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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, March 14, 2005

Ohio State Girls Basketball Tournament

Former Herd
· C-J turns tables on MND in Division I finale
PIavers
Honored'. B~ ~ILLER
fi~ish
~arne
J
RusTY
Associated Press

1

Submitted photo

Marshall University honored members of the 1955-56 basketball team recent ly during the Herd"swin over Miami. The
team won Marshall 's only MAC Championship in b·asketball
and they were honored at Marshall 's final MAC home
game. Two Meigs County natives were on that team,
Pomeroy native Charlie Slack and Middleport's Bob Ashley
who passed away on March 2. Pictured from left to right
are: Ashley's daughter-in-law Michelle Ashley, SlaGk .. Bob
Ashley and Paula Ashley representing their father Bob.

NCAA Wom~n's Basketball
Toumament
PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL
First Round

Saturday, March 19
At Reunion Arena
Dallas

10:30 p.m.

North Carolina State (21·7) liS. M1ddle
Tennessee State (23·8), 7 p.m.
Texas Tech (22·7) vs. Texas-Arlirigton

(2 1-9). 9:30p.m.

·

Sunday, March 20
At Thompson-Boling Arena
Knoxville, Ten".
Nevv Me~tico (264) vs. Purdu e (16-12).
7p.m
Tennessee (26-4) vs. Western Carolina

(18-13), 9:30p.m

At The Gampet Pavilion
Storrs, Conn. .
"T:emple (27·3) vs. Louisiana Tech (209), Noon
Rutge&lt;S (25-6) vs. Hartford (22-8). 2:30
p.m.
At Comcast Center
College Park, Md.
Ohio State (28-4) vs. Holy Cross (2Q10), Noon
Maryland (21·9) vs. Wisconsin-Green

Bay (27-3) . 2:30p.m.

Second Round
Monday, March 21
At Reunion Arena

Dallas

North Carolina State-Middle Tennessee
State winner vs Texas Tech-TelCasArlington winner. 7 or 9:30p.m.
1\Jesd&amp;y, March 22
At Thompson-Boling Arena
Knoxville, Tenn.
Tennessee-Western Carolina w1nn er
'vs. New Mex1co-PurdUe winner, 7 or 9:30
p.m.
AI The Gampel Pavilion
·
Storrs, Conn.
Temple-louisiana Tech winner .vs.
Rutgers-Hartford winner. 7 or 9:30 p.rh.
AI Comcasl Center

College Park, Md. ·
Maryland-Wlsconsin-Green Bay 'Ninner
vs. Ohio State-Holy Cross winner, 7 or
9:30p.m.
Semttinals
At The Llaeouras Center

Philadelphia

Sunday, March 27
North Carolina State-Middle Tennessee
State-TelCas Tech-Texas-Arlington winner vs. Tennessee-Western CarolinaNew Mexico-Purdue winner, Noon or 2:30
p.m,
Temple-louisiana
Tech-RutgersHartford winner vs. Maryland-Wisconsin·

Green Bay-QI)iQ State-Holy Cross winner, Noon or 2:30p.m.
Championship
At The liacouras Center
Philadelphia
Tuesday. March 29
Semifinal winners. TBA

CHATTANOOGA REGIONAL
First Round

Saturday, March 19

At Reunion Arena
Dallas
Texas (21-8) vs. Oral Roberls (22-8) .
,

Noon
Georgia (22·9) vs. Rice (24-8). 2:30

p.m.

Sunday, Mardi 20
At Thompson--Boling Arens
Knoxville, Tenn.
Oklahoma (17-12) v-s. Arizona (19-11) .
Noon
LSU (29-2) vs. Stetson (17-13), 2:30
p.m.
At Comcaat Center
College Parle, Md.
DePaul (25--4) vs. Virginia Tech (17-1 1).
7p.m.
Penn State (19-10) vs . liberty (24-6),
9:30p.m.
At The Dean E. Smith Center

Ch-I Hill, N.C.
Duke (28-4) vs. Canisius (21 -9), Noon
Boston College (19-9) vs. Houston (21 -

8). 2:30pm.
5econd Round
Monday, March 21
At Reunion Arena
Dallas
Georgia-Rice winner vs. Texas-Oral
Roberts winner. 7 or 9:30p.m.
1\Jelday, March 22
At Thomp800-8ollng Arana
Knoxville, Tenn.
LSU-Stetaon winner vs, OklahomaArizona winner, 7 or 9:30 p.m ..

.

At Comelllt C.COllege Pori&lt;, Md.

OePau~Virgin ia

At Save Mart Center
Fresno, Calif.
Iowa State (23-6) vs. Utah (25-7), 8 p.m
Stantorct (29-2) vs. Santa Clar'a (17-13},

Sem~lnolo

AI Mci&lt;M\zie Arena

c-.-,Tonn.
SO!urday, MM:h 28
LSU·Stetsoo-Oklahoma-Arizona wi n ~
ner vs. OePaui;Virglnia Tech-Penn
State--Uberty winner. Noon ·or 2:30p.m.
Georgia-Rice-Texas-Oral. Roberts
Winner vs. Boston College-HoustonOuke-Ganisius winner. Noon or 2:30 p m.

Chompionlhlp
AIMcKanzleArwno

Seattle
KanSas State (23·7) vs. Bowling Green
(23-7). 8 p m.
Vanderbilt (22-7) vs . .Montana (22·7) ,
10:30 p.m. Sunday. March 20
At The Gampei Pavilion
Storrs, Conn.
Connecticut (23·7) vs. Dartmouth (1710). 7 p.m.
Florida Stale (23-7) vs. Richmobd (23-

.,

7). 9:.30~ . m .

Second Round
""onday, March 21 ·
At Williams Arena
Minneapolis
M1chiga'n State-Alcorn State winner vs.
Southern Cali fornia-louisville winner. 7 or
9:30p.m.
At Save Mart Center
Fresno, Calif,
towa State-Utah winner vs. Stanford- .
Santa Clara winner. 9 or 11 :30 p.m .
At Bank of America Arena

·

Montana-Kansas State~Bowling Green
winner, 7:30 ar 10 p.ni
Florida State-Richmond-ConnecticutDanmouth winner vs. Iowa State-UtahStanford-santa Clara winner. 7:30 or 10
p.m.
Championship
At Municipal Auditorium
· Kansas City, Mo.
Tuesday, March 29
Semifinal winners, TBA

TEMPE REGIONAL
First Round ·
Saturday, March 19
At Williams Arena
Minneapolis
Virginia (20-10~ vs. Old Dominion (22·
8), 7 p.m.

Minnesota {24-7) vs. St. Francis, Pa.

(21·9), 9:30p.m.

At Save Mart Center
Fresno, Calif.
Arizona State (22-9) vs Eastern
Kentucky (23-7), 2 p.m.
Notre ~ame (26-5) vs . UC Santa
Bart:lara {21·8), 4:30p.m

At Bank of America Arena
Seanle
Baylor (27·3) vs. Illinois State (1 3-17) , 2
p.m.
Texas Christian (23-9) vs. Oregon (209) , 4:30p.m .
. Sunday, March 20

At The Dean E. Smith Center

Chapel Hill, N.~ . .

North Carolina (27-3) vs. Coppin State

123-7). 7 p.m.

·

MISSissippi (19-10) vs.
Washington ~22-8) . 9:30p.m.

(21-8), 2:30 p.m.

'George

Second Round

Monday, March 21 ·
At Williams Arenll
Minneapolis
Virg1nia-Oid Dominion winr'ler vs.
M1nnesota-St. Francis, Pa. winner. 7 Of
9:30p.m.
At Save Mart Center

DIVISION II
STATE SEMIFINALS

Pairings for the 2005 boys

COLUMBUS (AP) -

state basketball tournament.

· c•'• ' ) i'"
'lrj I 'S•\

, )

t~

1• •-) · 1. .,....~. .

vs. Notre Dame-UC Santa Barbara winner. 9 or 11 :30 p.m.
At Bank of America Arena
Seattle
Texas Chris!lan-Orego!"l winner vs.
Baylor-Illinois State winner, 9 or 11 .30
p.m.

Tuesday, March 22
At The Dean E. Smhh Center
Chapel Hill, N.C.
North Carolfna-Goppin State wir)ner vs.
Mlss'issippf..George Washington winner, 7
or 9:30p.m.
Som~lnolo

At Wells fargo Arena

'

Tempe, Ariz.
SaturdiY, March 28

North
Carolina-Coppln. StateMississippi-George Washlr,tgton winner
vs. Arizona State-Eastern Kentuct&lt;yNotre Oame-UC Sant'a Barbara winner,
t 0 p.m. or 12:30 a.m
Virginia-Old Dominion-Minnesota-St.
Francis, Pa. winner vs. Texas ChristisnOregon-8aylor-lllinois State winner, 10
p.m. or 12:30 a.m.

II lSI.,\\

111
.

• Reds tame Detroit in·
split squad win.
SeePage 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

POMEROY - Officials
from American Electric
Power"s Mountaineer Plant
in New Haven , W.Va. visited
Pomeroy Village Council on
Monday evening to discuss
the $500 million flue gas
desulfurization (FGD) or
"sc rubber" · the plant 1s
undertaking.
Corporate
visits
to

All games at Value City Arena, Columbus

DIVISION i
STATE SEMIFINALS

FINAL

Wooster Triway (23-3) vs. Cols: Linden McKinley
(11-14), Thursday, 10:45 a.m.; Day..Dunbar (22-4)
v~. UpPer Sandusky (25-0), Thursday, 2 p.m.

Mansfield Sr. (24'1 1 vs. Can. McKinley (25·1),
Friday, 5:15 p.m.: Cin. St. Xavier (21·5) vs. C1n.
Moeller (22-3), Fnday, 8:30 p.m .

FINAL

FINAL

·
,

I

Saturday, 10:45 a.m.

DIVISION IV
STATE SEMIFINALS

Cle. His. Lulheran E. (20-5) vs. Minster (21-4),
Thursday, 5:15p.m.: Conlinental (22-3) vs. Gals.
Africentric (25-1 ), Thursday, 8:30 p.m.

DIVISION Ill
STATE SEMIFINALS

Salu'rday. 8:30p.m.

Saturday, 5:15p.m.

OBITUARIES

FINAL

Loudonville (22-3) vs. Cin. N. College Hill (25-1),

Saturday, 2 p m.

Page A5·
• Lucy Ferrell Cadle, 87
• J. Merrill Carter, 84
• Rita J. Fields, 57
• Helen Walton, 90

INSIDE

...

'

.

. • Time out for tips. See
PageA2
• Hospital achieves
JCAHO accreditation.
See Page A2
• Sonshine Circle reports
·on projects and plans ·
spring events.
See Page A3
: • Tree sale under way.
See ~ge A5

lUST LOOK Al THE RECEIPT

Get 'em f•st

'

JUST LOOK AT THE RECEIPT

.... THE PROOF ••••
GROCERIES
87 .00•
·NO FRilLS
-13.00
SMALLER STORES . -10.00
LOW OVERHEAD -11.00
GROCERIES
AT SAVE-A-LOT 5.3.00

white they last!
u•• 5PfCIAL BUYS •n•

Fresh

WEATHER

Green
Cabbage

Sporn coal mine located in
New Haven, W.Va. to assess
the financial fea&gt;ibi lity JOf
reopening the· mine. If this
happens AEP would sell the
mineral rites and buy the coal
from a third ~arty who would
uperate .the facility.
Counci lman Jim SiS\on
inquired whether AEP had
any inlerest in the defunct ·
Meigs coal m1 ne, bu1 Long

Please see AEP, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Medium

POMEROY - The new
mine subsidence insurance
bill passed recently by the
Ohio General Assembly
enhances insurance benefits
for Ohioans living in 37
·counties, includin'g Meigs
and Gallia, affected by mine
collapses.
The legislation changes the.

31b bag
Prl&lt;e Good Thrt,.~ 3· 19-05.

"National weekly average grocery expendtture.

•••••••••••••••••••
W'i.SA-VE +LOT .C'OM

Details on Patle A6

1.49

INDEX

Act II

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Popcorn
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700 West Main St
Pomeroy
(740) "992-2891
~

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1.99

Calendars

A3

Paper Towels
l roll pkg

Classifieds

B3-4

2 SEcnoNs- 12 PAGES

Sparl&lt;lo "

,....,~

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

...

~

~:.,

Comics

'

""~ntuht • I l't•d Hi iu .IH"!!

'
· nul"t·l n ·..C thit•.or=-

. 20()fj

200fi

\

Beth Sergent/photo

Members of the Meigs C~unty Tobacco Prevention and Meigs County Cardiovascular Health
Coalition are 'throwing their support behind a campaign that is a stepping stone to banning
indoor smoking in public places in Ohio. The organization Smoke Free Ohio is attempting to get
the 20,000 signatures needed for a space on the November 2006 ballot with the question "Do
you support smoke-free public places?"
· of Health .

.
8r~mfteld als? ts spea_rheadm~ a ~a~p~tgn. to be~m
a walkmg tmllat~v_e m Metgs
County. · The tllltlattve IS a
joint venture with Athens and
Washington counties similar

to the Meigs In Motion walking program held last year.
Anyone wi shing to contribute
ideas for the campaign can
attended a meeting at 9 a.m.
Friday at the Meigs County
Health Department.._

ggc
Campbell's

Kitchen Classics

Soup

18.3·18.5

We Accept WIC and Ohio EDT
tOO% Guarantee of.Satisfaction or
Your Money Back !
Priced Good Thru 3/20/05

Other announcements from
the meeting inCluded:
• The Meigs County Relay
For Life will take place May
13-14 at the Meigs County
Please see·aan, AS

Rep. Jimmy Stewart (ROhio
Mine
Subsidence
Under the program annual
to Athens) sponsored the bill · in sur~nce premiums are $1
Insurance
program
increase benefit payouts and '(HB 425) which allows the . for policy holders in mandaexpand covemge for victims Ohio Mine Subsid&gt;nce tory counties and $5 in
Underwriting optional counties. Of the 37
whose homes or other non- Insurance
commercial structures, col- Associ:nion which .adminis- counties eligible for mine
lapse from underground ters the program. to in-crease subsidence coverage. 26 are
abandoned
mines.
The the maximum coverage for a mandmed counties. Thev are
ch,anges were initiated by the dwelling from $50,000 to Athens. Belmont. Carroll,
Ohio
Department
of $300.000 and allows the pro- Columbiana,
Coshocton.
Insurance and the Ohio gram to insure structure s Gallia. Guernsey. Harrision.
Department · of Natural such as garages. fences. barns
Please see Mine. AS
and sidewalks.
Resources.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTJNEL.COM

Bs

tion trade.
The Voinovich Cente-r for
Leadership and Public
Affairs . at Ohio University
has compl\!ted an Economic
Analysis for Development
on behalf of the Meigs
County Department o( .Job
and Familv Services. A draft
of the study, which will be
updated to reflect changes in
the county's economy since
it was commissioned, was
distributed last week to
members of a local commit-

Domin1ck Brook of the
tee worki ng on Middleport\
downtown
revitalization lnstitule
for
· tocal
Government
and
Rural
project.
The report, designed to Development , who wrote the
provide an overview of the report. said he will revise it
employment and economic before submi_tting it in final
trends in .the county, also form. using more recent sta- ·
which ·· ·discount
identities the county econo- tistics
my's unique strengths. but socco·s contributions to
relies heavily on information the county economy.
The s.tud y shows that minrelating .to the mining industry, which left Meigs County ing, farming and forestry and
when the Southern Ohio Coal comtruction sectors were the
Company' closed its Meigs
Mines in 2000.
Please see M~lgs. AS
...,..

PERFECT FOR MARCH MADNESS!!
•n• SPfOAl.IUYS ,....

Wylwood

Extra long
Asparagus

Spears

lS o.t can

Non-compliance enforcement

Meigs study shows economic·strengths in farming, forestry

MIDDLEPORT -A commi
ssioned study of Mei'gs
Dear Abby
A3 . County's
economy shows
large farming
·Editorials
A4 exceptionally
and forestry sectors, paying
much higher than
Obituaries
As wages
those industries pay elseB Sec.t ion • where in the state.
Sports
The study also indicates
potential
growth in retail
A6
Weather
and service businesses, and
fast growth in the c_onstruc© aoos Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

1.19

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
approved the purchase of a
2005 Ford Crown Victoria
police cru iser. at an estimated
cost of $25,000, ut Monday
evening's regular meeting . .
Council also authorized
financing at least a portion of
the cost through Peoples
Bank, N:A., at a municipll;l
interest rate of 4.5 percent.
The vehicle wi II be purcha~ed
through the state cooperatt_ve
purchasing program.
Assistant Police Chief Jeff
Miller said cruisers are used
on a rotating basis, and the
new vehicle will be added to
that rotation. Maintenance
costs on all cruisers. especially the 1998 model to be
replaced. are increasing. That
. vehicle has 165.000 miles,
Miller said. Councilman
Roger Manley voted against
the purchase.
·

Mine"subsidence legislation enhances benefits.

-Thru3-l~

Yellow Onions ·

IT'S WHY YOU SAVE UP T·o
401. ON YDUR GROCERIES.

POMEROY - Do most
people in Ohio support
smoke-free publi c places?
That question is being proposed for the November 2006
ballot and was discu ssed at
Monday 's meeting of the
Meigs County · Tobacco
Prevention
and
Meigs'
Couniy
· C.ardiovascular
Health (CVH) Coalition.
Chairwoman Lora Rawson
discussed the St'\te-wide initiative to ban indoor smoking
by the organization Smoke
Free Ohio and their Web site
SmokeFreeOhio.org. There
are 20,000 signatures needed
to get the initiative on the
November 2006 ballot.
Coalition member Brenda
Cui-fman announced that on
April I, the Southern Local
School District would be
going tobacco free for one
day,
which
Southern
Superintendent Bob Grueser
confirmed.
Coalition member Andrew
Brumfield, who is also the
coordinator
for
Cardiovascular Health at the
Meigs
County
Health
Department, announced that
his program's grant was
renewed once again for four
years. The .Cardiovascular
Health Grant is awarded
through the Ohio Department

1.99

DILES
HEARING

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Use in public facilities
Traveling
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TV video games
Stop disturbing ot_
hers

JACKSON

GALLIPOLIS
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l3l Huron Street ·
( Mc{ln.... Ph)'5K:al Therap&gt; 81da )

(A&lt;10SJ fi'om Post Oftl~)

(740) 446-7619

---, --

"
"
"
•
•
•

I -

~

Del~l!hted,

Mayor Sandy lannarelli
reviewed an
ordinance
req.uiriog owners of rental
properties to register their
rental units with the village
and pay their rental permit
fees of $12. lannarelli said
some of those property owners own as many. as 20 units
in the village and have not ·
paid their fees. The fine for
not paying the fees is $100
per unit, and the fines will be
enforc-ed. she said.
The deadline for paying
the permit fee was Feb. I,
but lan narelli said those
who have not paid to date
will be nQtified by letter and
given until April I -to do so,
before a fine in Mayur·s
Court is imposed. lannarelli
said less lhan 25 percent of
the rental property owners
'in the' illage have paid their
permit fees.
lannarelli said the police
depanment will begin putting
warning notices on cars with
expired tags. llat tires and in
other stages of disrepair
throughout the village . Those
notices will give owners ·10
days to remove the vehicles
from the street or bring the
vehicle . into compHan~.
Those vehide' not removed
or brought into compliance
will be towed at owner's
expense. and a fine of $100
per day will be imposed until
the vehicle is considered to
be in C(lmpliance.

PleaS. see Cruiser. A5

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husband can watcli
whatever he wants as loud

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ears. He does ·
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him, it is at a nonnal hearin~ level. I love
your product! -- Barry &amp; Shtrley Webb
hurt my

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1l OZI*f

Open Mnn. - Thun.
8 ;3()..Spm

. --~ -

the Mountaineer Plant will that doesn't happen ."
benefit froin the le&gt;Su ns
Lung
explained . that
learned at Gavin.
because of the scrubber proThe ·men explained a JCCt at the plant as many as
refined mitigation process 1.500 constructi on workers
that will keep the sulfur will be employed at the peak
dioxide at such a sma ll ton- of the construction proce,s.
centration that it wi ll nut and eventuall y this number
touch down.
. will decrease to about 500
"We're going . to make 'regular employees. There also
eVery effort to make sure that will be 18 new cells lining ·the
(b lue plume) doe sn't hap- river bank for ri ver traffic.
pen." Long said. " It's our
Long discussed studies
golden desire to make sure goin g on at AEP's Philip

council approves
cruiser purchase

Tempo, Ariz.

Sunday, April 3
Chananooga ' Regional chllmp1on vs
Tempe A eg~aroal charno10n. 7 or 9.30 p m
Ph1lade!ph1a Reg1on a1 champiOn vs
Kanps Crty Regional champion. 7 or
9:30p.m.
Chomploriohlp
.
lueodoy, Apnl 5
Semifinal wln~ers, 8:30 p.m. •

\ \ \\\~ llnd . u h ... ~ ·ll lllu l ••o~ n

Coaufton discusses proposed Ohio smoking ban ·Middleport

Chomplonohlp ·

lndlanepollo
Semtflnela

\I,\I((IJI ,~) . ~ Ofl ,-)

Mountain eer Plant\ ~urrounding communities 1s a
result of lessons learned durlng AEP's experiences in
Cheshire when a similar
scrubber was constructed at
their Gavin Plant; resulti ng in
touchdowns of blue plumes of
sulfuric acid aerosols.
Mountaineer .
Plant
Environ'mental Coordinator
Chris Long and FGD Process
Owner J.L. Perry, II inforn1ed
couocil that the scrubber at

At Ylelll Fargo Arena

Monday, March 28
Semifinal winners, TBA

'

AEP officials visit Pomeroy Village Council

SPORTS

Friday, 10:45 a.m.; Ironton (25-0) vs. Archbold (241), Friday, 2 p.m.·

Fresno, CaiH. ·
Arizona State-Eastern Kentucky Winner

AIRCADomo

MIO-'Io

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Boys basketball state toumament pairings

p.m.

THE FINAL FOUR

Southern California (19-10) · vs.
Loulavil~ (22-8), Noon
Mich i~ State (28·3) vs. Alcorn State

,.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Seattle

Tuesday, March 22
At The Gampel Pa\lition
Storrs, Conn.
Florida State-Richmond w1nner vs.
Connecticut·Oartmouth winner. 7 or 9:30
p.m,
Semifinals
At Municipal Auditorium
Kansas City, Mo.
Sunday, March 27 .
Michigan State-Alcorn State-Southern
California-Louisville winner vs. Vanderbilt-

speech meet,.A:J

BY .BETH SERGENT

Vanderbih-Montana winner vs. Kansas
State-Bowling Green winner, 9 or 11 :30

-.cloy, lilan;h 28
KANSAS CITY REGIONAL
FINI Round
s.turdey, March 19
At WHIIama Aren•

rebounds for No. 5-ranked Eastmoor (25·
3).
·
In Division Ill , Regina set _a toumamerit record for wtdest margm_ m two
games in winning by a combtned 71
points. But coach ·Pat Diulus wasn't
crowing about it.
"Margins mean nothing at all to us," he
said. "I'm not proud we set any kind of
records. We just come out and play _our ·
game and hope we score more pomts
than the otl)er team."
.
The Royals (25-3), ranked No. 6 m the
final regular~season Assoctated Press
poll, won thetr fifth state tttle m the last
'six years.
Freshman Shay Selby, a second-team
!Ill-stater, added 20 points. ..
Danielle Collins led the Patnots (25-2)
with II points.
In Division IV, the ofte~ ov~rlooked
Miller had the biggest shot for Htland.
"That's what it takes," said ·a disappointed Ottoville coach Dave Kleman.
"A lot of tim~s it takes someone other
than your stars."
.
Lindsay Stuckey scored 18 )JOints,
including the Hawks first four tn the
extra session, and also got a hand on a
key steal in the overtime for Hiland (280).
.
First-team
AII-Ohwan
Launa
Hochstetler scored 16 points and Rachel
Thomas had six points and 10 rebounds
off the bench for the Hawks, No. I in the
Associated Press poll from the first week'
until the last.
'Stacey Wannemacher and Megan
Kleman each scored 12 points and Amy
Honigford had II for Ottoville (23-4 ),
which has lost in the title game in each of
its three trips to the state tournament.

·

Chltt8noogli, Tenn.
~iflnal winners, TBA

COLUMBUS- When No. I met No.
2. it all came down to a grizzled veteran
and a r&amp;w rookie.
Ms. Basketball Maria Getty broke but
of a shooting slump just in time - and
freshman Rachel Chandler hit a huge 3pointer- to help second-ranked Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne go on a late 12-0
run to beat No. I Cincinnati Mount Notre
Dame 49-38 for the Division I girls state
high school championship.
In Saturday 's other finals, Kathleen
Gladstone hit a 3-pointer with I :45 left to
close the scoring and Cuyahoga Falls
Walsh Jesuit weathered a wild last. I0
seconds to beat Eastmoor 43-40 for the
· Division II crown; tirst-team Ali-Ohioan
Carla Jacobs h~d 23 points and South
. Euclid Regina completed one of.the most
dominating two-game performances in
tournament history by beating Patrick
Henry 70-45 in Division III; and Lydia
Miller had one. point through four quarters but hit the pivotal 3-pointer in overtime to help Na. 1-ranked Berlin Hiland
beat Ottoville 55-47 in Division IV.
Asked to pick the turning point of the
big-school final, Mount Notre Dame
coach Sc()lt Rogers didn' t hesitate.
. " It was the 3," he said, .shaking his
head.
It was only the second time that the
same two teams have met in the championship game two years in a row. A year
ago, Mount Notre Dame completed a 2"80 season by pounding C-J 59-44 in the
state tlnals.
This time, C-J (25-2) turned on the jets

near the
to beat Mount Notre
(25-3).
Getty missed her first II shots from the
field but made her last three, including
two consecutive driving layups in the
fourth quarter to give C-J a 3()-36 lead
with 4:56 left. The second .of those baskets also ignited th~ 12-0 spurt - which
was buill around Chandler's looping 3pointer.
. ·
"What the 3 did ... it gave us the
biggest lead of t-he game, and then
allowed us to continue our pressure,"
coach Marc Greenberg said.
In Division II, the most memorable
shot was one that didn' t count.
With Eastmoor hustling down the floor
for a possible tying 3-pointer with 3 seconds left, coach Jim Miranda signaled for
a timeout just as Cherise Daniel flipped
up a shot behind the arc that hit nothing
but net. Since the timeout had been called
and the whistle was sounding as she
released the shot, the basket was di sallowed.
"It's a coach's nightmare," Miranda
said quietly.
.
Daniel fell to the floor in disappointment before joining her teammates in the
huddle. When play resumed, she took the
3 again .from close to the same spot and it
just missed.
.· The title came in Walsh Jesuit' s ti~st
trip to the state tournament and ruined
Eastmoor's tirst appearance in the final
four.
Johnna Zaccari scored 13 points arid
had 10 rebounds to lead Walsh (25-3),
which was ranked IOth in the final
Associated Press regular-season poll.
Daniel had 12 faints and Ayana
Dunning added l
points and · 13

At Bank of America Arena

Tech wirvler vs. Penn

S1ate-Ubeny winner, 1 or 9:30p.m.
AI The O.n E. SmHh C.CIIapol Hill, N.C.
Boston College-Houston winner vs.
OW-Canisiua winner, 7 or 9:30 p.m.

'

· OVCS recognizes .
top winners of regional

· Family, friends
honor Pearl Leifheit's
career,A2

·

()p:n Tue1., Wed .• Th~nL

(740i'28~~1430

•

ATHENS
275 West Unio n St reel
Opcn r-'! o n

~

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�PageA2

COMMUNI1Y

The Daily ~tinel

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

.

.

. Family,friends honor Pearl Leifheit's career Smith's detective book reviewed
POMEROY- "The No. 1 long lost father had moved in Ramotsw.e exemplifies the
Ladies Detective Agency" by with her and was costing her Botswanan values of honAleximder McCall Smith was lots of money. If he truly esty. generosity. and ·kindreviewed by Pat Holter at a was her father she would ness. Alexander McCall
recent meeting of the gladly take care of him as Smith was born in what is
Middleport Litarary Club at . Botswanan custom demand- now Zimbabwe and was a .
.
the Pomeroy Library.
ed. but she wanted Precious
The heroine of the novel is to find out tl1e trt1th.
law
professor
at
the
1
1
Precious Ramotswe, a fullDisguising herself as a U . .iversity of Botswana
figured, mature Botswanan nurse, Precious ·met the man helore he moved to Scotland
lady who uses money left to , and tricked him into disclos· . where he is a l~w professor
her by her father to establish ing the truth and he left. In at
the
University
of
a detective agency in another case. she sean:heu Edinburgh.
Gabarone, the .capital of for a man who went missing
His affection for
and ,
Botswana. The assets of the during a river baptism and knowledge of the African
agency were a tiny white she found his remains in a people are clearly evident in
van. two desks and two crocodile she rured to the this hook .. After the success
chairs. a telephone, an old river's edge an&lt;! then shot.
In others· ··asec,
.
ty_pewnter,
a teapot an d three
,
, s·11e f'ottr1d of thi s novel. he created four,
·
c,·1r·. more novels about the No. I
cups. Th e tmy
wh'rte van ·rs the ow 11 er 0 t· ,·1 stolen·
_
almost another character in followed a cheating husband. Ladie s Detective Agency.
the story. Precious also hired exposed a con man who
After the review. members ·
an assistant, Mna Makutsi.
claimed to have lost a finger at1swered roll call by telling
· Hrilter described' Precious in a factory acciuent. and of a change in the .standards
as clever and warm, but also · solved the case of a doctor of b~havior they most regret.
a nq-nonsct1se woman. To who seemed to have a split At the next meeting, which
In eacli case, will be held at the Pomeroy
Leifheit stands with an enlarged photo of herself upon graduation from the Holze r School of illustrate her · deverness _and personality.
the
book.
Precious
used
her ingenuity
the
humor
of
Nurs ing in 1954 during a recent retirement dinner hosted by her family and frrends.
Holter recounted several of and originality to so lve the Library, Connie Gilkey will
Mma Ramotswe's cases. In problem.
Her detective i·eview "Ohio's Angels" by
CHESHIRE - To honor
·the.
'first
case.
a
local
woman
agency
became
very busy.
Harriet Scott Chessman. The
Pearl. E. Leill1eit. a surprise
According to notes from ineeting was hosted by Dana
came .to Precious because an
retirement dinner party with
family and friends was held
old man claiming to be her the
publisher.
Precious Kessinger.
Feb. 19 at The Lewis Family
Restaurant in Jacbon .
•
The dinner was hosteu by
her children. Sam and Kiinmie
Leifheit of Jackson, and
Stephanie J. Leifheit of
. Ellicott City. MeL
BY BECKY BAER
"No." Decide if something thing immaculate and coniLeilheit graduated fro·m the
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION EDUCATOR
is worth your time and pJete.
Holzer Sehoul of Nursing with
effort before agreei ng to do
Take care of yourself. Get
the class of 1954. Upon graduIn today's busy world, it it.
plenty of sleep. eat right,
ation, she was employed five
Plan. Prepare as much as don't snack, maintain a
can be quite a .challenge to
years at Holzer Hospital on
balance all of the responsi-. you can · ahead of time. For health y weight. exercise
First Avenue in Gallipolis. She \..
bilities o[ family, home &lt;)nd instance. to alleviate a hec- regularlo/. don' t smoke, use
then worked 8-1/2 years as an
'
work duties. How can you tic morning. set the break- · little or no alcohol and
industrial nurse at the Kaiser
better. manage your multiple fast table the night before. relieve st ress appropriately.
Aluminum
Plant
in
roles?
Have . keys. sc hool books . . Be positive. Enjoy your
Ravenswood. W.Va. She took
First, track your time for lunch money, etc. ready to well -earned down tim e:
some time out to be stay-home
a
week. Determine which grab · as· you go out the don't think about what you
morn with her two chi ldren.
· Submii!Qd photos
activities are time wasters. door. Get family members could be doing. Be tlexible.
Later, in 1976. she was
employed
at
Gallipolis Pearl E. Leifheit,. standing at left, was honored t&gt;y co-workers El iminate them. Chart both involved. Enlist the aid of Relax ami gu with the llow.
Developmental Center as stall and friends on her retirement as a staff .nurse from Gallipolis work and personal appoint- your social network in get- Periodically do things difnurse and she worked until her Developmental Center on Jan. 31. She had worked at GDC ments and events on one -ting tasks done. Consider fcrently to keep a fresh outsince 1976.
retirement on Jan . 3 1. 2005.
calendar. Color-code post-it- hiring out the housework.
look. Make tin1e to do what.
Set long-ferm goals. What you want to do. Don ' t
notes to si mplify this. Look
at your recorded schedule to do you really enjoy doing'' worry about the past: you
determine when your peak · What are your strengths'' can't control' that. but you
work times seem to be . Which skills do you need tu can plan for the· future .
Most of us function best improve? Don't add a new Schedule ftm breaks. long
I:,&lt;
during the mid- to late- task to your. work load until weekends or time to pursue
you remove an old one.
a favorite hobby. Be sure to
morning hours.
Prioritize
your · tasks .
Develop realistic expecta- put these activities on your
Arrange to do top pnonty tions. Lower your standards. calendar. so other thin gs
· duties first during your high No one is perfect, so don't won't interfere.
Be good· to yourse lf. You
performance
periods. think less of" yourself if you
Delegate low priority chores make a mistake or feel catr't handle ·all of the
. to others. If that is not pas- inadequate. Purposely let responsibilities of family.
sible, only take a short. five something go to show your- home and work. if you're
to ten-minute break to work self that you are still · wor- not personally experiencing
on them. ·Learn to say, · thy without having every-· a ba.lanced life.

Time out for tips

Pleasimt Valley Hospital

Hospital achieves JCAHO accreditation
POINT PLEASANT pita!, spoke of his pride in
By ·demonstrating compli- the medical staff and
ance
with
the . Joint employees who ask what
Commission
on needs to be do)1e to be
Accreditation of Healthcare accredited· by the Joint
(.JCAHO) Commission.
Orga nization·,
national
standards
for'
"In addition, they apprecihealthcare qua lity' and safe- . ate the educational aspect of
ty. Pleasam Valley Hospital , the survey and the opportuPleasant
Valley
Home nitv to interact with the
Medical Equipment. Plea,ant tea;n of surveyors."
Valley
Nursing
&amp;
Lawson called the accrediRehabilitation Center and. tation, "proof of an organiPieasant
Val ley
Home zation-wide commitment to
Health. Private Duty and provide quality care · on an
Hospice has earned the Joint ongoing basis."
Commission 's Gold Seal of
The Joint Commission on.
Approval.
Accreditation of Healthcare
Fo·unded in 1951, the Joint Organizations
reG.ently
Commission is dedicated to launched a new generation
continuously improving the of reporting . health care
safety and quality of the information about the qualination ·s health .::are through ' ty and safety of care providvolu-ntary accreditation .
. ed in its accredited health
''Above all, the . national c.are organizations across the
standards are intended to country.
stimulate con tinuous. sy;.
The Joint Commission's
tematic a;ki organization- Quality Check ..provides
wide improvement in an clear, objective data to indiorganization's performance victuals th'a t will permit
'and the outcomes of care," them to compare local hassays Kurt Patton, executive pitals, home care agencies,
director,
Hospital nursing homes. laboratories
· Accreditation Program. Joint and ambulatory care organiCommission. "The commu- zations with others on state
nity should be proud that and mttional bases. Further,
Pleasant Valley Ho,pital is the Joint Commission now
focusing on. the most chal- provideo;
hospital-specific
.Ienging goal -_ to continu- information .about clinical
ously rai se qualtty and safe· perlorm.ance on the care of
ty to higher leveL,...
patients.
,
Alvin R. Lawson. JD,
Consumers can access
FACHE, chief executive Quality Check at www.qual ~
officer of the non-profit hos- itycheck.org and search for

healthcare organizations by
name, type, and/or location.
Interactive links to informa·
tion are designed to help
individuals better un(!erstand
how to use and interpret the
information
presentell.
Individual s are encouraged
to talk with their doctors
about the information presented on Quality Check .
"More than ever before.
Americans are seeking information to help !hem make
sound decisions about their
health . care ," commented
Sandy Wood, vice-president
of patient .services at ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
"The Joint Commission 's ·
decision to provide the publie with the opportunity to
see how well hospitals C\lmpare to one another should
stimulate these facilities to
improve care and also pe(·
mit patiems to make more
informed choices," she continued.
The Joint Commission's
Quality Check is just one
source of information a person should use in determin• •
ing whether a given health
care organization is likely to
meet his or-her needs. When
deciding where to go for
care, individuals should consuit with their doctors and
other health care profcs;ionals about the advantages tlr
special characteristics of
each health care organization being considered.

The Daily Sentinel .

BYTHE BEND

Tuesday, March 15
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District, special meeting, noon,
Meigs SWCD office.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will meet in
special session at 7 p.m. at village hall for the purpose of a
discussion on the ball fields.
Wednesday, March 16
CHESH IRE - The Board of
Directors of the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency
will meet at noon on March 15
in the Cheshire office.
CHESTER -Eastern Local
Board of Education will meet in
regular session at 5:30 p.m. in
the Elementary School library
conference room.
Thursday, March 17
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township trustees will meet at
6:30 p.t)1. at the town hall.
Monday, March 21
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees will begin
.cleaning cemeteries today. ·

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, March 15
POMEROY Pomeroy
American Legion Post #39 will
hold their annual birthday party
at 7 p.m. at the post home .
Contact Mick Williams and

· Tol']l Anderson for reserva- Main, from 4:30 to 6:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Chuck
tions.
RUTLAND Rutland Compton, 7 p.m. at the New
youth league sign ups 5 to 7 Life Church of God. Pre-con-·
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station. cert, 6:30p.m. Earthen Vessel.s.
MIDDLEPORT - Brooks.- Refreshments will be served
Grant Camp. Sons of Union followingtheconcert.Formore
Veterans of the Civil War and information call675-3538.
Maj. Daniel McCook Circle
Saturday, March 19
Ladies of the Grand Army of
MASON-· A benefit forthe
the Republic regular meeting, . World Christian Outrench
7:15p.m., Middleport Masonic Ministry will be held at 7 p.m .
Temple . Civil War program on at the Christian· Brethren
· Church in Mason. Singing will
Civil War nurses.
Thursday, March 17
be Sandra Wise, the Brian
RACINE
Pomeroy- Family Connection and Ray
Racine Lodge 164, F&amp;AM will and Deloris Cundiff.
meet at 7:30p.m. Work will be
SALEM CENTER -Star
in the Master Mason degree.
Grange #778 and Junior
POMEROY
- Meigs Grange #878 Fun Night and
County retired Teachers will Potluck Supper, 6:30p.m. folmeet for a noon luncheon at lowed by final plans and set up
Trinity church. Reservaiions for soup dinner to be held on
may be made by calling 992- Sunday.
_
32 14. Storyteller Donna
Sunday, March 20
Wilson will give tales of Meigs
POMEROY
-Unity
County.
Singers under the direction of
Sue Matheny will present
Saturday, March 10
CHESTER - Shade River "More than Conquerors!'' at 7
Lodge453 will hold a breakfast p.m., Mt. Hermon United
meeting to confer two entered Brethren in ·Christ Church,
apprentice degrees after an .8· Wickham Road, Pomeroy.
a. m. breakfast.

fchurch events
Friday, March 18
MIDDLEPORT - A free
breakfast will be served at din:
ner time at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family Life
Center. corner of Fifth and

Tuesday, March

aves recognizes

Community Calendar
Public meetings

PageA3

Birthdays
Monday, March 21
POMEROY
Ruby
Burnside will celebrate her
90th birthday, March 21.
Cards may be sent to her at
40532 Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, 45769.

Mom struggles to support her gay teenage dnughter
. dervariance in either English
DEAR ABBY: In 2000. I
or Spanish. It can also be
won full custody of my two
ordered
by writing CNMC,
children. a boy, 12, and a girl, ·
Ill Michigan Ave. N.W ..
" Dallas.". who is now 14.
Washington, D.C. 20010.
·.
·I have done everything I
In addition to the !Jqoklet.
cou ld to raise them both with
Dear
the Children's Natiol)al
good morals and provide them
Abby
Medical Center's · outreach
with a good education.
A few weeks ago, Dallas
- - - - • · program provides clinical
confided in me · that she's
mental health services and
referrals to other knowledgeattracted to girls, and has a
able
professionals, a free
long-distance relationship
Jove
and
approve
of
her.
You
·
monthly
support group for
with a girl in a different state.
must
be
doing
something
parents
and
children, an online
It came as a shock, but I have
tried to understand so that she right, because she is assured discussion group for parents,
doesn't feel bad about it. I'm enough about who she is that and a Web page with infonnahoping thi s·is just a phase she's s he feels safe being open about tion for both parents and professionals.
_
going through and that it will it. Congratulations on that.
It is extremely important
DEAR ABBY: Please alert
pass -butifit doesn't, I'll do that
you come to terms with
my best to deal with it.
your own feelings about other dog lovers about someMy problem is that Dallas homosexuality. It is not thing our family learned this
insists on Jetting everyone uncommon forthe parents of a week after spending hundreds
know about her orientation. gay child to feel guilt or of dollars at an emergency vetShe even wears jewelry with shame , when . in truth; it has erinary clinic: Dogs can
the rainbow colors. I keep try - nothing to do with the quality become seriously ill or die
ing to make her under&gt;tand of their parenting and every- from eating grapes, raisins,
that this is HER business, and thing to do with genetics.
onions and garlic.
it's not something she should
Your · wisest move at this
Our darling puppy may have
make public. but she responds point would be to contact permanent ~idney damage
by ask ing me if I'm ashamed PFLAG (Parents and Friends because, in our ignorance, we
of her. (I al\vays reply. "Of of Lesbians and Gays), and left a bowl of grapes on, th~
course not.")
join one of its many support dinner table. I hope other fumAm I wrong by telling her groups. Once you do. you will ilies will read this and keep
: that? What's the correct way to find · it enormously helpful. their pets safe. Thanks for
deal with this'l CON- Contact it · by calling (202) spreading the word. - GERFUSED PARENT, ARLING- 467- 8180, or check the Web MAN SHEPHERD MOM,
TON, VA.
site at www.ptlag.org.
. THORNTON, COLO.
DEAR CONFUSED: It is a
I have recently learned
DEAR SHEPHERD MOM:
compliment to you that your about another helpful resource Consider it done ... a "woof' to
_ daughter trusts you enough to for parents of younger chi!- the wise.
• be open with you about her dren who exhibit gender-variDear Abby is written by
: sexual orientation. Many gay ant behavior and interests. It's Abigail Van Buren, also
teens- and younger·children the Children's National known as Jeanne Phillips,
-are su afraid they'll disap- Medical Center, which offers a and was founded by her
point their parents by disclos- booklet titled " If You Are mother, Pauline Phillips.
About
Your Write
Dear Abby at
ing they are "different'' that Concerned
Child's Gender Behaviors," It www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
they don't talk about it.
What your daughter needs can be downloaded from Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
right now is to know that you www.dcchildrens.com/gerl- 90069.

GALLIPOLIS - The ACSI
Ohio River Valley Region
Elementary speech meet was
hosted by Ohio Valley Christian
School last week wtth 66 students participating.
· OVCS has hosted this eveht
for the past five year!\,
Categories mcluded poetry for
grades 1-3, poetry for grades 46, Bible memory for grades 1·3,
Bible memory for grades 4~6,
fable/folklore, r.atriotic omtion
and dramatic Btble prose.
Studet)IS were scored on presentation individually, and
received blue ribbons for superior, red ribbons for · excellent,
white ribbons for good and teal
ribbons for honorable mention.
In total, students received 40
blue ribbons, 24 red ribbons and
two white ribbons.
At the awards assembly, one
student from each category was
selected to do their speech presentation. which followed the
judging.
These students included
Madison Parsons, second grade,
Pike Chri~tian Academy, · in
poetry for grades 1-3; Alex

15, 2005

winners of regional speech meet

r--=-,..-----=:..-=------;:'-------,

,.·14

Receiving t&gt;lue ribbons for their presentations at the Regional
Christian School Speech meet awards assembly at ·the Ohio
Valley Christian School were, from t~e left . Mad1son Crank .
fourth grade, Bible memory; Kyle Scott, sixth grade. dramatrc
prose; Allie Hamilton , srxth grade , patriotic oration: and Alex
Haddad, fourth grade. poetry.
Haddad, fourth grade, OVCS iw
poetry for grades 4-6; Andrew
Lightle, third grade, PCA in
Bible memory for grades 1-3;
Madi son Crank, fourth grade,
OVCS, in Bible memory for

grades 4-6: Madison Patnck.
third grade. PCA. in fable/folklore; Allie Hamilton . si.x th
grade. OVCS. in patriotic oration. and Kyle Scott. 'i.xth grade.
OVCS. dramatic Bible prose

Sonshine Circle reports,OQ projects and plans spring events
RACINE- Gloves, .socks.
and toboggans . have been
mailed to ·a soldier in
Afghanistan to be given to
local childten by the Sunshine
Circle which meets at the
Bethany Church.
A report on the project was
given at the March 10 meeting
of the group conducted by Lois
Sterrett, presidi!nt. As for other
projects it was reported that the
photo session, a fund raising
activity, at the 'church was a
success arid that the group had
sponsored a page in the Senior
Citizens meals on Wheels benefit gospel sing booklet. ·
It was reported that Ann
Boso had donated two Princess
Diana dolls to the group. They
will be auctioned off at the
RACO !lower festival to be
held on April 23 at Star Mill
Park. Recipes are still be
accepted for the new cookbook, and another noodle sale
will be held this wee". ·
Thank you notes were read
from Rev, William Marshall,
Beverly Chapman, Dan and
Donna Jean Smith, Josephine
Smith, and · Avis Harri son.
Donations were accepted from
Ann Boso and Shirley Boring.
The group made a donation to
Ed and Kelly Lawson to help
with medical expenses. Fiftyeight cards of encouragement

were signed, and the annual
Attending
were
Edie
mother-daughter banquet was Hubbard, Jackie
White.
set for May 5.
Blondena Rainer. Kathryn
Jackie White and Hart pre- ·Hart, Ann Boso. Mabel Brace.
Hart.
Nondus.
sented the program for the . Mildred
evening. White read from the Hendricks, Ruth Simpson.
book "Goct:s Promises for · Hazel McKelvey. Evelyn
Your Every Need" and gave Foreman, Edna Knopp. Betty
scripture from Matt. 5:16. Proffitt, Letha Proffitt. Jo Lee.
James 2: 15-17. Ist John I :3-7, Julie Campbell , Avis Harrison.
and "The Place Called Manha Lou Beegle and Lois
Calvary."
Each member Sterrett.
~
received a kit and made atherNext meeting will be on
mometer. Members enjoyed a April 14 at the church with
basket lunch. Secretary and Hazel
McKelvey.
Letha
treasurer reports were given by . Proffitt and Jo Lee presenting
Kathryn Hart . and Julie the program and serving
Campbell.
refreshments.
·

Congratulations
Carpenters Local Union 650
·on 113 years in Pomeroy
March 16th 1892-2005
Henry C. Peery

Business Representative
1954-1979

Retired

Steven M. Miller, M.D., Orthopedic Surgeon

. Adel A. Ibrahim, M.D., F.R.C.S., F.A.C.S •.
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital welcomes Dr. Miller tu uur medical staif

O'B leness Memorial Hospital welcomes Dr: lbrahim to our medical staff.
Dr. Ibrahim comes to O'Bleness after 24 years in private practic~ as a

Dr. Miller received his medical degree fwm the University uf C incinnati
College of Medicine and completed his residency at Shands Hospital.

.general and vascu lar surgeon in Huntington, West Virginia. He was an

Gainesville/Jacksonville, Flbrida. Prior to moving to Athens, he practiced

associate clinical. professor at Marshall University School of Medici ne for

drthopedic· surgery at Garden Medical Clinic, Garden City, Kansas.

years and is currently an associate professor at the Ohio Univ~rsity
College of Osteopathic Medicine.

ll

,,.

Dr. Miller's practice will include orthopedic surgery; knee ·a nd shoulder
hernia r~air. sentinel node biopsy, stereotactic breast hi ppsy, ad~anceJ

ligament reconstruction surgery; koee, hip ahd. shoulder replacement
surgery; sports or work-r€lated injuries; fractures; as well
carpal tunnel

traLima-life support and laboratory interpretation. Dr. lhrahim's services

and other nerve compression conditions .

include genera l, vascular and endoscopic surgery, biopsy, upper and lower
gastrointestinal endoscopy, and vascular laboratory imerprctation.

Dr. Miller's practice, Mountain View Bone and juint Clinic, is kx:ated in

Dr. Ibrahim has earneJ prufcssional certificati ons in lapamscnpic ventral

as

Suite 230 of theCastrop Center. Call (740)566-4590 t&lt;.1r mDrc inlnm1ati•m .
Dr. Ihrahim's .prKtice is located
in Suite 11 0 .of the Cast run• Center.
t
CaH (740) SY4-6100 for more infonnatiun.
·

The Castrop Center is located at .75 Hospital Drive, Athens.
in the O'Bieness Medical Park.

The Castrop Center is located at 75 Hospital Drive, Athens.
in the O'Bieness Medical Park.

J

O'BLENESS
MemoriJ HoepibJ

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

..

I

-

--~-

--------

•

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com
t

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecti11g an .
establishme11t of religio11, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or t!f the press; or 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

VIEW

READER'S

Pity Martha?
Stewart irks local domestic diva
Dear Editor:
Who's Martha Stewart anyway?
She's a woman who got lucky. got greedy, got caught and
then went to prison for it. Now she's a woman Who's an exconvict Reporters say, "Martha went from prison to privilege
in two and a half hours .'' How many ex-convicts are escorted
to 16 m1lliun dollar estates in limousines?
She's ruimng a generation of women, making them lhmk perfection is everything. Ever read her magazine'' You have to visit
a gourmet shop or big city to get items for the crafts and recipes.
When was the last time you had capers or gold leaf on hand?
She\ called a "domestiC diva." My idea of a domestic diva
is a woman who's up before dawn , f1xes coffee, feeds Fido,
washes dishes and a load uf laundry. Then she wakes her family, fixes breakfast and sends them out the door. She hangs
laundry. makes beds. vacuums. dusts and straightens. She sits
at the table and writes letters and lists. clips coupons and pays
bills How she makes a $300 paycheck pay $400 worth of
bills IS beyond me. Afternoons bring sewing and garden ing or
she runs errands and does voltlnteer work
She ·s home to meet .the kids, fixes a snack, urges them to
start their homework. while she tixes dinn&lt;;r. Sometimes she
has a PTO l)leeting to attend, where she is president. She gets
home, cleans the kitchen and gets the kids ready for bed. She
tucks them in, tells them she loves them. Then she watches
some TV w1th her husband and folds laundry or mends while
di'scussmg how they're going to get a nev. dryer Without going
into debt. Dragging hersell to bed, she t)janks the Lord for .
everything she has and for having the strength to do everything she does.
Now THAT'S A DOMESTIC DIVA 1
Debra A. Bullington
Rutland

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, March 15. the 74th day of 2005. There
are 291 days left in the year.
'
Today's Highlight in History:·On March 15, 1919, the
American Legion was founded, m Paris.
In 1493, Christopher Columbus returned to Spain, c.oncluding his first voyage to the Western Hemisphere.
In 1944, during World War II, Allied bombers again raided
German-held Monte Cassino.
In 1977, the U.S. House of Representatives began a 90-day test
· to determine the feasibility of showing its sessions on televisiOn.

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addressing issues, not personalities.

·The Daily Sentinel
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Tuesday, March 15,

President Bush's wave of
democracy · is sweeping the
Middle East, but it simply
does not figure that the
forces of despotism and
darkness are going to yield
without a fight.
The counterattac'k may
have
begun
with
Hezbollah's recent mass
demonstration in Beirut.
Presumably, it won't stop
there. Hezbollah has up to
20,000 men with anns. It
blew up the U.S. Marine barracks and the U.S. Embassy
1n Lebanon in 1983 and
drove Israeli forces to leave
Southern Lebanon.
Moreover, as a terrorist
group, the "Party of God"
has global connections and
global reach It is aided and
funded not only by Syria but
also Iran. Hezbollah killed
19 U.S Air Force personnel
m a bombmg at the Khobar
Towers apartment complex
in Saudi Arabia in 1996
It also bombed the lsmeli
Embassy in Buenos Aires,
Argentma, in 1992 and a
Jewish community center
there in 1994. It plotted an
attack on Israeli targets in
Singapore tn the 1990s. In
2002, two men were con. victed in North Carolina of
smuggling cigarettes to raise
funds for Hezbollah.
Around the world, "secunty services are not cracking
down forcefully and not paymg attention to the terrorist
cells and networks that are
being established internationally -1lght under the
respective
authorities'
noses," said Matthew Levitt,
a sc holar at the pro-Israel
Washington Institute for
Near East Policy.
"The mistakes that are
riow bemg made regarding
Hezbollah are the same as
those made a decade ago
conc~ming AI Qaeda."
It's increasingly, and gratify111gly. clear, as Bush said,
' that "across the Middle East,
a critical mass of events is
taking that region in a hopeful new direction."
In Afghanistan, Iraq,
Palest111e and Lebanon and even, to an extent, in
Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Iran
"II should be clear that

answer was, "better~" 41 per-

cent, "worse," 43 percent.
But if the progress toward
freedom continues and Bush
gets credit for It, those numbers will change And
chances are, Democratic
doubters will be swamped in
the process.
So too the Republican
"realists "
who
never
believed' that democracy
could prevail in the Mideast
_ or even in Eastern
Europe, for that matter and that "stability" was the
best goal ol U S. foreign
policy.
The "Bush Doctrine"
holds that the way to fight
terrorism, and, to build support for the United States, is
for this country to support
the popular yearnmg for
self-government and prosperity and to oppose authon!arianism. even when it's
practiced by ostensible U.S.
allies like Egypt's Hosni
Mubarak and the Saudi
Roya. 1 f·ami-1y.
But there remain three- big
.
.
.
obstacles to the tnumph o.t
the Bush Doctnne. . .
One IS the sheer difficulty
of embedd.mg ~emocracy 111
M1ddle East cult~res that
have never known 1t. ..
The second IS the posslbilIty that democracy will be
short:hved: as tt has been 111
Russia, with . popular rule
quickly g~vmg ~ay to
renewed dictatorship,. and
possibly Islamic extrem1sm
And the third IS the resJstance of those who have
everythmg to lose If democracy ~ucceeds.
In Iraq, those forces.
Saddam1sts . and lslamists,
arc committing mayhem
every day to prevent a stable
government from taking
hold.
It's hard to believe that
Syna, Iran and the terronst
forces · they
aid
AI
Qaeda.
Hezhollah,
lslam1c Jihad, Hamas and
the rest - will let themse lves be blown away by the
forces of freedom
Under pressure from the
Lebanese population and the

Morton
Kondracke

·
,
authontarian rule is not the
wave of the future; 11 IS the
last gasp of a discredited
past.".
,
.
Is It Bush s dom.11,? In
m~ny quarters - tho~gh not
Widely, as yet, m the
Democratlc Party-. Bush IS
gettmg credit. H1 s most
improbable
endorsement
came from Walid Jumblatt,
the Lebanese Druze leader
~ho has not always been so
fnendly to the Um.ted States.
He told The Washmgton
Post , ''It's strange for me to
say It, but th~s process of
change has st.trted because_
of the Am~ncan mvaslon ot
Iraq . I was cymcal about
Iraq._ But when I saw the
lraq1 people . voung
h .11 . three1.
k
wee sago, elg t !Til ton
them, It was the start of a
new Arab world. The Syrian
people, the Egyptian people,
all say that something is
changing The Berlin Wall
has fallen. We can see it."
It's true, as some Bush
cfilics say, that it was Iraq's
Ayatollah S1stani who 111sisted, over the Umted States
wavering, that his country's
Jan. 30 elections be held on
time. But those elections
would not have been possible without Bush's decision
to topple Saddam Hussein.
It's also true that Bush's
initiative has been expensive, particularly in lost
lives bYlh Amencan and
Iraqi.' But. if all of this really
produces a democratic
Middle East, Americans
surely will fmd It worthwhile. Bush will go down
with the late Ronald Reagan
as a histone Amencar president.
But we're not there yet,
either on the ground or in the
mind of the American publie. The latest Fox News poll
asked, "With George W.
Bush as president, do you

°

world communily, Syna is
hoping that it can get away
with a redeploy1nent of its
forces 111 Lebanon, not a
total withdrawal. It's hoping
that Hezbollah• 's demonstrations w iII be taken as a sign
that Lebanese Shiites , at
least, don ' t want full Wlthdrawa,l.
Fortunately, that's not
likely to work. France, Saudi
Arabia and the United
Nations are joimng the
Umted States m calling for a
fllll withdrawal. And foreigne! s have the power to
tntlict sCI IOU S damage on
Syria's decrepit economy if
It does not comply.
Hezbollah may not be
able to keep Syrian forces In
Lebanon. But it could try by
staging attacks against
Israel, hoping that retaliation might divert the
world 's pressure
Bush
seemed to be trying to pre. empt such· a tactic by po111ting out that the latest terror .
bombing 111 Tel Aviv was
carried out by a radical.
Palestll1mn group headquartered in Damascus.
It wi II be a maJor test of
international
resolve
whether Europe and the
Umted Nations Join the
United States m demandmg
Hezbollah's dJsai mament
So far. Europe does not li st
Hezbollah as a terrorist
group.
. Conceivably, Hezbollah
migh~ "go political" - compete in Lebanon's May eleclions. b1d to become the Si ngle most influential party in
the cotll1try's parliament
and. ultimatelv, trv. to turn
Lebanon into an Islamic
state allied with Iran and at
war with Israel.
Under Bush, the most
powerful nation on Earth is
al last fully comrmtted to the
cause of freedom. It is a historic act of leadership. It is
making a difference. But
freedom has enem1es. They
have weapons: Before this
tight is over. they are likely
to use them.

Obituaries

Ko11dracke

is

executrve editor of Roll Call.

the IJeH'spaper oj Capiro/
Hill.)

BY MALIA RULON

BIDWELL - Lucy Ferrell Cadle, 87, Bidwell, wentlo be
with the Lord on March 13, 2005, after a shan illness.
Born on July 19,1917, at Orgas, W.Va., ~he was the daughter of the late Theodore Ferrell and Alice Foster 'Ferrell. She
was a homemaker and a member of the Freewili Baptist
Chu1ch in Rul l8nd
!11 .u.ldition to her parenh , ,iJc v.as preceded Ill death by her
husband, Chilton "Chuck" Cadle 111 ISl94, and several brothers
and a sister
She is survived by her children, Charles (Faye) Cadle of
Albany, Gary Cadle of Parkersburg, W.Va., James (Elizabeth)
Cadle of Lumb,ar. Ill,, Joann (James) Coleman of Warren, Lee
Roy (Chen-y) Cadle of Mason. W.Va., Terry (Debbie) Cadle of
Springfield. Ricky (Brenda) Cadle of Bidwell. Darla Cadle of
Albany, Karen (Ronnie) Clay of Plainfield, Ill.; 14 grandchildren, 19 great-grandchildren. several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at I I a.m. on Thursday, March 17,
2005, at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. Evangelist John
Elswick will be officiating. A graveside committal service will
be held at 3:30p.m. at Pinevie.,., Cemetery lll 'MariTlfl, W.Va.
Friends may call on Wednesday, March 16, f1om 6 to 8 p.m.
at the funeral home.
Her family would like to thank he1 special fnends, Melinda
Sallee and Janice Lloyd for iheu lo;e, care and companionship.
On -line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral homes.com

Rita J. Fields
POMEROY - Rtta J. Fie ld s. 57. Pomeroy. passed away on
March 14. 2005. at Holzer Medical Cemer, Gallipolis.
She was born on February I0. 1948. in Meigs County,
daughter of the late John W. Mulford and Helen Davidson.
Mulford. She obtained a BA degree from Ohio University in
1989. She was employed by Meigs County as a social worker. She at(ended the Rutland Freewi ll Baptist Church.
.
In addilion to her parents. she was preceded in death by a
Sistei. Sandy MultiJid, and he1 father-in-law. Joseph Fields.
She is survi,ed hy her husband, Joseph Fields. Sr..
Pomeroy. sons. Joseph Fields, J t., Robert (Lisa) Fields, and
Gregory (Terra) Fields, all of Pomeroy, six granpchi ldren, a
brother. Randy (Stephame) Mulford of Cheshire; her motherin-law. Pauline Fields, and severalmeces and nephews.
Funeral services wil l be held at I p m on ·Wednesday,
March 16, 2005· at FISher Funeral Home 111 M 1ddleport .
Officiating wtll be the Rev. Jamie Fortner Burial will be in
Gilmore Cemeterv. Friends mav call on Wednesday, March
16. trom II a.m . until t1111e of service at the funeral home.
On-line condolences may be sent to ww.,., tisherfuneralhomes.com

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Ohioans and others who
receive federal grants to relocate or safeguard their homes
from hurricanes, tloodmg or
other natural disasters wouldn' t have to pay taxes on that
money under a bill approved
by the House on Monday. ·
The Internal R-evenue
Service determined last year
that these hazard mitigatton
grants were taxable under the
cur~ent law, prompting .Ia wmakers from states recently
hit by hurricanes In the
Southeast and tloodmg in the
Midwest to seek a tax exemption for the grants.
Previously. these Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency grants had not been
taxed because they were
assumed to be tax-exempl.
Without thi s l:iill , property
owners currently seeking
FEMA grants and those who
received federal assistance as
many .Is 15 yems ago would
have to pay up.
Rep. Rob Portman , a
Cmcinnati Republican who
co-sponsored the bill , stud
many Ohioans are recovering
from seven federal disasters
declared in hrs state in the
last 18 months, mostly due to
flooding caused by severe
winter srorms. They would
fall through the cracks if the
FEMA grants were taxed. he
said.
"It is often the only hope

·cruiser
from Page A1
'

Helen
- Watson

WELLSTON - Helen Elizabeth Frazee Walton, 90, of
Well ston, passed away on Friday, March II. 2005, at
Overhrook Center in Middleport. following several years of
residence dt Edgewood Manor in Wellston.
She was boru Sept. 3. 19'14, daughter of the late Mont and
Margaret Frazee of Wellston . For many years, she was a cook
at both Bundy and South Elementary Schools 111 Wellston
She is survived by a daughter, Faye (Kenny) Wiggins of
Racine. two sons, Thomas (Donna) Matteson and Paul
Walton, both of Well ston: and several grandchildren, great
grandchildren and great-great grandc hildren .
Services wtll be held at II am on Tuesd;1y, March 15, 2005,
at McWilliams Funeral Home on First Street 111 Wellston with
visitation from 10 to II a.m. pnor to the service.
Burial will be in the Hamden. Oh10 Cemetery.

Miller said vehicles need
not be on a village street to be
in non-compliance; those
vehicles deemed illegal for
operation or inoperable and
parked on private property
are also subject to fines
Planning Commission

Paul Reed, Bruce Fisher,
Mike
Gerlach.
Brenda
Phalin, Tom Dooley, and Bob
Robinson were appointed to
serve - on the Middleport
Planning Commission. The
commission will be working
closely on downtown revital ization efforts in the coming
months, lannarelli said.
School use
Council authorized the
River City Players to use the
gymnasium, stage and classrooms at the Middleport
Elementary School on Pearl
Street. lannarelli recommended allowing the theater
PATRIOT- J. Marrill Carter, 84, of Patriot, died Saturday. group to use the building
March 12, 2005, at his residence.
rent-free, if they pay the elecHe was preceded in death by his wife; Marguerite Pitchford tric and water costs associatCarter.
.
ed with the building.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Wedn~sday, March 16,
At the last council meeting,
2005, at Bethesda United Methodist Church near Patriot. President Stephen Houchins,
Burial with full military honors will follow at Bethesda who presided at the meeting,
Cemetery.
proposed a $100 monthly
Fnends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at Cremeens rental
fee for the b01lding .
Funeral Chapel 111 Gallipolis.

Deaths

Accountability, American style ·

•

I supported our war
agamst Saddam Hussein 's
mass graves and torture
chambers - and I would
have had to be a Michael
Moore clone not to support
our war against worldwide
homicidal terrorists whom
that blatherer praised as
·'Mmutemen."
However,
since lare 2002, I and other
reponers have been writing
on abuses of American
detainees, some so extreme
they violate American and
international laws against
torture.
On May 7. 2004, Secretary
of
Defense
Donald
Rumsfeld, testifying before
the House and Senate Armed
Services committees. said of
these charges of abuse:
"Each of us has had a strong
intetest in get!ing the facts
out to the American people.
We want you to know the
facts."
But Congress has resisted
appointing an independent
commission, like the Sept.
II Commission, to actually
get at all the facts - with
the power to subpoena the
chain of command up to the
very top.
Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales has shown no
interest in an independent
probe, and that's understand- ·
able as he was a key figure
m loosenmg up the rules of
interrogation - including
those in the U.S. Army Field
Manual 34-52 that expressly
prohibits ''acts of violence or
intimidation (during interrogations), including physical
or mental torture ... or exposure to ii'lliumane treatment."
And the August 2004
Schlesinger Report (The
to
Independent Panel
Rev1ew Department of
Defense Operations) · concluded that abuses of

Nat
Hentoff
----•

detainees were "widespread" and "were not just
the failure of some indiyiduals to follow k.nown standards, and they are more
than the failure of a few
leaders to enforce proper
discipline. There is both
institutional and personal
responsibility at higher
levels."
But, like Congress, the
Schlesinger Repon fell shon
of reaching those higher levels. And, as a lead editonal
in the Jan. 7 Washington
Post noted: "The record of
the past few months suggests
that the' administration will
neither hold any senior official accountable nor change
the policies that have produced this shameful record."
Moreover, in the Jan . . 8
National Journal, Stuart
Taylor
emphasized:
"Congress contmues to abdicate
its
constitutional
responsibility to provide a
legislative framework" for
our treatment of detainees.
There are members on both
sides of the aisle who are
concerned,
but
the
Republican leadership in
Congress will not move.
Congressman · Edward
Markey (D-Mass.) has again
introduced a bill that would
end "extraordinary renditions" by which the CIA
sends suspected terrorists to
countries known - including on annual
State

Department human rights
lists - for tonuring prisoners. But when New York
Times
columnist
Bob
Herbert asked a spokesman
for House Speaker Dennis
Hasten whether Hastert supports the Markey ·bill, the
· answer was: "The speaker
dqes not support the Markey
proposal. He beheves that
suspected terrorists should
be sent back to their home
countnes ."
(I
called
Hasten's otfice but there as
been n&lt;) response.)
But international treaties
we have signed, and our own
laws, forbid outsourcing torture - including to "home
countries" of alleged terrorists whom we have not
charged with any crime.
Accordingly, to get at the
facts as Donald Rumsfeld
has urged, there is no alternative but the courts, under
the separation of powers. On
March I, the American Civil
Liberties Union and Human
Rights First !formerly the
Lawyers Committee for
Human Rights)l filed suit in
an Illinois Federal District
Court, Ali, et al. v.
Rumsfeld.
The eight men represented
in the lawsuit were held in
U.S . detention centers in
Afghanistan and Iraq where,
the lawsuit claims, they
"were subjected to torture
'and other cruel and degrading treatment while there,
including severe and repeated beatings, cutting with
knives, sexual humiliation
and assault, mock executions, death threats, and
restraint in contorted and
excruciating
positions."
There were no charges
against them, and all have
since been released.
Lucas Guttentag of the
ACLU, who is lead counsel
•,

I

'

in the lawsUit, declares that
"Secretary Rumsfeld bears
direct and ultimate responsibility for this descent into
horror by. personally authorizing unlawful interrogation techniques and by
abdicatmg his legal duty to
stop torture .. . (he) has not
been held accountable f.or
his actions. "
Similar
accountability
complaints have been filed
by the ACLU 111 federal
courts in Connecticut. South
Carolina and Texas against
Col. Thomas Pqppas, Brig.
Gen. Jams K~rpmski and Lt.
Gen. Ricardo Sanchez "on
behalf of the torture victims
who were detained m Iraq ."
In the legal actions against
Rumsfeld, co-counsel retired
Rear Adm. John D. Huston,
former Judge Advocate
General of the Navy. states:
"One of the greatest
strengths of the U S. military
throughout our history has
been strong civilian leadership at the top of the chain of
command • Unfortunately,
Secretary Rumsfeld has
failed to live up to that tradition. In tile end, that imperil~
, our troops and underrm nes
the war effort."
Much of the media has
been asleep on this historic
move in the courts to affirm
our values to ourselves and the world- but I intend
to stay on this story.
Other JOurnalists are also
engaged.
When
.will
Congress and our couns join
us?
Nat Hentoff is a natio11al/y
renowned aurlrorit\' on tire
First Amendment · arrd tire
Bill of Rights and malwr of
several bonks, including
"Tire War 011 rite Bill of
Rights and the Gathering
ResiH&lt;mce" (Seven Stones
Press. 2003 ).

J. Merrill carter

Meigs

Local Briefs

from Page A1
i

Tree sale under way
POMEROY - Me1gs Soil and Water is holding its annual
tree s sales through March 31. Anyone mterested in purchasing
trees may stop at the office and pick up an order form. For
more more information call 992-4282.

Correction

•

POMEROY - The account of an attempted burglary on
Eastm,m Ridge Road was incorrect.
,
:' ..
The Me1gs'County Sheriff Department reported the mc1dent
as follows ·
"Deputies responded to a burglary in progress call at the
home of Shannon Wood on Eastman R1dge Road. The call
came from the owner of the home who rents to Ms. Wood. The
caller advised a male had entered the home and was being
held at gu npmnl by Ms. Wood's brother. Upon arrival of
deputtes. the suspect had tled on foot, a total search of the
property and surroundmg ~~~ds wlfs conducted. and the
unknown m&lt;rle IS still at large.
The Daily Sent111el regrets the error.

'

Cleanup today

RUTLAND - Rutland Town ship will start cleanup of
cemeteries in the township on Tuesday.

Plan soup dinner
SALEM CENTER - Star Grange No. 778 will hold its
annual soup dmner from II a.m. to 2 p.m . on Sunday at Star
Grange Hall. Cuunty Road I. three miles north of Salem
Center. Entertainment is planned .
.

primary exporlers of goods
and services, bnnging revenue into the county, while
local demand fur goods and
servtces from munufactunng,
wholesale and professional
service sectors were not
being met in the county, taking consumers and the1r
money out ot the county.
Agnculture and lorestry
make up 11.2 percent of
Meigs County 's economy,
according to the study, many
times the averaQe stze of the
farming antl forestry sector m
other
Ohio
counties'
economies. Average wages 1n
those industnes are also considerably higher here than 1n
other pans of the state.
Those industries and ihe
constructiOn industry have
seen the largest mcreases 111
scope between 1991 and
2000. with manufacturing.
mil)ing and wholesale se~tors
declining the most during the
same tune period.
The govemment - town-

For the Record
_Divorce

.Woodland group meets
ATHENS - SiJUtheast Ohm Woodland IntereSt Group
meeb at 7 p.m. at Athens County Extension Office. Carlin
Emmanuel of the Nature Conservancy Will present the pro~ram. Free seedltn~ distrtbution will take place . ' Information
IS available by calltng 593-8555.

·-

-------

AEP

House passes bill to make
disaster mitigation grants tax-free

Lucy Ferrell cadle

.

(Morro11

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Expect freedom foes to stage violent counterat(acks
think the world IS generally
heading in a better direction
or a worse direction?" The

r

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

POMEROY - An action
for divorce l1.1s been fi led m
Metg s County ComJnon
Pleas Court by• James A.
Watso n. Coolville. agmnst
Arney W Watson . Coolville.

for rcpctnivc loss disaster
VIClims." Portman said.
"Many of the people who
have taken ;tdvantage of such
assistance are people livmg
in lower-valued p10perty in
the flood plam who cannot
,IIford ,,, mmc onlheir own"
Since qate taxes often are
calculated based on federal
wages. the FEMA grants
would pose a double hit for
residents In many states.
111clmling Ohio.
"II It 's tax mcome at the
federal level. It's tax mcome
111
Ohio,"
sa1d
Ga~y
Gudmundson, .~ · spokesm an
for the· Ohio Dep.utment of
Taxation
'Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fia. ,
the bill's sponsor. smd, "2004
was a busy, busy year 101
Floridmns, with tour humcanes striking landfall, and
the last thmg people need to
be dca l111 g With IS ap Income
tax burden placed on them
for accepting grams from the
federal governmcnl ..
The bill had strong bipartisan support in the Ho!Jse and
passed on a voice vote. Sen.
Krt Bond. R-Mo .. has sponsored a compamon measure
in the Senate. which was
expected to quickly pass the
bill in time for this year's
April 15 tax de,Idline.
The proposal is also backed
by Presiclent Bush , who
mcluded $20 million in his
budget proposal for next year
and $400 milliOn over I 0
years to pay Ior makmg these
grants tax-free.

from Page A1
smd he had not heard any
1111cres1 expressed In that
area
In other counci l busmess,
Councilwoman
Mary
McAngus asked If a donation
could be made to the Meigs
County Shenff's Office for
the reopening of the jail.
Mayor John Musser said
that plans had been made to
make a donation from the
Pomeroy
Poli ce
Departme nt's
Law
Enfon;emenl Trust Fund.
which me ans no taxpayer
monev would be used.
Councilman
George
Wright sa id that he had
inspected High Street after a
resident complaint about pot
hole ~ and found that. "it's in
bad shape ..
Mtisser said that he would
add it to the lisl of areas that
he dnd Street Superintendent
Li ck Krautter are visiting·
throughout the vil lage.
Po111eruy Poli ce Cl11ef
Mark E. Prolfitt Informed
council oi ihe resignation of
Lt. AIan Queen
Protfitt smd that Queen had
resigned tor

rm ~mnal rea~on~

but wanted to stay on as a

Ban
from Page A1

part-time. cal l-111 pairolman
"He\ a frnc. outstandmg
pe"on ... Prolfitt said about
Queen. "I hate 10 see h1111
go."

Proffitt recommended part time Pomeroy Patrolman
Christopher Gruber be considered for Queen\ tull-ume
posiuon pending success ful
completion of a physical.
"We don't h,Ive much ot a
choice." Musser said about
pa'ying f()J· Gruber's physical.
"We h.t\e to support the
police department"
It was .InnowKed thai the
laie"
Commun ity
De,elopmenl Block Grant
meeting "il l he held at 7:30
p.m. on Thu1 sda) at the
Meig~
Senior
Center.
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun
sii e"eJ th.~t cnmmun iiV
attendance 1&lt; e"eniial 1o 1he
§ra nt· ~ :-.ucce~-...

Motion 9.05 was passed
aciJthf.ng 2005 appiOpnalions . a~d Motion I0.05 w.Js
pa"ed trans lei nng ); I0.000
, from ih e ~enera lio the slreer
lund
Mussel called the meetmg ,
Jnto executt\'e ,e,~Jon to JJ..,-.
cuss legal

maHer~

All tn embers ol council
were present lor the meetmg
with the exceptions ol
Councilme n Todd Norton
and Jacki e Welker
the theme lo1 1Im year\ contest would he "Cie.lf!ng the
A1r: Second-hand SmokeDanQer Zone .. All sc hool
age ' children In ~le1gs
Count) .ne eiigihle to particIpate 111 the contest v.hich
ca n Incl ude suhmJttlng draw in gs. posters and mixed
media emnes Emnes "ill be
picked up Apnl 18 at the
schools whi,·h Includes faithbased schools

Fairgrounds.
. • The Middleport -Pomeroy
Rotary Club will hold a pancake breakfast the mormng ol
the Relay For Lite wuh all
Houchins voted against the proceeds gomg to the cancer
,
chanty
measure
Gallia-Meigs
Con1munny
•
Other ·business
• Gallid-t'vle Jg:-. Community
Action recently rece1ved a
Council also
· Action announced that Lora
• Approved the first re~ding g1 ant to transport cancer Rawson left her posnion as
of an ordmance transfet ring p.Itients to and from
tobacco pre\ ention spec ialist
Federal
Emergency chemo1he1 apy t1 eatments
• The Fraternal Order of the to take a position" ith Holzer
Management Agency funds
into the general lund for Eagles v.tll hold. a cMnty Medi cal Center's tobacco
reimbursement of overume spaghetti dinner lor the cessation program ~aw~on
County
Health wa&lt; . re~laced by Nancy
expenses from the 2002 ice Meigs
Department and Tuberculosis Barker.
storm.
• OSU Extension Educator
• Adopted a re solution Relay for Life team from
Becky
Baer v.as recogntzed
noon
to
4
p.m.
Saturday
at
allowing the village to particby
the
coalition
for her work
ipate in the state cooper~t1ve 224 E. Main St., Pomeroy.
throtighoul
the
community
• Lora Rawson was reinpurchasing program for purThe next meelmg uf 1he
stated
as chau wom'an of the
chases for the police. fire . '
Me1~s
County Tobacco
street and public works coalition.
Pre
\-ent
IOn
and
Meigs
• Meigs County Cancer
departments. The cost "
C.IrdiO\ ascular
lmtiattve w1ll meet at I 30 County
$110.
Health
(CV
H
1 Coalition will /
p.m.
Saturday
at
the
Meigs
• Approved the mayor 's
be
atll.30
p.m
on May 16 in
report of fees and fines col- Senior Cemcr.
• The Kick Butts Day the basement of the Pomeroy
lecteo in the ~mount of
Committee
announced that Libwy .
$8,842.57.
• Approved payment of
bills 111 the amount of
'Oh io's Mine Subsidence
$24,581.07.
Insurance
program offers
• Approved a report from
low-cost insurance to protect
the income tax otfice, with
property' owners from strucfrom
PageA1
Houchins vming m oppositural
damage caused by the
tion, and reports from the
collapse
of an underground
refuse and public works Hocking. Holmes, Jackson.
mine:·
said
Insurance direcdepartments.
Jefferson ,
Lawrence,
• Excused Council mem- Mahoning, Meigs, Monroe. tor Ann Womer BenJamin.
bers Jeff Peckham imd Laurie Morgan, Muskingum, Noble. noting that residents can call
Reed from the meeting.
Perry,
Scioto,
Stark, the Department's consumer
Also present were Council Trumbull, Tucasawas, Vinton hot line at 1-800-686-1526 for
members Kathy Scott and and Washington. The option- more mfo rmation .
''While property damage
Robert Robmson and Fiscal al counties are Delaware,
from
mine subsidence is
Ene, Geauga, Lake , Licking,
Officer Susan Baker
infrequent.
it IS potential hazMedina, Ottawea, Portage,
Preble , Summil, and Wayne ard that impacts th€ safety
and econom1c well being of
ship, village, county and state counties
families
and communities m
agencies, including the Ohio
"By updating our laws it is
Oh1o
's
coal-bearing
counDepartment of Transportation my hope that we can provide
- is the sector employing the yet another safeguard for ties." Sam Speck. director of
most workers m Me1gs County, lam11ies and property own- the Ohio Department of
Natural Re sources. said.
employing 17.2 percent of the ers." Stewart said.
"The General Asse mblv
workforce. Retail busmesses
Approximately
5.000
and
the Ohio Department of
employ 13.6 percent. education 'Underground mine s have
and health 12.4 percent, and been abandoned in Ohio dur- Insurance have shown great
construction trades 10.5 per- mg the man y ye.trs coal min- le~dersh1p in recogmz111g the
cent. Manubcturing industries In!:! has been an act1ve indu~ ­ ImpOit.mce of mine subsiemployed only 1.2 percent of try. accurdmg to the Ohio dence Insuiance ~nd making
those working m Me1g~ Department
of Natural sigmlicanl unprmements m
the CO\ erage it prm ides."
County in 2002.
Re sources.

Mine

On Serta's Finest·

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 15,2005

Lawmakers concerned about standards over online charter schools
BY

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Division I All-Ohio, Page B2
Division II AII·Ohlo, Page B2
Chaney.will return for NIT, Page B6
CB Law visits with Stealers, Page 86

•

ANDREW

WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS- Lawmakers
arc taking another look at rules
governing online charter
· schools as the digital alternative
to bricks-and-mortar . classrooms ~o ntinues to grow in
Ohio.
Rep. Kevin DeWine, a suburban Dayton Republican ,
·said he's heard concerns from
some su perintendents about
students abusing the online
school system.
DeWine said he may introduce provision s into the state
budget that would add regulations such as requiring fre'
quent contact with teachers.
'T m concerned about the
number of e-schools and the
number of kids going to eschools, whether they're getting the kind of daily interaction from a certified teacher
that can assure us they're get. ting a quality educati on,"
De Wine said Monday.
About 15.800 of Ohio's 1.8
million sChoolchi ldren altend
online schools. They are
among the state's 62,000
charter school students.
Of online charter stttdents,
about 28 percent attend the 37
digital schools sponsored by
traditional public schools.
That includes students at
TRECA Digital, sponsored by
the Tri-Rivers Career Center
in Marion . The rest attend
three privately run online
schools.
according
to
Department of Education
data.
Two years ago the state· had
only 10 online sc hools, six of
them sponsored by traditional
public school s. The new digital schools are part of the
growing number of charter
· sc hool s spo.nsored by 'traditional public school di'stricts.
This year. 44 di stricts are
,sponsoring a total of 57 charter ·schools, the department
said .
Those district- sponsored
schools are getting $39 million in state aid, or 9 percent
of the $417 'million the state
will spend this.year on a total
of 250 charter schools.
-Supporters say the privately
run, publicly funded schools
are an alternative for students
who aren't being served by
school
di stri ct.
their
Opponents say the sc hool s
drain needed money from
public schools and aren 't held
. . accountable for poor academic performance.
Lawmakers already enacted
new regulations for online
schools two years ago, said
Steve Ramsey, president of
the Ohio . Charter Schools
Association.
. : That law requires online
schools to have telephone
lines hooked up to students'
hou ses and equipment to
count enrollment before
school starts.
· The law also requires some
face-to-face
meetings
between teachers and students

Tu~sday,

"

•

Boys .basketball state

: tou~nament pairings
OOLUMBI.IS (AP) - Pairin gs tor tiie
otale baskelballioumament

~bo!'s

1·;.)

'

~·

.'

'

' · , · , STATE SEMIFINALS
,AU Qlil1.98 Valve City Arana, Cofvmt&gt;vs

at

•
DIVISION I
Menofleld Sr. (24·1) vs. .can. McKinley
(25·1), Friday, .5:15 p.m.; Cln. St Xavier
(21·5)·vs. Clit. Moeller (22-3), Friday, 8:30

p.m.

FIN.!IL- Salultiay. 8:30p.m.

.

'

.

DIVISION II
Woosl0 r 1llway (23-3) vo. Cols. Linden
McKinley (1H4), Thursday, 10:45 a.m.;
Qa~ Dunbar (22-4) vs. Upper Sandusky
(25~). Thuroday. 2 p.m.
FINAL- Sslultisy, 10:45 am.

AP Photo/Kitchlro Solo

Sixth-graders Brandon Alle.n-, right, and Br ya n Sprinkler take the state proficiency tes't at Marion
City Digital Academy ·in Marion. Lawmakers are taking another look at rules governing online
charter schools as the digital alternative to bricks-and-mortar class rooms continues to grow in
Ohio. In addition to a handful of large, privately run on li ne charter schools, almost 40 school
cJjstricts now sponsor the ir own digital school, according to the Department of Education.
and that the schools install til- deve loped in thi s year's budtering software to hlock ge t for Ohio public school s.
obscene material.
The Ed ucation Department
The _superintendent of the said more students are
state's large" on line scho()l enrolled in publk and charter
questioned the need for fur- schools than expected when
ther regulations. He said the ,lawm ake" passed the twoschools' success shows they year budget in 2003.
are helping children who were
Marion city schools created
rreviously in danger of leav- Marion Digital Academy two
ing schoo l al toget her. .
years ago as it saw .&gt;t udents
Online sc hools "are being leaving for schools like cCOT.
successful in bringing nontra- and tak ing their state aid wi th
ditional studen ts back into the them.
public schools." said Jeffrey
"This was another source to
Forster of Col umb us-based either rec rui t some lost funds
Electron ic Classroom of or at least break even fundingTomorrow. with abo ut 6.500 wise." said Ray Haines, the
st ude nts.
· di gital acade my's dean of stuState budget official s said ·dents. "Education has become
the growi ng en rollment in a competitive business.''
charter· schools played a part
The school has abOut 100
in a $2lJ5 million shortfall that st udents , a mi x of former

home schoolers. children
deemed unli kely to graduate
from the traditional school ·
system and children with
problems getting to school
regularly.
· The district benefits finan cially by contracting out services to the di gital school,
including teachers, • and getting back a portion of state aid
fo r each student that attends
the online school, Haines said.
Akron Digi tal Academy has
a similar arrangement and will
pay the district about $ 1.2
million for teachers' salaries
this year, said academy
spokeswoman Joann Robb.
On the Net:
Department of' Education:

http://www.ode.state.'oh.usl

•
DIIIISION m
loudonville (22·3) vs. Cln. N. College Hill
!)!6·1). Friday, 10:45 a.m.; Ironton (25·0)
YO. Archbold (24·1), Friday, 2 p.m.

Thesday, March 15
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise to
41 with today' s low of 27
occurri ng around 6:00am.
Skies will be mostly sunny
to mostly cloudy with calm
turning from the northwest
as the morning progresses.
. Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will be a cloudy afternoon. Temperatures will
linge r at 41 with today 's
high of 43 . occurring
around 3:00pm. Winds will
be 5 MPH from the northwest tur(\ing froin the west
as the afternoon progresses.
Eve11i11g (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It will remain cloudy.
Temperatures will hover at
33. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the northwest turning
from the north as the
evemng p~ogre sses.

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will remain
around 29. Skies will range
from partly cloudy . to
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the north turning
from the northeast as the
overni ght progresses.
Wednesday, March 16

Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperature;; will climb
from 28 to 41 by late this
morning . Skies will be
partly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast. ·
Afternootl (1·6 p.m.)
Temperatures will' rise
from 42 early this afternoon to 43 by 3:00pm then
drop down to 39 late afternoon. Skies will be mostly
sunny to partly cloudy wit~
5 MPH winds from the
northeast. · -.)

FINAL - Sslurdsy, 5:15p.m.

' DNISIONIV
Cle. His. Lutheran E. (20-5) vs. Mlnslsr
(21-4). Thuroday, 5:15 p.m.; Continental
(22·3) vs. Cots. A1rlcentrlc 125·1).
Thursday, 8:30 p.m.
•

COLLEGE l3ASKETI3ALL

NCAA's mid-majors get another tough lesson ·
BY MICHAEL MAROT

Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS
Charlie Coles thought Miami
of Ohio's resume was strong
enough for an at-large bid to
the NCAA tournament: ·a 1910 record, the Mid-American
Conference regular-season
title, No : 29 in the RPI and asc hedule strength of 49.
It didn't impress the I0member se lection commi'ttee.
and .the RedHawks coach is
worried about the message
being . se nt to the MAC ,
which got just one team in
the 65-team field despite fi ve

teams ranked. in the top 55 of
the RPI.
"What it says i' that the
comm ittee has never, ever
respected our league," Coles
said Monday, one day after
the brackets were announced.
As usual, the six power
conferences
Atlantic
Coast, Big East, Big Ten, Big
12, Pac- 10 and Southeastern
- dominated the field. They
accounted for 31 of the 65
teams, including 25 of 34 atlarge bids.
Add soon, to-be Big East
members Louisville and
Cincinnati, from Conference
USA, and the numbers
increase to 33 and 26.

That left only eight spots
open for teams in conferences lik e the MAC and
Atlantic 10.. Three of those
were s wa Ilowed up hy upset
winners in the c01iference
tournaments - so mething
committ ee cha irman Bob
Bowlsby suggested Monday
played a key . part in some
team's being left ·out.
"The committ ee 't hought
there were better teams. but 'l
would also suggest that some
of the upsets may have affected the MAC teams. incl uding
Buffalo,"
Miami
and
Bowlsby s.aid.
But the annual debate
about life in a mid-major

_
Browns
release
Brown

Browns sign
veteran DT Fisk
•

CLEVELAND (AP) ·Defensive tackle Jason Fisk
signed a . three-year contract
Monday with the Cleveland
Browns.
; The I0-year veteran played
ihe last' three seasons with
San Diego. He recorded 30 .
tackles and one sack in 15
games in 2004.
Fisk should gtve the
Brown s some depth following the trade of defensive
tackle Gerard Warren to
Denver for a fourth -round
draft pick.
· Fisk was a seventh-round
pick of the Vikings out of
Stanford in 1995. He played
four seasons with Minnesota
and three with Tenne ssee.
The · 32-year-old
has
appeared in II postseason ·
games, starting six. He had
two sacks in the Vikings'
NFC Championship loss to
Atlanta in 1999, and sacked
Kurt Warner in the Titans'
Super Bowl loss to St. 'Loui s
in 2000.
Fisk's career totals include
450 tackles, 19 sacks and
three interceptions in 150
games.

to 3-year deal

... and have a place to call your own.
Farmers Bank invites you to Jock up this great
mortgage Joan rate for not one... not two ...but
thrt!e full years! .This discounted adjustable rate
· mortgage is available for a limited time for a first
mortgage on a primary ,residence. If you are
shopping for a home or looking to refinance your
existipg mortgage, tall Farmers first!
''
'

.

~-

'

' •APRfaAIIUIPB•' eUWIRi'*fl ...... ioalwttuiWCUi 111P
· t11111an. AP!l.._a~~S10D.eaa••4.a*•"; ..,"',.
. . . . . hi. . .llll~lllnil, ~-~~~ ts30.81, Iaiii " ' - clllr1JI"'
..,,~llllltfiM I

tll\llGO_..Iranl . . . . . . .. . .

11117&amp; ,... ....... ,. ~ IIlii . . . . ...-y
IWIMIIIOI!hlhlll ~ . ...,_.~ 1AdclwnWjn•iMI !i*'ID
wl»-rllla,of 80%. l.oi!I._IN.., (ll1l'j lo Jri!*Y rlllduncl, OWIIIfo

. . . ....

•

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company.

I

••k:llof•
""""·loin rates~
fa' loans wttlllillmS
._..IWIUhd.
Rlltl!m!tNe lor alimilld ~

DCalpied .. Same
UP tO 30)111n. Prciplitr

1111111 ~ . . IIAwllll .... _l!'d_.U

• ' I ..,, *4011fGirt

. . . . lillf . . . . . . . . . , . .................. .

Pomeroy
Mason
Tupper&amp; Plains
Gallipolis

992.2136
773.8400
887.3161
446.2265

Bowlsby ha' tal~ecl freleague didn't ·end with that
exrlanation . .
quently for the past two years
A yea r ago, Saint Joseph's ahoul
eva luat in g each
earned a top 'eed. This year school'' comp le te re,ume ,
the Hawks ( 19-11) were includ ing conference RPI ratdoomed by an RPI of 6iJ and •ng,.
According .to the NCAA's
a 3-8 nonconference sc hedule. .
I
·
own number&gt;. the MAC was
Wichita State 120-9). of the the IOth 'lrmige't league this
MiS&gt;ouri V;illey Conference. year. Conference USA.
was left out despite an RPI of which ranked ninth. got four
47 . Three oijler teams were bids. The Mountain West and
We ste rn At hl etic. wh ich
tak en from th e MVC Southern Illinois, Creighton ranked lith and 12th. each
had two teams make it.
and Northern Iowa.
Northeastern (24,9). of
"You may eliminate someAmerica East. didn't even body by their nonconference
appear on the NCAA's li sI of · schedule or the ir road record,
·
other teams considered
despite an RPl or 42.
Please see Lesson, Bl

FINAL- Saturday, 2 p.m.

~engals sign DT
~ryan Robinson

Local Stocks
ACI- 43.97
AEP- 34.25
Akzo- 44:83
Ashland Inc. - 67 .so
AT&amp;T -19.42
BU -12.06
Jlob Evans - 23.25
BorgWamer -· 53.06
Champion - 4.13
Channing Shops - 8. 73
J:lty Holding - 31.02
Col- 47.90
DG- 22.17
DuPont- 53.94
Federal Mogul- .34
Gannett - .7 9.89
General Electric - 36.22
GKNLY- 5.1
·Harley Davidson - ·60.91
JPM- 36.45
Kmart -128.75
Kroeer ..:.. 16.02
Ltd.- 25.12
NSC- 37.77
Oak Hill Financial - 35.34
ova- 33.22
BBT:.... 39.83
Peoples- 27.17
Pepsico - 52.73
Premier - 11.35
Rockwell - 59.18
Rocky Boots - 29.06
RD Shell :- 63.15
. SBC .,.... 24.09
Sears - 58.00
USB- 29.82
WaJ.Mart - 51.30
Wendy's - 39.34
· Worthington - 20.20
Dally stock reports are the
4. p.m. clOIIn&amp; quotn of the
pre~ day's transactions,
· provided by Smith Par~ners
at Advnt Inc. of Gallipolis.

March 15, 2005

j

CINCINNATI (AP)
Free-agent defensive tackle
Bryan Robin son signed a
three-year contract with the
Cincinnati
Benga ls on
Monday, bol stering t~e
team's porous run defense.
The Bengals declined to
release contract details . The
team's Web site reported it
was a $6 million deal.
Robinson, 30, played six
seasons with Chicttgti before
spen&lt;;ling last season in
Miami , where he had 69
tackles and 13 starts. .
- The Toledo nativ e has
missed just one game the last
six seasons, starting 90 of 96
games.
Rob inson is the Bengals'
third signing since the free agent season began March 2.
The team re-signed wide
receiver
TJ.
Houshmandzadeh and running back Rudi Johnson. who
lost the chance to become an
unrestricted free age nt when
the Bengal s declared him
their fran,hise player.

Boozer to miss
Cleveland return
CLEVELAND (AP) fans wiU have to
save their boos and catcalls
for Carlos Boozer until ne xt
season:
. Boozer is recovering from
a foot injury and won't play
.against his former team
Tuesday night, · Utah Jazz .
spokeswoman Cindy Edman
said.
·
· "He has decided to stay
back ln Salt Lake and rehab,"
Edman said. "He won'tjoin
us at all on the five-game
trip."
Boozer sprai.ned his right ·
foot at Phoenix on Feb. 14.
· He's averaging a team-high
. 17.8 points and 9.0 rebounds
in 51 games.
. l
C~valiers

AP photo

Detroit Tigers' Vance Wilson (26) slides safely home as the ball ski ps past Cincinnati Red s catcher Dane Sardinha in the
seventh inning of spring training baseball Monday in Sarasota, Fla. Wilson and teammate Jason Smith scored on the error.

Reds tame Detroit in split squad win1
SARASOTA , Fla. (AP) The Cincinnati Reds are
looking to free'agent acquisit ion Eric Milton to lead an
improved starting rotation
this year.
He pleased manager Dave
Miley on Monday by working five strong innings in a
7-5 victory over the Detroit
Tigers in a split-squad game.
The Red s scored three
run s in the first and Milton
made it stand up. He walked
Dmitri Young and allowed a

run-scoring double to Byro n
Gettis, but little else.
Young also singled in the
fourth, but Milton retired II
Of the last 12 batters he
faced. He allowed one
earned run , two hi ts and a
walk, with two strikeouts.
" Milton . threw great,' ~
Miley said. "He used all his
pitches and pitched inside."
He was the first Cincinnati .
starter this spring to Cgfll'plete five innings.
.
. " I got a ltttl e mote work tn

than expected." Milton said.
"I was only going to throw
65 pitches but 1 was pretty
efficient. 1 got through five
innings with ·tess than 60
pitches.''
·
Detroit went ahead with
four runs off reliever Jose
Acevedo in the seventh. But
Cincinnati's Rub Stratton
homered. with Pedro 'Swan n
and Edwin Encarnacion on ·
base. off Mike Bynum in the
eighth to put the Reds ahead
for good.

Ben Weber pitched a
scoreless -.e ighth for hi s first
win and Ricky Stone picked
up the save with a perfect
mnth.
. ·
Milton said'he will try to
extend his outings as he gets
more work.
"I feel good.". he said.
·-rm goi ng to keep doin g the .
same thing. I'll stay on four ·
dltys rest and pi tch every
fifth day the rest of the way.
I'll start to extend my pitch
count to 70-75 pitches."

CLEVELAND (A PJ Defensive end Cowrtney
Brown was released Monday ·
.by
the
C I.e v e I an d
Browns. who
say they want to
re-sign the for- .
mer No. I overall drah pi ck to
a new contract.
Brown played five injuryplagued seasons with the
'Browns and never li ved up to
expectations. He was cut a
day before he was due a $2.5
million roster bonus.
The Browns attempted to
redo· his contract before
releasing nim and will con-.
tinue talks with his agent,
Marvi n Demoff.
"We are hoping this is :i.
tem.porary situ ation . and
Courtney chooses to continue
his career wi th the Browns."
Brown; general manager Phil ,
Savage said in a statement.
A message left seeking
comment from Demoff was
not returned.
Last month. Brown said
he'd be willing to move to
linebacker in new coach
Romeo Crennel 's 3-4 defensive sc heme.
Brown mi ssed 33 games
with injurie s the past four
seasons. includ ing the final
14 games last season · after
tearing a li gament in his foot.
Injurie s severe ly limited
Brown 's playing time and
production as a pass-rusher.
He totaled just 17 sacks in 47
games. Hi s injuries included
a torn knee ligament, a hi gh
ankle sprain . microfracture
knee surgery and a ruptured
r·ight hicers tendon.
Brown\ rookie season in

2000 was· hi s most productive. Be appeare\1 in all 16
games. recording 70' tackles
and 4.5 'acks:

Oakland, Alabama A&amp;M ready
to tip NCAA's opening round
Bv RusTY

apologies,': Kampe said. themselves. They kept play"Our schedule was ran ked ing and they found a way."
No. I by the Sagarin ratings
A&amp;M ·s problems weren't
at the end of the non-cotifer- on the court. They won the
DAYTON - As an NCAA ence. 1 wouldn 't do that Southwestern
Athletic
moderator
introduced again,' but it definitely pre- Conference's regular-seaso n
Oakland coach Greg Kampe pared us to get here." ·
title and then rolled to the
·on Monday night. he menTh G · 1·
dt
f
·
·
tioned the Grizzlies' 12- 18
e rtzz tes regr&lt;Jupe o con erence s
tournament
win their last five games. championship to also make
·
record.
winning the Mt'd •C ontinent
their first trip to the NCAA
"You real!~ had to bring Conference tournament title tournament.
that up, didil t you?" Kampe by puliing off three upsets on , Before the season started.
scolded in mock di sg ust.
"Couldn 't you have said 18- consecutive days by a total of coach Vann Pettaway called
. seven points to grab their first his team together to tell them
12?" .
The Grizzlies and Alabama NCAA tournament bid . It that he had been diagnosed ·
A&amp;M (18-13) will meet took Pierre Dukes' 3-pointer with prostate cancer. His docTuesday night in the play-in with I .3 seconds left .for tors suggested he Jeave the
game at the University of Oakland to upset top-seeded team to 'receive treatment' but
Dayton after weathering ·Sea- Oral Roberts 61 -60 in the he returneu for what has
sons tilled with adversity.
final..
'become a magical ride.
Oakland opened its eighth
That shot extended the
"Basketball has been good
season in Division I 0-7 , los- streak to four years m a row medicine for me," he 'aid.
ing by an average of 13 points ·that a team with a .losing· "They (the doctor&gt; I told me·
a game. The opponent s: record has made it into the to take . the year off. hut
Illinois, Marquette, Xav ier, NCAA field .
there'; no way· I could have
Missouri, . Texas A&amp;M,
Asked whal the 0-7 start made it without hasketball."
AP
Ka•lsas State and Saint Louis. says about Oakland 's players,
The best medicine he. co~ld
"We understand our record Alabama A&amp;M forward Joe have received this season was Oakland. forward Rawle Marshall dunks the ball during practice
tor the NCAA play-in game Monday in Dayton . Marshall leads
is not what some people think Martin said. ''They're tough .
Oakland
in scoring with 19.7 points per game .
Please see D•yton. Bl
it should be . We make no They didn't get down on
MILLER

Associated Press

'

�Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

1~ 2005

Tuesday, Ma•·ch

www.mydailysentincl.com

~rthune

PREP BASKETl3ALL

Three of four players of the year
are packing for state tournament
C0Ll 1 MBUS (AP )
scnror. averaged 18.8 potn!s,
Three players headed for 11. 1 assists. 7 steals and 7.X
this week's st.rtc boys bas- rebounds .r game for the
ketball tuurn.rrncnl and st,Iic's No. 1-r.t nked team .
~lnuthc1 \vho J Wd 1111..,'-~d his Hrs " ltitll'" broiher, Jon , ,, 6lourih l'{)nSCCUUVC trip[() the 6 sophomore. is on the secfi n.rl four le&lt;1d · I he 2004- ond te.un after averaging
Pre" 2.\.tj points. 7 rebounds and
2005
Assuci.tkd
Dtvrsion I ami Dtv tsio n II 2.9 assrsts a ga me. Amlthe tr
All-Ohio teams announced father. Ke ith. grabbed coach
of the year honors for JeadMond ay.
The pi.Iyers uf !he yea r in i ng the Rams to the poll
Dtvi'!on II are Upper crown , a perfect 25-0 record
Sandusky 's Jacob Dtebler so far, and It s Thursday
and
Daylo n
Dunbar's aflet:noon date wnh Dunbar
Dc~equan Conk . whu\~ tc.Jnh. (22-4)
Thursday's firs! Divisron
Will meel tn the· scm tfi nab.
In D11 i&gt;~on I. rhc wp play- J-1 semi pils Wooster Triway
ers .rre .lohnqy Wolf. who ·123- 3) aga inst surpnsin g
helped CIIICtnn dlt St. Xavier Colum bus Linden McKinley
back tnlo til e slat es. and (11 - 14). The winners square
Jaml'llc Co rnlc y. 1NI10se ofl Satun.lay afte rn oon 10
Columbus Brookh&lt;I\'Cn team dcctdc the 111le.
Cook is a 6-5 junior who
los! in !he region.rl findl s to
fall shun uf a fourth co nsec- averaged 22.6 points. 11.5
utt ve appearance d! Value rebou11ds and 5 ass tst s a
City Arena
game
.
Joining Cook ami Diebler
Dreble rs are e&gt;erywhere
on the Division II lea m. it on the first team are : Korey
seems .lac·ob , a 6-foot-3 Spates, Warrensville Heights

(6- 1, sr., 26.5); Morgan
Le wi s, Paine svi lle Harv ey
(6-3, sr.. 20.1 ); Dwayne
Jack so n. Cuyahoga Fall s
Walsh .Jesuit (6- 3, sr., 2 1.0) ;
Chad
Fender,
Poland
Seminary (6-2. sr., 18 .2 );
Dante Jackson. Greenfield
McClain (6-5. soph .. 24.9);
Bnan
Kreefer,
East
Liverpool (6-7, sr.. 27.4),
and Mike Foul, Columbus
Hamilton Township (6-4. jr..
28 8) .

In Division I. Comley ts a
6-6 senior who hit fo r 21.1
points and 13 rebound s a
game while shooting 60 percent from the fi eld The
Penn State signee led lm
team to a 16-4 regular-season record .
Wolf, it 6-2 senior, recorded 24.3 pornt'&gt; a game forS t
Xavier (21-5), w,h ich battl es
c'rosstown rival Moeller (223) in Friday 's final semifi.nal. The earlier game matches Mansfield Senior (24 - 1)
against Canton McKinley

(2 5-1 ), with the fin ale set for
8.30 p,m . Saturday.
That · semifin'al
also
matche s the division's
coaches of th e year
Mansfield Senior IS Jed by
Gregg Colltns. who has won
more !han 300 games in a
career that include s two
stale
lilies
whil e
at
Le xil\gton.
Canton McKinle y. the No.
tea m in the fina l
As socra ted Press re gularseason poll . rs led by Dave
Hoover. who is brin ging hi s
Bulldogs b.rck to the state
tournament
for the second,
'
year in a row .
The rest or !he ftrst -team er~ in Division J rncluded:
Dall.ts Lauder dal e, Solon
(6-9, so ph.. 18. 0 ); Travi s
Walton. Lrma Sen1or (6-2.
sr.. ll) 4); B.J Raymond .
Toledo St. John' s (6-6. sr..
20.8): and Bret Wackerl y,
North Canton Hoover (5-I 0,
sr , 18.3).

FIRST TEAM: Jamelle . Corntey,
Columbus Brookhaven, 6-foot-6 , senior,
21.1 p01nts per game; Johnny Wolf, C1n
St. xavter, 6·2, sr., 24 3· D~llas
Lauderdale, Solon, 6-9, soph , 18 0 ,
Travis Walton, Lima Sr., 6·2, sr, 19 4,
B.J. Raymond, Tot. St. John's, 6·6, sr.
20.8; Brei Wackerly, N. Can ton Hoover.
5·10, sr , 18.3.
Players of the year: Jamelle CorniEty,
Cbls. Brookhaven, Johnny Wolf, Cln Sl
Xavier.
Coaches of the year: Gregg Collins,
Mansfield St., Dave Hoover, Canton
McK1nl~y

SECOND TEI\M:
Bon Howlo ll ,
Marietta, 6-0, sr., 30 1, Raymar Morgan ,
Canton McKmley, 6·7 , Jr., 18 3; Zach
Hillesland, Tot St John's, 6-7 , sr., i 5.3,
Jllmes Dews, Lakota E., 6-4, jr . 20 3,
Dennis Santiago, M1dpark, 5·10, sr,
21 0; Cordaryl Ballard, Cols Mifflin, 6-3.
sr , 22 3; Kyle Madsen, Dublin Coffman,
6-9 Sf., 17.3.

THIRD TEAM: Jonathon Avery,
Mansfield Sr, 6-5, sr., 16 7; Adam May,
Mentor, 6·7, jr., 23.3: Desomnd Motley,
Euclid, 6·4, jr., 16.9 Nate Miller, Spnng
S, 6·4, sr , 19 2; Mana Edwards, Mass
Washington, 6·2,Jr, 17.3, Ricky Jackson
Canton McKinley, 6·6, jr , •13 4, Chris
McKnight, lancaster, 6-6, Jr., 18.3, Chrrs
Kmghl , Cin Withrow, &amp;-6, sr , 23 9
Special Mention
Aaron Laflin, Pickerington N ; Jerome
Tillman, BeavercrEtek; Scot Grote
Cents'rvll!e: Patrie~ Howe, logar:J; Clint

on the recommendattons of a state media

panel:

Painesville Harvey, 6-3, sr, 20 1. Jacob
Oiebler, Upper Sandusky. 6·3, sr., 18.8,

sr.,

21 0, Chad Fender, Poland
Seminary, 6·2, sr , 18 2; Danra Jacksoo,

Greenfield McClain, 6-5,. soph .. 24.9:
Brian Kreefer, E Liverpool, 6·7, sr., 27.4;
Daequan Cook, Day. Dunbar, 6-5, jr.,
22.6, Mike Foul, Cols. Hamillon iWp., 8·4,
I' , 268
Players of the year: Jacob Dlebler,
Upper Sandusky: Daequan Cook, Day
Dunbar.
Coach of the year: Ke1th DletJier. Upper
Sandusky

SECOND TEAM: Jon Dlebler, Upper
Sandusky, 6·6, soph , 24.9, Lamont
Abb1ngton, Whitehall· Yearling, 6·6, sr ,
20.6. DeAndre Byrd. Cm. Taft. 6-1 . sr,
16 2; Wade Rittenhouse, Mmerva, 6-4,
sr. , 20 6. David White, Uhrichsville
l!::iaymont. 6-3, jr, 19.1, Tyler Evans,
C1rclev111e Logan Elm, 6·2. sr. 21 3;
J1mmy Lan,ghurst. Willard 5-10. JL. 26 8,

THIRD TEAM: Chase Groves, Rayland
Buckeye local 5-7 sr., 20 0, Patrick
Byrne, Cambndge, 6-2, sr , 15 3; Marcus
Johnson. Akron St. Vlncent-St Mary, 6·3.
1r , 23 5; Dernck Brown
Dayton
Chaminade-Jullenne, 6-8, sr., 15.0 ,
Patrick Dlvoky,, Ravenna SE, 6·1 , sr.,
22 2; Shaun Gunnell. Cols. Lmden McKinley, 6-2, sr, 20.0. Wes Clark, St
Marys Memonal, 6-1 , sr , 15 2
Special Mention
Sean Ellio tt, Canal Wmchesrer: ,Art
Ford. Cols. Bexley, Eugene Bruce,
Steubenville, Bruce Palmer, Wmtersv111e
lnd1an Creek; Matt Vetarn, Carrolllon: Matt
Wareh1me. New Concord John Glenn,
Brad M!!chell Byesv•lle Meadowbrook;
Nick Martrni. Hamrlton Badin; Branden
Mrller, Cm lnd1an Hill, Heath White, C1n
Taft; Josh Beebe V:lncenl Warren: Chrls
Bethel, McArthur Vrnton County, Josh
Barrera, Thprnv1Ue Sheridan. Shea..
McMahon . Circleville; Max Morrow,

Dayton
from Page 81
worktn g wtth hi) players
·'When I W&lt;Is tirst diag. nosed, everything fell apart. I
was through ... Pcnaway said.
"I heard the '-'Ord cancer and
the tlrst thing I thought of was
death.''
Pena way will co mpl ete
radiation treatments when thts
memorable season ends
Accustomed to learmn g X's
and o·,_ ht s players picked up
a larger le&gt;Son in tou ghne.,,
from him.
"It mol!valed us," Bulldogs
star guard Obre Trotter said of
his coach's struggle. 'That 's
the type of person
he is. He
.,
neve r gave up.
Pettaway is 3X4- 181 in 19
sea~ons at the 6,000-student
school in Normal, Ala., guiding the transition from

Lesson
from Page 81
Those are things that are dit'ficult to separate ." Bowlsby
said . "You can pl ay yourself
out of a bad seed, but you
can't play yourself into the
tournament. That's the harsh
reality."
It's also what Miami,
Buffalo, Kent ·State and
Akron are dealing with now.
Buffalo (22-9) was !'lo. 32 in
• the RPI, Kent State No. 52
and Akron No. 55 :
But it wasn'tjust the MAC
that .was disappointed .
''My only hope was that the
A-1 0 has hi storicall y done
well in the tournament,"
Saint Joseph 's coach Phil
Martelli said. "I hoped it

Honorable Mention
Greg SoroJevleh, COis. Centennial; Ryan
Ferst, Cots. Watterson; Sam Payne, Cola.
Llrden MoKinJey; Ronnie Sleward, Co~
Eestmoor Aced.; Eddie Tabler, Cols.
South;
Steven Harder, Cheshire River Valley;
K.C. Chrlsllan, Ironton Rock Hill : Carson
Leach,
Vincent
Warren;
Todd
Cumberlaf\d, Hill:!lbor~: Kyle Jones,
CirclevH!e Logan Elm; Mathew Marting,
WCH Miami Trace; Jar~ Humphr4y8,
JacMon;
Myles Trempe, St Paris Graham; Aaron
Pogue.
Dayton
Dunbar;
Danny
McKeehan, LiHie M1aml, Keflen Zawadzki,
Tipp City Tippecanoe; Kevin Colson,
Bellbrook, Nick Duffy, Si: Bernard Roger
Bacon·
Donn'e l SaUls, E Liverpool, Kyle Tharp,
Dover; KaGey Waaiand , Dresden Tn~
ValleY: Sam Lahmers, McConnelsville
Morgan, Logan Aronhalt, Zanesville;
Andy Kilgore, Dresden Tn-Valley; Adam
Vincenzo, St. Clairsville; Doug Lanzer,
Cambridge, Andy Byers, Cambridge;
Sean Call, Rayland BUCkeye local;
Grog Michell, Upper Sanduslly, Stephen
Hunter,
Norwalk; Jake Reckner,
Wauseon; Kevin Leady. Eastwood; JB
Shuck, Gallon;
Matt Huml, Parma Padua; Matt
-Jankowski, Parma Padua, Riley Kreisher. '
Ashlabula Edgewood; Bob Ae1nhard,
Jefferson Area; Nate Bement, Obertin
Flrelands, Andrew Weigand, Oberlin
Flrelands;
' Todd
Schlenkarman,
laGrange Keystone, Julian Mangano,
Pa1nesville Harvey;
Alex Cottsov. Cortland Lakeview;
Johnny WoJosmczuk, Akron Hoban,
Edward Kershaw, Youngs. Liberty: Luke
Conley, Louisville, Andrew Bane. Medina
Highland; Jaime Breneman, Woos!er
Trlway: Kielan Cherry, Akron Central·
Hower, Damon Robinson, Orrville,
Jordan Ferns, Ganfield; Andrew Moss,
Copley; Antwon Ervin, Canton South.

would have two representatives. When you ' re on tbe
razor, you have to give a reason to put you in and a reason
to keep you out."
Coles, who is in his second stint as a MAC head
coach" understands the
predicament for schools
like Miami.
If you don 't win a large
number of ga·mes or earn
the league's automatic bid,
you must bring something
else- like a potential firstround draft pick. Coles lrad
that in Dan Majerle at
Central lylichigan and in
Wally Szczerbiak at Miami .
Szczerbiak's last season at
Mtami , 1999, was also the
last time the MAC had an
at-large team make the
NCAA field .

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f'2l'

., _,.,
r&amp;~

Cl 2005 by NEA, In

~.,I'..I~-H·f-~._p_"_ANml .,~l roo C~Y
__

SASSY SCISSORS
Stylist wanted Salary/
Commission 740-441•1880
, or'740-256-6336.

Babysitting·
Very
Reasonable Rates. Ages 4
and under. Call Crystal
(740)441·9654 or (740)590-

Secunty Officers
15 lmmed Openmgs

11 \\'\11\ l

Wackenhul Cbrp has 1mmed
openmgs at AEP Gavm
Power Plant for a temp outage Must have HS D1p or
GED, clean Pollee Record,
valid DL and w•lltng to work
any shift Could turn 1nlo FT
Perm pos1ttons. Please call
740-925·3015 M-F, 7a-3p
EOE M/FIDN

2590.

i

BUSINOO

10

~

:;O~I'I'OimJNIIT:;;;:~

hHI01rJVA~~';""~u':usH

r-"'
NG CO recommends lh~
· ,...
~You do bus•ness with peo
P'e you know, and NOT 1
~end money through thE
~all unt1l you have 1nvesh
!gated the offenng.

ro LoAN

area
$85 000
1740)709-t 166·

wanted
Licensed
NBII
'
Tachs for new Nail Salon 1r1
Gallipolis area Must be Wlll••NOTICE**
•ng to learn and work Send
resume to· CLA Box 54B, cia ~~row Smart Contact th
Gallipolis Tribune, P 0 Box phro DIVISion of F1nancia
469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
nst1tutlon 's
Ofl1ce
o
~~nsumer
Affairs
Smoots
~EFORE you refinance
m&gt;·nuJCIIDN
~-ur home or obtain a loan.
~EWARE of requests to
Gallipolis Career College ~ny large advance pay
{Cateers Close To Home)
~ents of fees or msurance.
Call Today• 740-446-4367.
~all
the
Office
o
1·800·214-0452
Fonsumer Affairs loll fret:
www galllpoiiJSCIIeercollege com
~I 1-866-278-0003 to lean
Accredlled Member Accrediting
f the mortgage broker o
Council tor lndep&amp;ndenl College&amp;
ender IS property liCensed.
and School• 12748
This· Is a public servic
AN'IID
~nnouncement from th
,
ToDo
~h1o Valley Publishing
k':omoanvl
Call B D Canst for all your
hOme repair needs, roofmg.
~
sldmg , add-ons, remodeltng
SE:RvtaS
etc ,
free
estimates ,
t
(740)9 92·2979 leave mas -

1'511

Call Nowl
1-Bn-483.-6247 ext. 2455

tiiO

I

w

McClure's Restaurant now
hiring all locat1ons, full or
part-time, ~ up application at location &amp; brmg back
10.00am
&amp;
between
11 .00am , Monday thru
sage
Saturday.

DHK Cleanmg Do you need
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's cleaning? House. offiCe . etc,
needed Apply al 1354 Oulalde, Inside Maintenance
Jackson P1ke . Gallipolis.
pa1nt1ng
(powerwashlng,
etc)
Call
(740)985·
Pari time babys1tter needed 36 3 3 1174 o 1416.1 82 3
in
VInton
area
CI!IU References.
Ask
for
(740)388·8t60 or (740)645- Karen/Dave
2640
George&amp; Portable Sawmill.
Part-time Training Clerk (24 don't haul your logs to the
hra.fweek). Duties · Include mill just call 3().4-675·1957
work processing , fil ing,
.copying, data entry and
other general office dulles.
Computer
knowledge
required . EMT Carllrication
prafarred Send a latter ol
Interest and resume to
SEOEMS. 3240 St ate Rou1e
teo. Gallipolis. ciH 4563 t ,
by 4;30pm on March t 8
2005.

r

I

DIRECTV
frH Equltment
frH Professional
Installation
up to 4 rooms
Fre~ 50 + premium
~anne!&amp;

FrH 0\ID player
c:au tor details
Call 1-&amp;tl0-523-7556

Jewelry. Buy Sell Gold.
Gemstonea.
Diamonds .
J1m's Carpentry
We do remodeling and moat Repair. Appraiaall. Gem .
Graduate
any unfinished work. also Toot ing.
Jeweler ·
small
tree
removal Gemologl1t,
(740)845-6365 or (740)4ola(740)446·2506, (740)367 ·
3080.
0437 ,
Racine area, non:smoker
will babysit in my home.
elate certllled. call 1740194911 35

Furn1st1ecl 2 &amp; 3 room apts
Clean no pets Reference &amp;
de pos1t
requ1red
Call
4 rooms and balh 52 Olive (740)446- 1519
St No Pets. $300 month
Grac1ous h\11ng 1 and 2 bed(7401 446· 3945
room apartments at Vrllage
4Bedroom 3Bath large LR Manor
and
R1vers1de
tam1ly room, 3 car garage, Apartm ents m Middleport
close to schools $9QO/mo From $295-$444 Call 740·
Call (740)446·1082
992·5064 Equal Hous1ng
Clean 2 Bedroom Ground
Floor, WI D Hook Up Rel
Dep No Pets (304)6755162

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 11111
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345

1
.0
__Ppo_'_
u_n_•1 •_
••----~
Modern 1 bedroom apt ~all
(740)446·0390

Responsible couple to rent
2BA home 1mr
I rom
Galllpolrs ott State Rou te
588 Reference and deposit
reqUired (740)446-3413

r

I

Call

r

15266 U S 50 East. Alhen s,
OhiO 45701 , (740)592·1972,
MWhere You Get Your
49 2 acres with home and Money's Worth" .
1 and 2 bedroom apan two-car garage GCJ9d priments ,-turniShed and unfurSSI/ Soc1al Secunty
vate, farm land, some
secunty deposit
~1 . 300 Net mcome. We can n1shed
woods, Call (740)992·7037
lmance you a home Call reqUired , no pets 740-992·
2218
(304)736-3400

.
wleaomg t-rnancrar
InstitUtion approv1ng Small
Busrness, Mortgage
Personal and Vehicle
Loans lmmed1ate
response.
give us a call at.
1-866·228· 7~3" Or apply
online at

EI11C1ency apt $300 month
plus ut111t1es No pets Call
(740)446- 43 13

3Br
house
lor
Rent
$675/month. plus One
Month DepoSit 1n Advance
Fenced-•n Ya rd , S1ngle Car
Garage Attached (304)531·
1197 or (304)531 · 1198

MORILE HOME'i
1973 . Grandville 14x70, 3
tURRENT
bedroom. w11h stove &amp;
retngeretor $3 000 080
Call (740)446·0194
2BA 2BA, close to Tycoon
lake on 1!2 acre lot No
1993 14x70 Norr\s 2 bed·
partly
lurn1shed
pets
room, 2 bath , garden tub,
$365/month Includes 'Water
dishwasher, ' 8x8
deck,
$250 depOSit {740)379·
$1 t ,500 (740)446·9480
9297
1995 Clayton Double W1de,
52X24, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath, 3 bedroom mob1le home 1n
no
pets
Total Eleclnc (304)675-2907 Middleport,
Hl\ll"-11\11
(740)992-5858
For Sale - 1979 Homene, 2
bedroom, wlcentrat a1r. 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath
HOME'S
$3,495 00 Call (740) 385- Hand•capped Access1ble
mRSALE
$480 month plus depoSit
4367
wlgood references No Pets
2-story, 7 room house. 4 For Sale, 14X70, 3 bed·
(7 40)992-2146 .
bedroqm, 2 bath, 2 porches room, set up m Country
(1 closed m) , deck, 213 acre Homes, $6,995 00. Move m Small 2 bedroom mpbrle
flat lot. Heat pump A1ver today! Call (740)385-4367
home 1n Racme $225 per
Valley
ScHool
D1stnct
montt1 $225 deposit years
1
Bulaville P1ke
$69,500. Immediate possess1on Only lease no pets . no calls after
1740)367 7272
$213.68 per mo. New 3 bed- 9pm, (740)99 2-5039
·
room,· 2 bath mob1le home
3 bedroom all electnc 1 Only minutes from Athens Totally r~modeled mobile
story remodeled house 1n 1-800-837-3238
home on end lot lor rent/ ·
d
M ddl
37 1 8
lease
alb
E-mail
at
t aport,
roa way, · SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
740
3194
992
re
d2371
@ho1mall
or
$2B,OOO, (
)
Stock models at old pr~ces.
(518)89 1-2296 S395LWOB
(• ncludes lot rent)

:jiA\~==~M~ONEY====~ ~n~~oo:~!sba~:Cf11~~~~':; -~~!·smod~~b~~;~v~n~0 ~~~-

l

APAICIMU'l~
t·QRRENT

I r'--l'ltoosmN·S·ERVi
_CL'&gt;·_AL_,J
,

W&gt;HW ~nvestmentfrnane~al.org

Part-Time
Dayshlft and Nlghtshlft
28·33 hrs /week
Weekly Pay, Saturdays off,
Stable work, Proless•onal
environment
Limited nUmber of positions
avatlable

MORII.E HOME:&lt;;
FUR SALE

, 41(70
Schultz
EditiOn Excellent c:ond11Jon
new carpet 8 A!C, 8x20
porch , 2 oulbUIIdmgs. furniture mcluded, $15 000 Call
9am-1pm (740)446-6743

- - - - - - - - - Jackson , OH 45640 or call
GAMESTOP NOW HIRING (7 40)286·6631

Look No Fyrtharl

HousES

FOR Rf:r&gt;T

'

Wanled
Manager
and
Exper1enced Auto Body
man. ColliSIOn parntlng &amp;
Bates Bros. Amusement Co. frame expenence neces·
Spring/Summer, Must Be 17 sary. Call ( 740)446·4~66 to
Or Older And Able To Travel set up an appointment
Late
March-Late
Wanted· L1censed Physical
September. Weekly Pay, Therapy Ass1s1an1 for home
Living Facilities, Bonus, health serviCes P leaM! send
Contact Us At 740·266· resume to McGraw Physical
2950
Therapy, Inc , P 0 , Box 983,

New Store openmg In
Ga111pOits1 Now hrnng for all
positions!
Send your resume to
petemoneiiCgamestop com
or fax to 304-842-9019

How.-;

mRS.u£

View photos/mfo online

Auto Club Dn\llng SchOol,
Inc
141412th Street
Portsmoutll, Oh1o 45662
Attn AI
Fax number 740-351·0537

eeo
oeo

Now A vailab/e

""'""'""'"I
'"""''''"''I

Home ll.stlngs
L1st your home by calling
(740)446-3620

to·

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Portable Oxygen

POLICIES: Ohio VeOey Publishing r...rvea tiM right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad 11 any time. Errors must be reported on the llrat day of
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Rttltter will be reaponalble tor no mOfe than the coat of the apace occupied by the error end only the flrllinMrtlon.• We ihall
any lo.. or ex:pen" that reauHa from the publication or .omiUion ot an advartlaement Correctton Will be made In the flrslliVallable edition, • Boll
ar'e alway• confldentttl. • Current rtte card appllet. • All retl attlte adver11nmenta are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 19611. • Th1s
accepts only help want.t ads mMIIng EOE standard&amp;. Wa will not knowingly accaptany adYertl•mg In violation of the law.

www.orvb.com

Please send or fax resume

WAN"rno
TO BUY

Call Manlyn 304-882-2645

Fri 9-7; Sal.

&amp; MEOIC.\1. EQ~II'\IE~T

Powell's FOODFAIR
PHARMACY
992·1536
Store Hours:
7am-1 Opm • 7 Days A Week

Mon •

OXYGEN

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5252

Open M-F 9am-6pm
Sat 9am-1pm

HOURS:

~

Di,ane McVey

WHY PAY MORE??
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES!

FOl!Nl&gt;

446-9800

3084 State Route 160

ads must be prepaid'

• All

MA Dnv1ng School 16 olfermg a pos1tion w1th flex1ble
hours at our Gal11pohs off1ce.
We requi re can didate to
have . a H1gh Sc:hcol
C1ploma. a Val1d Lletinse to
be/become a Licensed
Dnver's
Education
Instructor. pass background
checks. relevant experience
m Tralltc Safe ty, Law
Entorcemenl , or TeachiQ9 ·
preferred or W1lltra1n

lu;r ANII

MER CURY

Bu•lneaa Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays· P••P•r

'""'-:--:-::-:--------------::-::=-==-:::::-:=:1
'L
piO
lwright@ic.net
www.comlcs.com

LOST. Orange long-harred Absolute Top Dollar. U S
cat near Vme Street CASH Silver and· Gold Cams,
REWI\RD (740)44 1-8265
Proolsets. Gold Rings, US
Los1 Small wh1te male dog Currency,·M .T S Go1n Shop,
Second
Avenue .
Weighs aprox 201bs Westle 151
ATTN needed 23 people to
U you found or mlo call Gallipolis. 740-446-2842
lose up to 30 lbs 1n the next
(740)388-0157 Reward
I \11'111, \II\ l
30 days 100% natural ,
M1ssmg 2 days
"-111(\111"-1
100%
guaranteed ,
no
1 IJiack Schipperke· aprmc
ephedra Call 1·888·234·
20 lbs, named Spookv
5146, or V1s1t www new1-blackl""'h•te
Elkhound
HELP WANTED
shaperesul1s com
m1xed aprox 35 lbs, named
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
Two
Sh1rley Spears, 304.:
Reward
An Excellent way to earn Sell
675·1 429
Last seen on Bukhart Lane money The New Avon.

N

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

LosT,\NIJ
FOIJND

Found Dog m the Leadmg
'Cree k ConserVatory area
Please call (740)742·2632
for more mformat•on

PRESCRIPTIO

Dally 1n-Colun1n: 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Frlldav For Sundays Paper

• Start 'four Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Prlee • Awold Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Pupp1es to gl\leaway, halt
Border Coll1e Call (740)256·
1233.

'''
•••

Now·you can have borders and graphics
lL-\
added to your classified ods
_{.~l,
.1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large·

Display Ads

Male B•chon, housebroken
to a good home call
(304)675-2200

www.foodfairmk.com

Division II to Division I in
1999.
Kampe has spent 21 years at
Oakland. a campus o~· 16,500
students in Rochester, Mich.,
going 348-254 while also
leadmg the move up 10
Divtsion I.
After all those years on the
sidelines, \loth coache s are
enj_oying finally making it into
the tournament. Neither is
worrying about what happens
nexl - win and receive the
dubtous honor of playing topseeded 'Nonh Carolina in its
home stme on Friday.
, Their players refuse to look
at t·he play-in game as an
overlooked bout on the under·
card.
"It's still the only college ·
game that's being played
tomorrow night," Oakland's
Conney Scott said. ''I consider it an NCAA tournament
game. And we need to win it
to continue on."

C~nU..Uke

_r

Jac~on;

Dwayne JaCkSon, Cuy Falls Wal&amp;h Jesuit,
6-3,

And Muon

Honorable Mention
Robin ·Ba1ley Westerville S Josh
BostiC, Galloway Westland: N1ck Coon.
Mount Vernon M1ke Harris, Cols ¥ anonFranklin, Justm Patnck, Galloway
Westland,
Sean
Miller,
Spnngboro,
Josh
Chicheste r, Lakota W. MIChael Hall ,
Troy, Josh Dow, Fairborn: Ross Mann ,
Cm l'nnceton, Ryan Childress, Crn
Moeller ;
Rober! Klsabeth. Tlffm Columbian, Nate
M1les Tol Ltbbey, Ryan Hoehner,
Bowling Green, Brent Jones Tal Rogers
Domtmque Jones. Mansfield Madison
Anlhony Bell. Ashland :
Anthony Youngblood, Manetta, Tory
Kratzenberg, l ogan; Chns Givens
Chillicothe •
Dan Biber, l oram Admiral Ki ng. Bria n
Rem aklus Loram Southvi ew, Starley
JOhnson, E Cleve. Shaw, Jordan Krantz,
Solon , Rob Koe llrng, Mentor Darnell
Campbell , Cleve Collinwood: Ben
Wallace. Clove GlenVille , Kyle Brown,
Strongsville, Mano McGee. Cleve JFK
Re1d Anderson , lakewood St Edward:
Roddy Fuller, Warren Harding Kosta
Koufos. Canton GlenOak, Chris Sw1tzar,
Slow; Mike Jones, Barberton , Steve
Kuzyk , lodi Cloverleaf; N1ck Bellanca,
Woos ter, M1chael Porrin1 , Mass
Washington: Sean
Weatherspoon,
Canton McK1nley, Bnan Guerm, Hudson

w.

FIRST
TEAM:
Korey
Spates,
Warrensville His.. 6-foot-1 , senior, 26.5
pomts per game; Morgan Lewis,

M•lga, Gellle,

\'\\Ol \~I \II\ I '

Kyle Holliday, Van Wert, Joe
Davis, Warrensvrlle Hte.; Derek Riedel,
Bay Village Bay; Ricky Slanzl, Milnlor
Lake Cath.; John Leffler, Chagrin Falls
Kenston; Andrew Boothe, Painesville
Harvey, Mike Reinhard, Cheete~and
Goauga; Rydell Brooks, Akron Buchtel;
Bylynn Halcher. Alliance ; Fred Harold,
Canton Cent Cath .; Unc RottmfJin,
Woosler Trlway; Bill Frech, Niles
McKinley; Tim Hiller, Orrville.

We C0¥.,...."7

Aust1n , Chillicothe; Marcus Washmgton,
Ch1\llcothe . Darryl Roberts, Tol. St.
Francis ,
Jason
Simon,
Cleve
Collinwood, Delvon Roe , LakewooO Sl
Edward; Jason Thompson, Bedford.
Rudy Krrbus. Cleve St lgnat1us. Lours
Tumblrn , Elyna, Kenny McCornell, Cleve
Glenville; Mar10 Mannlngham . Warren
Harding ; Donia Anthony, Medina,,
Anthony Gage, Canton GlenO~k; Jeremy
Duerr, Un1ontown l ake, Bnan Schelle r,
N Canton Hoover

Boys Division II All-Ohio List
COLUMBUS (AP) - Tho 2004·2005
Associated Press Olv1ston II boys All·
Ohio high school basketball team. based

- Sentinel - 1\egtster

CLASSIFIED

Boys Division I All-Ohio List
COLUMBUS (API - Tho 2004·2005
Associated Press D1v1slon II boys All·
Ohio high school basketball team, baset1
on the recommendations of a state
media panel.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Gl

All re.l utMe advertlllng
In thil new.~per II
1ubject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Ac:t of 1968
which rMkel it Illegal to
advertiH "any
pref..-.nce, limitation Ot'
dl~erlmlnat1on based on
rtce, color, religion, MX
familial at.tua or lllltlonal
origin, or any Intention to
mike any IUCh
p-1efW161K:e, llmltmlon Of
d..crlmloation ...
Thle newepaper will not
knDWingly accept
advertiHm.nta for rul
eetatewhlch .. ln
vla..tlon of the l.w. Our
rMders are hertiby
lnfortMCII thel: all
dwelllnp ldvtntMd In
thla ......~ ....
available on an equal
-unity ....... ·

Lovely 3 bedroom home '
overlooking Mocking River,
Coolville . St29.000. call
Maggio Gilford 740·591 ·
7221 , Hayes Realestate.
Must Sell· 3 bedroom, 1
bath, nice neighborhood.
aSking $69 900. (304 )593-

3542
Near Holzer HO&amp;I&gt;ital. Good
Neighborhood 3 bedroom.
1· 1/2 baths. large family
room, fireplace central air.
garage Newty remodeled,
city schools. $123.000.
(740)4ol8·7881
---:----Nool. cleon ,.,.,h olyto
home locattd In Racin1. Oh:
This home has 3 bedrqoms.
1 bath. one car garage. •torage barn, large deck. appliances stay, call 740-;~g.
3090 anytime arter 5pm.

We ha\fe approximately 13 2 bedroom apartment for
used horpes for under rent Aac:1ne, OH Deposit
$2 ,000 , 1·800-837-3238
reqwred no pets (740)992Lors &amp;
5174, leave mossego

i

__

ACREAGE

Corner Lot tOr S~re m Camp
Conley Already DoubleW•de Equ1ped . w/ water.
sewage &amp; footers askm g
$ 15,000 or $10 000 and
decer~t car 304 675·0800

r'a

New 1 bedroom apt Call
(740J446-3736
One BR apartment m Sprmg
Valley S290 per month plus
WID hOOkups
depOSit
(740)339-0362. (740)388·
0017
Pilot Program - Renters
Call (304)736needed
3409
Pleasant Va lley Apartmen!
Are now takrng ApplicatiOns
tor 2BA 3BA &amp; 4BA .
ApplicatiOns are
ta ken
Monday lhru Fnday, from
9 00 A M.-4 PM Off1ce IS
Localed at 1151 Evergreen ·
Onve Point Pleasant WV
Phone No IS {304)675·5806
EHO
THE MAPLES·
100 MEMORIAL DRIVE
EAST
POMEROY. 740·992·7Q22
Substd •zed
Res1dent1al
Housmg for 50 years ol aae
and older. Priority Given to
Applicants with Income at
or below St0,900.00
Max 1mum Income effective
02111 12005 for 1 person
$18,15000
Must meat H~D/120218 critana tor household composition. Managed
by
S11v'erheels. Incorporated, A
Realty Company Equal
Housmg Opportunity
Twm RIVers Tower 1s accepllng apphcallons tor wa1t1ng
hst for Hud·subs•zed, 1- br
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO

r

2 bedroom apt w1th stove,
SPACE
diShwasher~
refngeralot.
I'OR~
laundry hoo~ups . small stor·
age burldmg
No pets
For Lease. Othc:e or retail
References
requ ued
spaces 1n very good condi$350rent &amp;depos•t plus u!1h·
l•on Downtown Gall1pohs ,
t1es (740)446-3888
Approx 1600 sq It each 1
ApphCat•ons bemg taken' tor or 2 baths Lease pnce
ver y n1ce clean 2 bedroom negotiable to encou rage
bus1ness
Call
aparlmenl m country seH1ng. new
yet close to town. on (740)446·4425 0' (740)446Centenary Road Washer 3936
dryer. sto\le, fndge CIISh·
washer provided Total elec·
tnc w/AC Tenanl pays alecHl.lll!o'EHOIJ&gt;
tnc No pels no smok1ng
Goool
$400 depO Sit, $475 per
rTlQnth Wate r 1ncluded 7•0·
446·2205 or 740- 446-9585
Ask tor Vlrg•n•a

1BUY HOMES
to sell your home ·
quic~ly because of a
divorce , bankruptcy, JOI;I
transfer. or death Don't let
the bank foreclose and rur n
your credit Local perso n
buys houses. Fast clos 1ngs .
All cash. Jim , {7 40)992·
6300 No calls after 9pm
Beautiful 2-story townhouse.
O\lerlookmg GaiUpolls Crty
Ill ' I \I -.,
park. Kitchen-family 0 R..
L R. 3 B A . study. 2 baths.
HOlliES
laundry area References
REm"
required. secunty deposit
~.oo-..;mRiiiiitiiiiii;..r no pets $900 per mo
(740)446-2325 or (7401 446·
3 bedr09m Condo with nver 4425
v1ew,
full
M .seme nl.
Gallipolis Ferry $700 montn BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Call (740)446-3461
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
PRICES · AT JACKSON
3 bldroom hOme wlfu ll ESTATES, 52 Wts1wood
basement, 2 car garage . Drive from $3-« 1o $442.
rural · setting AproiC 10 mm Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Equal
from HolZer Hospital Ava11 740-446-2568
...,1 /0S $700 month plua HOUSing Opportunity.
HC e10p00n Can (740)446·
Check out a clean 2BR
3051.
cou ntry sen1ng 'w1th WID
hookup No pets S350imo ,
3 bedroom Muae m
dapoB!t t740)256·12 45
Pomeroy $400 00 per month
plua doposft (740J 992~ CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED I AFFORDABLE!
3 bedroom, all electric ifl Townhouse
apartments .
Middleport, no 1nside pets, and/or small houaes FOR
$42~ &amp; dapooll. 1740)992· RENT Call (7401441 · 1111
3t94
for apphcet10n &amp; Information
Need

Modern 1 bedroom apt No
pets . $265 month mcludes
water
5200
depoSit
(740)44&amp;3617

Appliance
Warehouse
m Henderson , WV
Preowned apphcanes startmg at
$75 &amp; up en under warranty.
we dO serv•ce work on all
Mak~ and Models (304)6757999
Furflllure Sofa· cha1 r sets
$399, Sofa· love seat sets ,
$499
Mollohan Carpet
17• 01-446·7 444 "' 1740)3880i13
Kenmore waahe •
$95
Whirlpool dryer. $95 , GE
electric
range.
$95
Whirlpool refrigerator. 's150,
like new Whirlpool dryer,
$250. Like new Magtc Chel
washer. $250 , Octagon end
tables. $15 each. Tappan
gas range , $175 .
S~aggs Apphanc4ts
16 Vine Street
1740)448·7398

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
BUIWING

Sui'I'I..IES

1r

HAY&amp;

AIJIOS

r

Aliros

Thompsons Appli ance &amp; AKC Reg . Lab pups.
Repair-675-7388. For sale. ElCcellent hunting stock.
re-conditioned
automa tiC American
&amp; Canadian
washers &amp; dryers, relrigera- Champion Ill parents pedi·
tors. gas and electric gr~e . (740)388-9269.
• ranges. air conditioners, _and ::_:__'----_;___---~­
wnnger washers. Will do ChihlJahua puppy, 6 wee~s
repairs on maier brands in

Used Furniture Store : 13b
Bulaville Pike. Appliances,
mattresses,
dressers.
couches, dinettes, recliners.
grave monuments. much
more. · (740)446·4782.
Gallipolis, OH, Hrs 11 ·3 (MS) We buy used lurnilure.

r

Avt1QUE5

Buy or sell
Riverine
Antiques. 1124. East Main
on SA 124 E . Pomeroy, 740992 ·2526. Ru ss Moore.'

MISCELLANF1JUS
MERCHANI)l~l:
1992 Dodge Stealth. 24
• valve turbo, $4,000
· Earl", 9b's Geh1 loader.
~ $10,500.
3· black Angu s Bulls. $2.000
each
2001 c argomate cargo trail·
er, $8,500. (740)256·9247 or
. (740)645-0870

FOHSALE

Ot1evy Monte Carlo SS, '84 ,
$500! Honda's, Chevy's, $6,500 neg. Call (740)377Jeep's,
Ect.
Pol ice 9943.
Impounds ! Cars from $500
Must sale, 1984 CorveHe ,
for listings 800-391·5227 350 engine. (740)992·6797
old. short hair, vet checked EXT 390 1
15
and vaccinatE!d , weighs 1.4
tu..a:.
poun Ds, no papers. full "03 Dodge Neon SE, 4 door, 1
auto,
air,
am!fm
tape,
GC,
blooded . . ·$250
Call
55900 · phone (7401992 " 1988 Ford F150, 79,300
(740)441·72 18
0309
miles. Excellent condition, 5
CKC Jack Russell Terrier
1952
Plymouth
4dr.
engine
spee.d, overdrive. (740.)388pupp1es. 3 male, 2 female .
runs good, body excel!., all 0140.
$125. (740)256-1'652.
orginal. no rust 32,000 miles - - -- - - - - Dactlshund puppies. AkC 304·5?6-2532
·
1993 Chevy 3500 Turbo
Diesel, Red Pickup, Dully,
1st shots, 1sl worming,
1969 Ford XL. Galaxy 390, Power Windows, Locks.
$350.· Call (740)446 -4446
automatic, power steering .Loaded
$8,000
firm
Retrievers (Golden) CKC . and brakes. AC , interior (304)593-5073
Seven weeks old. $250 . excellent. Mechanical excel·
(740)388·8965.
lent, body . good. Needs 1995 Ford F-150 XLT, 8ft.
;;..,;;;;;;;B;;,ho,;:l;;,t;;le;p~u~p~s~:~"11 minor repair and paint bed, excellent condition.
53,300.00 OBO. (740)696- Asking $6,800 OBO. Call
male. ,AKC Born 12/31, 1373. (74D)591·568B.
(740)992-1777
et Chk'd, shots
armed .
$500. POP. 1981 Olds 98. 4dr, Run s 1998 Ford 1 ton Cube Van .
12 ft . alum. box. auto- A.C.,
(7401473·2785. (740)236
Good , Call (304)675·1264
V.G.C., sharp, garage kept.
028
1989 C rown Vic, new !ires, Phon~ (740)446-7787.
UKC Toy Rat Terriers. 6 new battery new trans. Very --'--'----'-- - - n•·ce car. ·101 000 m•·les .. 1999 Chevy 1ton with 11ft.
weeks, tails docloied, $100 •
_200 _00 osci. (740 )992 • utility bed. AC, cruise, ti ll .
52
(740 )256 -M 24 ·
350 gas, 5 sp&amp;ed trans .,
5532
69,000 miles. Excellent con1994 Chrysler Concord. dition. Call (740)256·1526 or
95,000 miles ,. run s great, (740)64 5-0446.
~r;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;; cruisellilt. power every1hing. '2-0--'
-'-'----"C---=h--ev-',- "-.-t--SI-Iv-e-rado
01
00
FARM
S1.f:!OO 060. (740)256-1233
EQuiPMENT
or (740)256·9031.
1500 LS , .fully-optio n.ed,
4 X4 , b e d Ii n e r, Ir il e r in g •
Dunham·Lehr 22 OT loader. 1995 Olds Achieva. 4-dr, V6 , pkg.,Pewter ext. ,Charcoal
165,000 miles, S1.400 . int., 100~ tlighway miles,
All hydraulic, wi th bale
spear. E~~;cellent condition . (7.40)388-84 66. ·
syn.oil, below book $1.2,900.
7-73_-_
4-3
60- 6-2- --------'· $1 ,500. (7 40)379-2756.
1998
Pontiac
Sunfire • _0_

.~

ro'I'RRuS~~

10

'-------'--------- "---lilii;,;,:;;;o;;,;._.l :::__;_:___:_:_:_:::_:_:__:_:'------- ,

Aylce-2004
• Gown#6367 .
w/Se queins.

Ball
Yellow
,. size
6,

Excellent
Condition,
(304)593·4659 after 6Pm or
leave message
For rent· 24 ' ~~;32 ' 3 stall Pole
Barn. Private At 7. $200/
month.
(7 40)44 6- 4782
·Gallipolis.

Pole Barn 30x50x1 OFT
$6795. includes Painted
Metal. Plans. Instruc tion
Book, Slider, Fr~e Del ivery
(937)559-,8365
SPA OUTLET

Gfand Opening
SatutdayJSunday
·t 1am-7pm
Open Daily
u .s. 60
Cannonsburg-Ashland
(behind Mr. Gatti's)
' (606)922 -71 65

~ c~Qgi)~mil~

Ashley

SUVs
fOR SALE

Ask for Art

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

1999 Eddie Bauer Explorer
AWD, loaded, leather, 6 disc
CD
changer,
sunroof,
92,000 miles. $9,500 t&gt;BO.
(740)446-7777.
2001 lincoln Navigator.
AWD, 5.4 VB, 3rd row seat·
ing, cassette/C O-changer, ·
heated/c ooled-seats, low
miles, excellent condition,
$23.900.(740)453-5535.

~~~;

X

'

X

10x30
Janel Jeffers

'

us

Hm'• Small

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Complete small
. engine repair

Let me do 1t for you'

r-

0 25

LIWS IOCK

I :0: : :~:~:

~·

ing $26,000 ($04)675-491 7

Civic LX
Coupe. Green, autom atic.
3 . yr old Guilding quarter excellent condi tion, very
horse. Green broke. $500. clean, 73,000 highway~
(740)367-741 3 after Spm . • miles. $8.395 negotiable
(614)313-7096.
4-H Pigs for Sale
2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
Begin farrow1ng 1/20105 and
speed , 29,000 miles, air,
still farrowirig . Pure bred
one owner. Nice (740)441 ·
Yorks
and crossbreds.
0157
(740)645-5141 .
Please call (740)448·2002
or
(740)541-749 1
or 2002 Pontiac Grand AM SE.
(740)54 1-7470
Red, AJC, CD, loaded, S6k
miles,
E1,.1ro
taillights,
Yearling Angus Bulls. Mostly
chrome
accents.
$8.995.
A.l. exc ·~llent .bloodlines.
E~~;ce ll ent
condition. Call
priceQ reasonably. Slate Run
(740)256-6616 ..
Farm, Jackson. (740)2865395.
2003 Dodge Neon STX
www.slaterun.farm.com
4d.oor.' 4cyl ., automatic.
power everything, 11,000
ltw&amp;
miles,' $6,500. (740)441 GRAIN
0337 or (740)645:6153.

1993 Ctlevrolet Astra Van,
- - - - - - - - - good
condition
phone
99 Dodge Dakota CILJb Cab (304)€!75-5077
SLT. Loaded V-8, 4~~;4, Bed- ~------~Au nn·n9
l'·ner.
' •Boards ' 2000 Ford WindStar ·. LX,
Tonneau Cover, 95Kmi. 91.,000 miles. 2 sliding
$9,500 (304)882-2845
doors, power windows &amp;
cruise $6,300 (304)6 7.5·
40t4

SELL YOUR TRUCK
HERE

or

r

2000 Ford Winstar LX, 81K,
2Jslid1ng doors, seats 7, all
power. rear air, tinted Win·
dows, ·asking
$6,600,
(740)669-5653

t

SUVs

fOR SALE
1000# bales , $7.00·$ t0.00 90 Taurus wagon, AfT, PIS,
&amp; $15.00, piCk up load or POB. PJLocKs. PJSeat. cold
good
hay, AJC, 130K, good condition, t995 Jeep _Grand Cherokee
Used garage door. 16x7. semi-load,
$995, (304)662 -3190
Laredo, · 250K highway
Non-insulated brown, Uush (740)696-2765
panel, all hardware includmiles, garage kept, excellent
93 Lincoln Town Car. 81,000
ed, $100. 1740)446-4514 a- Square Bales mixed Hay. $2
condition, $3,000 firm ,
each leave message il no" miles. Very nice, $4,500.
4:30pm
(740)992·7599
(740)446-1759.
ans~er (304)675-t118

liNIA'S PllmNI

32119 WelshtownRd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-992.2432
E-mail
j wi 114.'i7fl9@yahoo.cnm

r

ATS &amp; MaroRS

B
.
o

ffiRSALE

I

2002 StingraY 20 ft . open
bOw, Red/ While, 5.0 liter v.
8, Hustler trailer, excellent
cond ., garage kept, pric·e
new $24.000 sell $15 ,700
call Troy Krebs 304-675·

02 Honda 400 EX. Excellent
condition, rode little _$3,000
neg. Call (740)256-1526 or
(740)645-Q446
1998 30' fifth Wheel travel
trailer, double slide:. excel1979 Honda 750 1Oth lent condition, $13 ,900
Anniversary Limited Edition. phone : (740)!)98- 9319
Needs
ignition
work.
Evening
(740)256-6870. 2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32',
_L_ow
_ m_ll_ea__,g:_e
____
•S
_2__c,o__
oo · _ _ 12' expando. sleeps 10,
excellent condition. $16,800.
1982 Honda 500 Trike
(740)441 -1501 .
Fanng w/stereo system. Dk
blue. Evenings (740)256·
'I 1{\ II I "'
6670. $3,000_

rlO

TO TRACJ&lt;

2001 Honda 250 EX Sport
T1ac $2,000 OBO (304)576- - - - - -- - 2903 or 13041675-0B19
Culverts
plastic and metal, 6" inches·
2003 Suzuki 400, all-skid 60 inches in stock _ Ron
plates. white brothers pipe Evans EnterpriSe. Jackson.
$3,200 (304)576-2006
OH 1(800)537-9526
2003 Suzuki Vinson 500, 4wheeler, 340 miles. Red 4
WD. $4800. OBO 304-675-

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.
25 ronoecuti•e editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Point Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach over
13,500 homes. hi 'addition, your ad will appear in our weekly Tri O.unty Marketplace
which is delivered to 17,000 homes_ If you sell your v~bicle Within 25 days, just call
and we' ll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't ~~ell, just call prior to the end of 25 days
and we'll extend your ad aootller 25 days.

We ' ll run your classified line ad in

***You must

call

prior

to

the end oflnltla(i.s

day

r--:-======.,.,
ADVERTISE
YOUR .
B' us·INESS

2790 ·
.
94 Harley Davidson Ultra
ClasSic, 10,000 miles, blue,
excellent condition, $13,500,
(i40)949-221 7
99 H.D. Fat Boy 9,000 miles,
$5.000 worth extra's. Asking
$15.000. (740)339-3526 .or
(740)446-9954

Hrs.: Thes·Sat 11·5

for each addltlon111 word over 1.5 words.

•••Typol!rapblcal correc:tlons must

n•Ooly

one Item

be

made within Rrst

3 dayo of publication.

per cla,.,IRed ad.

. .•Pre-psymenlls Required and non- refundable.
••• Available only

to

private, non-commercial lndlvldualo.

bt faUipaUf ~~ribunt

...
-,

-----

.

~

IT'S 'iOU i'.t-\1) l /&gt;.(,1\t~~TT\-\t.

p-M'i E.C.fl.O 1':&gt; t.DIT\1'-IG M'i
GR!&gt;J'\1'\~1

WOR.U&gt; !

Sunday, &amp; Monday

Closed

~

~· ~----~

• Deck~ • ~brchcs
·• Curpurts • Garage~

1

ifi:!'ft •,

•

~::::::;:;;;::;:1 ~

Seek~§)
,.

""No Job To Smllll".
Rac ine. OH

wow~

IMPORTS
Athens

740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508

r

By Bernice Bede Osol

7R."Y

T HAT :&gt;

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

PEANUTS

10x10x10Ji:20
992-3194
or 992-6635

ACTUALL'f', 'f'OU'RE ONL'f' GOING
TO BE STA'f'IN6 WITH US
FOR A FEW DA'(S ..

PERHAPS '1'0U DIDN'T UNDERSTAND..
C~ARL I E BROWN ISN'T GOING TO
6E GONE F.OREVER, '(OV KNOW ...

50 'f'OU DON'T HAVE TO
SEND OUT '' CllAN6E OF
ADDRESS '' CARDS ..

Henderson, WV

871-2497

·New Homes

·Garages
• Complete

Remodeling

140-992-1611
'Stop &amp; Compare

Cell Phone 67 4-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Driveways t Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots • Playgrounds
t Roads t Streets
t

SUNSHINE CLUB
IS

1-Jt: ~'6 HIS HAl R~SSU?
A MILLIC»J 6U&lt;k:S A 'Mil&lt;
10 CO HIS !-lA\ R

-ntAT COIJAIP

1J;?UMP~

RGALI--IAII&lt;?,
·wAm-R?

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

740·44"6·0842 • 949·1155 Evenings
800-446-0842

------~--------------- · --

--

account will be 181 lor
hearing before oald
Court on the April 8,
2005, et which time
oald account will be
conaldarad and con·
tlnued from dey to dey
until flnelly dlipoHd

H1ll's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

45771

pertaining to the · -

cutlon ollhl truat, not
1111 thon live dayo
prior to tho data 111
lor heirlng.
J.S. Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Court
Probate Dlvlalon
Molga County, Ohio
(3) 15
'

J

FOR ONL-Y

'TWO REASONS...

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota -Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St~

Rt. 124

Chester

985-3301

1

0
0
0

740·948'·2217

B:\lll\1 IJ 1!\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

AND
5KINNY·PIPPING-

FIR£ PRIL-l-5

0

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

1.

AND WHA'f
ARE THEY?

0

ADVERTISE .

ot.
Any peraon Inter·
eoted may 1111 wriHen
IICiptlon to oald
account or to manera

!

DO YOO SNAIL-!!
E:V!OR L-EAVE'
YOUR 5HELLS?

GRlZZWELLS

YVM!!

~lD

C\UCKE ~ (!\7:J.AW5

40 All-purpose
vehicles
1 Bad thing to 41 Winner's
break ,
take
4 Oat
42 Hindu Mr.
8 Bear's fool 44 Raring to go
11 Timetable
47 Pass, as a bill
Into
51 Wheel and
12 Wrist bone
13 Poles'
52 Tobaceo
connector
wad
15 Dune buggy 55 Scrooge's
oath
kin ·
16 Sign gas
56 Part of A.D.
17 Gambler's 57 Where
town
Priam ruled
18 Work dough 58 Freud topic
20 Balled out 59 Cowboy
21 Cominon
nickname
60 Veer
abbr.
23 Truckers'
off-cou rse
radios
61 Van 24 Next-door
Waals Ioree
27 Tiny stream
29 Small barrel
DOWN
32 Cancel
33 Shivery
1 Seep
feeling
2 Business
34 Hunter's
letter abbr.
org.
3 Ocean
35' Youngster
motion
4 Type ot cake
36 Stratford 's
river
5 Pamplona
37 Cartel
cheer
38 Newspaper 6 Yoko execs
7 Hightailed It
39 Listen
8 Elffel Tower
closely .
site

9 Chopped
37 Bankrupl
10 Sharry, e.g. 41 Summer
14 Grass
, flower
19 Fligh1 prefix 43 Change
20 Type
colors
of seaman 44 Spud st.
22 Necktie
45 Wigwam
23 Thuds
46 Rum
24 Cook In 1he
source
microwave 48 Not up yel
25 Wile
49 Parakeet
of Geralnt
. t;.rt.~s
26 Builds on 50
28 Horror-film ·
Het;entahl
servant .
52 Milk amts.
29 Make socks 53 Web addr.
30 Fish-eating 54 Debtor's
flier
note
31 One-liners
36 Crow's·nest
cry

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Ciph91" Cl)'ptograms a1u cre~led !rem q'JO'.arons oy 1amous oeop!e. oast and o·esent
Ea011e11er 1n the oianer stands tor .anoiMr

TOOsy s clue : Z equals H

" LZGI

FVDSJGM

LZGI

OZY

FBD ."

" HYJVL
DGNGM

PYZD
Iy J

OZYC

VGEUG NG
HMIHGD

0 UEE ,

V. J L

IYJMXGEA ."

FZMUXLUBD

VYNGG

PR EVIOUS SOLUTION - "li's going lobe hard lor me one day to juSI walk
oul of the ice rink and say, "I'm done.'" - Michelle Kwan
(c) 2005 by NEA Inc 3:15

THAT DAILY Q (('l "0
PUZUER ~~

·

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - All
JOint ventures should work out rather
well lor you today, but you 'll be espeCially fort~na t e when you mvotve
yourself with someone with whom you
have strong emo tional ti es
ARI ES (March 21- Ap rll 19) It's
been said th at two heads are batter ,
than one, so today put yours toget~er
w1th someone whose think.1ng you
respect, and co llectively you'll come
up with the solut1on you seek .
TAWRUS (Apr il 20·May 20) - Lady
Luck favors you in your work or ca reer
today and she may prove it to you in
matenal ways. You could reap a la rger
retu rn 1n an area where nothing more
was expe cted than u sua l.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20) - Tho
major reason why you' ll bo such a
standout today among your peerS IS
that yo ur warm , friendly and jov1al diSposition Will be the welcomed tonic
th ey so desperately need.
CANC ER (Jun e 2 t •Ju ly 22) Something very lucky is developing
lor yo,u today in ways th at may not be
immedia tely v1sible to you. It won't be
by happenstance; somaone vou previousl'y he lped will be the instigator
LEO (July 23-Aug . 2.2) - Hopes can
be realized today provided you deal
with those who are as vtsiona ry and
progressive as yourself. Find that right
j:1erson and Dame Fortune will take
over !rom there
ViRGO {Aug. 23-Sept . 22) - You're
capa!'le of turning almost any, situa·
lion you desire in wh1ch you're
presently involved into something that .
will bnng you Joy. The reason is that
Lady Luck w ill be your ally today.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - Ma1ntain
a pos1tlve and optim1st1c outlook and
a lt1tude today and you ca n make this
a rad-letter day lor you. Whatever" you
envis1on tor yourself will· materialize
into real ity
SCOR PIO (Oct . 24 ·.Nov. 22) Shared endeavors will be the oneis
that seem to offer you the greatest
opportunities and chances lor success today Team up with someone
who is upbeat and looking 10 make
,
things h8ppen
SAGI TTARIUS (Nov 23-0ec 2 1) ......:
Mal;l.e p lans to share your day With
lr•ends or associates you enjoy being
w1th. because the toner role w• ll -do
no th ing tor you . Better yet . do some . thing with one who IS very special to
you .
.
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19) Because your purposes will be noble
. and your goals are chantable , th~re
will be little doubt lhat you 'll .find sue ·
cess today. Lady Luck IS rewardmg
those who display their hiler qualities .
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. t9) - You'll
be the luckiest today Hl creat1ve ven tures. so let your 1mag1nat1ve talents
do the ir th ing. Arrange your aHa1rs In
ways where you'll' be able to put th e
best that's 1n you to good uses.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~ "\,

{ _

WGRD

1.'-"tJ ~)..
_________::___:= Ec:'it•d by CLAY R.

--.. 'lllrthci.IY:

P1sceans aren 't espec ially ~mown for
their boldness. but in th e! year ahead
a new courage may ,:tmerge out of
you and taKe you in d irecti ons that will

MAIIlEY'.S
SElF STORAGE

NORTHUP DODGE

UnlesS exceptions

AstrcGraph
Wednesday. March 16,2005

CAN

IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

ara filed thereto, aald

p i:!SS

prove quite fortu itq u s . Yow'tl have no
lear o f striv ing fo r Io tty goals.

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO·
BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHII;l
Account•
end
vouchera of the following named llducl·
ary hea been !lied In
tho Probote Court.
Melga County, . Ohio
for epprovol and HI·
lllment.
ESTATE NO. 16606Forty·thlrd Account
lllod by Huntington
National
Bank,
TrultH ol the Truat
Created Under the
Wlllo!Thomao A. May,

Pass

In "I Know Why the Caged Bird S1ngs."
Maya Angelou wrole. "Chi ldren's lalent to
endure stems from th eir 1gnoranc6 of
al ternatives."
Bridge players' talent stems from their
aOilily to decide correctly between alter·
nat1ves.
In today's deal, you have several alter natives with1n the trump suit. How would
you plan the play in (a) 51~ spades and (.b.l
seven spades? West lead s th e club
q'ueen.
After South received a single ra ise, he
was unwilling to play lower ttlan the six·
level. And just in case his partner ~ad
both the king and queen ol spades, he
jumped to five no-tru mp, the Grand Slam
Force. In reply, North would have b1d
seven wit); two ot tne top three trump
honors. Wilh !ewer 1"1onors, he settleC! for
six. (One, can use replies that are more
sophisticated. I like to b1d six spadeS with
no top honor. SIX diamonds with the
queen, and six clubs w1th the ace or
king .)
;
In six spades, you can afford one trunlp
loser. bul not two. The options are e1ther
to take two finesses through East. or to
cash the ace before leading tOward
dummy's queen . The odds are close, bu.f
the Winner IS the latte,r, starting with the
ace. (Here, this play tlas a secondary
advantage. If you opt to take two trump
finesses. you need two dummy entries,
which must be the , 0 and queen of
hearts. Tt1en , you nsk running into a bad
heart split.)
·
In seven spades, you could either C3$h
the spade ace, hoping East has a singleton king. or run dummy's queen, hoping
Wes1 1"10lds a si.ngleton jack. The odds are

,
•

0

-,.,~.,,

. ROCky '.'RJ"
Hupf) ,

• Room Adll. • :\1 1ni
Barns
• Kitchens • Baths

All

Puzzle

exactly equal - good luck!

GARFIELD

Deceued.
1

v

'rD

•••Liml':"'l

... 2.5~

-

100% Cotton
Materia'-__Patriotic
&amp; Quilter5 Prints

......ra:.._;o:;:__ _...,!:::;:;s'"-J .

"---~o

CanllnlcUaa ·

Period to extend.·

to one. 25 day extension. (Mali:lmum of 50 da)'ll)
•••Classified ad limited to 1.5 wonls or less.

'DOWN !!

New shipment of

2000 . Harley Davidson
Sportster B83 Hugger16,350
miles, new tires, extras,
$6.500 Neg. Day: (740)6453248, evening after 7pm
(740)256-6569.

Camper, Motorcycle, 4-Wheeler,
Van, Pitk·Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

HE'D 8E REAL. EASY

Needs

All Your Home

1996 Honda Goldwing 1500
HOME
Aspecad e. 23,700 miles, -.
IMPRoVEMFNTS
excellent condition , 2 (tlatch· ·-liiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii_.!
ing helmets. Asking $8,000.
(740)388-8047_

We'll run your classified llne ad to sell your Boat,

BARNEY

for a free estimate.

I mprovcment· Nee d ~
• Siding •·Windows

5 NT

Easy to see;
hard to distinguish

'·

Phone: 740-742-3411

• Leave a messa e

East

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Brian Reeves
New Home'Construction, Remodeling.
Renovations, Decks. Garages. Pole
Buildings, Roofs, Siding, Window s &amp; All

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley .

West ·

Pass
Pass

Openin g lea d; .to Q

Sunset Home
Construction

740.742·2293

WITII APHOTO!
Call (740)446-2342
For Details

Ta~e

South

••

/

740·992·7599

9 7 4
H
... A9764

+KJ

Dealer: South

SI$YPI'IUf IS
I'I~~E . AGAIN.
t&gt;OC:TOF:.

FREE ESTIMATES

5

Vulnerable: East-West

Top • REmoval • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Other R esident ial

•

•

...+

25 Years local Ex erlence

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Q Ill

South
. AIOK763
¥ AKJ653
A

WV036725

New Homes • Vinyl
Si_d ing • New Garages
• Replaccr~cnt
Windows • Roofing

•

"' (!Ji 05

tree Service

BISSELL

Q9 4

KJ 2
8 2
8 5 3 2

•
•

JONES'

BUILDERS me.

one's memory.

l

j ·

•

PomerDy, OhiD

choose a
tn"bute ro your /o )!ed

99 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo. Loaded, 6 cylinder,
excellent condition, 97,000
miles,
$7 ,900
OBO.
(740)592-2948.
,

MONTY

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

03·15-05

•

... K K 3 2
East

We~t

. turnace work

33795 Hiland Road
" Oh1'o
Pomerol'

'

North

740·667·0700 1-888-HUPP2l4

Remodellog
• New Gerogeo
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Guners
•VInyt-Sidlng&amp;Palnllng
• Patio and Porch Docks
We do II all excepl

;:::;::;::::;:;:==~

:

$26.900 .. 304-773-

45783 .
Home • Auto • Life • Retire111ent
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • cancer • Accident

•Room Additions &amp;

(740) 992-5232
5x10, lOxlO,
10 15 10· 20

2002 Chevy Avalanche Z71 .
FLJIIy loaded, ons tar, heated
seats, 29,000 miles, moon·
root, 4-wheel-drive, CD,
$23,400 080. (614)9696448 :
2004 Honda Pilot EX, rated
best full size SUV. Red Pearl
ext. tan clo_th int .. all options,
maintained and. babied, 21 k

~~~

CARPENTER
SERVICE

II'
Phone

I

'

• Q 10 7 6

Tuppers Plains, OH

..:;;::;:==;:;;=;--;==:::;:;;;;;=:,
High and Dry
YOUNG'S

slora•e

'

41B005R #7

Buyers of standing tirr1ber ~
Also Land Clearing

lf25

Convertible.
97,000
mileslauto. 2.4Liler engine,
all power. CD player, new
tires.
Black
wiRed
Pinstripes. $3,500 Firm.
(740)245-9268.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

S®yll®r ·ll.®i]i9:tn®

you every day.

Mazie, Chuck,
Kathryn J _and

Bnrm• li•pu

JET
,
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RebUilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
800·537 -9528.
.

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains.
Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. WeQnesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

a

away. our thoughts
and love are with

Crossword

ACROSS

Phillip
.Alder

It has been a· year
since you went

r

NEA

BRIDGE

2000 S10·LS, Ext-cab, 3rd
4x4
39728 SR 143.
door, 4·cyl. 5-spd. AC, CD,
FoR
SALE
Pomeroy.
OH
46,000
miles.
Asking
$7,900.00 060 (740)949740·992·9922
2621
2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport
4x4 price reduced, loaded
co
,towing package 54,ooo
2002 Chevy 1500. VB.
Specials ot the Month on
Farmpro Tractors. Farm prO 1999 Ford Co_ntour SE· 4 29 .080 miles, Sspd, PS/PB, miles 304-675-1314
door, 24,300 miles, excellent , AC fit' .
CD $ 12 000
20hp, 2-wheel drive, diesel
co ndition , $5,500. Call
· 1 ~rulse.
'
'
· B6 ~ronco XLT, 4 WD, 302, 4
utility tractor. $3899
Recon t1tle. (304)634-5131 .
(740 )446 . 0771 alter epm.
BBL , aLJio, new tires , raters, r--:~~-.:""~::0.,
Farmpro 25hp 4·wheel
$1 .1oo. 1740)992·3679 ·
2000 Chrysler Cirrus 4-door 2004 FORD F- 150 Lariat.
drive, diesel utility tract or
sedan . automatic power Super Crew. 10,000mi 99 . Jeep Cherokee Sport,
w/loader. S8999. More
seats.wlndows,door·locks , 2yr/20,000mi warranty left, 4x4, EC. gold, auto. PW. PL,
units available, all with t yr
$30,000. VS,
Silver excetl. cond. 63,000 loaded/extras,
warrant\;, call for more ·
CD,
CC,
new
, miles $6000. 304-675-6041' (304)523-3500; (304)654- rotOr s/brakes.
details. (740)696..()358·
$5 ,995.
, 9316; (304)666-1668.
(61 4)231-1355.
Tractor parts &amp; seivice, spe- 2000 Chrysler Concord ,
cializing
1n
Massey 82.000 miles. $5,300 OBO. 2004 Silverado 1500, Z71,
VANS
James A Wilt Jr.
Ferguson , Ford , Long, and 2002
Dodge
Strauss .
4WD,
Loaded
,
still
under"
~~--..iF.ioiiRiiSiAiilii
£
ioo-~·
Owner
Belarus. (740)696·0358
64,000 miles. $5,500 080. warranty. 29.000 miles. ask- JD 7000 Min-Till corn
planter. 4·row, $2.000.
MF 680 Semi·MTO Plow 4·
bottom. several new parts,
$500 (740)366-6466

· H.P. Laptop computer. used
less than 3 hrs. Paid $1 ,500
Will take $1.000. Extended
warranty· 3' years. Call
(740)441-13299 or (740)4415472

NEW AND USED STEEL

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

ALLEY OOP

1920-2004

BMW Z3, '99, $pecial
Edition, 22,000 miles, dark
green, $19,999. (304)4~23360.

lit\ \"'1'( II{ I\ lit l"\

www.mydailysentinel.com

Victor
Hannahs

(740)446-7444 1-677-630- Winters. Rio Grande. OH grass. Kept ins1de. $20 each. low miles. mini condition.
$7.900. Call (740)704-3751
(740)446·0223.

9162 Free Estimates, Easy Call740·245·512t
lfnancing, 90 days same as
cash . Visa/ Master Card .
Drive- a- little save alot.

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

In Memory

1'011 SALE

GIIAIN

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Cl ark Block, brick,· sewer p1pes, For Sale : Round Bales, 98 Cadi118c Calera. Fully
Chapel Road, Porter. Oh1o. windows , lintels, etc. Claude 1,000 lbs. Mostly orctlard equipped, leather interior,

_
shop or at your home.

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

www.mydail_ysentinel.com

0 fc-..r
RMrronpe , i e~:e 13 of
wo rdl
5;;ra ."T1:~I ec

GAME

;.1 e
::J~·

lcw'to form four " si~:!e word~

I

TIEI-NG

I

FOOLI

I

I I· I I ~ I

~======~ ~

Aller l151en 1ng to an JH1c;iai

, _,__,ro----=,r.w:_____,w::..:o:,..."'i ~r' g1ve his latest findings I've
'&amp; J 17 J J
__
come to the c~nclus1on lhat

_ _ _ _
governmem
inve5t1ga1ors
, - - - - - - - - - , have always cort[i ~uled more

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'fCIJ develc::- i~orn 51e;: r-..c .

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wc·C•

b~!o,.,.

I'

I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS. !-l , _: 5
· Hearth - Lunch - Vocal - Gunman - OUT MUCH
"This is the most pleasant restauranll've· beer 1n." I
sniled to the very glum wa11reEs. She snapped back.
"Wel l, you don't get OUT MUCH do you?·
·

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YtlU11~ .

I

&amp;f.I~G

AM

5\LLT.'

IJ()l'

�'

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March 15. 2005

Baseball turns over documents to.House
would give everything the panel
wanted . Manfred
said: "Thirty-five
WASHINGTON - Major
. of documents
League Base ball handed years
in three days'! Everything
O\"Cr a box of su bpoenaed that was humanly possible."
doi: ~unent s Monday to the
The documents could give
House panel investigating Congress a better sense of
steroids in the spoi·t.
just how cooperative baseThe· Government Reform ball will be: it's still unclear
Committee had given ba~e- who wi)l show up to testify
ball a Monday deadhne tor at ,the committee's hearing
·
producmg mformauotl about . Thursday.
1ts . drug -test1ng program .
Davis predicted· Sunday
including test re sults with on NBC's "' Meet the Press"
the names of players that the full Hou se easily
removed .
would pass' a contempt of
It wasn ' t immediately Congress resolution if subdear what pape1:s the com- poenaed
pl aye rs don't
missioner :s office ' ubmit- appear. · He said one or more
ted . The committee had of the seven active or former
issued a subpoena covering players called to testify
II areas.
could be excused, from com" We are reviewing the ing, though he did not specidocuments ·now," David fy who that might be.
Marin. a spokesman for
But Davis also said. his
cummillee chairman Tom panel would vot.e to find
Davis. wrote in an e- mail to players who fail to show in
The Associated Press.
contempt, and said he thinks
Rob Manfred, baseball "s the House would approve
executive vice president for such a resolution by a large
labor relations, had said margin. The last contempt of
Sunday that the commis- Congress prosecution was in
sioner's otlice was working 1983.
on document production.
"These people are not
Asked whether baseball above the law," Davis told
BY HOWARD FENDRICH

Associated Press

AP photo

Temple's head coach John Chaney reacts to a foul call in the
first half against Duke at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham,
N.C:, during this Jan . 8 photo.

Chaney will return to
·coach Temple in NIT
PHILADELPHIA -

tion head Donald Fehr also
were subpoenaed.
Canseco asked for immunity so he can testify fully,
Schilling said he's willin~ to
testify, and Thomas mtght
testify by telephone because
of an injury. McGwire, So.sa,
Giambi
and
Palme1ro
haven't said whether they'll
go.
Asked why Sosa and
McGwire were called, Davis
said: "They've been accused
by former colleag\leS of having used drugs .... There is, I
think, a widespread feeling
that maybe they cheated
their way to achieving these
records by using illegal
drugs."
The Daily News of New
York reported .sunday that
McGwire's name was mentioned several times during a
federal steroids investigation in the . early 1990s,
although he was not the target of the probe, nor was any
evidence collected against
him. Two dealers caught in
the federal investigation told
the newspaper that a
California man, Curtis ..
Wenzlaff, gave Can~eco and
McGwire illegal anabolic
steroids.

~

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'"'" ""d .. ih"·ulill~l.•·u"'

\\I I&gt;"- I Sll \\ . \l \RI II lh . :!oo:;

:;o ( 1 "-1'&gt; • \ &lt;ol. :;-4. "-"· q,;

County expects ·'domino effe_ct' if AEP chooses Meigs site

SPORTS

'

• Cavs take down Jazz.
See Page 81

'By BRIAN

J .. REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

GREAT BEND - Meigs
County officials say they are
certain a power plant in the
Great Bend area would create
a domino effect for other eco-

.

nomic development in the had asked an- independen·t
county, providing · jobs for electric transmission provider
local residents and revenue to evaluate three potential
for lo.cal governments above sites for a new Gasification
and beyond what would Combined Cycle clean-coal
result from the plant itself.
plant : the Great Bend site
Earlier this year, American · next .to the Ravenswood,
Electric Power announced it W.Va. bridge. a site adjacent

to AEP's Mountaineer Plant
in New Haven, W.Va., and an
Ohio River site in Lewis
County, Ky.
The
Columbus-based
power company is expected
to choose and announce its
site selection by Jul y.

l

The three sites named are
front -runners
becau-se they are already
owned by AEP, ilnd because
.of their acreage. contour and
proximity to water. The procon~idered

Please see AEP, AS

gies.'l

BY DAN GELSTON

Associated Press

NBC.
He was asked
why Barry Bonds
wasn't invited to the
hearing.
''There are a lot of reasons
why people are on or off the
list. including the BALCO
investigation
in
San
Francisco, but including the
fact that we didn't want to
make this about one player,"
Davis said.
Bonds reportedly testified
to a grand jury in 2003 that
he used a clear substance
and a cream given to him by
a trainer charged in !he
BALCO steroid-distribution
case, but the San Francisco
slugger also reportedly said
he didn't know they were
·
stero ids.
The ranking Democrat on
the House panel, Henry
Waxman of California, said
on "Meet the Press" that
Bonds could be summoned
for a future hearing.
Mark McGwire, Sammy
Sosa, Jose Canseco, Jason
Giambi, Rafael Palmeiro,
Curt Schilling and Frank
Thomas are the players who
were subpoenaed; · Manfred,
two other baseball executives and players' associa-

Giambi excused ·
from testifying at '
congressional steroids
hearing, ·B4

Redmen split with
Bluefield; Warnimont ·
wins tooth
game, Bt
.

Saint Joseph's ( 19-1 1) is
also in· the NIT. The Hawks
His play Hofstra. (21 -8) on

· suspension
over,
John
Chaney will be back to coach
Temple in the NIT. Whether
he's back for good is still in
question.
Chaney returns Tue sday
night for the Owl s"(l6-13 )
first-round game at Virginia
Tech ( 15-13) fo llowing · a
. three-week suspension for
sending in a player to commit
' hard fouls that left Saint
Joseph's senior John Bryant
with a broken arm.
The 73-year-old Hall of
Fame coach suspended himself for one game before the
school extended the puni shmen\ to three games after the
extent of Bryant 's injury was
discovered. Chaney then
banned himself from the :s ideline for the Atlantic 10 tournament.
Before leaving fur Virginia
on Monday; Chaney thanked
his assistants for the job they
did in his place and congratulated all the teams playing in
both NCAA tournaments,
especially Temple's women's
team. He had no other comment.
Temple athletic director
Bill Bradshaw declined. to
discuss any cond itions of
Chaney's return.
"We will all get together at
the end of the season and talk
about the future," Bradshaw
said.
Top
assistant
Dan
Liebovitz, who went 3-2 in
Chancy's absence, said the
coach has been at every home
practice a~d "pretty much ha,s
· been
h1s usual
self.'
Liebovitz said the players
have moved on.
"In their eyes, it"s . a dead
issue at this point," he said.
"We've done everything we
can' as a university to spread
our sympathy and our apolo~

Wedne~day.

In a 63-56 loss to Saint
Joseph ·5 on Feb. 22. Chaney
used Nehemiah Ingram _ a
player the coach called a
;·goon" - to ""send a message" by committing hard
fouls. Ingram foulecl out iw
four minutes. includin~ the
hit on Bryant that left the
senior sprawled on the court
for several minutes. An MRI
later revealed he h;1d a broken
arm.
Chaney apologized to
Bryant and hi s family and
offered to pay his medical
bills. Chaney also apologized
. to both schools and the conferencc .
Hawks coach Phil Martelli
·d 1
·b·l· · f Ch
sm t le possl 1 11 y 0
aney
coaching in the NIT "doesn't
mean anything to me."'
Martelli also didn't rule ou.t a
possible return by Bryant if
the Hawks advanced to the
NIT championship.
The · two Atlantic I0 teams
have not plaved each other ·
'
since the Feb. 22 game.
.though they came close in the
conference tournament. · The
Hawks advanced to the title .
game. but the Owls lost to
George .Washington in the
semifinals.
"We wanted to be in the (A- ·
10) championship game and
it's the same way in the NIT.'"
Bradshaw said. ;"S;tint Joe has
been a longtime rival and we
look forward to a long, enjoyable .and successful relationship in the future."
Chaney has a 72 1-294
career record in 23 seasons at
Temple and 33 overall. He led
Cheyney State in suburban
Philadelphia to the 1\178
Division ll national championship and has taken Temple
to 17 NCAA tournaments, but
none since 2001 .

OBITUARIES
·'
Page AS
• Stephen D. Clark, 30

I I I

to the Castrop Center!

.

.

First Floor

;

• 0'8/eness' Patient Registration Satellite
• O'Bieness' Radiology and Imaging Services
Bone Density
CT Scan
. Mammography
MRI
• O'Bieness' Rehabilitation Center
Physical Therapy

Second Floor
• American Cancer Society Patient Navigator
Coleen Y. D1etsch-Krubl
• Internal Medicine, Gastroenterology
Steven G. Cann Jr., D.O. ·
• Mountain View Bone and Joint Clinic
Steven M. Miller, M.D.
• River Rose Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
Jane E. Broecker, M.D.
·Michael J. Clark, D.O.
Jack M Ramey, D0

Additional services will be offered soon.

• Athens Pathology
Scott A. Jenkinson, D:O.
.. Nili Urieli, D.O.
.

O'Bleness Medltdl Park

BY BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT@MYQAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND -It was close
but Brandon Marcinko, 11,
edged out Timmy Wise, 12,
for the Robin Hood Archery
Award of the day at Meigs

.

• Lung Diseases, Sleep Medicine ·
Christopher S. Ryckman, M.D., F.C.C.P.
• Family Medicine
Linda B. Tome: D.O.
• General and Vastular Surgery
AdelA. Ibrahim, MD, F.R.C.S., F.A.C.S.
N~al J. Nesbitt, M.D., FAC.S.
• Infectious Diseases, Internal Medicine
Andrew R. Murry, MD.
• Internal Medicine
Paul E. Cadami)gnani, D.O.
• MidOhio Cardiology and Vascular Consultants
Lucy La Perna, D.O., RVT. .
David R. Richards, D.O., F. A.C.C., F.A.S.E.
Mitchell J. Silver, D.O., F. A.C.C.
John F. Tugaoen, M.D., F. A.C.C.
• Neurology
Gary E. Cordingley, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.A.N.
''
• O'Bieness' Dermatology Clinic
John P. Hibler,.D0.
Ty 0. Hanson, D.O., Resident ·
J. Michael Holsinger, D.O., Resident
• Otorhinolaryngology (Ear, Nose, &amp; Throat)
Michael W. Tome, D.O.
•Podiatry ·
EarlL. Driggs, D.P.M. .

1~ Hosp1tc~l

El~mentary demonstrate their stance in
archery class, The school hopes to form an after-school program that will result
in a competitive team. Above: Physical education teacher and archery instructor
Dan Thomas assists a student In tabulating her target score. Meigs Elementary
School is the only elementary school in Ohio with an archery · prog~am.

Left: Fourth-grade students at Meigs

Target practi~e: archery at Meigs aementary

'

WEA'niER

Efementary School; the only the -current nine-week block
elementary school in the state of physical education.
of Ohio with an archery proMeigs
Intermediate
gram.
··School Principal
Rusty
Marcinko and Wise are Bookman is certified as a
two of 290 fourth- and fifth- "level two archery instructor
graders who are participating and believes the sport teaches
in a course in archery during kids hand-eye coordination.

Neig~borhood revitalization

hearing set for Thursday .
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SECIJONS - 16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3
A4
A5

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

B Section

AS

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

CASTROP CENTER
I

Beth S.rpntjpllotot

'

Third Floor

• Athens Surgery Center
· • Eye Physicians and Surgeons of Athens, Inc.
Craig H. Dodrill, M.D.
Jeffrey F. McAdoo, M.D.
• O'Bieness; Laboratory Satellite

\

'

· • Legionnaires celebrJl,te
.organizatioris 86th birthday. Se8'
. Page
.. ~s

Located in the O'Bieness Medical Park, the Castrop Center represents O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's
commttment to progressive caring for our community. The largest sin~le projec-t of a four-phase
expansion plan, the Castrop Center provides convenient access to avariety of medical services.

Despite injury, Law
visits with Stealers
PITTSBURGH (A P) - . ]'Jew England, which &gt;igned ·
Free agent cornerback Ty him t·o a $5 1 millivn. sevenLaw visited with the year contract in 1'999. Law, a
on native of Aliquippa. Pa.; in
Pittsburgh . Steelers
Monday despite po~sibly suburban Pittsburgh , said he
' being months away from is willing to take less money
practicing again because of a to play for a con tendil)g
serious foot injury.
team.
Law1 a four-time Pro Bowl
The Steelers recently
player recently released by released former starting corthe Super Bowl champion nerback Chad Scott in a
Patriots, also plans to visit salary-cap move, but have
with the Chiefs, Brown s. starting cornerbacks Willie
and
Deshea
Jets, Raiders and Cowboys. Williams
He left for Kansas City after Townsend -and backups
Ri.chard Colclough and Ike
meeting with the Steelers.
Defensive
coordinator Taylor under contract.
Dick LejJeau said the · Law is believed to be at
Steelers are interested in least a . month away from
Law; even though he needed· being able to take a physical
an operation in January to that could determine if he
repair ligament damage in can still play in the NFL. He
his left foot. Law sustain.ed a is not yet close to being able
season-ending mid-foot frac- to work out for a team.
Law holds Patriots franture during a 34-20 loss in
Pittsburgh on Oct. 31 that chise records with 36 interended New England's record ceptions and six reg.ular-season touchdown s on intercep21-game winning streak.
The 31-year-old Law is tions. He also. ~cored on an
still wearing a soft cast as he interception
whe n
the
rehabilitates the foot.
Patriots beat the St. Loui s
Law was due to make Rams in 2002 for the first of
$8.75 million this season their three NFL titles in four
before being released by seasons.

INSIDE

Dr Athens, OH
i

POMEROY - An Ohio
Department of Development
community distress .grant of
~ to $300,000 could hinge
on how much interest residents of Pomeroy show in
having their neighborhoods
improved.
Pomeroy Mayor John
Musser said that interest
needs to be expressed by a
large . attendance at a third
hearing on the grant application to be held at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Senior
Citizens Cenler. " If you're
interested in seeing your
neighborhood improved, be
there," said Musser.
He explained that if . the
grant is awarded, it could
mean a variety of improvements all over town like
street an&lt;! sidewalk · repair,
better ~nd more lighting,

concentration and confidence.
·"This is a lifetime activity," physical education
teacher and cenitled level one archery instructor Dan
Thomas said, agreeing with
Bookman.

In his physical education
classes, Thomas not only·
stresses the skill of archery
but the safety involved.
On a daily basis, more
than 1,500 arrows are shot at

'

.

Please see Archery, AS

Heating assistance nears ertd
MIDDLEPORT - Gallia
Meigs Community Action
Agency's Emergency HEAP
Program will end on March
31, leaving very little time to
apply for assistance, said
Sandra Edwards. Emergency
Services Division director.
Emergency HEAP provides
assistance to households that
have had utilities disconnected, face the threat of di sconnection or have I0 days or
less supply of bulk fuel. The

demolition of old structures,
improved sewer and water
facilities, . development of
parks and recreation, construction of . handicapped
ramps, historic preservation,
and expansion of facilities
serving ·senior citizens and
children.
, '"Right now residents need
to give inp'ut into what they
want in the way o( revitalizing . their neighborhoods ;" .
said Musser. "That opportu- .
nity will be offered at the
.
Thursday night meeting
where those attending will
also be given a survey to
ST"FF REPORT
complete."
NEWS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
The survey is a one page
form with a list of potential
NEW l;IAVEN - Team
projects of interest which ~an
be check marked. It does not leaders have been named and
require a · signature. He . are beginning construction on
emphasized that this grant a major environmental retrofit
at
Appalachian
money if ·awarded will go project
Power's Mountaineer Plant.
Last year, Appalachian
· Please see Hearlna, AS

program ·allows a one-time - The client must provide 13
payment of up to $175 per weeks of in.:ome for Eheating season to restore or HEAP and 12 months of
retain home heating services. income for Regular. HEAP
For coal and wood clients. Also~ copy of the applicant's · .
the payment is $250. most recent electric bill is
However, propane, kerosene required.
and fuel oil clients will have
The following income levan increased benetit of $325 els by hQusehold size should
because of the increase in be used tfl'determine eligibilfuel prices .
ity. Th~ se income guidelines
Documentation verifying represent the !50 percent calincome must be provided
when · applying for HEAP.
Please_see Heatln., AS

p·roJ"ect team named for
Mounta1neer
.
Plant P•l'lo"ect
·1
Po.wer
parent company
American Electric Power
(AEP) announced that it
would invest $3.5 billion
through 2010 in environmental control equipment at its
coal-fired power · plants.
Approximately $500 million
onhat total will be invested at
the' Mountaineer Plant to

install a Oue gas desulfurization (FGD) system, commonly known as a "scrubber."
When it becomes . operational in early 2007, the FGD
system will reduce the plant's
sulfur dioxide emissions, a
contributor to acid rain, by up
to 98 percent.
Chris
Beam
is
the
Mountaineer FGD project
manager. He will oversee the
project and coordinate activi-

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