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•
Sundi~Feb.10,20P2

Pomeroy • Middleport • &lt;;.IUpolls, Ofllo 0 Point PIIPM'Irt, WV

Happiness and financial
worries linked to stroke risk
SAN ANTONIO (AP) Men who are _ull and
financially secure with
happy
families
might
already seem to have
enough advantage.s, but
researchers have discovered
11.n!:.J mQre: They are less
likely to suffer strokes.
The obvious question Why? - is pretty much a
mystery, though doctors
have some theories.
Experts already know of
several health habits and
conditions that undoubtedly i.ncr~ase the risk of
stroke, which is the thirdleading cause of death in
the United States. Among
the most important are
high blood pressure, smoking, diabetes, obesity and a
heart flutter called atrial

Kneen
flonaP&amp;geD1
rotation charts. One such
chart is found in Ohio State
...lf.xtension's Bulletin 789
"Weed Control Guide for
Ohio Field Crops," available
for sale at the Extension
Office.

•••
For seeding rates of
legumes and grasses for pastUre and hay fields take out
the Ohio Agronomy Guide,
Bulletin 472. This bulletin has
not been updated for several
years; however, the itiformation is still as pertinent today
as in the past. Seeding rates
for an acre of hay and rotational grazed pastures are as
follows:
: Alfalfa - . seed at' 10
pounds per acre mixed with

fibrillation.
But clearly there is more
to it than this.
"The traditional risk factors certainly don't explain
all strokes. There must be
more, whether they are

is your soil test?

How
IYBuz MIUI

GALLIPOLIS - If your last soil test
was taken in 1999 or earlier, it is now
time to take another test. Soil tests should
be taken at least every three years. By
doing this, you will be able to compare if
your fertilizer and lime application program is achieving the goals you desire.
genetic.
economic
9r
Also by keeping your soil test current,
lifestyle," said Dr. Larry you will know if you are over or under
Goldstein of Duke Univer- applying any nutrients.
·
sity, lead author of the
Soil sampling tools can include a soil .
American Stroke Associa- · probe, an auger or a shovel. Soil probes
tion 's prevention guide- are loaned out fiom the Gallia SCWD at
lines.
no cost. Soil sampling guide sheets can
So researchers are search- be picked up from OSU Extension and
ing for less obvious hints Gallia SWCD.
that can help identify who
Taking good representative soil samis at risk of a stroke so ples is the first critical step. Twelve to 15
something can be done to soil samples, or one sample per acre,
prevent it. Several reports whichever is greater, should be taken per
on this work were present- field. Field size should be 20 acres or less
ed Friday at the stroke asso- in size for each soil test. A plastic bucket
ciation's annual meeting in or bag should be used to collect "the samples.
San Antonio.

four pounds of timothy or
two to four pounds of
orchard grass.
Red clover sown at
eight pounds per acre with
· two to four pounds of
orchard grass, or eight to 10
pounds of tall fescue. · Use
lower rates of grass seed if
higher legume stands are
wanted.
Many homeowners have
called concerning the spring
flowers (daffodils) that have
already sprouted out of the
ground. They ask, how is the
cold weathe: going to affect
them? If the flower buds have
not appeared, your plants will
flower normally once warmer
weather retums. A light layer
of leaves will help protect the
tender flower buds &lt;;&gt;f those
plants that are further along.
Trap leaves in chicken wire
cages to keep them from
blowing away.

· aowman

$250,000 more over their lifetime than individuals with a
'
high school diploma.
This
long
way
toward
will
go
a
from PageDI
stimulating Ohio's economy.
tiona! individuals with an
The second reason is that
associate degree. This is a stag- today's industry requires
increased levels of skill and
·gering numbe.r.
Why is it important to knowledge that are primarily
Ohio's economy to have an available only with a college
degree. New business and
educated work force?
The most obvious reason is industry are not attracted to
that higher education equals our state if they cannot
higher paying jobs, which in emplo)' the necessary educat·
turn equals a growing econo- ed workers.
my. This is true because the
In fact, :recording to the a
more money you earn, the recent report, it is estimated
more you spend in taxes and that 65 percent of all jobs now
purchasing goods and ser- require an associate degree or
vices, which in turn also stim- advanced. training and anothulates the economy.
er 20 percent require a 4-year
The average communiry college degree.
and technical college graduate
If we do the ma.th, this
_JCan expect to earn at least means that only IS percent of

•••
Fruit tree growers are worried about the development
of flower buds due to the
warmer-than-normal month
ofJanuary. The effect of cold,
below 10 ·degree Fahrenheit
days won't be known until
late March, when we can see
the effects of cold weather on
the fruit ovaries within the
flower buds. If they are black,
the fruit will not form. If they
are still green and receive pollination, fruiting may occur.
Crocus flowers and snowdrops were seen at the end of
January in Meigs County so
we know Spring is just
around the corner. Let's hope
the groundhog is wrong this
·
year!

(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~
Extension agent for agriculture
. and 1111tural resources, Ohio State
University.) ·
the exis~ng jobs are available
to individuals without at least
an associlte degree or some
form of advanced training.
This is a significant fact to
think about if you have not
considered obtaining a college degree.
Quite simply, to improve
the economy of our state, we
must do more to educate our
citizens, both young and old. I
encourage you to · conuct
your local technical or community college to see how
they can help put you ori the
road to increased success.
Remember ... College is in
your future.

Keep each field's samples separate and supplies or feeding :areas. These will also
labeled to avoid co-mingling of the sam- give inaccurate reading on the analysu .
pies with other field samples. The col- sheet.
Soil samples can be taken to OSU
lected samples should be allowed Cb air
.dry and~hen crumbled. Thoroughly mix Extension and they send the sample to a ·
the field sampljj and prepare about orie soil lab for analysis. There is a fee for this
pint to be shipped to the soil-testing lab. servic'e. Some local farm supply businessDo it\Ot"'Cakf!· a sample in an old dead es provide this servrce for their cusfurrow, back fu.riow or turn rows. Avoid . comers. The cost of a soil sample is small the top qf 11\0~45 ·in ·a field. Low spots . compared to the cost of putting on more ,
that stay wetter than nor't,lal for the field nutrients than the soil"requires growing a.
and old fencerows shouTd be avoided. particular crop or not enough nutrients
These above :ireas, if sampled, could give to reach the crops' intended yield goal.
artificially high 'or low reading for some
parts of yo;.r soil test result. .
Spring is rapidly approaching and soil
In crop fields, sample the soil to the samples should be taken and sent to the
depth you till, normally seven to eight soil labs as soon as possible. Spring is norinches deep. In no- till fields, samples mally the heavy workload period for soil
should be taken to the above depth arid a labs and the turnaround tim~ will be a
separate sample taken at 2 inches.
little longer in gerting your soil test :·
This 2-inch sample will determine pH results returned. .
at the surface. Pasture and hay fields
A future article will cover interpreting:
. should be sampled to a depth of 4 inch-. the soil lab test results.
es with additional sampling restrictions ·
(Buz Mills is the technician for Gallia Soil
being, do no sample near trees, water and Water ConstrVation Distria.)

•

a1
What's inside
Kobe, West dominate
NBA All-Star Game

'i

.

-~ ~

for their ~ew employer, said UBS. Warburg :
spokesman David Walker. About 800 ·people !
staffed Enron's trading operation.
'
"The critical thing is that we have all the key '
people and the senior management team th~t
built this business into a market leadeiShip position," Walker said.
John Olson, a securities analyst with Sanders
Morris Harris in Houston, said UBS Warburg
will need to retain some of the former energy :
giant's swagger to bloom.
.
· "They have to be a market maker to really :
make a dilference:· Olson said. "They'D crawl ' .
before they walk, but that should probably be ·
the outline of the recovery."
·
Art Gelber, a principal with energy trading
firm Gelber &amp; Associates and who used to trade ·
with Enron, said the new venture's ·biggest
problem will be shedding its Enron past while
demonstrating its own trading strength. .

r

..

(Luanne R. &amp;wman is vice
president for financial and administrative affair5 at the Univmity
of Rio Grandt I Rio Grandt
Community College.)

old·wins gospel mus•c award
• . ,II_

Story, 81

Sidney R. Wise, 42
Edith Herrmann, 82
Jerry Brogan, 56

Chester woman
named female..
entertainer of the year
,

IY CHARuNE HOEFliCH. .
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details; Al

CHESTER - Gospel singer Sheila
Arnold of Chester has been named
the International Female Entertainer
of the Year by the Country rGospel
Music Association (CGMA.)
She received the title and th~ Golden Heart Award at the recent rtational
convention of the CGMA held in
'
Branson, Mo.

UBS Warburg officially takes
over Enron's
trading
operation
·
...
HOUSTON (AP) - Enroli Corp.'s onceenvied trading operation officially got a new
owner and a new name·Friday.
UBSWarburg's deal to resurrect Enron's trading business under the Swiss investment bank~
control was completed Friday. The new business, UBS Warburg Energy, will begin trading
this month.
"Combining the leading energy trading platform and more than 600 tal'ted staff with
UBS Warburg~ risk managelfient skills and
AA + credit rating will make UBS Warburg
Energy a formidable conipetito~:· said John R
Costas, chief exeCutive officer of UBS Warburg.
Lawrence "Greg" Whalley, wjlo resigned as
Enron's president and chief operating officer
last week, will be managing director and head ·
of the new operation.
About 6SO traders ·and support staff are
preparing to get back into the trading groove

Ho1Mtow11 Newspaper

~,

Weather

Arnold qualified
to participate for the
title by winning the
Silver Heart Award
for
top
female
entertainer at the
regional convention
of the Association
held in Kokomo,
Ind.,last summer. 1 .
Amold
She included in
her performance repretoire numerous
songs she has written and recorded in
her more than 40 years of singing
gospel music.
At both conventions, Arnold performed several nights before selections
for the top honors were announced.
While Arnold admits it's a real honor

to win, she confesses that it bothers her
a little to be called an "entertainer."
"1 consider myself not an 'entertainer'
but a 'minister of music,"' she said. "I
never sing to entertain, I sing to ~ter.''
Arnold twice before has been named
the Female Vocalist of the Year by the
CGMA and was also an earlier recipient of the Silver Heart Award. In fact
she has been an award winner . every
year .since joining the CGMA.
She and her husband, Nathan, who
works at Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
travel to CGMA events and other
places where Sheila performs in their
comfortable recreational van.
Singing since she was a kid, Sheila
says her "heart and voice has been

ESSAY .CONTEST

County Spelling
Bee set for Tuesday

lnv~ation

.

of shootings

Southern Elementary to host
top spellers in area

continues

FROM STAFF REPORTS

RUTLAND
The
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department continues to
investigate a shooting that
left two people dead Friday
night.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell said
the department received a
call around 9:20 p:m. on
Friday concerning a shooting on Smith Run Road . .
Upon ' arriving on the '
~cene, deputies observed
two people laying on th~
ground.
·
Debra Joan Snyder, 4 7,
Rutland, was pronounced
dead at the scene with an
apparent gunshot wound to
the head. Sidney Roland
Wise, 42, Rutland, who was
transported via medical
helicopter to Holzer Med7
ical Center with a gunshot
wound to the chest, later
died as a result of his
injuries, Trussell said.
Both bodies were transported to the Franklin
County Coroner for autopsies.
The incident is still under
· investigation, said Trussell.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

CONTEJT WINNERS~ Tyler . of Southern High School, shown accepting a certificate from
DAR chairman, Emma Ashley, was the county wiMer In the annual DAR good contest. Other
schO!)l winners were Mindy o:oeu of Meigs High School, left, and Sara Mansfield, Eastern High
SchOol. Also pictured are the,'two history essay contest, Zachary Carson, right, fifth grade; and
Nick Kuhn, eighth grade, both of Eastern. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Eastern's,
. Zach ·Carson wins
.
DAR stat~,, essay contest
.

Smith
fromPIIpDl
ment at maturity that is equal
to the principal invested plus
the iQterest earned compounded semiannually at a
state yield.
Municipal securities provide state and local governments with a mechanism for
issuing bonds to raise money
for public purposes, such as
water and sewer systems,
-,chools, highways and public
buildings.
·
Tax advantage - The
interest earned is free fiom
federal income tax throughout the life of the investment
and is payable at maturity
(i.e., tax deferred). In many
cases, states and cities :dso
aJiow an exemption on the
interest earned on their own
issues. (Certain out-of-state
bonds · may be caxable ·at the
!tate level. Check with your
13X advisor for details.)
· This compares favorably to
comparable taxable investments, which are subject to a
tax liability annually and at
maturity. Because of the
power of tax-free compq;mding interest, zero coupon
municipals often provide
higher tax-free returns than
after-tax yields on comparable .
uxable securities. .
Low minimum inveat-

can accumulate .capita[ tax
free until retirement. Then;
the securities can be converted to interest paying bonds so ·
the income stream can be
used for living expenses.
Stripped municipals are
another variation. In this case,
the cash flow of the coupon is
stripped fiom the principal
and repackaged into investments with maturities ranging
from six months to 30 years.
. Issued at a deep discount from
face yalue, stripped munici·pals are ;also available in a
wide range of credit quality.
For
safety
conscious
investors, many zero coupon
municipal bonds carry insurance and are rated. triple-A.
With these bonds, the interest
and principal payments are
guaranteed by third · party
municipal bond insurers.
Protection from reinvestment risk Because
there is no interest income to
be reinvested, investors are
assured of a specific rate of
· return until maturity. The lack
of current interest income
eliminates the risk of reinvesting coupon payments at lower
yields if rates decline.
For . more information .
about the role zero coupon
municipals can play in your
investment strategy, contact a
qualified financial adviser.

(Mark Smith is an investment
executive with Smith Partner/ at
Advest Inc. in its Gallipolis
office.)
'
·

Lotteries

BY CHARLENE Holh..c:H

ED!

PRICES JUST

%

Pick :S: 1·5·6
Pick 4: 1·3-7-6
~: 2-25-31-33-46-47
Bonus 11.111: 38
Kicker: 1-Q-6·7·8·0
W.VA.
D•'lly l: 6-8·6
DallY 4: 2-4-5-1
!IWJelllll: 17·21·30-3!&gt;-36 (12)

·1ndex
: 2Section C::alendar
Classifieds
Comics
·oear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

TUPPERS PLAINS - For the first time
participatsince Meigs County students
ing in the Daughters of the American Revolution history essay contests, the work of a local
student has been selected as b~st in the state.
This year's essay topic ·was •: editor of the
Philadelphia Gazette, intervi - at least tWo
signers of the Declaration
Independence
and write an article for the J y 5, 1776 edition." ·
The contest winner, Zacha Carson, a fifth
grader at Eastern Elementary, c4ose as his subjects for the interview, Thorn"' Jefferson and
John A4uns.
' ·
Using a question and answer format with
some introductory remarks, he developed the
story of the writing of the Declaption oflndependence, and concluded witth
~tlhe comri:lent
that "they are two patriots fi · ting for what
they believe in ... freedom for " .
Carson and his parents, St ' and Renee
Carson, will be guests at the
state convention where he will receive , er recognition and a check for $100. He .
one of five
students honored ~t, a lunch eo , ~~eting held
Saturday mornmg m the Easter tbgh School
library.
Taking first place in the history essay contest

Rio business students
score high in testing

pegan

OHIO

12 Pal•

AS
82-4
85
AS

A4
A3
A3
81
A2

c .2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE - The annual Meigs County spelling bee wiD
be held at 7 p.m.Tuesday at Southern Elementary School in
Racine.
Contestants should arrive at th e school at 6:30 p.m. for
rule explanations so that the bee can begin promptly at 7,
said Jacinda Yonker, the talented and gifted coordinator.
Winners from their respective schools who will be participating in the spelling bee tomorrow night as announced
by the coordinator are: ·
Rutland Elementary - Lily Jacks, daughter of Allen and
Henrietta Jacks.
·
Bradbury Elementary - Chastity Well, daughter of Mike
and Karen Well.
Harrisonville Elementary - Steven H oalcraft, son ofVictor and Angela Hoalcraft.
Salisbury Elementary - Jamie Dailey, daughter ofWally
and Lori Hatfield.
Pomeroy Elementary- Lucreshia Howard.
Eastern Elementary- Nick Kuhn , so n ofTim and Cris
Kuhn; Ray Sargent, son of Dennis and Kathy Sargent; Taylor Ru·ssell, daughter of Johney and Bre nda Russell, and
Sarah Wachter, daughter of Randy and Nancy Wachter.
Southern Elementary - Lindsey Ruzzard, daughter of
Rick and Marcia Buzzard; Eric Zeiner, son ofTodd Zeiner;
Zach Imboden, son ofJoy Imboden; Ashlee Teaford, daughter of Leslee Diehl.
Meigs Middle School- M egan Day. daughter ofJennifer
Large; Maureen Burns, daughter of Maureen Burns; and
Abbie Stewart, daughter of john Stewart and Jane English.

I .

HOEFLICHOMYIWLYSENTINEL.COM

ment -"TYPically available in
· $5,000 denominations, zero
coupon municipal bonds are
sold at a substantial discount
fiom the face amount. The
discount enables investors to
purchase more zeros for their
money than other types of
bonds. With zeros, investors
put aside a specific amount
now and know exactly how
much money they will
receive on a specified date in
the future.
For example, a bond with a
face amount of $20,000,
maturing in 20 years, may be
purchased for about $6,951
today. Assuming a 5 percent
interest rate that compounds
automatically until the bond
matures, the investor will
receive $20,000 at the end of
20 years.
Variety of choices Zero coupon municipals are
available with maturities
ranging from one to 40 years,
with the majority having
maturities between eight and
20 years. The categories of
bonds range from · 'general
obligation, which typically
carry sup~rior credit ratings
with corresponding lower
risk and yields, to revenue
bonds, which generally provide greater returns than genera! obligations bonds.
Convertible zero coupon
municipal bonds are. ideally
suited for investors planning
to retire in eight to 10 years.
With these bonds, individuals

dedicated ro the Lord." She sang with
the Gospel Tones Quartet, Sunrise and
The Soul Seekers before going solo.
In 1980, she voluntee red to be praise
and worship leader at the Faith Harvest C hurch where today she and her
two sisters, Doris Muthand and Sharon
Tucker, handle musi c for the new
church located in Coolville.
The trio of sisters provide close .harmony on hymns, some songs written
by Sheila and contemporary Christian
music. Muthand and Tucker are both
pianists, Arnold plays bass, and her so n,
Nathan IV, plays drums.
While Sheila has five tapes on the
market, her dream now is to make a
recording of the church quartet in performance.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

SPECIAL PRESENTATION - An American flag
was presented by local DAR chapter presi·
(lent Abbie · Stratton to Zachary Carson in
recognition of his outstanding essay about the
~lgners of the Declaration of Independence.
(Charlene Hoeflich)
in the county for eighth grade participants was
Nick Kuhn, also an Eastern student. Both
received pins, certificates and monetary gifts .
from Mary Rose, DAR contest chairman.
Also honored at the meeting were the winners of the Good Citizenship Awards, seniors
from the three Meigs County School Districts.
Those awards were presented by Emina Ashley, chairman, to Tyler Little of Southern Hi gh

PluH ... DAR.AJ

RIO GRANDE - Educational testing services,
based in Princeton, N.j. .
reported class and individual
scores for 64,578 business
student seniors attending
388 colleges and universities
throughout the country.
Universi ty
of
Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College business students had a 62 percentile ratmg.
"This shows that the best
students at Rio Grande did
as well or better than 62 percent of the students who
took the field tesi nationally
and can compete with the
best students anywhere in
the nation," said Dr. Paul
Sebastian, ch.air of Rio

Grande's Emerson E. Evans
School of Business.
Individually, three Rio
students scored within the
top 9 percent of the 64,578
students w ho took this
senior achievement test in
business.

Heath Maxon of Great
Britain, a soccer player, had a
92 percentile score. Both
Stephen Byus of Wellston
and Randy Koehler of
Grove City were close
behmd at the 91 percenttle
. level.
.
.
RIO Grande semor buSIness students have participated in this national test for
more than 12 years. The
results of this senior class
were the best since 1992.

•

Heart

JPOII.;,.o by 1M HMC Commtmily Hoahh ancl Weft,.,.. Depi:Jrlmenl ancl HMC Cart!iopolmonary Units

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HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
10 AM • 12 Noon and 1 • 4 PM - FREE SCREENINGS
. Non·Fasting Choleslerol and Glucose,
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Health information will be on hand as well
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'I ~

M ED I'CA.L CENTER

Discover the Holzer D({fe1·ence

www.holzer.org

•

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Sunday, Flb.10

0 ~--~-·~·
Colder weather coming back
'-

•

PageA2
Mond.y, Fa~N•'Y 11,2002

Why didn't taft address college tuition?

Ohio weather

Sumy PIC-

•

Showon T....,..

Roin

FJumn

Snow

loo

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Colder temperatures 'will prevail through Wednesday with
highs climbing back into the 40s and 50s by the weekend.
There's a chance of snow flurries until midweek with any precipitation turning to rain for Friday and Saturday.
Cloudy skies .will dominate the scene except for Thursday
when mostly clear skies are expected.
Weather Forecast
Tonight. .. Mosdy clear. Lows in the mid 20s. Light south
wind.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 40s. Southwest
wind 10 to 20 mph:
Tuesday night ... Mostly cloudy with a chance of flurries.
lows in the mid 20s. ·
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of flurries. Highs
in the mid 30s.
Wednesday night .. .Partly cloudy. Lows 20 to 25. ·
Thursday... Mostly clear. Highs.in the mid 40s.
Friday. .. Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers during the
day. .. Then a chance of snow showers during the night. Lows
in the upper 20s and highs 40 to 45. ·
Saturday.. .Partly cloudy. lows in the lower 30s and highs in
the upper 40s.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 30s and highs in the lower 50s.

large farms could set
tax breaks by keeptng
land in agriculture .
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio's largest farms could
get thousands of dollars in
tax breaks by promising
not to s~ll their land to
strip mall or housing developers . .
Under a biU pending in
the House Agriculture and
Natural Resources Committee, farms of 1,000 acres
or more would be eligible
for an additional tax
exemption worth up to 75
percent of the property
value.
In return, the farm owners would sign an agreement to keep the land in
agriculture for I 0 years.
Participating farmers also
would be eligible · for a
credit on their corporatefranchise- or income-tax
returns. The extra tax break
would be worth 50 percent
of the real-estate taxes paid
for property enrolled in the
program.·
If the bill becomes law.
the annual property-tax bill
for the owner of a 1,000acre farm taxed at the state
average would drop from
$8,048 to $2,012, according to the Legislative Budget Office. The tax credit
would be worth an additional $1,006.

Education funds
a tough sell
COLUMBUS (AP) -Even
with some of the state's top
lobbyists behind it, increased
state aid for higher education is
proving· to be a tough sell.
Ohio's 13 state-related universities last year had their legislative appropriation cut by
$121 million, or 6 percent, to
help offset a $1.5 billion state
budget deficit.
Curt Steine r, a one-time

Jidc to fi.n mer Republican
Gov. George Voinovich, said
even · that w~s considered a
moral victory by the InterUniversity Council, which
represents the institutions.

and to 11 percent in the cur- former public housing .direc- townhouse in Alexandria, Va.
rent two-year budget.
tor testified that she did noth- She said she believed those
ing Wrong in using public payments were to be part of a
money to pay the mortgage relocation package and that
on her Virginia townhouse.
they had the approval · of the
Claire Freeman, 58, headed the CMHA board. ·
Cuy.Jhoga Metropolitan HotNllg
CLEVELAND(AP)-Fu~­ Authority for eight ps before •
tive investment broker Frank being fired in 1998.
Gruttadauria's month on the
Federal prosecutors said that:
run involved shaving his mus- CMHA board members never
tache, traveling to Colorado and authorized the payments and that
Buffilo, N.Y, and ended with a Freeman is guilty of mail fiaud,
quiet surreqder to the FBI.
theft of public money and makGruttadauria, suspected of ing
statements ~ a
stealing up to $300 million lo.an. Her trial will continue
from his clients, walked into Monday .in U.S. District Court.
the FBI's doWI}town headAt issue is wllether she was
quarters around 5 p.m. Satur- authorized to· have the agency
day, two blocks from his old pay the mortgage she had on a
of!ice at Lehman Brothen.
He told a security guard his
name, and the guard called the
FBI, who armted him. A federal warrant iasued Jan. 25 charges
him with making flllae statementa to a financial institution.
Agents said Gruttadauria
llVlld on the run in Colorado
Spring~, Bulfal11 and Cleveland.
•

MASON (AP) - Procter &amp;
Gam)Jie Co. hopes a female libido
patch under development will
bring\ billions in sales for its pre-

scription drug subsidiar}\ which
made ib first profit last year. .
P&amp;G Pharmaceuticals is
testing a testosterone patch
that would restore sex drive in
post-t~_enopausal women.
The ·Gineinnati company
will invest several hundred
million dollars developing ihe
patch, called Intrinsa, and
counts on a potential 15 million consumers. It won't hit
the market for several years.
"I view female sexual dysjjjnction as a place where we
"have an opportunity to help a
lot of women and create a lot
of shareholder value," Mark
Collar, the drug subsidiary's
president, told The Cincinnati
Enquirer for a Sunday story.
Large-scale testing of the
patch in volunteers starts this
Steiner and his wife,]an Allen, month. one of the last stages .
a former aide to former Demo- before U.S. Food and Drug
cratic Gov. Richard Celeste, are Administration approval.
lobbyists for the council.
Company researchers are
Steiner also said he's grateful emphasizing that they don't
that lawmakers refrained from want the patch seen as a
raiding a pot of tobacco settle- "lifestyle" drug like Viagra. They
ment money reserved for bio- want the product reserved for
medical research.
women with a medically docu"It has been and continues to . mented loss of libido.
be a real stniggle," Steiner said.
While generally associated
He said the $5 billion, two- with the male sex drive, testosyear appropriation for colleges terone also is needed fo~ the
and universities is one of the female response. Srudies have
le~slature's first targets for cut- shown that levels of the horting because it is so large ·.and mone fall after menopause.
contains few mandatory items.
Colleges and universities
received about 13 percent of
the state's general revenue
fund during the 1980s. That
CLEVELAND .(AP) - A
dropped to 12 percent in 199:)

l
I

Director denies
charges

our own

BBQ Ribs
Every friday 6
Saturday Right~

Bluegrass

:s·eries reumes

.'i

...

Youth lnjui'ecl

Sidney Roland "Sid" Wise

CARPENTER- A Meigs
County youth has been hos•
pitalized
after an accidental
RUTLAND- Sidney Roland "Sid!'Wise, 42, Rutland, died .
shooting over the weekend.
Friday, Feb. 8, 2002, at his residence.
According to reports, the
. Born December 24, 1959, in Pometoy, he was the son of
Roland lee and Joann Gilmore Wise of Rutland and was a youth, along with another
self-employed carpenter with Durham Construction and an juvenile, were outside a cabin
near Carpenter on Saturday
•
. GALLIPOLIS - Bluegrass entertainer of the year nomi- avid hunter.
•
He was preceded in death by his grandparents,Jake and Mar- night when one of the juve'music returns to the ·Ariel nee.
. garet Wise, Walter and Edna Gilmore; and a special friend, Joan niles placed a .22 caliber rifle
.. :Theatre again this weekend as
He pia~ acoustic guitar and , Snyder.
·
on a shelf outside the cabin.
· house band Retrograss wel- is a singer' and songwriter. In
The gun accidently disAlong with his parents, he is survived by two sisters, Etta
comes The Clay Hess Band of addition to his own composi' Portsmouth and special guest tions, Damron performs songs Wise of Pomeroy, ~nd Rebecca and Brian Durham of Racine; charged, striking one of the
· Howie "Chase" Damron for that ha.ve long endured and a son, Joey Spencer of Hartford, WVa .; two nieces, Heather juveniles in the leg. The youth
Michelle Wise and JeffWhite of Chester, Jessica Lynn Durham was transported to OUBle' another installment of the are popular favorites.
ness Memorial Hospital in
of Racine; and a nephew, Brian Durham, Jr., of Racine.
' Ariel Bluegrass Series be~n­
Paulette Harrison's . Ariel
Athens.
Services
will
take
place
at
ll
a.m.
on
Wednesday,
Feb.
13,
. ning at 7 p.m. Saturday.
•
Dancers, based in Pomeroy, 2002, at the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland. Officiating
No .charges have been flied
.. Retrograss, a local band that
have long been an important : will be Theron Durham.
at this time.
· has been together for a little
part of the Ariel Bluegrass
Burial
will
follow
at
Meigs
Memory
Gardens
in
Pomeroy.
less than two years, 'includes
Series since it opened in ,
Friends may visit on Thesday from 2-4 p,m. and 7-9 p.m. at
Calvin Leport, Todd Sams and
November of 2001.
the
funeral home.
Kevin and Kent Jolley.
.
Advance tickets are available
:. ' Fresh from a 3-year run
·: ·with Ricky ·skaggs in for $10 each at Tawney's, The
POMEROY - An mc•·Nashville, Tenn., Hess seems Purple Turtle, Motgomery's
dent with a home-made
to be beginning afresh with Barber Shop, Oak Hill Banks
bomb
is being investigated by
his own band, which features and Dixon Tax in Gallipolis,
the Meigs Counry She(iff's
wife Shannon on lead vocals and at Main Street Photogra. Department.
""-,
' and bass, himself on lead phy in Point Pleasant, W.Va .
According to written
Tickets are S12 at the door.
vocals and madolin, a banjo
reports, deputies are still
For information, call the'
: player and guitarist. ·
investigating a home-made
'
MIDDLEPORT - Dora Edith Herrmann, 82, died at her bomb that was placed in the
·' Damron, who will headline Ariel at 740-446-2787.
· · his own show Feb. 23, is a
Doors open at 6 p.m. Satur- residence on Sunday, Feb. 10, 2002, following an extended ill- mailbox of Phillip Moxley of
), ness.
·'two-time male vocalist and day.
Pomeroy. Moxley reported
She was born Jan . 2, 1920 in Manunoth, W.Va ., daughter of that there' was remains of a
the late John Franklin and Clementine Black Mitchell. She was plastic bottle, aluminum foil
with the topics of depend- a homemaker, and was a member of the Ash Street Church in
and a greenish substance
ability, service, leadership Middleport and Old Bethel Freewill Baptist Church.
inside his mailbox.
and patriotism .
Surviving are three sons and a daughter-in~law, Roland HerThe material combusted
Also presented at the . rmann of Coolville, Dale Herrmann of Pomeroy, and Wade and
from
PageAl
and
a small fire broke out in
•
meeting was a flag which Judy Herrmann of Fr~zeysburg; four daughters and two sons•
mailbox.
! •School, the counry winner, had flown over the Capitol in-law: Nina and Ralph Dutcher of Middleport, Margie Stone theThe
incident is still under
; :Mindy O'Dell of Meigs High ·Building on Oct. 10 to Car- ·of Gallipolis, Sharon and C':harles Kitchen of Middleport and
investigation.
i :School and Sara Mansfield of leton School/Meigs lndus- Anita Vanchoff of Coral Springs, Fla.; 27 grandchildren; 47
trie~ at Syracuse. Anna Cle\ Eastern High School.
great grandchildren; 21 great-great grandchildren; and many
: Ashley explained that the land secured the flag which nieces and nephews.
• selection of winners from she presented to Kay Davis,
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus•• each school is based on their a staff member at the band of62 years, Rev. Noel A. Hermann: a son, Carroll E. Her:·essay performance dealing schooL
rmann; a grandson, Steven C. Herrmann; a . great grandson, ·· . POMEROY Several
Caleb N . Stone; four brothers: John Henry, Frank, James, and incidents are being investigatAllen Mitchell; four sisters: Lula Belle Thornton, Kathleen ed by the Meigs County
Ransom;, Evelene Boggess and Mae Coleman.
Sheriff's Department.
St&gt;rvices will be held at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 13 , 2002,
Diana Hook ofWhite Oak
at Fisher Fun eral Home in Middleport with Rev. Ralph · Road in Pomeroy reported
Butcher and Rev. Glenn Rowe officiating. Burial will follow at his home was broken into and
Beech Grove Cemetery.
a Mossburg .410 shotgun
Friends may call at the funeral ho.me on Tuesday from 2-4 with a pistol grip was taken.
and 6-8 p.m.
In other matte[S: •
• deputies responded to a
burglar alarm at Hill's Citgo
in Racine and the Kolosing
EVERETT,Wash.- Jerry Lee Brogan, 56, of Everett, Wash., Construction site on Flatformerly of Rutland, died on Thursday, Feb. 7, 2002, at Ever- woods Road. Both sites were
found to be secure;
green Hospital in Kirkland, Wash.
l
He was born on Jan. 18, 1946, in Charleston, W.Va., son of
•
Paula Creeger of
'
John W. Brogan, Sr. and Wilda I. Brogan. He was the owner and Reedsville reported a blue or
••
operator of Universal Machine Works in Woodinville, Wash. He grey Buick LeSabre drove
••
was a member of Harrisonville Masonic Lodge #411, Shriners through her yard and struck a
•
Miles Temple of Edmonds, Wash., and Scottish Rite and Valley water meter;
of Columbus in Columbus. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army.
• Lisa Coppick of Racine
Surviving, besides his parents, are his wife, Judith Ann Valdez reported the theft of a flute;
•
Brogan; a daughter, LeAnn Scott Warfield of Thcson, Ariz.; a
• Donald Zuspan of Rut: FIRST IN STATE- Zachary Carson, fifth grader at Eastern Ele;·
son, Keith Abelino Brogan of Seattle, Wash.; a daughter-in-law, land reported a three-person
: mentary Sch~ol, took the top award In the state for .hls essQy
Lisa Rybacki; six sisters and brothers-in-law: Joan and Frank swing had ·been stolen from
~ on the Declaration of Independence. He read It lit SaturdayUs
l meeting of Return Jonathan Chapter, Daughter.s of the Ameri· Goff of St. Albans, WVa.,Janet and John Haley of New Lex- his residence.
ington,Judy, his twin, and Jim Collier of Columbus, Joyce and
: can Revolution. (Charlene Hoeflich)
·
Pat Rowe of Grove City, Diana Godfrey of Columbus, and
Linda and Paul Dodgin of Proctorville; five brothers and sisters-in-law: Don and Eileen King of Oceanside, Calif.,John W.
RACINE - Appalachian
(Patty) Brogan, Rutland, Lawrence and Diane Brogan of Get- Center for Economic Nettysburg, Pa., Barry and Frances Brogan of Conyers, Ga., Steve .works is offering ''Jump Start
Brogan of Williamsburg, and Mark and Barbara Brogan of the Future," a U.S. DepartJ
Louden, N.H.; five grandchildren and several nieces and ment of Education-funded
•
nephews.
progra111 for community
l'
He was preceded in death by his brofhers, Joseph Dale Bro- members who are seeking to
i
gan,Ja,mes Duane Brogan arid an infant borther.
further their job advanceA memorial service will be held on Saturday, Feb. 16, 2002, ment, resume and interview
at 2 p.m. at the Rutland Freewill Baptist Church with Rev. skills and computer knowl'IJ
John Haley and Rev. Frank Goff officiating. Interment will fol- edge. It provides workforce
low at Miles Cemetery in Rutland.
readiness programming for
A memorial servi ce will also be held in Everett, Wash., on those seeking a better career
Wednesday.
and public access to technology for all conununity members.
.
.
The four-week free classes
• FLAG TO CARLETON - DAR member Anna Cleland presented
will teach interpersonal com: a flag which had flown over the Capitol Building to Kay Davis .
munication and transferable
: for the Carleton SchoolfMeigs Industries. (Charlene Hoeflich) ·
. ·..
·,
. . ·
· . ,
' ) :.
technology skills, which are
necessary to obtain and secure
Subscribe today.
employment. I nterpcrsonal

:-saturday night

Bomb investi·
gated

Deaths
Edith He:n mann

.

DAR

•

Retail Value over $700 !!

.

Drawing to be held Thursday, February 14, 2002
Enter at these participating merchants
No purchase necessary
1) Office Serv;ce &amp; Supply - "In the Garden" Jourilal &amp; Glass rem vase.
2) Middleport Department Store - Gift Certificate
3) Acquisitions Jewelry - Sterling Silver heart pendent with chain
4) Judy Kay's Restaurant- Gift Certificate
5) Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry - Wooden jewelry box.
6) Meigs Massage Therapy - Gift Certificate for 1 hour massage.
7) Clark's Jewelry Store- Valentine Bear w/14k lieart earrings
9) McClure's Famlly Restaurant - Girt Certificate
10) Dairy Queen Brazier- Girt Certificate
11) Hartwell House- Boyd's Bear
12) Weaving Stitch~ • Set of 3 scented wax heart ornaments
13) Hearts Aglow Candles &amp; (;lfts • Valentine cake candle w/ plate
14) K&amp;C Jewelry- necklace and Bracelet set.
15) Ohio River Bear Company - Ohio River Valentine
16) Middleport Flower Shop- Record -A- Bear
17) Fruth Pharmacy or Middleport - Yankee Candle
18) Shoe Place\ Locker 219 - Nike backpack
19) Millie'~ Restaurant- Gift Certificate ·
20) Hart's Kountry Kitchen - Gift Certificate
21) Fox's Pizza -Gift Certificate
22) Dan's - Carbartt Sweatshirt
23) Candle C~tions- Bisque heart candle holder w/vanJ.lla orchid candle
24) Nails by PBID &amp; Maridy - Gift Certificate
25) Court Street Grill- Gift Certificate
26) Anderson's Furniture- Pottery Coffee cup
27) Country Candle Shop - 2 refillable candle crocks &amp; 2 mason jar candles
28) Sue's Selectables - Picture
29) by Hearth &amp; Candlelight - "Keepers of the Light" candle'
30) Swisher &amp; Lohse,Piiarmacy - Russell Stover boxed candy heart.
31) Fabric Shop -Apple tea towel .
32) A Cut Above - Redkin Hairspray
33) Francis Florist- Boyd's Bear
34) Pomeroy Flower Shop - Rain Forest CaQdle

OHer classes

..

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•

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Obituaries

LOCAL BRIEFS

Jeny Brogan

$6.95

Sweetheart
Basket
·Oiveawa,

PAG pushes
newdn1g

gram.

~AQel

-

.Incidents
probed

Brokertums
himself in

ruse

Only about 3 percent of
the state's farnu would be
automatically eligible.
Ninety percent of Ohio's
farms are smaller than 500
acres, according to the U.S.
Deparrment ofAgriculture.
For owners of small farms
to qualify for the tax
·breaks, they would have to
band together to enroll at
least 1,000 acres in the proSome environmentalists
and family-farm advocates
fear the proposed state and
local tax breaks could end
up subsidizing. large mega
farms like Buckeye Egg
Farm - which has been
cited repeatedly for polluting streams near its facilities.
·
"If it's going to preserve
farrnland and slow development, we're all for it;'
Jack Shaner, spokesman for
the Ohio Environmental
Council, said of the legislation. "But we don't like the
idea of using taxpayer dollars to encourage more factory farms."
Farmers already get a
break on their property
taxes under a state law that
assesses agricultural land at
a fraction of other property.

COLUMBUS (AP)
dialogue and productive dis- light, such as his $1.6 billion it's somewhat hypocritical
When Gov. Bob taft talked cussions with the universities technology plan to create when you're threatening
putting tuition caps on six
about higher education dur- and we want to try to work it more jobs over 1(T"ye'an.
ing his State of the ·State out with
them," Taft
"He seems to be trying to months after you signed a bill
address last week, arguably the explained the day after his get this resolved in a r:elative- that removed them and then
hottest issue for public uni- speech.
·
'Jy calm and quiet way;• Asher completely slashed higher ed
versities at the moment ·The
Inter-University said. "From his perspective funding."
rising tuition
went Council, made up of the 13 and the universities perspecTaft signed a two-year budunmentioned.
presidents of Ohio's public - tive, it was better that. he not get in June that provided
Just days earlier, Taft had colleges and universities, have talk about it because it would almost no new funding for
butted heads with presidents agreed to work with Taft to have made the issue hotter Ohio's public universities and
of the 13 state-supported uni- keep tuition re:uonable. · . .
than it already was." ·•
colleges, and eliminate~ a 6
versities after some imposed
Eltzabeth St1les, a polit1cal
Whether Taft. will be seen as percent cap on tuition
rare midyear hikes and others scientist at John Carroll Ull_i- a weak leader for avoiding the increases. In December, he
proposed
double-digit verstty, a pnvate college rn hot topic in a major address signed a budget deficit bill
increases. He warned he Cl~veland, said governors depends on how he resolves that included a 6 percent cut.
would be forced to ask law- ryp•cally use State of the State the ruition controversy, Asher
"In an environment where '
makers to re-impose a cap'W speeches to show they are · .d
state support n&lt;;~t only is not
tuition increases if the schools strong leaders, especially duz:- ~~n. Gre 0 DiDonato, a growing but also is being cut,
mg an electton year. Taft IS D
g ryfi
N·
the tuition is the only other
could not show restraint.
.
·.
.
emocrat
rom
ew
~
Yet in his · speech, Taft did seekmg re-electwn
thiS Ph '! d I h .
b 1.
.., tit way that campuses have 10r
I N ovember agamst
. ' T 1m
.
· Wit. h the cost o f our
·not address controII.mg coh 1 a de pI 1a,k fle teves
d h'· .a.ab . dea1 mg
0
leg~ costs.
Hagan, a Democrat.
s ow~kia ac : ea ers 'P Y educational services;' said Jim ·
Instead, he thanked law"You could see it as duck- n~~H , ng tu~~~n. ·
b
McCollum, executive direct mg
a out tor of the Inter-University .
makers for hdping him ing the issue that's hot at the . · e s
increase financial aid for col- time but at the same time it mcreased enrollment and Council.
McCollum said he wasn't
lege students 28 percent since mak~s more sense in the S~te more financial .aid, but he's
he took office and for enact- of the State to focus on the not. talking about controlling surprised that Taft didn't
ing a College Tuition Tax bigger agenda and things that the costs, a~d that's exacdy announce a ruition plan.
"There's a series of ongoing
Credit to imp.rove access to unite the state" Stiles said. what I thmk everybody s
higher education. He also "Governors do~'t necessarily w?rried about," DiDonato discussions going . on right
proposed a $2 million invest- want to focus on the things sa1d.
.
now and the governor has
ment in the Ohio College that are dividing politics at
Rep.' Dean DeP1ero, the indicated a willingness to
Access Network to encourage that moment."
House minority leader, .said work with us on this,"
high school students to attend
Herb Asher, a political sci- he was shocked when Taft McCollum said.
college. And, he boasted that entist at Ohio State Universi- · failed to discuss stymieing .---------------------.
: enrollment increased in each ty, said Taft was smart not to skyrocketing tuition.
The River VIew Restaurant
of the past three years.
raise the dicey issue because it
"He missed the mark," said
M8lon, WV
"I didn't talk about it . would have detracted from Dipero, a Democrat from
because we're in constructive others he wanted to high'- Parma. "The worst part is that

:: -M_o_n_d_a~y~,F-•~b~·~1~1,~2~00~2--~------------~----~----~--~~~~.m~yd~a~l~ly~se~n~t~ln~e~l.~c~om~-------------------------Th~e~D=a=l~ly~Se:=n:tl:n:•~f·~P~a~g~e~A~3

T

communication skill training
will include j~b searching
techniques, resume building,
interviewing techniq ues and
budgeting. The slolls w1ll be
taught in conjuction with
word processing, database,
SPJI!adsheets, desktop processing, PowerPoint and web
browsers 3nd e- mail.
The courses will be offered
Mondays, Tuesdays and
Thursdays beginning Feb. 18
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., and will
rotate between th e Eastern
High School Community
Technology Center in February and Southern High
School Community Technology Center in March.
lnfo~mation
is ava ilable
from Brian Howard. at 5923854, or by e-mail at brianh@acenetworks.org. · ·

Funds available
CHESHIRE Emer- .
gency Home Energy Assistance Program funds are still
available through the CalhaMeigs Community Action
Agency, but the program will
end on March 31.
HEAP provides help for
. those on a fixed income or
among the workmg poor.
Emergency HEAP provides
assistance to , households
whos&lt;&gt; utilities have been disconnected, who face disconnection, or have 10 days or
less supply of bulk fuel. The
program provides a one-time
payment of up to $175 per
heating season to restore or

retain home heating se rvices .
For propane and fuel oil consumers, the paym ent was
increased to $250 because of
the increase in fu el_prices last
year. Homeown ers or ren te rs

may qualify if th eir rota!
household income is at or
below 150 percent of federal
poverty guidelines.
Eligibiliry informatio n and
information about applying
for HEAP and Emergency
HEAP is available by calling
· 992-2222 in Meigs Counry
and 446-1018 in Gallia
County. Appointments are
required at either the G!lllia
HEAP office in the Silver
Bridge Plaza, br in Meigs
County at 186 Mulberry
Avenue.

Meeting
changed
TUPPERS PLAINS
The regular meeting of the
Eastern local Board of Edu~
cation has been changed from
Feb. 20 to Feb. 19 at 7:30p.m.
at the administrative office.

Plan
conferences
TUPPERS · PLAINS
Parent- teach e r

conferenCes

will be held in the Eastern
Local Sc)lool District on Feb.
21 from 4 to 7 p.ni. Parents
can make appointments by
calling
their
respective
schools.

Immunization
Clinic set for
1bursday
POMEROY .

Meigs
Cou11~ealth Department
has cancc'k,d th e Childhood
Immunization Clinic scheduled for Wednesday and
resch eduled it fo r Thursday,
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
The child's shot reco rds must
be provided and each child
accompanied by a parent or
legal ~uardian .

Name omitted
POMEROY - Kclh Bailey of Pomeroy was included
on the dean 's list at O hi o
University for the fall quarter.
Her nan1e was omitted fron1
an earlier list oflocal OU students named to the list.

Name omitted
TUPPERS PLAINS Abbie Chevalier was omitted
from the "Al B" hon or .roll at
Eastern High SchooL She is in
ninth grad e.

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The Daily _Sentinel

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Mondey. Febnu~ry 11, 2 -

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Den Dlcklnon

.

Publlnr

I

Charlene Hoeflich
Oenetwl M1n1ger

. _·: .AR1J.IUR
ANDERSEN

•
DEAR ABBY: · I am 11 years
old. My family keeps telling me I
am gaunt and too thin. I think I am
fat ' - way fat. FI'Qm my point of
, v~w. I have an enormous stomach
·big legs, and I weigh and eat to~
much. My parents' view is,
"Where'd she go?" ·
Doctors tdl me to eat more, but
I won't eat junk food, and even
"normal food" to me is fattening.
People tell me I am uriqerweight,
but I know I'm gaining. I want to
look like all my thin friends. People
say I'm even thinner, but to me I
am bulging out. I'm afraid boys
won't like me. My father said I
should tell you that I'm 4 feet 11
inches tall and I weigh 80 pounds.
What's the truth? - ROXIE IN
BILOXI
DEAR ROXIE: At 4 feet 11
inches and 80 pounds you are
NOT overweight. You have

CORPoRATE

n.,

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NATIONAL VIEW

'l"oo·many
:·Congress practices own form
of overkill in Enron_probes
.
otr tiJe Enroll hearings:

'

Boston Herald,
At least II commit:tees or subcommittees of the House and Senate are planning or
:have started hearings on the collapse ofEnrop Corp. That's way
1

•

~ too

many.

: There's a lot of duplication, and some irrelevancies, among
:the announced agendas of the various panels. lt all runs the risk
' of dissipating whatever impulse this amazing story could give
~ to the passage of needed corrective legislation ....
• The general issues presented by the Enron collapse are few,
' important and can benefit fi:om prompt attention. A few indepth investigations are more likely to muster the resources of
the administration, professional bodies, think-tanks and compa. nies with .something to contribute than the spectacle of so
·;nany political warhorses galloping off badly prepared in many
different directions ....
Questions over who ordered what documents destroyed
when and why are best pursued by prosecutors, not members
'of Congress. Interesting questions that had no direct role in the
collapse, such as how to regulate .the trading of energy in
futures markets and Enron 's apparent abuse of tax shelters,
should be left for the ordinary course of congressional business.
There is precedent for special handling. The late Speaker
. Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill gave President Carter's energy bill in
1977 to a one-time committee, a procedure which succeeded
jn focusing public attention on the broader issues at stake.
The House and Senate .could fofiow that example and each
set up a single special committee to examine all the relevant
.
·1
Enron issues.

•

•

'T ODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·

! Today is Monday, Feb. 11, the 42nd day of 2002. There are
~23 days left in the year.
j Today's Highlight in History:

On Feb. II, 1861, President-elect Lincoln departed Spring_
field, Ill., for Washington.
l On this date:
t In 1812, Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry signed a redistricting law favoring his party - giving rise to the .term "gertymandering."
: In 1847,American inventor Thomas Alva Edison was born in
j\1ilan, Ohio.
1 In 1929, the Lateran Treaty was signed, with Italy· recognizjng the independence and sovereignty ofVatican City. .
' In 1937, a sit-down strike against General Motors ended,
;,.,ith the company agreeing to recognize the United Automobile Workers Union.
·
: In 1945, President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minis.}er Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin signed the
:Valta Agreement during World War II.
: In 1972, McGraw" Hill Publishing Co. and Life ·magazine
~anceled plans to publish what had turned out to~ke
autobiography of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes.
; In 1979, followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini seized
power in Iran.
' In 1989, the Rev. Barbara C. Harris became the first woman
consecrated as a bishop in the Episcopal Church, in a ceremony held in Boston.
In 1990, South African black activist Nelson Mandela was
freed after 27 years in captivity.
.
In 1993, President Clinton announced his choice of Miami
prosecutor Janet Reno to be the nation's first female attorney
general.
· Ten years ago: Secretary of State James A. Baker lll, on a tour
of six former Soviet republics, visited Armenia, where he heard
an appeal from the republic's president for US. help in resolving a bloody feud with neighboring Azerbaijan.
Five years ago: In a display ofbipartisan unity, President Clinton and congressional leaders agreed to focus the new Congress on balancing the budget and other issues ranging from
cutting taXes to solving the capital city's myriad problems.
Space&gt; shuttle Discovery was launched on a miSiion to service
1 the Hubble Space Telescope.
i One year ago: Two space commanders opened the door to
: Destiny, the American-made science laboratory attached the
: day before tq the international spac~ station. The East NBA
: All-Stars defeated the West squad, 111-to-11 0. Three · Rivers
:Stadium in Pittsburgh was demolished to clear the way for new
•separate baseball and football stadiums nearby.
: Today's Birthdays: Author Sidney Sheldon is 85. Former
ITreasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen is St. Actor Lesli~ Nielsen is
I76. Actor Conrad Janis is 74. Actress Tina Louise is 68, Actor
: llurt ~eynolds is 66. Songwriter Gerry Goffin is 63. Singer
: Hobby' "Boris" Pickett is 62. Bandleader Sergio Mendes is 61.
:Rhythm-and-blues singer Otis Clay is 60. UJah Gov. Mike
Leavitt is 5 L Actor Philip Anglim is 49. Actress Catherine
Hickland is 46. Actress Carey Lowell is 41 . Singer Sheryl Crow
is 40. Actress Jennifer Anisron is 33. Singer D'Angelo is 28.
1

'

HENTOFF'S ·VIEW

Nomination pits afree thinker vs. Ted Kennedy.
On feb. 14, one of the president's most
important and controversial nominees
appears before the Senate Committee on
Health, Education, Labor and Pett&lt;iom.
He is Gerald Reynolds, and the position is
assistant secretary of Education for Civil
Rights. There were heavy storm warnings
·as soon as the nomination was announced
last June.
The committee chairman, Ted
Kennedy, has "serious concerns" about the
nontinee's qualifications, and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights - a
coalition of supporters of affirmative
action as it is presently practiced- vehemently opposes Reynolds. Julian Bond,
chairman of the NAACP, charges
Reynolds with being a "staunch opponent
offairness programs."
Mr. Reynolds, who is black, grew up in
the South Bronx and Queens, the son of a
retired New York City police officer. He
attended public schools, graduated fi:om
New York's City University at York ColI~ge. and received his law degree at Boston
.University. His seven-year-old daughter
attends public school, where his wife is the
president of the parent's association.
The Office of Civil Rights in the
Department of Education deals with affirmative action policies and programs as
well as complaints of racial and gender
discrimination. Reynolds is dearly agaimt

Nat
Hentoff
COLUMNIST
discrimination practices and, despite accusations to the contrary, intends to vigorously enforce Title IX of the Education
Amendment of 1972 prohibiting sex discrimination in edu~ation programs,
including sports that are funded by the
federal goverrunent. "That," he says, "is a
straight-out anti-discrimination statute."
So what is so troubling to his accusers?
In a long, bristling letter to Sen. Kennedy
on Reynolds, the .~eadership Conference
on Civil Rights states unequivocally that
Reynolds is vehem enrly opposed ."to

all

fori li S of affirmative action."

Dear

Abby

VVhat income effects·your
Social Security benljits?

fealty to Jackson reveals the extreines to
which opponents of Reynolds will go te
defend racial preferences. Justice Lewis
Powell's swing vote in Regents ·of the
University of California v. Blake (1978) is
continually used by advocates of racial
preferences because Powell said that race
can be a factor - but not the primary
factor- in college admissions. But in that
very decision, Powell also said that
nonetheless, there has to be strict scrutiny
when using race collectively:
"The individual," Justice Powell wrote,
"is entitled to judicial protection against
classifications based on his racial or ethnic
background, because such distinctions
impinge upon personal rights," rather than
general extra pwtection for membership
in particular groups. That means all individuals of all races.
In view of the likely party-line vote in
the comntittee Sen. Kennedy chairs, Gerald Reynolds's fate - . as well as a fair definition of affirmative action - depends
on. Sen. Jim Jeffords ofVermont, who lias
stated that "a president is entitled to a
nominee of his or her own choosing
unless that person is ,tmethical or unquali- _
fied." Getald Reynolds is neither, even if
he does not genuflect to Jesse Jackson.

BY ELIZABETH CRUMP ·
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER

"Will my Social Security
retirement benefits be reduced
because I receive income from
my investments?"
That's a frequent question
from workers who are planning for a financially comfortable retirement. It's a pleasure
to tell them that most types of
income won't affect their benefits.
·
This includes pay~ents
fi:om private insurance, pensions from private industry
employers, annuity payments
and income from investments
such as .interest and capital
gains.
It's also a pleasure to know
these workers . are planning
their financial future and using
Social Security as the foundation.
But, here's how some other
Income could affect your benifit amounta:
• If you receive a pemion
based on work for which you
didn't pay Social Security
taxes, your benefit amount

In its letter to Sen . Kennedy, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights ends
it&lt; indictment of tl1e npminee by citing his
"criticism of Jesse Jacl,son in pa~ticular:'
(Nat Hent~ff is a natim~ally rmowned
I ask the senators who will be judging authority 011 the First Amemlment and the Bill
Gerald Reynolds if this requirement of of Rights.)

•'

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Court~ definition of (unreasonable' remains ·debatable
·Of all the ambiguous provisions in
9th. It was immaterial that the mmlour Constit&gt;~tion, none is more
van's driver had slowed abruptly. This is
ambiguous than a single word in the
. "an entirelj reasonable response that is
Fourth Amendment. That word is
in no way indicative of criminal activ"unreasonable." Last month the
ity!' The driver had avoided eye conSupreme Court tried once more to tell
tact. "While possibly indicating a lack
us what "unreasonable" means. Said the
of neighborliness, this ordinarily does
court: It depends.
not provide a basis for suspecting crimThe case involved the arrest and conina] activity."
The children's odd behavior was of
viction of Ralph Arvizu on a charge of
possessing marijuana with intent to
COLUMNIST
no moment. "It does not seem at all
distribute. The story began on the
odd to us. If every odd act engaged in
afternoon of Jan. 19, 1998, on a dirt
by one's children while sitting iri the
road in southeastern Arizona a few van coming toward him at 50 to 55 bac'k seat of the family vehicle could
miles north of the Mex1can border. . mph. The vehicle abruptly slowed to 25 contribute to a finding of reasonable
Border Patrol Agent Chnton Stoddard to 30 mph as ihe driver saw the parked suspicion, the vast majority of Ameri~lade the arrest on .wh~.t he. regarded as Border Patrol car. At trial .the agent can parents might be stopped fegularly
reasonable susp1c1on. HIS susp1c1.on would testify that the driver, Arvizu, within a block of their homes." The
turned out to be well found~d. Arv1zu "appeared rigid iand nervo 11s." He fact that the van was registered' to an
was hauhng 125 pounds of mariJuana. gripped the steering wheel tightly and address in i notorious block "i~ 'also
When the case went to tnal, defen~e avoided eye contact with Stoddard. An no significance and may not be given
counsel moved to suppress the ev1- d 1
.
. · ·•·,_
d
us D ' · J d F k R a u t passenger a1so' appeare d nervous. any weight."
,
,.
encet. I t. .'t . ISbtrlctt u gel fratnh 9th. Three children were in ·the back seats.
In his opinion ror the Sup~enl.e
Z apa a e 1 m, u a pane o
e
1'
f h 1 'ld
. .
. h Court, Chief Justice Rehnquist
Circuit reversed and threw it out. The wo 0 t e c 11 ren were Slttmg wu emphatically overruled Judge R,einpanel, speaking through Judge Stephen their knees u~usu~lly high~ as If thm hardt on every point. In the detertiil,c
Reinhardt, held that Agent Stoddard's feet were restmg on an object on the nation of "reasonable suspicioq," sai,d
stop was illegal. Three weeks ago the floor.
the court, what counts is the, '''totality
Sup.reme Court, speaking through
In the government's petition to the of the circumstances."Viewed separateChiefJustice William Rehnquist; unan - Supreme Court we are told: "Stoddard Jy, no single factor could justify a
imously reversed Judge Reinhardt. This followed the min_ivan. All three chi]- search. Viewed collectively, "we believe
happens with gratifying frequency to dren in the vehicle then began simulta- they sufficed to form a pariicularized
Judge Reinhardt's opinions.
neously waving !n an abnormal man- and .objective basis for Stoddard's ·s top-.
On the afternoon of the arrest four · ner, on and off, for about five minutes ping the vehicle."
,, ·,
years ago, Agent Stoddard was working whil~ facing forward, without ever
I like Rehnquist's opinion, though I
doubt that it greatly advances Fourth
a checkpoint near the town of Dou- · turmng around 1 I look at Stoddard."
glas, Ariz. About 2:15 a Border Patrol ..The agent ran radio license check Amendment · jurisprudence. · The
censor detected a vehicle traveling and learned that the minivan was reg- underlying constitutional provision iA
north on a dirt road known to be used istered to an address in Douglas just framed as a litotes-: The government ii
by smugglers. A few minutes later a four blocks north of the bordet. - •. not required to prove that a search
second censor indicated the vehicle street often used PY smuggler~ as a stag- reasonable - only that a search is not
was turning away from a recreational ing area for tramporting aliens and nar- unreasonable. In this case, reason agre~area in the Coronado National Forest. cotics. This was enough. Stoddard ably prevailea.
.
· .
These were the first of 10 factors that stopped the. minivan and asked for per•
(Letters to Mr. Kilpatrick should be
piqued the agent's curiosity.
mission to search. The ddver consent- sent in care of this newspaper, or by eStodqard left the checkpoint and ed, and the search .confirmed the mail to kilpatjj(~t)aol.co~.)
went w have a look. He parked at an · agent's suspicion\·
,
interception P.Oint on Rucker C~nyon
Did the ·agent have "reasonable sus.piJameJ ]. Kilpatrick is 4 columl!ist for
Road. Before long he .spotted .a rn.ini- cion"? No, said judge Reinhardt in the · Uttivmal Press Syndic~lt.

being fat and being fit. Fitness is
healthy, glowing and attractiYe.
Thinness is not fitness, nor is it
necessarily healthy or attractive. If
you diet to the point of being skinny, you- can make yourself sick.
There is a name for it: anorexia.
Your parents ate looking out for
your best interests, and so are your
ADVICE
doctors. Please listen to them. If
you don't, the results could be lifebecome so preoccupied with being threatening. A person does not have
thin that you no longer have a real- · to be "the thinnest" in order to be
istic view of yourself.
.
accepted or considered attractive.
You say you want to be thin like And THAT'S the truth.
your friends and are afraid . boys
DEAR ABBY: The letters about
won't like you if you're not. Well, I the doctors who had themselves
have news for you - every man I paged repeatedly to advertise
have ever talked to about "beauty" themselves reminded me of my stu- ·
has told me he doesn't like girls dent days when I worked part time
who are too thin. Quote: "I .like a in a health clinic. Every morni 0 g, I
little 'meat' distributed over those would hear a "Dr. Duncan" being
bones." Get the message?
asked to report to the lobby. I had
There is a difference between never heard of a doctor by that

may be reduced under what is
known as the windfall elintination provision. This provision primarily affects people
who earned a pension from
working . for a government
agency or a foreign government and also worked at other
jobs where tpey paid Social
Security taxes long enough to
qualify for retirement. or disability benefits.
•If you're receiving a Social
Security benefit on your
spouse's earnings record, your
benefits may be affected if you
also receive a benefit from
another public pension system
based on work not covered ·by
Social Security. This provision
is known as the government
pension office.
• If you begin re~eiving
Social Security benefita before
reachi11g full retirement ,age
and continue to work, your
benefit· amount will be
reduced when your earnings
exceed certain limits (S 11 ,280
in 2002). for example, if
you're betWeen 62 and full

retirement age, your benefits
will be reduced SI for every
$2 you earn over a limit 'that
increases each year.
However, in the year you
reach fuU retirement age, you'r
earnings would be reduced S I
for every $3 of earnings until
the month you reach full ·
retirement age. At that time,
your benefits will not be
reduced because of your earnings no matter how much you
earn.
To Jearn more about how
your benefits may be ' affected
by . other ·income, vmt
www.ssa.gov to read or download these publications: Government Pension Offset, The
Windfall Elintination Provision . and How Work Affects
Your Benefits. You may also
call our toll-free number, 1800-772-1213, to request a
copy of these publications.
We ho.pe our information
will help you plan your retirement in a way that a11ures you
maximum pleasure from your
years of earnings and benefiu.

name .working there.
I finally found out that !'Dr.
Duncan" was clinic "code" to let
· everyone who had time to take a
break know that the snack truck
had arrived at the back entrance.
That explained why coffee and
doughnuts would suddenly appear
all over the building after the message. Duncan ... doughnuts ... get
it? - A VERMONT M.D.
DEAR M.D.: Got it! That letter
struck a chord with another healer.
Read one:
DEAR ABBY: I am a retired ·
physician from a town in northeastern Ohio. When I was a lad, I
delivered groceries to an elderly
physician's family. He lived and
practiced until he was in advanced
age, probably 80 or so. (But that's
another story.)
Legend had it when he first came

to town as a young man, to try to
drum up business, he'd occasionally Jc
get his horse and buggy out of the •
barn and, after . a hurried run
through the main · streets, return
home. Pe0ple tho.ugh~ that he was
very ·busy for a y'oung doctor, and it
made a great impression.- OHIO
DOCTOR
DEAR OHIO DOCTOR:
Whether or ..nodt worked, it was
certainly worth a shot. Through the
years - from using ponies to pagers
- doctors have found ways to make
names for themselves .

(CONFIDENTIAL TO MY
ASIAN READERS: Tomorrow
begins the year of the horse, so I would
like to take this opportunity to wish
you a Happy and Prosperous New
Year: "Gung Hay Fat Choy," "Kung
Hsi Fa Tsai,, uKung Ho Hsin Hsi,"
"Hsin Nien Kuai Lt.'' uSan Ni Fri

Lo" and "Chuc Mung Nam Moi . ")

LOCAL EVENTS
Community Calendar Is
published u a free service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce
meetings and 1peclal
evente. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
sales or funil·ralsers of
any type. Items are prlnl·
ad only as 1pace permits
and cannot tie guaran·
teed to be printed a specific number of days.
MONDAY
RACINE
Special
meeting of Racine Village
Council, Monday, 7 p,m. for
the purpose of filling a seat
on Council.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains· Regional

Sewer District, regular er, Ann Womer Benjamin,
meeting, 7 p.m. Monday.
state representative. Tick.·
ets available from party
POMEROY Rock- committee members.
springs Junior Gardeners,
meeting Monday, 6:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
at the Rocksprings United
Trinity
POMEROY Methodist Church.
Congregational
church,
TUESDAY
Lenten breakfast, 7:45a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS _ . Wednesday. Use entrance
Eastern High School, finan· on Second Street. Resercial aid information night on vations to ·be made with
Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. in the Peggy Harris, 992·7569, or
cafeteria. Julia Murphy of Diane Hawley, 992-2722.
Hocking College will speak
MIDDLEPORT- Middleon FASSA, scholarships
port
Literary Club, 2 p.m.
and student loans.
Wednesday,
home of
POMEROY - Republl· Martha Hoover. Pauline
can Day Lincoln Day Din- Horton to review, "No eye
ner, Tuesday, 6 p.m. Meigs can See" by Jane Kirk·
High School. Guest speak~ patrick.

Legion Donation
F.. a.pc.

James
.
Kilpatrick .

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1111

PRESENTED CHECK- Students enrolled in the Meigs COunty SEM School will be able to enjoy
field trips and other extra-curricular activities because of money donated by the Rutland Post
467, American Legion. Here Fenton Taylor, school director, accepts a $500 check from leg1on
members, Eugene Ank, taft, and Dennis McKinney. (Sentinel staff)

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• -~ coolnll adloleslcroi 1112111p1!!1t
• R8DiMI oln skin twm amo1es

• Pm!olllile medicine

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• Minor sups. ~a lat:mliili aJt
• Wool!n\ ll!llcate ~ tlllllitWiool, bir1h coolnll a~ lllllllpl\t)
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• X·~ w;·~ SJi!OO!dly ablood m

Dr. Llmdry will be n·we~~ting his office but wiU wntinue his Rffiliatilm with Pleas~~nt VtUley Hospitlll.
. He is IUIRpprwed provider forAE'INA, as weU as most other insur~~nces.
,.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�Monday,Feb.11,20C~

www.mydellysentlnel.com

Page A~ • The Dally Sentinel

Stewart wins Shootout, Page· 86
. College Hoops, Page 86

Society Note~k
Young writen
contest kicks
off soon
ATHENS - Reading
· Rainbow is ready to kick
off its eighth annual
Young Writers and Illustrators Contest.
_ Children from .ki!Jder 7
garten to third grade are
encouraged to write and
illustrate their own stories and enter them in
Reading
Rainbow's
Young Writers and Illustrators Contest, which is
co'nducted in cooperation
with
WOUB / WOUC- TV.
Applications are available from the television
station or at local
libraries and elementary
schools in its viewing
area. They are also availonline
at
able
http ://www.woub.org/k
ids.
"Reading Rainbow's
Young Writers and Illustrators Contest allows
Reading Rainbow fans
to take their excitement
and love of books a step
even further, to authoring ·and illustrating their
own book," said Dr.
Twila C. Liggett, executive producer of the
senes.
Entries are first judged
at WOUB/WOUC-TV,
with ihe locaf winners
advancing to the national competition.
Each
child who participates in
the contest receives a
special certificate of
Achievement signed by
Reading Rainbow host
LeVar Burton.
Prizes for the national
first and second place
winners include a computer and printer, first
place; a VCR, second

place; and a Reading
Rainbow library set, fea' turing 10 · videos and
book titles for both first
and second places.
A similar Reading
Rainbow set is awarded
to each winner's local
s~hool and public library.
Noted . children's book
authors, Illustrators, pub. h ers, e d ucators, an d
l u·
representatives frorn such
organizations as the
American Library Association and the National
Council of Teachers of
English make up the
panel of national judges,
who evaluate the entries
and select the winners.
Last year, Reading
Rainbow's Young Wrjters and Illustrarors Contest attracted over 250
entries with
40,000
entries nationally. 40,000
entries nationally. and
over 250 entered locally.
For additional information
about Reading Rainbow's
Young Writers and illustrators
Contest,
contact
WOtJBIWOUC-TV or
check out the Reading
site
Rainbow , web
http:// gp~. cii!.edu/ rainbow
for details, or WOUB online
at http://wwwwouhorglkids.

ty · of Rio Grande
swimming pool.
The first series of
lessons will begin on
Wednesday, February
13 and will continue
through .
Saturday,
March 2. The lessons
ill be offered on
. ;ednesday · and Friday
·
d S t d
an
evenmgs
.
. . a ur ay_
mormngs; giVmg students three
lessons
weekly for three weeks,
a total of mne lessons
for a $30 registration
fee. All students registering for the course
J;llUSt be potty-trained.
Students 2-years old .
must be accompanied
in the water by a par·
ent.
Two time blocks are
scheduled for these
lessons. Students may

MONDAY's

··HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Basketball
''

SCHOLARSHIP - Teresa Crace of Vinton, a student at Shawnee State University, was pre·
sented a check by Rutland Post 467, American Legion. Making the presentation were members
Eugene Fink, left, and Dennis McKinney. (Sentinel staff)
·

:.Faces·

NBA
Sunday'• Geme
AII·Star game

-'

at Philadelphia
West 135, East 120,

Mailman misses
·All-Star Game
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
~ Utah Jazz forward Karl
. Malone remained in Salt Lake
City, missing the NBA AllStar Game in Philadelphia
because of his mother's illness,
team officials said.

stylish sof~ls

'

now at . _incredible

'

ChOote from all the latut style, colon, and fabrial

OuR REPORT CARD
IN ... ·

WE'RE WAITING ON YOUR INPUT.

from$799

Co(( D(tJr,•l Listed

- I.Y-1-aoy ..........

. THE LEGISLATOR .
)

at Capitol Hill as
among the best

'
savings:.-·-.......

,incredible selection
and

.·

'

.

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But hurl)' .. with prica dli•
law tb"f WD~i\ lut lonaf

ALAa..:.vA

. Gannon MVP of
Pro Bowl
HONOLULU (AP) -No
offense, Rich Gannon, but if
your teammates had voted for
Pro Bowl player of the game,
Ray Lewis might have won
iqstead.
The Baltimore linebacker's
touchdown in the fourth
quarter was the talk of the
locker room after the AFC's
38-30 win over the NFC.
Ty Law intercepted Donovan McNabb's pass late in the
game and ran 31 yards before
pitching the ball to Lewis,
who scurried 13 yards for the
final AFC touchdown.

Records fall at
·Fianden meet
~

new eourses m
America.

Golf ,1/a,&lt;Ja::illc
readers gave T1 m
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Nalional in Auburn/Opelika and Cambrian Ridge in
Greenville as among the Top 100 Courses in America
A Goi/!Jt_;,,.,,l named
the Trail as one of
the Top 60 Trips in
the world. A Come
sec' for yourself why
1·/&gt;:qllml l·~vcr llfa_qa::ill&lt;' listed the Tr-..il as
one of the Top I 0
Trips in lire World!

Michigan 65, Penn St. 58
Indiana 77, Louisville 62
Minnesota 86, Iowa 78
Illinois 69, Pure!ue 67
Wisconsin 73, Northwestern 44
Sunday'e Game
'Michigan St. 67, Ohio State 64.

Pro Basketball

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NCAA Men's
MAC
Saturday's Games
Bowling Green 83, Marshall 60
Kenl St. 96, Cent. Michigan 66
· Miami, Ohio 64, Toledo 54
N. Illinois 90, E. Michigan, 85, OT
Ohio as. Ball State 71
W. Michigan 60, Buffalo 59
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Warren 61 , Belpre 55

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Seturday'a Games

•I

GHENT, Belgium (AP) Svetlana Feofanova broke the
pole vault world record for
the third time in a week,.and
Mark Bett ran the fastest
indoor 10,000 meters in history at the Flanders Indoor
track and field meet.
·
· Feofanova cleared 15 feet, 6
1/4 inches to add half an inch
to the record she set Wednesday in Stockholm, Sweden.
The Russian's run of records
,-started la.t Sunday, when she
went over the bar at 15-5 1/2
.
'
in Stuttgart,_Germany.
Beti shattered a worli:l best
that stqod for 27 ¥ears. The
Kenyan won in, 27 minutes, ,
50.29 secon~, more than 21
seconds faster than the
28:12.04 that Ernie! · Puttemans of Belgium ran in Paris
in 1975.

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.Eastem punlinels·Ma_.auders in re~makh
BY JON Will
TUPPERS PLAINS - Before a
packed house Saturday, the Eastern
Eagles and Meigs Marauders met up
for what would be their final confrontation of the season.
In the previous contest, the Eagles
were victorious over the Marauders at
Rocksprings, but it was a hard fought
win. On Saturday, the Eagles clamped
down hard defensively, and it Was their
defense that led them to their second
victory, 68-39, over the Marauders

this season.
The match-up oof
these .two crosscounty rivals pitted ·
former mentors ·Carl ·
Wolfe and .H owie
Caldwell against each
other. .
Caldwell
coached under Wolfe
at Racine .during the
reign of the Hustling
Tornado State Semi-

and differences, with
Eastern's coach Caldwell being the more
vocal, outsp&lt;;&gt;ken one
of the two; while
Coach
Wolfe
depends mote on
chess-match strategy
than
outspoken

contest, putting the Marauders up 30. Ryan Frazier contributed to an
early Marauder gallop as well with a
jumper from the foul line, putting
Meigs up 6-2 with 6:QO remaining in
the first. Cody Dill tied the game at
six with 5:15 left. Dill hit a short
jumper off the glass, which was preceded. by a Lyons field goal. Matt
motivation.
Williamson quickly found an open
Caldwell
Wolfe
Meigs showed that lane and recaptured a two point lead
they meant business for the Marauders. A Garrett Karr to
finalist team.
early in the ball game. Buzzy Fackler
Ple•se see Ellstem.
84
Both coaches have their similarities drained a three-point goal :30 into the
.
~

Southern

Kobe's homecoming

_slips past

Ex-Philly prep
star scores 31 to'
lead Vfi&gt;st win

Beaver, 89-81
BY Scon WOIJ'E
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

BEAVER- The continuing saga ofDr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde unfolded again this
past Saturday when the good doctor South. ern Tornadoes showed up to the demise of
the Beaver Eastern Eagles.
Beaver, playing its last home game in the
current aging gymnasium, fell to the Tornadoes, 89-81, amid a festive celebration of
fanfare and reunions that retired the old
gymnasium. Southern plucked the feather
from the victory hat, however, leaving the
evening somewhat incomplete for the Pike
County fans.
-The Tornadoes, victim of their own Mr:
Hyde appearance the night before against
Wahama, took Coach Jonathan Rees'
, antecdote and played perhaps their best all-·
around game of the year Saturday. dur_.coring E.Stern 52-42 in the middle quarters,
Southern pulled .away for the win.
Southern, 10-9, guarantees itself of at
least a .500 regular season record.
When originally schedulep, the game was
to be the first in the new ,Beaver Eastern
gymnasium, a ~ew schod~nded by the
Beaver-Eastern community and the Ohio
School's Commission. Construction delays,
however, transformed the scheduled grand
opening into a farewell send-off of the old
gym. Southern did not want to be the victim.
Southern placed five men in ·double figures led by Justin Connollyis 20-point rampage, an effort that fed ·off a sparkling floor
game from guard Jordan Hill. Hill had
seven assists in the whirlwind effort, leading
the list ol19 avera!) a5sists. Hill, who had 18
points himself, provided the ammo and
Connolly played, the trigger man in bring
down the Eagles.
·
Another great effort came from senior
Dally Hill, who notched 17 points; frosh
Craig Randolph who netted 13 points,
Nate Martin 11, Curt Crouch 4, Macy
Rees 4, and Jake Nease 2.
Beaver was led by Kyle Vulgamore and
Cody Hubbard with 19 points each, while
Nathan Rider added 15, Chase Vickers
added 12, and Kevin Greene five.
Riding high on the emotion of the pre-

·PleiN- Kobe, 84

PHILADELPHIA (AP) Too bad Kobe Bryant can't
adopt Los Angeles ·as his
hometown. Given the way he
was treated by the fans in
Philadelphia, he has every reason to renounce all ties to the
city where he grew up. .
In a venomous display that
was harsh even by local standards, Bryant was booed mer. cilessly Sunday at the NBA
' All-Star game as he scored 31
points and was ·named MVP
of the game in leading the
West to a 135-120 victory
over the East,
"I'll .Use it as motivation,
definitely," Bryant said. '''I'm
the type . of person that if
Something occurs in my life
that's hurtful, I'm not going to
let it hurt me · for long. I' rt1
going to turn it around and
use.it as some kihd of motivation."'

Bryant used the words
"hurtful" and "upset" to
describe his feelings. The booing began when he was introduced, continued after he
made a series of game-turning
plays and reached a crescendo
when, he · wa• handed the
MVP trophy.
Bryant was booed relentlessly during the NBA. Finals
last year when the Lakers were
finishing off the 76ers, and he
recalled being booed during
his rookie season when he was
fresh out of high school and
returning home for !he first
time.
"I guess that's how Philly
is;'West teammate Steve Francis said.· ':That's unfortunate,
but he lit them up again."
Bryant's 31 points were the
most in an All-Star game since FIRE AWAY - Western Conference All-Star Kobe Bryant, left, of the Lakers,
shoots .over Baron Davis of the Hornets_, during the first half of the NBA AllPIHSI see Kobe. 84 .
Star game in Philadelphia Sunday. (AP)

Spartans break Buckeyes, 67-64 · Redwomen exorcise
EAST LANSING, Mich. (~j?) - · Michigan State has been tough to beat-this season with Marcus Taylor
and' A_dam Ballinger in
the starting lineup.
Without ·them, the '
Spartans have been extremely vulnerable.
Taylor had 18 points and five assists and
Ballinger added 18 points and 10 rebounds
as Michigan State beat No. 16 Oh1o State
67-64 on Sunday.
The Spar~ans (14-9, 5-5 Big Ten) have
lost five of their nine games with Taylor
and Ballinger sidelined with injuries.
"With Marcus; it's like niglu and day for
our team:· Ballinger said. "He's a great
player that makes everybody better, and he

NCAA

Daemen College

makes teams defend us differently:• ·
Ballinger missed four games earlier ihis
season with a sprained ankle, and Taylor
played for the first time since getting a mild
concussion early in the second half of the
SiJartans' Feb. 3 win at Illinois.
.
"I don't remember anything from the
Illinois game," Taylor said." And then I had
bad, bad headaches. But now I feel pretty
good. It was just nice to get back out there
and help the team:'
·
·
Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien was asked
how much difference Taylor makes for the
SparGns.
"What do you think?" O'Brien answered ·

BY MARK WilliAMS
SPECIAL TO OVP

,

RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande womeu;s
basketball team used a balanced attack in defeating Daemen College on Saturday evening, 96-77, at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande (21-9, 12-6 AMC) gained con.
trol of the game in the first half by jumping out
to a" 17-8 lead. The Redwomen held a near double digit lead
throughout the first half and used a late spurt to take a 50-36
advantage to the locker room.
.
.
·
Daemen (I 0-17, 6-12 AM C) stayed in the hunt until the final
seven minutes of the game. , They would get as close as two

NAIA

Ple•se see Redwomen. Bl

Please see Spartans, 84

G.B. com, MD will be seeing new and esllbUshed patleniS ftve days aweek. As afamily praaidoner, Dr. Com will be treating:

1.800.949.4444
www. ,-tjgfl!ffrmt

Monday, Febn•ry 11, 2002

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Swimming
.lessons
offered at Rio
Grande

Is

Page 81

'

register to swim on
Wednesday and Friday
from 5 p.m. to 5:30
p.m. and Saturday from .
11 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
or on Wednesday and
Friday from 5:30 p.m.
~o 6:30p.m. and Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to
12 noon.
Students may register
for either of these sessions by contacting
Dale Whitt, URG Adult
·
and Continuing Education at 800-282-7201,
ext. 7325 or 7 40-2457325. The second series
of lessons will be from
RIO GRANDE
March
13 · through
Learn to swim lessons
March 30, 2002.
will be offered at the
.
of . R 1.0
Because of aquatic
.
U mversuy
Grande/Rio
Grande center availability, there
Community
College will be no make-ups
again this year. The ses" . ·due to ':'eather, . holi~
sions, available . to stu- days, or Illness. If the
dents ages 2 and up, · URG campus is closed,
in eli! de a series of nine that day's seS"Sion is also
lessons in rhe Universi- canceled.

FROM THE PROS

The Daily Sentinel

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• Hlgh ~I
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;.~y.F~.11,2002

~1;,~~~
· diJlu '
tat~
'
Clark
bn·ng
·
s
snowboa-d·1ng
to
....~~~~J:..c:-.= ~~Rc::=
II
~~~..;~~ ~~~J forefront. wins first U.S. gold

m:rtbune - Sentinel -

~ ~c

Reglotarod

! ~=~~"'

In One Weelr With Us

SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Wtth the

4"' - ·

AJC;

1nJIIIng motor,""""
'"'cover, aJ accmoriaa in-

song "'This is Growing Up" pumpmg
oeo. through her headphones, 18-year-~ld
; Me- Collie pupa, nto, aa- 2748
'
Kelly Clark helped the sport of snowblalwl-oite; Mini Schnauz""
For SOlo or Trade. 36'xt2 b oa rdi ng come o f age.
. • alp; Sheitlo Tria pupo: ~ 97 Chow &amp;-tO, V8NottB&lt;:, 112 ·House local and trailer.
.
; eranlan
pupploa, Auto, NC, PSIP8, AM-FM (7..0)6611-~
Soaring and spinning higher and faster
• Craamo/aa!Jies (740)698- ...-. Aluminum wlleelo,
da
' 1085
'
Leer Topper. 731&lt;, $5200.
AtrroPAKJS &amp;
than her halfpipe foes, Clark on Sun y
CFA Himalayan Klneno, (7..0!379-2.748
·
AOJNOitlrni
became the first American to win a gold
CaN after 6pm -ys.
VANS &amp;
c'~-' T-~ Bed ~Sal O:.medal ·at the Winter Olympics, instantly
Parfect Valentine
Gift
"'w.a.Tk.
,....,., ·5:00pon.
e.,.. gtvmg
. . snowb oard mg
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• (7..0)448-3188
·
.....
....,
Callaltor
(740)448more ere d 1'bil'•ty.
Lab Pupplas AKC Shots
. 3243
than the X-Games could ever provide.
• ·• w..--"
,
1988 F-250
4x4, running
351 5
"Snow board ers h ave t h etr
. reputations,
.
"
j ovv. Yellow and speed
sunvisor
.:-.. Bo~7f"(;:l2 on ~ bodlina&lt;, ,;,..ng run- r1S
HoME
Clark said " But my doing this especially
i:r~.w:u..tc~ With~ ~. ~~~
~ in the
says a Jot.Maybe i; will shine
••ReQ t Orad Amar1can Spitz 11189 Foro Ft50 . 4, 4 302
a hght on snowboardmg, and people Will
11"*' _.. (7..0)446-3103 engine, new pa1ni, bled.. 4' ~~~:..~
look at it in a different way."
·
11""' ~~mo. nonce, free elllmaiO, ' The Salt Lake City Games got off to a
Jg'
p
1a
•
yer, rome (304)773-9550
.
:i
diamond pltie tool box and
· . rousing and, most· importantly, safe start
••r1V
""
bod ralls. S8000.00 OBO
BASEMENT
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~AMM
992·2648
WATERPROOFING
· t h'rs. wee ken
0.,
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199! ' GMC Jimmy 4 x4, Unconditional lifetime uuao--_; The games opened with a .solemn trib•'
Runs
Good, $2500 OBO. anleo.
roloroncos1975
fur-.. .ute to a torn flag and a "miraculous" light_ oiOB Maosey Fervuoon In· (7..0)448-6044
nl.ahed.Local
Esiebllehad
• dustrial Qieoel Tractor.
·
C&amp;l 24 H,., 17.0) 446- ~·mg of the flame courtesy of the 1980 U.S.
18 245
1·800·287-05 76. hockPV team - a show that smashed TV
~ "'
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MF
but HeavJ. 98 Dodge Ram, 4&gt;14, 316 067o,
Bulh. 4 opaed, HlgM.ow. Auto, 4' Uft. Have Extra .30 Rogers waterproofing.
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; (No MuiU. power), lloii Bar over 380.:Z, wilh Truck.
ratings for previous Olympics - then
: ~~N~P!:. t:.:',; (7..0)44 1 artor 5prn. C&amp;C Goneral Hornt Malnt• quickly Nrned to the business of sport.
:~ never had • on H. 98 Suburl&gt;ln, 4x4, LT Pack· none:.- Painting, .rn~ 110The U.S. team came away from the first
••(7o40)669-5t.Ot, Wllksvllle ago, (7..0)448-3844 days or lng, carponlry, . dOOrs, win·
..
.
• c;&gt;H.
' (740)446-9555 ev0r1lnga
dawl. bathe, mabie i'Konle two days of competition with 011e gold
~
repair and
For 1!96 and two St'Ivers. M oguI Ski er Sh ann on
1:John
Doare 13, Grain Drill,
lelllmato
callmore.
a.ot, 740-992·
•• S550. (740)643-2285
~ MoroRcv&lt;US . 6323.
1 Bahrke got the medal party started Satur! l1me tor Frost Seeding PuELF.cnuCAii
day with a silver, then hours later-speed9 Yamaha Pro Hauler.
', tureanoHayFieldo.
t98
REnliGERA110N ' skater Derek Parra set a surprise world
ATV Broaclcaot Seeders, 12 Good Condlllon. S2200. ~
•
.
,
·
, VOlt, Hlgh Ouallly. Fits most (304)882·3273
't record m the 5,000 meters that held up
·. Jlm'o'
ATVo Farm·
S295 Equipment Inc 1996 Honda 4 wheeler .300- wiring,
Aosklentlal
commercial
~ a st·1ver.
naw or
service
or rJ- oor
1740)448·2484
· 4 trax, Like Now, Groen, pairs. Maat&amp;lr Uconled elec·
Medals were to be decided around midGarage
Kept,
$3500. trlclan. Ridenour Electrical,
(7..0)446-9761
wvooo306, 304-675·1786• day Monday in women's downhill, men's
~ LMi:srocK _
luge singles and women 's 15-kilometer
~
=
·~
biathlon.
5 yr. old blue eyed, blonde
Later in the day, the men's 20-kilometer
palnl gelding pony, $350.oo.
PUBLIC
.. Call aftei 5 p.m. 740-949NOTICES ...r •Jdl"' .-,..,., ,.,_,.....,,,.,.._~
biathlon, men's halfpipe and pairs figure
IJotlh &lt;....t lllo:hl , ._ Jlnlr.
2494
skating will be decided.
;, For Sal.. Aeglllored Argus NOTICE OF REQUEST aorvlce provldero will
- WOMEN'S HALFPIPE: Clark gave
::.S~~~~~~~~~~10Ext FOR PROPOSALS be selac1ad II' a performance so spectacular the French
FOR DESIGN
accordance wllh judge gave her: a perfect 10.0, knocking
HAY&amp;
SERVICES BUILDING Sec11ons 153.65 t!l
IMPROVEMENT . 153.71 or 1he Ohio Doriarte Vidal of France to second. FabiGRAIN
PRO&lt;JRAM
Revised Code.
- enne R euteler of Switzerland won the
Good Mixed Hay. Never
The Eaa1orn Local ln1erasted parties bronze.
... been wet. $2.00 per square School Dletrlct {tho should contact the
• bale. (740)446·1062
"District") hereby Eastern
Locil
"I figured l had second place wrapped
Round bales, stored Inside, glvaa notice of Ill Administrative Offices up, so (·had to go for it," said Clark, whose
"$10 a bale. Albany Intent to amploy 11 1740 ) 887•8079 from winning routine included a I 1/2-revolu(7401541 .1223 or 17401698- proleulonela to 8:00 e.m. to 4:00p.m.
8055
provide archlteclurol on Monday through tion, upside-down spin, another 2-revolu•.- - - - - - - - and related design Friday. Proposal• will tion twist and the highest jumps of the
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HOW IQ. WRITE Ati

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~.;·trailef Sizl
tlrHs and ~
tlon Ladleo. FUll Service 2 LPN'o Day Shih, No
Baing Aooopted For CNA's
.
mull oell-eall Mlko o 740- Sc:hool. $600 plus Ulilltloo. :-mc0mrn.n:1ar lllont- Sprlngo,
Truck T""r. j
1
Male Eocorta. Prompt Pro- w - . Apply In Person 0111co - r y NMdod for &amp; Reoldent Aaslstlonts. 1376 Patriot Rd. Pauloi, 385-2434.
(7..0)245-9020
fronta available for loaoe. tH¥1(7,_.....".._'~·~L, 160.
• ~~ DlocrHt l Confl. at Plaza, 936 stale LOcal Vott~norlan Ofllct. Mllny Bontfltt Available OH. 2 Story, 3 BR, 2 t/2
~·
dontlal. 6pm to Bam. Route teo.
WIH Alto Poriarm Some Sueh As: Competitive Wag- Bath, .67 acrelol. Will eon- 1994 t4x70 Oakwood, 2 4 M HouM pn 9 ......,,
·
(740)388-17911.
A . lonl
Cleaning and Kennel Ou· 11, Paid Moelo, Paid Vlco· skier Land Contract. Down BR, 2 Full Bath, _ , Central Heal, Carpet, t Clean 2br. W/D . Hookup. llooldl ollal- Ow•••
tttnl
Ilea. Day and Evening tiona Employee Discounts Payment and Rolerences Dryer, Stove, 3 Ton Heat · Bathroom wilhln t milo of Rtferoonoe and Deposit No Tappan HI olflcloncy ~uooll
Why walt? Stan mooting Eom 2nd. lncomo without Houra end some Wook· &amp; A·:..'l bl I
I Required.
No
Pats. Pump, Now C&amp;rpet In Uvlng Gallipolis _and Hosplll&amp;l. a~-. (~'"'7"61"" .
~ fu~~lncluct.fuovma·
Ohio 1111" tonight, coli tollXI
2nd• Job
up~Ft
to
--•p •~ ".me Pas"'
On- - ·~a Appllconla
• nsurance,
n·
Room. $14,000. (7'")-7
•·~t
· p1us ut11n~~•· ~- -.,. ~ ~
•N
•••
./h
·
~~.
..
on
May
/'
o
fJ(7..0)379·9887
~
•
..
~
mo.
HI-·~
Elllol 1111 _,
•
lr.. 1 00 766 2623 O
7
1821 • • •
·
i:&amp;oo-2te~i~ .
ly. Frlandly and Warm Por· ply Dally Mon.·Sun. '9-4.
0907
(304)683-57211
WANTED 10 RENT
~ featuring~
•
www Money D......,. oom sobrlnaiiRty a MuatR.•.~loa: Como Soo Uol Ravena· 3 Bedroom on Roulo 2, For sale- t 6K70, 3 bedroom •. 5 8adroorn houoe for ront, Now Publ- 10f tho Ohio FrH inoredlbla warranty
ng asume to:1520
wood Care Center t t t 3 (304)875-S332
2 bath, 'call 740-385-9821 Section 8 wolcomt. t-773- Valley Pulollahlng Company
ANNouNcD!JiNJs AVONI All AIIUI To~ Arlrnal
Clinic,
Slllo Waohlngton St., Ravano- 4 Sale lg Ranch Style ali&lt; for Cha
, ryl.
·~ ••••
furnilllad apartment "N · s H••:nNG 6
Route teo, Gallipolis, Ohio. wood. wv. Ralorencea Ail- Homo,
•
·
~
to
rant for 3 4 montho
&amp;
~
4br..
3bl., wilh
o~.id •-- .
be · COOLING (7o40)44M411
A S...__r'o ParsdiH now Stll. Shl~oy Speers,
Rtctplloulot for buoy de» qulract.
ser- In patio pore~. 2 Umlled Or No Credit? GoY· Houoe For Rant on Brood ~- •••• private II&gt;- or 1 ~7
well~~!;""merchandise SO. 675-1429.
lor'o oftk». Knowltdgt ol
COME SROW
car garage. 176,000. 4 emment Bank Finance Only Run Rd. Behind Now Ha- :;:,'
~=~~~
oomhowrett
80%ofl'manutactursr'ooug.. Bal.. Broa. Amuoomtnt medico! codlngtbllllng pra-to
WITHUSI
blocka from High School ~lleOa.~~,!;_~rtoourl- =~=·-wv_.--·
__
r;~_.o_,.::JM.:=- (7.0)446-2342(days),
Wlllllnl..._..,,
314200
gutedrelall. Will add now Co.illooklngforlnlhuslaa- forred. FAX r1IIUIMI
WelriOKPtlndlngourcln:u· Gal. Ohio. Good view ol
:c
PSIWt.OOp;j'OO;t'200
3
2
producte regular1y. C'*k H tic Individual• lprirVIUIII- =~ P.gr =-=~ Ba~~ latlon to badar oerve town. (304)727•3318 •
Muol sell· 14x70 mobile Newl.y Redecorated 3BR,
Sail!
PSI $35 00 Per 100• All
outl a·shopparo-paradleo. mer 2002. MUll bo II loUt bourwvlllo WV 28884
our cu....,.rs. We are look· 816 Main Stroot, Pt. Pl. home, call 740·386·2434 No Poll, 10 miles lrom GalRI!:Nr
BIIM eoinpr. 11 1on Fntnge
com
18 years and lblt to.travel.
'
lng for a parton that hal Completely Relurblohod. 2 uk IOf Elaine.
llpolla, 7 mlloo from Rio
In StoCk.
w.okly pay, IMng facllltloo.
RN'a &amp; LPN'a
ltlglltntrgy loval,lelf· rnoU· otory, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed· Muat nil· t9i 7, t llxM, G~, (7..0)3711-2540
Mobil Home Lot, T- 12• RON !!VANS ENTEIIPRIS.
Fosler Parenla.
Contact ua at 740-288-281!0
vated and or&gt;IOYo working roomo. Larga Kitchen, Iron
. 1kitchen, excolltrlt ...,. Pilot Program, Ronlars 14• 18 Wldts, S't2tll mo D ~. Ohio, t-8001137· LOcal Agancy Jn Ohio - EVtnlng l Midnight Sltlfta with paople. Muat tave de- Largo Utility Room, LRI OR/
...~ -· - ~
lng quallllad couploo to be- Baautlclen, FT &amp; PT Help Fantaotlc Starting Wages pendablo transportatkln, ba· Family Rm. Naw Carpet dillon. Can Karano, 7.0· - · ~·-··-·
Pluo dtpoolt, Good Rtfa&lt;• - - - - - - - come Foster paronle In Neodod. Paid Vacation/ Groat Shift Ollltranllal.ll iilc oomputor knowledge. throughout. F/A 6 A/C, 385-9948 .
MOIIIU!: HoMEs
(740)446.()175
Amazing
MttabOIItm
Lawrence, Gallla, Jac-., Hourly waga Vs. Commls- aunbriclgaCOrs6Raltab Thla loa full time salaried $79900 17..0)446-9565 or Now t4x70, 3 brl2bth. Only
Brtlildhi'&lt;Kigfill
Meigs areas. There will be slon. FrH CEU hours,
For Pijtnlm
position and oftora all com· (7..0)446-2205 or (7..0)446· S975 down, $189.64 por
Storaga Space lor rant .033 Loae 10 pounda· 200
5 io 10 famlllas . - n to (740)448-7267
Call Wanda Taylor
pany benallts Including 2683.
month. Call Nikki, 740-388·
aquare foot. with molal poundo oloy, quick, Fast
becoma part ol the pilot CNA 1
to bo offloract
11304-757-6806
M81th lnourarce, vacation,
7871.
2 bodroom mobllo home for ahalvlng. Located In City of Dramatic ,Rosulta. tOO%
project. Ouallfted appllconta La~~""'' P........,..,
To ScheduloA
personal dayo, and .OtK For Rent or sole, ornall
rent, no pats, (7.0).9i2· Point Pleasant. Inquire at Natural, Dr. Racommended.
may rocolva up to $40.00 • 1 n ' .....- . 4,.,..._ Prol.-lntorvl
plan wears part of a largo houoe tbr. $250. month + Now Doublo Wide on PrJ. 5658
(304)67olo0102
'Ask about FREE Sa~'
par day ralmbu-. I"' lllut dolo Ia march • 2002,
Located At ow
comPany that olfers excel· Dopolli. (304)727-3318 vata Property, 1·5 Acree.
(7..0)441·11182
tarasted parties Call ::l;.,!.yw~ ~~~~
300 Saville Road
lent caroor advancement 1rom llpm-ttpm.
C&amp;ll (7..0)446-3583 to pre- 2 bedroom, f&lt;i&lt; lilt"' rani, -;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
(7..0)534-3379 ... lor Rob- ply to Vicky. FIN Sllff De- Humc.., wv 25826
OflPO'Iunltloo For lntorvlew
quallly
quiet oommunlty, nlco cloiin
I.BeoiUIIful
Carolina Country,
art. II you have previously valcpment bmcfr Appllco·
EOE
home, (7..0)882·2167
~
Ruffled Curtoolna. t PR·
COII8kl8iatlon lend 8 cover
One
Only
called, please call again.
lion ~-~~~·. F.;.,··~ 1e. Semi OM- w~ Ook lottar teiHng .. why you are
Goons
200"x98" with Valance- 1 '
Used-.
2· t4x70 Trallarl for Rant.
.PR·
100"lc66' Light Eoru .
the per100 we are looking
80156x28126, 3 bodroom, 2 Both havo Total Eloctrfc and
8IIGp Online 0
2002. All appllc:anta must Hill iJH TruciOng eom...nr for along with your resume
·
with R- Rum. and n...
beth, 011 heat, central air, Control Air. Boih In Vory · 38Jdl0- kltohan tooblo bactla, 521!0 ,_ S125 for
www.ma.,kay.C&lt;Ifl'lbsptn..,•7. have a high IChool diploma lo ' -king -rleneoct
Paul - · Cln:ulatlor
fireplace with gas logs, Good Condition. Aboolutoly with grooon accent, 4 malch- all (7.0)25&amp;e441i ·
Your Mary Kay lndependant or ClEO
Semi. Tractor Trailor Orlv to
Olrac:tor
at
Ohio
Valley
PubNo lnaklo Poto. $3501 lng oplndo chalra. WOO. ·
·
8aauty Consultant, Briclgat
ers. Over tho Road, Eorool· lilhlng Co.. 825 Thlro live.. All rNIOI- -tolnfl 11187-.
Price lor Immediate solo
month, S3eo deposit - · C&amp;ll (7..0)446.()467 after Commorolal Smoker-ramo
.. nt Pay, lnaurance and Ganlpollo, Ohio 45631.
ADVERTISING
In lhll MMPIPI" II
Cola's Mobile Homea
(7-40)245-11481 boforo 9pm. 4:GOflrn.
prMOUro cooker. 220 volt.
Bonallts. Call (7..0)68~What Ara You Waiting For
subjoct
lo
tho
US 50 Eaot, AthOrlS, Oh
(304)57fl.2703 _ __
SALES
7773 or 1-1100-5.23-01104.
Mobllo
Homo
lor
Ront.
Appllanat~
:
Rocondltloned
:::.::.:;.:.::;..:;;_
'lOu know you want to try II.
Felr ttou.lng Act af 1111
740-592·1872
.
WOrk
From
Homo
Start today. Jay Clark's REPRESENTATIVE
· (7..0)446-1279
Waohero, 0~. Rangae. Disney Area. 7 Dayo, .6
wnlcll makeo ft llofliil to
STNA
$1 OOO·SfiOOC/ Mo. PT/FT
addt11.....,,
Only SB50 down and
Kenpo Karate (740)742·
Rofrfaratoro, ,Up To 90 Days Night Hotal Slly. Paid $600,
Pan-time
STNA
for
For well established now progrsm pr&lt;Mdlng I"' (868)233-4968
·stet .38 par~getayou
25-46
IU'IU&lt;IMJO.nl~
Gua-1 Wt Sail Now Sail lOr Stili. (614)9i8·
JM•r.anoe, llmltltlon or
www.WorkToYourFulleat.co
a now home. 11 t -1100May!IQ AppllancM, French ~
dltcrtml-- an
Local Co.
home training to cars glv- m
837-3238 aak for Mike.
7796 · ~Eii;octrlc~l3!;whi;;o;jola;;;d~Am;;;lgo;;;
·
,_.,
co4or,
l'illtllon,
••
GIV&amp;\WAY
"'· o.- lncluda but nol
·
City Maytag, 7familial atatua or RtUonal
limited
to:
Aoalll
with
"""'
Pilot
P~amNo
Credl
V
Groctout
living.
1
and
2
Bedloom
Su~.
$150.
Olneno
- · 6 months old. cal
SERVING THE glvw training plans and In·
~
origin, or any lntentfon lo
Bad C I and Flrot Tl me bodooom apartmonts at VII· Set, $75. Dra-r, $75. (304)675-5238 Ail&lt; for
TlwNING
lniiUIIftYiuoh
Home Buyers. FA&amp; 8nd !age Manor and Rlvoroldo (7..0)446-8742
Free Adorable labl AustralTRI.COUNTV home training to care giv·
::iooo=:· - - - - - - ,
pNfat .. tct, limitation or
Government Loans AvalLI• AparimOnta In Middleport.
ian Shephooro Mix Pupplto.
""' ulittln -nlng propOf doeumontallon from cl&gt; Gallipolis car..r Colloga
diiCiimln~tlon."
ble. Own your new home In• From 1276-5$16. Call 740- For Salt: Reconditioned FrM Gas Furnactl and Air
To Good Home Only.
AREA
I n t i , - providl8, Mad- ~ce'"ra Cloao To Home)
etaad of renting. CalI 9i2·5084. Equal Housing Wllhtrl. d~ and ralrlg- Cond- Eollmolee. can
(7..0)379-2280'
all Todroyf 740-446-4367, Tftll MWtpeper "'lll nol (7..0)446·3218.
aratoro. ~ Appll· (7..0)«1-8308 or 1-800·
lcoid:
edvoCitt for . .Opportunltloo.
HrvicH; enter dlita Into
1-1100-21 4-0452,
. . : . . : - - - - - - - llf1CO, 3407 Jacl&lt;ton Avt· 29HX181l. If you don't cal
' MUll hive good
knowinglyFree puppi1111: Seventeen
We have approximately 20 Moctorn 1 Btclroom Apart· nue, (304)675-7388.
us wo both -1
program trt.ckin~ tylttm;
Ropf80.()6-t274B.
C:pploo to lind a home for. · Communlclllon aldlla maintain
used homee lor undar monl. (7..0)446-()390
medica records;
xed. 740-9815-4483
l
o
i
n
' MUll hiYI good · . public ~Poaltfon reGood UlOid Appl-, R• Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
W.oolD
12.000. call 1-800-837-3238
ol tho law. OUr
N
.
3rd
Avanut,
MldctitpOrt,
OOndltloned
and Guaran• Ropalro. P-o? Need
for
Info.
To
Do
driving~·
l.osrAND
2 bodroom, fumllhod aport· toed. W.ohara, Dryer11, · Tuned? C&amp;ll The Plano Or.
... htroliy
Diploma/
OED
th
"and~
lnfoomoot that all
P1'9¥kla own
FOIHl
mtlll, deposlll
Rangeo. and Rtfrlgeratora. 740-ol48-4525
m leaat ttlree yeare 81(peri- All Makeo ol Lawn Moweoa;
BISNESS
dwMIInga Hvartl•d In
,.....po11111on
no pata. 740-flfl2.0155
· Some stan at. $95. ~
·
ence required. Must be atH
Small Engines; Kerosene
thll M I~ II rr IN
AND BIJII,I?INGS
Appllancoo, 75 Vlna Sl., Independent Herlooo!lfo DitMlulng cat:. short black • MUll hive ability 10
ta ICr:.IH hornell tocaticns Htatera
Nowly Rarnodalod, 2 Bod· (7..0)448-73118
tnbulor, C&amp;ll For Product Or
IVIIIable on an equal
hair, while spell on neck unthat may no1 bo readily ac- Ropalrsd.and Salamanders
be 1 TEAM playw
Opportunity. (7..0)441-1982
can
Mike
_,unity-.
Prolesalonsl office building room Apt., Stovw Refrlgara·
dar chin, green collar.
coulbla: must bo able to II~ (7..0)446-7604
available for rtnt. COfl\ 'to- lor, Utllltlea Paid, '1400/ Hidebed, $100. Loveaeat,
Nama Ia Sammy. Any lnio
and trantfer clients; mult
tently located In downtOwn month. 48 Ollve St., $100. OuHn Box Spring
JET
call Donna at 740~992~
hava relllblt transportation;• Allofycurhomeropalra,ad· For Rant· bdr. Trallar Pt.Piaasant.Piontyofparl&lt;·
(7..0)448-3845
.
and
Mllttr-.
$100.
AERATION
MOTORS
2
3054.
ntu11 hava dell ontry corn
Sind lllluma 10:
to
dltlons
&amp; remodeling. 24hr - e and Relngator, Now lng. Call (304)675-22 9-t 3
(7..0)448-8742
Rtpllract,
Now
&amp; Rebulft In
putor lklllo: mutt be able . emergency sarvlce, .aenlor fu, mace, washer and dryer Monday-Friday or (304) 5- Now Takln~pllcailona.
Stodc.
0.11
Ron
Evans, t·
lpolla Dilly Tribuna communicate
87
.effectively
YARDS.W:
22yre. liook-upo quiet loCation 6765
~,;:,~.,.,:.:',J:::; Mollohan C&amp;rpot, 202 Clark 80().537·9528.
RE: Advarlltlng
Starting aal~: $1 1.50/ho clllzana discount.
adults, no pats. Sacond
Wator Sewaga Truh Chapal Road, PortO&lt;, Ohio.
Maximum ol hrlwk. T..,: oxp. (304) 57fl-2065
Salnlltp
PGrtabla Sawmill, trsllor or lolf on RoUsh For·
ALors&amp;
$350/Mo 7.o 446,0008 ' (7..0)448·7444 t-an-830· Larga pickup load miKed
el raqulract wllh travel rei rn128ThlrdACREAGE
,
"
·
01112. FrH Elllrnateo, Euy flrtwood, wll dallvor.
bursement at 38.5 cants par don' haul your 1oga to tho roll Dr. of Camp Conley Rd. ~
4
Spacloua 2br. tba. Dupltx ftnanolng, 90 days - I I (7..0)8411-2587 Evonlnge &amp;
Galllpollt, Oltlo 4H31 mila. Doadllno for appllco . mill lust coii30&lt;Hl75-t957. $250. mo. Pluo dopooll and
utilities. (304)675-2614
90 Acres Henderson on washor/Dryor
Hookup. cash. Vloai Ma- Card.W
..::oak=&lt;er::ocll:.,_ _ __
tlor Ia Ftbrulry 18, 2002.
Submit resume and ralor· Moving and Hauling: Clun "
New Four Lane 11 lnlaraoo- S4eo month. DoposiVRtfor· Drive- a· little oava alot.
Motal Desk.· 4 Drswora on
Basement Sala February NUR- IUPIR¥180111 enos to:
Out Buildings, Baoements, •or sole toy a -: Nice bl· lion with oily waler. 180,000 onooo. Required. No Poll. . IIIII'-~-~--.,
t&amp;th 8,00 am . 3,00 prn. Soenla Hills Nurolng Contar
Human Rooources
Garagn, Eotatn, Trash, ltVol homo on t acre near (3041837•2518 (304)545· (304)871-204e
pgu SPolri1NG
1·=·v~:.
Rutland Church or God ap. lo R• Slructurlng for opl&gt; ArM Agancy on Agi!'Q Etc. Odd Jobs. Call Choeter. ThrH bodroom, e48t .
.
1
Goons
•· •
prox2mllnoutSt'Rtt24 mal RN Supervloor Cover·
Olotrfct7,1no.
(7..0)448·7504
.
twof batho, """"'lgeraga,
Tat'"ntsTownV hosu"aoioAuparto2. ~
fl20or ~~~)tllln~.~oworl&lt;,
aga
F32 UF!G, PO llox 500
amlly room wllh l~act. Lot for aala 112 aoroiDI lull m • ory P · •
· .. - " ,_
AUCI10N AND
Wo 'ars looking lor Clodlcot- Rio Orondo, Ohio 48874 Top to Bollom Cleaning tun room. Now osntral heat· oft Oshel Rd Soma Btclrooma, 2 Floors, CA. 1 Modtl
Turkish Miluttr MOll~ HOMI OWNIRI
Fl..EA MAIIxEr lid, doplildablo, caring Equal 0ppor11n1y Emptoyar Baovlct. Profooalonal clean- lng &amp; lie ayolom. one ml· tlono coil 304-e75-n5a 11• 112 Balh, Fuly Carpeted, 8mm
1~~~~~~~~~~
1,~-..;irliiiii~iiiiiiiii;.,,J. RN'1 for tho 3-tt and 11·7
lng at affardabla prlcet. nult ofl Routo 7, but oUII p~- lor 5 prn
Atlull Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· bard'
shllt. Ntw Wsga lind Sana- SUbotltute NullO 11 -ntlal, - · rsincatl· vale. (740)1185·3118 1
'
tlo, Sllin I388/MO. No Pill,
dl hi offici
•
Rick Pnrson Auction Corn- fit Paokloge. PltaH Call C&amp;rtaton Boi1ool &amp; ~ga In- lng and oonstructlon olean
Lot for Salt: cloaied, approx LIUt PIUI &amp;toui11Y Dtposlt
• 01u ng
oncy nHt
pany, full tlmo - r . Pam Oaldwtl at (7..0)448- duotrloe to wort&lt; with ahl" up. Conlkltnttel. 1811·2978 Now Homo. Vinyl Siding, 2 112 ac111, grsval road, Rtctulract, Oayo: 7 · ~pl::-f:e ~ carry 1a,
complote auDIIon oervloo. 7teorormorslnforrnailor. d,., and adulla who havo or1811·t381.
Shlnglo Roof, 3 Badroorr.l water a tltctrlo avallablo, Mit; E..,lngo: 740-387·
•• Mobf
~ tee,Ohlo &amp; Welt
davtlopmontal dloabllltlts.
2 Balh, t4VV Down. Call Polllr area. 115,500. ea~ oeoa, 7.0 441 0101.
AlmQia
home~ l acaunVIrglnta, 304-n:t-5788 Of 0 •
N
MUll be a rogl- or 1•
(7..0)448-3570.
(7.0)o141-48t4or(7.0)448- ~·'nR~-·-ZtNLINo'1(7~~~ 1~
304-n:t-5447.
nYtr
teded, COL U· , . _ , nullO wllh
3248 after 5pm
'"' · - ,,_. _,...
-,........wllh ~- Endorll- aurrenl Chic llotniUrs. r10
IIUINas
llool Log " -· Cablno
.
lnQ applloltlons now for lluy or 1111: Alvarlne Arfl. or 1-.e7HI87
WAN11D
menl RaqulrJlf. lvanlng Sand to· C&amp;rltton
OftoolmlNrrr
to ouatoma. FrM lnforrna·
to
or In
Unillltvallablo
qutt, · 112.4 lui Main on www.orvll.-urett
roBVY
Work, HelM WHk-onds. 8ohoof, 1Sf0 . Cantlon
lion. 7..0·1188-2383
Co.
1/1
Manlll1, li002
lA 12.4 E. ~. 7401.,~------pl. (7..0)248-8814
ltraot, 8yracu11, Oh 48779
INOTICII
Rarnodaled S tedroom, In
pas1urs tbr. Huct lubalclluol
for 812·2528. AUH MooN,
:,.u~-::.';
Abooluta Top Ooflar. U.S. HOip wented ca~ng for 1tM1 Tht 8oufhorn Loosl- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Mlddltllon, osll Tom Ardar·
· tlda~,t.."fe= OH owntr. .
liar Ooilllliii.'Anolo, Often.
Sllvor, Clold Colilll, Proof· llidorly, Dtrot Group Homt, Dlotrlot hal .., lmmtdlaia INQ co. ,,_mrnoncls thai aon aher 5pm, (740)VV2·
But'o ltiiOIMioe on fht 'T' 1111, l'lat lor, 11H1 flftffna ·
oela, Dlamondo. flold now pa~lng minimum wage, -lng for 1 llosnoed lnta~ you do bulinlll wlttt poop1a 3348.
Very nlct, 1·3 bedroom In Mldctllport. Dolle, glue- Por Draine, Drlvtwaye I
Al~o, U.S. Currsnoy,. now shlfla: 7arn-3pm, 7a.,. pre141r .for a hta~nll'lm· you know. ancl NOT 1o oancl Stilt tht opponunllvo Low
:=ment, In IGWn, largo wars, Aladclln mantale, and · :f't;~~~ 1':.11- ·
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"Jiuve to get up at four in the morning for 'Good Morning America,"' she
said, "so probably not too much stuff."
MEN'S DOWNHILL: After
swooshi·ng th rou gh t h e u1 tra-steep downhill course, Austr'ia's Fritz Strobl - a 29year-old police officer who'd never won a
medal in a major competition - called
his wife and two young sons with some
b •g
' news: H e sn ared th e gold.
"J was just thinking of racing down the
. . " sat'd Strobl .
course, not o f wtnrung,
Lasse Kjus of Norway finished second
and Stephan Eberharter, the Austrian
expected to win, was third. American
medal hopeful Daron Rahlves finished
16th.
"It's a tough one to swallow," Rahlves
'd
sao ..
SPEEDSKATING : The Utah
Olympic Oval is living up to its speedy
reputation.
Parra set a world record in the 5,000
meters Sarurday, then saw the Netherlands' Jochem Uytdehaage smash his mark
to take the gold.
On Sunday, Germany's Claudia Pecht
. won th e gold by b rea king h er own
s em
world record in the 3,000 meters by more.
than 1 1/2 seconds. Renate Groenewold
of the Netherlands was second and Canada's Cindy Klassen third.
Annt' 'Frt' es.t'nger, wh'o had w on ·every
3,000 race .during the World Cup season,,
was fourth . American Jennifer Rodriguez
finished seventh despite breaking her own
national record.
- . FIGURE sJttriNG: The pairs
competition goes into its free skate program Monday with the Russian duo of
Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze
leading the way.
After Saturday night's short program,
world champions Jamie Sale and David
Pelletier of Canada were in second and
Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo of China
were in third.
Americans Kyoko Ina and John Zimmerman were fifth and Tiffany Scott and
Philip Dulebohn were 11th.
-MEN'S HOCKEY: Slovakia, which
h h
da
h fi I

round. Austria is also out, following a 4-2
loss to Latvia and a 3-2 loss to Germany.
That leaves Germany (2-0) playing
Latvia (1-0-1) on Tuesday night fora spot
·
in the eigh I-team final round.
In the battle for the other finals berth,
Belarus won its opener over Ukraine 1-0
tm a power- play goal by Oleg Mikulchik,
who last played in the•NHL six years ago.
. d SWltze
. rlan d 3- 3 .
an d Franee ue
FREESTYLE MOGULS: H ere's
. t he fitrst
w h at Bah r ke d'd
1 c.
.&gt;&lt;.~tu rday to wm
U.S. medal of these games: A leaping, full
revolution with the tips of her skis
crossed, all while looking back toward the
top of the hill.
That move, called a helicopter iron cross, put her in first until Kari Traa of
N orway passe d h er wr
~ th e gold . D eo
' en ding Olympic champ Tae Satoya of Japan
took bronze.
NORDIC COMBINED : Todd
Lodwick put in perspective his seventhplace finish, the best ever by an Am erican.
"A lot ofNorWegians, they don't have a
clue how to throw a football . It's pathetic," he said.
Samppa La'~unen o f F'nl
d won
. th e
1 an
two-day event that combines ski jumping
and cross-country racing, dropping countryman Jaakko Tallus, the first -day leader,
to second. Austria's Felix Gottwald got
bronze after ·fint'sht'ng 11th the first ""
~-y.
- SKI JUMPING : Germany's Sven
Hannawald was thinking gold. He'd just
made the longest jump of the day on the
90-meter hill and the only challenger left
was a 20-year-old coming off injuries.
Then Sim
. on Ammann turned those
thoughts to silver with a final jump that
earned Switzerland its first ski j umping
medal since 1972 .
"He came out of nowhere," said American Alan Alborn, who fini shed 11th.
Poland's Adam Malysz was third.
"At the Olympic. Games, it's only
medals that count," Hannawald said."Not
their color."
- LUGE: Germany's Georg Hackl and
dd
Austria's Markus Prock are poised to a
to their long luge rivalry. And Italy's
A .
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The Dilly Sentinel • Page B3

'!WWW.mydallyHntlnel.com

reoerveotha rlghl"'lo
. . .
.
k
ld
, 11101 any or all mate TnCla Byrnes was SIXth.
,.
A 6-6 tie with Latvia on Sunday and a champion, and Proc , a 10-time Wor
prq_p '?so.is. .
All "· The ultra-hip sno~vboardmg com mum- 3-0 loss to Germany on Saturday elirni- Cup champion. Adam Heidt of the Unitprof!Otale ahoul- ty might scoff at Clark's celebration plans. nated the Slovaks from · the preliminary ed States is fourth.
sent to:
.
li_astern Lao&lt;lt
School Dls1rlct
guard Emily Cooper dished
Lisa .M. Rhc~le.
TraaaUier
out 12 assists and swiped four
PROPOSAL FOR
steals.
CLASSROOMS
Every Rio Grande player
50008 SR 681
ADA (AP) - Jim Conrad scored 25 points, including 11 durReedevllle, Ohio 451:!'2
ended the game in the scoring
ing a key 14-4 run late in the second half, and Ohio Northern
{2) 8, 11
points
(64-62)
midway column.
beat Marietta 74- 64 Saturday for its fourth straight victory.
Daemen became weary in
second
half.
through
the
The scoring surge, which covered 6:06, gave the Polar Bears
Junior Nicole Bauer and the second half, having played
(15-7, 10-6 Ohio Conference) their biggest
freshman Amanda Blazetic the . night before. T he Lady
lead at 68-57 with 4:02 to play.
topped the Warriors were led by Crystal
·
The Pioneers (13 ~10, 8-8) took their only
DeRosa with 21· points,
scoring
lead of the game on the first basket of the secchart for the Angela Ty!ec added 17 points,
ond half. Ohio Northern responded with a 10-2 run to go
Redwomen nine boards, five a.&lt;Sists and six
ahead 45-39.
with
17 steals. Adrienne Welka tossed
Mark Killian scored 14 points, Mike Haynes had 12 and
in 12 points and collected six
each.
Aaron Fries 10 for Ohio Northern. ·
rebounds. Adrienne Dykeman
Blazetic
Dul'erow had 31 points to lead Marietta, which also got 13
opened up chipped in I 0 points and
point&lt; from Cody Lane and 10 from Thad Skinner.
the
ball hauled down eight boards.
Ohio 85, Ball State 71
With the vi ctory, Rio
game with
ATHENS (AP)- Brandon Hunter scored 30 points and had
Gr.1nde
matched it&lt; win total
Turley
six straight
10 rebounds as Ohio beat Ball State 85-71 Saturday
.
points and fiom last sea.&lt;on.
Hunter shot 8-of-13 fi"om the field and made 13-of-14 free
Rio Gr•nde dominate the
assisted on the fourth basket.
throws for Ohio (13-7, 8-4 in the Mid-Af!lerican Conference).
glass,
53-39 and both teaJilS
Both players also collected five
Sonny Johnson came off the bench to score 17 points. Patrick
rebounds each. Renee Turley were extremely careless with
Flomo and Jaivon Harris each scored 12 points for the Bobcats .
poured in 16 points and ball. Rio registered 24
Flomo also had five blocks.
returned to the game after turnovers and Daemen had
Patrick Jackson led Ball State (15- 8, 8-4 MAC) with 17
injuring an ankle early in the 33.
points. Theron Smith and Lonnie Jones each scored 14 points
Rio Grande will now gear
second half. Tiffany Johnson
and Chris Williams added 13 points for the Cardinals.
added 13 points (11 in the sec- up for the rematch with
Smith's jumper got Ball State to within 19- 18 with 11 :04
ond hall) and eight rebounds Shawnee State. SSU beat Rio
remaining in the half but the Bobcats went on a 10-0 run
off the bench ·while fellow 68-66 on January 22 in
capped by a 3-pointer by Harris to go up 29-18. Harris hit a 3rookie Alkia Fountain posted,a Portsmouth. Game time is set
pointer and a jumperin the final minute to give Ohio a 47-34
double-double with 13 points for 6 p.m. finale for the Redhalftime lead.
and I 0 rebounds. Junior point women.

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them down, SD we made some some jumpers outside. Even ·
adjustments defensively, espe- Connally, who was on the
cially in the transition game. &amp;coring end' of things many
We also picked up our offen- time1, paased up the shot to
from
II
sive tempo. from the second hit the open men Imide with
game ccremonic•. the Eagles period on we may ~ave four a11i1t1. on the night.
Eastern had good secondof former Southern star Jeff played our best basketball of
·Caldwell were flying high. the year. Everyone got into quarter efforts from VulgEastern put 28 points on th e the flow and everyone moved amore and Greene, but Rider
.• board to lead Southern 28-1 R better than we have all sea- was 1h1.1t down for the test of
the night.
a blitzing first quarter loft."
Southern's)orclan Hill. back
The transformation saw
1 romp. Rider had eleven of his
.15 points in the stint as Southern abed its Mr. Hyde after some ligament damage
Southern scrambled to find a attire and present itself with a sidelined him for a game, was
distinguished Dr. Jekyll-type back to 100 percent and capway to stop him.
1 Five other Eagles hit the offensive power. Southern put italized . on several twisting
~oring column in a wide- the scoring merry-go-round lay-ins. Likewise, Dally hit
1~read offensive obliteration, in motion and everyone par- drilled a couple key lane
.while Southern was having ticipated, making the neces- jumpers and Macy Rees hit a
pretty good offensive success sary number of passes and hit- cr1.1cial bucket in helping
of its own. Dally Hill and ting the open man. Midway Southern get the , lead. The
~raig Randolph each popped through the quarter, Southern . score at the half was Southern
in 1 five, ~hile Nate Martin had the lead and the momen- 43, Eastern 39.
Southern n~ver eased up in
drilled a long three and Curt . tum.
Crouch hit a nice baseline
Seven men hit the scoring · the third period, but Eastern
driver, the score 28-18.
column as guards Hill, Ran- was back on track to make a
Coach Jonathan Rees said, dolph, and Martin pumped gam, of . it going down the
"We had to find a way to slow the ball inside, then also hit stretch. Southern outscored

Southem
Pip

r-i"

Eastern 26-21 in the. frame to
lead 69-60 after three ro1.1nds.
Both clubs played even 20·20
in the last round as Southern
held on to win 89-81 .
~0
Southern
go~•
Recd1ville -E~•tern Friday.
11111\'lr

8outhtm N , 11tavor larotorn ao
8outhtm t • as ae 110 - ee
lltavar Ill If 22 110 - 81
80UTM!~N - Nail Martin 3 2-2 11, Craig
Rll'odOiph 52-i 13,
Hlll7 4-e 15, Curt
Crouah 2 Q.Z 4, Maay RHI 2 Q.O 4, Julin

-n

7 ~ 110. OUrtla Ntlgltr 0, 0.1111
HII 7 3-a 17, Jake N- 0 2·2 2. TOTALS:
33 17·23118.
SEAVER EASTERN - Adam Mathowo t
o.o z. 1&lt;y11 vu~gamo~~ all-8 t e.Jaoe&lt;f Haltlo
t 0.0 2, l(oo.ln Qrwono t 2-3 5, OUotn Monl·

Connelly

0 2-2 2, COdy Hubbard 7 5-e t 8.
Chill Vloktri 4 ~ 12, NoiNn Foancla 2 Q.
0 4, Nothan Rldor5 3-3 15. TOTALS: 2e 21 •

2781 .
THREE-POINT ClOA"S -

SOUihtm B
(Miotln 3. Randolph, ~~ly 2), Eutom 4
(Vulgamor11 IWO. Groono, Vloktrs).
REBOUNDS - Boutl\orn 27 (Ccnnolly I ,
D. Hill 5), Eallom 22 (Vulgamore 6):
ASSISTS - Sculhem t G(J. Hll 7, Con~·
I)' 4, Rondolph 4), Ea..., 5. STEALS Soutl\om 7 (Martin 2, R101 2, J. Hlll2), Esot·
om t. TURNOVERS- SOUihtm 15, East·
am 11 .

·

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• p .. 84. The DIIHy •• liMe!

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c:ult a 111\'feh
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.

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oould go through in this

Bmx Darby ICcnd 14 poinll lOr the
l
Bo• • )'II. 12 c:omina in the final 7:34. Zach
WilliamJ ldded 12, while Brian Brown and
, ~"It\ a huge dilli!reno:e. He\ sup- 'nftnce Diall each had 10.
1
poled to be~ oCrhe premier pR~J in the
·~w noc aoiniiiO win, Jot prnn if
a!Uil!l)lllOC just in the leaf!ue. I dlink lhey're . our guards go 9-ix..JO;' O'Brien said, refera dnmatically dilitcut team with him in the rins 11&gt; Darby and Brown.
!ineup:'
Ahr Ohio Smlit took a one-point lead,
Michigan .State used t\W 13-0 runs 110 the Spa tat a' .econd 13-0 run poe them a
knock the.Buckeyes (17-5, 8-3) out of their . 48-36.leadwith 9:261.eft.Michigan State led
fir1t..place tic with Indiana.
by at least IC'Wil until Bohan Siwovid 3The Spattans have -.wn five of their last poinl!r pulled Ohio.State within·rour with
se\'ei1 conference sunes, but with a month
2:46 left. The Buckeyes couldn't get closef
. lett in the season, Michigm State coach lzzo . than tine.
. is not ready to sbrt making pbm fOr the
The Spanans have won eight straight over
NCAAs.
Ohio State In the B~ Center and 13 of
Ohio State, which travels to Iowa and 15 0\"ee'aal iti the series.
· Indiana next, has lost two straight and three
Michigm State's tint 13-0 run gave it an
of five.
1'8-13lead with 7:551efi in the lim hili:Thc
"We're going to have to make sure we stay Spartans led 27-24 at halliime, despite holdreal positive;· O'Brien said "'flW is as difli- ing Ohio State to 27.6 percent shooting.

.1

oe

Kobe ·
from Page II
Michaei Jordan had 40 in 1988.
Bryant also became the first player to
· reach 30 points since Jordan did it in 1993,
and he relegated jordan, hometown hero
Allen Iverson and every other All-Star into
an aftetthought by thoroughly dominating
. the game neatly every moment he was on
• the floor.
:
He also had five rebounds and five assists,
shooting 12-for-25 from the field.
t
"What an incredible performance he
1 put on. He was a step ahead of the best in
II the league, and that's hard to do because
there's some great players out there," West
coach Don Nelson said.
Bryant got off .to the best start of anybody, scoring eight points in the first six
minutes and getting an assist by going
around jason J(jdd with a deft crossover
move and then feeding Tim Duncan for a
dunk. Bryant also showcased some impressive ballhandling, dribbling through his legs
as he came upcourt practically squatting.
Tracy McGrady scored 11 points in the
second·quarter to keep the East in it, but
Bryant had a three-point play inunediately after checking back in, then made four
more baskets in the final 1:47 of the quarter - including a layup just before the
halftime buzzer - as the West closed the
half with a 24-7 run for a 72"55lead.
The East chipped away during the third
quarter, but Bryant wouldn't let them get ·
too close. He scored one basket on a putback after the ball bounced over the top of
the backboard, then had another bucket off
an offenSive rebound with 4:20 left to
restore a 2().:point lead, 88-68.
The boos for Bryant were fairly loud
after both of those buckets. As the quarter

l

Eastem
fromPep .B1
Dill assist tied the game for a second
time at 8-all.
Eastern jumped into its full-court
' pressure with 4:00 remaining in the first
quarter, and soon had the results it was
looking (or. Two Meigs' turnovers
quickly gave Eastern a four point lead.
Brad Brannon followed up with a big
three pointer at the 1:40 mark, forcing
Coach Wolfe to take a time-out and
rethink their strategy.
Eastern was not affected by the new
Marauder defensive vices, and Nathan
Grubb drained a three with :10 remain· ing in th e fimt ~uarter. Grubb's ttey
. capped off a tO-point scoring spree thai
ended the f1rst quarter with Eastern up
18-8.
Buzzy Fackler again opened the
Marauder scoring in the second quarter
with a little jumper fi:om the elbow. A 2for-2 effort by Brad Brannon from the
line put the Eagles up 23-1 o, and was
• the result of the third foul on
Williamson.
With 5: 10 remaining the first half, 'I)'
.Ault found the basket on a Jay in, making the score 25-12. The Eastern fullcourt pressure was now a finely tuned
machine with 3 minutes remaining in
the half. With some tenacious defense,
Chris Lyons picked off an inadvertent
pass, and quickly clicked the Eagle lead
up two more notches.
Later, Ryan Hannan proved that he
was a threat not only in the post,. but
from three-point range as well. Hannan
swished his long range shot with 3:30
left to play to make the score 27-15.
E~stern proceeded to go on an 8-0 run.
during the final twO minutes of the half,
putting them atop a 35-15 score at halftime.
·
The Marauders needed co come out
and get an offensive tempo established;
points were hard to come by in the first
~
d
half.. T he Ea gl es were rea dy ror any an
everything that the Marauders could
.
dc d
throw ·at them. AI ex S1mpson an
o Y
Dill set up underneath the hoop on sev'
d h ~
bl' h d
era I occas1ons, an t ere.ore esta IS e
the Eagle post game early in the second
half. Travis S.iders was the one Mei&lt;&gt;&lt;
.,..
looked to for Jeadership. The quick-

..

.

'

I

I

progressed, Bryant was booed every time
he touched the ball as it became clear that
the West was headed for a lopsided victory.

Bryant, who grew up in Lower.Merion,
Pa., and whOse father, Joe, played for the
76ers, heard the boos long and loud 01;1e
last time as commissioner David Stem was
presenting him with the MVP trophy.
"My first game here in the NBA, my
rookie year when I came out of high
school, they booed me a little bit, too. That .
really, really hurt, because it was like my
homecoming;• {lryant said.
After Bryant got off to his strong start,
Jordan was the next to reel off a series of
spif!Y plays. He went baseline for a driving
dunk, followed with a fast-break layup and
. fed a no-look alley-oop pass to Antoine
Walker that jle failed tt convert.
jordan was all alone ahead of the field a
few moments later, but blew a one-handed dunk, causing his Eastern teammates to
rise on the sideline, laughing in unison.
Jordan laughed off the moment, too.
The West held a 23-point lead entering
the foutth quarter, but the East rallied. Paul
Pierce scored the first four points of the
quarter, McGrady also scored four in a row
arid Ray Allen hit a 3-pointer to complete
a 13-0 run and make it 100-90.
.
The next five baskets were all 3-pointers,
including a pair by Gary Payton that
helped the West maintain a double-digit
lead, and a 7-0 run ending with a dunk by
Elton Brand all but locked up the victory.
Payton added 18 points for the West, and
Garnett and Duncan had 14 each.
McGrady led the East with 24. No Eastern starter finished in double figures, with
Iverson shooting 2-for-9 for 5 points and
Jordan going 4-for-13 for 8 points.
The teams combined for 23 3-pointers,
an All-Star game record.

Hill's Self
Storage
2t870 Buhan Road
Racine, 01r1o •

45771

7~2217

Houra
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
111411

mo.

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 BeechSl
middleport, OH
(10'x10; 610'x20'J

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

"Ahead In Service"
35537 St. RL 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equl11112
12% Swll Harle IMd ................ $1.00/50
Swi!Stutf
12% s-t HorMIHd ................ $4.40/50
Hunllnl Pride 21% dog foocl ......... $8.85150
Economy a..t 12% stock faed ...... $8.75/50
Trace MIMIJI Blocka ....................$4.751100
18% Llyer Crurnbtla ,.................... $8.9

BRIOOJ:

711:(:

NEA

PHILLIP

ACROSS

Pllllel'll!l fagtes

11111&amp;0 2171

COIIlllCTOIS, lit

and
brains

740-t1H141

ftom ao a
liD bloall

•.mall-.

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

.p lldn

_
.. _,...._
.... -.

·-·~=·

fiug:GIWI
kiJICt
CICtJ
Oil =I ~ fomMGI,
Mary ... ""' aii'OU

fuel'll Tliundly
6 SUndey
Doors Open 4:30
farty birds st.wt
6:30

Prtgresslue top Une
Thursdays

Progresslue

Couerau on Stmdags

Independent Beauty

BISSEll

Consultant
I 14 High Street

BUILDERS Int.

Pomeroy. OH 4S769

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMEROAl ond REllDINTIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599

P/1

H0-992-2802
www.marykly.comlpzi&amp; dwlk

Advertise
In this space
for
'25 per month

.

Racll\e, Ohio 45771

f

CONCimllt.oa/IIKI

Wr..i

PARft
All Makes Trac(or &amp;
Equipment Parts
Paclory Authorized

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall, and
Additions

Case-IH Parts

De3!ers
1000 St. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667-0363

FreeEsdmatea
Servin&amp; Ohio anti W. V1
wv 11031712

smuh

mEIGS miiSSII6f
THERIIPY
(740) 992-1705

213 N. Second A~e.,
Middleport, Oh 45760
Tonia Reiber
Licensed Massag&amp;
Therapist
.

sui t· you rcadt

'.

:~

hoppjr'l
robuillr

sa Top dohet
118 IWcalonl
boY
57 Dell bfud
118 Overhead

t :AMI
l 'o1~r,.

o1s

veggltt

13 Cheat ·

ld-m
31 Complained
31 Wlmplt

24 C.nlno

40-on

11 Except
21 Hall

. ••rer

comment

(lnclll"lll

25 Small, In
2 Pwr. oourct
Dogpatch

27 A nanny
puahea II
29 Popular

3 Trani-

million

crulaeatop

-·

42 WaK mtlodramat...
43 Saya
ltnera
hoai'Miy
27 ilt8ge&lt;l
28 Nohto ollor 44 Ivan or
dot
Nlcholat
30 Plane'a
45 Timt lof'!g

·

5 lluoclt
cramp

37 Sanae
orpn
31-dunu
39 Requlreo
41 CIOihltr
Straus•
43 Homa

6 Above, lo

ohtblllzer

r.:r:

7

Deblor'a

28

e:::...._

4

30 Supplt

34 Llghlonow

~ 1 Eccentric

pill
47 Gretl Llkt
44 Dryerluu
51 Zllro

31 Flow.r

8 Granlld

lo..r

32
33

9 Whltloh
gtmt
10 Orange

Schoolboy
Uh'o
53 Cout

coutlnt

Guardaltrt

35 lnvHatlon
r-r.r--r,-

r:--l'l"""l'!~-

•

you

two-over-one) .

Now, though, suppost.• you arc omswering p;lltiJCr's takeout
double . Look at the
South hand in · the
diagram. Alkr partner
doubles one heart and

COM IN'

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

RtGHT UP,
PAW~!

ROBERT BISSELl ·
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete :·
Remodeling

the n..·~p&lt;HH.I~.:r passes ,

FREE ESTIMATES
7~992·1671

,..

,.

.

...8I.£E.C,CG\ I

TOO~Y ~~

7122/TFN

come

(740) 949-1521

I
f
•
I .

•

1· 16

Pd. I Mo.

DR Bissel Cat
740-378-6349

(;;)
~;::.;

If your weight Is

Advertise

unbeCtmlngte
you, You sltou~ be
comlllg to us.
• Gooclselel:tion or new &amp; used tires
•··
• Oil change $16.95·
We stock aU major brands
Mike Hill
Owner

HERBIIllff.
IDDEPERDEDT
DISmiBUTOR

Sunset Home
Const"'uction

WEST SHADE
BARBERSHOP

Steve H. Whit!, Owner

CIOoOcl' Jan. 30, 3111,
Feb. lot

Fonnerly of Zeoli's RV

Bryan Reeve•

New Homee, Rciom Addltton1,
Gerege1, Poll Qulldlngl, Rool1,
Siding, Decke, Kftchen1, Drywall
&amp;More

Bedllners •Nerf liar
• Tonneue Cover
• Ventvlsor • Bua
Shield &amp; FuU Line

or Other Accesaorles
31345 Noble Summit
Rd. Middleport, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

'

·PEANUTS

740-992-703i
Pd. 1 mo. 1110

Steve's Truck
Accessories

SIR,AAE
'1'011 601N6

. T06NEA
VALENTINE
10 CIIAALES?

Open
The, Fri!D-!:00 p.m.
SaL 8:30 • 12:00
· Georae K. Vac.

('740) 1192·5822

985·3616 C~rlt

11- ~"""'

IMONDAY

l

'

..~..
"•'
..•

High&amp; Dry

.miu.o r; ask partner to
·

propose a trump su1t.
And he .will tend to
Sh0 IV ~ 111 j nor because
be knows that if you
had four spades, you
would have been
happy to bid that suit.
What happens after

Tf.lltEf STRAI6UT

PITCJ.IES ..

FEBRUARY11 I

.

I

18

IO

I I I

.

e PRINT NUMBERED

by filling in the missing words

you develop from step No . 3 below.

·

3

:::_;;;::l~E~TT~E~RS~IN~SQ~UA~R;E~S;:::::;:=;:::::;:~::::;::::;:=~~
D UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS 1
1 1 1 1. 1 ·1 1
FOR

ANSWER

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Flinty- Flash· Quart· Jovial· SITUATION
Envy,if not so destructive, would be a very comic sin .

tl~;1t is ;myunl''s guess!

II is usually based on a total misunderstanding of anFinally, note that in
other person's SITUATION.
hearts West is held to
six tricks i f South g e t s , .
a spade mfl~

Tue~d.1y,

Ft.•b . 12, 2002
A Lmmd m·w l'Vt'll' (:Ullld be
birthin~ (ur yo'\1 so111etitllC
durin!-\ the y~ar :~he:1d. Us~

~

I

ym•r ta lcniN. i ma~ination "lid
nl·quircd skill~ to develop the
upportalnitic~ that will be

I.

'

mmilll( your way.
AQUAI~IUS 0""· 211-F•b.
1tJ) - - Stmu1thiuK tl!;lt ~:mild

''I"'

Ki v' Y"" a ~ront••r
uf
umtcrial u.'L'tlrity ~:ould 5t:~rt to
lwpp~·n (or y~~u tt1do1y. lluwrvt•r, thi! i~ ju~t th ..• b~·~iunill)o[.
AO \1c p;Uklll: Tryi11'~ IU J,afdt
11p n \,fuk!o'l l rmllillH'~·? 1' h~·
Amo .. C:rnr~h Matdt111n.kcr '''11'
help )'11\1 """'''·'' '""' wl111t 111
du w IIHikt the rcl .llitm,hif'
wc.,rk. Mull Sl . 7~ tu M~~tl'lt nutkl•r, chl tf1i~ lll"W~p.lpt•r,
P.O. Uo .'( 175H, Murr ;l ~' 11111
St.ltion, NL·w York, NV

Bill's Tire .
Shop

•

wv

•

(304) 273-3271

'
I

•

We've ·added to

. oyr •cyJcu;
, Complett nhauol
1yttem, .eompu..r
a1111nmen11, computtr
balance, ahocko I&lt;
struts, radl1tor new &amp;

WI ~6.

PISCES (fl•h. 20-M,,n:h 20)
•• T1111,1y lll"fkl the lll·~illllill~

repair, lie .rotlo, boll
olntl, ete,

(lf a 1:wumblL' ~.:ydL• pNt:~i ning
tn thinu• thnt yuu urij.(lii:UL',
moma~e 'lr L'Uiltrol. Thi~ pmi·
tivt: input will IHWL' lung lasti n~ cllt·rl~ .
.
AlliES (Mm:h 21 ~ /\pli\ l'J)
-- You will ~.:1 lhc ~'ppur11.1nily tmi;1y tu I(Ct thl' h.1H ~o llinp: 10 tr)' tu i1L'~jllin• 11 h~,.,~, Uf

Advertise your
business 'on this page·
.
. ..
for one month for as low' as $25 ' 1

-r¥

. ------------

~

ev~·r.

tat~:c

you . Friends de~lrc to ;mociate with you , .u will people

it will b~o· h 1 your ;adv.mItt kcq, yuur ~on\ to

fir~t

ymme\f,

you meet for the

TAUilUS (.A.pril :!O- May
2fl) -- Th~ Liminl:l is ripe today to impmvc upon the t·unt.litilna in\'ulvin~; L'ilh!.'r a Vi\[..:
m·d rdallomhip of!ome kind,
or yuur so&lt;i"l lif• in gonml.
· Mo\·e on it.
GEMINI (M•y 21-June 20)
~- Fucu~ ~olt•ly on your most
llll.,c.m ~mt. ~mbitiutu uhjectivc tmli'ly, bc ..·,m~t: thilt which
you CUlllcJn't liillllC'h rrcviomly cnn nuw ln: ~\1Cctmfully
ilrhii.!Vtti.
·
CANCEl~ O""• 21-July
22) --:- L~y uut yom ~'llltU ro ~
d.1y fc1r ~nmt•thinM lll' l'lr to
yuur h..·art 1h.1t vnu'd like tu

. LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23)·You lhquldn't be 'hes itomt to ·
rukL· on a new :mignm~·11t tod;ly, bl·l·:tust.• you're more th;n
up t(l the tn.,k. Wh:u'~ nmn·,
your hu~~ will t.ih,ovt."r how
vnlunblr ytHI fl'.1lly .ue.
SCOI~I'IO (Oct. 2~-Nuv.
22) .... Th~.• rc'1 :\ JlUUJ dHIIU.'L'
)'Our JH&gt;l,u l :~rity will take on a
m·w till' tm!:ay with both
memUcn of the oppo~ i tt&gt; M:rndcT- . They'll AL'C' more clearly
the Jovc.liueu chnt't nlw:1y1
been in ym1.
·
SAGITTAI,IUS (Nuv . 23l&gt;•c. 2 f) ·· Todoy cmlld mark
the rndintc of ont&gt; thint-t, but
thr bl•ginnin~ of :mother. In
fact, tWC'l new invnlvemenu
tni~ht bt" :.succenfully concluded antl two new CIIIC'l ·

ncrnmpli~h

~Onn.

Your

c.h.nl t'C' of ,, .,· hh.•vin~e thi~ d.,._
!UI'L' ~N l&gt;t:'ttt·r wht·n ym1 hnvt
, rLI &lt;Hiu J,I ~l,

lfi\.1 Q1il)'

2.1·AII~.

. na•nt

yuur

C ilrnin~:t• ~~~o~1 ~

CAI'RICOI~N

(D«. 22IIJ) -- If there i~ au nu:
'killll &lt;lf ·'~'N' ial knnwlL·dgC' that
l'Oltld hd~ you bem•r )lOUr lot

jJI I.

h"•

in lifl' , nlakl' t•vrry ciTcm m

f111l)' L',\:~,lurt'tt lt'lti.IV . Who1t
y(}u find will .Pt.• vo1hmhll•.
VllUiO (Au~. 2J-S,·pr. 22)
.... Th~·rt.• h ~CII IH•thinl( iudt.•.'l'l'ibilhJ .; i11
prt'.\L'IH'l' I0-

IH.'I.:j Ui rc

in au
dt•,

rUilr

\ltlll'rl" _t•_' - - -

.

time.

~t:'lrted .

22) ••

A uy P!om .i~in,~ ~iHJ.Ition that
Jm,kl hkt.' It n1ul~l ~t·rvc a~ Jll
.uhfiriot.l.ll rhannrl 10 nl\'\,ll'-

....1~--~::~~----:~::::::::::::::::=======----~W~i~~~l~Y~\11~1·~\'o~o:l(&gt;=ll~t.·r~~·~~l.~J=i&lt;~m~·---~~~~~~)~'t~h:'t~I~W~i/ 11Ur.1t.'t
I

.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

.

740-992-5232

Phone992-2155

BPVSZPFN'

TMEISXJSFFR,

abnr

•
"••

33795 HilAIIi Ri.
Pommy, Ohio

HtlflftiWood,

XP

~

Self-Storage

I

AOX

I

I PON'T KNOW ..

I f.IATE TO WASTE
A VALENTINE ON
SOMEONE I CAN
STRIKE 00T ON

Feb.l·Mo"'b 1

Shop will be rea houro .
1&lt; dar• March lot
.So..., for your inconv.

you

I

•

eueryweek

740-949-2700

'GBSFS'I

I

••

lose 2-B lbs.

104 Flnh Street, Radne, Ohio

as

Todsy'S ctu•: R «/UBIS Y

S@tt4U"M-JGt.trs·

Free EstnaEs

. Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash Available

to

by Lull Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptogram• are created from quotations by lamoua
people, pu.11nd preunl. Each lener In the Qpher elanda tor aoother.

11HHII!t the bidding
ladder. However, if
ZBSX
OINSA
ZBOG
ZOI
·you arc happy to act
GBS
JSIG
GBEXL
OJPMG
twice, bid the higherranking lirst. Herr,
J 0 IS J O. K K
with almost enough
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A beat·aeller Is a book which aome·
to jump, you should
how aell1 well because Ills lOlling well." - Daniel Booratln
start with two diamonds, p.lanning to
continue with three
THAt DAILY
WOlD
clubs.
PUULII
IAMI
With' such a strong· _ _ _ _...;_...;_ ldiltd ~y CLAY I. POLLAN - - - - - hand, West will dou- O Rearrange letters of the
ble two diamonds for
four scrombl!ld words be·
low
to lorm four simple words.
takeout. Partner, despite having only 13
V E R E l&lt; O
high-card points, will t-rr-r--r-.,;.;2- ,-,--;
raise to three dia- .
1. 1. 1.
mo1His; and then :=~=~~~=~-'
probably .you should
T U C E {\
h ead l~r game. Nodte
3 J I J" .
t 11.1t nvc diamon s . 1
. . . .
mak&lt;·s easily when the L-....L.--1-.1-_.J...--l
trumps split 2-2.
I
K A T R 5 1-::;,' .
I know a man wno IS a1ways
If East raises to two
. 11 busy on environmental commit·
hearts over North'ss 16 J
tees.Onedayltoldhimthatatrue
. . .
activist was not the one who
states the problem but the one
double, make a responsive double. You
S UR C E I
who-- ..•••• the problem.
Uo11 ' t wish to guess a
7
Complete the chuckle qvoted

t

1-877-466-1234

CELEBRITY CIPHER

would y&lt;iu bid dia!I!OIIds or dubs? And
wha( would you do if
East raised to two
h&lt;•arts?
If W&lt;'ak, bid the tlrst
four -rard suit )'OU

Stop &amp; Compare

j{

•

12:,'"'-

nlou!lt the l&gt;idding
ladder. So. if partn&lt;·r
opens one heart and
you have 4-4 in the
black suits, respond
one spade: Uut with
4-4 in the minors ,
,you call two clubs (if

•

Tf-IE:. FI~T
01&gt;.'( OHI-\E.
\{.DT Of
YCJ..JR U FE. I

•'

1~SJr-' 1

h50=rlea

anlranea

Obviously, the answer depends on the
situatiun . If YO\! are
the rc s~o nd e r, you
llllnllally bid the first

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST

e.r~IJc:dl" - -

.. ,_ ~~ llllf tJIIt

N1orth
[)b L

IIIIo
Hlppo'a

17 Equine
mOihtr
rallwoya
11 Flndtlault 51 Fttchea
20 Alpine calla
22 Sheggy
DOWN
· llow.r
23 Tulip colora 1 Caok'a
24 Elltt (hyph.) VIIMf

chouse?

. BARNEY

992-5479

'

41

stror1g t•nough for a

Jeff Warner Ins.

·.,

S SUn, In

watchdog
II Nail-door
11 Cu.....t

' "5U

•

It rs your turn to
act. You have two
fo11r- card suits and
will bid one uf them .
Whi,·ll
do
you

·'

Cellular

•

\\'r~l

I Y

"

Y Ill I .f 2

·Dc;,)Fr; \\'ell
\ 'ulncrHhic: ~either

•

Tree Service

882·2342

...

JC\

Jlll\1
.. Q J 1 6

•

JONES'

4;11

1\Kij75

y ,I I II

•

. .llt&amp;l.

MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout ·
Free Estimates

9

•

992-0739

401 lith StrHt
WV
•R11ld1ntlal

44 Yonuuola

14 Ecol.

fifMIIII

'\

NIW HIVIn,

ij

• Q

Owner: Terry .Lamm

ELDS
PLUMBING

J •

•

..... 10' .

Socc!allz!ng In:

in this
space
for
sso per
month

1 Crlbblgl

.,..

l·:ad
• L'd)J

and Drives• Stencil
Crae

Tr'

AKI5oi
4

.. I(.

• Footen, Walls. Step.•
Fill WDrtc.
Replocemenll. • Walks

/1J!J.1

'

Puzzle

lurnllhlng

=leo

Nut\
fill 112
A K ID 1 4

Cro~aword

44 Obey

coun*•

Beauty

Paige Cleek

D

...

KAY

MAllY

Shade River AG Service

( 0 \ 'd Ill ( 110\

maintenance

Molgt 11.

J ALLEY OOP

L.\\11\I'S

,Wolfe Home

'IOTALI: 15 1-14 H .
IAITIIIN - Juon ~ i 14 a, BarriH Klrr 2 2·2
1, CMa Lyono ~ 0·0 1, Nathan Grubb 1 1-10 8, AI"
Slmpaon 12·2 4, &amp;rid Brannon 5 4-4 15, Travla Wlllor&lt;l
2 o-o 4, !lrandon Worry 1 o-o 2, Altllln c- 1 o-o 2.
cody 01111 1-315. TOTALI: 25 15·23 ee.
'l!iiiii.POtNt QOALI- Eaatom 218raMon, G"'bb),
Maljlo 3(FICidor, Frazlor, Hannon). RIIOUNDI Eaatom 41 (011110; luokify 1), Mtlgo24 (IIUeh 5, Fack·
lor 5). ITIALI- Eutom 15 (Lyct~o 4, Grubb 4), Melgo
5 (Fac~or 2). AIIIITI- EU!tm 14(Lycna ~). Melga
II(Frezltr 2, Faa~or 2). TUIINOVIIII - Eumm 10,

To pluce (Ill od ((111997

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

-YI.mydallysentlnel.com

ALDER

handed point guard chipped in four
points in the third period, as he was
heavily .guarded by the likes of Lyons,
Interior &amp; Exterior
Brannon, and Karr.
Free estimates:
A 1-for-2 effort by Frazier fi:om the
foul line brought Meigs total to 20
Insured
points, while Eastern floated along with
43 points at the 5:00 mark.
Not being able to get anything going
offensively, Meigs called a time-out after
(740) 949·1521
passing the ball around the top of the
key for well over a minute. Fackler came
through for the Marauders by nailing a
WICK'S
quick jumper inside the paint. The
shooting guard along with Williamson RAUUNCaad
arid company hiked their score up to 27 EXCAVATING
b ~
-Hiullng tl.lrneaiOnl
c.ore the sound of the third quarter tGravel • s.rtd •Topeoll
buzzer; the Eagles leading 49-27.
ofUI Dirt -Mulch
All . was ·not a loss for the. young
Marauders, they put up an impressive .
fight throughout the fourth frame
despite their deficit, they netted 12
fourth quarter points.
(740) 992-3470
Buzzy Fackler and Travis Siders led
the Marauders in scoring with 7 and 6,
respectively. Fackler also grabbed 5
rebounds, had 2 steals, and made 2
assists.
Eastern had a 15 point duo of Brannon and Dill. Brannon slid into the
shooting guard position, while Dill
poimdcd the paint for his 15 points. Dill
· also grabbed I 0 boards to place him in
the do4ble double category on the
night.
The &amp;gle reserves picked up their
second win in two days as well by
defeating the young Meigs reserves 4128. Darren Scarbrough led the. Eagles in
HOWARDL.
scoring with 15 points, followed by Ken
Amsbary with nine. David Boyd was top
WRITESEL
man for the. Marauders with ·13 points,
Roofing· Home
followed by De.rek Dill with seven.

:v:,n;: 3R~~rg ~ri.:O~'Z:o~~A~•~.n

, Mondax, Feb. 11,2002

Monday, Feb. 11, 2002

Business Services

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Peae 88 • The Dallv Sentinel

•

••

(

'

Feb.

11,200~

.

.--

Virginia coach Pete Gillen Wllsn't at the
de&lt;peration stage, but he knew that Top
Ten teams shouldn't lose
four sl,r.light games.
So Gillen shook up
the starting lineup, and
the 1Oth-ranked Cavaliers responded by
snapping the losing streak with an 85-71
victory over Clemson on Sunday.
The three players who kept their staning spots - Roger Mason Jr., Travis Watson and Chris Williams - combined for
61 points as Virginia handed Clemson its
eighth straight loss.
Freshman point guard Keith Jenifer and
forward J.C. Mathis gave up their starting
spots to freshmen Jerrrtaine Harper and
Jason Clark.
"It wasn't that those guys were the
' problem; it was the group," Gillen said.
" We lost four in a row. We had to get a
change.
"This was a badly needed victory. It
would have been a really big hurdle to
overcome. They _were reeling. We we.re

NCAA

reeling."
.

It wasn't as ifVirginia (15-6, 5-5 Atlantic
Coast) was losing to w~ak teams. The losing streak was to No. 1 Duke, No. 3
Maryland, No. 22 Missouri and North
Carolina State.
Mason had 23 points, Watson added 20
points and I 0 rebounds and Williams had
18 points for the Cavaliers, who took
control with a -15-0 run after Clemson
(11-13, 2-9) tied the game at 50 with
15:10 left.
"Their three go-to guys really made the
difference in the game," Clemson coach
Larry Shyatt said.
Virginia's big run was courtesy of its
full-court pressure, which was effective

because it kept the ball out of the hands of
Edward Scott, who handled the ball well
for Clemson in the first half.
"We felt that he was the straw that stirs
their drink," Gillen said of Scott, who had
eight assists, seven in the opening 20 minutes. "We wanted to keep · it out of his
hands.
" I thought our pressure really got us
going, gave us a little energy."
Jamar McKnight had 18 points for the
Tigers, whose losing streak started right
after it stunned Virginia at home on Jan . 8.
No.3 Maryland 92,
North Carolina 77
Juan Dixon had 18 points, and the Terrapins (19-3, 9-1 Atlantic Coast) matched
their best overall and league starts in
school history.
•
Lonny Baxter and Byron Mouton
added 16 points each for visiting Marylan·d, which had the same overall record in
1999 and the same league mark 22 seasons
ago.
Kris Lang had 23 points for the_Tar
Heels (6-1 5, 2-9), who matched the
school record for losses in a season - it
happened twice in the early 1950s - and
set a record for ACC losses. The program's
previous worst ACC season was 6-8 in
Dean Smith's third season in 1963-64.
Boston College 76,
· No. 12 Miami 63
Troy Bell scored 24 points, and Ryan
Sidney added 23 points and nine
rebounds as the Eagles (16-7, 5-5 Big
East) beat the Hurricanes for the second
time in 13 days.' Boston College had lost
five of seven, but won 70c65 at Miami on
Jan. 29.
·
Marcus Barnes and John Salmons had
16 points each for Miami (20-4, 7-4),

games.
Fresno St. 58,
No. 14 OkJahoma St. 52
Damon Jackson went 7-for-11 from 3point t2nge and scored a career-high 24
points, and Travis DeManby added ... a..
school~record 11 ~teals for the Bulldogs .
(15-10), who snapped a four-game losing
streak.
Ivan McFarlin and Victor Williams
scored 12 points apiece for the visiting ·
Cowboys (18-6), who committed 25
turnovers and shot 35 percent.
Both teams were missing key performers. Oklahoma State played without leading scorer Maurice Baker, who sprained
his right ankle during Wednesday's victory over r;o. 24 Texas Tech. Forward Chris
Jefferies missed his ftfih straight game for
Fresno State with. torn cartilage in his left
knee.
Michigan St. 67,
No. 16 Ohio St. 64
Marcus Taylor and Adam Ballinger
scored 18 points each for the S.Partans
(14-9, 5-5 Big Ten), who have won five of
their last seven conference games.
Brent Darby had 14 points for the visiting Buckeyes (17-5, 8-3), who feU out of
a first-place tie with Indiana and lost for
the third time in five games.
Pittsburgh 75, No. 23 Syracuse 63
Brandin Knight scored · 11 of his 16
points over the final 5:34, and the Panthers (21-4, 9-3 Big East) rallied from a MINElli- Clemson's Chey Christie grabs a rebound in front
14-point deficit in the second half for ' of Vlrglnla·•s Keith Jennifer (10) in the first half Sunday. (AP)
their first win in the Carrier Dome since
March '2, 1997.
Preston Shumpert had 28 points for the
Orangemen (18-7, 7-4), who lost for the
fifth time in seven games.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -Tony Stewart and the
Ford drivers were the only
ones celebrating after the first
race

NASCAR

I•
--lY
.
.
.
--A'.
-·-··!ill
• ........._.....•

Investigation of
sh.,.ng ·continues
Murder-suicide
suspeded

Raiders beat Spartans, 5

Oebera t Snrder, 47
Freda Russel , 72

Details, 3
I

\IJid rnliDt' cncii.CMI and 12ftllllh COOIIOI.i&amp;W Nllllftd.
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~ M'N. TNT. ClleoM NMwlft. DIHDII.,.

THAT'S COLD -Tony Stewart reacts after getting a face full
of beer in Victory Lane at Daytona after winning the Budweiser Shootout Sunday. (AP)
Gordon.
"Rick Hendrick can get his
towel out and cry about it all
he wants to, but the .bottom
line is that physics is hurting
us," Yates said. "Thank gooc;lness NASCAR is making
some adjustments for that.
"There are a lot of good
Ford teams and a lot of other
teams that are good, but you
can't erase too much of a
handicap."
The Chevrolets, which most
people believe have at le~t a
slight advantage, are using a 6
1'/4-inch rear spoiler, while
both the Dodges and POntiacs
are at 6 112 inches.
Ford teams have complained
since the end of last season
that they are at an aerodynamic disadvantage under the new
rules for Daytona and Talladega, NASCAR's two biggest
and fastest ovals.
The new package was introduced late last fall after driver
complaints about dangerous
racing at the two tracks in
200 t: Those events had threeand four-wide racing and
pas;ing throughout the pack
on just about every. lap.
That resulted in a 19-car
pileup near the end of the
Dayqma 500 that resulted in
Stewart flipping on the backstretch. The elder E_arnbilrdt
was killed on the final lap of
the race.

Lewis admitted.
Olazabal, who like Tiger Woods made the cut
on the number, finished with a 72-hole total of
13-under 275.
"I feel like I played very, very well over the
weekend," said
Olazabal, who shot a 67 in the
I o
wind Saturday.The wind never came up Sunday,
giving golfers perfect conditions under a cloudless sky.
.
·
Lewis, trying for his second tour victory, tied
for second with Mar~ O'Meara at 276: Both
shot 70s. as did Daly, who finished fourth at 277.

.,
of th~

Spotlight: Kids speak out

BY TONY M. LEActt

path.
Musser said the village
POMEROY - Seeking could receive . additional
additional funds for ·the:, vii- financial assistance under the
!age's ptQpo~ed new wallting . Ohio Department of Natur. path project topped the al Resources' (ODNR)
agdtda
of
Monday's Clean Ohio Trails Fund·.
"If acquired, money from
Pomeroy Council meeting.
Former councilman John the Clean Ohio Trails Fund
Musser spoke with council would play a significant role
about the possibility of in the development of the
acquiring additional funding walking path project," said
for the project.
· Musser.
The new blacktop walkAfter discussing the issue
way, jf constructed; would be with Musser, council agreed
more than 9,100 linear feet to file an application with
in ·length and 10 feet wide the ODNR and provide all
and would extend along th~ in~ormation. and documenOhio River from the tatton requtred to become
Pomeroy levee to Nye eligible for possible funding
Avenue. Park benches, water asststance._
fountains and lights . would
In other matters, Pomeroy
also be placed along the
PlUM - Ponteroy, 3
TLEACHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

WASHINGTON (AP)
-· The FBI warned of a
possible terrorist attack as
early as Tuesday in the
United States or against
Americans in Yemen, and
investigators rushed to dis~ibut.: photpgrapm o(Jnen
believed to be involved.
Police nationwide were
under orders to detain any
of them immediately.
The warning identified
one possible attacker as
Fawaz Yahya ai-Rabeei, a
light-skinned, 22-year-old
trom Yemen with Westernlooking features. The FBI
considered the information
"credible;' but it was not
spedfic ah9ut possible targets and was not corroborated by other sources.Officials said they decided
to issue the warning out of
an abundance of caution
and because Tuesday was so
near.

.

OHIO

luck• 5: 4-15·27-28·29
Pick 3 ct.y: 7·8·7

daY: 7·7·2-2

W.VA.
Deily 3: 8-6.CJ
4: 4.CJ..2-a
'-llli 15: 2-8-15·16·17·22

,.UY

At Pleasant Valley Hospital,
we treat you like family... ·
..
because that's w~at you are.

I

Letters reveal community
..needs,..kid$i'conceJ;Us....~.~·
''

BY BRIAN J. R!I!D
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Adults tell us not
to skateboard in
but there
a ·place to
at my home. '
· bored
because
my
skateboilrding
activity has been
taken away." ·
. "If you would
put
in a new park
.
or community
center, fewer kids
would get in
trouble with the
· Kyle Boep
law," wrote Brittany Preast. "By bringing more activities into
the area, it will draw attention to the small
businesses.
·
"It would be a way to invest in the commu-

MIDDLEPORT .- "Please give us a place
of our own."
Casey Smith, a sixth-grader at Meigs Middle
School, and many of her classmates, say that
recreational facilities and businesses catering to
their needs and
interests would
' be assets . to the
commumty
and might help
eliminate discipline problems.
f .
Students
in
Pam
Durst's
sixth-grade class nity."
Talisha Beha, 11, wrote about restaurants in
wrote letters to
the editor as an her letter - or the lack of high-end eateries
like Damon's and
assignment, and
Lone Star Steaksay the commuhouse, and sugnity needs skategests
locating
boarding faciliCIIHySmlth
restaurants on the
ties,
activities
'
•..
nver.
centers, movie
· theaters and restaurants.
r
"Athens .and
Columbus have
"Middleport youth need more activities to
very
nice restauoccupy our time," Smith wrote. "We have
rants, ~o why
nothing to do. I bet if kids actually had somecan't
we?"
thing to do, there wouldn't be as much loitering on the streets."
"We need a
recreation center
"Instead
of
to keep kids off
adults complainthe streets," Kyle
ing about . us all
Boggs wrote. "I
the time, why
· hope the readers
don't you try to
Emily Davis
agree and will be
build us a skate
park?" Bradley inoved'to action!"
Lacey Stobart of Chester and Alexa Venoy of
Jones of Middleport
wrote. Pomeroy suggested a movie theater. '·
"Everywhere,
"It would help tourism by providing somego, .I se_e , no . thing to do in the evenings when everything
skateboardmg
else is closed. I think the old Pamida building
.
stgns..
would be an ideal place for a theater, with
Ryan Smailes plenty of parking," Stobart said.
of
Pomeroy
"People and kids would have a new meeting
wrote, "We need
·
a
skate
park.
PIMH
IM Kkll, 3
. Brittany Preatt

.

BPA to remain
in place
'
BY 8RfM J. RIEP ..

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

MIDDLEPORT- "This
is an unnecessary solution to
a non-existent problem."
That's how former Middleport Councilman Eric
Chambers described Middleport Village Council's
proposal to replace the
Board of Public Affairs with
a village administrator at
Monday evening's regular
council meeting.
The BPA will remain in
place after a proposal to
replace it was unanimously
tabled. Council again considered legislation to elimi-

nate the three-man board
with an administrator who
would be responsible for
supervising water and sewer
projects and em!;'loyees, testing water samples and other
work relating to the village's
public works system.
After the second reading
of the ordinance, which was
first introduced in December, a group of 14 Middleport residents - including
three former council members - voiced their concerns that the elimination of
the BPA was untimely and
unnecessary.
Council members . Roger
Manley
and
Stephen
Houchins, who have supported the ordinance, have.

Pleese •• Caun~ll. 3

Happy Anniversary! _.

.

Pick 3: 5·9·1
tf;ick 4: 4·5·8-8
~4
•

Area kids just want Council tables action
place of their own'· on administrator
~ -

wamlng

-~~--.-.

.........,.

'

victims and we are cur- ground. .
reritly in the process of ques- · Snyder was pronounced
· tioning an eyewimess;• said dead at the scene with an
Trussell. "My department and appare'nt gunshot wound to :
thl! Ohio Bureau of Criminal the head. Wise, who was trans- ·
BY TONY M. WCH
Identification and lnvestiga- ported via medical helicopter
TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL:.COM
RUTLAND - · A. s)iboting tion'Concu.r that the incident to Holzer Medical Center in
that left two people dead is was probably a homocide/sni- Gallip6Iis , with a gunshot
I wound to t he chest, later died
being investigated by authori- ct'd e."
On Friday night, deputies as a result of his injuries,.
ties
as
a
possible
from the sheriff's office were Trussell said.
homocide/ suicide.
According to Meigs County dispatched to a home on · Both bodies have been
Sheriff Ralph Trussell, evi- Smith Run Road around 9:20 transported to the Franklin
dence collected at the scene of p.m. · following a report of a County Coroner for autop:
the shooting near Rutland possible shooting. Upon arriv- stes.
"No arrests have been made
"seems to poin~ toward a pos- ing on the scene, deputies dissible homocide/suicide."
covered the boaies of Debra as of yet and ·the incident is
"A .38 caliber handgun was Joan Snyder, 47, and Sidney still under investigation," said
found under the body of-one Roland Wise, 42,laying on the Trussell.

_. FBI puts out

I

.. .., 122.811..--

'

' '

POMEROY
Pomeroy.hunts more
walking path funds .

MIDDLEPORT

•

index
..
2
6-8

9

2

. I. ·.•

·.~·.~:...,

·~

1

,r,l .

4.

.. 3
;;:"'{~~~.
i "~'
3

.,

.: ,' 5,8, 10

37

,

.

CELEBRATION -The 100th anniversary of People's Bank
was observed Friday with open houses at its various locations In Ohio, West VIrginia and Kentucky. Decorated cake
Inscribed 1902 to 2002 was served with punch and tea in
celebration of the occasion. Shown· here is Edie Harman, a
customer service representative at the Pomeroy bank,
serving Rita Lewis of Pomeroy. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Heart
Wellnes.

Jose Maria Olazabal wins Buick Invitational

l

HoMat.wn Newspa,.,

Got I All IIBt-

~:e

SAN . DIEGO (AP) - Jose Maria Olazabal
backed into the Buick Invitational title whenJ.L.
Lewis three-putted on No. 18 to blow a shot at
a playoff.
Bt.tt Olazabal certainly played well enough for
the victory, his first on the PGA Tour sincr winning his second Masters in 1999.
His 7-under-par 65 held up when Lewis
bogeyed the finishing hole on the Torrey Pines
. South Course on Sunday to blow his shot at a
_
playoff.
"I kind of got a bad break, then choked."

•

which lost for the second time in eight

Tony Stewart wins Bud Shootout
we've seen in Daytona so far."
The ·Fords have been slow
since the first practice here
Friday. Only two Fords
cracked the Top 20 in the first
. round . of qualifYing on Saturday, and Dale Jarrett's Robert
Yates-owned Taurus was the
top finisher m Sunday's
NASCAR season.
Stewart drove his Pontiac to shootout.
Jarrett's sixth-place finish
victory Sunday in 'the Budweiser 'Shootout, a nonpoints was almost four seconds
race at Daytona International behind Stewart, who held off a
Speedway. Two hours after its last7Iap charge by the Chevrocompletion,
NASCAR. lets of Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
reduced the spoilers on the Jeff Gordon to win the race.
Fords to make the Tauruses
The race was a single-ftle
event until it turned into a
more competitive.
The rules change overshad- legitimate shootout at the end,
oWed Stewart's second straight with Stewart winning for the
victory in the made-for-TV second straight year with an
event and spawned a flurry of Earnhardt in his rearview mircomplaints from the other ror.
Earnhardt Jr. was on ' Stewthree car makes.
"The Dodge camp is now art's rear bumper until the finbasically behind the eight ball ish line, reminiscent of last
across the board,'' said Tony year when Stewart outdueled
Glover, team manager for Dale Earnhardt one week
Chip Ganassi Racing. "It's dis- before the seven-time Winston
heartening and it's disappoint- Cup champion was killed in
ing when you start into a situ- the Daytona 500.
":Winning that race last year
ation as an underdog."
NASCAR cut a quarter- with that black No. 3 in my
inch off the Ford's rear spoilers mirror was the highlight of my
following their poor •hawing career," Stewart said. "But this
was just like last year. He may
in the shootout.
· The spoilers will be reduced have 'Junior' behind his name,
to 6 inches, a full half- inch but he drives like Senior."
The thrill from the wi~. was
smaller than they were when
shonlived,
though, as Stewart
NASCAR first introduced its
new aerodynamic package late and his crew chief reacted to
last fall. NASCAR 'took the the Fords getting help.
"I'm the only one who can
first quarter-inch away last
month after the Fords tested lose. by this because I won
under the old rules," .Stewan
poorly under the new rules.
The Fords can begin using said. "1 don't want them to do
the smaller spoilers on Tues- anything to the cars."
And Greg Zipadelli, his
day, and NASCAR will monitor their progress in the 125- crew chief, thought the Fords
mile qualifying races on didn't deserve the break.
"They should have been left
Thursday. Should the decision
alone
from the start and forced
shift the disadvantage to anyof
the other · three car makes, to do their 'homework a little
NASCAR president Mike better before 'they got here,''
Helion said more changes · Zipadelli said.
Yates fired back.
could be made before next
"We've worked extremely
Sunday's season-opening Dayhard," he said. "We didn't sit
tona 500.
"We're
making
these back or sandbag."
changes b3sed on · results on
Then he mentioned the
the track,'" H elton said. "This four Chevrolets of Hendrick
action is coming from what Motorsports, including that of

•

Olympics: u.s. rqen sweep.ha~ipe, 5

Virginia changes lineup and ends losing streak ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l
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Point Pleasant) WV 25550
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304.. 675-4340

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~~- and HMC CatdiCfl'Jimonotr Uni~
lbursday, February 14, _2002 • 10 AM- 4 PM
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