Hugh Davis, which Davis $590,000 bid by the general to 26 weeks of retraining in
Published · e~,~ery aftemoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
donated to the library board contractor, Lou • Morgan the form of college course
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
Correction Polley
'Builders of Sandyville, W.Va.
just prior to his death.
•
work, te chni ca l sc hoo l
Our main concern In all stories is postage paid at Pomeroy.
POMEROY
Meigs
• County R~corder Judy King
reported the following tramfers of real estate as processed
in her office:
Philip E. Eggers, Judith
Claugus Eggers, to Beth E.
Eggers Irrevocable Trust, deed,
Orange.
Richard Lee Williamson,
Darla Kay Williamson , to
Charles E. Parsley, Deborah
Jeanne Parsley, deed, Salisbury.
Ronald Edward · Davis,
Pauline Fern Davis, to Edward
D. Anderson, deed, Salem.
Robert L. Mash, Tamara L.
mash, to Columbus Southern
Power, right .o f way, Salisbury.
Robert L. Mash II,
Dorothea Mash, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way,
Salisbury.
Freda Smith to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way,
Columbia.
Bryan Branham, Cheryl
Columbus
Branham, to
Southern Power, right of way,
Columbia.
Philip E. Enggers, Judith
Claugus Eggers, to Beth E.
"Eggers Irr~ocableTrust; deed,
Orange.
Larry Allan Vance, Sharon L. '
Vance, to Patricia Margaret
Holmes,
Robert
John
Holmes, deed, Scipio.
Michael Rush, Glenis Rush,

Citation issued

Diabetes group
to meet

Rep to answer
questions

Ella Osbome

County EMS ·
runs

·Annie Ciet Your
Ciun' coming

to be aooumle . H you know ol an
error In a slory, c:all1he newsroom

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RUTLAND - Joe 13olin
RACINE -John Alfred Jeffers, 66, of 46295 Eagle Ridge
Road, Racine, died on Monday, January 14,2002, at St. Mary's was reelected president and
Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia, following an extended, Steve Lambert vice president
of the Rutland iownship
illness.
He was born on June 30, 1935, in Pomeroy, son of the late Trustees when the board held
John L. and Viola M. Riggs Jeffers. He was a graduate of their reorganization meeting
Pomeroy High School, and was a retired carpenter and a mem- recently.
Charles Barrett, Jr. is the
ber of Carpenters Local· No. 650.
third trustee.
He was a member of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
Meetings will be held on
in Pomeroy, lzaak Walton/Meig:&gt; County IKES, a past member
of the Salisbury School Board and ·a member of se~eral Car- the first Monday of each
month at 5 p.m. at the Rutpenters locals.
land Fire Station, unless othSurviving are his wife, Roberta Hysell Jeffers of Pomeroy; a
erwise announced, and are
daughter and son-in-law, Debl&gt;ie Kay and Alan Duvall ofVinopen to rhe public.
cent; two grandchildren, Amy Patricia Young of Columbus, and
Casey Alan Duvall ofVincent; brothers-in-law and sisters-inlaw, Ralph Neigler Jr. of Racine, Bernice Jeffers and Dorothy
Jeffers, both of Pomeroy, and Eula Jeffers of Middleport; and
two brothers and a sister-in-law, Harold Jeffers of Pomeroy, and
Donald and Shirley Jeffers of Rutland.
POMEROY -. The DiaBesides his. parents, he was preceded in death by his brothers, . betes Group will meet at
Marvin, Charles, Eugerte and Willard; and his sisters, Edna Nei- 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the
gler and Louise Dodrid~ .
Senior Citizens Center.
. Services will be held on Friday, January 18, 2002 at 1 p.m. at Nancy Stevens of Holzer will
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Mark Michael offici- present a program on foot
ating. Burial will follow at Rockspring:&gt; Cemetery.
care.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, January
17, 2002, from 7-9 p.m. ·
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Lung
Association of Ohio, Mid-Ohio Branch, 1950 Arlingate Lane,
Columbus,. Ohio· 43228-4102.
POMEROY - A representative of the Social Security Administration will be at
LONG BOTTOM- Ella Lessye Queen Osborne, 83, of the Senior Citizens Ce1iter
Long Bottom, died on Saturday, January 12, 2002, at Cam- from 10 to 11 a.m. on Jan. 23.

The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy, Mlddlllport, Ohio

from

Chemical found
in water

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Racine

. State, ACLU
to settle suit

Alleged hit man
pleads guilty

VVednelda~Jan.

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13 Weeks

$27.30
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28 WHks
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�·Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel ·•
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1182·2151. , . .: 111-21157

Ohio Valley Publlehlng Co.

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R. Shawn L-1•
Managing EdHor

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Cheri- Hoeflich
Oenerel Menea-r

Dlene Key Hill
Controller

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NATIONAL VIEW

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Air travel comes back, but with
.an eye out for potential danger

OUR READE.RS' VIEWS

Inappropriate r

Today is Wednesday, Jan. 16, the 16th day of2002. There are
·
349 days left in the ye.ar.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 16, 1920, Prohibition began in tbe United States as
the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution took effect. (It
was repealed by the 21st Amendment.)
On this date: ·
In 1547, Ivan the Terrible was crowned Czar of Russia . .
In 1883, the U.S. Ci:.:il Service Commission was established.
In 1919, Nebraska, Wyoming and Missouri became the
36th, 37th and 38th states to ratify Prohibition, which went
into effect a year later.
,
In 1942, actress Carole Lombard, her mother and about 20
other people were killed when their plane crashed ncar Las
Vegas, Nev., while returning from a war-bond promotion
tour.

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In 1944, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower .took command of the
Allied Invasion Force in London.
In 1964, the musical "Hello, Dolly!" opened on Broadway,
beginning a run of 2,844 performances.
In 196 7, Alan S. Boyd was sworn in as the first secretary of
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transportation.
.
In 1981, in· Northern Ireland, Protestant gunmen shot and
wounded Irish nationalist leader Bernadelt!-'· Devlin
McAliskey and her husband.
In 1989, three days of rioting erupted in Miami when a
police officer fatally shot a black motorcyclist, causing a crash
that also claimed the life of a passenger.
In 1991 , the White House announced the start of Operation
Desert Storm to drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. (Because of
the time difference, it was early Jan. 17 in the Persian Gulf
when the attack began.)
Ten years ago: Officials of the government of El Salvador
· and rebellead~rs signed a pact in Mexico City ending 12 years
of civil war that had left at least 75,000 people dead. Four days
of Middle East peace talks recessed in Washington, D.C.
Five years ago: Entertainer Bill Cosby's only son, Ennis, was
shot to death in Los Angeles in an apparent roadside robbery
attempt. In Atlanta, two bomb blasts an hour apart rocked a
building containing an abortion clinic, injuring six people.
Israeli soldiers dismantled their military headquarters in
Hebron, marking the beginning of the end of Israel's 30-yearold rule in the West Bank city.
' One year ago: Confirmation hearings for Attorney Gener:
al-designate John Ashcroft opened in Washington with Senate
Democrats throwing jabs at him over abortion and civil rights.
Laurent Kabila, president of the Demo.crati&lt;; Republic of
Co,ngo, was killed in a shooting at his home. Pave Winfield ·
·and Kirby Puckett w~re elected ro the B~eball Hall of Fame
on their first try. Leonard Woodcock, former head of the United Auto Workers union, died in Ann Arbor, Mich., at age 89.
Today's Dirthdays: Actress Katy Jurado is 75. Author William
Kennedy is 74.Author-editor Norman Podhoretz is 72. Opera
singer Marilyn Horne is 68. Auto ra~er A'J Foyt is 67. Singer·
· Barbara Lynn is 60. Country singer ltonnie Milsap is 59 . .
Country singer Jim Stafford is 58. Movie director John C.arpenter is 54. Actress-dancer-choreographer Debbie Allen is
52. Singer Sade is 43. Rock musician Paul Webb (Talk) is 40.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Maxine Jones (En Vo~e) is 36.
Actor David Chokachi is 34. Model Kate Moss is 28. Actress
Yvonne Zima is 13.

agement of ydur paper would have had
enough consideration and decency to
have not run that .. cartoon making light
of the death of the founder of this company who. is an employer in this county
and providing jobs for our people.
My husband and I feel the Daily Sentinel owes Dave Thomas and Wendy's an
apology.
Earle E. Showalter
EDen E. Showalter
Meigs Cou~ty

(Editor's note: The Daily Sentinel pub/ished A front pagt apology .on Jan. 14.)

Despicable cartoon·

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Daily Sentinel and the managing editor·
of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co~
showed tastelessness in printing a car~ .
toon of contempt and sick humor for ~
person as well loved and respected aS
DaveThomas.
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I strongly S\lggest an editorial apolog)i:
.. · RoicoeWis;
Middlepod

.Poor judgment

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RED GREEN'S VIEW

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Forget using sex to sell with men.··Dozers will work~;
!know that most advertisers use sex
appeal to sell their products, but there
may be something even stronger for
attracting the long-term attention of
men. I'm talking about any kind of
heavy machinery. Men are fascinated
by anything that shakes, spins, rumbles or moves. And the bigger it is, the
more they like it. I think it relates to
how men see their own respon!ibilities.
Historically, men get the heavier
jobs in life - building the homestead, getting rocks out of the cornfield, putting in a pool. So when a
man sees a machine that does things,
his instant hope is that it will somehow reduce his workload. And that
leads him to believe that he has managed to defy Mother Nature's plans
for him.
My neighbor rented a small backhoe last year to help with the yard
work. He was one happy guy sitting
there at those Co ntrols. He got the
yard work done in record time and
was enjoying himself so much . he
started &lt;hggtll_g holes and movt~g
trees and le~eltng .~b!O : garage, J:ie . dtd
t\vo ,pr three. ~~¢e~s' damage· 111 less
·than a day.:He dtd tltde.ed foo} ~oth-

er Na~ur~. _t,!nfonun~tdy,, be ~:lsp't 10
fortuna~e wtth his -wl(e.
,
, . No lit)' deya of wln~er. ;

Its beell . very .:;old, h~re . the lbt
wc!.elt
so, arid if~d'cci.lti'ed co me that
winter is a pretty g_ood cure for laztness . There . are thmgs you can get
away wtth m the summer that JUSt
don'~ work in the ':"inter. You need to
provtde younelf.with slielte~ pf some
~Ind. And clothmg 1s a mu~t. Lots ?f
1t. And even w1ch ch~ dothmg, you II
.
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'Or

i
ever you tell him .
.,
• A big tough guy who rem in~ ·
others of their limits.
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• A big eater who gets everyone tf
the buffet by going first.
.
il'
• A bunch of dieters so there~s
enough food .
\
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• A couple of single guys to keep
everyone entertained.
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• A couple of wives to keep ever~
one honest.
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COLUMNIST
Tr11ce shall set yo11 (ree
·My wife and I have been marridl
need a heat source, which means for a while now, and I'd have to say
you'll need fue~ whi~h .means you'll that our marriage is better than . eve~.
need money, which means you'll need Partly because we'-ve stood the tes~ of
a job. Now 1 s~pose you could .cut time. Partly because ne.i ther of us has
down a· few tree~and burn the wood, regrets in this particular area.• aut
but 1've tried that, and believe me, it's mainly because after you've been ' ·
easier to have ~ob. So if. you've got married to the same person for a lot"'
somebody in y~ur family who spends time,' you arrive at a kind of 'truco.
their days lyii1g around not doing There's no point in fighting any mo~
anything, ! _suggest you send them to over behavioral patterns. You've sa~
a cold place fOt"'a few months. In the and done everything and it didn't.·
past, you may ~ave told t h em to go to wo·rk, and ultimately none of it was\.,.
a certain hot p ace, but you had it all deal breaker, so you just both wavr.
wrong. They need to be up north in the white flag and have a happier life
the deep fre~fe . Hellfire and br.im- together. Maybe the . proble?1~ in: tlle
··stone ate(l't. rl.early so motivating as., f\1tddle .Ea_st wo~ld . g&lt;) . ~way, lfthe tw.,
·ollattering teeth and. a froun butt.
. .warrmg f~~pons marned ea~h othe~.
PleetUl't o£ your company . Jp.s t a,. thou. ght.
. .
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.. Having a successful party is all
. QUOTE OF , THE DAY: Thmk
about who you invite. You need to hard for, an hour eac~1 day. Any Ids
have the right types of people in the and you ll d0 .somethmg stuptd. Anr,
right propottton to guarantee that more, and you II lose all your fnends:
everything goes smoothly. Heres a - Red Grem
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guest list that works for me:
·
, A guy wlio al"':'ays laughs, to· keep
(Red Grew is !he slar of "The Rc~
everyone's spirits up.
, Green Show," a television seri·cs seen i~
, A guy who never laughs, to deal the U.S. on PBS and in Ca11~da on rlrf'o
with ' the cops.
CBC Network, and rhe author of "Tire'
, A meek lit,tle. guy who. does what- Red Green Book" and "Red Green Tal~$
·
.
. Car/ ·A Love Story.")
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Red

Green

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Abby

• Nancy Ervin, Racine, and from Chuck Jack who is a
Francis Carleton, Pomeroy.
missionary at Red Bird.
RACINE - Megan and
'terry Soulsby presided at
Howard ";B.J" Ervin Ill of
the meeting, which opened
Racine announce the birth of
.
·
· ,1 with the UMW purpose read
a son, Brayin unison. The pastor had
den Riley,
prayer arid new officers were
on Jan. 2 at
SSIOn
installed. They are Soulsqy,
O'Bieness
TUPPERS PLAINS _ A president; Judy Kennedy, vice
Memorial
president; Teresa Lemons, secprogram on the Red Bird
Hospital,
retary; Betty Chevalier, treaMission. and a summer work
Athens.
surer; and Connie Ra11kin,
Maternal . trip there was presented at a news reporte,r.
grandpar- . recent meeting of the Tuppers
Officers' reports were given
United Methodist and program books distriben~s are Jim Plains
Braydiln t'rvln and
Beth Women held at th~ St. Pail!., uted. A thank you card was
of Church.
Clark
read fro"m Blake and JoAnna
The Rev. Jane Beattie, pas- Weaver.
· Middleport; and maternal
great-grandparents are Leon tor, showed a video on the
Plans were made for a trip
and ·Pat
McKnight
of work there and noted that to Arcadia Nursing Home to
Pomeroy, and Grace Clark of fropt Aug. 25 to 31 a group sing to the ·elderly. Several
Middleport ..
from Meigs County will ~~ cards were signed and prayer
• Paternal grandparents are making a-work trip there, She to close the meeting was given
Buddy and . Sally Ervin, asked if the group would- by the pastor. Others attending
P.acine, and paternal great- sponsor one of the partici- were Mary Rankin, Barb
gtanqparents are Howard and pants. Kennedy read a letter Roush, and Elsie Culley.
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SON-IN-LAW
DEAR TOM: What a glowing
tribute for a son-in-law to offer.
You're a lucky family to have each
other. It would be wonderful if
more families could enjoy the love
and cooperation \&gt;etween generations that yours does . Perhaps the
secret lies in • mutual . respect for
each other's boundaries.
DEAR ABBY: Your wisdom is
remarkable. You told "Confused in
West Sacramento" that "Happiness
is where you find it; age is a state
of mind."
I married my lovely Blanch e on
Sept. 15, 1951. We just celebrated
our 50th anniversary at Fancy Feet
~allroom in Oregon City. We
danced an· exhibition· ballroom
cha-cha and enjoyed dancing with
our many friends. Our son's band
furnished two terrific hours of
must c.

danee planned.
POMEROY - A sweetheart dinner-dance will be
held at the Senior Citizens
Center on Feb. 14. The dinner
will be served at 5:30p.m. and
the dance to music by George
Hall will be held from 6-10
p.m.
. ·T he dinner and dance are
$15 per person. The dance
only is $10 per person.
For more information or
reservations, residents may call
992-2161.
Those planning to attend
are reminded that the Meigs ·
County Council on [\ging is
an alcohol and tobacco free
environment.

hear about Reel
Bird MI •

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
Are you tired of eating the same foods all of the time'
Do you want to jazz up your meals?
Use the following tips to help y.ou become a creative
cook.
Understand cooking basics. Know times, temperatures and cooking methods for various foods. ldemify
how foods can be prepared different ways for different
tastes.
Always have staple ingredients on hand.Various herbs,
spices, vegetables, pastaS sauces and mixes can liven up
meals with little effort . Comult label packages for interesting dinner ideas .
.
Identify seasoning combinations that are tasty. Use
these in other foods. Recognize how foods look and
smell during cooking. Add herbs and spices accordingly. Be aware, though, that too.much of a good thing can
result in flavors that may be too intense.
Try to duplicate dishes that you have had in restau~
rants. Take standard recipes and change ingredients
according to your tastes and what you have on hand.
Experiment with cultural foods. Try Mexican tortillas
as a wrap for a Reuben sandwich instead of rye bread.
Replace Mozzarella cheese with Momerrey Jack on
ptzza.
Be creative. Don't let cooking failures keep you from
continuing to experiment. Look at it as a learning
experience. Identify the problem, then try to correct it
for an appetizingly different creation.
1

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: 'Survivor'finale
puts CBS
· over the top
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• · LOS ANGELES (AP) The finale of "Survivor:
Africa" was television's mostwatched show last week and
helped boost CBS to a ratings victory.
The reality show's conclusion, in which soccer pro
Ethan Zohn claimed the S1
million prize, ·drew an . average audience last Thursday of
27.3 million, according to
Nielsen Media Research figures Tuesday. .
. Viewership for the end of
the third "Survivor" pales
next to the first two. In
August , 2000, the original
4
tSurvivor's" conclusion drew
5 t. 7 million, while 36.4 mil-

lion watched the "Survivor
2" finale last May.
CBS also was helped by
strong
performances of
"Everybody Loves Raymond" and "60 Minutes."
The newsmagazine·, which
posted its highest rating in
nearly two years, included
reports on Colombia's coca
crop and the release of frozen
Cuban assets by President
Clinton.
NBC, which claimed the
top two shows in household
ratings, was in second place
for the week. For struggling
ABC, the New York·Oakland NFL playoff game (at
No. 4) was among the few
bright spots and helped give
the network the edge over
NBC in total viewers.
In the seasonal glut of trophy shows, the People's
Choice Awards on CBS was
the No. 21 show for the

week, while tht American
Music Awards came in at No.
23.
For the week 111 prime
time: CBS averaged 14.1
million viewers (9.0 rating,
14 share), while ABC averaged 12.8 million ·(8.3 rating,
13 share) and NBC had
12.79 million (8.5 rating, 14
share) .
Fox averaged 7.8 million
(4 .8 rating, 7 share), UPN
averaged 4.2 million (2 .6 rating, 4 share), the WB had 3.5
.
h )
mi Ilion (2.2 ratmg, 3 s are •
and Pax TV had 1.4 million
(l.O rating, 2 share).
. In the evening news race,
"NBC Nightly News" held
its typical lead with an average 11.6 million viewers (8.2
rating, 15 share), while ABC's
"World News Tonight" had
10.7 million viewers (7.8 rating, 15 share) and "The CBS
Evening News" posted 10

million viewers (7 .I rating,
13 share).
A ratings point represents
1,055,000 households, or 1
percent of the nation's estimated 105.5 million TV
homes. The share is the pere&amp;intage of in-use televisions
tuned to a given show.
For the. week of Jan . 7-13,
the top I 0 shows, their networks and household ratings
were: "ER," NBC, 16 .3;
"Friends," NBC, 16.1; "SurCB
14 7
vivor : Africa," , S,
. ;
NFL Football playoff (Jets at
Oakland) Post-Game, CBS,
13. 9; "Everybody .Loves
Raymond," CBS, 13 .7; "60
Minutes," CBS, 13.3; "):.aw &amp;
Order," NBC, 13 .3: "NFL
Monday Night Football"
(Minnesota at Baltimore),
,ABC, 12 .3; "West Wing,"
NBC, l2.1; "Will' &amp; Grace,"
NBC, 12.1. ·

'

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For Your
Future?

Holm Clinic oft'm
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I'

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Gallipolis

CI,..INIC

Jackson

Point Pleasant
Proctorville

P.omeroy

South

.,

,

(Becky Baer is Meigs Counry~ Extension agent for fomify
mod consumer sciences/conu!lufliry development, Oloio Srare
Vfliversity.)

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: L.Y.C.L.INSTANT:
I BINGO TICKETS I
200 East Main Street
1
.
Pomeroy, 0 h1o
1
1 Mon- Fri
740-992-61121

I
1

11oam- Bpm
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Use This Coupon For $100 Drawing With This Ad.J

We'll have you
feeling . er about
your health.
Expect the latest technology, with a human touch.

Pauline Phillips a11d l1er daughter
] eaune Phillips slwre rhe pseudonym
Abigail Van B11rer1.

Becky
Baer

tBS survives' as weekly ratings victor
,,

Blanche is now 74; I am 96 . (I
have a daughter one year older
than Blanche.) Love, good nutrition, dancing, gardening and
mutual intellectual interests keep
,us active and happy. Our first date
was at the Palladium in Hollywood, Calif We have danced
together with joy eve r since!' HARRY
F.
BILLINGS,
SALEM, ORE.
DEAR HARRY: Your . letter
proves th at dancing not only lifts
the spirits, . but also provides
healthy cardiovascular exe rcise that
can add quality to a long life. The
same can be said of love - which
you also have in abundan ce. May it
ever be thus. (I have a hun ch your
wife loves to dance to ''I'm Just
Wild About Harry"!)

How to become a·
creative cook

Sweetheart

UMW memben

...
I·

Dear

Ervin birth

Dear Editor:
On Friday, Jan. 11, 2002,. a cartoon
alluding to the death of Dave Thomas
appeared 'in The Daily Sentinel. This
tasteless cartoon is \11-e most despicable
attempt a.t humor I ~ave ever witnessed.
The late Mr. Thomas has been,lauded
(Editor's note: The Daily , Sstttitlel' P"~
in about every newsJi~per in the.country
;
for.his generous gifts, ~f inillions to char- fished a front page apology o" Jail. 14)
ity to improve life fOr many.
Due to his compassion for children in
need of being adoe'ted into a loving
home, he founded 'ihe Dave Thomas
Dear Editor:
Foundation for Add/ltion in 1992 and
We were very offended by the "carwas honored by Pre~ldent Clinton and toon" about Dave Thomas ·published in
the First Lady for this' effort. The foun- the Daily Sentinel on Jan. 11 .
da.!ion's mission statement is "Every
Printing that ·_ cartoon _showed very
child will have a permanent home and poor judgment and a great lack of
1
·loving family."
respect. It waS published on the day of
·
He and his wife e~Ublished tlie Dave" his fUneral! Say ·what you want'abo.utfaSf,
and Lorraine Thomas Clinical Labor. to- · food, but Dave Thomas built a successful
ries at ·children's H~spital in 1990 'ari'd - business that employed many people.
followed that in 1997 with a $1 million · Dave Thomas was a good citizen, loyal
donation to the hoslli\tl.
·
to his f.unily and friends and gavt lots c&gt;f
In 1983, he provii!Jd $1.8 million to money to charitable causes. We ·had tiJ
help build the Arthur G. james Cancer privilege to meet this gentleman o.ncc ~
Hospital at Ohio State University in a famt!y event and he was both fnendly .
1
Columbus. ·
'"
:
and down-to-earth.
'
· Dave devoted vast . amoun~s of time
I think you owe his family and frien~
and millions of doif~rs to his favorite an apology. Shame on you!
causes to help humanity. These are just a
Wendell and · Martha Hoovet
"tip of the iceberg" of his great work for
·
. P~mer&lt;Jt
mankind.
·
, .
(Editor's note: The . Daily Sentinel pub;.
On the day of his ~uriru, certainly The lished a front-page apology on ja11 . 14.)

J

ily. We have had to hire a baby sitter only twice for our three children the entire time they were
growing up. Goldie cooked the
majority of our evening mfals. She
helped to wash and iron to the
point· where my wife had to start
hiding our clothes to stop her
mother from working so hard. She
ADVICE
watched .our dogs during the day,
·
.
and they preferred her company
about their mpthers-in!law. It's over ours .
refreshing to hear the ocher side of
Whenever my family needed
the story. Read on:
·}
Goldie, she was there. She is very
DEAR ABBY: My mother-in- considerate. If she feels we nee&lt;;!
law, who is now 89, has lived with our privacy, she goes to her living
our family for more than 30 years. quarters. We often beg her to stay,
Her name is Collette, but everyone but she won't change her mind . We
calls her Goldie: I· don't know learned early on not to impose our
when · pe~ple began calling her wills on Goldie.
,that, but I do know she is worth
I feel sorry for people who don 't .
her weight in gold.
.
· ' have ·a Goldie in their lives. When
Goldie has devoted a large par- she is no longer with us, I will fortion of her life to helping my fam- ever feel the loss. - TOM, HER

Wednesday. lanu•ry 16.1001

Society Notebook

!

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

DEAR ABBY: I have a friend,
"Steve,n whose wife, .. Marie," died
five years ago. Marie was one of the
most popular and beloved ladies in
town. Their child was left without a
mother. Steve remarried about two
. years ago. Marie's mother continued to stay in dose contact with
Steve and her grandchild.
Recendy, Steve approached me at
a social function. He was beaming. ·
He told me he was buying a new
house. He said his former motherin-law had told him in plain Eng.lish to put away Marie's pictures
and buy his wife a new home. .
Apparendy the mother-in-law is
a lot like her daughter - charming, thoughtful and considerate. STEVE'S FRIEND
DEAR
FRIEND: Marie's
mother is also sensitive and practical. Orchids to her. I usually, receive
letters from readers complaining

..

• Daily News, Los Angeles, m1 air tra11el vigilance, not fear.
There's evidence that we're getting over the natural anxiety
that followed the terrorist attacks. The number of prescribed
sleeping pills and tranquilizer&gt;, for example, is de)Wn. But that
·
.
doesn't mean we've become complacent....
After boarding Flight 63 ftom Paris to Miami, (Richard)
De•r Editor:
.Reid lighted a match, allegedly to ignite a makeshift bomb he
I found· the cartoon in the Jan. · 11
had concealed in his high-top tennis shoes.
paper
·tO be ~ompletely inappropriate!
But he was quickly foiled by a new breed of heroes- ordiand distasteful.
· '
nary people who, when pressed, show extraordinary valor and
selfless bravery. This new breed of heroes ... includes people like
Meigs Couilty has a hard enough time
'Hermis Moutardier, the American Airlines flight attendant who ·
trying to have jobs fur its people. Then
was quick to spot Reid lighting the. match and then confront
we get a corporation who is willing to
him. Moutardier called out tor help and tried to extinguish
come here and operate, provide jobs, and
Reid's shoes as he pushed and shoved her. ...
.
·
provide a service to the community, and
It's doubtful that the respome would have been so quick or
what does the local paper do, it insults
overwhelming before Sept. 11. The passengers and crew aboard
their founder and them with tasteless
Flight 63 were on the lookout for suspicious behavior, and they
cartoons.
were prepared to act in the event that they saw it.
No one has .to eat unhealthy at
They were cautious but not afraid. If they were afraid, they
Wenay,'s. Their grilled , chicken sandwouldn:t have been on that plane at all. ... They boarded the . . : .With,'balt¢&lt;1. ji&lt;liatiil~s. chili and salads are
plane, got to work and cracked open novels. Only :this time, • liealtl\f \~ith , ml~ fat when _eaten
chastened by a changed world, they kept one eye out; for dan~,
. ' w,Jth·t~i!';pf(lpepdppings. . · . ·
ger.
I ·Wlluld have thought that t~e man-

TODAY IN HISTORY

IJ the Bend
Time .to move on,

_Sen~tin-ei_______

.:.-!h_en_
· ail_y

..

£

. PageAS

�VVednelda~Jan.16,2002

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. Pege A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Scholarships available to 4-H members
POMEROY - Thousands
of dollars in scholarships are
available for Ohio 4-H members who are high school
' seniors or college freshmen.
While some scholarships list
eligibility requirements related to college major, county of
residence or college attending, others are of a more gen- ·
era! nature.
To apply, 4-H members
· must complete and submit an
all in one Ohio 4-H Achievement Record and/or the
appropriate application form
by Friday to the Meigs CountY Extension Office, Mulberry
Heights, P.O.
Box
32,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
For those needing assistance
in completing the application
forms, the Extension Office
will be offering a help session
tonight (Tuesday) from 5:30-7
p.m. or 4-Hers may contact
the Extension Office at 9926696 for an appointment
time.
College scholarships available through the Ohio 4-H
include:
. • All American Youth Horse
Show Foundation 4-H Scholarship- One $1,500 scholarship to be awarded. Applicants .must be high school

seniors and current 4-H horse
members planning to enroll in
the fall at any accredited post
secondary institution in any
course of study.
• Mary E. Border Ohio 4H Scholarships -Two $1,000
scholarships to be awarded.
Applicants must be .high
school se niors and current
members planning to enroll in
the fall at any accredited post
secondary institution in any
course of study.
• Bea Cleveland 4-H
Scholarship One S1,000
schol;mh\p to be awarded
annually to a 4-H member
who is a se nior in high school
during the year of application.
Applicants must be planning
to enroll as a freshman, in the
autumn quarter in the College of Huinan Ecology at
Ohio State University or any
of its regional campuses.
• Ashley Bnttany Calhoon
4-H Leadership Schnolarship
- One $600 scholarship to
be awarded. , Applicant must
be a 4-H member and senior
in high school planning to
enroll as a freshman in the fall
at Ohio State University. Preference is given to applicants ·
from Franklin County.
• Bob Evans Year Round

Dealing·with rare status migraines
Question: Our 31-year-old is triggered by a brief narrowson
has
had
mig.-ame ing within the blood vessels
headaches since he was three supplying the brain followed
years old. Sometimes he has by a swelling of the,m. This
difficulty talking or getting up process stimulates the nerve
when he has an attack. He has endings within the vessels and,
seen many doctors with this thereby, creates pain. At the
problem over the years and has same time, a poorly underalso had. many " normal" stood temporary dysfunction
MRis. They always come back is activate(! within the brain
itself. Together, these changes
with the same diagnosis migraine. In O&lt;;tober he had a within both the blood vessels
headache that became so and the brain produce the
severe he couldn't get c:iut of .migraine headache 'symptoms.
bed, eat or drink, and then he
About 50 percent of
began talking "out of his migraine sufferers have symptoms that precede the attack of
: head."
We took him to the hospi- pain. Sleepiness, blurred or
'tal, where he was admitted to otherwise . distorted vision,
the psychiatric ward. After numbness or tingling usually
four days he was almost back in an arm or leg, 'and confuto his old self so they· released sian are common examples.
him. Hedoes seem to still have When the headache begins, it
a bit of confusion, though. He is on one side of the head
thinks that we bought all new only. It is usually quite intense
furniture while he was gone and made worse by physical
even though nothing has activity, bright light or by
changed. Is this type of noise. Many suffer nausea and
migraine attack common 1
generally feel absolutely mis. Answer: Migraine headaches erable.
·
are common, but your son's
Some
individuals, lose
form is quite rare. Before I talk vision, have numbness, are
more about his problem, I unable to properly move a
want to tell you about the body part, or have other signs
more
that would in someone withcommon forms of this dis- out a history of migra,ine sugorder. As strange as it seems, gest the presence of a stroke or
the brain itself has no pain ?ther serious neurologic dissensors. The covering of the order.
brain, the attachment strucMost migraine attacks subtures, and the supplying blood side within three days if no
v,essels do have them, however. treatment is used. That is a
In addition, muscles, blood long time to suffer! The provessels and other structures of longed attack and severe neuthe face have pain nerve end- m logical symptoms that your
ing.; that when irritated are son experienced is more than
a common migraine. His
perceived as a '.'headache."
The current theory of attack is called a status
migraine says tha~ the' disorder migraine, and it requires

LOCAL EVENTS

.TUPPERS PLAINS- Volun·
Group, 10:30 a.m. Thursday,
Senior C~izens Center. Nancy tears needed to assist in rebuild·
prompt hospitalization and the
Stevens of Holzer to present ing home of Eastern High
administration of the proper
program on foot care.
School Coach Howie Caldwell's
medication.
home, which was destroyed by
You may be concerned that
FRIDAY
. APPLE GROVE - Round fire .in December. Wo.rking both
some emergency department
physician had your son admitand square dance [!'rlday, 8 to 1f Saturday and Sunday. Take
ted to the incorrect unit. I
p.m. Red Bam located on Ohio tools, food and drinks provided.
338.
Line dancing and clogging. Home located on Ohio 7, a mile
wouldn't fault him or her for
Music by the Happy Hollow south of Tuppers Plains. Tim
that decision because there are
Boys.
several psychiatric disorders
Baum at Baum Lumber coordl·
WEDNESDAY
that cause an · individual to
nating effort, 985-3301.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
SATURDAY
withdraw from interactions
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednes·
SAI,EM CENTER - Star
with others and become day, home or Sara .owen. Gay
Grangs
778 and Star Junior
TUESDAY
unable to take care of their .· Perrin to review "The Sisterhood
RACINE - RACO meeling,
own needs. The important or Women in History," "The Red Grange 878, fun night and
poUuck supper, Sa\IJrday. Sup- T
RACO
thing is that. he 'received. good Tenr and "Cane River.• ·
"'""
followed by F011 rth
uesday, 5:30 p.m. so
per, ...:,-p.m.
members can attend the town
care and was able to come
Degrve team praclioa .and open
home in only a tew d~ys.
and"closing teem practice at 7:30 'meeting at 7 p.m. There will be a
THURSDAY
After a migraine it is not
, Diabetes~· 1).m: .,•• ~
~
,. "
· pctluck dinner.
POMEROY
uncommon to have some
confusion for a while. After
•
status migraine, this period can
last for several days. I imagine
that your son has returned to
his normal state by now.
An important thing for your
son to do is to talk to his doctor apout the benefit of taking
medicine and adjusting his
lifestyle to prevent or reduce
the frequency of future
attacks, This is also good
advice for any migraine sufferer. In addition, your son
I INCH AD ..... $5.00
l'/2 INCH AD .. $7.50
should develop a, treatment
(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS) ·
plan for ahy additional attacks
that he may have, and this plan
Happy
should be communicated to
Happy Volentine's Day
1
st
Valentine's
Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
the appropriate family memTessa!
Mom,
Dad, Sister, and
bers.
Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings 1111d special events. The celender Is
not designed to promote seles
or fund-raisers of any type.
Items are printed only as
apace pennlts and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed 11
specific number of days.

t's·Vaten-time
Tell Someone You Love Them
· In ASpecial Way ·

--Your Way___; On February 14th
With A Sentinel Love Message!
Examples of Sizes and Prices

·Mommy &amp; Daddy

(Family Medicine is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D. 0., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, P. 0. Box 11 0, Athens,
Ohio 45701. Past columns are
available
online
at
wwwjhradio.org ifm.)

FLORENCE, Italy (AP) Living.There's no way like the early photos, on display on the
Qozens of black and white American Way."
show, are closecups of metal
p,'ictures
spanning
three
The photo, taken in 1937, wires, reels of thread and
· decades pay homage to the lif~ became instantly famous.
sheets of steel. She later
and· work of Margaret
The daughter of an engi- . became a forerunner in the
Bourke-White, one of the first · Iteer-designer for the printing newly emerging. field of phowo~en war photographers industry, Bourke-White ini- tojournalism and joined Fora~d the author of Life maga- tially turned her attention to tune magazine in the late
zlne's first cover photo.
machines and factories. · Her 1920s.
· The show . inside Palazzo
Vecchio, in the heart of FloPROTECTION FOR LIFE
rence, features some of the
photos that have made
Bourke-White famous worldYour
for
wide: Factory workers during
. t~e· Depression, inmates at the ..
Our Agency offers a complete portfolio of
Buchenwald Nazi concentraLife Insurance products and services to
tion camp, a portrait of
help keep you financially secure today
Mohandas Gandhi at his spinand In the future. Call me... Stop by...
ning wheel.
H's your choice!
. Also on display is a picture
(eaturing black victims of a
Nltioftwldl'
flood in Louisville, Ky., standInsurance &amp;
ing on a bread line beneath a
F'manciol s.Mcts
Sofdt'
billboard of a smiling white
family in a car. The headline
UIIN&amp;nnolw••••'ffl112 iWICII Lit........_~,
,...MuNifllnMnnOI Conlf*l1
on the billboard reads:
·
.., ~ eu..,....., Non ()flcr. CoMnbul. ott aatNJJI u moo
·:world's Highest Standard of

0

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(APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

.

·

Brother...
Thanks for beln9 such
a Qreot family!
I LoveYauVeryMuchl

3 INCH AD ... $15.00
Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
straight and true,

In bringing this thought
~to you.
I'm sony about the
other night.
When we had that
terrible fight.
A Sentinel love message
was a good Idea.
To show you lust how
much I love you, Matla.

MAYWEALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL UFE
TOGETHER I

MY

Writing this Jove

message gives me the
opportunity to· tell you
lust how much !love
you anti enjoy being
· husband. H&lt;now
I sometimes don't
show It but 1
clo.
Valentines

ADS MUST BE'
RECEIVED BY
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FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 8,
2002.

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·•·:. ··'·' ··h

..
,.. WEDNFSDAY's

~HIGHLIGHTS
•
•...

·.~ SCOREBOARD

Prep Buketbllll •
Girls
'l'uMdily'l Ga"'"
OVC. 56, Wood County 55
Boys
.
Tueeday'l Ga""'l
OVC 44, Wood County 34
Warren 93, River Valley 71
Logan 7';., Athens 46
Gliltia Academy 51, Pt. Pleasant 45
Manetta 67, Jackson 35
,
Ale~ander 71, Vinton County 63
Waterford 71, Miller 64
·
Fed. Hocking 77, N·vllle·Yo·rk 64
Wellston 52, Trimble 45
· Southern 90, South Gallia 63

Tornadoes pound South Gallia., 90-63
BY ScoTT Wot.FE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - For the past tWO or
three games Southern has played two
good quarters and two poor ones, but
Thesday night the Thrnadoes found
the rhythm and never missed a beat
for four quarters in pounding out a
90-63 non-league triumph over the
South Gallia Rebels in Charles W.
I
Hayman gymnasium.
Southern now moves to 7-4 on the
season. The Rebels fall to 1-10.
Southern ended the . night With. a
season-high 21 assists in an unselfish
effort that picked apart the Soutp Gal-

lia \lefense. Jordan Hill led that charge
with a steady floor game and pinpoint
passing, while senior Nate Martin did
a good job running the point and had
four assists. Four other players had two
assists apiece.
Southern was led by Dally Hill's 23
· points and five rebounds, while Justin
Connolly scored a double-double
with 19 points and eleven rebounds in
.
an effort that proVIded a great boost
for Southernis transition game. Freshman Craig Randolph added eleyen
points, while · another fro sh, Jake
Nease, had his best offensive night and
eight rebounds just a couple clicks

s!Jort of a double-double.
Jordan Hill, Curt C rouch, and Macy
Rees roUt:d a trio of six points games,
while Martin ~dded five, Josh Smith
three, and Cuttis Neigler two.
The Rebel atta.c k was' led by Brandon Caldwell 'who notched 21 points
and eight rebounds, while Kyle
Mooney added 19 markers and three
assists . Dustin Lewis added nine, Jason
Merrick six, Zach Haner four, and
two each by Josh Waugh and Hayes
Lester.
.
In contrast from the ftrst meetmg
between the two teams where South
GaUia came out and shell-shocked the

swa
forGa
Sh

. Tueadey'a Ga"'"
' Milwaukee 106, Indiana 102 ·
Philadelphia 112, Houston 106, OT
Dallas 116. Atlanta 107
Toronto 92, Detroit 90
San Antonio 98, Washington 91
Minnesota 97, L.A. Clippers 83
Chariotte 9~. Chlcago ·86
Sacramento 109, Cleveland 102

Sbinger family
files lawsuit

· PHILADELPHlA (AP) Allen Iverson scoq:d a careerqigh 58 points, .the most in an
l')IBA game in almost two years
l!Ud the fourth- highest total in
team histoty, as the Philadelphia
76ers beat the Houston Rockets
112-106 in overtime Tuesday ·
nigltt.
Iverson shot 21-of-42 and
made all14 ofhis free throws for
his seventh 50-point game,
including two In the playoffi.
Iverson's previous career-high
was 54.
·
• Elsehwhere, Dallas beat
t.danta 116-107, San Antonio
defeated Washington 96-91 and
Toronto edped Detroit 92-90.

J.

P I - ... Southern, 81

Perez ·

NBA

· MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Minnesota Vikings forced
lir\'eman Korey Stringer to practice the day after he fell ill at
training camp and didn't attend
to liim fast enough when he was
srri~ken a second time, his fami1}' says in a S100 million lawsuit.
Stringer, a 335-pound offensive tackle, died Aug. 1 of complications from heatstroke. His
body temperature was at 108.8
;legrees when he arrived at a
IV!ankato hospital 15 hours
before his death.

Tornadoes, Southern came out and
patiently, but aggressively attacked the
Rebel defense. Like the last outing, a
lot of points were put on the board,
but this time Southern took the lead
and never relinquished it:
Justin Connolly went back-door
several times with key passes from Hill
and Martin, and also had several key
.offensive boards. Dally Hill and Ran....!olph knocked down three-poimers,
while Jordan Hill, Crouch , and Rees
jumped aboard the scoring machine.
Southern had some trouble inside

Jorda.n,

NCAA Men.. Basketball
Tunday'a Ga"'"
Albany, N.Y. 41 , Columbia 40
Maris! 96, lana 80
Ohio 62, Bufflllo 61
Stony Brook 66, Binghamton 62
Chariotte 77, Saint Louis 49
E. Ky. 100, IUPFt Wayne 96, 20T
Kentucky 87, Mississippi 64
Mct·East. Shore 64, Coppin St. 59
Memphis 81 , South Florida 62
Miami 76, Pittsburgh 69, 20T
Momhead St. 86, OH Dominican 73
N.C. State 80, Clemson 79
Tulane 70, Southern Miss. 61
Villanova 77, Virginia Tech 75
Virginia 86, Wake Forest 74
Winthrop 75, R.·Macon 69
.Illinois 77, Iowa 66
Marquette 67, UAB 59
W. Michigan 62, IUP·INDY 61
Houston 82, TCU 71, OT
Kansas 79, Oklahoma St. 61
BYU 60, UNLV 47
N. Mexico St. 98, E. New Mex 82
Oregon 71, Wlllamette 48

'·lhe answer hils
for 58 points

.

.

Page 81 '
WeciM1d8J, ......ry 11. 21102

:. EUGENE, Ore. (AP) Casey Martin had surgery to
temove potentially deadly bacwria fiom his withered right leg.
; The professional golfer was
liStcil in tair condition at Sacred
Heart Medical Center in
~ugene. He will be hospitalized
· for about another week, then
Will need 6-to-10 weeks of
..;habilitation, according to his
)\'linneapolis-based agent, Chris
Murray.

(A PPROXI MATEL Y40 WORDS)

I,

Af.ort college hoops; Page B3
AP prtp girls poll, Page B4
Ohio hangs on, Page B6

.,

0

2 INCH AD.:.$10.00

War photographer's work on display in Italy

•

Environmental Sciences with present or former 4-H mem-·
a major in the area of agricul- ber, senior in high school and
ture or natural resources. Sec- planning to enroll as a fresh- .
ondary eligibility will be man in the fall at Ohio State
given to seniors planning to University, ATI or any of its
a~end the Agricultural Tee~- regional campuses in any acanical Institute located in demic area. Preference will be
Wooster. Preference will be given to Richland County
given · to applicants from . applicants.
.
• Vance Family 4- H Schol- ,
Richland, Know and Monroe
Counties.
arships - Two $1,500 and
• John L. Ryhant 4-H one $1,000 scholarships will
Scholarship One $1,000 be awarded. Applicant must be
scholarship awarded. Awarded present or former 4- H memto an incoming freshman ber, currently enrolled or
enrolled in the College of planning to enr'?ll in the fall at
Food, Agricultural and Envi- The Ohio State University,
ronmimtal Sciences, preferably ATI or any of its regional
from Delaware County, who campuses, majoring in Agriis a current or former 4-H culture or Home Economics.
member and who has demon- Former winner may . reapply
strated qualities of leadership. for this scholarship.
• Alga "Peg" Weaver 4-H
• M,abel Sarabaugh 4-H
Scholar,ship - One $1,000 Scholarships - Two $1,200
scholarship awarded. Appli- scholarships will be awarded.
cant must be a 4-H member, Applicants must be 4-H
senior in high school during members, seniors in high
the year of application and school during the year of
planning to enroll autumn application, planning to enroll
quarter in the College of ·in the College. of Human
Human Ecology as a freshman Ecology at Ohio State Uniat Ohio State Oniversity or versity. Recipients will be
any of its ·regional campuses.
awarded $400 for three con• Mr. and Mrs. G. Deming secutive quarters 'provicling
Seyn10ur 4-H Scholarship - ' the recipient maintains a minOne
$·1,000 scholarship imum GPA of2.0 or above on
awarded. Applicant must be a 4.0 scale.

Grazing Scholarships - Five State University main campus
S 1,000 scholarships to be in any academic area. Preferawarded. Applicants must be . ence will be given to Butler,
current or former 4- H mem- Preble and Hamilton County
bers who are seniors in high residents. Recipient may reapschool planning to attencl col- ply for scholarsliip after freshlege or university after gradu- man year.
• Henderson Family 4-H
ation, who have a working
knowledge and/or interest in Scholarship One $600
"stockpiling" and "year-round . scholarship awarded. Appligrazing" livestock manage- cants must be high school
ment practices. Preference .is se niors and current 4-H
to award one $1,000 scholar- members planniqg to enroll in
ship to a person from each of the fall at any accredited post
the five OSU Extension Dis- secondary institution in any
tricts in Ohio.
course of study.
• Bob Evans · Farms 4-H
• Jonard Family 4-H. ScholScholarships - Two $1 ,000 arship- One $1,000 scholarscholarships to be awarded. ship awarded. Applicant must
Applicants must be 4-H be present or . former 4-H
members, seniors in high member, senior in high school
school during the year of and planning to erroll ·as a
application and planning to freshman in the fall at Ohio
enroll in theAutumn Quarter St~te ,University in any course
in the College of Food, Agri- of study. Preference will be
cultural and Environmental given to Harrison, Jefferson
Sciences at The Ohio State and Delaware County appliUniversity to pursue a degree cants.
in Natural Resources.
• Chuck Lifer 4-H Scholar• William E. Goos Memor- ship - One $1,000 scholarial Scholarship- One $1 ,000 ship awarded. Applicant must
scholarship to be awarded. be a high school senior who is
Applicants must be current 4- a current or former 4-H
H member, senior in high member and planning to
school during the year of enroll autumn quarter at Ohio
application and planning to State University in the Colenroll autumn quarter at Ohio lege of Food, Agricultural and

The Daily Sentinel

.

HE'S NOT REACHIN'- Kentucky's Cliff Hawkins has control of the ball and the arm of Mississippi's Jason
Harrison, left, as Harrison's teammate Derrick Allen looks on during the first half of their game Tuesday. (AP)

Wildcat D.puts dow~ Rebels .
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Kentucky coach had 13 and Justin R eed added 11 for Mississippi (13Tubby Smith has been waiting for his team to put 4, 2-2), which had won nine of its last 10 games.
The Rebels entered the game shooting an SECtogether a dominating defensive performance.
The 12th-ranked Wildcats did just that Tuesday best 40 percent from behind the 3-point line but
,night, holding Mississippi to a ~.eason-low 33 percent made only 3-of- 18 against Kentucky, a dismal 1'1
from the field en route to an percent.
87~64 victory.
The Wildcats aho forced 18 turnovers and blocked
Kentucky (11-4, 2-2 South- 10 shots, forcing Mississippi to be tentative offensiveeastern Conference) suffocated ly.
the Rebels from the opening tip, holding them with'' A lot of (Kentucky's) offensive problems have
out a field goal for nearly eight minutes in taking a come because of their defensive problems," Mississip24-5 lead.
· pi coach Rod Barnes said. "I knew Coach Smith was
" We're playjng defense with more pride," said going to get on those guys and that we were going
• Smith, who •ov~~ defensive intensity above all else. to be in for a tough night scoring-wise."
· "This is the type of defense we have to play to be
He couldn't have know·n how tough .
successful."
·
Mississippi got called for two early shot-clock vioTayshaun Prince scored 19 points, Marquis Estill lations and niade only one of its first 12 shots as the
had 15 and Gerald Fitch added 13 points and 11 Wildcats went ahead 23-4 midway through the first
rebounds as the Wildcats won their second straight half.
game ·following consecutive conference losses.
"The defensive intensity was there early and that
David Sanders scored 17 points, Emmanuel Wade
Plelil~e see Wildcats, 84

NCAA

ATLANTA (AP)- Giving. Los Angeles
an ultimatum worked pretty well for Gary
Sheffield.
Two weeks after demanding the Dodgers
either trade him or keep him through the
end of his contract in 2004, Sheffield was
traded Tuesday to the Atlanta Braves for
Brian Jordan, pitcher Odalis Perez and a
I'(linor league pitcher.
Los Angeles GM Dan Evans insisted the
slugging outfielder's complaints didn't lead
to the deal.
"We didn't get rid of
Gary Sheffield," Evans
said. "We made the trade
because we felt it made a .
lot of sense for us ."
He strejsed Jordan's leadership in the clubhouse
and believes the loss of
Sheffield will be off1et by
Sheffield
better seasons from Eric
Karras,
Mark
Grudzielanek and Adrian Beltre - all of
w_l10m spent time on the .disabled list .
Sheffield asked the Dodgers for a contract extension or a trade before spr.i ng
training last year, but the team would not
rework his deal. He called team chairman
Bob Daly a liar, then hit .311 with 36
home runs and 100 RBis.
"We've been looking for a hitter of this
caliber for quite some time," Braves general manager John Schuerholz said. "We've
been talking periodically with the Dodgers
about Gary for the past year and were
delighted we were able to get it done."
Jordan, often the subject of trade rumors,
hit .295 with 25 home runs and 97 RBls
in 200 I. He was plagued by injuries during
, his three years in Atlanta, although he
often played through them .
''I'm still in shock," said Jordan, who
makes his home in the Atlanta area. "This
is going to take me away (rom my family.
You get used to being home, and then you
have to tell your kids we're going to be
apart."
A former NFL safety,Jordan's outspoken,
fiery personality made him a leader in the
clubhou;e and a welcoined change to the
Braves' laid-back style. ·

A-Train rolls to offensive rookie honors
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'
Anthony Thomas, not even a starter
in Chicago at the beginning of the
season, still rolled to a 1,000-yard performance that earned him The Associated Press Offensive Rookie of die
Year award on Tuesday.
l·
Thomas, a second-round draft pick
out of Michigan, was a backup to
James Allen at the start of the ~eason.
By midseason, he was an overpowering presence in the Bears' backfield,
helping them to the NFC Central
title.
"A lot of people didn 't think I could
do it;' Thomas said. "But Chicago had

faith in me and gaye
rile an opportunity,
and I tried to make
th~ best of it."
He did precisely
operating
that,
behind an improved
line and keying a balanced attack that
complemented
a
Thomas
superb
defense.
Thomas rushed for
1,183 yards and ,seven touchdowns,
with four 100-yard efforts. He compiled his 1impressive numbers despite
missing tw.o games with a· hamstrin g
'

injury and totaling three carries for ·9
yards. in the first two weel~s of the season.
It certainly helped in d1e balloting by a
nationwide panel of 50 sports writers and
broadcasters who cover the NFL that the
Bean were winners. Thomas earned 20
votes, beating San Diego's LaDainian
Tomlinson, who had 16.Tom~nson was a
first-round pick, the first running back
chosen in the draft. Thomas was taken
38th overall - one spot in fiont of Pinsburgh linebacker· KendreU Bell, th e
league's Defensive Rookie of the Year and was the founh running back selected.
Behind Thomas and Tomlinson, who

rushed for a rookie-best 1,236 y.uUs and
I0 touchdowns, were Miami wide receiv- ·
er Chris Chambers with seven vote'S, Arizona guard Leonard Davis with five and
Indianapolis running back Dominic
·
Rhodes with two.
Thomas' selection gave Chicago consecutiVe years with a top rookie. In 2000,
linebacker Brian Urlacher won defensive
rookie honors and became an All-Pro
this .season.
Thomas is the fourth Bears rookie
to ·win offensive honors, but tbe first
since Gale Sayers in 1965. Mike Ditka
won it in 1961 and Ron Bull won the
next season.

'

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·.

�Pomeroy, lllddlep ort, Ohio
•
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t!tribune - Sentinel -

t e .... onr1 truc1c1 $11115 1o
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•.
••

111111 Chevy Lt«Nne. Auto.
pw/pb. GrNI work Cor.
Auno good. 12500 "' nag.
(304)'1156-, 771

,.,•

tQG7 Oklt Cuttan Supremo, 4 clr•• 41,000 mllot.

'.

••

8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW I0. WRITE AH AD.

I.na
:r. __PEIIso:JNAI5
_____,I
\\'\ 111 '\I I \II '\I&lt;.,

-,
, •Gontlornon Soaking White
•FomaJe Over 50 Yaars For
'Walks And Fnendtllip. A..
ply To: 553 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ,
:Apartmanl403
:-:--:--:---:--::,-------::-Moon Ught Eocorllo. Altonllon Lad leo. Full service
, _ eacoo11. Prompt Pro1 - 1 Discreet &amp; Confl·
dontlal. epm to Oom.
(740f388-t7lll.

IJEuo WANnD

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Vmt-. A Keyword

0436

•

•

I'

• No, Commercial Ads

''
•
••

, • No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard-soles • Limit 3 Per Person
Moll To : Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Boautldan, FT &amp; PT Help
Needed. Paid Vocollonl
Hourly Waoo Vo. Comml•
alon, FrH ceu hours,
(740)446-7267

Sua Monitor

STNAI CNA Part· lime pas!-

t1an available an all ohllta.

Why wall? Slart mooting
Ohio singles tonlghl, call ton
lree t-800-788·2623 ext
1821..

hral week during school age a route .lyttem and

-ngly-

r

MlliiiU HoMEs
FOR SALE

IPI;

ArAinMI!Nis

. . . . ......
. · --FORiiRIMiiiii_.l

Umlted Or No Credit? Govommant Bank Finance Only
AI Oakwood In BarbOuro·
ville, WV 304--738-3409. .

"'

r

I.._,..m~

I

t -3 Bedrooms Faoecloled Single Bedroom EHicloncy Sut'a Seleciai&gt;IH on the"!" Floral-Print COUCh w/rnoiCI&gt;HomH From '$199/Mo., 4% Apt., · Shared · Bathroom. ·Jn '-'ddllpott. Dolo, giUio lng vliancH also chair 1o
Down, 30 Yeors al 8.5% - $200 1 monlh, Ut1WM In- waro, Aladdin ITIIIIIft, and maloh. Excellent Condition.
APR. For Uatlnga, 801).319- eluded. (740)446·811" or rnoow. (740)8112-112811
$700. (304)674-3837 or
3323ext. t709.
(740)2156-1972. Alk lor
M-···--14156-tns
t bedroom. $300' mo. plus
dopooH. Relora""" requlrld. Stavo &amp; Rolrlgooato•.
AIC,
Galllpollo.
(740)446--31187
2 bedroom houH In

posit, wllh option 1o buy on
land contract, no palo,
(740)696·7244
3 bedroom home Mlnersvllo
erea, river view, $4150 psr

r ••dSC!II

Lynn

•;:n-

with

lpl-.

IIMI1 lncludld, Mlddlopor1,

(740)511 .(1841 (740) -

1 ANWUS

•

,

Tore TownhouN Apart·
monla, Very Spaolouo, 2
Bedroorno, 2 Floorl. CA. t
t/2 Bath, Fully Cai!IOIId,
AduH Pool &amp; Baby Pool Pallo, Start $365/Ma. No Polo,
....._..... Pluo"-·""'"--"
~
~.".~ ... , .....,._..
Required,
Days:
740-448·
•••t E 1
•• 367
~ ; von nge; 7~
•
0602, 7-.otOt 1Win River Towers now IC·
ceptlng appllcatlonl for
I SR. HUD IUblldlzed IPI-

MI!III:H.\!IIll

·
or Monllor. Printor, Koy·
board, Sill All. Call
(740)446-7804
P
B H Horizonlel 5 ha11
Bliggl and Stratton engine.
RUrtl Good. Flllllllono, LOg
Splltlora, ale. 189. Can
~740)448·7804

package. (740)245-5672
85 Bronco II, 4x4, 6 cylinder, 4 .SP81d with overdrtve,
$1200 OBO. (740)446-3398
ATTENTION: AMISH
TRANSPORTATION 6
CHURCHES.
Z-2001, 15 PuoangarVano
loW Miles/Extra Clean
Coli Amy C.-tor
Turnplkl Ford

I

j

I

excellent condition, Auto·
matlc, V-8, k)aded with options. bumper hlloh, gooseneck &amp; Slh wheel towing

2701
:.;_:,:-_ _ _ _ __
While kHchen ceblnel
180.00, 200 amp aiiCirlc .
hook up $100.00, amall
molal wardrobe 1125.00.
7&lt;10-992·5503 o1 7&lt;10-992·
5718
:.:..::'-:-::-:--:::--:-:--:
Wood for Sale. $35 ti load

r

1 ton chaise, air,

cruise, tilt, Rease hlloh, go·
raga kepi. Alklng 18,500.
Phone 992·3987 (leave a
meaoage)
1994 Chevy 314 ton P~k·up.

-------While Frigldaro -idlY·
S1&gt;1dlololflcloncy
or Ht. $2(10. Wlll1l Holpolnt
$226 unfumlohld, $2150 fuo· 245MB Hltd Drf\11 Sound StOO. Almond GE A-.
-.S300dopoolt,water, Clrd."FFoppydrivH •13"Col· frlgarator St50. (304)675-

p.......
de-

oy, $375 PI' mo. plua

Point Pleatant area. 2x6 month, references required,
walls thermal pane win d. 1
~~...~
.......

ldYertfllft'llf11aforrMI
-~~to In

r

4-WDs

1986 Ford Ranger 4 whael
drive, V-6 engine. lo"ll bed,
good condlllon, St 200,
(7401949·2249
1992 Chevy 4x4 5-speed;
6.5 Diesel Turbo, 314 ton

ANI1QU&amp;'I

A-·Con~n~--- delivered. Call Randy Cox.
year. Wilt ride an aaalgned take responsibility lor the
-" (740)367-7633
wn-•
'
• apos I requ-. no ,..._
WOLFF ••uNINO••lEOS
ANNovNcEMI;Ms routt dally l&gt;itn driver, aa· aelo and delivery ol load vloiMianoltllolow.Our
dowa. priced to ..to. Call 7&lt;10-992-6mafter5pm.
·-;;;,;~~----.
Lw______.. olltlng driver In malnlllnlng producll lhro"'jjllut an . . . - - (304)675-3889 (600)474. .
loW l,1ontllly lnvoatmanto
BUIUliNG
~
order on the bus. Worlcl In ~nod terrllory.
4391 ask for Rosemary,
3 Bedroom hOUIB. eutom
Home Delivery
·
SVftouES
ADOPTION
ualgned cluoroom al lho e oHer medical, dantal,
~
..::loll In
.
Schoolo, Large yard. Out·
FREE Cdor catalog
110 +
Blrthmotherl we proml• to center when not an the t&gt;u•- oyo caoe, plus 40t~k), profft
oocl
Only $850 down end skis Bulkllngo, Carporl.
Call Today 1o801).7tto0t58
love your baby uncondftlon- New employoa l&gt;iH receive sharing, paid veoatlon. end
lfoto ••• P P r.,.
St 81.38 per month gala you Rent + Dlposil. 7&lt;10-985www.np.olllln.com
llloclc. brick. pially throughout Illes Joys algnlflcant training during flexible daya •nd houra~
.....,.. on an equW ' B new home. cau 1·800- 4308
lor elderty and dillbl«&lt;..
.
wlnctowt, Hntela,IIC. Claude
and Chellenges. Coolldon- employment.
Get the scoop on all tho de~·
837-3236 aok for Mike.
.
EOH
'Free Gu Fumacao and Air Wlnt.,., Rio Grandt, OH
till. Legal. C&amp;fl Margaret
. tails by calling 1.-.33&amp;Pilot Program, Rontooo
(304)&amp;7Wirls
, Conditioner Eatlmataa. Cal! C&amp;ll7&lt;10-245-5121.
and LID 1-688-203-0333 Appllcellon/ resume mull 71111 Clndldaloo must be 01
Pilot Program, Single Po- Needed. 304·738-7296.
·
·
(740)+18-6308 or 1·800· -~;;.;.;,;.;;;;.;.;.._ _,
- - -- - - - - be _. IO: Sanely Toylor, loaat 21 yllrs old end hive
rent, No Credl1/ Bad Credit,
.
.
291 .(10911. 11 you don"t call
Fuller Brush &amp; Stanley COl Head Start, PO Box a good driving record. Eoeio
aAnd Govem mentvLoansNfor 3 BA. Ev.r;roen Rd, _ , Chrlaly'o Fomlly Living, .. ,.. bolh Ioiii
~
0
Home
Products
bu
/soli
1084,
Gallpolls,
OH
46531
HoMEs
enlors.
wn
.our
ew
160.
$3851
month,
S300
...
33140
New IJml Rd., Rut·
'
"~------·
(740)843-t025 • Y ' by 4pm, January 24th.
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
FORSAU:
Homo Todayl (7401446· curlty deposit. (740)446· 111\d, 01\lo, 7411-741!-7403. Ful Size Maltren and Box ·
-:..:=;.::_;.:=;__;;.. _ _ _
plasma donors, Hm $50 to ~
3570.
• • · 6189 or (740)446 11185.
~Com~~~::-'..:= Sorlram~ao-', •1218.5, .Fl. :=u,!l11!•8g8, 2$!~1-eaoc~.!Jih
u)nd. PI.LIPPoio••
5
Fun ExerciM Private L"" .Custodian. Will Worlc op- $60 per week for 2 or 3
·
-, ~·
, ,
. .
Ni11oJ1. ' C. ,_,_ :::;;;: Fiar
~•8
oov "' '(7440 592 31 88
.
10111, Leam self defense at pro.:lmately 16 houra per hOurs weekly. cau Sera- 2 .bedroom ynflnlatled up· Special Financing- Down 4 Rooma &amp; Bath, $3001 fron,tl available lor leal. TNC:lk Topper, a1• long x .·
your own psc:e Jay Clarlc's week bo,_n our Chelh'. Toe, 7&lt;10-592-6651 .
· otalra, largo deck, now WB· Paymenla II low ao 1%. month. 52 Olivo Slroet. vooonc111 now'
80" Wide, $60. (7401266· AKC Malo Pug Puppln.
Kenpo Karate School 740· Ire, Gallipolis, and Pomeroy
tor/gas line, new heating &amp; P( req)~~~Y by . phone. (740)446-3945
·
1529
- · Wormed, Will taka
·
offlcH. RHumoo with ralor· WANTeo: Full- limo em- cooling system, newly paint- 740 - -3570.
Graclouo living. 1, and 2 G bb' PI
T 1 &amp; psymonll. $350. (740)388·
742•2546
encea will be accepted at ptoymant In your own home ed, dish waahef, chain link We have approximately 20
MoBilE lloMEs biidloom 11pllltmentl at VU. ru I ano- un ng :.;i32::::.5-::-.,.---:--Wanled Uttle Mr. Mlu. VII· lho Cholhlro .olllco, 8010 as a Home Saovlca Worker tonca. 99 Burdette Addition. uaac homes for under
FOR RIM
ilgl Menor and R - Ropoloo. Problems? Need AKC ......... Pupjl4H 3
online Corotutanll. Soyo &amp; North Stall Route 7, until with Buckeye Community call (304)875-2902
ApaF-~.~••-~-~
. .~. ~~~ 5The Plano Dr. Fomoln. , 1 malo. 7 woics.·
52 000 calllo801).S37.3236 ~
Girls aga 6m· ~Oyra . Sat. 4:30pm on January 23, Services. We provide salary
tor' info'
'""" ..,,v.-., --... "N"
2 1i
Poodle
mat.
Feb. 9th. Ripley Elem. For 2002. GMCM lo an equal pluo---l&gt;enoflto end a dally 3 bedroom 1 bath No 5 3rd.
·
12x60
all electric. 1112•5084. Equal Houolng Henly Mumo $3.o0 each 4 and
( 740~98
molll~rroe,.ln.,;fo.,;C.,;•,.n3,.7..2-.5,.950.._.,
.
opporlunltyemployor.
room and board rate. You St. t.~ason. WV $25.000. 1970 Champion 12x8o 2 $350/month. II)Oiudee wator ~lorSIO. Open Sat. 8-5pm. &amp; - - - - - - - . . . , . . . .
provide a home, guidance (3041995-3349
bedrooms 53 000 . OBO &amp; SIWOr ~-- Located be--~- n-.~-- G~
expsrietiC8d Caolllor NHd- andtrtencllhlplnafamllyal·
.
.
- hind Fox's PIUa In POint 1 Badroom ,Apslt· ~·-~- ~N••• ._... AKc Rag. Lab pup?IVFAWAY
ld (304)895-3603
mosphoro. Requires lhe 3 bedroom t bath, 6 Ann. Call (304)675-2470
Pleasant. C&amp;H (304)675- ,_._(740)448 0380 ,
houN Mt. Alto. (304)895· ploslor oaJe 304-675-44811
"~------~· 7-'C:.:...~"::..:.'"'=~---:- at;llty lo lllch per10n8lliv- St. CIIHon, wv 1125,000 Call 1973 mobile homo for oalo 3423
.
374Q leave menage. or
, Galllo- Melgo Community lng aklllo and a cornmllment (304)895-3349
t2K60 2 bedroom new
Now 2 SR, - · Dryer (304)695-3789
. AKC Roglotorad Llbrador
.
To Giveaway- 1 male modi· Action Agancy lo accapting t0 lhe rowth 8nd dev81o ·
.
'
1 '
Hookup, Appllonceo Fur- ...........,...nt u-~•11 01 Puppln Excallenl HunU,
1 .V....: p rt Gold
appllcatklna for· Accounts
g
P"' 3 bedroom house for sale electric furnace, ronl &amp; rear 2 bedroom mobKe home tor nlahed CioN to Holpltal "......,..'ovw ..,..,_ •
s· p
• .
~~~n~o ~)..:a.....to en Paylblo Cllrk. Higll tiChool mont oil~J~~~~ .!'~h on .lond contract (740)992- porch, large front ,rrch rent, no pets, (740)992· Relor~ncoo
Required: lrltutor, Coli For Producl Or· rospscll(7. Flral Shota
·
d'..._• wllh lwo
menll ·--•~· - nnar·
'
(roofed), on rente lot, 5858
(740)441.()117
Opportunity. (740)441 -1982 Wormed. 40)446-0080
.,....,_
yeara non- eated, con11c:t ChrWty 11 I· 5858·
$3500 080, Mason WV, - ' - - - - - - - I \In I '-I I 1'1 II "
=:!.::f"'C:::::u':."\"'1
800·531-2302. equal Op· 3 bo~room houH. 1·112 (304}n3-915t
2 Bedroon'I'Tranor. Allolec· North 3rd Avenue, Mlddl..
JeT
.
,\11\I'-IIHh
AUC'I10N AND
a .:nuat. Will proceu portunlty employer.
bath, 2 car garage, 299 t 990 Flee·-···• 2 bedroom ~k:, 5300/mo. $200 deposit. poit, t &amp; 2 bedroom furnllhAeRATION MOTORS
Ji'LEA MARKET
Aocounto Payable, Par.roll, Wonted: Halratyllll lor now ~~ Street, (740&gt;992 " home-call 'cheryl o 740o (740 )387-0847'
~~~::~~nta ..,:apo~~.:. :::.~~~.: :::.~~ \~ rtO
FARM
Purchall':f.:r::alnta n all salon. For more Information
385·9621 , 2002 SHnpointe 2-bedroom, for 1818 or rent, (740)=2 "t85
• 800-537 9528
~---Rick Pearson Auction Com· recorda.
with ref· please call (740)4ll6-3?47
3 Bedroom on Route 2. 3 bedrooml2bath 14 x 7()- quiet community, nice clean
•• ""'
•
·
'
r.A.lUtrmuu
peny. lull lime auctioneer, eren- and oppllcatlono
(304)675·5332
must sell-call Mlka o 740- home, (740)992·2167
Now Taking Appllcetlono..__lliiiliiiiiiil;....
complete auction service. will be accepted at the Wouki love to clean your
385'-2434
35 w.t 2 Bedroom Town- Large pickup load mixed Ford 5000 Gu TIW:tOr wllh
Licensed 1811,0hlo &amp; Wnt Choahlre Office. 8010 Nctrlh home, older Chriotlon lady 3 Boclroorn, 2 Bath, Sat up
·
Animal lovers _wanted· 2 houN Ape,_ 1 - Hrewood, will deliver locally, 590
Allied
Loader,
VIrginia, 304-773-5785 Or SIIJIIJ Aoute 7. uniU 4:30pm hila tOo yoara oxpsrfence on Privati Property. Toke 1995 Clayton t4x70 2 bed- bedroom, t4K70 mobile Wolor Sewage, Truh, $4!1.00 9411-2587 evenings . F740)37H38t
Dra·-ra on
304-ns-5447.
on January 23, 2002. and r(a 1er)',.!ceo , ce II any- over payments. (740)446· rooms 2 lull baths, dining home on 10 IICrtl,$415 min. S3501Mo., 740-448-oooa.
Molal ~--",
GMCAA Ia on oquol - 11me, 740 ••2-978 1
3583.
ar11, laundry room, central N. of Pomeroy. 25/mo
~ 4
""
~WANnD
tunlty employer.
air, underpinning. 8x16 oov- plus deposit &amp; utilities, Very nice, 2·3 bedroom one t6de, Shetve on Bottom,
J.AYMJ~
4 BR, 3.5 Bath ranch wRh orad porch. 8xl0 building. Tumor' Reali~, (740)992- apenmonl. In town. large 30x20, Veoy Nlca, Perloct
10 Buy
1.~-------'· Help '!'lnled caring lor the 114i
~
over 3000 aq II, large (304 )675·7116 or (304)675- 2886
kltchtn, LA, S5001mo. Ret- tor Students Homework,
•
oldorly, Derat Group Horne,
fenced yard, new kllchen , 5018
&amp; depoalf reql.irld. $20. (7401985-440G
20 Barred Rock honl &amp; 2
At&gt;ac&gt;utt Top Dollar. u.s . now psylng minimum wogo,
1'iwNING
new roof, 2 car attached ga·
Baautlful River View Ideal (740)448-;1844
- · $20; 2 fomolo rabSIIv&lt;tr. Gold Colno, Proal· now lhllta: 7am·3pm, 7omrage. $146.000. Call Foo sale- t8x70, 3 bedroom. Fort Or 2 People, RlforenMOBILE HOME OWNeRS bill lor'""'· 40 742.()212.
Mia,· Dlamanclo, Gold 5pm, 3pm-ttpm, ttpm· GolffpolloCirHr Collogl (740)448·2311
2 bath, caH 740-385-9621 cos, Depoatt, No POll, F o s - l n l e r t h e r m &amp; Coleman goa,
lh •Ringi, U.S. Currency,· 7am. col 740-992·5023.
(Coreara Cloll To Homo! .8 R
aek for Charyl.
lor Trailer Parle, 740-441·
SPACE ·
oil &amp; eloctrlc lumacea InY"'
MTS Coin Shop 151 secC1 11 Toda 1 448 367
oom Home with t aero
Ot8t
FOR RIM
eluding hi emalenoy heat
GRAIN
,.;,iA~uo GaiiiPout 7&lt;10- Lady 1o Help Care for elder·
pump BYIIerno. We corry a
1~Jtf· -'~ · lot. Handyman• Challenge, IRS Speclall We'll match
446-2e.i2 '
'
IV rnon, oomo houoework.
R IHIOoOS~~~B
Ails $29,500. Centerville, yourtaxretumupto$2.000. Claan, 3 Bedroom Mobile
complete line o1 Moblle · Qualltyhly loooalo,St.50
·
(304)675-1785 or (304)675OS
•
·
0H(7401245·977t
Call (740)446-3093 lor de· Home In the . Cou,ry. Tralilr Lot . ln Melon WV. home perto &amp; accassorloe. bell,· free miKed dog 10
7292
WANml
(7401256-6574
. $100. month. (304)882· BeNNETT'S HEATING a good home (740)885- 3810
816 M I St 1 Pt PI IIIIa. .
I \11' 1 I 1\ \ II '\ I
UPE vou DI!SEAVEI .
To Do
Compl.:;y R~r:oblohld. 2
8USINI'l;!l
Trailer In Rutland 2 bod- 2817
COOLING (740)441-1411
"lin HI...,
II YOUR OWN 80881
story. 2 Full Bath. 3 .BedAND BUIUliNGS
rooms, 1e... required, no
"' 1 ~-=nott
Hay &amp; Brlghl Wire llo
Income potenUallll
All of your home repairs ad· rooms. Large Kitchen, ___
. pets. 740-742·2681
www.
.•
Straw, Year 'Round De:IIYery
FREe Ink:. Full Training. dlllons &amp; remodeling. 24hr Large Utility Roam, LRI DR/
HouiEHouJ
NEW AND uaED STEEL &amp; VOlume Dlocount Avella·
Ho.PWANIID
WWW.JiodPEnlemdWSQDJ emergency service, aenlor Family Rm . New Carpet 8000 Sq. fool commerlcal
APAKIMI!MS
Steel Beaml Pipe Rebar btl.
Heritage
Farm.
818-884-4325
chlzeno discount . 22yrs. throughout. F/A &amp; AIC, storage wHh 14,000 sq. lool
FOR RIM
Gooos
For Concreto,' Angle, Chan- ~304)875-5724.
McCiuro'o Rtlllurant now exp. (3041578-2065
$79,900. (740)446-9585 or ol outslda area. Call ERA ~
nil, Flat Bar, Steel Grallng
lit i \"&gt;1'1 11 11 \I Il l\.
Are you eemlng wttal you ....., al
(740)446-2205
or
(740)446Town
&amp; Country Real Eo·
3 Place Bedroom Sullt. For Drains. Driveway• &amp;
3
oro worth? S1,60()o5k/mo ~~~..: ~':'"~/:. Georges Portoblo Sawmill, 2883.
tate 304-675-5546
~.~'!:. ~~..:!.~'::.. ~~u~: Price nagolllblo. (304)675- Wolkwayl. l&amp;L Scrap Mot· rio
A•~i'
Fraolnlo 801).221 ·1&gt;187. . lion at..;,.tlon &amp; bring back don1 haul your logo to the C
Cl
Bed
3604 .
olo Qpsn Monday, TueSday.
~,....,
_300m &amp; mllljuat caii304-675-19S7.
- ---:-----:-- botweon
rown ty. 3
room, 1 Cdmmorclal Building lor nlshed, rsecuolty depolll re.
- y &amp; Friday, Bam·
FOR &amp;IJ!
9
Art You Eomlng Whel
112 Baths. OWner Flnanclng Rent. Coder Str11t. Galllpoo qulrod, no psla, 740-992· ApplloncH: Reconditioned 4:30pm. Clooed Thuroday, "--lltlioiiioiiiiii_...
You're Warthm Chooll tO:00em, Monday thru Sat· Moving and Hauling: Clean with. $6.000
down. Us. OH. (740)258·6861
2216.
waohera, 0Nert, Re-o, Satur~:l &amp;
Sunday. 1_ Nova 11 ol wl1h elot
succooa end eom lrom urdly.
Otll Bulldlnga, Baaomenlt, (7401441·1108
.,
..~ 7
7
Homo I $1 500·$5000/Mo. Molhora Drllml
Garage a. Eotateo, Traoh,
For Lease: 3000 to 5000 sq t Bedroom Apartmento. Aelngoalora, Up T~ Deya ( 40)
300
' new porto $7000. 304-885PT/FT lor FREE lnfomoatlan Slly Home
Elo. Q(jd Joba. Call For sale by owner.
Nice bl.· H office on ROIIII Space. $269 month. Deposit &amp; Aafo :"ytaragnt~l~s ~!: Rooldontlel Homo Qwnoro 3076
, ••• 8t 8 08"'
(740'"'.. 71504
10\lel hor1\f on 1 acre near 35' 2nd Ave. MOdem Roat· orenca. HUD Approve~.
....,..
•
.,._ ___ HI ffl 1
90 1 =-:--~----C1 II
~·
· ~ BaYourQwnBonl
,.......
Chester. Three bedroom, roo~a. Walk· In vaull. can (740)441-1519
CityMaytao, 740-446·n95. ,..,....., e coney puo 11183 Ford Ranger 2 Wd.
www.SimploCullBiz.c:om Eam up to
Top to Bollom Cleaning two baths, one-car garage;-Arimll&lt;al for Ponlble Anti· ·
· !I'll furnaces Including 011 302, Automallc, $1100.
1Vt you Sarlous About
Sf500oS60001Mo.
5ervk:o. Profeoolonal clean· lamly room Wllh flreplaca, que Slone, Reslluranl, Pro· 1 Bedroom Apt. Galllpolll. For Sole: Reconditioned and eiiC\riC gao fuma· (304)87~-6733
dryers end relrigEHicloncy
Hoot '"::~"':-...;.:----Working From Home? Call PTIFT
·~"I" •
lng at oHor!Uoble _ prices. oun room · Now central hoat· fesslonal OHicea Many Walor Paid. $275 month wuhera,
oralora. Thompoona
Appll- ""·
Pumpo,HIloiiUrlng
Toppsns
-:c
Now For FnMIInlormatlan. 1~ ~705.
Rnklonllal, olllc:o, remodel· lng &amp; ale ayatem. One ml· Poealbllllloo . . se~ &lt;lreg pluo depoolt. No Palo, anct 3407 Jackson AYI F
""lbl
_..,,
1987 Grand Am, Runo
1
1
www.CashNowAndForevar. log and oonatructkln olean nute on Route 7, but still pri· Smith at Smith Buick Pon· (740)448-4043 aner 8:00pm
·
·
• rtl ncr,...
war....., Good, LOti at New Parta1
1-aa.eo1-4356
www.IUCCISI4u-4mo.com com
up. Conlklontlal. 992-2979 vall. (740)985-3961
tlac or phone (740)446· 106 LOculi Slreet. upatOI.; nuo, (:104) 675"7388$700. (740)388-8472
8
Altonttonl
Need 51adln Ia .-u AVOfl. or992·t39t .
FS: Bran~ New Home t800 2282
garage apenmom, 2 bod- ~~~~~:,a
:g~,Jcr (7~~-reN:41~ IIIII Grand Morqulo,
eo 2nd 1
l&gt;ilhout (740)446-3358
oq II., I 112 aooe lot,
Lots g_
room, IIDYI &amp; relrlgarator .......
"'1o100o112.e1117
8Q,OOO mllot, Loldld, Good
•
•
·
1
m ·· ncorno
•t15,000. Call lor lnla.
.,.
fumlshed, $275/mo., St80 ~40 )446· 444 1·877·830· -~ Condition 112000 080

r

VANS&amp;
1985 S·tO Blazer, $90,000
mills. No Rust, Good Condition. $2,600 (3041662·
2221

Scenic Hilla Nurolng Center. Allrool • - _ . , .
Stop by and Hit out en appll·
In IIIIo MWIPII* to
catlonorcaii PamC&amp;Idwell
lllbjocttothefor more Information. 'llr-.gActoltlll Must aell 1997 t8x58. Will
(740}446-7150
- - Mllopl to help wl1h dollv&lt;try. Coli Her·
. IdYll- •eny
old, 7&lt;10-385-9948.
Suooesa Never Taatld So 1"'""'"""·1-tiOto 0t
Gaodl -~~~ Tuo. dlat ~Oinatlon-on Muol ooll· 14x70 mobile
tilth a - · 111th, 1:00 om ,_, ooliot, ......... •• home, call 740·365·2434
.e:oo pm, Jeckaon Depot - 111 . - . 01 011110na1 1111&lt; far Elaine.
(piHH call lo schedule an ortoln, or ony lnt- to
lnfervlew). SChwan•a. a
.-ony.New 2002 t4x70, 3 br/2bth.
-•In food 08181 and dellmillotlon
Only
$995. down &amp; $189.67
1
livery for close to 50 yeono,
per month. Colt Nikki, 7&lt;10--~·
Rout clltcrimiNitlon."
385·7671 .
11 ~ng
a
I
Monoger In the Jackoon T h i l - l * will nat Nice 28x60 Double Wide
area, to optrtllend man-setting on oented lot In

P'•••- .

72 Chevy 314 Ton P.U., V-6•
Auto, PS &amp; PB l&gt;ith Extras.
$2500. (740137'"2706
79 F· IOO, 2 wd .. tOOK
mllll, $800; Molhowl Bow
29" drew, 60o701bs,
(740)388-9701

•
••

• Include Complete

G:t
.
=

IJEuo WANnD·

1987 Ford Ranger, 4x4, 5

spOed. (740)245-9502

•
1989 Bronco II, 4x4, 69,000
; • miles. Ex,cellont Condition.
• (740)367-0889

.·

(740)441 1100

-I.·

was the game that gave us a reality check." well off his averages of 17.7 points and

NCAA

craw Cob.

••

1'

Description • Include A Price tl Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

.ll:'.a

1976 c -

Hllllboro Bed, ,Good Solid

••
••

Prlvlte Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • each Item Priced

Pub lication
In-corutnn: 1: 00 p.m. Sundar Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays
For Sundays Peper

Quallffcollona: H~ School
Dlplomo/GEOrequlrld. Familler wl1h Held Start phi·
looophy. Current or post
Held Slalt psront poelerrld.
'Mull hav. TB lilt end en
lnltlll pl1yelcal ltlforo llllrt·
lng work. Must -lhoiiCI
1 Htl~tlon
·
nv Nalute ol worlc: Up to 40

"--'='-"-'=.;_....;.._ _

1·:00 p. m.

Monday•Fri&lt;IIV ror Insertion
In Next Dey 's Paper

• Start Your Adt

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

.

'

~-

In ~ Columo :

loaded. $9500. '(7401992·
2679.
2000 Ford TauiiJI SE, Pow·
or Windows. Dooro end
Locks. Roar defogger, 3 lillf
engine, Aluminum Wheels,
Sarvlced
Aaguloriy,
$10,500. (740)446-71185

::

•

Dally

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

!Unw' loss at UCLA bst weekend cost
the Jayhawks th.e N o. 1 ranking, and Oklaho ma State paid for it.
_
Fourth- ranked !Unsas led by as many as
24 points in a nearperfect first half and
w ent o n to a 79-61
victory over N o. 6
Oklahoma State on Tuesday night, the
worst ho me loss in Eddie Sutton's 12 seasons as coach of the Cowboys.
" We haven't played any better so fat this
yea r for sure," Kansas coach Roy Williams
said of the first half. "I thought w e were
really good defensively, and we m ade
shots."
Drew Gooden scored 17 points, Kirk
Hinrich 15 and N ick &lt;;:allison 14 as
Kansas (1 4-2, 3- 0 Bigl2) rebounded from
its 87-77 loss at UCLA on Saturday by
shooting 6 7 percent in the first half against
·a team that had been holding opponents
to 3 7 percent.
!Unw' tough man- to- man defense frus trated the Cowboys (15-2, 2-2) into 10
turnovers in the first half, many while
Oklahoma State was trying to run its halfcourt offense.
. "I thought they outplayed us," Sutton
said. "I thought their intensity was certain·
ly much better than ours."
In other games i!lvolving ranked teams
on Tuesday, it was No. 10Virginia 86, No.
14 Wake Forest 7 4; No. 11 Illinois 77, No.
17 Iowa 66; No. 12 Kentucky 87, Mississippi 64; No. 23 Oregol) 71, Willamette
48; and No. 24 Miami 76, Pittsburgh 69 in
double overtime.
·
Although Gooden had 22 points and .10
rebounds against UCLA, Williams said
Gooden played perhaps his poorest game.
"He took two terrible shots early and
didn't play any defense or guard his guy.
He lost his focus," Williams said. "You
throw out that game,and for the last three
or four weeks he's played about as good as
anybody I've ever had."
Gooden, Hinrich and Collison were
freshmen two years ago when the Jayhawks lost 86- 53 in Stillwater, the worst
loss ofWilliams' career.
" When we jumped out we had a lot of
confidence, a lot of anger built up after losing to UCLA," Gooden said. "I think that

, • Truck, St500. (740)388-

(304) 675-1333
Dlsolav Ads

(740)44eo()t03

t

•
•

The Dally Sentlllel • Page B 3

Kansas bounces back impressively against
Oklahoma State; Oregon, Illinois post wins

tlttaf,

,•

•

l\egister

t M6 Onlnd Ant. 4

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•

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PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

AHII"'

721&lt;, 13'1t!. tCH14 Grand

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

tUII S\1 ~:

.•

'

In one week With us

JM. 11, 2002

·:

..

Monday thru Friday

'

•
•

Word Ads

~llday,

1998 Honda 300 EX. Looks
Good. Runa Good. $1900

Fredrik Janzen had 21 points and 10
rebounds for O klahoma State, which lost
consecutive conference home games for
the first time since February 1988.
No. 10 Virginia 86,
No. 14 Wake Forest 74
R oger M ason J r. had 25 points- 21 on
3-pointers - and Travis Watson had 20
points a nd 17 rebounds for the Cavaliers
(1 1-2, 2-2 Atlantic Coast Conference),
w ho hit nine of their first 10 shots in the
second half \O take a 65-53 lead.
Josh Howard had 19 points for the
Demo n D eacons (13-4, 3-1), who were
looking fo r their fifth straight conference
road vic to ry.
No. 11 Dlinois 77, No. 17 Iowa 66
Brian Coo k had 21 points and Frank
Williams flirted w ith a triple- do uble- 16
points, nine assists and seven rebo unds as the lllini (14- 4, 3-2 B ig Ten) extended
their home winning streak to 27 games,
third-lo ngest in the country. ·
Luke R ecker, the conference's leading
scorer, had 16 points on 5-for- 13 shooting
for the Hawkeyes (1 3-6, 2-3), while R eggie Evans had 12 points and six rebo unds,

·r

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Evans shoots amid the defense of Illinois' Brian Cook, right, and Robert
Archibald, left, In the first half :ruesday.
(AP)

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t:2:,a·7543
WWtt.
ey- reoma.com
-------ATTENTION:
RN'S AND LPN'S
Aroo&lt;llo Nuralng Center·
Part·llmo poslllone ora
: oYiillblo on altlmoon and
- Midnight 111111. W8 oHor IK•
· Clllart! blnltlll that lnoluda
. Helllh lnauronot, 40tK,
Ult lnouronoo. oompstltfvl
Wlillllnd -rtunllln for
. ldYinoemonl. II you would
KkiiO ""n our 111m. ll)pty
In pertOn bel-• t:OO·
4:00 or oall Kllhryn Somer•
ville, O.O.NN.
~-AraoE~'! Muaratlnng ~·t•r
-·
Coolville Str-·
Oh
(740_..7.3tll8)
EOE

A..ro.u:~-~iiliii&amp;_,l' HIRING

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE:
Ia hereby
.....,t...
glvort
that
on
Saturday, January 18,
1981·1986 'Oidemobllo Cui·
2002, 11 1o:oo e.m., •
laSs Suprema parta. All
public aole will be h"d
Glaaa, Radiator, .many
11
211 Wall Second
more. Call · for Oetall~
S-t,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
(304)875-2674
Full/Part Time
The Form1111 B1nk and
Budget Priced Tronomlo·
OFFICE
Sevlngo Company, Ia
alono All Types, Access To ENVIRONMENT
atlllng lor c18h the
Over 10,000 Tranornloslons, :
following
coll1terol:
Rebuild Kill. 740-245-58n,: 1-888-974-JOBS
1918 Toyota Tercel
Hafp Wanted ·'
' Ceil: 339-3765._
JT2AC52L tT0137788,
ta.aao Mil••· Auto,
Nice Running car.
11181 Ford Fltata
KNJBT08KIIK8105388
6
(Thlo vohlclo Ia not
"
running)
·'j .
The Fermer• ·Bank
BASeMENT ,
and
Saving•
. . WATERPROOFING
Company, Pomeroy,
Uncondilional INeUme guar·
Ohio, ruerveo tho
antee. L.ocll reterenc11 fur·
rlghl to bid at thlo
nllhtd. Elltbllohed 1975.
1111, lnd to wlthdrtw
Call 24 Hra. (740) 446·
0870,
1-600.287-0576.
the above collateral
Aagera Waterproollng.
prior to aola. Further,
The Farmera Bank and
llvlngo Company
, reurvoo th• right to
IH:T\II.SPH"I \LIST rejeot •ny or all bldo
aubmlttocl.
Previ6us experience helpful.
Th.l
lbOVI
·State of the art equipment.
deecrlbtd ool!1t1111
will be IOid 11·11·
Great working atmosP.here.
where le", with no
We offer a benefit P.Bckage,
••prtllld or Implied
including 40lk, medical and
weirenty given.
retirement benefits, a five day
,or
tur.thlr
AHidlnllll or oommerolal
lntorm•llon, or tor an
work week and no Sundays.
wl~ng, new HrvkMr or rt· .
eppolntmenl
to
palrt. Mullr Llolnsld .....
lntptol
OOIIalartl,
!rlalln. "ldlnlll&lt;r lloOtrtal,
prior to 1111 ctall
WVOOO:I08, :10+1178-t?M.
oonlaot
lhtfll
~Clarence
luohtllln II Hl•lt :11.
11tw11n 10 a.m.
lt.m.
(1) II, 17, 11
Hafp Wantld

$6-$8

Per Hour

r

=:::mi:.!'.":"c~:

In Poraon. 8511 Third
Ave., Galllpollo.
8oltliC Hille 1
11
piiCIIIOf1o
~~
-k fill· In LPN lor lho 11-7
ohltl. Stop by end Ill out on
oppllcoUan or call Pam
Coldwell for more lnlorrna·
110&lt;1. (740)440-7180
Apply

~~4411·45141

rio

lkliiNmls

OPfoKruNrrr

1o: :";"

I .

.

(740)448:

I r'o

I

·

·~

'

• dapoolt, (740)44H06t

INOTICII
(740144 t·II08
.
Roull 2 $4!1,000 (304)273· Schoolo and owntown
OHI(i) VALLEY PUBLISH• Portlally Romoo.ltd nomt 0118
~':i ~~d5/ =~~~
lNG CO. recomrnondl lhll on eoltman Slreol In Jack·
p1 1 )448-492e
you do buolneoo wllh people eon, Nloo Out Building. 80 Acroo Htndaraon on 111 · ~ 40
you "'-• and NOT lo lind $42,000. (7401446-7811
NOw Four Lant 111m-· 2 Bedroom Apartment, 111
money through the _
mell until
tlon wllh city water. $60,000 ullllllll , Included. $4001
Solnlo Hlllo Ia accepilng op- you hev. ln-lgotld the AIIIIOdelld 3 bedroom, In (304)1137·2518 (304)545· monlh, •too dti!Otll.
pllcallonl for 3-11 Ful~. time oHortng.
.
MlddltPOrt. oall Tom Andar· 84Qt
~740)387.00,.
AN Supsrvlaor and a 3·11
-.eon a~or 5pm. ~7401992·
Pott· limo RN Supsrvloor, Slort Your Bullntll To, 3348.
3 Rcomo and Balh, Newly
Plluo atop "" and 1111 OU1 day... Primo 8""""'ng Cen·
RtmOdeltd. Downelllre.
an lppilcalklil'or call Pam II&lt; ..,_ AvaiiiDI. AI AI·
Molln.E HoMm
Stove lnd Rofriglrall!&lt;. All
_ColdWell lor more lnlorma· IOrdlttlt Rol~o'f~ Valley
FOR SAul
Housl;-s
Utlllllll Paid. 46 ' OIIYI
lion. (740)44&amp;-7tl50
Pion, Coll7
tOt . ;-FOR RENT
Strost. $475. (740)446-3845
Soenla Hlllo Nurol"ll Center
114x80 olop/oldlng 2x8
IEAUTIPUL
APAIIT·
II now ocooptI"'I appllca·
·
,.-....,.."""""""'
O
"'
SERVICE9
Willi.. 14x7 ola,. aldlng 3 Badroom 2 Bath 2 cir MINTI AT IUDGIT PIIJ.
tlono lor 2 RN\ far 11-7 ~
. 2x6 waUl 3br. 2ba., Latt garage, larGe fonoo&lt;i yord, CEI AT JACKION llo
ohlh. Houri l&gt;ill be 24· 32 I
modol double Wldtl 3br. locatod In Now Haven TATeS, 52 Wootwood Drive
_,.=_,.-F'~::-::-- - PI- otop by .and TURNID DOWN ON 2bl frtt dtllvory &amp; Sllup. ln $500 month + deposn : ~om $297 .Ia· $383. Walk to
AVONI All Areul To Buy or liN out on oppl~tlan or call SOCIAL IICURITY 1811? houoa financing lo quoliflld HUD appllconll welcoma. ohop &amp; movloi. Call 7&lt;10Sell. . Shl~ey Spsaro, 304· Pam CaldWIII 11 (740)448- No Fao Union Wo Win I buyers. (6061~74·4391 or 740·742·2443 .or 304-862· 446·2568. Equal Houolng
876·1429.
71150 lor more lnformarion.
1-888-582·3345
(60814747568 aner 5
3418
Opportunity.

'Ira

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lootalnmonl cantor, 2 night PSIII2UII Ptr tOO; t• 200 . 11190 Grand Prix, 178,000
tlondo, f300 , (740)347· PSI f37.00 Per 100; All milt• . . 11000, (740)367·
nos
Brau Comprallion Flttlnge oooe
In Stacie.
· -::::::-:::----:-=--~~~
Wolhor, $88, Dryer, $115, liON IVANI INTIRPIIIIo IQG2 Ford Taurut. V-8. FUll
Eloolrtc Range, tiS, Rlf~g. 11 Jackson, Ohio, t·8QO. Power, 40,000 mlltl,
tralor, 11811, Waaltarl Dryer 537·8828
t4200. (740)448-4714 altar
Stl. $295, St.IOk Wulier/
7pm
Dryt/, 1300, Sl&lt;laua Appil· Amulng
Mellbollam .;..!;;:;..._ _ _ _ __
lrtOII, 78 Vine Sl. •-routhll
· 87 Ford Touruo · Stollon
(740)4411·73118 or (740)21111- LOH to poundt aoo w
~·~
080
8013.
poundl u ay, qulok, Ful ~7:8",3i.2358~
.
Dramotlo Rooun.-. ,~
Natural, or. - -· H Neon, 4 Door, 44,000
ANnQliiS
"Aik about 1'1111 Bamplo" mllll, Aulomallc, Air, lied,
(740)44,_,1112
•
Soolloo,
14300 ( 40)21111o
080.
(140I28tl-88n
7
'Ointtto Sat, $75. DrHNr, 8481.
or
Buy or Nil. RIYOrine Anti· $75. entertainment C&amp;ntor, - - - - - -- quos. 1124 eoot Main on $35 Swaoper, 120. Pot AnUquo ford 11711 LTO, One
SR t24 E. ~omoroy, 7&lt;10- Cagi, Baby Stroller, U5. Owner, Bllak, and 11 In
912-2526. .Auao Moore, Mlorowavo, 11211. (740)440- good condl!lon. Cllon
owner.
11742
(30418118-3388

j

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....... ,, ..,

Sm111wood.
Tho
hearing on the
oppllclllon will bo
hold on the 18th dlly
of February, at 1:30
o'clock -p.m. In tho
Probate Courl of
Melge , County,
loCJitod at CourthOUit
Pomoroy, Dhlo.
Andrw M. SmallWood
27041 Price Strong
Rd, Vlnlon, Ohio
411188
(1) 15

........ ,...

1

ben111t1
detallld ""!~
l'armerl
81vlnga Company
ATTN: Human A•ourcee Director
PO Box 12t Po1111roy, Ohio 45788
Farmtra Bank 11 an. Eq~al Houalng Lender
Member FDIC and an Equal Opportunity .

$$$$$$$$$$

1 Start training by

Januaey 28, 2002
and you will get:
$!0.00 anar :lO doy1l
UO.OO ofltr 90 doyol
$100.00 afler 110 dayol

The
·Daily

h'lltlly
to all

:z.ll Tblrd Avenue
GolllpoiiJ, OH 1
1·877-463·6347
ElL lUI

$$$$$$$$$$

---~------------ -

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T AMPA , Fla. (AP) - The Tampa B ay B uccaneers acknowl edged fo r the fi rst tim e Tuesday that th ey are pursuing Bill Pa rcells.
.
Th e Bucs fi red To ny Dungy, the o nly winning coach in th e
fr~n c hi se's 26-yea r h is tory, o n Monday ni ght and
a~e believed to be close to an agreem ent w ith
Parcells.
After denying d urin g a news confe ren ce that th e tean1 had
ever had discuss io ns with the for me r G iants, Patriots and Jets
coac h o r his re presentative abo ut coming to Tampa Bay, the
sons of own er M alc o lm G!ner issued a statem ent saying talks
b egan w ith agent Jimmy Sexto n late Tu esday afte rn oon .
Sexto n ,did not imm ediately retu rn a tele phone m essage from
Th e Associated Press,
Sp ec ul~ti o n abo ut Dun gy's future and the possibi lity that
Pa rcells wo uld re turn to the N FL w ith the Bucs bega n during
the Super Bowl in Ta mpa last Janu ary.
The 'rumo r mill heated up agai n after the Bucs got off a slow
start this season , and winnin g fi ve of seve n down the stretch to
make the playoffs didn 't sto p repo rts predicting Dungy's o uster.
" This is the · ugly si de of th is busi ness," Joel Glazer sa id,
addressing 'the fi ri ng of D un gy, w hose 56-42 record with fou r
playoff appearan ces in six seasons is by fa r the best of any Tampa
Bay coach.
·
" It wasn 't on e thing or ano ther. It's just a sense of where this
franc hise is at, a sense as to how o ur team was do ing o n th e
field and where we tho ught was the b es t directio n to go."
General manager Ri ch M cKay, who!e j ob also could be
affected if Parcells is hired, lobbied unsuccessfully to re tain
. Dungy, w ho transformed th e Bucs fro m perennial doormats
into Super Bowl contenders. •
Tampa Bay advanced to the NFC C ham pio nship game two
years ago. But D un gy's inability t? get p ast the fi rst rou nd of
the playoff! since th en left a sour taste in the m o uths of the
owne rs.
T he Bucs sp en t generously the past two offleaso ns to bolster
an an e mic ofl'ense, ye t the addition of rece iver Keyshawn Johnson, quarterback B rad Jo hnson and offens ive linem en Jeff
C hristie and R andall M cD an iel d idn't produ ce th e desired
results.
Tampa Bay n eve r finish ed higher th an 21st in the NFL m
offe n se unde r Dun gy, who critics fe lt relied too much on a
defense that ro utinely ranked among th e best in th e league.
"I think he's pro ud of what we accomplished . I th ink he
knows the role he played in it, h ow impo rtant he was and I
think he also understands that in th e business, there are going
to b e changes," M cKay said .
At a separate news con ference at th e te·am"s headquarters,
Dungy said goodbye before cleaning o ut his office.
T h e Bucs are one of just three teams that have made the
playoffs each o f th e past year, and he thanked ~anagement and
the fa ns for providing an environme nt conduCive to w m nmg.
'"It's been a great six years," said Dungy, w ho could be a candidate for NFL openins- in Indianapolis, Carolit\a and San
Diego.

number 01·CV·
041, In the Court of
Common Ple11, Molgo
County, Ohio, alleging
that Lucinda s.
Dowton nogllgenlly
operated her motor
vehlclo ceuolng a
colllelon, reaulllng In
lnjurleo and damageo
to Plolnllll Eric J.
Tlylor. - Defendon1
Lucinda S. Dewaon
lhlll toke notice th~l
ahe hoe _twonty..lght
-----~- (21) doyo to file en
Anower to lhlo
Public Nollcll
- - - - - - - Complaint.
In the Court at (1)1a, 23, 30
Common Pleet, Molgo
county, Ohio, ClOt
Number 01·CV.048,
Eric J. Taylor ••·
Luclndll Dlwton, at al.
. Public Notice
Defondont Lucinda S.
Dowoon, whoee 1101
pl•c• of reelclenc• It Lebanon Townahlp ·
known •• 3rd Stroet, Annual Financial
Apartment 12, R1clna, floport 11 completed
OH 48771·8807, bul and IVIIIabll fOI
by
whou pl11en1 piece lnepectlon
of rllldtnot 11 appointment at 1he
unknown, will toke home of the Clerk.
Notlae on MlrOh -14, Porolhy A. Aoublrry
UW474
1001, I rio J, Taylor
llltd hit oomplalnl In (1) 11
Cllt

Publlo NotiOI

~ov"'"' OFFICER

'

looking at Bill Parcells

l'uhUt• '\n tirt·~ in St·\1 ~ f l:lji CF1o.
\ 'mar Ril:hllu Ktl !l\1, lh·lilt•n·d lti ~hlltl Yuur IJ(Hir.

a'

The Flrtnll'l Bank &amp; Saving• COITlpany
of Pomeroy, Ohio 11 aeeklng an
eMparlenoad Conaumer Loan Offlaar lor Ha
Galllpolla; Onto Branch location. Qualified
candidate• will have 1: 3 y1111 direct
lending IM~trltnc• In pereonal and real
estate (1 ·4 family) financing transactions ,
be compu-ter filtrate and poseet8 good
ouetomer relal,..,_. 1.-n•~~o
Bank ofllrt

'

Tampa ~ay admits to

No Phone Calli Plea1e
•Ieider ·

11 ~~.:~~':~ TniCk 'Tbppsr·

80" wide x (740)2olll-640e
'
2 Lovol Aero• with Moi&gt;Ho 15 Court Stroot. 2 Bed· cuh. loa/ Mootor Cord. It" Long, 150. Stopper .Ex• 11190 Ford Crown Vlcforll,
Mtrctrvllll. ThrN Unit Homo and 2 otory goraga. rooma, I t/2 bathe, Klich.., Drtv.. o·IIW. Hvt llol. irol.,, 185. t:r TtiiYiolon, . Very Cllln . Cor, Alklng
• Apartment buHdlng with ant Muon 60 Rood, Aohlon l&gt;ith ltave ond rofrigerolrio. Aid Iron Bad wllh \'Illite Color, tM. (740)238·1 1529 112500. (740)248-57811. Hno
10 "
mil .
SSti,ooo. LOll than 2 mllol from 011 Slroel Porklnt Clooolo Fumllurt, Chnl, Desk, 'En· watarllno Spsolll: 3/4 200 An-, Lllv. M-ge.

i

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH,
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS ·
OPENINGS IN THE •
. FOLLOWING AREAS:

=·
·
g:&lt;

I

ACREAGE

r' . oo.o~ I

I

I

j

12:.~-Jr:,~.:f.Fi.

NOW

Llv..,,-

1\i)

PUBLIC
NOTICES

l

=

j

•

'::m....

Pittsburgh 69, 20T
John Salmons had 25 points to lead the
H upicanes (16-2, 3-2 Big East) in their
first conference home game of the season.
M arcus Barnes, who hit the 3-pointer
t hat tied the game at t he end of regulation,
had a chance· to give Miami the lead with
1.3 seconds left in the first over time, but
he missed two free throws. Barnes, who
finished w ith 1 1 po ints, hit a 3 -pointer in
the second overtime that gave Miami . a
70-66 lead.
O ntario Lett scored a career- high 18
points for the Panthers (15-3, 3-2), w ho
lost thei r second consecutive gam e .

GIVE ME A HAND- Iowa's Reggie

OBO. (740)441 -1716

j

7

11.7 rebounds.
No. 23 Oregon 71, Willamette 48
Frederick Jones scored 19 points to lead
the Ducks (13-4) in the game that Commemorated the 75 t h anniversary of
McArthur Court against the same opponent.
B.J- Dobrkovsky had 13 points for the
Division Ill Bearcats (11-5), who lost 3810 in the building's first game on Jan. 14,
1927.
N o. 24 Miami 76,

\

NFL

--

�•

; Wednelday, Jan. 16, 2002

Wedneldey, Jan.11,·1001

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The paily Sentinel• Page B 5

'

-----_•nuuooaoiE------~:=:=:=:=:=======================
NEA Crossword Puzzle

AUEYOOP

PHILLll'
1, aov.. VASJ (1)
2, S. Euclid Regina (ll)
3, Clt'l. Mot- (3)

--I'Hk

1,

2. Colo. llraokhlwn (1 )
3, Colo. lndopondonce (1)
4, Tot Cont. Cath.
5, Young.o. Boatdman (2)
6, Plctcerington

8-4

Rocotd

F&gt;to

8, !lucyrus Wynfald (1)

12.0

1114
111
111

12.0
10.1
12.0

243

7, Richwood N. Union

13-1

101

167

8,NewAibonrtt)
9, Br0oll'lile

t2·t
10.1

•
10

to. voruillol

1H

37

17~

11-1
130
11-1
103
10·2
101
7. Mt. Vo'"""
13-0
96
8, Cln. Oek HiHS
11 -I
96
s, Manltield Sr.
11 -o
94
1o. N. Can !On Hoover (1 )
11 ·1
33
Others rec,lvlng 12 or more points: 11 , Wadsworth ~512 (tie), Lancaster, Parma Hts. Holy Name 15.

DIVISION II
t , Dayton Chamlnade-Jullenne ( 18) 15-0
2. Cleve. E. Tech (2)
9-1
3. KeneMg Alter
13-0
Willard (3)
13·0
5, Pemberville Eastwood
12..0
6, Millersburg W. Holmes
12·1
7,LimaBath
11-D

237
174
150
I 50
124
82
78
8, Galllpotto Gallil Acad. (1)
11.0
~~ ·
9, Greenfield McClain
12-0
47
tO, Springboro
9.o
4Q
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , Akron Hoban (1),
37. 12, Springfield Kenton Ridge 31. 13 (tie), Cots. Mif·
flin, Copley 23. 15, Perry 20. 16. Warren Howland 16. 17,
Ravenna Southeast 13.

tt.O

_

Hill's Self

CARPENTER
SERVICE:_.

1

Stor~gc

..........
·-no&amp;-.
• I'

DIVISION IV
1, Worthington Christian (14)
11..0
226
2, Hamler Patrick Henry (8)
11.0
185
3, Jackson Center (2)
11 ·1
189
4, Cols. Acad.
11.0
14i
5, Holgate
11·1
110
6. New Madison To-Village (2)
1:J.O
106
7, Mansfield St. Poter'a
12.0
93
8, Minster
11 ·1
86
9: Berlin Hiland .
12·1
58
10. Norwalk St. Paul
11·1
30
Others receiving 12 Of more points: 11 • ••
(1)
22. 12 (lie), Cin. Seven HINa, Hk;kovllle 15. 14. Ntl" f.9n·

w-

don 14. 15, Fl Recovery 12.

•

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: ~.;

'f. '

'""'

'

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'.

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'

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.

' •

..

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,...,.

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

• Pl110 and POrCh Docko

.,
,'•:

J. -o;

992·6215

.

•

Sovlh

HOUSE
PH IDlinG

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts ·
factory Authorized
Case·IH Par1s
Dealer-S
I000 St. Rt. 7 South

97 BeechSt
middleport, OH

L\i\1!\I' S
( ' " ' 11&lt;1 ( 1111'\
'
'

.

Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates:
Insured

'229.00*
* FRfJ INSTALLATION

Wolfe Home

maintenance
(740) 949-1521

mEIGS ffiftSSftGE
THERfiPY

* FUL1:Y WELDED

*!6YEARWARRANTY .

213 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh 4S760
Tonia Reiber
Licensed Massage
Therapist

9'/t ftn«/W'*

Q_l)ALJTY WINDOW '-'V''"'u

.,_~fJIIe

£.AwRtr~ce

.

992-4119 ·-~·291·5600
Showroo~o

VIlli Our
Stole Route JJ
6 Milts North Of Pomtroy_;Obto, AI Couoty Rood II

'· •

• No O..ters or Contractor&amp; Pteue
VI,./ Mutercard

weLk .MuteuM

rLEA$E
TAFf A-~
,.1/Mif!
' .
• •• •,, • •
•
•

.I.

,.

' BARNEY

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

JONES'

Tree Servic•

....
...........

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete

• Top • Removal • T~llll
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket :rruck .

Remodeling
· Stop &amp; Compare
· FREE ESTIMATES
.
740.992~1671

. .....

.

0411 1182-3049

IIL'II I OIIO.DCI,

Tfl.losTS 11\'l ~
~ 'I'OU-~ Kff.P!&gt;
WYI!¥:&gt; Lm£.'l
iV SC1Em~... ·

7122frF

'.

....

.,

Reporter ba-nned froill U(
CINCINNATI (AI') - A reporter
who wrote a story about Cincinnati
coach Bob Huggins
blasting fans for poor
·
attendance has been
barred from covering the Bearcats' next
two games.
Huggins and Cin.cinnati Post reporter
Jason Williams argued about the story
before a practice last Thursday. Athletic
director Bob Gain barred the reporter
from home games Wednesday against
DePaul and Saturday against Louisville.
Post sports editor frank Carini is
fighting the decision. Huggins declined

NCAA

'

to comment:
In a story by Williams that was pub-..
lished Jan. 8, Huggins lashed out over the
lack of sellouts at the '13, 176-seat Shoemaker Center, using profanity while
referring to fans.
He reiterated during his weekly radio
show two · days later that he was disappointed by the small crowds, but he tried
to soothe fans.
"I know what this town is capable of
doing and certainly our fan base is .capable of d~ said. "But in no
way, sh(pe 'o r form have I ever said or
meanynything ~etrimental to our fans."

Wildcats
frOm PageBl
carried over to the offense," said
Prince, who was 7-of-12 from the field,
including four 3-pointers. " We didn't
give thef\1 the opportunity to get going,
and we were able to get a lot of our guys
involved at the other end."
The Rebels made their second field
·goal _ a 3-pointer by Jason Harrison _
with 7:25 to play to cut the margin to
24- 8.
The Wildcats extended the lead to 3511 with 3:25 remaining. At that point,
Mississippi was just 3-of- 23 fron1 the
field, including 1-of-10 from behind the
3-point line.
An 11 - 2 run to end the half pulled ·
Mississippi within 37-22. The llebels
shot 24 percent for the half, going 2-of12 from 3-point range.
" You have . to give them credit
because· their defense totally broke us
down," said Harrison, who matched a
.season-low with only three points. "We

had some shots in the first half but
couldn't get them to fall."
R.eed scored on a putback to pull the
Rebels within 47-36 wifh 13: 14 to play.
Again, the Wildcats' deferise took

over.
Kentucky held Mississippi 'il'ithout a
field goal over the next six minutes as
the lead ballooned to M-31!.
Prince scored on a drive to the basket
and swished ~ long 3-pointer to key a
17-2 run during that stretch to end any
chance of a Mississippi comeback.
Tlie lead nevel dipped below 20 the
rest of the way as the Rebels finished
with a season-low 64 points.
" It ~ll started on the defensive end
tonigh.t," said Ken~ucky's ClifT Hawkins,
who finished with nine points and six
assists. "We know we can score, but we
have to find ways to stop the other
·team.
, "We played terrible defense in the
·games we lost. Coach stresses defense
, and tells us we have to find ways to hold
teams around -30 percent shooting. I{ we
do that, we win."

Pll!ltl'l!lllllet
IIRG0211f

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
3S537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomero~. OH 4S720
Equlne12
12% Sweet Horae feed ................ $5.00/50

Sweet Sluff
,.
12% Sweet Horae feed ........... ,.... $4.40150 .
Hur11tr1 Pride 21% dOV food .........$8.85150
, ECOI10ffi) Btef 12% llock f~..... $8,75/50
Trace Mlne111l Blackl ....................$4.751100
I

16%

•'

..................... 16.95150

f~ TIIIII'Sdlll

coaalaeHial

0.• lillY

u

DoorsoPen4:30
Early birds start

Beddentlal

6:30

t' 1111

140·912. .10

Pragresslue tep line
Thut'ldlys

Progrealue

~r,tUIIII~
l
.,_..
'
..

,. "

. .... "'

N&lt;fo1b

(740) 949-1521

- Flnii'nClng &amp;t 90 'oars
· Same As Cash Available

1a Spark
plug's

1 Glove
leather

23 Right away
2 SurpriH
25 Shade
26 Get·up-and· 3 Passengers
4 Top pilots
5 That ship
29 ~alaun·
6 Fourth
dry chore
down
32 Gradeoption
school org.
7 Perleetlon
33 Author
8 Grass-skirt
Bredbury
accessory
34 Pretend
9 Seattle hrs.
(2 wdo.)
10 Hog abode
35 Sun 'a
nl,kname 11 Blueprint
12 Dollar
36 Makos a
lrac:tlon
fa~x paa

1-:o.;~

2¥
J'n1
l'lllw
P;~u

hozardouo

39 Aromn
41 Wuhotand

oystom

11 Blister, e.g.
20 "Sorry! "
21 Till

Item

43 loathes
44 All.

22 Not phony
24 Mouoe

45 Brookaand
Gibson
pradator
47 Warlike son
26 Warm--up
or Hera
27 - Derr
48 Sty trick
Biggers
49 CSA de28 Ceremonial
tender
lire
50 Before
30 Lunch time 51 C.ommuter
.31 Dlk-dlk
vehicle
cousin
52 Go on
37 Least
the-

or~an . "

-

wv

WiWAMS
lLC~®~~G

" 'f'd

time
HS clooa
Floltlt'
Make cloth
Look-up to
Threlhold
PIIICII end
Changeo a
suit
AptHuc:los
Untidy
OOWN

18 Biller

W . 1-1.
A u de n
wrote, "It takes littl e
tal ent to see ci&lt;·arl v
wi1at li&lt;·s under on e's
11ose, a good deal of it
to know in which di re( tion to poi11t that

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~

Advertise in
this space for
sloO per
month .. .

--~1.1111
........ Tnlcl

i

18 Cpl.'s
ouperlor

Peripheral

(740) 992·1705

* FREE IN HOME llSTIMATE

flllWI•

•

-won • . .

... Ill
~

Q.

Z f , Pas~
I'm•• J •
l' a~!l
3 .,
r' a!iil l'as!

54

1a Excited by 55
17 "Faint hea~ 56

\ 'ulrJcrable: 8 [1\h

.......
"'

15 Wood

cunero

l&gt;ca l!'r· West

P~ , Ohlo

PUtl

992-6635

•'

•

DIPOYIII

(10'1110' 610'11201)
(740) 992-3194

..

.

V. C. YOUNG III,

IPJIIIIIng
13 Guide

42
46
48
49
52

14 Antagonism 53

.. ,. K II)I'l
• Q.

Free Estimates

41l~

rock
12 fllolt

F'.A!It
4Q 9 1 5
lJ A~
• J 1
A J II I 52

44
. K II I 1Cl2
• I I
• A 1 •
S IHtl.

• vt.,t Siding I Polntlnt

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
..

\Ynt

~

9 leal A Plumbing

.740-667-0363

.

.,
•• •

I

¥ JID
• KQ1 S t 32

• "'-"' llddlttona a d
na art lftl

Othtrt r-.tng 12 0&lt;,.,. polnta: 11 , Elgin (1)
38. 12, Young~. Uroutlno 23. 13, Ool&lt; Hill II) lG. 14 (lie),
Ocylaotown C h l - (1), E. Cenlen, Findlay Ubony·
il&lt;ln1M 18. 17, N. Limo S: AIIngo 17. 18, Savolty Ft. Frye
15. 19 (tie), Glram, Newton Folio 12.

·'

.., =..-.,.,~,.~.•-

38 Cooh
oubotltutet
40 "Not guilty,"
ag

1 Actraoo
MIIH
6 Lurid
mogulneo
11 Volconlc

YOUNG'S

Coolville, OH 45723

'

ACROSS

ALDER

183
1118
1M

1&amp;-0
1!-1

• •W.1"M''iffe ~)
5, Samlnil Eutom . _ , (2)

DIVItiON I

(20)

10.1

Th .Jt appli es tu
bridge players. Many
have sen~itive noses,
whid1 tht.~,Y Usc to
smell out who lj:1S
what key cards. One
player renowned for
this sense of smell is
Zia Mahmood. a
Pakistani by birth
\vho rcprcscms th e
United States in international events .
Wl•st's
opt•uing
showed a weak two bid in cith~r ntajor .
South's tluce-heart
cuc - biJ was an at CELEBRITY CIPHER
tempt to rea ch three
by LulsCampos
no-tru1np .
celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
The defense bt·~an
people, past and present. Each letter m the cipher stands for another.
Today's clue: F equals Y
with a heart to li1c
aC&lt;' and a heart to the
'TZY.
TS
LALPF
S P Z X YXT H
king. Now We st tried
a low club. He hoped
TS
NZRRLNN,
HT
JWYYLP
his partner had th.c
&lt;1uee11 and declarer
MKWY,
RTJLN
STPYK
the jack, when Zia
NTJLYKXHY
YT
JWIL
W
(South) would h;~v e
had a guc.ss.
H L M
LSSTPY
HLRLNNWPF.'
After winning with
dt1mmy's club king ,
MWOY
MKXYJWH
Zia called for the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "When a pair of magpies fly together 1
spade jack , which was
They do not envy the pai&lt; oi phoenixes." (Chrnese poet)
Lady Ho (BC)
c:ovcrcd by the queen
allC.l ac~. Now niost
decbn·rs would have
.
WOlD
c:ISheJ the spade king,
r~~~:~~v S©R~Nt-'l£~Ss GAM
I
,,
Edlltd
~y
CLAY
R.
POllAN
'
r;::;=&lt;=::::0+r.;;-;=:O\jg;:"\l assumi 11 g a 3-2 sp1i t.
Rearrange letter' of the
}\..~~~:.-~- ~ Uut Zia sntelled the
four scrambled words bsair first. East had covlow to form four sirnple words.
ered the spade j ack
with nn· hesitJ.tiou,
-.-R_;_,;A~WrN__:;O:..:D:.,-jl .
whereas if he had had
queen-doubleton or
queen-third,
he
prob;Ibiy would have
--11 ·
played· low, not cov- •
j
ered. llut Zia couldn 't
•
jmt go into dtillllllY
with a dianwud :md ~
5
·fincsst• the spade
I
1 .
On e old time r to another "Do
5
.
eight, bcc:ltlse that
_ _ _
~ you have an old war injury?" ·. The
would have left him r -----------'----. other ge.n t replied , "Yea , I got old
with two club losl'rs. .
R E V N· 0 G . and my knee - - • - - • - "
6
So, Zia cashed h is
~~ 1 Complete the chuc kle quoted
l
by Idling in the missin9 words
di.1mond ace, pb)-cd a L --'--_.J..__.J.._ __L_--'--_I ygu develop
from 5le p No. 3 below.
di:unond 1.0 dumm y's
&lt;jUl'l'll , and called for
the diamond kin g,
rutTed and ovcrrullcd.
Now Zia c•xited with.
the dub quec·n, forc SCRAM·LETS ANSWERs
iltg West to wiu the
Nugget - Stoic- Envoy - Wiggle- INGENUI TY
tri ck. Wi1atever he
Advic e to newco mer fro m btg executive "Never tell
rdurncJ, Zia could
people how to do thing s. Te ll the m what the JOb 1s and
rutT his club loser in
they will surpn se yo u wtt h thetr IN GENUIT Y "
the clununy and make

0

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agcnl
Box 189
Mid d leport. Oh io 45760
Local 843·5264
Mr,dic"re Supplement ; Life Insurance;
Burial and Fin" I Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pen~ ion &amp; 401 K Rollovers;
Mon~"ge ; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

WICK'S

-If your weight Is
unbecoming to

Construction ·

you, You should be

New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
,Siding, Decks, Kitchens, nrw•w..,

HERBftllfE
lnDEPEDDEDT
DISTRIBUTOR

'l

Bryan Reeves

a More

.~ I I I .
-.-rR,u_v,...R_F,-

lose 2-B lbs.

FREE ESTIMATES!

7

h_
l I I' I I I _

comlq to us.

PEANUTS

eilery week

740:.992-7036

742-3411

loiEfCE'S TME FIERCE

Pd. 1 mo.

SNOW SNAKE SNEAK11o16
ON A VICTIM ...

D

. Case • Remington •
Guitars • Some Furniture • Crofts
Now Available· Tiger Sharp Knives

oHaullng oLitniiiOnt
oQriVtl • Sand •Top10ll

•.

•Fill Dirt &lt;Mulch

~

.(740) 992·3470

".

·-

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio

'740-

alacllbbrn. .

-2422
Puny tnoured

10AM-4PM Mon·Sat

(740) 992-5908

-

-

fWEDNESDAY

740-885-3848
• Footers, Walla, Step&amp; •
Fta1 Work,
ReplacemcrMI, • Walkl

and Drlvot • Stoncll
Crete
.

-

BANKRUPTCY
can relieve a deblot of fl111110lal obllaatlona 111d
arranae a fair dlltrtblltlon o f - amona.!
credlton. Apenon 1olna thtoUJh bankrupccy
may retain certain property, known 'u .
"c~tmpt" property, for hla or her penona1 a~e.
1bl1111&amp;y lnc111do aCitit houle,,cltJihet. tll1d· holil!lhold ICJOda. Yo111lloutd dlracuny' :
queatlllllrreaanllnl bllllauptey 10 an auomey
before prooeedlna. For lntbntilllon realldlna

.

· Banknlptey contact:
· WIWalD SatraiJek, Altonley
. (7~)~f025
Atllllll

'

FreeEttlmateo
Servtna Ohio lhd w. v.

' 740·882·7588

(NO SUNDAV CALLS)

Advertise

High&amp; Dry

for ·
'25 per month

·1hursd.Jy , Jom. 17, ::!11112
You will ~l't Lh t· l lp portu in lht· )' l' ·l f .lll t'.1d t,, di\r n~:Jgt• yoursd f li'o m •• ' ilua tiun th.1t h:1s n·~ trk t c d Yo ur
rnn\'ilni pn l:o-: H·~~: S u c&lt;:e:~~ i~
probab!t&gt; ow.:e the hu rd~1 1 is

·I

nity

I

I
'

'

.•
1

Bill Dotiftr

liftt•d .

992-2979

CAI ' I~ICOI~N (lh·e 11J;m. 1~) -- Let gll of .111 l,IJ

~n niMt' you'n• lH'L'Il lllll'~ in ~ .
Continu illt-t to be vi 1 ul k ti\'~'
only s~r\'c ~ t t) crc;u ~· ~r t·n r\.·r
tli ~~l' ll!oiOil ,

In this space

fur

'

\'0 \lf

n \\' 11

Cellular

Advertise your business on this page f_or
Jeff Warner Ins.
one month for as low as $25
992~5479 '
Phone ·992·2155 ·

rtJill.UH.' l'

and vuu'll rln\1 it

Th~· A ~ tru~(ir., ·ph M .H l·h~
111:1kcr iu~t omtly rt'\'l'n l ~ w hid1
· ~iHtl~ :ll'e f(')numtkal ly p~rt~&lt;.·t
ft)r ym1 . Mnil S2. 75 tn Mat t.: h-

t
•

J

r ,H

._w:H.:~ of mind, wri1 the lHhcr
~: heck . Knuw wh~· rc tl1 look

33795 HiilmJ RJ.
Pommy, Ohio

740~99i-5232

,~

BUILDfRS IDC.

"-~~
SeR·Storage ·

_ _ _ _•1-•c_
' _CI_H..;It..;ra_c_t._ _ _

New Homes • Vinyl
Sldina • New Oaraaea
Home Improvements.
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JANUARY16I

BISSEll
Racine, Ohio 45n1

i

1 I I I).

RAULINGud

EXCAVATING

FHTET-If

r--------------.

am1tha rou te.
C A NCE R Uun•· 21 -Ju ly
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•

with the ever-improving
Brandon Caldwell, who
allowed his club to keep pac:e
with eight
first-quarter
points. Mooney drilled a trey
and added a two-pointer. At
the end of the first ~.
Southern led 20-15.
During the second period
Southern opened the flood
gates, throttling up to a 27point offensive explosion.The
Sou~ern guards threaded the
needle on the brnk and
when forced into a half-court
game, the Tornadoes · were
patient but went for the quick
strike.
Southern's Connolly continued to strike, hitting the
short jumper and · the back~ door lay-up for six more
points. Martin and Hilly Hill
each added five points with a
three pointer as the Tornadoes
rolled to a 47-33 halftime
advantage.
In the second frame, the
Rebels never succ~mbed to
the intense SHS attack and
· remained very much in the
game behind another good
Caldwell offensive effort.
Mooney went 4-of-5 at .the
line and added an inside stopand-pop jumper, and Dustin
Lewis earned his keep at the
varsity level with seven points
in an effort that netted a long
three-pointer. .
Southern had become
known as the Clark ~nt of
area high school basketball,
dawning tights and a cape in
explosive first-half efforts,
then darting into the locker
room to become the mildmannered average Joe and
squandering its first-half succes:'J.
· Tuesday, Southern sported
the cape for the entire game,
making a strong third period
stand. Dally Hill sparked that
effort with six points, while
fiosh Jake Nease began to
make his presence known.
Nease hammered on the
boards and put up his biggest
offensive numbers, but again
Jordan Hill and Nate Martin
made some terrific passes to
spark the offensive game. ·
Despite a fiery offensive
attack from Rebel Zach
Haner, South Gallia was
unable to keep pace and fell
to (&gt;7 -45 after three rounds.
. Mooney drained two South
Gallia threeis going down the
stretch. Southern, . mainly
because of Nate Martin's
defensive effort, had held the
high-scoring guard to just 13
points up to that point. Caldwell poured in six more
markers
but
Southern's
offense was just too much to
overcome in clicking to a 9063 finale.
Southern hit 36-of-72 for
50 percent from the field, hitting 6-of-16 three's, 30-of-56
two's, and 12-of-22 at the
·Jine. South Gallia hit 20-of59, while hitting 4-of-17
three's, -16-of-4 2 two's, and 9of-17 at the line.
Southern. won the battle of
the boards 42-23, led by ·
Connolly with eleven, Nease
eight, and Jordan Hill six.
Caldwell led SG with eight.
South Gallia won the
,resel'Ye game 50-45 led by
Dustin Lewis" with 12, D. ·
O'Brien with ten, and Gerrald Cade eight. Southern
was led by Wes Burrows with
14,Aaron Sellers ten; and Josh
Smith ten.
• Southern hosts Trimble Friday in Racine.
South Gallia travels to Hannan Friday.
at Soutllom
SOUihomiO, Iouth 011111 e3
Gallla 1S 18 12 18 63
SOutham 20 '0 2D 23 90
11QUTH GALLIA (1·10) - Josh Waugh 1
D-O 2. Ha)'tl L811er 1 0.0 2. Kyle
.MOoney 8 4-6 19, Dustin Lewis 4 D-1 9,
Sam Spoa11 0, ~evtn Lamphier D,
'Morrtcl&lt; 3 Oo2 6, Toddy Fortner D. Silphef1
:Bailey D. Zach Haner 1 2-4 4, Brandon
C.ldwell9 ~ 21 . TOTALS 25 11-17

s:

Bobcats outlast Buffalo, 62-61 -

Reds give Graves deal

AMHERST, N .Y. (AP)- Sonny Johnson missed a wide open layup with 1:02 left, failing 10 tie the tcore at 60.
scored 19 points as Ohio,
Brandon _Hunter had 18
despite going without a field
points and 10 rebounds for
goal over the final 5:47, beat
Ohio (9-4, 4-1).
Buffalo 62-61 Wednesday
Buffalo made 11 of its fint
night.
IS shots to take a 23-9 lead
The Bull$ (8-8, 3-3 MidAmerican Conference) had .
midway through the first
half. The Bobcats respondep
a chance to win, but Turner
by
scoring 16 of the next 19
Battle missed a 3-pointer
points as the Bulls missed
with three seconds to. play.
eight of their next nine shots.
Dared Williams' 3-pointer
Williams led the Bulls with 20 points
widt 28 seconds left pulled the Bulls
within 62-61. Buffalo's Clement Smith and Louis Campbell added 13.

Hotll~
•

•

CINCINN.A.TI (AP)- Right-hander Danny Graves
and the Cincinnati Reds agreed to a one-year contract
on Tuesday. Terms were not released.
Graves, 28, had a career-high 32 savrs
in 66 relief appearances last season. He
was 6-5 with a -4.15 ERA.
Graves joined first baseman Sean Casey and pitchers
-Elmer Dessens and Jose Silva as arbitration-eligible
Reds who · have agreed to terms for 2002. The Reds
still have three players eligible: third baseman Aaron
Boone, pitcher Scott Willi~mson and outfielder Juan
Encarnacion .

helps ftlnaways and parents, AS

••

MLB

Malp Couut(s

R(l te C!J.,( levy COUJd
{1.;_ •
h
•
cwect.tcnvns tp,
village finances

. t1 Wt ACCEPt WIC VOUCHEFll

!VeRYDAV LOW PRICES

HDRieloWii ... WI,.plr

onba

Heallh.d'parbnent

fl' WE ACCEPT OHIO EBT CARb

1

-

BY lluN J. RIID
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf
BREEDeMYOAILYSENTINa.COM

POMEROY - Township
and village officials·will face a
potentially devastating financia! obligation if voters reject
a levy request from the Meigs
County Board of Health.
Treasurer Howard Frank
spoke to a delegation of
township trustees and other
local officials during the

Buckeyes top Lions, 11

Deaths
Bessie Rife, 92
Edythe F.. Pullins, 73
Helen C. Williams, 91
Pamela Richards, 41
DetailS, A3

ll
,

By law, townships and vii- opponents of Meigs County's
Meigs Counry Township
Ass6Giation's annual meeting !ages bear the. burden of Clean Indoor Air Act pledged
last weekend, to advise those meeting the basic obligations last fall to campaign against
officials of their obligation to for , operating the board of · any request from the health
ra~: the department if a levy health, and if the levy fails, department for funding, and
will be called upon to pick up Torres said Wednesday the
Meigs County Health the cost of basic operations.
department plans an aggresCommissioner Norma Torres
"This could be a real hard- sive campaign urging public
said Wednesday the board ship for them, because most support.
plans to place a !-mill are already having a difficult
"We are going to work hard
replacement levy on the May time making ends meet," at informing voters about
primary ballot. CoUection on Campbell said.
what services are pro~ded,"
the board's current 1- mill
Campbell said a new levy Torres said, "and to emphasize
leVy wjll cease at the end of would generate considerably that only _. the most basic
the current tax year.
'
less than the current levy, expenses are paid from levy
,.. The department collected because of the loss in value of. revenue."
$233,000 from the levy in equipment at the Southern
Torres said that basic office
2001, said Auditor Nancy Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs operations, the salaries of
. P.arker Campbell, just a par- Mines.
eight full- time and two partcion of the annual budget.
A group of outspoken ti111e employees, equipment,

.u.s.

CONSTRUCTION

supplies and vehicles, are paid
from the levy proceeds .
Most programs, such as
immunization clinics, are provided through separate grant
funds.
'
The time is not right, Torres
said, for voters to abandoq
public health programs, in
light of biological warfar~
threats, such as anthrax and
small pox.
"If we operate on a skele~ :
ton staff. with only three
nurses, it would be difficult tQ
perform mass public imrnu~
nizations in the event of a
threat." Torrt's said. "In a case
like that, we would have to
make people wait."
·

URG to hold MLK
observation Tuesday •
FROM STAFF REPORTS

SAVE•A•LOT ·

2%

''·'!o-,,..

Large Eggs
¢

Hip: Hs, Low: 20i

....

Chicken Leg ·
·Quarters

¢

"f,l

Gallon

'

.'

"'"'

Frozen
10 Lb Bag
·

Milk$ 99

18 Count

• 1

Fresh
Boston Butt

12 Oz. Package

Bar "S''

Wieners
Pkg.

Pork
liced.
Bacon _ Roast

$ 29

t

t&amp;Oz.
Pkg.

Assorted
Varieties

Potatoes

99.

Michelina's
Dinners
-

Bubba
Cola.

89
24Ct.

c...

Bog

Details, A2

Dowdrops200

points
NEW YORK (AP) - A
murky forecast fiom Intel
sent stocks sharply lower
Wednesday on worries that
a recovery would take
longer than expected and
·- .ma:t. th~matket.. had risen.
too .high, too fast.
· Th~ Dow Jones industrials tumbled more than 200
points to their weakest finish in 1~ months with selling that . spread across the
market and intensified late
in the session. Analysts said
investors were collecting
profits rather than risk a loss
if an economic turnarol)nd
is delayed.
The Dow . closed ~own
211.88, or 2.1 percent, at
9,712.27, its lowest close
since Nov. 28, when the ·
index was ·at 9,711.86. The
loss was the biggest point
drop since Oct. . 29, when
the .index fell 275.

Lotteries

24PACK

10 Lb.

OlfiO
Pick 3 (d~J): 5-.9-1
Pick 4 (d.y): 5·6-B-2
· SqperLotto: 2-24-26·33-40-49
Bonus Ball: 27
MJcker:B-1-6-7-D-6
Pick 3 (nlpt): 2·2· 1
Pick 4 (nlpt): ·1-1-6-2
W.VA.
Dally 3: 9-6-2
. Dally 4: 6-8-9-5
.
l'outll..,.: 24-ll-34·40-47 (30)

Index

Classic

Purex.
Powder·
Detergent

49

83.
IOUTHERN (7-4) -

10~01

q, CraJij RandOlph 4

box

PRICES

4 Varieties ·
Frozen

Totino's
PiZZQS
1.

¢

Classifieds
Co11!ics
Dear Abby
EditQrials _
Movies
Obit!Jaries

MaxwellHouse

Sports

Weather

85

AS
~.

A4
A3
A3
81, 3, 4
A2

C 2002 Ohio Volloy Publlsttln1 Co.

Coffee

99
Con

Eoch

82

I

WEATHER DElAY - Work on Phase II 9f the Ravenswood Connector
tempOrarily
delayed beCause of lnclem~flt weather. Despite the delay, officials with
01'11o Department
of Transportation say the p{Dject Is "moving alonf and on schedule. When completed, the
connector will cor:mect JJ.S. ~with the Ritchie Bridge and Interstate 77 In Ravenswood, W.va.
(Tony M. L,each)
•
-

.

Despite delay, Phase II
project (on schedule'

,

RIO GRANDE - University of Rio Grande and Ri6
Grande Community College will celebrate Martin Luther
King Jr. Day on Tuesday, with a special presentation at 1
p.m. ill the John W. Be~ry Fine and Performing Arts Center. .
Co-sponsored ·by the Multi'-Ethnic Studem Cultural _
Union and ERASISM, the event's keynote speaker is Dr.
Robert Lawson, a 1973 Rio Grande graduate.
Lawson is an educational consultant from Portsmouth. He
works with business and non-profit organizations to coordinate and implement seminars, conferences and workshops.
He often returns to his alma mater to deliver motivational training and presentations. Lawson received a bachelor's
degree at Rio Grande, his master's degree from Marshall
University, and a doctorate in educational administration
from Nova Southeastern University in Florida.
· ·
. The Grande Chor•le will present music Christian Scott,
· ca·1996 Rio·Grande graduate, plans to conduct the community choir during the event. The Rev. Gene Armstrong will
offer the invocation.
·
Open to the public, a candlelight memorial to King will
follow on the main green. The Rev. Rebecca Michelfelder
will give the inspirational message. Refreshments Will be
served by RSVP members, Displays and an announcement
•on student essay winners are part of the vigil.
For details, call the Office of Multi-Ethnic Affairs, extension 7433, Multi-.Ethnic Student Cultural Union, also
extension 7433, the chaplaincy program, extension 7339, or
RSVP, extension 7449, through Rio Grande's toll-free
number, 1-800-282-7201.

Bomb threats empty
Eastern, Southern

BY TONY M. LEACH
Sible delays. So, despite this November 2003.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
SENT1Na NEWS STAFf
temporary shut down, we're
The cost of the Phase II
TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
~~~ good shape," said Huff- segment will total $21.3 milPOMEROY - Students from Eastern and .Southern
FIVE POINTS - Despite ~~an.
. lion.
school districts were evacuated Wednesday following ·two.
Mean'!'hile, work. crews
a temporary weather delay, ' ' "Whenever work · does
possibly related bomb threats called in by an unknown perofficials with the · Ohio r~sume, our main focus will with heavy equipment are
petrator.
Department of Transporta: ~preparing the superstruc- busy moving tnousands of
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell said students at
tion (ODOT) say progress on
e of the westbound and yards of dirt and rock for the
Eastern Elementary, Eastern High School, Southern Ele"
tbound bridges that span project's first phase, which
. Phase II of the Ravenswood
mentary and Southern High School were ~vacuated around
Connector project is "mov''te Route 7. We will also involves six miles of highway
10:45 a.m . after officials at Eastern Elementary and South•
ing along" as scheduled.
c tinue working on the exit from the Ritchie Bridge to
ern High School each received a phone call informing
Greg Huffman, ODOT
ps," he 'added.
the intersection of Ohio 124
them of a possible bomb located inside the facilities.
_Most of the project's and ' County Road 35 (Portproject engineer for Phase
Eastern students were immediately _evacuated to the Ohio
·
said Wednesday work on the dra4tage pipes have been laid land) .
Department ofTransportation garage, while Southern High
second of three segmen.ts of - ~om-.;rews will eventually
Utilities are being relocated
School students were taken to Southern Elementary.
"Super Two" highw~¥, ,.t)lar&gt; ·· o·~'to cohcehtrate on the and .land is being deared for
All smdet;tts were transported via bus to their homes as a
will conn~ct.U.S~-:J3''{\;ith the insWlation of catch basins," "the ' arrival of large earth
safety precaution .
Ritchie Bridge and Interstate Hultlnan said. .
·
moving equipment at the site
Once students were safely evacuated, members of various
77 at Ravenswood has bee~
Ph,~se H will encompass of Phase Ill, a 4.5~mile gap
fire and police departments conducted an intense search ·
. temporarily delayed . because abodt' four miles of highway ..between Morning Star and
throughout the schools for the alleged bombs .
of wet . weather, . however,' be~
· · ing at the end of Ohio Portland Road that will ultiNo evidence of a bomb was discovered in any ·of the fout
planned bad-weather days is 7 n . Five Points and ending mately connect all three sec" buildings.
allowing for the current lull .20 · iles east of Sutton tions.
"The bomb threats are most likely related because they
were made about three to four minutes apart," said Trussell.
in construction.
TowJ.-hip Road in the
The total cost of the 16- .
"The general consensus between school administrator$
"Fortunately, our winter Morningstar area. J:he sched- mile connecto:_project, once
and law enforcement officials is that the threats were a hoax, ·
work schedule is structured uled date for completion of finished in 2004, has been
however, the incident is still under investigation," he added. ·
in a manner allowing for pos- the project's second section is estimated at $75 million .

iv TONY M.

· . 2 section - 12 Pllpl

Juoot

Nate Martin 2 0.0
1-4 11 , Jordan Hill 3
0.0 6, CUn Crouch 2 2-2 6, Juatin Conooly B 2·5 19. cun1s NaJiller 1 0.0 2.
Dallas Hlll9 3-5 23, Josh Smith 0 3-4 3,
Jake N0818 ~ 1·2 9. Wes Burrows o o
0 . Totals 36 12·22 90.
·Tnr..-point goals - SG 4 (Mooney 3.
Lawls); Southern 6 (Dally HUI2, Randolph
2, Martin. Conooly)

Pomeroy, lllddllpoft, Ohio

11

LIAcH

n;

Is Giving .up ·Snlokllig
Your New Year's Resolution?
I

The To50cco Use Prevention Coalition ·is
here to help you accomplish your goal. ·

(7.40) 446·5940
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MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer l)iffere1Jce

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'.

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