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I

www.mydailysentlnelpom

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 17, 2004

AlLEYOOP
('AI)HJ&amp;Z.'nC WIUJl M~ /JP Nt

NEA Croasword Puzzle

. BRIDGE

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Some things to look for
in NCAA tourney, B2

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
I

03-17-04

•

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• A K QJ

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.. J 10 7 6
East
.. J 7 5

MONTY

• 10 7 4 2
• 7 5 2
... A Q 8

South
• 8 3
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Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West
West

North

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Pass

East
Pa"
All pass

3 NT

Opening lead: It 3

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Second-lowest can
apply to honors too

~'VE N~VE~ I~EN TtMPnl&gt;

e

28 Empty
29 Got eome
elr
31 Face shape
32 Use a
parachute
33 Devices
36 Taverns
37 Cotton gjn
name
38 August sign
39 Jau
Instrument
40 Kids IWOUnd
42 Nin&amp;&lt;liglt ID
43 "- Vadls?"

DOWN
1 Thurman
oflllms
2 PartoiRSVP
3 Web addr.
4 Bellicose
deity
23 Becomes
frayed
5 Like Spock
6 Yogurt
24 Gives
choice
a speech
7 Jet-black
25 Wrestling
hold
gem
28 Swampland
8 Bottle cap
30 HlrtandGore
9 Collection
of sayings
34 Wedding
slUts
10 Judge
- Bean
35 Analy•e
12 Takelotask
In detail
40 Ripe,
13 Madame
Bovary 'a
as a pear
nama
41 Time
beyond
18 Excuses
19 Kind ol spl~
measure
43 Medicine
20 Giza
monument
chest Item
22 Emblems
(hyph.)

45 Love,
to Claudius
46 Gull~
47 Had a bite
48 Map abbr.
50 Vein
contents
51 Stlmpy's
buddy
52· Tack on

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
, ,J(

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SPORTS
• West Virginia frustrates
Flashes. See Page 81

declarer, wh8n he cannot win a trick in
ha nd, playing his second-lowest spotcard instead of his lowest . However, the

same ru le is usually also applicable to
touching honor-cards. II you are winning
a trick in hand (or trying to win a trick;
pe rhaps you are finessing), most of the
t1me you should play the higher - second-lowest two touching honors.
(And playing the middle of three sequential honors can be correct.)

at

Take th is deal as an example . How
should South declare in three no -trump
after West leads a low Spade and East

BARNEY
1 WONDER IF THIS RUBBER
SNAKE WOULD WORK LIKE
A DUCK DECOY, JAMEY
.

plays lhe jack'

?

THE BORN LOSER
~Po.~ '{OU N-.10 f&gt;M'{ :'&gt;TILL/&gt;.,\-\~

Sl-\8:'&gt; 5EEN AA'&lt; I~G 1-\ARO TO
GE.T, L"TE.L'&lt;~ ---::'

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v-')1-\E GOT ~lEO Li'::&gt;T W((l(.i'

After winning trick one, declare r will enter
dummy with a hear! and take. the dia·
mond finesse. If it wins, declarer ra kes in
at least one overtrick. But when the
finesse loses, the co ntract is in danger.
However, West has a difficult decision if
South took the first trick with his spade
ki ng, his second-lowest - higher honor. Perhaps East , not South, has the
spade queen . (Remember, when third
hand plays high, he puts up the bottom ot
equally power1ul cards. With both the
queen and jack, East wou ld play the
jack.) H East has the spade queen, the
defense can run the suit
Here, though , West must shift to a club,
putting East on lead with his ace. Then,
East pushes a spade through declarer for
down two .
If South wins the first tric k with the spade
queen, West knows declarer has the
spa de king too. Switching to a club at
trick four is wrong only when South has
an unlikely doubleton king-queen of
spades and the club ace,

Astrc.Graph

&lt;!bur 'Birthday:
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THE C.REAT CI-I IC.A&lt;;O
FIRE Of 1811 ~I'.GES
OUT OF CONTROL, MOLLY,
A HOT · BLOODED IRISH
IMMIGRANT, IS 5 \JEPT
INTO T HE Sr\OLOERII'IG
EMBRACE OF ETHAN, A
RVGC.EDLY HAND SOME
BLACKSI11TH
SOFT BLU E
E '( ES HIDE
HIE IRON HARD TRUTH
OF A TERRIBLE

BY
ME SIT
FO 1&gt;. AN I-IOU!'-.
you REAl&gt; ..

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LONGING"?

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Thuraday, March 1B, 2004
By Bernice Bede 01ol

PEANUTS

NO,T~AT'5

111/E OFTEN WONDERED WI·N
'iOU DECIDED TO BECOME A
CACTUS W~EN 'IOU Mi61-lT
1-lAI/E SEEN AN ORAN6E TREE ..

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HAVING- 1"0 L-OOK

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ISN'T ~ALF T~E FUN

Af JON'S FACE

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Several unusual opportuniUes could come
your way in the year ahead through chan·
nels you'd least expect, so be ready to
move swiftly. These promising openings
may co me through people you know only
casua lly.
P ISCES (Feb. 20·Ma rch 20) The
momenl you let your guard down today,
you could absenl-mindedly do so methin g
that others lind appalling and instantly
undo all the good you've done to make
yo urse lf proud.
ARIE S (March 21-April 19) - If you allow
yourself to be sidetracked by nonessen1ial
inte rests today, you'll severely lessen yoU~
cha nces ot accomplishing .what is truly
important and end the day on a sour note.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) ......: Your
cha nces for gening what you go after today
look rather good, so thei-e is no need to
use others as stepping stones lor gratitying
you r desires. You 've got what it taKes all on
your own.
GEMI NI (May 21-June 20) - In situations
where you could care less whether they
are achieved or not, you'll do quite well
today, but the moment so mething
becomes important to you . you're ap t to be
all thumbs.
CANC ER (June 21-July 22)- What could
bring co nfuSion into a situation that calls
lor tea mwork today is if each party
depends upon and expects things from the
other which that person ha sn't agreed to

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YoU\oUcl-\ 11-\or£ A\-10 Ill.. 61VE:. YeO A
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No "TiiAN\0, PAL.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - In your mind's
eye today you may be well organized and
ready to roll up your sleeves and go to
work, but the moment you let self-doubts
creep in, your indecisiveness will cause
ineffectiveness.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Once you
start a task today, make certain yo u complete it to your satisfaction , because anything you leave unfi ni shed will have to be
takef) cara of later whan it won't be too
co nvenient to do.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - There's a
good chance that Cupid co uld place for·
bidden temptation in your path today, so be
on guard that you don't forsake your standards lor momen tary pleasure that you
won't be proud of.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - As the old
saying goes, •MaKe haste slowly" where
your work is concerned today. If you experiment wilh shortcuts or labor-saving
devices, they could turn out to be anything
bulthat.
SAGITIAAIU S (Nov. 23- Dec. 21) - Do not
be indifferent or too complacen t tod ay con·
cern lng any matter that Should be taken
seriously. By playing things too lOose or
IB)I, you could be inviting ma_ior pro blems.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19}-:- Boner
be budget-minded today, because If you
are impractical or reckless in the manage·
men! ol you r financial affairs this could tu rn
out to be a rather e•penslve day lor yo u.
AQUARI US (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - You are a

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cel&amp;b(ity C1pller CfVPIO!Jams are crealed from quotanorn: b'i faii'(JUS people, patil alld p&lt;asent
Each letter in the cipher slallds tor ano ther

Today·s clue · X equals S

" BPKEKZKH
BPTN

NPK

R

RHRXP

BTENKG,

R

KLTAREK

AS

KTADE

BTENKG

PTG

GK

D~E

ND

VEOB

MKDMCK
DECS

ND

PKTHN."

ZTCKHT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "If we do not permillhe Eanh to produce beauty
and joy, it will in lhe end not produce lood either."- J.W. Krulch
{c) 2004 by NEA, Inc. 3- 17

T~~~:t:~T S(ff~d{l ~- ~ t

- - - - - - ldllod by CLAY I. 'OLIAN

tfS.

wan
GlMI

hcr ~cnoe !ertel"'5 of t~e
sc~~ mb led W9rdJ be
low to ft'·m io".Jr ~;mp it wcrd3

1111 U ', JJ\\' \J\1(( II tH ,· •ooa

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN~L.COM

POM EROY - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
plans to resurface two statehi ghw ays before turnin g
them over to Meigs County.
repair a bridge on Ohio 68 1.
and create a we tland at
Rocksprings during its 2004
summer construction season.
ODOT's District 10 ofllce
in ¥arietta released its 2004
co n~tru cti o n
schedul e
Wednesday. The schedul e
includes seven construction
proj ects planned for Meigs
County this summer.
ODPT plan s to resurface
portidns of Ohio 124 and
Ohio 338 in preparation for
turnin g those roads over to
the count.)/ highway department. The state plans to abandon the roads because of the
completion of the new leg of
U.S. Ro~te 33 known as the
Ravenswood Connector.
The project schedule also
includes continued construction
of
the
new
Pom eroy/Mason Bridge, a
$45.8 mill ion project sel for
completion in September,
2006.
ODOT will construct 3.5
acres of wetland and protect
an additional 50 acres of
woodland and wetland, as
mitigation
for
the
Ravenswood Connector project,_ completed last year, and
the Athens-to-Darwin gortion

i

•• SCI.lM-lETS ANSWERS 3- 1s- o'Wooded- Novel . Rough • Elicamp · HANcJLE
Teen to dad, "Belter find out what's wrong w1lh the
passenger s1de of the car. Every time .I dr~ve with Mom
in the car. she has to hold onto !he HANDLE."

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH

I

Wi~l

f..IOHAIIKEJ.I

OU uULY FOOI(fH ,
f WILL fJOf EAHHE-M

OIJ A HOI?IH,

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(ti2E.EIJ €-G.C.Ii&gt;Af.lO H~/1'..

~i. PATRIC K'~ DA"f.'

Details on Page A2

Please see Legion, AS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGfS

Calendars
Classifieds
Coniit:s
·'
Dear Abby
Editorials
ObitQaries
Places To Go
Sports
Weather

A3
B3-4

Bs
A3
A4
As
A6

BI
A2

© iloo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

person
who is whe
usually
very polite,
tactful
and gracious
n dealing
with friends
and associates. yet once you get tired
these endearing virtues coukl desert you .
Watch your behavior.

·

Mason improvements
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGIS IT R.CO M

MASON
Mason's
expand ing populalinn and
scene
make
busine"
improvement s 10 its water
and sewer systems an ongo1lli!

Bob Honaker of the West
Virginia offi ce ul ihe Rural
Co mmuniti es
Assis l:mce
Prugram (RCA P ). a federal lyfunded advocate and faci Iita·
lor fu r small co mmunties
seek ing
infrast ru ct ure
improvements. hriefcdMason
Town Cou ncil on what i1 ca n
otTer at at a mee ting thi s

Drew Webster Post 39 Commander Mickey Willi ams. right, was
selected the 2004 Legionnaire of the Year. Here he accepts
the trophy from Joe Struble at the 85th birthday party of the
American Legion . (Charlene Hoeflich)

HEAP deadlines posted
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Qualified
Ohioans threatened with losing their heating services
have pntil March 31 to apply
for assistance through the
Emergency Home Energy
Program
Assistance
(EHEAP).
Applicants may still apply
for Regular HEAP by mail
throu gh May 31.
Home Ener~y Assi stance
Program prov1de s financial
heating assistance for · the

•

neediest residents, who may
be on a fixed income or
among the working poor.
.. HEAP helps senior citi zens and famili es with children avoid the choice of
' heating or eating"'. said
Sandy Edwards, Division
Direclor for Gallia Me igs
CAA. "People who need
help should choose HEAP."
So far, HEAP has assisted
more than 200,000 Ohio
households, an increase of 15
percent over las t year and a
27 .5 percent lncrease over
2002.

"It is projected lha't th e
stale will serve approximately 3 16,832 .customers,"
Edwards said .
Households \n danger of
having, or that have already
had. their n1ain or secondary
heating source disconnected
may be e ligible to . receive
EHEAP fund s up to $ 175.
Those households wi th less
I han a I0-day suppl y of bulk
fuel are e ligible 10 receive up
to $250 to restore or continue
their heating service.
Please see HEAP, AS

week.
Honaker said he vieweu the
town's wa1er and sewer sysJems prior i n the meeting and
noted areas where improvement is nccdcu.
He listed new waler lines.
tJrnblem s wiih infl ow · and
infiil ration to lhe sewer plan!
and use of a gri t filler for
treating sewage appropriate
for sm11hern state climates.
bui not for Mason.
He suggested that Dunn &amp;
Associales . the e ngi neeri ng

firm that oversaw some of the
work. be called in by the Iown
to examine problems and suggest solutions.

Mayor Raymond Cundiff
said ihm ··whilc ibe sewage
system can meet current
needs. he believes the wate r
li nes re4L1ire upgrading.
"'Mysel f. rct like to see new
waler Iines put in:· he said.
"'And that wo uld be adequate for fi re hydra nts."' Town

_...-;-~

~ys t ems

dur-

ing an ex tended outage. such

as ihe one ca used by lhe
February 2003 ice storm.
"That wou ld be something
we could help you with ."
Honaker said.
He added 1hat when its
assislance is needed , RCAP
will do il besl to see I he lown
gets tile improvements.
"Tm sure counci l will agree
any help you can give us will
be appreciated."" Cunei ill said.
Honaker made his presentation before wu nci l held a second readin{ on a proposed
sewer rate increase. wh ich its
recommended
acco untant
shou ld be 13 perce nt to cover
any indehtcd ness the town
possesses with the operation.
Mason res ident Chuck
Blake asked cuuncil lo consider eve ry cosl-saving measure il can before passi ng on
the increase to tile CL1stomer.
While he understands that
local government has to go to
the publ ic it serves to help
loot the bill. Blake asked,
"Are we lookmg at at every

way In save money'' You
can·r go to the people and ask
them to pay everything. but
so me responsible managePlease see Agency. AS

Saturday, March 20 • l 0 AM - 2 PM
Southern Elementary School - Racine

Disc0ver the Holzer Dij]erence

FREE Non-Fasting Cholesterol and Glucose
screenings will be available.

www.holzer.org

Sponsored by the HMC Community Heolth and Wei/ness Deportment

-------·-------

\Vater and sewe r

"A celebration lor families · offering health education,
information, activities and entertainment."
U-HauLg ,._

-~

co ncern .

Recorder Sara h Sili elds
added.
" It appears you r town is
grow ing and new lines wo uld
be in order."" Honaker said.
Cou nci lman Jim Proffitt
said the 1own has also been
advised 10' purchase a generalor tu provide power to the

Meigs County Health Fest 2004
wt-Pa ... He MusrVe
Rerifeo ONe. BIG

~-

'

Come see Holzer Medical Center at the

nJ~-:;r fi'AI:ll~

tOR Ml' I

bridge piers now under construct ion at the site of the new Pomeroy/Mason Bridge. Continued
construction of the bridge tops the Ohio Department of Tran sportation 's 2004 Meigs County
construction schedule. (Brian J. Reed)

BY KEVIN KELLY

POMEROY - The 85th
birthday of the American
Legion and the chartering of
Pomeroy's Drew Webster
Post 39 were celebrated at
Tuesday night's galhering of
legionnaires and their fami lies in the new Legion home
in the former Salisbury
Elementary School.
A highlight of the program
emceed by Joe Struble
included the presentation of
the Legionnaire of the Year
Award to Mickey William s,
. commander.
Also recognized were 50year members, Ken Harris,
Leonard Jewell, Harold
Norton, Joe Struble, and

.

TI-l~ ~PoT

111\tl . uh ... , · nll•u · ljoi H

Aworker from C.J. Mahan Construction Co. and National Engmeering Co. wo rks atop one of the

•

ARI,.O &amp; JANIS

'NI ~~ \-\IT

of U.S. Route 33.
Other Meigs County projects for ODOT's upcoming
season include:
• Cu lvert replacement on
Ohio 124 and Ohio 681 . &lt;(
$997,454 project awarded 10
Smi th
and
John son
Construction Co .. schedu led
to be completed in June. The
projecl includes work in both
Athens and Meigs Counties .
• Complelion of lwo phase s
of U.S. Route 33 between
Darwin and Athens. The firsl
phase . relocating the ro ule
from Darwin and T.R. 68
north of Shade, is a $33.25
million project. The second.
completing the su per-two
highway to Athens, is a
$39.75 million job. Both are
under contrac t by Smith and
Johnson, and are scheduled
to
be
completed
1n
September.
• Resurfaci ng of seven
miles of Ohio 338 begin ning
at Ohio 124. The project is to
be awarded in May.
• Bridge re pair on Ohio
.681, JUst east of Henderson
Road . The project is to be
awarded in May.
· Meigs County is also
included in a $350,000 sign
replacement project. awarded
to PDK Constru ction of
Pomeroy. Signs on various
ru'tdwa ys in Gallia, Hoc kin g.
Mei(¥i. Monroe, Noble and
Washmgton Counli es will be
replaced ,as JW.rt of the project.

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Page AS
• Victor Hannahs
• Francis Shaeffer
• Dwight Cullums

WEATHER

SOUP TO NUTZ

\\ \\\\

American Legion celebrates its 85th birthd4y Agency offers help for
OBITUARIES

:n

~fJ

.

0 feut

LI

1

ODOT plans seven projects in Meigs County

-

So far this week, we have looked at

• TO /lU.APTIJ/l~ MY
YOUTti -- IT HAl
.-&lt;&gt;--,
TOO 116 A
HfAD STA/lT.

Cleveland Rocks: Cavs
on seven-game roll, B6

I

14
15 ·""""
sos
16.Ciosekln
17 Blend In
18 Slk4&gt; llogBtB
21 From .
Havana
23 Ely
of "Tarzan"
26 Baby's seat
27 Rap·aheet

letters

It K Q 6

South

44 Film epeed
Ind.
1 Normal
46 Purple bird
Kind
4~ Shark
oftxplortr
hitchhiker
11 Reflect
53 Garrell
13 WNther
54 Hit a homer
modifier
55 Sobbing
56 Faahlon
12 Wdl.l

MEDICAL CENTER

�OHIO
Thursday,!~~~.~
,------------------------------------------------------------------~-------­

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar

Roller-coaster romance is making boyfriend queasy

·The Daily Sentinel

'

Suspect in Ohio highway
shootings arrested in Las Vegas

NewsChannel

will be 5 MPH from the
southeast turning from the
east as the afternoon progresses.
Evening
(7:00pmMidnight) 45 - 51 E-W 5
mph
It will continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
diminish from 51 early this
evening to 45. Winds will
be· 5 MPH from the east
turning from the west as
the evening progresses.
Overnight
(1:00am6:00am) 44 - 47
5 mph

Thursday, March 18

Morning (7:00am-Noon)
35 - 50 S-SE 5 mph
It looks like a cloudy
morning. Temperatures will
ise to 50 with today's low
o 35 occurring around
6:00am. Winds will be 5
. MPH from the south turning from the southeast as
the morning progresses.
. Afternoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 50 - 53 SE-E 5
mph
. . It should remain cloudy.
· Temperatures will hold
: steady around 51 with
It should continue to be
; today's high of 53 occur- cloudy. Temperatures will
ring around 2:00pm. Winds linger at 44. Winds will be

w

5 MPH from the west.

Friday, March 19
Morning (7:00am-Noml)
45 - 50 NW 5 mph
Temperatures will .hover
at 47. Skies will be sunny
to mostly cloudy with S
MPH winds from the nprthwest.
Afternoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 51
54 NW-N S
mph
Temperatures will remain
around 52. Skies will be
sunny with 5 MPH winds
from the northwest turning
from the north as the afternoon progresses.

(AP) LAS VEGAS - The
man suspected in two dozen
· sniper shootings that have terronzed motonsts along Ohio
highways was arrested at a
Las Vegas motel early
Wednesday.
Charles A. McCoy Jr., 28,
was taken into custody two days
atier he was named as a suspect
in the shootings that leti one
woman dead and pierced cars
and homes in the Columbus
area, said Las Vegas police Lt.
Christopher Van Cleef.
"We got him in custody without incident," Van Cleef said.
The son of the on! y person
ki lied in the shootings said
her family was glad that
McCoy had been found.
"We are glad for today's
news, but our hearts will
never be the same," Brent
Knisley said at a news conference in Columbus. His mother, Gail. 62, was shot in
November on her way to a
doctor's appointment.
Fmnklin County Sheriff's
Chief Deputy Steve Martin would
not comment on possible motive
or McCoy's mental .state or
describe the tips to investigators.
"U ltimat ely, that process
that we had in place led to Mr.
McCoy," Martm said.
. Authorities
had
said
McCoy had a history of menial illness and was believed to
be armed, with "suicidal or
homicidal tendencies."
Police were told of McCoy's
whereabouts by a man who spotted him at the Stardust casino, recognized him from media reports
and found out where he was staying, Van Cleef said. Las Vegas
police staked out the motel and
ameste4 McCoy in the parking lot.
"He wasn't armed, but we
haven't been in the motel
room or his vehicle yet." Van
Cleef said. He said poli ce
have impounded the car that
McCoy was driving.
McCoy's · family disputed
authorities' description of the
suspect, calling McCoy troubled but peaceful.
"I knew it would happen
without incident because he

was a very passive indi vidual." McCoy 's sister Amy
Walton said on NBC's
"Today" show. 'This came as
a great shock to our family."
Conrad Malsom, 60, of Las
Vegas said he told authorities
he met McCoy at the Stardust
casino Tuesday. He said he
offered McCoy a slice of
pizza but recognized the
disheveled-look ing man with
a darkening beard.
McCoy was reading a copy
of USA Today that featured
his photograph, Malsom said.
"In my heart and mind, I knew
this wa~ the man the police in
Ohio were looking lor," Malsom
told The Associated Press.
He said Mc'Coy told him his
name was "Mike" and that he
was staying at the· nearby motel.
When he !eli the ca,ino. Malsom
found "bizarre writing" on &lt;m 8
1/2 by 14-inch sp01ts betting
sheet the man leti behind.
" It tilled the whole sheet about 30 lines," Malsom said.
"Each line started with 'You' or
'You are' but· you can't read it,
you can't read any of it."
He said he tumed the sheet over
to authorities, along with a water
glass, match book and lunch
wrappers that McCoy let\ behind.
FBI special agent Todd
Palmer said McCoy is being
processed in the agency's
ottice and likely will be transferred to the U.S. attorney's
office.
Authorities
said
McCoy had been questioned
about the shooti ngs.
An arrest warrant accuses
McCoy of felonious assault in a
shooting with a 9 mm handgun
that damaged a house Dec. 15.
'Franklin County Prosecutor
Ron 0' Brien said that a' long as
McCoy i~ charged, an-ested &lt;md
extradued on one charge, it doesn't help prosecutors to charge him
with other shootings Iight away.
Martin gave no informatiOn
on the status of the $60,000
reward established in the case.
The 24 shootings around
several highways on the southern outskirts of Columbus
pierced homes and a school,
dented school buses, flattened

tires and shattered windshields. They began in May.
The shootin gs prompted
commuters. to take detours
and schools to cancel classes
or hold recess indoors. Police
increased patrels and the state
in stalled cameras on pole s
along Interstate 270.
Knisl ey wa s kill ed as a
friend drove her to a doctor' s
appointment Nov. 25. Lab
tests showed that bullets from
nine of the shootings includin~ lhe one that killed
Kni sley'_· we re fired from
the same gun .
·
Edw:u'd Cable of LucawiUe,
whose miniv:m wa., hit by a bullet as he was driving on Nov. 21.
said Wednesday he was glad to
see McCoy was picked up, "not
so much li1r myself, but tor any·
body else who's worried about
gettmg him oH' the street."
Authoritie s haven't said
what evidence led them to
McCoy. Newspaper and television reports Tue sday said ·
McCoy 's family gave investigators at least one ol· h1s guns.
In a missin~ person's rep011
fi led Monaay. McCoy's
mother. Ardith. said her son
withdrew $600 from a bank
account and left home Fridav
for a mall restaurant and bar
with video games.
Neighbors on McCoy\
street said they didn 't know
much about the suspect or hi s
mother. A check of court
records in nearby countie s
turned up a handful of traftic
tickets for McCoy, but no
other criminal or civil charges.
The tan garage doors at-the
house were splattered with
three eggs Tue sday. Police
said they did not know who
hurled the eggs or when they
were thrown.
McCoy 's hi~h school football coach sai d he's praying
for his tormer player.
"He was an ornery kid, but
a lot of kids are ornery at that
age," said Brian Cross, who
coached McCoy for four
years at Grove City High
School. "I don ' t remember
him doing anything extreme."

A DAY ON WALL STREET
March 17, 2004

10,750

Dow Jones
Industrials
10,300.30

::,~,

--:0:-:E-:cC--J-AN- - - :F=E"'B- -M
-cA-:A: - 9 '250

High

+1 .14

10,326.52

low

Record hl;h: 11.722.98
Jan . 14, 2000

10,184.30

'''

March 17, 2004

_,.,._
Nasdaq
composite

--==------::c::----:- 1.600

1,976.76

::.-=..,

+1 .73

DEC

JAN

· HJuh

low

1,960.31

FEB

MAR

Record hl;h: 5.048.62
Marcn 10, 2000

1.958.52

March 17, 2004

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

~·

Maney Ferguson • Farmhand
• Bobcat • Shenniu
New ldu • Rhino
New Holland • Cub Cadet

SHOE CO.

= c----::--__,._,,...,"""'~r-- 1.150

i!l"...:...&gt;:fill!.~---fiiri,....,~:!!!..- 1,100
_

NEW· USED FARM AND
INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT

KIPLING

1,200

=t:._~L-

BlJY, SEll, OR TRAVE .

New Shoe&amp;
Arriving Dail)'I

_;;::_=::,___ _ 1.050

--:D:::E=c--.,-JA::cN--:-.,-F:::E:=B--::MA-:':R::- 1'COO

1,123.75
Pet change

lnlmpmlouo: +1 .17

Htuh

low

Record hl;h: 1.527.46

1,125.76

1,110.70

March 24, 2000

'

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.

AP

1150 Eastern Avenue

Local ·stocks

'

I

,•

III.

~

I

I

1:

••

AGI-30.90
: AEP-33.90
: Akzo - 36.62
Ashland Inc. - 46.59
BBT- 36.63
BLI-13.77
Bob Evans - 32.68
BorgWarner - 87.64
City Holding - 35. 19
Champion- 4.73
• Charming Shops- 7.35
Col- 30.51
DuPont - 41 .74
DG -19.25
Federal Mogul- .33
Gannett - 89.24
General Electric - 30.76
GKNLY - 4.50
Harley Davidson - 52.31
Kmart - 34.68
Kroger- 16.71
Ltd -19.25

llEI Gallipolis, Ohio •

446-9177 or 446·2484

NSC -21.15
Oak Hill Financial - 32.04
B.ank One - 55.06
OVB - 29.51
Peoples - 28.28
Pepsico - 51.42
Premier- 9.08
Rocky Boots - 21.60
RD Shell -· 48.31
Rockwell - 32.26
Sears - 45.12
SBC- 24.53
AT&amp;T - 19.35
USB- 28.30
Wendy's- 40.99
Wai-Mart - 58.35
Worthington- 18.10
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.
'

.celebmtlng spedt1l
dtlys with you! ·
' .

· Sunday Times-Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Numb.ar
IS•••
You must cover every number on your ·card to win.
V~E f~~Ml S

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with other offer•.

JIVIDEN'S "FARM"
'EQUIPMErrr.

Rt, 7 South to $1, Rt.l18,l. 7
miles. 'rake rlvhtonto lnvatts

Thesday, March 23
SYRACUSE - Special
meeting of Syracuse Village
Council , 6:30 p.m. regarding
trhe purchase uf video camera equ ipment for a police
cruiser
and
regarding
campers in the village.

Clubs and
Organizations

Saturday, March 20
PORTLAND Semiannual community meeting
for the Portland Community
Center to show people what
we have done up to now, I
p.m.
CHESTER - Material on
researching old roads of the
county will take place at I
p.m . at
th e
Chester
Court house.
SALEM CENTER
Star Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878. fun
ni ght and piotluck supper.
Supper will be served at
6:30 p.m. with fun night to
fo llow. Final plans will be
made for Sunday ' s s011p
dinn er to he served from
II a. m. to 2 p.m.

COLUMBUS
Siate
Development Director Bruce
Johnson today announced
. that the application deadline
: is approaching for high
school students and teachers
· in Ohio's Appalachian region
wanting to apply for an all expense paid two-week math,
science and technology edu. cational program at the U.S.
Department of Energy's Oak
Ridge National Laboratory
(ORNL) in Oak Ridge, Tenn.
Th is year's application deadline is March 22, 2004.
. "I encourage math, science
. and technology students and : teachers in Ohio's Appalachia
· region to apply," said
: Johnson. "This is a unique
opportunity for student s and
teachers to work with
research sc ientists on relevant
: math, science and technology
· topics facing the world in the
: 2 I" century."
· Applications were recently
sent to all high schools in
Ohio's 29 Appalachian coun. ties urging students and
· teachers to apply for this
• competitive opportunity. The
: Governor's
Office
of
: Appalachia (GOA) , a division
ot the Ohio Department of
Development, is accepting
and reviewing application s.
The Appalachian Regional
: Comm iss ion is collaborating
: witn the ORNL and the Oak
: Ridge Institute for Science
and Education (ORISE) to
provide this opportunity. The
ORNL is one of the largest
• U.S . Department of Energy
: research facilities in the
• United States, located near
: the Great Smoky Mountains
National Park .
Participants of this year's
program will be housed at a
; hotel in Oak Ridge, near
: ORNL and ORISE facilities.
: Student participants will be
: chaperoned 24-hours a day by
experienced teachers who
have worked with ORNL pro-

.~

' •'

"

Monday, March 22
RACINE
Southern
Band Boosters will hold its
regular meeting, 7 p.m. in
the high school band room .
All band parents and supporters are invited to attend.

Sunday, March 21
MIDDLEPORT - The
Gracemen will be singing at
the Middleport Church of
the Nazarene 6:30 p.m.
Pastor Allen Midcap invites
the public. Refreshments
will be served.
MIDDLEPORT - The
Gracemen will be singing at
6:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Ch urch of the Nazarene.

Birthdays
Saturday, March 20
REEDSVILLE - Kemp
Beaumont will observe his
85th birthday Saturday.
Cards may be sent to him at
39579 Silver Ridge Road,
Reedsville, 45772.

Students, teachers in .
Appalachia can vie for program

'

www. turnplltaflm.cam

Sunday, March 21
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053 Ladies Auxiliary
will have a dinner at the hall
in Tuppers Plains. All members and spunses invited.

Church services

'

:· SubS&lt;ribe today'• 992·2155

HOURS:
Man - Frl 9-7; Sat. 9-5 .

STRACUSE - Syracuse
Youth League will have ball
signups from I 0 a.m. to
noon at the Syracuse Fire
Department.

Thursday, March 18
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association will meet at the
Pomeroy Library down stairs
meeting room for a noon
Tuesday, March 23
catered
luncheon .
RACINE - Racine Area
Reservations are to be called
Community
Organi za tion
to 992-3214 or 992-3472.
will
meet
at
6:30
p.m . at
Members may take guests.
The program will be on ser- Star Mill Park building.
vices of the Meigs Libraries. Potluck will be served. New
member:; always welcome.
POMEROY
Ohio
Vall ey Crusade for Christ
meeting, 7 p.m. at the First
Southern Baptist Church,
Thursday, March 18
intersection of Route 7 and
POMEROY - Meigs
Route 33. Planning to ·con- County Ministerial annual
tinu e
for
Freedom community Lenten services,
Experience, 7 p.m. April 5-7 7:30 p.m. at the Forest Run
at Meigs High School.
United Methodist Church.

Proud.to be apart of your life.

Fa~(740)446-8286

3137lnQalls Road •Gallipolis

Public meetings

•

(7 40) 446-1675

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

'
\,. •.

(
. ',.

',:.f.,'\ .

•·,L.I'

'·

grams for several years.
Teacher participants will not
be responsible for chaperoning students.
In addition, all major
expense s, inc luding meals.
lodging, transportation to and
from the participant's home
base and local transportation,
will be covered for participants. Teachers participating
will receive a $750 stipend.
For more information on
the program, please call (6 14)
644-9228. Applications can
be submitted to Wanda
Hairston in the Governor's
Office of Appalachia. 77 S.
High St., 24h
Floor,
Columbus, OH 43216.

DEAR ABBY: I need help
dealing with my ex-girlfriend,
"Ashley." We were together
off and on for 2 1/2 years and
lived together for a year. It
was a new experience for
both of us.
Aboui a year into our relationship, Ashley decided she
wasn't sure that what we had
was what she wanted anymore . I was OK with it. We
split up for four or five
months, and then we started
talking and decided to try
agai n. About three month s
later, she did the same thing.
It has now been another
three months, and supposedly
she has a new boyfriend. but
she's calling me . I love her
and would do anything for
her, but I just don't know
what to do anymore. My
romance with Ashley ha s
'caused a lot of arguments
between me and my parents.
Any advice would help. HURTING IN PASADENA
DEAR HURTING: Ashley
appears to be too immature
and indecisive for a serious
commitment to anyone - her
current boyfriend included. If
it's love you're looking for,
she isn 't the girl who can provide it. The best advice I can
offer is to admire her from a

safe distance. She's a heartbreaker.
DEAR ABBY: I have been
with my husband. "Ron," for
12 years. We have always
gotten along well except for
one thing. He smokes pot - a
lot of it. He says he will never
stop. I am against pol smoking, but I've tolerated it for
his sake.
My daughter, "Erica." just
turned 15 and has become
involved with a bad crowd. I
recently found out she has
been smoking pot with Ron.
Ron says he 'd rather Erica do
it at home instead of on the
streets.
Now, if Ron and I have
even the smallest disagreement, Erica will automatically take hi s side. The two of
them have their own bond and
in side jokes; I fee l like an outsider. I would take Erica and
leave my husband, but I'm
not financially able.
How can I make Ron realize it is unacceptable - that
he should be a role model
instead of a friend '' I really
feel like I am going crazy.
Any ideas ? UNCOOL
MOM
DEAR UNCOOL MOM:
Rather than behave like a
responsible parent, your hus-

Thursday, March 18,

Dear
Abby

band has become your daugh ·
ter's enabler. I urge you to
draw the line . Tell him that
you want the house to be
"clea n" by tomorrow. If it's
not. let him know you'll be
calling the police to report
him for supplying drugs to a
minor. Then do it. Let him
explain his off-the-wall philosophy to them. And for your
daughter's sake. recognize
that it' s time you started jobhunting. You may need to
support the two of you in the
near future .
DEAR ABBY: I attended a
wine testing a few weeks ago
where a guest accidentally
broke a wine glass. The hostess didn ' t seem concerned
that he might be injured, but
she did get upset that the glass
was broken.
Before he let't. the guest
alTered. to pay for. the broken
wine glass and the hostess

2004

accepted, saying that he owed
her $16. He produced a $20
bill , which she pocketed without offering change - and
later bragged to me that ~he
had made money on the deal.
I thought her behavior wa.,
inappropria te .
She recently w nfided thai
she's going to buy a crate of
99-cent glasses and charge $5
apiece if any of them are broken. Whal uo yo u think ·or
thi s' APPALLED IN
BEVERLY HILLS
DEAR APPALLED: The
hostess appears to be ethical·
ly challenged. If she'd cheat
her guests on the wine glass.
how can one be sure she's
pouring the vintage she
claims to be'' Frankly. I thipk
she's popped her cork , and i;f I
were you. I'd skip her soirees.
Dem Ahbr. is written 1JI'.
Abigai l Van Buren, also
knmm as konne Phillips.
and &gt;ms jimndt'd hr her nroth ·
e~ P{{ldine Phillips. Write
Dear
Abhl'
at
,..,..,. . DearAI1b\'.com or PO.
Box fi9440. Los Angeles. CA
90069.

SUV drapes charter in memory of Iraqi casualty
MIDDLEPORT The Confederate military and the
charter was draped in memo, many loyal Unionist populary of Meigs County's recent tion occurred. The military
loss of R. Clinton Turner of then refused to give Union
Pomeroy, a soldier in the sympat hizers sa lt needed for
Iraqi War. when Brooks- food preservation. A riot over
Grant Camp Sons of Union needed salt occurred and
Veterans of the Civ il War met Confederate military was
recently at the Riverbend sent in .
Arts Co unci l building in
Ashley said that despite
Middleport.
rules to the contrary, 14 old
Frank Sisson, patriotic men and young boys were
instructor, read a p1ece on gathered up. taken out, shot.
freedom under the U. S. tlag and then hacked in the head
as ·a part of the n1emorial trib- with a hoe to kill them.
ute to Turner.
Women were strung up.
At the meeting the first stripped naked, and whipped.
ever "camp vivandiere" cer- Due to amnesty laws passed
tificate was presented by the after the Civi I War, the
gro up to Barbara Jones of offending Confederate offiGallipolis, wife of deceased cers could not be prosecuted,
past com mander, Myron Ashley said. ,
Jones . It was noted that in the
During the busines s meetCivil War, a vivandiere was ing · th e Camp voted into
the only official temale type membership Gary Coleman
of military soldier of the war of Middleport on hi s ancestor
and was used as an ass istant Pvt. James Clay of the !40th
to Union officers. Jones Ohio lnfamry. He was then
received the certificate in elected to an unexpired term
appreciation for all her assis- us member of the camp countance at monume nt place - cil. The camp initiated him
ment and with history work. and Earl Willford of
She was appointed by Somerset. George Mora was
Commander
Gerald introduced as a g u~st for the
Crawford as the camp memo- evening.
rials officer.
Plans were completed on
For the 40 members and the third annual Appumattox
guests attending, Keith Day bean dinner to be held
Ashley gave a report on the on the James Mourning farm
Shelton Laurel Massacre. at the end of Railroad Street
This occurred, he said, on the in Middleport at 6 p.m ..
western border of North Friday, April 16. Also, plans
Carol ina in the Civil War in were completed for cere1863. Problems between the monies to dedicate a new

monument to Jenkins' Raid,
the first invasion of the North
. during the Civ il War which
occurred at Racine in 1862. A
memorial urn will be placed
by the camp wi th the mon ument pending permi ssion of
park authorities.
It was noted that the camp
is working to revise its constitution
and
by-laws.
Members were given a fact
sheet to enable them to write
letters to state senator Joy
Padgett asking her to support
upcoming legislation being
spon sored by Rep. Jimm y
Stewart to make non-certitied
photocopies of health department birth and death records
to be made at Cost again.
The Ohio Department of
Health used known false
information to get non-certified copies eliminated in the
2003 biennium budget bill by
r saying that the copies were
being used for identity theft.
The F.B .I. has refuted this
claim. according to SUV
members.
The Civil War encampment
in the Gallipolis City Park
was announced for May 22 .

The Ohio Civi l War Relics
Show will be held May 1-2 at
Richland Coumy Fairgrounds
at Manfield. Thi s is the
largest show in the U.S. wi th
seven large buildings of
materials of all kinds. There
are also live arti ll ery demonstration s.

The camp joined with the
Maj. Daniel McCook Circle
Ladies of the Grand Army of
the Republic for refreshments
afterward served by' Ki Ia
Frank and Emma Ashley.

Keeping
Meigs ·
informed
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-2155

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���Thursday, March 18, 2004
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March t8, 2004

~rihune-

Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

'

[jSome things to look for in NCAA tourney
Bv

JtM

O'CoNNELL

Associated Press

Every team has been broken down and every matchup has
. been analyzed. Still, there might be some things about the fi rst
:round of the NCAA tournament that have been overlooked:

•••
SENIORS

This is their las.t chance and, yes, there still are senior&gt; left
in college basketball .
• Duke's Chris Duhon was a freshman on the Blue Devil s'
last championship team and he is the unquestioned leader of
.
:this group.
. • Memphi s point guard Antonio Burk s was sel ected playe r
·of the year in Conference USA but struggled to a season-low
. six points on 2-for- 11 shooting when the Tigers were eliminated in the quarterfinals by Saint Loui s.
• Gonzaga guard Blake Stepp has been one of the keys to the
Bulldogs' recent success, but he has to lead them as they try to
:prove they deserved their No . 2 seeding.
: • Seton Hall guard Andre Barrett finally gets a chance to
:play in the NCAA tournament. The former New York City star
·will have to go against perennial powers Ari zona and Duke to
.play another weekend.

•••

East pl ayer of the year. had 43 points and 13 rebounds in the
conference championship'game aft er missing a month with a
broken wrist.
• Lui s Flores of Man hattan, the two-time Metro Atlantic
Athl etic Conference player of the yea r, was thi rd in the
nation in scoring at 24.1.
• Zakee Wadood of East Tennessee State. Besides hav ing
the best name in the tournament, he al so was the Southern
Conference playe r of the year.
• Nevada swingman Kirk Snyder, who is projected as a
first-round NBA draft pick if he leaves after his junior year.
led the Western Athleti c Conference in scoring and was its
pl ayer of the year.

•••
UNKNOWN TEAMS

FRESHMEN
• Duke's Luol Deng couldn't have lived up to his preseason
billing, but the 6-foot-8 forward had a good freshman year,
:averaging 14.7 points and 6. 8 rebounds.
· • Wake Forest's Chris Paul beat out Deng for Atlantic Coast
Conference rookie of the year, and he did it by averaging 14.2
points, 3. 2 rebounds and 5.8 assists.
. • Pittsburgh's Chr.is Taft stepped into a starting spot with the
LONG BALL
Panthers and was a force in the middle right away, averaging
in
the
field
are shooting better than 44 perThree
players
11.2 points and 7.5 rebounds.
from
beyond
the
3-point
line: Chris Hill , Michigan State
cent
• Connecticut's Josh Boone had a quiet freshman year until
(46.
1
),
Nick
Jacobson,
Utah
(45 .3) and Ben Gordon,
the Big East tournament when he picked up the slack for the
injured Emeka Okafor and grabbed 29 rebounds in two games. Connecticut (44.6). The most interesting long-range shooter
is Vanderbilt 's Dawid Przybyszewski whose 46 3-poinlers
this season are the most in the nation by a 7-footer. Four
COACHES
• Bob Knight of Texas Tech and Mike Krzyzewski of Duke teams are shooting better than 40 percent from beyond the
each have three national championships, the only coaches in arc : Gonzaga (41.4), Saint Joseph 's (40.7), Michigan State
the field with more than one. Their recent success has been (40.4) and Connecticut (40.0).
quite different, however. Krzyzewski has taken the Blue
REHAB WARD
Devils to the round of 16 or better the last six years, and he
•
Connecticut
center
Emeka Okafor missed the first two
won the 200 I championship. Knight has lost in the first round
in five of his last seven appearances. including 2000 when he games of the Big East tournament because of back spasms
lost to Pepperdine in Buffalo, N.Y. . in his last NCAA game but returned for the championship game . Connecticut forward Charlie Villanueva injured his leg in the semifinals of
with Indiana.
the Big East tournament and missed the championship game.
• Duke guard Chri s Duhon hurt his ribs in the Atlantic
BAYLOR FACTOR
Coast
Conference championship game against Maryland but
Three players who transferred out of the troubled Baylor
returned
and is expected to play.
program last summer will have an impact on some highly
• Florida swingman Matt Walsh had a huge bli ster on his
seeded teams. Lawrence Roberts of Mississippi State was the
right
foot , but he will wear a sheath and is expected to play.
Southeastern Conference player of the year; John Lucas of
•
Stanford
forward Justin Davis, the Cardinal's top
_Oklahoma State was selected the Big 12's player of the year
:by the media; and Kenny Taylor led Texas with 58 3-pointers. rebounder, returned for the last two games of the Pac-10
tournament after missing 10 games with a knee injury.
I
• • •
• North Carolina State guard Scooter Sherrill, the
FREE THROWS
TWo of the top free-throw shooters in the country are in the Wolfpack' s third-leading scorer, has missed four games with
tournament: Duke's J.J . Redick (130-for-136, 95.6 percent) an ankle injury and is considered day-to-day.
and Chris Hernandez of Stanford (96-for-105, 91.4 percent).
MISSING PLAYERS
. Four teams in the tield make at least 76 percent: North
Kelvin Brown, Murray State 's second-leading scorer. was
Carolina State (79.8), Arizona (78.6), Michigan State (76.9)
-and Manhattan (76.0). The five worst teams at the line: arrested on drug charges last weekend and suspended indefVirginia Commonwealth (60.4), Connecticut (61.6), Maryland initely.
- LeVar Seals, DePaul's sixth mim, was ejected from the
(62.6), Illinois-Chicago (63.4) and Syracuse (63.6).
Conference USA championship game against Cincinnati for
UNKNOWN STARS
throwing a punch and will mi ss Thursday night's game
• Taylor Coppenrath of Vermont, the two-time America against Dayton.

•••

•••

• •••

I

•••

•••

•••

AP Division Ill arid IV All-Ohio
Girls Basketball Teams
COI.LM!US (API - ~ 2003-2004 lndeperder&lt;e; 5ashe Sales. CleYe. MLK;
Asooc:lated PnJss OMeion 111 aoo rv !jtls AJI. 8tEtl)haniO T011ner. Eliri" Ceth.; em Porter.
Mktilafield Ca rdinal; AnQela Manfredi .
OtW&gt;
lllams, based
on
lhehi!j\
I'8CXIITICTieiiCialioos
~ a sta1e media Bur1on Ber1&lt;shire; Jocel)&lt;l HU(I'les. Oberlin;
Broo1tB Hinkle; Wtllngtoo; Joo Kolshner.
pWIOI.
lndepe1idef'Ce.
DIVISION I
ARST

~:

Courtney Davidson ,

lllungo. Ursu line, 5-lool-5, ...,io&lt;, 18.5
points per game; Sinone Redd. S. Euclid

Regina. 5-7. "'·· 18.4; Sl18mon I.B&amp;Sute.
5anlhsvlle Shenardoah, 5-7, sr., 24.1;
Jessica
McKsnzle, Zane!MIIe
W.
~ &amp;0, Jt, 22.6; U!S1ie SIOOg.
Metamola ~eon, 5-11 , sr., 17.7; Ellie
Slllneeash. MWolown Fen-Mck, 5-10, Of.,
17.7; Alyssa Hammord, Qak Hil,
jr.,
V .7; Sarah Clapper, NewaJ1&lt; Calh , &amp;0,
soph., 17.4; Lauren Procl1asl&lt;a, Plain City
Jor1alhM Alder, 0.10, fmsh. , 24.6.

s.o.

Pl8yeN ol1ho yoor: Alyssa Hammond.

• UAB was one of the five teams to tie for the Conference
USA regular-seaso,n title and the Blazers are in the NCAA
tournament for the first time in five years under second -year
coach Mike Anderson .
• Richmo_nd wasn't noticed much in the A-10 as Saint
Jose ph 's dominated the league, but the Spiders won at
Kansas and they have some tournament history, becoming
the first No. 15 seed to win a game, beating Syracuse in
1991.
• East Tennessee State has one of the most exciting pl ayers in 5-9 Tim Smith, and the Bu ccaneers, who have made all
six of their NCAA appearances since 1989, upset Arizona in
1992.
.
• The Mid-American Conference is always considered the
be st of the mid-majors, and Western Michigan won the
league titl e this year. It was led by' player of the year Mike
William s and first-year coach Steve Hawkins. .

Oak Htll; Courtney Davidsoo, Youngs.
Ur!IJIM; Sinone Aedd, S Eudid Regina.

DMSION r'/
FIRST TEAM: Gretchen Polinski,
Mens1ield St. Peters, 6-lool. i&lt;ri&gt;r. 14.2
per gerM; Am Steveno. Cente&lt;1lu&lt;y,
6· 1, sr., 174; PJny Sebastian. Cln.
Landmal1&lt;. 5-8, sr.. 23.4; Charity Stree'
BeaJISIAUe. 5-8. sr., 24.2; Amanda Nero,
L""""lvile, !HI, jr.. 20 9; JessiCa OeviKe,
Leetonta. 6- t , sr.. 24.6; Brittany Skolnlcl&lt;i,
Lota1n Cath., 5-9. jr , 19.0: Jennifer Grandy,

"""Is

Dame (26-0) into this week's state high school
basketball championships at Value City Areha
in Columbus. During the regular season , she
averaged 20.5 points, 6.5 rebounds, 6.1 assists
and 3.5 steals per game for the Cougars.
Despite those numbers, she's no diva in
sneakers.
"The young lady is extremely unselfish. It's
not her preference to be in the limelight,"
coach Scott Rogers said. "She plays basketball because she loves it and she has fun and
because she likes to play at a high intensity
level. She works so hard - she doesn 't take
any of it for granted."

The division 's coaches of the year are
Melvin Burke, who transformed a 3-20 team
two years ago into a 17-3 team this year at
Cleveland Central Catholic, and first-year
from Page 81
head coach Gary Lemle who led Oregon
jr., 22.6); Meiamora Evergreen 's Leslie Stritch to its first regional tournament
Strong (5- 11, sr. , 17.7); Ellie Stonecash of appearance in 25 years without a senior in
Middletown Fenwick (5-10, sr. , 17 .7); the starting lineup.
In Division IV, Polin ski is a 6-0 junior
Newark Catholic 's Sarah Clapper (6-0 ,
who
averages 14.2 points and 4.8 rebounds
soph., 17 .4) ; and Jonathan Alder 's Lauren
for the Spartans.
Prochaska (5-1 0, fresh. , 24.6).

lmsh., 160.

SpeclaiMontlon

Alicia Hurl, Heath; Koriann Reed. Mi~rd
Ctr. Fal!banks: Erin HeJd&amp;lbach, St .
etalmille; Aslltey Vavrek, Bellare; Amy
Bruney, Martins Ferry; Ashly sawon,
Ste\Abenville Calh. Cent.; Jessje Mason.
Georgetown; Vk:torta A1chley, C ln1on·

Massie; Sara Hacker. Ironton;· All Hull,
F'!:lrt!lmoulh; Lisa P81Ty, CMesapeaks; Caslj
Wertman, PhiHI&lt;XJthe Zane Trace; Micl&lt;i
Kuns, CaS1alia MargareHa; Ashleigh
Slallkamp, Peuldtng; Lyndsey Shew,
Roo1s1own; DaJ&gt; Wille, Atwater Waterloo;
.

~
.

Johnson. New Mlddleto_wn
: Jeoslca llu12er, O!Nie; Alicia
Hoff,
'lie; Hailey Slaubs, Marches1er;
Reecy - 1, S. Euclkl RE!IFna; Ur&lt;Jsay
~1, Shaker Hts Hethaway Brown;
Magan O'Donnell, CM. VASJ; Jessica
Moses, Rocky ' River Lulh. W.; Hoi!Y Ean,
Lomin ClearVIew; Gl.\m1 Edwar&lt;ls. CM
Cent. Calh.; Monlque Cl&lt;xlfrey, S. Euclid

AqJa

....

J.

__

Aw;, Pataskala Licking Hts.; Brittany
Beals, Worthtng1on Chr~tian ; Lyndsay
Hunter, W. Jeflerson; Erin Kume, Manon
Pleasant Katie Shaler, Bloom·Cenoll;
Rechel Klmllerty, Coshocton; Cllandra
Myers, Sugarcreek Garaway; Ashley
Parson, Suga""""' Garaway; PJny Hmes,
llarrletMIIe; samh H~ Beverty Ft Frye;
Krtsla Kimey, Betroont Union Local; Kel~
l'tllen, St. Ctair!Mie: ~m Rose, Lore City
9.Jd&lt;e&lt;,tl Trai·
Denlinger,
sarah Schulze.
Casst!l'Ml M""'l E.; WhM6y Dubbs, Cln
Hll~ Chrietian Acad. ; Hayley Hemm. Sidney
LelmJ:l; ,oJeshia Bors, WaYne!MIIe;
Whitney Hale, Ook Hit Whltoof Malden.
Nelsorlllille-\brk; ArtOoa Audmann. ltonton;

Anna oan"re

Allsha Bridges. Soulh Point; Karen Dielll,
Chillicothe Zane 'Ttace; Haley Messer,
- 1 ! 1; Daphne B.J1cher, Chillicothe
HuntifVon;
Alloon Meyer. Han1er Pollick Hemy; Sue
Brickner, Kansal l.akola; Kristen Ameling,
Oregon Strit:h; Jennfer Keesey, Swanlon;
Stahl, Aroltlold;
Aaril&lt;a Knepp, Wamon Kennedy, Selllh
Famoo, New ~ Sprtngield; Cerly
Pevticlc, Loul8ville Aquinas; Erica Short,
Omi!Ue; Kai11n Cook, Sml1hvn-.; Staph

Sc\llvartz. Cortlomd

Maplewood; Lauren
Manchester; Amber
' Boclrld&lt;, Youngs. Mooney; Katie Kibby,

WhHehill. Akron

c-.

Columbia"'
llrldgot CYBnen, a..... VAS.J; Ttflany~.
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown; Brittany
Feher, Rocky RM&gt;r Lulh. W.; Ja&lt;:kle Pakr~

Red men

started the scorin g with a pinch-double ,
plating Matt Randles.
' The Redmen were not able to solve
Tennessee Wesleyan in the second game on
from Page 81
Wednesday, dropping an 11 -0 decision in
inning s.
.
Sophomore Dustin Gibbs, a native of seven
Sophomore lefthander · Brent Watterson
·Vinton, fired three scoreless innings to col- was crui sing for the first fiv e frame s,
lect his first win of the year in two deci- throwing shutout baseball.
sions.
Tenne ssee Wesleyan erupted for ei ght
.. Freshman southpaw Nate Chau started runs (six earned) in th e sixth .
· and lasted four innings, yi elding four runs
Watterson fell to 2-2 with the loss.
(two earned) and fanning eight.
The Redm ~ n mu stered only five hit s.
Chau, Kris Schuler and Jorge Morales all
Rio Grande will hook up with Harriswent 2-for-3 at the plate. All three deliv- Stowe on Thursday for a scheduled doubl e
ered RBI hits and Morales plated Chau for header. The first game is slated to begin at
the winning run .
9 a.m.
Charlie Kabealo came off t~ bench and
(

Your Ad,

....,c_,_a_I_I_T_o_d_a_v_._··__o:..;r..:.F.;;;,ax To (740) 44&amp;-.3o..o,.,.e_ _ _o.:_r_F_ax_r_.:.o_.!.&lt;7:....:4.::.!.o)_:.9..:..:92=-.:-2:..:.1s:..;7..._..,.
I

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Should

·. r

ANNUUNCEMI:Nl'S

_

!

'I

'&gt;

~

'
"

'

.

Ap_ril 9, 2004
Senior Citizens make
up 65o/oofthe
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your
Advertising
Representative.

~alltpoli!li Jlliilp ~ribnne

·446-2342
• laoint
lalea~ant 1\egt~ter · 675-1333
,
'992-2l55
• The Daily Sentinel
Advertising Deadline - April1, 2004

WANTEI&gt;
To Do

. .

Lw-----_.J

Dally In-Colu~nn : 1:00 p.m.
Monday-friday for Insertion
In NeKt: Day•s Paper
Sunday In-ColuiTin: 1:00P-mFor Sundayllii Paper

• All ads

All Dl5play: 12 Noon 2
Business Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

must be prepaid'

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlahlng raaervea the right to edit, rejact, ar r:aneel any ad at any lima. Errore muat be reported on the tlrat day
Tribune--Sentinei-Regi1ter will be reaponalble tor no more than the coat of the lpiiCIII occuplftd by the error and onlv the first Insertion. We
any loaa or exponae that re~ulte from the publicati on or omlallon of en advertlaament. Couectlon will be made In the tirlll available edition.
are alwaya confidential. • Currant rate card appllaa. • All real eallta advertiHmenta are subject to the Fede.-al Fair Houaing A.ct of 1968.
accapta only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We will not knowingly accept any advertl1ingln violeUon ol the law.

. __
,r AP,;,mi 1\R 1ME-REi i~i ~ioi'.S•

lwright@ic.net

Rooltng , sidmg, porches , No
Job to small, Free estimates.
20:t y rs. exp , Aea~o n abl e,
(304)773·5028 , 304 ·882·
2095.

For
l ease:
Beautifull y
restored , unturn1she d. two
bedroo m apart ment over·
looking th e C ity Park and
R1ver. All new applian ces. 1
1/2
bath s.
$600/mo ,
Sec unty
depostt
References required. No
pets. C all 740 -446-2325 or
740·446·4425

0
0

can

Will do odd jobs. carpentry,
Hiring: Full &amp; Part ttme floor coverin g, anything you
Rum mage sale items Call Nursery Greenh ouse help. need! Reasonably pncedl
(304)882·2978 , 304·377Call (740)2 56·9247.
. altet 5 pm (740)388·8217.
4633.
Lo!.'TAND
Mako 50% sell ing Avon
FOUND
Limited
ttm e
ONLY Wil l Press ure Wash house's,
mobil e homes, n'\etal build (740)446·3358.
s. and gutters . Call
ing
Lost- small hOund dog , w hite
(740)446-0151 ask for Ron
&amp; tan . vicinity of Bashan Rd . Medi Home Health Agency.
Rewald, (7 40)985-3601
Inc.
see ki ng
full -t ime or leave message.
Physic al Therapist and PAN
11"\\"\4 1\1
Fe male Boston Occup ational Therapi st lor m;:;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
LOS T:
BUSINESS
Teme r last seen on 3/mtle OhiO and West Virgmia cli ent r10
OPPOR11JNITI'
Road Reward answers to bas e. M ust be ltcen sed both
8896.

0

c

~-------

Furn1shed apt . 1 or , 2ncl
Ave Upsta1rs, all ut1ht1es pd ,
No
pets.
Gallipolis.
(740)446 -9523.

r

I

"Chelsie" call (304) 675·7443
lost Red &amp; w hite Coon
hou nd , neutered m ale,
afraid of guns and men
· l~ewa rd
for
return
(740)339-1594

WANI'Eil

ro Buv

Absolute Top Dollar. U.S.
Stive r.
G old
Coi ns,
Proolsets, Dtamonds , Gold
Amgs,
U.S. C urrency,: M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
· Secon d Avenue, Gallipolis,
740-446-2842.
Cash pa td lor- gold &amp; Sliver
cams &amp; coin collection s. free
estim ates, Glen B1 ssell,
: (740)992-7599

tn Ohi o and West Vtrg1n1a.

We
oller a co mpet1t1ve
salary. E 0 E $5,000 SIGN·

ON·BONUS and ben elots lor
full -t1me Phy s1cal Th erapi st
only Please send resum e to
352
Second
Avenue.
Gallipolis . OH 456 3 t . Attn:
D1ana Harless, R.N. Cli nical
Manager.
Need a JOb?
We are hinng!
You cou ld earn up
to $8/hour plus bonuses
We al so oller pa id
train1ng, holtday s
and vacat ions
Full or part time
sh"ts ava1fabl e.
Call tocl ay
1-877-463-6247 ext. 2456
www.tnfOC ISI On .com

~~~;:;;~~

r

"'
"'
HIO VALLEY· PUBLISH
NG Co . recommen ds th a
·
'lh
ou do bus1ness WI pea
Ie you k now, an d NOT I
· h h
end mo ney I hroug t
'I
t'l
h
·
1·
a1 un 1 you ave 1nves 1
d
lh
H
0
ate
e enn ·

r

I'Ro~IUNAL

SERVICF.'l

Robert s
Res1dent1al
Electrical
Se rvic e A-Z.
PhOne (740)256-66 10.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888·582-3345
1~1\ll"il\11

Para medi CS
&amp;
EMT's m10!:"'"--:'~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
: Looking lor 2br o r bigger/
needs Apply · a t 1354
. house. with smaJIJpiece at
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
I&lt;UR SALE
land, on a rent-to-own bases
can pay up to $400month
! 600 sq . II. 3 yr old Ranch
(3 04)895·3408
POSTAL JOBS styl e home 2 1/2 car garag e,
$1 5.44-$21 .40/h r, now hlr- 3 bedroom, li:lrge kttchen.
I \ II'! II' \II \I
mg.
For app lication and free livin g room, 2 1/2 bath s,
,l· ll\11 "
governm ent job info. call laundry room , front porc h,
Ame rican Assoc. ol Labor. all electric . Very well layed
HEU' WANTFll
1-(913)599-8220. 24 hrs. ou t, beautiful 1ntenor on 1
emp. serv.
112 acres, 1348 Prospe ct
Church Rc1 Won't last long
~ Add ressers wanted immediResid enti al
Treatment al on ly $115,000. (740)446·
ately! No Expe rience neces·
Facility youth worke r. Pay 4514 or (740)446·3248 after
sary Work at Home. Call
based on experience. Call 5pm.
405-44 7·6397
(740)379·9083 to apply.
3 Bedroom home, located at
• Amengas Prop ane is seek21 2 N . Third Avenue ,
: ing en e}(pe rl ence d local
M iddleport. (740 )992·6759
Tech
tor
• driver/Service
: Rac1ne. COL A or B wllh
3 bedroom. 2 balhs on 4.3
. tan k &amp; hazmat required .
acres Close to Tycoon Lake.
Pr ior
Propane/ plumblnQ
Director needGd for local
Call(740)709·1166
e"perlence HELPFUL. Must area to work with schools,
be physi cally capable t.o per·
3br, 2ba, Housp In New
PTA's, and youth groups.
· form all demands of the job.
Haven totally remodeled
Avg . 46K 813-788·8157.
: Comp etitive pay and bene· ~·ong ••. poop.o oOCOIIl $~5,000 (304)882·3131
• fits. Oualllled applicants call fNho want to earn mane
: 1- 800·583 - 9675
~hila loelng weight, ahow 4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye
• EOE/AA/M/F/ON.
no
others
how. Hille Rd . In ground pool . 1
acre. (740)709·11 68.
nformatlonal

HOMES

School
Fundralslng

ovotC·r

An Excellent way to earn
money. Leta talk the
NEW AVON .
Call Marilyn 304-882·2645
• Joyc e 304-675-8919
: April 304-862-3830
: AS SEEN ON TV
• IN STRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR· TRA ILER
NEW PROGRAM
No Exper ience Needed
Placement Dept
Financing Available
: COL/Training
• ALLIANCE
• Tl'aCtor·TI'aller
· Training ' Centers
WytMvlllo, VA
Csll Toll Free
1·800·33(·1203

vallab le upon request 740
41-1984.
ll'IIV,I, work &amp; p/8y S68klnQ
'nerg&amp;tlc p80pla lor fun job
opportunity 1srn monsy
whlltJ &amp;llsinQ the USA call
llobln HI~H~?32
Wanted : Someone to clean
house. Send resu mes or let·
ter ol Interest to CLA S55,
c/o
Galllpolla
Tribune,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

,~.i~~~·~"~'~··~·------~
1176

: 675-1 429.

JDIIIRY
!MIDDLEPORT.

DA'
~HIFT/NIGH'r
·SHIFT.
PICK UP APPLICAT ION
BUS INESf
1,0URIN_G
tHOURS .

"

Mlscmi, ~

•

Barn Removal
All relo rencoo &amp; l ull lnour·
ance. Call 304·313-0011 .

&lt;Ol 2004 by NEA, Inc .

10

www.comics.com

Q

~===FO:R:SA:L:E:::

L-..OAiiNiiiUiiBiOUilliitl,iiiiJiiiii'II'Gtiil's;.
· ,..I
Commerctal buddmg for
sal e, asktng $39 ,000 Gr eat
opportunity to sta rt ·a business
or
to
lease.
Acq uisitions. 9 1 M1fl St .
Middleport. OH. Shown by

All real estate Bd\lertlsing
In thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ol1968
which makes It illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial statue or national
origin, or any Intention 10
make an~ such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."

Huus~~
FOR RENT

8U~·HNt~

HOMES

River
v 1ew. 3 bdrm .. 2
bath s. basement and deck.
All elec tri c . Located m
Gall ipo lis
Ferry,
WV.
$700/month , no pets. By
appt. (740)446·3481.

Monn.EHoM~~~
FORib:Nf

Thla newspaper Mil not
knowtngly accept
advertleemenls tor rt!al
estate which Is In
violation of tha law. Our
readers are hereby
lnrormed thPt till
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

16x80 sites availa ble $11 5
per month Inclu des wate r.
sewer &amp; tra sh, (740)9 922 167

2 bedroom . all ele ctric . a1r.
porch Very, very nice . No
pels In Gallipoli s. (740)4461.409(7401446·200 3

Fo r Sale. 79 .1 06 Acres
River view. produci ng 011 &amp;
gas wells. Reduced to
$11 5,000
30 4 -529-71 06
after Spm.

Be autiful river v1 ew, id eal for
one or two peo ple. No pets,
referen ces. [7 40)441 -0181 .
Nice 2 and 3 bedroom
mobil e ho mes lor ren t
iricludes water. s"ewe r &amp;

Lots for Sate: Meadow Hill s&amp;
3 mile s from Po int Pleasant tra sh, no pets. depostt
740 )992 .
on O shel Rd. 304-67 5·3000· ~ ~~~ per month, (
740·44 6·934 0

j440

AI'/\H'IMtNI'S

FOH

Poplar H9ights Subd ivision ,
Rt:Nl·
two adjac ent lot s. 4.5acres,
stream. view, mature hickory 1 an d 2 bedroom apart·
&amp; wal nut trees. $30,00 0 ment s, furni shed and unfur·
Letart Falls, OH; 3 bedroo m (304)675 -6666
nt shed, sec urity depOSit
house, 1 bath . detach ed --------~ reqwred, no pets, 740-99 2·
garage, new roof . Sidi ng, TEXAS LAND LI QUIDATIONI 2218
windows, carpet, &amp; kit chen, 20 acre ranches 35 minute s - - -- - - - - from boom ing El Pas o. 1 bedro om apt. lurnt'shed.
$65.000.00 (740)247-2000
Roads. surveyed. refer - $290, $150 deposit . Call
New Home- 3 bedroom, 2 ences . S8 ,995 $0 dow n, (740)4 46·9061
bath, de n On corner tot. $8Q/mo Suns et Ran che s. , '----'---- - -- - Meadow Hil ls. Osher Ad. Pt. Free mepsfpict ures . t -BOO- 1 bed room apt. stove/ refrigeralo r &amp; utilities lurnlshed.
Pleasan t, WV. (740)4 46· 843 . 7537 .
www
sunset
ranches.com
Call
(740)245-5859
9340

i~

1\IIOIIII.E HOME&lt;!

FORSALE

I

I( I \I \I \

. :;;=~===~
10

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HouSES

5 used
homes
under
$2 ,000.00 . Will help with ~
FORib:Nf
clellvery. Call Harold, 740·
2 bedroom house,
385·9948.

1 br. apt In Pt Pleasant.
1 br house in Ohio central
alrl heat no pet s dep req .
446-2200

not s. Grave Monument s.
(740)446·478 2, Galli poli S,
OH . Hrs. 10-4 (M-S ) Sunday
by appomtment

r

ANllQUI'.~

·

HAY&amp;
GRAII'i

Good mixed hay, $ 1. 50 a
bale, (740)742·7004
Hay tor Sale: 1.500 10 bales,
sta rtmg
at
$10. Call
(740)44 6-2109
Sq uare bale hay lor safe
Ba led dry $1.80 per ba le
Ca ll(740)245-5672

1650

S•:..:u &amp;
f'I.XIl1.17.J.:R

J.w_..;:,:-o:~:;::o~-P
Toba cco Plants order now to
gu arantee ea rly sp nn g
pl antm g
De whurst
Greenhouse (304)895·378 9

1

Gracious livmg . 1 a nd 2 bed·
room apartm ents at Vill age
$500 !. Hond as .
Chevys.
Manor
and
Rive rside ";~~-----., Jeeps,
etc
POLICE
Apartments in Middlepo rt I:
M
IMPOUND S Cars
from
From $295-$444 . Call 740 ISCEI.I ANF.OUS
$500. For listmgs 1-800-719·
MERC1lAN1liSE
992-5064 Equal Housmg
_
3_00 1_ e_x_l_
39_0_1_ __ ~
Opportunities.
JET
1980
Plym outh
Vola re
AERATION MOTORS
69,000 m11es (304 )882·28 10
New 1 bedroo m apt. Phone
Repai red, New &amp; Reb uilt In a
__fle_r_4_:p_m_ _ _ _ __
740·446·3736.
Stoc ~ . Call Ron Evan s, 11986 N1ssan 300 ZX turbo V·
800-5~ 7 - 95 28
6, T-tops wino tea ks. ta trl~
Plea sant Vall ey Apartment
new tra nsmi SS IOn $800
Are now tak1ng Application s - -- - - - - - NEW AND USED STEEL OBO 1740)992·2352
for 2BA , 38R &amp; 4BR .,
Max tma .
N 1ssan
Appli cati ons
are
ta ken Steel Be ams, P1pe Rebar 1990
An gle, $ 1,000 O BO. )7 40)44 6·
Monday thru Friday, 'h om For · Conc rete,
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M . OffiCe IS Channel . Flat Bar. Steel "16 19.
For
Drai ns.
Located at 115 1 Ev~;~rgreen Grating
1992 Bon nev1ll e S t 495
Drive Point Pleasant. WV Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L 1995 Gra nd Am 4 door
Phone No IS {304)675-5806. Scrap Metals Open Monday,
1993 Caravan .
Tue sday, Wed nesday &amp; $2. 195.
E.H .O
$ t ,995. 23 1n stoc k trades
Fnday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
welcome .
Saturday
&amp;
Town hou se Thursday,
Tara
Cook Motors
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
Apartments. Very SpaCIOUS,
(740!446
· 0 I 03
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA . t
1/2 Bath, Newly Ca rpet ed, Water hauling tanK 125 gat
$100; one set scaftold1ng 2 1993 Ford Pr obe SE . elec·
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Po ol,
t1er complete, $125. Qu ee n lrtc blue. body excell ent conPattu. Start $385/Mo. No
Ann sola, $185. 2 occas 1on- dttion, spoile r, No tra nsm1s Pets. Leas e Plus Securrty
al arm chatrs . $25 each; s1on . $500. (740)446-7857
Depo sit R e qu ~re d . Day s:
740-446 -348 I ; Eve ning s. GMC full s1ze truck topper, 1993 Mazda MX6 Spor t
$75: 3 wood bar stoo ls. $15 Co upe, moon -roof. automat·
740-367·0502.
each : cont emporary de sk &amp; 1c ,
powe r wind ows and
- - - - -- - - cha1 r $40: Oak coffee taQie lock s.
askmg
$2 .000
Tw1n R1vers Tower IS accepting applicat ions tor wa1hng &amp; 2 end tables. S50 a se1. (740 )367 . 0251
list for Hud-su bstzed. 1· br, aluminum 16' eJC!enllo n lad- :__:_c_c___.=:____ _ ~_
apartment . call 675-66 79 der. $30; 1999 Yamaha 4x4 1994 Cama ra for sale. in
Big Bear four wh eele r, excellent condition . ne .....
EHO
(740)843· 1053
stero
system
$3,500
chrome ta1t ptpes S !low
SI,ACt:
BUIUHNG
master (304 )5 76·2929
HJR RENT
SUPPLIR~
1996 Chevy Caviler body 1n
great shape. needs · some
2 store lronts in Htsloricat
2000 new bncks. 25e each. work St .200 (304) 576-2929
downtown Pome roy Oh, facmust take all. phone af1er 6
lllQ the rrver . for rent , (740)985-4149
1996 Cavali er 4 cyl. 2 door
(740)589-71 22
aut o Sir. new whee ls t1res
--------nood con dition $4 295
Block. briCk, sewer pipes. l"
•
Olfi ce space downtown
(7401256· 6228
wi ndows, lintel s. etc Claude '----'--- - · _ __ _
Pomeroy, ap prox. 1800 sq.
Wtnters, R•o Grande. OH 1996 Neo n powe r windows
ft , street level, near courthouse, $450 mo . (740) 592- ;;
C,;;apll74..;0..;
·2;.4.;.5·..;5"'12;.1"'---. ground effects . 4 door, au to.
PITs
CD
play er,
$2, 40 0
1758
FOR ~E
(740)44 1-0370.

1460

!' •

4 593 42

•••__J\",.. -· - - "· ---~m- ~

"'•-

i

c

riO

t 99B Dodge Avenger. 4

HOl..SElJOLD

G&lt;xiDs

Lw-------,.1

For

r

J

Twin bed $65, Full size bed
575, Couch 575; Recliner·
rocke r $40: table &amp; 6 Chairs
51 25: white chest-of-d raw·
ers $6D , gilder rocker $50
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vi ne Street
(740)446-7398
- - - -- - - -Used Furniture Store. i 30
Bulaville Pike, Mattresses.
dress ers,
co uches.
bunk beds. Reclin ers, what·

AKC

regi stered
male
G~;~rman Shepherd pupp ies .
3 mos old , 1st shots &amp;
wor med. $200. (740)992·

Eu reka Wh irl Wind L. ite
2 bedroom apt. St. Rt. 160 Sweeper. Used less than 6 3972
past Holzer. $47 5 m o. months,
$50
Phone
127 (740)441 -0194
(740)256-1117.

Sale/Rent
1999 Klneon Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio 661 3 rd Ave, Gallipolis, 2
Woodfield 14x70 like new Phone 740 -441 - 1184
bedroom. unturnlshed, out2br, 2ba central e.lr/heal . - - -, - - - - - - - - side storage . $300 + 1
8 room Ranch, lull base- $19,000 sale rent $450/mo. 2 or 3 Oedroom house In month deposit + utllllles
menl , 3 bedroom, 2·1 /2· (304)875·1519 (304)895· Pomeroy, no pets. (740)99 2· (740)245·9595.
balh, 2·1/2 acres, lamlly :3::59::5:____ _ _ _ _ _ 5858
- -- -,---- -,---:room .
covered
deck ,
Appli cations being taken for
$QQ,OOO. No land contracts. New 14 wide, On ly $849.00 3 -bedroo m
house
In very clean 2 bedroom In
down and only $164.88 per Pomeroy. De AOBit req uired . country aet11ng yet close to
(740}446 2196
•
·
month , Call Karena, 740· No Pats. (740)949-7004
tow n. Large kitchen and llv·
House lor sale on 2 112 385·7871.
ln g roo m . Was her, dryer,
and
acroe olland, lull baltmenl, :.:;::...;_;:.;...;.;__ _ _ _ _ 3 yr. old. 3 br. 2 112 bath , dlohwaahor, slove
Stop Renting . Own a decen t excellent condlllon, all elec·
II
t
1 cl d d W t
3 bedrooma, dining room , home Chelplll 511 ,OOO
re r gera or n u e . a er
1
tamlly rooril wlflreptace, 1111- Reduced to _.
, needs trlc, 2 112 \ca r garage, 10 anct garbage lnc;:luded. Total
5 500
minutes fro~ Ho lzer. Porter electric w ith AJC . Tenant
1ng room, 2 full baths, utility
room , 2 car garage, heat moved Soon. Will negotiate. area. $75Q/ mo nth, $750 pays electric. $400 deposit,
44...:6...:·2:;.
4.:.
pump, 2ox20 out building , ~
Rc:.ob::.ca:;.r1;_:(:;.74_0;.:).c
6 1.:__ deposit, .1
rsleroncas $475 per month. No pete.
30 toot poo l wllh now deck, VIctorian 1738 sq. ft. 3 be"· r.11qu 1red. d/'11740·446·4514 (740)446·2205 or (740)446·
(740)992-4641
room, 2 ba1h. Stainless atoll or 740-324~ after 5pm .
9585 ask lor VIrginia.
appll ancaa. 8 h. flat celllnga.
I
OPEN HOUSE
Hardllap with aadd la rool. 5' For Rent
Sale on Land BEAUTifUL
APART·
AT
BUDGET
Amazing quallly buill house on 12" roof pllch • porch . Conlract. , 400/mont h + MENTS
In desirable neighborhood. Cole'e Moblla Homeo152e8 dopoolt. 3 .b~room, 2 bath. PRICES AT JACKSON
Great schoo ls. 3 bedroom, 2 US 50 E. Alhono, Ohio (740)379-9887.
EB_TATES, 52 · Weolwood
1Jij~~~!"'i::!lmr.'ll
Drive fro m $344 to $442.
'
W
9?2
112 bath. $120.000. 0 pen (?40)592·1
.
hero you 11
house 5al. March 20th , 12•3 gol yourmoneyo worth"
oecroorr
Walk to ehop &amp; movlea. Ca ll
b~rr,lck , 1.5 b lhe. carpo rt, 740·446·2588.
Equal
or call lor appoi ntment .
"Am1S
1 N"o
r . "'• ·
O pee,
smo kl ng. Housing Opportunity.
•l850 d
(740)441·1237
FOR SALE
"''
·::.• epos Ill,•, re1eren,o. Convenient location Nice 1
·
7401446·9209.
Country home . l ·year old,
bed room. References and
new well , septic eyatem . Farm lor sa le 56,000 down Nice Houae to rent behind deposit required No pets.
;::1
:;.
_ 6::.c•.co.c
Includes 2 acres, 2 bed· take over payments, double the Armory 3 Br tftrence &amp;(•7_40
13:.;9_ _ __
44
room, 1112 baths, gas log car/garage on property, trail· Depoalt
raqu {td
$BOO fireplace . Aaklng $65,000.00 er.
5rms/21ullbatha month (30 )
.b ~~.
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Call
Fi rm. (740)247-2102
(304)5?6-9929
""(''
(740)448·0390.

••• ..____ ,.__...La; _ ____ ,__ _.._ , __ ••-

~r.tO_•H•o•&amp;xiiSEHiiiliil~liLD-_.11 r

Lw-oiiiiiiiiiliiilliiOiil-,.1

Jl

Oalllpollo Coroor Catlogo
(Careen1 Close To Home)
Call Todayl740·448·~367 ,
HQ0-214·0452
WNW.Qt lllpolltclrttrcolltge.com
: AVONI All Areaa l To Buy or Accredlled M1mber Aec redlllng
• Sell. Sh irley Spears, 304· Council lot Independent Cot1111••

_,1

CONVENIENTLY LDCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
TownhOuse
apa rtment s
and/or small hOuses FOR
RENT. Call (740 )441 -1111
fo r application &amp; information.

Rel iable adul t will do gras s
cutting (304 )675·8902

rece ivable, payroll, taxes,
qu arte r reports &amp; G L. Sen d Will do Babysitting in my
resu me 10 CLA s48 , c/o home. Smoke tree! Call
(740)367·0429 .
ME!d. stze dog Mixed breed, G alllpolis Tr1bune, Gallipolis - -- - - - -- Golde n Rel rteve r &amp; ? OH 45631
Will do bricK or block work
(740)446·1 619
~-------reason able or w1ll work lor
Full ti me desk clerk, apply m Contrac tor, 30yrs exp eriperson
Hol1day
Inn , en ce (304)675·1 163
RCA Floor model TV. Needs
little work.
(740)446- Gallipoli S.

a

{p;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOc for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

GIVFAWAY

·r
••

l1

WANTED

. DesK
Cl erk
and
House keeper
neede d.
C- 1 Beer Carry O ut perm1t Please apply at Bud get Inn ,
for sa le. Cheste r Township, 260 Jackson Ptke Gallipolis,
Meigs County, send letters OH. No phone calls pl ease.
of Interest to : The Daily
Sentinel , PO Box 729-20.
Expenenced
Acco untin g
Ohio 4576 9.
pe rson In accounts paya ble,

Honorable Menlldn

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

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

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Fairport Harbor Harding; Angela Notte,
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Of{tee 11o~~

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

Hts. Lulh. E.. Shaterra ~ng , Richmond Hts.;
Jessa Matt. Cuyahoga Hts.; Joel Matl!ko.

Looman. Ashtabu&gt;J Sts. .k&gt;hn artd Paul;
RebeCCa Heller, Thompson Ledgemont,
M~;~lanie Wllllari1s. Willoughby Andrews;
Tlfleny Osier, Ne\\OOry; Morgan Francis, N.
Rkjgevtle Laka Ridge ; Becky Trombley,
Wllk&gt;ughby Andrews.

l\egister
~rihune
Sentinel
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675~1333

To Place

Waterloo!. Kaylee Helton. Lalham Westem;
Rebecca Day. Beawr E- m; Katie Sayle,
Racine SOuthern; Joscie Kaup. Ft.
A91X!Y9fY; Mana Moeller, Maria Stein Marion
Local; Robyn HO\'ng. Mtnster; Ashleigh
Tondo, McDon81d; All Roach, Wl"ldhBm;
Kaly Ark:l&lt;, E. Canton ; Bri11any Smith, CleYe.

Mallorle Durbin . Danville: Liz GNem.
Gardlf'lgton Urmln; Charita Hatris, Cds.
Alrk::en1ric; M,d1&lt;lle Taliaferro, Grove City
Christian; Lynette Thlal. Morral Rklgedale;
Mallory Moore, Toronto; leah Hochstetler,
Bertin Htland, Be1h Hersltlergar, St!asbul9'
Franklin; Ashley Locker, StraSburg-Frankl1n;
Sam Svercek, Cakiwell; Katelyn Falbo,
Shadyside; Mk:helkl Kerr, Wellsvlle; Carrie
Stak:ler. Beallsville;
.
Elaina Kakatolis. Pitsburg FranklinMonroe; Evm Wimberty, Yelk&gt;w Springs;
Ania Buk:her, Russia; LeShea On, Deyton
Jelleison; Courtney Reed. Ft Loramie·
Chris1ina Harvey, Ironton St. Joseph; Kalie
DuduH. Portsmoulh Clay; Heather Grooms.
Portsmouth Sciotov1lle; LesiiEI Floyd, WfllaN
Wood . Symmes Valley ; Jade Downing,
Latham Western: Jenny AC1{Se. S. WebSter;
Kara Bobo, Richmond Dale SE; Allory
Hooper. Gk&gt;usler Trimble;
Ashley westenbarger, McComb; Jessica
Sheline, Arcadia; Carly Flowers, N.
Beltino10; Andee Reeder. P~; Megan
N&lt;lS9, Miller City ; Sarah Bird, GomamFayette ; Becky Babione, Fremont St.
Joseph; Leanne L!Jclus, New R~;
Kelli Ftllbek, Mogadore; Tara Ford, V"tenna
Mathews,: Sarah Bontrager, Kidron Cenl
Christian: Sarah JoiYISOn, Jad&lt;san-Milton;
Dana Donatelli, lowellville; fl)ovella
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(

M arlon Cath.; JessiQ Miller, StrasburgFra n~in ; Lir&lt;Jsay Stuckey, Berlin Htland;
Ashley Schaler, Caldweii;Jena Ehni, Bellaire
St Jom ; MMieh Hukl&lt;ly. Hami&gt;BI River
Local; Amanda lr-Mn. Cin. S&lt;M&gt;n Hi o; Kalle
Ht.tpp. S. Charleston SE; Ann&lt;&gt; Clinger,
Portsmouth Sciotoville. Morgan ~weber,
Reedsville Eastern: Haley Drayer.

Redwomen

.-

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Mansfield St. Peter's; Jessica Deville,
CoochM of 1ho ~r. Melvin Burke. L""""'a.
CleYe. Cent. cath.; Gary Lemle. Oregon
Coaches of the year: Uz Arnold,
Strt:ll.
Mi"""""; Chns Rump, Miler City; Brian
SECOND Tl!AM: Emn Miler, Belmont Carr. Aymoulh.
Unio&lt;l Latal, 5-7. jr.. 19.9; Jil 1lenz, Cin.
SECOND TEAM: Jackie Maries ,
Maclel&lt;a. &amp;3, sr., 16.1; Sofia So!elo, Cin. Carolngtoo L.iloolr1. 5- 11. jr., 21 .5; Erian
Mocleira, &amp;0, sr.. ! 3.0, Whiney Lewis, Bud&lt;man. Da)1on Jefferson, 5-9. jr., 15.9;
Lyrdlbura-Ciay. 5-11, sr. , 18.2; Nicole Jack.&lt;j Hauke. Mowrysl&lt;1Ml WhHeoak, 5-6,
Nissen, Cienoa. 6-0, sr., 17.8; Cachet sr , 22.5; Katie Coon. P~. 5-5, f .. 28.4,
Muml)l Girard, !HI ,~. 20.7; Jantel Lavender, Brooke Henn ~ler, Miller Crty, 5-B, sr., 11.1:
CleYe. Cent. Calh .. 64, lmsh., 18.0; Selena Erin Patemofl, Mogadore, 5-5, sr., 16.7.
E~BeaohY&lt;Xld, 5-9,"·· 21.7; Tym
THIRD TEAM: Jillian Angney, Ohio Deal,
Gmnt,
. U..Uirle, 5-10, soph., 17.9.
!HI, sr., 29.3; S!1ayla Holenka. Sha&lt;tjside, s.
ntiRD
: Rachel lleme1t. Marion 6. Jr.. 18.2; Hea1her Fields, Covington, 54,
Pleasan\ 5-10, ~.. 18.2; Nicole Anderson . sr., 13 7; Amanda Aonk, Crestline, 54, sr.,
Barnesville, 5-11, sr., 212; Whitney 19.5: Kat~e Ed&lt;inger, Dalton, 6-0, sr., 17.0,
Blackburn, Belpre, 5- 5, jr., 16.3; Karri Mal)' Evans, Newbury. &amp;6. sr.. 17.5.
Vott&lt;mer. N. Robinson Cd Crawford, !HI.
Special Mention
soph.. 13.1; Lydia M:Cul~. CleYe. VASJ, !HI,
Jessica Amspaugh. Mllersport Julia Blue.

All-Ohio

Tucker was 0-for-2 with a run scored and an
RBI.
Lotycz (3-1) went the distance , scattering
four hits with four strikeouts and three
only
from Page 81
walk s.
Tawyna Vernon absorbed the loss for
The Redwomen collected nim· hits in the Northland, yielding four earned runs, fanning
game.
three and walking one.
Freshman backstop Michele Dettwiller
Northland was plagued by shoddy defense,
went 3-for-4 at the plate with ·an RBI. Cooper committing eight errors in the game.
had two hits in four times at-bat with a run
Rio is 2-0 this year against Northl and.
scored and an RBI. Cooper al so swiped three
Rio Grande will closed out the West Coast
·. bases.
trip on Wednesday against SUNY In stitute of
Olding and senior third baseman Tangy Technology, Vangu ard (Cali t) and UMASSLaudermilt also delivered RBI hits and Boston.

G1ll'- Coi.LRty, O H

Giru&gt;ler TrmiJe, s.s, scph.• 31 s: L.au-.a
Hochstetler. Berln Hiland, 5-6. Jr.. 14.0;
Diana Reindl , Mansfield St Petets. 6-2, sr.,
13.1.
Ployenl ot the year. Qro1tllerl Polinski,

Thomas named Ms. Basketball
CINCINNATI- The city of Cincinnati was
being blanketed by a snowstorm, the roads
were all but impassable and the sehools were
closed.
. While other kids, tethered themselves to a
video game console or watched MTV on their
unexpected day off, Mel Thomas was using
the time to catch up on her homework.
· · It's that kind of work ethic that separates
.Thomas from most players - and also sepa·rates her from the rest of the state as the 2004
Ohio Associated Press Ms. Basketball, an
.award in its 17th year.
The 5-foot-9 Thomas will lead Mount Notre

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

rlO

cylinder, air condition ing
Power sunrool, automatic
60.000
m11es
$3,900
1740)446·2795
1999 Buick Century, 50,000
miles . excell ent cond ition. 4
doo r. power locks &amp; win -

~..""

Frigidaire washer/dryer both
5225
In good condition
lor L~--·=·ililiiiii'llio"-,.1
the pair (30 4l675 "6988
~
Good used Appliances, Now Holland Round bale r
Special.
Mason Co unty
Reco ndit ioned
and Residents receive the IOI ·
Guaranteed.
Wnhers , lowing discounts ·41'5 baler
Dryers,
Ranges .
and $1 ,500, 4)(4 baler $1 ,000
Refrigerators, Some start at Keela(s Service Cen1er
S9S. Skaggs Applian ces. 76 304 895·3874
Vlna Sl .. (740)448-7398
Ill~::::;:.;:..___
- -- - -- -- 1..IVFSTCX.X
Kenmore freeze , like new,
$125; Sears trash com- pactor, $75: Computer chair, Registered ANGUS and
$25. (740)446·3053.
Crossbred bulls. Top blOOd·
- - -- - - -linea, Slate Run For m,
Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark Jackson.
(740)288·5395
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio look
up
(740)446·?444 1-877-830· www.staterunlarm.com .
9182 . Free Es11ma1es, Eesy
HAY &amp;
llnanclng. 90 days eamo as
caoh . VISa/ Mao1ar Co rd
Drive· 1 • nttle save alot.
- - - - - - - -- 1000N bales mix gross·
Thompeons Appliance &amp; clover, allolla·orcharo groes.
Aepal r- 675·7388. For sale, soma ba rn stored, $15·$25.
r e·co ~ dltlo ned
automatic (740)698·2785

'---------,J
r

'-----G~RAJN::;:::___.

~~;: · tape

player. 740-446·

2000 Red Ford Mustang .
one owne r, low miles, non·
smoker V·6. aulo matic. cd.
elr, 1111 , etc. Asking $8.500.
call (740 )441-9840.

=:..::.:.:::...:..:..:_::.:::._--,--

2001 Ford Tau rus. $6,200.
1998 Sable, $4,395: 1997
Grande Cherokee. $4.695:
1998 Cavalier, 53.295; 1997
Sunflre , $2,995·, t995 F·250,
41114, d iese l, $9,995; 1994 F·
2 SO, 41114 di esel, $9 ,000,
19.95 W lndste r. $3,000,
1997 S· 10 Extended cab ,
$4.995 . 1997 Sable. $3. 495.
1995 Sable. $2.895; 1993
Saturn,
$2 ,895; 1991
Corsica. $995; 1985 Topaz ,
$795; 1992 Sunblrd. $995.
Rome iAuto Sales
93 Rodeo 33,000 miles, new
tires , brakes .&amp; pai nt job
$3,500 OBO (304)593-0922

Excellenl condition, While
95 Buick LoSebre. 68,500
washe rs &amp; dryera, rtfrlgera· -----~--- miles, $4,300 call (304)675·
1
tors, gas and electric 4XS rou nd bales covered . 4098
ranges, air conditioners, and good grass hay $1 2.50
wringer washers . Will do Square
bales
mostly For Sale 93 Ford Tempo, 5
repai rs on major brands tn orchard
gra&amp;a
$2 .50. speed. $1 ,250, good shape.
shop or at your home.
(?40)992·2623.
~ Phone 740·446·80?3.

!---·-· ) ·--.. -..-·--·-·- __... _

-~

�..
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 18, 2004
Thursday, March 18, 2004
ALLEYOOP

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The Daily Sentinel • Page BS
'
NEA Crossword Puzzle

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ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
Pomeroy E agles

BENNETT'S

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HEATING U COOLING

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8:00 to 12:00 Frid:av
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446-941 6 r I ' 800-872-5967

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• Supe r Hi Efficiency EquipmenJr,
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Saturday, March 20th
Main Street, Point Pleasant
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March 20 at 6:30 p.m.
American Legion Middleport
Coverall in 46 numbers
pays $1 ,000.00.
150 people will pay $1 ,000.00
Coverall if hit in 46 numbers
will
pay $2,000.00
Plus $5,000 .00 Jackpot 16
numbers left on Jackpot
tipboard
Starburst $1 ,300.00

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
All park $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
llonanza Get

• Huge Inventory
' , _; ..
• Vanguard Ventlcss Fireplaces '11' •· .

9:30am • 5:00pm
Door Prizes
Light Refreshments

'!!!~~"!!!

----

Gibson ltiiMiw.

MYERS PAVING

North

Henderson, WV

871-2457
Cell Phone 67 4-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Charles C.
Marshall
311 8131-2116/0 I
To have fri l!nds, you
must fi rst be a fri end.
You were defim tively
a friend to many and
touched many lives
throug h your frie nd ~hips

here on earth ...
but besides a fri end.
you were a ·wonderful

r

52
J
¥-t Q 10 9 5 3
. 86532
• 9
ofo AJ873
ofoK 9H
South
. AQ JI 097

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

¥ K8

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

•

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Hill's Self
Storage

Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

you Po pp y~
Happy Birthday!

Submiuetl by

Advertise
in this
liNDA'S PIINTII
spacefor$100
per month.

r

7730.

The Town of New Haven will
be accepting sealed bids lor
a 1991 Chevy Caprice
Police Cruiser. Vehicle to be
sold as is. The tOwn has the

,o

right to accept or reject any
or all bids. Vehicle may be
inspected at the New Haven
Sewer Plan!, 164 Layne St.
All bids are lo be submitted
to the Town of New Haven, For Sale: Motorcycle 2001
1000
P.O. Bo.: 217, New Haven ,
Wv 25265

~s"'oa~;4~~-~~~9s

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

• Blown Insulation
• Room Additions

..,.,........,.,..,=-...,.~--::-:::..-:r-:====-,....,

ISHQP CLASSIFIEDSI

• Vinyl
lteptm;cmcnt
Windows

~e you:§5:ijr.·older?
• ·~

'

.... '

'

•

" :.• '

-

, ".&lt;

'

•

If so, you qualify for a

Senior
on your home delivered subscription!

*

I
1

Mall or drop ofllhla coupon alqng with 1 copy of your photo ID to

1

Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O. Box 489, Galllpollt, OH 45831

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

......_____. j

992-2975
Lawn and Gardm Eq11ipmeut is 011r
b11siuess, 1101 o11r sideline

L...:ii....o. . . .._

THE BORN LOSER
L LOST 1'1\'1 I*T

'i(.S\(.KOi&gt;-.'(

1

"lfeellike
I'm out
on a limb!"

Pas£

Pass

11RS . CZ.ERWIC.KI, AS LONG
AS WE 'RE SilTING HERE
1N DETENT10N, WH~
DoN 'T WE PUT THE
Tlt1E tO GOOD USE ?

comers
•0·1 0 I United
l.!!..e!Ies ·

,1,1!1'59,00 •

1'Jin.! 1,\prll
'
•'

( tnt ON

BISSELL

Comics to
Stock Quotes
Find all the
news that
matters

New Homes • Viny l
Siding • New Garages
• Replllccment ,

to you.

FREE ESTIMATES

=

LET'S GET 1b
ALL
KNOW E,O.C.H
RIG.HT.
OTHER! I
WHAT
t1E,O."J, I
WOULD

3 Mischief
4 Cartoon ist

- Keane

27 Rumple
30 Colorado

5 Spoil
6 Desert
nomad's
robe
7 Facile
8 We~er ' s
offering

trees
32 Board
34 Trousers
go-with
35 Walklhe
best
36 Climax
37 Wire
38
39
42

21 Reddish
antelope
22 Devoted
following
23 Scale notes
24 Job-safety

40 An1arctic
Ice shell
41 Compare
42 Quit
43 No1ion
44 Selleck end

org.

9 Sec'

10 HowT
11 Fragrant
measure
woods
PC maker
12 Mo. bill
Coming
17 Physicist's
Successful
particle
at-bat
20 Came
ElDorado
wearer

Jones

25 Heroic tale
28 Exolic wrap
~9 Arrogant
person
31 Columnist
- Bombock
33 European
airline
35 Basketball

47 Relalnod
46 Lawyer,
briefly
49 Hairstyles
51 - choy
52 Annapolis
gred
54 Palin Dljon

moves ·
37 Cosmonaut
space lab

II.E ... LLY,
REALLY

KNOW NOTH- 'IOU LlltE
I~G ABOUT
TO ltNOW'
YOU 1

HUNGR-

PEANUTS

RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS
Alhens

DOES 'fOUR 6RAMPA PLAY
MUCH 60LF THESE DAVS?

1-lE 5A'f5 J.lE PLA'f5 MOSTL'I'
IN 1-115 I-lEAD...

'

6VT J.lE SAVS T&gt;IE COURSE
IS TOO NARROW ..

Sunset Home
Construction

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

lllll~l§l

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

475 South Church st:
Ripley, WV 25271

BETIY

1-800-822-04 f7
"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac. Buick . Olds
·
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

HOWARD£.
WRITESEL
*RIGRIIII
*HIME

MllmUIICE

*IEIMUII

ama
*frll --*

GARFIELD

....

NU~

Ill N IINh

..

Mlni·Storl!ge
992-6396

992-2272
- ~~

rl-4£:~,&gt; 5~'-"

1

Advertise In this
Space for
$50 per month

High&amp; Dry

I
I
1
I

Self-Storage ·

:~

33795·Hiland Rd.

I

.:
1

'·················································

(

''

•.

·'

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.

(

pur

A WARNING- l-ABEL.
ON THOSE TH!N&amp;S
-:?'::

11-~~

':

by Luis Campos
Celebr ity C1~r crypli"JQrilmS are created trom quotat.ons by tamoos ~JMole . past and preseot

Each letter II"I !Ni cipher stands lor another

Today s clue. Pequals R

" YKL

IOIEIT
IIIIELL
CINSTRUCTIII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·882·1Bn

740·992·5232

Stop &amp; Compare
_,

~~~,M~~~~~~~-1~6----------~~

GRIZZWELLS
liEN ! l-IE\\' '7AY, Vlb.~l'\, 17 IT IR\1£ '-N\\A1l\\EY
~ b.Y!ctil RA5f,\T~

oR 17 IT ;JWf
AMY111?

PI SCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20) - Lady Luck
co uld be in your corner today, but you' ll
have to ta ke adva nta ge ol her presence
and not proc rastinate if yo u are aiming lor
an important goa l. She's not apt to sliCk
around loo long .
ARI ES
(M arch
21-April
19)
lnvolvemtmts you have today with friends
and associates should "'4 Drk out quite sa tistadorily. It's a good day to try to recllly a
past misunde rstandi ng with a pal or p romole a pet project.
TAURU S (April 20-May 20) - II yo u are
going afte r an important objec t1ve loday,
espe cially concerning your work or career,
pull out all th e stops. This is not a day to
hold you r ace s roo close to the vesl: play
the m now
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - In your case,
il usually isn't advi sable to use intermediaries to sell your causes, because you ca n
do better yourself. But today. having an
associate contact someone for you could
prove lucKy.
CAN CER (June 2 1-July 22 ) - Th ere
could be a plelhora of financial opportunities around you tod ay where your work or
career is concern ed. Chances are you'll
come across more than one way to
in crease your earn ings
LEO (Ju ly 23- Aug . 22)- Using that clever
mind of yours today, you may link up two ·
frail situalions that have appea red to have
no relalionship to one another ancl turn
lhem into one successful operation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - When asked
to manage someth ing for another today,
you" ll tre at the matter as conscientiously
as it it where your own and. in doing so.
you" ll end· up gaining someth ing for yoursell as well.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) - Your sensitivity and awar"'ness ot subtler aspects of the
world about you loday gives yo u an ad\/antage over those wilh whom yo u'll be competing. You'll see what they miss
SCORPIO {Oct . 24- Nov. 22) - Chances
are you're not aptl o sit still on any money makin g concepti ons you get toda y and as
a resull could put yoursell on lhe track to
bettering your material lot in life.
SAGI TTARIU S (Nov. 23-0 ec. 21) Something of substanti al substance could
develop for yo u today from a social
involvement. When conversi ng wilh
friends, don't hesitate lo talk shop and ask ·
for their inpul.
CAPRI CORN (D ec. 22-Jan. 19) - G1ve
free reign to you r Imagination today and
don't be too hasty In dismiss1ng unusual
thinking. It's quile possible tor you to conceive a rather ingenious idea at thi s li me to
make more money.
AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Fab
19) Conditions in general look e11cept1ona lly
promisin g regarding something lhat
presently is of great concern to you. That
solution you're looking tor could be found
today

MWF

MWHY

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XY ,

PWXHDTM,

MXYK

CTOOF

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FTZ

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EWPVTH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Whenever I wanled 10 kno w whar Ihe lnsh people
wanted, I had only to examtne my own hea rt."- Eamon de Valera
(c) 2004 by NEA, Inc. 3- tB

~~~:t~~, S©tt~~- !iJ r..~s·
ldiloi

0 Recmonge

~y

woao
GAM I

tLA;V:-~;::~:;;;~:;::::

l11t1ers of the
!our K"rambled wards be.

:ow to form four simplt words.

R Q0 ll M IJ

la r

Window s • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

Bryan Reeves
New Homea,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

.,.,..,.&lt;Birthda.v :

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Friday, March 19, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
The aspects will serve to stim ulate your
imaginatio n in positive ways in lhe year
ahead, so immerse yourself in projects or
objectives that could offer unique opp ort unities not afforded to others. You cou ld go

'CAliSE I 't1
RE ... Ll '1,

BUILDERS InC.

®altipolis IDa it!• 1!rribunt
~oint f)lrnsnnt 1\rgis!er
The Dail y Sentinel
3i&gt;nnbap 1!rimru-3i&gt;rntinrl

Francis Picabia, a French painter and
poet. wrote. "The world is divided into
two categories: fai lures and unknowns:·
At the bndge table, there will be limes
when you are staring failure in the lace. ll
you do go down , you will remain
unknown . But if you spol a deceptive
diversion that misleads an opponen t,
columnists wi ll De lining up to report yo ur
ru se.
On this deal. you (South) are th e declarer in four spades. East opened two
hearts, a weak two-bid showing a dec ent
six-card suit and some 6-10 high-card
points. We sl leads the heart jack, and
East win s with th e ace. How would you
try to foil failure?
Wh en ente ring the auction alter an opponent has pre-empted, assume your partner has SIX or seven points. So, South
should jump lo four spades - where he
wishes to pl ay opposi te a smattering of
valu es.
Wesr s lead must be a singleton. At trick
two. East can give West a heart ruff .
Then they can take two club tricks. The
conclusion? Failure looks foreg one .
Howeve r, since you know that you will
never score a tlearl trick. you sho uld
drop your heart king - your second-lowest• - under Easl's ace. Assum1ng you
do it smoothly and in tempo, East is
going to think that his partner led from
the doubl eton jack-eight. He is virtually
certain to shift to the 1iamond nine.
U so, th at's all the help you need. You
take th e tri ck. draw two rounds of trumps,
unblock your other two diamond hOnors.
cross to dummy with a spade, and discard a loser on the diamond jack. You are
not a fa ilure and will no longer be
unknown.

~ Astro\ -¥} Graph

BIG NATE

•UJW E Argon

• Fusion Welei~

• Onot you hive elgllld up lor the Senior Dleoount, your rentwll notlot will relleot your dlecount,

·

i
~

• Glass • VInyl
• All Working Pans

\

.

204 Condor Street

Free
ISIImltiS
Call

iunbap lim~ -6mttnel
: Subscriber's Name
1 Address
I
: City/State/Zip
I
1 Phone
I

ROWDY!!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Care

•allipolil lailp !ribune
t)oint Jlealant 1\e~ttltet
The Daily Sentinel.

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

IF TH
RECEPTION
GITS

GRAVELY TRACTOR

740-992·7599

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.

h--~~......?

1 mo

Replacement
Windows
•Lifcr!me Wammry

• VInyl Siding
•Hoofing

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0670, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

TH' BRJ1)E'S SIDE
OR TH' GRooM'S

740·992·7953

•Ccrtalnteed VInyl

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

.•

• •.•

General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing. All types

BARNEY

Snapper

Gravely

Pro Lawn

992-2772 .

-----2000 Suzuki GZ 250 excel lent condition , $2,250. 1999
Honda CR 80 · rebuih, "ery
good condition. $ 1•800 ·
740 245 5220
;&lt;,,. 1
,;;,.;.;·;;,;;;.·,....'"""""""'
, )(ce en
onditlon. Call (740)416
1415.

m

J&amp;L Constr_
9C(Jon

IMPROVEMENn&gt;

,

~a:rra~~l(j

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

1999 Honda 400 EX , ,;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,~
10
$2 ,200. Phone (740)446·
' HoME

AlJIUi
FOR SAL!-:

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

'~a w~~~l(j.!ll

(10'1110' 610'1120')

" ' I{ \ I I I ...,

Pass

1 Fishtail

2 Itemize

The situation is
decidedly desperate

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport; OH

MmoRCYCLES

Ruby &amp; Family

4•

East

DOWN

server

45

740-991-1431

4-WDs

North

Opening lead: ¥ J

JIM'S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR

I

West

45771
74().949-2217

MAKES I MODELS
FREE EST!MAT£5 • FAST TURNAROUND
WE REPAIR·
MINI BIKES • GO-KARTS • LAWN MOWERS •
POWER MOWERS • CHAIN SAWS • SNOW
BLOWERS • WEED EATERS • TILLERS • EDGERS

1

South

500

15 Sasquatch
cousin
16 Gloomy
18 However
19 In an uproar
23 Enemy
26 Coffee

2¥

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1911 fisher fully loaded
w/trailer 75 Hp exc. cond.
1990 Plymouth Voyager
$4000 (304)593-1994
Van, one owner, VS LE, 7
pass, auto trans. E~tcellent se 17-ft Fisher Bass Boat
Condition . AU power with 60HP. Mercury/ Evinrude
NC. $4,500. 740 446·3277. trolling motor. Many extras.
. like. new. $6,800.00 Firm.
40
(740)742·2301

hu sband , fa ther and
' grandfather.
We love and miss

A K Q

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

Ta~e

99 Dodge 1500 Quad-Cab.
BoATS &amp; MoroAS
SLT package. loaded, many
liQR SALE
recent updates. very clean ,
garaged. $9,500, (740)256·
1988 Bass Tracker, 70 Hp,
6936.
ready tor fi shing , $3,200,
(740)742·2877
V.w;&amp;

t

haulers

East
• 8 4

•
•

740·992·7953

1991 Dodge 1/2 ton, BUIO, Serious Call s Only, leave
air, 97,000 miles. $3, 400. message (740)992-5232,
(740)446·7730.
1977 Harley Davidson M.G.,
good condition, $1 0,000;
91 Nissan 4WO Pickup 1978 Kawasaki M.G., fair
5spd, runs good $1,500 can condition , $400; 2 snow
(304)675-6545
.mobiles, lai r condition .

Grandfather

J 10 7 4

Wes t

Let me do 1t for y oul

In Memory of a
: Loving Husband.
Far her and

•

IJl-18-M

"' 6 2

BASKET BINGO
March 19th
6:00p.m.
Point Pleasant Middle
School Gym

~.,r__,:;;::.R:,o~.~--..1 r~ MoiURCY~~

K 6 3
7 6 4 2

"' Q 10

MONTY

"See our ad in today's paper!"

Birthday Celebration
Ernerst &amp; Ferra Lou Barringer
at M.J.&amp; Family Restaurant
Sunday, March 21
3:00 to 5:00
Please come join us

In Memory

•
•

loot
4611 - - a
1 Thick alice
nickel ...
5 Volcanic
50 Mud bricks
I low
53 Like
10 Doclor'a
Instantly
office
(2 wds.)
12 Valuable
55 C111us fruits
furs
56 Makes s1eel
13 Steal cattle 57 Chores 14 Freight
58 A famous

J

I I IT

While sitling outside one balmy
summer' s evening. th e w1fe swatted the air and mumbled. "How
come the Bengal Tiger 1s endan.-------~ gered and the lowly - · - • - • - M I P D I L flounshesT'

I

1--,,--,1"'7,...,1-'TI-:8..:,...1--1 () Complolo

tho chucklo quolod
by fillin9 in the miuing word~
L-...l..-L-...1.......1-.1-...J you develop from S1ep No. J below
_

e

.

.

.

P~ l'H NU.IoiBERED
lETiE ~ S

I

!N SQUARE S

SCUM-lETS ANSWERS l · i 7 • o4
Zemt.1 - Twill - Noose- Jackal - NEW COAT
My husband took our son with h1m to buy me a pres
en• "Dad ." my son asked. 'What are we do1ng in smail
a~pl i ances when mom wants a NEW COA p·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

/

__
UH HUH-YOU fW&lt;lALWAY€&gt;

KKP Af If umiL 'ji)Mf.OIJE.

WI!.lOt; UP MA,_D___--1

/

~::_]

' - --ldY

SOUPTO NUTZ
Ti~-tleW M'(

B2Ck 00T
f'jjl,Y•NG Wl"l\1
\f-\e \&lt;IDS ...

wHaT wece 'ot&gt;v
Pl8Y,n G lHBT CDOLD
-n-\\ovJ YouR \3&lt;3:1&lt; OJT ?

~~---:::::==:=t:;;~~
~

�I
www.mydailysentinel.~m
J

Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel
NCAA

DIY .

BASKETBA LL

CH. AMPIONSHIP

Men's matchup
,

Games are listed first in each area. Second game starts 30 minutes after first games ends.

Atlanta

East Rutherford

Phoenix

St. Louis

n

Raleigh, N.C. • Thurs .. 12:20 p.m.
15) Florida
20· t 0 • Southeastern

Denver • Thurs., 12:40 p.m.
(4) Maryland
19·11 • Atlantic Coast

Seattle • Thurs.. 7:35 p.m.

Allhllgh, N.c;. • Thurs ., 7:t0 p.m.
(1)DI!ke
27·5 • A~antic Coast
(16) Alabama State
16-14 • Southwestern
The Hornet's are 13-2 ol/er their
last 15 games, but it endS vs. Duke.

•

(1 2) Manhattan
24-5 • Metro Atlantic AthletiC
Streaky Gators will have hands full
with scrappy Jaspers .
~ 14) Wake Forest
19·9 • AtlantiC Coast

(8) Seton Hall
20-9 • Big East
(9) Arizona
2Cl-9 • Pac-1 o
Arizona has been an underachiev9f
and looks to move on vs. Hall.

1111 1t 3) Va. Commonwealth
23-7 • Colooial Athletio Assoc.
"
Demon Deacons should make short
work of Colonial's Rams.
'
Buffalo, N.Y. • Thurs ., 12:25 p.m.
(8) Texas Tech
22· 10 • Big 12

Denver • Thurs . ~ 7: 20 p.m.
(3) Texas
23-7 • Big 12
(14) Princeton
20-7 • Ivy League
!'rlnceton will look to slow down
game vs. athletic Longhorns.

~ (9) Charlotte

21·8 • Conference USA
Eddie Basde~ looks to shut down
Red Aaiders' Andre Emmen.
(1 ) Saint Joseph's

s

17) Michigan State
18-11 • Big Ten
110) Nevada
23-8 • Western Athletic
Wolf Pack look to upset State's battletested Spartan team.

r.i.Zij (13) Texas-EI Paso

24·7 • Western Athletic
Turnaround Terrapins will be tough
for UTEP.

12) Gonzaga
27-2 • West Coast

~ (5) Syracuse

21 ·7 • Big East
112) Brigham Young
21 ·8 • Mountain West
Last year's champs could have a
tough time with Cougars.

18· t 2 • Mid-Continent
Former Cinderella's meet, but 'Zags
will be staying at the danae.

Seattle • Thurs., 2:40p .m.

Milwaukee • Fri., 12:30 p.m.

~ 115) Valparaiso

I!J

(61 Boston College
23-9 • Big East

(8) Alabama
17-12 • Southeastern
(9) Southern Illinois
25-4 • Missouri Valley
Salukis could be too much lor a
mediocre Tide team.

Ill ) Utah
24-8 • Mountain West
Utes should give Eagles a game. but
will miss Majerus.

•

~~ (3) Georgia Tech

0

11) Air Force
22·6 • Mountain West
Best team the Falcons have had
in years is st~l no match for Heels.

18-14 • Big South
Hawks will take out loss in
conference tournament on Flames.

(1) Stanlord
29·1 • Pac-10
116) Texas-San Antonio
19-13 • Southland
Roadrunners will be no match for
tough Cardinal team .

Columbus, Ohio• Fri. , 12:25 p.m.
(5) Illinois
24·6 • Big Ten
( t 2) Murray State
28·5 • Ohio Valley
The Racers will use speed to liy
to knock off llllni.

Kansas City, Mo. • Fri., 12:30 p.m.
17) Memphis
21-7 • Conference USA
It 0) South carolina
23-10 • Southeastern
Both teams looking to straighten out
seasons after streaky second half.

Orlando, Fla. • Fn ., 12:15p.m.
(3) North carolina State
20-9 • Atlantic Coast
114) Loulslana·Lalayette
20-8 • Sun Ben Conferenoe
· Ragin' Cajuns and Wolfpaok should
put on high-scoring affair.

~ (4) Cincinnati

(2) Oklahoma State
27-3 • Big 12
(1 5) Eastern Washington
17-12 • Big Sky
Potential one-seed Cowboys should
handle Eagles no problem.

•

(6) Vanderbilt
21·9 • Southeastern
(11) Western Michigan
26-4 • Mid-American
Broncos should give COmmodores
all they can handle. /

19-11 • Pac-10
(9) Alabama-Birmingham
20-9 • Conference USA
Blazers could upset weak Pac 10

Orlando, Aa. • Fri., 7:10p.m.
(2) Mississippi State
25·3 • Southeastern
(15) Monmouth, N.J.
21 -11 • Northeast
Bulldogs will have easy time
aga!nst Hawks' defense.
(7) X.vter
23-1 0 • Atlantic 10

Milwaukee • Fri. , 7:20p .m.

Buffalo, N.Y. • Fri., 7:10p.m.

Kansas City, Mo. • Fri., 7:25p.m .

(TO) Louisville
20·9 • Conference USA
i took down St. Joe's, but
should watch out for Louisville.

114) Central Florida
25·5 • Atlantic Sun
Panthers looking to prove they're a
higller seed aner Big East f1nalloss.

16) North Caronna
18· 10 • Atlantic Coast

27-1 •Atlantic 10

lli!J (

1m

~ (16) Liberty

24-6 • Conterenoe USA

(13) East Tenness" St.
27-5 • Southam
• Huggins could take the 'Cats far
and will get past the Bucs.

9

II

(6) Wisconsin

~ (2) Connecticut

24-6 • Big Ten

27-6 • Big East
(15) Vermont
22·8 • America East
'
Despite injuries
to b~ men. Huskies
should roll over Catamounts.

•

(It) Richmond
20-12 • Atlantic 10
Badgers wary of upset-minded

Spiders - even at home.
13) Pittsburgh
29-4 • Big East
•

ifl

23-9 • Atlantic Coast
~ (1 4) Northern Iowa

21-9 • Missouri Valley
Yellowjackels should be too much lor
NIU's Panthers .
Columbus, Ohio • Fri., 7:10p.m.
11) Kentucky
26-4 • Southeastern
(t6)Lehlgh2Cl-10 • Patr. League
Fla. A&amp;M 14-16• MK~&amp;;t/&gt;lh.

A 16-seed has never beaten a oneseed and i1 won't happen with 'Cats.
~ (8) Washington

representative Huskies.

m

15) Providence
20·8 • Big East

~ 112) Pacific

24-7 • Big West
Rugged Friars should end Tigers' 15game winning st~eak .
14) Kansas
21·8 • Big 12

(7) DePaul
21 -9 • Conference USA

~ It 3) Illinois-Chicago

(10) Deyton
24-8 • Atlantic 10
Le1tao's Blue Demons should not
look past Flyers toward UConn.

24-7 • Horizon League
Experienced Jayhawks should be
able to hold off upstart Flames.

Thursday, March 18, 2004

UK in familiar
position, Bt

Outfielder Sizemore
) shines at Indians
spring training
WINTER HAV EN, Fla.
(AP) - Grady Size more
believes in se izing opportunities.
He did so when he
played high school quarterback.
"We onl y th rew the ball
four or fi ve times a game.
We had a few pass pl ays,"
he said Wednesday. "But I
turned them into run s."
Th e
21 -year-old
Cleveland Indians outfielder is now seizing the
chance to shine al hi s first
big-league spring training.
Since reporting last
month, Sizemore has been
perhaps the most impressive of the Indian s' young
players during spring
!raining. He's battin g .429
(9-for- 2 1) with fiv e extrabase hits through Tuesday
while
demonstrating
exceptional range in the
outfield and speed on the
basepaths.
Sizemore will begin the
season at Class AAA
Buffalo.
"Grady plays the game
you want everybody to
play it," Indians manager
Eric Wedge said . "He 's a
guy who is going to be
part of our future here. He
needs to go to Buffalo and
play every day for now. As
far as when he comes up
... that' s an issue of its
own."
It didn't take long for

Sizemore to become
known after the six-player
trade in 200 2 that' sent
pitcher Bartolo Colon to
Montreal and brou ght
Sizemore, Cliff Lee and
Brandon Phillips from the
Expos.
Sizemore hit .343 in 47
games for Class A Kinston

(N.C.) after the trade, then
was named Indians Minor ·
League Pl ayer of the Year
in 2003' after batting 3,P4
with 40 extra-base hits at
Class AA Akron .
He acknowledges hi s
first major-l eag ue camp
has been a learning expenence.
"The first thing you
notice is the pitching,"
Sizemore
said .
"Everything
-move s.
Nothing is straight. You
may get one pitch to hit
during an at-bat."
Si zemore ran for a
school-record 3,081 yards
as an option quarterback
in hi gh school and had
signed an NCAA football
letter-of-intent with the
University of Washington
before being drafted by
Montreal in the third
round in 2000.
Si zemore said he has no
second thoughts about his
career choice.
"I do mi~ s the emotion
of football," he said. "But,
looking back, it was the
only decision to make. I'll
play baseball until they
kick me . off the field .
Hopefully by that time I'll
be too old to pl ay football."
The Indians are likely to
kick Sizemore off the field
at Buffalo and up to
Cleveland at some point
thi s summer.
" I'm not even thinking ·
about when I am called
up, or if." Sizemore said.
"When the time is right,
they'll know. When I'm
ready, they ' ll know. I'm
trying to put the least pos'sible amount of pressure
on myself. Baseball is
hard enough as it is."

e
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:" '

1

I '

: t

\ , .1

..

• t"

IBIP\\

\ 1 \ h 4 t l•. • •• " ' ' f

.

SPORTS
• UC has undergone major
changes. See Page 81

-

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CLEVELAND - For the
record, LeBron James filled
·out his NCAA tournament
brackets and picked Oklahoma
State to win it all.
And Cleveland's rookie star
already has his eyes on a sleeper in the NBA playoffs: the
Cavaliers.
"I think we're real dangerous," James said. "We're not
just a one-dimensional team.
There are a lot of Eastern
teams that have one player that
they go to. And that's not it for
us."
Hardly.
Right now, it's difficult to
find a team in the league playing as well as the Cavaliers,
who won their seventh straight
game Tuesday night, 111 -87
over the Chicago Bulls.
With James and center
Zydrunas llgauskas leading the
way. Cleveland has gone 11-3
since the All-Star break and
25- 17 since opening the season
6-19.
The Cavaliers are currently
clinging to the No. 6 playoff
SP9t in the wild, wild East's

wide-open race where on
Wednesday si~ teams were
ser.arated by just three games.
'We're clicking at the right
time," said Ilgauskas, the
reigning conference player of
the week averaging 20.4
points, 9.2 rebounds and• 3.5
blocks in his last 13 games.
"We' re playing our best basketball of the season right now,
and that' s when you want to
peak. A lot of teams are dropping and we're going up.
Hopefully, we'll keep on doing
that."
The seven-game win streak
is the Cavaliers' lon~est since
1997 - the last ltme they
made the playoffs. And with
just 15 games left in the regular
season, it might be time to start
looking at Cleveland as a legit·
imate contender.
Not so fast, says coach Paul
Silas.
·
"We have a little swa~ger
about us right now," said Srlas,
who isn 't quite ready to proclaim his team among the conference's elite with Indiana,
New Jersey and Detroit.
"We' re not quite there," he
said. "But if we rip off a few
more games in a row, I' II say
we' re there."

There hasn 't been anything
tluky about the Cavs' surge.
In winning II of 13,
Cleveland has posted home
wins over San Antonio,
Milwaukee and Indiana as well
as road victories in New York
and New Orleans.
James, who is averaging
22.5 points, 6.0 rebounds and
4.8 assists since the break,
understands Silas' reluctance
to crown the Cavs contenders.
But that's not stopping King
James.
"We believe," he 1 said .
"Coaches alway s say no to
stuff like· that. But as players,
we have arrived and we can
play with anybody. Anytime
we go out we're capable (of
winning) and we' re showing it.
We're on u seven-game winning streak and that's not just
playing any teams. We 've beaten competitive teams out
there."
They' re going to have to beat
a few more, too, if they plan on
making the playoffs.
Cleveland has three games
left Utah , · Detroit and

Phoenix - on its current
homestand before facin~ a
five-game gauntlet that mtght
determine the Cavs' postseason
fate.
They'll play road games in
Philadelphia, San Antonio,
Dallas and Milwaukee and
have a home date with New
Jersey, which spanked the
Cavs by 20 points just before
the All-Star break.
The Nets may not recognize
these Cavaliers and especially
not the 7 ~ foot-3 llgauskas,
whose in/·ury-riddled career
has never ooked brighter.
Ilgauskas has been dominant
on offense and with Silas prodding him, the 28-year-old has
become a defensive force by
blocking shots and altering
others.
"He's one of the top centers
in all of the NBA,' Indiana
coach Rick Carlisle said.
"There's not many guys at 7-3
who can do what he does on
· the court - facing the basket,
shooting with range, posting
up, He's a very potent
weapon."
··

-

.

..

. -

POMEROY - A $600
donation f~om the non-profit
Enterpri se
Development
Corporation will go toward a
local match for the purchase
of a new meal delivery vehicle for the Meigs County
Council on Aging.
·
Gary N. Seeley, executive
director of the Athens-based
agency, presented the check
to
MCCoA
Executive
Director Mark Sutton at
Thursday 's regular meeting
of the Meigs County
Commissioners. The $31,000
four-wheel drive "Hot Shot"
delivery truck has been
ordered, and its purchase
financed primarily through
Community Development
Block Grant formula funds
awarded by commi ssioners
last year.
The $600 contribution
will be used toward a
$4,400 local match required

Commissioners
tabled
action on a request from cilizens and the Meigs County
Humane Society to change
hours of adoption at the
Meigs County Dog Pound.
Commissioners have been
asked to adjust the current
hours of 2 to 3 p.m. each day

··.sunglasses HALF
New·stock

PRICE

Russell Stover

Chocolate Rabbits
6 oz. Reg. S1.49

Please see Donation, AS

THE SPRING SCENE

threatened him on March 10
while
driving
out side
Young's East Main Street
POMEROY - A Pomeroy home . According to Young's
village worker charged with statement to police, Spaun
menacing for allegedly was upset about comments
threatening former Pomeroy Young had allegedly made
Mayor Victor Young Ill has about
Spaun 's
mother,
denied the charge, and will Pomeroy Council member
appea r an court again on Ruth Spaun.
April 29.
Story appoi-nted Pomero y
Shannon Spaun. 29. an Attorney Charles Kn ight to
employee with the village represent Spaun. and set a
wat er department, face s a personal recognizance bond
fourth -degree misdemeanor in the amount of $5.000.
charge. and pleaded not Spaun will appear at a final
guilty before Judge Steven L. . pre-trial hearing on April 29.
Story on Thursday morning. and has been restrained from
Young alleges that Spaun contact with Young.

Tipster recounts how he led
police to suspeded sniper

WEATHER

ONLY

99'

Russell Stover

Crispy Caramel
Rabbits

INDEX
ONLY

68'
30~"'
-OFF ·

2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Ed,itorials
Faith•Values
Movies
Nascar
Sports

Jewelry

HALF

Complete Stock

PRICE

Weather

t6

PAGES

A6
B4-6

B7
A6

IM
I
A2

As
B8

B1-1
AS

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publi~hlnK Co.

LAS VEGAS (AP) - An
unemployed sales man with
an extra slice of pepperoni
pizza ~nd bulldog persi stence
was
being credited with
Spring arrives on Saturday, at least by the calendar. For weeks, drivers passing by Joe's
pointing
police 10 a man susCountry Market in Rutland have watched the daily countdown to spring on the store ·s outdoor
pected in a string of shootings
marquis sign. Mandy Miller has the honor of changing the numbers one more time. (Brian-Reed) along Ohio highways.
Ch&lt;\rles A. McCoy Jr. , n.
was arrested early Wednesday
in th ~, parking lot of a motel
near
the Stardust hotel-casiYou know spring
no.
less
than 36 hours after
is almost here
Ohio
authoritie
s identified
when the daffodils bloom and him as a suspect.
McCoy will not fight extrathe forsythi a
dition
al a hearing Friday and
buds. Here twowants to return to Ohio "at the
year old Brayden government 's earliest po~si­
Cunningham, son ble convenience." his lawyer.
of Leanne and
Andrew Haney, said in a writ·
Shawn
ten.statemenl .
Cunningham of
The salesman who alened
Pomeroy.
authorities to McCoy's loca' admires a clump · tion, Conrad Malsom, 60, of
of blooming dafLas Vegas, said he recognized
fodil s in a
McCoy the day before from
friend 's yard .
news reports li,nking him to
(Charlene
the Ohio attacks. and did a litlie amateur detecti ve work to
Hoeflich)
locate McCoy' s car parked at
the mote I.
Police and the FBI did not

March is

National Nutrition Month

.flppllcatlons Being Accepted

and

·.s.er Vala''

Middleport, Ohio 992-2635
'

'

.

Spaun denies menacing
former Pomeroy Mayor

· (Former Kroger Location)

INGELS JEWELRY &amp; PIOURE GALLERY

I

STAFF REPORT

Detatto on Page AB

Complete StOck .

At

o:

Mark Sutton, standing left , acce pted a $600 donat ion from Enterprise Development Corp.
Executive D1rector Gary· N. Seeley Thursday, to be used fo r the purchase of a new home-delivered meals truck. Meigs County Commi ssioners Jim Sheets and Jeff Thornton are also pictured. (Brian J. Reed)

SeePage A2
• The Gracemen tb
perform Sunday.
See Page A2
• law You Can Use.
See Page A7
·
• Family Medicine.
See Page A7

.PO .
LIGHTERS

Part Time or Full Time
.
Pick-Up and Rerum Applications

.

Dog pound

• A Hunger.For More,

99C

1-"or Most Positions

1. .! 1

for the grant, Sutlon said.
The agency serves 47,000
meal s to elderly residents a
year, Sutton said, using a
tleet of three "Hot Shot"
trucks. Two trucks are on the
road each day.
from
The
donation
Ente.rprise Development was
made in conjunction with the
MCCaA's March for Meal s
fundraising drive. a monthlong effort to raise $10,000
for the home-deli vered meals
program, Sutton said.

INSIDE
'

Cleveland rocks: Cavs on a seven-game roll
Associated Press

..

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

NBA.
BY TOM WITHERS

.

Donation made for delivery truck

E. DeGasero; C. Osgood; M. StolgitiSIAP

SOURCE: Assodated Press

.

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.·
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
.

Ph.992~2955

112 East Main Street -

HOURS
MDn- Fri Sam - 9pm
Sat. Sam- Spm
Sun. CLOSED

I Poml!l·ov. Ohio
Open Weeknighls 'Till9 • Friendly Service

Prices Good Through Wednesday March 24, 2004

National Social Worker
Month
Holzer Medical Center salutes both our Nutrition Services and
Social Services Deparhnents during tbeir special month .

immediate·
ly corroborate
the
detail s of
Mal so m' s
account but
praised him
for
his
efforts.
"He provided the
information . Charles McCoy
He was persistent with it. " pol ice Lt. Ted
Lee sa id. "He did a little of
his own investigation, apparently goi11g to the (motel) and
locating the vehicle."
After receiving the tip. federal and local law enforcement officers surrounded the
Budget Su ites motel and
waited fo r McCoy to return .
He was taken into custody
without incident.
The arrest brought relief to
Ohio residents who have been
li ving in fear since the 24
shootings began in rhe
Columbus area last year. The
gunfire pierced homes and a

====

Please see Sniper. AS

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