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P.qe ·06 • ftunba! rilmtl·l!tntlntl

•

Pometov • Middleport • GalliPOlis. Ohio • Point Pleasant. WV

SundaY. februani 22. 2004

Rio closes out regular
season with loss at
Old Dominion, Bt

Western Kentucky
downs Marshall, Bt

ne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
_,,tll '\IS· \ol. ., 1 "\u

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SPORTS

Iraq .wa.r means another generation of storytelling veterans

• Buckeyes do~
Hoosiers. See Page 81

NORTH
ROYALTON
(AP) - Like other U.S.
conflicts, the Iraq war has
created a new generation
of combat veterans ready
to tell their stories to wideeyed school children.
Youngsters need to · learn
the meaning of sacrifice.
said Ohio Army National
Guard Spc. Andy Stefanik.
at
North
Speaking
Royalton Middle School in
suburban Cleveland, the
23-year-old said he still
looks up to World War II
veterans.
"People say they can' t
imagine what we went
through ," Stefanik said.
"We can't imagine what
they went through."
The image is becoming
familiar across Ohio as
veterans and
National
Guard members wrapping

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up overseas assignments were training local police.
return home and are sought
In
Piqua
north of
out as living history.
. Dayton. Army Spc. Robert
For nearly three hours, Grau, 29, visited Bennett
students
questioned Intermediate School to
Stefanik and three fellow thank students for their
Guard members about the care packages. He also told
hardships of war. .
them about being hospital·
'"Did you ever feel like ized for two months with a
giving up?" asked one girl. collapsed lun g after a road"At one point in time , side bombing .
"It happened in a split
everyone had that mentali·
ty," replied Spc. Patrick second." Grau told fourthO'Donnell, 19, who serves
and fifth -graders. "'I was
with t)le Guard 's !35th
Military Police Company thinking 'this is the end .' I
based in nearby Brook began yelling 'I'm hit. ' But
Park.
it was hard to yell. My
Stefanik, O'Donnell, Spc. lung was collapsed."'
Caleb Schuster, 20. and
Grau, whose leave ended Samantha Sevchek, a 7th grader at North Royalton Middle
?3
11
Friday,
said the school' s School in North Royalton , tries un the helmet of Spc . Cavone,
Sgt. Joe Scavone. - · , a
originally
from
North letters and pack&lt;~gcs were right, after he spoke to her class. Visits by Iraq veterans is
Royalton. made the visit "definitely a ·morale-boost- becoming increa singly familiar across Oh iO as veterans and
because the students had er. "
National Guard membe rs wrapping up overseas assignments
sent care packages and let·
Grau said his · favorite return home and get sought out as livmg history. (AP
ters to Iraq, where the men Please see Veterans. AS
Photo/ The Plain Dealer, Bill Kennedy)

New fire truck finds home in Racine
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Gerald E. Hendricks, 51

LIMIT 8 TOTAL

INSIDE
• Terrorism .research lives
on at other agencies. See
Page A2
• Community calendar.
See Page A3
·• Renovation gives Taft
Museum a new look. See
Page A6
Racine Village Council members, community leaders and firefighters dedicated the latest
addition to the Racine Vol~nteer Fire Department - a brand new $270,000 fire truck. From
left, Racine firefighter Gary Freeman, council member Charlotte Walmsley, fire chief David
Neigler, clerk-treasurer David Spencer, Home National Bank representative Roma Sayre,
Mayor J. Scott Hill, Council President Bob Beegle, Lebanon Twp. ·Trustee Charles Weddle,
and council member Greg Taylor (J. Miles Layton)

WEATHER

RACINE - Community
leaders and firelighters· dedicated a new $270.000 truck
Sunday at the Racine fire sta·
tion .
"This truck will help pro·
vide lire protection for the
village and tluee town ships."
said Racine Mayor Scott Hill,
who is also a me mber· of the
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Department "This is very
good thing for community
and the county. We can do so
much more with thi s truck."'
Manufactured by Smeal
Co .. the truck has a six -man
cab, pumps i 500 gallons·per
minute and has special foam
system which has become a
necessity in modern fire
fighting. The truck. which
· can hold a I000 gallons of
water, was paid for with
money from levjes from the
village and three neighboring
town ships. Home Natimial
Bank of Racine '!tlso provided
a $156.000 loan toward the
Please see Truck. AS

Crow gets

endoiSement
POMEROY - The Mei gs
County Bar .---...,. ,..,....,.,
Association
ha s unani·
mou s ly
endorsed
Judge Fred
W.
Crow
Ill
for
judge of the
Fourth
District
Court
of Judge Fred W.
Appeals .
Crow Ill
Crow has
15 years experience as judge
of the Meigs County Court ol
Common Pleas handling both
civil and criminal cases. and
has presided over cases in
nine of the District's 14 coun·
ties . He was al so ass igned by
the Chief Ju stice of the Ohio
Supreme Court as one of five
judges to pr.eside over the
Lucasville riot caP.ital murde1
cases.
Prio~ to being elected
Common Pleas Judge. Crow
served as prosecuting attorney of Meigs County for 12
years.

The.Daily Sentinel reaches out to neN generation
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detolla on Pap A8

lNnEX
'
.

2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGI!S

A3

Calendars
Ciassifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

bear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

~ports

B1

'

·A6

:Weather
'

@ 2004 Ol11o Volley PubU.hlng Co.

.

.

RACINE - Linda Fisher's fifth
grade class at Southern Elementary has
discovered. what is black and white,
and read all over.
On a white canvas of newsprint,
journalists at The Daily Sentinel write
a sea of .black ink about local people
and places that is read all over Meigs
County. Fisher, a classroom veteran
with 27 years in education, said newspapers are an excellent tool for teach·
ers to apply theory to practice.
"Newspapers help .students apply to
Taking first place in the cosmetology competition was Beth
everyday sttuations what we learn in
Landers, first, with Jackie Gloyd coming in second , and Amanda
the classroom," ~ he said.
HoyJ , third, left to right.
For extra credit, Fisher's students
0
spent a few minutes searching for arti cles that persuade, infonn or entertain
the reader. Abstract lessons coming
from books came to life in the pages of
· POMEROY - Winners in weekend at Nelsonville and
The Daily Sentinel.
the recent Mei gs Career and Cambridge in the regional
The boys naturally gravitated to the
Technical Center Ski lis USA- skills olympics.
sports pages to find articles about Southern Elementary ·fifth grade English teacher VICA (Vocational Industrial
Following the local judgSouthern high school's chances during Linda Fisher helps Ka itlyn Matson and Katey Clubs of America) competi- ing, prizes were awarded to
the remainder of basketball season. Patterson uncover all the news that is fit to print in tion held at Meigs High
The Daily Sentinel. (J. Miles Layton)
Please see VICA. AS
School will compete this
Please see Sentinel; AS

VICA competition winners

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ADV.frriS.D IT.M POLICY1

Monday, March 1
5~30 PM - 6:30 PM
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reflecting the same uvlnge, or • ralncheck which will entitle you to purchase the
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.

Each of these advertload llama Ia required

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�PageA2_

NATION ·• WORLD.

Th~ Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 23,

2004

Museum for Korean War
veterans pays tribute to
the 'forgotten ones'
WAHIAWA, Hawai i (AP)
- They were never .wel comed home with a pamde;
their war became known as
the forgotten one.
Now, 51 years later,
Korean War veterans at last
have a place to gather their
.memories - albeit a hum. ble one.
Little fanfare marked the
official ·opening of the
National
Korean
War
Museum on the island of
Oahu on Friday, but ·visitors
didn't seem to mind .
T~e museum, housed in a
1940s-era Quonset hut, is
sti ll a work in progress
with dangling wires, incomplete murals and yet-to-beinstalled attractions.
"When we were in the
war we never had any nice
facilities to · begin with,"
said Louis Baldovi, a 72year-old Korean War veteran. " Maybe it does bring
back that. It 's something
that we have versus not
having anything."
Previous attempts to build
a .museum honoring the .1.8
million Korean War veterans have faltered, said Kyle
Kopi tke, president of the
museum' s board of trustees.
"As they come in here
their shoulders straighten
up," Kopitke said. "They
feel that they wbn the war.
They feel that their sacrifices are finally acknowledged."
The museum occupies a
I0,000-square-foot open-air
space in a militiii'Y tow n
that many of the country's
first Korean immigrants
called home while working
in Oahu's pineapple fields .
Little about the place
mirrors the grand museums
that pay tribute to other

.I

I

Lt. Gen. Steven Blum. left, the chief of the National Guard system. talks with Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne at the National Governors
Association meeting in Washington. Kempthorne . a Republican. is chairman of the· National Governors Association. (AP
Photo/ Jacqueline Malonson)

Governors want dialogue with Bush administration
about transformation of National Guard
WASHINGTON (AP) Governors worried abo ut
increa si ng demands
on
National Guard uni ts want to
hear from th'e Bush admi nistration about its long-term
s trate~y in the fight against
terronsm.
State leaders raised their
concerns in a private meeting with the top G u;~rd general and Homeland Security
chief Tom Ridge.
"It's . not , that we' re not
supportive of the war on terrorism and the war in Iraq,"
said .Republican Goy. Mike
Huckabee of Arkansas. "We
have to kind of step back
. and rethink the whole picture." Like other governors,
be said the part-time soldiery has seen a transformation in recent years.
Guard and Reserve soldiers make up about 22 percent the forces in Iraq. That
level is expected to rise to
nearly 40 percent as a result
of force rotations in .the
coming months.
Lt. Gen. H Steven ·Blum,
chief of the National Guard

•

Bureau, which oversees all
reserve forces, made a private presentation to governors at the winter meeting of
the National Governors
Association.
The governors, who are
hoping to hear about thi s
issue when they meet with
President Bush on Monday,
were attending a Wh ite
HoLISe dinner Sunday night.
The military demands in
Iraq and Afghanist an give
governors. who technically
are commanders in chief of
their state units, ·a heightened inte rest in the development of U.S. foreign policy.
The reliance on the part-time
soldiers will have a ripple
effect, governors said .
"We' ve gol a real relention
issue," said Republican
Mark Sanford of South
Carolina, a member of the
Air Force Reserve.
·
"You' re going to see just
an emptying, when people's
tickets are up, ... of
Guardsmen not step up to
the plate," he said.
Tom
Said
Democrat

Vilsack of Iowa: "We •need
two things -. predictability
.
and stabil ity. "
States often re ly on t~eir
Air and Army Guard units to
help in emergencies such as
hurricanes, earthqu akes or
riots. In the past two years,
their role has expanded even
more, assisting in homeland
securi ty patrols.
The part-time soldiers are
brought under federal control
for mi ssion s such as those in_
Afghanistan and Iraq . There
are roughly 500,000 members of the Guard. With the
reserves, there are over 1
million civilian soldiers.
According to a document
obtained by The · Associated
Press, Blum told governors
that the goalsowashalf
to of
manage
deployment
each
state's units would remain at
home and be available for
state needs ; one-quarter
would be deployed for federal needs; and one-quarter
would be going through
intensive training for deployment.
Some state s now have 40

percent or more of their
Guard troops overseas.
Blum, speaking as -he and
staff ran through a multimedia presentation before the
meeting, said his goal was to
change the Guard so governors could have a pre dictable number of troops to
rely on .
"Governors are uniquely
challenged right now," he
said. "The Guard itself is
really transforming, at lightning speed, from an old
Cold War, strategic reserve.
based on deterrence - only
to be called up in event of
global war and we
moved from that to an operational reserve ."

WASHINGTON (AP) Despite an outcry over privacy implications, the government is pressing ahead with
research to' create powerful
tools to mine millions of public and private records for
information about terrorists.
Congress eliminated a
Pentagon office that had been
developing thi s terroristtrack ing technology because
of fears it might ensnare innocent Americans.
Still, some projects from
retired
Adm.
John
Poindexter's
Total
Information Awareness effort
were transferred to U.S. intelligence offices,. congressional, federal and research officials told The Associated
Press.
In addition, Congress left Reti r,ed Adm. John Poindexter, senior vice-president of Syntek
undisrurbed a separate but similar $64 million research program Technologies Inc.: seen with the company logo in this March 28,
run by a little-known office ·2001 file photo, in Arlington, Va., oversaw the Total Information ,
called the Advanced Research Awareness ~ffort ultimately s helved by Congress because of
and Development Activity, or fears it might ensare innocent Americans. The project had been
ARDA, that has u&gt;ed some of intended to create terrorist tracking technology based in the
the same researchers as search of millions of publ ic and private information records. (AP
Poindexu;r's program.
Photo/Alex Brandon, File) ·
"The whole congressional Massachusetts,
acknowl- intelligence agency would do
action looks like· a shell edged that "high numbers of the work.
game," said Steve Aftergood false positives can result.''
It said, for the time bpng,
of the Federation of American
Disturbed by the privacy products of this research
Scientists, which tracks work -im plications, Co n ~ress last could onl y be used ove[seas .
by U.S. intell igence agencies. fall closed Pmndexter's or against non-U.S. citizens
"There may be enough of a office, part of the Defense in this country, not against
·difference for them to claim Advanced Research Projects Americans on U.S. soil.
TIA was terminated while for Agency, and barred the
Congressional officials would
all practical purposes the agency from continu ing most not say which Poindexter proidentical work is continuing." of his research. Poindexter grams were killed and which
Poindexter aimed to predict quit the government and com- . were transferred. People with
terrorist atfacks py identify- plained that his work had direct knowledge of the coning telltale patterns of activity been misunderstood.
tracts told the AP that the survivin arrests, passport applicaThe work, however, did not ing programs included some of
tions, visas, work permits. die.
18 data-mining projects known
driver's licenses, car rentals
ln ki lling Poindexter's in Poindexter's research as
and airline ticket buys as well office, Congress quietly Evidence Extraction and Link
as credit transactions 'llnd agreed to continue paying to Discovery. ,
education, medical and hous- develop highly speciali zed · Poindexter's
office
ing records.
software to gather foreign described that research as
\ The research created a intelligence on terrorists.
"technology not only for
political uproar because such
In a classified sec tion sum- 'connecting the dots ' that
reviews of millions of trans- marized publicly, Congress enable the U.S. to predict and
actions cou ld pu( innocent added money for this soft- pre-empt attacks but also for
Americans under suspicion . . ware
reseatc h to the deciding which dots to con- .
One of Poindexter 's own "National
Foreign nect." It was among the most
researchers, David D. Jensen Intelligence Program,' ' with- contentious research proat
the
Un iversity
of out identifying openly which . grams.

11 be here

•

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•

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•

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.

• •

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.. '

. . .. . . . ..

Thursday, Feb. 26
SYRACUSE- Wildwood
Gatden Club, l p.m. at the
Syracuse Community Center.

Thursday, Feb. 26
POMEROY
Meigs
Local Board of Education
regular meeting 7 p.m. in the
board office. Changed from
Tuesday night due to boad
member conflicts.

POMEROY - Bits and
Pieces Quilt Guild, 6:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
For more information call
Sandra Tillis, 742-2572.

Monday, Feb. 23
RACINE - Sou thern
Band Boosters will meet in
regular session 7 p.m . in the
high school band room.
Discussion
items
will
incl ude the upcoming band
banquet and purchase of
instruments and other equipment. All band parents and
band supporters are invited.
HARRI SONV ILLE
Harri sonville Senior Citi zens
will meet at II a.m. at the
Scipio Firehouse. Blood
pressures wi ll be checked
and a potluck dinner will be
served. All seniors invited.
1\Jesday, Feb. 24
. RACINE - Raci ne Area
Com munity Organization to
meet at 6:30 p.m. at Star
Mill Park building. Potluck
to be served. New members
always welcome.

· Becky and Tim Jackson of
Portland,
0 h i 0 '
announce
the birth of
~ h e i r
daughter,
Ra c hel
N o e I
Jackson.
: R ac h e l
~as
born
11' '--"-"'----~'
pee· , and
Rachel Noel 1
2003
weighed 6
Jackson
oounds and
I'Wo ounces; she also was 19
Inches long.
: Her maternal grandparents
are Chester and Kay Hall of
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; pater~al grandparents, Steve and
Hel en 6f Franklin, Ohio;
Qlaternal great-grandparents,
Aubry and Myrtle Thompson
Qf Lew isburg, W.Va., and
!\mos and Eloi se Hall of
f'oint Pleasant, W.Va.; paternal
,great-grandparents,
Wayne and Beverly Jack son
Of Lansing, Mich., and the
late · Alice and Kasmer
krawczynski.

arch15

• Hardware
• Furniture
• Appliances

•

~Paint

• Carpet
• Electrical
• Construction
• Wallpaper
• Plumbing
• Banks
•Insurance
• And More ...

Thursday, l&lt;'eb. 26
POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing Support Group will
meet at l p.m. at the Meigs
Multi-purpose Center. Topic
wi ll be on heart health

Church services
Monday, Feb. 23
REEDSVILLE - Revival
services will be held 7 p.m.
nightly through Feb. 29 at
the Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene, Reedsvi lle. Dr.
Ron Roth of Springfield,
Mo., an evangelist for 23
years, will be the speaker.
There will be special si nging
nightly. The Sunday morning
services will be at I 0:45
a.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 25
POMEROY- The Trinity
Congregational Church will
ho st its traditional Ash
Wednesday breakfast at 7:45
a. m. in the Bethany Building
with the Second Street
entrance. Reservations are to

1\Jesday, Feb. 24
POMEROY - A free fellowslrl'p dinner will be
served from 4:30 to 6 p.m.
for Fat Tuesday at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Chufch. The · baked steak
dinner is open to the public.
Tuesday Feb. 24
POMEROY - Childhood
immunization clinic to be
held at the Meigs County
Health Department 9 to II
a.m. and l to 3 p.m. at the
office. Take child 's shot
records and any medical
cards.. All children to be
accompanied by ·parent or
guardian. Donations accepted.
Friday, Feb. 27
MIDDLEPORT -Elaine
Armstrong, Dean of Student
Affairs! at the University of
Rio Grande, and Mike
Gerlach, local historian, will
present programs in observance of Black · Hi story
Month from I to 3:30 p.m.
on Friday at the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center in Middleport. The
program is sponsored by
URG Crossroads and is open
to the public.

Birthdays
Monday, Feb. 23
POMEROY - Marjorie
Kapple will celebrate her
85th birthday Feb. 23. Cards
may be sent to her at II 0
Maple St., Pomeroy, 45769.

DEAR ABBY: My mother
died when l was 7. r ·m 13
now, and my father just told
me Mom suffered from bad
depression toward the end
of her life. He also said that
it would worry him a great
deal if I had depression, too.
I'm afraid I do. I get sad
easily. and I have thoug ht
about suicide, but I don't
know why. It could be the
stress of my family lift:, but
it can't still be about my
mother 's passing ,- can it''
That was six years ago.
I actually scare myself
sometimes, but l don 't think
my depress ion 1s bad
enough to see someone
abo ut it.
What do you think? SCARED IN SOUTH CAROLINA
DEAR SCARED: It 's
time to talk to your father.
Depression can run in families . You also need to tell a
professional exactl y what
you have told me. Please
don't put it off. The sooner
yo u get professional help.
the sooner you will feel better.
DEAR ABBY:
am
unemployed right now. I
become extremely nervous
when l fill out a job application because I have a
bankruptcy on my record.
Several potential employers
have indicated they will
check my credit rating as
part of their standard background search. I was having
terrible money problems
when I filed bankruptcy a
little over a year ago. But
since then I have joined a ·
12-step
grou p
called

to be out of control. and
everybody ignore; them or
looks away.
Sometimes I · stare at the
parent or walk slowly by to
let t.hem know that I know
Dear
what they're doing . One
Abby
time, I reported a mother
who kept slapping and
sco ldin g her . Down syndr.ome daughter. The girl
wa' doing nothing wrong
Debtors Anonymous. and it. and kept repeat in g. ''I'm
is helping me a great deal. vour FRIEND." lt turns out
If I didn 't have this bank- slapping is legal in Virginia
ruptcy on my credit report . l where I live. ~nd by the
don't think I'd have any way. l live in one of the
trouble at all getting a job.
wealthiest coumie; in the
How should I handle this nation.
at a job interviewry
What can I do to help
RECOVERING DEBTOR
some of these kids'' Any
DEAR RECOVERING : suggest ions would be appreTe ll the truth . The way the ciated. - SAD AND DISeconomy has been. you GUSTED IN VIRGIN IA
won't be the only one with
DEAR SAD AND DISa bankruptcy show ing up on GUSTED: I checked with
your credi t report. To adm it several state agencies and
that you had a problem and found out that al though
are doing somethi ng about il slapping may be legal in
is nothing to be ashamed of. Virginia. the state policy is
DEAR ABBY: l was in "open to interpretation ." The
the parking lot of a shop- Virginia Department of
ping center whe n l noticed Social Services operates a
an older woman two cars 24- hour statewide. childaway ye ll ing and hitti ng a
little girl. The girl looked abu se-reporting hot line. If a
report is deemed valid. a
abo ut 6 or 7.
local
age ncy wil l conduct an
I got into my car, pulled
investigation.
The in- state
up next to them ·and called number is (800)
552-7096;
out, "Are you OK?" The litfrom
out
of
state.
the numtle gi rl was crying and tryber
is
(804)
786-8536.
ing to straighten he r scarf:
Dear A!Jbr is wriuen br
the woman snapped bac k,
AbiKail
Vai1 Bure11. also
"Yes. she's OK!"
k11ull'n
m
Jean11e Phillips,
This kind of behavior
Will 1\ '0s .fuu11ded In her
reall y bothers me . I frequently see adu lts slap. hit. llll!thn Pwdin e Phillips.
c
d berate their chil - Writ e Dear A!Jbr at
ven babies in II 'IY II'.DearAbbu·om or P.O.
dren strollers. Th :e,.illlults seem B()x 69440. LOs Angeles. CA

90069.

honor roll in the S'outhern
Local School district for th e
second quarter grading period, having earned an average
of u/1 A~-. or all A:~ and B's:

Southern Elementary
Grade 5: Eric Buzzard,
Katey Patterson , all A's ;
Katie Barr, Wit Crow, Tiffany
Cundiff, Brian Durham ,
Trevor Flint, Mikale Hill ,
Dakota Imboden, Zachary
Manuel. Emily Ohlinger,
Charlie Pyles.
Grade 6: Michael Manuel,
Lynzee Tucker, all A's;
Logan Huddleston, Cyle
Rees, Dustin Salser, Breanna
Taylor, Katie Woods,
Grade 7: Brod'y Flint,
Bryan Harris, Emma Hunter,
Chelsea Pape, Jamie Warner,
all A's; Merri Collins ,
Charles Cook, Chri s Holter,
Robert McCarty, Brittany
Meldau , Samantha Patterson;
Rachel Picken s, Anthony
Shamblin.
Grade
8;
Lindsey
Buzzard, Sarah El Dabaja,
Courtney Ginther, Kaylin
Spradling, all A's; Morgan
Brown, . Ryan Chapman,
Heather Cundiff, Stephanie
Cundiff, Whitney Riffle.
Southern High School
Grade . 9: Mallory Hill ,
Miranda McKelvey, Ashlee

Arthurs, David Collins, Ryan
Donaldson, Amber Hill, Jacob
Hunter, Katie Kibble, Jessica ·
Lyons, Adam Phillips, Allie
Rees, Adelle Rice, Bethany
Vance, Summer Wickersham.
Grade 10: · John Bentz,
Zach Imboden, all A's; Ryan
Amberger, Dustin Brinager,
Brad Couch, Shane Hayman,
Amber Holsinger, Jenny
Warner, Kristina Williams.
Grade 11: Ashton Brown,
Jordan Neigler, all A's; Holly
DuffY,Jessica Gloyd, Jonas Hart,
Nicole Holman, Brooke Kiser,
Brinany Philson, Ryan Smith,
Chris Thcker, Nicki Tucker.
Grade
12;
Bethany
Amberger,
Stephanie
Bradford, Brandi Da ile~
Codi Davis, Chelsea Dilcher,
Stacy Eakins, Heather Fink,
Sarah Hawley, Tabitha Jones,
Deanna Pullins, Henry Rider,
Katie Sayre, all A's; Shawn
Barnhart, Tim Cogar, Ashley
Dunn, David Gloeckner,
Emily Hill, Jessica Wood,
Katelyn Hood, Paige Mu sser,
Amy Norman, Chris Roush,
Maria Schaeffer, Andrew
Smith, Brandon Sturgeon,
Jeremy Yeauger.

SIREN

499

8

BLASTER

felony, ~nd receiVIng stolen
property, a fifth-degree
felony.
POMEROY
The
• Trista A. Doerfer, 20,
Meigs County Grand Jury
has returned indictments on two counts of forgery,
fourth-degree felonies, and
agai nst the following:
• Roy Jack "Jick" . Neff, two counts of receiv ing
43 , on three counts: failure stolen property, fifth-degree
to comply (felony tleeing), felonies, with spec ification
a
third-degree
felony; that the property involved
inducing panic, a fourth- was a check . .
degree felon y; and va ndal• Naby Y. Kaloko, 26,
ism, a fifth-degree felony.
• Paul Flora, Jr., 20, on on two coUnts of forgery,
two counts of unlawful fourth-degree felonies, and
sexual conduct with a two counts I of receiving
minor, · both • fo urth.degree stolen property, fifth-degree
felonies , with specification
felonies.
•
Stephanina that the property involved
Laudermilt, 18 , on counts was a check.
of breaking and enterin g,
• Scott Autherson, ~5, on
a fifth-degree felony, and
count s of breaki ng and
receiv in g stol en property,
entering, a fifth -degree
a fifth-degree felony.
•. Michael Laudermilt , 25, felony, and rrivi'ng stolen
on counts of breaking . and property, a fifth-degree
entering , a fifth-degree felony.

599

8

STAFF REPORT .

Keeping .
-Meigs ·
informed

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~allipolis 1llailp m:ribune

The Daily Sentinel

(304) 675-1 ]]]
(740) 446-2342 .
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Support Groups

Other events

Teens feelings of depression
may be legacy 'from mother

Indictments filed

ADVERTISING DEADLINE TU8Sd8V, MARCH 2, 2004

,

POMEROY - Alpha lo1a
Masters to meet at 12:30
p.m. in th~lobby of the Wild
Horse Cafe.

be made hy calling 9922722, Dianne Hawley or
992-7569, Peggy Harris. The
public is invited to attend the
service of preparation for the
Lenten eason.

Monday, February 23, 2004

Birth
Southern honor roll announced
RACINE - The following Teaford, all A's; Robert
announcement students
were named to the

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ••••

•

.. ...

I

POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission. 9 a.m.
at the Mulberry Heights
office in the Annex .

Clubs and
Organizations

HI EIMP OVE ENT
EDITION·

Monday, Feb. 23
RACINE
Southern
Local Board of Education, 7
p.m. Monday at the high
school.

. MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM. work in
the Master Mason degree,
7:30 p.m. at the temple. All
master masons welcome.

. TUPPERS PLAINS Parent-teacher conferen'ces,
4 to 7 p.m. at Eastern High
School.

2004

- .. -------•

groups. There are no inter-.
active exhibits, no gift:
shops, no stunning displays .
Regardless, Kopitke, 47.
said the museum does not
lack emotional impact for
those who served in the
Korean War.
"I have veterans in here
crying," he said.
When the fighting ended
in the summer of 1953,
more
than · 33,000
Americans had been killed
in the three-year war
between North and South
Kore'a. The Koreas were
divided in 1945, and their
border
remain s. tightly
sealed.
There are 38 sections to
the
museum,
sy mbolic
because the war lasted 38
months and the 38th .parallel divides the Koreas . The
mpseum features such war
memorabilia as a 58-footlong mural of the Battle a(
Inchon; towering statues of.
So uth Korean Presidenf
Roh Moo-hyun and hi s
war-era predecessor, Rhee
Syng-man; a wartime jeep
and dozens of photographs.ln the real' of the museum , a meditation area contains a simple wooden cross
and soldier's helmet that
recall the losses suffe red.
By month's end , Kopitke
hopes to have machinery on
hand to engrave plaques
with the names of the war's
fallen soldiers, io be· put up
as families of the men visit.
Meanwhile, another group
has opened a small site the Korean ·War Ve te ran ~
National
Mu seum
&amp;
Library - at an outlet mall
in Tuscola, Ill. Organizers
plan to start construction on
a larger facility next month .

- 1"-::~~~~==--------------------======.,

Terrorism research lives ·o n at other agencies

I

Community Calendar
Public meetings

PageA3

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Diane K. Hill ·

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Charlene Hoeflich
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people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
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Moderately Confused·
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PageA4
Monday, February 23,2004

Staring down sharia law
Another big stoiy has cpme
out of Iraq with little media
fanfare - and this is one with
colossal idlplications.
Recently, L. Paul Bremer, the
tQp US. official in Iraq, toured
a ..new · women's center in
Karbala. (The center occupies a
fonner Ba'athist Party headquarters - nice touch.) There,
citing a 2003 United Nations
report that pegged the poverty
and non-productivity of the
Arab-Muslim world to the
repression of half its workforce
- women '-- under Islamic
sharia law, Bremer touted the
equal rights and full participation of women in the new Iraq.
Thl\; topic was api, particularly since the U.S.-backed
Iraqi Governing Council voted
in late December to withdraw
Iraqi family law matters from
their secular jurisdiction and
place them under an undefined
Islamic sharia law. Such a
legal maneuv~r could subject
women to underage marriages, polygamous maniages,
on-the-spot divorces ('I
divorce you, I divorce you, I
divorce you,' is all a husband
has to say in certain sharia proceedings), unfair inheritance
laws and other terrible
inequities.
Bremer has not approved
the Islamization of Iraqi family law. (Nor, as 'Paul Marshall
reported at National Review
Online, has Bremer intervened
in the Islamization of Iraq's
universities, nor the peremptory removal of a female deputy
minister for whom hardliners

Diana
West

the capriciousness of a rightscanceling fatwa . Indeed,
Islamic law is nm the basis of
a religion, as the JudeaChristian world understands
religion. but is rdther the basis
of a control! ing ideology that
is nothing short of totalitarian.
Sharia's adherents. of
course. would disagree. In a
January article abou t the
Governing Council's family
law decision. every judge and
lawyer the Los Angeles Times
interviewed in Baghdad insisted on the superiority of sharia
law to civil law. 'Sharia is
from God. the law is manmade. and sharia is better
bec;tUse what comes from
Allah is ,fix ed.' safd Kadhi m
Jubori. 55. who hus pructiced
fumily luw for 33 years in
Baghdud. (' I divon.:c you. I
divorce you. I divorce you' is
fixed !l Fixed or not. U.S.
e11\ll'ts to tend demnnucy's
rooh ir r Iraq would wither
under ''"l' sharia-buscd consti-

refused to work.) Against such
a political backdrop, Bremer
discussed the current draft of
the interim Iraqi constitution.
which is due Feb. 28. The draft
designates Islam the state religion of Iraq, Bremer said, and
·a source of inspirdtion for the
law' - not the only source of
inspiration for that law.
What
would
happen,
Bremer was asked, if Iraqi
leaders write an interim constitution inspired exclusively by
Islamic law? 'Our position is
clear,· Bremer replied in an
unforgivably undetreported
answer picked up by the
Associated Press. ' It can't be tution .
law until I sign it. · This stateThis would hoclc ill. hut not
ment
strongly
suggests jw.t for Iraq . The fuct is. as
Bremer would veto an Islamic colurnnisl
Charles
charter - which. of course. he Krauthammcr said re&lt;:ently in
should for the sake of liberty a magisterial address to the
and justice for all Iraqis. Equal American Enterprise Institute.
rights before the law do not 'Yuu \vin by laking territory
exist under Islamic law. One - and leaving so mething
citizen, one vote does nut exist behind.' We won Iraq by takunder Islamic law. Freedom of ing territory - and now must
worship does not exist under leave the basis lor democracy
Islamic law. Minorities- that behind. :--lot, sharia. 1
Such
a
polic,y · is, non-Muslims - enjoy
rights and protections at the Krautharnmer calls it \'dernncpleasure of the Muslim com- ralit: f!hlba li sln · - combines
munity that are ever-subject to reali s~1 wil h an idcaliJtic wm-

mitment to human freedom.
tempered, 'he cautioned. by
'strategic necessity.· Thai
means that the United States
commits blood and tre.asure
only in 'places central to the
larger war against the existen- .
tial enemy. the enemy that
poses a global mortal threat to
freedom. ·
Fifty years ago. that
described Germany and .Iapan.
vortexes of fascism. Both
nations. Krauthammer, noted:
·were tumccl. 'by nation-building, imo hulwarks against the
next great threat to freedom.
Soviet ,·rr rnmu ni sm.' Today.
he continued. the new global
threat tn frccJnm

i~

'the new

existential L'llC\11)', the ArabIslamic totalitarianism that has
threatened u.s in both its secular und religious forms for the
quan~H:~ntury
since the
Khomei ni revolution of 1979.'
He continued: 'Eslahlishing
civ ilized, decent . nnn-belliger~ nl. pro- West~ rn polities in
Afghanistan and lra4
wou ld. like the !lipping of
Gennany and Japan . change
the strategil' balanc:e in the
light against Arah- l&gt;lami&lt;' radicalism.·
Krauthammer &lt;lllmits we
ma y rail eve n

include'addr'~s

editing Ibnd must be signed and .
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and telephone numbe~ N~ unsigned letttrs will
be publirhed. Letters should be in good taste,
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Truck

VICA
from Page A1

.GIAHLER.

~oq

The more I.read about the
with broken arms and legs? ceives as a national crisis. ;The
steroid . scandal spreading
I'm willing to bet more foot- use of pertonnance-enhancing
across the nation from the
ball players have been dmgs like steroids in baseball,
California nutrition and supirreparably damaged by sim- football and other spot1s is
plement c.pmpany BALCO,
ply playing the game than dangerous, and it sends the
. the more difficulty I ·have .
have
been damaged by using wrong message - that there
Joan
working up a good fit of outare shortcuts to accomplishsteroids.
Ryan
rage. I find myself wondering
The other main reason per- ment, and that pet1'ormnnce is
if .the time has come to ask
formance-cnhancing drugs are more important than characourselves the radical question:
banned has lo do with the ter,' the president said.
Should ·we 90nsider making
integrity of the game. I under'But in today's pro spons,
perfonnance-enhancing drug~ they're maxed out genetically stand the argument. It would peti.onnance is more imporlegal in professional sports?
at 215, they have to find anotll- not be fair if 'juiced' players tant than character. and no one
Whether w~ are ready to er way to add the weight •
bmke the records of old-time in Washington knows that betAs I understand it, perfor- players who didn't have the ter than Bush. a former owner
acknowll;dge them or not,
here are the facts: Professional mance enhancers are illegal in benefit of ' performance- of the Texas Rangers ba~eball
sports have. evolved into cut- sports for two primary rca- enhancers. We'd have to put team. He didn't hire players
throat busine*s in which per- sons. One is the safety of the asterisks by the records, some because
they
spent
foimance is
only measure athletes. This is an important say. Perhaps they're right.
Thanksgiving dishing up food
of · worth. Athletes have concern. Steroid abuse has
But I wonder how we take ar a homeless shelter. He hired
increasingly turned to pharrna- been linked to all kinds of into account other advance- players because they could
ceuticals to push their perfor- physical and mental problems, ments in' equipment, medical deliver and got rid of them
tnances to the highest and even death. Like most pre- know-how, p[lysical condi- when they didn't.
most rewarded levels.
· scription drugs, steroids are tioning and game strategies
These are the times we .live
Athletes who abstain from dangerous when used improp- that give today's pl ayers in, whether we want to say it
. performari.ce-enhancers erly. But steroids and human · advantages over their prede- out loud or not. These are
k falling below the ever- growth hormone themselves cessors. Pitching, tor instance, times, too. in which consumer"
her playing standards and are not 'bad.' Doctors pre- has become so specialized that driven prescription drugs are
thus risk losing their jobs. scribe them for any number of closers rarely pitch more than advertised on television for
Teams and leagues are 'hardly medical and cosmetic reasons . an inning at a tiiTJe, allowing everything we want enhanced.
So if you concede that these them to rack up saves at mtes from moods to erections.
vigilant about .catching users;.
because the money pours in drugs are here to stay in sports, unheard of in previous generaSo I'm wondering why pro~
when paying customers and wouldn't the players be.safer if tions. Should there be asterisks fessional athletes shouldn't
television executives watch they didn't go to backi'oom by their records?
have the same freedom to
near-mythic characters crush hucksters with no medical
One could argue, actually, make informed choices and
home runs or tfreakdownfield background but rather to doc- that mak ing performance- take managed risks for the
tors who can prescribe and enhancing dmgs )egal in pro- sake of something as substantackles.
The most' important thing to supervise usage according to a fessional spot1s would help the tial as their livelihoods.
keep in mind: The drugs aren't player's medical history, phys- integrity of th~ game because
Haying written this, I admit
.going away, no matter how , ical condition aand profession- the playing tield would be to thinking about the future
many ruLes are posted on lock- al goals? This wouldn't guar- more level. . Every athlete · with some dread, knowing ·
er ropm bulletin boards. The antee that players would not would' have access to pharma- .. that every generation strives to
horse, folks, has left the bitrn. suffer damage from the ceuticals. So players would top the one before it: What on 1
'Players are willing to do ' steroids. B\lt wouldn't players find an edge over their com- earth will the sons and daughwhatever it lakes to give them- be safer if a doctor thoroughly petitors not in a syringe or a ters of today's athletes have to
selves, a chance to be CO~lljl\:ti- explained the risks and bene- pill - because everyone who do to surpass their s4perhero
' live,' said one NFL foot6aii fits, and let the players make wants the syringes and pills parents?
could have them c..... but in
(Joan Ryan is a columnist
. coach who works in the Bay informed choices?
Area. 'We've solr;l - ~m th.e
Also, if safety were so much . their own talent and hard · for the San Francisco
,
Chr(micle. .Send commems to
dream (of playing pro football) of a concern, wouldn't we stop w&lt;;&gt;rk. ·
In his State of the ·Union her in care of this newspaper
and then tell them if only '!~ley " pumping football players .full
were 20 or .30 pounds hea~6;, of cortisone and painkillers on address, President Bush devot- · or send her e·mail at joanthey might ~e it. So i( the sidelines so they can play · edseverallines to what he per· ryan@sfchronicle.com)

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THE
DAILY
SENTINEL

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C IN CtNNATl

Sentinel

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we

Is .it time for sports to accept steroids?

c

MORGANTOWN- AP. A
Michigan girl escaped from&lt;
man she said held her agains'
her will during the weekenc
RACINE -· Gerald E. Hendricks, 51, of Racine, passed
at the Lakeview Golf Resorr
away at 10:40 a.m. Fnday, Feb. 20, 2004 in the Wake Medical
and Spa.
Center in Raleigh, N. C.
J he 13-year-old girl frotr
Born on Oct . 20, I 952 in Mason, W. Va., he was the son of
Pontiac. Mich ., had beer
the late Floyd Eugene and Doris Irene Stobart Hendricks. He
missing since Thursday wher
was an electrician and a member of the Racine First Baptist
her family received a teJe.
Church.
·
phone call Sunday.
Surviving are · a daughter, Ginnee Hendricks and a son,
"She said she was callin!
from a pay phone. but sht
Brian (Shelly) Thorla, all of Racine; two sisters, Denise
didn't know where she was,'
(Randy) Davis of S~ewart, and Crystal (James) Pullins of .
said Cpl. AI Hawk in s of the
Torch ; a brother, Joe Hendricks, Norfolk, Va.; a special aunt,
Monongalia County sheriff!
Nondus Hendricks of Racine and several other aunts and
department.
uncles.
Mi chael K. Wiedenbein
In addition his parents, he was preceded in death by two
48,
of Columbus. Ohio
sons, Christopher Matthew Thorla in April, 1976, and
was arrested Sunday anc
Christopher Corey Hendricks on Nov. 25, 1995.
c harged with abduction
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 25,
kidnapping or co ncealin g '·
in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Officiating will be
. child . which is a felony
Rev. Rick Rule. Interment will be in the Letart Falls
~(j un ty
Magistrute Alar
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 9
Lindamood
'e
p.m . Tuesday. Memorial contributions may be made to the Michael K. Wiedenbein of Columbus, Ohio, seated, speaks with Cpl. AI Hawkins of the Wiedenbein 's
bail
a
family, c/o Cremeen s Funeral Home, P. 0. Box 323, Racine, Monongalia County Sheriff's Department after he was arrested in Morgantown, W.Va . $500.000.
Ohio 45771.
Hawkins said Wiedenbeir
Wiedenbe in was arrested or: charges of abduction, kidnapping, and concealing a child at
and
the girl had been at tht
Lakeview resort near Morgantown. The Michigan teen, who ·had been missing since Thursday,
said she escaped from Wiedenbein during the weekend at the Lakeview Golf Resort and Spa. West Virginia resort ne&lt;it
Morgantown since Frida)
(AP Photo)
morning . He said she wasn'
hurt but was under emotiona
the candidates including for- strain.
mer sheriff Ji.m Soulsby and
"She was afraid to leavt
KEEPING
long-time deputy Robert him.'' Hawkins said. "Wt
Beegle, though neither was don't know for sure whethe1
from PageA1
MEIGS
POMEROY - A Mardi Gras dinner will be held Tuesday at
quite certain who they would· she left home against her will
the Senior Citizens Center. The traditional meal will include
be voting for if they could We're still working on that."
jambalaya, cole slaw and king cake prepared by the Center's
The g irl's di scovered the vote. Speaking like two wellown Louisiana staff member, Theresa Marcinko. Serving will
,Dear Abby column, ldng a connected citizens. both girls
be from 4 to 4:45 p.m.
staple with readers for more knew. of the layoffs the sherEmail social news,
decades than these childreA itT's department has l'afed in
PROUD TO
engagement
the past year.
h&lt;lVe been alive.
wedding or anniversary
township trustees trans"The news paper is very
At first glance, it looked
BE A PART
formed the vision for a safer
announcements and
like a lot of the students had informati ve when it comes tu
community into reality. The
politics ,"
said
never picked up a newspaper local
photos to:
truck
replaces
an
old
pumper
Patterson.
before
·
but
appearances
from Page A1
news@mYrJoilysentinel.com
can be deceivin g. · Katey
Fish.e r said newspapers
truck that has been in service
since 1972.
·
Patterson
and
Kaitlyn help students with their
"Council
members,
purchase of the truck.
Matson are two very spelling. vocabulary usage.
THE
"This is state of the art trustees the members of the
informed students who prob- and writing ski lb - lessons
DAILY
equipment which will better fire department had a vision
ably know more about Meigs that can be very useful on
provide for the security of the and a goal to replace the old
County than some adults proficiency tests.
SENTINEL
" I hope we have taught
residents in our fire protec- pumper truck which was over
because they read the new s30
years
old,"
said
Spencer.
them
that there are other
paper at home.
·
tion area," said David
SUBSCRIBE
Neigler, Racine Fire Chief.
The fire truck will compliWhen asked about the means of hands-on learning
SUI3SCR ti3 E TODAY
TODAY
· David Spencer, Racine ment a relatively new fire staupcomiilg primary for Mei gs than o.ur textbooks." she saiJ .
1
)9 2 - 2155
?92
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155
Clerk-Treasurer, said cooper- tion which was built five
County Sheriff, both gi rls "The Dailr Sentinel is an allation between the village and short years ago.
were familiar with many of around ed.ucational product."

COUNTY
INFORMED

rnust ,try. Certainly. the lirst
thing to do is for Bremer -.
and the Ameri can people - to
be prepared 10 veto a shariabased constitution in Iraq.
I Diu11a ltht is ll mi111111Jist
fiJI' Tlw Hi1.&lt;hingtnn Times.
She call he cnn/1/Citd rici

~"'Tl\t

be less lthan 300 words. All letters are subject to

Missing Michigan teen found in W.Va.; Ohio man charged

Mardi Gras dinner planned

=

Letters to the editor ar~ welcome. They should

Obituaries

Local Briefs

----

lro

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Gerald E. Hendricks

•

LETTERS
THE
· EDITOR

Monday, February 23, 2004

.-

the winners pf the various
·
contests
The winners were:
Welding - B. J. Mamhout,
first; Adam Johnson, second;
Ben Collins, third; and Joe
Howard, fourth.
Electronics Kenny
Carsey, first; and Phillip
Murdock, second.
Cosmetology
Beth
Landers, first ; Jackie Gloyd,
second, and Amanda Hoyt,
third.
· Nursing - Basic health
care skills, Jennifer Harris ;
nursing assistant, Melissa
Richmond; first aid CPR ,
Lindsey Jeffers; · health
knowledge bowl. Nicole
McDaniel, Amanda Priddy.
Jessica Blaettnar, and Holley
Williams.
Students of Eastern, Mei~s
and Southern are enrolled m
the tech prep programs at the
Meigs High School Center.

Melissa Richmond
Nursing assistant

Veterans
from Page At
gift was a joke book.
"I irritated everyone with
that book ," he said, "but it
kept us occupied.''
In the YoungstowQ area,
Army 1st Lt. Jeremy James
visited fourth-graders who
had adopted hi)ll at SS .
Mary and Joseph School in
Newton Falls. Teacher Ann
Cicero's students heard the
hometown native was stationed in Baghdad, so they
decided to send him letters,
,
pictures and packages.
Ja·mes
explained
the
weapons he used, the trai~­
ing involved and the condttions troops endured .
Receivin~ letters and· gifts
from, \he students meant a

Kenny Carsey, left, took first in the electronics contest with
Philliip Murdock placing second.
The winning team from the nursing class in th e health know~
edge bowl, left to right, were Nicole McDaniel, Amanda Pnddy,
Jessica Blaettnar, and Ho lley Williams.

Kenny Carsey demonstrates his skills in electronics at the
annual VICA competition at Meigs High School. This weekend
' he will compete i~ the regional skills olympic.
lot to him and his unit, he
said. "It was nice. Jt helped
bring back morale."
The class devoted a bulletin
board to Jwres, with a map
statred with th!ir location and his.

Winners in the welding VICA competition were fi
through
fourth, B. J. Marnhout, Adam John son . Ben Collins. and Joe
Howard.

"They were excited to
meet him in person ," Cicero
said. "They see so much of
the war on TV. It 's been a
way for them to understand
what is happening."

0 Ll
on the number of Bingo
Cards you can play.
Cards in your Sunday, •
February 29, 2004 paper

Lindsey Jeffers.
First aid CPR

Jenn ifer Harris
Basic health care skills

Weare

wtli·~
th~PGallipolis s

50·60% OH

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ShJrewide

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FINE jEWELRY

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'

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•

· PageA6

OHIO

The
Daily Sentinel
'
.

Scoreboard,~ 82

Monday, February 23, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Western Kentucky downs Marshall, Page 86
Pittsburgh tops WVU, Page 86,

Renovation gives Taft Museum .of Art a new ll!ok ·
.
\· '

anneI

Monday, February 23
Morning (7:00am-Noon)
30 - 43 E 5 mph
Expect a cloudy morning.
Temperatures will rise to 43
with · today's low of 30
occurring around 6:00am.
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the east.
Afternoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 40 - 48 E 5 mph
It should continue to be
doudy. Temperatures will

rise from 45 early afternoon
to the high for the day of
48 at 3:00pm as they drop
back down to 40 later this
afternoon. Winds will be 5
MPH from the. east
Evening
(7:00pmMidnight) 34 - 39 E-NE 5
mph
It should remain cloudy.
There is a slight chance of
rain. Temperatures will hold
steady around 36. Winds
will be 5 MPH from the

east turning from the northeast as the evening progresses.
Overnight
(1:OOam35 E-NE 5
6:00am) 33
mph
It will remain cloudy.
There is a good chance we
could see some rain .
Temperatures will linger at
34. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the east turning from·
the
northeast
as
the
overnight progresses.

CINCINNATI (AP) The
paintings
by
Rembrandt, Whistler, Turner
and Corot soon will return
to ·their more spacious
home, along with the collectioils of Limoges enamels,
antique
European
watches
and
Chinese
ceramrcs.
A new wing at the Taft
Museum of Art reflects its
19th-century stately architecture while doubling its
size to 40,000 square feet .
The $23 million renovation adds a gallery for temporary exhibits , lecture hall,
studio classroom, lobby and
parking garage. ·
The galleries have been
restored and redecorated to
reflect the Taft's past as a
private home dating to
1820, and new lighting and
heating and cooling systems
are meant to better display
and protect the collection.
The grant reopening is May
15.
The museum overlooking
the Ohio River has been
closed since November
200 I for the makeover that
was extended while museum officials raised more
mooey for the project.
The permanent collection
has been in storage, with
. some of the masterpieces
on loan to museums in Los
Angeles, New York City,
Minneapolis and Seattle.
Nearly I00 works were dis-·
played for a year at the
Cincinnati Art Museum.
"The gallery will allow us
to. have much better access·
to a variety of exhibitions
which were previously just
too big for us to handle,"
director Phillip Long said.
"It gives us much more

.Prep Standings

=.============~==~========~===============

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red, sand and plum. The
wall-to-wall carpeting was
custom made in England
with designs reflecting various periods from the early
19tl\ century to the 1920s.
The windows have been
lined with mesh blinds that
control the amount of light
entering.
The· renewal follows last
year's opening of the new
Contemporary Arts Center
downtown and ·a new
Cincinnati Ar1 Museum wing
dedicated .to regional artists.

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Team
Trimble
Eastern
Southern
Federal Hocking
Miller
ilvaterlord

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9-1
8-2
6-4
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0-10

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!lliDn
Chesapeake
Rock Hill
River Valley·
South Point
·· Coal Grove
Fairland

QllQ Al.l.
8-2
6-4
6-4
5-5
3-7
2-B

Team .

13-7
10-9
12-1 o
2-13
2-18

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Team
Warren
Jackson
Marietta
Logan
Gallla Academy
Athens
Point Pleasant

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16-5
13-7
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Belpre
Alexander
Meigs
Vinton County
Nelsonville-York
Wellston

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13·8
12-9
7-14
5-15
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Trimble
10-0 19-1
Eastern
6-4 15-6
Waterlord
6-4 11-10
Southern
5·5 15-6
Federal Hocking 3·7 9-13
Miller '-IIW ..,...,.. _,....
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Chesapeake
Fairland
Rock Hill
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5-5
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1Q-10
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7-13
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Team
Oak Hilt
Wahama
Hannan
Ohio Valley Christian
South Gallia

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13-7
12-8
2-19

SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

•
McARTHUR - Winning their
third straight sectional title , the
Southern Lady Tornadoes sank the
Symmes Valley Viking's ship in a
huge way, 71-37, Saturday afternoon
in the Division IV Southeast sectional at Vinton County High SchooL
Southern (15-6) earned the right to
play Whiteoak (14-7) 8 p.m.,
Wednesday at Wellston High SchooL
The two schools will fight for the
right to play in the District
Championship against the Trimble-

Prep schedule
Today's games
Boyo Slct!onal
at Logen

•
~lver Valley

vs.

New lelCington. 7 p .m.

Tuooday'o

g~m11

Boyo IIOIO!cetboll
Dhio Valley
Christian .

Christian
·

at

Grace

Wayne at Point Pleasant
~uffalo at Wahama
Wirt Qlunty at Hannan

Boyo Soct!onal
•
otLogon
Qallla Academy vs. Warren, 6:15 p.m.
~elgs

11s. Fairfield Unioo, a p.m.

Wednoodoy, February 25
Boyo lluk-11

•

Boyo Slctlonol
at Logan

ytnton County vs. RVINL winner. 6:15

p.m.
Olrla Baoketboll

.
South em
p.m. .

Gl~l

Dloti'Ict

It -Wellaton

vs. ClayiWhlteoakNalley, 8

•

..
Thundey, Febru1ry 28
Boyl BHkllblll
•
iootnt Pleasant at Roane County
· Olrto Ball&lt;atbol
Dletrlct Tournament pmea
ot Chlll!cotho H.S.

Western Latham winner.
If going to Vegas, Southern's number would have to be a three. Besides
the third sectional crown, the win
also marked the third straight 15-plus
win season for the Lady 'Does, and
gave them the right to play Whiteoak
for the third straight time. Coach
Scott Wolfe hopes the third time is a
charm.
Southern Coach Scott Wolfe said,
"The girls came ready to play today.
Symmes Valley had some potential,
and if given a chance could have
made it a different ball game . Our

defense took them out of their game
plan, we never ever let them
(Symmes) in it. The girl s deserve all
the credit in the world and I am proud
of their effort.
"My hat is off to thi s ball club.
After losing 48 points from the lineup last sea on due to grad uation. we
expected to rebuild this season . We
knew we had a good nucleus, but we
also knew we had our work cut out
for us. To win 15 games and win the
sectional is 4uite an honor. The girls
believe now and our work isn't done.
Hey. I don't wanl lhe next one io be

the last one."
,·
Throu gh 20 garnes Katie Sayre
held a 17.6 average. Saturday she
topped that mark wilh a solid 21
point effort. Sayre also grabbed six
rebounds, while senior sidekicks
Ashley Dunn and Deana Pullins
brought home identical 12 point tallies. Dunn also had three blocks and
seven rebounds. while Pullins and
Sayre each had live thefts apiece .
Junior Ashley Roush added nine
points. Je ssica Hill four, Brooke
Please see Southem, B2

Buckeyes down Hoosiers

I

I'
I

BLOOMINGTON, Ind.
(AP) - Indiana coach
Mike Davis wasn't surprised how Ohio State
muscled his team inside.
After all, it's happened
every time the Hoosiers
.have stepped on the floor
lately.
·
Velimir
Radinovic
scored a career-high 23
points and JJ. Sullinger
hit a base11ne jumper with
17 seconds to play to lift
Ohio State'to a 59-56 win
over Indiana on Saturday,
dealing the Hoosiers their
fourth straight loss at
home.
"We haven't stopped
anyone in the paint all
year,"
Davis
said.
"Everybody we play will
have a career night against
us in the post."
A.J. Moye had a chance
to put the Hoosiers ahead,
but his 3-pointer from the
top of the key was off the
mark, and Terence Dials
corralled the rebound and
hit one free throw.
Bracey Wright then
missed a desperation
heave from halfcourt at the
buzzer for the Hoosiers,
who have lost six of their
last seven and were booed
by the home crowd as time
ran out
"Here it's so hard when
you lose," Davis said. "It's
like the end of the world
with every loss."
Radinovic scored 19 in
the second half. He added
I0 rebounds and Dials had
16 points and 10 rebounds
for the Buckeyes ( 12-13,
4-8 Big_Ten), who snapped
a thre~-game losing streak
- a_ll by double-figure
margms.
"We were just playing
confidently out there and
me and Terence were play.
ing well off each other and Ohio State's Velimir Radinovic puts up a shot between Indiana's Pat Ewing Jr., left. and
we were able to get some George Leach in the second half in Bloomington. Ind ., Saturday. Oh io State won, 59-56.
I
Radinovic firished with a team-high 23 points. (AP)
Please see OSU, Btl

Redwomen ·end season
with five-ganle losing skid
STAFF REPORT

COLUMBUS - For the
third consecutive season, the
University of Rio Grande
Red,women basketball team
ended their season on the
Alumni Hall floor with a
defeat to Ohio Dominican. ·
The Panthers rolled by the
Redwomen, 85-58, on
Saturday
afternoon.
Rio Grande
(18-!3, 7_11
AMC South) fell behind IO-O
before finally scoring 3:35 into
the game on a lay-up by soph&lt;&gt;more guard Marcia Smoot
Ohio Dominican ( 18-8,
13-5 AMC South) pushed
the lead to '20-6 at the 12:20
mark Of th'e first half. The
lead stayed at 14-points (2612) with 8:27 remaining.
Smoot hit a couple of baskets to help bring the
Red women to within eight
points ·(26-18) at the 6:04
mark. Rio would get as
close as seven points (2922) with 2:47 on the clock.
ODU held a 42-31 lead at
the half.
The second half, the Lady
\:

Panthers turned the game into
a rout with outstanding shooting and precision on.offense.
Smoot led the Redwomen
in scoring with 15 points.
She also pulled down five
rebounds. Junior forward
Alkia Fountain collected her
12th double-double of the
season with II points and 15
rebounds. Sophomore forward Jessica Worwell
scored , a career-high, 10
points off the bench.
Ohio Dominican placed
four players in double figures
led by Sarah Wheeler's 22
points ( 16 in the second hall).
Wheeler was lethal from long
range as she buried six threepointers in 10 attempts.
Becky Richter added 21
paints (15 in the first halt)
and five blocked shots.
Nicole Stone tossed in 20
points ( 11 in the second halt)
and Amanda Lewis chipped
in 14 points and dished out, a
game-high, nine assists.
Jackson High School graduate Brandy Caldwell scored
six points, dished out' six
assists and had !'our steals.

Rio Grande shot 40 percent (26-of-65) from the
floor and 67 percent (6-of9) from the free throw line.
The Red women came up
empty from three-point land
(0-for-8).
· . Ohio Dominican blistered
the nets at 53 percent (31of-58), 50 percent (8-of-16)
from beyond the arc and 88
percent (15 -of-17) from the
charity stripe.
Rio Grande out-rebounded the Lady Panthers, 35-34
with a 14-7 edge on the
offensive glass.
Both teams posted high
turnover numbers as Rio
Grande committed 28
turnovers while ODU had
21 miscues.
Ohio Dominican swept
the season series from the
Red women with the vi,ctory.
Rio Grande ends the season with a live-game losing
streak
while
Ohio
Dominican heads into the
American
Mideast
Conference Tournament on
the strength of a seven-game
winning streak ;

~)

'·

- - .·-

•

Rio closes
out regular
season with
loss at ODU
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

COLUMBUS - Saturday
marked the end of tough
week for NAJA Division II
No. 15 Rio Grande as they
lost for the second time this
week with a 70-56 defeat at
the hands of Ohio Dominican
at Alumni Hall in American
Mideast Conference Men's
Basketball action.
Rio Grande (19-10, 13-5
AMC South) fell behind 7-2 in
the opening mome nt~ of the
game. The Redmen tied it at 7-7
and then it was all Ohio
Dominican a~ the Panthers built
a I5-point (38-23) halftime lead.
The lead went as high as 18 ..
on the first Panther possession of the second' half. Rio
then put together its best span
of baskeiball of the afternoon
to cut the deficit to seven
points midway through the
second 20 minutes.
Ohio Dominican ( 17-15. 117 AMC South) answered every
Rio Grande challenge as they
close out the regular season
with four consecutive wins.
Rio Grande was led by
senior
swingman
Seth
Deerfield with 14 points and
junior forward Matt Simpson
added II points. Simpson also
hauled down seven rebmmds
while Deertield had six.
Junior
center
Sean.
Plummer
· topped
the
rebounding chart for the
Redmen .with eight.
ODU had three players in
double ligures. Micah Stith led
the Panthers with 14 points and
eight caroms. Haze Massey
added II points off the bench
(nine in the first half) and Mike
Fiebig tossed in I0 points.
Jeremy Renner scored nine
points and posted. a game-high,
13 rebounds and live assists.
Rio shot 38.5 percent (20-of52) from the tield. 23.5 percent
(4-of-17) from the_three-point
arc and 86 percent (12-of-14)
from the free throw line.
Ohio Dominican countered
with 4i percent (27 -of-66)
from the tloor. 36 percent (9of-25) from beyond the arc
and 58 perce nt (7-of-12)
from the foul line.
Rio did manage Ia win the
rebound
battle,
42-34,
although.ODU ,had o11e more
olfensi ve bound ( 13-12) than
the Redmen. Turnovers
played a significant role in the
outcome of the game as Rio
committed 18 turnovers to
only eight for the Panthers.
Ohio Dominican salvaged
one victory against the Redmen
this season in three contests.
The Redmen go stumbling
into the post-season with backto-back losses and three road
losses in the last four away
from the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Gnmde will have to wait
and see what the result of Mount
Vemon Nazarene/Malone game J
which will determine whether
the Redmen will have the top
seed in the South Division in the
AMC Tournament beginning on
Tuesday.
· Rio will play host to a first
round game 7:30 p.m.,
Tuesday night at the Newt
Oliver Arena.

.

SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Galtla Academy vs. Sheridan

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12-8
7-12
9-11
9-10
6-14

ALL

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Hannan
Ohio Valley Christian
Wahama
Oak Hilt

:
ot Wollllon H.S.
Eostom ve. Paint Yalloy

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PROUD TO BEA
PART OF YOUR LIFE.

the 1099~8 forms for stock sales. days before the ex-dividend date,
Write the date you purchased the the first day a stockholder .would
stock or other asset on the form. · · &lt;hot qualify for that dividend payNeed ~oney to
· These few steps wiH put all ,tn~. ):nent.. Si!;Jce the holding period
pay Taxes?
information you need at your fin- ·starts the ·day after the purchase
gertips when turning yeur taxes date, a stock bought on the day
VIsit the Pr~blem
over to a preparer or when filling before the ex-dividend date cannot
Solvers!!
out the IRS Schedule D, Capital meet the more-than-60 day
Quick decisions!!
Gains and Losses.
requirement for the first dividend
Walk out with
'·It will save you a lot tf time · payment to qualify for the lower
and grief," Perlman said. "It'll tax rate. Generally, a buyer can
your Check!!
s.ave the tax professional time and obtain the ex-dividend date from a
grief, and it could even save you brokerage or a com·pany's investor
money."
relations services.
74o-99:!-1771
To help taxpayers navigate the
There's one wrinkle for margin
B&amp;o-866-1771
new rates for capital gains and account holders whose brokerages
dividends, the IRS revised its temporarily lend their stock tooth124 West ~aln Street
forms that report-earnings in each ers, a practice common among
Pomeroy,
category.
brokers. Any dividends paid out
The new forms detailing infpr- during the time the stock is on ·' - - - - - - - - - . , . .
mation reported by financial insti- loan go to the borrowers, who then
Taxes
tutions and brokers, destined for reimburse the stock owners. The
stressing you out?
taxpayers in January, break out the payments received by the stock
Skip the two aspirin
amount of capital gains reported owners technically aren't cliviand call us in the
before and after the May 6 date the dends. They're known as a· "pamorning.
tax rates changed.
yments in lieu of dividends," and
Capital gains qualify for the new they're not eligible for the lower
We're tax profes!l)onals for a •
reason. No matter how complica!ed
15 percent maximum rate if the rate.
your tax situa!lon, you can rest
asset was held for more than a
This year, recognizing that some
assured that your return will be
year and sold on or after May 6, brokers may need more time to done right. It's just another part of
the H&amp;R Block Advantage. Cai12003. Capital gains would be adapt to the new law, the IRS is 800-HRBLOCK
or visit hrblock.com
taxed at a maximum of 20 percent letting taxpayers who receive
if the asset was held more than one Forms 1099-DIV erroneously
HS.R BLOCK
year·and sold before May 6, 2003. reporting such payments as diviCapital gains on assets held one dend income to treat them as divi618 East Main St.
year or less are taxed at ordinary dends, unless the taxpayer'knows
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
.992-6674
income tax rates.
that they are noi actual dividends.
Hours:
Mon-Frl
9 to 6; Sat. 9 to 5
New tax forms also sho~ the
All of these complications overOther Hours by Appointment
total dividends received during the lap when it comes to mutual
•
year and .document the amount funds, which may report a mix of
declared qualified for purposes of capital gain distributions,' clivithe new tax structure. Dividends dends and interest payments.
are "qualified dividends" if paid Taxpayers whose only gains or
by U.S. corporations and certain lossesare the capital gain distribuforeign corporations.
tions from their mutual funds may
Because the tax rates for divi- avoid Schedule D entirely by
dends were made retroactive to using a special worksheet in the
Jan. 1, 2003, taxpayers avoid the Form 1040 or 1040A i!lstruction
confusion of a midyear rate books. The IRS has revised this
change. But those who purchased worksheet to include the lower tax
dividena-paying stocks during the · rates on qualified dividends.
year will have to double check that
In all of these cases, taxpayers
they held the stock for the appro- can expect to rely heavily on
priate amount of time to qualify. information provided by their bro.for the lower rate.
kers and financial institutions, ·o r
To be eligible for the lower rate, in IRS Publication 550, still being
the shareholder must hold the updated. Taxpayers should keep
stock for more than 60 da,ys during good recon;ls themselves.
~~~tf~~~·;;'~t::.the 120-day period that began 60
·

AVAilABLE NOW AT. ..

n'Q ALL

Vinton County
Alexander
Belpre
Meigs
Wellston
Nelsonville-York

SEOAL

Wf\SHINGTON
(AP)
Investors with capital gain ~ or
dividend income from stocks, 'real
estate and other assets can expect.,
new benefits from lower tax rates,
but they're also bound to spend
more time poring over paperwork
to calculate thq$e savings.
The benefits 'flow from new tax
rates enacted in May, which
reduced the rates on capital gains
from 20 percent and 10 percent to
15 percent and 5 percent. The
changes took effect May 6.
.
Dividends, previously taxed at
the investor's ordinary income tax
rate, can also qualify for the 15
. percent and 5 percent capital gains
rates as of. Jan. I, · 2003. The
change can mean as much as a 20
percentage point reduction in the
dividend tax rate for wealthier
taxpayers.
"That's a huge difference," said
Jackie Perlman, senior tax
research analyst at H&amp;R Block.
The new tax rates add complications to this year's calculations for
two main reasons. First, the capital
gains tax rate changed midyear. so
multiple rates apply depending
when the asset was sold. Second,
not all dividends qualify for the
reduced rate, and the total amount
of those that qualify for the lowered rate may have to be reported
on the ·s chedule for capital gains
and losses.
Advisers recommend that taxpayers who are about to wade into
a pile of paperwork' take a few
minutes to get organized. "The
first thing I would do is son out all
of your 1099s," Perlman said.
Separate the 1099-DIV forms. for
dividends and distributions from

• ACCOUNT BALANCES
• TRANSACTION DETAILS
• TRANSFER FUNDS•
• MAKE LOAN PAYMENTS•
•BALANCE CHECKBOOK

15-5 .
14-6
13-7
9-11
1G-10
8-12
4-16

TVC
Ohio Division

Museum director Phillip. Long stands in the new main entrance
of the Taft Museum of Art in Cincinnati. A new wing at the
museum reflects its 19th-century stately architecture while
doubling its size to 40,000 - square feet. (AP Photo(The
Cinncinati Post, Terry Duennes)
flexibility. "
He also expects to double
the museum's yearly attendance from its recent
50,000 visitors a year.
Newspaper
publisher
Charles Taft, half brother of
President William Howard
Taft, and his wife lived in
the home from 1873 until
their deaths.
The Tafts acquired most
of the art in the early 20th
century. They willed the
home and 690-piece collec- .
tion to the city, which con- ·
verted the building and
opened the museum to the
public in 1932, the year
after Mrs. Taft's death.
The remodeling is meant
to recapture the home 's
look when the couple lived
there. The main floor gal·
leries have been repainted
in soft green, citron, dark

10-2
9-3
8-4
5-7
4-B
4-8
2-10

---

Taxes: A Puzzle for Investors

TOLL FREE

SEQ ALL

Marietta
Gallia Academy
Logan
Jackson
Athens
Warren
Point Pleasant

Southern sinks Vikings to win third straight sectional
STAFF REPORT

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~onday,February23,2004

Butler
downs OU
INDIANAPOLIS (A P)
- · Bruce Horan scored
five of his 14 points in the
closing moments of overtime to lead Butler over
Ohio 64-63 Saturday.
Horan hit a 3-pointer to
give the Bulldogs (13- 12)
a 59-56 lead with 2:30
remaining and t\)'O t'ree
throws to make it 64-60
with 15 seconds to play.
The Bobcats (9-16)
pulled within one on
Terren Harbut's 3-pointer
· with two seconds left. but
the Bulldogs held on to
win .
Duane Lightfoot added
14 points, and Mike
Monserez qnd Avery
Sheets itdded I0 each for
Butler.
Javion Harris led Ohio
with 16 points, while
Harbut added 15 and
Thomas Stevens had II.
Ohio turned a IS-point
deficit ·into a 54-49 lead
with 23 seconds left in regulation. Butler lied it when
Monserez made a 3-point er with 15 seconds remaining and tipped in a mi ssed
shot with two seconds left.

'

'

�PageB2

SCOREB.O ARD

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 23, 2004 .

www.mydallysentinel.com

Monday, February 23, 2004

m;rthune - Sentinel - l\egigter
CLASSIFIED

,.

Prep basketball
Gl~l Dlvlalon IV Si&lt;:llonal
at VInton County High SChool

Southern 71 , Symmes Valley 37
SymmeS Valley
S&lt;luthern

7 6 16 6 19 18 14 20 -

37
71

SYMMES VALLEY - Rebecca Capper 1
Amanda Provens o o-1 O, Brrnany
Wilson 4 2· 2 10. Jessica Neal
0,

o-o 2,

o o-o

.Kayla Saunders 0 Q. Q.Q, Megan Coomes- 1
0.1 2, Leslie Floyd 3 7- 10 13. Ashley
Wilson 1 0·0 2, Brigette Thompson 3 1· 1 7,
Tiffany Bryant 0 1-2 1. Kayta McCarty 0 00 0. TOTALS -

13 11-17 37.

SOUTHERN -Ashley Dunn 5 2-2 12,
Jessica Hill 2 0-0 4, Deana Pullins 4 4-6
12, Katie Sayre 10 1-3 21 , Susan Brauer 1
1-2 3, Brooke Kiser 1 2-2 4. Joanne
Pickens 0 0-0 0, Ashley Roush 4 0·0 9.
Knstima W illii'\ms 0 1-2 1 Kasie Sellers 1

0-0 3, Linda Eddy 0 0-0 0, JorQan Neigler 0
0.0 0, Bethany Vance 1 o-o 2 Mallory H11i
0 0-0 0. TOTALS - 28 11-17 71 .
3-point goats - SV 0 , Southern 2 (Roush,
Sellers)

Ohio High School Girls Basketball
Salurday's Results
Tournament
DIVISION I
Barberlon 78, Kent Roosevelt 17
Beavercreek 56 . W. Carrollton 22
Berea 63 , Parma Val ley Forge 46
Brunsw1ck 48. Parma Normandy 36
Can. GlenOak 45, Youngs. Austin town·
FilCh 3 1
Cm. Harrison 73. Gin. Oak Hill s 64
Cin McAuley 64, L1berty Twp Lak.ota E 25
Gin Mercy 52. Milford 32
Cin Sycamore 64 , Cin. Western Hills 28
Cle Coll1'nwood 42. Willoughby S. 40.
Cle. Hts. 58, S. Euclid- Lyndh~.lfst Bru sh 56
Cle S . 66, Macedonia Nordonia 63
Day. Trotwood- Madison 58. Piqua 46
Fai rfield 37, Gin . Winton Woods 36
Garfield Hi s 62. Bedford 49
Greensburg Green 47 , Akr. Garfield 30
Kettering Fairmont 50, Day. Our. bar 45
Medina 60, Cle. Rhodes 43
Mentor 65, Ashtabula Lake side 22
Parma Padua 53. Parma Sr. 46
Princeton 68, Amelia 19
W. ChP.ster Lakota W 58. C1n. Anderson
49
Wprren Hard tng 63 , Massillon Washington
57
DIVISION II
Alliance 35. Akr. E. 21
Avon 59, Olms ted Falls 51
CanEf,l Winche ster 65, Cols. Centenmal 52
Chagrin Falls 27, Cle O range 24
'Chillicothe Unioto 52, Circleville Logan
Elm 47
Gin. McNicholas 81 , Ctn. Indian Hill45
Cin. Purcell-Marian 49, New Richmond 42 ,
OT
Gals. Bexley 63. Ashville Te ays Valley 23
Cols. De Sales 45, Utica 26
Gals. Eastmoor 79, Cols. Hamilton Twp. 25
Cortland Lakev1ew 62, Painesville Harvey
53
Garfield Hts. Trin ity 79. Medina Highland
32
G eneva 36. Chardon NDCL 35
Goshen 55, Cin. Taft 52
Granvtlle 79, Cols. Beechcrofl 72
Jackson 44, Waverly 31
Lewi Stown Indian Lake 32, Ttpp C1ty
Tippecanoe 25
london 64, Hebron Lakewood sa
LOUISVIlle 41 , Can. Timken 38
Med ina Buckeye 49, Fairview Park
Fairview 45
Mentor Lake Cath . 53, Ashtabu la
Edgewood 37

Mogadore Field 75, Akr. Buchtel 24
Navarre Fa lr]ess 39, Wooster Triway 28
New Albany 47, Sunbury Big Walnut 30
Oberl 1n Fire!ands 46 , Lorain Brookside 18
Olentangy Liberty 50, Newark Lick1ng
Valley 48. OT
Sidney 56, Urbana 52
Spring Greenan 56, St. Paris Graham 35
Spring. Kenton Ridge 60. Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 41
St. Bernard Roger Bacon 64, N . Bend
Taylor 37
StoWWalsh Jesuit 63. WarrensVille Hts. 31
Thornville Sheridan 59, Greenfield
McClain 2a
Vincent Warren 50, McArthur Vinton
County 32
DIVISION Ill
Bloom-Carroll 45. Johnstown-Monroe 3B
Burton Berksh1re 49, 01Well Grand Valley 20
Chilli cothe Zane Trace 40. Belpre 36
Cle. VASJ 85, Gates Mills Hawken 40
Cols Ready 42, London Madison Plai ns 32
E Palestine 50, M1neral Ridge 39
Hanoverton
United
62,
Campbell
Memorial 11
Heath 54, Manon Pleasa nt 46
Ironton 58, Peebles 39
Middlefield Cardinal 61, Kinsman Badger 58
M11ford Center Fa11banks 49, Uberty Unkln 40
Newark Cath. 65. Fredericktown 16
Oberlin 56, LakewoM St. Augusline 36
Plain Ctty Jonathan Alder 52, Galion
Northmor 22
Sardima Eastern Brown 51 . Chesapeake 40
W. Jefferson 66, Grandview 15
Wellington 33 . Cle . Max Hayes 21
Williamsport Westfall 47. Chillicothe
Hunt1ngton Ross 43
Worthmgton Chnslla n 77, Cols. School for
Gcrls 37
Youngs. Ursuline 98, N. LimaS. Range 46
DIVISION IV
Beallsville 47, New Matamoras Frontier 37
Bedford Chanel 59, Fa1rpo rt Harbor
Harding 35
Berlin Hiland 66. Bowerston Conotton
Valley 15
Caldwell 64, Bellaire St. John's 51
Card1ngton-Lmcoln 53, Cots Wellington 31
Centerburg 51, Lancaster F1sher Cath. 28
Cin Christian 54. Gin. Summit Country
Day 46
Cin. landmark Christian 58, Lockland 11
Cin Seven Hills 6 1. St. Bernard 34
Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. 4 7, N. Bloomfield
Bloomfield 36
Covi ngton 49, Union City MiSSISSinawa
Valley 24
Danvil le 64, Sug ar Grove Berne Union 38
Day. Jefferson 74 , Newton 37
Delaware Christi an 49, Grove City
Chnsttan 37
Ft. Loramie 72, N. Lewisburg Triad 37
Gahanna Cols. Academy 45, Cols.
Alricentric 42
Houston 55, Spring. Cath. Cent. 28
Howard E. Knmc 37, Marion Cath. 21
Jackson Center 6a, Br8dford 45
Mechanicsburg 45, Troy Christian 44
Mill ersport 63, Cols. Harvest Prep 41
Morral Rcdg'edale 75, Uberty Christian 13
Mowryst,own Whiteoak. 60, Portsmouth
Clay 28
Raci ne Southern 71 , Willow Wood
Symmes Valley 37
Richmond Dale SE 56. Crooksville 21
Richmond Hts. 39, Thompson Ledgemont24
R1dgev ille ChriStian 6 t , Xenia Christian 58
Russia 79, DeGraff Ri verside 35
S. Webster 38, Leesburg Fairfield 36
Shadyside 65, Zanesville Rosecrans 41
Strasburg-,Franktin 56 , Malvern 30
Tuscai'aw-"'s Cent. Cath. 31. Toronto 27
Willoughby Andrews 26, Willoughby Hills
Cornerstone 21
,
Yellow Springs 56, Dayton Miami Valley 46
Regular Season

Southern

follow up goals. Ashley
Roush added a field goal,
Katie Sayre hit two baseline
from Page B1
drivers, and Deana Pullins hit
a lay-i n and foul shot.
Kiser fo ur, Kasie Sellers Southern divvied up the storthree, Susan Brauer three, ing in a balanced fashion and
Bethany .Vance two , and kept up tremendous intensity
Everywhere
Kiistiina Williams one. Not on defense.
scoring but putting forth a Symmes turned they found
good effort were Joanne purple and gold. At the end
Pickens (four steal s), Linda of the tirst round, Southern
Eddy, Jordan Neigler, and led 19"7.
Both clubs hit the bonu s
Mallory Hill.
Leslie Floyd led the early in the second period.
Vikings with 13 points , Southern ca lled off ·the
Brittany Wil so n had 10, press to conserve energy
Brigette Thompson seven, and to also not collect any
two each from Rebecc a more fouls . Southern 's
Capper, Megan Coomes, and offense didn ' t waiver, howAshley Wil son two, and e ve r, as onc:e agam six
'fiffany Bryant one .
players hit the scoring col-.
Southern started out quick- umn . Sayre hit for five, and
ly when Ashley Rou sh Dunn a nd Pullins notched
drilled a three to start th e four each as Southern raced
game on Southern's tirst pos- to a 37-13 halftime advansession·. Brittany Wilson hit a tage.
deuce for a 3-2 swre, but
At the half Sayre had nine,
Southern raced to a 9-2 lead Dunn eight, Pullins seven,
with several steals off the and Rou sh seven. Leslie
press.
Floyd led the Noursemen
Ashley Dunn had a couple with six points at the inter-

Crest line 56, Ashland Crestview 47
HiK School44, Hudson WRA 28
Lakewood 56, Lorain Admiral King 22
Lexington 60. Loudonville 37
Mantua Crestwood 55, Ravenna SE 40
Maple Hts. 62, Lorain SOuthview 61
Metamora Evergreen 42, DeHa 23
Millbury Lake 56, Kansas Lakota 53
Plymouth 78, Att ica Seneca E. 64
S . EuClid Aeg1na 61, Poland Seminary 28
St. Cla irsville 44 , Cambridge 43
Tol. Cent. Cath. 54 , Tol. Bowsher 51
Tiffin COlumbian 77, Lima Sr. 40
Plymouth 77, Attica Seneca E. 64
Napoleon 51 , Sandusky 50
Clyde 77, Sandusky St. Mary's 71
Sandusky Perk1ns 55. Huron 39
Castalia Margarerta 49, Port Clinton 42
Oak Harbor 84, Milan Edison 25

Lorain Catholic 62. Fremont St. Joseph .t8
Loudonville 80, Howard E. Knox 32
Mansfield Chri stian 66, Cardl~on­
Lincoln 64
Mansfield St. Peter's 76, Mansfield
Madison 55
Maple Hts. 77, Wanensville 74
Marion Cath. 73, Danville 48
Marion Harding 61 , Kenton 32
Medina Highland 78. Bart&gt;erton Norton 56
Metamora Evergreen 62, Delta 48
Middleburg Hts. Mldpar1C 35, N. Rklgeville 34
Mogadore Field 62, Peninsula Woodridge 59
MOO!ll Ridgedale 58, Sycamore Mohawk 56
N. Can. Hoover 61 , Can. McKinley 53
N. Olms ted 70, Cle. VASJ 67, OT
Navarre Fairless 54, Can. Cent. Cath. 49
New London 57, Castal ia Margaretta 55
New Washi ngton Buckeye Cent. 49,
Bucyrus 36
Paines~1 tle Harvey 45, Madison 4~
Perry 78 , Newbury 65
Pickerington N. 48, We sterville S. 46
Portsmouth 59, Athens 40
Ravenna SE 70, Garre ttsvi lle Garfield 48
Rootstown 70, Mantua Crestwood 56
Sandusky 69, Norwalk 66
Sandusky Perkins 47, Ashland Crestview 46
Sandusky St Mary's 76, Norwalk St. Paul 73
Shekinah Christian 81, Evangel Christian 57
Spencel'\l ille 67, Fl . Recovery 64
Sprin g. Kenton Ridge 72 , Bellelontaine
Benjamm Logan 46
Sylvania Northview 63. Fremont Ross 59
Tol. Christian 50, Swanton 40
Tontogany Otsego 52, Liberty Center 46
Upper Sandusky 59, Carey 46
Van Buren 62, Old Fort 44
Van Wert 55, Edgerton 41
Vermilion 57, Wf~Wng'ton 48
Versailles 61. Brookville 43
W Jelfe rson 40, Lancaster FISher Cath . 32
W. lafayette Ridgewood 61 . StrasburgFranklin 31
W. Salem NW 55, Apple Creek Waynedale 44
Wadsworth 71 , Tallmadge 59
Warren Harding 80 , Bed ford Chane! 69
Warsaw River View 53, Be1lin Hiland 52
Waynesfield-Goshen 62, McGuffey Upper
Scioto Valley 60
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 89, Tal.
Rogers 86
Windham 64, Atwater Waterloo 63
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 61 , Barnesville SO
Wooster 59, Millersburg W. Holmes 54
Zanesville Rosecrans 59, Zanesville W.
Muskingum 4 t

Ohio High School Boys Basketball
Saturday '• Rnults
Tournament
DIVISION IV
Ansonia 82, Miami Valley 31
Day. Jefferson 45, Cedarville 38
New Madison Tn·V1t1age 64 , .Middletown
Christian 50
P1tsburg Franklm-Monroe 45, Arcanum 40
Tipp C1ty Bethel 46. Ridgeville Christian 39
Xenia
Chnstian
53,
Union
City
Mississinewa Valley 37
Yellow Springs 67, Spnng. Cath. Cent. 39
Regular Sea.son
Akr. SVSM 74, Zanesville 58
Andover" Pymatuning Valley 61, Fairport
Harbor Harding 36
Archbold 68, Napoleon 61
Arlington 72. Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 25
Ashtabula Lakeside 55, Chardon 50
Avon 57, Rocky River 48
Basco-n Hopewell-Loudon 62, Monroeville 41
Beverly Ft. Frye 45, Caldwell 43
Blulfton 62, Havil and Wayne Trace 59, OT
Can. GlenOak 54 , Ausrintown· Fitch 52. OT
Can. Timken 44, Dover 42
Cm N. College Hill 69, Ft. Thomas {Ky.)
Highlands 56
Cin. Tra1l Blazers 73, Grove City Chnst1an 51
Cle. His 79. Bedford 70
Cle. Orange 77, Ri chmond H!s. 41
Cle. Sl. Ignatius 47. Findlay 45
Coldwater 63, Wapakoneta 54
Collins Western Reserve 74. Mansfield
. iemple Christian 50
.
Cols. Brookhaven 68, Cols Independence 65
Convoy Crestview 53, Lima Cent. Cath. 38
Cory·Rawson 11 1, Bettsville 44
Coshocton 35. Magnolia Sandy Valley 46
W.Va. prep basketball ecoree
Delaware Buckeye Val ley 45, Galion
Saturday 's Reautte
q
Glrll
Northmor 31
Berkeley Springs 60, Musselman 55
Delphos Jefferson sa, Lima Temple
Christian 42
' Cameron 39, Clay· Battelle 31
Capital 82, Huntington 70
Delphos St. John's 44, Lima Bath 33
Dublin Coffm{ln 62, Hilliard Davidson 46
Logan 55, Phelps. Ky. 39
Mount de Chantal62, Brooklyn Poly Prep,
E. Liverpool 53, Salem 52
NY. 52
Eastl ake N. 69, Macedonia Nordonia 61
Nitro 72, South Charleston 59
Elmore Woodmere 6 .1. Gibsonburg 34
Petersburg 59, Jefferson 36
Euclid 53, Cle Rhodes 48
Tyler Consolidated 68, St. Marys 55
Ft. Jennings 54. Pandora-Gilboa 24
Gallipolis Gallia 69, Marietta 56
Boyl
Gallipolis Ohio Valley Ch ristian 45, Spring.
Bluefield 69, Princeton 55
.
Emmanuel Christian 32
Ca lhoun 74, Parkersbt.lt] Catholic 69
Cameron 61 , Valley Wetzel 31
Greenwich S. Cent. 60, Milan Edison 54
Jeromesville Hillsdale 59, lucas 56, OT
Gateway Christian 63, Victory Baptist 43
Lakes1de Danbury 58, Fostoria St.
Greenbrier We st 64, Mount Hope 55
Hedgesville 67, East Fairmont 3g.
Wendel1n 41
Hundred 66, Clay-Battelle 61
Lakewood St Edward 74, Shaker Hts. 58
Huntington 82; South Charleston 78, OT
Lancaster 87. Cle. John Marshall 50
.
Unsly 82, ~ercersburg , Pa. 71
Lewistown lnd1an Lake ~', N. Lewisburg
Madonna 50, Notre Dame 38
Tread 54
Musselman 56, Frankfort 43
Lima Perry 41, Botkins 40
Lema Shawnee 107, Greenv111e 68
Oak Glen 58, Tyler Consolidated 57
Oak Hill 78, Richwood SO
Lodi Cloverleaf 71, C reston Norwayne 62
Logan 52 , Jac:kson 39
Paden City 66, Trinity 64
Parkersburg South 72. Wheeling Park 56
London Madison Plains 47, Plain City
PikeView 81 , Herbert Hoover 60
Jonathan Alder 45
Preston 61 . Buckhannon-Upshur 30
Lorain Cath. 52. Fremont St. Joseph 46

mission and Brittany Wilson six straight points in the
run.
had four.
"At least twice this season,
Southern _iook no prisoners
we played a sirong first half, in the tina! round as Sayre
then squandered the lead in added six points early,
the second half," said Wolfe. Pullins added three, and Hill,
"I challenged the girl~ at half- Dunn and Kiser each notched
time to play just as hard the two. Additionally, reserve
second half. We decided to guards Bethany Vance, a ·
play as if the score was· 0-0. freshman, and sophomore
We talked about playing to Kasie Sellers hit a two point
win, and stressed the impor- _goal and a three point goal
tance of riot losing the respectively. The result was a
mome ntum we had going 71-37 win.
. During the final stages of
into the intermission."
Southern ca me out and the final round, Wolfe
went ri ght to work as pulled his ·seniors to get
a
well-deserved
Ashley Roush g rabbe~ the them
defensive rebound and went applause as they came off
coast-to-coast for the score. the floor. Wolfe added, "Our
Sayre notched six quick seniors provided great leadpoints, Dunn had a 'follow- ership tonight. They led in
up jumper to give Soutbern spirit and by example .
a 47-17 advantage .. After · Wherever we go they get
Pullin,s hit a bang-bang lay- complimented on their husin, Southern mass substitut- tle. They give it everything
ed and the -Vikings went on they have. We can't overa 14-2 run to end the period look Whiteoak · by any
trailing' 51-31.
Brauer means, but this group wants
scored the lone Southern another shot at Trimble and
goal in the stretch, while t.hat could come in the
Viking Brittany Wilson hit District final s."

Rainelle Christian 60, Ballard Christian 44

RavenSWOOd 68. Gilmer County 55
Shady Sprtng 66, Nicholas Coun1y 51
· SlssonviMe 92, Ma1ewan 45
SOuth Harrison 61 , Bishop Donahue 55
St. Albans 84, George Washington 75
Teays Valley Christian 47, Xenia, Ohk:l 40
Wheeling Central 57. Toron10, Ohio 73
Woodrow Wilson 57, North Marion 49
Wyoming East 66, Mount View 57

Pro basketball
NaUonet Basketball AIIOCiatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvlelon
W L Pet
GB
New Jersey
34 20 .630
New York
26 3 1 456
9 112
Miami
25 32 .439
10 1/2
Philadelphia
2333 411
12
12 1/2
Boston
23 34 .404
17 1/2
WaShington
16 37 302
Orlando
15 42 .263
20 112
Central DIVIIIOn
W L Pet
GB
Indiana
41 15 .732
Deirol1
34 23 .596
7 112
New O rleans
30 25 .545
10 1/2
Mitwaukee
28 26 .519
12
Toronto
25 30 .455
15 1/2
Cleveland
22 34 .393
19 .
A11anta
18 37 .327
22 112
Chicago
16 40 .286
25
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwett Division
W L Pc1
GB
Minnesota
4016 .714
san Anton io
3719 .661
3
4 112
Dallas
35 20 .636
Memphis
33 22 .600
6 112
Hou ston
31 23 .574
8
8 1/2
Denver
32 25 .561
13 112
27 30 .474
Utah
PacHic Dlvlllon
W L Pc1
GB
Sacramento
40 14 .741
5 112
L.A. Lakers
34 19 .642
13 112
Portland
27 28 .491
Seattle
25 29 .463
15
Golden State
24 30 .444
16
L.A. Clippers
24 30 444
16
Phoenix
18 39 .316
23 112
· Saturday'e Games
M1ami 97, Denver 81
New Jersey 97. New Orleans 84
Memphis 105, Chicago 98
Dallas 97, Houston 88
L.A. Clippers 105, Milwaukee 103
Portland 105, Boston 84
Golden State 94, Seattle 92
Sunday 's Games
Sacramento 96, Toronto 81
Cleveland 92, New York 86
Indiana 94, Utah 80
San Antonio 94, Mlrinesota 92
Milwaukee at Washing)on , 6 p.m.
Orlando at Detroit, 6 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at· Phoeni•, 7 p.m.
Atlanta at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Boston at SeaHie, 9 p.m.
Monday's Games
Detroit at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
New Orleans at Cleveland, 7 p. m .
Portland at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Denver' at Memphis, 8 p.m
, Tuesday'e Gamet
Po rtland at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Golden State at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta , 7 :30p.m.
Toronto at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, a p m.
Houston at San Antonio , 8:30p.m .
L.A. Clippers at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
seattle at Utah, 9 p.m .
New York at Sacramento, 10 p.m.

Southern hit 28-66 overall,
hitting 26-61 two's, 2-5
three's, and 11 -17 at the line.
Southern grabbed
21
rebounds (Dunn 7, Sayre 6,
Pullins 5), 22 steals (Pullins
5, Sayre 5, Pickens 4), five
assists, nine turnovers, and
18 fouls.
Symmes Valley hit 13-49
overall, hitting 13-42 two's,
0-7 three's, and 11 -17 at the

Transactions
BASEBALL
Amerlc1n League
KANSAS CITY ROYAlS-Agreed to
terms with LHP Greg Swindell on a minor
league contract .
TEXAS RANGERS-Agreed to terms witl't
3B Hantc. Blalock on a live-.year contract:
and OF Kevin Mench , RHP M k:ke~
Callaway, AHP Juan Dominguez, RH~
Rosman Garcia, RHP Chris Ma~us , RH~
Edwin Moreno, LHP Erasmo Ramirez ..
RHP Nick Aegillo, LHP Brian ShOuse. LHP.
Ryan Snare, OF Ramon Nivar and . 1B
Adrian Gonzalez on one--year contracts .
Nationll l.Jtague
FLORIDA MARLIN8-Agreed to termlwith RHP Ronald Belisario, RHP Kevir1'
Cave, AHP Mlke Flannery, RHP Lincolt\
Hokjzkom. AHP Blaine Neal. RHP Justifl.
Wayne, LHP Franklyn Gracesqui , LH~
Tommy Phelps, INF Kevin Hooper, 1Nr.
Josh Wilson. OF Chris Aguila . OF Chip.
Amb res, OF Abraham Nunez and C Josh
Willingham on one-year contracts.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Signed RH~
Dan Reichert to a minor·league contract. •
M ONTR EAL EXPOS-Agreed to terfM'
with RHP Shawn Hill. RHP Chad Corder~
LHP Chad Bentz, INF Jamey Carroll, IN t.
Josh Labandeira . OF Ryan Church and OF
TBrrmel Sledge on one-year CO(ltrac:ts.
~
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Aesoclatlon
NBA- Fined Orlando Magic G Tracy
McGr.ady $ 10,000 lor kicking the basketbalt
into the stands twice at the end of the firs[
hall of a Feb. 20 game against Denver, anGWashl ngton Wizards coach Eddie Jordar1'
$7,500 lor tall1ng to leave the court 1n (
timely manner at the end ol a Feb. 20 gama.
against Indiana.
LOS ANG ELES CLIPPERS-Placed
Ooug Overton on the injured list. Activated
G-F Bobby Simmons lrom the injured list.
MIAMI HEAT-Placed G Bimbo Coles on
the inJured list. Activated F Samakl Walke t
from the injured list.
SACRAMENTO KINGS-Signed G-FRodney Buford to a 10-day contract .
•
TORONTO RAPTORS-Suspended ~
Lamond Murray one game for co nduc•
detrimental to the team.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL-Suspended Vancouver F Matt
Cooke two games without pay for a s pea r~
ing incident 1n a Feb. 19 game.
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS- Re&lt;:alled LW
Shawn Thornton from Norfolk ol the AHL.
COLORADO AVALANCHE- Traded D
Martin Skoula to Anaheim forD Kurt Saue~
and a 2005 fourttHound d raft choice.
· COLUMBU S BLUE JACKETS-Recalled
RW Kent McDonell from Syracuse of the
AHL.
,
.

(

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

.Oftflee llo""~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday

to

8:00 a.m.

5:00 p.m.

:10

,1

Boyd
Beet
Cattle
Performance Bull Sale. 65
Angus Bulls and 15 Polled
Hereford, all registered. and
sale guaranteed. Monday,
Marc:h 1, 6 .30pm, at the new
OK live Stock Auction,
Maysville, Kentucky. For
more 1nfo call 606· 763-64 18.
C- 1 Beer Carry Out permit
tOr sa te , Chester Townsh1p,
Meigs County, send letters
ol interest to : The Da1t,Y
Sentinel, PO Box 729·2~.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
\

r
~

Lair AND

FOUND

\II' I

r:To.Or--------,
11
HEu&gt;WANJ1ld 1

~~ ...-.ANNOUNCEMENT••••

.

6 yr SharPei Brown w/brown
co ll ar 3 miles out on
Redmond Ridge about 3
wks ago Reward (304)675188 1

I

II'
...,11n 11 1..,

I \11'1

HIRING 20041 FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS!, Up lo
$54 ,a4'1 .07+ year. FREE
CALL!
Interview
&amp;
Registration
Information
Sign on Bonus 1st 100
Callers Se lect Area. 1-&amp;oo892-5549 ext. 94, 7 days.

Found: ),t Black female dog
with green collar. Bidwell
UUHIRING
2004th••
area. Call (7 40)388-8687.
POSTAL JOBSI UP TO
Lost Red &amp; whi te Coon $1,0477 1 WEEKLY. FREE
hound, neutered male. 70 CALL! FOR INTERVIEW
lbs. afraid ol guns. Reward AND
REG ISTRATION
lor return . (740)339· 1594.
INFORMATION . SIGN ON
BONUS
1ST
100
Prescriptio n glasses bl ue
CALLERS.
SELECT
case fell from ca r. Ph one
AREAS, 1·800·892· 5549.
(304 )67 5·3542 leave mas·
EXT. 92, 9 DAYS.
sage

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

Are you t?OKmg or a
stabl e job w1th a
professional atmosphere?
We have the job for you!
Call on behalf ol major
Non-Profit and Political
prganizations a nd earn u~
to $8/hour plus bonuses.
Full or part-time
shifts available.
Call today to "schedule
an interview.
1-Bn-463-6247 ext 245
Class A COL Drivers
Wanted
-Min. 2 years exp.
Sig n-On Bonus
Home Weekends
34 Cents per mile
95% No Touch
No NYC Frei ght
Calf 800·652·2382

Offer expires 2129/04 All ads require pre
payment. No refunds if canceled early.
Offer includes merchandise calegories and
exc ludes real eslale, renlal and
employmenl . Privale party advertisers only.
Items under $500.

therapies and treatments. Allow trained hands

R ESORT AND SPA, part of the Resort Division ·

to massage away the remnants of a hard· da~. of

POINT C LEAR . AL

Your ad will reach over 33,000 people in
our daily newspapers.
Gallia County, Meigs County, and
Mason County.

J

ALABAMA'S

of the ROBERT TRENT JONES GOLF TRAIL

go lf or just th e cares o f the world, as you relax

Enjoy golf at the resort Lakewood Courses or at

m luxury. Experience th e popular H o t R ocks

nearby ch ampionship Magnolia Grove courses.

treatment, Vichy shower, anti-aging facials o r

For Spa reservations call251.990.6385. For

give yourself a work ..:out in th e cardiovascular

golf and h otel packages at The Grand or any-

wo rkout room. Give yourse lf over to a ll the

where ·o n the Trail, call800.257.3465.

Golf's Greatest Road Trip

•

'

;

I

•

~oint ~Ieagant

l\egister
~alltpolts 11Batlp .m:rtbune

(3afi

The Daily Sentinel
(304) 6,7 5·1333
(740) 446·2342
(740) 992·2155
Also your

W1ll do odd jobs. carpentry.
floor covering, anyt hing you
need! Reasonably pr1ced 1
(304)882-2978,.
304-3774633

Hous~
FOR RENT

ad will be on our website.

HOMEOWNERS!
Limited offer· 2 95"t. Loan
Rate. I be!teve you Will f1nd
this is the lowest rate available anywhere. Limited·offer.
Nationw1de Lende r. Any
credit. 1-888-581 -3328.

5 room house w1th
shower. cen tral
double garage, no
ere nce &amp; depOsit
(740)446- 1519.

bath and
heat/a1r,
pets, ref·
required

F1ve rooms and bath near
$300/
Holzer
Hospital
House fo r Sale· 4 miles out month + util illeSI deposit
Sandhell Road . 3 Bedroom 1 (740)446·9355 (leave mes·
Ba th $85 .000 (304 )675- sage)
2507
•
· o oeoroom
nck. 1.5 baths. carpo rt,
MOIIILE HOMES
No pets. No smokmg .
FOR SALE
10
•
B U!ol NES'i
$650. depos1!, references
OPI'OKll.INflY
1740)416-9209
1 314 Acres with 2 bedroom
mobile home. Shoestrm g N ice 3 bedroom house in
Commercial Retail or Office
R1dge. Gallipolis. 1·304-576- Tuppers Pla1ns, $450 month
space available lor lease 46
2314 or 740-446·2156.
plus utilities &amp; deposit, no
COurt
St.
downtown
pets. will consider sell1ng,
Gallipolis 286·4 772 Of 3791993 Redman. 3br/2blh , (740)667-3487 .
2204 after 5 PM
on ly $13,995 cnclud es cen·
tral a1r and delivery. call Pomeroy-Chester area, 3-4
LOCAL VENDING ROUTE ! Nikki 7 40·385-9948
bedroom hO us~ . 2 bath, rei·
60 vending machines/
erencestdepos1t requ1 red .
1995 1£x80 toot Fa1rmont (740)992-4025 no petS".
excellent locations all tor
mobile home. 3 bedroom. 2
$10,995, 800 -234·6982
bath, goo&lt;;! shape. must be
MOBILE HOMES
IU
"'
HJR RENT
OHIO VA LLEY PUBLISH moved. near Tuppers Placna.
·
books
$19.000.
•
se
ll
lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do business w1lh peo $17.000. 740· 667·6357 or 2 bedroom mobile home in
Vinton . Ava ilable 31 1104. Call
le you know, and NOT to (740)667 ·9823

Will rebuild automotive ,
truck and tractor eng1nes
ASE Certi fied Mechanic "'
Call {740}441·1306 leave a
messa ge.

An Excellent way to earn
money. Lets talk the
NEW AVON .
Call Marilyn 304-882·2645
Joyce 304·675-6919
April 304·882·3630

February
Special

spa at MARRIOTT'S GRAND HOTEL GOLF

lwrighl@ic.nel

**Federal Postal Joba**
Silver,
Gold
Coins, To $43,000/yr. Free Ca ll. No
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold Experience Necessary. Now
Rings.
U.S . Currency,- Hiring . Full Benefits. 1-800M .T.S Coin Shop, 151
842· 1622 Ext. 225.
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
740-446-2842.
Addressers wanted immediwanted 30 inch , e lectric atetyl No Experience necesrange. Priced reasonable . sary. Work at Home. Call
405-447-6397
Call (740)388·9376

Turn ·that Old
couch or chair
into SS$$$

European Spa. Experience the lates t in spa

Ho~u:s
FOR SALE

JIO

To Do

Absolu1e T: : ar: U.S.

NEW JERSEY OEVIL5-Assigned F Brett
Clouthier to Cincinnati of the ECHL.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS - Recalled 0
Les Borsheim from Philadelphia ol the
AHL.
PHOENI X
COYOTES - Rec alled
C
Krystofer Kolanos !rom Springfield of the
AHL.
P1TISBURGH PENGUINS- Recalled LW
Matt Murley from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of
the AHL. Assigned RW Eric Meloche to
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Acquired FfW
Landon Wilson lrom the Phoenix Coyotes
lor future considerations·.
COLLEGE
ONEONTA- Announced the resignation
of· Paul Clune, men's basketball coach.

luxury offered in the new 20,000 square foot

WAN1Hl

IIELPWANIDl

4Days

a-ll the pleasures of a

POUCIES : Ohio V..t~ Publl•hlng rnervea thtl right to edit, reject, Dr cancel any ad at any time. Errors ITiust be reported on tl1e first dav of
I i
Trlbun•S.ntlnet-Regl..., will bt re~pon.tble fOI' no more than the co1t of the I!)IICe occupied by the error and only the first insertion. We shall not be I
any ION or expanM that rnutt• h'dn the publi'*lon or omiNion Of an advertisement. CCM"rection will be made in the first available ediUon. • Bo x number ada
are atw.ya confidential.' • Cui'Nnt rate card applleti . • All r..l estate ad'lertlnmenia are subject to the Fedetal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thi• newspaper

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

WANIID

!SWords

•

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualneaa Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : t ·:oo p . m .
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Ads Should Run 7 oa.,.

r
.
~r~·AN;;;;NOUN;;;_;;CEMEN; ; ; ;rs; .; ,l

{p;.

No•Nyou can have borders and graphics
added to your-classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

friday For Sunday• Paper ·

• lndude Phone Number And Addn!!lSS When Needed

\'\'\IH \{I \11\1..,

Oeati/Jiru

D;illy In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday fdr Insertion·
In Next Day' s Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.

• SU!rt Yoyr Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbrev•ttons

Offer Ends Feb. 29, 2004

Immerse yo urself in

laegigter

Sentinel

q

line. Symmes Valley had 21
rebounds (Rebecca Capper 7,
Leslie Floyd 4}, two assists,
six steals (Capper 2.) , 25
turnovers, and 12 foul s.
Southern
wi II
plaY:
Whiteoak in the tirst round of
the district. Whiteoak, the
number . seven seed, defeated
number two seed Ponsmouth
Clay 60-28 Saturday afternoon.

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECT~
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
.

i

www.comics.com

&lt;e 2004 by NEA,

o:o.

Inc.

Mcintyre Park District is
loo king for a person to f1 1t a
HELP.WAim'D
part time receptionist posi·
lion. The hoU!'s are. M-F. 8·4
M;arch . th roug h O ctober.
you ever moug
INSTRUCTION
Resp. · inc:lu08; scheduling
bout helping a child who i
LEARN TO DRIVE
shellers, hayrides, tent
n trouble and might need
TRACTOR· TRAILER
lace to stay tor a couple o rent als, f1ling , answering
NEW PROGRAM
phone inquiries and keeping
Milestone
ays? The
No Experience Needed
aster Care Agency is look records for the park distr1ct.
Placement Dept
Send res ume before March
ng for providers in Galli
'·
Financi ng Available
cOunty to do short-terrr 1st to:
CDUTraining
0 .0 . Mc:jntyre Park District
are for homeless-runawa
ALLIANCE
cl o Reception 1st
hildren ages 0~18 . Foste
Tractor-Trailer
18 LoCust St.
ome licensing is required
1raining Centers
Gallipolis, OH 45631
eimbersemenl is included.
Wy1heville, VA
.or emailtq
lease caii1·888-S23·753
amymoore@galliaoe! net ·
Call Toll Free
or more inlormation.
1·80().334· 1203
An
Equal
Opportun1ty
Home Health Care ol Employer. No phone calls
Assistant Bookkeeper full or Sou theast Ohio IS currently please.
part-t1 me. Rio Grande area. hiring Home Health Aides.
ExpeMnce not reqUired . Com petitive wages . Call
Owner/Operaotrs/Fieet
Physically and mentally (740)662-1222.
Owner• Needed.
demanding. Possible profes· •Percenta ge Paid
SIOnal opportunity.
Call Local company seeks moti·
. ·weekly Settlements
(740)245-5203, 8-10pm.
vated individuals to work
' Sign-On Bonus
from home, great pay, trai n
'Home Weekends
Attn. Pt. Pleasant
today, start immedi ate ly.
Call BOD-652·2362
Postal positions. clerks/ea rn· 740-441-9160 or 740.441 ·
erslsorters.
No
exp.
Param edics · &amp;
EMT's
9 t 86.
required . Benefits. For exam,
needs. Apply at 1354
salary, and testing mforma· Local
Dining J~ckson P1ke, Gallipolis.
lion ca ll (630)393·3032 ext. Restau rant hiring expe n782 Sam-apm 7 days
enced waiter/waitress . Send Part·time poSit ion ava1lable
in Meigs Co., Ohio &amp; Mason
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or resume to CLA 570 , clo
Co .. WV to complete mobile
Gallipolis
Tnbune,
P.O.
Box
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
insurance exams, blood &amp;
469 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
675· 1429.
· urine colleCtions . Must have
Children's Home · Society · Make 50% setlmg Avon good phlebotomy Ski lls, lex
currently has an opooing tor Limited
ti me
ONLY resume to .304- 766·16ao or
mall to personnel· PO Box
a Youth Services Social (740)446·3358
845, Dunba,r. WV 25064
Worker in the Mason County
Medi
Home
Health
Agency,
office . Position will provide
see ki ng
lull·lime PoSIIion open in Southeast.
case management and sup· Inc.
Physical
Therapist
and
PAN Oh1o. with mechanical comportlve services to OHHR
pany, eKpenence necessa ry
Youth
Se rvice
cases. Occupational Therapist lor
send resume &amp; letter of rec·
Ohio
and
West
Vit:Qinia
client
Requirements
inc lude
ommendation . P 0 Box 363.
base.
Must
be
licensed
both
Bachelor's Degree and SW
The Plains . Oh 457aO.
license eligible, experience in Ohio and West Virginia.
We
offer
a
competitive
prelerred .
Competitive
Salary and benefits. Please salary. E.O.E. $5,000 SIGN· POSTAL JOBS
send letter of interest and ON-BONUS and benefits for $15.44·$21 .40/hr. now hirresume to Mason County full-time Physical Therap1 s1 ing For applicatiOn and free
OHHR
ATTN : .
Youth only. Please send resume to government JOb 1nfo, ca ll
Second
Avenue, American Assoc. of Labor.
Sel'\llces 710 VIand Street. 352
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 Gallipolis. OH 45631 . Attn: 1·(913)599-8220, 24 hrs
Diana Harless, R.N. Clinical
EOE
Manager.
Spring house cleaner ass1S·
EMT needed for a great
tant needed. Call (740)441 ofganlzationlll Securltas Is Now Hiring fu ll and part t341 leave message.
McClure's
now hiring for the Buffalo ti me.
WV area. You must have Restaurants,. In Gallipolis. Truck dnver- class A or B
EMT·B qualifications. Wages Middleport and Pomeroy. COL, needs references &amp;
Monday
thru prior experience. 4-6 monih
start at $8.00 per hour plus Apply
work, home dally, gooa pay,
paid Insurance. Uniforms Saturday. 10·11 am.
(740)992·5776
and
train ing
provided.
Please apply between the Now tak1ng resumes for pool
nours of 8:00 a.m. - 11 :00 manager. and lifeguards for
a.m. and 1:00 p. m. - 3:00 Syracuse's • Lo ndon pool.
p.m. 1032 12th Street West Rerfume maybe submlned to
Huntington WV, 25704 lor clerk at 2581 Third Street. 'Galllpolll ·C1reer College
{Careers Close To Home)
mortflnformatlon call 1-800· Syracuse or mailed to PO
Box 266, Syracuse, Oh. Ce ll Todayl740·446·4367 ,
241·7454 EOE!M/FID/F
45779 on or belore NOON
1·600·214.()452
GOVERNMENT
JOBSI March 4,2004
~ .g:alli!iolisctr•ercolle~ .com
WILDLIFE/ POSTAL $13.51
Accredited Mlmber AccrediUng
to $58.00 per hour. Full The Putnain County 9 11 COuncil tor lndlpendenl /College•
Benefits. Paid Training. Call Center Is accepting applies· 100 Schooil) 1274B.
for Application and Ekern tlons
or
part
time
Information. No Experkmce Dispatchers, COmputer and
Necessary. Toll Free 1..a88- Fire, pollee or EMS experl·
ence helpful $7.50 per hour
2SII-IODO
100.
Chlldc&amp;re Sta te licensed.
after training. Applicatlof1S
.. ng peop e oc•
Focus helping low-Income
ho want to earn mona can be picked up a1 the 911 f11mllies obta in chlidcare.
hlle losing weight, show center 3389 Winfield rd With 8hrs. sleep time for
ng
others
how Wlnlleld WV 25213 or from non-traditional sh ifts as QDQ
WWW pytnamemeragncv CQ
nformatlonal
DVD/C
ol your IIIGIIIS. 740-245·
vallable upon request 740 m and mailed to above 9242.
address
41-1984.

110
11110
1. HFJ.P WANTED , •
~----'
AS SEEN ONTV
ave

••I.

end money thro ugh th
mall until you have investl
ated the offering

(7401388-9 192.
199716x72 Redman , 2 bed·
room, 2 ba th $10.000. Ca ll 2 bedroom tra1ler 10 Racine.
(740)709- 1166.
$350 a month includes

i
1.--------,.J
.
MONE\'

ru I...C.&gt;AN·

SFREE Cash

Grantss ~

$33,217 GUARANT6ED in
YOUR AR EA and YOUR
STATE tor per sonal bil ls.
school , bus1ness, e)(! Never
Aepayl CALL NQWI Live
Operators 1·800-420·8331
Ext. 98.

I'RoFEX'OIONAL
SERVICES
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582·3345

W \IISI\11
10

HoMES
FOKSALE

~eo ro om .
'
oam
A1verv1ewt Access. Fo
·nform ateonr
Pho tos·
orvb com
Cod
~~03 or call (740}446
0531 . .

r.vww

3 bedroom. 2 ba ths on 4.3
acres. Close to Tycoon Lake.
Call (740)709-1166
4 bedroom. 2·1/2 bath , briCk
home A! . 588 Close to
town
(740 )441 -0504
$135,000 neg
Br1ck Ranch. 4 bedrooms. 1
112 bath, full basement. fire·
place. woodburner. garage.
paved driveway (7 40)339·
0213

1997

Fleehvood

home, 3 bedroom.

mobile wa ter. sewer. 5250 deposit.
740 949 2025
(
)
-

2 bath . all

electric, must be moved. Beaut1lul river view. ideal lor
as k1ng S10,90C, call afte r one or two people . No' pets.
4pm (740 )992·0032
references . {740)441 ·0 181 .

1999
Oakwood
rriobrle
home 16x80 3 br .2 tulf
baths must sell immed1ately,
leaving
st ate .
Asking
12.000.00 good cond. 304·
675·37 52
1999 Woodfield mobile
home. 14x70. 2 br. 2 bath,
c entral air/heat. like new
$20 .000. Will rent beautiful
country lot with po nd &amp;
12x 12 out/building . $100
mon1hly (304)~7!i·1519 OR
304 -895-3595

eubject to the Federal
Fair Houtlng Act of 1968
which make• II Illegal to
advertise "an y
preference, llmltBtlon or
dlacrlmlnation bated on
race, color, re ligion, 1111
lamltlal elatua or natlanal
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation ar
d\tcrlmtnatlon."
Thle newapapar will not
knowingly accept
advertltementa tor real
·
11tate wMich Ia In
vlo1itlon of the law. Our
raad ... a are hereby
Informed that ell
dwelling• advartlaad In
thll newapaper are
evellable on an equel
opportunity

b.,.,,

FORECLOSURE!
3 bed only $9,500. lor listings call
1·800·719-3001 ext f144

r

APAKfMF.I'oTS
FOR RENT

t and 2 bed room apar tments. furn1shed and unfurnishe d . secun ty deposit
reqUired . no pets. 740·992·
22 18
.

2000 . Oakwood
mobi le
Bedroom Apartment.
home. 14X70 . 3 bedroom . K1 tchen Furni Shed.
.A'II
$ 15,000.60. 1740)992-6313
Electric .
5300 Month,
DepoSit Requ1red Near H1gh
9 1 Mobile Home, on one SchOoL (30 4 )675-3 100 Or
~ere pl us. Central a1r. out
1304)675· 5509
building. large front deck . In
Mercerville. near schools 2 bedroom apt St. At 160
No Land Cont racts. For past Holzer. s475 mo.
$28. 000
Ca ll (7 40)256· (740)441 -0194 .
6663. address 2333 Cox
Apartmenl ! h o u se .
Rd Crown C1ty. Ohio.
Downtown Gall1polts. 3 bed97 doubl ew ide 28x48 on 6 rooms. one bath . K1tchen .
acres near · Hend~rson . · D1njng . Large Fam 1ly room.
$26.900. (304 )335·0528.
and ~s t o r'age/P iay room .
Separate gardqn entry.
New 14 wide only $799 Appr0111matel y 2500sq . ft .
down and only $169.53 Per S61 0/mo. Plu s
utili ttes .
month. call Karena 740 -385· (7 40)446-9961 .
767 1
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
ZERO MONEY DOWN
To qualified buyers stop 1n PRICES AT JACKSON
today and check with Ern1 e ESTATES, 52 West woo d
Dnve from $344 to $442 .
or Lynn
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Cole 's Mob1le Homes
740·446·2568.
Equal ,
15266 U.S. 50 East
Hous1ng Opportunrty.
Athens, Oh1o 457 01
17401592-1972
"Where You Get You.r
Money·s Worth"

All real e1tate advertlllng
in 1hla new1peper It

Nice 2 a nd 3 bec;troom
mobile homes for re nt
inclu des water. sewer &amp;
trash . no pets . deposit &amp;
$300 per month. (740)992·
2 167

r

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhous e
apartments.
andl or small houses FOR
RENT. Call 1740)441 ·1111
for app lication &amp; information.

161180 sites available $115
per month includes wate r,
sewer &amp; trash , (740 ) 992~
2167

Cottage Apt on Li ncoln Ave
in Pt. Pleasan t $275.00 a
man . as k lor Nancy 304675-5540 or 304-675-4024

For Sale · 79.106 Ac res .
A1ver view. produc 1ng oil &amp;
gas wells . Reduced to .
$115. 000 . 304·529-7106
after Spm.

For
Lease :
Beautifully
restored , un furnished, two
bedroom ap artment overlooking the City Pa rk and
River. All new appliances, 1
112
baths.
$600/mo .,
deposit.
Securi ty
Referen ces req uired, N o
pets . Call 740-446-2325 or
740-446-4425

I&lt; I \I \I "

HOUSIS
FOR

RENT

2 bedroom house on
'(9}Mill Creek _$350 plus
·
. utilities
&amp;
$200
dep oSit HUD accepted.
(7 40)446-25 15.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedmom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740·
992·506 4. Equal H ousing
Opportun ities.

2 BR water/trash paid. no Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
_pets. relerences &amp; deposit ing applications lor waiting
required. near Porte r 388~ list lor· Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartme nt, Call 675·6679
1100.
EHO

�.·•

. .. . ~

Monday, February 23, 2004

www.mydallysentinel.com
I 1. I! ' I ..,I I 'I

·I

Monday, February 23, 2004
ALtEYOOP

www.mydallysenti nel.com

rio

.L:I

.

Mollohan Car pot, 202 Clark 24 ft. 1\boYv ground pool ,
Ape. t and 3 bed· Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. -accessories and 12•12 ~
rooms now avail· (740)448· 74-4-4 1-871·830- new deck. $1 ,600

abkt.

Rent

BRIDGE

ete income. Equal Housing cash . Vlsaf Master Card.
Dl&gt;jlortunity. (740)4~6-3344. Drive· a- little saw alot.
TOO 1-800-751H1750.
---------

- - - - - - - - - MoviDg-Sa(e, Spinet piano,
Nice 2 Br Apt. for rent. no sofa. chairs. end-tables,

pets

'EiA/l!IPMBg

Phillip

..__lliiiiliiiiiiiiiio-,.1

Alder

135 Musey Ferguson with
gravel blade, gravel rake ,
Brno. 22 rifle, $175; New boom polo. Call (7&lt;40)4-46England )'O\J1h fT'Odel .223, 3505.
$200; Franchi auto 28·
gauge $650. (7&lt;40)4-46-2905. 2 Husqvarna Commercial Z·
Couch &amp; matching chair turn MoweJS. 2002, 62 inch
with brown rocking chair S50 cut. 23 honiepower (&amp;till

deposit required in pt, antique
trunk,
cedar
wardrobe. cedar chest. call (304)B82-3t29
Nice Clean 2br. refldep, no much more! (740~2828 . 2PM .

Pleasant (7&lt;40)446·2200

,... (304)675-5 162

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Townhouse Aepair-675·7388. For sale.
automatic
Very Spacioos, re-conditioned

North

•

Pomeroy Eagles

200 1• 42 inch cut, 18 horse·

r

power S3.000. (7401682·
4105.

Thurs., Feb. 26th
6:30pm
Middleport Legion

AERATION MOTORS
Apartmen1s,
Repaired. New &amp; Rebui• In
JIA:G,;~ ~
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1 washers &amp; dryers. refrigeraStOCk. CaU Ron Evans, 1- -~----~--·-·
112 Bath. Newly Carpeted, tors. gas and electric 800-537-9528
.
Adu11 Poor &amp; Baby Pool , ranges. air conditioners. and
1000• bales mix grass-

"

':11~6-2120.

-

·

r

iir!i:•.o~~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., ~-------•
l-lol.5Et-Jou&gt;

Buy

Gooll'i

Computer

desk;

or ' sell.

Antiques. 1124 East Main Sunday. (7401446-73!)0

Used

Appliances,
and
.. Guaranteed.
Washers,
Ranges .
anc:l
: oryers,

~ Reconditioned

"•~
. .....
~..:=
lnr..tt
ll'l.l,.~

Aiding mower, Sears-18 H.P.
$25,000
Cllh
grlnta- Kohler Eng. 44" cut. Very
GUAR ANTEED! AU
u.s. good condi tion. Ca ll 740 •
residents qualify! Money for 446-7845, cell 740-339·
billS, business, school. etc.. 3923.

· Refrigerators, Some start at cau 1-800-363-5222 ext
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 s 37 _
Vi~~ St, (740)446·7398
-------2 beaded Prom Gowns, very
bl
E . gsJ
. Kenmo re end Whirlpool
. washer, $75 each. Wfllirlpool reasona e.
ventn
56 •
k
all
74 n~2
ds
:dryer, $65. AU white, call wee en
c
..,.
6535 or 304-576-4009.

• aNer 6pm. (740)446·9066.

---~----

-,--------Wooden gun cabinet, wood·
en swing set w/anach9d tree
house, 3 piece livingroom
suite 740-441·9890.

i

BUILJJING
..__ _SiiiiiJI'I'UESiiiiiiiiao-,.1

---

LOO'king For

A New Home?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

r

r«J

Chevys.

Jeeps, etc ! POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars Irom

2-mini Pins. 1-male. 1! $500. For listings 1-800-719·
female. Male is 7 mos. old. 3001 ext 390 1
Female is 4 yrs. old. 740·
388-93231740-446·6947.
1977 C~dillac Oev'm, leather
interior,
53, 000
actua l
3 Pomeranian puppies sired mileage, one owner, garage
by Champion, 8 week~ old, kept, must see to appreci·
ate. asking $6.000, call
(7401416-1590
(740)949·0105' leave mes·
AKC Airedale puppies. male sage it no answer.

52200 . 17401247, 2028

1168

99 Neon. aprox_-90 ,000
miles. 52 _BOO; 99 Chrysler
Cirrus.
miles.
69 _000
$4,500_ Rebuilt sa lvage

For sale:t984 GoldWing
Inters tate. FU lly loaded .
Custom white paint with pln stripping. Many extras. Ron

lilies. (7401446·3091

Russell'(7401949·2909

j

TRUCKS
tuR SALE

Ii

'---oiiiiii.iiiiiiiiii.-,.1

~

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1991 Rangerframewlthfour 95 F150 4x4, 6 cyl., 5 sp.
chrome wheels &amp; good tires, AJC, 6-ln. lift, 35 in tires.
$150. TWo mechanics spo- $4,500 (740)388-8039.
1992
Plym.
cials ( 1)
Sundanca $350. (11 1989 96 Dodge Dakota 112 ton .
Toyota, new ti res $250 (as 94,000 miles; 12 str ing guiis) Both run. Jim Withrow tar ; Riding lawn mower.
(740)«6-0884.
(740)256·1102 ask lor Jr.

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

Let me do it for youl

LINDA'S PAINTING

Hill's Self
Storage

"= 1,

HOME
IMPROWMENTS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unco nditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fur nished. Established 1975 .

Call

24 Hrs. (7401 446·

0870, Rogers
Waterproofing.

Basement

29670 Bashan Road

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Racine, Ohio

,

SI~H

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION.
Revised
Code,
Sections 3501 .; 1(G),
5705.19,5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that In pur-

suance

of

a

Resolution of the
!Soard of Trustees of
the Township
of
Salisbury, Pomeroy,
Ohio, pund on the
16th ·
day
of
oecember,
2003,
there will be oubmH. ted a vole' of the people of said oubdlvl·
slon at a PRIMARY
J:LECTION to be held
In the Township of
Salisbury, Ohio, at the
regular places of votIng therein, on . the
2nd day of March,
2004, the question of
levying a tax, In
excasa of lhe ten mill
limitation, for the benefit . of
Salisbury
Township Including
Middleport
and
Pomeroy VIllages for
the po;rpon ol maintaining and operallng
cemeteries.
Said lllx being an
additional tax of 0.5
mill at a rate nol ·
exceeding 0.5 mills
for each one dollar of
? valuation,
which
• amounta to live canta
: ($0.05) for each one
· hundred dollars of
valuallon for five (5)
yeara.
The Polla for aald
'£1ectlon
will
be ·
opened
II
1:30
. o'clock a.m. and
. remain open until
· 7:30 o'clock a.m. of
: aalddliy.
By order of the
Board of Electlone, of
Meigs County, Ohio
Deled January 2, ·
2004
John
N.
lhle,
Chalrperaon
Rill
D.
Smith,
Director
(2) 2, 8, 18 • 23

Public Notice
7NOTICE OF ELEC·
: \tiON ON TAX LEVY IN
· _EXCESS QF THE TEN
:MILL LIMI't1.TION.
·1'1evlaed
Code,
Section a 3501.11 (0),
5705.18, 57.05.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
, given thai In purauanca
of ·
a
Re1olutlon of lhe
: Board of Townlhlp

Trustees
of
the
Township of Scipio,
Pomeroy, '
Ohio,
passed on the . 15th
day of December,
2003, !here will be
submitted a vote of
the people of said
subdivision at a PRIMARY. ELECTION to
In the
be held
Township of Scipio,
Ohio, at lhe regular
vollng
places of
theraln, on the 2nd
dly of March, 2004,
the question of levyIng a tax, In excess Of
the ten mill limitation,
for the benefit of
Scipio Township lor
lhe purpose of malnlalnlng and operallng
cemeteries.
• Said tax being ' a
replacement tax of
0.5 mil at a rale nol
exceedl!,'9 0.5 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to five cents
($0.05) lor eaCh one
hundred dollars of
valuation for five (5)

years . .

The Polls for said
E'lecllon
will
be
opened
at
8:30
o'clock a.m. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock a.m. of
aald day.
By order of the
Board of Elections, of
Meigs County, Ohio
Dated January 2,
2004
'
John
N.
lhle,
Chairperson
Smith,
Rita
Director
(2) 2, 9, 18. 23

o.

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
CI!Hinanclal, Inc. v1.
Roneld L. Denney, at
al
Meigs
County
Common Pleea Cut
No. 03-CV•113
In pur~uanct ol an
order Issued from
Pltaa
Common
Court, within and ~
the Counly of Melga,
Blllta of Ohio, on lhe
8th dey of April, 2004,
and to ma dlrectad, I
will offlr lor aalt al
Public Auction at lht
door of ' lhl Malg1
County Courthoutt,
100 E. Second Slreat,
Pomeroy, Ohio on the
9th Day of April, 2004
at 10:00 a.m. of aald
day; the following
Real Eatale, lo-wlt:
In
lhe
,Situate
Township of Salem, In

I

•

t he County of Melga
and State of Ohio:
Being In Section
13,
Township
8,
Range 14 of the Ohio
Company's purchan,
ar ~ being Lot 2 In fhe .

town

of

Danville,

Ohio.
lhe
EXCEPTING
coal known aslhe No.
4, 4-A, Clarion or
Limestone Coal, and
certain mining rights,
sold to the Ohio
Power Company, as
shown by lhl records
In the Melga County
Recorder's Olllce.
PPN: 13-00727.000
Located at 31015
Stale Roule 325,
Langsville, OH 45741.
Said property has
been appraised al
$20,000.00 and cannot sell for leas than
two-thirds
of
appraisement. This
appraisal Ia based
upon a visual Inspection of that part of the
premlaes to which
access was readily
The
available.
appraisers assume
no responsibility .for,
and give no weight lo,
unknown legil mat·
tara, Including, but
not limited to, conor
latent
cealed
dalac11, and/or the
preaence of harmful
or toxic chemlcala,
potlulllnta, or
Terma of S.le: Ttn
Plrcant (1 0%) day of
aalt, balance within
30deyl
· Relph Tru-ll, She rill
of Meigs County,
Ohio
Stephen . 0 : Mllee,
Attorney
18 Weal Monument
Avenue
Deyton, Ohio 48402
(2)8,18.23
.

a-•·

MARY· ELECTION to
be held In the Village
of Pomeroy, Ohio, at
the regular places of
votlnglhereln, on the
2nd dly of March;
2004, the question of
levying a lax, In
excess of the len mill
limitation, lor the benefit
of
Pomeroy
VIllage for the purpose •of fire protection.
Said lax being a
renewal of an exlatlng
taK of 1 mil at a rate
nol exceeding 1.0
m lila lor each one
dollar of valuation,
which amounta to ten
centa ($0.10) for each
one hundred dollars
of valuallon lor five
(5)

mil 'a t a rate not
exceeding 1.0 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounta to ten canis
($0.1 OJ for each one
hundred dollars of
valuation for five (5)
years.
, The Polls for said
Election
will
be
opened
at • 6:30
o'clock a.m . and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock a.ni. of
said day.
By order Of the
Board of Elecllona, of
Meigs Counly, Ohio
Dated ~anuary 2,
2004
John
N.
lhle,
Chalrper11on
Rita
D.
Smllh,
Dlreotor
(2) 2, 9, 16 &amp; 23

years.

The Polls lor aald
Election
will
be
6:30
opened
at
o'clock
a.m. and remain open
until.7:30 o'clock P.M.
of said day.
By order of lhe
Board of Elactlona, of
Meigs County, Ohio
Dated January 2,
2004
John
N.
lhle,
Chalrpareon
Rita
D.
Smith,
Director
(2) 2, 9, 16 &amp; 23
Public Notice
1

·Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
040201
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT Mailing Date:
0210612004
Sealed propoula will
be accepted from all
pre-qualified bidders
at . the OHica of
Contracta of the Ohio
Oepertment
of
Tr an 1 p o rtat Ion,
Columbus, Ohio, until
10;00 a.m.
Wedneadey, March
10,2004
For
Improving
Section
ME0-338·
0.00, State Routt 338
In Mtlg1 ,Counly,
Ohio, In eccordance
wllh plana end lptel·
flcetlona by grading
' and
pevlng
with
apheh concreta.
·~The date tat for
complttlon of thll
worli ahlll be 11 aet
forth In lht bidding
proponl:' Plena and
Bpeclflcatlone era on
fila In the Department
o11'nlnaporllltlon.
Gordon
· Proctor
Director
of
. Treneporlltlon
(2) 18, 23

NOTICE 0F ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION.
Ravlnd
Coda,
S.ctiona 3501.11((l),
5705.18,5705.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
glvtn that · l.n pur1uinct
of ·
1
R8tolutlon of tht
Boerd of Townehlp
Tru11"1
of
tht
TOWIIIhlp of. Sutton,
Racine, Ohio, palled
· Public Notice
on th!t 111 dey of
Dtctmblr,
2003,
NOTICE OF ELEC- the,. will be aubmh·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN lid 1 vote Of the peopie . ot aald' .a ubdlvl·
EXCEBB OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION • .
alon at 'a PRIMARY
ELECTION to be held
Codt,
Ravlaed
Sec;tlone 3101'.11 (G),
In the Townetolp of
· Button, Ohio, at the
8705.18, ll'05.21,
regular piiCN o1 vof·
NOTICE Ia hereby
given lhll In pur- lng therelf!, on the
auance
of
a 2nd day • of Marc";
2004, lht qiiM(Ion Of
Retolutlon of the
levying 1 tax, In
. Vlllege Council of !he
exceae of the 1111 mill
Pubilc Notice
Vlllege of Pomeroy,
Pomeroy,
. Ohio,
llml!ltlon,lor 1111 ben· · - - - - - - - alit
of
Sutton · TUpper•
Plaint
pa111d on thll 3rd
day of December,
Townahlp fol: the pur- Regional
• Silwer
2003, there will be poae of lire protec- Dltitrlct will accept
aubmltted a vote of lion.
...led bide for the
.Said tax being a following:
lhe people of aald
80Hz,
IUbdiYIIIOn' at I PRI• repllcamtnt tax of 1 Btltlonary

••

60kW
Diesel
Generator for projecl
681 Lift Station.
Tuppers
Plains
Sewer
Regional
Dlslrlcl reserves lhe
right to reluse any
and all bids. Bids will
be opened March 8th
al 7:00 p.m. All proposals shall be delivered 10 TPRllDand
arrive before the dale
and time shown.
lntereated persona
or firma may call
Loretta Murphy 74D667-3887 or 740.-667·
9805 and leave a message to obtain copies
of the Speclflcallons
and Plans.
Bids may be mailed
to:
Tuppers
Plains
Sewer
Regional
District
AttenUon:
Loretta Murphy P.O.
Box 175 Tuppers
Plains, Ohio 45783
(2) 13, 16, 17, 18, 19,
20,23,24,25,26,27
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Oilers
will
be
received at the olllce
of Bernard V. Fultz,
Attorney· at Lew, 1111/2 Well Second
Streat, Pomeroy, Ohio
45788, for the aala of
the Nelllt Zerkle resi·
dance real estate·
located at 34 Race
Slreat, Middleport,
Ohio. · The residence
conelata of two Iota
fronllng on Front
Slrealleclng the Ohio
River on whiCh !hare
Ia located the former
Zerkle.Trucklng build·
Ina containing
2
geregta, a down
ellllra office aulta end
a ltCond eloiy apart·
mant contaln)ng 1
large living room
extandlng the lull
length ol the real·
denca facing tht Ohio
River, two bedrcioma,
one
bethroom,
kitchen and .dining
room. Sealed ollare
far. I~ property will
be reoalved until lha
25th day ·of February,
2004 al lhe office of
.Bernard V. Fultz. The
rlghl 11 r8terved to
reject any and all
Offtl'a. Appointment•
·to examine 1111 pramln1 miY bl ~ by
calling 740-882·7101 .
(ll) 11, 12, 13; 18, 17,
, 11, 18, ~· 23, 2410T

•

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

I' '

BARNEY
OL' BULLET'S GOT
BUM LAIGS TODAY,
LUKEY !!

Tree Service

"·'·

THE BORN LOSER
R£C£t-IT
COS\'· CUHit-\G
1&lt;\EI\::,U~ ...

to 1o•xao· , '

Hours
7:00AM -8:00PM

I'"' '

I"'DESPITE.II\Y

5'x1.Dl "'

t\Llf\OUGf\ Tf\E.I?.[ WILL 1\\0W

0C 1\ CAAIZGE fOI&lt;.

Tf·\E CUPS I

rr.c-;..~.

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Free Estimates

111411 mo. pd

ROBERT
BISSEll

I' . ''.

Pass

Pass

Pass
All pass

"Nof me!
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services,
Box 169, Middleport OH
Phone: 843-5264."

Stop &amp; Compare

·-

R.B.
TRUCKING
HAULING:

PEANUTS

• Limestone
• Sand

51-lE 5 CUTE, iS~'T 5f.IE '?
1

• Dirt .
• Ag Line

CUTE ISN'T EVERVTf.IIN6,

CI&gt;IARLIE BROWN ...

I FALL IN LOVE WITfol
AN'(

61RL W~O

SMELLS

LIKE LIBRAR'&lt; PASTE ..

IMPORTS
Athens

740-985~3564
Sunset Home
Construction ·
·Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,'
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.

"W.V's #I Chevy. Pontiac, Buick. Olds
&amp; Cu stom

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH .
(10'1110' 610'1120')

Slanley fvqqmq
and Jrec Jrimminq

BISSEll

•Timber Harvesting
and Management
• Residential Tree
Trimming and
Removal
• Free Estimates

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

(740) 992-3194

(

( . :1n

992-6635

·''':

"fault ·\

17-10 I 7-12-2!').\

Advertise
in this
space for $2 5
per month.

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

GARFIELD
YOU CAN fN.IA'f Me, BOT
I rJ~~~ Wll.-1.- 81': ANO'fHER
I~
TO 'TAKE M'r' PL-ACE !

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Space for
$50 per month
~-- ..

Remodeling
•New Qeregee
•l!ltoblcel &amp;: Plumbing
• Rooflng &amp; Guttert

s

.

• Vlnyt Siding &amp; Painting

·

0

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy,Ohio

V.C. YOUNG 111
982-621~

'

GotJun~

tf'JP11fi114

• Petlo 1n~ Porch Oecke

Reduced Winter Rat..

GRIZZWELLS

""'--1
H'lgh Bl Dry . Giving ~20 ea.
elf Storage for automobiles.

'~

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Aoom
Adclltlone &amp; .

L.~2·2-YH~~-L~~~·-·~·~

BUILDERS InC.

Advertise in this

YOUNG'S

Pomeroy, 01110

BETTY

Ripley, WV 25271
1-800-822-0417

740-742-341

740·992·5232

~Call (740) 99l-0413
~r(740)99l·HYII

~

.

~Hno111!11er, L1

DOWN
1 Exec
2 Once more

24 Hack off
25 Two-kind
26 Mel In Coopers!own
27 Firs!·

40 Paris tower
41 Composer
- Franck
42 Fiery gems
43 Buckets
44 Fall ~uy
45 Declined ·

3 Art-class
model
29 Over and
4 Term papers
century
over
5 Firm ~rip
emperor
30 Vendors
6 Rocks
28 Classllied
34 Garment
- Leppard
secllon
repairers
7 Yul's lllm
30 - annum
37 Part ol TGIF
realm
31 One, lo Fritz
38 Space
8 Famed
32 Country
preceder
statueHe
addr.
39 Stephen
9 Prepared
33 Oroop·
Vincent- 1o Overindulge
nosed Iller
41 Ice-cream 13 Below zero 35 Bevel
treat
19 Charlotte- 36 Donkey 's
43 Taro paste
at "Bananas"
bray
44 Submarines ' 21 Recline lazily 39 Salaam

47 Humerus

neighbor
48 Puis
51 Spinks
defeater

53 Oil
alternative

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
Celebrity C.pher

" AEY

CI )'Pit~grams ~"~created

I10m qoot~Mn; b'{ !amous people, pa;l and preser.!
Ea:h lefier rn lhe ~rpher s1a11ds lor arJalhe •
To&lt;Jay 's clue: 0 equals P

OBYYERP

SBHF
YW

EY

AEY
GIVA

OFWOTF

SFBGGBSF

Y V A.G E J S ,

ABLJ

OLFYFRVF

SW

AEG. "

WR

SI P

SW
GFBRS

BLWIRJ
GEHF

GVPL 8 N

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Our dreams are our real lile." - Federico Fellino

'V/1-\~t

1-\/I~E

\biJ

BE£\\ ALL

~~\t-l6?

l'll. ReNE:W MY
NeW5PAPeR
OOB5C.RIPT\ON

(ci 2004 by NEA. Inc . 2·21

AstroGraph
'Your 'llirthde,y :

Tuesday, Feb . 24_, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Your managerial skills will be heightened
in the year ahead and recognized by th e
powers that be. You could be asked to
handle a situation that would earn yo u
much esteem and merit hand so mely in
the process
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marc h 20) - Although
your ideas and concepts could contain
greal merit, if your att itude IS negative and
sour today, you will li:t1l to approc iate thei1
wor th and not use them to your benefit
ARIES (M arch 21-Apnt 19) - Don't ignore

-....--l:~~~::•IH11ro Onl~~'"' ~-~--· ..··~---

Bridge has caused a lot ot d1vorces.
Once. Mr. A returned to hi s hotel room
during a tournament to fipO a note from
his wrfe. saying that she was leaving him
for Mr. B, who was - and still isr - Mr.
A's bridge partner
There have also been bridge marriages.
La st December. a widow. Judy Kay, mar·
ried a widower, Bobby Wollf_Judy's tate
husband . Norman . is a member of the
Hall of Fame. Bobby, also in the Hall of
Fame. holds 12 world titles .
On thrs deal. Judy Kay, as she was then ,
located the club queen to mAke her four·
spade contract.
A bal ancing jump overcall _
shows a good
six-card suit and some 14·16 high-card
points. Kay (South) upgraded because of
her extra distribulional values . Whe n
Wesl contested with three diamond s, Kay
bid one more irme . Then, North should
have passed. but if she had, there would·
n't have been a good story.
Declarer ruffed the secon_d diamond and
drew three rounds of trumps, getting the
bad news Now a heart went to West's
ace. He cashed the spade jack . then led
another diamond to force out South's fast
trum p. Declarer played a heart t9
dummy 's king , seeing West disc ard a diamond. Now Kay cashed the club ace and
played a club to her kin g, collecting
We st' s queen . Why did she play thai
way?
West was known to have started with two
clubs. And East was known to have the
queen-jack of hearts and d1amond jack.
With th e club que en as well. he would
have responded on the first round .

G

BIG NATE

740-992-1611

....

slangily
'
59 Laird's
dlughter

"Lile is a long rehearsal lor a film that is never made · - Marlene Oretrich

I'm out
on a limb!"

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remod ~ lin g

A

TracK the missing points from lhe bidding.

"I fee II ike

CONSTRUCDON
Public Notices In Ne""'spnpcrs.
Your Rlw;ht to Knu_.-,. Delivered RIKhl tu Y&lt;r•ur Du•ur.

vJANT YOU
TO f)(IT.

JONES'

4sn1
741).949·2217
10

vonll.r

Ta~e

$1,900. 080 304-675·5253
--------2001 Ford Ranger, 9,000
miles. Like new. See at 106
Second Ave. Call (740)446-

MOST OF THf

750 East Stale Street . Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

M~~Hso~~
v•~

East

Pass

Bridge divorces
and marriages

vJAY Ati!:A.C&gt;

IN TMf
E)(lT POLl-5 ...

2002 Jayco Oue st 2911.
1'987 Nissan pick -up 5
Slee ps 6 lots of
speed, good tires, good
co ndition
(304167S·42cl0
work truck, 152,000 miles

and female. 8 weeks old,
1632.
and 1st shots. 1991 Ford V6 engine on -----~---

FIND A PET
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

YOU'~f

I

llift'--s"",.-.-,-.
L--·
·. .. .

$500!.Hondas.

$250.00. (7401992·7888

MamRcn.;n

North

l •
3 •

•• t

58 Bad· mouth,

17 Hack
18 Puis on
20 Milord's
spouse
22 Puppy's cry
23 Like horror
11icks
24 Uncaged
27 Hardware
item

Wcsl

Opening lead:

Cherokee,

94 Buick LeSabre, $800 or
basi offer. Call (740)44 1·
9564 after 5pm.
- - - - - - -- - 1993 Honda EZ90 Cub
95 Olds, 98,4 c:loor, leather motorcycle, auto, alec. sta rt
&amp;~--. interior, very good shape. exc. cond. (304)576-2843
~
iiiiliiii
·~~-~_... (740)446·4385.
----,
.l'I!IUil..oi..L.r.K
--------1999 Yamaha 350 Big Bear
96 Saturn . neec:ls work ,
full time. 4X4 good condition
Tobacco Plants order now to $ 1.000 080. (740)992-77 19
guarantee earlu
spring - - . . , - , - - - - - - - $2,500.00 Firm .
'
planting ·
Dewhurst 96 T
v6
t
1 1966 404 International trac·
aurus, .. au o, a r. tor. $900.00 Firm . (740)843·
Greenhouse (304)895-3789 runs good, looks good.

I

roR~AU

Jeep

9 2
5
K J 8 4

Pass

V6, SUPER CLEAN . ri-·1

Dodge
miles . 2000

AKQ876

•
•

Dealer: West
Vulne t.·able: Neilher

mechanically. Asking $1 .~
ca ll John (740)379·9 122.

1J41144H111

.

+

alter
Saturn.
Neon , (740)379-2410
Cutl~s Ciera, Geo Tracker. 630pm.
Firebird , Corsica, Chevy
Truck . Over 20 in stock.
1992 Plymouth Voyager 3.0

Square ba les. grass hay.
never been wet, $ 1·75 per
bale, call (740)667·3267,
John Rice near Tuppers
Plains, Ohio

~~~"""""":'"':'""""""':::""~~i::iiiJ Call
Winters , Rio Grande, OH
iji
74Q-245·5121 .

South

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

S7.500 080. Call (7401256· (7401245·5162 or (7401446·
per bale. 6169.
6290.

• Sofa &amp; l011e ~at, mauves &amp; 2 Grave lots Ohio Valley •
Garden.
Sale" Block, brick, sewer pipes,
· E:reams. $200. call (740)446· Memory
3988.
cheap. (740)256·6070.
windows, lintels, etc. Claude

674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

$2,995;

(7401441-1533.

290
--,-s_.---:''----:--,--::
• =

4-WDs

• 9 3
¥ QJ743
• J 8 3
.t. 7 G 2

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

every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupo n
Buy $5.00
Bonania Gel
5 .' REE

VAIIL'i &amp;

•
¥
t

J 10 4 2
A
AKQ962
Q 5

ol6 Reilly bid
1 Long hair 48 Made
5 IRA
lnthelnVHtmenta 50 Asian
8 Plane!;
mounlalns
poellcally 52 Wave down
11 Lions' pray 54 Sidekick
12 -Ericson 55 Resolve
14 Ocaan
56 New Age
1 5 Sunl81
singer
colors
57 Speaker's
16 Nowhere
pauses
near

East

South

4 door.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- Remington Special Field ' - - ' - - - - - - - - 2002.
chair ; 992-2526. Russ Moore,
Square bales ol good mixed Strauss.
20.000
Lt.20 $550: Remington 48,

maHeress.
Call (7401446· ____
t423 after 6pm.

r·

Cell Phone

I0 7 4
A Ill 9 3

West

•

1997 Z-24 Loaded, $3,295 ; 1979 GMC, 14 pa·ssenger
1991 S-10, 4.3 auto, AJC. van . Runs good, body's
$t ,995; 1998 Grand Am , good, well maintained. Call

Fridav. Bam-4 :30pm. Closed Pure Timothy Hay. $3.00 per
Riverine Thursdav.
SatUrdav
&amp; bale, call after 7pm.

~~:~::;:e~~~x spri~g~~ lrowi:j";::e:::r~~·.:_~
-• • ~--r-,1 ~~e~~u~:: :!~.: &lt;~~w~z;,~ ~:1'o)742~;C:
Good

[.10--oiiiiAiiU
oi!Uiiiiiiiii._,.ll
FOR SALE

878-1417

6:30
Last Thursday of

Patio. Start $385/Mo. No wringer washers . Will do Liquidation,

closed CVS clover, alfalfa-orchard grass,
Pets. Lease Plus Security repairs on ma}or brands in 0 rugstore on 2nd Ave . some barn stored, $15·$25,
Deposit Required, Days: _sh_o_p_o-::r_•t_you_r_h-:om_e._ _ Sher~ing showcase, drink (740~98-2765
74G-446-3481 ; Evenings:
Used Furniture Store. 130 coolers, &amp; safe.
8001t , $10, never wet. stored
740-367.()5()2.
Bulavme Pike. manresses. Call (33S)·3J2-4560.
in barn. {740)949·2822
Upstairs · 1 Bedroom Apt dressers.
couches,
Court
51.
downtown bunkbeds. reclinfll&amp;, what· NEW AND USED STEEL For Sale: Hay $2 .00 a bale,
• Gallipolis 1 or 2 _persons nets. Grave Monumenls Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar about 1,000 bales left. Call
occupancy $275- mo. utili· (740)446;4782. Gallipolis, For
Concrete,
Angle . (740)446·7857.
lies, deposit , reference OH. Hrs. 10-4 (M-S) Sunday Channel. Flat Ba r, Steel Hav for sale: Round &amp;
require&lt;f 286-4772 or 379 ~ by appointment.
Grating
For
Drains.
~~;;;,;,;..;...;..;..._ _..., Drtvewavs &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L square
bates.
Delano
2204 after 5 pM
Scrap Metals Open Monday. Jackson's Farm. 304-675·
\li iH II \\ lll " l
. ANTIQUES
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; 1743 or 740-446· 11 04.

Henderson, WY

Early birds start

Tickets call 992-0003

•

4

MONTY

02-23-04

5
K 10 8 6 5

¥

MYERS·PAVING

BIN!JO 2171
E..ry Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doo~ Open 4:30

after under warranty) $5,000

JET

concama

ACROSS

FAIIM

starts 9162. Free Estimates, Easy (740)388--0498.

S255/month. Low &amp; moder· linancing. 90 days same as

Tara

firm .

NEA Crossword Puzzle

1! ,

\ I I\ I ' I I II h

~ HooOr Sock1o Hllh

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

an opportunily for add ing to your
resources today jus! because it came
about through someone you don·, like. •
Jump at the chance immedialely because
it will be fleeting

TAURUS (April 20-May 201 - Try to

keep

your conversations on th e light anc:l breezy
side loday in your mvolve ments wilh
l riends. Neither you nOr they will profit
!rom emotionally heated discussions
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Th ere w ill be
ample opportunities that pop up tod ay
where your career or goals are concerned. However, il you react in a ho·hum
fashion . they could evaporate nght before
your eyes.
CANCER !June 21-July 22)- Should a
friend or associate come to you today for
he lp, oller this pe rson lots o~ ideas and
suggestions, but it wouldn't be a good idea
lo assist monetarily. Things cou ld tu rn
sour.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) - Under no wcumstances should you allow othe rs to
poke thei r noses in your aflai rs today n1
which they are not directly involved. They
may mean we ll, but could muddy tho
waters even further
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Avoid ba srn g
your judgments on emoti onal continge ncies today, because they wilt greatly distort
your common sense or any inslin ctual
reactions thai m1ght be trying lo gu1de you
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23) ~ Don't get
yourself all in a dither tod ay over conlusmg
conditiom at work , because, ralher tha n
setting you back, they could serve to
awaken your ingenuity for creating furft·,er
growth.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Maka it a
point to devise occasional breaks in your
roulin es today. so that you won 't get sl uck
m a monotonous rut. 11 you feel tied down.
it could make yo u de sponoent and ineffective.
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23· Dec . 21) Instead of rat rona1izing or mak1ng excuses
today as 10 why you shouleln't do something , do what ne eds doi ng as each job
pops up and you'll end the day with a
sense of rea l accompli shmenl.
CAPRICORN (DeJ:. 22-Jan . 19) - Once
you decide to shelve some activity until
another day 111 order to partic1pate 111 a fun
involvement today, let it go and don't think
abou t it again Enjoy yo urself without gwlt
AQUARIUS (Ja n. 20 -Feb. 19) - Don t
toss in lhe towel lao prematurely today in
any of your bus1ne ss dealin gs or moneymaking transactions. Some thing that looks
like a loser could make a turnarorrnd to
your advantage.

1MA1 DALLY
rUIZLU

WOlD
GAlli ;

Ofewr
~eorro ..,,.e iett•rs d
scrambled wordJ

the
be.
iow ro fcrm four mr.ple wcrdl.

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The dentis: peered 1ntc the
wealthy gents mcuth . s miled and
said to t"ts assistant ,' Cancel ne~t
k
-1
t I'll b
·ng

I

wee s appclro men s.

Jn vacadon - ~ · - · ~ - -.

0·

Com!'lllt!l tMe chuci::ll!l qucted
by filliMg In the rt'1iMir'IQ wo:d$
~...J...-J......J...-.L.....J...-l you develcp from .uep No. J b@iow.
.

.

.

.

SCitAM -LETS ANSWERS

Unmask · Vouch - IQdex , Out.vit- IN vouc MOUTH
Our daughter was in tears after a heated d is .:ussron With
my husband. "You pul your loot down." I o:served, "and
wound up w1lh it IN your MOUiH."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

llO, YOU'l~ vU~T ME.% IT'Uf"

YOIJ DO~/ KkJOWA'-!YfH ikJCr
Ae.OIJT PAl klTI~1&lt; .'

SOUP TO NUTZ
11:700.0

.clo~

al'e THe way
UK€ ~tY is 114e

aq::&gt;f\,lB&lt;''f 1n TH-aT o rdeR -:;;

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