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'•

•

•

Page 8 6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.coni

Wednesday, April 2, 2003

Uninvited visitors panic
Widow who l.ives .alone·
' DEAR ABBY: I am a
widow who lives alone. My
problem concerns door-to·
door solicil.o rs. They seem to
be at my door all the tim~ .
With all the scams and violent home invasions I read
and hear about, I go into a
panic when I open the door
to find a· stranger standing .
there.
When I hear my doorbell
rihg, I like· to assume it's one
of my neighbors or their kids
-· so I open up. I don ' I want
to be rude and not answer
and help out my neighbors
~hose school-age children
might be selling candy for
fund- raisers or going doorto-door with Girl Scout
cookies. I love supporting
their causes when I am able.
But how should I react when
it's not someone I know?
·Today7 there were some
pretty shady-looking characters on my porch asking to
come inside and steam-clean
my carpets. Have you any
advice on how I _can polit.ely
but firmly get nd of sohCItors so I can feel safe in my
own home? Thanks, Abby.
-AFRAID TO FIND OUT
WHAT'S BEHIND DOOR

N0.1
DEAR AFRAID: First of
all, never open your door
without. first checking to see
who is there. If this means

people's children bothering
them? I realize that "Mother"
believes her children are the
s'alt of the earth and her
world revolVes around them.
However, I'm a middle-aged,
childless single woman who
. works hard all' day juggling
two difficult jobs. The last
thing I want to deal with
ADVICE
when I get home is someone
else's children. In .the last
having a ·peephole installed place I lived, my next-door
in your front door, it will be neighbors sent their kids into
money well-spent. If the per-- the hallway at nigh( to play
son standing there is a cricket and ~ouldn 't understranger, don 't open the door. stand why that bothered me!
Youf
suggestion
that
Second, people who go
around neighborhood s sell- "Mother" instruct her chiling services that haven't dren to leave the. neighbor
been previously ordered. or woman alone is a good one.
merchandise that "just fell However, advising her to add
off a truck ,~~ are usually scam that there is something
artists and should be a voided wrong with the woman
at all costs. Caveat emptor ("explain that the neighbor is
troubled and unhappy") fos(letthe buyer beware)!
DEAR
ABBY: ters bad manners. It should
"Concerned Mother" wrote make no difference to the
that she wants to move kiddies why they are to leave
because her neighbor, "the. tha! woman alone. It should
Wicked Witch of the West," be enough for them to underlikes· her dogs better than stand that the neighbor does"Concerned Mother's" chil- n't wish to be bothered. The
dren. ("'She ignores the inno- sooner they learn that not
cent greetings of our chil- everyone thinks they "hung
dren, which hurts their feel- the moon," the happier they
ings .... I worrr what a per- will be. ~ KATE J.N
,
son so filled wllh anger may TORONTO
DEAR KATE: The ,par- ·
be capable of.")
May I politely suggest that .ents of the cricket-playing
not everyone wants other kids in your hallway were
•'

Dear

Abby

ACROSS

42 Beatty
of films
1 Swelter
43 Pen brlfnd
6 Cite
44 Step on 'It
11 Force
46 Tycoon's
through
home
13 Corn kin
49 Fuel
14 Big lizard
rating ·
15 Complained 53 Like Arcfile
16 Grain
Bunker •
' holder
54 Oil canler
responsible for the racket -- 17 Devotee
55 More sad
not the youngsters. The little . 18 Rran
5&amp; Adds
brandy
o films
ones were just doing as they .
were told. I'm printing your 21 Handbag
DOWN
name
letter because tt 's true that
Price
not all adults relate well to 23 add-on
. 1 -Lanka
children. (W.C. Fields · was 26 Seine
2 Greet,
exam~le . of
that.)
an
as a dog
• vista
3 Trendy
However, it s safe to say that 27 Clnemax
meat
rival
most adults do. But some4
Bedouin
28
Frau's
times even ihe kindest and
' 5· Alter dark
spouse
happiest people don't Jike to
6 Virtual
29 Pixies
be disturbed .
..
'
7 Army outfit
31 Cuz'co
Dear Abby .is written, by
8 Grease
founder
9 Boot part
Abigail Van Buren, also 32 Mantra
10
Finale
chanter
known as Jeanne Phillips.
12
Ulm's river
33
Work
day
and was founqed by her
13- -a-brae
36
Wise-mother, Pauline Phillips. ·
owl .
18 Lose
Write
Dear Abby at 37 .Fiftlng
19 U.S.-Mexlco
border
www.DearAbby.com or P.Q.
38 Keats opus
town
39 Over there
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
(2 wds.)
40 Low ground
90069.
'

,

I

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
20 Bach, e.q . 43 Pedestal
45 Famous
22 Cheech,
volcano
to Chong
46 Recede
(hyph.)
47 Part
23 Sinew
of RSVP
24 Gallery
48 Sorority
25 Did ·
leiter
radiology
50
Dog show
• (hyph.)
. org.
28 "To Each
51 Born as
-Own"
52 Ums''
30 Writer
cousins
-Flaming
34 Result
35 Honest ·
40 Bishop's

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

"·

You may begin to disengage yourself in the year·
ahead. from people or sttuations that have proven to im_pede your progress._The new
associates you establish will
prove to be quite productive.
ARii&lt;:S (March 21-April
19) - There's_a good chance
that an association you have
has become too expensive for
you to continue. Today you
mtght dectde to calltt qmts. ·
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - A personal objective
that is important to you might
not be equally · so to others.
It's best not to team Uf' with
someone today who lacks interest in carrying out his or
her part of the bargain.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
, - Be careful what you tell
someone to~ay in confidence.
· If this person talks, it may be
held against you by the very
people you wtsh to please.
.. CANCER (June 21-July

22) - Although you may be
anxious to acquire something
thai is out of reach for you financially. be patient and build
a cash base before trymg to
go after it today by using
.
credit. You'll be sorry.
LEO (July 23-A ug. 22)This is a questionable day for
establishing any important
agreements. Before taking action on one today. take a little
more time to research it to see
where the loopholes might ex•l
ist.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se)lt. 22)
- Unless you lay all of vour
cards face up on ·the table,
persons with whom you associate today might be a bit dubious about' your motives.
They'll se nse you're hiding
something.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
-There's a strong possibility
that you may find yourself
lined up with the minority today against a group endeavor.
Instead of taking on a battle
that's more than you can handle, bow out. .,

~~?.1 W\\lil: A~E Yoll
r.n~Db

Freedom tree ·

hat
41 Scored
... well

The Newspaper
Has Class .••
Students can
learn a lot .from
the newspaper about the
world
in which they live. And
now is the
perfect time to bring
newspapers into the

cia r

motiey in after liad. If you're
locked into a bum deal. face it · '-....1-..l--"--1.for what it is and get.out of it
as quickly as you can.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- Unless you have set a
good example in ihe past, neither family nor companions
are apt to pitch in today when
you need help. Should this be
\!.!J
~'e~
ihe case, learn from it.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- People in general are a
bit lax today and might attempt to shift their responsibilities onto you. Be helpful if
you can. but don't earn their
entire paycheck for them.

0oooooo
fT\@o ®•@l§)tN@

to
2od00WN =~
3&lt;d DOWN

=.:::lL

4th DOWN

= 22

JUDO'S TOTAL

-

previous

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Word
Scrimmage ·

~ SToMAQj?

·

2nd DOWN

FOUR PLAY TOTAL

TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

DIRECTIONS: Makt a 2- to 7:1ener wora from

the lettl!f!l

=

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'(C1J

fi\.01-\E

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on e!K:h yardlne.

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

~EMEM9el&lt; ,

wrrn A
DiGITAl..

CMtEJ!A,

ANDnw:r

!l.IGIIT Arnll
I TAI&lt;EIT.•.

OIGITS .. .

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SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Assistant Fire Chief Eber
Pickens Jr. is pleased with the
fire department's patriotism.
A week a~, the 32-mcmber
volunteer department wanted
to do. somethiitg to acknowledge events going on in lmq.
They .decided IG decorate
the tree in front ' of the
Syracuse village hall with ribbons, many of them yellow, to
display their patriotism and
show their support for the
troops overseas .
Pickens said one of the

HOY, IT's

C/IMERA,

-r

Staff writer

· sparks that allowed this patriotism to shine was the parade
of protesters he and other people see on television and-in thenews.
"We saw everyone protesting and for us, decorating this
tree shows suppo;t, · for our
troops overseas," he said.
·
Pickens said anyone can
place a ribbon on the tree and
many people have done so
who are not in the fire depanment.
As events develop in Iraq,
Pickens said more ribbons
will be put on the tree which
he said the department and the ,
village are proud of.

A Dt&lt;JirAL

O!ON'r t CAN Plll?lttt\11
Slt\II.E... '1\\e I'ICTU~E

;

BY J. MILES UYTON

•

Atil polrWs to !Mid'l word or leiter U5lng SCXlri"liJ directions at riglll:. Seven·latter
words get a 6C1-poift tx'lnl.ll. AI' WOfds can be lound in Webster's NeW WOJid ~

172

1-\~CI&lt;.

lSI Down TOial
+50 PotnlS

AVERAGE GAME 2&amp;5-275

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AVERAGE GAME 105-115

·syracuse VFD
·strikes blow for
patrio~ic spirit

·WORD®©®CD@@0©®-

1. '3\.ET W/t..\-\'i .'{cti To L~VE
Mt:. 114e

j t:b FOR AN

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PVH to host -flag
football tourney
Staff report

E-

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Mike
Barlrum ,
a
longsnapper and tight end
with the Philadelphia Eagles,
and New England Patriots
wide receiver Troy Brown
will be the tentative special
guests at the annual Pleasant
Valley Hospital Coed Flag
Football Tournament to be
held May 17.

Bartrum and Brown will
sign , autogr.aphs, free of
charge, for the general public,
beginning at 9 a.m.
"We are elated , that Mike
and Troy will be the featured
guests at our annual coed flag
football tournament," said
Amy J. Leach, director of
community relations at PVH. ·
"These are two athletes who
epitomize good sportsman-

Piqse see PVH, AS

T~E

WAR. DRA65
ON .. ~E 15 LONECY

Sunny, HI: 701, Low: 60t

Index

ANO OEPRE 55 ED...

1 Sedfons - 16 Ptlps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials

" E-

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~

t\E ., UH . WELL

.

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· I'M OOING&lt; OUT,
C.ARFIE\..P

t&gt;.'f

~EM11'

INVO~V!!!l

NO'fHING- THAT
t&gt;. ':#/AT TEAM

W~ltY TIM~
YOlJ R~llEAl&gt;

IT, YOlJ FI Nl&gt;
SOMeTt41NG

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Movies

__..-:: IT'S Tti~ MA/liC OF A ~ML CLAfSIC. .

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Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Q

A3
B6· 7
BS
BS

A6

A3
AS
Bl-5
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2003 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

ao.o... Pow.ll, 4th fi'IIC!o,
"-royEietMntal')'

-u.s-. troops h~ve choice: Enter
or~·it

Baghdad

HOW

for Saddlam's downfan

Associated Press •
U.S.
WASHINGTON troops have advanced quickly
to the doorstep of Baghdad,
leaving their commanders
with a tantalizing choice:
Continue the charge into
Saddam Hussein's capital or
wait ·for reinforcements and
give Iraqis a chance to overthrow the regime themselves:
But during the fighting, two
American aircraft were lost.
While the Pentagon first said
an Anny Black Hawk helicopter and a Navy F/A-18C
Hornet had been shot down.
commanders in the Persian
Gulf said Thursday they were
still investigating t~e causes of
both incidents. ~Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks
told a Qatar press conference
that "hostile ftre" was not suspected in the helicopter downmg and that there were reports
the Hornet was hit by missiles,
not elaborating whether they
were Iraqi or coalition missiles.
Brooks said .there were
"some casualties" from the
helicopter
crash.
The
Pentagon said six Americans
aboard the helicopter were
killed. The Hornet pilot was·
missing and search ar\d res,Cue
operations were underway,
officials said.
·
Lead units of the multipronged U.S. Army and
Marine assault force were
about. four miles from the
edge of Baghdad on Thursday,
and some soldiers raided a
presidential
palace · near
Saddam International Airport.
Special forces infiltrated
some Iraqi command posts in

/

An unidentified Marine with India Co., 3rd Battal ion, 7th Maril'tes. 1st Marine Division, looks
at a portrait of Saddam Hussein found in a sc:hool in Numaniyah, southeast of Baghdad, Iraq,
today. Officers ·of the 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines were to meet today with local leaders in
Numaniyah, worrying that destruction and confiscation of weapons will leave them unable to
maintain security in the town. (AP)
the Baghdad area during the
night, seeking strategic information , and al so secured some
bridges and .dams to forestall
possible sabotage, . according
to the U.S. Central Command.
The advance set the stage
.for either a tina! push on the
capital or the capitulation of
Saddam's best and most loyal
tighters. Some Pentagon officials said Wed ne sday the
American forces likely would
pause on the outskirts of tQe
.;apital to allow pressure to
build on the Iraqi regime, perhaps enough so it would fall

without the chaotic and
bloody urban fighting Iraqi
offtcials say they are planmng.
A pa~se also would allow
more remforcements to enter ,
Iraq. The 4th Infantry
Divtsion, which has some of
the Army's most advanced
tanks and equipment, is m;riving in K~ait and could field
a brigaae-sized task force of a
few thousand soldiers as early
as Monday or. Tuesaay, the
official said.
Top civilian leaders said
they weren't counting on
'

and Wellness Department is a

· •Just For

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For more !nformotion, pleose
Jerreno Ebersbach at (740) 992-7747 or Jackie Wolf ot (740)992-4229

r

Saddam's capitulation . "It
doesn't see m likely," said
Victoria Clarke, spokeswoman for Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rurnsfeld.
The Pentagon sought to
lower ex~tations that the
Iraqi capttal could · be taken
quickly or easily.
"We are planning for a very
difficqlt fight ahead in
Baghdad.'' Maj. Gen. Stanley
McChrystal told a Pentagon
news conference. "We are not
expecting to drive irito
Baghdad suddenly and seize

sponsor

proviclecl by Girl Scouts of Black Diamond Big Bend Service Unit ,
Saturday, Apil 5 • 10 AM - 2 PM
· MidrJepcrt Church of Christ Family Ufe CenN!r
A special event for girls ages 5 - 18

~ (,()lf-16 To'&amp;. ltEN:&gt;Y. t'tl\

..

BY MATT KELLEY

HMC Community

,_

""'=.~~'
0

Nathan and Mackenzie Redman place pictures o( soldiers on the Freedom Tree displayed in the window at Middlepori
Flower Shop. Mandy Redman , who owns the shop, has invited local residents to place pictures and other mementos
"
representing local soldiers on the tree as a symbol of support. (Brian J. Reed)

N~yl.

...l

'I

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tying a yellow ribbon around this SyractJse tree is a way members ofthe volunteer fire department in Syracuse showed their
support for the troops overseas. (J . Miles Layton)

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22)- If you don't think well
of yourself, who will? How. ever, today. if you think only
of yourself and not of others,
persons who normally think
well ofyoil won't.
SAGITTARIUS ·(Nov. 23Dec: 21) - It behoo~es you
not to willingly suffer a mem.Pry lapse today' rind . fo~gct a
valuable lesson you have
learned from a bitter experience. By repeating the mi stakes, you'll repeat the re sults.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan. 19) - Guard against
temptations today to put good

.

THURSDAY. APRIL 3, 2003

50 CENTS • \lol. 53. No . 158

Ast~ograph
Thursday , April3, 2003

·-n-ose who serve:·A4

·.

•

.MEDIC A L CENTER
Discover the Holzer Diff..erence

www.holzer.org
•

�•

.

•

'

•

.

.The Daily Sentinel.

The Daily Sentinel

·SUV opposes taking ·
~Under God'·out of .pledge
Thursday, April 3, 2003

Ohio weather

Shoe strings

Friday, April 4

.

'

-

[ibnotlold

IWiifJ •
I•
• I Columbua ]_53'/65'

\.··~~~§:]

KY.

J

• Steven Blevins looks over boot l&lt;ll::es after pulling them
from the tipping machine at Mitchellace, a shoelace factory in Portsmouth Tuesday. Mitchellace has subcontracted
to provide the laces, along with laces for berets, ponchos;
and binocular straps, for the United States military. (AP)

- W.VA.

•. •....

0 2003 AocuWeather, Inc.

,..,

() -~

Sl.llfiY Pt. Cloucly

. -

Cloudy

Showers

.'·' ...- -. &lt;iifl!' -......
T-6torms

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

F:,ront will bring rain to area

Court dismisses·
appeals in school
construction conflict

.BY THE ASSOCIATED PRf;SS
in the mid 50s. Southwest winds
Sunshine will be abundant 10 to 15 mph.
Friday... Mostly cloudy. A
today.
The showers will become chanoe of showers in the mornmore common tonight into ing. Scattet:ed showers or thunBY ANDREW WELStHfUGGINS
Friday as low pressure develops derstorms in the afternoon.
Associated Press
on the front and moves east by Highs in the lower 70s.
early friday night There could Southwest winds I0 to 20 mph.
COLUMBUS _ The
be some thunderstonns later Chance of min 40 peroent.
Ohio
Supreme Court on
tnnight and Friday,
Friday night...Show11rs and ·
Wednesday
ended a lawsuit
Some of the storms could be thunderstonns likely. LOws near
that led to . significant
strong to severe, especially 50. Chance of rain 60 peroent
changes
at the agency
ExmaD.FCIIIB:AST
acioss southern Ohio, where it
responsible
for billions of
Saturday... Partly cloudy and
will be another warin day on
. dollars of school construeFriday with temperatures in the coOler. Highs in the upper 50s.
, lion projects.
Saturday
night...Mostly
clear.
70s.
Lows
near
40.
·
The court dismissed
As the low pressure moves
appeals . by
Monarch
Sunday... Partly · cloudy. A
east late Friday night, a north to
nOrthwest flow will develop and ~hance of rain late at night
Construction Co.. involving
the colder air will spread south. Highs in the lower 60s.
the .way the Ohio Sch~l
Monday... Mostly cloudy. A
Temperatures on S~y will
Fac1httes . .. Comn11Sston
chance of showers and thunderbe in the 50s.
awarde~ bulldmg c&lt;:mtmcts.
Sunday should be dry for stonns ,during the day, then a
The :hrst appeal_ myolve?
much of the day, although anoth- chanoe of showers. Lows in the
a lawsutt that Cmcmnauer developing low pressure sys: lower 40s. Highs in the upper
based Monarch filed allegmg the cortstruci:JOn managtern in the nation's midsection 60s.
er for a school project in
Tuesday... A chance of showwill bring a threat of showers
. western Ohio wrongly
ers, · otherwise partly cloudy.
back to ohio by Sunday night.
chose &lt;mother company as
WllAIHER FOI •AST
Lows in the lower 40s. Highs in
general contractor.
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Lows the upper 50s.
The second
appeal
involved a Monanch lawsuit
A DAY ON WALL STREET
that accused the I Oth Ohio
10,000
District Court of Appeals of
Aprtl2, 2003
Dow
using information outside
- - - •.ooo
Jones
the official court . record to
L---o,ooo
rule against Monanch.
7
000
The state Supreme Coun
-J,-AN,---=FE~B-~M~AA,----A~PR~ ·
8,285.~ ­
ruled
without explanation in
Pot.Chlnga
ReOord high: 11,122.ee
Low
8,318.&amp;4
8,070.Q8
from~:
+2.87
J•n .-1-4, 2000
·
both cases.
Monarch attorney Roger
Aprtl2,2003
1,800
Sabo
declined to comment.
Nasdag
lr--- •.•oo
A
message
was left with the
composite
facilities commission.
f - - - •.•oo
A lawsuit -filed in April
2002 by Monanch, the
apparent low bidder on the
Tn-Village school project,
Aprll2, 2003
triggered a chain of events
Standard&amp;
that led to the resignation of
Poor's 500
the commission's executive
directnr and a revamping of
700
the commission's process
880.90
APR
.for approving contracts.
POI. Chlnga
R.oord high: 1,527 .-46
from Pf8llioua +2.81
March 24 , 2000
Monarch said the con"
struction manager for the
project, Turner Construction
of Cincinnati, wrongly
chose another company as
-~~--------------general contractor.
AEP-23
Federal Mogul - .15
Rockwell - 21.20
In May 2002, Judge
Arch Coal - 18.85
USB-19.80
Rocky Boots - 7
Jennifer
Brunner
of Franklin
Akzo -20.92
Gannett- 71 .80
1
AD Shell- 41.70
General Eledric ~ 27.05
County Common Pleas
AmTschiSBC - 22.15
Sears - 25.23
Ashland Inc. - 30.07
GKNLY -2.75
Court ruled that Randy
AT&amp;T -15.89
Harley Davidson- 39.04 wai-Mart - 54.07
Fischer, the commission's
Wendy's- 27.65
Kmart - .10
Bank One- 35.88
executive
director, had no
Worthington - 12.27
BLI-11 .87
· Kroger - 13.63
authority to approve schoolBob Evans - 24.91
ltd. -13.29
Daily stock reports are
BorgWarner- 51 .37
NSC -19:08
construction contracts.
the 4 p.m. closing
Oak Hill Financial - 24 ·
Champion - 2.94
Brunner said state law
quotes of the previous
Charming Shops- 3.9( OVB-22
day's transactions, prorequires
that the three-perCity Holding - 27.95 · BBT- 32.54
vided
by
Smith
Partners
son school facilities comCol-18.82
Peoples - 23.15
at Advest Inc. of
DG -12.68
Pepsico- 39.70
mission vote on each con-

Local-stocks -_ ·

DuPont- 40 .57

Premier- 9.15

Worker
killed i-n
explosion ·

tract. She said the discretion
placed in Fischer's hands
was "unconscionable."
After the judge's ruling,
' Gov. ~o~ Taft ordere&lt;! the
corrurusston to retroactively
approve more than 1.800
contracts. .
.
In July, Ftscher restgned
because of continuing questions about his rote in
awarding construction contracts.
After his resignation, the
commission approved the
creation of an ethics policy,
guidelines for contract
changes and tougher rules
for competitive bidding of
roducts.
P
In November, the court of
appeals '
-?verturned
Brunner s ruhng and
Monarch appealed to the
state Supreme Court.
In February, a report by
the state inspector general
said Fischer inappropriately
accepted gifts from vendors
but stnpped short of suggesting criminal charges be
pursued.

Local briefs

1

MIDDLEPORT The
Meigs high School class of
1973 is planning a 30-year
reunion to be held on May 24.
Efforts are being made now
to contact all class members
by mail, e-mail or phone. Tim
and · Edie King at King Ace
Hardware, 992-5020,c or
Lynne Baker Brinker 'at 740446-7049 can be contacted
for further .information.
King said that the class now
·has a website that inCludes
reunion details, a registration
form, class .photos and a message board. Class members

t 12 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

Class o( '58
reunion 1

Monday, April 7
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session at 5 p.m. at
the Rutland Fire Station. ·

Clubs an~
Organizations

POMEROY ' _ Plans are
moving forward for the annual reunion of the Pomeroy
High School class of 19S8.
Addresses are needed for
Charles Kerns, Larry Tracy,
Bernice Thomas Sarver,
James Wadeson, Nancy
Musser Fridley, Loretta
Sinclair Douglas. They
should be telephoned to
Marcia Arnold, 992-2249, or
given to Thelma Jeffers.

1

POMEROY
Meigs
Republican Party meeting ,
7:30 p.m. at the Courthouse.
Wednesday, April 9
POMEROY - Board of
Health meeting at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the Meigs
County Helth Department,

.I .

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MILL

OUTLET

SAT &amp; SUN ONLY

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30PM MON·FRI &amp;
12:30 PM SAT· SUN
HEAD OF STATE (PG13)

Friday, April 4
POMEROY
Meig s
County PERl 74 will meet at
rioon at the Senior Ciizeris
Center. There will be lunch at
noon followed by a program
featuring
Bob
Byer,
Emergency
Management
Agency director, on emergency planning and homeland
security.

Tuesday, April 15
Saturday, April 5
MASON
StewartHARRISONVILLE
Johnson
VFW
Ladies
Harrisonville Lodge 411, 7:30 Auxiliary, Mason, will meet at
p.m. at the hall.
7 p.m. at the hall. Officers to
be elected. Potluck to follow.
Saturday, April12
MIDDLEPORT - The Big
Bend Sams Chapter of the
Good Sam RV Club will meet
Monday, April 7
.at 6 p.m. at the Fellowship
SALEM CENTER - A TB
room of the Middleport clinic wil be held at the Salem
Church of Christ, Fifth and Center Star Grange building
Main, in Middleport. For more from 5 to 7 p.m. giving skin
informaton call 992-7637 or tests. Re!)dings will be done at
740-245-5559.
the sme location April 9 from 5
to 6 p,m:

Other events

Our Employees
make
.
the difference!

SPECIALS

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992-7028

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with 5' rollback hean swing

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All glider
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General Manager
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are encoura~ed to · visit the
site at www.rtJeigs73.org.

Victorian Teahouse with double swing.

5' Pla~n Swing with "A" frame

-Y earbook

Tri-county DAR Chapter anniversaries were observed at a recent meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter. Participating in the program . were from the left Debbie Lewis .and Beverly
Schumacher. Nabby Lee Ames of Athens: Marilyn Vaglia, state DAR regent: Abbey Stratton,
Meigs Chapter; Wilma Brown , French Colony of Gallipolis; and Ha l Kneen . extension agent,
awarded the DAR. award for outstand ing community service .

Enhance your propertys
appearance with many original
styles of q_wility lawn ornaments,
planters and iurniqzre available_ at
Quality Furniture Plus.

It's Coming. :?.
April 6th, 2003
\in the
6unba~ linies-&amp;enttntl
.

soldiers represented as ancestors in the chapter membership total 129. Three members have served as state offi- .
cers including current member Rae Reynolds Moore . .
The Nabby Lee Ames
Chapter, Debbie Lewis,
regent , celebrated its I OOth
anniversary on Jan. 23, 1903
in Athens. The chapter is
active in community service
projects, supports service for
veterans and American
Indians , awards student
scholarships, and supports
the National and State DAR
projects. A current member,
Beverly Schumacher, serves
as Ohio Southeast District
DAR Director.
The
French · Colony
Chapter, Gallipolis, with
Wilma Brown as regent has a
growing membership of 92
members. Current member
Roberta Roush who serves as
Ohio DAR Historian has published , in honor of Ohio's
bicentennial' anniversary, a
Commemor,ative
history
book of the 88 counties.

Community Calendar

Class reunion
being planned

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Thursday, April 3, 2003

POMEROY -: A celebra- ing all the blessings of liber-tion of charter anniversaries ty.
Return Jonathan Meigs
was held when Daughters of
the American Revolution Chapter is celebrating its 95th'
Chapters in Meigs, Gallia and anniversary having been
Athens Counties met recently formed in 1908 with 21 charm Pomeroy.
ter members . Mrs. Daniel
Special guest for the .obser- Lantz ·was the · organizing
vance was Mari'lyn Vaglia, regent. The Chapter received
Ohio State regent, who spoke · its name fr.om Return
on the recent Ohio State DAR Jonathan Meigs, son of
Conference where l--inda Jonathan Meigs, a hero in the
Watkins , National President Revolutionary War and one
General , was speaker.
of the earliest settlers in
· Her talk was on the preser- Meigs County.
v ation of the Madonna of the
Current member, Eleanor
Trail statue on the National Smith, is the daughter · of
Road which begins in Florence Eleanor Russell
Pennsylvania
and
goes Smith, and granddaughter of
through Ohio, Indiana and Florence Ralston Russell,
Missouri. Each state has a both charter members.
statue of the Madonna of the
Emphasis of the chapter
Trai I, she said, which the has been on promoting eduOhio DAR is committed to cation, patriotic endeavors,
and preservation of the
maintain and preserve.
K history of the DAR Constitution along with grave
founded in 1890 was present- markings Abbey Siratton is
ed and it was noted that the the .current regent of the
purpose was to perpetuate the -chapter.
The Chapter has one "real
memory and spirit of the men
• and women who achieved daughter" Edyth Sargent
American Independence, . as Zerkle, daughter of Jerimiah
well as to P.romote education, Sargent, a Revolutionary War
patriotism, and aid in secur- Patriot. Revolutionary War

MIDDLEPORT -A reso- fields .
lution in support · of the
Commander
Oiler
impeachment of the Ninth announced that the , camp
U. S. District Federal Court now stocks a supply of
judges who voted the wor,ds membership medals and
"Under God" unconstitu- membership cer.t.ificates .for
tiona! in the Pledge of mem bers .
Allegiance has been passed
Final plans for the second
by Brooks-Grant Camp, annual Appomattox Day
Sons of Union Veterans.
bean dinner were complet·
Meeting recently at the
h
Ri verbend Arts Counci I ed. It be held at the mout ·
building members discussed- of Leading Creek on April
the issue and then joined · 9. The Major Daniel
othe.r Ohio . Department McCook Circle ·Ladies of
camps with a vote in sup- the Grand Army of the
port of action against the Republic will join in the
JUdges. ·
.
celebration of the !39th
Another resolution passed anniversary of the surrender
by the camp pertained to the of Gen .. Robert E. Lee and
SMte of Ohio requiring all his Army of Northern
~overnment bodies recelv- Virginia.
The camp also voted to
mg state funding observe
Presidents' Day by dosing hold its annual Memorial
all non-essential business Day cereiJlonies at 2 p.m.
activities that day.
on Sunday, May 18, at the
The reason for the local
action, according to Keith Civil War sllltue by the
Ashley, is to thwart action Meigs County Courthouse.
by some institutions of ·The · Ladies of the Grand ·
htgher learning who pro- Army will also participate.
pose moving the celebration The Blue and Gray · Dance
of President's Day to Dec. Orchestra are tentatively set
24 in defer~nce to appropri- to perform a concert as the
ate remembrance of George main program . .Wreath-layWashington, father of our ing at the statue will also
country,
and Abraham occur.
Lincoln, the great emanciThe camp voted to suppator.
port the . Meigs ·County
During the meeting _the Bicentennial Committee's
camp recognized three celebration of the Ohio ·
members as actors in the bicentenn'ial by having an
recently released movie, information table at the
"Gods and Generals." They
were James Oiler of Rio event on May I 0. The camp
Grande, Ron McClintock of has also registered as an
Athalia, and Keith Ashley entry in the bicentennial
of Rocksprings.
parade at Gallipolis on April
In conn~ction with the 26.
movie, the camp has been
A new publication on the
informed
that
the !16th Regiment Of the Ohio
Spotsylvania, Va., commis- Volunteer Infantry was dissioners are considering cussed. The publication is
allowing a major portion of available for .$25 in a spiral
· Chancellorsville binding.
the
Members voted to su~port
Battlefield, featured in the
movie, to be destroyed by the Ladies of the Orand
urban development.
The camp voted 10 send Army in •gathering coupons
Keith Ashley and Gerald to send to veterans of the
Crawford to testify before current war. These will be
the commission later in the sent to the veterans.
month against the rezoning Companies have agreed to
to allow this destruction of honor the coupons up to six
one of America's · most months beyond their stated
important Civil War battle- expiration dates.

Eqerience
the Outdoors.

Gallipolis.

CINCiNNATI (AP) - A '
worker at 11 plastics plant
was killed in an explgsion
early Wednesday, offfcials
said.
The name of the victim at
the Bayer Polymers plant in
Addyston , just west of
Cincinnati,
was · not
released. Officials did not
immediately determine the
cause of the explosion.
"We're not sure · pf the
reason," said Ken Perica,
the plant director. "We are
doing a full and thorough
investigation."
The plant makes pellets
used in plastics for autofiJO·
biles, refrigerator liners and
other household products.
About 50 of the plant's 450
employees were on the job
at the time of the explosion
at about 4 a.m.
•¥¥¥¥¥¥¥,¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥.¥¥¥•

PageA3

Local News
Tri~county DAR chapters celebrate

PageA2

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Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks ........ _....'30.15
26 Weeks ........... ..~0. 00
52Weeks ............'118.80
Roles Outside Meigs County
• 13 Weeks ...... . ......150.05
26Weeks .. . ...... . .. '100.10
52 Weeks .......•..... 1200.20

PIIOIE BOOTH • 7:35, 10:05
JDwl*li* liltl, till- !lilllda
AU AGES, Al l TI ME S S4 00

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Nation • .World

The .Daily Sentinel

Pentagon ousting Rivera
for allegedly disclosing,
unauthorized information

Thursday, April 3, 2003

Tanks·roll on

Fox Jl!ews Channel reporter
Geraldo Rivera is shown in
this April 22, 2001, file
photo in Pasadena, Calif.'
The Pentagon was investi·
gating whether Rivera
endangered troops by _
revealing the plans of a rnll·
itary unit in Iraq in advance .
Rivera denied reports that
he had been expelled from
the country. (AP) ·
being sent home," said
reporter Dean Staley, who is
embedded with the unit.
One of Fox News
Channel's rivals was quick
to go on the attack Tuesday.
MSNBC ran an in·house
promotion promising view·
ers that "we will not com·
promise military security or
Jeopardize
a
single
American life."
MSNBC also ran a news
story with a film clip of
Rivera's report, although it
pointedly blurred the lines
he drew in the sand.
Arnett· began his new job
as a contributor for the
British tabloid The Daily
Mirror by writing that "I am
still in shock and awe at
being fired."
Arnett was dismissed by
NBC
and · National
Geographic Explorer · on
Monday for giving an unau. thorized interview to Iraqi
state television in · which he
said the U.S.-led war effort
initially failed because of
Iraq's resistance.
"Fired by America · for
telling the truth," the Daily
Mirror said in a Page· One
headline. The paper said
Arnett will file one report
per week, giving a personalIzed view of the war.

Road closed

'

Deadline
extended

' ~o

r

Meigs County soldi ers 1 Johnson, Robert W.,
now servi ng in the SSG - Son of Kathy
Middle East. .
Van Meter of Mason.
Bissell, Jonathon A.,
McKnight, Charles,
Lt. spm pf Glen SPC
Bissel.l o_f Racin e and
Meheney, Erik, SPC
Naomt Btsse ll of Long
Son
of
·Rick
,Bottom.
Metheney and Vickie
Burns, · Levi · Ray, Brown; both of Salem
PFC - son of Debbt e Center. Currently servSchuler.
ing in the Middle East.
. Fields, Russ, 1 LT ·Michael, Derek W.
Hu s band of Darlene PVT ~ Re sident of
Fields.
Syrac use and so n of
Frechette, Aaron M., Jennifer Michael.
Lcpl. - Son of Ron and
Pickens, Terry II,
Becky Frec h ett~ 9f SPC -SC?n of Terry and
Albany. Now servmg m Tammy Ptckens, fomerlrag.
ly of Rutland.
·
Gaul, Jeremy E., AM
Robertson,
Justin,
- Son of Rodney and LCPL - Son of Greg
Sharon Gaul of Vincent. and Anna: Parker of
Grueser, Jerr_y, AM Tu(lpers Plains. Serving
-Son of Jerry Grueser, in tile Marines Kuwait.
Sr. and Jean Grueser of
Roush, Rodney D:,
Minersville.
SSFC - Son of Beverlx
Heck, Jennifer E.~ and Richard Fetty of
C~03 Da.ughter or Rutland and the late
Mtke and Suste Heck 9f Williford Lee Roush.
Pomeroy.
Servi~g in the Army in
Hill, John, Lcpl. the Mtddle East.
S&lt;?n of Pat and Nancy
Stac.y, Michael B.,
Hill of Pomeroy. Now SPC - Son of Jim and
serving in Kuwait.
Cathy Staj. of Pomeroy
HiD, Erik Ian, S,t.Swann, ulian, ·HN -·
f R
o
on and oyce Son of Mark Swann of

NOW

THROUGH
SATURDAY
ONLY!
TWO WCATIONS:
CORli/Ef! SECOND AND GRAPE, GAl-l-IPOLIS 446-2842

1he

Michael
Stacy

Dissolutions,
divorces

l$sued licenses

1 1

Robert

Jennifer Heck ·

Johnson

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Jo~ma Kaukonen

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Preparin9for chemical warfare:
· rroops tr.ain for enemy they can't see

Tonight
7:10
Pomeroy Eagles Qub
our "new" Elevator Is now
In opera1tlon

in ,concert see page AS.

EL PASO, Texas (AP) Soldiers ent er a room
Your eyes burn when the after it is filled wi th .smoke,
gas hits ihem and th ey snap but even aft er the fire is
shut immediately. Breathe out . th ere is enough' residin and you co ugh and ual gas to irritate se nsitive
choke .
membra nes.
Th e substanc e floating
"The first 30 seconds is
through the air is sim ila.r to the worst." said Spc . Tomas
te~r gas, and sol di ers at Pal acios, who took NBC
Fort Bliss m.ust suffer (nuclear, bioiogical and
th~o ugh it until they. ge t the chemical)
training on
signal to don their gas Wednesday. "You start to
ma sks.
ge t nervous beca use yo u
They are trained in a can't breathe and you can' t
buildi·ng un ceremuniou·s ly see .."
named the "Gas Chamber."
Palac ios. who wi ll soon
It is a galvanized s teel &lt;;leploy to the Persian Gulf.
structure on a cement pad said the train ing is required
'with two rn.orns. In the mid~ · twic.e a .year and _provides
die of each dark 'roorri - ·.so ldiers wiih the ·• co nfi about 20 feet square - is dence . they need tb ' survive
55-gallon drum where "CS" a chemical attack .
·. pow der ,is burned.. ·
·Each trainee must: .p.ut a

More women dietof
heart disease1han of
any
other cause. ..
.

·

'

JEWELRY

in

,Livestock report

. Names of local personnel
serving
in
Operation
Iraqi
Freedom can be emailed
to:
news@ mydail ys,e ntin~l, sent . by regular
ma1l to, or dropped at,
The Daily Sentinel's
office:
111
Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45679. Please include
the person's hometown, and ·your ·name
and phone number for
verification ~~~~~:_
-~~;.~li~]~o~f,~ i;Po~m~~~~;~~~;~~~A~Ut.~Sh.~~~ in
case we h
I st questions.

Roma., ce 1unJ

Bring your old jewelry
in and put your stone a
setting you will naUy love.

)

Marine Division tn
Kuwait.
Willbarger,
John
GNY SGT - Serving in
the Marine Corps, son of
Eloise Willbiirger.
Weber, Nathan, SRA
Son of Denni s and
Sally Weber of Grove
City.
formerly
of
Rutland. Serving in the
Air Force in Saudi
Arabia.
Willis, Larry E.,
Spec. - Son of Buck
and Betty Willi s of
Racine. Now deployed
to Iraq.
.

Jor rr~itement?
EVENT

EMS calls

Those who serve

Manufacturers saw orders
drop for metals, _n~i~~~~iciiJ_
__.computers._ and.
~
WASHINGTON (AP)
equir.ment. Orders for autoOrders to u.s. factories mob1leS'and parts were flat.
dropped by 1.5 percent in
The 1.5 percent decline in
February, the biggest decline orders in February was the
in five months, as prewar jit- largest drop since September,
ters and higher energy prices when orders fell by 2.4 persapped the buying appetite of ce%. more-forwardill.fu lookbusinesses and consumers.
The
Commerce ing report, released esday,
d offered a dismal and unset·D
•
epartment s report re 1ease. tling picture of the manufac. Wednesday offered .mo.re evt· turing sector for March: · the
dence t~at the nation s bat-. industry saw activity shrink
tered ll)anufactunng sector, for the first time in five
wh1ch has been sheddmg months.
hundreds of thou_sands ef
The Institute (or Supply
workers and operatmg below Management 's manufacturcapactty, IS be~ng the brunt ing index fell to 46.2 for
of the economy s problems. · March,
. down
from
, The . over-the-month February's reading of 50.5. A
decline -m February came reading below 50 means
after factory orders went ~p manufacturing activity conby a sohd . I. 7 , percent ~~~ tracted , while a reading
January, a bnef bnght spot m above that mark suggests
otherwise !~c~lu ster activity. growth.
feb ruary s performance
Manufacturing has been
was weaker than the 0. 7 per· the weakest link in' the
cent decline that analysts had national economy 's ability to
been
forecasting . get back to full throttle.
·

RESTYLING

For the Record

U.S. Army tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles With the 3rd Infa ntry DIVISion Task Force 1·64 move north near Karbala in central
Iraq Wednesday. (AP)

BY JEANNINE AVERSA

Associated Press.

91 MILl. STREET.

PauiE.Voll

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'
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Remove
owers

..,ers down
·Factory OrU

Loo

Local Briefs - Co·urt news

Robert Grimm

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Deaths

'

' Numerous cases we re tro l, $20 and costs ~ ·
recently
resolved in •Kristen
N. , Napper,
POMEROY - Paul E.
BURLINGHAM - Ohio Mei_gs County Court.
Dickson, Tenn.. left of
· Voll, 92. died Monday, Department of'fransportation
center. $20 and costs:
2003,
at has closed County Road 4
March · 31,
POMEROY - Cases Jonathan M. Neff, Belpre,
Overbrook
Center
in (Bu rling ham) at the junction resolved in the Meigs ass ured clear dislance $20
Middleport.
of U.S. Route 33 at County Court of Judge and costs; Matthew D.
His body will be sent from Burlingham in conjunction Steve Story between Feb. Neigler. Racine, seat. l;&gt;elt,
Ew ing Funeral Home to the with the Athens-Darwin con- 22 and March 12 are a's $30 and costs,·
William Shorts Funeral nector project.
follows:
John v. Ellis , Gallipolis, Jennifer L. ~aintiff,
Home in Ravenna for ' com- · It will be closed daily from
seatbelt. $30 and costs; Marietta, speed, $30 and
pletion of arrangements .
8 a.m. to 7 p.m.. and will Grover E. Ep ley. Marietta. wsts ; Patri cia D. Parris,
•
reopen Apri l 8. weather per&gt;e;ltbe lt , $30 and costs: ' Glade Springs , Va ., seat
mtttmg. The roadway · will .Nathan
S. Flowers. Little belt , '$30 and ·costs: John
remain open in the evenings
Hocking, seat belt, $30 and P. Patterson, Sandyville,
NEW HAVE N. W.Va.
and on the weeken·C! . Ohio costs: William L. Foley, W.Va., speed, $50 and
'Robert Ray Gr.imm. 63, New Route
681
opened Pomeroy, seatb elt . $30 cos ts; Penny L. Phelps.
Haven, died Tuesday; April I, ;vednesday eveni ng.
atid c.osts ; Danya L. Pomeroy, seat belt , $30
2003, at Charleston Area
Gheen.
Middleport. stop a n~ cos ts; , Tifl:any N:
Medical
Center
1n
I sign. $20 and costs; Gary
Pnddy, Pomeroy. seat
Charleston. W.Va.
MID
L. Gilmore . Langsvi lle , belt. $30 and costs: David
He is survived by hi s wife.
M'pdlLEPORTkVillage
use
of unauthorized of L. Rankin . Tuppers Plains.
f
Carolyn Skeens Grimm of 0
.' . eport. as s th at resi·
pla.tes.
$20 and costs; seat belt, $3 0 and costs:
New Haven .
dents remove all Winter now· Dennis M. Hahl. Bellevue, Ricky D. Reeves, Albany,
Services will be 2 p.m. ers from graves 111 vil lage seat belt, 530 and costs:
sear belt, $3 0 and cos ts:
Saturday at Fogelsong- cemeteries by April II .
· Sherri
A.
Hal ey, Teresa L. Ree ves, Albany,
Tuckcr .Funeral · Home,
Middleport, seat belt, $30 seat belt. $30 and costs; R.
Mason, W.Va .. with Rev. Carl
and
co St§.: M e l iss~ J. Riffle. Racine . speed. $30
"Papa" Skeens and Rev.
Hani
ng.
Albany, speed. and costs: Jason A. Ri ggs,
Rodney Skeens officiating.
$30 and costs; Jerry L. R 1 d
Burial will be in Graham
ut an • speed, $30 and
Hayma n. Syracuse, $ 30
Cemetery. New Have n.
and
costs;
Ginnee
R.
costs;
Kenneth Ray Biggs,
POMEROY - The dead·
Friends may call from 6 to 9 line for submitting audio·cas: Hendricks, Racine. spee d, Long Bottom, speed, $30
p.m .' Friday at the funeral sette taf}es of famil y stories, $30 and costs , seat belt, and costs: Clifford H.
home.
tall tales, lies or legends fur $30 and costs: Ralph M. Roush. Raci ne, speed ..$30
' the storytelling contest to Hilton, Raven swood, seat and costs:
John W. Rou sh, Vinton,
take place as a part of the helt, $30 and costs: Donna
M.
Hun,ter.
Columbus,
$30
and co~ts; K,imberly
Meigs County Bicentennial
Homecoming celebration on traffic cont/dev/signs, $20 D. Roush, Mason, failure
May I 0 at the Rock Springs and costs; Rocky J. Hupp, to control , $20 and costs;
E.
Rou sh,
Fairgrounds has been extend- Long Bottom. speed. $30 Robert
and cos ts; Jerome F Alexandria, Va.. speed.
ed.
'
Ja1nes, Co lumbus. speed. $30 and costs; Roger L.
The
tapes
are
to
be
turned
POMEROY Mei gs
$30
and co sts;
Rou sh, Pomeroy. failure
County Emergency Medical in at the Extension Oftice by
S.
Jarrell , to control, $20 and costs;
Janet
Services responded to these Thursda y. April 10. Becky
Satterfield.
calls pn Wednesday, April1. Baer is chairman of the con· Chesapeak e, speed, $33 James
and
costs;
Scott
M.
Middl
eport,
speed,
$30
CENTRAL DISPATCH test.
5:26 .a.m., Henry Thorne.
Several prizes 'wi ll be John so n, Pomeroy, seat and costs. seat belt. $30
Maple
Street,
Holzer awarded to the winners and belt. $20 and costs: Eric P. and costs: Bradl ey T.
Medical Center.
the winning entri es will be Jones , Rutland . seat belt , Searles . . Rutland. speed,
10:4 1 a.m .. Mildred Dean, presented at the ob~ervance. $30 and costs: Jeffrey $30 and costs: Benjamin
Rock sprin gs
Retirement Only one tape may be sub- Jones. Middleport, speed, J . See, Pomeroy. assured
Center. HMC.
mitted per perso n, Baer said. $30 and cos ts; Melinda clear di stance, $20 and
Karshnik.
Pom eroy,
5:·13 p.m., Debbie Milder,
unreasona bl e speed for costs; Wendy L. Shuler,
Union Avenue ,. Pleasant
condition s, $2 0 and costs; Syracuse, spe ed. $30 and
Valley Hospital.
·
Greg S. Kee ner, Akron. costs;
9:17 p.m., Mary Lockhart,
GALLIPOLIS - United speed, $ 31 and costs;
James
M.
Smith,
Ohio Route 325. HMC.
Producers Inc. market repo rt Terry L. Kennedy, Athens, Racine, ~eat belt , $30 and
from Gallipolis for sales con· spee d. $30 and costs; costs; Sandra G. Southern,
ducted on Wednesday.
Jeremy
D.
King, Shade,
traffic
Middleport. seatbelt, $30 co nt/dev/signs , $20 and
Feeder Cattle-Higher ·
275-415# St. $90-$106 Hf. and costs , speed , $30 and costs; Aarron J. Stanley,
Gallipolis, speed, $30 and
· POMEROY - An action $88-$100 425·525# St. $85· costs;
.
$95
Hf.
$85·$90
550-625#
Michael
S.
Krautter,
costs; James G. · Studer,
for dissolution of marri'age
St.
$80-$92
Hf.
$78-$85
650·
Pomeroy,
seat
belt
,
$20
Lebanon, speed $30 and
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court 725# St. $72·$80 Hf. $68- and costs; Brian K. costs; Russell ' D. Tate ,
Middleport, Gyp sy. W.Va ., speed, $30
by Tanya S. Holter, Racine, $75; 750-850# St. $68-$75; l-ambert,
HC.
$60-$70.
..
.
speed
,
$30
and costs; and costs: Autumn D.
against Stanley W. Holter,
Cows-Steady
Ju stin
D.
Legue, Thomas, Pomeroy, failure
Racine.
Well Muscled/Fleshed $36•· 'Johnstown , speed, $30 to register, $20 and costs;
A dissolution has been
•
Dennis J.
Watkins,
granted to Roger Lee Spaun $40; Medium/Lean $30-$35; and cos ts; Carlie D.
Thin/Light $22·$28; Bulls Lemaster, Long Bottom, Ravenswood , speed, $.30
and Brenda Lee Spaun.
speed, $38 and .costs: and costs; Jason L. ..
A divorce has been granted $38-$50
to Marie Kathleen Roush
Back To The Farm:
Shirley
A.
Lude, Weather! and,
New
from Donald Jeffrey Roush.
Cow/Calf Pairs $350-$810; Syracuse. stop sign, $20 Boston, Mich ., speed, $30
Bred Cows $200-$640; Baby and costs; Larry G.
d
c
Masten, "narkersburg, seat an
$11 -$240 ; Goats $1_,_
Caves
I
Wh · costs;
L · Norman D.
$80; Lambs $80-$91: Hogs belt , $30 and costs; James
Hen, otsa, Ky., speed,
E. Matney, Coal Grove, W$3h0t_tat·tnndghctollsts ; PJamie L.
POMEROY - Marria~e $30-$33.
spee
d, $30 and costs, fail.
omeroy,
·
1
licertse s have been issued m
Upcom Ing specm s:
b 1 $30
Easter
Jamb
sale,
.
ure/di
sp
lay/v
alid
registra·
seat
e
t,
and
costs;
Meig s County Probate Court
d
tion
$20
and
costs;
Daniel
Jody
L.
Wolfe,
Racine,
to Donald Je ~y Roush, 34, Wednes · ay, Apeil::-9·
McKil lop, Saint -cllar':Cie"'s'--.~s=
earb-elt-;-$3a-and'COS1s;and Joy Lynn M~;rphy, 35,
Feeder cattle sale, I p.m.
w
A
Mi ch., speed, $50. and
. . Woolard, Pomeroy,
both of Reedsville, and to Wednesday,Aprill6 .
Call the office at 446-9696. cos ts: Perfe cto Menera, seat belt, $30 and costs:
Christopher David Snouffer,
the
website
at Immokalee, Fla .. $35 and Frank A. Workinger, N.
20, and Charla Lynn Burge. ·visit
cos ts ; Jason A. Miller, Lawren ce, seat belt, $30
20, both of Middleport.
www.uproducers.co m
Pomeroy, failure to con· and costs.

BY DAVID BAUDER

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.The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Thursday. April 3, 2003

Associated Press
: NEW. YORK (AP) :While veteran reporter Peter
Amett wasted no time beginnmg hL' new career as a
weekly newspaper commentator, it wasn't clear-whether
GeraJdo Ri vera has a future
as a Fox News Channel correspondent in Iraq.
Military officials accused
Ri vera of disclosing unauthorized information about
military movements after a
report Monday in which he
squatted in the desert and
outlined military movements
in the dirt.
The Pentagon said that
Fox had agreed to remove
Rivera from his posting with
U.S troops in Iraq.
With the IOlst Airborne
Division· involved in fighting. Lt. Col. Dave LaPan
said Wednesday he wasn't
sure whether they had a
chance to take Rivera out of
Iraq. Fox has agreed to stop
Ri vera 's reports until he's
gone. he said.
A Fox News Channel
spokesman did riot immediatel y return a telephone call
comment
on
seeking
Wednesday. The Daily
News. quoting an unnamed
spokesman,
. reported
Wednesday that Ri vera had
"volunteered'' to go to
Kuwait. where he will conti nue to report on the war.
The paper said he'd face no
disciplinary action:
"I feel like I have been
scolded," Rivera told KSTP·
TV in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
He said he hoped to stay in
Kuwai t for a week and then
arrange to rejoin ·the IOl st
Airborne as an embedded
reporter.
LaPan said that's unlikely.
"Whether he will be allowed
to cover things from another
perspective, that would
remain to be seen;" he said.
KSTP said members of the
Army's IOlst had mixed
reactions to Rivera as he
passed through their camp in
Iraq.
"Some of them wanted a
picture or autograph. Others
were really angry because
they had heard what Geraldo
had done and they understood the reason he was

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

I

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The.deadliest disease
for women is also the
most preventable.

'

Talk With your doctor about heart
disease. learn mor.e.about heart health
under O'Bieness ' Health Resources at
www.oti_I,eress.org, or call (740) 592·9300.

a·

~O'BLENESS

-''~1·

from Page A1
ship and serve as exem plary
role models for the yo uth of
our communities. I encourage all local sports enthu si·
asts to arrive early with their
inemorabili a in order to
acquire the autographs of
these highly-talel\tCd NFL
players."
The double-elimination
tou·rnament 'will be held on ·
Saturday. May 17. 2003 at
the Maso n County Career
Center &amp;nd Point Pleasant
High School fields: The location has changed from previous years due to construction
at the Ordnance Elementary
School field s. Games will
begin at 8 a.m. and will continue throughout the day rain or shine . Individual tro·
phies will be awarded to the
top three finishing teams.
Entry fees are $150 per
team and ap plications car~ be
picked-up at the Pleasant
Val]ey Wellness Center. The
entry fee includes (for all
members on a team's roster)
an invitation to a VIP banquet
held at · Riverside Golf
· Course the night prior to the
tournament, commemorative
t'shirt with a caricature

Former U.S. hostage during ·
first Gulf War gets $1.75 million
in compensation from Iraq
Bechtel Corp., which was
building a crude oil refinery in Iraq in Augu st 1990,
just before Iraq inv aded
Kuwait. He sa id he and co:
workers were aw akened on
Aug. 18.
1990, and
detained in the empty U.S ,
a riTI&gt;a ssad or s
li"o'"m"'e' .- - Soldiers would not let anyone out for medicine. he
said.
As a re sult of the deten·
tion, Frazier went blind in
.one eye and lost 60
pound s. Hi s mu sc les and
nerves began failin g. He.
has no se nsat ion fromr his
knees to his toes · or from
hi s fin gerti ps ' to hi s
elbows.
Although
U.S .
law
allowed hostages to sue
foreign co untrie s, it did
not provide a mechanism
for releasing fr o,zen assets
from those nations . That
changed
when
the
Terroris m In suran ce Bill
became law las t year. ,
"Somebody ha s finally
held Saddam acco untable.
for his ac ts of terrorism,"
Deanna FraLier said . "Thi s
is the fir st time he's· ever
been ,held accou ntab\~ .' and
was over.,,
hopefully it wo n't be the
Frazier was working for last."

LAKE HAVASU , Ariz.
(AP) ~A former oil worker who went partially blind
and suffered nerve damage
while bein~ held hostage
in Iraq tn 1990 has
recei ved $1.75 million in
damage s from 'the Iraqi
g!lvernm·en .
Jack Frazier, 65 , was one
of 178 former hostage s
who succe ss full y sued the
Republic of Iraq for ill egally detaining them prior
to 1991's Gulf War. The
former ho stages were
awarded a total of $93 million .
Frazier, a diabeti c who
was denied in sulin durin g
hi s three-month detention.
was awarded his share in
2001. Frazier received the
fir st half of hi s $1.75 million settlement last week.
and the final payment was
depo sit ed into hi s bank
account on Tu esdav.
'' We have it."" said
Dea nna Frazier, Jack ' s
wife. "A ll of us ha ve it. I
still can't believe it. It' s
not real ye t. After I0 years
of fig hting and sc ream ing
and ,ru nnin g into brick
walls , in less than a minute
somebody just to ld me it

. ~-pt&gt;~tt9 ~t&gt;e~~ .
. cp~·rfy .

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MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

.

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Th is women's heart health initiative is provided by O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
in collaboration with OhioHealth .

.

~

•'

In Mlddlapor.t!
With Debi and

o:J. Joe

THURSDAY

·Subscribe today.
992-2156

'. . .

PVH

sketched by local arti st Jan
Haddox , lun&lt;.: h the afternoon
of the tournament and an
invitation to a post-game celebration at Riverside Marina ..
All proceeds from the tournament will be 'donated to the
Burtrum &amp; Brown Football
Camp.
,
Bartrum. who was a senior
on Marshall Uni versity's
1992 Di vision I·AA football
national championshi p team.
has taken a tour of the NFL.
His career began wi th the
Kansas City Chi efs. who
traded him to the Green Bay
Packers. Bartrum then signed
with the Patriots. where he
was a teammate of Bro\vn.
Then, in 2000, Bartrum
became a member of the
Philaqelphia Eagles. Bartrum
is regarded as one of the be st
longsnappers in the National
Football League. Brown ·_
al so a former Marshall
University sta ~ sports a
Super Bowl champ ionship
XXXVI ring.
The 2003 tournament will
be limited to the first 14
teams to register and pay
their entry fee . A copy of the
competition 's rules and regulations is attac'llti to each
team packet. For more inform.ation please call, (304)
675,7222 or (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326 .

At Wayne's Place

~~~ ~hioHealth .

~ Memorial Hospital

·Col. Jack Chiles, a 32·
year Army veteran who finished the training, said it
had . been about 15 years
since his last sess ion .
Chiles also is with the 31st
Combat Support Hosp ital.
" It was a littl e bit Of a
relearning
experience."
Chile s said. " It ' s pretty
stimulatin g. You want to
close yo ur eyes and try not
to breathe."
. Chiles should know.' He.is
the chief tif anest hes ia at
the Walter Reed Army
Medica l Center.
· " It's kind of ironic.'' ·
Chiles said. "It's the gas
man getting the gas."

..

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mask on, !!Ike a drink from
a ca ntee n, and replace the
mask's filter before leav ing
the room .
"We put abo ut 10 people
through at a time," said Sgt.
John Taber, with the 31st
Combat Support Hospital.
Taber is the one who gives
the sig-nal that the trainees
can put on thei r masks .
"That way it 's like they
are walkin g into a che mica l
environ ment ," he said. "We
run them through a coupl e
6f times. If somebody can't
do it , we send th em in with
their·mask on . That way we
know the mask works."
Taber said soldiers are
"required to carry the ma sks
everywhere they go once
·they are "in-co untry."

Mike Bartrum. a longsnapper with the Philadelphia Eagles,
and Troy Brown, a wide receiver and punt returner With the· New
England Patriots, will be the tentative special guests at the ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital Annual Coed Flag Football
Tournament. Shown above are, left to right, Darin Smith, exer·
cise physiologist and personal traine r at the. Pleasant Valley
Wel lness Center; Amber Ohlinger, community relations assis·
tant: Bartrum and Amy J. Leach, director of community relations.
·

8 p.m.
MARGAFirA &amp;
ta ' Sea:!
SPEaALS
2:30a.m.
Au. NIGHT!

SPRIN(; VALLEY CINEl\L\ 7

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The Daily sen~inei

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0 ·inion··

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PageA6
Thursday, April 3, 2003

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

()

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PageA7

.Dowri ·on ·the Farm

From dust to flood

•

•

..-£hursday, April 3, 2003

•

Pig city

•

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydally~entlnel.com

•

Ohio Valley Publishing

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Co.

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Den Dickerson
Publisher
r

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

'.

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

NATIONAL VIEW

Not cheap

...

Head Start, cifter-school
.programs undeserving of cutbacks

Bus~

• The Journal Star, Peoria, Ill .. on Bush's education cuts: As
part of his budget, President Bush has proposed big .changes .
in Head Start, the federal pre-school program, and substantial
cuts in after-school and vocational education. After-school
money would be reduced by 40 percent, and the Perkins
Vocational and Technical Education program would be virtually wiped out tQ divert dollars to "No Child Left Behind."
While no one can plausibly deny that illiteracy is a huge
problem, these proposals .seem to be working against them~~

.

Head Start is one example. School readiness requires more
than just knowing your ABCs. Sometimes it means doing .
health screenings so an inner ear infection or poor eyesight
gets detected/treated early. before it snowballs into something
much more crippling later on. Sometimes it's providing breakfast Those who deal with at-risk children will tell you they
don't feel much like reading when they're hungry ..
Yet Education Secretary Rod Paige will say those represent
the very "mission creep" - military lingo is applied even to
the classroom these days - that has made Head Start vulnerable to intervention.
Problem is, teaching kids to read is labor-intensive. If there
.are two strategies that seem to work, they' re time on task and
individualized attention. Those don't come cheap.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· Today is Thursday. April 3, the 93rd day of 2003. There are
272 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April3, 1860; the legendary Pony Express began service
between St. Joseph, Mo., and Sacramento, Cali(.
'
. On this date:
In 1865, Union forces occupied the Confederate capital of
Richmond, Va.
' In 1882, outlaw Jesse James was shot to death in St. Joseph,
Mo., by Robert Ford, a member of James' gang.
In 1936, Bruno Hauptmann was electrocuted in Trenton,
.N.J., for the kidnap-murder of the Lindbergh child . .
In 1946, Lt. General Masaharu Homma. the Japanese commander responsible for the Bataan Death March, was executed outside Manila.
· In 1948, President Truman signed the Marshall Plan, which
allocated more than $5 billion in aid for 16 European countries.
...
' . In 1968, the day before he was assassinated in Memphis,
· Tenn., civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his
_famous-~moumaintop" sp~ec h to a rally of striki-np-atjitat1on
workers. ·
. Ten years ago: President Clinton and Russian President
'Boris Yeltsin opened a weekend summit in Vancouver, British
:columbia, beginning their falks after a luncheon with
:canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. ~
:: Five years ago: The Dow Jones industrial average climbed
:above nine-thousand for the first time, but finished with a 3.23
point drop at 8,983.41. Douglas Fred Groat, a disgruntled spy
fired by the CIA, was charged with espionage and extortion.
;(Groat later pleaded guilty to extortion, and was sentenced to
:five years in prison.) ·
: One year ago: Israeli tanks rolled into· the West Bank's
:largest city, Nablus, and other troops laid siege to a refugee
'camp in Jenin, battling Palestinians who barricaded entrances
:and fought back with bombs and guns. Soldiers also encircled
,hundreds of Palestinian gunmen holed up in the Bethlehem
;church marking Jesus' birthplace.
: Today's Birthdays: Actor Marlon Brando is 79. Ac.tress~ singer Dori&amp; Day is 79. Actor Kevin Hagen is 75. Actress
:Miyoshi Umeki is 74. Former German Chancellor Helmut
-Kohl is 73. Country singer Don Gibson is 71. Jazz musician
Jimmy McGriff is 67. Actor William Gaunt is 66. Singer Jan
·Berry (Jan and Dean) is 62. Actress Marsha Mason is 61.
:singer Wayne Newton is 61. Singer Billy Joe Royal is 61.
:Singer Tony Orlando is 59. Singer Richard Thompson is 54.
\;Country musician Curtis Stone (Highway I0 I) is 53. Rock
:musician Mel Schacher (Grand Funk Railroad) is 52. Rock
;musician Mick Mars (Motley Crue) is 47. Act.or Alec Baldwin
:is 45. Actor David Hyde Pierce is 44. Comedian-actor Eddie
:Murphy is 42. Rock singer-musician Mike Ness (Social
;Distortion) is 41. Rock ,silllger Sebastian Bach is 35. Actress
:Jennie Garth is 31. Actress Amanda Bynes is 17 .
· Thought for Today: "The difference between gossip and
:news depen.ds· on whether you hear it or tell it." :Anonymous.
·

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itants and the fedayeen thugs .
currently harassing. U.S. sup"
ply lines - could stage guerrilla attacks on U.S . peacekeep·e~s. causing political
problems for the Bush
administration at home.
Bush and Blair -said they
wanted the United Nations
Security Council to pass a
resolution establishing a
post-Hussein · reconstruction
sy stem. but France and
Russia are balking· at allowing the ' United States and
Britain a leading role.
Evidently, the two nation s
that tried to .block the war are
now hoping to liSe the United
Nations to reinsert themselves into a major position
in the aftermath - some·
thing Bush presumably will
not welcome.
Foreigners who opposed
the war - and much of the
Arab world - likely will
accuse the United States of
occupying Iniq and o( practieing imperialism.
Bush has made it clear that
.:·the United States has no
mte~tlon of determm\ng the
preCISe for~ of Iraq s .~ew
_govemment and that that
choice belongs to the lraq 1
.
· . .
people .... W~ Will remam m
Iraq as long as ~~c essary, and
not a da~ 1~?r~.
.
.
lie s?td, a new regJme Ill
Iraq would ~erve as a dramatJc and mspmn_g exam pi~ fo.~
other nation s m the regiOn
- not that the Umted States
wa~ gomg to impose demoer~cy on Arab nations. · ·
·
Bush is an idealist. not an
imperiali st, but he 's raised
expectations for a smooth
transition in post-war Iraq.
He'll be 'judged accordingly
among others, by
Democrats _and by voters in
the 2004 elections.
(Morton Kondra cke is
executive editor of Roll Call,
the newspaper -of ClT{&gt;itul
Hill.)

Don'{ touch that dial
.

SPEAK OUT!
Ever yell at your televis~on set? Ever read something in the
newspaper that gets Y.\JUr dander ·up?
. .Next time you get the urge to express your opinion, pick ur,
the telephone and qill the Daily Sentinel's new "Speak Out'
line. ·
. ·
Speak Out line callers need not give their name. They must,
.however, follow a few simple rules- be brief (calls are limited to two minutes), no profanity. no pemmal attacks on individuals.
• The "Speak Out:' line is open on ly after 5 p.m. ea.ch day. Do
I)ot call "Speak Out" during regular business hours.
To call "Speak Out," dial the Sentinel's main number (740)
.992-2156.and then dial extension 29. Begin talking at the tone.

will foce p~rils in post~ Hussein .Iraq

Despite , unexpected comHumanitarian ,Assistance at
bat difficulties, the outcome _
the Pentagon under reti'red
of the war in Iraq is not in·
Gen. Jay Gamer.
·
doubt, The outcome of the
According to a senior
post-war Iraqi aftermath is,
defense official who briefed
however. which may lead to
reporters March II , .Garner
Morton
has assembled an interagency
political perils for President
Bu sh. In m11ch the same way
. Kondracke staff of more than 200 people
as son'\e administration om,
and assigned them to relief.
cials raised expectations for,a
· reconstruction and civil management jobs - but he still
quick victory greeted by '·
cheering Iraqis , Bush has
has not decided what to do
with members of the Iraqi
raised expectations about the the scene.
aftermath, promising to point ." U.S. and-British troops- National Congress, the lead. Iraq - indeed. the whole possibly assisted by other ing exile dissident group. ·
Middle East toward nations - will have to hold
p entagon o rr·Jcmls
· are sa1·d
democracy.
the country together and keep to ,.avor usmg
· the 1NC as the
Bush and his ally, British disparate groups from taking basis of a new Iraqi Interim
Prime Minster Tony Blair,
out reprisals
· a f ter the war-t he
.
d h on those who've Aut honty
strove Iast wee k to rea dJUSt oppresse t em.
INC
· d
- S
wants to be recogmze
F
D
expectations about the war, . ormer emocrauc enate as a government-in-exile
say-ing that timing was .not as a1de and diplomat Peter ' right now _ but the State
Galb~a1th, an expert on Department and CIA reportimportant as results.
"However long it takes to Kurdtsh affalfs, told me that edly want to depe d
. . n on peoachieve our objective," said he asked th~ U.S. official in ·
Bush, "the Iraqi people have charge of aiding the northern pie ~!ready. hvmg 10 Iraq .
got to know that ... they will city of Kirkuk about who
Its not at. all c\ear how
be liberated and Saddam would provide security there . many U.S. troops Will stay 10
Hussein will be removed no
'"We're going to use the Iraq and f?r how long- and
matter how long it takes."
local
police . force,"' ·what the lime table ls for t~e
The milit~ plan seems to Galbraith ·said the official trans !liOn from . Garner s
entail launchmg an air cam- responded. '"Do"'you know VJceroyshlp toiraqt rule.
paign against the three Iraqi who the police are')' I asked. to~~aq ;;rere:a~~eb;or~i~
Republican Guard divisions He said they were Kurds. I Relations Committee, also on
guarding Baghdad, before said, 'No, they're Arabs, the March ll , that U.S. liberators
making a final push into the people who kicked 250.000 might enJ·oy a "honeymoon"
capital.
Kurds out of the city in a oroperiod "if we move smartly
Iraq's defense minister said gram of ethnic cleansing.1"
his forces would fight houseGalbraith said the Kurds to restore services, provide
to-house in the city, but U.S. undoubtedly will want to jobs and get the economy
experts
say _return to Kirkuk - and they moving."
military
Baghdad, spread out and may want to oust the 250,0QO
But she said Iraqis - even
more like Los Angeles than Arab settlers that HusseiA those not loyal to HusseinManhattan, can be conquered sent in to replace them.
"will be intensely national is·
in chunks, if neces~aiy.
"It bothers me that the peo- t1c .... It will not tl!ke long Once the war ends, howev- pie - we're-going to put in six months, a year - for
er, new problems begin. charge dort't know who the opposition to surface. This
Large portions of the popula-. police are," Galbraith said, presents us with a dilemma
tion - especially Northern. adding that, on the eve of the and we will have to make
Kurds and Southern Shiites· war, . officials in charge of trade-offs."
-undoubtedly will cheer in administering post-war Iraq
"To get real political and
the streets when they are were still making calls to social change - · a constitu·
freed from Saddam Hussein's recruit people to run key tiona! regime , for example oppression.
Iraqi ministries when the war will take time. But the longer
But there is reason to fear 1s over.
we stay, the more we risk
that Iraq could resemble
It was only on Jan. 20 _g"enerating national resentYugoslavia, which flew apart after weeks of 'urging from ment and opposition," Marr
in bloody ethnic conflict members of Congress- that said.
once - its ((;mgtime - dictator, ~Bush set up the Qffice of
Conceivably, pro, Hussein
Marshal Tito, passed from Reconstruction
and remnants - Baath party mil·

I

•

John Carlson checks on a ·sow that recently birthed a litter
on the Willis Free Range Hog Farm near Thornton, Iowa,
· Friday. More than 300 hogs live free-range on organic land
in small huts and are raised antibiotic-free. (AP)

Good morning. I'm Pat
these nutso, right-wing uniform are fighting and
Riotic , your host on the
shows. The host was saying, dying to bring democracy to
"Of -course, everyone knows Iraq. They are lighting and
Excess in Broadcasting network . Regular listeners
these Iraqis are savages." I d ~ing to pre serve what
know I am not an angry perwond!!r what that heroic America stands for. Contrary
son. But, this morning every
pilot 'from Sacramento to what the rightist media ·
red-blooded cell in my starJoan
would think if he heard that tell you , it is not antispangled body is trembling
Ryan
Americans bac]&lt; home were American to voice dissent: it
with indignation at what I've
saying he is risking his life is anti-American 10 suppress ·
been hearing and seeing.
to save and liberate people it.
You know what I'm talkwho are nothing more than ' That said , 1 won't be calling about, folks: \he rightist,
"savages"?
t'
t
·t
h
ratic
garbage
on
radio
and
Rea11 y, cou ld these s1mp
· 1e- extremist
ing for a broadcasters
boyrott of these
conse~va 1ve
ra1 ors w o
and
pollute our public air.waves television shows, giving aid tons be more out of touch
with on-American rhetoric. and sustenance to Saddam with American values? their sponsors. I won't be
. Let's not .mince words: Hussein. What could please These are the same anti- organizing a ' public burning
Let's call these so-called this tyrant more than seeing democrati~ dimwits who of their hate-filled hooks and
talk-show hosts what they Americans demand that di s- cheered the rollback of civil tape s. As odious as these
are: Anti-American subver- sent be stifled - thus mak- libenies in the wake of the right-w ing dunces are, as
sives . They are extremists ·ing our country more like Sept. 11 attacks. If they like offensive as· it is to loyal
· who claim to love f,merica his? ·
the suppression of funda- - Americans to hear these peobut clearly hate it and all it
On my way to the station mental American freedoms pie openly denounce the
· today, I listened .to an inter- so much, why don ' t they go very values we are fighting
stands for.
Have you listened to this view on ABC radio with a live in a country where such to preserve, they de serve our
claptrap? They insi st every-. pilot f.rom Sacramento freedoms aren't allowed? tolerance, if not acceptance.
Yes, . I am angry that
one in America speak with named Lumpy. He and hi s Like the old bumper sticker
one voice, and whoever crew risked their lives, quite said, "America: Love it or they're trying to undermine
, .
my country's most cherished
doesn ' t fall in step with the literally, !lying to safety II leave it"
'go.vernment 's version of Iraqis who had been injur~d · Wlien anti-war protesters ideals. Bui I also understand
· thing s is disloyal. ·
m battle: One was a baby carried mock caskets during that every minute they use
Ladies and gentlemen, we whose nght leg had been a recent demonstration , one the public airwaves to spew ,
are at war. This is no time to blown off. The crew was right-wing radio host said if their idiocy only shows how
be undermining the ideals on shot at as they _earned the the protesters were in Iraq, seriously
thi s country
which this country was mJured to th~ hehcopter, and they'd be ·in the caskets, so embraces freedom of speech.
founded and for which so Lumpy managed to kee!lthe how can they b~ protesting Even half-wits in headsets
much blood has been spilled . hehcopter mrborne despite a against our g vernrflent? get to enjoy its protection .
We should be demonstrating bhndmg . sandstorm and This is the twist d logic: The . (Joan Rya11 is a columnist
our support for democratic artillery ftre. The mcred1~le protester5""'411ould . be so for the San Francisco
rights instead of spitting. all effbrt to save these- poor vtc- appreciative of their right to Chronicle. Send comments
.over them. Yet these right· . urns of war brought tears to free spe_ech that, well. ther to her i11 care of this newspawing dolts keep spewi ng my eyes .. . ·
shouldn t exerc1se 11.
per or send her e-mail at
their misguided, anti-democThen I sw itched to one of
Our men and women in joOilryarBfclrrollicle.com.)
'

' . l

•

.

Glenn Allen poses near standing water on a portion of the 4,000-acre family farm near Latta, S.C,. , Tuesdey. For four years the Aliens, like
other farmers tn South Carolina and across the South, dealt with a drought then, when the rains came, they didn't seem' to stop. (AP)
'

After year~ _ of _drought, heavy rain
threatens Georgia's sweet onion~
BY ELuon MtNoR
Associated Press

ALBANY. Ga.
Cale
Blocker has often prayed for
· rain during hi s seven-year
farttJin g career, which included a .four-year drought.
· Nnw he's praying for the
rain to &gt;lop· so he and the
state's other 134 regisiered
Vidalia growers can rrotect
the $~0 million crop o sweet
onions from diseases that pro·
liferate during prolonged wet
periods.
','We prayed a little too
much," said Blocker, 24, who
grew his first onion crop when
he was a· senior in high school.

Federal judge says
forced apple.payments.
are unconstitutional·
BY LINDA ASHTON

Associated Press

YAKIMA, . Wash.
Payments that Washington
apple farmers are forced to
make to promote the state's
apple crop are uncon stituHe has 450 acres this year.
time, the ponds were pumped
"We' re not in a disaster situtional, according to a. federA cold snap wiped out half dry -and we couldn' t irrigate." ation yet,'' he said. "I've been
al judge whose ruling could
R.eid Torrance, the county in some fields that are in
the crop last year, so growers
have inipl_ications for more
were relieved when they extension coordinator in rough shape, but the vast
than just apple s.
escaped serious damage from Tattnall County, the state's majority of fields ... do not
The ruling Monday by
another frigid blast this largest Vidalia producer, said have ·a bacterial problem. Our
U.S. District Judge Edward
January.
growers desperately need dry, concern is that it's going to get
Shea in Richland calls into
It appeared they might have .sunny days: but the long-range widespread."
question the future of the
The harvest will begin about
a banner year until an almost forecast calls for more rain.
66-year-old
Washington
"We've been so dry for so "April lO and continue Into
daily deluge of rain began in
Apple 'E!onilnission and the
early M'arch. Now their fields long, it's hard for us to curse June, but consumers will be
state's two dozen similar
are too wet to support equip- rain," he said. "B ut when we able to purchase Vidalias
panels promoting other
ment that could spray chemi- have 24 to 48 hours of con: stored in special warehouses
products.
cals to fight the destructive stant leaf wetness, we are sub-, through about November.
It 's a debate being heard
bacteria and fungi !~at attack ject to disease."
George
Boyhan ,
a · -in courts across the country.
onions. There are already spo- · A bacterial disease known University of Georgia onion
Livestock producers and
farmers in several states
radic reports pf damage.
as Psudomonas viridiflava, specialist, said the rain has a
have sued. contending that
"I ride around to see what's which rots the bulbs of infect- bright side.
forced subsidies for adverfloating and what's sinking," ed plants, is causing the great"It'll make the onions
tising that benefits the comsaid Blocker. "Last year at this est concern, Torrance said.·
milder," he said.
'
petition is an unconstitu-.
tiona! infringement on free
speech.
The Washington Apple
Commission, one of the
nation's oldest and largest
commodtty commissions,
gets 25 cents per 42-pound
telecommunications. Fiber receivin~ a billion bits of tern that's highly affordable o box of apples from growers
in the state. With an 86-mil·
optic networks, high-tech informauon per second for and very robust," said Ben
lion-box crop for the 2002Davenport, co-founder of the
h1gh schools, multimedia ser- each ·user.
2003 season, that's $21.5
vice access points - all are
Community leaders regard Future .of the Piedmont
million in assessments. or
seen as the economic future. the eDan network the way Foundation, an economic
about
. 90 percent of the
- "We trave to change," said they do roads: build one that's development agency that
commission's annual budWilliam Sleeper, the county bi~ enough and businesses secured the funds for eDan.
get.
When .eDan is · complete,
·
·
administrator. "You just can't . will come.
go out and · buy a I 00-acre
"We saw that we were never Danville and Pittslyvania
tract and farm it and expect to going to have the interstate County will join Bristol, Va .
make money anymore."
highway · we wanted, we in the telecommunications
In 1998, tobacco tlimpanies weren't going to have a major business. Martinsville and
agreed to pay $20'b billion airport, so our best chance of Front RoYal also are working
over 25 years to 46 states to moving this economy forward on their own networks, state
settle lawsuits; .government was to have a fiber optic sys· officials say.
••"
leaders here are making use of
-~
WITH
Virginia's share to invest $17
million for an Institute for
Unl1m1ted n 1qllt &amp; weekend n11r1utcs
Advanced Learning and
Research, and $1 million in a
900-acre industrial park .
With another $2 million,
community leaders installed
40 miles of fibercoptic cable
for an "eDan" network that
• Unlimited night &amp;
will be ready for use in April.
The network is expected to be
w• 1kend mlnutea _
capable of sending and

.

Once·famous for tobacco and textiles;
c~unty remakes itself for high~tecltfuture
BY CHRIS KAHN

Associated Press
DANVILLE, Va . - After
21 years ,of stitching sweat
shins, Annette Burke was laid
off from a textile factory in
this southern Virginia town
live years ago. She had no
high school diploma and no
technical skills.
But Burke took computer
courses at a community co llege and landed a job designing Web sites. where she now
makes more than the $10
houri y wage she had at the
Bassett-Walker factory.
"I ' m not working physically as much as I did before.""
said Blirke, 43 . "I don't think
1 could
. ,. handle the factory
aga1n.
Tobacco and textil eS: once
the soul -of Danville and surrounding Pittslyvanip County,
have slowly given way to

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We Honor Most Third Party
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OPEN Monday-. thru Friday
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Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sunday - Closed ·

"The commission is hi story,'' said Brian Leighton, a
Clovis, Calif., lawyer who
represented organic apple
growers in the class-action
lawsuit "To mandate some·
body to pay for somebody
else 's message and somebody else's messenger is
just abhorrent"
.
Welcome Sauer, president
of the commi ssion, wljich
collected assessments from
more than 3.000 growers in
the state, said "I think this is
a very sad day for the
Washington apple-- i.ndus_try."

.

Shea ordered the. parties
to meet Monday to discuss
refunds and damages. The
defendants are ' ~eeking .
close to $50 mill-ion iQ.
refunds. and L~ightoQ said
he believes the state cou!CI
be forced to pay them.
The commission said it
will ask the court to stay its
decision so grower assess·
ments can continue to be
collected during an appeal,
said Peter Spadoni, a commission lawyer.
The
Wenatchee-based
commission__in.iliaJed th.e
Ja-,vsuit in 200 I, hoping for
an affirmation of its right to
collect
the
mandatory
assessments.
The commission argued at
a March 18 heating that it is
a state agency and as-such is
empowered to collect fees
for promotion of the state ': s
No. I crop.

M~e Soineone·f'eel

.· ·.·.

-~tGGS'-TRA

• tllta ........ -.. I , 1oa llll:cllutal

• 7Actua1 Size 1x3
,.1 Person per ad
Run date Fri.,
~u:m 11, 2003
·;Deadline Thurs.
' Aprii:S,-2003 .

'

Evan Rodgers
Happy Easter
Love, Mom &amp;. Dad

. Mail to or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel :"''
111 Court Street, Pomroy, Ohio 45769 '
'

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.

,._
(

)

�(._

Page AS"• The

.,

"'

•

Daily_Sentinel

Thursday, April 3, 2003

www.mydaiJysentlne.. com

•

l~sid~:

.
.
.
.
Scoreboard, Page 82

The Daily Sentinel

·

Williams, Boehelm seek title, Page B2
Hornets, Blazers make playoffs, Page B3
Tribe tops Baltimore, Page B4
NASCAR This Week, Page 85

PageBl

•

Howland hired
at UCLA
\

Pt?meroJl .
r,.t. .Mtddleport
_
-.
'

Little
Lecture

Band to

play

• • The West Vuginia
Humanities Council pre:sents· its Little Lecture
~eries at 2 p.m. S,uodays
:in· the parlor of the bis'toric
MacFarlandBubbard
House.
~efreshments

a

The
Patrick
Sweeney Band will play
· at the Court Grill beginning at 9 p.m. .Saturday.
On Th,\lrsday the Johnny
Rawls Revue, a ~oul
blues band, will perform
at 9 p. ~ . Both co~erts
have a $5 cover charge.
For more information
call the Grill, ?92-6524
or see www.courtstreetgrill.com

are

.:served. Admission is
:$10, and advance pay:rmint is recommended
~ue to limited seating.
.The lineup includes
':Lewis and Clark: The
:(tole of West Vuginia,"
:by Todd Bolton, chief of
;VIsitor services . for
;Harpers Ferry National
Historic Park, April Z7;
.and
"Contemporary
Writin~ ·. in
West
Virgi~Ja"
by Irene
:McKinney,
West
Yuginia poet laureate,
May 18. Call (304) 346;S~OO
or
visit
:J:it1p://www. wvhumani-

•

'

• Ohio University
concert calendar over
the next week includes a
percussion ensemble,
-~hild's Play" by Grant
Cambridge at 8 p.m .
tonight in the Forum
Theater; the honor Band
concert at 7:30 p.m. on
Saturday in Memorial
Auditorium ;
the
Trombone Choir at 8
p.m. on Monday at the
Methodist Church, and .
an organ demonsrration
by Paul Barte, 8 p.m
Tuesday at Galbreath
Chapel.
All concerts are free
and open to the public.

..:U~s.org.
....

Paddling
... .r.- expo
:;.
Mountain State
:&lt;;futfitters and Coonskjn
~ sponsor · tbe 11th
· :annual WJ.!derfest from
:il a.m. to 4 p.m.
:Saturday, April 5, at the
~k's Family Fun
-··- ;Center and Pond. A
iiaolls-on clinic and

'canoe aftc:l kayak demo

C

..

event is .offel-ect rain or ..
shine. Call (304) 925~959 or (800) 690-2234.

.. Calligraphy
tmplay
'
~ay

tJvough Tuesday,

; Music Scxjety
: • The

quartet per~
forms at 8 p.m. Saturday,
May 3, at Christ Church
;Umted 'Methodist. as
~of the 6lst season of
:Charleston
Chamber
Music Society Inc.
.Admission is $15. Free
professional child care is
available

-

YWCA
.
are April23,Ma
y30
,
·
A
29
j, une 27, Ju1y 25 • ug.
•

Sept. 26• Oct. 31 and Nov. 28 ·
Refreshments are served. Ciill
(304) 525-8181.

Then mystery
• The event, open to ages
11 and up, begins at 8 p.m.
Saturday, April 12, at Ritter
Park, 12th Street entrance.
· Sponsored by Qreater
H untmgtoo
.
park
an d
Recreation District, roasted
marshmallows follow. Call
(304) 696-5954.

Watercoloring

EggHWlt
a

The "fastest egg hunt east
of the Mississippi," sponsored by the Greater
Park
and
Huntington
Recreation District, begins at
10 a.m. Saturday, April , 19.
The free hunt is divided into
three age groups. Call (304)
696-5954.

• "Missing Music Mystery"
• The class, sponsored by
Friday-5aturday; April 18~19. the Renaissance Gallery, is
Shows ~ set for 7 p.m. offered from 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday; 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and Thesdiiys, now through May 6,
S:30_p.m. S~y. Tickets are at the gallery, 900 8th St. Call
$18 for reserved and $15 (or .Fern Christi3!1, (304) 4S3general admission with cbil- 3187, or · e-mail femchristdren's general admission ·at ian@Renaissance-Art$12each. Call (304)696-5990. Gallery.com.

BEST DEAL IN TOWN
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LOS ANGELES (AP)
Ben Howland, who led
Pittsburgh to the round of 16
in the NCAA tournameiu ,
was hired .as UCLA's coach.
·-::,flow land , -4~ becomes. the
etghth coach at UCLA since
John Wooden retired in 1975
.after leading the Bruins to 10
national championships in a
12-year span .
Howland· replaces Steve
Lavin, who was ·fired March
17 after the Bruins went I 019 for their first losing season
in 55 years.
Howl and, .~ho grew up in
Southern california, led Pitt
from Big East doormat to
national championship contender after his hiring in
1999. He has a 168-99 record
in nine years as a head coach
- five at Northern Arizona
and tl)e last four at .Pitt .

k

ATLANTA
(AP)
Kentucky'.g Tubby Smith and
Duke 's Gail Goestenkors
have been chosen as the 2003
Naismith college basketball
coaches of the . year by the
Mlanta Tipoff Club.
Earlier, the club named T.
J. Ford of Texas and Diana
Taurasi of Connecticut as its
~o llege ~layers of the year.
Smith led Kentucky (32-4)
to
the
Southeastern
Conference championship
and won 26 straight games
before . losing to Marquette
83-69 in the Midwest
Regional final.
Goestenkors led Atlantic
Coast Conference champion
Duke (35-1) into the Final
Four where it will meet
Tennessee in one semifinal
on Sunday in Atlanta. She lias
guided Duke to four straight
ACC titles .

Burk lobbies
judge

'

. • Scheduled. dances at ihe

c

• The Bob Evans
Farm opens its neweSt
attraction
Thursday,
May l, to serve as a cor.porate museum and his•
torical center. The farmhouse displays the
farm's company memorabilia and its history
from 1940 to present on
first floor, wnile- iferils .
on second floor feature
. history and lifestyle of
company founder Bob
Evans and his family.
Call (614) 492-4954.

.April 8, at The Cultural
·~nter, State Capitol
Complex in OJarleston.
Call (304) 558-&lt;!162 or go
online
at
:bttp:llwww.wvculture.cxg.

Ballroom
dandng

e

h

www:ohiou.edu/music
for further information.

Homestead
to open

• For Letter aOO \'erie,
·Iii! exhibition of. calligra•.. JilY and poc:Uy is on dis-

Major League Baseball

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern hammered out 12 hits
en route to claiming a 12 •0
shut-out victory over the
Waterford Wednesday night
in an important Tri-Valley
Conference Ho~;king Division
game.
Alyssa Holter had· two
doubles , and two si ngles to
lead the Eagles, whtle Sandy
Powell had three d~ubles,
Jenny Armes two smg les,
Katte Robertson a double and
smgle, and Morgan Weber a
single.
·
Waterford (1-1) was led by
Alana Miller with a single,
Deana VanDyne a single.
Jeconda Smith a single,. and
Mall&lt;jry McCutcheon a tnple.
Coach Pam Douthitt's crew
took the lead in the third
inning when Armes si ngled
and advanced on an error,

Goestenkors,
Smith net
Naismith honors

Concert set

are featured. The free

Thursday, April 3, 2003 .

.

Kids art
a The free activity, open to'

kindergarten through fifth
grade, is available from I to 3
p.m. each Saturday at the
Huntington Museum of Art's
Children's Education Gallery. .
Admission is ·free. Call (304)
529-270 I
or
visit
http:/fww\\:.hmoo:org.

Al,JGUSTA, Ga. (AP)
Manha Burk's lawyers asked
a judge to override the sher,iff's decision prohibiting her
from demonstrating at the
front gate of Augusta
National during the Masters .
The request comes I 0 days
before Burk plans to protest
at the club because of its allmale membership. Burk,
·chair of the National Council
of Women's Organizations,
wants thousands of golf fans
to walk by her demonstratiQ!h.._ .

KGB re-ups
with Green Bay
GREEN BAY. Wi s. (A P)
- Kabeer Gbaja-Biainila.
who had the fifth-most sacks
.in the NFL over the last two
seasons, signed a seven-year
contract with the Green Bay
Packers. The deal, reached
late Tuesday night, will bring
the defensive end $37.3 million, of which $13.25 million
js guaranteed, agent Bruce
Tollner said.
Gbaja-Biamila recorded 12
sacks in 2002, his second season with at least 10 sacks. He
also had a career-high 45
tackles. returned an interception for a touchdown, forced
four . fumbles and had one
fumble recovery.
.
He, is seventh on the
.Packers' career sacks list
y;ith 27.

More foreign .
players in MLB
NEW YORK (AP) - The
percentage of major league~s
born outside · the 1 50 states
rose for the sixth straight
year, up to 27.8.
Of the 827 players on
opening-day rosters and disabled lisJs, 230 were born
among 16 foreign countries
and Puerto Rico, the commis·
sioner's.. office said. The percentage has climbed steadily
fr"'" 19.0 in 1997, reaching
26:J last year.

Holter had an RBI single, and
Sandy Powell an RBI single,
the score 2-0.
In the fifth Eastern got five
more runs on an Armes single, a Holter double, Powell
double, a Robertson double, a
Lodwick ground out for an
RBI, and a Weber single, the
score 7_0 _
Eastern (3' 0) plated five
more when Nikki Phillips
reached on an error, Smith
reached on an error, followed
bv back-to-back doubles to
Holter and Powell. Robertson
· had an RBI si ngle, Lodwick
walked :tnd Weber forced
home a run with a 1-3 ground
out.
Eastern
pitcher
Katie
Robertson went the distance
for the win. She fanned six
and walke~ just one. Jeconda
Smtih suffered the loss with
four strikeouts and just one
walk.
'Eastern
goes
to
Nelsonville-York Friday.

Southern rolls to win
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

.

Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr. hits a solo home run off Pittst&gt;urgh Pirates pitcher Kip
. Wells in the third inning, Wednesday in Cincinnati. (AP)

,Kendell and Young
blast Reds in eighth
..

·•.

'

'

t

•

Bv JoE KAY
Associated fress

CINCINNATI - Kevin
Young and Jason Kendall
hit two-run homers in the
eighth inning, and the
Pittsburgh Pirates kept ihe
Cincinnati Reds wirlless in
their new ballpark by rallying for a 7-4 victory
Wednesday night.
·
d
Austm Kearns an Ken
Griffey Jr. got the Reds' frrst
homers in Great American
Ball Park as the home team

Indians and their first two
~ames against the Pimtes,
mcluding a 10-1 drubbing
in the seas.on opener. Reds
reliever Josias Manzanillo
(0-1) sarcastically tipped his

cap to the booing crowd
'after giving up the Reds '
finally cozied up and took first lead at the ballpark in
tts first !ead, 4-3.
the eighth.
.
But tt ended the way
Young, who got into the
eve~ other game has .at the _- game· aspart rof a· Iate douReds new place- wnh the ble-s witch hit a two-out
home team's pitchers get- homer off Manzanillo to put
Pittsbur~h
up
5-4.
ting jeered off the. field .
fhe Reds lost two exhibi- Manzamllo then threw
tion s to the Cleveland wildly to first on Kenny

•

Lofton's slow roller for an
error, and Kendall hit his
second homer in two games
to set off the crowd.
All seven of Pit'tsburgh's
runs came on homers Randall Simon hit a three. run shot in the first off Ryan
Dempster.
The Pirates' hitters have
taken a liking to Great
beneficial
A rnerican' s
breezes and close-up walls,
connecting for six homers
in the first two ga mes.
Kendall was one of three
Pirates who homered in the
second inning of the opener.
Salomon Torres (1-0) got
the win with one inning in
-relief of Kip ~Wells. Mike
Williams pitched the ninth
for the save.
Griffey, who' doubled for
the first hit at the new bali-

'Please see Reds. 84

College football

BuckeYe-s ·know
they wear bullseyeS

GLOUSTER Rachel
Chapman hurled a six-hitter
and the Southern bats ham.mered out I 0 hits to propel
\Southern to a 12-3 Tri-Valley
t Conference Hocking Division
win over Trimble Wednesday
· at Glouster Municipal Park.
Southern hitters were Ashlee
Hill a double and a single;
Deana Pullins and Brooke
Kiser two singles each, Rachel
Chapman ' a double, Katie
Sayre, Ashley Roush, ·and

Joanne Pickens singles.
Trimble hitters were Nicki
Yore a triple and single, Jessica
Brunton a double, and singles
by Lindsay Hooper, Sandra
Brooks, and -Brandi Hodgson.
Southern (3:0) went up 3-0
in the third when Ashlee Hill
singled and was substituted
with pinch runner Jeri Hill.
Emily Hill walked and
advanced a long with Hill on
a . Pullins sacrifice bun.t.
Sayre singled home one run,
Chapman reached on an error to
score another, then Kiser hit a sac-

Please see Southern. 82

Eagles bury Wildcats
BY ,ScoTT WOLFE
_Sports ,90rrespondent

TUPPERS PLAINS Behind a-Ryan Smith no hitter
Eastern rolled to a I 0-0 mercy
run victory over Waterford
Wednesday night in Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
baseball action.
Eastern hitters were Myers
with two singles, Ken
Amsbary one single, Cody
Ea\Dk one _ double, Brett
Parker had two singles,
Dustin Riggs· a double, and
Jonny Owen two si ngles.
A close ga me developed
early as two scoreless innings
were turned in by both clubs.
That scenario soon changed.
In the third inning, Riggs
reached on an error for coach
Brian Bowen's diamond men .
Owen singled, Myers doubled
home one run, Smith walked
to load the bases, Amsbary
walked home a run, then
· Cody Faulk doubled home
two runs, the score 5-0.
Faulk's blow established a

wave of momentum that carried Eastern through to the
finish · and complimented
Smith's fine pitching.
ln. the fourth Riggs led off
with a single, Owen singled, ·
Myers -singled horne a run,
Smith walked to load the
bases and Faulk was hit by a
pitch to force horne one and
Parker singled home the last
run, the score 8-0.
Eastern (2- 1. 1-1 TV C) plat·
ed two more runs to clinch the
game when Riggs walked and
advanced on a fielder's choice,
Myers walked and Smith
walked to load the bases.
Amsbary then reached on an
error to score the two runs that
won the game.
Smith pitched very well in
handcuffing the Wildcats, as he
struck out one· and walked one.
Matt Heiner sufferect the loss
with one strike out and seven
walks, gaining relief from Dan
Dobereiner in the fifth.
Waterford dropped to 0-2.
Eastern
plays
at
Nelsonville-York on Friday.

Southern fans to Trimble
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

GLOUSTER _ Leadin~ 30 going into the third inmng,
Southern began a c(Jmedy of
errors that led to an Jl-4
defeat at the hands of Trimble
Wednesday · night in Tri·
Valley Conference boys varsity baseball action in
Glouster Municipal Park.
Southern hitters were Jordan
Hill with a triple and single;
and Burrows a single. Jenkins
had the lone Trimble hit.
Southern (I - I 1- 1 TV C)
took a ·1-0 lead' early' when
.Jordan Hill hit the first · pitch
off the fence for a triple then
score on a Justin Allen sacritlce fly, 1-0. In the second,
Curt Crouch scored after
reaching on an error and a
fielder's choice, 2-0.
In the third frame, furdan Hill
singled Wes Burrows singled,
and Allen reached on an errorto
score a run, the score 3-0.

\

Trimble came back with
seven tuns in the third inning
on a Zach Walton single and
walk to S~yder. Then after a
muffed Tnrnble bunt, .Bro~n
· walked and Noah Barrett ~11 a
sacnfice fly. Jeremy Fmres .
reached on an error to score a
run, then another series of
three_ errors brought in the
rern~mng runs, the score, 7-3.
Tnmble added . two run~, m ·
the fifth on -a smgle to Farres
and hit batter, then after a wild
pllch two runs scored on an
error at short. the score 9·3.
Southef)l scored a single run
in the sixth and Trimble scored
two more on a walk, an error, a
sacrifice fly by Faires and a
ground out, the score 11-4.
Scott Brown was the winning pitcher while fanning 5,
and w~lking one. Jordan Bass
suffered the loss with relief
from Justin Allen while fanning four and walking four.
Southern
plays
at
Ravenswood today.

�Page 82 •

'

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard
College Basketball

National Basketball Association

At

OPENING ROUND
University ol Dayton Arena

Atlantic 01YIIi on

Dayton. Otrio

'IUesday. Man:h 18
North Carolina -Asheville 92, Texas
Southern 84. Ol'
EAST REGIONAL
Fil"'t Round
Thursday, March 20
At The FOld Center
Oklahoma City
Califorria 76, North Carolina State 74, OT
Oklahoma 71 , South Carol1na StS.te 54
Friday, March 2t
At The Fleet Center

• · Boaton
Syracuse" 76, Manhattan 65
Oklahoma State n , Pennsylvania 63
-.1 St. Pate TJmes Forum

x-New Jersey

~-Phi ladelphi a

Boston
Orlando
Washington
NewVor""Mtami

At Blrmlngham-Jeftorson Civic Center
Birmingham, Ala.

Butler 79, Louisville 71
Semlflnilla
AtPopatA"""'

Albany, N.Y.
Friday, March 28
Oklahoma 65, Butler 54
Syracuse 79,·Auburn 78

18

.4! 0

I

13

.303 23',

3'.

45

2j
33

. x·Oallas

Utah
Hou ston

Memphis
Denver

WL .
56 18
55 20
47 29
44 30

PctGB
.757
.733 1 '7
.618 tO
.595 12

38

37

.507 18'r.a

26

49

National Hockey League

-

40

Atlanta

AtSpokane,
Spokane """"'
Waah.
Connect&lt;ut 85. Slanford 14
Sunday, March 23
At Tho Gaytonl E-lnment Centor
Nathvllle, Tenn.
Maryland
Xav;er 64
At Binning~ CMc Cencer
Blrmlnghom, Alo.
Texas
Purdue 67
At St. Pole TlrMO Forum

n.

n,

' Tampa,RL
Michigan Slate 68, Florida 46

5emlflnall
At The Allmodon•

Houston
Pittsburgh

St. Louis
Chicago
Cincinnati
Milwauk8e

Chomplonlllltp
At The Alamodome
S..Antonlo

Sunday, MIII'Ch 30
T8'&lt;as 85, Michigan State 76

At Spclcano Anno

Spokane, Waah.
WISCOnsin 81 , Weber State 74 ·
Tulsa 84, Dayton 71

Frtdey,Morch2t

0

2

.000
0
2
Central Dlvlalon

W
2
2
2·

L
0
0
0

1

1

0

2

0

Pet

~o

0·

2
GB

t .OO
t .OO
'1. 00
.500
.000
.000

2

t

2
2

PCIGB
1.00
.667
1
.333
2

2

.000

3

.000

2\

~

Wedneadly'l Gamee
Montreal 3, Atlanta 0
Philadelphia B. Aorida 2
N.Y. Mats 4, Chicago Cubs ~
Pl11sburgh 7. Cinci nna114
Houston 8, Colorado 7
St. Louis 7, Mil waukee 0
Los Angeles 5, Arizona o
San FranCisco 5. San Diego 3

T6)Cas 82, ConnecticU1 78
Michigan Slate 60, Maryland 58

Missouri 72, SOuthern Illinois 71

t

0
t

Pet GB
t .OO
t .OO
.500
1
.000
2

W&amp;at Dlvlllon
WL '
San Franci sco
3
0
LOS Angeles
2
1
Arizona
1
2
Sen Diego

MIDWEST REGIONAL
Firat Round
Thureday, March 20
At Tho ACA Domo
,
lndtentopCJIII ,
Marquetla 72. Holy Cross 68

2

Montreal

Phlladelph1a
New York
Atlanta
Florida

at

Houston

(Robenson 0·2). 2:05p.m.

At Tho Fleet Co-

Boston

Pittsburgh 87, Wagner 61
100i8na 67, Alabama 62
At Tho Gaytonl Entwrtlltnment Center
Naahvllle, Tenn.

Los Angeles (Ishii 14-10) at San Diego
(Peavy 6-7). 5:05 p m.
•
Montreal (Vazquez 10-13) at Atlanta
(Orliz 14· 101. 7:35 p.m.
Friday'l Gamea
Pittsburgh'at Philadelphia. 1:30 p.m.
San Francisco at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 4:05p.m.
Montreal at N.Y. Mets, 7:10p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 7:10p.m.
Florida at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m.
Houston at St. Loui s. 8:t0 p.m.
Los Angeles at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.

Koniucl&lt;y 95. lnclana· f'uroue.~ 64
U1ah 00, Oregon 58

Second Round
Saturday, March 22
At Tho RCA Domo
lndlanapona

Marquet1e 101. Missouri 92. OT
At Spokane Arena

Spolalno, WAH.

New York

Booton
P'iti:Sburgh 74, Indiana 52
At The Gaylord Enttrtlltnment Center
Nashville, Tenn.
~tud&lt;y 74, Utah 54

Boston

Baltimore
Tampa Bay
Toronto

ChompiOnllillp

AI The Hubert H. Humptny MMoOI!tntodo.MiotmnaiO
Mlnneopolla

SaturdoV, ~ 2¥

Marquetle 83, Kent..:i&lt;y 69
WEST REGIONAL
Fl ...t Round
Thursday, Man:h 20
At The RCA Domo
tnclianlpolll
lHinois 65, Western Kentucky 60

1

2

Kansas City

2

Minnesota

2

Cleveland
Chicago
Detroit

1
0

Oakland
Anal'leim
Texas ·
Seanle

Pet GB
1.00
.667
1
.500 f it

0
3
Central Olvlelon
W
L

Samlflnata
At The Hubert H. HumphRty Mettodome
Mlnneopolla
Thursday, March 27
Kentucky 63, Wisconsin 57
Marqu~:~tte -n , Pitt:Sbu_rgh 74

·L
0
1
1

0

0

1
2

.333

2

.000

3

PctGB

t .OO

a

1.00
f

2

Wflt Dlvlalon
WL
2
0
2
1
1
2,
o · 2.

5

Phoeni•

30 35 10 5
28 37 7 ~ 8

75 200219

75 200227
71 208233
Two ~nta for • win, one point for a tie
and overtime toea.
.x,oll~ohod ptoyott opot
y-cllnched division

San Jose

Wednesday's Gam•
Buffalo 4, Atlanta 3 ·
Columbus 3, Minnesota 0
Tampa Bay 2, Montreal 1
Pinsburgh 3, Carolina 2
Dallas 2. Anaheim 1
san Jose 2, Calgary 2, tie

· Vancouver 3, Phoenix 3, tie
Los Angeles 5, Colorado 3
ThUr1day'1 Gemea
onawa at WashingtOI'r, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
Boston at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Chicago at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Detroit, 8 p.m.
San Jose at Edmonton, 9 p.m.

.500
.000
.000

1
2
2

PctGB
1.00
.667 .,. '12
.333 1-'.a..000
2

Wedneadly'a Gal"''tin
Kansas City 5, Chicago White Sox 4

Designated LHP Mark Lucaslawlcz for
assignment.
TAMF¥. BAY DEVIL RAY5-Si!ned 28

Damion Easley. Optioned 28 Brent
Abernathy 10 Durham of the IL. Sent OF
Goorge lombard outright to pumam and
L.HP Hans Smith outright to OftaOOO of the
SoU1hern League. Designated OF Jason•
Tyner for assignment. Aetumed INF Hector
luna to Cleveland for $25,000. Signed RHP

Alan Levine to a minor league contract.
BASKETBALL

Nltlonal Baalcatblll Auoclatlon'
ATLANTA HAWKs--Fired Pete Bebcock,
lj8nE!ral manager.
DENVER NUGGET3-Aclivated
G.
Vincen1 Yarbrough from the injured list.
Signed G Jeff Trepagnier to a second 1Q.day .
contract. Signed G Adam Harrington for the
remainder of the season and placed him on
the injured list.
·
Natlonol Footblll l..oe!iutl
AR IZONA CAROINAL5-Released

DENVER BAONCO&amp;-Agreed

rifice fly to push the score 3-0.
Trimble (0-2) got one back in
the bottom of the inning when
Allory Hooper walked and
5\X)red on a Nick Yore triple.
In the fourth inning Southern
gained three more runs when
Joanne Pickens reached on an
error, then with two out, Pullins
lined an RBI single, Katie Sayre .
walked, and Chapman had a
two-run double, the score 6- I.
All was quiet until the sixth
inning · when Emily ,Hill
opened up with a walk, Pullins
smgled and Katie Sayre .laid
down a perfect bunt. Sayre
~ached on a throwing error
allowing both Hill and Pullins
to score. Chapman reached on
an error, then with two on and
two out, Ashl~:y Roush had an
RBI single, Pickens had a pop
single, and Ashlee Hill
slainmed her second hit of the
night, a two-run _ double.
Southern now led more comfortably with a 12-l lead.
Trimble &lt;died single nms in the
fifth arxl the sixth, OOt 01apman
cut down the Tcmcats 1-2-3 in the
seventh to clinch the win.
Chapman walked four and
struck out three, while scattering si,x hits, and having
errors · from the defense.
Trimole's Hooper and Decore
walked six and fanned five in
suffering the loss.
Southern goes to Alexander
on Friday.

three ·

... i '

Eagles Club
Pomeroy

Band: Mavin' On
5

BINGO
April 5th
6:30pm

Mary's Grill
at
Riverside Golf Club
Friday

Steak Night
(304) 773-5354
Open to the public

Green and OB Jonathan Beasley.
GREEN BAY PACKEA5-Signed DE
Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila to a mutttyear contract.
HOUSTON TEXANS-Re-signed CB
~my Wright. Signed LB Charlie Clemons.
MINNESOTA VIKING8-AQreed to lerms
with TE Hunter Goodwin on a two-year con.tract." Renegotiated the contract ol WA
Derrick Ale~eandBr.
TENNESSEE TITANs-Re-signed C Tom
Ackerman and DE Juqua Thomas.
A.esclnded a tender offer to AB Mike Green.
Waived TE Nate Bandy and C Mah
Anderson.
HOCKEY
Nationol Hockoy ~110
NHL-Su~ Atlanta 0 Chris Tamer
two games withOUt pay for cross-checklng
Nashville AW Vladimir Orszagh in a March
29 game'. Fined the New Vorl&lt; l~anders
· $25.000 for holding a clooed pract&lt;:o without
media access Tue~.

A SPECIAL
SECTION
•
In The

• ®alltpolt~ llailp m:rthune
• ~oint .f)lea~ant ~egt~ter
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

REACH OVER 18,000 HOMES
I ; IN THE TAl-COUNTY AREA!
'

At The FOld c.nter
Old"""""' City

State 84, Memphis 71

Advertising Deadline:
THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2003

Kanaas 64. Utah Slate 61
Second Round

Soturct.v, March 22
' AI Tho RCA DDml
lndlontopCJIIO

Notre Dame 68, Illinois 60
At Tho Jon M. Huotomon Com.r
•
SoH L.oko City

Arizona 96, Gonzaga 95, 20T

ee. CeniTal Mlctl;gan eo

_,...

At The Ford centor
Oldohomo City

wa. Arizona State 76
At A.t&amp;OWI'IMd

Pond

,._,callt.

Thu...... - 2 1
ArizOna 88, Notre Dame 71
Kan... 69. Duke 66

ChomploiiOhtp

At Anuwhwd Pond

-.COlli.

Soturdoy, 2¥
Kanu.a 78, Arizona 75
'
FINAL I'OUR
AI Thlt Loutll•na iiisu;op.,ardol-m••
-OriMnl

Ct.mpl01..tllp
Mondoy, Aprtl7
Semifinal wlnnars. 9::22 p.m.

'f

,.

.

H

National tfockey League.

.

BY

.

DENNIS WASZAK JR.

Associated Press

New Jersey Nets' center Jason Collins, center left, and New Orleans Hornets' P.J . Brown, center
right, argue after a play during th ird quarter Wednesday in New Orleans . Brown was issued a flagrant foul on the play. Hornets' Baron Davis (1) and George Lynch (9) try to break them up . (AP)

Hornets, Trail Blazers
make·playoff field
New Orleans has its first
NBA playoff team .
The Hornets, who moved
from Charlotte to New
·orleans thi s season, secured a
playoff benh Wednesday
nigh[ with a 106-97 victory
over New Jersey. Coupled
with Washington' s I 05-99
·home lo ss to Sacramento,
' New Orleans cruised in.
Portland also wrapped up a
"playoff spot, and didn 'f'even
need to take the court to do it.
Hou ston feli I 06-99 at
Milwaukee, and that wa s
enough for the Blazers to
.secure ·their 21st consecutive
'postseason spot. the NBA's
longest current streak.
Elsewhere
Wedne sday
night, it was Philadelphia
I 08, Chicago lO I; Minnesota
91, Seattle 86; Toronto. 89,
Detroit 78; San Antonio 105.
Memphi s 87 ; Indiana 103,
Cleveland 82 ; Boston 90,
Miami 62; and New York 83 ,
Denver 75 .
The Hornets locked up their
fourth straight playoff berth.
·Jamal Mashburn scored 24
points , and Baron Davis and
George Lynch each added 19.
The Jazz, who played in New
Orleans for five seasons,
·never got into the playoffs.
"This was a key win
tonight," Hornets coach Paul
Silas said. "Not just because
we clinched a playoff berth,
but because WI: might meet
this team in the playoffs ."
If so. the Hornets could be
short-handed . Guard Baron
Davis, who returned to the
lineup March II after missing
20 games following surgery
on his left knee, twisted the
knee and left late in the third
· quarter. Silas said after the
game it was too early to know
how bad Davis' injury was.
Ne\1' Orleans is fifth in the
Eastern Conference.
" It takes some . pressure off
:us," Lynch said. "But we
can't look at it like that.
We've got 'to try to improve
each game now."

.Kings 105,
Wizards 99

of nine and are 3- 1 on their points and 16 rebound s as
Toronto ended a seven-game
six-game East Coast trip.
road losing streak.
The win let Toronto coach
Lenny Wilken s put off bre&lt;iking Bill · Fitch 's NBA record
of I , I 06 coaching los ses.
Wilken s, who set the record
At Milwaukee, Sam Cassell
for wins in 1995; tied 'Fitch 's
scored 20 points as the Bucks
mark on Tuesday night in a
erased a 13-point deficit.
home loss to the Pi stons.
Gary Payton and Toni Kukoc
each scored 18 point s for
Milwaukee.
Houston has lost four of
five and is I 1/2 games behind ·
Phoenix for the West 's e ighth
playoff spot. Yao Ming had 15
At
Cleveland,
AI
points and six rebound s for Harrington, subbing
for
Houston.
Jermaine O' Neal (·sprained
·ankle) scored 24 points, and
Ron Artest was up to hi s usual
antics for Indiana.
Arte~t . fined and suspended
several times this season for .
At Philadelphia, Allen
Iverson had 24 points and a bad behavior, kept things
season-high 12 assists. Kenny lively during the fourth quarThomas added 16 points and ter. He shoved Ricky Davis
14 rebounds for the Sixers, out of bounds and was
20·5 since the All-Star break assessed a technical foul for
and within a half-gam e of arguing . Artest continued to .
first-place New Jersey in the protest. and when teammate
Atlantic Division.
Austin Croshere, stepped in to
Jay · Williams scored 23 stop him, Arte st pushed him
points for Chicago, 3-36 on and then knocked away
the road .
Indiana coach lsiah Thomas'
arm.
On Indi ana's next possession, Cavs forward Jumaine
Jones was ejected. As Jones
At Memphi s, Tenn., Tim was leaving the floor, Artest,
Duncan had 33 points and 19 apparently upset that somerebounds for San Antonio. one had thrown something at
Duncan connected on 13 of him, directed an obscene ges16 shots from the field as the ture toward the crowd.
Spurs won their seventh
straight game.
Memphi s, meanwhile, has
lost seven of its last eig~t :
Lorenzen
Wright
led
Memphis with 24 points.
At Denver, Allan Houston
had 27 points and Latrell
Sprewell added 16. New York
ended a three-game losing
streak to remain 3 1/2 games
At
Minneapolis , Troy behind Milwaukee for the
Hudson scored 31 points and final playoff spot in the
Kevin Garnett added 20 . Eastern Conference with
Hudson, Minnesota's streaky seven games left.
point guard, fell three points
Juwan Howard led the
short of his career high .
Nuggets with 20 points and
The-Wolves, who snapped a
14 rebounds.
three-game losing streak, also
played tight defense on Ray
Allen, holding the Seattle
guard to a quiet 19 points.
The Sanies fell three games
behind Phoenix for the final
playoff spot in the West.

Bucks 106, ·
Rockets 99

Pacers 103,
Cavaliers 82

76e.rs 108,
Bulls 101

Spurs 105,
Grizzlies 87

Knicks 83,
Nuggets 75

T-wolves 91 , ·
SuperSonics 86

Celtlcs 90;
Heat-,62

At Washington, Chri s
At Bosto·n, Paul Pie'rce
Webber had 28 points, nine scored 28 points and the Heat
rebound s and six a s sists tied their lowest-scoring
,against hi s former team as game of the season.
·Sacramento reduced its magic
The Heat, the NBA's sec·
:number to one to clinch the ond-lowest scorin~ team , had
' Pacific Division.
fewer than 70 pomts for the
Jerry Stackhouse scored .27 eighth time this season; .
points . for
Washington.
It was the Celt1 cs th~rd
·M ' h 1 J 0 rdan
playing stratght v1ctory after a · stx, IC ae
.
• game losmg streak. But they
• • .
-alrno~t nonstop Ill his btd to beat two of the NBA's worst
:get to the playoffs one last tea ins - Cleveland twi ce and
:time, scored 17 points a_nd Miami.
'played 33 of the first 34 mmutes and 42 min'Utes total. The
Wi zards sank to a season -low
:Six 'games under .500 and two
:games behind Milwaukee for
:the eighth Eastern Conference
At Auburn Hill s Mich.,
·playo!f spot.
Vince Carter scored 8 points
The Kings have won eight and Jerome Williams 1)118 11

Raptors 89,
Pistons 78

s.mlflnoto
Soturct.y, Apttl s
~ (27-6) VI. Karoaa (29-1). 6:07 ~
Sy!OCYS8 (211-5) ""· r.... (26-11), e:•7 p.
.

•··.

First pack $10.00 ·
All other after $5.00
Starburst $1200

to lerms

Arizona 80. Vermont 51
CoMr!ll Michigan 79, Creighton 73
Duke ril. Colorado Slate 57

Mario Lemi eux set up the
winnin g goal on possibly the
last shift of his NHL career.
Lemieux ass isted on Eric
Me loche's goa l with I 0 . 1
seco nd s left as the Pittsburgh
Pe nguins fini shed their home
schedule with a 3-2 victory
over Carolin a on Wedne sday
ni ght. ·
Afterw ard,
Le mie ux
re peiHed what 's he said fur
we eks - he wo n' t decide
unt il thi s summer if he will
play next season. He al so
said he won 't play in the season finale in Washington on
Saturday night.
' " I' m not sure if I want to
&amp;e part of a rebuildin g
process. I've been wre stling
with that for a while now,"
said Lemieu x. also the team
1
owner. "1'11 sit down with th e
right people and see wh ere
we want to go with the franchise ."
,
Lemieux ti ni shed th e· season with 28 goals and 63
assi sts for 91 points in 67
games. In 16 NHL season , he
ha s 682 goal s, 1,0 I 0 assists
and I ,69 2 points.
In 1984, he scored in
Boston on his first NHL shot.
and he had an a ssist on the
first shift -of his comeback
game aga inst Toronto in
2000, when he ended a 44month retirement'.
However, he might have
ended hi s career with a nine game goal drought, the
longe st streak of his career
without a goal.
· The Penguif!S, 2- 16-2 in
their last 20 games. won for
the .first time in II home
game s to avoid tying a franchi se -record for . longest
home winless streak set in
1983 .
" It 's not been very much
fun, for my self or the fran chi se ," Lemieux said . "It's
been difficult all year.
Nobody wants to lose all the
time.
While Lemieux contem·
plated his future , Vancouver
closed in on its first divi sion
title in a decade .
The Canucks moved three
points in front of Coloradq
for the Northwest Divi sion
lead with a 3- 3 tie at
Phoenix , and the Avalanche' s
5-3 loss at Los Angeles.
In other games, it wa s:
. Ta mpa Bay 2, MontFeal l ;
Dallas 2, Anaheim
I;
. Columbu s 3, Minnesota 0 ;

Buffalo 4, Atlanta 3; and San·
Jose 2, Cal gary 2.
The C anucks have o ne
more game left - again st
Los Ange le s · - while the
Avalanche have two more: at
Anaheim and aga inst St.
Louis. Vancouver, which last
won a divi sion title in 199293. mi ssed an opportunity to
widen
the
ga p
with
Colorado .
"We' re pretty disappointed
right now. But as of right
now , we ' re still the third
team
in
the
Western
Confe re nce,"
Brendan
Morri son said after th e
Canuc ks blew a late 3-2 lead.
Teppo Numminen scored
with 2:0 I re maining as the
Coyotes rallied from a twogoal defi cit in the Jhird peri od.
"We played well in the second period and played the
wa y we' re suppo sed to play,"
said Markus· Naslund, whose
league-leading 48th goal at
11:38 of the second gave
Vancouve r a 3- 1 lead. "But
then we went back to not
playing in the third ."
The Canucks. 3-0- 1 in four
games against the Coyotes,
are 4-2- 1 in their last seven
and a fran chise-best 23- 10-71 on the road.

h[gh with his 22nd goal for
th e Li ghtning, who are
appro~c hin g th e first di vision
title in th eir I !-year hi story.
They .
lead
So utheast
Di v1sio n-ri val Washington
by three poi nt s with two
ga mes rema ining for each
tea m.

Stars 2,
Mighty Ducks 1
At Dallas. J aso n Arnott
and Dcrian Hatcher scored
third -period goals to lead the
Stars past Ana he im in a
pote ntial ti rs t-round playoff .
prev iew.
Mike Modan o. the Stars'
leading scorer, left in the second period with what the
team called a lower-body
injury. Coach Da·vc Tippeti
S&lt;tid the injury wasn'-t seri ous. but didn 't elaborate.
Dallas ·
Marty
Turco
stopped 26 of 27 shots and
low ~ red hi s goa l s- a ga i~ st
average to 1.7 6. just below
the· NHL record of 1.77 set
by Chi cago's Tony Esposito
in 1971 -72 and Toronto's AI
Rollin s in 1950-5 1.

Blue Jackets 3,
Wild 0

At Columbus, Phiu, Marc ·
Denis stopped 27 shots for
hi s fifth shutout of the season, and ninth of hi s career,
and Mik e Sillinger had a
goal and an assist as
.Columbus scored three
Eric . Bela~ger . had ~wo power-plaY, goal s late in the
goals and an assi st, and first period .
Ziggy Palffy had a goal and
two assist s for Los Angeles,
which came back and beat
Colorado to fini sh 19-20-2 at
Staples Center Jlfter going
22-13-6 last season .
At Buffalo, N.Y.. Daniel
Colorado's Milan Hejduk Briere and Tim Connolly
scored hi s 47th goal for the scored power- pl ay goal s in
Avalanche. who are 30-15-4 the final I :59 . and the Salbres- - --'1
since T9ny Granato replaced won for the first time after
Bob Hartley as coach on being down by three goals
Dec . 19.
since O ct. 17. 19 98. at
"There are no excuses. We Montreal.
were ahead 3-2 and had the
Pasi Nurminen mad e 36
gaine right where we wanted saves for Atlanta, which failed
it, but they . were working in its bid for a club-reeord
really hard," Colorado goalie five-game unbeaten su·eak.
Patrick Roy said

Kings 5,
Avalanche 3

Sabres 4,
Thrashers 3 .

Sharks 2,
Flames 2 -

Lightning 2,
Canadians 1
At Tampa, Fla. , Nikolai
Khabibulin made 26 saves
anci extended hi s career-best
unbeaten streak to 16 games
for the Lightning.
Cory Sarich scored the goahead· goal in the second , and
Vinny Prospal tied a career

At Calgary, Alberta, Chris
Drury scored the tyin g g&lt;lal
at ' l4:39 of th e th ird per iod
for the Flames, who went 0for-8 on the powe r play and
have failed to score with the
man advantage on the ir last
36 chances.

Spring ·
Planting
Season
Is Here

2000

Ext.Cab414

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1-304-773-55&amp;3

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i

Pro Bas,!(etball

•

from Page B1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Lemieux sets up
winner in possibly
'his last game

•

C

S.HL.okoCity

Kansas
. "

Southern

Mike Gruttadauria.

Gonzaga 74, Cir.dnnati 69

Duke

..

National.Basketball Association

Associated Press

FOOTBALL

Notre Dame 70, WiSCQnsin-Mitwaukee 69
At The Jon M. Huntaman c.nter·

Arlzor:~a

al championship. games, while with Sy rac use. hav ing won
Williams made it to the Final about 75 perce nt of hi s gan]cs.
Four three times previously,
Boe heim will return to the
including last year.
· Loui siana Superdome, where
Williamsinsiststhattheprospoct hi s Orangemen lost a 74-73
of going lJ.4 in Fmal Fours doesn't heartbreaker to Indiana in the
ocld any pressure for him.
1987 final. Keith Smart was
"I do have a goal and dream the hero that year, hilling a
of winning a natioQal champi- baseline j umper with 4 seconship at Kansas , and we try onds left · aft er De rrick
very hard to be in position to Coleman mi ssed the front e nd
do it all the time," he ·said. of a 1-and- 1 for Syracuse.
"Still, we haven't done it, but I
Asked if he found it
still feel my life is .pretty dam " weird" to be he he ad ed
good, and if I coach for anoth- back to the Supe rdome for a
· er 15 years and have some Final Four. Boe heim said :
similar success that we' ve had '' It is, a little. but we've· kind
the ftrst 15, I'll feel lucky of gotten throug h th a t. h 's
regardless."
'
been 16 . year~.· ·
Williaq~s, a former Nonh
On Wednesda y, Williams
Carolina assistant, has won asked reporters to stop askin g
more than 80 percent of his about the Tar Hee ls' job unt il
games as a Division I head after the Final Four.
coach, ranking him ,ahead of
" I didn't think th is de ci· all other active coaches.
sion would come up again ,
Kansas lost in ·the 2002 but it has. and it' s alre ady
semifinals to eventual nation - been a pain ," he said. " My
al champion Maryland. The team de se rves me not hav- .
Jayhawk::' other Final Four ing to answer th ose quesappeamnces under Williams tion s ... [ think my team
came in 1991 and 1993.
deserve s the rig ht to fo cus
Boeheim is in his 27th season and enj oy thi s wee k."

DETROIT LION5-Ae~ased WR Jecquez

Eaat Division
W
3
2
1

32 37 6

NEW ORLEANS (AP) Roy Williams thinks Kansas
vs. Syracuse for the national
title has a nice ring to it.
That way, Willi am s fi gures ,
either he or counterpart Jim
Boeheim will tin ally shed the
label· of being one of the best
coaches never to win an
NCAA championship.
" If we make it to the final
game, at least one guy's going
to· leave with some of that
load off of his shoulders,"
Williams said Wednesday
during a conference call for
·
the Final Four coaches.
Kansas plays Marquette in the
first semifinal Saturday, followed by Syracu se against
Texas.
William.s and Boeheim
have a combined 42 years of
experience a s head coach al
their respective schools. They
have 1,068 victories and 36
NCAA tournament appearances between them , but no
national championships.
Both men have been. this
close more than once before.
Boeheim has lost two nation-

With S Nid&lt; Ferguson and LB Quincy Stewart.

American League

Wisconsin 61 , Tulsa 60
Sunday, March 23
AlTha Fleet Center

Los Angeles

ANAHEIM ANGELS--Ciakned AHP Elll
Serrano off waivers from Philadelphia.

(Redman 8-15). 1:35 p.m.

2-6)

74 183 203

BASEBALL
American L.aague

Chicago CuPs (Prior 6·6) at N.Y. Mets
(Trachsel "11-11), 1:10 p.m
·
Milwaukee (Kinney 2·7) at St. Louis
(Stephenson 2-5), 1:10 p.m
.
Philadelphia (Padilla t4-11) at Florida
(Cruz

27 33 t3 7

Transactions

Thursday'• Game•
Pittsburgh (Fogg t2-12) at Cincinnati
(Ji.Anderson 8- 13), 12:35 p.m.

Colorado

70 217 280

29 41 7 3 68 205254
Northwest D&amp;vlalon ·
W L T OLPtaGF GA
x-VanCouve r 45 22 13 1 104 264206
40 t9 13 8 101 242t89
x-Colorado
x-Minnesota 41 2810 t 93 193!73
x·Edmonton 36 25 tO 9 91 227223
27 36 13 4 71 180226
C~lgary
Pacttlc Dtvlaton
.
W L T OL Pta GF GA
y-Dallas
45 1115 4 109243169
x-Anaheim
40 27 9 5 94 200 18P

East Olvlalon

Colorado

San Antonio
Frtdliy, March 28

Nashville

- National Laague
L
0

5

Col umbus

Baseball
W
2

29 39 7

Flor&lt;ta
23 35 13 9 68 170 230
Carolina
· 22 41 11 6 61 169234
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Centrlil Oivl•lan
W L T OLP!aGF GA
y-Oetrolt
47 20 9 3 106 256tg2
x-St. t..oois
41 22 10 6 98 ~45209
Chica go
28 33 12 6 74 i 952t7

Friday's Gamea
San Antonio at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Houston at Philadelphia. 7 p.m.
Miami at New. Jersey, 7:30-p.m.
Sacramento at Boston, 8 p.m.
L. A. Lakers at Memphis. 8 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit. 8 p.m.
Cleveland at Milwaukee. 8:30p.m.
New York at Utah, 9 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Seanle, 1Q: 30 p.m.
Portland at Golden State, 10;30 p.m.

T1f11po, Flo.

Satunloy,- 22

Hockey

.347 30'2

Utah at Portland, 10 p.m.

Purdue '80, LSU 56
At SL T-. Fcilum
Michigan State 79, Coklmdo 64
Florida 85, Sam Houston State 55
Second Round

Frlday'a Gamel

Seante at Ta~~: a s , 2:05 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 4:05p.m.
Boston at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m
.,
""' N:Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7:15 p.m.
-Toronto at Minnesota, 8 :0! 'P.m.
Cl811ell!ind at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Anaheim at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

.224

Minnesota 91. SeaHie 86
New Orleans 106. New Jersey 97
New York 83, Denver 75
Tf1uradey's Games
Washington at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Dallas. 9:30 p. m.

Con'necticut 58. Brigham Young 53
Sianioro n . San Diego 69
•
Friday, March2t
AI The Gaylord Enterlalnment center
NllahviUt, Tenn.
Xavier 71, Tro; State 59
· Maryland 75, N. Carolina.Y.Illmington 73
At Blnnln~ Civic Center
Blnnlngh8m, Ala.
Taxas 82, North carou na-Ashev~le 61

Minnesota (Lohse 13·8) at pe troi t
(Bernero 4-7), 1:05 p.m.
Chicago While Sox (Garland 12-12) at
Kansas City (Asencio 4· 7), 2:05 p.m.
Bos ton (Fossum 5-4) at Tampa Bay
(Bi&amp;rbrOdl 0-Q), 2:15 p.m.
Seal11e (Pineiro 14·7) at Oakland (Mulder
19·7), 3:35p.m
Cleveland
(B.Anderson 6-11 ) at
Ball!more (Helling 1Q-12) , -7:05p.m.

EASTERN CONF~RENC!
Atlantic Olvlalon
W L T OLP!aGF GA
Pet GB
x-New Jersey 45 20 8 6 104 211162
.7t1
x·Philadelphia 43 20 13 4 103201163
.630 s ·~
L.A. Lakers
43 3 t
.58 1 10 ' N.Y. Islanders 34 32 11 2 81 218222
N.Y. Rangers 32 34 10 4 78 205 224
Phoenix
39 35
.527 14
Pitlsburgh
27 43 6 5 65 166250
Seattle
36 38
.486 17
Northeast Dlvl•lon
Golden State
36 39
.480 1 7 ~
30
W L T OLP!aGF GA
L.A. Clippers
23 51
.311
y-Ottawa
50218 1 109255180
x-cllnched pleyotf apot
x·Toronto
43 27 7 3 96 233204
Wedl'le8day's Games
X·BOS ton
35 3t 10 4 84 236231
Boslon 90, Miami 62
·
Montreal
29 35 8 9 75 20t 230
Indiana 103, Cleveland 82
27369 8 71 183209
Buffalo
Ph iladelphia 108, Chicago 101
Southeast Dlvlak&gt;n
Toronto 89. Detroit 78
W L T OL Ptl GF GA
. Milwaukee 106, HOuston 99
x·Tampa Bay 36 23 16 5 93 216200
San p..ntonio 105, Memphis 87
x-Washlngton 38 28 8 .6 90 218212
Saciamonto 105; Washington 99

17 59
Pacific Dlvlalon
VI L
x-Sacramento
54
22
x- Portland
46 27

Thursday, April 3, 2003

.

Thurwday'e Gamea

.520 \

MldWe•l Dlvieloh

SOUTH REGIONAL
First Round
Thursday, Man:h 20
At Spclcano Allll18
Spclcano, W.ah.

.

5
7
.459 11 ',

22

Albony, N.Y.
Sunday, March 30
Syracuse 63, Oklahoma 47

.

l

.392

Chomptonohlp
At Popat Anno

'

34

1

26 50
.342
Toronto
24 50
.324
Cleveland
14 60
.189
WESTERN CONFERENCE

29

x·Minnesota

' Oldahqma City

29

GB

Atlanta

x-San Antonio

Oklahoma 74, california 65
Sunday, Man:h 23
At Tho Fleet Contor
Boll10n
Syracuse 68, Oklahoma State 56
At SL Pole Tlmeo Forum
Tampa, Aa.
Auburn 68, Wake Forest 62

45
41
39

.613
.608
.547

Chicago

At Blnnlnghanh.lefferson Civic center
Blnnlngham, Ala~
Louisville 86, Austin Feay 64
Butler 47, Mississippi State 46
Saturday, March 22
At The FOld Cent&lt;or

Pet

29

PctGB
.635
.587
.553
6
.487 11

Wake fOrest 76, East Tennessee State 73

Second Round

L

36
34 40
33 42
23 53
Central Olvltlon
WL
x-De troit
47 27
x- lndlana
44 31
x·New Orleans
42 34
Milwaukee
37 39

Tampa, AI.
Aubum 65, Sai('lt Joseph's 63. OT

W
46

Williams, Boeheim get another.
shot.at
f.
i
rst
NCAA
hoops
titl~
'

Anaheim 11. Te)(as 5
N.Y. Ya nkees 9, Toronto 7
Minnesota B. Detroit 1
Cl811eland 4 , Baltimore 2
Boston 7, Tampa Bay 5
e&gt;aklaM 8, Seattle 3

EASTERN CONFERENCE

NCAA Tournament

Thursday, April 3, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

IIXXXIXIIXXIXIXXXIIXXXIIXXIIIXXXIIIIXXX%1%jj
J

' I

''

_I __

'.

�•

'\

.

0

\

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Page 84

Thursday, April 3, 2003

.

'

'

-

Tribe gives Wedge first managerial win

•

Cliff Floyd and Roger Ceueno Arizona . Dtamondbacks on .
thrt:t:. hils in six-plus innings of '
Boston a 7-3 lead in 1he lll'th .
homered.
The Red Sox also scored thr.-e
a victory.
BALTIMORE
The Graffanino, and Randa home-'· in the_third when Kevin Millar
Shawn Greer. hit a homc'run,
C1.eveland Indians beat the red off Rick White (0-1).
and David Ortiz had RBI dou. two double,&lt;; and three RBIs,,
Baltimore
Orioles
4-2
Albie Lopez ( 1-0) gave up an - bles off loser Jim Parque.
•
BriUJJ Jordan also homered.
Wednesday night ' behind a RBI single in the eighth to
'
Elmer .Dessens (0-1). in his
solid pitching performance by Armando Rios, and rookie
MIAMI - Randy Wolf took, Arizona debut. allowed four
rookie Ricardo Mike Macl:;&gt;ougal pitched me
a one-hitter into me sev.enth runs on eight hits in tive
Rodriguez.
·ninth for his second save. With
DETROIT - Jacque Jones
inning. Jim' Thome had two innings.
Ellis
Burks a runner on first, Frank hit a two-ruit homer and hall
more hits and Mike Lieberthal
drove in •two rims Thomas grounded into a game- four RBls as 'the Minneso1a
added a bases-loaded .triple to
Twins beat Detroit. ,
for the Indians. · ending double play.
lead the Philadelphia Phillies
Joe · Mays didn't have much
Rodriguez ( 1-0) gave up one
over the Rorida Marlins ..
trouble with the Tigers during
run and four · hits in seven
Lieberthal and Marlon Byrd
his
five-inning
outing.
Mays
.
.
.
itmings in his eighth career
ST. LOUIS Woody
retired his first six batters
hu consecutive double~ m the
start. His only costly mistake
Williams
'pitched
two-hit
ball
fifth.
Byrd
moved
to
thtrd
on
a
before Eric Munson's homer in
came in the second, when he
the third cut Detroit's d'licit to
ground ol!l and scored ori into the seventh inning and
yielded a solo home run to
ANAHEIM, Calif. -A his- 3-1.
Jimmy Rollins two-out bunt Mike Matheny had three hits
Tony Batista.
toric. home run by Alex
Mays gave up just two hits
single dowll the tirst-base line. and two RB'Is as t~e St. Louis
The right-hander outpitched Rodriguez wasn't enough for . and no walks while striking out
While Derrek Lee appeared to Cardinals beat the Milwaukee
four.
Omar Daal (0-1 ), who allowed the Texas Rangers.
ATLANTA - Zach Day and tag Rollins on the back for the Brewers.
Rodriguez became the
Detroit starter Jeremy three
four runs and eight hits in 6 1Williams didn't allow a hit
relievers combined on a final out, . first,base umpire
3 innings in his debut with the youngest player to hit 300 Sonderman gave up six runs three-hitter, and Jose Vidro hit Chri ~ Guccione called him safe until Eric Young tripled to right
Orioles. Daal struck out seven homers but the Anaheim and nine hits over four innings
a two-run homer - allowing the second run to with two outs in the sixth.
.Angels' beat the Rangers in his first outing a hoy~ Class
and walked two.
to
lead
the
EduarJo Perez just missed on a
.
score.
Montrea I Expos
Daal was pulled in the sev- behind home runs from Troy A. He struck o ut f,Ive and
diving
attempt of Young's slicover the Atlanta
enth with one out, runners on Glaus, Brad Fullmer and Darin walked qne m a 79-puch out- .
ing drive to the warning tr1tck.
mg.
Braves. '
second and third and Cleveland Erstad.
The Brewers' only other hit
Vidro hit a two-run shot in
ahead · 2-l. Willis Roberts
Rodriguez, 27 years, 249
against
Williams (1 -0) was a
the tirst ioning, sending rookie
entered and promptly gave up a days old, hit a three-run homer
one-out single by Je ffrey
Braves
starter
Horacio
in the fifth inning off Ramon
two-run single to Burks.
Ramirez
to
a
hard-luck
loss
in
HOUSTON
Craig.
Hammonds in the seventh. The
After Rodriguez left, Jose Ortiz ( 1-0).
his major league debut.
Biggio's two-run single capped right-hander si[Uck out five and
Bengie · Molina had four
Santiago gave up a home run to
TORONTO
· - Erick
Day dominated a Braves a rally from a four-run deficit walked one in 6 2-3 innings..
Dei vi Cruz leading off the RBJs and Ortiz allowed four Almonte homered and had team that l?oked d~w~right in the ninth inning, giving the
eighth. But Carl Sadler. got the runs and seven hits over live three RBls in his lirst game as feeble offenstve ly. Atlanta got Houston Astros a win over the
final t'Yo outs of the inning and innings.
Derek Jeter's replm:ement, and only one runner past second · C 1 d R k.
0 ora o oc Ies.
the New York Yankees beat base.
Danys Baez worked a perfect
Toronto to complete an openJose J1menez (0-1) replaced
ninth for his first save.
ing three-game sweep of the
Todd Jones with a 7-3 lead and
SAN DIEGO - Marquis
Blue Jays.
.
'
gave up six hits while retiring
Almonte went 2-for-5 in his
S
' just one batter. Jeff Bagwell. Grissom·, three-run double
ftrst
major
league
start
.
NEW
YORK
-.
amO!y
·Lance Berkman and Jeff Kent highlighted ' a live-run third
ST. PETERSBURG, Ra. He
sing
led
in
the
second
So'a
took
a
big-'wmg
and
sent
. Ies. inning. and the San Francisco
Jason Varitek hit a three-run
ti b 11
t0 1 ft fi ld Ioaded th e bases. Wit. h smg
Wednesday off Mark a Y. a soanng
e Ie · and Richard Hidalgo hit a two- Giants beat the San Diego
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-· Joe homer and Derek . Lowe inning
Hendrickson
(0-1)
for
his
first
Sure
II
was
home
run
No. 500, run double.
shrugged off a shitky start to
Padres for a three-game sweep.
Randa hit a tiebreak.ing two- pitch
RBI
then
hit
a
two-run
he
immediately
threw
his am1s
career
six innings as the Boston
Barry Bonds went 0-for-4
run homer in the seventh Red Sox beat the Tampa Bay homer in the third aoaimt Pete up, took a signature hop and
and has just one hit - a threeinning as the Kansas City Devil Rays.
Walker for hi s fi~·st major clapped his hands.
nm, homer Tuesday night - in
Royals beat the Chicago White
·
Instead of history and a tying
Lowe allowed five runs and league home run .
10 at-bats thi s season. Facing
three-run homer, however, the
Sox for their first 2-0 start in 24 six hits, struck one and walked
Jesse
Orosco with a runner on
hall was blown back into the
years.
four to improve to 6-2 against
PHOENIX - Kevin Brown, third in the seventh . Bonds
park and !~ II' for ;(harmle ss out ,
With the score 3-all, Angel the Devil Rays, who wasted a
exactly the kind of break the in a performance thin bo&gt;les popped up to shortstop 'to drop
.
Berroa niached. on a throwing 3-0 lead.
Varitek
homered
off
one
of
New York Mets needed in a ·well tor the Los Angeles to 4-for-26 ·(.154) lifetime
error by shortstop Tony
the catwalks that ~upport the
OAKLAND. Calif. - AL victory over the Chicago Cubs. Dodgers. shut · down the against the 45-year-old lefty ..
•
Associated Press

roof al Tropic una Fil'ltt giving

TWinS 8, Tigers 1

AL

Angels 11,
Rangers 5

MVP Migue l Tejada hit a
three-'run homer and,Cy Young
winner B'any Zito pitched six
solid innings as the Oakland
Athletics heat the Seattle
Mariners.
Eric- Chavez also homered
for the defending AL We\t
champions. who won easi ly
again for mokie manager Ken
Macha.
Zito ( 1-0), one ·of four leftbanders in Oakland's rotation,
was sc heduled to pitch the'
opener agamst Seattle m Tokyo ·
last week, but lhe two-game
senes was canceled because of
the war with Iraq.
·

'

Phillies 8,
Marlins 2

Cardinals 7,
Brewers 0

Expos-3,
Braves 0

NL

Astros 8,
Rockies 7

Yankees 9,
Blue Jays 7

Royals 5,
White Sox4

RedSox7,
Devil Rays 5

Giants 5,
Padres 3

MetS 4 Cubs 1

Dodgers 5,
·Diamondbacks 0

Athletics 8,
Mariners 3

i .

College football

Miami cornerback trying to put
Fiesta Bowl·memory behind him
-ee&gt;W~I::-'CJ'KBtES, -Fl'"a. --;p""a""st' , -,;a"'nd""tt"~'--;n=ot gping to do said nehas seen the play three

(AP) - Miami Hurricanes'
cornerback Glenn Sharpe
says he wouldn 't' change a
thing if he had to relive his
infamous play from January's
national title game.
Sharpe was the Hurricam;s'
cornerback called for a questionable pass interference
penalty near the end of the
Hurricanes 31-24 doubleovertime Fiesta Bowl loss to
Ohio State.
"I don ' t like to keep replaying it and watching it over and
over because that's in the

Reds
from Page 81
park Monday, tied the game
at 3 with a wind-blown solo
homer in the third. His high
drive to left-center was
caught by 'a fan in the first
row behind the 12-foot wall.
· It was Griffey's 469th
career homer, leaving him
24th on the career list. Willie
Stargell and Stan Musial are

Osu

any good now," said Sharpe. times since the game. but is
"Ori that particular play, eager · for next season to
there is nothing I could have begin.
done better," he added. "I did
While Sharpe remains optieverything my coach told me mi?tic and says he has put ·thc
to do. "
· ·
game behind him. Miami
· The fourth-down penalty - coach Larry Coker warm that
which was called several sec- the play could stic~ with
onds after the . game was Glenn for sometime.
thought over - gave Ohio
"I think it as been an 1ss ue
State a chance to tie the game with Glenn." Coker sa id .
in the first . overtime before · "Anytime ym1 ' re· the fo~ al
winning it in the second, over- point of such a huge game and ..
lime.
such a young player. I think
Sharpe, then a freshman, ' that's going to li nger."
tied at 475 .
Austin Keams had a tworun homer in the first and
gave the Reds their first ·lead
in the ballpark by reaching on
an infield single and eventually scoring on Brandon
Larson 's sin~le in the sixth.
After sell mg out the two
exhibitions and the season
opener at the new park, the
Reds 'drew 22,878 for
Wednesday's game.
A fan delayed the game in
the top of the t}fth by running

onto .the tield with Kendall
on first and Aramis Ramirez
at bat. The man tried to
stepped on first base and
headed for second as slllnncu
players stood in place and
'
watched .
A police 'o!Jicer tackled th~
man from behind as he got
halfway to second, tearing off
the fan 's red shirt as he tried
to wriggle away. Two other
officers helped to hold him
on the ground until he was
handcuffed and led away.

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
REAL ESTATE

AUTOMOTIVE
- Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

Homestead Bend Real
www.homesteadber~dr'eallty.cornl

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com

-Homestead Realty

www.homesteadrealtyl.com

BUSINESS TRAINING
Gallipolis Career College

COMMUNITY

www.gallipoliscareercollege,com

City of Point Pleasant

www.pointpleasantwv.org

MEDICAL

Mason .~ounty

Holzer Clinic

Chamber of

Commerc~

www.holzerdinic.com

wwwlmasoncountychamber.org

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

.www.pvalley.org

www,meigstountyohio.com

0

'

ENTERTAINMENT

NEWSPAPERS

Charter Communications

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.charter.com

Jeff Burton motivated
by 'Young Guns'
'

shoulder troubles last season
but still rushed for 1,237 yards
and 18 touchdowns, also will
have limited contact.
from Page 81
He is bench pressing 340
pounds in rehabilitation - 60
he wants more than a fear~me
pounds shy of where he was
· runnmg ,game and eftictent
last August, Tressel said.
With the targets they now
pa.~~g.h · ld be a· 0· re ex~o- . So~e playe~ will.be limited
.. e s ou ,
m .
. m spnng practtces becaUse of wear, the Buckeyes know they
st ve ~ffense, Tressel Stlld. . e injuries. . _
can't count on repeating the
~oal IS score at least 40 pomts . Among them are offensive heart-stopping fourth-quarter
a game· .
..
tackle Shane Oli vea and defen- comebacks of their perfect seaStepanovich agreed. A lot sive ends Darrion Scott and son - which ended with a
of people last year s~d defe~se Simon Fraser, all bothered by. Miami pass batted away from
~on games for us, he SIUd. injured shoulders. Offensive th'e end zone in double over.'That makes .~s hungry gomg lineman T.J. Downing hurt time as the Buckeyes beat the
.
himself slipping on ice.
'nto thts year:
Hurricanes 31-24 m the Fiesta
Tressel srud . the staJ! wtll
Maurice Clarett, who mjssed Bowl.
have fun watchmg expenenced all or part of five game~ with

WINSTON

T~lladega . · . .
Su~rspeectway

Associated Press
. Before the so-called "Young Guns" like
Kurt Busch and Ryan Newman were having such an impact in NASCAR, Jeff
Burton was one of Winston Cup's up-andcommg stars.
The last couple of seasons have been a
little bumpy. ·
Burton was hired by Jack Roush in
1996 after two seasons with another team,
and ~uickly shot to No. 13 in the point
standtngs. The next year, Burton won his
first race, starting a stretch of four straight
seasons finishing in the top five.
Now 35 and in his IOth full Cup season,
Burton finds himself No. 18 in the standing~. And 1-f in points for the second
strat ght week are his Roush Racing teammates: Matt Kenseth, in his fourth season,
and the 24-year-old Busch.
''I'm proud of them for how 'they ' ve
done. I'm not one of those people t)mt
looks at what Matt and Kurt have done
and feel bad about it," Burton said. "I feel
good about it because I' ve helped that.
'''rhat helps us, gives us some things to
look at and to emulate from time to time,''
he said. "It's not my intention to be a team
at Roush that isn't as competitive as all of
the other teams." .
Newman won last week at 'I'exas, where
three Roush entries tinished in the top I0
- Mark Martin (fifth), Kenseth (sixth)
and Busch (ninth). Burton, at the track
where the tirst of his 17 wins came in
1997, was 20 and Roush rookie Greg
Biffle was 28.
•
Through seven races this season,
Burton is below Kenseth, · Busch and
Martin (13). Roush's original driver in
1988 and the only one for the owner until
1992.
Still. there have been signs of promise
for Burton's team, revamped during the
winter after Paul Andrews took over as
crew chief for the No. 99 Ford late last
season .
.
Burton wasn' t able to finish-consecutive
races at Atlanta and Darlington fast month
because of engine failure, but those came
after he fini shed sixth at Las Vegas. He
was no lower than 13 in the other three
races before Texas.
"Our performance; I'm not totally disappointed,'' Burton said. "I' m nqt overjoyed with it, we need to do .a little better,
but we &lt;tre not in left field right now.
"We' re on the cusp of really doing some
good things. This is a whole brand new
team. We are starting from scratch and feel
good about where we are heading."
Burton had four of his 14 careertop IOs
last season - and two of his live top tives
- after Andrews took over the final II
races. Andrews used that time to evaluate
needs within the team, and numerou s
changes were made.
''Pit crew was one of the things we
needed to work on. the pit stops last year
were really inconsistent;'' said Andrews,
me crew chief for Alan Kulwicki's 1982
Cup championsllip. "We've . brought in
people that fit my style and my design.
you might say."
.
BUI1on is encouraged by the progress
tieing made early in il season of transition.
but refuses to . put . a timetable on when
· there will be more substantial results, such
as a victory or a top five finish.
·
·He does finally feel like rh~ team is getting up to speed after the offseason
changes limited testing arid track time.
. "Everything we· re doing makes sense.
We're not doing stupid stuff," Burton said.
"We've got a good plan in place and we
have to ·have time to act-it out.'.' 1
After a slow start in 200 I, with four tin-

AGRICULTURE

.

I

(/)

Start/Finish

-·-Q)
E
co
co•

Race No.
8 of 36

C\1

...

.c

Banking

C)

c:G)

_ ,

In the turn.s

Turn

Turn

0

®

TV schedule (ET)
Schedule: ·Friday, qualifying
(Speed Channel, 4 p.m.);
Sunday, ~ace (Fox, Noon)

Jeff Burton (9) leads Jimmy Spencer (1) through turn four during the Little Trees 300
raqe at Lowe' s Motor Speedway in Concori:J, N.C., in this 2002 photo. Now 35 and
in his 10th fu ll Cup season, Burton finds himself trying to catch up with the frontrunners in th~ standings. (AP)
ishcs of 30 or worse in ihe tirst six races.
Burton slipped to No. I0 in season points.
He also won twice that season, his last win
coming at Phoenix in 200 I.
Last season. Burton didn't win a race for
the tirst time since 1996 and linished No.
12 in season points, also hi s worst show-

ing since that first season with Roush.
'There weren't many good performances," he said. "It was terribly disappointing. I don't race to go around in circles and sweat on Sunday. I race because I
like to win. When we don't have success.
it hurts.''

Next race
Virginia 500 .
April 13, Martinsville, Va.

NASCAR TOP 10

Aaron's 499

Winston Clip SerieS
Points

Driver

.

1. Matt Kenseth

Wins

1,090

Top
Ss

4

6

6

1

1

4

5

6

2

3. Dale Earnhardt Jr

924

0

3

4

4

5

4. Michael Waltrip

89B

1

3

3

5. Jimmie Johnson

885

0

1

4

7

6

6.

Jeff Gordon

864

0

2

3

3

10

7.

Tony Stewart

849

0

2

4

7

3

B. Ryan Newman

848

1

1

3

1

15

9.

Ricky Craven

840

1

2

2

4

7

• 10. Kevin Harvick

802

0

1
2
--·
- _..._____

5

11

'

Talladega, Ala.
Site
Sunday, April 6
·Date ·
2002 winner •Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Race length 188 laps, 500 miles
Race record
Mark- Martin
...., •
188.354 mph, May 10, 1997
Qualifying record
Bill Elliott
212.809 mph (44.998 seconds), ·
April 30, 1987

Prev
Rank

935

2.' Kurt Busch

J

4

.,.-.----

~-

SOURCE: Assoeiated Press

AP

More NASCAR news coming this weekend!

The Daily Sentinel

· www.mydailysentinel.com

)im's' Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

Point Pleasant Register

i&gt;unb·ap tleimes -j)erttiitel · ·

www.mydailyregister.com
'

0

,.

r

BANKS

&amp; Supply

Take your business into the homes of
over 40,000 consumers in Gallia,
Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in ·

Co.

-

•

CONSTRUCTION
736 E. Main St. • Pomeroy, Ohio

555 Park St • Middleport

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

. (740) 992-5009

•

Banks,

992-6611

for _only a $1 a day.

·NORRIS
Dodge, ·Inc.
'

,,

CD···

.0

992-2825
..
.
'

Turn

Turn

106 North Second Ave. ~ Middleport, OH

_ _ _ __;_.;__ _..;..;o..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:.,
• _ _ __ __ ,. __

CUP

'

-----"
•••,
-,.n.•umlllilm

0

•

Thursday, April 3, 2003

BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

•

players and new iecruits compete for spots on defense and
special teams.
"We lost four of the frrst six
producers (on defense), if I had
w·bet," as well as Alf-America
punter Andy Groom Tressel
said.
'

NASCAR lbis .~Week

·www.mydailytribune.com
'

.

,.

. Page.BS

I

•,

•

252 Upper River Rd.

Gallipolis, OH

.448·0841

Main Street, • ·Rutland, Ohio .

.

•

'

740·742·2289 or 1·800-837-8217
Cell lor hourt or to make en appointment

-

•

-----·-~-----'-----

�•
Sentinel

Thursday, Aprtl 3, 2003

(l;tfiJuue ·-

r

ANNouNCEMENTS

rI

~~
Fr~ay

1r

.I riO

YARDSME-

.Lr.io_HRP
__w._ANIID
__

Pr. f'LFASANr

Thursday &amp;
5 lam• Indoor Mov ng Sale!
I es 112 mile on Johnsons Apr I 4th 10 7pm Apnl 5th
'C 1 Beer Carry Out perm t RldQe off Georges Creek 10 5 Lyons Add 1 on
for sale Chester TownshiP Rd (740)446 6345
Mason
WV
Antiques
ptfelgs County send laHars lll!ii""-::':'"~'::"----, Furn lure Home Inter or
of nterest to The Dally r4
YARD St\LE·
baskets clothUJg g ass
~en11 na1 PO Box 729 20
Po~n;ROY/M.mou: ware
l?omeroy Oh o 45769

I

'treasures Beyond
your Ballet!

.00 you need your GED or Apr t 2 3 4 Hysell Run Ad
+hgh Schoo D ploma? Do

~u know how to wr te an April 2 3 4 SR 143 tots or
stuff

&gt;effect ve resume? Do you
know what qual I es employ
~~trs are look ng For 10 an
tn'ipk)yee? Do you know
How to keep a JOb once wu
get 11? We can Help For
more Informal on call the

Large Garage Sale
Apnl
4 5 8 m1les out on
Apr I 4 5
at Aut and
F rehouse 8 3Q-? clo thes Sandhill Road (from I ghl)
(Letart area) lots of every
k1ds through p us. s•zes fu
niture lots of everyth ng thmg baby clothes &amp; •tems
changmg, table strollers
someth ng for eiJeryone
walker boys &amp; adult cloth
Basement sale Apr I 3-4 1ng household ttems Wo.rlb
firs t hpuse on Kerr St yoyr Oiyal
across
from
Pomeroy
Rain or Sh1ne Apr I 5 Huge
Mun c pal
Park
baby
.movmg and garage sale at
clothes baby tams deer
Helen (Marr) Lem eys and
sta nd poo l table &amp; lots
Mar s Follow s1gns 2 m les
more
from New Haven on Un on
Community yard sate at the Campground Rd turn on
corner of Eagle A dge Rd &amp; Barlow Ad th e 3 houses
Pme
Grove
Rd
from past Union Church Lots of
ant1 q ues
Pomeroy go to Memor al good clothes
Gardens on AT 7 turn r ght wheelhorse pd ng mower
too much to hsl household
f rst mtersecllon approx

Me•gs
County
STEP/JOG/ABLE • Program

at 740 992 6600 or 740
992-6930 or stop n Monday
through Fr day at 11 1 West

Second Street m Pomeroy

Oh Make a difference '"
your life Today
PPHS ~o KAN Yearbooks
from 1952 1963 W II pay
$25 each pl us postage
Ema11 Apnl Wamsley NICola
at n colaJa@ att net

:r

r

•

Dental Assistant Monday
Thursday med cal or dental
oft ce expenence equ red
send resume
PO Box
380 Mason WV 25260

to

Do you enjoy talking to peo
pte on the telephone? Are
you persuas ve end conf1
dent? Do you enjoy know ng
what 1s going on In Pomeroy
Middleport and all of Me gs
COunty? Would you enJoy
a career In ns de sales
with no mght or weeKend
hours? How about 9am 5
30pm
Monday through
Fr day w th pa d holidays
vacat ons SICk leave a
401 (k) plan and mad cal
nsurance? Our newspaper
n Pomeroy has 1 opemng
for a permanent pr6fess1on
al
Ins de
salesperson
Compensation 1s a combine
t10n of base salary and com
m1ss on Th1s JOb Will not be
open long so cal La rry
Boyer 10d"'' at (740) 4462342 Monday through Frid ay
mornings between Bam and
9am
and
afternoons
between 4pm and 5pm If
those hours are not conven
ant for you to call ema1l a
cover let1e r and your resume
to Larry at lboyerg mydal
Mnbqne com Be last !

HOMES
fOR SALE

HELP'WANm&gt;

Med1 Home Health Agency
Inc seek ng f!i West V1rg n a
Phystcal Therapy Ass1stant
tor the Galt pol s OhiO area
We offer a compel t ve
salary benet ts package
401 k and flex time Please
send esume to 356 Second
Avenue
Ga I poliS
OH
45631 Attn Dane Harless
Cl ntcal Manager
--------AN wanted for a pan time
pas liOn
as
a
health
ServiCes Coof\! nator Hours
1Dam 1pm Monday through
Fr day with some flex bll ty
Must have cu rrent AN
license n the State of Oh o
Preler experience m public
health nurs ng and/or work
mg w th ct:uldren and adu Is
w1th developmental d•sab I
t es Send resume by Fr day
Apr I 111h to
Me1gs County Board of

r

d•1•u,.n,.1.ur.e-~..,
1t111em,;-s•a-:nAUCilON
AND

r

1992 Cors ca V 6 auto ots 1997 Dodge extend cab
of new parts &amp; PB!Jnl Great 4x4 4 left k1t must see
shape $3200 1989 Escort (740)742 6500
4cyl auto 4dr uns great
St8Dq (74Q1742 os09
1999 GMC Jimmy SLT 4dr
leather
moon roof Bose
1995FordC ownVclX 61
loaded
low
V 8 4 dr every option new Excellent
John Deere Model 435 I res I ne condition 1t3200 m leage (740)645 2127
round baler Baled less than (740)992 6719
800 bales
L ke new
2000 Ford F 350 XLT 4&gt;&lt;'4
Cond liOn l st new S18 200 1996 Mercury Sable 4 dr 8 Bed Supercab dually
will
sell
lor
$8 100 .. 3 0 V 6 extra good cond1 excellent shape must sen•
ton every ophon low low $26 500 (7 40)44 t 7300
(304)675 5724
pr ce 54500 (740)992 6719 ~--=--=-:---:-,1996 Satu n 4d
Ll' llHC K K
90 k 2000 Ford Wlndstar LX
Excellent
Cond han 50 000 m les $9500 call
$3 195 1996 Granc:tam 2d (740}992 6968 f no answer
5 year old Bay Getdmg F01 78k $3 995 19 Grandam please leave message
95
sa le or trade
Ph one 2d 99k $2 895 t6 others 1n
(304)675 2443
Slack
COOK MOTORS 2002 Ford Range r Edge
comfortably eqUipped 8 000
(740)446-0103
FAIR PIGS
m les $13 500 2000 Ford
s red by
997 Ford Contour auto Range r Ext
Cab fully
ArtiC Blast Dot com Black 1997 Ford Esco t auto equ pped 20 000 miles
Ice by H1tman fl and Bearcat $2150 each (740)742 2357 $14 300 (304)675 3354
Sows S100 ea (740)698
1998 Ca11ahe 2 door black
6231
4cy 5 speed 78 000 m1les 314 Ton GMC Work Van
Pure Breed Angus year $3 800
OBO
NICE ~M Ong na Owner a r
auto 111 cruise $10 500
1nos .he fers &amp; bulls for sale (304)773 5840
(740)446 2957
$1 OOib (304)675 6246
2000 Pont ac Grand Am
Aeg Angus bulls Top per 72k m11es good cond ton
tormance blood! nes Ma•ne ask ng
$7500
OBO
Ch1 Angus show he lers (740)446 0263 8 5 Alle r
he Iars b ed he fers and 5 30 1740)446 0211
or $1500 reward for mfo and
crossbred bulls Slate Run (74012 o6 1os9
recovery of stolen TAX
Fa m
Jackson
OH
450
ES
ye llow VINI
2001
Pon
t
ac
Trans
Am
(740)266 5395
476TE224X24305505
wtRam a r white 11 072
Eng ne• 6606549 (741&gt;)3£7
Reg stared 5yr old AOHA m las e&gt;~ce lent cond t1on
7893 call anytime
Stud Red Dun Contact K1m one owner shl under wa
(304)77J.6000
ranty $24 000 (304)273
9558
RAglstered e Angdt Bulls
(740)288 1460 call after 2002 Chevy Cavalter Ye low
Ch ome whee s w1th sport
5pm
•
package Shll just I ke new
RegiStered Black Angus 18 200m les Askng $9500
Buls and heifers Yearllngs Ph.one (740)256 1253leave
1997 Harley Oav dson 883
and older out of N BAfi message 1f no answer
Sportster
ext a chrome
EXEXT TRAVLERS and --=.:::...:_::_=.::...Eclipse Genlle Guaranteed 79 Vene auto 350 needs lowered new I res brakes
But $1 000 a11d up Heifers nter or
$6500
080 Excellent cond1t o- 14 000
m les $7000 Call after 5pm
$750 and up (3041372 (74019491 17&amp;
(740)44 1 0131
2389
BB Honda Acccrd 4 cylm

r

I Mo~U:s~ I M~~~~ I L,r1.0-·H·&lt;~-EHO-ID-·

3 bedroom Ranch style 1999 Fl eetwo od Mobile
houl)e our of town Excellent Home 16xBO Complete
Cqnd 11on (304)675 0932
~lichen dmtng 3 bedrooms
2 baths (one w1th Garden
3 bedroom 2 bath br ck tub)
ut hty
room
hOme new carpet pamt (washer/Dryer) deck &amp; utI ty
appliances concrete dr ve bUild ng on rented lot Call
$45 000 00 163 Mulberry SomervHie Realty (304)675
Pomeroy 7 40 394 3030 (304,675 3431
Ave
1211 evenngs 740380
9600 days
2 bedrooms 121160 ready to
move n\o On rented lot
3br 2ba attached 2 car $
( )
5 000 740 446 3617
garage pool many extras ~

Beautilul R1ver V ew Idea
For 1 Or 2 People
Relerences DepoSit No
Pets Foster Tra tar Pa k
740 441-0161
--------In Gall pols 2 bedrooms
(small)
4 rooms total
Unlurm shed except for a
gas range refr gerator &amp;
washer NICe &amp; clean deal
fOr elderly person or couple
Phone (740)446 9539

95 t 6xBO mobile home Mob e home for rent no
$19 500 OBO Musl be pets (740)992 5858
moved (740)256 65581eave ~r~;.;.~,;,;,;..;.,.;.....,-.,
message
AP~!:T

Serl_pus
1nqwres
on ly
$100000 (304)BB2 2531
5 bedroom 2 bath , 0 acres

Call Mel ssa Pettit Century ~-=..:...--:---:::--:Homes Hoi ey and Assoc 95 Commodrore C fallon
(740)286-7n3
14)(72 3br 2ba Half fur

55 acre farm on SA 554 3
bedroom 2 bath house w th
basement 2 barns 10 acres
pasture Spr ng led livestock
tank GoOd hunt ng Stocked
M e n t a I pond Free gas $125 000
Retardation/Developmen tal Call (741l1367 7266 between
9am &amp; 9pm
D1sab I t es 1 310 Ca rleton
St eet
P: 0
Box 307
Syracuse
Oh
45779
(741&gt;)992 6681

r~

......."

1 end 2 bedroom apart
n1shed w/new fu n lure Very
ments furnished and unfur
Good ConditiOn Ask ng
n shed secur ty depos t
$18 000 for more
nto
requ red no pets 740 992
1304 l675 3094
2216
Good used 3br/2bth Only
$7995 Includes delivery
Bed room Apa rtmenls
Call Kar;ena 740 385 9948
at
$289/mo
Sta tlng
Washe I Dryer Hookup
Land Home Packages ava11
Stov.e and Refngeralor
able In your area (740)446
(740)44 1 1519

3384

Used Furnnure Store t30
Bulav ue P ke We se I mat
tresses dressers couches
bunk beds bedroom su tes
reel ners Grave monuments
(740)446 4782 Ga hpohs
OH Wanted to buy good
used couches mat1resses
dressers

Buy or sell
A verme
Ant ques 1124 East Man
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
992 2526
Russ Moore
owner
Very old cann ng JarS pop
boll es M ners Lunch Pat
Po son
B tters
Inks
MediC ne boHies Galhpol s
H story Items d1fferent col
orad f1ddles and more W I
not spit up Sell all $1000
Call (740)44 t 1236 I no
answer leave message.

f""'

ML'OlJANEOIJS
MHIUIANDlSE

Apartment Ava table Now
R1verBend
Place
New
Haven WV now accepting
apphcauons for HUD subS!
d1zed 1 bed oom apart
ment Ut hies ncluded Call
(304)882 3 121 Apartment
available for quaht ad sen
orfd sa bled person EHO

Someone to do del \ler es
and tra n to repa r eppl
ances Must havE! vehd dnv
ers
hcense
Skaggs
~ppl ences (740)446 7398

mBuv

r

$2 65 par ba e (304)675
5724
-La_r_ge_R_o-un_d_b_e-le_s_t_o_r-. .-,,-

'

$20 per bale Call (304)675
1743 attar 6 OOpm
Round
bales
(7 40)446·2724

r

FOR SAl

I

V:~B~ES

....

NI C G I

rI

r..,
_

_

i

_E,_--il

_

_

son can

_

thai

by filling In rne milling word•

_

you d . .tlop from step No 3

below

.:'1. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS

~ 1~1 THESE SQUARfS

€i G£1
UNSCRAMBlE LEnERS TO
ANSWER
2

Yesterdays

r

r

~

SCAAM-lETS ANSWERS

Nobody· Swept· Jomt ·Rector CONSENT
Overwrought mother to son, "I d like to go through
one day wilhout scolding or pun&lt;sh1ng you " The bralty
son replied "You certa•nly have my C0NSENT • •

~0 Box 33 Gall polls OH

WHATJ~&gt;W/iS

45631

"f'H,.., ?!

Need someone to Mow Yard
Call (304)675 1523
F'art ume help needed at
A&amp;A Auto Dalal Mala or
lemale Apply w thin 220 41h
Avenue Gall!f?OI s

h1re class A COL requ1red
excellent pav expertence
reqwred Earn up to S1 000
per week Cal 304 675
4005

Q.

0
0

~

~
...1

&lt;

WER~AIR

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers

740-985-3564

• Chain

BoATS &amp; MOIDRS

I

• Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

r

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Old
Fashioned
Compassion Modern
Care
Nestled In a beautt
lui counlry selling
(SR 50/32 East) and
eas1ly accessible from
the
Appalachian
Highway
Music
and
Art
Thereples
Hospice
and
Respite Care
Phone 740 667 3156
FAX 74o-667 0080
Phystcal
Occupational
aod
Speech Theraptes
we
Accept
Medicare
Medicaid

and Insurance
(4) 3 lTC

PUBLIC NOTICE

•

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Aree Agency
bn Aging at Buckeye
Hills Hocking Valley
Regional
Devalopment Dlstrlcl
lo requesting propos·
ala for Title 111 D
Dloease Prevonllon
and Health Promollon
Services In Athens ,
Hocking,
Meigs

Monroe \

Morgan,

Noble,
Perry
and
Woohlnglon counttee
Dleoue Prevention

HELP WANTED

and Health Promotion
Programs need to
meet the neode ol
medically
under·
served
low~lncome
Individuals 60 years
ol
age
or
older
Details of allowable
serVIces and funding
are Included In the
RFP Small minority

Deborah

Brown

Planner at (740) 374
9436 beginning April
4
2003
Complete
proposal deadline Ia
500 PM
2 2003
Proposala submltled
after thai time will not
be accepted
Questions may be
aubmlllod by contact·
lng Daborah Brown
Planner al (740) 374·
9436 or In writing at
tho above addrel8

(4) 3 1TC

HELP WANTED

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN
Gra~u

1te ol accredtted surg1cal technology

program 0 1 equtvalent expencnce rcqu1red

Cett1fied ORT preferred
Excellent salary hohdays health msurance
Slngle/famtly plan dental plan life msurance
vacauon long tenn dJsabJIIty nnd rettremenr

For more anformo u on
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
clo Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
l'olnl Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675 4340

AAIEOE

~:.. Spring *

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Special &gt;:&lt;
TIIERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE
~:.

Ofler good hru 5

992·5776
Syracuse
N ow Open
Beddmg &amp; Vegetabl e

Plants $6 95 flat
Hang m g BaskeLs
$5 95 II 95
Pert:nmals 8 m $2 25

$3 25
4 m Annuals $1 25
Pottmg Sm l

' I 79 ' 400&amp; ' lrl95
Open Mon Sat 9 5
C l osed Sunda

03

Pomeroy Eagles

JONES'

BINGO 2171

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

[lO'xlO' 610'x20')

Self-Storage

HARTWELL
STORAGE

33795 Hiland Ad
Pomeroy, Oh1o

740·992-5232

10x10
10x20

OLD GLORY
AUCTION
SERVICES

Top • RemovCII • Trfm
• Stump Gr1nd1119
Bucket Truck

IColnDuters. Repatrs,
1UP!l1adi!S1 Networks

GetSFREE
Gravely

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

St Rt 7 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy
J&amp;C Lawn Service
Mow&amp; Trim

740-992·6694

Phone 992-9553

742-0226

Best Serv1ce at
the Best Pnce
New Homes • Vmyl
Sadmg • New Garages
• Replacement
Wmdows • Rool mg
COMMERCIAL and
Ope11 9~m ~ p m

RESIDENTIAL

J•m Taylor

answer

740·992-7599

1

I

fn: e na~
0. ~ftlfa

Lovmg rne m on~:s
n ~.::vcr

d1e

As years t o ll on and
da) s pass by
Deep 111 ou r hean ~
a memory as kept
Of the one we l01cd
and can never forget
Deep!) mtssed hy
son &amp; w1fc
Larry &amp; Joy Clark
Grandchildren

wmdows
ba ths
mobile
home repair and more For
lree estimate call Chat 740
992 6323

Penny &amp;

Wendy

AUCTION

ESTATE AUCTION
8580 St Rt 588 • Galhpohs, Oh1o 45631
Apr1l S, 2003 10 00 A M •
(740)698·1428
The personal property of Dorolh} Harden Ya1es
a.~ ordtrwt by Don llardrn
Th1 HlpMtal l ~ Ill!
Antique Furnitu re Oak Fla1vA11 ~upboard WI pe safe n hm
tom Kuchcn (:Rb1ne1 w/ flour ~~r ~ SO s Chma Huu:h K tden
U1 hty Cab net w/ nra.... er anti pon:ej,t n Top 3 pc Waterfall bed
room set U.ne Cedar Chest Several Oak Patlor Tables
Stands Fancy Carved Oak Mat11tl S naer Treadle
mu~ hme Oak Rockers Wooden H1gh Chan'S Full s•zc Jenny
L nd Bed Ful Wa erfall Bed Iron Beds Full Bra~:; Eled Ollk
Dr :;M:r w/Yoke and m rror 2 Desks W cker K01:kcr and Char
S1n11gh1 Bock Cha r.; Oak T Back Arm Cha rs Se 'Crul
Bookcn~s Sleamer Tn nk L01 ol Pict u~ Old P c1ure Fru ~es
Old Tnmk Several R()( Lamps M ~ Tilblc Uu P" M1!oe La p
Pan~ ~nd several pes of fum lure n rough ~ond 110n Bed pwt

I

A .I; u

Antique Glau,..•n Oeprt'n10n C ass (Amencan Swr=clhnrt
Moonsu~ne Routeue S•erra) Pink Diamond Oullt btrry Sc M It
Glm Sandw1~ Punch Do"' I Se Pink Depre~slon Pi1cher AncOOr
Hocking Amtncana Glass G!a§ s Horse Door Sop Ro}al Cop e~
Rooste~ HIU'P Cake Sl.a:nl.l Fnf Kmg Red Dol M ~tlnl Bowl Stl
M1sc Fm: K ng 01l Lamps Top of Shawn« Bulle 01 sh Sal and
Ptppc:n (Wall Disney s Dumbo L&amp; Sha~nee Com Mammy&amp;: ot
ers) V1~ n11 RoK ( Sugar Creamer &amp;. Gnt 'l lloat) Plnt Royal
Lace Ekl"AI Re ~tall/'all t DiV!ei, Aladd n Lam~ (I Gla~~ Amhl:
Color I Mttll) 4 Jad1tt: Relnh Plain Old Cla-s Baby Bol IC':s
Qccup ed Japan Ch ld, TeaSe (par1 al) C mer&amp;. lves Otoht ~ Hop
a lonll Ca-.i1dy Saucer
Mite Antlq11ts Sew1ng Baskt ~ V n age Cloth ng Old Roob
Cuokbooh Volm (~bert M ~owt) Toy San a on M on:;de
(Suzun me111l}. Feed Sad.s ( We ~1em &amp; M li C pnn ) Wall Pucle1 2
F u~ Pl~ee Sets OIU Chnstmas Decorat ons RR Lamem ( Armopea
M FG Norfolk&amp;: Wt~ltrll Red Olobe) R R Lantern (Ohio Fue l &amp;
OIS Red Globe) R R Lantern ( Htndlan Sa n LOlliS No 0100.:}
RIIJ Bnten Wat Hanama: Dry 1111 Rack Bu'd Baths wt 1ops Ca~dy
P1f11 Oren teware Ch11m D1sher 2 Butler Mob.ls Qt.ults 6 1/2 Ft
Alum n11m Chnstnu.~ Tree
Ponery1McCoy Watt Rumnll Rose\ lilt Old Pottery Base t.,mp
0 d Pllllltn Bl11e Htll Ch1na Tea Pot (Aiadd n Shnpel Blue !land
Cro-.:k Bowls 3 Cal Slone Bu ter Chum S me J•~ Slane JUS'
SlOne crocb Com Sheller (81ack Hawk) Apple Pteler
PrtmltiYtll Tools Carll de Llghl• Fum Me 2 Ma 1 Cro!i!o&amp;;ll Saw
U1 lily Bench Qulhma Frame~ Wagner Bean Po1 w/ L d W•sner
Sklllw 01l C11t' Wlrt Egg Ba~tet Gla)~ Ch ~ken Vulcr) Kll,u
Culltr w/ Bo~ Wall h11 Clothes HMJer P1u1lot~ more
Mo&amp;rn Hldeabcd CO\Ich Love Sea Chau Reclmer Apt Ste
Ken~ Wuher &amp;. Drycr Sm
Applanch Refril!ti110r
Fl!llware Ptuuc Wm Kenmore Che~ Freuer N U11ral ( a)
Heater Colem111 Comfor1 Center Stme
Nolt We m $\Ill &amp;Oinj \Jiru lht cellar bam$ and smoke tluuK:
!here are still IOli of boles to 111 lhlu Come early eal snd enJOY
the sale
Richard

E Workm•n "AucUo11eer"

(740) 698-1428

~h"D"'I" kup

Pontiac Buick Olds

Fmally Money patd ro l'.Q.U. when cancer
stnkes You choose the amount up w $50 000 1
Pays m addnmn to ot her msurancc
Yuu use the money however you hkt:
Cancer" Ill stnke when you least expect 1t
ll w 1ll h:: avc } OU and your tamdy fina m.:mlly
str 1pped CANCER CH ECK wdl be
there ''hen yOL need 1\
Cal l now to rcscr.c nmr check

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
•
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
Box 189 MIDDLEPORT OH 4&gt;760

740·843·5264

Jlf

Hill's Self
Storage

WRITESfl

CANCER CHECK

J, ut u

'in\ o• /'/

7-IOWARDL

29670 Bashan Road
Rac ~ne Ohio

25 yrs expenence
Friendly &amp; Professional
for free esttma1es
740-992·5678

45771
740 949-2217

MllmNINCI

*SEAMlESS
GUmR
*Free Eslltltlllb

949-1405
ROBERT
BISSEll

COIISTRUmON
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodehog

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

THOMPSONS
WATER
Smce 1979
Aulh med Ser. e Prov de F0

Vegetable, bedding flats &amp;

RainSoft

hanging baskets $6.60

\~al t.: r Tn:;~

1~nt

ut.•u Etj u pr

Time

740· 97·9751

• Room Addttlona &amp;
Remodeling

to plant cool weather vegetable

plant• &amp; panay'a 4" perennlala $118

Custom
Building
&amp; Remodeling

Buy 6 uti FREE
of perennials 6- shrubs
at tilt /owut prtcu In Meigs COWJty

Llltr~est selection

Q, er 16 years Expenence

Morning Star Road • C Rd 30 • Racine,

• Room Additions
• Ktlchen &amp; Bath
Remodehng

Cell

992 6215

OH

nr

lull Range ol seru1ces

• No Seanu
• No Leaks
• Free Estunates
Dill 1d Rhode~ &amp; Nomtll flhodes

Office (740) 985-3511
Home (740)

Phone

674 3311 Fax 304 675 2457

WV Contractors L1c #003506

Owner Operated

985-3622

Marcpm
Building
Serv1ce
• Dec-ks &amp; Porches
• RoomAddUlons
• Roohng
• V1nyl &amp; Wood
Sldmg
• Intenor Remodelmg
General Carpentry Work

Parts • Service
Bags • Belts

740-985-4141

~2s 00 serv1ce fee for p1ckmg

rr CClfiTRUCrOO

up sweepers at your home
RMinbows, Kitb) Electrolux Hool'er, Eul'\'ka
Trt s .. r. Realna &amp; most other brands

Painting Electncal

Parts ohlpped UPS • Fut, Dependable Service

Decks Etc

!

I

tl ( '

Rausa's
LAWN
CUI
I:AWN
MOWING
CONTRACIS
$15·$25for

small yard
Mike Marcum, Owner

Over 25 yea rs m Busmess

I

wv

• Dnvewayst Tennts Courts
• Parkmg Lots • Playgrounds
t Roads • Streets

Owner

I I

• Free Esttmales

V C YOUNG

871-2417 or 441-2111 '

Cettlfl... Arbctrlsl

I;,

El~rlcal I Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gunera
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patto and Porch Deckf

Henderson,

Randall L Shust

tl

•
•
•
•

MYERS PAVIND

740-991-1119

(

• New Garages

Pomerey Otllo
22 Years 1..

• Complete Rehabs
Full y Insured
Free Esumates

CARE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

4" aonuala 94¢

Mt Vernon

• Replace menl Wmdows
• Porches • Decks • Garages
• Stdmg• Roo fing

)

and ra I~

•

ooomru~n.,.,d

(740) 446·1812

1*RIIFIIIG
*HIME
who depattedthts life
Apn13 1997

W V s #I Chevy

Owner

FREE ESTIMATES

IN MEMORY

1-800-822-0417

Mann1ng K Roush

P lease leave

~===::::=:::;:::=

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

~

Lawn and Garden Equ1pment IS our
busrness, not our Sfdelrne

message 11 no

call

New&amp; Used

Pomeroy, Oh10

992-2975

Auctioneer

AC

Dean Hill

SALES &amp; SERVICE

740-992-1717

at530pm

or

Tree Service

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4 30
Earl) b1rds start
6 30 lsi Thursday
of every month
All pack $5 110
Brmg lh1s coupon
Buy $5 00 Bonanza

204 Condor Street

Every Thursday

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFI]'IG
Uncond t1onal hfet1me guar
antee Local references fur
n shed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

TFN

Eor more infonnat1on call992 4055

Also now accepting
mu~t wsurance

owned and women
business enterprlaas C&amp;C
General
Home
are encouraged to Ma ntenence Pamt ng vmyl
submtt
proposals, slc:lmg carpen1ry doors

Request lor Proposal
packals
maybe
obtained at lhe Area
Agency on Aging 11
Buckeye
Hills
Hocking
Valley
Regional
Developmenl District
Office at Route 1, Box
299D Marlello Ohio
45750 or by ca111ng

Mtr.IJJ f'OII C01 11 u v A~~IX wd
1 he Pumerov M(n.;ham~ As ()( a1 n
To gn lll ~ l op UJ Oh o R ' r Bcm Co or M11hllcpon
Dq Sl o ~ or 0 111 c ScrHce &amp; Supplv n M ddl port 0 1
('hapllDO S hoes &amp; Oh o Valley Hulk S1o e P 11 c v

740-992-5379

w

or

Cellular

po~ters

~on::d hy I he

Sp

Gel 2nd Free!

a messaga

PI

llye1s &amp;
All rur $5 00'

n~w~paper s

Heather A Fry L M T

CAMPERS &amp;

Pt

nd o

Buy 1 Cift Certificate,

~~~
I High 8l Dry (740) 992-3194
992-6635

1999 Jayco 26ft Travel
T alier Used very httle non
smoker no pets Can be
seen at 2912 Meadowbrook

..&lt;lllt&amp;l

6 m~les long-through Middleport &amp; Pomeroy Hundred
1or maps dls1nhut~;d Ad\e111sed &amp; promoted w1de l y on

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

ooo

Bnyllme or Iaeve

Saws

• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters

1993 J mmy SLE 4dr 4
MmoR HOPI.~ 1
Consignment Wed &amp;
whee dnve Cloth mter or
Thurs lOam 3pm
PW
PB
PS
Good t 999 Coleman Pop up
Cond I on $3 900 080 camper
th A1r &amp; heat
Now doing estale
1304)675 7653
$2500 (304)675 4782
&amp; household sales

pnvate • • •

--~·1 ~. ~~mplete

• Dirt
•Ag Line

OBd

1976 Ford Pck up very •
fOR SALE
good cond1! on 302 auto
rebu It eng ne tool box bed 1994 St atos 264 Bass Boat
1ner body \ery good condl Black &amp; Silver 120 h p
tlon (740)256 1235
Eu nrude 421b toil ng motor
f sh I nder Great shape
t988 Ford B once II 4x4 5 $7500 (740)742 0509
speed
good cond lion
129 000 m les -~" (304)675
t 522
1997 Marada MX 1 Sport
1710
with
110
135
2001 Dodge Ram Quad Mercru ~r loaded excel
Cab lots of extras 25 000 lent cond1t1on garage kept
m1les
Askmg $21 900 used very little TraHer has
(740)256 1426
spa re t re mounted All for
57
ca1 1740)446 2444

EQuiPMENT

I' I I

_

I

j

&amp;~::,

Makes
Free Esflmales
Fasl Turnaround

• Sand

" I I~\ l i I "

~--Goons--_.~

M~n'.!.~~

dlt on
$3400
• (740)446 6124

BUJIJ)fNG

ERZ.EFE

I~ I I I

FOR SAlE

I

Dr ve

•'OR

r

-

TRuCKS

:~::~3623

r

0

E

r

1989 Z 24 Chevy Caval er
New 3 Eng ne 35 000 t 997 Chevy Sl vera do Z 71
m1les on
Lots of new 4x4 auto 3rd dr tow m1les
parts $2 500 (304)675 Excell ent
Gondttton
4822
(304)895 3825 After 5 00

...

HO!'IIDi
SALE

I

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS!
Hondas Che11ys etct Cars/
Trucks from $500 For I st
ngs 1 BOO 719 3001 ext
3901

~~~~-

S©"\\4llA-~£trs·

hay

Auros

r

.

of

Order tobacco plants now
Dewhurst
Greenhouse

r

r M~s~ Ir~;,O;:::=.!;OUSES:RENT:::=:,

I

I lAY &amp;

s

l

t

HAULING:
• Limestone

GRAIN

Good qual ty straw Volume 99 Pont ac Sunl1re auto/a~r 98 Honda 400 Foreman 4x4
de •very ava 1 CD player exc cond 80 000 st ck stoppers floor boards
d scount
able Heavy square bales miles S4 500 304 675 6325 d t dev1l t~res excellent con

u;)

r

May 2nd &amp; 3rd
$5 geb you on Ihe m p &amp; a )ellow llag
An addmonal $5 fyou need an m t lYon
!oca on lor your yard sale

der 120 000 mtl es racer 1997 So fia I Custom 8 500
ms I ght body damage miles l ots ot extras Plus all
$900 (740)446 8124
oriQnel equ pment $12 500
obo MUST SELL!
9001b Round Bales stored 89 Olds Cutlass Cal as
work
(304)675
1178 reave mes
eng ne
ms•de $ 5 each w11t load needs
sage
(7401245 5393
(740)379 2768 evenmgs

r

r

Jomthe6tiiannual Yellow Flag Yarp Sale t

R.B.
TRUCKING

r

r

Last 2002 Model Llnco n
old wood full s1ze bed
Park 64x28 3 bedroom 2
Bnck Ranch Home 3br 2ba bath total electr c heat
GIVEAWAY
1 freezer cab
fram e
1 car Attached garage 1 car pump del vered &amp; set on
(304)662 2706
Fl.EA. MARKEl
•
detached garage lnground your fou ndation reduced
:G1yeaway Beegle puppy
t B Horsepowe r d ng lawn
pool On 112 acre lot from $55 365 to only
~mo otd Bl ack Lab m•x
Kessel s P educe and Flea
mower 42 mch cut $450
Senous
lnqwres
only $47 485
Coles Mob1 e
;puppy 6mo old to good
Mkt Open Thurs Fn Sat East of
(740)386 8972
Ch1cago P1zza Wanted Chn cal Medical (304)675 8051
Homes
U
S 50 Eas t
;nome (740)441 8298 Good
Now rentmg spaces 1354 Co now h1r ng all sh 11s OffiCe Ass slan t w1th phle
Athens
Oh
740
592
1972
-w1th children
85 Topaz runs good good
Jackson P ke (740)446 &amp;
pos1bons Also need botomy
exper ence
lor
Where You Get Your BEAUTIFUL
APART
$500 dtmng oo m
body
7787
Del ver ng dnvers I ex ble phys can office Rei abe
Moneys Worlh
Qale 3 1/2yr old Full Blooo
MENTS
AT
BUDGET table enterta nment center
Apply
w
th
n
soheduhng
tran
spor
tat
on
needed
WANIV.D
long hal ed Jack Russel
New 2003 Daub ew1de 3 BA PRICES AT JACKSON (740)992 2563
1540 Eastern
Avenue Computer sk liS prf.'ferred
Lerner to good home
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down ESTATES 52 Westwood
Gall1pohs
(740)441
1234
weekends
or
holidays
No
Garage sa le
4 family
&gt;(304)937 3954
Fel
BLOCK
BURN
and &amp;295/mo 1 800 691 Or ve tram 5297 to $383
All real estate advertising
Fr day Apnl 4th 8 5 740 Absolute Top Dollar US EASY WOAKI EXCELLENT Full or part time Benefits
Crav
ngs
and
BOOST
Walk to shop &amp; moves Cal
6777
;P.ulp Wood to g1veaway 985-4260 3rd house on left
available Fax resume to
In thla newapaper Ia
Energy L ke
You Have
S lver
Gold
Co1ns PAY I Assemble Pro~ucts at
740
446
2568
Equa
(304}675 7800 or rna I to
~3041695 357i ask lor on top of Chaste H ll (S A
aubJ~t to the Federal
Never Expenenced
Prootsets 0 amonds uold Home Call Toll Free 1 aoo
New 3b rl2bth Only $995 Houstng Opportun ty
Fair Houalng Act or 1968
~ltchell or Sean call after 248)
CLA 574 c/o Galhpohs Daly
nlant
ch ldren A ng s
WEIGHT LOSS
down
and
only
$197
~7 per - - - - - - - - US Currency 467 5566 Ext 12170
which makaa It Hleg~l to
Tr bune P 0 Box 469
4pm
women s &amp; matern1ty c oth MTS C01n Shop 151
month Ca ll Harold 740 Beech St Middleport 2 bed
REVOLUTION
any
advertise
Gal pols OH 45631
ng
toddler
bed
wfmaHress
385
767
1
Full!
me
I
ant
desk
clerk/
room
turn
shed
apartment
New
product
launch October
Second
A11errue
Gathpolls
White Toy Poodle male
preference limitation or
ca seat 740 446 2842
uti t as pa•d depos I &amp; refer 23 20,02 Ca I Tracy at
n ght aud1tor Apply n per 140
B~
dlacrlmlnatlon band on
loves ch1ldren 3 years old cradle
washer/dryer hOme el)ter
F~
ences no pets (740)992 (7 40)441 1962
son at the front desk of the
race color religion aea
(741&gt;)446 3906
1.
TRAINING
ta nment center dresser Old Photos and p ctu re post Holiday Inn Gathpol s
~
fOR SALE
0165
familial atatua or national
For sale new baby bed 8.
table/lamp
exerCise ca ds of Mason County - , - - - - - - - - : origin or any intention to
loiTAND
machme Step 2 swmgset area towns boats bu ld Full t1me Sei;retary needed Goltlpolls CantOr College
maka any such
33 acres At 2 N Beaut ful Furmshed eff c ency down maHress used two limes
FOUND
1ngs etc
Ca 1 Robert for a fast paced Gallipolis (Careers Close To Home)
p,.,.renca !Imitation or
w/cl ub house lots morel
sett ng House barn above stars 919 2nd Avenue 3 cell phone 304 687 5372
Keathley (304)882 3396
bus ness Applicant needs to Call Today 740 446-4367
dl.crlmlnallon "
ground
pool Call (304)895 rooms &amp; bath All uttltles
Lost
112 year o d black Garage sate Fnday Apnl
JET
, 800-214 0452
be famtl ar w th bas1c oH1ce
paod $295/ mo (740)446
3129
I \11'1 ll\ \ II \ I
Lab w/wh te ma rkmgs m 4th 9 4 gas lieat ng stove
AERATION MOTORS
Thla newafM!per will not
3945
procedures telephone com 'N'KW galhpol scareercol ege com
Peach Fork area Reward 18 000 BTU a r cond1t one
.._ , I~\ I( I "
Repa1 ed New 8. Rebuilt In
Rea #90 05-1274B
knowingly accept
mun catiO ns &amp; comp uters
(741&gt;)992 535 1
Sloe~ Ca I Ron Evar1S 1
advertiMmenta
for
r
.
.
t
cloth es lnlant boys clothes
and enjoy dealmg w th the
WANTID
eC'Iate which Ia In
800 537 9528
TV
Freon
recovery
public
Send
resume
to
PO
Lost Chocolate Lab male
ToDo
vtolaHon of the law Our
recla1mer Dreamcast pads
Box 1133 GallipOliS OH .
Oft1ce B u ~dln g/ Apartments
unneutered 10041:
nea
rudera are hereby
and memory cardi &amp; etc
45631
for sale/ rent
Salem School Lot &amp; 143
Second - , - - - - - - - - - Large swmg set jJJII s ze
Informed that 111
Georges Portable Sawm 11
C emeans
Roma
ARCADIA NURSING
Avenue Askmg $ 102 000 Grac1ous I vmg 1 and 2 bed trLICk cap love slit older
3/28/03 740 664 3067 or
dwalllnga
advertised
In
don t haul your logs to th e
General Laborer &amp;
Beechgove Ad Rutland
CENTER
(740)266 2828 or (740 )710 room apa tments at V llage childs chQpped 3 wheeler
this newspaper are
740 707 2065 ask for Gabby
rTllljUSI call 304 675 1957
Sanitation Worker
Part T me AN or LPN need
t467
available on an equal
and
R111ers de (740)985 3810
Mana
Positions
LOSl Pm e St male black/ ,. Garage sale rem or sh ne ed A11a lable 11 7 shift We
opportunity
basea
Handyman
yard
work
tn
M
ddleport ~--'--:-:--:-::--::-­
Apartments
General Milia a grow ng
Lms&amp;
llhlle some gray around Apr I 4th &amp; 5th Fn &amp; Sat offer excertenl benef•ts that
From $278 $348 Call 740 New &amp; Used Hea t Pumps
(740)992
2741
ask
for
T
m
food
manufactur
ng
compa
ACREAGE
face medium s ze part Bam ?
turn at Me gs n.clude Health Insurance
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Gas
Furnaces ... Free
Custom bUJII Cape Cod
ny and one of the largest
sheep dog needs med cal Memory Gardens off AI 7 401 K L fe Insurance com
Est mates (740)446 6308
Opportun ties
J•m
s
Carpentry
and
small
'2
200
sq
ft
4
BR
3
bath
m
the
Jackson
employers
go 1/4 m1le 2nd house on pett1ve wages plus sh tt
attention , 7401446 7685
1/3 acre tot o n 554 1n Porter
\
en old mantel dock old
County area has 1mmed ate tandscap ng 20 yrs e:wer Askmg $126 000 (741&gt;)441 all ul I I es ( ndudmg sewer)
dtfterent al end opportun
Newly remodeled 2 bed NEW AND USED STEEL
Free
est mate 0602
crocks qu Its old toys old
opportun t1es fo General ence
Ready to bUild $16 900 roo m apartment Eastern Stee Beams P pe Rebar
lies for advancement If you
(740)446
2506
YARD SALE
colored glass frost tree
laborers &amp; Expenenced
Conc rete
Ang e
Debb1e Pflve Galhpohs 3 (7 40)256 9200
want to join our team con
AVenue $400 a month For
--refr gerator 2 old trunks lots
san tat on Workers at our
baths
2
tact Sudn W nland D 0 N
Lawn Care Tree Tr mm1ng bedrooms
ncludes water
Depos 1 Channa Fat Bar Steel
ol m sc (741&gt;)992 7599
32 acres ten m nutes from
Wellston Oh o p ant
For
Ora ns
Arcad1a Nurs ng Center
Tree Removal Spr nkler $129 000 Ca l (740)245
equ red refere nces a must G a11ng
Ho
zer MediCal Center Off
9258
Dnveways &amp; Wa kways L&amp;l
Main
Street
East
L
ght
ConstructiOn
System
No
pets
For
nformation
call
M die port Pomeroy s 6th
Qualified candidates muat
160 North County water
Coolville Oh
and Excavat on (304 )638 For sale or rent 3 bedroom
(740) 446 4467 (740)446 Sc ap Metals Open Monday
an a 6 m le long Ye llow
meet the following
ave labia N ce homeSite No
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
740
667
3156
5877
Leave
Me
ssage
Flag rd Sale May 2 &amp; 3
1 bath full basement home and contracts $40 000 4262 Ask lor Faye
•Be at tease 18 yrs of age
2 tam ly lu mture house
Fr day Sam 4 30pm C osed
EOE
M/FIH/DV
look to e yei w flags• Call
•Ava1 ab I ty to work 2nd shift Law n mowmg serVIces ca ll on Evans He ghts (740)256 (740)446 3228
hold terns m1sc cheap!
Satu day
&amp;
Now Tak ng Appl ca t ons Thursday
for 1nfo ab t ocat ons 740
or 3rd shiH tncludmg over for free eshmate home 304 5846
9176
State Route 218
35 West
2
Bedroom } Sunday (740)446-7300
4
5
acres
no
restr
cllons
992 4055
Attn Work tram home
lime as needed TypiCa ly 895 33"99. or cell '674 0870 Home With four bedrooms Call Mal ssa Pet1 t
Mercerville
Fr day
Apartments
at Townhouse
Sarurday 9?
~as~s~g~n~ed~to~w~o~r~k:!a~.p~a!!r~liC~u!'-iT.::;;;::c:;~=:;;=;;;;z:;~=-and large garage lOC8J.ed Century Homes Holley and Includes Water Sewage Red F bergtass Topper for
lar sh f1 but asked to work Mo1her of 2 w II babys11 Day ac ross from Graham School
Trash $350/Mo 740 446 short b4:1d (step s de) Ford
Assoc (740,286 711 3
Ranger $250 (304)675
othe sh tts and overti me as sh fl only Fenced m yard on Road on SA 141 Fo more
6()().286 9748
0008
5703
www re t~re4t 1 com
needed
Sandh II (304)895 3741
nforma110n Cal (740,992 Acreage off Nye Avenue
Townhouse
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
•Pass ng res ults on compa
6797 If no answer leave some 1mber access road Tara
Representatives
want
Avon
ny
test
s
background
check
W
I
pressure
wash
homes
Spac•ous
Apartments
Very
call (740)992 2377
9am 4pm clothmg turn
message
SVPI'Ins
Ira Iars decks mefal bu ild
drug screen and physiCal
2 Bedrooms 2 Fl oors CA 1
lure air cond t1oner we ght ed (740)446 3358
April 4th &amp; 5th cCJion al
lot
for
sale
n
Racme
House
to
be
moved
Bnck
•San
tat
on
workers
should
mgs
and
Qullers
Call
112
Bath
Newy
Carpeted
set 1984 Camara m1sce11a AVON A l Areas• To Buy or
Honeysuckle Apt
:Cln&gt;Je
have prevous expenence n (740)446-0151 ask for Ron and Cedar 8062 State (7 40)992 5858
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool BlocK brick sewer p pes
neous tams 'Roy Jones Ad Sell
Sl'l rley Spears 304
*methmg for everyone
a
s m1 ar pOSition
or leave message
Route 7 North Tak ng b1ds
Syracuse
675 1429
Mason Co 20 acres near Pat o Start $385/Mo No wmdows lintels etc Cfaude
(740)367 7560 (740)367
Cornsta lk good huntlng Pets Lease Plus Secur ty W nters Ala Grande OH
Bargain Yard Sale French
Wednesday Satu rday Sam Commun ty aC'I on 1s seeK Pay rates for General W II stay wielder y n there 0317
121 f!Cres ofl RT B7 Depos1t Requ red Days
iown Apartments 727 4th
Tackerv111e Ad
Rac1ne ng a laborer/Records Clerk Laborers start at $8 50 per home n ghts on y Nurs ng ::---,---,----,-Even ngs
Somewhat
pr vate w/bwld 740 446 3481
A:oJenue Thursday Apnl 3rd
Techmc an
w/25yr Pnce for QUICk sale 3 bed
b1 Kes dresser treadm I tor
the
Weathenzat1on hour
740
367.0502
Exper
en
ced
E\18rythtng $ so each
E)C pe rtenc e
Good room home n Middlepor t ng and Daube W1d e
books
decorative Program
Weather zatton San t~t o(l Workers start at
References In no answer plus 1 bedroom rental on Corner ot 1n Pt PI $5 000 Twin Rivers Towe s accept
.Mov ng Sale 227 41 h ~bi!Jiabry/a.;.du~ll":"c.;.lo.lh~nofg;..._ _, exper ence preferred Good $1000 per hour Shf1 dHer lea 11e message (304)675 same lot reduced down to JJ Wedge Broke r (304)344
ng applications for wa1t ng AKC 1 femal e Boston Temer
read ng wrt ng com pre ent at Is 8dd1tlona1 These
:Avenue 9am 4pm
YARD SALE1300 Jjwedge@ charter net
1898
$52 000 (740)992 6154
list tor Hud subs1zed 1 br and AKC 1 female Ch1nese
hension organ1zat1ona1 and are un on hourly pas t1ons
Moving Sala 4/3 &amp; 414 ~--P'[ioiilii'I.MsANroiiiiiiiiiiooo~ computer skill s a MUST General Mills offers excel
Pr cad to Sellt $90 000 Pair ot a ea 20+ wooded apartment call 675 6679 Pug pupptes $350 now tak
11\\\11\ 1
Thursday Fnday Located
ng payments and depos ts
Th1s 1s a fu I t1me post! on tent heath care benet ts
1998 3 bedroom 2 bath acres county water electnc E ~O
(7 401386 9325
behind Peps1 D1str but ng m Back Yard Sale Wed Fr Send or deliver resume and prescr pt1on card paid vaca
large Kitchen stone f re good home s1te AdJacent
SPACE
Chesh re 9afTl 4pm Ra n or 2221 Jefferson Ave House references to GMCA:A. t1on ho 1days and ga1nshar
place On State Route 588 Wayne Nat anal Forrest
AKC Bos1on Terrier mae 4
RENT
Slll.ne Clothes fu rniture 1tems and baby terns what attention Sandra Edwards mg
Immediate
Possession Excellent hunt ng $32 000
months old $250 (740)446
'CIUrtams toys household nots (304)675 2801
8010 N State Route 7
(740)983 0730
(740)379 9141
!NOTICE!
0972
~ tams
computer pr nter - - - - - ' - - - - - - - CheShire Oh10 45620 by To schedule a testing
I ~ I \I \ I "
-scanner desk chs r and Estate Sate 2635 L nco n 04 1 1 03 GMCAA s an EOE appointment please ca ll OHIO WALLEY PUBLI SH
Full Blooded Bloodh'b und
CO
recommends
that
lNG
.oak hltng cabmet Much A&gt;JeAprl23459?
(740)286 9222 MonCiay thru
pups
.$150 each 5 females
you
do
business
With
people
Demo/
Samplerll
Event
-Moral
Furniture glassware round
Fnday
from
Bam Spm
must sa le AS~P' Call
HOUSEJIOIJl
bed dressers dishes Lots Personnel Excellent pay Appo ntments wt I be Ill ed you know and NOT to send 14x46 1981 1 1/2br bath
(740)245-0304
'Moving Yard Sale 2608 of m1sc
money through the msll until
htghe st In area sa mplers
on a I rst come/ 1trst ser&gt;Jed
large LA nice size k tchen
State Route 141 Friday &amp; ~-------­ needed In local reta1f store
you have •nvesttgated the
basis
new stovelrefr g new car
Pet Grooming dogs &amp; cats
Saturday
namebrand Huge Yard Sale Thursday Flexible wee+c.end work Sat'
GENERAL MILLS INC
pet gas heat underp nmng
p
ck up &amp; del very L nda
Reconditioned
clothes girls Infant 1Q.. 12 Frday Satu day Apr I 3 4 5 Sun 6 hours a day looking
Human Resources Dept
nclu de d
Very
Good
HI I Ad
Side
washers dryers and ref ng Wade
boys mfant 12 womens 14 7 30? Sandhill Ad at Letart for hard working selt motl
2403 S PennsylVania Ave
Condition (304)576 2950
Rutlana
(740)742
8916
erators
Thompsons
16 twn bedding Pool1 L1on Cloth es al s zes baby vated peop e who w1 I take
Wellston OH 45692
.King
cars
household stroller
rock ng
horse pride n the r work For more
15 acres rural water. elec
Appliance 3407 JaGkson Reg AKC Lab Pupp es
EEOIAA Employer
TURNED DOWN ON
Avenue (304)675 7388
'Disney
mov1es
toys m crowa&gt;Je
muctl
more ntormation call Otana at 1
Ye low or Black shots &amp;
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? trc phone hook up mobile - - - - , , - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - ,plsystatlon walker
m sc
BB85473366
Help wanted car ng for the
wormed S200 Parents on
home
bUilding
well
water
2
br
newly
remodeled
ref
&amp;
Good
Used
Appl
ances
No Fee Unless We Wm
elderly Darst Group Home
Hunte rs Parad1se {740)379 dep no pets 304 675 6224 Reconditioned
and Prem ses (7 40)379 2643
1
888-582 3345
now pay ng mln1mum wage
2809
leave message
Guaranteed
Washe•s
I&lt; I \I I .._ I \ 1 I
Reg1stere(j Border Coli e
TIIAT DAILY
new shifts 7am 3pm 7am
WOlD
Ranges
and puppies Imported workmg
1980 14:~C70 3 BR 2 bath 3br house In Mason for Dryers
PUll Ill
5pm 3pm 11pm 11pm
tAM I
central air now carpet great Rent $375 month $300 Retrlgerators Some start at bloodlines Standard mark
7am call 740-992 5023
- - - - - - - ltllto~ loy CLAY L PDUAN - - - - - shipe must be moved Deposit No Indoor Pets Cat $95 Skaggs App lances 76 1ngs (740)379 9 110
FOR
$7500 (741&gt;)446 9357 Call (304)882 3£52
V neSt (740)446 7398
Local body shOp seeks qual
Rearro"o• Jen•rt of the
lour ICI'Cimbled words b•
ifled repa ir tech Competitive
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up after 5pm
House for rent In West Ke nmore washer $95 G E
low to form four 11rnple wordJ
pay good._ working environ
for •mmedfate possession al 1984 14x70 mobile home Columbia on At 62 1 m ile dryer $95 G E electnc "••tttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_,.
ment. C811 to set up Inter
wlthm 15 min of downtown 7)(21 rt extena10n deck and f rom Mason Watmart DNY ra nge $95 G E relr gerator
view (741&gt;) 448-4486
Green School whirl poo l tub 2br Lg $95
Kenmore portable Dl•n• Eddla
Galhpol s Rates as low as building
KI tc h I l A I D e c k
washer
$150 Kenmore Congralu latlons! Yo u have
District (740)245 9084
McDonalds Rio Grande now 8% (740)446-3216
$400
mo/$400
Sec
washer
&amp;
d!yer set $300 won 2 free move tickets to
hirng any tme positions c..;-------~ ~ass 14x70 3BR 1 bath
1
Deposit
Full
Basement
or
Table
and
chairs sohd the Spring Va lley 7 n
Insurance aval abl&amp; Pa1d
acre r.verfront briC~na heat pump 2 covered decks
consider
sell ng wooo $125 several n ght Gall po Is Call the Register
$12 000
vacation and holidays Apply vmyl 3 bedrooms 2 ba 2 Asking
080 w II
w th n
hreplaces hardwood floors ( 740 )245
(304)773
9167
stands $30 each Quee(l today for deta Is (304)675
0333
1333
approximately 2000 sq ft
size frame &amp; headboard
I \H\1 ..., , 1'1 '1 II "
Mectl Home Private Carli h~r Fun basement S160 000 1996 14,.;70 Claytoo Mob1le
very n ce !200 Skaggs
mg LPN for Gallipolis office (7-'0)446.0538
,\ IJ\t'I(Hh
Home 3br 2ba w1th Garden ___
.. vn nrJ"'I
• Appliances 76 VIne Street
Fax resume to 1 740-699
tub
new carpet E:~Ctra
(740)446 7398
BEOROOM
HOME Clean Must see $15 000 2 bedroom a1r porch very
or cal Karen 1800 3
FAAAt
:-:rV...,A-:-N-r-I
r;:.,
A famous poht1&lt;:1an
sa1d 2315
Only
$8
000
For
I
stings
cat Cal (304)675 6&amp;17
533
5848
n ce Galllpo 10 (740)446 Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
.
to a group of vOters "The most lm1 BOO 719 3001 Ext F144
Chapel Road Porter Ohto
2003(740)446 1409
5
portant political office that a per- Medical B ller Busmen
We have new sect anal
(740) 446 7444 1 677 630
L• ....JL-..1-..L-J......J ..
hold IS
of
off ce needs a sharp 3 Bedroom newly remod homes as low as $23 995 3br Mob1le Home Sits on 9162 Free Esllmates Easy 1953 John Dee e moc:lel 60
dependable knowledgeable eled In Middleport call Torn and new singe wide homes approx 3 acres Central A•r flnanc1ng 90 days same as Tractor 3 po nt h tch new
as low as $19 993 1 800- Ewcellent condition Lease cash V sal Master Card tires I ve power &amp; dual
person tor med cal lnsur Anderson after 5 p m
5
Hydraulic (304)Ba2 3236
992
3348
637
3238
anca
blthng
Resume
10
Required (304)695-3400
,::l....;E,r-.:.P'rl1-7-TEI;_;_Trl
the (hucklt quoled
Dr ve a I ttle save alot
mately 1 2 m11e aam 1 t
whenever WII have too s
clothes glassware guns
ant ques !urn lure collect
1tems Sat Apnl 5.,
- - -- - - - - Gara~ &amp; bake sate Fry
residence next to SalSbury
Elementary School Fnday
Apr 4 9-4 Saturday Apnl5
9 4 Proceeds to Hem ock
Grange

14x60
A bstone
s lo
w/unloader $1500 2 yr olp
blao:k Angus bull proven sire
$ 000 will trade 1 or botH
tor brushhog of equal value
740949 2453 days 740
949 2452 e11en ngs

I

I

II \

(304) 273-4098

jl

Roofing S1d1ng

Free Est1mates

1112·1188 1112·21102

$35 per acre

Call n-to
schedule your

lawn caN

samca.
lnsuNd

•

140-941-1181

1-888-2111111

�"

..

'

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentlntl

~

· www.mydailysentlnel.com

.

.

'

. DEAR ABBY: Years
.ago, when I first became a
daughter-in· law, it was a
good lesson in how NOT
to be a mother-in: la,w. So
when · our son · became
engaged, I told his chosen
one I considered her " in·
law" status only a legality,
that I felt I was gaining a
daughter, and that wives
should
always
come
before mothers.
My husband and I
offered advice only when
asked and kept still when
we saw them do something
we thought was a mistake.
When our son had to
ttavel out of town for
additional job trainin~.
Dad and I moved into the1r
home at their request. We
had a great fime with · our
'g randchildren ani! made it
· possible for our son and
his wife to have uninterrufted time for each other.
am now a widow in my
90s and live in a lovely
apartment my son and his
wife built onto their home.
They visit and help me
whenever I need them.
. When we drive places, I
have always insisted on
sitting in the back seat
because I find it easier to
get in and out of the car.
(The kids often have

Dear
Abby
'ADVI_CE
things to discuss and I
don't need to know every·
thing.) Believe me, the
back seat "ain't" all that
bad!
My daughters ' live in
Virginia and California
and come to stay whenever my son and his wife
want to get a way. All of
them keep me busy with
my computer, getting my
own meals, knitting and
library books . My girls
call daily • California · in
the mornings !ind Virginia
to say good-night. The
kids here in town are in
and . out several times a
day. When I tell each one
how blessed I feel, my son
always says, ''Mother, you
reap what you sow." GRATEFUL MOM/IN·
LAW
.
DEAR
G~ATEFUL
MOM/IN-LAW: In most
relationships, your son is

right. Love and respect are
a two-way street. I receive
so many leuers about bad
relationsliips that it's . a
pleasure to print one that
detail s such an exemplary
one .
And while we're on the
subject, I'll reprint a
favorite item that has
appeared . in my .&lt;:olumn
before:
TEN ' COMMAND·
MENTS FOR A MOTHER-IN-LAW
by lola M. Irwin
Thou shalt . love ,
honor and respect the new
couple .
.
Thou .. shalt allow
them complete independence.
-Thou shalt speak only
kindly aod loyally about
them.
- Thou shalt not find
fault. .
- Thou shalt not ·visit
them too frequently, and
never enter '' their home
without knocking.
- Thou shalt not expect
them to visit . you too
often .
- Thou shalt not give
advice unless requested.
- Thou shalt not mention how much you look
forward to grandchildren.
- Thou shalt respect

•

'•

Thursday, April 3, 2003 .
ACROSS

4ccommodating mother-in-law
gets back what she gives.
.

1 Movie's
need
5 Incite
(2 wds.)
10 Kind of
basket
12 ..:.. c. Scon
13 Yearbook
14 Whodunits
15 Coral
formation
their .taste in hom~ decorating, thou-gh it differs 16 Promise
to pay
from your own.
18 NBAer
- Thou shalt petition
- Unseld
daily the Heavenly Father, 19 Tact
in whose love they abide, 23 Flock·
member
for their happiness.
26
Polite
Dear Abby is ~Yritten by 27 Helen word
of ~
Abigail Van Buren, also 30 Runway
known as Jeanne Phillips,
surface .
and wa ~ founded by her 32 Vexes
mother, Pauline Phillips . 34 Wing II ·
· (hyph,)
Write Dear Abby at .
35
l&gt;iano'plece
www.DearAbby.com
or
36
Arid
P. 0. Box 69440, Los 37 Male
parent
Angeles, CA 90069.
38. Repair
39 Nooks
42 Food
· addltlve
45 RN
r-------='----·'-"
"'' -'"'-..:.-.,
.- . '
employer

:Dining guide 2003 inside today!

46 Tart ·
50 Selnleld pal
53 Consumer
lure
55 Bath powder
56 Myatery
unraveler
57 Goya's .
home

•

Friday, April4, 2003 ·

you'll be expected to contribute your skills.
ElY BERNICE BEDE OsoL
CANCER (June 21-July
It's quite possible in the
22)- Because of your restless nature today, the day will
year ahead that you could ascend to new heights where
be more pleasurable for you if
you associate with active pals.
your work or career is con·
cemed. Your driving ambition
You won't be happy with
and unfaltering persistence
friends who drag their feet.
will make ·things happen.
LEO (July 23-Aug\.42) · ARIES (March 21-April
If you have recently handled
19) - Be assertive today in
something successfully, you
situations where you need to wouldn't be out of line today
protect your material inter·
tooting your.own hom. You'll
ests,..You can do so properly
know how to tell others about
witliout alienating associates it without appearing boa~tful.
or business contacts by using
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
your great personality.
- you need activities today
TAURUS (April 20-May
that serve to stimulate you
20) - Don't waste a whole both mentally· and physically
in order to .help energize and
lot of time today wondering
about whether your ideas will
invigorate your outlook. Tenwork or not. You'll know
nis, anyone?
quickl.Y enou!fh opce you put
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
!hem ~nto actton and can ad· • - Don't be timid about
JUSt thmgs as you go ~long. _ slanding_up...fuLy.o.lluights_toGEMI~I (May 21-JUl'ieZO)
day when needed. Just be- .There s a good chance you cause another guy or gal has a
could reap so~ ~nefits tc:&gt;bigger mouth, it doesn't make
day from a Situation that IS this person an authority or
not of your own. mak mg.
right about anything.
However, once mvolved,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

' DOWN
1 Film
2 Teen woe
3 Douse a
candle
23 Sweater
4 Pablo's·
letter
aunt
24 Gamblers'
5 Want-ad
rolls .
abbr.
25 Dashiell's
6 State VIP
peer .
7 Raised
28 Norse king
8 Stare
9 Famed loch 29 Hairy
humanoid
10 Golfer's
31 Actress
goal
-Sorvlno
11 Doctor's
33 Jazz
office
Instrument
12 Lions' prey
35 Enjoys
17 Above,
37 Funny
In verse'
• -Deluise
20 A Peron
21 Walked tall 40 HS class
41 Valuable
22 Actress
fur
-Moran

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
42 New York
nine
43 Cuff
44 Festival
47 Grotto
48 Ovid's

Easter drama

route
49 German
title start

51. Here,
to Henri
52 Habit
w11arer
54 Years on
end

I

Troopers fraT the Gallia-Melgs Post of the Ohio State Highway
Patrol mvesttgate the scene of an accident Thursday on
Raccoon Road where a truck from the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department swerved off the road and flipped ' onto its side,
killing the driver. According to reports, the weight of the water
in the truck's tank shifted, causing the vehicle to overturn.
(Carrie Ann Wood)

.

No matter what
direction you turn
you can always nnd
It In the
classlneds!

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22) - Someone with whom tain you allow yourself some
you'll be associating today leisure time as well. A recreamight give you an inspiring tional break will do you a
idea. If you can't use it Imme- world of good.
diately, you'll file it away and
AQUARiUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
develop it as time and ·events 19)- Because you'll be as
dictate.
strong a finisher today ·as you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23- are a starter, much of value
Dec. 21)- You won ' t be re- can be accomplished. Tackle
luctant to dig in and give your • those assignments that you
work or career the momentum have found challenging in the
and jolt it needs toda~ to gen· past.
erate a larger yield. Extra ef·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
fort on your part will produce 20)- Although outside inter·
extra dividends.
ests might place some heavy
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· demands on you today, it isn't
Jan. 19)- Attend to your es- likely that you will mind one
sential duties and responsi· bit. They'll all tum out to be a
bilities today, but make cer· fun way of keeping busy.

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTIONrurtBV JUDD HAMBRICK .
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Firefighter
dies in crash

417

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Pumper truck
flips over on
way to fire

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News editor
CARRIE ANN WOOD

Staff writer

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GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis firefighters today
are mourning the loss of one
of their own.
Veteran volunteer firefighter Richard A. Long died of
injuries he suffered .when the
pumper truck he was driving
to a brush tire Thursday went
off
County
Road
94
(Raccoon) and overturned.
Long, 56, of 335 Green
Terrace Court, was pronounced dead at the scene of
the 12:50 p.m. accident by Dr.
Daniel H. Whiteley, Gallia
County cor~mer.
A ·30-year member of the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
The fire department was
·
called to the brush fire at
Department, Long was retired 12:42 p.m., Gallia County 9_
fr\)m M&amp;G Polymers at 1-1 reported. The pumper driApp)e Grove, W.Va .. He was ven · by Long · was the first
the sole occupant of the
pumper, one of two trucks vehicle on the road, followed
dispatched to the brush fire at by _a brush truck .
Firefighters Joe Carter and
3039 R
R d · CI
accoon oa 111 ay Ronnie · Phillips, en route to
Township. ·
Gallipolis Police Chief the brush lire in private vehj·
Roger Brandeberry, acting as . cles, cam_e upon the accident
a spokeman for the fire and called 9·1·1.'
department, said Long 's death
Sgt. Brian Rutherford of the·
· "
1 f h d
State
Highway
Patrol's
IS a great oss or t e epart- Gallia-Meigs Post said Long
ment and the whole city.'
was eastbound about 0.3 of a
"I've been around Richard
since probably about 1979," mile east of Ohio Route 218,
Brandeberry said. "He was wh~n t~e pumper, a 2003
one of the most well-liked Fre1ghthner, rounded a left·nremen over there. Always· a -hand curve. .
willing
worker, always
Long apphed the brakes
worked hard."'
Ple•se see FINflcJder, A5

~g8~~~~ :·J~ !.'" 0
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by JUDD HAMBRICK

Grief counselors were on
hand Thursday afternoon to
assist Long's fellow firefighters through the tragedy.
"It's going to .be hard to
lose not just a co-worker, but
a good friend," Bra_ndeberry
said. "Our thoughts are with
his family."
City Manager Bob Gordon
said this morning that for
more than 30 years; Long
exemplified the loyalty and
dedication that is evident in
all ·firefighters.
"He will be remembered
not only through tears and
memorials, but also through
the effons of the 32 fellow
firefighters who will continue
to rise and respond to the call
of duty with the same dedicalion," Gordori said.
"The members of the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Departm'ent are assured that
the spirit of their absent colleague will always be by their
side."

BY KEVIN KELLY

IT I~N'T "All
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2 Sections - II Pile-

Calendar
Classifieds
' Comics
: Dear .Abby
· Editorials
Movies .
Obituaries
Sports
· Weather ' -

A3
B4-6

•

87
B7
A4
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0 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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&amp;
The Last Supper, a portrayal

Last Supper re-creation·slated for April 11
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor
POMEROY -A portrayal
of The Last Supper will be
presented at II ·a.m. · Sunday,
Apn·1 6 , and a1 7 :30 p.m.
Friday, April 11 , at the St.
Paul Lutheran Church iil
Pomeroy.
Open to the public, the program is described as an hour

of drama, music and worship
telling the story of Christ's
last supper with his disciples
before his crucifixion.
·It is being presented by
members of the congrega·
lions of the St. John and St.
Paul churches under the
direction of Julie Rice and
Shirley Hamm.
. Carla Shuler is organist for
the dmma and Frank Ryther,

the narrator. Soloists are
Hamm, Ryan Davis, trumpet,
and Adelle Rice, flute.
Hamm is in charge of cos·
tumes.
Taking roles in the-presentation are, (in photo from the
left) Charles Frecker as ·
Nathaniel, Bill Downie as
James, · Ray Taylor ·as
Andrew; David Ridgeway
(standing) as Peter, Terry

'

Reuter as Judas, Bill Young·
as John, Roger Stearns . as
Jesus, Richard Moore (standing) as Thom~s. Tom Reuter
as James, Bill Roush .as
Phillip, Dan Davis as
Mathew, · Jim · Fry as
Thaddaeus, and Allen Moore
as Simon.
Refreshments will be
served following the presentation.
1

United
Fund distributes contributions
..
$20,000 allocated
to local charities
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff. writer
POMEROY - Agencies
supported by charitable
contributions from the
United · Fund for Meigs
County received their first
checks through the fund's
2003 fundraising campaigrt
Thursday night."
The
local
charity
fundraising organization
.. collects
contributions
' through payroll deduction s
and other private contribu- United Fuild for Meigs County Treasurer Bruce Fisher presents checks representing the 2003
tions, and distributes the lundraising campaign to Tonya Huffman, Holzer Meigs Hospice; Sandra Edwards, Gallia/Meigs
. funds on a quarterly basis Community Action Agency; Rev. Keith Rader, God's Neighborhood Escape for Teens.: Vicky Peckham,
to charities serving Meigs Meigs County Humane Society; Mary Wise, Riverbend Arts Council, Rev. William Middleswarth,
County residents.
· Meigs County Museum; and Diana Coates, Yesteryear/Seniors in Schools. (Charlene Hoeflich)
UFMC's board of directors allocated $10,000 to Shelter on Union · Ave., and other services forn.e edy Co.unty Council on Aging 's
local non;profit organiza- Pomeroy, .which provides Meigs County families; Yesteryear and S'eniors in
tions through the 2003 cam -. emergency
shelter · for Riverbend Arts Co\.lnci.l; the School programs ; · Holzer
paign, acfording to l[FMC homeless
men; . God's Meigs County Historical Meigs · Hospice: and the
President~ Tom Dooley, Neighborhood Escape fer, Society, which will use Gallia/Mei gs Community'
Those agencie s are Serenity.· Teens, a church-suppo(t~d , funds-to purchase archival Action Agency. which uses
House, ;a shelter for W()lil,ert·. ac.t-ivities ; .:enter . f.qr:',are~ .,,m~t,irii!Js ; ,. Meigs County UFMC contributions for its
and ch1ldren who are vtc-· yourh , based In ' Pgrnei'oy;·• Humane Society, which emergency fund.
·
· · tims of domestic violence, . the Mei!);-!i Cooperative uses contributions to pay
Sue Mai son served as the
based in .' Gallipoiis ;. the .. Parish, an ecuminical in is· the salaryof a hl)mane offi- . fund 's 2003 campaign
· Meigs .• Meri's, .:. Homdess·',sion ·.operatirig a food bank · cer and educator; the Meigs . chairman .

Together we've ,lost ·252 pounds.
And we're still losing .
•
•

ToLL FREE (866) 821-4541
•

•
WWW.CCWL.INFO
.

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