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                  <text>SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Pro Hockey
National Hockey Leaaue
EASTERN CONFERENCl

.Atllntlc Dlvllkm

W L T OL Pts GF GA
f'hlladelphia 35 17 12 6 88 201
New Jersey 35 20 11 2 83 169
N.Y. Islanders 30 25 10 3 73 190
N.Y Rangers 24 33 7 5 60 180
Pfttsburgt1
15 44 6 4 40 150
Northe. .t Division
W L T OLPtsGF
37 18 9 5 88 230
Ottawa
Toronro
37 20 9 3 86 198
32 16 14 7 85 175
Boston
Montreal
37 26 6 2 82 184
BuHato
30 31 6 1 67 176
Southeast Division
W L T OL Pts GF

161
137
177
207

267
GA
152
175
157
162

187
GA

x-Tampa Bay 39 17 8 5 91 205 157

•

Florida
A11an1a

24 28 14 3
27 32 7 3

65 152 177
84 186 212

Carolina

22 29 13 4 61 131 167

Washington 21 38 8 2 52 159 207
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L T OL Pts GF GA
39 17 10 2 90 2 14 153
Delroil
Nashville
33 25 8 2 76 180 181
31 26 9 2 73 158 169
St. Louis
20 37 8 4 52 147 200
Columbus
18 35 9 6 51 158 206
ChiCago
Northwest Division
W L T OLPtsGF GA
Colorado
35 t7 12 5 87 208 165
Vancouver
36 21 8 4 84 199 167
34 26 5 3 76 167 152
Calgary
Edmonton
28 27 112 69 182176
Minnesota
21 26 19 2 63 145 153

S. Carotina 34 21 3
71 168
67 203
Greensboro 33 25 1
Cnartone
30 23 1
67 183
29 26 6 64 171
Roanoke
Florence
24 29 7
55 174
Greenville 10 44 5
25 142
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Centrel Olvl1lon
W L T P t s GF
Louisiana 41 16 2
84 198
Mississippi 35 19 6
76 214
Gwinnen
33 19 5
71 193
Pensacola 32 19 7
71 196
Columbus 3323470 181
Augusta
24 27 7
55 160
TaKas
18 36 5
41 160
Pacific Division
WLTP1s GF
K·San0iego37 12 10 84 193
78 191
x-Las Vegas 36 19 6
Idaho
33 18 7
73 lBO
Alaska
31 23 4
66 182
Bakersfield 21 33 7
49 171
Long Beach 21 32 4
46 156
42 158
Fresno
18 35 6

San Jose
Dallas
l os Angeles
Anah eim
Ph oen i~t

33
35
25
25
20

18
22
19
28
27

11 6
11 0
16 7
9 8
16 5

83
81
73
67
61

173
160
175
157
169

149 .
145
175
180
205

TWo points for a wi n, one point for a tie
and overtime loss.
x-cli nched div1sion
Sunday 's Games
Edmonton 4, Chicago 3, OT
Calgar'y 7. Colorado 1
Dallas 4, San Jose 0
Pittsburgh 7, N.Y. Rangers 4
St. louis 5, Buffalo 1
Minnesota 1. PhoeniK 1, t1e
Monday's Games
Ottawa 4, Washington 1
Carolina 4 , Columbus 1
Tampa Bay 1, Detroi t 1. tie
Colorado 9, Vancouver 2
Montreal 5, Anaheim 2
Tuesday's Games
Dallas at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m
Florida at Toron to. 7: 30p.m.
Philadelphia at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at St. l ouis, 8 p.m
Boston at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Edmo nton at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Minnesota at San Jose. 10:30 p. m.
PhDeniK at l os Angeles. 10:30 p. m.
Wednesday 's Games
Buffalo at Washington , 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Carolina .' 7 p.m
Colcrado at Edmonton. 8:30 p.m
l os Angeles at Phoen1x, 9 p.m.
Minnesota at Vancouver. 11 p. m

ECHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Northern Dlvleton
W L T
P1s GF
Wheeling
45 13 2
92 224
Atlantic City 39 14 5
83 196
Peoria
36 16 8
80 190
Johnstown 35 19 6
76 174
Reading
31 19 9
71 181
65 174
Trenton
29 22 7
Toledo
2 1 29 9
51 161
Cincinnati 22 36 3
47 141
Dayton
2 1 34 5
47 147
Southern Division
W L T
P1s GF
80 237
Columbia 37 18 6
Florida
31 22 10 72 204

GA .
154
129
148
162
149
151
202
182
225

152
196
175
207
217

238
GA

136
173
161
194
161
191
235
GA

154
161
16.7
170
196
204
232

~~: · clinched

playoff spot
NOTE: Two pointS are awarded fo r a w1n.
Overtime and shootout losses earn one
point and are referred to as ties.
Monday's Games
No games sched uled
Tuesday's Games
Florence at Greenville
Louisiana at Gwinnett
Miss1ssipp1at Pensacola
Trenton at Peoria
Wheeling at Aead1ng
August a at South Carolina
Wednesday's Games
Cincinn ati at Alaska
Wheeli ng at Atlantic C1ty
louisiana at Charlotte
Long Beach at Idaho

Pacific Division
W L T OLPtsGF GA

Pro Basketball
National Basketball
Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L
PctGB
38 24
.613
New Jersey
New York
453 10
29 35
Boston
28 36
.438 1 I
Miami
27 36
.429 11 '?
Philadelphia
26 38
.406 13
Washingto n
20 41
.328 17',
Orlando
18 47
.277 2 1'l
Central Division
Wl
Pct
GB
x- lndiana
47 16
.746
Detroit
41 25
.62 1 7'7
Milwaukee
33 30
.524 14
New Orleans
33 30
.524 14
Cleveland
28 36
.438 19 ''l
Toronto
27 36
.429 20
Atlanta
20 43
.317 27
Chicago
18 44
.290 28 '2
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
Pet
GB
W l
Minnesota
44 19
.698
42 2 1
.667 2
Sa n Antonio
40 23
635 4
Dallas
Memphis
.6 19 5
39 24
.561 7\
Houston
36 26
Denver
33 31
.516 11' ~
32 32
.500 12',
Uta h
Pacific Division
Pet
GB
W L
46 16
.,742
Sa cramento
L.A. l akers
41 22
65 1 5'.
30 33
476 16 '..,
Portland
Seattle
27 36
.429 t9 'l
L.A. Cl ippers
26 36
.419 20
.4 10 20',
25 36
Golden State
Phoenix
21 43
.328 26
:&lt;-clinched playoff spot

GA
187
198

PageB6

Monday's Games
Philadelphia 97, Milwaukee 92
Cleveland 10a. Atlan ta 102
Dalla s 103, Phoenix 90
Utah 88, L.A. Lakers 83
Tuesday 's Games

Denver at Washington, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Indiana, ? p.m.
Orlando at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Boston at New 'rork. 7:30 p.m.
San Ant on~ at Memphis, 8 p.m.
Phil adelphia ar Chicago, 8:30p.m.
l .A. Clippers at Houston. 8:30p.m.
Minnesota at Seattle. 10 p.m.
Golden State at Sacramento. 10 p.m.
Wedneaday 'a Games
L.A. Lakers at Boston, 7 p.m
Cleveland at Toronto. 7 p.m.
Washington at Orlando. 7 p.m.
Chicago at Detroit. 7:30 p.m.
Den¥er at New Jersey. 7:30p.m
Atlanta at Milwaukee, S p.m .
M1am1at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
L. A Clippers at San Antonio , 8:30p.m
Golden State at Utah . 9 p.m.
M1nnesota at Portland , 10 p.m.
Thursday's Games
New Orleans at Houston. 7:30p.m.
Dallas at Sacramento, 10 p.m.

NCAA Basketball
Top Twenty Five
The top 25 1eams in The Assoc iated Press'
men's college basketball poll, with fi rstplace votes H1 parentheses, records
through March 7, tota l points based on 25
poin ls fo r a tirst·place vote through one
poin t for a 25th-place vote and previous
ranking:
Pts
Record
Pvs
1. Saint Joseph's (67) 27-0 1,795 2
2. Stan tord (2)
26-1 1,648 1
26-2 1.604 3
3. Gonzaga I 1)
4. Mississ ippi St.
25-2 t ,557 5
s . Duke {2)
25-4 1,5 19 4
6. Pittsburgh
27·3 1.451 6
7. Oklahoma St.
24-3 I ,4 10 7
8. Kentucky
23-4 1,370 8
9 . Connecticut
24·6 1.1 58 9
10. W1sconsin
21.-6 927
16
11. Te• as
21-6 914
10
12. Illinois
22·5 898
18
13. Cincinnati
21·6 844
13
14. Georgia Tech
22·8 81 7
19
15. Wa ke Forest
19-8 672
tl
16. North Carolina
18-9 665
14
t 7. N.C. State
19-a 654
17
18 . Kansas
20-7 607
20
19. Syracuse
21-6 593
23
20. Providence
20-7 521
12
21 . Anzona
19-8 400 2 1
22. U1ah St.
25-2 322
24
23. Memphis
21·6 310
22
25-4 264
15
24. S. Utino1s
25. Air Force
22-5 73
Others receivi ng votes: Michigan St. 70,
Charlotte 48, DePaul 42, Louisville 41 .
Boston College 36, Washington 36. Seton
Hall 34. W MIChi gan 31 , Nevada 20, ETSU
10, Te)(as Tech 10, Florida 6. Dayton 5,
Manhattan 4 , South Carolina 3, Boise St. 2,
UTEP 2. Alabama 1. BYU 1. Marquene 1,
Oklahoma 1, Paci fic i, Pri nceton 1, Va .
Commonwealth 1
Mid-American Conference
.men's tournament pairings
First Round
Monday's Results
Toledo 9 t , Cent. Michigan 88
Buffalo 90, N. Illinois 73
Ball St. 76. Akron 72
Bowling Green 56, Ohio 54
Marshall 78 . E. Michigan 59 At Gund
Arena. Clevel and
Quarterfinals
Thursday
(7) Bowl1ng Green (14· 16) vs (2) Kent
State (20 -7), noon
(6) Ba ll State (14-1 4) vs (3) Miami ol
Ohio (17· 10). 2:30 p.m.
(8) Marshall (1 2· 16) v s (1) Western
Michigan (23-4 ), 7 p.m
(5) Buf1alo (17· 11) vs. (4 ) Toledo (19·9).
9:30p.m
Semifinals
Friday
Marshall-Western Michigan winner vs .
Buffalo-Toledo winner. 6: 30p m.
Bowling Green·Kenl State winner \IS. Ball
St ate-Miami of Ohio winner, 9 p.m.
Championship

Salu~,

llln:h 13

Atlanta
St. Louis

&amp;!lmlflnal win ners, 7 p.m.
Monday'o College

llukotbell

MIIID&lt;SCOfoo
TOURNAMENT
Colonlo1 A1hlotlc Aoooc:lotlon
Champlonlhlp
Va. Commonwealth 55, George Mason

54
Mld.Contlnent Conference
Semifinals
Valparaiso 90. UMKC..-78
Mid -Eastern Athletic Conference
F~rst Round
Morgan St. 60. Howard 59
Norfolk St. 58, N. Carolina A&amp; T 43
SOuthland Conference
First Round
SE louisiana 72. Northwes tern St. 64
Stephen F. Austin 85, Sam Houston St. 53
Te~~:as- Arl i ngton 77, louisiana-Monroe 62
TeKas·San Antonio 78. TeKas St. 73
Sun Belt Conference
Semifinals
l ouisiana·l:.afayette
70,
Middle
Tennessee 66
Monday's Women 's Basketball
MaJor Scores
TQURNAMENT
Atlantic 10 Conference
Championship
Temple 53, Saint Jos eph's 48
Atlantic Coast Conference
Championship
Duke 63, North Carolin a 4 7
Big East Conference
Semifinals
Boston College 73, Connecticut 70
Rutgers 61, West Virginia 51
Big Ten Confenjince
Championship
Purdue 59, Penn St. 58
Horizon league
Ch ampionship
Wis.-Green Bay 66, Detroit 54
Mid-Continent Conference
Semifinals
Oral Roberts 72, W. Illinois 70, OT
Valparaiso 66, 'Missouri- Ka nsas City 54
Mld·Eastern Athletic Conference
Firat Round
Bethune -Cookman 81 , Morgan St. 52
Md .·Eastern Shore 79, N. Carolina A&amp;T
61
Sun Batt Conference
Semifinals
Middle Tennessee 64, Denver 61
W. Kentucky 71. New Mexico St. 56

Baseball
Major League Baseball
Spring Training
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W
L
Cleveland
Anaheim
Chica go
Minnesota
Tampa Bay
Boston
New York
Kansas Cily
To ronto
Baltimore
Detroit
Te:&lt;as
Seattl e
Oaklan d

4

0

4
4

1
1

4

2

2

1

3
3

2
2

2
2
2
2
2
1
1

2
2
3
3
3
3
4

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W
l
Milwaukee
5
1
Florida
4
1
Chicago
3
1
Los Angeles
4
2
New York
4
2
Arizona
3
2
3
2
Montreal
Philadelphia
3
2
Houston
2
2
Cincinnati
3
4
Colorado
1
3
San Fran cisco
1
3
San Diego
4
Pittsburgh
5

Tuesday, March 9, 2004

Pc1
1.000
.800
.800
.667
.667
.600
.600
.500
.500
.400

.400
.400
.250
.200

Pet
.833
.BOO
750
.667
.667
.600
.600
.600
. 500
.429
.250
.250
.200
167

0
0

5

6

.000
.000

NOTE : Spilt--squad games cou nt in the
standings; games agslnst non-major
league teams do not.
Sunday's Games
..Florida 6. Baltimore 1
N.V. Ya nkees 11, Boston 7
Montreat 7, St. louis 2
Tampa Bay 1t , Atlanta 2
Cleveland 18, Detroit 10
N.Y. Mets 8, Los Angeles 3
Minnes01a 7, Cincinnati 4
Philadelphia 12. Toronto 6
Houston 15, Pittsburgh 8
Milwaukee 12. Texas a
An ~he i m (ss } 5, Oakland 2
Seattle 16, San Diego (ss) 5
Arizona 8, Chicago White Sox 7
Colorado 4, Kansas City (ss) 1
Chicago Cubs (SS) 6, San Francisco 6, tie
Kansas City (ss) 4. Chicago Cubs (ss ) 4,
tie
Anaheim (ss) 6, San Diego (ss) 3
Monday's Games
Florida 8, Montreal 1
Detroit B. Houston 4
Cleveland 7. Atlan ta 3
Baltimore 14, l os Angeles 5
Toron to 6, Pittsburg h (ss) 5
Boston (ss) 5, Philadelphia 3
Boston (ss) 9. Minnesota (ss) 4
Cincin nati (ss) 6, Tampa Bay 3
C1ncin nati (SS) 9, Pi tt sburgh (SS) 5
N.Y. Mets 6, St. Louis 4
Minnesota (ss) 13, N.Y. Ya nkees 2
Anaheim 5, Seattle 3
Texas 4, San Diego 2
Anzona 5. Colorado 4
Chicago Cubs 8, Milwaukee 4
Chic ago White Sox 6, Oakland 5
Kansas City 9, San Francisco 3
Tuesday's Games
Toronto vs . Detroit at Lakelan d. Fl a., 1:05
p.m.
Los Angeles vs. Montreal at Viera , Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Cincinnati vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla ..
1:05 p.m
Houston vs. Clevelan d at Winter Haven.
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton.
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Minnesota vs. Philadelph ia at Clearwater,
Fla.. 1:05 p.m.
Florida vs . N.Y. Mats at Port St. Lucie.
Fla., 1:10 p.m.
Baltimore vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Fl a ..
1:10 p.m .
Atlanta vs. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa, Fl a.,
1:15 p.m
Texas vs. Seattle at Peoria. Ariz .. 3:05
p.m.
San Diego vs. Oakland at Phoenix, 3:05
p.m·.
Anaheim vs . Arizona at Tucson. Ariz.,
3:05 p.m.
San Francisco vs. Milwaukee al Phoe ni~t .
3:05 p.m.
Ch icago Whil e Sox v s. Colorado at
Tucson, Ariz., 3:05p.m .
Chicago Cubs vs. Kansas City at
SurprisE! . Ariz .. 3:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Boston vs St.louis at Jupiter. Fla., 12:05
p.m.
Tampa Bay vs. Cincinnati at Sa rasota,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
Cleveland (ss) vs. Montreal at Viera. Fla ..
1:05 p.m
Florida (ss) vs. Baltimore at Fo rt
Lauderdal e, Fla .. 1:05 p.m .
Toront.o (ss ) vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton,
Fla., 1:05 p.m.
New York Yankees (ss) vs. Minnesota at
· Fort Myers, Fla., 1:05 p.m .
Cleveland (ss) vs . Detroit (ss) at
Lakeland, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
New York Yankees (ss) v s. Toront o (ss) at
Dunedin, Fla., 1:05 p. m.
Detroit (ss) vs. Los Angeles (ss) at Vera
Beach, Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
Seattle vs. Anaheim at Tempe, Ariz ., 3:05
p.m.
Te,.;as vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale ,
Ariz .. 3:05p.m.
Colorado (ss) vs. Milwau~ee at Phoenix.
3:05p.m.
OaKland (ss ) vs. San Diego at Peoria,

Associated Press
OWINGS MILLS, Md. - . Terrell
Owens skipped a physical with the
Baltimore Ravens on Monday, then
teasserted his intention not to play
for the team.
: While the Ravens waited for an
arbitrator to rule on the star receiver's bid to void his trade from San
Francisco, Owens issued a statement
saying he won ' t suit up for
Baltimore.
"So that there is no misunderStanding, regardless of what happens
with the grievance, under the present
circumstances I do not see myself
playing for the Ravens, " Owens
said. "I can assure everyone that I
will continue to keep fighting for my
right to play for the team of my
choice even after the grievance. At

the end of this process, I simply
want to be able to exercise my right
to play for a team of my choosing
under a deal that is fair to me and my
family."
The Ravens will wait for the arbi- ·
trator' s ruling before making their
next move.
"This is a matter between the
league and the union right now,"
Ravens spokesman Chad Steele
said. "We can't do anything 4ntil we
hear back on the ruling."
The Ravens expect the matter to
be cleared up by Friday and are certain Owens will play for them this
season . They said they are willing to
rework the deal to bring his salary in
line with top receivers in the league.
But Owens wants a contract with
the team of his choosing, and
believes the Ravens were out of line
in making the trade.

Owens was denied free-agent status last month after he missed a
deadline to void the final three seasons of his contract. His agent,
David Joseph, filed a grievance with
the NFL Management Council
through
the
NFL
Players
Association.
·Gene Upshaw, executive director
of the players /association, has asked
the league to bverturn. the trade and
have Owens' 'tontract voided so he
can be declared a free agent. That
could mean millions to Owens, who
is due to make $17.7 million in base
salary over the· next three seasons,
including $5.3 million next year.
Upshaw sent the case to Stephen
Burbank, an arbitrator in charg~ of
settling disputd regarding the NFL's
collective bargaining agreement,
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said .
"First and foremost, I believe that
1

Gardocki not worried about kicking in
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Chris
Gardocki spent four years in
Chicago and four years in
Cleveland, so punting in Heinz
Field doesn't faze him.
. "I've had my share of punting
iri. nasty
weather,"
the
Pittsburgh Steelers' new punter
said Monday. "Playing in nasty
weather
in
places
like
Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chicago,
New England, that should be to
the home team's advantage."
Gardocki also punted for four
years in Indianapoli s. That 's
where he played fo r specialteam s coach Kev in Spencer,
who is now in Pittsburgh and
was instrumental in directing
Gardocki to the Sleelers.
Gardocki needed the help. He
once presented Steelers coach
Bill Cowher with an obscene
hand gesture afler linebacker
Joey Porter had knocked the
wind out of him with a postpunt block . At the time,
Gardocki and the Browns railed
about the so-called cheap shot,
but Gardocki put the 2000 incident behind him yesterday.

"When you 're out there, you
don 't have any friend s,"
Gardocki said. "That's football.
ln between the lines, people
change person ali ties and you
want to win. I'm a competitor
and if you' re no.t in this game to
compete and win, you shouldn 't
be playing."
Asked if he 'd talked to Porter
yet, Gardocki said he hadn 't
sought him out. ,
"I' m going to hide from him,"
he said. "I think he got the best
of me."
Gardocki signed a five-year,
$6.5 million contract with the
Steelers on Saturday, a deal that
included a $,1 million·bonus. On
Monday, the Steelers released
eight-year veteran punter Josh
Miller, who, like Gardocki, will
be 34 on opening day. Both punters averaged 41.9 yards per
punt last season, but Miller had
the better net average of 37.4 to
Gardocki's 34.8.
The Steelers al so hosted free
agent s Artrell Hawkin s and
Duce St;lley on Monday.
' I

I properly voided the remaining
years on my contract. However, as a
possible resolution to this dispute, I
agreed to try and work out a new
deal with a team of my choice that
would be backed up by a trade with
the 49ers," Owens said. " I was
promised that no trade would be
made unti I I completed such a deal.
Unfortunately, all of the teams did
not adhere to this agreement and we
now have an even bigger mess."
The Ravens obtained the four-time
Pro Bowl receiver from the 49ers
last Thursday for a second+round
draft pick. Owens said he wo~ld not
report to Baltimore, insisting that if
given the choice, he would rather
play for the Philadelphia Eagles.
After Owens did not · show up for
Monday's physical , the Ravens, who
have the option of waiving the physical, postponed the examination

Hei~ ·

Hawkins, a ,5-10, 190-pound Horton. All three men coached
cornerback , was released by the Hawkins during his time with
Cincinnati Bengals on Friday. the Bengals.
He lost his starting job last sea"I know what they're about.
son to Jeff Burris and Tory They know what I'm about,"
James after starting nine games Hawkins said. "I feel comfortand intercepting one pass.
In s1x seasons with the able in their scheme and it's a
Bengals , Hawkins started 72 good opportunity I ihink, and so
games and intercepted nine right now we' re in the process
passes.
The
27-year-old of getting something done."
The Steelers negotialed with
Johnstown native left the
Steelers' offices Monday to visit Staley, a 29-year-old running
the Carolina Panthers, but said back, into Monday evening. The
that he and the Steelers were 5-11 , 220-pounder played for
close to a deal.
the Philadelphia Eagles the last
"I would love to play here," seven seasons and accumulated
Hawkins said. "That's not any- 4,807 yards on I .200 carries.
thing coach Cowher and the rest Staley also caught 275 career
of the coaches don 't know. passes for 2,498 yards.
Yeah, I am going down to
Last season , Staley held out of
Carolina right how. I do have to
look out and make sure I have training camp in an attempt to
options, but Pittsburgh is high renegotiate the final year of his
contract. Upon his return, Staley
on my priority list. "
Hawkins
was
escorted found himself in a three-man
ihroughout the Steelers' practice rotation with Brian Westbrook
faci li ty by defensive coordina- and Correll Buckhalter and
lor Dick LeBeau . The two were gained only 463 yards on 96
joined ~· lunch by assistant . carries. He also caught 36 passcoaches Darren Perry and Ray es.

It's a 'sister act' at
Pickerington Division
IV regional tourney, Bt

Ariz., 3:05p.m.
Chicago Cubf; (11) va. Arizona at Tucson ,
Ariz., 3:05p.m.
Oakland (01) vo. Chicago Cubs (oa) at
Mesa , Ariz ., 3:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (ss ) vs. Kansas City
at Surprise, Ariz .. 3:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets vs. Houston at Kissimmee, Fla.,
7:05p.m.
Ph1iadelph1a vs. Atlanta at Kissim mee.
Fla., 7:05 p.m.
Los Angeles (ss) vs. Florida (ss ) at
Jupiter, Fla., 7:05 p.m.
Colorado (ss) vs . Chicago White Sox (ss)
at Tucson. Ariz .. 9:05p.m.

Low-cost health
services, varied
and available, A2

Transactions
BASEBALL
Americ an League
CLEVELAND INDIAN S-Renewed the
contract of OF Jody Ger ut.
NEW YORK YANKEE$-Optioned LHP
Danny, Borrell to Columbus ol the
International l eague and RHP Chien· Ming
Wang to Tren ton of the Eastern league
NaUonal League
ARIZONA DIAMDNDBACKS-Ex1ended
their player development contract with
l ancaster of the Califomia League through
the 2006 season .
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
SAN ANTONIO SPUR S-Signed G Mat1
Carro.IL ..
FOOTBAll
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS-Signed DT Rod
Coleman to a six- year contract. Agreed to
terms with G Steve Herndon
CIN CINNATI BE NGALS-Signed C Rich
Brah am to a one-year contract.
MINNESOTA VI I&lt; INGS-Agreed to terms
with WR Marc us Robinson on a tour-year
contract
NEW YO RK GIANTS;-Signed LB Barrett
Green
NEW YO RK JETS-Released WA Curtis
Conway.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Signed P
Chris Gardocki to a l ive-year co ntract.
Relea sed P Josh Miller. Named Joe
Greene scout
SEATILE SE AHAWKS-Re-signed LB
Isaiah Kacyvensk1to a multiyear contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS- Recalled F
Matt Keith from Norfolk of th e AHL
Reassigned F Pavel Vorobiev to Norfolk.
COLUMBU S
BLUE
JACKETSActivated 0 Duvie Westcott fro m injured
reserve. Ass igned 0 Darrel Scoville to the
Syracu se of the AH L.
DALLAS STARS- A cq uired D Chris
The rien from Ph ilad el phia for a 2004
eighth -round and a 2005 third -ro und draft
pick
FLORIDA PANTHERS- Traded D Kyle
RosSiter to Atlanta for C Kamil Pires.
LOS ANGELE S KINGS- Reca lled G
Milan Hnilicka from Manche ste r of the
AHL: assigned G Mathieu Chouinard an d D
Denis Grebeshkov to Manchester.
MINNESOTA WILD- Traded D Brad
B r~Z~ wn and a 2005 sixth-rou nd dra ft pick to
Buffalo for a 2005 fourth- round draft pi ck.
NA SHVILLE PR EDATORS- Assigned F.
Wyatt Smith to Mil waukee of the AHL.
NEW YOR K IS LA NDERS- Traded D
Alain Nasreddine to Pittsburgh for F Steve
Webb
NEW YORK RANGER S-Tr aded D
Vl adimir Malakhov to Philad elphia for RW
Rick Kozak and a 2005 second-round draft
pick
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Traded AW
Anson Carter to Los Angel es for F Jared
Au lin.
COLLEGE
CLAYTON STATE-Announced the resignation of A.C .. McCullers, women's bas·
ketball coach.
HOUSTON'-Aeassigned Ray McCallum.
men's baske tball coach, to athletic department fund rai ser

Ravens taking wait-and-see stance on Terrell Owens
BY DAVID GINSBURG

/

pending confirmation of the trade.
The Eagles reportedly agreed to a
contract with Owens that included a
signing bonus worth about $10 million. But the 49ers were not intere sted in Phili1delphia's offer for Owens:
a fifth-round pick and wide receiver
James Thrash .
Owens caught 80 passes for 1,102
yards and nine touchdowns last season, his lowest totals since 1999.
Owens isn't all abOL1t talent,
though . His departure from San
Francisco was perpetuated by a
clash with management and teammates, and his on-field antics after
touchdowns include signing a football with a marker he carried in his
sock, and an impromptu cheer with
pom-pons he borrowed from a
cheerleader.

Braham signs deal
wit~ Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals
re-signed ~enter Rich Braham, an unrestricted free
agent, to '1 one-year contract on Monday.
The 10-~ear veteran i ~ an anchor on the offensive line, starting 15 of the Bengals' 16 games last
season.
"He's a leader on the line and runs the show as
far as recognizing fronts and making calls, and
he'll be a big help to (first-year-starter) Carson
Palmer," said Paul Alexander, the Bengals' assistant head coach and offensive line coach.
The Bengals and. Braham's agent, Vern
Sharbaugh, declined to reveal terms of the contract.
Braham, who made $655,000 last season, was on
vacation and could not be reached, his agent said.
"Let the team announce the money, but let's just
say it's a lot more than last year," Braham was
quoted on the Bengals' Web site. "l think it' s a good
deal for both sides. I never wanted to be anywhere
else."
Braham has missed only on,e game in the past
three years.
Last week, the Bengal s matched Jacksonville's
five -year, $6.5 million offer sheet to retain kicke r
Shayne Grah am and signed two free age nts, former Ravens and Ram s free safety Kim Herring and
former Tampa Bay linebacker Nate Webster. to
five -year deals.

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
, tl\1"\lS•\tl(

,J . "\n

SPORTS
• Ridgedale might be an
even match up for Eagles.
See Page 81

\\IP:'\1'1,\,

tL\

\1\1\.lllo

'OOJ

''1'"'11" ! "1

, ,1.1 • ;,,

Meigs Local faces ·major operating deficit
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

POMEROY - Faced with
a $500.000 minimum deficit
in operating funds for fiscal
year 2004-2005, the Meigs
Local Board of Education
began a di scussion of where
to cut costs at Tue sday
night's meeting.
HPeople need to know the
financial condition of the
school
district ,"
said
Superintendent"
Wi II iam
Buckley. "We are looking at a

m a j o r
d e fi c it
w h i c h
means cuts
will have to
be made,
and we will .
be lookin g
at
every
program to
see where
that can be William Buckley
done while
· minimizing the impact on th e
kids."
Buckley said that whil e

the di strict operated "in the
red" in February, the expec·
tation is that fin ances will be
in the bl ack at the end of this
sc hool year.
. ''The more critical iss ue
w me s next year,'' he said .
Buckley emphasized that
the permanent improvement
levy defeated earli er thi s
month does not ha ve an y
bearing on the school 's operating fund s. Money from that
levy, had it passed. could
have bee n used onl y for
bu ses and books, lhings wilh

a life of five or more yea rs.
serv ice organi zation . Our serSpeak ing of ope raling vice is k;cts. and our goal has
funds. Buck ley said the vast 10 be 10 min imize as much as
majority of the budget goes possible the impac t on kids.
to perso nn el. "What ihat
" I do nol think that the state
mean s is ihat when looking al is going to bail anyone out. I
a defi cit of $5 00.000. il don't see the state giving us
mean s personnel will ha ve lo an y more reve nue. While
be cut. He s;;id he has been !here is all thi s hoopla about
meet in g wi lh princi pal s and ihe economy making alum . I
talking abo ut what can be don·l see it.
done in !heir respec ti ve
" What we will be doing is
schools.
looking al what we are offe r"Cub will be in all areas:· i ng, and co me up with some
he said. "From admini slraPlease see Deficit. AS
tion ri ghl on do wn. We're a

Work under way
:':'c~':Kts
Rutland sewer system gets new Jines plan spring
.

\

. ..
.

I

•

..

.

events

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFUCH@MYDAtLY SENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Millard Spaulding

INSIDE
• Family Medidne.
See Page A3
• Jury court-martial set
for soldier accused in
grenade attack.
See Page A6

'

.,

........

... ·,.

Work is proceeding on the expansion of the Rutland sewer system, with J.C. Trivett Excavating of Athens on site installing new
sewer line. The project is designed to serve both the Meigs Elementary School and the Heaven on Earth Senior Living Center,
to be built on property near Brick Street. The $99,499 project is be ing funded through the Appalachian Regional Commiss ion
and Rutland Village, and involves the installation of four-inch sewer line along Ohio 124 and Little Leading Creek . The .proJect
wi ll relieve a financial burden on the Meigs Local School District. The district is now paying about $9 ,000 every month for
sewage removal at the new school. The project is expected to take 60 days for completion. (Brian J. Reed)

WEATHER

Income tax
Paul Darnell speaks at Meigs County
loopholes .
Chamber of Commerce Business Luncheon
closed forever
Paul Darnell of PM Des ign was
BY J.

MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 S&gt;:cT10NS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Community

A2

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publi11hing Co.

POMEROY
Any .
remaining loopholes in the
Income Tax Code closed shut
Monday when Pomeroy
Village Council unanimously
approved the final reading of
an ordinance proposing
sweeping reforms to its ta~
code.
Pomeroy has a one percent
income tax which applies to
anyone who works in the vil lage.
The ordinance would eliminate a loophole that allows
business losses to be deducted
from earned wages. The ordinance will also eliminate a
loophole that allows businesses to carry forward any losses.
, Please see Tllx. AS

''

'

''.(

the keynote speaker for the
third Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Business Luncheon
held Tuesday at the Wild Horse
Cafe in Pomeroy. Darnell is a
graduate of Meigs High School
and is employed by American
Electric Power. He maintains the
county web sites for the
Economic Development Tourism
and Chamber office. The
Business Luncheon series has
proved to be very popular and
many local bus;ness leaders
were present to hear what
Darnell had to say about the
Internet. For instance. the
Internet was not created by AI
Gore but by a Republican
administration - the Eisenhour
administration to keep U.S.
technology competitive in the
space race era. (J. Miles
Layton)

NING

POMEROY - With spring
ap proaching. planning for
.communily activities moved
into high gear Tuesday when
the Pomeroy Merchants
Association mel at City
National Bank.
An Easter egg hunt to be
hel d on the Pomeroy football
field was announced for
10:30 a.m. on April 10.
Michelle Nobl e, chairman.
reported that a bunny costume has been ordered and
that contacts to gel donal ions
for items to fil l the planned
2,500 plastic eggs are being
made.
The eggs will be filled with
candy, miniature toys, and
stickers and scallered around
I he ball field for hunts in age
groups of one th rough three,
four through six , and seven to
12. There will be a gold egg
and a silver egg holding special gifts, possibly savings
bonds, for the tinders.
Torn Dooley and Susan ·
Baker of the Middleport
Community
Association
attended the meeting to invite
Pomeroy to participate in the
Yellow Flag yard sale again
this year. It is scheduled for
the weekend of April 30 and
May I .
The cost to 1he Association
will be minimal. Baker said.
since expenses are handled primarily from ihe $5 fee
paid by those who participate. Yellow flags are given
to the participants. and their
location is marked on a map
which is widely distributed.
The fee al so covers all advertising and promotion for the
evenI.
Dooley and Baker also suggested that perhaps space
could be made available in
the parking lot or mini -park
for people outside of the villages who mi ght like to come
in and set up with yard sale
items.

It was stressed by Baker
thai ihe yellow flag yard sale
is "nol a fundraiser. bui ralher
an opportunity 10 get people
oul and into the community."
She said that il also provides
a good time for merchants to
Please see Events, AS

�PageA2

COMMUNITY

·The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Marcft 10, 2004

'

Low-cost health services, varied and available

Numerous health-related programs are carried out at the Meigs County Health Department. In
charge of programs are left to right, seated, Andrew Brumfield , cardiovasc ular care; Dortha
Riffle , WIC; and Susie Heines, speech and heari ng clinic; and standing, Kyle Ord and Brenda
Curfman , tobacco risk education; Frank Gorsch, infrastructure: Connie Little and Becky Ball,
children and family health services; Leanne Cunningham, public health nu rse: and Barbara
Vujaklija, home visiting nurse. (Charlene Hoefl ich)
BY CHARLENE' HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

POMEROY - Everythi ng
from preventive care to medical and dental treatment to
concerns abou) the environment and biot.errorism are
continually being addressed
by the Mei gs County Health
Dep~rtment.

'

The agency 's role is to promote the health and wellbeing of Meigs Countians
through low cost health care
and sc reenings. and to prepare the county to handle
public health emergencies
should they occur.
By combining local levy
funds , grant s and private
monies with federal and state
allocations, the agency is
successful in n;aching large
segments of the population
and achieving 1he objective
of better health ~ hrou g h early
detection and treatment .
Health Dep!trtment st.aff
continues to prepare for
unusual occ~rrences of
health threats ~nowing that
local public health age ncies
are likely to be the first to be
aware of unusual occurrences
of health threats. 1·
The ability . o qu ickly
detect
and /effectivel y
respond to a publi c heallh
emergency can make the difference in containing the
spread of disease ,and preventing panic and. instabi
lity
I

lows:
Dental clinic
Operating on a full-time
basis since last June, the
Meigs
County
Hea lth
Department's dental clinic in
Middleport continues to provide dental services to many
uninsured and underinsured
residents.
Dr. Dale White is the dentist in the practi ce assisted by
Beth Cremeans, clinic manager; Tammy Taylor, clerical
·assistant, and Rhonda Davi s,
dental hygienist.
II reopened a year ago on a
part-time basis after having
been closed for several
months because of the county 's inability to attract a denti st.
From the total of I ,846 visits last year, 696 patients had
Medicaid coverage , I ,086
benefited from the sliding fee
scale payment and 64 utilized
commerci al insurance payment.
The practice is supported
by grant funds awarded by
the Appalachian Regional
Commission and the
Osteopathic Heritage
Foundation of Nelsonville.
Women's, infants and
children's services
The role of WIC is to provide nutritional assistance to
infants, children and pregnant women as well as to
refer them for other needed
services and give counseling

total client contacts last year
were 249 with 79 families
receiving visits.
or the vis its 28 were with
prenatal cli ents and 51 were
post-partum mothers. Eight
clients declined program services, and 12 others were not
. available for the scheduled .
visit. Of the total number of
visit s, 187 referral s for other
community services were
made.
Immunization action
A total of 2077 immunizations were given in 2003 in
clinics which are held at the
heallh department for children every Tuesday.
Immunization Action Pl an
(lAP) was handled last year
by Sherry Weese, R. N., now
director of nursing, and
Cunningham who currently
fills the position.
In addition to childhood
immunizations, the department administered influenza
vaccinations to I, 122 Meigs
County residents.
Prenatal services
Prenatal serv ice s offered
including social assessments,
nutritional counseling, blood
work, cultures, height and
weight measurements and
regular physical exams , are
coordinated hy Connie Little,
RN ,BSN, who is the Child
and Family Health Services
director. and Becki Ball, program assistant.
At the prenatal clinic Dr.

Members of the Meigs County Board of Health are seated, Larry Marshall, deputy health com·
missioner: Norma Torres, health commissioner/ administrator; and standing, Sandra
Cunningham, Irene Bailey, Don Hodge, Keith Little, Edwina Bell, and Kyle Ord . (Charlene Hoeflich)
in the community, said
Norma Torres, RN , BSN,
MSED, health commissioner
and department administrator.
Torres, who has resig'!\ed
from her position after 25
years with the agency, effective April 4, will leave the
,department in the hands of
Larry Marshall. MFS. MA .
He was hired to fill the position by the Board of Health
Gene Jeffers, president; Jim
Clifford, Jr., Ann Hanning
and Paul a Hart, and in
January began work with the
department as the deputy
health commissioner. He will
work in cooperation with Dr.
James Witherell who is the
age nc y's medical director.
The health-related pro·
grams offered during the past
year have flourished, touch- ·
mg the lives of many Meigs
Countians. They are as fol -

geared to a healthy life.
Wilma Man sfield provide s
Debbie Babbitt, R.N. care for women during their
directs the program with first 26 weeks of pregnancy.
assistance from Pam Sharp, After then the staff coordihealth educator, and Dortha nates a transfer to the client's
Riffle , coordinator.
delivering physician/hospital
The service s including of choice.
screenings,
In 2003, 299 women were
hemoglobin
height and weight measure- served in the prenatal clinic
ments, nutritional assess ment and an additional 25 1 pregand counseling. ln 2003 nanc y te sts were adminiscoupons for nutri tiona! foods tered.
and formul a were provided
Speech and hearing clinic
for more than 3,324 clients.
Ca rolyn
Sue
Heine s,
First-time certifications speech and hearing pathololast year totaled 509 clients gist, continues to coordinate
with 993 participants being an evening speech and hearrecertified. During 2003 , in g clinic in conjunction with
WIC made I ,948 client refer- Ohio University.
Funding for the program
rals to · various clinics and
social service agencies for currently is received from the
Sisters of St. Joseph
additional services.
Charita ble Fund. A total of
Help Me Grow
The Help Me Grow new- 1319 client cont acts we re
born · home visiting program made last year. Parent educais handled by Leanne tion classes were conducted
Cunningham , R.N. whose for - 129 participants, and

heari ng tests were performed
for 167 clients. The total
number of referrals were 93,
and clients benefiting from
therapy was 56.
Wellness project
The Meigs County Health
Department continues to
work in the public schools on
an abstinence education program. The program is funded
through the Meigs County
Family and Children First
Council. Brenda Curfman
coordinates the Wellness
Block Grant.
Last year the Responsible
Social Values Program was
offered to the sixth, seventh
and eighth grades with 235
students participating.
A Sex Can Wait Program
' was offered for ninth and lOth
grades with 147 stude nt~ participating, while the Life Skills
Asset Building Program was
offered for the fifth grade with
162 students participating.
As a part of her wellness
program, Curfman did several
outreach
endeavors
the
county
throughout
including health fairs and the
Women's
Outing
on
Wellness.
Medical handicaps

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

were given for 496 students
and 285 sessions were held
for the teaching staff.
Information and presentations also were given to local
churches, community organizations and businesses and at
health fairs, the Meig s
County Fair and Meig s
County Town and Country
Expo. A total of 2,494 citizens were served.
Cardiovascular health
Sports
Physiologist
Andrew Brumfield coordinates the Cardiovascular
Health Grant which pays' for
programs in Meigs, Athens
and Washington Co un ties
which form the Tri-County
Heart Healthy Coalition.
Brumfield's role is to
encourage agency staff and
other local organizations to
become physically active and
nutritionally aware by sponsoring "healthy" competitions.
He coordinated the I0,000
Steps (Walking) Program by
giving each participant a
pedometer to monitor the number of steps they walk each
day. Other staff members of the
Health Department have assisted in the Southern School
Di strict's Wellness Program

public health nuisance call,
the majority involving solid
waste concerns, and did 144
in spection s
of
county
schools, mobile home parks,
public pools/spas. landfill
areas, camps, parks and
home loan inspections.
Al so carried out were 193
water/sewage in spections
and 263 food serv ice operation/retail food establi shment
inspections. A total of 172
food licen ses were issued .
Mobile mammography
Mobile mammography services continue to be avail able
for low income women
through the Meigs County
Health Departmenl.
The Southeastern Ohio
. Breasl and Cervi cal Cancer
Program (SEOBCCP), coordinated by Courtney Sim,
was reinstituted in March
2003 after the county had
been without service for several months.
The Centers for Disea~e
Control/Ohio Department of
Heallh funded the project which
paid for 40 mammograms' and
57 gy necological exams given
by local physicians for income
eligible residents.
The Ohio St;~te University's

-Community Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, March 10'
, POMEROY
Meigs
.County Board of Health
meeting, 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department,
Memorial Drive

Clubs and
Organizations
Thursday, March II
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Carol McCull ough.
St. Patrick's din ner to be
served. New officers wi ll
be elected. Co-hostesses
June Van Vranken and Jean
Powell.
RACINE
Sonshine
Circle at 7 p.m . at the
Bethany Ch urch. All area
. women are invited.
POMEROY Ohio
Valley Crusade for Chri st
meeting, 7 p.m. at the
.first So uthern Baptist
Churc h. inter sec ti on of
· Route 7 and Route 33
near Meigs High School.
Plans will cont inue for
Freedom
Experience,
April S-7, at Meigs Hi gh
Sc hoo l.
. CHESTER
Regular
· meeting of the Shade River
:Lodge 453 , F&amp;AM, 7:30
· p.m. Refreshments.
. TUPPERS PLAINS :VFW 9053 will meet 7 p.m
. at the hall. A meal will be
:se rved at 6:30 p.m.

of items to be brought by
members will be held.

Friday, March 12
PMOEROY - Widow 's
Fellowship noon luncheon
at
Craw's
Family
Restaurant.

Church services
Friday March 12
LONG
BOTTOM
Faith Full Gospel Church, 7
p.m. with Rogie Bissell and
the Just for Now Singers.

CHESTER Chester
Baseball Association wil
have its final ball signup
from 6 to 8 p.m at the
Chester Fire House.

LANGSVILLE - "Spritfi lled" revival at Langsville
Christian Church, through
Sunday, 7 p.m. Trina
Williams of Christ Temple
in Huntington, W.Va., to be
speaker. Pastors Robert and
Roberta Mu sser invite the
public .

Sunday, March 14
CHESTER Chester
Baseball Association coaches and all interested parties
meeting, 2 p.m. at the
church on Oak Hill Road .
Saturday, March 13
POMEROY
Buirling~am
Modern
5:30
p.m .
Woodman,
potluck supper at the hall.
Members to take a covered
dish.
Guests
welcome.
Ca mp will p;rovide meat.
rolls, drinks and table servtce.

Saturday, March 13
POINT PLEASANT - A
benefit concert with gospel
music by Proclaim , Matt
Scott, Ray and Delori s
Cundiff, Missy Miller and
Clan Cadle, will be held at
7 p.m. at the Church of God
of Prophecy, 22nd Street in
Point Pleasant. For more
information call 1-304-8953845.

POMEROY
- Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
DAR, charter day luncheon,
noon at trinity Church.
Marsha Seifert, stale vice
regent to be guest speaker.
Outstanding community citi zens service award to be
presented.

Sunday, March 14
POMEROY
Mi ss ionary Patricia Sil ver
will show slides of her last
trip to Kenya at 6:30 p.m .
at the Poplar Ridge Freewill
Baptist Church.

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411
special meeting 7:30 p.m. at
the hall. Work in the EA
degree. Refreshments.

RACINE The First
Bapti st Church of Racine
will hold revival services
10:40 a.m. and 7 p.m. today
and 7 p.m. through March
17 . Don Walker, former pastor, will be the guest speaker.

Monday, March 15
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m. at
the hall in Chester. Auction

The Bureau for Children
with Medical Handicaps
(BCMH) continues to assist
area famili es with the application process for program
services to ensure that children with chronic health concerns and those in need of
diagnostic
assessment
receiv e necessary medical
attention. Last year Nancy
Broderick and Sherry Weese
conducted 43 home and
office visits in 2003 .
Currently, there are 60 active
children benefiting from program services.
Well child clinics
Dr. Douglas Hunter and Dr.
James Witherell continue to
provide medical services for
the well-child clinics. Last
year six clinics were held
with 88 children bc;ing
served, Personnel completed
69 blood lead screenings for
children aged birth to 72
months.
Specialty clinics
Specialty clinics were
offered for Mei~s County
children aged bmh to 21
years
by
the
Ohio
Department of Health and
agency nursing personnel.
Cardiac, hearing, vision and
plastics clinics were coordinated by Nancy Broderick,
Norma
Torres,
Jane
Campbell and Sherry Weese
during the year. In October
the final Plastics Clinic was
held because of the lack of a
specialty physician.
Four clients benefited from
services given at the plastics
clinic; 48 clients were served
during the vision clinics; 36
children attended the hearing
clinics; and I 0 children
attended the cardiac clinic.
Tobacco risk education
Tobacco prevention programs continue to be offered
to students in Mei gs
County's school as a part of
the Tobacco Risk Education
Awareness and Prevention
(TREAP) Program. It is
funded by the Ohio Tobacco
Use Prevention Control
Foundation and coordinated
by Brenda Curfman with the
assistance of Kyle Ord.
Last year presentations

and Meigs Intermediary
School's health clinics. Last
year Brumfield gave 23 presentations to various organizations/agencies, held nine training sessions and did media outreach programs. Currently, 13
agencies participate in the
Cardiovascular Coalition.
Bioterrorism precautions
Programs geared to being
prepared for any possible
bioterrori sm, outbreaks of
infectious di seases and other
unforeseen
emergencies
which might threaten public
health are coordinated for the
Health Department by Frank
Gorscak, and funded through
a Public Health Infrastructure
Grant
by
the
Ohio
Department of Health and the
Centers for Disease Control.
Gorscak and Sherry
Weese, director of nursing,
attended several training sessions to prepare for such
events. Various technological
equipment has been purchased with grant funding to
enhance
communication
throughout the county and
between a~encies.
The Metgs County Health
Department now is connected to the Ohio Department of
Health's e-mai l internet site.
An alarm system was purchased for the refrigerator
that contains vaccinations in
the event of a power outage,
such as the one experienced
durin g the February 2003 ice
storm, to notify appropriate
agency personnel in an effo rt
to protect fragile vaccine.
Environmental programs
Forty-two animal bite
reports, all of which required
medical attention, were
among the situations handled
by Keith Little, R.S. Director
of Environmental Health,
with assistance from Don
Hodge, R.S. and Kyle Ord, a
sanitarian in training.
While the animal bites
were just a small pan of the
department's envtronmental
health work, it did require
sending 16 animal specimens
to the Ohio Department of
Health for lab testing. All
were negative for rabies.
The staff investigated 56

•

James Mobile Mammography
Clinic visited the County on
three occasions last year to do
screening. The Ohio University
College
of
Osteopathic
Medicine's Mobile Health Unit
was also in the county several
times to provide screenings
along with gynecological services and referrals.
Vital statistics
There were 143 Meigs
County deaths in 2003,
according to a report from
Edwina Bell, vital statistics
registrar.
Heart-related diseases and
cancer again were the leading
·causes of death .
The department issued 245
certified birth and 569 certi- ·
fied death certificates. They
also issued 3,653 uncertified
copies · of vital records for
genealogy purposes . That
service was discontinued in
August for privacy services
although the agency does
offer some genealogical
assistance. Also issued were
212 burial transit permits and
five free certified death certificates for veterans.
Other services
Student head lice screening
continues to take place in the
elementary and middle
schools in conjunction with
the
Meigs
CounCy
Departme nt of Jobs af1d
Family Services and school
nurses. A total of 5,305 students were screened.
Sports physicals were completed (upon request (rom
sc hool personnel) for Eastern
Local District students by Dr.
Witherell, Dr. Man sfield afld
April Well s, certified nurse
practitioner (CNP). Sixtyfive students were assessed.
Head Start physicals for 25
students were conducted by
the agency with April WellS,
CNP and Dr. Douglas Hunter
doing the examinations.
.
A diabetes awareness
screening was co-sponsorea
wi th Holzer Medical Center;
short-term internships were
provided for nursing students,
and numerous public information presentations were ma&lt;le
to community organizations -:

DEAR ABBY:
have
heard many men fantasize
about hooking up with a
nymphomaniac . Speaking as
someone with 20/20 hindsight, I advise any man who
meets one to run'
I was married to a woman
with that problem, and at
first I did think I was in
heaven. I didn't learn about
the downside until much
later.
Every day afte r I left for
work, another man spent the
day with my wife. And when
I went into the military, she
di sappeared. I later learned
that she was frequenting
bars, having encounters with
anyone and eve ryone who
would, and contracting multiple STDs in the process. At
the time I was very angry at
her. I now realize she was
driven by an addiction over
which she had no control.
So. unless you are prepared
to spend every minute of
every day with a nymphomani ac, expect to share - with
. the world. - OLDER AND
WISER
DEAR OLDER AND
WISER: As ~o ur letter
proves, sometimes there
CAN be too much of a good
thing. What's the old saying,
' "'Moderation in all things"''
It's true .
"
DEAR ABBY: My daugh ter, "Kim ," is in grade
school. She 's an onl y child.
and ever since she was little,
I have invited kids over so

iron . It would be best to have
some lab work done to confirm the diagnosis of anemia,
however, before beginning
treatment. Women who are
pregnant are also more prone
to RLS, as are people of both
genders who have low thyroid hormone levels, diabetes, low folic aid and magnes ium level s, or varicose
vein s.
The treatment for RLS
depends on the cause. If you
have an underlying causative
condition , then adequate
treatment of that condition
will usually cure your RLS.
However, as l said, most people with RLS have no identifiable cause, so the treatment
is much less specific and
more problematic.
Discontinuing coffee, alcohol and tobacco can be helpful. Avoid exercise for at least
two hours before bedtime.
Massaging the legs and using
cold compresses can give
some relief. There are medications that can help to still
the restless legs, but some
may have undesirable side
effects.
Finally, remember that any
time you see the label "syndrome" it means we are in the
realm of the "art" of medicine
ra!))er than the "science" of
medicine . I say this because a
syndrome is a grouping of
sy mptom s that are commonly
observed together rather than
a specific disease condition
for which we understand the
underlying
ca uses.
Consequently,
treatment
dec isions are based more on
subjective, or "artful," observations than on hard, scientific data. This is certainly the

Family Medicine® is a
weekly column . To submit
questions, write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B.A , Ohio
of
University
College
Osteopathic Medicine. P 0.
Box 11 0, Athens, Ohio 45701,
or via email to readerquestions@ fa m i lymedic inene ws.o
rg. Medical ilzformation in
this column is provided as an
educational service onlv. It
does not replace the judgment of your personal physician, who should be relied on
to diagnose and recommend
treatment for Gill' medical
conditiai!S. Past columns are
available online w www.familymed ici 11enews. org.

Keeping
. Meigs ··
informed
Sunday
Ttmes~'sentinel Meigs• 992·2155

MEIGS COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT
112 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE, 'POMEROY, OHIO 45769
Phone: 740-992-6626 Fax: 740-992·0836
E-mail: klittle@gw.odh.state.ah.us

FEES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES I LICENSES
Food Service/Food Establishment Programs
License Class ........................................................ Local Fee ...................... State· Portion ............................ Total
Level 1 &lt; 25,000 It' ................................................. $27.00.................................. $24.00 ........................ $51.00
Levei 2 &lt; 25,000 It' ................................................ $99.Q0 .................................. $24.00......................$123.00
Level 3 &lt; 25,000 It' .............................................. $240.00 .................................. $24.00......................$264.00
Level4·&lt; 25,000 It' .............................................. $319.00 ....... ,.......................... $24.00......................$343.00
Level 1 &gt; 25,000 It' .............................................. $142 .00 .................................. $24.00......................$166.00
Level 2 &gt; 25,000 It' .......... ".................................. $153 .00 .................................. $24.00 ...................... $177.00
Level 3 &gt; 25,000 It' .............................................. $601.00.................................. $24.00......................$625.00
Level 4 &gt; 25,000 It' ..............................................$730.00.................................. $24.00 ...................... $754.00
Temporary ... :.............................................................. $30.00 .................................... $0.00 ........................ $30.00
Mobile ....................................................................... $125 .00 .................................. $24.00...................... $t4.9.00
Vending ......c............................... ............................. ....$15.82 .................................... $5.00 ........................ $20.82
Plan review for regular food servke tJndj or food establishment opemlion (Temporcrry &amp; Mobile are uempt)

Before construction has started ...... .-............................................ $25.00/HR ........................ Minimum = $25.00
After construction has started ....................................$50.00 + $25.00/HR ........................ Minimum = $75.00
After completion of construction .............................. $75.00 + $25.00/HR ..................... Minimum = $100.00
Sample analysis for food operations ..................................... Billed at cost of transport, supplies &amp; analysis

man . English is my 'econd
language . I was in ESL Juring junior high sc hool. I not
only learned enoug h Engli'h
to go into main~tream . but I

abo have college- prep classDear
es in which I am quite good.
Abby
My hi story teacher told me
about a program L:alled
"Upward Bound" that holds
classe' on SaiUrdays anJ is
very promi sing . I didn't think
she· d have someone to play my Engltsh was good
with. Most, of thci r parents enough. hut I applied and
promise they' II have Kim was accepted. Now I &lt;lll1
over for a play-date at their afraid to go. rrn womed that
house "soon ... but soon never people will j udge me because
seems to come.
of my Colombian-accent.
Kim is nice to her cla ssI have received much
mates and well-behaved in advice abou t this i"ue. but I
school. Her friends' parent' st iII need more . Perhaps yott
. always tell me what a great will help me. - WORRIED
time their kids have at our ABOUT
COLOMB IA N
house.
ACCENT
Kim ne ve r says anything
DEAR WORRIED : Go to
about not being in vited In the the class! You we re accepted.
homes of olher children, but so for heaven's sake . take
I'm starti ng to feel like a free ad\a ntage of the opportunity.
baby-sitting service.
You have nothing tu lose and
What should I do the ne xt everylhing to ga in . Shou ld
time a parent says. "'Let's get anyone be rude enough tu
the kids to play togetl1er over commen t on your ac-cent.
vacation or the weekend'"·&gt; sweetlv ask him or her liow
EVERYONE'S BABY he or · she wou ld do takinc
SITTER
classes in YOUR nati ve i a n~
DEAR BABY SITTER: guagc.
Say this: "That's a wonderfu l
Dmr Ahhr is IITiiT&lt;'Il /Jr
idea. Can we do it at your Abigail Vui1 Burell. o/so
house'' I have some things I knmrn as .ft•w mt' Phillip., .
ha ve to take care of at that and IH/ .1' fou11ded hr her
time , and yo ur supervising 11111thn Pauline Plu/1 ips.
the children wou ld reall y Write
Dew· A/Jin
at
help me out. ..
1nnr.DearAb/J\.COIII ,;,. P.O.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 15- Box 69440, L1js A11geles. CA
year-old high school fre sh- 90069.

gers. He reminded members to walk strange fie lds
betixe driving over them
with a tractor. looking for
holes. stumps and wet
areas.
Janet Morri s. women's
activiti es chairma n. di scussed the upcoming soup
dinner and reported tha t
serving wi II take place
from I I a. m. until 2 p.m ..
There will be en terta inment
and membership awards
pre,enled at the dinner.
Jani s Macomber. deaf
chairman, reported that

Sundt Grafton. stale deaf
represe ntative. wi ll he the
speaker for the Meigs
County Grange banquet to
be held on April 30 at the
Meigs
Coun ty
Senior
Citite ns Center. Tickets for
the banquet are available
from Grange Masters and
should be purchased by
Ap ril 20.
The next meeting will be
run night on March 20
with a potluck supper at
6:30 p.m .

Coming Thursda/,}~ the Sentinel ...

"GfPfaceJ f(J ~ 0' T!rBng~ f(J JP~"

WHAT: Pilates. is a dynamic exercise program,
allowing participants to improve their C\)re body
strength, while increasing their flexibility, muscle
and coordination .
WHO: Anyone can join! This is. a beginner's class,
focusing on form and technique. All exercises-can be
modified to fit your personal needs and limitations.
WHY: The benefits are enormous - loose inches, gain
strength , improve flexibility and posture, and decrease
pam
WHEN: Class will include a 1 hour one-on-one session beginning March 20th , followed by a 6 week class,
Mondays and Thursdays at 6 pm at Rocksprings Rehab
Center, beginning April 5th.
HOW: Class size is, very limited. Please contact us
soon at Rocksprings Rehab Center, 992-6606. Class
rate is $75 which will include individual session and 6
week class. ,
INSTRUCTOR:
ALLISON G. BARNETT, CPI •
,-

Certified Pilates Instructor

Rocksprings
REHABILITATION CENTER
·~.--==----~=--·=-"-

•

10, 2004

Soup dinner set for March 21

SALEM CENTER
Final plan s for a soup dinner on Sunday March 21
were made when Star
Grange 778 met recently at
the hall .
Master Patty Dyer conducted the meeting here
two new members we re
case with idiopathic restless in itiated into the order,
legs sy ndrome.
Carl Morris, Legislative
If you suffe r from restless
reported on tracchairman,
legs sy ndrome and are one of
the majority of sufferers who tor safety and rem inded
don't have an underlyi ng dis- members to ha ve slow
order, I'd still reco mmend moving vehicl e signs and
that you talk to your famil y roll bars on all tractors,
doctor about treatment choic- and do not hau I passenes. B.ut be patient. Remember
that "art" often takes time.

:Sydrome treated with art, not science

Dr. Dale White provides dental health services at the Appalachian Dental Clin ic in Middleport
to uninsured and underinsured residents. Seated beside him is Bethany Cremeans, clin ic manager. Others working at the clinic are from the left, Jean Kelly and Tammy Taylor, receptionists,
and Rhonda Davis.• registered dental hygienist. (Charlene Hoeftich)

Wednesday, March

Sexual fantasy fulfilled turns out to be nightmare

Family Medicine
Question:
My doctor
J·ecen lly told me that I have
.restless leg syndrome and to
_take iron suppl ements. He
. &lt;lidn't do any lab work, just
·examined me and said that
::was what I had. I have· been
: havi ng trouble sleeping from
· this because my legs only
. bother me at night. Is there
anything else I can do about
.this? What is restless leg syndrome?
Answer: Restless leg syndrome, or RLS, is a movement disorder. The primary
symptoms arc an uncomfort. able feeling, usually in the
·upper legs, thai causes an
irresistible urge to move the'
legs or walk to relieve the
:sensation . These symptoms
frequently occur during the
~ar ly stages of sleep. Moving
the legs seems to make the
sensation go away. Episodes
can last for up to an hour or
longer. A similar syndrome
can atlect the arms, but this is
· rare.
Generally, the person with
RLS co mes to his or her
physician's office complain'tng about an inability to
.sleep. Th e fourth-leading
q use of insomnia, RLS is
seen in about 6 percent of the
. adult population, with a higher incidence in people over
65. There is a strong tendency for thi s. disorder to run in
·rami lies, and most cases are
idiopathic - no cause is ever
· fo und .
In some cases, though, certain medical conditions can
be pinpointed as the cause.
Iron deficiency anemia, for
example , is a common, treatable cause of RLS . This may
be why you were told to take

PageA3

'

'I

i

I

�PageA4

OPINION

: The Daily Sentinel
'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager~Ne~s Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishmetlt of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of tlte
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tlte Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

·Moderately Confused
THIS IS
MADNESS
AND IT HAS
NoTHIN6 To
DO WITH

MARCH!

"The aliens gathered by an
imaginary line between two
cities. two countries, two
economies, and when the sun
was about to set they moved.
"In the old Border Patrol
Joseph
days a few dozen might try it
Perkins
on a given night. Now, in a
wne of few &gt;q uare mi les, in
etlect a no man's land
between the cities of Tijuana.
Mexico. and San Diego. into the United States from
USA. they came. Sometimes Mexico -· has fallen more
IO.lXXJ per week.
than 80 percent. The ambush"And in those canyons es and robberies and rapes
lu rked Tijuana bandits and and murders that were nightly
cutthroats who ted off the occurrences in the lawless no
pollos as they crossed the man's land of which
frontier in the night. ... Aliens Wambaugh wrote were
were ambushed. robbed. reduced nearly to nil.
raped. murdered. occasionalYet. Gatekeeper has not .
ly within screaming distance staunched the tide of unlawof United States officers at the ful crossings onto this side of
l&lt;md port of entry."
the border. In fact, the Border
That was a true-to-life hor- Patrol apprehended more than
ror story at the U.S.-Mexico I00,000 illegal ali ens las t
border two decades ago. as year here in the southwest
the celebrated author Joseph corner of the United States.
Wambaugh documented in
Most of those try ing to steal
hi s 1984 bestseller, "Lines into the United States were
and Shadows" I Bantam).
Mex ican. But more than a
And it continued unabated few hailed from countries ol
Lmlil 1994. when Operation concern.
including
Gatekeeper was launched.
Afghani stan , Iran . Iraq ,
That campaign to bring law Jordan ,
Lebanon
and
and order to the Tij uana-San Pakistan .
Diego border ent ail ed the
That's why il is so vital to
constructio n of solid stee l national security that the
fencing as well as stadiumBorder Patrol complete a pro·
style lighting along a 14-mil e ject
triple the fencing along
corridor, from the mountains the to
14-mile corridor, to furto the Pacillc Ocean .
ther fortify the U.S.-Mexico
Since the border fence was border against forei gn inlilcompleted, the number of trators who mean this nation
illegal aliens apprehended hann.
along tlmt 14-mile stretch ·The agency, whi ch was
which , du ring the J9gOs and folded into the Department of
earl y 1990s accounted for Homeland Security followin g
full y half of unlawful entries the Sept. II terror attacks, has

finished much of the 558 mi llion border security projeGI.
Bul the California Coastal
Commi"ion, beholden to
environmental activist groups
thai couldn't care less about
national security. has rejected
the Border Patrol 's plan to
complete the proje&lt;:t's tina l
3.5 miles.
The groups. which filet.! a
federal law.,uit last month to
block the lence. claim that the
Border Patrol's plan to till in a
half-mile canyon -- Smuggler\
Gulch, a passage of choice for
Mexican drug traffickers -will destroy sensitive habitat
for the cmLstal sage stmb bi rt.l
and other species.
Of course. the enviros play
the "sensiti ve ha bit at" card
any and every time they ai m
to prevent a constntetion project, no matter. even if that
project is vi tal to pratccting
the homeland.
That\ why San Diego Rep.
Du nc:tn Hunter. R-EI Cajon.
:tnd , ·! 1ai nnan of the House
Armed Serv ices Committee.
who played an instrumental
role in gett ing the original
border sec urit y fence built .
has taken on th e Coas ta l
Commiss ion. He has written
Ho meland
Securit y
to
Secretary Tom Ridge urgi ng
him to exercise his fede ral
mtthorit} lo overrule the
"obstructionist" state agency.
Indeed. it is no secret to
anyo ne -- save maybe for
Coastal Commiss ion members -- that San Diego is the
biggest Navy port on the West
Coast, with several maj or
installations, with nuclear aircraft carri ers and submarines.

Navy Secretary Gordon
England attests. "The porous
nuture of the border area
poses an unnecessary security
risk to these install&lt;ttions." to
that nuclear fleet.
That's not to say that the
Border Patrol shou ld have no
concern whatsoever about the
environment along the U.S .·
Mexico border. In fact. savs
Hun ter, the triple fc1Ke wi ll
probably be good fur the sensitive hahi tat in the area. For.
as it is now. he says. "The illegal aliens have j ust hammered" lhe habitat for whi ch
the Coa, ,al Commi."ion pro·
fcsses

'I tiL

1l conce rn . creating

unnattll ,. il ails that won't go
away lu1 lhe next hundred
years wi th uu t interve nt ion .

·· 1r you build the fe nce . you
save lbe eco~yst em. " he s~t iLl
No t to ment ion thj;. environmental bcneftts to be gained
by the Border Patrol's plan to
restore ve~et at io n to X5 miles
of dirt roads ·· I X5 acres
worth ·· to mitigate the enviro nmemal impact ol com plct·
ing the triple border fe nce.
If the Coastal Commi ssion
had its way. there probably
wo uldn't be even a single border fence. mLh: h le ss the three
necessary to forti fy border
securit y.
The westernmost stretch of
the U.S.- Mex ico border today
wo uld be pretty much the
way Wambaugh described it
two decades ago. Except that
the no man's land between the
two count ries wo uhJ prov ide
easy passage into the United
States not only to illegal
aliens and dru l! s mu ~2: l e rs ,
but also to t e tTll~ist s . ' '

AUUUU\l.
LtT T\.IE UN~
~OLE

Obituaries

Man killed during initiation Kansas wheat groups look
at cooperative agreement
at Masonic Lodge

Millard Spaulding
BIDW ELL - Millard Carson Spaulding, 71 , Bidwell ,
passed away unexpectedl y on Wednesday, Murch 3, 2004. in
Las Vegas. Nev.
·
He was born on Jan. II , 1933 in Borderline, Ky.. son of the
late Anderson and Anna Bragg Spaulding. He was e mployed
for 33 years at Ravenswood Al uminum. He was a veteran of
the U.S. Air Force and a member of the VFW Post in Mason
W Va., Drew-Webster Post, American Legion Pomeroy and
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM .
'
'
He is survived by hi s wife, Nancy Spaulding of Bidwell ;
three sons, Steve (Linda) Spaulding, Danny Spaulding. and
Robert ~·p a uldm g, all of Coshocton; a stepson. Rick
Laudermtlt of Gallipolis; two step daughters, Kym Laudermilt
of Mesa, ~ nz., and Rev a Mullen of Pomeroy ; five grandchildren and ftve step grandchildren; three sisters and brothers- inlaw : Etta Mae and Dan Webster of Glenview, Pa., Zeffie and
Herbert Slone of Bidwell , and Geraldine and Charles Casto of
Ravenswood, W.Va.; three brothers and two sisters-in-law:
Edward Morgan Spaulding' of Marion, Elmer L. , Sr. and
Charle!Je Spaulding of Bidwell, and Arnold and Jud y
Spauldmg of Salem Va.; and several special nieces and
nephews.
. Besides his paretll s, •he was preceded in death by hi s sisterIll-law, Emoge ne Ward Spaulding.
Services. will be held at I p.m. on Thursday, March II .
2004, at Ftsher Funeral Home in Middleport , with entombment to follow m the mausoleum at Meigs Memory Gardens.
Mtlttary servtces will be conducted by the Mason VFW Post.
Fnends may call from 2 to 4 anc16 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday
at the funeral home.
Masonic servi ces will be conducted at 7:45 p.m .
Fnends may send condol ences online at www.fi sherfuneralhomes.com.

Local Briefs
Gan-,e tickets
on sale

Julie Howard at 992-1044.
Application s are al so available online at www.riv erbendcommunitytheatre.org.
Applications must be
received by March 3 I.

EAST MEIGS - Tickets
are on sal e at Eastern High
School for both boys and
girl s' di strict b&lt;tsketball
games. When ti cket s are purchased at the school. a porREEDSVILLE - Tuppers
tion of all sales go to the Plains-Chester Water District
school. The girls will be · has issued a boil advisory for
playing at Pickerington Hi gh the following roads in Olive
School against Riverdale on Township: Ohio 681 from
Thursday. The bov s will play the intersection of Dye Rei.,
at 2 p.m. on · Saturday at the (Dye Rd. not included) to
Convocations Center again st and including Joppa Rd. ,
Sciotoville for the di strict North Rye Rd ., Coolville
championship .
Rd .. Marcinko Rd., and Eden
Ridge Rd.
Customers are asked to
boil cooking and drinking
MIDDLEPORT The water for three minute s
it.
consuming
River ' City Players are before
accepting application s for a Customers wi ll be advised
director for the summer 2004 when lhe advisory is lifted.
musical production .
The boil advisory is necesFor more information sary following the repair of a
and/or an application, contact leak on 68 L

Advisory issued

Director needed

IT.

PATCHOGUE, N.Y (AP)
- A man was killed during
a Masonic initiation ceremony when ano ther member
fired a gun loaded wi th real
bullets instead of the expected blanks and shot him in
the face, police said Tuesday.
A 76-year-old man alleged
to have firer:! the shot was
charged with1.manslaughter.
William James. 47. was
shot while partici pating in an
induction Monday night at
the South side Maso nic
Lodge, Suffb lk · Count y
pol ice said . He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Detective 1 Lt.
Jac k
Fitzpatri ck sa id the ritu al
thai went "'tragicall y wron g"' '
involves making•a loud noise
to fri ghten the new metnber.
'The
ceremony
was
des igned to create a state of
anxiety," he said. 1
The lieutenant said the ·
Masons sat James', in a chair
and pl aced cans on a small
platform around his head .
The all eged shooter,
Albert Eid , was standin g
approximate ly 20 fee t
away · holdin g a gun .
Fitzpatrick said at a news
conferen ce . When th e gun
was fired. a mah who had
been holding a stick out of
sight was suppo sed to
knoc k th e can s off th e platform to make the inductee
think tbey had been stru ck
by bullets , he said.
Eid had two guns and
apparently pulled
th e
wrong one out of hi s
pocket and fir ed, shootin g
Jam e s in th e fa ce . the
lieutenant said .
· "We believe it was completely
accidental ,"
Fitzpatrick said . Eid was
quite "stunned and di straught" at James' death, he

Events
from PageA1

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published

every

aft ernoon,

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It came from under the door
Sue and I lived in a co-op
building in the city with 240
apartments before we moved
to a farm . In a co-op, you don't
own your apartment, you own
shares in the building. Almost
every day, we'd find important
shareholder news slipped
under the front door:
Feb. I
Dear Shareholders:
In an effort to improve the
quality of service here at The
Veneer, we are pleased to
mmounce that the finn of Crash
.&amp; Bwn will replace Ivan Jones&amp;
Co. '!s the building's new managing agent effective March I.
We are confident that Mr.
Thompson and his staff of
professionals will assist us
in finally meeting our objectives of improving the present inadequate and shoddy
management of The Veneer.
Sincerely,
Board of Directors
The
Veneer Owners

Jim
Mullen

Ivan Jones

and Fmmpke, I'm going crazy.
I need this like I need a broken
boiler ... Joe the Super."
I think all shareholders are
entitled to know what is
going on 1 I told Mi ss
Frumpke that the marbleized
sink would be $ 100 extra!
Shareholders, act now,
before it is TOO LATE! !!
Sincerely.
Ivan Jones

selected to be the new managing itgenl of 1l1e Veneer.
Sincerely.
Ivan Jones
Feb. II
Dear Shareholders:
Miss Fmmpke will not dignify Ivan Jones' accusations
with a reply as she works in
the daytime and can only
meet Mr. Thompson at night
to talk about strictl y co-op
business, wh ich is more than
she can sav for Mr. Junes and
that tramp in 28. You never
see her in the laundry room'
E. Frumpke
Board of Directors

Feb. 7
Feb. 5
To
All Shareholders:
Dear Shareholders:
The
Board wi shes to advi se
Ivan Jones' budget projecyou
that
Mr. Jones' letter is
tions are simply unreaJistic.
As you may remember, his replete with distortions and
Miss mi srepresentations of fact.
estimate to fix
Miss Elizabeth Frumpke
Frumpke's bathroom was
Feb. 13
$800 when the actual cost has brought it to the Board's
·
attention
th
at
the
building
To
All Shareholders:
was $900 and change. So
superintendent
,
Joseph
Jones,
To
sel
the record straight, the
much for Mr. Jones' . "astute"
has
been
the
brother
of
I
van
"tramp" in 2B is my .sister. She
management. This letter just
Jones
all
along
.
Is
it
any
woninforms
me that the quality of
scratches the surface of the
der
that
the
leak
in
Maj
.
people
one
sees in· the laundry
incessant problems we have
Pram's
apartment
had
to
be
room
leaves
much to be
faced in. dealing with Mr.
fi
xed
by
outside
plumbers'?
desired. This is one of the things
Jones' management company.
And
what
about
Mrs.
Yorba's
we would like to have brought
Sincerely,
A sso~ iation
missing
fruit
basket''
up at a general board meeting .
The Board of Directors
Sincerely,
1l1ere should be a dress code
Feb. 3
Board of Directors
for the laundry room, and it
Feb. 5
To All Shareholders:
could
use a new paint job.
Dear Shareholoers:
'!
Feb.
As many of you are aware
Plea&gt;e
join
us in calling for a
The delaying tactics taken
Dear Shareholders:
· by now, the Board of by the Board of Directors can
general ~ard meeting.
Ivan J ~ nes ·
Directors has hired a new ultimately mean a substantial
It recently came to my attenmanage ment ' company, increase in the monthly tion that Mr. Thompson of the
Feb. 15
whi ch will immedtately maintenance charges to all fim1 of Ct'ash &amp; Bum has been
having
all-night
meetings
with
To All ~ ~are holde rs:
increase the cost of managing shareholders. It may also
There 1w1ll be a general
the building, whereas under result in the loss of some of Elizabeth Frumpke. the secremy astute management of our valued building employ- tary of the Board. When I, Ivan meeting of all shareholi:lers
The Ve neer our maintenance ees. Enclosed is a letter from Jones. tried to find out what to elect a new board of direccost may have been reduced our building superintendent, these "meetings" were all tors at 4 a. m.. Tu esday
about. Miss Fmmpke slammed morning. ~e m e mber, this is
by $35 a month. Pl ease sign Joseph Jones. to me:
the door in my face. I think your co-op and yo ur partici"Ivan,
unless
this
building
ami return one copy of the
enclosed request for a full gets its act . to~ether, I am ALL SHAREHOLDERS are pation is welcomed.
Thank you,
meeting of all sltareholders.
gomg to qutt. ,Hetween you entitled to know exactly how
Board of Directors
the: ftnu of Crash &amp; Bum was
Sincerely,

.,

have sidewalk sale s.
Heritage Day, originally
scheduled for the l'i rst
Saturday in May was
changed to the first one in
June on recommendation of
chairman Annie Chapman.
She described the heritage
events as lhe village 's contribution to the Wings and Ribs
Festival to be held June 4 and
5 on the parking . The heritage activities will include a
dance in period co stume
called by "Miz Rosebud."
Cost for her services to the
association will be $100,
Chapman reported.
Signage on the electric box
near the stage area was discussed with John Miusser,
president, proposing a lighted
sign with changeable letters,
30 inches by 8 feet, attached

so that it is visible when trav eling up or down river. Total
cost , he said, would be about
$400. No acti~n was taken by
the group.
Another shipment of souvenir tree ornaments picturing the new bridge have
arrived and are on sale at several locations. Additional
ornaments showing the current Pomeroy-Mason bridge
will be available within a
month .
As preparations are made
to demolish the old Pomeroy
Junior High School building,
George Wright reported that
some items are being sal·
vaged for sale. Solid oak
doors and 4x4 foot slate
boards are being removed
and will be sold. Several will
be moved to the mini-park on
Court Street later this week.
Anyone interested in purchasing something from the
building should contact
Wright.

WICHITA, Kan . (AP) joint meeting in Hay, .
said.
If growers agree to the
Eid. of Patchog ue. had had After nearly 50 years of
working
apart,
the
Kansas
cooperative
agreement. the
a permit since 195 1 for the
Wheat Commission and main focu' of the Wheat
.32-caliber handgun used in Kansas Assoc iatio n of Wheat
Growers v. ill be wheat polithe shooting but it was not Growers as ked growers to cy and lobbying whi le the
clear why he took it to the dec ide whether the groups Whea t Commission wo ul d
ceremony. police said. He sho uld combi ne resources to focu~ on market ing wheut
pleaded innocent to a increa.,e efficiency ant.! '&gt;ave and
co ntinuing
whcut
manslaughter charge and bai l money.
re search. Crumbaker said.
was set at $2,500. Hi s next
The cooperative agreement
The groups· wou ld the n
call
s
for
a
proposed
Monday
immediately search fo r a sincourt date was sc heduled for
single chief execu ti ve officer gle dJ ief executive of1icerApril 27.
Eid's lawye r did no t to run both organizations. a a choice not limited to the
immediately return a call shared staff and a commo n current top officials of ei ther
facility. Committees would group. Crumbaker said.
seeking comment.
It was unce rt ai n how
Carl Fitje. grand master of include members from both
would
inc
lude
grou
ps
and
many.
if any. staff reductions
the
New
York
State some joint meetings.
W.Ju ld be made - it could
Freemaso ns, issued a stateBut the deal fall s short of range t'ro m none to two.
ment Tuesday denying that an outright merger or consol- Crumbaker sa id.
guns play a role in any offi - idation since each organ izaThe Wheat Growe rs. a
ciall y sanctioned lodge cere- tion would keep its separate vol unt ary farm organ izati on.
monies.
board of di rec tors and has three fu ll -time workers,
"We don' t use pistols."" bylaws.
a $400.000 annual budget
Ray Crumbaker, a farmer and 2.000 me mbers. The
Steve Mayo, . who described
himself as &lt;1 senior deacon of who serves on the boards of group. headed by executi ve
the lodge. told reporters directors fo r both groups. vice president Brett Myers.
Tuesday. 'This is not a said it is un cert ain how marked its 50th an niversarv
~
Masonic ceremonv where we much money the joint ope ra· l ast ~i l~
tions
would
sa
ve.
In - the · I 950s. the Wheat
bring pistols." ·
"There will be some sav- Grower' pet itioned the stale
Fitzpatrick said members ings. but I do not antici pate
Legislature to enact a checktold police the rite involving it will be substantial, " he ofT
on wheat to suppon mara gun goes back at least 70 said. "'The primary purpose ket deve lopment.
years.
is to make the organizations
The
Kansas
Wheat
Mayo sait.l the Monday more effecti ve and more Commission was then creat night ce remony was an initi· effi cient. ··
ed by the Legis lature to
ation into the Fellow Craft,
Both organili.ltion s are adm inister the I-eetH pe r
which is the second degree askin g wheat growers to bu she l wpeat chec koff. It
within
the
multil evel submit written comments to now has a staff of seven fulleither group by May I. A time workers and an annual
Masonic, system.
Mayo said James. of tentati ve vofin g date has budge t of nearl y $3J milMedforCI, had been a mem- been set for May 26 at a lion .
ber of the lodge for a few
month s while Eicl had been a
Musser sa id the measure
member for many years.
would make paying wxes
··This is very upsetting,
fairer for everyo ne by closing
very upsetting that one of
from
Page
A1
existin g loopholes.
.
our brothers was accidentally
Pomeroy
Tax
killed,'" he said.
Admi
nistrator
.l
ean
Durst
James worked for the plan- The ordinance seek., a unl- sclid ordinance seeks to comning department of the Long t(Jrm due date for filing tax ply and conform with exi stIsland town of Brookhaven. returns and changing the t.lue ing q ate law to create a more
spokesman Dave Kennedy clatefromApril 30toAprill5. uniform tax system.
Finall y. the ordinance
said.
"I am glad village council
seeks mandatory filin g lo r all passed the ordinance,.. she
village resit.lents. Most other said . "I hope these changes
municipalities have. s imilar help make it more fair for
measures in place or soon everyone...
Subscribe today . 992-2 155
will.
The ordinance will go into
Pomeroy Mayor John effect immediately. '

Tax

Proud to be apart of your life.

Deficit
from Page A1

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should,
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
. .editing and must be signed and include addres:&gt;
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, Ma r c h t o , 2004

Build a triple-border fence to protect America

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March to, 2004

" We' re goin g

to ~ hav e

to

prioriti ze - things we have
tu have, and things we can
get along without."

The importance of getting
finances under contro l in the
recommendation s on what 2004-2005 fiscal year wa s
cuts to make. Then I' ll bring stressed by the superintenthose recommendations to dent.
the board, prohably at the
He exp lained that the
first meeting in April ," said fina
ncial problem stems from
Buckley.
.
u decrease in tax revenue for
He said he would like to dn
as many cuts as poss ib le ·schools resulting partly from
through attrition . He noted the clo sing of the Meig s
that se veral teachers have Mines., the decrease in stuindicated they will be retiring dent population which resu lts
at the end of the school year in less state money. and genand thatthere are others who · eral cuts in school funding
from the state.
are eligible to retire.
As for fundin g, the school
Where possible . Buckl ey district now operates on 20
said. he would like to use the mills col lected locally. The
reduction in force method state minimum as set by the
where teachers are laid off Ohio Legi slature, however, is
but remain eligible for recall . 23 1/2 mills with the addi.He spoke of minimal cuts in tional 3 1/2 mills being made
staffing which can take place up by the state because
at the elementary and middle
schools, and said most cut "Meigs is considered a poor
district."
'
will have to come at the high
Buckley said that if the disschool.
trict went to the voters fQr an
He emphasized.. however. that operating levy, the first 3 112
"at this point nothing is sao-ed."
mills of any levy would give

no additional re venue to the
OTher lmsinni
distri ~ t for operating funds
Severa l personnel items
because the state would were handled during the
charge oil that amount which meeting attended hy alrboard
they now pay to make up the members. Roger Abbott.
23 112 mills.
Victor Youni!. Norman
Therefore. Buckley. said. Humphreys. Rc)n Logan and
going to the voters for an Scott Walton . and trea s ur~ r.
operating levy is of no bene- Mark Rhonemus.
lit. "All tl1at would do is to
They incl uded the hiring of
shift the burden from the substitute teach er., . Joe l C.
state to local taxpayers:·
Farrar. Jessica Kinsey. Mary
"The bottom line here'" said Ellen Moore. Amanda Parry.
the superintent.lent. "is that to Richard Pese k. Ryan Shean.
get through next school year. Bonn ie J. Smith. and Brady
we' re going to have to cut Trace: substitute secretary.
personnel."
Donna Carr: and the approval
He said tl1a1 he and other of volunteer ass istant coachstaff men1bers are working to es. Brian Ho wa rd. Stacey
identify areas ··we can n1an- Price. and Kevin Logan. soft age without"' and that he'll ball. and Vince Reiber and
retu rn to the Board in early Chri s Stewart. baseball.
April with recommendations.

If you're experiencing

theose symptoms of tax

season, see a

professionaL Because

Sweaty palms.
Dry mouth.
Taxes must be

TAKE A CLOSER LOOK •..
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Call Ken@ 740-992-7440
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Other Hours by Appo1ntme nt

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

Sl~ep

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 of the night. Maybe you're having difficulty fallin g asleep or are
excessively fatigued during the daytime. The Center can help you get back \O your normal cycle.
· Now accepting appointments with a physician referral through the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Neuro-Physiology Center, (304)675-2551 .

PLEASANT
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�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 10,

2004

AII·Distrlct hoops teams, Page 82

\

ewsChannel

Prep Basketball
Boys Southeast District

Rep. John Boehne r, R-Ohio, vice chair man of the House Agricu lture Committee, speaks at a
question and answe r sess1on wit h fa rm ers on Capito l Hill . (A P Plloto/ Denn is Cook)

Ohio farmers in Washington to lobby
MALIA

BY
RULON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

'

Wednesday morning
Temperatures will rise to 43
with today's low of 29 occurring around 6 a.m. Skies will
be sunny to mostly sunny
with 5 to I0 m.p.h. winds
from the north turning from
the northeast as the morning
progresses.
Wednesday afternoon .. .
Temperatures will rise from
45 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 46 at 3 p.m. as
they drop back down to 42
later thi s afternoon . Skies
will be sunny with 5 m.p.h.

winds from the northeast.
Wednesday evening
Temperatures will hold steady
around 36. Skies will range
from clear to mostly clear with
5 m.p.h. winds from the northeast turning from the southeast
as the evening progresses.
Wednesday overnight .. .
Temperatures will linger at
32. Skies will be mostly d ear
to partly cloudy with 5 m.p.h .
winds from the southeast
turning from the south as the
overnight progresses.
Thursday morning

March 9, 2004

March 9. 2004

Dow Jones
Industrials

f,t!!Jt~tw
---cD-:c
E.,C- -J-A_N_ _F
_E_B-

Low

High

10,529.70 10.424.07

- M-AR
-

Nasdaq
composite

9·250

Record high: 11 ,722 98
Jan ~4 . 2000

Standard 8c
Poor's 500

d"f ~~} .

10,456.96
·13.62
1,995 16

lf.8;l ~;
\.:.:·•·'·'·

1,140 .58

March 9, 2004

:..=··

-o.66

March 9, 2004

Standard Be
Poor's 500
1,140.58

::.,-=.,., ·0 58

.e.S&amp; ,,

Russell

Nasdaq
composite
1,995.16

2000

JAN

Low

2.011 .83 1,987.29

1.000
FEB
MAR
Roconl high : 5.04862

Mardl10, 2000

2,049

Advanced :

1,041
===;___..:.c.::..;..:.

\ ,050

176
New Iowa

New high a

97

D::=ec
.: :l:::ln:::
ed:::::c_____::2:..:,1=:
32 . New lowt
Unchanged:
264
9

---,=--=--=---,---,-1.000
DEC
JAN
FEB
MAR
Low

Declined:

Nasdaq diary

'----'f~=~---- \,\00

High

1,239 New highs

157
7
Volume: 1,894,819, 130

.....~.---- 1150

1,147.32 1,136.84

Advanced:
Unchanged:

------------------------1~

==;!______: "--'-----

585 95

NYSE diary

---,=-- -----,.-----DEC
High

Record high: 1,527.46
MarCil 24, 2000

Volume:
AP

2,079,402,956

AP

FORT ,KNOX . Ky. (AP)
-- A judge set a July court
martial date Tuesday for an
Army sergeant charged in a
grenade attack in Kuwait
that killed two officers one
day before they were to
move into Iraq .
Sgt. Hasan Akbar, 32, of
the
10 I st
Airborne
Di vision. could become the
seventh serviceman on the
military's death row.
Akbar's civilian attorney
had asked for a trial date
in the fall so there would
be more time to prepare.
Col. Dan Trimble said
at an arra ignment hearing Tuesda y that it wa s
pre mature to con sider
del ayin g th e case. He

Local Stocks
ACI - 31 .55
AEP - 33.91
Akzo- 38.46
Ashland . Inc. - 48.39
BBT - 37.37
BLI - 14.25
Bob Evans - 33.20
BorgWarner - 87.40
City Holding - 35.20
Champion - 4.78
Charming Shops -- 7.16
Col - 30.72
DuPont - 43.38
DG -20.74
Federal Mogul - .42
Gannett - 86.24
General Electric - 31 .58
GKNLY- 4.95
Harley Davidson - 52.69
Kmart - 34.30
Kroger -- 18.56
Ltd - 19.24

NSC - 21.34
Oak Hill Financial
32.38
Bank One - 55.72
OVB- 29.50
Peoples - 28.83
Pepsico - 52.75
Premier 9.251
Rocky Boots - 22.80
RD Shell - 50.01
Rockwell - 28 .57
Sears - 46.56
SBC - 25 .14
AT&amp;T- 19.68
USB - 28.41
Wendy's - 40.97
Wai-Mart - 60.28
Worthington - 17.37
Daily , stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

----------REE HEARING TESTS
COUPON

I
Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by
I
I &amp;ltcJ.e TM HEA~ING AID CENTER I
1
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes Office
1
New Location:507 Mullberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH I
I
. FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 2004
I
(740) 446·1744 • 9 to noon
I
Call Toll Free 1-800-634-5265 for an Immediate appointment. I
I The testa will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist.
J Anyone who haa trouble hearing or understanding 1

. converutlon Ia invited to have a FREE hearing test to see If I
can be helped! Bring this coupon with you for
1thla problem
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
I
I

..

"

•

UMWA • UAW • ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
,
WALK·INS WELCOME
..

--------------•

nat ional

trac kin g

sys te m

became a priorit y when mad
cow di sease was discovered
in December in a Canadaborn cow that li ved on a
Washington state farm.
Ohio t;umers also are seeking changes to Lhe "glH~st work-

er" progmm to make hiring seasonal laborers easier. Growers
say the currem program is too
expensive and cu mbersome.
And as the U.S. Senate considers the budget bill tl1is week,
the Lumers are lobbying for the
pcrmancm elimination of the
estate tax , which they say hurts
them when passing on their
businesses to their children.
Under currenl law, the tax
would be eliminated in 20 I0.·

July court-martial set for soldier accused in
deadly grenade attack on fellow servicemen

' ·&lt;n····"'

Dow Jones
Industrials

:,-=.,., ·0.69

going to happen. so we are
wonderi ng what cost and
how it will work ."
Fa rmers with large herds
arc w ncerned abo ut paying
for an expensive ide nt ificati,m system. Creat ing a

Market watch

A DAY ON WALL STREET

10,456.96

Temperatures will climb from
3 1 to 45 by late this morning.
Skies wil l range from partl y
cloudy to·cloudy with ."i to I0
m.p .h. winds fro m the south
turning from the southwest as
the morning pi·ogresses.
Thursday artcrnoon
Cloudy ahcmoon. There i;, a
slight chance we could see some
rain. Temperatures will drop
from 45 early this afternoon to
39. Winds will be 10 to 15
m.p.h. from the southwest turning from the west tts the afternoon progresses.

WA SHIN GTON -- Ohi o
farm ers
arri ved
in
Washi ngton on Tuesday to
make anot her plea fur the
stalled energy bill. whi ch
they say would boost corn
production and help the state
build an ethanol production
plant.
A version of the bill that
stall ed in the Senate still
could come up for consideratio n thi s year. Production of
et hanol. an alcohol-based
fue I additi ve made from corn
and other starch crops. would
do uble to '1 bi llion gallons a
yei1r hy 201 2 under the bill.
"As we look at building an
ethanol industry. the idea of a
5 billion gallon mandated 11se
kind of puts some surety in the
market. whi ch will help the
industry grow," sa id Keith
Stimpert, the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation's vice pres-

iden t for government affairs.
Stimpett is among abou t I00
tederation members -- .most
of them farmers fro m Ohio -who are in Washington this
week to meet wi th members of
Agriculttlre
the
House
Committee. offi ci al s at the
U.S.
Depart me nt
·or
Agriculture.
The farmers. whose interests range fro m po ul try and
hogs to wheat. soy beans and
com, also wanted more information about upcoming trade
deals that could affect their
business and a new animal
identification program.
U.S . Agri cultu re Sec retary
Ann Vcneman said he r dcpa11ment is trying to develop a system to help fann ing and public
health ex perts trace tile nation's
96 million cattle from their
fann of binh through the production chain stmting in 2005.
"Thi s is a bi g issue,''
Stimpert sa id. "The US DA is
telling us th at a program is

•

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

.

set the court mar t ia l to
beg in July 12.
During
the
hearin g.
Akbar deferred his right to
enter a pl ea.
He is charged wit h two
co un ts of premedit ated
murder and th ree counts
of att einpted pre medit ated murder for th e attack
on a group of fe ll o w
I0 I st Airbo rne Di vision
soldi ers &lt;tnd ot hers o n
March 23. 2003, durin g
the early days of th e
Iraq
war.
Pro se cutor s
allege that he stol e seve n
grenades fr o m a Humve e
he was guarding.
He could rece ive the
death penalt y, life 111
prison without parole or

life wi th parole. .
An attorney fo r Akbar
said las t year that no eyewitnesses placed the soldier
at 1hc scene, and th at other
sold iers onl y ass umed that
he committed the crime
becau se he is Mu slim.
Killed were Army Capt.
C hri sto ph er Scott Se ifert ,
27, of Easton. Pa., and Air
Force Maj. Gregory Stone,
40. of
Boise.
Idaho .
were
others
Fourteen
injured.
Akbar I S jailed at Fort
Knox
beca use
Fort
Campbell has no long-term
holding facility.

Thank You For Your
Support &amp; Vote.
It was truly appreciated.
1 ask for your continued
support in the general election.

KAY HILL

CONVENIENT EYE EXAMS
EVENING &amp; SATURDAYS AVAILABLE
WALK-INS ACCEPTED

EDWARD C. BEITER, 0.0.
INDEPENDENT DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY
LOCATED IN

WAL-MART VISION CENTER
GALLIPOLIS,
OH
.

'

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Division IV Girls Regional Preview

Wednesday, March to, 2004

AP All-District

Division II
at Convoca11on Center, Athens
Saturday's games
Vinton County vs. Greenfield McClain , 12
p.m. (w inner advances to regi onal at
Convocation Center, Atllen s)
Division Ill
at Convcx:atlon Center, Athens
Wednesday 's gamea
Chesapeake vs. North Ada ms, 6:15 p.m.
J5iketon liS. Portsmouth, 8 p.m.
Thursday's games
We st1all vs. Belpre, 6:15 p.m.
Ironton vs. Eastern (Brown), 8 p. m
Saturday's gamea
Peake/NA wi nner vs. Piketon/Ports. winner, 6 p.m. (winner advances to regional at
Convocation Center, Athens)
Westfall/ Belpre
winner
vs .
Ironton/Eastern winner. 8 p.m. (winner
advan ces to regional at Convoca tion
Center, Athen s)

Randolph,
Weber,
Sayre named
first team

Division IV
at Convocation Center, Athens
Saturday's games

bcooper@mydailytri bune.com

BY BUTCH COOPER

Eastern vs. Sciotoville. 2 p.m. (winner
advances to regional at Columbu s
Fairgrounds)
Sou th Webster vs. Trimble 4 p.m_(winner
advances to regional at Columbus
FMgrounds)

'Girls regional pairings
DIVISION II
At Ontario High School
Beloit W. Branch (22·1) vs. Lexington (16·
8) , Tuesday, 6· 15: Cuya hoga Falls Wa lsh
Jesuit (20-4) vs. Elida (17-7) , Tuesday, 8.
Finals: Frid ay, 7:30
At Zanesville High School
Dover (22· 1) vs. Dresden Tri-Valley (158) , Tuesday, 6:15: Vi ncent Warren (22- 1)
vs. Thornville Sheridan (22- 1), Tu esday, 8
Fina!s: Frid ay, 7.30.
At Barberton High School
Canal Fulton NW (20-4) vs. Bay Village
Bay (17-6), Tuesday, B·t s: Salem (23- 1)
vs. Perry (20-3), Tuesday, 8 .
Finals: Friday, 7:30.
At Vandalia Buller High School
St. Berna rd Roger Bacon (1 6-8) vs.
Hamilton Badin (19·5). TuesQay, 6: 15;
Bexley (23-1) vs_ Kenering Aller (19-4),
Tu esday, 8.
·
Finals: Friday, 7:30.
"
StatiO! Tourna ment Pairings: Ontario vs.
Zan esville: Barberton vs. Vandalia .
DIVISION Ill
~t Vandalia Butler High School
An na (16-8) vs. Plain City Jonathan Alder
(23-1 ), Wednesday, 6:15; Cm. Madeira
(24-0) vs. Cin. Hills Chri stian -(20-4),
Wednesday, a p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1:30.
AI Cuyahoga Falls High School
S. Euclid Regina (21-2) ' vs. Cle. Cent.
Ca\h. (20·3), Wednesday, 6:15: Cle. VASJ
( 12- 12) vs. Youngs. Ursuline (22 -2).
Wednesday, 8.
Finals: Saturday, 1:30.
At Lancaster High School
Zanesvill e W. Muskingum (20-4) vs
Worthington Christi an (1 9-4), Wednesday.
6:15; Oak Hill (22-1) vs. Chillicothe Zane
Trace (20 -3), Wednesday. 8.
Finals: Saturday, 1:30.
At Lexington High School
Swanton (14- 10) vs . Smithville (22-2),
Wednesday, 6:15: Oregon Strltch (20 -3)
vs.
Castalia
Margaretta
(1 4- 9) ,
Wednesday, 8.
Finals: Saturday, 1:30.
State Tournament Pairings: Vandalia vs.
Cuyahoga Fall s; Lancaster vs. Lexington.
DIVISION IV
At Elida High School
Fremont St. Joseph (1 9-4) vs . Miller City
(23·0), Thursday. 6:15; Stryker (17·6) vs.
Mt. Blanchard Riverdal e (17 -6), Thursday.
8.
Finals: Sa turday, 7:30.
At Massillon Perry High School
Mogadore (22-2) vs. Mansfield St. Peters
(2 1-2), Thursday, 6:15; Windham (15-8)
vs. Lowellville (2 0-4), Th ursday, 8.
Finals: Saturday, 7:30.
At Vandalia Butler High School
Jacks on Center (18·6) vs. Minster (20-3) ,
Thursday, 6:15: Ft. Loramie (21 -3) vs.
Covington (2 2·2), Thursday, 8.
Finals: Saturday. 7:30.
At Pickerington North School
Morral Ridgedale (18-6) vs. Reedsville
Eastern n7-6) , Thursday, 6:15; Berlin
Hiland (23-1) vs. Glouster Trimble (22-1).
Thursday, 8.
Finals: Satu rday. 7:30.
State Tournament Pairi ngs: Elida vs.
Massillon: Vandalia vs. Pickerington.

Akron fires
mens' basketball
coach Hipsher
AKRON (AP) - Akron
fired basketball coach Dan
Hipsher on Tuesday, a day
after his team lost in the first
round of . the Mid-American
Conte nince tournament.
. Hipsher will be reassigned to
a position within the office of
public affairs and development
for the last three years of his
contract, the university said.
The Zips went 13- 15 this
season, 7- II in the MAC, and
lost in the opening round of the
league tournament for the second straight season .
: Hipsher took over a struggling program in .March 1995
:md was named MAC coach of
the yem· in 1998 after Akron
went 17- 10.
He was 11 2- 137 in nine
years at Akron, including three_
winning seasons. His teams
were 1-7 in MAC tournament
play.

Reds get by
Pedro, Schilling
.

: FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP)
~ Pedro Martinez and Curt
Schilling gave up a run each
in ~ 2-3 innin¥s for the
!Josten Red Sox m their 3-2
loss to the Cincinnati Reds on
Tuesday night.
. The Red Sox managed just
lhree hits -- a double and
jlomer by Gabe Kapler and a
double by Elhs Burks -against Corr Lidle, Aaron
Harang, Ryan Wagner, Chris
Jleitsma and Brian Reith.

·...'·

'

'··;'

Eastern head coach Ric k Edwards talks with his players during a fourth-qu arter time out in his teams
Division IV district championship game against Southeastern March 3. The Eagles wil l face Ridged ale in th e
regional semifinal Thursday at Pickerington North High School. (Brad Sherman)

Ridgedale might be an
even match up for Eagles
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydailytribune.com

"From what
we feel like,
we're two
pretty
(evenly)
matched
teams:·

TUPPERS PLAINS - Being
one of just 16 teams left in the state
might be sweet, but when coming so
close, anything less than a state tournament berth certainly leaves a bad
taste.
Four teams are set to fight for one
coveted spot in Columbus during
Edwards
-- Rick Edwards
the Division IV regional toumament
at Pickerington North High School. the perimeter, they might be a little
That lone winner moves on to the bit bigger."
state tournament at the Jerome
Eastern finished behind Trimble
in the TVC Hocking, while
Schottenstein Value City Arena.
Eastern and Trimble, two Tri- Ridgedale lost out on the Mid-Ohio
Valley
Conference
Hocking Athletic Conference Blue Division
Division teams from the Southeast crown to rival Mm·ion Pleasant.
District, along with Morral
Pleasant failed to even make it to
Ridgedt~e from the Central Dist1ict the t.listrict level, leaving Ridgedale
and the East District's Berlin Hiland as the last standing representative
make up the four-temn field.
from the conference.
Ea.stern
( 17-6)
challenges
The Lady Eagles, who have won
Ridgedale ( 18-6) in one semitinal eight of their last nine, earned a spot
game Thursday, while Trimble and in the regionals alier a 47-40 win
Hiland lock horns in the ni ghtcap.
over Richmond Dale Southeastern.
On paper, the evening's first Eastern al so ousted Paint Valley
match-up between the Lady Eagles (45-41) and Waterford (50-45) on its
and Lady Rockets appears to be a march through the postseason.
very even one.
Ridgedale punched its ticket to
Both teams tinished second in the game by blasting Centerburg,
their respective conferences, spoil 42-27. That kind of lop-sided outcomparable overall records and come has been the norm thus far in
have similar personnel.
the tourney tor the Lady Rockets.
"From what we feel like, we 'r~ They also defeated Millerspo11, 69t\~O pretty (evenly) ma~ched temns,
56, Columbus Academy by a score
smd Eastern coach R1ck Edwards. of 61 -25 and whipped Columbus
"They' ve _got a lot of the same per- ~ibttrty Chri stian by a 75- 13 count.
sonnel thmgs except stzc-w1se on
On the season, Ridgedale is

outscoring its opponents 49.7 to
37.2. Eastem is scoring an average
of 50 points per game whi le swTendering 41.
Junior Lynnette Thiel (5-9) is a
physical point guard who coach
Edwards described as
"very
smooth. talented and pretty crafty."
Thiel is the lone Lady Rocket
averaging double ti gurcs with 12.R
per contest and has also grabbed 129
total rebOLmds. And with her size, is
also able to post up smaller guards.
"She \ not afra id to poSI her oppo·
ncnt up," he commented. "She' J.J get
down in the post once in a whi le and
let (Jessi) Wheeler run the point."
Both Thiel and her backcuurt
teammate Wheeler (5-4, jr. ) are very
quick. and they like to penetrate ami
k1ck the bailout to openleammates.
"They like a lot of motion on
oflense, and really like to break you
down with the dribble." Edwards
explained. "They get you to help.
then distribute the ball once you
help."
Ridget.lalc's twD main post players are Kri sta Bollinger (5-9. sr.) and
Echo Galtshall (6-1. jr.). Bollinger
scores 8.3 ppg. but does most of her
damage on the boards, amassmg
157 total rebound' this season. 65
on the oftensivc end.
Eastern is paced in scoring by lirsi
team All-Southeast Distri ct selection Morgan Weber at 14.8 per contest. Honorable mention all-district
selections Alyssa H()lter and Erin

Please see Eagles, Bl

It's a 'sister act' at Pickerington
Division IV regional tournament

Jenna Hupp

ball , ti ve sets of them al a single
regional toumament ~i te is not.
For Trimble. there is Southeast
District player of the Yem· Jenn ifer
Grandy and her older. lesser known
sibling Jessica.
Berl in Hiland features two sets of
sisters: Leah and Krista Beechy as
well as twin torwards Leah and
Launa Hochstetler.
And Eastem also features two sister duos, with.a pair of Hupps on the
perimeter and the Weber sisters in
the starting frontcoul1.
Sophomore Jessie Hupp, the
team s starting point guard, JS joined
on the varsity by her freshman sibling, Jenna.
While only Jessie sees signiticant
minutes between the two Hu pps.
both Morg'm and Erin Weber are
counted on heavily in the Lady
Eagle game plan.

Jessie Hupp

Ple..e see Sister, Bl

BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@mydailytribune.com
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ On
Thursday, Marcus Cinema in
Pickerington is showing: "50 First
Dates", "Barbershop 2", "Starsky
and Hutch" and "Confessions of a
Teenage Drama Queen".
Just three miles down the road,
Pickerington North High School is Erin Weber
featurin~ a sort of "Sister Act". But it
is not likeIy that you will see any
singing nuns or Whoopi Goldberg.
Just like at the Division IV
Southeast District tournament in
Wellston, three of the four teams at
this week's regionals in Pickerington
have something in common. But it
has nothing to do with conference
ties this time, instead, each have at
. least one pair of sisters on the roster.
While sister ·teammates are quite
common in high school girls basket- Mor&amp;an Weber
;

TH E PLAINS -- Sou the rn's Craig
Randol ph had his fare share of bi g ga mes
thi s season.
With 42 po ints aga in sl So uth Ga lli a and
37 again st Wel lsto n. Rai1 do lph was the
hea rt and so ul of the
Torn adoes boys bas ket ball
tea m lhi s season.
T hat'' why the 6-foot- 1
JUni or po int guard was
narnet.l to the first team of
the
Assoc ia ted
Press
Southeasl Di stri cr Di vision
IV sq uad as vot ed on by a
panel of area sports writers.
Randolph
See compl ete list on B2.
Randolph ave raged 26.6
po ints per ga me for the 137 Torn adoes .
Al so ea rnin g first team
ho nors on the boys side
was Gal li a Academ y's
Do nnie
John so n
in
Divis ion II .
John son, a 6-0 se ni or,
ave raged 13.9 ppg. while
con tributin g with 5.5
ass ists per g am e

Sayre

illld

cJ ose

to th ree steal s a contesl.

Sec ond te am honors
. we nl to Meigs· Dakota De Will in Di visio n
II (1 5.7 ppg and 9.7 rebound s per game )
and Eastern 's Nathan Lee Grubb ( 11 .9
ppg ) in Di visiDn IV
Gruhl)s teammal e Cod y Dill was a third
team selection along wi th South Gallia 's
Jason Merric k and Jon Bobb of Meigs in
Divi sion II .
Honorable menti on acco lades went to
Tom Bose and Zach Shawver of Gallia
Acade my: Stephen Harder. Jared Swain
and Colby Reese of Ri ve r Valley: Carl
Wolfe. Jr. of Me igs: Josh Waugh and
Dustin Lew is of South Ga lli a: Alex
Si mpson of Eastern and Southe rn's Wes
Burrow s.
On 1he girl s side. Eastern 's Morgan
Weber and Southern 's Kati e Sayre were
named first team in Div ision IV.
Weber averaged 14.K point s per game
along with 7.4 rpg to lead the Eagles ( 146 ) to a di strict champion ship .
Sayre was a workhorse for the Tom adoes
( 14-6) with 17 ppg. 6 rpg and over three
:-;teal s a gam e .

Me1gs ' .la ynee Da vis was named second
team in Di vision II as she put together a
double-doubl e season with I 5.5 ppg and
11 .5 rpg for the Marauders.
Gallia Academy's Jac·kie Wam sley wa s a
third-team se lecti on in Di vision II with
14.2 ppg.
Girls' honorabl e menlion honorees were
Galli a Acad emy's Kari James: Ashl ey
Cald we ll and Beth Pay ne o f Ri ver Vall ey:
Sam Pi erce of Me igs: Eastern's Erin
Weber and Aly ssa Holter and Soulhcrn\
Dea na Pullins and Ashle y Dunn .

All-district
coaches team
announced
STAFF REPORT

sports @myda&gt;lytribu ne.com
C HESA PEA KE - The DIS tr ic t I :l
, B;tsketball Coaches A" ociatiu n announ ced
its all-di strict teams and date and time of its
di st ri ct &lt;il l-sta r ga me .
Ga llia Academy's Donnie Johnson was
named playe r of the yc,u· and North-South
game represe nti ve.
See com plete list on B2.
For Meigs. .J on Bobb was a first team
se lecti on .
In Di vis ion IV boys. Southern' s Craig
Randolph , South Gallia' s Jason Merri ck
and Eastern 's Na thmi Lee Grubb and Cody
Dill was fi rst team .
So uth Galli a 's Donni e Sau1iders was
name Division IV coach of the year.
On the girl s Di vis ion II first team was
Galli a Academy's Jackie Wamsley. Ri ver
Valley's Beth Pay ne and Meigs' Jaynee
Dav is.
On th e Division IV girls first team,
Ea stern's Morga n Weber was pl ayer of the
year. Join ing her on the first team is
Eastem 's Alyssa Holte r and Southern 's
Katie Sayre.

�Wednesday, March 10, 2004

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March

Associated Press Southeast AII-Distrid Basketball Teams
COLUMBUS (API -

The 2003.()4

Soutneast Alj..()istrict basketball teams as

selected by a media panel from the d1stnct

BOYS
DIVISION I
FIRSTTEAM

Cl nt Aust1n Chdhcothe 6-hot 3 )umor 14 5
po niS per game B J Hughes Logan 6 0 Jf
12 6 Tyler Lough Manetta 5 11 sr 19 9
Ben Howlett Mar etta &amp; 1 J' 19 4
Playvr of the Year Tyku Lough Manetta
Coach ot the Year. Ron Warner Manetta

SECOND TEAM

Marcus Wash ngton Ct11lhcothe 6 8 Jl
10 2 PatriCk Howe Logan 6-0 Jr 11 5
Cody Wagner Manetta 6 5 sr B 8

HONORABLE MENTION

Quentin Upshaw
Kratzenberg
Logan
Mar etta

Chill cothe
Tory
Joe Schanken

DIVISION II
FIRSTTEAM

Tylfi! Evans C1rclevdle Logan Elm 6 2 1r
2 1 2 Dante Jackson Greenfield McClain 64 fr 18 1 Enk Mart1ng Wash ington Court
House M am1 T ace 5 11 sr 17 Ryan Kent
McArthur Vmton County 6-3 sr 13 Donnie
Johnson Ga1t1pohs Gall1a Academy 6-0

sr 13 9
Player of the Year Tyler Evans C1rclev111e
Logan Elm
Coaches at lhe Year Matt Combs
McArthur V1nton County Doug Stt~Jerson
Clrclevtlle Logan Em

SECOND TEAM

Aaron Forte Athens 6 1 Sf 17 Chris
Bethel MeA tt ur Vtnton County 6 3 1 17
Kyle Jones Ctrclevtlle Logan Elm 6 0 1r
13 5 Josh Barrera Thornv lie She dan 5
10 1r 13 3 Just n E chtnger V1ncent Warren
6 1 sr 17 3 Dakota DeWitt Pomeroy
Meigs 6-6 sr 15 1 MaJ&lt; Morrow Jackson

6.()

Jr 15

THIRD TEAM
Shea McMahon C rclevtl e 6-3 1r 12 4
Jason Hutle Greenf etd Mc:C a1n 5-11 sr
10 5 Bnan Dtxon McArthur V nton County
6 o sr 14 Jonathon Bobb Pomeroy
Metgl 5-10 sr 18 3 Jordan Burnworth
Lancaster Fa1rf1ed Unton 5 10 sr 13 KC
Chnsttan Ironton Rock Htll 5-10 sr 12 5
Evan Blake Ctrdev lie Logan Elm 6 3 soph

109

HONORABLE MENnON

Mtke Russell New lex ngton Kyle 0 Hare
New Le:&lt; tngton W1ly Sm th Wash ngton C H
Mtam Trace Tyle Robertson Washtngtor'l
C H Wa!;htngton Andrew Chonko Athens
Jared Humphreys Jackson Joe Snyder
Hill sboro B yce Raney Htllsboro Todd
Cumberland Htlsboro Jordan Rhodes
ThornV lie Shendan Jared Larson Lancaster
Fa rfteld Unton Tom Bose Gallipolis Gallla
Academy Zach Shawver Gallipolis Gallla
Academy Stephen Harder Cheshire
River \/alley Jared Swain Cheshire River
Valley, Colby Reese Cheshire River
Valley Carl WOlfe Jr Pomeroy Meigs
Josh Beebe V ncent Warren Justin Htlton
Waverly JacoO Carson Greenfield McCiatn
Jonathan Stevens Ctrclev lie Kory Valent ne
Ctrclev11e

DIVISION Ill
FIRST TEAM

Kyle Vu lgamore Ptketon 6 3 sr 16 3
Drew BobO Ba nbndge Pa1nt Valley 6 5 sr
2~ 7 Evan Yates LucasVIlle Val fj&gt;J 6 5 sr
19 Dan1el Thompson Chesapeake 6 0 sr
11 5 Brett Beucler Sard1n1a Eastern Brown
6-1 1r 20 3 ChriS Meade Seaman North
Adams 6 3 s 19 1 Josh Sands Ironton 6
o sr 11 5 Jake Hale Albany Alexander 6
5 Jf 1a
Player of the Year Kyle Vulgamore
Ptketon
Coaches of the Year Bret Coreno
P keton Norm Perstn Chesapeake

SECOND TEAM

Wtll Besonen Chi bcotne Un10to 6-8 sr
16 4 Drew Shaw Wtlhamsport Westfall 5 11

Eagles
from Page 81
Weber average 9 2 and 7 2 ppg
resper.ll vely
Edwards beheves th,ll the
keys to VIctory Thursday are
the
same
as
agamst
Southeastern - controlling
dribble penetration reboundmg and cutung down on
tumovers
''The effort won 't be a con
cern, our gtrls w1ll go to play,'
he satd "Its JUSt whether we
can do the httle thmgs - wntrollmg Th1el 's dnbble penetra
t1on,
recogmzmg
where
Wheeler IS on the floor and
checkmg out Bollinger so she
doesn't get those second shot
opportumlles on the offens1ve
i!nd •
Wh1le playmg well defenSively, Eastern was struggled
somewhat lately on the offenSive end Edwdrds' club h.1s
been held to SO pomts or less
over 1ts last fhe outings but he
hopes to break that trend
Thursd,IY
"I don t thmk offensJ\ ely,
we have played as well as we
are capable m the last four or
five games' he admitted
"We ve not put 11 all together

sr
16 1 Jeremtah Oates Ch d ICOthe
Huntmgton 6 4 soph 16 Nate Eaton
Belpre 6 1 sr 16 9 Bngham Wagtnger
Ironton 6- 2 soph 10 7 Ryan McGraw
Mtnlord 6-Q sr 17 PJ Rase Chesapeake
6 2 ~h 15 Enc Mount Lynchburg..Ciay
6 3 Sr 17

THIRD TEAM

Brandon Rymer Coal Grove Dawson
Bryant 6-0 sr 16 Seth Craft South Pont
6 3 sr 14 3 Dennts Gaga Ironton 6 2
sop11 14 7 Cory Chambefl n Wheelersburg
5 9 sr t3 Enc Nordrum lucasv lie Valley
6 a sr 15 5 Cody Shy McDermott
Northwest 6 8 s 18 Erte Farmer P1keton
6 3 Jr 14 3 Nick Mtlhken Frankfort Adena
6 3 soph 13 6 Brant Derrow Wellston 5
11 Sf 167

HONORABLE MENTION

Josh Stmpson Portsmouttl West Joe
Ironton
Andy
Stapleton
Zo nes
Chesapeake Tom Pemberton Coal Grove
Dawson Bryant Jeremy Prtn Proctorvtlle
Farland Kendall Staggs
Proctorville
Fa rland
Chance M les
McDermott
Nort hwest Mtchael Hughes McDermott
Nortt;Jwest Enc Hortoo LtX:aSvtlle Valley
Lu~e Slone
Mtnford N1ck Camn gton
Wheelersburg Just n Ne son Portsmouth
Tyler Clifford Portsmouth Josh Beard
W1lhamsport
Westfal
M1ke
Angles
Wtlhamsport Westfall
John Eldridge
Chtl tco the Huntmg ton
Co r(j&gt;J While
Chtlltcothe Untoto Bnan Gngsby Frankfort
Adena
Doug Parsons
Belpre Abe
Hemngshaw Belpre Kyle Mtller Ptketon
Kevtn Gosche Sard ma Eastern Brown Ben
Hauc ~
Sard1n1a Eastern Brown Enc
Semple Seaman North Adams Cory Copas
Seaman North Adams Dust1n Barr West
Unton Jared Cox West Unton Ed LemaSier
Albany A eKander Terry Holbert Albany
Alexander Brandon Maden Nelsonvtl e
Yo r~ Chad Berry Nelsonvtlle Yor~ Davtd
Herman Wellston

DIVISION IV
FIRST TEAM

Nick Aldrtdge South Webster 6-6 soph
26 Zac Alexander Beaver Eastern 5 9
sop h
19
Cameron
Thoroughman
Portsmouth Clay 6 5 soph 18 3 Dan
Downing SciotOVIIIe East 1).1 sr 1a Shawn
Hacker Ironton St Joseph 6 7 sr 27 2
Craig Randolph Rac1ne Southern 6-1 jr
26 A J Jenktns Glouster Tnmble 6 1 sr

191

Player of the Year Shawn Hacker Ironton
St Joseph
Coaches of the Year Marc Kre scher
South Webster J m Holbert Glouster Tr mble

SECOND TEAM

Jeremy Mcleod latham Western 6 0 fr
20 7 Aaron Patten Frank~n Furnace G een
6-Q sr i 7 9 Kyle Gtlmore Wtllow Wood
Symmes Valley 5 8 sr 13 8 Jared Bohl
Mowrystown Whlleoak 6 1 sr 15 1 Nathan
Lee Grubb Reedsville Eastern, 5-8 sr
13 9 AndrB'N Conley Sc otov lie East 6-3 1r
16 Bruce Fouts GtousterTnmble 6-3 1r 14
Greg Mauk Glenwood New Boston 5-9 sr

15

THIRD TEAM

Jarod Shalfer Willow Wood Symmes Valley
5 i1 s
15 9 Steven Dugger Leesl::urg
Fatrfteld 6 2 sr 14 Adam Hammer
Crooksvtlle 6 1 sr 16 2 Jason Merrick
Crown City SOuth Gallla 6-3 sr 14.3 Tony
Young Rtehmond Dale Southeastern 6 3 sr
12 0
Drew Prater
RIChmond Dale
Southeastern 6 3 s
11 6 Cody Dill
Reedsville Eastem 6-5 Jr 11 8 Ttm Yarnen
Fran~ ln Furnace Green 5-11 sr 145
HONORA~LE

MENTION

Dusllll Dean Manchester Andrew Weber
Peebles B ad Doughman Peebles Blake
K1ble
Mowrystown
Wh1teoa~
Wes
Robertson Leesburg Fatrfteld Tyler Sm tt1
Crooksvttle Josh Waugh Crown City South
Gallla Ouslln Lewis Crown ~ty South
Gallla Alex Simpson Reedsville Eastern

and gotten a good offens1 vc
output, ,md 1ts dOOlllllme lor us
to do that '
Eastern has reached the
reg1onal sem1fmals tw1ce
before. m 1999 and 199S but
has never been to a regtonal
final
The late game Thursday p1ts
two state-ranked teams agamst
one anot her when No 2 Berlin
H1land (22-1 ) takes on No 7
Tnmble (22 I)
DIVISIOn
IV
Southeast
D1 stnct Player of the Year
Jenmfer Grandy (S-S, so). who
averages 31 pomts per game
leads an up and down the floor
Tnmble offense agamst the
tm ored Lad) Ha-.- ks
Hiland returned all hve
staners from last season's 2 1 3
.md Inter Valley Conference
champ1onsh1p team as well as
,, fonner starter that sat out l.tst
season with a tom ACL
Lmdsay Stuckey (5-7, so)
.~ong w1th twm slsters Launa
and Leah Hochstetler (5 6 so ),
pace a balanced Lady Hawk
scormg attack The tno 1s averagmg 13- 14 pomts each
R1dgedale versus Eastern
lips oft at 6 I S p m , while
Hiland and Tnmble are set tor
an 8 p m start or approximately 30 mmutes alter the concluSIOn ol the first gdme

Wee Burrow• Racine Southern Matt
Townsend Waterford Matt Chnstman
Glouster Tnmble Curt Lunmg Hemlock M1ller
Adam Bond Beaver Eastern Anthony
Penwell Latham Western Zach Messer
Glenwood New Boston M+ehael Day
Glenwood New Boston Josh Hosktns
Sc10tov1le East Brett Enz Sciotovtlle East
J D Kmg Sc oto&lt;JIII e East Charlie Doll
Portsmouth Notre Dame Enc Thacker
Portsmouth Clay Rob Johnson South
Webster Kyle Cayton South Webster Evan
DeCamp South Webster Derek L~;~w s
F ankhn Furnace G reen Ghr s ElsWick
WtHOw WOOd Symmes Val&amp;;

GIRLS
DIVISION I
ARSTTEAM
Abby Bunsttne Ch~IICOthe 5-6 1r 21 0
Alteta Brokaw Chtlhcothe 6- 1 sr 13 Megan
McAu &amp;f. Manetta 6-Q tr 18 1 Alltson Angle
Logan 5-10 soph 10
Player of the Year Abby Bunst ne
Chtl cothe
Coach of the Year Jeff Usath 0tulhcothe

HONORABLE MENTION

Mtm Ptetson Ch fttCOthe Amanda Jenkins
Mar etta Alex Hermann Logan Kathy
Kenan logan

DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM

Oerm.11e Spea~man Chillicothe Untato 5-7
Jr 16 3 Jesse Slack Thornville Sheridan 5
1 1 1r 16 4 Ashley Thomas Lancaster
Fa rfteld Un.on sr 17 9 Stac1e Shnder
Vtncent Wamm 511 sr 12 1 Sarah
Gas~ll Athens 5 5 soph 18 2
Players of the Year Jesste Slack ThornVIlle
Sheridan Stace Shnder VncentWarren
Coach of the Year Larry Ryan VlrlC9nt
Warre n

SECOND TEAM

Jaynee Davis Pomeroy Me~ga S..10 ar,
15 5, Victona Lealt Jackson 5 5 soph 10 4
Kate Frey Chtlhcothe Unioto, 5-9 sr 11 4
Lyndsey Lemon Vmcent Warren 5-10 sr
10 4 Amanda Kroft ThornvtMe Sheridan 5-7
sr 10 5 Mane Bamer Ironton Rock Htll 5 7
sr 14 Ltsa Hartley Washtngton C H Mtam1
Trace 5-8 sr

THIRD TEAM
Waver~ 5-7 sr 15 Jackie
Wamsley Galllpolla Gallla A~my 5-7
Ashley Borden

soph 14 2 Megan Ftshe r Proctorv1le
Fa rland 5 5 s
10 K mberty W lt ams
Circleville 5 10 sr 12 8 Darcy Will ams
Thomv l e Shendar'l 5 10 sr 104 Knsten
Ttsdale Circleville Logan Elm 6-o sr 13 5
Lindsey Steppe Jackson 5-4 sr 13 2

HONORABLE MENTION

Brtanna Dav s Proctorvtlle Fatrland Montea
Barner Ironton Rock H1ll Me1adith W1 son
Washtngton Court House M1am1 Trace Stev1
Large Thornville Sheridan Haley StriCkland
Lancaster Fa rfteld Un10n Holly Schoenholtz
ChtiiCOthe Untoto Ahsha Lee Greenlte d
McCiatn Knsten Bradshaw McDermott
Northwest
Ken Sanders
McDermott
Northwest EUzabeth Crocker Waverly Jenna
Wittektnd Vtncent Warren Madison Connery
Vtncent Warren Sammy Pferce Pomeroy
Meigs Karl James Gallipolis GaiUa
Academy Ashley CaldweN Chesh•re River
Valley, Beth Payne Cheshire River Valley,
Amanda Buckler Jackson Hay~ Sowers
McArthur Vtnton County

SECOND TEAM
Whnney Hale Oak H1h 5-11 sr 17 Whnney
Maiden Nelsonville-York &amp;0 Jr 1ao Andrea
Audmann Ironton 5 9 Jr 16 6 Allsha
Bridges South Point 5-7 1r 13 Karen Diehl

Chlllk:olheZaneTrace 5-11 1r 117 Haley
Messer Wheelersburg 5-3 Jr

14 Daphne

Butcher Ch11icothe 1-tunttngton 5-5 Jr 15 7

THIADTEAM

Kendra MaS518 Wheelersburg 5-3 Jr 12

Tonya

Portsmou1h 5-3 Jr 19
W1lhamspor1Westfai 5-7 1'

McKenzJe

Jessica Rogers

10 Megan Hauck Sard1nta Eastern Brown 5
10 Jr 8 7 Amanda Stover Stewart Federal
Hocl&lt;lng 5-11 sopl1 13 3 Ashley Sowers
Frankfort Adena 5-8 sr
14 2 Kat1e
Donahoe Mtnford 6.0 Jr 14 8 Ketlee
Guthne Albany Alexander 5-9 fr 12

HONORABLE MEN110N

Brittany Sessor Portsrrouth West Natasha
Fie6ds West Un100 Codt Hatten lynchburg
Clay Wh tney Sm1th P1keton Amanda
Angles Will amsport Westfall Courtney
Jenk1ns Chillicothe Hunttngton Bnttany
Ferguson Belpre Shawna Mtrti.s Belpre
Holly Coats
Belpre
Magg.a Howe
Wheelersburg Brittany Bngner Mtnford
Amka Shonkwiler Mmford Keisa DaviS Oak
Htll Ashley Midkttf Oak H1tl Jaml8 Slone Qak
Hill Mandi Boykin Ironton Chelsea Markins
Coal Grove Dawson Bryant Jess1 Craft
South Pont Mallory Fisher New L611;tngton
Jalynn McClellan Seaman North Adams
Samantha Lundergan • Sardtnta Eastern
Brown C ndy Reeves Sardtnta Eastern
Brown Megan Reed Peebles Enca Sams
Albany Alexander Tern Wolfe Stewart
Federal Hocking Ktm Cremeans Wellston

DMSIONIV
ARSTTEAM

Jenntfer Grandy G ouster Trimble 5 5
soph 31 5 Jackte Hauke Mowrystown
Whiteoak sr 22 5 Anme Clinger Sciotov111e
East 5 11 sr
17 5 Morgan Weber

Reedsville Eastern 5-10 jl 148 Haley
Drayer Waler1ord 5-4 soph 17 5 Kaylee

Helton Latham Western 5 6 fr 17 4
Rebecca Day Beaver Eastern 5-10 If 16 6
Katie Sayre Racine Southern 5-8 sr, 11
Player of the Year Jenntfer Grandy
Glouster Trimble
COach of the Year Ttm S korski Glouster
TrimOie

SECOND TEAM

Chnst1na Harvey Ironton St Joseph 5-11
1r 15 Kate Duduit Portsmouth Clay 5-9
soph 16 7 Heather Grooms Sclotov lte
East 5 9 sr 17 5 Ltsa Floyd Willow Wood

Symmes Valey 5 7 1r 11 9 Jade Downing

Latham Western 5-8 sr 13 7 Jenny Royse
SOuth Webster 5 9 sr 14 5 Kara Bobo
Rtchmond Dale Southeaslem 5-6 sr 10 3
Allory Hooper Glouster Tnmble 5 10 sr

106

THIRD TEAM
Jes51ca Waugh Glenwood New Boston 54 soph 19 Whl11ey Bobsl Sou1h Webster s10 soph

14 5 Amy Nord ru m lucasVIlle

Valley 5 11 soph 12 5 JennHer Himes

Manchester 5 9 soph 12 1 Ashton H..:e
RIChmond Dale Southeastern 5-6 Jr 13 6
Chesea Ebltn Batnbndge Patnt Valley 5-10
soph 11 6 Kara Gustin leesl::urg Fa1rfteld
soph 11 8 Jute Trace GlousterTnrrble 55
soph 12 5

HONORABLE MENTION

Jennifer Dew Crooksville Melissa Stuckey
Leesburg Fa rfield Deana Pullins Racine
Southern, Ashley Dunn, Racine Southam
Alyssa Holter Reedavllle Eastern, Erin

DIVISION Ill
FIRST TEAM
Wh1lney Lewts Lynchburg-Gay 5 11 sr
18 2 Alyssa Hammond Oak HII 6 0 jr 27 7 Weber, Reedsville Eeotem Julia Gwinn,

Sara Hacker Ironton 6-Q soph 17 6 Ah
Hull Portsmouth 6-Q sr 14 L sa Perry
Chesapeake 5-5 sr 13 2 Casst Wertman
Chillicothe Zane Trace 5-8 sr 17 6 Whttt"leY
B ackburn Belpre 5-5 1r 16 3
Player of the Year: Alyssa Hammond Qak
Htll
Coaches of the Year Joe Dunkle
Ch I ICOthe Zane Trace Amy Hughes lronlon

Crown City SOuth Gallla Des ree Van Dyne
Waterford Meagan P1erce Franklin Furnace
Green Ashley Augustin Portsmouth Notre
Dame Erica S nger Portsmouth Clay
Amanda Clark Portsmouth Notre Dame

Abbey Marshall Glenwood New Boslon

Raven Blake Ironton St Joseph Kelst Brown
Hem ock Miller Ash~ Heavener Hemlorl&lt;.
M1ller

10, 2004

Distrid 13 Basketball Coaches
Association AII·Distrid Teams
Division Iond I

FlmToom

Donnte

Johnson

Acaderrti sr Tyler

GalltpoltS

First Team
Stacte Shrider: V rJ::en1 Warren sr Sarah
Gaskell The ?Ia ns Athens sopl"l Megml
Fisher Proctorvtle Fa~rtand sr Beth f'avri'
Chesh re A ver Valley soph Lindsay
Steppe Jackson sr Amanda Buckler
Jackson sr Jaynee Davts Pomeroy Meigs
sr Jackte Wamsley GaM pohs Galha
Academy sopl1

Galli&amp;

loogh Marietta sr
Justin Eighinger Vtneent Warren sr Aaron
Fo&lt;le The Plains A1hens sr Ryan Kaol1
~r V1nton County 5I Max Monow
~ Jr Chns Bethel McArthur Vtnton
Coor&lt;y , Jon Bobb POmeroy Meigs sr
Second Teem
Tom Bose Ganipolis Gallia Academy sr
Ben HooMelt Manetta 1r S1ephen Harder

SecondToom

Bnan Dixon McArthur Vtnlon County sr

Special Mention
Andrew Conko The Platns Athens Jr Joe
Shanken Manetta sr Josh Beebe V1ncent
Warren 1 Patrid&lt; Howe Logan 1r Jared

Ashlee

Jackson sr
Coachea of the Year

Matt Combs
McArthur VInton County Ron Warner

PW,w of the

Year. Donme Johnson
Gallipol~ GaNiil Academy
North-South Representative Donnte

Cooch of 1t1o Yea' lany Ryan
Warren
Player of lhe Year. S1acle Shrider

GaiiiB Academy

Dlvlalon nl

ArstTeam
Brant Derrow Wellston sr Jake Hale
Albany Alexander Jr Josh Sands Ironton
sr Daniel Thompson Olesapeake sr
Seth Cta1t South Potnt sr Brandon Rymer
Dawson Bryant Coal Grove sr Jeremy
Pntt Proctorv tie Fairland sr Br gham
Wag1nger Ironton soph

Hammond

Dak

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

Otfftee !lowe-~

HII Jr Lsa Perfy

F\Jin1 1'

~ Cra~
~nt 1r Andrea Ructnan Ironton Jr

Bridges Sou1h

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

Hill sopli Chelsea
Maridns Dawson Bryant Coal Grove tr
Kimmy Cremeans Wel stan sr Amanda
Slover S1ewart Federal Herling soph Tep1
Wolfe Stewart Federal Hocking Jr Brittar:~y
Ferguson Belpre soph H~ ary Patnck
Wellston sr

sr Andy

Keilee Guthne A bany Alexander lr Jarme
Slone Oak Htll sr ~ty Coats Belpre sr
coach of the Year Doug Hale Oak HII
Pl.....,. ol the Yee' A~ssa Hamrnoll(l
Oak Htll Lisa Perry Chesapeake
North-Soulh Repreoentallve L sa Peny

Chesapeake
Brant Derrow

Chesapeake

W..1~10n

North SOuth Repreaentaltve Brant
Derrow Wellston
Division IV
AratTeam
Shawn Hacker Ironton St Joe sr Cra1g
Randolph Ractne Southern Jr A J
Jenktns Glouster Trtmble sr Jason
Merrick, Crown City South Gallta sr Kyle
Gtlmore Wtllow Wood Symmes Va ley sr
Nathan Lee Grutt Reedsville Eastern sr
(;o(;y 011 ReedsvtHe Eastern Jr

Second Team
Josh Waugh Crown City SOuth Gallta sr
Alex Stmpson Reedsville Eastern sr
Jarod Shatter Wtllow Wood Symmes Valley
sr ChriS Elswick W Ilow WoOO Symmes
Valley sr Wes Burrows Rac1ne SOutham
1r Matt Townsend Waterford soph

Special Mention

oa~

Bruce Fouts Glous1er Tnmble 1 Jake
Nease Aac ne Southern Jr Curt Mows
Hemloc~
Mtller sr
Robert Cross
Reedsville Eastern Jr Just1n Holland
Wtllow wood Symnies Va lfj&gt;f Jr Kevm
Payton Hemlock Mtfter sr
Coach of the Year. Donnte Saunders

Dlvlolon IV

ArstTeam
tv1organ Weber Reedsv I e Eastern Jr
Jemifer Grandy Glouster Tnmble sopt1
Katie Sayre Ractne Southern sr Alyssa
Holter Reedsville Eastern sr Haley Drayer
Waterford soph Albry Hooper Gbusler
Tr mble sr ..UMe Trace GlOuSter Tn~
soph
Second Team
Deana Pull ns Racme Southern sr Leslie
Fbjd W llow WocxJ Symmes Valley 1r Erln
Weber AeedsVlle Eastem fr Ashley Dunn
Rac1ne Southern fr Rebecca Capper
Wtllow Wood Symmes Valley soph

Bridgene Thompson Wlklw Wooo Symmes

Valley soph
Eastern sr

Kat1e Robertson Aeedsyj e

Special Mention

Megan Coomes Willow Wood Symmes
Val ey soph Jesse Hupp Reedsvtne
Eastern soph Tiffany Bryant Wtllow Wood
Symmes Val ey. fr Jen Hayman Reedsvtlle
Eastem 1r Christina Harvey Ironton St Joe
r Em1l1e Bray Hemlod&lt; Mtller soph Raven
B~

Ironton 51 Joe lr

Coach

of the Year: lim S korski Glouster

Crown C«y South Galha

Tnll'llle

Player of the Year
Irenton St Joe

Player of 1he Year
Reedsville Eastern

Shawn Hacker

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

Morgan Weber

r

\ '\"01 '\( I \II '\ 1..,
ANNOUNI:E MEIVIS

C 1 Beer Ca rry Out permtt
for sale Chester Townsh p
Me1gs County send lett ers
ol mterest to The Dally
Senttnel PO Bo)( 729 20

rmeroy

1 male 1 female Border
Collie mtJ&lt; pupptes free to
good home (740)256 1652

Older Sheet musiC for gtve
away (740)446 9709

FOUND

Found Sat 3 6 Black w/ Tan
markmgs female mm ature
Doberman no collar m TNT
area 304 675-6541
Lost sma l female Jack
Russell Tamer last seen
Mon on J1m Htll Ad Reward

304 675 8159

New Shoes
Arriving DailyI

KIPLING
SHOE CO.
Shoes for the enure fam1ly

Rt

2Bypass

Point Pleasant, WV

304-675-7870
2nd Ave
740-441-90t0

Lost Red &amp; whtte Coon
hound
neutered
male
;,tfratd of g uns and men
Reward
fo
return

r

(7401339 1594

BUY, SEll, OR TRA

DILES

NEW· USED FARM AND
INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT

HEARIN
CENTER

" 74

Mllssey Ferguson • Farmhand
• Boba~t • Shenniu
New Idea • Rhino
New Holland • Cub cadet

DON'T MISS THE
SOUNDS OF SPRING!
• Free heorlnasuoenlngs.
• Audiolopsll o• staff
• Wide ronp of technolorf and
• Dl&amp;lte1and olhor hearinallds
• Amplified telophone and TV dO¥ices

MASON
FURNITURE
COMPANY
•Qualrry • Selewo11 • Set tree

4-773-5592
~e t

_MasoJl WV_

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.
1150 Eastern Avenue

!llm Gallipolis, Ohio •

44&amp;·9m or 44&amp;-2484

"L

To~&gt;pirtg

16" l
• D&lt;agnosl1c X Rays
• Personal

Rehab1htat•on
• Nutnttonal Counse ling

• Personal InJury
• Workers Compensation

• Most Insurance Accepted
lncludmg Umted Health

740-441-0200
1·888·451·2225

990 2nd Ave • Gallipolis

PIZZA

9.99

5

675-1812

Potnt Pleasant, WV

JJ3-5536
Mason, WV
Delivery reatrlctlona may apply Not valid
with other offer. Limited time

Fa~(740)446-8286

3137 Ingalls Road •Gallipolis
Rt 7SouthtoSt Rt 218,2 7
mites. Take riQht onto lnqatts
1 mile on lhe

Desk

Clerk

and
H ouse~eeper
needed
Ptf}ase apply at Budget Inn
Jackson Ptke Gall pol ts
OH No phone calls please

$15 44 $21 40/hr now htr
mg For app 1cat1on and free
governm ent JOb tnlo call
Amer can Assoc of Lab or

HELPWANliD
HIRING 2004 ,.. ..

HEALTH CARE SERVICES

ALLIANCE
Tracto r Trailer
Train ng Centers
Wythevtl le VA
Cal Toll Free

1 800 334 1203

r-r-1
"''
~M ERCURY
HOURS

Mon - Frl 9-7 Sal 9-5

www.turnplkeflm.com

'

AVONt All Areast To Buy or

Se 1 Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
Full ttme wa tress apply tn
person at th e Holiday Inn
Gallipolis

""

of
PreciOus Memo r es
M ddleport seeks appoint
ment sellers Work fro m
your home Good pay

"'

ga1ad 1he offenng
~

PRo.r~KlNAI

SERVICE:S

1 (9131599 8220 24 hrs
emp serv

IH II "1111

10

·---iii!liiOilii-.-J

3144

EOEIM/F/ON

3 bedroom
remade ed

P hys~al

Therapist end PAN

Occupational The raptst tor
Ohio and West Vlrgmla client
base Must be li censed both
10 Oh1o and West V rgtnla
We otler a com petitive

salary E0 E $5 000 SIGN
ON BONUS ~nd benefits lor
full ttme Physical Therapist
only P~ase send resume to
352
Second
Avenue

Gallipolis OH 46631 Al1n
Dtana Harless A N Clmlcal
Manager

$85 000 Irm (7401446 1168
or (7401446 0137
vat able upon request 740

41 1984

Dtrector needed for local
area to work wtth schools
PTA s and youth groups

e room
R1verv ewf Ac ces s
Photos
ww orvb com
Cod
0303 or ca ll (740)446

Tak tng apphcabons lor part
I me/f ull ltme green house
help Send resume to 6453
531
State Route 790 Scottown
Oh10 4567a
4 bedroom 2 112 Dath br1ck
home At 58a Close to
Travel work &amp; play seakmg town
(740)441 0504

energetiC people for fun Job $135 000 neg
opportumty earn money
wh1/e seemg the USA call a room A__anch fu I base
Robin 866 298-5132
m en1 3 bedroom 2 112

11211

SnuATIONS ·
WAN"IID

bat h 2 1 2 acre s tamtly
room
covered
deck
$99 000 No and contracts

(7401446 2196
Wtll care for elderly m my
home
Asststed
I vmg

740 388 0118
1

ScHooLS
INrn!UCTK&gt;N
All real eetete advertlelng
In thlt newtptper 11
aubject to the Federal
Fair Hou t lng Acl ot 1968
which mtket II Ulegal to
edvertlee any
prererence limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon b11ed on
race ector religion HIC
famltlal etatue or national
origin or any tnttlntlon to
make any euch
prftrence llmltaUon or
dlecrlmlnatlon

Wtlt do odd obs carpentry
floor covenng anyth ng you
need! Reasonably prtcedl

(3041882 2978
4633

304 377

3 bedroom hous e (mce &amp; on Beech Street Mt ddlepon
acre tot) m Pomeroy $450 bed room fu n shed apa rt
per

month plus

depost t

(7401992 0064

ment uttll cs patd depost
and referen ces No Pets

(740)992 0165

reqw red Cal 740 446 45t4
01 740 324a alte 5pm

Hm st HOIIl
G&lt;JOIJS

ThOmpsons Appl ance &amp;
Repa1r 675 7388 For sate
re condll oned
automat c
washers &amp; dryers efngera
tors
gas and e ect c
ranges a co 1d t oners and
wr nge washers W II do
repa rs on mator brands n
shop or at your home

$75 Co uch $75 Reel fler
1ocke 540 table &amp; 6 cha s
$125 \\l h te chest o draw
ers 560 gl der ocker 550
Skaggs Appl anCF!::.
76 V ne S eet
(740\4 46 7398

r

Cal (7401245 5859

$400 00 Ren1 $400 00 Harrtord WV Call(3041529
7062 or (3041525 3581
(7401949 7004
1~1\t\1"
FORECLOSURE!

HousE:s

FORRE:Nf

Golden Aetr ever AKC 1st
shots vets checked POP
Toy Schnussell under 5 lbs
1st shOt
vet checke d

(740)643 017 1
lab pupp es AKC reg s
te ed 3 black ma!es have
both parents
to good
homes S250 (740)949
23 11

570

1\'lt Sll'-\1
IJI..'&gt;TRl~ lfN"IS

l'\: 1.1\ .._,I()( h.

AN 11(}1 f"

610

Buy
or
sell
Atver ne
Anuques 1124 East Matn
on SA 124 E Pome10y 740
992 2526
Russ Moore
owner

I"'"' MISCEII ~NfJll'S
"lERCH INI)ISE
2 be aded Prom Gowns very
easonable
Eventn gs/
weeKends ca l 740 256
6535 or 304 576 4009
5 40 x30 Thermoguard w n
dows 5 40 x30 Storm w n
daws
Overs ze d g een
reel ner Play sta tion lu I
s1ze mauress &amp; boJ&lt; spr ngs
16 Chrome nms and new
t res (740)245 5017

f:\R\I
EQUIP\ I!,"

2950 John Deere w 148 end
oader 5100 hr S! 6 500
(7 401949 2072
Locust Post a d Gas + Wei
Swabb e ! 4 ~ 0 Case T act01
wt!h oade (740)245 5535

r

11\ISIO(l(

4H Fatr p g s
egtstered
purebred Yo rks t om good
breed
ready Apr 1 t st
reserve nowt (740)698 7086

5 y1/old Mare black w th
wh te face ve y wei broke
$950 10 yr old standard
breed geld 19 ve ry well
Agco Stmp 1c1ty
1718
broke $750 6 y old quarte
Gard en T1 acto
ag t res
norse ma re green b oke
hydro 50 deck 6"9 hou s $650 !3041'73 5103
1ew block n ce 52 100
Reg ste ed ANGUS an d
(3041675 5253
Crossbred bul s Top blood
I nes Sa te Run Farm
{740)2 86 5395
Jacks on
Ones
Treasu re loo k
up
Cons ignment
Shop www staterunlarm com
Proc torvtlle OH 17401886

r

1 bed oom apt stove/ refng
erator &amp; ullt tttes furnished

Full blooded Rottwetler pup
pes Parents on premtses
Cal {740)245 ::J017

I· I K~l Sl 1'1'1.11·,&gt;

r

r

r

Used re fr gerato 1n good 1\e\~ 7 p ece ludw g drum
conditiOn S t 00 ("40)985 set s lence s &amp; tt"lro ne
3538au A Ka
Chester black pad S650 00 askmg
Oho

3 bedroom 2 bath lor rent
Pleasa nt Val e) Apar tm ent
1n coun try (740)992 63 13
Are now takm g Appl ca t ons
(740)388 9081
3Br Tra iler Leta t $325 lor 2BR 3BR &amp; 48A
arc taken
New 14 wtde only $799 month $250 depostt All elec App tca t ons
ay
thru
Frtday
from
Mond
tr
c
water
pa
d
(304)882
down and only $169 53 pe r
900 AM 4 PM 0 11 tce IS 7868
month call Karcna 740 385 2858
Loca ted at 11 51 Evergreen
7671
Beauhtu l rver v ew tdeal for Or ve Pomt Pl€asant WV
JET
one or two people No pets Phone No 1s (304)675 5806
AERATION MOTORS
New 14 Wide On y $849 00 rete enc es (740)441 0 181
Repalfed New &amp; Rebu t In
EH O
down and only $164 88 pe r
Stock Call Ron EYans 1
Mob le home lor ren t tn Ta ra
Tow nhouse
month Call Ka ana 740
800 537 9528
countr y $350 per month Ap artments Ve y Spactous
385 7671
$ 100 depos 1 ~ 740 ) 99 2 2 Bedroo ms 2 Floors CA 1
3470
1 2 Bath New y Carpeted NEW AND USED STEEL
V ctor an 1736 sq ft 3 bed
Adu
lt Pool &amp; Baby Poo
N
ce
2
and
3
bedroom
Steel Beams Ptp e Re bar
room 2 ba th Slam ess steel
Pat o Start $385/Mo No Fo r
mob
le
hom
es
tor
rent
Co 1c ret e
A 19 e
appl ances 8 It flat ce hn gs
Stee
nc ud es water sewe &amp; Pets Lease Plu s Sec w tv Chan ne Flat Ba
Ha d1 lap wtth saddle roof 5
For
Ora ns
Depos1t Aequ ed Days Gra1mg
trash
no
pets
depos
t
&amp;
on 12 root p tch
po ch
740 446 3481
Even ng s Onveways &amp; Wa kv.ays L&amp;L
Co e s Mobtle Homes ~ 5266 $300 per month (7 40)992
Scrap Meta ls Open Monday
740
367
0502
2167
US 50 E Athen s Ohto
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
(740)592 1972 Where you
Tw n Rtvers Tower IS accept Frtday Bam 4 30pm Closed
get your money s worth~
tng appllcattons lor wa 1ng Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
list for Hud subs zed 1 br Sunday (740)446-7300
BUSINESS
1 and 2 bedroom apart ap artment call 675 6679
Or ental Sc een bought at
AND BUILDINGS
ments fu rntshed and untur EHO
Fla r Fu rn1ture patd $300 w11
ntshed
security deposit
SPALl
take $150 {:304)882 2436
Commerctal bulldtn g tor required no pets 740 992
FOR lb:r.'f
sale asktng $39 000 Great 2218
Peavy Gutter 505 eftocts
opportuntty to start a bu st
pedal
crate am phi er d1sto1
ness
or
to
lease 1 bed oom apt furmshed 2 store !rants n Ht stonca l
tt on effects pedal (740) 245
downtown
Pomeroy
Oh
fac
$290 $150 depOSit Call
AcQuts tons 91 Mtll St
mg the nver fo r rent 5017
Middleport OH Shown by (7401446 3870
Fatr cond1t on $2 500 Call

Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertiNm.nll for rill
eatllte which lain
vloletlon of the lew Our
r"dere ' '• hereby
Informed thtt all
dweUinge advertleed ln
thle new epa~r ere
available on an equal
opportunity btMt

3 bed only $9 500 for list
tngs call
1 800 719 3001 ext f144

10

IUK Rt N"l

Furn1 shed efftctency At utth
t es patd sha re bath 919
Good con
Ave
S 150/m onth
d1t1on $ 4 000 (740}37 9 For Rent
2 bed roo m 2nd
17401446
3945
2720
Cottage m Middleport $350
depos 1 and $350
per
1993 Redman 3brl2b1h month House to r sale on Gractous I v 19 1 and 2 bed
only $13 995 tncludes can land contact 1n M ddteport oom apa tme1 ts a t V11lage
and
Rrvers de
tral a r a nd de tvery cal $3 000 down and $265 per Mano r
Apa rtm ents n M ddleport
Nlkkt740 385 9948
month Call (740)446 8994 _
From S295 $444 Ca 7 40
992 50 64 Eaua Hous ng
t 999 Clayton mob le home ~ MOBil F. HOMFS
tor sale 14xBO 3 bedroom s
Opportun tte s
lOR RENT
2 baths u grey s1d1ng and
In town locat1on 1 bed oom
dk b ue shutte rs Has new
1Br Tra tl er Letart Fu mshed must have referen ces and
heat pump Comes With mce
AI u111hes pad $300 month depost Ca ll (740)44 6 0!39
s1ze fro nt deck A so comes
$300
depoS11(3041882 2858
wtth 2 outbwldtn gs app stze
Modern 1 Bed room apt Call
8x10 Home on rented lot 2 bed oom 2 bath CA
(7401446 0390
w I have to be moved Cal 1997 t4x7 0 1n country 5350
(7401446 4749
+ depostt + refe rences New 1 bedroom apt Pho e
740 446 3736
17401388 8371
2000 14X80 Oakwood
mobtle home 3 bedroom 2 2 bed room a I electnc a r
bath total electr c Call porch Very very r'l ce No N ce two bedrqom apart
pet s In Ga llpolls ..{740)446 ment s Large rooms Fully
(740)992 9263
equtped k tchen Ce nt m
1409(7401446 2003
5 used homes under
he tl t tng ; coo
ng
$2 000 00 W II help Wtlh 2 Bedroom no pets $245 Washer d yer
hookup
delivery Ca I Haro ld 740 month nc ud es water $1 DO 13041882 2523
depOSit (740)446 36 17
385 9948

WII ptck up trash lor freel Letart Falls OH 3 bedroom
Any ~lnd of 1unkl Beer cans house 1 bath detached 2 bedroom home ln country
Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT S pop cans to gtve away Call garage new roo! siding $400/month deposit &amp; refer
needs
Apply at 1354 Sco11 740 448 9954 740 w1ndows carpet &amp; ki tchen ences (7401446 2801
$65 000 00 (7401247 2000
339 3528
Jackson P1ke Galhpol s

Avg 46K8137886157

AI,&lt;\.Kil\11 NI""S

2 bedroom apt St At 160
16x80 s1tes avatlable $115 past Holzer $475 mo
pe r month tncludes water (7 401441 0194
sewer &amp; trash (740)992
Applicaltons being taken lor
2167
very clean 2 bedroom n
Beauttlully wooded 2 38 country selling yet close to
A 1 types at masonry brick
acres Green Twp $4 7 000 town Large kitchen and 11v
block &amp; ston e 20 yrs
mg room Wash er dryer
17401441 9516
El&lt;perlence free estimate
dishwasher
stove
and
1 304 773 9550 304 593
For Sale 79 106 Acres rel ngerato r mc1uded Water
1007
Atver v ew produc ng ott &amp; and garbage Included Tolel
gas well s Reduced to electric with AIC Tenant
Georges Portable Sawmill
$115 000 304 529 7106 pays electr c $400 depos11
don t haul your logs to the For Sale or Rent 3 bedroom
$475 per mo r'l th No pets
house In Pomeroy large after 5pm
m1f JU St call 304-675 1957
(7401446 2205 or (7401446
yard on dead end street
Jim s Carpentry end sma I Absolutely no animals No A vertront lots wtth 38 9585 ask for V1rg1n1a
land sce pmg Call (740)446- and contracts
Deposit camper great condition In

2506

School
Fund raising

2 bath new y
City schoo s

10

3 bedroom 2 bath newly
remodeled m count y very CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
n1 ce
on
Rt
160 ED &amp; AFFORDABLE'
$475+dep +ret (740)3 88 Tow nhouse
apartments
MOiiiLEHOMES
8371
and/o small houses FOR
FORSAU
RENT Call (740)4 41 t111
3 bed rooms 2 bat h dou
lo apphca11on &amp; nformatto
14x70 mobtle home 3 bed blew de gas heat &amp; coo ~ ng
room far condttiOn 50°, HUD approved TpiC wate For
Lease
Beau tif ully
remad e ed
$3200 &amp; Eastern Loca l Schools restored un1urn1 Shed two
$400 per month Contact 1 bed room apa tm ent ave
(3041773 9599
502 943 0386
lookmg th e Ctty Park and
14x70 mob le home wh te
3 yr old 3br212bath Ave All new appliances 1
std ng black shmgled oaf
ba ths
$600 rna
excel ent cond lion all e ec 1/2
and shutters 2 bedroom 2
Secu ty
depos t
tr1c 2 1/2 car garage 10
1f2 bath nc ud es 101(22
mtnutes from Holzer Porter Referen ces requ red No
covered porch underpm
area $750 mo nth $750 pets Ca I 7 40 446 2325 or
n ng and gutters $14 000
deposit
reteren ces 740 446 4425

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? (7401388 9717
No Fee Unless We Wm
1 888 582 3345
1973 Champton

(7401992 4294

z6o

little as 5 hours a week And
thiS IS FUN Want to learn
how? Give me a call K m
Ba lltng er
Independ ent
Beaut1 Control Consultant

HOMES
FORS.Y.E

HOMEOWNERS'
Limited offer 2 95% Loan
For sate or rent Bus ne ss Rate 1 bel teve you wtlt lmd
Property 2 640 sq f1 bu ld thiS s he lowest rate avatl
ng olf street park ng aiJie anywhere L1m ted offer
Corne r lot 3rd &amp; V ne Nattonwtde lender Any
Gall tpol s OH (740)446 cred t 1 888-581.o3328

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bus ness w th pe o
le you know and NOT to
end mon ey through the
rna J unt I you have mvest1

tJ

""'"P''perl

OI~'OR1liNITY

8030

Now you con hove borders and graphtcs
~
added to your classtfied ads
~~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

POLICIES Ohio Val!ev Publishing reserves !he righiiO edit rejecl or cancel any ad at any 1 me Errors mus1 be reported on the I rat day ol
Tnbune-Sent nel Reg1aler will be reapone ble tor no more than the cost of the space occupied by the error and only the l rst nsert on We shall not be 1 I
any loss or eno:penae that reaulta from the pubhcal on or om •ss on of an ad11ert sement Correcttoo will be made o lhe I rs t ava lable ed I on • Bo~
are always confldanttal • Current rate card apphes • All real estate adYerttaementa are subJeCt to lhe Federal Fair Housing Act ot 1968 • Th a
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE standards We w II not knowtngly accept any advert1smg 1n vlola!Jon ot the law

8USINE.'-'i

HO~lllS
·
Sales Reps needed lor loca l
FOR SALE
Chrtsl an owned company
Rewardmg career for select
ed mdtv tduals Great pay 1600 sq ft 3 yr old Ranch
Expenenced
Accounttng Work
on
your
own style home 2 1/2 car garage
person 1n accounts payable 17401992 4294
3 bedroom arge kttchen
receivable payro ll taxes
hv ng room 2 1/2 baths
SH URI I\ OH IC f US
quarter reports &amp; G L Send
laundry room front porch
AI~UO\ I f) IJI'}o NINGS
resume to CLA 54a c/o
all etectnc Ve ry well layed
$(1 (1011111
Galhpohs Tn bune Galt polls
out beautiful lntenor on 1
OH 45631
112 acres 1348 Prospect
Wackenhut Corp has multi Church Ad Wont last long
u
tm e sa es person
pie opemngs at AEP Gav1n at only Si 15 000 (740)446
ust have eJ&lt;penence
Power Plant fo r temp cover 4514 or (740)446 3248 after
ardwareflumber Apply a
homas Do It Center age that could last up to s1x 5pm
1
months Must have HS d plo
2BR
House
LIVIng
&amp; Din ng
ma or GED and valid Dnvers
Room
K1tchen
&amp;
1/2
base
license
and
clean
po
lice
Looktng for 8)(tra 1ncome
w tthout alot of extra work? record Please call Capt ment approx 1 9 acre
You could earn $1 000+ Chuc~ Slewart at 740 925 $32 000 approx 1/4 mtle out
month whtle Dnly work ng as 30 15 M F BA 3P to apply Bud Cha111n Ad 13041675

(7401446 3358
MANAGER IN TRAINING

No Experience Needed
Placement Dept
F nanclng Available
CDl.JTra1nlng

With new vehkle purchase.
See Tllmplke for details.

JIVIDEN'S "FARM"
EQUIPMENT
(740) 446-1675

POSTAL JOBS

lrluge yard sa le ma ny many (7401245 9342
terns
tn stde rat nlshtne
LPN
Destred
March 10 &amp; 11 8 OOAM I I .l.f.NLf.I
?? CCCU Fellowship Hall EnJOY Flex1ble Scheduling &amp;
Hartford W VA Watch for A Reward ng Career In A
Hom eli~e At mosphere Many
BenefitS Compel l tve Pay
WANTED
ProfeSSIOnal App ICBnts May
IUBUY
App y Da tly Man Sun 9
4pm Ravenswood Caro
Absolut e Top Dol ar U S Cente r 111 3 Washtngton
S11ver
God
Coms S1 Ravenswood WV (304 I
Prootsets Dtamonds Gold 273 94a2 (Ac ross A1 tch e
R1ng s
U S Cur ency
Brtdge Rt 2 N
Last
MTS Con Shop 151 Bus ness On R1ght) Com e
Second Avenue Galhpo 1s Jam Our Teaml You II Be
Glad You Ddl
I \iPI(n\11 \t
Make 50% seltng Avon
o..,l 1{\ I( I '"i
Lt mtted
t1me
ONLY

NEWAVON
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645
Joyce 304 675 6919
Ap rll 304 882 3630
AS SEEN ON TV
INSTRUCTION
lEARN TO DRIVE
tRACTOR TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM

~ Gallipolis
• JQey D.

www tnfocision com

c urrently
has
a
I au nd r y t hou sekeep In g Gelllpollt Career College
supervtsor In lralntng pos
(Careers Close To Home}
tton open Rotating schedule Call Todayl 74D-446 4367
w th on call dutl e&amp; required
1 800 214-0452
Must possess strong super www ga111po tscereerco lege eom
vlsory skills be hard work Accr•dl ed Member Accred ling
1ng and dependable Benefit Council lor lnc:tepe ldenl Oollegea
and Sct1oola 12748
package available EOE
Send appltcatlon/resume to
The Arbors At Galllpo Is
Admin stratlve
Asatstant
170 P necrest Drive
needed MS work &amp; excel
ATIN linda Dennis
,equlred
Contact Kelly
Barn Removal
(7 401446 9088
Servtces {866)286 47n
All references &amp; full tnsu r
Med Home Health Agency
II
An Excellent way to earn
Inc
seeking
full ti me
money Lets ta k the

IS•.•

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

Y \R() SALE·

1"10

Overbrook Nurstng and
Rehabthtahon Center ts cu r
ently accepttng appltcatmns
lor canng and dedtcated
Stat e
Tested
Nursmg
ASSIStants We offer i 2 hour
shtft s compettl1'18 wages
and an eJ~cellent bene ftls
p ac~age Interested apph
cants contact Cassy lee
Sta ff
Development
Coord nator a1 (740 )992

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Days Pr1or To
Publication
Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thursday for Sundays Pap&lt;&gt;r

• All ads must be prepaid'

HEt P WANTEIJ

POSTAL JOBSI
UP TO $1 047 71 WEEKLY
FAEE CALLI FOR INTER
VIEW AND REGISTRATION
INFORMATION SIGN ON
BONUS
1ST
100
CALLERS
SELECT
AREAS 1 800 892 5549
EXT 92 7 DAYS

Ribar
Chiropractic
Center

YARDSALE

POMEROY /Mmlll.F

110
.
1

Sisters

I

Lll&lt;rrAND

l:•o

1 877 46H247 ext 2455 6472

C11go Ltttte Johns St At 141
Centenary Full and part
ttme pos t!IOns avat lable
Beneltts tnclude ra 1se after
90 days 401 K ove rt me pay
for holi days &amp; patd vaca
Free to good hOme klttensl !tons Expenence helpful but
1 blackl wh te the ot her
not necessary Apply 1n per
Htmalayan/Mal ono
mtK son Monday Fnday 9am 6
Please call (740)446 2738
pm

r

'''
•••

v_a11 10r somemmg you
bel eve 1n and make
great money dotng tt'
Ca I on behalf of ma or
Non Proftt and Poht cal
organtzattons and earn ~~
to $8/hour plus bon uses
We also offer pa d tra nmg paid holidays and
pa1d vacatons
Cal today to schedule an
mtervtew

Found Small do g part
Yo !(te/Pomera n
Found
along A t
7 S? Call
(740)256 1438
&amp;
gtve
descnptlan

uu

prep.u-auon, and recalled some
of h1s own expenences
I was fortunate enough
when I was growmg up, I had a
from Page 81
brother that wa~ one year ahe,td
of me,'' he explamed Th10ugh
"Our s1ster combmauon IS
football and basketball we
very comph mentary of each
coul d not only challenge each
other Morgan plays on the other, but we also had the
pcnmeter, and Enn plays opportumty to go through
mstde, ' srud Eastern coach plays, offenses, defenses and
R1ck Edwards Enn IS st1ll JUst
scoutmg We could qu1z each
a freshman trymg to find her other and make sure we knew
way some mghts but has come what was go•ng on
a long way And Morgan IS a
Eastern laces the only s1ster
two-year starter for us "
less team m Morrall R1dgedale
Morgan Weber, a first team
Comc1dentally the Lady Eagles
All-Southeast Dtstnct selecuon,
also faced the only non-Toaverages 14 &amp; pomts and 7 4 Valley Conference team at last
rebounds per game Hono~able week's
d1 stnct
tourney,
mentton all diStrict honoree
Rtchmond Dale Southeastern
Erin Weber avemges 7 2 ppg
Eastern could have three ~ets
and 6 6 rpg
of sisters on the vars1ty next
"It's pretty mce to have, 11
season when JUmor forward
makes 11 fun " Edwards sa1d of Jenmter Hayman's s1ster moves
havmg s1sters on the team
up
"They lighten thmgs up for
'Next yew, we'll go to three
each another once m a while
- the Haymans the Hupps and
"Another thmg, those are hfe- the Webers,'' Ed-.-ards concludume memones somethmg the
two of them w1ll share lorever, • ed
Eastern Iaces R1dgedale
he added
Thursday at P1ckenngton North
Edwards .1greed that h,tvmg"
H1gh School begmnmg at 6 16
s1bllng as a teammate helps pro
pm
vtde .m advantage 111 game

~::0~::::

Dally In-Column 1 00 p m
Monday-Friday far Insertion
In Next Day s Paper
sunday In-Column. 1 oo p m .
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Special MentioO

Jordan Lackey

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Sou1h

Second Team

Kei sa DaVIS

Wellston sr Ryan M11ter Wellston Jr Tom
Pemberton Dawson Bryant Coal Grove sr
Derek Bobo Albany Alexander sr Ed
LeMaster A bany A exander sr
Coach of the Year Norm Persm
Ptayar of the Year

Dave

Chesapeake sr Sara Hacker Ironton
soph Whllney Hale Oak H1JI sr Alist1a

Spoclal Mention
sr

Staete

ArstTeam

Alyssa

Nate Eaton Belpre sr Joe Zornes
Ironton 1r David Herman Wellston Jr
Doug Parsons Belpre Sf Kendall Staggs
Proctorville Fatrland sr Denn1s Gaga
Ironton soph P:J Rase Chesapeake
soph
Justin Workman South Point

Vmen1

OMolon Ill

Second Team

S1apla1on Chesapeake

To Place
\lr:ribune
Sentinel
1\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-aooa
or Fax To (740J 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

v""""'

Warren
North South RepresentatiVe
Shrider Vncent Warren
Assistant Coach of the
Weber ReedsVII e Eastern

Aallotent Coach of lhe Yoa' Ad&lt; Ash

'&lt;:ou111y OH

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

SpeclaiMentloA
The Plams Athens Jr

~roe

5t

Marlel1a

Pllmeroy MeiQS

G~ll

Knsten Berry Proctorville Fa rland If
Bnanna D8VIS ProctoM le Fairland sopt1
VICtona Lealt Jackson soph Sammy
P18108 Pomeroy Meigs Jr Alex HBf'mai'Vl
Logan Jr MooiCa Barner Ironton Rock Hill
sr Kan Adkins Gallipolis GaHa Academy sr
Holly Priderrore McArthur VtntonCounty
Tiffany Patterson McArthur Vtnton County ~r

Humphreys Jackson Jr Jared Swan
Chesh.re River Valley sr Trav~s Downard

Gall1p&lt;&gt;~

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

Kan James Ga!ipolis Gallia Academy r
Kay!a Jewitt McArthur Vntoo County sr
Hay! e Sowers McArthur V nton County ~
Lyndsey Lemon Vmcent Warren sr Malle
Bamer Ironton Rock Htll sr All son Angle
Logan soph

Cheshire RIYOI Valley Jr Dako1a OeWm
Pome~ Meigs sr B.J Hughes, Logan Jr
K C Chns11r611 lromon Rock ~11 soph

Johnson

\lr:ribune - Sentinel - 1\egister
CLASSIFIED
We Cove-"'

•

Girls

Boyl
Dlvltlon I and I

www.mydailysentlnel.com

r

"
" &amp;
GR\1~

000# bales mtM gmss
cover allal1a orchard grasc.
some barn stored S15 S25

1740)698 276o

4X5 round bales covered
good or ass hay 5 12 50
Square
ba es
most y
orc hard
grass
$2 so
(740 )99 2 2623
Ba n stored hay BOO lbs
rour'ld bales $ 10 OO!bale
Square bales (barn sto1ed)
$1 75 pe Oale 740 742

1008
Hay lor Sale 1sl &amp; 2nd cut
tmg $2 00 a ba e (304)675
72 17
Hay tor sale Round &amp;
square
ba es
Delano
Jacksons Farm 304 675
1743 or 740 446 1104

Square DRies alfalfa cover
orchard grass 1st &amp; 2nd
Woodbu ner K1ng E.-ce lent
cu lt ng good t)orse hay
Off ce space downtown condtt on $325 Used carp et 52 50 per ba e Paul R Ka rr
Pomeroy appro~ 1800 sq and paddmg greer'l 13 Chester Oh
112ft )(12ft 3ftx14ft $65
It street level near cou I
house $450 mo (740)592 17401388 8609

17401589 7122

1758
\II IU 11\'\ltiSI

HOUSEHOI ()
GooDS
18 cub1c It Roper refndg
exc co nd 304 675 7937
Almond Frost free relrlgera
tor
Mag1c Che f $100

r

BlllLDIN(,
SUPI'LU:S

Tobacco Plants order now to
gu a antee
early
spnng
Block bnck sewer ptpes plant ng
Dewhurst
wmdows lintels etc Claude GreenhOuse (304)895 3789

iii~~a~i/o~;.4;~;.2
,; ;.:;,;;~5;.G.;;;.;.~.'d.e_O.....,H lili#J.j@pi!i+
Aum;
t~.,___f"{i i)~-s~.~-1. . . .1

ro

FOR SAL~

8 month old bo)(er house •
(7401446 9066
tra ned
lat ldoc~ed
a $5001 Hondas
Chevys
Good Used Appli ances shots ears/c lipped very Jeep s
etc
!
POLICE
Re cond 1t a ned
and smart
$175 00
cal IMPOUNDS Ca s tram
Was hers (304)675 5212
$500 For lt sllngs 1 BOO 719
BEAUTIFUL
APART Guaranteed
Ra nge s
and
MENTS AT BUDGET Drye s
:}001 ex t 3901
PRICES AT JACKSON Ref rigerators Some sta I at AKC 5 wee~ o d LabradOI
ESTATES 52 Westwood $95 Skaggs Appliances 76 Retnevers only two le ft 1 1963 Bu c~ Skylark orlg1nal
blac~ fe male t yellow ma te
aluminum motor 2 speed
Dnve from $344 to $442 Vme St (740)44 6 7398
shots
&amp;
wormed
G8W
auto Call 740 441 9354 or
Wal~ to shop &amp; movtes Cal
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark EASTER GIFTS! $250 00 740 645 1502
740 446 2568
Equal
Chapel Road Porter Oh o EACH (304)773 5103
1999 Honda Accord EX V6
(7401446 7444 1 877 830
Cottage Apt on L ncotn Ave 9162 Free Estimates Easy Four month old Ferret vac 2d (red) all power leather
90K m•les
n Pt Pleasant $275 00 a ltnanet ng 90 days sa me as ctnated w th cage and all moon roof
man ask lor Nancy 304 cash VIsa/ Maste r Card accessones very lovmg (3041675 0226 0 (3041773
5235
$12513041675 1175
675 5540 or 304 675 4024 Or1ve a l ttte save atot

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March 10, 2004
Wednesday, March 10, 2004

Witt\, A Daily

tioel

BULLETIN BOARD

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

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Alder

To place an ad Call 992-2156
Business Card ... $25 .00/column inch per month

'

I

BENNETT'S

NOW OPEN

I'm starting a fund for

SIDERS
JEWELERS

William Levi
Yates.

304-773-6060
Hrs- M·F 9 :30 · 5 30
Sat. · 9 :30 • 5 :00
Sunday Closed

Watch 1or our
Grand Opening

• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen.
'
• Free Estimates
• S &amp; I 0 y r Warranties
• Huge I nventory
• Vanguard Vent less Fireplaces '«~,

'\!·

----

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ENTERPRISES
Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
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Water and Utilities

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BASKET GAMES

Regu lar Priced items
(Excludes Pnce Just R1ght)

Bidwell-Porter
Elementary Gym

EXTRA 20% OFF
Red &amp; Yellow S11ckerJtems

I

6:30

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Sponsored by: Gal lia County
Democratic Party

875-2457

Mamttcvu.Es

1990 Ni ssan Pa thfinder, V-6 1997 Dodge Neon, runs gg Monte Carlo, $4,500; 98 1g97 Honda Nighthawk 750,
auto. 12 1K. $2.695: 1996 good, 5 sp., 4 cyl, Iron! body Otds Achieva. $2,300; 96 low mil es. looks &amp; runs like
Saturn . S2,7g5: 1997 Neon dam age, $700.
Sport. 2D. 68K. $2.695. 5544

(74Q)gg2-

Pont. Grand Am , $2.200; 00 new. [740)247-2031
Dodge Neon . $3.000; 97
Othe1s in stock. we take - - - - - - - - Neon, $2.000 ; ge Fo rd 1ggg Harley Sports fer . 883
1ggg Wrangler Jeep Soft Ran ger, $1 ,900; 95 Fo rd Cu stom black , 5,000 miles.
trades.
top, Hard doors , low mileage F150. $2.500,97 Dodge PU. s1.ooo. caiii740i367-7623.
COOK MOTORS
1304)675-6368
(740)446-0 103
$4.300: 99 Mere. Cougar. 1999 Honda 400 EX. stage
as-is. $2.500; 95 Chev.
1991 Acura l egend. Good 2001 Mitsubishi Eclipse, GS, Conversion van . ra1ded-roof. 2 Jet Kil . 4-new tr res. very
good condition, $2. 400.
condition , $5,900. (740)256- 80 ,000
miles.
$8 ,500 , TV. stereo. etc. very nice.

(740)441-9516.

6392.

080

dillon, spoiler. No tran smis·

sian. $600 . (740)446-7857 .

II &amp; I) i\utu ~a l1 · .~
lh·~· · I hO N.
(7 lni · J. · Ih~ t1Hha.

L~ncer,

4
door. 5 . spee9, loaded
Factory warranty. very cle3n .

1993 Ford Probe SE . elec- $8.900. 740-256-6936
jric blue, body e~ecellent con-

(740)446-7730 .

53.000.

1993 Firobird. E)(cellent con - 2002 Mitsubishi

dition. $3.975 .00.
(740)742-7004

92 BuiCk Park Ave . $2500

(304)675-72 17

720

ThiJ&lt;;KS
H)J.l

(304)675-3986

1996 Dodge Stratus. 92 ,000
m iles. New b attery, brakes,
ti res.
$ 1,800
080

1740125&amp;1424.

C.AIIIiell\ir Su1jm

TrY the
Classifieds!!

VT1100. excelle nt condition.
one mvner. Asking $5.300,
(740)446 -7668 no answer
laave a messag e

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'x10' 610'x20')

(740) 992-3194
992-6635
lloA:rs &amp; MmuNs
I'OR SALE

77 Harley Sportster 1100cc.
motor reb uill. good condi- 1911 Fish er fu lly loaded
1987 N ISSB['I 2Wd picku p, tion, $4500 080 (must sell
w/trailer 75 Hp axe. cond .
reduced $1 .650 (304)675- to get w1fe at my case )

$4000 (304 )593-1994

(740)949-4601

Ni ce 1996 Dodge Dakota
112 ton, 94.000 miles . Priced
$2 .600 . (740)256-1 102 ask
for Jr.
Drum· set, $300.

VANS&amp;

For
ANew Home?

200 1 Honda Shadow Spirit,

St\1.1·:

1993 Geo Tracker 2WD. 99 Pont 1ac Grand Prix . Red
4cyl, Ssp, HARDTOP, 101K 4dr 47.000 miles garage 5253
exc .
condi tion
miles
$1900
0.8 .0 . kept

(304)675-7386

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

4-WDs

·----Oiiiiiiiiiiorl
tt. slide out. Excellent condi-

van. Shor t wheel base. V6

3.0. Asking $1,200 080.
(740)379-9122.

tion, $14 .000. (74 0) 2566392.

llo.&gt;\TS &amp; I\1(Yf011S
Hlll SAl~:

97 Ford conversion van. rear 17 Fl. C hr is Craft. 85 model. 1995 Sun light pop-up l r'Uck
bed. ca ptains chairs .· eiE!ctric 140 horse. Good con dition. camper. li ght weight, roof air,
window. doors. TV/VCR 53,000. (740)4111 -1333.
toilet/shower inside, sink,
hook-ups, exc ellent condi tio n, reta ils at over $5700 , t9ee ~a ss Tracke r. 70 Hp,
must se ll $4700 OBO ready fo r fishing , $3 ,200,
(740)992-0219
(7 40)742-2877

3/burners stove,' heater. trig,
water heater, awnin g &amp; add i·
tion al out side shower super
nice $4500 (304)67 5-2949

ed with this conveyance .
Deed Reference:
Volume 282, Page
1003. Meigs County
Deed Records and
Volume 266, Page
919 , Meigs County
Deed Records.
Property Address:
51761
Bald Knob
Road, Long Bottom,
OH 45743
Parcel
No . 07·
00703.00
A deposit ot a certi·
lied check. payable to
the Sheriff, or cash
for ten (1 0%) percent
of the purchase price
will be required at the
time the bid Is accepted .
The lull price shall
be paid to the SheriH
within thirty (30) days
from the date ot sale
and on failure to do
so, the purchaser
shall be adjudged In
contempt ot courl,
Apprai sed at S20,0DO-OO Terms ol sale,
c'sh .
RALPH TRUSSELL,
Sheriff
AMY L. ARRIGHI,
Attorney
1940
Huntington
Building
.
925 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44116
(216) 621.()()40
(2) 25, (3) 3, 10

Is requesting propgs·
als lor Title Ill D
Disease Prevention
and Health Promotion
Services In Athens,
Hocking,
Meigs,
Monroe,
Morgan,
Noble, Perry and
Washl~gton counties.
Disease Prevention
and Health Promotion .
Programs need to
meet the needs ol
medically
underserved, low-Income
Individuals 60 years
ol· age or older.
Details ol allowable
services end funding
are Included In the
RFP. Small, minority·
owned and woman
business enterprises
are encouraged to
submit
proposals.
Completed proposal
deadline• 5:00 p.m.
April 23, 2004.
Call
Deborah
Brown, Planner at
(740) 374-9436 lor
RFP packet.
(3) 10 1TC
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby
given that on March
2, 2004. the Director
ol Ohio EPA and the
Meigs
Coun-ly
Commissioners
("'ra'apondent")
entered Into, Final
Findings end Orders
to resolve violations
at the Meigs County
Landfill located on
Salisbury Township
Road 207 in Meigs
County, Ohio. These
Findings and Orders
re quire
the
Respondent to record

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Area Agency
on Aging at Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional
Development District,
245 Millers Lane,
Marietta, Ohio 45750

1

Pass

1•

Pass

Pass
Pass

3•

Pas s
Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

S'~fS

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for youl

Construction

J&amp;L

m

Paying up to $400
per ac re for Good
Hunting land i n
L eb anon Twp.

or

Will

lease up to
$5.00 per acre.

Call 740-592-4323
Ce ll 740-541-4323

• Vinyl·Siding
•Roofing
• Rlown Insul ation
• Hoom Additions
• vinyl
Replacc nwnr
Windows

\ I IH H'l S

810

Hmu:
IMI'RO\'EMt'NTS
BASEMENT

Gravely

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

pd 1 1110

!

YOU FELLERS G'WAN
OUTSIDE AN' WORK
AN APPYTITE 1! .

'
•••

i'

LANDSAI&lt;ES !! IT'S JEST A FIGGER
OF SPEECH - - _____.c:::::.:::::-GO PLAY .-

•

Snapper

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Cnndnr Slrcel

l'umerny, Ohiu

992-2975

THE BORN LOSER

Lawn mul Gardeu J:'quitnn efll is 'our
bw~ilw.~ s. not our ,·ideli11l

,..

i:

1

"'l

TI-\OUGI--\T

YOU

1--\1'-0 SWORN

p--

L D\ D

H-\\S IS SW.ICI'LY

orr D~t.l ~Kit'~&lt;:. com:.t.J

FOIZ 1&lt;\I:.DIC. It-&lt;N....
PURI'OSC..':I O~L'( I

Mann ing K. Roush
Owner
0 en Mon -Fn 9·5
.. .... ..

Pro Lawn

-..

~.~

Care
free
Estimates

··- ......

I'm out
on a limb!"

i

1

'

/

BIG NATE

"'Notme!

My money is w1th

.

Bryan Reeves
New H.omes,
Room Additions,
Garages , Pole
Buildings , Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742·341

$8e .
··~\·

'

.

RockY~~: RJ 1' ·

. .Hbp'p .
,_

..

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
dEAMlESS
GOnER

50 IF TilE BALL 15

Athens

'

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

YOUNG'S

• Room Addition • &amp;
Remodeling

• New Geragea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pai nting
• Pa!io Bnd Porch Dec ks

Reduced Winter Rates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Vears Local

l-IE FLIPS IT TO THE
SECOND BASEMAN
WHO Tl-lROI.iiS IT TO
FIRST FOR TI-lE
DOUBLE PL.AI' !

---~----

&lt;.-.:-

BETTY

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's #I C h evy, Pontiac: Buick. Old s

&amp;

Got Ju~
Giving ~20 ea.
for automobiles.
A~ Call (740) 992-0413
~

or(740)992·1071

lrucksV'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

((,.J.r-4tll

S~ORTSTOP,

'' DOU6L.E PLA'I ... "
50VND5 LIKE A 600D
NAME FOR A COOKIE ..

J/10/04

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

949-1405

992-6396
992·2272

-j
...

*free Estlmateb

Mlni·Storage

1-lrr TO TI-lE

~~.~~,.

Cws,h

NOW IUNTINCi
,\-,J

PEANUTS

··!

IMPORTS

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

Or ons.

BISSEll

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Repla(.!e mcn t
Windu ws • Roo fing
COMMERC IAL and
RESIDENTIAL

GARFIELD
PON'i YOU HAVE:
ANYTHING TO DO?

FREE ESTIMATES

If no answer, Lv mMgt.

7 40·992· 7599

Advertise in this

Space for
$50 per month

~'R~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232

-'Birthday:

Some of your greatest opportu nities in the
year ahead are likely to develop through
lin~ s you 'd le ast eKpect. Flow in the direction the soh winds ta ke you. instead ot trying to light your way th rough sform s.
PISCES
(Feb
20- March
20)
Discuss ions with friends today shoul dn 't
be allowed to reach th e level ol serving as
a forum lor the United Nations . Nobody's
views will win any argum ents.
ARIES (March 2 1-Apri l 19)- It's natura l
for us to protect tha t which wo feel is ou rs.
but today you might have to be careful not
to be unreasonably concerned about
being taken advantage of and forsake a
good investment.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Remember
that ever ything is negotia ble, so be carefu l
not to take such an unyielding posi tion
today that you won 't even listen to o ther
possibilities. You would be shooting yourself in the loot.
GEMINI (M ay 21-June 20) Usual ly
yau·re never hesitant about be1ng o f service to others wheneve r possible. Yet today,
wh en someth ing is asked of you , you
c ou ld take the po sition ot it b e1ng imposed
upon .
CANC ER (June. 2 1-July 22) - Do what
you can today not to rni11 together any
friends who hold divergent points o f view.
II you do. you might end up be1ng th e one
who has to p lay referee to a bunch o t hotheads.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- Be on guard as
to how you mi ght react or respond if som eone who like s to ca ll the shots for everybody sta rts iss uing you direcllves on how
to run your lite_ Keep ·your temp er in check
V IRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Although
you might be dying to tell someone about
you r latest bnght idea, keep it to yourself if
the only perSon arouhd is one wh o tac~s
vision . This individual could put a damper
on it .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Rightf ully so,
you might get a li ttle miffed today when
someone who owes you money starts
buying expensive th ing s instead of pay1ng
you baok.
SCO RPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - It you hope
to further an mterest today that is important to you, you'd betfer make certain
there is also :oomet hing in it l or others if
you e,;pect them to help you accompli sh
your purpose .
S AGitTARIUS t.Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) - Don't
expect to be able to relax and enJoy yoursell today if you haven 't yet taken care at
a responsibility that you k now is in much
need of att enti on. Get you r duti es out of
the way first.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J an . t 9) - II you
plan to Par ticipate in some form of strenuous sport or activity today, be particul arly
care ful not to exert you rself beyohd your
endurance level or be ready to lace aches
and p ains tom orrow
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Don't
give any credence today to cril •cal comm eri ts being voiced by Bn associate who
you know IS envious ol you r accom plishment s. Le1 this person eat tlis or her own
sour grapes.

'

• -•.. ;i

Graph

By Bernice Bede Osol

~ ' • J:!t~ nU&lt;I m Ollln ~"" I\IV

.. _.

Astro-

Thursday,·ft!larch 11 , 20D4

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services.
\ Box 1B9, Middleport. OH
'-.,, Phone : 843-5264 •

l

~

es.

G

Call

;~~~~====~

Edmond Rostand , a French poel and
playw rigtlt. wrote. "I recoi l. overco me with
tile glory of my rosy hue and the knowl edge th at I, a mere rooster, have made
the sun rise."
We usually pl ay bridge well after the sun
has risen . And some player s spend thei r
who le l ime assuming !he sun is shi nin g
on them. with every SUit-split favo rable
and all fi nesses successful. The more
realistic expect some storms . and lhey try
to lind a dry route home.
On this deal . you (South) are 1n three notrump. West leads the club two . How
would you plan th e play?
When one partner shows a long minor
suit, the pair' s priority is to try· to reach
three no-trump. So, with no c lub stopper,
North rebids three spades. This makes
no statem ent about the lengths of his
major s. Luckily, South had a club stopper.
so he bid three no-trump.
There seem to be 10 easy tricks via one
spade. one heart. seven diamonds and
one c lub. What could possibly go wrong?
O ne declarer found out very qu1ckly He
grabbed the lirsttrick and cashed the dia·
mond ace. It was su ddenly rai ning feli nes
and cani nes.
·
The more cautious play er is willing to
saC ri fice an overtrick to ensure tli s contract. Alter winning the lirst, second or
th ird club trick, he leads a low diamond
from tla nd . Then he puts on his sungla ssHowever, if you are competing in a duplicate pai r eve nt, you cann ot afford this
safety-play. A 4-0 split happen s le ss th an
10 percent of the time, and overtri cks are
the name of the game. Go for the ma)(im um.

"I feel like

ADVERTISE
R.B.
YOUR
TRUCKING
BUSINESS
HAULING :
• Limestone
IN THE
•Sand
CLASSIFIEDS • Dirt

a notation on the
deed to the landfill
property that will
notify any potential
purchaser ot the
property that the land
has been used as a
sanitary landfill taclll·
ty; conduct regular
Inspections ot the
landfill to Identity and
correct any leachate
outbreaks,. maintain
the landfill cap aya·
tam, and Install a
leachate collection
system .
Respondents
may
request
additional
time to perform the
required tasks by
submitting to the
Director tor approval
documentation
demonstrating
a
financial Inability to
perform the required
work and documents·
tlon demonstrating a
good faith effort on
behalf ol the respondent
to
pursue
financing.
These Orders are
sublaci to all rules,
regulations,
and
specified conditions.
Persona wlalng to be
on Ohlo'a EPA Inter·
ested parties mailing
list tor this project
must
submit
a
request In writing to
Ohio EPA, Division of
Solid and Infectious
Waste Management ,
Attn:
Systems
Management
Unit,
P.O.
Box
1049 ,
Columbus,
Ohio
43216·1049, tel.: (614 )
644-2621.
(3)10 1TC

BARNEY

GRAVELY TRACTOR

General Conlracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing •All types

740·992·7953

POUT.

992·2772

• Ct,rtalnlt'l'&lt;l Viny l
llcplact'mcnt
Windows
• Uferlmc \Yarranty
• Glass • Vinyl
• All Working Parts
•Low E Argon
• Fusion Welded
Corner s
•0-10 t Unitl'&lt;l
Inches
S250.oo
Thru April

Do not assume
everything is rosy

A SPOIL~D

,flAT--· S~~ ALwAYS
GHS Ttf~ g~Nf:FIT
_(r?-. /
6F Ttf~

750 Easl State Street Phon e (740)S93-b671
Athens , Ohio
·
A Berter War. E\·en ' Dm ·

~a:l'lflil@li

Pass

Ea'St

Opening lead: • 2

45771
740..949-2217

Sunset Home
Construction
One, NA, Plaintiff, vs.
Terry L. OHman, et al ,
Defendants , Ralph
Trussell , Sheriff, shall
offer for sale at public
auction 104 East
Second Street In the
city
Of Pomeroy,
County ol Meigs and
State ol Ohio on
Friday, the 26th day ot
March, 2004 at 10:00
o' clock a.m. ot said
day the following
described lands and
tenements to-wit:
Situated In the
Township
of
Lebanon, ·County of
Meigs and State ol
Ohio
Being 10 acres off
. Company, Pomeroy,
thil East side ol the
· Ohio, reserves the
following described
· right to bid at this
real astate, being 80
sale, and to withdraw
rods long and 20 rods
the above collateral
wide and being In
prior to sale. Further,
Section 25, Town 3,
The Farmers Bank
Range 11 ol the Ohio
and
Savings
Company's Purchase,
Company reserves
T
h
e Lebanon Township ,
the right to reject any
Commissioners
Meigs County, Ohio.
or all bldo submitted. ,reserve the rlghl to
Bounded
and
reject any and all bids
The
above
described as follows
described collateral
and/or accept the
Being 111 rods
will be oold "ao Is·
bast bid for the
West of the Northeast
where II", with no Intended purpose. A
comer of said seca•praooed or Implied
45-day completion
tion, thence West 67
rods; thence North 80
warranty given.
date Is requested
For further lnlor·
alter the bid Is awardrods to the place ot
million, or lor an
ed.
beginning, containing
(3) 10, 24
appointment
to
28·112 acres.
lntpect
collateral,
E1ception
2·1/2
prior to oale date con·
acres deed to Harry
tact Diane Rector, or
Public Notice
W. Richard In Volume
,Jiandy Hays at 992·
163, Page 440 Meigs
~36.
PUBLIC NOTICE
County
Deed
Records; and !'•cept
~3) 10, 11 , 12
The State ol Ohio,
Meigs County, ss.
1 acres deeded to
•
Shirley
Long
in
Pursuant to the com·
Volume 249, Page
_P;_u:.b:.l:.:.lc:..:.;N:.:o..:;tl:.:c.:.e_ mend ol an order ol
637, Meigs County
, sale issued !rom the
Osed Records.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Court ol Common
The Minerals under
• ROOF REPLACE·
Pleas of aald county• .
MENT FOR MEIGS
and to me directed, In
the above Described
COUNTY JOB AND
the action ol Bank
real estate are lnclud·

West

+
+

North

ROBERT
BISSELL

ll? Mt&gt;.¥.t.
A PIT

CONSTRUCTION

the kitty
46 Thrilled
48 Canine
1 Sheet
warning
olplywood
49 Quarrel
6 Canyon
1t Just
52 Warm
12 Take aim
greetings
(2 wds.)
53 Decks out
13 Muas up
54 Comforl·
14 Wrapping
able
up
(2 wds.)
15 Luau
55 Utter
welcome
happiness
16 Bewildered 56 Cheers
17 Have the

nerve
18 Deli order
19 Move slowly
23 Sweater
material

.,

'

I Actress

- Prentiss
2 Knighl
attire

26 Natural restn
29 Finish
second
32 "Rhelngold"
33 Oh, gross!
34 Longdistance
charges
35 Serpent
36 Close
38 Solemn
promise
40 - spumante
41 Cable
channel
42 Feed

3 Brother's
son
4 She , .
In Seville
5 Drain
cleaner
6 Chromo-some unit
7 Dec ree
8 King (Fr .)
9 Whitney
invention
10 High school
subj.
11 Metal
fastener
12 Keen

''bears"

20 Goose egg
21 IRS
employees

22 Briefcase
closer

24 Make
a decision
26 Moon
goddess
27 Long
periods

43 Kind ol
congestion
44 Lock or cur
45 Otherwise
47 Fellows
48 Locality
49 Apply
makeup

50 Web addr.
51 -Lanka
52 Kendall or
Starr

28 Talk
30 Laird's
household
31 N.Y. hours

qu ot ~l l()ns

by

t~mM

people pas: arx~ present

Each re~er on the Cipher stands tor amlher
Todays ewe· A equals K

" VBUZSKY
UHTZ

BUZ

KFZ

WHXZTY

ZEZUO

NHU

GHUX,

BMKLHS

CTKLWB K Z
MFLTXUZS ;

WHEZWZSK

FBY

BS

MBVKBLS

BSX

ZNNZMK. "

ABSJBUHH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'The truth 1s not always dressed lor the evening.'
- Margaret Lewerth
"Never assume the obvious is true.·' - W. Saiire
(C) 2004 by NEA.Inc 3- tO

r;~~::;~' S@ ~~ N\- ~ "E t/JS"
_ _ _ _:.___.: fdltecf by ClAY It POlLAN

·0 four

Reorrcnr;le

!•!le rs

I

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'GAM I

of

scrombled word'
low to form fou~ simple wn''''

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scur~u

I

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I I IT
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A,-N..G
L1
J-.....,,...,
1-..
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I
3

3

O ne woman to hec fne.1d, "I
woul d love to take :he wnoli; fam .L ....J.-..l..-..J..
. ....J____
lly camp,ng, but my h·csbands's
r-------__,idea of rough1119 11. 's to ha'e b'an
_,,

.
6

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I 1I I I
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Complele

the chuck le

Idling in the

m1U 1n9

Q.

"c. led
words

' -....l..'--'---L-l.-.1-.J you oeve lc;&gt; i~om sr~ p No. 3 below.

f}

P.RiNT N U~lBf P. FD LEiTERS I
lr'-! Jl-tfJt 5QUAR£ S

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 1- •- o '

Polatm- Crock· Bleak - Thieve . CHEAP TALi&lt;.
Two olo.ijm ers were talking about pol 1ti: s "Yes. sa1d
on e. ··electiOn year t5 when pc l1tic:ans get fiee ~ee c h
mixed up Wllh CHEAP TALK"

,ARLO &amp; JANIS
MY WAKI( i&lt;LA"&gt;"&gt; IS
HALf ti&gt;\PTY. ?HALl ! FILL
YOURo W~ llt I'M UP'

SOUP TO NUTZ

i ~~:=;;;;-jjj;j

STol"

~

Ir

740-992-1611
_?rap &amp; Compare

'I

18 Western
necktie

37 Lassos
39 Grimm
youngster
41 CBer's

by Luis Campos
Celeb1itj' CipheJcryptogram; Ma c1ea 1ed lrom

• New Homes
• Garages
·Compl ete
Remodeling

I

enjoyment
16 The whole
time
(2 wds.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER

/

I

DOWN

25 Wine valley

South

Raci ne , Ohio

'~t w~~~&lt;ia!l

•

.. Q J 3

• 7
+ AKQ9654
.. A tO 7

29670 Bashan Road

740-985-3564

FAMILY SERVICES.
Sealed bids will be
received by the Meigs
County . Board ot
Commissioners
at
their office located in
the Court House, 100
East Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 1:00 p.m. on the
1st day ol April, 2004,
and at that time
op&lt;~ned by the Clerk
at said Board and
read aloud tor the
replacement ot the
shingle root ol the
three· story section ol
the Meigs County
Department ol Job
and Family Services.
Specifications
lor
said roof replacement
may be obtained from
the Clark ol the Board
of Melga County
Commissioners
during normal work·
lng hours Monday
through Friday.

J 6 5

3
3 NT

•Ag Line

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, March 13,
2004, at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeioy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Ia selling
lor cash In hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
.
1995
DODGE
: AVENGER
2D
' 483AU52N7SE074391
'- 1887 PLYMOUTH
4D
NEON
3P3ES47YOVT607321
. The Farmers Bank
: -and
Savings

K2

•

Sou th
• 5 4

Hill's Self
Storage

Uncon
ditiOnal life time guarWATERPROOFING
Honda 50 moto rcyc le lOoks 50 H.P. M erc ury boat fl'\Oior,
antee. Local references fur&amp; runs good
$ 450.00 3 extra props, 1 stainless
nished . 'Esta bli stled 1g75.
(304 )773-5103
steel . w1th con trols. Needs
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446minor
repa1rs
$400,
0670 , Roge rs Ba sement
Ser ious Calls Only, leave (3 04)675-513l.
message (740)992·5232, ;,,.;.;..,;,.;,..,;,._ _ _...., Waterproofing.
1977 Harley Oavidson M.C.,
CAJ\'11..~ &amp;
good cond ition. $ 10.000;
MO'I'OR HOI'vi'K'"I

19'78 Kawasaki M .C .. fair
cond ition , $400: 2 snow 1994 Nomad, 5th wheel, 30
g2 Plymouth Voyager minimobiles. fair condition

•

East
4 Qt07 63
¥ K9843

• J 10 8 2
.. K 9 6 2

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

740-991-2411

f40
L
~fL.~o-•F•oA.~u•s•AL•
ros E•._,.~I Lt.~-•ro•A•i•~.x:.~..-_,..~ L.~o_....~.~.i,.s,.~~.~.E-•

7 3

Wetit

MONTY

t

JIM'S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR I
0

•

.. . 54

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
FREE ESDMATES • FAST TUBNABOUNQ
WE REPAIR;
MINI BIKES • GO·KARTS • LAWN MOWERS •
POWER MOWERS • CHAIN SAWS • SNOW
BLOWERS • WEED EATERS • TILLERS • EDGERS

Specials
Information Call: 367-7530

North
03 -JO ·tl4
4 A J 9 8
¥ A Q tO 2

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

20 Games for $20.00

'

Henderson, WV

e\'ery month
All pack $5.00
Bring this t·oupon
Buy $5.00

740·992·7953

Thursday, March 11th
6:00pm

40% OFF

MYERS PAVING

Gallipoli s, OH WVOI0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

c/o Mother Nicole Yates.

Friday 121h &amp; Saturday 131h
Open al 9:00 a.m.

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
E•er)' Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Ear l ~ birds start

Lasl Thursday of

!'l!FKl!!l Gibson 1~.

25701

FASHION BUG
SUPER 2-DAY SALE

I

Residential &amp; Manufactured Hou si ng
Air Conditioners, Heal Pumps &amp; Fumaces

age 5, who was ran over
accidentally on 2/28/04 .
If you'd like to help with
expenses, please mail it to
William Levi Yates ,
Room 5151 (IC U)
Cabell Huntington Hospital ,
1340 Hal Greer Blvd .,
Huntington, West Virginia

Mason
Wai -Mart Plaza

..

HEATING U COOLING

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

.-;~

.

I

THou~• w ~

�www. mydallysentlne~com

Sentinel

Wednesday, March 10,2004

Reds beat Devil
Rays, 6-1, Bt

,.0 ,.BE

Evolution lesson
plan approved, A2

I

••
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
•''' 1 !\ lt....·\•tl

,J "\ • • •11

1111 H'.IJ\\

\1\IH 1111

, ...

.: o•~a

111.1.11 1

·~~~~~ ...... , ..

•

P(!ir arraigned 1n B&amp;E cases

SPORTS
• Gerut easing into
season. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDI\ILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Two men
are charged with breaking
and entering , theft, and other
charges re lating to two incidents in Pomeroy, and addi tional charges from both
Middleport and Pomeroy are
accordinjl
to
ex pected.
Pomeroy Poli ce Chief Mark
E. Proftltt.
Mi chae l Bing, Pomeroy .

Cremeans.
and
Jo shua
Middleport. both 22. were
arraigned Monday before
Meigs Cou nt y Court Judge
Steven L. Story on ~hargcs
alleging break -ins and theft
of property from Gravel y
Tracto r Sales in Pomeroy and
an Anne Street home.
Bing was charged wi th
three coun ts of receiving
stolen property. two ~ounts of
breakin g a nd enteri ng. three
cm1nts of theft. possession of

oxycudonc. possl' ~"'ion o f
marijuana. anJ -criminal t rL'~ pass 'mg.
Crep1eans was charged

set preliminary hearings for
Mard1 I K. Nei tha requested
cou n -app&lt;&gt;i nted attor neys.
Both Bin ~ ami Cremeans
with two L:ou nt ~ or rec~i. vin~ · were r~s t ruir.leli fro m the tracstolen property. fourth~ tor sho p and the home on
degrc~ k l(lll ie,. and t11o
Anne Street.
counts of break ing and entn·
Accorliin~
tu Proffitt.
ing. fifth-degree felonie- s. w~cd
trinlll)l'J"\.
rota ry
relating to in c ident ~ on rch. tiller s and other ~arden
21 and Mar~h 7.
equipment IVL'rc sto le~l fro m
Story '"! bond l·or hot II the Condo r Street ·t ractor
defendants at $)0.000. with supplr er. crnd rrur nc:rou s perI() per~e n t L'a'h allo\1\'d. and son&lt;d item..., were \lole n

from the Anne Street home.
He said officers bel ie ve the
items were stolen lor the purpose of re-sale.
Additi onal charges are ·
expected to be ti led against'
th e pair for theft incidents in
Middleport. and officers are
now in vesti ga tin g a March 5
B&amp;E at Colonial Park
Apartment s on Mulberry
Ave .. where other items were
Please see Arraigned, AS

Easterns Business and science converge at Meigs High School
Bv
Well
announces
retirement
J.

MtLES lAYTON

JLA.YTON@MYDAILYSEN!INEL .COM

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Eastern vs Morral Ridgedale
Thursday March lith 6:15pm
at Pickerington High School

.-~ ...
,of. ' .... ,..

•tjj

OBITUARIES

CHAMPIONSHIP GAME

(
Page AS \
• Ernie E. SiSson
• Robert F. B~rnett
• Rose Marie Boyd

Saturday, March 13th • 7:00pm
at Pickerington
Good Luck Eastern in the Sweet II!
GOOD LUCK EASTERN
lADY EAGLES!!
Eastern Athletic Boosters

Quality
Print Shop
992 . . 3345
Middleport, Ohio

Baumlumber
985-3301
Chester, Ohio

Wesam
Construction
992-6466
Pomeroy, Ohio

Crow's Family
Restaurant
992-2432
Pomeroy, Ohio

GOOD LUCK
Lady Eagles!!!
- Coach Edwards
&amp; Cathy Edwards

Ingels Electronics
K&amp;C
Jewelers
and Jewelry
992-3785
992-2635
Pomeroy, Ohio
Middleport, Ohio

D. V. Weber

Fisher
Construction Funeral Hom
740-378-6293

Middleport Pomeroy

Reedsville, Ohio

992-5144 992-5444

(\
\

INSIDE

CONGRATULATIONS
AND GOOD LUCK
Lady Eagles!!!
The Daily Sentinel

Valley lumber
&amp;Supply
992-6611
Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

.• Law You Can ~se.
See Page A3 1
• Community C~lendar.
See Page A3 '\
I

Swisher•Lohse
Pharmacy
.

'

992-2955 .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Detallo on Pa&amp;e A2

INDEX .

The Shoe Place
&amp; Locker 219
992-5627
Middleport, Ohio

Downing-Childs
Quality Furniture
-Mullen-Musser Brogan Warner
Plus
Insurance
Insurance
1-800-200-4005
992-6687
992-3381
740-667-7388
Pomeroy, Ohio

I

'""'r"'

2 SECriONS- 12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Places To Go

A6

Obituaries

As

Sports

B1

Weather

A2

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Superintendent
Deryl Well will retire at the
end of the current school
year.
Me eti ng
Tuesday ,
the Eastern
Local
Board of
Ed uca tion
accepted
Well's resi g nation ,
effective
July 31.
An Eastern
High school graduate. Well has
served as the district's superintendent since 1996, and has
been in education for 34 years.
He began as an English teacher
at Kyger Creek High School,
and came to Eastern from
Warren Local High School,
where he served as principaL
In other business. the board
approved the following .substitute teachers tor the remainder of
the school year: Jamie A. Blick,
Mary Ellen Moore, Richard
Pesek, Ryan Shean, Bonnie J.
Smith, and Brady Trace.
Charley
Young
was
approved as a volunteer baseball coach.
The board approved post·
ing of a high school mathe-·
mati cs teacher position and a
gifted program teacher for
the 2004-2005 school year.
Admission for base ball ,
softb all and track events was
set at $2.
The board also:
• Received a report from
Sheli a Taylor regarding student achievement for students
participating in a Model
United Nations program;
• Discussed a need for a
storage building, possi bly at
the site of the Tuppers Plains
bus garage;
• Discussed placement of
milk vending machines in the
district's school buildings;
• Approved a meeting of
the records commission for
10 a.m. on March 29 at the
administrative oftice;
• Set the next meeting for 6:30
p.m. on April 28 at the elementary library conference room.
Attending. in addition to WeD
and Taylor, were Greg Bailey,

Howard CaldweU, Charles Weber
and Treasurer Lisa Ritchie.

949-2210· 992-6333

Pomeroy

Meigs High School senio rs Justin Whitlatch and Ran dy Hudson won tl1e Southeast Distrrct
Science Fair last weekend at Ohio Universrty. This qualifies them to compete at the interna·
t iona! science fa ir in Portland , Ore., later this spring. The proJect. "P lant Tissue Cu lturing,"
could revolutionize s pring planting. (J . Miles Layton)

Please see Science, AS

Theater group reorganizes; plans summer program
Bv

CHARLENE HoEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDL EPORT
- The
Co mmun ity
Riverbend
Theater group which for the
past several years have doing
musical productions has
reorgani zed under the name
of River Ci ty Playe rs and
named new officers and management team members .
Julie Howard, a member of
the management team, said
that the theater group decided
to move from sponsorship of
the Riverbend Arts Council
and establish a separate nonprofit organization status.

"This will allow bot h orga- pend ing ri ght'\ an.JUlsition.
nizations to operate indepen- th e Pla ye rs wi ll prese nt
dentl y and be more fl exible "Annie Get Yuur Gun."
to serve the community... said Should rights not be ohlainHoward.
ahk for tl1a1. then the ~ roup
Names to the 2004 man- will dil "Bye Bye Birdie ...
age ment team and elected
Applic,ttinns for director
officers were
Karin (lf th e musical &lt;~rc n rrrcnt lv
Johnson , president: Susa n berng •~c·ccptcd and ~a n be
Baker.
secretary ;
Torn obtained &lt;Ill the ~Ne b s il e at
Dooley. treas urer: .lu li:r ww w . r i ve rb e n'll l'n mmu n i Sayre, Amy Perrin. Kathy . tythcatre .org or by call ing
Johnso n. Julie Howard. Brian Howard
at
992- 1044.
Howard. Bob Buck. Dick Applica tions arc due by
Vaughan. Cath y Erwin. and Marcil .\ I. 2004.
Linda Warner.
Tile pwduction will be prePlan .s are moving forwa rd sented in the former Meigs
for the annual summer musi- Middle School aud itorium if
ca l production . Cu rren tl y, io " al'ailahlc Meanwhi le

other locatio ns are being
ex plored.
Discussed at the rece nt
management team meeting
was the possibility of securing a permanent locati on for
future producti ons by the
Ri ve r Cny Players including
renova ti ons to an existing
space or construction of a
new fac ility. Community
support and financial assistance is going to be needed in
prder to make this plan materiali ze. said Howard.
Also discussed at a recent
management team meeting
Please see The•ter, A5

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, March 14 from 2:00pm· 4:00pm in the HMC French 500 Room.

Nancy Stevens, RN, HMC Diabetes Education, will be the speaker.

Diabetes SeN-Management

Paogram

t:al

Syracuse

or

Diabetes Support Group

Plai

Farmers Bank
Home
National Bank "Your Bank For l=ife"
Racine

POMEROY - Two award
win ning se niors from Meigs
High Schon! have opened a
door to the future that cou ld
mea n fina nci al succe ss for
the county.
Justin Whitlatch and Randv
Hud so n arc ordinary students . according to Meigs
Hi gh
Sc hool
Principal
Dennis Eichi nger. Both have
solid grade point averages
and ;~re invol ved in school
ac ti vi ties . but few people
wou ld conside r them poster
perfect sc ientists who wi le
crwav the hours rec itine the
periiJdic table elements .
Eich inge r said these are the
type of kids th at run trac k.
play v1deo g&lt;t mes and have
parts in the sc hool play. Last
weeke nd t.hat al l chan ged
when th~y wo.n the Southeast
District Science Fair ;n Ohio
Universit y for thei r project.
Plant TissLoe Cultu ring.
"When we we nt to the science fair. we didn ' t think we
wo uld do well." said
Whitlatch .
Hudson. who boasts a nearly perfect grade point average , was surpri sed when
judges and noted scienti sts at
Ohio University recommended th e project for the state
competition.
" I never thou~ht this was
going to take off the way it
did." he said .
The pote ntial fin ancial
wrndfall from thi s experiment could mean great things
for Meigs County.
Consider thi s. Eve rybody
buys plant s such as ferns in
the spring to spruce up the
house . When fern s are not
grow n loca ll y at the stores or

Gallipolis Tuppers Plains

March 29, 30 and 31 from 9:00am· 12 Noon in the French 500 Room

992-2136 446-2265 667-3161

Please bring o list of home medications to class .
Please have prescription from your physician to attend.
For more information on these FREE program s, or to register, call (740). 446•5080
.

~

•-·--··

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the HolzeT' Difference

www .holzer.org
..

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