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                  <text>Sunday, March 20, 2005

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Page 06 • ~unbnp 1!i:imrg -:&amp;rntincl

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Atkins honored for
service to OVCS, A2

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HOLZER
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Sim honored by
scouts,Aa

Center for

ANCER

ne

ARE

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Opening March 21

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:! Ot t .J

Bids awarded as Middleport improvement projects proceed

_SPORTS .
• Edwards wins firsl Cup
race to complete Atlanta
sweep. See Page 81

J. REED

ing the Ohio River at Dave Diles
Park. Plans include installation of
plumbing, a kitchen and restroom and
MIDDLEPORT - Progress on ·a a heating and cooling system.
community~wide improvement proA community group which spearject in Middleport, including new headed the renovation project has
sidewall$:s, renovation of the tum-of- already installed a new roof and made
the-century freight depot, demolition other exterior and structural improveof abandoned houses, street paving ments to the depot. Once it is com and firehouse improvements has pleted, it will be made available to the
begun, with bids coming in for new public as a community center.
Hannon Heating and Cooling of
fire equipment and the first step
Racine is the apparent low bidder on
toward renovating the depot.
Last
week, Meigs County an overhead heater for the fire depart- ,
. Commissioners authorized a contract ment, with a bid of $7 ,500. Foreman
.with R. V.C. Architects of Athens to · and Abbott Heating ·and Cooling of
complete plans for the interior reno- Middleport. Mark' s Plumbing· and
vation project at the depot , overlook- Heating of Reedsville and Certified
BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Mechankal Co. , Athens, also subillitted bids. Commissioners will approve
a bid this week.
·
Gallia Overhead Doors of Patriot
suhmiited the so le bid for a new
garage door at the firehou ,e, in the
amount of $2 ,685 . commissioners
are expected to act on that bid after
review this week.
The village qualitled last year for a
$300,000 grant for the combined
projects
through
the . Ohio
Department of Development's
Community Development Block ·
Grant Community Distress program ,
which allows a· community to focus
on a particular target area and complete . a number of smaller projects

'

with one grant award. The v.illage is
combining funding from the Issue
Two program and the CDBG
Formula program as a local match,
and fund s set aside by the fire
department and Riverbend Arts
Council will also be considered pan
of the match, bringing the project's
scope to approximately a half-mil·
lion dollars, Trussell said.
All phases of the project mu st be
comp leted by September, 2007 ,
Tru ssell said. Project s within the
grant program will be completed
one at a time. Tru ssell said sidewalk
replacement will likely be the first
part of the construction schedule
this spring.

;

.: ·.Pomeroy Merchants
.Association holds second
·,;an~ual ~aster egg hunt •
OBITUARIES
Page AS .
• Jimmy Bailey, 71
• Bartel me Pauline ·
Barber, 82
• Thurman Joseph
Martin, Jr., 72
• Stanley M. Payne, Sr.,
73
• Sharon Andrews
Thunander, s1 ·
Beth Sergent/photo

Fifth-graders at Meigs Elementary are learning how to' become more observant of their ·surroundings by drawing portraits of one another.
·

INSIDE
• Rio plans W'NI film
series. See Page A2
• April jamboree set for
scouts. See Page A3

I .

· WEATHER

of

----The Holzer Centerl -or~Cancer CareTs-on the cutting edge medical -technOldgy~ With
state-of-the-art equipment .and services, this new center 'provides treatment options for
the region, without having to traveL Radiation Oncology will now be offered with the latest equipment available. With only 3 installed in the entire country, the linear accelerator, offers the strongest and safest dose of radiation treatment for patients. An outside healing garden will provide a tranquil and comforting area for patients and their
families. to enjoy.

Oetalis on

Pace 118

INDEX
Classifiecls

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1-800-821-3860.

12 PAGES

A3
B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publt.hlng Co.

e. • •

oserto

RUTLAND -· "Draw what you see, not
what you think you see," Meigs Elementary
An Teacher Jan Haddox said 'tarhis fifthgrade students who -were given the assignmerit to sketch the faces of their classmates.
The students were each paired with a panne_r and sat directly acros~ a table from une.___

•
()llother. Haddox then began teaching the
fundamentals of drawing an oval face and
how to calculate the position of the nose.
eyes and mouth before allowing the kids to
add the "extras."
The "extras" defined I!BCh student to their
Classmates like having curly hair or wearing
glasses. Haddox hoped his students' abili~-.

Please see Art. .,.._' - - - - - -

$77,469.26 to cover delinquent taxes was issued to
Howard Frank, Meigs
POMEROY ~ Family
County treasurer.
.
Resort, Inc ., aka Royal Oak
· "This . is the biggest
Resort Club, Inc., . located
delinquent tax check I've
near Five Points in · Sutton
handled since , being in
· office here," said Frank as
he.accepted the check from
Pat O'Brien. one of the
attorneys involved in the
transaction.
Frank said the delinquent
tax collection will be distributed in the first half tax
settlement and will primarily benefit the Eastern Local
School District, with a lesser benefit for the Southern
Local School District.
There are three parcels
listed in the conveyance,
totaling just over I00 acres.
One of the exceptions listed
on the deed is a conveyance
ChMiene Hoeftlchj photo
of abour two acres to
Attorney Pat O'Brien , left, presents a check for delinquent William R. Stuckey and
taxes in the amount of $77,469.26 to Meigs County trea- Saundra S. Stuckey, former
surer Howard Frank and clerk Nancy Russell.
owner~.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

The -Holzer Center for Cancer Care is now open at 170 Jackson Pike, located in the front
of Holzer Medical Center. For more information, .please
. call 446-5474 or toll free

rust.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SEcnoNsCalendars

at

BY BETH SERGENT

Resort sells,- delinquent taxes collected

2

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·Teaching ldds to obsenre art in Ufe

Township, has been sold to
the
Lazy
T.
Royal
Chaparral.
,
The deed on the sale
was filed with the Meigs
County recorder Friday
afternoon and a check for

ou=
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�The Daily Sentinel

SCHOOL NEWS

Rio plans WWI film series
RIO GRANDE - The Jeanette Albiez its programs into the community and is dediDavis Library at The University of Rio cated to the theme of being a "library without
Grande/Rto Grande Community College has walls." Rio Grande officials hope to use film
been named as one of a select number of . series to reach out to Rio Grande students and
libraries throughout the country to receive a community members.
Throughout the 2005-2006 school year, the
viewing and discussion series on World War I.
"World War I Years: America Becomes a Davis Library .will otler classes and workWorld Power" i~ a fi lm viewing and di sc ~s - shops on World War I, luncheons, roundtable
sian series presented · by National Video . discussions, guest lecturers and presentations
Resources m association with the American in addition to the films being shown.
Library 'Association · and the National
The Madog Center For Welsh Studies at
Endowment for the Humanities.
Rio Grande will also offer presentations on
The Davis Library ut Rio Grande is one of how Wofld War I affected the Welsh immi. only 50 libraries from throughout the country gpnts in the region.
chosen tor the film . program. T_he Davis
While the campus will be the main place that
Ltbrary also recetved tunds for a R10 Grande the film series wi ll be shown, li)Jrary1 officials
representative. to travel to a workshop in are also planning to show it at community cenChtcago, Ill. 111 Apnl 111 order to prepare for ters, art centers and historical societies in
the film presentations.
·
.
Gallia, Jackson and Meigs counties. Amy
"World War I Years: America Becomes a . Wilson, reference outreach speciali st for the
World Power" is. a six-part, scholar-led film Davis I.,ibrary, will serve aSthe program coorviewing and discussion series that examines dinator for the World War I film and discussion
the political and social history of the United series, and she will be planning many of ,the
States m the early 1900's. The film series has · events, which will begin iii September in condifferent themes for each part. The themes are junction with the university's Sept. II obser- ,
"The Road to War. " "Over There: The vance. The World War I film and discussions
Military History of the American series and the events surrounding it will conExpeditionary Force.'' ·'Modern War: The . tinue throughout the 2005-2006 school year.
Experience of the ' Doughboys,"' "The
History Professor Samuel Wilsoi1, a memAmerica~ People in Wartime ," " Peace
ber of the Friends of the Davis Library group
Making: The League of Nations Experiment," at Rio Grande, will serve as the scholar for the
and ':After the War: The Turbulent Years."
project. Wilson is an expet1 on World War I,
Each time one of the fi lms is shown, ihe having written on the political and military
Davis Library wi ll have speakers on hand to aspeCts of the war for several scholarly jourexpand on the themes of the films . University . nals. As pan of his work with the presenta~cho lars will be invited to speak along with
tions of the film serie s, Wilson will lead a disother experts such as members of the League cussio n on the Great War aviator William C.
of World War I Aviation Historians and repre- Lambert of Ironton. AlthDugh Lambert fought
sentativcs of the · Air Force Museum in fur the British during World War I, he was
.
second only to Captain Eddie Rickenbacker
Dayton.
The Davis Library will receive six films for in victories by an American during the war.
the series, and the library will be able to keep
The World War I film and discussion series
the films as part of its permanent collection.. promises numerous fascinating and educaThe: library will also .. receive seven com- . tiona! presentations over the next year. Rio
.
pelhng essays on the !tim toptcs wntten by Grande officials are
eminent scholars; an extensive resource guide
honored to be selected as one of the 50
for ·additional publications, videos and Web libraries in the country to receive the
sites; and program and publicity materials.
series, and they ·are excited about all of its
The Davis Library is currently expanding possibilities.

film

Hocking Colleg~ Sojourners
develop conservation program
NELSONVILLE
an opportunity to earn college
Hocking
College
and credit for classroom work and
Sojourners Care Network receive on the job training. in
have establi shed the Ohio construction and conservaOutback Conservation C!JrpS. tion. Pariicipants are paid to.
a collaboration of the School attend classes at Sojourners,
of Natural Resources and the for which they receive credit
Sojourners Academy . of at Hocking College, and work
Sojourners Care Network.
on natural resources projects.
The program is supported Those conservation projects
through discretionary fund- afford real-life training in a
ilig
from
the
Ohio variety of fields, including
· Department of Jobs and construction, landscaping,
Family Services.
carpentry and the operation of
The OOCC, which will ' heavy equipment.
operate from McArthur, will . Young men and women
serve 18 to 24 year olds with participating receive voca-

tiona!, leadership and life
skills training and have access
to professional counseling on
life issues and receive peer
and prof~ssional tutoring.
The program follows the
tradition of the Civilian
Conservation Corps founded
to provide employment for
young people during the
Great Depre ssion . CCC
planted an estimated three
billion trees from 1933 to
1942. Ohio developed a CCC
program in 1977, but it was
discontinued in recent years
due to a lack of funding .

Monday, March

'

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Racine have been named to
the
Ohio
Northern
University dean's list for the
winter quarter.
The deans' list includes students who attain a grade point

4.0 grading system .
The students are all pharmacy majors.
'
ONU is a private university
affi liated with the I.J)lited
Methodist Church.

Attendance winners

Dr. Fred Williams, administrator of Ohio, Valley Christian School, presents Coach Greg·
Atkins with a plaque expressing the appreciation of the school for his 15 years of service.
Coach Atkins retired at the end of this season and the plaque was presented at the sports
awards banquet in the ·presence of players and parents, who gave Atkins a standing ovation. Atkins had a season record .exceeding 500, took the team to 4 state finals, and won
two state championships, 1991 and 2004.
..
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' ...

International Honor Society inducts Eastern graduate
POMEROY - . Sara Ann
Mansfield of Pomeroy has
accepted membership in the
Golden Key International
Honor Society and was individually honored during a
recent ceremony at Ohio
University.
"It is only fitting that a high
academic achiever like Sara
be recognized by · Golden
Key,'' said· Alexander D.
Perwich ,II, Golden Key's
Chief Execl!tive Officer. "Our
members are inspired and
motivated by the challenge
not only to be recognized for
their outstanding accomplishments but alsoto make a positive impact on our . world
through the Society's commitment to service."
Golden Key . International
Honour Society was founded .

Sara Mansfield
more than 25 years ago in
Atlanta, Ga. and provides
academic recognition to college juniors and seniors in the
top IS percent of their class.
The mission of the global,

non-profit Society is to build
global communities of academic achievers by providing
opportunities lor individual
gtowth through lea&lt;;fership , ·
career development, net~orking and service. ,
The ~ociety's values are
integrity, inclusiveness and
collaboration. innovation,
reSpect.
teamwork
and
Golden Key has 335 chapters
in the
United States.
Australia, Canada, Great
Britain, Malaysia, New ·
Zealand and South Africa.
Membership into the Socieiy
is by invitation only, to students in all fields of study. ·
Sara, daughter of Dr.
Wilma Mansfield, is a gradu,
ate of Ea,;tern high School
and is a junior biology major
at Ohio University.
·

River Valley Christian Academy announces honor roll
Large, Josh Nottingham , Bryan Proffitt,
Jordan Rawson, Britnee Sauters, Kelsey
Sauters, Brandon Shull, B Honor Roll .
Adrianna · Rowe and Casey McConnell
received scholastic achievement awards,
Kedrick Konkle and Joy Billing s received
academic acheivement awards; Keisha Rowe
and Jason Large received Top Readmaster
awards; and Bethany Cunningham was given
the keyboarding award.

MIDDLEPORT -The following students
were named ·w the honor roll for the second
nine-week gi·ading period at River Valley
Christian Academy: Joy Billings, Katie
Huffman, Jennier Kapp, Valerie Kapp,
Briaunna King, Kedrick Konkle, Casey
McConnell, Taylor Northup, Charice Proffitt,
Adrianna Rowe, Kiesha Rowe, A.J. Rowe, A
Honor RolL
Kim Billings, Bethany Cunningham, Jason

.91. specia{section in the tJJaify Sentine{

to publicize your upcoming T-aster t£vent! ·
For [':xample Only:

740-992-2155
to have your
church included or
for more
·information.

Proud.to be apart ofyour life.

•.

Name of Church
Date
Good Friday Service
;tl.ll night Hymn sing
Date
Sunday Sunrise Service
6:00a.m.
·Morning Service
10:00 a.m.
Evening Worship
· 7:00 p.m. '
Pastor
Pastor's Name
Address of Church

Contact Dave
or Brenda at ·

The following Buckeye Hills Career Center students had perfect attendance for the second nine
weeks and were awarded the following prizes: Jeff Mullins, River Valley High School, computer
system: Larry Anderson, Vinton County High School, $50 gift card: Andrew Hale, .Oak Hill High
School, $25 gift card; and Jeremy Meek, Gallia Academy High School, $25 gift card ...Pictured
left to right: Jeff Mullins, Larry Anderson, Andrew Hale. and Jeremy Meek.

MIDDLEPORT
Celebrations of Appomattox
Day on April 9 and Memorial
Day on May 21 have been
made by the Major Daniel
McCook Circle Ladies of the
Grand Army of the Republic.
' Meeting at the Middleport
Masonic Temple building
recently, the group planned a
bean dinner at the Mourning
hum at the end of Railroad
Street in Middleport for the
observance of Appomattox -Day.
·Members were asked to take
cornbread and desset1s for the
dinner to be held with BrooksGrant Camp Sons or Union
Veterans of the Civil War.
The Memorial Day observance will be held at the Civil
War statue on the Meigs County

Monday, March

Courtho'use lawn at II a.m. on
May 21. The circle voted to
obtain a public address system
for the public program which
will feature a Civil War rifle
salute and a Civil War bugler
along with a speaker. The
speaker is yet to be announced.
Memorial Day was originally
set aside to honor Union veterans of the Civil War.
New members accepted
were Jean Quiggle of
Chesapeake, Va .. based on her
ancestor, Cpl. John Quiggle of
Co. C: 41st Ohio Infantry;
Dorothy Chaney of Shade
based on her ancestor, . P~t.
John W.' Pullins of Co. B,
140th Ohio Infantry.; Edna
Stobart of Miami , Fla., formerly of LetaJ1 Falls. based on

21, 2005

DENT IN KANSAS
DEAR ABBY: My sister,
her ancestor Sgt. Alexander H.
DEAR INDEPENDENT: I
Shuler of Co. H, 53rd Ohio "Pamela," constantly steals
get the feeling that you someInfantry; Zoe Hanna of things that belong to me. It can
how resent your childhood
be
anything
from
underwear
to
Tuscan, Ariz., based on her
friend,
and that's sad.J':'Iot only
jewelry.
When
I
catch
her
wearancestor, Pyt. David Baird of
did
Muffy's
mother encourage
Co. G, 90th Ohio Infantry, ing .whatever she "borrowed,"
Dear
her . daughter 's ·physical
Verna Sisco, · of . Amsterdam, the belongings go missfng.
Abby
dependence.
it appears she
Pamela
then
claims
that
.
she
Ohio, based her ancestor, on
her
daughter
's emonurtured
returned
them.
I
have
to
beg,
Pvt. Cassius M. Fitch of Co.
tional dependence as welL
E, 193rd Ohio Infantry, and cry, and tinally search'herroom
I agree that Muffy "should"
and
car
to
find
them.
Most
of
Shirley Cogar of Racine based
to live independently,
leatn
the
time
they'
ll
be
ruined.
on her ancestor, Pvt. John W.
is
causing
a
great
strain
dry,
clean
house,
etc.
I,
too
,
·
anti
"should"
be free to make
This
Pullins of Co. B 140 Oho
Infantry. The circle is the on my life and our relation- waited on Muffy. As a child, I new friends. However, at this .
ship. It has reached the point thought I was supposed to take point in her life she may not
largest in the State of Ohio.
have the tools to do either. It
Members joined with the that I have told my sister I no care of her.
longer
want
anything
to
do
Muffy
is
now
an
adult
,
a
would
be · a kindness to
Sons of Union Veterans for a
program on Confederate with her because she's deceit- recluse with few friend s. She encourage her to get profesattempts to free Confederate ful, hurtful and selfish. I hon- st ill lives with her mother, sional flelp so she can figure
prisoners from Johnson 's estly think she has some sort· even though she has a job and out where her mother ends and
Island and for refreshments ofOCD or does it forthe thrill. could move out on her own. she be'gins. Only then will
Oh, we are not teenagers. I Muffy is a oice woman. My your childhood friend be able
after the program.
am 26 and Pamela is 24. We problem is that her mother to truly get on with her life.
are both adults with master's expected us to be best ·friends . DEAR ABBY: What do yo\1
degrees and full-time jobs.- throughout our lives. She and think of men in kilt s&gt; I want to
FED UP IN QUEBEC
Muffy can't seem to under- buy and try one. My wife is
DEAR FED UP: Excuse me, stand that I have a husband, a undecid,ed, but trusts your
but how is Pamela able to take son. and other responsibilities judgment. Your thoughts .
test using teamwork ·and possession of your property? that include work.
please? - GRANDSON OF
Scouting skill s.
My mother and Muffy's SCOTLAND
If;-ou 'reliving under the same
Scouts will also have roof, have a deadbolt lock mother are best friends, and
DEAR GRANDSON : As a
canoes and rowboats on the insta(.(ed on your bedroom Mom ·often comments to me that person of proud Scottish
lake. Saturday night there door and use it while you' re I should remain friends with descent, you are entitled to
will be an arena show in the out. If not, have your dwelling Muffy.lt seems Muffy's mother wear . a kilt if you wish, but
please refrain from doing high ·
amphitheater overlooking the re-keyed. Your sister cannot won't let the subject drop.
river. The show will include steal and destroy that to which
I think they both need to get kicks on the dance floor.
an archery display combined she doesn't have access.
on with their lives and Muffy
Dear Abby is written by
with a drug prevention proDEAR ABBY: I grew UP, should be free to make new Abigail Van Buren, also
gram. The event will end with a friend I'll caii"Muffy.' friends. In the end, she is the known as Jeanne PhiUips, and
with six different multi- Muffy was raised in ,a rich, one who has been hurt by not was founded by her mother,
denominational church ser- sheltered environment. Her learning how to live indepen- Pauline Phillips. mite Dear
vices being held throughout mother did everything for her. dently and take care of herself. Abby at www.Del)rAbby.com
the Regional Jamboree on. She never taught her daughter She should not be a prisoner of or 1,'.0. Box 69440, Los
Sunday morning.
how to wash dishes, do Iaun- her childhood. - INDEPEN- Angeles, CA 90069.

April jamboree set for scouts

-·~~"~~?!:~:~~" ?~,~,.~ !~~~--MZ - . Branch, son of Ronald and
Tere~a
Branch , Mason,
W.Va., Ben A. Holter, son ·of
Roy and , Valerie Holter of
Pomeroy, and Nikki L.
Robinson, daughter of Carl

The Daily Sentinel.

21, 2005

ATKINS HONORFD FOR SERVICE TO OVCS

PageA3

BY THE BEND
Civil War Ladies plan celebration Woman sthievery is driving her sister mad

PageA2

'

POINT PLEASANT - On
April 8- 10 Tri -State Area
Council, BSA will be holding
a Regional Jamboree and
Family Camp at Krodel Park
in Point Pleasant hosted ,by
the Point Pleasant Tourism
and Economic Department. i
Other city departments
cooperating include police,
emergency services, san ita- ·
tion, mayor's office and public works . Scout Executive
Ray· Franks stated, "I doubt if
another city in this region
w.ould lay out the welcome
mat for thi s major Scouting
event the way that Point .
Pleasant has."
City Director for Tourism
aRd Economic Development,
Dennis Bellamy said, "The
Boy
Scout
Regional
Jamboree with over 1.000
parr'icipants will be one of the
large st events that we wi II
draw to Point Pleasam thi s
year. It is an excellent way to
showcase our city, its history
and our hospitality to peqple
from throughout several
states and the Tri-State
regi01i."
The event has over 800
parttctpants pre-registered
from
throughout
West
Virginia. Ohio and Kentucky.
· All Scouts from any council
. are welcome but pre-registration is mandatory and will be
limited to the first I ,000 . For
prc-rcEistration infonhatiou
call the Scout Service· Center
at 304-5 23 -3408 or go to
www.lsacbsa.org.
The jamboree will include
displays from the West
Virginia National Guard.
West Virginia Division of
Natural Reso urces, several
major businesses and the
National Sportsman Alliance
from Columbus.
The theme for the Regional
Jamboree &amp; Family Camp is
"Pathway s of our Fow1ders"
apd will slri),SS how the geography and natural resources
have . worked together to
t ~--caffecHh e-histor-y-ef the-area.
The jamboree will have a
Merit Badge Midway, which
will include di splays on merit
badges related to history such
as railroading, · Indian lore,
genealogy, and American cultures. There will be a historical hiking trail linking Krodel
Park with Tu-Endie-Wei
Park. Along the hike Scouts
will meet historically significant people like Chief
Cornstalk and Daniel Boone.
At the park the hike will end
with tours of the River
Museum and Battle Museum .

I

Clubs and
organizations

Farmers of America. 74th and Sharing Support Group
annual awards banquet, 6:30 meeting will be held at I p.m.
p.m ..' Southern High School at the Meigs Multi-purpose
gymnasium. RSVP to 949- · Senior Center. The meeting
will including an overview
2611 , extension 2 118.
POMEROY
Th·e on Alzheimers Disease.
Ppmeroy-Middleport Lions
Club wil meet for a noon luncheon at the Senior Citizens
Center.
.
.
Monday, March 21
Thursday, March .z4
POMEROY - Salisbury
POMEROY - Alpha Iota Township Trustees will begin
Masters wil meet at noon at cleaning cemeteries today.
St. Paul Lutheran Church for
Thesday, March 22
a meeting and luncheon.
POMEROY - Childhood
Saturday, March 26
immunization clinic, 9 to II
HARRISONVILLE
a.m., I to 3 p.m. at Meigs
There will be an Easter egg County Health Department.
hunt at 4 p.m. and a bean Bring shot records, medical '
soup and corn bread dinner cards if applicable. Children
from 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday at must be accompanied by a parthe Scipio Fire Department at ent or l~gal guardian. $5 dona, Harrisonville.
tion accepted but not required.

Other events

Church events

. Birthdays

•

On behalf of Cub Scout Pack 235 of Chester Floyd Ridenour
presents a plaque to Bitt Slm in appreciation of his Support and
dedication to the pack. Sim does bow shoots for the scouts.

Brinagers announce.birth
LETART - . Scott and
Janey · Brinager of Letart.
nnounce-the~birth

nf--,...,"'"'- ·11-

Monday, March 21
Thursday, March 24
POMEROY
- Meigs
POMEROY
Revival
County Right to Life regul11r .
services
will
be
held
at the
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
Faith
Valley
Taberl)acle
Pomeroy Library.
Church, Bailey Run Road at
Thesday, March 22
7
p.m. each evening through
POMEROY - The Meigs
Speakers will be
March
High School winter sports ban- the Rev.27.
Emmett
Rawson and
quet will be held at 6:30 p.m.
in the school cafeteria. Those the Rev. Handley Dunn .
attending are to take a dessert
dish.

Monday, March 21
POMEROY
Ruby
Burnside will celebrate her
90!h birthday, March 21.
Cards may be sent to her at
40532 Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, 45769.
.
Saturday, March 26
RACINE
Verneda
will observe her
on March 26.

Thursday, Ma.rch 24
POMEROY - A Caring

45881 Pomeroy Pike. ·Reine,
Ohio 45771. ·

Cruz Robert, born on Feb. 8·at
Hol zer Medical Center. He
weighed 9 pounds, 12 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Lori Hill of Racine and Dean
hill of Apple Grove, and paternal grandparents are Tim
. Brinl\ger of Racine, and Cricket
and
Frank
Adkins
of
Ravenswood, W. Va. The
maternal great:grandparents are
Donna Hill of Apple Grove and
the late Dallas Hill and Robert ·
and Beverly Chapman of ter of Racine and the late James
Symcuse. The paternal great- Carpenter, and Cecil and Ruby
grandparents are Betty carpen- Brinager of Racine.

Future

L

...
--·$499.
*599. -...
$699. .......... ...................

.... '399
'479
. '799

Evaluation for lead based paint presence: determination ot the source of any possible hazards:
prepare LBP work specifications ; and prepare lead safe renovation or preabatement plan. Fee
proposal for such service will be accepted until M£!rch 31 , 2005.

I'Wtn.., ' . . ... : . ..... , . . .
hit~Mt ..
. ....
alite. t~et ..........'199

1'wlln ... . ' • ' ......... .. . .

Fee proposal must state qualifications, including all related completed lead-based paint training
approved by the Ohio Department of Health: provide State ·Certification or be able to provide such
Certification prior to September 1, 2005 . Listing of all ·previous experience in Lead Based Paint
Hazard Renovation/Reduction/Abatement; scope of ·services to be provided and amount of f\l&lt;ed
compensation required for the above services and pricing data to support the fixed price (e.g., per
hour, diem, unit). All related qualifications and/or training certifications must be attached to the
proposal.

.I
•

~·

Monday, March 21
LETART FALLS -Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p:m.,
office biljlding.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS Community
Education
Forum, 6:30 p.m. , Eastern
Elementary School. "What a
Complicated System,'' presented by Dr. Thomas Gumpf
of Ohio Department of
Education; "How Has the
Classroom Changed,'' by Bob
Caldwell, superintendent of
Wolf Creek Local Schools;
and presentatioN about school
and community partnerships
by John R~dovi!ln.

The. program ·will consist of rehabilitation of owner occupied units. At this date, it is not
determined how many of the units witt need to comply with the Title X Residential Lead -Based
Paint Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 effective Septen1ber 15, 2000. The Meigs CHIP Program, if
funded, will require the professional services of State of Ohio qualified Lead Based Paint Risk
Assessor and Inspector t,o provide the following services;·

The Daily Sentinel
Subscrii;)e today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com
'

Public meetings

The Meigs County Commission!JrS are preparing an application for submission to the ODOD Office
of Housing and Community Partnerships to request grant funding through the community Housing
Improvement Program.
·

(UPr

-.. ---

SIM HONORED BY SCOUI'S Community Calendar

. PUBLIC NOTICE
' REQUEST FOR FEE PROPOSALS/REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
LEAD BASED PAINT RISK ASSESSOR/INSPECTOR

·Actvertisins Deadline;
Tuesday, March 22nd
Date of Publication:
Thursday, March 24th

... ----·--·~-

During the day Scouts will
mingle with over I00
Revolution era craftsmen and
reinactors
outside
Fort
Randolph, which is a fullscale pioneer era foq in
Krodel Park. There also will
be an enca11)pment of about
50 Native Americans.
A special Cub Scout world
will include West Virginia
displays on snakes, fish, fish
shocking and a hunter safety
trail. Scouts will also have an
opp011tmity to earn ribbons
by competing in patrol con-

•

Fee proposals may be mailed or delivered to the Meigs County Grants Office, 117 East Memorial
Drive . Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . Questions in regard to this request may be addressed to Jean
Trussell, Grants Administrator. at 740·992-7908 .
Mick Davenport, President
Meigs County Commissioners

._..... ....

. .'649

....... ......... ......... ...... 01!~.;....,.........-

"li --"''

FLAIR
Tut • Sit e·to s
Mon &amp; Friday 9-6
CloiiCI Sunday to be
with llmtty

FREE

Layaway

FURNITURE

•JIRAND NAME F'URI'IlTURE AT DISCOVI'IT PRIC£.5-

Ate 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV

{304)675-1371

5~ mil" south of Point PluHnt on lit. :i tn

r.ny

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse ·thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of griet,ances.
-The First Amendment to the

u:s. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. March 21, the 80th day of 2005; There
are 285 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History; On March 21, 1965, more
than 3.000 civil righ!s demonstrators led by the Rev. Manin
Lut her King Jr. began · their march from Selma to
Montgomery. Ala.
On this date ; In 1685. composer Johann Sebastian Bach was
born in Eisenach. Germany.
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson reported to President
Washington in New York as the new secretary of state.
In 1804, the French civil code, or the ':Code Napoleon" as
it was later called, was adopted.
·
In 1871 , journalist Henry M. Stanley began his famous
.ex pedition to Africa to locate the missing Scottish missionary
David Livingstone.
·
In 1945, during World War II, Allied bombers began four
days of raids over Germany. .
.
In 1963, the Alcatraz federal prison island in San Francisco
Bay was emptied of its hist inmates at the order of Attorney
Ge neral Robert F. Kennedy.
·
·
.
In 1979, the Egyptian Parliament unanimously approved a
peace treaty with Israel.
In 1985, police in Langa, South Africa, opened fire on '
blacks marching to mark the 25th anniversary of the
.S harpeville shootings, killing at least 21 demonstrators;
Ten years ago; Thousands of Japanese police raided the
offices of a secretive religious group, Aum Shinri Kyo, in connection with nerve-gas attacks on Tokyo subways that killed
12 people and sickened thousands.
·
Five years ago: Pope John .Paul II began the first official
visit by· a Roman Catholic pontiff to Israel. A divided
Supreme Court ruled the government lacked authority to regulate tobacco as an addictive drug, throwing out the Clinton
administration's main anti-smoking initiative.
One year ago: The White House disputed assertions by .
President Bush's former counter·terrorism coordinator,
Richard A. Clarke. that the administration had failed to recognize the ri sk of an attack-by al-Qaida .in the months leading.
up to Sept. II. (Clarke's assertions were contained in a new
book, "Against All Enemies,"· that went on sale the next day.) ,
Iraqi-born architect Zaha Hadid won the prestigious 2004
Pritzker Architecture Prize, becoming the first woman to
receive the profession's highest honor.
·
·
Today 's Birthdays: Singer Solomon Burke· is 6~ Actress
Marie-Christine Barrault is 61. Singer-musician Rose Stone
(Sly and the Family Stone) is 60: Actor Timothy Dalton is 59.
Singer Eddie Money is 56. Rock sihger-musician Roger
Hodgson (Supertramp) is 55. Rock musician Conrad Lozano
(Los Lobos) is 54. R&amp;B singer Russell Thompkins Jr. (The
Stylistics) is 54. Actress Sabrina LeBeauf is 47 . Actor Gary
Oldman ts 47. Actor Matthew Broderick is 43. Comedian ·
Rosie O' Donnell is 43. Rock musician Jonas "Joker"
Berggren (Ace of Base) is 38. Rock MC Maxim (Prodigy) is
38 .. Rock musician Andrew Copeland (Sister Hazel) is 37.
"Htp-hop OJ" OJ Premier (Gang Starr) is 36.

'The Daily Sentinel

------·-·-------..J

Monday, March :n,

'Monday, March 21,

RfGI~TfRED

AT SHELL,
MOBIL,
BPAND

TEXACO.

Alcohol is a much bigger problem than ~steroids

ball's secret little underworld,
he'll be elsewhere, calling
upon the National Collegiate
Athletic Association to ban
alcohol commercials from all
broadcasts .o f the NCCA basketball tournament.
"Colleges and universities
continue to take money from
beer companies whose . ads
glamorize drinking and target
audience,"
a
youthful
Osborne said. "They' re sendlng very mixed messages to
their students, because every
college president wiJI tell you
that the No. I problem on
their camp4s is alcohol."
The I ,400 college students
who die each year from alcohoi-related injuries translates
to three or four students every
single day. Try to find any
reputable reSearch that says
steroids has killed a single
child. There isn 't any. Several
suicides have been linked to
steroid use, l;mt as tragic as
lhey are, they do not constilute a public health crisis. The
numbers of kids using
steroids in the U.S. barely
registers on the scale of teen
drug use. In a 1999 study by
the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, 2.7 percent of 8th- and
lOth-graders and 2.9 percent
of 12th-graders had taken
steroids.
. By contrast. ~0 percent of
htgh school semors have used
alcohol; 32 percent say they
had been drunk in the last
month. About 3 million teens
are said to be alcoholics.
B,aseball's unwillingness

co-sponsored a bill that would
have funded new effons to
prevent kids from drinking.
The bill failed even to reach
the House floor, thanks to vigorous lobbying against it.
The
National
Beer
Wholesalers Association is
the fifth-highest spender of all
political action committees in
Washington. The alcohol
industry spent $10,164,916
last year in Washington to
promote its products.
Last month, Osborne and
his co-sponsors reintroduced
the
"STOP
Underage
Drinking" bill, and its passage
is as unlikely today as it was
last year and the year before.
"You're
swimming
upstream, " Osborne said of
fighting Big Alcohol.
Even
the
House
Government
Reform
Committee concedes that no
legi slation will come out of
today's steroids hearing.
Steroids are already iJJegal
. without a prescription.
BasebaJI already is moving,
however slowly, toward a
stricter drug policy. What,
then, is the point of Congress
devoting an entire workday
and hauling in basebaJI stars
and executtves?
A hearing about sports and
alcohol would mean · a·
parade of parents and
experts testifying about "
. drunken · driving accidents ,
violence, rape, unsafe sex,
suicide, educational failures
and crime. ((would mean a
photo exhibit of the I ,400
college students lost last
year to alcohol. Such powerful testimony surely would
put pressure on Congress to
do something about it.
And that's why the recent
hearmg was about steroids .
(Joqn Ryan is a co/wnni.1·t
for tire San Francisco
Chronicle. Send comments
to her in care of this ne&gt;npaper or. send her e-mail llf
joan ryan@ sfch ronicle.coni.)

Deaths

Bartelme Pauline Barber

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

..

Jimmy Bailey

Ohio's regional campus growth
fueled by convenience, cost

Stanley M. Payne, Sr•

REEDSVILLE - Bartelme Pauline Barber 82 of
:Reedsville, died Saturday, March 19, 2005, at her r~side~ce.
She was born March5, 1923, in Parkersburg, W.Va. , daughter of the late_ William Walter and Ruby Crouser Baxter.
She ts sumved by three sons: Leonard, Jr. (Shirley) Barber.
How~rd L. Barber and S[Jecial friend, Kay Gillian, and Danny
M. B,trber. all of Reedsvtlle; a daug hter, Ruby (Daniel) Drake
of Long Bottom; 16 grandchildren; two step grandchildren;·
and several great grandchildren ; a brother, Daniel Baxter of
B.attle Creek, Mich ..; and severa l nie c~s and nephews. .
· Bestdes her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Leonard Barber; five brothers; Wiley Baxter, Clyde R.
Baxte:. Wallace Baxt~r. Ster!ing Baxter and William Baxter;
four ststers: Lavada Fmnagm, Dons Baxter, Ruby Magdalene
Baxter, and Helen Louise Baxter; three·infant brothers and sisters; a granddaughter, Sabrina Pauline Drake; and a grandson.
John Paul Barber.
·Services ~ill be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, March 22, 2005,
at Eden Umted Brethren Church in Reedsville with Robert D.
Barber officiating. Burial will follow at Eden Cemetery in
Reedsville.
· Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Monday at
the Whtte-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville.
.

REEDSVILLE - Jimmy L. Bailey, 71, of Reedsville, died
Sunday, March 20, 2005. at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
.
He was born March 2. 1934, in Reedsville, son of the late
William and ·Reta Margaret Wilson Bailey. He was the owner
and mechanice for the· Ashland Service Station in Tuppers
Pli!ins for 20 years.
He is survived by his wife, Beverly Linthicum Sampson
Batley; two sons, Gregory Lee 'Bailey and Roger Bailey; five
daughters: Sheila and Marvin Taylor, Brenda. and Paul
Holsmger, Lena and Charles Bailey, 1\lancy Collins and
Jennifer Bailey ; two brothers , Oliver Bailey and Ansel Bailey;
three SISters; Ruth Myers. Betty Damron and Faey Cowdery;
12 grandchildren; four greal grandc hildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
granddaughter, Kelly Bailey. and a brother, Donald Bailey.
Fnends may call from 2 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville. There will be no funeral services.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contr'ibutions may be made to
_
.
Chester Fire Depattment.

CLEVELAND (AP) Students
interested in saving
GALLIPOLIS - Stanley M. Payne,· Sr. , 73 , of Gallipolis ,
passed.away unexpectedly at I :35 p.m . Saturday, March 19 in money or staying close to
home have caused the rolls to
the emergency depanment at the Holzer Medical Center.
swell
at the 24 satellite cam·
· Born October 17, 1931 in Gallia County, he was the son of
puses of Ohio's public unithe late Dana Paul and Ruth Morgan Payne.
Funeral services will be at noon Wednesday in the Paint versities.
Enrollment jtrmped 14 perCreek Baptist Chur~h with Rev. Calvin Min(lis officiating .
Entombment wtll follow in the Chapel of Prayer cent between fall 1998 and
fall 2003 at the branch camMaus'oleum in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call from 6 - 9 p.m. Tuesday at Cremeen~ pUSes, which offer many of
Funeral Chapel.
.
the same courses at a lower
The body will lie in state at the church one hour prior to the price than the main campusfuneral service.
·
es, according .to the Ohio
Casketbearers are Buford Minnis, Larry Dudley, Bryan Board .
of
Regents .
Briggs, Bob Payne, Billy Garnes and Jessie Saunders.
Enrollment at the main camMilitary graveside rites will be conducted by the Gallia puses rose 4 percent over the
County Veterans Servic,e Funeral Det,ail.
same period .
Tuition at the regional campuses is 40 percent less than
at main campuses in Ohio, on
'
POINT PLEASANT- Sharon G. Andrews Thunander, 61, average .
Point Pleasant, W,.Va ., died Friday, March 18. at Pleasant
College costs thai have
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
been rising faster than houseServices will he I p.m. Tuesday,.March 22, at Wi!lis Funeral hold incomes have made th e
Home in Gallipolis with burial in St.. Nick Cemetery. Friends satellite campuses more
may call from II a.m. until time of the service at the funeral attractive to thrifty students, .
home On Tuesday. .
·
said Tom Monenson, a senior
schol ar at the Pell Institute
for the Study of Opponunity
in Higher Education in
Washington, D.C
"We have definite evidence
of students ·migrating down
CUYAHOGA
FALLS school officials received an the price ladder of educa(AP) -A sc hool bus driver anonymous tip that he might tion," Mortenson said. " It 's
an affordab.ility issue."
wno police said dropped off be intoxicated.
Otficials said the state has
a busload of children while
Police in Hudson, which is
drunk has pleaded guilty to about 25 miles so utheast of traditionally kept prices
operatrng a vehicle under . Cleveland, sai d Olzmann lower at the regional campus.the influence and child registered a . 134 blood-alco- es to encourage residents in
endangering.
hol level, which is more than outlying areas to enroll at
Norbert Olzmann. 61. of three times the .04 limit to universities.
Freshman Sheri Sintic is
Hudson, entered the plea operate a commercial vehicle
Friday before Cuyahoga Falls in Ohio.
Municipal
Judge
Kim
No one was hun .
Hoover. No sentencing date . p!zmann does not have a
was set.
listed telephone number and
Olzmann had dropped off could not be reached for
47 middle school students commen\.
from Hudson at their homes
after school on March 3 and
Information from: ·
was headed to pick up anothCOLUMBUS (AP)-The
Akron Beacon Journal,
state' s chief elections offier load of students when http://www.ohio.com
c ial has a message for those
who say Ohio's Nov. 2 election was fraught with unpreparedness, mi stakes and
fraud: Take a closer look.
Secretary
of
State
Kenneth Blackwell was
AKRON (AP) - 1\ bak, November sent her to a men- sc heduled to testify at a
ery's insurance company will tal . health facility for five field hearing of the U.S.
pay a -$1.25 million settle- years. '
House
Administration
ment to the family·of a delivBennett, 38, told police that Committee on Monday,
ery truckdriver who died in a God had told her to drive fast more than a month after
fiery traffic accident.
and that she was a Mafia failing to appear at the
Sheldon Gotschall, 53. was member oh the run. Her panel's first post-election
makin g a delivery for Norcia attorney said Be nnett had hearing in Washington.
U.S. Rep . Bob Ney, an
-Bakery on July 3 when a· car been taking medication s
rammed his truck, rupturin g since she was 23 for bipolar Ohio Republican and the
committee's chairman, took
its gas tank. The impact disorder.
Schulman commended the Blackwell's absence as a
broke hi s back,.and he could bakerf
for having a large snub,
especially
st.nce
n't escape as the truck went
insurance policy and said Blackwell
was
in
up in flame s.
Bennett
was
covered
only
by
Washington
the
same
day
to .
Allen
Schulman,
a
a
$12.500
policy.
lead
a
meeting
of
the
non
Canto·n lawyer who reprepartisan
Campaign
Finance
sented Gotschall's family,
The lawyers for Gotschalrs Institute .
said he was "gratified that family will receive $412,500,
Blackwell said he couldthe family did not have to about a third of the settle- n 't · appear at fellow
endure a difficult trial ment. Schulman said he Republican Ney.'s hearing
where they . would (have thought the fee was appropr.i- because of the previously
been) forced to rehve th.is ate because of the amount of sc heduled institute meeting.
horrific cra~h." - - - - ttme-and-e-1-taFl-that-went-mtg- - FJuriua- S-ecretary-ttf-5tate
The driver of the car. the case.
Glenda
Hood . another
Sherah Bennelt, was found
Republic an. also did not
Information from:
innocent of aggravated vehicappear, citing a previous
Akron
Beacon
}ounial,
ular homicide by reason of
com mitment in her state.
Blacl;:well was expected
insanity, and a judge in http://www.ohio.com
to tell Ney's committee on
Monday that mo st of his
critics' complaints about
counting provisional ballots , long lines at polling

Sharon c. Andrews lhunander

Bus driver pleads guilty to .
driving students while drunk

saving more than $3,000 by
takin g classes· this year at
Kent State University's.
regional campu; in Geauga
County. Whil e she would
have paid $7 ,504 to attend
the main campus, the . combined full -time tuition for
fall and 'Pring semesters is
$4,326 at the branch campus.
Sintic wants to be a teacher
and plans to earn as many
credits as pos;ible at the
regional campus before transferring to the main campu s to
complete her degree .
"Why pay more if .you
don ' t have•to''" said Sintic.
19, of Thompson Township
in Geau ga County.
Enrollment at the Kent 1/4
branch has grown 59 percent
bet ween 1998 and 2003 . the
fastest of anv of Ohio's satellite campuses.
.David Mohan, the campus.
dean. said more than half of
Kent Geauga· s students have
fu ll-time jobs and few commute more than 30 'miles. ·
''With everything they're
juggling. they don ·t have
time to drive to Kent or
Cleveland
State
or
Youn gstown'' to attend Classes, Mohan said. "For some,
they ei ther find wh&lt;tt they
need here or they don't go to
college."

Information from:
The
Plain
Dealer,
http://www.clevelartd.com · ·

Blackwell to testify

before connnittee

nlunnan Joseph Martin, Jr.

.•. AND W£ 1RE

Joan
Ryan

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries ..

Fadng new evil empires

to acknowledge its role · in
glamorizing steroids, however unintentional that promotion might be, is nothing
compared to its unwillin gness to acknowledge its role
in glamorizing alcohol.
.
· Nearly ~1,000 -alcohGJ.com­
mercials aired in 2002 during the telecasts of the Super
Bowl , the World Series, college footbaJI bowl games
and the 'National Football
League's Monday Night
Football broadcasts, according to the Center on. Alcohol
Marketing and Youth. .
Every time a kid tunes in to
a March Madness game the
next two weeks, he or she will
see an average of four advertisements of attractive young
people having a great time
drinking. By year's end, this
one kid will see about 245
such ads. When researchers
from Teenage Research
. Unlimited . in 2002 asked
teens to choose their favorite
commercials, more named
commercials · for Budweiser
than for any. other brand,
.including Pepsi and Nike.
But it's not only television
commercials that associate
sports with alcohol. Kids see
enormotA Bud ads on scoreboards at· stadiums. They see
Coors· as the official name of
the Colorado Rockies ballpark. Down the road from
Capitol Hill, they see promotions for Smimoff Ice and
Captain Morgan's Gold product~ in the Washington
· Redskirls' stadium and on television during Red5kins broadcasts. They see Crown Royal
as the official sponsor of auto
racing's International Race of
Champions. The Jist goes on.
The money and power the
alcohol industry wields are
. enormous. In 2003, when a
landmark 'National Academy
of Sciences repon to Congress
concluded that underage
drinking costs the United
States $52 billion a year, he

2005

2005

It's strange yet appropriate
"shame," as the Post para- reverse core policy and regard
phrased, that "the world uses the terrorist group Hezbollah
to be discussi ng Lebanon
the same words for complete- as just another political party.
again, where . the United
And I think of this in regm'd'
ly different types of processStates began its war on
es in different government to a barely noted story of
Islamic terror in 1983. Or,
systems, thereby making democratic justice, Palestinianrather, where Islamic terror
Diana
15 Palestinian
moral equivalencies that style
began its war against the
· west
don't exist." As Sharansky Authority-scheduled execuUnited States. The fact is, in
put it, ''This election can be tions of "collaborators" with
1983, after Iranian-backed,
the beginning of the democ- Israel. Presumably, lhese are
Syrian-boosted Helbollah
ratic process only if we don 't Arabs - likely Muslims -.
bombings in .Beirut killed
have illusions that democracy wlio hav~ risked everything to
more than 300 Americans at
is
already there, and that all prevent lhe mass murder :md
the U.S. embassy and Empire that ultimately wori
Marine barracks, the United his release in 1986 after nine we have to do · now is give maiming of Jewish civilians.
them"independence. If this is Chairman Abbas' idea of judiStates just sailed away.
years of Soviet servitude.
We wouldn ' t assume ·a war
Now, Sharansky, an lsnieli what we do, then we will find cial .review ·has been to tum
footing against "terror" for government minister, ·has that we have given indepen- their cases over to Sheik
another 20 years. Ronald written ''The Case for dence not to a democratic Akrima Sabri, who, as the
Reagan could fighl only one Democracy" (Public Affairs, state, but io a terrorist state." P.A. 's chief mufti,. is a poster·
This is something to think . imam for Jew-hatred and the
totalitarian behemoth per 2004), a book President Bush
lifetime, the spreading rot he has declared to be a pan of about in connection with the joys of "manyrdom." Nol surknew, communism, not the his " presidential DNA ." wider Middle East, where prisingly, he is calling for the
still-nippable, budding blight Being "the case for democra- there is now such a strong prisoners' blood.
Natan' Sharansky has urged
of jihildist Islam. But 1983 cy," the book provides a the- desire to ' see dictators fall and
was a good year for the Cold oretical underpinning for democracies rise. Danger Ariel Sharonlo save them. " It
War: It was the year President Bush's doctrinal optimism ' lurks in ·allowing the ideolo- is unacceptable," he wrote in
Reagan branded the Soviet about the security-enhancing gies and bureaucracies· and a Jetter to the Israeli prime
Union the "evil empire."
potential in the spread of mmies of violence and hatred minister, that Israel release
In his tiny corner of the freedom. But, as P. David to be sucked up whole into the hundreds of jailed terrorists
Gulag, the renowned dissi- Hornik has written in the machinery of democracy, as "because of the hope of an
d~nt
Natan
Sharansky American
Spectator, though majority-rule itself will opening to peace, (while) the
learned of President Reagan 's . Sharansky's famously hope- neutralize rather than P.A. is about to commit swte
es tab! i shment-q uaki n g ful philosophy is !empered by strengthen -· such poisons. I executions of people accused
words. As Sharansky has a Jess well-known realism. In think of this in regard to ol helping Israel thwan ter ·
written, ''Tapping on walls other words, he sees throu gh Palestinian Authority chair- ror." Thwaning jihadisnenur
and talking through toilets, his own heans and flowers to man Mahmoud Abbas, him- is what the new and improved
word of Reagan's ' provoca- the facts on the ground.
self an unrepeniant Holocaust P.A. is supposed to be doing
t.ion' quickly spread through
These aren·' t always so denier (a weird counterpoint to - along with the rest of the
the prison. We dissidents · pretty. But worse than the this week's opening of a new . Middle East, someday, the
were ecstatic. Finally, t.he uglier corners of reality are Holocaust museum in Israel democracy-theory goes ..'lf it
leader of the free world had the efforts to hide them . attended by world leaders), doesn't, of course, the empire
spoken the truth." Sharansky Discussing the Palestinian who says the terrorist group remains evil, no maher what
experienced first-hand the election, which has been fol- Hamas would and should hold we call it. . .
transformative powers· of lowed by continued incite· seats in the Palestinian pari ia(Diana West is a columnist
truth and free-world leader- ment and terrorism against ment. I think of this in regard fur The Washington Ti11ies.
ship: It was Reagan adminis- Israel, Sharansky told the lo the appalling proposition She can be contacted via
tration pressure on the Evil Jerusalem Post il was that the United States might dianall'est@ verizon.net.)

Virginia
Republican
· Congressman Tom Davis
claims steroids are a public
health crisis. That's why he
and his colleagu~s have gone
to the trouble of summoning
some of the biggest stars in
-+hgught-for-T.()day.;..!!One-fFiend-in-a-hfe~ime-is-much;-~wo­ ~tms.e_balL.to CapitoL Hill to
testify. It's about all
are many; three are hardly possible." - Henry Brooks
together
now
protecting
Adams, American historian and author ( 1838-1918). .
our children.
·Let's say the motive for this
steroids' hearing is, in fact,
about protecting America's
kids from the harmfal -influence of sports leagues that
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
care only about boosting ticket
sales and TV ratings. Then
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
I imagine we can expect a big
editing and must be signed and include address
ballyhO&lt;JeQ he!!rlng soon on
the substance that is most gloand telephone number. No unsigned letters will
rified by spons leagues and
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
kills more kids every year
addressing issues, notpersonalities.
than every other drug combined: Alcohol.
No single industry pfQmotes the consumption of
alcohol among teenagers as
much as college and profesReader Services
(UsPs 213-9601 ·.
sional
sports. ·
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Nebraska
Republican Rep.
Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon. Monday
Tom Osborne knows a bit
accurate. II you know of an error in a through Friday, 111 CoUrt Street,
story, call the newsroom at (7 40) 992· Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class Postage
about college and poofession2156.
paid at Pomeroy.
al sports. He played for the
Member: The Associated Press and the
49ers, then coached the
Oh10 NeWspaper Association.
Our main number Is
University of Nebraska footPo•tma1ter: Send address corrections
(740) 992-2156.
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to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cour1 ,Street,
Department extensions are:
those years on the Nebraska
- Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
campus, he says he dealt with
News
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only three students who
By carrier or molor route
Editor: ChMene Hoeflich, E&lt;t. 12
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hol,"
.Osborne explained.
mall permitt9CI in areas where h0r'r:l9
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Cha~ene Hoeflich, EJd. 12
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news@mydailysentinel.com
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colleagues delve . into base-

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

' .

.

PageA4

SYRACUSE - Thurman Joseph. Martin, Jr., 71, of
Syracuse, passed away at 3:35 p.m. Saturday, March 19 in the
Wintersong Village in Washington Court House .
Bdrn August 22, 1933 at Bowman 's Run, in Racine, he was
the son of the late Thurman Joseph Martin, Sr., and Laura Hill
Man in.
He was a farmer and a member of the. Church of the
Nazarene.
[!J . addition his parents, he was preceded in .death by his
wife, Geraldine Con.nant Manin . on March 16, 1998; an infant
daughter, Joy Lynn Martin, on Apri129, 1963; a sister, Garnet
Potts and two sisters who died at binh, Shirley Jean and Hilda
Ruth.
He is survived by a son. Harvey (Jeannette) Manin, . of
Danvill e; eight sisters and three brothers-in-Jaw, Elma
Imboden, ·of Waverly; Anna Roush, of St. Petersburg. Fla.;
Mynle Imboden, of St. Petersburg; Mary Cox, of Bidwell;
Betty Wicks, of Lancaster; Margaret (Jirri) Cline, of Beverly ;
Ora E!ass, of Syracuse; · Bernice (Dana) Winebrenner, of
Syracuse; Ernie Connant, of Middlepon; and several nieces
and nephews.
.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. Wednesday in the
Cremeens Funeral Home . in Racine, with Pastor Mike Adkins
officiating.
Internment will be in the Carmel Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 - 8 p.m . Tuesday at the funeral
home.
Casketbearers are Harvey Martin , Dencil Hudson, Virgil
Hudson. Clair Swan, Jim Cline and Chris Courtney.

For the Record
Divorces · ·
POMEROY - Divorce actions have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun by Ra,bert Willis, Syracuse,
against Ari Willis, Pomeroy, and by Elizabeth J. Morgan,
Middlepon, against Stanley N. Watson, Jacksonville.
A divorce has been granted to Linda Marie Rapp from Larry
W. Rapp.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY -· Marriage licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Coun to Joshua William Hysell, 18,
and Counney Ann Jones, 18, both of Middleport, and Mark
Lee Allen, 30, and Stephanie Nicole Bu_rton, 25, both of
Syracuse.

Fatitily awarded $1.25 million
setdement in bakery truck crash

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

places and ballots thrown
out beca use of voting irregularities were groundle ss.
"Overall, Ohio has a good
system and it performed
well under extraqrdinary
stress. And yes. it has some
weaknesses,"
Blackwell
said in testimony prepared
.
for the co mmittee .
Ohio and its 20 electoral
votes were key to Pre sident
Bush's victory over John
Kerry. Bush carried the state
by 118,000 votes. or 2 perce ntage points.
A report prepared by tt)e
Democrati c staff of the
House Judiciary Committee
accused Ohio election offi,
cials of · disenfranchisino
minority and Democrati~
voters by mi sallocating voting machines in their distri cts and restricting the use
of provisiona l ballots.
Blackwell" s order that registrations must be on a certain
weight of paper also drew
fire in the staff report.
· Blackwe ll has denied the
staff's all egations .
h- was- a-stunuiug anddisgraceful display demonstrating that there are those
in Congress who are very
wi IIi ng to cast ·as ide the
Constitution and the lawfu lly certified vote of the people to wage a nasty and
-disingenuous
. partisan
attack ," Blackwell said in
hi s testimonY:

•

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

.'

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BEIUIER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
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Art
from PageA1
ties to· spot the extras would
teach them how to observe
what is really there in a person and in their own sur·
roundings.
"! tell them to look out the
window on- the way to
school,"
Haddox
said ,
encouraging them to . be
observant of their environment.
Haddox pointed out that if
there are 10 different witnesses to the same accident
often there are .10 different
accounts because people are
not observant:
SO what did the fifthgraders observe about one
another after drawing their
classmates' portraits?
"I can tell that she 's a nice
person," student Emalee
Glass said about the ponr'ait
~.. -

she'd drawn of her best friend
Marlee Hoffman, "and I can
· tell she dOesn't do drugs ."
"She
has
dimpl,e s," ·
Hoffman noticed about her
portrait of Glass: "Art takes
times."
"Don't put black in my
hair," student Destiny Mullen
said to her portrait artist
Holly McGrath. "I don't see
any black in my hair."
Mullen e~amined her hair
as spoke to be sure she hadn't
· missed
something · that
McGrath had observed.
"I could tell he was cool,"
Raymond Granat said after
e~amining the portrait he'd
dr·awn of classmate Justin
Myers.
"How .do you like yourself?" Myers asked Granat
about the portrait he'd done
of him .
" I look _good." Grail at
answered .
Haddox believes art is a
part of everybody's life and
exercises such as dra~in g

- - --- - · - - · - -- -

-

-

- - " " - --

-

ponraits not only teach kids
to be observant but to better
relate and communicate with
one another.

" An is a process," Haddox
said.
Which makes it a lot like
life.

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Beth Sarpn!/ photo

Meigs Elementary Art Teacher Jan Haddox assists one of his
students in the art of drawing portraits; Students created por,
traits of their c!assrnates, teaching them both observation
and communfc.ation skills.
- _ . ; __ _ _ _ _ _ __ o _

OH • 992-3671

_ _ _ _ _- : - - - - - - - ' - - - - - -- -

�PageA6

OHIO

The. Daily. Sentinel
.

Monday, March 21,

2005

l\1E:MBER EXCHANGE: Team hopes fossil find will tell human story
BY JOHN MANGELS
THE PLAIN DEALER

- - - - - - -- -CLEVELAND (AP) - In
the eight decades or so that
fossi I hunters have roamed
nature's graveyards in search
of the earliest traces of
humanity, the pickings have
been mighty slim.
Wind, water and predators
scoured the African bush with
a cruel efficiency long before
the first .scientists arrived.
They didn't leave much - a
cracked mdlar here, a flake of
thigh bone there.
So when veteran searcher
Aiemayehu Asfaw unearthed a
weathered shank of forearm a
month ago in the hilly
Ethiopian badlands south of
the Mille River, there was no
reason to think anything extraordinary would follow. The
rest of the fossil-hunting team ,
led by paleoanthropologist
. Yohannes Haile-Selassie of the
Cleveland Museum of Natural
History. had turned up only old
monkey and antelope bones
and was ready to move on.
But they dropped to hands
and knees out of habit to
crawl the dusty plot. hoping
to locate other pieces of the
fossilized arm bone.
What they found instead. in
rapid succession. was a veritable anatomy lesson: parts of
upper arm and leg bones. ribs.
stubby vertebrae, the lacy swirl
of sacral bones that sit atop the
pelvis. All 50 or 60 specimens
found that day were lying on
the surface or captured in the
mesh sieves that workers used
to sift the top layer of dirt.
The searchers planted yellow plastic !lags to mark each
fossil's location. Soon. the
excavation site looked as. if a
patch of daffodils had sprouted from the parched earth.
When dwindling money
and supplies ended the expe-

dition earlier this month. the
Cleveland team had achieved
· one of anthropology's rarest
feats - re.covering the partial
skeleton of an early htumn
ancestor. They located more
than 400 bones and bone
frag1i1ents. and suspect others
are still buried in the hard,
pac'ked ground. waiting to be
exhumed when digging·
resumes next year.
"We have. neck bones, we
have ribs, a partial upper leg, a
scapula, just on the surface,"
said museum director and
expedition co- leader Bruce
Latimer, in hi s and Hai leSelassie's tirst interview since
returning to Cleveland. "Just
the elements we' ve found so
far are indicative we ' re going
to lind more ...
Only four other relat ive ly
intact skeletons older than I
million -years have ever been
found .
The most famous of those
- but not the most compl'ete
- is ""Lucy," the 3.2-millionyear-old Attstralopithec us
afarensis specimen fo und in
1974 by Donald Johanson , at
the time the Cleveland museurn 's curator of physical
anthropology. ·
Compared with a fu ll 206bone s~e l e ton . Lucy is 20
percent i.ntact.
The other partial skeletons
are the 4.4 million-year-old
bones of a primitive. ape· man
called Ardipithecus ramidus
that Haile -Selassie helped
uncover in Ethiopia in 1994:
an extraordinarily intact
skeleton of a 1.6 miJ.Iipn-yearold Homo .erectus youth nick·
named Turkana Boy that
Pennsy !Va nia
Stat~
University
paleontologi st
Alan Walker and colleagues
identitied in Kenya in 19~ 5:
and a nearly complete but
unclassitied skeleton, approx. imatcly 4 million years old,

Monday, March 21
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise
from 31 to 43 by late .thi s
mornin g. Skies will be
most ly sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the north turning from the northwest as
the morning progresses.

Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)

AP Photo/ Cleveland Museum of Natural History via The Plain Dealer

Ovemight (1;6 a.m.)

Temperatures will linger
at 3 1 ·with today's low of
31
occurring
around
6:00am. Skies will range
from mostly clear to partly
clo udy . with 10 MPH
winds from the northeast. .
Thesday, March 22 .

Temperatures will hold
steady around 45 with
tOtJ ay's hi gh of 4 7
around
.occurring
3:00pm. Skies will be
mostly . sunny 'with 5
MPH winds from the
northwest turning from
the north eas t as the
afternoon progress es.
Evening
(7 · p.m.-

Temperatures will climb
from 31 to 52 by late thts
morning. · Skies will be
. mostl y sunny ·to mostly
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from the east.

Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It looks like a cloudy
afternoon. We are predicting lig ht rain . The r11in
will start around 3:00pm.
Expect. 0.10 inches of rail)
by the end of this afternoon . Tempe ratures will
hover at 54. Winds will be
10 io IS MPH from the
east.

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· DUNEDIN. Fla. (AP) Josh Towers pitched five
so lid innings and the
Toronto Blue Jays defeated
the Cincinnati Reds 4-1 on
Sunday.
Towers had the longest
outing of the spring for a
. Toronto starter, allowing
one run and five .hit s while
striking out two . Hi: threw
42 of hi s 65 pitches for
s t~ikes and only three of his
outs came on tlyballs.
"He pitched a good
game." Blue Jays manager
John Gibbons said. "He , ·
moved the ball around and
threw a lot of · strikes and
made them put the ball in
play."
Aft-er leaving the game.
Towers threw an additional
20 pitches in the bullpen .
Cincinnati starter Aaron
Hara ng allowed two run s
and three hits in five ·
innings. He did not walk a
batter.
"I was happy . with my
pitche s overall," Harang
said. " I made a few mistakes
but hit my spoh. I wish the
season started tomprrow.':
Harang's only . rough
iltn.ing came in the fifth.
After retiring · eight straight
batters, he gave· up back-toback so lo homers to · Frank
Menechino and Alex Rios .
Before the game. manager
Dave Miley ·sa id he was
looking for Harang to fill
the fourth or fifth spot in the
rotation.
·
Shea Hillenbrand had two
hits for Toronto. Sean Casey
had the lone RBI for
Cincinnati.
Toronto pitchers retired 19
of their final 20 batters.
Miguel Bati sta worked a
perfect nirith for the save.
Notes: Ken Griffey Jr.
stayed back in Sarasota to
take extra batting practice.
He is scheduled to pl ay
seven innings in center field
on Mo.nday and Tuesday. In
seven games this spring, six
as the DH. Griffey is hit.ting
.42 1 with three RBis .... ·
Blue Jay s 3B Corey Koskie
, (strained groin) took batting
practice with the team but
went to the minor league ·
complex to be the DH in a
game there .

COLLEGE PARK, Md .
(A P) - Jess ica Davenport
had 23 points and II
rebounds , and Brandie
Hoskins scored 14 point s
for Ohio State (29-4) in an
86-45 over Holy Cross in
the first round of .the NCAA
women's tournament.
· The 29 wins surpasses the sc hool mark set by the
1984-85 . team and matched
by the 1992-93 team, which
advanced to the Final Four.
The
second-seeded
Buckeyes
will
face
Maryland in th e second
round.
Lisa Andrew s scored 13
poinrs for 15th-seeded Holy
Cross (20-11 ), which fell to
1- 10 in NCAA tournament
play.

Spring coaches
reminder

·The_Daily Sentinel

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· Towers, Blue ·
Jays top Reds

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Spring vars ity sport s
coaches are reminded to
send us your schedules. for
the ·upcoming season as
soon as possible.
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m. fa x them to 446-3008, or
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Redmen split doubleheader with Shawnee State
STAFF REPORT.
SPECIAL 1'0 TH E SENTIN EL

Next Game:

Today vs. OWet (at
RIO GRANDE - The University
Ormond Beach.
of Rio Grande and Shawnee State Ba.sebaR Fla.), 2 p.m.
closed out their four-game weekend
series on Saturday with the Redmen
and Bears splitting a doubleheader in
Shawnee won the first game S-2
American Mideast Conference South and Rio took game two 7-2.
Rio Grande starter Nate Chau gave
Division baseball action at Robert
up
three first inning runs and the
Evans Field.

NAS~AR Nextel

CONTACT ltjFO

Fax- (740) 446-3008
(7 40) 446-2342
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Redmen could never recover in dropping the game one dec ision . Two of
the three runs came on a home run off
the bat of Ju stin Craft. Jared Perdue
scored the third run after &gt;tealing
third base and scoring l)n a throw ing
error by Rio catcher Jorge Morales.
Ri o ( 14-5, 5- 1 AMCSJ scored two
runs ·in the fourth inning to clo&gt;e the
gap to 3-2. Senior designated hitter
Kris Schuler collected a big RBI sin·
gle in the innin g.
·

Shawnee State (6-5-1, 1-3 AMCS)
added a pair of in surance runs in the
top of the seventh when Ryan
Rowland clubbed a two-run homer tO
make the score S-2.
Matt Thompson (2·1) went the distance to get the win for the Bears. He
yielded five hits and two runs (one
earned) with nine strikeouts and two
walks .
Please see Reclnien. Bl

Cup I Golden Corral 500 - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - , - - - - - - -

A star is born·
Edwards wins first Cup race
·to complete Atlanta sweep
BY

PAUL NEWBERRY

. ASSOCIATED PRESS

HAMPTON, Ga. A
NASCAR star is born.
Carl Edwards pulled off a
daring move on Jimmie
John son coming off the final
turn and won his first Nextel
Cup · race at Atlanta Motor
Speedway, beating Johnson by
about a half-car length
Sunday.
.
Johnson . trying to win for
the second week in a row,
grabbed · the lead from
Edwards with 25 laps to go
and appeared to be strong
enough to take it all the way to
the fini sh of the Golden Corral
500.
But, on the final lap,
Edwards got a great run coming out of tum two and pulled
up on Johnson 's back bumper.
Johnson went high coming
through turns three and four,
trying to block his challenger,
but Edwards went even higher.
The 25-year-old driver hardly resembled someone in his
tirst full year on the circuit,
huggi ng the wall and attllally
tapping Johnson's car as they
roared through the trioval.
John son 's car bobbled
slightly just a few feet from
the finish, and Edwards
slipped by on the outside to
win by a minuscule 0.028 sec-

onds.
When it was over, Edwards
pu lied to a stop in front of the
main grandstand, climbed out
of his Roush Racing Ford and
pulled off a move that's sure to
become a standard on the Cup
circuit - a backflip onto· the
asphalt.
"Let me tell you, Jimmie ·
Johnson is an amazing competitor,"· Edwards said. "That's
the hardest I've ever driven in
my life. I'm pretty proud of
that."
Edwards completed a weekend ·sweep in Atlanta. On
Saturday, he held off Johnson
and Tony Stewart to win the
Busch race - his ftrst victory·
in that series, as well .
Edwards, who moved from
trucks to Nextel Cup for the
final 13 races last season, is
running a full schedule in both
·series, trying to gain as much
experience as possible:
Clearly, he's a quick learner.
"You can see his intensity,
his car control," Johnson said.
"This guy is our next superstar."

.

Greg Biffle held on for third,
followed by Mark Martin and
Kasey Kahne.
Johnson led a race-high !56
laps, followed by Biffle with
'151. Edwards led only' nine
laps, but he was near the front
. Please

see NASCAR. Bl

APpholll

Cart Edwarcls does a flip after winning the NASCAR Nextet Cup Golden Corral 500 at Atlanta
Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga. Sunclay.

Boys State Tourr,arnent I Division Ill

Ohio St. women
beat Holy Cross

• Diap~rs

PLEASE REMEMBER:

. INGELS

.

Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)

Atemayehu Asfaw, an Ethiopian man who helped a Cleveland
MUseum of Natural History team hunt for foss il s in the hilly
Ethiopian badlands south of the Mille River, shows off a fresh find
- part of an arm bone belonging to an early -human ancestor.
Judging from the types of animal fossils recovered nearby, the par- .
tial skeleton is about 4 million years old. Scientists should be able
. to pin down the fossils· exact age by measuring the rate of
Midnight)
radioactive decay of volcanic rocks that surrounded them.
Temp era ture s . will
still embedded in a cave wall menls reassembled as n1uch as. drop from 39 early thi s
.in Sterkfontein, South Africa. possible. The fossi ls will ·stay evening to 32 . Ski es
The Cle veland team's bones in
Ethiopia 's
National
are · in much better shape. Museum. Latime'r. Hail e- will be mostly clear
though they still must be Selassie and other researchers with 5 MPH wind s
from th e northeast.
cleaned and the jigsaw frag- will study plaster copies.

HOLZER

'

Sweet 16 bracket, Page 82
Local sports, Page 86 .
NCAA Roundup, Page 86

Monday, March 21, 2005

PRESCRIPTION

.

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

tronton:s Denl1is Gagai , left,
rebound during the Ohio High

TORONTO (AP)
LeBron James never played
better. It still wasn't enough .
James
became
the
youngest player to sco_re 50
points in an ,NBA game, but
hi s franchi se-record 56
weren 't enough to prevent
the Toronto Rap tors from
beating
the
Cleveland
&lt;;avaliers 105-98 on Sunday.
"I probably played the best
game of my life but it means
nothing when it comes with
a lo s~ :· James said.
He easily surpassed hi s
previous career best of 43
AP photo
points, set Nov. 24 against
and Cincinnati North College Hill' s Darien Goins fight for a Detroit. However, he; comSchool Division Ill Championsh ip Saturday in Columbus.
mitted a key turnover ·with
16 seconds left and missed a
pair of 3-point attempts in
the final 14 seconds.
James finished 18-for-36
from the field and 14-for-15
from the line. He also had six ·
3s, I 0 rebounds and five
Mayo took a back seat to whipped a pass to teammate
assi~ts. But Toronto 's bench
hi s teammates most of' the Damon Butler on the other did in the Cavaliers, outscorgame, but with the game tee- side of the basket. Butl er just ing Cleveland's reserves 34tering in the b_alance in the got off a shot as he was
I.
t"inal minute the 6-foot-6 fouled, the shot going in and
"I don't care about individsophomore asserted himself his free thro w pllshing the
ual slats, especially when
in a big way.
lead to 67-63 with 30.5 secyou lose. I was disappointed
What had been a 12-point onds left.
to
.bave as good a game as I
lead early _in the quarter
On the ensuing possession . . had and stilL come out with a
melted away for the Trojans the Fighting Tigers (26- 1)
·(27- 1) until they held a 64-63 missed a shot, rebounded it . loss," James said.
At 20 years, 80 days old,
advantage with time s ifting and then turned the ball over
James eclipsed Rick Barry as
away.
·- Mayo stealing a pass in
the youngest player to score
The Fighting Tigers had a the corner. He raced down
shot at taking the lead with the court and glanced at a SO points. Barry was 21
years, 261 days old ·when he
43.9 seconds to go but teammate on a 2-on-1 before
Marcus Willi ams missed two dunking with 12 seconds . scored 57 for San Francisco
against the New York
free throws.
remaining .
Knicks, according to the
North
College
Hill
"We had a trap on the base- Elias
Spons Bureau.
inboonded. to Mayo and he line and my job was to rotate
"It 's a good achievement,
brought the ball down the to the closest player ... Mayo
but
I'd rather set it with a
court and d'l-ove the right said . '" I didn 't rotate right
win,"
James said.
·
baseline. He ran out of room away because I "'anted him
point
total
also
James'
at the end line and as he was
bested · the
previous
falling out of bound s,
Cavaliers mark of 50 set by

N. College Hill scraps Ironton·
·Southeastern Ohio .power fall In D-Ill title game
BY RUSTY

MILLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS
One
down , two to go.
Mr, Basketball O.J . Mayo
had an assist on a critical
basket and then scored the
final four points for No. !ranked Cincinnati North
College Hill in a 71 -65 win
over No. 2 Ironton in the
Division Ill stat!! champi onship game on Saturday.
Second-team Ali-Ohioan
Bill Walker had 19 points
and 14 rebounds, with 6- 11
center Keenan Ellis adding
14 points, seve n rebounds
and five blocked shots.
"We had a goal way back
in November - to play for
the state championship,''
Walker said. "We did it. Now
the goal is to get two more."

James breaks 50,
but Cavs still lose
Walt
Wesley
against
Cincinnati on Feb. 19, 1971.
"He 's going to set .a lot
more records, ~ou know, if
he de:velops,' Cllweland
coach Paul Silas said. "He ·
was just on ftre tonight,. be
was JUSt amazing and it was
great to see ."
After cutting Toronto's
lead to three with an off-baE
ance 3-pointer, James pausect
before running up the floor
and clapping his hands.
:
Rafer Alston followed
with a layup, giving the
Raptors a I 03-98 lead with
23 seconds left. James, with
fou r defenders converging
on him, then turned the ball
over as he was driving to the
basket.
,
. .
Alston foUowed w1th two
free throws with 14 seconds
to go. and James misSed two
3-pointers before the fmal
buzzer.
James' most spectacular
points came on a dunk in the
fourth quarter. He crossed'
over before blowing by Pape
Sow and throwing down. a
thunderous dunk, yelling in
the air afterward. James
played all 48 minutes.
His 56 points were the
mo st ever · by a Raptors
opponent.
" I thought he earned all
56." Toronto coach Sam
Mitchell said. "I mean . he hit
some fadeaway 3s and shots,
but he had two guys contesting him."
Drew Gooden added 24
points and 10 rebounds for
the Cavaliers, wbo have lost
nine straight
games and
nine of 11 overall:
Gooden couldn't believ~ .

road

�(9) Nevada
(16) F. Oid&lt;insol)

National Champion

67-55

Thursday, 7:27 p.m.
~UW-Milwaukee
(4) Bosi&lt;JnCoi.
(5) Alabama

-~-~~:~=-:~=~
_rrr~:=~~J
r·--------· ······-·-· .... --.. . ':(16)30 mlns. after end
--- ---- I
Wlsconsin-N.C. State

71-59

Oal&lt;land

&gt;--~

,,._

-

of

·-·~--

Chicago

____ , __;

Allstate Arena

Syracuse

Carrier Dome

I

Saturday

83-75
83-73

.

1.

Sunday

'-;'5;;:·-;Vie'llla=:n:.::ov:.::a:. . . . -:;;;.~
7~

(4) Fklrida

(12) New Mexico· 55-4c

~11 ) ~-~-~on_-~--~:~ ~}l l

r· -- --,---

(6) Utah State
66-53
30 mlns. after end of :..

1

~~~-~'!:~W _M~a~~.... I
Oklahoma~ ) .

,----.L..-

.

(7} S. lllr.ois
85-77
(15) SELou!S&lt;Jna 63-50

Edward Jones

Dome
St. Louis·
Sat.. April2

[ 1 Washington
'
(6) Pacitic
97-79 !
(9) Pitlsbo'lfl
79-71 -~-------- ......................,
Thursday, 7:10p.m. 'T ·
-

~ ~;'_.

L~-~9~_i_~-~~~!~-- - - - - - ---u
(5) Goorga Tecl1 76-54
(13) LA-Lalayette
(3) Gonzaga
(11) UCLA

!--

All times EST

· Saturday

I

'

30 mins. after and of

65-£2
7&amp;&lt;13

.

(13) Vermont
72-61
(12) o~ Damn"' 69-81

:=-~

I

-~

~

-~

60-54
30 mins. after end of

i· (14) UTEP

-!·-·-··-········-·----·-··--·-:

1

National
semifinals

National
semifinals

Duke-Michigan State
2 Kentucky
m-cwti.nati ~~
~"''
(15) E. Kentucl&lt;y 72-64
Regionals

SOURCE: NCAA

NASCAR
from Page 81
all day.
"I was pretty confident I
could beat (Johnson), but I
couldn ' t be3t Carl ,'' Biffle
said. "I didn' t plan on him
being there."
Johnson · shook off the
embarrassment of being
docked 25 point s and losi ng
his series lead because hi s
Chevrolet fai led inspection
after win ning last Week's race
at Las Vegas.
"We were thinking about
Victory Lane and being able
to smile over our critics and
eve·ryone who thought we
·were doing something goofy
last weekel1d," Johnson said.
"We're going to prove what
this team is capable of and
change the impression some
people may have of the team."
Johnson's team wasn't the
onl y one to face NASCAR 's

Scraps

J

St.. 63-55

Frank iu~~~~enter r:)::~--

(2) Wake. Forest~11 - 105

Regionals

[-I 1 DMississW
uke
(9)

[ 7 West Virginia
63-61

Charlotte

(16) c..~ware st. 57-413
Friday, 7:10p.m.

Washington-Louisville

no) c~

(2) Connecticut
(7)

J_-- _- - - - - ;-·- - - - - ;
April ~ J~=~-:::_:_:.:__:__ l
l
- 1. L~.- ~~~-i-~~-~--~~~~---·-...J
Austin

Universi ty Arena

1
71-69 . i
7~

Championship
Game
Edward
'
Jones Dome i
St. Louis
_ Sat.,

Albuquerque

68-62

r·s·-·i-exa·~ T~ch . ·--

Edward Jones
Dome
St. Louis
·sat., April2

(3- 1) scauered seven hits,
giving up two (uns while fanning seven in the rou te going
performance. .
.
from Page 81
The onl y runs Shaw nee
Stale earned off of Watterson
Chau ( 1-2) made two .bad happened. in the top of the
pitches and it cost him. He sixth inni ng when Craft went
went seven inni ngs, giving deep for a second time on the
five runs (four earned). arid aftern oon.
six hits while stri king out
Rio Grande collected live
four ·and walking three.
hits in ga me two )Jut made
Schuler led the Redmen the most of them, scoring
offense with a 2-for-2 day at seven ntns. The fin al three
the plate.
.
runs came in the bottom of
Game two saw the Redmen the sixth inning with the benget a second straight out' e fit ·. of onl y one hi t. The
standing pi tching perfo r- Redmen were aided by two
mance from jun ior southpaw throwing errors by Shawnee
Brent Watterson. Watterson relief pitcher John Rypel.

Red men

1118 SWeet 16 S~ed, team and scores of first-and-second-round games (seeds in bold)
(1i111nois-- -- -t-·1

Monday, March 2:1,

www:mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

AP

Casey Mears spun as . he
wrath after Las. Vegas. Three
crew chiefs were suspended swept off turn two, setting off
for ru les violations - though a wild melee that took out
two uf them were in Ailanta fou r-time Cup champion Jeff
pending appeals
and Gordon and six-time Atlanta
Jo hnson was docked 25 winner Bobby Labonte. The
r~ce was halted for nearly I0
points.
/· .
whi le
workers
At the ' driver's meeting . minutes
before the race, NASCA R cleaned up the mess.
"I thought I was going to
preside nt Mike Helton issued
· a stem warning to the drivers get through there," said
and crew chiefs. He raised the Gordon, who rammed · the
possibility of stiffer penalties inside wall. "I saw smoke, but
- such as dri ver suspensions · they all turned down in front
- if teams continued to tlout of me."
the ntlebook.
Gordon and Labonte evenTodd Berrier, the crew chief tually got back in the race
for Kevi n Harv ick, began with rebuilt cars. but it was
serving a four-race suspension merely to tum laps on the
even though he's appealing high-banked oval and hope
the severity of his penalty. for as many points as possible.
Johnson crew chief Chad Labonte ·finished
37th,
Knaus and Alan Gustafson, Gordon 39th.
·
who works with Kyle Busch,
Series points leader Kurt
were at the race while they · Bu sch also was involved in
appeal two-race suspensions the big wreck, but he had only
for failin g inspections.
minor damage. The defending
The race wasn't even a lap Ncxtel Cup champion manold when 10 cars got caught aged to climb back into con- .
,up in a hu.ge wreck coming tention, getting as high as secdown the backstretch.
ond before a shredded tire

r··-···-···-···~···-···-···--:--···---··

from Page 81
to think he was wide open."
He later closed the scoring
with two clinching free
throws.
Mayo fini shed with 22
points, six assists and three
rebounds, despite carryin g
fo ur fo uls for most of the second half.
" It was like playing an allstar team out there," Ironton
coach Roger Zornes said.
"They' re very good."
Ironton, .which was making
mined his day. He wound up
32nd and surrendered the top
spot in the stand ings back to
Johnson..
John son has an 82-point
lead over-· Biffle, whil e
Edwards is 87 points back.
Busch slipped to fourth .
Ryan Newman, wlio won
his fifth straight Cup pole at
Atlanta, surrendered the lead
to Johnson aft er the · big
wreck, quickly fell off the
pace and fini shed 14th. In
seven races at this track,
Newman has yet to place
higher than tifth.
Bobby Hamilton Jr., the
biggest surprise of qualifying,
started from th&lt;; outside of the
front row but got off to a dismal start. He was passed by
three cars before he got to the.
first turn, then got clipped by
Brian Vickers on the 'back"
stretch , cutting a tire.
Later, Hamilton was trying
to get back on the , lead _lap
when he slammed the wall ,
forcing him to limp behind the
wall. He settled for 38th.

its second trip to the ti na!
fo ur, rece ived 28 points fro m
center Cliffton Howard, who
also had 16 rebounds. Dennis
Gagai, a special. mention All Ohio selection, tossed in 22
points.
.
The Troj ans, shuffling
players in and out because of
foul trouble, took the lead on
Butler 's 3-pointer and then
expanded it to 36-30 with
Walker scoring the last eight
points for his team.
The
Fight ing
Tigers
fo undered because of bad
free-throw shooting. They hi't
just three of their first ni ne
and ended the half 7-of-15 at
the line - then hit just 1-of'

James
from Page 81
what he saw.
"They were doing all
types of defenses against
him, but he ·still kept scor. ing," Gooden said. "I just
looked and thou ght , who
would have thought someone like LeBron James
would come out of high
schoo l and do this in his second year in the NBA ? I
looked at the clock, and he
had 48 point s with like fi ve
minutes left." ·
'. Jalen Rose had 30 points
and Donyell Mars hall added
·
24 for the Raptors.
Marshall said James
reminds him of Mi chae l
Jordan.
"When I used to play with
Golden
State,
B.J .
Armstrong used to tell me
about how to beat the Bulls.
Let Michael score his
points, and stop everybody

Monday, March 21 , 2005

m:rtbune - Sentinel - Re ster

Schuler cont inued his mini
hot streak with two more hits,
including a run scorin g double in the foUJt h inning. He
now has five strai ght hits and
has reached base six consecuti ve times.
Craft (0- 1) took !he loss for
th e Bears. He lasted five
innings, giving up fo ur ru ns
(three earned) and four hits.
He struck out fo ur and
walked four.
Rio won the series capturing three of the fou r games.
The Redmen will head to
Ormond Beach, Fla. for the
annual spring trip, They are
scheduled to' play Ol ivet 2
p.ni. today.

CLASSIFIE -D

G.olli.o C..Unly, Ofl

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

3 in the second half.
North College Hill was
holding a 44-43 lead midway
th rough the third period when
Ellis scored on a baseline .
dri ve, Walker stole a pass and
fo un d Mayo ·for an easy
layup - Mayo waiting for
the defe nder and then drawing the fOLtl as he !lipped in
the layup . Ellis then.tipped in
a Mayo miss before Walker ·
brought the crowd to life.
He stepped in front of a
pass at midcourt: and soared
in for a dltnk, windmilling it
in while 14,749 at Value City
Arena roared. That gave the
Trojans a 53-43 lead .
else," Marshall said . "I think
we did that."
James scored 29 poims in
the first , two quarters, his
most in any half. His previous record for a half was 28
on Ma rch 27, 2004, against
New Jersey. He fini shed
with 4 1 in tha t game.
James c.o mm itt ed two
straight turnovers, the second of whi ch led to Morri s
Peterson's dun k. giving
Toronto a 12-point lead in
the first quarter it s
bigges t of the game.
But James followed with
I0 point s and two ass ists in
the final 3:37 of the quarter
to help cut the lead to th ree.
Notes: C leveland point
guard Jeff Mcinni s has lost
hi s startin g job to Eric
Snow. " I don' t care. I real•
ly don't. What i-s there to
lose?:' Silas said. " I don ' t
have time to wait. I have to
find guys that can step up,"
Mcinnis didn 't play at all .
Snow had zero points and
four assists.

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

Announcement ...•.. ........... ...........................0 30

Antlqoos ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Markat. .... .'...............-........080
Auto Parts &amp;. Accessories ...................•.. .. ... 760

•

Auto Repalr .................................................. 770 .
Autos lor Sate ..............................................710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale .. ......................... .. 750
Buttdln_g Supplies.,.................._. .. ,................ 550
Business and Buildings .................. ;.......... 340
Business Opportunlty .................................210
Business. Treining ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
CamP,Ing Equipment ............................. :..... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Chttd/Eiderly Care ....................... ................ 190
Electricat!Relrigeration ...............................840
Equipment lor Rent .....................................480
Excavating ............................................. ...... 830
Farm Equipment.. ........................................610
Farms lor Rent ........................................... ..430
FarmslorSate .................. .-....................... ... 330
For Lease ......................................... ,........... 490
For Sate .............................. :......................... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetabtes ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Hauling ........................................... 850
Giveaway ...................................................... 040 .
Hippy Ads .................................................... oso
Hay &amp; Grain .................................................. 640
Help Wantad .................... J............................ 110

•

Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ...........,t:.. ....................... 510
Houoes for Rent.. ........................................ 410
In Memoriam ......... :...................................... 020

•

.

.

'

'

•

••

'

••

l

..

i
i

Display Ads

Dally In- Column: 1 : 00 p.m.

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2

Monday~Frlday

Buslne•• Days Prior To
Publication

Home lmprovements ................................... 81 0

Insurance .............. ,....'............. ... ··-·-·---··.:...•. 130

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

i
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Office · o Bidwell-Porter area. 3 bed·
ons.umer Affai rs toll treJ room , 2 bath. 5 acres, cust 1·866-278-0003 to learri tom oak cabinets and wood·
f the mortgage broker o work. $138,500. (740)367ender Is properly licensed. 7181 .
This is a public servic
nnouncement from th
hio Valley Publishin

i

We do remodeling and most
&amp;
EMrs
Paramedics
aliy unfinished work, also
needed. Apply at 1354
tree
removal.
small
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis . .

(740)446-2506; (740)367-

perspn
needed . 0437.
Sales
Furmture S:lore. Full time ,
Mike Pooe
sales experience preferred. Roofo
'ng, Sido·ng, ~orc•es.
11
Immediate opening. Apply in
person: Lifestyle Furniture . . Decks. Phone (740)388-

8329.

856 Third Ave , Gallipolis,
OH, 10am-5pm. No phone Private duty nursi ng. Call
catlsptease .
' (740) 441 -95 15.

NEA, Inc.
HOMES

MONEY

US-Help-You· Clean-er -~Jp!l! ~o~
m~
a n~::::;::::::~
No Matter What The Job Is J!!l
We Will Get-er-Donel!! For
PR~AL
All You're Inside/Outsi de
SERVICES
Needs We're the Ones fo r r..--iiiiiiiiiiiii-_.1
You. Call Karen or Dave at
OIRECTY
740.985-3633. Businesses,
Free
Equitmen1
A e s i de n t i a 1/ h om e s ,
Need Cash?
Free Professional
Contracts.
· Anytime .
We pay up lo $8/hour.
install ation
Clean
Al l.
Weekly pay, Paid training, . Ariyp lace.
Up to 4 rooms
Powerwashing: Remodeling
Full benefits package,
Free 50+ premium
etc.
Slable wo rk, Prpfessional
chan nels
No Job Is To Dirty!!!
environment
Free DVO pl ay.er
Give us a Call TODAY I
call lor details :
1 ~877-46 3 -6 2 47 ext. 2456
Jim':;; Carpentry
Cal l 1-800-523·7556

For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in ve ry good condi·
lion. Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx. 1600 sq. h . each . 1
2241
or 2 baths. Lease price
negotiable · to encourage
Small 2 bedroom mobile new
business.
Call
home in Racine . $225 per (740)446·44?5 or (740)446·
month, $225 deposit. years 3936.
lease, no pets. no calls af19r
\ IIIH 11\ \ 0I "o l

Fair Housing Act ol1 D68

APAR!l'&gt;IE'&gt;TS
FUR RENT

Call Harold. (740)385-9948.

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock modelS at old prices,
2005 models arriving Now.
Cote's
Mobile
Homes.
15266 U.S. 50 E;ast , Athens.
Ohio 45701. (740)592-1972,
MWhere You Get Your
Money's Worth "

1 bedroom, t bath, kitchen
w/J:lishwasher, very spacious. Call (740)446-4639
Sam-4 :30pm.

•

I~allipolis 11Bailp m:rtbune

I

The Daily.Sentinel J)oint J)Ieasant ~egister
L._... ~--Q~Q~.~~:234~---··-···-···-J~l.~:-.~~-~-----··-···-J~)
..~.:~~·-···-..J
•
4
.
'

I

-Warehouse
in Henderson . WV. Preowned applicanes starting at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do serv1ce work. on all
Make and Models (304)675-

7999

Kenmore washer, $95 :
Whirlpool drYer, $95; GE
electric
range·.
$95 :
Whirlpool refrigerator. $150 :
Like, new Whirlpool dryer,
$250: Like new Magic· Chef
washer , $250; Octagon end
(740)446-2325 or (740)446- tables . $15 each; Tappan
4425.gas range. $175. ·
Skaggs Appliances
BEAUTIFUL .
APART·
76 Vine Street
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
(740)446-7398
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark
Drive from $344 to $442 .
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
Walk ro shop &amp; movies. Call (740)446-7444 1-877-830740-446-2568 .
Equal 9162. Free Estimates, Easy

SS I/ Social Security'
Housing Opportunity.
financing. 90 days same as
$1.300 Net income, We can Beech Street. Middleport.' 1 cash . VIsa/ Mast er Card.
finance you a home. Call bedroom furnished apart- drive- a- linle save alot.
1_304_)_73_6_-34_00____ ment, utUiMs paid, deposit &amp;
.
refer ences. ·'no
We
have
apprOximately
13_
{T40}992
used homes lor under :___:____:0fSS
_ _ _ _ __

--====~~~~w~~~m~- ~--

r

LoTs&amp;
ACRF.AGE

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments ·
and/or small hOuses ·FOR

RE NT. Call (740)44 t-111 I

washers &amp; dryers , retrigerators, gas · and electric
ranges. air conditioners. and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home .

rt.,--•ANnQu
---JE-S_.1

Free Equitment
Free Professional
install ation
Free OVD pl ayer
Call 1·800-523·7556
call lor Free H.BO/Cinamax
. &amp; Show time.

iiiiiiiiil

1

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660
Livestock ...................................................... 63D
Lost and Foun&lt;I ........................................... 060
~;OProlrruNrrv~==~~~·'
Lots &amp; Acraage ................................... :....... 350
Clll
3080.
Miscellaneous ...................... ... ........ ,............ 170 age. Must have HS Dip. or HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Miscellaneous Marchandtse....................... 540 GED, clean Police Record. lNG CO. recommends lha · T\JRNED DOWN ON
Mobile Home Repalr ....................... ............. 860 valid DL and willing to won. ou do business with
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Mobile Homos lor Rent ............................... 420 any shiN. Could t~Jrn 1nto FT le you know, and NOT t
No Fee Unless we Winl
·Mobile Homos lor Sate'........ ....................... .320 Perm positions. Please call end money through th
1-888·582-3345
Money to Loan .............................................220 740 -925 -3015 M·F, 7a-3p. ail until yot.l have investi
Motorcyclll &amp; 4 Wheeiero .......... ., .............. 740 EOE MJFION.
ated the offeri .
1~ I \I I ' 1 \ 11
Mualcallnstrumenta ................_................... 570
Peroonsla ..................................................... 005 Wanted· Licensed Physical -,r--":':'......-., "~-~~--...,
Pets lor Sare·.,.............................................. 560 Therapy Assistant for home
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820 health ~ervices. Please sepd
Professional Sarvlces ................................. 230 resume to McGraw Pt1ys1ca1 •
Therapy. Inc ., P.O. Box %3.
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ..................... .......... 160 Jackson.
OH 45640 or call
ea 1ng nanc a
Nice ~ bedroom. t bath,
Fleer Eawe Wanted ..................................... 360 (740)286-6631
.
Institution approving Small great ne1gnborhood. excelSchools lnatruction .... ;....................... :........150_
· Business. Mortgage
!ent
condition,
Price
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Work From Home, 15 year
Personal and Vehicle
Reduce&lt;ll
(~)593-3542""
Situation• Wanted .......................................120 company weekly pay, free
Loans. lmmec:llate
Space for Rent ............................................. 460 bEinelits·. ft8)1ible schedule,
response:
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520 home phone. need computgi\le us a call at.
2-story. 7 room house, 4
SUV'a lor Sate ......... ....................:.... ........ ... .720 er. 1nternet (7.40}44,·9267. 1-866-228-7063. Or apply bedroom . 2 bath, 2 porches
Truckolor Sate ............................................ 715 apply online www.employ'·
online at
(1 closed In), cftd(. 2/3 acre
Upholotsry .......................................... :........ 870 menthomhoma.neVp131824 www.mv.•tmentttnanc,al .o
flat lot . Heat pump. River
Van• For Sate ...............................................730 ;:.::==;:=::;,:;.;,;;;.~=:;;::;:::==~ Valley School OIIPI'Ict .
Wanted to Buy ...................... :.................... ;.090
Butavlllo Plkt. $6~ , 500
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppltea.................. 620
. (7&gt;4())367·7272.
Wanted To Do ..............................................180
Warned to Rant ................ ... .........................470
3 bedooom. 2bllh, llroploco,
Yard Sale- G~lllpolla ...................... :.............072
on 1 .e acres. ~io Grande
Yard 8alo-Pomoroy/Mtddte ........... .............. 074
area.
$85,000.
Call
Yard $ale-P1. Pleasant ................................ 076
(7&gt;4())7011·1166.
lt)

FIND AJOB
IN THE CL_
ASSIFIEDS

Appliance

12.40' acre home site, rural tor; application &amp; information
edverti•• ·•any
water on site. electric. gas
praferenca, limitation or · available ,· road frontage. Furnished 2 &amp; 3 room apts Used Furniture Store: 130
Clean, no pets. Reference &amp; Bulaville Pike . Appliances.
dlacrlmlnallon band on
$30,000. 740 992·2800
dressers,
race, color, religion, HX
deposit
req uired .
Call mattresses,
couches. dinettes. recliners.
lffiu. FsfATE
familial statue or naUonal
(740)446-1519.
grave monuments. much
origin, or any intention to
WANJ'EIJ
Gracious living. t and 2 bed- more .
1740)446·4782.
meke any such .
room apartments a1 Village Gallipolis . OH. Hrs 1 J-3 (M·
preference, limitation or
I BUY HOMES
discrimination."
Manor
and
Riverside S) We buy used furniture.
Need . to sell your home
Apartments in Middleport.
quickly because of a
Thia newapt~per will not
From 5295-$444 . Call 740·
div,orce,
bankruptcy, job
knowingty accept
992-5064 . Equal Housing ·
Don"t
let
transfer,
or
death
.
advertisements for real
OpportuO!I!eS.
•
the bank foreclose and rUin
"estat e which 11 In
Buy
or .sell
A1verine
your credit. LOCal person Modern 1 bedroom apt Can
-..lolation of the l•w. Our
Antiques. 1124 East Mam
buys houses. Fast closings. (740)446-0390.
readers are hereby
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 740Informed that an
All cash. Jim (740)992·
New 1 bedroom apt Call 992-2526_ Russ Moore .
dwe111niJI advertJMCI In
(740)446-3736.
owner.
this newspaper are
av..lable on an equal
One BR apartment in Spring
oppartuntty baHa.
Valley. $290 per month plus
deposit. W/D hookups.

OIRECTY

•H

Gooos

1 and 2 bedroom apart- qr High Delinit1on Hitachi
ments. furnished and unfur- wide screen T.V. Excellent
nished , security deposit condihon Less than 6
required, no pets, 740-992- months old. MoVing must
sell, $1.500 (740)441·9983
2218.

whh:h makealt II~ to

I 1'. \ '.f I \ I

r

ll!'r!I10~-H~OUSEIIOI..D-----,

1 bedroom , 2 bathrOom ,
Immediate possession! Only
kitchen wldish~asher, beau$213.68 per mo. New 3 bedtiful view of the Gallipolis
room, 2 bath mobil e hOme.
City
Park. Calf (740)446Ohly minutes from Athens.
4639 Sam-4:30pm.
1-800-837-3238
1br. Kitchen Furn. Over 700
Inventory Clearance. New 3
Sq. Ft. $300 + Deposit
bedroom
home.
(304)675-3100
$239 .00/mo nth. Includes
AJC, Delivery and Set-up. Beautiful 2-story townhouse ,
Call Mike, (740)385·767_1
overlooking Gallipolis City
park. Kitchen-family, O.R ..
Inventory Clearance. New 4 L. A. 3 B. A. . study, 2 t&gt;atns.
bedroom
Home.
laundry area. References
$3 19.00/month
Includes
required. securitY deposit.
A/C, Delivery and Set-up. no pets. 5900 per mo

$2,000, 1-800-837-3238

All ,... "late advertising
in this newiPI!pel" Ia
subject to the Fedltfal

r

Near Holzer Hospnat. Good

Call (740)446-3481 .

Neighbortlood. 3 bedroom,

4 rooms and bath. 52 Olive
1- 112 batns. large lamily St. No pets. $300 month.
room, fireplace, central air, (740)446-_
3945.
garage. Newty remodeled,
city schools, $ 123 .000. Ciean 2 Bedroom. Ground
(740)446-7881.
F -, WID Hook Up, ROI.

r

THE MAPLES

(740)388Renr&amp;rs

•

MOIIILEFOR.,~LEOMES

MOilll.F. H OMES

03 Fleetwood Annl\l~rsary,
R&gt;R. RENT
14x52, 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
sto\le, refrigerator. $16.000. 2 bedroom Mobile Home, in
(740 )992-()()02
New . Haven 14x70, gu
- - - - - - - - - t1eat.
S300/deposit .
1973 Grandville 14•70. 3 S3251monlt1 . (30C")882-1107
bedroom, with stove &amp;
refrigerator. $3 ,000
2 bedroom mobile home.
Call (740)44~194 .
Clo.-e . to
town . Call

oeo.

2001 Oakwood 16x80. 3
Oedroom, 2 bath, vinyVanlngta, appliances. central neat
&amp; air. $16.900 (~)633-

8536.

Bristol TicKet. 2 or 3 for Apnt
2 &amp; 3. Call (7 40 )446- 7399 or

(740)423·5141

!304)736~

tOO MEMORIAL
EAST

Bull Frog · hot tub paid
$4 ,500 , take $2.500 firm
App. 1-.t 12 years old. lf has
DRIVE a lounge and three seats. In
e~~:ce11ent
condition.

POMEROY, 740.992·7022
Subsidized
Res1dential
Housing for 50 Vflors pf aae
and older. Pliortty Given ID
A.ppiiCIInta wfth Income 11
or below S1 0.900.00
Maximum lncome effectiVe
0211112005 fo r 1 person

I ~~:2 No Pets. (304)675l..r__..~.ONE-loANiiii"'--..rl eo ~~L Ir.~---ii""iiii;;.,_.l, i
I
$18,150.00.

I

R.)_R_RDIT._. . .

3 br. trailer GallipoliS Ferry
nice, private $350.00 per
month. S400 . dep. water &amp;
trash included 304-576·

Jewe lry. Eluy Sell Gold .
(740)339-0362,
Gemstones . Lovely 3 ~ed roo m home
Diamonds,
00H.
=J6!""'-~B~
US&gt;tNIN;----, Repair, Appraisals, Gem overlooking Hocking River.
Testing.
Grad uate Cool-ville. $129 .000, call
3 bedroom Condo with river Pilot · ProgramWackenhut Corp has immed
Maggie Gifford 740-59 1- view.
full
basement . needed . Call
ope~ings at AEP Gavin
GemolOgist,
Jewe ler.
(740)645-6365 01 (740)4467221 , Hayes Realestate.
Ga1!ipolls Ferry. $700 month _ 3-409.
Power Plant for a temp out·
Security Off icers
,5 lmmed. Openings

it.,.... SPACE

For Sale: Clayton Siera
28')156'
Double
W ide
Modular Home : Buyer must
move Home to their site. 3
bedrooms, MBA with lull
bath and 6" Soaker Tub. . 2 i:
9pi::m~·:.;(_
74":"0,;,)9..9,;.
2·.5,,;.03"'9- - ,

Domino's now H1ring :
Sale DriVers
All LoCations.
Apply in person

Hon'le 'Health Care of SE
Ohio is currentl y hiring
Home Health Aides. competitive
wages,
call

Now you can have borders and graphics
.lil....'l
added to your classified ads
{J~
lm
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

POUCI ES: Ohio V•II•Y Publlehlng~ reHrv" the right to Milt, relect, or cancel eny Mt et •ny t ime . Errore muet be reported on the rlr1t dsy of
Trlbun• Sentlnei-Reglater will' be re~ponSible lor nO mote thsn the coat of the space occu pied by the error and only the tirat lnaertlon. We
I not be
ariy 1011 or expen1e that re1u1ta from tha publlcltlon or oml11lon of en edverliHmeM . CorreC1ion will be made In the tlrat available ed litor.. • Boz nu:.~:,::l
are elway• confldendel. • Current rete c:erd
. • All rul .eelale sdvertleemente ilre eubject to the Federel Fa ir Houaln; 4c:1 of 1988. • Thle n
accept• only help wented ads meeting EOE
. We llfill not knowingly ec:C4tpt any advartielng in vlolaUon of the law.

• Start Your Ad I With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description · • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Nurt)ber And Addre1s When Needed
e Ads Should Run 7 Day1

HELl' WANTFJl.

Sunday Display: 1 : 00

Thursday foP Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

~

••

for In•ertlon

Gallipolis Career College:
ATIN: needed 23 people to (740)662-1222
!Careers Close To Home)
lose up to 30 lbs. 1n the next Legal Secretary Posi tion . Call Today! 74()..446-4367.
30 days. 1oo o,., natural. Experience
1-800-2 14-0452
Pre ferred .
10ci%
guaranteed .
no Salar.y · and
Benefits, • WW\Ii.ltlii~~~9Cill&amp;QICOIIege.com
Atcradlted Ml'lmbf!r Attrl!d1hng
ephedra . Call 1-888 -234· Competitive, Send Re~ume Council lor Independent Coll~~ge5
5146, or VisH www.new· to: EB 18 c/1:~ Point Pleasant
and Scnools 12748
shaperesults com
Register. 200 Main Street.
Point Pleasant. WV 25550

4x4's For Saia .............................................. 725

•

Word Ads

GAMESTOP NOW HIRING

WANlHl

~;:;;~~-;£J

~egtster

Sentinel

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

'

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get.Response ...

-~,··-···---··---··-···-···-···-···-···-···~···-···-···

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

m:rtbune

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

..

Reach 3 Counties

=-

www.mydallysentlnel.com

2005

(740)256-6309 .

F1rlwood. Spilt &amp; DeiNered_
Call
(740)256-91 15
or
,(740 , 256 _6605 ,
For sate Four Prom (formal)
Gown! . slzas 3/4. 5/fi. 9/10.
like n8W" Ph ~304)675-76U

$2Q-$35
Muot meot HUD/120218 en· - -- - - -- -

tarta for

houNhold compoelllon. Managed
by
SliVerheels. Incorporated. A
Realty Compar:~y Equal
Hou•lnil Opportunity

H.P. Laptop computer, used
less than 3 hrs. Paid $1.500
will take $1 ,000. Extended
warranty· 3 years. Call

(7&lt;0)441-8299 or (7_&gt;4ll)441-

5472
Twin Rivers Tower Ia aocept,
ing al)llltcaiJ.i:lns lot' waning ·
JET
(740)256-657'
Hat for Hud-subtized, 1· br. ' AERATION MOTORS
2 BA , 1 bath, centre! air, Out· apartment. cal l 675--&amp;&amp;79 Repaired, Nt'ltf &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Coli Ron E'vona, 1.
building &amp; - - 1o mn. lrom EHO
600-537-9528 .
town ' holpltat &amp; plant&amp;. Call

(740)446-4234 or (7&gt;4ll)2087B81 .

For Sale • 1979 Homene, 2
bedroo"1·· w/ctntral air, 3 ~room moblte t"lorM In ·
$3,4S5.00. Call (7&gt;W) 385- Middleport. no p111
(7&gt;1Q)992-5858
4367

Lltca
~uty

new Wotto EX14 hHvy
treadmill, $17!. Aloe,

older NOrdic noel&lt;, 171.
(740)379-2316.

�Monday, March 21, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Monday, March 21, 2005
ALLEY OOP

Help Wanted

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar

For

Concrete,

Angle,

Channel , Flat 13ar, Steel'"
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; 'walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday, ·
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
F.rlday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. _(740)446-7300

Pole Bam 3D•50xlOFT
$6795 . includes Painted
Metal. Plans, Instruction
Book, Slider, Free Delivery
(937)559·8385

Remington exp. magnum 12
gauge with both ba,rrels,
$275; Lifestyler treadmi ll
$200, 4 Chevy rally wheels
with beauty rings and center
caps, $200; Canon sure
shot. t 55 zoom w/case, $75:
call after 6pm , (740)447·
2795

SPAOunET
Grand Opening
Saturday/S unday
11am-7pm
Open Daily
U.S.60
CannonSburg-Ashland
(behind Mr. Gatti's)
606 922·7185
Treated Pool Deck S 150
ax 14 Building $250
fwo Trailer Tongues $50
(30. )675·6121

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, has a position
available for a part time Radiologic
Technologist.
Applicant .must meet the registry
requirements by the ARRT. Applicant
must have a WV license.
-Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental,
life insurance, vacation, long-term
disability and retirement. Join our
family of professionals to be the .
resource for community health
service needs.
For more information :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

Pharmacy Technician

~..r__..B.su.u~.LD.IN.G"'._ .. L
rw
--(740)446-1648.

AlJilJS

1.

i

Ph,'S
fOR SALE

---

AKC Toy Poodles 2 blal:k
males, $350 each , vet
checked 1st shol and
dewormed . (-740)367-7429
Dachshund puppies. AKC
1st shots.· 1st worming,
$350. Call (740)446·4446.
Golden Retriever puppies
· tor sale CKC, $250. Phone
number (740)388·8965.

IL

Shellle pups:

Olds 98. 4dr. Runs

Call 19'91 S-1 0, 4x4, · 4.3, 5
speed, $5,200. (304)6755612.
1994 white Thunderbird,
lOaded, excellent condition,
VB. $3,200 or best offer.
(740)388·9675.

l2male, AKC Born 12/31,
~et Ch~'d , shOts a
!wormed.
$500, POP.
740)473·2785. (740)236
~028
.
1 \In I ... t t•J'I 11"
,\ 1 1\l .... l ()(h,

"':l~-~~--....,

r

10

FARM

....... 'IPMENT

·-...ii"""'"iiiOiiliiiii,;;,_.l
'
19' IH Hydraulic Fold Disc.
2 1' J.D. Field Cultivator
Hydraulic Fold with Harrow.
21' Hydraulic Fold Packer
call(304)675·4308
'
JD 7000 Min-Tilt corn
planter, 4-row, $2,000.
MF 880 Semi·MTD Plow 4bottom, several new parts,
S500. (7401388·8466

i
·------_.1
LIVESTOCK

v

~

.

rAa•ndy~.'!"\"~:":':'1~~:-t
SELL YOUR CAR

·HERE

WITH A PHOTO!
Call (740)446·2342
For Details

'F15 .

TRUCKS

304-773-6062

r
'

2004 FORD F-150 Lariat.
Super Crew,
10,'000mi
2yr/20,000mi warranty lef1,
loadildlextras.
$30,000.
(304}523-3500; (304)654·
9318; (304)886-1668.

2000 S1 0-LS, Ext-cab, 3rd
door, 4-cyl, 5-spd. AC, CD,
48,000
miles.
Asking
$7 ,900.00 OBO (740)949·
2621
2001 Ford F-350 diesel,
dually, 4 door, 4x4, automatic. $22,500. Ca11 (740)446·
9317 .
2002 Cbevy 1500, V6,
29,080 miles, 5spd, PS/PB,
AC , tiltlcruise, CD, $12,000.
Recon title. (304)634-5131.

992-6215

I

llDflbJ• B•plllr

· .4WHEEU:RS

02 Honda 400 EX. Excellent
condition, rode little. $3,000
1999 Eddie Bauer Explorer neg. Call (740)256-1526 or
AWD.Ioaded. lealher, 6 disc (740)645·0446.
CD
changer,
sunroof,
92,001) miles. $9,500 OBO. 1979 Honda 750 10th
(740)446-7777.
Anniversary limited Edition.
Needs
Ignition
work.
2001 lincoln Navigator. Evening
(740)256·6870.
AWD. 5.4 V8, 3rd row seat- Low, mileage. $2,000.
ing , cassette/CO-changer, --'---=----heated/cooled-seats, low 1982 Honda 500 · Trike
miles , B)(Cellent condition, Faririg w/stereo system. Dk
$23,900.(740)453·5535.
blue . .Evenings (740)25670 3 000
68
2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer _
_ _ _· 5
:..:..·_ ·_ _ _· _ _

39728 SRI43
Pomeroy. OH.

740-992-9922

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

llm'•Bma/1

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Complete small
engine repair

Le: me do 1' for you!

James AWill Jr.

Own,er
J2119 WelshtownRd.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-!192-2432

E-mail

ing factory warranty, new
tires, long bed, quad cab,
tow package, am·fm-casscd, loaded , one owner,
$17.500. (740)992·2459

IMPROVEMENTS

I'

·
' ------·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unco nditional lifetime guarantee. local relerences lurnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs . (740) · 446·
0870 , Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

.:........:..._ _ _ _ __

1998 Yamaha 400 Kodiak,
Culverts
4x4 four wheeler. 1,950.4K
(great
shape)
asking· plastic and metat, 6K inches·
$3,000,
(740)742-3029 60 inches in stock. Ron
Evans Enterprise, Jackson,
morning leven ing.
OH 1(800)537·9528
2000
Harley
Da11idson
'sportster 883 Hugger, 6,350
miles, new tires. extras,
$6,500 Neg. Oay: (74Q)645·
3248, evening after 7pm
(740)256·6589.

2900 Yamaha Road Star
1600cc, Windshield, Leather
Bags, Tuned Bll:haust, 6000
miles Color Red, $7,500
Phone (304)675·2793 or
(304)593-5157

2003 Suzuki Vinson 500, 4wheeler, 340 miles, Red 4
WD. $4800. OBO 304·6752790

2004 Harley Davidson 1200

Custom Sportster, loaded.
2001 Jeep Qherokee Sport $9,900 080, 304·593·3542,
4ll:4 price reduced, loaded 773-5182.
CD .towing Package 54,000
94 Harley DavidSon Ultra
miles 304-675·1314
Classic, 10,000 mileS, blue,
99 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
excellent condition, $13,500,
4ll:4, EC, gold, aula, PW, PL,
'(74Q)949·2217
CD,
CC,
new
V6 ,
rotors/brakes ,
$5,995. Kawasaki Mule 4ll:4, Cab,
(614)231-1355.
Heater, Bed liner, less than
2yrs old. (304)675·3773

tBoA~~~~

,•

•

·

BUSINESS .

ON THIS'"PAG~~ FOrt
AS lOW As
,

$26;00 PERMofmti
., .

,...

1•
2•
44
4 NT

6 t

FUEL

iNJ~CTOil

TE$TlNG

'OMPVTtfl.

Sunset Home
Con·struction
Brian Reeves
New Home Construction, Remodeling. '
Renovations, Decks. Gamges, Pole
Buildings, Ro?fs. Siding, Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs

Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.

.BARNEY
ME AN' El VINEY TEND TO
DIFFER 'BOUT Ll'l
THINGS, BUT WHEN
IT COMES TO TH'

MILL END .
FABRICS
740-992-3673
New shipment of
100% Cotton
Materiai... Patriotic
&amp; Quilters Prints

Ufl., I FOR&amp;CI j"'

Notice Ia haroby given
that on April 2nd at. I 0
a:m. a public auction
will be hold at A&amp;J
Mini Stor-o• on Union
Avo. to Hll contents of
Bay 16, consisting of
Crllloman tool box, air
hockey teblo, mtac .
furniture
&amp;
small
2002 AV Toy Hauler 8x24. tools,
etc. Owner
Uving Quarters, Cargo llebbert N..l.
Area . Cal1(740)~46·2286 .
(3) 21 , 28, 30

fi~I'I'T tT :'&gt;JPI'!N.D
TO~t:&gt;~Y7

Closed

All Your Horne
Improvement Needs
• Siding • Windows

• Decb • Porches
• Carports • Garages
• RnomAdd. • Mini
• Kitchens • Baths
"No Joh To Small"

740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508
14 yrs . Ex

MANlEY'S
SELF STIRAGE

. 97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

· toxtOxtOx20
992-3194
or 992-663$
"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
CDIISTHcnON
• New Homes

• Garages
·Complete

Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

AND

IMPORTS

THE

DELIVERY
SHOULD 'BE
HERE INNN.
FOURTEEN

Athens

TES ~

Wh~ley's

Auto

Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

.

Restocki'!lJ lntR J'&lt;lodel S..l•ngc•
and AflRr Mlrket Parts

PEANUTS
. i'

DID YOU SEE WI-IAT T~AT DOG DID 7
l-IE WAS A HERO !

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

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

871-24&amp;7
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

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

SUNSHINE CLUB

r-,w

CW

~OR IS IA.O&lt;KII\lG
~VW::WitJG ALL Klr\05

Of NE.W DRUGS.

WV Contractors lie. #003506

"

HEYI WHERE t&gt;lt&gt;

MY LUNCH GIO"l'l .

Hill's Se lf
Storage
29670

Bashan Road

Racine , Ohio

Houra
7:00AM - 8:00 PM
111'41 1 mo. pd

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
PHss

Past;

Exploding the myths
of the short minor
What do you think ol these statements
that I have heard (some more than once)
from students?
"A one-club opening aSks for a major."
"I had to rebid my flve·card Suit to tell
partner it wasn't a short club."
"I didn't show my major, because I had to
confirm that I had a long, nOt short,
mirior."
Not to put too tine a point on it, they are
all rubbish!
·
A one-club opening bid is not Stayman ; it
does not guarantee length in a major. Th e
opener may have no interest whatsoever
in the majors. Ho,wever, it is true that the
responder will often bid .a major just in
case partner does have support there.
But if responder has longer diamonds, he
shows those first , as in this deal.
Despite holding only 27 combined highcard points, North-South can make six
diamonds or six clubs. When South
reverses on the second round with two
hearts, showing fou r hearts, five·plus diamonds and at least game-going values, .
North should recognize how useful his
hand has become. Then , after South also
admits to some club fit, North knows that
all of hi s honors are working. He controlbids (cue-bids ) his heart ace to say that
he has a good hand for slam .
II South responds one heart, though,
North would probably ra1se to two hearts.
Then, when South continues with three
diamonds, North would picture only four
diamonds, not five. The auct1on would
become much more difficult.
Whenever possible, bid your longest suit

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE ·
FOR $52 PER MONTH

B.\ll!\1 Ll'!\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor

witli 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMlJER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

· GRIZZWELLS

AstroGraph
-... 'lllrthdo\Y:

EXACTLY~

;~~:~~~~:
p.io.lo:I:.&amp;.I.....U.::LO.JI.LI""'~

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

~
·~

' BIG NATE

Barns
Racine. OH

East

1•
I NT
3 •
4•
5•

first.

F~~-

.

WHATEVER ELVINEY SEZ
THEY ARE !!

THE BORN LOSER

Hrs.: 1\Jes-Sot 11·5
Sunday &amp; Mond11y

guard for
F·250-350
Duty
or
OBQ_ Call

1997 Coachman Catalina
Ute 24' foot, Front Bedroom,
many
-extras
phone
(304)675-2039.56,995 OBO

j

Machine Quilting

GARFIELD

~~~

"BIG ISSUES''?

1

WE'RE IN TOTAL.
AGREEMENT !!

2002 Stingray 20 ft. open
bow, Red/ White, 5.0 liter V·
8, Hustler trailer, excellent'
con d., garage kept, price
new $24.000 sell $15,700.
call Trov Krebs 3&lt;W-675-

Stainless grill
1999·curren t
Ford
Super
Excu~ion : $400

WHAT'RE TH'

BIG ISSUES, '

Now Available At ·

992..21

IT L.OOICS LIIC~ YOVfl O.l&gt;OMeT~fl COMPVnfl IMC.:IC~l&gt;
f
INTO YOVfl

I&gt;IAGNo$TIC

• Leave a messa e

North

Opening lea d : • K

?2~~~&amp;

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

We st

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

CanatrucUim

45771
740·949·2217

~~Dafly

Dealer: North '
Vulnerable: East-West

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket .Truck

740-'142·2293

jwill45769@yahoo.com

7 2

AJ863
Q"I O 3
9 8 5
• 6

South
• 2
• K 1J 52
.AK10 43
• k J 5·

Tree Service

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

EXT LT 4x4. 3rd row.seating, 1982 Yamaha Exciter 185,
" I U \ II I ..,
loaded.
garage
kept. 942 actual miles, last tune· C:::1"""-~~----.
Excellent
condition. up Spring 2004, $750 080, r10
HoME
.1740)696·1227
'
-- -600
-- -.
1993
Suzuki
Kantana
New paint last fall. Great
shape Asking $1,800 080.
(740)388·0172.
'---'------1996 Honda Goldwing 1500
Aspecade . 23,700 miles.
excellent condition, 2 match·
ing helmets. Asking $8,000.
(740)388·8047.

•

W\/038725

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Rcplacemcn1
Windows • Roofing

\10'\l \II·SI
( 0\11'\'\,

6
•
•
•

... 10 , i' 4

JONES'

BUILDERS IRC.

\( 'IH 1·.

East

. K Q 974
• J 9 8

South

BISSELL

choose a Msting

tribuJe to your loved

I

MONTY

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Yeat'l Local E• rlenct

Ut r•s help you

· 1993 Chevrolet Astro Van.
good
condition '¢hone
(304)675·5077

Tuppers Plains, OH
~~ 45783 '

V.C. YOUNG Ill

VANS

r40

r

• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; PlumtMng
• Rooftng &amp; Gutters
· • Vln~l Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks'
We do ll all e11.cept
furnace work

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mon-Sat IOAM-5PM

SUVs
FOR SALR ·

• Room AddltiOf111 I
Remodeling

33795 Hiland Road

FoR SALE

A Q H 3 2

Wesl

andWV

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(740) 992-5232
SxlO,lOxlO,
10xl5, 10x20,
' l0x30

41800 SR #7

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP2l4

YOUNG'S

, Phone

A 7 4

QJ6

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

740-6~2-6188

2000 Ford WindStar LX,
91,000 iniles, 2 sliding
doors, power windows &amp;
2004 Silverado· 1500, Z71 , cru ise $6,300 (304)675·
4WD, Loaded, still under 4014
warranty, 29,000 miles, asking $26,000 (304)675·4917 2000 Ford Winsta r LX, 81K,
2/sliding doors, seats· 7, all
99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab power. rear air. tinted win·
SLT. Loaded V·S, 4)(4, Bed· dews,
asking
$6,600,
Running-Boards. (740)669·5653
liner.
Tonneau Cover, 95Krpi.
$9,500 (304)882·2845
MOTORCYCLE'il

i

2002 Pontiac Grand AM SE.
Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly Red, AJC, CD, loaded, 56k
A.l. excellent blOOdlines,
priced reasonably. Slat€! Run mites,
Euro
taill ights,
· chrome accents, $8 ,995.
740
286
F'arm , Jackson . (
)
· E)(celleht condition. Call
5J95.
www.slaterunfarm .com
(740 )256 "8816 ··
2003 Dodge Neon STX
4door. 4cy1.. ·automatic.
HAY&amp;
power everything, 11 ,000
GRAIN
miles, $6,500. (740)4 41 •
·0337 or (740)645·&amp;153. ·
1000# bales, $7.00·$10.00
&amp;• $15.00, pick up load or 93 Lincoln Town Car. 81.000
good
hay, miles. Very nice, $4,560.
semi-load ,
(740)696·2765
(740)4&lt;16·1759.

i

.

1-888-321-0111

Storage

03 · 21 ·~

I0 5

and Financial Services

Ask for Art

High and Dry

I

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Buyers of 's tanding timber
Also Land Clearing

Janet Jeffers

.~

L

1995 Qkjs AchieYO. 4-dr, v6 , L.,--•fOiiliRii.iiiSiiALEiiii-,.1 $24,500. (740)446-7484 or
165,000 mil~s . S1.400.
'(740)441
- - - -7411.
'------(740)388·8466.
1993 Chevy 3500, Turbo 2004 Honda Pilot EX, rated
Diesel, Red Pickup, Dully, best full size SUV. Red Pearl
1998
Pontiac
Sunfire Power Windqws. Locks. ext. tan cloth int, all options,
Convertible.
97,000
Loaded
$8,000
firm maintained and babied, 21k
miles/auto. 2.4Liter engine. (304)593·5073
rTiiles $26,900. 304-773all power. CD player, new
6062
tires,
Black
. wi Red 1995 Ford F-150 XLT, B ft.
Pinstripes. $3,500 Firm. bed , excellent condition. 94 Jeep Grand Cherokee.
(740)245·9266.
Asking $6.800 OBO. Call Blacks, 318, runs good,
needs body work, $900
1999 Ford Contour SE• 4 (740)992·1777
080.
(740 }446·3600;
door, 24,300 mites, excellent 1998 ChevY S-10 pick-up (740)645-5502.
condition. $5,500. Call truck. Very gOOd condition, 5
(740)446-0n1 after 6pm .
speed,
good mileage• . 99 Jeep Grand Cherokee
2000 Chrysler Cirrus 4-door .extras .
(740)245·9502 laredo. Loaded, 6 cylinder,
sedan, ·automatic power ·evenings.
f3.!&lt;;Cellent condition, 97,qoo
mll.s
$7 900
080 ·
seats,windows,door-locks,
·
'
1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11 ft . (740)592-29-48 .
Silver excell. cond. 63,000 utility bed. AC. cruise. tilt,
miles $6000. 304-6 75- 6047 350 gas, 5 speed 1rans , ·
4x4
2000 Chrysler Concord . 69,000 mites. ExCellent conFOR SALE
82.000 miles. $5,300 080. dition. Call (740)256-1526 or
2002
Dodge
Str'auss. (740)645-0446.
1989 ext.cab GMC 6" lift,
·
.
64,000 mi tes, $5,500 OBO. 2000 Chevrolet-Silverado 4 X4, rebuilt VB-engine,
~
1500 LS, lully·optioned, rebuilt Buto-trans. $ 3 •500
(740)256-1539.
740&gt;256•2280 leav~
2002 Ford Escort Z:X2, 5 4x4 ,bedliner.tra ilering- OBO. &lt;
J:)eWter
ext.
,Charcoal
message.
pkg.,
speed, 29,000 miles, air,
_ _ _Dod_g_e_R_a_m_•_x_•-.- -K,
one owner. Nice (740)441· int ., 1~0k h~hway mnes, 200
1
46
0157 or (740)645·5141 .
syn.o11. below OOok $1~ 28 months on 19K remain·

.
.I

4·H Pigs for Sale
Begin farrowing 1/20/05 and
· still farrowing . Pure bred
Yorks and
crossbreds.
Please call (740)448-2002
or
(740)541·7491
or
- (7 40)541"7~70

~ tlm~f)@~ml~

www.pvalley.org

AA/EOE

l · ~...r.ls--fOTR.:.UsCKS~'-·1

98 Cadillac Catera Fully
equipped, leather interior,
$500 1 Honda's, Chevy's, low miles. mint condition,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police $7.900. Call (740)704·3751 .
Impounds! Cars from $500
tor listif")gs 800-391·5227 99 Cavalier, 4 door. auto·
·EXT 3901
malic, new paint, nice.lnterior, 119,000 miles, tuns
1952 Plymouth 4dr. engine great. $2,800. (740)669runs good, body eli:Cell., 8:11 0302
orglnal, no rust 32,000 miles
BMW Z3, '99, Special
304·576·2532
Edition , 22,000 miles, dark
1969 Ford XL, Gala)(y 390, green, $19,999. (304)412automatic. power steering 3380.
and brakes, AC. Interior
excellent, Mechanica,l excel- For sale: 1941 Chevrolet
lent. body good. Needs Coupe Street. Rod project
minor repair and paiht. 350, 350 turbo, Mustang 2
$3,300.00 080. (740)696· fronte'nd , many new parts.
1373. (740)591 · 588B.
$8,500 080. (740)446·3005

~981

FOR SALE

Miniature Schnauzer pup·
pies. AKC , black-salt/pep- Good, Ca11(304) 675 . 1264
per, vet checked &amp; shOts,
1989 Cro'fm Vic, new tires.
$400, (74Q)696·1085
new banerv. new trans. Very
Poodle puppies· tiny toys, nice car. 101 ,000 mites.
AKC. white &amp; cream. 2 male. $2,200.00 080. (740)9921 female , (740)401-0327
5532
Rabbits for sale.
(740)446·3732

F:RlJilJSS.. ••

rm

S~a~~®(l' lb®,~~ml~

304-675-4340

www.pvalley.org

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

White
promlor
dress,
size Call
3!4 . .
Will sell
$125.

Phillip
Alder

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a P~armacy
Technician. Successful completion of
WV Board of Phe~rmacy approved
technicians training . program or
equivalent. State-registration or
National-certification certificate as a
Pharmacy Technician preferred. At
least 2080 hours as a pharmacy
technician experience preferred.
Hospital experience preferred.
Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, life insurance, vacation,. longterm disability and retirement.
For more information :
·
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley brive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

304·675-4 340
AA/EOE

Block, brick, Sewer pipes,
windows, 11ntels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Call 740.2 45 .s 121

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

NEW ANO USED STEEL

Tueeday, March 22. 2005
By Bernice Bade Osol
It'll behoove you in the· year· ahead to
get more·involved with clubs or organ izations where you can meet new
people. Your chart shows that a num ·
ber of beneficial relationships can
develop through social sources.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) A
rewarding re lationship can be developed toQ8y with someone you've
recently met who is rather influentiaL
11 will behoove you to do what you can
to cultivate the friendship.
TAURUS (April 20 -May 20) - Now is
the time to try to finalize an arrangement that could be important to your
famlty. You're the one who can ~ettle
things quite advantageously for all If
you don't waste time .
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) Conditions are trending In an exceptionalty hopeful pattern for you today.
If there is someone you wished you
could meet or something special you
woukt love to be able to do, go tor it
now.
CANCER {.June 21 -July 22)- Be on
tho alor1today for some opportunities
to develop for you which could
lmpfove your financial position. Set
your sights accorOingly and build
toward the future .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - You are like·
ly to be the luckiest at this point in
time in ~nterpr ises where you have a
strong hand In c;mveloplng or managing . Focus your personal sNorts
toward these e nds.
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept. 22) - You're
now In a br_iel cyc le w here you can
derive benems from situations that
others have already engineered. Look
tor ways where you can be included
and mak.e a contrlbulion .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - A situation that · has been peppered with
uncertainties is about to .!'lhOw some
signs of making a transformation tor
the better. Today could bring the first
signals of this, happening.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Be
patient and take things a step at a
time today. Lofty goals that are impor·
tant to you can be achieved It you
work with others who are as persist ent and methodical as you. ·
SAG!lTARIUS (Nov. 23·0uc. 2 1) Your mental faculties are eJ&lt;ceptionally creative today. Have faith in your
ideas and don't let assoCiates dOubt
or discourage you before you even
get a chance to try anything out.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. t9) Earn ings from soUnd Investments
you·ve made in the past may offer
several s trong new possibilities tor
additiona l growth. Investigate rhose
situations which have profitable
potential.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2 0 - Feb .• 19) Although you usually prefer to operate
independently· of others, today your
greatest successes are l1k.ety to come
from partnership arrangements. Team
up with someone you like .
PI SC ES {Feb. 20-March 20) - Lady
Luck tet:~ds to laver you today both
financially And where your work. Is
cof1cerned. Raise your sights a blt
higher and snow her that you 're will·
ing to cooperate with her.

ACROSS

44 Hair-care
product
1 Soften
46 Farming
major
5 Diner order
8 Part ofTNT 49 Elev.
11 Provo's state 50 Recedes
12 Limerick
52 Coal
locale
scuUies
14 Thither
54 Tyson stat
and55 D1amlss
15 Sand
56 Gibe at
57 Oangerous
deposit
16 Egyptian
curve
58 Toady's
god
t7 Cap
reply
18 Figure
59 Equine
of speech
fodder
20 Obediently
22 Hosp.
DOWN
workers
23 Dents
Flood
24 Maxi or mini
residue
27 Company
2 Needle cise
VIPs
3 Secure a
29 Help-wanted . c.ontract
abbr.
4 Those
30 More
people's
peculiar
5 Smiles
34 Planned lor 6 Kindled
37 Alt, on
7 Quick pace
the Seine
8 Harrison's
38 Cheryl or
suCCessor
Alan
.
9 Makes
39 Metal grate
turbid
41 Shaggy
10 A famous
beasts
500
43 Ice skater · 13 Charm
- Babilonla 19 Switch

positions
21 Zorro's
disguise
24 Phone trio
25 Outback
jumper
26 Constantly ,
to Poe
27 Fed a line
28' Bonn single
30 Proof endar
31 Sequel's
sequel
32 Pipe bend
33 Family
mem.
35 North
Woods

40 OK for the
queen
(hyph.)
41 Egg parts
42 Freeway
cloggers
43 Chores
44 Other sock
45 Online
auction
(hyph.)
47 Mldwes1
state ·
46 Rewrite
51 Prior to
yr. 1
53 Ave.
crossers

animals

36 Mouths off
39 Silence

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~ity C1pher

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�Monday, March ·2 1,

www.inydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

NCAA Tournament I Sunday's Roundup

N.C. State upets UConn

2005

Local Sports

New physidan honored

Reds harpoon
Tampa Bay, Bt

at open house, As .

'

WORCESTER. Mass. (AP) 6-of-7 from the field with going coach Tom Brennan 's
-Julius Hodge shouted to his three 3-pointers and 15 points. se nse ot' hu mar won over
fans at the buzzer, saying he His tap-in with 8:41 left put many of the rest. But · star
knew this would happen all the Badgers (24-8) ahead for Taylor Coppenrath went into a
along: Nonh Carolina State good, then he protected the shooting slump - making 5was heading to the round of lead with rebounds on the next of,23 shots for 16 points. T.J.
16, and the defending champi- two defensive stands.
Sorrentine scored 26 points
on was knocked out- again.
OKLAHOMA· STATE 85,
but made just 6 of 15 shots
Hodge scored on a slashing .
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 77
from 3-poinl railge.
drive through the lane with 4.3 . OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)
.
UUKE 63,
seconds left to break a 62-all - Ivan McFarlin scored a
M1ssissn•pt Sl'A'r..: 55
tie and send the Wolfpack past career-high 31 points to move
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
second-seeded Connecttcut ·Oklahoma State into the round _ With one of hi s most'
65-62 Sunday in the second of 16 in consecutive seasons · 1mlikely Duke teams, Mike
round of the NCAA touma- for the tirst time since 1991 · Krzy zewski moved himsel f
92.
into the NCAA tournament
ment.
North Carolina State (21The
second-seeded record books and the Blue
13), the IOth seed. in the Cowboys (26-6) 'will play Devils into the round of 16:
Syracuse Regional. advances third-seeded Ariwna (29-6)
Daniel Ewing handled the
to the regional semifinals for next weekend in a meeting of offense and Shelden Williams
the first time since 1989 and the two oldest coaches in the took care of defense to lead
will play the winner of tournament. Arizona's Lute the rop,seeded Blue Devils to
Bucknell-Wisconsin. ·
Olson is 70, and Eddie Sutton the win in the second round of
No team has repeated since · 69
· R · 1 Tl
·
Duke _in 199.1 -92, but t. he . ts Jan.1aal TatuJn· led the the Austm egiona . le wm
was a record 66th tournament
defendmg nattonal cha.mpwn Salukis (27-8) with 22 points. victory for Coach K, moving
Husktes (23-8) seemed almost Seventh-seeded
Southern him ahead of Dear.t Smith at
a lock to at least move past. the Illinois got within 72-68 on the top of the list.
second round. They went mto Tat~m·s
3-pointer,
but
LOUISVILLE 76,
the game 27-0 agamst teams JamesOn . Curry answered
G··ouGI' TECH 54
seeded stxth or lower til the
.
.
- .
~ ~ ~
tournament. And in 19 years wtth a 3-pomter _ot his own _ NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
under coach Jim Calhoun , Oklahoma State htt all etght ot - Francisco Garcia scored 18
they were 23-2 in the first two tts free throws down the 6f his 21 points in the first half
rounds of the tournament. stretch and McFarlin added a, and Taquan Dean stopped any
reaching the regional semiti- two-handed pm With 44.3 hope Georgia Tech had for a·
nals 13 times. ·
seconds left to keep hts team rally with back-to-back 3ihe loss also was a setback ahead.
pointers. sealing a victory that
for the Big East conference,
MtCHIGAN STATE 72,
sent Louisville to the regional
which has lost four teams so
VF.RMONT 61
semifinals for the first time
far, including a No.2 seed and
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) since 1997.
- Mauncc Ager scored 19
Dean finished with 14
two No.4 seeds.
Hodge, .who yelled, '"I told points and Paul Davis had II points. all bril two on 3-pointyou! I told you!" to Wol!'pack points and 14 rebou nd s to ers, and also had six rebounds
fans after the buzzer sounded. send Michigan State to the and two · assists. Larry
was fouled by Ed Nelson on regional semifinals.
o· Bannon added 16 for the
his drive and completed the
Largely ignored during the fourth-seeded Cardinals (3 1·
three-point play. Marcus Big Ten season while Illinois 4), who have won 20 of their
Williams' desperation 3 auhe . took. over the top of the last 21.
buzzer fell short.
national rankings, Michigan
L,uke Schenscher led the
Hodge finished with 17 State (24-6) found itself the Yellow Jackets with 13 , but
points and six assists. sentimental second choice the rest of Georgia · Tech 's
Williams led the Hu s~ies with agai n in Worcester when the offense was largely ineffec. a career-htgh 22 pmnts , and 13th-seeded Catamounts (25- live. Jarrett Jack had II
Charlie Villanueva had 16 7) beat Syracuse ·- the first points, Will Bynum had eight
pomts and 12 rebounds.
NCAA win in Vermont histo- and B.J . Elder was held to just
VILLANOVA 76, FLORIDA 65 ry.
'
three for Georgia Tech (20NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
The crowd was heavily tilt- 12), which made a thrilling .
.- Backup ·center Jason Fraser ed toward vermont, and out- run tQ the title game last year.
scored 21 points and grabbed
15 rebounds to help fifthseeded Villanova (24-7) make
the round of 16 for the .first
time since 1988. It will play
Nonh Carolina.
With leading scorer Allan
Ray struggling and . Curtis
Sumpter sitting out much of
the game with an injury,
Fraser and guard Randy Foye
took over. Faye had 18 points
to help pick up the slack.
The founh-seeded Gators
(24-8) were held ·to 38.5
shooting and got little offensive support for David Lee,
who had 20 points, I0
rebounds, three -blocks and
three steals before fouling out.
Matt Walsh finished with 12
points, but was 4-for-13.
Anthony Roberson went 1for-8 and finished with five
points. ·
NORTH CAROLINA 92,
IOWA STATE 65
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- Sean May had 24 points
and 17 rebounds, and sixth
man Marvin Williams finished
with a career-high 15
rebounds and the top-seeded
Tar Heels advanced past the
first weekend for the first time
in five seasons.
Williams scored 20 points
- tying his season high for
the second consecutive game
and Rashad McCants
· · · added 17 for Nonh Carolina
(29-4 ), which went to the
Final Four in 2000 before the
tournament drought. Now,
coach Roy Williams has the
Tar Heels back in the regional
semifinals in his second season, the IOth time he's made it
that far in 17 NCAA tourna·
ment appearances.
The Tar Heels will face
fifth-seeded Villanova next
weekend in the Syracuse
Regional. Jared Homan, playin~ in his final game, fimshed
wllh 19 points and 20
rebounds for Iowa State ( 19-

Submtned photo

·southem fifth graders.win toumey

. • Struggling Cavaliers fire
Silas as coach.
SeePage a1

Southern Elementary's .fifth grade b(lys took first place in the league tournament held recently at
Southern .• Earlier the team had taken second place 1n the Pomeroy-Rutland Youth League
Tournament. Pictured in front from left are Chris Sowders, Andrew Roseberry, Chase Graham, Dyllan
Roush, .and Ethan Martin. In back are coach Dave !;lass, Dylan Bass. Marcus Hill, Allen Bnckles,
Austin Hill, Dustin C~ster, Blake Crow and coach Jeff Martin. Andrew Ginther was absent.

Camps and Clinics
Baseball
MARIETIA COLLEGE CAMP OF CHAMPS
.
MARIETIA - The Marietta College Baseball Camp of
Champs will be held over the course pt the summer at
Pioneer Park.
The Day Camps for grades 2·8 will be held July 5·7. 12·
'14 and 19·21, while the Resider'lce/Commuter Camp will be
held for grades 6·12 on July 24·28.
For a camp brochure, call the baseball office at (740)376·
4517 or (740)376-4673 or check the web at www.mariel·
ta .edu.

Basketball
BIG REO BASKETBALL CAMPS SCHEDULED
RIO GRANDE -The Unjversrty of Rio Grande's men's
basketball team will hold ~s annual Big Red Basketball
Camps in June at the Lyne Center.
The schedule for the camps, with fees are as follows:
·Varsity and iv Shoo1out, June 9. $\30.
·
. Varsity Shooioul. June 10, $130.
- JV Shootou1, June 11 , $130.
, • Junior High Team Camp, June 12·14, $190.
· Varsity and JV Shootou1, June 15,$130.
· Varsity and JV Team Camp, June 16·18, $190.
· Individual Camp, June 26·30, $250.
The individual camp includes "The Triple", the nation's
only triple elimination tournament.
'
For more information. call 245·7294, Hlll0-282·7201
(ext. 7294). or e·mail Rio Grande assistant ooacll Ken
French at kfrench@rio.edu.

'YES I CAN' CAMP AT
HEIDELBERG COLLEGE
TIFFIN -The 25th annual "Yes I Can" basketball camp,
featuring author and coach Stan Kellner, will be lleld June
26·30 at Heidelberg Coii8\Je.
The camp 11for boys and gids in grades 6-12.
For more information, call Bill lmmler at (440)233·7551 or
visit their web site at www.yes~nsports .com .

OHIO UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL .
,
CAMPS SCHEDULED
ATHENS - The Ohio Universrty football coaching staff.
headed by Frank Solich, will host two camps this summer.
The Senior Prospect Camp will be held 10 a.m.. June 5
while the overnight Individual Position Camp Win run from
June 26-28.
The Senior ProsPect Camp is 0pen to all athletes who wilt
be seniors in the fall of 2005. Cost of the camp is $25 for
those who pre·r8\JIS1er and $4() on 1he, day of the camp. ·
. The Individual Posrtion Camp is open to all students who
will be going into grades 7·12 this fall. The cost wilt be $250
for overnight campers and $175 tor commuters.
A brochure 'Will be made available on ohiobobcats.com
~hen it is GQmpleted. For more information··on the camps,
p~ase contact Gdowski at gdowski@ohio.edu or 740-593:
1187.

up 10 $300,000 to be used in or Pomeroy Village Hall .
Infrastructure project, street
improving neighborhoods.
The goal is to have all of the repairs, demolition of aban"Public input is \lital if we are forms in by mid-April so that do ned · buildings to make
POMEROY -· While more to be considered for a grant," Musser and Jean Trussell , neighborhoods look better, and
public input is needed before said Musser.
Meigs County's grant admin- pubic facility needs, like cornan application for an Ohio
Survey forms where project istrator. can begin the process munity centers, are all projects
· Department o.f Development preferences were listed were of seeing what improvements which can be accepted under
community distress grant ·can completed by those attending. residents want, then prioritize the guidelines of the grant.
be filed, Pomeroy Mayor The forms, "What's Your , what projects to accept and
At last week's meeting
John Musser.said he was very Vision for Our Community" determine where the work Musser said lots of questions
encouraged by attendance at are still being collected, and will be done..
were answered with much of
.the hearing last week.
Musser urged anyone who has
Mus ~er emphasized that the · discussion revolving · on
About 75 residents turned not already completed one to input from residents is. essen- how the money can be spent
out to hear.the plan on how . . do so. They are available from tial because that is a determin- and what qualifies for a
the village might qualify for Musser, at The Daily Sentinel ing factor in getting a grant . . required match from the vii-

lage . Trussell explained that
sometimes·an improvement or
project already under way can
qualify as the match for a new
project.
Mu sser said the next step
will be the review of the surveys, selecting and prioritizing the projects, then holding
another public meeting sometime in May. In June the specific projects ·and dollar
amounts for each one will be
determined and the application will be submitted in July.

Meigs Elementary welcomes back Principal Deem from Iraq

EPA study
showsCS
problems
in lab mice
:
.'

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Football

OBrruARIES
Page AS
• Charles Gerard, 83

INSIDE
• Jury session canceled.
See Page AS
. ·
• BlackWell tells panel
election went smoothly.
See Page A6 ·
• Ohio unemployment
rate hits highest level since
1993. See Page A6
• Ohio's regional
campus growth fueled by
convenience, cost.
See Page A6

WEATHER

RUTLAND
Meig s
.Elementary students and faculty welcomed _back their
Principal Tony Deem on
Monday for his first official
day of work since returning
from serving his country in
the 3664th Army National
Guard
Maintenance
Cdmpany.
. An American flag and service banner which had been
fiying over the school since
Deem's depanure on Nov.
I 7, 2003 were lowered and
presented to him by members of the Middleport
American Legion Fenney
Bennett Post 128.
"I can't say enough about
those guys and 11ll they do,"
Deem said about the dedication of th.e members of the
American Legion." It was an honor," Deem
added about receiving the
American flag in a ceremony
most living veterans never
get to experience.
Along with the flag ceremony, Deem• was treated to
an assembly of his students,
all I,000 plus who performed
patriotic songs for him and
the other servicemen who
were invited to attend.
" It was overwhelming,"
Deem said about his students' performance as well as
their behavior and reverence
for the ceremony.
The Meigs High School
Marauder Band also performed and Deem's assistant
Kristen Acree presented him
with a pair of his old shoes,
Please see DeeM, AS

'
BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.'cOM .:

BY

• I

..

POMEROY -A new
· study shows ·that high· levell;
of the chemical found if!
much smaller amounts itt
local water supplies causes
reproductive problems iit
. pregnant laboratory mice . :
An
Environment:V
Proteciion Agency stuct;'
shows lab mice exposed oo
high levels of perfluor~
tanoic acid, or C8. reab.._
sorbed all of their fetuses. C8
has been identified in the
Tuppers · Plains-Chester,
Pomeroy and Mason County,
W.Va: public water supplies,
and as pan of the settlement
of a class-action lawsuit, the
chemical company DuPont
has agreed to install water filtration equipment in those

Jan Haddoxfpllotos

Above: As his students look

on , members of the
Middleport American Legion
Fenney Bennett Post 128 present Meigs Elementary
Principal Tony Deem with the
American Flag that had flown
over the school since his
dep;lrture from it oo Nov: 17,
2003. Deem recently returned .
home with the 3664th
National Guard Maintenance
Company from Iraq.

PIHH see EPA. AS

Sunday raid
results in drug
seizure, arrest
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Meigs Elementary
Principal Tony Deem received
this American flag to honor
his service in Iraq.
Right:

MIDDLEPORT · -A
Middleport man was arrested
on drug-related charges, and
similar charges are pending
against a Middleport woman
follbwing searches of their
Ash Street homes early
Sunday.
Middleport Police Chief
Bruce
Swift said the
STAFF REPORT
Middleport police officers
and
Meigs County sheriff's
POMEROY
- Meigs
deputies
conducted the two
County Sheriff Robert
as
pan of an ongosearches
Beegle is searching for a
male
subject allegedly ing investigation into drug
involved in arf attempted bur- trafficking in the village. The
glary ne&lt;1r .Middleport' on county's canine unit and the
canine unit from Athens
Sunday mornmg.
Beegle said Jon Jacobs, of County also were .involved in
Ohio 7 l)ear Middleport, the searches.
Officers conducted searchreponed that he and his wife
es
of the residences of
left their residence at around
10 a.m. Sunday for a.business Donald Francis of 315 Ash
trip, but .returned to the resi- St., and Tina Storms. 425 Ash
dence 20 minutes later to St. during the early morning
pick up an item. When they hours on Sunday. Officers
entered their home, they dis- allegedly recovered a small
covered a white male in the quantity of what is believed
to be crack cooaine, marijuahouse.
·
Jacobs struggled with the na, a loaded firearm and sev-

What you don't know about colon cancer can kill you Search on for
BY BETH
armed_burglar

SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

... and have a place to call your own.
Farmers Bank invites you to lock up this great
mortgage loan rate for not one ... not two ... but
three full years! This discounted adjustllble rate
mortgage is availabl~ for a limited time for a first
mortgage on a primary residence. If you are
shopping fOr a home or looking to refinance
your existing mortgage, call Farmers first!

12).
W&amp;:ONSIN 71, BuCKNELl~ 62

OKLAHOMA CITY (AI;&gt;)
- Maybe Bucknell could
have found a scheme to stop
Wisconsin 's Mike Wilkinson
or Zach Morley. Handling
both, however, was too much
for the upstan Bison.
The 6-foot-8 forwards consistently put themselves in all
the right places; especially
when things were tight in the
second half, carrying the
Badgers to victory in the second round of the Syracuse
Regional and sending 14thseeded Bucknell back to its
Pennsylvania campus with
plenty to be proud of nonetheless.
Morley, who was shut out in
28 minutes of a first-round
win over Nonhern Iowa, was

Public input vital to distress grant application

SPORTS

Detlltlo on P"'e A&amp;

INDEX
2 SECnONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

. Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© a005 Ohio Vlilley Publlshlns Co.

POMEROY - Colorectal
cancer. commonly known as
colon cancer, is the thirdleading cause of cancer death
in both men and women in
the United States and is largely preventable.
.
One of the least understood
facts about colorectal cancer
is that it can be stopped
before it stans if precancerous ·polyps are found and
removed through screening
endoscopy (colonoscopy), .
thereby avoiding the disease
completely.
.
· ·Colonoscopy is usually
Beth Settentjphoto
performed on an outpatient Meigs County Health Department Assistant Administ~ator
basis. The patient is mildly Courtney Sh'n passes out literature on colorectat cancer to
s-edated, the endoscope is Shirley and Roger Coleman at the recent Meigs County Health
Fest.. Colorectcal cancer is a unique ·cancer because it can be
Please see C.ilcer, AS
prevented through screenings.

Please see s..rch, As

Please see Raid, AS

Farmers
Bank
&amp; ·Savings Company
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Gallipolis

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_

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