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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March 1, 2005

•

Bears cut former first-round pick Terrell Burson has coached
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wide receiver . David
Terrell, the eighth pick in
the 200 I draft, was released
by the Chicago Bears as
NFL teams prepared for the
start of free
agency
Wednesday by paring veterans to get under the salary
cap.
Terrell was 'joined on the
temporary unemployment
line Monday by Cleveland
safety Robert Griffith , 36year-old linebacker Roman
Phifer of New England, and
three Atlanta defensive
players who have been
starters much of their
careers: Travi s Hall. Ed
Jasper and Cory Hall.
·
Carolina cut 39-year-old
backup quarterback Rodney
Peete , and San Diego
released defensive tackle
Jason Fisk.
Terrell became expendable when the Bears signed
veteran
Muhsin
Muhammad. released last
week by the Panthers after
an All-Pro season.

Terrell started 15 games
last season and led the
Bears with a career-high
699 yards receiving on 42
receptions with one touchdown . Over four year~ with
the team, he totaled 128
receptions , I ,602 yards
receiving and nine tou'Ohdowns.
"It is unfortunate ·things
didn't turn out better for
David i.n Chicago,'! general
manager Jerry Angelo said.
''The bottom line was \lie
needed · an upgrade at the
receiver position. We were
able to add a Pro Bowl
wideout this past weekend ,
and those types of .moves
qn affect others on the
team."
Atlanta cut defensive
linemen Travis Hall and
Jasper and safety Cory Hall,
cutting $5 million from the
team's salary cap.
Travis Hall started 13 or
more games six times in. I0
seasons with Atlanta . Jasper
started 12 games last season
and both of the Falcons'

playoff games. Cory Hall games in three seasons with
started 23 of the 25 games the Chargers. making 88
he spent with Atlanta after tackles and five sacks.
being signed two years ago
The Buccaneers restrucas a free agent .from tured the contract of fullCincinnati.
back Mike Alstott as part of
Phifer played with the the team's effort to pare
Rams in .Los Angeles and about $17 million from the
St. Louis for eight seasons ·payroll. Alston. a six-time
after being a second-round ' Pro Bowl selection, was
pick in the 1991 draft. He scheduled to earn $2 milwent to the New York Jets lion in 2005. After missing
as a free agent before join- most of 2003 with a neck
ing the Patriots in 2001. He strain, he avera~ed 3.4
has played in . 211 games yards per carry whtle rushduring his career.
.. ing ·for 230 yards and two
Griffith, 34, led the touchdowns last season
Browns in tackles last sea.- while being limited by a
son with 157 . In three sea- knee injury.
son s after · signing with
Detroit and Dominic
Cleveland from .Minne sota, Raiola agreed on a five-year
he started 44 games and had contract, keeping the team's
408 tackles. six intercep- center off the free-agent
tions, two fumble recover- market.
ies and one sack.
Raiola started every game
Peete , a 16-year veteran, the past three seasons after
cou ld be re-signed by spending much of hi s rookCarolina, which also cut ie season in 2001 on special
guard Doug Brzezinski in teams·. The. 26-year-old
saving $2 .5 million in cap Hawaii native was drafted
space.
in the second round out of
Fisk started 31 of 47 Nebraska.

Illinois on top for 13th straight week·
BY JIM

0'

CONNELL

. Assoc1ated Press
Illinois was No. ·1 in The
Associated Press college
basketball poll Monday, the
lllini's 13th straight week
on top and their fifth con·
secutive poll as a unanimous choice .
The lllini (28-0) beat
Northwestern · in their only
game last week. Coupled
with a loss by Michigan
State, that was enough for
them to win their second
straight Big Ten title . .
The 13-week run at No. I
is 'the longest since Kansas
was on top for 15 straight
polls in 1996-97. Five weeks
as a unanimous choice .of the
72-member national ·media
panel is the iongest such
streak since Duke's fiveweek run in 2001-02 .
North Carolina (24-3) beat

North Carolina State and UCLA's run of 221 conSecuMaryland last week to tive polls that started with
remain No. 2.
the preseason · voting in
Kentucky. · · which beat 1966-67 and ended on Jan.
Alabama
in
a
key . 8, 1980.
Southeastern Conference
Kansas ..which has the secgame on Satmday. moved up and-longest active. streak at
two spots to third. Wake 9l straight polls, moved
Forest made the same jump from eighth to No. 7.
to fourth . while Boston Oklahoma State, the team
College, which lost at the Jay'hawks beat to end
Villanova last Wedn'esday, their three-game losing
dropped from No. 3 - the streak, dropped from . fourth
highest ranking in school to No.8.
history- to fifth.
Louisville·and Washington
· Duke moved up one spot rounded out the Top Ten.
to sixth. It marked the Blue
Arizona was II th and was
Devils' !64th consecutive followed by Gonzaga,
poll appearance, tying Syracuse, Michigan State,
Kentucky for the fifth- Connecticut, Utah, Pacific.
longest streak since the poll Charlotte, Villanova and
started in the 1948-49 sea- Oklahoma.
son.
. Alabama,
Cincinnati,
Duke has been ranked in Wisconsin, Pittsburgh and
every poll since the presea- Nevada were the last five
son Top 25 of the 1996-97 ranked teams.
season. The record is
Pittsburgh (18-7) lost

home ·games to West
Virginia and Connecticut
last week to extend its losing
·streak to three games. The
Panthers' fall from 18th to
24th was the biggest drop of
the week, and is their lowest
ranking since they started
their run of 59 straight polls
on Feb. II , 2002.
Washington, which beat
Arizona State and Arizona,
and Villanova, which beat
Georgetown in addition to
the win over Boston
College, both had the week's.
biggest jump at fo.ur places.
There are four games with ,
two ranked teams this week
Pittsburgh at Boston
College
on , Monday;
Charlotte at Louisville on
Thursday; Syracuse at
Connecticut · on Saturday,
and Duke at ~orth Carolina
on Sunday.

his last game for MC

NEW CONCORD (AP) Burson. whose retirement
Muskingum basketball coach will take effect on Aug. 31 ,
Jim Burson, among the ·top 10 2006, has a record of 542-416.
in Division Ill in career wins, He has been voted OhiO
announced Monday that he has Conference .coach of the year
coached his last game. He will five times, has won three regutake a sabbatical during the tar-season and three OAC tour2005-06 season and will then nament championships and has
retire after 38 years as a head · taken five teams to the_NCAA
coach . .
tournament.
Burson said he based his
"Muskingum ha&gt; been nl)thdecision in part on the ing but good to me and I've
demands of becoming presi- had a wonderful time," Burson
dent
of
the
National said. "I'm so proud that they
Association of Basketball gave me a chance at a young
Coaches in April.
"I knew when I started this age to be here and to.coach. It
year that this may be my last has been a great run and I have ·
·.
season," Burson said after his no regrets."
His career victories also rank
Muskies completed a 17-10
year. "Some of my disciplined in the top five among active
·
habits have eroded a little bit coaches in the division.
"As
an
educator
and
coach,
and the game has changed.... I
find myself at times going Jim has developed and men'Wow I don't think I can quite tared thousands of Muskingum
fit.' When you get to that stage College students," Muskingum
and you can smile and say we· president Dr. Anne C. Steele
had a ~ood year, then you just said. "These students are hts
know tt's time.',
legacy."

Chaney
from Page B1
the injury he sustained last
week against Temple. Neither
should I be able to coach."
Chaney had apologized to
Bryant and his family and
offered to pay his medical
bills. Chaney originally suspended himself for one game
before the extent of Bryant's
injury was known.
When an MRI on Friday
showed Bryant had a broken
arm, Temple suspended
Chaney for the final two
games of the regular season.
Chaney is still coaching the
Owls at practice, though he
won't attend any of their
games.
Assistant
Dan
Leibovitz is coaching the
team for the rest of the season.
Chaney, who won a
Division II title in I0 seasons
at Cheyney State, took· the
Owls to 17 NCAA touma- ,
ments from 1984 to 200 I. l-ie
has a 721-294 record in his
33-year coaching career.

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At Tuesday 's monthly
meeting
of
Middleport
Community AssOciation, Vice
MIDDLEPORT
-The President ,Tom Dooley disInstitute .
for . . Local cussed long-term and shortGovernment and Regional term plans for downtown
Development
at
Ohio revitalization to be coordinatUniversity will play a cent ral . ed by a group of local volun role in developing plans for a · teers organized under the
downtown redevelopment LeadershipPlenty program.
strategy in Middleport.
He said the group will work
BY BRIAN J. REED

BR EED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

with
professionals
at worked with the· Department the City of Well ston on a
ILGARD to develop plan s for of Job.and Family Services, downtown· revitalization pro- .
improving the infra.structure and the county co mmi ss ion- gram, Dooley said.
and phy sical appearance of .ers on a number uf economic
"They have done a walkthe downtown shopping dis- development
projects·. through in Middleport,
trict in an attempt to attract in cl uding work on the health identifying building s that
new businesse s and to help care steering committee now need work. and o.thers that
existing businesses succeed .
trying to mtract funding for a are ready to be occupied
ILGARD is a non-p rofit hospitsl and emergency room with just a little work,"
organization affiliated with in the county. A team from
Ohio University, . and has ILGARD also worked with
Please see ILGARD, AS

QUADRUPLETS BORN
BY BETH SERGENT
' BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

OBITUARIES
'

.Page AS
• Raymond Goble, 64
• Ed Harmon, 81

INSIDE
• f:'Ope speaks to top
Vatican official in
latest sign of recovery.
See . Page A2
• Agency calls for first
Ohio welfare raise in five
· years. See Page A2
• Artists in the Making to
display work.
See Page A3
• · Eating disorders
program opens in Albany.
See Page AS
• Eastern pep rally set.
See Page AS

Ultimate Checking Balance Interest Paid
Rate APY*'
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0.$ 50,000
0.50% 0.50%
$ so,ooo - $ 99.999·99 1.85% 1.87"/o
$too,ooo • $249,999.99 2.15% 2.17%
S2so,ooo - $499,999.99 2.25% 2.28%
$5oo,ooo and Up
2.50% 2-53%

....

WEATHER

POMEROY - When it became apparent that Helen
was unexpectedly givi ng birth to quadruplets on Friday
night, her midwife Vicki Long immediately thought, " I
need more help'' and "oh, you poor goat."
No, Long was not insulting Helen because Helen is a
pygmy·goat who was giving birth to her third litter of kids . .
One to three kids per litter is normal but quadruplets are
rare. Each one of Helen's four kids were born healthy and
are now busy frolicking around their barn.
. Long and neighbor Ken Cook raise the pygmy goats
and currently have 34 of the good-natured animals in their
shared barnyard on Chambers Road near Five PointS.
"They all have their own personality and voice," said
Long as she cuddled one of,Helen's kids .
Pygmy goats originated in Africa and arrived in the
United States around 1950. Besides being affectionate and
keeping the grass cut on a farm, they are becoming popular for small children to raise as 4-H projects.
Beth Sercenl/photo
Long and Cook breed the animals that will get as tall as On Friday, Helen, a pygmy goat owned by Vicki Long and Ken Cook, gave birth to quadruplets,
which is a rarity. The goats are pictured along with Long and Cook. ·
23inches, weigh 40-60 pounds and live around 15 years.

Federal grants available for after-school programming. Legg appeals·
j'ury '~ the11t
':J
convt•ctt•on .
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL

POMEROY - At the ·end
of each school day in Meigs
County, there are undoubtedly dozens of children who
return to homes wh.ere no
adults await and they spend a
couple of hours alone until a
parent returns from work.
They are· called "latchkey
children" and it's estimated
1hat there ate ·14,3 million in

America's•households.
Most of the children probably have a snack, turn on the
television, or sit down to play
computer game~ to pass the
time away until a pare,nt
arrives. Few probably use
that time to do their homew·ork or household chores
since most need direction and
there's nobody there to give
any.
In some areas, however,.
there are after-school pro-

grams, where children c.an
spend a few hours in a constructive way - getting
homework help, having a
snack, getting some e~erci se.
doing creative projects - all
under the · supervision of
tesponsible adults.
Mary Jo Frazer, out-ofsc hool coordinator for the
Corporation
for . Ohio
Appalachian Development
(COAD) , Early Care and
Education .Division, is con-

'

Free unlimited check-writing

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'I" i I \

• Costly turnover: Gilbert
owns Cavaliers.
See Page 81

INDEX
2

Sl!CrtONS ~ 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds

. A3

•

82-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

. Editorials
· Obituaries
Sports
Weathe(

B Section
A6

cerned about the ·'after1
. school haves and have- nots"
.,
and is convinced . that many .
children would participate in
. after-school programs if they
were available .
·
BY BRIAN J. REED
"Two years ago the federal
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM
governmelu committed to
steady and sensible growth in
POMEROY
-A
after.-school funding, but it Ch illicothe man convicted of
hasn't· lived up to the com- grand theft auto in a February
mitment. The No Child Lett jury trial has appealed his
conyiction.
Please see Grants, AS
. Lawrence R. Legg. 21, filed
an appeal of his conviction in
the Fourth District Court of
Appeals , clainiing Prosecutor
Pat Story failed to prove
venue and failed to prove
each and every element in the
case beyond a reasonable
doubt.
Legg 's attorney,
Michael Eachus of Gallipolis,
tiled the appeal on Monday.
Legg was convicted on' Feb.
15 of grand theft auto. He was
accu·sed. with his cousin,
Craig Karr. of. stealing a Ford
Expedi ti'on owned by Wesley
Karr of Flatwoods Road on .
Nov: 7. Legg was acquitted of
charges of breaking and .
entering and vandalism.
Karr entered a plea agreement admitting his role in the
incident. in exchange fortes- .
timony in Legg 's trial. Legg
was sentenced to 18 moAths
in prison on the charge. and
face s a parole violation in his
native Ross County.
Craig Karr testified iri
Plene see Lea. AS

© aoos Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

t ~allipolts Jail~ lribunt

Ill \

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Interest-bearing checking account
We'll run your classified U!Je ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribooe,
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which is delivered to 17,000 homes. Hyou sell your vehicle within 25 days; just call
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MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Rio
Redwomen shot just under
58 percent ( 11 -of-19) from
the free throw line .
Roberts Wesleyan shot 47
percent (35-of-75) from the .
field, 42 percent ( I0-of-24)
from three-point land and
62.5 percent (15-of-24)
from the free throw line for
the game.
The Raiders outscored Rio
Grande, 30-3, from threepoint land and held a decisive 28-6 edge in points off
turnovers even though Rio
had
only
two
more
turnovers than .did Roberts
(18-16).
Roberts also dominated
the glass, out-rebounding
the Redwomen, 55-42.
Rio now has · to play the
waiting and hoping game
concerning
the
NAJA
National Tournament. There
are six at-large bids to the
national tourna111ent and the
. Red women are hoping
against hope that one will
fall their way.

friends bucy ·
dead after suicide bomber
kills at least 125, A2
· 1~"amilies,

Ilmited edition
ewe featured at
basket bingo, As

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NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Wednesday, March

2, 2005

P&lt;?pe speaks Families, friends bury dead after suicide bomber kills at least 125
to top Vatican BY QASIM ABDUL-ZAHRA
HILLAH ,
Iraq
official in
Thousands of mostly blackIraqis protested Tuesday
latest sign of clad
outside a medical clinic where
a suicide car bomber killed
125 people a day earlier, bravrecovery
ing the threat of another attack
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

VATICAN CITY (AP)
Pope 1ohn Pau I II
· managed to speak in two
languages with a top
Vatican official Tuesday,
the first clear sign the
pontitf was regaining his
voice after thrbat suFgery.
The
meeting
with
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
reinforced Vatican statements ·that the 84-year-old
pope · was making strides
in vocal and respiratory
therapy less than a week
after receiving a breathing
tube. It . also sent a message that John Paul can
remain engaged in key.
church affairs from his
IOth-lloor suite at Rome's
Gemelli Polyclinic . hospital.
''The pope spoke with
me in German and in
Italian," said Ratzinger, ·a
German who runs a powerful Vatican office that
deals with issues of
Roman Catholic doctrine.
"I am happy to say that
the Holy Father is fully
alert mentally and also
·able to say the essential
things with his voice."
Ratzinger did not elaborille · on what the · pope
said or how . · long he
spoke, but his rare meet. ing
with
reporters
strengthened the image the
Vatican is putting l'orward:
The pope . is rebounding
and remains in controL
· The Vatican has never
officiallv . confirmed John
Paul's other m11jor ' health
concem, Parkinson's disease, which causes. progressive loss of muscle

as thev waved clenched lists,
condel11ned foreign fighters
and chanted "No to terrorism'"
Police prevented people
from· parking cars in front of
the clinic or the hospital,
·where authorities blocked hos- .
pita! gates with barbed wire to
stave off hundreds of victirils'
relatives desperate. for information on loved ones.
The demonstration in this
town 60 · miles south of the
· capital came as the Shiite candidate for prime minister traveled north for talks with the
Kurds about a coalition government and as 'the number of
American dead in the Iraqi war
neared I ,500.
.
AP Photo
Insurgents, fighting both
American forces and t~e Iraqi Hundreds of Iraqis demonstrate in condemnation of Monday's suicide bombing at the blast site in Hillah, Iraq Tuesday. Hundreds of
government, released a video people VISited the wounded and inspected corpses at the hospital in Hillah on Tuesday, trying to identify friends and family who died
Tuesday of French journalist in a suicide bombing that killed at least 120 people, the single deadliest attack of its kind since the fall of Saddam Hussein.
Florence Aubenas. 4~. kid- ·
napped nearlyiwb months ago. · they gathered around lists of Wahhabism'" and demanding from striking back, mostly at mentary majority to elect a
·The 4~-year-old correspondent the dead and wounded that the resignation of interim . the behest of Grarid Ayatollah president and nominate .the
for the French daily Liberation were posted on hospital walls. Prime Minister Ayad Allawi.
Ali al-Sistani, who wants noth- prime minister.
appeared alone in front of a Relatives who came to identify
Wahhabism was a clear ref. ing to impede the Shiites from
One of the most important
maroon-colored background, the dead placed corpses into crence to foreign lighters who gaining political power m Iraq. challenges for the incoming
pleading for help.
. coffins and loaded them onto are supporters of ai-Qaida and
Nominally disbanded Shiite government will be the
Abu Musab al-Zaryawi's ter- pickup tmcks to take them adherents of the strict Wahhabi militias could easily field thou- ongoing violence and the
form of Islam , which is the sands of tough and effective , difficulties in training an
ror group. which has repeated- away for buriaL
ly seized foreigners and
Fears that insurgents would version practiced in Saudi fi ghters that could deal· a Iraqi army capable of taking
attacked Americans, purport- target Shiite mourners forced Arabia. The Jm·danian-born Crushing blow to the insur-. over from American troops.
edly claimed responsibility for authorities to cancel an elabo- Zarqawi. the... country's most gency. But Shiite leaders will
The deaths Monday of two
the suicide bombing in Hillah. rate funeral procession for feared terrorist, claims to be also have to allay the fears of U.S. soldiers in a vehicle acciIt was not possible to indepen- some of . the victims of affiliated. with Osama bin Sunnis, who dominated the dent in Beiji, 155 miles north
dently verify the claim, which Monday's attack, the deadliest Laden's organization.
Iraqi political sy~tem under of the capital. reported by the
was posted on the IDtemet.
since the insurgency hegan two . . The Baath party was the Saddam and make up 20 per, military Tuesday, brought the
The group said it targeted years ago.
political organization that ran cent of the popula1ion.
number of . deaths among the
recruits for the Iraqi security . "I am afraid t!Jere might be a Iraq under Saddam Hussein. ·
With a slight majority of 140 U.S. mtlttary to at least 1.499
services. whom it referred to as suicide bomber among the
Although Monday's attack seat~ in the 275-meniber par- since the beginning of the .
''apostates," but did not n1en- demonstrating crowd," said was directed at recruits, most liament that was elected · on lraqi war, according to an :
. tion those killed in a nearby 30-year-old Ahmed . al-Amiry. of the victims were Shiites. · Jan. 30, the main Shiite clergy- Associated Press coum.
market. The car bomb wem off "It's very possible."
Insurgents have increasingly backed United Iraqi Alliance
At least I, 135 dted as a
at a site where police and army
But anxieties· over another targeted gatherings of Shiites, sent its candidate for prime result of hostile act1on, accordrecruits were lining up for attack did not prevent more who make up liO percent of minister; Ibrahim al-Jaafari , mg to the De!ense Departmen!· .
physicats exams at the medical than 2,000 people from gather- lraq's, population, in an appar- north to Irbil to negotiate for The fig~res mclude four mJhclinic.
ing outside the clinic Tuesday, ent effort to start a sectarian the support of the Kurds. The tary cmhans. The AP count 1s
In Hillah, relatives and shouting "No to terrorism!" . war.
alliance needs Kurdish support .12 htgher than the Defense
friends s.creamed and wailed as ·and "No to BaathiSJ)1 and
The Shiites have refrained to build the two-thirds parlia- Department's tally on Monday.

Agency calls for f1"rst Oh·1·o
welfar'e ra"ls·e l"n fl"v·e years

control and is expeqed to
complicate his recovery.
But Ratzinger · indirectly
/
acknowledge&lt;J the pope's
COLUMBUS (AP)- The below 190,000 since then,
condition, saying an asso- state is proposing the first agency spokesman Jon Allen
ciation for Parkinson's suf- raise in five years for families said.
The agency is planning an
ferers wrote the pope to receiving welfare ,and other
k ~
ways to spend most of the average increase of about I0
express than s or helping program's balance, which has percent to rellect· inflat.ion
the image of those afflict- surpassed what ·the federal since the last increase . in
ed.
. government gives the state 2000. A family of three now
"The Holy Father has each year for welfare.
receiving $373 a month
Staff with Department of would get about $410.
the courage to appear in
public as a person who Job and Family Services were. Even then, the family .
suffers and who continues to present the agency plan on would be making 30 percent
to work," Ratzinger told . Tuesday to House lawmak- . of the federal poverty level,
Vatican Radio.
ers. The Legislature must said Athens County's human
"He is welL His condi- approve spending for the fed- services director, Jack Frech,
·
· ,
al , eral-state program as part of who has criticized . the state
tlon is · improvmg, P&lt;;JJ. fthe state's next two-year bud- for allowing the surplus to
spokesman
Joaqui.n, .:· ge.t that begins in July.
build up.
The fe~eral government in
"They are so far behind on
Navarro- Valls
' . told
reporters. He said ·the · 1996 replaced traditional what they need to Jive on,"
pope "spent a good night" welfare with a three-year said Frech.
and celebrated Mass in his temporary grant program
Half of families re&lt;:eiving
suite.
combined with child care and the help won't be able to get
Doctors had told · the job hunting help. Ohio's $728 jobs because the parent or
pope to rest his voice for million annual .grant has grandparent raising the chilseveral days after a tra- · stayed mostly unchanged, dren ts disabled, Frech said,
cheotomv. Thursday. He is supplemented by siate money and only 15 percent receive
to make a more than $1 bil- subsidized housing. firom the
undergoing · daily therapy iion program. · ·
grants they have to pay for
to learn to breath and
Meanwhile, an account of rent, utilities, diapers, school
speak with the tube in nearly $790 million has built fees and other daily expenses.
up as lawmakers put aside
Frech advocates a $ 100
place.
. ;&lt;Everything is ' normal." savings based on concerns monthly increase to families.
Navarro-Valls said. "He, is that it would run out · of
The goal is to avoid any ·
a good patient."
ll)oney and counties spent spending changes , that can't
The Vatican . canceled the less than they were b4dgeted. be sustained beyond 2007,
Agency Director Barbara Allen said.
pop·e 's We dnesday general. Riley 's plan calls for spendOther proposals -include
audience. The Rome daily ing down the balance to $265 $8.6. million. in 2007 for cash
II Messaggero · reported million by July 2007.
bonuses to those who leave
About $320 million of the welfare for a job and stay
John Paul hopes to say
"Grazie" - "Thank you" . yearly total is direct aid to employed for one year, $64
- at Sunday 's prayers.
families in which the parents million over two years {or
Th,e Vatican has . offered or grandparents aren't work- increased child care payfew precise details on the ing or can't work. The num- ments and $70 million over
pope's condition and has ber of recipients fell below two years for demonstration
not said when he might 200,000 for the first time in projects to help keep people
be able to leave the hos- 2002 but hasn ' t dropped off welfare .
pita!. The next EJffic ial
health update is expected
Gene H. Abels, M.D.
Thursday. ·
Medical Associates of Gallipoiis
However. it appears likely his current hospitalizais now accepting a limited number of new patients.
tion will be longer than
Pr.actice is preventive cardiology.
the last: I0 days of treatThe following patientswould be covered:
ment at Gemelli
For
1. Hypertension
breathing problem s that
2. Lipid or cholesterol abnormalities
began Feb.. 1. · Italian
3. Known coronary disease
reports suggest the pope
4. Heart failure .
could be under medical
5. Type II diabetes
care until Easter - March
6. Peripheral/Carotid Artery Disease
27 - even if there are no
7. On-site same day lab results
·
setbacks.
6. X-Ray services
A.&gt;wcialed Pre.\S writers
Victor L. Simpson and ·
Insurance's accepted: Most insurances accepted
Daniela Petroff contributl!d
lncludinR OH Medicaid
to ihis rept!rl from Rome.
.

.

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.
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This speciaal is only available to private, non-commercial individuals..
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the Pomeroy Sentil)el and the Point Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach over
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eall

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***Limited to one, 25 day extension. (Maximum of SO da~·s)
***Classified ad limited to 15 word~ or less. ·
***25¢ for each additional word over 15 words.
***Typographical corrections must be made within first 3 days of publication.
***Only one Item per classified ad.
.
***Pre-payment Is Required and non-~undable.
***Available only to private, non-commercial individuals.
.

'

ibr ~alllpolisllallp trlbunr
740-446·2342
Th,e _Daily Sentinel

140-992·2155

--- · ----.----.J'----~- -'~- --·

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The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

Artists in the Making to display work

Community Calendar

~ ATHENS The Dairy Dairy Barn Summe·r Art
· Barn Arts Center will host Camp 2004 students who
Artists in the Making; an studied the art, music, literaex~ibition featuring young lure and traditions of cultures
artiStS from Athens and sur- from around the world. Some
rounding counties March 12 of the themes include: the
Persian Empire, South of the
to April 24.
Selections from The Athens Border, Native America,
• Photographic Project, Artists Asia, Cave Kids, Africa, ami
'in the School s Residency Paradise Island.
. Program at the Athens Middle · The artwork of high school
School , the Dairy Barn \,students 'who. participated in
Summer Art Camp, the The Governor's Youth Art
Governor's
Youth
Art Exl)ibition will also be on
: Exhibition . and
JIBE, view. Open to all of Ohio's
. Juvemles
Interested
in I ,0 II high schools, this juried
· Becoming Enriched.
exhibition reflects the fine
The array of artwork in quality of art instruction and
this exhibition showcases the talent in our state. Twentynul]lerous art progra\ns avail- five artworks are chosen to
able to young people in our n!ceive the Governor's Award
-: area and highlights the multi- of Excellence from among
· tude of talents represented in the 12,000 state entries. sub: young artists' work. Each mitted.
program offers something
Juveniles Interested in
new 'and exciting to the view- Becoming Enriched (JIBE),
er. For example, The Athens is an Ohio Arts Council grantPhotographic Project features funded program for at-risk
· photographs of quilt squares males, ages 12- 18, court
· painted on barns in Adams ordere~ to complete Hocking
. Commumty
County.
Valley
The goal of the organiza- Residential Center's program.
tion is to· pr\)vide meiJtally ill
For more. information, call
people with tools for learning The Dairy Barn at 740-592through their process of 4981 or visit us on the web at
The
recovery. to encourage re-dis- www.dairybarn.org.
. covery of personal identity, Dairy Barn Arts Center is
and to foster confidence, pur- located at · 8000 Dairy Lane
and is open Tuesday tltrough
pose, and hope.
· Through an Artists in the Saturday noon - 5 p.m.,
Schools Residency program Sunday l - 5 p.m. , and
sponsored by The Dairy Barn, Thursday . evenings until 8
the Ohio A1ts Council and the p.m. General admission is
Martha Holden Jennings $3.50.. seniors and students
Foundation, tiber artist Kate $2.50, children under 12 and
. Gorman directed a . group of members free, with a disAthens . Middle School stu- count on Thursday evenings
dent~ to create eight quilted from 5 to 8 p.m.
_ fabric collage murals. The
The Ohio Arts Council
quilts were created using a helped fund this organization
fusible web applique tech- _with state tax · dollars to
· nique based on the theme of encourage economic growth,
. "fantasy."
educational exce llence and
Another componentto the cultural en richment for all
exhibit ion is the work of Ohioans .

Hospitals must follow -wishes
of patients who want privacy
DEAR ABBY: I am a nursing supervisor in a large hospital. There is a policy in hos: pitals that the public does not
· understand, and it ha:s caused
:more than a few problems.
Dear
· Because of privacy laws,
Abby
all patients. admitted to the
hospital must be asked if they
- want to be a "privacy patient"
· : or a "no. publicity patten!." If
: they .answer yes to that ques:tion, it means that if anyone
DEAR ABBY: When my
calls, or .comes to the hospi- husband's· grandmother died
tal, we cannot even acknowl- two years ago, my mother-in- edge that the patient is here. law, "Shirley," told us we
: we must say, "I don't have a could go through the items
: patient listed by that name." left in her mother's house,
: Not surprisingly, this often take what we wanted, and .
·: upsets friends and family then discard the rest'. 1 took
· members. So. please, Abby, mostly kitchen stuff- main- .
remind your readers about ly pots and pans.
My birthday was last week .
the privacy laws. We . are not
purposely lying to anyone; and I had to work late. so
we are just following the Shirley came over and
patient's instructions and cooked dinner for me. A cou: obeying the rules. Thank you. pie of days later, l was going
: - FRUSTRATED NURSE to cook some lasagna and
· IN IRONTON, OHlO .
take it to her home, but after
FRUSTRATED: searchi ng high and low, I was
DEAR
Thank YOU for injecting an unable to locate a particular .
important dose of reality. dish 1 used. Finally, after
. While some patients may going through every cup: welcome visitors, many more board, I called Shirley to ask
·:do not, One solution is to where she had put · it. She ·
- assign a particular relative or then informed me that since
friend to be the "minister of it was her mother's dish, she
information." That way, there had taken it.
is less emotional wear and
I was upset and told her I
. tear on all con.cerned.
wanted it back. Shirley told
DEAR ABBY: My fiancee ·me no and hung up on' me!
: has ·requested that I stop My mother-in-law has not
:opening doors for her .after I spoken to me since, and now
asked her to f!Cknowledge my she's fighting with , ~y buscourtesy with a "thank. you." band because he stood up to
This simple (in my opinion) defend me,
request turnetl into a huge ·I don't want a lasagna dish
argument after she told me I" to divide my family, but I
:should not open doors for her refuse to be treated this way.
. : anymore..
.
How would you have hanAbby, I was brought up to died this situation?
be a gentleman and to treat OFFENDED IN ODESSA,
women like ladies. Am I. TEXAS ·
wrong for wanting' to be
DEAR OFFENDED: Your
appreciated for doing this, or mother-in-law was wrong to
: should I stop being so darn take the dish without asking
:sensitive and forget about or letting you
know.
· opening doors for her, which However, it's possible the
goes against who I am? item has some sentimental
CLOSING THIS DOOR IN meaning to her. Bearing thai
HONOLULU
in mind, and in the interest of
DEAR CLOSING: You are family harmony, I'd have
: not "wrong" to want your . written Shirley a note telling
:courtesy to be acknowledged. her that she's welcome to it
: That is. the way you· were - and then I'd have gone out
raised. However, you have and bought myself another
proposed to someone whose lasagna pan .
background is not as refined
Dear Abby is written · by
· as yours. Before you tie the Abigail Van Buren, also
: knot, please consider careful- known as Jeanne Phillips,
: ly that this ,woman will be and . was fou~ded by_ ~er
. raising your chtldren. Is mo~ller, Paulme Ph1ll1pS.
· someone with her atlitude the Wr1te .Dear Abby
at
kind of person with whom www.DearAbby.com or P.f!.
you want to spend the rest of Box 69440, Los Angeles, 0\ ,
your life?
90069.

Public meetings
.
·
Wednesday, March 2
PAGEVILLE Sciipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30p.m. at Pageville town
hall.
Thursday, March 3
POMEROY . - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the town haiL

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, March 3
ChesterCHESTER Shade . Historical. Association
will meet at 7 p.m. in the old
Chester Courthouse Museum.
2005 Calender of events to
include
benefit
dinner,
progress on · the Chester
Academy, and the July
Chautauqua will be discussed.
For more' information contact
David Schatz, 667-9712 or
Dale Colburn, 992-5662.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will meet at 7 p.m.
at the halL
·
Holzer
POMERO)'

·PageA3
Wednesday, March

Hospice, Meigs County, will Center, Room C. We'ight Lo's
' have dmner WJth fnends at 6 Support . Group will meet
p.m. at Bob Evans Restaurant from k6:30 to 7:30pm. in the
in Mason. W Va. For more Center, Room AB. For more
in formaton call 446-5825.
information call 992-7463.
March
4
Friday,
.
SALEM CENTER
Meigs
County
Pomona
Grange, . 7:30 p.m ., Star
'Friday, March 4
Grange Hall, three miles · LANGSVILLE - Reviv&lt;il
north of Salem Center on services will be held at 7 p.m.
C.R. I. Inspection and degree March 4 5 ·and 6 at the
work will be held. Fi11al plans . Lang sv ill~ Christian· (Full
for the Meigs County Grange Gospel) Church. Speaker will
Banquet to be held on Friday be Pastor Tom Thompson of
April 29 will be made.
McArthur. For more informaSaturday, March 5.
tion cull 992-3630.
HARRISONVILLE
Saturday, March 5
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge
MASON - . A benefit sing
411, F&amp;AM. will meet at 7:30 for Evan Jarrett will be held at
p.m. at the halL Refreshments. 7 p.m. at the Faith Baptist
· HARRISONVILLE
Church. Featured singers will
Harrisonville Youth League be the Builders Quartet.
baseball and s,oftball signups, Gloryland Believe rs . The
10 a.m. to 2 p.m., 6to 7 p.m ., Roush Family, Callecj for
Scipio ·Township Firehouse. Chri~t. and Matt Scott and
Same hours on March 12.
Co-Pilot. For more , informaMonday, March 7
ton call30-4-882-3430.
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer ·
Sunday, March 6
Center for Comprehensive
POMEROY - The Hysdl
. Weight Loss Informational Run Community Church will
meeting 5:.30 to 6:30p.m. in hold a meeting at 6 p.m. for
Holzer
Medical
Center the purpose of fomring a
Education and Conference , youth group. All youth

Church events

between the age' of I0 and 18
arc invited t&lt;l i'ttcnd . For furthe r in formation, contact
Jeanie Howell, 992-7036.

Birthdays
Thursday. March 3
. SHADE -· Kat1e Biron will
be '10 on March 3. She is now
res iJing with he r daughter
and 'on, in-law. Don and Jane
Frym~er. and c[J rds may be
s.ent to her !here. . 42 1'19
Gilkey · Ridge. Shade. Ohio
45776.
MIDDLEPOKT - Mildred
Arnold will be 90 Thur, da v.
Cards may be sent to her fn
care of Ovcrb~ook Center. 33."\
Page St.. Middleport. 45760 .
Salurday, March 12
CHESTER
. Wilma
Ginther Seaman, formerly of
Chester. will be~~ years old on
March 12. Cards may be sent
to her at I0720 State Roule
550. Vinceflt. Ohio 4Sn4.
Sunday, March 13
LONG BOTT0\1 - Henrv
Bahr will be 80 on \!!arch IJ.
Cards may he sent to him at
JnJ7 Greenup Lane, Long
Bottom, 45743 .

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publjsher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tl~ereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; oi the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

•

Memones
•

•

Recalling details if'37flood ·
.

Dear Editor:
I want to congratulate you and Brian Reed on your Jan. 30
story, "In Disaster's Wake." The 1937 reporter's statement
that the · 37 flood reached the second tloor of the courthouse
is incorrect. He probably did not" even see the crest and reported on hearsay.
·
·
When I came to the county in 1940, my office was in the
basement corner next to the sold ier's monument. I was told .
that the height of the flood was at the top of the door. As you
can see in the picture, the water level is just below the transom over the door. This is what is now the entrance to the elevator and is the same lever as my former office.
For the last four years l have lived near the town of
Rockport, Ind .. which is . 360 mile s downriver from
Pomeroy. It is slightly smal ler than Pomeroy, but like
Pomeroy, fronts the Ohio River. In your Gallipolis reporter 's
story several weeks ago, he said that Gallipolis always
prides itself on being the highest point on the river between
Pittsburgh and Paducah , Ky. I have always accepted that fact
until I moved here . .
First Street in Rockport is about the sitQ1e level as the swale
between the parking lots in Pomeroy, so when the water
· comes up. First Street is flooded and closed off, but Second
Street and the rest of the town area on the .bluff and as far as I
know have never been in a tlood.
Rockport is the port from which Abraham Lincoln launched
hi s flat boat trip down the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers to New
Orleans, where he saw the slave auctions, and has reportedly
said, "If I ever get the chance, I will destroy slavery."
lincoln lived for 14 years of his life, 1816 to 1830, on his
father's farm about 1·5 miles -north of here, before his family
moved to Illinois . His mother's grave and a National Lincoln
Memorial Museum are located near the farm.
The 1937, 1 think, is called a "100-year tlood," but I hope I
never live to hear about another 100-year flood, but it will
return. I sympathize with our merchants to have that to prepare for. According to my knowledge, the 1884 and 1913
floods were similar.
Just wanted to lei you know I keep in touch with Meigs
County through The Daily Sentinel. Meigs County people
will always have a warm place in my heart for the courtesy .
and friendship they gave me in my 61 years in Meigs County.
I enjpy. reading about the. progressive steps being taken in
Meigs County.
Charles "Chuck" Blakeslee
Rockport, Ind.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
·Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
· be less /han 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters .will
be published. Letters should· be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel .
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio V&amp;lt!Jy Publishing Co.

Ol/r main concern in all storie.s is to be Published ever.y afternoon, Monday
accurate. If you know of an error in a 1hrouoh Friday, 111 Court Street ,

story, call the newsroom at (7 40) 992-

Pometoy, Ohio. Second-class postage

2156.

paict at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the

Our main number Is
.(7401992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
-Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, ~xt. 13

Advertising
Ou.l slde Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
Outalde Sales; Brenda Davis. Ext 16
Ciau./Cin:.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation
District Mgr.: Jason Panerson, Ext. H

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, ExL 12

Ohio Newspaper Association.

Postmaster: Send address corredions
to The Da ily Sentinel, 111 Cou.rt Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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Pagei\4

O~INION

Wednesday, March 2,

2005

We~esday,

that I was always giving
them hell.
That reminds me of the
words of the late president
Harry S Truman, one of my
•favorite Democrats. He
didn't give his foes hell, he
said. He just spoke the
truth, and they thought it
was hell.
And that 's what I have
done for much of the past 15
years. I have written · the
truth · as it revealed itself.
And many, if not most, of
my liberal and Democrat
readers. thought it was hell.
· Yet, while l have been a
bare-knuckled ·
optmon
writer, while I have pulled
none Qf my punches over the
years, I have never ' borne
malice toward .anyone simply ·becau se we differed
politically.
I might have disagreed,
strenuou sly so. with ·some.one ,s position on a given
issue, or oti many issues. But
I never allowed that to cross
-the Iine into hate on my part.
l have tried to follow the
example of Booker T.
Washington, who was ·a
black conservative long
' before being black and con~ervative was cool. "I will
permit no man," he said. "to
narrow and degrade my soul
by making me hate him."
Now I know that many of
my conservative readers will
be disappointed that I am
.getting out of the opinionwriting game. But I am not
so full of myself as to
believe that I am leaving
· behind a void that ·somehow
can't be filled.
Indeed. back in my White
House days, I had an actress

friend who was appearing in
a production of "Twelfth
Night" ·at Washington "s
Folger Shakespeare Theatt;r.
One day, the lead actress
in the play, Hollywood Alister Kelly McGillis (whose
screen credit s included "Top
Gun," "Witness" and .'The
Accused"), fell ill.
I wondered whether the
evening's
performance
would go on. To which my
actres,s friend replied: "One
monkey don 't stop no
Show."
Well, I'm just a simian
w"ho writes conservative
opinions. And there are plenty of other simians who
share my political predile&lt;:tion who can ably .take my
place.
And if, for some reason.
the 200 or so newspapers
that have carried my column
- including San Diego's
leading daily - . do not see
fit to run another conservative column in place of
mine, conservative readers
need not despair. .
Because they can always
turn to the blogosphere. It is ·
the brave new marketplace
of ideas, rivaling the inflllence of newspaper editorial
page s.
Who knows? I may . come
out of retirement in six
month s or a year or three
years and start my own blog,
proffering opinions on issues
of the day. It would be just
like old tiines.
Jos.eph Perkins is a
columnist for The San
Diego Union-Tribune and
can
be
reached
at
}oseph.Perkim@UIIioiiTrib.
.com.

WE USED 1tJ SHOP AT

DEPARTh1ENT SToRES?

EBAY.COM
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www.mydailysentinel.com

There are all kinds of peo- . .-----:-~---,·
from many operations. She knew what happened to the
· rocks side-to-side when she battered woman.
pie at my health ·club who
use canes and walkers and
walks, her shoulders seem to
"'You mean the councilcrutches to get around; all
-be locked into a permanent woman? She had a hard
shrug. She is on the tread- . landi.ng when she brought
kinds of people who wear
braces · and slings. Many
mill when I arrive and she is her plane in yesterday."
Jim
members are overweight and
on the treadmill when I
"She's a pilot? And she's
Mullen
some are so skinny their
leave. walking, walking, on the. city council?" ·
walking, usually reading
Spandex sags. The men have
"'Oh yeah. I only know that
. beer bellies and love hansomething. Which is why because she 's my English Lit
dles, hairy backs and bald
l"ve·never got to know ·her. professor at the college."
heads, flabby arms and sagI've never run into her at the
I can't tly a plane and my
ging pees. And I'm not just remin()s me of the stories Water fountain or the front bones are fine. I'm not a .
talking about myself. The my mother used to . tell me desk. I've never even seen college profe ~sor and my
women are not perfect of women she knew who her standing still. If she is bones are fine . l would
would clean their houses on self- conscious about her never dream of running for
~ither. Stand behind anyone
Monday
because the maid body, you'd never know it.
using a stair stepper for five
the thankless job of city
minutes and you',ll never was coming on Tuesday.
One day I walked into the council member and my
Unless you're a mountain health club and the woman bones are fine . Why did I ·
want to look at another butt
again . About the only body troll or• an ore, I can almost · with the bone disease was ever feel sorry for this
type I have never seen at the guarantee that you will not walking out. Her face was woman' She has a more
be the be the least attractive CO\'ered in huge ugly brui s- exciting life than I do.
health club is a perfect one.
Because male models and person at your health club. . es, her left arm was in a
A few weeks later the
Madonnas don 't go to the Wear long pants and a tlop- sling. her awkward, rolling councilwoman/professor/pi!
health club. Those folks all py shirt and who's going to walk was even more pr\)- ot was back at the health
have personal trainers and · know what you look like nounced ·and painful -look · club on a regular basis. We
home gyms. The kind of under there? And once you ing. The poor thing must still nod when we pass each
people you meet at most see what everyone else looks have fallen down a flight of other. But now. for some reahealth clubs are the same like, you' II strip down io steps, or tripped getting out son I can' t explain, I get the
kind of people you run into next to nothing.
of the shower. It' s bad feeling that when ·she sees
There is. a woman in her enough to be trapped in my straight legs and my
at the mall . As a matter of
fact. the people you see at 60s I see at the health' club that stiff body,· l thought unbowed back, she feels
the mall are there to buy almost every time I go who and now this. Life is just sorry for me ..
ugly clothes that they can has some type of · serious not fair.
Jim Mullen iN the author
bone disease .. I don "t know
wear to the gym.
I got to the front desk and of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
I' ve heard people say, her at all except to nod and pointed to the poo·r Complicali11g the Simple
they co uld never join a say "'hello." Her limbs arc woman's retreating tigure · Life" a11d "Baby's First
"health club because they long ,and thin and you can and asked the young girl Tattoo." You ca11 reach him
are so out of shape. It see the scars on her legs behind the counter if ·she . atjim_mullell @myway.com

..

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Limited edition ewe featured at. basket bingo

SYRACUSE-. Ra~mond "Ray" lee Goble, 64, Syracuse,
passed away at Iu s restdence on Feb. 28, 2005.
He was born on May 4, 1940, in Ri'verside, W.Va., son of the
late Ed.gel and Goldie Kennan Goble. He was employed as a ·
coal mtner and worked constru~tion at Walt Disney World.
Best des h1 s parents, he was preceded in death by his sister,"
Brenda Re scke.
Surviving are his wife of 27 years, Cheryl Ann Goble of
Syracuse; his children: Tyler and Chad Goble, both of
. Syracuse, Heather Teaford of Portland, Kevin S. Goble and
Anita Miller of Missouri , and Denna Goble.and lisa Goble of
Arizona; II grand_children and three great grandchildren;
three brothers: Joe Goble of Cleveland, Larry Goble of Vinton
and B11l Goble of Syracuse; and four sisters: Mary O'Conners,
Betty Lanham, Linda Osborne and Bonnie laurie, all of
Cleveland.
.
S~rvices will be held at I p.m. on Monday, March 4, 2005,
at F1sher Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Mike Adkins
officiating. Burial will follow at 3 p.m. at Ridgewood
·
·
Cemetery in Well ston.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at-the funeral horne, and may send online condolences to www.fisherfuncrulhomes.com.

Eloise Drenner
of Weaving
Stitches is seen
· contructing one
of only 20
sheep, or ewes,
for So~thern
Elementary's
PTO basket
bingo event to
be held at 6
p.m. Thursday,at
the Middlepor\
American Legion.

,..,

· JM.

Submitted photo

Deaths
Ed Hannon ·
POINT PLEASANT, W Va.-Ed lewis Harmon. 81, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., died at hi s home on Monday, Feb. 28. 2005.
He was the husband of the late Mary Louise Hudson Harmon.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Thursday March 3, 2005,
at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Rev.
Alfred Holi9 and Rev. Carl S,wisher officiating. Burial will
follow at Lone Oa)&lt;. Cemetery in Point Pleasant.
Friends may diil from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home.
.
·
·

Eating disorders program opens in Albany
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

EASTERN - · A community pep rally will be held at 7 p.m.
Thursday for the Eastern boys basketball team at Eastern High
School. The Eagles play Whiteoak at 9 p.in. Friday at Ohio
University's Convocation Center for the district championship.

ALBANY - Eating disorders affect people of all" dif·
ferent shapes, sizes and genders but there is now local
treatment available.
Wellspring Retreat and
Resource Center in Albany
has
added . Crossr!)ads
Christian· Counseling as one
of its outreach programs.
Crossroads
Christian

ernment-funded programs
1n Meigs· County, . Frazer
said God's Net is providing
an after-school . service program at the Mulberry
Community Center where
there is . adult supervision,
the children are served a
meal and are given assistance with their homework.
GOd\ Net has not applied
for nor received any of the
funding · which is available
through the No Child Left
Behind Act, according to Keith
Rader; director of the Meigs
Coopemtive Parish/God's Net.
Frazer said that while the funding comes through school districts, the programs do not
have to be held in schools.
She said that Gallia County
applied for and received

funding through the 21st
Century Grant Program for
several programs which started this school year. She was
not sure whether any Meigs
County schools had applied
and been denied, or had just
not applied.
Currently there ·are II
after-school programs tn
Appala~hia operating with
21st century gran is this year.
Frazer noted that 22 programs lost their funding
because they had been operating with federal dollars for
the past five years, the time
period specified for becoming self-sustaining. Most of
the programs now operating
are held in schools where an
· emphasis is on rising test
scores, she said.

Local Briefs
Eastern pep rally set

from Page A1
Behind Act called for $2 bil·
lion after-school funding for
the coming year, but the president and Congress have
never ·provided more than
half that in any year since
passing the Act," said Frazer.
She said that has been a loss
for all communities and fami.lies in Meigs and other southeastern Ohio counties that
need quality after-school and
summer care. She is calling
on residents ofAppalachia to
join her in urging Congress to
fund after-school programs at
the levels promised.
While there are no gov-

ILGARD

I should .have joined a ment~l health·club ·

.

Raymond Goble

Grants
REMEMBER WHEN

2005

Obituaries

Knowing when it's time to quit
"The mass of men lead
lives of quiet desperation."
-· . Henry David Thoreau
Some of my friends wonder aloud if J, am sufferi ng
some sort of "midlife crisis."
Joseph
They cannot fathom, for the
Perkins
life of them, why I would
retire, in my mid-40s, from
my writing job at The San
Diego Union-Tribune; why I
would forfeit my nationally columns and giving my writings an even wider audience.
syndicated column.
Your overwhelming feedWell, after nearly 15 years
back.
measured in · e-mails
of ·daily deadlines, writing
three to four editorials a -and voice mails, reassured
week. in addition to a col- me that my conservative
umn, "this seems as good a thinking on the range of subtime as any to walk away jects was not nearly as far
out as my preponderantly
from the grind.
As the latter-day philoso- liberal journali stic peers
-pher
Crint
Eastwood often suggested.
Indeed , I considered it my
famously stated: "A man's
got to know his limitations." mission to counterbalance
I know there will be spec- the liberal orthodoxy that
Illation in some quarters as prevails on most of the
nation's opinion pages. I
to the "rear' reason .for my
departure from daily journal· viewed myself as a voice of
ism. Some will· wonder the majority of Americans
whether I am the victim of who are right of center on
.
so me liberal coup at the the political &gt;pectrum.
to
the
folk
s
I'm
referring
Union-([ribune; whether I
who live in so-called red
was "pushed.out the door."
Let me · assure everyone states - or in red counties,
concerned that I am leaving like San Diego, in otherwise
of my own ·volition. I am blue states, like California
looking forward to the next - whose conservative valchapter in my life and career. ues are viewed contemptuAnd so is my lovely wife, ously by the liberal elite who
Yolanda, who is taking early dominate .academia and
Hollywood and the putative
retirement.
I owe a debt of gratitude to mainstream media.
I'm talking about the 60
my loyal readers, in San
million
God-fearing, patriotDiego and around the coun·ic
Americans
who just
try, for supporting my writings over the ye~. And to the returned George W. Bush to
·
folks at FreeRepublic.com, the White House.
Now some of my criticsLu.cianne.com
aqd
.
yes,
I've pad a few - comRealCiearPolitics.com·- my
three favorite Web sites- for plained that I was too hard
occasionally posting my . on .l.iberals and Democrats:

March 2,

Middleport community will
be invited to participate
with input.
from PageA1
The team has qualified for
a $10,000 grant to be used
Dooley said. "Compar.ed to tqward revitalizatk&gt;n, and
Wellston before their pro- that grant might be used for a
ject began, Middleport is in short-term project which
would then serve as a ·~cata­
far better condition."
Dooley said the goal of lyst" for long-term improvethe leadership team , made ments, Dooley said.
up of village and county
.- Other business
The association's Tsunami
officials, loca.I merchants
and Middleport residents, is Relief Fund has collected just
to complete a thorough plan under $3,000 for UNJCEF's
program,
Sally
for re-development of the relief
downtown shopping di s- lambert
of
Peoples
trict, from Rutland Street to Insurance reported.
the corner of South Fifth . The association will hold
Avenue and Mill Street. The its annual Bunny Hop Bake
JLGARD team will serve Sale from 10 ·a.m. to I p.m. ·
merely as facilitators, on March 26. Local non Dooley said, and the entire profit . organizations are

'

encouraged to conduct bake
sales, at no charge, in downtown Middleport on that day.
The Easter Bunny also will
be in town that day, and
Peoples Bank will offer free
photos of children with the
Bunny. Dooley asked interested organizations to contact him at 992-3148 to
arrange for a space.
Brenda Phalin of the
University of Rio Grande
Crossroads program said the
program will again hold an
Appalachian Festival on May
14 on Mill Street.

Counseling recently began its·
·eating di sorders treatment
program headed . by Jeff
Bryson who is originally from
Huntington, W.Va. but has
studied at Harding University
Graduate School of Religion
in Memphis. Tenn. and the
Reumda· Ranch
Eating
Disorders Center in Arizona.
Bryson said that although
eating disorders affect both
men and women, he sees the
condition most often in col-

l~ge-age women and "g irls women because shame of
who are beginning puberty. . · their disorder and fear of
For college-age women. weight gain makes them caueating di sorders can manifest tious abou t new relat ionsh ips.
out of their fear of not being
Bryson takes what he calls
able to make it as an adult a Christ-centric therapy
after leaving their families. approach which is applying
These young women also hi s world view as a Christ·ian
have a level of perfectionism . to treating a client. However.
that is focused on their body. clients do not have to
Bryson explained that embrace the Christian faith to
some college age women with benefit from hi s treatment.
eating disorders view their
"'My role as a therapist is to
bodies as a direct link to valu- mirror God's love and to work
ing themselves as a person.
on their eating disorder."
"To them the disorder · is . Bryson said about his priorities. ·
who they are as a person,"
Goals for the Crossroads ·
Bryson said.
Christian . Counseling eating
Warning signs that a per- disorders treatment program
son might have an eating dis· include establi shing interven. order are sharp weight gain or lions through education,
weight" loss over a short peri- adding a group program conoct of time, and lightheaded- sisting of clients in recovery
ness resulting in passing out. ·from their disorder. and estabAs a therapist, Bryson said lishing a prevention .program.
that rapport with his clients is
If you are iriterested in.
an important part of the treat· Crossroads
Christian
ment process, especially .with Counseling. ca ll 698-0000.

"I would love to . see the
communities pull together
and work at getting money
to provide more after-school
. programs. There are many
grant programs out there, all
kind s of possibilities,"
Frazer said ..
She said m the ·program
us"ually teachers are there to
emphasis intervention, while
community members handle
more of the enrichment part.
The grants include funding
for food .
Flatwoods Road. and said
As the out-of-school time
Legg was not aware of his
coordinator for COAD,
plans to move the E~plorer.
from
Page
A1
Frazer said she is available
When Wesley Karr arrived
for information and to work ·
on the scene , armed with a
on funding and programming Legg's trial that the two ran gun, Legg fled the scene and
with those interested in start- out-of gas near Wesley Karr 's was captured hours later at a
ing a program. Her telephone home, and that he - not Five · Points convenience
number is 1-800-577-2267.
Legg -decided to move store by sheriff's deputies.
Wesley Karr's .vehicle from
The two Chillicothe men
his garage in order to siphon said they were u-aveling home
Susan Baker announced the gas into Legg's vehicle. He from a party in Wellston and ·
· association's
next said he never intended to got lost along the way. They
longaberger Basket Bingo move . the vehicle beyond have no Mefgs County ties .
will be held on April 15.
There will be at least two
Coming -Thursday in the ~ Sentinel ...
winners for each game. The
proceeds will be used to
finance July 4 fireworks and
. other community projects
_sponsored by the association.
This year 's Yellow Flag
Yard Sale will be held on
· May 5 and 6,
Membership in the associ a-·
Your picle to weekend ·
tion is still open, Dooley said.
at $25 for businesses and $10
.entertainment in ,the tri-state
for individuals.

Legg

.·"cp[ke: t~ ~ f?
.

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�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

· Wednesday, March 2,

INSIDE .

The Daily

NHL lockout news, Page B6
OSU listed No. 11 from bottom, Page 86

2005

Bl

~entinel

Report: Attorney told she couldn't bring tape in to inmate
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - An attorney whp once represented
death row inmate Richard
Cooey was told she couldn 't
take a roll of black electrical
tape and a sewing kit into the.
prison on a visit to Cooey the
day before Cooey and another
inmate tried to escape, The
Associated Press has learned.
A sewing kit was found with
the prisoners after they were
caught the followin g day. and
black tape was used to help
build a homemade ladder used
during the escape, p.risons
spokeswoman Andrea Dean
said Tuesday. .
·
·Dean said the items found
with the inmates were similar
to ones attorney Margery
Koosed had with her Feb. 2 but
could not have been the same
items since she was prohibited
from bringing them in. ·
Koosed, a University of
Akron law professor, said she
carried the tape with her for
minor repairs. She denied carrying a sewing kit that day. She
said she had no involvement in
ihe escape attempt.
.
"I did not know anything

about any escape," Koosed'
said Tuesday.
Koosed "tried to bring in
black elec.trical tape . and
sewing kit" during a visit Feb.
2, accordi ng to the Department
of
Rehabilit ation
and ·
Correction incident report ·
obtained by the AP through a
public records request.
"I· don ' t know what this
report says, but the information that vou related to me is
inaccurate," Koosed said.
Dean said staff remembered
Koosed's. visit when the
inmate s' belongings were
inve ntoried after they were
caught following the escape
·
attempt Feb. 3.
"When they were apprehended and thi s tape that
looked similar to what she had
atfempted to bring in appeared,
some of our staff recalled mat,"
Dean said Tuesday. "But we ·
can 't prove she had anything
whatsoever to do with it."
The prison system is not
investigating Koosed, Dean
said.
Cooey, 37, wa's sentenced to
die for raping and killing two
ney's request for more time to trooper during a traffic stop in
University of Akron students
January 1996.
in 1986. He was 12 hours from study the case.
White, 39, was senienced to
U.S. District Judge Da'n
being executed in July 2003
when a judge granted an attar- die for killing a state highway Aaron Polster appointed a state

This undated photo provided
t&gt;y Ohio Department of
Rehabi Iitation imd" Correction
shows homemade tools that
were used by death row
inmates Richard Cooey and
Maxwell White. The two
inmates who tried to escape
from Ohio 's death row hid a
home-maoe ladder under a
pile of snow in an outdoor
recreation area and were carrying food, water, matches
and extra clothes, according
'
to a report about the escape
released Monday.
AP Photo/Department
of Rehabilitation and Correction

.

public defender as Cooey 's
new attorney in 2003 after a
federal appeals court dismissed Cooey 's previous
attorneys, including Koosed .

..

The 6th U.S. Circuit Courto{
Appeals told Koosed_and att'?rney Nathan Ray that tt w~s dtssatisfie(l with the quality of
their court filings on behalf of
Cooey and the amount of fees
they were paid for representmg
him in federal court.
The two inmates used a ladder made from sheets and
rolled-up newspapers and magazines to escape an outdoor
recreation cage. They were
caught when alarms sounded
on an inner perimeter fence mat
Cooey successfully jumped.
The two were carrying 25 packs
of matches, a sewing kit, gloves,
socks, shirts, seven Payday candy
bars, an AM-FM cassette radio
and a bottle of water, aniong other
items, according to an inventory
of items found with me inmates
released Tuesday.
The sewing kit included bandages, gauze pads, tweezers, a
nail clipper and 20 Tylenol
pills, the inventory said.
Pants, sweat shirts, T-shirts
and a us.ed roll of masking tape
were found in the recreation
cage, the invenJ,ory·said.
The escape attempt happened
even though the prison's securily
chiefhad twice been tippedaht:adof
time by an infonnant, a prison system report released Monday said.

Wednesday, March 2, 2005

Bv MALIA RULON ·

year and nothing in 2007.
Some money - abOUt $70
million - would be available
WASHINGTON - Bush ·to schools through competibudget cuts would hit impor- tive grants, but school offitant research programs that cials say the·change would be
examine everything from so .sudden that about 2,000
soybeans and dairy produc- jobs nationwide would be lost
tion to cattle viruses, agricul- immediately. The cuts also
ture school official s . com- would des[roy a network of
plained to Congress on research collaboration that
Tuesday. .
allows states to work together
Fred Cholick, dl)an of me to thwart agriculture diseases
agriculture college at Kansas and· develop better practices.
State University, ·said the cuts
"If everything goes comthreaten the original mission petitive, then it's everybody
of Ohio State University and for themselves," said Bobby
.the other land-grant schools, Moser, dean and vice presicreated by Congress in the dent of the agriculture college
1800s to use public money on at Ohio State University. "We
shared agricultural research) .lose the network."
Moser and about 120 other
Under the Bush plan, funding for programs on farming, school officials and agriculforestry and animal health, tore research supporters
mainstays at land-grant insti- fanned out across Capitol Hill
tutions for decades, would be to lobby their hometown lawTemperatures will stay near slashed from $200 million makers in favor of the proWednesday, March 2
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
22 with today's low of 21 this year to $100 million next · ·grams.
It looks like a cloudy morn- occurring around · 6:00am.
ing. Expect a few snowflakes Skies will range from clear to
here and there. Temperatures mostly clear with 5 MPH
will linger at 25. Winds will winds from the northwest.
be 10 MPH from the west.
Thursday, March 3
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
-Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
1! will continue to be cloudy. Temperatures will rise from
Some flurries are expected. 20 to 30 by )ate this morning.
Temperatures will hover at 32 S
·th 5
with today's high of 34 occur- Ides will be sunny wt
ring around 3:00pm. Winds MPH winds from . me northwill be I 0 MPH from the wes[.
.
west.
Afternoon (1-6p.m.)
InStant Money. Nobody gets
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will rise from
· Expect a few snowflakes . 32 early this afternoon to 33
you money faster.
here and there. Temperatures by 3:00pm then drop down to
will remain around 25. Skies 26 late afternoon. Skies will
With hL'lanl Morll•Y· you can walk in wdh your tax&lt;os and walk out
will be mostly clear to cloudy be sunny with 5 MPH winds
with a rrfund anl.idpation loan che&lt;:k, Is your tax guy tlmt fast?
with I 0 MPH winds from the from the northwest turning
northwest.
from the north as the after- .
618 East Main St
· Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
noon progresses.
Pomeroy. OH

The schools use the money
to study both national priorities - food security, pest
control, obesity, waste manag.ement - and locaJ ·issues,
such as cattle diarrhea in
Wyoming, dairy breeding in
Pennsylvania and which pesticides to use at macadamia
nut farms in Hawaii.
"What kind of partnerships
would we have in the
future ?" Cholick .said.
He said the network paid
off last November when the
first U.S , .case of soybean
rust, a fungus that can reduce
harvests, was found in two
Louisiana State University
research fields . The school
was able to get word immediately to researchers across .the
country for what to look for
and how ·to stop the spread.
"If we don't have a net-

work, a system, then we don't
know what' s here and we
can't respond," Cholick said.
"These formula grants are the
glue that holds the system
together."
Bob Steele, dean . of the
agricultural sciences college
State
at
Pennsy lvania
University, said the cuts al so
would affect students and,
ultimately, c·onsumers.
"You are putting at risk an .
abundant food supply and an
affordable food supply and a
safe food supply," Steele said.
"So it's not just ·about farmers. Anybody who eats ought
to be concerned about ihis."
Agriculture
Department
spokesman. Ed Loyd said the
Bush administration is proposing the two-year transition -to
competitive funding because it
would eliminate duplication.

Local Stocks
ACI - 43.50
AEP - 33.71
Akzo - 44.19

Ashland Inc. AT&amp;T -

au-

64.36:

19.63

11.87

Bob Evans - 23.47
Bor&amp;Wamer - · 54.05
Champion - 4.33

the 4 p.m, closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at Ad vest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

H&amp;R BLOCK"

office near you.
~.-ltw41kb.-••• l• lf'l-n.lo _ tt,IIIIN!t...·!~~ IWW \A IN-IIIt.*L I....aMII'I"alaiWI)-_,.

• a.-&lt;lo t_.,~.,.,. ThM --~ lut J.-. Mllll"1t&gt;110' tlllbl'rbo 1"-':t~ ~
k• &lt;~• •~• -d;ot ~ ~,... ..-pac~n.- C"ZZII'IIIIAI!l'llr.oc:Jr!io~Mtft~_ IIIO!

Pomeroy, OH • 992-3671 1"1111'1 •

_,,_\6nll

t:JHM -

Charming Shops - 7.75
City Holding - 31.30
Col - 46.49

·oo -21.82
Gannett -

GKNLY -

80.10
35.22

DIVISION IV

. Friday, March 4
South Webster (21-1) vs. Portsmouth
Clay (1 8· 4). 7 p.m.
Reedsville
Eaatern
{19·3)
va.
Mowrystown Whiteoak (16--6), ~p. m .

DIVISION II

S...nday, March 6
Greenfield McClain (21 ·2) vs. Logan Elm

(20·3). 2 p.m.

DIVISION Ill

Sunday, March 6
Seaman North Adams (21-1) vs .
Chesapeake (21·1), 4 p.m. ,
Ironton (22·0) vs. Sardinia Eastern Brown
(17· 5). 6 p.m.

• Winners advance to regional tournament

Pre-sale tickets .
available at EHS ·
Pre-sale tickets for Eastern's
district tournament game
· against Whiteoak Friday in
Athens can be purchased at
the high school during the
school day on Tuesday,
Wednesday, and Thursday.
All tickets are $5 and preschool kids will be admitted
free to the game. The athletic
general funp gets 25 percent .o f
the money-from all tickets sold
at Eastern High School. Doors
will open to the generalpublic
75 mmutes befm:e tip-off of
the first scheduled game.

61.7 5

JPM ...- 37.09

Kmart - . 99.15
Kroter ...;..

18.05

Ltd. - 24.42
NSC - 36.37
Oak Hill Financial -

. ·35.51 .

ova-

33.40

BBT -

39.52
Peoples - 27.09
Pepelco ..:.... 54.06

Premier -

11.75

Rockwell - 80.46
Rocky Boob - 31.56

RD

shett -

sac-

63.15

24.32
Saara - .50.42

USB- 29.89
Wai-Mart ·wenctts Worthlneton
Dally stock

52.04
38.42
- ·20.69
reports are

•

- s.t

lofiiW

•

-

.. ,_

•

'

BY DAVE GOLDBERG

now recognize it 's best to
keep your own, especially
- - - - - - -- - - · your stars. So good players
go on the market onl y when
Drew Bledsoe has signed there are salary c&lt;lp issues or
with Dallas and Muh sin personality pressures - as
Muhammad with the Bears. wi th Randy M'lss, whose
Ty Law has drawn interest trade from Minnesota to
from several teams. The Oakland most likely will be
Tennessee. Six, especially made official in the next couSamari Rolle and Derrick ple of days.
Mason, are hot commodities
This year, the best potential
on .the free-agent market.
free age nts have been proAs the signing peri od tected with franchi se tags or
begin s Wednesday, the play- re:signed, including otTeners most in demand are those sive tackl es Orlando Pace
who have bee n released by and Walter Jon es; running
their fqrmer employers or backs Edgerrin James and
are about to be - as good or ·shaun Alexander; wide
better than the rest of the receiver Jerry Porter; cornerfree agents.
back Charles Woodson, and
The reason: most teams quarterbacks
Matt
Associated Press

HaS&gt;e lbeck
and
Drew
"'"'""~"'"""
....
·~.·
Brees.
·
" A 1.. •
• A A 4
A lot of
Jesser players also are
off the market as teams
try to remain
as cohesiye as possible. ·
"The most important thing
for us is h·a ving a ce11ain .
grour of guys to build
·around ," said W&lt;~ s hin g ton
coach · Joe .Gibbs, who last
year inherited an offense of
ill-fitt ing parts, the product of
futil e spending for half a
dec&lt;1de by owner Daniel
SnydeL "We want to honor
those guys th;it played hard
for us that we~ feel . are
•

..

Red!.kins."
Sti ll , Washington is part of
one of the early dramas of
free agency: what 10 do wi th
wide receive r Lav eranues
Coles, signed two yea rs ago
from the New York Jets and
paid a $ 13 milli on signing
·bonus. Coles. who had 90
receptions last season. wants
to be traded because he
believes Gibbs' offense
emphasizes the run too much.
The Redskins had talks
with the Jets about sending
him b3ck in return for
Santana Moss, but thai now
seems . unlikely. If they
release him, it co uld cost
them more than $7 million in
salary-cap space because· of
the. prorated bonus.

CLEVELAND · (AP)
Jeff Uhlenhake, who played
at Ohio State and for I 0 years
in the NFL, was named an
assistant offensive line coach
for the Cleveland Browns on
Tuesday.
Uhlenhake spent last season at the University of
Cincinnati. He was drafted
by Miami in 1989 and played
five seasons with . the
Dolphin s. Uhlenhake also
played for the New Orleans
Saints and Washington
Redskins.
In Cleveland, he will be .
reunited with Jeff Davidson,
a college teammate at OSU
who was recently named the
Browns offensive line coach.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Ben gals tendered contract
offers Tuesday to linebacker
Marcus Wilkins, running
back Kenny Watson and cornerbacks Rashad Bauman
and Reggie Myles, who are
restricted free agents.
By tendering contracts, the
Bengals reserved the right to
·match any offer from another
team.
The move also means that
the Bengals would get a
. third-round draft choice in
exchange for Bauman if
another team makes him an
offer that it chooses not to
match. The Bengals wouldn' t
get any compensation for the
other three if they let them
leave.

. Please see NFL 86

scrimmage

OL coach
' '

The prototypical 2005 free
age nt may be Buffalo's Jonas
Jennings. an offen&gt;ive tackle
who wi ll probably be in
demand sim ply because
numerous teams need help at
that position and he's probably the best remaining avail.able tackle. He' ll command
big money even though he 's ·
far below Jones a nd Pace.
"My feeli ng is th at. because
there. are more top players
being franchised or being
retained by their clubs, more
money will be thrown at
fewer players. It will be
expe nsive," said New York
Giants general manager Ernie
Accorsi, who needs a tackle

Griffey Jr.
sits out

Browns add
assistant

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Jeriome Robertson's career
seemed to be on the fast track
when he won 15 games as a
rookie, the most by any newcomer in the majors in 2003.
Two years later, he's trying
to revive his career with the
Cincinnati Reds. Robertson,
27.. signed a minor league
contract with the Reds, who
are giving him a chance to
win one of the two open spots
in their rotation this spring .
After being traded to
Cleveland last year, he went
1- l in eight appearances and
gave up 19 earned runs and
22 hits in only 14 innings.
The Indians designated him
for assignment to the minors
in July. then traded him to
Montreal. He spent the rest of
the season in me minors.

5.10

Harley Davidson

It's a year for·second-line free agents

LHP Robertson
signs wit~ Reds

DuPont - 53.88
Federal Mogul -. .37
o-ral Electric

Distrid Finals

Bengals tender
contracts to
·four players

nJ-992~74

Caii1-SOO.HRBLOCK or
11iSit hrblock .com for an

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

At Convo- Athena

Universities balk at Bush's proposed cuts to agriculture research
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Boys Schedule

.

AP photo

New Cleveland Cavaliers majority owner Dan Gilbert. center. holds the tie given to him by former owner Gordon Gund (not
shown) following a news conference Tuesday in Cleveland. R&amp;B artist Usher, left, owns a .minority stake in the NBA franchise.

Costly turnover: .Gilbert owns Cavaliers.
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

CLEVELAND _ Detroit

winning R&amp;B artist Usher;
fri end and business panner
David Katzman; a1\d Gund,
who will retain at least a I 0percent stake.
Founder ·0 r LivoniaMich.-based Quicken Loans,
Gilbert
needed
on ly
approval of the NBA's board

mortgage magnate . Dan
Gilbert assumed majorit y
ownership of the Clev~land
Cavaliers on Tuesday, taking
over a once troubled NBA
franchise saved by star for- of governors to complete the
ward LeBron James.
transaction and take over
Gilbert, who · turned a day-to-day management . of
$5,000 inve stment in the . the team and the operatmg
. 1980s into an online banking nghts to the 20.000-seat
empire, bought the Cavaliers downtown arena. That confor $375 million from sent finall y came on
Gordon Gund. The 42- year- ·Tuesday. .
old Gilbert heads a principal
"It's a privilege and honor
ownership
group
that to be; the owner of the
includes Grart)m f Award- Cleveland
Cavaliers ...

Gilbert said at a new s confe rence al so attended by
Gund , Usher and Katzman.
"We expect to build a world
class organization here. Nut
just on the couri, but everywhere.';

Gilbert's pursuit of the
Cavalier&gt; began last summer. shortly after Jame s
almost single-handedly rescued the club from fmancial
hard ship (IS a rookie by.
bringing fans back to Gund
Arena and leading the Cavs
to 35 wins - 18 more than
the previous year.
Cleveland's jump of more
than 6.000 fans per game
was the largest turnarou nd in

leag ue hi story. Now, the
Caval iers are on the brink of
getti ng back into the playoffs for the first time since
1998.
Gilbert said Usher wo uld
be involved in the enterta in-·
mem aspect of the team and
runni ng its downtpwn are na·.
which also hosts concerts.
Us her said he wa nted .to
"turn .this
,, thing. up a notch if
we can.

Us her said he will atte nd
as many games as he can in
Cleveland. He also told fans
that he gets extremely emotional at games.
Plea~e

see Gilbert. B6

SARASOTA. Fla. (AP)Ken Griffey Jr. sat out the
Cincinnati Reds' intrasquad
game on Tue sday because
he's still not up to full speed
in his recovery froni a torn
hamst(ing .
Griffey worked out with
trainers before the game. He
had surgery last Aug. 16 to
reattach a torn right ham"
string, and needs a little more
time to recover.
The Reds expect him to be
ready before opening day, but
don 't have a timetable for
Griffey appearing in a spring
training game.
"We are mostly concerned
with hi s ability ·to change
directions and decelerate,"
train er Mark Mann said
Tuesday. "He is running 90 to
95 perce,nt right now. When
he can go at I 00 percent two
or three days in a row without
residual pain , he will be
cleared to play in games."
Griffey. 35. has been sidelined by serious injuries each
of the last four seasons. so the
Reds will be cautious with
him during spring training .
Utility player Ryan Freel
also sat out the intrasquad
game. on Tuesday. Freel had
surgery to ·repair torn knee
cartUage last Noyember and
is close to full speed in his
recovery.
Outfielder Austin Kearns,
who had surgery last July to
remove scar ti ssue and a bone
spur from his right thumb, hit
a homer and a double in the
intrasquad game.
·'My thumb feels good,"
Kearns said. "It hasn't been
sore at all."

Some schools upset with N_CAA's first re·.port card
BY

'

"This represents the implementation of the most farreac hing academic reform in
INDIANAPOLIS _ The decades," NCAA president
NCAA had barely released its Myles Brand said. "It holds
first report on teams' acade- schools acco un tabl_e for the
ml·c progress when the com- pertorma.•nce ofthetr student· athletes.
.
Pl at.nts began .
"'"e'd be remt"ss 1·1· we dt"dThe new calculation gener,..,
n't express at least some con- ates a score between 0 and
cern that there are any num- 1,000: penalties are assessed
with team s that
ber Of flaws t·n tht"s methodol - beginni""
·· b
ogy," Oklahoma ath!etic drop below 925. The number
director Joe Castiglione said. is determined by a points forThe NCAA wants to hold ·mula that rewards long-term
schools more accountable for eligibility and retenti on of
academic pr-ogress of athletes athletes. Programs can lose
with a formula that tracks eli - points when athletes transfer.
gibility
and
retention. drop out, leave for the pros or
According to the report become academically ine ligireleased Monday, half the ble while sti ll at the school.
328 Division I s~hoo l s have
Under the formula, athlete'
at least one team that could receive one point each
face sanctions of 5,270 teams · semester for staying academ nationwide.
ically eligible and another
Programs can lose scholar- point for staying in ,chool.
ships for up to one year and For instance, a perfect score
no team can lose more than for a · 13-member ba&gt;ketball
10 percent of what it offers. team at a semester school
MICHAEL -MAROT
Associated Press

.

.
would be 52.
people ·understand; you have onl y sports with averages
The total number of points a prob lem."
below the 925-point cutline.
a team actually receives is · At " Maryland -Baltimore Baseball teams averaged 922,
divided by the maximum Coun ty. the men's indoor whi le football and men's baspossi ble total to get a per- track team scored an ketball were at 923 .
ccntage: which is converted extremely low 600 - a fig The most prominent proto the 1.000-poim scale . No ure athletic direc tor Charle~ grams that appeared in trouteam can lose more than I 0 Brown had aI read y to ld ble were the men's basketball
· 1s was wrong. teams at Fresno State and
NCAA o fliIC!a
percent of wha! it offers :
T b
·d d
11 Baylor. Fresno State received
Some teams below the cut·· o e co ns! ere we a bll, while Baylor scored
line will not be penalized . below the cutline is very 647 _ a figure affected by
. because of a stati stical adJ·ust- embarras,ing
and it hurt.s
. ·
.• B
·d 'Iour
. the transfer of several players
ment that will help eliminate recruiting , rown 'at · · l s after the 2003 shooting death
anomalies for teams with extremely up,etting that the of Patrick Dennehy. Only one .
fewer athletes. Others can NCAA released somet.hing of those players remains on
apply for a waive(.
when they know there are the team.
·
· At Oklahoma. the baseball, some flaw&gt;. This is an honors
"If it were ·necessary to
wrestling and men's and institution:·
consider a waiver. we would
women's indoor track teams
The three spons that could do so," Baylor athletic dire&lt;:scored lower than the 92 .5 be most affected are football. tor Jan McCaw said.
percent mark.
,
baseball and men·s basket - · "Hopefully at this point, ~or
"The y're going to get a lot ball. The NCAA est1mate' program is in good academic
of waivers:· said Gerald t~at 25 percent ol football condition. and it won't
Gurne). Oklahoma·, a"oci - program&lt;. 23 percent of base- become an issue for us ."
ale athletic director for acad - ball teams and 19 percent of
McCa" also said he
cmic affair,. ··An) &gt;ystem men\ basketball programs wouldn't contest the numbers
that create' 'uch a bureaucra - could face scholarship losses. that were mailed to schools
' CY that you have huge num Footbal l. ba,eball and
her' nf waiver' and 'ery few men·s ba,ketball were the
t
- - - ---~~---.:.._~----

--

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 2, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

Wednesday, March 2, 2005

~ttbune -

....

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83 ·

www.mydailysenlinel.com

-·l\egtlttr
we cove~.,

Melp, Gellle,

AndMuqn
Counties Uke
Noone
Elsa Cenl

r~.,__,.;s~~R:;::IlNG~·-.,JI r ~
c.uu. Co~o~nty, Olf , ,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

'&lt;!Crtbune

To Place

Your Ad,

Call Today...

or Fax Tq (740) 446-3008
.
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
~~~~~~~~~-

\ \\01 \( I \II \ Is

r

ANNOUNCEMEMS

. In

Perhaps-you-sent-a-lovely
ca r d , or· sa t· qu ielly-in·a
chair.-per haps-you-sent :a
funeral·flower.if-so-we saw
IHhere,perhaps-you-spoke
the
kindest·
words(Rev)Parsons.as-anyfnend -could say,pe rhapsyou
sent-food
to-the·
.
'
Iam1ly,as-any-triend
would ·
do-perhaps-you-sung
a-

s o n g ( T h e
Bledsoe s)Perhaps
youwere-not-there at all JUSt·
thought-of-us-that day-whatever-you-did-to console-ourhearts-we
thank-yOu-so 'much-whatever-the-part
The Family of Carolyn Miller

YARD SAI.E

YARD SM.EPuMEROY!Mmou:

Basement Sale- St Paul
UM
Church,
Tuppers
Plams, Fn-Mar 4, 9-7, Sat.
Mar 5, 9-2, clothing, dishes,
furniture, books, and m1sc
1

~--...iiiioiiio

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-'Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

POUCIES : Ohio Valley Publlahlng reaervea the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Errore muat be repotted on the rirtt day of
will tM reaponalble for no more than tha coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the llral Insertion. We ahall nat be I
any loaa or expenaa that result• from the publication ar omission of an advertisement Correction will be made tn th• first available edition. • Box
are always canfldentilll. • Curr•nt rata card applies. • All real ••tate advar11aementa are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act ol 1968.
-~~;;-,;.;;.;1
acc:epta only help wanted ada meeting EOE atanderda. We will not llnowlngly accept 1ny advertising In violation ot the law.

Description • Include A Price • A,vold Abbreviations
• Inelude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dayli

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

10

1·110 HELP WANTED

lwright@ic.net

...... NECCO.....

---

MAKE A
DIFFERENCE IN A
CHILD'S LIFE
Foster Parents needed.
To learn more about
tostering and free training
opportunities contact.
Kim Romeo at
740·894·4360
1-877 ·50·NECCO

no

no

For ·Lease· One bedroom ,
Clean 2 bdr., Ref. Oep . No mce 2nd floor apt Corner
Ptne and Second La rge
Pets. (304)675·5162
kitchen w1th dmtng area
Small house one mile from New range . refrigerator
Mason WaiMart , no pets. Water Included References
$250 a month , (304)773· reqwred $300/mo. Secunty
5163
depos1t
No gets Call

~1nt Pleasant, WV. 4
~dro0m,

0
0
0

bedroom, 3 bath , 4 5
eras, 2.5 car garage.
ackson. OH Code 2255
pr call (740)286-4750

WAIVfED

To Do

320 MOBII.E HOMES
FOR SAI.E

IU II I ' I \ II

I rio
' HOMES
~~---FOoiiiRi.SiiiiiAiil.iiE-_.1

"'

c

I

.

G:t

ae•

t

..r§O_..INrnlj j ScHo i.sl i i~UC·:riON-_.1

r

~AL

~-------.,.1

OHK Cleaning. Do you
need? House Cleaning or
Eldtrly
Care, Out&amp;ide
Malntenence {powerwasnlng , etc} Call (7•0)985·
3 6 3 311 74 o) 41 6 ·1 B 2 3
AefertnCtl IVIIIIbll. Alk
lor Karen/Dave

Jewelry. Buy Salt Gold,
Diamonds ,
Gemstones
Repair. Appraisals , Gem
Testing
Graduate
Gemologlat,
Jeweler.'
(740)645-6365 or (740)«6·

---------

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUf!ITY /881?
No Fee unteaa We Win!
1·888·582·3345

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don't haul your toga to tl'lt
mill juat call 304·87S·1957

•

3080.

-------

Reodyour

and learn

fOR RENT

Redwood Cape Cod
~~me 9.5 Acres, 4
~d!oom, 2 Bath , 2 Car
~arage, Above Ground
Pool. Bidwell, OH
tacked Pond. Code 914
r Call (740)386·0410.

View photos/Info online.

{)

lr

APARTMENTs

1 B'ath, Many
~~enities. Open House
t!'~arch 12, 10am-6pm
p:ode 2165 or call
(304)675·4125

Home Listings.
List your home by calltng
1740)446·3620 '

0

HousFS

FOR RENT

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to S442 .
3 bedroom Condo with river Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
view,
full
basement, 740-446·2568.
Equal
Galllpohs Ferry $700 month. Hous1ng Opportuntty.
Call (740)446·3481
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
3 bedroom house
m ED &amp; AFFDRDABLEI
Pomeroy $400 00 per month Townhouse
apartments,
plus .depoSit (740)992-0175
and/or small houses FOR
4 rooms and bath 52 OliVe RENT. Call (740)44 H 1 11
St. No pets, $300 month. tor apphcatton &amp; information.

1980 14x60 Nausha, 2 bed·
room: remodel bathroom,
new porch roof, w/d, stove,
Now accepting resumes for
Jtm's Carpentry
refngerator.
$6 000,
Cast Technician positions We Qo remodeling and most
Requires good Excel skills, any unfiniShed work, also 2615 MI. Vernon, 1 story, 2 (740)992·0925
genera l computer knowl- small
tree
removal br.. bsmt w/ fam . rm, bedrm.
edge, willingness to travel (740)446·2506; (740)367· bath. large det.. gar/shop, 1993 14x70 Norris 2 bedchain link fence. great loca- room , 2 bath, garden tub.
and work overtime Starling 0437
8xa
tteck .
tion $79 .000. 304·675-6682 dishwasher,
pay $15.00 hour Applicant
$1
1
.500.
(740)446·9480.
needs not to have expert·
28x56 home on 6 acres
ence, must have good work
92- 14x70 Breezewood, 3
28x48 barn. m ground pool
ethtcs and the wdhngness to
bedroom. 2 bath , CA- Valley
Millstone Ad 304-576-2920
BUSINESS
learn Tratmng provided. Fax
V1ew Dr (740)441-0953
$95.000.
OI'I'ORWNIIY
resume to (614)716·2272.
For Sale • 1979 Homette, 2
3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace .
bedroom. · w/central air,
Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT's
on 1 6 acres R1o Grande
$3.495 .00 Call (740) 385·
needed . Apply at 1354
$85,000
Call
PUBLISH area
4387
JaCkson P1ke, Gallipolis.
lNG. CO recommends tha (740)709·1 166
u do busmess w1th peo 3 br house 1 5 bath,w/ For Sale. 14X70. 3 bedROUTE SALES
roorri . set up tn Country
le you know, , and NOT t
garage &amp; basement.hardHERR FOOD INC.
Homes $6.995.00. Move in
nd monev through th
wood Hoors, t1led &amp;newly
a1l until you have investi remodeled kitchen w/ extras today! Call (740)385·4367
Is accepting resumes for
ated the offerin
located 1n Pt. Pleasant 304· Home ava1 lable for ImmediImmediate Opehing
Route Sates People m thiS
675·6052 or o04·593-2532
ate occupaAcyl · Already ~et­
Motor route available In area
up on rented lot 3 bedroom,
the Leon area $900.- $950.
MONt.-v
1 bath, 10% down , $209 00
a month call Sean Cullen
TO loAN
Must possess these
month.
Call
Harold,
at 304-675·1333 ext. 20
quahMs·
(740)385·9948.
*Clean Drivmg Record
Loader operator lor Cyblair •self starter, early r1ser
- Leaumg 1nancta
Immediate possess10n1Only
lumber Company At least 1 "Good communication skills
Institution approving Small
$213.68 per mo. New 3 bed·
All
real
estate
advertising
year expenence Apply 1n •strong sellmg sk1lls
Bus1ness, Mortgage
room, 2 bath mobile home.
In th1a newspaper ia
person at State Route 62 N •Ftrst year Income potentia!
Personal and Vehicle
subject
to
the
Federal
OnlY
m1nutes from Athens .
West
Columbia,
WV of $30K+ wlben9fits
Loans lmmed1ate
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
1-800-837 ·3238
(304)773-5670
response
Send resume to .
which makes It 111agal to
g1ve us a call at.
Inventory Clearence
Herr Foods, Inc
adverttJe "any
Ma1ntenance Director
1·866-228· 7063" Or apply
5 used homes under
476
E.
Seventh
Street
prefarenc:e,
llmlta1ion
or
Overbrook Aehabilttatmn
·onltne at
$2.000.00
Call
M1ke ,
dlecrimlnatlon based on
Chillicothe, OH 45601
Center IS now accepllng
www investment!inancial oro
(740)385·7671
. rece, color, religion,
resumes for the pos1110n of
familial status or national
Mamtenance Q1rector The
SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
origin, or any intention to
**NOTICf:**
qualified candidate must
Stock models at old prices,
make any auch
possess strong verbal and
2005 mOdels amv1ng Now,
prelerence, limitation or
~arrow Smart. Contact th
written commumcat1on sk~ls
Cole's
Mobile
Homes,
diacrlmlnation."
Town of Hartford wtll be QIV· Ph10 Divtsion of Fmancia
mcluding techmcal report
15266 U.S. 50 East, Athens,
mg
out
Apphcattons ~.stttution's
Offit;e
o
Thla newapeper will not
wnt1ng and record keep1ng .
OhiO 45701 , (740)592·1972.
between the hours of 9am to !Consumer
Affair
knowlngty accept
Must have expenence 1n
"Where You Get Your
1pm MondaY thur Friday for ~EFORE you refinanc
adv.rtlnmenta for real
general ma1ntenance
Money's Worth ~
a Class I Water Operator
~ur home or obtain a loan.
eatate: which Ia in
1nclud1ng carpentry, plumb~
SSI/ Social Secunty
EWARE
of
requests
fo
violation
of the taw. Our
1ng, elec1ncal, telephone
We are hiring!
$1 ,300 Net tncome, We can
reade,. are hereby
any
large
advance
pay
and cable 1nstallation, pa1ntWe offer paid tratnir)Q,
Informed th• all
linance yo'u a home Ca i
~;nts ol fees or insurance
1ng ,grounds work , evalua·
paid vacat1ons and
dwellings advertieed in
(304)736·3400
~all
the
·.
Office
o
t1on and Inspection of emerbene f1ts. You could make
thla newspaper are
~~nsumer
AHatrs
toll
·Ire
gency equipment, item
We have approximately 13
avaUable on an ,equal
up to $8.00/hour plus
~~ 1-866-278-0003 to lear
assembly, and boiler sys·
used homes for under
opportunity baaea.
bonuses
f the mortgage broker o
tem operatiOn . Must have
$2 .000. 1·800·837·3238
Call today to Start your
ender IS properly, licensed
knowledge of OSHA, L1fe
new career at
Th1s is a public serv1c
REAL E!ITAIT
Safety Code, HVAC and
tnfoCision
!announcement
from th
Country settmg on 2-acres.
WAIVfED
Bu11dnlQ Code. Long term
1-Bn-463·6247 ext. 2457
~~10 Valley Publishtn 2,240 sq-fl . 4 bedroom . 2
care expenence preferred
WWW jnfocjsjon com
ompany)
baths, fireplace, garden tub
but not requ1red . Qualified
I BUY HOMES
w/4
Jets , $105 ,000 00
candidates may send
Need
to sell your home
(740)742 .7434
resvmes to : Charla Brown·
qu1ckly because of a
McGu1re, AN, LNHA,
divorce. bankruptcy. jo'b
Located on Graham
Admimstrator, 333 Page
transfer, or death, Don't let
School
Road
Gallipolis CarHr College
Street, Mlddlepc:xt Ohio
the bank foreclose and ruin
3 Homes with 7 acres.
(Careers Close To Home)
DIRECTV
45760. EOE
your credit . Local person
$165 ,000
Call Todayl 740·446-4367,
Free DVD Player
euys houses. Fast ctosmgs.
3BR
Hous111,
1
bath,
1·800-21 4·0452 .
Free HBO &amp; Cmama11
Mason
County
Health
All cash . Jim
(740)992·
2 car garage.
www.OIIIipolltcar•ercouege com
FrH
ProfessiOnal
Department is accepting for Acc redited Member Accrediting
6300. No calls after 9pm
3BR
Doublewide,
lnst8Uatlon
Sanitanan. Applications can CO!XICII lor lndependanl Colleges
2 bath, above ground
up to 4 Rooms
be obtained at the health •nd School• 127-48.
I( I '\ t \ I ..,
pool, central a1r.
Call 1-1100·523· 7556
department until March 7.
WANJID
3BR, 1-112 bath Mobile
for details
Home with addition.
To Do
McClure's Restaurant now

Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty................................. 21 0
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ..................... .............. 780
Cards of Thanks ..........................................010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Relrigeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent. .................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment...:...................................... 610
Farms lor Rent. .................................... :....... 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trede .........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home lmprovements ...................................810
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses lor Rent. .........................................410
In Memorlam ...............................................
Insurance ..................................................... 130
~wn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Llvestock ...:..................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... O&amp;O
Loll &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlacellaneoua..............................................170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse.......................540
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals .....................................................005
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Sarvlces ................;·····--·--·--·--230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ..,............................ 160
Real Ettate Wanted ..................................... 360
SChoola lnatructlon ...................: .......... :...... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
SIIIIMions Wanted .................................. :.... 120
Space lor RanL .......................................... 480
hiring au locations. full or
Sporting Goodo ........................................... 520
. part-time, ptck up appliC(\·
SUV'a for Sale..............................................
Mn at location &amp; bring bade:
Trucko lor Sale ............................................ 715
between
9:30am
&amp;
Upholatery ................................................... 870
Vane For Sale ...............................................730 , n .ooam, Monday thru
Saturday
Wanted to Buy .............................................0110
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supj,llee .................. ll20
Wanted
Manager
and
W•ntedTo Do .........l . .. .. . ............. . ......•..... , • ••• 180
Experienced Auto Body
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
man . Cotillion painting &amp;.
Vard Ill.. Galllpolla....................................072
frame experience ntceaVard lla..Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
aary Call (7•0)446·«66 to
V•d lla..Pt. PIHNnt ..............................:. 078
aet up,an appointment.

:020

~.,r:==~:~:s:~::=;l r·o
r
www.orvb.com

rroo~ I

t

Thursday for Sundays Paper

Trlbune-Sentln•~eglallllf

ATIN· needed 23 people to
lose up to 30 lbs. 1n the neKt
Absolute Top Dollar· US
30 days. 100% natural,
Silver and Gold Co 1ns,
100%
guaranteed,
no
Proofsets, Gold A1ngs, US
ephedra. Call 1·888-234Currency,-M TS Coin.Shop,
5146, or V1sit www.new151
Second
Avenue ,
shaperesults.com
'Gallipolis, 740·446·2842.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

I

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.

_ _.

SHOP
ClASSIFIEDS

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~_
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid•

Wanting to buy 48x40 Inch AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Shtrley S~aars, 304·
wooden
pallets.
L Sell
Williamson Pallets 304-675· 675·1429
2716
Bates Bros. Amusement Co.
Airedale- Male, Lost v1C1My Wanllng to buy· Lawn mow· Spnng./Summer, Must Be 17
of
Smokey
Row
Ad ers and weed eaters. Or Older And Able To Travel
Answers to Skippy or Puppy (740)388·9327
Late
March-Late
$1 DO Reward Has red collar
September. Weekly Pay,
I \11'1 I)' \II\ I
w1tM
rab1es · tag
Call
l-Iving Facilities. ' Bonus.
Sll~\1&lt;1..,
1740)379·2313
COntact Us At 740-266·
2950.
J:ound· Route 32 (Apphch1an
IIFJJ' WANTED
Hwy) Male Chocolate Lab
DATA ENTRY·
s1tt1ng bes1de a dead female
Work lrom home
Chocolate
lab
Call
An Excellent way to earn Flexible Hours I
(740)992·606b)
$SSGreat Pay$$$
money. The New Avon.
Personal Computer
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
ReqUired. ·
SAs'sv Snssoas
1o80().873.0345 oxt. UOO.
Stylist wanted . Salary/
Hair Stylists
CommiSSIOn 740-441-1880
Don 't miss th is incredible
O r 740-256-6336.
opportu n1ty with Fiesta Hair
Salons! We currently have
openings for full and partlime licensed Hair Stylists
4x4's For Sale ................................:............. 725
at our salon in Mason.We
Announceme.rt ............................................ 030
oller guaranteed hourly
AnUques ................................~ ...................... 530
wages, new pay spate wHh
Apartmenls for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market... .......................... 080 1Up tO 52% SBIVICe COm.
mission, retail and tannmg
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
commissions,
med1cal denAuto Repalr ..................................................770
tal , IIISIOn and hie ms.,
Au~s for Sale ..............................................
advanced educaliOn , and
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
much more. Call 1-8n-327Building Supplies ........................................ 550
7001 tor more 1nformat1on

t

.'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Start Your Ad5 With A Keyword • lnc:lude Complete

Ii~;::::;:::::::~ '----....
70

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oead'liiru

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ... ·

l\egtster

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Offee llowc-i
· HOW IQ, WRITE AN AD

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
· March 5, 2005
Meigs County Fairgrounds
Auctioneer
Capt Billy R Goble, Jr.
740-992-5794 Home
740-416-1164 Cell
Lunch by Southern Local
Band Boosters

2 bedroom house Stove &amp;
refngerator Included No
pets. $275 month, $ t 50
deposit. Call (740)446·9061 .

ANTIQUES

L.____.;.___.l
Buy
or
sell
Rivenne
Antiques. 1124 East Ma1n
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992·2526. ' Russ Moore.
.owner.

r~1

Extra 10%. off Everylhing
Wed., March' 2· Sat, March 5
Sears Thank You Sale
10% ofl everyth 1ng includmg
appliance brands like Kenmore, GE,
Whirlpool. Maytag and Frigidaire '
and tractors like Craftsman , the '
number one selling brand of ''"'''no•l
in Amer1ca. Now through Saturday
get 0% Financing Until September.
2005 w1th your Sears Card or free
delivery with mail in rebate on all
home appliances over $399. Save
also on your rawn and garden ~~~~~~~~~
when you lake 10% off the "
or sale prices of all tractors
attachments. Sav1ngs and offers
Saturday, March 5. Excludes G
Price , Maytag Neptune, and

co•••• ·...,

2200

~:;astern

~ MOBILE HUMES

L_

I

·~39:.::3~6------

2 bedroom mobile home,
14 x70,
gas
heat.
$300/deposll, $325/month
(304)882·1107

Furntshed 3 rooms &amp; bath ,
upstairs, newly decorated ,
clean . no pets. Reference &amp;
depoSit requtred (740)446·
~
·5:...1~9_ _ _ _ _ __

2 bedroom mobile home. all Modern 1 bedroom apt. Call
electnc
1n
Middleport. (740}446·0390

ADVERTISE YOUR EVENT
IN THE BULLETIN BOARD
Help Wanted

$350 00 pluS deposit. No Modern 1 bedroom apt No
inside pets. (740)992·3194
pet, $265 month, 1nciOOes
2 bedroOJTl, 4 m11es from wate r,
$200
deposit
Holzei S350/month 'plus ~17_4_:0:_)44_:6_:·3:.:6:_17:___ _ __
sec depos1t &amp; reference. New 1 bedroom apt. Call
(740)446·6865 oc (740)379· (740)446·3738.
2923
P1 lot Program- Renters
2 br mobile home City limitS needed
Call • (304)736·
of Pt Pleasant 304-675· 3409
2359
Tw1n Rivers Tower is accept·
3 bedroom mobile home in tng applications for waitmg
Middleport.
no
pets list for Hud·subslzed, 1· br
(740)992·5858
apartment, ca ll 675·6679
3Br. . trailer
w/refndg&amp; _E::OH!:'o_ _ _ _ _ _ __,
Stove.washer
&amp;
drye(
included Section 8 approved
(304 )576-2934

r

~

APARThiENlS
FORRENr

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furmshed and unfur·
mshed, security deposit
requtred, no pets, 740-992·
2218

1 bedroom apt. 1n Gallipolis
Reference
&amp;
depostt
reqwred Call (740)4462468 alter 4pm

r.:i

SPACE

HJR

RFNr

~

For Lease· Othce or fetat l
.spaces 1n very good cond1·
liOn Downtown Gall1pohs.
Approx 1600 sq. ft each 1
or 2 baths Lea se pnce
negohable to encourage
new
busmess.
Call
(740)446·4425 oc (740)446·
3936.

female.
7429

$400 .

(740)367·

-----'-----

I \I( \I "' I 1'1'1 II..,.
,\ 11\I " IIHI,

Help Wanted

Who: Luigino's, Inc.
Where: 100 E. Broadway St., Jackson, Ohio
When: March 5, 2005 between.9:00 a.m. &amp; 2:00p.m.
Luigino's wiU be taking applications during the above
time frame for:
Maintenance
· Sanitation
Warehouse
·
~
Prod~ction
Full time ..,art time opportuni~ies available with
starting wages from $7.10 to $10.25 per hour plus
incentive pay. Excellent benefits which includes
Medical, Dental, Optical, 401 K, Paid Vacation and
Holidays.

1985 Che vy Stlverado 300
m1tes on rebu1tt 350, bu t
won t hold 0 11 p1e ssu re
Askmg $700 Call (304)675·
5979.

2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport
4x4 power w1ndows 8 locks
CO .tow1ng package 54,000
m11es 304-675· 13t4 ·
. -99 Jeep Che rokee Sport
1988 Ford F1 50 79.300 . 4x4 EC gold, auto, PW PL
m1les Excellent condihon . 5 V5
CD
CC
new
speed, overdnve (740)388· roto rs/bra kes,
$5 '995
0140
(6 14)23 1·1355

FARM
F..Q\m'MENT
1962 Gravely Tractor, model
L.S 6.6 HP, manual-start ,
slow speed, dual-wheels,
rotary plow, sickle-mower,
bush hog, and a extra
eng1ne L. l. and runs g90d
$1200. f1rm, for more info.
call304·675·1838

4Wuuu;R~
2000
Harley
Dav1dson
Spo rt ster B83 Hugger 6,35D '
mile s, new ttre s. ex tras.
$6.500 Neg Day ( 74 0 ~6 4 53248 ev enmg after 7pm
(740)256· 6589
--'·

--'·

---

2004 Harley Oav•dson 883
custom, black 4 ,500 m1\es ,
$7,500 (74 0)441-1583

2005 Kawasak t V Twm 750
Vulcan
Cycle.
ne'.'er
dropped garaged 50mpg
1993 Chevrolet Astro Van . $4.400 (304)675- 2942
cond1t1on
phone
goo d
(304)675-5077
VANS

"~-------"

m11es excellent cond1t10n,
$10.500 cal l (740)245·
Boyd Beef Cattle
9088. '
2000 Chevrolet-Silverado
Performance Bull Sale
2001 Honda C1v1c LX 1500 LS, full y-optioned,
Selling
60
Registered Coupe. Green. automatiC 4x4 be,dll n er,tra ilermg Angus and 20 Polled excellent cond1t1on , ve ry pkg ,Pewter ext Cha rcoal
Her,eford Bulls Mondav c lean, 73,000 highway- int , 1OOk highway m1les,
March 7 at the New OK miles, $8.395 negotiable syn oil, below book $12.900
304·773·6062
LIVestock
Aycljon (614)313·7096 .
Mayesyllle KY 6·30pm.' For
2002 Ford Escort ZX2 5 '2000 Sto-LS. Ext-cab 3rd
more mfOrma tiOn contact
speed, 29 ,000 m11es. a1r door 4-cyl. 5-spd AC. CD.
Charlie Boyd · (606)763m1les
Askmg
one owner N1ce (740)441· 48,000
6418.
$7.900
00
OBO
(740)949·
0157 or (740)645·5141
2621
While male Llama, 4 years
2003 Dodge Neon STX
old $fOO Call (740)256· 4door, 4cyl . automatic, 87 Chevy 112-ton, 2WD 350·
1652
power everythmg, 1 I ,000 engme. 81 ,000-mlles. good
condtt10n , PWIPL, Orl~ 4
Yearling Angus Bulls. Mostly miles. $6.500 (740)441· new
11res.
Red/blac k
0337
oc
(740)645-61
53
.
A.\. excellent bloodlines.
$4.700. (740)506·1367
priced reasonably. Slate Run 93 ewck $1900 304-576·
87 S-10 Chevy pick-up, la1 r
Farm. Jackson. (740)286- 2383
cond1t ton , 4 cyl. , 4 speed.
5395.
93 Ford Escort LX Auto, PS. runs
good .
$1 .37 5.
www.slaterunfarm.com
PB, AJG, 88,000 m1les, (740)949·2490
HAY&amp;
$1 ,BOO 080. (740)446·
SUVs
GRAIN
6304
fUR SALE
98 Cadillac Calera Fully
Hay for sale BOO lb round
equipped. leather interior.
1995 Jeep Cherokee Sport.
bales Good hay, $7 .5Q a
low mtleS. mint cond!t1on.
4 0 automatic, alf excellent
bale You haul. (740)245·
$7.900 Call (740)704·3751
cond . $3495 00 304 -727·
0485
BMW Z3 , '99, Spec1al 6924
Want1 ng to rent summer Ed1hon , 22.000 miles, dark
Jeep
Cherokee
pasture, for beef cattle 1n green, $19,999 (304)412- 1998
Classic, 4 o. automatic, fully
Gallla County Call after 3380
loaded $5495 1 304 - 727 ~
6pm. (740)446·3375
Chevy Monte Carlo SS. '84 , 6924
I I{ \ \SI'I IU 1 \ Ill 1\
$6.500 neg. Call (740)3772001 L1ncoln Navtgator
9943.
AWD, 5.4 VB, 3rd row seat·
AIIIUS
Income
Tax
Specials
1ng,
casseUe/CD·changer,
FOR SALE
96
Chevy
Cors1ca heated/cooled-seats.
low
$2,800 oo· 96 Ply Neon 4 m1les, exce llent cond 1t1on.
$5001 Honda's, Chevy's,
Dr $2 ,700.00· 93 Bwck $23.900 17401453·5535
PoliCe
Jeep's,
Ect
Regal 2 Dt, $2 ,700 00 94
lmpoundsl Cars from $500
Park
Avenue 2002 Chevy Avalanche Z71 .
tor listmgs 800-391-5227 BUICk
$2,600 00. 97 Chevy Mahbu Fully loaded. onstar, heated
EXT 3901
$2,900.00
95 Ponllac seats 29.000 m1les, moonroof. 4-wheel·dnve. CD,
1952 Plymouth 4dr. engme Sunlire GT $2.950 00 96 $23.400 080 (61 4)989·
Ponhac
Sunf1re
$3,800.00
runs good, body excell , all
Chevy
Corstca 6448
orginal, no rust 32,000 mileS 95
$1 ,200.00: SeVeral . more 2004 Honda P1lot EX. rated
304-578-2532
cars and trucks A1verv1ew best lull SIZe SUV Red Pearl
1979 Ford Thunderbird Motors 2 blocks up past ext tan cloth 1nt all options
Runs, fatr condition, $375 McDonalds in Pomeroy. Call ma1ntamed and babied , 2 1k
Call (740)387.()667
(740)992·3490
m11es $26,900 304-773-

1981 Olds 98, 4dr. Ru ns Jeep Grand Cherokee oo
Good. Call (304)675·1264
Laredo. 65K m11es Excellent
cond1t1on . 4lf4 , remote stan,
t989 Crown V1c , new t1res ,
e11tras
$13.000neg
new battery, new trans . Very
(304)617·1 380
n1ce car. 101 ,000 m11es .
·1999 Stock Tra116r. t 2 ', $2,200.00 ' OBO. (740)992· Must sale, 1984 Corvette
350 eng1ne. (740)992-6797
$1.500. Call (740)256· 1355 5532
'

40 MmuR&lt;wu:-;1

FOR SALE

-

r

4x4
FoR SAu:

TRUCKS

mRSALE

r

'NEW ~NO USED STEEL
Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
Angle.
For
Concrete.
Complete family of Ohio
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
River Bears- $100.
Gra,tmg
For
Drains,
Antique
Gooseneck Rocker,
DrtVeways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
newly upholstered· $200.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Rocker Recliner· $100
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fnday 8am-4:30pm. Closed Complete set of Budweiser
X-mas mugs- $100
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Amish
Rocker· $150
Sunday. (740)44&amp;-7300

/:'MP/j)}'M/:'NT
(JPPlJRTUNITII•:S

i

i

~60~6~2;,.;~-~~--.,
4x4
fuR SALE

call Troy Krebs 304-675 ·
200 1 Dod ge Caravan Sport 8828
70 000 m11es excellent co n- ;;,;:.-~--~~-..
CA:\tPt:KS &amp;
dll to n. sli d1ng ·doors-bo th
s1des auto, V6. AIC , powe r
M&lt;.YI'OR HOMl-:S
everylh1n g time/tem perature
gauge
51 1 000 "03" 34' Jay co Ea gle 5th
(740)256-6511 3
wh eel
Lots of eKtras
17'01339·0218
2QD2 Chevrolet Custom1zed
Aeau lar
Van
!Arche1 1998 30' fltth wheel travel
Expressl 20 000 mlles plus, tra1ler, double Sltd e, excelexcellent co nd1tion has TV , lent condlt10n . $1 3.900
tape player and radto m rear phone (740)698·9319
section of van also m l ront
Sl U.\ H I._,
dash Speaker phone s 111
rear, one owner Never been
10
HOME:
wrecked To VIeW phon e
(740)446·9539 .
hii'RO\'t:\lfNI'S
4()"""C"

M&lt;llURll'CU'SI

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondlliOnal hlet1me guar
1979 Hono a 750 1Oth antee Loc al ·references lurAnnive rsary L1m1ted Edtllon n~shed Establi sh ed 1975
NeedS'
tg n1t10n
work Ca ll 24 Hrs . (74fll 446Evenmg
(740 )256-687 0 0870 Rogers Basem ent
Low mileage $2 000
Waterproo fing.

4 WHE:EU]lS

1982 Honda 500 Tf1ke
Faring w/ste re o system Dk
otue Evenmgs (740 )256
plastiC and me tal 6" mch es6870 $3 .000
60 1nches 1n stock Ro n
1986 Honda' 250R orgma l Evans Enterpnse Jackson .
plastic. run s goo d 53,000 ,OH 1(800)537·9528
304·882-2924

Culverts

1986 Honda For~man 4 wd .
excellent cond ition. garage
kept. $2000. (740)992·04 13
1995 Harley Softa11 Custom.
$9 .995 Can (606)232·631 9
1996 Honda Goldwmg 1500
Aspecade 23.700 m1le s,
excellent cond1tron 2 match·
1ng helmets Ask1ng $8,000
(740)388·8047

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR
STYLE. ..

-~

'c !)l

1998
Yamah a Warner
Excellent co nd1t1on $2.600
4-wheeler t1re's· vanous
si zes
and
co nd1t1ons
(740)446·0048
1999 Honda ES 4-wheeler
Excellent cond1t1on 54.()00
080. (740)256·6655

~ __ j

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS

t 99~ Honda Shadow 75()(;:c.
6.200 m1les excellent condt·
t1on . $4 ,000 can 1740)446·
1948.

SOMETHING
FOR YOO!!

-- -

2003 Suzuki V1nson 500 486 Bronco XLT, 4 WD, 302. 4 wheeler, 340 m1les Red 4
BBL . auto, new 11res, .raters. WD $4600 OBO 304-675·
2790
$1 .100. (740)992·3.679

\ IJIU 11\'01"1

Hou;rnow

Gooos

Security at the Receiving gate will direct you to where
you can complete the application.

1BA apartment for rent 1n
Spnng Valley $350/month
plus depos1t, water &amp; trash
Included (740)388-00t7 or
(740)339·0362

r

j570

(740)446·4425 or (740)446·

.

FOR Rmf

15

r

MUSICAL
JET
IN:.ORUMEMS
_AERATION MOTQRS
Repa1red, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1· Nee_d old str~ ng Instruments
Repairable or for parts. Call
800·537·9528.
740 256·1335.

Bart and the Chasers
· Playing at the
MIZWAY

Al!IDi
FOR SALE

5

Sha~e pups 2M/2F, AKC.
For rent· 24'x32' 3 stall Pole Born 12131 . Vet Chk'd, shots
Barn. Private. Rt 7. $2001 &amp; wormed.
SSOO, POP
month .
(740)446·4782 (740)473-2785. (740)236·
Galllpoll~.
0028.

products. Other exclusions apply.
store for details.

t'o

Pole Barn ·30x50x10FT 2000 M F 231S Tractor. 235 1989 Lincoln Town car, elC C
$6795 tncludes Pamted hrs $9,500 Call (740)256· cond 304-773·5326
- - - - . . -- - - Metal, Plans, InstructiOn 6746
1990 Ford Thunderbtrd
~~~S~~~~ Free Dej1very John 'Deer~ 116 rid1ng lawn $700 304·675 -4949
II"!!"'"!!'IOII. .IIII!!"'--. mower w/ yard cart ,nice 1994 Mercedes 220 Good
$1200. 304·675·3824
SPA FACtORY OlffiETS
cond1t1on , $6 ,800
Call
New Shipment
John Deere 2040 , d1eset, (740)245·9088.
20-tubs 1n-stock
EC, new ltres, $8,950 Ford
1995 Ford Mustang. 5
Cedar Knoll Mall,
3000
d1esei,
$5,995
speed. (740)388·61 88 .
Kentucky Trading Post.
{614)41 9-2781
Ashland.
·1999 Ford Contour SE· 4
(606)922-7185
Spec1als of the Month on
door, 24 ,300 miles, excellent
Farmpro Tractors Farmpro cond1t1on , $5,500. Call
20hp, 2-wheel dnve, diesel
(740)446-0771 after 6pm
BUJLDING
utility tractor, $3899
SUPI'LIES
2000 Chevy Cavalier Z·24,
Farmpro 25hp 4-wheel
50 000 'mdes powe r wtn·
drive, diesel utility tractor
Block, bnck , sewer pipes, wlloader. $8999 More
dowsl doors, alloy wheels
ask1ng $5000 304 -675·
windows, lintels, eiC. Claude units available, all with t yr
Winters, A10 Grande, OH warranty, call lor more
5828
Call 740-245·5121.
details. (740)696·0358
2000 Chrysler Ctrrus 4-door
Tractor parts &amp; service, spe- sedan. automatiC power
in
Massey seats. WI ndows.door ·lock.s.
cializing
Ferguson , Ford; Long, and Silver eKcell cond. 63.000
m11es $6000 304·675·6047
AKC
Reg istered
Toy Belarus (740)696-0358
Poodles 4 black males, ·
2000 Chrysler LXI Town and
$350. i black, t apncot
LIVESTOCK
Country All leather, 66,000

Dalmatian, male approx. 2
1990 Yamaha electriC golf
yrs , Yellow Lab, m, approx 3
cart, very nice $1500. 304·
yrs, Rat Terrier, f. approx . 5
67$·3824
yrs, several m &amp; f Beagles;
Border Colhe mix, many
1g92 Dodge Stealth, 24 mtxed dogs, please adopt
one of these homeless dogs
valve turbo. $4,000.
Early 90's Gehl loader · from the Meigs Co. Dog
$10.500. ' '
· Pound. (740)992·3779
3- black Angus Bulls. $2,000 Male Pekingese pupp1e S. 7
each.
weeks old, 1st shots. CKC
2001 Cargomate cargo trail- Regtstered Call (614)471er. $8,500 (740)256·9247 or 4766 .
(740)645-0870
Purebred Border Collie
2001 Kawasaki 225,$2,000. pu)&gt;s Imported bloodltnes.
1987 motor home. 31 foot. 1st shots/wormed Classic
Good condition, sleeps 6·8. colors $ 100 each. Call
(740)379·9110.
$10.000. (740)245·9124

(740)446-3945

Equal Opponunity Employer
Appliance

2 bedroom apt Second
Warehouse
Ave .. Gallipolis $450 month,
stove/refrigerator Included,
washer/dryer hookup, cen- 1n Henderson , WV. Pre·
tral air. 740-441·01 94 or owned applicanes starting at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty.
740·441 -1184
we do service work on all
2BR apt State Route 160 Make and Models (304)675·
$400/monltl, stovelrelngera- 7999
tor included, washer/dryer
hookup (740)441 ·0194 or Brass bed, lull size . Good
(740)441·1184
condition. Pretty new mat·
lress(740)44 Hl540.
3
room
and
b81~ ,
stovelrelngera tor,
down- Furmture : Sofa - chatr sets.
stairs, all utilities pa1d. 46 $399 : Sofa - love seat sets,
Olive
Street
$450. $499
Mollohan Carpet
(740)446·3945.
(740)446·7444 or (740)388·
0173.
Appl1cat1ons be1ng taken lor
very nice, clean 2 bedroom . Hunter Green &amp; Beige
apartment 1n country senmg, couch &amp; chair, good clean
yet close to town , on cond $175 00 304·675·
Centenary Road ,Washer, 6943
dryer, stove, fndge, dish· - -- - - - - - washer provided Total elec· Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
tric wiAC Tenant pays elec- Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
trlc No pits. no smoking (740)446· 7444 1-877·830·
$400 deposit , s475 per 9162. Free Esttmates. Easy
month Water included. 740· financmg, 90 days same as
446·2205 or 740. 446•9585 , cash . V1sa/ Master Card.
Ask for v1rglnia
Drive· a· little save alot.

BE!aut1lul 2-story townhouse,
overlook 1ng Gallipolis City
park. K1tchen-famlly, 0 A ,
LA
t d 2 be th s,
. . 3 B.A , suy.
HOIJSJ'S
laundry area. References
FORRmf
required . security ctepoSII ,
no pets $900 per mo
1 bedroom houae, 1005 (7-40)446-2325 or (740) 446•
Third Ave., Gallipolis. $250 4-425.
plus utlllllel and depo1lt.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 btQ·
(7.0)256·8881 .
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
2 bedroom
hOuJe
In Apartmentl in Middleport.
Pom~roy
$275 00 plul From 5:195·$444. Call 740·
S275.00 dopoolt. (7•0)992· 992·5064 Equal Housin g
8215 or (740)591-0195
Oppor1un1111S.

•

Middleport American Legion
March 3rd, 6 pm
~ponsored by Southern Elementary
PTO Advanced Ticket drawing
For tickets call Jennifer Hoback

Franchi 48AL 12ga , $450
Marlm 17cat heavy brl.
3x9tasco, $250 Remington
700BDL, 22·250, Weaver
1OXscope,
· $550.
Winche&amp;ter 77 tubefed semtauto 22L A. \ $250. S&amp;\'1
Model 29, '44mag. 6~brl. Fulltarget , $475. High Standard
Sport King 22L.R. heavy brl.
10shot clip, $450. Mossberg
22mag . bolt, clipfed, scope,
$175 Heritage 17cal blued
6·shot pistol, $175. New
England 20ga. singleshot,
$85. Stevens 22L.R. semi·
auto rille 4x Iasco. $125.
7 40 446-2905

16

I ~.,r__,.F.ou_,·~.R-~.ENT-_.JI

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388 For sale.
re-cond itioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refngera·
tors . gas and ele&lt;:tric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wnnger washers . Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

SELL YOUR
USED FURNITURE
WITH A.
CLASSIFIED AD

'

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!
'

PUBLIC
NOTICES
Beginning
7315
PUBLIC NOTICE
feel weal from the
SHERIFF SALE
Number northeast corner of
Case
said lol 257 on the .
02CV125
north line of lot 257;
Branch Banking &amp;
thence weal along
Trull Co., Plaintiff, va.
&amp; said north line 208',
. Steven/Stephen
thence aouth along
Elizabeth Jenkina, at
the weal line of oald
ol. Defendants Court
10 acre tract ol real
of Common Plell.
eetate 487.5'; thence
Melga County, Ohio.
eoal along the south
In pursuance of on
order of oale to me · line of said 10 acre
tract of real estate
dlrtOCted from aold
208'; thence north
court In tho above
parallel with tht )¥111
. entitled action, I will
upoaa to aale at pub- line of aald 1o. acre
lic lllCtlon on the lrect of real eatate
front atepa of the 487.5' to the place of
Melge
Counly beginning, conlalnlng
2.32 acres, more or
Courthouee
on
Friday, April 8th, 2005 1-.
Excepting
and
at 10:00 a.m. ol uld
day, the following reaarvlng all cool, oil,
· deecrtbed reel eatota:
goa ·end
miner... with the right to
Exhibit A
remove ume, which
Legal Deecrlptlon
Situated In Letart · hiVe nol alrudy been
Townohlp,
Melga ucepted or reaarved.
Eitilng part ofthe 10
County, Ohio, being
part of a 10 ecre par· acre• of real aotate
eel of real eatatl deecrlbed In Volume
deocrlbed In deed 251' P1tge 183 of the
Melgo County Deed
recorded In Volume
281 ; .,_ 183 of lhe Recorda.
Reference Daad:
Melge County Deed
Racorde and being Volume 327, Page
part of 100 acre lot 345, Melgo County
Deed, Recorda.
no.287.

0-

'.

Premlsea commonly known as:
47670 Adams Road,
Racine, Ohio
45771
Current
Owner:
&amp;
Stephan/Steven
Elizabeth Jenkins, al
at
Proparty at: 47670
Adamo Road, Racine,
OH'
pp f08.00294.001
Prior
Oaad
Reference: · Volume
327, Page 345
Appralood
at
$80,000.
Term• of
Sale: Cannot be told
for le11 than 213rdo of
the appralaad VIIIU8.
10% down on day of
sale, cuh or certified
check, balance due
on confirmation of
sale.
Robert E. Baagle,
Melgo County Sheriff
Attorney lor Plolnllff
Carllole,
McNellle,
Rlnl, Kromer I Ulrich
Co.
24755
Chagrin
Boulevard Suite 200
Claveland,,
Ohio
44122-51190
(218) 360-7200
(3) 2,8,18 3T

.

�I

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March 2, 2005
ALLEY OOP-

Wednesdl\IY· March 2, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle -

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Sheriff 's Sale
Real Estata
Case
Number
04CV066
CIIIGroup Mortgage
HSBC Bank USA
Plaintiff
vs
James &amp; Deborah
· Barker
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
directed from said
Court In the above
entitled aclion, 1 will
expos.e .to sale at public auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs county Court
Hous'e on Friday,
April 1, 2005 at 10
a.m., of said day, the
following described

privilege, with the . C. Thomao Smith,
right of Ingress and Ohio
Professional
egress at all times.
surveyor, f6844 .
Excepting thereLESS
' AND
from a lot sold to EXPECTING THERENorman E. ArnoH and FROM A TRACT OF
Om a 1. Arnon by deed LAND DESCRIBED
deled August 18, AS
1947, and recorded In
FOLLOWS :
Volume 159, Page 506
Being a part of 3.49
of the deed records of
aCre tract transferred
Meigs County, Ohio.
to Cheri L., Campbell,
Also excepting a as recorded In Tract
lot sold to Royal Two Office Reconds
Thomas and Ural Volume 7.0 at Page
Thomas by deed· 849, Meigs County
dated May 7, 1946, Recorder's
office,
and
recorded
in Meigs County, Ohio,
Volume 158, P~ge 127 also being a part of
of the deed records of
Section 18, TownshlpMeigs County, Ohio.
9-North, Range-15Also excepting .32 Weat, · Columbia
acres · sold to Lee Township,
Meigs
Sayre and Ruth Sayre County, Stale of Ohio
by deed recorded In and more particularly
Volume 239 , Page described as follows;
837, of the deed
Beginning at an
real estate:
records of Meigs existing Iron . pin
Legal Description
County, Ohio.
being a polnl on the
File Number: 304- Current Owner:
Norlh line of said 3.49
1936
James &amp; Deborah acre tract and being
Situated in the village Barker
the Northeast corner
Property at:
of Syracuse, CoUnty
of a 5.000 acre tract
2982 Third Street
of Meigs, State of
recorded In Official
Ohio, to-wit: First Syracuse, Ohio 45779 Records Volume 48 at
Tract: Situated in
PP# 2Q-00565.00
Page 487;
Syracuse . .Special 20-00566.00
Thence along said
District : Beginning Prior
Deed Norlh line South 85
303 feet east of Reference : Volume 151 35" East a dlaThomas
Dully's 316, Page 13
tance or 388.93 feet to
southeast corner of Appraised
at a 518", Iron pin wllh
the north side of the $30,000.00
i.d. cap set assumed
. public road leading Terms
·or
Sale: to be the Northeast
from Pomeroy to Cannot be sold for . corner of said 3-49
Racine: thence east
less than 2/3rds of acre tract and being a
along side road 126 the appraised value. point on the North
feet, more or less, to
10% down on day of line of a 50 tool right
the west line of W.O. sale, cash or certified of way known as
Roush's
property check, balance on Chestnut Drive;
which Is also the line confirmation of sale.
Thence along the
between 100 acre Lot Ralph E. Trussel, North line of said
No. 290 and 291 ; Meigs County Sheriff. Chestnut Drive the
thence north at right
Attorney . for
the following three coursangles with said road
Plaintiff
es:
and along said line Carlisle McNellle Rlnl
1. South 62 27' 06"
100 feet; thence west Kramer &amp; Ulrich
West a distance of
126 feet; more or 24755 Chagrin Blvd., 322 .74 feet to a 518"
les~ ; thence south
Suite 200
Iron
pin wHh l.d.
100 feet"to the place Cleveland,
Ohio cap set;
.
of beginning, being a 44122
2. South 79 59' 41"
lot with a frontage on (216) 360-7200
West a distance of
public
road
of (2) 23, (3) 2, 9
69.74 feet lo a 5/6"
approximately
126
iron pin wllh l.d_ cap
set;
· . '
feet and a depth of
100 feet.
Public Notice
·3. North 65 31 ' 36"
Excepting 50 feet
West a distance of
off the west end SHERIFF
SALE, 50.37 feet to a 5/8",
thereof, conveyed to REAL ESTATE. CASE iron pin wllh i.d_ cap
Norman Arnott and
NUMBER 04CV071
set being a point on
Om a ArnoH by · deed
ABN AMRO Morlgage the East line of said
recorded in Volume
Group, Plaintiff
5.000 acre 'tract;
· 159, Page 206 of the vs
Thence
leaving
deed
records
of Douglas Campbell, et
seld Norlh line and
Meigs County, Ohio.
al., Defendants
along said Easl line
· Second
Tract: Court of Common North 05 15' 32" East
Situated in the Village Pleas, Meigs County, a distance of 190.39
of Syracuse, County OH
feet to the principal
of Meigs, and Siate of
In pursuance of an point of beginning
Ohio, ·. and described Order of Sale to me containing
1.037
as follows: Being in directed from said acres.
100 acre Lot No. 291, Court In the above
All iron pins set are
Town 2, Range 12, of entitled action, I will 518" X 30" rebar with
the Ohio Company's expose lo sale at pub- plastic
l.d.
cap
Purchase,
and lic aUction on the stamped "CTS-6844".
bounded as follows: front steps oC lhe
Bearings derived
Beginning at the Meigs County Court from previous survoy
northeast corner of a House on 'Friday, and are for the detertract of land now or March 18,- 2005 , at mination of angles
formerly owned by 10:00 a.m., of said only.
Frank Amou, on the day. the following
The above descripeast line of 100 acre described real eslate: tion was prepared
Lot No. 291 and the
LEGAL
DESCRIP- from an actual survoy
north of the road TION
made on 1he 1st day
leading
from
Situated In the of June, 2000, by
Pomeroy to Racine ; State of Ohio, County Thomas SmHh, Ohio
thence north follow- · of Meigs and in the Professional
irig the east line of Township
of Surveyor, 116844:
100 acre Lot No. 291 , Columbia .
commonly known
380 feet to lhelol now
Being a part of as:
2 9 2 0 9
or formerly owned by 63.76 acre tract and a Lemaster
Road,
Thomas Snowball ; 3.49 acre tract transAlbany, Ohio 4571 o
thence west along the ferred to Katherine
ALSO 'LESS AND
south line of the
Lawson as recorded
EXCEPTING THEREl)lomas Snowball Lot In Deed Book 263 at
773 feet to where said Page · 143, Meigs
l ine intersects the
Cou.nty Recorder's FOLLOWS:
road leading to the
Office, Meigs County,
Being a part of a
cemetery; thence fol- Ohio, also being a · 5.00 acres tract translowing the meander- part of Section 16, ferred lo Douglas
ing&amp; or the cemetery Township 9 Range 15 Campbell as recordroad In a southerly West,
Columbia ed In Office Reconda
direction 362 feet to Township,
Melga Volume 43, al Page
the northwest corner County, Slate of Ohio 487, Meigs County
of a tract of land now and more particularly Recorder's
Office,
or formerly awned by described as follows:
Meigs County Ohio,
Thomas Duffy (deed
Beginning at an also being a part of
r.ecorded in Volume existing Iron ·pin Section 18, Townshlp119,
Page
319); assumed to be the 9-North, Range -ISthence in a south· northwest corner of West,
Columbia
easterly direction folsaid 3.49 acre tracl Townahlp,
Meigs
lowing the north line and beara North 050 County, State of Ohio
of the Thomas Duffy
15' 32" East a dl• and more particularly
tract 350 feet; thence lance of 583.67 feet described ao follows:
southerly along the from the northwest
Beginning at a
east line of the comer of 2.5 acre point on the assumed
Thomas Duffy lol 150 tract recorded in West line o• said
feet to the northeast Office
Recorda Section 18, Townahlpcorner of a tract of Volume 189 at Page 9-, Range 15, and
land nOw or formerly 647;
being the Sou1hwest
• owned by Thomas
Thence along the cornlf of Hid 5.00
Duffy (deed recorded asoumed north line of acres tract recorded
In Volume 98, Page said 3.49 acre lract, in Official Records
440): thence in a South 85 15, 350 East Volume 48, at f'age
northerly direction a distance of 511-l!9 487;
following the north or feet to a 518"1ron
Thence along said
rear line of the prop-. pin set; Thence
West, line North 05
erty now Or formerly South 05 151
320 15' .32" East a dlaowned by the follow- Weal a distance of tance of 70.07 feel to
Ing persona ; Anno 432.81 feet to a 518" a 518" Iron pin found
Dalton , ·Bert Weese, Iron pin set; Thence being the lnteraactlon
Royal Thomas and North 83 43' 58" Wast of ..ld W.ot line and
Frank Arnon to tha palling lhru a 518"
place of beginning, Iron pin at • dlotance
containing about olx of 501 .02 feet and
and one·hall acreo (8 going a total dlotance
f /2), more or Ia...
of 511 .35 feet to a
R.,.ervlng unto the point on the a..umad
. .ld C.H . Wllllamo, west lino of said
Tru•t•. hll heli-a, Section 18;
IUCCIIIOrl
and
Thence along Hid
aaolgno, all minerals weot line North 0515'
underlying sold prop- 32" Eaal a distance of
erty with the right to 419 .1 8 feet to the
mine and remove the principal point of
ume elao, reHrvlng beginning containing
unto tho oald C.H. 2.347 acraa In Hid
Williams, Trustee, hio 3.4e acre tract and
helrl,
IUCCIIIOf'l
2.853 acrao In .. ld
and oulgns, the right . 63.78 acre tract lor a
of way over oald total of 5.000 acreo.
premlllo, for the pur·
, Bearlnga
were
poll of laying a pipe dorlvad from a prevlline, with lhe right to ouo aurvoy recorded
conetruct,
repair, In Office Ricardo
replace and renew
Volume 19 at Page
the ..ld !lne and that. 647.
no damageo art lo be
The above deacrlpp8ld by the aid C.H.
llon waa prepared
Wllliamo, Truatee, hlo from an actual ourvey
heir•,
IUCCeSIOrl
"!Ode on. the 2nd day
ond a.. lgno for ouch of January, 1997, by

c_

r:~MotsJ:~~1 ~~

by
the South rlghl of way accompanied
line of a 50 foot right Proof of Authority of
of way known as the official or agent
signing tho bond.
Chatnut Drlva ;
Thence
leavln'g
Bids shall be sealed
said Wast line and and marked as Bid for
Fire
long said South right Middleport
of way line the follow- Department heating
Ing three courses.,.
equipment
project
and mailed or deliv1. North 80 20' 15"
East a distance of ered lo: Meigs County
229.93 feet to a 518"
Commissioners
Iron pin found;
Courthouse,
~- North 70 09' 20"
pomeroy, Ohio ~5769
East a distance of Attention of bidders
160.12 feel to a 518N Ia called to all of the
Iron pin found;
requirements
contained In this bid
3. South 85 31 ', 36"
East a distance of packet, particularly to
137.80 feet to a point the . Federal Labor
being the Intersection Slandards Provisions
of said South right of and
Davls·Bacon
way line and the East Wages, variouS Insurline of aald 5.00 acre · ance requirements,
various equal opportractThence
leaving tunity provisions; and
·said South right of the requirement for a
way line and along paymenl bond and
said East line South 5 performance bond for
15' 32" West e dis- 100% of the con~ract
tance of 192.55 feet price. No bidder may
thence . west lo the· withdraw his bid withpolnl of beginning In thirty (30) days
containing · 1.679 after the actual date
acres subjecl to all of the opening thereof The Meigs County
le9al easements and
Commissioners
rlght·of·way.
Said. legal descrip- reaerve lhe right lo
tion Is the same as reject any or all bids.
Davenport,
appaars In a Partial Mlck
Releaae of mortgage President
Meigs
recorded or, June 16, C o u n t y
2003
In
Official Commissioners
Records Volume 171 , (2) 24, (3) 2. 9
page 19 of the Meigs
County Reconder's
office .
Current

· Public Notice

Owner:

Douglas Campbeir, et.
al.
Property at: 29209
Lemaster
Road,
Albany, OH 45710
PP#: 05:00462.003
Prior
Deed
Reference: Volume
152, Page 559
Appraised
at
$53,000
Te~ms
of Sale: ·
Cannot be sold for
less than 213rds of
the appraised value.
10% down on day of
sale. Ralph Trussell,
Meigs County Sheriff
· Attorney · for
the
Plaintiff:
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rolhfusa, P.O. Box
5480, Cincinnati, Ohio
45201 -5408;
(513)
241-3100
(2)16&amp;23(3)2

. Rocky Hupp Insurance

S®~U@r L@iJ~~llil~
~ t~~~~~llil~

and Financial SeiVices
45783
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers' • Major Med •
Medicare Sup_ • Cancer • Accident

1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

ri

POMEROY - · ·~

EAGLES 2171

i EUCHRE

·

I

Wednesday

I Sign
up 7pm. I
Starts at 7 30
IS;gn. Saturday
I
up I :30 p.m.
1.. . Starts 2 P~ ,_,j
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Avai(able
• Free Estimates
Call Gal'j Stanley
740·742-2293

. ..

MILL END
FABRICS

Public Notice
withdrew his bid withIn thirty (30) days
after the actual date
of the opening thereor The Meigs County
Commissioners
reserve the right to
reject any·or all bids.
Mick
Davenpo·rt,
President
Meigs
County
Commissioners
(2) 24, (3) 2, 9

• Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guffera ·

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting

Public Notice

••

BUILDERS InC.

Siding • Ne~' Garages
• Rcplaccmcnl
Windows • Roofing
COM MERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1l fer youl

liii'S PllmNG

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Tri,m
• Stump Grinding

Brian Reeves
New Home Construction, Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks, Garages. Pole
Buildings, Roofs, Siding. Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs

Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate_

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.

LI:T'S 5E.E,
1 CAN PIZ.OI!&gt;f\eL'1'

KE.~ ,T1\0~PI&gt;LE:.?

CAt..C.ULA.IE IT
TO i\-IE. D"''&lt;, 'CHIEf ...

GAstro-

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Self-Siorage•
•

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICtiON
• Garages
• Complete

Remodeling

~cfrHING

IMPDm

Stop &amp; Compare

RE ...DY TO
START THE
MATCH,

LlKE A
FRIENOL'I,

ARTU R'

GrM1E Of"

YOUR
MOYE .
OL.

RELA~ING

BUDD~

01.."

CHESS,
R IGHT:&gt;

Athens

PAL

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin . OH
740-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553
ne..toekirt&lt;J t.a t.. \lndet
and Arter ,\-hrkl·l Alrls

. PEANUTS
'' I KNOW NOL.AM I nu:.
KEEPER OF M'f' BROTHER'S
GLOVE?'' GENESIS If: 9

HAVE 'I'OU SEEN MV
BASEBALL 6LOVE AROliND
AN'f'WIIEI{E 7

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun . Closed

•

Advertise
in this
space for. $1 04
pe month.
.

740-992-1611

·~

BIG NATE

SUNSHINE CLUB

,.

•

1

GARFIELD

.,

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-Mtl-2217

I

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

•. - .

GRIZZWELLS
I 1111~ 1'~ tiEEH i\IE VICTIM Of

•

f;

t

Trt• paliy ·Sentinel

982-2155

PICTURE
THIS!!
Pmftsslonal Photography
A Vidto~raph)"

Any oc~rulon ·fortrai l
Sessions, Weddlnp:, ,
Famllle~~, l:np~menU,

Babies
Calllan Carpenter

-

- ' - - - --

-

•

I KNOW TJ.lE
VERSE ..

~

~Graph

'bu''lllrthdaiY:

Thureday, March 3, 2005
By Betnlce Bede O•ol
There might be more expanded
o p portun ities tar you in the year
a h ead than :you may h ave ever expe·
rlenced previous ly_ Handle what Iran·
spire s w ise ly. because It could mean
dramatic improvements lor you fin an·
c ially a nd s tatus-wise.
P,ISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It
won't leave any n egative imprint on
.you If you s ta rt o ut th e day trlpping
over your ow n shoestrings . You'll
laugh it ott once you realize h ow for·
tuitous conditio ns are tor you rega rd·
lng your career.
AR IES (March 2 1-Apr il 19) - Today
you m ay disagree to do something
a n o th e r says is great, only to go elo ng
with it late r when other feels com,e to
light that this person Was right. You'll
be glad you did.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - There
are larger than usual rewards today In
your work world . However, you must
be prepared to wo r k for what yo u
hope to achieve . Wishful thin kin g
won't e nrich you .
GEMINI (May 21--June 20) ·You 'll be
fortunate today in getting the cooper·
ation ot' those who labor a t. your side,
because th eir good nature will make
up tor a few dlflicullies you can have
with authority figure s .
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - Seize
the initiative today and do things tor
th ose you love without having to be
asked . The bloom will be taken from
th e rose if they have to beg for your
cooperation and h elp.
LEO (J ul y 23-Au g . 22) Ign ore
doubting companions today who may
do th eir best to convince you that
those , c r eative Ideas you get aren't
any good. Once you get rolling. you 'll
find out how right you are.
VIRGO
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Although your concepts regarcltng
family finances may not receive the
!llcceptance from your partner early
today, he or she mlghl be thrilled you
were in charge once the funds stan to
mutllply.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0Ct. 23) Just
because things might get oH to a poor
start ·today, It doesn 't necessarily
mean thai lhey · will end up .as 1hey
began . In fact, things could look up for
you by dilly's end
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ---. You
might sta rt 'ott the day a bit sh ort of
cash, bu1 if you're willing to labor a 'bit,
th ere should be several opportunities
tNat come your way enabUng you to
replenish your bank accoun1 .
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)There IS a strOng possibility that you
could receive some helpfu l news
today that win be; m ore of a personal
benefi1 lor you than for anyone else
Involved.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - In
order 1o succeed 1octay'. you musl nip
in the bud any negative thoughts you
get. Once you allow pos•tive thinking
to seep In, things will change arQUnd
in ways that'll make you Quite happy.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- Don' t
lret it you find yoursell a btl restless
today. Instead, get on ~he phone and
lind some gregarious friends to help
you get out and turn me day Into one

ol

3 Tool man
- Allen
Navy InitialS
All klddl"'l.-:- 4 Audience
Seize forcibly 5 Kind
of dollar
leHer after
6 "'Titanic"
zeta
award
Holiday mo.
7 Patricia Gambles
or " Hud"
badly
8 Road
Fleur-de- dividers
Have
9 Courtroom
a hot dog
fig .
1-70

27 Protrudes
28 Ewe plaints

29 Denomination

34 Looking lor
36 Cruel king
42 Calcutta

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

C!lletlrlty Cipller cryptograms ille created \rom QliOI.I !OlS by tii!TiruS peopt! . p!IS\ and presem
Each letter (1 the o~er !1llnds tor &amp;ndhel
'

Todsy 's clua:-5 BqUB/5 D

" IKGREOGRI
TVENRT

NYLR

Y F. V X

X AVTI

EYAR

YFYX

CAYTH

FKPHS

YHGKIE

CRKCHR

EYAR

0

KU
Y

GX

H0 UR

EN VB

GKGR8E ."

JYOHRX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ...: "The car has become lhe carapace, lhe proleclive
and aggressive shell, o' urban and suburban man : - Marshall Mcluhan
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc. 3·2

~~:~~t:~' S,~ RJ.l 1A- ~ t.~S •

WDID

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- - - - - - ld lto~ iy CI.AY l. ,0 \IA N
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sc~o~b\ed w=tds

horrcngo
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th e
be·
low ·:c for:r. !ovr 1ir.ip le worda.

MU N 0 M S

l I I I I I'
I

WORRY]

!' I' I _
C I T E ~~

a iong 11me SiJent al a

Federal Government building
trying to siraighteh out some
1 1
~
red tape, :· ve deciced ;hatgov::~~~~=~~~:..., ernment IS a svste m lor
. S II M I 0 y
j ke,epin.g people 1n line, mostly
"'

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3 briO¥w .

SCRAM-lETS I.NSW!RS '- :-"'
Rodent- Matte- Labor - Uniust- E::T"ER . .
A aooc rule 10 live by .. .Whene,,e: you !eel that llie IS
crOwCina vou, remem~er there's a!ways rocm ior
getting Elt:tTER.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
·WHAT A'1/EIIW ORU!I.·IF If
~SA

ClRt.AM!

merrlm~t.

SOUPTONUTZ

. P\~lfj\&gt;IA1"10H

foR~-:L
SNaPM'IAN~x

Scorpion .T ractors
•

ca.. ~

"Taking The Sting Out Of ·
-Hard Work!"
Mid-S ize 4Wheel DriveTractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

'jOU

llo!.io!'&lt;e

tR£ 6 CH~C~&lt;£1.~'!

liON::!&lt; or
Bats&gt;Ne'l ... Do &lt;,bu
~L~~ '111\S GU'i~
W~WT

a

X 1&gt;-&gt;&lt;t;O ... X :J.&gt;Sr
Hal'£ &gt;1£ ~ &lt;lW1r1
F~ ...~ ~ ·-

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

- '·
\

I

··- - - - - - - --

THE BORN LOSER
HOW .LON.c. K~V( '1'0\.J ""l
BEEN Eti\PLO'&lt;(I::&gt;

41

1f you and your partner wish to de1end
much better, worK together on the resi of
this week's colu mns. You will ·learn how
defenders can employ "useless~ ca,rds to
transmit information.
What do I mean ·by employing useless
cards? Suppose a defender has the 6·5.·
3 of spade's, the trump suit. Declarer
draws three rounds of trumps. If the
defender plays his cards in descending
otder - 6-5-3 - he iS asking for a heart
(or maybe a diamond) shift 11 he plays in
ascending order- 3·5·6- he is calling
for a club (or perhaps a diamond). Some
other sequence transmits no message.
Against lour spades, West leads the king
of clubs. Allhis trick, East plays the club
thr.ee, his lowest card being a discaurag·
ing signal denying the club ace .
After winning. with his ace, suppose
South starts by drawing !rumps. Since
East cannot signal with a discard, he
must follow suit in the order 6-5-3 to show
inte rest in hearts. He always plays his
highest card to ask his partner to lead the
higher·ranking unplayed suii. ,(With the A·
K·J ol diamonds, he would lollow 3-5-6.1
Then, when declarer \9ads his seco~d
club toward dummy's jack, West goes in
with the queen, and East should play the
nine, his highest remaining club! again
signaling tor hearts.
'
11 is much stronger · play tor South to
return his club eight at trick two, immedi·
ately putting West on the spot. It h8 does
thai, East must drop the nine under
West's queen. Without this ·signal, West
would be guessing whether to shift to the
heart 10 or to the diamond 10.

Sunset Home
Construction

• Room Add. • Mini
Barns

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

37
38

Useless cards
can aid defense

Bucket Truck

All Your Home

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

East
Pass
Pass

39
40

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Improvement Needs
• Siding • Windows
• Decks • Porche.~;
• Carpuns • Garages

• Kitchens • Baths
"No Job To Small"
Racine, OH
740-247-2t62 or
740-416-3508
14 "yrs. Ex riencc

West North
Pass ' 2 •
Pass Pass

31
32
33
35

Opening lead: olo K

'I'll .
CDRslructlon

740. , ..l.Jll6

'

4•

JONES'

WV036725

• New Homes
PUBLIC NOTICE
Rutland Township
Trualeaa will take
bids . for cemetery
mowing contract for
Miles and Robinson
Cemeteries for lhe
2005 mowing seaaon_
Cemeteriea are to be
mowed at leasI f 0
times throughoul the
season. Successful
bids
musl
be
received
by
lhe
Township by 4 p.m.
on Monday March 7,
to
lhe
Rutland
Township Trustees,
.P.O. Box 326, Rutland,
OH45n5.
(2) 23, 27 (3) 2 3TC

J•

nannies
43 RabbiH or
Murphy
45 Creep
swimmer
slowly
13 Has a hurich
19 Video store 47 Unhappy
fate .
sectiOn
48 Atlas abbr.
20 Swallow
.22 Pays for - 49 Capper
source
24 Viking,
50 Aloha token
maybe
52 Feverish
25 Make
53 So-so grade
beloved
26 Caterwaul 54 Previously

10 Bruceof kung ru
11 Electric

sumx

Dealer : South
Vulnerable: Neither

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex rlence

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
OPAL DYER, CLERK
742-2805
FEBRUARY 16, 2005
Spring Cleanup of
Rutland
Township
Cemeteries will begin
March 15. All decorations will be rem'oved
.prior to the Easier
Holiday. Anyone who
wa"ts to save decorations are asked to
remoVe them until
March 25.
(2) 23, 27 (3) 2 3TC

olo A 8

V.C. YOUNG Ill

New Honies • Vinyl

5' 2

+AKJ

We do It all except
furnace work

BISSELL

6 5 3
A KJ

• 5 4 2
' olo 9653

•

• Patio and Porch Decks

992-6215

¥

Soutb
• A K 10 9 8

South

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Q 6 3

•

740-667~0700 1-888-HUPP234

YOUNG'S .

•

10 9 8 7
10 9 8 7
olo K Q 10 2

•

Ask for Art

QJ 7 2
Q6 3

•
•

Tuppers Plains,

Buyers of standing timber
Also Land Clearing

03-(12-05

•
•

... J 7 4
East

West
• 4

41800 SR #7

Hill's Self
Storage

J

1 Gat clean
43 Make
6 Reduced
mistakes
(2 wds.)
44 Kipling
12 Disgusting
claaslc
14 Medium46 Explain
olu sola
further
15 Coy
48 Actor
16 Price-fixing
Allred group
51 Forget it!
17 Heir, often
(2 wda.) ·
18 Spinks
55 Moat
deloater
56 Hard
19 Dash off
worker
21 Hllchcock's 57 Sounds·
tHia
from the
23 Before,
.
paddock
in combos 58 Brawl
26 Not hither
DOWN
27 Airport
arrival
28 High-fiber
1 Slan~y
physoque
rood
30 Wel&gt;surler's 2 Citrus drink

I
North

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for
the Purchase and
Installation of overhead heaters lor the
Mlddleporl
Fire
.
Department, Meigs ·
County, Ohio will be
received by lhe Meigs
C ·a u n t y
Commissioners
at
their office at the
Courthouse ,
Machine Quilting
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
• I • •
unlll
1:00
p.m. ,
New shipment of
Thursday, March 17,
2005 and then at 1:15
100% Cotton
pm at said office
Materiai...Patr.
iotic
opened and read
aloud for the follow&amp; Quilters Prints
ing:
Hrs_: Thes-Satll-5
Purchase and InstalSunday &amp; Monday
lation of overhead
Closed
heaters
for
the ·
Middleport .
Fire ...__ _ _ _ _ __.

Department .
Specifications proPublic Notice
vided in bid packet.
Specifications, and
NOTICE TO CON- bid forma may be
TRACTORS
secured at the olflce
Sealed proposals for
of the Meigs County
the Purchase and
Commissioner ,
Installation of steel Courthouse ,
lnaulated
garage
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
door
for
the . Phone 74Q-992-2895. ·
Middleport
Fire A deposit of $0 dolDepartmen1, Meigs
lars will be required
County, Ohio will be for each sat of plaps
received by the Meigs and speclfl~atlons.
C o u n ,t y . Each bid musl be
Commissioners
at accompanied
by
their office at the either a bid bond In
courthouse, an amount of 100"4 of
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 the bid amount wllh a
· until 11:00 p.m. , surety satisfactory to
Tl)uraday, March 17, the aforesaid Meigs
2005 and then all :15 C o u n t y
pm at said office Commissioners or by
opened and read certified
check,
aloud for the follow- cashiers check, or letIng:
. ter of credit upon a
PurchaH and instal- solvenl bank In and
lation of steel.lnsulat- amount . of not less
ed garage door for than 10% of the bid
the Middleport Fire amount In favor of the
Department. aforesaid
Meigs
Specifications pro- C o u n t y
vided In bid packet.
Commissioners. Bid
Specifications, and, Bonds , shall
be
bid forms may be ·accompanied
by
secured at the office
Proof of Aulhorlty of
of the Meigs County . lhe official or agent
Commlseloner, signing the bond.
Courlhouse, Bids shall be sealed
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 · and marked as Bid for
Phone 740-992·2895.
Mlddleporl
Fire
A deposit of $0 dol- Department , heating
lars will be required equipment project
for each sel of plano and mailed or delivand specifications. ered to: Meigs County
Each bid must be Commlaoloners
accompanied
by Cou .rthouse,
. either a bid bond In Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
an amount of 1DO% of Anentlon of bidders
the bid amount with a Is called to all of the
surety satisfactory to requirements
con ~
the aforesaid Meigs talned In this bid
C o u n t y paCket, particularly to
Cf)mmlaaloners or by the Federal Labor
· certified
check, Standands Provisions
cashiers check, or let- and
Davis-Bacon
ter of credit upon a. Wages, various Insursolvent bank In and ance requirements,
amount or not le11 various equal opporthen 10% of the bid tunity provisions, Bnd
amoUnt in favor of the . the requlremen1 for a
aforesaid
Meigs payment bond and
C o u n t y performance ~ond for
Commloalonera. Bid 100% of the conlract
Bondo
.ohall
be price. No bidder may

lac.

Phillip
Alder

I•\Abllc Noll ceN In Ne'WNpapers.

Your Right. to Know. Delivered Rly:ht to Vuur Door.

42 Kenya's'

•

·'

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel ··

Wednesday, March 2,

www. mydailysentinel.com

2005

NHL board of g,overnors and
NCAA lists OSU football team
players hold separate ·meetings No. 11 from bottom academically
Bv IRA PDDEU
Associated Press
NEW YORK- If there are
crack.s within the players'
association , they weren 't evident Tuesday when the rank
and file met for the first time
since. the NHL season was
canceled.
"The so-called splinter faction in the union that is going
a different direction has been
drummed up by a lot of
media members and people
hoping a deal gets done,:' St.
·Louis defense man Chris
Pronger said. ''I can unequivocally say everyone is on
boar&lt;! and understand s the
issues better."
The meeting. lasted about
three hours on Tuesday after
beginning a night earlier with
a dinner.
While more than !50 of the
NHL's 700-plus players met
in Toronto, the league's board
of governors - representing
all 30 teams - gathered in
New York at the same hotel
where commissioner Gary
Bettman imposed the lockout
in September and wiped out
the entire season two weeks
ago.
Both
meetings
were
expected to be informational,
providing updates on what
happened in the failed negotiations the past 5 1/2 months.
Union leaders scheduled
another
meeting
for
Wednesday in Toronto with

NCAA
· from Page 81
last week.
But
some
numbers
appeared inaccurate to university leaders, · and there
appeared to be more problems with the track calculations . Houston's women 's
cross country team an\1 the
men's indoor track teams at
Eastern Michigan and Seton
Hall all scored zero.
NCAA officials acknowledged during the conference
call that errors might have

Gilbert ·
from Page 81
"I look for Cleveland to be
my home away from home,"
he said.
Gilbert met with Cleveland
players for the first time on
Tuesday and gave them a
glimpse of his vision of the
team's future.
"There's a commitment to
winning and making this a
championship franchise,"
coach Paul Silas said. "And
that's what everyone wants to
hear."
Gilbert is counting on his
magic touch in the business
world to work on the Ca v.s.
Cleveland fans hope so, too.
The Cavaliers have a mostly
dismal history. Plagued by
injuries and haunted by
Michael Jordan, they've
never made it to the · NBA
finals since joining the league
in 1970. , ·
And along with the Browns
and Indians, they are part of a
world championship drought
in Cleveland dating to 1964,

Ohio State is listed last
reasonable deal in place that
COLUMBUS (AP) would allow for the NHL to
among Big Ten schools
Even though Ohio State's
' '·
get
back
on
the
ice
next
sea'I
academically i.n football
football
tea,m
ranks
near
.' '
son.
(870), last in men's basketthe bottom I0 in the nation
I;
In the final week before the ·
i ball (881 ), tied for third in
in academic performance
t "·t
'
season· was canceled, owners
l women's basketball (983),
according to a new measur., ' I,
to
drop
their
demand
agreed
! ·eighth of I0 teams in baseing stick, athletic director
·., __ .....
'
for linkage·. In return , the
\,
Andy
Geiger
said
it's
a
sign
i . ball (928) and is ranked
).
union agreed to accept a
'
ahead of only Purdue in the
that the university is headsalary cap but the sides never
' overall 'nitings.
ed in the right direction.
agreed on an acceptable numplayer agents. ·
Ohio State's overall rat"I have been a big propoThe board · of governors ber.
.
nent of this,". said Geiger, II from the bottom. ing is 938, still higher than
meeting was the first since
There is no telling when
referring to the . NCAA's Another Ohio school, Cincinnati (929), Miami
the start of the lockout. players and owners wiM sit
Academic
Performance Toledo, is even worse, at University (924), Bowling
Alternate governors, com- down a( the bargaining table · Ratings,
Green (917) and Ohio .
which · were No . 4 from the bottom.
prised of general mimagers again. The NHL would like to
.
Borne schools disagree (916).
released Monday for the
and other executives, were get talks started as quickly as
Toledo actually has 'a bet2003-2004 school year. "I with the methodology used
also present in Manhattan.
possible so an agreement can
to
determine
the
ratings.
If
ter
overall rating than Ohio
think it's great." ·
'
Wayne Gretzky, the manag- be reached in time for .the
Middle Tennessee State's every scholarship athlete State (940).
ing partner of the Phoenix · draft to be held in June.
Akron's overall rating is
football
team is ranked on a team is academically
Coyotes, was absent because
The union · doesn't have
worst in the'countryacade- eligible that year, a school 983 and Kent State's is
he was·with his ill mother in much incentive to rush back
947.
mically.
Ohio State is No. has a rating of 1000.
Brantford, Ontario.
into negotiations .since the
Gnitzky and Pittsburgh players aren't due to be paid
Penguin.s player-owner Mario ·again until October, when
the second half of the season New England in 1993.
Lemieux took part in the last next season is slated to start.
with a broken foot. That
Jeff Garcia, released by
bargaining session with the
"It's important for both
. injury is making some teams Cleveland, could be reunited
union on Feb. 19 - three sides to take a little time to
wary.
in Detroit with Steve
from
Page
81
days after the season was · reassess," said Vancouve.r
At this point, Law is prob- Mariucci, who coached him
wiped out - is an effort to . center Trevor Linden, the
but is not sure he is willing ably only the second-most in San Francisco, but only as
uncancel the season. But they players' as sociation presi to •pay Jennings' asking desirable cornerbacll: after a backup to Joey Harrington.
left disappointed that a deal dent. "Obviously the process
Rolle, one of six veterans
"He's had this system
price.
wasn't in place.
at this point .hasn't worked
by
the
Titans,
who
before
and he's been proreleased
The governors began dis- and we'll step back and have
The marquee name on the
cussions around 12:30 p.m. a look back at how we can
market is Plaxico Burress, need to lop the $27. million ductive, he's been to the Pro
Tuesday and were expected move this thing forward .
the Pittsburg!) wide receiver. they cost off their salary cap Bowl three times in a row in
to continue talking into the
"To get right back at it and
But he alSo carries a number. There ·have been this syst~m." Mariucci said
early evening.
start firing proposals, I'm not
"buyer beware" tag. He's reports· that Washington of Garcia, who struggled
Debate was expected to sure that's the right way to do
been inconsistent, and the wants him, although that with the coaching staff and · .
take place between hard-line · it. To reflect, to decide which
Steelers declined to protect would be silly and is proba- the system in his only year
bly untrue - if the'y signed in Cleveland.
him as a franchise player owners who want a salary cap way to go, I think is imporhim,
they would reopen their · And while Kurt Warner
similar to three-time chamwith a link between league tant. At the appropriate time,
annual
revolving door and moves on from the Giants
. pion New England and N!'C
revenues and player costs, there'll be discussion and
titleist Philadelphia, the Fred Smoot, their best cor- after helping to break in Eli
and those who just want a we'll get. back to it."
Manning, Jay Fiedler could .
Steelers often are willing to nerback, would go. .
Mason,
whose
96
recepland
in the Meadowlands to
let their own go if they
lions were second in the replace him as Manning's
aren't worth the price.
occurred or there might be schools could opt to take
Another Steeler on the NFL last season, also will be ba,kup. The former Miami .
just one athlete on those · their punishment in the fall if
market will be linebacker in demand - probably the starter, a New York native,
they expect penalties.
teams.
a
backup
in
Kendrell Bell, the defensive best receiver out there was
Stronger sanctions, such as
Schools can submit amendbehind
Burress.
Still,
he
is
Jacksonville
in
1999
under
rookie
of
the
year
in
2001.
ed · forms in March, with postseason bans for consisSince then, he has s)lent likely to be overpaid - he is Giants coach Tom Coughlin.
results expected to ·be tently poor long-term acadeWill anyone have a huge
more time in the trainer's solid but was a possession
mic performance, are expectreleased in April.
receiver
in
a
passing
offense
impact?
·
room
than
on
the
field
and
Monday's report indicates ed to be enforced by the fall
on Tuesday, Pittsburgh re- last year.
Unlikely. Gibbs' comhow schools are doing, based of 2008.
The
quarterbacks?
ments
echo Marv Levy, who
signed
Larry
Foote,
who
But Brand believes the
on data collected from the
Hasselbeck
and
Brees
are
was
coaching
in Buffalo
replaced
him
last
season.
2003-04 academic year. No first step to correcting probthe
best
two
of
the
group
when
f~ee agency began in
The
Patriots
already
have
penalties will be enforced lems began Monday.
cut Law, the anchor of their and both are franchise play- 1993. ·
"In the case of the 7.2 perunti I data . from the 2004-05
secondary for a decade. Tiiat ers, although Brees could be
"I'd rather keep our own
cent of schools affected, they
school year are included.
was
for
salary
cap
reasons
marketed
by
San
Diego
players.
They know our sysSchools are expected to be have not achieved the level
- he was due $12.5 million which still sees Philip tern. Even if the newer playnotified in December of. the of achievement they · need
Rivers as its long-term quar- er is a little better. he has to
next season.
final results, and programs to," Brand said. "They
But New England also terback: Bledsoe was cut by spend a lot of time learning
must take the penalties as should take this as a serious
recognized that Law is · 31 Buffalo and immediately what we're doing," Levy.
early as possible. Some warning."
and that the Patriots won the snapped up by Dallas' Bill said.
In other words, buyer
Super · Bowl last season Parcells, who took him with
the
No.
I
overall
pick
for
beware.
him
he
missed
without
• Lions. Last year,
Gilbert's greatest challenge the Detroit
will be to keep the momen- he lo5t in an attempt to buy
tum going in Cleveland that · the Milwaukee Brewers. ·
began with the addition of · After college, Gilbert
Jam.es.
invested his life savings t!)
. Among his first big deci- , start Rock Financial. He
· sions will be whether to re- . smartly angled into the pe~­
sign Zydrunas llgauskas, the sonal computer boom of the
club's 7-foot-3 All-Star cen- late 1990s and built Rock
ter who is in .the final year of Financial into an online morta six-year. $71 million con- gage power.
tract.
In 1999, Gilbert sold Rock ·
Down the road could be a Financial to Intuit Inc. for
bigger dilemma: persuading $370 million. He bought it
James to sign a long-term back four years latl:r for $150
contract to stay in Cleveland. million. In 2003, the compaThe club controls his rights ny closed $12 billion in loans
through the 2007,season.
and reportedly turned a $400
Gilbert has promised not to million profit.
move the Cavaliers. The
Quicken Loans was named
team's lease at Gund Arena America's 12th-best comparuns through 2027.
ny to work for by fortune
· 1~ :crab Lep, Salmon, Shrimp, clams, Sallops,
During Monday nighi's magazine in 2004.
Mussels, Fried Fish, Beef, Chkken, Pori&amp;.
game against San Antonio,
Katzman would not reveal
·
Vepblbles, Soups, Appetlzen, Salad, C.kes,
Gund walked to center court how m~ch of a stake Usher
ke Cream and Much More!
and thanked fans for 22 years has in the Cavaliers, saying
of support. He also told 'them only that it was significant.
they were getting an ownerUsher is the latest hip-hop
ship group , with good inten- star to add his name and clout
tions.
to im NBA team. Nelly owns ·
In buying the Cavaliers, part · of the expansion
Gilbert has satisfied a sports Charlotte Bobqts and Jay-Z
craving that began during a has a stake in the New Jersey ·
childhood spent rooting for Nets.
·
.,:......

''· ·-· ..

•

.,

l
)

•- . ._,~

1

Middleport • Pomeroy; Ohio
-:~,1!",]'.. .

nME:
PLACE:

THURSDAY, MARCH lOTH
6:30P.M.

MEIGS COUNTY ANNEX
NEXT DOOR TO THE
EmNSION OFFICE.

CONTACI': Al DETTWILLER
740-992-5500

J}fl}\..._Jl\'J

:,-

J.

treatment equipment for local water
systems, including the Tuppers
Plains-Chester and. Pomeroy Village
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. -Wood systems in Meigs County and the
County, W.Va . Circuit Judge George Mason County, W.Va. water system.
W. Hill has approved a proposed set~
The settlement was announced in
tlement of the 200 I class action law- September, just before the·action was
suit against the , chemical giant, · to go to trial in Parkersburg. The suit
DuPont, alleging the company risked alleged that DuPont relea~ed ammothe health of local residents by releas- nium perfluorooctanoate, or C8. into
ing a chemical into the water supply. . the Ohio River through its
The sett lement ·provides water Washington Works Plant near
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SWEEPSTAKES

$f0,000!
the value of this incredible
grand prize package which includes.
• Equestrian Vacations Colorado
Trail Ride and airfare for two.

• Carharit"" Shopping Spree
• 3mTM Abunak care esseOtials
r Corona-Lextol" produc1s

• Classic Equine Sports products

• Pfizer Ari'imal Health products.
• Hamilton Products hailers

• One ton of Purina Mills" Horse Feed.

Four regional winners witt
re~e the all new John
Deere® four wheel ·
Buck EXT Utility
(Value $7,500 each.)

Mon • Sat 11 :10 am-4:00 pm

Adult $5.15
• Chlldnan uncler 10 - S1.15 ·

HO EFLIC H@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT- Six. sheltered workshop
, employees of Meigs ·Industries have completed a beginner class in acrylic painting
taught by 'Rhojean McClure over the past
four weeks .
Sponsored by the Riverbend Arts Council ,
the prognim has given those individual s with
developmental di sabilities the opportunity to
parti cipate with ~ommunity members in
learning new skills.
"Birds on a Post" was the theme of their art
work . For some of those enrolled, it was an
oppnrtunity .to pursue a new hobby, while for
· others, it was a time for improving their
·Skills under the direction of an artist. and for
all it was a tim): for making new friends with
similar interest s.
March is Abilities Awarene ss Month and
the empha sis is on promoting greater
understanding of people with disabilities
and rai sing the awareness of the many abi l' ities they have.
·
"This is a time when our organization focus·
Above: Birds on a Post is the
es
on encouraging the public to better undertheme ofacrylic paintings in
an art class sponsored by the stand the individuals we serve,'' said Steve
Riverbend Arts Council of Beha, executive director of the Meigs County
Middleport. and taught by Board of Mental Retardation/Developmental
·· artist. Rhojean fv1cCiure. Disabilities.
Among the Meigs Industries
"During MR/DD Awarene ss Month we
clients taking part are Hugh encourage people ·to learn more about the
Roush , IFft, and scott people in this· community who have develBrowning.
·
.
opmental disabil ities. For example, when
left: Alban Salser, a Meigs you see a child who uses a wheelcha·ir, see
Industries employee, displays the child.
"In our community . touching your life
his completed Phoenix roost·
er and begins work on anoth- every day are people with disabilities who
er painting for use in a cot· are working, learning. and living to the best
tage business he is starting. of their abillties .
It will include primitive art
" ln cr~asing public awareness involves .rediCha~ene Hoeftlchfphotos
recting the public's attention to what individuals with developmental di sabilities can do
instead of what they cannot do," said Beha .

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Andrew Mar1 Burton, 93
• Raymond Goble, 64
• Patricia M. Hindy, 65

INSIDE
· • Bake sale set.
SeePage AS
• Firemen offer dinner.
See Page AS
• Youth League signups
·announced. See Page AS

WEATHER

.2 SllCfiONS -

Obituaries
Places to go
Sports
Weather
•

Adult '$7.95

State releases audit
of Southern Local

AB

INDEX .

Editorials

Mon to Sat 4:00 pm • 9:00 p111

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

16 PAGES

REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS DuPont and a major engineering firm have begun ·the
design phase of a water liltration 'ystem for the Tuppers
Plains-C hester Water District.
The chemical company ·has
agreed to provide $10 million
in new filtrat ion equipment to
six area water systems whose
customers have been exposed
to the chemical C8, used in
the manufacture of Teflon
and many other products. ·
TP-C General Manager
Donald Poole said a team of ·
engineers representing DuPont
and the engineering firm URS
visited TP-C last month to
study and photograph the
existing treaunent plant.
TP-C and water systems in
Pomeroy and. Mason County,
W.Va. are among th~ six area
water systems to receive new
.filtration systems as a term of
a class-act ion lawsuit settlement approved Monday by
Wood County Circuit Judge .
George W. Hill. .
Poole said DuPont has indicated that plans for the filtration system shou ld be completed by the end of March,
and ihe system should be in
place this summer. Poole said
he has provided copies of the
plan' of the current system to
Please see TP-C, A5

A3

RACINE Auditor of, State Betty
·Montgomery this week issued her office's audit
B7 of the Southern Local School . District for the
year ending June 30, 2004.
The· audit report shows a non-compliance
A3
was issued after the Southern Board of
A4 citation·
Education authorized the transfer of $35 ,000
As from the Permanent Improvement Fund and
$35,000 from the S Mill Maintence Fund to
A7
the Local Classroom Facilities Fund. .
B Section
These transfers were made to provide a local
AB match . for money received from the Ohio
Bs-6

Me igs County Sheriff
Robert .Beegle accepts the
· keys to a used 1999
Crown Victona cruiser from
Steven Schierholt of the
Ohio P~btic Officer Training
Commission (OPOTC), a
division of the office of the
Attorney General Jim Petro.
Schierhott was JOined by
colleague Lou Agosta who
is the assistant executive
director of aovance training
at OPOTC . Both men met
Beegle during three weeks
of law enforcement training
in London. The latest cruis·
er raises the fleet of the
Me1gs County Sheriff's
Office to 12 vehicles.
•

Beth S.SerirtfO&lt;enrrtt/
. photo

• Chlldnan under 10 • $4.15

Diabetes Paograms

104Va OFF Senior Citizens
Children under 4 eat free!

Diabe!u St!F=Mqnagement Proa!'ll!!l • Man;h 7, 8 and 9
4:00PM· 7:00PM • HMC French 500 Room
Plorue bring a li•t a/ homo rnedicatiom lo do" and have a pre&gt;eriplion lrom )'OUr physiOan lo attend.
The HMC Diab Ills S.,pport Group will meet Sunday, March 13 from
2:00 pm · 4:00 pm at the HMC French 500 Room.
,

. ZPhone (740) 441-9688
.

'

Th·;, FREE supporl group is sponson!d by !he Arthri~' Foundation and Holz';' Medical Center
Tuesday, March 8 • 5:30 PM · 8:00 PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Room A8
Topocs discussed wilt i!ldude. poi; control, oxen:ise, ~. fatigue, depressioo and docto./ po!ient rolotiooship.

For more information, or 1o regisler, coli Missi Ross at {7401446-5121 or 1-800-816-5131.

- ·-·-------- --:--·---

MEDICAL CENTER

F« mare inlormotion on .these FREE program., oc 1o rogisler, coli (740) 446-5080.

· Phone (304) 675-4277
:S 19 Viand Street • Point Pleasant. WV
Phone (304) 773-5331 ·
I

BRIAN J.

Sheriffs office receives cruiser -.

© 2005 Oh.Jo VaHey Publishing Co.

161 Upper River Road • Gallipolis. OH

--------

Poole: Design of
TP-C filtration
system under way
BY

. Details on P"*e

,,.

DuPont aLso will pay ·for ohgoing
blood te sts for customers in the
affected water districts, an indepentlent study to determine the potential
health ri sh associated with the chemical , and nearly $23 million in legal
tees incurred by the plantiffs.
The. suit was tiled by residents living
near the DuRont Washington Works
plant near Parkersburg, W.Va .. and all
the settlement tenT!s are expected to
cost DuPont at least $108 million.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Dear Abby

Dinner Buffet

Parkersburg, although the company
had knowledge exposure to the chemical had potential health risk s.
DuPont ha.s stopped short of admitting wrongdoing in releasing the chemical into the river. ~lle chemical company has al so denied any link between
the chemical and illness in water constllners, ~!though internal documents
revealed during discovery in the lawsuit's proceedings revealed otherwise.
As another term of the settlement.

Meigs Industries class completes art projects

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Judge approves DuPont settlement ter1ns

NFL

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DATE:

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down Whiteoak.
See Page 81

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