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                  <text>Coming Thursday: Places to go, Things to do

.

~

en
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Supreme
Court
•
com1ng ·
to Chester
BY

J.

All the world's a stage

OW HOW WOMEN FEEL.
"

Complete Women's Healthcare Services
Having a convenient, easy to find location is just the beginning of satisfying our patients. When
our neighbors choose a hospital, many choose PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL because of the
superior care they receive. That's no surprise becausE PLEASANT VAIJ.EY HOSPITAL believes that
patient satisfaction is an important part of total quality medical care.

A part of that commitment is offering complete women's healthcare services. Women's bodies
are different ... we want to provide you with the knowledge to establish and maintain the highest

BY

Inside .
• Brewer exec~tion: See
page Al
• Court news, See page
Al-3
• Literary Club, See
page A3
• Military news. See
page A3
• 10,000 pianos and
counting. See page Ali
• Land transfers, See
pageA6
• Social Security, See
pageA6
Partly cloudy, HI: 70o, Low: 50s

quality of life possible.

\\

l1-~r 1

"'I

Autumn D1M011, 5th Cf8de,
Pomeroy Elementary

Index
l Sections Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

n Peges
A3
84-5
B6
B6
A4
A3
B 1-3
A2

Brant Buckley listens to Jen nifer Thoma. front. and Erica Lemmons perform their li nes
for the upcoming play "Taming the Wild. Wild West in a Dress. " There will be a dinne r
theater performance 7 p.m. May 3, in t he ,high school gym nas iu m. A matinee pe rformance wi ll also be presented at 2 p.m.. May 4. (J . Miles Layton)

Tom Theiss lis tens to Rachel Chapman. middle. an~ Amy Lee perform the ir li nes for
the upcom ing play "Taming the Wild, Wild West in a Dress ." Theiss and Chapman will
be ma rried in the play th at wi ll open for one night only 7 p.m. Mpy 9 in the high school
gymnasi um. (J. Miles Layton)

MILES LAYTON

RAC INE
Southern
Local Superintendent Bob
Grueser said no one will lose
their job because of budget
cuts. At the sc hoo l board
meeti ng Monday, Gruese r
laid out the fiscal plan whic h
wi ll red uce the $665 ,000
.deficit by more than
$430,700.
Faculty and staff retirements are the main ways the
district hopes to satisfy the
Pl annin g
state Finance
Supervis ion Commission
which has ordered the distric t to come up with a financial recovery plan which wi ll
eliminate the debt.
The sav ings from salaries
will come from many places.
The distri ct will not replace a
reti ring special edu cation
teacher, which wi ll save
more than $52,000. A reti ring
phys ical ed ucatio n
teacher will be re pl aced
through an internal transfer,
further savi ng the distri ct
$40.000. An additi onal
teac her wi ll be paid from
special Titl e IV fund, which
is a federal progr-Am established by the Clinton adm inistratio n whi ch seeks to
lower student to teacher
classroom ratios. Since the
money for this salary will not
come from the general fund
money, it will save the district approx imately $40,000.
Retiring staff members
will be re placed with less
ex pensive new employees.
which will"\ave the distri ct ·
an additionaj $50.000.
An allocation fro m state
parity aid whic h wi II be used
for salaries will further

BY J. MILES LAYTON
Staff writer

POMEROY - Students at
Eastern and Southern High
School wiU present comedy
plays to entertain the community this week and next. w
The senior class of Eastern
High School will present a
two-act comedy western,
"Taming the Wtld, Wlld West
in a Dress," by noted playwright Billy St. John. There
wiU be a din tier theater performance at 7 p.m. SatunJay in
the high school gymnasium.
The play is about an acting
troop which inherit' a saloo{l
in the wild west After leaving
the confines of big city ci vitization. the group of men discover a typographical error
which changes their li ves.
"Saloon" is supposed to be
"salon" - a place where
women get their hair cut. The
men are faced with a dilemma. Do they run the· hair
salon, or high-tail it back to
the big dty?
Since the men are actors.
they choose the road less trav,
eled by and dress as women to
keep the business alive. These
cross dressers learn a thing or
two about women and in the
process tau in love with a couple of their clients. Even

today, a relationship between wri tten and will be pera cross dressing male salon fom1ed by the students.
technician and an unsuspectThere are two acts. The
ing female customer makes fi rst takes place at a bridal
for a good night of entertain- shower. The second takes
ment, as real or imagined place at the wedding recepidentities dance around the tion.
plot.
"This year's play will be
At 6:30 a.m. each morning different because it is not a
for thepast six weeks. director bunch of different acts or
Twila Buckley has prepared stories, but one big comedy
the 21-member cast for the wi th a couple shades of
play. Cast member Erica crrwna throw n in for a good
Lemmons .looks forward to blend of theater," said
opening night. She said she Director Don Dudding.
has enjoyed being in the play
In the play, Rachel
w1d that it has given her a Chapman plays the bride and ·
chance to become better Tommy Theiss plays the·
friends with cast members. groom . The play is a learning
Jennifer Thoma said it will experience .
be funny watching boys
"We get experience in actdress as girls.
ing and being able to talk in
Dinner theater tickets, front of people so that it
which cost $8 for adults arid won't bother us as much
$5 for students, will be on when we get . to college,"
sale from senior class tliem- Chapmm1 said.
bers through Wednesday. A
Theiss looks forward to the
matinee perfonnance will "danci ng" scene. He said that
also be presented at 2 p.m. the ca~t had "good chemistry"
Sunday. Tickets for the mati- w1d "worked well together"
nee will cost $4 for adulis . while creating the play.
and $2 for students.
Dudding. dnuna teacher. .
Southern High School stu- ha~ done this type of thing for
de nts will be performing nearly a decade. He said this
"From this Moment On" at 7 year's perfom1at1ce wi ll be
p.m. May 9 in the high vety memorable.
school gynmasi um. "From
"It has been a i on~ time
this Moment On" is a wed- since I have seen a scnpt this
ding comedy which was good," he said

School
nets state
money_for
repairs
BY J. MILES lAYTON

Staff writer
RACINE - The Ohio
Fac ilities Commission
will provide the Southern
Local School district
more than $557,000 for
necessary repairs to
bui!dings in the district.
Superintendent
· Bob
Grueser announced to the
school board Monday
night that hi s lobby
efforts in Columbus have
paid off. The di strict will
not pay a penny for these
repairs.
,
The district will able to
make repai rs to the of the
portico at the entrance of
the high school which
will cost more than
$ 117,000. Major plumbing work to showers,
commodes, urinals and
other rei ated ite ms,
which will cost more
than $125 ,000, are also
slated to be replaced or
repaired. Inside and outside doors to the high
school will be replaced
too along other related
items which will cost at
least $24,000. A handicap access elevator,
wh ich will cost more
than $120,000. , and a
modern · phone system,
which will cost at least
Please see Money. A5

Please see South1 -n, AS

Students produce comedies

' 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Eastern royalty

Jenifer Chadwe ll , daughter of Jim and Cindy Chadwell
of Reedsvi lle. and Ja red Hupp, son of Ed and Sharon
Hupp of Portland . were named Prom Queen and King
at Eastern High School Saturday night. The prom's
theme was "Garden of Dreams ." (Brian J. Reed)
'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

1he Tobacco Use P1 evention Center
NOW OPEN!

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340

•

J.

'

MILES LAYTON

CHESTER - The Supreme
Court of Ohio wi ll convene a
special sess ion at noon
Wedn esday in Chillicothe to
discuss the landmark case
Marbury v. Madi son and other
import ant topics in Ohio 's legal
history as part of Ohio' s bicentenn ial celebrati on.
· Simul taneo usly at the old
Chester courth ouse and many
other l ocat ion ~ across the state,
local lawyers and j udges wi ll
prese nt sim ilar programs to discuss the role the law had in the
slate's history as part of the ce lebration .
Me igs
County
Ju ve nile/Probate judge Scott
Powell and Meigs Count y Judge
Steven L. Story wi ll presen t a
bicente nnial program at 12 p.m .
April 30 at the C hester
Courthouse .
Powe ll said se lected top notch
stude nt s fro m area high schools
will argue cases in front of the
j udges 'bench at the . Chester
courthouse. One of the cases
in volves a constable who:. seized
property. Another involves a
dispute ove r which ad ult would
be res ponsible fGr a chi ld's we lfare. ·
·
"I thi nk this will be a nice program," said Pmyell. "We put
together a presenp tio n for the
county on how the 'laws and .the
courts helped shap_e ou r county' s histo ry,"

There are plenty of surprises awaiting you at PLEASANT VAlLEY HOSPITAL.

.

Staff writer

Staff writer

•

Despite budget cuts,
Southern. Local staff
rema1ns 1ntact

2881 State Route 160 • Gallipolis
(At the intersecfio~ of Route 160 and Jackson Pike)
Information on Secondhand smoke, tobacco prevention and
much morel No appointment necessary!

www.pvalley.org

(

MEDICAL CENTER

D iscover the Holzer D~fference

www.holzer .org

For more information, please call (740)446·5940

,.

.

'

·-

••

'

�''

'

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Local • Ohio.
Brewer executed for
killing friend's wife

Ohio weather
Wednesday, April 30

.

'

... ~oungstow,.~ : 4G_"f6a~.J

,----~---

Mansfield 44

IND.

no •

Local News

•

The Daily Sentinel

1\Jesday, April 29, 2003

.

.

Tricycle winner

Tuppers Plains VF;W
Aux iliary 9053 will hold a
regular meeting at 7:30
p.m.
on Thursday at the
Thursday, May 1
REEDSVILLE - Ol ive post hall .
Township ltustees, will
meet in regular session at
Saturday, May 2
7:30 p.m. Thursday, at the
HARRISONVILLE
1ownship hall on Joppa Harrisonville Lodge 411 ,
Road .
F&amp;AM , 7:30 p.m. , at hall.
Refreshments .

Associa1ed Press

-

Sb-\

/

l~
W. VA.

"
I

Cl2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

'~
2'&lt;;, ~
~- . Sunny Pt CIOIXt)'

Cloudy

Showers

~~

--

~
li~~~~ ~~ ~,
.
.....
'
T-storms

Rain

~

...

Flumes

Snow

Ice

Vlll IWOC1ated Press

Rainy days ahead
showers and thunderstonns·
through 3 am. Lows near 60.
Chtmce of rain 30 percent.
Thursday... Partly sunny and
wann. A slight chance of showers tmd thunderstonns in the
afternoon. Highs near 80.
Chance of rain 20 percent. ·
Thursday
night.. .Partly
cloudy and mild with a chance
of showers and thunderstonns.
Lows in the upper 50s. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
Friday... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstonns until midnighr...Then a
slight chance of showers. Highs
in the mid 70s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers are in the forecast
through tl1e weekend as a cold
front ~headed toward the region
is expected to stall over the
Ohio River Valley.
High temperatures for the
week are expected to be
between 75 and 80 degrees with
lows in the 50s.
The forecast is calling for a
break from rain Saturday and
Sunday before wet weather
returns next Monday.
WEATHER FORECAST

Tonight...Rather mild with
scattered showers and thunderstonns. Lows in the mid 50s.
Nonheaq winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday... Partly sunny and
warm. Scanered showers and
thunderstonns in the afternoon.
Highs near 80. Nonheast winds
5 to I0 mph becoming south
early in the afternoon .. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday
night...Partly
cloudy and mild. A chance of

ExTENDED FORECAST

Saturday ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows near 50 and highs in the
mid 60s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 40s and highs in the
upper 60s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy wi.th
a chtmce of showers and thunderstOtlllS. Lows in the lower
50s and highs near 70.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
April28, 2003

10,00&lt;1

Dow
Jones

9,000

8.471.61
Pet. c~

lrom preVIOUS:

+1.99

JAN

FEB

High
8,501 .66

low
8,305.03

7,000

MAR
APR
Reoord high: 11.722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

Apri\28, 2003

1,600

Nasdag
composite

1,400
1,200

JAN
High
1,465.40

FEB
Low
1.436.35

April28, 2003

1,0&lt;10

March 10. 2000
1,000

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500

900

aoo

+18.03
'

914.84
Pet.change
lrom pre"ous +1.78

JAN
High
91 8.15

FEB
Low
898.81

Marriage
licenses

POMEROY - Divorce
actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Sherrie L
Fink, Middleport. against
Charles E. Fink. Long
Bouom;
and
Donna
Matthews,
Middleport,
against Terry Matthews,
Albany.
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been tiled by
Frank J. McCown, and Tyna
L. McCown, both of Ironton;
Ronald Allen
Murphy,
tv!iddleport, and Tomasina B.

MAR
APR
Record high: 5,048.62

700

MAR
APR
Reoord hi~h: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Showing agility

Clubs and

Org~nizations

Two month-.old Haley Shaffer was the winner of a tricycle
given as a promotional prize by the . Meigs County
Immunization Program. Pictured with Haley are her mother, Tiffany Lonas, and her sister, Alyssa Shaffer, 2 .

Literary Club

Members hear
book.review,
set luncheon
POMEROY
- Nadine
Goebel reviewed Dean R.
Koontz' "The Watchers" at a
recent
meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club at the
home of Ann Rue.
She said the author developed his writing skils at a very
early age as a survival strategy
havmg been in a difficult home
situtaton where both parents
were iii .At least eight books
which have risen to first place
on the New York Times bestseller list were written by
Koontz, she noted, and are now
published in 38 languages. and
are big sellers both here and
abroad. Koontz now lives and
still writes in Califomia.
"The Watchers" is about two
genetically-altered life fonns
coming from a top government
laboratory, said Goebel. One of
these fonns is a dog of amazing
intelligence, and the other a
monster who is brutally violent
with no conscience. The story is
also aboul a man and woman
who are caught up in the suspense and horror, who meet up
with an unusual dog, a dirty,
damp golden retriever, with
blood on ils paws and their abil-

Court news

Divorce,
dissolution

+27.70
1,462.24
Pet.change
lrom previous +1.93

LUCASVILLE (AP) - A
man was exel Jted Tuesday
for kidnapping his ' fri end 's
wife, stuffing her in the
trunk of hi s car, and strangling and stabbing her when
she tried 10 escape.
David Brewer, 44, was
executed by injection at
10:20 a.m.
Authorities said Brewer,
44, sex ually assaulted and
beat Sherry Byrne , 21, in a
; motel room on March 21,
1985 , after luring her there
e n the pretense of meeting
him and hi s wife, Cathy. He
then abducted her and drove
around with her in the trunk
of hi s car for several hours.
Sharry Bymu
David Brewer
By the tim e authorities
-traced the license plate to·
Brewer, he had killed Bvrne ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '
after she tried to esca.pe iq unconstitutional in 1972, friend 's wife.
Springdale , hoping to have
Authorities said after sex- !hei r first child there. He
Beavercreek, a Dayton sub- saying it was applied too
urb aboul 40 miles north - arbilrarily.
,
ually assaulting and healing moved inlo his parents'
easl of the .motel.
On Friday, Gov. Boll Taft Byrne in the motel room, he home in Middletown .
Overcome with grief, he
Brewer confessed to denied Brewer's request for abducted her and drove
killing Byrne and. told clemency. Defense attor- around with her in the trunk was unable lo re lurn to hi s
poli ce her body was in a · ney s had argued thai of his car for several hours. old job .. Joe Byrne sold hi s
re nted storage locker in Brewer deserved mercy . Police
said
pass ing house. keeping only a few
nearby Franklin.
because he had no criminal motorists had reported see- item s. in c lud ing a basketHe pleaded innocent by record before the killing ing a piece of paper with ball je rsey tha.t his wife had
reason of insanity and was and has been a model pri s- "help me please" written in slept in .
lipstick shoved throu gh the
He remarr ied in 19~7 and
convicted of aggravated oner.
murder and kidnapping.
Brewer, who lived in crack in the trunk of a car.
look· a job as a financial
Brewe r's execution was Centerville, near Dayton.
Police said Byrne was executi ve with a paper comthe seventh in Ohio si nce and managed a rental appli- choked with a necktie tind pany in New Jersey the fol 1999, the year the state ance store, wa s a former stabbed IS times.
lowin g year. trying to
resumed executing inmates fraternity
brother
of
Joe Byrne never went escape the memories.
after reinstating the death Byrne' s
hu sband,
Joe back to the home he and hi s
He said he still suffers on
penalty in 1981. The U.S. Byrne. ·
wife , a cosmetics sa le s- the anniversary of hi s first
Supreme
Court
had
Brewer later told police woman , had bought in 1he marriage, Byrne's birthday
suburb
of and the day she was killed.
declared .the death penalty he was attracted to his Cincinnati

POMEROY -· Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Prob;lte Court
to George William Reirmire,
26. Pomeroy, and Amy Marie
Rizer, 24. Racine; Todd
Andrew Bannie, 28. and
Denise Michelle Laughery,
29, both of St. Paul , Minn .;
and Donny Ray Hoffman, 42,
and Jayme Anne Hudson, 23,
both of Pomeroy.

8.000

+165.26

Murphy, Long Bonom, and
by Thomas A
Smith,
Tuppers Plains, and Donna
K. Smith, Belpre.
Dissolutions have been
granted to Maggie Vance and
Andrew A. Vance, and
Crystal Gale Roush and
Jason Paige Roush.
Divorces have been granled to Nancy E. Scarbrough
from Leonard Scarbrough,
Deborah L. Michael from
Raymond J. Michael, and
Tracie M. Gilmore from
Travis Lee Gilmore.

Civil actions
POMEROY - The following civil aclions have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court:
• First
Resolution
Investment Corp., Columbus,
against Michael R. Klein,
Tuppers Plains, and others,
alleging defaull on a promissory note in the amount of
$5,072,95.
• Richard A. Hagerty,
Chillicothe, against Brenda
Alicie, Vinton, and others,
alleging default on a mortgage agreement in the
amount of $9,309.28.
• Home National Bank,

Police officer shot to death
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - in connection with an earlier
shooting at a bar.
slopped a car was shot and
II was the first death of a
killed Tuesday, and a1.11hori- Youngstown officer in the
ties were searching for the line of d'uty in II years,
driver.
police said. Hartzell had
Police Capt. Mike Vodilko been with the police departsaid Patrolman Michael ment since December of
Hartzel l, 26, was shot 2000.
arou nd 2:20 a.m. in downSome officers fro m nef1rtown Youngstown.
by Sharon, Pa., joined
It wasn't known if Youngstown police in the
Hartzell had stopped the car search.
A police officer who had

Racine, against Christopher installalion of a heating and
D. Smith, Pomeroy. and oth- cooling system, demanding
ers. alleging default on judgment in excess of
promi ssory note s in lhe $25,000.
amount of $58,610.56, and
~Bank One, Milwaukee,
$24,544.33.
Wis , against Paul L~e Flora,
· • National City Bank , · Pomeroy, and others, allegPittsburgh, Pa, · against ing default on a mortgage
Michael E. Rinehart, Racine, agreement in the amount of
and others, alleging default $29 ,105 .44.
on a mortgage agreement in
the amount of $66,885.
• Aurora Casket Co., Inc. ,
Cincinnati , against Benjamin
POMEROY
-Ernie
H. Ewing, doing business as Roach was sentenced in
Ewing
Funeral
Home , Meig s County Common
Pomeroy, and others, alleg" Pleas Court to two years in
ing an unpaid balance of
prison, with 195 days ' credit
$1 ,851.94. I.
• Asset
Acceplance , for time served, on a motion
Warren. Mich..
against to . revoke community conNancy Whittekind, Pomeroy, trol.
Billy W. Pearce was senalleging default on a loan
agreement in the amounl of tenced to one vear on each of
six counts. He was charged
$11,762.03.
• H&amp;S Financial Services. with two counts of breaking
Inc. , Lewisville, Tex ., against and entering, two counts of
Stacy Jeffers, Rutland, and grand theft. and two counts
others, alleging default on a of vandalism. Two of the
promissory note. in the one-year terms were sus- .
pended , and Pearce was
amount of; $11,662.73.
ordered
to participate in the
, • Penny Wolfe , Rac ine ,
against Hendrix Heating and Community Control program
Cooling, Tuppers Plains, and and was ordered to seek drug
others, allegmg negligence in and alcohol counseling .

Sentenced

Thomas J.
Kopczinksy
POMEROY
Navy
Seaman Recruit Thomas J.
Kopczinsky, son of Nada and
Arthur
Kopczinsky · of
Pomeroy recently completed
U.S. basic training at Recruit
Trainin g Command, Great
Lakes, IlL
Dpring the eight-week program, Kopcinsky completed a
variety of training , which
included classroom study and 1
practical instruction on naval

Do You Justt~

Your Sentinel
Newspaper carri

&lt;•.oo

Exercise consists of cardrovalcular workout:
Treadmill, rowing machine, bicycling; Ab strengthening and light weights

Class size limited to 10
Call 992·2681, Ext. 233 to
register or to get more Info..

customs, first aid, firefighting, water safety and survival,
and shipboard and aircraft
safety. An emphasis was also
placed on phys ical fitness.
The capstone event of boot
camp is "Battle Stations," an
exercise giving recruits the
key skills and confidence
needed to graduate and rake
to lhe fleet. "Battle Stations"

CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge #453 will
hold a special meeting at
7:30 p.m .' on Tuesday,
with work in the E.A.
degree.
Thursday, May 1
TUPPERS PLAINS

Reader Services

News

compliments of
Pizza Hut

. POMEROY
Childhood Immunization
Clinic, 9 to 11 a.m. , 1 to 3
p.m.,
Meigs
County
Health Department. Bring
shot records. Children
must be accompanied by
parent or legal guardian .
Donations accepted, . but
services provided to all.

Birthdays
Sunday, May 4
CHESTER - Ethel Orr,
formerly of Chester, will
celebrate her 98th birthday on May 4. Cards may
be sent to Northview
Senior Living Center, 267
North
Main
St.,
Johnstown, Ohio 43031.

Five generations recently celebrated Easter together at
the Connolly home on Ohio 681 with Tiffany Parker.
Pictured are, front, holdin!'l Tiffany, are her great-great
grandmother, Beulah Schultz and father, Jason Parker;
back row, great grandmother Marjorie Connolly and grandmother, Arlene Parker.

Court news
Numerous cases resolved Vinton, seatbelt, $30 and
in Meig s County Court
costs, left of center, $25
and cost s: Donald R.
POMEROY
Case s Holcomb, Vinton, speedresolved in the Meigs ing, $25 and costs;
Camilla Morris, Rutland,
County Court of Judge
Steve Story between March passing bad checks, $25
20 and April 14 are as fol- and . costs; Christina A.
lows:
·
Mulford, Pomeroy, speedPatrick
Buskirk, ing, $29 and costs; Larry
Pomeroy. disorderly con- M. Ritchie, Coolville, juveduct, $50 and costs; Eric E. nile bac, $150 and costs;
Dillard, Pomeroy, reckless James
M.
Smith,
operation, costs; Heather R. Reedsville, seatbelt, $30
Friend, Middleport, menac- and costs; Steven Vance,
ing, $50 and costs; Richard Albany, seatbelt, $30 and
Fuller, Bidwell, no drivers costs; Staci M. Adams,
license , $400 and costs; Belpre, speeding, $30 and
Eugene D. Atkins, Portland, costs; George R. Adkins,
speeding, $30 and costs; Middleport, seatbelt, $30
seatbelt, $30 and costs; and costs; ·
·
April Counts, Syracuse,
Michael
J.
Adkins,
passing bad checks , $25 Racine, speeding. $30 . and
and costs; Shawn·E. Goble, costs; Mark A. Ash,

Look for NASCAR
action Thursday

Waverly, seatbelt-passenger, $20 and costs; Thomas
P. Avis, Coolville, left of
center, $20 a'nd costs;
Reuben )3enson, Charlotte,
NC,
$30
and
costs;
Marlesia Boivin, Shade,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Robert P. Boyce, Marietta,
speeding, $25 and costs;
T.J. Michael Brantley,
Albany, speeding, $30 and
costs; Timothy D. Brinager,
Racine, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Rebecca A. Brown,
Warren, speeding, $30 and
costs; Mark L. Bruckner,
Bethel Park, Pa. , speeding,
$50 and costs; John P.
Burdette, Coolville, seatbelt , $30 and costs; Jeremy
W. Burleson, Norfolk, Va.,
speeding, $30 and costs;
James
E.
Bush,

Advertising
Outside Sale1 : Dave ~arrls , Ext. 15
Cla11JCin:.: Judy Clark, Ext. .10

has been designed ro galva:
nize the basic warrior attributes of sacrifice, dedication,
teamwork and endurance in
each recruit through the prac tical application of basic
Navy• skill s and the core values of Honor, Courage and
Commitment.
Kopczinsky is a 1999 graduate of Meigs High School.

FITNESS
Getting fit and
staying fit is in!

(UsPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley 'Publishing Co.
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Middlepor;t , seatbelt , $30
and costs; Richard D.
Blizzard, Racine, failure to
control, $20 and costs;
R.
Carnahan ,
Sandra
Syracuse, speeding, $30
and costs; David K.
Carrico, Lexington, Ky.,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Gregory
M.
Carter,
Sunbury, speeding, $30 and
costs; Paul 0. Castaneda,
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and costs, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Raymond Chesney,
Brooklyn, Mich ., tinted
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E. Clark, Gallipolis, unreasonable speed for conditions; Misty D. Clark,
Guysville , speeding , $30
and costs.

HEALTH

The Daily Sentinel

Edhor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext 13

May IBID July 21

Tlm1: ID:DO to 11:11 a.m.
Wbue: ••lt•l•niDr Cltlun1' P1tn111 loom
Dp1n lo Ag11 48+
CRt: Only 11.11 pu 1111loa
total)

RACINE
The
Racine/Southern Alumni
Commit1ee will mee1 a1
Southern High School at
4:30 p.m . to diSC!JSS plans
for the alumni banquet to
be held at 6 p.m . on May
24 .

Tuesday, April 29

and

Correction Polley

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected, your
~
1}18-t:A.
carrier will win dinner
r fltA"t'
for two at

Wben: Mon. 8 Will. beginning

Tuesday, April 29 ,
TUPPERS .PLAINS Eastern Music Boosters ,
7 p.m., high school band
room, to discuss final
details for concert band
trip. All members urged to
at1end.

qur main concern in all stories Is t~ be Monday throug h Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an err?r tn a Str~e1, Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· , class postage paid B.t Pomeroy.
2156.
Member : The A ssocia ted Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association .
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions Ia The Daily Sentinel, 11 t
. Department extensions are:
Cou rt Street , Po.meroy, Ohio
45769.

Nominate them for

Ten Weeks' Exercise Class

ity to communicate.
The story involves another
character, a hired assassin who
is paid to kill the doctors who
are involved genetic engineering aimed al making animalhuman coiTUllunication possible. The dog Einstein was a
product of the programas was
the male creature. Both escaped
from the lab.
In concluding her review,
Goebel said that the large part
· of the book is concerned with
how the main characters, Travis
and Nora, deal with the hired
killer and the Outsider. with
Einstein's help.
President Leah Ord conducted the meeting and the•club collect
was
repeated.
At
Wednesday's meeting Phyllis
Hacken will review Fahrenheit
451 by Ray Bradbury during
the meeting at the Ord home.
On May 14 there will be a
catered luncheon at the
Pomeroy Library meeting room
with Ida Diehl lo give a review
of the Harry Potter books.
The members responded to
roll call by naming an Ohio
author and something he or she
had written.

Other events ·

Military news

Pizza Hut

Linda Mecklenburg of Mt. Gilead runs her Border Collie
"Awe some" through the Master Standard Agiljty course at the
Spring Festival of Dog Agility at Voice of America Park in West
Chester. Sunday. (AP)

Generations gather

Public
meetings

I

~

•

/'"

'

,......-..

,......... .L •.. ·r-·" .....
· Dayt_on ~~n&amp;~

1\Jesday, April 29, 2003

'

Community Calendar

BY JoHN McCARTHY

....,.

PageA3

news C mydailysenlinel .com
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Havet

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Carl Esposito
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Petrcfsky .decision leaves
him open to own bias

Today is Tuesday, April 29, the !19th day of 2003. There are
246 days left in the yeat.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
On April 29, I 945, during World War II, Amencan soldters
liberated the Dachau concentration camp; that same day,
Adolf Hitler married Eva Braun and designated Admiral Karl
D(Jenitz his successor.
On this date:
.
In 1429, Joan of Arc entered the besieged city of Orleans to
lead a victory over the English.
In 1861 , Maryland's House of Delegates voted against
seceding from the Union.
In 1862, New Orleans fell to Union forces during the Civil
Wfn. 1916, the Easter Rising in 6ubli':l collapsed as Irish
nationalists surrendered to Bnllsh authonttes.
In 1946, 28 former Japanese leaders were indicted as war
criminals.
·
.
In 1974 President Nixon announced he was releasing edited transcrlpts of some secretly made White House tape
' recordings related to Watergate.
In 1983, Harold Washington was sworn .in as the first black
.
.
.
mayor of Chicago.
In 1992, deadly rioting erupted m Los Angeles after a JUry
in Simi Valley, Calif , acquitted four Los Angeles pohce officers of almost all state charges in the videotaped beating of
Rodney King.
In 1996 former CIA Director William Colby was presumed
drowned by authorities in Maryland after an apparent boating
acci'dent; his body was later recovered.
. .
In 1997, a worldwide treaty to ban chemtcal weapons went
into effect.
.
Ten years ago: Britain's Queen Elizabeth II announced that
for the first time, Buckingham Palace would be opened to
tourists to help raise money for repairs at fire-damaged
Windsor Castle.
.
Five years ago: The United States, Canada, and Mexico
agreed to eliminate tariffs on. items accountmg for $1 btlhon
in trade at a meetmg m Pans on th~ North Amencan Free
Trade Agreement. Israelis began markmg the 50th anmversary
of the founding of their country (although, according to the
Gregorian calendar, the anniversary fell on Ma~ 14th).
One year ago: A year after the loss of a seat It had held for
over 50 years, the United States won election to the U.N.
Humah Rights Commission.
.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Celeste Holm IS 84. Rhythm and
blues singer Carl Gardner (The Coasters) IS 75. Poet Rod
McKuen is 70. Actor Keith Baxter is 70. BluesmaA qus .Rush
is 69. Conductor Zubin Mehta is 67 . Actor Lane Smith IS 67.
Country si nger Duane Allen (Th~ Oak Ridge. Boys) is 60.
Singer Tommy James is 56. Movte director Phtlhp Noyce ~s
53. Comedian Jerry Seinfeld is 49. Actress Kate Mulgrew IS
48. Actor Daniel Day-Lewis is 46. ActressM;chelle,Pfetffer IS
45. Actress:Eve Plumb is 45. Rock mustc.tan Phil Kmg · ~ 43.
Country singer Stephanie Bentley is 40. Smger Carnte Wilson
· (Wilson Phillips) is 35. Actress Uma Thurman IS 33. Tenms
player Andre Agassi is 33. Rapper Master P 1s 33. Country
singer James Bonamy is 31. Rock musician Mike Hogan (The
Cranberries) is 30. Actor Zane Carney 1s 18.
.
Thought for Today: "If 50 million people say a foohsh
thing, it is still a foolish thing." - Anatole France, French
author and critic ( 1844-1924 ).

SPEAK OUT!
Ever yell at your television set? Ever read something in the
newspaper that gets y'our dander up?
Next time you get the urge to express your opinion, pick up the
telephone and call the Daily Sentinel's new "Speak Out" line .
Speak Out line callers need not give their name. They must,
however, follow a few simple rules - be bnef (calls are ·lnruted
to two minutes), no profanity, no personal attacks on individuals.
The "Speak Out" line is open 24 hours a day.
To call "Speak Out," dial the Sentinel's main number (740)
992-2 156 and then dial extension 29. Begin talking at the tone.

Mary Roush

Council authorizes
water
system
grants
.
rcJ

Triston Counts

MOVeS 0rwa .
With $300,000
applicatiOn

a

Politicized

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.
EMS runs

Friends may register and
se nd condolences online at
SYRACUSE - Mary L. · www.fisherfuneralhomes.co
. POMEROY
The
Roush , 77, Syracuse, went to. m
Emergency
Medical
be with the Lord on Monday,
to the
Service
responded
April 28, 2003, at Riverside •
f
not yet been determined.
following calls on Tuesday:
Methodi st
Hospital
in
Until recently, the village
Central Dispatch
Columbus.
RACINE - Triston James
had planned to construct
12:49
a.m.
.Adria!
She was born on April 12, Counts, infant son of Brett
the new plant at the Park
1926 in Meigs County, Counts and Karen Noll of Patterson, Spring Avenue ,
Street School site, but last
daughter of the late Gi.lbert Racine,
was
sti llborn treated not transported;
night , lannarelli said negoII :45 a.m. Faye Shultz,
and Eli zabeth· Freeman Saturday, April 26, 2003 , at
Bv BRIAN J. REED
tiations are
underway
Baumgardner. She was for- Cabe ii-Huntington Hospital Marietta
Memorial
Staff
writer
between
the
village
and
merly employed as a bar- in Huntington, W.Va. ·
Hospital;
tender in· Meigs County for · Besides his parents, he is
12:34
p.m.
Thomas
over 32 years.
survived by hi s brother, Tucker. Maple Avenue,
·
MIDDLEPORT
near the Middleport Manna
In addition to her parents. · Curtis Counts, at home ; Pleasant Valley Hospital;
· area on Page Street.
she was preceded in death by maternal
grandparents,
3:47 p.m. Keith Oiler, Middleport VII
i age Counct 1 The $!. 8 million treather son, William; a grandson, Christine Miller of Columbus Ohio 325, Holzer Medical authorized Mayor Sandy
Charles, Jr.; several sisters; and Charles Noll of Center;
Iannarelli to proceed with a ment plant is required
and brother.
.
Michigan; paternal grandpargrant apflication becau se of the relatively
6: 17 p.m. Scott and $300,000
for construction o the vii- hl.gh manganese content in
Surviving are her husband , ents, James and Ida Counts of
Wolf
Pen
Timothy
Walker,
!age' s new water treatment water from the new well
Millard L. Rou sh of Racine; paternal great grandRd.,
treated
not
tran
sported;
plant.
field, Ha ys said. Th e area
Syracuse; her children: parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor
6:
17
p.m.
Wolf
Pen
,
John
Meeting Monday, follow- chosen as a water well field
Gilbert (Vicki) Woods , Counts; and several aunts and
Dean, Hol zer;
ing the regular meeting of is located in the Hobson
Chester, Susie and Jeff uncles.
9:07
p.m .
Judith the Board of Public Affairs, area, and is owned by Jay
Schumacker, Westerville, Pat
Services will be held at the
Wildermuth,
Rocksprings
council met with Becky HaiL The Vil lage holds an
(Bob) Eynon, JacksoA, Myra convenience of the family.
Center, Hays of the village's engi- option to purchase up to 40
Briggs. Columbus, Mary K. Arrangements are under the Rehabilitation
neering firm Floyd. Browne acres for the new fteld . but
Deeter, Jackson. Joanie direction of Fisher Funeral Holzer;
9:39 p.m. Jeff Calmes, Associates. Hays said the · has not taken action to pur(Charles) Newhouse, . South Home in Pomeroy.
Carolina; her sister, Martha
Friends may send condo- Side Hill Rd. , auto fire.
new water treatment plant cha se land to date.
Hudson of Columbus; 17 lences and register online at
is required by the Ohio
The village's pre-appli caEnvironmental Protection tion for funds throu gh the
grandc hildren; 18 great www.fisherfuneralhomes.co
·
1
Agency in conjunction with Appalachian
Regtona
grandchildren; and several m.
new
water
well
field
now
Commission,
approved
a
nieces and nephews.
in the planning stages.
Monday evening, will . be
Services will be held at II
The
site
for
the
plant
has
followed
by grant appl1caa.m. on Wednesday, April 30.
POMEROY
- Meigs
2003 at Fisher Funeral Home
RACINE Dessie Douglas County
Sheriff Ralph
in Pomeroy with Pastor Boggess, 78: Racine, passed Trussell reported the folJasper Marcum officiating . away on Sunday, April 27, lowing complaints filed
Burial will follow at Meigs 2003 at Overbrook Center tn with his office over the
Memory Gardens.
Middleport.
weekend:
Friends may call from 5 to
She was born June 16,
from Page A1
• Robert Saltzman of
9 p.m. Tue sday at the funeral 1924 in West Virginia, Racine reported hi s car was
home .
daughter of the late Harry vandali zed while parked at
reduce the defic it by
and Ruth Ann. Barnhart hi s apartment.
$150,000.
Douglas. She was a homeMIDDLEPORT- Area resTwo kindergarten aid e
•
Maxine
Rose
and
maker.
idents
are
invited
to
a
share
their
will be ~ limi na i ed
positions
MIDDLEPORT - Joann
Surviving are a daughter, Delbert VanMeter, both of poetry and hear from an and these employees wi II be
Clark
Conant,
66, Linda Roberts, and her hus- Racine. reported their mail- acclaimed poet during a special
used in other vacant posiMiddleport, died on Monday, band, Herman "Pudge," of boxes were vandalized.
event
at
7
p.m.
Wednesday
at
tions
where funding avail• Mt. Moriah Church of
April 28, 2003 at Cabell Pomeroy; and five grandchilthe
University
of
Rio
able.
This
will save the disHuntington Hospital in dren : Robin (Alex) Nolan of God in Racine reported the Grande/Rio
Grande trict $46,000. Other major
Huntington , W.Va.
Kentucky, Tammy (Brad) vandalism of a new wooden Community College Meigs
n!duc tions include· eliminatShe was born on June 28, Thatcher of Barlow, Donald sign .and part of a fence ..
Center in Middleport.
ing
one bus route, which will
1936 in Pomeroy, daughter of Boggess of Racine, Linda
• Mattie Beegle or Racme
"Evening of Poetry" features save the distri.ct $29,000 and
the late Raymond and Evelyn Harrison (Ron Capehart) of reported the theft of a 36- award-winning poet .&lt;md essayminor reductions in employQuillen Spencer. She was a Pomeroy, and Joe Roberts of inch. John Deere ndtng ist Cathy Lentes.
·
ee
hours worked, which will
homemaker and a member of Pomeroy; five great grand- lawn mower from a buildLentes wiU read from some save the di strict $14,000.
the Middleport Church of . children: Justin Harri son, ing on her property.
of her moving and entertaining
There will be a $5,000
Christ and Pomeroy Eagles Jillian Harri son, Savanna
Trus se ll said his office is works during the event. The
Club Auxiliary.
Capehart, Ron Capehart and also
investigating
the local resident will also share her
Surviving are her husband, . Erin Nolan.
· break-ing and entering at thoughts on poetry and answer
Arthur C. Conant of
Also surviving is a brother, Ridgeview
Carryout, questions from audience memMiddleport ; her children , Harry J. Douglas of Racine ,
bers. The evening will also feaVicki Hanson of Pomeroy, with whom she made her Albany. Entry was made ture
an "open-floor" time when
from Page A1
Rick Clark of Matamora, home ; two daughters-in-law, through a side door, but
audience
members will be
Ind ., Sherri
Kin g of Agnes Boggess of Letart nothing was reported mi ssinvited to share some of their
Wheelersburg, and Terri .Falls and Rita Keith of ing.
$35.000, will also be
Deputies are also inve sti- poems. AU audi~nce members replaced.
Clark of Ellenwood, Ga.; her Parkersburg. W.Va.
are invited to bnng thetr own
stepson, Paul J Conant of
De ss ie was preceded in gating an attempted B&amp;E at poems to share and read during
The state did not provide
Aihens; her grandchildren, death by her husband, Denzel Reed' s Country Store in
funding for additional classBrent and Chad Hanson. L. Boggess, in 1978; sons, Reedsv ill e. Trussell asked the evening.
Lentes is a former first room heating systems.
Jerica Clark, Leigh Ann Robert Boggess and Denzel anyone with information
Grueser said funding for
King. and Amber Joann and Eugene Boggess; brothers, about the incidents to con- grade/kindergarten teacher who
these
projects is based on
has
had
her
poems
and
essays
.
Clayton Ray Clark; her &amp;reat Dennis Douglas and Denford tact the department' s 24published
in
a
variety
of
jourpercentages.
Depending on
granddaughter. Kylee Milch ; Douglas; an infant brother, hour anonymous tip line ,
nals, magazines and books, the project, the state provides
brothers, Larry Spencer of Alfred Douglas, and an infant 992-3502.
including
"Appalachian a certain percentage of the
Columbus and Charles sisters, Bessie Doug.las.
Heritage,
Pine
Mountain
Sand funding and local revenues
(Birdie) Spencer of Lima;
Services will be held at II
and Gravel, Rive!Wind, Now make up the difference. The
and several nieces and a.m. Wednesday. April 30,
and Then, Northern Ohio Live local money that was spent
. nephews. ·
2003, at · Cremeens Funeral
POMEROY
Meig
s
and Have My Own Song For
Services will be held at II Home in Racine, with Rev.
County
Sheriff
Ralph
It: Modem Poems of Ohio."
a.m. on Thursday, May I, Brian Harkness officiating.
Refreshments will be served
2003 at Fisher Funeral Home Burial will follow at Letart Trus sell reported the arrest
at
the event, which is open to
on
a
charge
of
Ernie
Crouso
in Middleport with AI Falls Cemetery.
everyone.
Hartson officiating. Burial
Friends may call from 6 to of domestic violence, after
For information. call 992.will follow at Rocksprings 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral he allegedly made threats to
3383.
harm his live-in girlfriend.
Cemetery.
home.
Friends may call from 6 to
8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
Federal Consumer Protection has confmncd the fuel saving claims in this advertisement.•
funeral home.

~~~~~~o::~~~ter~~~C:si~!

NATIONAL VIEW

TODAY IN HISTORY

For the Record

Obituaries

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

' • Dayton Daily News: Baseball Hall of Fame president
Dale Petrofsky bristles these days when people pomt out that
he used to work in the Ronald Reagan White House.
·
That was decades ago, he has said, and had nothing to do
with it. 'The "it" is his appalling. decision to cancel .the._l5th
anniversary showmg of the class10 baseball movte Bull
Durham" at this year's Hall of Fame festtvtttes because. two of
the movie's stars were outspoken opponents of the warm I~aq.
He insisted that he would have taken the same acuon agamst
supporters of the war, and that his concern was th!tt the actors
- Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins - would pohttctze the
event by talking about the war at the festivities.
What a crock.
In his letter announcing his decision, he made no mention of
his concern about what might happen at the baseball ceremonies event.
. That his act was indeed, motivated by the dovishness of the
actors is unmistak~ble -as is Mr. Petrofsky's political background.
. .
The best way for the Hall of Fame to _live down th1s httle
.infamy is to look around for another prestdent -. and tt m1ght
think twtce about lookmg m the world of pohucs.
.

The D.aily Sentinel'• Page AS

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Thesday, April 29, 2003

The Daily Sentinel

Bette Pearce
Managing Epitor

Tuesday, April 29, 2003

Dessie Boggess

Ulhat Americans have to learn about cultural education
George Bush the father
always said he wanted to be
)mown as the "Education
President." George Bush the
son has an education plan
that, if it ever comes off.
would make him the
"Education Wizard. "
That plan is helping Iraqis
build a secular education system. Such a system is a vital
pan of any American strategy
to promote Western-style
democracy, and not Islamic
theocracy. in liberated Iraq
(or Afghanistan, Pakistan, the
Palestinian Authority and
anywhere else in the Islamic
world). "The most radical
aspects of Islam il'l'e in places
with no education at all but
the Koran," a U.S . official
recently told the Washington
Post. "There is no math, no
culture. You counter that
(fundamentalism) by doing
something with the education
system."

But what? For . starters,
"something" that inculcates
respect for the rule of law,
wards off tyranny of the
majority, and · safeguards
freedom of worship and
equal rights before the law.
Any country decimated by
dictatorship also needs to
rediscover its culture, its history, and its significance in
the sweep of civilization.
Such serious and seriously
rigorous requirements, however, make me wonder
whether
21st-century
America, decades into its
own cultural eradication program of applied political correctness, is really well equipped to lead the way.

Diana
West ·

This bout of doubt came
over me while reading a
Vogue magazine article about
married foreign correspondents - at one point "he"
was Beijing bureau chief for
the Wall Street Journal and
"she" was Beijing bureau
chief for Newsweek - and
how they raised their three
young sons to be "citizens of
the world," not the United
States. According to author
Dorinda Elliott, she and her
husband very successfully
expanded their children's
multicultural horizons, but
never, ever grounded them in
fundamental American values - a failure that shocked
them on their post 9/11 return
to the States.
Why the shock? The piece
is a clear explanation of how
privileged
Americans
schooled their children to
disdain American privileges.
Ms. Elliott prides herself on
having actively imparted· to
her children a "healthy skepticism"; raised them to realize the world is "rarely blackand-white"; and strived to
bring "current affairs into our
living room." But she's out to
lunch when it comes to figuring out where her eldest son
picked up his rancorous atti-

tudes. Somehow. it seems,
the boy accepted Chinese
propaganda on the fa ilures of
America's "so-called democracy." Somehow, it seems, he
never learned of the nearsacred regard -,vith which the
Chinese hold the freedom to
travel. Somehow, it seems,
he had a "one-dimensional
view of America as a land of
random violence." Living in
"expat bubbles," h~ never
even discovered that "cheese
and chocolate and other luxuries" were unavailable in
China.
But how could he? What
with all the healthy skepticism going around, Mom and
Dad never seemed to get
around to mentioning such
things -- or at least not until
Junior hit adolescence and II
was too late. Small wonder
the little darling came home
to Connecticut, and, upon
being asked not to wear "hi s
favorite homemade T-shirt"
("FREEDOM IS A LIBERTY/BURN THE AMERICAN FLAG!") , the boy
sulked, built an illicit fire on
the backyard barbecue and
grilled up the Stars and
Stnpes.
At this, Elliott, who wore
Mao suits back when her
Harvard profs "somehow left
me with the impression that
the Cultural Revolution was
one of the great social experiments," fell into a retrospective vertigo. "Six month
before, when we were still
living in Hong Kong, I might
ha ve been more laid back,"
she writes. "But with stories
about John Walker Lindh, the
confused young American

who had ended up fighting
for the Taliban. swirling in
the pre ss, I knew I had to do·
everything I could to understand what Oliver was gothg
through."
Looking back at the Vogue
portrait of the family posed ,
before the mantel piece
(adorned with a giant poster
of Chairman Mao), you real-,
ize Elliott never quite nails
exactly why "confu sed,.
Oliver "ended up" burning
the.tlag . But maybe it doesn't
matter. The boy is now happy
at Brooklyn's St. Ann's
school, "a bastion of ultraliberal thinking and creativity."
(The Web site feature s a
gallery of third-graders' .
painting
of
"Comrade
Lenin.") Ms. Elliott may
have plumbed the depths of
denial to di stance herself
from her own possible influence on Oliver 's jaundiced
views, but she really didn't
ha.ve to. The .same multicultural horizons her family
focused on across the globe,
much to the detriment of the
children's American roots,
are the same multiculti principles taught within sight of .
the nation's capital -- much .
to the detriment of all our
children's American roots.
Which is one reason I won- ·
der how it is that we hope to .
be successful at passing on
our democratic traditions to
others, when we're not too
good at passing them on to·
ourselves.
(Diana West is a columnisr
fo r The Washin gton Times.
She can be contacted via
dianaw@waug(obal.net.)

·,-

matter how indomitable women's golf. Her example .
Martina Navratilova was on could raise the level of ath- .
the women's tennis tour. peo- leticism among women
pie said she wouldn't crack golfers, just as Navratilova
the top 50 on the men's tour. raised the level of power and
Critics say the Women's athletici sm in women's tenJoan
. National
Basketball nis (now pushed even higher '
Ryan
Association all-stars couldn't bv the remarkable Williams .
beat a decent college ri1en 's sisters).
·
t
-'-;;
team. And so ori.
"It's
a
risk
(for
Now
Sorenstam
has Sorenstam)." . says Anne
· opened the door again for Cribbs, a former Olympic
"We have more to lose as comparisons
in
which swimmer who founded the :
an organizatton than Anmka women will, in the eyes of women's
American ·
has to gain as an individual,'' many, always come up short. Basketball League and headLPGA
golfer
Angela
Yet as nervous as I am for ed up San Francisco's recent
Stanford wrote in Sports Sorenstam -- the television bid for the Olympics. "But
Illustrated recently.
. cameras will be pitiless in athletes take risks. If this is '
I understand Stanford 's scrutinizing her every step the way she sets her persona~
point of view. I have argued and misstep -- I imagine the standard of excellence, then
It myself. I am bothered decision to take this risk she s~ou ld do it."
when female athletes are came not from righteousness
hi
·11
· h
measured against men. It' s but from that insatiable place
Selfis y, 1 stt
wts
·
b
Sorenstam were not playing
like measunng a
an- that churns inside every great in the Colonial. It sends the
tamweight against a heavy- athlete. It pushes t~em Io test message that the women's
wetght tn boxmg . It ts a the outermost limits ot thetr
Pointless exercise. Men and bodies, ski ll , intuition, tour is the minor leagues, that
women are bUl' Jt d.f'
1 .erent1y. improvisation. Great athletes · women must measure themSo in physical competitions, want to know what they are selves against men to find
women are~~ a disadvantage. capable of.
legitimacy. But. in the end,
No one demgrates male athIn preparation for the Sorenstam is an athlete . She
letes tn lower wetght classes Colontal, Sorenstam has wants what every driven athin boxing or wrestling been turning her body into a lete, male or female. wants-because they can't compete mu scle machine to add to say, "I'm here. I made it. I :.t':
against their larger and power and thus distance. to did it.' '
stronger counterparts .. They her drives. Thou~h she has
(Jom1 Rran is a columnist
are apprectated for bemg .the insisted that playmg against for the · Son Francisco
best m their class.
the men is a personal chal- Clu-'!nicle. Send commellfs to
Yet every few years the Jenge and not a statement her m care of rlus newspaper
men versus women debate about the LPGA, her quest · or send !rer e-mail at joanbubbles to the surface. No could end up transforming ryansjqhrollicle.com.)

Poetry ·
Southern
reading
scheduled

Joann Conant

Money

Arrest reported

~VINGS

borne by the village probably through the water
improvement fund fed by
water customers. each
th . H'ay .,. sa1·d .
mon
c onstrucuon
·
the new
f. ld · don
we 11 tc
an treatment
plain is not likely d.
before
summer. 2004 , accor tng to
Hays.
.
Council al so author ized
lann arelli Io file ARC pre applications for the renova tion of the electrical and
plumbing systems at the
Meig s Mid dle School.
whi2h the vil lage will try to·
de velop later thi ; year. and
the re novation of
Middleport
Elementary
School , the planned site of
a new vil la ge hall.
for

reduction in library expendi tures which will be a minor.
cutba ck periodical; and
books . Im plementin g a
Workman's
Bure au of
Compe nsation safety program will save the di stricr
ap pro, imalely an additional
$5,000.
With
these
staffin g
change s and reduction s, the
di strict will save approxi·
mately $430.700 which can
be applied toward the debt.
The sc hool board Ullanimou sly approved th e superlntende nt' s plan.
"I think this plan will satisfy the· state Finance
Planning
Supervision
Commission," Grueser said.
on other projects in the dis-.
trict counted toward the total
percentage required by the
state, and so the funding for
additional projects will be
from the' state.
The school district had
already provided local funds
to demolish the old Southern
Junior High building, build
new bleachers and make necessary facility improvements.
Grueser said the state chose
to accept these expenditures,
which costed more than
S2 17 ,000, against the proposed building upgrade
requests made by the district.

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Can women sgolfgain from this?
If Annika Sorenstam wants
to know, I would be more
comfortable watching the
(:olonial golf tournament in
Texas next month if she were
not playing in it.
It's a wussy thing for me to
say. I know. I feel the same
way when I watch a high
school senior heading toward
the podium to deliver the
valediction in front of all his
or her classmates and their
families . The mix of pressure, excitement, scrutiny
and expectation is enough to
make me nauseous, even if I
don't know the kid.
When she tees off at the
Colonial, Sorenstam will be
the first woman since Babe
Zaharias in 1945 to play a
PGA Tour event. The young
Swede is the best female
golfer in the world. She won
19 tournaments in the las!
two years, setting a variety of
LPGA scoring and earning
records. She wants to challenge herself against the
men.
But some of her colleagues
say Sorenstam's performance
can only hurt the LPGA. If
she plays well, people will
think she's too good for the
lowly LJ;'GA. If she plays
poorly, they will think the
rest of . the LPGA golfers
must really stink if she's the
best of the lot.

Reports
incidents

tions
through
the ·
Community Development
Block Grant Fund , in the,
amount of $500 ,000, and
the Issue Two program in
the amoun t of $500,000.
The $548,000 balance -of
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Business

The Daily Sentinel

10,000 pianos and counting ...

'

.Lane Daniels of Rutland, who's operated Daniels Piano Service since May 1965, tunes the ·
piano at Gallipolis' Ariel Theatre. Toting up his sales receipts for nearly four decades of work, ·
Daniels estimates he's tuned more than 10,000
. pianos. (Kevin Kelly)

lane Daniels marks 38
years of local service
BY KEVIN KEU'i'

News editor
---------RUTLAND- After nearly four decades and 10,000
pianos
serviced, Lane
Daniels has earned the right
to work at his chosen profession on a part-time basis, but
his talents as one of the
area's few piano tuners are
still in demand.
Daniels said the number of
home s and schools with
pianos has been on th.e
decline for the last 10 years ,
but he believes there is still
work for tuners for time to
come.
"The piano industry produced literall y millions of
pianos until about 1990,'' he
said as he serviced the piano
at Gallipolis' Ariel Theatre
last week. "A piano like this
will la.st at best for 100
years, so there will be work
for piano tuners probably
until -the end of the world."
Daniels has been in business in the tri -county area
since May 1965, and in that
time has tuned pianos in
such varied venues as private homes , the Meigs
Museum, the University of
Rio Grande , Gallipolis
Developmental
Center,
Athens
Mental
Health

Center, Lakin State Hospital
and others.
At one time. GDC 's cottages boasted at least one
piano, some two, partly as
therapy for its clients,
Daniels said.
When he entered the business, Daniels said "pianos
were more common at the
time . It was more of a custom to have children take
lessons. You could depend
on being busy every
September as kids prepared
to take their lessons.
"My wife tells me kids
spend more time now at
computers, which is also
true of adults to some
extent," he added.
Daniels, raised in Scioto
County and a 1957 graduate
of Wheelersburg
High
School , came to Meigs
County in 1963 to help with
Bible instruction under the
Jehovah's Witnesses and
"I've been there ever since."
"There were no jobs to be
had in Meigs County at the
time," he added . "A friend
of mine tuned pianos. so I
·
studied the method."
Piano tuning follows a scientific procedure, and while
a musical background isn 't
necessary, Daniels said it
helps. He started taking
piano lessons at I 0 and con-

tinued until he graduated
high school. ·
"When my friend started
tuning , I thought this is
something l could probably
do," Daniels said.
In addition to the jobs ha~ ­
dled by his business, Daniels
Piano Service at 34434 Ohio
Route 124 . at Rutland,
Daniels worked as a tuner
for Brunicardi Music Co. in
Gallipolis from 1978 until
its closing in 1999.
He and his wife, Donna,
have been married since
1966 and are the parents of a
son, Erek , who · resides in
Middleport, and a daughter,
Leah, who is teaching
English in Beijing, China.
"The piano business has
declined since the early '90s
as far as sales are concerned,
so I'm just doing it more
part-time now," he said,
adding with a smile, "I started to slow down."
But he can still be contacted for service at (740) 742295 I.
"I've enjoyed meeting
people who use pianos,"
Daniels said. ''Out of those
I 0,000-plus pianos, I never
had a bad check. That must
say something about the
character of people who play
pianos .''

Business brief

Land transfers

Award received

POMEROY
- Meigs Klausing, · to Columbus
County Recorder Judy King Southern Pow~r. right of
posted the following trans- way, Salem.
fers in real estate: ·
Christian Church of Salem
Nancy Jo Aldridge to Township, to Columbus
Andrea D. HHI, deed, Southern Power, right of
Chester.
way, Salem.
Cindy Jo Crabtree to
Leonard E. Amos, Fay E.
Cindy Jo Crabtree, Dawn M. Amos ,
to
Columbus
Gindlesberger.
deed, Southern Power, right of
Columbia.
way, Orange.
Kevin Griggs , Janet
William Morris, Gayle E.
Morris, William H. Morris, . Griggs,
to
Columbus
to Victor J. Morris, deed, Southern Power. right of
way, Orange.
Rutland.
Rachael E.
Downie,
William H. Morris, Gayle
E. Mortis, William Morris, William B. Downie, Jr. , to
to Victor J. Morris, deed, David Ridgeway, Jacob
Rutland.
Ridgeway, deed, Sutton .
Loretta C. Shortridge to
Bruuer Land Co., Inc., to
Roger W. Leonard, Betty J. Robert J. Kowalski, Leonard
Leonard, deed, Olive.
D. Knotts, deed, Olive.
Alpha G. Butcher, Juanita
Erna N. . Floyd , Erma N.
C. Bowles, to Alpha G. Miller, Kenneth R. Miller, to
Butcher, deed, Scipio.
Orland L. Floyd, Tonda A.
Joanne Cole to Rhonda Floyd, deed, Salisbury.
Sharp, deed , Village of
Roberr · C. . Snodgrass,
Racine.
Emma J. Snodgrass, Robert
Jack
M.
Hawley, B. Warner, Michelle L.
deceased. to Elizabeth M. Warner, deed, Scipio.
Hawley, affidavit, Village of Consolidated
Health
Middleport.
Systems, Inc. to A. Jackson
Virgil B. Hudson to John Bailes, Mary Bailes,. deed,
E. Blake, sheriff' s deed , Salisbury/Village
of
Village of Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
Jeanette
Freeman ,
David E. Vanlnwagen,
decea~ed ,
to
Melvin . Kimberly L. Vanlnwagen,
Freeman, affidavit, Sutton.
Kimberly L. Roush , to
Melvin
Freeman
to Roger Jordan, Micah D.
Jeanette L. Lunsford, deed, Jordan, deed, Sutton.
Sutton.
Gary Carr, Gary L. Carr,
Bartels, Andrea Carr, to Gary L.
Carolyn M.
Carolyn M. Korn, George Carr, Andrea Carr, deed ,
Kqrn, · to Robert A. Jones , Columbia:
Kimberly A. Jones, deed ,
Beatrice Rairden to Nicole Bedford.
Kirstin
Black.
deed,
Daniel G. Klausing, Irene Salisbury.

Rocky
Hupp
of
Pomeroy
has
been
named
a
National
H o n o r
Associate of
. Monumental
Insurance.
The award
Hupp
is one of the
most prestigious awards in the company,
honoring consistent high
achievement · and success,
recognizing the recipient as
leader in quality service to
clients.

Look for

~'i~ \t~,b~
,:~:t~(](9
lllunJdtiY

PageA6

.,

Thesday, April 29, 2003

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball, Page 82
NHL playoffs, Page 83
NBA playoffs, Page 83

Social Security

Page Bl

Active duty military service
covered under social security
BY Lou HORVATH

tax rate is 6.2 percent up to a·

Contributor

maximum of $87.000 in earnings. You also pay I ,45 percent
in Medi~are taxes on all of your
military earnings. The U.S.
Government, as your employer,
matches the taxes you pay.
And after you've received
$3,560 in military pay in 2003,
you've earned the maximum
four Social Security credits that
count toward future Social
Seclllity benefits. The number
of credit~ you need to qualify
for Social Seclllity depends on
your age and the type of benefit
you might be eligible to
receive. No one needs more
than 40 credits (10 years of
worlc or military service) to be
eligible for Social S,ecurity.
Your furure Soctal Security
benetit depends on your earnings averaged over your working lifetime. Generally, the
higher your earnings, the higher your Social Seclllity benefit.
If .you had military service
prior to 2002, there are special
rules that may apply to you
concerning credit for extra

The thoughts of many
Americans are with the brave
men and women who are serving their oountry in the armed
·torces overseas. So I thought it
might be a good time to review
the oonnection between service
in the military and Social
Security.
If you are in the military, you
probably know that you are
paying Social Security taxes
and earning Social . Security
ooverJge. In fact. earnings for
active duty military service or
active duty training have been
covered under Social Security
since 1957. And Social Security
has covered inactive duty service in the armed forces
reserves (such as weekend
drills) since 1988.ln addition to
your regular pay, special earnings credits are added to your
Social Security record wben
you serve in the military.
In 2003, the Social Security

eamin ~s

for military service.
These extra earnings could, in
some C&lt;tses, translate into additiona! Social Security credits
and potential Social Secmity
benefits. Check with Social
Security for more details.
And remember that Social
Security is more than retirement. If you're a young person
who has worked and paid
Social Security taxes for a' few
as 18 months, it's possible that
~ou may be eligible for disabiltty benefits for you tmd your
family. If you die, your spouse
and dependent children may be
eligible for Social Security survivor.; benefit~.
For more-infonnation, read
the fact sheet, Military Service
and Soctal Secunty. It ts avatlable on our website at www.
socialsecurity. gov/pubs/ 100 l
7.hunl. Or you can call l-800.
772-1213) (TTY: l-800-325·
0778) and ask for a copy to be
mailed to you.
Lnu Horvath is nl£mager at
the Athens Social Secllrity
office.

Local pharmacist elected to OPA board
POMEROY Tamara
Grueser, R.Ph.. of Pomeroy
was installed as trustee of the
Ohio Pharmacists Association
(OPA), representing District 8,
at its I 25th annual conference
held April II -13 in Columbus.
G.rueser, a graduate of The

Ohio .State University College
of Pharmacy. currently practices at Fruth Pharmacy in
Middleport. She has served
one term a~ OPA trustee, is a
founding member and past secretary of the Mid-Ohio Valley
Pharmacists Association, and

has served on the OSU Board
of Govemor:s of the Pharmacy
AI\Irnni Society.
OPA, established in 1879,
represents more than 4,000
pharmacists, pharmacy educators, and pharmacy students
throughout the state.

Spending and personal incomes increase
WASHINGTON (AP) Americans flocked to the
shopping malls in March :
bOosting spending by 0.4 percent, the best gain this year, as
consumers started to shake off
their wonies about the Iraq
war.
The Commerce Department
said the March increase in
spending followed a lackluster
0.1 percent gain in February
and a decline of 0.1 percent in

January. It marked the
strongest monthly increase
since a 1.1 percent surge last
December.
Americans also saw their
incomes increase at a more
mpid pace during the month,
rising by 0.4 percent, double
the 0.2 percent increase of
February.
While both statistics were an
impmvement over the recent
past, economists cautioned

that a sustained rebound in
incomes and spending is not
likely until the nation's job picture improves, something they
do not expect to occur for
some time to come.
The unemployment rate
stood at 5.8 percent in both
February and March, l wo
months when the country lost
a sizable 465,000 jobs, the
sharpest job losses since the
recession year of 200 l.

a heartfelt '1hank You" could be
could ever give your mother.
ss t~is opportunity to say it.
Greeting Eramples ...
1X3 Greeting $10.00 1X5 Greeting· $13.00

,,

.

Happy
Mother's Day
(Your
Mother's
Name)
Love john,
joe and Susan

Happy
Mother: s Day
(Picture)

TUesday, April 29, 2003

Freidel named
to 2003 EPL
.team of the year
LONDON (AP) -' Brad
Friedel bec ame the first "
American pi cked for the
English Premier League team
of the .year when he was
voted the top goalkeeper by
his fellow players.
Friedel , the starter for the
United States at last year's
World Cup. finished first in
voting by the Professional
Footballers Association. He
led Blackburn to the 2002
Football League Cup, then
saved two penalty kicks for
the Americans at the World
Cup as the United States
advanced to the quarterfinals.
The 31 -year-old from Bay
Village, Ohio, has I 5
shutouts thi s season for
Rovers. seventh in the
Premier League. He helped
Blackburn upset Manchester
· United and Arsenal, the top
two teams in the league.

Banks signed by
Redskins
ASHBURN, Va. (AP) Iowa quarterback Brad
Banks, the national player of
the year and Heisman Trophy
runner-up, was one of 12
undrafted free agents signed
by the Washington Redskins.
Banks passed for 25 touchdowns, rushed for nve, threw
just four interceptions and led
the nation with a .166.0 rating
in the regular season last year
for the Hawkcyes. He led
Iowa to an 11-1 record before
a 38- 17 loss to Southern
California in the Orange
Bowl.

MLB attendance
down
ATLANTA
(AP)
Attendance is down throughout ihe major leagues, slipping 4.g percent through
Sunday 's games when compared to a similar point last
year. And this comes on top
of a 6-percent decline for the
2002 season.
More troubling , 21 of 30
teams are running behind for teams such as the Braves,
way behind - . their pergame averages from last
April.
Atlanta is averaging 24,133
through 16 home games,
With
30,582
compared
through the same number of
dates a year ago. That's a
dec! ine of 21 percent hardly encouraging for a
team that's already had five
straight years of falling attendance since getting a spike · ·
with the move to Turner Field
in 1997.
Eleven other team s have
experienced double- figure ·
drop-offs. including the New
York Yankees, down 16 percent, and Seattle Mariners,
down 20 percent. Both teams
lead their respective divisions.

Curt Schilling
goes on DL

(Your
Mother's
Name)

PHOENIX (AP) - The
Arizona
Diamondbacks
placed Curt Schilling on the
I5-day disabled list, retroactive to his last start on April
18.
Schilling. who underwent
an appendectomy in St. Louis ·
on April 20, had been scheduled to stan Thursday against
Florida. The move pushed
that stan back two days to
Saturday, when Schilling is
scheduled to face the Atlanta
Braves.

Love john,
joe and
Susan
~.

Deadline for lhlsSpeclal Mother's Day Tribute Is Thursdoy, May 1, 2003

Questions
surround
OSU in 2003
COLUMBUS (AP)
More than 57,000 paying
custome;s watched Ohio
State 's spring intrasquad
game on SaturdaY. and just
about all of them went home
happy.
The sun was shining, no
one was seriou.sly hurt, every
available player saw action
and those in uniform got a
foretaste of what they'll face
when the game~ stan to count
this autumn.
"It was a great experience
to get a lot of playing time in
front of that many people,"
redshirt freshman wide
receiver/kick
returner
Santonio Hoi mes said. "I
learned a lot."
The real work now begins
for the Buckeyes coaches,
who will spend the .next few
weeks dissecting videos fmm
the scrimmage and the 14
spring practices which preceded it. Each player has' to
be analyzed, each strength
and weakness evaluated.
"Some guys · that have nut
been in Ohio Stadium under
pressure got in some of those
Ohio State defensive end Jay Richardson (9) sacks
.
i in the
rth quar· pressure situations and had a
ter of the Scarlet and Gray spring game in Columtlus. Ohio, Saturday. More than 57,000 fans chance to get themselves on
attended Ohio State's spring intrasquad game. The real work now begins for the Buckeyes film," head coach Jim Tressel
said. "It 's one thing to watch
coaches. (AP)

LOUISV ILLE, Ky. (AP)
-Buddy Gil was bred in the
Bluegrass State, but he's not
really at his old Kentuckv
home this week.
·
The only Kentucky Derby
entry with three consecutive
victories besides Peace Rules
·. was raised · in Hagerman,
Idaho. It's where Buddy Gil
wandered through streams
and tields and was unfazed
when wild game jumped out
of the tall grasses he shared.
Co-owner
Donnie
McFadden, who bred the
. colt, raised Buddy Gil in a
grass paddock with a nearby
shed that kept him out of
winter weather. McFadden
believes in an outdoor life for
his horses since those who
make it to the races will
spend the rest of their lives in

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
- Four former players from
West Virginia signed freeagent contracts Monday with
NFL teams, including WVU
running
back
Avon
Cobourne with the Detroit
Lions.
Also, defensive tackle
David Upchurch signed with
the Pittsburgh Steelers,
Marshall receiver Denero
Marriott sign~d with the
Philadelphia Eagles and
Thundering Herd cornerback
Yancey Satterwhite signed
with the Cleveland Browns.
. Cobourne will join former
teammate James Davis, a
linebacker who was taken by
the Lions in the fifth round

Phllldlllllll E11111

I City, State, Zip

I
1
I

L-------------~~~~~~~2~~--------------J
Sentinel
Make Checks Available to: The

stakes in ·a row," Mullins
said . "How much more do
they want of the horse?"
Mullins didn 't become
Buddy Gil ' s trainer until
early this year. Together, they
are three-for-three.
Buddy Gil wi ll try to
become the first gelding
since Clyde Van Dusen in
1929 to win the Derby on
Saturday.
Most of the pre-Derby
attention is on trainer Bobby
Frankel's promi sing pair of
Empire Maker and Peace
Rules.and Atswhatimtalknbout, the horse whose
minority owners include
Hollywood directors Steven
Spielberg. Gary Ross ai1d
Frank Marshall.

KENT, Ohio (AP) - A
Kent State basketball
standout
who
hasn't
played football since high
school signed a two-year
contract Monday with the
San Diego Chargers.
Antonio Gates is projected as a tight end, and
he has demonstrated some
of the skil ls essential to
the position on the basketball court.
The 6-foot-5, 250-pound
forward was a physical
rebounder and agile ba.llhandler who al so showed a
deft shooting touch for the
Golden Flashes, averaging
20.6 points and 7.7
rebounds last seasotl .
"We ' re excited th tll
Antonio has .this'kind of
opportunity," Kent State
basketball coach Jim
Christian said. "He wi II

1
1
I

1 Phone#
I

in 1997 aboard Silver Charm.
"Buddy Gil is a more athletic horse than Silver
Charm," Stevens said. "He's
got the same kind of heart
that Silver Charm had ."
Mullins ' rise took longer,
but the 40-year-old will saddle a horse in the Derby for
the second consecutive year.
A year ago, Mullins
worked out of a faraway stall
on Ch urchil l Downs' backside and saddled Lusty Latin
to a 15th-place finish.
Mullins recently finished
second to Baffen in the Santa
Anita trainers' standings. But
the Utah native came out on
top when Buddy Gil defeated
Baffert-trained
Indian
Express by a head in the
Santa Anita Derby.
"He 's won three graded

Associated Press

MIKE BIRTRUM

.

Trainer Jeff Mullins gave
Stevens, then an unknown
rider, a leg up on Forever
Rise. It wasn 't until Mullins'
mother recently showed him
a winner's circle photo from
the race that he remembered
Stevens shared the victorv.
"Back then, I was just a
punk kid trying to make a
few dollars and Gary was just
a jockey in Idaho," said
Mullins, sporting a belt buckle the size of an appetizer
plate that commemorates his
training title at Arizona's Turf
Paradise in 1999-2000.
Stevens' hair has thinned
since he and Mullins started
out with high hopes back
then . Stevens went on to win
three Derbies and was inducted into racing's Hall of Fame.
One of his Derby wins was

Kent State's Gates
signs with .-Chargers

I

I

stalls.
Buddy Gil is the first graded stakes winner for
McFadden and his wife,
Judy. The colt's credentials
include consecutive victories
in the Santa Anita Derby, San
Felipe Stakes and Baldwin
Stakes.
Guenther, of . Newport
Beach, Calif., likes to joke
that the city Irmit signs in
Hagerman are back-to-back.
The town near Twin Falls has
about 800 residents. .
Buddy Gil and McFadden
aren't the only ones in the
group with Idaho tie s. Jockey
Gary Stevens. is from
Caldwell and he rode Forever
Rise, McFadden's tirst thoroughbred mare, to victory at
Idaho' s Les Bois Park in
1981.

Four former players from West
Virginia sign NFL contracts

Special Tentative Guests:

I

Please see Buckeyes. B:S

Idaho's Buddy Gil out of place at Kentucky Derby

Fill out the form below, attach It with your payment
and send It to
The Dally Sentiitel "Mother's Day"
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
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other guys on film . To watch
yourself on film under pressure, that' will be very valuable."
Coming off a national
championship season,. it's
only natural that the focal
point during the spring was
replacing those lost to gradu·
ation. Gone are five starters
on defense- safeties Donnie
Nickey and Michael Doss,
linebackers Cie Grant and ·
Matt Wilhelm and defensive
tackle Kenny Peterson along with punter Andy
Groom and back-up wide
receiver Chris Vance.
Several key players missed
the spring with injuries,
includmg three-fourths of the
tirst-team defensive line and
several key players on the
offensive line.
If everyone heals properly,
the Buckeyes still must
answer several nagging questions before the opening kickoff against Washington at 8
p.m. on Aug. 30 ...
- Who will replace the
departed linebackers and
safeties?
.
Sophomore linebackers
A.J. Hawk and Mike

was a third-team allAmerican.
The
6-3.
285-pound
Upchurch ranked II th in
tackles at WVU with 41 last
season. He earned secondteam all-Big East honors last
season.
Marriott , a 6- l, 178-pound
. native of Inwood , led the
Thundering Herd with 86
of the NFL draft on Sunday. c·atches last season, ranked
The 5-foot-9, 190-pound third with 993 yards receivCoboume is expected to join ing and scored eight touchthe Lions for a mini-camp
downs.
starting Thursday night.
Satterwhite; a 5-l 0, 175Coboume, the Big E.ast' s
career rushing leader, gained pound defensive back at
5,164 yards for his career Marshall, tied Roberto
and set the school's single- Terrell for the team lead with
season rushing record last three interceptions in 2002
season with l,710 yards. He and was fifth with 86 tackles.

..

work hard and make the ·
mo st of it.''
Gates
enrol led
at
Michigan State in 1998 tc
play football. After one
semester the Detroit native
transferred to Eastern
Michigan, where he played
basketball for one sea son
befor.e leaving for Kent
State.
Gates was a key membet
of the Golden Fla she ;
team that came within one
win of the Fin al Four in
the 200 2 NCAA tourna ment.
Tw o other undrafte d
Golden Fla she s - · defen sive tackl e Roy Attieh and
cornerback NasiJVille Dye r
signed
with the
Pit-tsburgh Steelers on
Monday.

FIRST-EVER COED FlAG FOOTBAll
BANQUET TO FEATURE NFl PlAYERS
Limited Number of Tickets Available to Generai Public
'

Friday, May 16, 2003
1 Silent auction with NFL merchandise
• Riverside Golf Course
1 Player and coach auction
• 6:30p.m. ·Dinner served approximately 7p.m.
• $1 0/adult and $5/children under 12 years of age
1 All persons playing in the Pleasant Valley Hospital • Make all checks payable to "Bartrum &amp; Brown Football Camp"
Coed Flag Football Tournamet\t will receive a ticket 1 Purchase tickets at the\Vellness Center or Riverside Golf Course

·1

.TROY BROWN
IIIIW 11111111 PltriDII

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, April 29, 2003

I

D-backs shut down Marlins

.Prep track

BY JtM SOULSBY

Sports correspondent
PROCTORVILLE - The
Meigs Marauder track teams
travelld to Fairland High
School Friday night and battled a field of some of the best
teams in the Southeast
District as well as the elements in the Fairland
Invitational.
The weather cooperated
very little as the .athletes bat·
tied chi lly temperatures and
rain most of the meet. The
Marauder ladies finished fifth
of the I0 teams with 52
points. while the Marauder
men finished ninth with one
point.

Brook Bolin finished second in both the I 00-meter
hurdles (17.4) and 300 hurdles (50.8). Emily Story col lected a second-place finish in
the 800-meter run (2:36.4).
Shannon Soulsby finished
fourth in the 400-meter dash,
covering the quarter mile in
0:64.6. Megan Garnes finished fourth in the 200 meter
dash with a time of 28.4.
Andrea Burdette crossed the
line in fourth place i·n the
3.200 meter run posting a
time of 14:26.3. Garnes and
Soulsby placed 5th and 6th in
the high jump, both clearing

Ashley Savage, Burdette and
Story flaced second with a
time o II :34.6. The 4 X 200
team of Bolin, Cassie Lee,
Soulsby and Garnes fini shed
fourth with a time of I :55.4.
The 4 X 400 quartet of Bolin,
.Garnes, Story and Soulsby
placed tifth with a 4:35.0.
Hurdler Andy Kinnan
placed sixth irt the 110 meter
hurdles (20.8) for the
Marauder boys team.
Wheelersburg won both
divisions in the meet.
Fairland,
Ironton.
Portsmouth ,
Chesapeake,
Coal Grove. South Point,
4'4".
Rock Hill and Sciotoville
The Marauder relay teams rounded out the field.
all placed in the meet. The 4X
Mei gs will compete at
800 team of Ashley Samar, Vinton County on Thursday.

Steelers sign 19 lindrafted,
rookie free agents
PITTSBURGH (AP) The Pittsburgh Steelers ,
who already have one of
the stronges t receivmg
tandems in the league in
Plaxico Burres s and Hines
· Ward. signed five wide
receivers Monday, including Georgia's all-time leading receiver.
In all, the Steelers sig ned
19 undrafted rookie fre~
agents.
On offense , Pittsburgh
signed
wide receivers
Terrence
Edwards
of
Georgia . Jason Armstead of
Mississippi,
Jeremy
Con·ley of Duquesne, Brian
Robin son of Houston and
Leonard
Scott
of
Tennessee; running back
Dante Brown of MemP.hi s
State ; tight end Casey
Poppinga of Utah State;
tackle Jack Fadule of
Harvard ; center Jimond
Pugh of Memphis State;

PHOENIX (AP) - The
Arizona Diamondbacks wanted Elmer Dessens to be a
quality No. 3 pitcher. So far
this season, he has more wins
than Randy Johnson and Curt
Schilling combined.
Dessens allowed one run on
five hits throu~h seven
innings Monday mght as the
Diamondbacks beat the
Florida Marlins 7-1 for their
first three-game winnmg
streak of the season.
Dessens (3-2) was acquired
in the offseason from
Cincinnati in the trade that
sent Erubiel Durazo to
Oakland. The right'-hander
has won two in a row, allowing .two runs over a 13-inning
span in the process.
"I said it last time, but that's
what we expected from Elmer
Dessens," Arizona manager'
Bob Brenly said, "a lot of
good strikes with movement
low in the strike zone. He got
a lot of groui;Jdballs. He was
ahead in the count most of the
night."
Dessens is 4-0 with a I .60
ERA in six appearances, five
of them starts, against the
Marlins.
Junior Spivey, batting .182
with three RB!s going into

and guard De on White of
Jacksonville State .
Defensive signees were
tackles Roy Attieh of Kent
State and David Upchurch
of West Virginia ; safeties
Rash.ad Faison of South
Carolina
and · Ru sse ll
Stuvaints of Youngstown
State:
cornerback
Nashville Dyer of Kent
State: linebacker Terrence
Robinson of Oklahoma
State and defensive end
Dan
Rumishek
of
Michigan.
The Steelers also signed'
punter Mike Hay es of
Akron and kicker Jonathan
Ruffin of Cincinnati.

quarterback Joe Germaine.
leaving
the
team with
three quarterbacks on ·
~~Rthe ros01
ter.
'-~ T h e
remaini ng quarterbacks are
Jon Kitna. the holdover
starter:
backup
Akili
Smith, and Carson Palmer,
whom the Bengals signed
last week and picked No. I
overall in the draft.
Germaine was with the
Bengals for part of the
2002 season , but did not
plaY, He was signed to the
Cincinnati practice squad
Oct. 16 and was activated
to the 53-player roster for
Germaine waived
the final three games. The
by Bengals
'former Ohio State star was
previou sly with St., Louis
CINC IN NATI (AP) - and Kansas City in the
The Cinc innati Bengals on NFL.
Monday waived backup

CINCINNATI (AP) O.J. Mayo,
who already is being compared with Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary prep sensation LeBron James, has
enrolled in school in suburban North College Hill.
Mayo, a 6-foot-5, eighthgrade point guard, withdrew
from Rose Hill Christian in
Ashland, Ky .. last week. His
family has established residence in North College Hill,
officials said Monday.
Playing on the hi gh school
Fift~en-year-old

varsity at Rose Hill , Mayo
averaged 23.1 points as a
seventh-grader and 20.5
points last fall.
A teammate, 6-5 eighthgrader Bill Walker, tran sferred from Rose Hill to
North College Hill's middle ·
school two months ago.
North College Hill has an
enrollment of about 450 students and plays in Ohio's
second-smallest
class,
Division lll.

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in the
Sentinel

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Southern wins alumni game
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent
RACINE - The RacineSouthern varsity softball
team defeated a tough
Alumni squad in a weekend
pick-up game 8-3 as Rachel
Chapman and Brooke Kiser
combined for a one-hitter.
Southern hitters were
Brigette Barnes with a triple
and single , and Deana
Pullins, Rachel Chapman.
Brooke
Ki'ser; Joanne
Pickens, Emily Hill, and Jeri
Hill with singles. Chapman

had a sacrifice lly RBI ,
Holly Duffy had an RBI , and
Joanne Pickens had two
RBI's.
Debbie Michael had the
lone Alumni hit. Alumni
players included Laren
Wolfe-Riffle, Ashley Davis,
Regina Manuel . Mel Weese,
Tammy Chapman, Jenny
Bentley, and Kim lhle.
Southern rallied for five
runs in the first inning on
walks to Deana Pullins and
Katie Sayre. who rode home
on a Barnes single. Brooke
Ki~er' singled then Joanne
Pickens had a two-run sin-

gle.
Southern scored single
runs in the third . fourth, and
fifth, innings.
Chapman pitched five
innings of shut-out ball with ·
three strike outs and one
walk . Ki ser finished the
game with all runs charge9
to her. Together, SHS pitching walked five, gave up one
hit, and had three strike outs.
Manuel suffered the loss in
a well -pitched. game. She
struck out one ·and walked
six..
Southern, 10-4, play~
Eastern on Monday

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NBA playoffs

Philadel.ph_ia tops Hornets·
.

A~sociated

•

4¥'~·

..

Dallas Stars' Scott Young, left, battles Anaheim Mighty Ducks' Petr Sykora, of the Czech
Republic. for the puck during the first period of Game 3 of the Western Conference semifinals
in Anaheim, Calif .. Monday. (AP)
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
- The Mighty Ducks were
looking as if they might
never lose. They knew better.
Jere Lehtinen scored
twice, and Marty Turco
stopped 31 shots Monday
night as the Dallas Stars
defeated Anaheim · 2-1 in
th eir Western Conference
semifinal series.
The Ducks sti ll lead the
be st-of-seven series 2-1.
. with Game 4 on Wednesday
night in Anaheim.
Dallas coach Dave Tippett
obvious ly would like the
Stars to be the ones riding
hi gh.
While pleased with the
outcome, Tippett wasn't
happy with the Stars ' performance in Game 3.
· In the other playoff g~me
Monday night, Tampa Bay
beat New Jersey 4-3 to cut
the series deficit to 2-1.
On Tuesday ni ght , Ottawa
is at Philadelphia and
Vancouver is at Minnesota.
· with both series tied 1-1.
The Ducks. swept the
Stanley Cup champion
'Detroit Red Wings in the
opening senes before winning the first two against
Dallas .
Anaheim coach Mike
Babcock sa id the Stars simply beat the Ducks in Game
3.
"Give them full marks. We
have a series now," he said.
Lehtinen , who beat JeanSebastien Giguere 011 a
rebound in the opening minutes of the game, snapped a
1-1 tie when he denected a
shot by Derian Hatcher past
the Mighty Ducks . goaltender on a power play at
3:41 iof the second period.

Again, the puck bounced
On the second goal,
· Hatcher fired a slap shot out in front of the crease and
from the right pqint, and Lehtinen quickly knocked it
Lehtinen, stationed just out- into the net before Giguere
side the crease, was credited could get back intp. position.
with the goal when the puck
Anaheim won the se ries
caromed off his shin pad and
slid between the goalie's opener 4-3 early in the fifth
overtime. the .fourth-longest
leg s.
The goal was the third of game in NHL history. The
this postseason and 20th of Ducks won Game 2 early in
his career for Lehtinen. who the first overtime, a 3-2 victwice received the Selke tory.
Trophy as th e NHL's top
Game 5 is Saturday in
defensive forward.
He
sc.ored a career-high 3 I Dallas.
Stars ri ght wing Bill
goals for the Stars during the
Guerin, out becau se of thigh
regular season.
· Then there was Turco, surgery. was in the lineup
who withstood a late assault for the first time Feb. 27.
by the Ducks and made a
variety of fine saves including swatting one shot Lightning 4, Devils 3
away backhand with hi s
stick, then immediately batAt Tampa, Fla.. the
ting away a shot from the Lightning squandered a
other side off the rebound three -goa.! advantage, but
during the third period.
Dave Andreychuk snapped a.
Giguere made 30 saves third-period tie and lifted
and had little chance to stop Tampa Bay 10 a victory.
the two shots that got past
. .
The Lightning trail the
hlm
,
After Lehtinen scored Devils 2-1 as they try to
2:24 in to give Dallas a rally 111 their Eastern
quick lead, Steve Rucchin Conference se mifinal series.
tied it on a power play at
Andreychuk scored the
16:09. The goa l, Rucchin's game-winner with 13:52
third, was only Anaheim's remaining, and Nikolai
second in 25 power-play Khabibulin rebounded from
opportunities in the postseaa shak y second period to
son.
Niko 'Kapan en began the make two key saves in the
sequen ce that led to the final two minutes with New
Stars' first goal. taking a Jersey on a power play.
slap shot from the top of the
New Jersey played most of
right circle. Giguere moved the game wi.thout captain
to hi s left and blocked the Scott Stevens, who left early
shot with hi s left skate, but in the first after a shot by
the puck bounced o.ut to Rob
DiMaio, who wristed a shot Tampa Bay's Pavel Kubina
right back , but Giguere . hit him in the left ear, openextended his right leg and ing a cut that required stitchblocked it with hi s skate.
es.

aren't nearly as settled. 'fYier
Everett, Will Allen and · Nate
Salley still have a lot to learn,
and not much time to learn it.
from Page 81
- Will the offense be better?
D'Andrea were productive
All II starters are back, but
during the spri n~ game and in that doesn't mean there aren't
the weeks leadmg up to it. doubts. In five of their final six
They should be a good tit to ·Big Ten gaines last year: the
take the places of the fast defense had to control the
Grant and the smart Wilhelm, · closing minutes for Ohio State
making up for youthful mis- to escape with a win. Not
takes with a lot of athletic abil- many times does a team score
ity.
19 (Wisconsin), 13 (Penn
"I'm glad I've improved State), 10 (Purdue), 23
since last fall," said D'Andrea, (including an overtime .toucha 6-3, 240-pound brute from down , at Illinois) and 14
Avon Lake who looks like points (Michi gan) and win
Brett Hull in the face and the every game.
·
Incredible Hulk in physique.
Freshman tailback Maurice
"But I still don't think I'm at Clarett was not healthy in any
all where I should be right of those games and the
now."
Buckeyes suddenly had a preWith Hawk and D'Andrea dictable, tentative and flawed
joining Robert Reynolds (who offense dedicated to helping
missed the s~ing with an on until the defense carried the
injury) at the ree linebacker day.
spots, there might not be any
A year of seasoning should
drop-off at all.
boost the production by the
At safety, the Buckeyes skill players while increasing

Buckeyes

HOME IMPROVEMENT

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Dallas holds off Anaheim · Sacramento.beats Jazz;

the game, was 3-fot-5, includ- Burnett was placed on the 15- ·
ing his first' home run of the day disabled list Monday, got
season. He spotted Arizona a the start in place of Ca.rl
(jUi~k 2-0 lead with his first-. Pavano, one of eight pitchers
mnmg two-run homer off used by Florida on Sunday. .
Justm Wayne (0-1) and .
.
scored twice . Rod Barajas, "'Wayne allowed four runs and .
just off the disabled li st. seven h1ts m 5 1-3 mmngs.
qrove in two runs with a double and single.
Phillies 3, Dodgers 0
It was a tough day all
around for the Marlins, who
Brett Myers (2-2) allowed
had to ny across the country six hits in 7 2-3 innings , and
after playing the longest
game in the franchise's histo- Jim Thome homered as
ry, a 6-7, 20-inning home loss Philadelphia opened a . I 0to St. Louis that lasted 6 game road trip by beating Los
hours and 7 minutes.
Angeles.
.
. On top of that, the team's
The win was the sixth in
best pitcher, A.J. Burnett, will seven games for the Phillies
undergo surgery on his right including their 1-0 victory
elbow Tuesday. If the tear in over the San Francisco Giants
Burnett's ligament is serious
on Sunday when Kevin
enou~h, it might be "Tommy
John' reconstructive surgery Millwood pitched baseball's
that would keep the right- first no-hitter in exactly one
hander out 12 to 18 months. ' year.
The Diamondbacks also
The loss snapped a seasonwere coming off a long day high three-game winni'ng
Sunday, and a cross-country streak for the Dodgers.
trip. But they swept their douDarren Dreifort (ic3) was
bleheader from the Mets in
New
York.
The the hard-luck loser, allowing
Diamondbacks are 8-4 since a six hits and two runs in seven
innings while wal~ing one
3-II start.
Wayne, recalled from and striking out II to match
Triple-A Albuquerque whe'n his career high .

The next LeBron?

Meigs' Bolin places second
in 100-m, 200-m hurdles ·

WW)N.mydallysentin~l:com ·

'

NHL·playoffs

Major League Baseball

· Arizona Diamondbacks' Luis Gonzalez can't catch a double hit by Flordia Marlins ' Mike Lowell
during the fourth inning Monday, at Bank One Ballpark in Phoenix. (AP)
·

Tuesday, April 29, 2003

the protection provided by
what was a young line a year
ago . .
So the linemen got a steady
dose of blitzes and a crash
course in pass-blocking this
sr.ring, with the goal of diverSifying tHe offense and steeling it for what's ahead.
- Are there· young guys
who can help right away?
A year ago, Clarett graduated early from high school so
he could get a le~ up on the
competition dunng spring
workouts. This year, Ashton
Youboty and Donte Whitner
did the same and may have
played themselves into the
cornerback picture this fall.
Defensive ends Jay Penton
and Jay Richardson, flanker
Holmes, offensive linemen
Mike Datish and John Conroy,
receivers Ro~ Hall and John
Hollins and linebacker Redgie
Arden all had solid springs
and may have earned a long,
hard look later in the summer.
That might be true for the
entire team.

.

.

Press ·

at Minnesota, with it tied 2- just three field goals in the
2.
first 7 1/2 minutes of the
,
Malone led the Jazz with third quarter as the Kings ·
SALT LAKE CITY - 24 points and Stockton had began to pull away.
Jazz fans may have seen 12 points and seven assists.
The Jazz got to 59-57 on
their last Stockton-to- Neither wanted to talk two free throw s by Malone .
much about the future after
Malone play in Utah.
with 3: I 0 left in the third
Sacramento's 99-82 win the garne .
over Utah on Monday night
Stockton left the game period, then the King s went
put the Kings within a game quietly during a timeout. on a 14-2 run to close the
of clinching. the . first-round Malone got a standing ova- quarter. Sacramento wa s ·
playoff series, and possibly tion from what was left of 15-for-25 from the lloor in
ending the Jazz careers of the sellout crowd of 19,91 1 the period. getting a few :
John Stockton and Karl when he was pulled with easy layups off fastbreak s
Malone.
2:25 left.
and three 3-pointers from
If it goes anything like , "We've played a long Stojakovic.
Monday, it will \le only one time together," Malone
The Kings didn 't allow :
game. Peja Stojakovic said. "Hopefu lly the fan s the Jazz to get closer than :
·
scored 15 of his 27 points in have appreciated what nine the rest of the way.
the third quarter and Chris we've tried to do for this
Jim Jackson score'd I 0 for :
Webber had 26 points and organization and for them ."
II rebounds as the Kings
Two days after a gritty the King s.
turned a four-point halftime win got them back into the
Matt Harpring scored 18
deficit into a blowout.
· series, the older and slower point s and Andrei Kirilenko
Sacramento lead s th e Jazz couldn't keep up with finished with 15 for the ·
series 3-1, and can clinch it the Kings in the second Jazz. Greg Ostertag had 14 :
at home Wednesday night in half.
rebounds for Utah, wh.ich :
Game 5.
The Jazz are on the verge has been knocked out of the ·
The Kings co uld be last of getti ng knocked out of playoffs in the first round
team to beat Stockton and the playoffs by the Kings the last 1wo seasons.
Malone with the Jazz if the for the second straight year. .
41-year-old Stockton retires
Even after a second oneafter a 19-year career with sided win in the series. 76ers 96, Hornets 87
Utah and Malone leaves as Sacramento coach Rick
At Philadelphia, Allen
a free agent.
Adelman scoffed at suggesBoth
Stockton
and tion s it was over.
Iverson's 22 points were hi s
Malone will decide their
"They have beat us this lowest total 'in the serie s.
futures when the season year and we can't relax. but five other 76ers scored
_ends, which will be soon if You .have to play the same in double figures in a victothe Jazz can't pull an upset kind of game in Sacramento ry over New Orleans.
in Sacramento.
·
that we played in the second
Game 5 is in Philadelphia
"We' d love to play what half toni ght," Adelman said.
may be the las t game "You have to .win four on Wednesday night, with
against
Stockton
and games, and then it's over." the 76ers leading the series
Malone as a tandem. We
Sacramento was just 17- 3- l.
would love to be a part of for-50 from the field in the
The balanced scorin g and
that," Webber said. "That's first half and trailed 41-37 rebounding effort by the .
something you 'd love to tell despite
causing
14 Sixers spoi led a 34-point
your kids about."
turnovers . But the Kings perfo rmance by Baron
In the other playoff game started hitting shots from Davis. who received too litMonday night. Philadelphia everywhere in the third tie help from the rest of the
beat New Orleans 96-87 to quarter and quickly turned team 10 pull the Hornets
take a 3-1 series lead.·
it into a runaway.
.
even in the series.
On
Tuesday
ni ght,
Stojakovic hit his second
Milwaukee is at New · straight 3-pointer to tie the
Eric Snow had 17 points
and
12
assists
for
Jersey, with the series tied game at 47, then put back
2-2: Phoenix is at San his own offensive rebound Philadelphia , while Keith
Antonio, ·also tied 2-2; to give the Kings their first Van Horn scored 13 points.
Boston is at Indiana, with lead since late in the first Kenny' Thomas, Derrick
the Celtics leading 3-1; and quarter.
Coleman and Aaron McKie
the Los Angeles Lakers are
The Jazz struggled with each scored II.

-S200+trtodoln.
"'your..,..,.,
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�'
www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Tuesday, April 29, 2003

r

m::rtbune - Sentinel - l\egt~ter

CLASSIFIED

Garage Apt. 2 br. appliances
.wate r turn . 106 Locust St.
$275.00+ 5150.00 dep.
(740)446·9061 .
Mtip CINniJ. OH

We Cove
Melp,

'Gracious living. 1 and :2 bed·
room apartments al Village.
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $278-$348. Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunlrles.

a.au.,

AndM•""
CGUntltsUk
' NoOne
I!IMCa"1 ·

Honeysuc~le Hills Apt. localed on Colonial Dr. behind
Highway Patrol post, 2 b-r
now available rent starts
$285.00 per mon. low &amp;
moderate ,~ income EQual
Housing
Oppo rtun ity
(740)446-3344 or TDD 1800-750·0750.

Gill II• County, OH

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

To

P.l ace
Your
•••

Offee 11o~~
Monday tllru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally Jn~Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for lnilertlon

All Dlsp.lay: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

In Next .,.,_y•s Paper
&gt;u••doy In- Column: 1:00 p . m .
Sunctays Paper

..

t
------..,
e
~y~' ePoi\=Y~ ~~~.0-HELP-·W-A.N'!Ul-·._.J
r
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

'
• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include complete

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

• Include Phone Number And Addrets When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 D•y•

Description • lnctude A Price • Avoid

\"\\01 \(I \11 \ ,...,

I

ANNouNcEMINrs

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to : The Daily
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

r

GIVEAWAY

8 lamily yard sale. Dale
Hart,
Yellowbu sh
Rd,
Recine , May 1st from 9-4,
refrigerator. cou nter top,
drop in range , range hood,
sink, dishes. kn ick -knac~s .
clothing (mcludmg boys
infant &amp; toddler, women's
plus size, men's size large
dress shirts.) shoes, purses,
new gift items. linens. pans.
Christmas tree &amp; decoralions, indoor &amp; outdoor toys,
Little lYkes toys. loi s of misc.

r

r

GAlLIPOLIS

2 Family May 1, 2, and 3 At.
218 South of rt. 7, Good +
new clothes, antques, misc.
Time 9·6 rain or shine.
4 Family - 6 miles South on

At. 7, Glassware. &amp; clothing,
varity of other things.
May 1&amp; 2 V~nco Road
" E•erclse Bike, Desk, Name
Brand
clothes,
Home
Interior, Christmas items,
play pen, stroller, 2 T Boys
clothes. April 29, 30, 1st.

SAT. May 3rd, Antique and
Household
fu rniture,
women 's clothing, tools,
mower, and misc. items. 564

Shoestring Ridge.
Yard Sale lund-raiser tor the
Gallia
County
Animal
Welfare League. May , -3 9
am to 4 pm. 91 Garfield
Avenue ,
Gallipolis.
Fu rnit ure, clothes.
collectibles. and jewelry. Help
Us ·- Help the animals.

r

4

YARD SALE-

I

~ Poi\IEROY/MmoLE .

Inside yard sa le- 348 Lincoln
St. , MiddiAport , May 1, 2, 3,
~arri-4pm .

Several garage &amp; paliO
sales, May 1, ·2, 3, 9am-?,
lots of new &amp; used tools,
bicycles. dolls. furniture ,
electrical &amp; Indian items,
Elvis Presley 'collection,
glassware
&amp; ceramics,
homemade wooden barn &amp;
house knickknack shelves,
clo thing, new homemade
quilts (all sizes). something
tor everyone, Stale Ro ute
124 between Raci ne &amp;
Syracuse.

Spring Rummage saleHeath
U.M.
Church,
Middleport, May 2 &amp; 3, 9am-

3pm.
Yard sa le- May 1 &amp; 2 at 1672
Li nco ln Heights, Pomeroy,
Oh
:-Ye_ll_o_w_llu_s_h:-R::-o-a-d-.=Th_u_rs_d_a_y

cl oth~s..

I

table, A.M. and 3:00 P.M. For
more information you may
Longaberger items &amp; more. contact
Steve
Rhea,

r

r

116

ldh• ~

G~MI

by CIAV I , ~OLIAN - - - - - - -

NERTOT

HURES

·

L..-..J..-1....---I.L.-..1..--J ,

REJ SET

Insomniac to doctor: " wish I·
could think as clearly during the
day _when I'm supposed to be
.awake as I do in the early hours
of morn1ng . I'd make a -----.- "

r--.,.1-;6,.-.JF--';1-:?;-Ir--.,.1--i,1(!» .Complero

'--'-·--'--...1.·--'-·--'-'--....1.
-··

the chuckle Quoltd .
by filli ng in the miuing wordt

you dtn lop from

·"'P No. 3 btlow.

f:J PRINT

NUMBERED LETTERS I · 2
IN THES[ SQUARES

t)

Individual with Secretaria l,
Accounting, and sales skills.
Send resume a nd re fer·
ences along with salary
reQuirements to: 4367 State
Route 160, Gallipolis, OH
45631 "
Insurance Inspector Part·
ti me . Property Inspector
needed for Mason Co. Car,
35mm ca mera, measuring
device
Required. Send
Resume to Mr. Mike . PO Box
339, Brick, NJ 08723 or
email upfromlkeOaol .com

I

I

~~tc:~~iER LETTERs 10 I

III I

Sunday

II

Yesterday's SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Hermit- Basin -.Eight- Siding' BIGGER
"Did anyone see you catch such a big fish?" the
woman asked her bragging husband. " Why sure,' ne
answered, "othe!Wise that fish would be even BIGGER!"

Lost your Job? Need to
Let's talk ... The new
Avon!
There
are
""25,ooo··customers in our
area needing service. Earn
$1 .000+ Monthly by selling
$20. oi Beauty Products to 6
People, 5 days a Week!
Great for : Couples-Single
Moms - Fa milies Handicapped. Plans to Fit
any Need. No Stodo: Ups, No
Door to Door. It will Work lor
You! $10.00 Start up Fee.
Call April. 304-882-3630 lor
Details.
WOr~?

Need 5 ladies to sell Avon
(7&lt;0)446-3358

No Loyofhl HoN Ill
Earn
an eX1ra $420.$1680/mon.
Part-time, flexfbte schedule!
1-B00-695-9166 or 'VISit
www.NoLiyolltHtlre.com

1:00

Thursday for

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@ mydailyregister.com

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

I

POLICIES: Ohio V1lley Publishing reeerv11 the rlghi to edit, rtjecl:, or csnet! any ad at any lime. Errore muet be reporad on the ttret day of
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Rtgleter will be rttponelblt tor no mort than the coet o~ the epace occupiltd by the error end only the first lnnrtlon. We
any loll or tll:ptnH that r~tu ltl from the publlcttlon or omlltlon of an advel1itemenl. Correction will be made In the first available edition. • ~~:~n~:;:;,~::t
are alw1y1 conrldentill. • Current rt!t ctrd 1pplle1. • All re11 ettate advertluments are su bJect to the Fedtrll Fair Housing Act ol1968. • Thi•
act9pll only help w1nted ads meeting EOE et.ndsrde. We will not knowingly accept any adOJertlalng in violation of the law.

WA~'IID

·lfap·
·-·w·ANfl'l)--·.,.II'&amp;J

To Do

..,111·0··

NURSES (ANI)
LAWN CARE call aNer 4
$47.00
per
hour. PM. 740-256·9361.
ColumbUs, OH. All Units,
FULL TIME (800)437·0348
Will pressure wash homes.
trailers, decks, me tal buildRetired-Children
grown· ings and gut1ers . Call
Extra bedroom-Empty Nest· (740)446-0151 ask for Ron
Want to stay at home. Foster or leave message.
Parents Needed: Become a
Therapeutic Foster Care
Giver for youths ages 0-18.
You will receive reimbursement $30-$45 a day plus
m ileage and paid respite
!NOTICE I
We are looking for homes In
Athens, Meigs, Gal/ia, and O HIO VALLEY PUBLISHsurrounding
counties. lNG CO. recommends that
Training begins May 2. Call you do business with people
tor more information or to you Know, and NOT tO send
set up an initial meeting. money through the mail until
Oasis The rapeutic Foste r you have investigated the
Care Network·Aibany -toll oH~ring.
lree-1·877·325-1558.
ABSOLUTE GOLOMINE! 60
SALES POSITIONS OPEN \lendtnn mach ines with
!:it
H ard ware &amp; or b w'ld"mg excellent
locations all to
· 1 p
·
&amp; F 11
r
matena s. art lime
u $10,995. 800 -234-6982
ti me positions available wi!h
MoNEY
growing, succesfu l local
co mpany. Send resume or
10 l..oAN
pidl up application At O'Dell •--llliiioiiiiiiiiiio-_.1
True Value Lumber. 3rd &amp;
DEBT CRISIS!
Vine Street, Gallipolis, Ohio Consolidation Is the key to
45631 .
personal loans. mortgages,

HOMES
FOR SALE

I

4br. 3 baths, storage building, fe nCftd yard . CIA ,
Modern aPpliances, All
Electric,.
Good
Neighborhood. Pt. Pleasant.
Call (304)675-6515 after
Spm.
5 room on 1 acre lot, in
Mercerville Oh . (7 40)256·
1717

The following is a schedule
of dates and places the correctional oHicers testing will
be given
April 25. 2Q03 Charles E.
Career
Center
Yeager
Hamlin , WV
April :29, :2003 Career
Technology
Center
Hunti~onWV .

May 6, 2003 Ma son Co,
Li brary Point Pleasant WV.
All testing will begin al 10
am, to ma~e an appointment
to take the test please ca ll
304·558-211 0 and ask for
Helen or Sandy. The test will
also be given on April 30.
2003 and May 13. 2003.
Please call for more infor·
mation on these te st dates.

Truck Drlvara. Immediate
hire, c.lass A CCL required,
excellent pay, experience
required. Earn up to $1 ,000
)Jer week.Call 304-6754005

..

l':'r~~~~~--

Couch $200.00, Recliner
$125.00, 19 io TV $50.00,
Coffee
Table
$20.00,
Kitchen Table and Chairs
$60.00, Freezer $100.00.
Car Carrier $60.00, Boat
Slalom Skies $50.00. 367·
7272

New 2003 Doublewi de. 3 BR
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/ mo. 1-800-6916777

.t. 0

1
• -·FOR·"·ous·RENr·
ES
_ _,..,I

3 br. house in town ava1lable

May 15th unfurnished wl
ca rpet $400. pe r month
$400. del'. 1 yr. lease contract call (740)446·0332 as ~
New 3b rl2bth. Only $995 tor Heather.
down and only $197.47 per
month. Call Harold, 740· House m
Leon area·.
385 -7671
Beautifu l4 bedroom. 3 bath .
2300 squa;e feet 2 ca r
We have new sectional . &amp;
garage. privacy in country.
single wide homes as low as
$700. a month , $500.
$180 per month, 800·837Deposit.
Ref
required .
2338 .
(J04)586-0a68

t

r

r ~NAL

z

a

- - - -- -

Beautiful 14 CT gold Bridal
Set rounded cluster dia i"n onds, wide gold bend.
Pretty Design $300.00. 2
Basket&amp;
Longaberger
$45.00 446 -4348

I

Newly remodeled 3 bedroom in Middleport. 2 car
garage ,
fenced
yard .
$450.00 mon th plus deposit.
Rolerence s required.
740-446-4543.
--------Nice 4-5 bedroom farm
house, between Pomeroy &amp;
Athens. quite country setACREAGE
pool . On 112 acre lot
ting. avai lable immediatelY.
Serious
Inquires . only.
ca ll (740)593-7456, 740·
1 acre building lots: 3&amp; 1f2 707-0030.
(304)675-8051
acres, and 5 acres tracts.
Bulaville Pike, 2 story, 3 br.. Green Schools. Great locaMOBILE HOM!~
2 112 ba., liv. room , dining, tion. At 588. (740)446-9966
FORRENI'
lam.,&amp; game room , 2 car
gar., 3 car unattached. pool, 1.79 Acres Lot Stoneybroo~ 14x70 mobile home, 2br. wl
1
acre
$175.000.00 Estates . .sand Hill Road , den, liv. rm w I pull-out, all
Point Pleasant. Land already electric located on Finch Dr.
(740)446-8050
and other financial services.
Clea red ,
Ready
for behind Fox's Pizza in Point
Available up to $500,0CO.
By Builder, affortable New Construction. Public Water. Pleasant $435.00 a mon .
Low Interest. CALL TOLL
Brie~ 3 bedroom
1/2 beth. 675 -3524 or 675-5 440. call 304-675-3423
FREE: 1-877-4:l6·6297
2 ca r garage. Corner lot. Serious Inquiries Only."
G reat Location, Green &amp;
Approximately 1 acre on 2 Bedroom ST At. 554 &amp;
City Schools. (740)446-9966
Centenary Road , 1 more Ward Road . $325.00 month .
from proposed new school plus Deposit, no pets. 740245-567 t .
TURNED DOWN ON
si te . 740-446-4543.
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Camps11e
on
Raccoon 3br. Mobil e Home 2 miles
No Fee Unless We Win!
Ad
&amp;
Barefoot
Parle outside of New Haven .
Creek
1-888-582-3345
elec. &amp; water on site $3000. Adults On ly (304 )88:2-3362
(740)286-8806
Beautiful River View Ideal
All rtJI 111ate advertising
in thla new.paper Ia
Lot fo r sale in Rac ine, For 1 Or 2 People,
HDMfS
subJect to the Federal
Refere nces. Deposit. No
(740)992·5858
FOR SALE
Fair Houelng Act of 1968
Pels. Foster Trailer Pa r ~.
Property tor sale- close to 740-441 ·018 1.
which makea lllllegat to
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
ach1ertlae " any
Green School. 2 mpbile
for immediate possession all
preference, limitation or
home lots. Own 1 &amp; rent 1. Clean 2 bedroom Mobile
within 15 min. ot dow·ntown
discrimination bated on
Approxi mately 112 ac re. Home in Country, 256-6574 .
race, color, religion , •••
Gallipolis. Rates as low as
Great investment. (419)991 femlllal 1tetu1 or nltlonal
Mobile home lor rent, no
6%. (740)4 46·3218.
0924
origin, or any Intention to
pe1s. (740)992-5858
make any such
Rio Grande irea, 3 to 30
2/3 acres Le\lel Lot, 2 story
preference, llmitallon or
acres lots, some restrictions, Newly redecorated trailer in
room s. 2 baths,
house,
discrimination ."
water &amp; electric. (740):245- Middleport. deposit &amp; referporch and large deck. heat
ences requested . no pets,
5747
pump, recently remodeled ,
Th\1 nawapapar will not
(740)992·5073 or 740·992·
corner of Green tree cit
Wanted to buy: Lot lor 5443.
knowingly accept
Bulaville
Pk. $69.500 .
advertlaementl tor rtll
mobile home. Gallia County,
(7 40)367. 7272 : ..
...tate which Ia In
with
water.ele .. sewage Trailer for rent. $375.00 per
violation ot the law. Our
hookup.
740-446·9209.
month $375.00 Deposit. On
2br. house for sale in Apple
readers are hereby
Bulaville
Pike . 367·7:272 or
Grove. Mobile Home spot for
HI ' I l l '
Informed that all
441 ·1283.
rent. (3 04 )576·2642
dwellings advertised In
thle newept~per are
3 Bedroom in Pomeroy.
APAR'IMF.N'IS
Land Contract optional with
_ ..opportunity balls. ...... .ri
..1·0--·"-DI.l'if
... 'S
.· . . , __
.,
FUR .RENT
..
FORRENI'
51500. Down payment. Call
(304)882·3864
all er
For sale by owners in 2 bedroom
house
in 1 an d 2 bed room apart~
6:00pm .
Addison overlooki ng river. 1 Rutland, $300 per month ments, furnrshed and unfur-.
3 Bedroom newly remod- 112 acre, 3 br., 1 be .. din. rm , plus deposi1, (740)992-0309 nished, security deposil
elect In Mkldleport call Tom kil. . full basement. in ground
required , no pets. 740-992Anderson after 5 p.m.
pool, fruit trees (740)446- 2 br. house, full basement 2218.
$375 .00 a mon .+$250.00
4526
99:2-3348
dep.
Bedroom Apartments
3 br. w/ full basement &amp; Startin g
3 bedroom. 1 bath. 2 story fi'Il MOBIL.E HOMfS
S.t
$289/mo,
garage, lg. yard $45~l()IJ a Washe r/ Dryer Hookup,
home in Pomeroy, 1 ca r
FOR SALE
mon.+ $250.00 dep. 304· Stove and Refrigerator.
garage, fireplace, (740)992949:2
1997 16x80 Trailer lor sale, 2 675-4469
(?40)441 -1519.
2
18
500
3 br. home~ at 171 Lariat Dr. · bedroom,
baths, $ ·
2 br. w/ full basement, city 1br. apt. in New Haven .
Call 446·4807.
school $500. a mon. + util Appliances
Gallipolis OH., eppt . on ly
included .
{740)245·9020
please 740·446-9403 or
Ava
ilable
now
(304)88296 Norris Mobile hOme. 2
?40·446-7845or 1-304·675·
br.,2 ba ., central air/heat,w/ 2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms unites 3131
3216.
stove. rbfridg ..~asher &amp; a v a i l a b l e
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
dryer
..20 Ft. deck w/ awning, Pomeroyi MiddleporVAacine MENTS
4 BEDROOM HOME. 4
AT
BUDGET
area, Immediate occupancy.
bath, only $14,900. For list- in very good shape , elderly
PRICES AT JACKSON
Hud apprbved, pets alloweQ,
ings call 1-800-719-3001 lady moving to re tirement
ESTATES , 52 Westwood
home 304-675-3806 or 304- no deposit option. Lv. M$g. Drive tram $297 to $383.
ExtF144
1·8QO.J40-8614
643-4691 .
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 Car
Equal
3 Bedroom, Brick Ranch, full 740-446-2568 .
Cole's Mobile Homes
Garage, 4 miles out 218.
basement,garage.screened Housing Opportunity.
US 50 East, Athens, Ohio,740·256-1709
dec~ . sundeck. Fire place.
45701. 740-592- 1972
$550.00 mo. 740·441 -0113. Beech St. Middleport. 2 bed·
4 br. 1 11:2 baths, brick and
room furnished apartment,
frame, fu" basement. 2 car Land Home Packages avail- 3 Bedrooms $450.00. Also 3 uti lities paid. deposit &amp; refer garage, New ha\len WV able. In your area, (740)446- bedroom house $450.00 + ences. no pets. (740)992 -"
(740)446-4274
3384.'
deposit 740-446-4824.
0165

;,;·~ll~tb~l·-o·-··~eq-u~·'

Beautiful 14 CT gold Bridal
Set rounded cluster die·
monds, wide gold band.
Preity Design $300.00. 2
· Baskets
Longaberger
$45.00 446-4348

r M~U:s~~lt~

55 acre fa rm on SA 554. 3
bedroom, 2 bath house with
basement. 2 barns. 10 acres
BuSI~
pasture. Spring fed livestock
ANDBUIWINGS
tank. Good hunting. Stoc~ed
pond. Free gas. $125,000.
Rio Grande area, 2400
Call (7 40)367-7:266 between
sq.ft. . OHicel Commercial
9am &amp; 9pm.
Building fo r RenV Lease.
Plenty off parking. (740)245- ·
Brie~ Ranch Home. 3br. 2ba 5747
1 car Attached garage, 1 car
detached garage tnground
lols&amp;

·r

WOlD

R~orrange

I ~: ;?'
r-.,.J.;_;.:.J...,;,.,J..;5;....:,;1----l

I

The Christian Life Academy
located in Jackso n, Ohio is
accepting applications lor
elementary teachers for the
2003-2004 school year.
Applicants must be state
certified . Applications can
be picked up at the school
office located at 10595
Ch illicothe
Pi~e .
M-F

Yellowbush Road, Thursday Admin istrator at 740-286&amp; Friday, baby crib, toys , 1234.
Benefit yard sale, May 1-3,
table,
cloth es,
kitchen
8am- ?, 606 Broadway St.,
Longab9rger items &amp; more . ELEMENTARY TEACHERS
Raci n.e, watch tor signs,
The Christian Lile: Academy
some $1 bags.
located in Jackson, Ohio is
accepting applications for a
Friday, 133 BUtternut Ave .,
elementary teachers for the
lawn
furniture ,
blinds,
2003-2004 school year.
Large
Garage
Sale
drapes, luggage, lamps,
Applica nts must be state
miniature oak fla t wall, Rain or shine 112 m.lle out on
certified , Applications can
At
87
on
the
left
Wed
stands. crafts, antlqu'es, colbe picked up at the front
!ThUr/Fri /Sat
lectibles, much more.
oHice located at 10595
Ch illicothe
P i~e.
M-F
Garage sale- Bashan Ad.
between the hours ol 9:00
from Racine, 4 112 miles on
A.M. and 3:00P.M. For more
leh onto Gainer, baby itef!ls,
Home Interior, umbrella Auction, May 3rd, 10am, informa tion you may contact
table, lots more, May 2 &amp; 3 ~ Angle 's Flea Ma rket, 333 Steve Rh ea, Administrator
Mechanic St., · Pomeroy, at 740-286·1234.
Garage sale- May 1,2,3, rain
or shine, Allen St, Chester, 4 Ohio, (740)992-9734 more ELEMENTARY TEACHERS
wheeler. glider rOCJ&lt;er, gas
The Christian Life Academy
range baby bed, golfcart,
located In Jakson. Ohio is
goll items . lawn mower,
accepting appliCations lor
guns, wicker headboard . lots
elementary teachers for the
of misc.
Absolute Top Dollar: u.s. :2003-2004 school year.
Gold Coins, Applicants must be slate
Middleport- Pomeroy's 6th Silver,
Prootsets,
Diamonds,
Gold certified . Applications can
annual 6-mNe long Yellow
u:s. Currency,- be picked up at the school
Flag Yard Sale. May 2 &amp; a. Rln"gs,
office located at 10595
look for the yellow flags! Call M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Chillicothe
Pike,
M·F
Avenue,
Gallipolis,
Second
tor info about localiOiis, 74Qthe
hours
of
9:00
between
740-446-2842.
992-4055 .
A.M. and 3:00P.M. For more
I \11 '1 ~1\\11\1
Moving sale- May 1st-3rd,
Information you may contact
.., I I ~\ It I ...,
furnit\,Jre, cu rtai ns. bedSteve Rhea, Ad ministrator
spread. coo~ware. gun cabl·
et 740-286· 1234.
net, treadmill , various misc.
.
lln.PWANIID
Full -Ti me Custodian needed
32984 Sidehill Ad , follow 1
tor local business, 40 hrs
signs from Rutland or
weekly Call 446·4965, M-F
Harrisonville
Ann : Work from home.
9AM-2PM.
S500· $1500/rno. PT
RaineriHudson garage sale·
$2000- $4500/mo. FT
Help wanted caring lor the
Ta:ckerville Ad., Racine . MaY
800·286-9748
elderly, Darst Group Home,
t , 2, 3, collectibles, tools,
www.retire411 .com
now paying minimum wage,
household, much more .
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am5pm, 3 pm- 11_pm, 11pm7am, call 740-992-50.23.

FHF I W

_

Elementary Teachers

kitchen

lotter.s of the
lour scram~ led words below to form . f oU( lfmplt words.

I

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
.Sell. Shirley Spears, 304675-1429.
--------Busy physician office seek·
ing part-time cle rical help.
previous medical exp. req.
resume may be taken to the
Office
or Dr.
Robert
McCleary Suite 211, 2520
Valley Dr. Pt. Pleasant

&amp; Friday, baby crib, toys, between the hours of 9:00

l;~~:~;y S©1\~1J.-L££~S8

0

Abbrevl~tlons

I ..

Female spayed cat 3 years
old. Beautiful Catk:o. Indoors
&amp; out. Loves to talk. 740256-6535.
8 family yard sa le, Da le
Hart,
Yellowbush
Ad.
Lovable, gentle puppies to Racine, May 1st from 9-4,
give away. Call:388-0416.
refrigerator, co unte r top.
drop in range, range hood,
sink, dishes; knick-knacks,
clothing (including boys
infant &amp; toddler. · women 's
Lost small skin ny beagle plus size, men's size large
dog named Twiggy please dress shirts,). shoes, purses,
call (740)388·8449 we miss new gih items, linens, pans,
him.
Christmas tree &amp; 'decorac
tions, indoor &amp; outdoor toys,
Lit11e Ty~es toys. lots ot mise

YARD SALE-

~egister

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at: 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com
classified@ mydai lysentinel.com

MiSCEU.ANF.OUS
MERCHANDISE

_,1

r

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Fla t e·ar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
T~esday, Wednesday . &amp;
Friday, Sam-4 :30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
Thursday,
Sunday. (740 )446-7JOO

r

BUJLDING
· SllPPLIES

L.,.-----~-.,.1

I

Auros
FOR SALE

2002 Mitsubishi Eclipse :2dr,
power sunroof. keyless
entry. Excellent Condition.'
To take over payments o r
payoff. (304 )675·7744 after
5pm .
2002 Nissen Quest SE,
7000 miles. Excellent condition, fully loaded, video system , $22,000 740·448-7370.
94 LEXUS ES JOO. loaded.
111K, clean , good condition,
leather. $5.500, (7 40)590·'
2496

Bloc~. brick, sewer ·pipes,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude 95 Grand Pri x $2,495. 00
Winters, Rio Grande. OH Ford Focus $3,200, 99 Ford
Call 740·245·5121 .
LX $2,795., 98 Plymouth
Breeze $3,200. 98 Pontiac
PE'IS .
Sunlire $2,695., 97 Dodge
FOR SALE
Grand
Cav." SE $3,795., 97
·Modern 1 br. apt. (740)446Ford EX $2 ,095., 98 Chevy
0390
AKC Pug Puppy male,shots. Metro
$1 ,695.,
96 TNow Taking Applications- and wormed . $350.00
Bird$2,695 ..
96
Pont
35
West 2
Bedroom Call: 740·388·9325
Bonniville $2,495. B &amp; D
• Townhouse
Apartments.
AKC Registered Labrador 44
Au61o_68 6a51el'Rs
. H
UwCKSy
. 160 N.
Includes Water Sewage,
Retriever
puppies,
Trash, $350/Mo., 740-446Champion
Bloodlines.
0008 .

r

K~:~:~~~::~6~~:~~:

One bedroom furnished
apartment in Pt. Pleasant
Very clean and nice . No
Boxer/German
Pets. Phone (304)675·1386 Cute
Sheppard
mile puppies.
Pleasant Valley Apartment Shots &amp; wo rmed, 6 weekAre now taking Applications sold. $50.00 379·2915.
for 2BR . 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
Applications are
taken Registered Norwegian El ~
~onday thri.J Friday, !ro m hound male 1 1/2 yr. old,
9:00 A.M .-4 P.M. Office 1s needs to run $1:25.00 304Located at 1151 Evergreen 882-3528
Orive Poi nt Pleasanl, WV
Phone No Is (304)6 75~5806

I \I{\ I...,,

1'1'1

II -.

o\11\l ... lfHI\.

I! H O
ra~ing

applications Gall.
area, 2 br. duplex, relridg. &amp;
s'iove !urn . central air, no
pels rei. &amp; dep. (740)245- 3, 1997 Terramites, low
5893
hours. ne w paint. Call
Huntington. {304)736-4800
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious, Ford 36oo Deisl Tractor,
:2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1 4000 SU Deisel, 50 Massie
112 Bath. Newly Carpeted. Fergu~n· Gas, Ford BushAdult Pool &amp; Baby Poo l. hog 740-286-6522
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Leate Pius Securi ty
Deposit Required. Days:
740-446·3481 ; Evenings:
740-367·0502.
WE want to BUY tobacco

r

Tw in Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications lor waiting
list for Hud-subslzed. 1- br,
apartment, call 675·6679
EHO

r

· SPACE
FORRENI'

Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
,and
Guaranteed.
Wasijers,
G&gt;ryers.
Ra nges,
and
REifrigerators , Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
VIne St. (740)446-7398

Mare for sale 304-674"6141
or 740-208-8024.

ln1::ti~:

s ing le

Axle Dump truck, 466 DT.
Allis Chalmers OD Road
Grader, d iesel
engine,
(740)256-6147
1991 Dodge Van axe. shape
as~lng $1100.
Wanted 4 dump truck loads
of dirt 304-675-65 12

Reg . Angus bulls- Top performance blood lines, Maine
Chi· Angus s how heifers.
heiters. bred heifers and
crossbred bulls . Slate Run
Jackson.
OH
Farm,
(740)286-5395

ar::::---..

couch es,bun~beds,bed room

740-992-1717

740·985-1564

Pomeroy

of maps distributed! Adverti sed &amp; promoted widely on
radio, newspapers, fl ye rs &amp; posters!
All for $5.00!

r

1/aut ~~
· ,
High i Dry

s

U• tor2de
"'&amp;

33795 Hiland Rd.

by The MiddlePQn Commumty A s~oc and
The Pomeroy Mw; hants Association .
To sign up, stop in Ohio River Hear Co or Mtddlcpon
Dept Store or Office Service&amp;. Supply m Midt.tlcflOTI o r
Chapman Shoes &amp; Ohio Valley Bulk Store-Pomeroy.
For more lnfonnation call 992-40SS

OLD GLORY
AUCTION
SERVICES
Every Thursday
at 5:30p.m.
IC&lt;msi:gnirient Wed,
TKurs. 10am-3pm
Now doing estate
&amp; household sales.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone 992-9553
or 742-0226

740-992-5232

Auctioneer
Jim

':&lt; Spring l:&lt;
':&lt; Special ':'

THEUPEITIC
MASUGE
Easter &amp; Mothers Day

Buy 1 Gift Ce-rtificate,

Get lnd Free!
,Heather A. Fry L.M.T.

740-992-5379
Offe-r gond thru

Also now accepting

THE CRAFT
SHACK

Pomeroy Eagles
BJNG02171

Craft, Basket and
Antique Mall
Grafters Wanted
Grand Openin&lt;J
May 1st
202 East Main
Street Downtown,
Pomeroy
(740) 992-0003

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
·of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $S.OO Bonanza
GetS FREE

of

lots

Seamless Gutter
Seroices

Auros

2000 Hornet 29 ft . Camper.
Sleeps 9, Excellent condition. Asking $12,000. 446$5001 Pollee
lmpoundol 4473 After 5 PM .
Hondas, Chevys, etc! Cars/
Truc~ s from $500. For list· 200:2
Hornet
Camper,
ings 1·800-7 19-3001 ext. sleeps 10, has dinette &amp; liv·
390 1
ing area slide out, 32 ~ . long .
Never · been
trailered.
1973 Ford LTD runs well , Excellent
cond ition .
new tires , new battery, new $15,000. (740)446-2252
distributor. 446-2639.
36' Dutchman camper for
1994. Corve tte, White Red sale, more information call
leather. glass top $11,000 Raymond Smith (740)992{740)682-7512
770~

HoME:
IMI'RoVEIIIENIS

All proceeds go to
Meigs County Relay lor Life

Tree Service

M

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675-5282

3D Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronni&lt;! Jones

www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctor@wv cdr.com

Estimates

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

Pomeroy, Ohio

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

992-2975
lAwn and Garden Equipment is our
business, not our sideline

1-800-822-0417
"W.Y's # 1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
. &amp; Cu stom Van Dealer"

WILSON'

.\lUI\'

BUILDERS IDC.

comes first!

Under New

M•n•a•a•ment

A ~riety

or c:•mo ufl•lt•

Windows • Rooftng
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Pomrroy, Ohio, 45769

1-740.992-7007

FREE ESTIMATES

Houre 10-8 pm
Cloaed lundap

dUM LESS
GliTTER

941-1405

REAL ESTATE

in this

MllmiiUCE

•frll hiiAIItlb

strapped. CANCER CHECK will he

there when you need it.
reserve~ check.

Call now to
Opcn9am-5pm

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE

fn:c 1:.\IIIIIOI C\. ro
n In hllff&gt;l' pi c~up
Call u5 l&lt;or all )•~ r •·"lfl"JI~r llf&lt;"th

&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
BOX 18S MIDDLEPO RT, OH 45760

(740) 446-1812
A1·l: us 11/:lvur our
S•·n ·kr Phm.•·.1

140-843-5264

29670 Bashan Road
45771
740-949-2217

ROO

as low as

REAL ESTATE

month

For Sale
Bank Foreclosure Property
3 Be!lroom, 1 1 x2 Bath located
on 60/120 corner lot at 4!i
Riverview Drive Middleport,
OH. Call (740) 949-2210, ask
for Sheila for an appointment
to see. Priced at -::J,uluu•.UIJ.

11401

992-138~
YOUNG'S
SUE's GREENHOUSE CARPENTER
Meigs County's Lal'!lest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trus,
roses, rhoaoaenarons, ana azaleas.

COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot of annuals 94'
4" pot Of perennials $1.18(8u~ 69tll FREE!

Flat of plants $6.60

apon 1 ••••

Hanging Baskets $6.60

'"';;,'.~~','• ..

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

FISHING DERBY
Racine Gun Club
Prizes Awarded
Food, Beverages &amp;
B ail Provided
Sun., May 1Bth
All Kids 17 &amp; Under

WANT~D

Plastic &amp; Metal Welding

HELP WANTED

ATV's fenders
Motorcycles fairings
Auto : Bumpers

Gril les

Local Area 'lndustry seeking temporary
personnel.
• 40 Hr. workweeks anticipated,
rotating shift work required.
• Technical and/or maintenance
experience preferred .
• Entry level wags rate @ approx.
$10.00 per hr. with moderate benefit
package being offered.
·
Interested candidates are to submit
resumes to:

Human Resources Dept
P.O. Box 1051
New Haven, WV 25265-1051
By May 9, 2003
.
An Equal Opportunity Employer

r

Rad iators shrouds &amp;
Side ta nks
Broken tab s
Plast i~;: tank.s &amp; Boxes
Tail light lense s
Mild Steel

Pipe

~~

Structural
Aluminum
Stainless Stee l El IN
Cast Iron
,
Brass
Stick , Mig, Tig. Gas,
Propane Weld ing
Plasma, Air Arc, &amp;
Acety lene cu tting

Stare Certified • Porrable

AP Welding (740) 949-0901

Sweeper Repairs
Parts • Service
Bags • Belts
Over 25 years in B11siness
-

LINDA'S PllmNG

*W.A.C.

1-740-949-2115

HELP

Let me do it for y:;u l

sggtmonth*

for

$75
per

Special
on A/C

ISillrinlll

Racine, Ohio

space

J/ 111 1fn

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Hill's Self
Storage

Advertise

*ROOFING
*HOME

Stop &amp; Compare

lt will leave you and your fam ily financially

740·992-7599

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

140-992-1611

You U!)e the monev however vou like.
Cancer wi ll str ike ~ hen yo u least e'-pect it.

• Replacement

Ne at' lttnU A4d~d Wttkfy
36198 Ptath Fork Rd.

• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Finally... MOney paid to Ylli!. w hCn cancer
strikes. You choose th e amount up to $5 0,000!
Pay ~ in addition to o thcr .insurance 1 .

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

c\oth in1 Mid h untinc
eq•alp1nelll

ROBERT
BISSELL
·cOimiCTIOII

CANCER CHECK

Best SeTllice at
the Best Price

Sl:tli'I.I IS

2000 Dodge Dakota 4x4
Sport V6, 5 speed, ai r, 67k
mites, sharp. $11 .700 080,
740·339·3685 or 740-245·
5347.

BASKET BINGO
May 1, 2003
6:30 pm
Middleport Legion

JONES'

985-3622

Yamaha X-VZ 12 1983
Goldwing GL 1100 1982
Aspencade . 74D-245-0460.

CAMPERS&amp;
MaJUR HOMES

Phone (740)593-6671
A1hens, Ohio

PC DOCTOR

204 Condor Street

Office (740) 985-3511

Brand New 4-wheelers. 50
cc $1299, HJOcc $1599. Will
trade tor a great deal Call
(304)675-1935

OBO,

750 East State Stree1

SALES &amp; SERVICE

David Rlzvde.~ &amp; Norma Rhndes

1998 Kaw8saki 300 Four
Wheeler $2 ,800. 740-4460425

Car dolly, $100
7 40 992-2679

mix or march
10 in. HUngmg haskets
$5.95 &amp; $9.95
12 in . H a n ~ in g Baskets
$11.95
6 in. Pere nni als $2.25.
4 in. pnts $1 .00 - $ 1._;2.5
8 in &amp; 10 in . Clay pots
&amp; comhinari o nion plilnt en, $4.50 &amp; $7 .95
Open M an-Sat 9-5
C losed Sunda

Snapper

Owner Operated

AlJIO PARIS &amp;
ACCFSSORIES

992-5776
Syracuse Now Open
All Flats $6.95

GRAVELY TRACTOR

• Free Estimates

r MoroRCY~ .

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

Gravely

• No Seams
• No Leaks

1997 4x4 Dodge Extended
Cab Tow pa ckage running
boards. Brush guard 77,000
miles $12.500 740-38 89017 .

t

.S-11~03

most insurance

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Sport~o retl

Rl7 Goeglein

J

Cellular

6 miles long through Middleport &amp; Pomeroy! Hundred.

Prime location with

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. CaJI Ron Evans. 1800·537·9528 .

wnlta'a Matll Delactorw
Ron Allison
588 Watson Ad
Bidwell OH, 45614
Phone (740)446-4338

• Dirt
• Ag Lime

97 Ford Aan"ger XLT. extended Cab, 2 wheel drive, V-6,
air, cruise , tilt, ps, pb, sliding
rea r
window,
bed liner,
74.000
miles.
$8,000,
(740)742-1906

General
Home
C&amp;C
Maintenance- Painting , vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors,
wi ndows, ba ths, mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chat, 7402000 Oldsmobile Alero 992-8323.
42,500 mi. ext. wa rranty to
BuiJding
&amp;
100, 000 mi. 4 new tires, Cu stom
Free
AMI FMf&amp;
. cassene/CD, Remodeling,
White wl Gray in t., spoiler, Estimates, tor All "Your Home
BURN
Fa1,
BLOCK .exc. cond . (740)441;9865 Repair and Remodeling
Crav ings, and
BOOST after 5pm.
Needs, (740)992-1119
E~ergy Like
You Halle
Never Experienced.
WEIGHT· LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launch October
:23, 2002 Call Tracy at
(7 40)441 -1982

New &amp; Used Heat Pumps·
Gas
Furnaces.
Free
Estimates. (740)446-6308

• Sand

1997 DOdge EXIended Cab.
Tow pacKage, Running
bOards, Brush guard 77,000
miles. $12.500 740·3889017

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446cass/cd, tots new, runs 0870, Rogers Basement
$2800
080, Waterproofing . .
good,
(740)992·4276

Large swi ng set; lull size
truck cap; love seat; older
child's chopped 3 wheeler,
(740)985-3810

lOxlO
10x20

• Limestone

Self

$5 gets you on the map &amp; a yellow flag .
An addi tional $5 if you need an in- town
location for your yard sale,

STORAGE

1996 Chevy S- 1 0 Blazer.
Loaded,
New
tires .
(J04J773-8i3a

FOR SALE

Whirlpool Washer. Designer
2000, $ t 75; GE Washer,
$95; GE Dryer, $95; Electric
Range. 30", $95: Frost Free
Refrigerator. nica. $150: GE
Electric Ran99, nice, $165;
Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer Set.
like new. $400: Kenmore
Washer and Dryer Set,
$300: Drop Leaf Table and 4
chai rs, $165 : Couch , $50:
King size Bed. $ 150: Full
.size Bed, $150; Vario·us
other p1eces of fu rniture. 1995 Ford Mustang GT
Skaggs
App liances, $5,500 446-6389
(740)446·7398
1996 Saturn $3.195., 1997
Cavalier
$2 ,495,
Four
Grand -ams from $2.895.,
1995 Monte-Carlo $3,695.,
t3 others instock. We take
Buy
or sell . Riverine
trades. Cook Motora. 74DAntiques , 1124 East Main
441Hl103
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moo re. 1997 Ford Escort, amlfm

3 pc. wood lawn furn ./w
cushions $30.00
7 cu. h. chest freezer $50.00
West inghouse washer &amp;
dryer $25.00 each.
2-200w technics speakers
$100.00, karokee w/2 mics,
weight bench. :2 bar bellsWI
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May 2nd &amp; 3rd.

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Drive- a- linle save alot.
Good quality straw. Volume
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able. Heavy square bales.
Bulaville Pike . We sell
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dressers,
5724
suites. Recliners. Grave
monuments. 740-446-4782.
Gallipolis, Oh. Wanted to
buy-good used couches,
manresses.dressers.

199o

I

Join the 6th annual Yellow Flag Yard Sale!

HAULING:

Trucks
91 C5odge Grand Caravan
SE, $3,795 ., 94 DOdge
Grand Ca ravan $ 1 ,095., 99
· poundage. Ca ll : 245-5159 or
Ford Explorer 4 door
$5,595, 96 Ford Explorer 2
door $3,995 .. 88 Chevy P.U
$1,895., ·92 DOdQe P. U.
$2,395. B &amp; D Av1o Sales
10 horses for sale, green H'h)'. 1 6~ N. 446-6865
broke paints, (7 40)992-3276

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Transportation
Available .
L.F.G. Stud Fee $300.
(304)675-6440

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Thompsons
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'

Life with.PE!rfectionist·
~ perfectly awful for family
DEAR ABBY: The letteJ
from "Tina in Tennessee"
brought back memories from
my past. Tina was upset
because her husband's son
had come to Ilve with them.
and his messy bedroom made
her angry. She excused herself
by saying she was a "perfectionist," waving it like a banner, as though it made her
behavior OK.
I, too, was a perfectionist. I
made my four children's lives
miserable with my constant
nagjling and threatening. My
crists carne one winter when,
in the midst of a snowstorm, I
made all of them stand on our
windy back porch, strip naked
from their wet, cold clothes,
and wait until my floor had
dried because I had just
washed and polished it. It hit
me like a ton of bricks!
For years; I had made my
entire family miserable with
my constant cleaning. I had
been known to wake up in tbe
middle of the night and clean
or go outside and do · yard
work. I always said the clean
house was for "them." The
truth was, I didn't like myself.
J. cleaned house to prove to
· the world that I was all right.
• What rea II y needed cleaning was my SPIRIT, not the
• house. This may be too long
to print, but I wanted to share
this milestone in my life ··.the

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
stan of my recovery. - NO
LONGER
"MOMMY
DEAREST" IN CATHEDRAL CITY, CALIF.
DEAR NO LONGER: You
were perceptive to realize that
you had turned the "vinue" of
cleanliness into obsession and
compulsion. to the point that
it had become abusive to your
family. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I, too, am
the stepparent of a sloppy
child . It used to drive me to
distmction, until! realized the
only person I could change
was myself, and my harping
and complainin~ only made
ME the pariah m the household. Now I close the door to
his room and ignore it. When
he's grown up and gone, I can
change the carpet, paint the
walls and "live happily ever
after." - MARK IN GAR·
LAND, TEXAS
DEAR MARK: A wise
parent (or stepparent) carefully chooses his (or her) battles,

because you can't win 'em all.
DEAR 'ABBY: My philosophy on neatness is that I'll
n~ver look back on my life
and think, "Thank goodness I
did the dishes every day. I'm
glad I spent so much time
vacuuming." I will always
wish for more time spent with
my family and friends , enjoying the things I love.
I would hate for that woman
to find herself looking back
on her life, regretting a miserable relationship with the boy
and his father over dirty
clothes and candy wrappers.
She needs to reach a compromise . -NOT SO NEAT IN
N. Y.C.
DEAR NOT SO NEAT:
Your housekeeping may not
win any awards, but you have
your priorities in order.
. DEAR ABBY: "Tina in
Tennessee" should count her
blessings. She has a wonderful stepson who is being
bounced around like a pingpong ball through no fault of
his own. His father should
rejoice in the opponunity to
have a relationship with his
son. This is also Tina's chance
to have a relationship with the
young man. Tell her not to
ruin it because of a messy
bedroom. Shut the door! -A
MOTHER IN MINNEAPOLIS
DEAR MOTHER: Good

point. There is so little the boy
can control - his bedroom is
"his space," and it should not
be turned into a battleground.
He should be praised for his
strong points and given a little
leeway. To quote a reader
from Littleton, Colo., "Teens
are 'neat' people. and it has
nothing to do with the state of
their bedrooms."
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Burell, also
know11 as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother.
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

• I

ACROSS

1
4

Slalom
need
"Little
Women"

37 Kind of lens
38 Sleeping
place
39 Dietary
need
40 Motels
of yore
41 Good pilot
42 Make
dollies
44 Important
period
47 Mora polite
51 Tea herb
52 Gizzard
55 U.N.
member
56 Pierre's
head

role
·
Gulf st.
Menu
phrase
(2 wds.)
12 Burn
soother
13 Nobleman
15 Chair part
' 16 Row
of seats
17 Trickle
6 One often 37 Pasta type
down
7 Not him
39 I, for
18 Retirement 57 Ted
8 UPS rival
Wolfgang
plan
58 "My, myl"
9 Superman's· 41 Performed
~0 Droplets
mother
43 EI-Sadat of
59 Closet need
21 Pastoral
10 Very dry
Egypt
60 Turn aside
spot
61 Meet,
14 DJ's albums 44 CPR giver
23 Tothein poker
19 Lively loy 45 Jetty
24 Painful
20 Censor
46 Aware of
27 "The
DOWN
22 Stick to
48 Slices
Wanderer"
23 Jiffy .
49 Latin I verb
singer
1 Polio
24 Foreign car 50 Gather
29 Flowery
vaccine
25 Stare at
leaves
month
Inventor , 26 Cattail
52 Not mil.
32 Baseball's
2 MOMA
28 " - 53 Canape
Tommieartist
Excltad"
~opper
33 Sound of
3 "Othello"
29 Gaze
54 Absorbed, .
perplexity
heavy
dreamily
as costs
34 Livy's eggs 4 Wash
30 Cosmetics
35 Pub suds
5 Yale
brand
36 Wind dir.
student
31 Edible roots
8
11

~~~~-

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL
Don '1 be too quick to accept
or turn down any proposals
brought to you on the· year
ahead. The beuer you exam:
inc things. the less disappoinlmcnl you ' II experience later.
Careful considerations can

bring mtJCh sm:cess .

TAUiWS (April 20-May

20) - You ' re extremely
adept today and we ll
equipped lo correct any negative developments thul might
pop up. Use your ingenuity to
turn losing situations around.

GEMtNI (May 21-June 20)
- Keep your huppy mood
and don ' I be intluenccd by
the behavior of others today,
especially when involved
with selfish people. Let your
i.nstincts dictate your attitu&lt;le,
nol their conduct.
CANCER (Ju ne 21 -July
22) - Should you find yourself coming up short in one
area today. look Ia another to
make your strides and gains.
ti~erything should have a way
"f balancing itself out at this

time.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Friends will come through for
you today. but not in situations where you're quite able
to fend for yourself. .Be sure
your requests are reasonable
and needed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-

If you discover along the

this happen today. make up
by concentrating on candlelight and wine and roses.
l'ISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Anything done for you
today by another needs super-

today to get your complicated

as&gt; ignments out of the way
while your mind is fresh and
alert. Later on. as you tire.

way that you had been going
about things in a wrong man·
ner. don't hesitate lo make a
big switch in tactics. II will be
foolish only if you don'llry.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
-There's no need lo come
unglued at the seams today
shou ld a problem develop
with a temperamental associate. Keep your emotiOns ontact. and you can calm him or
her down.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22)- Your intensity always
makes yo~ play to win, but
today don't make winning all
imrorlanl or you 'll end up
lo~mg admirers. Maintaining
grace is more imponanl than
gamesmanship.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- It would be wise

your lhink i n~ abi lities may
·wither and fuae.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan. 19) -This can be a materially rewarding day for
you, bul you must not take
anything for ,grunted and let
events govern your gain s .
Guess again if you think
you ' ll be handed something
for nothing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Somelim•s you can
spontaneously blurt out the
truth without regard for the
feelings of another. Should

vision. Misconceptions about '

how you wanl things might
unhappy results. Stay
on lop of the job and this
won't happen.
ARIES (Murc h 21-April
19) - Be patient if you're negotiating something with associates today and you believe you' re not being offered
a fair market price. Leave
things until another day, when
people are more cooperative.
lead 10

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WA'I'fO

www.mydailysentinel com

Worker
injured
at Meigs
field
house

National Day of Prayer Thursday

Staff report

Local events continue
throughout week
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer

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· POMEROY - A week-long
observance of the National Day of
Prayer will end Thursday with a
prayer service at the Meigs
County Counhouse and a Concert
of Prayer at the Riverfront
Amphitheater in Pomeroy.
Earlier this month, . Meigs
County commissioners issued a
proclamation declaring May I as a
Day of Pmyer for Meigs County,
in conjunction with the National
Day of Prayer declared by
President Bush.
Brenda Bamhan is the coordinator of the event, and ,Peggy
Crane, the Rev. Rod Brower,
Linda Haley, Faith Hayman and
Gladys Cumings serve on the
local National Day of Pmyer com-

h .OOWN

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by JUDD HAMBRICK

mittee.
The observance began Sunday,
as local residents circled the
Meigs courthouse for a IS-minute
prayer service. Since then, a
and
prayer
Bible-reading
marathon have been underway
and will continue until Thursday's
pmyer servtce.
·The Fellowship of Christian
Students and the Meigs County
National
Day of Prayer
Committee will co-sponsor a
praise and prayer rally for
teenagers from 7 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday, at Meigs Middle
School.
Thursday's service, from II :30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m., will include·
music and special pmyers from
the steps of the county counhouse
'
for elected officials, according to Local residents circled the Meigs County Courthouse for a 15-minute prayer circle
Sunday, as the week's events observing National Day of Prayer began.
Bamhan.

FOUR PlAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- to 7-leltel word trom the le"ers on eact1 y:ardllne.
Add points to each wout or ie'iler usinv sconng directions at rig!t . Seven-lener
words get a 60·poiot bonus . All words can be !otsld 1n Webster's New WOOd

c,....

mag~ ·

At.!. MaTttiG

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003

Local pastors, including the Rev. Father Walter Heinz 6f the Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy, are among those participating in a daily
six-hour Bible-reading marathon as part of the county's National
Day of Prayer observance.(Brian J. Reed )

·Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

1H,l;r~

SO CENTS ' Vol. 53, No. 177

Transported
by helicopter
to hospital

\\'OIUJ·SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
C 11003 Unhd h1h111 Syndlull IM.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

~~~~

,The
newspaper
is a valuable
learning tool
for students
of all ages.
It connects
the principles
and facts they learn in the
classroom with stories
and events that are
happening here and
aro1,md the world.

Astrograph
Wednesday. April 30, 2003

. Coming lbursday: NASCAR

•

!lieti0h8~ .

Inside
• Dragnet out for cop
killer suspect, See page

- SEe, He~E'S
/II.J

Berea program to be offered in Meigs County

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

1\El!f'S IINOillER ...
1\IE ;~T ~~~H~I!ET
~~S' ~

Al

. -y-

• Family Medicine, See

page Al
• Holzer Clinic employees recognized, See page
A6
I~SE.N~ITIV €

!

I DIDN'1 I)&lt;~ER'E ~OU I
'JJ H'l Dl D 'IOU P«T UP Wt'l\1 ME ?

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ONE PE~~~
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5:J

ROCKSPRINGS A
man fell through the
rafters and onto his head
Tuesday afternoon, inside
the new field house located near Meig s High
School.
Mei s
ocal School s
Supe intendent ·
Bill
said
Mitch
Buc ley
Deskins was doing electri cal work in the rafters ,
which are about I 0 to 12
feet above the floor.
Buckley said Deskins
lost his footing and fell.
Buckley said Deskins had
a large cut on his head
y.; hich was bleeding , but
was conscious when emer- .
gency workers arrived.
Deskins was transported
by medical helicopter to
Cabell- Huntington
Hospital ,
Huntington.
W.Va., where he is undergoing care. .
Deskins is the co-owner
of Deskins Electrical , a
Lancaster company .

that Meigs County has been
selected to participate in its
Leadership
Development
Progmm.
· "The 15 team members will
develop a common vision for
Meigs County, sharpen their
leadership skills, and design
and carry out a community·
project," according to Van
Gravitt of the Brushy Fork
Institute.
"Last year, Adams County,
Ohio, completed a project to•
provide canoe access points
to Brush Creek, a 60-mile
waterway running through
Adams County with no pubhe access," Gravtll smd.
"To do this, they worked

Seeking team
members for
community project
Bv BRIAN J.
Staff writer

REED

POMEROY
Brushy
Fork Institute at Berea (Ky.)
College will conduct a leadership development program
in Meigs County, and is now
accepting applications for a
IS-member team to complete
a community improvement
project.
The college has announced

00£5

with state and local government as well as private
landowners," he added.
"We are especially interested in people who are new to
leadership," Gra vitt said.
"We are interested in getting
people from all commun ities
in Meigs County and from all
walks of life - . anyone who
is interested in working to
better the community while
practicing and learning new
skills. Our emphasis is definitely on broader community
development."
The institute has offered
the program in Kentucky,
Tennessee , West Vtrgmoa and
Ohio. and more than 800 pea-

pie have participated, including people from government ,
business people, grassroots
volunteers. bankers, students
and teachers. homemakers.
ministers and artists.
"Our participants have
ranged in age from high
school students to senior citizens, and have included both
established leaders and peopie new to leadership roles,"
Gravitt said.
. Brushy Fork county ~eams
have
comp leted
many
dynamic projects, addressing
community issues such as
.,recycling, education , e~onomtc cJtvelopment, toun sm,
county planning and voter

education.
The six-month program
involves two expense-paid
workshops at Berea College.
one Sept. tl-13, and the other
April 2-3, 2004. Hotel
accommodations, food, materials and transportation. custs
will be paid by the institute,
Gravitt said. Funds are even
available for child care costs .
Local resident s interested
in participating in the pro. gram can pick up appliqtions
from Perry Varnadoe at the
Mei gs County Economic
Development Offi ce. or
Becky Baer at the Meigs
County Extensoon Ofl 1ce.

lH£ OiHER .

Erin P-non. 5th ar-.
Pomeroy Elemont.ry

Index
1 Sections -

cv ~e, y ' s

SIC.!&lt;..!
1'\~ . GA.L.V t N
SAI D HE"S
HAD .AN
INT ESTIN,-.. \.
V\ RU5 I

WA5 'Tl-IAT
NECE55ARY?

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

HOW MVC.H
tx:I ES. IT
.C.OST"

TO

DRY CL EAN
TO P AAT""

HAVE &lt;,&gt;OU

EV€.1'1 SPENT
AN&lt;,&gt; 1'1ME
W I'I'H

YOUR5El.F?

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Pllses

A3
84-5
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B6
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C. 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.,..

Gas tax increases; provides money for repairs
in Meigs County.
The first increase since
1993, the state's 22-cent-pergallon gasoline tax will
increase ·by up to six cents
per gallon over three years.
The first 2-cent increase in
the gasoline tax takes place
July I and, the second will be
added July I, 2004.
· The final increase, scheduled to take effect July l,
2005, will be suspended if
Ohio's return on the gasoline

Townships
benefit the most
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

POMEROY
While
higher gasoline taxes means
motorists will be paying
more at the pump, more
money will be available for
road repairs in counties,
townships and municipalities

taxes sent to Washington
increases from 89 to 95 cents
on the dollar. The graduated
return will generate more
money each year as the tax
increase becomes established.
Town ships
tn
Meigs
County will see a significant
increase in the amount of
state money received because
of
the
legislation.
According to State Rep.
Jimmy Stewan, an Athen s

Republican who supported
the legislation j,vhich passed
in early April, sootheast Ohio
will receive far more than
largely urban areas which
would see the increase "as a
drop in the bucket."
The motor fuel tax will
provfde about $44,000 more
to townships each year. The
amounts received by· the
townships will vary slightly,
depending on the number of
registered vehicle owners.

The villages will see an 87
percent increa se in the
amount received from the
motor fuel tax . Pomeroy cur- .
rently recei ves approximately $44,891.55 from the current tax. but - with the
mcrease. it will recetve
$83,854.
Racine, whi ch currently
receives $17 ,267, will eventually receive $32.254.
Please see Gas

tax. AS

Together we can change your body.
And your life.
~

~

WILL&amp;. Wf\f.N -;ou'i'.E.C.ti~IW.
'(()JI(. T()U{lt'£ DOWN TfiE.. '&gt;11&lt;Ef.T

,. ,no:.iflt ~r::.z.E. !\lOio-l~ 1100!

'

A

ToLL

'.

...

'.

FREE

(866) 821-4541 www.ccwL.INFo

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>April 29, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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      <name>conant</name>
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    <tag tagId="1167">
      <name>counts</name>
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    <tag tagId="1510">
      <name>douglas</name>
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    <tag tagId="100">
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    <tag tagId="208">
      <name>spencer</name>
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</item>
