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Page B&amp;

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

T1111d,.. .. ..Mrf 22. 2112

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Oklaho a topples Missouri
NORMAN, ()Ida. (AP) It NnU out Kelvin~
had nothing to worry about.
The Okbhoma coach .._.
concern6d

• •

Melp c:o..t(l

NCAA=~er~ ·
.

••
I ntR&lt;IW·HIM OUT -

Raptors Antonio Davis, right, Is fouled by Celtlcs Walter McCart}' (0)
as he goes to the hoop In Boston Monday. MCCart}'' was ejected from the game with a flagrant foul. (AP)
·

!

Knicks humiliated by Hornets

f
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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. . Ray Allen scored 15 first-half points and
. The Sacramen~o Kings are tough to beat Joel Przybilla had a care~r-highs ~f 12 points
· · anywhere they play. For the New York and 13 rebounds for the Bucks.
Knicks, there's no place to hide.
Detroit's Jerry Stackhouse scoresJ19 points
·
Sacramento, behind double-figilre scoring on 5-for-21 shooting.
by seven players, won its 12th
Hawks 95, Rockets 91
straight and extended its
Jason Terry scored 19 points as Atlanta
home unbeaten .streak to 16 stopped a six-game losing streak overall and
games with a 112-98 victory ·a five-game home losing skid with a victory
over the Memphis Grizzlies on · Monday over visiting J:iouston.
, night.
·
Nazr Mohammed finished with 18 points
The string of success has the Kings striving and 17 rebounds for the Hawks.
·
for more.
·
Cuttino Mobley had 26 points for the
"The win streak is' l)ice, but we are not sat- Rocltets, who have lost four of five. Steve
isfied with it. We are not ,sitting here Laker Francis had 25.
watching," Chris Webber said.
.
Maverick• 113, Nets lOS
.
The Kings improved to an NBA-best 31Dirk Nowitzki scored 39 points, including
9, which is 1 1/2 games ahead of defending nine straight during a 17~1 run in the clos;•
champion Los Angeles.
•
ing minutes, leading host Dallas past New
''
Meanwhile, New York's abysmal season Jersey.
"
.
reached new · depths as Charlotte dealt the
Jason Kidd missed his first 16 shots and ·
Kniclcs their worst home loss in the fran- . didri't make · a field goal until a 3- pointer
chise's 56-year history; 111-68.
with 25 seconds left. He had eight rebounds .
'
The Knicks' shot a season-worst 30 per- and 15 assists, including the 5,000th of his
·
cent as their losing streak reached eight c:ireer.
games, their longest skid since Dec. 5-20,
.
Jazz 101~ Wartion 99
1986:
Karl Malone made a season-high 16 free
Some players hid their heads b~neath tow- throws and scored 37 points, and Bryon Rusels as the final seconds ticked off. New York sell made five free throws in the 6nal15 seccoach Don Chaney and Mark Jackson didn't onds to lead Utah to victory at Golden State.
TheJazz shot 26 free throws in the second
hide their disappointment in the Knicks'
futility.
half and beat the Warriors for the 26th time
"I thought they threw in the towel. I in 28. meetings.
thought they gave up," Chaney said.
Antawn Jamison scored . 25 points for
· Jackson said: "It's an embarrassment:'
Golden State, which lost for the 10th time in
The Kings needed more than 24 points J 1 games.
"
and 11 rebounds from Webber and Peja StoPacers 93, Bulb 81
Reggie MiUer scored 20 points as Indiana
jakovic's 21 points to ·get past Memphis,
which shot 64 percent in the first half.
' snapped a five-game losing streak with a vicDoug Christie delivered a lift in the third tory in Chicago.
quarter, contributing eight points, three . Ron Mercer scored 18 points for the Bulls,
assists and three steals-as the Kings outscored who lost to the·Pacers for the ninth straight
Memphis 32-19 and pushed their lead to 17 time.
points.
·
Celtic• 106, Raptors 97
Memphis, without Jason Williams
Paul Pierce scored 30 points and Antoine
(migraine headache} and Shane Battier Walker added 20 points and 10 assists as
(strained groin) ,lost its fourth straight.
Boston beat Toronto.
Tony Massenburg scored 23 points and
Vince Carter scored 26 points for Thronto,
Rodney~ Buford added 18 for the Grizzlies, which had its four-game . winning . streak
who shot a season-high 56 percent. Pau snapped and its three-game road winning
Gasol scored 16 points,
streak halted.
"We knew we were short-handed, but
Kenny Anderson added 13 points and nine
that's the NBA,".Buford said, "It happens to assists for the Celtics.
all teams, which means guys have to step it
Heat 95, Cavaliers 93, Of
·
up. But we didn't:'
Brian Grant made tWo jumpers in the
In New York, the Knicks did little right final 1:22 of overtime .as visiting Miami
against the Hornets in their worst home loss won its fifth straight and dealt Cleveland its
since a 132-93 rout by Milwaukee on April 1Oth consecutive loss.
10, 1987.
Eddie Jones scored 27 points, Alonzo
Latrell Sprewell was scoreless on 0-for-9 Mourning had 15 before fouling out and
shooting, the first time he has .gone without rookie Mike James had a·season-high .12 for ·
·
a point since November 1995.
the Heat, winners of eight of 11.
·
The Knicks were held to their lowest point
Wesley Person had 19 points and·,Andre ·
total of the season. ·
Miller 17 points and 12 assists for the Cavs.
"I don't think we're treating the job as
Timberwolves 105, Wizard• 1'01
seriously as we need to," said Allan Houston,
Kevin Garnett had 23 points · and nine
who ·scored 11 points on 5-of-15 shooting. assists to offset Michael Jordan's 29 points,
· Jackson agreed, saying: "I can't tell you leading Minnesota past Wa$hington.
..
what it is but bad basketball. Top to bott9m, . ·The Timberwolves won for the 14th time
it's just bad."
in 16 games and improved to 18-2 at home.
The Hornets extended their lead to 43
Jordan had 22 points in the first half, but
poin~ in the third quarter and sent 'the shot 2-for-15 from the field in the second.
Knicks to their most lopsided loss since IndiMinnesota's Terrell Brandon, in his secana beat them 131c86 on Feb. 20,1980.
ond game back after missing the previous
l{urt Thomas led the Knicks with 16 16 with a knee injury, scored 17 points.
'
points.
.
Wally Szczerbiak added 19.
SuperSonics 109, 76era 98
Clippers 102, N,uggeta 89
Gary Payton scored 28 points and Seattle . Elton Brand had a season-high 31 points,
shot a team-record .66. 1 percent in a victory 14 rebounds arid six blocked shots as Los
'
in Philadelphia.
Angeles dealt Denver iis 14th straight road
Allen Iverson led the Sixers with 38 points loss.
·
,
and became the eighth player in Philadelphia
Quentin Richardson had 17 points and
•
history to score 10,000 career points.
. 10 rebounds for the · Clippers, while
Vin Baker added 20 points for the Sonics. Michael Olowokandi ·had 14 points, 10
Bucks 97; Plltom 79
.
rebounds and six blocks.
'
Mi~hael
Redd
scored
21
points
and
Sam
Nick Van Exel led the Nuggets with 19
.... .
Cassell added 18 as Milwaukee extended its points, 10 assists and seven rebounds.
winning streak to eight games with a win in
Detroit.

NBA

I
. ..
,

ranked
Sooners 91 ·•
would be able to rebound
'Monday night fiom a tough
loss at then-No. 4 Kansas !\TO
days earlier. They did, going
on a late first-half run and
coasting past No. 18 Missouri
84-71.
"When you have this sort of
a turnaround, you're not aS
concerned wjth practicing
you're concerned with pre,pa;.•l
ration," Sampson .said.
souri's a team that requires
lot of preparation because
have a good inside game
great perimeter players:'
.
The inside game was no.factor, and only Clarence Gilbert
was able . to find _the range ·
from outside. Gilbert had
eight 3-pointers and scored 26
poirits, but Kareem Rush had
just 13 on 4-oi-15 shooting.
"[ thought our kids did a BALL FIGHTING - • Oklahoma guard Ebl Ere (2) outbattles .
great job of guarding him, and Missouri forward Travon Bryant (5) for the ball Monc;tay. (AP)
maybe we caught him on an
off night," Sampson said.
Which the Sooners hit 10 . Thor Solverson added 15
Hollis Price scored 24 sttaight shots and scored on Mo!ldaY as Illinois-Chicago
points for the Sooners (1 5-2, their final 11 possessions beat 'f;oungstown State .85-69
4-l Big 12), who outrebound- before halftime to take a 44- in a Martin Luther King Holed Missouri 43-26 in Mon- 3t, iead. Price hit two 3-point- iday matinee.
.
day's only game involving a els: and scored 10 points durThe Flames (1 2-8, 3-3
ranked team. They also forced inl'the run, when the Sooners ·Horizon League) went ahead ·
18 turnovers in beating the fo.r~ed four turnovers and early :u:~d built a 50-25 halfTigers · (14-5, 4-2) for the converted them all into bas- time lead with a blistering
k~.·
·
73:t percent shootin~ (1 9-ofeighth straight time.
"You have to be strong and
i9ldahoma scored on its first 26) from the field: They subtough and the guys were weak th~ trips of the second half, stituted freely in the second
with the ball," Missouri coach capped by Price's 3~pointer half but managed to stay well
Quin Snyder said. "We have to thal,f"lde it 51-35. The Soon- ahead.
·
The Penguins (3·14, 1-6}; .
have some guys step up. We ers. pushed the margin to 18
need Kareem to be stronger poiq,ts a few minutes later and who shot 47 percent, were
dic:Jn't let Missouri get closer paced by Ryan Patton's 21;
and he knows that."
• Priee started slowly, but the thaJ 11 after that.
points and six assists. His back~
scoring ofQuannasWhite and
White. scored 14 points and court partner Doug Under~
Daryan Selvy kept the Soon- ha.:l"six assists for the Sooners, wood added -15 points.
·
ers going. Then three 3-point- while McGhee had 13 points
Illinois- Chicago made only
ers by Gilbert in just over four . and eight rebounds and Selvy 8-of-22 foul shots but sank
11-of-16 from 3-point ·raf)ge.
minutes gave the Tigers a 23- added 12 points.
19 lead with 6:51 left in the
1 m.-Chicago 85,
Jonathan Scheiderman had 14
half.
Youngstown St. 69
points and Cory Little added
. A follow shot by Aaron
CHICAGO (AP) -Jordan 10 for the Flames,
McGhee started a run in Kardos scored 18 points and
'

'

Lane

What's

Bridge is sound

Cowher:

Steelers ready, BI

Dead&amp;
Pamela Burson, 47

Details, A3 · ,

Wead1er
Hlp: 10, .._: SOli
Details, A2
\

lnveston still
not Impressed
NEW YORK (AP) - .A .

'

B"IDGE SAFETY -· Despite concerns over a recent reduction on legal load limits for commercial trucks traveling across the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, a·n official with the Ohio Department .of Transportation s.a id the 7 4-year-old span Is "structurally
. sound" and that minor ruston the girders ne~tr the West Virginia approach spans prompted the new limits. (Tony M. Leach)

Hkight limit prompts
motonst concerns

Health Deparbnent offers lea~ saeening

Lotteries.

Index

·

I.

.

Girls ll111e ·out

s..Jl:N•.b..ary 27 •

Middleport
health fair
Thursday
FROM STAFF REPORTS

MIDDLEPORT Do
you know the numbers of
good health?
A health fair sponsored by
the Village of Middleport,
McNelly, Patrick &amp; Associates
Insurance, Anthem and Holzer Meigs Clinic will provide
information about blood
pressure, cardiac · risk assessment, glucose, cholesterol,
height, weight, diabetes, stress,
cancer risks, ·and other infor_mation about healthy living in
Meigs Counry.
. ' The fair will be held on
Thursday from 10 a.m. until 2
p.m., is open to the public,
and will be held at the Middleport Fire Department.
Exhibits will be .included
from: James Schmoll, O.D.;
Black Lung representatives

PI••• see Fillr, A3

.

2:00 • 4:30 PM • HMC Gallipols French 500 Roam

: F~red Speakers: Koren Stocker, RD, LD; Rick ~er, ~.
Nancy B. Graham, MD; and Monique Sherrill, MD .

SPECIAL FEATURE; NQN·FASDNG CHOI.EmRQL scREENiNGS
.
FOR GIRLS AGE$ 10 • 18.
(Must be accompanied by o parent or gvardion}.
All are welcome! D~ is casual. Refreshments will be served.

'

For more
., .

r

ATHENS - Holzer Clinic
is announcing the opening of
a new and expanded health
care facility in the Athens area:.
Plans are to locate the clinic on Columbus Road and
the facility • is expected to
open late spring of 2002.
The clinic will relocate its
sleep laboratory and Dr.
Christopher T. Meyer's practice to the new location along
with adding new specialty
services.
· Dr. J. Craig Strafford, president of Holzer Clinic, said the
clinic. is considering the addition of physician coverage in
orthopedics, general surgery,
endocrinology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and
possil:!ly urgent care services.:
"We are truly excited about
coming to Athens and look
forward to working with the
primary care physicians in the
~rea," he said.
·
'
"We will be bringing some ·
of our already existing spe~
· cialist&lt; to the area, but have
intentions to hire specialis(s
specifically for the , Athen,s
location," said Clinic Admin·~
istrator Robert E. Daniel.
The clinic is in the proce,;,;
of hiring a manager for the
Athens facility, and will soon
. after begin to hire support
staff fortits,new operation.
•
Founded more than . 50
years ago, Holzer, Clinic is a .
multi-specialty, physicianowned group, :practice with
100-plus physicians and 29
medical specialties.
Based and founded in Gallipolis, Holzer Clinic alsci has
facilities in Jackson, Pomeroy,
and Proctorville, Ohio1 as well
as Point Pleasant ·and South
Charleston, W.Va.

. .,. A specipl Milt for girls cmd ~ in our~~~-

~

' .,

trucks, 15 . tons; three-axle trucks, 19 an inspection to assess .the structure's
tons; four-axle trucks, 20 tons; and five- strength," said Coen. "After examining
axle trucks, 34 tons.
. the results, the team discovered some
Even though the load limits · are minor rust on the girders near the West
reserved for commercial trucks only, Virginia approach spans."
.
moto~ists · in both Meigs and Mason
"A reduction in t h e Iegalloa d I'1~1ts
countles have expressed concerns over was recommended only as .a pr~:~autlon' ' ' i ......
' II th' " '' ' • I'd ary measure
'
'
dr'
fi .. h
the new ltruts; ;!§'we as 'e' ,4 year-o
to ,;ns,~re .. 1ver, sa e.ty, e
bridge's stability.
added. "There·are'fii:Y froblems Wl~h the
··' "As1o~'SS m~torists don '.r exc!:~d the- ; bridg~'s ~rail sta~ilf¥:1 '·'"~~''1
.
posted wetght .hnuts, there IS absolutely · Whtle st1ll semceable and safe, the
nothing to. worry about," said John bridge, built in 1928, is considered by
Coen, bridge engineer for ODOT Dis- ODOT to be inadequate for handling
trict 10.
today's heavytlow o~traffic and is sched"Consultants from the URS Corp. uled ~o be replaced m 2003 when c~n­
recently performed a computenzed struct10n begms on a new $25 m1ll10n
load-rating analysis on the bridge during cable-stayed bridge.

sironger-than-.anticipated eco'
f
nomic rewrt Thesday tailed to .
impress investors, who instead
retreated into the now-familBY TONY M. LEAcH
iar pattern of unlo~g techTLEACHCPMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
nology stocks as they worried
noMEROY _ D ·t
t · ts'
espl e mo OilS
aboqt the timing of a~ · , ~
''coik~i:ns,.r. a~· dftkial with the Ohio
·' The Nasdaqmup;ft ~ ' "'De -~rnn~nt o(Tr~ '0~!ft1o~ (ODOT}
. ~tl) itsldM!st~'~,
sa~J rec~nt f!!dJ~tfo'n11n 'load'1iffilli 'fdi
months on eoncetnl' th:ii 'w.ill the Pomeroy~Mason Bridge is no cause
Stteetk ~ lalt n'lonlh might
for alarm:
have been too muCh, too soon
· The new limits which took effect last
The Dow .Jo.\.es industrial
Friday, reduces the legaliJlqad limit for
average closed down 58.05, or
commercial trucks crossiril:the bridge to
0.6 percent, at 9,713.80,
around. 75 percent. The limits, according
falling back fiom an earlier
to ODOT, are as follows: two-axle
advance of70.
The technology-focused
''
Nasdaq fared even worse
when its moriling gains deteriorated. It lost 47.81, or 2.5
percent, to 1,882.53 _: its
lowest cli&gt;se since Nov. 21;
BY CHARLENE Ho,EAJCH .
when the index finished at
HOEFLICHIIPMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
1,875.05.
POMEROY - "A simple
' The stand3rd &amp; Poor's 500
blood test can prevent a lifetime spoiled by irreverSible
index dropped 8.27, or 0.7
percent, to .1,1 19.31.
damJige as a result oflead poisoning, and parents need ' to
be·aware of that," said Margie
Skidmore, R.N., director of
nursing at the Meigs County
. OHIO
Health Department:
•
Pick :1:,7-3·6
To raise lead poisoning pre~ 4:7:2~ 1·,9 . .
sh.~
vention
awareness,
lucke¥9 5: 2·10..11-17"32
announced free screenings
Pick J day: ~-5
and infi&gt;rrnational sessions to
Pick 4 day: 3-9-8-5 .
be hel&lt;i at the health department on Feb. 6 and March 6
\V.VA. :
.
for children ages 6 months to
Dilly J: 0..6-Q
years.
'
6
~~ .4:9-7-2-6
. 15: 1~2-5"15-23·25
Parents, .she said, can call 1
992-6626 and make arl ··
appointment or request information.
'
· Skidmore said that of the
2 Sldlani ~ 12 Pllpl
126 ·children screened . last i'
Calendar
AS , y~ar. two had elevated blood, LEAD TESTING- Nancy Broderick, R.N., child and family health services child health clinClassifieds
82-4
lead levels. as compared to,\,) lc nurse collects a blood specimen to be tested for lead from Nevada Quails, daughter of
Comics
BS ' seven of the , 9.7 children sa,rah Q~alis, Middleport. (Charlene Hoeflich) ·
screened in 2000.
,
,
·
··
Dea'r Abby
AS
'
It
is
estimated
that
national;,'
,
"lead
pois~ming
affects
nearly
lead
poisoning occurs with- · and 36 months of age because
Editorials ·
A4
ly almOJt a million children ,, tf"ery system in the body, can out distinctive symptoms.
they have a lot of hand to
M9\'ies
A3
age
of
6
have
'
·
cause
learning
disabilities,
"Children
up
·
to
6
years
of
under
the
Obituaries
. A3
mouth activity:'
enough lead in their blood to ~ehavioral problems, ~nd at age are the inost vulnerable to
Sports
81
"Parents should have their
harm them, said Skidmore.
very htgh ,levels, . setzures, lead poisoning especially
Weather
A2
She went on io explain th~t coma and e¥en death. Often those who are between 12
,..... - .... llh•.A3 .
c 2002 Ohio V.lley Publlshlns Co.

'

'·

Holzer
Clinic·set
to open
in Athens
FROM STAFF REPORTS

I.

.

•

. _llo....._.. N8W1ptptr

c0U

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
I

446-5679
, •

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OhiO

The Daily Sentinel
Thui'SCMy, Jan. 2ol

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lw141·

··;~
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• 1 eo~umu

!41·Hr

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KV.

02002 AocuWoa111ef, Inc.

__

..0 --·~-·
Warmth will end abruptly
"""'V ... """"' """"'

,.....

r.......

Aoln

COLUMBUS (AP) r- American
Electric Power said Tuesday its fourth"
quarter earnings, excluding special
items, dropped 41 percent because of
mild weather and a weak economy.
The utility had· ongoing quarterly
earnings of $113.7 million, or 35 cents
per shore, falling short of the 39 .cents
per share predicted by analysts polled by
Thomson Financial/First Call. A year
ago, the company had ongoing earnings
of S193.6 million, or 62 cents per share.
Net earnings were $51.9 million,
compared with a loss of $222.3 million
in the fourth quarter 2000. Revenue
was S 14.2 billion,,.up !rom $10. ~ billion
a year ago.
Columbus-based AEP also lowered its
2002 earnings . forecast to between
. $3.60 and $3.75 per share from the previous range of $3'.70 and $3.80 per

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The unseasonably warm weather and rain will continue
across the area through Thursday morning, forecasters said.
Then an approaching low pressure system will return conditions to normal for at least 36 hours, with temperatures in the
· 30s and northwesterly winds making it feel even colder.
However, by the weekend, the warmer conditions will be
back, the National Weather Service said.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:39, and sunrise on Thursday is at
7:47a.m.
Weather forecast:
.
Tonight ... Occasional rain. Lows in the lower 50s. Southwest
. . wind around 15 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.
Thursday... Occasional rain. Hi~hs near 60. West wind 15
mph becoming north early in the afternoon. Chance c:if rain 80
percent.
Thursday night ... Partly cloudy. A chance of rain early. Lows
in the mid 30s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 40s.
Friday night.. .Mostly clear. Lows 25 to 30.
Saturclay... Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 50s.
Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows near 30 and highs in the upper
50s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 30s and highs in the
lower 50s.
Tuesday... Pa;tly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s and highs in the
lower 50s.

Pair charged
with fraud
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
U.S. attorney's office in Toledo
has charged two m~ in a S105
million nationwide scam to
cheat investors · who bought
insurance polices of terminally ill
·people.
James A. Capwill, 37, ofAurora in suburban Cleveland,
appeared Thesday before a· federal judge in Toledo on a 160count indictmel)t that alleges he
and a former business associate,].
Richard Jamieson, lied to more
than 2,800 investors across the
country.
· Prosecutors s:¥1 the men laundered millions of dollars and
spent it on themselves and their
families.
The · allegations involve viaticals, investments that give terminally ill patients money to spend
during their last days.

Renovations ·
underway at
Orient prison
.

share, citing the recenion and. the pos- Commission to review. AEP's $4.37 bilsible issuanct of stock to fund n~ . lion acquisition of Central South West
growth and strengthen its balance sheet. Power. The court said the st;:C failed to
In tracling Tuesday on the N~ York adequately explain its conclusion that
Stock Exchange, AEP's stock was down the merger complied with a 1935 law
89 cents to $42:11.
aimed at protecting consumers and
For the year, AEP's earnings, exclud- stockholders.
,
.ing spe~ial items, were S1.09. billion, or
The q~erger made AEP one of ~e
$3.38 per share. That compares with country's largest power compames
$870.7 million, or $2.71 per share, jn with 5 percent of the market.
2000. ·
The combined company serves cusNet earnings were $970.8 million, or tomers in Ohio and 10 other states:
$3.01 per share;.\..p from $267.1 mil- Arkansas,
Indiana,
Kentucky,
lion, or 83 cents per share, in 2000. The Louisiana, Michigan, Oklahoma, Ten2001 earnings included extraordinary nessee, Texas, Virginia and West Vir.
items such as costs related to the June ginia.
2000 completion of AEP's merger with
AEP alsp said it didn't expect a
Central South West · Power· Corp. and "long-term negative impact" from the
the purchase of Houston Pipe Line. ·
bankruptcy ofEnron Corp.AEP previLast week, a federal appeals court · ously said it cpuld lose up t!l $50 milordered the Securities and .Exchange lion from business deals with Enron.

""""

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Wedn••d•y. JllniNI'J D. 2002

AEP fourth-quarter earnings take·a hit

Ohio weather

'.

PageA2

had th~ right combination for
the drawing Tuesday. and it's
worth · the Ohio Lottery
game's top prize of$100,000.
The winning ticket was sold
at Dairy Mart in Lakewood.
S;iles in Buckeye 5 totaled
$26.1,960 and players shared
$184,480.
There were 93 Buckeye 5
tickets with four of the numhers, and each is worth $250.
The 3,041 tickets showing
three of the numbers are each
worth S10, and the 30,820
tickets showing two of the
numbers are each worth St.
The Ohio Lottery will pay
out $225,766.50 to winners in
Tuesday night's Pick 3 Numbers daily game, which had
sales of$776,491.

· management . vigorously
opposed the union's efforts to
represent employees of the
Greensboro plant and suggest- .
ed that union representation
might cost employees their job
security. The company's antiunion campaign cost one
employee her job, UAW officials said.

·

fralelllity ·
.

chapter dOseS
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
national officers of Delta Tau
Delta have voted to close the
fraternity's Ohio State University chapter.

The chapter was unable to
effectively manage operations
and recruit new members, said
JamesB.Russeli,DeltaTauDelta
executive vice president
In 2000, the chapter was
placed on probation after one of
its members died of a drug and
alcohol overdose.
Ohio State and Delta Thu
Delta have agreed that the chapter could return to campus in
2004 under a set of expectations
addressing recruitment, triembership education, scholarship,
community service and university involvement. The
chapter has been at Ohio
State since 1884.

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VVednelda~Jan.23,2002

:what's next
for
.
reeling Kmart?

~I

The Dally Sentinel • .Page A 3

·obituaries

LOCAL BRIEFS
'IWo inJured ·

rescheduled due to Saturday's
•
Those who have tickets are
reminded that tickets will still
be honored at the rescheduled
date, that will be made soon .
For details, contact Holzer
Hospice at 7 40-446-5074.

vveadle~

SYRACUSE - A two-car
crash Monday on Ohio 124
SUNBURY- Pamela L. Burson, 47, Sunbury, passed away near Syracuse led to _injuries
at home on Saturday, Jan. 19, 2002 after a lengthy battle with for two persons, the Galliacancer.
Meigs Post of the State HighDETROIT (AP) - When statetnent.
She was a 1972 graduate of Meigs High School, and a 1974 way Patrol reported .
. Kmart founder Sebastian S.
Among Kmart's exclusil(e graduate of Hocking College, and had been-employ~d with
Driver James L. Pattersqn,
Kresge opened his first store .Products is the Martha Stewart
Ati1erican Electric Power Service Corp., since 1979.
40,
Third Street, Racine, was
more than a century ago, he Everyday brand, which covers ,
She is survived by her life companion of 17 years, Dianne transported to Cabell Hunt. sold everything for five and 10 such items as sheets, towels, .
POMEROY - Units of
Thompson; her momer, Jeanne Burson Kelly of Florida; her ington Hospital, Huntington,
~. cents, .• strategy that helped paints and kitchenware. It is
the.Meigs
Emergency Service
grandmother, Dorothy Bishop of Florida; three brothers and a W.Va., following the 6:20
turn his company into a retail- Kmart's largest volume-proanswered seven calls for assissister-in-law: Steve Burson of Florida, Mark and Jeanie Burson p.m . accident .
. . ing giant with more than 2,100 ducing label, generating about
of Shade and Brian Burson of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; her niece,
Elizabeth 'M. Shuler. 8, tance . on Tuesday. Units
stores.
$1.5 billion in sales last year.
·
Jeanne Burson of Shade; aunts, Joan and Mary Bursc;m of Racine, a passenger in a car responded as follows:
Analysts say that kind of
Martha Stewart Living Athens, Harriett Meeks _ of Shade, Midge Shum\Yay ,of driven by Wendy L. Shuler,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
vision is needed once again to Omnimedia has a provision in Granville, Nancy and Loren Israel of Wellston, and Clydene
9:20
a.m.,
Limburger
. resurrect the discount chain its conrract that allows Stewart Gabriel of Illinois; two uncles, Jack Carsey of Pomeroy and · 25, Racine, was taken to Ridge, Christy Jordan, CamPleasant Valley Hospital by
from bankruptcy.
to leave Kmart in bankruptcy, Dick Stanley of Akron and many wonderful relatives and very Syra.cuse EMS, according to den-Clark Memorial HospiKmari Corp. filed for Chap- but it would have to be 1 special friends.
tal;
the patrol.
ter 11 on Tuesday, becoming approved by a bankruptcy
2:28 p.m., Hog Hollow
She was preceded in death by her father, Robert H . Burson
Troopers said Patterson was
the nation's largest retailer to judge. Martha Stewart officials of Shade.
Road
, Marjorie Lawson,
westboun,:l when the car he
file for bankruptcy. Lower- could not be reached for comFriends may call on Friday from 2 p.m. to 4 and 6 p.m. to 8 drove struck a deer in the Holzer Medical Center;
than-expected holiday sales ment on Tuesday.
p.m. at the DeVore-Synder Funeral Home, Ohio 3 at 61 in road that had been killed JUSt
4:24 p.m., North Second;
and a poor earnings perforFor Krnart's suppliers, the Sunbury. Luncheon for all will be served on Saturday at 11 a.m . 'minutes before, causing the. Juanita Gerard, HMC;
mance in the fourth quarter bankruptcy filing was a bit of a at the Sunbury United Methodist Church, 100 West Cherry
5:52 p.m., Union Avenue,
car to travel off the right side
precipitated its decline.
St.,
Sunbury,
where
services
will
be
held
on
Saturday·
at
noon,
Mindy
Brinker, HMC.
relief
of the road.
The No. 3 discount retailer
REEDSVILLE
Fleming Cos., its primaty with Pastor Brian Smith officiating. Committal services will be
Patterson lost control on
: . known for the BlueLight Spe- food distributor, cut off ship- held at 3:30 p.m.' on Saturday at Athens Memory Gardens.
9:15 a.m., Portland, Dwain
grass, went left and collided
cial and Martha Stewart fash- ments Monday after Kmart
Memorial contributions may be made to Secret Angels, c/o with an eastbound car driven Casto, Pleasant Valley Hospiions has also srruggled against failed to make a regular week- Huntington National Bank, 17 South High St., Columbus,
by Wendy Shuler, th e report tal.
No. 1 Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and ly payment. On Tuesday, Flem- Ohio 43215, reference account 01892147002
RUTLAND
said.
No. 2 Target Corp.
Condolences
for
the
family
may
be
expressed
at
www.sny7:10
p.m.,
HMC Clinic,
ing said it intends to resume
Both cars were severely
Kmart tumbled into crisis deliveries once ·it gets assur- derfuneralhoiTles.com:
·
.
damaged, and Patterson was Bonita Connlley, HMC.
after Jan. 1, when debt rating ances it will be paid.
TUPPERS PLAINS
cited for left of center.
agencies lowered its credit rat6:35 p.m .. Ohio 248, Keith
Other suppliers have delayed
ings and analysts lost confi- or stopped shipments to Kmart ·
Aeiker, PVH.
dence in its stock.
in recent days. But bankruptcy
What Kmart needs now, expert Ma~tin Zohn with
retail analysts say, is a plan to Proskauer Rose LLP said venrestore that confidence among dors will' come back.
GALLIPOLIS - A special
POMEROY Pomeroy
analysts and the shopping pubbenefit
for
Holzer
Hospice,
.
Church
of
Christ
will'
hold a
. "The Chapter 11 brings
. lie.
the Second Annual Fantasy community dinner on Friday
order to the process," Zohn
Conor Reilly, senior partner said. "It has straightforward
Magic Show Spectacular, from 5 to 7 p.m. The dinner is
with Gibson, Dunn and
scheduled for Jan . 19, has been free and open to the public.
rules and for some reason peoCrutcher, said Krnart needs to
ple find that reassuring."
go back to the drawing board
Krnart listed its assets itl, its
Skidmore
suggested
and determine "what their sort
bankruptcy filing at $16.3 ,bilw.ashing their children's
MIDDLETOWN (AP) - . location."
· of retailing rationale is, what's
lion,
with
$10.3
billion
in
total
hands often, keeping
. going to bring . customers to
Middletown Regional HosNew residents are generaldebts,
making
it
the
.
Jarvst
the
house as clean and
from Page AI
them as opposed to other
pita! officials say the hospital ly affluent the median
retailer
to
declare
bankruptcy.
free from dust as possicompetitors."
could be more useful to household income in the
Previously. Federated Depart- more people if it relocated county is $57,800 ble,
removing
shoes
child
tested
for
lead,
and
they
and
As part of its reorganization,
ment Stores Inc., with $9.1 bil- into the burgeoning area used to a certain level of ser- should also know that the pri- before
entering
the
· • Troy, Mich.-based Kmart said
lion in assets, was the largest between Cincinnati and ·vices. When Donna Crossley mary source of lead exposure house, . changing out of
c it will evaluate the performoved to Mason from Vir- is through lead-based paint work clothes and show. mance of every store and close when it filed in January \990 Dayton.
and
emerged
two
years
lalf.!'.
But some residents oppose ginia two years ago, she did- that is peeling, chipping, ering before coming
: all that are unprofitable or
Although
Kmart
has
won
the move from the central n't realize she would be 25 chalking, or cracking," con- home if you work with
. underperforming.
lead at your job, and
time to figure out its bus! ness city to rnral Warren County· minutes from a hospital.
tinued Skidmore.
• Some analysts said up to 700
.
srrategy,
the
danger
is
tha;
the
Contaminated
paint never sanding, burning
south r J&gt;t of Middletown,
"I've never lived anywhere
• stores may eventually be shutretail giant's customers IJ;light saying it would only add to where there wasn't a hospi- can be a hazard when or scraping paint unless
". lered. Km~r,t , h~··&lt;· about
law found on surfaces that you · know it doesn't ·
•. 275,000 employees and stores find Somewhere else to tlrop, the urban sprawl they believe tal," said Crossley, .
· in all 50 states. · · · ·
· ·· said Emrne Kozloff with Bern- is eroding their quality of school student and the moth- children can che,w or contain lead .
.
She also encouraged
life.
er of two. "It didn't even that get a lot of wearKrnart said it had secured $2 · stein Sanford.
and-tear such as win- healthy eating habits,
Filing for bankruptcy m;eans
"In order to make it ml,lre occur to me to ask."
· billion in financing, approved
Opponents note that hos- dows, and window sills, throwing away older,
• late Tuesday by Bankruptcy the chain's shelves aren't going convenient for a few people,
doors and door frames, imported or handmade
'. Court Judge Susan Pierson to be fully stocked every• day, we're going to make it more pitals in Cincinnati, Dayton
comp.~ny
difficult for others," said and Hamilton have closed in stairs, · railings, banis- dishes, avoiding hobbies
. Sonderby, which will help the something the
ters,
porches · and that use lea d, keeping
· company's cash flow while it already struggles with, she\aid. David Rawnsley, who lives recent years, and not everyaway from
"You're going to fru·strate abol!t five miles from th.e site. one agrees that the county fences, according to the furniture
· restructures.
damaged
paint,
and not
nurse.
' The retailer has targeted customers, and they're going ,to "The tradeoff to me · isn't needs a traditional hospital.
As for what parents using home remedies or
They say today's trend is
, em.ergence from Chapter 11,in ·go, and it's going to be hart!&gt; to good enough."
can do to prevent child - cosmetics that contain
get 'them back;' Kozloff sai~.
Warren County is the sec- toward medical centers : 2003.
lead.
At Big Kmart in Rose\&gt;ille, and-fastest
growing
of clusters of doctors' offices hood . lead poisomng ..
"We are determined . to
• complete our reprganization as cashier Rita Sassin agreed: The Ohio's 88 counties. It has 39 that can offer minor surgery
· quickly and smoothly as possi- company has to make sure it percent more residents than and other services that used
Crossroads program, a repredecade
ago,
about
to
be
hospitals'
domain.
it
had
a
fl¥'rcontinues
to
stock
the
ble, while taking full advantage
sentative from the Rock139,000 people:
Still, many residents long
of this chance to make a fresh chandise that customers wagt.
springs Rehabilitation Center
But
the
$125
million
hosfor
a
full-fledged
hospital.
"To
heck
with
the
rain
and an occupational therapist
:. start and reposition Krnart for ·
from Page AI
plan, which
also
Diana Renner of Lebanon
with arm and hand massage;
• the future," chief executive checks, they want the items:' pita!
and
says
it's
a
30-minute
drive
to
includes
related
offices
. Chuck Conaway said in a she said .
with breathing tests; represen- Holzer Medical Center's
industry on a 300-acre cam- · Kettering Memorial, near tatives from the Meigs Coun- rehabilitation unit; and Merck
pus, has mobilized opposition Dayton, where she expects to ry Multipurpose Senior Cen- Pharmaceutical with bone
from
residents who have . have her third child in May.
'
ter, Meigs County Health density tests.
been successful in holding off
"It's quite a drive, particu- Department,
"We hope that residents ·
Overbrook
the growth that has oc~urred larly if you're in labor;' said Center, Meigs County Dis- from throughout the area will
Premier8.35
elsewhere
in Warren County. her husband, David. "For trict Public Library, Applachi- visit the health fair," Carol
.94
Federal
Mogul
AEP-42. 11
Rockwell - 18.26
USB-20.48
Arch Coal - 18.80
Two years ago, they emergency purposes or even an Dental Clinic, Woodland Howe Cantrell, the event's
Rocky Bools - 6
• Gannett- 68.90
Akzo -43.17
stopped
a proposed $200 for maternity, . it would be Centers, Department of Job organizer said. "P reve ntive
General Electric- 38.30 RD Shell - 46.84
AmTech/SBC- 35.57
Sears - 52.42
million
mega-mall
that . nice to have some place clos- and Family Services, Healthy health is an important part of
GKNLY-3.70
Ashland Inc. - 45.24
Hanev oav&gt;Json- 53.88 Shoney's ~ .30
AT&amp;T-18.13
would . have 1 included 200 er to home."
Start, and job training ser- our well-being, and informaWai·Mart- 56.01
Kmart- .69
. Bank One- 37.81
stores and employed up to
Bob Gray, who · keeps cows vices; Universiry of Rio tion on any number of topics
Wendy's - 30.82
Kroger - 20.41
BLI-10
Worthington - 14.02
3,000 people. The Michigan- and chickens on his small Grande and the universiry's will be of interest to anyone."
Lands End - 49.70
. Bob Evans- 27.41
Dally stock reports are
Lid. -15.49
· BorgWamer-51.90
based developer shelved the farm near the proposed hoslhe 4 p.m . closing
NSC-19.72
ChampiOn - 3 .15
pita! site, said he . and his
Charming Shops- 5.39 Oak HI Fnanclal- 16.13 quotes of lhe previous plan .
transactions,
pro-1
day's
OVB-25.05
Hospital. officials say they neighbors should not be
City Holding -12.85
vlded by Smilh Partners
BBT-34.89
Col-21.30
won't
be discouraged so easi- steamrolled as health care
at Advest Inc. of Gal·
Peoples- t9
DG -15.17
)y. Middletown Regional has alternatives are being considllpolls.
Pepsico - 49.42
DuPont - 40.44
...
options to buy land along ered.
"Basically what it com,es
Interstate 75, and work could
Subscribe today.
start next year and be com- down to is 1- moved out here
992-2156
pleted by 2006; said hospital for a reason, and the reason is
president Douglas McNeill.
that it was a country, rural
. • (USPS 213-960)
"I
want
to
be
clear.
We
atmosphere,"
he said. "That's
OhiO Volley Pubtlohlng Co.
Published every attemoon, Monday
need to move," McNeill said. why most of the people I
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
"We believe (this) is the best know moved out here."
Pomaroy,
Ohio. · Second.clas&amp;
Correction Polley

EMS runs

Magic show

Some residents
oppose hospital
construction ·

rescheduled

Plan dinner

Health

a

"

.

Facility set to
Close despite $4.4
million facelift

Fair·

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Bt., ~Olllo
1'40 812·21M • Flu:
2117

DBAR. ABBY: I started college
last fall and moved into a dorm. My
roommate and I get along g~at. She
lliecps in the nude. It shocked me at
fint, but the weather was hot, so I
tried it. Now I wouldn't sleep any
other way.
· .
Last week, while I was visiting my
famUy, my mother came into my
room to wake me. She saw my bare
shoulden, and correctly assumed 'I
was nude underneath the blankets.
You should have seen her reaction!
She is now convinced that I am sexually active, which I am not. She
thinks my roommate and I must be
lesbians. (We're both straight.) She
says what.! am doing is immoral and
un-Christian.
Abby, I am a very religious person.
I cannot see how sleeping in the
nude is immoral. I don't talk about it
or prance around nude. Am I missing
something? How can I convince

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

Cllllrlel)t Hotftlch
Gtntrll Manager

Dllnt:::. Hill

Con

1M

!

LltUn lo 1M bliitw an wkOIIN. ""' slwtdd H Nil t1uut. :Jtl() wonll• .til,...
.,.. 1t4}«t,. ttl#i"' tuul '""" H llpft/«I«&lt;IM"'* aMrn1 riMiflqlunu .....,,
No u•fr•M t.lt•n wlU H pllbiUW IAtkn 1ltHIII H Ill pvd

lTN.,.,.,

lullfl, ,.., ,m01f41Jlifl.

•

,.,t•, .....,,,_,

""".,.,..,of1M OldtJ twa.,

"~"'"., U. U.. coL.. ..,. lltklw IllY Ill•
hllll&lt;lobtr c .. ~ Hitorlol- "'""' otA..W• . - .

I

NATIONAL VIEW

Fix it

•

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,,

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•', I
'.
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I

.

· ·The State, Columbia, S.C., on blacks being stripped &lt;if/and:
We hear a lot from property-rights advocates about the need to
write new laws to protect people from what th,ey refer to as
"takings." They're usually talking about actions by the government that reduce the value or potential value of a property,
ofien through zoning or other land-use restrictions.
. But you don't hear a lot about a much more egregiousindeed, much more real - form of taking that our laws allow:
the kind that occurs when land speculators twist our laws in
order to swindle people out of land that has been in their family for generations.
The Associated Press came across this problem while prepar~
ing a recent series of articles about. how African-Americans
have been stripped. of their land for a century and a half. But
tvhile it disproportionately affects black landowners, the abuse
of so-called partition sales is a problem for black and white
alike. And it is a problem that n eed~ addressing....
· The media and groups that work with th e poor- who are
the most likely to dre without wills - need to educate the
public about .the need ICY make arrangements for their property after their deaths.
And we need to work on our laws. In many cases, judges
already have the authority to come up with solutions other
than partition sales when someone goes m· c.ourn .to '_get hi~ or
,
her share ofland held in common. .. .
•And if judges. aren't willing to make the t'Ti:!llgei·: bn their
own, tlien lawmakers need to· write laws to·require them to.

'TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Jan . 23, the 23rd day ·of 2002. There
are 342 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 23, 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt
announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential
nomination.
On this date:
In 1789, Georgetown University was established in present-day Washington, D.C.
In 1845, Congress decided all national elections would be
· held on vhe first Tuesday after the first Monday in Novem-

\ier.

~ In

'' .'

..•
••

.•.•· ..
..

.'
~·"

'.

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!
•

.•

. .'

:fAws favoring land speculators
ignore poor owners' rights

.

Bend
Nude sleepeti keeps mom ·awake at night

WadnBdiiJ, ..n1111ry 2S. 2 -.

•

•

'

-~~eD""'!-ail_'y_Se_ntin_e_l-------~~ the

Page~-.

1920, the Dutch go"ernment refused demands from the
v:ictorious Allies to hand over the ex-kaiser of Germany.
. In 1950, the Isra~li Knesset approved a resolution pro. claiming Jerusalem the capital ·of Israel.
: In 1964, the 24th amendment to the Constitution, eliminating the poll tax in federal elections, was ratified.
) n 1968, North Korea seized the U.S. Navy ship· Pueblo,
charging its crew with being on a spying mission. (The crew ·
was released 11 months later.)
~ In 1973, President Nixon announced an accord had been
reached to el1d the Vietnam War.
. In 1977, 25 years ago, the TV mini-series "Roots," based
ctn the Alex Haley novel, began airing on ABC.
, In 1985, debate in Britain's House of Lords was carried on
live television for the ·first time.
: In 1989, surrealist· artist Salvador Dali died in his native
Spain at age 84 . . '
.
Ten years ago: Forty-seven nations, including the United
States, agreed on a massive global humanitarian effort to rescue millions of hurigry people in the former Soviet Uniofi.
; Five years ago: Cancer experts who were supposed to sett~e a furious controversy over whether women shoulq start
h~v ing mammograms :it age 40 or age 50 decided instead to
!~ave the decision up to patients.
; One year ago: California energy officials eked sufficient
P,QWer out of tight West Coast electricity supplies to avoid
rush hour blackouts as lawmakers scrambled to make
Ii&gt;nger-term deals to buy power. Five Falun Gong followers
s~t themselves on fire in China's Tiananmen Square; one
die ct.
~ Today's Birthdays: Historian Joseph Nathan Kane is 103.
Actress J eanne Moreau is 74 . Actress Chita Rivera is 69.
}lctor-director Lou Antonio is 68 . Actor Gil Gerard is 59.
Actor Rueger Hauer is 58. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jerry
' I;,awson (The Persuasions) is 58. Sen. Thomas R . Carper, DOe!., is 55. Singer Anita Pointer is 54. Actor Richard Dean
~nderson is 52. Rock musician Bill Cunningham is 52.
~ock singer-musician Patrick Simmons (The Doobie
Brothers) is 52 . Rock musician Danny Feder'id (Bru~e
~ringsteen and the E Street Band) is 52. Rock singer
Robin Zander (Cheap Trick) is 49. Princess Caroline of
Monaco is -45. Singer Anita Baker is 44. R egga,e musician
Earl Falconer (UB40) is 43. Actress Mariska Hargitay is 38.
llhythm-and-blues singer Marc Nelson is 31. Actress Tiffani
'l,"hiessen is 28.
Thought for Tod:ty:-"Jealousy is all· the fun you thirtk they
had:"- 'Erica Jong, American author.
· .

.-

and .deciding what's right for us.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY:. My 16-year-old
)
daughter, "Jenny," sleeps at her best
friend's house about once a month.
Her friend has a double bed, which
they share.[ have been fine with this.
I have slept in the same bed with
6ther women, and there was nothing
ADVICE
sexual about it .
Since last 'summer, Jenny has been
Mother that what I'm doi'!g is real- sleeping in the nude. I don't have a
ly OK?- FEELING THE HEAT problem with that, either. She doesDEAR FEEl INGTHE HEAT: n't parade around the house naked
Nudity is not immoral; it has noth- and is quite modest. I started sleeping to do with religion. It is not an ing in the nude when I was I 8. ·
indication of sexual activity or lack Again, there was nothing sexual
of it. Nudity is simply a state of about it. ·
undress.You are comfortable with it;
The other day, I asked Jenny if she
your mo\her is not. You probably slept in the nude when she was at
can't convince a person who feels her friend 's house. She said they
that nudity is fundamentally wrong both did. It has been bothering me
thct it's OK. Part of growing up is ever since. I can't help feeling their
learning to listen to our conscience friendship is sexual. I'm afraid asking

Dear

Abby

her outright would make her angry mother-daughter chat. Read on:
or might result in her lying to me,
DEAR ABBY: I recently heard
the
best way to sleep soundly is to
since she knows I would not approve
of her having sex with anyone at this keep your feet and hands warm. The
image I had from this report wa£
age.
Abby, do you · think it's possible Sleep with socks ' and mittens, but
16-year-old girls could share the nothing else.
same bed naked and not be sexually
A few days later, another article!
involved? What can I do to ease my claimed that when you sleep totally
mind? - SUSPICIOUS MOM nude, heat is more evenly distributed, thus you sleep more comfortIN NAPA, cALIF.
. DEAR SUSPICIOUS MOM: ably, even in the cold of winter.
Yes, I do think it's possible. HowevWhat have you heard about sleeper, your question is intriguing. Are ing in the riude? - NUDIST IN
there any other reasons you are sus- SANTA CLARITA, CAUF.
DEAR NUDIST: Only . this:
picious? Has she shown an interest
Heat escapes ·from the top of the
in boys?
Your daughter will not become head and the liottom of the feet. So
defensive when you talk to her to conserve body heat,' wear socks
about her sexual orientation unless and a ski cap. And pray that anyone
you appe¥ accusatory or judgmen- who sees you doesn't die laughing.
til. Although time may answer your
Pauline Phillips and her daughter
question for you, you and she are Jeanne Phillips share the pseudonym
overdue for a frank and loving Abigail ~n Buren.

two

www.CIIgll.cDIII

,,i

PERKIN~,'

VIEW

Enron .is not exclusively·aU!hite House problem
.
.
.

Remember the famous scene in
"Casablanca" when Rick's Cafe Americain is shut down?
"How can you close me up?" asks Rick,
played by Humphrey Bogart. "On what
grounds?"
"I'm shocked, shocked (!) to find that
· gambling is going on in here," replies
Captain Renault, played by Claude Rains.
At which point a croupier appears,
hand~ Renault a stack of money, a!).d
informs him, 11 Your winnings, sir."
Which brings me to the Enron investigation on Capitol Hill. Some Democrats,
like Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman and
California Rep. Henry Waxman, are trying their darndest to spin it as a Bush
administration scandal.
Th,~'re. shocked, sh9c.ked Q)_th~t the
president received campaign contribu·tidns from Bnron chairman Kenneth Lay.
· That·certain-high-ranking members of
his administration, including Vice Presi. dent Dick Cheney, Attorney General John
Ashcroft, Economic Adviser Larry Lindsey, Securities and Exchange Conunission
Chairman Harvey Pitt, have some connection or another with the bankrupt
energy giant.
But it's not like the party of Lieberman
and Waxman has riot been a' beneficiary of
Enron's largeSs. Your contributions, sirs.
Not that Democrats have had no connections whatsoever with the Houston•based
firm.
In fact, an analysis of federaJ election
documents by The Center for Responsive
Politics reveals that 29 Senate Democrats,
including Lieberman himself and Majority Leader Tom Daschle, received catnpaign contributions from Enron.As did 71
House Democrats, including Minority
Leader Richard Gephardt.
Then thei:e's the $285,000 in Enron
cash the Democratic National Committee
accepted in 2000. Not to mention the
$100,000 Thanksgiving gift the energy

use the powers o( his office to bail the
energy giant out of its tro\lbles.
Nor did Enron's connections to Bush .
administration officials help the belea- .
guered company avert financial collapse._
The Treasury Department -rebuffed ,
repeated requests that Bush officials call .
' the bond-rating agencjes on the compa- ..
ny's behalf. The request~ were made nOt
only by Lay but also by former Clinton
tOLUMNIST
Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, a
•
director of Citigroup, Enron 's largest cred;j
itor (not to mention Lieberman's larg"'t
giant gave the DemJlf.!tic Senatorial campaign contribu tor) .
Campaign Committee ~St November, a
Treasury's decision effectively quashed
week before filing Ch~ r 11 ~n bank- Enron's pending merger with Dynegy anti
ruptcy court.
lefi Enrun with no recourse but bankEnron also retained thi 'services of sonie ruptcy.
.of tlj~ . best DelJ~9.&lt;;ratic ,lil9byists, c~ms;U~
Meanwhile, both the SEC and the Ju!ltants and lawyers money .:'ould buy.
· · tiee Departrtl~nt have launched investigaLike jack Quinn, forme~ Vice President tipns of Enron that c&lt;lluld 'lead, eorkei\'U
Al Gore's former chief ofcsraff, a lobbyist ably, to asset forfeintres and cril'ninal cor1"
for the nation's seventh•largest company. victions for the company's senior oxecu"
Robert Bennett, who . represented Bill tives.
Clinton in the Paula Jones case, Enron's
So, then, for all its campaign contribulead Washington lawyer. David Boies, tions to President Bush, for all its ties to
Go~·, lead lawyer in thc!'f)orida recount, with Bush admirustration officials, Enrott
representing the fallen erfergy giant's for- has little to show for it.
·
mer chief financial officer, Andrew FasThat's why, according to the lat~t
tow.
,.
CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll, few
And, oh yes, Micha~l ' Lewin, Lieber- Americans blame the Bush administration
man's former chief of staff, who earned a for Enron 's implosion and the hardship
nice check from Ebron by building rela- suffered by the bankrupt company's fortionships for the compty with Demo~- mer ·employees. .
ratic lawmakers.
. Lieberman and Waxman can try to per. Both Lieberman and axman are con- suade the public 'that Enron's' collapse· Is
cerned with the influence Enron might somehow a Dush adininistration scandal.
have had with the B!Kh administration, But it is hi\l'd-to· make that case when so
given the president's past friendship with !llany Democratic lawmakers have
Lay, given the ties that Cheney, Asl)croft, accepted Enron's cash; when so many
Lindsey, Pitt and other administration offi- Democratic insiders continue to use their
dais had with the company.
Washington connections on Enroll's
But the fact that Enron and its execu- behalf.
tives generously supp.orted Bush during
'
his two campaigns for Texas governor, as
aaseph PerkitiS is a columnist for Tire sa),
well as during his can\p'aign for the White Diego UniM- Trilnme alld COil be reaclted
House, did not comllel the president to Joseph.Perki11S Ur1i0f1 Trib.com.)

~:Tose~h

·Perkins

'. *

at -

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Guys: You have to want tp do things with the_Mrs.
I needed to get something at the
hdrdware store the other day, and I asked
my wife whether .she wanted me to pick
anything up for her while I was out. She
said, 'I No, I'll go with you."
The next 'thing you know, we're well
into o\lr second hour at the mall, look"
ing for shoes. There was a time in my
marriage when I would have said somec
thing negative about how a man who
only needed drywall screws was being
asked to give opinions on 20 or 30 pairs
of shoes that all looked pretty much
identical to him. But I know better. I
just schlepped along quietly, feeling as
though I must be a pretty good guy to
go shopping with my wife and · not
complain.
.
'
But I 'was wrong.. My wife had to take
me aside in a quiet corner by the drinking fountain and point out how my attitude was ruining the entire shopping
experience, "This is supposed to be fun,
. isn't it?" I nodded my head while I suppressed the truthful answer. And then it
struck me: When you have a life partner,
it's .not enough that you do things with
them; you have to want to do them. So,
not only do I have to go shopping with
my wife, I have to want to go shopping

with my wife. Oth~rwise rt jus.t isn't o~ look around for the restroon;. I tokt
going to work. I undersrand that now, my wife that she could talk to me when ·
and that's why I've signed up for acting the fireworks are over. That was a mi!llessons.
.·
take. I don 't have a heated garage . .
One thing after the other
A sad story
Have you ever noticed how men have
As baby boomers get older, there are
the ability to stand in a group and stare co ntinual repercussions throughout
at something? No words. No move- society. I noticed one of them last week
ment. We can stand and stare at a fire- when I was in one of those hairstylingworks display or a television set or a car for-men places, where they wash yo11r
engine or a size 5 woman in a size 4 hair and massage your neck and do any
bathing suit and have absol.utely no rea- kind of style you want. Unfortunately,
son to share our thoughts. Now, some these days most of the men who go in
people might say that makes us look there look like me. Male-pattern balddumb or insensjtive. I don't agree. I ness is a problem. When it comes to
think · it's. a su~tle rebellion against hairstyles, less is not more . .But the wont
multi-tasking. M'en need to focu s. We part is the professionally trained hairfunction better i.loing one thing at a stylist spending most of the appointtime. When yo meet a couple who ment hacking tufts of hair out of ears
have no children, nine times out of 10, and noses. I can't help thinking that this
they have a TV ;in the bedroom. Men is a person who once had a dream .
QUOTE OF THE DAY:"Never roast
are single-mindel!. When I'm watching
a fireworks display, that's the only thin g marshmallows over a processed firelog."
I'm there for. I got up out of my easy - Red Green
.
chair, put on my pants and went down
(Red Green i&lt; !he star of"Thc R&lt;'d Grt,~ll
to the park. In order to get value for my Shout," a television series seert in th e U.S. 011
efforts, I need to take in as much of the . PBS and in Canada orl the CBC Network,
fireworks display as possible. I want to and the author of "The Red Green Book"
see it, 'hear it, feel it and smell it. I don't and "Red 'Green Talks Cars: A Love
want to have •..conversation or eat pizza Story.")
(

..

nursing director; Patricia
Ervin RN, BSN, assistant
nursing director.
OUCOM collaborates with
health agencies, civic groups,
schools, hospitals and community leaden throughout southeastern Ohio.
Meigs County is one of
many counties that benefits
from services rendered via
OUCOM's Healthy Adult
Project, especially the breast
and cervical cancer program,
which. provides screening
gynecological examinations
and mammogram referrals via
its mobile unit, particularly for
uninsured and underinsured
residents.

Health assistant
ncogiilzecl
POMEROY - Courtney
C. Sim, BSC, administrative
assistant at the Meigs County
Health Department, has
received special recognition
for her role in community service programs from the Ohio
Univenity C9llege of Osteopathic Medicine (OUCOM).
· Sim's recognition came as a
result of her special service to
the breast and cervical cancer
program.
Awards were presented at
the sixth annual OUCOM
· CSP's recognition program to
· those selected by program
· C!!Ordinaton, Melanie Moy~n-Smith, nune .practitioner,
and Marilyn Yannerella, case
manager.
Currently, Sim organizes bi~
monthly mobile mammography clinics at the health
department by scheduling
appointments,
completing
appropriate paperwork and
coordinating necessary followup for clientele.

11th birthday
RECOGNIZED - Courtney Sim of the Meigs County Health Departmeni, left, was presented a
plaque by Melanie Moynan-Smith, right, in recognition of her work with the OUCOM's breast and·
cervical screening program. Also pictured are Marilyn Yannerella, coordinator, and John Caen,
who drives the van to Pomeroy and gives technical support. (Staff. photo)
In addition, Sim promotes
area healthcare offerings
(including OUCOM's Breast
and Cervical Screenings);
assesses clients health needs;
links income eligible, upin-

sured
and
underinsured
women to available and funding sources for necessary
· mammography and gynecological services.
.More than 75 attended the

recognition event. Going from
here were Meigs County
.Health Department employees
Sim; Norma Torres, RN, BSN,
MSEd., health commissioner;
Margie Skidmore, RN, BSN,

-·Black is gold at Hollywood awards show
'

.

NEW YORK (AP) -The
fashiori story at the Golden
Globes ceremony in Beverly
Hills, Calif., was written in
black and white.
The list ofHollywo9d's A-list
actresses in black ran as long as
the ~d c~t at the Beverly
~ Hilton. Nicole Kidman wore a
black gown with cutouts, Sarah
Jessica Parker was in a Chane!
black strapless top and beaded
pants, and all three of the female
stars of"Friel)ds" were in black,
albeit in totally different silhouettes - Jennifer Aniston in a
tuxedo,
Courteney , Cox

Arquette in a Ralph Lauren suit Billy .Bob Thornton were a
with a plunging V-neck and complementary couple - she
lace details, and Lisa Kudrow in in a black strapless gown and
a goWn with a keyhole neck.
white pearls, he in a black suit,
"Dark Angel's" Jessica Alba white shirt, tie and hat.
was a fan of white, and so were · There was some red on the
Megan Mullally . ("Will &amp; red carpet a5 well: Jennifer GarGrace") ;md Maggie Smith.
nef ("Alias") in a sleek, bright
Kristin Davis ("Sex and the red gown with no adornment or
City") struck a compromise in jewels; Jutianna Margulies in a
a black-and-white beaded hal- formfitting off-the-shoulder
ter ~th black skirt, as did Jen- Narcisco Rodriguez gown in a
nifer · Connelly ("A Beautiful deeper shade; and Sela Ward in a
Mind"), who wore . a black red gown with more bow ties
gown with a white flower at than the men at the Globes
the pinnacle of its V-neck.
chose to wear.
Angelina Jolie and husband
It seemed most of the men

New Treatments for Tinnitus

LOCAL EVENTS
Community .Calender Ia
publlahld II I !I'M llrVICI
to non·proflt groupe wlahlng .
to ennounce meetlngl and
apeclal eventa. The calendar
11 not dnlgnld to promote
ielee or funcf.rallel'l of any
type. ltlml are printed only
" epaca permlta and can·
not bl. guarentHd to be
printed e epeclflc num.blr of
dey e.

opted for a ~gular suit tie
instead of bow ties with their
tuxedos. Martin Sheen wore
black (tie) on black (shirt) on
black (suit) while his son, Charlie, had a silver tie. Benjamil)
Bratt and Sissy· Spacek, in . i.
man's tuxedo, left their ties at
home.
Many of the television
actresses wore the glamorous
gowns they had originally
picked for the Emmys, which
were postponed twice following the events of Sept. II and
endeq up as a "business attire"
event.

SERENITI Digital

Churth ol Christ Women's FellOwship, Thuniday, 1:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Church of Christ. Dex·
tar to have devollons, Pomeroy,
the program.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053, Thursday, at the hall, Tup- ' ·
pars Plaine. 7 p.m. Meal at 6:30 ·
p.m.

,,

POMEROY - Ewings Chapter, Sons ol the American l=levoiutlon, meeting Thursday at the
Meigs Museum. Dinner at 6:30
p.m. meeting at 7:30p.m. Reservations due by Tuesday. SpeakTHURSDAY
er will be Marlene Harrison,
POMEROY- Pleoeptor Beta Meigs County Clerk ol Courts.
Beta, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
home o1 June VanVranken, 6:30
REEDSVILLE -' Riverview
p.m. Thursday reminded to take
old photo&amp; to bll used at a later Garden Club, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
home o1 Frances Reed. Members .
date. .
.
POMEROY- Meigs County to lal&lt;e.ilam for auction.

. •WEDNESDAY
,
POMEROY - Bedford Townlhlp Trustees, special meeting, 7
p.m. Wednesday at the town
hall.

,-

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observed
RACINE -Travis Anthony .Hysell celebrated his lith
birthday recently with a party
at the home of his grandparents, David and Ann Zirkle in
Racine.
Following a dinner a birthday cake and ice cream were

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today.
992-2156
~thy Bates (My Sister~ Keep·
er) won an Obie playing the
waitress in Frankie and Johnny,
but lhe film role went to
Michelle Preiffer.

served. Attending were · his
parents, Bruce and Terri
Hysell of Nitro, W.Va.; his •isters , Jessica Hysell and
Samantha ·
Proffitt of
Pomeroy; ·
Roger
Smith,
Debbie
Maynard,
Amber and
Arnie
Dugan and
Hysell
Donnie ,
Proffitt, all ·
of Racine; Brenda Swann and
Mike Seagraves of Middleport; and Jesse and Taylor
Maynard of Washington
Court House.
The honored guest alsb
receive'd gifts from his grandparents, Norman and Patt)l
Hysell' of Racine; greatgrandmother,
Roberta
Swisher of New Haven,
W.Va., Janet and Roger Jeffers of Pomeroy, and Amanda
Simms of Nitro.

-TRIVIA
•
Hector Elizondo (Fidel) plays .
classical guitar and the conga ·
drums in addilion to doing bai·
let, which he studied at a
Carnegie Hall studio.

�\

Page A~

•

The Daily Sentinel

•
•

•

...•
•

•

•

Wednesday. Jllnuary n. 100*

Hearst to testify

JDL figures .

In SLAcase

plead innocent

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Patricia . Hearst said that Sara
Jane Olson and members of the
Symbionese Liberation Army
charged with murder in a 1975
bank robbery were dedicated
revolutionaries who had their
"own little jihad" going.
The newspaper heiress who
•was kidnapped by the 1970s
radical group and later joined
them told CNN's . Larry King
on :ruesday that she believed
Olson, Bill arid Emily Harris,
Michael Bortin and James Kilgore "wanted to bring down
·the country," and she promised
to testify against them.
"They wanted to overthrow
·the government of the United
States. They called themselves
an army. They planned on
forming cells and going on
until they started a full-scale war
in this country;• Hearst said.
At one point during the
hour-long interview, she com. pared the SLA to the bombers
of the Oklahoma City Federal
Building and the violent
1960s Charles Manson cult.
She also used the word
'jihad;' or holy war._

LOS ANGELES (AP) Two Jewish Defense league
figures pleaded innocent
Tuesday to conspiring to
blow up a mosque and an
Arab-American congressman1S office.
JDl Chairman lrv Rubin,
56, and group member· Earl
Krugel, 59, remained held
without bail. They were
indicted earlier this month
on federal charges in an
alleged plot to bomb · the
field office of Rep. Darrell
lssa, R -Calif., and the King
Fahd Mosque in suburban
Culver City.
The plot was thwarted and
the two 'men were arrested
Dec. 12 when an informant
delivered five pounds of
explosive
powder
to
Krugel's home, investigators
said.

Good times ahe~d for new housing
WASHINGTON (AP) -A booming overall economy was in evidence last
housing market, which has helped cush- year, when construction activity and
ion the fallout fiom the recession, should sales of hpmes ~ained strong despite
remain robust for the rest of this decade, the recession an.V.terrorist attacks.
_adding 1.6 million new homes each year, · -'The 'overall economy. as measured by
the head of Fannie Mae said Tuesday.
tlie gross domestic product, · probably
Fatlnie Mae Chairman franklin shrank by 0.5 percent last year, Raines
Raines said that the solid performance· said. But without the_strength in housturned in by the housing market in the ing. .ll..aines said, that decline would have
1990s, when rhe country was in its been five times as steep and an additionlongest economic expansion in history, al 350,0()0 Americans would have lost
will be surpassed in the new decade.
their jobs.
'
"As good as housing was in the last
Through December, job losses from
decade, the best is yet to come," Raines the recession, which began in March,
said in a speech to the National Press · have been put at 1.4 million. The govClub. "Consumers are going to double ernment has yet to,report ori how much
their inyestment in housing before the the e_conomy contracted in the Octodecade is over .and need twice as much . her-December quarter.
Raines said he ,bl!lieves demand for
capital to finance it."
Raines, who served as budget director housing will remain strong throughout
during the Clinton administration, said this decade, with an average of 1.6 milthe contribution housing makes to the lion new homes each year ~nd 16 mil-

lion new homes by the end of the
•
decade.
,
"Housing will remain a powerful economic driver for at least the rest of the
decade because the consumer need for
housing is likely to surge:· Raines said. ,
He said a growing U.S. population wiU
add 13 million to 15 million new households, slightly more than in the 1990s~
and the homeownership rate will proba: ·
bly climb from the current 68 percent to;&gt;
71 percent or higher. ·_
All of these factors will mea.n that
consumers, who now have S11 trillion
invested in housing, will increase that
figure to S22 trillion to $25 trillion by
the end qf the decade, he said.
F.annie Mae, which began life .as the
Federal National Mortgage Association,
was ranked by Fortune magazine last
year as the 26th biggest company, based
on revenues.

'

'"

/"

WEDNFSDAY's

Miller Falcon·treys bury Southern, 70-67

HJGHLIGHIS

BY ~ WOLFE
SENTINEL OORRESPONDENT

fiEMLOCK - Southern's run for
the Olympic Gold ~arne to an abrupt
halt at the hands of a 5-fur,7 second
half three-point assault from the
Miller falcons, who grounded the '
Tornadoes 70-67 Tuesday night in
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Divi~
sion action in Dunlap Gymnasium.
Southern drops to 7-9 on the season.
Southern waS led by Justin•Connolly's 26 points . and 13 rebounds, an
effort that earned · a double-double
performance. Connolly stepped forward and assumed the leadership tole

Prep basketball
Boy•
TuMday'a Gamn

SEOAL

Galli&amp; Academy 69, Athens 33
Marietta 76, Pl. Pleasant 51 ·
Warren 54, Jackson 51
Logan 79, River Valley 49
TVC
Waterford 67, Fed. Hoclelng 51
AleJ~&amp;nder 66, Wellston 62
·Belpre 79, Meigs 61
Miller 70. Southern 67
Vinton Co. 54, N'vllle-York ·36
Eastern 67, Trimble 51

for the Tornadoes, establishing himself
as the go-to man. Likewise, the attenlion Connolly drew allowed his team"
mates some breathing room.
Freshman Craig Randolph tossed in
sntteen points with three-three point:
ers, Dally Hill added eleven, and )ordan Hill and Nate Martin added six
each.
Miller was led by Jeremy Paige, who
tied Connolly for game-high honors
with 26. Paige took · control of the
game wben it was on the line in the
final round,'hitting three of three treys
in the second half and hitting two big
twO-point buckets going down the

stretch.
Luke Kennedy had a big game with
twenty points and seven rebounds,
while Noah Gamble added 13 points,
and Zach Eing eight.
Southern got in early foul trouble,
holding a 7-1 edge in fouls i11 the first
three miimtes. That forced Southern
out of its press and its tenacious manto-man into a ·2-3 zone. The tornadoes fell to a 15-4 deficit, but then put
the binders on the Miller attack and
came back to 17-15 at the end of the
frame. Martin hit two three pointers
in the stretch and Randolph another
in the comeback bid.

BluBand

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100 w. Malo St.

Pomerov, 01110 ·

Oatmeal Pies,
Zebra cakes,
Swiss Rollt-&amp;:fudge
Brown'les

..

·.s· 9.9

79-6'1
BY JIM SOULS8Y
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Nonn Charfton

out for year

SEATTLE (AP) - Seattle
reliever Norm Charlton will
probably miss the season after
injuring his left shoulder
while working out. ~harlton,
38, will undergo surgery to
repair a torn rotator ~uff next
Monday.
.

'

1Json and Lewis
preview their
_big fight

.

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time.

Defense attorney Brad Lollar withheld his opening state-ment until after the state pre' · .sents its case.

Prices

,

,·,

thru Sat. Jan. 26. We reserve

)

to limit

NEW YORK (AP)
· Mike lYson's latest outburst
angered Lennox Lewis and
landed the president of the
World Boxing Commission in
the hospital briefly with a. sore
head.lYson also was left with
some explaining to do if he
ever hopes to get Lewis into
.
the ring ~or 'real.
Tyson himself was cut on
his forehead after he came at
Lewis and threw a punch that
triggered a melee and ended
up canceling a news conference to promote their heavy- ·
weight championship fight
April6.
·
_
The fight could be in trouble as well, if'JYson can't convince Nevada boxing authorities next week that all he was
trying _to do was promote t~e
fight whe,n he went after
Lewis.

· Jon GIUCien
..,..,t sbly In·LA.
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) Coach Jon Gruden will not .
sign a new contract With the
Oakland Raiders and plans to
leave the team after next season at the latest, his agent told
several San Francisco Bay a·rea
newspapers .
Gruden won't coach the
team' after his five-year con. tract expires at the end of the
2002 season, agent Bob LaMonte said.

•.

•

·Meig~

NBA
Tueaday'a Games
Miami 92, Chicago 79
Orlando 100, Atlanta 86
Phoenix 92, Milwaukee 81
Philadelphia -91, Washington 84
Dallas 1%~HoljPtonJD~··.,
New\)ertey 92,- Siln Antonlb 88 •
Denver 107, L..A. L.akers 91
Portland 116, Secramento 110, OT

Fish Sticks·

PIMH He Miller. Ill

Belpre
outguns

Pro Basketball

Mrs. Paul's

Southern fell early in the second
·round, but -came back Ia tie the score
on several accounts, and took the lead
briefly on a pair of Connolly inside
jumpersjust before the half. Southern
gave up a couple back door lay-in's to .
Eing and Kennedy in the last minute · ..
before the intermission to lead 33-31.
Southern had a strong third quarter, ·
coming from behind . on a ciiuple of
occasions to lead 49-4 7 after three
rounds. Connolly hit 4-of-5 SHS field
goals in the stretch, while Hill and
Nease hit a pair of-free throws and

. .

Manhattan 67, Marist 62
Pittsburgh 72, Syracuse 57 ,
Providence 70, Rutgers 55
Jacksonville St. 59, Samford 56
Kentucky 89, Aubum 82'
· Stetson 68, JaQksonvllle 58
UCF 62, Florida Atlantic 56
Virginia 89, Georgia Tech 65
Cent. Michigan 76, Toledo 81
Clncl_nnlltl 54, Slllnt Loula 50
Creighton 67, Wichita St. 55
Iowa 75, Michigan St. 71
Kant St. 11, Buffalo 53
N. Nllnola 78, Miami (Ohio) 70
..- Ohio 80, E. "'lchlgan 88
Colorado 85, Kansas St. 71

MIAMI (AP) -About 150
people marched through
Miami's streets to protest the
fatal police shooting of an
unarmed man sitting behind
the wheel of a stolen car.
The protesters chanted "no
,,justice, no peace" as they
marched Tuesday, one day after
the shooting. Some said the
white officer who pulled the
trigger should be charged with
murdering the black suspect.
Eddie Lee Macklin, 20, was
killed as hundreds of people
headed home after a celebration
honoring Martin Luther KingJr.
At a community meeting
with police after the march,
Eddie Macklin, 42, the victim's .father, said:"! don't think
there should have been that
kind of violence. He was
unarmed."

'.

Wedn•d.y........ry ::a:J, 2001

NCAAMen'i
Tueadlly'a Gamn
Hartford 67, Dartmouth 65, OT

demand justice

DALLAS (AP) -An 8-yearold girl was locked in a dark,
filthy closet and weighed just
25 pounds When she was res- ·
ciled last summer, a prosecutor
said Tuesday as the trial of the
gitl's mother got under way.
"Without medical attention, · she ·would have died,"
prosecutor Patricia . Hogue
said during opening statements in the trial of Barbara ·
Atkinson, who. is charged
with serious bodily injury to a
child.
·
Atkinson, 30, has pleaded
innocent, to the first-degree
.felony. She faces life in prison if
convicted of depriving her
.daughter of food and lotking
.her in a closet for, months at a

PageB1

•

College
Basketball

· Protesters

mother

,•

OTHERS

uMoses,'' -'David,'' and ''Jesus.''

'Dial .;pens for

•

Colts ltirt Dungy, .Page B3
No pay for college athletes, Page B4
College, pro hoops, Page B6

South Point 58, Ohio Valley 33
Rock Hill 70, S,outh Gallla 69

Guiliani
bio optioned
NEW YORK (AP) - A
film company has purchased
the rights to a biography of
former New York City Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani and is
expected to make Giuliani's
story into a television movie.
The company, _Five Mile
River Films, bought the
screen rights to "Rudy Giuliani: Emperor ot the City," by
Andrew Kirtzman, a political
correspondent for local TV
station New York 1. The purchase price wasn't disclosed.
Kirtzman was with Giuliani
on the morning of Sept. II as
the then-mayor searched for a
location for an emergency
command. center. He update&lt;!
the book, published in 2000,
. with a final chapter about the
. terrorist _attacks.
Five Mile River previously
produced . televisiol\
has
movies about Biblical figures,including
"Abraham,"

The Daily Sentinel

DETERMINED-. Steelers quarterback Kordell Stewart dives for yardage. After leading the Stealers against
the trash talking ·Ravens, they now take on the subdued Patriots for the AFC crown. _
(AP)

Cowher says Steelers will .
.have a passion·for Patriots
PITTSBURGH (AP) -After a ·week of listening
to the cocky Baltimore Ravens, the Pittsburgh Steelers face an ·entirely unanticipated problem going into
the AFC championship game.
, How can they find a way to dislike
the New .E_ngland PatriotS, a team
they haven't played in three years?
How ca(l they develop in a few
short days any enmity for a charmed
team that's being labeled in Boston
with the tired-but-true tag of destiny's darlings?
That's easy, Steelers coach 'Bill
Cowher
Cowher silid Tuesday. His players
need only 'remember-what's at stake
· Sunday, and who stands in their way of winning.
"After we playeq Baltimore the last time (on Dec.
16), maybe we.took a deep breath, relaxed and gave a
little sigh - but not now, not with this ballgame;•
!

.

'

Cowher said. "This season's going to be over with in
what, 12 days, so now's not the time ·to take any sighs.
"But- that won't be any problem, not with this
game."
The Ravens waved their Super Bowl rings in the
Steelers' faces and talked constantly of the swagger in ·
their step. So after the Steelers dominated the Ravens
27-10 Sunday, wide receiver Hines Ward took some
satisfaction in s:iying, "Now they can swagger themselves back to Bal!imore."
The Steelers wouldn't have had any problem developing a renewed rivalry with the Oakland Raiders, if
only because they would have been reminded all
week about the three memorable AFC title games
the fi-an·chises played during the 1970s.
The Patriots, by contra,t, are almost impossible to
dislike. They have had" an improbably good season,led

PleaH see Cowher, IJ

BELPRE - The Meigs Marauder boys
basketball team hit the hardwood for the first
time since January 12th Tuesday night a.' they
traveled to Belpre to take on the Golder:&gt;
Eagles in an Ohio Division TVC contest.
Weather and scheduling were the reasons
for the ten-day layoff for the maroon and
gold. Although the Eagles have struggled at
times this season, the Marauders knew going
in that it would be a tall order to top the
Eagles; who qualified for the state semi-finals
last season.
Belpre used the inside-outside combination of Nick
Morey and Kyle Holbert to
' post a 79-61 win over the
Marauders. Morey a 6-fopt6 senior dominated inside,
scoring 27 points and grab~
bing i 4 (ebounds, while
Holbert flashed his threepoint prowess, nailing five
three-point goals to account
all of his 15 points.
R yap frazier led Meigs with 18 scoring all
but four of his points in the final period.
Meigs was overwhelmed early as the
Eagles came out red hot to start the game.
Pat Klein started the scoring with the opening bucket of the game. Frazier countered
with a hoop to tie the score at 2 all. Buzz
Fackler hit a three to counter a Morey goal
and with 6:33 left in the first quarter, Meigs
had its· only lead of ~he night at 5-4. The
Eagles then went op an 13-2 run that fea- tured three long range bombs from Holbert
as the hosts hit on five straight shots and built
a 17-5 lead. Fackler hit his second three
pointer to cut the lead to 17- 10, but. Meigs
would not score over the last 3:50 of the
period. Belpre did cool off however and
managed only six more points the rest of the
way to hold a 23-10 lead after one period.
· Meigs turned to its two"seniors early in the
second quarter as Matt Williamson opened
the scoring with1 a three pointer and Travis
Siders who waS'· seeing his. first action of the
season a-fter sitting out due to academic ·
problems, scored his first goal of the game.
An Abe H eri'ingshaw score and a backdoor
bucket for Morey offset the Marauder buckets; Williamson then olrilled his second trifec-

Please see Melp~ IJ

•

Ohio tops Eastern Mich Rio upset bid fails
.

YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) · Patrick
Flomo scored 16 points and Ohio arased a
seven-point deficit with a
26-4 run early in the
second half, setting up a
78-66 victory over Eastern Michigan on Tuesday night.
The Bobcats (11-4, 61 Mid-American · Conference) ,shot 66 percent
in the second half and
held the Ea.gles (5-14, 17) to eight field goals after
·
they led 38-31 at halftinte. ,
Steve Esterkamp added 15 points for the
Bobcats. Brandon Hunter, who stored five

of Ohio's first seven second-half p_oints, fin,ished with 13 points, 13 rebounds and four
assists.
Ricky Cottrill led
Eastern Michigan with
25 points. Steve Pett)john scored nine
points to go with eight
rebounds, and Melvin
Hicks added nine points
off the bench for the
Eagles, who lost their
fifth straight game.
The Bobcats, who
r·
improVed to 4-1 on the
road in the MAC, led by as many as 19
points jn the second half.
''

.

BY MARK WIWAMS
SPECIAL TO OVP

PORTSMOUTH -The University of Rio Grande Redwomen basketball team has not beaten Shawnee State since the .
.
Lori Hamilton days of the early 1990's. Rio
Grande went .to "The Cave" wi1h a mission, to
.
·upset the nationally ranked lady Bears.
Rio Grande ( 18-7, 10-4 AM C) fell short on
that misslon,losing a 68-66 decision on Tuesday evening. Emily
Cooper's shot in the paint was blocked at the buzzer and the
·
mission was unfulfilled.
. Freshman Tiffany Johnson once again led the way for the_
Redwomen, collecting a double-double with 13 points and 10 ·
reb,ounds. Amanda Blazetic added 12 points and six rebounds~
while Alkia Fountain scored II points (nine in the second hal~
and pulled down six boards .

NAIA

Please see Rio, 16
- 1.

�·.
Pave B 2 • The o.Hy Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1Erthune- Sentinel~4-4W
Free Gao FU~T~ACee

I

7

(304)e

and

. -.

(7-10)441·

o 2111-0098. " you donl co11
• uo we bc4h98 Mertury COUgar XR7,
•
71,000 mlln, ooto. 3.8,
• Goa Forcod Air Fumece loodod, rod. INIJ&gt; . .. 0111·
~ .,.,. Air CondillotiOJ, lkond inti $5700, (7&lt;10)992·211!52
• \ Now, $1150. Call' (740)256Ford Ra
K

97
81
1216
•••95 93
4 eoor;
..,. .
'
'
Grubb's Plano- Tunlng &amp; 98K, $2195. 97 Grond Am,
Aepalro. Problems? Neod 4 door, 87K. $3895. 97 LuTuned? Call The Piano Dr. mlna, 102K, $3895. 94
740-446-4525
Grand Am, 2 Door, 68K,
$3995. Othero In I10Cic from
\ Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4 $995. COOK MOTORS.
• lor StO. Open Set. 8·5pm. &amp; (740)448-0t03
_
" evMings, Dewhurat Green.~ hcuae MI. Alto. (304)895· 98 Codlllac CetOt'L 6 cylln;, 3740 leave m....ge. or der, 4 door, 14,000 mlleo.
~ (304)895-3789
Loaded, NC, LMI!tor, sun~ lndepe11detot He!baife Dis· ~~:soo. H~~f (7~.::
• trl&gt;utor; Cell For Produot Or 2300
: _Opportunity. (740)441-1982
J · Ironing board, Uko new, $5;
'l'RlJa(s
~ • old pr roller alcalea $10· •
JiOil &amp;u!
.
~:llfoctriC hedge cunor: $10:
!• l&gt;fv
.~~
coolar, $5, 1978 Chm&lt;llel
Ceb,
~· 17-·~··2529
Hill-. Bod
Solid
::
Truck, 11s00. 1740,388•
~ · AEAATI~ETMOTORS 0431!
" · Ropalre&lt;t. New &amp; Reb&lt;JIM In 1988 ,..,.,., 4 4 e-~·-~ • SIOCk. Call Ron Evans, 1·
~~·r K • ~-"
J. 800-537·9528.
condition, ssooo. (7&lt;10)3792820

C..:·

•
"
;
"
:
•
•
l.

In one week Wit.. us

v=-

to 5-yea r, .Pct 13M ea

=-~c.~:'f.::: :1·!:.
u=.
Air oo. » . Wll T - 10&lt; Truck Towing P -. -na

Condl- Elllmo!H. Call ol equol
(7-10)446-6308 or 1-800· 0750

I'

$5500. (7&lt;10)2..S:S758

h

um JMP CMmkoe coun-

INDIANAP...,LIS (AP) - Tony Dungy
' '"~
·-"
was the o nJy coach J un
~-, wan=.
• The Indianapolis Colts' owner got his m.:m
Th-"ha h called
biddin
ouay, winning w t e
a · · g
war with the Carolim P.:mthers to lure Dungy
to Indianapolis.
·
..,.,. '
•
·
be tb'd "- Tc
we weren t gotng to
ou 1 tur ony
Dungy;' lrsay said. "He was going to be a Colt
,._
,
tur sure.
Dunav who Irsay
'
said agreed
bl'
•
to a 5-year, $13' million contract, is expected to be intro-

58,000 mlln. Gorago
gpc. E•tru, $11 .500.
(304)875-3'173
1997 5&lt;bltu 0u11Joc1&lt; W"9'
on. AWD. CD. c.- Ra·
dlo. S«uriiy System. A•
, _ Koyloll Entry foJr Ex·
~lent condnion ' ~king
SIO,SOO. 1740124 5758
tm F3SO 4x4 Power
Stroke Lariat, leather seata.
auto. air, fifth hltct) ,
Rille hitch ancJ llumlnum
1001 box. 740-948-2493
try.

s:

NFL

.

97......., van, 56,000 . -if)
.
~rul~... ~ P.f,. ':ducedb Wedn~ob. ed
h
.
bags, ABS, -•• 7, like
T e Colts J open Jan. 8 w en Jun Mora was tired ofter
new, Mull aalll $10,000 going 32-34 and leading Indianapolis to two playoffappearances
firm. (7&lt;10)379-2134 ieavL in four seasons.
.
meuege.
"r41r;;;;;;,___._.,
_ The 46-year,.olf;l Dungy W2S fired by Tampa Bay, but needed
Morollcv&lt;U:S
just eight days to find a new job. In six seasons, he turned a bad
~
.
.
if Bucc.:meen team mto a Super Bowl contender.
98 Honda 300, 2WO, Vt!l'$ Irsay said he thought Dungy's defensive background was just
~~~=ion· -52700 · what
the Colts needed to tum around the league's No. 29
~
Auro PARI'S &amp; - detense.
A!XEi'iOIIIf3
' "I called him and basically I made it clear that, 'You're the guy
• Large pickup load mixed 1988 Ford F-250, 2 wd .. old.
" I w.mt to coach our team;" Irsay said.
' liriWOOd, wiR deliver locally, cab, longbed, dleaal, 5 1981·1988 Ofdloo- CU1Th d a! h~·-·
't
. I

REAeH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

1'..

l\egister

I

I

£':

(304) 675-1333

f:

Word Ads

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

Private Party Ads· Under $100
20 Words _7 Days • Each Item Priced

Display Ads
AII ' DIIplay: l2 Noon l
Business Days Prlar Ta

• $45.00 949-2587 &amp;venlngs apeed, _gooee neck and re~ S
· 810 .!'.,~~ 53,500 n8(i .,
1 usanna · Summar Torto 1740,____.. 13
T-. Must Sell,
Call 1997Ford F· 150 e-.ded
Ceb; v-e; 5 opooc1 manual
, (740)446.6827

• No Commerclel Ads

f
sso.
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Special: 314 200
PSI $21 .95 Per 100; t• 200

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
· Or GorogetVord Sales • Limit 3. Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Publication
sundiY Dlsptey : t:oo
Thursday tor Sundays

.Es Jackson,
.537-9528
.

I

PDsoN.us

1110
I

lloJ&gt;WANDD

lio

ATTN: Pomeroy
Pella! paoltiona. Clerkalcar·
ri0f8ilortoro. No
qulrod. Benefltl. For eum,
aalaryardt0811ng lnforma·
t1on call (630)393·3032 old.
7151,8am-8pm7dayt
AVON! AI A l'l1 "'~
I reu o -..,or
Sal1. Shirley Spears, 3046715-1429.
BauorGultlrillandSinger
Needed for Metal Band
·
7401 448-7621

Hw&gt;WAimD

I

t

HluWANIFII

lr

~:;- ' I eo ~

~ Irio

"'=:

1170 ChlrnpiOn 12xeo 2 1 bldroom - · - · , . I Bod"""" Apt. Golllpolil. Mollohan c.opot. 202 Clark
btdroomo. $3,000 OBO. · . . - . altctllc ltoot, fur· Wll1or Paid. $275 month Chopol - · PorW, Ohio.
Moon Ughl Eacortl. Atton·
now paying minimum wege, lla County ..... surrounding
Nil
CeU (304)8715-2470
- · Muon, all pluo dopoall. No l'etl, (740)448-7444 t-8n-S30tlon Ladles. Full Service
,_ ·shifto: 7arn-3pm, 7am- CO&lt;Jntlel-ld require ba·
In lhfloNa P1P r It
fll&gt;m, (304)77W804
(740)445 1043 lltor 8:00pm 9162. Froo Colin l 11, Eaty
2 btdooom bldroom $300{ mo plua
Male Eacorla. Prompt Pro5J)m, 3pm-11pm, 11pm- slckJK&gt;wlldgeofhomolcon........,,..__ ' 1990 -..a, 90 dayl- 11
1
fesalonal Dlocreet &amp; Confi·
7am, call 740-992·5023.
otructlon, maaaurlng exter1Fair Houlfnt
ho.....,.n Choryl • 740- dopoti.'R....onooi
,. 1 br. Apt. LMng Clsh. Vila/ Coni.
dentlal. 8pm to 5sm.
ordlmoonelona,oboo&lt;vlng
~ ~ IJiftd l Aofrfgelo- .-n,ldtchon,balh.Aiutlllt• Orfve.a·IIUit- alol
. (740,388-1799.
Fomlly Advoctle: Molgt condltion ..... tlklnuphotoo
.....- •...,
mutl otlk:IIIMict t 740- lor. 'NC,
Gtllpalll. lea pd. EKcept Electric. a.-., Size Hldttbod.
Cotny.
of home. Independent con·
pcu,..-.l.,u ..llillw••
_..,. .~
(740) 418 3687
(304)87&amp;-1385
2
Why walt? Start meeting
tractor/port--bull.
II ~·• l , _ . . , ~·
' ·
·
Good~- 17401448. Ohio singles tonight, call lOll
Qualifications: Aasocloto Mull be dotal&gt; ortenlod,
.--, - · rollglon,28x80 Dolobloaida lilting on 2 BRlOB i..oault Slreel, ' upolllra !828
·
lree 1-800·768·2823 el&lt;l
Degree In SOCial Worl&lt;, havartllabletran..,.,- - - o r - ranted lot. Wlh
Rl¥tr Vlow, 112111 month :,u" ~~=Wall 1wggor- Dad&lt;
' 1621 .
Cou...,lng,Nuralng,orRe- and35mmORDigltalcom- qln,or..,~olliotluooto thermal pana - - pluaUtl-. (740)4113811 tumitlhod 5275/mo $t50 Brown Ufce. PuN Oo4 Arm
ialed Field Required. Bach- oro.. COrllf)uterwith lntomtt
_..,_
Prlcod to SoH. Point l'1oU- (nlngd&amp;Jll. (7&lt;10,1189566 (... "-"· P40
. )448-ooet . T-. s175: (304)8Gei 3115
,
ANNouNCEMENili
elor degree prefen'od.
acceu aloo helpful.
pooltrto100, t1m;11t1on or ant aroa. (304)875-3889
Beautician, FT &amp; PT ·Help
· Plaeae raapond to:
- -• '
Ulllor -..ry.
F 1 •·• e~ 1
All Wa- $95 Oryer $85
..__ _ _ _ _ _.,J Needed. Paid Vacation/ Nature of work: Develop INSURANCE INSPECTOR
.
3 bldroom homo Mlnaravile u:J~Pald ;.e,:Y·Bath Elll:lr1c ·~. $95, iwrlg:
, Fun Exorcloo Privatolto- Houriy Wage Vs. commie- family partnera
Tlilono"'l 1 ..... 2Forba....,lh 2~!707 ~~~1· ....,rnonlh,rlvarol10vltw•.,..' ~. 1 ~ $!351 month. 9!9 Seco:ord erator, $185, _ , Dryar
1amltyhlp ~~ P . P00BoH~~~~M••
:=-..;~:.:"J~;"C'I!".:~ ~~~~67ceu houra, =~~"=laattinQ~~ """"· - &lt;r~ . . .~":."~':::"roo~ lllllo&lt;c;;:;'y., ~- ~·~rod,;;--..;;: Ave.,(740)44&amp;-3945
~~-~w:
.K
Karote School 740:::."ra:dr~r:ra~r/.= local Manufactured Houo- - ta In
IRS Spoclall .W.'II match , 7--6 . _ fll&gt;m.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 ancea, 78
na St.
742·2548
needa
of
families
and
chi&gt;
lng
Dealeralilp
~u
lmrnodlvloflllon
colliN
low.
OUr
your
llli
')l":
~
$2,000.
3
-oom.
2
Slofy,
Nloe.
~7398
or
(740)258If you bne had 1811!:11 or
dren
ate _,.na for Fun Time
- - hiNiir
Cell (740
for ~ Gu Hao~ $42111 month
Apanrnantl In Middleport
MARY KAY PRODUCTS
customer senict:
'
ontce
Pollllon. Exptrlonce
hol'uiitNdlhal
olt
.....
dapoalt. No·POll. (740)379- From $27&amp;-$348. cau 7.W:
10% Off First Item,
Claooraom Aide: Melga po-efonod. EKcellent Oppor· -Hrto advli" lin- untod 0r No Credit? Qov. 2540
992·5064. Equal Houlllng
A!mQLtl!s
experience...
50% Oft Second Item.
County.
!unity. Call lor Interview.
tliloMOII 11 ommont Bank Flnenoe Only 4 n-and Bath In, • ....._ "-"".........,,
In Stock Items Onlyl
Frenctl City Homea, Inc.
.v8lllbll on • equal
""""'•
__....,.. _...,.,....:..:..._·~-·-----(740)441-0988,
Quallflcatlona:
Minimum
Gallpolla,
Ohio.
(7&lt;10)448~:
..
~i!.
olleR
.UiOopolaltod
&amp;NoRtl......,p
1 BodJQORI Apart· Buy or otll. R!&gt;11h11 Antiplease leave message.
110· mont (740)448-0390
high school graduaia or 9340
'
~
·. · eq r '
queo 1124 Eut Main on
1191
If you are currently
~· Local Phyolclan aeaklng
Mu,.
• 18II '1997 18-""
Wll (740)He
SA i24 E. f'orrtll-,
GEO . I- a d In WO•Nng
HOMel
-·
Nice .2 bod
·~ 740GivEAWAY
employed buloeed
with ptOachoof age children. quenled Individual for front
. JI'OR 8.uE
help with delivery. Cel Har· Pilot ProQram Ronttra
"""" 992·2528. . Ruaa Moore.
p...,lou8 e1Cfl8rltnc:a In an deal&lt; ~•1on ·Good ComNtodld 304-730-7215
for renl, $300/month, owner.
1 old, 740-~.
moft money or 1 better Hrly ohlldhoOO aaUing .... put !2:"' • &amp;' r1or "•" Of
,
'
,
$300/datiolllt,
•
'
· ,·
11a P ~ - · For lllo b)l own&amp;t" Nice bl· Moat soli· 14x70 mobile 311tity- homo In-., 740-591-D649, Mkkhport,
footed
"
740-598·
Suo'l
Sal
c-ontiN-r
2 female rabbits for tree,
ca... r opportunity...
.
.
flee Exp. Required. JR18 level home on 1 aero near homo, call 740·385-2434 ~Pia~ ootdtion; ~to II- 3486
In Middleport. Iloilo, .-.....
(740)742.0212.
Nature of Work: Provide ~...~~~~~ ~~~;\ Point Cheal«. · Threa bodJQORI, Uk lor Elaine.
·
brllry; Call Llbntry: at 448- North 3rd Aven 0 Middle- want, , . , . , and
Free to a good ·home. e
suppor11Y11 aeNicea to Su·
1wo balhs, ......,., garage, New 2002 14x70 3 brl2bth REAP,""' 236·
port, 1 &amp;2 bod.::.;. fumlilh- .,..., (740)992-o298
week old puppies, Mixed
pervlslng Teaohera and CaShier. Part ~me. Eltperi· family room wlt1j flreplaco, Only $995. down'&amp; $189.&amp;7
M'oiiii.EIIoMis od · - · dapooil &amp;
Ml!lf1!!1AI&lt;II!(U
II you bave been
mostly lab. (7&lt;10)~9552
cla11room - . s lnciUd· enoe In ~ end Hard- eun room. Now -.lhoal· por monlh Cell Nikki 740Rl!l&lt;lr
,.,.,._ no palo
~
receatly laid off or are ~go.;:.eg:.:=.:: =.~=~~~ ~.&amp;:=bul~,: 385-7871. ·
'
JI'OR
(74011182-oies
'..__iiiiiiiiiiiiiiir
To Good Homo On~l 4
abaut to be...
mixed Breed Puppies. 3
I with all clallroom actlvlllet. GaHipolll, Ohio.
veto. (74019815-3981
ono Only
2 bodioom- homo 10&lt; ,Now TaklngAppllcatlono- 1 Lorge Propane Gao
.
moles, 1 female. Vary PlayProvldet teiepllono ard ol·
lJaod donlllmida.
rant, no peto, (740)992· 36 2 BodJoom T_,. Slovo, can Sal1llalng lJaod
lui and adorabla. (740)245flee coverage u twlgnod. McCluro't -rant now For Sale lg. Ranch Homa, 110168ot28128, 3 bedroom, 2 5868
~. lncludtl In Homa. St1l 1450.
9082.
Se!vu u I8COnd llduM on hl~ng afl 3 tocallona. full or 4br.. 3111 .. with
In balh, gea ioMt, oontral air,
Wllltr Sewage, Trash, (740)992·7681
lnfoCIIIDD lla amwtn1 lhe bus u '*"""ry.
part•tlrnt pick up appilca· patio porch, 2 car - · fireplace gea toga, 2 Bod,_. Trallor, Galllpo- a -.. 740 118 0008,
LoST AND
al itX:auon &amp; bring baclc $78,000. (304)727·3318
1987 moi1al,
.
111-. $2501 monlh. 0.
12o1 Proetopowanoook·
company olfertngllftll A...,meo and applications t10n
FOUND
betw•n
9:30am
&amp;
•
Prtt:. for
aalo
· pooi1 and R t f - Ro- Upetalro 1 Bedroom Fur- er, ~5; Muon jaro 5 to Sl;
1
will ba acctOpted through !O:OOam, Monday thru Sal· FS. Brnand1 """
000
Mobile Homos
q\ired. No Pota. (740)387· nlohod Alla"'-" located llko naw AOJ . floor Jack
waps,beneftll,
112 Homa
1ot, Cole's
January
28th·
COl
Heed
rdoy
·
aq
"
aero
us
so
Eul
Alhanl
Oh
7780
on Stooond Ave Blllde U· (ltoo duty)) 500011
Lost: Larg8 Black and Tan
bonUJe:s. a•d the most Start, PO Bo•'t064, Gelltp. u .
$115,000. Call for Info. 740-592·1872
,
torary. $3501 monlh plus Ulll- $20 (7vy40l)992 ~
max.
Airedale. Last Seen on Hoiollo,
OH
45831
1141
JkJsli'i!8s
(740)446·45141
(7401448·
2
Bodroom,
14&gt;&lt;60
1t1to
,
_
,
li'fllll
11
tnclud.:.:.:,:.:.·
;,;,;;=:..:'==-:--~
prolflllonol
comb Hollow Ad, 1/19102.
'l'lwNING
3248,
.
Only $850 down and Poroh, AI Eltclrtc, $250 o. od In '""''· can OObblo or 20 pc. punoh boW1 ttl ("'
Answers to Gus. Friencty.
envlron•ent In tbe
,
$181.38
per month geta you poolt, $350 Rent. c - to Judy 01 Ubrllry (7&lt;10)448· glaaa) $20· COI1C- OUIBrad Palntar,. (740,245·
. 3. bedroom houaa for ltle I ,_ homo. CeU 1-800- Cinema, (304)8715-2900 . 7323
door llalueO or wlltou1
1elemarke11ng lnduslryl Looklng for a job lhal pro5993. Reward.
video Meaningful wort&lt; and Qalllpolla C&amp;roor ColltgO . on land contract, (740l992' 837-3238 Ilk lor Millo.
S1udkoldlcloncy
pump $150; ai8Ctrlc - ·
Call
Cornpet111w
6C:'=~~~ 5858'
·
·
PilOt p._,., Single Pa- ~~~,::; $225 unfurnished~=: $20, (740)992-2&amp;211
AUCI10N AND
ComponeaFE
•up H:;_'!..
HI00·
I4-o4&amp;2
'
3
Bodroom
on
Aoute
2,
rent, No Crt&lt;ll1/ Bad Crodlt, homo, (7401992-2161
nlahod, $300 dopooll, water, Large Vldoco cam... , _
2
U ~
1-877-463-6347
""
48
(304)875-5332
-and Govar!1ment Loana for
truh lncludod, Mlddlopott, battery $SO Wood High
FLEA MARKEr
INSURANCE IIALEI
R:g 1110-015-127 ·
.
. Rantora. Own Your . New 3 -oom Mclille Homo. 5 (740)581~9. (740, 598- Chtlr i2tJ (aiJ4)773-848t .
POIITIOH.
1111
W.oom
3 BodJQORI, 2 Bath, Sal up Home Today! (7&lt;10)440· .-front Clalllpollo on 218. 3468.
·
·
·
.·
ext.1841
A~k Pearoon Auction corn'Aaill with Agent'o Market·
on Private Property. Take 3670
Very Nice and Claan.
-LE HOME To Do
over peymento. (740)448·
(7&lt;10)258-1417
.
Tara Townhouaa Apart·
&amp; Coltmln gli.
pany, lull time auctioneer,
Ing efforts. "conduot needoOr stop by
baaod aa1e1 lnleMewo.
3583.
Special Financing· Down
monte. Very Spaclouo, 2 oil &amp; ai8Ctrlc fu._ lncomplete auctloll service.
. home
1 od·
.
Paymonta U lOW II 1%. ~ Fli'M ldltl Bodrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
Licensed f68,0toi0 &amp; Wilt 242 Third Avenue 'Baaeltlary but llignlflcant AU of
portion 011
buill
ditionr'&amp;r
'"24h 3BR, 2.5 Bath, Nice Lot Proquallly b)l photle. For 1 Or 2 Ptoplo, 112 Bath, FuRy Cerpote&lt;l, eluding hi tfflcloncy heat
VIrginia, 304·773·5785 Or
.-...
on
ng.
r Win conlllder land controcl (740)448-3870
- · Oopolalt. No Peto, Foe- Adul Pool &amp;11o1oy Pool Pa· IJI'IIIml. Wt oany •
Gallipolis, Ohio
304·773·5447.
commllllon. "Mull be croa- emergency 18JVIco, aenlor wllh down payment and
.
tor Trailer Park 740-441· tlo Start $386/Mo No POll complete lint. &lt;!I Mobile
tlve, adaptable In a feat·
cltlzono discount. 22yrs. gocxf rolerancea. (740)379- Wt how approximately 20 0181.
'
• t.aUa PU s.ourtiy Depc&gt;otti homo parts &amp; •
tooa.
wANJ11.D
pacod anviroromtMlland In· 0"11- (304)578·2085
0687. l.Dcalod In Patriot.
ulod htlmeo for UIICHr
A~ulred Oaye· 740-448- II!NNITT'I HIATINQ l
ro Buv
$2,000,cafl1-II00-837·3238
.;;:
COOUNG
(7~11
. · - - - - - - · PJ'DC4111DATAENTAY
Clolmo for OOCtora. lar811odlnacar-witha
local STATE FARM INSUR· Georges Portable Sawmill, $18 Main Strtlt, Pt. Pl. for lnlo
'
no ' ·. e'voningo.; 740-387· or
~~
Aboolute Top Dollar: U.S. Will Train, PC Aaqulred. AlfNCyouEaArsGIENTntares
' tod ~-- don, haul your logo to lhe Cornpletoly Rafurblahed. 2'
.
0502, 740-448-0101 .
- ·- Silver, Gold COins, PlOOf·
Groatlncomelll
, r _ mHIJuatca11304-675·1957. story, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bod-- r
• llusiNiiBi .
TwinRivarTowaronow..,.
. lets, Diamonds, Gold 1·800-240-111 97, Dept. 968 contact our Interactive voice MoV"'" and Ha 0 ling· Clea room a. Large Kitchen,
AND BvlwlNGs
oeptlng IIPPilcetlono fOr
NEW AND UUD STilL
·
www hpnmod corn
responaelntoJView at
...
n Large Udllly Room LR/ OR/ ~
•
IBR HUD ~~-od .M StOll BMtte. P1pt - r
AI ngs,
U·S· Curroncy,·
·
·
1-800-928-2387 and antor Out Bulldlnr., Buemento, Family Rm New Cerpel
·
au~ ..... For eono-. .-ngle, CllanM.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Soc· Dernonotratoro
neoded 48-1491. The call wlll talco ' Garagoo, llateo. Traoh, throughout · F/A &amp; /IIC 8000 Sq. foot oot11oNtlcal
.
for ~W. dlaalllod. 1111. Rat Ba• 81tll Grallnll
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- Part·tlme to hand out Sam·
10 mlnutot and you will Etc. Odd .lobo. Call $79,900. ('T40)448-9685 .; storage with 14,000 sq. foot 15 C!&gt;urt S1rtll1. 2 Bod·
(304)875-6879
For Oralno,' OrWfta~ '
448-2842.
pies &amp; Coupons In Local
need pen and paper.
(740)44&amp;-7804
(740)448-2205 or (7&lt;10)448- of OUIIIdt arM. Coll ERA toomo, I 112 baths. Kllchen
,
~ U.L Scrap Mot·
Music Typewriter and
Stores, $9.001 hour. Mull
State Cerllflad Day Car Pro- 2683. , .
Town &amp; Country Rtal e .. with atova and ~lor.
.,
tit Open Mor'&lt;lay, T.-y,
one veroad In Music Nota· be available Wookendo. Optomotrlc Technician·- vide hu
tlto 304-875-8548
Oft Porklng, - to Very n1ct 4 room ~ &amp; Friday, &amp;am1 10&lt; 1
lion. Preferably computer. Pluae Coli (900)334-5233 Stato-ol·th•art optomelrlc 2 c:.U..ron~'t&lt;t on ;~ By ~~-clol--~ on ~ C
lal B 1 ~ 1
~'""'i~-~~ownpluo"'d;
up
town
Pt.
Pf
..
24-25th.
111:
4:30pm.
Cloaod Thuroday,
Phone (304"'75-7878
p~tloe II -.ng an lndl· 33 l ' -•-rt N
H
acre ~
....
ommorc . u N na 1or
. .....
Flent $300 • &amp;
Sunday
"'
Dental Alalatent Noedod, vldU8 for a carMr In a dy·
n ~ · ow avon btdroomo, 1 112 bathe, Rent. Cedar Streol, Ooltlpo- poolt and Rafe.....,.. No 1 yeO, · (740
7300
·
Wanted! Old Pinball Me· Full Tlmll Part Tlmo, Send namlc work environment School Dlllrlct. 10 .years. largo kitchen with double Ill, Otl. (740)2~1
Polo. (740)448-4928
'o'letlcdayt (304)e715-3982
.
·
chlnoo Juke BoKoa and Aeeoooo to CLA 548, c/o with a gr.atleam of profaa- ~- C~l (304)895· oveno and lott of cablneuo,
Oak table - • CIWI. 71oc.
OlhorCotnOperatodEqulp- GollpoliiDallyTribune;&amp;25 alooalt Appllcenl mull ba 3198
largo llvlng room, CA.,.,. ForLtuo:300010SOOOeq ~ bodroom apa:ont In Very nlco 2·3 btd.-n · bod"""" eu111, mlmenl. Huntington. (304)4211- Third Avo, Galllpolle, OH dotlll.,;rionted, oommH1od Will Cloan out Garages Central Haat. TP&amp;C - . - R office on Ratalf _Space. rn::::::r$ 3 ~~ 1 ~~ apertmen~· In 10Wn, large crowavo, 2 swivel .tfar
45831 ·
3333
.
to
In pallont bulldlngo, hou- o10. Have Eulom Local Schoolt, to- 362 2nd Avo. Modern Ratt· S2SO 00 · doJ&gt;oin 740-~ kitchen, LR, SSOOimo. Alf· --Allin brand naw oonDRIV!A
TRAINING
care,
oolf·motlvated
ond Full lllzt truck. No trash. oatod on Routt . 7 noar roorno, Welk· In Vllilt. can 2025.or740-992;2043
trenc8ll • dapoall roqulrod. diHon. (304)8715-3805
I \11'1 0\ \ I I \ I
INITIIUCTOA
pcil88• good oommun~· (30 4)BVI5- 7g98 (304) 875• Chtltor. All roomo hlva Ramodal for Poltlbla Anll·
(740)448-3844
Aul-l HOlM Owntn
"' ' H\ I• I "
Nadonal Organlzallon nood- tlon okllle. Appro•lmatoly 1015
IIOOd carpel, storm win· qua Stona, Raelauranl, Pro- 2 bedroom apartment In
Tappan Hit-ICY 90 p1ue
jfij~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ - lng Instructor to work In 1IN 35hiJ/Wk, . lncludto somo
dOWI, ful balament, plenty fatalonol OHiooo, Many Mldditporl, oomplttely ra·
gu fumeoaa lnolutllng 'till .
110
I Gdlll Mo~ County araa Salurdayo and ovonlngo.
of ckl1811 and t10rage,)1d PolllbiiHlet. Soo G"'CC modalod, 1325.00 a month, .
HPu WANI'IID to teach Driver Education. Benefna lncluda paid tuHion
gorage - opaner,,Jiomo Smith tt 8mlth Buick Pan- ~50.00 dlpolit, 740-949and · :am:..,:-•~·
1
wu wail malntalnod wllh Uao or phone (740)448- 2025 or 740-992•2043
..___
- . o o y .._,
Fl OXlbl 0 ho Urt Inc IUdl ng and travol for caraor ICIIIODd paint and wallpaper· 2262
~
Pumpe, faaturlng ~
An oiCOhol and othtr dN ewnlngo and woakonda. vanoomont, paid holldayo,
'rng. liking prloto pg,ooo
Froa lnorodlblt warranly ·
3 Roomo .,.,. Ba N
oounaallng/
provontlo~ Prior IHohlng oxparlenoa vacation and lick tlmt,
unlit Wt 1111 with rultor. i
• ~ ••
RtmOdtled. o!'ns::. Newly Rtmodtled Oftlco paoicago
.
.
agency locotad In Gallla and po-eforrod, but not roqulrod.
pi~~·=..:::.":
INoncll
Quick Ilia II naodod. 740&amp;All~ " '
lllovt ind Aefrfgerator, AI
10&lt; Rani In Gllill!olls. IINNITrl HIATING I
740 448
Jaokoon Countloa' -II - · driving
Will train.
Mual havt good 1 d b 1'
ACIIEAGE
(740l44H41t
record
and no orfml· • rt u no1 necowry. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· 1168-43311
· ulllltlts Pold. 48 Olivo 7130 month. 1 1 • COOLING
or 1-100472..r.
.
:~~·~·::~ lnd"::' nal hletory. SubmH reeume wage 11 commensurate .-th lNG co. _,.mends that crown City. 3 BodJQORI,. 1
Slroot. 1-475. (740)448-3945
- · - oa~•llll
p
aon .;.::: -~ with oover letter to: CLA txpertonco. EOE. MaR ,.. you do bull-- p8CIIllt 112 Bathe. OWntr Financing 80 Ao'" . Handorson on IIAUTIPUL
APAIIT·
rawlltY
• '•H 551 c/o Gallipolis Daily sumo lo Tho Daly Senllnol, you knoW, ar-4 NOT lo ttnd with
$8 000
down Now Four Ltna tt ln._ MINTI A• IU""'.. Aflol d b'e • Conn~tllnt
-wlllworkwlthallage T"b'
GIll
PO 11ox 729-12. l'omtloy, montVIhiOIJQhlhemalluntll (740'-.. 1•110a
'llonwitho11Ywattr.MO,OOO
·•
_., rn~
WOIJIII TANNING IIDI
1 pol1a, OH Q1o
- I n both communltlto. " uno,
4&amp;781 or fu to (740) you hlva lnvtttlgatod lha
~""'
(304)937-2511 (304)541· Cll AT JACICIOII ...
Low MontNy ln'ulltmlflll
~l8ponllblllllo4-lncludo: Co- 45831 or 10 10 17401351 ' 894-2270.
offt~ng.
For Rant or Hit, amall 1491
TATU, 52 WttiWOOCI Otfve
ordination ol D'IJg Frn 0537.
1280. Month • o.
, I""" 128710 1383. W~k to ~.._,_...;
Community , Coallllon,
.
Soenlo Hlllt Nurolng Centar Start Your luolneao To· pooH, (304)727·3318 from t.ollor aalo 112 aort 1o1 JtJtl lho!&gt; a rnoviH. Dal. 740- ~
Awarenoaa totlvllloo, Edu·
Hair Styllltl
Ia now •-Una opplloa· dey... Prima Shopping can- 1pm-11pm.
off Othel Rd.Somt ~ 44&amp;·2518. Equol Houtlng I· Hot Point Undtr Counltr Call 'llldey 1-100-711-4'158
oallon Progromo, Training Fiesta Salono, a loading tiona lor 2 RN'o lor 11·7 tor Space Avellablt At /II·
dono call 304-0715-775e ll· OpporlunHy.
Dloh Waoher, Fill 34www.~.-.oom
Progroms, and Develop· provider or hair and laMing shift. Hours will ba 24-32 • fordable Rale. 8t&gt;rlna Valley Mtrctrvlllt Thrat Unit tor 5 pm,
BaautWUI co-n Apt 3 1/21023·314 Space, 1• Hot Amulng
Meiii1DMim
mentond lmplomantatlon ol nrvlo•, 11 o-..ung M'o - - P - iJ1D11 b)l and Pfua, Col1710~101 , ·Apartrnont buJidlng wll!lone
BR Nice Clotata Sto~g. Point Double Ovon (Ball 1~11
now gran! proJICI. A mini· Grand Opening oarty Ftbru· 1111 out an applioallon or oall
aora
mil
858 000
La ' Kllche NHrty 2 ooO Cltan) Fill Spaoa zex50 IMI 10 poundl· 1100
mumoftBocheloraDogroa trylllyouara ahlghtyoroa. Pam ColdWell at (740)440Paoiiiiii!IONAL
(740)441·11oS
' '
...
ftotn'IIBOOI mOnth 1· Thormodor 4 Burner IIOUndl oaay, quiOk, FUl
with kJICI'Modgt o1 alcohol, live otyllot looltlng for alrath 7150 for .,...information,
SmMa:s
Call Kelly 174o 1 998
' Drop In Stovto Top, Space Dramatlo AuullL 100%
1
tot.cco and olhtr drugs. ltlrt, WI nave poaltlone Seametrell
wanted·
.
Nlat Lot wtth 3 Bedroom r~
Hou!ll8
48x21 314- Brill In ~tlr. 1· Natural, Dr. ...IOOI'Nntt dtct
~re:,''f~ F:'~ available for management llralght -mo. (7&lt;10~38~·
TUIINID DOWN ON
houtt within City Umh. Call
JiOil RliNr
Christy's ~omiJy Living, Ranga Hood- Fit148x19-1/2 "Aile abou1 Pllll aa_.
s\ •Glll'""'ls
Ololo'••••t or aSndtyll full1 twalrno off.,.,. port.~ -9310 ..
SOCIAL IICUIItTV 11117 (740)25e-6000. (740)25e· ~
331&lt;10 Now Lima Rd., Rut· -over oook top. Appi~ (740)441-11112
""" •
~
Ill
er a
.
0005.
land, .Phlo, 740-742·7403 oncoo art Qold Finish.
.
Fu: (740)448-5014. EOE, hl~ng bonus, .hcuoty URGENTLY
NEEDED· No F• U - We Wlnl
1 ·3 Bodroonw Fotooh 11 I Apartmont, homo ar-4 tra11ei Good Condition. Malee Of· Dlonoy - · 7 Daya, 8
MIF/H,
up to 50% cornmlulon. p1aame donora, 88m 15010
1-681-582-3348
Homos From •199/Mo., 4% rtnlalo. c:on-c1a1 atoro- fer. (7&lt;10)448-18! 8 '
Nillf1t Hott!Stay. PUIIIOO,
401(K' , profit llharlng, va· tao per for 2 or 3
Down, ~ Veers at 8.5% Ironto available for Soli for •199. (814)891· ·
Earn 20:_tt1
without cation, hltlth. vlllon, houro wnkly. Coil Sora·
APR. l'or Ulllnga, fl00.31 1- Vlc&amp;nclel now.
• Appllancoo: Rocondldonod ::;2119::94.:._=-:--,,..-.,and lifo Ins.. frH TICI, 740-592-6681 .
lllr.ois
3323 EKI. 1709.
Washorl, D~ Ranges, 0 - 878 Full 8lzt llooc
$2 2": Job up 10
oducallon, antldl-.ntll
1 and 2 bedroom apart· RtlrfQnllora, Up To 90 Deye 11po1ng ind Malt- 8100
&amp;.· 75Jitr. Pf·Ft.
Call Myme t 800-825· Wantod! Hal~ for now
JiOil SALE
14, 80 illll)lsldlng 2•8 4 BR House -In 1 miles menta, fuml- and unfur· Guaranteodl Wo Soli New : Outoil Sltt llooc 8c&gt;rlita and .
t-800-2Jf71543
8383X 3010 to - • • an salon. For mora Information
walls .14, 70 slap/siding of town. Sltto on a ocreo. nllhed, --"Y dopool1 ,.. Moytag Appllencu, Frenolt MattrHo , 100. C1tttt
www.Monty· roamo.oom lnttrvltwl
pltatt call (740)448-3747 I Partlatty Rtmodolod homo, 2K8 Walt 3br. 2ba., Lito ~ ~'\ 1 t.'::.th to- ~\T'' no ,J18tl, 740-882· City Maytag, 741).448.7795. Drawero.' 125. (740)448- .
- : - - - . , . - - - - - Naod Ful Tlmo Rttlll Cltrk. Would loVt to .._ your 2 Bodroom, ., 8&amp;1h, Full modtl double wideo 3br.
(::r683-5728 ap.
·
For Sole: . Recondlllonad ~17:..:42=--:-.,.---~
Clan A COL Drtvor to pull Send Ruume 10: CLA 1580. homo, Ol!itr Ch-n lady e.-. Large unattoch· 2ba froa dollwry &amp; ootup. In
1 Bodroom Apanmontl, washera, dryero and ro1r1g. Flbefll- Trucik TOpper 10&lt;
oonlalntro In WV, KY, &amp; c/o GaiNOOIII Dal~ T~bunt. hu til+ years - - tc1 2 oar garage. 127 Kino- -financing 10 quallflod 4 Roomo &amp; Bath, 13001 $28g month. Dtpoalt a Rt1· erotors. Thompson• Appfl· a Ford F·I50, Ukt New,
PH. Homo avery weakond. 825 Third Avo, Galllpolll, and roforonoas, cell any· on or.. $80,000. (740)441· buyooro. (80e)474·4391 or momh. 52 Olive Stroll. . oronce. HUD Approvod. anoa. 3&lt;107 Jackson Avo- uoo. Call Mlkt 11
Pay 30%. (740,388·9326
OH 45831.
tlmt, (740,992•8781
0485
(808)4747688 after 5
(740)440-3945
(740)441-151g
nuo, (304)875-7388.
(304)8715-5052

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malfY
Dungy interviewed with both the P.:mthers and Colt&lt; last
Oet~l
. .
· .
,)' week, and when negoaaaons got senot.IS M~nday, the . Colts
found themselves tn what lrsay described as a b1t of a b1dding

Tnn.,.. war."

.
Crulae; Bed Uner; 6 f ,000 R - 'Kill 7':c,_24s-sa'Zl''
By Monday rught, though, the Colis essenti.ally reached a
miles. Eo«:ellent condition. Call: 339-:rffls.
,. : contract agreement with Dungy. But Dungy's agent, R.ay
$14,200. Call (740,448·
· A d
'd
. 11 esda ha final d tails
till being
7231 after 5pm or leave
n erson, S3l twtce u
y t t
e
were s
Ohio, 1-800- mesaage.
worked out. ·
,
.
.
HOME
·::
-•
.
94 Chevy Silverado PU, E•·
. •·~
·
We L
""""n
t wo rked everythin
· gout, bu t there's nothing .that's

riO

products, call (740)949- 1418
3027
'94 Toyota .Pickup, t40K
BlJIUliNG
(highway), Auto, AC, CO,
S
Bed liner Tonneau Cover
IJPI&gt;IJE'i
Topper,
$3000 Ann:
Block, brick, sewer pipes, (740,4!6 880 7

I

i

windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Wlnte&lt;S. Rio Granda, OH
caJ 1740.24s.5121 _

vac.

llii

1

.IMI"IQ.I~1

BASEMENT . '"

WATERPROOANG
Unconditional lifetime ga~;.

m·

antH._L&lt;ocal relerences,.fur·

nlshed. Established 1
Cell 24 Hrs. (740) .
0870,
1-800·287.0576.
Aogera Waterproofong. ·

I

VANS &amp;

4-WDs
·

..

•

tnsurm~unu

"

bl •• And
'd
e,
erson saJ .

Colts president Bill Polian said in a statement that it was ·an
·

·

·

1"

·

agreement m pnnc1p e.
Polian was not available for questions, .:md a phone message
left on Dungy's home answering machine was not returned.
.
Anderson said Dungy was in Mobile, Ala., where the Senior
Bowl is being played and many NFL scout5 are assembled.
Neither Anderson nor the Colts said they expected any smgs
·
· ·· D
h
th
cessfuJ coach m
· B
tl) s1grung ungy, w o was e most sue
uccaneer.; historv, going 54-42 .:md leading the team to the p 1 -~ffi
• ''
-Tv
four times. The Bucs were 9-8 this season, including a loss to
Philadelphia in the wild-card round .

c&amp;C General Home Mainle"""""' Painting, vinyl JOid.
lng, carpentry, doono, Joinf989 Conve'rsion Van, Ma· - . . baths. mollile home
FOII':Yoll.E
roon/wMelgray.
40 ,000 repair .,.,. more. For llee
.,_ _oioiiiioiiiiiiiiiiioa_.o miles great gas mileage, lltlllmeto call Chet, 7&lt;10·992·
.,
305 ¥-8. Very Nice. Sell or 6323.
2 Malo CKC Aeglslerod Yet- Trod&amp; for truck. $8,000. Call ~'Jj:;_;::;ii;;i'j
'
With Tampa Bay, Dungy's defenses ranked among the league's
low Labs, DOB 9102100 . .,(304:::..:!).::87c::5-c..:1.::928=---- '"'
best and earned No. 1 ranking.; in 1998 and 2000.
$150 oach OBD, (740)387- 7399
1979 F- 250. EKCellent Con"We think he can give the defense a consistency and a cohe----::----,--- - dltion. $2500. (740)379,..
sive nature;' lrsay said. "He is a simplistic genius."
4 MaHese Pupa, All WhHe, 2351
,
Residential or comi'Tltrcial
Grow to 8 lbs. Call - - - - - - - - wiring, new serviCe or reDungy.also fit the profile Polian w:mted- a defensive-mind(740)645-0583. Available 1998 Geo T-er 5 sp palrt. Master Licensed elec·
ed
coach whose system would work well with young player.;.
lor Valentine's Day.
4k4, eKcellent cOndition: trlclan. Ridenour EIICirlcal,
Mora was fired, primarily because he refused to fire defensive
WV000308, 304-675-1'168.
· AKC Male Pug Puppies·. new tire~. (740}992·7358
coordinator
Vic Fangio, who has since taken the coordinator's
•Shots, Wormed, Will take r;:;;:===,:=;;:::;;;==T'~:;::T;.;:::::;&lt;=;:===·Sl
• ~
'
·r~ants. $350. (740)a. ~:~~ ~;~~:k:_~ ~d{i~ ~-\~.li· job with the expansion Houston Texans.

"""'

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AKC

Registered
'Chocolata
or

Labs,
Black.

(7&lt;10144Hl931

PUBLIC
NOTICES

·.

'"'"'"""" "··~~

'""'' Ri:!•••~"""··' "io· •·::::::J

NOTICE TO BIODERS
,.
Notice 11 hereby
given that the Board
of Education of the
Meigs Local School
Dla1rlcl, 320 Eaet

Quattlono can. '·' be
anewered by Mr. ·P.aul
McElroy,
Traneportatlon 1 ·
Supervlaor at &lt;t'~)
742·2180.
&lt;( ·
All blda must be

1950 Massey Harris Model Main Street, Pomeroy,

received In, ancWIId

33, Has Hydraul~ Syalom
·wHh Two Wet Lines. Comes
'with Wood Splitter that
wort&lt;s oH Hydraulic System
on.w _56-6444
Tractor,
$1800.
17 12

epeclffcallon eheeta
may be ob1iall\f!d
lrom. TAEASUREfl'S
OFFICE, 32D E. Main
•
Street, P.0 , Box 2.2,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169,
or by calling (140)
892·5650.
;;.:.

I \H\1"1 1'1'111'
.'\. 11 \l'-. l ()t k

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:::;!"'::::':.!:.:

GLI8e, Radiator,
mora. Cell for
(304)875-2874
Budgel , . _

Watkins Products. dark and tended Cab, Trunk l1d , ..,
·.white double strength vanit- TeaU Sliver, 350 Engine,
: Ia,, extracts, spk:es, sa!Yes, ·Pl,_PW, Trailer Hitch, E•·
,liniments and many other cellenl Condhlon. (740}245-

Help caring for lha INSURANCE tN8PECTOA8
alderty, Derot Group Homo, Field -In Qolllpollll Gal-

•"'I·""

laq Supreme partl. ~~

Transmlssion; New Tlrea; alan&amp; All Types Accesa 10
All Power EqUipment; 0vw IOOOO T -..,.,.

f "PSI $37.00 Per 1OO; All
l.Bma CO&lt;npre11ion Rttings
Jj ln Stock.
J RON EVANS EN1EAPA11-

• Adl Should ltun 7 DIVI

\\'\lH '\c I \II' I '

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1

Ohio 45769, will offer
lor salo by oealed bid
et1 :00 PM, Thuraday,
January 31, 2002, the
1o II ow1ng ve hi c 1ee
a nd
mo d uIa r
1989 Cherokee 2 Horso clusrooms:
'Trauer, Seals Up Tight.
1888 International
$1500. (740,379·2820
Bua/!21
1888 International
4 foot Pull Disc. 5150 .
'1740)379 2351
·Bua 1!28
-:c...=.:...:·" " ' - - - - 1888 lnternellonal
'Fertilizer Buggy, Stainless SUI 132
Steel Cargo Box. St soo. · 1890 International
(740)268·8444
B,.ua/!12•0
..Used un Truck Fort&lt;s, sso1885 314 Ton Ford
•$75 per set. 3 sections of Pickup Truck j38
10'xl2' plastic pipe, also -1882 1 Ton Ford
.smaller
sizes,
$75. Dump Bed Truck 150
(740)379·2757.
1882 Ford Van 1188
Llvfm'ocK
Modular
Classroom• at Salem
Center Elementary
lOlled
, All
.for 11ie· 2 donkeys &amp; a po- envelope• coit1elnlng
ony, (7A0)698-2785
bids are to be marked
HAY &amp;
clearly on tho
GRAIN
outalde.
Terma
of
aale will be
caeh or
money' order. Said
·Hay
Board roeorvaa tha
right. to waive
lnlormalltlea, 10
accep1 or re(ect eny
and all, or parta of
;m;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ any and all blda.
------...__..;ioiiiiiiiiii--'
H111 w ~..
.,
P ln....
1988 Buick Grand National,
Excellent condition, 75,000
mUoa, (740)245-5087

Cowherfrom PageB1
by improbable starting quarterback Tom Brady, who
replaced longtime starter
Drew Bledsoe and orchestrated one of the most
improbable playotf finishes
in NFL history.
If the Steelers had the
Immaculate Reception in
1972, the Patriots have what
might be called the Immaculate Interpretation - the
instant replay overturn of an
apparent Brady fumble that
saved New England from a
seemingly certain defeat Saturday against Oakland.
But Cowher . said good
fortune has nothing to do
·with the Patriots getting this
far.
"That's a very confident
~
ball
·
100t
· team we 're p1aymg,
a 'team that got hot at the
right time:' Cowher said.

Steelers did so if only
they remember what they
still have to do.
"You'Ve got to enjoy it,
· and there's nothing wrong
with getting excited and
e!llbracing the moment," he
. said. "There's nothing wrong
with enjoying the fact we're
still working, that this tournament is dow!! to four
teams and we're one of
them. But you've got to be
able to handle the moment."
Cowher also understa!lds
the excitement the Steelers
are creating in Pittsburgh,
even if he is insulated from it
by the long hours coaches
put in before a game.

Morey led all scorers with 1:1,
15 and Abe
Herringshaw finished with 11

Meigs

Holbert llOfChed

fl•aP&amp;pB1

for Belpre.

then drilled his
Second lrifecta .:md the count
stood at 27-18 with 6:28 to go
in the hal£ A Morey put back off'

Roush two.

ets; Williamson

Meigs W3S paced by Frazier's
1.8-point effort; Williamson
added 14, Fackler nine, Bush
eight, Siders six,Ty Ault four and

.:m offensive rebound an anothei
Meigs connected o n 24-of-55
rainbow from Holbert put shoo including · 9:-&lt;&gt;f-22 fiom
Meig&lt; in a 14-point hole. Belpre . three-point range.
Belpre hit on 34-of-53 shots
increased the a&lt;Mntage to 16 at
including6-of-12 from long dis- ,
the half. 40-24.
A Williamson two and Fack- tance. Morey was 13 of 17 from
lers' third three-pointer of the the field and Herringshaw, ~ 6-4
. night pulled the maroon and sophomore, was 5-of-6 as the
gold to within 11 to start the Eagles ~red the shorter
second half. but Morey again Meigs team inside.
The Eagles got a measure of
rook cmr for his tean1 as he
scored 11 of the next 14 Golden _......,ge. in the reserve game as
Eagle points .With but 2:17 to go they defeated Meigs, who won
in period three Meigs was on the first meeting, by a score of
the short end of a 52-33 score. 50-38. Guy Early led Belpre
Freshman Zach Bush scored with 13, Justin Cline added 11.
with 2:15 left in the quarter to Jordan Williams topped the scorstop the 12-4 Belpre charge. The · ing column for M eigs with 15,
Eagles were colnfortably in fiont Carl Wolfe had 11.
Meigs .will play host to the
heading to the final quarter 59Miller
Falcons on Friday and
36.
Belpre built the lead to 65-38 Nelsonville comes to Larry R
when Morey scored his last Morrison Gymnasiwn on Tuespoint of the game before retiring day the 29th.
to the bench with 5:23 to go in
et Belpr-e
the contest. The Marauders
Bolpno 79, lletgti 81
14
12
25 - 61
refused to quit however a.~ they Meigs 10
Belpre 23
17
19
20 - 79
continued to play h:ud for the MEIGS - Travis Siders 2 2·7 6; Matt
Williamson 6 o-o 1•; Ty Ault 1 2·2 4; Jere·
final 5:23 of the game, outscor- my
Roush 1 o-o 2; Buzz Fadder 3 O.Q 9;
ing the Eagles 23-14 the rest of Ryan FrazierS 2·2 18; Zach Bush 3 2·2 B;
Ryan Hannan O; Doug Dill 0. TOTALS 24
the way. Frazier g9t the hot hand 8·13
61 .
in the last four minutes as he BELPRE- Bryan Adams 3 o-o 7: Pal
KHon 3 o-o 8; Nate Eaton o 2-2 2; Nlcl&lt;
sank 4 of 5 fiom beyond the arc HamiMon
f 0-Q 2; Ed Updike 3 1-2 7; Guy
Bush ,Sider.; and Jeremy Roush Ea!ly I 0-Q 2; Abe HtorTingshaw 5 1-3 II;
Kyle Holbert 5 0-Q 15; Nick Morey 13 1·2
all contributed point&lt; over the 27. TOTALS 34 S-9 79.
span. But it was too little too late Ttvee-point goals - Meigs 9 (Frazier 4,
Fackler 3, and Williamson 2) Bel~re 6
as the Marauders fell 79-61.
(Holbert 5, Adams) .
did have some mental break-

Rio

downs."

from PageB1

"We played well enough
to win, we just didn't get it

done_."
Shawnee State (13-4, 9-2
AMC) received 19points
and seven rebounds from
Angie Ingram in a reserve
role.
Heather Schillil)g
chipped in 16- points and
had five steals and five
rebounds, Cheri Griffith
notched 15 points and five
rebounds. Camey Geiman
posted a game-high nine
rebounds and five stealS.
Rio Grande led 32-30 at
halftime .

"We were weiL,prepared,"
Rio Grande Head Coach
David Smalley said. "But we

.

,

The Lady Bears entered
the game, ranked No. 17 in
the latest NAJA Division II
poll.
Shawnee State won the
rebounding battle, 34-33
and was plus one (19-20) in

turnover margin.
Rio will get a shot at
revenge', February 12 when
the Lady Bears come to the
Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio now gears up for
NAIA Division II No. 9
Malone on Saturday in Canton . Game time is set for
5:30p.m.

Southem

quick shot. Kennedy got the
defensive rebound and was
fouled, where he went to the
line and hit both ends for a 68,.
Page
62 SHS lead with 30.5 seconds
left.
· Dally hit 3-4 charity tosses.
Mark E. Rhonemue,
Southern went coast to coast
Every time Southern would
Treaeurer
,,.
MEIGS LOCAL
attempt to pull away, Paige with Jmdan Hill hitting Dally ·
,,
BOARD OF
would drill a three pointer, hit- Hill for a quick score, .68-64.
EDUCATION
,, '
Paige was fouled on. the
, .,
ting three in the round.
(1) 20, 23, 27,2002 ·
In the final round, Miller inbounds pass and hit the second
31c
·
regained the lead early, but of the double bonus, 69-64.
With 5.6 seconds left, Connolly
Southern carne right back.
Public Notice '.v
uTo see that, it is excitAt the 4:35 mark, Miller led drilled a three pointer to cut the
In the Court of
ing;·
he
said.
"It's
good,
as
Common Pleat, Melp
56-50, but :after a Southern time lead to 69-67 and SHS fouled
County, Ohio, c..i
long as you don't get caught
immediately with 4.6 ticks left.
out to re~up,
Number 01 ·CV-04e,
up in it. If you do, it can be
"•
Craig Randolph drilled a Paige hit the second of two foul
Eric J. Taylor. Vl'overwhelming. This will be a
three pointer to cut the lead in shots, and Southern went the "
Lucinda D11waon, e111.
oelendent Lucinda 8.
big test, to stay focused and
half one minute later, 56-53. · distance where Jordan Hill took
Dawson, whoae 1011
recognize the opportunity
After a Miller miSs Dally Hill a last second three that went in
place of reeldence li
we
have,
but
not
deviate
drilled another three to tie the and out with Miller taking
known II 3rd StrHli
12
from
a
preparation
standgame at 56-56 at the 3:00 mark. home the win.
Apartment • Racln".;[
OH 45771·1807, b.ti
point."
Southern hit 22-of-64 overall,
In the transition, Luke
whose preeent place "They're·sound, they're conhitting
8-of-24 three's. Miller hit
Kennedy,
Then;
pointing
out
that
he
who
had
dominated
ol ruldence ,-, fident, they're patient and
unknown, will tekjl
the inside game for the Falcons, a more respectable 22-of-52
Notice on March 14, they don't give up a lot of normally would be scouting
hit a aim around jwnper to give fiom the field, hitting 7-of-14
players at the Senior Bowl in
2aD1, Eric J . Taylcil' big plays ."
Miller a 58-56 edge, but South- three's.
, Iliad hie cqJI!PIIInt lh
Still Cowher has no prob- Alabama if the Steelers
ca1a number 01·CV.·
'.
.
Southern
grabbed
29
em's Connolly hit a twisting
041 Jn thl Court of lem w1th his players reflect- weren't playing for the con·
rebounds
(Connolly
13);
had
11
reverse
lay-up
to
again
tie
the
·
Common Pioll, Melga· · ing on what they've done so ference title, Cowher said:
assiSIS (Martin 5, J. Hill 4); 11
score.
·County, Ohio, alleglnll' far_ winning 14 games for
"It's j_ust great to be here
that Luolnda 8.'
,
steals
(Randolph, Martin, Rees,
A
Dally
Hill
steal
off
the
press
Daweon negligently_ the first time smce the 1979 and not be in Mobile."
19110 Chovy Btrtna 3.1, v.
and assist to Randolph on the J. Hill, D. Hill two each); 11
operated her motor
8.New tlres&amp;tiC/Itult , lie
vahlolo
oautlng
a:
lay-in gave SHS a . lead and turnover.;, three charges, and 20
$1780.304-8'715-0337
colllalon, raeultlng In•
forced
a Miller time out, the fouls.
1$91 Chryoler Now Yorl&lt;ar,
Jnjurlee end damag11 ' ·
6th Avenue. E•collent Con·
score 60-58 Southern. Coach
Miller had 30 rebounds
to Pltlnlllf Eric J.' .:
dillOn. $2500. (740,37g.
Tlylor.
.
Defendant
(Kennedy
8 , Paige 6, Humphrey
Jomthan
Rees'
last
words
out
of
2381
1'11l•lir \u\1•'1' ~ iu "1.&amp;'1'\l• l• l.. 'r~.
Luclnde B. Deweon
the huddle were to defend the 7, Gamble 7); 16 turnoven, nine
1996 Saturn . .$L1 Forr11t
thall lake nollaa lhlt r
''n" m~~lut•·. hm•"·l•d•• •· ••·d lh,:hl ·•" ''"'' II•"~• FuiUPart Time
Groen. /IIC , Crulae, tilt,
three. Just seconds •.later, Noah steals (Eing 3), seven assists (Eing
lhl h11 twanty.. Jght ·
~ .......... .
'AM/FM/CD, Sop. Manual.
OFFICE
(21) day• lo Ilia an
Gamble nailed an unguarded three); and 17 fouls .
(304)773-6030
ENVIRONMENT Anewer to thll ,. NOTICE: Ia hereby The Fermoro hnk and the dlatriDI office.
Southern won the reserve
three fiom the short left wing to
1988 Ford Eooort, 85,000
given
that
on Saving• Comptny
Complaint.
mUll, 5 •PHd tran1mla• 1·888·974-JOBS (1)11, 23,30
game 48-45led by Wes Burrows
give MHS a 61-60 adv.jntage.
Saturday, Jenuery 21, rettrvtl the right lo 811A8D Clerk
slon, .loadtd,
Phon"
11
10:00
a.m.,
1
reject
any
or
all
bldl
2002,
Humphrey hit a free throw for with 14,1\aron Sellers ten, Cur(7&lt;10)448-1104
(1) 23,2002
public 1111 will be held aubmltted.
two
point Falcon lead, then at tis Neigler ten, and Josh Smith
· 92 Cod go Oynaoty, $1500,
II 211 Wtll Second Thl
lbOVI 1to
LOoks Good and Runa
$1!Ht, Pome_roy, Ohio, deocrlbad collateral - - - - - - - - the 1:19 mark Randolph hit a eight. For Miller Curt Mauro
GOOd. (7&lt;10)441-0888
:tJia Forme,. lenk and will be eold "11 Ia·
Public Notice
pair of charity tosses to tie the had 14, and Nathan Brown
Sovlngo Compeny, 11 whtrl II", with no - - - - - - - - game at 62-62. At the 1:08 mark eleven.
~8 Noon. 4 Ooor, 44,000
,
...ling lor caeh the expre111d or Implied
miles, Automat~. Air, Atd.
A
vlew,ng
for
the
Southern hosts Waterford FriJeremy Paige, hit the penetr.&gt;ting
fliliowlng collllarel: . warranty given.
Spoiler, $3800 OBO.
(7&lt;10)268-6877 or (740,250· 1HQ DODQE RAM
For
further purp011 of Cioling I
day
and Miller goes 'to Meigs.
lane
jumper,
then
Paige
stole
the
8487.
11100 4X4 QUAD CAl lnformlllon, or lor en portion of County
ball in the transition and drove it
TRUCK
eppolntment
to Roed 318, aleo
Llvely'a Auto Sal•• 1982
It RICIM
known
••
"Dead
in for the score. The play was a
387HF13YaXM552283 lnapect collllaral,
Olds Achleva, $1800. 1993
Miller 70, 9outhem e7
Man'•
Curve",
will
bt
ltACK, V8 MAQNUM· prior to 1111 d1t1
Plymouth Aocloolm, $1400.
huge momentum shift, a hard Sou1loem 15 18 18 18 - 67
1968 Ford Muatang, $1200.
Shalla held on January 31at
41,700 MILES, AUTO, oontaot
Miller
17 18 14 23 - 70
blow that Southern was never SOUTHERN
1968 Ford F-150 Plokup,
- Nolo Martin 2 D6, Craig
AIR ,
AM·FM Buchlntn II H2·2131. at 8:00 e.m. fallowed
by a haerlng 11 10:00
$1200. 1192 Dodge Ram
.Randolph 4 5-7 18, Jordan Hill 2 2·2 6,
(1) 23, 24, 25 3TC
CASSEnE,
really able to overcome.
Van, $1000. 1985 DodgeD·
a.m.
11
the
Curt Crouch 0, Macy Reea 0, Justin Con·
EXCELLENT
Southern called time, set up its nolly 11 2-3 28, Dallas Hill 3 4-6 11 Jake
250 Pickup, St 000. 1990
ALL YOU CAN EATIII
Commllllontr'l
CONDITION.
Public Notice
·Ford Tempo, 2 Door, $900.
Everyona
last minute strategy, and went to Neaae 0 2-2 2. TOTALS: 22 15-20 67.
lhe Fermere Benk _ __;__ _ _.;...._ olllca.
$CUP DINNER
1989 ChOVl' Borttta, $900.
MILLER - Matt HamlhonO, Zach Elng 3
lnltrlllld
In
lhle
and
Btvlngl The
rtnenclal
.work. Southern took a hasty 1·2 8, B.J. Humphrey 1 1·2 3, Jeremy
:1985 Plds CutillO Su·
Sat. January 26, 2002
roed
oloelng
It
preme, $800. 1988 Mazda
ComP.,ny, Pomaroy, o1atamanll ol tha Sy·
shot and · missed with under a Polge 8 8-9 28, Noah Gamble I 1·3 13,
11:00 am to 8:00pm
Pickup , $800. 1190 Goo
LUKO Kennedy 8 4·5 20. TOTALI: 25 t3·
Ohio, rettrvea thio Recine Bawar Dlatrlct welcome to 1ttand
minute to go. Southern got the 1970.
Storm, Black, $800. 1985
Tuppers Plalris Fire Dept
"
right to bid at thll for 1he y. . r 2001 both the viewing and
Three -Point goala- Miller 7 (Eing, Pllgt
Ford E350 Van, 15 pa~~&amp;n·
thl hltrlng.
eolto,
and
10
withdraw
hava
bean
oompltlld
'
ball
out
of
bounds
off
the
loose
4, Qomblo 2), Soothom 8 (Martin 2, Con·
gar, $800. 10 mort Cfiro un·
the ;Jibova collaterel and are evallebla tor
nolly 2, RaoJjplph 3, Hill),
'(lor SjOOO. Call (7&lt;10)388·
rebound
,
then
again
;
ook
a
p~lor 1o oalo. Further, public lnepecllon II (1) 23, 30, 2002
9303
'

:r.
r

from

81

NOW

HIRING
$6·$8
Per Hour

PUBLIC
NOTICES
--

--- ... ....

a

'

., .

�'

-

'

Wedl ucllly, JM. 23,2002

p ••• 4 • The Deily 81ntlnel

The Dally Sentinel• Pate B I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.NCAA: 'No pay for play'

NBA Cro11word Punle
PHILLIP
ALDIR

•
'

NEW YORK (AP) -The chairman ety, but they haw no p~ in the unipfthe NCAA Board ofDirecton oppos- ftnity ·environment. Student-athletes
•
es any suggestion that are not employees. Thae'1 no mle for
student-athletes
be unions."
:
paid or unionized
Kirwan said he is concerned with the
l
because it would vio- findings of the Knight Commiaion on
late the mission of colleges_and univeni- College Athletics, which reported poor
ties.
clalsroom performance, excessive out: Ohio State Univeristy president of-class demands on student-athletes,
William E. Kirwan called pay-for-play and expenditures that are out of balance.
p~t~posals "a nonstarter."
And he said his board, which has the
"To many, it seems simple;' he said ultimate authority for Division I interTuesday. "We should pay for play.. It is a collegiate athletics, would press for
bad idea and it has nothing to do with reform.
cost. Intercollegiate athletics were . "The arms race (for elite athletes)
founded on the prmciple of students in detracts from the mission of the univerextracurricular activity. That principle sity," he said. "At many institutions, the
has worked well 'for the most part.
rate of expenditure on intercollegiate
"To pay athletes puts universities in athletics is higher than the expenditures
the position of hiring people to do a job, at the rest of the university..I think that's
not to carry out the mission of the uni- inappropriate.
"My view is the NCAA· should shine
venity. It would be a violation of the
principles on which the university was a light 'o n the expenditures .in athletics."
Kirwan said he was troubled by colfounded," he said.
Instead, Kirwan supports stipends, per- lege and universities losing their way in
haps $2,000 per athlete, for costs not the rush for athletic excellence.
"Universities operate to provide eduincluded in traditional scholarships that
tover only tuition, fees, books and cations for young people;• he said. "I'm
hoard."It is something I will continue to not so naive to say there have not been
work on," he said.
abuses. You fix that problem. You don't
Kirwan recalled that when he was create professional teams in a university
president of the University of Maryland, environment.
"If I have an agenda, it is to address the
the team made the NCAA tournament's
round of 16 and was sent on the road to .academic issue.Academic performapce is
)lay in a West regionaL Joe Smith, then the most pressing issue facing the
the team's star, told him his parents could NCAA and its member institUtions. That
pot alford to travel to the games.
· will be iny focus as chairman of the
J "TJ:!e NCAA needs to figure that Division I board. There is considerable
out," Kirwan said.
·
momentum for change.
"The current statistics are unacceptThere have been suggestions that college athletes might be unionized. Kir- able. It is untenable to have programs at
wan dismissed that suggestion.
major universities so unsuccessful acade. "That would be the end of college mically. Thar can't be tolerated. We have
athletics as we know it," he said. "Unions ideas and determination to make the
are perfectly respected in American soci- changes happen."

Hill's Self
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'NCAA

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lllddleport, OH

llolnlltlln4:38
flrtt lllrds stlrt

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NEW YORK (AP)- Pat Summerall and trying to react to his commentary;;
and John Madden are parting ways after Summerall said.
"That I can never replace."
21 years in which they became the stanJoe Buck, who is Fox's lead play-bydard by which NFL announcing teams
play announcer for baseball and has
•
are judged.
l
called NFL gaines for the nerwbrk,
Summerall
announced Tuesday could be a replacement as Madden's
.
. that he will leave his partner.
"No decisions have been made about
longtime NFL broadcasting partner after
they caD the Super Bowl for Fox Sports. who will work with John next year;· Fox
' But the 71-year-old former New York spokesman Lou D'Ermilio said.
Giants star kicker, who's been associated
Sum!llerall, Whose Fox ·contract
' ~th the NFL for 50 years as a player or expires at the end of this season, said he
jlllnouncer, said he won't rule out doing decided two weeks ago to move on. He
wanted· to · make the announcement
· more TV work.
, Asked if he's set on retiring, Summer- now so as not to be a distraction during
1111 said:" Absolutely not. I still want to do the buildup' to the NFL's championship
' games. I still want to work with the game.
NFL I'd love to get back involved in
He said he ·might be interested in
! $ol~ i~ some way. I'd love to do tennis staying at Fox in a different spot.
"Fox has said they would like to talk
1 agam . .
1 While Summerall called those sports to us after the Super Bowl about other
~hen he was at CBS, he is best known possibilities of him staying on," said his
; lis half of the longest-paired NFL TV agent, Sandy Montag. "Sometime ih
puo ever.
February or March, we said, we'll talk
Summerall's play-by-play arid Mad- about it."
~ . den's color analysis have complemented
Summerall's TV career started in
~ach other since they were paired at 1960.
• . CBS in 1981. They moved together to
"Pat Summerall· is not only a Hall of
' · Fox in 1994 after that network bought ~arne broadcaster, but one of the classi~FL rights.
est men to ever work in the business,"
• Their Feb. 3 swan song will be Sum- Fox Spofts president Ed Goren said.
merall's 17th Super Bowl broadcast.
"His 50 years a player and broadcast, . . "I'll miss standing next to John during er is a record that will never be broken.
l the course of a: broadcast and watching· Quite simply, for generations of fans, Pat
~ :his antics and enjoying his commentary Summerall was the voice of the NFL.''

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William
James
44 Mln6I
IMnb
.
wrote, "Metaphysics
33 Confto CliO
1
badly of
:Ill Anlan and
means nothing but an
44F..wn
• Raacal
Cuttt
unusually obstinate
7 lMo
50
Down wllll .'
37 81rang
• lhaflu
• Compular
1111181
effort to
think
31AIIIIe .
51~0..
clearly." Does this
at. J
lima, in
10 ECUINmeall that all bridge
experts are metaphysicians? (I thought it
would have been
"metaphysici}ts," but
apparently not.)
If you obstinately
think clearly, bridge is
an easy game. You
will get some 80 pt•rcent of do:~ls right. It
is the other 20 percent that sort out the
metaphysicians from
the metaphysicists, as
it were.
'This dt'al· ought to
be ·c.,sy for the · de-·
fenders, but sometimes "rote" plays oc- ·
cur bt-furc thought.
Against four spades,
West led the heart
CELEBRITY CIPHER
queen . As. it' was a suit
by Lula Campoa
~Ciphtr~arocrulld
fromquotallonl by'"". contract, South knew
-"·put
and PfUitjl. t;octJ ~In 111o......, -lai .......,,
that E:~st held the
.
.
T0t11JYSCIU9: H equals D
heilrt ace. And declarer realized that if
West had the club
ace, the opponents
could take the first
four tricks: two hearts
and two clubs. Carefully, South covered
· with dummy's heart
king.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'II youth knew; II ago could."- Hervl
After winning with
EaUenna
•
the ace, East thought'Every m•n over lorty Ia a· scoundrel. • - George Barnar'd
lessly led back the
Shaw ·
.
heart si.x. And with
West on play at trick
WOlD
TIIAT DAILY
three, South was safe.
GAMI
'UJZLU
West couldn't do bet- - - - - - - l d l l o d by CLAY I. ,OLLAN
ter than cash the club
llecrrono• letters of th•
four Krombltd words be·
ace to stop an overlow to form four simple words.
trick.
East should have
p L 1 0 I M
been obstinate, -refus- f--r-...,..-r-...,..r-r--1
ing to follow the un- .
reliable return-part- '-...1..-'-...L-'-...L--l

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ner's-lead
rule. f
M R T p
Knowing that the defenders needed four . 1
. .1 .1 .1 .
tricks, he should have ~::':=~~==~~
shifted to · the dub
L E D U E I~
My wise old granny lectured
queen at trick two.
l
4
me one day . She said that wisThen, at the end of . . . . . ._ dom was the quality that keeps
the deal, West would
you from getting into situations
have been smiling,
I F NE DE
where you---· - •.
not frowning.
O Complete the cnuckle quoted
Jame~ was a phi. . . . . ,
bv filling in t~e missing words
.
you develop from step No. 3 below.
1
Iosop her w I10 Ioo keu
at things in reverse.
for example: We are
frightened because we
nm. He also claimed
that beliefs do not
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
work because they are
Afraid- Trunk. Heron· Infect- TAKE OFF
true, but are true beHandyman to matron, "Remove the garments before
caus~ they work. Dis1work on the closet." Without thinking, she shOuted , "Yell
cuss that over breakmean I'll have to TAKE OFF my clothes?"
. fast!
.

II I 1I

·PEANUTS

euerg week

104 Fifth Street, Racine, Ohio

Steve's Truck
Accessories

game and about 30 other postseason
games, including the conference finals.
The new deals average a total of $765
million a year, a 25 percent increase from
the league's expiring TV contracts with
NBC, TNT and-TBS. -'
That's not bad for a league whose reg- ·
ular-season ratings dropped 35 p.ercent
from the 1997-98 season to 2000-01,
but it represents the smallest percentage
increase in the NBA~s. TV rights fees
since at least 1983. Since then, the league
has more than doubled its national TV
revenue three times - , including the
expiring deal .:._ and received a nearly
50 percent increase in .the only other
contract. Those previous deals were all
for four years.
"This is a very substantial increase in a
turbulent marketplace. We couldn't be
happier," Stern said. "It's relatively easy
to go from $100 milliC?.n to $200 million.
But you necessarily begin to slow down
on your rate of increase as your numbers
get higher.''
NBC, which says it lost mpre than
$100 million a season in its outgoing
NBA deal, drops pro basketball after 12
years. The network offered about $1.3
billion for four years to stay on, prompting the league to turn to ABC and
ESPN.
Overall, the league received $615 million a year in the old four-)rear, $2.46
billion confracts with· NBC and 1\lrner
Sports.

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Pat Summerall to make final call

NEWYORK (AP) -The NBA figured out a way to increase its TV reven~es despite shrinking
ratmgs and a tough economy.
• ' · What the league couldn't do was avoid
.a big shift to cable.
, After weeks of fine-tuning, the NBA
completed packages Tuesday with The
Walt
Disney Co. and AOL Time Warner
1
,worth $4.6 billion for six years.
.
ESPN, ESPN2, TNT and a new cable
network jointly owned · by the league
and AOL Time Warner get the bulk of
the regular season and playoff telecasts
under the deals, which start next season.
The new rights packages put the conference finals on TNT, which also gets
the AU-Star game, and ESPN.
ESPN, ESPN2 an&lt;! TNT each is in
about 20 million 'fewer homes than the
major broadcast networks, while the
new channel will start off in ·about 75
million fewer.
"With the growth of cable, we've
'come to be persuaded that we needed to
)lave a larger presence during the week
on . cable," NBA commissioner David
Stern said.
ABC, the lone broadcast network
partner, will have 15 regular-season
games, five playoff games and the NBA
Finals.
Outgoing broadcaster NBC has been
sh()wing about 33 games in the regular
season, plus the NBA Finals, the AU-Star

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PRICING

VIm BIPIADEMUT IIIINiiOWI
.:Mir _,.IIIIDU•llil·

Thur,.lay, Jan . 24, 20ll2
Let thr hiM wi~\ in YOl.lr
t.:omp:Uly know you're uut
a~o1id tn take on m:1jnr n•$pomibiHtic~, nnd ynu nmlt.l
mak" ,;~nificant stride-~ in
your can•cr. Pn·pltre younelf
\Vith wlmt'' nc~.·dcd to do ~o.
AQUAiliUS U•n. 211-f,•b.
19) .. a A ~hout:htli.tl , im•xpen'ivc tukl'n ot nJUr at1C:t:tion
~i\'t'l\ m sonwuuc yuu luv~
will ~o a luuK W;Jy toward,;
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little thinw 'om~.•time~ L:an be

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N••w Yurk, NY IOtSC•. ·
I'ISCES (F•b. 20-March 211)

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-- It will pro\'C' co yum \lhitn:lh.' benefit to bL• helpful to
sunh.'Une who truly u~ottJ~ you
today. L'\'en If it illl:unvenil'ncc!. you. The r~o· w:mis will
Ctr 1.':'\~o·~o·cd yo ur inve~tmcut of
lillll'.

Alli[S (M.~rd&gt; 21 -April 1'1)
-- Don't l1 c~ it:ttc to lllkr your
~nnw-how in h:mdlinp: .1 ditli - ,
r ult pn•hkm whl•n ynu n•c

TFN

•

-.

~

i

-~
.

.

otht.'rs ~~nl~~lin~ with it." Tiu.•y
· won't rt'scnt it; th~..'y'll wcl-

&lt;'OIIle ~clmchmty wllu h t.·x~lc­
rit.•nc::cd.
TAURUS (April 211- M•v
2U) -- Your probabiliril'~ fi,r
~'crwn:1l acqubition nrc cxc.:cl1\•nt h\dow, b~·~·;at~~: \'tlu'l\ be
upcr~ring' within yotlr field of
uperti~e :md will know rx;\Ctly whert w tind the ~olden

'~!~'·

GEMINI (M.1y 21 -June 20)
•• Ueci\USt" of the ex:unpltyou'll set tod;~y , othen who
1ti.1y find thc project :t t hand
lli~ :l~l'L'llhle will follow yom
1\o;!ll :md copv the w;,y you do ·
things. h 's the ~im:e re~t t)'ll'-'-

of llatt•·ry.

CANC~Il

Unne 21-July
· 22) ... Wholt make~ nthen admire you w&lt;by is tht' w:1y
you'll ~u :thc·HH auhtin~ them
without ~ecking cr&lt;"d!t or p:m
on the back. It'~ :t (ui'IIHIII\ for
g~ncr:1ti11~ allllmhm·c iu re·
ntrn .
LEO Quly 2 .1- J',u~. 22) -Throu~h :\ fr.111k ttml opt.· n
diu:u~~ion tOdily with thmc
who frcttucmly an as your advism'!'l, y&lt;m'\1 r~:Kh an intdligenc and work;,ble ~u hnion
for somethinp: upon whil" h
you haw dnubts.

(Au~. 23-Scpt. 22)
Han~ t i~ht with tlmsc who
share ~·our vi~ions ;md e:-.:pl•c -

VIRGO

--

t.lticms today and irc•u,re the
p c~~i nti~t~. 1 1 &gt;J~itiw tl1inkin15
;\ ) W;l)'~ 'k1ds to ~Ut'l't!U :md

!!aim.
Lilli&lt;. A (S&lt;·pt. 23-0t·l. 23) •

- You'll utfcr ~ooJ •guiJance
tll thmc in y~1ur d1.1rge today
bl· L:~ U~l' yoLI'll instinctively
kn ~,W wh~.· u lu me hard line
dirt'(.'tinn and when you c:an

soften yom approach.
SCOI&lt;.i'IO (0&lt;1 . 24-Nov .
22) -· It nny n~1t be impor ..
ttlllt

to }'OU to rtnist tuJay rC'-

garding yom r c:non&lt;tl m:nten,
but you will be cxtremdy tenacious and consd cntious
t'Oih:erniu~ wh;tt you lllilllilM~

f"'r othcM .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) -- Th ~.• re i5 nothi ng
!llOJC important to do todo1y
tlun to malu· it ::1 point to let
tho.h: whu~e rdatiou~hips you
value know how nmch yo u
rm:. lo ,•in ~ word~ will ~olid­
ify bonr.h.
CAI'Il iCO ilN (llrc . 22Jan. II.J} -- 1\lthuup:h tht.•rtm:ty nyt h(' ;my ti-e(' rid~o·~ out
tht.·a· to~tw , vou 'll h;I\'C no
trm1biL· graiif);1 118 your ,"mbitious

objcl." t i vc ~,

htr:lmc

yoll're wiliins; tiJ do whatever
it t~ke~ tO acCo111plid1 thc111.

•

•

�•

PageBG..

The Daily Sentinel

Freshmen a focus for Buckeyes, B1

u . ..-

·Kentucky outlasts Auburn, ·69~62 Redmen 'ose nail biter at Shawnee
. AUBURN, Ala. (AP) Matquis Estill shot 8-of-12
.from the field to tie his season
high with
21 points as
No.8 Ken•
tucky over·came an uneven effort to beat
Auburn 69-62 on Tuesday
night for its fourth straight
win.
Keith Bogans had 13 points
and Gerald Fitch added 11 for
the Wildcats (13-4, 3-2 Southeastern Conference), who shot
just 8-of-20 from the foul line
during the final 5:.12. Leading
'SCorer Tayshaun Prince was
held to nine points, eight
below his average.
Marquis Daniels led Auburn
(9-8, 1-5) with 16 points, but
.cored only one in the second
half. He also had 11 rebounds,
six assists and four steals .
Marco Killingsworth added 13
points for the Tigers, who
hav~ lost 16 of the last 17
meetings with the Wildcats.
The Tigers, the SE&lt;;:'s lowest-scoring team, were just 5of-23 from 3-point range as
they lost their third straight
conference game, but Kentucky missed 17 of 33 free
throws to keep Auburn in it.
Pittsburgh 72, No. 12

BY MARK Wn LIIIMI

boards:
.,
'
Andre Horton, entered the game as the .
PORTSMOUTH- For the second con- AMC's top scorer, poured in 30 points,
secutive year the Shawnee
including seven trifectas for
State Bears nipped thtf
Shawnee State. Horton als9
Rio Grande Redmen
dished out six assists. Jay
in a game
· Hall · added ~2 · points
~-to
md
~
the
final
rebounds,
buzzer.
Antwain
'Lavender
NAIA
Division II
chipped in
No.
22
12 points and
Shawnee
Jeff 'Fraley
Sute
scored 10.
droppedthe
Danny Mardefending
tin
ana
American
•
Richard Mon...
Mideast Conpgue each collected five rebounds.
ference champions, 80-79, on Tuesday
"We knew it was going to be a great.game("
evening before a packed ·.house at "The Rio Grande head coach Earl Thomas said.
Cave".
1
"We told our guys it )IVOuld probably com;.
. · It was a back-and-fQrth gam~ from· start to · down to one possession."
"The teams that win one-possession baske~
finish with neither team l~dinll by more
than seven points.
•
ball games are the t~ams that execut~C the bet~
Shawnee State (17-6, 8-2 AMC) held a 34- under pressure and tonight that was Shawnee.4'
33 lead at halftime.
~
"We made too many mental mistakc;s."
Rio Grande (13-11, 8-3 AM C) dropped its
Rio Grande won the rebounding battle, 4{tsecond straight game and has 'n ow lost three 34, but did yield 19 offensive rebounds. ·"They
of its last four. The Redmen had an opportu- were just a little more aggressive going to t~
nity to win the game, with possession and 11 glass-than us," Thomas said.
:.
seconds remaining. Sean Plummer chased
The Redmen also committed 15 turn&lt;M:D
down a missed shot and his leaning 10-foot to only nipe for the Bears.
~
jumper on the base line with two seconds left . for the game, Rio shot 53 percent (26-ofr
caromed off as time ran out. : ,~
. 49) from the field, 36 percent (4-of-.11) tit&gt;m
· Jerry Barlow scored 18 ofl;l~s 21 points in three-point land and 74 percent (23-of-3:(.)
the .second half. Barlow was saddled with from the free throw line. Shawnee countereG
fouls and limited to only eight minutes in the with 42 percent (28-of-66) shooting from the
first half. lie collected six rebounds. Joe field, 34.5 percent (10-of-29) from beyond the
Delaney added 18 points (13 iiJ. the first half) arc and 56 percent (14-of-25} from the line.
before fouling out and Plu~r recorded a
Rio continues its current road trip on Thursdouble-double with 12 pqipts and 11 day with a trip to Columbus to face Ohio
r~bounds. Matt Simpson h~led in five Dominican. Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.
·

SPECIAL TO OVP

NCAA

Kentu~ky's

Keith Bogans (10) dunks the ball
against Auburn in the first half at Beard-Eaves Memorial Colleseum In Auburn, Ala., on Tuesday. (AP)

points .
. eralovich one time, and I think
"The fans helped get us he knocked me into next
pumped up an,d kept us in the week."
Syracu•e 57
d
.
His team, which had won
PITTSBURGH (AP) _ game," sai Pitt swmgman
Syracuse really has a rebound- Jaron Brown, who had 10 seven in a row until losing two
straight, knows exactly how he
rebounds.
ing problem now.
d 11 h
Overwhelmed
on
the
Julius Page, gra ua y s oot- feels .
"But we can't be satisfied,"
ing himself out of a seasonboards in back-to-back upset long slump, Jed Pitt with 21 said Page, who also led Pitt
losses to unranlted teams, the
points, including four 3- with 18 points in a 68-67 vicNo. 12 Orangemen lead the pointers. Preston Shumpert tory Saturday at Georgetown.
Big East Conference West by led Syracuse with 17 points, "We've got to keep coming
only a half-game following and James Thues had 15, but out every game and playing
.
their 72-57 loss to Pittsburgh no Syracuse player had more hard."
on Tuesday night.
ihan four rebounds.
No. 4 Cincinnati 54,
Asked if he's concerned that
Saint Louis 50
Brandin Knight added 12
the Panthers are threatening to points for Pitt, which led 16-4
Steve Logan scored 25
'overtake his suddenly slump- in offensive rebounds and points as Cincinnati survived
ing team, coach Jim Boeheim made 19 of 31 free throws to the closest scare of its 18-game
~aid, "I'm worried about
winning streak.
Syracuse's 6-of-7.
everyone right now."
Cincinnati (18-1, 6-0 Con"It was a great win - any
His biggest worry is bounc- time you beat Syracuse, you ference USA) had its season
ing back from consecutive have to be happy," Pitt coach low for points and tied its seagames in which the Orange- Ben Howland said. "It's as big son worst with onl:y one 3men were overwhelmed on
the boards _ 43 _18 by ·Pitt a win as I've had in my short pointer. The Bearcats' previous
and 49-27 in a 66-62 loss at (three"year) . tenure here. We low was 62 against Oklahoma
did a great job rebounding the State in their opener, also their
Tennessee on Saturday.
basketball and making that only loss.
·
"The last two games, we got
h h
h
h
Jason Edwin had 15 points
crushed on the boards," Boe- ex!ra pass, w ic I 1 oug t
heim said. "You cannot win opened up some things and for Saint Louis (9-10, 3-3),
made a difference in the which had its seven-game
..
when you get outrebounded
home winning streak snapped.
by 20 and 25."
g~:as an infrequent upset of No. 7 Virginia 69, G~or­
In their home away from
Syracuse for Pitt, which beat
gla Tech 65
home, Fitzgerald Field House,
h B' E
Travis Watson· hit the gothe Orangemen (16- 4 5-1) the Orange . in t e h. btg hasdt
,
.
' .
tournament tn Marc , ut a ahead basket with 1:12 to go, hadn t lost 10 four game~ smce lost 17 of 19 to ·them. But it and Elton Brown .scored a ,
.
·
rfi
the Panthers maugural Btg
. was a typtcal defenstve pe or- career-high 20 points as Vir. 1982 83 S
East season 10
.
-. · yra- mance for the Panthers, who ginia. rallied at Georgia Tech.
cuse had won etght m a row 1 d D. · ·
I b h0 ld'
Tony Akins missed .a tyiti.g
overall in Pittsburgh counting ea
tvmon
Y
fmg
. h d
'
M 1 opponents to an average o 57 layup in the final seconds for
galmAes 10 t e owntown e - points - exactly what Syra- the Yellow Jackets, who lost
on rena.
their fifth straight game, and
"Thi .
d I ,B
cuse scored.
s ts a goo pace, oe"Th
.
'd f h 6 798
t
ey
get
everyone Chris Williams added two free
hetmsatote
, -sea.
ld · ' . l
h .
. h th p h
.ll mvo ve detenstve y - t etr clinching free throws.
h
e ant
arena, w tc
, ers Wt guards re boun d , and they do 11·
Roger Mason Jr. added 12
vacate next season ,or a new
.. B h ·
'd
points for th.e Cavaliers (13-2,
.
h ,
p·
as a team, oe etm sat .
b uildmg
on t e .ormer ttt
It
. 1
. ,1 th e way 4-2 Atlantic Coast Conferwasn
.
certam
y
Stadiurn stte.
B h .
..
d ..
,_
oe etm envmone eXttmg a ence), who won their fourth
f .1tzgeraid f.te ld H ouse a.,o
50-year-a ld arena wh ere he m a row.
b 1 d d . . .da .
can e a ou an mtum tmg playea for Syracuse in the
Clarence Mo.ore and Ed
·place. The sellout crowd made
I 1960
·
Nelson each scored 15 points
plenty of noise as Pittsburgh ea~•f . sd · h 1 1 d
for
Georgia Tech (7-12, 0-6),
11
enJoye
w en p aye
(17 -3 5-2) quickly opened a
'
.
here and 1t was old even back off to its worst start in the
·
·b er conference in 21 years.
13-7 advantage before pullmg th en,', h e sat'd. "I remem
out to leads o f as many as 15 bemg
· elb owe d by Bnan
· G en-

COLUMBUS (AP) - How a state panel ol op0rta Writers and
broadcasters rates Ohio high acl1ool gl~a baakotball teams In
the second ol six weekly regu~r-seaaon 2001-2002 polls lor
Tho Aaaoc:ialod Pross (rocordS through gameo ol Jan. 13):

...

DIVISION I

1, Beaven:reok (19)
- 13-&lt;l ·
2, COla. Btoolcllaven (1)
12· 1
3, Colo. lndependenco (1)
15-q
4. Plckering10n
12·2
5, Younga. Boardmln (2)
12-i
6, N, canton HOOV&lt;If (·1)
14-1
Tel. Cont. cath.
11·2
6, MI. Vernon
14-0
9, "'""""old Sr.
1 3-d
10, Cln. Oak Hills
12·1 ·
Others receiving 12 or mom points: 11 , Wad- 20.

233
Pll
t 70
152
112
10&lt;1
99
99
95
67

B4
12,

Lancaster 16.
DIVISION I
1, Dayton Chamrnado-Jullenne (17)
2, Cleve. E. Tach (2)
3, Kettering Aller .
4, Wllard (2)
,
..
5, Poniborvllle EastWood
8, Millersburg W. Holmes {1)

7,

uma Balli

16.0
1H
14.0
15.0
13-&lt;l
1:J.-1

227
162
152
145
105
93

t2-0
1U

85
54

I, GIHipolll Ollila ACid. (I)
9. Springboro
13-.1
47
1D, Greonflold McClain
14-0
42
Othera racolvlng 12 or more points; 11. Ala&lt;&gt;ri Hoban (1) 36.
12, Springfield Kon1on Rldgo 26. 13, Cq&gt;ley 25. 14, Perry 21.
15, Warran Howland 18. 11 (tie), Ravenna SOUUteaat, Day.
Dunbar 12.
·
'~~

t'

DIVISION Ill
1,Cieve.VASJ(8)
13·1 •
202
2, S. Euclid Regina (7)
1D-5
161 •
3, Sardlnlo Eootom Brown (4)
14-0
150 •
4,Waynesville(1)
tS-1
132 •
5. Richwood N. Union
14·1
V2 ;
6, NowAibany(1)
t3-1
88 '
7, ern. Madeira
t 3· t
79
8, Bucyrus Wynford
12·1
55
9, Brookvllo
t3-1
54
tO, Marion Elgin (1)
12·1
3B
Others racolvlng 12 ormo&lt;o polnla: tt, V-l!leo 32.12, Ook
Hill (1)21. 13, OOylostown Chippewa (1) 24. 14, E. canton 23.
15, Youngs. Uraul""' 19. 16, Findlay Llberty·Banlon 15. 17
(~e), N. Uma S. Range, &lt;llrar&lt;f 14. 11 (111), Blwr1)t F1. Frye, ,
Morral Rldgodare 13.

DIVISION IV
1, Worthington CMstron (t7)
2, Hamler Patrick Henry (3)
3, Jackson cantor (1,
4, Colo. Acad.
5, Holgate
8, Now llladiiOil Tri-VIIIaga (2)
7, Minster
~8, lllanolleld St Polar's
9, Berlin HHan&lt;l
IO.S.Wib-(1)
Others recefvfng 12 or more points: 11 ,
12, Cln. Seven Hills 15.

13-0
13-0
t3-1
14-0
12· 1
14.0
13-1
14-0
12·1
13-1

. The standings didn't reflect it, but the Denver Nuggets thought they broke their 14-game
road losing streak against the
best team in the world. .
·
The Portland Trail Blazers
just settled for a victory over
NBA-leading Sacramento Kings.
The Nuggets overcame a 40-point performance by Shaquille O 'Neal in his return from
a three-game suspension and beat the Los
Angeles Lakers 107-91 Tuesday night.
"We needed one. It's always great when you
beat the No. j team on the planet,'' said Zendon Hamilton, one offour double-figure scorers for Denver.
In Portland, Bonzi Wells scored a career-high
. 34 points, and Rasheed Wallace made a ,careerbest six .3-pointers and added 33 points and IS
rebounds as the Trail Blazers beat Sacramento
116-110 in overtime, snapping the Kings' 12game winning sqeak.
"They were aggressive at home, and they
played their best ball,'' Sacramento's Chris
Webber ••id. "That's what you have to do to
beat a good team like us."
. In other NBA games Tuesday night, it was
Miami 92, Chicago 79; Orlando I 00, Atlanta
86; Phoenix 92, Milwaukee 81; Philadelphia
91, Washington 84; Dallas 113, Houston 107;
New Jersey 92, San Antonio 86.

NBA

The Nuggets shot 39-for-69 - a season- .
best 56.5 percent - for just their fourth victory in 18 games.
"We were about due for a win," saidVoshon
Lenard, who scored 13 of his season-high 29
points in tbe fourth quarter. "You wouldn't
expect it to come against a great team like the
Lakers. We had nothing to lose, and that's the
way we played. Maybe this is the start for us."
. O 'Neal, who also had 11 rebounds and five
assists, scored 27 points in the first half, but had
little help. Kobe Bryant had 15 points, seven
rebounds and .six assists and was the only other
Los·Angeles player to score mo.re than eight
points.
The Trail Blazers (21-20) snapped a sevengame losing streak against the top five teams in
ihe Western Conference, moving past .SGO for
the first time since Dec. 21.
Wells scored eight of his points in overtime,
and the Blazers outscored Sacramento 16-10
· in the extra period.
Webber had 34 points, eight rebounds and
eight assists to lead Sacramento, which has the
NBA's best record by a half-game over Minnesota and I 112 over the two-time defending
champion Lakers.
.
Mike Bibby added 27. points and Peja, Stojakovic. 21 for the Kings (31 , 10), who fell to 89 on the road.

r

r {,

for tTi~nsmort·"'tt'on
·r
14

....,
..

Deaths
Oscar 0. Miles. 79
Leland Brown, 89
Chester 0. Hudson, 81

Details. A3

Substance
l•ksfrom
Akzo Nobel
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, ·
W.V~.- A shelter ·in place
lllHIND SCHEDULE- Construction on the new elementary school for the Meigs Local School
alert was i5sued for a 1-mile
Qlstrlct Is
nearly three months behind schedule. The project manager blames It on the \
radius around the · Akzo
~Nobel ch~inical :·plari1 in '' lflasbnft 'dOntractof'whieb;hM failen' behlnd In .the bricks,!!nd mortar work. (Tony Leach)
Gall!Polis-~erryat2:02p.m.. .-.. · · •· ·
. • • ~-. r- ~
-~

row

.

alert,"

·

··

J ct.y: 5·4-4
Pick 4 d.y: 1+9-0
~

W.VA.

Dti!Y J: 0..5·7

Q~lj 4: 4-7-4-D .
~

.•

'

••
'

•

0

I

.
14-18-30-32-47 (36)

.Index
J .,

'.

: I _SediDM-11 . . . .

Classifieds
.Cbmics
Dear Abby
Editorials
•Movies
Obituaries

Sports , ,

82-4
85
AS

A4
A3

A3 ·
Bl

Weather
ttl
: C&gt; ~1 Ohio Volley Publishlna Co.

·

. :

.

n~,

·, , iF1
·.,,,,
"

Ptojed -managet~~ispleased
UJith pr~mesS,l
quality
o' '

Blake

PlckJ:4-1-9
Pick 4: 1-9-4-2
Sllpld..Qio; 12-15-2-25-42-47
llol'lus •11: 29
Kicker: 4-7-D-8·7·6

\

•

•. .

OHIO

•

"'·

behI {td. scheduIe

Lotteries

.•'

Gl'llllt. A:J

•·ocal women
injured in wrecks

HIP: 401. Low: 311
· Details. A2
,.

The release occurred during the sche~uled clean out
of a·tank. The situation was
immediately under controL

••

.PluH -

Bv TONY M. I.EAcH

gency
MasonServices
CountyDirector
Emer-

•

routes in an attempt to assist
those needing work transportation, but the logistical
nightmare of coordinating
work schedules, child care
arrangements . and
other
details, especially in light of
the counry's wide-spread
geography, would probably
make such a sharing arrangement impractical.
MOur intent," said DJFS
Director Michael Swisher, "is
to apply for a grant through

TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

:~;redlate

)

making the transition from
welfare. to ,work, and while a
!)umber of short-term
solu.
· tions have proven successful, a
long-term solution remains to
be found.
Up to 60 percent of Meigs
County's workforce travels
outside of the c.ounty to work.
More than 1,000 travel to jobs
in Athens County, 6 70 to Gal-

a ride

gency/Developmental
Reserve program, made funds
available to income-eligilble
clients for the purchase of a
reliable automobile. Through
that program, I 9 cars were
' purchased at a total cost of
$89,222. It was administered
· through the Gallia-Meigs
Communiry Action Agency.
Agencies - including the
Meigs County Council on
Aging, MR/DD and CAAhave also begt~n to consider
the possibility of sharing van

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOLS

Chuck Blake said the warnlng
was lifted at 2:14 p.m.

.

BRIAII
· J, REm

MIDDLEPORT An
Ohio Department of Transportation grant might help
Meigs County address transportation issues faced by th'e
local unemployed.
Studies conducted for the

"The plam sounded the
alarm and we called local
television and ~adio for an

.

Q

BREEDOMYpAILYSENnNEL.COM

mixed with water and dispered a cloud. .

92

91
58
21
Norwa• St. Paul22.

At Pleas~nt Valley Hospital,
we treat you like family...
because that's what you are.

14

lia County, 500 to Mason
County, W.Va., and 270 to
Wood County, W.Va., according to DJFS statistics. Others
travel to Jackson, Vinton and
Washington counties.
For those making the transition to work, the long-distance job market poses a challenge which, in many cases;
prevents willing workers from
entering the job market.
Until last July, the DJFS,
through
its
Prevention,
Retention
and
Cantin-

t14
102

Nuggets.end road losing streak
BY THE.ASSOCIATED PRESS

U
•.Department ofjob and FatniD'J)TVS
r P fSues ;. 15' Services indicate that a lack
transportation
ODarJ"'·ndt'nr.~o ofremams_reliable
an obstacle for those

·

224
188
162
135

. ''

worken just n

B A S K E T B A. l L

POWER PLAY-

•

MelpCounty's

·

that right now the' entire construction project
is about three months behind schedule.
Engram and Superintendent William Buckley did indicate that since the new ·superintendent came onto . the job, the number of
BY CIIARUNE HOEFuc:H
workers has increased to over 30 instead of the
HOEFliCHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
12 to 14 earlier, and the quality of the work is
POMEROY - Problems with the masonry ·up to sundard.
It was reported that legal counsel has been
contractor on the elementary school construetiQ}I were aired at length during Wednesday called in to help sort out the problems since
night's meeting ,of the Meigs Local Board of the Board of Education is bound by contract.
Education.
Payment~ to the contractor have been susJeff Engram; the Quande), Group project pended. Engram explained that the "bonding
manager on site, reported on the lack of company has the responsibility to finish the
progress and the unsatisfactory quality of the project - that's why we have the bonding
work by C&amp;R Masonry.
,
.
company." .
.
He said that a meeting h~!l, been held with
Engram said the board could "realistically
the contractor and their slJperintendents to look to March 2003 as the completion date if
discuss the problems, and th'!ft the contractor everything goes along all right from now on:· ·
has been notified by letter that they have 72
As for the high school renovation, the prohours to comply. and satisfy quality and safety ject manager said the work should be completissues on the construction p~ect.
.
ed by Sept. 1 with the exception of some "fine
If they arf unable to do tha~, Engram said the tuning,'' which will take about two months.
bonding company will take over and employ a
The steel beams for the roof are going up on
management firm to handle ihe problems and the Meigs Middle School with that project
get the project back on sche&amp;Mle.
running ahead of schedule, Buckley noted.
It was reported during tJi.~eeting that a
Other action taken by the board included:
wall had fallen and that a C ' mbus firm was
• adopting a district intervention policy setb~ing called in to x~ray oth , .· . aiready in ting forth what action is being taken to assure
place -to check their integri ·
success of fourth-grade students on the profiEngram also repor-ted that ·. &amp;R Masonry ciency test, and giving a plan for intervention;
· tend t on the J'ob . • approving the purchase
liability
has ·pu t a new superm
,
h of districtfro
h
which he hopes will addresi ~e problem of. msurance coverage •or t e next years m t e
'nfi ·
k d1 k f
,..'f · n
Great Amencan Ltfe Insurance Co. through
1 enor wor an
ac o pro"!llf 110 ·
dB
fA h ·
f$19 615
H
1· d h b
~
- f th 1 k 0 f Reed an
auer o t ens at a cost o
,
e exp amhe t at ecaus~, h e act
· amounting to $2 million for each occurrence
progress m t e masonry wor", t er con rae.
tors have been unable to move forward and
,.•••• see Melp, A:J

POMEROY -A Pomeroy woman has beeri hospitalized
following an auto accident on Tuesday evening.
According to police reports, Mindy K. Brinker, 27, was
heading e~st on East Main Street in her 1987 Chevrolet
around 5:3'8 p.m. when she was struck from behind by a
1992 Mercury driven by William Heeter, Jr., 64, of Racine.
The force of the impact caused Brinker's vehicle to spin
around and come to a complete stop in the middle of the
road. Heeter's automobile continued forward until finally
stopping on the sidewalk in front of Don Tate Motors, Inc.
Both Brinker and Heeter's vehicles sustained extensive
damage in the accident.
In a statement given to police, Heeter said in an attempt
to avoid a collision, he tried to hit his brake pe&lt;4J, but
instead, hit his gas pedal, thus causing him to accelerate for' ward and strike Brinker's vehicle.
Foil owing the accident, Brinker, who is five months pregnant, informed officers that her neck was hurting. She was
immediately transported to Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis where she is currently being held for observation.
Heeter was cited for assured clear distance ahead and not
wearing a safety belt.
A Reedsville woman received minor injuries following a
one car accident on Wednesday.
According to Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Proffitt, Mary
B. Duvall, 70, was traveling north on U.S 33 around 10:32
· a.m. Wednesday when she lost control of her 1992 Buick,
which went airborne and flipped into a ravine.
Duvall informed officers she had been hurrying to get to
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va., to see her
husband who was transported there earlier in the day. She
sustained minor injures and was treated at the scene.
Duvall's vehicle was totaled in the accident, which is still
under investigation, said Proffitt.

New map likely

to face challenge
•

COLUMBUS (AP} -At least one Democrat in Congress immediately threatened a lawsuit after the state Senate
passed a bill remapping Ohio's congressional districts .
The bill, which the Senate passed 22-11 Wednesday, now
goes to Gov. Bob Taft, who is expected to sign it. The House
passed the bill on Tuesday.
.
Sen . C.J. Prentiss, a Democrat from Clevei&lt;ln!l, joined
majority Republicans in approving the bill, which ensures
that the neW map goes into effect when Taft signs it.
Democrats agreed to provide at least one vote in return for
·
some say in drawing the map. .
The new map reduces Ohio's congressional delegation
from 19 to 18, reflecting population shifts recorded in the
2000 census. Greater growth in other states cost Ohio one
·
congressional seat.
Without enough Democratic support, the map would not
go into effect in time to hold a congressional primary in
May. That could have forced the.state to hold two primaries
this year, at a cost of about $7 million.
Republicans hold a 21-12 in the Senate and a 59-40 edge
in the House. To get the two-thirds majorities to move the
bill as an emergency, though, they needed 22 votes in the
Senate and 66 in the House.

PIHH He Dldrkt.. Al

•

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•

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'

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'

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,,

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22707">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>January 23, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1460">
      <name>burson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
