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                  <text>Sunday, March 21, 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt- Pleasant, WV

Page 06 • i»unbap i!imtli -i»enlinrl

Deer population
showing up in
suburbs,A6

U.S. Marines kill
two in Haiti, A2

tne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,lt~l"\1 ' .... ,.\.)1

, J , '\t)

SPORTS
• OVP Super 10 teams.
See Page 81

\141\J~\\

iJ1

\1\1 \ lll .' ~ , ! t,lll

1\ l \ 1\

Man arrested on drug, assault charges
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BAEED®MYDAILYSENfiNEL.COM

POMEROY
A
Coo lvill e man was jailed
Friday on charges of possession of cocaine, aggravated
robbery, felonious assault,
and assault on a police' ofticer, and a deputy sheriff was
injured during the arrest.
Meigs County Sheriff' s
deputies Danny Mohler and

Rick Smith arrested Jeremy
Smith, 28, after a call to
Rock springs Road, near
Kingsbury, where a suspicious vehicle and person had
been seen.
"Upon arrival, officers
found Smith outside of the
vehicle, attempting to break
the windows out of the vehicle ," Sheriff Ralph Trussell
suspect
reported . ''The
refused to comp ly with offi-

cer's orders to stop. When
deputies attempted to arrest
Smith, he re sisted and
assaulted both officers."
Mohler later required medical treatment. Trussell said.
After Smith was arrested
and cuffed. he attempted to
flee the officers when hi s
pant s fell down, causing him
to trip and injure his head.
He was transported to
0 ' Bleness
Memorial

Hospital and later released
into sheriff's custody.
Trussell sa id an acquaintance of Smith. who was
with him at the scene. was
also injured.
"(The victim) reported that
Jeremy Smith had assaulted
him, bitten him. stolen
money from him and tried to
force him to usc illegal
drugs," Trussell sa id .
Trussell said two small

.

INSIDE
.' '

~

'

.. 1··1!·--·

·t: '

~

. ,.
.

• Veterans Stadium
reduced to rubble.
See Page AS
• Arcadia employees
honored. See Page AS
• Ohio Marine killed
in mortar attack.
See Page AS

When you climb on your bike, be sure your helmet is on your head. That was the message of
Margo Marazon of Ohio University's School of Osteopath ic Medicine, to Dierra Jenkins at
Saturday's Healthiest held in the Southern Elementary School gymnasium Saturday. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

r-~: -

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

RACINE - While the
focus of Saturday's Meigs
County Healthfest was on
creating an awareness of
nutrition, fitness, and wellness activities, there was no
neglecting the role which fun
plays in a well-rounded
healthy lifestyle.
Greeting the several hun-

WEATHER

.

pla ... tic bag..., containing what
i' believed to lle cocaine

were culleL·ted from in ,ide
the ve hicle.
Smith
we"
arraigned
Friday befmc Mcig' County
Court Jud)'e Ste1en L Story.
and deni~d the charge'
agai nst him. A preliminary
hearing

was

.o,;et

for

Thur,day. ctnd Smi lh i\'&lt;t'
released on a $50.000 personal recognizatKe bond.

.

Five-year-old Nick Roush in a hat created at Saturday's
Healthiest was one of many children entertaining from the
puppet stage. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Meigs County Healthfest registers success
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

-- ~ - ·

ol l • . l • tll l"lo ltlttooJ , , , , ,,

dred visitors to the Healthfest
held at Southern Elementary
School and joinin~ in the
games were Holzer s Benny
the Bear and the State
Highway Patrol's Teddy
Trooper.
"Rockin' Reggie" of
Health Recovery Services
Drug
Awareness
and
Prevention Program s, kept
things moving for the young-

sters with karaoke, hula hoop
and limbo contests, along
with music for dancing as
their parents sat on the sidelines and applauded.
This year's puppet stage
was popular with the youngsters along with face painting, and the beautiful bonnet
creations by Heart of the
Valley Head Start personnel.
The second graders at

Southern entertained with
songs and an exercise routine
and the Rock- 'n-Country
Cloggers performed during
the day. There were plenty of
informational handouts and
favors from various agencies
and organizations at the
numerous booths which surrounded the gymnasium. ,
Dr. Douglas Hunter was
there doing height, weight,

and BMI's; Holzer Medical
Center was testing cholesterol and blood glucose; and
Pleasant
Valley
Home
Medical Equipment was
doing oximetry measure ments.
There were special displays
from the Meig s County
Council on Aging. the Meigs
Please see Healthfest. AS

MCCI distributes free colorectal cancer screening kits
· Dotolla on Poco A8

The importance of early detection of
colorectal cancer was stressed
Saturday morning as members of the
Meigs County Cancer Initiative
(MCCI) distributed free colorectal
cancer screening kits in the lobby of
Farmers Bank. Sixty people came by
to get the "Screen for Life" materi· ·
als. Saturday's program was dedicat·
ed to the memory of Abbie Stratton
who recently died of colorectal cancer. The annual event was sponsored
by MCC I, Meigs County Health
Department. Farmers Bank, Holze r
Clinic and the Holzer Medical Center
Wellness Department. Here Bertie
Lance of Pomeroy completes paperwork for her screening kit. With he r
are from the left, Donna Nelson,
seated. Carolyn Grueser. and Carol
Jean Adams, R. N.. left. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

/
....' ,_ ..... --- -·~"'
.

'. ~.

USDA
Family

'

Beef Loin

........
,
$
T·Bone or\
Porterhouse
Steaks

99
lb

All Varieties
~Excludes Lactose
rea and Premium
Orange Juice) Half
Gallon Juice or

Kroger
Half Gallon
Milk

Chilean Red Globe
with Seeds or

Red or While
Seedless
Grapes

12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

itl A004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

• Hither ACidtmlca • H1nda on tralntna and tM~trltnct 1 Stam\tll patti to an A••oclilttl Dtlfll or hilhtr
• Dtaltntd for hlth achoolatudtntl 1 Ttchntcally challtnetne
Course• a{fered: Healthcare, Auto Service
au-.. Hllll GaUlt o+.cadlmV Jacklon Olk Hill ~~t VllltV Ioiii~ QIIU8 VlRtllll County Wtlltlon u; ollllo Ol'lnclt and lnformat Ion Technology
,,

�Page.A2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 22,

2004

Iraqi-born architect :
first woman to claim
prestigious prize
Bv ANDREW
BRIDGES
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WEST
HOLLYWOOD. Calif.
Zaha Hadid, an lmqiborn architect who
struggled for years to
get her audacious and
unconventional designs
built, won the prestigious 2004 Pritzker
Architecture Prize on
Sunday,
the
first
woman to receive the
profession ' s
highest
honor.
Pritzker jurors singled out her designs
for an Austrian ski
jump, a German fire
station and an Ohio art
museum.
Pritzker Architecture Prize winner for
u.s. Marines patrol inside the Cite Solei! district in Port-au-Prince, Haiti . (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)
Hadid "is probably 2004 Zaha Hadid poses in' West
one of the younge st Hollywood, Ca lif. Hadid, an Iraqilaureates and has one born architect who struggled for
of the clearest arc hi- years to get her audacious and
tectural
trajecto ri es unconventional des1gns built, was
we've seen in many named winner Sunday, March 21,
years. Each project 2004. She is the first woman to the
BY PAISLEY DODDS
unfolds
with
new win architecture's most prestigious
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
excitement and innova- prize in its 26-year history. (AP
tion," said California Photo;Kevork DJansezian)
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
architect
and juror
- Relatives wailed in grief
Frank Gehry. a 1989
over two people shot by
intei·est in her work.
Pritzker winner.
American troops as anger
A year later. Hadid said,
· Hadid, 53, now a British she won four competitions,
grew over the U.S.-Ied
citizen, exploded on the followetl by li1Ltr more the
peacekeeping operation, with
world architecture scene twu following year. Among
some Haitian s on Saturday
decades ago when she won them were two museums :
demanding the United States
a competition to design a the Rosenthal Center for
return ousted President Jeanclifftop resort above Hong Contempora ry
Bertrand Aristide.
Art
in
Kong
.
The
project
was
Aristide, in exile in the
Cincinnati anti the National
never built, but it thrust her Center for Contemporary
Central African Republic
into the public eye.
since Feb. 29, was to tly to
Arts in Rome.
For years , Hadid was
Jamaica on Monday to be
"Without ever building.
most
famous
fer
being
the
reunited with his daughters,
Zaha Hatlid would have
architect whose buildings radically cxpantlctl architecwho stayed in New York
universally lauded as ture\ reperloit·e of spatial
during the upheaval. He has
distinctive
and dynamic claimed he was forced out
articulation." juror Rolf
remained unbuilt.
by th~ U.S. government.
Fehlbaum said. Now that
"It
became
like
a
cause
A delegation of American
her design s have begun to
celebre, because it perpetu- take sha pe, "the power uf
and Jamaican officials ated this wondering 'why lle r innovat ion is fully
including Rep.
Maxine
not,' 'it's not possible,' 'it's revealed."
Waters, D-Calif. left
not buildable,"' Hadid said
Miami Saturday night in a
Her 60-person London
during a recent interview in finn.
chartered jet to bring
Zaha
Hadid
West
Hollywood.
Architects. h:\s been floodAristide to Jamaica.
Hadid said the "very ed
with
co mmissions,
Tile tlight was expected to
drawings
she
creextreme"
includin g a BMW factory
land in the Central African
Republic on Sunday after- U.S. Marines guard the entrance to the National Palace while others leave to patrol the perime- ated for architectural com- in Germany, an arts center
petitions were met with in Oklahoma anti a ll'ai(l
noon. Aristide was scheduled ter of the Palace in Port-a u-Prince, Haiti .(AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)
"They did not station in Ital y.
skepticism.
to arrive in Jamaica on
believe it was possible,"
H&lt;1tlid wi ll be awarded a
Monday morning.
possible more thari two peo- French peacekeepers were
Aristide claims he is still Hadid said of her inventive
$ 100.000 grant and a
Haiti 's new prime minister, ple were killed in the gun- sent to secure key sites and the legitimate leader of Haiti,
designs. "There was not bronze medallion during a
Gerard Latortue, has warned battle.
provide security. Their mis- and that the U.S. government any work like that being
May 31 ceremony in St.
that Aristide's return to the
sion
has changed, however, forced him out. U.S. officials
Several people also were
Petersburg, Russ ia.
region would only increase injured in Friday's gunbattle. and now they are ,working say Aristide asked for help done.',
She
credits
the
1997
The Pritzker Prize, sport
tension in Haiti, and said he
One was Evans Dubuisson, with Haitian police to disarm and that they saved his life by opening of the titanium-clad sored by the Chicago famj..
would not meet with the ·
his
departure Guggenheim Museum that ly that developed the Hyatt
17, who said he was shot in the general population. U.S. arranging
ousted leader.
troops
have
shot
and
killed
U
.S.-chartered
air- Gehry designed for Bilbao, Hotel chain, was created 26
aboard
a
U.S. Ambassador to Haiti the side after crossing the at least six · Haitians in the
craft during a bloody rebel- Spain, with sparking greater years ago.
James Foley said Saturday street to buy candles for his past week.
lion.
·
family.
that "Jamaican authorities
The
chairman
of
the
U.S.
Jamaican Prime Minister
Residents said it was the
are certainly taking on a risk
Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. P.J. Patterson, the chairman ·
first
time
they
had
seen
the
and a responsibility" by
the
Caribbean
U.S. troops enter the gritty Richard Myers, arrived of
accepting Aristide.
I
Saturday to get a closer look Community, invited Latortue
The
Daily
Sentinel
Meanwhile, U.S. Marines neighborhood, blocks away
at the operation.
to visit Jamaica this weeksaid the two men killed late from the National Palace, at
Subsr;ribe
today
• 992-2155
He visited U.S. troops at end for talks . But Robert
Friday during a patrol were night. Since Aristide left the
www.mydailysentinel.com
their barracks, shaking hands Ulysse, an aid to Latonue,
gunmen who had previou sly country, residents here with Marines. But he did not said the prime minister
fired on the Marines. haven't had electricity or talk with Haitian officials.
would stay in .. Haiti and
although their weapons were water, and trash piles have
At
a
news
conference,
he
focus on setting up his
never recovered. Witnesses reached heights of more than
said:
"As
far
as
Aristide
's
Cabinet.
·
said
the
dead
were I0 feet.
return to the region is conAlso
Saturday,
I0
Also
Saturday,
gunfire
bystanders.
cerned, if that increases the Dominicans taken hostage
Tuesday - March 23rd
'The Marines have very broke out in the seaside slum
violence
here,
then
that
by
Haitians
along
the
two
strict engagements of a tar- of Cite Solei I. Residents said would be extremely unhelpcountries' border were freed
get," Maj. Richard Crusan the fight began when two ful."
after the Dominican govern(Formerly Baers Market) Syracuse, Ohio
said. "Did they hit other gangs began arguing over a
He
said
the
United
States
ment
released
a
Haitian
shipment of donated rice and
people? I doubt it ."
Hrs: 9-6 1\1-Snturduy: Clos•d Sundays
would not take sides in investi gated for the killing of
Relatives of 18-year-old flour. At least one man and Haiti , but warned the
two Dominican soldiers.
Frantzy Louis wailed and two children were wounded, Marines had the right to
The two Dominican solcan for phone aheod &amp; special orders
hugged each other at his tin witnesses said.
defend
themselves.
diers
were
killed
Feb.
14
as
T~e sprawling shantytown
shack home in Belair.
The violence is the biggest Haiti an militants living in
is
a pro-Aristide stronghold
Looking at pictures of him,
challenge
facing Latortue, the Dominican Republic
tensions
persi st
they said he wouldn't have where
between some Of its several the new prime minister who crossed the border to join the
been holding a gun.
was sworn in Friday.
rebellion in Haiti.
"He was playing basket- gangs. Crowds ran from the
ball when the A!llericans and streets as the gunfire eruptthe French began firing," ed, then emerged again as
said Loui s' brother, 24-year- young men with pistols and
old Rudy. "He wasn't politi- rifles sped off in pickups to
cal. All he did was study and investigate. Police . rarely
venture into the slum, and
play· basketball."
Residents identified the some gang leaders say they
other vtctlm as Dread are trying to keep the peace.
Pasteur, 29, and said it was
Initially the Marines and

U.S.

MARINES KILL TWO IN HAITI

1

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FOODFAIR

NEW STYLES

(Former Kroger Location) ·'

Applications Bering flcccrptcrcl

ORDER EARLY

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

The Fabric Shop
Pomeroy, Ohio 740-992·2284
Mon.-Sat. 9:00-5:00

29th annual Community Calendar
long rifle
a crusade at the Mt.
Public meetings ducting
Union Baptist church near
Carpenter, March 26 and 27.
exhibit in
Monday, March 22
POMEROY
-Meigs Included will be film on his
County Library regular work in Africa on Saturday
Marietta
board meeting, 3 p.m. at the night, and his witness about
MARIETTA
The
Association of Ohio Long
Rille Collectors will hold
their 29th annual exhibit on
Apri I 3 and 4 at the Hotel
Lafayette
in
hi storic
Marietta .
"Thi s exhibit will present
to th e public approximately
400 of the fin est Ohio muzz.leloading rifl es in existence.'' states Jame' Claggett,
AOLRC . President. "The
ritles. exhibited by private
collectors, include plain
working ril1es as well as
extremely fancy brass, silver,
and ivory inlayed rifles that
are exce llent examples of
American folk art."
The "Feat ured Gunsmith':
for this vear will be William
Earnhart who worked in
Pickaway County in the early
1800's. The exhibit is primarily for the presentation of historic firearms and accessories
for public view, but a
"Tratlmg Table" where members can oiTer antiyue muzLieloading arms and acces-

sories for\aie or trade is provided.
''The purpose of the Ann.ual
Exhibit.'" according
to
Claggett, "is to attract visitors who may not otherwtse
be able to view or obtain
information on original Ohio
longrirles." Claggett notes
that the members and experts
at the show can often identify
lvngrifles that visitors bring
to the shnw, thus establishing
the age, value, and historical
si~ nificance of what otherwtse would just be a "wallhanger " .
The Association of Ohio
Long Rifle Collectors was
formed in 1975 for the study
and preservation of Ohio
made mu zzleloading ritles .. '
The Association has recently
completed the publication of
a fi ve-vo lume set of books
li sting the gunsmiths of Ohio, .
by county, with biographical
information and photographs
of their work. The bonks will
be available at the exhibit.
The viewing hours for the
public are Saturday, April 3,
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
Sunday. April 4, from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m.

Losers
recognized
at TOPS
meeting
COOLVILLE - Members
of TOPS, Ohio 2013. were
recognized at a recent meeting of the group at the Torch
Baptist Church.
The weekly best loser certificate and fruit basket was
presented to Tracy Chevelier.
Frymyer,
Shelia
Jane
Westfall, and Judy Dick~ns
· all were presented with a
certificate for a consecutive
·six week loss.
The National Area
Recognition Day was discussed. This year's theme
will be "Freedom To Loose
With TOPS". Plans were
made for a Chinese auction
on March 30.
Officers were elected and
are Pat Snedden as leader,
Dottie Bond as . co-leader,
Judy Dickens as secretary,
and Penny Brooks as treasurer. Thi s year's Angel of the
Group was voted on and will
be revealed at a later date.
The meeting was closed
with a circle of hands read- ·
ing to encourage each other
in the upcoming week.
TOPS OH 2013 of
Coolville meets at the church
in Torch with weigh-in
beginning at 5:15 p.ni. a~d
the meeting beginning at
6:30 p.m. Anyone interested
should contact Snedden at
740-662-2633.
The first
meeting is free for observation.

Pomeroy Library.
•
RACINE
Southern
Local School District Board
of Education, 7 p.m. at the
high school media center.

Tuesday, March 23
SYRACUSE - Special
meeting of Syracuse Village
Council, 6:30. p.m. regarding
the purchase of video camem equipment for a police
cruiser
and
regarding
campers in the village.

Clubs and
Organizations
Monday, March 22
RACINE -·
Southern
Band Boosters will hold its
regular meeting, 7 p.m. in
the hi gh school band room .
All band parents and supporters are invited to attend.

Tuesday, March 23
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization
will meet at 6:30 p.m . at
Star Mill Park building .
Potluck will be served. New
members always welcome.
Thursday, March 25

Monday, March

DEAR ABBY: I am 14

Ui~agrcement

and~ a little confused. I go

being converted from Islam
and the miracles in his ministry. Proclaim will provide
music on Friday night and
there will also be special
music on Saturday. Services
being at 6:30 p.m.
GUYSVILLE
The
Carthage
Community
Church on Route 50 six
miles west of the Coolspot
will have a spring revival at
7 p.m. on both March 26
and 27. The Friday services
will feature !Jay Hubbard of
Little Hocking and Jim blair
and the Southern Gospel
Aires of Marietta, while on
Saturday Sammy anders of
New Haven will speak and
music will be by" the Bilders
quartet of Ripley. ·

to a school where "tlirting"
involves touching. Even
when the girls say stop, the
boys don't. '
.
One guy has grabbed me
several time s. I like him,
but I'm afraid he's going to
do worse things to me.
Please help me. I feel weird
talking about this to anyone. But I need to know
what tlirting really means. EMBARRASSED IN CAMDEN, ARK.
DEAR EMBARRASSED:
Flirting is letting someone
that you ' re interested in
know it. It can be a smile.
a greeting, a Iingering
glance, or a touch on the
hand, the arm or the shoul der. It does not in volve
grabbing or overtly sexual
touching.
I'm
sorry
you
feel
uncomfortable discussing it.
Someone sho uld tell the
sc hool administration about
what's happening so the
difference between tlirting
and sexual harassment can
be explained to the entire
student body before things
get "out of hand."
DEAR ABBY: As the
owner of a tanning salon, I
feel compelled Jo reply to
the wife who said her husband's visit to a tanning
salon · was a sign of cheating.
The other dues you listed
were more relevant. At our
salon, only about 15 percent
of our customers are male.

Other events
Monday, March 22
POMEROY
Tuberculosis Clinic will be
giving skin tests from I to 4
p.m. The tuberclosis clinic
will be open but only for
reading skin tests from 8
a.m. to II a.m.
Tuesday, March 23

Friday, March 26
POMEROY - Free dinner at the Pomeroy Church
of Christ, West Main Street.
Serving .will be from 5:30 to
7 p.m. Everyone is welcome
to come for food and fellowship.
MIDDLEPORT - Free
soup and sandwich supper,
4 to 6 p.m. at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center, Fifth
and Main.

When
tell lmn this.
frighten ... me. he -..a)' I am
0\c rl) ncr\Olls . I sa\' it's

Most clients tan for the
good look a tan gives. or in
preparation for a beach or
cruise vacation - or even
just for the relaxation .
BRETT
RICH .
MARYVILLE. TENN .
DEAR BRETT: No one
meant to '" dis'' an entire
industry or imply that the
fa~,;t someone visits a tanning salon is conclusive
proof that l1e or she is

not a 111 &lt; ttll~ r of hL~ ing nc r\'Ous. I wa~ r~1i-....:d In he
co urt euu~ and ;tn nounD: rn~

presence. I think my hu ' banu's hch :11·im i' se lfi sh.
rude. and show s a lal'k . of
manner-... Who i" righl'.' KRISTA
1\1
JACK SONV IL LE
DEAR KRISTA: You :trc.
Hi.s behavior is :tl s11 ch ild -

c heati ng. When someone is
chea ting. the warning signs

usually appear in multiples
- and that is where the
checklist wmes in handy.
P.S. The fir st "warnin~
sign" is usually a person 's
intuition that somet hing is
wrong. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Your li st
of 29 things to look lor i I
you suspect your partner of
cheating w:!s incomplete.
You forgot No. 30, the final
one: '" If your partner tries
to hide the list from you ." ED IN LAKELAND. FLA .
DEAR ED: Ah. yes ... 11 s
a truism that people who
are secretive usually have a
lot to hide .
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I are having a

ish and

Omr Ahhr is ll'l'illl'!l i&gt;r
,\!Jig"i/ Van Buren. also
knm&gt; 'll &lt;IS .!ewllle Phillij•s.
and \1'(/ S fo~tndt~ d hy ll t! l'
lllllfill' J:
P&lt;111 iine Phillips.
Write
/),-ur
Ah/&gt;1
111
W\nt.DeurA/JIJ\·.co m or PO.
llw (&gt;'J../-10. Los Angl'ies.
C!l lJIIIW/

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.,.,. . . Rocker Recliner
n...-~~.,.., Fabrics &amp; Coldts
~4tlY,OO ....SpeciaJ

~vu . Weight

$799

$366

Friday, March 26

.,,

MASON - Resumes for
15 scholarships of $500
each to be awarded by the
Stewart Johnson Post 9926
in mason are being accepted from post members and
their families through April
30.
A Post spokesman said
that if all the scholarships
are not awarded to members and their families,
then veterans and their
familie~ will be considered.
Those who apply must be
accepted at a college or
university.
Resumes should state the
applicant's. relationship to
the
veterans
well as·
include the college they
plan to attend and their
major course of stl\dy.
Resumes are to be sent to
the VFW Post 9926, P. 0 .
Box 586, Mason, W. Va.
25260.

··•·:. &gt;

•
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Calls
- .,

touch -..ad i"li L·

P.S . Loc·k the bat hroom
dom when you take
. . ho\ver. anJ hang a ..;tring.
of li ttle hells or chimes on
the front and back doors of
yolll· house . That ;; hnulu
so lve the probl em.

FIIIIYUI

•

ll

Vinyl

CARPENTER
Dr.
David Rahamut, evangelist
from Trinidad, will be con-

MasonVFW
taking
scholarship
applications

... ome -

now here .

ChurJ:h services

'Powelrs.

,J;\

about

thing and wuu ltl li~c j uu Ill
scllle it. When J' Ill lwmc
alune. he 'neab into the
hou se anti tip toe·, up bchinu
me . He has even June it
while I'm in the ,l·towe r.
sutldenlv appearin~ out or

Dear
Abby

POMEROY - Alpha Iota
POMEROY
Meigs
Masters, 6:30 p.m. at the County Health Department
Lutheran Church. Donna will have a childhood
Byer and Velma Ru~, host- immunization clinic from 9
esses.
POMEROY - Wildwood to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m.
Garden Club will meet at at the Memorial Drive
I :30 p.m. at the home of office. Take child's shot
Shirley Hamm, Amberger records and any medical
. cards. Children must be
Road.
accompanied by parent/legal
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will have a guardian.
meeting at 7 p.m. at the
hall in Tuppers Plains.
There will be a special
BERKLINE
drawing.

Social Events

22, 2004

Classmates' flirting style
is verging on harass~ent

lmREST

,,
r

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

·--·--·--·-----\

•

�t) -.

h

Monday, March

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting a11
establishment of religio11, or prohibiti11g the
free exercise thereoj; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govemme11t for a redress of grieva11ces.
-The Fjrst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

l11gest or in jest
Ingest: To take in as if for digestion
In j est: An utterance not seriously intended, whether sarcastic, ironic or playfuL
There is a move ment afo ot to ban snowmobiles in
Yellowstone National Park. Reason" To protect tht!" wildlife
from harassment. Are these the same people who were in
fuvor of reintroducing wolves into the park ? Wolves harass
wildlife They also eat them!
We bought Alaska at a bargain price. We found oil and produced some. Why at a time when we are importing oil from all
over, is most ot" the oil from Alaska being ex ported instead of
being used here 0 Drilling in the Alaska Wildlife Refuge has been
prohibited because of the caribou herds. Which is our greatei·
need oil or caribou '' Can we use our oil and impm1 caribou ''
Why couldn't we have bought Iraq and its oil we lls instead of
invading it'' For what this war is costing us it should have been
· considered. We know Halli burton knows how to get oil out of the
sand, but do they have a process 10 get the bl ood out of the oir&gt;
After the train bombing in Spai.n a security ex pert was as ked
about the safety of our train s. sub ways . etc. He stated it was
impractical to inspect train s to the sa me degree as. planes and
airports. Has someone determined th at the people who ride
trains are less deserving of protection than those celebrities,
CEO's, and big shot politicians who fl y?
They intend to allow Mex ican National s to enter the U. S.
for three days without photos or finger printing. Does old
"Sammy been Hiding" have any Mexican on the payroll, or
anyone who could pose as one'J Opportunity!
Our elected official s passed a law giving them and other
"financially blessed" a tax cut. This becomes effective imme- ·
diately. They passed a prescription drug bill to help me buy
my diabetes medicine. Wh y do I have to wait until 2006?
As usual the candidates are telling us whai needs to be ddne
and what they, if elected , will do to take care of the problem.
I'm waiting for these that have been in power for years to
explain why they haven't done it already.
And that, Folks, is The (Long) Bottom Line!

Something needs to be
made very clear: The war we
wage. the Uni ted States and
its coalition of friends. now
Spain-less (spine less), is not
a war on "terror." Terror is
an emotion. It is not a war
on
"terrorism."
Like
blitzkrieg. siege or ambush.
terrorism is a tacti c. And it\
not a war agai nst "ev ildoers." a creaky tag th at conjures face less heavies of a
vague ly
extraterrestria l
nature. not the seedy killers
who lurk in our cities' secret
cell s. The war we wage, the
United States and its coalition of friends. is a war on
Islamic jihad -- the spread of
Islam by violent means -·
ami we wage it again st
Islamic j ihadists who dream
of death and destruction in
their reli gion's name.
Two and a half years after
the Twin Towers fell, our
nation · and its fri ends fight
on, but in those two and a
half years this great semantic fud ge has allowed our
enemies to remain ill defin ed.
Maybe
that
explains why we have seen
confusion spring up between
"the war on terror," which is
conc~ed of as a response
to the attacks of 9/11 , and
the "war in iraq," which has
sometimes been erroneously
depicted, particularly by
anti-war Democrats , as a
wholly di sconnected ve nture. No such confu sion arises when you set out to combat global jihad, a phrase
that just as aptly describes
· the stru ggle against Islamic

Diana
West

fi ghters in Iraq or the Wesl
Ban k as it does the strugg le
against Islamic fighters in
the skies over Penn sylvania
or on the trai n tracks of
Madri d. Terrorism may be
the lac tic Islamic fig hters
employ, but jihad is the ideology they share.
A great irony of the
Spanish election is that even
as mass-murdering jihadists
take credit for bringing
about the Socialist victory -expected to result in Spain 's
withdrawal from -Iraq of its
1.300 troops -· they have
also thrown a giant spotlight
on the intertwined tactical
connections between Islamic
terror networks &lt;tnd the war
in Iraq . The most likely scenario is that Islamic fi ghters
either affili ated with or
inspired by AI Qaeda chose
to attack Spain in order to
strike at the U.S.-Ied coal ition in Iraq.
"The approaching general
elections in Spain in March
mu st be exploited to the
extreme," announced an
online manifesto that has
been appearing on jihadist
Web sites associated with AI
Qaeda since December. The

manifesto went on to predict
that attat·ks on Spain would
virtua ll y
guara ruee
a
Socialist vict&lt;&gt;ry along with
the j ihadist objective of seeing Spanish troops leave the
America n-led coali tion . If
ji had ish make the connection between "terrorism " and
Iraq, why can 't we·•
Maybe the conclusion to
be drawn is tno horri fyi ng:
namely. tha t in warding oil
jihad ist aggressio n. we combat an ideology bnrn of a
reli gion. In the fo rm erly
Judea-Chris tian. current ly
relati vist-hedoni st
West.
such a thought triggers nearpan ic: How can re iigious
wo rshi p. pu re and unhi jacked. inspire anyt hing bttl
goodwi ll ·anmng me n'! And

' 1l...fo

22. 2004

(old jihad -· that ha1e transformed tit~ ( UiiLtre of
Wc,tern
Eun&gt;pt·.
J"rom
Granada. ll'hcrc the first
mosLJUC has opened since
Christian
fort·cs ended
Muslim rule in Spain in
1-llJ~. to Oxford. where historian Niall Ferguson reports
historian
Edward
that
Gib!Jo n's prediction tha t
mina rets wou ld one day rise
over the uniwrs ity wi ll
wme true next year wit h the
npen ing of a grand new
blamic Sllodies center.
Such '&lt;~tSillll' cu ltu ru l
sh ifh 111a inlv res ult fro m

i mm igr;tt lon ~ po l i(.;ies

th at

have int n 1d uced vas t co nce nt rat ion . ., uf non-oJssimilati n!!

Musl i ms

thro LJ gho ut

Western Europe. But there\
aren't
tcrrori sl
tal'l il:S something
else.
Some
opposed hy &lt;Ill hu l a slati st i- 14.000 "w hite Britons" have
ca ll v invisibk
Is lamic con verted to Islam . accordfringe'! Perhaps it's better to ing tn the Times of Lo ndon.
ask what kind of rel igion incl udinQ "some of Britain 's
offer ' •a lvatio n in exchange top lat1downers. celebrities
for utt.h• l\· ach &lt;If l'iolcncc. and the offspring of se nior
And he ucr to wo nder how establi shmen t
figures."
in vis ible l! frin ~e is when a A mong th e l'Oil\'erts are
recent poll. commi ssioned Yah ya (form erl y .lon:tt han )
by the liberal British news- 13irt. son of Lurd Bi rt. furpaper The Gua rdi an. claims mer directnr-gcncral of the
that more than I in I 0 BBC. and Em ma C lark.
British Mu slim s tove r
rcat - faJH.fd CI LP hter of the
160.000 people ) believe AI libe r~l prim':- mini ste r
Qaeda-style auacks on the Herbert Asq ui th. Miss Clark ,
Uniled States arc justified.
incide ntall y. helped des ig n
But most . of us don't as k Pri nce Charles' Islamic garand don't wo nde r. Valiantl y. den at hi s hnme. Hi ~ h gro ve .
we
fi ght
"lcrroris m. " "We're al l the ra~c ~1ow."
Determinedl y, we target said Miss Clark . reTcrrin g to
"e vildoers." Maybe it is this MLtslims. "I hope it 's not a
same gauzy sc rim that has passing fashion ."
obscured the other kinds or
In toda y's wnrld . that's
j il1ad -- quiet jihad or even l'e ry hard to say.
11

11

1

are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Cu. :, eJitoJ iul boa1d, unles:1 otlte1 wi:se noted.·

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction

(USPs 21a-sso)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Polley

Our main concern in all stories Is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (7401 992·
2156.

Published every afternoon,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Stree1, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
·and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.

Our main number Is
{740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

Poatmaater: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

News
. • Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext. 13
~dvertising

Oulltde Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
ClaaaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

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District Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

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- all the result of unwilling- are about half that of the
ness to trade current plea- United States.
sure for future benefits .
"Generall y. if ynu live in
We go into debt for a new poverty or close to poverty
car because we won't wait a and m the same time you're
couple years to save for iL bombarded with messages of
Joan
We play the lottery or plunk a constlmrtion. you're going to
Ryan
wad on Destiny's Darling in want those thin gs," said
the third at the track rather Bogin. "There is a fru stration
than sock the money in a built in -- 'I'm never going to
slow-growing mutual t'und . have that stuff, but I can
We
prefer to enjoy a slice of have all this food ri ght now.'"
China and South Korea and
chocolate layer cake now
The
World
Health
South Africa and Egypt.
instead
of
the
delayed
gratifiOrganization now ranks obeMost observers blame two
· American exports ·· cheap cation of a healthier heart and sity as the I Oth most imporfast food and high technolo- a slimmer body. (I admit to tant health problem today.
gy. They say we have writing that last sentence The group is expected in the
enticed the world's peoples between bites of Thin Mints. ) next week or so lo deliver a
When the savings rates long-awaited and controverinto eatin¥ Big Macs and
Fritos while parking their began to fall in the late 1970s, sial initiative to combat the
rears in front of computers obesity increased slowly, then disease. The United States,
by the 1990s very rapidly. reprising its role in the war on
and televisions.
That accusation may be From the 1970s until 2000, tobacco, has already criticized
true. But a third American the obesity rate increased by a draft &lt;?f the plan. Among
export might also be to about 112 percent, while the other obJections, the United
blame, one that goes hand- personal savings \·ate tell by States is balking at restricting
in-hand with KFC and AOL: 83 percent, according to a the American food industry's
recent academic paper co- freedom to advertise its sugar
instant gratification .
authored
by Barry Bogin , · and fat to children.
We are accustomed to
·The world has gotten fat
such fast delivery of goods professor of anthropology at
the
University
of
Michiganbicause
high-calorie food s
and services that waiting for
Dearborn.
are cheap and plentiful ,
anything seems inefficient at
There is at least some evi- because our jobs and daily
best, a personal affront at
worst. Our lives move to the dence, Bogin and his co- life require less physical exer"Flight of the Bumble Bee" authors suggest, that nations tion than in past generations,
rhythms of instant messag· with lower savings rates because television and coming, microwave dinners, have higher obesity rates. puters are engaging enough
ATMs, lilltes-to-go, no- Countries such as Finland, to keep us planted in our
standin~-in-line ; Fandango- ·Spain and the United States chairs for hours on end,
eel movie tickets. It seems no have some of the highest · because we have lost our taste
coincidence that obesity has obesity rates and lowest sav- for delayed gratification.
Here, then, is lhe conun grown at the same time per- ings rates in the world .
sonal debt has increased, Switzerland and Belgium; drum of tackling ,the obesity
savings have1· drilpped and 1 on the other hand, have the problem. There is no quick
legal gambling h~-~ P&lt;&gt;omed - highest. net domestic. sayings fix,1 IJut that's the only kind
that we 11 accept. ·.
rates with obesity rates
., '
. '·
'
'

•

(

•

-

•

POMEROY - A report
on projects of the Hemlock
Grange was given at a
recent meeting of Hemlock
Grange held at the haiL
Master Rosalie Story conducted the meeting at which
members were reminded
that the fronts of cards to
be sent to St. . Jude's ranch
will be completed this
month. Anyone with items
to contribute should contact
Barbara Fry.
Kim Romine reported on
the cookbook which the
grange is compiling and any
members needing information on the book are asked
to contact her.
The charter was draped in
memory of Lucille Potraz.
and it was noted that a 65
year membership seal had
been sent to Burl Windon .

Roy Grueser, legislative
chairman, gave a report on
articles of interest · to the
Grange, and communicatons
from the Ohio State Grange
were read.
Ray Midkiff, delegate to
the Grange convention, gave
a talk on different activities
that took place at the convention. The annual Grange
ban~uet was announced for
Apnl 30 at the Senior
Cttizens Center. All masters
of county. granges have tickets for sale. Several members and friends were
reported ilL
The literary program on
St. Patrick 's Day and Coke
Cola was given by Kim
Romine, lecturer, who noted
that coke was invented by a
pharmatist, the first · year
nine glasses a day were

.Proud to .be apart of your life.
Brin_g A.d in for I visit fRf,r
with session purchase
(ne• CU;Shlmers Onllj}
1 Month Unlimited $25.00

Melissa's Seyle &amp;

I

sold, now I0 billion gallons
of syrup is made. The business was sold in 1891 1 for
$2300. The shape of the
bottle was made in ]1916
and for 75 years there was
·
one flavor of coke.
Sprite was introduced 1 in
1961, Tab in 1963, Frqca
in 1966, Diet Coke in 1963.
and in 1985 the new versi0n
of Coke was introduced an~
turned out to be a flop.
1
There was a St. Patrick·~
Day quiz, a reading "My
Wild Irish Rose" was given
by Margaret Hanning, "The
Wish" was read by Rosalie
Johnson. The lecturer distributed handouts with an
Irish recipe. The April meeting will be preceded by a
6:30 p.m. sausage and kraut
supper to be prepared by
Roy Grueser.

Subscribe today • 992-2155

Ph iladelphia's Veterans Stad iu m implodes early Sunday morning. Detonation of about 3.000 pounds of explosives began
on schedu le at 7 a.m., reducing the stadium to a pi le of rubble in just more tha n a minu te. The Eagles began playing in
the ir new home, Lincoln Fina ncial Fie ld. last year. The Phil lies
played their last game at the Vet in September; their season
opener in Citizens Bank Park 1s Apri l 12. (AP)
several mi nutes before the
detonation. which began after
Mayor John Street\ 10-second countdow n.
When it was ove r. a large
cloud of dus t rose over the
site. reduced to a pi le of co ncrete slabs and pi liars.
Fi refighte rs hmed do wn
the rubble to contain the du sl,
wh ic h was so thick fro m
some va nlage point s lhat the
impl osoon was obscured and
onl y the thunderin g booms
could be heard .
Once the du st scnles. workers will begin breaking down
the 70,000 cubic yards of
co ncrete. Co ntrac tors wil l
recyc le debris on th e s ite
unt il Jul y. and the spot will
eventuall y serve as a 5.500space parking lot.
'The Eagles began playing in.
their new home. Lincoln
Financial Field. last year. The
Phi !lies' seao;on opener in the new
Citizens B&lt;mk Park is Apti I 12.
l eam offic ial s. playe rs and
fans agreed the concrete- bowl
swdium - much maligned
for rats. leaky ceilin gs and

•.

insuftk ient aoi1enitie' - '""
way p&lt;tst it,. prime.
·' Jn some respecl.,. Ve tera ns
Stadi um became a re lic:·
Street said. ··we really had to
let it go."
The Ph illie' plan to paint
an outl ine of the Ve t's pia)ing fie ld acr(iss the nell' parking lol. an d place grani te
markers at the former home
pl ate. ptlching mou nd and
ba . . e lnca Liun..,

For The Record
Marriage
licenses
PO MERO Y - Marria ge
li ce nse, ha1·e been i"ued in
Me iu, Cou nt v Prob;He Court
to Kev in D&lt;trrell Gall aghe1·.
4 7. and Debora Lyn n
Mi chael. -+-+. bot h of Rac ine.
and Michael Willi am Mayer.
30. Rutl and . and Juli e Ann
Wandli ng. ~5. romeroy.

Healthfest Tuppers Plains firemen
from Page A1
getting equipment
County Health Department .
The Ohio Uni ve rsity College
of Osteopathic Medi cine, the
Department of Jobs and
Family Services, the Meigs
County
Public Library.
Hol zer Tobacco Prevention ,
Woodland Center, Heart of
the valley Head Start, and 'the
Children's Hunger Alliance,
along with several commercial
exhibits
including
Wendy's Restaurat , GNC ,
Pampered Chef, Tastefully
Simple and Mary Kay.
Again this year Junie
Maynard, Southern Local
school nurse, chaired the
committee planning the funfor-everyone free healthfest.

TUPPERS PLAI NS specifi call y used in support
The Tuppers Plain s Fire of fire suppression act ivilies
Department of Meigs County - fire engi nes. tanker tntchs.
will be receiving a 19H3 AM pi c kup ~. va th. pnrlabl e genGeneral 2 1/2-lon. all wheel erators and pumps. compresdrive cargo truck and a 600- sors. hoses. nl&gt;ules. protecgallon water tank .
tive clothi ng. sakty eq uipState Senator Joy Padge tt. ment and materi als that L' &lt;tn
R-Coshocton ,
announced be used to fab ri ~:a t e and
that the equipment is coming maintain these 1te1m.
through the Division of
Though the equ ipment
Forestry's Federal Excess comes u'ed. in mosl cases by
Personal Property (FEPP) the militarv. it is often llll&gt;re
up- to-dat e ~ than the equ ipprogram.
Together, the cargo truck ment 1he departments ty pi·
and the water tank are valued cally have. It allows them to
obtain ve hicle s a nd other
at $59.000, she said.
The FEPP program facili- needed equipment they could
tates the loan of equipment not purchase on their own .

St.
Patrick's
day winner

S«tlonaJ - 2 Rt!Cllners ""''"""'"

Full sleeper · phone - stor.tge ,'J1tl5
S.le '

1699.95

MIDDLEPORT
Debbie King was the winner of the ''pot of gold"
given away in observance
of St. Patri ck's Day by
Peoples
Bank
of
Middleport.
It was presented to ' her by Carla
King, bank employee.

t\

St.UIOncll)' Sofa &amp;. Full OJair

(50 Free Spc-t(_:es• Lirn

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Pnm,PI'01 ',

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C lip &amp; nnlil

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K e n (c:i! 7 40 -YlJ2 - 7 .... 40

SLE·E P DISORDERS CENTER
It's Time You Got A Good Night's Sleep

'

..
I

eight; Cindy Hyde, Sharon
· ·
Robbins, six; and All yson
Mc Benge, Melissa Barringer,
and Stephanie Evans, five;
PHI LADELPHIA
Joan Ann Beatty and Kathy
Stadium
was
Sm ith, three, and Kim White, Veteran&gt;
reduced
to
a
pi
le
of
rubble
in
Ruth Bissell, Andrea Gates
just
over
a
minu
te
Sunday
as
and Susan Windland, two.
hu ndreds of people looked on.
About 3.000 po un d&gt; of
ex plosives toppled the concrete structure that served as
home
field
to
the
Ph ilade lphia Ph illies and
Eagles fo r more than three
decades. It fell , sectio n by
section, in a clockwise direction as loud booms rang out.
''Ladies and ge ntlemen, you
just witnessed history," team
announcer Dan Baker told the
cheering crowd. One onlooker played taps on a sil ver
trumpet to mark the occasion.
Former Phillies slugger Greg
Luzinski, a member of the 1980
World Series team, and the
Phillie Phanatic mascot pushed
a ceremonial red plunger as the
explosions began.
"That was a bi g one,''
Luzinski said . "It took 2 1/2
years to build it and it went
down quick."
.
Actuall y, it took more than
three years to build the stadi um , which was completed in
Recognized for th eir years of service to Arcadia Nursing Center were longtime employees, left to 1971 at a cost of about $52
right. Donna Chapman, 19 years, Donna Welch, 25 years, and Judy Brunty, 33 years.
milli on.
The Phill ies played their
last game in the stadium .
which man v officials aQd
fan s deemed out~ated. in
September. The Phillies and
the Eagles each have a new
stadium of their own.
A large area around the
sports complex in south
Philadelphia was closed off.
and airspace above the stadium
was restricled to a 1,500-foot
elevation for a quarter-mile
radiu s during the implosion.
Passing truckers blared their
air horns in salute. At one
point dozens or by standers
tried to cross over a police
barricade. but were pushed
bac k by police. A siren blared

Grange plans spring pojec1s

Recently, three · South
Korean professors sat in a
small office at the American
Sports Institute in Mill
Valley, Calif. ; to talk about
fat children. South Korean
children have gotten so fat in
the past few years you'd
think they were Americans.
"Along with a Westernized
diet, South Korea is No. I or
No. 2 in the world in terms
of Internet use," said
Seongho Lee of Chungang
University in SeouL "More
than 90 percent of students
spend more than four hours
a day on the computer."
He said physical education
in the schools has lost out to
studying for high-stakes tests.
Discipline of mind and body
has lost out to conspicuous
consumption. "Death from
heart disease has skyrocketed
so that now it's about the same
as cancer," said Lee, who with
his colleagues was seeking
U.S. educationtlf models to
combat the problem.
Despite the magazine covers
and front-page stories, America
can no longer claim obesity as
it~ own personal disease.
The
World
Health
Organization has reported
that more than half of the
populations · in
Spain,
. Australia, Brazil , Mexico,
Denmark, Italy and Russia
are overweight. In Germany
alone, the annual cost' of
obesjty has been ' estimated
at $10 billion. Obesity is
showing up in Papua New
Guinea and Guatemala and

The opinions expressed in the column below

33; Donna Welch, 25; Donna
Chapman.29;LindaSmeeks,
17; Karen Kebler, 16;
Priscilla Holter and Mary Jo
Hickel, 10.
Others recognized were Dot
Birt, Cindy Dillon, Deanna
Brooks, Stephanie Evans,

~

In fat race) US. leads) world gains

addressing issues, not personalities.

COOLV ILLE
-An
employee recognition di nner
was held at the at Arcadia
Nursing Center recently.
Jay ne Darling, admmistrator, presented pins to the
employees for thei r respective
years of service: Judy Brunty,

'

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
:: be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
:. and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
:: be published. Letters should be in good taste,

Arcadia employees honored Veterans Stadium Reduced to
. JUS
. t over a mlnU
. te
ru bble In

I

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Karen Keble r, employed with Arcadia for 16 years, and Linda Smeeks for 17 years were presented pins at a recent recogn ition dinner.

Henry E. Bahr
Long Bottom

; editing and must be signed and include address

2004

,t

\

Defining the war we're fighting

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

1)."

O PINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 22,

•

•

/

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•

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March

22, 2004

Bl

The _Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Redwomen sweep Concord, Page 82
UAB stuns top-seeded Kentucky, Page B6

Monday, March 22, 2004

Sapp chooses
Raiders over
Bengals

-

A deer stand in the backyard of a home in So lon , Ohio. Deer are increasingly JUmping highway
guardrails, darting across cui-de-sacs and eating at backyard vegetable garde ns . Police in
Solon. a Cleveland suburb, say the number of dee r-vehicle collisions in the city between 1993
and 2002 averaged about 112 a year. (AP Photo/The Plain Dealer, C.H. Pete Copeland )

Deer population showing up in city suburbs

Monday, March 22
Moming (7:00am-Noon)
27-35 NW 5-10 mph
Temperatures will rise to 35
with today's low of 27 occurring
around 6:00am. Skies will range
from mostly sunny to mostly
cloudy with 5 to I0 MPH winds
from the northwest.
Afternoon
(1:00pm6:00pm) 35 - 37 NW 5 mph
Temperatures will hold
steady around 36 with today's
high of 37 occurring around
3:00pm. Skies will be sunny to
mostly sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the northwest.

Evening
(7:00pmMidnight) 30 - 31 NW-SW 5
mph
Temperat ures will linger at
30. Skies will be clear with 5
MPH winds from the northwest turning from the southwest as the evening progresses.
. Overnight
(I :00am6:00am) 29- 30 SW-S 5 mph
Temperature s will hover at
29. Skies will be clear with 5
MPH winds from the southwest turning from the south as
the overnight progresses.
Thesday, March 23
Morning (7:00am-Noon)

29- 45 S-SW 5- 10 mph
Temperatures will cl imb
from 29 to 45 by late this morning. Skies will range from
sunny to partly cloudy with Sto
10 MPH winds from the south
turning from the southwest as
the morning progresses.
Afternoon
(1:00pm 6:00pm) 46 - 50 SW 5- 10 mph
Temperatures will ri~e from
46 early this afternoon lo 50 by
3:00pm then drop down to 47
late aftemoon. Skies will be partly cloudy to cloudy with 5 to 10
MPH winds from the southwest.

Ohio Marine killed in mortar attack in Iraq
AKRON , Ohio (AP) - An
Ohioan who volunteered for
the Marines and wanted to go
to Iraq was there little more
than a month when he died in
a mortar attack.
Cpl.
Andrew
D.
Brownfield, of Akron , died
Thursday in the attack at AI
Asad
Air
Base,
the
Department of Defense said
in a statement Saturday. He is
the 21st Ohio military member to be killed in Iraq.
24,
was
Brownfield,
assigned to the Marine Wing
Support Squadron 374, part
of the Marine Expeditionary
Force in Twentynine Palms,
Calif.
Members of his family said
they last saw him in
December, when he came .
home for Christmas with his
fiancee. He went to Iraq in
early February.
"He volunteered to go to
Iraq," said Melody Roop, his
mother, who lives in nearby
Stow.
"He did this because he
wanted to fight for what he
believed in. He was a very
strong Marine. He believed in
this war, and he wanted to
fight for his country to help
prevent any more 9-11 's from
happening here."
Roop said she last spoke
with him about I0 days ago
by telephone. She now treasures a message he recently
left on her answering
machine, imitating Forrest
Gump.
Kirk Brownfield, his father,
said Andrew graduated from
Akron North High School
and worked at various jobs
before joining the Marines.
·"He enjoyed it real well. He·
liked it more than he didn't,"
he said. "He was a good kid.

Everybody was proud of him."
Hi s fiancee,
Michell
Hackworth, 21, of Highland,
Calif.. !lew to Akron on
Friday
to
be
with
Brownfield 's family. The
couple planned to move to
Ohio after Brownfield 's
enli stment
ended
ne xt
January, she said.
Brownfield volunteered to
go to Iraq, Hackworth said.
"He used to tell me he
wanted a piece of the action,"
she said.
Five mortar rounds were
fired in the attack at the base
about 135 miles northwest of
Baghdad, said Marine Maj .
Steve White, casualty officer
at the Akron Marine Reserve
Center. Three other Marines
were wounded.
Brownfield joined the
Marines Jan. 3, 2001. His job
in Iraq was to hang bombs on
planes and helicopters, White
said.
"He walked proud," Roop
said. "He had the Marine
look, even in civilian
clothes."
On Saturday, White presented
members
of
Brownfield's · family with a
Purple Heart and Gold Star.
Funeral arrangements were
not yet complete.
North Principal Larry
Weigel
remembers
Brownfteld as ·:an average,
go-to-school kind of kid."
He said Brownfield was
one of the first to participate
in a training program that had
students divide their days
between school and studying
a vocation.
"It's very sad," said Weigel,
who heard about Brownfield's
death on the radio. "My heart
goes out to him and his family. I hope the life he had was

satisfying and good."

CLEVELAND (AP ) deer is the automobile.
Unchecked urban sprawl is
But the ' tleet-footed anieating up America's farms, mals can become a danger
fields and forests, and as the themse lves as they herd and
habitat of whitetail dee r dis- forage throu gh subdivi sions
appears, the highl y adaptable and acro ss medi an stri ps.
animal is becoming a more posing a hazard to motorists
common part of the suburban who often spot the elusi ve
landscape.
beasts too late to avoid colli Deer are increasi ngly siOns.
jumping highway guardrails,
Poli ce
in
Solon, a
da rting across cui -de-sac s Cleveland suburb, say til e
and eating at backyard veg- number of deer-vehicle collietable gardens. Subu rbanites sions in the cit y betwee n
try various methods to keep 1993 and 2002 averaged
them away, but nothing about 11 2 a year. Las t year,
seems to repel the voracious they spiked to 175 .
herbi vores. A deer can eat
Nat ionall y, the insurance
seven pounds of food a day, industry estimates there are
1.5 million deer-vehi cle
or more than a ton a year.
As a species, deer repro- crashes each year, killing 1.60
duce rapidl y. And those liv- to 200 people and injuring
ing in outer-ring suburbs are 16,000. The estimated annua l
free of natural predators and damage is $1 billion.
hunters, so their numbers can
In Ohio, the latest available
grow exponentially. The data shows an estimated $6 1
bi ggest killer of suburban million in deer crash clai ms

in 2002.
Tom Uhl. ow ner of So lon
Auto Body. sees lots of
blood-spattered smashes and
dents. He repai rs about 30
deer-da maged vehicles a
year. including cruisers from
area police departments.
The federa l governmem
requires an env ironmental
impact study before if. permils deer killin g on parkla nd s. In the Cuya hoga
Valley
Nationa l
Park.
betwee n Cleve land and
Ak ron, that study is ex pected
to begin thi s year and take
two years to compl ete.
Park biologist Li sa Petit
estimates dee r density in the
33 .000-ac re national preserve
is as low as 40 per square
mile and as hig h as 130 per
square mil e.

'''
BUY, SEll, OR

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M••••Y Fei'JUIDn • F8rmh•nd
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•

TAMPA. Fla. (AP) Seven-ti me Pro Bowl defe nsive tuck le Warren Sapp
Signed a seven-year, $36.6
mill ion contract with the
Oakl and
Raide rs
on
Saturday, ending his nineyear relationship wi th the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
"The bad news is I won't
be back with the Bucs," Sapp
said by tele phone from
Miami. "The good news is
I'm a Raider."
The surpri se move came
only a day after Sapp's age nt ,
Drew Rosenhaus, sa i ~ the
one-time NFL defe nsive
pl ayer of the year was cl ose
to signing a four-year deal
with the Cincinnati Bengal s.
Sapp will receive a $7 million signing bonus. He
~amed $6.6 million last year
in the final season of a sixyear. $36 million contract he
signed in 1998.
Earlier this month, the 31year-old tackle said he was
optimistic about the prospect
of re-s igning with the Bucs.
But that changed when hi s
old team failed to make him
an offer during the first week
of the free agency period.
Sapp joined the Bucs as
first-round draft pi ck out of
Miami in 1995 and - along
with linebacker Derh ck
Brooks and safety Jbhn
Lynch - helped transform
the Bucs from a laughingstock into Super Bowl cham\
pions.

MASON
FURNITURE

COMPANY
•Quality • Selection • Service

304-773-5592

FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.
1150 Eastern Avenue

. 1ZJ Gallipolis, Ohio e
448·97n or 446·2484

1

Buckeyes earn ,
spot in NCAA
tournament
DETROIT (AP) - Pa~l
Caponigri had two goals antl
an assist and Ohio State heh\1
on for a 4- 2 win ove~
Michigan to win the Central \
Colleg iate
Hockey I
Associ ation
Super
Six \
Championship on Saturday
night at Joe Louis Are na.
The Buckeyes (26- 15-0 )
captured an automatic bid to
the NCAA Tournament and
the Mason Cup, which goes to
the CCHA playoff champion.
It is their second CCHA playoff title and first since 1972.
The regular-season champion Wolverines (26-13-2) will
also get an NCAA bid. They
had won the previous two
CCHA pl ayoff championships
and were appeari ng in their
fourth consecutive title gan1e.

.Countians
top .honors
squad

CLEVELAND (AP)
Chauncey Billups 'had 18
points and the Detroit Pistons
smothered Cleveland in the
first half, beating the Cavaliers
96-76 on Sunday to extend
their winning streak to eight.
Detroit held the Cavaliers to
a season-low 31 points in the
tirst half. The Pistons led by as
many as 28 in the third quarter
and let their backups fimsh the
game.
By letting up in the second
half, it was the most points the
Pistons have allowed an oppotient to score during their
streak.
LeBron James shot poorly
for his second straight game
.;.. 5- for-17 for 15 points.
&lt;;:ar!os Boozer led the
Eavaliers with 21 points and
11 rebounds.
Despite the loss, Cleveland
remained in the eighth playoff
spot in the East with BosUJn
and Toronto close behind.

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

www.turqpllllflm.com

I} •

'

.

GGGF FGGGF F -

Past honorees
Player of the year - Boys
2002 - Tony Moore. Galtia Academy

2003 - Donnie Johnson . Gatlia Academy
2004 - Craig Randolph, Southern

Coach of the yaar - Boys
2002 - Howle Caldwell, Eastern
2003 - Riehle Blain, PQint Pleasant

· 2Q04 - Howle Caldwell, . ea~tarn

Player of the yHr - Glrla
.
·•
2003 - Marliea D!IY. Gallla. ~demy
. 2004 - ~.a)inee Oav~. M8fgs · '
·
·.. C-h Of till 1/Hf- ~I riB

2002 - · erianna John&amp;on; Gallla Academy

2002 - Sl:otl Wolle; SOU!Ii8rn
. 2003 - Kim Adkins, Gallla Academy

2004 :.... RICk.'Edwards,' Eastern

lijrorts@myda\lytribu~te .com. ·
T~u rna)' al.so drop ~em off

Caldwall

Jon Bobb, Meigs
Sr.
Donnie Johnson, Gallia Academy Sr.
Craig Randolph , Southern
Jr.
Dakota DeWitt, Meigs
Sr.
Jason Merrick, South Gallia
Sr.
4
Second Team
Nathan Bowman. OVC
Sr.
Nathan Lee Grubb. Eastern
Sr.
Josh Waugh. South Gallia
Sr.
Steve Harder, River Valley
Jr.
Greg Collins, Hannan
Sr.
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Craig Randolph, Southern
COACH OF THE YEAR
Howie Caldwell, Eastern

Girls
First Team
G.- Jackie Wamsley, Gallia Academy
G - Morgan Weber, Eastern
F ~ Jaynee Davis, Meigs
F _:._ Julia Hoffman, Wahama
F - Katie Sayre, Southern
Second Team
G - Beth Payne, River Valley
G - Sammy Pierce, Meigs
G - Keith Ann Sayre, Wahama
F - Brittany. Sabolsky, Hannan
F - AlysSa Zirllle, OVC
PLAYER· OF THE YEAR
Jaynee Davis, Meigs
COACH OF THE YEAR
Rick Edwards, Eastern

So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Fr.
Sr.

tp.. our · Gallipdlis,, office ·on .

"fhird'·Ave,

'· ·

·

•
·.-

•

:e..._--"'- ·-·-~-"""-~"'l"""t

Boys
First team

OVP Super 10

-

HOURS:
Mon • Frl 9-7; Sat. 9·S

lhe OVP Super 10 Teams

•

: Pallia and Meigs County
1larsity sprin@ sports coaches
llfidlor athleuc directors are
reminded to send in your
Sc_ttedules as soon as possi.tlle.
: :You may fax them to 4463008 or e-mail them to

740·441·0200

•

, .•

Spring sports
schedules
needed

• Diagnostic X-Rays
• Penonal ·
Rehabilitation
• Nutr~ional Counseling
• Personallnjur)'
• Workers Compen&amp;ation
• Most Insurance Accepted
• Including United Health

•

&lt;

\

Hot Pistons
down Cavs

on•••
FSPIIIIIIII

•

•

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••
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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Rio track begins outdoor
season at Coastal Carolina
STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailytribune.com

MYRTLE BEAC H, S.C. The Uni ve rsity of Rio Grande
began its 2004 outdoor track
and field season at the Coastal
Carolina
In vit ational
Saturday.
Sophomore sprinter Tory
Jordan freshman Carlesha
Chambers and fres hma n
thrower Nicki Thomas were
the top Redwu men perfor mers. Jordan re.:orded two sixth
pl ace fin ishes in the I00 and
200-meter dashes. Jordan ran
12.59 in the 100 and 26.96 iq
the 200. Cham bers finished
runner-up 111 her first colic. giate meet. Chambers, also a
membe r of I he wo men\ basketball team. ran sg.H4 in the
800.-meter run .
Thomas was ti ft h overa ll in
the javelin and ninth in the
shot put. Her effort in the
javelin was I 00 feet. three
inche s and she hit 34 feel, 10',
inches in the shot.
·
Freshman Ali cia Smith lin-

ished sixth in the discus ( 128
fee t) and 15th in the hammer
th row ( 103 feet. 2 inches).
Other solid efforts by the
Redwomen included sophomore Nies ha Fuller gai ning
an e ighth place fin ish in the
200 (27 .3 11 and she crossed
the li ne nint h in the I00
( 12.96) . Fres hman Cara
Ratcliff was sevent h in the
200 (27.28) and 12th in the
( 13.09 ).
Fres hman
I 00
Shannon Soul sby recorded an
e ighth place tini sh in the 400
( 1:04.581 and Sarah Brame
was seventh in the jave li n (83
feet. nine inches).
Othe r women's results:
Moll y Howdyshell . tied for
II th in the po le vault (7 feet.
6 '. inches): Billie Robinson.
17th in the 1.500-meter run
(5:49.1 41 and Jana Marshall .
I Rth in the 1.500 (5:53 .30).
On the men's side fres hman
thrower Gastin Green had the
bu siest &lt;tnd best day. Green
fini shed sixth in the shot put
with a heave of 44 fee t. I ' •
inches. He al so fini shed

ei~ht h in the discus th row
( 1':16 fee t, 4 inches) and 14th
in the hammer th row ( I04
feet. II inches) .
Senior Brian Mitc hell was
eighth in the II 0-meter hurdles wi th a time of 16.64 and
sophomore Brad Gilders
ti med nut at I :59.85 in the
800-meter run. fin ishi ng ni nth
owrall .
Other Redmen result s:
Brando n Brow n. IOth in the
IUIJ-meter dash ( 11 .40) and
15th in the 200 (22.83): David
Brode ur. II th in the javelin
(!53 feet. 10 tnches): Nate
Hall. tied for 12th in the high
jump (5 feet. 8 in ches):
Michael Conge r, 14th in the
II 0 hurdles (1 8.00) and I Hth
in the long jump ( 18 feet. 6
inches): Adam Grim . 21st in
the discus ( Ill feet. I0 inches) and Tim McCoy; 25 th in
the 100-meter da sh ( 12.56)
and 32 nd in the 200 (25.40).
Th e
Redmen
and
Redwomen will be back in
action thi s Saturday at
Muskingum .

College Softball
•

Re·dwomen sweep Concord
Senior second ba seman Cooper added two hits each.
Emily Cooper was 1-for-4 Cooper scored twice and had
sports@ mydailytribu ne.com
with two runs scored, a stolen base and Tucker
including a stea l of home . ripped a pair of double s and
ATHENS, W.Va. - The Junior first baseman Amy knocked m two runs.
University of Rio Grande Conn and senior third baseChevalier added an RBI
Redwomen softball team man Tangy Laudermilt also double and Olding went
enjoyed a big day at added RBI hits for the deep with a solo home run .
Concord College rolling up Redwomen .
Sophomore
Stephanie
two wins, 11-4 and 8-0 on
Sophomore Andrea Lotycz Broccolo had a masterful
Sunday afternoon .
went the distan ce to get the performance in the pitcher 's
Rio Grande (8-4) used a · victory. Lotycz (4-2 ) yielded circle. Broccolo (4-2) went
I0-hit attack to score II runs four hits and two earned the full five innings, yield in
the
first
~ame.
runs whi le striking out two ing only one hit. The
Sophomore right ftelder and walking five .
Concord knock came on a
Jenny Olding ripped three
In game two. it was more · fly ball to center field that
hits in five at-bats and drove of the same as the dropped because Tucker lost
in a run for Rio Grande .
Redwomen were ab le to her footing thanks to muddy
Senior center
ielder blank Concord 8-0 in five conditions .
Krista Tucker went -for-3 mnmgs.
The two schools will face
with two RBI an(! I o runs
Sophomore catcher Brandi each other again at Rio April
ris len Jones led the Redwomen 2.'
scored
and
Chevalier smacked h r first with a 3-for-3 performance
Rio Grande will have its '
career home run , knocking at the plate with a double home opener 3 p.m., Friday
in two with the blast. \
and an RBI. Tucker and vers us Geneva.
STAFF REPORT

Monday, March

Prep
Basketball

2 2 , 2004

Weber. Ga ll ia A~ademy 's
Jackie Wamslev. Katie
Sayre of Southern anti
Wahama's Julia Hoffman.
from Page 81
Weber. a junior. averaged:
14 .8 ppg and 7.4 rpg this:
Join ing Grubb on the sec- season. while Sayre, ao nd team is Hanna n's Greg senior. scored 17 ppg to go·
Collins. the lone member of along wi th her six rpg and
this year's Wildcats' sq uad 3.2 steals per game.
who played on the West
Weber. Savre and Merrick
Virg inia state semifina list are the lo ne lnembers of thi S:
team in 200 I. Ohio Wiley vear·s team who \a..·erc on Ihe:
C hri stian 's
Nathan i'i rs t eve r OV P Super I 0;
Bowman, Steve Harder of squad in 2002.
Ri ve r Va ll ey and South
Wa msley , a so phomore:
Gallia's Josh Waugh.
averaged 14.2 ppg fo r the
Eight se ni ors and two Bl ue Angels alo ng wnh
j uni ors make up thi s year's shoot in g 79 pe rce nt lrum.
boys co llecti ve.
the
fo ul li ne.
while:
Howie Caldwell . who had Hoff ma n. a se ni or. led alt
led Eastern to the regional scorers on the OV P girl s'
tournament three out of the team wit h. I X.5 ppg along'
last four years, is thi s year' s with nine rpg.
OVP Super 10 boys coach
The second team consi&gt;to
of the year.
of Hollma n· s tea mma te·
Caldwell was at the helm Keith An n Sayre. al ong with:
of an Eagles' squad whi ch Me igs" Sam my Pi erce , Beth.
made it back to the reg ional Pay ne of River Valley. Ohi o;
tournament despite losin g Vall ey Christ ian 's Alyssa
one of their top scorers and Zirillc
Hanna n's
anu
a key bench player durin g Brilla ny Sa bols ky.
the early part of the season.
Eas te rn ~wep t cnLu.:hin g
The girl s team is led by hono rs u~ Ri ck Edward s was
Mei gs' Jaynee Davi s. a n&lt;J mt•d gi r l~· coac h of the.
senior who was a double
.
th reat for the Marauders th is year.
Edwards leu the Eag les t&lt;J
season.
a
regio nal tournament:
Davis averaged 15 .5 ppg appearance and his Eagle.s
and . 11.5 rebounds per gam e were the unl v te;.un dunn g
along with 2.8 steals a gam e
the reg ular season to beat "
to take home player of th e Warren
squad that won lhe
year accolades.
Ohio Athleti C:
Joining Davis on the fir&gt;t Southeastern
League titl e.
team is Eastern's Morgan

ATH ENS (AP )
Aa ron Agnew had 38
po ints and 13 rebound s
to lead Bell aire to a 7 168
squeaker
over
Chesapeake on Saturday
in a Div ision Ill reg ional
final.
The firs t appearance in
the state tournament for
the Big Reds (22-4) was
prese rved only when P.J .
Ra se's 3-po int shot
rolled out at the buzzer.
Nate Davis had 16
points and 12 rebounds
as Bellaire outrebounded
the Panthers 39- 17. Mike
Fi sher scored I0 for the
Big Reds.
Race led Chesa peake
(22-3) with 18 point s.
Trent Finl ey added 14
points, Daniel Thompson
scored 13 and Brennan
Hall I 0.
The
Bi g
Reds
stretched a 33- 31 halftime lead to 53-47 at the
end of three.
Chesapeake got back
in the game in the fourth
and the lead changed
several
times,
but
Bellaire went up for
good on Agnew's basket
making it 67 -66 with
2:18 to go.

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992-2155

Boys basketball state
tournament pairings
COLUMBUS (AP) - Pairings for
this week's state boys basketball
tournament at Va lue City Arena :

'aCrtbune- Sentinel -]L\e

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SunFreshTMProducts from~..
Purina Mills®

DIVISION II
Canal Fulton Northwest (23-1) vs

-=., . Taking orders now

Dover (22-3), Thursday, 9

p.m.

Offtee lloar-cf'
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ALLIANCE

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{{'

Claaa A COL Drivers
Wanted

----.1!

446-2342
'
.
675-1333
.992·2155.

~10
.

1

,re ctor-Trai ler
t rain ing Centers
11\ythevllle, VA
Ca lt Toll Free
1-800-334-120 3

.

,.

--------AVONI All Are asl To Buy or

llELPWANrnJ

lwrtght@lc.net

l. _

www.comlcs.com

Affordable Services, Hauling
Qravel, dirt, ect., Pal.nllng,
Tree Trimming , Driveway
Repair. Guuers, Chimney.
Plumbing Jack Or All Trades.
30yrs. experience (304)8822196 (304)377-8266
,--,--,-,--.--, -- Reli able (:)dull will do grass
cutting (304)675-8902

HOMFS
~..__ _;.FOIIRii.i Si AIIii__
.E
,.t
'

1600 sq. ft. 3 y r. old Ranch
style home 2 1/2 car garage,
3 bedroom, large kitchen,
living room , 2 1/2 baths.
laundry room, front porcll,
all electric. Very well layed
out. beautiful interior on 1
112 acres, 1348 Prospect
Churc)l Rd. Won't last long
at only $11 5,000. (740)446·
4514 or (740)446-3248 after
Spm .

3 Bedroom home, located at

212 N. Third Avenue.
Middleport . (740)992-6759
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car
garage. Minutes from town.
City achools &amp; water. price
neg . (3041926·6661 .
3 bedroom, 2 baths on 4.3
acres. Close to Tycoon Lake.
Call (740)709· 1t 66
3br, 2ba , House in New
'Haven totally remodeled
$85,000 (304)882-31.31
4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye
Hills Rd. In ground pool. 1
acre. (740)709· 1166.

4 br. 2 bath. centra l air. with
dream kitchen, 1 acre ol
Roofing, siding, porches, No ground. must sell $70.000
Job to small, Free esllmBtee, (304)675·3641
20+ yrs. e•p., Reuonable,
(304 )773-5028, 304-862· 4bedroom . Aancn home,
2bath, 2500 sq . fl. w/800 sq.
2095.
ft. patio room In New Haven
_
W_II_I_d_o_B_a_by-sl-ttl-ng-ln_my_ $12!5,000 Sits on 3 lots
home. Smoke !real Call (3041662·2401
( 740)367·0429 ..
--------room Ranch , lull baseWill Praasure Wash house's. ment, 3 bedroom . 2-1/:i!mobile nomas, metal build· bath, 2·1/2 acres, family
covered
deck.
ings, and gutters. Cal l room ,
(740)446-0161 ask for Ron $99,000. No land contracts.
(7401446·2196.
or leave message. _
$15 .44·$21 .40/hr, now hlr·
1 1'- \ \.t 1 \ 1
lng. For application and free -w;;::;;;~:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;

~n-to-rv_t•_w_._1_-8_7_7·-6-82-·

""
_ _
8324 Option e.
-

SCh00 I
Fundralslng

Realdentlat
Treatment
Facility youth worker. Pay
bjaed en experience. Call
(740)379·9083 to appty.

Director needed for local
area to work ~Hh schoola,
PTA'a: and youth groJJps.
Avg . 48K 813 -788-6157 .

...

I-,

l!lr~IDI'"'-~~---.,

446-4101.

---------

e

I

1

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI

j

--

PRo8~~AL
1:.1\.Y~~

IUbjecl ~0 thl Fedll"al
Fair Houafng Act of 1188
whlcrh mak• ltlllag•llo
IIChNI~IH "any
ptwtaranc,, llmllltlon or
dltorlmlnllillon t.Md on
r.at~, colaJi rwllglan, ux

famll .. l atllfua or nfrtlaMI
origin, or ariy Intention
mlkii~Y IUoh

I
•

Roberts
Residential
·
Electrical
Service
A·Z,
Phone( 7401256 .a610.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-868·582·3345

1St

All real " " ' ' advertlalng
In thla q.wapaptr II

60 vending machines/
excellent locations aU lor
$10,995. 600·234-8982.

Must have good driving
., NV_Itw~ . Clll
record wltll own truck .
Experience In cable or satel· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lite a plus . 11you have a "DO lNG CO. recommends tha
MORE, EARN MORE" Work
ou do buslneaa with peo
ethic, you're a good candl ·
Ia you know. and NOT t
date. 30-35K per yea r. Full
end monay through th
time benefits are available. ~a ll unl ll you have Invest!
Please call Digital Dilh l:!ated the otferlna.
between 9am-4pm to set up

May tag
Ponable Lab pupp1es for sale
Dish washer, like new 5100 Champ1on bloocllrne. proven
ca ll (304 )4 58-1757
hurling stock. Ready now1
$2,50 each.(740)643-2288
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Chapel Road . Porter. Ohio.
1 \I{'\ I stl' l,l ns
(740)446-7444 1-877-830&amp; 1.1\ I· SlOt. 1\.
2 bedroom apl. St. At. 160 9162. Free Estimates. Easy
'A•R•,·--.,
past Holzer. $475 mo linan c1ng . 9() days same as ·~,.110,....-...,l,.
cash. Vi sa / Masre r Card
{740)441 -0194.
Dr1ve- a- lillie sa•• e alot
EQL. II''\IE:\"' 1
Ap artm en r ror rent $500 No
Pel s. Available May 12th . Refrig erat or in good condi- Ne·.•• Holland Round ba ler
tio n $75.00. Floor model TV. Spec1al
Mason Count y
Call {740) 44t - I 124
good cond ition $50.00. Call Res1denl s 1eCe1ve the folAp plications bei ng taken for (740)992-7380
lowing discounts 4x5 baler
very clean 2 lledwom in
$1_500. 4)(4 bale! $1.000
ThOmpsons
Appliance
&amp;
0
country se lling yet close to
Repa lr-675-7388. For sale. Keele r"s Serv1ce Cen1er
'()
town _Large kil crmn and livre-cond itioned
automat•c 304)895 ·3874
ing roo m. Washer. drye r.
washers &amp; dryers, relngeradishwasher. s!O'tle and
Ll\ lSH )t."l\
IOrs, g as and electric
relrigerator included. Wat er
ranges , air cond ition ers. and
and garbage in cluded. Tota l
wrin ger washe rs. Will do
2 reg1stered ANGUS Bulls. 2
ele ctri c with AJ C. Tenant
repairs on maJOr brands 1n
years old . Good blood l1nes
pay s electric . $400 dep osit .
shop or a t your home.
1J40)256-9004.
$475 per month . No pets.
(740)44 6-2205 or (740,1446· l!sod Furn1t uro Sto re. t 30
1-- z..
9585 ask for Virginia
Bulavilte Pike. Mattresses 9 vear old C1 nn arn on
~
dr essers,
couches Halhnge r ge lding. Very 9el" ·
1.1
BEAUTIFUL
APART- bunkbe ds. Rec to ners. what- tie starter horse. Confid ence
~MENTS
AT
BUDqET nots G r av1~ Mon umen ts bLJilder. targe l •ame. eKcel© 2°04 by NEA, Inc.
PRICE S AT JACKSON· {740 ·14 46-4782 . Gallipolis lenl tra il horse not show
Askmg
St .OOO.
ESTATES, 52 Westw ood OH Hrs. t 0·4 (M-S) Sunday type
(740 )441 -101:1
Drive from $344 to $442 by appointment .
riO
HOM~
Walk to shop &amp; mOVIeS. Ca ll
Blacks Charnp1on show
FORSALE
: : : : : : ; : : : : : : : ; 740 -446 -2568
Equal
p•g s Eth1cally ra1ser1. pure
Housin g Opportunity.
bred &amp; cross bfCd. For sale
House for sale on 2 112
HOUSES
---'-----'--- ~
acres olland, lull basement,
FUR RFNf
Convenient locatiO n_ Nice t Buy or
se ll. R 1verme at f&lt;Jmoly t&lt;Jrm by .1ppo1nt·
bedroom. References and Antiques. lt 24 East Mam men!. Call (740)4 41 -1013
3 becjrooms. dining room .
family room wl1ireplace, liv- 2 or 3 bed room hou se in deposit reqUired . No pel s on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 740- Po rk. qual1ty Inca! ra1sed
ing room, 2 fUit baths, utility Pomeroy, no pets, (740)992- 1740)446 -01 39 ·
992- 2526. Russ Moo re. hogs. Cus10rr cu i at R&amp;C
room. 2 car garage, heat 5858
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- ~ow;;;n:;:e;:;'~------, p &lt;:~c kong ask for BL ACK,
pump, 20x20 out building,
740-245-9440
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
!\'flst"~: LI.ANIJ )( IS
30 foot pool with new deck.
bedroom
house
in
Townhouse
apartm ent s,
~1ERC H.&lt;\NDISI~
{740)992·1641
Pomeroy. DepoSit required
Reg islered ANGUS ;m el
and/or small houses FOR
No Pets. (740)949-7004
Crossbred bu lls Too bloodRENT. Call (740)441-11 11
Letart Falls, OH; 3 bedroom
NO
PETS. to r appli cation &amp; 1nformation . 2001 Cub Cad et lawn lr&lt;Jc- lrnes . Slale Ru n Farm,
house. 1 bath , det ached 3
BR.
(740)286-5395
tor. model 2166. 16 ho. OVP Jackson.
garage, new roof, sid ing , $295/monlh , 5150 depos it Furni shed apt_ t br., 2nd Kohler engine. 42 " deck look
(7401446-3617
windows. carpet. &amp; kitchen ,
A've . Upstairs, at I util il1es pd., Hydr os ta tic t ransmissron. www.stateruntarm .com
565.000.00 (7401247 -2000
pets.
Gallipolis, shall dr 1ven . casl 1r0r1 aK ie,
3 yr. old. 3 b r. 2 112 bath . No
low hours. good condition.
excellent conditi on , atl alec· (740)44 6-9523.
New Home- 3 bedroom. 2
"""
GH:,\I&amp;
i\
$1.900. call (740)992 -4001
lric , 2 1/2 car garag e. 10
bath. den. On corner lot.
Gracious
living.
1
and
2
bedminutes from Holzer. Porte r
Futon bunk bed &amp; Sl!pEr smMeadow Hills, Osher Rd. Pt
4X5 round bale5 covered.
area. $750 month , $75 0 room apartment s at Village
Pleasant, WV. (740)446·
and
Riversi de gle walerbed frame Wllh good grass hay 512 .50.
deposit .
re ferences Manor
hea dboard.
S50
each.
9340.
Square
ba les
mostly
required. Call 740-446·4514 Apa rtme nts in Midcllepo rl (740)742 -280 t
From $295·544 4. Ca ll 74 0·
orcha1d
grass
52 .50.
or
740-446·3248
aHer
Spm
MORILE !lOMEli
99 2- 50 64. Equa l Housing
(74())992-2623
JET
roo
FORSAI.E
.
Opportunitie s.
AER ATION MOTORS
rick, 1.5 baths, carport,
Repa ired. New &amp; Rebu il t In Good m1xed lwy, S1 50 a
No
pets
,
No
smoki
ng.
Modern 1 Bedroom apt Call
For
Sale/Rent
1999
Stock Call Ron Eva ns 1- bale. (740)742-7004
650, deposit, referenet:ls
Woodfield 14x70 like new
(740)446·0390.
800· 537·9528
740 446·9209.
Hay !or Snle 1.500 lb. bales.
2br, 2ba central air/hea t
starting
a1 S10
Call
$ 19,000 sate rent $450/mo.
(304)675·1519 (304)89~- River
view. 3 bdrm ., 2
NEW AND USED STEEL (740) 445-2 109
3595
baths, basement and deck. - - - -- - - - - Steet Be ams. Pipe Reba r
Alt electric. located In Pleasant Valley Apartment For
C oncrete.
An gle, Square ba le hay for sale
New 14 wide, Only $849.00 Gallipolis
Ferry,
WV. Are now taking Applic ations Channe l. Fl at Bar. Steel Baled dry. $1 .80 per bale
down and only $t64 .88 per $700/month, no pats. By lor 2BR , 3BR &amp; 4BR. , Grating
For
Drains, Call (740)245 -5672
month, Call Kerana, 74Q- appt. (740)446-348t .
Applicat ion s
are taken Driveway s &amp; Wa lkways. L&amp;L
I H: \ '\SI'OIU \ 110'\
385·7671.
.,.,...~--"!'!'--., Monday tt1ru Friday. fro m Scrap Metals Open Monday
MOBFORILE o~ 9:00 A.M.- 4 P.M. Office is Tue sd ay, Wednesday &amp; p10
AUTOS
Nice used 3 bedroom, tota l
IUJ'II
Loca ted at 1151 Everg ree n Friday, sam-4 :30pm Ctosed 1
•uR SUE
electric. will he lp with
Drive Point Pleesan l, WV Thu rsday.
Saturday
&amp;
Dellvery. Only $13,995.00,
Phone No Is (304)675·5806 .
d
(740)446 7300
Call Harold, 740·385·9948. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, CA,
un ay.
$500! .Hondas,
Chev ys.
1997 14)(70 In country. $350 E.H .O
w ater ha ulin g tank 125 gal. Jeeps. etc ! POLIC E
Victorian 1736 sq. ft. 3 bed· + deposit + references - - - - -- - - - $100; one sal sc affoldin g 2 IM POU NDS Cars from
room, 2 bath. Stainless stee l (740)388-8371.
Tara
Townhouse tier complete $t 25: Queen $500. For tisti nQs t -800-719appllances. 8 fl. flat ceilings .
Apartments , Very Sp acious, Ann sola. $185; 2 occ asion· 300 t eJC I 3901
Hard! lap .wlth saddle root. 5" 2 Br. Mobile Ho.me in Spring 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA, 1 al arm chairs. 25 each; - - - - - - - on 12" roof pitch • porch. Valley area. $300 a month+ 1/2 Bath, Newly Carp eted, GMC full size truck topper. oo Pontiac Sunfire. S3,495 :
Cole's Mobile Homes t526t'l $250 deposit (304)B75-2900 Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool. $75 : 3 woo d bar stoo ls. $i5 oo Dod ge Neon. S2. 99 5: 99
US so E. Athans, OhloO- :._r1:._7:._40:_:)_44:...1_·6:...9.54
:._ _ _ _ Pati o. Start $3 85/Mo. No each; co ntempora ry de sk &amp; Ford Escort. $2.9 95; · 9Et
(740)592·1972. 'VJhere you Pets, Lease Plus Security cha;r, $40·, Oak coflee table Olds Achieva. $2 .495: 96 T.
Beautiful river view, ideal for
d o
getyourmonay'sworth~
one or two people, No pets , Depostt Requi re ·
11.ys: &amp; 2 end tables, $50 a set. Bird, $1 .995; 96 Gra nd Am.
4
4
1
references. (7401441 .0181 . 7 0·446 -3 8 : Evening s· alu minum t 6' extention lad- $2, 195 : 99 Plym . Breeze ,
8 USINFS'S
740-367-0502.
dar, $30; 1999 Yamaha 4K4 S2. t 95 , 96 N1ssan 4:~~4, Trk.
AND 8UIIJ)INGS
Nice 2 and 3 'be.d room
Big Bear four wheeler ; $3.495: 99 Kla Sporta ge.
~
Twin Rivers Tower is acce pt· ~ ,• , 53 .995 . g• GMC sp• .
mobil e homes 1or ren t
(740)843· 1053
.. ..
..
•
1.
1
Commercial building for Jnctudes water . sewe r &amp; in g applications or wa hng ;n~.;;.~;.;.,----, Pickup. $4.495. 97 Dodge
sale, asking $39,000. Great trash. no pets. deposi t &amp; list lor Hud-subslzed..._ 1- br,
BUIWING . .
PU. $3.995 . 98 Ford F150
SUI'PLIE.~
$4,395.
opportun ity to start a blJsl - $300 per month, (740.992· ~p~t menl. cal l 675 "6679
ness
or
to
lease . 2167
;;;,H;;;.-...,~---.,
B &amp; Auto Sates
Acqu isitions, 91 Mill St ., ;.;;;-~----..,
SPACE
Block , brick . SEij&lt;Ye r p ipe s.
7 128 State Route 160
Middleport. OH. Shown by
APARrMENJs
FOR RE.Vf
windows, linte!s, ate . C laude
(7 40)446-6865
a t.onl. 740992·5971 .
FORRENr
Wint ers, R1o Gra nde. OH
Call740-245-5 12 t .
1973
Mercury Cougar,
2 store lronts in Hi stoncal
63.0(10 actual miles. ru ns
1 and 2 bedroom apa rt downtown Pomeroy, Oh ,_ fa cPFTS
goOd . 5750 OBO, (740 )99 2ments, lurnished aild unfur·
ing the nv er. lor rent,
9334
nlshed . security · depoSit
16x80 sites available $1 15 required, no pets, 740·992· (740)589-71 22
per month lncludee water,
10 week old Reg female 1980 Pl ymouth Volare
$100. 69.000 miles (304)882-2610
. - ' - - - - - - -- Oltl ce space do wntown Be ag le
sewer &amp; trash, (740)992· :2::2:..1.:.8_
pups.
Pom eroy, approx. 1800 sq.
afteo 4 pm
21B7
(740)446 -3845.
1 bedroom apt. stove/ refrigft.
.
strebt level. near courterator &amp; utilities lurnlshed.
house, $450 mo.. (740)592· AKC Lab pups . 7 weeks. out 1967 Subaru car. 4 wheel
For Sa le: 79.106 AcreS:. Call (7401245·5859
1756
River view, producing oil &amp;
ol hunt1 ng stock. Parents on dri'tler. 2 door. runs good
$600 OBO. Call (7 40)256gas wells. Reduced to 1 Bedroom. near Holzer,
premise s. Wormed and t s1
\IIIH 11\'-111\1
t652 .
sho ts. Yell ows &amp; blacks .
$115.000. 304-529·71b6 CI A, WID hookup, qu iet
alter Spm.
(7401386·951 5.
location. $379 plus utilities.
HOUSEttlH~l}
1998 Dodge Aven ger. 4
Deposit &amp; lease requ ired .
ro"..,~
cy l1nder. a1r conditioning.
Lots lor Sale: Meadow Hills·
1 •--,;""'~::.;;,·~:::.,-.,1 AKC
regis tered
mala
7 ·_ _ __
17_40;_1_44_6_·2_9_5_
.,
German Shapherd puppies. Power sunroof. automatic.
3 miles from Point Pleasant ;_
mites
53.900
on Ost1el Rd. 304·675·3000· 1 BR Bachelor Apartment , Good Use d Appl1ances. 3 mos . old. t st . s.hot s &amp; 60.000
741}-446·9340.
Private &amp; Quiet $350 month Recondi tioned
and .worm ed. $200. (740)992- (740)446-2795
(304)675·1550
Guarant eed.
Wa shers . 3972
1999 Burck Century, 50.000
Poplar Heights Subdlvlalon,
Drye
rs.
Ranges.
and Good Home 1or J ack Russe II miles. excel len1 condi tion. 4
two adjacent )ota, 4.5acrea, 1 br. apt In Pt. Pleasant.
Refr igerators. Some start at T
d d
d
er rler. spa e . up t o El1e rJo01. power locks &amp; win·
stream, view, mature hickory 1 br. hcuse In Ohio central
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
1er· cows . tape player. 7-4 0-44691
air/
heat
no
pet~
dop
req.
on
all
med
sho
ts
ra
&amp; w elnut trees. $30,000
Vin e St ., (740)446-7 398
ences (304 )675-6676
448·2200
4224.
(3041675·8666

0

Veterinary Assistant needed. E•peri ance preferred,
but will" train. PTIFT, some
weekel1dS
requ ired
Min imum
wage .
Send
resume to French Town
Veterinary Clin ic. 360 SA
160 Gallipolis, or tax 740-

SATELLITE TECHNICIANS
NEEDED!

r

l'n,;
FOR S.\L[

0

assistants enc;:ouraged to
apply. Applications are availat
ttle
Meigs
able
Multipurpose Senior Center,
Mulberry Helgtlts, Pomeroy,
Oh. An EOE.

~-·

HousEIIOI .n
GOODS

1

The Meigs County CotJncil
on Aging is accepting appli·
cations lor Home Health
Aides. Applicants shotJid
have high school diploma or
G.E .D., reliable transporta·
lion, telephone in the home
and willing to work wee kends &amp; holidays. Must be
motivated and flexible. Witt
train. State tested nursing

VITUftiUI"'II

r

10

I

2
bedroom
new
stove/ ref rigerator.
Rent
$400.00
and
$400.00
deposit. No Pets
Off
Kingsbury and 33 . Ask lor
Marge. (740)992·411 9.

www.inloclsion.cof"(l

Soli
Shirley Spears, 304·
75 1 429

~ •

POLICIES: Ohio Vsltey Publllhlng t111fiYII lite right to edit, rej~~el, or c:enr.el any ad at any time . Err ors muat be reported on th e fir al day ol
li i
Trlbun•Sentlnai·Rtglttar will be reeponslbla tor no more then the colt of 1M space oeellplad by the error and only the Pirtt in te rti on. We t hall
1ny loa• or IXJHinH that results from the publication or omlaalon of •n ad'tlflrtlaament. Corr11ctlon will be madfl In the fir st av.!llll&amp;bl e edh 1on. • B o ~
sre aiWrfl c:onlldanllal . • Currant rste card applies. • All t11al Millie ad'tler11eements are aubjecl to the Federal Fair Housi ng Act uf 1968. • Thi &amp; ""'''P'''"'
.CCIPU only help w•nttd •de mHtlng EOE 111nclard1. We will not knowingly accept anv advertising In violation ollhe law.

ng
peop e oea
ho want to eam mon
hile losing weight, show
ng
others
how
lnlormaUonal
DVO/C
vailable upon reqtJesl 740
41·1964.

·r•o

Thuraday for Sunday&amp;

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Now
hiring Automotive
Technician at Norris Northup
Dddge , 252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipoli s, Ohio. B00-446 .
0842 _
--------Paramedics
&amp;
EMT"s
needs. Apply at 1354
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

government jotl Info, call
American Assoc . ol Labor,
t -(913)599·8220, 24 hrs.
emp. serv.

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualneaa Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00 ·..;····

• All ads must be prepaid'

1·B77·463-6247ert. 2456

20041._ ....
POSTAL JOBS! UP TO
$1 ,047.71 WEEKLY, FREE
CALLI FOR INTERVIEW
AND
REGISTRATION
INFORMATION . SIGN ON
BONUS
1ST
tOO
CALLERS.
SE LECT
AREAS , 1·800-892•5144.
EXT. 93, 7 DAYS.
Portamed ic, the nallen's
leading paramedical health
A me rlgas Propane Is seek- Information service compa·
Ing an experienced local ny Is seeking med techa,
d~lvertSe r'tlice Tech for phlebotomlets, · EMT's and
Racine. COL A or B with LPN s to do Insurance
tank &amp; hazmat required. exams In the Galllpolle &amp;.
Prior .
Propane/plumbing Pomeroy area. Must have 1·
e:xperlence HELPFUL. Must year blood draw experience.
be physically capable to per· Pan t ime. Schedule your
torm all demands of tt1e job. own appointments . Fax
p ompetltlve pay and bene· resume to : Olatrlct Manager
tits. Oualllled applicants ca ll 614· 785-0565
1·800 · 583·9675
~OEIAAIMIFION
POSTAL JOBS

Ap_ril 9, 2004

'69·
..9.

HELl' WAN'ru!J

••••HIRING

Queen oat
Limited Quantitieo

Twi n ea. pt .

HELP WA!\n:D

Gallipolis.

110

-~

In Next Day•a Pape~
~"~~·~·~ In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundaya Paper

1r.-ooiiiNsrRiiiiiiiuiiicniiiiOiN;.r

Serta

-~

Monday-Friday ror Inaertlon

Wanted: Someone to clean
house. Send resumes or let·
Hea'tly equipmen t mechan- tar of interest to CLA 555,
ic/welde r needed, experi· c/o
Gallipolis
Tribune.
Abso lute Top Dollar: U.S. ence
necessary,
tools Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
?ilve r.
G ol d
Coin s, required, catl (740)247·221 1
150
Proofsets, Di amond s, Gold EOE
ScHooL...'!
·· Rings.
U.S . Currency.·
M.T. S. Coin Shop, 151 Hiring: Full &amp; Part time Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Nursery Greenhouse help. Gallipoli s Career College
740 -446·2842.
Call (740)256-9247.
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367, ·
Cash paid for- gold &amp; silver MaKe 50% se lling Avon .
1-800-214-0452
lime
ONLY. www . gallipoliscaret~roo t legB .oom
Coins &amp; com collection s. free Limited
Accrfldi!ed Member Acc•edlllog
esti males. G le n Bissell . (740)446-3356 .
Council lor \ndepandllnt Coll ages
(7 401992· 7599
Need a job?
We are hiring!
Look ing lor 2br or bigger/
You could earn up
house. with sm aH!piece of
to
SB/hou
r plus bonuses.
lan d . on a rt=ml-to-own base s
We also offer paid
can pay up to $400month
Barn Removal
training, holidays
(304)895-3408
Atl
relerences
&amp; lull lnsurand vacations
l\l!'l())\11'\1
Full or part time
Sl H\ H I..,
shills available.
Call todey.

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

hits and a walk.
Haynes did not throw at all until March 6
after failing his preseason physical. He won
15 games in 2002 but was hmited to 18 starts
with lower back pain last season. ·
"When he fai led his core strevgth test at
the be~inning of camp. we decided to take
care ot it right away,' manager Dave Miley
said. "Things are falling into place . You
don't win 15 games in the big leagues by
accident."

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

Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlons
• lnc:lude Phone Number And Addn~•• When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 D•v•

110

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclosslfledads
{I~~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
·
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Plsolay Ads

• start Your Ads Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete

black stripe tabby cal. yell ow
Accounting
eyes . small lace, bu11 around Experienced
person
in
accotJnts
payable,
eyes . white moutt1 very lev·
receivable,
pay
roll,
taxes,
ing. answers to Dolly. II you
hive seen her please call quarter reports &amp; G.L. Send
res ume tl3 CLA 548 , c/o
{30 4 )675-238 3
Gallipolis Tribune. Ga llipolis
OH 45631.
lost - small t1ound dog. white
&amp; tan. 'tlici nity of Bashan Ad , Full time desk cle rk, apply in
Reward, (740)985·3601
person
Holiday
Inn.

,

...

AD

Should Include These Items

r

SERTA

AN

O~ad'lfirM

Word Ads

Monday thru _F riday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

L

l

pitched fo. ur scoreless I ' nnings and the
Cincinnati Reds beat the Pinsburgh Pirates
5-0 Sunday.
The Reds got five strut ht hits off Kip
Wells to start a five-run fi~· t. Austin Kearns
and Jason LaRue hit conse utive doubles.
Cincinnati ended its six - ame spring losing
streak .
Haynes. who gave up three runs in two
innings in his last outing, allowed just two

3L\egt~ter
(304) 675-1333

To Place

~
. (740);::~::n

for .4.prll 9th
delivery

Championship: S&amp;.turday, 2 p.m.
DIVISION Ill
Loudonville (23·2) vs: St. Henry (20·
5), Thursday, 11 a.m.; Bellaire (22·4)
vs. Versailles {26-0) , Thursday, 2 p.m.
Championship: Saturday, 11 a.m.
DIVISION IV
Maria Stein Marion Local (17-9) vs.

In One Week With Us
REA·~H OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
Pt.;US YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

free German Rottwe 1ler Call 800-652-236 2
male 3yr s old , very larg e &amp;
Pen
included
frie ndly,
(3041458- 1823
IDOLEPORT.
DA
HIFT! NIGHT
SHIFT.
ICK UP APPLICATION
Yu ung mate cat. sn ort hair,
BUSINES
black/white. Goo d Hunter! DURI NG
~O~U~R:,S:.·....
a ll
Desk
Clerk
and
Hous
ekeeper
needed.
FOUND
Plea se apply at Budget Inn.
Lost 3- 15 on Vansickle Court 260 Jackson Pike Gallipolis,
a female spa yed brown OH . No phone calls please.

Dayton Chaminade-JUiienne (18-7),

Thursday, 6 p. m., Ottawa-Giandorl

~ter

CLASSIFIED

C-1 Beer Ca rry Oul perm it
tor sale. cnester Town ship, •Min. ot 2 years exp.
Meigs Cou nty, send lett ers
•Medic al Ins., 401 K
of interest 10: The Dall y
•Operation area 400 mile
Sentmel , PO Box 729·20,
radius ot Jackson , OH
Po mer , Ohio 45 769.
•Sign on BontJs
•34 cent per mile
GIVEAWAY
•95 ~'" No touch

Are He

DIVISION I
Tal. St. John's (22-4) vs . Cots.
Brookhaven (25·2) , Friday. 6 p.m.;
Canton McKinley (22·3) vs. Hamilton
(23·2 ), Friday, 9 p.m.
Championship: Saturday, 8: 30p.m.

vs.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Super10

Bellaire
eliminates
Chesapeake

(25-1)

Monday, March 22, 2004

to

pr.tlrenca, l(mllatlan or
dlacrlml\llon."
Thtt ntwepeP:.r will not

knowlngl~ccapt
advii"11HrM for rHI
1111ta wh4c 11 In
vlatatlon of 1 law. Our
rHdara ara htrtby
lnlormad that all
dwlltlngt advlrtiHd In
thl• n~ptl*" are
avallabl• on an equal
opportunity" Hill.

r

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AN"IlQl ll·~~

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-------~-------------------· -·

"

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Card of Thanks
2000 blue Jeta Vol. 5 speed,
AIC, 4 door. CD. New brakes

and Uros. (740)446-7500
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT.
4 door, V6, 27 ,000 miles.
$6,995.
2003 Pontiac Grand Am V6,
4 door, 31 ,000 miles.

$6.900 . Phone (740)256·
• 1142.
2001 Ford Taurus . $6 ,200;
1998 Sable, $4,395; 1997
Grande Cherokee, $4,695;
,998 Cavalier. $3,295; 1997
Sunflre, $2,995: 1995 F-250.
4k4, diesel , $9,995; 1994 F250 , 4x4 diesel , $9.000:

1995

Windstar,

$3,000;

_1997 S-10 Extended cab,

$4,995: 1997 Sabia, S3.495;

Help Wanted

Thanks for caring
so much to send
a card, phone calls,
gifts. &amp; nowers . All
was greatly
· appreciated.
God Ble&gt;S You All.

ACROSS

WANTED: Emergency Relief Workers
(Substitutes) needed to work with people with

Phillip
Alder

mental retardation in Athens &amp; Meies Counties.

Hourli: as scheduled as needed; some overnights
required. Requirements: High school diploma
/GED, valid dri\lers license, three years sood
driving experience and adequate automobile
insurance coverage. $7.00/hour.

BENNETT'S

for ..1pplica.nt s.

V!M~

10

Cavalier, Neon , Saturn.
Grand Am . Cutlass. Intrigue,
Geo
Trackar.
Firebird,
Caravan. Intrepid. Sunfire.
GMC. Bonneville, vehicles
are in stock from $1 ,195 to
$3.895.
Excellent c~ition . approx .
COOK MOTORS
37,000 mil s.
Asking
1740)446 _0103
$20,000
( 40)446- 1864
after 6pm or (740)446-0974 - - - - - - - For Sale: 93 Ford Tem po, 5
87 Buick LeSabre, high speed. $1 ,250 , good shape.
mileage, new starter, new Phone 740 _446 _8073 .
brakes . runs good . $550 . ;,;;;;;;;;,.:.;;;:.,;;;::.;;.;;;.:;;.......,

r

Call (740)245-5003 leave
massage
~

TRucKS

mR SALE

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen.tt.

Equal Opportunity Employer

L~.--~Ar!lflii~u;~~-,..l~
L~.JO_ _,;;Y..-;,M~I
S &amp;;.,_,J r:
L
- .L
L_

MmuRCYCLES

I·

1979 Chevy Suburban. 4x4.
low mileage. 400 small
block. has engine noise. 4
new rough tread tires &amp; rally
rims, plus 1977 350 Blazer.
4x4. rebuilt 1rans. all for
$2300 firm. (740)992-9334

2000 Suzuki GZ 250 excellent condition. S2.250. 1999
Honda CA 80, rebuilt. very
good condition, $1 ,800.
(740)245 -5220
- - -G-S-X-R-- - E - -- 200 1
6 00 , xce 11en 1
condit1on . Call (740 }4161990 Plymouth Voyager 1415.
Van. one owner. V6 LE. 7 .,.,.,,...-...,...,..,--.,
pass. auto ttans. Excellent
BoATS &amp; MoroRS
Condition. All power with ~-...iFII
'OiiiRiiSAu:iiiiiiii,;..,..l.
AJC. $4,500. (740)446-3277. --,

r

r40

MUIURCYUE&gt;

I

~

I

1987 Citatiou 3.0 4/cy linder
4yrs old, Alpha Oue Out
Drive reb uilt runs great

$2,000 (304)593-1990

93 Rodeo 33,000 miles, new
1999 Honda 400 EX.
tires, brakes,&amp; paint JOb 1991 Dodge 1/2 ton . auto. $2.200. Phone (740)446- 1988 Baja 19 ft . open bow
$3.500 OBO (304)593-0922 a1r, 97,000 miles. $3,400. 7730.
trailer, V-6. 4.3 liter engine.

94 Camara V-6. auto w/air,
looks &amp; runs good, $2,500,
(740)742 -2357 after 6pm
• leave message.

-~------ $4500. (740)949·3029

740}446-7730.

!!,;;"'"~~:0...---. 2000

Honda Rancher TAX:X.
VANS &amp;
350. tow mileage. in good 50 H.P. Mercu ry boat motor,
4-"'Ds
Condition. $2600, Paul Karr. 3 extra props, 1 stainless
Chester. Oh. (740)965-3536 steel, with co ntrols and
trolling
motor
$400 .
89 Chevy Blazer Tahoe 4x4.
• E~~:celler.t condition. While !airty new ti res. runs good. 2002 Honda 300 EX. very (304)675·5131 aNar 4pm
-95 Buict-: LaSabre. 68.500 asking
OBO. good shape: 1994 Yama ha
51600
miles, $4.300 call (304)675- (740 )
_
Blaster.
good
shape,
CMIPUIS&amp;
992 4078

409B

(740)992-3976

Pomeroy Eagles

HEATING t/ COOLING

Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, Ohio 45640
Dcildlm~

• Free Eslimates
• 5 &amp; l0 yr Warranti es

....
, : •. '"'

• Huge Inventory
'
• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces "'f.{.·

f!!~!!.'Yl

Gibson 1111B1f11BlM.
--~-

Gallipolis, OH WVO I0212

1988 Mallard camper. 36ft..

ex. cond.. 55200. (740)9493029
Sll{ll!ls
HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

DINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sund ay

MYERS PAVING

Doors Open 4:30

871-2457

6:30

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

Last Thursday of
every month

t
t

All pack $5.00
Bring thi s coupon

Hoy $5.!KI

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Hill's Self

Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

National
Phone (740)S9J-6671
Athen s, Ohio
/Jeue,.
· El'CJT

&amp;!®~ W®®1iltillil
~cll'li®@li

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Paying up to S400

General Contracting
Homes, Garages,

J&amp;L Construction
992·2772
• Vinyl Sitllnl(
•Hoofing
• Blown Insula tion
• Hoom Additions
• Vinyl
Replaccm cnt
Windows

Shop
Classifieds!

•Ccrtaintcml Vinyl
Relllac&lt;' rn e nl ·
Windows

l

BARNEY

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204

Condor Street

992-2975

.,

limb!"

BIG NATE
G. INA 1 HE RE ARE SOME
COMICS I DREW FOR
THE NEl&lt;r EDITION OF

"Notme!

/

(
\

~.~GO.OO
,

My money 1s w1 lh ". ·
Rocky Hupp Insurance ·.
and Financial Services.
\ Box 189, Midd leport, OH
., Phone 843-5264 ." , /
'·· ··~!~~-~~«) ·~- ~~:~.~~.~ -~· ~· ·'

THE SCHOOL NEWSPAPER~
Ll H. OK. I'LL
SEE lF TH£RE:5
ROOM FOI'THEM.

Here's .all you need to do...\
Fill out the coupon below \
and drop off or mail it with a\
copy of your photo ID. I

rv-.
Unleso

exceptions
are flied thereto, said
account will be oet for
• heari ng before said
Court on the 22nd day .
ol April, 2004, at
which
lime . said
account will be i:onoldered and continued from dey .to day
until finally disposed
Of.
Any peroon tntereated may file wriHen
exception , to said
account or to maHers
pertaining to the execution of the trust, not
teaa. than five days
prior to the date set

for hearing.
J,S.Powetl
Judge
Common Pleaa Courl,
Probate Division
Melgo County, Ohio
(3) 22
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The eighteen member
Gallta·Jackson·Melge
Board ol Alcohol,
Drug Addiction and
Mental
Health
Services Is appointed
by tho Director of the
Ohio Department of
Mental
Health
(4
appointees),
the
Olrector of the Ohio
Department
of
Alcohol and Drug
AddlcHon Services (4
appointees) and the
County

Commissioners

In

Gallla, Jackoon and
Meigs Counties (1 0
appointees) .
Currently, there are
vacsncleo to be filled.
Individuate Inter·
eoted In being considered
for
lhls
appointment can do
so by requesHng an
application from:
Ronald A. Adkins,
Executive Director
G&amp;llla-Jackson-Melgo
Board of Alcohol,

I

Drug Addiction
and Menial Health
Services
53 Shawnee Lana
P.O. Box 514
Galllpalli, OH45831
Phone: 740-446-9022
Tho Board atrtveo
to maintain a balanced repreoentatlon
of community mom·
bert and wetcomea
minority or female
apptlcanto.
(3) 22 , 23, 24

Public Notice
Notice Is hereby
given that the annual
meeting of the share·
holders of Farmero
Bancshares, Inc. will
be
held
at
the
Middleport Church of
Christ, Family Life
Center, 437 Main
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio, on the third
Wednesday of April,
2004, at 4:00 p .m.
according
to
Ito
bylaws, for the pur·
pooe
of
electing
directors and the
transaction of ouch
other business as
may properly come
before said meeting.
Jo
Ann
Crlap,
Secretary
(3) 22, (4) 2, 14, 20

WELL ..- WE
ROOM
ONLY HAVE
FOR THEM ? so MuCH
WHY
SPACE Fd&lt;
WOULDN ' T
C/',RTOONS .

IN F II'.ST
P!&gt;.NEL ,
BELLIGEI'.ENT
DOG C HASES
"ZA NY CAT ....

THEI&lt;.E BE
ROOI'\ FOR

THEM ?

BUILDERS InC.
New Homes • Vi nyl
Siding • New GarJgt::s
• Rcplm:cmcnt

See
.Rocl&lt;y:"RJ ....

• Rool'i ng

PEANUTS
T~ERE ARE TOO
MAN'( CI-IARACTERS
IN THIS BOOK,AND
TOO MUCH601N6

Hupp

COMMERCIAL and

on your home delivered subscription!

IF T HERE 'S

BISSELL
Window ~t

DISCOUnt*

g

l 'mout
on a

,'

11Ui.t
. . .April
,,

I

"I fee II ike

can

Inches

1-\\Gl-\(:':l\ BRI\C.KET

-.. .,

Free
Estimates

corners

i\ ~E..~\:18

,...WHO!!. t'\(.,f'., Kt'-IN.'i ::.1\VW "''
l:':l /&gt;., Pml'.'l \kf.EJ:J It-\ Tf-\E:

Tf\OIZ~t\I'PLE. ...

·husine.'ts, not our !i'ide/hre

Care

•0·10 I United

PU'\~'i '::&gt;t\\JU) \'J"'-l
E.NZ\-It.C&gt;... "

P"1'01!. 'IOU, "r&gt;..

P":,IGf\'_ Bt.\1-\G 1\ fV\ILUOO.t\IR£ "''
f-\1\'J 1\~ C&gt;l~\)\/t\1'1\1\G(.:':l,

IAwll and Garden l!qrtifliiiCIII is our

Pro Lawn

IMPORTS
Ath ens

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

I LIKE A SOOK

WHERE T~ERE'5

ONLY ONE CHARACTER
AND NOTI-l1N6
HAPPENS TO HIM ..

ON .. I CAN'T KEEP
TRACK OF -rneM
ALL ...

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

740-742·341

-· - -~

--

3122/04

Dean Hill

"W.V's

BETTY

New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1 t&gt;ON'T
II.NOW Ya.l.

1·800·822-0417

GOODBYE!

Chevy. Ponttas. Buick.
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

#I

iHE Pl)lij&gt;())E OF
''Cil\\.l, OISP\.;W'' IS SO

£0ME.TIME.S
I jUST

ANSW~'l\\E 1'1\0NE

BEING P.UD€
iO
STRANGERS

YOO ()ON'r I-lAVE TO

ITS PEOPlE YOU

IF

Olds

FE€~ 1..\KE

DON'T KNOI-J

HOWARD l.

WRITES!£

•allipoH• lail~ lribunt
Jotnt Jlea•ant le~t,ttr
The Daily Sentinel

iunb.ap O!tme' ·ientintl
' Onca you have signed up lor the Senior DI!Count, your renewal notice will rell ect your di!Count

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

:Subscriber'sName ___________
I
:Address _____________
~City/State/Zip. _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
I •
1 Phone _______________

Mall or drop off this coupon along with acopy of your phOIO ID lo
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O.Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••

•ROORNI
•HOME
MAINTENANCE

GARFIELD

.SEAMLESS

GmER
*free hllmlt&amp;l*

949·1405
NOW IU'NTINli
A·J
Mini-Storage

992-6396
992-2272
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• Room Addition• a
Remodeling
• New Garag..
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttera

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Docks
We do It all except

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740·446"·0842 • 9'4 9· 1155 Evenings
800-446·0842

t
~

1HEN BUlL.!] UP
' 1'0 1'HI5

0

N

t':l

0

0

(:-.

I

1{\

~

CS:

t

~

~~

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 pet month

~ ~eittUtt
~igh&amp; Dry

Self·Storage

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Pass
i\11 pass

7
8

9
10

of cheese

Excited "

39 Prolix for
media

13 Playground
gear

currency

36 Walks
slowly

AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Luis

Campos

Celeor1tv C1pher cryplogra mo il lII ~rea ted Irom quotiltlons by lamou; DE!DPit&gt;
Each letter 1n te c1~her ~1aflds lor another

pas1 and presen·

Today' s clue N eoua!s 0

" IXOOJII
DKJZ

ZSZU ."

"UGX'HJ
UGX

GPLJM

01

NXOL

TX I L

PHZMF

MJA J H

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ZM
LURJH

BGI J H

XMLOB

LHUOMR ."

OGZOE

WOFJ

KDLFZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Jack Paar was so good. he seemed to be 'n color
when TV was still in black-and-whtte... - Critic Tom Shales
(C) 2004 by NEA. Inc 3-20

'Your &lt;JIIrlh&lt;h\y:

Tuesday, Ma rch 23, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Powerful new contacts you could make in
th e year ahead will be 1n positions to give
your work or career a tremendous boost.
The person who is apt to be the luckiest lor
you may be born under the sign of Virgo.
ARIE S (M arch 2 1-April 19) - Think in
te rms of be 1ng helpful wherever you can
and being of service to all you encounter
today. Good deeds wi ll be recogn ized,
appreciated and rewarded in larger measure than usual.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Because
you're not apt to make situations more serious than they are , matters th at are placed
in your hands Will run quite smoothl y lor
you 1oday. Your smite makes yo u a winner.
GEMI NI (May 21 -June 20) - You won't
have to be out on the town where the
aclion Is in order to enjoy yourself today.
Once your work is out of the way, spending
ti me at home with loved ones is all you'll
need.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Whethe r 1!
is mingling with a sizeable crowd or promoting a big deal. anyth ing that smacks of
largeness could turn out to be extremely
fortunate for you today. Don't th1nk in small
terms.
LE O (July 23-Aug . 22) - You may get a
tremendous opportu nity today to enlarge
upon somethi ng good that you already
have going fo r you Watch for ways th at
co uld enhan ce your position.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Something
far removed from your present interests
could be stirring and will become of great
interest to you whEtn you learn about 1t,
posSibly today. Tile benefits to you wi ll be
ou tstanding
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Get involved
with others 1oday whenever possible and
feas1ble, because conditions look exceptiona lly promising for you at this time co ncerning any joint ven ture or shared inter-

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compliment on how well she
had organ 1zed the loca l bazaar.
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Vrc/rm • Query · Olden - Knotty · CCC TOR
Before we were married I w :shed mv husbond had a

nice

vo1 ce

so he could stng me to s:ee'o Now after f:f-

teen years I wish he was a DOC TO R

ARLO &amp; JANIS

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GRIZZWELLS

U\-1-o\l , ~E~\=blm ... 1
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U?fE\-\ ..

Under no
ci rcumstances should you cast yourself in
a loner's role today. In order to be at your
bes t, you' ll requ1re joyful companio11s, or
spending time with you r special someone
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov 23-0ec. 21) - You'll
be at your best today 1n fulfill ing career or
work-rela1ed objectives. If 1here is anyth1ng
on your agenda that is especially important. be sure to work 'bn it now while t11e
odds favo r you.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) Although you appreciate beautiful belongIngs. you 're not apt to be particularly lnlerested in th1ngs of a m a ter~ al nature tod ay.
Your real joy will come !rom love and good
tnends.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb 19) - Vou may
have to deal with a changeable Slluahon
today that was not supposed to be on your
plate, but your clever m1nd will eas1fy handie the matter and calm ly avert any ado,rer-

vMCH Wil&lt;t, DO 1 CUT'.'THl RfD

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tr'o
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PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Although
early indicators may sigO_al to ugh th1ngs to
be dealt w1th tod ay, Lady Luck has other
plans for you. She will quickly back you up
and let you get on with what you enjoy.

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I

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5
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mineral

good pl ayers, however, it is important to
know wheri to "break" the second-lowest
rule, to avoid giving away vtf al snippets of
information .
You have six top tricks: two spades and
tour hea r~ . You can establish fou r more
winners in diamonds. Fine. but there is a
danger. If East holds the diamond ace
and can shift with effect to a high club,
they might take one diamond and four
clu bs.
You must try to persuade East to continue spades. (If West has the diamond ace.
your club king is safe from attack.) The
key is to win lhe first trick with the spade
king , not the ace. Then, East, when in
with the d1amond ace. will almost cer tainly return the spade 10. He will hope h1s
partner started with five or six spades
headed by the ace-jack or ace-ntne.
II you win trick one with the spade ace.
though , East is much more li kely to shift
to the cl ub queen. He will assu me th at if
you had only the spade ace, you wou ld
have made a holdup play at trick one

TH.E BORN LOSER

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Last week. I gave examples of declarer
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However. there are a couple of occasions
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them today and to morrow.
You are sitting Sou th. th e declarer in
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Before · di scussing that. though , if your
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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, March 22, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

·,

·,

O~E.''

!i£COJJ05-"

f

�Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 22,

www. mydailysentinel.t;Om

NCAA Tournament ·

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

Ga. Tech 57, Boston Coli. 54
'

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

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

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

ATLANTA REGIONAL

Xavier 89, Miss. St. 74

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

Memphis 53

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

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

.PHOENIX REGIONAL

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

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

NASCAA

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

1

Browns announce
preseason schedule, B2

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

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

2004

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

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

• Bigger schools sweep allstar games. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

124 West ~aln Street

WEAmER
I

Taxes
stressing you out'?
Skip the two aspirin
and call us in the
morning.

Datalla on Paaa AS

INDEX
:1 SECTIONS- 1:1 PAGES

618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
992-6674
Hours: Mon-Frl 9 to 6; Sat. 9 to 5
Other Hours by Appointment

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Banking

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

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

Please see Plant. AS

J.

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

REED

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio VaUey Publishing Co.

www.ovbc.com

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

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

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

HO EFL \C H@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

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

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

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

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

truck
•
•
arr1ves 1n
Pomeroy
Bv

J. MtLES- lAYTON

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

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

March is Colorectal Cancer Month

Colorectal Cancer Update 2004

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Target Audience: RNs and LPNs

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Featured Spealcan: Ronn Grandia, MD, James Ungerleider, MD, Carol Ad&lt;)mS, RN, BSN,
Nikita Hasseman, RN, Lisa lee, RN, BSN, Tanya Cremeens, RN, BSN ,
Jackie Woodward, RNFA and Amy Bias, RN, BSN.
For mora information , coli (740) 446-5679 or (7 40) 446·5057.
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Development Block Grant
program with a June application. She was not able to provide an estimated cost for the
project last night, but said an
appli cation through Ohio
Public Works Comm ission
has already been filed.
Hays urged council _to act
on closi ng the purchase of

BREED@MYDAI LYSENTINEL .COM

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OBITUARIES

748-992-1771
808-866-1771

BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAI LYSEN TINEL.CDM

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

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SPORTS

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

Ohio protesters
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