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                  <text>Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 22,

www. mydailysentinel.t;Om

NCAA Tournament ·

UAB serlds top-seeded
Wildcats·back to KentuckY
Associated Press

Ga. Tech 57, Boston Coli. 54
'

At Columbus. The NCAA tournament's
top seed got sent back to its ol' Kentucky
home.
Mo Finley made a 17-foot jumper with
12.2 seconds left and ninth-seeded
Alabama-Birmingham stunned the
Wildcats 76-75 Sunday in the second
round of the St. Louis Regional.
Kentuck{s Gerald Fitch_ missed a 3pomter with 2.2 second s left, and Chuck
Hayes' tip rolled off the rim just before the
horn.
The Blazers (22-9) advanced to the
round of I ti for the f1rst time since 1982
with their second big upset of Kentucky in
the NCAA tournament. UA B's win came
almost exactly 23 years to the day that the
Blazers beat Kentucky in the second
round in 1981.
For the second straight year. Kentucky
(27-5) came up shon in its quest for an
eighth NCAA title as the tourney's
favori te. The Wildcats were the second
No. I seed to be dispatched thi s weekend,
'following Stanford. which got beat by
• Alabama on Saturday.
Mo Finlev scored 17 points, and Donell
Taylor and ·Gabe Kennedy had 13 apiece
for the Blazers~ who advanced to play
foun h-seeded Kansas on Friday at Edward
Jones Dome.
Gerald Fitch led Kentucky with 17
points.

Kansas 78, Pacific 63
At Kansas City, Mo., Wayne Simien had
18 points and 12 rebounds and Kansas
overcame a slow stan to beat Pacific.
Kansas {23-8). which has made two
straight Final Fours, is in the round of 16
for the fourth consecuti ve year.
Guillaume Yango had 22 points for
Pacific (25-8). which had won 16 straight
games.

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At Milwaukee, Jarrett Jack scored four
points in the final minute. including a key
steal and dunk with less than six seconds
left to lift Georgia Tech.
The third-seeded Yellow Jacket s
advanced to the semifinals of the St. Louis
Regional to face I Oth-seeded Nevada on
Friday at Edward Jones Dome.
Jack tinished with eight points. six
rebounds and six assists. B.J . Elder led the
Yellow Jackets (25-9) with 18 points.
Jared Dudley had 13 points for Boston
College (24- 10).
·

ATLANTA REGIONAL

Xavier 89, Miss. St. 74

At Orlando, Fla., Lionel Chalmers
scored a career-high 31 points, and
Dedrick Finn added 22. helping seventhseeded Xavier upset second-seeded
Mississippi State.
Xavier {25-1 0), which has won 15 of 16
games after a I 0-9 start, advanced beyond
the second round for the tirst time since
1990. The Musketeers will face thirdseeded Texas on Friday at the Georgia
Dome.
Mississippi State (26-4) shot 36 percent
and lost control of the game after building
EAST RUTHERFORD REGIONAL a 23-13 lead. Xavier finished the half with
a 21-10 mn, with Chalmers scoring 12
Oklahoma St. 70,
points in that stretch.

Memphis 53

At Kansas City, Mo.. Joey Graham
scored 21 points - all but one of those
coming in the first half - for Oklahoma
State.
The second-seeded Cowboys (29-3)
will meet thi rd-seeded Pittsburgh on
Thursday at Continental Airlines Arena.
Oklahoma State led 41-19 after a first
half in which it shot 68 percent ( 17-for-23)
and outrebounded the Tigers (22-8) 17-6.
Antonio Burks and Jed Memphis with 21
points.

Illinois 92, Cincinnati 68
At Columbus, Deron Williams hit his
first seven attempts, setting the tone for a
can't-miss attack, and fifth-seeded Illinois
rolled past Ci ncinnati.
Williams matched his career high with _
31 points. going 10-of-13 from the field,
and Illinois (26-6) shot a season-high 63.6
percent. The Big Ten regular-season
champion will play top-seeded Duke on
Friday althe Georgia Dome.

.PHOENIX REGIONAL

Pitt 59, Wisconsin 55
At Milwaukee, Carl Krauser scored 16
points. and Julius Page added 12 to lead
Pittsburgh (3 1-4).
Pittsb~rgh shot, 36 percent to th_e
Badgers 35 percent, and 11 was anybody s
game until the closing seconds when the
Panthers made all the crucial plays.
Devin Harris scored 21 points for the .
Badgers (25-7), but none after his 3-pointer gave Wisconsin a 40,37 lead.

Vanderbilt 75,
N. Carolina St. 73
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Matt Freije
scored 31 points, and Corey Smith 's threepoint play with 21.2 seconds remaining
Iit\ed sixth-seeded Vanderbilt past Nonh
Carolina State.
Vanderbilt (23-9) trailed by II with 4:20
left. but Freije scored II points from there
to lead the comeback.

NASCAA

the 1099-B form s for stoc k sale s.
Write the date you purchased the
stock or other asset on the form.
These few steps will put a ll the
information you need at your fin gertips when turnin g your taxes
over to a preparer or when filling
out the IRS Schedule D, Capital
Gains and Losses.
"It wi II save you a lot of time
and grief," Perlman said. " It'll
save the tax professional time and
grief, and it could even save you
money."
To help taxpayers navi gate the
new rates for capital gains and
dividends, the IRS revised its
forms that report earnings in each
category.
The new forms detailing infor~ation reported by financial institutions and brokers , destined for
laxpayers in January, break out the
amount of capital gains reported
before and after the May 6 date the
ta~ rates changed .
Capital gains qualify for the new
15 percent maximum rate if the
asset was held for more than a
year and sold on or after May 6,
2003. Capital gains would be
taxed at a maximum of 20 percent
if the asset was held more than one
year and sold before May 6, 2003.
Capital gains on assets held one
year or less are taxed at ordinary
income tax rates.
New tax forms also show the
total dividends received during the
year and document the amount
declared qualified for purposes of
the new tax structure. Dividends
are "qualified dividends" if paid
by U.S. corporations and certain
foreign corporations.
Because the tax rates for dividends were made retroactive to
Jan. I, 2003 , taxpayers avoid the
confu sio n of a midyear rate
change . But those who purchased
dividend-paying stocks during the
year will have to double check that
they held the stock for the appropriate amount of time to qualify
for the lower rate.
To be eligible for the lower rate,
the shareholder must hold the
stock for more than 60 days during
the 120-day period that began 60

1

Browns announce
preseason schedule, B2

Johnson races to first ·
Darlington victory
DARLINGTON,
S.C.
(AP) - Jimmie Johnson got
the lead with a fast pit stop
and held off a challenge from
hard-luck Bobby Labonte to
win the NASCAR Nextel
Cup race Sunday at
Darlington Raceway.
Labonte was leading the
Carolina Dodge Dealers 400
by half a stmightaway over
Kun Busch on the 1.366-mile
oval when Kyle Petty 's
engine went up in a plume of
white smoke. bringing out a
caution flag 19 laps from the
end of the 293-lap event.
All the leaders pitted for
much-needed fresh tires and
Johnson's No. 48 Chevrolet
crew got him out inches in
front of Labonte's No. 18
Chevy.
"These guys got me the
lead early in the race and they
got me out front again when
it really counted," Johnson
said, high-tiving and pointing
at crew chief Chad Knaus
and the rest of hi s crew.
The green fl ag came out on
lap 283, but another caution
flag waved moments later
when Tony Stewart bumped
rookie Kasey Kahne from
behind and sent him sliding
through turns three and four.
The ensuing caution wa~
longer than expected ' and,
when the green was displayed again with only four
laps remaining, it looked like
thi s race might tum out like
last year 's when Ricky
Craven nipped Busch by
inches in a bumping, fenderbanging finish.
Labonte. who won the
Southem 500 here in 2000.

Taxes: A Puzzle for Investors
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Investors with capital gains or
dividend income from stocks, real
estate and other assets can expect
new benefits from low~r tax rates,
but they ' re also bound to spend
more time poring over paperwork
to calculate those savings.
· The benefits flow from new tax
rates enacted in May. which
reduced the rates on capital gains
from 20 percent and 10 percent to
15 percent and 5 percent. The
changes took effect May 6.
Dividends, previou sly taxed at '
the investor's ordinary income tax
rate, can also qualify for the 15
percent and 5 percent capital gains
rates as of Jan . I, 2003. The
change can mean as much as a 20
percentage point reduction in the
dividend tax rate for wealthier
taxpayers.
"That' s a huge difference," said
J ac kie Pe rlman. senior tax
research analyst at H&amp;R Block.
The new tax rates add complications to this year's calculations for
two main reasons. First, the capital
gains tax rate changed midyear, so
multiple rates apply depending
when the asset was sold. Second,
not all dividends qualify for the
reduced rate, and the total amount
of those that qualify for the lowered rate may have to be reported
on the schedule for capital gains
and losses.
Advisers recommend that tax payers who are about to wade into
a pile of paperwork take a few
minutes to get organized. "The
first thing I would do is sort out all
of your 1099s," Perlman said.
Separate the I 099-DIV forms for
dividends and distributions from

2004

gave it a good try. but he
couldn ' t. quite catch the
leader. linishi ng 0.1J2 second' - about two carlengths - behind.
For Johnson. it was the seventh victory_ of his 'Ncxtel
Cup career and first on
NASCAR 's oldest superspeedway. It also was the
I Oth Dw·lington victory for
team owner Rick Hendrick,
tying him for the track record
with retired Junior Johnson .
" I knew he was coming,"
Johnson said of Labonte. " I
knew I had to protect the
high side. He got inside me a
couple of times but, luckily. I
had momentum."
Labonte said it definitely
was harder to pass all day on
the narrow egg-shaped oval,
made even tigh1er by the
recent installation of the
impact-cushioning SAFER
·barriers on the outside walls
in the turns and the front
straightaway. That sl iced 30
inches from the racing
grooye, which has always
been up near the outside
wall .
"We were able to get close
to him, but ndt able to pass,"
Labonte said. ·'It's a pretty
narrow place, you know. It
was harder to pass (today)
and you really had to pick
and choose your places a little more ...
Ryan Newman. who had to
make up a lost lap after being
penalized for hitting a marker cone wh ile entering the
pits early in the race, ~am e
back to linish third, fo llowed
by Robby Gordon, Elliott
Sadler and Bus~h.

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,,otl:'ljJS•\ni. :,.J. :\11. 1) :!

• Bigger schools sweep allstar games. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

124 West ~aln Street

WEAmER
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Taxes
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Skip the two aspirin
and call us in the
morning.

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Floyd Browne Associates,
met with new Village
Administrator
Bradford
Anderson Monday and
updated vi llage counci l on
the _project' s status at
Monday evenin g's regular
meeting.
The trea'tment plant plans
were begun by the Board of
Publi c Affairs, which was
replaced last month by the.

village admini strator position. The plans for the new
plant have been completed,
Hays said, and are now being
reviewed by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency.
There is no contract for
construction of the plant in
place. Hays said funding for
the project will be soug ht
from
the
Community

Please see Plant. AS

J.

Kev in Butcher, front ,
takes the role of a
suicidal CPA in "The
Ledge ." Others in
the comedy are
Bobbi Napper,
Steven Major,
Jessica Curfman,
Brittany Powers,
Enrico Parini,
Jessica Howell ,
Jennifer Dunn, and
Holley Wil liams.

REED

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio VaUey Publishing Co.

www.ovbc.com

MIDDL EPORT
A
Young Poets Competition
wi II be held at the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College to celebrate April as Poetry Month .
The contest is open to all
student s in grades seven
through 12, and will be
judged in a blind review
process. Four judges from
the University will choose
two winners in two categories : ages 12 to 14 and 15
to 18.
According to Gina Pines,
director of the Meigs Center,
the contest serves several
purposes.
"Often, kids feel we doo 't
want to hear what they. \lave ·
to say, and this is an opportunity for them to express
themselves to an audience,"
Pines said. "Poetry is a very
personal art form, and it can
be scary for any poet especially an unpublished
young writer - to submit
his work, but he should, and
I hope this contest will serve
to. encourage that."
A writer ~erself, Pines said
she was encouraged by a
high school English teacher
to develop her skills as a
writer and to submit her
work, and she's glad she did.
"Kids in this age group
experience a lot of emotions,
and poetry is a good way to
express those emotions,"
Pines said.
"Teachers do a much better job in promoting creativity than they used to, and
writing plays a much larger
role in our schools today,"
Pines said . "The quality of
writing our young people are
producing today is better
than ever, and one of the
best things about that change
is that students are exposed
to creative writing and poetry, in particular, far more
than they used to be."
If the promise of creative
reward and recognition is
not encouragement enough
for the area's aspiring poets,
cash and other prizes will be
awarded to the poets deemed
best.
The poems of the contest
winners will be published in
The Dail y Sentinel, and all
entrants will be encouraged
to attend the "Evening of
Poetry" ce lebration at the
center on April 29, where
local poets, including Rio
Grande students and faculty,
will share their work.

Taking roles in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame Goes West" are left to right, front, Josh Ray,
Tyler Barnes, Jaynee Davis, Chrissy Miller, Page Bradbury, and back , Courtney Kennedy, Nikk i
Butcher, David Boyd, Miranda Stewart, Maegan Dodson, Heidi Gilmore, Erica Poole, Nicole
Harper, Randy Hudson , Sarah Lee, Doug Di ll , and Jamitha Willford.

Drama students to present plays Friday
the part of a suicidal CPA
who is interrupted by various
individuals who have their
POMEROY - The Meigs own set of problems and ·
High School drama students iss ues. A surprise ending
will present two plays at 7:30 results from his interactions
p.m. on Friday in the school with them.
gymnasium under the direc"The Hunchback of Notre
tion of Celia McCoy.
Dame Goes West" features
"The Ledge" is a comedy Tyler Barnes who plays a stuwhere Kevin Butcher plays dent director obsessed with
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

HO EFL \C H@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

making sure the play he has
written gets into the state
drama finals. He sets out to
sabotage hi s competition but
finds he mu st compromise to
win, as the "Old West" meets
"Old Puree" in the comedy
spoof.
Tickets to the production
are $3 for adults and $2 for
students.

EMA plans equipment demo and training classes
BY CHARLENE HOEFI.ICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSE NTINEL. COM

POMEROY - As a part of
Meigs County's program of
preparedness for an emergency response to terrorism,
equipment demonstrations
and trainin g classes have
been scheduled by the Mei gs
County
Emergency
Management Agency.

Thursday ni ght a representative of the Zumro Company
will be at the Middleport Fire
Station at 6:30 p.m. to
demonstrate an intlatable
decontamination tent and
search and rescue equipment.
Bob Byer, EMA d1rector,
said that the equipment for
demonstration is being
brought in so that the county
can gel, a look at it for possi-

truck
•
•
arr1ves 1n
Pomeroy
Bv

J. MtLES- lAYTON

ble purchase sometime in the
future through a Homeland
Security grant.
"Training is also including
in grant funds ," said Byer, so
we have set up some training
sessions on emergency
response to terrorism"
On Tuesday, April 6 there
will be two four-hour classes
Please see Classes. AS

POMEROY -After more
than two years of planning
and waiting. Pomeroy Fire
Chief Rick Blaettnar told village council Monday the new
$349,000 pumper fire tmck
was deli vered last Friday to
the fire-statim\. The fire truck
will still need to be tested and
equipment will need to be
added, but Blaettnar said it
will be completely operational within two weeks.
Blaettnar described the
ve hicle as very maneuvera ble
and an asset to the village and
county.
"We' re are pretty proud of
the vehicle and think it will
work well with the vi llage,"
he sa id .
Speaking of new vehicles.
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
purchased two new police
cruisers for $7,000 recently at
a state auction with village
council's approval. Proffitt
said both vehicles have low
mileage and are in top condition.
Council approved painting
these new ve hicles along
with repainting the 4-wheeldrive Bravada and touching
up another police crui ser all for the $2,400. To pay for
this paint job, which Proffitt
de scribed as a "very good
deal," one of the police cruis. ers currently in use will be
sold.
Council approved two resolutions authorizing Mayor
John Musser to apply for two
grants. The first grant seeks
more than $129,000 from the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources which will be used
to enhance the riverfront boat
dock.
The second grant seeks
$ 10.000 from ' the Ohio
Department of Transportation
to provide 20 park benches at
various spots along the ri verfront particularly in the
downtown levy area though
there is talk of poss ibly placing a few along the new
walkpath. This project call s
for a 20 percent match from
the village of $2,000 which
Musser said Farmer's Bank is
providing i( and when the
grant is awarded.
Charles Burton Sr.. spoke
of trash issues in the Monkey
Run area. Though there has
been some progress in recent
weeks clearing out trash and
debris, Burton said there is
still a lot of work that needs
to be done to in sure a safe
and clean environment. Steve
Van Meter echoed the same
sentiment for his neighborhood. Proffitt said the police
have been issuing citations to
get people to clean up their
property.
There wiII be a spring
clean -up the week of April
19. The rules are as follows:
Please see ll'uck. AS

March is Colorectal Cancer Month

Colorectal Cancer Update 2004

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Jackie Woodward, RNFA and Amy Bias, RN, BSN.
For mora information , coli (740) 446-5679 or (7 40) 446·5057.
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I

Development Block Grant
program with a June application. She was not able to provide an estimated cost for the
project last night, but said an
appli cation through Ohio
Public Works Comm ission
has already been filed.
Hays urged council _to act
on closi ng the purchase of

BREED@MYDAI LYSENTINEL .COM

• Time Out For Tips.
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Rio Center
seeks young
poets

INSIDE

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Pomeroy, On

J.

Becky Hayes of the village's engi neering firm ,

OBITUARIES

748-992-1771
808-866-1771

BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAI LYSEN TINEL.CDM

MIDDLEPORT- If funding is awarded. plans to constru't a new water treatment
plant on Page Street wi II proceed under the direction of
Middlepon Village Council.

./lfl!Ji/:""~;
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pay Taxes?
Visit the Problem
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Middleport wiU proceed with treatment plant New fire

SPORTS

"'{.7,; Credit

days before the ex-dividend date,
the first day a stockholder would
not qualify for that dividend payment. Since the holdin g period
starts th e day after the purcha se
date, a stock bought on the day
before the ex-dividend date cannot
meet the more-than-60 day
requirement for the first divide nd
payment to qualify for the lower
tax nite. Generally, a buyer can
obtain the ex-dividend date from a
brokerage or a company's investor
relaJions services.
There's one wrinkle for margin
account holders whose brokerages
temporarily lend their stock to others, a practice common among
brokers. Any dividends paid out
during the time the swck is on
loan go to the borrowers, who then
reimburse the stock owners. The
payments received by the stock
owners technically aren't divi dends . They're known as a " payments in lieu of dividends," and
they ' re not eligible for the lower
rate .
Thi s year, recognizing that some
brokers may need more time to
adapt to the new law, the IRS is
letting taxpayers who receive
Forms I 099 -DIV erron eo usly
reporting such payments as dividend income to Jreat them as dividends, unless the taxpayer knows
that they are not actual dividends.
All of these complications overlap when it comes to mutual
funds, which may report a mix of
capital gain distribution s, dividends and interest payments.
Taxpayers whose only gains or
losses are the capital gain distributions from th eir mutual funds may
avoid Schedule D entire ly by
using a special worksheet in the
Form I 040 or I 040A instruction
books. The IRS ha s revised thi s
worksheet to include the lower tax
rates on qualified dividends.
In all of these cases, taxpayers
can expect to rely heavily on
information provided by their brokers and financial institutions, or
in IRS Publication 550, still being
updated. Taxpayers should keep
good records themselves.

Ohio protesters
rally,A6

.

t·

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difle,.ence

www.holzer.org

�PageA2

COMMUNITY

. The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March

23, 2004

Cases heard in Meigs County Court

Betsy Jones. left, and Tammy Bachner were given the Beta Sigma Phi Order of the Rose at a
recent meeting of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter.

Sorority qualified for the&lt;Jrc:ler of the Rose
POMEROY
Betsy
Jones and Tammy Bachner
of the Oho Eta Phi Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
qualified for the Order of
the Rose and were honored
during a recent meeting.
In membership changes.
Chery! and Cindy Facemyer
moved up to the Preceptor
Chapter
while
Dena

Roseberry
and
Sherry
Bibbee advanced to the
Exemplar Chapter.
Officers of the group are
Gretchen Anderson, president: Dena Roseberry, vice
president: Kristi Riffle. treasurer; Betsy Jones, secretary.
and Tammy Bachner, corresponding secretary. There
are currently 16 active

members in the group.
Activities over the pat
several months have included a Hawai.ian Luau, and a
Mexican Fiesta. lans are
being made for a "spring
forth with a salad" meeting.
Founder 's Day will be
observed on April 29 with a
dinner at the Riverside Golf
Course.

--TIME OUT FOR TIPS-Clutter can cause chaos in
the home. Many times it
occurs because you don't.
have a specific place for your
things. You may also feel
you don ' t have the time to
put stuff away or that there
isn 't enough storage space
for the items.
To remedy this problem,
you need to get organized.
Critique each area of the
house separately to decide
how to better incorporate
storage. Assign everything
to its particular storage area.
Make it easily accessible or
things won 't get put away.
As you begin to de-clutter
each section of the house,
have
boxes
designated

"Storage." "Trash,"

Becky
Baer

easy to see and reach .
Clearly label all boxes, drawers, filing cabinets, and storage spaces with what is
inside and make a list of
these for family members.
To prevent clutter from reemerging, take a few extra
minutes to put things away
after using them. As new
items come into the household, such as legal papers,
junk mail and magazmes,
take care of them immediately.
Don't allow them to
accumulate.
So you will know where
documents are when you
need them, organize your
important papers in a filing
system that wo~ks for you.
Each time you come across a
paper, choose one of these
actions: throw it away, delegate it to someone else to
take care of, act on it right
the11, file it, or set it aside to

~~Repair,"

and "Donation." Go through
all of the stuff in that area
before going on to the next:
When you have separated the
items into their respective
boxes, specifically label
what is in the "Storage" box.
After a year. if you find out
that the "Storage" box hasn't
been opened, throw it out.
You evidently don't need the
items that are in it.
Organize your storage by
keeping things where they
are first and most often used,
as well as where they are

For The Record
Arrests

•

maintain marked lanes.
• Elizabeth
Huffman ,
Portland: for domestic violence.

POMEROY
Dana
Bailey ol· Albany was
arrested on charges of
inducing panic, possessing a
weapon while intoxicated,
criminal trespassing. driving
under the influence and driving under suspension following an incident on Side
Hill Road.
According
to
Meigs
County
Sheriff
Ralph
Trusse ll, Bailey drove to a
residence and began waving
a pistol at the homeowner.
When officers arrived, they
found Bailey's car partially
stuck in a ditch. He was
arrested without incident.
Trussell also reported the
following other arrests:
• Rhonda
K.
Smith,
Pomeroy, for driving under
the influence, failure to
yield, and failure to maintain marked lanes.
• Victoria Martinez, Long
Bottom, for driving under
the influence and failing to

read later. Watch out. Don't
put all of your papers into the
"read later" stack. If you do,
you'll be right back where
you 'started! Try to touch
each paper only once. Don't
shuffle it from pile to pile.
Try some of these ideas to
create order in your home. By
setting aside 15 minutes each
day to organize your papers
and your house, you can keep
clutter under control.

Becky Baer is the Meigs
County Extension Agent,
and
Consumer
Family
S cie 11 ces/C om m u 11 i ty
Deve/opmmt.
·

New Shoes
Arriving 'DailyY

KIPLING
SHOE CO.
Rt. 2 Bypass
Point Pleasant, WV

304-675-7870
2nd Ave.

1-9010

•••

DILES

HEARIN
CENTER

Free huringsueenlngs.
Audiologists on slllff.
Wide range of IKhnology and pnttis~
Digital and other hearing aids.
415 leCIIId .,..... 1111111111. IH

•

Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters. 6:30 p.m. at the
Lutheran Ch urc h. Donna
!lyer and Velma Rue , host esses.
. POMEROY - Wildwood
'Garden Club will meet at
I :30 p.m. at the home of
Sh irley Hamm, Amberger
Road.
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
VFW Y053 will have a
meeting at 7 p.m. at the
hall in Tuppers Plains .
There wi II be a special
drawing.

Social Events
Friday, March 26
POMEROY - Free din-

Friday, March 26
CARPENTER
Dr.
David Rahamut, evangelist
from Trinidad, will be conducting a crusa&lt;.le at the Mt.
Union Baptist church near
Carpenter, March 26 and 27.
Included will be tilm on hi s
work in Africa on Saturday
Thesday, March23
night, and his witness about
POMEROY - Meigs
being converted from Islam County Health Department
and the miracles in hi s min- ' will have a childhood
istry. Proclaim will provide immunization clinic from 9
music on Friday ni ght and to II a.m. and I to 3 p.ni.
there will ·also be special at the Memorial Drive
music on Saturday. Services office . Take child's shot
being at 6:30 p.m.
records ar1&lt;.1 any medical
GUYSVILLE
The cards. Children must be
Carthage
Community accompanied by parent/legal
Church on Route 50 six guardian.
miles west of the Coolspot
will have a spring revival at
7 p.m. · on both March 26
and 27 ) The Friday services
Thursday, March 25
will feature IJay Hubbard of
Little Hocking and Jim blair
POMEROY
Caring
and the Southern Gospel and Sharing Support Group,
Aires of Marietta, while on I p.m. at the Meigs MultiCenter.
Nancy
Saturday Sammy anders of purpose
New Haven will speak and Broderick, T.B. Clinic nurse,
music will be by the Bilders to be the speaker. Public
quartet of Ripley.
invited.

Other events

Support Groups

·~·-·

Massey Ferguson • Farmhand
• Bobcat • Shennlu
New Idea • Rhino
New Holland • Cub Cadet

OVCS holds awards banquet

......................... , ...._....................1

MASON
I . JIM'SFARM
FURNITURE 1
INC.
COMPANY i EQUIPMENT,
:Z 150 Eastern Avenue

!•Quality • Selection • Serl'ice i

304-773-5592 I IZJ Gallipolis, Ohio •
l 2nd Stre.tl_Millitlh....~Y ..J 44&amp;-9m or 448-2484

-rs:MI1·11Mr8:30-5:00

GALLIPOLIS
Recognition of the accomplishments of Ohio Valley
.Christian School st udents
:highlighted the annual win·
ler sports awards program
lleld rece ntly at the school.
Awarded trophies were
Alyssa Zirille, most steals,
:!Jighest field goal percentpge, and spiritual leader~ hip ;
Kri sti Davis, consis1ency award: Sarah Dawn

Jenkins, free throw percentage, most r~bounds, and
obedience; Sara Beckley,
cheerleading
consistency
award:
Hallie Carter,
integrity
award:
Sarah
Burleson, servant award.
Nat han Bowman, free
throw percentage: Andrew
Holcomb, co-defensive, servant
award :
Conrad
Butlington, most rebounds,
courage
award;
Brody

Blankenship, most assists,
consistency award, and athlete of the year.
Hanah Burleson, most
assists, athletic leadership
and athlete of the yers:
J .P. Lindeman, co-defen
sive, field goal percentage:
Kaleb Eldridge, spiritual
leadership: and Dave and
Martha
Kelley,
athletic
boosters of the year.

'

must cover e~ery number on your.card to win.

Ullt

PIZZA .

1·888-451-2225
990 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis

,.

With new vehicle purchase.
See lllmplke for details.

9.9
675-1812

5

OGII~•rv

.

Fo~(740}446-8286

313 71ngalls Rood •Gallipolis

Mason, WV

Rt. 7 South to St. Rt. 2 I 8, 2. 7
mites. Take right onto

1

ALFRED
Thelma
Henderson led the program,
"Lent/Easter:
Women
Looked On," when Alfred
United Methodist Women
met recently at the church.
Henderson showed different crosses used during the
ages,
and
read
from
Response,
"Stand
with
Women in Black."
Mary
Jo
Barringer,
president , led the meeting,
with
Henderson
offering opening prayer
and leading members in
reading "Th'e Purpo se."
Members reported 125
visits to shut-ins.
Mary
Jo
Buckley
announced that she ·se nt a
prayer calendar to Evelyn
Erbel, who is in education
in Russia.

and keep them there . They
will not Jose va lue.
2. Mel I down the bands and
engagement ring and have a
wonderful Mother's Day gift
created. She would appreci ate it more than anyone . ~
JEWELER IN THE SOUTH.
DAPHNE. ALA.
DEAR SOUTHERN JEWELER: Thank you for your
input. I Jearn from my readers eve ry 'day. By the way.
you aren't the only jeweler
who offered s uggestions.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Your advice
about donating the rings to
charit y isn't the only choice
that you ng man has.
My husband is a custom
jewe ler. Women come into
his store all the time wanting
''divorce rings.'' They bring
their old wedding rings, have
them me lted down and have
a different one created. That
young man cou ld do th e
sa me thing for himself or for
someo ne else important in
his life. JEWELER ' S
WIFE. CARRIZOZO. N.M.
DEAR WIFE: Hmmm ... a
divorce ring? If the person

~'

, MERCURV

HOURS:

Mon · Frl9·7; Sat. 9-5

www.turnpllleflm.com

doe sn't mind being reminded
of an unhappy chapter in life .
I suppose that would work.
DEAR ABBY: Set th e
record straight and send thai
young man back to the jewel er' I have been buying e;ta te
jewelry for more than 25
year;. In my experience.
there are fuur way, to liqui date a diamond ring: I I) sell
to a jeweler: (2 ) consign to a
jewelry store: &lt;3) sell through
auction: 141 donate to a charity.
Consignmenl is usuall y lhe
hest choice because yo u can
delennine a fair price in
adv;once ami lhe jewe ler
doesn ' t lwve to front I he
money to buy it. Donating i&gt;
harder becULISC most charilic,
are geared Lowan.l rece iving
money rather than merchan di se.
Above all. remember 1he
two "don't.{': Don't sell to
someone yDu know - and
don ' t run an ad. because it
cou ld be &lt;.langerou s.
HANK
FR IEDMAN .
MARIN COUNTY. CALIF
DEAR HANK: Thank you
for the helpful suggestions and thank you. too. for· the
warn mg.
Dear Abhr is 11·ritren IJI'
Abiga il

Vail

/Ju,.m.

alsiJ

knoll'n as Jnmne Phil/ip.1·,
and was .finmded h1· her
mother. Pauline Phi/lips.
Wrile
Dear Ahh\'
a1
\I'II"H".DearAI&gt;br.co/11 ,;,. PO.
Box 69&lt;140. Lr;,,. Angeles. CA
90069.

The West Ohio School of
Christian Mission in Ada
was announced for July
23-25.

Athens

District

be

held o n

Retreat will
April 24.

Members agreed to begin

remivlq old carpet.

Call us or stop ln.
We'D come to your
home and measure
foralreeno

OH • 992·3671

obUgatlon quote.
•

- - - -----·-·

Keeping
Meigs
informed

meetings at 7 p.m.
Pastor Jane Beattie gave
the blessi ng before refreshments, which were served

Sunday
Times-Sentinel

by Ruth Brooks to those

Meigs· 992-2155

named.

Sarah

Caldwell,

new member Janice Weber.
and Nellie Parker.
The next meeting will be
at 7 p.m. on April 13 at
the church.

.91. specia[section in tlie

f}Jaifg Sentine[
to pu6ficize your upcoming tf.aster 'Event!
f 'or Example Orrly:

Contact Dave
or Brenda at
to have your
church included or
for more
information.

Name of Church
Date
Good Friday Service
All night Hymn sing
Date
Sunday Sunrise Service
6:00a.m.
Morning Service
. 10:00 a.m.
Evening Worship
7:00p.m.
Pastor
Pastor's Name
Address of Church

Advertising Deadline:
Friday, March 26th
Date of Publication:
March 30th and April 6th

(

(740) 446-1675

773-5536
rs;trlctlons may apply. Not
with other oHert. Llmlled time

AU lt)'les ol carpet are Included:
Here's the deal ...
USY PAYIENT PW'
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET, $1-· $10 PIIIIIITII
Buy your carpet
.TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET, FOR ONE YEAR
from us and we'll
LEVEL LOOP CARPET and
'IIE-IIIIIIIU
·give you the pad
SCULPTURED CARPET.
FREE!!
No utra charge for movlllllurnltule or

JIVIDEN'S "FARM"
EQUIPMENT

Point Pleasant, WV

740-441-0200

Tl
F

L

16" 1 'T'..-.~~;

Dear
Abby

740-992-2155

I

~ Gallipoli~
Chiropractic
Center ·
.,..., •• Joey D.

DEAR ABBY: You printed
a letter from a man in
Chicago who had broken his
engagement. He asked how
to di spose of the rings
because it was "no longer
possible to return them to the
Jeweler, and a pawnshop
would never give (him) their
full value.'' You advised him
to get. a written appraisal and
donate the rings to charity.
I have been a jeweler for 20
years, and I disagree. If that
young man needs the money
instead of a tax write-off,
there are jewelers who will
take items on consignment.
Another idea is to run an ad
in the classified sec tion of the
local newspaper. Before he
places the ad, the man sho uld
contact a local jeweler, make
an appoi ntment to have a
written appraisal · dol)e. and
ask the jeweler if - for a
commission - he can meet
the prospective buyer in the
store. This adds credibility to
the ring that is being sold,
and it is the only safe way to
resell jewelry to the public.
Jewelers spe nd thou sands
of doll ars to get people inside
their doors; this would be
two more prospective customers for the jeweler. That
is why most indepe ndent
jewelers wouldn ' t mind
accom modating the young
man.
If all else fails, and he's
stuck with the rings , I have
two other suggestions:
I. Get a safe-deposit box

2004

UMW meets

umber

• Diagnostic X-Rays
• Personal
Rehabilitation
• Nutritional Counseling
• Personal Injury
• Workers Compensation
• Most Insurance Accepted
Including United Health

.

Tuesday, March 23
RACINE - Racine Area
Co mmunity
Orga nization
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
Star Mill Park building.
Potluck will be served. New
members always welcome.

Church services

Saturday, March 27
POMEROY - A gospel
sing will be held at 7 p.m at
the Poplar Ridge Freewill
Baptist Church on Poplar
Ridge Road off State Route
554 . The McComas Family
and Cross Creek will sing.
For more information call
740-593-7390.

·. .

DIWWiblltl

,

Clubs and
Organizations

POMEROY
Mike
Warnke will present "Live"
at the Common Grounds·
coffee shop located at 202
East Main Street, Pomeroy ,
7 p.m. Friday, Saturday and
Sunday. Love offering will
be taken .

NEW· USED FARM AND
INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT

IJ40·446-J619 • 800·23Hl18 . I

Chick 111 aur

I

Tuesday, March 23
SYRACUSE Special
meeting of Syracuse Village
Counci l, 6:30p.m. regarding
the purchase of video camera equipment for a police
c rui ser
and
regarding
rampers in the village.

ner at the Pomeroy Church
of Christ, West Main Street.
Serving will be from 5 :30 to
7 p.m. Everyone is welcome
to come for food and fellowship.
MIDDLEPORT -Free
soup and sand\\fich supper, 4
to 6 p.m. at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center, Fifth and Main.

Receiving awards at the recent winter sports program were left to right, front, Alyssa Zirille.
Kristi Davis, and Sarah Dawn Jenkins; second row, Sara Beckley, Hallie Carter. and Sarah
Burleson: and back row, Nathan Bowman, Andrew Holcomb, Conrad Buffington, Brody
Blankenship, athlete of the year.

BUY, SEll, OR

Amplified telephone and TV dewices

~::=S:g;~j

Tuesday, March 23,

Community Calendar
Public meetings

BY THE BEND
Man left holding rings can
consign or sell to jeweler

.Proud to be apart of your life. Subscribe today. 992-2155

l!b,.--

Sunday Times-Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

and costs:
Co lumbu s, speedin g. $30
William
M.
Barton. an&lt;.l costs:
Middleport,
driving
111
Robe rt
W. Caruthers.
marked lanes. $20 and Middleport. slop sign , $20
costs;
Gene
Bateman . and costs; Owen D. Castle,
Chauncey, speeding. $30 Ripl ey, W.Va.. speeding ,
and costs: Rya n M. Bates. $30 and costs: Cathy L.
Langsville,
deer
parts- Casto, Pomeroy. speeding.
improperly
tag ged , $50 $30 and costs: Scott E.
fine , illegally taking deer. · Casto. Gallipolis, assured
$100 and cos ts: Jason 0. clear distance. $20 and
Blake, Pomeroy. seatbelt. costs. tinted glass. $20 and
$30 and costs; Thomas W. cosh: Brian K. Chancellor.
Blum, Zanesville, spee&lt;.ling, Parkersburg . W.Va.. speed$50 and costs: Jonathan J. ing. $30 and costs: Freda.
Bobb. Pomeroy. seat~elt. Chand ler. Middleport . con$30 and costs: Julian E. tributing/delinquency /c hild .
Boggs, Coolville, no-stop cosh only ;
light s/commercial tractor.
Fen
Z.
Chen.
$20 and costs:
Ravenswood. W.Va .. speedWilliam
F.
Boggs. ing. $30 and costs: Dale A.
Huntington, W.Va.. speed- Chidester. Marietta. speed; ng,
$30
and
costs: ing, $30 and costs; Jame s
Anthony E. Border. Ripley. 0. Clark. Middleport. place
W.Va.. speed ing. $30 and injurious item on highway.
costs:
Josie
Boyer. $20 and costs: Kevin G.
Gallipolis, speeding, $29 C line, speeding, $50 and
and
costs;
Travis
M. costs: Mark T. Cobb. seatBrewer, Pomeroy. seatbelt, belt violation. $3 0 and
$30 and costs: William H. costs: Charles W. Cochran.
Brookover, Vienna, W.Va.. Pageville, $30 and costs:
seatbelt, $30 and costs: seutbelt. $30 and costs:
Dayle A. Brooks. Long
Jamie
C.
Coleman.
Bottom. no driver's license. Racine, assured clear dis$ 100 and cos ts, use of lance. $20 and wsts: Colin
unauthorized plates, $25 I. Co les, speedi ng. $50 an&lt;.l
and costs;
costs; Teresa L. Combs.
Keith
Brown,
Bethel Bidwell. speeding. $30 a nd
Park. Pa., speeding; $50 costs: Dede M. Cook,
and costs:
Michael J. Columbu s, speedi ng , $30
Brown, Racine , ass ured and costs: Jennifer L.
clear di stance, costs only: Cott rill , Huntington. W.Va ..
Dale E. Brum, Parkersburg, $30 and costs; .bmes D.
W.Va., speeding, $50 and Cou ncil , . Racine, seatbelt.
costs;
Erica
Bryan, $30 and costs, scatbelt. $30
Cheshire, seatbelt, $30 and and costs: Brett M. Counts.
costs: Amanda J. Buck. Racine. assured clear dis:
Middleport. seatbel t, $30 tance , $20 and costs:
and costs; Angela M. Lauren
N.
Coyle,
Cantrell, Vinton, $30 and Springboro. speeding. $50
costs: David 0. Carothers. and costs.

"Shoes for the enlirc family"

Complaints
POMEROY Ronald
Bearhs of Pomeroy reported
to
the
Meigs County
Sheriff's Department that
his residence was entered
through a rear door and
seve ral firearms were stolen.
Virgil Reeves, Albany,
reported the theft of $200
worth of aluminum cans
from
his
property on
Woodyard Rd.
Hazel Life , Reed sv ille,
reported the theft of prescription medications.
Lois George of Rutlan&lt;.l
reported that two cherry
trees were cut down and
taken from her property.
Michael
Vance,
Middleport, reported the
theft of a box of comic
books form his truck while
it was parked at his home.

POMEROY
Cases
resolved 1n the Meigs
County Court of Judge
Steve Story between Jan .
26 an&lt;.l Marc h 14 are as
follows : Clen S. Aaron,
Sissonville, W.Va .. speeding. $&lt;JO and costs: Brian
M. Abell, Jackson, speeding. $50 and costs: Larry
E. Abrom, Anderson . Ind ..
speed ing. $30 and costs:
Gary L. Acree, Rutland.
disorderly conduct, costs
only:
Amanda
J.
Adkins.
Ravenswood. W.Va., speeding. $25 and costs: Jill M.
Ailes, . Sciotoville, seatbeltpassenger, $20 and costs:
Luke A. Allen. Charleston,
W.Va., speeding. $30 and
costs; Mark V. Anderson,
Mineral
Wells,
W.Va.,
speeding, $30 and costs:
Steven A. Anderson, Little
Hocking, seatbelt-passenger,
$20 and costs; Walter A.
Arnold, Pomeroy, driving
under susp/revocation, $100
and costs; Jeanne M.
Arthur,
Reynoldsburg,
speeding, S30 and costs;
Josh T. Bailey, Belpre,
passing bad checks, $25.65
in costs: Randi I. Bailey,
The Plains, seatbelt-passenger, $20 and costs: Rodney
E. Baker. Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and costs: Donny
M.
Barber.
Reedsville,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Teresa M. Barber, Portland,
driving
under
suspension/revocation ; $200
and costs, seatbelt, $30 and
costs: Douglas E. Barnette,
Racine, drug a~use, $50
and costs, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Debora Barnhart ,
Syracuse, speeding, $30

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

�...,

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

READER'S

VIEW

Inept
Dear Editor:
I, a · former member of the Middleport Board of Public
Affairs, attended the meeting of Village Council when they
voted to abolish the BPA. Not one member of council voiced
appreciation for the time and effort put forth by the BPA to
ensure that our drinking water is safe and the outtlow of
sewage into the river is in compliance with EPA requirement s.
I also attended the special meeting of council to hire a village
administrator. Brad Anderson was approved and hired. Two
other former members of the BPA were also in attendance.
With all due respect to Mr. Anderson, I found it perplexing
that the names of the other applicants were not submitted for
consideration. No questions were asked of Mr. Anderson no salary was discussed until after he was hired, and then only
. by one councilman. At least one council member didn't even
. know where Mr. Anderson lived. Simply amazing!
Mayor lannarelli stated that Mr. Anderson had been on the
· job si nce 7:30 a.m., observing and listing things that needed
attention. The meeting to hire him was not held until I p.m.!
Would you call that a done deal? Just asking.
If you were hiring a person for a job that entailed a multitude
of responsibilities, and at a cost of thousands of dollars, would
you not want to know something about him before hiring him?
. This is yet another example of the inept representation of some
· members of council: Act now and think about it later.
Now, to the main purpose of my letter. After the meeting.
the President of Council told Mr. Anderson that we three former members of the BPA wou ld cause him trouble. If working the protect the hea lth and well -being of you, the residents,
is causing trouble, so be it. It is quite evident Council has not
been concerned with the problems that existed.
I believe that elected oflicials should represent the people, not
promote their individual and self-serving ideas simply because
they don' t "approve" or other methods. Each person should
examine, investigate, get the fact s and public opinions regarding the matters at hand. Then they should make decisions based
on common sense and not be a rubber stamp for others.
The one positive though I have is that Mr. Anderson will be
under the direction of the mayor - not council.

Jean Craig
Middleport

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

Tuesday, March 23,

Page _A4
Tuesday, March 23, 2004

forces are acceptable -· a scary
figure .. but 57 pen:ent say·they
are ltnacceptable. &lt;~ong with 85
percent of Shiites and 96 percent of Kurds.
Not to dismiss ongoing vioMorton
lence -- dnunati7ecl by the recent
Kondracke bombing of the Mt. Lebanon
Hotel in Baghdad -· the poll
re.su lts suggest that U.S. policy
could well be .succeeding.
Even the hotel bombing itself
legitimacy to post-war operacould
be a sign that the Iraqi
tions in Iraq.
The admini stration wants 1~s i stance i.s losing its punch.
the Uni ted Nations to assist the ll1i.s was the softest of soti tarnew Iraqi government follow- gets. a completely unguarded
ing its installation July I &lt;md building not anything like the
pave the way lor national elec- strategic significance of earlier
tions. And, it evidently will tm·gets such as the Jordanian
seek a new U.N. Security Embassy, U.N. headquarters or
Council resolution blessing Shiite mosques in Baghdad and
Karbala.
JX!St-July I anangements.
The only strategic aspect of
Moreover, in whal could be
a significant move in a direc- the bombing seems to have
tion that Kerry has made a cen- been that it was in Baghdad,
terpiece of his foreign policy, conveniently available for covBush has decided to attend the erage by network television
European Union summit again anchors in the country for the
this year. offering an oppot1u- tirst "'' nivcr.smy of the Iraq
nity to patch up strained rela- war. T he c&lt;mmge was extensive ly covered but had no
tions with estranged allies.
Another piece of good news noticeable psychological effect
wa' contained in &lt;mABC poll of in the United States.
Iraqis showing that, even though
The United States did suffer
mucl1 of the popu)ation detest&gt; a major setback ·- and AI
U.S. occupation. big majorities Qaeda. a notable victory -·
believe that life is better now when Spain elected Socialist
than it wa&gt;before the war.
Jose Zapatero, a militant Iraq
Moreover. a full 61 percent war opponent, as its new prime
ofSunni Arabs-- the most anti- minister following tl1e horrific
American group in the country terrmist bombing of commuter
·- believe that conditions will trains in Madrid.
be better in the future, along
Zapatero, doing Kerry no
with 72 percent of Shiites and tavors in tl1is country, declared
83 percent of Kurds.
that he hoped Bush would be
Thirty-six percent of Sunnis defeated in the November
believe that attacks on coalition election. This proved that

Kerry did have the foreign
leadership suppot1 he clatmed,
but wouldn't identify.
Still, Vice President Cheney
scored a direct hit with the
crack. "American voters are the
ones charged with detennining
the outcome of this election,
not unnatned foreign leaders."
In a hot exch&lt;mge of speeches
recently. Cheney also got the
better of Keny by pointing out
the inconsistency of Kerry's
pmmise to repair U.S. relations
with toreigners while calling
countries now assisting the
United States in Iraq "a coalition
of the coerced and the bribed."
"If such dismissive tenns are
the vernacular of the golden
age of diplomacy Senator
Kerry promises." Cheney
jibed. "we are left to wonder
which nations would care to
join any future coalition. He
speaks as if on! y those who
open ly oppose America's
objectives have a chance of
earning his respect."
For his pan. Kerry kept up
accusations that Bush "misled"
the country into war. "But having gone to war. we have ... a
huge responsibility now to ...
achieve a peaceful and stable
lraq," he said.
"All of Europe - I mean all of
Europe -- ha' a fundamental
security interest in not having a
failed Iraq at it' doorstep," he said,
calling on his new best friend,
Zapatero, to recott,ider pulling
Spanish troops out of Iraq.
No question, this is a bitter
presidential campaign, but the
country just may come out of it
with a consensus foreign policy.

Business Briefs
A. Lois Yeater

PORTAND - A Lois Yeater, 83, of Ponland, Oho, formerly of Parkersburg, vy. Va. died Monday, March 22, 2004 at
Eagle Po tnt Nurstng Center in Parkersburg, W. Va.
Arrangements are pending with White-Schwarzel Funeral
Horne in Coolvi'lle.

Local Briefs
Soup supper
planned
REEDSVILLE - a soup
supper will be held Saturday at
the Eden United Brethren
Church, Stale Route 124,
Reedsville. Serving will begin
at 5 p.m. Carry out is available.

·Chicken and rib
barbecue
planned
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy
Firemen 's
Association, Inc. will have ·a
chicken and ribs barbecue
dinners Sunday at the fire
station. Serving will begin at
II a.m. Dinners are $6.

Cleanup
to begin
LETART - Letan Township
will be soon begin cleaning
cemeteries for summer mowing
. Anyone wanting to save decorations or flowers are asked t
have them removed by April I
if possible. but no later than
April 5 since the caretaker will
remove them atier that date.

El11\ (91-00't Fo~Ps v.~ S"'tAI?·"l"Ei:t..EG~"''--f-\-ULME

Fund raiser
planned
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Historical Society will
have a spaghetti dinner at the
Meigs Muse um on April 2.
The dinner will also include a
salad. garlic bread and beverage for $5 . Dessert will be an
additional $1. Serving will be
from II a.m. tp 2 p.m. and
dinners will be either eat in or
take out. Orders are also being
taken for delivery but those
must be in by April I.

Plant
from

1"'HE BEST SOURC.E OF INFORMATION ON
L\HKS ScTWCEN lRAQ AM1;) AL ~EDA

Pe~ge

A1

real estate from Harold
Brown for the treatment plant
site before the CDBG app li cation is filed . Hay s said
council must also consider
additional water and sewer
rate increases to bring the
combined rates to a level representing two and a half percent of the village's medi an
.inco me, which the federal
government requ1res for
grant funding.

'

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Other business
transferred

Was Saddam Hussein afeminist?
In a February speech in
Washington, New York Sen.
Hillary Clinton. often regarded
as an eventual Oval Office candidate, voiced her concern
about "some of the pullbacks in
the rights" she said were given
to Iraqi women under Saddam
Hussem. Not even Sen. Ted
Kennedy, who has attacked
President Bush for engaging in
a "senseless war in Iraq," ha'
gone so far as to praise Hussein
as a supponer of women's
rights.
Hillary Clinton did try to
quality her softening of the dictator's horritic image by noting
that these women's rights were
"on paper." However. she went
on to give substance to the
rights on paper: "They went to
school; they participated in the
professions; they participated in
government and in business; a'
long as they stayed out of his
way, they had considerable
freedom of movement"
John Bums -- who reported
tor The New York limes from
Iraq before, during the war, and·
now ·- wmte of a parrunilitary
group once led by H~ssein's
oldest (since forcibly deceased)
son, Uday: "Masked and clad in
black, (the men) make the
women kneel in busy city
squares, along crowded sidewalks, or in ileighborhood
pltlt,, then behead them with
swords." ll1e women's crime,
said their families, was having
criticized Uday's benevolent
father.

Nat
Hentoff

When the dictator's prisons

were briefly opened before tre
war, Bums reponed on the "raping of women in front of treir hll'bands, from whom tre torturers
wanted to exua.1 intOnnation."
This year, in the March 9
New York Sun. Tamara Chalabi
•• currently working on civil
society projects in Iraq -- noted
that some of the Arab press had
gleefully mentioned Mrs.
Clinton's roseate version of
women's right&gt; under Hussein.
And the BBC quoted a headline
of the Baghdad edition of AI·
Sharq al-Awsat, a Saudi-owned
newspaper: "Hillary Clinton:
'Iraqi women were better off
under Saddarn's reign."'
Responding to Sen. Clinton's
exculpatory view of Hussein,
Chalabi -- a writer on Middle
East issues -- described "the
many raped women whose
children are from three different
soldiers; how is it for tliem to
live every day raising these
children that are an eternal
reminder of their violent rape?
What is being done for these
women today?"

Sen. Clinton, in being introduced for her speech at the public policy group Brookings
Institute, wa' described as "one
of the most powerful analyst,,
advocates and speakers on a
broad mnge of issues that face
our country."
But she does occasionally
need a fact-checker in her
office.
As tor Saddam's record on
women's tights, Chalabi points
out that "Saddam did not
believe in women's rights.
Women had no freedom,
whether they stayed in or out of
his way.
"He decreed that women
could not travel alone without a
male relative. ... Women were
barred from majoring in specific subjects such as engineering
because they were not 'womanly' enough. Women were sexually degraded."
From now until Election
Day, the Demqcmt' will continue to attack Bush for -- as Sen.
Kennedy put it -- "pure, unadultemted fear-mongering" 'that led
us into the war that removed
Hussein. Democrats will crow
that the weapons of mass
destruction have not been
tound; and that we should have
involved the United Nations
more deeply and patiently so
that peacemaker Kofi Annan
could have avoided the war.
The Bush administration is at
fault, to say the l e&lt;L~t, for not
having -- from the beginning •·
focuS!)d on Hussein's wanton

mass destruction of so many
thousands of Iraqi human lives,
as persistently documented by
Amnesty International and
other human-rights organizations. Bush fitiled to emphasize
that America went into Bosnia,
under a previous administration, to stop the filling of the
mass gmves there and other
human rights atrocities. And
Hussein had been torturing and
murdering his people for
decades longer.
But would France and
Gennany -- who opposed our
toppling Hussein-- have agreed
to do anything about the torture
chambers, the mpes and the disappearances? Chalabi reminds
us "of the many Imqi mothers
that stiII weep beside randomly
dug-up skeletons of their sons'
remains."
Would Kofi Annan have prevented more skeletons? As the
much-berated Tony Blair said in
the House of Commons: without the war, the "darkness"
would have closed back over the
Iraqi people again, and Saddam
would have been "free to take
his revenge upon those he
(would) know wish him gone."
How would Hillary Clinton
have prevented the return of the
darkness? Does she know that
under the interim constitution,
one of the fundamental rights is
that "torture, in all its fonns,
physical or mental, shall be prohibited under all circumstances"?
That includes women.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Deaths

There really is agreement on foreign policy
Amid all the foreign policy
rocket tire being exchanged by
U.S. politici&lt;ms -· and terrible
news from Spain and Baghdad
-- good things actually are happening on the lmq . front that
ought not be overlooked.
One development is a convergence -- believe it or not ·between Sen. John Kerry. D·
Mass .. and the Bush administr.Jtion on how to win the peace
in Iraq.
In what seems an obvious
move to the center now that the
general election campaign is
under way. Kerry is making it
clear that he wants tl1e United
States (and also Spain, under
its new Socialist government)
to stay the course in Iraq.
While bashing President
Bush for conducting a "stubborn" and "arrogant" foreign
policy that "drives ... allies
away," Kerry also declared
"we must never give anyone
else a veto over the national
security of our nation" and
characterized terrorism as "a
mortal challenge" he wouldn't
hesitate to light with force.
Besides being a tactical campaign move to tight GOP
charges that he is "weak on
detense." it may be dawning
on Kerry that he actually could
be president next January and
will have to tinish out what
Bush has begun in lmq and
also fight the terrorist menace.
The ·Bush administration,
meanwhile, is adopting an idea
long pushed by Democrats and
moving
toward
greater
involvement by the United
Nations to give international

2004

Council

Classes
from PageA1
for lire, emergency and law
,enforceme nt personnel to
teach techniques of locating
secondary devices ~ "that's
where an explosion has
already occurred but there
may be a secondary device
someplace to cause more
problems," said Byer.
Anyone interested in the
taking the class is to contact
the Meigs County EMA

Warehouse in
Manhattan
Project sampled
for radiation
DAYTON (AP) A
warehouse used as a lab in
the 1940s as part of the
Manhattan Project to create
the first atomic bomb was
examined Monday for any
lingering radiation .
Investigators with the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers
began taking samples from
the boarded-up warehouse
on the city's east side.
· Stephen Bosquet, a health
physicist with the corps '
Buffalo, N.Y., office' said
radioactive Poloniurry 210
was used in the lab. He said
Polonium has a half-life of
138 days and should have
decayed
into . harmless
amounts in less than three
years.
"Based
on
historical
records, the building d~es
not pose a threat to human
I:tealth or the environmedt,"
Bosquet said.
However, he said the
'
corps is checking such sites
as part of the Formerly
Utilized Sites Remedial
Action Program.
The corps was placed in
charge of the program in
1997 . .Bosquet said sampling at the warehouse was
delayed because ownership
of the si te changed frequently.
The sampling is expected
to take up to two weeks and
a report issued in the fall.

Clark joins
designer group
MIDDLEPORT - Linda
Clark of Middlepon is now
one of the designers for
Home &amp; Garden Party, Ltd.
a party plan business that
was founded in · 1996 in
Marshall , Texas by Steve
and Penny Carlile.
Based on Christian principles, Home &amp; Garden Party
sells products made in the
United States and include
hand turned stoneware, candles, bakeware, framed
prints and decorative accessories to enhance the beauty of every home.
The designers are independent contractors who set
their own hours and earn
30%-40% in personal commissions plus override commissions. sponsor bonuses
and possible infinity bonuses.
Designers
also enjoy the opportunity
to win prizes, awards and
trips. The company offers a
generous ~o s te ss plan for
those wishing to host a
party. With no inventory,
no quotas, no deli very and
no · territories , Home &amp;
Garden . Party is still a
ground floor opportunity,
according to a press release
from the company.
Clark 's telephone number
is 992-0 I 0 I.

Whitlock retires
CHESHIRE Patricia
A. Whitlock, an equipment
operator at the Ohio Valley
Electric
Corporation's
Kyger Creek Plant. retired
March I with 24 years of
service with the company,
Ralph E. Amburgey, Plant
Martager, announced.
Whitlock joined OVEC in
1980 as a laborer in the
labor department. In 1980,
she transferred to the operations department as a utility operator and advanced
to an auxiliary equipment
operator the following year.
In 1990, she was promoted
to an equipment operator.
Whitlock is a member of
the First Church of the
Nazarene of Point Pleasant.
She
resides 111
Point
Pleasant.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Safety provisions likely to pass
WASHINGTON (AP) Kevin Jordan is a retired
State Highway Patrol trooper
from Ohw who believes that
learning how to drive means
learning what to do when the
brakes lock up.
"Many kids don 't ·get anything more than the basic
stu ff. and the way ou r traffic
congesti on is right now. they
need to know how to respond
to many other situations."
said Jordan. who runs Learn
Right Driving School in
Powell , a Columbus suburb.
National experts agree,
saying there is a hodge podge
of dnvmg courses, taught tn
schools or by private companies. Curriculum and teaching requirements vary by
state and even by county.
"We need to be focused on
vehicle handling , crash
avoidance, driver behavior
and risk interaction," said
Mantill
Williams,
a
spokesman for the American
Automobile Association.
The highway fundi ng bill
pending tn the House would
create an office within the
Transportation Department to
help states update driver educatiOn programs by providing
guidelines, education and $5
million in annual grants.
The bill also would require
automakers to post the results
of government crash tests on
new vehicles. mandate that
the gove rnment use childsize dummies in standard ·
crash tests and ban the sale of
electronic devices that allow
drivers to chan ge traffic
lights from red to green at the
touch of a button .
A total cost estimate wasn't
available.
House Transporlation and
Infrastructure
Committee
spokesman Steve Hansen
says the safety measures have
a good chance of passage.
"Satety programs in general tend to rec~iv e support on
b1lls ltke th1s, he sa1d.
The proposals ·'are grounded in common se nse and
practicality," said Sen. Mike
DeWine, R-Ohio, who sponsored them. _"Highwa~. safety
ts not a partisan 1ssue.
For DeWine. the issue IS
personal. Hi s 22-year-old
daughter. Becky, died in a car
crash 1n 1993.
Teens make up 6.6 percent of
all drivers but are involved in 14
percent of all tatal accidents and
16 percent of all crashes.
according to the National

$1,185.03 from the electricity, repairs and maintenance,
and other professional services funds for the payment
of natural gas costs at the
Middleport High School,
Elementary School and
Central
Buildings.
Councilman Robert Pooler
voted against the transfers.
The figure represents a
cumulative past-due bill,
according to Fiscal Officer
Linda Hanson, and an additional transfer will be needed
to pay the balance of the winter 's heating costs.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
said the gas service to the
high school and central buildings has been disconnected
for the season.

Council
hired
Oris resea rch she has completed
McCloud of Middleport as on regulations ror motorized
the new vi llage mechanic , at bicycles and scooters . She
a rate of $8.50 per hour.
McCloud recently moved to sa id she has been in contact
Middleport from Newark and with cities in several slates,
has 35 years of experience in but has found no uniform
large machinery work. He method of regulating the
was hired on Anderson's rec- vehicles for public safety.
ommendation.
Council also approved the
Mayor Sa'ndy lannarelli
2004 tax budget, with a total
said repairs have been completed at the restrooms in in all funds of $1 ,699.049.38,
General Hartinger Park, but and approved payment of
sa id the restrooms will bill s in the amount of
remain closed to the public $24.0003.94, with Pooler
until baseball season. The
Middleport Youth League voting in opposition.
Also present were Council
will be responsible for maintaining the facilities during members Roger Manley,
the summer month s.
Stephen Hou chins. Kathy
Laurie Reed reponed on Scott and Bob Robinson.

before April I.
On Saturday, April 17 there
will be a DEA Meth Lab program. It is also a four-hour
class to begin at 8 a.m. at the
Racine Fire Station. Since the
class size is limited, anyone
interested is asked to respond
to Scott Hill or the Meigs
EMA.
Byer said two classes on
hazardou s materials awareness along with weapons of
mass destruction awareness
will be held in May. One will
be on Friday, May 7, while a
second class will be held on
May 8. Time and location of

those classes will be
announced later.
"What we're trying to do
right now is to see what's
available in the way of equipment and learn how to use it ,
and then line up equipment
purchases for when the
Homeland Security grant
money is available." sa id
Byer.
He said that Thursday night
the firemen , emergency rescue workers and law enforcement will be looking at a
search and rescue camera
which can locate "hot spots
- like if a building collaps-

Highway Tmnsportation Safety
Administration. A total of 6.724
teens 15 m1d older died. in cmshes involving a teen driver in
2002. up from 6.457 in 200 I.
Jordan and traffic satety
ex pens say national driver education standards should be
adopted so teenagers cvcry.where receive uniform tmining.
"They need to know whal
to do .in emergency situations," Jordan said . When
brakes fa il , for instance, a
dri ve r should mane uve r
toward the shoulder, usi ng
directional signals and slow
the car by gradually letting
up on the gas and switching
into a lower gear.
While the bill wouldn 't
mandate national standards. it
would help states narrow the
gaE in training differences.
'Driving traininl? in this
country is abysmal. said Eric
Skrum of the Waunakee, Wis.based National Motorists
Association. "At thi s point .
you're getting kids into a classroom and you're giving them
some education but you' re not
really educating them on everything that needs to be done."
In the pa't five years. rnon;,
states, including Ohio. have
adopted graduated driver's licensing, which restrict driving privileges unti I teenagers get more
experienl-e behind the wheel.
Advocates say such progr,uns
help ease teens into dtivmg.
In Ohio. students mu st
have 24 hours of classroom
instruction and eight hours of
behind-the-wheel training.
They must have at least 50
hours of in-car practice with
at least I 0 hours at night wi th
a parent or legal guardian.
The Americ&lt;m Association of
Motor Vehicle Adminisrrators
has not endorsed the idea but
isn't opposed to it. spokesmcm
h-;on Kmg said.
The requ irement to post
crash test re sult s wou ld
increase con sumer access to
the scores for frontal , side
and ro llover impacts, which
are reported as zero to five
stars. The information now is
available on the Internet.
"When you go to tl1e showroom. you actually get to see
what the cmsh test worthiness is
of a car," said S&lt;~ly Greenberg.
senior product safety counsel
for the Conslllners Union.
"You see. for example. that
this truck got three stars and
this other truck got five stars .
So you think, 'Maybe I want
that truck ."'

Automakers support the
concept but say the y are
afraid making all the information ava il able for all seven
kind.s of tesh could lead to
informat ion overload.
'111e issue is where does it go'!
If you put it al l on tre label. there
isn't much room:· said Eron
Shosted. spokesman lilr the
Allia1Ke
ur
Automobile
Manufacturers. which includes
such automakers as BMW.
DaimletChrysler, Foru Motor
Company a11LI General Motors.
The National Highway
Transponation
Safety
Adminisu-dtion now u.ses childsize dummies to test safety seat'
and air bags. but neither test
involves cmshing a car. The bill
would require child dummies
also to be used in standard l1'lJsh
test where vehicles are dri ven
into a w;~l.
The dummies. which represent childre n ages I. 3 and 6
years old and adolescents. cost
about $30.000 each. The regular tests cost about $60.000
each to buy a new car and collect data. accordi ng to agency
spokesman Tim Herd .
Laura MacCiecrv. an auto
safety lawyer for" the consumer advocacy group Public
Citizen. said the tests are
wonh it. Gove rnment qati stics show that the No. I kill er
of children under 1-+ is an:idcnts. led by traffic crashes.
"Do children re.spond differently than adults to frontal co lli sions. side collisions. real
collision s'~" MacCiccry asked.
"How is the restraint pertilr·
mance'' How does the lit of
the child restraint matter'' For
older chi lclren. how does the
tit of the seat belt matter''
"All of tlmse kinds of lhing.s
are questions that we can 't
answer right now:· she said.
Lawmakers in several states.
inducting Florida. Maryland.
New York. Pennsylvania and
Washington. have introdw.:ed
legislation banning unauthorized
use of the U1tltic light ch&lt;mgers.
according to the National
Conte1~ nce or State Le&gt;rislatures.
The devices, called- MIRTS .
have been used for years bv
poli ce offi ce rs. fi refighter~'
and paramedics and have
become avai lable to the public recentl y through Int ernet
sites . The highway bill proposes fining users or se llers
$1 0.000 and sending them to
jail for six months to a year.

Truck

cou nci l
or
Sal isbmy
Township was responsible
tor Union Terrace because he
wants the narrow ro•td. which
he described as dangerous
espec iall y during the winter.
11aved. Musser said the vil lage is responsible for Union
Terrace :1nd that council will
look into the possibi li ty of
paving it 111 the future.

from Page A1
No tires, no car batteries. no
paint. no appliances. and no
shingles. Musser advised
people to pack their garbage
into trash bags instead ofjust
leaving it on the curb .
Robert W. Smith asked if

'

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe today¥ (740) 992-2155

.L..-------------------..1

es. they can set a probe down
in that hole and see if anvone
•
is in there."
"The lire depm1menl has
an infrared camera which can
locate something, but it takes
a search and rescue camera to
actua lly see what 's there." he
added.
So that the public can be
more aware on what is being
done in Meigs County to prepare for disasters or terrorism , Byer said he is preparing
a power point prese ntation
which he will be showing to
organizations across the
county.

(50 Free Spaces)
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r--------------------------------------------------------------~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
'I
'I

iJ
;I

I
I

• Alzheimer's Support Group
Third Tuesday ofeach month
7p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;Rehabilitation Center
Information: (304)675-5236

t

Arthritis Support Group
Second Thursday ofeach month
3p.m.
Pleasant Vallev Wei/ness Center
!nfonnation. (304) 675-8639

• Aphasia Association &amp; Stroke Support Group
Fourth Tuesday ofeach month
/p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;Rehabilitation Celller
lnfonnation.·(304) 675-5250

t

Balance Clinic
• Wings • Grief Support Group
Third Monday ~feach month
Firs/ Mondayofeach month
Noon
6JOp.m.
Outpatient Rehabilitation Department
Pleasant Valier Hospital Main Building
For moreinformation. (3n4) 675-7400
Information. (304) 675-8639

t

Cameo Ladies - Breast Cancer Support Group
Fourth Monday ofeach mollfh
7p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Main Building
Information· (304) 675-7997

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�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 23,

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Qoston College defeats OSU, Page B2
All-Ohio Divisions 1·11 announced, Page B2
Scores and Standings, Page B8

2004

Tuesday, March 23, 2004

NewsChannel

·Rio Grand~
sports
Friday'• game•
BaMball
CedarVille at Rio (DH), noon
.
Softball

LIES

District 13 All-Star Basketball Games

Bigger schools sweep all-star games
BY BRAD SHERMAN

'Geneva at Rio, 3 p.m.
·
Seturdll(• g~~rnn
.

I

Cedarvlll~

BaMblll

at Rio (DH), noon
Softball

Malone at Rio, 1 p.m.
An anti-war demonstrator, left, stands near several pro-war demonstrators in Cincinnati, during
a war protest rally attended by several hundred people. (AP Photo/A! Behrman)

Ohio protesters rally against Iraq war

Tuesday, March 23
Momi11g ( 7:00am-Naml)
29 - 44 S-SW 5- I0 mph
Temperatures will rise to
44 with tuday's low of 29
occurring arounu (,:OOam.
Skies will be sunny to mostly
sunny with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from the south turning
from the _,outhwest as the
morning progresses.
Ajtemao11
(I :00pm6:00pm) 46- 49 SW 5-10 mph
Temperatures will hold
steady around 47 with today's
hi gh of 49 occurring around
3:00pm. Skies will range
from mostly su nny to panly
cloudy with 5 to I0 MPH

winJs from the southwest.
Eve11i11g
(7:00pmMidnight) 40 - 43 S 5- I0 mph
Temperatures will linger at
42. Skies will be mostly clear
to cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from the south.
Ovemigllt
(I :00am6:00am) 40 - 45 S 5-I 0 mph
It will be a cloudy overnight.
You will see light min. The rainfall is expected to begin near
5:00am. The rain should reach
0.03 inches by this overnight.
Temperatures will rise from 43
early overnight to 45 by 4:00am
then drop down to 40 late
overnight Winds will be 5 to I0
MPH from the south.

Local Stocks

A DAY ON WALL STREET

ACI
29.93
AEP- 33.25
Akzo- 35.00
Ashland Inc. - 48.78
BBT - 34.79
BLI - 13.59
Bob Evans - 32.00
BorgWarner- 82.00
City Holding - 33.95
Champion - 4.87
Charming Shops - 7.04
Col-30.13
DuPont- 40.80
DG -18.88
Federal Mogul - ,34
Gannett- 87.08
General Electric - 29.41
GKNLY-4.55
Harley Davidson- 51.35
Kmart- 37.46
Kroger- 16.99
Ltd -19.29
NSC-20.54
Oak Hill Financial - 32.09
Bank One- 53.02
OVB -29.51
Peoples- 27.75
Pepsico- 50.79
Premier- 9.10
Rocky Boots- 20.90
RD Stiell - 46.51
Rockwell- 31 .33
Sears- 42.60
SBC- 24.10
AT&amp;T -1 9.30
USB- 27.25
Wendy's - 40.95
Wai-Mart - 58.10

Wednesdny, Murch 24
Moming (7:00am-Noon)
42 - 48 S 5- 10 mph
It's go ing to be a cloudy"
moming. Light rain is forecasted. The rain should Sot.op
by 8:00am with total accumulations for this event near 0.07
inches. Temperatures will
climb from 42 to 48 by late
this morning. Winds will be 5
to I0 MPH from the south .
Aftemooll (I :00pm-6:00pm)
50-56S 10-15mph
It will continue to be cloudy.
Temperatures will increase from
50 to 56 by late tl1is aftemoon.
Winds will be 10 to 15 MPH
from the south.

March 22 , 2004

10}50

Dow Jones
Industrials

10,250

·.· *

'~
( l,.(r'

,,:'.

.•

---

.•

Pel change.
from previOue:

9,750

'&gt;#'

'-'

10,064.75

·1.20

DEC

JAN

High

Low

9,2~

FEB

10,166.t5 t0,012.16

MAR
Record high: t1 ,722.96
Jan. 14. 2000

March 22, 2004

2,200

Nasdaq
composite

2,000

1,600

. ~~p~

'

.~ &gt;t&gt;t . ~~-;-~~,~·....-

_,
1,909.90

Pet. ehii1Qt
lfom prevtoua: · 1. 58

DEC

JAN

High

Low

FEB

MAR

Mard110, 2000
1.200

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500
···f4.1('
";!'.*
'(!

'

~-··

Pel Chllllge
from previOul:

1.150

·1.30

( AP) Protesters pounded against the war in Iraq .
nearby with a sign encouron drums and chanted antiClaire Mugavin put on a aging drivers to honk their
war slogans Saturday as biohazard suit and pretend- horns
in
support
of
hundreds of people gathered . ed to look for weapons of President Bush. He was
across Ohio in recognition mass destruction under joined by a handful of .famof the first anniversary of benches and in trash cans.
ily members and friends.
the U.S.-Ied war on Iraq.
'The goal is to get peo"We're out here to supIn Cincinnati more than ple thinking about the rea- port the troops, President
250 people gathered for son we were told to go to Bush and the liberation of
almost two hours at down- war." said Mugavin , 24, the Iraqi people ," Ruck
town's Fountain Square who works in Xavier said.
where a folk group sang University's campus minAbout 100 people gathpeace songs. Protesters, istry office. "II shows the ered in Yellow Springs in
some dressed in tie-dye T- way the United States pop- southwest Ohio and a few
shirts, carried signs such ulation was manipulated by hundred more rallied outas "Bush Lies . Thousands a lie."
side the Siatehouse in
Die," and spoke out
Ryan Ruck, 21, stood downtown Columbus.

DOE rejects plan to-build bigger
uranium conversi·on plant in Ohio
WASHINGTON (AP) U.S.
Energy
The
Department has rejected a
plan that would save about
$55 million from the cost
of converting
uranium
waste at an Ohio plant,
according to a review of
the · project
released
Monday.
The report by department ·
inspector general Gregory'
Friedman said that building
a larger facility at the
Portsmouth
Gaseous
Ditlusion Plant in Piketon
four production lines
instead of three - would
cut the time needed to
treat an estimated 254,000
metric tons of waste from
19 years to 14 years.
The cost of an additional
line, $5.6 million, would
be more than paid for in
sav ings of $60.2 million
that come from operating
the plant for five fewer
years, the report said.
· But the DOE response to

the report said the agency
expects to achieve the cost
savings without the additiona I Iine by "making
process changes to increase
the efficiency of the existing equipment." A department representative didn't
immediately return a phone
call
seeking
additional
comment
For workers, a bigger
facility could mean more
jobs at the plant, but the
jobs would last for a shorter period of time. It wasn't
immediately clear how
many jobs were at stake.
"From the union's perspective, it's a mixed
blessing," said Phil Potter,
a spokesman for the Paper,
Allied-Industrial , Chemical
&amp; Energy union , which
represents workers at the
plant.
About 60,000 cylinders
of depleted uranium are
stored
at
Energy
Department facilities in

Piketon. Paducah. Ky., and
Oak Ridge , Tenn. The new
plants, which will be built
in Piketon and Paducah,
will convert the waste into
a more stable form for
long-term storage, use or
disposal.
The hazardous waste is a
byproduct of the uranium
enrichment process used by
the government in manufacturing nuclear weapons.
Currently, only the Paducah
plant enriches uranium. and
it does so for commercial
purposes . The Ohio facility
would convert waste from
the Oak Rid ge plant.
Uranium
Disposition
Services, a consonium of
energy companies based in
Oak Ridge , will build the
two plants, expected to
bring about ISO long-term
jobs and as many as 300
construction jobs to each
site. Construction was to
begin by July 31.

1,100
1,050

,o.;.t·~

1,095.40

t,&amp;OO

Record high: 5,048.62

1.92928 t ,897.63

Mardh 22. 2004

"~~~

DEC

. JAN

High

Low

FEB

MAR

,.

, ,o:xl

Record high: , ,527.46

1,109.78 t,089 49

March 24. 2000

AP
Worthington - 18.40
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.

sJJCcial adve11ising feature .

Major Rental Car Company
Has Gone Bankrupt
Vehicles 50°/o - 70o/o Off Original M.S.RP.+
$Millions in Inventory Now Available at Norris Northup Chrysler
Dodge Jeep for Immediate Disposal; Direct To The Public!
GALLIPOLIS, OH - Due to recent economic woes and
the nationwide decline in travel, a major rental car company has
recently gone out of business. Hundreds of late model cars,
trucks, vans and SUVs must be _liquidated. The largest supply of
these vehicles are in the $8,000 to $15,000 price range.

Fleet Liquidators of America has arranged for over 173 rental
liquidation and other used vehicles to be available at NORRIS
NORTHUP CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP for this one-time-only
major disposal event. All Vehicles will be clearly marked.
Offers may be below the posted settlement amount.

$59 Down* Then Start Making Payments • Payments As Low As $79/mo**
WHEN: 5 DAYS ONLY- THIS ·EVENT WILL NO]; BE l:IEI,D OVER

(Former Kroger Location)

Applications
Being Accepted
I

WEDNESDAY
MARCH24
8AM-8PM

For Most Positions
Part Time or Full Time
Pick-Up and Return Applications

THURSDAY
'MARCH25
8AM-8PM

FRIDAY
MARCH26
8AM-8PM

SUNDAY
'MARCH28
NOON-5PM

SATURDAY
MARCH27
9AM-7PM

NORRISNORTHUPCHRYSLERDODGE'
·J EEP
. .

At

.

.

252 Upper River Rd. _• Gallipolis • (740) 44~·"842

'.

.'

'

• All offers on approved credit. $59 down plus tax, title &amp;fees. "Example: 1999 Ford Taurus, Sale Price $3731 . $79/mo for 48 mos.
@ 10.5% APR. $59 down payment plus tax. Total amount financed $3,672 plus tax. Subject to credit apprbval, prior sale &amp;lenders
final approval. +A select few vehicles will be·discounted 50-70% off original MSRP. Copyright G&amp;A Marketing, Inc. 2003.

•

-- . ---

.a:
(

Bl

'

Bengals
introduce new
QB, team logo
CINCINNATI (AP)
The Cincinnati Bengals·· era
of change continues under
coach Marvin Lewis.
Off-season
workouts
began
Monday,
and
although they are voluntary,
Lewis
said he
e llpected to see
ut least
threefourths
· of the
players
who are under contract.
Lewis also introduced his
new starting quarterback for
the first time in person .
Carson Palmer was in
California when Lewis
made the initial announcement March I that Palmer,
the No . I draft pick a year
ago. would replace Jon
Kitna.
"We're just reversing the
roles this year," Lewis said.
"I still have confidence in
Jon Kitna ."
Lewis said he wanted to
formally introduce Palmer
"to let him and Jon both
move forward."
Kitna had a career year
last season, passing fur
3,591 yards and 26 touchdowns. He was the only
quarterback in the NFL to
take every snap for his team,
but he always knew that
Palmer would be the
Bengals · starter when Lewis
thought he was ready.
"Carson has been preparing all along , since we drafted him, to \ie a starting quarterback," Lewis said. "The
biggest thing is a shift in
snaps. We get to focus a little differently."
Kitna said no longer sees
himself as
the team
spokesman but will quietly
help with the transition.
Althou gh Kitna is more
adept at this point at reading
defense s and reacting to
them , Palmer has the
stronger arm and the
Bengals hope that will offer
more downfield options.
"Carson gives us the ability to do that, no question,"
Lewis said.
Another change inspired
by Lewis is the new uniform
that .will be unveiled next
month .
It will include an additional team logo , a tiger-striped
'B'.that also will be used on
t~am promotions and merchandise, Lewis said. The
~ngals will continue to use
llieir leaping tiger and tiger
head logos, and tiger-striped
helmets.
: : :'People associate the
Sftipes with our team, and
we wanted to incorporate
that in a new logo," said
Katie
Blackburn,
the
Bengals ' executive vice
president. "It adds to our
inventory of logos with a
clean , simple design that has ,
a strong Bengals identity."
_In two ga mes last season.
Bengals
players
wore
~edesigned uniforms that
included more black along
with the team 's signature
, orange color.
. Lewis said this year's
changes would be "a subtle
~fling well, a little more
than subtle."
: The
Bengal s
also
announced their preseason
opponents - Tampa Bay,
~w England, Atlanta and
IO~ianapolis . Dates have not
bJ)en de.termined.
: .. - . i '

---------,. ~------------

•

bsherman@ mydailytribune .com
RIO GRANDE - Eleven
3-pointers were not enough
for the Divi sion Ill and IV
girls. as Division s I and II
came from behind to claim a
59-53 victory in Monday's
girls Di strict 13 all-star basketball game.
The D 1-11 boy s were also
victorious, 86-69, giving the
bigger schools a sweep of
the all -star contests.
In the girls game. D III -IV
led by as many as eight midway throu gh the second .
half, but D 1-11 used an I 1-3
run over the final two minutes to take the decision.
Rock Hill' s Barner sisters.
Monica and Marie. com bined to score 19 points for
the winners. Jackson's
Lindsey Steppe and team
Most Valuable Player Jenna
Wittekind of Warren had
eight apiece. Meigs' Jaynee
Davis added a deuce to the
effort.
Chesapeake's Lisa Perry
led the D III-IV 3-poi nt barrage, connecting on four en
route to a ga me -hi g h 14
points . Perry earned team
MVP honors.
Southern's Katie Sayre
added three more treys to
finish with I 0 markers.
Eastern's Alyssa Holter
added five and Sou them's
Deana Pullins chipped in
with a bucket.
In the nightcap, the D 1-11
boys held just a seven-poi nt
lead at intermi ss ion. but
Meigs guard Jon Bobb (10) goes up for a reverse layup in front of Coal Grove's Brandon Rymer (5) during the first half of they pulled away over the
Monday's District 13 All-star game . Bobb's Divisions I and II squad won the game 86-69. (Brad Sherman)
second 20 minutes to win by
a comfortable 17-point margin.
Warren's Justin Eichinger,
who was voted hi s team's
MVP. led the winners with
14 points. The Marietta duo
of Tyler Lough and Joe
Schanken added I0 points
each. Meigs' Dakota DeWitt
scored eight. Ri ve r Valley's
Jared Swain went for sill and
Donnie Johnson of Ga!lia
Academy chipped in four.
Ironton St. Joe's big man
and D III-IV MVP Shawn
Hacker
scored a dozen
points. as did Trimble' s A.J .
Jenkins. South Gallia's
Jason Merrick and Josh
Waugh scored seven and
four respectively while
Eastern teammates Nathan
Lee Grubb and Alex
Simpson added five and
two.
coach
South
Gallia
Donnie Saunders coached
the Division s Ill and IV
team.
Lanky Alexander point
guard Jake Hale bettered six
others to win the slam dunk
contest. wowing the crowd
with a competition-winning
360 de gree two-handed
slam.
gu ard
Dawson -Bryant
Brandon Rymer maue eight
of I0 treys to take the 3puint shootin g contest on
the buy s side. Trimble
standout Jennifer Grandy
Southern 's Deana Pullins (13) dribbles away from the defenmade seve n of her I0 shots
sive pressure of Rock Hill's Monica Barner (0) . The division Eastern's Alex Simpson throws one down during the slam dunk to take the girls title.
contest Monday. (Brad Sherman)
1-11 girls won the game 59-53. (Brad Sherman)

Davis named Ohio Division's Most Valuable Player
BY STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
Meigs' Jaynee Davis was clearly one
of the Tri-Valley Conference's most
dominate post players all season lung,
and she was rewarded for being so.
Davi s wus named the Ohio
Division's Most Valuable Player by the
league 's coaches. The senior averaged
15.5 points and 11.5 rebounds per
gafne.
Ryan Werry of league champion
·Belpre was voted the Ohio's Coach of
the Year.
Davis' teammate Sammy Pierce also
made the tirst tealh. Joining the Meigs
Countians were Alexander's Keilee
Guthrie and· Erica Sams, Whitney
Blackburn of Belpre, NelsonvilleYork's Wliitney Matden, Kayla Jewett
of Vinton County and Wellston 's

.,

Kimmy Cremeans.
Holly Coates and
Brittany Ferguson of
Belpre and Vinton
County's
Holly
Pridemore
and
Hayley Sowers made
the second team along
with
NelsonvilleYork's
Jordan
and
Bateman
Davis
Wellston's
Hilary
Patrick.
Vinton County's Ryan Kent and
Wellston's Brant Derrow shared Ohio
Division Most Valuable Player honors
on the boys side. Viking coach Matt
Combs was named Coacn of the Year.
Kent was joined on the first team by
teammates Chris Bethel and Brian
Dixon. Also making the team were
Belpre's Nate Eaton and Doug Parsons,

Meigs' Jon Bubb, Jake Hale of
Alexander and Nelsonville- York's
Brandon Maiden.,
Meigs' Dakota DeWitt, Alexander's
Ed· Lemaster, Nelsonville- York's Chad
Berry, Vinton county's Josh Ousley and
David Herman of Wellston were all
named to the second squad.
Trimble, who won both the boys and
girls Hocking Division championships,
swept the top honors in the division.
A.J. Jenkins was the boys Player of
the Year. and his mentor Jim Holbert
was dubbed top coach. On the girls
side, Jennifer Grandy and Tim
Silkorski were Player and Coach of the
Year respectively.
Jenkins was joined on the first team
by teammates Matt Christman and
Bruce Fouts. Other first reamers
include the Eastern trio of Cody Dill,
Nathan Lee Grubb and Alex Simpson,

Federal Hocking's Greg Posten and
Southem 's Craig R&lt;uJdolph.
Eastern·s Robert Cross and
Southem 's Wes Burrows were named
to the second team along with Miller's
Curt Mauro. ·waterford's Matt
Townsend and Federal Hocking's Joel
Gandee and Cody Homsby.
On the gi rl's first team. Grandy's was
accompanied by teammates Allory
Hopper and Julie Trace. Eastern's
Morgan Weber and Alyssa Holter,
Southern's Katie Sayre. Amanda
Stover of Federal Hocki ng and
Waterford's Haley Dmyer also made
the squad.
Eastern's Jen
Hayman
and
Southern's Deana Pullins made the second team along with Faith Guilders and
Terri Wolfe from Federal Hocking,
Waterford's Desiree Van Dyne and
Miller's Kelsi Brown.

. ' -··

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March

www.mydailysentinel.com

23. 2004

Tuesday, March 23, 2004

DeWitt named All-Ohio NCAA Womens Tournament
Honorable Mention ·
Boston College knocks out Ohio State
AP AND STAFF REPORT
sports@myda•lytnbune com
COLUMBUS Me1gs btg
man Dakota DeWitt was a
force this season tor the
Mardude rs
The center averaged

15 7

potnts and 9.7 rebounds per
game tn this, hts sentor season,
and was named Div1ston II
All-Ohio honorable mentton
Monday.
Tol e do

St.

John' s

Bn.tn

Robens and Jamellc Comley
of Columbu s
Brookhaven
shared the Dtvtston I player o l
the year award wnh Cmcmn.tt l
Moeller\ Andrew Brackman
in the b1g-school diVISIOn .
based on the recommenda tions ot a state panel o t spon s
wrtters and broadcasters
Lun.1 S h awnee st.1r Jam.tr
Butler was the pl.tyer ot the
year m DIVISion II
Rubens 1s a 6-foot-2 semor
who averages

17

5

pomts , 4

rebounds , 3 5
asSish
shoots 90 percent trom

.tnd
the

Wackerly (5-11, jr. , 20.6),
Wadsworth' s Ben Falkenberg

BY RUSTY MIUER

(5-11. sr.• 20.4 ). Darren Jones

Associated Press

of Cleveland He1ghts (5-9. sr••
18 .4) ;
Chns
Moore
ot
Lakewood St. Edward (6-9,
sr, 21.5); and Olmsted Falls'
Steve Gansey (6-2. sr. 20.8)

COLUMBUS

-

Amber

Jacob s

scored 17 pomts and Boston College
held Oh1o State

scoreless lor e1ght

mtnutes of the second half Monday

The coaches of the year 111
Divis1on I are Hamilton's

mght 111 a 6 3-48 vtctory tn the second

Larry Allen. whose team was

round ol the NCAA tournament.

picked founh m its league but
made
a ll the way to the
state's final four. and Ken
Vana
ot
Cleveland

n

Collinwood, who gutded his
team to a 17-3 regular season
and a trtp to the regtonal
finals.
Butler was a lopstded ch01ce

&lt;IS the top player in Dtvtston II.
The 6-2 semor, who will play
next year for Oh10 State, averaged 31.6 pomts, 8 3 assists
and 5 8 rebounds a game
wh1le scoring more than 2,400
pomts m h1s career He was a
!trst-team AII-Ohto for the
thtrd year m a row.
He was JOmed on the first

The

third-seeded

Eagles

(27-6)

advanced to play etther Minnesota or
Kansas State 111 the M tdeast Regtonal
semtfinals Sunday 111 Norfolk, Va

l ead

beaten

added l 0 point s and I

But Boston College all but elim tn atplaymg

Davenport

asststs

and

four

Davenport's
rema1111ng -

Kathnn Ress added 16 pomts and
Je ssalyn

Deveny

had

15

for

the

Eagles, who reached the round of

I6

for the second year in a row.

from

the

field -

deficit to 40-3 9.

ed Buckeyes (21-10) with 16 points,

Ohto State m1ssed all nme shots from

Stanford gave up a leadoff hom e

Canton McKmley (22-3) takes
on Hamtlton (23-2 ) in the
nightcap,
decidmg

wtth
the

the

state

wtnners
titl e

on

Saturday
Brackman. a 6-9 1/2 semor,
led Moeller to the state tttle

a

year .tgo and came back to
average 19.7 pomts a game .
He has signed to play next
year at Nonh Carolma State
Joining Roberts and Comley
on the first team are Nonh
Canton

Hoover' s

Bret

15.8).
The Dtvtston II coaches of
the year are Jim Lower of
Canal Fulton Northwest and
Chad Frazier of Chesterland
West Geauga, a regional final -

tsl.
Lower 's Northwest squad
(23-1)
plays
Dayton
'Chaminade-Juhenne ( 18-7) in
the

opening

semifinal

on

free throws. BC w.1s 12 -o l - 17

Arend

s1

K h4lJ

ol

.tt

Bul'kc ycs·
mm e d

St

John

home

lloor

to

Y.1luc

WINTER

HAVEN,
spot

•n

Fla
th e

(AP)

-

The others are Jake Westbrook , Chad

C l eve land

rotatton,

allowmg

run to Ja&gt; ier Valentin in the second
mnin g, but later induced an inmng-

Durbin ,
D ' Amtco
"We

Jason

Bere

and

Jeff

The

Detroit 2-1

tn ,,

lnJt .llls

'13"

g.1mc stopped

keep

11 y•ng

about

to

our

answer

startmg

the

pttch-

''We 've seen s1gns

tnntng

when

.t

l.lll

t c quued

ge n cy medic.! I .tsSislanu~
Davts

st.trt e d

lor

out of some people, but we're gomg

allowed one run over s1x

to play tt out until the end."

Griffey

lndtans

outfielder Alex

Escobar

and

Lark111

drov e

tog

wtth the bases loaded .

h•s

s pnng

home s 111 th e Orlando ,uea

39)

Escobar and Coco Cnsp, batttng

27 - year- old

left - hander

has

allowed two runs over seve n tnntngs
lndi,ms

.421, are attempt mg to wtn a spot as
Cleveland ' s fourth outfielder.

tn his last two starts.
The

385 ( 15-for-

onginally

s igned

S.nurday

,md

Sund.1y

,11 thctr
• Van

Poppet s t.trt ed tor th e Reds tnstedd of
scheduled

st.1rte•

P.ntl

Wilson .

Manag e • D.tvc Mtley s.1 1d the move

Ctncmnatt's Jermame Clark htt a

was to get Y,1n Popp e !

mote

11111111 gs

Stanford as a non - drafted free agent

three - run

off GIOvanni

The Reds m&lt;~ y Ju gg l e Wtlson's sched-

111 1999 and promoted him to the btg

Carrara. It was the second homer ot

ule to , til ow h11n to s t a t t on opcnmg

leag ue s for 13 appearances la s t sea-

the spnng for Clark, batting .316 (6-

day ..

son

for- 19 ) with four extra-base htt s tn

consecuttve g.11nes l or t h e ftrst llllle

hts l,tst ntne ga me s

thts spnng

"I

thou g ht Jason had good stuff,"

lndtans

manage r

Enc

Wedge

home

run

K e n Gntfey Jr

OF Mtlton Bt.tdley played Ill
Bradley was 1- lot -:1 ,md

drove 111two 1uns Y.llh" t11pl e

w.ts 2-for-3

satd

. The

Reds cut lm11 pl.tye" ltom the11 10s
ter

against Dover (22-3). The tttle

concentrating

I'm

gtve up stx runs in the thtrd mntng.

Lopez

game is Saturday.

seeing from htm. "

Van Poppe! ha s been charged with
seven earned runs 111 hts last 4 l-3

assigmng RHPA.11on Myette. C Dane

Stanford ' ' one ot ftve contenders

mmngs

their llllnor- l e.tg ue c.tmp

on

the

progress

lor two spots tn the lnd1ans rotat•on .

Monday .
to

opttontng

Tnple-A

Sardtnh.t and OF

INF

Fel1pe

Loutsvtlle

a nd

Reggte Taylot

to

Boys Division I All-Ohio Ust

Free age11t Urbina meets with Indians
CLEVELAND

(AP)

The

Cleveland lndtans are meetmg with

Urbt na

free-agent closer U gueth

four

with a 2.81

2004

ERA

last

season

and

year.
A mess,tge to Urbm.t's agent. P e ter

days after losmg closer Bob W1ckman

converted

Greenbe•g.

for at least half the season.

32

returned Mond.1y

Urbina,

who

helped

the

of

Marlins win the World Senes last sea-

tunitie s

son,

Texa s

visited

the

Indians

tn

38

save oppor-

Flonda
Winter

for
and

Haven, Fla., on Monday for a physi-

Florida. He

cal

saved

"We are not at the stage where we
are dtscussing terms, nor are we anywhere

close to it,"

lndtans general

manager Mark Shaptro said .
The

30-year-old

Urbina

was

3-4

5

Urbtna e.~r n cd $4

four

games lor Flonda dunng the postsea Ptttsburgh and Mmnesota reported -

nol

mtllt o n las t

tmmedt.ttely

W1ckm.tn ha s d spr.11ned rt gh t elbow
All-Star break . tl .It all
The 35-ycar-old close: h.td "To mmy
John"

elbow

surgery

2002 and w.ts l1mited
tlllllOI - I eag u e

111

Decembet

to pttchtng tn

ga m es

tn

2001

ly made offers that d1d not approach

was expected to be g•ven the opportu-

what Urbma wa s hoping to be patd 111

nity to replace W1ckman

CLEVELAND (AP) The

Cleveland

Browns

wtll agatn lace Tennessee
and

Detroit

thts

presea-

so n, the te a m announced
Monday.
play

the

T1tans between Aug

The

Browns

12-

16, then host Detroit the
weekend ot Aug

19-23

They'll vtslt Kansas Ctty
between Aug 26-30, then
close

the

preseason

against Chicago the week end of Sept. 2-5.
The

leag ue

announce

wtll

spectflc

dates

and ltmes .11 a later date
The

Browns

Tenne ssee

lost

dunng

to

wtll

play

annual

111

wtth

se lected by
and

Detroit

the

Great

Classtc
team

and

third
Lakes

a

ch.mty

the

winmng

recetving

$30,000

the

losing

c harity

.

REACH OVER 18,000 HOMES
IN THE TAl-COUNTY AREA!
Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 2004
12:00 Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16,2004

last

year's preseason l 0-6.
Cleveland

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
'

team 's

co llecting

Call
Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
For More Information

Browns

mau g ural

won

Great

992-2155

Lakes

lost last year :18-17

I

I

~J•WAMFD

t

In Next Day'• Paper

Publication

Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m.
J'rlday For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sunday•

AD NOTICED

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~.
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

£•

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Buelne•• Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid'

POLICIES. Ohio V111-v Publllhlng r11erveethe riQht to edit, reject, or cancel any ld at any time Errora muet be reported on thelirll
Trlbune-Senllnei·R~Ialer will be reeponalble lor no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error 1nd only the llrat 1naertlon
any loa~ or .. JMinH thllt reault. from the publication or omlulon olan advertisement Correction Will be made In tne lire! available edition
art llweye contkllnUal. • Current rite card appllee • All rtel ntate advertlaemente are aubject lo tne Federal Fair Housmg Act of 1968
Knpte only help wented ads mHtlng EOE atandarda We will nol knowingly accept any advertlemg In violation of the law

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Losl3·15 on VansiCkle Court
a lern ale spayed brown Full t1 me desk clerk apply 1n
Holiday
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eyes small face buf1 around GallipOlis
eyes wh1te mouth very lov· Heavy equipment mechen·
111g answers to Dolly If you ICiwelder needed expen·
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ence
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1304)6 75 2383
requ~red call (740)247 22 11
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740·446 2842

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va11able upon request 740
4t t964
The Me1gs County Council
on Ag1ng IS acceptmg appll·
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A1des Applicants should
have hiQh school diploma or
G E D reliable tra nsporla ~
liOn telephone m the home
and wll~ng to work week·
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motivated and flex1ble W1ll
tra1n State tested nurs1ng
assiStants encouraged to
apply Applications are ava1i
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at
the
Me1gs
Multipurpose Semor Center
Mulberry Hetghts Pomeroy
Oh An EOE

· -~

~~"
1Cl2004 b

i

,O

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i

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NEA, Inc

0PPOKI1JNIT\'
Veter1nery ASSIStant need- ·--i.iiiiiiiliiliiil;..,.l
ed Expenence preferred,
but wtll lratn PTIFT some
HIO..,VALLEY Pu'i:'usH
weekends
required lNG CO recommends tha
Mmlmum
wage
Send
,.
au do busmess w1th peo
resume to F rene h .own le you know and NOT t
Veter1nary Cl InIC 360 SA
d
h
h h
160 Gallipolis or lq.x 740· en money 1 roug 1
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until
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446 4101
ated the oftenn
150
Scuool$
I

1L,--liiNSiilii'iiROiucniiiiliiONiii._.l

Al1t\Kl'\U:N'l'S

lwnghi@IC net

School

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

the

C l asstc 24-23 ttl 2002 and

I

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

KIT

116

riO

$20,000
The

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE

Display Ads

De1ulption • lnc:lude A Prlc:e • Avoid Abbrevl•tionl
• Include Phone Number And Addre•• When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

I

• ®alhpolts mailp m:rtbune
• llotnt llleasant ]Register
' '

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oearltire.s:-

• Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • lndude complete

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ny Is seek1ng mad tachs, Repair Gutters, Ch1mney
110
phlebotomists, EMT's and Plumbing Jack Of All Trades
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excellent locations all for
Placement Dept
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$10 995 800-234-6982
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8324 Opt1on 8
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Wanted Someone to clean
Tractor· Trailer
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t&amp;r of lntiflorest to CLA 555 ,
\vythe'l!lle, VA
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Call Toll Free
Gelllpollo OH 4563 t
, ·6()().334· t 203

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

'' '

na

AVON' All Araasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
C· l Beer Carry Out perm1t 675 t429
lor sale Chester Town ship,
Me1gs County send letters Clasa A CDL Orlvera
of 1nterest to The Da1ly Wanted
Sen t1 nel PO Bo11. 729·20
Pomeroy Oh10 45769
•Mm ot 2 years e.~:p
•Med1cal lns 401 K
Leaves to Haul away •Operal1on area 400 m1le
~304)882·2268
radius ot Jackson OH
•S1gn on Bonus
•34 cent per mtle
GIH.\WA\
•95"'k_ No touch

R1ght-handed se tup m.tn Davtd RISke

Springtime Sights 8 Sounds
Browns
announce
preseason.
schedule

~ &gt;\NNOUNCE~IENTS

and wtll not p1tch .tgatn untd .tit er the

tour

son.

w.ts

I \II \ I '

40

mtnutes to Wtntet Haven aftc1 spend-

was 4-for-4 wtth a double, tmprovtng
average to

\\\Ill "

Reds starter Todd Van Poppet and

COLUMBUS (AP) -The 2003 2004 ASSOCiated Press Dlv~lon II bOys AII.Qhkl high
school basketball team, based on the recommendallons ot a state medta panel
DIVISION II
ARST TEAM Jamar Butler Lima Shawnee, 6-loot-2, senior 31 6 JXllnts per game
Kev1n Weybnght Ctn Wyommg, 6·6. sr, 23 0 Devin Fulk, Newark Licking Valley, 6.0 sr,
16 5 Tyler Evans CirCleville Logan Elm 6·2 1r, 21 2 Chad Fender, Poland Seminary, 62 Jr 19 6 Korey Spates Warrensville His 5-11, jr, 28 0, Brett Bartlett, LaGrange
Keystone 6-0 sr . 18 3 Jeremy Ady Dover 6..0 jr , 15 8
Player of &lt;the year Jamar Butler, L1ma Shawnee
Coaches ol the year J1m Lower, Canal Fulton Northwest, Chad Frazier, Chesterland W
Geauga
SECOND TEAM. Derrick Brown, Dayton Cham1nade.Jullenne, s-6, jr, 15 4, Tim Pollitz
Ottawa Glandorf 6·4 1/2 sr , 20 4 Enc Pollltz Ottawa-Glandorf 6--4 1/2 sr, 17 8 Jacob
01ebler, Fostor1a S.4, jr , 24 5 Dan Jones Niles McKinley. 6·3. sr 22 8 Bryan Robtnson
London 6·6 sr , 20 3
lHIRD TEAM lamont Abbington, Whllehell Yearling 6--6 Jr 17 9 Bnan Kreefer E
Liverpool, 6·7, jr. 20 0, Drake Aronhalt Zanesville 6·1, sr 19 1 OaequanCook, Dayton
Dunbar 6·5, soph , 21 5 Deandro Byrd Cln TaN 6 1 jr, 16 0 Corey Jones Akron St
Vmcent-St Mary, 6·1, sr 150 Troy ~lcheson, Minerva 6·0 sr 161, Brendan Schuler
Fuvlew Park Fa1rv1ew. 5-10 sr, 20 2
Special Menllon
Shaun Gunnell Cots L1nden McK1nley Seth H1ll Cols Watterson, Andrew Mertz St
Clairsville Ryan ThOmpson, Byesville Meadowbrook. Jamie Yoder Millersburg W
Holmes. Matt Donley New Concord John Glenn Steve Repella Steubenville, Jake
Robinson Lisbon Beaver Local Todd Lisowski Dover, Ryan Short. Spnngf1eld Shawnee
Dante Jackson Greenheld McCia1n Enc Marting Washmgton Court House M1aml Trace
Ayan Kent McArthur V1nton County, Donnie Johnaon, Galllpolla Galli a Academy,
Andrew Lemmon Port Clinton Ben Carver Shelby Bradley Fletcher Youngs Liberty Pat
Olvoky Ravenna Southeast, Lawrence Wilson, Akron St Vlncent-St Mary T1m 1-hller
Orrville Eric Raine Canton Timken, Matt Lew1s Canal Fulton N(j"thwest Bnan Clark
ROCky River Tyler Trutza Bay V11tage Bay, Brad Sm1tek Avon D J Shaw LaGrange
Keystone Jake Ballosky LaGrange Keystone, Anthony Byrd, Orange Rob Skusk1
Chesterland w Geauga Derek Riedel Bay Village Bay Brian McCarthy Parma Hts Holy
Name
Honorable Mention
Aaylon Almon Cols Beechcroft, Joe Schmall Cots OeSales Donald Suet Cols
Eastmoor Acad Kyle Stevens Newark Llckmg Valley, Mark Troutman Canal Winchester
Tyler Felt, Cambndge Oavld Swanson Warsaw R1ver V1ew Eugene Bruce, Steubenville
Bruce Palmer, W1ntersv1lle Indian Creek, Chase Groves, Rayland Buckeye Local, Wade
Ewing, McConnelsv1He Morgan Kyle Smith Dresden Trt Valley Jacob Brown. Millersburg
W Holmes, Scott Scales, E Ltverpool, Pat Woods, Lisbon Beaver Local
Billy Finnell Cln Purcell Marian Kelly Tuss1ng, lnd1an Lake Bnan Hangbers. Trenton
Edgewood Mark Hawkms Flnneytown, Will Norwell C1n Turpin,
Aaron Forte Athens Chns Bethel McArthur Vmton County, Kyle Jones, Clrdevllle
Logan Elm Josh Barrera Thornville Sheridan, Justin E1ch1nger V1ncent Warren Local
Oakotl DeWIH, Pomeroy Melga, M a.~: Morrow, Jackson,
Jon Olebler, Fostoria, J1mmy Lenghurst Willard Larry Avery Ontario Chris Carpenter
Bryan, Jake Reckner Wauseon, SCott Vossler, St Marys Memonal
,
Chad Baker Canfield Rydell Brooks Akron Buchtel, Chuck W1ll1a ms Cortland LakeVIew
Austin Banks, Alliance, Jim Shurllla Poland Sem1nary Pat Welden LOUISVIlle, Dwayne
Jackson, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit Wade Rittenhouse M1nerva Chad McDaniel
Wooster Trlway Chuck Samsa Canal Fulton Northwest,
Mike Fitch, Avon Dan Nemet Jef1ersan. Alex Rabe, Jellerson Drew P1cc1ano.
Chesterland W Geauga Ben T1mmons, Chagrm Falls Evan Bush Mento r Lake Calh,
Tony Lewis Orange Matt Hum!, Parma Padua Franciscan, TonyVirovec Parma Hts Holy
Name, Tim Church Conneaut Morgan Lewis Painesville Harvey Men Fort Garfield Hts
Ti'lnlty Mike Reinhard. Chesterland W Geauga

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

446-3008

.ttH~

tnntn gs

both

Alii. AQ

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

RHP J.tson

Clevel,md

endmg gro undout from Barry Larkin
The

HOW IQ WRITE

e mer-

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Boys Division II All-Ohio List

or Fax To

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

with two out tn t h e top ol th e tunth

would have let him go longer. I'm

Jamelle Carnley Cols Brookhaven 6 6 Jf 24 5 Andrew Bra ckman, Cm Moeller, 6-9
1/2 sr 19 7 Bret Wackerly N Canton Hoover 5-11, jr 20 6, Ben Falkenberg
Wadsworth 5 11 sr 20 4 Darren Jones Cle Hts 5·9, sr , 18 4 Chns Moore,
Lakewood St Edward 6·9 sr 21 5, Steve Gansey, Olmsted Falls 6-2 sr 20 8
Players at the year Bnan Roberts Tot St John's Jamelle Carnley Cots Brookhaven,
Andrew Brackman, C1n Moeller
Coaches of the year Larry Allen Ham1tton Ken Vana, Cleve Collinwood
SECOND TEAM: ls1ah Carson, Spnngheld South, 6·1, sr , 17 3, B J Raymond, Tot
St John's, 6·6 tr 18 6 Stan Hall Canton McKinley, 6·2 sr. 15 9 Julian Sullinger
Cols Northland, 6·4, sr , 21 9 Juslln Orr, Cm La Salle, 6·6, sr, 173 Josh Duncan,
C1n Moeller, 6·8 sr 16 1 Matt Terw1tliger Troy 6-9, sr, 18 1
THIRD TEAM: Torry Cornett Cols Independence, 6·2 sr. 19 0. Travis Walton, Lima
Sr 6·1, ]r 20 4 T1m Homan Celina 6·4 sr 19 9, Terrell Eargle, Youngs Austintown
Fitch 6 3 sr 20 6, Josh Yanke Massillon Jackson 6-8 sr 17 1. Dan Btnggeh,
Olmsted Falls, 6·3, sr 18 3 Joe Roberts, Cleve Rhodes 6·4, sr, 23 4
Special Mention
Just1n Butler P1ckenngton Central N1ck Moore, Westerville South, James Warwick,
New Ph•ladelphla, Zach Otson New Philadelphia, Tyler Lough Marlena, Ryan
Wlll1ams. Sandusky, Jonathon Avery Mansf1eld Sr, Mario Mannlngham, Warren
Harding, Bnan Schm•dt, Brunswick Kyle Ne•d!Q Wooster, Tim Reynolds N Canton
Hoover, Billy Relford. Mass1llon Washington Raynard Sawyer, E Cle Shaw, Kyle
Koncz Strongsv1lle Desmond Monttey Euclid, Doug Barber, Willoughby South
Marqual Miller Lora1n Southview Tony Martucci, Mentor
Honorable Mention
Cordaryl Ballard, Cols Mlfll1n Aaron Laflin, Pickerington NI.Jrth, Nate Linhart
Gahanna Lincoln , Denzel Lyles, Cots Brookhaven, Matt North, Hilliard Dav1dson
Johnny Wolf, Cm St Xavier Jerome Tillman , Beavercreek Seth Gorney Vandalia
Sutler Adam Myers-Wh1te, Ham1lton MarK Darns, Cln. Princeton,
Cl1nt Austin Chillicothe B J Hughes Logan, Ben Howlen, Manetta Lance Frank
Ashland Jerome Pterce, Tal L1bbey Joe McV1cker, Whlteh9use Anthony Wayne,
Steve Kyser Sylvama Southv1ew M1ke Dhondt, Perrysburg, tlobert K1sabeth T1ff1n
Columb•an.
M1ke Evans Brunsw1ck Bnan Flaherty Stow tan Ptouts, Greensburg Green Anthony
Gage Canton GlenOak Raymer Morgan Canton McKinley N1ck Maag Barberton,
Bnan Scheller, N Canton Hoover Ramlfls Crosby, Twinsburg Chamberlin Mark
All&lt;ens Youngs Austintown F1tch Sean Weatherspoon, Canton McKinley
Oenms Sant1ago Mtddleburg Hts Midpark Rudy Klrbus, Cle St IgnatiuS, Adam May,
Mentor David DIFranco Gratton M1dv1ew Trent Morgan Lakewood St Edward El Bey
Williams Lyndhurst Brush, Mark Kent Pa1nesv1lle Riverside, Lou1s Tumblin, Elyria,
Chns SholtiS Geneva B111y Welsh Wesllake, Clint Nlchol&amp;an, Eastlake North , Harold
Haynes, Cle Hts Reynold Mitchell, Cle Collinwood

Call TOday...

Jcle.tted

"Hts pttch count got up there, or we

FIRST TEAM Bnan Aoberls Tal Sl John's 6 loot 2, semor, 17 5 pomts per game

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

x yl'.u s ttgo

NOTES:

1\.egtster

Sentinel

Ctty

Thursday mght, followed by
Ottawa-Glandorf
(25-l)

COLUMBUS (AP) - The 2003-2004 AsSOCiated Press DIVISIOn I boys AII·Otllo high
schOol basketball learn based on the recommendations of a state media panel
DIVISION I

Your Ad,

The g.unc was pl.tyed before a parcrowd

\!Cribune

To Place

Ohto St.tlc .tlso htt just two of lllne

Stanford solid in Tribe's win over Reds:

Korey Spates of Warrensville

Dover's Jeremy Ady (6-0, jr. ,

made hall ol the1r 22 shots 11om

the lteld

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tng ," Wedge sa td

18.3 ) , and

-

they

Dunng the 10-0 Eagles run 111 whiCh

second 1~

lteld -g oal pe1cent.tgc at 49.4 percent

hefore

Brandte Hosktns l ed the Sixth -seed-

questions

Ban lett (6-0, sr.,

Buckeyes

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

(7 - tor- 2 9)

Meanwhile. the Eagles -

lhe

wtn aga tn st Ctncmnatt on Monday

Comley on Fnday m g ht Ill the
first Dtviston I semifinal.

but the

shots tn the seUJnd h&lt;~ll

Arena.

one run over three mntngs ot an 11-4

Roberts
wtll
oppose
Brookhaven
(25-2)
and

c ut Ohio ,State's

G• ll•• Counl) OH

52 petcenl . htt tust 24 p~rccnt ot thetr

polllter w11h 6 36 l e tt

star tmg

Heights
(5-11, Jr.,
28.0);
LaGrange Keystone's Brett

14:3 8

lou~

tn lteld -g o,tl percentage thts se,1son at

dtdn't score agatn until Matter hit a 3-

lnd1ans '

and

with

the

The Buckeye s. who led th e n,1t1on

tisan

Ctrclevtlle Logan Elm (6-2,Jr..
21 2),
Poland
Seminary's
Chad Fender (6-2, Jr. , 19.6);

Umvcrstty ol Dayton
St.
John 's
(22-4)

and

she was J USt 2-for-1 0

a

the

underneath

putback

earntng

at

rebounds 111

the 73-67 wtn.

Jason Stanford moved a step closer to

season

I

surroundt n g her with defenders when -

five

scored

n ext e 1g ht po1nts while holdtng OhiO

Davenport had 22 points and Turner

ever she recetved a pass

had

EagJes

mmutes

6-3 LaToya Turner

the held , mcludtng three of four 3also

the

Davenport and

pomters, and a ll lour free throws She
rebounds

1ng drought.

State wtthout " pmnt tor ,mother

of

n ext

in

mg the ball lllstde to b - toot -5 Jesst ~d

16 5) ,

play

V~rgtnta

Saturday's opentng round by •pound -

23.0),
Newark
Lickmg
Valley 's Devm Fulk (6-0, sr.,

to

West

ed the Buckeyes' •nstde game, over-

Jacobs h1t five of seven shots from

After M attc r lllt.tll y bro~c th e scm-

Ohio State, playmg on tis own camhad

- Sentinel - 1\.egtster
CLASSIFIED

mitted three lllTIIOVCrs, J,ILODS h,td a
layup and a J - potnt~• .tnd Deveny htl

JUntor, was good lor 24.5
pomts, 12.5 rebounds and 2
blocked shots a game .,., hi le
httltng 62 percent of hts shots
from the tield He has stgned

s ix

a paiT ol b.tskets

team by Kevm Weybnght of
Cmcmnatt Wyommg (6-6, sr,

Evans

and

mtdway through the second half.

free-throw hne Corn ley, a 6 -6

Tyler

changes

tte s, the Eagles slowly pulled away

pus ,

~rtbune

the held. botl1 tree tluows .md com;

and Catty Matter h a d 10
Alter c tght

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Roberts
Res1denllal
Electncal Serv1ce A Z
Phone (740)256-6610
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nt
t -688·562·3345
I&lt;I \I I .., I \II

t 600 sq II 3 yr old Ranch
style home 2 1/2 car garage
3 bedroom large k1tchen,
liVIng room, 2 112 baths.
laundry room front porch,
all electnc Very well layed
out beautiful 1ntenor on 1
112 acres, 1348 Prospect
&lt;4li4ch Ad Won 1 last long
afOhty $115,000 (740)446·
4514 or (740)446·3248 after
5pm
---------

L,-------,.1
1n t
10

IIOMF.S

FOR SALE

All reateatata adwertlalng
In thla newapaper 11
eub)ectto the Federal
Felr Houalng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
•dvertlae any
preference limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, C&lt;Jior, religion, sea:
tamllialatatus or national
origin, or any intention to
make any euc;:h
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmln•tlon.'
Thl• newepaper will not
knowing!~ accept
advertlsementa for real
eatate which 11 In
violation of the l•w. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
this new1p1per 1r1
available on an equal
opportunity bae..

8USINK"t.l\
AND BUti.IIINGS

Lw-iiiiiiOililiiiiiiiiiil-,.1
Commercial building for
sale askrng $39 000 Great
opportun•ly to starl a buSI·
ness
or
to
lease
Acqu•s•t•ons, 91 Mill St
Middleport OH Shown by

r10

e room Ranch, full base·
men!, 3 bedroom, 2·112·
bath, 2·1/2 acres family
room.
covered
deck,
$99,000 No land contracts
(740)448·2t98

I

Nloe used 3 bedroom, total
electric will help with
Delivery Only $13,995 00
Call Harold, 740-385-9948

809 2nd Ave Gallipolis OR, VIctorian 1736 sq ft 3 bed·
room, 2 bath Stainless steel
LA 4 BA, 2 bath, fireplace .
appliances (7-'0)256-9350
appliances 6 fl flat ceilings
Hardllap with saddle roal 5"
Letart Falls OH, 3 bedroom on 12" roof pitch • porch
hOuse 1 bath , detached Cots's Mobile Homes 15286
garage, new roof. siding US 50 E Athens Ohio
windows, carpet, &amp; KIIChen (740)592·1972 Where you
$65 000 00 (740)247-2000 get your monay's worth"

2 bedroom 2 bath CA
1997 14x70 1n counlry $350 Tara
Townhouse
• depoSII + refere nces Apartments Very Spac1ous
(740)388·837 1
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA 1
t /2 Bath Newly Carpeted
2 Br Mob1le Home m Spr1ng Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Valley area $300 a month + Pallo Sta rt $3851MO No
$250 deposol (304)675·2900 Pets Lease Plus Security
Depos1t Requ11ed Days
or (740)441 ·6954
740 446 3481
Evenmgs
Beaut1ful nver v1ew 1deal for 740 367 0502
one or two people No pels
references (740)441·0181
Tw1n A1vers Tower IS accept
u1g appilcat1ons 10! wa1t mg
N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom lisl for Hud substzed 1 br
mob1le homes lor rent apartment ca ll 675-6679
mctudes water se wer &amp; EHO
tra sh no pets depOSit &amp;
$300 per month (740)992
SPALl:
2167
t-nRRINI'

r

AmKrMFNr.;
I'OR RENI

-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
BOO 537 9528
NEW AND USED STEEL

Steel Beams P1pe Rei.Ja1
For
Concrete
Angl e
Channel Flat Bar Stee l
Grat1ng
For
Drams
Dnveways &amp; Wa lkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesday Weclnesday &amp;
Fnday Bam 4 30pm Closed
Thursday
Saturclay
&amp;
Sunday (7 40)446-7100
Reese 5th wheel hitch like
new 2 g1ass tro nl ana top
show cases l1ghted e&gt;:cel
lont cond1t1o n 1740)992
3426

r&gt;""

BtU.1JIN(;
St rt,,Jf.~

r

H
tu:

809 2nd Ave Galllf.olls LA
DR 4 BR 2 baths fireplace
ref , stave
dishwasher
References deposit $650
plus utrlllles (740)256·9350
roo

Futon bunk bed &amp; super sm
gle waterbed lrame w1th
headboard
SSO
each
(740)742 280t

2 store fronts 1n H1stor1CBI
downtown Pom eroy Oh lac· Block br1ck sewer p1pes
ng the nver for rent w1ndows lintels etc Claude
1 and 2 bedroom aparl · (740)589·7122
Wmt ers A10 Grande OH
ments turntshed and unlurCall 740 245 512t
nlshed secuoty depOSit Olhce space downtown
;~~u~red no pels 740 992· Pomeroy approx 1800 sq
It streel level near coull
1 bedroom ap1 slave/ relr1g house $450 mo (740)592
10 week old Reg female
era tor &amp; uttlltleS furn1sned 1758
Beagl e pups
$ t 00
\IIIH 11\,llhl
Call (740)245 5859
(740)446 3845

1 Bedroom near Holzer ~10
HOI ISI'H()ID .
C1A WID hookup qu1et
(;(X)I~
L.--~::/i~ti.-~ 1oca t10n 5379 plus utilities
Deposit &amp; lease reqwed
16x80 Sites ava•lable $115 1740)446 2957
Al mond Mag1c Chef frost
per month Includes water
free Retr1gerator $100
sewe r &amp; trash (740)992 1 BR Bachelor Apartm ent Kenmore
washer
565
2167
Pr1vate &amp; Ou1et $350 month Kenmoro
washer/dryer
1304)675·1550
$ 135 both are wh1te Call
For Sale 79 106 Ac1es
alter 6prn (740)446-9066
Rwer v1ew producmg oil &amp; 1 br apt m Pt Pleasant
gas wel ls Reduced to t br house 1n OhiO central Good Used Applmnces
$tt5000
304·529·7106 atr/ heat no pets dep req Recond1 110ned
and
446·2200
after 5pm
Guaranteed
Wa shers
Ranges
and
2
bedroom
new Dryers
Re"l
Lots for Sale Meadow H1lls- stove/retng erator
, . Aefr.1gera.tors Some start at
3 m1les from Po1nt Plea san t $ 400 00
and
s4oo 00 $95 Skaggs Appliances 76
on Oshel Ad 304·675·3000 d epOSI 1 N0 p 91S
011 Vme St (740)446 7398
740·446·9340
Kmgsbury ancl 33 Ask for
May tag
Portabl e
Marge (740)992 4119
Poplar H e~ghts SubdiVISIOn
Dishwasher like new $100
two adjacent lots 4 Sacre s 2 bedroom apt St At t60 call (304)458 1757
stream v1ew, mature hickory past Holzer $475 mo
&amp; walnut trees $30 000 (740)44 t 0194
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
(304)675·8666
Chapel Road Porter Oh10
Apartment for rent $500 No (740)446·7444 I 877 830·
Pets Available May 12th
9162 Free Est1mates Easy
:~:::;:.::===:,
!1nancmg 90 days same as
Call {740)441 ·1124
ApplicatiOns bemg taken for cash V1sa1 Mester Card
very clean 2 bedroom In Dnve a ltnle save alot
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,. country seH•ng yet close to
Refngerator m good cond•·
--,
2 bedroom house 127 town Large kitchen and ltv- tlon $75 00 Floor model TV
lng room Washer dryer good cond1t1on S50 00 Call
Klneon Ave Gallipolis Ohro dl h
h
t
d
Phone 740 441 1184
s was er
s ove an
(740!992·7380
refngerator Included Water
_2_o_r_3_b-ed-ro_o_m_ h_ou_s_e_t_n and ga rbage Included Total Thompsons Appliance &amp;
electric with AJC Tenant Repa~r·6 75·738B For sale
Pomeroy, no pets (740)992 pays electnc $400 deposit
re·condllloned automa11c
5858
S475 per month No pets
washers &amp; dryers relngera·
- - - - - - - - - (740)446·2205 or (740)446·
tors
gas and electric
3 bedroom hOuse In 9585 ask fo r V1rgtn1a
ranges
a1r cond1 l•oners and
Pomeroy Deposll reqUired
No Pets (740)949·7004
BEAUTIFUL
APART ~ wringer washers Will do
MENTS
AT
BUDGET repalfs on maJor brands 1M
3 bedroom house 1641 PRICES AT JACKSON shop or at your hOme
Lincoln Heights Pomeroy, ESTATES, 52 Westwood
bath an half reck room, Dnve from s 344 to $442 Used Furmlure Store 130
dennll.lt required , no pets w lk t h &amp;
c 11 Bulavllle P1ke Mattresses
• ·)· •
a 0 s op mov•es a dressers
couches
1740 687 3986
740·446·2568
Equal
bunkbeds Rec:l1ners what
Hous1ng Opportumty
nols Grave Monuments
3
BA
NO
PETS
$295/month $150 deposit Convenient location N1ce 1 (740)446-4782 Gall1polls
{140)446·3617
bedroom Aelerences and OH Hrs 10"4 (M·S) Sunday
deposit required No pets by appomtment

House for sale on 2 112
acres of land full basement
3 bedrooms dmlng room
family room Wlflreplace llvlng room 2 full baths utility
room 2 car garage heat
pump, 20 1&lt;20 out building.
d k
3 Bedroom home located at 30 foot poo1 with new ec •
2t 2 N Thl rd Aven ue, (740)992·164t
Middleport (740)992·6759
3 bedroom 2 bath, 2 car New Home· 3 bedroom 2
bath den On corner lot
garage Minutes from town Meadow Hills, Osher Ad PI
City schools &amp; water price Pleasant, WV ( 740 ) 446 ~
_
ne_g_(3_41
0 _926_·6_6_8_t___ 9340
.:.~":":--~:-......,
3 bedroom, 2 baths an 4 3
MOBFORILES~~:m'
acres Close IO Tycoon laKe
~
Call {740)709"t 166
-3b-r-.-:2-b-e.-H-ou-.-.-:-,n-:-N-ewC
1996
14 X70
layton
Haven totally remodeled wf1 2x2.4 add on many
$85000 (304)882·3t31
extra's rented lot $21,500
(3041675 8714
•
4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye
Hills Ad In Qround pool 1
acre (740)709·t166
For
Sale/Rent
1999
Woodfield 14x70 like new
4 br, 2 bath, central air with 2br, 2 ba central air/heat
dream kitchen, 1 acre ot 519 •000 sale rent $450/mo
ground, mu81 sell $70000 13041675 .t 5 t 9 13041895• 3 yr old 3 br 2 t/2 bath
(304)675·3641
e.~:celtent condition, all elec·
3595
trlc, 2 1/2 car garage 10
4bedraom, Ranch home,
minutes tram Holzer Porter
2bath, 2500 sq f1 w/800 eq New 14 wide, Only $849 00 area 5750 month $ 750
t1 patio roam In New Haven down and only $164 88 per deposit
references
$125,000 sits on 3 lots month, Call Karen a, 740· required Call 740 •446 4514
(304)882-2401
385-7671
or 740 _446•3248 after 5pm

Rr

Plea sant Valley Apartment
Are now tak1ng Appl1cat1o ns
for 2BR 3BA &amp; 4BR
Applicat•ons are taken
Monday lhru Fnday from
9 00 AM -4 PM Off1ce 1S
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dr ve Po nt Plea sant WV
Phone No IS (304)675-5806
EHO

(7401446·0139
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhou se
apartments
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 · 11 11
for applicatiOn &amp; mtormafiOn
Furnished apt 1 br 2nd
Ave Upsta~rs all ut111t1os pd
No
pets
Galllpot•s
(740)446 9523

Gracious living t end 2 bed·
room apartments at V1llage
Manor
and
Rlvers•de
rick, 1 5 baths, ca rport
1 M ddl
t
pets No smoking
Apartments P- ' epor
50, deposit, reterehces
From $295-$444 Call 740
~.
992 5064 Equal Housmg
740 4 9209
Opportumt1es
_.:..:.__ _ _ _ __ _
House for rent 5 miles from
New 1 bedroom apt Phone
Gallipolis 3 bedroom. 1
ocre Wltl 17401245 •5378
740·446·373G

r

AKC Lab pups 7 weeks out
of hunt1ng stock PaTents on
prem1ses Wormed and 1st
shot s Yellows &amp; blacks
17401388 95 15
AK C
reg1stered
male
German Shapherd pupp1es
3 mos old 1st shots &amp;
wo rmed $200 (740 )992
3972

German short ha1r Po1nter
pups AKC Reg1stered 18
weeks old $200 (740)44 1
8826
Good Home lor Jack Russell
Terner spaded up to date
on 1111 medslshots re ler
ences (304)675 6676
Lab pupp1es fo t sale
Charnp1on bloodl ne proven
hunt1ng stock Ready now
$250 each (740)643 2288

1 \U\1 Sl PPLI1 s
,'\II\ 1· SIO( f..
010

FAtt\1
[QLIJJii\11-_N'I

New Holland Rou nd bal er
Specml
Mason County
Aes•dents re ce•ve the fol ·
low1ng discounts 4:~t5 baler
$1 500 4x4 baler $1 000
Keefer s Serv1ce Center
304)895·3674
6JO

Lt&gt;r.&lt;ITOCK
2 reg1stered ANGUS Bulls 2
years old Good blood lines
(740)256 9004
9 year old Ctnnamon
Halhnger geldmg Very gen
tie starter horse Con l1dence
builder large lrame e.~:cel ·
lent tra1l horse not show
type
Ask1ng
$1 000
(740)441 1013

Blacks Champion shaw
p1gs Ethically ra1sed pure
bred &amp; cross bred For sale
Buy or
sell
R1venne at fa m11y far m tJy appoint
Ant1ques 1124 East Ma1n mont Call(740)4411013
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
992 2526 Russ Moore Pork quality local ra1sed
hogs Custom cui at R&amp;C
owner
packmg ask for BLACK
""' MtS01L\NEOUi
740·245 9440
MERCHANDISE
Reg1stered ANGU S and
Crossbred
bulls Top blOOd·
200 1 Cub Cadet lawn trac
lines
Slate
Ru n Farm
tor model 2166 16 hp OVP
(7 40)286·5395
Kohler eng1ne 42 deck Jackson
up
Hydros1at1c transmiSSIOn lOOk
shalt driven cast 1ron a.~:le www sTaterunfarm com

AN'IlQI.J};S

low hours good condtiiOn
$1 900 ca ll (740)992·400t
3 Prom dresses tor sale
Sizes 2·4 Coil a*te• 5pm
(740)446 4134

r

""'
&amp;
GRAIN

Good mixed hay $1 50 a
bale (740)742·7004

�Tuesday, March 23, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

BENNETT'S

HE4TING fl COOLING

~

WfiEKt.y INCQME!
Nat!DMI Company
N ~as Home Mailers
lmmemately 1n Your Areal
Postage PrO'.'idedl
In Bu!'.lr.ess Since 19891
Swt lmmedi&lt;Helyl

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L RM H~ tN: only ~ llhd
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iiiHIIIt .
PI'OQo'lm 1t1r elrrnnatmo lhe OI:Yfitllln\1

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Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners. Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Effici ency Equipmen
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~
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Gibson
--~-

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OH WVO I02 12
446-Y4 16 r 1-800-872-5967
Gallipolis,

Lower paynl&amp;nts, Reduce lnt&amp;re91.

SToP FEES! Member BBB, L1C8n&amp;ect,
Bor1&amp;&gt;ld Oalray C11'1di l Counseling
t ·888·37t ·0712 Ext. 102

FR EE POSTAGE. SUPPLI E$1
Stall rmmedr atetv'
Free Cal! 24r7
1.000-577·77 35
Ca ll now tor f1f!V lntormat•on

BUY FORECLOSURES!
u~

$1 ,380 WEEKLY

lnve&amp;toro Muney!
Split Profitst

STUFFING ENVELOPE S
No Exp Necessaryr

T!allinljj!
Frte tntormatiOO'

550 Cash H11mg 8tmusl1

800.,\314555 .. 2254

~orth

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday

MYERS PAVING

&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:311

Henderson, WV

Earl y birds starl
6:30
Last Thursday of

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

eve r)' month

All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

Buy $5.110
•Bonan1.a Get
5 .' REE

•
"
•

MONTY

875-2457

+

Dealer: South

WV Contractors Lie. #003506
Sou th
1•
44

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

FOR SALE
4X5 round Dales covered, 00 Ponliac Sunflre, $3,495;
good grass hay $12.50. 00 Dodge Neon, $2,995; 99
Square
bales
mos tl y Ford Escort $2,995; 98
orchard
grass
$2.50. Olds Achieva , $2.495; 96 T.
Bird, $1 ,995; 96 Grand Am,
(740)992·2623.
$2,195; 99 Plym. Breeze,
Round bales ot hay lor sale, $2, 195; 96 Nissan 4x4, Trk,
$15 a bale. Call (740)682· $3,495; 99 Kia Sportage,
8106.
4x4, $3,995: 94 GMC Spt.
~qua re bale hay ror sale. Pickup, $4,495; 97 Dodge
Baled dry. $ 1.80 per bale. PU, $3,995; 98 Ford F150

Call (740)245-5672.
I U \ \\l'i ill I\ 110\

$4.395
B &amp; D Auto Sales
7128 Stale Route 160

1740)446·6865

A u tu;

lllRSALE
$SOOI.Hondas,
Chevys,
Jeeps,
etc ! POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars
from
$500. For listings 1-800 -7193001 ext 3901

WANTED: Emergency Relief Workers
(Substitutes) needed to work with people with
mental retardation in Athens &amp; Meigs Counties.
Hours: as scheduled as needed; some overnights
required. Requirements: High , school diploma
/GED, valid drivers license, three yea1s good

driving experience and adequate automobile
insurance coverage. $7.00/hour. No experience

necessary. Training provided.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, Oh io 45640
Dt::aJlinl! for appl ic:ml ' : JnhiU4 . E4u;1l Oppottu nil y Emrluycr.

1973
Me rcury Couga r,
63,000 actu al miles, run s

3d

goo . $750 OBO. (740)992-

93 4

1!'1!1"-------,
0

F'

Atrn:li
S'ALE

L'(}H

I ['0

-------•
1980
Plymouth
Volare
69,000 miles {304)882-28 10 1996 Dodge Avenger, 4
cy linder, air condition in g,
after 4 pm
Power su nroof, automatic,
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT, 1987 SuOaru car. 4 wheel 60.000
miles .
$3,900.
4 door. V6, 27,000 miles. driver, 2 door. runs good . (740)446-2795.

$600 OBO. Call (740)256·

$6.995.

~~------..,

AUTOS

· mHSAu-:

Ca'.'a ll er, Neon, Saturn,
Grand Am, Cutlass, Intrigue,
Geo
Trac ker,
Fir ebird,
Cara~an . Intrepid . Sunlire,
GM C, Bonneville, vehicles
are in stock from $1, 195 to

2003 Pontiac Grand Am V6, 1652
1998 Honda Foreman 450 S $3,895.
· 4 door, 31 ,000 miles, - - - - - - - - 4 x4 , 250 hrs, exc. condition
COOK MOTORS
$6,900. Phone (740)256- 1995 Che'.'y Ca~alier, red . $3,400 (304)773 -57 30
(7 40)446-0103

(740)446-2582.

1142.

1999 Buick Century, 50,000 For Sale : 93 Ford Tempo. 5
miles, e)(Cellent com:1ilion, 4 speed S1,250, good shape.
door, power locks &amp; win- Phone 740-44~-8073 .
dows. tape player. 740-446· ~~,;~.;.;.~;,;;.;~;;_....,

4224 .

30

4-WDs

2000 blue Jeta Vol. 5 speed,
A/C, 4 door, CD. New brakes
and tires. (740)446·7500

SHERIFF'S SALE,
REAL ESTATE
· CASE NUMBER
02 CV 120
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYS- TEMS, INC.
Plaintiff
·VB·
JAMES S. FERRIS, el
al.
Defendants
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In Pursuance or an
· Order of Sale to me
directed from said
. Court In the above
entitled action, I will
·expose to sale at public auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday, April
9, 2004, at 10:30 A.M.,
of aald day, the followIng deacrlbad real
eatata:
Situated In the
County of Meigs,
State of Ohio, and In
the
Township
of
Scipio and bounded
and ducrlbad 11 lollowa: Beginning In the
canter of the public
road which point Ia
north 1308 leal, oouth
84 degraea 50' aaet
1118 feet l~om the
canter of Section No.
8; thence following
the canter of oeld
aouth
84
road
degreaa 55'eeet1222
. laet; thence following
the conter of said
road
oouth
39
dagreao 30' aeat 245
fHt; thence
lollowtng, the canter
of oald rood south 37,
dagraeo 30' uet 749.5
· fHii thence waat
17451aet to the canter
of · Section No. 6;
thonce about 1300
feel to the placa of
beginning, containing

.....

. 12.5 acral, more or
CURRENT OWNERS:
Jamu S. Farrlo and
Jodi L. Ferrlo
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
37855 Chaoe Road,
Albany, Ohio 45710

*'

Pp
1
00929.000

7

PRIOR DEED REFERENCE: Volume 99,
Page 741
APPRAISED
AT:

$40,000.00
TERMS OF SALE:
Cannot be oold lor

lass than 213rds of the
appraised value. 10%
down on day or sale,
cash
or certified
check, balance on
confirmation of sale .
RALPH E. TRUSSELL,
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
REIMER &amp; LORBER
Co. , L.P.A.
By:
De n n I s
Reimer
(Reg.
#0031109)
James C. Wrentmore
(Reg.
#0046779)
Attorneys
for
Substituted Plaintiff,
Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc. solely as nominee
lor
Wharton
Mortgage, Inc. 2450
Edison Blvd. P.O. Box
968 TwinsbUrg, Ohio
44087 (330) 425-4201 .
(3) 9, 16,23

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The eighteen member
Gallla-Jackson-Melge
Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction and
Mentel
Health
Services Ia appointed
by the Director of the
Ohio Department of
Mental
Health
(4
appointees),
the
Director of the Ohio
Department
of
Alcohol and Drug
Addiction Services (4
appointees) and the
County
Commlaalonera
In
Gallla, Jeckaon and
Meigs Countlae (10
appolnlaeo) .
Currently, there are
vacancies to be filled.
Individuals Interested In baing considered lor this appointment can do eo by
requastlng an application from:
Ronald A. Adkins,
Executive Director
Gallla-Jackeon-Malge
Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction
and Mental Health
Services
53 Shawnee Lane
P.O. Box 514
Galllpollo, OH45831
Phone: 74~-3022
The Board otrlveo
to melnlaln a bal anced rapreeantetlon
of community members and welcome•
minority or female
applicants.
(3) 22, 23, 24

y

VANs&amp;

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me de 11 for youl

liNDA'S PAINTING

~®~ W®ll~&lt;~~illl
~rtrrll'!l@ill
Paying up to $400

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

Hunling land in
Lebanon Twp.
or

(10'K10'610'K20')

Will lease up to
$5 .00 per ac re.
Call 740-592-4323
Cell 740-54 1-4323

(740] 992-3194
992-6635

J&amp;L ConstructiOn
992·2772

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

BARNEY
I'M GITTIN' ALONG

THEY'VE BEEN VISITIN' FER FOUR
DAYS AN' YOU'VE ONLY BEEN
HANGIN' OUT
HERE FER

MUCH BETTER WIF
LUKEY'S
r_,\Ce:u·'&gt;T IVE S

~.,t!£1;r'Y' THREE"~~

~:l('lo.oo

THE BORN LOSER

Pomeroy, Ohio

·

'"'1

p-

992-2975

l [(0 500 :&gt;1\· IJP~ tVOZY

IAwll a11d Garde11 Equipmelll is our
br1si11ess, 1101 our sideli11e

I"'

p-

l WORK 00\
"- ~1\, r-\YS(Lf' .1

D/1-.Y- ['M WORKI!-iiG
ON r-\Y ~IX· P~U. I

LOOK:) UK£ YCX.J'RE:.
NOR.Kit-110 01'-1 /1-. i&lt;£G I

i

I

-&lt;~
"lfaallika

·------_.1

MOT(lRC'r'CU~

aher 6pm or (740)446·0974

'~

HOW COME YOU RE

LETTING. ARTVR DRII&gt;W
COM tCS FOR THE
PAPER, GINA&gt; .----&lt;~ 1
THAT'S

JOS!

Wednesday, March 24, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol ·
Friends and associates in key places can
play important roles in your affai rs in the
year ahead. Their assistance will be able
to open doors you ca n't open on your own.
and ena ble you to acl11911e your greatest
desires.
ARI ES (March 2 t ·April 19 ) - It's qui te
likely that your idoas will Oe beller lhan
those of your peers today, but if want your
though ts to be readily accepted ovor their
own thinking , make sure there's something
in it lor them .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Friends or
associates are likely to take you into their
confidence tod ay because they'l l se ns e
that you ·re someone who can be tru sted to
keep things to you rself. You won't let them

~OU ,

NATE . I'M
.JUST GIVING
YO U A DIFFERENT .JOB
ON THE NEW S-

MY

P"PE R ST"FF.

87 Buick LeSabre, high - mileage, new starter, new 1999 Honda 400 EX,
brakes, run s good , $550. $2,200 . Phone (740)446Cal! (740 )245-5003 leave 7730
message.
- - - - - - -2000 Honda Rancher TRX93 Rodeo 33,000 miles, new 350, tow mileage, in good
tires, brakes, &amp; paint job condition, $2800, Paul Karr,
$3,500 OBO (304)5 93-092 2 Chesler. Oh. (740)985-3538

Drive rebui lt run s great
$2,000 (304)593- 1990
1966 Baja 19ft. open bow
trailer, V-6 , 4.3 liter engine,
$4500, {740)949·3029
50 H.P. Mercury boat motor.
3 extra props, 1 stain less
steel , with controls and

·r,
~rolling
motor
$400
94 C.m.ro V-6, auto wi',
tt
2000 Suzuki GZ 250 e)(CSI· (304)6 75 5 131 f
4
looks &amp; runs good, $2,500, lent condition, $2,250. ~999
a ter pm
(740)742-2357 after 6pm Honda CR 80, rebui11 , ve ry
leave message.
good condtlion. 51,800.

r

(740)245-5220.

~

141 5.

3029

CAMPERs &amp;
MoroR HOMf:l)

I
.

Excellent condltlon ,. White
95 Buick L.aSabre, 68,500 2001 GSXR 600, Excelle nt 1988 Mallard camper, 36 ft .,
mlles , $4 ,300 call (304)6?5· condition . Call (740 }416- e~ . cond .. $5200, {740 )949-

4098

New Homes • Vinyl

PEANUTS

Sid ing • New Garages
• Replacement
WinJ(lW ~ • Ro( 1fi11 g
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

GOOD GRIEF,
ANOTHER HOME RON!
THIS 15 OUR WORST
GAME
'

FREE ESTIMATES

down

''IF THE HEART OF A MAN
15 DEPRESSED WITH CARES,
THE MIST 15 DISPELLED
WHEN A WOMAN APPEARS "

740·992-7599

(304)529-7082 or (304)525358 1

S! Ill It I S

tO

HOME
IMI'ROVEMEN'I~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional ntelime guarantee . Local refe rences f ur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 44 60870, Rogers Basemen t
Waterproofing .

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole
Buildings , Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens , Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742-341

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

BETTY
N~~ !Flll~'(

Ripley, WV 25271

VALU~~8R

PRIVACY,

1·800-822-0417

1 VALUE

"W.V's #I Chery. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp;

MIN&amp;

Custom Van Dealer"

HOWARDl.
WRITESEl
•ROOFINB
•HOME
MAINTENANCE
•SEAMLESS

aamR

*frealltlmalea.

941-1405

GARFIELD
IF t,&gt;OU'RE

... AND I,IOU WAIT
LONG ENOUGH .. .

PA'fiE:NI...

NORTHUP DODGE
River Road • Gallipolis
• 949-1

0

Evenings

0
0

NOW IU'I'IITIN(•
A-,1
Mini-Storage
992-6396
992-2272

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Ream Addition• 111
Ramodellng
·New

aar•r•Plumbing

• Elaotrlcal

• Rooting &amp; Gutt.r.
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch O.Cka

We do It all excegt

furnact work ..

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

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

~~~
High 8l Dry

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232

0
0

~~~I
GRIZZWELLS
'V:ll) ~ 1\-\IIT 'tlol.lltl 6t: 1\-\E
D/SJ IN\-\'Q.\ fl. ~loJS ~'C:P~\o?­
L\1&lt;.£. ~\ll-\1\-\~
~\7Z'NUL

• New Homes

'W&gt;.S\-\t-:i

• Garages

C'.SI-I\.:7 1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetr•lj' Crpher Cl)' ptogr&lt;:~ms are created lromQJO!al:ons IT)• famDus peopj e. pa;l ann ~·resen t
Eaclllener rn me CIPher stanos lor aoomer

Today'S clue. Vequals W

" VMXYLMU
YFL

AU

LHTYXUG

MRMLNC

YFL

IF R MG. "

GEMINI (May 2 1·June 20)- Chances are
you're the one who'll be ce lled into situa·
lions that others fe el are lhe greate st cha t·
lenges or the mosl d llf1cult to perform
because ,. for you, they 'll be the easiest to
manage.
CANC ER {Ju ne 2 1-July 22)- Act in har·
mony with your thinking today becau se the
rdeas and concepts yo u perceive co ncern·
ing ways to further you r ambitions will work
ou t as you envi sion them
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Your grealesl
ad va ntages today are apt to come tram situations tha t are initiated by others ral her
than !rom those you beg in yourself. but
you won' t mind so long as th ey're successful.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) - Wh en there
is a family m atter at stake today, you ca n
serve as an eltectlve cata ly st to gel all of
lhe c lan acting In harmony and pulling
logether tor a common pu rpose. Don't
hesitate to do so
LIBRA (Sept 23-0 cl. 23) - Anything that
rs disorderly or unsigh tl y ca n take on a
new look under your competent direclion
toctay. ln'o'olve yourself in those types of
projects that need bea utification.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22 ) - A new
source of adding to your resources may
pmsent itself today. It'll not come about by
accident; you'll be instrumental in corning
up with so mething tha l'll be limely and in
demand
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21 ) ~ trs
highly likely that you' ll be rn a sociable
mood today, but you won 't have to go ou l
on 1/19 town to lind st imulating company.
Your friendliness wrll draw fun friends to

R

F RS L

INRUU

TO

RIYTMU

HTTB
MRCGTKB

RKB

NTTWU

TM

IFRKBN lM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Success is often just an idea awa('
- Fran k Tyger
' You 're never a loser unlit you quit tr ying' - Coach Mike Oitka

(cl,2004 by NEA . Inc

3·23

WOlD

GAMt

0 -'1ecrr anye
!ettttrJ
scrombied
f? v ~

c_f •he
wore~ be ·

low to for m io;.~ r wo rds

3 IT ONA

Z 0 FER

I I I I'
r--S-,1-u--=o-M--. ~
~~--~-r--~-" ~

I

~

I I' I .,

E D T 0 11

nopo l1zes any CQnve rs a-

Gramps says he knQWS
wny sne ialks so much. He
says 1t's because it takes more
energy to soul a mouth than to
tion

3 ''&gt; · 0 ''
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
·. : J,j! Y- Yours - Taupe- Voyage-PAY DEARLY
My "slerwas ftshing for a compliment en hcw weii sic e
had c·ganized I he local bazaar. Mom says that . "Ccmp!irr.ents cosl nothing. but you may have to PAY DEARLY
for them ·

, ., .

ARLO &amp; JANIS .

0
0

0

CAPRI CORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Do not
hesitate to use te1ms of end ea rmen t in
your meaningful relationships today
Individuals who are rm portant to you will
be highly receptive to hearing how much
vou care
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Focus
vour sma rts on your goals and wishes
today, because wh en yo u in troduce your
thoughts into conver sations, successful
ways and means can come lhroug h intellectual exchanges.
,.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Amb rtious
objec li ves can be ach1e~ed today. but
you' ll need to uso both int ellectual arguments and charm to convince you r audi·
ence. A co mbination of both will be a win-

oer

I

CONSTIUCnOII

(

vou .

0

0

Jr

ROBERT
BISSELL

• Complete
Remodeling

I

l1

'1bur 'llil'lh&lt;lo;y:

I: CANT ' FtRE'

CAMJJEMS &amp;

4yrs old. Alpha Que Out

AI tr ick one. you must play the heart two.
Then, West wi ll be unsure whal to do. If
East started With J-7-4 of hearts, West
cannot a fford to cas h th e heart king,
beca l.lse you will ruff and have a discard
coming on dummy's heart qu ee n. 11 West
immediately shifts to a minor sui!, you are
home free
Bu t if you drop a higher heart (even the
jack ), West will cash the hearl ~ i ng . Eas t
wo uldn't play the four from 7-4-2 or J-4·2:
he would always lollow suit with the two .
This is the guideline whe n lrying to disrupt
the opponent s' signals: ·Play as they do. II
you wish the lea der to continue the suit.
drop an unnece ssa rily high (encou raging)
card. II you prefer lhat he move elsewhere
at the next iri ck, cont ribute your towesl
(di scouraging) card .
P.S. rm .told !hat an old m eaning of "prove"
was "test ," so the expression at the beginning shou ld be wrillen ~the except ion that,
tests the rul e:

BIG NATE

MaroN HOMI&lt;N

\ 997 38 ' SANDP IPER
CAMPER, 2 Slide Outs . 2
Bedrooms. Oak tr im . Pl.llled
one time. MU ST SEE! !I

9
10

~ Astro,~Graph

"r'!O.,..-------, .,,...------_,
1995 Sunlight pop-up lrLICk
camper. light we ight. roof air,
t oilellshowe r inside. si nk.
3/burners stove, heater, !rig',
water heate r, awning &amp; addilional out side shower sup er
nice $4500 (304)675-2949

a

You know that West can take two hearl
winners and give Eas t a heart ru ff . Then.
sure ly !he diamond finesse will lose, and
you will be one down

I'm out
on a limb!"

"Nolme!
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Flnonclol SeNices.
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone 843 -5264.'

Corners

ifiril April

204 Condor Street

Call

•O·IOI United.

1978 Chevy Suburban, 4x4,
low m ileage. 400 small
2001 Ford Taurus , $6,200; block, has engine noise, 4
1998 Sable, $4,395; 1997 new rough tread !ires &amp; rally
Grande Cherokee, $4,695: rims. plu s 1977 350 Blazer,
M&lt;Yil)R(.'YCI.I&lt;:"'i
1998 Cavalier, $3,295; 1997 4x4, rebuilt trans . all l or
Sunlire. $2.995; 1995 F·250. $2300 tirm, (740)992-9334
4x4, diesel, $9,995: 1994 F·
1990
Ford
150
XLT
2002 Honda 300 EX , very
250, 4)(4 diesel, $9,000;
Exlended Cab 4K4, 92,000 good shape. 1994 Yamaha
1995 Windstar, $3,000;
miles $3,500 {304)675-3052
Blaster,
good
sh ape,
1997 S-10 EKtended cab ,
S4.995: 1997 Sable . $3.495 ; 1990 P lymouth Voyager (740)992·3976
1995 Sable. $2,695 ; 199 3 Van, one owner, V6 LE, 7
Saturn,
$2,695; 199 1 pass. auto trans . EKcellent
Bo.o\l'S &amp; M(ffi)ltfii
Corsica, $995: 1985 Topaz, Conditi on. All power with
FOR SALE
$795; 1992 Sunbird, S995.
AJC. $4 ,500. (740)446·3277
Rom e Auto Sales
89 Chevy Blazer Tahoe 4x4, 10 II. Jon Boat and trolling
2002 4-door VB Uncolnls fairly new tires, ru ns good, motor. $250. 16 fl . Boat trail EK cellent condition, appro)( asking
$ 1800
080. er, 5275. Call (740 )441 ·
0405.
37, 000 mil es.
Asking (740)992-4078
44
4
$20,000.
(740 ) 6·l86
~40
11 967 CitatiOLI 3.0 4/cylinder

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Frae
Estimates

•l•uslon w el,:ted
Inches

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Care

Windows

Windows

4
5
6
7

South 's hearl holding IS unattractive. bu t it
would be cowardly to b1d less than game
after Nor th's raise.

Snapper

Gravely

Pro Lawn

•nooflng
• Llfctlnw Warranty
•Glass •VInyl
•lllown Insulation
• All working Parts
• Koom Atldltlons
• Low E AtKon
n epluccm c nt

3

Why?

I mo

Replact,menr

• VInyl

31 Campus
area
34 Spud s l.
35 Harness
part
36 Recipe qtys.
37 Ignore
socially
38 Movie dog
39 Psyche parts
40 Turn inlo
bone

You are Soulh , lh e declarer in four
spades_ We st, who overca lled two hearts,
leads the heart ace. and East lotlows suit
wilh the four. Wh at heart would you play?

740·992·7953

•Certalntced VInyl

• VInyl Sldln)l

41 Wetland
43 Pyromaniac's deed
DOWN
vine
45 Whistles
23 Jellyfish
46 Planet 's
Russian
25 Regrels
course
export
26 Huff
47 Boxing
Trojan War 27 - St.
triumphs
story
Vincent
49 Fishing
Smatl
Millay
boat
change
28 DJ's supply 51 Lamb
Professors 29 Atlas data
portion
Dawdle
31 Swab brand 52 Collar
Support
(hyph.)
53 Sci-fi craft
" Tiny Alice" 32 Egg-grading 54 Family
playwright
org.
mem.
No,
33 Basilica
56 Female
lo a laird
part
rabbit
Goose egg 35 Moonbeam
Louvre
40 Lennon's
display
Yoke-

2

11 Deluxe
18 Arrogance
20 Creep!ng

I have neve• understood the expressio~
"!he exceplion thai proves the rLIIe." How
can an exception prove something?
However. here is ano ther e)(cept ion to th e
"declarer should play his second-lowest
spot-card " ru le.

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

per acre for Good

A

A second exception
to the rule

740-991-1431

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Easl
Pass
Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

JIM•s SMALL ENGINE REPAIR

m

North
2•
Pass

Op ening lead : •

FREE ESTIMATES • FAST IURNAROUNp
WE REPAIR;
MINI BIKES· GO -KARTS • LAWN MOWERSPOWER MOWERS • CHAIN SAWS • SNOW
BLOWERS • WEED EATERS • TILLERS • EDGERS

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

Wel'it
2•
Pass

p ioneer

61 Favor,
old-style
62 Affirmative
63 Seattle hrs.

in Berlin

Vulnerable : Buth

I mo

AUTOS

4
JJU865
J
... J 10 7 4

4 AJJUU5 2
• .l 7 2
t A Q
.. A K

Hours

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

"t

Stmlh

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

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

J
AK9 65 J
K !:1 :l

.. Q "

Hill's Self
HOME CREEK
Storage
ENTERPRISES
Bashan Road
Backhoe, Dozer, 29670
..
Ra cine, Ohio
45771
Foundations,
740-949·2217
Septic Systems, · Slztt~- 15!ii:1.1l ;,
JQ!li!Q!d ' ~,,
Water and Utilities .' '...',\0~;i;;!fl~~m~

740·992·7953

7 4

.. 8 6 5 3
East
• 9 6

West

•
.

OJ 23 04

K Q 14
Q 10 8

1 - Damone
4 Swiat pelk
7 Pequln of
"The Plano"
11 Tent
support
12 Freeway
clogger
13 Resting
place
14 Noree Zaus
15 In the past
16 Expressway
17 Chased
the puck
19 Type
of chart
21 SUIIorad from
22 Topaz or
opal
24 Doggerel
28 Attractive
30 And,

42 Joyous
outburet
44 Gobbled up
45 Little kid
48 Curtain
hanger
50 Open
the wine
52 Gists
55 - man out
57 Boxcar rider
58 Curly hairdo
59 Fish eggs
60 Elevalor

SOUP TO NUTZ
I SOUGHT fULFILLI"''l!NT IN

a B~i"t.e BUT s o OPTe.n
I FELT EMPl'(...

•

740·902-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

'·

.'

�\

ScoREBOARD·

·The Daily Sentinel
x.o...;wa I

39 21 9 6 93 241 168
4d267390 198 173
33326476 198 206
Southooot Dlvlolon
WL T OLPtsGF GA
y-Tampa Bay 42 21 a 5 97 223 178

Pro Basketball
GB
8',
9
11
13
19

x·Detroit
Nashville
St. Louis

43 19 11 2 99 236 172
34 27 11 3 82 198 200
34 28 11 2' 81 174 185

Columbus

16'.

19',

20'.
29 .
31
GB
2
4
4
t.
12
12
GB
4
16
19
21•
24' ,
28

Sunday's Games
Dallas 101 , New Jersey 98
Golden State 96, L.A. Clipper s 85
Miami 101 , Washington 81
Detroit 96, Cleveland 76
Minnesota 98. Denver 77
Toronto 121, New Orlean s 120, OT
Sacramento 100, Houston 95
Seattle 84 . Orlando 67
L.A. Lakers 104, Milwaukee 103. OT
Monday's Games
Indiana 101, Chir;ago 77
Pl'1iladelphla 107, Dallas 98
New YorK 96. Atlanta 84
Denver ,102, L.A. Clippers 80
Houston 93. Portland 85. OT
Tuesday 's Games
,.hoenix at Cleveland, 7 p.m
Toronto at Memphis, 8 p.m.
Detroit at New Orleans . 8 p.m
San Antonio at Minnesota. 8 p.m.
·New Jersey at Ch1cago, 8:30p.m.
Washington at Utah. 9 p.m.·
Milwaukee at Sacramento. 10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Miami at Orlando. 7 p.m.
Phoenix at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Memphis at New York . 7:30 p.m.
Daltas at Indiana, B p.m.
Toronto at Houston, 8:30 p.rll
Minnesota at Denve1. 9 p. m.
Utah at Seattle. 10 p.m
L.A . Clippers at Portland. 10 p.m.
Sacri'lmento at L.A. Lake·rs , 10:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Golden State, 10:30 p.m

27 31 14 3
26 30 13 6
22 42 9 2

Cincinnati
New York
San Diego
A!lanta
Pittsburgh
San Franc1sco

72 202 228
71 167 195
71 151 183
55 171 231

2b

38

10 6 56 174 227

21.42 8 4 54 161 22 1
Northwest Division
W L T Ol Pts GF GA

38 20 12 5 93 222 181
37 24 10 5 89 214 187
38 28 7 s 86 186 167
33 27 12 4 82 206 194

Colorado
Vancouver
Calgary
Edmonton
Mmnesota
San .Jose
Dallas
Lo s Angeles
Anaheim
Phoemx

25 27 20 3 73 163 167
Pacific Division
W L T Ol Pts GF GA
37 20 12 6 92 198 171

39 24 13 0 91 179 158
211 24 16 7 79 196 198
27 31 tO8 72 173 201
21 3 1 18 6

66 183 226

Two points for a win . one point for a t1e
and overt1me loss.
x·clinched playoff spot
y-chnched d1vis1on
Sunday 's Games
N.Y. Islanders 3, Tampa Bay 0
Phoenix 2, Chicag o 2. he
Pittsburgh 4. N.Y. Rangers 3. OT
Edmonton 5, San Jose 2
Anaheim 8. Detroif 6
Columbus 5, Vancouve r 4
Monday 's Games
PhOemx 3. M1nnesota 2 . OT
Dallas 4. Calgary 0
Edmonton 2, Los Ang eles 1
Tuesday's Games
Ot1awa at Boston, 7 p.m .
Philadelphi a at Carolina. 7 p.m.
Washington a· N.Y. Islanders. 7 p.m.
New Je rsey at Fl orida. 7.30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Toro nto. 7:30 p m
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers. 7:30p.m.
An aheim at Nashville, 8 p.m
Chicago at Colorado. 9 p.m
Detroit at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
' Wednesday 's Games
Minnesota at Columbus, 7 p.m .
Montreal at BuHalo. 7:30 p.m
Washington at Atl anta. 7:30p.m.
Calgary at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Dallas at Edmonton . 10 p.m.
los Angeles at Vancouver. tO p.m.

Baseball
Major League Baseball
Spring Training

AMERICAN LEAGUE
w L
Minnesota
13 7
Seattle
6
Cleveland
12 7
Boston
1f 7
Oakland
12 8
Tampa Say
8 7
Kansas City
10 9
New York
10 9
Toronto
B 9
Anaheim
9 11
Te11as
B
tO
Detroit
12
9
Chicago
8 11
Balti more
7 11
NATIONAL LEAGUE
w L
Montreat
13 6
Milwaukee
12 8
Florida
8
Houston
9 7
Anzo na
1f 9
St. Louis
11 10
Chicago
10 10
Colorado
10 10

,

NPiional Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L T OL Pis GF GA
216 171
189 152
212 194
193229
173 285

W L T OL Pis GF GA
37 17 14 7 95 191 170
94 223 193

,

PC/

650
647
.632
.611
600
.533
526
526
.471
450
.444
429
.421
.389
Pel
.684
.600
.579
.562
.550
.524
.500
.500

I

9
10 I
to
9
8
7
7

6

10
12
13
12
13
14
12

,

.474

.454
.435
.429
.421
.350
.333
.333

NOTE : Split-squad games count in the
standings; games agamst non-major
teague teams do not.

~

Hockey

41 23 9 3

30 34 8 4

_Chocago

GB
5'.
15

x-cfi nched playort spot

x·Boston
x-Toronto

Atlanta
Florida
Carolina
Washmgton

Los Angeles

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L T OL P1s GF GA

2J',

I

x·Philadelphia 3B 18 14 6 96
New Jersey 38 23 12 2 90
N.Y. Islanders 34 27 10 4 82
N.Y. Aangers 2536 7 8 65
20 45 7 4 51
Pittsburgh
Northeast Division

Philadelphia

Montreal
Buffalo

'
Nallgnal
Baaketball
..oclatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atllntlc Olvlakm
w L Pet.
New Jersey
41 28 .594
.47,
Miami
;l3 37
New York
33 38 .465
Boston
31 40 .437
Philadelphia
29 42 .408
Washn)Qion
.22 47 .319
Orlando
19 53 .264
Central Division
w L PC1
x-lncliana
51 19 .729
)(-Detroit
46 25 .648
Ne w Orleans
51 4
36 34
Mil waukee
34 35
493
Cl811eland
31 38 449
Toronto
435
30 39
Atlanta
22 49 310
Chicago
20 50 286
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldweat Division
w L
Pc1
x-Minnesota
48 22 686
San Anton1o
46 24 657
44 26
Dallas
629
Memph is
43 26 .623
Houston
40 29 .580
Denver
37 35 514
Utah
36 34 5'14
Pacific Division
Pet
w L
x-Sacramenlo
51 19 729
L.A. Lakers
47 23 671
Portland
35 35 500
Seattle
32 38 457
Golden State
29 40 420
L.A. Clippers
27 44 380
Phoeni)(
23 47 .329

PageB6
Tuesday, March 23,2004

7:1!5 p.m.

Morch 2e
At Tho Qoor;ll como
Atlonto

NCAA Basketball
NCAA Toumament
OPENING ROUND

At UD Arena
Dayton, Ohio
Tuesday, March 16
Florida A&amp;M 72. Lehigh 57

1

Taxes (25·7) vs. Xavier (25·10), 7:27p.m.
Duke (29-5) vs. Illinois (26·6), 30 minutes
after first game
Championship J
Sunday, March 28
At Th• Georgia Dome
Attanta
Semifinal winners

Sunday's Games
EAST RUTHERFORD REGIONAL
ST. LOUIS REGIONAL
Toronto 2. Detroit 1
First Round
First Round
St. l ouis 6. Atlanta 4
Thursday, March 18
Thursday, March 18
Boston 4, Baltimore 2
At HSBC Arena
At Key Arena
Buffalo, N.Y.
Montreal 9. Cleveland 5
Seattie
New York Mets (ss) 9, Florida 1
Texas Tech 76. Charlotte 73
Nevada 72, Mich1gan State 66
C1nc1nnati 5, Pit1sburgh 0
Sa1nt Joseph's 82, Liberty 63
Gonzaga ,76. Valparaiso 49
Minnesota 9, Philadelp1'1ia a
AI RBC Center
Friday, March 19
Los Angeles (ss) 4, New York Mats (ss) 1
Raleigh, N.C.
At Nationwide Arens
N.Y. Yankees 7, Tampa Bay 2
Manhattan 75. Florida 60
Columbus, Ohio
Oakland 8. San Francisco 6
Wake Forest 79, Virginia Commonwealth
KentucNy 96, Florida A&amp;M 76
76
Kansas City 3, Anaheim 2
Alabama -Birmingham 102. Washington
Chicago Cubs 7, San Diego (ss) 6
Friday, March 19
100
AI Kemper Arena
Seattle 12, Chicago While So~e 2
At Kamper Arena
Texas 6, Colorado {ss) 1
Kansas Clty, Mo.
Kanaaa City, Mo.
Arizona {ss) 3. Milwaukee 0
MefY!phis 59, South Carolina 43
Pacific 66 . Providence 58
Oklahoma State 75, Eastern Wash1ngton
Arizona (ss) 14, ColoradO (ss) 3
Ka nsas 78, lllinois-Chicauo 53
56
Houston 10. Los Angeles (ss) 7
At The .Bradley Center
_Monday's Games
At The Bradley Center
Milwaukee
Houston 3. Florida o
Milwaukee
Boston College 58, Utah 51
Wisconsin 76 , Richmond 64
N.Y. Yankees 13. Detroit 3
Georgia Tech 65, North ern Iowa 60
Pi11sburgh 53, Central Florida 44
Los Angeles 3, Boston 2
Second Round
Second Round
St. Louis 7, Atlanta 2
Saturday, March 20
Saturday, March 20
Mmnesota 11 , Pittsburgh 7
At Key Arena
Cleveland 1 1. Cincmnat14
At HSBC Arena
SeaHie
Buffalo, N.Y.
Philadelphia 5, Tampa Bay 4
Nevada 91, Goozaga 72
Saint Joseph's 70. Texas Tech 65
Colorado 1. San Diego 0
Sunday, March 21
At RBC Center
Arizona 3, Seattle 2
At Nationwide Arena
Ralalgh, N.C.
MilwauKee 6. Chicago While Sox 2
Columbua, Ohio
Wake Forest 84. Manhattan 80
Chicago Cubs 1. OaKland o
Alabama-Birmin gham 76, Kentucky 75
Sunday, March 2,
Texas 7, Kansas City 6
At Kemper Arena
At Kemper Arena
Tuesday 's Gi.mes
Kanaas City, Mo.
Kansas City, Mo.
Al1anla vs. Houston at Kissimmee . Fla ..
Kansas 78, Pacific 63
1:05 p.m
...,./
Oklahoma State 70, Memphis 53
At The Bradley Center
At The Bradley Center
Los Angeles vs. Florida at Jupiter. Fla ..
Milwaukee
1:05 p.m.
Milwaukee
Georg1a Tech 57, Boston College 54
Pittsburgh 59, Wisconsin 55
Tampa Bay vs Boston at Fort Myers. Fla ..
Semifinals
1:05 p.m
Semifinals
Friday, March 26
Thursday, March 25
Cleveland vs. Toronto at Dunedin. Fla..
At Edward Jones Dome
1:05 p.m
At Continental Airlines Arena
St. Louis
Philadelphia vs. Pillsburgh at Bradenton,
East Rutherford, N.J.
Alabama -Birmingha m (22·9) 'JS . Kansas
Fla .. 1:05 p.m
OKlahoma State (29· 3) vs. Pittsburgh (23·81, 7.10 p.m .
Montreal (ss) vs . Baltimore at Fort (31·4), n7 p.m.
Georgia Tech (25·9) vs. Nevada (25·8).
Lauderdale. Fla.. 1:05pm.
Saint Joseph's (29· 1) vs. Wake Forest 30 minutes after fi rst game
Texa s vs. San Diego at Peoria. Ariz .. 3:05 (21 ·9), 30 minutes after lirst game.
Championship
p.m.
Championship
Sunday, March 28
MilwauKee vs. Anaheim at Tempe. Ariz ..
Salurday, March 27
At Edward Jones Dome
3:05 pm .
At Continental Airlines Arena
St.Louis
Kansas City vs. Oakland at Phoenix. 3:05
East Rutherford, N.J.
Semifinal winners
p.m.
Semifinal winners
San Francisco vs. Chicago Cubs at Mesa,
PHOENIX REGIONAL
A1iz .. 3:05 p.m.
· ATLANTA REGIONAL
First Round
Arizona vs. Chicago White Sox at Tucson.
First Round
Thursday, March 1a
Ariz .. 3:05 p.m.
Thursday, March 18
At HSBC Arena
N.Y. Mets vs. Montreal (ss) at Viera, Fla.,
At The Papal Center
Buffslo, N.Y.
7:05p.m.
Denver
Connecticut 70. Vermont 53
N.Y. YanKees vs. Cincinnati at Sarasota.
Texa s 66, Prince ton 49
DePaul 76, Dayton 69, 20T
Fla., 7:05p.m
North Carolina 63, Air Force 52
At The Pepsi Center ·
Sealtle vs. Colorado at Tucson. Ariz., 9:05
At ABC Center
Denver
p.m.
Raleigh, N.C.
Maryland 86, Texas·EI Paso 83
Wednesday 's Games
Duke 96, Alabama State 61
Syracuse 80. Brigham Young 75
Baltimore vs. Montreal at Viera, Fla., 1:05
Seton Hall 80, Arizona 76
At Key Arena
p.m.
Friday, March 19
Seanle
Tampa Bay vs. Cleveland at Winter
At Nationwide Arena
Alabama 65 . Southern Illinois 64
Haven. Fla .. 1·05 p m,
Columbus, Ohio
Stanford 71, Texas-San Antonio 45
Oakland vs. Texas at Surprise. Ariz .. 3:05
Illinois 72, Murray Slate 53
Friday, Maroh 19
p.m.
Cincinnati 80. East Tennessee State 77
At TO Waterhouse Centra
Chicago Cubs vs. Anaheim at Tempe,
At TO Waterhouse Centre
Orlando, Fla.
Ariz .. 3:05p.m.
Orlando, Fla.
North Carolin a Stale 61. louisianaArizona vs. Colorado at Tucson, Anz ..
Mississippi State 85, Monmouth, N . ~ . 52
Lafayette 52
3:05p.m.
Xavier 80 . Louisville 70
Vanderbilt71. Western Michigan 58
Seallle vs. Chicago White Sox at Tucson,
S8cond Round
Second Round
Ariz .. 3:05 p.m.
Saturday, March 20
Saturday, March 20
San Diego vs . San Francisco at
At The Pepsi Center
At HSBC Arena
Scottsdale, Ariz.. 3:05 p.m.
Denver
Buffalo, N.Y.
Cincinnati vs. Detroit at Lakeland. Fla ..
Texas 78, North Carolina 75
Connecticut 72. DePaul 55
6:05 p.m.
At ABC Center
At The Pepsi Center
Florida vs. St. Louis at Jupiter. Fla .. 7:05
Raleigh, N.C.
Denver
p.m.
Duke 90, Se ton Hall 62
Syra cuse 72. Maryland 70
Toronto vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater.
Sunday, March 21
At Key Arena
Fla., 7:05 p.m.
At Nationwide Arena
seattle
PiHsburgh vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers.
Columbus, Ohio
Alabama 70, Stanford 67
Fla .. 7:05 p.m.
Illinois 92, Cincinnati 68
Sunday, March 21
Houston vs. N.Y. Mets at Port St. Lucie,
At TD Waterhouse Center
At TO Waterhouse Center
Fla .. 7:10p.m.
Orlando, Fla.
Orlando, Fla.
Boston vs. N.Y. Ya nkees at Tampa, Fla.,
Xavier 89, Mississippi State 74
, Vanderbilt 75, North Carolina Sta te 73

Big second helps Jays
edge Tribe; Bt

S.mlflnala

S.mlflnala

Thurodoy, March 25

F~doy,

At AmtriCI Weat Arena
Phoenix
Vanderbl~

.(23·9) vs. Connecticul (29·8),

7:1 0p.m.
Alabama (19·12) vs. Svracuse (23-7) , 30
minutes after first game
Championship
Saturday, March 27
At America Welt Arena
Phoenix ·
Semifinal winners

FINAL FOUR
At The Alamoctome
San Antonio
Semifinals
SaiUrday, April3
East Aulherlord champion vs. St. louis
champion, TBA '
;
Atla nta champion vs. Phoenix champion,
TSA Championship

Monday, Ap~l 5

Semilinal winners

National Invitation Tournament
Opening Round
Tuesday, March 16
Nebraska 71, Creighton'ftl
Wednesday. March 17
Niagara 87, Troy State 83
George Mason 58 , Tennessee 55
West Virginia 65, Kent State 54
Rhode Island BO. Boston U. 52
Austin Peay 65. Belmont 59
Wisconsin-Milwaukee 91. Rice 53
Boise State 84, UNLV 69

'

Sheriff issues cocaine advisory

SPORTS
• Xavier finds direction,
moves nto round of 16.
See PageB1

'

BY BRtAN J. REED '
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

P15SR12
P175/70R13
P15S/80R13 P185/70R13

'

P185/75R14 P185/70R14
P195/75R14 P195/70R14
P175/65R14 P185/60R14
P185/85R14 P195/60R14
P205/7SR14 P205/70R14
I

P195/65R14 P205/75R15
P185/65R15 P215175R15
P195/65R15
P196/60R15 P225175R15
P205/65R15 P235/75R15
P205/70R15

i$89
i$99
i$110
i$119
4$129

for

Billllftdftg &amp; ~AI Exir11 Cost
7reN Deilp M11y l'11ry
No C11rryou18

---With the purchase of a
set of fo ur ·selected
Goodyear ti res.
$!0 F.... $7! FIW

~

.....,., __ , (;as 'rin.'!i: G11s Ti~:
.\ (jlliolf1'CI I

'I

l · n~l e

I· I

' 1111 l~t~ lt 1(\ A ~J1 ~Ie 1W llllf'll
~I ;S Wn111yifr ,\"I.S Pil l\
'
• I
I

Mohle r and Deputy Ric k
Smith were called to
Kin gs bury Road late lasl
week an d found a Coolvil le
man allegedly breaking win-

POMEROY A very
p01ent and addic ti ve form
of cocaine is being traf·
ficked in Meigs Coun ty,
according to Sheriff Ralph
Trussell , and symbolizes a
growing problem with the
drug in the communit y.
"This cocaine is extremely addictive and very toxic,"
Trussell said Tuesday. ·"Use

West Virginia 79_, .1.Rhode Island 72
George Mason oti , Austin Peay 60
Nebraska 78, Niagara 70
Saturday, March 20
Boise State 73. Wisconsin-MilwauKee 70

Home-made cross soon to light entrance

Friday, March 19

dow s out ur a car whil e

under the inrluence of
coca1ne.
..Cocaine use and trafficking ha ve begun to cause
serious problems wi thin thi s
community:· Tru"ell said .
·'Many of the breakin g and
entering &lt;.:ases. theft case;

Second Round
Saturday, Man:::h 20
Villanova 73, Virginia 63
Monday, March 22
Notre Dame 77, Saint Louis 66
Rutg ers 67, West Virginia 64
Michigan 63, Oklahoma 52
Hawaii 84, Nebraska 83
· TUesday, March 23
Iowa State (18-12) at Florida State (19·
13). 7 p.m .
Boise State (23·9) at -Marqu ette (~8-1 1).
8p.m_
Oregon (16· t2) vs. George Mason (23·
9), 11:30 p.m'. .

anJ other .:rimes investigated by my office have a
direct li nk to drug use. and
particul arly 10 cocaine use .'·
Tru sse ll said cocai ne 's
hi gh street . cost forc es
add icts to stea l ·easily-sold
items in orde r to support
their dru g habit.
"I urge anyone with information regarding thi s drug
to contact my ortice or any
other
law
enfor&lt;.:emen t
agency ... Trusse ll said.

Board of
Education
renews
contracts
of Southern
principals

Quarterfinals
March 24-26
Villanova (18· 16) vs. Rutgers (18·12),

BY

J. MtLES

lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTI NEL. CO M

TBA

1 Boise State-Marquette winner vs. Iowa
State-Florida State winner, TBA
Notre Dame (19·12) vs. Oregon-George
Mason winner. TBA
Mich1gan (20·1 1) vs. Hawaii (21·11 }, TBA

Semifinals
Tuesday, March 30
Villanova-Rutgers winner vs. Boise
State-Marquette-Iowa State-Florida State
winner. TBA
Notre Dame-Oregon-George Mason
winner vs . Michigan-Hawai i winner. TBA
Championship
Thursday, April1
Semifinal winners. T8A

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

@~~~~~~3
00
ONL~54
P175nOR13 BLK

powder.
of this particu lar form of ellecl. Talcum
cocaine has caused individ- chalk, meat tenderi zer and
uals to become very violent. other' stlbst mlces arc fre and it tends to make those quentl y used to .. cu t.. the
dru g, but Trussel l said the
who use it very sick .'"
According to TrusselL the highl y-potent hmn now cirsickness which results from culating is virtual ly pure .
Tru ssell said at least two
the use of thi s form of
cocaine is due to its purity. violenl incident s in vestigatCocaine is ge nerall y .. cut:· ed by his o ffi ce ha ve been
or adulterated, with other linked to the use of cocaine ,
substances m order to the last of which resulted in
increase its retail value and the injury and treatment of
to soften its st imu lant Deputy Donny Mohler.

First Round
Monday, March 1S
Ma rquette 87, Toledo 72
Tuesday. March 16
Saint Lou is 70, Iowa 69
Michigan 65, Missouri 64
Wednesday, March 11
Notre Dame 71 , Purdue 59
Virgi nia 79, George Washington 66
Rutgers76, Temple 71
Vil lanova 85, Drexel 70
Florida State 91. Wichita State 84. 20T
Hawaii 85, Utah Stale 74
Iowa State 8 2, Georgia 74
Oklahoma 70, LSU 61
Oregon 77. Colorado 72. OT

INSIDE

Free Mot~ming

lidle to start
Reds opener
against Cubs, Bt

• Pomeroy woman takes
top niusic award.
See Page A2
• Family Medicine.
S8e Page A3

WEATHER

P165/70R14 ..... .............$59.99
P195170R14 ........... ....... $62.99
P205/70R14 ..................$64.99
P205/70R15 .................. $7t .00
P225/60R16.................. $88.99

RACINE - Contracts of
pri ncipals
for
both
Southern
Hi gh
and
So uthern
Elementary
Schools were renewed by
the Southern Local Board
of Education at Monday
nigh1's meeting.
Gordon Fisher. who has
been principal at Southern
High Schoo l s1nce 1994.
was awarded a four-year
administrative contrac t as
high school principal for
the 2004-2005 school year
through
the 2007 -2008
school year.
Kucsma, principal of
Southern Elementarv. was
awarded a two-year· administrative contract as the
elementary principal effective for the 2004-2005
school year through the
2005-2006 school year. She
has been a principal in the
district for 17 years.
The resig nation of Ryan
Eddie Ball puts the finishing touches on a cross he is attaching to the front entrance of the Mulberry Street Community Center where
the Meigs Cooperative Parish and God 's NET will eventually be located. Ball bu11t the cross himself and used lights donated by Joanne Lemley . as athletic director
Vaughan. Meigs Cooperative Parish Director Keith Rader said he hopes the parish offices, God 's NET and the food bank Will be able
Please see Contracts, A5
to move into the former Pomeroy Elementary School this summer. (J. Miles Layton)
.

Meig~

I

Local Board of Education holds meet1ng

William Buckl e~ had said
that he would bnng "recom·
mendations to the board,
POMEROY - A second probably at the first meeting
step in cutting costs was m April" on cuts to be made.
taken by the Meigs Local That is expected to happen.
Ron
Wood ,
Board of Education Tuesday
Ohio
night when it was voted not Association of Public School
to renew the administrative Employees president. was
contract of Kelly Barnett, included on last night's agen·
assistant principal at Meigs da to talk on concerns about
High School.
potential cuts.
During the meeting the
Earlier the board had voted
not to replace Donna Carr, board voted to renew its consecretary in the office of tract with Ohio University to
superintendent's office, who provide an athletic trai ning
retired. The district is facing for Meigs high School at a
•a projected $500,000 deficit cost of $9.000; to hire Teresa
in operating funds for the fis- Carr and Matt Kulber as
cal year 2004-2005 school tutors for health handicapped
year and it was agreed at last students at a rate of $30 an
month's meeting that person- hour not to exceed fi ve hours
nel would have to be cut and a week, and to hire Ben
that many of the(cuts would Hager as a substitute teacher
be at the high school.
Earl ier
Superintendent
Please see Meeting. AS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detallo on Pap AS

INTEGRITY

00
ONL~39
P175/7DR13 BLK

INDEX

P185170R13 BK..... ..$43.00
P175/70R14 BK .. ..... $44.00
P205/70R14 XNW .... $54.00
P215/70R14 XNW .. ..$56.00
P215/70R1 5 BK.......$56.00
P205/70R15 BK.......$59.00

Other Sizes Available At Sillilw Saling•

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P265/70R1 7.......... $120 .95
P245/75R16 ...... ... $11 5.95

SIZES &amp;PRICES AVAILABLE
lnl«nt, ~o Pllyrnentl Fcx 90 Days $100 Mlnlrrl.lm Purcha.e Required.
FINANCE CHARGES accrue from tt111 data ol purchase and all acctuild FINANCE CHARGES will be added to your Accoum for 1110
&amp;ntlte promotiOnal parlod. Uqualifying purchases are not paid In full by the end of the deferred paym1mt period or 11 you fall to make
any rfK!Uirecl payment on your Account when due. Sea below lor n·Kua delt~lls

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Senior Citizens make·
up 65% of the tutcn
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this
contact your
Advertising
Representative.
I

~al!ipoli~ liBailp lll:ribUne.·
•tt:I:Jint !lleasattt' lie.llt~ter

• The Daily Sentinel
'

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

(;omics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Community

A2

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ron Logan, stude nt ac hievement li aison representative fo r the Meigs Local Board of
Education presents pins to science contest winners, Randy Hud son and Justin Whitlatch, and
DAR essay wi nner, Shawntay Garnes, left to right. (Charlene Hoeflich)
I

SK Walk for

..

Saturflay, April 3 •
(Registration - 10 AM • Speakers - 1VI: ~,..~

2146~2342

Gallipolis ·City Parle '

675-1333
992-215'5

Autism is a disorder of the brain thof affects as ~any as 1 out of
is the fastest·growing developmen~l disability. (Autism Society

250 births and

Advertising Deadline - April1, 2004

For more information,

HOPE

••

at

Discover the Holzer Difference

America)

Show your support! Everyone invited! $5.00 re!llt!stratic&gt;n fee.
T-Shirts • S10.00 - S12.00

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call

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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>03. March</text>
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          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18192">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18191">
              <text>March 23, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
