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                  <text>Page 06 • &amp;unbap Qtimrtt-&amp;tntinrl

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

Sunday, March 14.

2004

Putin wins
Russian electilJh, A2

\

Spend 178

/

en aalacted Hem•

March 14th • 27th

/

Eagles excel in
close shaves, Bt .

\
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o lT'\ IS • \&lt;&gt;L .&gt;-l · '\11 . •:l h

On~

March aoth • April 24th

"""

" '" '·"' "•· nlllwl .•"'"

Middleport administrator to be hired Monday

SPORTS

'uturo Ordot

\10:\11\) , 'I \1{( '111:;. :.!oo-1

· • Eagles stil dominant at
The Convo. See Page B1

.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MI DDLEPO RT
Midd leport Village Counci l
will meet in special session
at I p. m. Monday to
employ a new village
ad ministrator.
The new administrator,
who mu st be qualified in
Ohio
accordance
with
Environmental Protect ion

Agency standards, wi ll
assume responsibility for
the daily operation of the
v illage ~ s water and sewer
systems. responsibil ity that
rested wit h the Board of
Pub lic Affa irs unt il counci l,
in January, voted to disband
the elected hoard. The
admi nistrator wil l also
supervise water and sewer
system employee s.
The new village adminis-

trator will work under the
direct supervision of Mayor
Sandy lannarelli . Three
applicants wi ll be considered for the Pl"ition.
lannarelli said last week.
The village has not disclosed a salary range. but
wi ll pay the new administrator from village water
and sewer funds.
Midd lep011's last village
administrator was dism issed

after

rai ...,ed

a L' ltl/ L~n~
group
4ue~tiun~ about water

Hobson from Jay Hall and
has drilled a new water
well there. Plans have also
been underway for the con-·
struction of a new water
trealment plant on Page
Street if fund ing can be
,ecured·. but village counc il
has no t indicated whether
plans to improve water or
se wer systems wi ll proceed
unde r the village administrator system.

quality. inadeqLiate sewer
disposal and ot her i"ues
relating to the vi llage's
public work .s operation,.
After he was- dismissed. the
new BPA a.ssu mcd responsibility for repairs mandated
bv the Ohio Enl'ironmental'
P~·ot ee t iun Agency.
The vi llage recently purch,heu
propcn y
near

Meigs marking 'Music in Our Schools Month'
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

I

.

INSIDE
• Big Bend Cloggers take
first place. See Page AS
• School News.
See Page A5
• Dead Sea scrolls exhib~
opens in Akron.
See Page A6

POM EROY - The importance of music in our schools
goes far beyond the act of
just pl aying an instrument or
singi ng, says Toney Dingess.
longtime instrumental and
vocal music teacher in the
Meigs Local Schools. It is a
Jesson in life skills.
With March being Mu sic in
Our Schools Month. an
emphas is of the Nation al
Association
for
Mu sic
Education is being placed on
getting the message to students and parents that there is
real value in music - "introduce a child to music and you
open the, door to academic
success.
The va lue of music,
according to Assoc iation for ·
Music Educatio n studi es,
determined th at th e skills
learned transfer directl y to
study, communication, and
cog niti ve skills wh ich are
useful in every part of the
school curriculum .
The stati stics flll1her determi ned that students with
music course work and ex perience in music performance
scored hi gher on the ATC,
secondary students who parPlease see Music, AS

WEATHER

,: &amp;
•

An athletic trainer plays
bereaved organtzes k
.
t
m
a ey r0 1e 0 n any ea
Support group f~r
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENT&gt;NE L.COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 S EcrtoNS - 12 P AGES

All Varieties 6 ct Novelties,
56 oz Ice Cream or 6·14 oz Pkg

Healthy Choice
Entrees

Calenda rs

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

At

Ohio
Sports

A6
Bl

Weather

A6

·© 2004 Ohio Valley Publis hing Co.

POM EROY - · "Carin g
Friends," a newly organized
support group for the lonely
and bereaved, will meet
Tuesday ni ght at 6 p.m, at the
Pomeroy Uni ted Methodi st
Church, 11 2 East Second St.
Emphasis of the group will
be on helping
Meigs
Countians who have lost a
loved one, by givi ng friendship at a time when the person 1·5 alone, and "v y lett'1ng
that person know that someone cares and wants to help.
Ken -and Vickie Hobbs,
director of Famil y Service at
Meigs County Memory
Gardens are sponsorin g the
organization in cooperation
with several churche s and
indi vidual s including Rod
Brower of the Uni ted
Methodi st Church, Mike
Fore man of Rejoicing Life
Church, Mark Morrow of

..... ..

RELAY
FOR LIFE•
Prlcea end heme Good At 919 E. State St, Athen a
and 1130 E. Meln St, Jeckaon Kroger Stores
·
"'erch 14 thru March 20, 2004.
Some ltema may require a deposit.

Vlelt our Webelte at www.Kroger.com or
.. call C...tom.r Service at f.SOO.KROOERS

Satu rday the 76 me mbers of the Meigs Marauder Band wil l travel to Shawnee State to par ticipate in the Di strict 17 contest in
concert ba nd. Toney Dingess, director, says music programs where overall performance is de pende nt on everyone's best effort
is a good lesson about tea m skills needed for success in today's society. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Middleport First Baptist. and
Pete and Brenda Barnhart of
WJOS Christian TV Station.
''There are many wo nderful
peo ple out there that arc now .
alone. We wa nt them to know
that they don'r have to be
alone. that there are people
who care. We care and we
want to help." sai d Ke n
Hobbs.
He described activ iti es of
the new group as a fel lowship
of people talking and li stening while hav in g coffee,
· ·llll
· g
gm· ng ou t lo c1mner.
VISl
others. helping with errands,
and just be ing a friend without ex pectation.
As for sup port to the lonely
and bereaved. spec ial activities will be provi ded, referrals can be made to a lice nsed
coun selor, and vo lunteers and
lay me n wi ll prov ide group
effort help whe re and as
needed.
Please see Support. AS

~

Bv BUTCH COOPER

scooPER®MVD&lt;~LYTRIBUN E coM

ATH ENS - One of the
most important people on the
side li nes of an y sport ing
eve nt isn't th e coaches or
eve n the athletes. but the one
person who keeps the at hle tes
up and running.
Tlwt person doesn' t blow a
whis tle or call BUt plays. hut
is just as vital to the success
o 1-- any 1eam. 0 r t.or a team tn
be able to take the cou rt or
field for that matter.
The at hletic trainer has been
as big a ro le player in he lping
a team wi n games as anyone.
They keep the players
healthy, or make cet1ain the
players don' t become anymore
injured than they already are.
One such trai ner has helped
the Eastern boys varsity btisketbal lteammake a run to the
reg ional to urnamen t.

Knst111 Hustcdde. a stude nt
at Oh1n LJn 1vcr"tY. 1"" been on
the bench iill· the cnt 1re season
for the E:l'• les. who will be
play ing So~t h Wc hster in the
Division IV reg ional .semi llnal
·
at t11e C' u 1um1"" F:urgrnu
nr1s
Cult.seum Tuesday.
.. 11 ·s great." ,a id Hustedue.
:'Yml get to be around the
players and you're in the
ac tion all the time. It 's great
tu see a kid who has been
injured and comes back and
gets to play. I JUSt love seeing
them out there."
Hustedde is one of many Ohio
students working thi s sc hool
yem- at area high sl'lmols as athletic trainers. She is l'LIITemly
working on her master's degree
after
tran s!Crring
from
McKendree
College
in
Lebtmon. lll . last summer where
she eamed her ha..:helor's.
"It's go&lt;1cl experience." said

Hu stedde o · working at
Eastern . "W get to be 111
clwrge of everything.
"Thev' re in \the Sweet 16
and 1 g.et to be\ a part of that ,
j ust because 1' 111 111 the backgrnun d. and Wit 1 them -~verylb&gt;y. It s JU St en oyable.
Hustedde is . Iso an athlete.
She played basketball in high
school and also at McKendree.
She also works~out with the
h
h
d .
players
w
en
t
e
nee
an
.
. ses,
usmg her pl ayi n expenence
to help out.
"I played sport_:- in college
and I played baskvtball there,"
said Hustedde. 'Tel\ like to continue to be involve' in athletic
training. It's so lnuch -fun
working with the atl'l letes."
Her main goal is to work as
a trai ner fo r a college athletic
department. She'll complete
the Ohio athletic tra iner's
high school program in June.

·1

·Attention ·c ancer Survivors!
And those interested in the fight against cancer.
The "2004 Gallia County Relay for Life will be held

June 4 and 5
at the Gallipolis City Pork

M E D 1CAL C E NT E -R

Discover the Holzer Difference

A cancer survivors' reception will ta ke place before the opening lap.
'

All are invited to attend and join us in the fight against cancer!

I -.1I i
'--- - - ---- ·-····-----

I

www.holzer.org

For more ioformotion , please call Chai rperson Bon nie McFarland at (740) 446-5679.

'-

•

'

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION

PageA2

• WORLD

Monday, March 15, 2004

Putin wins Russian election

Crews recover two
missing since water taxi
with more than 68 percent, according to preliminary results capsized in Baltimore
Bv STEVE GUTTERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MOSCOW - President
Vladimir Putin claimed victory early Monday after easily winning a second term
with more than 69 percent of
the vote, confirming widespread expectations of a
commanding victory.
Assured in advance of victory, Putin was looking for a
powerful turnout to strength..
en his grip over Russia .already tightened by his
appointment of a new
Cabinet just before the vote
and by December parliamentary elections that gave the
main pro-Kremlin party full
control over lawmaking.
. According to preliminary
:data, 64.2 7 percent of voters
·nationwide had cast ballots,
electoral officials said.
With 49.7 percent of
precincts accounted for. Putin
had 69.3 percent of the vote,
the
Central
Election
Commission said. The partial
results were backed up by an
exit poll by the non-governPublic
Opinion
mental
Foundation, which surveyed
120,000 voters at 1,200
polling stations and conclud. ed Putin had won 69 percent.
"I promise you that for the
next four years, I will work in
the same mode," Put in said.
Putin tirst thanked voters
for turning ·out, then thanked
those who supported him. He
promised to ensure further
econo.mic growth, strengthen
·civil institutions and media
freedom. "All the democratic
achievements will be guaranteed," he said.
Putin, who reined in
.Russia's independent media
following his first election in
2000, dominated the nationwide television networks
before the vote. His five challengers received less coverage, ·actding to the widespread
impression that the vote was
a one-horse race.
· "I voted for Putin because
he is going to win anyway,
·and what is the point in vot:ing for someone else?" said
·financial inspector Yelena
·Chebakova, 31, one of a
·hand~ul of early voters at a
Moscow polling station.
Secretary of State Colin
Powell said he was concerned with a lack of openness in·'Russia 's ·presidential
:election and "a level of
·authoritarianism· creeping
back" into Russian society.
National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice also
·expressed concern.
But Powell said he did not
. think Russia was reverting to
the hard-line ways of the former Soviet Union.
· "Russians have to under; stand that to have full democ; racy of the kind that the inter: national community will rec·ognize, you've got to let can: dictates have all access to the
:media that the president has,"
; Powell said on "Fox News
·Sunday."
. Dmitry 'Kozak, the head of
· Putin's campaign headquarters, rejected the criticism,
· saying that Russia's election
:campaign was "in strict con-

•.

An elderly Russian leaves a voting booth as a sailor with the Russian Pacific Navy waits to vote
at right, in the Russian Far Eastern port of Vladivostok, about 4,000 miles east of Moscow. In
a vote stretching over 11 t ime zones and 22 hours, Russians began casting ballots Sunday in
Presidential elections. (AP Photo)
formity witll the election
law."
"Russian voters already
have significant experience
in democratic elections and
don't need suggestions from
anyone, even less so from
representatives of a country
that has clear flaws in its
election procedures," Kozak
said in a statement released
Sunday night by the Kremlin
press service.
A frenzy of television
appeals by Putin. his rivals
and even top religious leaders urging people to vote
reflected Kremlin concerns
that the lack of a challenger
with a chance of unseating
the president might keep
Russians away from the ballot box .
After voting in Moscow on
Sunday morning alongside
his . wife, Lyudmila, Putin
made a lasHninute plea, saying that "much depends on
this election" and that "the
feeling of involvement must
increase year after year."
The election lasted 22
hours, stretching over 11
time zones, before ending at
8 p.m. in the Baltic Sea
exclave of Kaliningrad.
Nadezhda, a kindergarten
teacher who gave only her
first name, didn't need the
encouragement provided by a
van that cruised around her
Moscow neighborhood with
a loudspeaker shouting that
voting is the way to "a dignified life and a bright future."
"I always vote - it is my
country and my responsibility," she said, adding that she
voted for Putin. She said he is
"young and energetic" qualities that many Russians
cite for their support of the
trim, 51-year-old president,
who has also benefited from
steady economic growth during his first term.
"We voted for Putiri
because under him there's
been stability in society, in
the economy," said Mikhail
Antonchik , a young miner
who voted with his wife in
Cheryomukhovo, a Ural

Mountains village. "You can
plan for the family."
But about one -fifth of
Russia's 144 million people
live in poverty and the gap
between rich and poor
remains wide, stoking 'anger
at the authorities.
challenger
Communist
Nikolai Kharitonov appealed
to the poor and polled; more
strongly than expected,
bringing in 14.3 percent of
the vote, according to preliminary results. Some 3.9 percent of voters checked the
box marked "against all."
Irina Kozhukhova. a 42year-old radio factory worker
in St. Petersburg, said she'd
voted in that category.
"I didn 't vote for Putin
because I've seen no changes
- neither in politics nor in
the economy," she said.
Amid calls by some liberals for a boycott of the vote,
which came three months
after parliamentary elections
that international observers
called a setback for democracy, rival candidates and rights
groups alleged vote-rigging
in favor of Putin, including
pre-marked ballots and pressure on students and soldiers.
"The authorities are resorting to pressuring the electorate and abusing their powers to manipulate the vote,"
nationalist candidate Sergei
Glazyev told The Associated
Press at an election monitoring center he set up jointly
with Kharitonov and liberal
candidate Irina Khakamada.
Citing monitors, the joint
center said that patients at a
Moscow psychiatric hospital
had complained that the ballots they received were
already marked for Putin.
VOICE, a grass-roots election monitorin g association,
reported that officers at a military base in the Volga River
reg10n of Samara received
telegrams from the Defense
Ministry ordering them to tell
their superiors, in writing, the
time they and their family
members voted. Students at
Samara State Aerospace

:A quick look at spring break in Daytona Beach Fla.

University were threatened
wi.th eviction from their dormitory if they didn ' t vote,
VOICE alleged .
Putin did not campaign
openly, relying instead on hi s
image as a stable, disciplined
leader to appeal to a nation
still traumatized by the political and social upheavals that
followed the 1991 Soviet collapse.
In addition to Kharitonov,
Khakamada and Glazyev,
Putin faced Oleg Malyshkin,
the little-known candidate
from flamboyant nationalist
Vladimir
Zhirinovsky's
party, and Sergei Mironov,
the speaker of the upper
house of parliament, who has
said he was running ' to support the incumbent. Glazyev
polled 4. 7 percent and
Khakamada 4.6 percent,
according to preliminary
results.

BALTIMORE (AP) - The
bodies of two of the three
passengers missing si nce a
water taxi capsized eight
days ago were pulled
Sunday from the murky
waters of the citv's Inner
Harbor, officials said.
Crews planned to search
for the remaining missing
passenger until dark .
The bodies of Andrew
Roccella, 26. of Virginia.
and
6-year-o ld
Daniel
Bentrem, of Harrisonburg,
Va..
were
recovered
Sunday afternoon, said Fire
Chief William Goodwin .
The
discovery
"will
allow the families to have
their grieving time. their
funerals," Goodwin said.
Corinne Schillings, 26, of
Alexandria,
Va.,
who
planned to marry Roccella,
remained missing.
"I feel we will be successful
in
that
third
attempt. finding Corinne ,
and then our job will be
complete," Goodwin said .
The bodies were found
"a couple hundred feet"
from where the survivors
were rescued, he said.
The Seaport Taxi flipped
over March 5 in a sudden
thunderstorm with wind
gusts up to 55 miles per
hour, se nding all 25 people
on board into chilly. choppy water. Two died after
they were rescued.

Sonar equipment detected
the bodies Sunday. A
robotic camera that swims
through the water took
video to confirm the discovery. Goodwin said.
Divers have strugg led
with Cclld and murky
water. and no vi sibility on
the harbor bottom.
"The weather was not
cooperating. but it hasn't
the whole time. " Goodwin
said. adding that the wind
worked agLtinst &lt;.:rews un
Sunday.
Strong gusts flipped the
boat
as
the
captain
attempted to steer it tp
shore after receiv1ng a
radio warning of the storm .
There were life jackets 0_!1
board for everyone, bl!t
passengers are not required
to wear them .
Crews identified the roof
on the bottom of the harbor on Friday, but ha-.:e
yet to raise it, saying their
priority wa s finding the
mi ssing passengers. After
the roof is retrieved, it wiil
be turned over to tire
National
Transportation
Safety Board for its inve~­
tigation of the accident.

Celebrating special ·

days with you!
Sunday Times-Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

Daughter deserves to know that dad is in the slammer

.Public meetings
Monday, March 15
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council,
special meeting, I p.m. to
hire village administrator.
Wednesday, March 17
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township trustees, noon at
the township building on
Rocksprings Road.

Clubs and
Organizations
Monday, March 15
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m. at
the hall in Chester. Auction
of items to be brought by
members will be held.
, POMERY
Meigs
County Right to Life will
meet 7:30 p.m at Pomeroy
Library.
Thesday, March 16
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of
Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM . 7 p.m.
at the temple for work in the
Master Mason Degree . All
Master Masons welcome.
MIDDLEPORT
Brooks-Grant Camp Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil
War and Maj . Daniel
. McCook Circle Ladies of
the grand Army of the
Republic will hold their
respective meetings at 7: 15
p.m. at the Riverbend Arts
Council
building
in
Middleport. the program
will be the Shelton Laurel
. Massacre which occurred
:against loyal Northern residents of western North
Carolina.
Wednesday, March 17
MIDDLEPORT The
:Middleport Literary Club
·will meet at 2 p.m. in the
downstairs social room of
Trinity
Coingregational

DEAR ABBY: I have a
where she is going to live.
black mesh st~&gt;cking s and
Church. Jeanne Bowen will
beautiful
6-year-old
daughYour
next
step
should
be
thigh-high
boots. When I
review "The Hours" by
·
ter
I'll
call
"Maya"
who
to
discu
ss
child
.custody
asked Jeff where he ex pectMichael Cunningham.
Hdores her father. "John"
with an a!torney. Since it ea me. to wea~. th at stuff. h~
and I were together for
appears that you ·and · John .· said. "On a date with me Thursday, March 18
Dear
are 1iot married, .and he .is or in oilr bedroom ."
POMEROY - The Meigs more than eight years and .
Abby
not contributing financially
County Retired Teachers have been apart for abol]t a
Is it healthy for Jeff 'Ia
to
Maya's welfare, I fail to have those fantasies'l - NOT
year.
During
our
last
year
Association will meet at the
see how he can claim the A SLUT IN MISSISSIPPI
Pomeroy Library downstairs together, he was caught sellmeeting room for a noon ing drugs and was convicted
right to have her live with
DEAR - NOT Oui . oui.
catered
luncheon. of possession and distribuhim. A lawyer can help you Madame· - as \nng a&gt; the
Reservations are to be called tion, as well as possession
make sure it doesn ' t ha]l- fantasies include yo u'
toi 992-3214 or 992-3472. of an illegal weapQn. I knew his mother again when they peri, so please waste no
WORTH REMEMB ERMembers may take guests. nothing of this until he was let him out. )
time jn contacting one. It ING : "To spea.k ill of other'
The program will be on ser- arrested. (I worked' while he
He keeps telling Maya will ease your mind , and
is a qishonest way of praisvices of the Meigs Libraries. was a stay-at-home dad.)
how much fun they'll have that's what is important ·
ing ourselves." - Will and
John is now serving a together. I want her to love right now.
DEAR ABBY: My _hu·s- Ariel Durant
four-year sentence in federal John and have a good relaDear Abby .is wl'itten by
prison. However, he tells . tionship with him, liut I band, "Jeff.'' is 35 and I'm
Maya that he is in "Daddy don't · want to lose her. 41. We 've been married 10 Abigail ttun ·Buren , · (Jlso
Monday, March 15
k•wwn as Jeam1e Phillips,
RACINE The First School," and when he gets What's the answer? - WOR- years.
Jeff is an excellent and 'ras founded bv her
Baptist Church of Racine home she will live with RIED MOTHER IN TEXAS
will hold revival serv ices him.
DEAR MOTHER: Your provider. He spends quality motha Pauline Phillip .1.
Dea r A/JIJ\'
a/
10:40 a.m. and 7 p.m. today
Abby, I · have struggled daughter deserves to know time with the chi ldren and Write
H'I\'II'
.
D
ea
rAhb
\'.con1
or
P
0.
and 7 p.m. through March long and hard to get back the truth about her father - will do anything I ask.
17. Don Walker, former pas- on my feet after paying all that he did something that
l have only one problem., Box 69440. Lo.1 Angeles, CA
90069.
tor, will be the guest speak- of John's legal bills and was against the law, and he Every gift occasion
er.
finding a place for Maya is now paying for "it. If you anniversary,
Chris,tmas;
and me to live. Should I tell go along with his lie, Maya Valentine's Day or biftlu)ay
her where her father really · will have good reaSon to - Jeff buys me an outfit · I ·
is, and that she won't be \iv- believe that everything John consider trashy. His most
ing with him but can visit is telling her is' the truth - recent gift . was a black
Thesday, March 16
POMEROY - Childhood
immunizations at the meigs him? (He will be living with rin;c~L~ud_i:-n;g~t-h_e..;.p_a_rt_a_b~a-u_t~l:e:at~h:e~r~m:i~n~is:ki:'rt:,:an;d~b:\I:St;ie:r~,~=::;:=:!:::::====:::::
County Health Department
Federal Consumer Protect ion has confirmed the fuel saving claims in this advertisement. *
office, 9 to 11 a.m and l to
3 p.m. Take child's shot
records. Children must be
BOSTON- National Fuelsaver 22% of each gallon normally greater fuel savings wilh the
accompanied by parent/legal
Corp. has dev"ioped a low cost
burns when it reaches the Gas Saver than the ·22%
guardian. Tak(i medical card
autoJTiotive accessory called platinum
of. the
catalytic claipled by the developer."
.
.
if you have one.
the-Platinum Gas Saver which converter.
In addition to the fuel
is guaranteed to increase gas ·
Unfortunately,
t h 'e savings, the Gas Saver has
mileage by 22% while meeting converter's platinum bum~ this . received patents. for cleaning
all emission .standards.
fuel in the tail-pipe, where the out carll&lt;m and raising octane,
With
a
simple
I;pnnection
to
heat and energy· produced from making higher giad.es of fuel
Sunday, March 14
GALLIPOLIS
.
a vacuum line, Ihe' Gas ·Saver this fuel cannot be harnessed ·unnecessary fo r most vehicle ... .:
adds microscopic quantities of to dri ve your vehicle.
Diabetes support group will
J o el
Rob •n s'o n. th e
platinum
to
the
air-fuel
But
when
the
Gas
Saver
de1·eloper, commen ted: "We
meet from 2 to 4 p.m. in the
mixture entering Lhe engine.
adds plaiinum· to Ihc air-fuel ha1 c sold a half million Gas
Holzer Mesdical Center's
Since platinum has .. the mixture. 22% more o f eac·h Savers. To -our . _sur{&gt;fise, as
French 500 Room .
unique ability to make ·non- . gallon bums inside the engine .many people buy . the Gas
burning fuel burn, the Gas so, that. 22% more of each Saver .becau-se if extends
Saver's platinum increases the gallon bums inside the engine engine 4fe (by clea.riiilg out the
percentage of fuel burning in so that 22% fewer gallons are abrasive c!lrbon) a§. buy it·to
Saturday, March 20
: the engine from 68% of each required to drive the same increase gas mileage or raise
REEDSVILLE - Kemp
.,__
octane.t' .
gallon to 90% each gallon, a distance.
Beaumont will observe his
22% increase.
After a five year study, the
For further information call:
85th birthday Saturday.
Since unbumt fuel leaving gove rnment · concluded:
1·800·LESS·GAS
Cards may be sent to him at ·
an engine i's pollution, this "Independent testing. shows
1-800-537-7427
39579 Silver Ridge Road,
' *To receive the government's Wriuen conclusions, enwi l yuur name and·.tele.pllone number to o~ti onalfurl .. e~v::r @ ~o:oH. .ncl
Reedsville. 45772 .

Church services

·Other events

Device may increase gas mileage by 22%

Support Groups

informed·

Birthdays

or

'

•

for Christ
:accepts contributions

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County ...

l

r

"Shoes for the entire family"

f

Rt.lllypan

.
forw&lt;Jrd

or
ar er

'

Polnll PIHIICiRI, WV

'

. DON'T MISS THE
SOUNDS OF SPRING!
.... . .

As plans move
for the April· 5 to 7 Freedom
Experience at Meigs High School sponsored by the Ohio Valley
.crusade for Christ, contributions are being accepted for the
:expenses. Here AI Hartson of the Middleport Church of Christ.
:left. and Lamar O'Bryant of the First Southern Baptist Church
:present checks for $1,000 from their respective churches to
John Riebel, treaswrer. Featured at the Crusade will be illusionist Brock Gill, working with the band "Inhabited," and
Chaos on Wheels, the BMX stunt team.

FURNITURE
COMPANY

J

~Quality • Selection • ,\ et·v•c,e i

. 304-773-5592

..
· 2150 Eastern Avenue

1lEl Gallipolis, Ohio
44&amp;~am

•

or 446·2484

Ap_ril 9, .2004

In observance of

4-HweekMarch 7-13,2004
.

·l

. ' ' ...

Li'~li
~
'
· • ~alHpoli!i

.L.~I
i

.•

llailp m:rtbune
• ~oint ~lea£iant 1L\egi£iter
• The Daily Sentinel

~ Gallipolis ·

The Rocksprings Raiders 4-HCiub
Wishes to thank all of the
Meigs County 4-H Sponsors especially
McDonalds-Pomeroy for purchasing Nathan Cooks'
Grand Champion Commercial Feeder Calf
Farmers Bank-Pometoy for purchasing J.E.. Greenes'
Commercial Feeder,Calf &amp; Victoria Lawson's ·
Market Lamb at the 2003 Meigs County Fair. ·

}

.

.

~Crusade

Senior Citizens make
up 65% of the tot•'ll
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this
contact your
Advertising
Representative.

. Crowds fill the beach during the annual college spring break. in Daytona Beach Ra. (AP Photo/Daytona
Beach News-Journal, Jim Tiller)

..

446-2342
675-1333
'·
.
'
992-2155

Advertising Deadline - April 1, 2004

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Center

Dr. Joey D.

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• Diagnostic X-Rays
• Pl!f50nal .
Rehabilitation ·
• Nutritional Counseling

• Personal Injury

New Members Welcome
Contact Patty Cook

·Workers Compensation
• Most Insurance Accepted

992-2447

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Including United Health

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HOURS:
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OPINION

· The Daily Sentinel

.•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

READERS'

VIEWS

Cutting costs
Dear Editor:
In regards to Mr. Buckley's statement on cutting costs, I'm
assuming Mr. Buckley means by starting with his salary, and
down through the principals and board members, before he
gets to the hourly wages.
Another thing I was wondering about, are all the principals
·and assistant principals necessary? Before the schools were
completely consolidated into three buildings, a lot of the principals would take care qf the two or three different buildings
and some would even teach a class, as well.
It was my understanding that the superintendent and school
board were told the sewer system wouldn't handle the elementary school. If this is true, with this knowledge, they went
ahead and opened the elementary school. If they were
:promised by any official of the Rutland sewer system, maybe
· they should ask them to pay part of the bill.
Robert L. Richmond
Middleport

': READERS'
,\

VIEWS

Monday, March 15,

PageA4
Monday, March 15, 2004

Big Bend Cloggers take first place Sonshine Circle contributes to causes

Pinning one on Kerry
A blogger on the official
John Kerry campaign Web
site has offered a telling
insight imo the Kerry campaign in her accoum (since
removed) of a December
campaign party.
"We had 200 guests eating.
drinking . and watching the
Move.On
documentary
'Uncovered ,'
featuring
Joseph Wi Ison and Rand
Beers from the Kerry camwrote
blogger
paign."
Pamela Leavey, describing a
Kerry eve nt that did not
include John Kerry himself.
"When Theresa Heinz-Kerry
arrived, she handed me a pin
that read in the center: 'Asses
of Evil' with 'Bush ,'
'Cheney,' 'Rumsfeld,' and
'Ashcroft.' surrounding it."
Asses of Evil --get it'' And
how fitting that 60-year-old
Mr. Kerry. who finds a
charge in likening America's
54th presidential election to .
"regime change," and in
turning George W. Bush's
words for America's enemies
("Bring 'em on") into a derisive campaign slogan, would
have a wife who mocks both
the Axis of Evil and the
Pre sident of the United
States with equal parts
malevolence and vulgarity.
But the Asses of Evil button shows voters more just
than a magnified glimpse of
a potential first lady, it symbolizes the fundamental flaw
of the Kerry doctrine: that
the greatest threat the United
States faces is not Islamic
terrorism, Islamic totalitari-

was worth the cost, Kerry
rep lied: "If there are not
weapons of mass-destruction
-- and we may yet find some
-- then this is a·war that was
fought under false pretens-

Diana
West

es." "So." asked Time, "if we

an ism and rogue nations, but
rather ... George W. Bush. I
guess what Kerry calls
"Benedict Arnold companies
that ship American jobs
overseas" rank a nasty second . Can't wait to hear candidate Kerry denounce H.J .
Hein z, hi s and his wife's
own Benedict Arnold company. As columnist James
Glass man has written to
inexcusably scant notice.
"Of the 79 factories that "the
food-processor owns. 57
(fe li ci tous number!) are
overseas." That ships plenty
of "A,merican jobs" to
Botswana, Thailand, China.
India and elsewhere.
Supposing Kerry were to
vanqutsh Bush at the ballot
box , eliminating what he
(and the mi ssus) deem Public
Enemy No. I. Would a
President Kerry simply vault
the old Axis of Evil and land
in a vat of world peace?
Take Iraq. According to
Time magazine this month,
Kerry says that as president
he "might have gone to war"
or he "might have avoided
war."

When asked whether
removtng Saddam Hussein

don't find WMD, the war
wasn't worth the costs?
That's a yes?" "No," said
Kerry. "I think you can still- wait. no. You can't -- that's
not a fair question, and I'll
tell you why. You can wind
up successful in transform ing Iraq and changing the
dyna mics, · and that may
make it worth it. but that
doesn't mean (transforming
Iraq) was the cau se (that provided the) legitimacy to go."
Right. Moving on to Iran,
where Hezbollah, Hamas,
Palestin ian Islamic Jihad
and eve n AI Qaeda have
found support and safe
haven, K e r~y·s position is a
bit clea rer. In fact, on Feb. 8,
the Tehran Times published
in full an e-mail sent by the
Kerry campaign to a govern·
ment news agency promising that a President Kerry
would try to restore relations
"at risk " due to "the actions
and attitudes" of the Bush
administration.
"Disappointment with the
current U.S. leadership is
widespread," the e-mail said,
"extending not just to the
corridors of power and politics, but to the man and
woman on the street as
well."
If that's not giving aid and
comfort to an enemy, it's cer-

RACIN E - Donations of
$250 each to the Meigs
Seniors Meal s on Wheels
and
to tf1e
H.O.P.E .
Intervention for Aut ism program and its upcoming 5K
walk were made at last
week's meeting of the
Sunshin e Circle held at
Bethany Church.
Charlotte Wam sley and
Missy Cox representing
H.O.P.E. Intervention, were
at the meeting to talk on the
SK walk which will take
place at II a.m. on April 3 at
the Gallipolis City Park.
Evelyn Foreman presided
at the business meeting opening with reading the 23rd
Psalm and "Good Morning
God." Officers' reports were
given by Kathryn Hart and
Julie Campbell .
Thank you notes were read
from Donna Hill , Phyllis
Young, and Karen and Jim
Werry ; and a donation from
Donna Hill was acknowledged.

tainly meddling with U.S .
diplomacy in a time of war.
The Kerry communique
drew a response from Iran'_,
brave Student Movement
Coordination Committee for
Democracy : "Senator. by
sending such a me ssage
directly to the organs and
megaphones of the dictatorial Islamic regime. you have
given them credibility, comfort and embntced thi s odious theocracy. You have
encouraged and emboldened
a tyrannical regime to use
this as propaganda and
declare 'ope n season' on the
freedom fig hters in Iran."
Did the Kerry ca mpaign outreach on Feb. 8 affect
Tehran's decision to close
reformist newspapers and
bar some 2,500 reformist
candidates from elections on
Feb. 20? Such a question is
hard to dismiss.
Nothing so dramatic has
happened in North Korea
(yet). although Kerry. who
has promi sed bilateral talks
with
Pyongyang.
has
nonetheless become the darling of the ultra-repressive
dictatorship. According to
the Financial Times. Kerry's
campaign Speeches are being
blared
over
Radio
Pyongyang "and reported in
glowing terms by ... the offi.
cial mouthpiece of ... (Kim
Jong-il's)
communist
regime."
All of which is something
to remember about which
for~ign leaders would like to
see John Kerry in power.

Meigs County's Big Bend Cloggers were in Gatlinburg, Tenn. recently for a competition. Brenna
Shobe and Erica Haning took first place in their category in the duo competition.

Holter reviews Devereaux novel

'
TUPPERS PLAINS
"Knighl in Shining Armor"
by Jude Devereaux, publi shed in 2002. was reviewed
by Pat Holter at a recent
meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club at the home of
Nadine Goebel of Tuppers
Plains.
Deveraux began writing in
1976 and has written 27 novels that made the New York
Times bestseller list. In 1988
she was awarded the
Romantic Times Magazine's
Career Achievement Award .
"Knight in Shining Armor"
actually wa s written and
published in 1987, but
because it was one of the
author's favorites. she added
50 page s to the story and it
was released agai n in 2002.
The story spans four centuries--from modern day
England and America back

WE

GoT HrM!

'

Notice a comedy

'

Music

1

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

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 address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
· be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
. The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Puhlishing
Co. J editvt ial boaJd, unless otlze1 wiJe /toted.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(UsPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published
every
afternoon,
~ ~ · .Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
'
·accurate. II you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Our main number Ia
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992·2158.
tions to Tho Daily Sentinel, 111
Oep!lrtment extenalons are:
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 ..

News
EdHor: Charlene Hoeflich, EK1. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. t4
Reporl1or: J. Miles Layton, EK1. 13

Advertising
Outolde S.laa: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
ClaoaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext, 10

Circulation
D11trlct Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E·mall:
newsCmydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentlnet.com

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in time to 16th century
England and forward again
to the present. The main
character
is
Dougless
Montgomery,
a
young
American woman who, after ·
being deserted by her abusive fiance, finds herself
alone and broken-hearted in
an English churchyard. As
she wept, a handsome knight
in a suit of brilliant armor
appeared to her. She introduces Nicholas Stafford, Earl
of Thornwich from the 16th
Century to the modern-.world
atld falls in love with him
be,fore he was sent back to
his own time where he was
scheduled to be executed.
Dougless found historical
evidence of his innocence,
and then she, too , was trans- '
ported to his time where she
became . involved in hi s
world, and their love affair

when success is measured by
indiVidual performance, the
success of a musical ensemfrom Page A1
ble is a culmination of the
effort~
of many," says
ticipated in band or other Dingess .
" In mu sic groups, much
music programs reported the
lowest lifetime and current like in life, there are those
use of alcohol. tobacco and who will do anything and
illegal drugs, and the con- everyth ing to be successful ,
stant adjustments of tempo, there are those who do just
tone. style, rhythm, phrasing enough to get by, and there
and feeling train the brain to are a small number of stuorganize and conduct numer- dents just happy to ride
through on the shirttails of
ous activities at once.
else," he added.
everyone
The bottom line, according
"The
music experience
to the National Association
for Music education is that where overall performance is
"kids plus music programs dependent on everyone's best
equal hi gher grades and effort is a good lesson in
developing
lite
skili s.
lower substance abuse."
Dingess added that by par- Students celebrate victories
ticipating in music groups at as well as defeats "together,"
sc hool students learn to they -learn to cope with the
"interact with others while inadequacies of those around
striving toward a common them as well their own inadegoal" - developing the prac- quacies. And all the while
tice of team work so essential they are creating not only
to success in today's business skills for getti ng along well
in life, but memories that last
world.
"Unlike academic classes a lifetime."

Dear Editor:
I read your public notice pertaining to oil and gas. I found it
·somewhat of a comedy. Gas was nearly free for 20 years and
we were assessed tax as usual. The landowners and taxpayers
haven't objected because the majority didn't understand the
system. I suggest you all awaken and call your Congress people and attend the ballot booth.
· James E. Diddle
Rac;ine

...

Keeping tabs ·deaths in Iraq
Patricia Kneisler is a 51-yearold civil engineer who lives by
herself in Benicia, Calif., a
town of about 27,000 people.
She helps design piping layouts
for jet-fueling facihties.
Michael White is a married
40-something computer progr.muner in Stone Mountain,
Ga., whose favorite hobby is
spinning bedtime stories for
· his 3-year-old daughter.
They have never met in person. They have talked on the
phone once. But they were
drawn together last spring by a
shared question: How many
people are dying in Iraq? Their
unlikely collaboration in finding the answer has turned
these two ordinary people, on
opposite sides of the country,
into players in the international debate over the war in Iraq.
The little Web site they created last year -- www.lunaville.org -- is now considered by
manyjoumalists, military personnel and their families to be
the most accurate, up-to-date
and comprehensive source for
death and casualty tolls in Iraq.
You'll find references to the
site on BBC, Slate, the New
York Review of Books, the
National Review (criticizing
Kneisler and White for being
"peaceniks"), Editor &amp;
Publisher, U.S. News and
World Report, and dozens of
Web sites and Web logs.
"It's amazing the community
of people from around the
world that we hear from," White
. said by phone from Georgia..

Joan
Ryan

It began almost a year ago
when Kneisler attended an
anti-war vigil at a park in ·
Benicia. She had never
protested anything in her life.
She was a Midwestern numbers geek. But she felt so
''completely and totally convinced" that the war was
immoral that she began showing up at the park every week
for the Thursday night vigils,
even when the protesters had
dwindled to just two or three.
She made two signs to hold.
On one she wrote the number
of dead U.S. and allied troops.
On the other she wrote the
number of dead Iraqi civilians.
But she ran into a problem:
She found conflicting numbers for deaths for U.S. and
allied troops.
The Department of Defense
and U.S. Central Command
Web sites don't publish running totals to check against
such sites as CNN, so Kneisler
went into their archives to
chronicle and count every
death. She crosschecked their
numbers with news items
about every death since the
war beglln. After three weeks
)I

of research, she constructed
her own list of the dead, noting
the name, hometown, place
and date of death and the circumstances.
.
"I compared my list to others, and my eyes about fell out
or my head," she said. CNN
had missed two British deaths.
The Army Times had missed
four U. S. deaths. A Russian
site that was keeping a tally
had double-counted one death
and gotten another one wrong.
A stickler for detail,
Kneisler developed a spreadsheet to record the death and
casualty statistics, keeping a
detailed list of her crosschecked information sources.
"Then if anyone challenged
my signs, I would have th!!
evidence," she said.
Kneisler shared the numbers
with an anti-war Web log,
which posted it immediately.
Three thousand miles away
in Georgia, Michael White
was searching the Internet for
a delinitive number on the
dead in Iraq. It was late April.
The war had supposedly
ended, and President Bush had
appeared on the aircraft carrier
in front of the "Mission
Accomplished!" sign.
"No one seemed to be paying attention to the soldiers
that were still dying," White
said.
He came across Kneisler's
chart on the Web log and emailed her. He wanted to take
her information, update it daily
and post it on the Web domain

he had set up for his family.
The site already bore the name
of Lunaville, the tictional setting of the bedtime stories he
spun for his daughter.
TogetQer, White and Kneisler
ammged the data in an accessible format. Eve!)' day since
then, between the responsibilities of their real jobs, they compare news items about casualties to CentCom and
Department of Defense infor'
mation releases. They scour foreign news sources for obituaries
that confirm non-American
deaths in the allied forces.
The hits to the site soon
grew from 4,000 a month to
the current 600,000, plus the
hundreds of e-mails from military personnel, families of
troops in Iraq, anti-war
activists, and correspondents
in Poland, Spain and Russia
who send translated news
items from their local papers.
Last summer, White had to
move the site off his home
computer and onto a public
Web server to accommodate
the' volume of visitors.
"My wife is about ready to
kill me for how much time I
spend on the computer," White
joked.
But he and Kneisler, and a
growing stable of contributors,
continue the meticulous work
of researching and posting
each casualty as a remi nde~ of
the cost of this war.
The totals tor U.S. military,
as of this writing: 558 dead,
3,200 wounded.
•

The Daily Sent~el • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Celebroting special
· days with you! . ·

It was noted that the back

entrance at the church is
·being completed along with a
storage building by Dennis
Long Construction. It wa'
decided to purchase railing
for the back entrance. A new
counter top has al so been
purchased .
Campbell reported that
the group made $1659.5 0 on
their last bake. noodle and
towel sale. The money will
be used to help pay the cost
of building the ramp.
Hart reported that she had
ordered three plaques to be
placed at the three entrances
to designate who made donation s in memory of loved
ones.
It was announced that the
group will be serving the
volunteers at God 's Net on
March 23.
. The noodle makers wi II be
making noodles on March 29
for sale and anyone wanting
to place orders may contact
Hart at 949-2656.

Next meeting was changed
to 7 p.m. on April 15 at the
church due to Maundy
Thursday serv ices. Each
ind ividual i' to take a basket
lunch.
Suzanne Sayre. Blondena
Rainer, and Edie Hubbard
prese nted the program for the
evening .
Hubbard read
"Ireland". Sayre read "The
Legend of St Patrick's Day",
"Count Your Blessings", "A
Blessing from St Patrick".
and several other Iri sh
Blessings.
Rainer read
"Good Ole Country Slan g."
They served refreshments
to Lillian Hayman. Ruth
Simpson, Mabel Brace.
Kathryn
Hart.
Hazel
McKelvey. Evelyn Fore man,
Betty Proffitt. Linda Ru sse ll ,
Edna Knopp. Tammy Beegle.
Mattie Beegle. Jackie White,
Letha Proffitt. Martha Lou
Beegle, Meli ss a Holman,
Denise
Holm an,
Avis
Harrison , Juli e Campbell,
Janet Thei ss and Joann Lee.

School News
On Dean's List

Commerce. The students
also will participate in
breakout sessions - enhancing a resume with communi ty service, handling diffi cult
customers. understanding an
employer' s
expectations.
business lunch etiquette. and
interview tips. The symposium concludes wi th a vi sit
to the "Reality Store". a progralll designed to put the real
life challenges of job, family
and income into perspective.
Interested students may
regi ster at their school s
through
their
busine ss
instructors. For more contact
College Tech Prep Program
Assistant. at (740) 374-8716,
ext. 1885.

PC Application s. Business
Law
I,
Basic
Math,
Introduction to Composition,
Pre -Algebra .
General
Psychology.
Sociology,
Inte rpersonal
Economics.
Commu ni cation.
and
Introduction to the Theatre .
Registration is now underway for spring quarter.
which begins March 29.

POMEROY - The following students have been
named in the 26th annual
deepened. Together they edition of the National
devised a plan that, as a Dean's List for 2002-2003:
sign,
something
would Matthew
Koch ,
Knox
appear from him in the mod- College, Chelsea Peterson,
ern world when she returned Ohio
University,
and
to her own time. On the Jennifer Reeves , Hocking
'~We are using u new eplane returning to the United College, all or Albany ; Janet
learning platform to host the
States, Dougless metReed L. Ridenour, Washington
course information, ass ignStanford, who smiled at her State Comm unity College,
ments. te sts and more."
with Nicholas' s smile. She Chester; Brad W. Gilders.
Andaz Ahmad. Director of
had her sign.
• . University of Rio Grande.
Di stance
Learnin g.
As part of he( review, Mrs. and
Hope McClelland.
exp lain ed. "Students will
Holter read 'passages from Hncking Col lege, both of
need to visit the site as wel l
the novel that described the Glouster; Meli ssa Holman,
as parti cipate in di,cussion
characters as well as the love University · of Rio Grande ,
forums and c·hat rooms cenaffair and mystery of the Middleport; Tamara D.
tered on the course. and
book.
Bissell, Was hington State
email will be part ol' the
Members responded to roll Cothmunity
College,
work."
·
Pomerov·,
Debra
F.
Drake,
The college uses Interact.
call by remem benng a
J
an open so urce e-learning
favorite romanti c evening. Washington
State
platform , for its online
Next meeting will be Community College, Racine;
instruction. The websi te
Wednesdy at Trinity Church. and Darrick Knapp, Ohio
allows the instructor to creJeanne Bowen will review Valley College, Rutland.
ate. admini ster and add to
"The hoiurs" by Michael
Students are selected by
MARIETTA
·
·
.
h
their
college
deans,
registrars
the course through the
Cunnmgham, wmner o 1 t e
State Internet. Students vis it the
1998 Pulitzer Prize.
or honor society advisors Washington
and are in the top I0 percent Community, Coll ege contin- site to obtain course inforof their class, on their ue s to meet the needs of e- mation . a syllabus. assignschool's dean's li st, or have lcarners with an expanded ments, quiz zes, tes ts, and
spring schedule of distance more. They also will turn in
earned a comparable honor.
leaming courses. Students assignments through the site ,
may select from 12 online meet other students through
courses. including one for course chat room s and
those need ing to polish their forums . and participate in
RACINE
Racine
math skill s. The remaining class discu ssio ns .
Village Council will meet·
co urses may be applied
Almad point s out that.
Monday (tonight) at 7 p.m. at
tow ard many associat e with e-learning. there is a
the municipal building.
degree
p:rograms
at great deal of responsibility
Washington State or trans- on the student to participate
MARIETTA
The ferred to complete a bache- and keep up with the course
Washington-Morgan-Meigs lor's degree program at a work. Students also must
College
Tech
Prep four-year college.
compl ete a "getting started"
Consortium has joined with
More and more students assignment to Lktermine if
Zonta of Marietta to present arc turning to online courses they can w..·cess
.
and na\·igmc
a business symposium for ~s they discover the conve- the site for their particular
area high school students.
nience and flexibility they cour~e .
The program for senior offer. With enrollment in
For more inform ation on
business students at Meigs, each course lim ited to the Washin~ton
State
and Morgan High. Belpre, regular classroom capacity, Comrmlnity Cullcgc\ eFrontier,
and
Marietta these popular courses tend to \earni ng prog ram . umtad
schools, in addition to the till quickly.
Andaz Ahmad at 17401 .~74Washington County Career
Spring quarter onl ine 8 176. ext. 1710. or cilcc·k out
Center, is set for l) a. m. to courses
include
Small the distan L·e learning wt: bsite
3:30 p.m on Friday, April 2. Busine ss Entrepreneurship. at www.wscconline.com .
at
Washington
State
Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...
Community Coll ege.
Meigs • 992-2 155
Keynote speaker for the
day will be Charlotte Keirn,
executive director of the
Marietta
Chamber
of

Community
College
expands spring
online courses

Local Briefs

Council to meet

Business
symposium
offered to
students

Keeping
Meigs
informed

Sunday
Times-Sentinel

Support
from Page A1
An emphasis will also be
on
"helping
ourselves
through helping others," said
Hobbs, who extended an

invitation to anyone in the
Bend area to attend Tuesday
night's meeting.
He said that Caring Friends
is not for only those who are
lonely and bereaved, but also
for those who are concerned
enough about others to offer
, their help.

"P~aee($ f€1 ([fi &amp;
f€1 $&gt;€1"

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of Racine

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March 14th~ 17th
!0:40am Sunday morning
7:00pm each evening

, Guest Speaker:
Pastor Don Walker
Former Minister at the Church

404 5th St.
Racine , Ohio

Pastor Rick Rule invites
the public.

AIR
· (Former Kroger Location)

Applications Being Accepted
For Most Positions
Part Time or FUll Time
Pick-Up and Return Applications
At

Powelrs Super Vala
second St.

Pomeroy
k

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

•

Monday, March 15, 2004

Dead Sea scrolls exhibit
opens in Akron on Tuesday

hannel

The exhibit also includes
example, of ancie nt writi ngs
and trace' the J~velopment
of the first Engl ish language
Bihle. That beca me a battl e
between ;, uccessin:- Roman

Catholic and Protestant moniirchs trying to impose their
rcl i~imt~ view~

in England.

The tre&lt;&gt;tment of the issue
prompt ed the Tex." Cat holi c
11cdly new,paper in Dallas
lu wam th&lt;&gt;t tl1e show has a
hin t of anti~Catho li c bias, but
B1undi sa id th e tDne was
lll(\rC anti-monarc h.
Rl'l. Lawrence Tosco, a ·
Scrip tu re professor at the
Clcw land Roman Catholi c
Diocc'e sem inary, said transl a till~ the Bible from the hi storic- ritual use of Latin into
En~l i sli led to llllme.rous conllil:ts and . often focu sed on
accompanying co n1mentaries
that rdkcted sectarian bias-

e.-..

To,co said sd1 ol ars are
d" iued about whether the
C&lt;IIC' 11 h~rc th ~ scrolls were
found we re their place of tlri~ in or a hidin;; place. Still ,
the· 1tcrns ha ve co ntribut ed to
the undersLinding. of Judaism

'lllllt' 1.900 year' ago, Toscn
Monday, March 15
Morning (7:00am-Noon)
33 - 47 W-NW 5 mph
Temperatures will rise from
33 to 47 by late this morning.
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from the west
turning from the northwest as
the morning progresses. ·
Aftemoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 48 - 51 NW-NE 5
mph
Temperatures will remain
around 49 with today's high of
5f occurring around 2:00pm.
Skies will range from sunny

to mostly sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the northwest
turning from the northeast as
the afternoon progresses.
Evening
(7:00pmMidnight) 38 - 43 NE 5 mph
Temperatures will stay
near 40. Skies will be mostly
clear to mostly cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the northeast.

Overnight
(1:00am6:00am) 33 - 37 N 5-10 mph
It will be a cloudy
overnight. There is a good
chance of some rain .

. . aid.

Temperatures will hold steady
around 34 with today's low of
33 occurring around 6:00am. A fragment · of the Dead Sea Scrolls, top, is shown witll an
Winds will be 5 to I0 MPH infrared photograph to reveal the text. in Akron ... From the Dead
Sea Scrolls to the Forbidden Book", a major exhibit of religious
from the north .
artifacts opens next week in Akron. (AP Photo/ Mark Duncan)
Thesday; March 16
AKRON , - A Dead Sea lection in the home of Bruce
Moming (7:00am-Noon) scroll
s exhibit that attracted Ferrini. who suggested brinu32 - 40 N 5-l 0 mph
crowds in three stops across ing the ex hibit' north arte r'a
It's going to be a cloudy the Bible Belt opens this swing through the Bible Belt.
morning . There is a good week in the Rust Belt home"It's a once in a lifet.ime
chance of rain. Temperatures town of one it its backers.
opportunity to get the show."
will climb from 32 to 40 by
The privately owned exhibit, Biondi said. He said avoiding
late this morning. Winds will "From the Dead Sea Scrolls to museums also allowed the
be 5 to I0 MPH from the the Forbidden Book," will be show's backers to maintain
north .
unveiled at a charity preview control of how the items were
on Monday night at the JohnS. di splayed.
Knight Center. It will be open
Ferrini asked to keep a low ~
to the public from Tuesday profile over the show arran ge~
through April 18.
ments and only emerged from
Over the past II months a meeting with show staff
ous legal issues and al so..,..~e show has tra ve led members to announce that
long-term cost impli c
thr
h Dalla s, Hunt sville, another Bible-related find
tions," Taf( spo
Ala., . 'llld Murfreesboro,· would be added to fulure
Orest Holubec
Tenn.,
awing more than shows. The coll ection is valPetro s.aid the system 100,000
pie .
ued at more than $ 10 mill ion .
would have helped solve
The s
, the brainchild of
The show has three tent athe kidnapping last year of antiquttle. · dealers with an tive dates upcoming . but
Dru Sjodin, a student at the interest in Bible-related items, Biondi said any announceUniversity of North Dakota. has bypassed hi gh-profile metll must await signed
Her alleged abductor was museums in favor of venues ex hibit contrac ts.
The highlights are the flag~
a registered sex offender such as the Kni ght center, a
high-tech exhibit hall that typ- ments of Dead Sea scroll s,
Iivi ng just over the border
ically hosts concerts and trade ancient writings foLmd in a cave
in Minnesota. That would shows.
in the Judean dcsen from 1947
have been known "in 30
Still, visitors should get the to 1956. They are believed by
seconds," ,if those states feel of a dimly lit mus~;um some schol ars to be the oldest'
were partners in the sys- when they see scroll fragments Hebrew manuscripts of Judeaotem, Petro said.
and related items tracing the Christian Scripture.
"Jt's remarkable," Petro written language and the
Th e fra gment s represe nt
said. "It has a great deal of English Bible over more than perhaps 1 percent of the Dead
three millennia, according to Sea scro lls. most of which are
potential."
Twelve states involved in Lee Biondi, who put hi s Los held by the Israeli governthe
program
or
had Angeles antiquities dealership ment's anfiquities program.
on hold to serve as show curaexpressed interest have tor.
pu II ed out.
"The Kni ght center is not a
Connecticut, Michigan, museum, but when you walk
Florida and Pennsylvania in you'll feel like you're in a
also remain participants in museum," Biondi said while
the program.
carefully previewing the col-

"We have a much larger
kno wledge of the variety
wit hin .l udai"n at that time,"
he \aid.
Other items included . in the
c•.x hibit arc 5.000-vear-old
tabl ets from Mesopotmnia .
medieva l Bib le manuscripts
and fir't ecl1 ti&lt;lll S of the
Gutenberu Bible from 1.:155
and the King .lames Bible
from 16 1I . The exhibit . wh ich costs
$ 15 for adults and $8 for students over 8. has never turned
a proi'it and Bi ondi said it has
become a cheris hed endeavor
for him.
''I've gotten a great personal bless ing out of it." he said .

State sold records to company for $50K
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state Bureau of Motor
Vehicles
sold
driving
records of Ohioans for
about $50,000 to the company developing a multistate crime database program, a newspaper reported. ·
· The
program,
called
Matrix, lets states share
information and cross-reference the data with up to 20
billion records in databases
held by Seisint Inc., a private company based in
Boca Raton, Fla.
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
spokeswoman Julie Hinds
told
The
Columtms
Dispatch that Sei sint paid
Ohio
$50,073
between
October
2002
and
December 2003.
Hinds said the company
signed an agreement not to
misuse the information.
· A spokesman for state
Attorney General Jim Petro,
who supports the system,
said the information Ohio
is ·sharing is already available to law enforcement.
"There's nothing novel
here. It's just the speed at
which it's done," said
james V. Canepa, chief
itej:&gt;uty attorney general.
. The
records
include
details on property, boats
and Internet domain names
that
their
con-

..

nections, bankruptcies, liens
and
business
filings,
according to an August
report by the Georgia state
Offi'ce
of
Homeland
Security.
The
American
Civil
Liberties Union has complained that the system,
fonmilly
known
as
Multi state Anti-Terrorism
Information
Exchange,
could be used by state and
federal investigators to
compile dossiers on people
who have never been suspected of a crime.
Seisint officials have said
safeguards are built into the
system to prevent such
abuses.
Ohio and other states
have been given releases
stating they won't be liable
for mistakes if data from
the system contain errors.
The ACLU has filed a
number of public records
requests in Ohio and other
states to get more details.
"Accuracy on this seems
to be poor at best," said
Carrie Davis, an attorney
with the ACLU of Ohio.
"We have no idea what
these records are."
Gov. Bob Taft is reviewing to what extent Ohio
should be involved . The
others still interested are
Connecticut,
Florida,
Michigan and Pennsylvania.
"We are
·
vari-

"' frou4Jo,be ap~rt ojyour tve.
'-,1

'

.

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-2155

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Wright upsets Mosley, Page 82
NCAA women's brackets, Page 86
Harris receives award, Page 86

Monday, March 15, 2004

Mansfield St.
Peter's wins
regional final
MASSILLON (AP)
Gretchen Polinski hit seven
3-pointers and tini shed with
23 points to lead Mansfield
St. Peter's to a 72-36 rout of
Lowellville on Saturday
night in a girls Division IV
regional tina!.
Polinski hit four 3-poimers
in the last 3:20 of the tirst
quarter to give the Spartans
(23-2) a 2 1- 12 lead.
St. Peter 's limi ted th e
Rockets (2 1-5) to four second-quarter points. forcing
II turnovers in the period
while building a 39-16lead.
Amanda
Nero
led
Lowellville with 14 points.
. St. Peter 's will play Miller
Cjty in the state semifi nals
Friday in Col umbus.

Destroyers fall
again in close
game
COLUMBUS (AP)
Nick Browder threw a 25yard touchdown pass to
Ricky Ross with ' I 8 seconds
left to give the Philadelphia
Soul a 43-41 victory over the
Columbus Destroyers on
Saturday night.
Browder was 16-of-34 for
168 yards and three TDs for
the Soul (3-3). Ryan Vena ,
was 18-of-34-for 186 yards
and two touchdowns for the
Destroyers ( 1-5 ). He also ran
for two scores.

St. Louis rallies
for 5-3 win over
Columbus
'

Keeping
Meigs
informed

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Brian
Savage, Keith Tkachuk and
Mike Sillinger scored thirdperiod goals, rallying the St.
Louis Blues to a 5-3 victory
over the Columbus Blue
Jackets on Saturday night.
After the Blues took a 2-0
lead on goals by Sillinger and
Alexander Khavanov, the
Blue Jac kets came back to
take the lead when Trevor
Letowski scored twice and
Alexander Svitov added a
goal.
Tkachuk's winner came
when
Columbu s'
Todd
Marchant was oft' for tripping.
Aftrr Petr Cajanek muffed a
shot. Tkachuk got the puck
and scored.
Sillinger scored his second
of the game at 16:36 on a twoon-one break.
The BIues tied it at 3 when
Savage poked in a rebound of
Doug Weight's shot at 6:41.
The Blue Jackets had taken
the lead at 2:47. Nikolai
Zherdev flung the puck in
from the top of slot toward the
net, and Letowski deflected
(he shot in off the right post.
· The
Blues
outshot
Columbus 17-6 in the third
period and 32-21 for the
game.
St. Louis, which has
reached the playoffs 24 consecutive years , moved one
point ahead uf Los Angeles in
the race fur eighth place in the
Western Conference. The
Blues' postseason streak in the
longest current run in professional sports .
: Columbus. an NHL-worst
!)-23-4-2 on the road, has
dropped tive straight overalL
:-The Blues. 4-0-2 in their
last six, went 5- 1 this season
11gainst Columbus. St. Louis is
9; 1-1 at home versus the Blue
Jacket,s.
· St. Loui s led 1-0 after the
tlrst period after Sillinger's
short-handed goal , the Blues'
tirst since Jan. I.
Blue Jackets goalie Fred
Brathwaite was hit by a long
shot from Bryce Salvador.
Brathwaite finished the tirst
period but was then replaced
by Marc Deni s.
St. Louis went ahead 2-0 at
4:46 of the second period . on
Khavanov's power-play goal,
the tirst shot against Denis.
: Notes: Morning skates are
· optional for the Blues in an
Jlltempt to save the team's
energy for the rest of the season .... Blues D Murray Baron
returned after missing two
games because of the tlu .
j,

• DIVISION

IV DISTRIO

58r SCIOTOVILLE 54, 0T •

EAmRN

CHAMPIONSHIP -

Eagles still dominant at The Convo
BY BUTCH COOPER

Eagles
excel in
close
shaves

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com
ATHENS
Ale x
Simpson and his Eastern
Eagles may consider moving their home coun to 211
Convocation Center in
Athens. the home mailing
address of The Convo.
Not only have the Eagles
been successful there for the
past four years, i.hey put in
some extra time during the
district tournament this year.
Coming off a two overtime win over Whiteoak
March 4. Simpson helped
Eastern preserve the 2004
season Saturday.
Simpson connected on a
game-trying 3-point goal
with no time remaining on
the clock in regulation, then
made all of the Eagles'
points in OT to lead Eastern
to a 58-54 win over
Sciotoville for their third
di strict title in the past four
years.
Simpson led the Eagles
( 16-7 J with 22 points,
including five 3-pointers,
while Nathan Lee Grubb
added 16 points and Cody
Dill scored nine points to go
along with his 12 rebounds.
Grubb also had six steals.
Dan Downing scored 22
points for the Tartans ( 18-5 ),
while Hoskins netted 14.
Eastern will now face
South Webster in the regional semifinal 6: 15 p.m.,
Tuesday at the Columbus
Fairgrounds Coliseum. The
Jeeps ( 19-3) w~re a 63-40
winner over Trimble in their
district tina! game Saturday.
"It was just a tremendou s
game," said Eastern head
coach Howie Caldwell.
"The kids preserved. They
don't do some things right
all the time, but by golly,
three out of 'the last four
years, we're district champs.
Not too many teams can say
that. I'm proud of that fact.
I'm proud . of the fact that
they believed and they never
gave up. It was a heck of a
basketball game."
With Sciotoville up by
three with seven seconds
remaining , Hoskins was
fouled, putting the senior at
the free throw line for two
attempts.
Hoskins, who helped lead
a strong third-quarter push
earlier in the game. only
Please see Eagles, 82

BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman @mydaitytribune:com
ATHENS
Gillette ,
Remington and Schick have
nothing on Eastern.
For whe n it co me s to
heart-stopping and edge-ofyour-seat ba sketball tournament action. the Eagles are
distingui shing them selves as
the kings of close shaves.
A 58-54 overtime victory
over Sciotoville East in a
boys Division IV Southeast
Di strict final Saturday, was
j ust the latest in a trilogy of
tourney nail biters involving
.the Meigs Countians.
Last week ' s semifinal win
ove r Whiteoak went to double over\i me before they
pulled out a 43-42 win. And
just three points ~ eparated
the top-seed from a second
ro und upset at the hands of
Crooksvi lle .
Following Saturday' s vic.tory. a relieved Eastern
coac h Howie Caldwell
agreed that playing in close
ga mes will only help his
team at this week's regional
encounters.
"Earlier in the year. we
were losing close games," he
recalled. "If you lose them ,
doubts come into the back of
you r mind . These kids, they
don ' t mind (close games)
nnw.''

While the previou s two
contests were close. they
were roomy compared to
Saturday.
Sciotoville led by three ,
and had a chance to ice the
game at the free throw line.
But Jo sh Hoskins mi ssed
both charity attempts, setting
up a game-tying 3-pointer at
the buzzer by Eastern 's Alex
Simpson .
"If you ever want t.o say,
·y ou never want to give up,'
ri !(hl there would be a classic
example of a basketball
game w here you neve r want

to give up," Caldwell added

Eastern's Alex Simpson (20) shoots a pull up jumper over Sciotovll le 's Josh Hos kins (25) du ring the first half of the Eagles· 58-54 overt1rne w1n over th e Tartans for the Divi sion IV distri ct
championship. (Brad St1 erman)

Please see Shave, B:Z

Xavier, Cincinnati, Daytof1 to play in NCAA tournament
Bv

ANITA CHANG
Wednesday in the fir st
ever matchup betwee n the
Associated Press
- - - - - - -- - - two teams.
The Bearcats were hopNo. 13 Cincinnati won't ing for a No . 3 seed in
have to go far from home their 13t h consecutive
for the NCAA tournament. NCAA tournament appearThe Bearcats. who won ance, but weren' t too di sthe Conference US A tour- appointed with the outnament over the wee kend. come. espec iall y · ih e
were rewarded Sunday venue.
with a No. 4 seed and a
" We're going to sell our
first round ga me in ticket allotm ent, no LJU esColumbus, Ohio, a two- tion ,'' coac h Bob Hu ggin s
hour drive up Interstate 71. said.
Cincinnati (24-6 ) plays
Cincinnati heat DePaul
East Tenne ssee State (27- 55-50 on Saturday lo win
5) on Friday.
th e confere nce tourna Two other Ohio teams me nt. At the end of the
made the NCAA tourna- reg ular
seaso n.
th e
ment.
Bea rcats found themselves
Xavier (23-1 0) enters as sharing first place in th e
the No. 7 seed in the sa me confe rence with four oth er
Atlanta
regional
as teams
DePaul.
Cincinnati.
Th e A I a b a 111 a - B j r m i n g h a m ,
Musketee rs play lOth- Me mphis , and Charloll c.
seeded Louisville (20-9)
Tony Bobbitt said he
on Friday in Orlando , Fla. doesn't want to repeat the
In the Phoenix regional, Bearcat s' long history of
No . 10 seed Dayton (24-8) losin g in th e first weeke nd
plays No. 7 seed DePaul of the tournament.
(21 -9) on Thursday at
"We aren ' t lookin g
Buffalo, N.Y. ,
ahead," said Bobbitt , voted
Kent State and Toledo Conference USA tournaaccepted berths Sunday in ment MVP. "It was kind of
the National Invitation disappointing to be elimi Tournament.
nat ed in the first round la st
Toledo (20- 10) plays at year. Nb w we ' re co n.cen Marquette ( 17- 11) in the tratin g oi1 preparing for
first round on Monday. East Tennesse e State ."
Kent State (22-8) hosts
Hugg in s said the tea m
West Virginia (15 -13) in
the
ope nin g
round
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Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

:Wright upsets Mosley to
unify 154-pound titles
BY TIM

DAALBERG
Associated Press

LAS VEGAS ' - Shane
Mosley took a $10 million
gamble and lost.
Wink y Wright ou tworked
Mosley over 12 rounds
Saturday night, taking the
fight to him and scorins the
bigger punches to Will a
unanimous decision a nd
. be co me the undi sputed
!54-pound champion.
In the biggest fi gh t of hi s
ca ree r, the. unheralded
Wri ght consistentl y beat
the speedy Mos ley to the
punch. ruining hi s planned
$ 10 million mega fi ght with
Felix Trinidad later thi s
year.
There were no knoc kdowns but the fi ght was
:fast-paced from the o pen. ing bell as the two cham pi :ons went after each other.
:Mosley, though. was never
able to get ins ide a nd
· Wright seemed to ha ve the
answer everytime he landed a punch.
Judges Dave Moretti and
Chuck Giamp a scored it
. 117-111 , whi le Paul Smith
had it 11 6-1 12. The
Associated
Pre ss
had
Wright winning 116- 11 2 ..
" I deserved it. It 's been a
long time," Wright said . " I
always thought I was better. Shane has speed but I
was better all arou nd ."
Sensing he was behind ,
Mosley came ou t in the
final round throwing everything he had . But Wri ght
responded and the two
·fought toe-to-toe as the
crowd stood and cheered at
the Mandalt~y Bay hotelcasino.
As the final seconds
ticked
down , Mo sley
sw ung so hard with a right
hand that he fell down as
the bell sounded. He got up
and the two fi ghters
embraced.
Mosley, who beat Oscar
De La Hoya in his last fight
to win the WBA and WBC
titles, was a 2-1 favorite
against Wright, who· held
the IBF title but had been
largely shut out of big
fights in his career.
"For some reason when I
came into the ring I felt
like I wa s dehydrated ,"
Mosley said . " I couldn ' t

,

\

move. It wa s a monkey on
my back ."
Mosley came out quick in
the first round, but it soon
became
apparent
that
Wri ght was landing harder
punches and began control ling the pace of the fight.
"If you box him like this
it will be a n easy fight for
yo u." Wright 's train er. Dan
Birmingham said.
Wright heeded hi s trainer's advice and began pil ing up the rounds, relent less ly going after the short er Mosle y, who tried to
co unter him by moving
about the ring.
"I alway s felt I was the
better fighter," Wright sa id .
After the sixt h round
there was a grow tn g
urge ncy in Mosley 's corne r, where hi s father and
trainer, Jack Mo sley, urged
hi s son on .
"The rounds are going by
quickly," Mosley told hi s
son. "You have to do the
ri ght things to · win thi s
fi ght ."
Mosley (39-3) was figh ting at 154 pounds for only
the third time in a career
that began as a lightwei ght.
Wright (47-3) fought hi s
en tire career at the weight,
and seemed both big ger
and stronger than Mosley.
Punch
stats showed
Wright landed 250 punche s
to 166 for Mosley.
"I thin k it was mo re on
my part th an hi s part. "
Mosley said. "! don ' t fee l
h ~ was overwhelming ly
strong."
Mosley said he took the
fi ght with Wri ght to make
history by unifyin g all
three titles. But he was al so·
look ing for a bi g win to se t
up a poss ibl e November
fi ght with Trinidad where
both fighters would make
at least $10 million.
"It was not a mistake. I
have no regrets," Mo sley
said. " I wanted to find out
who was the best . in our
division. I was fi ghtin g for
hi story."
Mosley earned $2. 1 mil lion , while Wright was paid
$750,000.
On the undercard, Joe
Mesi lived up to his billing
as a heavyweight star of the
future for eight rounds.· In
two furious final rounds ,
Vassiliy . Jirov may ha ve

exposed him as something
far le ss.
When it was over, Mesi
remained undefeated - but
just barely .
Jiro v turned a lopsided
fi ght arou nd with shocking
suddenness. knock in g Mesi
down three times in the
final two rounds and leaving him hanging on desperately to remain up right as
the bell sounded to end the
fi ght after I 0 rounds .
Mesi was declared the
winn er by 94-93 margins
on all three ringsi de scorecards. but his reputation
took a beating as J irov
handed him one in the ring
over the las t two rounds.
The Associated Press had
Mesi winnin g 95 -93.
Mes i had dominated the
fight, beating the former
cruiserweigh t champion to
the punch and bl oodying
hi s face when Jirov
dropped him with a right
hand to the back of his
head late in the ninth
round . Mes i got up and
traded punches with ..lirov
as th e round ended .
" If I knew I was ahead as
much as I w;ts I wouldn 't
have taken that chance,"
Mesi ·said . "I wanted to
close the show."
Instead, it was Jirov who
near Iy closed the show on
Mes i. He hurt him with a
series of punches earl y in
the lOth round and Mesi
wen t down to one knee,
getting up at the count of
nin e.
Ji rov, the 1996 Olympic
gold medalist, went right
after Mes i, landing a leftright combination that put
him down on one knee with
52 seco nds left in the fi&amp;ht.
Mes i was desperately trying to hold and hang on as
Ji rov rocked him with
another big left hand with
I0 second s left and was
stumbling in J irov 's arm s
when the fight ended .
Mesi , who Improved to
29-0, was making his first
Las Vegas appearance after
fig hting most of hi s career
ne ar hi s hometown of
Buffalo. N.Y. Jirov was
supposed to be his tou ghes t
opponent yet, after a slow
climb in the quality of
opponent s in a career that
began in 1997.

NCAA

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from Page 81
needed to make one foul shot to
put the game away, but failed
on both attempts.
The Eagles, with no time
outs remaining, got the ball
back as time ticked off the
clock. The ball was in
Simpson's hands, who let one
loose from the top of the key as
the buzzer sounded to force the
oveni me and give the Eagles
new life.
'•I just got the ball and figured I just might as well shoot
it," said Simpson. "Why not?
We didn 't have anything to
lose. So I just shot it up there
and it went in."
. "There wasn't a doubt in my
mind that Alex was going to
have a good game today.
because he had an extraordinary week of practice," added
Caldwel l. "He worked very
hard of this week trying to get
him from taking the ball all the Eastern 's Nathan Lee Grubb dnves to the basket fo r a laylJ!l
way to the hole and just go up anp draws a blocking foul during the Eagles' 58·54 overtime
;
and shoot the ball. Shoot it he win for the district championsh ip . (Brad Sherman)
did.
Eastern in the same situat ion we might be all right. and We
"He stepped up and did what Sciotoville was in earlier.
one of the 16 (Division 1\Z)
a senior is supposed to do."
But. Downing couldn't imi- teams left in the state of Ohil:\:
Simpson's 3-pointer was not tate Simpson's OT forcing bas"We did not do a very gD&lt;!I
the last of the big shots by the ket as his 3-point attempt with job in the ftrsl half of gLtardillj'
6-foot- 1 senior forward, whose nine seconds left in the game Downing or Conley."
,
presence became even more missed it's mark. Simpson was
The duo were held to n11ie
crucial when the team's leading quickly fou led and made one of points in the second half, but jt
scorer (Grubb) going into the his shots from the charity ~tripe didn't slop Sciotoville froMl
ovenime period and the lead- to send Eastern packing for taking its tirst lead of the night
ing rebounder (Dill) had both Columbus.
early in the half with the help Of
fouled out by midway through
Eastern opened the game eight third-quaner points by
OT.
with a 9-0 lead, and the Eagles . Hoskins.
"You have to give the kids took a 14-9 advantage into the
Hoskins had a dri ving lay-up
who are sitting on the bench second quaner, but the first half to open the half, then !laile&gt;l_a
(Chris Carroll and Chris play of Downing and Andrew trey to tie the game. With 4:56
Myers) so much credit for what · Conley kept the T;u1ans in the left in the third quaner, a free
they did," said Caldwell. game.
·
throw shot by Hoskins put tile
"There was Cody sitting on the
Downing and Conley com- Tanans up by one.
_
bench and there was Nathan bined for 18 of the Tanans' 24
From that point. it was a dog
Lee sitting on the bench. They tirst-half points to keep fi ght.
came in and did a very, very Sciotoville in the game at half"It was our ball to stan the
good job."
third quaner and we wanted to
time. 29-24.
Simpson nailed a 3-pointer
"We were very focused at the make sure we got some kind ef
with 2:54 left in OT to put the very ~ginning of the game, shot, but we didn't play well i'n
Eagles up by three. Later in OT, but it seems like we just shoot the third quat1er," said
following a Downing long ourselves in the foot some- Caldwell. "We let them back in
jumper that tied the game at 54- how," said Caldwell. "If we can · the hall game in the third quarall, Simpson connected from alleviate those problems, we ter and that hun. That hun a
outside the arc again, putting might be all right. I'm saying lot."

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from Page 81
Simpson dribbled across the
time line, pulled-up at the top of
the key. and found nothing but
net from 21-feet out to force
ovenime.
"It was kind of a brokendown play," explained the
senior fmward. "I looked up at
the clock, and I had to shoot it,
so I threw one up and it went
.

Simpson, who finished with
a game-high 22 points, went on
to score all eight Eastern tallies
in the extra session, including
two more 3-pointers, to send

-

hi s club back to the Regional OL!l Cody Dill and injured
Ruben Cross - but had two
Tournament.
The regional benh ts guards step up in their absence.
Nat han Lee Grubb score&gt;i
Eastern's third in the past four
years, as well as the third in four points in the first extra session to force a second, then
school history.
Simpson also came up with a ,( hris Myers c;tme off the
clutch play back on Feb. 28 in bench to nail a 3- pointer and
his team's 41-38 win over mesh a pitir of free throws to
Crooksville in a sectional tlnal. p.ut his club up for good.
The Ceramics. down by two,
The Wildcats had a chance to
had possession of the ball in the win the game, but a defensive
closing seconds. That was, stand in the tinal seconds preuntil Simpson came up with a ve nted a shot fro m even being
steal at half coun. He then con - attempted.
vet1ed one of two free throws
Eastern takes on Sourh
to make the margin three, and Webster in a regional semifinal
his team held on for the win.
Tuesday at the Fairgrounds
In the ·double OT win over Coliseum in Columbus. Tip-off
Whiteoak, Eastern found itself is slated for 6: 15 p.m.
without its big men, the fouled

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To
992· 2157

Oeatl~ite.f'

Offtee llofd'~
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00
Items

· Burlile, Inc .. th e so le mem-

ber of Burllle 0 11 Company.
LLC has adopted a resolution to withdraw the Limited
l iability Company. Claims

Experienced
AccoUnting
person in accounts payable,
receivable, payroll , taxes,
quarter reports &amp; G.L. Send
resume to CLA 548 , c/o
Gall ipolis Tnbune, Gallipolis
bH 45631.

against the company should
be addressed to Burlile Oil Full time wa.tress apply 1n
Company, LLC, PO Bo)( 334, pe rson at the Holiday Inn.
Galltpolis.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
look1ng lor a fun, friendly ,
tor sale. Chester Township, and rewarding env 1 ro n ~
Meigs County. send lett ers ment ? Then Fiesta Salons'
of interest to : The Daily busy Mason location is the
Sentinel. PO Box 729-20, place tor yOul We have
immed1 ate openmgs and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
great benefits for full and
part-ti me licensed Hair
GIVEAWAY
Stylists. Benefits include:
$300 hirmg bonu s hourly
6 mixed breed puppies wages. service co mmission
Aprox. 3 months old . Call up to 45%. retail and tanning
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ical, vis1on, denta l &amp; lite ins.,
lmfAND
advanced ed ucahon and
morel
Call Lynn at
(304)773-9560 lor more 1nto
Lost small female Jack and to sched ule an mterv~aw

· C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t

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FoUND

Russell Terrier , last seen
Maintenance Worker- High
Mon . on J1m Hill Ad . Reward
004-675-8 159

lost Red &amp; white Coon
hound, neutered male,
afraid of guns and men.
Reward
for
(7401 339· t 594.

return .

Aedishlbrown dog found in
town. Collar but no tags. Call
(740)446-9346 to descnbe

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Gold

Coins,

Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold

Rings,
M.T.S.

U.S. Currency,·
Coin Shop, 151

(7401992-7599

I \ IP I ll\'11 ' '
~ II{ \I( I '-1

for Sunday•

POLICIES. Ohio Valley Publishing reaervta the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad 111 any lime. Errofa muat be reported on the l lral
Trl bun•S.ntlnt~I·R-v l atar

will be r"pon albla for no mora than the coat of the apac;:a occupied by tha e rror and only ttlalirat inHrtion.

..

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not

Paramedic s
&amp;
EMT' s
needs. Apply at 1354
Jackson Pike Gallipolis.

- -------Residentia l
Tre atment
Fac:rlity youth worke r. Pay
based on experience Call
(740)379·9083 to apply.

School
Fundraislng

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1-800-2 14-0452
wwwga.l llpoliscareercollege.com
Accredlleci · Member A r;~:r!Klillng
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and S&lt;:hools1274B.

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Nice 2 and 3
mobile homes
· includes water,
trash , no pets,
S300 per month
2t67

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• t;:ltgo Llnle Johns St. Rt. 141

Centenary. Full and part

time positions available.
Benallta Include raise after
90 days, 401 K. overtime pay
for holidays &amp; paiCI vaca-

lor
ca ring
and dedicated
State
Tested
Nursing
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shifts, compelltlve wages,
an~ an excellon1 boneflta
pocl&lt;age. Interested appllean1s eontoct Cally Lso,
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Development
Coordinator at (7•0)992·

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6472
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Desk
Clerk
and
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needed.
Pleue apply at Budget Inn,
260 Jact&lt;oon Pika Galllpolla,
• GH. NO pl10&lt;1e COlli pte-.

POSTAL JOBS

~~~~:=~~~
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end money through th
ail until you have investi

:~a1~ed~h~o=o~ffo:rl~n::==~

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$15.44·$21.40/hr. now hir- •~---SiiFJMiiiOiieiii-_.1
&amp;&lt;;
lng. For applicati on and free ~
go\lernment job info . call
TURNED DOWN ON
Amoricon Assoc. of Labor, SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
1·(913)599-8220, 24 hrs.
No Foo Un!oso We Win!
amp. aarv.
1~582-3345

bedroom!Of, rent
sewer &amp;
depoSit &amp;
(7 40 )992~

Small engin e repair tools
Several spec1al toots 1n 3
tool ba&gt;&lt;.Et§ Repa1r books &amp;
2 store fronts in H1stoncal manua ls. Much more_ 5130
downtow n Pomeroy, Oh. fac· f1rm . (74Qt446..{J79 1.

..__ _ioRliRiioiiRiii·i:~ii
o 'r_

tng

the

rlv~.. 10!

(140158~- 7122

_.

L:. ~~
"'". . . . .,., ~... I.

rent •• :
.

- ·-. .

APAJmi.IINfS

Off1ce space downtQ_wn
.,
Pomeroy, approx. 1800 sq.
.ne'W ~r~c~. 25¢ each ,
ft. . street level. near court· fuust \a~ ~ll . pi'IOne _Jffer 6
1 and 2 b9droom· 8Rart- houSe, $450 mo .. (740)592· F40 ) 985~4149
ments, fu rnished and unfur· · 1758
nished, security depos1t
Block. bn ck. sewe r p1pes.
\ IIIH 11\"JISI.
reqwed , no pets. 740•992·
. d ows. Imtl
t Clade
wm
e s ec
u
2218.
Winterl},,
Rio
Grande.
OH
"10
I IOliSEHOI.Il
7 40 ·2 45 -~121 .
Call
(',{I())}';
1 bedroo m apt. furnished .
$290. S150 depos•t Call
I'Els
..
Good Used Ap pliances
(740144 G-3870
,. mH SALE
Recondi tioned
a-nd
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1 bedroom ap! ~;tovel rei n~
G ua ran~ed
Was11ers, ·AKC 5 week olcf.~lab'raGor
erator &amp; util ities "furnished
Dry~ rs .
RangeS.
an~ .RetrltverS. only two left, 1
Ca ll (74DI245·585g.
Aetngerators. Some start at blaek te'inala 1 yQJioW male,
2 bedroom apt St At. 160 $95. SkaQgs Appliances,
shotS &amp;.. w6rme.d iBUI
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bedroom, unfurnished, out· (740)446-7 444 1·877-830· AKC Lab pups, 7 weeks, out
side storage $300 + 1 9162 Free Estimates. Easy of hun11ng stock Parents on
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cas h Visa/ Master Ca rd . shots . Yel lows &amp; blacks
(740)245·9595
Drive· a- littl e save alot.·
(740)388·9515.
Applications being taken tOr ---~----- - - - - -- - - very clean 2 be droom in Thompsons Appliance &amp; Wolf· Sil~fenan Husky pup ·country setti'ng y6t ctose to Repair-675-7388: For sale, pies . 1·whlte, 1-gray . white
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mg roQOl. WaShe r, dr.~ei, washers &amp; dryers, refrigera· Slberiail Husky.
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and garbage mctuded Total wringer Wflsl\'ers.' WI!! ~oelectric with ' AJC Tenant repairs bn

3000

fUR RENT

"""

3-15"

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HOMFS
fY'R

S." ,.

..__ _ii·riiiivoiiii''ii~iilo-r
1600 sq. ft. 3 yr. old Ranch
sty le home 2 1/2 car garage.
3 bedroom. large k!tchen.
lllling room. 2 1f2 baths.
laundry room. front porch.
ali electric. Very well layed
out. beautiful interior on 1
1/2 acres, 1348 P.rospec1
Church Ad Won't last long
· 000 740 446
15
"
at only
•
·( )
4514 or 17401446·3248 after.
spm.

$~

2BR House, L1v1ng &amp; Dlmng
Room . Kitchen &amp; 112 basement. approx. 1.9 acre
$32.000 approx. 1/4 mile out
Bud Chaltln Rd 1304l6753t 44

' ~

. C ;10114 by NEA, Inc.

r.... : i i~i· i~ irAi iLEi r_,..1
IO_ _

r

16x80 s1tes available $1 t 5
per month rncludes wa~er,
sewer &amp; trash, (740)992·
2167
- - - -- - - - For Sa le· 79 106 Acres .
(7!10) 949·7~
A1ver view. produCing- oil &amp;
.
gas welt~. A~duced to
·.~L-ot-or-t::
·Fo-::-ls, OH=:-:-;-:~·be--:dr.,_oom
~
3Q4·529-7106
hous• 1 barti ·. defacl'itd arter 5pm.
· ··
'
·
'
garage, new root, sld]ng, Lot &amp; Older Trailer ftlr sale in
windows, carpet, &amp; kltchtl1,. Hartford $7,000.00 or -best
$6 5 ooo.oo (740)247-2000
offer (304)675-7773 alter
5:00
New Home- 3 bedroom, 2
bath. den On corner lot. Lots for Sale: Meadow HlllsMeadow Hills. Osher Ad. Pt. 3 m1les from Po1nt Pleasanl
Pleasant; WV (740)446- on Oshel Rd. 304-675·3000·
740·446·9340
9340.

1

3

·sns.ooo.

~r~-:M~o~u~~.-.8~0MES""!
1.~,

3br. 2ba . House 1n New
Haven tota lly remodeled
$85.000 t304l882·3 t3t

·--iliiiiiiiiiiiiio-,.l

C

home. Rt. 588. lose to
iown.
(740)441·0504
$135,000 neg.

'---'---::-=---:---:--

FOR SALE

1

n

r

1999 Clayton mabrle home
for sale. 14x80, 3 bedrooms
2 baths. Lt. grey sidmg and
dk. blue shutters. Has new
heat pump. Comes w1th mea
size front deck. Also comes
.. h 2
b 'ld
s1
w1t
out u1 1ngs app. ze
8x10. Home on rented tot
•· move....
• Call
will have to Uti'
•
••
•749
(7401 -~
·

5 used homes under
$2,000 00. Will help with
deI.1very. c a11 Haro ld , 740 •

38~9948.

All ...., . . . . .wtrtielnt
lnth•news~a.

aub).ct to the Hderal
fair - l n g Aot 0111111
wtoloh molcoo ~ lllopl1o
IMrtiH "lny .
prerer.no., limitation or
diiiCrlmlnltlori baaed on
race, color, re11glon , nx
f1millal status or netlonal
origin, Or any Intention to

New 14 wide, Only $849.00
down ani! only $184 . 88 ,..r
month. Ca.tl Karana, 740·
385-7671 . .
Stop Renting. Own a decent
homo Cheop\11 $11 ,000
RedUced to $'4500. neett~
moved Soon. Will negotiate.
Robert (740)446-2451

m•k• any such
p reference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon."

Thle ntwiP~tt~WwtMnot
kMwlngty ~~~~~

""=·=::In-

_ . . , OIIIMI 11'4f, Our

- . , . ioerOI1y

lnlormod ihot ell
dwtlllnOSidvertiHCIIn
this n•wapttper are

Victorian 1736 sq. ft. 3 bed·
room, 1:: bath. Stainless steel
appllonces. 8 ft. flat collings.
Hardllap wlltl saddle rool. 5' .
on 12" rool piiCh . - porcto,
Cole's Mot&gt;lle Homee 15288
us !10 E . .t.thono, Ohio
(740)592-1972. 'INhon1 Y""

got your mon.Ya wo •

Country home , 1-year old.
new well, septic system.
Includes 2 acres, 2 ~droom, 1112 be1hs, gas log
ltreptaco. Aoklng 565,000.00
Firm. f740)241410l!

•

to

ze

m&amp;jor~brands ·in

pays

el ect r~c . $.!1 00 depos11 ,

shop or at your home

$475 per month No pets.
(740)446·2205 or (740)446· Tw1n bed $65: Full SIZe bed
9585 ask for V~rgmm .
575. Couch $75: Fleclinerrockor $40: table &amp; 6 chairs
BEAUTIFUL
APART· S125. wh1te chest-of-d raw· 1996 John Deere Ba ckh oe
MENTS
AT
BUDGET ers $60: gilder roclo;er S50
4 x4 . ext !1oe 4 ,000 hrs
PRICES AT JACKSON
Skaggs Appliances
Make olle1 C all (7401 44 6ESTATES, 52 Westwood
76 Vine Street
80•14
Dnve tram $344 10 $442.
(7401446-7398
Walk to shop &amp; mo\lies. Call
740·446·2568.
Equal Used Furniture Store . 130 Locust Post and Gas-+ Well
Bulavrlle Pike, Mattresses, Swabber. 141 0 Case Tr.actor
Housing OpporhJn1ty.
dress•rs.
· c.o uc h~&amp;. -.,tth loa~. (740)~46·?~ ·
CONVENIENTLY LOCATblinkbedl, RecUnars, whl1'1 ~
~
ED • A#'ORD4B(i&lt;t
note. Gr'ave Monultlentt: ·Ll~'· ·~~
Townhouse
apartments. (740)446-4782. Gallipolis. ·
"'
and/or small houses FOR OH . Hrs. 10·4 (M-S) Sunday
RENT. Call (740)44 1· t111 by appointment.
4 yr. old Thorou ghbred
Ge!d1ng S:lOO OBO C all
for appli catio n &amp; informahon.

r·•'' . . I

r

Cottage Apt on Lincoln Ave
ANTIQUES
in Pt Pleasa nt $275 00 a
mon ask lor Nan·cy 304Buy or
sell
R1ven ne
675- 554 0 or 304-675-4024
bedroom
house.
127
2
Antiques. 1124 East Mam
Kineon Ave. Gan 1po lis. OhiO - - - - - -- -- on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
For Lease
8eaut1l ully
Phone 7-40·441·1f84.
992·2526. ~uss Moore ,
- - - - - - - - - resto red, unfurnished, two
bedr60m apartment O\ler· own at.
3 ti~room house In Patriot.
looking the City Parte and
·
.
S400 monltl, $200 d-sll.
...,..,..
River. AU new appliances, 1 So!ICI MahQglny Black laoColl(74014-16.076 t .
112
baths.
$600/mo .. quored tormol dlnlngroom
security _
· deposi t tabta
.&amp; ten · chairs
) J)edroom, 1 112 baths, cen- Aetere r ces requi red. No (~hillppines) 82" diam one
tral healing/ai r co nd very pets . can 740-446-2325 or p1ece w/ l azy Susan 304_ _
.
nice . In Gallipolis, $475 p er
675· 4027
740 446 4425
month . depoSit/ credit refer- - -- - - -- - ence Ca t\ (7401446 -1540 Furni shed apt 1 br , 2nd J540 MISCElLANEOUS
MERLllANilL~E
_
a_l1e_r_5.:_
Pm
_ __ _ _ _ Ave Upstairs. al l utilities pd.
No
pets
Gallipo
li
s.
3 yr. old. 3 br. 2 112 bath ,
6·_9_
52_3_ _~~ 2 beaded Pfom Gowns, very
excellent condition, all elec~ _17_4_0.:_14_4,..
rea1onable .
Evenings!
tric, 2 112 oar garage, 10 Graciou's1Ning. 1 and 2 bed· wool&lt;snds oan 740.2!56·
minutes from Holzer. Porter room apartments At Village
6535 or 304-57Bo&gt;4009,
area. $750 month, $750 Manor
and
Riverllda
depoatt,
references Apartments In Middleport.
JET
.
required. Coli 740-1-46-4514 From $295-$444. Coli 740·
AERATION MOTORS
or 740-32&gt;18 ofter Spm.
992-5064 . Equal Housing
Repolied, N.,.: lt·Ae!Julh In
Oppor11Jnitlss.
StoCic. Can Ron Evana. 1·
809 2nd Ave ., 4 bOdroom. 2
600-537-9528.
bath, 11\'I!'O room; famil y
Modern
1
Bedroom
apt
Ca
ll
room,
garage,
reference/depos1t. $650 + (740)446·0390.
Leonard fiber glass short
utilities. No pets. (740)256·
bed topper. red color $300
New 1 bedroom apt Phone
9350.
(3041675-6807 0&lt; t3041675·
740.446·3736. •

HOISES

IUHRFNI'

7985

Commercial buildin~ for
sale, asking $39,000 Great
opportunity to start a busl·
ness
or
to
lease.
Acquloltlons, ~~ MIU St.,
Middleport, Otl. Shown by
(740)812•1517t .

appt. only.

17401~~~~ ~- ----

5 R e(1 /i, JI·~ u s yca1 1mg
Ho11ers 1 Req A'l gus yea1
lin g bull Phone (740) 388·
8756
.

Regiote&lt;ed ANGUS and
Cri&gt;llb&lt;ed bUlls: Top blOOd·
tinoa, Sl ala f'lun Form.
Jackoon:
(?-40)286 ·~395
lOok
up .

r.

www.a_tlterUf'ltarfu.com.
·

·

'

.c~y &amp;
GRAIN

1 000# bales mix grassclover, alfalfa·orchard orass.
soma bern otorod, $15·$26 .
(740)-2765 -

---..,----'--

4X5 J10UJ1d 'bo!ea ClOYOred.
go.Od qrast hay $12.50.
Squart
·tatoo
mo01ly
-~·ard '· &gt;-~" $2.50

..

1740)~""""·
. &lt;.

.• •

. .

Barn stored hay 800 . ~b8
rou nd b!tes $ 10.00/be.le
Square bales (barn sl'ored)
$1.75 pe r bale, 740.742 -

1008

·'

•

'
NICe two bedroom apart• Mineral f'llghta In Muon Hay 1o&lt; ._ ._. Round &amp;

300-"" ro J_...

ments Large room• Fully Goun1y 1/2. lnterMI In I(IUIIAI .~. . Delano
lq(jtplld kllehen Con1rat 11PtJ10'1 •
Olio
ffiln. :!Oo-875healtnglcoottng mau otter call (304)787· 1 743 or7~· 11'!".
hookup· 4Ul3
Ntae H&lt;Nio lor renl behind l'iuhe&lt;ldryar
1fro Armo1y 3Br Rtrlofence &amp; (304)$62-2523
Sqi/M,. - hll(" lor oalo.
NIW AND UIED 811!1!1. Balla drjC tUO · ~~tr bale.
Deposit
required
$800
Tara
Townhouse .SIHI
Pipe Robar C*1J (1-10 ~72. ,
month (3041593·3542
Concreie,
Ang le, .
Apartmems. Ver; Spacious , For
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
SJ.]i])
2
Bedrooms,
2
Floors,
CA.
1
Momu: HOMES
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted , Gra1ing
For
Drains. L.--oifl.iriii
:Jm
iiriiLiiiZii'.EiiiR;;,._.t
L~--ooiifOIIIiii.iiREiiM
i' i
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Poo l. Driveways &amp; Walkways l &amp;L .
Patio, Start $3 85fMo. No Scrap Metals Open Monday, Tobacco Plan1s order now to
2 bedroom, all electnc, air,
Pets , Lease Plus Security Tuesday, Wedne sday &amp; guarantfi'EI early sp ring
porch. Very, very nice. No Depostt ReqUired , Days:
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Cloaod plar\llng.' , ,
DowbuJit
pe11. Ill GaiUpolla. (740~· 740-4-16·3481: Evenlnga:
Thursday,
Salurday
&amp; ·:Green- (304)895-3789
·14011 (740)44flo2003.
740-387·01502.
Sunday. (740)&lt;14t-7300
91 (304)p3&gt;624I

aeama,

anll1ble on an equ.l
opportunity b..... ·

.=::::::::=~~

TEXAS LAND LIQUIDATI QNI
20 acre ranches 35 minutes
from booming El Pa so.
Roa ds, surveye d. refer·
ences, $8,995 $0 down,
$89/mo. . Sunaet Ranches.
Free rfl$)~p i ctures. 1-1)00·
643·7537 . .
www.sunsatranches.com

•

8 room Ranch , full baaemen1. 3 bedroom , 2·112bath , 2- 1/2 acres , family 2000
14X80 OaklfiOod
room,
covered
deck, mobile home. 3 bedroom, 2
$99.000. No land co ntracts. bath . total electric Call
(740)992 •9263
(740)446·2196.
,,

ACilliAGE

For Sale or Ront: 3 be droom
house in Pome roy, large
yard on dead end street .
Absolutely no anrma ls. No
land contracts. Deposit
$400 .00 Rent $400.00 .

can (740)7 09· 1166

4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye
Hills Ad In ground pool. 1
acre. (740)709 -1166.
4 bed room. 2- 1/2 ba th , briCk

•
U:m&amp;

r

3 bed room. 2 bath, newly
OPEN HOUSE
remodeled. City schools, Amazing quality built house
$SS.OOO firm . (740) 446 _1168 1n desirable neighborhood
Great schOols. 'Open house
1740144
37
or
Sot. Morch 20th. t 2-3 or oall
6-0t ·
3 bedroom. 2 baths on 4.3 for appointment {740)441 ·
acres. Close to Tycoon lake. 1237.
·.. ...

L---oitlioiol&gt;oiiiil--,.1

r•o

Open 2411 Jacl&lt;oon Avo . Pt.
Pleasant, • ·
Ret ired
Longaberg8,r
Basket
ll
Perteet Connection 0 1sh
Network (304)675-1400

2 Bed room, no pets, $245 Twin Rivers Tow8r-is accept·
month, InCludes water, $ ~ 00 lng epplicBtlons for wafting
depos1t. (740)1446·36 17
list lor Hud-subsized, 1· br,
apartment. ca ll 675-6i;iJ9
Beautilul river VI8W, ideal tor EHO
one or two people No pets,
references (740)441 -0181

www.comics .com

.10
1

: pm.

I

f

1

i

iio-rl

,1'1

'·

I

any lou or expense that reaulta from the publication or omlsa1on ot an advertisement Corr&amp;c:tlon will be mad• In l he fl ral available ed1!1on. • Do11 ,· ~.•;;,.... ,
1
ere elwe)'• confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All ll!IBI eetate a dvertu~em ents are
I to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1906. • Th•s
ICCIPII only h-'P Wlnt.cllch
EOE at1ndards. We will nol
atcept any
I I ot lhe law.

~oun:.h M:~Y ~~ ~:OSp~,fe;

sary. Work at Home. Call
Inc
seek rng
!ull·t1me
405-447·6397
Physical The rapiSt and PAN
-upational Therapist for
0 """
Admmistralive
Assis tant
'1..4'....,..,.. . • ~.,...,.,...~
needed MS Word &amp; Excel Ohio anct West Virginia cllE!nt
"~""""""
. requ ired
contact
Kelly base. MUS1 be licensed bo1h
In Ohio and West VIrginia .
. Services 868·288·47n
We ..titter ,a competitive ··
selary. E .
$!;,000 SIGN·
Barn Removal
An Excellent way to earn
0N·BONL)s and benefits !Or
~
money. Lets talk the
,All references &amp; full 1nsurfull-time Physical Theraprst ance. Call 304-373-0011 .
NEW AVON .
only. Please send resume to
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
352
Second
Avenue. 1180
WANIID
· Joyce 304·675·69 t 9
Gall&gt;po!IS, OH 45631 . Alln .
: April 304·882-3630
Diana Harless. R N. Clinical
. ~-c--:::-~Manage....r._ _ _ _ _ _ Georges Portable Sawn;1 11 ,
AS SEEN ON TV
-don't haul your logs to the
INSTRUCTION
mill JU St call 304-675- 1957
Need a job?
LEARN TO DRIVE
We are hlflngt
TRACTOR- TRAILER
You could earn up
NEW PROGRAM
to $8/hour plus bonuses . . Reliable bdull will do grass
No Experience Needed
We also offer paid
cu111ng (3041675-8902
Placement Dept
trolnlng, holidays
: Financing Available
and vacations .
Will do odd jobs, carpen\1)',
· COL/Training
FUll or part time
floor cove ring, anything you
' ALLIANCE
shlf1s available.
needl Reasonably pricedJ
: Tractor· Trailer
Call1odoy.
(304 1882 ·2978. 304-377·
· Training Centers
1-877-463-6247 .... 2456 4633.
Wytheville, VA
www.rntocls1o n.com
11'\\'\tl\1
Call Toll F~ee
Overbrook Nursing and
1·800·334· 1203
Rehabilitation Center is curB~
• AVON! All Areas! To Buy or rently accepting applications
{)pp()R1lJNm'

· Sell.

992-1028

Th~rsday

resume lo Public Preschool
at The Athens • Meigs ·
Educational Service Center,
507 R1chland Avenue. Swte
108, Ath ens Oeadlme IS
March 22 We are an Equal
Opportun ity Employer and
Provider

0

992-21S5

Sunday Dl•ph11y: 1:00 p.m.

Fr;td•oy For Sundays Paper

Needed AN to s~rv1ce
approx imately 270 children
m 7 preschools in Athens
County. Applicants must be
wilhng to have a cnmmal
backgroun d check Duties
mclude me dica l tra,.ck1ng,
111sion and heanng scre ens,
growth and development
charting. and teaching about
health and safety to both
children
an d
adults.
Exce llent co mpu ter
and
rxgan, zatlonal skills as well
as reliable tran spor tati o~ are
a must Schedule mus\ be
flexib le with both mor"ing '
and
aft ernoon
ho~ rs
requ1red . Work load \is
approxi mately 40 hours a

•
Woodland Centers, Inc_ Is
not-tor-profit private
community mental health
center serving Gal!la,
Director needed lor local
Jeckson
and
Meigs
area to work with schools,
Counties
In
Ohio ~
PTA's, and yo uth groups.
Competittve Salaries and
Avg 46K 813-788·6t57.
benefits package includ·
lng paid \lacatlon and sick
ee ng
peop e oca
time, 13 paid holidays,
ho want to earn mane
retirement plan, health,
hila los1ng we1ght, show
life, and disability Insur- 'ng
others
how
ance offered. Positions Informati onal
DVD/C
must maintain valid drl·
vailable upon request 740
'ller's license as defined by
1-1 984.
Agency's fleet insurance
carrier.
Please
send Travel. work. &amp; play seekrng
Resume
to
Sherry energetic people for fun JOb
opportumty earn money
Gordon,
Manager
or
while
see;ng the USA call
Human
Resources,
Robin 866-298-6732 ·
Woodland Centers, Inc.
3086 Slale Roule 160,
Golllpolls, Ohio 45631.
EOEIAA Employer.
INSTRUCUON

a

WAIIrlliD

Silver,

School
Diploma/GED
required. Position performs
general carpentry, electrical
and plumbmg preferred
Must have or be willing to
obtam COL lice nse wi~h passenger
endo rseme nt
Postlion reqwes travel in
Gallia. Jackson and Meigs
counties.

ately' No Experience neces- Medi Home Health Agency,

Call
Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
For More Information

e

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

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And AddreS!I When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Make 50% selling Avon.
Limited
time
ONLY.
· Addre ssers wanted Immedi- (7401446·3358.

Advertising Deadline:
\
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 2004
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16,2004

All Dl•playt 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• O•ya Prior TO
Publication
.

• All ads must be prepaid*

ScHOOLS

REACH OVER 18,000 HOMES
IN .THE TRI-COUNTY AREA!\

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monda\'·Frlday for Xn•ertlon
'In Next Day•• Paper·

Now you can have borders and graphics
""-'
added to your classified ads
'
~~
""'
Borders$3.00/perod
Graphics 50¢ for small
··
$1 .00 for large

lwrlght@lc.het

Springtime Sights &amp;Sounds

.

Pisplay Ads

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

. Cash paid for- gold &amp; silver
coins &amp; coin collections, free
eslimates, Glen Bissell,

I

Word 'Ads

• Start Your Ad5 With A Keyword • Include Complete

Second Avenue, Gallipo lis,
74().446·2842

( A SPECIAL SECTION
In The
1
·\~alltpolts ]Batlp m:rtbune
• J}oint ~leasant Register
• ~omeroy Daily Sentinel

l\egister

Sentinel

\!Cribune

To Place

.

Shave

.
~3

The Daily Seittimil • Page

2004

Eagles

'
''
tn.

Louisville.
The Flyers lost to Tulsa
"We understand it' s one in the first round of the
loss and you ' re done. We tournament last year.
"Last year was a definite
just want to try to stretch
from Page B1 •
thi s out as long as we can," lea rnin g ex pe rience for
us,"
guard
Ramod
Chalmers said .
has enough balan ce to
Marshall said . 'This year
Shooting
guard
Romain
overcome its lack of a Sato. a fellqw se nior go ing it 's ' more business and less
strong in side player.
"We don ' t have an in side to his fourth tournament , exc itement. We' re excited
to be there, but we · ve got
agreed .
guy we can throw the ball
"My freshman· year we som e work to do."
to and score. Max (Jason went to the . NCAA ," he
. 20 Ohio State was
Max iell) is so undersized," said. ''The ne xt day we theNo only
wo men 's team
he said .
went back home."
from
the
state
to get .an
"We need to score the
Dayton , .the A-1 0' s West NCAA
berth .
The
: ball a little better. When Division champions. gave
Buckeyes
got
a
No.
6
seed
Tony (Bobbitt) and Field Xavier a scare in the A-1 0 'and will be hos tin g the
(William s) are making final s, leading by as man y
shots, Armein (Kirkland) as se ven in the second first two rounds of the
and James (White) are half. Xavier went on to tournam ent at St. John
Are na. They ' ll play No . II
playing the way they are win 58-49, after winnin g seed
West Virginia (2 1- 10)
capable of, we are a hard other tournament game,, by on Saturda y.
matchup."
lm average of 23 points . .
In the Women' s National
The NCAA tournament
Thi s is Dayton 's 13th In vitati on
Tournament,
opens with the play- in NCAA tournament in vita- Mi ami (Ohio) (2 1-9) will
ga me· Tuesday ni ght in . ·ti on.
play at Xav ie r ( 17- 12) on
Day ton , between Lehi gh
"We were getting prelty Wedn esday . On Friday,
(20-10) and Florida A&amp;M nervous, especially whe n Kent State ( 19-9) plays at
(14-16) .
they ·ca ll ed so me other
i Joseph 's (20- 10), and
Xavier hope s its po stse a- teams for at-larges," for- Sain
( 15- 15) plays at
. son roll continues into its ward Keith Wales kowski Cincinnati
Western Kentucky (18- 13 ).
: fourth consecutive NCAA said.
· tournament and 15th overall. The Mu sketeers are
coming off a six-game -win
streak and have won 13 of
their last 14.
The future looked much
bleaker in January, when
the team was I 0-9.
"We've come a long way
from I0-9. A lot of people
had us penciled in for the
Laminate :
Berber
:Wholesale
NIT," point gu ard Lionel
Chalmers sa id.
Carpet
Flooring :
: Carpet
The Mu sketee rs turned
I
I
I
around the regular seaso n,
then dominated in the
: swti~i $
!! starti·~~ $6!! starli~~ $1~~ :
Atlantic I0 post season,
5[] fd
Sq''&lt;l
I
stunning No . !-ranked
1
~-------------------------------_I
Saint Josep h' s 87-67 in the
quarterfinal s,
On Sale Thru
"We were a team that
was )lOt a loc k to make the
March 28, 2004
NCAA, but we earned it
with our pl ay in Dayton ,"
6 .'\: 12 ~lonths S..U ·.with approved crrdit.
coach Thad Matta said.
Players said that despite
the string of victories, they
weren 't going to be cocky
175 ~orth 2nd ,\n•nm· • Middlrport, 011
about th e matchup with

Monday, March 15.

...

�• :Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
Card otThanks

r~,.-oiFORi iAi i .Tfa&gt;oi iS.W:i i -.,.1
10

1966 Nlssan 300 ZX 1urbo V-

,•

. ' 1987 Subaru, 4 wheel dri11er.

.. 4

.

· OBO. Call(740)256-1652.
:. • 1991 Acura LeQtmd. Good
· ·condition, $5.900. (740)256·

. 6392
~ 1992

Bonneville , $1 ,495 ;
... 1995 GraM Am , 4 door,
$2 , 195;
1993 Cara11an.
$1.995. 23 in stock. tra des
welcome.

BENNETT'S

life.
The Dallas Hill family e1presses their gratitude to those who of!ertd lholglds,
prayers, cards, food, Dowers, and charitable donatiom in Dallas's name. Thank you,
Cindy Wo~e, lor organizing the IIC(OIIllllodatious 1lHfi!81')'
_
to receive our f101ily and
friends alter die funerai9Jspedallbanks also goes to the Racine Masonic
Lodge #461 for their ~especially, our long-lime friends, Gary Norris and Tom
Wolfe for thelF partici_'pallon.

a"uto, air, new wheels tires.

Thank you, Dale Wallace ffil~ Linda HiD 'll)rley, Trisba McNickle, Denny Evan~
Nadine Euler, Normnn Roush, and Cari'Wolfe for dellvtring pmon'allributes In cdebradon of~~ lift during the fuaeral ~.All ofDall»'s children and grand·

good condition. $4.295.
1740125 6·6226 -

~-~o~n~::c~~~e~;:~dZ~~:
$2,400.

2000 Red Ford Mustang,
one owner, low miles, non-

cblldr!l e~ lhdr loveud~tohim lhroughlelten!'ladby Pastor Pete

/II,,,,~~~ '

,TIIIllll'l')IOU, lllebllle, I~Br!W...BIII\ DarreD,A~~ Delli

::1

&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds slllrt
6:30
Last Thursday of

f!!~f'YJ ~~!~ 1~.

every month
All pack $5.00
Hring this cuupon
Buv $5.00

Gallipolis. OH WVO I 0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

Bonanza Get
SFREE

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

:.rr

locks, asking $2.000,
1740)367·025 1·
1996 Cavalier, 4 cyL . 2 door.

Every Thursday

Residential &amp; Manufactured Hou smg
Air ConditioncrJ;,lleat Pum~&amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency E4uipmen~
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranlie'
. ~
• Huge Invent ory
' . "·
• Vanguard Vent less Fireplaces '11.; ,

wantto thank you for your kindness, friendship, and fellowship of!ertd lheoughoul ~

power windows and

BINGO 2171

JIEATJNG U COOLING

Dallas enjoyed all the visi~ from b~ extended familv members and friends. He woold

sion. $600. 1740)446-7a57.
1993 Mazda MX6 Sport
Coupe, moon-roof, automat-

Pomeroy Eagles

2002 Mitsubishi Lancer, 4
door, 5 speed, loaded .
Factory warranty, very clean.
$8,900. 740·256·6936.

WE REPAIR:
MINI BIKES • GO-KARTS • LAWN MOWERS •
POWER MOWERS • CHAIN SAWS • SNOW
BLOWERS • WEED EATERS • TILLERS • EDGERS

We feel so f011tmate to be part
llelllbeiUO WdJ duringdJMts ofliftCL ~
- jtJndiii!S inds)lapi

JIM'S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR

wllmfs

(304)675-546 1
•TRUCKS

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

02 Chevy S!O, LS. 4-cyl., 5speed, air, tilt, C.O., runs/
looks great. 42,000 miles,

$ll,900.(740)367 -DO! 2.

i

~

BoATS

j
. ~

&amp; MoroR'i 1

FOR SALE

~AMPERS &amp;

garaged. $9,500, (740)256- $2,500, (740)245·9419.
6936.
MmoRCVCLEN

I

1971 Yamaha 350. 7,600

17Ft. Chris Craft, 85 model.
140 horse. Good condition,

"il

1

1{\

II I "i

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

MOTOR HoME&gt; . r.~r:~~10~-~H011-1E-1994 Nomad, 5th wheel, 30 L--IMPRiiiiiiiOiiVEII!mrsoilli:i
_ _

i5'2" Ga~nada Tri -Haul with
SLT package, loaded, many trailer. 1200 lb. capacity, 70 ft. slide our. Excellent condi- recent updates, very clean, HP, Even Aude engine. lion, $14,000. (740)256-

99 Dodge 1500 Ouad-Cab.

r:e

6392.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1995 Layton. 24 ft. plu s lifth
wheel, loaded, good condi·

lion: $8,5ojl. Call (740)256$3,000, (740)441-1333.
9350.
-,-9B_6_B_a_s_s-Tr_ac_ke_r_.-70-H--'-p. -19_9_5_5-+].-h1_ _ _t_k

(10'x10' 610'x20')

(740) 99~- 3194
992-6635

Honda 50 motorcycle looks - - - - - - - - 3/burners stove, heater, frig ,
&amp; runs good. $450.00 19ft Fisher fully loaded water heater. awning &amp; addi·
(304)773-5103
wltrailer 75 Hp exc. cond. lionel outside shOwer super

$4000 i3041593-1994

nice $4500 (~04)675-2949

message (740)992-5232. - - - ' - - - - - 1977 Harley Davidson MG., 98 17-H F;sher Bass Boat
good condition,

$l O,OOO: 60HP. Mercury/ E1nnrude _

1978 Kawasaki M.C. , fair trolling motor. Many extras.
condition, $400; 2 snow Like new. $6,800.00 Firm.
mobiles, fair condition.
(740)742 -2 3° 1

~l&amp;t 'JD®I&amp;~iit&amp;

.Acr*®~im

Paying up to $400

per acre for Good
Hunting land in
Lebanon Twp.
or
Will lease up to
$5.00 per acre.

Call 740-592-4323
Cell 740-541-4323

It

I

ll:wAIIliU.:..~j,iw,
JWIIII.~

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS
1

Advertise
in this
LiliA'S PAINniG
space for $1 00
pe_
r month.

Let me do 1t for you I

ww~o

YA GOT 'EM

I

~p:o m

!

TO STOP

ARGUIN',
LUKEY

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing •All types

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975

I""

I""

e,\Z,\.l\IJ:':&gt; C.C:.Ll~\E:S
:::,T. pr-._liZ\C.\&lt;:) WEXJZ I

BR.UTll:':&gt; C.~E.~\6
:':&gt;T. Pr...IR\C.\() l:&gt;fo.-'( 0-\ --z

unvn and Garden Equipment is our
business, not our sideline

740·992·7953
d 1 mo

"I feel like
l'mout
on a limb!"

Free
Estimates

WHAT IF YOU HAD

"Not me!

A

GIRLFRIEND WHO CALLED

My money is with

YOU "SNOOKUMS" 01&gt;.

Rocky Hupp lnsuronce
and Financiol Services.
Box 189,
OH

., Ct.JDDLECUB' 01'&lt;. SOME-

TH 1NG

~

WOULD

YOU HANPL£ IT'

I

• Dirt

1'1EAN . HOW

• Ag Line

7 40-985-3564 .

~OW, AT T~IS TIME

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used

D

74o-742-341

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAimNANCE
dUM lESS
lOnER
*Free Estimates.

949-1405
~ow

Ul ~ ••~c.
.\ -,J
Mini-Storage
992-6396
992-2272

' Once you havtelgned up lor the Senior Discount, your renewal notice will iefteqt your discount

.

.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

YOUNG'S

Subscriber's Name --~----,.--.,-----~-~

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Address ---'--------:-~-----­

• Room Addltlon8 &amp;

AemodeRng

City/State/Zip------------Phone,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•NewOertgu
• Electrtcel &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter•
• Vlnvl Siding &amp; Pelnllng
• Patio and Porch Deck•

Reduced Winter Rates

Mall or drop off this coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

v,c. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Year• Local

·v_

BETIY

South Church St.

~8'S

WAiCH
'tHE \NOMEN'S
NETWORK

Ripley, WV 25271

&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

OF

'(EAR. TI-lE RAV5 OFT~E
SliN"REFLECT OI=F THE
SHI N'f' W~ITE PAINT ON
T~E ''OUT OF 80LINDS"
STAKES?

Sunset Home
Construction

WRITfSfl

'

IMPORTS
Athens

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall

-

HAVE '1'0U EVER NOTICED

0

1-800-822-0417

SI'OI\.TS S~ES i11E

I

.HUMAN SPIRIT UND€P.
'TREMENOOUS ACNEJ2StiY

t

"W.V's # 1 Chevy. Pontiac, Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van

1NI1'H 1'H&amp;. ~DITIOI\I

OF HUMI~IATION riND
C,P.UE.liV AS \NEU..

SO OOfS PII.OGRAIM\I~G
ON 'ffiE WOMEN'5
~ETWOF!K

GotJu~ BISSEll
BUILDERS InC.

Giving ~20 ea.

New Homes • Vinyl

~Call (740) ~2-0413

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
.,Window~ • Roofing

for automobiles.
~r (740) 992-11171

ers.-

~~HIIOIIllllll, L! llll.llag!.

~1{~­
High&amp; Dry ce1mucno•
Homes

740-992-5232

WONI'ERtNC:. WHY

,-H16 Pl-UNG-ER 16

ON MY FAC.E

FREE ESTIMATES

ROBERT
BISSELL'

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

YOU'RE PROBABLY

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month·

Self·Storage

GARFIELD

74o-992-7599

• New
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992·1671
Stop &amp;Compare

II J
,.,,._,..,!

"-&gt;1'Jfl"lj

••

~~~~~~~~~.~9J~G-t~~~~~~~~~4-LJ~---4~~~~~
GRIZZWELLS
~\..\.. 11\t.
f,6(;.\'t;\ '1\J\\'i
l\-105E /•&gt;I ,,
GI~S

1 REFU!lE

,-o Pt..AY
YOUR

I.. IlTl-E

GAME:

swimmer

45 Oren part
48 - soda
49 "Cape
Fear" star
51 Droning

North
3 NT

East

All pass

sound

11 Tiny
53 Mlns. and
organisms
mlns .
13 Diet target 54 Feel
14 Hold gently
anxiety
15 EnJoys
55 Before,
o novel
to Keals
16 Impress
56 Make do
t7 O..Wctwgod.
with
sla1glly
57 Commuter
19 -boom
vehicle
21 ChopStick 58 Driving
target
hazard
'
22 MaunaDOWN
23 Add a lane
26 Less
certain
1 Felt boot
2 Nonllylng
30 Bullpen
birds
slats
3t Counterfeit 3 Spelling
32 Be prone
error
33 Spoil
4 Doze
34 Pkg.deliwrer 5 "Good grief!"
35 Olspateh
6 Gob
7 Better late
36 Glossy
paints
-never
39 Lets up
8 Fuzzy fruit
9 Fuel cartel
40 Attorney's
It "WaH Until
deg.
Dark'' actor
4t Squid's

AstroGraph
q(our 'lllrthWIY:

The year ahead may bring more grace,
ease and pleasa nt socia l !nterection than
ever before, and chances are it will serve
to expand your circle of fri end s who will
prove to be quite beneficial to you
PISCE S (F eb. 20-March 20) - Size
se rv es to awaken your fullest potentia l
today, so don't be afraid to thmk in big
term s when there is someth ing grand to
be gained . If others can do thing s large in
scope. so can you.
ARIES (March 2 1·Apr il 19) - Beneficial
happen1ngs could do much to enhance
your security or add to your material
resources again today. Remain ophmistic.
think victory and all will go well for you .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Becaus e
you have both the desire and capabilities
to han dle yourself well in sticky situations
today. your actio ns will win you admi re rs,
as well as add tQ you r pres tige and popu·
larily_
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20) - Of course
you will not deliberately place yoursell in
any awKwa rd situation today, but know in
your mind that if you shou ld get squeezed
into a corner. tuck will be with you and bail
you out.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - This could
turn out to be one ol those wonderful.
happy days where the opportunities of
othe rs cou ld turn out to be eq ually forlunate lor you without you even having to tilt
a lin ger
LEO (J uly 23-Aug. 22 ) - Alliances you
form !OOay for financial purposes should
work. out beller thlin you think . Chances
are the one you link up with will be a person whose luck will rub off on you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - A posi tive
attitude today can produce remarkable
results for you in matters of major importance . Visualize th e exact results you
desire in detail and they'll materialize right
before your eyes.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - In competitive
comme rcial si tuations today it may seem
that you are battling alone. but behind the
scenes 'Dame Fortune is your biggest
OOoster aild is backing you in all your
undertakin·gs.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) - Lady Luck
will~ your ally today and help you resolve
and bring to satisfactory conclusions several problems th,at have been QUite vexing
for you for some' lime. She'll put things to
res\
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - The
odds tend to favor you today in al l com petitive situ ations. and the area where this
see ms Ia be the most prevalent w1ll be
with work·related matters. Make the most
of things.
CA PRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan·_ 19) - You 're
not above turning 10 help when you know
someone is in a position to do so Thu s.
don't be hesitan t today to call upon a
soc1al contact who dm help you with a
business situation
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Give serious attention and considera tion to any
investment proposals brought to you today
by a trusted and qualified source
Opportunity may be knocki ng at your door
at this time.

12 Mountain
curves
18 Stein tillers
20 Shade tree
22 Jokes with
23 Had been
24 Golf club
25 Floppy

1--r~e:----rill

38 Kudu
cousin
39 Finished
41 Specks
42 Tennis
champ
Arthur43 Hamill of

contents

26 Seance
sounds
27 Dots
in the Seine
28 One,
in Munich
29 Sunset
colors
31 Daffodil
starter
35 H.H. Munro
37 Sosa's org.

"Star Ware··
44 II not

45 - cheese
dressing
46 Gourmet's
staHer
47 Kind
of dollar
50 Moon,
poeilcally
52 Alcott girl

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by L~is Campos
Celetnty Cipher crypt~ rams are creati!d trom q,iata:lans b'l tamoos people. oas; and present
Each letl01 m!t'·e ophe r st.:Jr.ds lo1 CJ10!her

Today·s clue. K eouals 'r'

"FGW
FGW

RDBBWZWYTW
DNOLPPOEJW

EWFHWWY
MYR

OLPPDEJW

JDWP

OWZPLV'P

AWFWZNDYMFDLY."

FLNNK

DY

FGW

M

JMPLZRM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "On screen she always played the second ljddle In
life she was 1he leading lady"- Russ Tamblyn , on Ann Mill er
(c)2004 by NEA. Inc 3-13

~:~~:~;;~ S©RJJN\-~£~~ ,
-

ldlttd

~~

WOIO
GAM I
CLAY I POllAN - - - - - -

0 ~eorrcl".(je

lettrm of lhe
sc:c~~;ed wcrds be·
to :Cn':'l iciJ~ simple wc1ds .

iour

iow

ECR 0 LE

I' I I' I I
HU F R0

I' I I I'
...----.....,~

ME T H 1 R
~
_L__J.._L_..L....l_,j

L

-9

I

"The future beicncs it au chit·
dren • ar.e fe ;iow a'C:n9unced :o
tf',e o!her le'laws a! th~ oar ··so
why do they spend mcrc e-; as 1f
t11ere's no-- • ---- --"' \

0

complele the chudda quct~d
by fiiling in rhe M\I.Ui11 1J wrr r.~
you develop from ste~:~ No. J below.

p,,,; "'~~:~URE O - - - T
. \~:· : ~ 5

·, . I'

, / SOU!-IHS

• ,,. • 11 1. 1.
1
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS , - 1 : - o, 1,
I
Broach- Shrug- Abide -- Oddtly- 5/F~THDAYS
"Tne secret of happrness," the old woman told ~er
grandson. who ha:J ;ust turned 30. "is to count you&gt; blessings instead of your BIRTHDAYS.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

I k?~At.LY /JEW TD
fiiJibH ifi16IOIJI(};HT.

SOUP TO NUTZ
e&gt;&lt;M• " '~

s'' "'"""~ ·

... .,...... •. ,,,,..,. .•,

I''" "' "' • '·" .,..,.,,..,"' """
)

,

l hnsE f':':'opl~
&lt;3~C.

1&gt;.\&lt;E:

FAI'\0\.17

maybe
4 .Baate
7 Ring
decision
10 Singer

Tuesday, March 16, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol

• Limestone
• Sand

lalltpoli•lailp idbune
Joi~t Jltat1ant l.tlfjter
The Daily Sentinel
ittnbap lim~ ·ientinel

Pass

G

Call

HOWARVl.

'

Gravely

HAUI:ING:

Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

w_ _ --

BARNEY

TRUCKING

on your home delivered subscription!

West

1 NT

1 Parakeet,

Are you wi lling to change one habit of a
lifetime? If so, read on. If not. read on
anyway!
Inexperienced declarers. when they cannot win a trick in hand, automatica lly play
their lowest card in th e suit led. This is not
a good idea against delenders who are
watching , counting and analyzing_ (If your
opponents are thought less, it doesn't
matter what you do: JUSt keep them as
opponents!) Most of the time, it 1s better
to foll ow suit with your second-lowest
spot-card, keeping the lowest hi dden.
Also. if you are going to play from two
1ouching honors in your hand - say,
king-queen - it is usually right to play
th e seco nd-lowest- or higher.
Why? Stay tuned this week
Against three .no -trump, West leads the
spade ace: lour, three ...
South has six top tricks: three hearts and
three clubs. He can estab lish three diamond winners, but when the opponents
get in with the diamond ace. they might
do damage in spades. 11 only West could
be persuaded to continue spades at tr1ck
two. Then South's queen would become
a trick, and the contract woutd come
home (assuming West didn't start with
live or six spade s and the diamond ace).
At trick one, to try to make East's spade
three look higher than it is, South must
drop the eight, his second-lmvest spotca rd. Now West will wonder if East start·
ed with 0-3-2 of spades. 11 West does
lead another spade. the contract is safe.
But rl South plays the spade two at trick
one. West witl surely shift. Then. when
East gets in with his d1amond ace, a
spade return w111 result in twa down

R.B.

*

S..ulh

The big secret
is finally out

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Replacement
• Vinyl Siding
Windows
•Roofing
• Lifetime Warranty
• Glass • \1nyl
•Blown Insulation
•
All
Working Parts
•lloom i\ddlilons
• Low E Argon
• vinyl
• Fusion Welded
. Corners ·
Replacement
•0-1 o t U1ilte.d
Windows

If so, you qualify for a

-- _ _j_ ____ "- --

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

lcHivRO,~T#

• Certainteed VInyl

!

Q8 2
A J 8
K Q 10 3

"'AJ B

LARRY SCHEY

Care

......''.ftre you 65 or older?
f

•
•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Pro Lawn

actual miles, Mint condition,
un IQ pop-up rue
$800. (7 )
_
ready for fishing, $3.200, camper, li ~ht weight. roof air,
40 256 9350
(740)742-2877
toil et/shower inside, sink,

Serious CaUs Only, leave

•

740·992·2432

FORSALE

(304)675-6545

South

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

45771
740-949-2217

MAKES A MODELS

, -84 Volkswagen Jetta GL 36
mMes to the gallon 1/owner,
new parts, $12001 o.b.o

91 Nlssan 4WD Pickup

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

Racine, Ohio

FREE EUIMATES • FAST TURNABDUNp

: $14,000. (740)379·2142.

Sspd, runs good $1,500 call

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax· 304-675-2457

29670 Bashan Road

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

• A B2
"'965 2

• 7 4
"'1074

Opening lead: • A

'

2003 Dodge Ram 1500, 2
wheel drive, shOrt bed, 6
cYlinder, 5·speed, AJC_
. ~ Serious
inquires
only,

L_

MONTY

878-2417

J 9 6 5

"'KQ3
East
West
• 53
.AKJ96
• 96 52
• 10 7 4

Hill 's Self
Storage

call (740)441 -9640.

V3)

•

defense
42 Invisible

- Grant

03-lS-04

• t O7 4
• K Q3

1 mo

air, tilt, etc. Asking $8.500,

li

Phillip
Alder

740·992·7953

smoker, V-6, automatic, cd,

!

ACROSS

MYERS PAVING
Henderson; WV

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

North

and Betty Carpenter lor their Christian lellmhip during Dallas's rtmaining days.

, 993 Ford Probe SE. electric blue, body excellent condltion, spoiler, No transmis -

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

Business Card ... $25.00/column inch per month

We are grateful to Pastor Pete and Mrs. Trish Shaffer, Paul 8eeglt, Uoda Diddle,

Cook Motors

Monday, March 15, 2004
ALLEY OOP

To place an ad Call 992-2156

ronditiou for our travel! to many dorlor'sappoiolment..

(140)446-0 I Ol

Monday, March 15, 2004

Business Services

Ho"" Health Nurse, provided Jlallas with prof!Siiooal quality Clll'lthat
lrtmendously helpotj our llll1lily through th~ dillkull time. We thllllk SbarOII
and Mark Harvey, Bobbi Hil~ and Hlmk Gibsoo lor offtring their prof~ skUis
and advice to uson many lll~asions. AdditionaUy, the Letart Towaship Tmlm
deserve our thanks for ensuring thai Wolfe Road was lrt&lt; of snow a~d in ettelleol •

"" 2 door, runs good. $800

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: Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.ciom

Monday, March 15. 2004

'

Tennessee gets top seed in tourna.ment
(AP) Tennessee earned the
top ovel'llll seed in the NCAA
Ylomen' s basketball tourna~nt Sunday, bui two straight
paJional
champio11shtps
weren't enough to get a No. I
for Connecticut
Coach Pat Summin's Lady
Vols, williiCrs of a record six
national titles, were made the
No. I seed in the Midwest
Regional. Also placed at the
top of the brackets were Penn
State (East), Duke (Mideast)
and Texas (West).
Tennessee and Duke, the
top-ranked team in The
Associated Press poll, had been
considered locks to be seeded
No. l. Penn State and. Texas
edged Purdue and Connecticut
for the two other spots.
"It was exciting this year
because we had more teams to
consider for No. l s,'' sa id
Cheryl Marra, who chairs the
selection committee. "For the
tirst time we had a larger pool,
which is exciting for the game,
but made it very difficult for
the committee."
ln the end, Marra said
Connecticut did not quite measure up to the four who were
seeded No. l.
The Huskies (25-4), the No.
2 seed in the East, had been in
line for a No. l until losing to
Villanova in its next-to-last
regular season game and then
getting upset by Boston
College in the semifinals of the
Big East tournament.
Duke was ranked second
amoog the No. I seeds, followed by Penn State and
Texas. Purdue was the top No.
2, with Connecticut next.
This is the first tinie that
UConn, which has won three
of the last four NCAA titles,
has not been a No. I seed since
1998, when as a No. 2 it was
upset by North Carolina State
in the East Regional final.
"'Taking
a
look
at
(Connecticut's) full body of
work, when you put it up to the
other schools being considered, the other four we believe
had a better overall performance this year," said Marra,
senior associate athletic director at Wisconsin.
Tennessee (26-3) received its
I5th No. l seed in 17 years
after winning won · the
Southeastern Conference regular-season championship at 140 and playing the nation's
toughest schedule.. The Lady
Vols have 18 victories over
teams that made the NCAA
!O\Jrnarnent, including a 72-69
win at top-ranked Duke.
Duke (27-3) won the ACC
regular-sea~on and tournament
championships, while Texas
(28-4) shared the Big 12 title
with Kansas State and finished
second in the conference tour!JlUTlent. The Longhorns also
went 2-1 against the other No.
.1 seeds, beating Duke and
Tennessee and losing to Penn
State.
·
Penn State (25-5) lost to
Purdue in the championship

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Southeast District Ath letic Board member and Eastern High
School Principal Rick Edwards , left. presents the Dai ly
Sentinel's Dave Harris wtth the SEODAB's Media Service
Award during halftime of Saturday's Eastern v. Sciotoville dis. trict final. (Brad Shennan)

(p(&gt;. jU

.'OJO(.(.. 10( .-~·

game of the Big Ten tuuma- Conference had eight teams in
ment,
but
beat
the 1999 and 2002. Seven SEC
Boilermakers twice during the teams made it thi s time:
season and played a challerig- Tennessee. Auburn, Plorida,
ing schedule that included a Georgia, LSU, Mississippi and
20-point win over Texas.
Vanderbilt.
Now the Lady lions face a
The Big 12 also had seven
challenging road to get to the and the Big Ten six.
Final Four in New Orleans.
First-round games will be
They could play eighth-seeded played next Saturday or
Virginia Tech on Tech's home Sunday at 16 sites. Those winfloor in the second round and ners play March 22 or 23.
have a potential meeting with
Two of the regionals are
Connecticut at the Hartford March 27 and 29: the East in
Civic Center in the regional Hartford and the West in
tina!.
Seattle. The Mideast in
Though Marra said Hartford Nortolk, Va., and the Midwest
"is not their home," the in Norman, Okla., are March
Huskies play sever.ll games a 28 and 30.
.
year there and are 37-2 at the . At the national semifinals
Civic Center since the 1996-97 April 4, it will be East vs.
season.
Mideast and Midwest against
"That's how the games are West. That creates the possibilset up at this time," Penn State ity of a Tennessee-Connecticut
coach Rene Portland said. championship game for the
"''ve got to believe for the last second straight year and fourth
few years people thought that time since 1995. UConn won
way when they had to come to · the three previous meetings,
State College.
including a 73-68 victory in
"There's going to be chal- Atlanta last year.
lenges every place we go.
Texas is a No. I seed for the
That's what this tournament is first time since 1988 and Penn
for. "
State for the tirst time since
It was a banner year for the 1994. Duke earned its fourth
Big East. which got a record- s trai ~ ht No. I seed but is still
tying eight teams in the NCAA , lookmg for its ftrst national
tournament. UConn will be title.
joined by Boston College,
Temiessee, which has overMiami. Notre Dame, Rutgers, come the midseason loss of
Villanova, Virginia Tech and starting point guard Loree
Moore to a knee injury, will
West Virginia.
Every Big East team except open the tournament on the
West Virginia had an RPI in the road for the first time ever. The
top 30, Marra said, and West Lady Vols play Colgate m
Vir~inia had four victories Chattanooga on Saturday.
agamstteams among the top 50
That's of no concern to
in the RPI.
Summitt.
The
Southeastern
"We've been everywhere,"

she said. "l don't know (it)
we've ever had a team better
prepared al thi s time of the sea:
son to hit the road."
Purdue is the No. 2 seed in
the West. The other No. 2s are
Kansas State in the Mideast
and Vanderbilt in the Midwest,
setting up the possibility of a
Vandy-Tennessee meeting in
the regional final.
Texas opens at home against
Southern on Sunday, Duke
hosts Northwestern State on
Sunday and Penn State plays
Han]pton in Blacksburg, Va. on
Sunday.
UConn
(25-4)
begins
defense of its national title
against Ivy League champion
Penn at Bridgeport, Conn ., on
Sunday.
Missouri was the only ·atlarge team that made it with a
losing conference record. The
Tigers ( 17-1 2) tied for seventh
in the Big 12 at 7-9.

Harris receives
Media Service Award
STAFF REPORT

sports@ myda1lytnb une.com
ATHENS - The Dail y Sentinel's uw n Dave Harri s was
prese nted wit h a prestigious hunur SatunJ ay at the
Convocati on Center in Athens.
In honor of hi s involvement wi th area hi gh sc hool sports
coverage. Harris earned the 2003-0-1 OHSAA Sportsmanshi p,
Ethics and Integrity Committee's Media Service Award.
Onl y two awards are presented year ly to media members in
each of the six athletic districts across the stale.
Harris is a "i'l78 graduate of Meigs High School and a 1979
graduate of the American School of Broadcasting.
He served as th e play-by-pl4y broadcaster for WMPO in
Pomeroy for 16 years. including the I'l8 2 state to urnament,
·
before movi ng on to the Dail y Sentinel.
During his career. he has covered over 2.5 00 hi gh school
games.
The Sportsman ship, Ethic s and Integrity Com mittee was
formed in 19&lt;) I and charged with d~velop i ng an aw;tre ness of
the need J'o r sportsmanship . ethi cs and int~grity in schools of
Ohio,

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