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                  <text>· Py De •

6anll&lt;!' 1:imrt -6rntinrl

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

Sunday, February 29, 2004

'figer wins second
sb1light Match Play
Championship, Bt

•

®

manulacturarse

SPORTS

Fire protection levy passage a necessity for Pomeroy

• Symmes Valley upsets
Tornadoes. See Page 81

department, will be up for
consideration in 2005.
Blaettnar said passing the
. POMEROY - Fire safety levy is a necessity because
is on the ballot in Pomeroy the all-volunteer· tire departin the form of a !-mill fire ment relies on local funding
protection levy.
to operate. There are 40
"This levy provides fund- members in the department
ing essential for fire protec- ' that provide 24 hour service.
tion in Pomeroy and Meigs Response time is well within
County," said Pomeroy Fire three minutes.
·
Chief Rick Blaettnar.
"We need this levy to
This renewal levy is the pass,:· Blaettnar said. ''This
second of three five-year levy 1s Important to everyone
levies (a total of 4 mills) that because we use the money
provides money for tire pro- for the operation and functection.
ti o nin~ of the fire depart·
At the last general election ment.'
Nov. 4, a 1-mill levy that
In one 24-hour period last
provides about $16,262 per month, the Pomeroy Fire
year to the tire department Department put out a house
for five years passed qy a fire and later rescued a fami323· 78 margin. The tlnal 2- . ly trapped inside a car.
mill renewal levy, which
The house tire was set by
provides $33.000 to the tire confessed arsonist and self-

14.9·16 oz Pkg Keebler Sandles,
14·16 oz Pkg Club Ctackers,
18 oz Pkg Soft Batch Cookies
or 15·16 oz Pkg
.

•Keebler
Chi~s Deluxe ·
4.8·9 oz Pk ·All Varieties Kellogg's
I

Kroger .
Gallon Milk

BY

J.

MILES UYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

firefi ghter
proclaimed .
Shawn Rat! ill. who pled not
guilty last week in the Meigs
County Court of Common
~l e a s courtroom of judge
Fred Crow Ill.
Before the firefighters
could even sit down to '' cup
of coffee to rellect on the
house fire the night before,
they were called into duty
when a car slid into a ditch
while coming down Anne
Street in Pomeroy.
Within two minutes, the
Pomeroy Fire Department
and
emergency
crews
responded lo the .scene
where Dana Lee Bunch, his
wife Mary, their daughter
Colleen Brydie and her husband Lawrence. and their
two children. Lawrence and
Tavian. were trarped inside
the vehicle. Fireli ghters and

emergency worke rs rescued
the family.
Last June. a huge fire
destroyed .the Pomeroy vil lage garage. The Pomeroy
Fire Department arrived on
the scene and fo ugh t the
blaze for hours before il was
finall y extinguished. The
tol&lt;ll damage was estimated
to be between $160.000 to
$200.000.
Blaettnar said the levy is
important to not onl y
Pomeroy. hut Meigs County
as well. Because of a mutual
aid agreement . the Pomeroy
Fire Department responds to
any number of emergency
calls in the county.
Last March. a tractor fire
in rural Meigs Count y
almost ignited a local gas
well. Howard Lockhart was
mowing a fi eld beside

Landa ker Road whe n he
hc!!an In " nell something
hu rn ing .

Before the circa I 'J53 tractor

became engul fe d

in

fl ames near 1he gas well. he
called 1hc Pomeroy Fi re
Departmc111 . A huge puniper
truck with fi ve men. includ·
ing Blac ttnar. hegan their
rough journey to the fire hy
turning off U.S. l3 and heading down Kingsbury Road

(Counl v Road IH) .
The " fi re ft ghte rs ex tin·
gui shed the fire aro und the
gas we ll first before starting
on the tractor which had by
now
been co mpletely
engulfed in flames.
Bla~ttnar said he hc1pes the
community will conlinue tn
support 1he lire department
hy voting fnr lhe levy in
Tuesday's eleclion .

INSIDE

Fruit Snac s or 12 oz Special K,
19.1 oz Apple Jacks,
19.5 oz Com Pops or

All Varieties Gallon
Orange Juice or

Smoltz caJJs for tougher
steroid testing, B2

• Aristide resigns, flees
into exile; United Nations
debates multinational
force. See Page AS

• Kellogg's 25 oz
Sugar Frosted Flakes
WITH

Making lap robes for elderly people confined to their homes or a nursing home is a volun·
teer project of Mary Allee Blse of Reedsville . Here she shows her latest cre&lt;ttions to Diana
Coates, RSVP director at the Senior Citizens Center. (Charlene Hoeflich)

WEATHER

Geraldine Cleland of Racine is a faithful volunteer on the baby
qu ilt fund-raising project at the Senior Citizens Center. Her
favorite quilts to work on are the ones featuring a tractor pat·
tern. She 's made about 15 of them. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Volunteers turn quilting into fund-raising venture
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHql&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - If there's
one thing volunteers at the
Senior Citizens Center like
to do , it's work on baby
quilts.
Detello on Pall• A6

Visit the center almost any
day of the week and you' II
find a dozen or so women
· around tables with one or
two marking squares on
yards of material, two or
three others cutting out the
blocks, and several others

sewing the pieces together.
It's thl! process of making
a quilt top.
"They just love to work on
the baby ,quilts," said Diana
Coates, Retired Senior
Volunteer Program director
at the center, who can he
1

seen "working the room"
most any morning encouraging and admiring the work of
the dedicated volunteers.
In fact , she says , there
are so many quilts made
up now that plan s are
being made to have a baby

quilt show thi s spring.
Making the quilts is reall y
a fund-rai ser for the center.
The onl y cost is for the mate·
rial for the lop and h&lt;ll'k. the
battil)g whi ch goes in
Please see Quilts, A5

'Lord of the Rings' claims 11 Oscars
•

By DAVID GERMAIN
AP Mov.le Writer

·, INDEX
2 S ECI'IONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials
Sports

Weather

Bt-2, 6
A6

iC) ao04,nhlo Valley PubltohiDR Co.

ex-hoodlum who falls back
on his criminal ways 111
"Mystic River."
·
LOS ANGELES - "The
Tim Robbins won the supLord of the Rin¥,s: The porting-actor. prize for his
Return of the King ' won a performance as ~n emotionrecord-tying 1I Academy ally crippled murder &amp;uspect
Awards on Sunday, includ- in "Mystic River," and
ing best picture and director Renee Zellweger took supand becoming the first fanta- porting actress as .a hardy
sy to win the top Oscar. ·
Confederate surv1vo r. 111
In the acting categories, "Cold Mountain."
all the winners took home
After the first two installtheir first Oscars: Charlize ments of the "Lord of the
Theron won best actress for Rings" trilogy were ~ hut out
her transformati ve perfor- of major awards, "Return of
mance as serial killer Aileen the Kmg" swept all II cateWuornos in "Monster," and gories in which it was nomiSean Penn was named best nated. It matched the record
actor for playing a. vengeful I I wins of "Titanic" and

. I

-

Some lteme may require e deposit.

Vl•lf

our Web•lf• at www.Kro•er.com or

call Cu•tomer Service at 1-BOO.KROGaRS

·- --------

Than You!

February such a success for us in 2004.

ADVIIIn'IIIIID tT•M POLICYI .
WE RE8ERVI.THE RIGHT TO UMrr Q\MNTITII!S. Each of theM tdvertltlld ltemt It
Nc!ulnMIIo be ·IIVIIIIIIble fDr ule. tt- do nii\ out olen tdveriiHd Item, - wtll ·
offer you your cl!olue ole com.,...IM ltent, when IIVIIIIeiM, rwll-ng·the ....,.
uvtnae, or • l'lllnoheOk whlcll wtn entitle you to' pun:htu the edvertlud Item
M the ac!VertiMd prtce within 30 dolye. Only one vendor coupon w111 be
ec oepll d I*" Item. Co"""'ht 2004. The Kraaer Company. No •••• .to detl-.

---- ------ ----- -··

PI•••• sn Ose~rs, A5

Elijah Wood , left, Sean Astin . Bi lly Boyd and Dominic
Monaghan, all hobbits In the film "Lord of The Rings: The
Return of the King, " arrive for the 76th ann ual Academy
Awards in Los Angeles. (AP Photo; Kevork Djansezian)

l() all who helped make our American Heart Month during

(:) Kroger cares about your privacy! Please view our current privacy policy at kroger.com or vi sit the customer service desk.
.
Prlcee 1nd Heme Gloocl AI 818 E. Stele St., Athena end 1130 E. Main St., Jackeon
'
I
•
Kroger Storee Februery 29 thru Merch e, 2004.
·

"Ben-Hur'' and became only
the third movie to sweep
every nominated category,
following "Gi¥,i" and ''The
Last Emperor. ' which both
went nine-for-nine.
"I especially just lastly
want to thank our wonderful
cast who just got their
tongues around this rather
awkward text and made it
come to life with such devotion and passion and heart,"
said "Lord of the Rings"
director Peter Jackson, who
shared the sc re enpla~ prize
"-ith co-writers Pgilippa
Boyens and Fran Wal sh.

Remember to stay heart healthy throughout the year. .. for
more information, call the Holzer Medical Center Community
Health and Wei/ness Department at (740) 446-5679.
M E o 1c A L c E NT E R
'•

·-· ...__
~------

•'

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I

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The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

Page.A2

Monday, March t,

2004

Community Calendar
Public meeting~

Wednesday, March 3
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Youth League
regi stration at Middleport
council room 6 to 8 p.m.
Signup is for both baseball
and softball for boy s and
girls, 4 to 17.

LETART FALLS - .Letart
Town ship Tru~tee s meet at 5
p.m.. office building .
Sutton
. SYRACUSE :Township Tru stees 7 p.m. at
Syracuse Village Hai L

MIDDLEPORT
-The
Middleport Literary Club
will meet at 2 p.m . at the
home of Nadfein Goebel.
Patricia Holter will review
''A Knight in Shining Armor''
by Jude Deveraux.

Thesday, March 2
ALFRED - Th ~ . Orange
Township Trustees. 7:30 p.m.
at the home of clerk Osie
Follrod. ,
The Bow Mariner, a chemical tanker sinks after an explosion off the coast of Virginia . The Coast
Guard continued searching the frigid Atlantic Sunday for 18 crew members of the tanker wh ich
was carrying 3.5 million gallons (13.3 million liters) of ethanol. Three crewmen wete known
dead and six others were rescued. (AP Photo/ U.S. Coast Guard)
·

The Enterprise, the nation's oldest nuclear-powered ai rcraft carrier, docks at Norfolk Naval
Station returning home Sunday to adoring crowd s afte r a six-month deployment supporting the
war in Iraq and the global war on terrorism. (AP Photo/ The Virginian-Pilot, Genevieve Ross) ·

S~ar~h

suspended for 18
Carrier USS Enterprise returns
m1ss1ng after tanker explosion after six-month deployment

I

I;

'

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,.

...

By SONJA BARISIC
Associated Press Writer
PORTSMOUTH , Va. (AP)
- The Coast Guard on
Sunday ni ght suspended the
search for 18 crew members
miss ing from an ethanolladen tanker that exploded in
the Atlantic Ocean, and were
unsure whether search efforts
would resume Monday mornIng.
The Coast Guard will
decide whether to continue
the search after a crew fli es
over the area Monday morning, Chief Warrant Officer
Gene Maestas said.
"Realistically, the longer
the search goes on, the less
likely it is that we will find
anyone who is still alive,"
Rear Adm. Sally .BriceO'Hara, commander of the
Coast Guard's 5th District,
said at a news briefing earlier
Sunday.
The Bow Mariner, a tanker
carrying 3.5 million gallons
of ethanol, exploded and
sank Saturday night about 50
miles off Virginia's Eastern
Shore. Three men died and
six were rescued.
Three of the survivors were
Sunday
from
released
Sentara Norfolk General
Hospital. The others were in
good condition and could be
released Monday morning,
hospital spokeswoman Ann
Keffer said.
· Two Coast Guard workers
were treated for minor
injuries.
Coast Guard officials were
investigating the cause of the
explosion. Coast Guard
spokeswoman Krys Hannum
said there was no reason to
believe it was anything other
than an accident.
Two Coast Guard patrol
boats, a helicopter and a C130
airplane
searched
Sunday, but with water temperatures below 50 degrees,
the likelihood of additional
survivors being found grew
increasingly slim.
Hannum said some of 'the
crew members were sleeping
at the time of the explosion
and some were on deck, so
it's unlikely that they were
. wearing gear that would protect them from the cold
water.
The survivors were treated
for conditions including
hypothermia and had to be
decontaminated after being
found covered with a petroleum-based substance.
"They look like they 've
been through an ordeal and
they're very introspective
about what happened," hospital spokeswoman Vicky
Gray said of the rescued
crewmen, who are Filipino
and did not speak English .
"They' re very quiet, subdued, like you would

expect."
The crew members have
declined interview requests,
Gray said. Hospital chap lains
helped the crew talk to their
families in the Philippines by
telephone.
Coast Guard official s said
that most of the ethanol
spewed from the tanker had
evaporated, but fuel fro m the
ship's storage tanks has
formed a 9-square-mile oil
slick in ~h e Atlantic.
Guardsmen don't'yet know
how much of the fuel aboard
the ship spilled; but they say
it was carrying 48,000 gallons of stored diesel fuel and
193,000 gallons of fuel oil.
Environmental officials are
most concerned about the
fuel oil, a sticky, heavy,
molasses-like substance that
was used to power the vessel.
"That's what we're really
keeping an eye on. We don't
want that stuff to reach the
shoreline," said Mike Sharon,
chief of the emergency
response division of the
Maryland Department of the
Environment.
Computer models drawn
by scientists at the Coast
Guard and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration predict the
spill will wash out to sea and
not glom onto the shores of
Maryland or Virginia, said
Chief Warrant Officer Gene
Maestas of the Coast Guard.
The 570-foot Bow Mariner
was en route from New York
to Houston Saturday when it
sank in 200 feet of water. Lt. .
Chris Shaffer of Ocean City
(Md.) Emergency Services
said the explosion came after
a· fire started on the deck of
the ship.
The ship is a chemical
tanker built in 1982 and is
managed by a Greek company, Ceres Hellenic Shipping
Enterprises Ltd. A company
spokesman said the ship had

a crew of 24 Filipinos and
three Greeks.
A spokesman for Norwaybased Odfjell , the commercial operator and owner of
the Singapore- flagged ship,
declined to speculate on what
caused the accident.
"We are very grieved about
having to report that Bow
Mariner has gone down and
that many seamen have lost
their lives," company chairman Dan Odfjell said .
Tony Redding, spokesman
for Ceres Hellenic/said the
company was sending a technical -c rew from Greece on
Sunday to assist the Coast
Guard. Odfjell hired Marine
Spill Response Corporation,
which dispatched a cleanup
ship to standby, Sharon said.
The Bow Mariner underwent two routine inspections
in 2003, Ceres Hellenic said
in a statement. No problems
were found in January, and
five minor deficiencies were
found in October, including a
defective crew shower and
the need tb update a log book.
The issues were corrected
and the ship sailed without
delay, the company said.
Scientists with the Coast
Guard's Marine Safety Office
were preparing the environmental cleanup, Maestas
said. A likely method would
be using inflatable booms to
surround the spill and shift it
toward pumps that would ·
skim the oil and funnel it into
a nearby barge, he said.
Ethanol, an alcohol-based
fuel additive made from corn
and other starch crops, is considered
environmentally
clean. It is water-soluble and
· isn't floating atop the waters
of the Atlantic, Sharon said . .
" Because it mixes with the
water, it's got the whole
ocean to dilute it out," he
said. "You don' t see the kind
of containment issues you
have with oil."

Judge Collins served his
commWlity as a prosecutor,
reacher, and coach. /

He has 22 years of judicial
ex pcrie~ce and currently '

serves as a judge on the .
Ironton Municipal Court.

Three generations
of the Collins family,
including late Senator
Oakley Collins.

NORFOLK, Va. (AP) Navy spokesman Lt . Jim for wl]at is known as a
The nation's oldest nuclear- Hoeft said. ·
utiger cruise.,
powered aircraft carrier and
The Enterprise, commisMembers . of the ship's
its 5,000 crew members sioned in 1961 , had been air wing flew home midreturned home Sunday to at sea since Aug. 29. It week.
adpring crowds after a six- headed .
to
the
During the deployment,
month deployment support- Mediterranean Sea and planes and other forces
ing the war in Iraq and Persian Gulf in the first from the carrier's strike
the global war on terror- deployment of a . Navy car- group were scattered to
ism.
rier si nce major military
The USS Enterprise, dis- operations in Iraq officially many places, including
Iraq, Afghan istan, the Horn
playing a banner reading ended May I.
of
Africa and the Indian
"Hi Mom," pulled into · The
carrier's
crew
Norfolk Naval Station and members were not the .Ocean. The group also
ones
to
come rounded up two · vessels
fired a two-gun salute as on! y
family and friends cheered ashore .
Also
arriving loaded with drugs - the
wildly from the pier.
home were more than profit s from which were
"There was a bright blue I ,000 relatives of crew likely going to fund terrorsky with a brilliant sun, · members, mostly children, ist activities, commanding
and lots of happy people who boarded ihe ship officer Capt. Eric C
with
American
flag s," Friday in Mayport, Fla. Neidlinger said last week.
, '~. ' ·:···&lt;.

-:.,,. · •[.;.

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"

•-Jet~ : : ,·

·

.,. P~oud to be apart of your life. Subscribe today • 992-2155
.

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MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport Lodge
363 F&amp;AM 7:30 p.m. at the
temp le. Work will be in the
entered apprentice degree.

. RACINE - The Forest
Run
United
Methodist
Chur~h will not be serving an
elect1on day di nner on
Tuesday. March· 2. but will
resume serving thi s dinner
tor the general election in
November.

Thursday, March 4
POMEROY - . Holzer
Hosp:ice Meigs County "dinner with friends'' 6 p.m
Thursday
at
Crow 's
Restaurant. Ca ll 992 -7463
for more in formation .

Wednesday, March 3
PAGEVILLE
- Sc ipio
Township Trustees meeting
will be held at 6:30 p.m. at
the Pagev ill e town halL

Friday, March 5
HARRISIONVILLE · Meig s Cou nty Pomona
Grange 46 will meet in regular
session
at
the
Harrisionville Fire Station.
Final plans wi ll be made for
the Grange banquet on April
30.

Clubs and
Organizations
Thcsday, March 2
CHESTER
Chester
Counci l 323, Daughers of
America. 7 p.m. at the lodge
hall. Good of the order committee will serve soup and
co nduct games. Members to
take giIts for the games.

Saturday, March 6
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet in reg-

DEAR ABBY: Seven years
ular session at 7:30 p.m. fol- · ago. I met the man of my
lowing a 6:30 p_m. dinner.
dreams and was lucky
enough to marry him. ''Mike''
is intelligent , caring, loving,
witty, romantic and a great
Monday, March 1
father. Every day he tells me
MIDDLEPORT - Indoor he loves me and that I'm
camp by the Meigs Area
beautiful.
Holiness Association, 7 p.m.
So what 's the problem?
each evening through March Mike weighs 80 pounds more
7. except Sunday at 6 p.m.,
than he did when we met. I
at the Middleport Nazarene
thank God for him every sinChurch. Rev. Elaine Pettit,
gle day, but the "zing" is
evangelist . The Sissons progone. ·
vidi ng the music.
Don't get me wrong. We 're
sti ll intimaJe , but I miss the
Sunday, March 7
"butterflies" I used to feel
POMEROY- Tricky
just looking at him. I am al so
Ricky Henson, a gospel
worried about his health and
magician and ventriloqui st,
the effect his eating habi ts
will be at the Hill side Bapti st have on our children. Thi s
Church , 10:30 a.m. to noon. has seriou sly damaged his
For transportation or more
self- esteem. too, and that is
information, call Dr. James
the hardest thing for me to
R. Acree. Sr., 992-6768 or
deal with.
Tom Wilson. 992-7007.
. If life gets in the: way, and
mt1macy goes by the wayside
for a couple of weeks, Mike
accuses ·me of purposely
avoiding him, looking for
1\tesday, March 3
someone
new, never taking
POMEROY - Meigs
the
initiative
, etc. Abby, I
County Health Department
love my husband. I've done
will conduct a childhood
everything I can to help him
immunization clinic at the
with his weight problem - to
office, I to 7 p.m. Take
child's shot records. Chldren no avail. In fact, if I mention
it, he tells me saying somemust be accompanied by a
thing only makes it worse.
parent/guardian. Take medI take good care of my own
ical cards if applicable.
health and try to teach the
Donation s will he accepted.
kids to do the same, even
when they ask why Dad doesn't take care of hi s.
Am I being petty when I
Mondav, March 1
tell you I'd give anything to
RUTLAND Norman
Wi ll wi ll observe his 91 st have my slimmer, sexier,
birthday Monday. Cards may healthier husband back" I
be se nt to him at Overbrook miss his energy and cmitlCe nter,
Page
Street,
Middleport , 45760.

Church services

Other events

Birthdays

meeti ng,
which
was
approved. Two new members
were acce pted and re ti ri ng
members were reported.
Birthdays for February and
Marc h were announced. Get
well cards were . sent to
Rosalie Story and Carolyn
Smith.
.
The next meeting wi II be
held at noon on Marc h 6 at

Trinity United Methodist
Church in Wellston. It will be
a combined meeting with
Alpha Omicron Chapter as
hosts.
Also attending were Pam
Toon , Barbara
Rhodes,
Kathleen Bledsoe, Carol ·
Eberts, Cheryl Nisely, Linda
Specht, Becky Zurcher, Gay
Perrin, and Marge Fetty.

School News
Deshong
graduates

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ••••
• Hardware
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• And More ...

. SYRACUSE -Melinda
DeShong, daughter of Roy
;and Cherri Bass Rinehart,
:Mansfield, and granddaugh1er of Ora Bass, Syracuse,
·gradu ated from Me thodi st
College at Fayetteville, N.C.
:on Dec. 12.
· She rece ived a bachelor of
-soc ial work degree and grad:Uated summa cum laude.
Melinda was enrol ied in the
RO.T.C. program.
: Following the graduation,
·a ceremony was held in the
college chapel during which
Melinda was co mmi ssioned
).Is a Second Lieutenant in
1he U.S. Army. Her parents
:assisted in the pinning of the
l;lars. Melinda and her husband, Sgt . Adam DeS hong,
are both sta tioned at Ft.
:Bragg, N.C.
·
Those attending her gradu-

ation and commissioning
were Ora Bass, Richard and
Barb Koker, Syracuse; Roy
and Cherri Rinehart, Patrick
and Stephanie Rietschlin and
Zane, Mansfield; Jack and
Lenora Offenberger, Torch;
William and Kri stin Hand,
Marion, Ind .; and Mike and
Diane Miller of Gas City,
Ind.
.

Heine s, Pomeroy ; Andrea
Krawsczyn, Pomeroy; Sara
Mansfield, Pomeroy; Lee
Nau, Pomeroy; Scott Needs,
Pomeroy; Jeremy Roush ,
Pomeroy ;
Ryan
Pratt,
Pomeroy ; Jeffrey Shank,
Pomeroy; James Satnely,
Pomeroy: Robert Workman,
Pomeroy.
Arian Smedley, Portland;
Joseph
Coroell
Racine;
Mariam El-Dabaja, Racine ;
Macyn
Ervin,
Racine;
Kimberly
!hie,
Racine :
ATHENS - The follow- Rachel Marshall , Racine;
ing students have been Brandon Smith, Racine ;
named to the dean's li st at Jennifer Walker, Racine;
Ohio University, earning a Brandon Wolfe, Racine:
grade point average of 3.3 or Jessica Brannon, Reedsville;
better:
Jeri
Thomas, Melissa Johnson, Reedsville ;
Cheshire ; Amos Cottrill, Joshua Kehl, Reedsville; Leah
Coolville , Jeffrey Gandee, Sanders, Reedsv ille; Sara
Coolville: Kenneth Sisco. !hie, · Rutl and;
Amber
Coolville; Orion Barrett, Snowden, Rutland; Edda Cox,
Langsv ille: Jeremiah Smith. Shade; Ginger Schmalenberg,
Langsv ille: Stacey Brewer, Shade: Kimberly Marcinko,
Jennifer Tuppers Plains.
Middl eport ;
Buckley, Pomeroy; Heidi
Del ong. Pomeroy: Maureen

Dean's list

Graduate OU

Celebrating spedol

dtl)'swifhyou! ·

Dear
Abby

dence and the respect I had
for him. Abby. are my feel ings valid'' Or should I just
get over it and be happy with
all of his good qualitie&gt; 0 FEELII'\G
WEIGHTED
DOWN ,
DEAR
WEIGHTED
DOWN : You are not being
petty. You are being human .
Ask your husband to make an
appointment with hi s doctor
for a complete physical or
make the call for him. The
lecture abo ut diet and health
should come from the doclor.
Your husband is not alone in
his problem. It's one that is
shared by millions of people
in thi s countrv.
The solutioi1 lies in a will ingness to make lifestyle
changes. Since you are
already providing healthy
meals at hom e. please consid er a physical activity yDu ant!
your husband can enjoy
toge ther to help him burn
those extra calories. (If he'&gt;
reluctant. remind him that it
will pu t him in better shape
for lovemaki ng.) Reward any
progress wi th comp l im~nts
and praise. If all else fails.
make sure hi s li fe insurance
is up-to-date and enjoy him
as long as yo u can. Nobody's

perfect.
DEAR ABBY: In our office
we o ft~n ;end card; and gifts
as a group to anyone who has
a birthday, new baby. etc .
Usually everyone ,ign&gt; the
card&gt;. We are a big department. '0 there ar~ a lot of
name, .
What i' the etiquette on
group 'ympathy
cards'J
Should everyone 'ign it. or is
that too tlippant'' Should it
read. "Your friend' in the
department"·.' - CURIOUS
ABOUT ETIQUETTE
DEAR CURIOUS : Either
one i&gt; prope~ -· howe\ er. fnr
each person to sign it woulcl
be much \Varmer and more
per,onal.
bEAR ABBY: My hu,baml
and I have been married ju't
over a ye ar. and we are not
ready to haw .:hildren for
another yt:ar or ~o .
How can I 2et the me"age
ac:ross to welf:.meaning r~nli ­
ly and friend s that it is none
of their busi ness when we are
planning to have chi ldre n'' I
have ent!uret! enough personal quest ion, . I "'oult! love to
hear you r advice. - NOT
READY FOR CHILDRE N
DEAR NOT READY: Here
it is. Say with a sm ile.
"Thank you t'or your interest.
but we're waitin g to ,ee if the
marria!!e \vorks out. ..
Dew'-: Ahln- i., HTi!len hr
Abigail v,,;, Burell, als;,
kno11 ·" 11s Jew111e Phil/if's:
1111d \\'CIS jou/lded /11· her
morh e1: Paulille Pliillips.
Wrire
Dear
A/Jh"
ar
H'W11'.01'tllAhb\'.COIII

,;r

ATHENS
Lucinda
Parker of Rutland and
Cynthia Bauers of Syracuse
received degrees from Ohio
University at the conclusion
of the fall quarter.

Sunday lim~-~entinel
(740)992;.2155

Supplement to:

POMEROY
Meigs
County
Tobacco
Use
Prevention Coal ition, m
cooperation
with
the
Campaign for Tobacco-Free
Kids, is asking for art work
expressing the harmful
aspects of tobacco use.
Art projects will be featured in a gallery show at
the Meigs County District
Public Library to wrap up
"Kick Butts Day" activities.
·
Projects will
be judged by rules and regulations provided. A prize
will be awarded to the top
entries in the categories of
drawings, posters and 3-D
mixed media on grade levels, kindergarten through
grade 2, third through tifth
grade, sixth through eighth,
and ninth through 12th.
The mixed media catego- Ernest Bus h and He len Hill were -named Valentine King and
ry is open only to students Queen at Overbrook Center, and we re presented with gifts.
in sixth through 12th grades. Dwight Icenhower. local Elvis Presley tribute artist. entertained.
Judging will be based on the
creativity of the theme and
overall presentation Every
student who enters will
receive a participation prize.
The theme for the contest
is "The
Truth
about
Tobacco,"
and
entries
should focus on any of the
harmful aspects of tobacco
use. A title may be used.
ArtFest will feature art
works of students in kindergarten through Grade 12.
Entrie~ will be picked up at
schools on April 14. A kickoff ceremony and awards
presentation will be held at
6 p.m. on Tuesday, April 20,
at the Pomeroy Library.
Entries will remain on
public display for one wee k
following the awards ceremony.
·
Information is available
by· calling 992-2222 or 9855385.

N'bCUiAlf&gt;E

~oint ~lealiant l\egiliter
~allipohli 1JElailp tn:rHJtme

The Daily Sentinel

(304) 675·1333
(740) 44&amp;.;.2341
(740) 991·2155

HARRISON
, For
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REP BLICAN
DELMAR II ELII PULLINS

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FOR

' · Proven commitment to
Clerks Office
. and the Citizens '!{Meigs C11untyl

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"One thing I've learned during my career as a pro football
player and Marshall atumn~s is thai expenence counts. It
doesn't matter how good you say you are. You have to have the
experience to prove it. Experience took me to the Superbowl in
'97. Judge Fred Crow knows firsthand thai experience does
matter - especially in a court of law. Elect Fred Crow for Judge
of the 4th District Court of Appeals. Vote for~heuy who. has the
experience not for the ones
7~- n0
that just say they do."
r~
~ ou

,-.,J/J

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"Go with Crow!"

Clerk of courts

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Box 6~·/.10. Los Angeles. CA
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1, 2004

Artfest entries Overbrook Center
sought
Valentine King and Queen

Chapter meets
POMEROY .
Alpha
Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma, met recently
at First Southern Baptist
Church in Pomeroy.
·
Members joined in prayer
before a carry-in meaL .
- President Sandra Walker
4ed the business meeting, and
Secretary Nellie Parker read
lhe report of the December

Monday, March

Man of wife's dreams outgrows her fantasy

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Association , 8:30 a.m.,
Peoples Bank.

Monday, March 1
RUTLAND
-The
Rutland Town ship Tru stees
wi·ll meet at 5 p.m at the
Rutland Fire Station.

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

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Daily Sentinel

Monday, March

The Daily Sentinel

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free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
· of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
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READER'S
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'

VIEW

School

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Cut and manage budget
Dear Editor:
Enough is· enough of waste by the Meigs Local School
Board, regarding Rutland Elementary.
As a homeowner and retired on pension, the board (exclude
.Mr. Young) knew two months in advance that the sewage
·removal didn't work. Instead of postponing moving in at a
'cost of approximately $100,000 by year's end to the taxpayer,
·. $14,000 per month,they opened.
They voted to pay a principal of K-2 's difference in salary
·while he is in the service. Is that covering school expenses'?
·No, and are they going to do that for all employees ? Can poor
taxpayers afford that? I never knew they had principals for
_ three grades.
The managed to get the MRIDD levy through and Mr. Frank
· states they will get more to run that small school than he will
. ·have to run the county. Remember last year when we had no
·deputies for our protection? Part of which could have been
. prevented by only calling back half instead of them all.
. ·. We have no emergency health care after 9 p.m., except for
our wonderful emergency squads (thank God for them). We
need our hospital re-opened.
· · We have children walking miles for meals who say they are
so hungry they could eat paper. Our senior citizens are doing
'without food because they have to pay doctor bills and med, 'ications. One medication I take costs $540 a month for 100
. pills.
It's time for a .change and time to make school boards
accountable and io our commissioners, I think you· re doing a
good job but give our older and poor people a year without
levies. It's time for the tax and spend to cut and manage.

has to 'bring 'clarity' to the
definition of marriage, the
lens on the world has gone
fu zzy. Not that everyone
does n't know that the bride is
the girl and the groom is the
Diana
boy. What's out of focus is
West
the basic notion, as Bush put
it, that 'marriage cannot be
severed from its cultural ,
religious and natural roots
sometbing else that links the without weakenin g the good
twq iss ues: namely, what influence of society.'
they tell us about 21 st-centuOnce upon a time. such a
ry civilization. The fact is, statement expressed consenthe proposed Ameri can sus; today, it's a bolt of conamendment and the Israeli troversy. 'How would gay
fence are defensive reactions marriage weaken society'' '
to unprecedented assaults on reporters repeatedly asked
principle s so fundamental White House spoke sman
that they have never before Scott
McLellan . What
required much in the way of specifically would happen?
let
alone How did the president arrive
articulation ,
defense. For millennia. at this'! And could the Bible
Judea-Chri stian marriage have been involved'! As one
has been the union of a man reporter wondered, rather
and a woman , and unre- memorably: 'We understand
markabl y so. Similarly unre- there's the issue of Sodom
markable has been a m~tion's and Gomorrah in the Bible.
ri ght to protect itself against but did he use that'' We want
unceasing, barbarous attack. to know.'
Today. these basic precepts
Poor babie s. Severed from
have come under fire - and their own cultural tradition ,
unremarkably so - indicat- they grope for a rationale for
ing the extent to which the heterosexual marriage and
very foundations of modern find only a fundamentalist
civilization have shifted .
reading of Sodom and
That shift is visible Gomorrah. Thi s. even more
between the line s of than the actions of activist
President Bush's explanation judges and officials, indiof why. after 'more than lwo cates how far we. as anycenturie s of American thing resembling a unified
jurisprudence and millennia society, have fallen.
of human experience,· he
A similar estrangement
believes a constitutional from basic principles underamendment is necessary to lies the bizarre 'trial' of
bring 'clarity ' to the defini- Israel's security fence at the
tion . of marriage. That is. Hague. Suffering the most
when a president believes he savage attacks on civilian s in

modern hi story. Israel is
erecti ng a fe nce to stop
Palestini an terroris ls from
entering Israel from the West
Bank to kill and maim its
people. (Saud i Arabia and
India. ~y the wa y, are building simil ar fences on their
contested borders with
Yem en and Pak ista n. ) Th is
act of Israeli se lf-defense.
condemned by .the United
Nations - nut ch - was
referred to the Internati onal
Court of Ju stice for an opinion . The Israeli delegation at
the Hague aptl y framed the
case's Dada'esque aspects:
·At the ' arne time Israel is
burying eight victims of a
sui cide bombing ye sterday
hy a member of Vasser
Arafat's AI Aq sa brigade. the
Palestinians are using the
United Nations Court to
attack Israel for building a
fence that could have saved
their lives.'
Building a fence against
Palestini an Authority sui cide bombers who bl ow up
Israeli bu ses and restaurant s
and markets is an act of
self-defense - nol a matter.
of opinion . The institution
of marriage is th e union
betwe en a man and a
woman. Nothing could be
clearer. In thi s fractious 21 st
century, of course , con sen - .
sus has vanished. Once . civ ili zation drew the se lines:
its continued exi stence
depends on somehow holding them .
(Diana Wesr is" column is!
f or The . Washinr&lt; rmr Ti111 es.
She can be comacted 1·ia
diana wit' @ ve rhm.net.)

!RAG! ISN'T READy

FoR ELEc1ioNs ! YoU

DoN'T HAVE COMPLETE
V01'ER USTS', CoMPETEfoiT
· oFftCrALS, A RELIAEILE
'loirlolG S'(SiEM oR ANY
WA'{ To Elo/SVRE AN
ACCli~E COlll'tT!

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EDITOR
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be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
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:;addressing issues, not personalities.
::: The opinions expressed in the column below
· are. the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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By PAISLEY DODDS
and IAN JAMES ·
Associated Press Writers

The discontent erupted into
violence 3 1/2 weeks ago as
rebels began driving police
from towns and cities m the
PORT~AU-PRINCE, Haiti north .
- Prestdent Jean-Bertrand
On Sunday, France decided
Aristide resigned and flew to send a detachment of
into exile Sunday, pressured between 120-140 soldiers to
by a bloody rebellion and the Haiti,
said
Catherine
United States. Gunfire crack- Colonna, spokeswoman for
led as the capital fell into Pre sident Jacques Chirac.
chaos, and U.S. Marines She said the troops would
arrived in the country.
arrive on Monday and they
The contingent totaled would 1.\!0rk "in coordination
fewer tlian I00 Marines and with the United States."
more were to arrive Monday.
A
French
. military
They were the vanguard of a spokesman in Guadeloupe
multinational force that ·the said the contingent would
Council consist of 200 soldiers from
U.N. Security
approved late· Sunday night, the French Caribbean territoand France said it would send ry of Martinique.
troops on Monday.
Though not aligned with
"The government believes rebels, the political opposiit is essential that Haiti have a tion had also pushed for
hopeful future . This is the Aristide to leave for the good
beginning of a new chapter," of ' Haiti's 8 million people,
President Bu sh said at the angered by poverty, corrupWhite House. "I would urge tion and ~rime. The upri sing
the people of Haiti to reject killed at least 100 people.
violence, to give this break
Anarchy reigned for most
from the .past a chance to of the day in Port-au-Prince.
work. And the United States More than 3,000 inmates
is prepared to help."
in
the
Natioual
held
Aristide's
whereabouts Penitentiary were released.
were uncertain late Sunday, Looters emptied a police stawith officials saying his jet tion and hit . pharmacies,
stopped to refuel in the supermarkets and other busiCaribbean island nation of nesses, mostly on the capital's outskirts.
Antigt~a. A senior Caribbean
Community official said
"Chop off their heads and
Aristide told him during the burn their homes," rioters
refueling stop he was bound screamed, echoing the war
for South Africa.
cry
of
Jean-Jacques
After word spread of .the Dessalines, the general who
president's departure, angry ousted French troops and
Aristide supporters roamed torched plantations to end
the streets armed with old slavery in Haiti.
Some anti-Aristide · milirifles, pistols, machetes and
sticks. Some fired wildly into tants organized armed posses
crowds on the Champs de that prowled the streets in
Mars, the main square i.n pickup trucks, searching for
Aristide supporters. In the
front of the National Palace.
The head of . Haiti's back of one a man lay unconsupreme court said he was scious - or dead - with a
taking charge of the govern- head wound.
But police moved in during
ment, and a key rebel leader
the
afternoon, scared away
said he welcomed the arrival
the crowd in the front of the
of foreign troops.
"I think the worst is over, palace, and the violence
and we're waiting for the ebbed.
James Voltaire, 28, said
international forces. They
will have. our full coopera- Haiti's constitution had been
tion," Guy Philippe told violated. "Whoever the president is, it's going to be. a losCNN.
The. crisis has been brew- ing situation. As long as we
ing since Aristide's party don't see our real president
swept flawed legislative elec- (Aristide) we will ,stay mobi' li6Iis in 2000, prompting lized," he warned.
It was unclear where
international donors to freeze
Aristide
would go. U.S.
millions of dollars in aid.
Opponents also accused National Security Adviser
Arisude of breaking promises Condoleezza Rice said he
to help the poor, allowing was going to a "third" councorruption fueled by drug try, meaning he would not
trafficking and mastermind- take refuge in the United
ing attacks on opponents by States as he did the last time
armed gangs -· charges the he was ousted, in 1991.
Aristide's jet refueled ·on
president denied.

Oscars

D.B. Rowlands
Pomeroy
-·------------~~-----------------------

Therapeutic cloning causes some to reassess
As I was reading about the
successful cloning of human
embryos recently, I happened
to come across an obituary for
a 93-year-old doctor named
Landrum B. Shettles.
He had conducted some of
the first in vitro fertilization
experiments, the obit said. It
told of his supervisor at the
Columbia University medical
school being outraged at his
attempt in 1973 to create the
tirst 'test tube" baby for an
infertile couple. The supervisor
- a fellow scientist - was so
disturbed by the idea. that he
unsealed the flask carrying the
woman's eggs, destroying
them before they could be fertilized and implanted.
The anecdote captured the
hysteria that surrounded JVF at
the time . People had visions of
a 'Brave New World," with
factory · workers fertilizing
eggs in tubs of sperm and
growing humans like Chia
Pets. Thirty years la~r, with
more than I00,000 babtes born
in the United States through
!VF, the objections have disappeared. Over time, people
redefined their assumptions.
The recent advances in
cloning technology are sure to
force a similar rethinking.
Scientists are cloning embryos
to extract stem cells for
research into customized cures
for Parkinson's disease, spinal
cord injuries, Alzheimer's. diabetes. To extract the cells,
however, they have to destroy
the embryo.
This lands the science world
smack in the middle of that
most divisive of American topics - abortion.
For the staunchest opponents of abortion, the destruction of embryos for any rea5on,

of the rest of the population.
leaders, and many hours of
'Who's speaking for all the thought, rellection, and prayer,
people whose lives might be I reached the conclusion that
saved by this research?" he human lite does not begin in
asked. 'This has the potential the petri dish," Hatch said
to cure cancer, cure human dis- before the Senate last year. 'I
Joan
eases. And the faster you work beheve that human life
Ryan
on it, the faster you get a cure." requires and begins in a mothBut a cure is long way off. er's nurturing \vomb.'
at least in the United States. if
Under his new detinition,
researchers can't use govern- the destruction of test-tube
ment money to study cloned "embryos is not murder. Some
even one as noble as curi.ng stem cell lines. This piece of say Hatch is simply doing
di sease, is wrong. To them, the cloning issue - the rate some fancy moral footwork. I
human life begins at tertiliza- of U.S. scientitic progress say. 'Amen.' In the rigid, civic
tion. So a dot-size embryo- is thorniest for Bush: He debate about abortion, any
like the ones used in stem-cell doesn't want the United States movement from the world of
research - is imbued with the to fall behind the internation- religion to the world of medisame sacred qualities as a al science and medical com- cine is welcome.
human being walking the munity, but he also can't sup'This is the most promising
Earth. Saving lives by destroy- port the creation and destruc- research in health care perhaps
ing others is morally unaccept- lion of embryos without com- in the history .of the world,"
able.
promising his anti-abortion Hatch said last week of the
Though . these sound very stance. That's why he's lead- cloning announcement . 'And
much like religious beliefs, ing the charge for a United we should not be left behind in
they have guided the U.S. gov- Nations' ban not only on the research.'
ernment's response to this new reproductive cloning but otT
Which means the pressure
researcl). In the House of therapeutic cloning as well. If might mount for the president
Representatives, a bill to ban he ties the hands of the rest of and others to revisit their
all therapeutic cloning research the world's scientists as tight- beliefs, as Hatcb has, about
has already passed twice. (A ly as he has tied the hands of when life begins, or at least to
similar bill has stalled in the his own scientists, they can't concede that in a pluralistic
Senate.) President Bush in pass us by.
society, their particular version
200 I banned all federally
There is good news, howev- of morality shol!ld not be
funded research of embryonic er. The societal shift that fol- allowed to stymie the scientific
stem cells, except for those lowed lVF in America seems and medical progress of everylines already in existence.
to be groaning to a slow start one else. Perhaps the conflictThis means that scientists for therapeutic cloning. Some ing values inherent in the
like Dr. Irving Weissman, the of those who once saw the cloning-research debate will
eminent Stanford professor abortion · issue as black and help the president and others to
who was among the earliest • white now are considering revisit some assumptions
stem-cell researchers, are other factors. Sen. Orrin Hatch, about what it means to be
today's version of the late Dr. R-Utah, might be the harbin- human. Maybe they will find
Shettles. Their research has ger of how other people · that to be truly 'pro-life" means
hurtled ahead of society's com- opposed to abortion will helping people who are
fort zone. And though rethink their abortion argu- already alive.
(Joan Ryan is a column is!
Weissman. says he is confident ments so they can be both
society Will eventually catch against abortion· and for !hera- for the San Francisco
Chronicle. Send conunems to
up, he is frustrated witli gov- peutia cloning.
emment leaders who are
'After many conversations her in care of this newspaper
imposing their religious beliefs with scientists, ethicists, or .send her e-mailr at joanon scientists, to the detriment patient advQCates and religio11s ryan@sfchronicle.com)

I••

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Aristide resigns, flees into exile; United Nations debates multinational force

Building fences in Israel and America
What could the proposed
amendment 10 the U.S.
Constitution defining marriage as the legal union of a
man and a wor$n possibly
have in common with the
security fence Israel is building to block West Bank terror ists from entering the
coun try and killing civilians''
The two stories share the
front pages lately, but that' s
about it . A phil osophical
debat e over a polilical
process, no matter how contentious, has nothing to do
with the nuts and bolts Oilerally) of building a wall high
enough. strong enough and
smart enough to fend off terrori st killers.
Except for poss ibly one
thing . Both stories, in their
way, show societies engaged
in fundamental struggle s
over their futures and resorting. respectively, to dire
measures to preserve lhem-.
selves culturally and phy sically. With a marriage
amendment, the United
States could go to the mat the Constitution- to draw a
new line in the sand against
continuing cultural revolu tion. With the security fence,
Israel is drawing a line and building it, too - to
safeguard the lives of its cittzens.
,
The possibility of :homosexuals ' marrying ' in San
Francisco, New Mexico and
Mas sachusetts, even by the
thousands, hardly constitutes
the mortal danger posed by
any one suicide bomber.
Even so, there remains

www .mydailysentinel.com

t , 2004

•

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Monday, March 1, 2004

from PageA1
Compo~er Howard Shore
took his second Oscar for
writing "Lord of the Rings"
music, having won two years
ago on Part I of the saga,
"The Fellowship of the
Ring ."
"Into the West," the wistful
tune of farewell from "Return
of the King," won the bestsong Oscar. The song was
written by Frail Walsh, the
film's
co-screenwriter;
Howard Shore, its music
composer;
and
Annie
Lennox, who sings the tune.
Zellweger won for playing
a character in frumpy clothes
and a layer of din from working the fields, .a rear after
"Cold Mountain' co-star
Nicole Kidman received the
lead-actress Oscar for wearing a fake nose to simulate
Virginia Woolf's plain-Jane
features in 'The Hours." And
best-actress winner Theron,
in "Monster," gained 30
pounds and was disguised
behind dark contact lenses,
false teeth and splotchy
makeup.
"I hope it 's a trend, meaning interesting parts playing
women who are multifaceted
and really rich in their journeys. It's what interests me
most," Zellweger said backstage. ''The more you can
change yourself. the more
removed the character is
from your own experiences,
the more rewarding it is."
Robbins won with his firstever ·acting nomination,
though he had been nominated as best cjirector for 1995's ·
"Dead Man Walking."
"In this movie, I play a victim of abuse and violence,"
Robbins said. "If you are out
there and are a person who
... has had that tragedy befall
you, there is no shame in
seeking help and counsel1

Ing.~·

Sofia Coppola won the
original-screenplay prize for
her quirky tale of friendship
"Lost
in
in
Tokyo,
Translation."
.
French-Canadian filmmaker Denys Arcand's "The
Barbarian Invasions," an
alternately merry and melancholy story of a dying man's
reunion with his estranged
son, won the foreign-language honor.
The $340 million blockbuster "Finding Nemo," the
story of a clownfish on a mission to rescue his wayward
son from a dentist's aquarium, earned the Oscar for animated feature.
"I'm going to be forever
grateful to the cast and crew
of 'Finding Nemo ' for giving
their incomparable talents to
this little fish story I had,"
said Andrew Stanton, director of "Finding Nemo," the
latest film from the makers of
"Monsters, Inc ." and the
'Toy Story" !licks.
Director Errol Morris'
"The Fog of War" - a portrait of Robert McNamara,
U.S. defense secretary for
much of the Vietnam War won the Oscar for featurelength documentary. Morris
compared U.S. military
action overseas today with
the Vietnam era.
"Forty years ago, this country went down a rabbit hole
in Vietnam - millions died,"
Morris said. "I fear we' re
going down the rabbit hole
once again."
Filmmaker Blake Edwards

.

Aristide"s defmnt political camer
Keye'o.@n1S ofouSil&gt;d Haitian Pl'esidentJean-Bertand Plistide :
Jul~

15, t9SS -Born! &lt;M!Isees mxlest

! atNatorel Allace

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re w1n11ernatore1 aid ag~~lnst A'IS1dnaos:s
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IIIII SfiiKIIf'l priests.
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Dorrlnlcm Repu~lc.
Reed'lenglllnst
dlei!I'Or .Ran-Cioode
"SIIt&gt;yDoc" Du~ller,
ure1ng ''llctw
nro&gt;Aolenoe".
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'0 H'IIIU ~rges as
prarlnemprlest
plt'a&lt;:l'jn9 '0 1'oe poor.
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on Du~ellerlstrrlllta .
F'r!!eellts ht
Haltans shOud take
up almS In self

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&lt;M!I11'fo ws I'll Side
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ro~s lntl!lwne '0
lt'Siolt' l'lls:tde.
Fell.6 1995 -A'IS1de
as~n11&gt; army
lt'J:Iaoes ~ wn a&gt;Aian

d~nse. .

p~~rtes bo'I(Xlttwtrw;~.

OOIIlty DO :!EnS Klll!d,
lnjult'd In aaslles ·
~ew.oeen pal~ and
gowrrrnE"nt
opproents.
Fet&gt;.5,lll:l04-Ret&gt;ets
set~ Qlnlllws,
Halt'S 11\111\olargest
city st!l!Urw;J popuar
uprlslrw;J against
I'll Side g&lt;M!Inrrent
poll~.
Fet&gt; .21 -nlrretm'lll
Dec. 2S. 1995delegaton &gt;As11S10
A'l:ilde proege Rene press fOr 11 ru~.
l're~l elec•d
Nl:ilde agees)O
president OJe '0 wrm share power; polltool
ll'n.lls.
opproents Insist ne
t.1s~ 21. :;ooo.s•p ooun.
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FEb. 22- Rebels
sweeps IEglsl'lltw
set~ Cq&gt;-Halten
etectlcns. Obserwrs press on 10 C0J:It!ll,
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wns prestlenO\(
resigns ani:111ees ln'O
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e ~le.

sept 11 , 1958 Dec. 11. 2001 AlmCII ers b\lst ln'O
crup i!lUm'pt
I¥1Stdt'S Cll\ld'l,
killing 13.
. Dec.16,1990Pfl:ilde lllns landsltle
democl'!ltc electcn.
Feb.7, 1991naug.~ra•d n r
ooup a•llllt Rres
army generals,
Sl'lrll"'l
b\leaooracy b'IICKS
llrriiEd prllllll:zi!lton 01
SliiW entaprlses,

ss••

ing anymore ," Philippe said
man interview with CNN.
He also said rebels wanted
to take part in any negotiations about Haiti 's future, but
accepted
had
already
Alexandre as pre sident.
"We just hope no country
will accept Aristide, so they
will send him back to be
judged. He did bad things,"
Philippe, a former police
chief, said at a rebel headquarters in the key northern

port town of Cap-Haitien. He
told CNN his men would be
in the capital l:Jy Sunday night
or Monday morning.
Another rebel commander,
Winter Etienne, said the
fi ghters .would disarm once a
new government is installed.

Associated Press reporters
Michael Norton in Kingston,
Jamaica.
and
Mark
Stevenson in Port-au-Prince
also conrribured to rhis swn·.

Quilts

AP

the island of Antigua and was
en route to South Africa, government and airport officials
in that Caribbean country
said.
But officials in
Johannesburg said there had
been no recent contact with
Aristide nor an offer of asylum.
It was not clear where
Aristide's wife was. The expresident
and
Mildred
Trouillot Aristide had sent
their two daughters to her
mother in New York City last
week.
Three hotlrs after Aristide's
departure, Supreme Court
Justice Boniface Alexandre
declared at a news conference that he .was taking control of the government as
called for by the constitution.
He urged calm.
"The· task will not be an
easy one," said Alexandre.
"Haiti is in crisis .... It needs
all its sons and daughters. No
one should take justice into
their own hands."
Alexandre, in his 60s, has a

reputation for honesty but
could face a legal obstacle:
The Haitian constitution calls
for parliament to approve
him as leader, and the legislature has not met since early
this year when lawmakers'
terms expired.
Haiti's political opposition
on Sunday postponed a decision on a proposal for a new
government offered by the
Caribbean Community of
nations and the Organization
of American States. The plan
calls for the government, the
opposition and the international community ·to form a
panel that would eventually
lead to a new prime minister
and elections.
Half the country was in the
hands of the rebels, inc! uding
former soldiers of the army
that Aristide had disbanded.
Philippe, the rebel leader,
told The Associated Press his
forces would head for the
capital but would not engage
in any further fighting.
"The time is not for fight-

received an honorary Oscar
for lifetime achievement. The
ceremony included a spirited ·
montage of clips from
Edwards' films, includin*
"The
Pink
Panther, '
"Breakfast at Tiffany's" and
"Victor/Victoria."
Edwards said: "My mother
thanks you, my father thanks
you, and the beautiful
English broad with the
incomparable soprano and
promiscuous
vocabulary
thanks you," the latter a reference to his wife and frequent
star, Julie Andrews .
Billy Cry stal, returning as
host for the first time in four
years, opened with his usual
montage of nominees, having
himself inserted into spoofs
of key Oscar contenders,
including Diane Keaton's
screeching nude scene in
"Something's Gotta Give."
He joked that for the first
time, the show was being
simuloast in Aramaic, a poke
at "The Passion of the
Christ," Mel Gibson's divisive religiou s film that took
in $117.5 million in its first
five days. The movie was
done in Aramaic and Latin,
with English subtitles.
Crystal said that the first
time he hosted the Oscars 13
years ago, things were different from today: "Bush was
president, the economy was
tanking and we'd just finished a war with Iraq."
With all the awards for
"Return of the King," produced in New Zealand,
Crystal joked: "It's now offi-

cia!. There is nobody left in
New Zealand to thank."
The Oscars returned to fullglamour mode after two
years in which Hollywood's
prom night was muted by
world events- the aftermath
of the Sept. II attacks in
2002 and the Iraq war in
2003. .
With the passage of time,
the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts,and Sciences figured it was safe to make
merry again for the 76th
annual Oscars.
"Return of the King," the
closing chapter of Jack son's
epic adapted from J .R.R.
Tolkien 's Middle~earth saga,
dominated earlier Hollywood
awards.
The best-picture win was
the first ever for the fantasy
genre. generally overlooj(ed
by Oscar voters who favor
heavy drama over otherworldly stories. Only a handful of fantasy or science-fiction tales have earned bestpicture nominations, among
them "The Wizard of Oz ,"
"Star Wars," "E.T. the Extra-

Cleland has made about 15
baby quilts \vith the tractor
theme and thev · ve all sold.
from Page A1
Mc:mwhile." Mary Ellen
Bi se of Reedsv ille. another
at the cCenter. has
volunteer
between. and the yarn to tie it
a
quilting
project
all her own.
together.
She makes lap robes for
Once completed. the baby
nursing
home residents and
quilts sell for between $25
and $40, with that money homebound senior citizens.
going toward the various ser- Last week. she completed six
vice programs for the elderly. more. which will go out on
"It's a good fund-rai ser." the home-deli vered meal
said Coates, "because the trucks to seniors who aren't
materials are inexpensive and able to get out of the house
while making quilts is labor any more .
Bise said that each lap robe
intensive, the time is all
takes
her about four hours to
donated by the volunteers."
The quilt tops. all cotton in compl ete. So far she 's made
content. mostly tlannels. are about 200 which have gone
done in alternating blocks of lo homebound seniors,
plains and patterns. While the patients at Overbrook Center,
Home.
the
colors are predominately Darst's
pink and blue, the patterns of Rockspring s Rehab Center
and the Veterans Hospital at
the print blocks are varied everything from Care Bears Chillicothe.
She does most of the work
and Blue's Clues to cars and
at
home
while watching teletractors.
· One of the volunteers , vision, using material and
Geraldine Cleland of Racine. other supplies provided hy
works exclusively on quilts the center.
"I'm not out anything but
featuring tractors.
my
time," said Bise, "and
"That's what I like to do,"
I've got plenty of that."
she said.
Terrestrial" and the first two
"Lord of the Rings" installments, 'The Fellowship of
the Ring" and "The Two
Towers."
'
While "Return of the
King " scooped up techni cal awards. it was shur out
in the acting categories.
which the film' s Oscarwinning costumer design-

ers lamented backstage.
"It's a sad day they haven't
been recognized. but they do
know themselves they have
done a beautiful performance that people will cherish for generations potential ly, " said Richard Taylor,
who shared the costumedesign Oscar with Ngila
Dickson.

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�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March

Prep scoreboard, Page 86

.
OSU women top Wisconsin, Page 86

1, 2004

Monday, March 1, 2004

nnel·

Prep Schedule
Boys Southeast District

Tournaments
Division 11

at Convocation Center, Athens
Wedneaday'a pmt
Vinton County vs . Miami Trace, 6:15 p.m.
GreenUeld McClain vs. Gal!ia Academy,

8:15 p.m.
Division Ill
at Convocatlon center, Athena
Wednesday, March 10
Chesapeake vs. North Adams , 6:15 p.in .
Piketon vs . Portsmouth, 8 p.m.
.,.
Thursday, Man:h 11
Westfall 11s. Belpre , 6:15 p.m.
Ironton vs. Eastern (Brown). 8 p.m

Al ice Wilson shows a display of merchandise promoting the mo,1ie "The Passion of the
Christ, " at her bookstore in Maple Heights, Ohio. A line of merchandise to accompany Mel
Gibson 's movie, which depicts the last hours of Jesus' life, has Christian bookstores in
Ohio scrambling to keep displays stocked. (AP Photo/The Plain Dealer. Gus Chan)

Monday, March 1
rain is predicted to start lations for this event near
Morning
(7:00am-Noon) near 5:00pm. Expect accu- 0.5S inches. Temperatures
mulations of 0.23 inches.
Temperatures will stay near
61 '&gt;'lith today's high of 63
occurring around 3:00pm.
Winds will be I 0 to 15
MPH from the south.

Evening (7:00pm-Midnight)

It will be a wet and
cloudy evening. Light rain
Afternoon (1:00pm-6:00pm) is expected. The · rainfall is
. It should r~main cloudy. expected to end around
Expect moderate rain. The midnight with total accumu-

will hold steady around 60.
Winds will be 10 to 15
MPH from the southwest.
Overnight (I:00am-6:00am)
Expect a couple of raindrops
around the area. Tempemtures
will linger at 57. Skies will
range from mostly clear to
cloudy with 5 to 15 MPH
winds from the southwest
turning from the south as the
overnight progresses.

Future of E-check emissions test uncertain
DAYTON (AP) - The
future of Ohio's E-check
vehicle inspection program is
uncertain as the contract with
the company conducting the
tests expires next year.
Proponents say E-check is
needed to help clean up
Ohio's air and enable the state
to meet requirements of the
federal Clean Air Act. Those
critical of the program have
c~;~mplained about the fees,
costly repairs, damage to
vehicles and long waiting
lines.
Next year, the state legishiture will decide the fate of Echeck. Options r(\nge from
not renewing the contract to
expanding the program to
more counties.
The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency is currently
studying how the program,
which started in 1995, contributes to cleaner air. Drivers
in counties where the emissions
test is .-equired must test their
cars every two years to renew
their licenses. Large trucks,
including tractor-trailers, are
exempt from the testing.
· ·~we still have to meet
clean air goals, but my boss
would like to see us pursue
another way;" said Lauren
Goode, aide to Ohio Sen.
Kimberly Zurz, D-Akron.
"E-Check hasn't worked out'
all that wen ...

C o n n e c t i c u t - b a s e d inspection service possible,
Environmental
Systems both in terms of providing
Products Holdmgs, Inc. runs
.
.
..
the program, which is cur- Oh10 motonsts a pos1tive
rently ~quired in ·4•hout~- ·-·inspeo~on experience a."d"·
west . and northeast 0~10 supporting Ohio's clean air
, .
count1es. Those count1es
have repeatedly failed to _goal~, smd spokeswoman Tia
meet federal clean" air' stan• · Tnv~. ~ ..J
dards, according to the U.S.
Critics point to the most
EPA.
recent statistics that show
· The Ohio Environ':llental
Council, the state 's largest 94 percent of all cars testadvocacy group, supports ed pass the E-check test,
continuing a vehicle emis- and virtually all vehicles
sion testing program but said built since 1997 pass.
it was not the only solution
to air quality problems. '
A 2002 report by the EPA
"It IS no substitute for showed that the E,check profocusing on the two largest
d
1 12 000
sources of pollution, which gram remove near Y '
are coal-fired power ~J::lnts of the worst polluting cars
and large diesel engines, ' ~d from the road and provided
Kurt Walzer of the OEC. an incentive for people to
"Cars are going to be getting
a lot cleaner in the next 10 keep their cars properly
years."
maintained.
The test costs $19.50 per
However, the report also
car: Cars that fail can be
retested and certified if own- noted a motorist opinion surers spend at least $100 on vey conducted by O~io State
repairs and show a 30 per-~ University that said only 8
cent Improvement.
pe
t (48
t f 604) 0 f
The state receives about SO
rcen
ou 0
cents from the fee. The rest those surveyed had their cars
goes to Environmental repaired before !liking the test.
Systems Products.
·
The Ohio EPA maintained
Company officials said that keeping older cars
they provide quality tests.
"Our plans · are to stay repaired was one of the benfocused on providing the best efits of the emissions testing.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A Rainbow does not offer the
line of merchandise to accom- nail yet, Wil son said at least
pany Mel Gibson 's movie 96 pendants will be available
"The Passion of the Christ." within the next week.
which depicts the last hours of
The English version of the
Jesus' life, has Christian book- mug. which al so conies in an
stores in Ohio -scrambling to ancient Aramaic version in
keep displays stocked.
the language of Jesus, was
[}avid Wilson said his subur- listed as sold out Friday on
ban Maple Heights store can the movie Web site .
hardly keep up with the demand.
At tl)e Catholic Shop, a priJesus T-shirts sold out in a vately owned bookstore in
week, and the store is replen- Madeira near Cincinnati. the top
ishing supplies of other sou- movie-related items are the cofvenirs in preparation for the fee wble-size book 'The Passion"
expected spike in sales.
about the pn:xluction, including
Besides the T-shirts, the BiblicaJ references, a CD with the
Rainbow· Family
Book movie soundtrack and a guideCenter, which Wilson co- book; according to Julie Spitzig.
owns with his wife, Alice,
"We're selling a lot of stuff
offers a coffee-table picture every day," Spitzig said, includbook with scenes from . the ing about 20 of "The Passion"
movie,
pewter
poc1~et books listing for $24.99.
reminders and prayer cards
The new iconography of the
inspired by the film.
nail might serve to sensitize
Also, the official "ljhe Christians to the gruesomePassion of the Christ" jewelry ness of the crucifixion and,
line, marketed by Bob more generally, the violence
Siemon , the creator of the suffered globally on a daily
"What Would Jesus Do?" jew- basis, said Doris Donnelly,
elry, includes bracelets, lapel professor of religious studies
pins and necklaces, the mo'~ at John Carroll University. ·
popular of which has been a ~
"The crucifix was once
.la~iJ!ch pewte~Jmil pendant; embedded with jewel~ and
meant to be a replica of nails 1 emphasized the beauty of the
.use(! in the crucifixion.
1 resurrection, because in the
An estimated' 75,000 nail 1 Middle Ages, seeing the 'suf,.lli(Adants, wl\i'&lt;h come har- 1 fering of Jesus was not an
nessed to leather cords, have ,effective evangelical instrubeen shipped to vendors ment to inspire people to
across the country. Although Ibecome Christian," she said.

to Meigs

Paul Carter

~,
reduete of
~
Eastern
~1Hiah School

~

officer
~ trelnlna
~,;
school

i

~!

\~

Wednesday, March 3
ne r
advan ces
Pickering ton H.S.)

:E. Mo·ny Wood
t:.

O·r
Meigs County Sheriff
L

Pairings
announced for
Big Ten women's
tournament

.

'•

'\f

.,1':1
_J.·

·;:·
'.,~~

'

1

"WE work for the voters ...
·
WE do not work against each other."

~
· ~~
' ~ ~
,._;. ' ",1\....._~''.
'·~~t: "'~
~_,J...._:.~.

P•ldlorb\lthe cendldale. .

·······~···············································································~··············•

••
•••
•

SLEEP DISORDERS CENTER
It's Time You Got A Good Night's Sleep

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL is proud to announce the opening of its Sleep Disorders
Center. The Sleep Disorders Center can effectively treat disorders like a partner's snoring, gasping
for air or kicking in the middle ofthe night. Maybe you're having difficulty falling asleep or are
excessively fatigued during the daytime. The Center can help you get back to your normal cycle.
Now accepting appointments with a physician referral through the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Neuro·PhysiologyCenter,(304)67S-2551.
.
.

•

:
:

PLEASANT. :
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

:

:
:

.

····································~·······················
~·······································
\
--

J

-

at

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Regular-season champion
Penn State earned the No. I
seed in the Big Ten women's
basketball tournament for the
second straight year and will
get a fir st-round bye into
Friday's ~uartertinals against
either Ind1ana or Wisconsin.
. The Lady Lions got the top
seed by beating Purdue 69-60
Sunday at State College, Pa.,
rtlarking the first time a game
ti_etween two teams tied atop
the standings determined the
regular-season championship.
; The tournament begins
"Fhursday
at
Conseco
Pieldhou se with the eighth·
seeded Hoosiers against the
ninth-seeded Badgers.
. - No . 3 seed Ohio State and
No. 2 Purdue, the defending
tournament champions, also
got first-round byes into the
quarterfinals.
Besides Indiana-Wisconsin,
the other games in the tirst
round on Thursday are No . 7
Michigan against No . 10
Illinoi s and No. 6 Minnesota
against No. II Northwestern.
On Friday, No . 4 Iowa will
play No. 5 Michigan State,
Purdue will play the
Michigan-Illinois winner and
Ohio State wi 11 play the
Min ne sot a -Northwe stern
wmner.
The two semifinals will be
Sunday, with the champi·
onship Monday.

..

••

ANN ARBOR. Mich. (AP)
- Lester Abram scored 20
points and Michigan kept its
hopes of making the NCAA
tournament alive with a 75-64
win over Ohio State on
Sunday.
The Wolverines ( 16~ 9 . 7-7
Big Ten) have won three of
four but need to fmish strong
on the road against Indiana and
N011hwestern and in the conference tournament to play in
the NCAAs for the lirst time
since 1998.
The Buckeyes (13-14, 5-9)
had won two straight. both on
the road. Tony Stockman led
Ohio State with 22 points,
Terence Dials scored 13 and
Velimir Radinovic added II
\ points and seven rebounds.
I Abram scored I0 points in
the first half to help Michigan
am a nine-point lead and had
10 points after haltiime as the
Wolverines stayed ahead com'ortably.
In hi s last scheduled home
g me,
senior
Bernard
R binson had 13 points and
fi e assists. Rese rve Brent
Pet ay tied a career high with
12 points and had eight
reb unds and three . blocks.
Da iel Horton added I0 points
and six assists.
' Abram made two 3-pointers
and a putback in two-plus min"
utes to give Michigan a 52-38
lead midway through the second half. Ohio State then
pulled within seven but could
not get closer.
The Buckeyes go1 olf lo a
good start and did not trail until
8:30 remained in the tirst half.
Michigan went ahead dUling
a 13-2 run and later scored
eight straight points to take
control of the game. Michigan
led 40-31 at halftime .
While it may be difticult l'ur
the Wolverines to make the
NCAA tournament. il was
impossible just a few months
before the season.
The NCAA accepted the
school's many self-imposed
sanct ions - stemming from
its involvement with nowdeceased booster Ed Man in but added an additional year of
·
a postseason ban.

I

Varsity boys and girls
basketball
coaches
in
Gallia and Meigs counties
are reminded to send in
their team individual play•
er stati stics as soon as
their regular season is
completed. These stats
will be used in helping to
select all -district and OVP
Super I0 tea ms in March.
You can e-mail your stats:

J·
)ji

10Yeer
veteran of the
SheriWs
Department

~-­

·~

reg ional

Boys, girls
basketball
coaches
reminder

....._:.J.

Syracuse
Council
Member for
8 years.

D.A.R.E.
Officer for
5 years.

DIGNITY&amp;
COURAGE."

~~

to

!Eastern vs. Southeastern, 8 p.m.
(winner advances to regional at
j:)ickerlngton H .S.)

~ ~ '~!

Mayor of
Syracuse.

*·

,i~

at

Trimble vs . Southern, 6:15 p.m. (win·

1,~~~-~· :a~

*"The badge_"
to me means
.
RESPECT,

If _

re9i onal

Buckeyes .
fall at
Michigan

sports@mydailytribun e.com,

l~?" *~
!

to

or fax them to 446-3008.
You may also drop them off
at our Gallipolis office on
Third Ave.
We need ' thi s io.formation no later than 5 p.m.,
March 3.

.

4 1- 19. The Herd shot 53.3
percent in the first half to
29.6 percent for Ohio.
The Bobcats sti II trailed by
17 points with 8:00 remaining when Troutman hit a
layup. 3-pointer and two free
throws in a 9-2 run that cut
the Herd 's lead to 58-49 with
4:42 to play.

•

al Wellston High School

n i

.I

of-13 field goals, including
4-of-5 3-pointers, and con,
nected on 6-of-7 at the line.
James Bridgewater added II
points for the Bobcats.
Marshall closed the first
half on a 19-4 run to lead 3919 at the break and scored
the first basket after halftime
for its biggest advantage at

Saturday, March 6

hard for all Meigs County Residents"
~I

gave Marshall a three-point
lead.
Black finished 7,for-S at
the line and added nine
rebounds. Ire
Whitted
scored 17 points, Ronny
Dawn had 12 and Enoch
Bunch II for Marshall.
Sonny Troutman led Ohio
with 28 points. He made 9-

OaK Hill/Ports. win ner vs . Eastern
(Brown)/Westfall winner, 7 p.m. (winner
advances to regional at Lancaster H.S.)
Olvlalon 1V

MMISSIONER

~ o::::~~~.

/)}J

(winner advances
Lancaster H.S.) ·

MEIGS COUNTY

.

outscored the Herd (10-15,
7-9) 49-32 in the second
half, including 14-6 over the
final two minutes.
Jeff Halbert's two free
throws pulled Ohio to 69-68
with five seconds remaining.
Thomas Stephens missed a
3-pointer to tie at the buzzer
after Black's free throws

Division II
at Chillicothe High School
Saturday's games
Wa rren vs . Fa1rlield Union 1 p.m.
Unioto vs Athens, 2:45 p.m
Thursday, March 4
Sheridan vs. Miami Trace. 6:15 p.m.
(winner advances to reg1onal at
zanesville H.S.)
Warren /Fairfi eld
winner
vs.
Unioto/Athens winner, 8 p.m. (w inner
advances to regional at Zanesville H.S.)
Division Ill
at Waverly High School
Saturday's games
Oak Hill vs. Portsmouth 12 p.m.
Eastern (Brown) vs. Westfall, 1;45 p.m.
Friday, March 5
Lynchburg Clay vs. Zane Trace 7 p.m.

for

~
- .· _- , ~~-·~
- . ·f!"'f''~'l/

ATHENS (AP) - Marvin
Black scored 15 points and
made two crucial. free throws
with four seconds remaining,
helping Marshall hold off
Ohio 71-68 Sunday after
nearly blowing a 22-point
lead.
·
The Bobcats (9- 18, 6-10
Mid-American Conference)

.

Girls Southeast District
Tournaments

Plan to
implement
911 service in
Meigs County

Democrat

county ·

.

Division IV

"The crucifix alone does
not emphasize th ~ sense of
horror that acco mpani es the
act of crucifixion." she said .
Young shoppers such as
and
Nicole
Ramseur
LaTonya Walker. both of
whom ha ve tattoos of a cross
or the Iike ness of Jesus on
their backs, agree that the nail
pendant has breathed new life
into the ex pression of sympathy for Jes us' suffering.
'The symboli sm of the cross
is so walered Lluwn now,'·
Ramseur said. "Everyone
wears the cross. even those who
don't go to church. We needed
someth ing that speaks louder
than the cross. And the nail is
what was used to put him
there."
Wilson said he doesn't
believe the pervasiveness of
popular culture in the merchandise undennines the more spiritual aspects of its message.
'"Younger peopl e are looking for different ways to
express their faith," he said.
"That's the point of what
we' re . doing. Everything we
sell here has a message , and
we hope it changes lives." '

VOTE

BrihgJobf

Black leads Herd past Bobcats, 71-68

at Convocation Center, Athens
Thursday's games
Eastern (Meigs) 11s . Whiteoak, 6:15 p.m.
Sciotoville vs. Symmes Va ll ey, 8 p.m
Friday's games
South Webster vs. Southeastern. 6:15
p.m.
Tnmble vs. Portsmouth Clay, 8 p.m

'Passion' gives Christlan merchandise big boost

Expect a cloudy morning.
There could be a few raindrops
around the area TemperalllreS
will rise to 60 with today's low
of 39 OCCW1ing around 6:00am.
Wmds wiU be 5 to IS MPH
from the southeast turning from
the south as the morning progresses.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Symmes Valley's Kyle Gilmore (4) throws a bounce pass in front of Southern's Aaron Sellers during the first half Saturday.
Symmes Valley upset Southern 50-47 to advance to district play at the Convo.
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

WELLSTON - According to seeding, Symmes Valley is only the sixth
best team in the Division IV sectional
tournament at Wellston High School
- not too impressive.
'
But according to an updated tournament bracket, is also one of only eight
D-IY teams left in the Southeast
District- now that is.
The Vikings can make that claim following a 50-47 upset of third-seeded
Southern in a boys basketball sectional
tina! Saturday.
Symmes Valley (14-8) moves on to
the district tournament at Ohio
University's Convocation Center in
Athens where it will face the secondseeded Sciotoville East Tartans.
The win was the seventh straight for

the Lawrence Countians, as they arc
undefeated since the sectional tourna,
ment draw, where they received a No.
6 seed in early February.
Southern (13-8) bows out of the
postseason in the sectional round for
the third time in four years .
Kyle Gilmore and Jarr&lt;id Shaffer
scored 13 points apiece to lead the
winners. Shaffer had nine of hi s team's
27 rebounds while Michael White collected seven to go along with nine ·
points.
Gilmore also drew of tough assignment of guarding Southern standout
Craig Randolph.
Randolph still amassed 17 points to
lead all scorers, but was held well
below his season average. Wes
Burrows added a dozen points plus
four assists, and Jake Nease pulled

down a team-best nine rebounds .
After dropping the first three quarters to the Vikings, Southern found
itself in a nine-point hole early in the
fourth .
But a 9-0 run over the next three
minutes pulled !he Tornadoes even.
Burrows connected on a pair of rree
throws, then seven straight points by
Randolph concluded the run .
The junior guard nailed a 3-pointer
from the left wing to make it 43-39,
then added a pair of drive and lay ups to
knot the contest at 43 apiece at the 4: 17
mark.
The score was again square at 45
after Gilmore and Burrows swapped
sets of free throws, but Southern ne ve r
pulled' even again .

Please see Upset, 86

Tiger wins second straight Match Play Championship
Championship for the second
straight year.
"He's obviously the best at
what he does," said Love,
who failed to win a hole over
the final 17. "That shows
even more in match play. He
can play the game no matter
what rules you put out
there."
Woods won for the 40th
time on the PGA Tour in just
his !49th start, the quickest
anyone has reached that
milestone. Jack Nicklaus
played 22 I events before he
won his 40th 'tournament.
Woods earned · $1.2 million, the biggest prize to date
on the PGA Tour, and
reminded everyone who's
No. I in the world - and
who's the best when the
world gets together.

CARLSBAD, Calif. (AP)
- Tiger Woods made it
sound so simple, even after
making it look so hard .
"It all boils down to what
my dad always told me when
it comes to match play,"
Woods said. "All you have to
do is just be better than your
opponent that day. All you
have to do is win more holes
than you lose."
When he tapped in a 4-foot
par putt on tbe 34th hole
Sunday, Woods proved again
that he has no match.
Spraying his tee shots all
over La Costa Resort, unable
to take the lead until the 25th
hole, Woods turned a terrible
tee shot into an unlikely
birdie , then roared past puttstarved Davis Love Ill to win
Play
the
Match
I

He won for the eighth time
in the 14 official World Golf
Championships he has
played.
Even more impressive is
his back-to-back victories in
the Accenture Match Play
Championship, the most
unpredictable format in golf
because of the five IS-hole
matches required to get to
the fi~;~als .
Woods thrives on this format.
"Right from the first tee,
it 's eyeball-to-eyeball ," he
said. "That to me is a great
rush."
His amateur record -was
among the best ever - three
straight
U.S.
Junior
Amateurs, followed by three

Please see npr. B&amp;

Tiger Woocs sends the turf ftying as he digs another shot out of
the rough on the fourth hole where he went on to make a bogey
in his
I match against Davis Love Ill at the World Golf
C:h,mololnshlios Accenture Match Play Champions hip , Sundayin
Calif. Woods hit only two fairways on the front nine. (AP)

�Page B~

BASEBALL

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

Monday, March 1, 2004

\~tribune

- Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Monday, March t , 2004
I

.

Smoltz calls for tougher steroid testing Indians looking for
more consistency
from offense
I

•

The Dail y Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

John Smaltz is one player
who's clearly· concerned
about steroids in baseball .
The Atlanta Braves closer
called for tougher tes ting
Sunday. sayi ng the sport 's
integrity is at stake.
"The more this becomes a
monster, the more it 'plays
into everybody's mind,"
Sma ltz said after a sprin g
training
wo rkou t
in
Kissi mmee. Fla . "There's a
way they should do tests. Do
them the way they should be
done - not a pl atform that \
just a smoke screen."
Srnolt1 said he doesn' t
even understand the testing
poli cy adopted by major
league baseball as part of the
collecti ve bargaining agreement in 2002 .
Last season, baseball conducted random tests for
steroids. and between 5 percent and 7 percent came back
pos itive . That triggered a
clause in the labor agreement
that allowed players to be
puni shed this season if they
were found using steroids.
But Dick Pound, head of the
World Anti -Doping Agency,
called the policy a "complete
joke'' and an "insult" to the
fi ght against performanceenhancing drugs.
Under baseball 's plan, the
first positive test for steroid
use would result in treatment
only. A second postttve
would bring a fine or suspension, but a player would have
to test positive five times to
get a one-year suspension.
Four men associated with a
San Franci sco•lab have been
indicted on federal charges
of providing steroids to athletes. Among them : the personal trainer for San
Francisco Giants slugger
Barry Bonds.
Smaltz said he's never
taken steroids and doesn't
know of anyone who has, but
he believes air players are
being tainted by the transgressions of a few.
"This stuff did not just pop
up out of nowhere," he said.
"This controversy is not going
to end until the studies and
tests are done the right way.
c"lt's not good for the game.
It's not good for the future of
the game. It's not good for the
kids who want to play this
game. It sends the wrong message.','
On the field, Smoltz has
erased nearly all doubts
about whether he' ll be ready
for opening day.
Coming back from the
fourth elbow surgery of his
career, he pitched off the
mound for the third time
Sunday. Though he has yet to
throw to hitters, his stuff
looks ready for a game.
"It fett11ike it was about 90
percent,' Smollz said. "The
ballwas popping." '
Pedro Martinez and Mark
Mulder were also happy to
be back on the mound.
In Fort Myers, Fla., Martinez

Atlanta Braves pitcher John Smaltz throws in the bullpen as manager Bobby Cox, .behind right,
watches during workouts on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2004, at Disney's Wide World of Complex in
Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP)
·
was shocked by the sharpness of it. It was something I needed stuff. He can do all that."
his ftrst pitches of spring train- to take care of," he added· in
Williams is considered a
ing. He threw 49 pitches in his an interview with The long shot to be ready for the
first session off a mound since Associated Press.
season opener March 30 in
last Oct. 16, when the Boston
"I 'm looking forward to Tokyo against Tampa Bay.
Red Sox lost the seventh game this year - big time. I'm
In Jupiter, Fla. , the Marlins
of the AL championship series going to have more fun this said Josh Beckett ·will start
to the New York Yankees.
year than any year.':
the team 's spring training
He usually throws just fastIn Tampa, Fla., Yankees opener Thursday · against
balls during his first workout center
fielder
Bernie Baltimore, his first competioff the mound but he mixed Williams was released from tive action since winning
in ali three of his pitches the hospital, two days after Game 6 of the World Series
Sunday: the fastball, curve his appendix was re"'oved. at Yankee Stadium. The
and changeup.
Willjams spent an extra day right-hander is expected to
"For so long without actu- at St. Joseph 's Hospital throw about three innings.
ally touching a mound I because of a low fever, which
In Phoenix. Milwaukee manthought it was great," is not unu~ual after surgery.
ager Ned Yost said Ben Sheets
Martinez said. "It was nice
"He'll probably be here in the will start the season opener
and loose, smooth."
middle of the week," New York AprilS against St. Louis. It will
In Phoenix, Oakland manager Joe Torre said. "He be the third consecutive openAthletics left-hander Mulder Cl\II ·still do, without getting out ing day start for Sheets, who
threw off a mound for the on the field, things he has been ties the franchise record set by
first time in more ·than a doing for his shoulders and Teddy Higuera (1986-88).
week and said he 'II be ready
to take his regular'turn when
spring training games start.
"It won't be a problem,"
Mulder said after throwing
36 pitches in his first action
since having back spasms
about a week ago. ''!'II throw
to hitters in a day or two, and
we only start with two or
three innings the first time
out. I feel fine. "
New York Mets shortstop
Kaz Matsui will be sidelined for
a week after injuring a finger on
his throwing hand during
infield drills in Port St. Lucie,
Fla.
In Vera Beach, Fla.,
Dodgers outfielder Bubba
Trammell
acknowledged
publicly for the first time that
he left the Yankees and sat
1.......
out the second half of last
148-446-1619 • IUU··Zlll·ffll
season becau se of depres...,., . . .'lllllr 1::10-1:10
sion .
"Shoes for the entire family"
DON'T MISS THE
"It had nothing to do with
Rt. 2Bypass
anybody else but myself," said
Point Pleasant, WV
SOUNDS OF SPRING!
304-675-7870
Trammell, who signed a $1.85
• FrH lourtn1 scrtHinp.
• o\udloiOJisb on oblff.
million, one-year contract with
• Wide ranp ., iachnai"'Y and
Los Angeles two months ago.
•
Dl ..llland oilier heartn1•lds.
"''m just glad I got through

New Shoes
Arrivins 'Dailyl

WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) 1- The Ind ians &amp;elieve
the kqy to success in 2004
will b6 making their offense
less offensive .
Only the 119-loss Detroit
Tigers l ~c ored fewer · run s
last sea~on than Cleveland,
which ~l so ranked 13th in
the American League in onbase percentage and batt ing
average.
Injuries and young players
fo rced manager Eric Wedge
to use a major-league hi gh
145 lineups last season ,
when Cleveland finished
fourth in the AL Central at
68-94.
"Th;lt's not indicative of
what I want to do with a
lineup," the second-year
manager said. "I don' t like
doin~ that, but I had to do it .
I'd hke to have a more stable batting order this season.''
For that to happen, the
Indians will need more production from young catchers
Victor Martinez and Josh
Bard, and the first base-designated hitter platoon of Ben
Broussard and
Travis
Hafner.
"We learned so much last
year about just being in the
big leagues. Now we need to
carry that over to this season
and put up some numbers ,"
Hafner satd.
Right fielder Jody Gerut
and . third baseman Casey
Blake won starting jobs last
season, meaning Wedge will
be counting on them to help
lead the way in 2004.
"Last year was the first
time most of us had. gone
through that," Gerut said. "It
was tough for all of us, but
we'll benefit from that this
season. I think our offense
will be a lot better."

The Indians had nine rook~
ies in the lineup at times aC
the end of last season.
·
"We learned a lot la ~ t
yea r, and we learned it allljt
the same time." Blake said .
''The experience we got last
year will reall y help us." ·
Wedge needs production
from the entire lineup
because the Indians lack true
leadoff and cleanup hitters.:
"We aren' t building
around one or lwo guys," he
said. "That's not the kind o{
tea m we are. ... We need
everyone to produce and
contribute."
The only bat the lndiall6
added in the offseason was
second baseman Ronnie
Belliard. who hit .277 with
eight homers and 50 RB!s
last season at Colorado.
Matt Lawton, who has
missed significant time the
las t two season s with
injuries, likely will lead off
and play left field. Shortstop
Omar Vizquel , who played
in only 64 games last season
becau se of a knee injury,
will bat second, followed by
Gerut and center fielder
Milton Bradley.
Blake, Broussard, Hafner,
Martinez and Belliard will
fill the rest of the order in
spots to be determined.
''I'm looking forward to
see what we can do as ail
offense," Lawton said. "We
should be a loi better."

'''
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s,ruiiOnld••Yay In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
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POI..ICIES: Ohio V1lley Publllhlng rtHf'YIIIhe right to edit, rejecl, or cancllany ad M anv time , Errora muat ba raporttel on the llrat Clay of
Trlbun ..S.ntlnei-Reglatar will bt raaponalbla for nb mor.than t~ coat of the lpiiCI occupied by tha enor and only the llrat ln..rtlon. Wa
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WV, 25704 For more Infer·
rnation call1 ·800·241-7454.
EOEIM/F/0/F
::.:,.::...___ _ _ _ _ _
Experienced Sa lesperson.
Work with auto dealersh ips
and real-estates companies.
50K In commissions possibte. Earn what you are
wo rth . Only profession als
and motivated need apply.
Pre cious
M~ m or i es.
(740)99 2·4294

Director needed for local
area to wo rk with sch ool s,
PTA's, and youth groups.

Av~. 46 K St 3-788 -61 57·
nKing •• poopto 1oce11•
~ o want to earn mone
~hlle losing weight, show
ng
others
how
Informational
DVDtC[
valleble·upon request 740
r,:4.:;1-"'19~8:::4:;..
. ------'
'"'
Seeking FT, PT Sleep
Te chnologist . E ~eperlence
preferred , but will train.
Medical background a plus.
Re spirator y
Tllerapist.
encouraged to apply Mail
resume to E823 200 Main
St. Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
The Meigs County Council
on Agi ng is accepting applicati ons/res ume s tor the
position
ot
Clinical
Supervisor. Qu alificatio ns
Include a· Bachelor Degree
R.N. with a minimum of two
years supervisory experi·
ence in a health care setting
or R.N. with' four years
supervisory experience In a
health cere setting . Th e sue·
ease ful can didate wil l be
highly organ ized. self motivated and possess good
computer skills. good co mmunication skills (writt en
and verbal ) and have e~ep e rt­
en ce In wrlllng consumer
care plans . Th is Is a 32-hour
a wee.k position with health
and 401 K benefits available ,
posslbl~ leading to l ull time.

\

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

r.;w:ww:::·c:o:m::ic:•:.c:o:m::~;=::;;:::::::::=::;~~==~:::~=~
'-._.11
Il.,ji.lO--iiBIIUSINiiliOiER;IIil
OPI'OKJlJNI'IY

To apply tor thi s position,
"'
&lt;C
see Da rla Hawley, Human
HIO VAL LEY PUBLISH
R e s o u r c e s lNG CO. recommends tha
Director/ E~e ec uti ve Ass istant
ou do busin ess with pea
at the Meigs Multipurpose
le you know, and NOT I
Senior Center. 1t2 East
end money thr ough th
Memorial Dr ive. Pomeroy.
a11 until you have investi
Oh. An EOE .
ted the olferin .

~~-~---...,
r:
140

BustNI'..'iS
Now Hiring ful l and part ~..,_ _oiToiiRAiiiiiNiilliNiiG-_.1
time.
McClure's
Re staurant s. In Gallipoli s, CAR EE R- No Exp ... The
Middl eport and Pom eroy. Advantage of an Empl oyee .
Apply
Monday
thru The Benefit s of Owning Your
Saturday, 10-11 am.
Own Bu siness. 35K to
- - - - - - -- - 50k/Yea r. s emin ar Friday,
Para medics
&amp;
EMT's Call Ken (740)992-7440
13 54
needs . App Iy at
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
TRAINING - Starts Mar. 9th ,
- - - -- - - - - Call Ken Now. (740)992Person to sit with elderly 7440
lady, 5 days a week , lighl , 50 .
"~·~ "
housekeepi ng, Middleport
~~
area. (740)385-8114 leave 1
INSTRUCI10N
message.
- - - - - - - - - Gattlpolla Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
POSTAL JOBS Call
Today I 740-446-4367,
$1 5.44-$2 1.40/hr, now hir1·800·2 14·0452
Ing. For application and fre e
www.galllpoliseareerco ll ege.com
governm ent job info, call Accredi ted Member Accred1ting
America n Assoc. of Labor. Council lor lndupt~nde nl Collegu
1·(91 3)599·8220 . 24 hrs. and Schools 12748 .
emp. serv.

School

mR RJ.Nr

HOUSEHOLD

Gtxms

2
bedroom
apartmen t,
recen tl y remodeled , downlawn GallipOliS No pets. ref·
erences &amp; depos11 required,
please call (740)446-1812

Mollohan Carpel. 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio
(740) 446· 7444 1-877-8309162. Free Es11ma1es. Easy
financmg, 90 days same as
cash. V1sa/ Master Card.
Vic torian 1736 sq. ft . 3 bed - 2 bedroom apt. St At 160 Dnve- a- l1ltle save alot
room. 2 bath. Stainless steel past Holzer $475 mo.
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
appliances. 8 ft . fl at ceilings. (740)44 t -Ot94.
Hardi lap with saddle roo f. 5"
bedroom
apartment.
Ret1alr-675-7388
For sale.
3
on 12" roof pitch - porch. recenlty remodeled . ca &amp; re-c~ndl!ioned
autom atic
Cole's Mobile Homes 15266 heat . downtown Gallipolis. washsrs &amp; dryers. retngeraUS 50 E. Athens. Oh10 no pets. references B Iars. 1 gas an d electric
(740)5 92-1972. "Wh ere you
rang13:s. a1r cond1t1 oners . and
depos1t
reqwred
ca ll
get your money's wor th'"
(7401446 _1812
wringer was hers. W1ll do
repairs on major brr&gt;nds 1n
BUSINF-'i~
BEAUTIFUL
APART - shop or at your home
ANil BUII .IliNC ;s
AT
BUDGET --~--~-------MENTS
PRICES AT JACKSON Used \Furn1ture Store. 130
Building lor sal e: i 2X24, fin- ESTATES, 52 We s1 woo d Bulavi\e Pike, mattresses,
couches,
ished wall s, ca rpet. v1nyl sid- Drive !rom $344 to $442. dress~rs.
ing, small porch. $3,500.00 Walk to shop &amp; mov 1es. Call Ounktkds. recliners, whatEqual nots . I Grave Monuments.
(74 0)742·3802 1740)742· 740-446-2568
Hous 1ng Opportun 1ty
{740)~46-4782 Gallipolis.
3, 54
OH. H\s 10-4 (M-5) Sunday
Lm,.; &amp;
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· by app~ 1 ntmen1.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Ac.:RJo~\l:t:
Townhquse
apartments. 53) \
16M80 sites available $115 an d/or small houses FOR
per month includes water, RENT. Call (740)441·11 11
Riverine
sewer &amp; trash, (740)992- tor appl ica tion &amp; in formalion . Buy or\ sell.
2167
Collage Apt. on Linco ln Ave Ant1ques 11 24 East Mam
in Pt. Pleasant $275.00 a on S R 124 E. Pomeroy. 740For Sale : 79. 106 Acres
Russ Moore,
man. ask for Nancy 304- 992·2526
River v1ew, prod ucing oil · &amp;
own
er.
675-5540 or 304-675- 4024
gas well s. Reduc ed lo
540 Mts .l.·t:tJ..INEot
rs
$1 15,000
30 4- 529-7 106 For
Lease:
Beau tifu lly
.
aft er 5pm
res tared, u nf urn1 shed. two L.-O:,I\;,:1,;;E:;,KlL:O'I~j,I::\N,;:tii&gt;IIIS•;;,:_.1
bedroom apar tment overlooking th e City Park and 15' Chevy Ral ly Sport
River. All new appliances. 1 Whee ls complete wlt1res
112
baths
$600/mo. $150 . Ta1l Gate 94 GMC
10
Hou~K~
Securi ty
depos1t . 5100 O.B.O (304)675·1GB7
I'OR RJ~1·
Aeterenccs required . No
5 · 7' church
pets. Call 740-416-2325 or 16·9'and
pews: good cond1t1on. Red
house in 740-446-4425
3 bedroom
Middlepor t, $400
plus :_:::_:_:.:__:::::_:__ _ _.- loam padding. song book
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- rack and cross on end
deposit. no 1ns1de pets.
(740)992-3 194
room apartments at V!llage 53 .500.00 F1rm . Must take
Manor
and
Riverside al l. Bob Thom pson (740)
5 roo m house wi th bath and Apartments in Middleport 367-7406
'
shower. central hea t/air, From 5295-$4 44 . Call 740double garage. no pets, ref- 992-50G4. Equa l HOUSing 2 beaded Prom Gowns . ve ry
Even1ngs/
reasonable
eren ce &amp; deposit req uir ed. Opportu nities
weekends ca ll 740-256(740)446· 1519.
~ H rHle~· Sur kl e Hills 6535 or 304·576-4009
11 .. 1 and 3 be drick , 1.5 baths. carport . ........ ·-· rooms now avail - 3- 7'x 10' wooden garage
o pets. No smoki ng. able.
Rent
starts doors with hardware excel·
650. deposi t. references. 5255/month. Low &amp; mocter• le nt cond1110n. (7 40)2 45740 46-9209.
ate income. Equal Housing 5017.
Opportu nity. (740)446-3344 ,
32•81 new s1orm door in
House for ren t (304)675- TOO 1·800·750·0750.
carton. $100: staiiOna ry
6720
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone e~ee rcise
bicycl e.
S 15
Nice 1 bedroom apt . wid 740·446·3736.
1740)992·5919
hook-up, cent ral air, t mile
48 " big screen TV. good connorth
of
Cheshire.
Nice Clean 2br. relldep, no dition. (740)992·2881
$375i month. (740)9 92-5226
pets (304)675-5 162
Baby Grand Piano. 53 500
Small 3 bedroom house in
N1ce two bedroom apart- Call aft er 4pm (740) 446 area
cou ntry, Rodney
ments Larg e roo ms Fully 4525 .
$500/month, $500 deposit ,
equiped kitchen Cen tral - - - - - - - -references . (740)2 45-0380
heating &amp; cooling Washer &amp; Beautiful Prom Dresses Full
after Spm
dryer hookup (304)8 82- Wh i1e size 8. Full Red size

AN"IlQl l~~"

Physical Therapist and PAN 110
Occupation al Therapist tor
HEI ,p \\'AN11m
Ohio and West Virgin ia client • _ _ _ _ _ _ _,...
base. Must be licensed both
in Ohio an d We st Vi rginia.
We olfer a competiti ve
salary. E.O.E. $5.000 SIGNON-BONU S and benefits for
l ull·tim e Physical Therapi st
1 PI
d
1
on y. ease sen resume o
d
A
352
econ
venue,
GaII'1po1·IS, OH 4563 1. A"un·
A N c 1· · 1
Diana Harless. . . m1ca
Manager.

10

AP&lt;IIfiMENfS

FOR St\LE

c.net

GOVERNMENT
JOBSI
WILOUFEI POSTAL $13.51
to . $5 8.00 per hour. Full
Benetit s. Paid Training. Call
lor Ap plica tion and E~eam
Information . No E~e peri e nce
Necessary. Toll Free 1-888269-6090 ext. 100.

fundra)&amp;Jng

Full time Maintenance position, apply In person at the
HoUde~ Inn of Gallipol is.

How you can have borders and graphics
lLJ
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

::::::.:.:.:...:=--- -

Foster parents needed- If
you have an extra bedroom
&amp; wish to help a child, you
can become a Therapeutic
Foster Parent lor youth ages
birth to 18, you will receive
reimbursement of $33-$48 a
day plus paid resplle. We are
looking
lor homes . In
Southern Ohio Counties,
tralninlil be~ins Mar. 6th , cell
for more Information or to
set up an lnlllat meetingOasis Therapeutic .Foster
Care Network toll free 1·
871-325·1558.

All Dleplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualneea D•v• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thuraday tor Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Stnt Your Ad1 With A Keyword • Include Complete
De1crlpUon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlons
• Include Phane Number And AddreSI When Needed
• Ada Should Run 7 Days

Assistant Beekeep er full or
2 female Border Co llie part-time , Rio Grande area .
rn1xed puppies. lree to good Experience not re quired.
Phy sically and mentally
home. (740)256·1 652.
demanding. Possible profes sio nal opportunity. Call
Female ca t, shots. declawed (740)245·5203, 8· 10pm.
&amp; spayed. To good home.
Call (740)245·0442 leave a AVON1 All Areas! To Buy or Local co mpany seeks motiSell
Shirley Spears. 304- vat ed indi vidu als to work
message.
from home, grea t pay, train
675 -1429.
- - - - - today, start immediatel y.
Female Squirrel dog to give- Bates Bros. Amusem ent Co. 740-4 41 -9160 or 740-441·
away 18 months old to a Spring/Su mmer 2004 , Must
9186.
good home ca ll (304)773- be 17 or older an d able to
5878
!raVel,
li ving
Medi Hosee
meking
Health lu
Age
ncy,
facili
ties,weekly
bonus . pay,
contact
us Inc.
ll-time

Ah Excellent way to earn
n)oney. Lets talk the
NEW AVON .
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
Joyce 304-675·6919
Ap1ll 304·662· 3630

Joey D.

l\egister

Sentinel

675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304)
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

"Federal Poelet Joba..
To $4 3,000 yr/ Free Call No
Experience Necessary No
Hiring/ Full Benefits 1·800·
842-1622 ••, . 225.

Gallipolis
Chiropractic
Center

Three generatrons

Your Ad,

: .... HIRING 2004; ...
POSTAL JOBSI UP TO
$1 ,047.71 WEEKLY, FREE
CALLI FOR INTERVI EW
AND
REGISTRATION
INFORMATION. SIGN ON
BONU S
1ST
100
CAL LERS.
SELECT
AREAS , 1-800·892·5649
EXT. 92, 7 DAYS.

community as a prosecucor,

He has 22 years of judicial
experience and currently
serves as a judge on the
\ Ironton Munici.pal Court.

mribune

·To Place

1150 Eastem Avenue

LUCQ
Judge CoUins served his

OH

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

Free to good home: 1 female
at (740)266-2950
Golden Retriever/ Black Lab CLINICAL SUPERVISOR
mix puppy. (740)367·7708.
for ICFIMR.Faclllty

DILES

• o\..llflod lllephone and TV dHlcoo

G .a lH~ Co~o~11 ty,

i

PHo~ONAL

SF..HVICI'li

~~-------_.1
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1•88e.582 .3345
IU\11"1\11
-;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

r
1!1

io

Ho·~~
ll'~

~--itFORiiiiiOiSiiiALiiiiEO._.I

2BR House, Living &amp; Dining
Room, Kitchen &amp; 1/2 basement, approx. 1 acre
$32,000 approK . 1/4 mile out
Bud Chattin Rd. {304)675·
3144
3 bedroom 2 bath, Buckeye
Hills Ad. In ground po ol. 1
acre. (740)709-1 166.

riO

HOMES
FOR SALE

All real eatate adwertlalng
In thlt newapeper '•
eubJect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makM It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination b"ed on
race, color, religion, sax
familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preterence, llml..tlon or
dlaerlmlnatlon."
Thla newspaper will not
knowingly tccept
adwerlt .. mtlnlt tor real
ntate which lain
vlolttlon of the taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that ell
dwellings tdvertt ..d In
thla newafMiper are
available on an equat
opportunllv btraet.
FORECLOSURE I

3 bed only $9,500. lor list-

3 bedro,~ m . 2 bath, newly ings call

remodeled. Clly schools, 1-e00-719-3001 e~et 1144
$85,000 firm. (740)446·1168
01 (740)446.()1 37.
Homo sale lo City. 3 bed·
room, 2 lull baths, nice &amp;
e
room,
Barn Removal
clean, greet location in City,
Riverview/ Access .
All refe rences &amp; full insu rVInyl siding . Price to sate
PhOtos: now. Phpne (740\446-9539 .
nformatlon/
Cod
ww.orvb .com
303 or call (740)446
_Letart Falls, OH; 3 bedroom
531 .
hOuse , 1 bath , detach"ed
All ty pes of masonry brlck,
block &amp; sto ne 20 yrs.
Experience lree estimate.
1·304·773-9550 , 304-593·
1007
Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
mill jus1 call 304·675·1957.
Will rebui ld au tomollve,
truck and tractor engines.
ASE Certified Mec_t'\an ic.
Call (740)441-1306 leave a
message.

Area Rep/ Loc al Route,
No Selling. $tOOK Income.
$1 2.950 Investment lor
Accounts. Inventory,
Training, Te rritory. (800) 3735470.
JOBS- Don't Tell Me You
Can't Get A Job. Call Ken
For Intervi ew, (740)9927440
LOCAL VENDING ROUTE!
60 vending macl;llnest
ex cellen t locations all fo r
$10,99 5, 600· 234·6982
SUCCESS· II You Really
wa nt To· Su cceed. Call Ken
(740)992·7440

3 bedroom, 2 baths on 4.3
acres. Close to l'ycQon Lake.
Call {740)709·1 166
- - -- - - - BI·Level Houee 4 bed·
rooms 2 ba~hs 3 ton c~ntral
air electric heat large deck 2
car anach8d gar8.ge 1 1/2
acres 4dx30
detached
garage with bath 2 ton cen·
tral heat propane heat
garage matches house
paved driveways and road
1/2 mite out Pleasant Ridge
Road, Gallipolis Farry, WV
$145 ,000 Call Rick &amp; Judy
Jmdan (304)576·2035

1:J ,,

fl2lr

MOBILE HOMf:~

L.--itliiioiiiii;,;,-,.J

1990 t4X75 3br, 2ba . cen - Beautiful river view, ideal fo r
tral air, deck $14,800 one or two people. No pets.
(304)882·3882
references. (7 40)44 1-01 81.
Mobile Home lor rent. 3br.
w/, stove &amp; ref. (304)5769991
Nice 2 and 3 bedroom
mobile homes tor ren t

14X80
Oakwood
2000
includes wate r. sewer &amp;
mobile home. 3 bedroom, 2
trash , no pets . e1epos1 t &amp;
bath, total electric. Call
$300 per month, (740)992Kitts Hill· New 3 bedroom. 2 (740)992·9263
2167
bath+ mobile home on t7.5
Looking
lor
a
great
home
Pomeroy $350 a mo .. $1 50
acres.
Water Loo-141 · 3 bedroom, cheap? Stop renling I have dep ., no pets, (740)6671-1/2 bath, full basement, the home for you. Debbie ~30~B~3~a~lle:r~5~pm~
· ----~
{740)446·2451 . Lesa than
good condilion. 1 acre.
$4000WOWIII

e.L c.n-ur IIIIHtl
tlU1UH111

Stu dio

apar tme nt

1n Bolens riding mower. 15 Hp,

3 bedroom trailer, total elec- Pomeroy. gas, electric &amp; 38 inch cut .bou ght June

tric, newly remodel ed. Quiet
neighborhood. Taking appl ications. must have deposi t.
garage, new roof, siding. (740)388·9770.
windows, carpet. &amp; kitchen.
5 minutes !rom Gallipolis
$65.000.00 {740)247·2000
St ate Rou te 2 18. Nice
70K14,
with stora ge b.uilding.
MOBn.E HOMES
or 740-256740-256-1417
FOR SALE
6228

1993 Rodma n, 3brl2blh,
only $13 ,995 includes central air end del ivery, call
Nikki 740·38 5·9948

7-8 Red Gloves (304)675·
5870

2523

FOR RENT

rA~~

New 14 wide only $799
down and only $169.53 per t and 2 bedroom ap artCoun1ry home , 1-year old, month, call Karena 740-385 ments, furnished and un furnew well , septic system. 7871
nished, securi ty deposit
lf'l~ludes 11 12 acres . 2 bedrequ ired . no pets, 740-992room, 11 /2 baths, gas log New 3 bedroom , 2 Oath .
2218.
fi replace. Aiking $70,000.00 Only $995.00 down and only - - - - - - - -Firm. (740)247·2102
$206.68 pe r month. Call 1 bedroom ap t. stove! relrig·
Nikki , 740·385·7671
erator &amp; utilities furnished .
Fo r Salct'2Br Home· on .38
Call (740)245· $859.
acre lot, lence&lt;lln backyard. Nice uaed 3 bedroom . Total
convenient location, appll· electric. will help with detlv- 1 BA Must have REFER ancea stay Mason, WV OTY. Only $13 ,995.00. COli ENCES &amp; deposit. No Pols,
(7 40)4 46·01 39.
(3041773·5094
Harold, 740·385·9948.

water included. $350 mon th- 2003 pd. $875. sell $550.
iy plus deposit. contact Joe 304-675-7340
{740)742·4225
For sal e Buck Stove with
Tara
Townhouse accessories $400 00 Firm
Apart ments. Very Spacious, {304)675- 1080
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
JET
1/2 Bath , Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool 8. Baby Pool.
AERATION MOTORS
Patio. Star t $385/Mo No AepMed . New &amp; Rebuilt In
Pets: Lease Plu s Security Slock. Ca ll Ron Evan s. 1Deposit Required . Days 800·537·9528
740-446-3481 : Evenings:
740·367·0502.
NEW AND USED STEEL
Twin Ri vers Tower is accept· Steel Beams . Ptpe Rebar
lng applications tor wai ting For
Concrete.
Ang le,
list lor Hud-subsized, 1- br, Channel , Flat Btu. Steel
For
Drains.
~~~tm e nt, call 675-667 9 Gra ting
Driveways &amp; Wall&lt;ways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
SrAn :
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
FOR R£'\jT
Friday, Sam- 4:30pm Closed
Th ursday.
Saturday
&amp;
2 store tronts tn HisiOrical Sl1nday. (740)446-7300
downtown Pomeroy. Oh. facing th e river fo r rent, Snare drum-SSO. Console
stereo with 8-track-$100, 2
~ cloth and chrome barstools
and 2 wooden end-tables.
$50 each . 1740)446·9209.
•10
HOll~o'EH(K.D
Goorr;
Utility Trailer 51C1 2 with ramp
tailgate. Singl e axle. Good
6 Ft. Sola with cha1r. cotfee for hauling mowers. ATV's
ta ble, 27" Zenith color TV., 6 $350. 740·388·91431740·
441 ·3755.
ft . hutch. (7 40)446-0971

;;:,:p..______.,
:«:JJ

~

Good Used AppliBilCes.
and
Aecondllioned
Guaranteed
Washers,
Dryers.
Ranges,
and
Refrigerators, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vint~ St ., (740)446-7398

B un .tJtNG

Sut~~Jf:S
Block, brick. sewer pipes,
windows. lintels. ere. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. OH
Can 740-245-5121 .

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18134">
              <text>March 1, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
