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I

Kid Scoop, A6

•

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 160

www. rnyd,,ily,~ntim·l.wrn

MONDAY, APRIL 7, 2003

Charles E. Blakeslee cuts a ribbon officially opening the new
Charles E. Blakeslee Addition to the Meigs County District
Public Library. Kristi Eblin, library director, tha~ks everyone
involved in the project. (J. Miles Layton)

Library addition
welcomes future
to present
BY

J.

'

MILES lAYTON

Staff writer

POMEROY
The
trustees of the Meigs
County District Publi~:
Library dedicated the new
Charles
E.
Blakeslee
Addition SuRday afternoon.
The $77 )!,000 project was
named after a long-serving
library trustee. the late Dr.
Hugh Davis.
The addition and renovation to the library nearly
doubles the library's noor
space, and includes reading
areas, book stacks, a computer lab and expanded
office- ·space: -Readers · are
greeted by natural light
coming from large windows
which offer a view of the
Ohio River.
Blakeslee, a former Meigs
County
Agricultural
Extension Agent and a 52year member of the library's
board of directors, recounted the steps it took to make
the dream a reality. He was
quick to remember everyone involved. including
Hugh Davis.
"l am sure he · wou ld be
very proud of this fine
building which sits on the
site of his boyhood home, "
Blakeslee said.
' The man who first came
to M.eigs County 63 years
ago noted the importance of
people past and present who
contributed to the library's
success. ·
"Let us not forget the
seven trustees of each
Middleport _ and Pomeroy
lib rary who met religiously
one day or evening of every
month for nearly the last
I00 years and the trustees
of the Meigs County
Library who have met regtl-

larl y monthly ever since ·the
formation of the Meigs
Local School Di.strict," he
said.
"Let us give thanks for
the excellen t staff that ha s
continued to serve the
library needs of all Meigs
County and neighboring
counties for these many
years."
·
Kristi Eblin, library'director, thanked the library's
board of trustees, staff and
the contractor, Lou Morgan
Builders.
During the renovations,
the library staff had to
endure "less than desirable
conditions (or. almo:;.t J.S
months ."
Space was tight at times.
Books had to be moved to
their new location.
"Thank you for your willingness to pitch in and do
things suc h as move an
entire library collection so
that we could continue to
serve our patrons during the
renovatio n of the existing
facility," Elblin said.
After a ribbon-cutting,
Pomeroy
Mayor
John
Blaettnar said he was
pleased with the new addi-tion to the library and village.
" We have a balance of
progess in the region with
the new highway, b'ridge,
new businesses and now
this cultura l center," he
said. "I think it is wonderful
is · all
that
the . whole area
.
"
progressmg now.
Joan May has been a
patron of the library for
years.
"I think the addition is
beautiful and I welcome it
to the county," she said.
" Everyone should take
advantage of it."

2 Sections Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Sales Consultant

'

U~VehicleM~et

t;;

.

-R-esident finds .crafts appealing
J.

rugs to patriotic woodcraft,
model cars and trains to coffee mug holders and dog and
MIDDLEPORT _ Staff cat pictures he's painted.
at Overbroo.k Center in
"I never h~d an _interest in
Middleport consider Glenn . arts ~~d crafts unt~l I ~oved .
Grueser a "crafty" guy _ here, GruesersaJd. I JUSt
and a big help around the started domg 1t for .somethmg to do. Now, I have
facility.
Grueser. 69. has been a · made so many tl\ings I have
resident of the nursi ng home to give t.hem away. because l
for six years, and has found wouldn t have room for
his reward in the center 's everything."
weekly arts and crafts proGrueser is especially pargram. Grueser's room is tial to woodcrafts, he said,
decorated to the hilt with and the center supplies him
hand,nade craft items with craft kits with pre-cut
everything from latch hook wood pieces , so all he has to
BY BRIAN

REED

Staff writer

n Paees
A2
83-5
86
86
A4
AS
AS
B1-3
A2

2003 Ohio Valley Publishif'lg Co.

eracto

Palce llafrelt, 3rd
RUIIBIId Elementary

do is put the items together,
and then paint them.
Some of Grueser's items
have been contest winners,
even. Three of his creations
were sent to a Columbusbased cont~st a~d were
returned w1th th1rd-place
nbbons.
As much as staff and fellow
residents
admire
Grueser for h1 s creattvtty,
they also appreciate his
helpfulness.
Mike Crites, the center's
actiVIties director, said
Grueser is a big Help to staff,
and Grueser agrees that his,

yolunteer work with other
residents has been a big
help.
Grueser helps transport
residents from activity peri·
ods, meals and coffee
breaks, and helps the activities
t up f()r bingo
g es and other activities.
"He's come a long way
since he arrived here, and
he's a big help to all of us,"
Crites said. ''And because
he's such a c.ut-up, he's
entertaining, too. We're just
glad he's here with us; and
that he enjoys his time. here
as much as he does."

'Chemical' Ali found dead in Basra
BY TINI TRAN

.Associated Press
~".

..

AI-Majid
apparently
was killed
on Saturday
when two
coalition aircraft used

'
BASRA. Iraq - Ali Hassan
"
ai-Majid, one of the most brutal
members of President Saddam
Hussein's inner circle, was
laser_-~ uided
killed by an airstrike on his
mumt1ons to
house in Basra, a British officer "
attack his
said Monday. He had been
house
ii1
dubbed "Chemical Ali" by. · ai-Majld
Basra .
•
opponeryts for ordering a 1988
Jackson said
poison gas attack that ki lied
the . body
thousands of Kurd.,.
wa~ found along with thatof his
Maj. Andrew Jackson of the bodyguard and the head of Iraqi
3rd
Battalion
Parachute intelligence services in Basra.
Jacksqn sald the di!!Covery of
Regiment told The Associated
Press that,his superiors had con- a!-Majid's body was one of the
fimled the death of the man reasons the British decided to
who was Saddam's first cousin, move infantry into Basra,
entrusted with clefending south- because they hoped that resisem Iraq against invading coali- tance in the southern Iraqi city
might crumble with the top
tion forces.
,~

~~ -·~-; ~

,~ -~

Index
BriQRoa ,

Glenn Grueser, a resident at Middle pert's Overbrook Center, displays some of the many craft items he's made. His room
at the center is filled with the many projects
he's tompleted at weekly arts and craft sessions. (Brian J. Reed)
.

leadership gone.
"(His death should show) that
the regime is linished. It is over,
and liberation is here," said
Group Capt. AI Lockwood,
spokesman for British forces in
the Gulf. "The leadership is
now gone in southern Iraq."
Believed to be in his fifties,
ai-Majid led a 1988 campaign
against rebellious Kurds in
northern Iraq in which whole
villages were wiped out. An
estimated 100,000 Kurds,
mostly civilians, we~ killed.
A!- Majid also fias , been
linked to the bloody crackdown
on Shiites in southern Iraq after
their uprising following the
1991 Gulf War. Prior to that, he
served as governor of Kuwait
during Iraq's seven-month
occupation of its neighbor in
1990-1991 - an inva~ion that

led to the Gulf War. '
Human rights groups had
called for ai-Majid's arrest on
war crimes charges when he
toured Arab capitals last
January seeking to rally suppon
against mounting U.S. pressure
on Saddam's regime.
"Al-Majid
is
Saddam
Hussein's hatchet man,"
Kenneth Roth, head of Human
Rights Watch in New York. said
at the time. "He has been
involved in some of Iraq's
worst crimes, including genocide and crimes against humanity."
· Hazem al-Youssefi, Cairo
representative of the opposition
Patriotic Union of ~istan,
described ai-Majid as a standout in a regime of criminals.
PI
Ch
L AS
use see em 1Cll

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To attend, patients must .hove been seen by a Holzer physician ond
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MEDICAL CENTER
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Local• Ohio

· The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

Page-A2
Monday, April 7, 2003

CHESTER A card
shower honoring Erma
Cleland who is 90 years
old was held at a recent
meeting
of
Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
. America.
The group sang "Happy
Birthday" to her, Esther
Smith read "Dearest of
Friends"
and
Mary
Barringer read, "To a
Friend." Cleland was

•

I Toledo 131'14~' 1
L

· •IColumbus 138'148' I

Roman Catholic nun Alice Gerdeman, coQrdlnator of the ·
Intercommunity Justice and Peace Center, protests during the CentralAmerica United States trade talks Feb. 28
in Cincinnati. (AP)

Roman Catholic sister
has devoted decades
to peace activism

W.VA.
KY.

C2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

,.
o ••• ·~••flf:~
S'-'5 T·stoons

.
Ram

"

Aurrils

~ ~

Snow

,.

Ice

Rain .possible tomorrow·
Low s in the upper 30s.
WEATHER FORECAST
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Today ... Occasional
rain
Wedriesday... Mostly cloudy
showers this morning ...Then with a chance of rain. Highs
mostly cloudy with a chance around 50. Chance ofrain 30
of showers thi s afternoon. percent.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Wednesday night ... Mostly
Southeast winds 15 mph cloudy with a chance of rain.
becoming southwest late. Lows in the upper 30s.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Toni!lht. .. Part!Y cloudy. , !hursday... Mostly cloudy
. L?ws m the nud 40s. ~est with a chance of rain. Highs
wmds 5 to 10 mph becommg in the lower 50s.
southeast.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Tuesday ... Increasing
Friday ... Partly
cloudy.
clouds. A shght chance of rain Lows in the upper 30s and
in the afternoon. Highs near highs near 60.
· 60. Nonh winds 5 to 10 mph
Saturday... Mostly clear.
· becoming east early in the Lows in the lower 40s and
afternoon. Chance of rain 20 hi~s in the mid 60s.
percent.
Sunda;y,,.Mostly
clear.
Tuesday
riight ... Mostly Lows in the lower 40s and
. cloudy with a chance of rain. highs in the upper 60s,
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Confessed
killer recants
at trial

CINCINNATI (AP) - lreated well, she said. Her
She has negotiated with mother and German-born
police on the rules for grandmother were always
demonstrations, deplored willing to help newcomers
what she considers the com- adjust to America or cope
mercia! exploitation of with immigration problems.
Central America and has
protested executions.
Her family inspired her to
. Sister Alice Gerdeman help others and to treat them
also has attended p!)blic with respect, she said.
heanngs, spoken in church- Gendeman took the vow to
es, carried signs and picketed join her religious order in
on sidewalks. Police say at 1964. Her colleagues were
times, she is unable to con- mostly teachers and social
lrol the crowds she draws. workets. She planned · to
The Roman Catholic nun, spend her life in elementary
who has spent about three' schoo1 education and was
decades speaking out, has no principal of what is now
plans to slow down.
She has faith that it makes Holy Spirit Elementary
School in Newport, Ky.
a difference.
· "It is hard to get the mes- · But at the urging of a bishsage out. But, we figure we op to work for peace and juscan't be ignored constantly," tice. Gerdeman joined in a
Gendeman, 56, said while in 1973 boycott of Campbell
her office surrounded by Soup Co. protesting its purstacks of leaflets, newsletters chases of grapes and lettuce
and signs against the U.S. picked by nonunion farm
war against Iraq.
workers.
Gerdeman grew up on a
· farm in the northwest Ohio
town of Kalida. Her father
employed migrant workers
and saw to it that they were

AKRON ·
(AP)
· Prosecutors are arguing that
convicted kiUer Richard Wade
Cooey is out of appeals and the
Ohio Supreme Court should set
an execution date.
Summit County prosecutors
filed a motion Thursday that
could pu\ Cooey in line behind
four other death row inmates
already scheduled for execution
in the nex.t two months.
On Monday, the . U.S.
Supreme Court declined to heat
Cooey's latest appeal.
Cooey, 35, was convicted of
the 1986 killings of University
of Akron sophomores Wendy
Offredo, 21, and Dawn

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April .

2003

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City of Point Pleasant

Syrac~se Police Officer Brian Pearce recently visited Heart of the Valley Head Start in
Tuppers Plains, and discussed safety issues with chi ldren. including crossing the street
safely and not talking to strangers. Children. were allowed to explore his patrol .par. Larry
Sellers brought his tow truck for the children to see.

.Ohio Valley Christian announces honor roll
GALLIPOLIS
- The
. following stu dents have
. made the A honor roll for
the fourth six weeks at Oh io
.' Valley Christian Aca'demy
in Ga lli po li s: . First grade:
Termi Barnitz. Beth any
Beaver, Ka telyn Beaver,
. : Sara h Blodgett, Morgan
, Brumfie ld, Maggie Criste,
, Michaela
Drummond ,
. Logan Edmonds, Alyssa
Freeman. Thomas Holley,
Jon Kostiv.al. Aubrey Lpng,
Ranjit
Mavi.
Timothy
Miller. · Amy Ours. Cole
Parenti; Sarah Schoonover,
· Ka ss ie ·Shriver, Joseph
' Stone. Maggie Westfall.
Second grade:
Sara h
Absten. · Jordyn Benson ,
Joshua Blevins, Richard
Bowman, Chance Burleson,
·. Megan Cochran, Madi son
: Crank, Brady Cur.ry. Alex
: Haddad , Oliver Len tz, Eli se
.: Long. Riley Nibert, Craig
·. Terre-B lanche.
Third grade: Bryce Amos,
Bransen Barr, Jennifer
Blevins, Katie Blodgett,
Chase Caldwe ll , Michael
Fahmy, Alex Gagucas ,
Jo se ph. Jarvis. · Maegan
Jewe ll , SamaQtha McClure.
Paul
Miller,
Micaela
Owens, Sarah Beth SyQdor.
Ben
Tillis.
Samantha
Westfall.
. Fourth grade: Heather
Case, Joshua Curry, Tyler
Eastman, · Allie Ham ilton.
Alexis Henry, D~niel Irw in.
'

Elicia Ir wi n, KaLhleen
Long. Kyl e Scott. Valerie
Terre-Blanche .
Matt hew
Wright.
Fifth grade: Amanda
Allen. Brooke Bowie. Hali
Burle son,
Ashley
~cbecca
Coughenour,
Evan_s. · Heather ? Mahan .
Lindsey Miller. Stephanie
Sh ul er.
Natalie Stone.
Melissa Stump. Juli e Ti lli s.
Sixth grade: Joey Abstcn.
'Annee Carman, Grant
Foster. Jasmin e Gibeaut,
Qu inton Nibert. Jasmine
Owens, Henry Patrick. Cara
Sandell, . Kyle Scouten.
Todd .Simms, Alex Trent,
Andrea VanMeter.
Seve nth grade: Richelle
Blankenship. Lindsey Carr.
Zach ·
Carr,
Kaitlin
Dewhurst, Heather Moran,
t.aurel Stone, . Heathe r
Wagner,
Christopher
Williams.
Eigh th
grade:
Julie
Hussell , .
Mackenzie
McMurry, Cry'stal Thomas.
· Ninth
·grade:
Sara
Beck ley,
Kristi Davis.
J:acob Eldridge, Sarah Dawn
Jenkirts. Co·ry Kelley. Keith
Peck. Zachary Weber.
Tenth
grade:
Hallie
Carter, Michael Cristc,
Sarah Eldri&gt;!ge, Elizabeth
Ssevens.
· EleveJH(l grade: Brody
Blankenslifp. ·
Lind sey
Wheeler. AlYssa Ziri lle.
"Twelfth grade: Jeremy

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www.pointpleasantwv.org

MEDICAL

Holzer Clinic

Mason County Chamber of Commerce

www.holzerclinic.com

www.masoncountychamber.org

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Meigs County Chamber uf Commerce

www.pvalley.org

www.meigscountyohio.com

ENTERTAINMENT

NEWSPAPERS

ty tmck and tield team, and is
captain of the marching band
tlag corps . She was a delegate to
Buckeye Girls' State and wa~
selected tor the Ohio Summer
Honofli Institute. She is a mentor for at-risk kids •md has volunteered with the Special
Olympics, the Meigs- euunty
Fair, Shade River 4- H and the
Community
Historical
Program.

·wilmington; ·
·cincinnati ·state
: set up ~egree

Evans. Ke lsey Sa li sbury,
·
Christina Taylor.
The following students
have made 1he B honor roll ·
fnr the fou rth six weeks:
Fir't
grade :
Reid
Eastman ,
Bryanne
Hamilton, Alivia Stover,
Scotty Wood.
Second grade: Caleb
Curry.
Third grade: Hannah
Brumfield ,
Kayla
Brumfield, Tori VanFossen.
grade: Aaron
Fourth
Dillard , Olivia Kostival,
Claire McMurry.
Fifth grade: Seth Amos.
Jose ph Beaver, Ama.rrda
Jarvis. Camero n· Lentz.
Ricardo
Maldonado,
Jonathan VanMatre.
Sixth
grade:
Alex
Pasquale.
Seventh grade: Jonathan
Beave r: Seth Johnson,
Natasha Sachdeva, Nicholas
Stevens. Brooke Taylor.
Eighth grade: Brandon
Coughenour, · , Kalee
Edmonds, Megan Mahan ,
Garrison Sali sbu ry, Michael
Williams.
Ninth grade: Kelli Irwin.
Tenth grade: Conrad
BUffington, Kaleb Eldridge,
Andrew Holcomb. John·
l-lu sse ll.
Ch ri s
TerreBlanche.
Elevent h grade: Natha n
Bowman. J.P. Li ndeman,
John Moran.

Named
tO COmmittee

Wins bee

ATHENS - Students from
Meigs, Athens, Hocking, and
ALBANY
Trenton
Perry Counties recently attendREEDSVILLE John McC lintock . was overall
ed a health care careers event at Rice of Reedsville, president of winner of a regional spelling
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. the Eastern Local Board of..---::=--..., compe tit'ion
Hospital employees from the . Education, has been -.Jmmed
and
repres e 'n t e d
laboratory, nursing department, to the Southeast Region
radiology, respiratory therapy Executive Committee of the
Sou the as tern
and surgery took students on Ohio
School
Boards
Ohio In a
tours of their departments, and Association. The committee
stare compe-'
showed students the equip- provide s governance and
titian
in
ment, talked about educational leadership to school board
C a n a I
in
Athens.
Winche,ter.
· requirements for their fields, members
described job requi rements and Belmont, Gallia. Guernsey.
He is the son
salary ranges and discussed Hocking,
Jackson,
of Brian and
their personal reasons for Lawrence. Monroe, Morgan. McClintock V a I e r i e
selectinga health carecareer.
Muskingum. Noble. Perry.
McClintock
Representatives of Hocking Pike, Scioto, Vinton ·and of Shade and altends Grace
College also attended to dis- Washington
Counties. Academy Christian School
cuss their health care career MembersattelectedbyOSBA in Albany.
prognuns.
members in the region.

Scholarship applications being accepted
RUTLAND - Again this
year the Rutland High School
Alumni Association will
award a scholarship to a 2003
graduating senior who is a.
child or grandchild of someone who graduated fro.m
Rutland High School.
The deadline for applying
is May I. Applicants are to
provide a current official
high school course transcript
affixed with a seal and guidance counselor's signature.
along with at least 75 per
cent of the current year's
grades (three of the four
nine-week periods, or five of
the six six-week periods) for
the senior year, and the current GPA based on a four
point system.
Applicants are also to provide a resume of activities
and career objectives, a current photograph for publicity
purposes, current address
and telephone number, name
and graduation year of alumni parent or grandparent, and
the nan1e of intended higher
educational institution to
which he or she has been
accepted.
Applicants will be evaluated on grade point average,
course of study, and compliance with requirements, with
some consideration of

extracurricular and co-curricular activities, and career
objectives. All materials submitted will become the property of the Rutland High
School
Scholarship
Committee.
Scholarship
application

materials may be mailed to the
Rutland High School Alumni
Scholarship
Committee,
P.O.Box 802 Syracuse, Ohio
45779; or hand delivered to
Suzy
Parker, Pomeroy
'Elementary School, 260
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

.And Win
CLUE FOR M.ONDAY.
APRIL 7
•

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the indian~
dtank.

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••

McCreery, 20. He was found
guilty of aggravated munder.
aggra,vated robbery, felonious
assault and kidnapping for the
purpose of engaging in forcible
sexual activity.
"As far as we know, the
defendant has exhausted all of
his state and federal appeals and
there is no reason not to execute
the sentence," said Assistant
Summit County Prosecutor
Philip Bogdanoff.
However, Cooey's lawyer,
Margery Koosed, plans to ask
the high court to reconsider.
Such requests are rarely granted.

experiences, including study
and work abroad. ·
Haynes, who will begin cla~ses at Ohio University in the fall,
plan,s to study pre-medicine.
, Sbe is the daughter of Paul and
Jamce Haynes of Coolville. ·
She is a member or' the
National Honor Society, and J]le
Science, French. Medical, Pep
and Key clubs. She is also 'lin
the yearbook staff and the varsi-

Education briefs

Arrangements were made
to purchase a tape deck for
the church. Bob Byer of
the
Meigs
County
Emergency, Management
Agency will speak at the
April meeting.
Sheila Cozart presided at
the meeting which opened
fo ll owing the pledge to the
flag .

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
confessed killer recanted at
his accused accomplice 's
trial, infuriating the family
of a slain clerk.
Calvin Hill, 22, avoided a
possible death sentence in
'
November by pleading
guilty to fatally shooting
Ghaleb · "Johnny" Yahya
while robbing the Madi son
Deli in Cleveland. Hill
In Wednesday's
received a life prison sentence and agreed to testify
against
co-defendant
Terrand Ramsey, who could
face a death penalty if convicted.
,.
At his sentencing, Hill ·
named Ramsey, 19, as
Yahya's killer and ·apolo~ gized - te- Yahya •s- widow, · Jb:Jtu:uun:txl:nu:nltil:uuu:txl:nu:[XltXl:ntL
Rola.
j311t Thursday, Hill denied
killing Yahya and ever
knowing Ramsey. He said
his lawyers coerced him
_into pleading guilty and
wrote his apology for him.
One person ·in· Yahya 's
family, Rola Yahya, yelled
at Hill "I am happy to see
you like this ," as Hill was
led to a cell in handcuffs.
Deputies removed her
from Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Judge
Michael. Russo's courtroom.
Prosecutors can nullify
Hill 's plea deal because of
his testim?ny and seek the
death pen~lty against him .
Assistant
County
Prosecutor Steve Dever
refused to say whether hi s
~~-of[ice wou ld do so.
In vestigators say Hill
· Tue - ·Thurs. 8:30am - 5:00pm
pull~ d the trigger of the .22ca'liber weapon that killed
Yahya, but Ramsey planned
the killing.

COOLV£LLE - Meigs
High School senior Meghan S.
Haynes of Cpolville will be the
2003-2004 Dr. James H. and
Nellie
Rowley
JewellManasseh Cutler Scholar at
Ohio University. The prestigious four-year undergraduate
scholarship provides an annual
sti.~nd to cover undergraduate
tultton, room and board, and
four summers of enrichment

given cards by the members and presented a gift
from the lodge.
Doris Grueser conducted
the meeting which opened
With flag pledge s, ' scripture and prayer. A practice
was held for the upcoming
&lt;ally. ·It was reported that
Jean Welsh will be having
eye surgery. The deaths of
Dorothy Karr and Mary
Newell were noted.

Summit County wants death
date set for convicted killer

Monday, April 7, 2003

Haynes,named to scholar list

Comiention announced
POMEROY- A convention for Catholic women to
be held in Steubenville on
June 25 . was announced
when
the
Catholic
Woman's Club of Sacred
Heart Church met recently.
Also announced was the
spring bi -annu al meeting
to be held on April 9 at St.
Paul 's Church in Athens.
'

PageA3

Youth It Education

Head start visit

0

MICH.

Sl.mj Pt. COO!y CloOOy

:Tpe paily Sentinel

Card shower .
honors member

\

Tuesday, AprilS

.

'

•

CINC IN NAT I (AP)
An agreement between
Wilmington College and
· Cincinnati State Technical
and Co mmunity College
cou ld enable people with
associate degrees from the
two-year sc hool to obtain a
bachelor's degree .
Fal'li ll y members from
Wilmington Co llege will ·
teac h classes leadin g to a .
degree in busi ness administration , the two sc hool s
said Friday. Other degree .
programs could follow.
"It will enab le our stu dents to apply most of their
coursework toward s a
bachelor's degree.'' said
• Monica Posey. academic
- vi&lt;.:e president at Cincinnati
S'tate. "In ad dition , they
will be able to finish their
four-year degree on our
campus, a place where they
are familiar and comfortable."
•
Wilmington
Preside nt
•
Dun DiBiasio said the program would extend his college·, efforts in sou th west
,• Ohio.
"The extension will serve
•• more st udent s in a more
• personal way. which is
important in thi s era of distance education." he said .

•

PLEASE REMEMBER:
- Egg Is not at a place of busineSs
- Egg Is not at a private residence
- Egg Is not inside a man-made object
- You will not "need digging tools
- You will not need to climb or the use of a ladder

The Daily Sentinel
Brought to you by:

Rocky

HOLZER CLINIC

DOWNING
CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE

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Insurance

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0 1n1on

The Daily Sentinel·

•

Obituaries

.,;_.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson

Publisher
Ct)arlene Hoeflich
Editor
' .
•
•
~~
'

.
Prevention.

..,. ..

·~ .

'I

'

'

'

Grants to halt Jtest Nile
virns' march agood idea
• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, 011 squashi11g
skeeters: The West Nile virus' deadly sweep across the coun.try put the bite on local governments. which had to spend
.extra money to kill mosqui toes that carry the disease.
, With the virus present in all but six states, thi s spring and
.summer is likely to bring more of the same. That's why a
House vote to provide $100 million in grants through the
Centers for Di sease Control is a timely response.
The measure, which was sponsored by a Louisiana lawmaker, Rep. Chris John, a Democrat· from Crowley, recommends that the Bush administration provide $ 100 million for
mosquito abatement this year. Loca l governments would ·be
able to apply for up to $ 100,000 in grants if they can come up
with a 50 percent match.
.
In Louisiana last year, 329 people had West Nile and 24
'died. The epidemic cost $24 million in this state, including
mosquito abatement and hospi talization.
West Nile is a national public health threat, and federal help
is justified. Since 1999, when the virus appeared in this country, there have been 4,007 cases of human illness and 263
deaths, according to the CDC.
The Senate. which will take up this legislation soon, should
follow the Hou se lead and vote to approve it. Prevention is
·always the best and most cost effective health care strategy,
and killing mosquitoes is the best way to prevent the West
Nile virus from sickening and killing people.

TODAY IN H·ISTORY .
-

·

.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· Today ts Monday, Apnl 7, the 97th day of 2003. There are
268 days_ left in the year.
.
· Today's Highlight in History:
' Fifty years ago, on April 7, 1953. the UN General Assembly
elected Dag Hammarskjold of Sweden to be secretary -general.
On this date:
l.n 1862, Union forces led by Gen. Ulysses S. Grant defeat·ed the Confederates at the Battle of Shiloh in Tennessee .
· In 1927, an audience in New York saw an image of
Commerce SecretarY Herbert Hoover in the 1\fst successful
long-distance demonstration of television .
In 1939, Italy invaded Albania. (Less than a week later, Italy
annexed Albania.)
l.n 1945', during World War 11. American planes intercepted
a Japanese
fleet that was headed for Okinawa on a suicide
.
'

miSS IOn.

.

~·--

Corifu~ing
Madonna has decided,
what with the news and all,
that the time may not be ri ght
for
her
new
video,
"American Life." Maybe it 's
that troupe of video ac tors
costumed as transvestite
American soldiers that now
gives the pop diva a case of
.cold feet. Or maybe it.'s her
·own star turn on the video as
an assassin targeting a
President Bush look-alike
with a hand gre nade. "I do
not wish to risk offending
anyone who might misinterpret the meaning of thi s
, video," the singer explained
by way of annquncing that
the "shock video" would not
be making its U.S. debut.
Which is probably a good
thin g, since cross-dressing
Gls and exploding president s
are so easily misinterpreted.
Of course, what probably
saved Madonna from being
commercially fried a Ia Dixie
Chick was a panicky read of
the U.S·. population: Her likemost
ly
hunch
that
be
Americans
would
repulsed by the video's cartoonishly vicious, anti-military; anti-Bush animus at a.
time when most of us are
intense ly concerned about
the safety and success of our
real-life troops and president.
Thi s, of co urse, shouldn't
stop Madonna from making
it grand in France, where a
recent poll tells us that onein-three French citizens is
actually pulling for Saddam.
And she 's a cinch in the Arab
world, where anti-American
animus is all the rage.
Literally.

AS

road to Palestine

Diana
West

Odd how we deal wi th that
rage, tiptoeing around it.
holding our breath . We will it
away with a portfolio full of
diplomatic and strategic
plans to win Muslim hearts
and minds poisoned against
us by a see mingly unstaunchable tlow of 'disinformatio.n
- extreme. and extremely
toxic, to the point of lunacy.
And I mean ''lunacy." Many
of these people believe 9/11
was a ZionistcMossad-CIA
plot to twist world opinion
against the Arab world. And
what word better describes
t]Je weird , even grotesque
'political analysis coming out
of that core Arab institution ,
the government mosque?
Take the mosque s of the
Saddam Husse in -supporting
Palestinian Authority, whose
"road map" to statehood has
again been green-lighted by
British and American leaders
- even as coalition forces
ar~ still finding thei r position's to dislodge the Iraqi
dictator who is an inspiration
and paymaster to Pale stinian
homicide bombers.
''The aggression against
Iraq is an assault on Islam,
the Koran and the message of
Muhammad," said · Sheikh

Muhammad Abu AI-Hunud
durin g a recent sermon on
Palestinian Authority tel evision (tran sla ted by the
Middle East Media Research
Institute, . www.memri.org).
sounding a favorite theme of
the Arab world.
Terrori sts? Weapon s of
mass destruction? Never
heard oft hem. "The 0 .N. has
proven th.is claim is not true ...
said, (or lied, actual ly)
Sheikh Ibrahim Madeiris in
another' televised sermon.
Mosque ana lysis has it that
the American-led war is not
just a so-called oil-grab: it is
also a C&lt;!mpaign to pu t an
Arab chicken in every
American pot. The United
States is "enduring now ;in
economic crisis that nearl y
fini shes it," the imam added.
"Hence it has no choice but
to start a war ... to raise the
American standard of living. " May be when Briti sh
troops arc done handing out
water bottles in Basra, they
could be redeployed to Main
.Street. U.S.A.
·
Then there 's my personal
fave : .the "slap in the face
which Iraq gave America."
This is said to have occurred
during the first Gulf War,
"w hen," Madeiris expl;iined,
" Iraq gave · a knockout
(punch) to America, the
result of whith · was that
Pharaoh the father (the first
George Bush) lost the presidency."
·
Only heaven knows where
to begi n to pick apart this te rrible collection of lies. Not
that anyone is asking :
"Allah," Abu AI -Hunud

praye rfull y cotH:Iuded last
week. "make their ;JOS,CS·
sions a booty for the
Muslim s, All~h. annihilate
them and their weapons.
Allah. make their children
orphans ami the ir women
widows."

Such sermon izi ng. rneanwh ilc. repre sen ts · onl y a
microscopic look at some of
the milder sludge com ing
from the gove rnment pulpi t.
And how does America
wspond tu these and other
otfen,es '' As though truth
wouldn't set these people
free. but would set them otl
Much of the Arab world
says 9/11 was a Zionist plot''
Fine. we 'II scrounge the
world over, fro m Albani a w
Zanzihar, for alli es in the war
on Iraq . but bar Israel from
the "coalition .of the willing"
so as not to '·upset" anyone.
Hundreds of member' of PA
Chairman Yasser Arafat ·s
Fatah move ment ar~ heading
for Baghdad to serve as sui cide attackers for th e Iraqi
regime? The PAre 'ames the
main public squ are in Jcnin
for the suicide bomber who
detonated fo ur U.S. marines
at a checkpo int in Iraq·&gt;
Better ge t . moving on that
road map to Palestinian statehood (particularly now that
the PA has a new, Araratappointed prime minister
who is ·a Holocaust-denier)
- otherwise. they might not ·
like us.
I Djcma West is a columni.l't
fo r The Washingwn lim es.
She can be crmtarted l'ia
diwWII 'II'@attgloba/.net.)

KURDISH

the next morning, with the
three out cold, their stalag
mates tied them into chairs
and lined them up outside so
they wouldn 't miss roll call.
Neal laughs softl y at . the
story. which is smooth and
polished from rete ll ing. He
won't say much else about
the POW camp in Germany.
where he spe nt a year, or
about the 289-mile, 19-day
forced march that whittled
his body to Ill pounds .
- "Thi ngs happened so gross
I' wouldn •'t want to tell you.
thi'f1gs that would make your
stomach turn ,'' he says. "It
stays with you. This group
over in Iraq now will bringback sorne bad memnrie,.
Some of them wi ll crack
under the strain ."
He saw momentary video
clips of the POWs taken in
Iraq last week. He knew the
look of absolute fear. of wondering if a minute from now
you'll get a bu llet in the head.
"I thought , 'Oh those poor
guys. '" Nea I says.
He and Gamer say they
hate war, as they say any Feasonable person does, hut they
support the decision ,tO OUSt
Saddum and his weaponry.
"Better now than later.''

Garner says.
Yet they also know thl'lt the
men .and women fig hting
there wi ll return home
changed. They' II ca~ry pieces
of the war like shrapn el.
When Garner goes to Navy
reunions and talks 'about the
old days wi th hi s mates , he
says there · &lt;lre long minutes
when the group falls sil ent.
''You know everybody is
remembering . There ·arc ·
memories that just tear at
you. You don't even talk
abou t them to each other.
There are stories I have never
even told my wife . You live
with the m for the rest of your
life . They touch y&lt;•ur &gt;oul
forever:·
We think we're seeing ihe
war on television. But 60
years from now. when old
men sit around rewunting
the war in Iraq, they' ll fall
silent sometimes. too. like
Garner and Neal , remembering the stories that are never
told.
I Jocm Rwm is a coft~mnist
fur the . San Fr·ancisco
Chronit:le. Se111/ cotr/ll(('llts to
her iwi:are of Jilis neu•spaper
or sertd her e·trwil at jo(wr\'lmsjdr rmriclt'. ,·om. J

Incidents

reported

After hopeless diagnosis, teen emerges
from more than year-long coma
1

.
&lt;

...

•WIN•
2FIEEncms
SPIIIIIBIIWY
CIIIIEJIIJ
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'$ CLASSIFIED

SECTION AND WINl

IRAN

•

t;Jo11uk CONTROLLED
took control ;,·au Ain s~ Kurdish mil~ia took
the highways into
::1
Aln Slfr)l. U.S. aircraft
Civilian and Mosul . • 't.t&gt;il mtstakenty bombed a
.
K~lak
convoy of allied
casuaHieS
'
.
K
rdi h f' ht I
'
·
ustgersn
Russtan
northern Iraq, killing at
least 17 and wounding
caught in croiisfire
more than 45.
KUrdish allied
mistakenly bombed.
Sunday as U S Jorces

Local Briefs

Remembrance of wars past

'

Baghdad

¥

:

U.S. troops ·
exchanged fi re with
Airstrike
Iraqi forces; a
C·130 cargo plane
landed at the airport.
~. • Diwaniyah _
Iraqi troops slowed the
Najaf ;.
', "-·-\
advance of the 3rd ?""
IRAQ
~.'&lt;&gt;
Battalion, 4111 Marines
Nasiriyah
by disabling a bridge

0

south of Baghdad.

Between 2,000 and
Brtti9h forces made
3,000 Iraqi ftghters were their deepest push

kihed when two task
forces swept through the
southern outskirts of
Baghdad on Satorday,
a CeRtrat Command
official estimated.

into Basre wrth a
column of at least 40
armored personnel
carriers·and have set
up checkpoints for

Baby-sitting and mowing
lawns: Town helps families
Chemical
of soldiers sent to Iraq

In 1947, auto pioneer Henry Ford died in Dearborn, Mich.,
· -at age 83. ·
.
In 1948 , the World Health Organization was founded. ·
In 1957, the last of New York 's electric trolleys completed
·its final run from Queens to Manhattan.
· In 1966, the United States recovered a hydroge n bomb it
had lost off the coast of Spain.
•
· In 1969. the Supreme Court unanimou sly struck down laws
·prohibiting pri va te possession of obscene material.
In 1983, space shuttle astronauts Story Musgrave and Don
Peterson took the first U.S : space walk in almost a decade as
they worked ,in the open cargo bay of Challenger for nearly
four hours.
Ten years ago: European warplanes began arriving in Italy
in preparation for enforcing a no-tly zone over BosniaHerzegovi na.
..1
Five years ago: President Clinton held a town meeting in
Kansas City, Mo ., on the future of Social Security. Mary
Bono, the widow of entertainer-turned-politician Sonny Bono,
won a special election to serve out the remainder of her1lllsband ·s congressional term.
One year ago: Israe li troops,fought fierce battles with
Palestinians in the West Bank, en'countering stiff resistance in
the Jenin refugee' camp and in Nablus. Actor John Agar died
Eyen 60 years later, they
'
in Burbank, California, at.age-81-. -.
can ' t speak of things they
Today \ Birthdays: Actor R.G. Armstrong is 86. Sitar playsaw during the War. They are
..
er Ravi Shankar is 83. Actor James Garner is 75. Country
old men now. One carves
. gorgeous duck decoys in his
s.inger Cal Smith is 71. Actor Wayne Rogers is 70. Actor Ian
Richardson is 69. Media commentator Hodding Carter the
retirement, and still hunts
Joan
Third is 68. Country singer ~obby Bare is 68. Rh ythm-andand fi shes. The other has
Ryan
blues singer Charlie Thomas (The Drifters) is 66. Jazz musibeen Slowed by heat1 problems.
.
cian Freddie Hubbard is 65. The mayor of Oakland, Calif.,
They watch the images
Jerry Brow n, is 65. Mov ie director Francis Ford Coppola is
64. Television personality David Frost is 64. Singer Patricia
flow on television of another
Bennett (The Chiffons) is 56. Singer John Oates is 54. Singer
generation of troops wHo are
Jan is Jan is 52. Count ry musician John Dittrich is.52. Rock
much like they were. Young. nearby. Neal served in the
musician Bruce Gary is 5 1. Actor Jack ie Chan is 49 .. Football
Scared. Proud. Horrified. Army during World War II.
Hall-of-Farner Tony Dorsett -is49. Actor Russell Crowe is 39.
The sorting-out process, sep- working as a gunner on B ~
Rhythm-and-blues singer Mark Kibble (Take 6) is 39. Actor
arating the haunting from the 5 1s over Germany. Garner
·Bill Bellamy is 38.
beautiful , the ex hilarating · was a boatswam mthe Navy.
Thought for Today: "Vox populi .. vox humbug.·· (The voice..,, from the gruesome. cont!n- fightmg m the Pac tftc. They
of the people is the voice of humbug.). _ Gen . William T.
ues sti ll, as tf the memones recall the most minute details
Shermao. Union military leader ( 1820- 189 1).
of their experiences. like
1 are so extreme ~nd ~ontradt C·
·
·
tory they don t shp neatly baseball heroes recounting
- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - -"''-'into the brai n's filing system . the particulars of every
Yet Bill Neal. the decoy game.
·
carver. says . of his military
They share mostly the
service, "It was the greate$1 funny stories and. the stories
c;x perience in the world." He about famous battles. Garner
Ever ye ll at your television set? Ever read someth ing in ·the
is a little hard of hearing and tells how he served with all
newspaper that gets your dander up'
speaks softly, as if accus- three generations of McCain
Next time you get the ur~e to express your opinion, pick up the
telephone and call The Dmly Sentinel's new "Speak Out'' hne.
tomed to the quiet of his own men, first in World War II.
c.Qmpany. William Garner then Korea and Vietnam . He
Speak Outline callers need not give their name. They must,
nods.
,.
talks about Guadalcanal and
however. follow a few simple rules - be brief (call s are lim"I think it makes you a bet- the sinking of the USS
ited to two minu tes ), no profanity, no personal attacks on inditer man," Neal continues.
Atlanta and two Ji ma. Neal
vidual s.
'
'
We' re sitting at a table in tells of the three fellow
The "Speak Out" line is open only. after 5 p.m. each day. Do
an empty room of the POWs who made their own
not. call "Speltk Out" during regular business hours.
Margaret Todd Senior Center liquor out of dried fruit and
To call "Speak Out." dial the Sentinel's main number (740)
in Novato. Calif. Both live sugar and got so drunk that
992-2156 and then dial extension 29. Begin talking at the tone.

SPEAK OUT!

Airstrtkes continued l.,_

NEW HAVEN - · Robert
S. Weaver, 76, of New
Haven, died Saturday AprilS,
2003 at home, following an
extended illness.' He was a
home Christian for the Lord.
Robert was born on
November 23, 1926 in
Mayfield, DeKalb County,
IlL son of the late Hobart
~ussell Weaver and the late
Ruie Louise Roush Weaver.
He is survived by his wife
of 52 years, Aleta Snyder
Weaver of New Haven ;
daughter and her husband,
Linda and David Spencer of
Racine; son and hi s fiancee,
Tony R. Weaver and Helen
Berkley of, New Haven;
grandson, Joshua Weaver, Members of Cameron Baptist Church 's deployed family support group ministry mows the
granddaughter,
Selena yard of a soldier deployed overseas Thursday, in Lawton , Okla. The ministry mows the yards
Spencer; sister, Leona Cruey for spouses of deployed soldiers and helps out with any other needs they might have . (AP)
of Hawthorne, Fla.; ·and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents,
he was preceded in death by
his sister Helen Tryon, brothers, Leland Weaver, Lavern
Weaver, foster Weaver, and
Warren (Gene) Weaver.
Weaver retired from
Laborer Local 534 of
.. ,
Huntington, W." Va. He was a
lifetime ·member of the BY KEU.Y KURT
the families ot the 3,000 in the ·communit y that the
American Legion Post 140 of S_ta_ff _w_ri_te:._r_ _ _ _ _ _ _ troops deployed ,SO far have city council once held its
New Haven and a life mem- stayed, they said .
meeting on the post.
ber pf the Veterans of Foreign
Asked how many anti-war
They find a community
LAWTON, Okla. (AP) -· cocoon so pro:military protests Lawton has seen,
Wars Post 9926 of Mason,
W.Va .. He served in the Sami Roberts saves her tears Lawton 's mayor describes the Mayor Cecil Powell stifles a
United States Army and he for work, where her 18- window-jarring explosions of gnn .
was a World War II veteran. month-old son can't see them practice artillery fire as ''free··zero," he said. "We are a
·and
her
superviS
or,
a
Gulf
Graveside funeral services
dom bells ringin g in our military . town. We are citi with military funeral honors War veteran, understands.
ears.''
zens of the United States and
When her husband went to
conducted by the American
They're close to medical we arc at war. And I support
Legion and the V.F.W, will be w·ar two weeks ago, she con- care on the post, and get war that I00 percent."
Established in 1869 to stop
on Tuesday Aprit 8, 2003 at sidered taking her worries upd ate~ on the phone. They
2:30
p.m. at Sunrise home to tiny Mentone, Texas. attend classes at Fort Sill Indians from raiding settleCemetery. In lieu of flowers, But ~ven though her only link where they learn about tinan- ments. the post is home to the
please make a memorial con- to this Anny town is go ne, the cial planning or dealing with U.S. Field Artillery Training
tribution to a charity of your town's embrace ,is giving her round-the-clock war cover- Command and the 3rd Corps
reason to stay.
age. While Fort Si II offers Artillery. Iraqis knew it in
choice .
''I
have
found
more
people
support , groups to help them 1991 by its "steel rain," thouArrangements are under
supportive
than
not,"
said
.cope, Lawton churches offer sands of submunitions delivthe direction of Anderson
Roberts,
29.
"I
just
come
in
volunteers to help them mow ered by rockets from a single
Funeral Home, New Haven.
and
say,
'OK
guys,
I'
m
havlauncher.
their
lawns.
An on-line registry is availing
a
bad
day.'''
Phil Sperling left a wife
The
Army
urges
families
to
able at www.andersonfu.com.
• During the Gulf War, fami- stay because it believes they and three children behind
lies of troops deployed from can better cope within a net- when he deployed from Fort
nearby Fort Sill scattered. No work of other supportive mil- Sill to the Persian Gulf in
one has an exact comparison, itary families.
1991.
but Fort Sill officials said far
Even before the first
"Your family can provide
lbombs
fell this time on Iraq,
fewer are opting to leave this love and encliuragement, but
time ..
they can 't reall y connect," he he lped organize volu nThe post has already seen said Bob McElroy, a Gulf teers from his church to aid
its share of grief from the.war. War veteran and Fort S iII deployed soldiers' families.
Like other churches in
Three soldiers from the spokesman. "The emotional
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell same Fort Sill artillery unit and moral support they can Lawto n, volunteers from
reported the followmg investi- were killed Thursday in what ?et from other families is just Cameron Baptist Church are
offering to baby -sit and do
gations, by incident, in March: the military described to mvaluable."
alarm, 1; animal complaints; 2; some family members as a
Fort Si ll sprawls across whatever else is needed.
assault, 3; attempted breaking "friendly fire" incident appar- 94,000 acres· dotted wi th They he Iped Roberts with a
and entering, I; breaking and ently involving a coalition flaming pink redbud trees door she wasn't sure how to
entering, 8; breaking and enter- aircraft · that bombed a and shadowed by the fi x. They fo und a temporary
ing, vandalism/theft, I; bur- Bradley fighting vehicle.
Medicine Bluffs. It flanks home for a deployed couglary, 2; possible burglary, I;
An esti~ated 80 percent of Lawton but is so embedded ple's 3-month-old Rottweiler.
consent to search, 2; criminal
damaging, 9; criminal damaging/theft, I ; cri,rninal mischief,
8; criminal trespassing, I.
Damage from . weather, I ;
disonderly conduct, I; disonderly by intoxication, I; drugs. I;
dead on arrival, 7; domestic
violence, 28; domestic vioTUSTIN , Calif. (AP) - A Tustin Hospital and Medical pressure inside her skull and
lence/a~gravated menacing, I;
teenager defied · a hopeless Center and for the first time developed new neuro logical
domestic violence/criminal prognosis and awoke from a in it year, her daughter turned pathways to make up for
damaging, I; Driving under the coma she slipped into more her head toward the sou nd . ones she lost when · half her
influence/driving under sus- than a year ago after giving
"I just froze," Eva Diaz brain
was
surgically
pension/criminal damaging, I; birth.
said, choking .back tears. removed.
3;
DUIIDUS/possession,
Doctors had to ld Je ssica "The nurses came, and I They wa nt to get Je ssica
DUI!reckless operation, I; fail- Diaz's mother, Eva Diaz. she said. ' She turned her head! into aggressive physical,
ure to control, I; failure to reg- would never awake from the She moved '' They said, 'Go occupational and speech
ister, I ; failure to register coma . But now with help. on, Mom. Go, go." '
therapy.
address, 3.
·
She said she never gave up
Jessica Diaz can lift her
she can cuddle her son Julio
Felony escape, I; felony · Jr. and touch · his face . She on her daughter, even when arms. but she can't smi le.
vandalism, I; fighting, 4; even gave a television inler· doctors told .her Jessica was talk or walk . .She communi fraud, I; harrassment, 8; litter- view on Sunday.
likel y to die from medul- cates mostly by rolling her
ing, I; mailbox vandalism, 6;
Diaz, then 17, gave birth labl asto ma , a particularly eyes back: once for no. twice·
man with gun, I : menacing · on Jan. 13, 2002. She could virulent brain tumor,
·· for yes.
- · threats, 2; mental illness, 2; risk hardly see her newborn
Doctors said Je ssica Diaz
of harm to self, I ; road rage, I; because a brain tumor had probably emerged fro m the
robbery, I; runaway, I; search blinded one eye and coma because her brain
warrant, I; shots fired, I; stolen obscured vision in the other. became accustomed to the
vehicle, I; storm damage, I; But she held her son, named
attempted suicide, I; suicide, 2; after boyfriend Julio Ortiz,
suicide threat, I; suspicious and told him she .would be
tJersonlvehicle, 3; telephone back later to take care of
harrassment, 5.
·
him.
SHOWN ON
Theft, 21; theft of medicines,
SAT &amp; SUN ONLY
Doctors removed a fast·
BOX OFFICE OPENS
2; theft of license plates, I; growing. tumor a day after
6:30 PM MON·FRI &amp;
theft of four-wheeler, I; she gave birth. Within 10
threats, 3; traffic/damage to minutes of surgery, Jessica
vehicle, · I; trespassing, 2; became comatose. · '
undemge co nsump~on, l;
But last Tuesday, Eva Diaz
unsecured load, I; vandalism, knocked on the open door of
I0; vandalism/theft, I: viola- her daughter 's room at
tion of protective order. 2.

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

•

~oaJition ~ircles

Weaver

. '111 Court Str~et • Pomeroy, Ohio

NATIONAL VIEW

Page

OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM: DAY 19

RobertS.

•

.

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

The Daily Sentinel•

Pomeroy/Middleport, OhiO

Monday, April 7, 2003

The Daily Sentinel
.

Monday, April 7, 2003 ·

the first time.

T

Pam • • ':':'

ANGER MANAGEMENT

a

-

NEW YORK (AP) - Two
teenagers o n a subw ay train
harassed anoth.er passenger
who they believed was gay,
and one even videotaped the
incident, police said.
Dani el
Jamile
and
Nkrumah Ajomajberi n, both
17, were arrested Saturday
ni ght on charges of menacing , resistin g arrest and
obstructing
gove rnment
administration,
said
Detecti ve Cheryl Crispin, a
police spoke swoman .
The teens confro'nted the
24-year-old New Jersey man

j ust
before
midnight
Saturday on a -subway train
111 midtown Manhattan ,
polic e said , They yelled
an ti -gay threats, and one
tau1nt ed the man with a
light er while the other
wielded the camera, police
said.
. Officers arres ted Jamile
and Ajomajberin at .the
Times Square subway stati on and seized the camera.
Detectives were reviewing
the videotape .

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Two teens accused of
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released a video they said had
been smuggled out of southern
Iraq." fn the video, which was
shown on several Arab TV netfrom Page A1
works, ai-Majid was seen exeAI- Majid was a warrant offi- cuting captured rebels with piscer and motorcycle messenger tol shots to the head and kicking
in the army before Saddam's otl1ers in the face as they sat on
Baath party led a coup in 1968. the ground.
He was no less brutal with his
He was promoted to general
own
family.
and served as defense minister
His
nephew and Saddam's
from 1991-95, as well as a
regional party leader. 1 ,..
. son-in-law, Lt. Gen. Hussein
In 1988, as the 1980-88 Iran- Kamel, was in charge for many
Iraq war was winding down, he years of Iraq 's clandestine
commanded a scorched-earth weapons programs before
campaign to wipe out a Kurdish defecting in 1995 to Jordan
rebellion in northern Iraq. Later, with his brother, Saddam
he boasted about the attacks, Kamel, who was married to
including the March 16, 1988, Saddam 's other daughter.
Both brothers were lured
poison gas strike on the village
back
to Iraq in Febniary 1996
of Halabja, where an estimated
and
killed
on their uncle's
5,000 people died.
During April 1991 peace orders, together with seveml
talks in Baghdad, the Kurdish other family members. ·
Syria and Lebanon ignored
delegation
leader,
Jalal
Talabani , told ai-Majid that international calls to arrest aimore than 200,000 Kunds lost Majid when he visited in
their lives in the Iraqi cam- January. He dropped seheduled
paign. AI-Majid replied that the stops in Jordan and Egypt - .
figure was exaggerated and the both U.S. allies. Egypt refused
dead were not more . than to receive him and the
I00,000, according to Arab Jondanian government denied a
visit was ever planned.
press reports.
Associated Press writer
After Iraq 's 1991 Shiite
Muslim uprising was crushed, Maamoun Youssef contributed
Iraqi
opposition . groups to this report from Cairo, Egypt.

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I IIWIIIIIr 11 Ullallln 11:111111 P111 fir Yl. . P111111

~ Plants

(,
C 2003 by VICki Whiting, Ed~or

WeelliJ Wrldn~
Corner V"'"

El
~

Dawn Armato-Brehm &amp; Sheny Aak, Illustration &amp; Design

'

Best Book
of the Summer

Summer is a great time to read,
read, READ! Help other Kid
Scoop readers pick.out some goo)()1
reads by writing about y0ur
favorite book.
Deadline: May 4, 2003
Published: Week of June I, 2003
Send )'our $/on· to:
-0-t:!n UICkerson

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825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Please Include your school and grade.

Tr Somerville
St.te F•nn lnsur•nu
Point Pleasant,. WV
Sponsors of: Mrs. DoeHinger'~ Jrd grade class
North Point Elementary
·

Point

Ph~21sant,

Amllfkln Electric Power • G•vin pt•nt
Cheshire, OH
Sponsors of: Ms. Crum's 3rd grade dass
Addaville Elementary
Addison, OH

Toler &amp; Taler
Insurance Services
Gallipolis, OH
,
Sponsors of: Mrs. Perry's 3rd grade class
Rio Grande Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

a,s needed.

~ When your sunflowers bloom,

Skylinl!' Lanes
Callipolis,' OH
~::::: of: Sandra Walker's 3rd grade class
~
Elememary
Pomeroy, Ohio

ill you will have a special playhouse
to enjoy. Encourage the morning
glories
up the sunflower
stalks.

Bu,keye Rural Electric Co~op
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Be&lt;lcy Woodyard's 3rd grade class
Southwestern Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

Mr.

Caterpillar follow
the path through
If you add up all but one
of the numbers on the
sunflower petals you will
get the number in the
center for an answer

mat into the

Cross out the extra nnmlneirl ll
from each flower. ·

ltio Tire
Rio Gnsnde, OH
Sponsors of : Phyllis Brandenberry's 3rd grade class
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Holzer cnnt&lt;

Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sheila Bevins' 3rd grade class

~:::::~~~ ~~enta"'

Link: Number Sense :
------------iii;j:;~~~a~~~=::: ~;;;;;;;j~;:;;p;;ii;;&amp;;;;. l ....Star\dordo
7'~~~~s~u~m~sr,to;;;7o;·iil;,-..J·l l

The~
of
ry

Holzer
Clinic
Gallipolis,
OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ours' 3rd grade class..
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Fl

A news story starts
with the "seed" of
an idea called a
" lead." It tells who,
what, when and where.

Hol1er Clink
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Little's 3'rd grade class
Central Elementary
Poi nt Pleasant WV

Vau....n'$

Su~rm.rket

M iddleport. OH
Sponsors of: Sandy Needs' 3rd grade class
Eastern Elementary
Middleport OH

Read a news story
with a friend and
identify the lead.
Write the facts
the lead on the
picture of the seed.

Vaush•n's Supermarket
Mid&lt;tleport. OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Struble's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
M iddleport, OH

Read the story formore details. Write
a detai I next to each
of the plants leaves.

•····""-' ' "

Darr..l Norris •nd Marshall Roush Grt~enhouses
Letart Falls. Ohio
Sponsors of : Ms. Hoher's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport, OH

Standards Link:
idea, facts and

.J)[ixed-up

..;plant

Cut out the pictures of the growing plant and put them
in order from seed to grown-up plant.

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~--------L--------L--------J
Standarda Unka: Life Science: Students know the

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lanls.

SUNFLOWER
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HEAVENLY
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CLIMB
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LONGER

Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this weel\.'s Kid Scoop
stories and activities.

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M 0 R N I

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I It Morrison &amp; Associates

T MN y

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T R E ·N

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H E D A

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E D R A G

Jivtden's Power Equipm11nt
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Davenport's 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH
Edward Jones Investments
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Sara SpuriO&lt;:k's 3rd grade class
Vinton Elementary .
Vinton, OH

E p A W L 0 A M E N
E .R

PageBl ·

0 R
H

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Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mfs. Fellure's 3rd. grade class
Hannan Trace Elementary •
Mercerville, OH

Letart Corporation
Gallipolis Ferry, VW
Sponsors of: A 3rd grade ctass
Beale Elementary Gallipolis Ferry, WV

Women's Basket_,.ll Tum
Se.ndlirds Link: LeHer sequencing. Recognizing identical
words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling panems.

Scoa

of Rio Gr•nde
~io
, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Price 's lrd gn1de class
Washington Elementar")'
Gallipolis, OH

Ohio V•lley Tec:h Prep
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of : Mrs. Saunders' 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
•
Bidwell, OH

Plants and Me
~!look through the newspaper for pictures
of plants and things that come from plants.
Make a list of how plants contribute to
your life.

Ohio Velley Tec:h Prep
Gallipol is, OH
Sponsors of : Mrs. Short's Jrd gritde dass
Addt~ville Elementary
Addaville. OH

Standard• Link : Life Science: Students recognize that plants ~re
producers and provide many resources .

Ohio Valley Tec:h Prep
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: lou Ann Shawver's 3rd grade class
G•~n E_lementa'Y

My Magic Seed
One day, I planted a seed. I didn ' i know it was magic, until! saw what grew from it. No one would believe me, but this is what happened. One afternoon, in the summer, I was at the pool. I swam and swam and swam until I felt some tiny beads underneath my feet. At least, I thought they were beads.
Turns out, they were magic seeds. I still thought they were beads. I went home, put the seeds outside in a flowerpot. The next morning when I went outside to feed my_outside cat, the seeds had grown into a castle! Right in my yard f I knocked on the door and it mysteriousl_y opened._ ! saw a candle floatmg around. I tned to get tt. but a gente appeared! I asked If I could make 3 w1shes and he satd he could grant ail my wtshes! I wished for 50 cats and
20 dogs. For my Mom a new car and a million dollars. I wished for a pot of gold and a servant and a mansion with 17 floors. I hope I find another one!
Alyssa Nelson, Washington Elementary
Mrs. Ours 3rd Grade

'

For more information on becoming a classroom sponsor, contact Den Dickerson at (740) 44&amp;-1341

Meigs
opens
.track
s,eason

Prep baseball

Southern splits·with
Symmes Valley
BY SCOTT -WoLFE ~ ·
Sports correspondent

WILLOW WOOD _ After '
dropping the opener 15-3 on
the mercy rule the Southern
Tornadoes carr:e back strong
in the nightcap to claim a 126 win ove r the Symmes
Valley Vikings to split the
twin bill Saturday in nonleague
baseball
action .
Symmes Valley is 5- I and
Southern is 2-4.
Southern wa s out of the
first game from the get-go
with only five hits in the
mercy-rule 15-3 defeat.
Southern hitters were Wes
Burrows a sing le, Marnhoul a
single, Yeauger two singles,
and Curt Crouch a double.
Symmes hitters were Rice,
Bland, Burcham, ~nd Artrip
with two hits and three by
Holland. Rice ·and Holland
each had home runs.
· Two home runs in the second inning sparked a. 10-ru n
frame for the Vikings. 10-0.
Southern pitching by cornmittee included Wes Burrows,
Jordan Bass, and Ju stin
Connolly. They combined for
six st rikeouts, four walks, and
14 hits.
Chase Higgins was the winning pitcher. He fanned six
and walked six.
In the second game,
Southern benefited from four
home runs, two by B.J .
Marnhout, and single dingers
from Joey Phillips and
Jeremy Yeauger, who went 4-

Bv JtM SouL.SBY
Sports correspondent

wv

Home NatioN! B.tnk
Racine, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. McNickle's lrd grade class
South@fn Elementary
Radne, OH

the welcome

•

Monday, April 7, 2003

When the days start to
get longer-and warmer, many people start to
think about spring and gardening. Here is a simple
garden project that grows into a sumrnert:lme playhouse.

Help

Reds win sans Junior, Page 82
Tigers continue to lose, Page 82
8oehelm, Williams unfazed, Page 83
UConn, Tennessee again,
. Page 83

The Daily Sentinel

Vol. 19 No.

1

summer,

Inside:

POMEROY - The Meigs
Marauder boys and girls ·
track teams opened their season Friday night by participating in the 14th BuJ!dog
Relays at Athens High
School.
The Mei gs girl s finished in
fifth place with 25 points and
the boys tied for seventh with
Jackson with seven points. ·
Warren all(] Marietta dominated both divisions with the
Warren teams both taking
first places and the Tiger runners capturing second.
The Marauder girls placed
third in the 4 X 400 relay
with a time of 4:33.3. Megan
Garnes, Emi ly Story. Brook
Bolin and Shannon Soulsby
made up the Marauder quartet.
The 4x200 of team of
Bolin. Soulsby. Garnes and
Cassie Lee placed fourth with
a time of I :57.4. The same
four Marauder girls advanced
to regional competition last
season.
The Long Di stan ce Medley
Relay saw the Meigs gir ls
capture fifth place with Story,
Soul sby. Andrea Burdette
and Ash ley Savage running·
for the maroon and ·go ld .
Bolin , Garnes, Lee and
Ashley Samar finished fourth
in the Sprint ·Medley Relay
with a time of 2:07.5.
Burdette. Savage. Lee and
Samar combined to fini sh
fifth in th e Distance Medley
Relay posting a time of
12:25.7 .
.
. Soul sby, Bolin and Samar
finished third in the Long
Jump competition with a distance of 38 feet ti 3/4 inches.
The Meig s boys took
·fourth in the Long Jump with
Ryan Stobart, Gary Moore
and Sebastian Kai ser combining for a distance · of 47
feet4 1/2 inches.
The Meigs boys took fifth
in the. 4x I00 relay with a time
of 49.0. Joe Howard , Jerem y
Roush. Stobart and Kaiser
ran for the Marauders.
The Marauders finished
sixth in the discus competition with a combined distance of 24 7feet 8 3/4 inches.
Roush. Josh Buzzard and
Zach Gibbs did the throwing
for Meigs.
Warren, Marietta, Jackson ,
Athens, Crooksvi lle, Federal
Hocking a~d River Valley
also competed in the meet.
Meigs will ~ompele at
Ri ver Valley on.Tuesday.

Sorenstam wins
· LOS ANGELES (AP) Annika Sorenstam "shot a 1under-par 71 in the final
round Sunday to win the
Office Depot Championship
by four strokes. Defending
champion Se Ri Pak, Pat
Hurst and Heather Bowie fintshed tied for second.

Wallace injured ·
AUBURN .HILLS , Mich .
(AP) - Detroit Pistons forward Ben Wallace went down
with a sprained knee ligament late in the fir st half
against San Antonio on
_ Sunday.
Wallace was to undergo an
MRI exam today.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. reacts in Victory Lane as he celebrates his fourth consecutive win
Sunday at the Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala. Earnhardt had just won the
NASCAR Aaron's 499 race. (AP)

Earnhardt wins record
fourth Talladega race
BY JENNA FRYER

Associated Press
TALLADEGA, Ala. _
The record book will only
show that Dale Earnhardt Jr.
won four straight races at
Talladega Superspeedway.
Some of his rivals wonder if
the feat de serves an asterisk.
Earnhardt used a contraversial pass to take the lead
in the Aaron's 499 on
Sunday, driving below the
yellow line at Talladega .
with four taps to go as his
Chevrolet went ahead of
Matt Kenseth.
NASCAR didn't penalize
him - as it has done with
several other drivers since
impl ementing the rule in
July 200 1 -and Earnhardt
' went on to his record fourth
consecutive
wm
at
Talladega.
" He was clearly below the
yellow line," said Jimmie
Johnson, who was behind
Earnhardt and Kenseth.
"Anybody else who dances
down there gets in trouble.
From my vantage point, 1
didn't think it was a legal
&gt; pass."
With a huge "grin on hi s
face and still wearing hi s
. beer-soaked
firesuit.
Earnhardt dismissed any
suggestion of preferential
treatment while savoring hi s
latest tamin g of Talladega.
"Thi s is definitely the
sweetest, regardless of the
controversy of going below
the line or whatever," he
said.
There's
no
doubt
Earnhardt "had to work for

this win, his first of th e year
and eighth of hi s career.
Crew members overslept
after forgetting to reset their
clocks. Hi s engine had to be
replaced before the start of
the race, forcing him to go
to the rear of the 43 _car
field at the start.
And ·he had to avoid the
27-car accident .three laps
into the race, driving
through the i~fieldto miss it
while collectmg shght damage to his Chevrolet.
But all that was forgotten
across the gara~e as dnvers
and crew chiefs wondered
why Earnhardt Jr. was not
pena~Ized for.dnvtng below
the hnc .. Crossmg onto the
apron to tmprove tr~ck posttton IS Strictly prohibited at
Talladega and Daytona, and
the
sa nctioning
body
warned all driv ers before
the race it would be watching closely for such moves.
NASCAR even e_nforced
it on Sunday, penali zing
Steve Park, Earnhardt's
teammate, for crossing the
line to make a pass earlier in
the race.
So when Earnhardt did it,
the cars running behind him
all waited to see the blackflag. When it never came,
runner-up Kevin Harvick 's
team had radioed NASCAR
and .denlanded a review of
the call.
NASCA.R watched the
tape and spokesman Jim
Hunter said officials stood
by the calL
.
"There is not a shadow of
a doubt he ,was below the
yellow line," Hunter said.

"However, in our judgment.
he had already improved hi s
position and was past
(Kenseth) when he went
down there."
Earnhardt acknowledged
going below the line, but he
agreed with NASCAR that
he had already passed
Kensetli .
" I can honestly say if I did
anything wrong, I would be
th e fir st driver to admit it,"
he said. "I know in roy heart
of heart s I did not go below
the line to improve posilion. "

Elliott Sadler, who was
right behind . Earnhardt.
believed Earnhardt had to
go below the ye llow line to
avoid hitting Kenseth.
·•t was the 0 ne pushing
him and · th ey ran him
down,:· Sadler said. "He had
to do that or cause a big
wreck, so it was a smart
move."
The rest or the garage saw
it differently. and numerous
crew chiefs were lined up
outside
the . NASCAR
hauler looking for 'an explanation on the rule.
"I guarantee you if my
driver went an inch below
the line, he would have been
black -flagged ," said , Todd
Berrier, Harvick 's crew
chief. 'The rule is below the
yellow line. it doe sn't matter if it's two tires or four
tires."
•
But the wind will stand,
moving Earnhardt past
Buddy · Baker 's record of
three straight Talladega
wins. Baker won twice in
19,75 and once in 1976.

4 in the·nightc1rp.
Other Southern hitters were
Jordan Hill who went 3-5
with a double, Marnhout 3-4,
J~ey Phillips 3-3, Adam Ball
With a smgle, and Ju sttn Allen
a double .
.
For Symmes, Gtlmore had
two smg le s~ Ptnkerman a
double and smgle •. Holland a
single_. Bland a smgle,_ Will
two smgles, Chaffin a s!ngle, ·
and Rtce a double and smg l7. ·
Southern took a 1-0 lead m
the ntghtcap when Marnhout
hammered hi s first homer,
then the Tornadoes rallied for
a 4-0 lead on &lt;IIead-off double to Jordan Hill and a tworun shot QY Marnhout.
. Southern added a _later run
In the frame on a trto of smgles by Phillips, Yeauger, and
an RBI version by Adam Ball,
the score 4-0.
Symmes cut the lead to 4-2
when freshman hurler Dustin
Brinegar came in in the 5th to
relieve Justin Allen, who
pitched a bnlhant first half.
Allen go the win; striking
out three and hitting one in
four innings for the win . .
Brinegar came on to get his
first varsity save, strikin~ out
two, walking two and gtving
up six hits as Southern's
offense rallied behind him t'o
push the lead to 12-6 at the
finish.
Gilmore suffered the loss,
fanning eight and · walking
four, while giving up 17 hits.
Southern ho sts Eastern
today.

Prep softball

Tornadoes rally' to
earn split with Vikes
BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent
WILLOW WOOD - The
battle between two of the
area's premier teams ended in
a deadlock after Symmes
Valley stored a come-frombehind win in the first game,
5-1 , setting the stage for a 3-2
Southern victory in the nightcap of an afternoon doubleheader at Symmes Field. Both
clubs are now 4-2 overall.
Symmes Valley took advan tage of two Southern errors in
the first game to break a I:d•
SHS lead in .the third inning.
In that frame , Mandy Estep
singled, and with one out
Cassie Myers singled, then a
double error allowed two runs
to score. After another out
Kay.la Bowman singled a run ,
and Rebecca Cooper singled
Bowman home, for a 4-1
Symmes lead.
Southern had scored in the
. first when Deana Pullins led
off with
walk and after
siealing second scored on
Katie 5ayre's' RBI single.
Symmes added a si ngle r~n
in the fifth-when Lori Harmon
doubled and advanced, then
scored on pair of ground outs.
the score 5-1 .
After the first inning,
Symmes pitcher Lori Harmon
was tough on the Tornado hitters , fanning 14 in her quest
for the win . She walked five
and gave up only one and the
Symmes defense was perfect
behind her with no errors .
Rachel Chapman got the
start for the Tornadoes and
pitched well , but the two
errors in the third inning stilled her chances for the win.
Freshman Bethany Riffle

a

came on in relief and pitched
two fine innings. They combine(! for four walks, no strike
outs, and gave up seven hits.
Southern hitters were Katie ·
Sayre and Brigette Barnes.
Symmes Valley hitters were
Cassie Myers with two singles, and singles by Lori
Harmon, Kayla Bowman,
Rebecca Capper. Erin Martin,
and Mandy Estep.
In the second game,
Southern started the first just
like in the previ"ous contest,
sco ring a run in the first on
back-to-back doubles by
Katie Sayre and Brooke
Kiser. Meanwnile, Chapman
re-established herself as the
pitcher in control of the game.
Chapman faced just one batter over the minimum in the
last four innings in buckling
d~wn to complete the no-hit
Will.

In the third inning, Symmes
Valley 's first batter reacl~ed
1
on an error but was out o~
fielder's choice that let
Mandy Estep climb aboard.
After
Chapman
fanned
Coomes, Cassie Myers turned
a misplayed ball into a 3-base
error that brought home
Coomes, Lori Harm on then
reached on an oveithrow that
allowed home the go-ahead
run and yet another error put
runners on the corners. A pop-up to short e nded the
inning with Symmes leading
2-1.
In the fourth and fifth
innings, Southern went down
J·-2-3, but in the sixth Katie
Sayre led off with a walk and
Brooke Kiser laid down a perfect bunt and beat it out for a
hit as Kristiina Williams, run-

Please see Southem, B3

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Mt~rge Gibbs' lrd grade
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�Page 82 •

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The DailySentinel

Monday, April 7, 2003

Monday, April 7, 2003 ·

www.mydailytribune.com

'

'
www.mydailytribune.com

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The Daily Senti.'lei • Page B3
•

NCAA Men's Tourney

National League

American League

Reds win first
game,without Jr.

Terrible Tigers off to ·Williams, Boeh~im maintain
despite
hype
another·awful start perspective
.

Sean Casey provided a
happy ending to Cincinnati's
miserable opening homesland at Great American Ball
Park.
Casey drove in three runs
and hit a tiebreaking solo
homer in the eighth inning
for a 5-4 victory over the
Chicago Cubs on Sunday.
The Reds lost their first
three games at their new stadium and then lost star Ken
Griffey Jr. to a dislocated
right shoulder on Saturday.
Casey 's
homer
~ave
Cincinnati its second wm in
six games on the homestand.
"It's been crazy," Casey
said. "Even the exhibition
games. it was almost a playoff atmosphere. Not being
able to win the ffrst three
games was tough.
"There was a lot of weird
things, and Griff is on everyone's mind right now."
Tests found no fracture or
damage to Griffey's rotator
cuff. A team doctor said
Sunday that Griffey will try
to rehabilitate without
surgery and could be back in
six-to-10 weeks.
The Houston-St. Louis
.
game was rained out.
Griffey has been repeatedly sidelined by injuries since
he returned to his hometown
team in a February 2000
trade with Seattle.
He pulled a hamstring during that first season, thim
tore the same hamstring during an exhibition game in the
final week of spring training
2001. Six games into last
season, he tore a tendon in
his right knee.
He worked hard over the
winter to build up his legs,
and seemed determined to
prove thilt he's still one of
baseball's best.
Cincinnati fell behind 4-0,
but Kerry Wood couldn't
hold it. The Reds used a pair
of homers to get their first
come-from-behind victory.
Casey's tiebreaking homer
came off Mark Guthrie (0-l ).
Gabe White (1-0) got the victory with I 113 innings in
rehef. Scott Williamson got
the save, retiring Sammy Sosa
on a double play to end it.

red for the Yankees, who con- their consec utive World
cluded a season-opening road Series championship seasons.
5-l. New York has out- The Twins have scored only
Alan Trammell was expect- trip
ed to bring a winning tradi- homered its opposition 15-2. 20 runs in six games.
tion back to the Detroit
Tigers . .
No sign of progress yet.
The Tigers became the first
team in 40 years to open 0-6 ·
At
Baltimore,
Shea
in consecutive seasons, giving
At Arlington, Texas, Edgar
up nine runs in the eighth Hillenbrand homered, douinning of a 10-2 road loss to bled twice and had a career- Martinez homered and Dan
the Chicago White Sox on high six RB!s as Boston ·Wilson, just off the disabled
Sunday.
roughed up Rodrigo Lopez list, hi t an RBI single on the
. "I can stand up and take it. (0- 1).
first pitch he saw this season
It's an 0-6 start. We'll keer,
Nomar Garciaparra home- as Seattle jumped on Ch.~n Ho
battling, I can tell you tllat, '
Park (0-2) early.
said Trammell , the Tigers' red, scored four runs and fell
Freddy
Garcia
( 1-1)
a single short of the cycle.
rookie manager.
bounced
back
from
his
poor
to
become
the
20th
Bidding
The New York Mets were
the last team te lose their first Boston player to hit for the first start, allowing just two
six games in back-to-ba_ck cycle, Garciaparra flied out in run s and three hits in 6 1-3
seasons. They did it in 1962 the eighth.
innings despite six walks. .
and 1963 -· their first two
Hillenbrand has 15 RBis in
seasons - according to the ·seven games. Manny Ramirez
Elias Sports Bureau, base- drove in two runs and extendball's statistician.
ed his hitting streak to 20
Detroit began 0- I I last year games, matching a career
and finished 55-I 06. tying best. Knuckle bailer Tim
Tampa Bay for the worst
At Oakland, Calif., Mark
record in the majors.
Wakefield '( l-O) pitched . stx Ellis had a career-high four
'"The on 1y chotce
· you have solid innings.
hits as the Athletics eompletls to keep fighting," pitcher
ed a three-game sweep of the
Steve Sparks said.
In other AL games, it was:
World Series champions.
New York 10, Tampa Bay 5;
Chris Singleton's ·RBI single off Francisco Rodriguez
Boston 12, Balttmore 2;
At Minneapolis, Car~os (0-1) gave the Athletk; a 6-5
Toronto 8, Minnesota I;
Seattle II , Texas 2; and Delgado homered and drove lead in the seventh inning,
Oakland 7, Anaheim 6. in four runs, and Cory Lidle and Ellis' sacrifice tly providCleveland and Kansas City (1-1) pitched seven strong ed an insurance run. He finwere rained out.
innings as Toronto finished a
The Yankees and Indians three-game sweep.
ished with two doubles, two
postponed their home openers
Brad Radke (1-1) was hit RBl s and a run scored.
·Monday because of snow in hard, giving up eight runs on
Oakland's 5- l start is its
the forecast in each city..Both 10 hits in three-plus innings. best since winning five
games were rescheduled for The eight earned runs tied straight to start the 1992 seaTuesday.
Radke's career high, set four
Magglio Ordonez's three- times previously.
~on .
run homer capped Chicago's
The Blue Jays swept a
Tim Salmon homered in the
big rally in the eighth. Miguel . three-game series at the ninth for Anaheim, arid Brad
Olivo drew a bases-loaded Metrodome for the first time Fullmer drove in three runs.
walk to push across the go- ._...,t*tlnllrklll*~t*illn'!*'~tlnllrkllnil'~t*tlnllrkl~~ahead run, D'Angelo Jimenez
,.
had a two-run double and
Josh Paul added a two-run
single.
.J
· Trammell, the shortstqp on
some of Detroit's best teams
under Sparky Anderson,
helped lead the Tigers. to the
1984 World Series title. At the
helm of a young team hoping
to build for the future,
Trammell now must get
accustomed to losing.
He said he might keep the
lineup card from his first victory as a manager _ when he
finally gets it.
I
"There is still a long way to
go," Trammell said. "It's dis- .
appointing, no question. We'll
have to regroup."

Red Sox 12,
Orioles 2

Mariners 11,
Rangers 2

Athletics 7,
Angels 6

Blue Jays 8,
Twins 1

Cincinnati Reds' Sean Casey, ;ight, is congratulated by third
base coach Ti.m Foli after he hit the game winning home run
of Chicago Cubs pitcher Mike Remlinger in the eighth inning
Sunday in Cincinnati. (AP)

.

also started 6-0 last season.

their six-year history.

Braves 13,
Marlins 4

Pirates 2,
Phillies 0

At Atlanta, Chipper Jones
had a two-run single and
Andruw Jones followed with
a two-run double in the first
inning as the Braves bounced
back from their most lopsided loss in three seasons.
After Braves ace Greg
Maddux was pounded for three
homers and nine runs in two
innings of a 17 -I loss Saturday
night, the Braves responded
quickly against Florida starter
Brad Penny (0-1 ).
Rafael Furcal went 4-for-5 ,
scored two runs and drove in
another and Andruw Jones
went 3-for-5 with a homer
and four RBis. Robert Fick
and Gary Sheffield also
homered to back Horacia
Ramirez (1-1 ).

At Philadelphia, Kris
Benson (2-0) pttched seven
shutout innings and scored a
run for Pittsburgh.
Mike Williams pitched the
ninth for his third save for
the Pirates, who are off to a
5-l start for the second
straight year.
Phillies starter Brett Myers
(0-1) struck out a career-high ·

Rockies 8,
D-backs 3

At Milwaukee, Kirk
Rueter (l-0) pitched six
A
scoreless innings and San
At Denver; Todd Helton hit
Francisco remained unbeat- a three-run homer off Curt
en despite resting half its Schilling and Jason Jennings
starters.
( 1-1) pitched five-plus innings
Giants manager . Felipe as Colorado beat Arizona for
Alou held Barry Bonds, Ray its fourth straight win.
Durham, Benito Santiago
Helton's homer highlightand J.T. Snow out of the .ed a four-run first inning
starting lineup, but the against Schilling (0-1 ). He
makeshift team that played and
teammate
Randy
was good enough to defeat Johnson are a combined 0-2
the Brewers, who are 0-6 for after two starts apiece this
the first time in franchise his- season.
tory.
The two-time defending
Rich Aurilia hit a solo NL West champions have
homer off Wayne Franklin lost four straight and are 1-5,
(0- 1) for the Giants, who ~equaling the worst start in

II.

Expos 8, Mets 5
At New York, Jeff Liefer
hit a three-run homer off
Armando Benitez (0-1) in
the ninth inning for
Montreal.
Scott Stewart ( 1-0) pitched
one inning for the win, and
Rocky Biddle got hi s second
save.
.
Tony Clark hit a go-ahead,
two-run shot in the sixth
inning in his Mets debut.

Dodgers 4,
Padres 3, 13 inn.
At San Die go, Bri an
bases- loaded
Jordan 's
grounder against Jaret
Wri ght (0-1) drove in the goahead run in the top of the
13th inning and Los Angeles
beat San Diego t6 avoid a
four-game sweep.
Guillermo Mota (1-0)
pitched two innings for the
wm .

It's Comi.n g. ::;
April 13th, 2003
in the

&amp;unbap limes-j,enttnel

2oo3

Yearbook

Yankees 10,
Devil Rays 5

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Education
· Section

At St. Petersburg, Fla ..
Roger Clemens won his 295th
game and Alfonso Soriano
and Nick Johnson started the
first inning with co_(tsecutive
homers.
Clemens (2-0) allowed four
runs and six hits in seven
innings. After limiting Tampa
Bay to a run and three htts
through six, the six-time Cy
Young winner gave up a
three-run homer to Javier
Valentin i_n the seventh . ~-c..·~

'

WATCH
fOB ITI

NEW ORLEANS- A 3foot putt or, the biggest basketball game of their lives.
Roy Williams ·and Ji m
Boeheim have made it this
far by treating them almost as
one ant! the same.
These golf buddies-turnedcoachin g rivals are on the
verge of breaking through
and winning the ·national
. championship th at has eluded both over a coti1bined 42
years of coachi ng .
But thev know that win or
lose Monday night, li fe will
go on, anoth er chapter will
unfold and ano ther chance to
compete won't be far off for. these two, probably this
summer on the golf course.
"Is it more important to
me'' Yes. Is it more imp ~ tant
to. you'' YeS:' Boeheim ~a id ,
referring to the title game.
"But you coach it the same
way.''
That 's not to play down the
.import ance of the game and
what a victory will do for the
winner.
Williams
and
Boehei m would agree with
the obvious -· that wi nning
the NCAA basketball title is
·the pinnacle of the sport.
· "When you coach at this
leveL that 's what you want to
do," Boeheim said.
_ But will they coac h diffe r·
ently? Put more pressure on
'themselves'' Buy into the
we ll-circu lated noti on that
they need a championship to
validat e careers that have
been nnthin~ less than ste,)·

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PUBLIC NOTICE
· F'UBLIC NOTICE
IN THE COMMON
F'LEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO .
IN THE MAnER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO·
- BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts
and
vouchers of the fol lowing named fiducl·
ary has been flied in
the · Probate Court,
Meigs County. Ohio
for approval and set·
tlement.
ESTATE NO. 26901 ·
The Filth Account of
Robert
Wingett,
Trustee of- the Trust
Created by Item
- VI, Sub Item F of the
Will of E!nest A.
• Wingett, Deceased ,
• ESTATE NO. 26901 •
The Sixth Account of
Robert
Wingett,

:!*

Trustee of the Trust
Created by Item VI,
Sub Item F of the Will
of Ernest A. Wingett,

p
on
SAVINGS

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1.) Send \II )"'UU' 1'111111e. tlddrela and phone number.
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Mall your entries to: I'IUI a.rker
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82~

topping off a 39-0 season
with a win over Oklahoma.
Four St&lt;U1ers from that team
graduated and Auriemma's
lineup now incl udes two freshmen and a sophomore. Another
freshman is a key reserve.
But he also has Diana
Taurasi, an incomparable '"tal- ·
em around which to build a
team. Taurasi scored 26 points
against Texas, including a long
3-pointer to put the Huskies
ahead to stay with 2:07 left.
Tennessee avenged on~ of
its losses_by beating Duke and
now has a chance to make
amends for another. The Lady
Yol s lost to UConn 63-62 in
ovenime on Jan . 4. They have
won 24 of 25 since then.
Tennessee started its march
to the title ga me after a hunlblin g 78-62 loss to LS U in the
Southeastern
Co nfere nce
tournamenl· finaL The Lady
Yol s had almost two weeks
between that game and the
start of the NCAA tournament and, as usual, coach Pat
Summitt had them ready. .
.Playing the first fo ur round s
at home. Tennessee breezed
to its 14th Final Four by an
average margin of 23.6
point s. Against Duke, the
Lady Vol s used their defense
and, rebounding to hold on
until Gwen Jackson closed
with a tremendou s performance down the stretch .
Jackson scored 13 of her 25
points in the final 6:08.

Southern

the lead-off batter in the seventh , Jodi Black reached on
an error. Chapman the n got a
force out on a great play from
Kiser to Pullins at second fo r
the force , then Chapman
fanned Coomes to finisH off
the game.
Chapman stru c~ out three,
walked none, and gave up
n6-hits. Estep suffered the
loss with fi ve strikeout s one
walk and ~ ix hits agai nst her.
Southern hitters were Ki ser
and Pi ckens with a double
and single each, Sayre a double and Barnes a sin gle,
Symme s Valley went hitless.
Southern ho sts Eastern
today.

from Page 81
ning for Sayre advanced to
third base . Chapman flew out
after Ki ser stole second . With
one out and runners on second and third, Barnes hit an
infield single that loaded the
bases as Williams was forced
to hold at third.
Sophomore Joanne Pickens
then ripped a two-run double
to give SHS the lead at 3-2.
Southern's Chapman then
retired the side in order in the
sixtn and after striking out

*
**

10

Unless exceptions
are filed thereto, said
account will be set for

hearing before said
Court on the 7th day
of May, 2003 , at which
time said account will .
be considered and

or older?

day until finally dis·
posed of.
Any person Inter·
ested may file written
exception to said
account or to matters
pertaining to the execution of the trust, not
less than five days
prior to the date set
for hearing.
1:. Powell
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio

s.

(4)7

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c§alltpolt• JBatlp tltrthune
o ~lea•ant ltegi•ter

IN MEMORY

/11 Loving
Memory of
Helen Jeffers

*

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u~

Hu!-hand. Daddy ·anll Gra nd pa
Two years ago you went lN!Iay
We miss you every minute of every day.
Your loving smile, your good advice .
That was all so very nice.
You always loved God, Jesus and your family, so
God blessed us with you the very best we know.
You always he lped everyone so much
We all love and miss you so very much.
With all our love,
Ruth, Susan, Mindy. Greg, Mory,
Christopher, Kelsey ancffamily

I Year
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ln l1l\ 111£ 111l"ll1nry of

tuition r~1n1b ursernent program. there arc a few select
positions uvuilahl ~. If you arc a person who values making a dil"fcrence in the li ves of others und wurkinx with a dedi '-=Utedlcomrnittcd team. you may he a ca ndidate for one t) f these

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ATLANTA (AP) - So
Connecticut was too young to
do thi s agai n, huh ? Too many
players missi ng from last season' s unbeaten national
championship team, ri ght 'J
Ha!
Connecticut is back iri the title
game again and look wllo the
Huskies are playing on Tuesday
night: None other than those
dreaded Tennessee Lady Vols,
their biner .rivals for supremacy
in women's basketball.
The third championship
game between the two was set
up when both earned tough
sem ifina l victories Sunday
night. Connecticut came from
nine points down in the second half to beat Texas 7-1-69
and Tennessee · pulled away
late to defeat Duke 66-56.
"RegardleSs of how it plays out
I think it's going to be a heck of a
game,'' UConn coach Geno
Aiuiemma said. "I know thln's the
game everyone's.been wJiting for
and now that it'shere, let's enjoy iL"
Like _it or not, the season
will
end
with
either
I. Connecticut
(36-1)
or
Tennessee (33-4) adding to its
title collection. Tennessee has
won six championships bl/.l. its
last was in 1998. Connecttcut
is going for it s third title in
fo ur years and fourth overalL
UConn beat Tennessee in
the 1995 and 2000 championship game s and defeated
the Lady Yol s in the nation al
se mi finals last year before

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B-y a! mo st any account , ·
Boeheim has done one of his
: best coaching jobs tbis sea·
son. It's not that he doesn't
have talent - quite the contrary. It's just that the talent is
young . Freshman of the year
Carmela Anthony, classmate
. Gerry
McNamara
and
Warrick account for 63 percent of Syracuse's offense.
Boeheim has nur~d
them and u ~ed his trick
zone defense more th&lt; he
Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim, left, and Kansas coach Roy normally would, It's his way
Willi;Jms chat prior to a joint news conference Sunday in New of masking inexperienced
Orleans. Kansas will meet Syracuse in the NCAA Finals players' defensive shortcomings, and the sys tem has
Moncjay night. (AP)
worked.
"At this point in the year,
This season, the 52-year- beciJ,use of the winnin g or
old William s reached the losin e. but because it 's the we're not freshmen any400-victory plateau, and he last Cl\ llege game for Kirk more," McNamara said.
Still , Kansas is the more ·
did it fa ster than ail but lhree Hinrich and Nick Collison.
men - Adolph Rupp. Clair
"I would hate to think that seasoned team. Collison .,and
Bee and Jerry Tarkan ian. my son played for so mebody Hinrich are iwo top-notch
Wi !Ii ams has gui ded th ~ who didn't care," Williams seniors who get significant
playing time, something of a
Jayhawks to th eir fourth .said. " I do deeply care."
Final Four and thei r second
With a 652 -226 record in rarity in thi s era of early
champi onship g&lt;uile in his 15 27 seasons at Syracuse. departures.
While Boeheim calls
Boeheim ranks second in
years at Kansas.
B'ut the numbers don't tell winn ing percent age among almost every play for
the whole story. He is a coach all ac ti ve coaches. He took Syracuse, Williams takes
in much more than an Xs and the Orangemen to 10 stra ight pride in not being much of a
Os sense. In the style of his NCAA tournament s from micromanager; he likes hi s
old boss and menlor, Dean 19RVJ2. the fo urth -longest players to run and push and
play man-to-man.
Smith, William s is a mentor. streak ever.
"My personality is I want
too. He considers his players
Twice , he has taken the
fami ly.
Orangeme n to the final. only to be a little more agg~es­
Three years ago, he hacl a 'to come up short - in 1987, sive," Williams said. "If you
handshake agreement to take at the Superdome. they lost feel comfortable doing somethe job at hi s alma mater. 74-73 to Indiana on Keith thing, it's easier to do."
That. both William s and
North Carolina. But he Smart 's bas ket with 4 secBoeheim
agree, is part of
changed hi s mind when he onds left.
Iar''
~
went to the gym and ran into
"I Md a tremendous expe- their coaching handbook: Do
"S ure, the game is tremen- th ree of his former players. rience for five days, 39 min- what you're most comfortdously im portant," Boehei m includi ng Greg Gurl ey. all of utes and 56 seconds there," able with. Have a good time.
said. ''The problem I have, whom had children.
Boeheim said. "I want to try Keep things in perspective.
· tho ugh. i&gt; the thought that all
"I think we've pretty well
'·Greg said, 'How docs it to get those other 4 seconds
o~ the sudden. you· re a good fe el to have your grandchil- in this I ime."
handled the fact that we' ve
player or a good coach dren in the gy m with you?'"
Th e 58-vear-o ld coach been here and lost , ~till been
because you win this game. William s said . ''That was is n' t as touchy-feely as his able to get up. smile and go
That's fool ishness."
something that real ly hit me coun terpart. but that should- on the next day," William s
Williams agrees.
n't diminish his real emo- said. "But perhaps it makes
prett y hard at the time."
you a little more hungry, to
Both coaches ha ve the
Undoub tedl y. Williams tions .
-resumes to back their confi - wi ll cry when it 's over
"He is always trying to try to see what it's like on the
Monday night - not jYst push me, and he goes about it other side."
dence .

:. HELP WANTED

Nominate them for

Familiar foes meet -in
Tuesday's title game

in a funny way sometime s,"
Syracuse sophomore forward
Hak im Warrick said. " It has
helped me . I know he's just
trying to get the best out of

'

~ ********************

Check out
Kid Scoop
in today's Sentinel

em

'
since 1993, the second of
Bernie Williams also home'

"' "'

Associated Press

BY JosH DuBow
Associated Press

Giants 5,
Brewers 0

BY MIKE FITZPATRICK "

Bv EDDIE PELLS
.Associated Press

NCAA Women's Tourney

( he Daily Sentinel
6aturbap ·ottme• -6tnttntl
'

Six long years have
slowly p~st since
our family faced
the ultimate task
when you heard
God's call and took
hi.!! hand lO find that peace in heavens' land.
Your parting has left a tremendous void. We
try our: best to fill i,t with remembered joy.
Your :o;wcct face, your laugh, your kiss, oh,
yes. thc~c things we surely miss . With the
tragic loss of Roger. oh so near. Our broken
famil)' circle. again brings us tears .
But the love_and srrength of family helps us
,
meet tomorrow
.
I
•
Each
qlllct
memory
helps
to
ease
our
sorrow.
1
Some duy upon God's go lden shore we'll all
emhrace and live evermore.
1
Sadly rni;sed by husband.
Boh. and family

_J

..

6unb4,! '

mtmt• -6mtinel

r················· ' ······························

:Subscriber's Name ------~---------1

:Address __~-------------------: City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
:~hone

_________________________________________

•
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:
1

Mall or drop oH thla coupon along with 1 copy of your photo 10 1o
Ohio Volley Publlohtng P.O. Box 469 , Golllpollo, OH 45631

·---·················--·-······------------------~

�Monday, April 7, 2003

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e - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED.
We C!)vc-""

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·And Mason .
Count"s Like
NoOne
Else Can!

Ad •••

-«1

~

'"' ..... :~........

$1500 reward for info and
recovery of stolen TAX
450
ES·, yellow. VIN#
.
Joh n Deere Model 435 478TE224X2430 550 5
round baler. Baled less than Eng•ne• 8606549 (740)367·
800 ba les. Like new 7893 call anytime
Condition. List new $18,200
sell
lor
$8, 100. t 997 Softa1l Custom. 8,500
will
miles. Lots of extras. Plu s all
original equipment. $12 .500
obo. MUST SELL!
(304)675· 1178 leave mes·
sage.

SPACE
FORRE'Nr

i\egtster
Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyreg ister.com

Monday thru Friday
8·: 00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

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A~'NOUNCEMEN'Ili

~~ND

Lost- Chocolate Lab. male.
unneutered 100# , near
· C~ 1 Beer Carry OUI permit Salem School Lot &amp; 143,
"for sale, Chester Township, 3/28/03, 740·664-3067 or
, Meigs County, send letters 740-707-2065 ask for Gabby
~of interest tO : The Daily
: sentinel. PO BOK 729-20.
· Pomeroy, 'Jhio 45769.
male dog found around Rt 7
Do yo u need your GEO or Forest .Run Rd a rea.
High-School Diplom a? Do POssibly lost dog after vehiyou kn ow how to write an cle acci dent. (740) 992-3779
effeCti Ve resume? Do you
know what qualities employ·

r

how to keep a job once you
gat· it ? We can Help! For
more informati on, call the
Me1gs
Co,unty
STEP/JOG/ABLE Prog ra m
at 140·992· 6600 or 740992-6930. or stop in Monday ·
through Friday at 1 11 West •
·second Street in POmeroy,
Oh. Make a dif1erenc:e in
ypur lite Today!

~=·~·=~=~===~
VARO SAl .E-

[Uf4

l'oMEROYIMDIUI .E
Basement sate- April 3·4.
first hOuse on Kerr St.
across
from
Pomeroy .
Mu ni cipal
Park,
baby
clothes , baby ite ms, deer
stand. pool table &amp; lots
more.

· ~PHS "O· KAN" Yearbooks
:ff'Om 1952-1963 . Will pay
·$25 . ea ch, plus postage. Middleport-Pom eroy 's 6t ti
annual 6-mile long Yellow
~limail April Wamsley Nicola
Flag Yard Sale. May 2 &amp; 3,
:St~ nicol ajaC an.net.
look fo r the yellow fl ags! Cal l
tor mfo about loCations. 740992-4055.

.! school buses for storage.

r

Already gutted. Ready for
possession. (740) 742-2632
Kessel's Produce and Flea
:after 5:00pm.
Mkt. Open Th urs·Fri-Sa t.
Now renting spaces , 1354
' Female Border Co llie , m1x: Jackson Pike. (740)446:rige r Gray. female. cat, 7787
(740)441-0504
. f.ree ki" ens. part Pers1an
\Jery be autifu l an d ta me.
' (740)44 1·0833

r

WANIHJ
lUBuY ',

l'l'l1:::1o
. - - - - - - , ..,_ _ _ _ __ .
HELP WA!'ITED
Do you enjoy talk ing to peopie on the telephone? Are
you persuasive and co nfi·
ARCADIA NURSING
dent? Do you enjoy knowing
CENTER
what is going on in Pomeroy.
Part-Time RN or LPN need- Middleport and all of Meigs
ed. Available, 11·7 shift. We County? Would you enjoy
otter e~Cce ttent benefits that a ca reer 1n inside sa les
wnh no night or weeken d
include Hea lth Insurance,
401 K. Lite Insurance, com·
hours? How about 9am - 5 ~
petitive wages. plus shift
30pm. Monday through
differential and opportuniFriday w ith paid holidays ,
ties for advancement. tf you vacatio ns. sick le ave. a
want to join our team. con40 1( ~ ) plan and med ica l
tact Susan Winland, O.O.N. insurance? Our newsp aper
ArC adia Nursing Center
in Po meroy ha s 1 opening
for a permanent, protessionEast Mai n Street
Coolv iHe. Oh
at
Inside
sal esperson .
740-667-3156
Com pen sation is a combina·
EOE·M/FIHI DV
lion ot base salary and com·
mission. This job w111 not be
ope n to ng . so call Larry
·Attn : Work from home. • Boyer today .at ·(740) 446$500· $1500/mo. PT
2~ 2 Mon day fhrou gh Friday
$2000- $4500/mo, FT
morn ings between Bam and
800-286·97 48
Sam
and
aft ernoo ns
www.retire411 .coiT)
between 4pm and 5pm . If
Avon Re p r~sentati"es want· those hours are not conven·
ient for you to cal l, email a
ed. (740 )446; 3358
cover lener and .your re sume
AVON I All Areas ! To Buy or to La rry et lbayer@mydai·
Self. Shirley Spears. 304- lytrjbyne com Be fastl
675· 1429.
E ,.; P· e r i e n c e d
AN wanted for a part-ti me carpenter/roofer. (740)378poSition
as
a health 6349
Services Coordinat or. Hours
10am -1pm. Monday th ro ugh Help wanted caring for the
Friday with some flexibi lity, elderly, Darst Group Home,
Must have current AN now paymg m1n1mum wa ge,
liceOS'e. in the State of Ohio. new Shift s: 7am-3pm, 7am Pre fer e,.;penence in public 5pm , 3pm- 1tpm, 1 1pm·
health nursing and/or work· 7am, call 740-992-5023.
1ng "'filh children and aclults
with developmental disabili- Immediate Openin g for
Part-time
ties. Sand resume by Friday, Permane nt,
receptionist in busy lflternal
April 1 tth to.
medicine practice . Resumes
Me1gs Cou nty Board of
may be taken to the office of
M
e
n
t
a
t
Dr.
Randall F. Hawkins. SUite
A eta rda tionf Deve!opme nta 1
212. 2520 Va lley Drive. Pt.
Disabilities, 1310 Carleton
PI ., WV
Box 307,
Street, P. O
Syracuse .
Oh
45779, Local body shop seeks qual(740)992·6681
ified repair tech . Com petitive

......... .

WOlD

'UULIR

UMI

O Reorroru; o

letters . of the
,
fov r x.romb led words bo·
low .fO form fdur .Vrnp le words.

~~~~~;;,;;;;;;;;;;;,:::::;:-

1

I

E TPAF.

I

'--..J...---1-..1.-..L. .....J
C F
F E

1

pay, good working environ·
ment Call to set up inter·
view (740)446-4466
McDona td s Rio Gra nde now
hiring any 'time posi tions.
Insurance available. Paid
vacation and holidays. Apply
within.
Medl Home. Pr1vate Care hiring LPN for Gallipolis office.
Fax res ume to 1·740-69923 15 or call Karen 1800·
533-5848
Medical B1ller. Busin ess
office needS a sharp ,
dependat,lle. know led geable
person for medical ins ur·
ance billing Resume· to :
P.O. Bo,.; 33. Gallipolis. OH
45631.
NURSES (RNa)
per
hour,
$47.00
Co lumbus. OH All Un1ts.
FULL TI ME (800)437 -0348

0 E s E ~I , ....::!;
r---.-,-·-.r-.,.....-1· ·~

·I I I I'• I

All ·Display: 12 Noon 2

1110 Hw• W~IID

Ab solute Top Doll ar: U.S.
Coins,
Silve r,
Gold
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold
· Gray S white cat, friendly, Rings.
U.S. Currency,'41 Bry"!ont Rd. 1st hOuse on M.T. S. Co in Shop, 151
:t aft
w/do uble
garage,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Madi Home Health Age ncy.
: (740)742-2020
740-446-2842.
Inc. seeking AN's for the
Gallipolis, OH area. We otter
larrAND
a competitiye salary. beneFOUNIJ
fils package, 401 k, fle,.; tim e,
Old Photos and picture post· an d sig n on bonus. Please
· Lost1f2 year old black
cards of Ma son Cou nty send resu me to 356 Second
· La b w/white markings in
area ; towns, boats. bu ild- Ave nu e.
Gallipolis.
OH
: Peach Fork area, Reward,
Call Rob ert 45631 . .Attn. Diana Harless,
mgs, etc.
'(740)992·5351
Keathley (304)882-3396
Clinical Manager

""~'

Daily In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

o Start Your Ads With A Keyword o Include Complete
Description o Include A Prl&lt;e • Avoid Abbreviations
o Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
· o Ads Should Run 7 Days

rI'------,.1

ers are ·lookin
For in
an
employee?
Dog you
know

Display Ads

3

0

can 't we save any
the husband asked his
wife "We ll: replied the wife, • 1
blame it on the neighbors. They
~~~!';P buying thmgs we can't - • • -

j I I ' I I I e Co~cl•'• rh• &lt;:kvdcle quoted
'-....J'-...L.l-...1..-.l-...J
by
word1
you develop from lfep No. 3 btlow.
5

liiliog in ' "" mi..,ng

,.IN! NUM8Etfl&gt; LE ITUS IN

I

lHESE SQUARES •
UN lC ~t&gt;MBlE A&amp;oVE

ro GEl -"NSWER

lETlUS

Yesterday's SCJtAM.lETS' ANSWERS

Lastly • Rough· - Odium - Jostle - YOU GET
' The mark. of a truly great professional, • said the top
notch joumahst to the g raduating c lass, "is giving more
than YOU GET."

Part -time help needed at
A&amp; A Auto Deta1t. Male or
female. Apply Within , 220 4th
Avenue. Gallipolis.
Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc., seek1ng a West Virginia
Physical Therapy Assis tant
for the Gallipolis. O hio area .
We o ffer a competitive
salar y, benefits package ,
401k, and fie,.; lime: Please
send resume to 356 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis, OH
45631 . Ann: Diane Harless.
Clinical Manager.

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

BusinesS Days Prior To
PublicatiOn

Sunday Display: 1:00
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POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publishing reserves the right to edit, reject. or cancjitl any ad at any time . Errors must be reported on the first day of publication and
Tribuna-Sentinel-Register will be responsible for no more than the cost ol the space otciJpied by the error and only the first insertion. We shall not be Hable
any loss or e~~:pense that results from the publication or omission of an advertisement. Correction will be made in the first available edition. • Box: number
are always confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All real estate advertisements are subject to the Federal Fa ir Housing Act olt968. • Th is n'"''P''pe'l
accepts only help wanted ads meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly aCcept any advertising in violation of the law.

110 .

1
..,.-·"·I·.·I .~·W-AN•n•u•'-'1
Someone to do deliveries
and train to repair appliances. Must have vali d drivers
license .
Sk aggs
Appliances (7 40)446-7398

r

I'ROFEN;IONAI.
SERVIO:S

I

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wir'l!
1·888-582·3345

HHI 1'1 \II

Truck Drivers. Immediate
10
HOMElS
hire, class A COL raQ uired,
lOR
SALE
e ~C ce llen l pay, expe ri ence
require d_Earn up to $1 ,000.
per week. Call 304-675- (3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for immedi ate possession all
4005
withi n 15 min. of downtown
Wanted: Clin ica l M edic al Gallipolis. Rates as low as
Office Assistant with phle- 6%. (740) 446-32 18.
bo tomy
expepe nce
lor
physician office. Reliable I acre , rive rfron t, brick and
transport ation
neede d. vinyl. 3 bedrooms. 2 oath . 2
Computer skill s preferre d. fireplaces , hardwood floors.
No weeke nds or hollctays. approximately 2000 sq.ft.
Full or pa rt -time. Benefits Full basement , $160,000
availabla. · Fa,.; re su me to (740) 446·0 538
(304)67 5-7800 or mai l to
CLA 574, c/o Gall ipo liS Dai ly 3
BEDROOM
HOME
Tribun e. P.O. B ox 469, 2 .ba th. only S17 .900 . For
Gallipolis. OH 4563 1.
listin gs call 1·800·719·3001
Ext . F144

BuSINESS
TRAINING

10

HCII\1t:S

MORILE Hn\I~:S

mRSALE

mRSALE

Home with tour bedroo ms
and large garage. Located
across from Graham School
Road. on SA 141 . For more
information Call ~740) 9926797 ll no answer. lea"e
messag e.
House to be moved. Br1cK
and Cedar. 8062 State
Rou ta 7 North. Tak1ng bi ds.
(740)367·7560 (7 40)367·
0317

We have new sect1onal
homes as low as · $23.995
and new s1ngle Wide homes
as low as $19,995 1·800·
837·3238

1 ancl 2 bedroom apa rt-.
ments, furniShed and unlur·
n1shed. security deposit
required. no pets , 740·992·
2218

Wmdale
mobile home,
12x60.w1th expando, w1ndow
air. gas heat . furnished. one
famil y owned . very n1ce ...
pr~ce
re duced , S5.500,
(740)742·2979.
740- 992·
3394

1 Bedroom Apartme nts
Startmg
at
$289/ mo,
Washer/ Qryer Hook up.
Stove and Refng er ator.
(740)441-15 19

1br fu rn ished apa rtment.
r.r.:::--~-----, · $325. a month Includes
New 3 bed room. bric k. 2 ca r
8USIN~
water. trash. Depos1 t &amp; rei.
garage .' corn9r lot. Grea t
ANI&gt; 8 UILiliN(;S
Required . (304)675·3042
location
2 m1les ffom
Holze r
Green &amp; City Office 8 u1ld1ng/ APartments A partme nt Available Now.
Place. ·New
RiverBend
Schools . (740)446·9966
for sale/ rent. Second
Haven, WV now accept1ng
Avenue. Askmg $102.000
applications for HUD ·sybsl .Price for quick sale- 3 bed(740)286-2828 or (740)710d ized . 1 bedroom · apa rtroom home in MiddlePort
1467.
plus 1 bedroom renta l on
ment. Ut11itles mcluded Call
same lot. reduced down to
(304)882 ·3t21 Apa rtment
Lon;&amp;
$52,000. (740 )992-6154
available
tor qualified senACRFAGE
ior/disabled pe rson. EHO
Priced to Sent $90.000.
1 acre building lots; 3&amp; 1/2
1998. 3 bedroom , 2 bath,
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
acres , and 5 acres tracts.
large k1tchen . stone fire·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Green Schools _· Great toeaPRICES AT JACKSON
place. On State Route 588.
l ion~ Rl 588 . (740)446-9966
Immediate
Possession
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
(740)983·0730
Drive 1from $297 to $383.
32 acres, ten m1nutes tram Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
fW MOBII.E HOMElS Holzer Medical Center. OH 740-446·2568
Equal
160 Nor th. County water ~ous1ng Opportun ity
HJRSALE
available . Nice homesite. No
1980 1'4x70. 3 BR. 2 bath land contracts. S40.000 Beech St. Middleport 2 bed-.
room furnished apa'1 tment.
central air. new carpet. great (740)446·3228
ut11it1eS pa1d. depos1t &amp; re fer·
shape , must be moved .
$7500. (740)446·9357 Call Lot for sale m Rac1ne, ences. no pets. (7 40) 9920165
atfer 5pm.
(740)992·5858

---------

r

3 bedroom , 2 ba th. brick
home, new ca rpet, paint.
Gallipolle Career College, app liances, concrete drive
(Careers Close To Home) S45,000.00, 163 M ulberry
Call Today! 740·446 -4367. Ave .. Pomeroy, 74().-3941·800-2 14·0452
1211 evenings, 740·380·
._w.gatlpotiscatl!ercollege.com 9800 days
Reg #90·05·1 2748.
55 acre farm on S A 554. 3
1110
WANIID
bedroom . 2 bath house with
1
.
ToDo
basement. 2 barns. 10 ac res
pastu re. Spring fed livestocK
Georges Po rtap le Sawn;~i l l. tank. GOod hunting. Stockad
don't haul your logs to the
pond . Free gas . $125.000
mill just ca ll 304-675·1957 . Call (740)367·7266 be tween 1984 t 41C70 mobile home
7,.;21 It extens1on . deck and
Jim's Ca rpentry and small 9am &amp; 9pm.
building
Green School
lan dscaping. 20 yrs e,.;pe rlBea'u tilul 312 home in pnvate Distric t. (7 40)2 45-9084
ence.
Free
estimate.
Charolals Lake on 3 ac res
(740)446·2506
m/1 . Many extras. Must Sael 1996 141C70 Clayton Mobile
Home, 3br, 2b a with Garden
Lawn Care, Tree Trimming , (7 40) 446·2927
tub , new carpet. Extra
Tree . Remova l, Sp rinkler
Sys tem. Light Cons truction . Brick Ranch Home. 3br. 2ba. Clean. Must see. $15.000
and Exc avation . {304)638- 1 car Attached garage, 1 car Call (304)675·8647

detached garage. lngrouncl
pool . On 1/2 ac re lot. 2 bedrooms, 12K60. ready to
Lawn mowing services. call Selious
lnqu1res.
on ly. move in to. On rented lot..
$5.000 . (7 40)446-3 617
for free estimate home 304· (304 )675-8051
895·3399 or cell 674·0870_
2002 Clayton. 3 bedroom. 2
Wi ll pressure Vl!a::th homes.
balh, 141C64, !ike new,
Hailers , decks. metal buildS19,000. (740)742-8716
mgs and gutters. Call
Good used 3br/2bth. Only
(740)446·0151 ask for Ron
$7995. Includes delive ry.
or leave message.
Call Karena 740·385·9 94 8
All real eatate advenlslng
Will stay w/elderly in the~r
In this newspaper Ia
L d H
p k
.
home, n1ghts only. N ~ rs 1ng
11.1bject ta the Federal - - en
ome ec ages ava11·
Tec hnician
w/25yr.
Fair Housing Act ol1968
able. In your area. (7 40)446E ~~:pe ri en ce.
Good
3384.
whlch makea It Illegal to
References . 1r no answer
advertise "any
--:-:-:-----prer•rence, llmHatlon or
Last 2002 Model Lincoln
leav e message. (304)6(5Park , 64)(28. 3 bedroom. 2
dlacrlmlnellan baaed on
1898
race, color, religion , ..)(
bath , to tal etectnc . heat
Will work . for S4 per hour. fam ilial statut ar national
pump. delive red &amp; set on
odd jobs &amp; ya rd work. origin, or en~ Intention to
your foundation , reduced
(740)446·4437
make any auch
!rom 555,365 to only
preference, limitation or
$4 7.485-. Cole 's - Mob1le
11\\,ll\1
diacrlmlnstlon."
.Homes , uS . 50 ~ast.
Athens. O h, 740·592·1972.
BusiNESS
This new1paper witt not
"Where You Get Your
01'1'0Rl'UNITl'
knowingly accept
Money·s WQrth"
advertiMments for real
wh
ich
Is
In
·
e1tete
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR
I NOTICE!
violation of the law. Our
&amp; 2 Bath Only s1695 down
OHIO VAL LEY PUBLIS H·
r•adere ere her•by
and &amp;29 5/ mo. 1_8qo _691 _
lNG CO. recommends that
lntormed that all
577 7
4
'"
you do bus1ness with people
dwetllngs actverttsed In
you ~now. and NOT to send
this newspaper are
money lhrough the mail until
New 3br/2b th..'I'Only $995
available on en equal
you have investigated the
down and only $197 .47 per
opportunity Msea.
oHenng.
mon th. Call Harold, 740385·7671
ABSOLUTE GOLOMINE! For sale or rent . 3 bedroom,
60 Vending mach1nes with 1 bath, full baSemen t home One bed1oom tra iler. $300,
e~Cceltent tocaiiOns all for on Evans Heights (7 40)256· wa ter P.a1d , 49 Spruce St.
$10 995. 800· 234·6982
6846
(740) 446 -8677 days.

, 5877 Leave Message.

I

ilr~~...;.:;HA~v~&amp;~--,.1 , r 997

For Sale: Reconditi o ne~
washers, dryers an d retrigGRAIN I
•
era tors.
Thompsons __
Appliance. 3407 Jackson ..____iiiiiii0.-.,.1
Good quality straw. Volume
Avenue, (304)675-7388.
discount &amp; delivery availGood Used Appliances, able. Heavy squ are bale s.
Reconditioned
and $2.85 per bale. {304)675Guaranteed.
Washers, 5724
Dryers~
Range s,
and
Refrigerators , Some start at
SFJD &amp;

Patn ot area . 20+ wooded
acres, county water. e lect r~c.
go()d home site . Adj .9cent
Wayne National Forrest
E,.;cellent hunlmg. $32 ,000
(740)379-9141

Furmshed eff1c1ency. down·
sta1rs. 919 2nd Avenue . 3
rooms &amp; bath All Ut1lll1 es
paid. $295/ ma (7 40)4 463945
Furnished effic1ency All ut1l1·
ties pa1d. share bath. S135
month. 919 2nd Avenue
(7401446·3945

1"10

HousE.~

Grac1ous' living. 1 and 2 bedIURRENI'
room apartments at V1ltage
and
Rrvers1de
3 bedrooms, 2 baths.· N1ce Manor
Apartments
m
Middleport.
and ctean. Gre at locat1on 1n
City. Ideal fo r Semor person From $278 -$348. Call 740992·5064 . Equal Housin g
or couple . {740)446 -9539
Opportun1t1es
3b r. house m Mason . lor
Rent. $375 monlh . 5300
Deposit. No Indoor Pets Call
(304)882·3652

• Now Takm g AppiiCB!Ions 35 West
2
Bedroom
Townhouse
Apart men ts.
Includes Water Sewag e,
Trash, $350/Mo. 740-446-Homes From
$199/Mo.. 0008 .
FO ACLOSEO HOMES 4% - - - - - - - ; - - - - ,
Down , 30 Years at 8.5eto One bedroom apariments:
APR For Usl1ngs. 800·319- util ities included. 607 2nd .
$325 s1ngla. $375 couple .
3323 E,.;t 1709.
(740)446-~77 days.

211 MOIIILE HOMI:~

mR RJ.;vr

On e room et1ic1ency apart·
ment, utilities 1ncluded. S3DO
2 bechoom, air, porch. very s1ngle. $350 cou ple . 920 4t h
n1ce , Gallipolis. (740)446- Aye (740)446~8677 days
2003 (7401446·1409
Plea sant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Appli cations
3br ~ob1 le Home. S1ts on
for 2BA, 3BR &amp; tiBR .
approx . 3 acres. Central Air ApplicatiOns
are
taken
ExCellent co nditi on . Lease Mona ay th fu Friday. !rom
Requ1red. (304 )895·3400 or 9:00 A.M -4 P:M Otfice IS
304·895·3562 attar 6pm
Located at 115 t Evergreen
Dnve Point. Pleasant. WV
Beautiful River V1ew Ideal Phone No 1s (304)6 75·5806
For
1 Or 2
People , E.H.O
Refere nces, Depos11. ~ o
Pets. Fos ter Trailer Pa rk. Tw in R1ve1s Towe1 IS accept 740-441-0181.
Ing apphca!IOn s for wa1ting
list for Hud-subSIZAd 1- b r
Mobile home for rent. no apartment, call 675-6679
pelS , (7401992·5858
EHO

ManJRS

Marada MX·1 s port

&gt;7'10'
w i1h
110
135
Mercruiser. Loaded, excel·
lent condition. garag e ke pi ,
used very little. Trailer has
spare tire mounted. All for
$7.000. Call (740)446·2444
anytime or lea"e a mesSage .

i

TRUCKING
• Limestone
I Makes &amp; Mode ls
Free Eslimates
F~s1 Turnaround

• Ag Line

740-985-3564

Arevou

Laid oHil
You could be
eligible for FREE
help getting
back to work
For m o re informatio n ,
ca ll Ga llia Me i9s
Comm u nity Act1on
Agency

(740) 992-2222 or
(740) 446-1018

·riO

r

wood, $1 25; several night
stands, $30 each. Queen
size frame &amp; headboard,
very nice , $200. Skaggs
Appliances, 76 Vlna Street.
(740)446·7398

CAMPERS &amp;

I

$5001 Pollee lmpoundal
M
H
Hondas. Chevys, etc! Cars/
(Yf()R OME'S
Trucks from $500 . For list·
ings 1-800-719-3001 e,.; t. 1999 Colem an Pop u p
3901
camper. With Air &amp; heat
$2500. (304) 675·4782
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clar~ 1992 Corsica V·6 auto. lacs ·
co--26_1_t. - :
T-ra-ve
' "l
Chapel Road , Por ter, Ohio. cit new par ts &amp; paint. Great -1'"99_9_ J_a_y(740)446-7444 1-877-830· shape. $3200 . 1989 Escort Trailer. used ve ry litt le, non·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy 4Cyf. auto, 4dr, runs great smoker. no pets. Ca n be
financing, 90 days same as $1800. (740)742 -0509
seen at 2912 Meadowbrook ·
cash. Visa/ Master Ca rd.
Drive, Pt. Pl. o r call
1993 Ford Escort, auto, 2
Drive · a· IIHie save alot.
(304 )675·382 3
AC,
door. gOOd condition. $1200
Used Furniture Store, 130 79 ,000 miles. (740)441 - microwave.
Bulavltte Plk.e. We sell mat· 0370
"' I H\ It 1 "'
tresses . dressers, couches.
HOME
bunk beds, bedroom sui tes .•1994 Ford_ Ta~ rus Station
recliners. Grave monuments Wagon, wme In color, all
IMPRO~
{740)446-4782 Gallipolis, power, AMIFM . A/C, great ..__iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiir'
OH . Wari1ed 1o buy· gOOd condl11on. S3295 . (740)441·
BAS~MENT
used couches. mattresses. 1029
WATERPROOFING
dressers.
1994 Ford Tempo, 2 door. Unconditional lifetime guarANrlQUElS
· 1 auto, $1500. (740 )256·6104 an tee. Local references turnishe d. Establ ished · 1975.
__
. 1995 Subaru lmpreza AWO,
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _,... auto, air, AMIFM, cassette &amp; Call
087 0, Rog ers Basement
Buy
or s911. Riverine CD, $3700 . (740)2 56·1189
Waterproofing
Antiques. 1124 East Main
1997 Ford Contour, auto;
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 7401991 Ford Escort, auto.
....... 992-2526. Aus s Moore,
$2150 each, (740)742·2357 C&amp;C
General
Home
owner.
Maintenance- Painting, vJnyl
1998 Toyota Si enna LE . 7
Very old canning jars, pop passenger van , V-6, · 1 siding , carpentry.• doors .
bottles. Miners Lunch Pail. owner, low miles, e~Ccellent windows, baths . mobile
home repair and more. For
Poiso n,
Bitters.
ln~s. condition, (740)992-54~7
free est imate call Chet, 740Medicine boHies, Gallipolis
History Items, .different col· 1999 Cavalier 20. auto 41K 992 - 63~ 3.
ored fiddles and more. Will $3.895
not split up. Sell all $1000. 1994 BereHa Z-26 101K
Call '(740)441-1236 il no· $2 ,895
answer, leave message .
1996 Ca\lalier 96K $3,295
We Take Trades Cooke

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

740-992-5232

~~

Residential
Construction
Position. Call 740-742-3411
Between 6:00 PM &amp; 8:00
P.M. Only

740-992-2432

All fo r $5.00!

For more infomut.tion caii!J92-4055

~ Spring ~

HUBBARDS .
GREENHOUSE

Special r.f
THERAPEUTIC
~

992-5776
Syracuse

MASSAGE

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

Buy I Gift Certifica1e.
Get 2nd Free!
H~ather

A. Fry L.M.l '.

740-992-5379

Ractne, OH

'FreeEst t ma~e-s •

Lawn Ma!nlalncnce, Shrub
Trlmmino, Snow Removal
&amp; Other l awn Core Needs
Jamie EvallS
Li nda Evans
(740) 94~2108

(740) 843·51 16

Pager (800) 976· 2471

I'l l "'"

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

ldxlO
10x20
740·992-17J7

E ''ery Thursday
nt 5:30p.m.
Consignmen1 Wed. &amp;
Thurs. llla m-.lpm

St. Rt. 7 Goeglein Rd.

Now d oing t•s tate

I&amp;C Lawn Service
Mow&amp; Trim

&amp; household sales.

Phone 992-9553
or 742-0226
Aucti o ne er

Jim Taylor

Now Open
Bedding &amp; Vcg etahlc
Plants $t1.95 nat
Pe rennial s 8 in 52.25

. $.1.25
4 l n . A n n u al s $ 1.25

Pott in g So il
\4 .00 &amp; ~ t6 .95
Open M on ~ S at 9 -5
C losed S und a

Also now accepting

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Earl y birds start
6:30 l si Thursday
or every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Gel5 FREE

• 2001 Pon tiac · Trans Am
w/Ram ai r, white, 11 ,072
85 Topaz. runs good. good
mi les. excellent condition,
body. $500; dining room
one owner. still under war·
table, entertainment center,
ran1y. $24 .000 . (304)27 3(740)992·2583
9558
Fal ,
BLOCK
BURN
C ravings. and
BOOST
Energy Like
You Have
Never Experienced.
WEIGHT· LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launch O&lt;:tober
23, 2002 . Call Tracy at
(740)441·1982

fO~R

2002 Chevy Cavalier, Yellow,
Chrome wheels with spo rt
package. Still just like new.
18,200 mlles: Asl&lt; lng $9500.
Phon e (7 40)256· 1253 le ave
message if no answer

Pomeroy

740-992-6694
Please leave
message if no
answer

Craftsman
42"
Riding
Mower. 6- speed, Koh ler 88 Honda ACCOfd. 4 cytin·
engiM . Nice. Condition. der. 120,000 miles, racer
rims, ligh t body damage.
(304)895-3020
$900. (740)446·8124 Craftsman Lawn tractor, 42
inch, 15 HP, 7 years old . 89 Olds Cutl ass Cal ais,
eng1ne
work.
E,.;cellent Conclitipn . $600 needs
(740)256· 1426 .
(HOJ245·5393

•

Top • Removal • Trim

(304) 675-5282
www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctorOwv dr.com

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

740-992-1671.
Stop &amp; Compare

New &amp; Used Heat Pumps - 1988 Ford Bronco II , 4X4, 5·
Gas
· Furnaces .
Free speed , good condition,
Estimales. (740)446·6308
1 29,000 miles. (304 )675·
NEW AND USED STEEL 1522.
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar .,. - - - - - d- -R-m_a_u_a_d
2 00 1 0 0
Fo r
Concrete,
·Angle,
ge a
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Cab, lots of ~,.;tras, 25•000
Grating
For'
Drains, miles . A~klng $21,900.
Driveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L 17401256"1 26

Ripley, WV 25271

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our

business, not our sideline

r

·w.v·s #I

81

BUilDERS InC.

Best Service at
the Best Price

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garage&lt;
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCI AL and
RESIDENTIAL

'
FREE E~TIMATES

l rw ~,!,~MI•''· fr«" 10 h,.k,.,

~1 dup

Call u&lt; tuo •II ! ""r C•&gt;~n~ultr 1\1'&lt;'&lt;.1&lt;

(740) 446-1812

740·992-7599

,\.\A

u.• n/mul

Fin all y ... Money p aid to XQ.JJ. when cancer
strik es. You choose the amount up to $50.000!
Pays in addition to o lher insunmc e.
You use the mo ney howeve r you lili.e.
Cance r w ill strik e w hen you leasl expect it.
It wi ll leave you and your famil y fin anciall.y
strapped. CANCER C HECK will be
there when yo u need it.

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
Box

189 :111 DDLEPORT.

fJlU

29670 Bashan Road
· Racine, Ohio

JAS Painting
25 yrs. experience

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Friendly &amp; P.:Oreasionel

Let me de 1\ for yc.ul

for free es1ima1es
740-992·5678

,..

' . 0,

.i&gt;

'

to·1o•xal:l'
Hours

7 :00AM· 8:00PM

YOUNG'S
Sine\! 1979

Vegetable, bedding flats &amp;
hanging baskets $6.60
4" annuals 94¢
Time to plant cool weather vegetable
plants &amp; pansy's , 4" perennials $1.18

Auth••nl.:d SerY!&lt;C F'ru\ 1Jrr Fur

RainSofl
W:ucr Trc.tl tllC I)t

F.~u i pmc n l

Mt. Vern on
7~0- 397- 9751

Custom
Building
&amp; Remodeling
Ovc1 16 year.~ Expenence
• Room Additi o n.~
• Ki tchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
• Repl ucement W in dows

Buv 6 get 1 FREE

taryest selection of perennials a shrubs
at the lowest priceS In Meigs County

1-740-949-2115

992· 6215
Pomerov. Onlo

3/24 TFN

22 Ve rs

WV

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675-2457

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots t Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Office (740) 985-3511
Home (740) 985-3622

Marcum
Building

Service
• Decks &amp; Porches
• Room Add itions
•

1

Roofing

• Viny l &amp; Wood
Siding
• lnlerior Remodeling
General Carpen try Work

Parts • Service
Bags • Belts

Mike Marcum, Owner

740-985-4141

Over 25 years in Business
- l2.5 .00 service fee for piddng

SEAL IT~

up sweeper~ at your home
· Rain bow s. Kirby, Elecirolux. Hoover, Eureka.

Tri-Star, Regina &amp; most other brands.
Ports shipped UPS • Fast, Dependable S.rvlce

l'd,i• , JI

I

878-2417 or

Owner Opt&gt;rated
David-Rhodes &amp; Norma Rhodes

L1

d.n \j

(304) 273-4098
•

Free Es1ima1es

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Henderson,

ln su ~d

(,II f '~ II (

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical 6 Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
•
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka

MYERS PAVING :

• No Seams
• No Leaks
• Free Estimates

Pill Grooming· &lt;logo &amp; call, 1993, Suzuki Katana Bike,
pick-up &amp; d&amp;ll\lery, Linda aaklng $1800 OBO mini
Wade, Side Hill
Rd .. oondRion, (740)388-0481
Rutland. (740)742·8916

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

Seamless Gutter
Services

M&lt;m&gt;R&lt;.'Yrus

liNDA1 Pllmll

.slzis 5'x1·or

740·991·1119

2000 Ford Wlndolar LX ,
so,ooo mlleo, $9500, call
(7-'0)992·6968 It no answer
pleaae leave mes11ge.

.llt8 tfn

Ta~e

lntt rlor. Ex1erlor, CumnwKiid

45771
740·949·2217

Free Es1ima1es

....

OH 45760

740-843-5264

s.·nwr /'/1111.1.'

Hill's Self
Storage

Full )

1997 Dodge extend cab
4x4, 4" left kit, must
Block, bfick, sewer pipes, (740 )742·8500
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Wlntara, Rio Grande , OH 1999 GMC Jimmy SLT, &lt;dr,
leather, moon roof, Bolt
Call740-245-5121 .
Excellent.
loaded,
low
mileage, (740)645·2127

AKC 1 female Bolton Terrier
and AKC 1 tamale Chlnoae
Fug pupploo. S350 now 1ak·
lng payments and depoeill.
(740)388·9325

CANCER CHECK

• Complete Rehabs

Red Fiberglass Topper tor __
•
shor1 bed (step side) Ford
1997 Chevy Sil-verado. Z-71 .
Ranger. $250. (304 )875·
4x4, auto. 3rd dr. low miles.
5703
E~cellent
Condition, .
(304 )895·3825 AHer 5:00

t

Ch evy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
Custom Van Dealer'

Call now to rese r ve ):.Q..I.!I check .
Open 9am-Spm

• Sidin g • Roofing

I

r~

1-800-822-0417

Manning K. Roush
Owner

• Porches • Decks • Garages

Scrap Metals Open Monday, 84 Ranger, runs , 4·speed,
Tue111 day, Wednesday &amp; good tires. $595 , high back
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed 1opper, $195. (740)441-&lt;&gt;514
Th ursday,
Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)448-7300

South Church St.

992-2975

• Ga rages

r

New&amp;: Used

Pomeroy, Ohio

dEIMlESS

• Compl ete
Remodeling

Dean Hill

SALES &amp; SERVICE

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE

• New Hom es .

99 Pontiac Sunflre auto/air,
CO player e,.;c. cond. 80,000
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In miles $4,500 30+675·6325
Stoclt Call Ron Evans, 1·
800·537-9528 .

JET

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

HOWARD£.
WRITESEl

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON

Tree Service

We Make House Call,

Gravely

949-1405
1 &lt;.

JONES'

k

GOnER
*Free EsUmales*

'79 Vene. au to 350, needs
inte ri or.
$650 0
0 80,
(740)949-1175

750 Easl Slale Streel Phone (740)593~71
Athens, Ohio

PC DOCTOR

1-M_o_lo_ra_·_
7 4_0_·4_4_
6·_
0_10_3_ _

--

/cHiVRO,~T/

$5.95 · I I .9 5

~ 1.. 7 9 ,

Offn 1:!'"..::1 1hm :'i-11-01

LARRY SCHEY

Hangi n g B a~kets

EVANS LAWN CARE

HARTWELL
STORAGE·
OLD GLORY
AUCTION
SERVICES

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Th.._, MiJ.dlqKJrl Cmnmmlil) A~~~·c- ;nu..l
·n1 c P illliC rt•} Mer c hant~ A•.,1JCio!lio11.
Tu '111n up. ~tu p 1n Oh10 RI\Cr Bear C" N r.l i&lt;ldleport
Der!l Sw r~ ur Office Service &amp; Suppl)' m M1ddlepon (lr
Chnrman Shoe' &amp; OhiO V:~lk~ Bulk ~tnre - Pt1 n ~roy.
b~

Spuii\IJn."J.

204 Condor Slreet

r·

Respi ratory Therap1st. PIT,
as needed. fleKible hours.
Ohio license. Send replies to
CLA 575 , clo Gall1pohs Da1ly
Tnbune , PO Box 469 .
GallipoliS OH 4563 1.

321 19 Wel shtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

- -- -- -

r

JIM 'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

(lO'xlO' &amp;10'x20')

rlO

i

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
~Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

Cellular

6 1 i11 k ~ \( lllg lhrough Mid dlcpllrt &amp; Putne ro)! Hundred.
ulmap:. distribu tl!d! Ad\' e rti ~c d &amp; promoted \\ id cly on
radio. llt!W!tpaper .... n ycn &amp; j)O 'ilers!

most ins ur~nce

~*R~

.Au.tEL

S5 gd&lt;i. you on tho: map &amp; &lt;I ~d lo" flag.
An udd1tional $5 if you nc t:d an in -IOW\1
locati on for you r yurJ -.ulc.

HAULING:

~997

Pro15 Bass Tracker,
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
9.9 O,B,&amp; trolling motor, 3
Vine St., (740)446-7398
seats,live well, rod holders ,
O rd~r tobacco plants now. f ish depth finder $2,500.
Kenmore washer, $95; G.E. Dewhurs t
Gr een hous e.
304-882·2850
dryer, $95; G.E.· electric
range, $95; G.E. refrigerator,
$95; Kenmore portable
Bass boat, 1994 Ran ger
washer, . $150 ; kenmor~
A72, 115HP, Mere Trac ke r,
washer &amp; dryer set, $300;
Aurl:f;
loaded, run s and looks
Table and chairs, solid ·--.iFOR.IiiiiSAu:·· -.,.1 great, $7000 .(740)446·6970

1hc 61h annual Yel low Flag Yard Sale'

May 2nd &amp; 3rd,

2002 Ford Ranger Edge
comlortably aqulpped 8,000
AKC Bolton Tarrier, male, 4 rlines $13,500. 2000 Ford
montho old, $250, (740)448· Ranger Ext Cab fu lly
equipped , 20,000 m lloa .
0872
$14,300. (~)875·3354
Euil!_ Pupplal AKC L:ab.
ChOCitillCI&lt;. 7wkl. old April
11i. (740 )98S-4174

I
J

AI'ART.IIENI'S
mR~:vr

lui~

::-c--------- --------- • Sand
• Dirt

BoATS

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at (7 40) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lysentinel.corn

Word Ads

R.B.

FAIR PIGS
sired by:
Trailer space tor Jent in Artie Blast, oot. com, Black 2000 Honda Motorcycle,
Middleport, (740)992·5858
Ice by Hitman 11 and Bearcat CBA 600, 4.6K act ual miles ,
excell ent condit1on. Cal l
Tw o 1i 2- 1 acre lots, in · Sows, S100 ea .. (740)6986231
(740) 446- 1731
Mercervill e area. $125 per
month. (740}258· 1015
Polled Hereford Bu ll s and 98 Honda400 Foreman4K4 .
WANnD
Heifers . 6 to 8 mo. Call stick stoppers, floor boards .
TO RENT
(304)882-2426
dirt-devil tires, e,.;ce.llent con·
d ition .
$3400
OBO
Pu re Breed A ngus yeBT· (740 )446 _8124
Wanted to rent - Pasture in ling s, heifers &amp; bull s for sale.
Gallia Co. with good fences $1.00ib: 1304)675-6248
&amp;
&amp; water
Phone: Jim
mw.SALE
Reg. Angu s bulls- Top performance bloodlines, Meine
Chi· Angus show heifers, 1994 Stratos 264 Bass Boat.
he if&amp;rs. bred heifers and Bl eck &amp; Sliver, 120 h.p.
crossbred bull s. Slate Run Eu inrude 421b trolling motor
Fa rm,
Jackson,
O H. fish finder. G reat shape.
(740)286·5395
S7500. (740)742-0509

L--•F'Eimuzilililiiiiiilli~--,.1

(){flee 1/o""~

MIJIURCYCLI:S

I__

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
{[rtbune
Sentinel
Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ myda ilytri bune.com

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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, April 7, 2003

Screening day examines
how ·alcohol affects hea.lth
DEAR ABBY: I applaud
your recent columns on alcohol abuse. But how much do
your readers really know
about alcohol and health? The
imponance of becoming educated about alcohol cannot be
emphasized enough. On April
I 0.
National
Alcohol
Screening Day, Americans
ADVICE
can learn about alcohol and ·
the ir health, and assess if
they 're engaging in risky your readers will attend local
drinking practices.
alcohol education and screenThe Screening Day mes- ing programs in their own
sage puts it simply: "Alcohol communities on April 10. On
and your health: Where do that day. health programs and
you draw the line?" Each of agencies, colleges and univerus needs to know just where sities, senior center{ and com·
that line is. Alcohol misuse munity organizations nation comes with a devastatingly wide will offer ed ucation and
high cost. The annual dollar screening
programs
for
amount is estimated to be Americans of all ages. They
$185 billion in the United will have the opportunity to
States. The emotional cost to find out more about alcohol
individuals and their families and their health and to comis immeasurable.
plete a brief, anonymous.
Our studies show that near- alcohol screening questionly one-third of adults engage naire to assess if they are
in risky drinking patterns. Our risky drinkers.
200 I National Household
Please encourage your readSurvey on Drug Abuse found ers to Jearn more about
that 13.4 million Americans-- National Alcohol Screening
5.9 percent of tile population- Day, Abby. By sharing this
• meet the diagnostic criteria information with them, you
for alcohol dependence or are making an imponant conabuse. Ninety-one percent of tribution to our commitment
these people do not realize to promote · safe and healthy
they have a problem.
lives for all.- TOMMYG.
For these reasons. I hope THOMPSON,
SECRE·

Dear

Abby

TARY OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVJCES
DEAR
SECRETARY
THOMPSON: Beca~e people occasional! y ove · ndulge
m drinking does not a omatically mean they ar a.lcoholics. However, it 1s o
everyone's advan tage to know
the difference and to reco~­
nize the warning signs. This 1s
cenainly a subject wonh educating oneself about. To learn
more about National Alcohol
Screening Day. call toll- free
(800) 763-1200 or visit
www. nationalalcoholscreenin gday.org.
DEAR ABBY: I operate a
home day care for preschool
children, and almost every
day I'm faced with the same
question: When parents arrive
to pick up their children and
the kids begin mi sbehaving.
who is responsible for correcting them - their parents
or me?
Two youngsters in particular tum into little monsters the
minute their mothers arrive.
These women have never
once disciplined them in my
presence. Should I give the
offending children a "timeout" the next day? I need your
advice because I don ' t want to
overstep my bounds .
CHILD-CARE PRO IN
NEW JERSEY

ACROSS

44
46
49
50
52

1 Fish bait
5 New Year
mo.
8 Dog
breeder's · 54
or g.
11 Not home 55
12 Mixed bag
14 Doctor's
56

DEAR
CHILD-CARE
PRO: Some parents let their
children get away with murder. However, you are within
your rights to let the children
know what behavior will not
be tolerated on your premises.
Were I in your shoes and the
youn gsters began acting up
while their parents said nothing, I would speak up.
··
·; h
d~ ' · Wallmg
unll t e next ay IS
too late.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
•know11 liS Jeanne Phillips and
was founded by her m;ther.
. PI '11'
"' · D '
POil 1me
u Ips. rrnte ear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0 . Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

15
16
17

~~yb~~~~d

garnet
Truck
fronts
Strong
~~::."
Frenzies

57
58
59

Dried fruit
Crave
Finale
Gala
Caroler's
tune
Banjo
cousin
Adventure
tale ·
Rundown
dwelling
Average
Pedro's
aunt
Solar disk

By BERNICE SEDE 0sOL

There's a good chance yo u
will find yourse lf assuming
leadership roles in the coming
year both where your social
mterests are concerned and in

yo ur commercial involve.ment s. You could score on all
front s.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - You have what it takes
to accumulate fund s today ,
but inslead of looking for a
big kill, take all the little
gains that come your way.
They' II have a way of adding
up to one large sum.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Be.ing a strong. inde-

pendent tl~inK e r can serve you

~~

well today. so when lefl to
yo ur own devices. don 't be
afraid to make decisions when
the big boss is n· t around .
You ' ll do a good job. .
.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-The devil will be in the de·
:tails today, so when making
any important financial trans·
actions, don't affix you r signature 10 any document be·

fore reading it through carefully and thoroughly.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - It isn't likely that what
you tell to someone 1oday will
slay with that person. so un less you don'! mind your affairs being broadcast to everyone within earshot. better stay
mum.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Important objectives can be
achieved today if you're willing to make your moves one
step at a time. You won't
botch thin gs up if you are
thoughtful and watch your
footing .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-Trade on your experiences
today, and you won't make
any mislakes you might have
made in the past. If you don ' t,
hi story will repeat itself ..
possibly with greater verve.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- What will give you a competitive edge over your competition both commercially
and careerwise today will be
your clever reasoning powers.
They'll be both sharp and accurate.
·

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22)- Stand back a few paces
today if you have to deal 'll'fth
a comphcaled issue. Distance
improves your vision and

gives you a clearer perspective to deal with the situation
· better.
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) - This is one of
!hose days where all of your
efforts wi II be noticed and rewarded, so slrive lobe as pro·
due-live as possible. Even
your small victories will be
acknowledged.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22J an. 19) - If you want to be
a hit socially today. put people al ease by getlong them to

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

50 CENTS • Vol. 53 . No . 161

13 Fish hawk 40 Kampala 's
DOWN
18
19 Well-put
nat ion
20
1 Tongues
21 Frisk about 41 Sri22 DJ 's
sometime, 24 Rested
42 Quilt stuffer
albums
do It
25 Like some 43 Veldt
humor
scavenger
23 Highway
2 Gets
26 Holy lerror 44 Stay in
24 Speedy
on debt
27 Lisbon ladyth-e-army 27- Regard11s- 3- Freeway
29 Tentacle
.access
28 Overhead
(hyph.)
30 Plump
4 Yours truly
railways
45 Tidy
(hyph.)
5 Athletes
30 Pole
47 Force
· 34 Powerful
6 Huntsville .31 Mouths,
to flee
In biology 48 Fictional
storms
loc.
32 ,Set
captain
37 "Norma-" 7 Robins'
33 Affirmative 51 Bi· plus one
38 Meat· ·
beaks
grading
8 Wouldn't
35 Shades
53 RN
· grp. ·
hurt--.
36 Turn
assistant
39 Piers
9 Entered .
into bone
41 Sedimenf
data
39 "-Sera,
Sera"
43 Bear 10 High notes

Students can
'")~llearn a lot from
the newspa·
T&gt;~..."ll~ per about the
world ·
in which they live. And
now is the
perfect time to bring
newspapers into the
· I ssr om.

· BY CHARLENE

0
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2nd DOWN

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JUDD'S TOTAL

•

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22

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2nd DOWN

J&lt;d DOWN

~til

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to

DOWN

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previous
Word
Scrimmage ·

AVERAGE GAME 240.250

=

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME UMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7-lener woro !rom me teners on eacn yarCIIIne

.l.dd poinls 1o each word or lelt!!r using scoring directions at r1ght. Se~~en-letler
words gat a SO-point bonus. All WOfds can be lound in Webslers New Work!
Colleo&amp; Olclionary.
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

273

&lt;Ofl

A long line Ot firetrucks and pollee vehicles from the tri·county
area pass underneath a ladder tribute on Second Avenue dur·
ing Monday's funeral process ion for veteran Gallipolis firefighter Richard A. Long, 56 , who died Thursday of injuries he
suffered in a pumper truck accident. (Carrie Ann Wood)

H'onoring a
friend, colleague

,,

'--

BY ToNY M.

lEACH

Staff writer

smc•s,

wOimM~s
U&amp;elt55 ~UNI ' 5,
TA~KtD

5AVIN&amp;5,

8LOVJN M£~T Eb&amp;':l ..

.
GALLIPOLIS - · A gentle
rain fell outside the First
Baptist Church J'vlonday as'
hundreds came out to pay
their respect s for a fallen firefighter.
Funeral services were held
Monday morning at First
Baptist church on Fourth
.

LET GO' Of 1'\1( GREW
AND OVtRINDULGtNGt 1'\1AT
DEfiNED 1'\1E L/15T 'TWO
otCA0€5 AND AWAKtN TO
OUR HI&amp;HER PURPOSE ...

FRENCH
WAITRESSES

ARE 50
EXCITA&amp;~E ..

WE LOOtr: ....
NOTtiiNG
ALitce!

A~e
TAL~ING

wtiAT

-YOU
A,OUT? .I.'M
YOU#l
DOVBL.EI.

HOEFLICH

News editor

WORD®©®CD@@0©®··
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~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Science f~ction keys
Meigs studen dramas

Officers of Farmers Bank of West Virgini&lt;l cut a ribbon officially
OPI)ning the bank's Mason office Monday morning. The new
branch, the first office of the Pomeroy-based bank's West
Virginia Division, oPf)ned for business two weeks ago at the
entrance to the Wai-Mart Super Center. Cutting the ribbon are,
from left, Hilda Austin of the Mason County Chamber of
Commerce, Farmers Bank President Paul Reed, Vice President
Roger Hysell, Bank Director John Musser, Mason Mayor Ray
Varian, Farmers Bank Chief Executive Officer Paul Kloes , West
Virginia Division President Mike Lieving, and Gina Pines , presi·
dent of the Meigs County Chamber of Comme rce. (Brian J. Ree d)

talk about their favorite subject - themselves. The more
you encourage them to do so,
the better lhey'IJ like you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - You're apt to get a lot
more accomplished than usual
today. not because you ' II necessarily work harder, but because you'll be smarter about
· how you go about performing
your tasks.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- The race isn 't apt to go
to the swift today, bul to the
smart. If you get involved in ·
anylhing competitive. use
your brams. Let the other guy
attempt to use his or her
brawn.

4th DOWN

AVERAGE GAME 170.180

Branch opens

The Newspaper
Has Class •••

IC aoo3 VN!ed F... .._ s,r.dlclle , lnr.

y,

TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 2003

,----------..,

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK

@
@

Orang111•n win NCAA title, B1

•

Astrograph
Tuesday, April 8. 2003

.

Avenue 'for Rich ard A. Long,
56, a veteran ftrefighter who
died last Thursday of injuries
sutfered when a pumper truck
he was driving to a brush fire
in Clay Township went off the .
road and ovenurned.
Members of various local
Jaw enforcement agencies,
fire departments, and emergency organizations, along

Please see Honoring. AS
Rain, HI: 60s, Low: 4o.

Index
2 Sections - 12 ,....

Calendar
: Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
· Weather

A2
83·5
·86
86

A4

AS
8 1·3

A2

C 2003 Ohio ValleY Publishina Co.

Zllc
-·
3fd &amp;raM
Pomeroy
Elementary

POMEROY - If you
lik e. scien ce fiction,
you:ll Jove thi s year's
. play s by the drama st udents of Meigs High
School.
Directe d by Celia
McCoy, the two plays
will be presented at 8
p .m. on Friday in the
Larry
R . Morri so n
Gymnasium. Cost· is $4
for adults and $2 for
students.
In the cast of " High
School Dropouts from
Outer Space" are left to
ri g ht, seated front,
Michelle
Drenner,
Ashley Eblin, Bridget
Balser, Cassie Braun
and Jassiline Carter;
middle
standing·,
Andrea Burdette, Kaiie
Jeffers, Chris Haning
and Casey Tillis; and
back,
Jon · Diddle ,
Chelsea Ray, Rachel
Argabright,
Brandy
Shea,
Shannon
Soulsby. Shaun Cri s p
and Marc Barr. Cast
members not pictured
are Juley Eblin, Lee
Layton
and
Jami
Hayes .
Taking roles in the
second play," Attack of
the
Killer
Grasshoppers ,"
are,
from left, seated on
floor, Je ss ica Justice,
Stephanie Story, Maria
Drenner, Hollie Ferrell,
Brook
Bolin
and
Meghan .Haynes ; second
row,
Michele
RunyiJn,
Brandon
R amsburg,
Chris
Haning, Will Kauff.
Mindy Chancey and
Jeremy Roush ; third
row,
Efl\ily . Story,
Jennifer
Walker,
Amanda Fetty, Allison
Williamson and Ashley
Col well ; and back ,
Heather
Hysell ,
Mallory King , Zach
Gilkey, Mat 0' Bri e n ,
Beth
Wilfong
and
Candice Fetty.

'High School Dropouts from Outer Space'

Garbage ordin,ance close to passage
BY J. MILES

LAYTON

Staff writer
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council discu ssed a
proposed garbage ordinance
at Monday's meeting.
. The ordinance, to regulate
trash .:.'ollection in the village, passed 5-1 for the second of three votes needed
for approval. If the ordi nance passes after one more
vote , it will be effective .
The proposed ordinance
syste mati cally
mandate s
how tra sh collection is to
take place, which would
almost require a trash
removal contractor.

Residents who do not
have a permit from the village will not be '!llowed to
collect, remove or transport
trash within the village.
People will no longer be
allowed tQ haul garbage
away using flatbed open
trucks because a specific
type of truck will be
required for trash removal.
The ordinance also sets a
standard for how trash
removal contractors would
submit proposals to contract
with the vi llage. Official
times and date s for trash
collection will be established.
The ordinance establishes

a penalty for anyone who
violates th e Jaw. According
to clerk-treasurer . Sherry
Cottrill, versions of this
ordinance have been di scussed in the past with varying degrees of success.
Council members who
voted for the ordinance were
Eber Picken s Jr., Donna
Peterson, Mike Van Meter,
Mike Deem and Mony
Wood , council president.
Counci·J
member
Eric
Cunningham voted against
the ord inance.
''I'm in favor of it because
I don' t Jiike pickups or flat
bed trucks picking up
garbage," he said.

Diabetes Support Groups.

'

· The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, April 13 from 2:00 • 4:00 pm
in the Hospital's French 500 ~oom .
In Meigs County: Thursday, April17 at 10:30 am · Meigs Senior Center

Diabetes SeH Management Pa ogram

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzel' D(fference

April14, 15 and 16 from 9:00am· 12 Noon in the French 500 Room
For more informatiOn on these FREE programs, o"r to register, call

...

I

" I .don't like the waste
dripping all over the roads,"
Pickens said.
Pickens said tra sh removal
would be early in the day
between 6 a.m. and noon.
He said this would be better
because lhe trash trucks
would be "out of town when
kids start going to· the pool
or during ball season."
Cunningham opposes the
garbage ordinance because
he doesn"t think the village
needs to be te lling people
how to pick up their trash.
He said it shou ld be the citizens' decision to determine
how they pick up and haul
away their trash.

www .holzer.org

(740) 446·5080

.,

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