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                  <text>. Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March :!!2,

2005

Yankees scalp Cleveland, 6-2

Fee for stonnwater
collection sho~fij'!P on

NASA telescope spots
first lbdtt from planets
beyond'solar system, A7

·homeowner tax b

, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o

t 1.:\ IS.\ ol. :;,f . '\o .

• Bonds says he may be
out this season following
knee surgery.
See Page81

.,
AP photo
Cleveland Indians third baseman Aaron Boone, far right,
protests as third base umpire Andy Fletcher rules New Yorl(
Yankees Jason Giambi, center, · safe on a fifth inning triple if!
the Yankees 6-2 victory against Cleveland Monday.

Taylor

,,

•••

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
.
'

'

Subscrib~ todt;zy~.

992-2155

'

..

The liltle (.ftmpaay...

Silas·

coaching change since the
start of the season.
Malone , in his first season
with
the Cavaliers, wa·s the
from Page 81
first coach of the expansion
Toronto Raptors, spending
a morning practice.
one season with the team.
Despite James and · fellow
He's been an assistant with
All-Star Zydrunas Ilgauskas, ·New York, Indiana, Seattle
the Cavaliers have slumped'
and Detroit in 19 years of
since the All-Star break.
They have lost nine of 12 and .· NBA coaching.
Malone said he would use
nine straight road games.
the same starting lineup Silas
including Sunday's· 105-98
· did against Toronto. He did
loss to Toronto when the 20not say if Mcinnis would
year-old James became the
play.
youngest NBA player to
James helped lead the
score 50 or more points.
.
Cavaliers to a 35-47 record
"We felt that if we didn't
make · this decision that we last season - . an 18-game
turnaround. Silas seemed to
were jeopardizing our ability
have the respect of his playto be a playoff team this
ers. The club, however, lost
year," P;~xson said.
Paxson criticized Silas ' Boozer as a free . agent. the
first sign of real trouble.
ability as a coach.and motivaThe Cavaliers started this
tor.
season
by staying in first
"We're 64 games into the
place for most of the first two
season and we still don't
months. Then injuries jind
have a consistent ' rotation,
inconsistency led to losses.
substitution pattern, those
"There was a change in our
type of things," Paxson said.
swagger, the way . we per"We didn't see that changformed."
reserve
Scott
ing."
Williams
said.
"People
Gilbert took over the team
would tell me· they didn:t
just three weeks ago and said
know what to do- thinking
the organization would be
too much , playing too tight."
evaluated from top to bottom.
The 61-year-old Silas spent ·
He indicated Silas was not
16 ·years in the NBA as a
creating the best environment
player, winning two .titles
for the players.
with Boston and one with
"We felt the change today
Seattle. His coaching record
was necessary. It's going . to
was 355-400 with the Los
put us in a better position to
Angeles Clippers, Hornets
win," Gilbert said.
·
and Cavaliers. He joined
The Cavaliers entered the
Cleveland in 2003 after being
All-Star break at 30-21, then
fired by the New Orleans
went into a slide, the decline
Hornets, having led them to ·
marked by personnel issues.
the
playoffs four straight
The trouble may have culmi, times.
nated Sunday . when Silas
Silas was hired to be
benched starting guard Jeff
James
' first professional
Mcinnis for Eric Snow, who
didn 't score. Mcinnis did not coach. The youngster entered
the league at 18 11nd has
play:
.
Earlier this season, Silas soared from rookie of the
threw Snow off the · bench year last season to All-Star
after the two. exchanged this year. but the rest of the
·words in Detroit, a move that team has struggled.
That became apparent
stunned the team 'because
Sunday
with the team's third
Snow is a leader.
straight
loss. While James
Lasr week , Silas was fined
$10,00.0 by the team .for a had a career day, the
derogatory comment about Ca~aliers were weak on
Utah forward Carlos Boozer, defense and the reserves
who left the team as a free were outscored 34-1.
"There was a lot of standagent last summer. Gilbert
around
watching
said that had no bearing on ing
Paxson
said.
the firing.
· LeBron,"
· The Cavaliers ate the ninth "LeBron is a passer first, and
team - . nearly one-third of he became more of a shooter
the league - to make a and that hurt our team."

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INSIDE
• Tsunami victims get a
boost from OVCS.
SeePageA2
• Time out for tips.
See Page A2.
• Egg hunt set for
Saturday. See Page A3
• Stearns graduates
training course. ·
~ Pa(je'~
• Board approves
supplemental contracts.
See Page A5
• Mason city budget
reviewed at council
meeting. See Page A5
• .State says death row
moving to supermax prison
in Youngstown.
See Page AS
!

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Dear Abby

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AS

© 2005 Ohio Vlllley Publi&amp;hl"' Co.
'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

POMEROY - The president of
American Electric Power Ohio said
Tuesday "it's highly probable" that
AEP will build a $1 billion powe.r
·
plant in Meigs County.
· Kevin Willker told local officials
yesterday they will have an.ongoing
role in helping to assure the location
of !he new ABP integrated gasifica. tion combined cycle clean-coal
power plant here. AEP announced
Friday it had filed an application
with
the
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio · seeking
authority to recover costs associated
with building and operating a new
clean-coal technology power plant
in Lebanon Township.
Walker told offieials here the
PUCO is expected to rule favorably
on AEP's cost recovery plan, and is
expected to do so ·"relatively quickly'' ·- in six to eight months: ·
Walker visited Meigs County yesterday to meet with county commis-

.sinners, mayors and ottier communi~
ty leaders to ask for their support of
the· projecl, which he said may be
subject to litigation and other slumbling blocks along the way. AEP
hopes the PUCO ·. will approve its
plan for recovering costs of the
plant's construction, allowing con- .
struction to begin in 2007 and operation to begin in 20 I0 .
AEP considered sites in II states.
and Walker said yesterday the Meigs
County sile was deemed the secondc
besl site among those considered.
Only a site in Mason County, W.Va.
was deemed more desirable by AEP
engineers considering possible locations, and AEP's Appalachian Power
has filed a similar cost recovery plan
with the West ·Virginia Public
Services Commission for that site,
located adjacent to the Mountaineer ,
Plant at New Haven, W.Va.
AEP plans to invest in 1,200
.
B~an J. Reed/photo
megawatts of new generation using
AEP Ohio President Kevin Walker, pictured· with The Daily Sentinel's general marl'
· the new IGCC technology, and may agerCharlene Hoeflich, met with local elected officials Tuesday to ask for pubdo so with two 600-megawatt facililic support of the power company's plan to construct a new $1 billion clean coal
Pieese see Meigs. AS
power. plant in Lebanon Township.

Schools donate computers
·to Portland center
'

--

'

ODOT closed two sections of
124 and two sections .o f 144
.· COOLVILLE Ohio due to the massive damage at
Department of Transportation the slip sites. ·
·
District I 0 has scheduled a
.The northern section of 144
public meeting for March 28 . was repaired and reopened to
to present potential emer- traffic in late February. ODOT
gency repair alternatives has been, working closely with
associated with major ·slips outside engineering firms to
on Ohio 124 and 144.
develop feasible alternatives
The meeting will be held for how to address the remainfrom 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at ing closures.
Coolville Elementary School.
During a recent meeting
A presentation will be held at · with ODOT Director Gordon
6:30p.m. wjth a question and Proctor, representatives from
answer session following.
ODOT District 10 presented
. "Because.of the emergency. a range of potential fixes
status of this project, ODOT including stabilization and
is trying to move forward . reconstruction on site, possiquickly in determining the ble upgrades of surrounding
appropriate repair alternative county and township roads,
and implementing it,'' said and excavation and reali~n­
ODOT Public Information ment. The March 28 meetmg
Officer Stephanie . Filson. i&gt; the next step on.the way to
"However, it is important that finalizing a clear course of
we gain feedback from those acti'on .
"!his is a large and comaffected by the current dam- ·
age and those poteQtially plex project," said District
affected by the repair of that Directo( George Collins. "A
damage . This meeting will public meeting will give u~
provide a good forum for that the opportunity to weigh the
dialogue.'·
concerns of those who are
The slips occurred on the most affected by the current .
heels of a series of significant damage. Our goal is · to use
tlood event s thai' struck the this feedback io determine
area, the most recent of the best. most cost"effective
which Iwppened in January. alternative and construct it as
Over the course of one week. · quickly as possible."
,

.

.

BY BETH SERGENT '
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

STAFF REPORT

PORTLAND - Eight used
comp.u ters Md six used printers 'were recently donated by
Meigs Local Sch()Ols to the
Portland Community Center
and installed by Meigs High
School student volunteers.
"There is an extreme need
for
this,"
Portland
Community Center Treasurer .
Mike W. Duhl said abou.t
access to computer technology in rural communities. ·
· Six ·Meigs High School
students were ·JOined by
teacher Scott Brinker and
Meigs
Local
District
Technology
Coordinator
Mark
Thomas
when
installing the computers.
The students learned 'their
skills
from
Brinker's
Information
Technolog.y
Tools class and installed proBeth Sergent/pholos
grams like . Microsoft Power Students from Meigs H'igh School decide where to begin setting
Point, Office '97, Word and up.eight computers donated to th~ Portland Community Center
Excel onto the computers that by Meigs ~ocal Schools. The comp~ters will be used to teach
are not Internet ready, yet.
residents computer basics with Internet access to follow at the
Duhl hopes to even'tually Portland Community Center.
have Internet service at the
community center. For now,
residents will have the opportunity to learn computer .
basics on the machines.
"I think it's wonderful,"
PortlMd Community Center
Vice.- president
Mila
Raymond said about the
donations of computers and
volunteerism from Meigs
Local Schools and students.
is e'xpected to be completed
BY CHARLENE HoEFI.ICH
"l think its good utilization
HbEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
next week. Moore said.
of an abandoned school
The annex has been name~
·building," Thomas agreed.
· POMEROY - bedication in honor of Howard Nolan,
"This was a unique opportuof the annex to the Meigs 96, of Syracuse, benefactor
nity and . we're always open
Museum built on an adjacent · of the project, and his late
as a district to ways to get the
lot on· Butternul Avenue in wife, Geneva.
kids e)lposed · to public ser· Pomeroy has been set for 2
The
1.200,square-foot
vice opportunities."
p.m. on Sunday, April 10. .
building will consist mostly
"We get to use what we Meigs High School ~tudents donated tl,lEiir time ahd skills
Plan;; for th e dedication of open space to be used for
learned in class to help the learned ir;! teacher Scott Brinker's Information Technology Tools were ·announced by Ferman .
community," Meigs High .Class to the Portland Community Center which was a recipient Moore at a recent meeting of exhibits. but will inclu!le an
School student Eric Bumen of eight used computers and six used printers donated by the the Meigs County Historical office. kitchenette, restroom
and a storage loft.
said.
.
· Meigs Local Schools. Brinker _a nd his students along with Society board of trustees held
Meigs .Local Schools also Meigs Local District Technology Coordinator Mark Thomas deliv- at the Museum . The 3-by-40- · Also planned at the meetfug;
donated a used commercial ered the computers and Installed their software. Pictured from foot structure with a brick was a memorial dedication in .
honor of Dick Genheimer, a '
stove, chairs and tables to left are students Damien Spencer, Jeff Baughman , Nikita facade
conslructed
by
Homecreek Enterprise s, Inc .
Pluse ne Anne.. AS
PluH ne School1. AS
Lewis, Eric Burnen, Karen Milliron and Tim Matthews.
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ODOT schedules
public ·hearing on slips ·

Historical Society sets
dedication of museum annex

INDEX

'··

'"'" ·"'"'"i'"''nlll&gt;d con •

·AEP's Walker: Meigs power plant is 'highly probable'

SPORTS

be an unrestricted free agent
in 2006, when he would be
free· to sign with any franchise. Taylor was drafted in
from Page 81
the sixth round out of Toledo
'
in 2002,
·"The Ravens are a great
If the Ravens hadn't opted
organization and Chester
Taylor is proud to be a to match the · offer, they
Baltimore Rav~n," said Ken · would have received · the
Sarnoff, Taylor's agent. ''He . Browns' sixth-round draft ,..
looks forwan1 to helping· the pick as compensation.
NFL
Meanwhile,
the
Ravens compete for a Super
announced that the Ravens
Bowl ring in 2005."
Taylor's contract wi II count will open the season Sept. _II
approximately $3 . million on national television against
against the Ravens ' 20D5 the Indianapolis Colts in a
salary cap. He is still slated to . Sunday night ESPN game.

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15, 2005

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

COMMUNITY
Tsunami victims get a boost from OVCS

·. Wednesday, March 23,

2005

Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church

mi.

For the students it was an opportunity to
. help others see Christian love in action, said
Fred Williams, school administrator. His
original challenge to the students was to
give the price of a meal in America.
"The students really warUed to help and
their response was truly amazing," said
.. Williams. Some gave their allowance, others their birthday and Christmas money.
and some asked relatives to help.
The goal set at first was for $550, and
after meeting that in two days it changed to
$1,000, then $1,700, Before it was over, the
elementary had raised $3,135. The high
school added an additional $1,059 to bring
the total gift to $4,i85.
The school channeled i,ts gift through
Samaritan's Purse, which is the Franklin
Graham organization that di~tributes shoe
boxes to children across the world. The
superintendent said Graham was so
impressed by the unusual outpouring of concern, that he had his office call the school and
convey his appreciation.

$3,135

given to
the tsunami relief
effort
through
Franklin
Graham's
organiza. tion . An
additional

.

was given
by high
school students.

Becky
Baer

people would progress, just
hegm! That way you can feel
like you have accomplished
something because you have ·
having to do things under at least started on the venture.
pressure?
•
Let others help you by del. The best way to address egating some of your routine
: these concerns is to plan duties. Don't give in to the
ahead through the use of a
If ·
d
se -Impose pressure of hav1 d
d "li D .. 1.
0
0
ca en ar an a
:
IS!. ing to do it all yourself or
Wnte. down ~ppotntments .: that no one can do it as good
deadlines, proJects, and so as you. Don 't expect perfec- ·
. forth on a weeki~ or monthly tionism _of others or· your: calendar. Orgamze . a. daily self. Plan to give yourse.If a
. ume schedule by pnontlzmg . reward when . you finish a
-. pumng the 1mponant project.
thmgs f1rst. Be sure you
Learn .to say, "No." Don't
allo:-v enough t1me for .com- clutter your agenda with
pletmg each task.
.
things that don't fit your
. Start your day by tackhng goals or your schedule.
: t?e tough JObs early and getLastly, be sure to plan time
. tmg , them out of the way. for doing nothing. This will
. You 11 then be free to ~oncen- give you the rest you need to
trate on. more e~Joyable re-energize for future underthmgs, Without 1\avmg any- takings.
thmg hang over your head.
By trying some of these
. Close your door or t~rn off tips, you don't have to he sat: the phon,e an~ televiSIOn so isfied being a time juggler.
· you won t he Interrupted and You can become a time
can devote your thoughts to . expen.
your work. Do the most
importanl assignments when
you are the most energetic.
, It 's been said that 80 percent
; of the work we do is accom; plished in 20 percent of our
time. Studies also show that
most people are more effi~ .
cient in getting things done
during the late morning
hours.
. To help you beat the clock
www.•JidiJnRUHf'"ll'
: as you get ready for work and
the kids off to school, prepare
· for the morning rush before
going to bed. List all of the
things that need to he done in
the morning. Determine how
. many minutes each will take
and add them together.
: Subtr'act the total · from the
·time you have to be at work.

~
~

'''
•••

675-4498
www.hol~erclinic.com

APPIV Todav... Drive Todav!

2605 Jackson Ave.
Pt. Pleasant, WU

Powell's
FOODFAIR

REEDSVILLE - Easter
: sunrise service at 6:30 a.m.
with breakfast to follow.

THE AREA'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED
HELlOS PROVIDER.

Long Botto~ United
Methodist Church

Personll l O&gt;ro;Jen 5ysiero

MERCURY

(740) 441-0202

446-9800

3084 State Route160
Woodland C.nter Complex
(Aeros• from Holzer Medical Center)
Gallipolis, Ohio

Hillside Baptist Church

HOURS: Mon - Fri 9-7; Sat.

POMEROY
Good
Friday service at I p.m., dinner at 2 p.m., All-night prayer
service treginning at 3 p.m.

ing service at 10 a.m., Pastor
Linda
Damewood
announced.
Rocksprings United
Methodist Church
ROCKSPRINGS - . Easter
sunrise service at 6:30 a.m.
by
breakfast.
followed
SundaY, school , 9 a.m., morning worship, I0 a.m. Easter
egg hunt follows service.
Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene

SYRACUSE
Good
Friday Communion serv ice,
6 p.m.
"The Passion of the Christ"
will be shown at 7 p.m ~ on
Friday, free of charge, with
childcare provided at the
church.
RUTLAND -Paul E.
An Easter egg hunt will
Taylor Memorial Good take place at noon on
Friday all-night gospel sing. 7 Saturday at lhe church.
p.m. including ·Glory land
Ea~ter Sunday sunrise serBelievers, The Connors , vice, 6:30 a.m., with breakEternity, Glorybound Quartet, fast to follow ; Sunday
Uncle pan Hayman and the school. 9:30; 10:30 a.m. with
Country Hymntimers. Faith "Ju st For Now" bluegrass
Hay man
and
the gospel group performing.
Christianaires, Roush Family
and Sandra Wise, McDaniel
Middleport First
Trio , Priscilla Dodrill, Brian
Baptist Church
and Family Connections.
MIDDLEPORT - Maundy
Cheryle Knight. .
"Three Nails" Easier play, Thursday services at 7 p.m.
7 p.m. Saturday.
. Members will allend the
Son-Rise Service on Easter community Good Fridljy serSunday.
vices at the Heath United
Pastor Jamie Fonner.
Methodist Church and are
feminded to take a canned
Faith Full Gospel
food item .
·church
Easter Sunrise se rvice
will be at the church 6:30
LONG BOTTOM - A Sunday with a breakfast in
Good Friday service will l{e the
fellowship
hall.
held at 7 p.m.
Worship service will be at
I 0:15 a.m. followed by an
Middleport Church
Easter egg hunt.
of Christ
· Enterprise ·united
MIDDLEPORT - Easter
Methodist Church
sunrise service with adu lt
choir presenting, "Behold the
POMEROY - Silent comLamb." Breali.fast at 7 a.m., munion service with piano
Worship, 8: IS and I0:30 and organ music from 7 p.m.
a.m., Sunday school, 9:30 to 8 p.m. on Thursday.
a.m.
Participants may came and
Choir will also perform leave . any time during the
"Behold the Lamb" at 7 p.m . hour.
on Monday ·
Easler sunrise . service presented by the choir, 6 a.m.
South Bethel
Breakfast following the serCommunity Church
vice.
Easter Sunday worship ser- ·
POMEROY - A Sunday vice at 9:3Q a.m.. Sunday
'sunrise service at 6:30 a.m. ·School at I0:30 a.m. Pastor
will be followed by a mom- Arland King.

DEAR ABBY: I really,
really need your help. I have
serious anger issues .. Almost
·every day I lash out · at my
mother. and it makes· her very
sad . Recently my mom went
Dear
through a bout of depression .
Abby
She has relapses sometime., ,
ye t I am unable to control my
yelling at her. I am 13, but I
realize that I am already an
ab user and I don't know how
to stop. Little' things set me included in the price.)
off on a screaming frenzy at
Among the suggestions
my poor mother..
offer in the booklet are :
·Please help me. I'm afraid I
"Recognize that you are
will hurt her one day because getting angry. Admit that
of this, . and I would never your buttons are being
forgive myself. And please pushed and that you're about
don't print my name and to ' lose it.' (By losing it, I
address. We live in a small mean expressing yourself
town , and I don 't want people emotiona lly, without con13 AND trol. )
)o know.
SCARED IN VIRGINIA
"So me healthy. acceptable
DEAR SCARED: It is ways to express anger:
important that you pinpoint
"Express it calmly without
exactly what is making you so being abusive or calling
angry. If it is something other names. Say, -'When you do (
than your.mother, then you're ). it makes me angry.' And
making her a scapegoat for then explain why.
what is really bothering you.
"Take a walk. Remove
If it IS your ll)other, you must you rself from the source of
find healthier, more construe- your anger unti I you cool off.
tive ways of expressing your . "Write a letter to the person
anger than screaming at her who has angered you ,
. because, as yo u have pointed expressing your feelings. You
out, it may escalate.
may n~ver deliver it; in facJ,
I have a booklet that could you probably shouldn '( - ·
helP. you to understand and but you 'II feel much better
control your outbursts. It's once you get your emotions
callw "The Anger in All of down. on paper and out of
Us ·and How to Deal With lt." your system.
It can be ordered by sending
"When all else fa il s ·a
business-size,
se lf- have a good cry. That , too, .
addressed envelope, plus a ' will lessen the tension." ~­
check or money order for $5 . But whatever you do, do
(U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, NOT raise your hand in anger
Anger Bookl et, P.O. Box against yo11r mother. If your
447, Mount Morris, IL anger is truly out of control,
61054-044 7. (Postage is ask your mother 'to make an

.RUTLAND -Army National Guard Pvt.
Nat[]an Stearns has graduated from the
machinist advanced individualtraining.course
at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Aberdeen, Md.
Steams was introduced to machine shop
fundamentals including fabricating, repairing
and modifying metallic and · non -metallic

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Clubs and
organizations

We do the billing locally
Locally owned.
We care about you! ·
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-446-0007
Toll

Tadats

to

Wednesday, March 23
RACINE
Racine/Southern
Future
Farmers of America, 74th
; annual awards banquet, 6:30
: p.m., Southern High School
· gymnasium. RSVP to 9492611. extension 2118.
POMEROY - Meigs High
School Junior Class parents
: will .rteet at 6:30 p.m. in the
Thu..Sday, March 24
: Meigs High School Library
Thursday; March 24
POMEROY - A Caring
: to discuss plans for the prom .
POMEROY. · - Revival and Sharing Support Group
POMEROY
The services o,yill be held at the meeting will be held at I p.m.
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Faith VaHey Tabernacle
at the Meig~ Multi -purpose
Club wil meet for anoon Jun- Church. Bailey Run Road at
Senior Center. The meeting
. cheon at the Senior Citizens 7 p.m. each evening through will including an overview
: Center. .
March 27. Speakers will be on Alzheimers Disease.
Thursday, March 24
the Rev. Emmett Rawson and
POMEROY - Alpha Iota the Rev. Handley Dunn .
Masters wil meet at noon at
Saturday, March 26
St. Paul Lutheran Church for
POMEROY -Easter egg
Saturday, March 26
a meeting and luncheon.
hunt, noon , at Laurel Cliff
RACINE
Verneda
TUPPERS PLAINS Free Methodi st Church .
· VFW 9053 will meet at 7 Open to children 12 and Hartung will observe· her
98th birthday O!) March 26.
: p.m . at the hall in Tuppers under.
MIDDLE(&gt;ORT •.The Cards may be sent to her at
· Plains.
REEDSVILLE The Kings of Lancaster will be at 45481 Pomeroy Pike, Racine.
Riverview Garden Club will the Middleport Church of the Ohio 45771.

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Point Pleasant, WV

773-5536

Jl6 Se&lt;ond Avenue

Gallipolis, OH 456.3 I

(740) 446-2933
Hours:

M-F

IIWIII

lOam-Close - •

""''•zt"
Mo.

.Si&lt;)4 ¥

trltlaf!!

www.kasplat.com
7 40-446·8500
328 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

:
'·
:
:

More . than I0,000 colored
plastic eggs have been filled
with candy for the hunt. The
children will be divided into
five age categories, babies
with mothers, toddler~ up to
4, children 5 to 8, 9 to II and
12 to 15 years of age. In the
event of rain the hunt will be

.

'

·. Currency Exhibition ·

Support groups

• Old Currency
· Many Old Coins
· Meigs County Tokens
· Old Local Bank Currency
· 2005 and Buffalo Nickels

·FREE TO THE PUBLIC

* Free min to children

4

. aps 16 and under
Brlnc.ln your old coins
·
for appraisal!
Door Prl~es Every Hour

*

(

*

:-EGG HUNT SET FOR SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
second annual community
Easter egg hunt for Tuppers
Plains will he held at noon
Saturday on the gro unds of the
Amazing Grace Community
Church and the Tuppers Plain s
Fire Departments, sponsors of
the hunt.

COINCL

ACoin ' a nd

Birthdays

VISit us
onliheat

parts: The trainee learned to operate machines
such as engine lathes, uti'lity grinders, power
cutoff saws. armature. undercutters. arbor,
hydraulic, and drill presses. and associated
attachments. accessories and tools .
Stearns is the son of Florence Stearns of
Rutland.

Friday, April 1st

meet at 7:30 p·.m. at the Nazare1ie at 7 p.m. Saturday. '
Reedsville United Methodist Pastor is · Allen Midcap.
Church. Members are to take Refreshments.
finger foods. .
Monday, March 28
Saturday, March 26
POMEROY - The. SOOth
HARRISONVILLE
meeting of the Oh-Kan Coin
There will he an Easter egg Club will be held an p.m. at ·
hunt at 4 p.m . and a bean · the Pomeroy Library. There
soup and com bread dinner will be coin auction and plans
from.4 .to 7 p.m. Saturday at will be finalized for the coin
the Scipio Fire Department at show to be held on April 10.
Harrisonville .

Church events

Abigail Van Buren, also
know11 as Jean11e Phillips,
and was jou11ded by her
mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www;DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A11ge/es, CA
90069.

Coming

Community Calendar

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Ox:ygen •
• Nebulizers
• Electric Beds
• Wheelchairs
• Diapers ·
• Chux
• Medicare/Medicaid

appoinlment fo r you to discu" it with "r.sychologist so
he or she can help yc1u form ·
the IOOb 10 cOntrol it or channel it in a con;tru cti ve way.
DEAR ABBY: My brother
has inherited a very old quilt
from our grandmother. . Her
great-grandmother made it in
I 862, when she was 18. We
are thrilled to have such a
wonderful piece of family
memorabilia: however. we .
don '1 know what to uo wilh
it. It appears to he in good
condition. but I can 't imagine
putting it on a bed and risking
spill s or pet fur getting on it.
At pre &gt;ent. the quilt is
wrapped in pl astiC and sitting
in a box . I'd love to find a
way for my brolher to display
it or u.se it. but he is 19 and
doesn 't really care about
things like this yet. Any idea
you might have wou ld be
welcome . - KRISTA IN
SALT 1,-AKE CITY
DEAR . KRISTA : The quilt
should be slored until vour
brother has a place to display
it. A cleaner that prepares
bridal' gowns for storage can
help you do it so the quilt
isn't damaged . When your ·
brother is ready. consider
having the quilt mounted in a
large "shadow box" frame .
However. make certain it is
not exposed to direcl sunlight.'
.
· Dear Abby i.1 written by

Steams graduates training cotl.rse

M.A.. CCC-A

. O~· ner &amp; Audiologi!ll

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Teen's angry outbursts are
scaring her into seeking help

Diane McVey

• Pomeroy, Ohio·
740-992-5252

7am-llipm • 7 Days A Week

LONG BOTTOM - Good
-Friday service will be held at
7 p.m. .

HELiOS

700 East Main Street

Store Hours:

POMEROY
- Holy
Thursday: Mas s of the
Lord''s Supper with Holy
Communion and Procession .
. 7:30 p.m. Visits to the
Repository until II p.m .
Good Friday: Stations of
the Cross, noon, in conjunction with Meigs Ministerial
Association Lenten observances. Confessions, I to 2
p.m. Liturgy of the Passion
· and Death of Our Lord with
Holy Communion, 7:30p.m.
Holy Saturday: · Easter
Vigil Mass, 7:30p.m.
Easter Sunday: Mass,
: 9:30a.m. . ·
Rev. Walter E. Hei.nz, Pastor.
Reedsville United
Methodist Church

OXYGEN

Specializing in:
v' Bankruptcy
v' Divorce
tl Charge Offs
v' And MORE!!

Sacred Heart
Catholic Church

Prescriplion
O•ygen

PRESCRIPTION

HOLZER
CLINIC

.

POMEROY - Morning
Easter service at II a.m. Rev.
Ed Payne is pastor.

$1,050

Time out for tips

Easter Sunday Unified morning service, 10:30 a.m. ,
evening service, 6 p.m.
James R. Ac:ree, Sr., Pastor.

POMEROY
- Easter
Sunday Sunrise Service, "He
is Coming (Are You .
St. Paul &amp; St. John
Ready?)" at 6:30 .a.m.;
Lutheran
Sunday School, 9:30; Sunday
worship, 10:30 a.m.; evening
POMEROY .- St. Paul
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Lutheran Church: Maundy
Pas tor Peter Martindale.
Thursday worship service ,
with Holy Communion , 7
Hemlock Grove
p.m. ; Good Friday Tenebrue
Chris.tian Church
worship service, 7 p.m.
St. John Lutheran Church:
POMEROY - Easter sun- Easter Sumise worship serrise services at 6:30a.m. with vice, 7 a.m., with breakfast.
breakfast to ·follow in . the follpwing.
church basement. Regular
Regular East~r Sunday
worshi ip service '?'ill be at worship service. 9 a.m. at St.
9:30a.m. with Sunday school John, II a.m. at St. PauL
classes to follow.
Rutland Freewill
Grace Episcopal Church
Baptist Church

Ohio Valley
Christian
School elementary
students
hold up the
numbers
for their
total donation of

This will be . the time you
need to get up and start your
day.
.
Before retiring for the
evening, lay out everyone's
clothes, set the breakfast
table and make lunches so
the next morning will go
smoothly. Keep items in the .
same place all of the time
where they can easily be
found as you walk out the
door - keys. school books.
lunch money. etc. .
Other time-saving tips for
the morning include waking
up early to get ready before
the rest of the family arises,
and setting your clocks ahead
a few minutes. This trick
will cause you to believe that
it's later than you think, so
you won't dawdle'.
If you feel overwhelmed
with big projects, break them
up into smaller tasks. If feelings inundate you because
you don't know where to
begin, just begin! Even if it's
in the middle of how most

BY THE BEND

Holy Week Services

1

GALLIPOLIS - The students ot' Ohio
Valley Christian School (OVCS) through
free-will offerings raised $4,185 to forward
to .those Who are recovering from the tsuna.

Can you solve this riddle?
"You can't save it. You can't
borrow it. You can't lend h.
You can't leave it. You can't
take it. You can only do two
things with it-. use it or lose.
it: What is it?" It's time.
Time is a unique personal
·· resource (unlike money, ener, gy, talents , skills and abilities) in 'that each of us is
given the ~arne amount every
day- 24 hours_ no more,
no less. How do you manage
your time? Are you a time
struggler? A time juggler? A
time expert? Very few of us
are time experts. In fact, we
do well to be time jugglers.
Unfortunately, most of us are
probably time strugglers.
What can you do to better
manage time ? First look at
the things that rob .you of
'your time. Do you procrastinate? Try to do everything
yourself? Don't plan ahead?
Are constantly interrupted?
Let's take a. closer look at
how these time robbers can
he handled .
Why do you procrastinate,
or put off until tomorrow the
: things . that .could be done
: today? Are you afraid you
won't do it right _ that you
expect perfectionism? Are
you afraid of success,
~cause then you would have
.
. to contmually Jive up to that
: standard? Do you feel over· whelmed and don't know
. where to start? Is the task difficult or unpleasant? Do you
enjoy the last minute thrill of

The Da,ily Sentinel .

PageA3

The fun Buins at 8:00 a.m.
in the in the lobbY of Home
National Bank in Racine!

postponed until the following
at noon.
·
Numerous prizes will be
awarded in drawings at the egg
hunt. These include bicycles.
tricycles, savings bonds, Easter
baskets. and stuffed toys..
For more information call
Linda Dunlap at 667-0194 .
Saturd~y

Home
National
Gl'
...... '

-FDii
-~--

...

Bank

Racine
740-949-2210

~WIT'~©M@®

Syracuse
740-992-6333

J •

----------~ ~------

-----~--

·-···---------------;-----,-:-:.-------~.

•

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ·

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.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 exercise there~[; 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 ~f grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Conflid
Dissension is healthy
Dear Editor:
I would like to raise a point regarding Rev. Jonathan
Noble 's March 18 column, ''Beware the power of the tongue. "
He cautions that "we should beware those people who sow
seeds of dissension. who continuall y complain, who nip and
the heels of everything and everyone good."
Approaching the &lt;.liscussion from the religious left. I believe
that philosophic;il thou ght is the mere ideological superstructure of economic t'o rces. I have a large collection of theological magazines from the late 19th century and the editorial
page s of those times are filled with lament about how Labor
justifiably regarded the conservative church as the great
enemy of the working class .
I can concur with Rev. Noble.'s sentiment to an extent, but ·
taken to an extreme, it can also mean the justification of conformity. and repression of free discussion in the process of buttressing the existing power structure.
I believe that a certain amount of tension between individuals as well as between individuals and the community ensures
· a healthy conflict between self interest and civic responsibility.

Jeff Fields

Wednesday, March

23, 2005

W really is for women

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

Pagei\4

The liberal Web site
TomPaine.com recently sent
out an e-mail screaming:
''Women of the . Worl&lt;.l v.
Bu sh." Another left·wing
si te, feministing .com. has
declared: "W Stands f01' War
on Women ."
Can they be serious'!
Of course, they are. The
Bush -Che ney "W 'is for
Women"' campaign gimmick
during Election 2004 was
derided not because it was
cheesy (it was, what campaign slogan isn't''). but that
the established, "sophi s ti ca l ~
ed'" view has bcc11 women
vote left. Remember the soccer moms?
Well. a few of those soccer
mom s beca me . securi ty
moms in 2004 and cut 8 percentage points into the 11 point female advantage the.
. Democrats had in the 2000
election.·
And the rest, as they say, is
history. Yet much .of the Left
is still stuck with an old template . (Could they believe,
like Teresa Heinz Kerrv. that
two Republ ican brothers
stole the election fro m the
real women's choice, K~ rry ­
Edwards?) ·
The
text
cif
that
TomPaine.com
e- mail
focused on a United Nations
conference on women during which the United States
argued that abonion is not a
fundamental human ri ght. If
the topic has anything to do
with what the United Nation

being taken to neighboring
states for abort ions without
. parental· consent - is not a
matte.r or abort ion per se, but
of human rights and common sense.
Kathryn
And it's not just on aborLopez
tion that liberal actiyists
shortchange women. How
about on cloning, which this
president wants banned? It
files under "reprod ucti ve was a left-wing gal, Judy
ri ghts" or "'bioethics." the Norsigian, who testified in
Right Is Wrong. according to Boston last month against an
emb ryon ic-stem-c~ll bill in
the Left.
At recent he.arings on · Massachusetts that would
Capitol Hill , Marcia Carroll. allow "research'' or "theraa , Pennsylvania mother. peutic"' cloning.
recounted the stury ·or her · In The Boston. Globe, she
14-year-old daug hter being wrote that, "There is a dispressured into an abortion by turbing lack of attention to
her boyfriend's family . (in · the risks to women's health
New Jersey, where parental posed by .the advent of
notification is not r~quired) . embryo cloning." No female
The
Child
Interstate George W. Bush clone·,
Abortion Notifi cation Act. Norsigian is executive direcwho se lead spon sor . is tor of Our Bodies Oursel ves.
Repu blic an 'Ileana Ros- the Boston women's health
Lehtinen of Florida (and is book collective - hardly an
suppo rted by the White appendage of the Vast Ri ghtHouse). is just another . Wing Conspiracy.
attempt by conservati ves to
Even putting as ide the bigrol l back women's rights if ge r moral que stion s: Is
yo u
talk
to
·your cloning. in any form, in the
TomPaine.com-type friends best interest of women? Are
(or the ACLU . which oppos- feminists comfortable 'with
es the bill ). In truth, thou gh, the pro spect of · women
it would protect that 14- becoming egg poppers for
year-old girl and others I ike hire 0 All of this so unds at
her from being press ured least as important as cominto abortion.
plaining
about
Kirstie
Where's the femini st Alley's "Fat Actress" being
Left's concern for these bad for women, which
teens? The point of the bill NOW's president was seen
- prohibiting girls from .doing not long ago on

International Women's Day.
As the gender-gap myth
has started to fade (as media
and left-wi ng activi sts' templates are updated), so,
slowly.· alternatives to the.
likes of the left-leaning
National Organization. for
Women have become more
visible. Today, . abortion
opponents,
es pecially
prominent women among
them like Cathy Ru se, a
the·
spokeswoman
for
National Conference of
Catholic Bi shops, talk compass ionately about how
"women de serve better"
than abortion. And the
Susan B. Anthony Li st,
which rai ses money for prolife candidates, is now on
the scene, .providing a
counter to the powerful
E.M.I.L.Y.'S .List.
Don ' t hold . your breath
wmung
for
Gloria
Steinem's old rag, Ms., to
do a profile admitting that
W does stand for women, or
profilin g a gallery of conservative Americans who
are defending some of . the
most vulnerable women .
But it 's a wide world out
there. The Left 'would be
wi se to learn that. Lives
may depend on it. never
mind electoral margins.
(Kc1thryn Lopez is the editor «f' Nmimwl . Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com), She can be contacted at klope z@ llarimwlre view.com. )

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. March 23, the 82nd day of 2005.
There are 283 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History : On March 23, 1775, Patrick
Henry made his famous call for American independence from
Britain, telling the Vi rg inia Provincial Convention, "Give me
liberty, or give me death!"
One year ago: Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and
Secretary of State Colin Powell offered a strong defense of
the administration's pre-Sept. II actions as they . testified
before a federal commission reviewing the 200.1 attacks. A
report by Medi Gare'· trustees .said that without changes, the
federal health care program woul&lt;.l go broke by 2019, seven .
years earlier than expected.
Today's Birthdays: Comedian Marty Allen is 83. Movie direc- ·
tor Mark Rydell is 71. Singer·Chaka Khan is 52. Actress Hope
Davi s is 41. ComedianJohn Pinnett is 41. Actor Richard Grieco
is 40. Country musician Kevi n Griffin (Yankee Grey) is 40.
Rock singer-musician Damon Albam (Blur) is 37. Rock musician John Humphrey (The Nixons) is 35. Actress Keri Russell is
29. Country singer Paul Martin (Marshall Dyllon) is 27.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our r'nain concern in all stories is to. be Published every afternoon, Monday
accurate. 11 you know of an error in a lhrouQh Friday, 111 Court Street,
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Pcttmaster: Send address cbrrections
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News
Edhor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
·Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Reporter; Beth Sergent, Exl. 13

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52 Weeks

Board approves supplemental contracts
STAFF REPORT

MARETTA - The Washington Soil . and Water
Conservation Di strict will be holding a wildlife clinic titled
"Our Small Wild Neighbors," April 7. from 6:45-9:30 p.m.
Information on the natural history of some of our most common species found within the city lrmits will be covered. Learn
where to observe, how to identify, ways to attract, how to deter
imd who to contact when you have a need or question related
to wildlife. A wildlife specialist, a wildlife officer and other
experts on the sma11 critters that inhabit the city will be there.
The clinic is free and will be held in the Community Room
at Washington State Community College. for more information or questions q n\cerning the clinic contact Rebecca Moore
ai 373-7113, extension 236.

T\)PPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved supplemental contracts for coaches
at last week's regular meeting.
The board approved contracts for Brian Cummins,
co-assistant softball coach;
Gay,le Salyer, co-assistant
softball coach; Sue Arnold,
junior hi gh track coach;
Glenn Arnold, assistant varsity track coach; and Craig

Ball.signup set
RUTLAND - Final sign,tip for the Rutland Youth League will
be held from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Rutand Fire Station.

Venoy, volunteer assistant
softball coach .
Laura Elli s was approved
as a substitutc .teacher for the
remainder of the 2004-2005
school year pending proper
Billie
Jo
certifi cation.
Marcinko and Daniell e
Wilkinson were approve&lt;.! as
substitute aides fo r the 'reaminder of the school year.
pending proper certification.
The board also re cogn ized .
the academic quiz team s for
their outstandin g seasons.
and Andy Francis for hi s par-

ttctpauon in the Ohio sion and authorizing the necUniversity and the Ohio State e5'ary tax Ievie &gt; and certify-·
ing them to the county au&lt;.li Unive"ity Honor Bands.
tnr for fi,cal year 2005 -2(Xl6.
The board also:
• Approve&lt;.! salary continu• Accepte&lt;.l an &lt;Jnon ymou s
ation fur an employee .
&lt;.lonation to the Cl as' of'2 U05
• Approved
financial Activity Fund .
report s for February.
• Approved the seni or class
• Approved a re solution trip to Flori&lt;.la frotn April 24amenJing the amounts and 30.
tax rates as &lt;.letermined by the
• Approved the 2005 -2006
budget wmmission for · the school calendar.
fi scal year 2004-2005. and a
• Set the next meeting at
resolution accepting the 6 :30 p.m . on April 20 in the
amounts and rates as deter- Elementary
Library
mined by the budget commis- Conference Room.

Mason city budget reviewed at council meeting

Cancer benefit planned

'

BY 8TEPHANI.E JENKINS
SJENKINS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

RUTLAND - A benefit auction and dance for Jack
Frederick, who recently was diagnosed with cancer, will be
held Saturday night at the Meigs Elementary School. All pro. · .
ceeds will go to Frederick.
The auction including gift certiticates, candles, watches, Tshirts, hats, Beanie Babies, scrapbook kits and many other items
will be held at 6 p.m. with the dance to be from 7:30 to 9:30p.m.
There will be music, concessions and karaoke. Admission is $2
and the dance is for students. I 0 to 18 years of age. There will
be law enforcement and other supervision at the dance.
For more information , call Ruby King, 742-0310, or Kristen
Frederick King. 742-3602 .

MASON - The annual
bud~t . Mason's birthday celebration and more were
reviewed during Monday
night's Mason City Council
meeting.
Council awarded an additional $5.200 to the Mason
City Library, which inclu&lt;.le s
the water, electric and insurance payments ..The additional fund s also include the
library 's story hour and summer reading program.
Council also discussed
adding a fee for water usage at
the library in the future to help
pay the library 's water bill.
The budget, along with the
water and sewer budgets, was
approved.
Council then discussed
entertainers fo r' Maso n's

Plan bake sale
MIDDLEPORT- Spaces are still available for the Bunny
Hop Bake Sale, to be held Saturday under sponsorship of the
Middleport Community Association. Local non-profit organizations who wish to set up a bake sale table in the shopping
district should cal1992-3 148 to reserve a space.
The sale will begin at"IO a.m. Treats will be given out and free
photos with the Easter bunny will be taken at Peoples Bank.

· Bingo set
MIDDLEPORT - A basket bingo game 'will . be held at 6
p.m. on March 29 at the Middleport American Legion Post
. with proceeds benefitting Meigs County Relay 'for Life.
Tickets are available by calling 992-5767.

I 50th birthday ce lebration
a·nd the Jul y 4th celebration. It
was decided that Elvis impersonator Dwight Icenhower
was too expensive. Other suggestions
included
Joey
Wilcoxen, local bluegras~
group Idle Time s and the
Rarel y Herd.
In other .business, council
&lt;.liscussed the ·Mason Easter
Egg hunt, which will be noon
Saturday at · the Mason
Ri verfront Park . In case of
rain, the hunt will .be moved to
noon, April 2. The I 50th birthday celebration committee will
sell hot dogs, popcorn and soft
drinks from II a.m. to I p.m .
Council will meet with Jeff
Fowler, building inspector for
Point Pleasa nt, at the next
council meeting to di sc uss
hiring Fowler as building
inspector fo r Mason, as well.

.

Council members agreed that resolut.ion to request th~ ne\\
a building inspector wus Appalachian Power plant be
needed because of several con structed in Mason County.
dilapidated properties 111 Counc il agreed to combine
Mason. Fowler has ag re ed to ciTons with 1\ew Haven and
take on the job.
Hart tor&lt;.! to ' end the rcsolu"1 thiryk we're going in the tion to .A.ppalachmn Power
right direction in having ollicials and Go\'. Joe
someone who is qualifie&lt;.l to Manchio direL·tly.
'do th is," coun cil member
The re,olut iun ma y be a bit
late. hown er. as Co lumbus
Agnes Roush said.
The Ohio Department of Southe rn Power "n&lt;.l Ohio
Transportation will install· a Power ·filed an ·application
new storm line at the entrance Fri da y with ·th e Publi c
of the Mason Wal-Mart U'tilities Ctllnmi"ion of
Wednesday. The entrance to Oh io identifying Meigs
Wal-Mart will be closed from County as th e intended site
5 p.m. until the installation is for the plant.
completed.
All council members were
Ma so n' s Spring Cleanup present. The next council meetwill
be
April
11-15 . ing will be 6 p.m. Monday.
Res idents may call City Hall March 28. to meet with three
to r~quest pickup. at $5 for engineering lirms selected to
one or two items.
bid on the upcoming water line
Council then discussed a · replacement project.
·

O'Bleness offers drivers' Agency offers fr~e rides
· . · fo~ cancer patients . .
refresher course

rates are already among the
BY BETH SERGENT
need for the tnm spo,rtation
lowest in the nation.
ATHENS - A classroom count on their auto insur- BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM program .
. "The governor, legislators, course aimed at helping older ance costs.
Drivers who have been
and PUCO are all behind the people to refresh_ and
from Page A1
·
Gerald
L.
Geisler.
AARP
POMEROY
.
Galliascreened
and trained throu gh
project, bt~t it 's unreali stic to improve their driving skills is
Driver
Safety
Progra
m
Me
ig
s
Community
'
Action
·
Gallia-Meig s Community
ties on two sites, or two on think it' s going to be a slam being offered by O'Bieness Ohio assistant slate coordi - re ce ntl y received a grant Action will pick up patients
dunk," Walker. said. " I do
the same site.
Memorial Hospital.
nator, will be the in structor. from the American Cancer at their home. take tnem to
Walker said the proposed thi.nk it's highly probable this
course,
55
The
He will present information Society to transport cancer their appointments and bring
project has wide support will happen."
Alive/Mature
Driving,
will
addressing
today's drivin g . patients to and from their them home.
Walker encouraged · county
.
among elected officials, from
be
given
on
con
secutive
doctor
appointments
al)d
challenges,
such
as:
how
to
commissioners
and
other
According
to
Varian
there
President George W. Bush
Thursdays. April 7 and 14,
anQ. Gov. Bob Taft to mem- elected officials to speak out from 12:30 to 4:30p.m. in compensate for changes in cl)emotherapy treatments free are no restrictions on the
vision, hearing and reaction of charge.
delivery area. S.o far clients
bers of Congress and the state in support of the project, to
O'Blenes
s'
Lower
Level
OCC
from
discourage
the
time:
how
to
handle
prob·
There
are
no
income
guidec
have been transported to
legislature . However, he said,
some opposition is ex pee ted objecting tolit, and to testify, conference Room 004. Iem situations such as left · lines for eligibility to mee t Columbus. Huntington and
from the Ohio Consumers' if needed, at PUCO hearings Participants must . atten~ turns , right-of-way,' freeway the needs of all people in the· Parkersburg.
Council. a consumer advoca- or in court if the OCC files both sessions. All drivers, traffic , trucks and blind communtty.
Varian stressed that this
cy group which closely mon- Iitigation in an attempt to especially tho se who are 50 spots; what to do if con "Some people don't have a tran sportation· program is for
years old or older, are invit- · fronted by an aggre ssive veh1cle that they trust to all cancer patients.
itors the activities of public block construction.
"We' re your biggest cheer- ed to participate in the pro-.
utility. companies and their
If you are a cancer patient
driver· when to use a ca r dnve very far, or they may
leaders,
and we' II do whatev- gram.
impact on utility costs. ·
phone'; how medic ation s not feel like driving after and are in need of transport
"We expect the Ohio er we can do ' to help,"
by
the may affect drivin g; how to thw ..chemotherap.y treat- between doctor appointDeveloped
Mick American Association of
Consumers· Council to come Commissioner
properly use anti-lock ment , .
Galha-Meigs ment s and chemotherapy
Davenport
said
.
at this proposal as being too
Retired Persons (AARP) , 55 brake s. air bag s and safety Communuy Action Planner trea tn)ents, call 992-6629 or
The plant would create an Alive/Mature. Driving is a
costly. and to say it will raise
rates for· AEP customers," estimated I ,900 construction c.omprehensive classroom belts ; and how 10 assess Teresa Vanan satd about the 367-734 1.
Walker told tbe group of local jobs and 125 full-time jobs · refre sher course geared one 's own and others' abilileaders in Pomeroy yesterday. once it is operating. It is also toward the specific needs of ties via a "'Personal Driving
"If that happens, customers in expected to provide $10 milCapability Index ."
Obio can go to another sup- lion in tax revenue per year to drivers who are 50 years old
No tests are given. Most
plier, but I think AEP"s rates the federal, state, county and or older. Accord.i ng to auto insurance companies
local gover:nments, including AARP, the course help s driwill remain competitive."
vers update their driving offer discounts to those who
Walker said AEP Ohio's local school districts.
knowledge and skills, pre- complete 'the driver safety
vent traffic crashes and vio.~ refresher course.
The course is limited to I 0
and Robert Wingett are both lations, and maintain' mobil participants: To enroll in the
hospitalized. Cards were ity and independence. As an
course,
which . ha s a $ 10
added bonu s, those who
signed for each of them.
Mary Grace Cowdery' and complete the course may be enrollment fee , call (740)
from Page A1
Maxine Whitehead reported on eligible to receive a di s- 592-9337.
Meigs County native who lost the display of election memohis life during the Vietnam rabilia items at the museum.
which is' to be open to every Portland School and its new, donations.
. .
Fund-raisers were disWar. Central to 'the dedication
extended life as the Portland
A
fund-rai
ser
featuring
resident
of
Meigs
County.
is a tail hook from the plane cussed and it was noted that a
"Community means more Community Center.
Elvis impersonator Dwight
Genheimer was flying when spaghetti dinner had been
than Portland," Raymond said.
Still, there is a. need for vol- Icenhower will be held at . 7
from
Page
A1
the accident occun:ed on the held and Wendy's was donatThe center recentl y com- unteers as well as computer p.m. on. April 9 at the·
deck of an aircraft carrier. At ing a percentage of dining
pletea
a massive roof repair, desk~ and foldi ng tables and Portland Community Center
that time the tail hook was room proceeds on Tuesday. the center.
and has applied for grants to chairs for dinners. Anvone
Although Portlillld technical- install a Civil War Museum, wishing to volunteer or donate with all proceeds going back
retrieved by another service- On Thursday, April 7. the
. ma'n now residing
in Historical Society will be ly falls into tbe So.uthern Local · operate a food pantry one day items can call Raymond at into the c.enter. Tickets are
California who recently locat- holding a basket bingo at the School District, the Mei gs a week and offer community 843-5358 or Duhl at59 1-9007. $10 each and can be pured family members. Their Legion Hall in Middleport. Local donations are a demon- dinners on Tuesdays .
"They ca11call us and we ' ll chase&lt;.! at the door or through
request was that it be sent to Over $3,000 in baskets and stration of the mission of the
. "The . building is sound,'' come and pick them up." the Meig' County Chamber
prizes
will
be
given.
Tickets
the Meigs Museum. · .
Portland Community Center Duhl 'said of the former Ray mond said about the . of Commer(e.
The dedication has been set can be purchased at the
for Apri123 . Margaret Parker, Meigs Museuin, the Meigs
president, reported to the County Extensio.n Office or
Digital Technology .
trustees that the donor and from a board member.
For Better Hearing
It was noted that on April
relatives of Dick Genheimer
·'
will be in Pomeroy for the 16 the Ohio Association of
ff. :..A;,],J
BEITER
LIVING
AND
.
Historical
Societie
s
and
dedication.
&lt;$&gt;
......
In other business, it was Museums will hold · their
Good Friday, March 25, 2005
~Sounds are more natural
· l~:
reported that board members annual regional meeting at
· Service at 1:00 p.m.
Rev. William Middleswarth the Meigs County Museum.
• Suppresses noise and feedback :...~. ·1 : .' ~

The Daily Sentinel
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Annex

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

2 156.

Local Briefs

Meigs

·

Correction Polley

www.mydailysentinel.com

23, 2005

Clinic to be held

Syracuse

Read.er Services

Wednesday, March

I'll be ,therefor·you
Sue looked up at' me from
her hospital bed -and asked
for the fou11h time if I was
sure I'd be alright. There
were all kinds of tubes running into an IV on the back
of her hand. There was a big
lump under the , covers
halfway. down her left leg,
.thick from the ~andages over
the knee replacement they'd
done this morning.
"It's only a golf trip," I ·
said ,a little testily, "What's·
the worst that could happen0" Actually, I didn ' t fee.l
that way at alL Sure, she's
got lots of nurses and doctors to take care o'f )jer, but
what about me? "('here 's
nobody to take care uf me.
Just 13 other guys, in a
beachfront condo in Florida
pl ayi ng five different golf
courses in five days. 'Plenty
could go wn;mg, bur th at
doesn't seem to worry her,
They could give me the
wrong-size rental car the
way they did the last time.
There was n't enough room
for four guys, their luggage
. and their golf clubs so one nf
us had to wait while three of
u' drove away.
A year later Bob still complains about being left at the

,,

but not right now

microwave .' I'll be · stuck he wouldn't flip through
' with a bunch of guys who · them at aiL He'd just sit
don ' t know . t~e first thing there and watch a show for,
about First Aid. I'll be lucky like, five or six minutes in a
to come liack alive. You can row. Get In touch with· your
always sue a doctor if that feminine side somewhere
Jim
happens. but can you sue else, Mac, ~e're trying to
Mullen
your golf buddies?. Not if watch television here.
you ever .want to play agai n.
The bathroom in Sue' s
Food poisoning is not just hospital room is spotless, not
a possibility, it's almost a like the swamp we have . to
rental counter. Get over it .' sure thing. The guys I' m share. Oh, the first day it's
man, Things happen. But with can barel y order pizza OK, but by the end of the
what if it happens to me 0 without help. To them the week it starts to smell like
Will Sue be around to drive kitchen is the dark side of the the outhouse at summer
me, . to phone a cab? . No. moon, none of them are quite camp. After the, budget cuts.
I get the feeling that washing
she' ll be in the hospi tal . sure what goes on in there,
enjoying herself.
I've always heard that you my ' hands in then; would
I could get sunburned . aren't suppos'ed to eat meat . actually add germs to my
There's nothing like the pain that smells like garbage can s ~in , . not kill them.
of getting sunburned. And i~ a month with' an R it. And
I'm not saying Sue's selfthey don't give you a mor- I know for a fatt that the ish, but I'd like to think if the
phine ddp- ~or that li~e they "five-second rule" does not shoe were on the othe'r foot,
do for a knee replacement. apply to scrambled eggs. that if she were the 'one who
And there's no team of nurs- Sue's been so lucky, they had to go golting, that I'd be
es to fuss over you just have n' t let her eat anything there for her.
because you .got drunk and solid for two days. Br.oth and
(Jim Mullen is the author
fell asleep in a lounge chair Jell-0 are about it.
of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
on the condo balcony. You
Sue gets her own televi- Complicati11 g the Simple
just have to suffer through it ' sian right there at her hospi- Life" a11d "Baby's First
with nothing to help you but · tal bed. Not us. We all have Tattoo." You can' reach him
Noxzema and ibuprofen .
to watch the same one at the at jim_mullen@myway.com.
While Sue 's in the hospital . same time . There was a · He is also one of the creators ·
with an entire staff cooking nasty tight one year o:ver the of "Hookli11e &amp; Sinker," a
her breakfast, lunch and din- clicker. Mac wasn't flippin g parody of mail order cataner, I might burn myselftak - through the .channel s fast logs. You can read it onli11e
ing popcorn out of the enough. Every now and then at www. hoo~lille. bi:.)

--

Schools

.

\",.'

'

Dinner at 2:00 p.m. · ·
All Night Prayer begins at 3:00 p.m.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

"G})fac~ t~ ((;, 0'
~~t~1tJ~"
Your plcle to weekend

Easter Sunday, March 27, 2005
Unified Morning Service at 10:30 a.m.
Evening Service at 6:00 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church

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restore the treasured sounds ·of your ~orld again .. .
a technological revolution .

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·

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Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

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. . . . . . . . .!&amp;. . .._~dl·~-

... .........

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

tllllti• •~.J··

~··

•
HOLIDAY COLORING CONTEST
J•
·I'
CONTEST
RULES
•I FIRSTPRJZE.......:1s.oo
t
'
I

SECOND PRIZE ... 10.00
THIRD PRIZE ........ ss.OO

e.
~

Bv DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~
Q

•
AP Photo/Manuel eatce Ceneta

· David Charbonneau of Harvard-Smithsonian · Center for Astrophysics. Cambridge,
Massachusetts , left to right; Drake Deming of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, moderator
Kim Weaver of NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington and Alan Boss of Department
of Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington, hold a NASA science uP&lt;Jate
Tuesday 1n Washington. NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope captured light, from two known planets orbiting stars other than our sun.

NASA
NASA .TELESCOPE SPOTS FIRST UGHT
FROM PLANErS BEYOND SOlAR SYSTEM
'

BY JOSEPH B. VE~RENGIA
AP SCIENCE WRITER

A

Name,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Age._ _ __
Address, ________________~--

__

Phone•~-----------------

NASA telescope peering far beyond our
.
. solar system has for
the first time. directly measured
light from
two
Jupiter-sized gas planets
closely orbiting distant stars.
adding crucial features . to
astronomy's portrait of far, away worlds.
Studies of the infrared
light streaming from· the two
giant planets suggest they
are , made of hot, swirling
gases that reach a broiling
I .340, degrees Fahrenheit or
higher.
"It's an awesome e'xperience . 10 realize we are seeing the glow of distant
worlds," said· astronomer
David Charbonneau of the
Harvard-S mithsonian Center
for
Astrophysics
m
Cambridge, Mass., whose
team captured hght from a
planet in the constellation

THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•)
•

&amp;

••

J..

Name•------- - - - - - - Age,_______

Namer_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Ag,~~---AddrMS•-------- - - - - - - - - Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone_____________

~--

DOWNING ·CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
POMERO'l OHIO

Phoner_________________

CROW'S RESTAURANT
POMEROY, OHIO

Name, ____ _ _ __ _~--- Age,__·_ __
Address, _______ _ _ _ __ ~--~--

Phone___~~----------~

BROGAN WARNER INSURANCE
POMEROY, OHIO

..
J..

I•
I•
I•
I•

Lyra. 'The one thing they
can't hide is their heat."'
Since the mid-1990s. scientists have discovered more
than 130 of these so-called
extrasolar planets. But the
stars they orbit are so distant and shine so brightly
that they lend to overwhelm
the pl'anets· from view.
To tini:l them, astronomers
indirectly measure the tiny
grav itational wobble that
orbiting planets exert on
their suns, or the brief dimming of starlight thai occurs
when a planet's orbit carries
il in front of the star.
But hot celestial objects
like these · gas planets also
emil infrared lighl. NASA's
Spitzer Space Telescope has
detectors to collect these
iflfrared ·sig nals. Infrared
light contains specitlc signatures in differe·m wave
lengths that · reveal more scientific characteristics about
a space object than visible
li2ht.

-.

PITISBURGH (AP) -Six
· employees of a company that
processed federal tax returns
were indicted Tuesday on
charges they hid and later
destroyed
about
80,000
returns ancj $1 billion in payments to make it appear
employees had met a deadline.
The
employees
faced
charges of conspiracy and
theft for the acti vi lies at
Mellon Financial in the spring
of 2001. during the I;JCak taxreturn processing penod.
Tens of thousands of tax
return~ and payments mailed
from taxpayers across the
Northeast were lost or
destroyed after being sent to
the company, which was one
of several finns contracted to
collect payments- for the government
Mellon's contract with the
Internal Revenue Service
required .it to complete the
project by April 29. 200 1. As
the deadline neared. one

employee directed tive others
to destroy the materials,
according to the indictment.
Mellon
officials
have
acknowledged the returns a·nd
payments may have been hid- .
den or destroyed by employees who felt swamped by the
amount of work.
Company spokesman Ron
Gruendl said Tuesday the
problems were "caused by a
few employees who blatantly
violated Mellon's' long-established. clearly stated policies ...
The government spe nt
months settling taxpayers '
accounts. In December 2002,
Mellon announced it had paid
$5.3 milhon to the Treasury
Department to settle administrative costs. Earlier, Mellon
had paid $12.8 million to
cover lost interest.
The six have not worked at
Mellon si nce 200 1, but it was
unclear Tuesday how many of
them resigned or were tired,
Gruendl said.

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Al JIRtll Block, you can walk iu witll ym1r taxes ;md walk nut
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]ookin~ for to pay uiJ bills an~ oth&lt;•r dl'l•t l'i!.~L

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'lburBankpr,~...
MEMBER FDIC
r;:'} famien Bank- POMEROY • TUPPERS PLAINS
c..!) , ......,c""""""
GALLIPOUS, OHIO
.-

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Name, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Age._ _ __

Name._ _ _ _~-------- Age. _ _ __

Addreas'-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Address. __
· - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - -

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Phone,_____________ _ _______

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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
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OHIO

One planet is known as
HD 209458b, Qicknamed
Osiris. II orbits a sun-like
star 150 light -years from
Earth in the constellation of
Pegas us. Its infrared signature was measured by
astronomers at the NASA
Goddard Spaceflight •Center
in Greenbelt, Md. Details
will appear Wednesday in
the. online version of the
journal Nature.
The other extrasolar planet
measured by the Harv,ardSmithsonian 1ea111 is known
as TRes-1. It is located 500
light-years from Earth in the
constellation Lvra. Result s
will be published in the
20
issue
of
June
Astrophysical JournaL
Both planets ci rcle their
stars in less than four days
at a distance of les s than 4
million miles, explaining
their very high .'temperatures.
In contrast , . Earth orbits
an average of 93 million
miles from the sun.

Six indicted in investigation
of missing tax retu~s

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Wednesday, M"arch 23, 2005

·McCain takes shots at AARP
during Bush Social Security rally

1. Just color one or more of the drawings on these pages, Fill in the blanks and take
your entry to the sponsoring store before 5 p.m. March 25.
2. Entries will be judged in two different categories, ages 4-8 and 9-12.
3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but can win only one prize.
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

Name,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Age·---Address __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

a

NATION

The Daily_ Sen~el

•

'~..
J..
J•
J•
I ~-·-v_A_L_L_E_Y_L_U_M_B_E_R
J..

PageA7

a

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M .
Republican Sen. ~ohn
.McCain, sitting alongside
President Bush at a Social
Security event here Tuesday.
threw a few punches at those
he says arc blocking change.
McCain took a jab at AARP,
the lopby for older citizens,
which has been bt1ying televi~
sion and newspaper advertisements in cities Bu sh is. visiting to oppose his idea 10 let
younger workers divert some
of their payroll Ia xes into pri vate investment accoums.
"Some cif our friends. who
are opposing this idea. say.
· :Oh; you don't have Jo worry
until 2042.' We wail . until
2042 when we stop paying
people Social Security?" the
Arizona Republican asked
rhetorically at the Social
Security event here.
The Social Security trustees
have said 2042 is the year
when the trust fund · will be
empty and the program will
have on ly annual payroll
taxes 10 pay benefits .
"I want lP say to our friends
in AARP. and they . are ;ny
friends in AARP. 'Come to
the table with us," ' McCain
said. "We not only have an
obligation to seniors. but we
have an obligation to future
generations of Americans as
welL"
John Rother, policy director
for AARP, says .his organization does not want to \~ait
until 2042. but favors a solution that is less rad ical than
· the private accounts.
" If we cati get away from
private accounts and get away
from creating · massive new
debt. then that would be a
more constructive discussion
that we would be happy to
participate in."' Rother said.
"This isn't a political
issue;" Bush insisted, in New
Mexico. "This isn ' t. you
know, Democrats trying to ge t
·ahead of Republicans or
. Republicans trying to get
ahead of Democrats. If that's
the spirit in Washington, nothing's goi ng to get done."
Social Security. however, is
among the most divisive issues
in political circles today. .

BARGAINS
BY THE
BASKET!
' Cofd

PoP ~

\ 20oz.
Bottle

Only 11¢'

AP Photo/J . Scott Applewhite
.
President Bush and Sen. John McCain, R·Ariz .. nght. embrace
as they wrap up two days in Western states together promo!·
ing Social Security reforms , here. at the Kiva Auditorium in
Albuquerque; N.M .. Tuesday. In a state with a large population
of retirees, Bush wants to assure seniors that they will con- ·
tinue to receive their regular government checks, while he
pushes for a system of private accou nts which wou ld enable
younger workers to divert a portion of their payroll taxes from
Social Security deductions and into stock market investments
to bankroll their retirement.
'

McCain nudged his New
Mexico colleague in the
Senate,
Democrat
Jeff
Bingaman. to support private
accounts. Bingaman said private accounts would do nothing to' strengthen the . program's solvenc y and would
lead to a reduction in benetlts
to seniors.
"It's true that in about 50
years, Social Security will be
required· to pay out more than
it
is
collecting," said
Bingaman. a member of the

Senate Finance Committee ,
which ha~ jurisdiciion over
Social Security. "There are
steps we can and shou ld take
to strengthen Social Security
for the future. And there\ no
question that we shou ld
e11courage Americans 10 save
for their· retirement so that
they are not depending solely
'o n Social Securit y during
their golden years. Bul privati zing Social Security i' not
the answer ...

WE HAUE AWINNER!!
· Congratulation~
.

'

Chuck BattBI~
The Daily Sentinel.

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wed.Jesday, March 23, ~005

State says death row moving to supermax prison in Youngstown
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS Ohio
moved death row I0 yea~;s
ago from southern Ohio in
.the wake of a bloody prison
uprising .that killed a guard
and nine inmates. The state
announced Tuesday it would
move the unit for condemned
killers again, this time to save
money.
. The move to Youngstown's
supermaximum
security
pnson, scheduled for this
summer, is unrelated to an
attempted escape from the
death row unit at the prison in
Mansfield last month or security concerns, said Terry
Collins, deputy director of
the
Department
of
· Rehabilitation
and
Correction.
Oh.io
State
The
Penitentiary in Youngstown
already has staff and space to
handle
the
additional
inmates, Collins said .
The move "would give us
the ability 'to close the death
row unit at Manst1eld and
therefore be able to meet
some of the needs of our budget," Collins said.
Collins said the move
could save millions of dollars
but no specific figure was
available Tuesday.
Once death row's I 00
employees find other jobs in
the system, the prison department's work force would be
·permanently re&lt;luced by the
same number, Collins said.
The prisons department is
discussmg the fate of those
jobs with the state employees' union but no layoffs are
planned, Collins said. The
prison also houses about
2,200 other inmates.
About 50 positions are
open at the Mansfield and
nearby Richland correctional
institutions, and another I0 to
20 at the Youngstown facility,
said Sally Meckling, a
spokeswoman for the Ohio

·

·

~:*II

Local Stocks

ACI-45.33
AEP-32.93
Akzo-44.70
BY TERRY KINNEY
taxpayer revolt that got the Ashland Inc. - 66.83
AT&amp;T-18.60
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
fee removed.
In Georgia; opponents took BLI-11.81
Evans - 23.73
BATAVIA - Thousands of
their case to the state Bob
Bor~amar - &amp;0.88
Ohio homeowners found a
Supreme Court , which Champion - 4.06
new assessment on their tax
upheld the fees.
Charming Shops - 8.08
bills last month, and millions
Kirkham saicl although the City Holding- 29.93 .
of people nationwide will be
fee in Pocatello would have Col- 47.08
charged the new fees for capbeen less than $3 a inonth per DG-21.66·
turing, channeling or treating
household, "It amounted to a DuPont- 51.74
rain that falls on roofs and
· new property tax."
Federal .Mogul·- .33
·
driveways. .
Pete Sepp, spokesman for USB- 28.40
As part of the Clean Water
the ' Virginia-based National Gannett- 78.90
Act, local governments are
Taxpayers Union, said local General Electric - 35.50
required to create storm
governments sometimes pass GKNLY- 4.9
water utilities to manage
·on environmental .fees too Harley Davidson - 59.60
Kmart- 127.15 '
compliance programs, and
readily.
costs are passed on to home"The fact' that they don't Kroger -'- 15.68
owners. The fees cover
fight more aggressively with Ltd.- 23.60
administrative costs and, if
the federal government NSC- 38.20
necessary, construction of
makes you wonder whether Oak Hill Financial - 33.98
storm sewers.
taxpayers ' wallets are a high OVB-33
B!IT- 37.76
The mandate from the U.S.
priority," Sepp said.
Peoples - 26.89
Environmental Protection
Phase I of the storm water Pepsico - 52;10
Agency is intended to make
implementation, aimed at Premier - 11.10
sure that pollutants carried by
industries · and the nation 's Rockwell - 58.66
storm water- such as chembig
cities, has been in effect Rocky Boots - 28.62
AP photo '
icals and oil and gasoline that
since 1992. Akron , Dayton, RD Shall - 60.91
leak onto driveways - are Larry Ward of the Reynoldsburg Street Department, stands in front of the city's street trucks Toledo and Columbus were SBC-23.04
treated before the water is · in Reynoldsburg. Thousands of homeowners in Ohio found a new assessment on .their tax bills the first of Ohio's big cities to Sears- 57.74
returned to streams, where last month , and millions of people nationwide will be charged new fees for capturing, routing comply.
·
Wa~Mart - 50.90
drinking water sources could and treating rain that falls on roofs and driveways.
The Phase II push this year Wendy's - 39.18 .
be contaminated.
.
is in communities with popu- Worthington - 20.37
,soak into the ground.
going to come out here and. lations Of I0,000 to I00.000. . Dally stock reports are the 4 ·
It's ·up to local govern- times more than $4 month.
Rates usually depend on
Any amount IS too much tell ·us how to manage our Permitting for storm water p.m. closing quotas of the pr&amp;ments to determine how to
the
size
of
a
homeowner'
s
for
some opponents of spe- water," said Rich Kirkham, a programs in those cities vlous day's transactions, pr&amp;- ·
pay, either from a general
·
• . Pocatello, Idaho, business- began in 2003, and programs vlded by Smith Partners at
fund or direct billing, said roof, driveway and other sur- cial.fees.
"We' ll be darned if they' re .man who helped organize a must be completed by 2008. Advest Inc. of Galtlpolla. ·
Jason Fyffe, a spokesman for faces where rainfall cannot

Fee for stormwater collection showing up on homeowner tax bills

•

Pistons misfire against Cavs, Page 84
WVU turnaround rooted In Injury, Page 84
8ogut leads AP All-American.team, Page 88
Tennessee's Summitt stands alone, Page 88

..

Wednesday, March 23
• Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
A few sprinkles are possible. The rain is predicted to
end ·
near
7:00am.
Temperatures will rise from
53 to 64 by late this_ morning .
Skies will be mostly sunny to
cloudy with I 0 MPH wind;s
from the southwest turning
from the west as the morning
progresses.
Afternoon '(l-6 p.m.)
There is a good chance we
could see some rain. Today 's
high of 65 will occur around
! 2:00pm as temperatures
diminish to 58 by late afternoon . Skies will range frofl1
partly cloudy to cloudy with
5 to 10 MPH winds from the
west.
Evening (7 p.m.-MidTJight)
It will be a cloudy evening.
There is a slight chance we
could see some rain.
Te!l1peratures will drop from
54 early this evening to 4 I.
AP photo
Winds will be 10 to 15 MPH
Prison officials announced Monday that Ohio 's death row wi ll be moved to the Ohio State Penitentiary, shown Monday, Jan. 8, from the west.
2001 in Youngstown, in an bid to save millions of dollars in the state budget.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It should continue to be
door recreation area when it cloudy.
Civil Service Employees · Ohio has put 16 men to Youngstown."
might be a bit
death since resuming execuThe U.S. Supreme Court opened, although one was of rainThere
Association.
around the area.
The pri son system would tions in 1999, ·including will re view an appeal thi s created in response to the Temperatures
wi II hold
receive $1.48 billion under seven last year, second in the ~ear over the assignment of law suit.
steady
around
42 . with
Go~. Bob Taft 's· proposed
nation only to Texas, which 1~mates to Youngstown . Civil · Cells are also smaller in
rights groups filed a class- Youngstown, with 67 square today's low of 41 occurring
budget next year. a" 2.6 per- executed 23.
cent increase followed by a
The state's public defendet action lawsuit against the feet of living space compared around I :OOam. Winds will
I. 7 percent increase the fol- slammed the announcement, state in 200 I on behalf of with 72 square feet in be 5 to 10 MPH from the
west turning from the northcriticizing the Youngstown prisoners over the assignment Manst1eld.
lowing year.
Ohio moved death row to w~st as the overnight proThe ·supermax prison, built facility as overly harsh and 1ssue and prison conditions.
At issue was "the absolute Mansfield
from
the gresses.
· in 1998, was meant for Ohio saying it will hurt efforts to
Thursday, March 24
inmates witli the worst di sci- represent the inmates in social isolation and sensory Southern Ohio Correctional
Morning
(7 a.m.-Noon) .
pline problems, but not nec- court.
deprivation that goes on at Facility in Lucasville after
·
hpect
a
cloudy morning .
essarily those who.committed
The move will force public . the supermax," said Michael the 1993 riots . The state will
defenders from Columbus to Benza, a Cleveland lawyer continue to execute con- Temperatures will linger at
the most heinous crimes.
However, only 54 of the nearly double their driving representing inmates in the demned
killers
in 42. Winds will be 5 to .1 0
MPH from the oorihwest.
· Lucasvill e, Collins said.
264 inmates currently at the time to meet with clients at lawsuit.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.) ,.
"Guys are kept tofally isoTwo inmates tried unsuc·
prison meet the strictest secu- Youngstown iri northeast
Temperatures will hover at
rity requirement s, said pris- Ohio, said State Publi c lated, depending on their cessfully to escape from
46.
Skies will be mostly
ons spokeswoman JoEIIen Defender David Bodiker.
se~urity classification. rangdeath row last month. Several
to mostly cloudy with
sunny
Lyons.
"We ,try to keep the morale ing from occasional contact administrators were repri:
Ohio had 198 men on death of the people on death row up with another human being to manded and two official s 5 MPH winds from the west
row Tuesday ai the Mansfield and try to do what we can," almost ·no contact with a were demoted and received turning from the southwest as
Correctional Institution . 'One Bodiker said. "They' re sit- human being," Benza said pay cuts after the attempted the afternoon progresses.
escape, in which inmates hit a
woman who has been sen' ting there anticipatii1g execu- Tuesday.
tenced to death is housed at tion . They' re probably going
For example, doors are homemade ladder under a
Ohio 's women's pri son tn · to think execution is wel- solid · metal instead of bars. pile of snow in an outdoor
Mary sville.
come if they have to stay at The prison also had no out- recreation cage.

the Ohio EPA Officials who
have decided to recoup the
cost through homeowner tax
bills are careful to note that
·the charge is not, strictly
· speaking, a tax but a user fee.
"Whether you call it a user'
fee or a tax, it's still an addi:
tional burden on the taxpay.er," said anti-tax acttvist
Greg Delev, a Cincinnati
lawyer. "It's unfair, but nothing will happen until taxpayers stand ur and say, ' Enough
is enough.' '
·
Although plans for storm
water programs have been in
the works for years, assessments are just showing up
because of the time the government allows for compliance and the way taxes are
paid. Tax bills due last month
were for the first half of 2004.
Homeowners in Cincinnati
and its suburbs werf assessed ·
only $4.84 for the year
because that program is primarily meant to deal with
water quality, rrot flooding,
said
Hamilton
County
Auditor Dusty Rhodes. In
communities trying to reduce
flooding. homeowners are
charged much more, some-

.The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

.-

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Rio's Simpson,
Vandall earn .·
· All-American
Scholar ·. honors
OLATHE, Kan. - For the
second consecutive year
University of Rio Grande
men's basketball players Matt
Simpson and Cain Vandall
earned NAIA All-American
Scholar Athlete awards for
their outstanding accomplishments in the classroom.
Simpson, a 6-6 forward
from Lottridge, had his senior
season on the court cut short
because of
broken hand.
However, it did not hamper
his work in the' classroom.
Matt
is
majoring
in
.Information Technology.
Simpson averaged 8.3
points and 3.8·rebounds in 23
games this season.
Vandall, a 6-0 guard from
Huntington, W.Va., like
Simpson, .is a two-time winner
of this academic award.
Vandall is majoring in
Accounting.
Vandall averaged 7.3 points,
1.9 rebounds and 1.7 assists iti
27 games this · season for the
Redmen.
Rio t1nished the year with a
19-12 record.
· To qualify for the NAIA AllAmencan Scholar Athlete
award a studtmt-athlete must
achieve a minimum 3.5 grade
point average and play in at
least 75 percent of their teams
games.
Simpson and Vandall will
graduate in May.

a

Reds cut five
from camp
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) The Cincinnati Reds sent five
players to the minors on
Tuesday, including right-hander Ricky Stone and outfielder
Rob Stratton.
The Reds optioned third
baseman Edwin Encarnacion
and catcher Dane Sardinha to
Triple-A Louisville. They also
reassigned Stone, Stratton and
left-bander Randy Keisler to
their minor league camp.
The moves left the Reds
with 36 players in camp, II
more than the opening day
limit. They 've still goi 18
pitchers and six minor lea..
guers invited to camp.
Stone, 30, grew up in
Hamilton, near Cincinnati,
and is trying to revive h.is
career in the Reds' organization. He agreed to' a minor
league deal in the offseason
with a chance to win a bullpen
job. He gave up five earned .
runs and eight hits in · eight
innings this spring.
Stratton, 27, a career minor
leaguer, Jed the Reds with four
homers and I 0 RBls this
·spring while hitting .324.
Stratton hit .353 in 34 games
for Louisville last season with .
12 homers and 34 RBis. He
also struck out 35 times.

OL Brooks
signs contract
with Steelers
PITTSBURGH (AP)
Backup offensive lineman
Barrett Brooks signed a oneyear contract with the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
. The mne-year veteran, Vo!ho
appeared in seven games the
last four seasons, agreed to the
contract that will pay . him
$665,000, including a $25,000
signing bonus. The contract
will count $5 10,000 under the
salary cap.
·

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Rio Grande falls to St. Xavier, beats Olivet in Florida
'

.

ORMOND BEACH, Fla.
-The bats went silent for the
University of Rio Grande
baseball team on day two of
the spring trip as the Redmen
lost 3-1 to St. Xavier (IlL) on
Tuesday morning .
Rio Grande ( 15 -6) produced eight hits and could
:only muster one . run in the
seventh rnning . on a wild
pitch. Junior shortstop Matt
Martin was a perfect 2-for-2
to lead the Rio offense.
Senior third baseman Kris
Schuler went 1-for-2 with a
double and scored Rio's only
run.
"We just didn't ~et it done
with the bats," R1o Grande
. Head Coach BradWamimont
said. "We did not hit at all."
Senior Soloman Alam took

Rio Grande 7, Olivet 5
The University of Rio
G)'ande Redmen baseball
team won the ftrst j1:ame of
their annual spring tnp with a
7-5 victory over Olivet on
Monday afternoon.

4A6.54·
'

'

'.

Rio Grande (15-5) was able
to overcome a rocky outing
from freshman pitcher Mike
0 s 'born e .
0 s bo r ne
struggled with
hi s control,
walking seven
in
3
2/3
innings on the
hilL He gave up only one hit
and struck out . three ·while
giving up three runs.
The Redmen put together
three runs in the fourth
inning. S~nior center t1elder
Scott Peterman led off with a
si'ngle and scored on a double
by junior catcher Jorge
Morales. Sophomore left
fielder Nate Chau then tripled
home a run and scored o'n a
single by junior third base-

man Kevin Dolan ,
Rio added a run in the.lifth
inning ori a sacrifice fl y from
junior first baseman Michael
Branon and one in the sixth
when sophomore Michael
Warren scored on ·a ground
out by senior Kris Schuler.
Rio would put the game
away with a pair of runs in the
seventh -keyed by back-toback doubles by Pet~rman
and Branon.
Juni or second baseman
Mike Golom was 2-for-4 with
two doubles to give him 12
two-base hits on the season.
Peterman was 3-tor-5 with a
double and an RBI and Chau
was 2-for-3 with a run scoring
triple : Senior right fielder
Charlie Kabealo. also collected two hits for the Redmen .

Freshman Chris Brown
picked up the win in relief of
Osborne.
Brown (3-0)
pitched 2 2/3 innings giving
two hits and two runs.
Freshman Kenta Sato tallied
his fourth save of the season
by slamming the door over
the. t1nal 2 2/3 innings. Sato
struck out five including the
side in order in the seventh . .
Olivet falls to 13-6 on the
season with the loss.
Rio Grande will face
Xavier (La.) on Tuesd&lt;ty in a
si ngle game.
·
JV Notes: The Rio Grande
junior varsity team also collected a win on Monday with
a 4: I triumph over West
Virginia . Wesleyan. . The
Redmen JV are now 2-0 on
the season.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Lady Buckeyes shell Maryland
BY DAVID GINSBURG
Associated Press

COLLEGE PARK, Md.
-Ohio State's balanced
attack · and aggressive .
defensive .was more than
enough to overcome
Maryland's home court
advantage in the second
round of the NCAA tournament.
,
Brandie Hoskins ·scored
22 points, three other
Buckeyes reached double
figures, and Ohio State
advanced to the round of
16 for the first time since
1993 with a 75-65 victory
Tuesday night.
Jessica Davenport had
15 points and nine
rebounds, Caity Matter
scored 16 · points and
Stephanie Blanton added
12 for the second-seeded
Buckeyes, who limited
the Terrapins to 31 points
after halftime.
·
Ohio State (30-4) will
face third-seeded Rutgers
on Sunday in the
Philadelphia
Regional
semifinals. Rutgers beat
Temple 61-54 on Tuesday
night in Storrs, Conn .
Crystal L!!nghornc had
22 points and
16
rebounds for the seventhseeded Terrapins (22-10),
who were trying to win
their first second-round
NCAA tournament game
since . 1992. It was
Langhorne's 18th doubledouble of the season,
tying the school record
set by Vicky Bullett in
1987-88.
. Ahead
58-53,
the
Buckeyes used a 9-3 spurt
to go up 67-56 with just
over 3. minutes left .
Matter scored · .s~ven
points in the run, capping
AP photo
it with a 3-pointer that all
Ohio
State's
Caity
Matter
takes
a
shot
over
Maryland's
Shay
Doran
during
the
second
half
but assured victory.
of Ohio State's 75-65 win in the NCAA tournament second-round game Tuesday in College
PINse - osu. B8
Park, Md ..
.

.

.

Reds beat
Boston
Bv HOWARD

ULMAH

Associated Press
FORT MYERS, Fla.
Tim Wakefield is· excited
about pitching Boston's
home opener as World Series
champions. He just wants to
pitch better than he did
Tuesday night.
He allowed six runs on
eight hits, including Adam
Dunn 's two-run homer, in 3
1-3 . innings and the
Cincinnati Reds. beat the
Red Sox 6-4 .
" 1. didn ' t feel as comfortable as I have in the last
three starts," the knuckleballer said. "The ball stayed
up and they ' ve got a good
hitting club over there."
So do . the New York
Yankees, but Wakefield is·
looking forward to facing
them at Fenway Park on
April II after a pregame
ceremony in which. the Red
Sox will receive their World
Series rings.
"It 's' a huge honor to be
able to get our rings and
start the home opener
against New York ," he said.
'T m proud to be able to
take the ball for us. "
Cincinnati starter Jeriome
Robertson has a less dramatic April to look. forward
to. He simply wants to get
one of the two vacancies in
the Red.s rotation and he
picked up the win Tuesday
· when he gave up one run on
two hits in two innings. ..
Robertson is in camp on •
minor league deal and hasn't .gotten an indication of
where he stands in the conipetition.
Please -

Reds. . . · :

.

Bonds says he may be out this:
season following knee surgery·:
BY K~N PETERS

.Associated Press

Mitchell signs
.one-year deal ·.
with Cincin.nati
CINCINNATI (AP)
Safety Anthony Mitchell: an
unrestricted free agent, signed
a one-year contract Tuesday
with the Cincinnati Bengals.
Mitchell is a sixth-year
player who was with the
Bengals for the t1nal 12 games
last season after being released
by the Jacksonville Jaguars.
He played for Bengals
coach Marvin Lewis for two
seasons in Baltimore, when
Lewis was the Ravens' defensive coordinator.

.

the Joss for the Redmen.
Alam (2-1 ) went the di stance
and gave up three runs while
scattering seven hits. .
St. Xavier (9-9) scored sin·
j1:1e runs in the I st, 4th and 5th
mnings and then held on for
the win.
Rio batters struck out a total
of I0 times in the game.
Rio Grande is scheduled to
play a dou~leheader versus
West Virginia Wesleyan on
Wednesday. The first game is
slated for 10 a.m.

AP photo

San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds returns to spring training camp Tuesday in Scottsdale, Ariz . Bonds has returned
to Giants camp for retrabilltatlon since a second arthroscopic surgery on his right knee last week.
·
•

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.
Leaning his head on a crutch
and repeatedly sayi ng he was
tired , Barry Bonds said he
might miss the entire season
following hi s latest knee
surgery. .
"Right now I'm just going
to try to rehab myself to get
back to, I don't know, hope,
fully next season, hopefull y
the middle of the season. I
don 't know. Right now I'm
just go ing to take things
slow. " he said Tuesday after
meeting with San Francisco
Giants trainer Stan Conte for
I 1/2 hours.
"I'm 40 years old, not. 20,
30."
.
Conte sa id Bonds went
through a "no'rmal rehab six

day s ~ut of surgery" on troubles on the media.
Tuesday and that hi s knee
"You wanted me to· jume
looked as expected.
off a bridge , I. finally did .."! expect he ' ll progress as Bonds said . "You finallj. .
knee patients go," the trainer brought me and my famil)l:
said, offering no prediction down .... So now go pick I(
of when Bonds might be able different. person.''
•
to play agairt.
Bonds had hi s latesl
The seve n-time NL MVP. surgery last Thursday in tl$
who begins the- season third Bay Area. Though the Giant$
on the career hom'ers li st ha ve not set a timetable fot
with 703. returned to spring hi s return. Conte has said it'~
cam~. Tuesday followmg last unlikely he ' ll . be ready, fOe
week s surgery. He made ht.s opening day.
:remarks wh1le Slttmg at a · "My son and 1 a(e just
p1~nt c. ta ble outside the going to enjoy our lives. You
Gt~nts clubhouse w1th h1 s guys wanted to hurt me bad
15 -y~ar-old son, N1kola1. at enough. you finally got me/'
h1s Side. . .
.
Bonds said. "I' m mentally
Bo~ds sa1d he was ured drained. I'm tired of my kids
and diS3J?potnted followmg a crying."
wmter 111 wh1c h he was
Teammate Moises Alou ,
ac~used of stero1d use. h1 s who has had five surgeries,
grand JUry testimony was said Bonds probably was J·ust
leaked and he had two knee
.
PIH-.- lOR ... M ,
operatio ns. He blamed hi s

,

'

�· www.mydailysentincl.com
Page B2

o

The Qally Sentinel

Wednesday,' Maret) 23, 2005

. www.mydailysentinel.com

'

FULL· COURT

HO

Ill

IN THE

Games through Big 10 Tournament

BIG TEN STANDINGS

Big 10
illinois
15·1
Michigan St. 13·3
Wisconsin
11·5
Minnesota
10-6
Indiana
10-6
Ohio State
8-8
Iowa
7-9
Northwestern 6-10
Michigan
4·12
Purdue
3·13
Penn State
1-15

AU Top 25
32-1 s-o
22-6 1-3
22-8 3·4
21·10 1-6
15·13 1-6
20-12 2-4
21,11 3-6
15-16 1-7
13-18 1·6
7-21 0·8
7-23 0-6

PF
78.2
78.1
68.0
68.5
63.9
71.0
73.2
59.0
61.6
62.9
63.4

-.......:.

PA
60.7
63.4
59.8
62.8
63.5
64.1
67.0
62.0
64.0
68.1
70'.7

.rt2005 Longwing Pubtications lnc.

SWEET 16

Pl'eview

TEAM LEADERS
Average per game

SCORING OFFENSE
MichiganState . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
illinois. ,
.. , . . . . . . . , ..
Iowa ... ... c . . . . • . . . . . . . .
Ohio State .. .. .. .. .. . ....

l Mtf.T ·
Mf. 1N JJ

78.1
77.4

73.2
71.0

ST.I.OOIS..

Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . 68.5 ·
Wisconsin . .. .
' ' ' . ' ' ' ' 67.2
Indiana .. . ..
' ' ' .• ' ' ' 63.9
Penn State . . . . . • . .

o

. .. , . . . 63.4

. 59.0.

59.6
60.1
62.0
62.8
63.4
63.5
64.0
64.1
67.0
68.1
70.7

pol'Ki
completed a
disappointing season with a first-round
loss to Nortllwestern in the Big Ten
Tournament. One of the few positives of
the season was the emergence of
sophomore guard Dion Harris, who
started 29 of 30 games, averaging 14.2
points per game. He was named honorable
mention All-Conference. Teammate
Graham Brown was awarded one of the
Big Ten Sportsmanship Awards,

Minnesota . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 456
Northwestern. : . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 452

Michigan . . . . . . , .•.... , . _...443

~~Mu-HIGAN

Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43 7

Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . , . , ..... 427
Purdue ... .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 421
Penn State . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . .. 408

FREE·THROW PERC:ENTAOE
Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 775
illinois . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . .. 724
Michigan . . . . . . . . . • . . , .... .122
Indiana . . . . . . • . . . . . . . , .. , .715
Minnesota . . . . . . . . . ...•. ... 707
Penn State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 695
Iowa . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .689
Purdue .. ... . . · . . . . . . . . . . . . 680
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . , • ... ... .668
Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . · . . . . . .656
Northwestern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .610

nELb-OOAL PCT. DEFENSE
illinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 412
Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 418
Iowa .. .. . . . . . . . . • . • , , . . . . 418

OhioState . . . , . . . . . . • . • .... 420
~

. . , . . . · .421

Minnesota . • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . .424
Michigan . . . . . , . .•.• , . . . . . .429 .
Michigan State . . . . . • . . . . . . . . .430
Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . .448
Northwestern ... ... ·. . . . . . . . . .451
Penn State . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . .453

REBOUNDING MARGIN
Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +8.1
Wisconsin .. . . . • . . ... . • . . . . +3.9

illinois .. .. . . . . . . . . . • .... +3.6
Minnesota . • . . . . . . . . . • . . . . ·+2.6
Penn State . . . . . . . , . . : , . . . . +2.2
. Iowa . . . . . . . . , . • . . . . . . .. +1.1
.
'
Purdue . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . +0.3

Michigan . . . . . . . •.... . .• . .. -1.1
Ohio State .... .· .... • .... . .. -1.~
Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ... -2.8
Northwestern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -5.5

ASSUTS
· illinois . . . . . . . . . . . . "· .. ..
Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . .. ..
Iowa . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . ,
Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

18.6
17.9

15.5
15.4

Northwestern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.3
Minnesota . . . . . . . , . . . • . . . . 14.4
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . •. . . . . 13.1

Purdue , . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . .
Penn State . . . . . . . • ... . ....
Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2005
•co.•

NC~ Division I Men's Basketball Cha~pionship

MMJND•

No11h CIII'041na
JoWIIk.

12.8
12.5
12.2
11.9

BLOC:BED SHOTS
Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.4

Big Ten shows streilgih
A

ll season, the Big Ten teams had to listen to the talk . They
were too weak. They were too top~ heavy. The team's with
. tradition weren't good anymore . And then.just for good
measure, they would discredit Illinois' incredible run , saying that
a lot of teams could haveldone as well as Illinois iQ such a weak
conferepee.
When-the NCAA Tournament seedings came out, they .
reflected that bias. But as the Sweet J 6 is set to ~gin. three teams
from the Big 10 ·are still standing - just as many as from the ·
much-hyped Atlantic Coast Conference.
While they took differeni roads to the Sweet 16. Michigan State
and Wisconsin will take the court against Duke and North ·
Carolina ·
7 p.m. Friday in two games that will
help decide
is superior.
Each year. the two conferences face' oil in the Big Ten-ACC
Challenge; this season, the ACC took a convincing 7-2 victory.
But with an NCAA Final Four berth on the line this weekend, the
twcr most successful conferences in college basketball will have
plenty more to prove. Since 2000 1 the two leagues have combined
to make 10 Final Four appearances a1ld win three uf the last five
NCAA titles.
To reach the Sweet 16, the North Carolina teams had to travel a
much different road £han 1heir Big Ten compelitors. No~h
Carolina State had to pull off two upsets, coming from behind to
beat Charlotte 75-63 in the opener before upsetting second-seeded
Connecticut 65-62 in the second round , Duke, on the other hand,
took a bumpierthan normal top-seed road, holding off No. 16 seed
Delaware State 57-46 and defeating Mississippi State 63-55.
Michigan State and Wisconsin, however, weTe rhe beneficiaries
of two of the biggest first~round upsels. ensuring that neither team
had to face an opponent seeded higher than No. II .
The Spanans outlasted No. 12 Old Dominion 89·81 in the
opening ruund before running past No . 13 Vermont 72~61 iTt the
second. The Catamounts -upset fourth-seeded Syracuse 60~57 in
one of the tournament's biggest upsets.
Wiscon•i~ beat No. II Northern Iowa 57-52 in the opening
round before defeating No. 14 Bucknell71-62 in the second
round. The Bison pulled off the first round' s biggest" upset,
!tunning third-seeded Kansas 64-~3".
While plenty of teams played dramatic games to re3.ch the
second weekend,l.llinois quietly glided into another favOrable
matchup. And as they have done·thfoughout the season. the lllini
quickly put away their opening~ round _opponents, beating 16th
seed Fairleigh DickinsOn 67-55 in the opening round before
ousting ninth-seeded Nevada 71-59 in the second. The lllini will
now move on to face this season's Cinderella team, WisconsinMilwaukee. The 12th ~seeded Panthers upset Alabama and Boston
College en route to the Sweet 16.

Minnesota . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4. 7

Illinois Illini

Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . 4.5
Michigan . . . . • . . . . _ ... • . .. 4.3

illinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4
Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ... 3.2
MichiganState . . . . . . . . .. ... ·. 2.1
Northwestern . , . . . . . . . ·.. .. , . 2.6
Penn State . . . . . ·. . . . . . . • .. , . 2.2

Ohio State ... ...... .... • .. . . 2.0
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • .. 2.0

• Seed: No. I. Chicago Region. • Record: 34-1 ( 15-1 Big Ten) .
• Coach: Bruce Weber ( 163-62). • Sweet 16 opponent: No. 12
Wisconsin-Milwaukee (26-5: 16-2 Horizon): Chicago. 6:27p.m.
Cf_Thursday (CBS). • Winner faces: No.3 Arizona or No.2
Oklahoma State.
Outlook: The lll ini appe~r to be sining pretiy as they head into
the tournament's second weekend. With a favorable tnatchup
against Wis_consin - ~ilwaukee awaiting them , the IIHni should be

pumped up to show off their skills once again in lront of what
amounts to a home ci-owd at Allstate Arena. The -IUini faithful also
made the shon triP to Jndianapolis to make sure the team had a
home-court atmosphere in the sub-regional.
Wiscon sin~ Milwaukee's playing style will match up welfwith
the lllini's. The Panthers depend on leading scorer Ed McCants
for the bulk of their scoring, but forwand s Joah Tucker and Adrian
Tigert help balance the scoring load for the Horizon League
champs. But the Panthers' stre.ngths seem ro fit right into Illinois'
plans. The quick defense or the All-American guard rrio of Dee
Brown, Deron Willialns and Luther Head \Yill give McCants and
Tucker plenty of harassment. Under the hoop. coming off the best
scoring performance of his career. James Augustine matches up
well with Tigert. Illinois must remain wary of overlooking the
Panthers and concentrati-ng on nation&lt;:~ I powers Arizona and
Oklahoma State, one of whom would await them in a Satunlav
mmchup . As they have already seen, Wisconsin~Milwaukee c~n
make any oversight costly.
"

Michigan State Spartans
• Seed: No.5. Austin Region . • Record: 24-6 ( 13-3 Big Ten).
Coach: Tom lzzo (231-96). • Sweet 16 opponent: No. I Duke
(27-5, 11-5 ACC); Austin, Texas. 6:10p.m. Cf Friday (CBS).
• Winner faces: No.6 Utah or No.2 Kentucky .
·
'outlook: They've tangled plenty 0 f times before , and when
MSU coiu.:h Tom lz.zo and Du~e's Mike Krzyzewski meet Friday
night, it wi II be a meeting of two of the great minds in college
basketball. The teams faced off early in the season. with Duke
coming QUI victorious 81 ~ 74 a1 home in front_ of a raucous crowd.
That_game was the stan of MSU's late-game free-throw-shooting
woes, as they made only 3 for 8 down the stretch to lose. While
D~ke ' s most favorable m~tchup seems 10 be inside. where
Shelden Williams will probably be covered by Michigan State's
Drew Naymick, Matt Trannon and Paul Davis . it was the guards
who decided the first meeting . J.J . Redick and Daniel Ewing each
scored 29 points in the Blue Devils' victory. .
·

.Opening Round:
Oelllllld v•. Allbama .U.M

Wisconsin Badgers
• Seed: No.6. Syracuse Region . • Record: 24-8 (\ 1-5 Big Ten).
i Coach: Bo Ryan (475-99). • Sweet 16 opponent: Nn. 10
North Carolina State (21- 13, 8-9 ACC): Syracuse. N. '( .. 7:27 p.m.
ET Friday (CBS). • Winner faces: No. 1 North Carolina or No.5
·
.
Vj\lanova . '
Outlook: If you're looking for a high -scoring matchup ; don't
watch this game. But if you want to see some superb half~coun:
orrense. something of a lost art in .college basketball. this is the
march up for you.
. The Wolfpack will bring their Princeton~style offense under
coach Herb .Sendek into Symcuse against Wisconsin. one of the
·most d!sciplined teams in the country . .Wisconsin sees the sa me
offen se when they face Northwestern each season. and the
Badgers shou ld be.well prepared for a team that preys on its
opponent's mistaltes. The problem for the Badgers will be
containing Wolfpack swingman Julius Hodge. The Badgers'
stre.ngth comes from guard Alando Tucker and center Mike
Wilkinson, but they must find a iniddle-of-the-roadguy to shut
down H_odge. Wisconsin will be favored to win Friday as they
lSJOk to tie the school record for wins in a season . ·

992·3381

&amp; WI~~C&lt;&gt;Min

ttNarll,.,. ......

s Kan-

" Eklcnn

IIIRTHWESTERN ~~dcats
fell sho(t of making the postseason after
falling below .500 to Close the season. The
bright spot remained junior center
Vedran Vukusic, who was named third·
team All-Big Ten.

-.....u_n S"''A"'T The Buckeyes

~'",;;, endured their

season of punishment after forfeiting
postseason play due to infractions under
fomier coach Jim O'Brien. Ohio State
finished the season surprisingly well
behind the talent of junior center Teren&lt;e
Dials, who was named second-team All·
Big Ten .

IIIIIKan.r STATE The Nittany Lions
...,.ann
won only one
conference game this season, but seVeral
of their players gained individual
recognition. Freshman Geary Claxton was
named to the conference's AU-Freshman
teal)1 after averaging 14 points per game.
Junior Aaron Johnson was named
honorable mention All-Big Ten.

Ill! Lau ... ono

St. Louis

• Oldohamo St.

co,.,.ctlc:ut

St.louis

April2

April2

1 D&lt;lk•
11Dolo...... St.

Natiooal Champion

llichiiJon St.

Utah
Utah

Gene Keady's final
season at Purdue was
one that he'd rather forget. But the
contributions of junior center Carl Landry
earned him second-team All-Big Ten
·
honors. Landry averaged 18.2 points with
1, I rebounds _Per game.

.__.,CONSIN

The Badgers
lll'l'fil
defeated
14th-seeded Bucknell 71·62 tin Sunday to
advance to the Sweet 16, where they will
face North Carolina State. The Badgers
have now won 24 games, tied for second- '
most in school history (last year's 25-win
total remains the sc])ool's best). Wisconsin
made the Sweet 16 in 2000 and 2003. To
beat Bucknell, Wisconsin used a trio of
stars: Mike Wilkinson, Alando Tl)cker
and Zaclt: Morley. Wilkinson scored 23
points, Tucker contributed 17 points and
Morley scored 15 points.

011\ MaldtU,. ............ c...............
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• 1n4NESOTA ~::,~~a~~~NCAA
Tournament for the first time since 1999 .
and the first time under coach Don
Monson, but the glory wa$ short-lived.
Minnesota fell . to Iowa State 64-53 in the
opening round. Brent Lawson led the·
way for the Gophers, scoring 14 points in
his final game.- The Gophers finished the
season with a 21·11 record.

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the regular season, the Spart&amp;ns made
their foul shots to advance in the NCAA.
The SpartailS made their final six shots
down the stretch to beat Old Dominion
88·81 Friday night, then beat Vermont
72-61 to advance to the Sweet 16.

_.ri'U

5 Vlliii'I&lt;Wa

Vllllnovo

I!Mut.HIGAN .The Wolverines

nELDoOOAL PERCENTAGE
Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .496
illinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .489
Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . : .463
Ohio State ... · .. , . . . . . . . . . . . 461

Wisconsin . ,. . . . . . . .

•

lilluMA

SCORING DEFENSE
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . ·. . . . . . .
illinois . . .. . . . . , .•. , , .. , ..
Northwestern . . . . . . • . , . .• .. .
Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . .
Michigan State . . . . . . .. • .. . .
Indiana . , .. . . . . . . . . ..... .
Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . .
Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Iowa . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . .
Purdue . . . . . . . .
. .......
Penn State . . . . . . . . . . . . . : ..

J

lANA

Purdue , . . . . . . .. . . ... ..... 62.9
Michigan . . . . . . . . . . ... ... . 61.6
Northwestern. . . . . . . .. .

With the NCAA .
tournament in full
swing, the lllini needed contributions
from many players to glide into the Sweet
16. One of those was Jack Ingram, who
. surprised with 12 points on 6-for-7
shooting in a 71-59 victory over ninth- ,
seeded Nevada. The team shot 53 percent
from the field, t he first time the lllini
made more than half their shots since
they beat Purdue ori Feb. 23. James
Augustine scored a career-high 23 points,
collecting II of the final13 points to close the first half with a 34-27 illinois
lead.
a-m
The Hoosiers' young
IOilftD
squad made the·
postseason, but the venture ended
quickly with a 67-60 loss to Vanderbilt' in
the opening iound of the National
Invitational Tournall)ent. Junior All,
American Bracey Wright, who was seen
later in the week watching high school
teammate Deron Williams play for
1\linois in the NCAA Tournament, l~d the
way for Indiana, scoring 17 points.
After a late-season run that
........,.
lifted the Hawkeyes rnto the
NCAA Tournament, they took an early exit
with a 76·64 loss to Cincinnati. The
Hawkeyes struggled, making 20 of 59
shots (14 percent) in the loss: Iowa's
biggest contrib~tor was Greg Brunner,
who managed 20 points.

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�Wednesday, March

www. mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 23,_2005

23. 2005

~ribune

Pistons misfire against Cavs West Vi.rginia turnaround
JOE MILICIA
Associated Press

CLEVELAND - LeBron
James scored 29 and got some
sorely needed help from the
Cavaliers bench to give interIm coach Brendan Malone a
win 111 his first game. 9 1-76
over the DetrOit Ptstons on
Tuesd&lt;ty mght
Malone. who took over
after Paul Silas was fired
Monday, had his t1e loosened
from the opemng t1p and was
often on hts leet, Intensely
encourag111g h1s players
He gave more play1ng ume
to Anderson VareJaO and other
reserves and it pa1d off
VareJaO scored I I and played
tough defense With " wu ple
blocks that 1gmted Cleve land
The wm ended a threegame losing streak tor the
Cavaliers and snapped the
Pistons' five -game

BY

JOHN RABY
Assoc1ated Press

AP photo

Cleveland Cavaliers forward Anderson 'Varejao. from Brazil ,
blocks tlle shot of Detro1t Pistons forward Anton1o McDyess 1n
the second quarter Tuesday In Cleveland.
·

Wlllllln g

streak.
Rasheed Wallace scored 25
points and Tays haun Pnnce
had 22 for the P1stons
Detroit
was
without
R1chard Hamilton , who was
out w1th a spra1 ned left ankle
Rook1e guard Carlos Delfmo
made ht s hrst start 111
Hamilton's place and scored
four.
The Caval1ers opened up
the1r b1 ggest lead 77-66 With
5 37 lett on James· last-brec~k
teed to VarcJao, who slam med
it home.
After trail111g 47-45 at the
hal f, Zydrunas ll ga uskas
scored e1ght stra1ght pmnts
early in the thi rd quarter for a
56-51 lead. James added ,1

I ree throw and a p.m of
JUmpers lor a 14-4 run and
Cleveland d1dn 't trml agam ,
The Cavaliers d1dn ' t disappOint maJonty owner Dan
G1lbert. a former P1stons tan,
whose Roc k Fmanc1al and
Qu1cken Loans 1s based m
suburban Detroit Gilbert had
h1 s own chcenng section ,
bnng1ng down 700 of ht s
employees to the game on 13
buses
James. who scored 56
pomts 111 Sunday's loss to
Toronto. kept the Cavaliers m
the game early but the
rese rves stepped up. con-

Reds

was the odd man out after
the Astros got Roger
Cleme ns and Andy Petlltte
last year He was traded to
Cleveland late m camp,
strugg led as a reliever and
was traded to Montreal 111
August
He gave up the f1rst run
Tuesday 111 the first 111nmg
on a walk to Edgar Renteri a.•
a doub le by Manny Ramirez
and an RBI smgle by Kevm
Millar.
The Reds made it 4-1 in
the second on Bobby
Estalella 's sacnt tce tly,
Fel1pe Lopez's run-sconng
double and Dunn' s thtrd
homer of spring traintng .

from Page 81
"No more than co mmg
mto 'the spn ng ," he smd
"We ' ve had a few guys battling for the rotation. and
then there 's some bullpen
spots open. Bes1des be111g
told that at the beg111ntng of
the spnng, I've 1ust been
gomg out and gettmg myself
ready for the season:·
Robertson gamed d spot m
Houston 's rotation late during the 2003 camp and won
15 games as a rookie He

tnbut1ng 27 pomts to
DetrOit 's II They were
outscored 34-1 111 Sunday 's
loss
Enc Snow also seemed
more 111 synch, sconng four
pomts w1th I0 ass1sts. after
gomg scoreless 111 40 mmutes
Sunday
The Caval1ers came out
hustling , go111g alter loose
ball s and battling for
'
rebounds
The Pistons shot 4-tor-18
trom the field 111 the third
quarter and allowed the
Cavaliers to take over DetrOit
shot 37 percent overall
They added two run s m the
fourth when Estalella tnpled
and scored on a passed ball
and Sean Casey hll an RBI
double.
Boston cut the lead to 6-4
111 the SIXth agamst Dav1d
Weathers on a 450-toot
homer by Davtd Orttz, h1 s
fifth in 30 spring trammg atbats. and a two-run double
by Bill Mueller But the Red
Sox were h1tless over the
last
_three
mnmgs
Cincmnatt had no hn s
agamst a ll four re lievers
who followed Wakefteld
over the last 5 1-3 mn111gs.
Notes. Boston closer Ke1th
Foulke retired all seven bat-

MORGANTOWN, W Va.
- If not tor D'or F1scher's
upper resp1ratory mfect1on,
West V1rgtma m1ght not
have made a late-season run
that
has
I anded
the·
Mountdmeers deep 111 the
NCAA tournament
The transformation trom a
Bi g East also-ran to an
NCAA conte nder that w1ll
play Texds Tech m the th1rd
round on Thursday mght 111
Albuquerque got Its start on
Feb. 5
FIScher was SICk Kevm
Plltsnogle got only h1s second start of the season 111
F1scher's place against thenNo. 16 Pittsburgh.
P1tt snogle scored a careerhigh 27 pomts, 1nclud1ng
e1ght in overume that
spelled the dtfference 111 an
83-78 1¥111
He's been the sta1ter ever
smce. Even though he's
play111g only four more mmutes per game, Pmsnogle has
led West V1rgm1a m sconng
m h,tlf 1ts games
" It was JUSt a great opportunny tor me to step up my
game and knowing I was
go tng to play the whole
game That game gave me a
lot
of
con f1dence,"
P1ttSnogle sa1d
The Mountaineers won s1x
of the1 r f111al e1ght regul arseason contest~. knocked out

P10v1dence. Boston College
and Villanova 111 the B1g
East tournament, then beat
Creigh ton
and
Wake
Forest in the
NCAA tournament 's first
two rounds
"Ltfe I S lull
ol niany. m&lt;~n y obstacles,"
FISc her s&lt;11d "I know good
th1ngs come to those who
walt. I'm gomg to get my
chance It wasn 't meant for
me to be out there play1ng
like that. That's the only way
I can look at it. "
Both 6-foot-11 players
present fa r d1fferent problems lor opponents Whtle
F1scher IS a defens1ve speCialist w1th 64 blocked shots,
Pittsnoglc 's long r[\n ge shot
befuddles opposmg defenses
He leads the Mounta111eers
111 3-pmntel s made (52) and
accuracy (40 percent) on a
team that makes an ave rage
of mne per game.
"The evolution ot Kevm
as a ce nter has made tough
mi smatches for people," sa1d
West Virgm1a coach John
Beilem, who cautioned that
P1ttsnogl e d1dn ' t get the
startmg JOb by default
" It Kevm dtdn't have the
ri ght attitude in practice and
v. ork111g hard, tt never v.ould
have happened," he said.
P1tt snogle 's emergence
add s to an offense that pndes
llsell 111 havmg no superstars. onl y s1x players who

Bonds

ters he faced after replacmg
Wakef1eld He's allowed
one hll 111 5 1-3 mnmgs 111
four exh1b1t1on outmgs
"He's elevatin g hiS !.1stmtl ndger
Terry
ball ,''
Francona sa1d "I thmk the
two weeks that we took to
JUst let h1m get hiS arm
streng th ha ve reall y been
benef1c1al. "
S1x Reds'
relievers allowed three hils
111 seve n mnmgs, all off
Weathers m the s1xth. ..
Robert son made h1 s f1r st
start and f1fth appearance of
spnng traimng . .. Wakef1eld
had all owed one earned run
in nine innings in h1 s other
three outings

from Page 81
havmg a bad day.
" M~yb e today he was
not very optim1 sttc. I thmk
11 was one of those rehab
da ys where yo u JUst
caught h11n on one of the
bad days,'' Alou sm d " It 's
not Iun when you come to
the ballpark. then have to
go to the train111g room to
get taped and get treatment
"It 's not as fun as when
you are young and :.vlld

score more than mne pomts
per game .
"We'reJUSt a team, as long
as we get the wins, we don't
reall y care about who's playmg and who's scoring. I JUst
want to wm," P1ttsnogle
said.
Lately, everyone 's gotten
mto the act.
In the fmal minute of a
t1rst-round
win
over
Cre1ghton, Tyrone Sally
made two free throws to t1e
the game, blocked Nate
Funk's 3-pOtnt attempt, then
ran to the other end to make
the game-wtnning dunk w1th
2.9 seconds left.
Agam st Wake Forest ,
Mtke Gansey had 19 of h1s
29 pomts after regulation as
West Vtrgmia won 111 double
mertime.
When Pm snogle got into
foul trouble against Wake,
FIScher stepped 111 and had
hi s be st game s111ce assummg a backup role w1th 15
points and I 0 rebounds.
That effort made Beilein
1eal1 ze that Fischer's illness
had come full circle.
"It sort of helped us when
D'or v.as hurt and s1ck, that
we're a better team overall
nght now - especi ally w1th
a b1g guy like D' or commg
off the bench," Beilem sa1d.
"Our k1ds have to understand that you can never
gtvc up. you have to wan for
that opportunity, and if you
get tt. you· d got to be ready
to take advantage of tt."

Counti.-Uke
NoOne
, Else Can!

r..n,.. County

PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF SALE

Case

Number

04CV098
Countrywode Home
Loans, Inc., Platntlff,
vs. Darrell R Bralley,
et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Me1gs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
,order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled action, 1 w111

expose to sale at
public auction on the
front steps of the
Melg 0
County
Courthouse
on
Friday, April 15th,
2005 at 10:00 a.m. of
aald day, the followIng described real
Help Wanted

------·-=
---·-=-==

estate:

Situate In the State
of Ohio, County of
Meigs and In the
Village of Middleport
Be1ng
Lot
No.
Fifteen (15) of pro·
posed
PLAT
OF
RIVERVIEW ACRES,
Middleport, OhiO, to
be l1ied 1n the Meigs
County Plat Records,
in Volume 4, Page 39 .
Current
Owner:
Darrell R. Bralley, et
al Property at : 109
Park
Street,
Middleport, OH
pp .15-00031
Proor
Deed
Reference Volume 4,
Page 39 and VOlume
22 Page 47
Appraised
• at
$26 ,000. Terms of

Sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds of
the appraised value.
10% clown on day of
sale, cash or certified

check, balance due
on confirmation of
sale.
Robert E. Beegle ,
Meogs County Sheriff
Attorney lor Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
P.O. Boa 5480
Cincinnati,
Ohio
45201 -5480
120 East 4th Street,
8th Floor
Cincmnati,
Oh1o
45202-4007
(513) 241-3100
(3) 9, 16 &amp; 23 3T

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

~ .......... """'". . . . ~~··-~·...~d

Friday, April 15, 2005
at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following
described real estate:
Situated In the
State of Ohio, County
of
Meigs
and
Township
of
Salisbury and bemg
further described as
follows:
Being all of Lot
~440 and
15 feet
adjoining part of Lot
1441 and being a part
of the same real
estate conveyed by
James R. Eads to
James 11 Allen by
deed recorded 1n
Deed Book 197, Page
65, Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Parcel
No. 1501407-000
&amp;
t 501408-000
Known as. 760
Laurel
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
Current
Owner:
Gait McAbee Ike Gait
Zirkle, et at
Property at: 760
Laurel
Street,
Middleport, OH 45760
PP •15.01407 and
15.()1408
Prior
Deed
Reference: Voluma
1
197, Page 65
Appraised
at
$30,000. Terms of
Sale: Cannot be aold
lor leas than 213rda of
the appratud value.
10% down on day of

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF SALE
Case
Number
02CV102
Mortgage
Etectron1c
Registration
Sys ..
Plaintiff, vs . Gall
McAbee
lka Ga11
Zirkle ,
et
al.
Defendants Court of

Common

Pleas,

Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale 10 me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled action, t will
eapose to sale at
pu~tic auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs
County
Courthouse
on
Help Wanted

.

1

PLEASANT VALL:EY HOSPITAL

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Pharmacy Technician

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepltng resumes for a Pharmacy
Technician. Successful completion of
WV Board of Pharmacy 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 retir!!ment

Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, has a position
available for a part time Radtologic
Technologist.
-.
Applicant must meet the registry
requirements by the ARRT. Applicant
must have a WV license.
Excellent salary; holidays, health
insurance single/lamtly plan, dental,
life insurance, vacatton, long-term
disability and retirement Join our
family of professionals to be the
resource for community health
setVice needs.

For more information :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
252P Valley Driv"
Pt. Pleasant, WV 2555G
304-675-4340
AA/EOE
www.pvalley.org
•

•

sale, cash or certified
check, balance dua
on confirmation of
sale
Robert E. Beegle,
Malgo County Sherlll
Anorney tor Plaintiff
Frank &amp; WOoldridge
Co.,, 600 Sou1h PMrl
Street,
Columbue,
OhiO 43206
(614) 221·1662
(3) 9, 16 &amp; 23

For more 111formatton :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dnve
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340
AA/ EOE
www pvalley.org

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
Vll1ege 1 of
Pomeroy
will be
accepting
•••led
bids on a 1981
International Dump

I'

truck lor sale. All bids
must be received by
March 28, 2005 at
12:00 noon In the
Clerk's Office at 320
East Main Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
Kathy Hysell, Clerk
Village of Pomeroy
(3) 16, 18, 20, 23

minutes 28
seconds Eost 111.32
feet to B point In the

1•'11

Register
To Place
\ll:ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To
992-2157

'

and dotng th1ng s, espeCially when yo u are the
man ."
Bonds trml s o nly Babe
Ruth (7 14 ) and Hank
Aaron (755) on the career
home run li st. He hit a
seaso n-record 73 111 200 I
Last September. the
Giants dropped a proviSIOn that would have
allowed them to vmd
Bond s' $18 million salary
in 2006 if he fad ed to
reach 500 plate appearances thi s year or I ,500
combined from 2003 to
2005, mclud1ng at least
400 th1s year.

.....,~_..-pa.ap&lt;e:

·~lg.l-a . . . . . . .

"-=--···-

sole.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
center of a small Attorney lor Plaintiff
stream, thence along Little,
Sheets
&amp;
the center of the Warner
small stream South 213 Eas~ Second
77 degrees 25 min- Street
utes 55 seconds East · Pomeroy, Ohio 54769
78.91 feet and Norlh (740)99H689
88 degrees 40 min- (3) t6, 23, 30
utes 22 seconds East
Public Notice
62 17 feet ; thence
South 26 degrees 55
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
lninutes 0 seconds
SHERIFF SALE
West239.891eello an LEGAL NOTICE
Case Number 1ron pin, passing 1ron
Title t of the
04CV037
pins set lor reference Workforce
Home
NaiiQnal at 15.00 teet and Investment Act of
Bank, Plamt1ff, va. 213.58 teet; thence 1998 (WtA) requires
Frank R. Nelson, Jr., North 62 degrees 12 each local workforce
el al. Defendants minutes 0 seconds Investment area to
Court of Common West along the north
establish a one·stop
Pleas, Meigs County,
line of Marvin &amp;lor system to provide
OhiO.
Sheila Taylor lo the support and educa. In pursuance of an point of beginning , tional services to
order of sale to me passing an Iron pin their
community.
directed from said
set for reference at Each area Ia to aubcourt tn the above 184.38 feet contain· mll a business plan
enlllled 'actlon, I wilt lng 1.025 acre.
detailing
how
II
eapose to sale at
Intends to accompublic auction on the The above daacrlp· pllah thla goal. The
front atepo of the tlon waa baud on an plan
Ia
effective
Meigs
County actual survey, under beginning July 1,
Courthouae
on the ailltrvlalon of 2005. Services are
Friday, April 22nd, Eugene Triplett R.S. targeted to youth, dis2005 at 10:00 a.m. of 6766 on June 13, located workers who
said day, the follow1990. Bearings are have been laid off,
Ing described real baaed on , grantor's and adut... To provide
estate':
deacl and discovered theH servlcea localThe following real manumantatlon and ly, Ohlo'a Area 14
ewtale,
being
In . are uaed to denote consists of Metgs,
Section 19, Town 4, angles only
Athans, Vinton, Perry,
Range 12 of the Ohio
Reference Deed : and Hocking coun·
Company's Purchase,
Volume 14, Page 771
Ilea. Some servlcaa,
Cheater Townahtp, of the Meigs CQunty such as fob aurch
Malga County, Ohto, Official Recorda.
and use of reaource
and being a part of
Auditor'•
Parcel roome, are universal
the Albert L. and No.. 03.()()814.001
aarvlcea available to
Francia Eileen Martin
Property Addraaa : the general public.
property described In 37900 SR 7, Pomeroy, Other servlcea, such
Volume 257, Page 273 OH45769
aa tuition aaats..nce
of the Melga County
Currant
Owner:
and auppart aervlcea,
Deed
Recorda, Frank R. Nelson, Jr., are contingent on elf..
bounded
and et al.
glbttlty criteria.
deacrlbed aaloltowa,
Properly at: 37900 A
DRAFTol
tho
Beginning •at a SR 7, Pomeroy, Ohto
Bualnaaa Pen lor the
point In tho center 01 pp lf03.()()814.001
Workforce
te Route 7 said
Prior
Deed tnvealment Area 114
Point
being
the Reference : Volume wilt be available lor
aouthweat corner of 14, Page 771
review and com·
The Albert L. and
Appraised
at manta In the Melga
Francia Eileen Marlin $21 ,000
Terma of C o u n t y
property ;
thence Sale: Cannot be aotd Commlaatonera '
along the cantor of for leas than 213rda of olllce at 100 Second
S..te Route 7 North the appralud V11lue
St., Pomeroy, Ohio
2&amp; degrees 55 min· 10% down 011 day of 45769 lor a 30-day
u.. a 0 HConds Eaat ule. caah or certified parlod
beginning
144.25 feet ; thence check, btllance due March 9, 2005 thru
South 85 degreea 50 on conltrmatlon of April 8, 2005.

__ _

-=»--·~·--

For mora Information,
contact Mike Swisher,
Director of Meigs
County Department
of Job &amp; Family
Services. (740) 9922117.
(3) 9, 23
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Area Agency
on Aging at Buckeye
Hltta-Hocklng Valley
Regional
Development District,
P.O, Box 370, Reno,
Oho 45773 Is request·
tng proposals lor
Alzheimer's DIHase
and
Related
Dementia
State
Funded Program In
Meigs, Monroe, Noble
and
Waahlngton
counties.
Small
minority -owned and
woman
bualnaaa
enterprises
are
encouraged to submit proposals. Details
of eervlcea and fundIng are Included tn
the RFP. Completed
proposala deadline
5:00 P.M, Aprtt 15,
2005. Call Deborah
Brown, AAA Planner
at (740) 373~ lor
RFP packet.
(3) 23 lTC

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on
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•

VISA

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~~~

fD5
I'F:RSONAU;
~,1_
_______
,..

Black Male Lab Found on

Retired Gentleman wants
to meet Fema le to r fnend or

Red mond R1dge now at
Shette r or ca ll (304)6752897

mo re wr1te P 0 Box 182
Potnt Pleasant WV 25550

tA~I

Found Mate Beagle •n
Northup
Call (740)446-

4310

I wdl not be responsible for
any other debts but my own Lost 1 dog- white w1th black
speckes on body &amp; brown
S•dney V Watson
speckes on paws 20N
Needed lovmg and canng Sk 1nner W St,ade area
foster pa rents Please con- (740)985 4492
tact TranSII•ons for Youth at

r

(740)985-4349
GfVFAWA\

1yr old Male dog , 1/ 2 Shih·
Tzu, 1/2 Chihuahua to good

home (304) 937·3348 after
6pm

M1ss tng Cartn Terner (Toto)
Ch1!d s pet• Rio G ra nde
area Reward 1f returned,

Call (740)245· 5244

i

WAl\1ID .

·--•roiiioiBiiUYiiao-.-J
'

2yr old Fema le dog 112 Rat Absolute Top Dollar U S
Terne r
1/2 Dachshund, S1lver and Gold Coins
gQod w/kods (304)937·3348 Proofsets Gold R1ngs U S
Currency -M T S Co1n Shop
after 6pm
151
Second
Avenue
4-female pupp1es 8·wks old, Gall1pohs 740-446-2842
Mother 112-Lab, 1/2-Ral Dad
Sneak1n Beagle next door
very cute I (304)675-4122
Older used school band
Instruments
Trumpets
Black &amp; while kitten about 3
Saxophones Trombones
mo otd (740)992 6882
etc Older N1ntendo games
King SIZe waterbed Call Large lots only (740)388·

(740)992·5329

8692

4•4's For Sale ........... :.................................. 725
Announcement ........................................... 030
Anllques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent... ................................ 440
Auction and Flea Merket.............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................ .. 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate ............................. 750
Building Supptles ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportun)ty ........................ ,..... ,.. 210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thenks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly care ....................................... 190
Electrlca 1/Rafrlgeratlon .................... ,., ... ,.,.. 840
Equipment for Reni.. ................................. A80
E1cavat1ng ................................................. 830
Farm Equlpment, ..... ,, ...................... ,...........610
Farms lor Rent .......,.....................................430
Farms for Sate ...... ............................... ,.... 330
For Lease .......... .., ............................. .., ...... ..490
For Sale .............. , ......................................585
For Sate or Trade .............................. ,.......... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetabtes ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ......................................450
General Hautlng...........................................850
Glveaway.. ,,,,, ...............................................040
Happy Ada ................................... ,................050
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home tmproV11man .......... ,..........................810
Homes tor Sate ............................................ 310
Houaehold Goocls .. ..,.................................. 510
Houeealor Rent .......................................... 410
tn Mamortam ................................................020
lnaurance ....................,........................... ,.... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........., .............. 660
LtVftlock..................................................... ,63~
Loat and Found ........................................... 060
Lata &amp; Acruge ............................................ 350

Mllcellaheoua........................................ - .... 170
Mlecettaneoua Merchancltse..........,............ 540
Mobile Home Repair .................................... 660
Mabile Homaa tor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homeelor Sate.... ,........................... 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcyctaa &amp; 4 Whtetera .......................... 740

Mu1lcal lnllrurnanta ................................... 570
Paraonala .....................................................005,
Petalor Sate ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .....................,.............. 820
Prote111onat Servlces ................................. 230
Redlo, TV &amp; CB Repair ...............................160
Real Eatate Wantad .....................,............... 380
Schoolalnatructton ..................................... 150
Seed, Plant Fertilizer .. .., ......................... 650
Sttultlone Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sponlng Goode ...........................................520
SUV'ator Sate ...... ,.......................................720
Trucka for Sale ............................................ 715
Uphola..ry ................................,.................. 870
Vana For Stle ............................................ .'.. 730
Wantad to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllea .................. 620
Wanted To Do .......... ..,................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ........................................ -,470
Yard Sate- Gatilpolla........................... ,........072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy1Mkklle ......................... 074
Yard Site-Pt. Pleaaant ................................ 076

Publication
Sunday Display: 1.00 p.m.
Thu~sday for Sundays Pa,P&lt;•r

POUCIES Ohio Valley Publlthlng r•Mrv•• the right to edit, retect or cancel any ad at any tlm• Errora must be reported on the first da~ of
Trlbun•S•ntlnei-Reglater will be reeponalbl• for no more than the coat ot the apace occupied by the error and only the t1rst 1naertton We II'U!IIII not be
11ny loll or e"pen•e that r•aultl from the publication or om11S1on of an advertisement Correction Will be made 1n the f1rst available edrt1on • Bo•
are ai waya confidential • Current rate card appliea • Ali real e1tate adver11aementa are aubject to the Federal Fa~r Houamg Act of 1968
of the law
accepta only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandards We will not knowingly accept any advertlalng In

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

0'

I \11'1
\II\ I
0..,1 1~\ II ! ..,

1

Ll;.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ad1 With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

How you can have borders and graphics
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PLUS YOUR AD N

CLASSIFIED INDEX
l'olc.,._l...._-&lt;e: S

Mclp Co~o~nly OH

w-.cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
••.._al:&gt; llc;:o

- Sentinel - ~e

CLASSI .FIED

rooted in Fischer's illness

BY

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

10
lwrlghl@lc net

2 story 7 room house 4
bedroom 2 bath 2 porches
(1 closed m) deck 213 ac re
flat lot Heat pump R1ver
Va lley
School
D•str.1ct
Bulav1lle P1ke
S69 500
(740)367 7272

$500-$1,1100 mo/PT
$2,40Q-$5,500 mo/FT
Work from your Home or
Off•ce tnternatlona!
Company needs
Superv•sors &amp; Assistants
One-on-One lra1mng
Vacations

3 Bedroom Ranch LA FA
lull basement 2 car garage
State Route 14 1 Centenary
(740)446·1035

www.TrueProsperlty4U.corn

1·800·949·4561
1DO Workers Needed
Assemble crafts
wood 1tems
Matenals provided
To $480+Wk
Free 1nformahon pkg 24 hr

3 bedroom 2 bath !~replace
on 1 6 acres RIO Grande
$85 000
Call
area
(740)709 1166

0
0

,

0

801·428·4649
Addresses wanted •mme&lt;:llately' No expe nence neces·
sary Work at home Call loll

405 447-6397
~

An EKcellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Mantyn 304-682-2645

A;f~

Home Health Care of SE
OhiO IS currently hmng
Home Heal th Aides com
pet1trve
wages ,
call

675 1429

(740)662·1222

45769 EOE
Oommo s now H1nng
Safe Dn'4'ers
All Locations
Apply m person

© 2005 by NEA, Inc.

www.comtcs.com

ATTN needed 23 people to
lose up to 30 lbs 1n the next
30 days 100% natural
100%
guaranteed
no
ephedra Call 1·888-2345146 o r V1s1t www newshaperesults com
--------AVON• All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Sh1r!ey Spears 304·

O!elarv Cook
Overbrook Cen1er IS current·
ly accepting appliCations for
a Part T1me D1etary Cook
Must have some expen
ence If you are •nterested
please co me tn and hll out
an appliCation at 333 Page
Street,
Middle port
Oh

"t':llo:-------,
HELP WANTI!JJ

l

Work From Home. 15 year
company weeki~ pay, free
benefitS flex1ble schedule,
home phone need comp ut
er mternet (740)44 1-9267
apply onhne www employ·
mentfromhome netfp131 824

Door
to
Door
Sales
Reprase ntat•ves Local deal
ersh1p High Comm•ss•ons
Part T1me and Full T1me
Open•ngs (304)675·7105
Onve

BEST DRIVING JOB
AVAILABLE

.

INsrRucnoN

,

Free 4 room
McClure s Restaurant now
hookup
Free
HD
B1g Screen
h1nng all locations full or
TV
800·263·2640
part-time, p1ck up appl1ca
tton at tocat1on &amp; brmg back Man Lee strapless prom
between
10 ooam • &amp; gown s•ze 9 Aqua $200 00
Monday thru
11 OQam
36 bulb tan mng bed $800
Saturday
304-675·6643

To Do

Part· Time Help 3 days No Job Is To D•rty!l!
lnte,..ted ~rtlae can
weekly Apply at Wallpaper
1162-23112. .
Outlet 420 Main Street
J1m's Carpentry
PI Pleasant, WV No Phone We do remodehng and most
~ FIIKo Pflll OMrltQr
cans
any unhmshed work also
tree
removal
St John Record Programs, Sales
perso n
needed small
$ manufacturer of pnnted Furnltur.e store Full t1me, (7 40)446 2506 (740)367·
labels tor the med•cal mdus- sates experience preferred 0437
lry located 1n Log an, OhiO, Immediate opening Apply In
Mike Pope
currentty has an opening for person Lifestyle Furn iture
Roofing , S1dmg, Porches
a first shift Press Operator 856 Third Ave Gallipolis
Decks Phone (740)388·
Th•s position wtll be respon- OH, 1Qam-5pm No phone
8329
albte for runn•ng ~ flexo web ca lls please
press (Comco) The qualiPnvate duty nursmg Can
fied applicant must have
Secunty OffiCers
t740)441·9515
experience 1n runmng fleKO
15 lmmect Openmgs
equipment ThiS pos1110n IS "
also required to work closely Wackenhut Corp has 1mmed
with key manutactunng per· openmQ&amp; a1 AEP Gavin
~
sonnet to ensure production Power Plan.t for a temp out·
0PPOR11Jl\ITY
goals are aecompllshed We age Must have HS Dip or ..__oiiiililiiiiiiiiiioilili,_,..
offer a competitive salary, GED clean Pollee Record,
health benefits, and 401K tt valid DL ttnd willing to work
mterested
please
fBit any shift Could turn 1nto FT pH to.,VALLE7Pu'i:LJSH
resume w1th salary require· Perm posit•ons Please call NG CO recommends tha

aoo-

r10

Vera

Croft 740·925-301 5 M· F, 7a·3p
EOE MJFIDN

GAM ESTOP NOW HIRIN&lt;l
New

Store

opening

m

Galllpol•sl Now h1nng for all

positions I
Send your resume to
petemoneiiOgamestop com

or fa• to 304·1142·9019

I

0

1!1.,..-------,
j MONEY

ttou do bus1ness with peo
~6 you know and NOT t
end money through thE
Wanted pan· time babysitter
ma1
t unttl you hav~ mvesti
VInton area Call (740)388ated the offering .
S160 or 1740)645·2640

.

FIND A JOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

---·- --------

(740) ~46· 3266

B•dweii·Porter area 3 bed·
room 2 ba th 5 acres, cus· SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
tom oak catunets and wood· Stock models at old pnces
work $138 500 (7401387· 2005 models arrrv1ng Now
Coles
Mobile
Homes
718 1
15266 US 50 East Athens
You
Get
Moneys Worth"

All real estate advertising
'" th1s newspaper 111
subject to the F&amp;deral
Housing Act ot 1968
wh•c:h makes 1t Illegal to
adveft1se ' anv

Fa~r

pret•rence limitation or
discrimination based on
race color rehg 1on ee•

fam•t!al status or nat1onal
orlg1n, or any Intention to
make any suc:h

preterenc:., limitation or
dlecnmmat1on '

SERVICI!S

'

DIRECTV
frH Equltment
FrM Professional
1nstalla110n
Free OVD player
Cal! 1-80()-523-7556
cal! for fi'H HBO/Cmamax
&amp; Show time

Jewelry Buy Sell Gold
Diamonds
Gemstones
Repa ir Appra•sa!s, Gem
Gractuate
Test1ng
GemoiOQISt
Jeweler
(740)645·6.365 or (740)446·

3080

This newspaper wilt not
knowmgly accept
adver1lsftmMts for real
estate which Is In
VIOlatio n of the law Our
readers are hereby
mlormed that aU
dwellings advertised In
lhlt newepaper are
av•llabl• on an eqUIII
opportunity baaea

2 BR 1 bath centra! a1r out
hwld 1ng &amp; deck 10 mm f·om
town hosprtal ~ plants Call
{7 40)446-4234 or (74{))208
786 1

--'------3 br tra1ler Ga!hpol1s Ferry
n1ce pflvate $350 00 per
month $400 dep .vater &amp;
trash mc!uded 304 5 76
2241
Traller lor rent 2 bedroom
$300/mo plus depos11 On
At
7
1/2 m1!e from
M ddleporl ex1t acro ss from
sawm111 next to KC Auto
Sales
(740)44 6·8172

(740)256-6251

r

&lt;\P'Irr\IF.IIo'TS

FURRml

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments
on
Beech
Street
1n
Middleport turn1shed utlh·
t•es pa1d depos•t &amp; references requ~red no pets

(740)992·0165
1 and 2 bedroom apartments furn•shed and unfursecunty deposit
nished
requ1red no pets 740·9922218
1 bedroom 1 bath kitchen
w/dtshwasher very spa
CIOUS Call (740)446 4639
Sam 4 30pm

(740)388·9686

Centenary all utilities pd
except electnc new tile
SSI/ Soc1al Secunty
throughout-$325
Cal l
$1 300 Net •ncome We can
(740)256 1135
ftnance you a home Call
(304)736-3400
2 bedroom turn1shed apart
ment North 4th Avenue
We have approx•matety t3
Middleport depOSit &amp; refer
used homes for under
ences reQuired no pets
S2 000 1 800·837·3238

i

1740)992·0165

A~\~E

Beeur1ful 2 story townhouse
over1ook1ng Gallipolis C•t).
park K1tchen tam11y 0 R
12 40 acre hOme s1te rural L R 3 B R study 2 taths
water on s1te electnc gas laundry area References
available road frontage reqwed secur1ty oepos11
$30 000 740 992 2800
no pets $900 per mo
(740 )446 2325 or t740)446
RF-\1 EsrATE
4425

W•!lffiJ)

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
Need to sell • your home PRICES AT
I BUY HOMES

r Mo~U:s~ID&gt; Iiiiiiiiiil
03 Fleetwood Annlversar~
14x52 2 bedroom 1 bath
stove, retngerator, $16,000

t740)992-CI002
1973 G ran dv11te 14M70. 3
bedroom, w•th sto\le &amp;
relrlgerator $2,000 , must

sell Call {740)446.0194

APART·
BUDGET
JACKSON

52 Westwood
Dnve from $344 to $442
Walk to sll op &amp; mov1el:i Ca ll
740 446 2568
Equal
Hous•ng Opponun•ty
ESTATES.

CONVENIENTLY LOCAtED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townnouse
apartments
aM/r;&gt;r small hOuses FOR
RENT tall (740)4411111
tor applicatiOn &amp; InformatiOn

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 room apts
Clean no pets Reference &amp;
depoSII
req u•red
Call
3 bedroom Conclo w1th mmr (740 )446-1519
basement
v•ew
full
GallipoliS Ferl)l $700 month Furn1shed apartment swt·
able tor 1 person all ut11it1es
Call (7 40)446-3481
pa1d
Oownsta•rs
4 rooms and bath 52 Olrve $285/month 919 Second
St No pets $300 montl'l Ave (740)446-3945

t989 Redmond t4x70 3br
2ba newer w•ndows apphances. good condition , on (740 )446-3945
rented lot Add1son-P1ke
Attention I

(740)367·7662

200, Oakwood 16lC80 3
bedroom 2 bath vlnyllshln
gle appliances central heat

Ill \ I I " I \ t I

&amp; aor S16 900 (304)633-

~--~~-----, _~_36____________
iO
u~ID&gt;
·~
96 Noms 14x76 CIA. 2 bed-

·--FORiiiiiiioiSALEiiii-_.l

(740)256 6574

Your

qu1ck!y because of
a
d1vorce
bankruptcv rob
Lovely :&gt; bedroo m home
overlook1ng Hock1ng Rtver lransfer or death Don t let
Coolvi ll e, s 129 000 calt the bank foreclose and ru1n
Magg1e G1fford 740-591. your credit Local person
7221 Hayes Aealestate '
buys hOuses Fast clos1ngs
All casn J 1m
(740)992·

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1·1!88·582-3345

r

2 bedroom mob•le home
Close to
to wn
Call

..,__llliiiiiiiiiliiiiil-r

:C~co~m~paan~y)====::I

r·--iiiiiiiii""'-'

2 bedroom Mobile Home 1n
New Haven 14x70 gas
heat
$300tdepos•t
S325/month (304)882 1107

1 bedroom 2 bath room
k•lchen wl dishwasher beau·
tiful v•ew ot the Gallipolis
C1ty Pa rk Call (740 )446·
Several mob1le hOmes late
4639 Sam-4 30pm
70s 80s and 90s call tor
'pnces (740)388 8371 or 2
bedroom
apt
n
~where

Borrow Smart Contact the
Ph•o DiVISIOn of Fmancia
lnst•t ut1on s
Off•ce
o
~onsume r
Atfa1r
BEFORE you retmance
fvour home or obtam a loan
~EWARE of requests fo
~ny large advance pay
!ments of tees or msurance
~all the OU•ce o
Fonsumer Atta1rs toll tree
t 1-866·278.{)0()3 to learr
f the mortgage broker o
ender •s properly licensed
Th1s IS a pubhc service
nnouncement from the
OhiO Va ll ey Publlshm~

PROI'IBJ10NAL

FOR REt&gt;T

Ohoo 45701 (740)592 1972

**NOTICE**

DIRECT TV

"HolpltoiiDllon ond

to

ReaiiS!IC 10k pe r month
potential mcome Tra1n1ng
provided 24hr 1nfo message 1-SD0-829·2056 or go

For Sale
Clayton S1era
28 x56
Double
W•de
Modular Home Buyer must
move Home to thmr s•te 3
bedrooms MBA With full
bath and 6 Soaker Tub 2
Ad 1 Bed Rooms w1th full
bath Includes all up grade
Appliances
also
Aefngerator Washer/Dryer
•n Mud Room Llv1ng Room
has 45 Surround Sound TV
System With 6 Changer
CDIDVD Player 3 !on 360o'
BTU Heat Pump Priced ar
$54 BOO tor 1nformat10n and
Vlewmg call {304)675·7137
1f no answer leave message
with name and phone num-

4 bedroom, ? 112 bath gas
heat ale soh water system
flltty furntshed hnanct ng be r
available
$65 000
call
lmmed•ate possess•onl Only
Gwdo (740)992 2529 or
$213 68 per mo New 3 bed740 992 3650
room 2 bath mobile home
49 2 acres w1\h home and Only mmutes from Athens
two-car garage Good pn- 1-800·837 ·3238
vate
farm land
some
Inventory CIE;larance New 3
woods Call (740)992-7037
bed room
home
Includes
$239 00 1month
Attention!
Local company offer1ng 'NO AIC Delivery and Set up
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· Cal ! M1ke (740)385 7671
grams for you to buy your
Inven tory Clearance New 4
home 1nstead of rentmg
bedroom
Home
• 100%. f•nanc1ng
$319 00/monfh
Includes
• Less than perfect cred1t
AJC Dehve ry and Set-up
accepted
Call Harold (740)385-9948
• Payment could be the
same as rent
"Movmg Must SeW
l:ocators 14x70 Noms set up on tot
Mortgage
(7 40)992 7321
$10 900 (740)446 9480 or

MISCELLANEOUS

'No

(740)385·2554

8

OPYOKll.!NIIY

.....iiiiiiioi....,

McDonalds· Now hmng all 3
WANllD
1ocat1o ns- flexible hour spatd holtdays and vacat1ons
FamttY·Ortented Carner With Start1ng rate above mm1·
Open Door J)c)Jtcy looking for mum wage Apply w1thm
DHK
Cleaning &amp; Restoration Let
OTR Class A COL dnvers
U s Help You Clean~er up"'
w1th one year experience
Need Cash?
No Matter What The Job Is
We pay up to $8/hOur
•stan at 40 cpm- all miles
We Wtll Get-er-Oone l•l For
Weekly pay Pa1d tralnmg,
All You 're Inside/Outside
•Potential &amp;OK
Full benef1ts package
•Late model Frelghtllner Stable work Profess iOnal Need! Were the Ones for
Condo• with Automatic
You Call Karen or Dave at
environment
740 985 3633 Businesses
Tren1ml1alon
Give uo 1 Coli TODAY!
Re s•den 11 al / h o m es
foR*! NYC
1-an~147 .... 2458
•gs% No tOuch freight
Contracts,
Anytime
ParamediC&amp;
&amp;
EMT's Anyplace
Clean
All
"Ptlkl VICitlon
&lt;1111 K needed Apply at 135 4 Powerwash•ng Remodeling
•Hometlme on WHicendl Jackson P1ke Gallipo lis
OIC

ments

ll:f2':llt0:--~-U·SIN-F$
_ __,

www m"'Coenterpnses com
Legal Secretary Pos1t1on
Expenence
Prelerred ,
Salary
and
Benefits
1!50
ScHools
I
Competitive Send Resume
roLoAN
1
to EB18 c/o Po1nt Pleasant ~
Reg1ster 200 Mam Street
LOau ong Flnancoal
Gallipolis Career College
Point Pleasa nt. WV 25550
Institution
approving Small
(Careers Close To Home)
Business Mortgage
Local home care company Call Todayl740·446·4367.
Personal and VehiCle
lookmg tor a Certified
I 800-214 ·~2
Loans lmmedaate
Aesp1ratory The rap~ st to set
WNW galhpoiiSCllfOOrc&lt;IHOQO com
response
up C·PapiB•·Pap and oxy- A.ccredihtd Member A.ccredot ng
g•ve
us a call at
Councrl
lor
lndependenl
Collegt~s
gen m home tor pat•ents
and SC~ools 127otB
1·866·228-7063" Or apply
Compet1!1ve wages With
onlme at
70
benet1ts Send resume to
WYNi IOWlslmentt nanc1al 01g
1
PO
B ox
414 ,
Pomt
Pleasant, WV 25550

r

(304)675 5858

-:t ~

MOIIILI: HOMI.,

MOBILE HOMES
mRSALE

Ho~n~

FORSAU"

• Thll """'P81,.r l

Grac•ous ltvmg 1 and 2 bed·
room apa rtm ents at Vt!lage
Local company oMenng "NO Manor
and
R1vers1de
DOWN ~ PAYMENT"
pro· Apartments In tvMd!eport
grams for you to buy your From $295 $444 Call 740·
home Instead of rent•ng
992 5064 Eoua! Housmg
• 100°10 financing
Opportunities
• Less than perlett cred1t
Large 1 bedroom laundry
accepted
• Payment could be the room stove retngerator
water aM trasn pa1d $275+
same as rent
Locators 'Ciepos1t and references No
Mortgage
pets
{740 )388 8371
or
(740)992·732 1

room 2 bath sale $16 000
'
Rent
$450
no
P!iiS
.. . N1ce 3 bedroom , 1 bath. (7 40)446 1062
(740)368-9686
greal neighbOrhood, excelClean 2 Bedroom, Ground
For
Sale
·
1979
Homette
2
lent
condl11on
PriCe
Modern t bedroom apt Call
w/central an Floor WID Hook Up, Ref
Reduced ' (304)593·3542"' bedroom
(740)446·0390
$3 495 00 Call ('r40) 385· Dep No Pets (304)675
5162
4367
New 1 bedroom apt Call
49 acre rarm w1th free gas
(740)446·3736
and royalty check trom well Fbr Sate 14X70 3 bed
Pilot Program· Re nters
$239
000
room set up m Coun try
needed
Call {304)736·
BevertyC St1llpassRealt~ Homes , S6 995 00 Move 1n
3409
tOdayl Galt (740}385 4367
t740)643·2589

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

)

..
!
;

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

r

r.__~.RAIN-viii&amp;--,.1

One BA apartment in Spring Pole

Ear corn, $2. 50 per bushel.
Call (740}245-5047.

Wednesday, Ma~ch 23, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March 23, 2005
ALLEY OOP

~.,r_·.~..FO-~-RENr-IENTS·
"-_.1 ~~ I
Barn 30 x50k10FT
Valley. $290 ,per month plus $6795. includes Painted
deposit. WID hookups. Metal, Plan s, Instru ction
(740)339·0362. (740)388· Book. Slider. Free Delivery
0017,
(937)559·8385

THE MAPLES
100 MEMOR1AL DRIV E
EAST
POMEROY, 740·992·7022
Subsidized
Re sidential

FOR SALE

r

~:~

$500! Honda's, Chevy 's,
Ect.
Police ·
Jeep's,·
Impounds! Cars from $500
tor listings 800·391 -5227

195.2 Plymouth 4dr. engine
runs .good •. body eKcell. , all
BlOck. brick. sewer pipes,
orginal , no rust 32,000 miles
windows , lintels, etc. Claude
304·576-2532
Winters , Rio· Grande, OH
Call740-245-51.21 .
1969 Ford XL , Galaxy 390,
automatic, power steering
Plrrs
arid brakes, AC , · interior
e)(cellel:lt, Mechanical excellent, body good . Needs
AKC registered Jack Russell minor repair and paint
Terriers. 3 'pairs of adults.• $3,300.00 080: (740)696·
$300 ea. , $400 per · pair; 1373. (740)591·5888
Jack Russell F, puppy $200;
Registered Boston Te rrier, F. 1981 . Oids 98, 4dr, Runs
Good, Calt(304)675-1264
$400: (740)378·6610

r

.

1

. FOR SALE

-· For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in very good condi·
tion . Downtown Gallipolis.
Appro,;. 1600 sq. ft . each. 1
or 2 baths. Lease price
negotiable to encourage
AKC Registered . German 1989 Crown Vic, new tires.
new
business.
Call Shepherd . pups, e)[cellent new b'artery, new trans. Very
(740)446-4425 0' (740)446· bloodlines, large boned nice car. 101,000 mites.
' 3~36.

Warehouse tor Rent 3000
Sq. Ft. All Utilities Available
Belle:mead
area;
Pt
Pleasant. WV call (304)675-

1998 Chevy S-10 pick-up
truck. Very good condition, 5
speed.
good
mileage,
extras.
(740)245-9502
evenings. ·

Appliance

~.male, AKC
~~t Chk'd.

Warehouse ·
1n Henderson, WV. Preowned applicanes starting at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do service work on all
Make and Models (304)675-

!wormed.

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.

shots
5500,

8

POP.

740)473'2785. (740)236
Po28
1 \I{\ I

~11'1'1

II...,

r

L,_,.;EQIIiiiUJPMENTiiiiioiiiilioio;.'_.I

I

a

2003 Dodge .Neon STX
4door, 4cyl., automatic,
power everything, 11,000
miles, $6,500. (740)4410337 or · (740)645-6153.
91 Corsica, $ 1,000 OBO,
good wor.k car, ·(740 )992 •
2747.740.416-0166
93 Lincoln Town Car. 81 ,000
miles. very nice, $4,500.

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumblng
• Roofing &amp; Gunera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
· We·do It all except
furnace work

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

25 Years Local Ex rlenc:e

Ut us help you
choose a lnsting

BISSELL

('()\11'\'-;)

39728 SRJ43
Pomeroy, OH

• Replacement ·
Windows • Roofing

740-992-9922

COMMERCIAL and
'

Mon-Sat IOAM-5PM

RFSIDENTIAL •

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
Ta~e

B11t 's S11tall
&amp;rgllla Rapalr

.

Compiete small
engine repair

12x8x5 chain link dog pen
with gate, $100. (740)446·
4514 or (]40)446-3248 after

2 Paint Ponies
1 POA 46-48 inches
. 4 yr Hackney Pony
Paints $500 each .Hackney

32119 WelshtownRd.

(740)696·1227

Pomerov, Ohio 45769

.

Phone: 740-992-2432
1993 Suzuki f;IOO Kantana .
New paint last fall. Great
shape. ASking $1 ,800 OBO.

'

E-mail
jwill45769@yahoo.com

(740)388-0172.

5pm. ·

$300. POA 5600 (740)593·

I ·

Bristol Ticket. 2 or 3 for April
2 &amp; 3. Call (740)446·7399 or

7390 leave message

119,000 miles, runs

$2,800.

(740)669· 2001

2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer
EXT LT 4x4. 3rd row se8ring,
loaded ,
garage
kept.
E-xcellent
condition
$24 ,soo. (740)446•7484 br
(740 )441 _741 1..

29,000 miles. $16,000 .
.(740)446.021'3.
. .
2003 Suzukt V1nson 500, 4wheeler, 340 mites, Red 4
WO. $4800. 080 .304·675-

2004 Honda Pilot EX, rated
best full si:Ze SUV. Red Pearl
e)(t. tan cloth int., all options,
maintained and babied, 21k

-------~-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Ne~ &amp; Rebuilt tn

(304)593-5037 .
WITH A PHOTO!

Stock . Call Ron Evans, 1- Well muscled club pigs,
great 4H and FFA project&amp;,
800-537·9528.
Pure YOrk and cross bred,
(740)6 9 6295

Call (740)446-2342
· For Details

'--'-------- r"1¥~;::::::::;;;;::=~I
e.

Like newWeslo EX14 heavy
duty treadmill, S175 Also, Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly
older Nordic Track , $75. A.l. excellent bloo.dlines,
pricftd: reasonabty. Slate Run ..,._ _
(740)379-2316
Farm, Jackson . (740)286· .,

FORTh~~

miles
6062

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete, · Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
. Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap ·Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday .&amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

25 Years Experience

David Lewis

Sunday. (740)446-7300

2005
9:00A.M.

Refundable Deposit)

10x10x10x20

Cal 740-992-9444
or Email per·
s'on6@verizon. Net
WV, OH and 'all legal
states must be 21.
\I

1~\

I( I ..,

Brian Reeves
New Home Construction, Remodeling,
Renovations, Dec~s. Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs, Siding, Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs
Phon~: 740-742,3411
for a free estimate.

STANLEY TREE

·1

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

94 Hatley Davidson Ultra
94 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Classic, 10.000 miles, blue,
Blacks, 318, runs good, e)(Cellent condition , $13,500, Unc~nditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur:
needs body work , $900 (740)949·2217
nished. Established 1975
080.
(740)446·3600;
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446Kawasaki Mule 4)(4 , Cab,
17401 45 5502
~ '
•
0870, Rogers Basement
Heater,
Bed
liner,
less
than
99 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Waterproofing.
2y" old. (304)675·3773
Laredo. Loaded, 6 cylinder,
e)(ceUent condition, 97,000
BoATS &amp; Morons
miles,
$7,900
090.

... .
BARNEY
JUGHAID AN'
MAR'!' BETH AIN'T

TALKIN'
AG'lN

::'5::---! !r-""'1&lt;~,.,

Machine Quilting

740-992-3673
New shipment of

work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free-Estimates
Call Gaiy Stanley
740·742-2293
• leave a messa e

100% Cotton
Material...Patriotic
&amp; Quilter5 Prints
Hrs.: Thes·Sat 11·5.

'"

THE BORN .

.PI fi.E:A.IZ!&gt; YOU TOOK U? li,K\H\~
· (,Lt&gt;-.I&gt;Y,S!

.

I.

~

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

O F F EMME
FI\T A U TY" '.

Whaley,s Auto
Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

See Brent

or Brian Whaley
.

PEANUTS
T~IS IS MY REPORT
ON THE TOOT~ I LOST
. LAST N16~T ..

1997. Cqachman Cat811na
.Ute 24' foot, Front Bedroom,
many
extras
phone ·

NOMArrER
WHAT. YOI:IRI

(304)675·2039 $6 ,995 080

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

SUNSHINE CLUB

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

I ~P\\1'1 KNOW
. 11-1~'i HAD 'THAT
~

Racine , Ohio
45771

trailer, double slide, excel·99 Jeep Cherokee Sport. lent condition , $ 13,900

740·949·2217

4x4. EC, gold, aU10, PW, PL, phone: (740)698-9319
VB,
CD,
CC,
now

. . --.,

"r~-~":V.~.w;
~
FOR SALE

.,

992•2155..,
.

•

oxc~llent condition. $16,800
(740)441 · 1501 .

... THE
NEWSPAPER
SOMETHING

.1993 Chevrolet Astra Van:
good
condition
phone

FOR YOU!!

(304)675·5077
2000 FOrd WindStar LX.
91 ,000 mil8s. · 2 sliding
dOQrs, power windows &amp; 2002 RV Toy Haule' Bx24 .
cruise $6,300 (304 )67 5- l iving Quarters, Cargo
4014
A'6a. Call (74,0)446·2266.

-- --·-- - - - - -;- -·

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

HAS

·Sentinel
.,
•

1 FINISHeD GNAWING 1'He
FURNI'fURE. NOW I'M OFF 1'0
EA'f SOME CHeese. AND
1'HEN 1'0 CHeW ON SOC.KS

miles. 529.000. (7(0)256·
1998 30' fifth wheel travel
9247 m (740)645·0870.

----- --

'(OU MAY WANT TO
CONSIDER T~IS TI-lE NEXT
TIME 'IOU LEAVE A TOOT~
UNDER YOUR PILLOW ..

8711-2487

GARFIELD

29670 Bashan Road

T~AT

TOOTfl FAIR¥ SENDS ALL
TI-lE TEETfl 51-lE COLLECTS TO
T~E FACTORY WI-IERE Tl-lE'r'
MAKE 131LLIARD BALLS ..

Henderson, WV

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Hill's Self
Storage

I JUST LEARNED
T~E

MYERS PAVING

G~

CAMPERS&amp;
MOIURHOMES

-... 'llll'thda\v:

IMPORTS
Athens

Htrls

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

with 30hp &amp;40hp Kubota Engines

entrance

8 Field
ot' study
9 Newspaper

czar

44

Ceremonial
tire
45 Like
Tonto ' s

friei'ld
46 Ra 's
symbol
47 Beatty
of films
48 Oil amts.
49 Tokyo .

once

30 Pu1 ln
. readiness

to shoguns

32 Rx givers
36 Trial VIPs
39 Gr~ery
buy

51

Acorn ·

·bearer

·

AstroGraph
I

6·9866 .

$5,995. ·2001 HOfnet Bunkhouse 32',
12' expando, sleeps 10,

,

I

:THE DEATH

and 4fter 1~hrket

7 Palace

34 Better
execs
ventila1ed
35 Like folk art 10 Von Sydow
dolls
oflilms
37 .Laughs
11 Vagrant
·· heartily
12 Gulf sta1e
38 Mai"ina
17 Mantra
. chants
.
oigh1s
·
40 Delhi
19 Vinegar
honorific
bottles

. ' Afte r South opens one cluO and No.rth•
responds one spade , South has two
uunpalatable" alternatives: one no-trump
with two low hearts, and two clubs with
only a five-card suit. Most would select .
the latter. (Note that SOuth cannot rebid
two dio:);rtlonds, because that would be a
reverse, which wo uld guarantee at least a
good 17 high-card points. Also, some
players would open one cjiamond . planning to reb id two club s. However, that
. ri sks reaching a stupid diamond contract
when r~sponder. "correctly" assumes that
the opener holds five di(lmonds qfter he
rebids in club s.) But when North contin·
ues with a forcing two-heart rebid , South
is happy to offer no•lrump.
If, at trJck two. you put in the diamond jack
(or play low), you will win the third dia·
mend . Now you must keep West off the
lead, so cash your two top Clubs.
Correct , though,· is to win trick' two with
the diamond king , Th e'n, to ensure that
East nev~r regains the lead, takE! the club
ace: cross to dummy with a heart. and
play a club to your jack.
·
Here, both li nes work . but the fo rme r is a

BIG NATE-

Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

Culverts

I_

rotors/brakes,
(614)231·1355.

~&lt;;,CAl~

L.UC.i/.. ...

Closed.

plastic and metal, 6~ inches·
~
,..,.
2002 Stingray 20 ft. op6n 60 · inches in stock. Ron
bow, Fled/ White, 5.0 liter V- Evans Enterprise, Jackson,
FOR SAI.E '
0
8, Hustler trBHer, exce llent OH 1(800)537·9528
5~95 .
1993 Chevy 3500 Turbo
,
2bo1
Dodge
Ram
)(
K,
cond., garaQe kept, price
4 4 46
www.slaterUnfarm.com
Diesel, Red Pickup, Dully,
28
months
on
19K
remain·
new
$24·000 sell $ 15•700 ·
Power Windows , Locks,
HAULlNG
ing factory warranty, new . call Troy Krebs 304-675·
HAv&amp;
$8 ,000
firm
Loa-ded
tires, long bed, qi.Jad cab,
GRAIN
(304)593-5073
Adorable Beagle mil(ed bred
tow p6ckage, am-fm-casspuppies, to good home,very
cd , loaded, ont:t owner,
1000# bales, $7.00·$10.00
playlul, 4 wks. old, (740)992·
'1995
Fo'
d
F-150'
XLT,
8
ft
.
$1
7.500,
(740)992·2459
&amp; $15.00, pick up load or
4454
bed, eKcellent condition.
Stainiess grl!l guard for
seml-k)ad,
good
hay,
Asking $6,800 OBO. Call 2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport
1999-current
·F-250-350
(740)698·2765
(740)992-1n7.
·4x4 price reduced, loaded
Ford
Super
Duty
or.
CD ,towing package 54,000
Excursion. $400 OBO. Call
miles S9,200.0BO 304·675·
2003 Dodge Duly, 4K4,
black, 4 door, El speed.
Cummins Bngine, nerf bars,
stainless body moldings,
diamond plate tool box &amp;
bed sides, retractable
Qooseneck· ball . 59,000

l'"'(t.~; BuT rtf\ NOT f\,.._IJ\t-1(, ~ ""(IJE.R'i 1'1&gt;.\\E.Rhl 1 STI-K\ t.~\l5U~

Sunday &amp; Monday

Restocking late . Model Soh1.ge

6 Oodles

33 Frontier

1ad lucky.

"Middleport's only
Self·Siorage•

Remodeling

+6

garment

the diamond (line. How w.ould you ptan

1he play?

FABRICS

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

M-Fri 8:30,5:00

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

All_ pa~l:i

21 Toss
22 Once - a
time
23 " Pretty
Woman "
lead
24 finales
26 Kind
of dollar
27 Charles
Lamb
28 N01e 'en .

six . East wins with his ace and reiturns

MILL END

TRIMMING&amp;

992-1194
or 992-6615

ROBERT,·
.BISSEll
COISTRICDIN

3 NT '

4 Apply
makeup
5 Sheik's

40 Hearts or
spades
41 Hard lo find
42 Dreaded

three no-trump. West leads the diamond·

• Kitchen s • Baths

'it7 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

$75.00 ($25.00 Non·

r1o

740

PalS!)

access

high lighled by loday's deal.
Fir-st, though, assume you (South) reach

"No Job To Smtlll"

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

i3.

$26.900 . 304-773· 773·5182.

1314

2NT

20 Cellar

of chop

3 - mater

Yesterday, I mentioned th at one tries to
avo1d reb idding in a five-card suit. One .
·pre1ers to show a second suit, or to bid in
no-trump, or to ra ise partner's suit. But
occasionally one vyill have to rebid in a
flve·card suit. The classic situation · IS

Sunset Home
Construction

Racine, OI-l
740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508
14
enence

•a
I:IIIICuiell
,.,..,. Claa

t.

North . East
Pass
Pass
2¥

in a five-card suit?

Barns

Masnn VFW

r

2 ...

partner

2 Kind

pistol
25 Lining
fabric
29 Bloom
(2 wds.)
31 Injured
by a bear

When may one rebid

oitiiiiiiiii--.-l

NEW AND USED STEEL

West

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

• Bucket Truck

• Roonl'Add . .• Mini

2004 Harley DavidsOn 1200 1!~11""-~-----~
custom Sportster, ·loaded,
HoME
$9,900 000, 304·593·3542,
IMPRo\'Ett-1EI'ITS .

FORSALE '

,...

South

1 'Rum's

21 German

7
8 3
K J 54

Vulnerable: Neilher

• C.i.rporls • Gara~e.s

2790

r(740)592.·29448~4

s

... A K J t O 3

• Decks • Porches

(304)593·5157

t

... 9 8

• Siding • WinUows

miles Color Red, $7,500
Phone (304)675·2793 or
200 1 Harley Road King.-Teal
in ·colqr, many eKtrafi,, one
'Owner, excellent cond ition ,

l

... Q 2

+

A ll Your Home
lmprovemcnt !\eeds

Davidson

Lincoln Navigator.
AWO, 5.4 VB, 3rd row seating, cassette/CO-changer,
BMW Z3, '99, Special heated/cooled-seats, low
Edition, 22.000 miles, dark miles, excellent condition,
green, . $t 9,999. (304)412- -$23,900.(740}453·5535.

4·H Pigs for Sate
Begin farrowing 1/20105 and
(740)423-5141 .
·
still farrowing. Pure bred 3380.
Bull Frrig hot tub pai~ Yorks
and crossbreds
$4,500, take $2',500 firm . Please call (740)448-2002 For sale: 1941 Chevrolet
App: 1-1 /2 years old. If has or
(740}541 · 7~91
or Coupe Street Rod project
350, 350 turbo: Mustang 2'
a lounge and three seats. In (740)541·7470
lrontend, many new parts.
ex'celient
condHion.
Hatching April 6th
$8,500 080. (740)446·3005
(740)256·6309
Randy.
·
Black Australorps
Firewood. Split &amp; Oeli\lered.
Puttets$1 .60-each
~~l"l"~~.-,!'!"11"''
Call
(740)256-9 11 5 or Rhode Island Red Pu.llets
SELL YOUR CAR
(740)256·6605
$1.50-each
HERE
Austra White Pullets
For Sale Four Prom (formal)
$1
.5o-each
Gowns, sizes 3!4. 5!9. 9110.
Buff Orphington Pullet~
like new Ph. (304)675-7644
$1 .6Q.-each
$20-$35
Now Taking Orders

•

A ,J

Construcllon

92,000 miles. $9,500 080. 1600cc, Windshield, Leather
·matic, new paint, nice interi· (740)446·77'17.
'
Bags, Tuned exhaust, 6000
g'ee1.
0302.

• J 6 '·
+Q 1 086 3

K 53
·' 10 9 5
A 9 2 .

South

n

1996 Honda Goldwing 1500
Aspecade .' 23,700 miles,
93 18; (304)!186·1668.
excellent condition, 2 match·
2004 Silverado t 500, Z7~, ing helmets. Asking $8.000.
4WO, Loaded, still under (740)388·8047.
warranty, 29,000 miles, asking $26,000 (304)675-4917 1998 Yamaha 400 Kodiak.
4x4 four wheeler, 1,950.4K
99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab (great
shape)
asking
SLT, Loaded V-6, 41&lt;4, Bed$3.000.
(740)742·3029
liner,
Aunnin·g-Boards,
morning /evening.
Tonneau Cover, 95Kmi.

-9-9-c=-a-.-al-ie-,.-4-d~o'o-,.-.-u-to-or,

liNDA'S PAINTING

Owner

1982 Yamaha Exciter 185,
942 actual miles, last tuneup Spring 2004, $750 PBO,

--

4 11o,ses 46·48 inches

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me de 1t for youl

James A Will Jr.

Saturday April.

r ~~: I

to

•

· DOWN

16 Python or
wrap
18 Continent
divider
19 Travel kH
items

East

+

witled

F:rincess

Q 10 2

•

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

New Homes • Vinyl

740-992-6971

I

West

PoL.ITI&lt;:AL.

Siding • N ew G arages

Buy or sell. Riverine Auggie Vorage feeder with (740)446-1759.
SUVS
Sportster 883 Hugger, 6,350
Antiques, 1124 East Main scales. Gooa condition. Call
FOR
S~
.
mi
les, new tires, . e)(tras,
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy; 740 _ (740)245-5047.
98 Cadillac Catera. Fully
equipped, leather interior, ..,.__ittiiiiiiiioo_.l· $6,500 Neg. Day: (740)645·
3248 , evening after 7pm
99272526. Russ Moore, .
loY-~ miles, mint .condition,
LJ\'ISil)CK ... $7,900. Call (740)704-3751. 1999 Eddie Bauer EKplorer (740)256·6589.
owner.
AWD, lo.aded, leather, 6 disc
CO
changer,
'sunroof, ·2obo Yamaha Road Star

r

03 ·2.3 -05

Answer to Prev ious Puzzle

43 Solar - know
44 Organize
48 Tremble
SO Wile E.52 Harangue
53 Got paid
54 Shorthand
pro
55 Quick·

1 Wearing
something
5 Kelp
10 Dough
12 On deck
13 Hands-onhips
14 Starbucks
orders
15 Warrior

4A9 8 6 4
¥ , AKQ 2
• 7
.... 7 6 4

41800 SR #7
Tuppers Plains,
45783

BUILDERS IDC.

\ (' 1~ 1:1-.
\10'-;l \11· '-; '!

1982 ·Honda 500 Trike
Faring w/stereo system. Dk
2001 Ford F-350 diesel,
blue. Evenings (740)256dually,·4 doo~. 4X4, automat ~
6870. $3,000.
ic. $22,500. Call (740)446·

I

'

North

992-6215 WV036725
Pomeroy, Ohio

tribute to your loved
one's memory.

1979 Honda 750 10th
Anniversary Limited Edition.
Needs
ignition
work.
(740)256-6870 .
Evening
Low mileage, $2,000.

2000 · .Hadey

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

V.C. YOUNG Ill

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

2621

i.

.storage

CARPENTER
SERVItE

neg. Call (740)256·1526 o'
(740)645·0446 .

$7,900.00 080 (740)949·

$ 9 ·500 13041882 ' 2845

YOUNG'S

Janet Jeffers

02 Honda 400 EX. Excellent
condition, rode little. $3,000

2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
speed, 29.000 mi les, air, 2002 Chevy 1500, ve,
One owner. Nice (740}441· 29,080 miles, 5spd, PS/PB,
0157 0' (740)645·5141.
AC. tiiVcruise, CD, $12,000.
Aecon title. (304)634-5131
2002 Ponliac Grand AM SE.
Red , AJQ, . CD, loaded, 56k 2004 FORD F-150 Lariat.
miles.
Euro
taill ights.
Super Crew, 1O,DOOmi
chrome accents, S8,sas.
2yr/20,000mi warranty left,
Excell~nt condition . can
lOaded/extras,
$30,000.
(740)256 •8 16..
(304)523-3500; (304)654-

'
(740)446·7444 1-877-830· 472 New Holland hay bine
9162. Free Estimates, ,Easy $S.OOO; 256 New Holland

·r

ACROSS

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP2l4

High and Dry
Phone
(740) 992-5232
SxlO, lOxlO,
lOxlS, 't0x20,
l0x30

(740)669-5653

9317.

financing, 90 days same as
cash . Visa/ Master Card . hay rake &amp; dolly $3.500 like
·new: 14 toot hay tedder
Drive- a- little save . a!ot.
$1,700; 16 toot goose neck
Thompsons Appliance &amp; trailer 9200 GVW $1 ,900': (.2}
Aepair·675-7388. For sale, · John De9re '1056 running
re-conditiOned automatic .gear wagons :. 10 lug hay
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- wagon $1,000; Coats 40-50
tors, g'as and electric SA tire changer $1 ,000;
ranges. air conditioners, and Massey Ferguson 3 bottom
wringer washers . Will do plows $550; New Holland
repairs on major b'rands 1n rounc:l balers $2,500. All in
shop or at yOur home.
exc.e\lent
condition.
(740)709-9069 days or
ANnQl.IFS .
(740)446-0118 after 7pm.
.
..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.. · Knight mode) 2250 Reel

~~~T.....

Dealer: South

1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11 ft. 89 Ply. Van. AC, Locided, no
ulility bed. AC. cruise, tilt, Rust. Great Int. MuSt See
350 gas, 5 speed trans., $1,100 (304)593·0517
69,000 miles. E)(cellent condition . Call (740}25&amp;-1526 or 41 MmuRcvcu:s/
(740)645·0446.
4 WHEELERS

(740)256·1539.

Fo\RM

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

-~----

2000 Chrysler Concord,
82,000 miles, $5,300 OBO.
2002
Dodge
Strauss,
64,000 miles, $5,500· OBO.

~\ 11\ISitHh..

iO. .

7999

Born 12/31,

Ask for Art

2000 Ford Winstar LX. 8'1K,
2/sliding doors, seats 7, all
power. rear air, tinted windows,
asking · S6,600,

2000 CtJevrotet-Si lverado
1500 LS, tully-optioned,
4x4. bed liner. trai ler i ngpkg.,Pewter eKt. ,Charcoal
int., 1OOk highway mites,
2000 Chrysler Cirrus 4-door syn.oil, below book $12,900.
sedan, automatic power 304-773·6062
seats ,windows ,door -I ock s, 2000 S10·LS, E)(t·cab, 3rd
Silver excel!. cond. 63,000 door, 4-cyl, 5-spd. AC, CD,
miles $60001 304-675·6047 48,000
miles.
Asking

Shettle pupa:

Buyers of standing tirroh..•rCi
Also Land Clearing

VANS

AKC Toy Poodles 2 black
males , $350 e.ach , vet 1994 white Thunderbird ,
checked 1st . shot ·· and l oad~d , excellent condition,
dewormed . (7.:!0).367 -7429. VB. ~3.200 or best offer.
(740)388 -9875. .
3423
· .
Golden Retriever puppies
\IIIH 11\\lll'-11
for sale CKC, $250. Phone 1998
Pohtiac
Surfire
number (740)388-8965.
Convertible.
97.000
miles/auto, 2.4Liter englr:1 e,
HOUSEHOLD
' .Gooo&gt;
Miniature SChnauzer pup- all power, CD player, new
pies, AKC, black-salt/pep- tires ,
Black
wiRed
per.
v~t
checked
·
&amp;
shots,
'
Pinstripes.
$3,500
Firm.
57" High Definition Hitachi
$
_
4
_o_
oc.c
.
('74
_
o
")6
_9_
6·_1_085
_
_
_
·
(740)245
-9266.
wide screen T.V. E)(cellent
condition. · Less than 6 Poodle puppies- tiny toys. 1999 Ford Contour SE· 4
months old. MoVing must AKC. white &amp; cream. 2 male, door. 24.300-miles, B)(Cellent
sell, 51 ,50Q. (740)441-9983. 1 female , (740)401-0327
condition . $5,500. Call
Rabbits lor sale . Call (740}446-0771 after 6pm.

(740)446·3732

~ ,~~~~~10~

'FoR SALE

$2,200.00 080. (740)992·
5532

$225 (304)675-5724

S®~~@lt' lb®'I~IO~

American Legion ·
Birthday Dinner 6 pm
Smith Capehart American
Legion.
Social hour at 5 p.m ..
Open to legio.nnaires,
auxiliary, and SAL
members.
Dance will follow from
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
The Charlie Lilly band will
play. Reservations must be .
turned in by March 23.
For more information call
882-3203 or 882-3101
alter4

EXT 3901 ,

Twin Rivers Tower is accept ing 3pplicalions for waiting
list f9r Hud-subsized. 1· br,
apartment, ·.oall 675-6679

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Phillip
Aldef

Auros

(606)922· 7185

02/ 11 /2005 for 1 person Treated Pool Deck $ 150
$18,150.00.
8X14 Building $250
Must meet HUD/1202/8 crl· Two Tra11er Tongues $50
terla for household com- (304)675·6121

EHO

euT

I R \ \'\l't ll( I \ 110\

Maximum Income effective

position. Managed by
Silverheels, Incorporated. A
Ri3atty Company Equal
Housing Opportunity

...

wo~v

AU.. TO VOU,

(304)675-5724

Cannonsburu·Ashland
(behind Mr. Gatti's)

Applicants with Income at
or below $10,900.00

DON'T

Wt!: L.L.. I!.XRL..AIN IT

Ro.und Bales of Hay $~5
each·
Heritage
Farms

u .s , 5o

and older. Prlqrlty Given to

The Daily Sentinel • Page. B7

,.

Orchard grass ·n ay roundbales, 1,000 lbs. 2004. barn
k~pt , $20 each. Around 40
left. (7 40)446·0223 after
Spm .

_~PA UIITL&gt;T
Gra.nd .Opening
Saturday/Sunday
11am-7pm
Open Daity

Housing lor 50 years· of aae

www.myda ilysentinel.ccim

GRIZZWELLS

I MET UP Wml A Cl-liCK

1 \'(jJHI) ~ i~
11-1-mit~f:l". AHtl IT

1\l~I'-\EV ~T S\IE
HAt' .l::IW 1b
M~'l

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-330l

,.

I

•

Thursday, March 24 , 2005
By Berni~ Bade Osol
What experien ce h.a s taught you will
be ' wisely put to use in th e year ahead ·
in yo ur dealings With people. B ec aus~
you bener understand yourself, "you 'll
better understand othlifrs, which w ill
op en up i-.ew avenues for s uccess .
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) - A fail ure to appr ec l a t ~ a co-worker's polntof·view could undo the good r9 1ation ship you had established and cause
som e unnec essary proble ms .. Make
an effort to see the other side.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - S ubdue
, te ndencies to day to take ' a gamble
merely to expe dite a matter yo u deem .
is going too slowly. A progressive
m .9 aSured pac e is what will lead to
s uccess white speed could fail.
GEMJN.I (M ay 2 1-June 20) .Many
pl easant experiences arE! in th e o ffing
for you today. provided yOu do not
prejudge situations. lf you keep an
open mind. what yo u. thought would n' t ·
be fun will turn out g reat.
C AN CER (June 2 1 ·July 22 ) - The
kind o f attitude ypu adopt 'today w ill b e ·
e xtremely .importS nt to your su cc.e.ss,
e specially wh e re your wo rk is concerned. Don 't visualize tasks as being
harder th'a ri they really are.
LEO (July 23 -Aug: 22) - No expenditure, large 'or small , shou ld be made
1mpulsivEily today. Before spending
y our money. consider two factor s:
One, do you really need it, o r JU St
want it? And two, can you afford it?
VIRGO (Aug . 23-S ept. 22 ) - Your
c hanc~ for g~ tting wh at you want
tod ay a re
B)(Cepti on all\1
goo d..
Ho wever. ,it could still turn out to be a
bummer o f a day if you be have selfishly and do things that ~nn oy other s. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - S trive to
keep you r temper tn c,heck today, sa
that you don 't overreact to p etty fru s-tration s an·d blow your Image . So long
as your re8son and cool hea d preva ils, all .will run smoothly for you .
SC ORPIO (Oct . 2 4· Nov. 22) Fina l')cial cond itions eQuid be a m ixed
bag to r you today. On o ne h and. yo u
may make a few costly w rong m oves.
but on the oth er hand , you' ll know
h ow to rectify th6m should that happen.
. .
SAG ITTARIUS (N ov. 23· Dec . 2 1) Friends will go a l.o ng with your wishes
t a;daY and even go O!Jt of their way for
yo u, provide d they do not fee l you are
try in g to manipulate the l'l'l . Be
respect1ul a nd keep everythi ng ab ove
board .
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ,- Do
not g~t · discouraged today if th 1ngs
are m oving a bit slowly and you can not achieve yo ur ' goals as easily as
yo'u thou ght. Victory won 't b e denied
yo u If you·m a ke a S91id second effort .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20· Feb. 19) - So
long as friends o r associ ates do n 't
think yo u're prying. they w ill tell you
thing s the y wo n 't nepes s arll y tell
e verybody. If you' want the m to . open
up. let them vo lunteer the ihtormation
PI S CES (Feb. 20- March 20) - If you
hope to gain the c ooperation of othe rs
today, It w ill be very Important thl!llt you
first show a wllltngn~ss to compro·
m ise. In order to · get What you want ,
you'll have to flrat benc;t a' little

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetmty C1pher ayptograrns are crealed 110m quatat1ons by famous peope. past ano present
Eacto lener 1n the Cipher stands tm MDIMr

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�Page 88 • 1he Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Mllrch 23.

www.mydailysentinel.com

200~

State scrambles to replace
network of day programs,
therapy for MRDD, A7 .

Utah's Bogut leading vote-getter on AP All-America team:
of the first team not to have
received any recognition after
last season'. In fact, he was the
only one of the five no,t to
Andrew Bogut was just have been at least an honoranother. international player able mentiori selection in the
when th~ college basketball preseason All-America ballotseason started, not even merit- mg. Now Bogut is considered
ing an honorable mention in a sure lottery pick, and the
the preseason All-America ,possible top pick, if he decides
balloting.
to declare for the NBA draft.
All that has changed now
'The thing that impresses
for the 7-foot sophomore from me the most about Andrew is
Australia. The Utah center hi s ability to get better as ·the
was the leading vote-getter on year went along," first-year
The Associated Press' All- Utah coach Ra,y Giacoletti
America team announced said. "I've never seen a guy
Tuesday.
size with the versatility he
Bogut, who averaged 20.4 his
has
and the will to win he
points and was second in the
has."
country in rebounding at I2.4.
Eiogut showed off his passwas jomed'on the first team by
senior forwards .Wayne ing skills with .a season-high
Simien of Kansas and Hakim seven assists in the Utes' secwin
over
Warrick of Syracuse, junior ond-round
guard J.J. Redick of Duke and Oklahoma last Saturday, a
sophomore guard Chris Paul game in which he has a seaso n-low 10 poinis on just
of Wake Forest. .
The voting was done on a·5- seven shots. That led the Utes
3-l basis by the safne 72- into the round of I6 for the
member national media panel first time since their 1998 run
that selects the Top 25 each to the national championship
week. The balloting was con- game.
"We were just trying to have
ducted before the NCAA toura successful year and do our
nament began. .
Bogut received 60 first- best," said Bogut, Utah's first
AP photo
team votes and 330 points, 22 All-America since Andre · Utah's Andrew Bogut celebrates during the final seconds
more than Redick, who had 53 Miller in 1999. "It just all against Oklahoma Saturday iri ·the second round of the ·NCAA
came together these last cou- Championships In Tucson. Bogut was the leading vote-getter on
first-team votes. ,
.
Simien .and Paul each had ple of weeks." .
Redick
is
one
of
the best The ·Associated Press' All-America team announced Tuesday.
289 points with Simien getting 45 frrst-team votes. one shooters in the game from
more than Paul. Warrick also · long range - 40.5 percent on points and played 373 min- tournament for the sixth time
had 44 first-team votes and 3-pointers . - and the free utes per game for the short- in seven· years and are in the
throw line - 93.7 percent. handed Blue Devils, who won round of I6 for the eighth
got 283 points. ·
The
6-4 Redick averaged 22.1 the Atlantic Coast Conference straight year. ·
Bogut was the only member
Bv JtM O'CoNNELL
Associated Press

, 2004-05

P1a11

AII·AmeriA.Ba$ketbal

.

A. DAVIS
Associated Press

KNOXVILLE, Tenn.
Pat Summitt stands alone at
the top of NCAA basketball.
The Tenne·ssee coach broke
Dean Smith's career victory
record Tuesday night, getting
No. 880 in the Lady Vols '. 7554 win over Purdue in the
second round · of the NCAA
tournament. ·
Summitt tied Smith at 879
with an easy win over
Western Carolina in the first
round Sunday night and
passed the former North
Carolina men 's coach with
another convincing victory.
Summitt improved to 88017 I, while Smith was 879254 when he retired in 1997
after 36 years with the Tar
Heels.
·"Obviously, to be in the
c0 mpany with Coach Smith,
to think about all the people
that were a part of these
wins, I never thought I'd live
this long," Summitt said.
· Top-seeded Tennessee (28-

4). seeking
its seventh
national title
u
d e r
Summitt,
advanced to
face fourthseeded Texas
Tech in the
semifinal s of
t
h
e
Philadelphia
Regional on Pat Summitt
Sunday. ·
Ninth-seeded Purdue (I 713) tried its best to stall
Summitt's chase, hanging
tough with the Lady Vols in
the first half.
But Tennessee's defense
was too much for Purdue in
the · second
half. The
Boilermakers didn't have a
field goal in the first 6:35 of
the second half, while the
Lady Vols pushed their lead to
20 with a I9-6 run.
Tye'sha·Fiuker tied a career
high with I8 points and had
10 rebounds while Shyra Ely
added I 6 points, Shanna
Zolman I 5 and Nicky
Anosike I I.
·

n

· Sharika Webb had 16 points
and I0 rebounds and Katie
Gear Ids added I 3 for the
Boilermakers, who made only
four .tield goals in the second
half.
. Summitt overtook Texas'
Jody Conradt as the winninge ~ t
women's college
coach early in the 2002-03
season.
She holds nearly every
NCAA tournament record for
·a women's coach including
most NCAA titles (six), Final
Four appearances (15), Final
Four wins (17). tournament
appearances (24), tournament
games (104) and tournament
wins (87).
And many of her tournament runs have started in
Knoxville, where the Lady
Vols improved to 46-0 in
NCAA games.
An amazingly chunk of
Summitt's wins have come
against ranked teams. In her
I ,05 I games, 494 of those
were against ranked opponents and she won 353 of
them. She has never lost to an
unrankec.l team in Thompson-

Township.
AEP · Ohio monthly surcharge to resi- charges would end when the
President Kevin Walker ~aid dential customers using plant begins commercial conTuesday it is ''highly proba- I ,000 kilowatt hours per struction.
GREAT BEND - If the ble" that the PUCO will month of approximately 58
The final phas.e of cost
Public Utilities Commission approve that cost recovery cents for Columbus Southern recovery would begin when
of Ohio approves American plan, allowing construction Power customers and 39 the plant begins operating.
Electric Power's plans, AEP to begin in 2007.
cents fop Ohio Power Co. The companies would recovwill recover costs associated
The plant, · which AEP customers.
er the projected $ 1.033 bi 1with building its new
hopes
to
build
on
I
,200
acres
·
In the second phase: from . lion cost of the plant over ·its
Integrated
Gasification
of
land
it
owns
near
the
200v
to. mid-2010, when the operating life of 40 years.
Combined Cycle power plant
Ravenswood
Bridge,
would
plant
is
placed in commercial The per-killowatt hour cost
from customers in three phasbe jointly · owned by operation , the companies cannot be determined at this
es, beginning next year.
Columbus
Southern Power would recover costs associat- time because the market
Last week, AEP filed an
ed with construction prices for generation will
application with the Public and Ohio Power Co.
During the first phase of $237.5 million- with a sur- vary during the plant's operUtilities. Commission of
Ohio, asking for authority to cost recovery, beginning next charge of $2 for Columbus ating life, AEP said.
recover costs involved in year, AEP would recover Southern Power .Customers · Because the surcharge will
constructing a $I billion approximately $18 · million and $1.40 for Ohio Power. be added to the generation .,
IGCC ·plant in Lebanon for site engineering with a Co. customers. Those sur- portion of customers' electric

Aaron on hold.
See~geB1

0

.Meigs High hosts·sign language classes
.

0BTIUARIES
'Page AS
o Gloria

Adams, 77
• Martha Gr$am, 76
o Garnett Schafer, 93

INSIDE
• Adult swim lessons to
start See' Page A2
. • Alinuai.Easter egg hunt.
See Page A2
• Ashley reviews Civil War
hijacking_ see Page A2
• Garden ciub hear
about oriental lilies.
see Page A2
•· Local briefs.
See Page A5
·• For the record.
See Page A5
•'

Bv TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

returned to California to bury their strike zones and quarrel-. Milwood and with the emerhis uncle. Not long after that, a ing more than at any time in gence of Jake Westbrook as an
close cousin bled to deaih after his five big-league seasons. All-Star; the Indians have
an accident.
·
His behavior on· the mound . taken some of the pressure off
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. It was too much to bear. was affecting his stuff.
Sabathia, who is 54-35 since
C. C. Sabathia has never been Sabathia did his best to cope,
And although he went 6-6 in coming up in 200 l. Unlike the
in better shape. An off-season putting on an outward sunny 13 starts after the break, past few seasons, he doesn't
Sabathia's ERA was 6.67 in have to take the ball feeling
spent w.othrking· o\Jt shixdhay s da appearance.
week WI , a !ramer as e1pe
Inside, he was hurting.
five starts in July and 6.08 in like it's win or else.
"It has already been huge
Cleveland S. ace drop werght · "Looking back on it now, it · six outings in August, further
and sculpt ~IS flabby ~Y·
definitely did have a big effect proof he wasn't the same having Kevin around here,"
He also hfted the weight of on me," he said. "lt would pitcher to reach 50 career wins Sabathia said. "Seeing what he
the world off h1s.shoulders.
have taken its toll on anyone." faster thlm any active major does to get prepared for a start,
After havmg h1s poorest seaSabathia's escape came leaguer.
.
how he watches video.' I'm
son wrth t)Je lndrans, one made every fifth day in a start. But
He tried to clear his 'mind, doing things I hadn't done
worse. by some personal beginning on opening day in but couldn't. ·
_
before."
·
tragedies, an I 1-10 record and Minnesota when the Indians'
Then. in September, his
Sabathia's off-season work. injuries, Sabathia decided it bullpen blew a 4~0 lead, rocky se&lt;)son came· to an outs were supervised by an
was ume to take rnventory of Sabathia's season began to abrupt, and fitting end, when Indians trainer, who had the
his life -on and off the field . unravel.
he hurt his hatilstri~g and 290 pounde~ lifting more
At just 24, he went through a
He was forced to leave a missed his · final four starts. weights. The results are visible
mid-baseball-life crisis.
start in June with a sore shoul- Given months to reflect on in a more toned midsection
"I h~d to learn tha,t I can't do der, an injury worrisome what went wrong, Sabathia and chest.
it all myself," he satd Tuesday enough that he visited noted came to some conclusions.
"I feel great," Sabathia said.
following a morning workout. orthopedist
Dr.
James
"I now know that I can't do "I'm in shape for the first time
"I've learned that I need to Andrews for a second opinion. everything myself," he said. "! in my career and I'm excited
trust others more and not put The left-bander bounced back can't go out there and throw a to see what 1 can do."
so much pressure on myself. nicely, winning three straight shutout every time or a comHe strained a muscle in his
I've learned that after I let the ·starts.
plete game or a no-hitter every side earlier this month, a setball go, I can't control anyBut although he made the time, so why try. I don't feel back that . will cost him an
thing."
AL All-Star team for the sec- . like I have to make every pitch opening day assignment. On
He came to spring training ond straight year, Sabathla was or field every ground ball. I Tuesday, Sabathia threw 35
in Ft:bruary with a heavy heart far from bemg on top of his cari only do so much ."
pitches off a mound for the
after his father died following game.
And this year, he'll have first time since gettin~ hurt and
a long struggle with cancer.
He had an unusually short help.
expects to make h1s season
And then in March, Sabathia fuse with umpires, challenging
Irt. signing free agent Kevin , debut in mid-April.

osu
from Page 81
Maryland made only four
baskets in the final 9:42,
two of them in the final 40
seconds. Leading scorer
Shay Doron finished with
only nine points on 3-for15 shooting.
The Terrapins were I 3-3
at the Corneas! Center, but

playing at home and in front the second half. The to 58-53.
of a partisan crowd wasn't Buckeyes mi ssed their next
They would get no closer.
enough \O overcome Ohio four shots, and after
The Buckeyes took a 35State's speed and tenacious Maryland closed to 53-50, · 34 halftime lead on a 3Ashley Allen m.ade. a 3- pointer. by Allen, her only
defense .
The second half featured pointer and Hoskins added a points
of
the
half.
eight lead changes before layup to give OSU an eight- Davenport and Langhorne
.
Matter hit a 3-pointer, point cushion~
Hoskins scored on a drive
Davenport then went to dueled for all 20 minutes;
and Blanton sank a shot the bench with three fouls, Davenport had I 0 points
from beyond the arc to put and the 6-3 Langhorne went and ·Langhorne had I 0
the Buckeyes up 53,46 with to work. She· scored inside, points and nine rebounds.
Ohio State improved to
14:10 left.
·
·
grabbed a rebound on the
At that point, Ohio State other end al)d made a free 28-1 when leading at the
was 7-for-8 from the field in throw to bring the Terrapins half.

.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Boling, which opened in
I987.
Summitt took over the
women's
program
at
Tennessee in I974 at age 22
when there were no scholarships and she had to wash the
uniforms and drive the team
van. The Lady Vols nickname
didn't even exist.
A mere 53 fans watched
Summitt win her first game, a
69-32 victory over Middle
Tennessee on Jan. 10, 1975.
Thousands of orange-clad
supporters came \O see
Summitt reach 880 on
Tuesday, creating an atmosphere even more electric than
usual.
The fans are likely to see
many more wins. At 52,
Summitt's · record could
stretch well past I ,000 before
she retires.
Summitt is the second college coach to pass Smith this
season.
Harry
Statham
of
McKendree College in the
NAJA did earlierthis year and
finished the . year with 896
wins.

Fit and focused, Sabathia looking forward

.

'

. BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

of Ruth,

Summitt st~nds alone as winningest coach .
BY ELIZABETH

coming to VAS stage, AS

AEP to recover IGCC costs in three phases ·beginning in '06.

SPORTS
o Bonds' chase

'Pirates of Penzance'

Ultimate Checking Balance Interest Paid
Rate APY*
0-$ 50,000
$
o.5o% o.5o%
so,ooo - 99.999·99 1.85% 1.87"/o
$100,000 - $249.999·99 2.15% 2.17%
$250,000 " S499o999•99 2.25% 2.28%
$5oo,ooo and Up
2.50% 2.53%

s

WEATIIER

s

POMEROY
After
Spanish,
English
and
American Sign .Language
(ASL) is the third-inost-used
language in the United States
and residents of Meigs
County have an opportunity
to learn it
Although the first beginner community ASL clas.s
for adults is coming to an
end, more sessions for
beginners and advanced
users of ASL will be held
from 4-6 p.m. starting April
26 at Meigs High School.
Registration is $25 for rhe
six-week course and a text
book will be provided. The
dass meets once a week.
Instructor
Donna
M.
Williams also teaches ASL to
Meigs High School students
for college ¢redit thanks to a
grant through Washington
State University.
.
Williams is herself hearing
impaired and contributes her
own life experience into the
ASL teaching process.
"She's patient and goes1at a
slow rate to make it fun ,and
enjoyable," student and
speech
therapist
Terri
Dewhurst
said
about
Williams.
"She does a wonderful job
presenting it," student and
second-grade teacher at
Eastern Elementary Amy
Gross agreed.
What ·Williams presents
are the · expressions and

Please see Sip, A5

Interest-bearing checking account

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Free Internet banking

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Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Places to go
Sports

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BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport residents will
receive a survey ·asking about their shopping
habits and their retail needs with their April water
bill. The survey is a step in a local committee's
efforts to prepare a downtown revitalization plan
for the village.
The committee, led by the Institute for Local
Government and Rural Development, ·has prepared a two-page survey seeking information
from local residents about their shopping habits
and their opinion of Middleport's shoppmg dis·
trict . A separate survey of business gwners
already has been distributed.
The consumer survey asks residents about the
types of new businesses and services they believe
could be successful in Middleport a'nd the products or services they currently go elsewhere to
obtain.The surveys will be mailed with the April
water bill and are to be returned to the water
office by April I 0.
The committee expects to complete an economic analysis of Middleport 's retail market and
a market study report by the end of May. The
committee is working closely with the
Middleport Community Association. A co'mmu- .
nity open house also is planned to allow local residents an opportunity to share their ideas about

Please see Survey, A5

Southern students display
computer skills for grandparents
Beth Serpnlfphoto

American Sign Language (ASL) instructor Donna M. Williams assists her
adult students in the difficulties of finger spelling in the first community
ASL class at Meigs High School. A new session of both beginner and
advanced ASL classes will begin April 26. Tuition is $25 a~d enrollment is
now open though classes ate limited to 15 students.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

.....

·

W~;ather

t6 PAGES

A3
Bs-6
B7

A3

A4
As
AS

B Section

A7

@ aoos ()ldo Valley Publlshlna Co.

POINT PLEASANT - The Regional Jamboree
And Family Camp to be held at Point Pleasant in
Krodel Park on Friday, April 8 through Sunday,
April 10 has 850 youth and leaders registered and
only 150 more spaces are available .
Scouts have registered from Ohio, West Virginia
and Kentucky, according to the event's organizer,
the Tri-State Council of the Boy Scouts of America:
"The Pathways of Our Founders" Regional
Jamboree will feature a Merit Badge midway, displays, historical re-enaciors, native Indian encampment, Cub World and competitive events.
Point Pleasant's Economic and Tourism
Department is hosting the event. There will be a
staff of almost 200 individual volunteers and reenactors necessary to operate this Boy Scout event
"Response to this super event has been excellent,"
noted Tri-State Scout Executive Ray Franks. "This
will be the largest weekend camping event that our

council has held in over
.25 years."
. Scouts from any council are welcome, but
is
pre-registration
mandatory.
"Leaders of the
Regional
Jamboree
want to ensure that the
event ·does not have
more youth and adu Its
than they have activity
facilities, therefore they
are limiting the event to the first 1,000 youth to register," according to Greg Sargent, Regional
Jamboree and Pamily Camp chief from
Barboursville, W.Va.
To register, call the Scout Service Center at (304)
523-3408or acquire the registration forms and more
information at www.tsacbsa.org, &lt;http://www.tsacbsa.org/&gt; bef~re space runs out.
• PltraH ... BSA. A~

Holzer·MfHIIr:al Center,
~ Pregnant-Women

FreeATM use

Retail survey to acCOID'QallY
Middleport water bills .

Space running out for April BSA jaJ!lboree ·in Point

Detallo on Pq;e A 7 ·

Free unlimited check-writing

bills, AEP Ohio's customers
will have the option of choo:;,;
ing an alternate supplier and
avoid cost recovery surcharges·.
An IGCC plant is more
costly to build than a stan•
dard coal-tired power plant,
but AEP officials said they
believe the new plant wiU
operate most cos·t effectively
once it is operating.
. "We are convinced tha.t an
IGCC plant, over its expected
life span of 40 years, is th~
most cost-elfective option for
our customers," Walker told
Meigs County Commissioners
on Tuesday.

•

--plloto

Fifth-graders at Southern Elementary recently displayed their computer skills for their instructors
and grandparents during • an after-school worl&lt;shop. After demonstrating their computer savy,
students assisted their grandparents in creating
a Microsoft Power Point presentation from home
photos. The theme of the presentation was .•This
Is Your Life."

.

and Smoking Pilot Project

Are you smoking while pregnant. or recently gave birth and smoked while pregnant?
1·800•374•6123
www.peoplesbancorp.com
•Ann111l Pttuntllt Yield (AP't'), Atcount earns Interest. Cuntnl rates and APY art lttUfltiiS of
o~/17/0S. btit •ublec:tlo thtnP', Adally bal1nce ofS1,000 Is required ro .void a monthly fn of $15.
A PH of ,Stoo Is chatpd lftht acctKJnt is clased within the rlr1t

n

monthS.

We would like your.pa"lclpstlonl

Call .us and complete a
confidential and private 'one hour interview and receive a
· ~u: gift card . .Ask tor ·HeatherDunlap at (740) 446-5940.
•

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