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                  <text>Page 86 • ~ Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 7, 2005 ..

www .mydailysentinetcom ·

Smith named Ohio State AD Woods beats ·Mickelson
million budget at Arizona
Stale.
Associated Press
Before going 10 Arizona
State, Smith was AD at Iowa
COLUMBUS
SOhio State and Eastern Michi gan.
State introduced Gene mith
Smith, who had an overall
as its new athletic director salary at Arizona State of
Saturday, giving the forme, about $370,000, agreed to a
Anzona State AD a hefty seven-year contract with Ohio
salary to take charge. of a State staning April 15 that
depanment betng mvesllgated · will pay him up 10 $625,000
by the NCAA about 1mproper annually if he meets performance goals and makes it to
benefits gtve!l to athletes.
Smtth, athleuc dtrector ·at the end of the contract.
Arizona State since 2000, will
Smith's base pay will be
replace Andy Geiger, who $450.000, com pared with
said he is retiring because he $250,000 that Geiger made
is burned out.
annually. University president
Smith said he understands Karen Holbrook earned
what he's getting into and the $437,000· last year; football
school's recent problems coach Jim Tressel's pay tops
aren 't indicative of its overall $ 1.2 million per year.
character.
Smith inherits an Ohio State
"These issues are single program that has been
issues in a small situation. It's wracked by ·controversy for
not something that will dam- most of_ the past two years.
age the integrity and the long '!'hree of 1ts b1ggest sports term health of the institution football and men's and
or the athletic program." he women 's basketball - are
said Saturday at an introduc- bemg mvest1gateil . by the
tory news conference.
NCAA ·amid allegations of
The 49-year-old Cleveland violations including academic
native will be the tirst black fraud by players. payments
athletic director in Ohio from boosters and no-show
S,tate's history. The school's summer jobs..
athletic department has an
Former Oh10 State football
operating budget of more than standout Maunce Clarett has
$80 million and oversees 36 alleged that Tresse l helped
varsity sports. That compares line .him and other players up
with the 22 teams and $35 w1th loaner cars. Claret! has
BY JONATHAN DREW

.

also ~harged that football
players were placed in easy
courses and received high pay
for minimal work in the summer.
In
December, Geiger
announced the school was
banning its basketball team
from playing in the NCAA or
NIT tournaments this season
as a way of mitigating expected sanctions from the NCAA.
Former coach Jim .O'Brien
acknowledged ·he loaned
$6,000 to the family of a
recruit in 1999 and was tired
in June.
Smith said he feels the
school 's reputation has survived.
"Keep in mind that outside
of Columbus, the Ohio Stale
University is still thought of
in a ~ reat way," he said.
Anzona State 's graduation
rate improved to school highs
under Sniith. But in a report
released last ,week, the NCAA
rated the program 's overall
academics below the cutoff
point for acceptable perfor'mance .
Ohio State's program got
slightly higher overall marks
. from the NCAA in it s
Academic Progress Ratings.
The Buckey!!s' football team .
was ranked II th-worst in the
country, a little bit lower than
Arizona State's.

'

The lllini led 64-58 after tipped out of bounds in front
James Augustine's layup with of the Illinois bench. The
3:23 left - but didn' t score lllini had one last chance
with 2.2 seconds left.
again. .
.
Page B1
The Buckeyes ran off the William s passed to Powell ,
next seven points, with Dials, but his hurried 3-pointer from
set a pick and rolled to the who had 21 points, scoring the top of the circle was well
basket and guard Tony on a half-hook before short and off the mark ..
Stockman.',was used as a Sylvester drove the lane for a
Fans rushed· the court after
decoy. The lllini bit on the . left-handed .scoop to cut the the buzzer soimded, snapping
deception ..
lead to 64-62 with · I :40 photos, jumping up and down
"As we left the huddle, remmmng.
and. slapping the Buckeyes on
Matt said, 'I' II make the
·
'They · were . loosey- ·the back.
shot,'" Matta said. "And he goosey," Weber said of the
Dee
Brown
led
the
lllini
,tlid."
Buckeyes. "They didn 't quit. with IJ points, although he
Ohio State ( 19- 12, 8-8); a They 're an NCAA tourna- was rattled all day by chants
team with problems all year ment team. Playing on their of "air ball" after several
hanging onto the ball, didn't home court, they made the errant second-half shots. He
have a turnover in the·second plays."
was 3-of-11 from the field
.
half. The lllini, who had hurWith just over a minute and had only five points over
dled tough games in loud left, Illinois' Deron Williams the final 34 minutes . Powell
environments all season, had drove the ·lane and wrapped a and Head each added 12
seven turnovers after half- pass around a defender to points.
time.
Williams, who came in
Roger Powell , but Dial s
"We didn't take care of the swatted the shot away to averaging 12.8 points a
ball and they made all the teammate Je' Kel Foster. . game, was 1-of-7 from the
plays at the end," Illinois Sylvester missed a 15-foilter field and finished with two
center Jack Ingram said. for the Buckeyes and then points.
"They won it.''
'They just outplayed us,"
Illinois ' Luther Head misIt was the second straight fired on a 3-pointer with 17 Brown said. ''They deserved
season a tealil coached by seconds left.
it."
Matta ended a run at perfecOhio State called a timeout
Foster added I0 points for
tion. Matta's Xavier team with 12 seconds left. Foster Ohio State, 'which enters this
handed Saint Joseph's its first inbounded to B.randon Fuss- .' week's Big Ten tournament
loss last season in the Cheatham who passed to · as the. No. 6 seed. After that,
Atlantic I 0 tournament.
Sylvester on the right wing, the Buckeyes will head
"I'd like to be the other in front of the Ohio State home . ..
.
team just one time,'' Matta bench. His quick shot seemed
Matta was asked if the vicsaid with a lau~h. "I'm living to surprise the lllini , nestling tory over Illinois makes his
for the day I m the No. I in the net while a capacity team's postseason ban even
team and someone else is try- crowd at Value City Arena more difficult to accept.
ing to do it to us."
.
roared.
·
·
. "Yeah. I thought we could
The last team to reach the
"The other day I was in the win the national champiNCAA tollrnament without a ~ym with Brandon and I said, onship," he joked. "And
loss was UNLV in 1991. On Wouldn 't it be unbelievable nobod(s ever going to
Saturday, Matta had shown to score 25 points and hit the know.'
his players film clips of sev• game-winner
against
The · lllini will regroup.
era! huge upsets and the Illinois.?"' Sylvester said. playing as the team to beat m
Rebels' loss to Duke in the "This feels. so good I can't the conference tournament
national semifinals that year describe it."
and then in the NCAA tourwas one of them.
After· a timeout, a pass was . nament.

Shock

from

Basketball, A3

in shootout at OK Doral .
BY DOUG fERGUSON

Associated Press
MIAMI - Tiger Woods.
turned in a performance
worthy of his return to No.

one shot the
tournament
record
at
Dora!, pre viously held
by
Jim
F u r y k
&lt;2000 l and

l.!n a dramiltic duel with
Phil Mickelson that came
a~
0 rr
down to the last ~hot
(1993). This
Sunday, Woods made a 30· Woods
is the sixth
fool birdie putt o,n the 17th
PGA Tour
hole to take the lead, then a eveJ\1 where Woods has at
6-foot par putt to dose with least a share of the 72-hole
a 6-1,mder 66 and win the record .
Ford Championship at
Vijay Singh , who had
Dora!, giving him the No. I been No. 1 the last 26
ranking for the first time weeks after beating Woods
in a Labor Day duel outside
since September.
Mickelson, coming off Boston, closed with a 66 to
doni,inant victories in 'his fini sh ihird, five shots
last two stroke-play tourna- behind, along with Zach
ments , had a chance to force Johnson (67).
Mickelson's streak of 10
a playoff or possibly win on
the 18th. His 30-foot chip consecutive rounds i(l
looked good all the way. but · stroke play atop the leaderca ught the lower lip. He board ended , but not withclosed with a 69.
"The whole day, we were out a gutsy fight. Most players would have buckled
going at each other,'' Wood s when Woods surged into the
said. " II was fun to be· a part
lead, but Mickelson came
of that .''
right back at him.
Woods took the lead for
Thi s Sunday show down
exceeded the expectations the tlrst time all .week in
of a battle between two of
ihe biggest names in golf. A spectacular fashion. From
sellout crowd was buzzing 293 yards away in the 12th
from start-to-finish, espe- fairway, he took a big crack
cially during wild momen- with hi s 3-wood, bowed hi s
tum changes on . the back head and started walking,
nine of the Blue Monster.
waiting for the cheers to tell
Woods reached the 603- him he hit the green for the
yard 12th hole for the sec- second straighf day. No oneond time in two day s for an else reached it all week.
eagle tp take a two-shot
Woods holed th'e 25-foot
lead. Mickelson "'nswered eagle putt. taking two steps
with back-to-back birdies to to the right throwing a big
catch him.
uppercut when it fell, giving
Lefty looked like he had him a two-sliot lead. It
control of the tournament · appeared the tournament
until he missed a 5-foot par suddenly was his to ·win .
· putt on the 16th, and then
Not so fast.
Lefty
Wood s delivered like he bounced back with consecuusually does with two tive birdies to. catch him ,
clutch pulls .
starling with an 8-footer on
Wood s,
who · earned the 243-yard 13th hole. But
$990,000 for his second he wasted two great
victory of the year, finished chances.
at 24-under 264 to break by
Mickelson grazed the lip

2 J

on a I0-foot birdie on the
15th, then caught the lip on
a 5-footer for par at No. 16
after Woods had. already
failed to get-and-down from
a bunker.
II was the first time in 67
holes either of them had
made a 'bogey. They performed at such a high le,vel
th at they each made . 27
birdies on the Blue Monster,
a career-high for both.
II was only the third time.
Woods and Mickelson have
played against each other in·
the final round, and Woods
impmved to 3-0. The other
two times were the 2001
Masters, where Woods had
a one-shot lead; and the
2003 Bukk Invitational ~
where Woods was two
ahead of Mickelson .
This was the first time
Lefty had the lead, and he
battled hard to keep it.
Woods managed to get
within
one
shot
Mickelson at the turn, and
their scoring was ordinary
given the superb conditions
of balmy breezes and greens
as soft as carpet.
Both had their chances . .
Woods mis sed back-toback birdie pulls from~ feet
early in the,round, but a pivotal hole came at the par-3
fourth. Mickel so n stuffed
his tee shot into 5 feet,
while Woods' tee shot
bounded off the side of the
hill and was saved by thick
rough from going into the
water.
He chipped some I 0 feet
by. and it looked as though
Mickelson would double his
lead. Instead, Woods made
a tricky par putt and
his
Mickel son mi ssed
birdie . One hole later,
Woods nicked the flag with ·
his approach and made a 4foot birdie . They matched.
shots the rest of the way;
both of them twice missing
birdie· putts inside 12 feet.

oe

.

•

.

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.. •You must call prior to the end of initial 25 day period to extend.
•••Limited to one, 25 day extension. (Maximum of 50 days)
•••Classified ad limited to 15 words or less.
•••zs~ for each additional word over' ts·words.
•••Typographical corredions must be made witbin first 3 days of publication.
•••Only one Item per classified .ad.
•••Pre-payment Is Required and non-refundable.
••• Available ·only to private, noo-commen:ial individuals.

.... '479

.

Associated Fabricators, Inc. closing its doors

SPORTS

.

• Sabathia shut down.
See Page B1

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

bu,ine"·· which has si nce
been sold to Jell Brown. who .
continue s the operati on in
another location .
A' for the bui ldin g,
Thomp,on and hi s wife.
Alice .. have no plans for 'ell ing it artd are hopeful &gt;orne
illdu stry wi ll move in . A portion of the ~tructure dates
back to the early 1900s \i'hen
the Barkcoff Organ Co.
mo ved tu · · Pomeroy and
opened a manufacturing plant
here . sh ipping organs on the
river to all parts of. the countrv.
-For most of their married
Jives. Bob and Alice lived on
the hill overlooking the
Meigs Marauder football
field adjacent to the· busine ss
building. In I CJ98 they bu ilt a
new house on a farm on Gun
Club Road. and it's there that
they will spend their retire-

HOEFLICH@JMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Associated
Fabricators. Inc. , a longtime
bu siness in Pomeroy. is closing its doors thi s week.
Contents of the construction company owned and
operated by Bob Thompson
for the past 25 years, along
·with some equipment from
t~e former Fulton-Thompson
machine shop, will be sold at
auction Satu~day.
Thompson, ~3. who is
recuperating from a stroke.
suffered in October, said he
decided it was time to retire.
have
While operations
decreased. he still has five ·
full-time and. two part-time
employees on the pay roll. ·
· Page -AS
Fifty-nine years ago,
• Virginia Harl,. 56
'
Thompson joined a relative ·
in a machine shop businessmimed Fulton-Thompson in
the same building on· Spring
Valley Lane. The company
sold
tractors and equiprrienl
· • Meigs students receive
medals at district contest. along with milking supplies
and equipment for · dairy
See Page AS
farms.
When Fulton retired from
...,.. '· '

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

~

ment years.

Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

Through
the
years
Thompson .has been involved
with the Meigs Count y Fair
Board and worked on numerous improvements ·on the

Bob Thompson and his old '1921 Fordson, which for years has sat on the vacant lot at the cor·
ner of East Main and Spring Avenue, are the same age and both are "hanging it up" come
Saturday. Thompson is clostng down his Associated Fabricators, IQc. business and the tractor
·
is being sold at auction .
the bu,iness. Thompson
remained in the building and

began changing the direction
of the business from sales to

constructi on. He further
developed the dairy servtce

Please see Closing. A5

FOUND MONEY

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TUESDA \' , MARCil M, 2005

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We'll run your classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
. the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Poi~t Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach ?ver
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

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Submitted photo

Authorities Latest drug arrest involves
search
Middleport pair
•

Oetallo on Page A6

INDEX

Jumper

•

"' .

Sheriff's Deputy Ricky Sm1th counts the $11,070 1n cash found along Oh10 124 at Minersville
early Sunday evening. Sheriff Robert Beegle said he believes the cash, retrieved by two deputies,
belongs to a defendant in a pending drug case, but the matter remains under investigation.

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.

'499,
.......

Federal highway bill
doesn't guarantee more
gas tax for states, A2

UPWARD

•

Beth sergent/ photo

Pam Riffle (left) and Cathy Clark· are pictured operatin·g the
long-arm quilting machine owned by The Fabric Shop. The
.machine can quilt patterns in a matter pf hours resulting in
Quilts that are constructed in a few days and can withstand
wash ing machine wear-and-tear.

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SEcnoNs- 12 PAGES

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
~ditorials

Obituaries
Sports ·

B Section

. Weather

A6

- 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
:©

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- William Garro!!. 71,. of
Sandyville, W.Va. , has been
identified as the man who
may have jumped from the
William S. Ritchie Jr. Bridge
in Ravenswood on Friday
night.
Ravenswood Police Chief
William Sinnett . released
Garroll's name Monday.

Please see Jumper, AS

POMEROY - In local law
enforcement agencies' continued efforts to prosecute
those trafficking in drugs. a·
Middleport man and woman
were arre sted . on ·. drug
charges early Sunday when a
search of their vehicle nencd
crack cocaine and prescription medication .
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
· El'IS ha ··Lacey .. D.ICkens.
. 15
-· .
and Brandi Hicks. 20. were
arrested on Ohio 833 near

Rose Hill Road early Sunday '
morning. Dickens was arrested on a warrant of indictment
·charging four counts of drugrelated charges.
After a search of the vehi. de by the co(mty 's canine
unit resulted in the discovery
of crack cocaine and other
drug s, Dickens and Hicks
were charged with felony
possession of crack cocaine.
Charges rela\ing to their
alleged illegal possession of
prescription drugs · are abo

Please see Arrest. A5

- HI•TECH QUILTING-.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMERO-Y - The Fabric
Shop employee Pam Riffle
traces a quilt pattern with an
infrared dot, and in four to
. five hours, she has quilted a
panern that would have taken
days if it were hand-sewn .
'The majority Of the people want it done fast." said
Riftle's fellow employee
Cathy Clark. who explained
that their quilts made with the

computerized long-arm quilt
machine are ready in a few
da ys.
Don' t let the word "computerized" fool you. There is.
skill involved in working the
long-arm quilt machine.
When
operating
the
machine. Riflle moves fluidly with the pattern. careful to
stop and snip'the thread when
it's needed and making sure
the quill is square. ·

Please. see Qulltlnc; A5

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Page·A2

OHIO

.The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 8,

YTHE BENDTime Out for Tips

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 8,

2005

.Community Calendar
Public meetings

WASHINGTON - · The
. six-year, $284 billion highway and mass transit spending bill pending in the U.S.
House does no t guarantee
that Ohio and other states
wiU. receive a bigger share of
gasoline taxes, a provision
advocated by lawmakers and
state otficials.
·
· Lawmakers planned a vote
on the bill this week, but the
· issue of how the bill divides
the nioney among states is
expected to be a sti cking
point In the Senate, where
Sens. Mike DeWi ne and
George Voinovich of Ohio
have called for making the
highway funding process
more fair.
Currentl y. Ohio gets 90.5
cents for every $1 that Ohio
motor.ists pay in gas taxes, an
arrangement created under
. the rationale that more populous states should help pay
for a national highway system that runs through less
·
populated states.
But states that pay more
than they get back are now
demanding a higher return on
their payments. The Senate
was pushing a $3 17 billion
bill last year that would have
steered 95 cents · per dollar
back to Ohio, increasi ng the
state's share of funds froin
$5_8 billion to $8 billion.
"That's going to be the battle," Voinovich said Monday.
"We 're being shortchanged in
terms of these other states."
Voinovich , a member of
the Senate subcommittee on
transportation and . infrastructure,. said the problem
is that gas taxes don't raise
enough money to ensure the
current tevel of funding fo r
.other states while guaranteeing that Ohio can
increase its share to 95 percent. If rai sing the gas tax is
off the table , Congress
needs io find another revenue source to boost Ohi9 's

Other events

Church events

B!rthdays ·

Clubs.and
organizations

share, he said.
''The big debate is going to
be about what these other
revenues will be," Voinovich
said.
The highwa y bill stalled
last year over the same issue,
Congress
to
prompting
extend until May 31 the pre·vious $2 18 billion six-year
plan , which expired .in
September 2003 . Lawmakers
are wo(king quickl y to pass a
bi II before that date .
Transportation officials in
Ohio and elsewhere fear that
they' ll have to delay road and
bridge projects if the highway bill isn't passed by then.
"We:re getting to the point,

the end of Spring. where if
there isn ' t anything authorized soon, we will have to
start looking at delaying projects planned for future
years," said Ohio Department
of Transportarion· spokesinan
Brian Cunningham.
This year, with the House
bill bigger than the $275 bil lion package it passed in
2004, and the White House
supporting a larger bill ,
chances for passage are
improved. The admini stration
had threatened las t year to
veto any bill that added to the
federal dellcit.
The Housi: bill also contains 3.3 15 projects requested

by House members -for their
·di stri cts and criticized by
government watchdog groups
as pork barrel spending.
Ohio projects range from
$60 million for a mass-transit
corridor in Cleveland meant
to speed bus riders between
the city\ two biggest job
centers, to $250,000 tor a
hike and bike trail between
William sburg to Batavia 111
southern · Ohio east of
Cinc innati .
Although ranke.d 35th in
the · nation by geographic
size . Ohio has the fourth
largest interstate network that
carries the fou_rth l arg e~t
amount of truck traffic.

remained with the parents sia n was· reac hed .
. until their rights are taken
" It could happen , but it's
permanently.
way too soon to tell ," lie said.
Lawver Ed Markovich, who
Kitzler said a permanent
represented the child's mother, custody motion remains
Arica Heimlich, at the hearing before the court, ·and · he
Monday, said a settlement was . expects there will be another
proposed to place Aiden in the hearing on it possibly before
custody of his grandmother the end of May.
Dawn Mansfield .
The county age ncy has
'The parents are ve ry temporary custody of the
happy with that, although child~ who is on a ventilator
final terms of the settlement arid being fed through a tube
have yet to be determined," at Akron Children's Hospital.
Markpvich said.
His parents fou ght a legal batMansfield said she would tie to keep their baby alive
make decisions .to keep the after
a court-appointed
child alive and to try weaning guardian requested last June
him off a ventilator, although that Aiden Stein's Ufe support
medical ·experts· have deter-· be removed.
mined that Aiden Stein is
Markovich said the child's
blind, deaf and unaware of family believes his condition
his surroundings.
might be the result of a brain
"I don't feel .it is a chal- hemorrhage that that could
lenge," ·Mansfield said. "It's have been diagnosed about
about my love for my grand- the iime of hi s ~rt . They
son and love for my family." also believe he m soon be
David Kitzler, lawye r able to breathe on . ts own.
for . Richland County, sa id
"We are confident he will
the custody change was live lon~·term with appropridi sc ussed, but no conclu-. ate medtcal care,'' he saict.

•

'&gt;-~·;'.. ~

·.-

SUMMARY BOX: House to vote
this week on $28~ billion highway bill
TAXING ISSUE: Ohio lawmakers are fed up with the
state gening just90.5 ·cents back for every $J in gas taxes
it collects at.the pump.
WHAT OIDO WANTS: A new six-year highway .bill is
being considered in Congress this year and Ohio lawmak·
ers are trying to insert a provision to even out the funding
formula so states like Ohio get more money back
SENSE 'OF . URGENCY: The current highway bill
expires at the end of May and transportation officials in
Ohio and elsewhere say they' ll have to start delaying road
and bridge projects if a bill isn't passed by then.

•

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-~,,.:_;';

··~;1~.'

w;.,

(

Completes basic training
COOLVILLE-Army PFC
Brandon C. Thomas has graduated from basic combat training at Fort Jackson, Columbia,
S.C.
During the nine weeks of
training, the soldier stud ied the
Army mission, history, tradition and core values, physical

..

:.~EGGS' -TRA SPECIAL.~a Daily Sentinel
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• Actual Size tx3
• Run date Fri., ,
March 25, 2005
::.~ Deadline Fri.
March 18, 2005
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Evan &amp;.. Adam R....... _. rAr"' I
Happy Easter
Love, Mom &amp;.. Dad

Mail to P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OH 45769
or droR off at The Daily Sentinel
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111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

. ·················· ···· ······.···························~·-···· ..•
ring around · 4 :00 a m. Skies will range from mostly
Skies will be mo stly clear sunny to cloudy wiih 5 MPH
to mostly cloud y with 5 winds from me west.
MPH Wind s from the
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
west.
'Jemperatures will linger at 34.
Wednesday, March 9 ,. Skies wi ll be partly cloudy to
. Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
cloudy with 5 MPH winds from
Temperatures will rise from the west turning from the north25 to 34 by late' this morningc west as the afternoon progresses.

Child's Name
From
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Address

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fitness, and received instruction and practice in basic combat skills, military weapons,
chemical warfare and bayonet
training. drill and ceremon y,
marching, rifle marksmanship, armed and unarmed combat, map reading, field tactics ,
rnilitary courtesy, military jus-

tice system. basic first aid, foot
marches, and field training
exercises.
Thomas' mother is Lori J.
Thomas of Old State Road,
Coo lvill e. The private is a
:?004 grad uate of Federal
Hi gh
School ,
.Hocking
Stewart.

Testing for colon cancer can
detect and prevent disease

..

"'!'o':';i

GREETING.! !

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'

Make Someone Feel
.

2005

··ordinarv and nece"ary" - can accurately help you tlg ure
common and accepted in your out the amount oweJ. .
field and helpful and appropriU;,e the ri~ht fonn&gt;. Cothulr
ate to your business. as well as last year'&gt; tax rerum to be po&gt;ireasonable. Have proof in case tive that yo u are including
the expense is aud1ted.
everything. However. realize
Keep al l sales receipts and that if sales are significantl y
documentation. Retain receipt&gt; different from last year. you
for all (,ieductible ex penses that may want to change to another
are more thail $75 and lor al l .schedule. Ask your CPA which
lodging expenditures. Recc'ipts liling S\atU&gt; you should l"e if
should have at least the tallow- you arc r!wned.
.
ing information: the busine"
Confirm all the nun]hef' on
purpose, location, date and you r return. Check yo ur Social
amount of the expe1he. Sewrity number !if you are the
Maintain a mileage log with .the only employee) or . your
date, begmnmg and endmg , Employer
IJcnuf Jcauon
mileage and the purp&lt;Jsc and Number Iif you have hired othlocation of your trip. .
ers to help you) for accuracy.
Beware of possible Schedule Spend extm · time ·now reC mistakes. If your business is adding the worksheet numbers_
a sole proprietorship, record receipts_ etc. to be 'ure they are
keeping can be much easier if correct. If there are errol". you
you use a cash basis where you could get a l1efty bil l from the
write off ull expenses as they IRS and a correstxmding penalhappen. rather than an accrual ty. Keep al l worksheet&gt; and
method of acco~jntin g that uses side papers with you r copy of
depreciation. Note all income, the retum for documentation
including cash sales at cmti during an audit.
shows. Keep track of all
Pay special allelllion tu huw
expenses. Catalog expenditures you collect sales tax. Each state
for employees. including those has its own laws governing it
of family members. for their Get sales permits from alT of
commisSions, wages and bene- the states in which you do busi fits. Equipment can be written ness and unde rstand how you
oft' up to $24,000 in the year of are to collect and remit taxes in
purchase. If ~ou · claim a part of each one . Decide if. you are
your horne as a business deduc- goin11 to charge the sales Lax in
t1on, 11 must be used entirely lor addition tu the cost at the item
business. It might be easier not or if the sales tax wil l be includto deduct that because it could ed as part of the quoted price.
· be ditlicult to substantiate.
By fo llowing these suggesMake sure you complete all tions, you may prevent tax
of the corresponding work- headaches and save your craft
sheets even though they won't business some money in the
· be included in the retum. They process.

UPWARD .Basketball

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jl-'·

Thesday, March 8
Morning .(7 a.m.-Noon)
Expect a· cloudy morning.
Some flurries are expected.
The snow should stop by
II :OOam. Temperatures wi ll
remain arou nd 26. Winds will
be 10 to 15 MPH from the
norti]west.
Afternooll (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from
29 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 33 at 2:00r.m as
they drop back down to 28
later this afternoon. Skies will
be mostly sunny to cloudy
with 10 to 15 MPH winds from
the northwest.
·
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will stay near
'24. Skies will range from clear
to mostly cloudy with 10 MPH
winds from the northwest turning from: the west a&gt; the
evening progresses.
Overnight (l-6a.m.)
Temperatures will hold
steady around 24 with
.-today's low of 24 OCC\Ir·

Flower festival planning begins·

A bus rollsdown Euclid Avenue toward the Theq,tre District Monday in Cleveland. The six-year, $284 billion highway and mass trans it spending bill pending in
the U.S. House does not guarantee that O~io an~ other states will receive a bigger share· of gasoline taxes, a provision advocqted by lawmakers and state officials. Lawmakers. planned a vote on the bill this week, but the issue of how the bill divides the money among states is expected to be &lt;;~ sticking point in· the
Senate, where .Sens. Mike DeWine and George Voinovich of Ohio have called for making the highway funding process more fair_

Grandmother willing to take custody of brain-damaged baby
MANSFIELD (AP) - The
paternal grandmother of · a
brand-damaged 16-month-old
boy is willing to take custody
of him and would favor decisions to keep him alive. a
j udge was told on Monday.
- Aiden Stein has been in . a
vegetative state si nce March
15, 2004. He is hospitalized
on life support in a suspected
case of · shaken baby syn·
drome.
The boy's father, Matthew
Stein, has been under investigalion, but has not been
charged. Stein has denied
harming his son.
Richland County Children
Servic.es Board asked for permanent custody last month. The
county would allow a court·
appointed guardian to make
medical decisions,. including
removal of life support.
. Lawyers met with Juvenile
Court Judge Ron Span Ofl
Monday.
The Ohio Supreme Court
ruled in December that the
right to withdraw life support

Masters will meet at noon at Church . At the 10:30 a.m.
BY BECKY BAER
St. Paul Lutheran Church for March 20 service, Bobby
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION EDUCATOR
Siders will be singing.
.a salad potluck luncheon .
Thesday, March 8
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Tax time can be a real chalPOMEROY Bedford
The
VFW
\1053
will
meet
7
lenge
for craliers. With their
Township Trustees will meet
p,m.
at
the
hall.
!lair
for
creativity. it may be
at 7 p.m. at the town hall .
difficult for them to think i1i
Tuesday, March 8
Wednesday, March 9
POMEROY
-Meigs tenns of numerical ligures, tax
Cou nty · Tubercu losis staff returns and the IRS. Here are
POMEROY - The Meigs
administering TB skin tests . some suggestions for artisans to
County B0ard of Health
Friday, March II
at Columbia Fire Station, consider to help lessen -the
meeting wil l take place at 5 . LONG
BOTTOM
apprehension and tetision thtlt
p.m. in Lhe conference room Rogie Bissell . and Headed 4:30 to 6 p.m. At Scipio April IS can entaiL
of the Meigs .County Health Home will be singing at the Township VFD, 4:30 to 6
Get professional · advice.
Department,
11 2 , E. Faith Full Gospel Church at p.m., March 14.
Certified public accountants
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Long Bottom. 7 p.m.
kno"i the tax laws and · their
REEDSVILLE - Regular.
recent changes. They can not
meeting of Olive Township
Sunday, March 13
only help you lile your return,
Trustees; 6:30 p.m. , township
but they also can give you
MIDDLEPORT
Saturday, March 12
garage on Jop.pa Road.
'strategies
for saving tax dollars
Harmony, a music ministry
CHESTER
. Wilma
now
and
in
the future.
of God's Bible School and Ginther Seaman, )foFmerly of
Choose
the
right legal busi. College, Cinci nnati will be Chester, wi II be 88 years old
ness
stn1cture.
Sole proprietorappearing at the Wesleyan on March 12. Cards may be
Bib le Holiness Church, 75 sent to her at I0720. State ship. partnership (limited liabilPearl St. , Middl eport at 7 Route 550, Vincent; Ohio ity company). C-Corporation
and $-Corporations are all pas·Thesday, March 8
p.m. For more information 457~4 . .
sibilities.
Sole proprietorship is
·
POMEROY - The Meigs ca ll 992-200 I.
the onl y one that allows the tax
County Genealogy Society
POMEROY
Randy
Sunday, March 13
return to be fli ed unde·r
wi II meet at 5 p. m at the Parsons will be speaking at
LONG
BOTTOM
' Schedule C (Profit or Loss
Meigs Mu seum.
the 10:30 a.m. worship ser- Henry · Bahr wi ll be 80 on from Business) as an attachvice and Jerry Frederick at Marc h 13, Cards may be sent ment ·to the personal I040.
Thursday, March 10
the 6 p.m. service · at the to hi m at 37837 Greenup Schedu le
SE
(SelfPOMEROY - Alpha Iota Larrel Cliff Free Method ist Lane . Long Bottom, 45743. · Employment Tax) tor Medicare
and Social Security also will
need to be included.
Make estimated quarterly tax
·payments. Set aside the appropriate amount of tax in a sepaRACINE - The annual department to be given to year several RACO scholar- rate interest-bearing account so
. llower fest ival to be held chiJdren in stress ful · situa- ships will be awarded that you will have the money
on April 23 at Star Mill tio ns. A donation of 20 along
with
' three when April, June , October and
Park was uiscussed and bears from Debbie Gilmore RACO/Edi son
. Brace January 15 roll around.
Take approved deductions,
reports on proJects carried was acknowledged , and it Memorial Scholarships, and
Your
CPA can offer guidance in
, out recently were given at was reported that RACO one Jim Adams Memorial
this
area.
)'he expen~e must be
Racine Ar~a Com munit y will . help spon sor the Scholarship .
Organization's meeting .
gospel sing Satu rday at the
A spring yard sale will
It was noted that RACO Meig,s Elementary School be held' May 10-12 at Star
had provided food for llood where 'donations will go to Mill Park . All proceeds will
relief. had de livered treats the Senior Ce nter's nutri - go to the scholarship fund.
to the elderly and shutins tio n program.
· Donations are being acceptThe RACO sc holarship ed. ·
during the holidays, and
had .given 1.142 . hours of program was discussed and
It was noted that $500
volunteer work through tl1e it was noted that members had · been donated to jail
Senior Citizens Center.
are working With the guid- renovations. and · 5200 to
Stuffed animals also wen~ ance counselor at Southern the
End uri ng
Freedom
presented to the sheriff's Hi gh Schoo l. Again .thi s Group of Racin ~ .

AP PhotoiTony Dejak

PageA3_

. I

DEAR ABBY: lm&lt;tgine if,
by applying what'we already
know, we cou ld save the
majority of lives that are hist
to t~e th ird-leading cause of
cancer in men and women:
That 's no pie- in-the-sky
dream . I'm talking abo ut
colon cancer. Regular testing
can help prevei1t thi s disease
or detect it at it&gt; earliest,
most treatable stage. ·
This year, colon cancer
wil.l Claim the lives of more
than 56,000 Americans.
That's more than 150 death s
a day, many ' of them preventable. The test s allow
· doc tors to remove polyp s
before they can become cancero u ~ . and prevent co lon
cancer from happeni ng.
These same tests can also
de'tect early signs of the disease as effectivel y as mammography detects breast cancer. So why aren' t Americans
over the age of 50 getting
tested?
Many people simply do not
realize they're at risk beginning at age 50., Some people
thmk they don t need to be
·
th h
tested because ey a~e no .
lamily hi story of the d1sea~~
or symptom~. The _truth IS,
symptoms often don t appear
until colon cancer has progressed, and ·no matter what
a person's family history or
how someone feels . if you're
50 or older you're at ri sk for
colon cancer.
There is also the perception that the test will be
embarras sing or painfuL
While some of-the tests may
be uncomfortab le, colon cancer is far worse. ·
Bottom line: If you're 50
or older. now is the time to
get te st~d for colon cancer.
People with a family history
of the disease or other nsk

..

..

.

Dear

Abby

factors should discuss with .
the ir doctors ge tting tested
even earlier.
Abbv. Marc h marks the
sixth · annual
National
Colorectal Cancer Awareness
Month. It's a perfect time to
start raising this. important
subject and making sure that
Americans get the test that
could save their lives. Do it
NOW Don' t put it off It's
one of the few cancer tests
that can actuall y prevent the
di sease . - · STEPHEN F.
SENER, M.D,, PRESIDENT.
AMERICAN
CANCER
SOCIETY
DEAR DR . SENER: I am
pleased to help pubhcue th1s
1mportant message. Readers,
1! there IS a htstory of colon
·
f - · ·
cancer m yoltr ann 1y; p1ease
dtscuss It wtth your doctors._
reg~rdless .of your age:. ~~
you re lucky and 'there 1sn t
one, but you're 50 or nearly
there, recognize that adulthood brings with it certain
responsibilities. So don't be
chi ldi sh, don't be embarrassed and don 't be afraid.
The exam isn't painfuL The
biggest " inconvenience" is
the preparation for iL
Consider it an initiation into
a special club - the longlife club.
Th~
American · Cancer
Society offers a free information kit to help you di scuss
colon cancer tcstmg w1th
your phystctan. To get one.

call toll-free: (800) 227-2345
und stop colon cancer before
it starts.
DEAR ABBY: I a1n a 28year-old,
American-born
Asian woman, whose tradition-bound, first-generation
mother insists that I, · or
another person in our famil y,
share a portion of our meal
with her even though she has
already· eaten and we ·have
not. Th1s is acce ptable
behaviOr m her home, but 1s
it appropriate for he r to conti nue thi s behavior in public?
For example, my mother,
my aunt. my cousin's three
children and husband and I
went out to dinner at a steakhouse, and my mother ins.isted that 1 slice a portion of
my steak and share it with
my cousin, who had already
started to eat her entree of
pasta. Not wanti ng to create
a scene, 1 obliged . .Mothe·r
becomes angry with 'me
when 1 try to explain that
this is not proper etiquette.
She calls me seUlsh for nol
wanting 10 share. What do
.
. d ?
FRUS
you sugges1 1 o. TRATED DAUG HTER IN
CALIFORN IA
DEAR
FRUSTRAT ED·
·
You ~ill spare yourself a lot
of heartburn if you realize
that you cannot change your
mother. So, when you are at
a restaurant with her, order a
larger portion than you normally would, beat her to the
punch and offer to share.
Dear Abby is wrillen by
Abigail Van Burell, also
knoM&gt;n as Jeanne Phillips,
a11d was founded by her
mo~her, Pauline_ Phillips.
Wrrte
Dear Abby
IJI
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A11ge/es, CA
90069.·

Gino , Matthew, Rocco and
Bruno Casci. all of Middleport,
recently completed a successful season in the Upward
·
Basketball program in Th.e
Plains. The non.&lt;Jenominational, faith:based ·program for
youth was sponsored by The
Pla1ns Unite'd Methodist
ChurCh and The Plains Church
of the Nazarene, and promoted self-esteem and faith-based
values among its players.
Gino, Rocco and Bruno are
sons of Ron and Lowry Casci
. and Matthew the son of David
Casci and Michelle Hanning.
Submitted photo

�I

'•

The Daily Sentinel
·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley ·Publishing Co.
Jim .Freeland
Publisher
Charlene tioeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Tuesday, Mtirch 8, the 67th day of 2005. There are
298 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On March 8, 1782, the
Gnadenhutten massac re took place as some 90 Indians were
slain.by militiamen in Ohio in retaliat:On for raids carried out
by other Indians:
.
.
.
On this date: In 1702, England's Queen Anne ascended the
throne upon the death of King William Ill.
.
In 1841, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. ,
the "Great Disse nter," was born in Boston.
In 1854, U.S, Commodore Matthew C. I;'erry made his second landing in Japan: within a month, he concluded a treaty
with the Japanese.
·
.
In 1874, the 13th president Of the United States, Millard
Fillmore, died in Buffalo, N.Y.
In 1917: Russia's "Febru;rry Revolution" (so called because
. of the Old Style calendar being used by Russians at the time)
began with rioting and strikes in St. Petersburg.
In 1917, the U.S. Senate voted to limit filibusters by adoptirig the cloture rule.
·
.In 1930. the 27th president of the United States, William
Howard Taft, died in Washington .
.
In 1942, Japanese forces captured Rangoon,' Burma, during
World War II.
.
,
. In 1965, the United States landed about 3,500 Marines in
South Vietnam.
In I999 , New York Yankees baseball star Joe .DiMaggio
died in Hollywood, Fla., at age 84.
Ten years ago: Two United States diplomats were killed,
one injured, when their car was ambushed as they were driving to the U.S. Consu late in Kardchi, Pakistan. The plummeting d~llar stabi lized after Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan .called the decline unwarranted.
Five years ago: President Clinton submitted .to Congress
legislation to establish permanent normal trade relations with
China. A. letter carrier, two firefighters .and a sheriff's deputy
were shot to death in Memphis, Tenn. , allegedly by the letter
carrier's husband, Frederick Williams, who was also a tirefighter. · ·
·
. One year ago: Iraq's Governing Council signed a landmark
interim constitution. Todd Bertuzzi of the Vancouver Canucks
slugged Colorado Avalanche forward Steve Moore during a
,game. · leaving Moore with a broken neck. concussion and
facial cuts. (Bertuzzi, who was suspended indefinitely from the
NHL, later pleaded guilty to criminal assault.) Abu! Abbas, the
Palestinian guerrilla leader who planned the hijacking of the
Achille Lauro passenger ship, died while in U.S. custody in
Baghdad, Iraq; he was 56. Actor Robert Pastorelli was found
dead in his Hollywood Hills, Calif., home; he was 49.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball player Jim Rice is 52. Singer
Gary Numan is 47. Actor Aidan Quinn is 46. Country musician Jimmy Dorm ire (Confederate Railroad) is 45. Actor Leon
is 42. 'Rock singer Shawn Mullins (The Thoms) is 37. Actor
Freddie Prinze Jr. is 29. Attar James Van Der Beek is 28.
. R&amp;B singer KaiTleelah Williams (702) is 27.
· Thought for Today: "Noble deeds and hot baths are tl]e best
cures for depression." - Dodie Smith, English playwright
(1896-1990).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 30() words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be j:igned and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
.Correction Policy·
Our main concern, in all s1ortes Is to be

accurate . If you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (7 40) 992-

2156.

IUSPs.213-960l
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, ,111 Court St~eet.
Pomerov. OhiO. Sooond.ctass postage

paiclat Pomeroy.

Our main number Ia
(740) 992-2158.
Department extensions are:

News
EdHor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. t2
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext . t3

Advertising
Outllde Salea: Dave _
Harris, Ext. 15
Outolde S.leo: Brenda Davis. Ext 1 6
CtauJCtrc.: Judy Clarl&lt;. Ext. 10

Circulation
Dlatrtct Mgr.: Jason PaHerson, Ext. 17

.

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General Manager
Chartene HQB:Hich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
news C mydaitysentlnet.com

Wob:
www.mydallysentinel .com

Member: The Assodated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Associatiori.
PoetiNI&amp;ler: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinef, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, March 8,

Tuesday, March 8,

2005

Obituaries

US. haS scored bipanisan SU({fSSes in warfor .Colombia ·
Amid the justified controversy - and now optimism
- triggered l)y President
Bush's policies on Iraq and
the Middle East, Americans
have paid too little attention
Morton,
to a bipartisan success story:
Kondracke
Colombia.
This was a country that
five years ago looked like a
lawless failed state in the
Credit for the transformamaking - a government
tion
· goes primarily to
overwhelmed by a murder··ous inelange of left- and Colombia's tough president,
right-wing terrorist groups Alvaro Uribe, but also to
and drug cartels, overseeing Republicans and Democrats
an economy based more on in Congress and ·Presidents
cocaine than honest enter- Bill Clinton and Bush, who
have provide\) $3 billion in
prise.
aid
since 2000. ·
The battle 'isn't over, but
Uribe's approval ratings
the notorious Cali drug carare
in the 60s and .70s. In a
tel is broken, with its leaders
extradited to the United move that worries some
States. Negotiations are Americans and encourages
under way (though lately others, he's won a constituthey have stalled) to demobi, tiona I change that allows
lize the right-wing AUC (the him to run for re-election in
Spanish acronym for the 2006.
Meantime, Colombia's leadUnited Self-Defense Forces
ing
polling finn reported last
of Colombia) paramilitary
armies. The war against the year that 58 percent of
left-wing . FARC · (for Colombians had a positive
Revolll{ionary
Armed attitude toward Uribe's relaForces of Colombia) goes tionship with Bush, while only
on, but now it's being fought 28 percent were negative.
That shows the success
aggressively.
From 2000 to 2004, that can be achieved if secuColombia, with U.S. assis- rity is improved. Indeed, it
tance, trained I I 0,000 new suggests that Bush may
police, reduced coca acreage someday enjoy similar
by one-third, tripled the appreciation in the rest of the
number of terrorists killed, world if democracy prevails
and reduced incidents of ter- in Iraq and continues to
rorism from I ,500 a year to spread around the Mideast.
Bush inherited . "Plan
700, kidnappings from I ,900
to 750, homicides from Colombia" from Cfinton,
27,000 to 21 ,000 and dis- who hatched it with Uribe's
Andres
placed persons from 340,000 predecessor,
Pastrana, a Jimmy Carterto 137,000.
. The progress against nar- sty le figure who thought he
cotics , trafficking is so cot~ld cut a peace deal with
impressive that Colombian the FARC thar allowed it to
officials have been enlisted rule an area the size of
to give advice to Afghanistan Swit1.erland. (Colombia is
on ho~ to stamp out its the size of Texas and
California combined.)
poppy production ..

Mt;ch as Carter was disil- overcommg
some
lusioned by the Soviet inva- Democratic opposition to
sian
of
Afghanistan, allow U.S. aid previously
Pastrana reversed course earmarked for anti-narcotics
when the guerrillas used activities to be used for the
their teJTitory as a base for anti-insurgency struggle. ·
terrorist raids and stepped"It made sense, " one GOP
up narcotics production.
aide said. "The FARC and
Republicans in Congress, the . AUC are deep into· the·
Jed by Speaker Dennis drug · business. Anti -nar' Hastert , of Illinois, had long cotics and anti-insurgency
been urging a tough were the same struggle."
approat:h toward criminality
Neither the AUC , and 'cerin Colombia and now say rt tainly not the FARC have
was their pressure that led been brought to heel. Nor,
t li nton to launch the plan.
obviously, has the drug trade
If Pastrana was Carter, stopped. But both groups are
then Uribe was Rdnald on the defensive. According
Reagan. running in 2002 on to the ministry of defense,
a platform of law, order and 4,400 AUC and 3,700 FARC
authority. His campaign slo- terrorists were killed or
gan was "Firm Hand, Big demobilized in 2004.
Heart."
·
·
That year, almost 150 tons
He's combined stepped-up of cocaine were seized in the
police training, military country, one-third more than
. action and· crop eradit:ation in 2003, and I ,900 cocaine
with upgrades in economic labs were destroyed, 40 perdevelopment and aid to con- , cent more than in 2002. Still,
vert c:oca growers to alterna- according to The Economist
rive crops. mainly hearts of (Roll Call is an Economist
palm .
·
Group business). the wholeThe United States has 800 · sale pric~ of
gram of
troops in tile country - · cocaine in the United States
assigned to training, not" fell to $38 in 2003 from $48
combat ~ plus about 300 in 2000 and $100 inl986.
civilian contractors responIt would be nice to ·
·sible for coca eradication. attribute the price drop to a
More than 170 drug traffick- reduction in demand, but
ers have been extradited for U.S . and Co lombian offitrial and imprisonment in the cials acknowledge that it's
United States, including Cali al so due to efficiency gains
kingpin Miguel Rodriguez in production and the trans- ·
Orejuela. His brother, .fer of coca-growing. and Gi lberta, is on the way.
processing to neighboring
With the Cali cartel broken countries.
and
violence· reduced,
These wars never end,
Co lombia's economy has much as the battle for indiprospered. Its 2004 growth vidual freedom doesn't. But
rate, 3.9 percent, is the sec- when ·there' s progress, it
ond highest, after Ch ile's, in . ought to be ce lebrated Latin America.
·
along with those who have
C o n g r e s s i o n a I made it happen. ·
Rej:JUbl'ican s claim that they
(Morton Ko11dra cke is
and Bush were responsible exetutive editor of Roll Call.
for a major change in rile 11ewspaper of Cat&gt;itol
Colombia policy in 2002. Hill.)

COOLVIL.LE - Vi'rgini'a Sue Coleman Harl passed away
from this life on March 4, 2005. in Tulsa, Okla.
She was born Dec. 5, 1948, to Richard L. Coleman and the
late Stella E. Jacksori·Coleman. Ginny graduated from Eastern
High School Class of 1966. She belonged to the Carmelite
Sisters from 1969 to 1974. Ginny became a registered nurse
and had worked in Oklahoma, Arkansas and Ohio. Nursing
was her Iitelong career.
She is survived by her father; three sisters: Martha (Bill)
Durst of Reedsville, Merrilee Bryant and Melissa Coleman of
Long ' Bottom; her aunt. Carmen McManaway of Bucyrw;;
step grandchildren: Matthew. Jaymie, Jeffrey,, $henna and
Christopher Harl; beloved nieces and nephews; and a host of.
relatives and friends .
In addition toher mother, she was preceded in death by her
husband, George Harl.
Graveside service 1vill be held at 4 p.m . on March 9, 2005.
at Heiney Cemetery in Reedsville. There will be no visitation.
Arrangements are under the direction of White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in Coolville.

. NEWS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT - Dr.
Anthony J. McEldowney. a
board-eligible orthopedic
surgeon, has establishetl a
satellite office at Jackson
General Hospital (JGH.)
McEldowney, a physician
with Pleasant Valley Hospital,
has been coordinating these
efforts with Jackson General
Hospital where he has applied
for privileges, according to
William A. Barker, Jr., vicepresident of administrative
services at PV H.
"Jackson General Hospital
and Pleasant Valley- Hospital
have worked to'gether to
improve the quality of life of
our patient s," Barker said.
"PVH also placed John
McMurry, MD. an obstetrician/gynecologist, on' the
campus, of JGH some time·
ago. This eventually led to

Dr. Anthony J_ McEldowney

the re-openin g of their obstetric services and has worked
.well for the facility."
Richard, Blackburn, DO ,
·and Lee Jonathan Bechtold,
DO, also have opened aclinic ,
· "Med Ex," in Ravenswood.
'.'These are two independent· physicians that will own
and operate their own practice ," explained Barker.

"However, we hope their medrcal degree in J98lJ from
referral s go to JGH and to the University of Cincinnati
PVH. PVH is primarily inter- School of Medicine in
ested in re fer ra b to our Cincinnati. Ohio. In 1'191 he
physicians for services not completed
hi'
ge neral .
offered at JGH."
surgery itlterrl , hip at the
Clinic
111
Other physicians working Cle\'eland
at both facilities include John Cleveland. Ohi&lt;&gt;. and in 1995
A. Wade, Jr. , MD, an ENT; concluded hi' .on hopedlc
Shrikam Vaidya, MD, a urol- .surgery residency program at
ogist; Edward J. Sheridan. the Cleveland Clinic
MD, an ophthalmologist.
Prior to com ing lo P lea~ant
Mark Nolan, MD, an obstetri- Valley .
Ho, pital ,
cian/gynecologist and Nikola McEldowney worked as an
Bicak. DPM, a podiati·ist.
orthopedic
surgeon
at
Community
As for McEldowney. hi ' .Bourbon
main office will be continue Hospi tal in Lexi ngton. Ky.,
to be located in Suite 21 1 of and the MacDill Air Force
the PVH Medi cal Office Base in Tampa. Fla . In addiBuilding in Point Pleasant' tion , he wa~ ,in private prac All appointments ·for both tice at Bra ndon Regional
locations can be made by . Hospital in Brandon. Fla .
calling 304-675-5275. PVH
This dedicated phy sic ian
wi ll have orthopedic ser' has four children : Morgan.
vices· coverage 24 hours a 10. Conner. 10. Brooke. 7.
day/seven days a week in and Ri ley. 4. McEldowney
case of an emerge1,1Cy.
·currently reside s in .Point
McEldowney received his Pleasant.

"It's . a craft,'' Anderson
clarified.
Anderson said that the
from Page A1
long-arm quilting machine
has enhanced ller business,
"I love my work." Riftle allowing it to produce more
said before explaining that quilting samples and sell
POMEROY - Meigs stushe has been· sewing since more fabric.
dents
participating in the
The addition of the quiltshe was 13. "It's good to do
ing machine is another 2005 Ohio SkillsUSA regionsomething you enjoy."
The Fabric · Shop ha s ·attempt to diversify The al competit ion in New .
Saturday
several. patterns the pub- Fabric · Shop's business, Philadt;lphia
returned
with
one
gold
and
1ic can choose from and which includes notions,
th ey also do c ustom pat - clothing, dry cleaning ser-' three bonze medals.
Amanda Faulk, a nursing
terns which can lake up to vices and tuxedo· rental serstudent, was the gold medal
two days on t~e long-arm llice.
This diversity has allowed winner in a skill demonstraquilter machine to com·The Fabric Shop to stay in tion competition against I 0
plete .
The Fabric Shop owner business since I 959. They schools. Winning a bronze
Becky Anderson said that have been at their present medal in first aid and CPR
people have a mi~conception location at II 0 W. Main St. was Shane Collin&gt;, also a
that the process of long-arm since 1987 . Hours are 9 ·a.rll. nursing student at Meig~.
Ashton Well was awarded a
quilting is all about automa~ to 5 p.m. , Monday through
bronze medal for his demonSaturday.
tion.
stration in electronic technolHis last project was mov- ogy in-competition with seven
ing a historic log cabin frotn different schools.
The top three places in each
a .location on Scenic Lane to
of
those contests will advance
. from Page A1
the fairgrounds - piece by
piece to retain its authenticity to the State SkillsUSA com. petition !Nhich will be held at .
Submitted photos
fairgrounds.
v-olunteering - and reconstructing it.
the Ohio State fairgrounds
Being
outdoors
people
,
Gold
medal
winner.
Amanda
Faulk,
center,
took
a
gold
medal
for
her
skills
demonstration
at the
much of his time.
and
Expo
Center
on
April
29regional competition held in New Philadelphia Saturday. She advances to the state competition.
He constructed two animal Alice will continue growing 30.
flowers,
and
and
showing
buildings' on the hill, and
Due to a procedural change
another one on the fair- Bob will continue gardening, for the Tech Prep. Showcase
ground's lower level. He ren- developing his fish ponds. participants, the gold medal
ovated the old Grange build- and building bird houses.
Not one who enjoys too winner of the regional contest
ing. doing some interior work
and putting on a new roof. much leisure time, Bob left . will go directly to the nationand stabilized the unique the door open to other things, als to be held this summer in
curved· grandstand , which is "When I get better. who Mi ssouri.
For their Tech Prep project,
listed on 'the National knows'' I might st3rt all over
Travis
Butcher,
Brooke .
Registrar of Historic Places, again."
O'Bryant
and
Shannon
Whitlatch were awarded a
one count each of possession bronze medal. They showor t:nu;k cocaine. a second- cased the Ohio River Bear
degree felony. possession of Company. At the rcgional s the
Oxycontin, a third-degree team competed against five
from Page A1
felony. and trafficking in ·schools with various types of
Shane Collins. bronze
Brooke O'Bryant, bronze
Ashton Well, bronze
crack cocaine and trafficking technology programs.
expected. Beggle said.
First ald/CPR
team
Tech
Prep
Showcase
Electronic Technology
Beegle said Dickens· 1995 in Oxycontin , both fifthDodge 4x4 was . impounded ' degree felonies.
Following the arrests, the
·upon his arrest, and a twoMiddleport
Police
way polit:e radio ajso was·
seized. Dickens was alleged- Department conducted a
of
Dickens'
ly using the radio to track law search
was in the process of being Mayor Sandy lannarelli said additional SJ. Take-home
collected from Spanish Club Friday. The magnets advise orders placed by Thursday
enforcement ac~ivity , and Middleport home ,and seized
unspecified
contraband.
adviser April King in rela- residents to dial 91 I, but 91 I can be picked up between
was . iistening to sheriffs ,
tion to a Spani sh Club service is not available here. 3:30 and 5 p.m.
department. radio traffic on Middleport Pol ice had confundraiser.
The 'treasurer's For police emergencies.
the radio just before hi s duc.ted a search of Dickens'
- An
POMEROY
home
in
2004,
resulting
in
arrest , in an attempt to thwart
unknown subject remains at office later reported that the Middleport .residents . should
officers' att~mpts to serve the the charges contained in the large after sheriff's deputies $I 28 was paid by King on call 992-6424. For medical
indictment served on Sunday. responded to an armed bur- Feb. I 0. The collection of emergencies, they should call
indictment.
· Both Dickens and Hicks glary in progress on Eastman money was delayed because 992-6663, lannarelli said.
"1 plan to ask the prosecutPOMEROY - A meeting
were
transported to the Ridge Road.
· · a student belonging to the
ing attorney to file a f9rfeithe Meigs Local Board of
of
Sheritf Robert . Beegle said Spanish Club had their
ture action for the truck Washington County Jail
Education
scheduled · for
impounded in this arrest," pending court appearances.
deputies received a· call from fundraiser money stolen
. Tuesday night as been canBeegle said the arrests have a homeo1vner whose tenant , from their locker.
Beegle said.
celed .
The original indictment resulted in information that Shannon Woods, had advised
against · Dickens , filed in may lead to additional drug- that a male subject had
·entered · he.r home and was
December, charged him wi'th related arrests.
POMEROY -· The Meigs
holding her at gunp&lt;Jint.
POMEROY
- Meigs County Histori cal Society
When deputies arrived,
. Ravenswood Fire Department Beegle said. the suspect had County Tuberculosis staff · will have a spaghetti lunmember and secretary Valerie fled the scene on foot. A will be at Scipio Township cheon at the Meigs Co).lnty
Hunter, 17 volunteer fire search of the · property and . VFD from 4:30 to 6 p.m. on Museum Friday. Serving will
March 14 to administer skin be from II a.m. to 2 p.m.
departments from . Jackson surrounding area was con,
from Page A1 .
Tl1e Daily Senti11el
tests.
Lunches
will
include Subscribe today • 9922! 55
and surrounding counties ducted, but the subject was
spaghetti. salad, garlic bread
www.mydaiiysenrinei.com
Sinnett said that on Friday assisted in diving and drag- not found .
·
and a soft drink for $5. Pie or
ging
the
river
on
Sunday.
at around 10:15 p.m. a
cake will be otfered for
A canine unit also was
passerby on the William S.
Ritchie Jr. Bridge witnessed a brought in to search for
man who is believed to have Garroll. but their etforts were
MIDDLEPORT
RACINE - In the rect:nt
hampered
due
to
cold
water
been Garron get odt of his
'·
story "State releases audit of Information magnets distribvehicle and limp toward the and wind.
uted
in
Meig&gt;
County
offer
Southern
Local ,"
the
· Eight volunteer fire depart- Southern Local Treasurer's . incorrect emergency contact
apron of the bridge.
Middleport
The passerby turned ments were continuing the Office re~orted that $128 information ,
around. went back onto the search on Monday, including
bridge to ins pec ~ the si tua- the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Gene H. Abels, M.Dtion and · found the elderly Department, which provided
sonar
and
underwater
camman had disappear€d, though
Medical Associates of Gallipolis
his
abandoned
vehicle eras to help in reqJvery
is now accepting a limited number of new patients.
remained, parked in the mid- efforts. The American Red
· Practice is preventive cardiology.
dle of the bridge halfway Cross . from Parkersburg.
· ·The following patients would be covered:
W.Va., also is on the scene
across.
1. 'Hypertension
.
·
Sgt. John Moore and providing resc ue ' workers
2. Lipid or cholesterol abnormalities
Patrolman Bernard Fox of with food and supplies.
Garrell
Hunter
said
3. Known coronary disease
the Ravenswood Poli ce
jumped
from
the
23rd
beam
Department arrived OQ the
4. Heart .failure
·
scene .at around 10:20 p.m. of the William S. Ritchie Jr.
5. Type II diabetes
Friday and a search of the Bridge on the West Virginia
6. Peripheral/Carotid Artery Disease
Ohio River continued until &gt;ide. He had been diagnosed
7. On-site same day lab results
midnight, briefly ·halting with c·ance r three weeks ago,
B. X-Ray services
·
Sinnett 'aid.
" river traflic .
"We hope we can get him
The search for Garroll.conInsurance's accepted: Most insurances accepted
,
Offer gqod only at the
back
to
his
family
for
clotir'lu~d throughout th~ weekMcClure's Restaurant - General Hartinger Parlkwa,v.
I.ncludin OH Medicaid
end .
According
to sure," Hunter said.

Quilting

Meigs students receive medals at·. d~strict contes~ .

a

Glosing

0fAHlf-R.

@YH£ COUIMBIJS 015~

= ·

Arrest

•

WHICH
ONES ARE

Local physician to open satellite office at Jackson General Hospital
STAFF REPORT

Virginia. Hart

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinetcom

2005

THE BAD
GUYS?

Local Briefs

Alleged armed
robber sought

Clint Eastwood's euthanasia movie
Clint Eastwood is no Dirty
Harry. Attentive and with a
wry sense of humor, he has
told me he made his living as
a jazz pianist in his youth. So
he understands the life force
of that music. But in his
acclaimed "Million Dollar
Baby," he is cluelessly
encouraging the euthanization of some of the disabled.
For many years, I have
reported on disability rights,
and have come to know people diagnosed as "vegetables" in their early years or later as "hopelessly" dis. abled - who have become
coq)orate
psychologists,
lawyers and .evel) writers.
I have also learned froin
them that those of us who
are not quadriplegic , or otherwise physically limited,
may only be "temporarily
able." Any of us can suddenly be disabled.
While gathering prestigious prizes, including
Oscars for best picture and ·
directing,
Eastwood's
"Baby" (with its no-longera-surprise ending) . has
attracted considerable criticism. For example, Lennard
Davis, professor of disability
studjes and human development iil the College of
Health
and
Human
Development ·
Sciences,
University of Illinois at
Chicago, writes in the Feb. 2
Chicago Tribune about the
ultimate message of the film .
By admirable determination Maggie (Hilary Swank)
is successfully train!!d to be a
boxer by Frank (Eastwood).

Nat
Hentoff

But then, paralyzed by a
spinal cord InJury, she
becomes a quadriplegic .
Distraught after .losing her
.leg to bed sores, she beseeches her trainer to euthani1.e her
(also known as killing her) .
After some hesitation, he
agrees. Pertinently, professor
Davis adds:
"Sioce 1990 there are laws
that
allow
(cognitive)
patients to refuse treatment.
A quadriplegic on .a respirator could simply ask to be
disconnected from the
device. Doctors would have
done so and administered a
sedative so the person co\lld
die peacefully."
But Eastwood chose to
Mve his character "illegally
enter the hospital and disconnect the device,"
Thill "would make her
gasp like a fish . on the
shore," says Stephen Drake,
whose mother ·was told· he'd
be a vegetable. Stephen is
now research analyst for Not
Dead Yet, a disability rights ·
group.
The National 'Spinal Cord
Injury Association - devoted since 1948 "to improving
the quality of life for hundreds of thou sands of

Americans living with the
results of spinal cord injury
and disease and their families"- points out "this numPe.r grows by an average of
30 newly injured people each
day."
Reacting to this film.
which more than suggests
that death · is preferable to
being
di sabled,
John
Hockenberry- a paraplegic
for the past three decades
and a correspondent for .
NBC news - emphasizes:
"If Mr. Eastwood is so
convinced that his film is
grounded in reality then perhaps he might wis~ to
accompany me to the U.S.
Army's Walter Reed Medical
Center in Maryland where
there are I ,000 or so severely di sabled soldiers from ·
Iraq whose lives are changed
forever, who were told they
fought for Iraqi freedom and
are now perhaps wondering,
along with their families,
who is going to fight for
their freedom · to live a full
life here in America."
But instead of "Million .
Dollar Baby '"s message,
Hockenberry adds that,
"there is another message of
hope and strength inside
Walter Reed." ·
.
Many reviewers of "Baby"
did not reveal the act of
euthimasia at the end of the
movie because they didn't
want to &gt;poil the surprise for
;icwcr&gt;. And those who
httve , poiled that ending,
through vigorous' public crit-·
icism of the "deliverance" of
Maggie by EastwOod's char-

acter, have been severely
criticized by some commentators.
New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, who
vainly aspires io being a .
moral philosopher, wrote
scathingly of those who
revealed the ending: "The
purpose of art is not always
to send messages." But
"Million Dollar Baby" has a
message, whicli is clear and deadly.
.
Disability rights activist
Diane Coleman of Nor Dead
Yet, whom I've known for
years, points out that 'message: "Some of the (tilm's,)
audience will be newly disabled people, their family
members and friends, swept
along in the critically
acclaimed emotion that the
kindest response to someone
struggling with the life
changes brought on by a
severe injury is, after all, to
kill them. "
Obviou sly, a filmmaker
has the' right to send any
message he or she wants, or
send no message at all. But
Clint Eastwood should not
be surprised that certain
messages are not taken kindly by the disabled, who are ·
not dead yet - and are as
alive as he is.
(Nar Henwff is a nariona/renowned aurhorirv 011 rhe
First Amt'Ju/mellt . a11d rh e
Bill of Rixh11 and awlwr of
se1•eral books. i1rcludinx
"The War on the Bill of
Rights a11d th e Gathering
Resistance" (Sel'ell Srories
Press. 2003 ).
1~'

'
;

Meeting
canceled

.

Offer skin tests

PROUD TO BE APART

Jumper

L

Spaghetti
luncheon
planned

OF YOUR LIFE.

Clarification

Magnets are
wrong

an .----------

McClure's Restaurant

Ce(e6rating Our

48tft~nniversaty!
Morufay thru Saturday
March 7th thru March 12, 2005

CJ}uy @;ne ~§ffM9

GET ®JVE
f'RJE!!

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

_Tuesday, March 8,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

INSIDE

NEWS ABOUT
SENIOR CITIZENS IN _MEIGS COUNTY

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Rio Grande splits twlnblll, Page B6
',

r

'

'

T1,1esday, March 8, 2005
ACTIVITY SCHEDULE

meet from 1-2:30 p.m. on March 8.
Lia
Tipton,
Occupational
Therapist, Holzer Rehabilitation
Center, is the coordinator.
The Diabetes Support Group
will meet on March 17 . Meetin~s
begin at 10:30 a.m. and are held m
the Conference Room at the Meigs
Multipurpose Center.
Dr. Melanie Weese will speak on
'"How Diabetes Affects Your Eyes"
at the March meeting.

Mar-05

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
The Sen lor Nutrition Meal hi aerved Dally at 11 :.45

The Meigs Multipurpos~ Center is
lllt LO.
bdeccl
~"""open Monday through Friday from 8
a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Regularly
Tuna Slliild On Bun
Bakecl TIMMY.
G10UI1CI s.oganolf
s~ heduled .activities held thrOli ghout
Potato Soup .
S..tPalatOO&amp;
WI-•
the week include sewing. quilting,
Trop;oaJ
Fruit
Applesauce
llflllleJuice
bingo, checkers ~nd games.
Angel Food CR
~Boll\ C........
HaNard8Mli
. Dance team practice is held each
Roll
SUI!er'ed Cabbage
Monday at t p.m. Cost is $1 per session attended . The Knitting Circle
meets on Wednesday from 10 a.m.
Tuno Noodle C a Pol1&lt; Chop
Chili
Roomed Clllc:Mn
until noon. ·
·
TOGOOd Salad
CdecW ..
~~
Setiloned s~
. MASSAGE THERAPY ·
All ages are invited to attend the
Ora111Je Juice
,_.W/Jei·O
Spioo&lt;lDleoei"'l
.
Chocolelll
Chip cake
activities sc heduled. Lunch is served
v.... Pudding
Llmalleons
5&lt;111~­
Another
new
addition
to
the
Wl&gt;oatS.Piums
daily at 11 :45. The suggested donation for the noon meal is $2 for those Wellness Program will be Massage
Therapy. The massage table and other
60 or older.
equipment have been ordered and
MIK:aruni &amp; a Beam&amp;Fr•
T-yTelniZtil\l
I BeefSiew
should
artjve
soon.
Janice
Haynes,
a
CatJ-rWtCI\eese
.
'
Bilcult
S-.! T"""""""
DIABETIC THERAPY SHOES
. registered massage therapist, will be
Sauetl&lt;raul
Cranberry Mold WI
C«n
~­
Chooolale
Cooki..
Mand.,;n Oranges
UNiar The l_ris~ SoJ
-BI'Illld
Terry May. Sales Representative providing this new service for us.
Salad
.,._
OropeJui..,
118naria
Roll
for Extended Care. will be at the March l is the projected day to .begin.
Bread
~
Center on March 8 to talk to every- The cost for this service is $30 for 1/2
one about Diabetic Therapy Shoes. hour and $50 for one hour. If you
BBQRlbo
JohnoyM....,..
Diabetes affects nearly 16 million have a current MCCaA membership'
t181ian Green Beans
Americans and often causes severe card, you will receive a 10% discount
Sueoola8ll . Celifomia Vegelebleo
I'Mc:hCobbleo
complications and premature death. ror the· service. Appointments can be
Roll
Gerticllreed
-8alad
Many experts agree that most lower scheduled Monday through Thursday
.
Coconut
Cal&lt;e
Grah.-n-Cra'*""' .
Peanut Butter Coolies
limb amputations due to diabetes beginning at 4 p.m. To schedule tm
WhlloBtoed
Waldorfwould be preventable with appropri- appointment, call 992-2161 or 992ate footwear that is properly fit to 2681 ext. 233.
Tb~nk Yot~ ForYoUrOCMMifons
Pimenlo c~- On 8un
ROOlll B,.f WIG&lt;""'
the patient.
Massage therapy helps relieve pain
TomaloSoop
St•••d Donations Pw .....
Medicare Part B provides reim- of arthritis, muscle strain. tendonitis
kJ2.(M). Fcr~
a.-a
-V
........
Ieo
burseme11t for depth shoes, Cltstom and other injuries. eases chronic backtnf'otnl&amp;tfOI'I, Contld
Vanlla Puddii\Q
molded shoes ai1d . shoe inserts to pain, reduces posttraumatic headaches,
~ MercbtWo or
Comi!IOad
qualified patients with diabetes.
lessens pain and muscle spasms in
Mr. May will present the program patients who have undergone heart
on Diabetic Shoes at l 0 a.m. He will bypass surgery, promotes relaxauon recommendations for three one-hour - David and Audrey Slater, Jack
Bring a friend and stay for lunch.
be here until noon to speak with pea- . and alleviates the perception of pain sessions. Appointments will be and Paula Welker, Jim and Eleanor
pte on an individual basis.
and anxtety Ill cancer panents.
scheduled at your convenience. Thomas, Mary K. Roush, Garth and
PERl MEETING
. Please call 992-2161 or 992-2681, Erin Truter, Charlene Hoeflich,
PARTY! PARTY!
EXPANDED FITNESS RooM HouRS ext. 233 for more information or to .Carol Adams, Todd Adams, Kim
The regular meeting of PERl will
Harris, Eunice · Jones,· Charles be held on April 1 at the Meigs
schedule an appointment.
The Sisters of Saint Joseph
We're having· a St. Patrick's Day
Blakeslee, Don ~nd Lee Young
Multipurpose Senior Center. Lonch
party on March 17 and an Easter Charitable Fund have awarded a
CRAFTS
• In Memory of Marge Grimm will be served at II :45 a.m.
Dinner on March 24. The Merry grant to help finance our fitness
Racine First Baptist Church Ladies,
.' .
Maker Choir will sing at the Easter room. This grant has allowed us to
The ladies from the Meigs County Missionary Fellowship
0UILT CLASS
expand our hours of operation and Library will be here on March 17 at
party at 11 a.m.
• In Memory of Betty Wills Make sure you wear .your Easter hire ait Assistant Wellness Director, 10:30 a.m. with a different craft pro- Dan and Donna Jean Smith
Have you ever wanted to learn how
bonnet and your lines! Easter clothes. Bryan Hoffman. Our new hours are ject for each day. Participants get to
to make a quilt top but didn't have
as · follows: · Monday through take home what they make.
anyone to teach you? Now you have
BIRTHDAY PARTY
Thursday 7 a.m·. to 8 p.m. and Fripay
PIANO AND SINGING
the opportunity to learn from some'
from 7 a.m. to 4:30p.m .
HEALTH &amp; FITNESS
We will celebrate birthdays on one who has made a lot of quilts,
Wellness Director, Joy Bentley
Wilovene Bailey will play the
March , 24. If you have a birthday
Bunny Kuhl will conduct two sepapiano on March 15 and Charles and works Monday through Thursday
Linda King will present "Soy during March, come and celebrate rate.classes on making a "Trip Around
Ellen Rife will sing for you on from 7 a.m. to noon. Bryan Hoffman Foods for Better Health" on March with us!
the World" quilt top. This class is for
March 29 at II a.m.
. staffs the fitne ss room Monday 10 and "Vegetables" on March 24.
beginners and intermediate quitters.
Come and tap your feet and clap through Thursday from 2-8· p.m. and
All of the programs are scheduled
The classes will be held on March ·
OOPS!
your hands to the music. You can on Friday from 7a.m. to I p.m.
at ll a.m. Linda works with the
8 and 15 from 6-9 p.m. and March
even sing along if you want! ·
Ohio State Extension Office and
We left out the names of Jim and I0 and 17 from 2-5 p.m. and the cost
TAX PREPARATION
offers a variety of programs,. Eleanor Thomas on the list of those is a total of $20 for both classes. You
. CHOIR PRACTICE
who donated items to the Make a only ·need to attend two evening or
Tax assistance is available at the
Difference Day Auction. We apolo- two daytime classes.
EUCHRE AT THE CENTER
Cho\r Practice is held every Meigs Senior Center each Tuesday
gize for the mistake.
A list of materials you will need to
Thursday at I :30 at the Center. The and Thursday from 9-11 a.m. Euchre is the name of the game on
bring will be given to you when you
choir, known as the Merry Makers, is Through Apnl 15,
.
. Thursdays at the Center. Bring a friend
register for the class. If you purchase
. HEARING AiD CHECK-UP
scheduled to perform at the March for
Herman Carson and Shtrley and ·come and join us at tO a.m. We
your material at the Fabric Shop in
Meals Gospel Sing on March 12 at the Hamm provtde Volunteer Income · will play in groups of four. If you don't
Is your hearing aid working prop~ Pomeroy, you will receive a 20%
Meigs Elementary School in Rutland. Tax Assistance (VITA) and Tax know how to play, we'll teach you!
erty? If not, you can have it checked discount.
The Merry Makers will also per- Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) by
We have large print playing cards at the Center on April 5.
Call Debbie Jones at 992-2161 lfl
form for the Easter Dinner at the appmntll)ent onl~. Please call 992- for those of you who have trouble
Karr Audiology will check your register Qr for more information.
Center at 11 a. m.
2161 for an appomtment.
with your vision. Hope to see you hearing aid on April 5 at 10:30. No
Stop by the Center to see what the
If you are interested in joiniT)g,
For complicated tax returns, please here at the Center.
appointment is needed.
quilt top looks like.
·
please -contact Debbie Jon es at 992- consult a prud tax preparer:
2161. Shirley Hamm is the director
THANK You!
CRAFTS FoR You _To Do
UPCOMING TRIPS
DIET ANALYSIS AND EDUCATION
and Debbie Fin law is the pianisT.
We appreciate the financial support
March 22 - Ruth Ward will
Cincinnati Flower Show- April
SOCIAL SECURITY
Diet analysis and nutrition educa- received. from the following church- teach a ceramic class .. All supplies 20, 2005
lion have been added to the Well ness es, organizations, and individuals: . are provided. Class is limited to 12.
View displays of new garden and
•, Racine Baptist Sunday School,
Representatives from the Athens Program. Tiffany Hoffman, D.T.R.,
April 5 - Doris Carder will be flower prod_ucts, garden decorations
Social Security Office will be at the who has an associate's degree in Racine United Methodist Church, the instructor for paint class. You and .planting ideas. ·
Meigs Senior Center to assist peopl'e dietetics and eight years of experi- Tuppers Plains Church of Christ, will paint watering cans for Spring.
Cost includes transportation, admiswith Social Security problems and to ence working in a nursing home set- Rocksprings Church, Pomeroy All supplies are provided and the sion, and a buffet dinner at Ryan 's.
provide information . The dates af/e'ting and in children's nutrition pro- Church of Christ, Flatwoods United class is limited to 12 .
Cost is $50. Deposit of $20 due by
March 9 and 23 from 10 a.m. II a.m. grams, Will be lendmg her experttse . Methodist Church,
Enterprise
Aprill9- Come and paint small March 10, 2005.
No appointment is needed: plea
to our program. ·
·
United 'Methodist Church, Racine terra cotta flower pots. Supplies are
For further information ' or to
register at the receptionist desk.
If you have high cholesterol, high United Methodist Women, Sonshine provided.
make reservations, contact Debbie
•
hlood pressure, are overweight, di~- Circle, Meigs County PERl
All of the classes begin at 10:30 a.m. Jones, Activities Director at 992SUPPORT GROUPS
bette: ha'e been mstructed to modi• In Memo,ry of Richard Curtis and Please call Debbie Jones at 992-2161 2161 or Alice Wamsley, Volunteer
fy your dtet m any way, or you are . Evelyn c:;:tark - Polly Curtis
to sign up or for more information.
Trip Coordinator at 992·3938,
The Caring and Sharing the parents or guardmns of hyperae• In Memory of Edna Hunnell Support Group meets each month ,live children, you may bene!i~ f[om Frances and Donald Hunnel,
BINGO
'
at the Meigs Multipurpose Center at dtetetiC counseling. The cost IS $25 Beverly
Chapman,
Candice
The Meigs County Council on
I p.m. The meeting date is March 24. for those who h_ave a current Wellman, Sherry Ritchie
Aging, Inc. wtH be closed on
Join us for bingo on March 3 at
Lenora Leifheit is the coordinator MCCaA membership car~ and $30
• In Memory of Leo Davidson Friday, rt~arch 25 In observance of
It a.m .
for the group.
for non-meml)ers.. Thts _pnce Mary Davidson
Good Friday. Happy Easter from
Overbrook Center will be the
The Stroke Support Group will mcludes mdtvtdual dtet. analysts and
•. In Memory of Dorothy Downie sponsor for the.March bingo.
all of the staff!

--

""""

""""""

--

Harmony Boys
In Concert with:
Glorybound
And Soloist
John Stevens .

The Heme Energy Assistance Program (HEAP), is one of several programs
offemf by the Ohio Department of Development (OOOD) to help low-income
Obi pans pay their utility bills, Households may be eligible for assistance if~
household's iiKOine is at or below the 150% federal pcverty guidelines.

.

Below are guidelines for the 2004-2005 HEAP program:
Size of Hoosehold

Total Gross Household lncoole
up,to $ 13,965
up to S13,735
up to 23,505
up to S23,275

1

March 12, 2005 .
Meigs Elementary School
Rutland, Ohio

2
3

Concert starts at 6:00 p.m.

s

s
up to s33,045

4

6
7
8

Admission: $10.00 per person/$18.00 couple
I 0% discount for those holding a 2005 Silver,
Bronze, nr Gold membership· to MCCoA)

upto$37,815
up to s42,585
up to s47,355

For households with more than 8members, addS 4,770 per member.

Children under 12 admitted free

-p-

"We Care About Patient Care'~

• Home Oxygen
• Hospital Beds
• CPAP Machines • Wheelchairs
• Oximetry -·
• Nebulizers
.. • .

JCAHO Accredited .

24-Hour Emergency Service • Free Delivery
'

1-800-458-6844

Proceeds to Benefit "Meals on Wheels"
Sponsored by:

Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc .
For mon: information or tic ket in tOnna1ion please r.::onfac1 Us
·
ot(740 )992-21 61

...____ .--

If you need more informatioo about the HEAP Program, contact Kathy Goble at
the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Cent« at 740-992-2161. If y~ need assistance
with completing a HEAP application, please call to schedule ail appcintmenl
Kathy is also available to make home visits for lndividuals that BR diJabled or

homebound.

-.,..--- ----- -------- -'-

.

--

--

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70 Pine Street

765 E. Main St. 540 W. Union

~ierce, Wamsley

earn All-Ohio
AP honors
COLUMBUS Academy junior

Mid-American Conference Tournament - - - - -.

Gatlin
Jackie

Bobcats hold off Herd to advance to Gund

,.,..._,....,.,,...,......., W a m s l e y

STAFF REPORT

was named to
the special
mention list
of
the
.Associated .
P r e s ·s
Divi sion 11
Girls' AllOhio team
released . on
Monday.
Pierce
See complete Division I and 11 AllOhio list on B2.
· Wamsley led the Blue
Angels wnh 16.9 points per
game this past season.
Meanwhile, Meigs' senior
Sammy Pierce was named
honorable mention, averaging
15 ppg for the Marauders.

spo'rts@ mydailysentinel.com

Patton named
MAC East player
of the week .

'

ATHENS- Four Bobcats scored in double fi;;ures as the Ohio men 's basketball team ended
Marshall's season with a 72 -66 defeat at the
Convocation Center Monday night.
· W!th the opening-round win in the MidAmerican Conference Tournament, the Bobcats
now advance to Thursday's quarterfinals at Gund
'Arena for a 9 p.m. contest against Kent Stme .

week leave from hi; military 'ervice in Iraq.
"I definitely think that really helped fire the
guys up," said Ohio head coach Tim O'Shea. "I
didn ' t know he was coming. He just showed up in
my office today with hi s dad . 1 was in shock.
.
"He has t~o weeks total during hi s deployment
for hi ' vaca tion and this is where he wanted to be.
· Ohio ( 18- ·t 0) started stron g in front of a rowdy He wanted to·be here to see us play in the tournastudent-domi nated crowd.
ment. What an amazingly dedicated guy. Boy, it
The Bobcats scored the ga me 's first 10 points, was emotional in the locker room when everyenergized partly hy a surprise visit prior tn tipoff
Please see·8obca~. 82
by assistant coach Kevin Kuwik , who is on a two-

n~66

Despite
loss,
lllini still
splendid

Cavaliers·
losing
games,
reliance

BY NANCY ARMOUR

HUNTINGTON, W.Va .
tAP) - Marshall's Mark
Patton has been named theMid-American Conference
East Division player of the
week for his performance's
against Akron and Miami.
The Barboursville reside'nt
posted back-to-back doubledoubles in points and
rebounds in last ·week's two
games, averaging 13 points
and 13.5 rebounds.
Patton scored 14 points and
grabbed II rebounds as
Marshall closed out the regu- ·
Jar season Satu~day with a
54-47 win over Miami. He
also had three steals and two
assists.
Earlier in the week against
Akron , Patton scored 12
points and had a game-high
l 6 rebounds, as well as two
steals.
He is the !irst Thundering
-Herd player to capture the
player of the week award thi s ·
season.
. Peyton Stovall of Ball
State claimed the . West
Divi sion honor.

Miami's Mason
named MAC
Clefensive POY
CLEVELAND (AP) Chet Mason of Miami of
Ohio was named the MidAmerican
Conference's
defensive player of the year
. Monday for helping the
RedHawks hold opponents
to 61 points per game.
,
The senior guard had a
team-leading 35 steals and
helped Miami to its first
MAC championship since
1999
·· Forward Leon Williams of
Ohio is the MAC's freshman
of the year, leading an all- .
freshman team of guard
Bubba Walther of Akron.
guard Jeremy Fears ·of Ohio,
guard Kashif Payne of
Toledo and foward/center
Joe Reitz of Western .
Michigan .
Williams . averaged 11.3
points and 8.2 rebounds per
game, started all 27 games
and added 32 steals and 13
blocked shois.
: The- ~ixth man of the year
f&amp; senior Mark Bortz of
Buffalo, who averaged I0.6
points and 5.8 rebounds with
32 blocked shots and 24
steals.

Spring coaches
reminder
Spring
varsiry
sports
coaches are reminded to send
us your schedules for the
upcoming season as soon as
possible.
You may e-mail them to
sports@ mydailysentinel .com
, fax them to 446-3008, or
drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
f',ve.
- Schedules are needed for ·
baseb-all, softball, tennis and
track and field .
·

Associated Press

. CHICAGO - So much
for the 29 straight wins the
·Fighting lllini piled up over
the last fout months, their
double-digit victory margins
and their dazzling shooting
SlatS.
.
One loss - · and on a lustsecond shot, at that - and
top-ranked lllinois isn 't
quite so impressive anymore.
"The radio talk shows in
Chicago this morning make
me sick," Purdue coach
Gene Keady said Monday.
"They're ·upset Illinois didn' t go (unbeaten). That 's
ridiculous. Twenty-nine and
one is unbelievable."
It's not just callers in
Chicago who are dogging
the lllini, . though, after
Sunday's 65-64 loss at Ohio
State spoiled their bid for a
perfect season. Illinoi s kept
its No. 1 ranking in this
week's poll with 48 firstplace votes aod 1,725
points, but 22 voters went
· for North Carolina, a team
with three losses.
Some are . wondering
whether lllinois could lose
out on a No. 1 seed in the
NCAA tournament if it
doesn' t go deep in the Big
Ten tourname_nt, which
begins Thursday at the
United Center. Illinois ha~ a
bye in the !irst round, &lt;md
plays the winner of
Michigan-Northwestern on
Friday.
"It's hard tor people to .
realize, but this is not going
to impact them greatly. They
did not turn i'nto mere mortals today, · nor were . they
invincible
· before,"
Minnesota coach Dan
Monson said. 'They weren't
going to get carried away if
they . went undefeated and
they're not going to collapse
if they didn ·t. I think you' re
going to see business-as~
usuallllinois on Friday."
'
The lllini were trying to
become the first team togo
Please see lllini. B2

Bv ToM WtTHERs
Associated Press

CLEVELAND
The.
·Cavaliers have beg~n their
push for the NBA playoffsbackward.
Six straight defeats ha ve
, erased much of what
Cleveland accomplished in
the !irs! half of the season,
when it led the Central
Division and played like a
team on the verge of becom- ·
ing a winner..
But now. in addition to losing ga me s, the Cavalier' are
losing confidence.
" I don ' t see the lire, the
intensity. the passion. a_ll the
things we've had at one time
we· ve lost.'' coach Paul Silas
said Sunday night after a
I 02-S2 loss to the Miami
Heat. "~hey have to do some
soul searcliin~. Either we're
going to pick n up or chuck it
in.''

·

the li ving," Nicklaus said . " It huns, but
vou go on. You make commitments, and
you''Ve got to do them."
But he remains so shaken that he left a
statement on each chair that e·x~ressed
his grief and appreciation about t e love
and support, hopeful it would limit the
questions during a one-hour interview.
His voice cracked only once. when he
mentioned that Steve's wife. Krista. is 3
1/2 months pregnant anil probably will
have the baby shortly after the British
Open.
"Obviouslv, that little babv she has
inside her is- very important.'' Nicklaus
· said.
Nicklaus is perhaps the greatest champion golf has known. winning a record
l ~ inajors over 25 seasons. But he ha~
always taken more pride in his family.
There are the famous stories of how

Mavbe Silas should have
seen "this coming. After all,
the Cavs ' surprisingly strong
start was aided by a favorable
scbedule. the Indiana-Detroit
brawl that slowed those
Eastern Conference powers
and the dramatic one-year
improvement of LeBron
James.
·The · Cavaliers are 8-0
against expansion Charlotte
and Atlanta and 14-0 overall
against Golden State. Utah.
New Orleans and Toronto ~
all last-place team's. Against
the rest of the · league,
Cleveland is 17-27.
·
In the past · week. the
·cavaliers have been exposed
at. hom.e by San ·Antonio.
Seattle and Miami . The Heat
won wi th ease. pulling away
in the second half despite getting limited time from
Shaquille O'Neal . who was
in foul ·trouble · throughout
and fini shed with just .13
points in 27 minutes.
. Silas, who has. tried to be
supportive during the slide.
finallY boiled over after the
Cavs were outhust led and
outrebounded 55-40 by the
Heat.
"When Shaq goes out.
you've got to get up a ki·ller
instinct." Silas 'aid . "But all
I' m 'eeing rig ht now is
':We're ticht , I'm this. . I'm
that.' That's nonsense. ' we
didn't .fight. That·, a 'loser's
mentalitv. If wr c'onti iiue to
perform· as we are. then
everything i' in danger."
A
few
week 1
ago .
Cleveland's !irst trip to the
playoffs since 19.98 'eemed
like a slam dunk.
Now it's a potential air ball.
Going intn Monday night\
games, the Ca1·atiers 131 -27)
were tied with Orlando for
the No. 5 seed in the East
with .. ChicaQo (29-27) one
game back and Indiana (2930) and Philadelphia (29-30)

Please see Nicklaus, 82

PIHse see cavs. 82

AP
Cleveland lnoians pitcher C.C. Sabathia throws during practice at the team's spring training facility Feb. 22 in Winte r Haven , Fla.
·

WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - C.C.
Sabathia likely won ' t stan the season open. er for the Clevehmd ~ lndian s after tests on
Monday revealed the left-hamler strained a
muscle on his right side.
·
. Sabathia strained the oblique muscle
while warming up for hi s schedu led &gt;tart ·
againsi Detroit on Sunday.
Sabathia has been ordered not to throw for
a week - which would probably not give
him enough time to get in shape to pit~h the
opener April 4 in Chicago.
"Opening day is unlikely and I'll leave it
at that." said manager Eric Wedge. "The
best,case scenario, we· re probably look at
the second week of April with C.C. I'm
happy it was nothing major." ·
Wedge said ,that right-hander Jake

Westbrook probably would start the opener
against the White Sox with right-hander
Jason Davis added to the rotation until.
Sabathia is ready.
"The symptoms will dictate how C.C. will
progress. but we' re looking at it as a threeto live-week injury," said Indians head trainer Lonnie Soloff.
"There's a chance he will not stan on
opening day. We're looking at seven days of
no throwing, seven days of long toss and
then seven days of throwin g off the mound."
Sabathia expressed fnistration at being
hurt, but was relieved to lind out it was not
worse.

. ·•t feel OK today. hut when it happened it
· Please see Sabathla, 82

Grieving Nicklaus likely to skip the Masters
Muirtleld Village ~our.e In suburban
Dublin. •·
·
Nicklaus ~aid his chances of playing
JUPITE • Fla. _ Jack Nicklaus had . the Masters are "between ·slim and
planned to squeeze in a few trips to none:: although he plam to be at
Augusta National for the Champions
Augusta National this month, making Dinner, maybe . evep . the Par :1
sure his 65-year-old body was lit and his Tournament.
game W&lt;l' good enough to compete in
He still would like to play the British
the Masters.
·
,Open at St. Andrews in July since this is
· Now. the Masters is the last thing on his last year of eligibility and because
his mind.
his son, Steve, wants to&lt;:addie/or him.
"I think with what's happened to us in
It w&lt;t' Steve Nicklaus' son. Jake. who
our family, my time is .going to be spent drowned Tuesday night. _
ih much different ways." Nicklaus said
Nicklaus sat before a small gathering
Monday. his lirst public comments since Monday moming at The Loxahatchee
his 17-month-old grandson drowned in a· Club. not as the steely-eyed winner of
hot tub. 'That's the most important thing 18 major championships. but as .a tearyright now..And 1think it wi ll be the most eyed grandfather who had lost one of hi;
imponant thing for a .loi1g time,''
17 gmndchildren.
Nicklaus is originally from Columbus,
He declined to cancel the appearance.
Ohio. and played at Ohio State. He hosts saying it was the right thing to do.
"Life has got to move on. Life is for
the annual Memorial Tournament at the
Y DouG fERGUSON

Associated Press

•-

-·

•
"

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

April 4 every day. I really want to pitch the
opener. be the guy who can lead this team."
Soloff said that Sabathia made the right decision not to try and pitch th rough the injury.
from Page 81
" It was the prudent move," he said. "It is an
was a sharp pain," Sabathia said. " At fi rst I injury common to pitchers and no question we
thought it was a cramp, but 11 felt hke some- are relieved it is only a mild strain. This is
something we shou ld be able to put behind us
body was stickmg a kni fe in my ribs.
·
''I felt 11 on one pitch while warming u·p and in a couple of weeks."
Sabathia is coming off an injury-marred
.., then threw about I0 pitches after that before
2004
season. He missed his fimil three starts
stopping."
·
last
season
with a strained left hamstring. He
The 6-foot-7. 290-pounder came to camp in
his best shape ever after gliing through a win- also was scratc hed from a stan last April
bec au ~e of irritation in his reft biceps tendon. a
ter conditioning program.
condition
that forced him to leave a start June
. "That makes this more frustrating than anything," he said . "All winter, I tho.ught about 26 atier one inning.

Sabathia

weapons with all live starters been an added bonus, but it
avemging in. double fig ures, was never the lllini's priority.
They insisted they were n't
but no one ''star."
They don't even have a cool overwhelmed by the attention
from Page 81
nickname like Michigan's Fab that grew with every victory,
Five or the Flyin' lllini, the and thev scoffed at the notion
through an entire season unde- school's last Final Four team.
they should lose a game before
feated since Indiana in 1975The Big Ten doesn't help the tournament to reduce the
. 76. and thei r start was the best
much,
The conference pressure..
since UNLV opened 34-0 i·sn't as either.
strong as it was a te w
But Sunday's loss leaves
before losing in the 1991 Final years ago. when it had two them little choice 'but to reloFour. They hadn 't lost since
Four teams in baCk-to- &lt;..: us.
falling to Duke in the NCAA Final
"I hope they got a taste of
buck
season
s. Only Illinois,
regional -semifinals last March, . No. 13 Michigan
defeat
State
and
No.
and what it feels like.
and had -a margin of victory of 23 Wisconsin are ranked, and We haven't
had that in 12
almost 19 points. They routed the contetence will be tonu- months or whatever it was,
then-No. I Wake Forest and nate to get ti ve teams in the since the Duke game," coach·
snapped Wisconsin 's 38-game· NCAA tournament.
Bruce We.ber said. "Maybe we
home winning streak, the
Compare that with the ACC, need to taste that again. Be
longest in the country.
which has three of the top fi ve humbled a little bit. Maybe it'll
But the l!lini never really got . teams in the country. Or the do some good. I hope it will."
a powerhouse's respect, with Big East. which has ti ve teams
plenty of skeptics wandering in the top 25.
·
when - · not if - they were
"Illinois was doing somegoing to lose.
thing that so few have· done,"
·'Everybody's waiting for us Michigan State coach Tom
to lose. saying they think we' re
lzzo said. "I still love that
not the best tpm in Jhe coun-. team. I still think they' ve got a
try," Dee Brown said last chance to make a big- time mn
month after the lllipi beat in every tournament they play
Wisconsin for a second time . in."
"Watch TV, they'll show )'bu.
And, ultimately, that's the
they'll tell you. The No. t only thing that matters .
team? It's not us."
Since the start of the season,
Part of it is IUinois' makeup. · Illinois has had the same goals ~
The lllini don't have a big be the Big Ten champions, get
inside presence. making them a No. I seed in the NCAA
seem · vulnerable to teams that tournament and wi.n' the
do like Kansas (Wayne Simien)
title. Matching the
or North Carolina (Sean May). nati0nal
1975-76 Hoosiers .would have
They have a multitude of

lllini -

going to close the door on it
until it's time to get there,"
Nicklaus said. "But l can't
imagine my mind is going to
from Page 81
be on preparing to play golf.
"I'll go to Augusta this
he fainted when his wife,
year," he said. ''I' II probably
Barbara, gave birth to each of go out and play a round on
their live children. There was Tuesday, and I may play the
that memorable photo of him Par 3 on Wednesday..And if I
scooping up 4-.year-otd Gary can
if I think I should
after a round at Jhe 1973 PGA play play,
the golf tournament, I' ll
Championship. Gary Nicklaus probably play the golf tournalater played two years on Jhe ment. If I don't think I should,
PGATour.
I' ll play Tuesday and
And when Nicklaus had his Wednesday, and that will be
left hip replaced in 1999 it."
.
causing him to mi ss the
he doesn't play, it would
Masters for the first time - he beIfonly
the tliird time since he
said it was to improve his . tirst played
in 1959: After the
quality of life so he could
hip
replacement
surgery in
remain active with hi s grand19~9. he missed 2002 because
children , not to help him play
of lingering back problems.
another major.
Nicklaus has not played the
"As you can imagine, the
British
Open since 2000 at St.
last few days have been an
Andrews.
Past champions are
overwhelmingly difficult and
trying time for my entire fam- eligible through age 65, and
ily," Nicklau s said in his state- the Royal &amp; Ancient Golf
ment. 'The loss of our pre- Club moved up St. Andrews in
cious, 17-month-old grandson the rotation to give the Golden
Bear one last chance to pl ay
Jak~ was devastating, and it is
on
hi s favorite' links.
a loss that is impossible to put
Having
his son on the bag
into words."
will
help.
Nicklaus had an easier time
"I would think I' ll play the
talking about his future in golf.
British
Open no matter what,''
"I have absolutely zero
he
said.
"Steve is caddying tor
plans as it relates to 'the game
me, so I'll share that with him
of golf," he said.
either way."
He plans to play Tuesdav in
But that's still four months
a charity event hosted by Gary away,
and Nicklaus is trying to
Player, because Nicklaus is
through each day right.
upholding his commitments. get
now.
was a visitation
He also has an outing Monday Friday,There
the
funeral service
at Lost Tree near his home in Saturday. There
are commitNoith Palm Beach.
ments
he
doesn't
want
to break
And he won't entirely mle
out playing in the Masters. because. as Nicklaus said, life
on. But his foc us· is far
although he called his chances goes
from
the
fairways.
less than 20 percent.
.
"I'm
going
to spend my time
"If I feel like t can get Steve with Steve and
Krista," he
out and spend some time with said. •·t think that's
probably
him on the golf course, get more imponant than golf."
myself in shape ... I'm not

Nicklaus

Cavs
from Page 81
lurking 21, games behind .
Cleveland 's -schedule for
the ~est of March won't provide man y breaks, either.
After hosting the Magic on
Tuesday night and the Pacers
oil Sunday., the Cavaliers
have home games against
Philadelphia and Detro it and
road date s in Mil waukee,
TorontQ, Houston, Dall as and
Chicago.
"We could easily go down
the toilet and not make the
playoffs,'' Jjtmes said.
James, w110 has been brilliant all season, has shown
more frustration of late. On
Friday, the second-year star ·
was called for a technical in
the ' fourth quarter at

Philadelphia that allowed. the
Sixers to close out a win .
On Sunday, James said hi s
team doesn't know now what
it takes to win.
"That's very concerning,"
he said. "We've j ust got to
get a win . Some way, somehow. If I've got to play 48
minutes to get us· a win , ·r•JJ
do it."
James and center Zydrunas
llgauskas have provided the
onl y consistency for a team
that has gotten nothing from
its bench during the losi ng
streak. Against the Heat, the
pair combined for 45 points
while starters Jeff Mcinni s.
Ira Newble and Robert .
Traylor accounted for 14 on
6-of-20 shooting.
"We're just putting pressure on oursel ves now,''
Mcinnis said. "Everybody is
pressing."

Tuesday, March 8, 2005

'Tuesday, March 8, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Bobcats
from Page 81
body first saw him,"
After the lead went as high
as 13, at 18-5 with 14:40 left
in the period, the Thundering
Herd (6-22) went on a 21-8
run to tie it at 26-26 with
4:48 to go. The Bobcats..
however, closed out the half
with a 7-2 run to lead by five
at the break.
Senior forward Terren·
Harbut leU alt . scorers with
I 0 points in addition to tour ·
rebounds at halftime.
The second half began
with Ohio on a t 0-3 run ,
capped by a short jumper
from se nior center Clay
' McGowen (Westerville). A
three -pointer by Marshall 's
Enoch
Bunch, though,
knocked the advantage back
down to four at 43-39 with
12:37 remaining.
At that point, the Bobcats
showed their versatility as
points came from Harbut,
sophomore forw ard Sonny
Troutman and junior guard
Mychal Green . .Th e trio
pushed the lead back to double digits, where it remained
until the two-minute mark. ·
Seven straight points from

· Herd guard A.W. Hamilton
cut the lead down to six with'
I:27 to play. When Hamilton
nailed a trey with 47 seconds
remaining, the lead went
down to four, 68-64.
Despite making only seven
foul shots in 18 attempts
over the final two minutes,
Ohio managed to hang on for
the victory as good defense
and rebounding prevailed
down the stretch.
"We had a chance to win
by a nice comfortabl e margin had we made some free
throw s,"
said
0 ' Shea.
"Tonight we were 24: for 41
- that is a staggeringly bad
number.
We made just
enough to get by tonight so I
feel very' fortunate to be tlie
winning coach . given our
free-throw shooting."
From the fi eld , the
Bobcats shot 50 percent (21of-42), incll)ding 31.6 percent (6-of-19) from behind
the arc. Marshall made 23ofc51 (45.1 percent) from
the. fi eld , I0-of-27 (37 percent) from three-point range
and 10-of~ II (90.9 percent)
from the line.
Harbut ended up with a
game-high 19 points while
Troutman finished with 17
points and four steals and
Green managed 16 points

eligll&gt;le.

No Onll!

Else Can!
C~Liio~

1

0- r..;.F.a~
"'""~-----~--..,.-:-=-:
;; x -To (740) 446 -31."0r"
OB,_.-~~O_r_F_ax_l&lt;.:..:o:..:(~74.:..:0::..).:..99:..:2:....:·2:.:1.:..57~-

11

Offee !lowe-~
· HOW IQ WRITE AN 'A D
Successful Ads- - - Should- Include These Items
;ro .Hetp Get Response ...

'''
•••

NRA Concealed F1 rearm s
Class
Now Forming
March 19th, 9:00am
Cost $75
$25 (Non-Refundable
Deposit)
Call (740)992-9444
Cell Phone·
(7 40)4 Hl-3329
E-mail
NRAINSTRUCTOR@OHI
OH ILLS.COM

PLEASANT
VALLEY .
HOSPITAL

Specializing in:
t/ Bankruptcy
t/ Divorce
t/ Charge OWs
t/ And MORE!!

• Lasts up to 10 hours at a setting of 2.
• Takes about 40 seconds to fill.
·Operates uprtght, on its back or in any
position in-between.

740-446·0007
Toll Free 871·669·0007
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

APPIV Todav... Drive Todav!

owned. We core

Broadband Wireless
Internet Access

, MER CURY

446-9800 '

Tht Lmte Company...
~~o·ith ,~, BIG Smice

PRESCRIPTION

HOLZER
CLINIC
2605 Jackson Ave.
Pt. Pleasant. WV
GALLIPOLIS

.

i't•Lfss
.

675-4498

435'/, Second Avenue
IA~o-ro&gt;~

From PiJ~I Ollke J

Open Mon · ThuN.

~U0-5 pm

446-7619

·

www.holzerclinic.com

OXYGEN
THE AREA'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED
HELlOS PROVIDER.

HELiOS
!) e rsonol 0•1gen

S~s te 111

(740) 441-0202
3084 State Route 160
Woodland Center Compie11
(Acroaa from Holzer Medical Center)

Galllpolia, Ohio

Tl
umber
i
Powell's
FOODFAIR
700 EastMain Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
740·.992·5252

www.foodlairmk .com
• Hair Care&amp;. Makeup
· Nail Care
• Facials &amp;. Waxing

'Massage ·
• Body Treatment

113-5536

GIVF.AWAY

TO BUY

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Golcl Co ins.
P roo fsets. Gold Rings,
U.S. Currency.-M.T S Coi n
ShoP.
15 1 .
Second
Avenue. Gallipolis . .740446-2842.

I \ 11'10,\11 \I

1· 1110

Brown/black with grey.
male Coon Hound. ·Found
• in· Crown City. Owner call
:to identify (740)256-1746.

M.A. CCC-A

s~ up, l'Mtafft
www.kasplat.com~
&lt;t ~.. ·

615-1812

t

WANal}

't il{\!(

I.=r ANU
FO!Nl

Owner &amp; Audiologist

~

Point Pleasant, WV

Rewa rd for information or
retu rn of Calfee cat .
Monkey
R un
area·.
(740)992·5896

I ....

MUST BE! 21

· - Free pupp1es to good
: home only
Au st ral iAn
·Shephe rd m•x 9 wee ks
: old. 740 256-6623

Diane McVey

.....speed Ral1tbliro

328 2nd Ave.

.304-675-4340

r

REWARD

• Spa Packages
326 5Kond Avenue
Glillipolis, OH 45631

WHV PAV MORE??
EUERV DAV
lOW PRICES!
Powelrs FOODFAIR
PHARMACY
Open M-F ' - 6pm

sat-1 .....

ttl-1531
(740) 446-2933
Store
Hours:
Hours:
M-F 11Jam-Ciose 12l• "•·-·''n".- • 7 Days A Week

,

.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Sunday Dll;play: 1:00 p.m. ·

Friday For Sundays Paper

Thursday for Sundays Paper

ads must be prepaid'

Hf:tPWM'I'I-:0

"' .. "NECCO "" .,.
MAKE A
DIFFERENCE IN A

CHILD'S liFE
Foster Parents needed.
To learn more about
fostenng and fre e traimng
oppcirtunities contact:
K1m Romeo at
740-894-4360
1·877·5D-NECCO

4x4's For Sale ...... ................................... .... . 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques ............ ........... .-........................ ....... 530
Apartments lor Ren1 .... ............................... 440
Aucti9n and Flea Market ............................. oeo
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ..... :......... ......... .. 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
: Autos lor Sate ................. .................. ...-........ 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ......... ................... .- 750
Building Supplies ........... ............................. 550
Business and Buildings ......... .................... 340
Business Opportunity ........... ......................210
Business Trainlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..... .. .................... 790
Camping Equipment ............................. :..... 780
- Cards of Thanks .................. ,....................... 010
: Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlca t/Refrl geration ............: ........... ....... 840
Equipment lor Rent .............................. .. ..... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment............. ...................... ....... 610
Farms for RenL ..................... .... .................. 430
Farms lor Sale ........... :................................. 330
For Lease ................ ............... ........................ 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ....... '"' .......................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Hautlng ......... ............................. ..... 850
Giveaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads,................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Grain .................................................. 640
Help Wanted ,................................................ 110
: Homelmprovements ...................................810
- Homes lor Sale ................................. ........... 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses lor Rent ........ :... ,............................. 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660
Livestock ................................................. :..;.63.0
Loot and Found ........................................... 060
: Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
• Miscellaneous .............................................. 170
• Mlacetlaneoua Merchandlse ....................... 540 ·
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Mobile Homes -lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale .... ............................ 320
Money to Loan ....................................... ,,.... 220,
Motorcyctea &amp; 4 Wheelera .......................... 740
• Muslcallnatrum!tl1tl ................................... 570
- Personals .................................................... 005
: Pets lor Sale.,.............................................. 560
· Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Proleaalonat Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB. Repair ................................ 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoola tnatructlon ............... :..................... 150
- Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
: Situations wanted .......................... .'............ 120
: Space lor Rent ............................................. 460
• Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
• SUV'slor Sale ........................... ................... 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale .................. ,.... , ........ ,.... ,........ 730
Wanled to Buy ............................................. 090
_ Wanted to Buy- Farm Supptlea .................. 620
- Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
• Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
: Yard Sale- Galllpotla .. ..................................072
Yard Satt-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sate-Pl. Pte11ant ..............................., 076

fJ;.

How you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for lqrge

· POLICtES: Ohio Valley Publilhing reaerv8a the r1ght to edit, reject, or c1ncet any ad at any time . Errors muat be reponed on ttte lir a! day of publication and
Tribune-Sentlnei·Reglater will be reaponalble for no-more tha n the cost of tile 1pace occ upied by the error and only the lir1t in-rtion. We ahallnot be i
any losa or e~tpenaathat re1ulta from the publlcaUon or omission of an ,advartlaemant. Correction will be made in th41 fir11 available edltl9n. • BoK number
are alwawa confidentiaL • Current rate card appliea. • All real eatate advertlaamanta are subject to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of t968 . • This
accepta cnlw h11lp wanted ada mHUng EOE standard•. We will not knowingly 1cceptany adverti ain9 in violation of the law.

n••••P•loe&lt;l

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
An Exeellent way to earn
money. The New Avon .
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645

DIRECTV
Free Eq01tment
·. Free Professional
installation
up to 4 rooms
Free 50 + premium
cnannels
Free DVD ptayer
ca ll lor details ·
Call 1-800-523-7556

Are you t1red of your
curren1 iob _and looking
for something bener?
We offer excellent
employment oppor tunities.
You can make up to
$8/hour calling on behalf
of major non-prof it and
poHt1ca1 organizations. We ·
also otter pa1d tram1ng.
ho lidays and vacations.
Take adva nt age ol these
. opport unities and call us
today!
1-877-463-6247 ext.
. 2454.

0
0
0

Jewelry. Buy Sell Gold .
D1amonds.
Gemstones
Repai r, App ra1sals. Gem
Testi ng.
Gr aduate
Gemologist.
Jeweler .
(740)645-6365
or
{7 40) 446-3080

\

---

•

__
/

,--

RI\IISI\11

AS P ~ALT CO MPANY ;n
HUNTI NGTON looking for
EX PER IEN CE D
dump
truck
drivers. asphalt
labors. eq uip. oper. P O.
Box 3105. Hun tington. WV
25702.

1310

AITN ne~ded 23 peop le
lo lose up to 30 ' 100. 1n the
next .30 clays t
natu·
ral. 100",. guaranteed. no
ephedra. Galt 1-888-2345 t4 6, or V1sit www.newshaperesults.com

© 2005 by NEA, Inc .

www.comics.co!TI

ooc.:,

110

110

1.

180

Har WANTEn

Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is now accepting
resumes lor lhe pos(IIOn
of Maintenance Director.
The qualified ca ndidate
must possess strong verbal and wrinen commu nication skills including ·
techmcal report writing
and record k ee pin~ . MuSt
have experience in general ma1 nte nance includ 1ng
carpentry. plumbi ng, elec·
trical. tele phOne and·cable
tnstall atlon, painting
.grounds work. eva luation
AVO N! All Areas! Jo Buy or
and mspection ot emer·
Sell. Shirley Spears 304gency equipment , 1tem
675-1429.
assembly and bo11er sys·
Bates Bros. Amu sement · tem operat1on . M ust have
Co. Springi Summer. Must
knowledge of OSHA. Life
Be 17 Or Ol der And Able · Sa fety Code. HVAC and
To Travel Late March -Late
Building Code. Long te rm
September. Weekly Pay_ care expenence preferred
LI\MQ, Facilities. Bonus,
but not required . Qualified
Contact Us At 740-266candidateS may send
2950.
resumes to : Charla
Brown-McGuire. AN.
Due to agency's growlh ,
LNHA. Admi nistrator. 333
local Home Health Agency
Page Street. Middleport.
is seeking Home Heal th
Oh10 45760. EOE
Aides for · the Galli polis
area and the Meigs county
McClure's Restaurant now
area. No Traintng necesh1rmg all locations. full or
sary, agency wtll tratn . We
pa rH1me. pick up applica·
offe r fleXIble schedulmg.
11on at loca~ion &amp; bring
Those interested should
back between 9 :30am &amp;
please call (740)441-1377
I t :OOam, Monday thru
or {866)441· 1377
Saturday.

·

Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
needed Apply ar 1354
Jackson Pike , ~allipolis .

PARTS DEPARTMENT

WANIH&gt;

To Do

Maintenance Director

Auto Parts Manager. ·Mus t
have ·work1ng knoWledge
of automotive practices
and par ts app lications.
Must have basic computer
skills. Including Microsoft
Off ice: ability to handle
mail order phone calls :
experie nce in auto parts:
retaiL'wholesalc sales prefe rred . •Full time position.
Call Hill'S Classic Cars:
7· 00AM to Monday thru
Fnday, fo r ap p O I ~J t ment.
(740)949·2217

Licensed P;ractical Nurse
u..eN); Overbrook center IS
currently accept1ng applications tor Full-Time and
Part-T1me LPN's. Anyone
Interested please come in
an till out an application at
333
Page
Street .
Middleport, Oh EOE

HOMf:~
FOHSAI£

DHK Cleanmg. Do you
need? House Cleanmg or
Elderly Care, Outside
Mamte nence (powerwash- ·
ing, etc) Call (740)9853633 / (740)4 1 6- 1823
References available. Ask
for Karen/Dave·.

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
Post1ng Date:
March 1, 2005

3 Beclroom 1 &amp; 112 bath,
new-windoWS li roof ,located t 2 Sm1th"St K1ngs town
area Aiver·vlew ava ilable
No Down-Payment $425.a
mont h (304)675-2749

3 bedroom. 2 bath. tireplace. on 1.6 acreS. Rio
Grancle a:rea. $85.000. Call
(740)709· 11 66.

SECRETARY
Babysi tting- .
Very
Reasonable Rates. Ages 4
and under. Ca ll Crysta l
(740)44 1-9654
or
{740)590·2590

ADMISSIONS OFFICE
T he UntverSIIy of Rio
G ran.de invi tes applicatiOns tor the position ol
Secreiary
m
the
Umversity's
Admiss1on
OHice.

II\\ \ I I \I

Responsi bilities 1nclucte .
but are not limited to, providing general secretanal
and cle rical dut1es. maintaining electronic file~ on
prospective students and
working with Admissions
staff for coordination and
follow up on student ca f11·
Pus v1sits.

"'VA~LE~v;U BLISH
"'

.
pH10
NG CO . recommend!
ha t you do bus1ness witt
eo ple you know anc
~OT to send mon e1
hrough the ma11 unti l ~au
ave rnvesligated · thE
ftenng .

M ust haVe high school
diploma o r equivalent .
Associate Degree in secretanal science or computer technology preferred .
Must have knowledge ol
personal and mainframe
computers. Conl1deiltiality
a must. Good oral and wri1ten communication skills
requirecl.

r
.-Leao1ng ~ 1nanc1a1
Institution appro11ing
Small
Business. Mortgage
Personal and Vehicle
Loans. immediate ~
respo nse.
give us a pall ·at.
1 -8·66~228-7063" Or
apply online a t
www lrwvslmlimthr"liu1Cia1.cro

All applicants must submit
One o1 Ohio 's leacling
a let.ter of interest and
motor earners has an
including the .
immediate opening tor a · resume
names and add resses of"
qualll1ed Part s Person
th ree re fere nces . on or
E)(perience reqwred. We
Loader ope rator for Cyblair
before Marcn 14, 2005 to
offer
top
pay
and
t:Je
ne1it
s
Lumber Company. At least ,
Ms. Phyllis M ason. SPH R
tor the right person Three
1 year experience. Apply in
D
irector
·of
H um an
and a hall day work Week.
person at State Rou te 62
R esources, Uni11erslty of
paid
vacation
.
personal
N. WeSt Columbia, WV
~arrow Smart. Con tac
R io Grande, P.O. Box 500 .
days. health insurance.
' (304)~73·5670
he Oh1o Oivis1on o
R io Grande. OH 45674 . epaid hOlidays. o~erlime·
~
mancial
Institution '
mail
pmasbnOrio.edu.
fax
.
Local Insurance age ncy.
pay. 40 11&lt; plan and work
t:;&gt;rr1ce
of
Consume
740-2
4~·4909.
se"eklng part time recepuniformS' are among the
IAffairs BEFORE wou refi
many benefits. This post·
tionist.
Hours
Mon.,
t'ance your home o
EEO/ AA Employer
Tue .. and Fri.. Must have
lion is open now and you
~btain a loan., BEWAAI
basic computer. phone
can begin work Immedi~ requests lor any targ
and tiling stti1hs. Pl ease
ately. Appf~ by tax . email or
nil!ll"'"-~----,
ladvance payments 0
you may walk in.
send resume to EB!II:3 200
150
SOlool.s
I
ees or msurance . Cal
Main St. F't F'leasent WV
.
L~UCJ'ION
'
.
he
Office of Consume
1
25550.
Arct1c Express. inc
~-ftai'rs toll tree at ,.1•866
4277 Lyman Drive
11278-()003 to lea rn If th
RBQ!SJBred Nurse tRN l
H1lhard. O H 43026
Galllpolle Career
~ortgage br oker o
Overbrook Center is curFax: 614-527-4114
College ·
ender
IS
proper!
rently accepting · appfica- ·
Email. mtox Oarcticex(Careers Close To Home)
1censed. (This Is a publ~
11ons for a Full-Time AN tor
pmss com
Call Todayt 740-446-4367,
. erv1ce. announc~en
ttle shit! o1 7p-7a. Anyone
E.O.E/Orug Free
1-800-214-{)452
rom the Ohio Valle
interested please come in
Workplace
ga'hpci~•Hrroil"!j,'e com
rPubhshlnQ Comoanv)
and 1111 out an applicatio.n
Acc•edlled' M•'Yibeo' Aecradthf19
Wanted Manager and
at 333 . Page Street.
Councll lo! II odapandeul cot.gea
EJ~:perienced Auto Body
Mlddlepon. Oh EOE
and Sctoocl&amp; 127AB • '
man. Collision pa1nhng &amp;
WantedLicensed
lrame eJtj)erience neces·
WANTID
Physical Therapy Ass1stant
sary. Call (740)44&amp;-4466
Do
tor home health seNIC&amp;S
to set up an appotntment.
TURNED DOWN ON
Please send resume to
SOCIAL SECURITY
McGraw Phys•cal Therapy,
SASSV S CI SS ORS
Georges Portable SawiTIIII ,
ISSI?
Inc ..
PO. Box 983,
Stylist'wanled . Salary/
No Fee Unless We Wm l
don't haul your togs to the
Jackson. OH 45640 or call
Commission. 740·441 ·
1-888·582·3345
mill just call 304·6?5- t 957 .
(740)286·6~1
t880 or 740· 256·6336

.

www.orvb.cotn
Home Listings.
L1st your home b~ call(740)446·3620

'"9

View pho tos/info online.

Thia newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaementa tor real
eatate whk:h is In
violation of the law. Our
readers are herebw ·
into""ed that an
dwelling• advertised In
!his newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity baa,a.

Near Holzer Hosp ital.
Good Neighborhood . 3
oedroom. 1-1/2 baths
large family room . l ire place. central air. garage.
Newly remodeled . · city
sch_ools.
$t23.000.
(740)446·7881
Neat. clean ranch style
hornS located m Rac1ne.
Oh . This home has 3 bedrooms . 1 bath . one car
~arage ,
storage barn .
large deck . applia nces
stay. call 740·949-3090
any!ime after Spm.

A Jump
on
SAVINGS

L.-.ililiiiiilliiii-.,J

Shop
Classlfieds!

Midclleport . carpeted . 1
car garage. (740)992-7501

Sl. No pets. $300 month
(740)446 3945.

bedroom. 3 bath , 4 5
cres. 2.5 car garage.
ackson. OH. Code
255 or call (740)286750.

I

fl2ll MOBU.f: HOM!2
FOR SALE .
1980 14lt60 Nausha. 2
bedroom . remodel bathroom . new porch roof. w/d .
stove. refr~gera tor. $6 .000
(740)992-0925
1982 Schultz 14)(70. 2 br..
1 bath. asking $5000. 304675·6 349
1993 14x70 Noms. 2 bed. room. 2 bath, garden tub.
diShwasher. 8x8 deck
$1 , .500 (740) 446-9480.

For Sale. 14X70. 3 bed·
room . set up in Country
Homes. $6.995.00. Mpve
in today! Call (740)3854367.
Home available for Immediate occupancy 1 Already
set-up on rented lot. 3 bedroom , 1 bath 10°o down.
$209.00
month
Call
Harold (740)385-9948

.

4 rooms and bath . 52 Ol1ve

5 rooms and tiath 1n
Middleport. Gas· heat No
pets. depoSit (740 )1422424 or (740)992·3439
Nice Large 3br Home 1n
Town . Upsta~rs laundry 1·
Year Lease . $550/month
plus Deposit (304)6754030 9·5

Mi&gt;111U: Hor.ns .
fUll RENT

.

2 br. mobile home c1ty lim'ltS of Pt. Pleasant 304675· 2359

2SA. 2BA, close" to Tycoon
Lake on '1f2 acre lot. No
pets . pa rtly furnished .
$365/month
Includes
water .
$250
deposit.
{740)379-9297.
3 bfldroom mobile hOIT)e m
pets
Middleport. . no
{740)992·5858
Mobile Home on Pr1vate
lot. Spnng Valley area Like
new· 3 bedroom , all electnc, 2 Oath , central air,
refngerator stove. wl dryer
hook up, attached garage.
water 1ncluded . 2 miles
fio m Holzer hospital $585 .
ref and depos1t req . No
pets
Cal
614·763."
0518/614·208-5840 .

1 and 2 Oedroom apartments. furmshed and
unhl1n1shed
secu11t'y
deposit reqwred . no pets.
. 740·_992·2218

Immediate
possess1on!
Only $213.68 per mo. New
3 bedroom. 2 bath mobile
home. Only m 1nuteS from
Alhens. 1·800-837-3238

bedroom
apt.
1n
Gallipolis Refe rence &amp;
cleposlt requ1 red
Ca ll
(740 )446-2468 after 4pm

Inventory Clearance
5 used homes unde1
S2.000 00
Call
M1ke .
{740)385-7671

$275

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock models at old pnces
2005 models arnvmg Now
Cole 's Mobile Homes
15266 US
50 East.
Ohio
45701 .
Athens .

2 bedroom apt. S!'l'cona
$450
Ave
Galt1polts
mon th. stove/ refn gerator
mcluded
was her dryer
'hookup. central a1r. 740441 -0 194 or 740-44 1tt84 .

(740~592-1972 .

~ wnere

You Get Y&lt;lur
Worth"

Money's

SSif Soc1al Secunty
$1 ,300 Net income We
can l1nance you a home
Call (304 ),736·3400
We have approx1mately 13
used homes for under
$2 000. 1·800·837 ·3238

r
-

R£.-u. Esr.m :
WA.'"Illl
I BUY HOMES

Need to sell your home
quickly because ·of a
di11orce . bankruptcy. JOb
transfer. or death Don't let
the bank foreclos-e and
ru1n your credit Local person buys hOuses Fast
CIOs1ngs All cash J1m
(7.-0t992·6300 No calls

2 bedroom house m
Pomeroy S275 00 plus
$275 00
depOSit
(?40)992-6215
or
1740I59Hl195
·'

••

213 bedroom· house in

Redwood Cape Cod
Home. 9 5 Acres . 4
!Bedroom. 2 Bath. 2 Car
jGarag e . A bove Ground
Pool B1 dweil, OH
'"'tacked Pond Code
14 or Call (740)388·
41 0

---

To

2 bedroom house. Stove &amp;
refrigerator mcluded. No
pets $275 month . S150
deposit Call (740)446-.
9061

3 bedroom Condo ·w1th
nver view. full basement
GallipOliS
Ferry. S700
month . Call (740)4463481 .

For Sal e - 1979 Homette, 2
bedroom, wlcen tra l air.
$3. 495.00 Call {7 40) 385·
. 4367 .

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Is
sul)tect to the Federal
Fair J:loualng Act of 1968
whk:h makes it Illegal to
advertise '"an~
preference, llmltelion or
discrimination bated on
race, eolor, religion , se:.:
familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any au~h
preference, limitation or
discrimination .."

HOl,Sf~~
FOR RfJ\'f

Point Pleasant. WV 4
Bedroom. 1 Bath . Many
menit ies. Open House
March 12. 10am-6pm
lcode 2165 or call
1(3041675·41 25

26 15 Mt Vernon 1 story.
2 br .bsmt w/ tam rm
bed rm. bath. jarge det. ,
g ar/s~o p , chain li nk fence
great ·tocation $79,000
304-675-6682
.

3 Bd rm Ranch, 2 bath, LA ,
FA, basement . 2 lireplaces, 2 car g,ara ge
Cen tenary.
(740)446·
1035.

10

How;.~
, FOR SALE

I'Rml':&lt;..'iiONAL
SEHV!CES

lwright@ic .net

(7 40)44 H285.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Now Available
Current &amp; Future Access
Areas Include:
Crown City, Mercerville,
Centerville, Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, Pt. Pleasant, ·
Rodney &amp; Bidwell

Gallipolis, OH

CASH

Dally In - Column: 1 : 00 p.m .
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day ' s Paper

• Start Your Ad!l With A Keyword • InClude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviiltions
• Include Phone Number And Address Wtten Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Ul"l' ~Nil
FOLN!J

Cratters. Rental spaces to
d1splay craft s. For more
:into. call 304-675-6130 if
:no answer leave message.

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• All

VISA

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oead~lrw

Word Ads

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

• WV. OH AND ALL LEGAL
•
STAT ES

• Requires no electricity or batteries.

Cnun,l y, UH

. In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
'Qtribune
Sentinel ·.
l\egi~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today...
.

PERSONAL
OXYGEN SYS1£M
• Easy to carry.
• Cool, quiet operation.
• Weighs just 3.6 lbs. i

We Cove
Melga1 Gallla,
And Meson

Counties Like

LOST: Orange long-M1red
cat near Vine Street .

family not

~ter

CLASSIFIED

AN~IlllNCEMENil;

$·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m::rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

and four assists.
Ohio 's other double-fi gure
sco rer wus forw ard Leon
William s - who earlier in
the . day had been named
MAC Freshman of the Year
-w ith 13 points to go along
with six rebounds.
"To me, the unsung here of
tonight's game wits clearly
Diamo nd Gladney,'' O' Shea
said: " He cam e · off the
bench and rea lly got our
team going again st the zone .
picking it apart. I thanked
him in the locker room
because he has accepted a
rol e that really no senior
wants to accept - playing
backup to a freshman .
"He's handled it with great
class. He's been ·a nientor to
Jeremy Fears. He's one of
the most popular guys on the
team and he's a big reason
why thi s season has been
.
success t.uI .,.
Hamilton led Marshall
with 18 points while Bunch
scored 12 and Mark Patton
and Ronny Dawn both added
eight.
. Next up fo r the Bobcats is
a MAC Toumament quarterfin al ga me again st · Kent
Stat e (20- 11 ). Tip-off is
sc hed uled for 9 · p.m..
Thursday at Gund Arena in
Cleveland.

HELlOS

74D-446-8500

www.mydailysentlnel.com

·---------·-------

bedroo ~

apartme nt
pe r month . plus
Oepos1t plus ut11ifleS. "3rd
Street Racme (740)24 74292
2

2BR apt State Route 160.
$400/month . stove/re"lngerator
rncluded .
washer 'd r ~er
hookup
(740)441 -0 194
or
(740 )44 1 1184
3
room
aM
bath .
stove 1ref ngerator. downsta ~rs All utilitieS paid 46
Ohve
Street
$450
(740)446·3945
Apphcat1ons be1ng· ta~en
tor very mce. clean 2 bed·
room apa rtment 1n country
settmg. yet clOse to town ,
on
C en tenary
Road
Washe r. dryer.
stove .
lndge. dishwasher provtd·
ed Total elect nc w/AC
Tenant pays eleclnc No
pets no smok1ng $400
deposll $475 pe.r month
Water 1ncluded 74(}-4462205 or 740-446· 9585
Ask tor V1rQ1n1a
Beaut1l ul 2·stor y townhouse .
ove rl ook1ng
Galhpohs
C1ty
pa rk
t&lt; itchen-lam•ty D A l A 3
B Fl; study. 2 baths. laundry
area
Fl;elerences reou1red. secu nty deposit
no. pets • $900 per ·m o
(740)446· 2325
or
(740)446-4425

�. Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

r

APAKI'I\It::IVIS
tURRFXf

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve from $344 to $442.
Wal~ to shop &amp; movies.
Call 740-446-2568. Equ al
Housing Opportun1ty.

Alder
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
LPN-PH or Medical
Asst./Medical Receptionist
Pleasant Valley Hospit'!l is currently
accepting resumes for a · full-time
LPN-PH or
Medical
Assistant/
Medical · Receptionist. Applicants
must have a current WV licens~ .
One-year experience in a physicians
office or hospital related area,
working with direct patient care.

MERCHANDL&lt;;E· ,

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

1992 Dodge Stealth. 24
valve turb.o. $4,000.
. Ecirty 90's Gehl loader,

Townhouse apartment s,
and/or small house·s FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
tor application . &amp; lfllorma·

$10,500.

'

3- black Angus Bulls,
$2.000 each .
2001 Cargomate cargo
tra iler. 58.500. (740)2569247 or ("740)645 -0870.

tion .
Efficiency apt. $300 month

plus utllit1es. No pets. Call
(740)446·431 3.

r

t=or rent- 24 'x32' 3 stall
Pole Barn. Private. At. 7.

For Lease · 2 . Fl oor.
Spacious,
Totally
Remodeled , 2 Bedroom, 1
1/2 BaJhs, Unfurn1 shed
Apartme nt. New Water
Heater and Appliances.
Downtown
Gallipolis.

52001 month. i740l446·
4782 GallipOlis.

JET •
AERATION MOTORS

Aequire!j .

LiV&amp;mJCK

(7401448·2002

(7401446·6882. M·F 8:00·
500.

(7401541-7470

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drain.s,
Driveways &amp; Walkways .
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monday,
Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
8.
Sunday.
Saturday

Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riverside Apartments in
Middleport. From $295·

(7401286·5395.

1000# bp.les, $7.00·$10.00

Pole Barn 30x50x 10FT
$6795. includes Painted
Metal. Plans. Instruction
Book, Slider, Free Delivery

Housing

Modern 1 bf!droom apt
Galt (7 40)446 -~390 .

&amp; $15.00, pick up load or
semi-toad,

SPA FACTORY

Square Bales nib:ed Hay.
$2 each leave message II
no answer (304)675·1118

0tm.E.TS

New Shipment
20-tubs in-stock
Cedar Knoll Mall ,
Kentucky Trading Post,
• Ashland .

(740)446-3736 .
Pilot Program- Renters
needed . Call · (304)7363409.

11~\\-.,I'IIHI

FlO

tURSALE

~=======~I

r

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows , lintels,
etc.
Claude
Winters,
Rio
Grande. OH Call 740-2455121 .

SPACE

tURRENT

r

For Lease: Office" or retail
spaces in very good condition. Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx. 1600 sq . 11. each. t
or 2 baths. Lease price
negotiable to encourage
. new
business.
Call

PETs

iiiiiiillal '
1

Appliance

in Henderson, WV. Preowned applicai1es starting
at $75 &amp; up -all under war·
ranty, we do service work
on all Make and MQdels

Ta~e

4WIIEELER'i
1966 Honda ·250R, orginal
plastic, runs good $3,000.

liNDA'S PAINTING

304·882·2924
1986 HonOa Foreman, 4
wd, excellent condition .
garage
kept,
$2000,

Chevy Monte Carlo SS,
'84, $6,500 neg . Call

(7401379·9110.

miles. 52.200.00
(7401992·5532

1998 Yamaha Wa,rrie r.
Excellent
condition ,
$2,600. 4-wheeler tiresvarious sizes and condi·

$25,500. (740l245·9i 62.

tions. (7401446·0048.

2004 Honda Pilot EX,
rated best full size SUV.
Red Pearl ext tan cloth
in!., all options, maintained
and babied, . 21 k miles

1999 Honda
Shadow
750cc. 6,200 miies, e)(cel·
lent" condition , $4 ,000. Call

$26,900. 304,773·6062

2000 Harley Davidson
Sportster 883 Hugger.
6,350 miles, new tires .
extras. $6,500 Neg. Day:
(740)645-3248, evening
aher 7pm (740)256-6589.

080.

1990 Ford Thunderbird
$700. 304-675-4949

(7401256-6824.

$2,9g5, (7401742·3802
1994 Chrysler Concord.
95,000 miles, runs great.
cru ise/tilt, power eiJerything.
$1 ,600
OBO.

(740)256·1233
(740)256-903 1.

or

~ 994

Mercedes 220. Good
condition, $6,800. Call

(740)245·9068.
1994 Mitsubishi 3000 G.T,
new transmission, CD
player. great cond. 304·
773-5177 or 304-593·
3619.
1999 Ford Contour SE-· 4
door, 24.300 miles, excellent conditiOn, $5,500. Call

96

Chevy

Buick

Park

$2.600.00:

Avenue

97 Chevy

Malibu $2,900.00:
95
Pontiac
Sunfire
GT
$2.950.00· 96 Pontiac
Sunflre $3,800.00: 95
Chevy Corsica $1 ,200.00·
Several more cars and
trucks. Riverview Motors,
2
blocks
up
past
McOonalds in Pomeroy

99 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo~ Loadep, 6 cylinder, excellent condition,
97.000 miles, $7,900

j13$
I·

Call (7401992·3490
Jeep Grand Cherokee 00
Laredo,
65K
miles.
El(cellent' condition. 4x4.
remote
start,
extras.

$13.000neg.
1380.

door

p

sedan.
Q

automatic

w

e

r

seats,windows,door-locks,
~ilver excel!. cond . 63,000
miles $6000. 304-675-

4x4

Must sale, 1984 COrvette,
350 engine. (740)992·
6797

6047
and Country. All leather,
66.000 miles, excellent
· condition, $10,500. Call

(740)245·9088.

'

PL, V6, CD, CC. new

shortbed 110.000 miles 5
speed, overdrive call 304882·2924 $4,500.

rotors/brakes,

Dodge

sharp, $2,300; 1998 Chevy
Z-24, $3,295; 1999 Ford

Dakota ex cab, $4.800:
1996 Ford Aero Start van .

Contour. $2. 100.

B A D Auto Salw
(740~4 48 1185

'11·3 (M·SI We buy used

93 Bu~k $1900. 304-576·

furni1ure.

$1 .00 each (3041593-5073

2383

ADVERTISE_
YOUB
BUSINESS

•

r

1993 Chavy 3500 Turbo

ON THI.SPAGE FOR
'ASLOW
AS
.

$26.00 PERMOtihlt
The Daily $entinel

992-2155

2000 Ford WlndSiar LX.
91 ,000 miles, 2 sliding
doOrs. power windows /1.
cruise $6,300 (304)67~ ~

4014
2000 Ford Winstar LX, •
81K, 2/sliding doors, seats
7, all power, rear air, tinted
windows, asking $6,600,

(7401446·1948 .

2004 Harley Davidson 883
cust'om.
black , 4,500
miles. S7,500. (740)441.-

1583.
2005 Kawasaki V-Twin 750
· Vulcan
Cy.cle,
never
dropp.ed, garaged , 50mpg

$4,400 (3041675·2942

2000 S10-LS, EX1-cab, 3rd
door, 4-Cyl, 5·Spd AC, CD.'
Askin!:!

tM~:~J

5spd,

02

$12,000.

Excell,nt condition·. rode

Aacon

title.

2004 FORO F·150 Lariat.
Super Crew, 10,000ml
2yr/~ , 000mi warranty left,
loadectlelrtraa, $30,000.

EX.

1979 Honda 750 1Oth
Anniversary
Limited
Edition . Needs igMion
work . Evening (740)2566870.
Low
mileage,

(304)523-3500; (304)6549318; (304)886-1668.
87 Chevy 1/ 2·ton , 2WD
350-engine. a 1,ooo-mues,
good condition, PW/PL,
orlg.
4
new
tires.
Red/blaCk.
$4,700.

(740)506-1367

400

lltllo. $3.000 neg. Call
(7401258·1526
or
(7401645·0446.

(30411534·5131.

$2,000.
1982 Honda 500 Trike
Faring wtstereo systein.
Ok
blue .
Evenrngs

'

WHAT'S FER

SUPPER,
MAW?

STANLEY TREE

TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
· ·
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

New shipment of
100% Cotton
Materiai...Patriotic
&amp; Quilters Prints

THE BORN LOSER
P'"WI-\'( SO

DO'Nt\ I~ ."'"i;::~ JJ~\ eLU£.

Hrs.: Thes-Sat 11-5
Sunday &amp; Monday

DUI'\1':')?

Closed

Improvement Needs
• Siding • Windows

''

Sac( .'t ,,

• Decks • Porches

• C&lt;.~rpurts • Garages

(7401256·6870. $3,000.

Baths

"No Job To Smllff"

'-"

Racine, OH
740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508
14 yrs. E)(

I &amp;UE.~

I FE.E.L &amp;.TIER
fl.-L~t;N!

1

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

THAT WAS A

PITY

,~,

Hill"s Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
45771
740-949-2217

plaauc and metal, 6~ lnchea-60 lncnes in stocl&lt;. Ron
Evans
Enterprise.
Jaclalon, OH 1(800)537·

PEANUTS
IT'S ALL SETTLED THEN,
SNOOPY.. YOU CAN STAY

See Brent or Brian Whal ey
M-Fri 8:30-5:00·

I-IERE WITH LINUS
AND LUCV, OKAV ?

SaL 8:30-Noon
Closed

SUNSHINE CLUB

7:00AM· 8:00PM
1/14/1

mo. pel

PICTURE THIS!!
Profe.•;sinnall,hulujcrHph~·

&amp; \ 'idqraphy
Any occasion-Portrait
• Ses.&lt;~ions, \Veddinw;.
Families, EnJ:aaements,

Babin

Ca ll Jan Car~J:IIU

740-741-.llll\

- - - --- ~.-·-

53 Raise, asldds

li:ast
2 t

Pass

54 Implement
55 Take in
56 Adjusts .
a watch
57 Ms. M"'kel
58 Approx.

color
21 Employ
24 Galley

DOWN

mover

25 Kuwait

counterpart

neighbor
26 Place
27 Alias

24 Fuel tanker 1 Blemish
27 Weasel kin
2 Gambler's
30 Like tho
town
Maleve
3 Memo abbr.
31 Lose
4 Falling slar
brightness
5 Reject
32 Papular
6 Card game
beverage
for two ·
34 "Tho Facts
7 Optimistic
of Lifo" star 8 Laud
35 Snowman
outburst .
accessory
9 Bang down
36 Coli around 10 Auel ·
37 Face cards
heroine
39 Kind of pasta 13 Waterfall
40 Social
19 Changed

•

contents

28 007's alma
mater
29 Gas
for signs
31 Museum
display
(2 wds.)
33 Tarzan's

38 Uses
the door
39 Saffron
dish
41 Bridge
tower
42 Dugout
VlPs

43 Sheltered
44 Well·
groomed
46 Inventory
wd .
47 A son

· of Zeus
48 Russian
veto word
51 Chit

nanny

35 Squint at
36 Comedian
Jay -

"Taking ·The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celel)ity Cipher cryptogram&amp; are create&lt;l !rom qliOtat,onS Oy lamous peoole past and tresent
·
Each letter 111 tne CIPMar staoos ror anotroer

Today's clue. f.equals H

VZJYIFAN

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

U 5 P VZ J S Y E Z

FSKKYGZNN. "

uz

AL

" UZAAZE

NWSJJ

XL G N. A V A P A Z

FSKK0

AFSG

FZOTL .LV

RLFG

T Y N Z. "

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I've had seven (heart) bypasses . one for each
major lood group." - Former baskelball Goach R1ck Ma;erus ·
. (c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 3·8

WORP
GAMf

' REALLY SAY·

iI

NICE.
NATE !
KEEP
WOI'.KING

Wednead~v. March 9, 200!1

By Bernice Bede Oaol
Something you've always wanted but
" '(OU POOR'
never felt you could achiav~ might be
TALE~TLESS"
HAI'.D'
in the offing for you iri the year ahead
You may finally find the way to accomplish that which you've labored over
tor some time.
P ISCES {Feb . 20-Merch ·20) Modify your behavior toward others
today with a lot of char m and tact .
Smiles and warmth will achisve sue·
cess and open up ways to friendship
even with those who can be a bit
pushy or grumpy.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - 11 could
be one of those days where it'll seems
. like everybody for whom you've done
favors in the past will want to reciprocate In some form or anothe~. It's your
turn to be the receiver.
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) - Friends
and associates will react warmly to
you today in response to your eagerto place their wishes on par with
DON'T ness
your own . It's always a sure-fire formula for being popular.
GE MINI
(May
21-June
20)
S urprisingly. that which · may appear
to be the most difficult t o do or seem
to offer the greatest challenge for you
today m igtht_ bs the ~sry thing that
ends up being the eas1e~t task to per·
form .
CANCER {June 21-July 22) It
always pays to be, alert. and today you
might profit from your keen perceptloh
o f another's experience. What you
learn trdm it will later bti put to your
beneficial use .
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) - Today you
can reap some of your greatest
I&gt;Rf.. ~
rewards from a dsveloPment Initiated
by another rather than from your own
1J.li~S
N~R LOSE.
spadework_ Be ready to take advanWtil-l
tage wh¥ opport unity knocks.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22} - Normally,
it . may not be too smart to let your
heart rule your head in making importcint decisions, but today could prove
to be an eKcep tion . Put yourself in the
other person's shoes_
- LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ) - If possible, work on projects today that give
you the latitude to express your . creativity and artistry. Tfle results will
plelise you and brin'g joy to others as ·
well .
'
~Is
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Your
popularity_Is on the rise at this point In
lime, so just conHnue today to be the
n ice person that you are. People like
. you tor yourself find not tor What you
have or can do for them .
l GUESS 1"HA1" 50UN96 &amp;E'I'reR SAG ITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 21) 1"HAN "GrOf'T"A FAL-L. 170WN"
Considerable enjoymi:lnt can be
dorivod today from expressing yourself in domestic ways ..Take the time to
try your hand at the culinary arts or
attempt something new in decorating
Your abode.
'
. CAPRICORN (Oec . 22-Jan . 19) When it comes to your most mean ingful relationships , dori'·t hOld back or
be bashful about using terms ol .
endearment . Those who care for you '
wlil be pleased to know you c are to r
them .
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20· Feb. 19) - If
there's somU thing luxur1ous you 'vo
been wanting tor you~elt but lind a bit
too expensive, try checking some dif·
ferent sources today. Your qhances for
finding lt at the right price are good .

lNG

WAS

I'LL ONLY BE GONE FOR A FEW DAYS:.
THEY'LL TAKE GOOD CARE OF YOU ... .

DON'T
LEAVE ME!
PLEASE
LEAYE ME'

0 Reorronge
!ellen of
four scrambled w:~rds
low :o

form

four. simple

GRIZZWELLS
\~ 1\\11.1 0~\i Of'
~MN&gt;

!he

be·

words.

R UL P YE

I I I' I I
C A XE T
· ·our government" grum·
S C E R T 1:; bled the speaker at a po!it1cal
5 I
I ~~~, rally, "is based on nol only the
I. 1. . . . . separation of church and
.-----,--'--~-.state, but the separation Df

I

I I· I

.ll.-LM-.l.l-.L..J.A_
· -'N-Y-'--'1money
and Jhe '·-·---·. "
7
I
B
r.a ( ornpl e:!! th~ chu~kl!!
1

_

.

cue:ed

b~· ~ dl i ~; ;,., tne rMSi"!!;J wo rds
you Oe v, lo;:&gt; •· em $lt!p No J be1ow.
V

&amp;!. PR1Ni NUMBERED
~ LEi1t~S 1N SQUARES

e
,

UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSW~R

·

;-:--os
S.CRAM·LETS ANSWE.RS
,
Chalet . Drill . Tinge- Advent. 0/DNT HEAR

Someone had given me a lool proal scheme to mal&lt;e
money. Granny .told me lha( whenever t~mgs sound
too easy. ittums out there's a part you

Dl DN r HEAR

ARLO &amp; JANIS
AklD

'f/HA1 A~E

'1'00 LOOKiuG. AP

SOUP TO NUTZ

t:dN5
OIJt~

~

Mid-Size 4Whec1 Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER

LC

WPJAYAPVZ

@

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

Scorpion Tractors

.
.
e

I GIJE-SS 11-1£1¢.
f'lf.N
AGI&gt;, MAUD

ADVERTISE

Now Available At

Hours

vessel
42 MedHatlon
chant
45 Chaucer
pilgrim
49 High splrlls
50 Tiny stream
52 Tumble
the wash

17 Phoenician
deity
18 ·Marvel
20 Everesl
guide
22 Poe1lc
adverb
23 KGB

British author and critic Anthony Burgess
wrOte, "If you write fiction you are , in a
sense, cor rupted. There's a tremendous
corruptibility for the f1ction writer because
you 're dealing mainly with sex and violence. These remain the basic themes:
they're the basic t~emes of Shakespeare
whether you like. it or not.~ ..
Luckily, this column is fact . But today's .
deal does feature a theme that you mighl
not ·have seen bEifore. You are South~ in
five diamonds. Since East has shown a
major two~suiter . West leads a low spade
(To say that West should have. picked the
heart ace is fact - perh aps!) How would
. you plan the play?
·North's one-no-trump open1ng promised
a good 14 to 17 points. Then, after East
announced a major two-suiter, South,
worried tha( East-West might be· able to
make four spades, blasted violently into
five diamonds.
You win with dummy's spade ace and
lead the queen for ·a ruffing finesse . If
East covers with the king , you trump, take
a diamond finesse , and make the contract, collecting three spades, six diamonds and two clubs. But suppose East
defends more strongly, refusing to cover
the spade queen. You discard a heart, of
course. You continue with the spade jack,
throwing another heart when again East
doesn't cover. What would you· do next?
You must lead dummy's last spade and
jettison your final heart. Then, you can
ruff a heart tO get into hand to t~ke the
lfump finesse. lqsing only one spade and
one club. If instead you try a heart, East
wins with the queen. cashes the club
ace, and plays a spade, West ove11uffing
you .

.
'
§~~~* ~ L;i·o~

Re8tockitW late Model S..htt9~·
and ·After .Ha rket Pa rls

Advertise
·in-this
space for $1 04
per month.

, WHAT HE WA';,

C.ODE.!

St Rt.68 ( Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

Sun.

C.LA.SS&lt;C.

COMMENT, GINA'

WHEN HE TELLS YOU
~ou· RE " WORKING HARr&gt;;'
HE'S SPEAKI NG. IN .

Whaley's Auto
Parts

97 Beech Street

992·:5194
or 992-66:55

'

IMPORTS
Athens

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE
10x10x10x20

~

41 Cook's

. '1ilur 'lllrthdal)':

IMPRoVEMENTS

--- -~ ---------------~--------------

~~ \S 7 WE.U., WI-\M D'Yf&gt;..i(i.IOI·jj'

1'\0~\:&gt;11.';',

,.ROcky;+~~'j
. J·h.tpp' i

• Room Add. • Mini

Middleport, OH

Pass

1 Friar' a !Hie
4 E·malt
7 Calo'a bear
11 Permit
12 " Aeneid" or
''Beowulf"
14 Many, ·
In combos
15 Picnic pelt
16 Salad

Astro.Graph

$16,800. (740)441 ·15d1.

YOUR
BUSINESS
·INTH.E
CLASSIFIEDS

':"1

BUI \\-\ISIS \UE.~DP--Y,
~---...·..._ .()RUTUS I

~

2001 Hornet BunkhOuse
32'. 12' expando, sleeps
10, 9)CCellent condilion .

9528

t DO\(\ i&lt;l'IOW_:I

All Your Home

Racine , Ohio

PSIPB. AC, 1111/crvlse, CD,

Honda

BARNEY

phone: (7401698-9319

Culverts

&lt;'t . '~

'.

1998 30' fihh wheel travel
trailer. double slide, ei(Cellent condition . $13,900 .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
unconditional
lifetime
guarantee. Local . refer:
ences
furnished .
Established 1975. Call 24.
t:~rs .
(740)
446-0870.
Rogers
Basement
Waterproofing.

•.

'I'll

ROBERT
BISSEll
~A'IS &amp; MO'JO!l51 CONSTRUCDIII
I_ FORSAU: .
2002 Stingray 20 ft. open
bow, Redl White,' 5.0 liter
V-8, Husller trailer, e~ce l­
lent cond .. garage kept,
price new $24.000 sel l
$15,700. call Troy Krebs

.. '.:,: 1(__

Construction .

• Kitchl· ns •

5t

North
I NT
Pass

An old animal

for a free estimate.

• Leave a messa e

' $13,500, (7401949·22 17

2002 Chevy 1500, VB,
miles,

'2Jfl

West

Opening lead; 4!0 3

How:

2002
Chevrolot
Cyotomjzed Begutar Van
tArcher Exnreos) 20,000
miles plus. excellent condltion has T.V., tape player,
and radio in rear section of
van, also in !rant dash.
Speaker phones In rear.
one owner. Never been
wrecll:ed . To view phone

$7,900.00 OBO (740)949- . (740)446·9539.
2621
29,080

-~

1!/~- ~­

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic, 10,000 miles,
blue. excellent condition ,

(740)889·5653

2000 Chevrolet·SIIverado
1500 LS, fully- optioned,
4x4.bedliner,trallerlngpkg.,Pewter ext .. Charcoal
lnt.,100k highway mlles,r
syn.oll ,
below
book
$12,900 . 304-nl-6062

• J 6 2
tQJ761 3
o!o K 42

Brian Reeves
New Home Cons! ruction. Reriwdeling,
Renovalions, Decks, Garages. Pole
Buildings, Roofs , ~iding. Windows &amp; All
Olher Residential Needs
Phone: 740-7 42-3411

Bams

• 304-675·8828

(3041675·5077

1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11
fl . utility bed. AC, cruise,
tilt , 350 gas, 5 speed
trans., · 69,000
miles.
Excellent condition. Call
(7401256·1526
or
(7401645-0446.

miles.

VANS
FORSAU

1993 Chevrolet Astro Van,
good condition phone

Asking $6,800 OBO. Call
(740)992-lm.

48,000

$5,995.

(614)231-1355.

2000 Kia Sephia 4-door, .
automatic, very easy on
(304)593·5073
gas, 70,000 miles, runs
like new, purpte in color.
1.995 Ford F-150 XLT, 8ft.
$3,800 or best offer.. bed, excellent condition.

1999

(7401992·

99 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
4x4, EC, gold, auto, PW,

Diesel, Red Pickup, Dully,
Power Windows. locks,
loaded
$8,000
firm

2000 Kia Sephia. $3, 10Q:
1999 Ford Ranger XLT.

Asking $8.000. (7401388·
8047.

4 WD. $4800. 080 304·

ers.- $1,100,
3679

1992 Ford F150 XLT 4x4

2000 Chrysler LXI Town

1996 · Honda Goldwing
1500 Aspecade . 23.700
miles, excellent condition ,
2 matching . helmets

675-2790

4 BBL, auto, new tires. rot·

1968 Ford F150, 79,300
mites. Excellent condition ,
5
speed,
overdrive.

"

10

A 8 6

... 6

Sunset Home
Construction

740-742·2293

2

2001
Jeep Cherokee
Sport 4x4 power windows
.&amp; locks, CD ,towing pack·
age 54,000 miles 304-675-

·~

(Before 6pm
~
Leove Men~ ... _

(606)232·63~9.

FoRSALE

(740136?·71.47.

[1401 985-4180
Affor 6pm

1995
Harley
Softait
Custom.
$9,995. Call

2003 SUzuki Vinson 500,
· 4- wheeler, 340 miles , Red'

1978 ( Jeep CJ5 6 cy. 304
engine, white fiber glass
·body, black top &amp; bikini top,
padded roll bar, sharp.
Excellent
condition.

(304)617·

(740)388·0140

(7 401992·0413

080. (7401592·2948.

86 8ronpo XLT. 4 WO, 302,

3 yr old Guilding quarte.r

·-··

Corsica

2000 Chrysler Cirrus 4-

$3,800;

$500.

(7401377·9943

1314

$400.(740)256· 1652.

(740)367·7413 ahor 6pm.

(7401704·

(740)446-0nl after 6pm. ·

(740)441·9378.

horse. Green broke.

2002 Chevy Avalanche
Z71. Fully loaded, onstar,
heated
seats, 29,000
miles, moonroof, 4-wheeldrive, CO, $23,400 OBO. .

$2,800.00: 96 Ply. Neon 4
Dr. $2,700.00:· 93 Buick
1992 Pontiac Bonneville · Regal 2 Dr. $2,700.00: 94

UKC Toy Rat Terriers. 6
Weeks. tails docked. $100.

1· Quarter horse mare, 4
yrs old . GrE!en broke,

$7.900. Call
3751.

$23,900. (( 40)453·5535.

Income Tax Specials

SE, excellent condition,
maroon, new tires, runs
good,
103,000 miles,

0358

$7900. (304)458·1881

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
le' me do it for you'

t

4
South

South

ACROSS

in new wool

740-992-7599 .

1989 Crown Vic. new tires,
neW battery. new · trans.
Very nice car. 101,000

For Sale Day old flhode
Island Reds St. run only

-

2001 Lincoln Navigator.
AWO, 5.4 VB , 3rd row seat. '
. ing, cassatte/CD-changer,
heated/cooled-seats, low
miles. e~~:cellenr condition,

2003 Pontiac Sunfire
approx. 20,000 miles

FREE ESTIMATES

Good, Call (304j675·1264

Tractor parts &amp; service,
specializing in Massey
Ferguson , Ford , · Long,
and Belarus. (740)696-

Used Fum1ture Store: 130
Bulaville Pike. Appliances,
mattresses,
dressers,
couches, dinettes, reclin- ·
ers, grave monuments,
much cnore . (740)4464782, Gallipolis. OH, Hrt

or 304·593·3619

miles, $6,500. (7401441·
0337. or (740)645·8153.

RESIDENTIAL

40 MmORC\'CIJN

2001 GMC Jimmy SLE,
CD player, all power, 4X4,
great cond. 304-773-5177

2003 Dodge Neon STX
4door, 4cyl., automatic,
power everything, 11 ,000

COMMERCIAL and

Purebred Border Collie
pups. Imported bloodlines.
1st shots/wormed. Classic
colors. 5100 each. Call

0358

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
re-co'nditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refriger·
ators . gas and electric
ranges. air conditioners.
. and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home

(7401367·7147.

(7401256·8816 ..

740-992-9922
Mon -Sat IOAM-5PM

2004 Ford Expedition 4x4
XLT. Power wi d sear
cruise. air, AMIFM. cas.
sette. CD. tilt. 5.4l , Triton ,
VB , tow plcg. Red &amp; grey
color,
35,000
miles.
Excellent
cond ition,

Specials of the Month on
Farmpro Tractor&amp;.
Farmpro 20hp, 2-wheet
drive, diesel utility trac tor,
$3899. Farmpro 25hp 4·
wheel dr1ve , diesel utility
tractor w/loader, $8999.
More units avaitabl9, all
w1th 1yr warranty, call for
more details . . (740)696· ·

MollOhan Carpet , 202
Clark
Ch"apel
Road ,
Pqrter, Ohio_ (740)446·
7444
1-877-830·9162.
Free Estimates, Easy
financing , 90 days same
as cash . Visa/ Master
Card _ Drive- a- little save
alot.

2002 POntiac Grand AM
SE. Red. A/C, CD. loaded,
56k miles. Euro taillights,
chrome accents, $8,995.
Excellent condition. Celt

t

K 5
... 1119 5 3

Bucket Truck

Homes • Vinyl

Wiridows • Roofing

green.-519,999. (304)412·
3380.

John Deere 2040, diesel,
EC , new tires, $8,950.
Ford 3000 diesel, $5,995.
(614)419-278 1.

(7401446-7398

Jeep
Grand
2000
Cherokee Limit~td 4x4, 4,0
automatic. Cassette, CD
changer, sun roof, heatedcooled seats, low mUes.
Excellent
conditiori.

39728 .SR 143
Pomeroy. OH

1981 Olds 98, 4dr, Runs

I \In I "il 1'1'1 II "i
~\II\ I "ill)( h.

Skaggs Appliances
· 76 Vine Street

2002 Ford Escort ZX2. "5
speed, 29,000 miles, air,
one ownes. Nice (740)44101 57 or (740)645·5~4 1.

~ew

Siding • New Garages
• Rep Iacemcnt

(6141471-4766.

or

$175.

1998 Je8p Cherokee
Classic, 4.0, a.utomatic,
fully loaded $5495. 304727·6924

,,

Top • Removal ~ Trim
• Stump Grinding

BUILDERS IDC.

one's memory.
'
\( ' RFI·
\10\l \11·.'\T
( 0\IP\N\

. K 9852
¥ K Q tO 7

·A 9 5 4

Tree Service

BISSELL

Let us help you ·
choose a luSting
tribute to ymJr i1wetl

(6141989·6448.

FORS,\LE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

choice

t~ast

"'¥ 1n

V.C. YOUNG Ill

'99, Special
Edition, 22,000 mileS, dark

(7401985·3929

Kenmore washer. $95;
Whirlpool dryer, S95: GE
electric
range,
$95;
Wh irlpool
refrigerator,
$150; Uke new Whirlpool
dryer. $250; Like new
Magic Ch9f washer, $250:
Octagon .end tables, $15
each; Tappan gas range.

(6141313·7096.

t A 9 8 2
.... Q J 7

furnace work

suvs

1995 Jeep Cherokee
Sport , 4 .0 8!..1tomatic, air,
excellent cond. $3495.00
304-727-6924.

• ia

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-Wcsl

• Room Addltlons I.
Remodeling
• New Garagea
.
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Oecb
We do It all e11cept

BMW · Z3,

Waim Morning
wood
heater Excellent condilion.
$250.00
Call:

Furniture: Sofa- chair sets,
$399: Sofa- love seat sets,
$4~9. Mollohan Carpet

Storage

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(740)696·1373. (7401591·
5888.

r

Brass bed , full size. Good
condition. Pretty new mattress(740)441 .0540.

1952 Plymouth 4dr. engine
runs good, body,excell .. all
orglnal. no ruSt 32,000
miles 304-576-2532

YOUNG'S

OJ ·ii/H L'l

... AQJJ O

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

High an.. Dry

Male Pekingese puppies,
7 weeks old , 1st shots.
CKC Registered. Call

·$350. Coli (7401446·4446.

(7401236-0028.

(3041675·7999

EXT 3901

1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

1\"orth

Wl'st

· Home • Auto • Life • Retirement ·
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
M·edicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Ask for Art

98 Cadillac Catera. Fully
equipped, leather interior,
low miles. mint condition,

Sheltie pups: 2MI2F, AKC,
Born 12131, Vet Chk'd,
shots &amp; wor"med. $500,
POP
(7401473·2785,

Warehouse

1

Impounds! Cars from $500
for listings 800-391·5227

·

1969 Ford XL, Galaxy 390 .
automatic, power steering
and brakes, AC , interior
excellent,
Mechanical
excellent, body good .
Needs minor repair and
paint. 53,300.00 080.

FOR SALE

Dachshund puppies. AKC
·I st shoj s. 1st worming.

or

$500! Honda's, Chevy's,
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police

8UIWING

L~---S~UPI'L::,:,:;;IDiliiiii-.,1

\I Ill\

Auros

1606l922· 7185

Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applicadons tor
waiting list for Hud-subsized, t • br, apartment,
call 675-6679 EHO

hay,

(7401698·2765 '

(9371559·8385

New 1 bedroom apt Call

good

Also Land Clearing

Janet Jeffers

2001 Honda Civic LX
Coupe. Green, automatic,.
excellent conditior-1 , very
clean, 73,000 highway·
miles, $8,395 negotiable

41BOOSR#7
Tuppers Plains, OH
~~~~ 45783

Buyers of standing timber

(740) 992-5232
SxiO, JOxiO,
IOxiS, 10x20,
10x30

IUR SAJ.E

..

GIWN

~ c~tg9g9~~®

33795 Hiland Koad
Pomeroy, Ohio

~F....f.~.R~•s•M£··-, ~j r:

u~v&amp;

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and F.inancial Services

~®~U~ll' l@,®Ufil@

www.pvalley.org

10

www.slaterunfarm.com

r

. AA/EOE

/

Phone

304-675-4340

Yearling Angus Bulls,
Mostly A.l . e)(cellent blood·
lines, priced reasonably.
Slat9 Run Farm, Jackson.

(7401446-7300

$444. Call 740-992·5064.

Send resumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o·Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

or
or

(7401541-74~1

NEW AND USED STEEL

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 room
apts Clean , no pets.
ReferenCe
&amp;
deposit
required Call (740)4461519_

(740)446' 7444 ·
(7401388·0173.

Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental
plan, . life insurance, vacatiorr, long.
term disability, and retirement.

4-H Pigs for Sale
Begin farrowing 1120/05
and still farrowing : Pure
bred Yorks and crossPlease call
breds. ·

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stock. Call Ron EvanS:,
1-800·537 ·9528.

Security and Key Deposit
ReQuired .
No
Pets.

rlO "~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Phillip

MIS&lt;.'tlJANEOUS .

(7401256·1245.

(740)446·4425

Help Wanted

www.mydallysentlnel.com
BRIDGE

Buy or sell. Riverine
Ant1ques, 1124 East Main
on SA 12"4 E. Pomeroy,
740· 992·2526.
Russ
Moore, owner.

a

Equal
Opportunities.

Help Wanted

Tuesday, March 8, 2005
ALLEY OOP

AN"nQ(JES

Check out
clean 2BA
counlry setting with W/D
hookup.
No
pets.
$350/ mo..
depos1t.

t

Happy Ad

, ; March 8, 2005

Uama 45 cal. ACP,, Duo
Tone. M1n1 Max, New In
box $300 304 675·2558

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON

References

www.mydailysentinel.com

I•

•

_

_ __ _ I

�"Tuesday, March 8,

www .mydailysenthiel.com

· Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

College

•
2005

Syracuse Police
Deparbnent makes

Basebaii · --~-------.,----

RiO Granpe splits twinbill with Miami-Hamilton
with a two base hit.
Barry Roe improved to 2-0 on the
season as he lasted five innings on the
hilL Roe struck out seven and walked
seven while yielding only one hit in
five shutout innings:
Miami-Hamilton · scored its' only
run off senior reliever Soloman Alam.
The bats went missing in game two
as the Red men dropped a 4-2 decision.
Rio missed out numerous scori ng
opportunities; it left the bases loaded
in the fourth inning and could not
score after getting runners at second

STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytribune . com

Red men
•
offense going
2-for-3 with a
double and
HAMLLTON -The University of
triple. Senior
Rio Gmnde Redmen baseball returned
T~~6-seb~zU center fielder
to the dian10nd on Sunday. splitting a
.s c 0 t t
doubleheader with Miami-Hamilto~. Peterman collected two doubles in
The Redmen won the lirst game 8-1 four plate appearances and drove in
and dropped the second game 4-2:.
three runs . . Junior tlrst baseman
Rio Grande (8-3) spent a lot of time Michael Branon and junior catcher
in the gap in the first game as it ripped Jorge Morales went 2-for-4 each with
live doubles and one triple. Junior sec- a double and sophomore third baseond baseman Mike Golom led the man Michael Warren went 1-for-3

0'

and third in both the third and fifth
frames. The Redmen would also
strand runners in the sixth and seventh
innings. Rio hitters struck out eight
times.
Peterman went 1-for-4 at the plate
and knocked in both Redmen runs ..
Golom was also 1-for-4 with a triple
and scored a run and junior shortstop
Matt Martin was l-for-2 with a double.
.
Junior lefty Brent Walterson · had
one bad inning and it cost him.
Watterson ( l-1) went the distance,

Division I-ll All-Ohio (iirls Teams
COLUMBUS (AP) -The 2004·2005 Associated Press
Division 1 and II girls All-Ohio h1gh school basketball
team . based on the recommendations of a state media

panel:

·

DIVISION I

FIRST TEAM: Shana Andrus , Barberton . S:loot-11.
senior, 19.0 points per game; N1ki McCoy, Sylvania
Northview, 5-11 , sr., 16.7; Jessica Minnlield, Tol. Cen1.
Cath., 5-6 , sr. , 14.1; Kate Verhoff, Elyrta. 5- 10, sr .. 20.6: ·

Magan Skouby, Mentor. 6-6 . sr. . 23.1. Maria Getty. Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne. 5-9. sr .. 14 .6. Michelle Jones, C1n.

Mt. Notre Dame. 6-2. sr., 16.3. Marshae Dbtson, Cols.
Mi111in,. 6-0, sr., 18.9: Star Allen: Cols. Independence, 511, sr .. 21 .1.
Players ot the year: Michelle Jones, Cin. Mt. Notre.
Dame; Maria Getty, Dayton Chaminade-Julienne; Megan
Skouby, Mentor
Coach of the year: Manny May. Tol. Waite.
SECOND TEAM: Abby Bunstine. Chillicothe , 5-7, sr ,
22.8; Jessica Moore, Youngs. Boardman. 6-0 , sr., 15.0;
Janna SchOn~ . Pickerington North , 5-7. "sr. , ' 12.5; Carlee
Roethlisberger, Findlay. 6-0, soph .. 16.5. Jacy Schulz,
t.1idpark. 5-8, Jr., 20.3; Aisha Jefferson , Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne, 6-2, sr., 14.2; Denise Tate, Cleve
GlenVille, B-1 , sr., 15.4; Carly Hawkins, Stow. 5-7, sr.,
13.5
'
THIRD TEAM: Maddie McGarvey, Zanesville, 5-7, Jr.,
19.9: Shareese Ulis. Tol. Waite. 5-6 , soph., 11 .3; Special'
Jennings, Cleve. E. Tech, S--6, soph., 17.8; Leslee MasonCox, Ciri. Winton Woods , S-9, Jr., 20.1: Amber Will , N.
Canton t-1oover, 5-5 , jr., 12 0'.
Special Mention
Jennifer Bushby, Gahanna L1ncoln ; Jodie McClain ,
Westerville SoUth; Allison Lawyer, Zanesville ; Brittany
Wells , Miamisburg; Britney Brooks, Harrison : Jessica
Harris, logan: Megan McAuley. Marietta ; leah Mottayaw,
Mansfield Madison; Jenny Kohr, Painesville Riverside ;
Audra Mihalic. Amherst Steele ; Kourtney Brown. Solon;
Cassie Schrock, Wadsworth ; Ta-myra Davis , Akron
Firestone. ·
· Honorable Mention
Tammy Anderson, Galloway Westla nd: Ashleigh Brown,
Delaware Hayes: Stephanie Foster. COi s. Brookhaven;
Mlk~ Marteina , Cols. East; Cydnei Stoudt, Pickerington
North;
Angel Morgan. Sprihgfield North ; Rachel Fiely,
Greenville; Amber Gray, Lal&lt;:ota West: Knsten Richardson ,

.Oxford Talawanda; Catherine Bove. Cin . Ursuline; Ashlee
Bridge, Cin. Princelon:
· .
Krissy Koester . Wapal&lt;:oneta; Stephany Johnson, Tol.
Bowsher; Tatyana McNeal, Tol. Waite; Allison Florian, Tol.
St. Ursula: Tia Simms, Fremont Ross;
Cassie Barandi , Painesville ' Riverside: Klerstin Fill a.
Chardon : ·Jamie Henry. Garfield His.; Jihann Williams.
Glenville; Ashley Barnett. Cleve. Lincoln West; Megan
Wydra, Norlh Roya l ton~ Ashley Carney, Solon; KeyAuna
Jenkins, Cle. John F. Kennedy ;
Sahar Nusseibeh. N. Canton Hoover: Brinany Mingo,
Barberton; Ashley Veal, Wadsworth: Brittany Orban. N.
Canton Hoover; Jen Uhl. Wadsworth; Abby Kacsandi ,
Wooster: · Jasmine Baity, Brunswick; April Melquist,
Youngs. Boardman.

DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM: lindsey Gaul, Navarre Fairless, 5-5,
junior, 21.3'points per game; Tan iesha Holland. Youngs.
Rayen , 5-8. sr.. 25,0; Shelly Bellman, Ottawa-Glandorf, 5·
10. sr.. 13.6; Kerri Kraus. Upper Sandusky; 5-, 0, sr., 20.0;
Radhele Fitz, G'arfield His. Trinity, 6-0, Jr., 27.0; Jessie
s 'lack. Thornville Sheridan, 5-1 1, sr., 16.4: Oennale
Speakman, Chillicothe Unloto, 5-7, sr., 25.5; Na'lalie
Miller, Dover, 5-9, sr., 20.3: Tricia Smith, Dre sde n TriValley, 5-11. sr.. 14.3; Lynzee Johnson. Bellbrook, 5-10,
jr .. 21.6; Christine OiSabato,.Cols. DeSales, 5·7, sr., 13.3
Player or the year: Rachele Fitz, Garfield Hts. Trinity.
Coaches of the year: Jim Miranda. Cols. Eastmoor
Acad .; Marty Bice, Dresden Tri-Valley.
SECOND TEAM: Kristin Daugherty, Warsaw River View,
6-0. soph., 17.9; Bree Hinkle, Cols. Bexley, 5-7, jr. , 16.4;
Jessica Hoeh, 51. Bernard Roger Bacon, 5-11, sr., 14.8;
Rachel Green, Canal Fulton NW, 6-2. sr., 17.7: Tori Arndt,
Beloit W. Branch , 6-2, sr.. 12.5; Amanda Mondrach,
Parma HIS. Holy Name, 5-9, sr., 20.2; Teresa Scott. Cols
Eastmoor Acad ., 5-7, jr., 15.2.
THIRD TEAM: liz Aepella, Sle4benville, 5-1 1_, sop)l.,,
22 .0. Kim Yourig, Pemberville Eastwood, 5-4, Jr., 18.5;
Allie Clifton,' Van Wert. 5-11, jr.. 19.9; Haley Kapferer,
Jef1erson Area, 6-3, soph., 21.1 ; Bayley Nosal, Chagrin
Falls Kenston_, 5-6 , sr., 15.6: Michele Derr, Urbana, 5-9,
jr .. 20.7
SpeCial Mention
Alethea Lamberson. london; Cherise Daniel, Cols
Eastmoor Ac_ad.; Kelly Polen, ~ad iz Harrison Central:
Lauren Flood, Ai~hmcind Edison local; Sarah Van Horn,

McConnelsville Morgan; Tiffany Youel, Byesville
Meadowbrool&lt;:;. Lauren Sharpe, Tipp City Tippecanoe;
Sakara House, Spring. Kenton Ridge; Oeseree Byrd, Cin .
Taft: Kristen Bradshaw, McDermott NW; Jackie Wamalay,
Gallipolis Gallla · Academy; Sam~ntha Leach. WCH
Miami Trace; Marissa Groves, Lancaster Fairfield Union;
Elaine DiCesare, FostOria; Paris Pugliese, Bay VIllage
Bay; Alexis Korovich, Geneva; Kealy McNally, Rocky
River; Oayna Smith, Garfield Hts. Trinity; Jessica Wood,
Warren Champion: Serena Farage , Medina Buckey;
Kathleen Gladstone. Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit Sarah

Bengals RB Rudi
Johnson signs
one~year contract

Hamilton. Salem:Tenishia Benson, Akron Hoban; Br;ttany
Cl.NCINNATI (AP)
'
HonorobleMonllon
Running _back . Rudi Johnson
oomin~que Daniels. cots. DeSales; Ayana Dunning,
signed a one-year, $6.3 milcots EaS1moor; carla Lawls, Sunbury Big Walnut; It' on contract Monday to. stay·
· Deanna Pickett, New Albany; Ashley Trimble. Cols.
HamiltonTwp.;
·w ith the Cincinnati Bengals
Mallory
Yaiko,
lisbon
Beaver
Local;
Amanda
Bryan,
this season, a year after he set
Carrollton; Trisha Uhl, Millersburg W. Holmes; Rachel
Poorman, Zanesville Maysville; Alana Pavol,. the team' s single-season
McConnelsville Morgan ; 'Lauren Valentjne, Byesville · recofd for .rushing yardage.
Meadowbrook; Whitney Williams, Warsaw River View;
Kirstin Wright, New Philadelphia;
Johnson set . a Ben gals
Emily Noble. Franklin; Jessie Carmack, unto Miami; record last season with ] ,454
Katie Schneider, Western Brown; Erica Richardson ,
·
f
Wilmington; Janna Smith, Indian Lake; Sydney Huntley, rushing yards. He is still ree
Gin. Purcell Marian;
.
to negotiate a long-term conKayle Waller. Thornville Sheridan; Brlanna Davis,
t
· WhIC
· b he
Proctorville Fairland; lauren Justice. lancastar Fairtield rae t WI·tb th e tearn,
Union; Sammy Pierce, Pomeroy Molgo; Victoria leali, sa~s he wants to do. He was
Jackson;
Heather Ellis, McDermon NW;
prud $1..8 m1lhon 10 2004..
Melissa Goodall, lexington; Paula Wargo, Port Clinton;
Megan Sellers. Norwalk; Tori Foltz, lima Shawnee; Carla
Johnson . became . a free
wf~~~n.g~~t~. Chardon Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin; agent on March 2, but the
Daniello Vala, Cleve. His. Beaumont; Ka~ie Fulkerson, Bengals designated him their
Parma His. Holy Name; Ainnie Mayer, Fairview; Hannah franchise player on ' Feb. 15,
Ryan, Perry; Nltasha Keyes, Warrensville Hts.; Eulise
·
h
ld
·
.Dickerson, Warrensville Hts.; Alexis Karel, Mentor lake meantng t ey COU
retain
cath.,
him by matc hing any offer
Carrie Dyer, Copley; Brinany Tabron. Caoton Cent. sheet he signe. d with another
McGarry, Salem,Alex D'Amico, Akron Hoban; Kristin May,
Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit: Kara Murphy, Akron St. VincentSt. Mary; Laurel lawson, Navarre Fairless.

team.

, rushing games in a season and

Under the NFL's collective led the Bengals with 12
bargaining agreement; a fran- touchdowns.

H&amp;R B!ud. you cau walk in
Get the money Yt:?u 're loo~ing
to pay off bills and other dctn f11st.

With.right planning, inheritance can help realize

goal~

Receiving an inheritance is not as simple as it sounds, and it"s important to handle the gifl the right way because often it's a once-in-alifetime opportunity.
,
An inheritance, whether from parents or a long-lost relative, can offer people the chance to realize lifelong goals -or to friuer away the

Need ~oney to
pay Taxes?
'VIsit the Problem
Solvers!!
Quick declsl.-ns!!
Walk out with
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li fe time savi ngs of a loved one.
·
'
.
''II \ definitely a mixed blessing.'' says Greg Jacobs, regional managing director of Wachovia Wealth Management based in Atlanta. Ga.
··Inheritances almost always have emotional issues and most people feel an obligation to pass it onto their children, or at least not watch it just

disappear."
·
.
A
lump
su
m
of
money
typica
ll
y
resuhs
in
a
myriad
of
investment
opportunities,
from
family
members
with
"can'tlosc"
propositions fur
IM~Ioc:k.comfor an office near you .
the_ir ~mall busines~es to un~avory finanCial advisors who promise to doubl'e the money.

"There are so many people offering 10 help that il can be overwhelming," Jacobs said. "And·it's extremely difficuh to differentiate people who
arc looking 10 sell you something from those who are really looking out for your best interests."'

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Before making any in vestment decisions, spend some time considering the tax. implications. In m'ost cases, the estate will pay whatever
taxes arc due before. dispersing funds to heirs. but it's wise to confirm that, notes Pau·l Browner, execu_tive director of the AssoCiation of

Pr&lt;!cticing CPAs

.

If the inheritance incl udes stocks, contlrm that the cost basis has been changed to reflect new ownership, said_ DaViQ Berman, 3. Certified

Financial Planner (CFP) in Baltimore, Md. For instance, if an uncle left I00 shares of IBM stock, the tax basis is their value on the day he
died, nol what he paid for them 20 years ago. Thai information should·be detailed in the estate's paperwork, but if it isn't, il could cause
significant tax problems when th~ stock is eventually sold.
.
Depending upon the income, if any. derived from the inheritance, some people may need to stan paying quarterly estimated tax es, Browner
adds.
.
Take it slow
While most people who inherit money probably will want to re-invest il, experts advise moving slowly. "I usually recommend that people
buy a six-month CD- th at gels them off the hook so they can think through these very important decisions." Berman Said.
It's generally not a good idea to leave the money where it is. because the goals are likely 10 be very different than those· of the deceased

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"Some people feel like 'if it's good enough for Dad, it's good enough for me,' but that's not always true," Browner said. "Chances are good
that they were lookin g primarily for income. while someone younger might be looking for growth:•
Many people will automatically think of pay ing off their mortgage, bullhat's nol necessarily a good choice either.
"It.'s not an investment, because you'll still make the same profit on a house whether the mortgage has.been paid or not," Berman said. Apaid,
for house is less liquid than other investments so the money will be more difficult to access in case of an emergency. Berman recommends

working with a professional planner 10 create a three-legged portfolio that addresses growth, income (current or future) and salety.
"One of the biggest mistakes people make is looking for income and putting {he entire pot into bonds, but if interest rates go up, bonds may
lake a hig hit." :
·
For most people, mutual funds are a better choice than individual stocks. "Your ·mom always said never pUt all your eggs in one basket, and
mutual fund&amp;are the easiest ways 10 gel .in as many ba•kels as possible," Berman said.
Any portfolio should he based on personal goals and objectives, ·says Bryan Lee, CPF of Strategic Financial Planning in Dallas, Texa:•.
"E.vety new client meeting includes a discussion on what life would be like if you had all the money you ever wanted and how it would be
different from the way you live now. The answer 10 that question helps us figure oul the best answers to your investment decisions."
· Clients also are asked abnullheir tolerance for risk so Lee can recommend a portfolio that they' ll be comfortable with as the market
·changes. A client whose needs are relatively simple- children's ed ucation and enough to retire- won't need a risky portfolio designed to
earn a 10 percent return.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CGM

version of tlie National Endowment for
the Humanities ami has picked Meigs
County as the location of their latest
POMEROY - The Meigs County Chmnaqua, which will focus on "The
Chamber of Commerce was introduced Roaring Twenties."
to Chautauqua at their "business mind- · The Chautaqua will take place Jqly 12ed" )uncheon , held Tuesday at the Wild 16 at the Chester Commons in Chester.
Horse Cafe.
The Ohio Humanities Council wil l proChau1a4ua is a Native Americ:an word vide a lent and $500 c~airs for the event
describing the shape of Lake Chautaqua that is estimated to cost $50,000. The
in New York, the one-time site of educa- Chester-Shade Historical Association is
tional lectures and theater. Chautaqua 's responsible for raising $7,500 to· support
lectures, and , theater prolluctions have local entertainment that wi l) perform at
been modernized to create a 1'a gather- the Chautaqua.
ing" of living history, according 'to ,Fran · Actors . will portray notable historical
Tiberzio . director of public relations for figures, including Henry Ford, Babe
the Ohio Humanities Council, who spoke Ruth, Zora Neale Hurston, John Dillinger
to chamber members about the upcoming and Zelda Fit. zgera ld. After delivering
event, to be held in July in Chester.
Tiberzio said her organization is Ohio's
Please see Chamber.- AS

. Beth Sargent/photo

Fran Tiberzio, left , director of publtc relat1ons for the Ohio Humanities
Council. and Billi Bentley, Meigs County tourism coordinator, unveil the
new Meigs County 2005 Visitors Guide. Tiberzio's organization will bring
an Ohto Chautauqua to the Chester Commons in Ch esler July 12-16.

Injured Village worker .
released from hospital
OBITUARIES

BY BETH SERGENT
Tattcrson was injured when
. BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTIN ELCOM he and
fellow Street
Department employees were
· POMEROY - Pomeroy clearing brush on West Main
Street Department employee Street. He received a head
· Steve Tatterson of Racine is injury after being struck by a
al home recupe.rating after tree that they were removing .
being injured on the job last
Friday in Pomeroy.
Please see Worker. AS

• Named branch manager.
SeePageA3
• Scarberry prQITloted at
OVEC.. see Page A3 .
• UMW meets. See
Page A3
• Greer Museum to
display works of Randall
Enos. See Page AS
•: Breakfast tickets on
sale. See Page AS
• Brooks-Grant Camp
meets. See Page A5

WEAmER

Detcrmirting when the money will be needed helps planners decide whether it should be placed in aggressive -investments that may nucJuate ·
over a period of years or more stable alternatives with a lower n;turn. .

.

,

"We can't lei I what an inveslmcnl.will do from year to year, but we can pretty well tell over a 10- or 15-year hori zon, within a percent or two,
what the return will be," Lee said.
Planning chrldren's
inheritances

.

GET
STUCK

HERE!

While an inheritance is still a taboo topic in many famil.ies, haby boomers are more likely to be proactive in planning their children's
inheritances, Jacobs said.

"People inheriting money now don 't necessarily have a good idea of what their parents wanted done with the inheritance. I see that starting to

Detalle on ~ page A6

INDEX

www.ovbc.com

shift now because baby boomerS are much more willing to talk to their children about money."
It 's a good idea to di scuss the issues involved with an inheritance with childrei-1 , so everyone can be clear on What the plans are.

2

SE.CilONS -

~2

PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

.Comics

Bs

D~ar

A3

Aliby

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports
Weather

"You have a plan whether you know it or not- if you ·don't make your plans clear, you've planned to let someone else make them for you,"
Jacobs said.
Karl Keblerlll*
Certified Public Accountant
e-mail:kkebler@charter.net

· • Eastern falls in regi.onal
semifinal. See Page 81

Ask About
Our On-Line
!;tanking

www.ovbc.com

·~-e·

·

The Chamber mee~ Chauta~qua

SPORTS

relative .

Investme nts also may be divided into various "pots" with specific goals tied to time horizons such as ·college education or-retirement.

'hnrBank/n~.

··n.

INSIDE

1-800-HRBLOCK or visit

618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6674

..

Page AS
• Art.hur Yeater, 62

'

with your taxes and walk out with
a refund anticipation loan check.

donation, Aa

chise,flayer is p'aid the averf
age o the top five salaries.o
players at the same position
the prior season.
The deal allows toe Bengals
to keep Johnson while they
see whether Chris Perry. their
top draft choice in 2004, will
develop into ' their running
back of the future, Perry was .
'd · d f'
h f ~·
Sl ehne
or muc o ••IS
-rookie season by injuries.
· bro ke the team
Johnson•
rushing record that Corey
Dillon, now with the New
England Patriots, set with
1.435 yards in 2000. Johnson
set another Bengals record
with 361 carries, exceeding
D'll • 340 · 2001
I On S
1.11
·
Johnson also tied the team
record with fiv.e 100-yard

Taxes: Tips SPECIAL EDITION
mof1e)'

lab awarded
accreditation, Aa

scattering eight hits and four runs
while fanning five.
Up next for the Redmen: Tuesday at
Bluefield College.
REDMEN NOTES: Rio's games
on Saturday versus WVU-Tech and
St. Vincent at WVU-Tech were rained ·
out. The make-up date with
Cedarville has been set. for April 18 at
Robert Evans Field beginning at 2
p.m. The Redmen and Yellow Jackets
were only able to play two games of
their scheduled four-game set, Feb.
25-26.

Mayle, Mantua Crestwood.

Cath .; Ka lie Rock, Wooster Triway; leah Seaman.
Louisville; E¥elyn Woods, Beloit W. Branch; Katherine

Holzer CHnic

A.6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

T~~~cy~seven

ep1ployees
la1d off at Rockwell .

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE . COM
GALLIPOLIS - · Twentyseven hourly emp loyees of
ElectroCraft
Engine'er~u
Solutions. a division of
Rockwell Automation, have
been laid off from the plant
on McCormick Road m
Gallipolis.

Students compete
in Speech Meet
MIDDLEPORT- The tear of speaking in front
of a crowd is one of the most common social phobias, but students at Mid-Valley Christian School
are working to overcome the fear before they have
a chance to acquire it. ·
At a speech competition held Friday, students in
kindergarten through sixth grade recited poetry,
patriotic readings, fables, and Scripture passages
before an a~dience of parents and friends - and a
panel of three judges.
Linda Rowe, Gladys Cumings and Norma Torres
were judges for the event, and tirsl and second
place winners were selected from each class: Grade
l, Brandon Johnson and Wesley Reitmire; .Grade 2,
Jcnna Thompson and Andrew Briles; Grade 3, Kyle
Johnson and Tanner Riffle, Tyler Qualls and Nick
Sprouse ; Grade 4, KarHe Hall ru1d Jesse Vaughan;
Grade 5: Beth Sprouse and Colton Stewart; Grade
6, Kateland Hurlow and Jayme Vaughan, first
place, and Kevin Jamison, second place.

"We notified the employees
tWO week s ago that they
would be laid off last week:·
said Steve Smith, spokesman
for Rockwe'll at its corporate
oftlces in Milwaukee, Wis .
After the layoffs. 181
hourly and 80 salaried
employees remain at the
Please see Rockwell, AS .

Rotary begins March food drive
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM
- The
POMEROY
Middlepori!Pomeroy Rotary
Club has kicked ,off· its
"Nelghbors
Helping
Neighbors" food drive. and

Powell"s Foodfair and several
local organi zations are taking
the iheme 10 heart by joining
in the effort to stock local
food pantrie,.
The Rotary Club will
Please see Rotary, AS

place in

New Smokey Bear license plate.now on sale
STAFF REPORT
on the Internet, according to promoting wildfire preven- - -- - - - - -. the Ohio Department of . tion, and now Ohioans can
tak~ that pledge a step furPOMEROY - Ohioans Natural Resources.
can · proudly display their
"Ohio is proud to be the ther . by purchasing one of
support of wildfire preven- first state to initiate a special SmQI;.ey's plates."
Each Smokey plate sold in ·
tion and education by pur- Smokey Bear license plate ,"
chasing the new Smokey said John Dorka, chief of the Ohio costs $25 above the price
Bear specialty license plate, ODNR Division of Forestry. of a standard license plate,
now available at deputy reg- "Smokey Bear has long
Please see Plate, AS
istrars across the state and been admired for his role in

Brion J. R -/ photo

Braden and Tyler Petry, front, were the fi rst to contribute to the
"Neighbors Helping Neighbors" food drive, and are joined by Lee
Powell, manager of Powell's Foodfair. Rev. Walter Heinz, Rotary .
president and President-Elect Brenda· Barnhart Rob Edwards of
Chester built the special house used in the grocery store display.

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Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone: 740-992-7270

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17110">
              <text>March 8, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="128">
      <name>coleman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4375">
      <name>harl</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
