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                  <text>Sunday, March 30, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Dealing with
Family home has central great room
aggressive plants
THE

BY JANE BERGER

Associated Press

Beware plant geeks bearing
gifts. They may be bearing
enetnies instead of friends.
I learned my lesson the hard
way, · from a true plant geek
who lived next door. Hubert's
garden was filled with varietie~
he came to know in his native
Britain, hunted down from
obscure sources all over the
United States, and then
ordered by mail. He also loved
to propagate plants and share
them with friends and neighbors.
•
I had no problem with the
espaliered fig tree and the towenng pink crape myrtle he
gave me, but I rue the day he
came trotting over with a little
piece of "extra" spurge that he
was certain I would love to
have in my garden.
1 was not familiar with this
particular euphorbia, but then,
Hubert had hundreds of plants
in his garden that even avid
American gardeners would
never know.
I planted it in the herb garden, hoping it would help fill
in some of the empty space
between the sage and the
chervil. And did it ever' Within
a few years, it had carpeted the
herb garden, jumped across the
path to a perenrnal bed, and
popped up several yards away
under the dwarf nectarine tree.
Even after the garden was
completely renovated, the
spurge sporadically appeared
111 the rruddle of the new lawn.
Hubert wasn't sure of the
botanical name of this euphorbia, but it turned out to be
Cypress spurge (euphorbia
cyparissias) a European imrnigrant which is now considered
invasive in many states. It's a
tx:autiful plan't, with soft green
needle-like foliage - you'd
almost think it was some kind
Qf a dwarf evergreen- and in
summer it has small yellowish. !itj:en bracts that later on tum

to a reddish hue. I hate to say it,
but I actually would plant this
euphorbia again, but only in an
area between two slabs of concrete or in a container.
Another well-intentioned
friend gave me the rapacious
lemon balm (melissa officinalis) and the tenacious tansy
(tanacetum vulgare), which
she insisted that I try because
of its quaint old reputation as
the "strewing herb" - strewn
about the ground in olden
times to disguise repulsive
odors. I think it's known as the
"strewing herb" because it
strews it' seeds all over the
yard.
The lemon balm ]jas a pleasant, lemony smell, but it's a
lemon of a plant. It, too, is
coming up all over my yard,
and although its leaves can be
used for a delightful tea, I've
got so much of it I could
almost go into the herbal tea
business.
Plant catalogs and nurseries
almost never warn you that a
plant might be problematical.
One prominent mail-order
house notes that tansy leaves
can be used as an insect repellent, and another observes that
the obedient plant (physostegia
virginiana) gets its name from
the ability of the blooms to stay
put if you push them · around
· the stem. It won't stay put in ·
the garden, however, unless
you buy the cultivar Miss
Manners, which is far better
behaved than its aggressive
cousins
·
.
Most nursenes and grow~rs
are m the busmess of selhng
P.lants, and they tend to emphaSIZe demable, rather than
undestrable plant tratts. Before
you plant anythmg, you should
o.btai~ a copy. of the "invastves hst that ts kept by your
local county extension agent,
or check out individual plants
in reference books or on the
Internet.

HOUSE

.••.

OF

THE

WEEK

.

Support the troops!

•

.•.
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
MONDAY, MARCH 31 , 2003

5 0 ClNTS • Vol. 53 , No. 155

On the homefront

A DUO OF DORMERS and an arc had window add to thle home's traditional look.

By BRUCE A. NATHAN
For AP Newsfeatures
re there many mouths to feed in your
home?
This design, Plan K-64, by the Homestore
Plans and Publications Designers Network,

A

et'·4•

makes the most of its manageable 2,347
square feet of living space, providing four
bedrooms on the main floor. plus a flexible
future area upstairs.
Three good·sized bedrooms -one of which
has a vaulted ceiling - are serviced by a full
bath in a front corner
QV[R,t,LL
of the home . The
master suite is special:
A stepped ceiling and
COV. PORCH
a bayed sitting area
add style to the
bedroom , while hisand-hers walk-in
closets provide the
s1orage space you
need . And the
suite has a

FUTURF. ARRA

·---· ·-··· --..;;: io:;·-,;.·.:o; ····· -----

private bath with a deluxe tub.
The family gathering areas deliver comfort,
but with enoUgh elegance for a "grown-ups·
only" evening. The great room and the formal
dining room, which is set off by two pairs of
columns , contribute to this refined look.
For everyday living, the great room, the
breakfast room and the kitchen will be a well·
used trio. An island coaktop and a serving
bar in the kitchen are two amenities that will
make life easier. Need a couple more? Take
a look at the half·bath and the spacious
laundry room off the kitchen.

K-64 Details
Bedrooms: .......................................................3
Bedrooms: .............................................. .........4+
Baths: ......................................................... 2-1/2
Main floor:.....
.. ._. 2 ,347 sq. ft.
Total living area:.................,............ 2 ,347 sq . ft .
Future area: ........................ .................823 sq. ft .
Standard basement :................... 2,347 sq. ft .
Garaga and storage: .........................446 sq. ft.
Exterior Wall Framing:..................................2x4
Foundation Options : .... Standard basement,
Crawlspace or Slab

K-64 '

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

Twins spread
patriotism,
plan local rally
J.

Iowa in I 989 when a gun tunet
Staff writer
exploded causing his death.
The sisters have started rnakPOMEROY _ Local twin ing colorful ribbons for people
sister.; are trying to make a dif- - who s~pport the troops. The yelference by rallying the home- low nbbons have a wooden
front in support of the troops heart attached. The heart has
abroad.
been painstakingly handpainted
Sherry Kinnan and Shelly flags in red, white and blue.
The sisters were worried that
White are organizing a rally on
May 17, Anned Forces Day. some military personnel will
Tentatively, they have planned a experience the same barbs and
candlelight . vigil at the insults that greeted soldiers
llll,l,Phttheater m Pomeroy.
returning from Vietnam.
I think the county shouW
White is adamantly opposed
su~rt our troops," Kinnan to people who protest the
sat •
American involvement in Iraq.
The tw&lt;;~ women ~orne from .a
"I am tired of hearing about
" h
_ long rrulitary trad!Uon. Therr th
te
·d "I
grandfather, Robert Hunnell,
e. pro s1ers, s e sru .
served in the Army during believe they should be for the
World War II. Their father Lany U.S. all the way, or they are for
Fex was a member ~f the terrorists," she said.
Niui~nal Guard.
The sisters will be holding an
::Kinnan served in the Navy organizational meeting for the
during the frrst Gulf War. rally at 6 p.m. April 3 at
White's husband was a member God'sNET in
downtown
of the Navy and aboard the USS Pomeroy. ·
-.
BY

MILES LAYTON

BECAUSE OF ITS PROXIMITY to the kitchen and the breakfast room, this home's
central great room Is a spot lor both special and everyday gatherings. A buder'a
pantry eases meal service from the kitchen to the formal dining room. Down the hall
are the slaepln~quarters, lneludlng three bedrooms and a lull bath. The master aulta
Is beyond the great room and lricludas twin walk-In closets. A future area could be
flnlshad off to meet your needs.

Retired farmer says
life on today's farms
not like it used to be

· RACINE
Meigs
County's annual Family Health
Fest, a celebration offering
health education information
f&lt;l(.-- families, activities and
emertainment,
was
held
Sa!wday
at
Southern
El~tary School.
.Tij) ev~t focused on helping
families develop an awareness
of !he importance on nutrition
education, healthy living, fitness, preventative health care

:Index
2 Sections - 12 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
· Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A2
B4-5

86
86
A4
A3
AS
81-3
A2

C 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

MILES LAYTON

Styff writer

Veteran farm couple Dan and Donna Jean Smith, who have
retired from farming, says farming IS a great way to raise
children. Dan says their six children were raised with a solid
work ethic which they can carry anywhere. (J. Miles Layton)

routinely milked dozens of
cows each day alongside his
wife and children, said kids
today think milk comes
from Kroger's.
Smith said he and his wife
went to one of the local
elementary schools and
demonstiated how butter is
made wilh a churn.
"Youn~er children do
not know the importance
of farming because they do
not know where food

comes from," Smith said.
Smith said that while he
misse s farming, he is having "a good time" now that
he has retired. He h J pes
thi;!t by demonstrating to
students how butter is
made and other things
about farmlife !hat they
know more about the
importance of farming to
their everyday lives - and
that milk does ·not come
from a grocery store.

Coalition troops pushing toward Baghdad;
raids continu~ as Republic Guard dwindles

He.althy .Iivi n·g
focus of event
News editor

J.

very hard to make a living
as a farmer now. The costs
of
everything
have
RACINE _ Farming has increased while profits have
decreased.
For instance. Smith said
been a part of Meigs County
life for generations, and
Dan Smith and his wife he bought a new tractor in
Donna Jean were farmers the early 1950s for $2,500.
for more than 5o years 1.•n That same tractor today
would cost more than
Meigs County.
$ 2 00
Together, with their six
i.:nit~· said fertilizer used
children who are now to be $55 a ton, but today a
grown, they have farmed ton of fertilizer is sold
between 500 to 700 acres of between $150 to $200. A
com, wheat, oats, soybeans bushel of seed corn used to
and oats . At one point, the be $10, and it is now $80 a
Smiths had more than 140 bushel, and that same
Holstein cattle.
b h
Dan said when he , was us e1 is a bit smaller.
"I hate to discourage peagrowing up there were 19 pie from farming, but 1
dairy farll,lers in the Basham would hate to tell them to
Road area. A lot of those go down that road."
farmers also tended mediSmith said that the returns
urn-sized fields. Parents on a million-dollar investworked alongside their ment are slim, and as a
children who could be seen result, people are no longer
riding tractors or milking as interested in farming .
Smith said farm life
cows each day whether
school was in or not.
taught his children the
"The best crop I ever got value of hard work. Their
was those six kids," said days began at first daylight
Dan, talking about his chi!- and didn't end until dusk.
dren.
"We worked hours and
Smith said farming has hours each day," he said.
all but died out in the tiny "A farmer's work is never
community he grew up in. done."
Farms are few and far
There was a fringe benefit
between. He said there is of children with hands hard
~-~
· .l~~;~f:J .iR, the at work. "There was no time
"1~~~~~~~_,1 . · ln~read :_:tQ;get• invol\(edri:W.ith' devil•
I
fields in this ment," Smith s!lip:
area.
produce hay or
The farmer said today's
new homes.
children do not even know
' The veteran farmer, who where milk comes from. A
retired in 2000, said it is longtime dairy farmer who
BY

~r-year-old Mad.ison Maynard gets rtt for a fun hat at Sat.IJrdav's
F,amlly Health Fest by Linda Rathburn and Sheryl Carson.
(}:harlene Hoeflich)

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

www.mydailysentinel tom

BY PAULINE JELINEK

Associated Press

and safety.
Free health screenings for
prostate cancer, cholesterol,
blood pressure and glucose levels, and fat analysis were available. Information on the role of
public agencies and the services
they provide was distributed.
The day was well attended
and included a variety of gan~es
for the children along }'lith
music by Reggie Robinson
"Roc kin' Reggie" of Health
Recovery Services, a program
by Ronald McDonald, and a
show by the Rock 'n' Cloggers.

WASHINGTON (AP) American units began probing attacks in a rim around the
southern outskirts of Baghdad
in another effort to pave the
way for the battle for the caP:
ita!, defense officials satd
Monday.
A week of heavy bombing
has left some of Iraq' s
Republican Guard units surrounding · Baghdad at less
than half ,strength, Gen.
Richard Myers, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said
Sunday. And U.S. Army
troops spearheading the drive
to Baghdad on Monday
fought their way into
Hindiya, about 50 mil~s from
the capital, capturing dozens
of members of Saddam
Hu ssein's elite Republican
Guard .
Other Army and Marine
units were sent closer to
Baghdad on probing missions
to assess Iraqi troop strength
and cut Iraqi forces off where
they can, two Defense
Department officials said
Monday.
Some have crossed over
into the so-called "red zone."
one official said. The

' has said that as
Pentagon
invadillg forces moved into
the area, cornered Iraqi forces
could decide to attack with
chemical weapons.
As criticism continued to
swirl around a war plan some
say underestimated Iraqi
resistance and the necessary
U.S. troop strength, Defense
Secretary
Donald
H.
Rumsfeld
was
meeting
Monday with President Bush .
It was not a convening of
national security advisers, but
the long-standing weekly
one-on-one meeting between
the president and defense secretary.
Intense bombing continued
on Monday. Over the weekend, Pentagon officials said
that U.S. troops were prepared for a major attack
against Sadda.h's Guard
forces , but the heaviest attack
may have to await pressure to
build on the Iraqi leader.
"Their fighting capability is
going down minute by
minute, hour by hour. There's
not going to be much left to
fight with," Myers said
Sunday.
"We have the power to be
patient in this, and we ' re not

OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM:

DAY 12

J:'tU.S.foice.s'now control
0
~\ . ..:.r~=.~~~~:
' •oelonglng to the group

.

· Cautious step..'&amp;. to!Ward
,
As U.S. trqopS incfi8d

toward Baghdad,.
liiltttlng ,.

.

. ·cOnll®l!d in

key cit~ and
skirmishes\

-~~kKURDISH CO
. NTROLLED

f.\

R~G/ON &amp;shur :
' :. :····. * II( airstrip
Mosul : ~roil •.
Kirkuk oif1181d
Klrkuk
i ·

along coalitloil:
n
I,

\

-

JOROAN

·•... ·
••••• ·

L"*'

··v· ·

·

Thrmhor

supply •MS.-...... ·..&lt;f., ., '&lt;
,•• ··'
··1;"-'!"Q ' ,

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IRAN
.

··~hamchamal

1

·continued

Ansar aHslam.

\

"'~ :

\ f'•· . ,
R A :Q
l&gt;
:: R(tZZMJI
'"'*e

In Beilhdld.

coalition alra"llft !lit

a pr..,ldeht181

palace, 811
inteHigence
complex, and tho'
main bai'I'IICI&lt;s of a
param.llltary .
training center.

U.S. warpl8nes bombed :
ovemktlt Kmlala, reducjrig
Republican Guard unitoio
lesS than 50 percent of their
prewar capacity.
U.S. troops have surrounded~. _ _,__..
securing the airfield and propinng
to go door to door to root out
paramilitary forces.

A ~rlne raid &amp;red buildings In
Nalrly11h that contained large caches of _ _ ___)
cl\emieal decontamination equipment,
A Brlijsh soldier was
weapons and ammunition.
kiUied In action near
A.M ame helicopter crashed at a refueling point
Batra. 30 Iraqis
In soythem lr&amp;(f, killing three people aboard.
were reported kUiod
and hundreds
SA U 01
:···: Areas not in Iraqi control,
l ARA
A
captured during
1
9
~ •.• : according to the Pentagon
heavy fighting in the
town of Abu al
0
100 ml
Ai rstrike :t\..._~ Ground battle .....'!'!!!;.::~._ Khasib, southwest of
li'-:t -1
0
''" '
Basra .

1 00

SOURCES: Defense Ma~lng Agency: CIA; Un~ed Nabons; National Imagery

Please see Iraq, AS

and Mapping Agency: ESRI : Associaled Pre ss

March is
Cancer
Awareness Month
Holzer Medical Center encourages you .to learn more about
colorectal cancer. Prevention, early detection and treatment is
the best protection against colorectal cancer.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Dijfer·ence

·www.holzer.org

For more information, call the HMC Community Health and Wellness Deporlment
at C740) 446-1679, or the American Cancer Society at 1·800-ACI-2345

'

AP

�Local• Ohio

·The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Tuesday, April1
AccuWeather.com klrecastlor davt1me oonditions. tow/high temoeratures
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Flurries

Snow

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Ice

Vta Assocw!Jd Press

Warmer, rainy days ahead
Tuesday night...Partly cloud
Today ... Variable
cloudi- y. Lows 45 to 50.
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny a ·
ness and still chill y. A slight ch
ance of light rain or snow show nd warm. Highs in the mid 70s
ers th is morning ;md early this
Wednesday night ... Mostly cl
afternoon. Hi ghs in the upper4
Os. West wi nds I0 to 15 mph. ear. Lows in the lower 50s.
Chance of precipitation 20 perThursday... Partly cloudy. A s
light
chance of showers late at
cent.
Tonight... Partly cloudy early night. Continued warm. Highs
. Mostly cloudy with a chance in the mid 70s.
of light rain after midnight. Lo
Friday... Partly cloudy with a
ws near 40 this evening. Temp chance of showers. Lows in th
eratures steady or rising after e lower 50s and highs in the lo
midnight. Southwest winds 10 wer 70s.
to 15 mph. Chance of rain 30 p
Saturday... Mostly cloudy wit
h a slight chance of rain. Lows
ercent.
Tuesday ... A sli ght chance of in the upper 40s and highs in th
showers in the morning .. .Other e lower 60s.
wi se partly cloudy ... Breezy an
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with
d much warmer. Highs 65 to 7 a chance of rain. Lows in the I
0. Southwest winds 10 to 20m ower 40s and highs in the lowe
ph. Chance of rain 20 percent. r 60s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Court: Man had right
to bark at police dog
ATHENS (AP) - A man
was using his free speech rights
when he barked back at a police
dog, a state appeals court has
ruled.
The 4th Ohio District Court
of Appeals upheld the dismissal
of charges against a man who
answered the barks of Pepsie in
this southeast Ohio city in
September 200 I .
Jeremy Gilchrist, then 21 ,
encountered the dog, which

PageA2

was in a police cruiser, as he
walked along a street with
friends.
His attorney said he wa5 trying to be funny when he barked
back.
State law makes it illegal to
taunt, torment or hit a police
dog or horse. Officer Krishea
Osborne
testified
that
Gilchrist's barking made the
dog "work himself up into a
frenzy."

A lotoftape

Scott Bartlett poses with his 366 pound mas ki ng tape ball on
his front porch in Fremont on Friday. Bartlett, who also created a giant rubberband bal l. used 1340 rolls of masking tape
to ma ke the oversized ball in two years of time. He also plans
to enter the ball to be judged by the Guiness Book of World
Records 111 June when the ball wil l be a record 500 pounds.
The current reco rd is 80 pounds. (AP)

Groups join to
stop spread of HIV
CLEVELAND (AP) The NAACP and the
National Black Lea,dership
Commi ssion on AIDS is
starting a local affiliate to
wo rk to stop the spread of
HIV among blacks.
The number of new HIV
cases is ri sing in Cleveland
and the nation, and the
viru s is decimating much
of the developing world .
The Cle veland branch of
the National Assoc iation
for the Adv ancement of
Colored People reached
out to the commission
because of the disproportionate number of blacks
infected with HIV, said
George Forbes, the local
NA/,CP president
"Black women are the
fastest -growing group contracting the viru s," Forbes
said .
Blacks make up about 25
percent of the population
in the Cleveland area but
54
percent
of
the

Named to honor band

Just a trim

Tuesday, April 1
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, Osie Follrod.
Wednesday, April 2
PAGEVILLE Scipio
township trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pagevile
Town hall .
Thursday, April 3
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District is holding a public
meeting at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, April 3r, at the
Ohio State University extension office, located on
Mulberry Heights behind
Holzer Clinic. Purpose of the

Insurance ~
verdict to be
used for new
cancer center
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State University 's
· cancer center will use .its
share of a record verdict
against an insurance company to build a new department that will focus on
cancer that affects the ner·
vous system.
The Arthur G. ·James
Cancer Hospital and
Richard J. Solove Research
Institute received its share
- $14.3 million - Friday
from a $40 million dollar
verdict against Anthem
Blue Cross and Blue
Shield.
The Esther Dardinger
Neuro-Oncology Center
will focu s on researching
neurological cancer at the
molecular level and use of
new treatment techniques,
such as the experimental
chemotherapy treatments
given to Esther Dardinger.
The lawsuit was filed by
Mrs. Dardinger's husband
Robert, of Johnstown. Mrs.
Dardinger died on Nov. 6,
1997, of breast cancer that
had spread to her brain.
After initially agreeing to
pay for experimental
chemotherapy treatment,
Anthem halted the payments, even though Mrs.
Dardinger 's doctor said the
treatment was shrinking
her brain tumors.
A Licking County jury
originally awarded $51.5
million in damages.
Anthem appealed and the
case eventually went to the
Ohio Supreme Court,
which
in
December
ordered the company to
pay $30 million in puniti ve
damages - twice as much
as the court had allowed in
any other .case. An addi tional $ 10.5 mill ion in
interest acc rued during
appeals.
Anthem previously paid
Dardinger $2.5 million in
compensatory damages .
Dardinger's lawyers will
be paid $16.2 mill ion, and
Dardingerwill get $ 10 mi llion.

~o nday,~arc h

31,2003

National Honor Society·inductees

HIV/AIDS population.
The new campai gn is
expected to rely heavily on
the churches, located on
about every street corner in
the city, to help increase
awareness about the virus.
The partnership also will
lobby for more federal and
state money to fight AIDS ,
particularly through prevention .

"We hope to set a course .
and direction for other
cities to follow," said
Debra Fraser-Howze, president and chief executive
of the Black Leadership
Commi ssion .
The effort will look at
ways of expanding AIDS
program s in the public
schools, create a Wep site
and chat room to provide
doctors with information
about HIV/AIDS and
develop confidential centers where people can
receive information.

Five members of the Meigs Marauder Band directed by Toney
Dingess have been selected to participate in the District
Hono rs Band wh ich will perform on April 5 at Ohio University.
They are from the left, Wesley Fields, tuba; Megan Dodson,
trumpet; Juley Eblin and Megan Mayes , clarinet; and Brittany
Powers, trombone. (Charlene Hoeflich)
First Lt Joe Garaux from Canton, gives a haircut to Staff
Sgt Shane Duhe from Bowling Green, Ky, both frof'Tl the
1st U.S. Marine Division, on the road to Bagdad near
the city of Ad Diwaniyah in central Iraq, Saturday. (AP)

Holter on Ohio Northern
University dean's list
POMEROY Michael dean's list earn a grade point
Leifheit and Ben Holter, both average of at least 3.5 on a 4.0
of Pomeroy, and Keithen grading scale.
Branch, Mason, W.Va. , were
Leifheit is the son of Roger
· named to the Ohio Northern
and Lenora Leifheit, Holter
~ University' s dean's li st for the
the son of Alan and Valerie
winter quarter.
. ' They are pharmacy majors. Holter and Branch the son of
· Students named to the Ronald and Teresa Branch.

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Youth It Educati

.The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 31, 2003

' Page A

meeting is to discuss the
development of the Leading
Creek Watershed Project
Watershed residents are
encouraged to attend to
learn more about the project
and future activities. For
more information contact
Cynthia Bauers at 992·4282.

Clubs and
Organizations
Wednesday, April 2
The Middleport Literary
Club will meet at 2 P.M. at
the Pomeroy Library with
Dana Kessinger as hostess.
Sara Owen will review "The
Arthurian Saga" by Mary
Stewart.

Thursday, April 3
CHESTER - ChesterShade Historical Society, 7
p.m.
at the
Chester
Courthouse.

Center. There will be lunch at
noon followed by a program
featuring
Bob
Byer,
Emergency Management
Agency d1rector, on emer·
gency planning and home· .
rand security.

POMEROY - An organizational meeting for a May
"Support or Troops" rally will
be held at 6 p.m. at God's Net
RACINE- God's Clothing
in Pomeroy. Individuals and
Parish
in Racine is having a
representatives of organizafree
clothing
give-away on all
tions interested in helping
winter
stock
through
the end
are asked to attend, along
of
March.
Store
hours
are 11
with family members of sera.m
to
2
p.m
Monday
through
vicemen. For more information contact Sherry Kinnan Friday.
992-0608 or Shelly White
992-9425.

Other events

.Harry Potter fan buys
: unreleased book at auction
"

Birthdays

Friday, April 4
Erma Cleland of Chester
POMEROY Meigs will be 90 years old on Aprjl
County PERl 74 will meet at . 5. Friends are planning a
noon at the Senior Ciizens card shower for her.
·

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
AUTOMOTIVE

REAL ESTATE

Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdo"ge.com

Homestead Bend Realty

.!

· LONDON (AP)- A Harry
~ , Potter fan has paid $8,000 for
a signed copy of the latest,
unreleased installment of the
boy wizard's adventures.
The winner of the online
· auction Thursday took home
· ·nothing - the book he or she
· won is yet to be printed, let
alone signed by author J.K.
Rawling.
·~· The British charity group
.;; sense sparked frenzted bid;~ding when it announced the
.;;!sale of a copy of the long:-awaited "Harry Potter and the
:~~order of the Phoenix," the
.fifth book in the series.
· Bids for the book, due out
:on June 21 , started at $1.60
:when the auction kicked off
more than a week ago before

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com

:House approves
:Amber Alert package

Homestead Realty

www.homesteadrealtyl.com

BUSINESS TRAINING
Gallipolis Career College

COMMUNITY

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

WASHINGTON (AP) The House joined the Senate
:Thursday
in
approving
:money for a pationwide child
·kidnapping "Amber Alert"
:system, but a di spute over the
'House's addition of other provisions for sex offenses could
delay the system 's implemen-tation.
: The GOP-controlled House
:pushed through a package of
'child protection measures by
an overwhelming vote of
410-14, including "Amber"
and "Code Adam" alerts
.designed to quickly stop kid:nappers, a ban on computer:simulated child pornography
:and new punitive measures
·for sex offenses.
The legislation "not only
gets the word out after a kid:napping, but it also takes
:strong steps to keep them
:from happening in the first

City of Point Pleasant

www.pointpleasantwv.org

MEDICAL
Holzer Clinic

Mason County Chamber of Commerce

www.holzerclinic.com

www.masoncountychamber.org

Pleasant Valley Hospital ·

Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

www.pvalley.org

www.meigscountyohio.com

ENTERTAINMENT

NEWSPAPERS

Charter Communications

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.charter.com

www.mydailytribune.com

AGRICULTURE

The Daily Sentinel

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.jimsfarmequipmentcom .

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com

...

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

place," said House Judiciary
Committee Chairman James
Sensenbrenner, R-Wis.
President Bush, in a statement, said he would sign the
legislation "as quickly as possible."
Amber alerts are named
after Amber Hagerman, a 9year-old girl abducted in
Arlington, Texas, and later
found murdered. Bulletins are
di stributed quickly through
radio and television broadcasts and electronic highway
signs about kidnapped children and their abductors.

Meigs students participate
in regional contest
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

POMEROY - Several
Meij!S tech prep students
parttcipated in competition
at
the
Washington/Morgan/Mei
gs Consortium Tech Prep
Showcase
held
in
Mariettl!:· ·Ben Bookman and
Chris Haye received first
place with a promotional
video and a web site for
Weaving Stitches
in
Pomeroy.
They will travel to
Newark on April 3 for the
district competition.
Jennifer
Zielinski ,
Shawna Manley, and
Cory VanReeth tied for
second place with their
creation of business forms
including a catalog, flyer's, brochure, busines s
cards, imd gift certificates
for Weaving Stitches, as
well as a PowerPoint presentation which featured
variou s products for sale.
M. Suzanne Bentz,
MHS
Tech
Prep
Interactive Media instructor, accompanied the students.
Thi s is the second year
that Meig s Interactive
Media students have won
fi rst place at the regional
competition.

Correction Polley
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MATINEES SHOWN ON

Meigs students Ben Bookman and Chris Haye took first in pro·
motional video and web site at the tec h prep competition held
in Marietta.

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·

Take your business into the homes of
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quickly jumping to the closing price.
"We hoped to raise as much
money as possible from the
auction but the $8,000 bid has
exceeded all our eltpectations," said Paul Amadi, a
SP?kesman for Sense, which
atds the deaf and blind.
The four previous Harry
Potter novels have worldwide
sales of more than 190 million and many readers already
have ordered copies of the
new book through retailers. ·
Within hours of the
announcement in Janutrr,r that
"Order of the Phoenix' was
coming out, the book topped
the · best seller lists of
Amazon.com and Barnes &amp;
Noble .com.

Fourteen Meigs High School students were inducted into the National Honor Society in ceremonies last week. Inducted were
seated , David Barnes, David Boyd, Page Bradbury, Nathan Brickles, Jaynee Davis, Maegan Dodson, and Andrea Fetty, and
· standing, Aubrie Kopec, Nicole Harper, Randall Hudso n, Rya n Stobar t, Enca Poole, Sarah Lee, and Rachel McDani el. Lighting
candles and speaking on the attributes of membership were Miche le Runyon on knowledge and leadership, Brook Bolin on
scholarship, Mindy Chancey on service , and Mathewe O'Brien on character. A rece ption was held following the ceremony to
honor the new members. (Charlene Hoeflich)

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PageA4

~af?Neo THaT

SiN LaDeN
iS BLiVe
aND WeL~!

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

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

NATIONAL VIEW

Shameful
Basketball scandals bring
discredit to teams' schools
•
~

The Observer-Dispatch, Utica, N.Y., mr March Madness
··controversies: College basketball's March Madness was upon
::us, but sadly, it was the wrong type of madness. A rash of col; ~ lege sports scandals makes clear too many colleges and uni; versities have lost perspective about what their academic mis; .sion is all about
i :' By bending rules and cutting corners in an all-out quest for
·· victories, these schools tarnish their own images and that of
·college sports as a whole.
In a year when Syracuse University's basketball team - by
playing well and competing fairly -has brought more excite. men! to the Carrier Dome than has been seen in years, else.. where college basketball has been rocked with a rash of scandals.
Academically ineligible athletes. Fake grades in a course
. taught by a coach 's son. Misuse of a telephone credit card by
. multiple members of one team. Continued hiring of coaches
·" of questionable ethics. And, in St. Bonaventure's case, the loss
. .of a university president because he allowed the school to
. admit a basketball player whose credentials consisted of a
y.'elding degree.
These episodes are embarrassing and shameful. Even in the
. ,year 2003, colleges are still considered a place in society
. where idealism and truth can and do run free.
::

o

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, March 31, the 90th day of 2003. There
·· are 275 days left in the year.
·
· Today's Highlight in History:
. On March 31, 1968, President Lyndon Johnson stunned the
· country by announcing he would not seek another term in
. office.
On this date:
In 1917, the United States took possession of the Virgin
· Islands from Denmark.
' In 1933, Congress authorized the Civi Iian Conservation
· Corps.
.
' In 1943, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical
''Oklahoma!" opened on Broadway.
In 1945, the Tennessee Williams play "The Glass
·· Menagerie" opened on Broadway.
.. In 1949, Newfoundland entered confederation as Canada's
tenth province.
In 1953, 50 years ago, Stanley Kubrick's first feature film,
a war drama titled "Fear and Desire," premiered in New York.
In 1991, the Warsaw Pact spent the last day of its existence.
as a military alliance.
In 1995, Mexican-American singer Selena QuintanillaPerez, 23, was shot to death in Corpus Christi , Texas, by
Yolanda Saldivar, the founder of her fan club. (Saldivar was
convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.)
Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council increased inter. national pressure on Bosnian Serbs, authorizing NATO war. planes to shoot down aircraft that violated a ban on flights
·over Bosnia. Actor Brandon Lee, 28, was killed during the
filming of a movie in Wilmington, N.C., by a prop gun that
·fired part of a dummy bullet instead of a blank. "Star Dust"
, lyricist Mitchell Parish died in New York at age 92.
Five years ago: For the tirst time in history, the Clinton
administration released a detailed financial statement for the
, .federal government showing its assets and liabilities. The
U.N. Security Council imposed a new arms embargo on
Yugoslavia to pressure the Serbs into concessions concerning
·ethnic Albanians in Kosovo. . Former New York
Congresswoman Bella Abzug died at age 77.
One year a~o: Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon vowed to ·
smash Palesnnian militants in a broadcast speech that came
:lhe same day as .a suicide bombing in Haifa' that killed 15
:tsraelis. Pope John Paul II used his Easter message to call for
.an end to VIOlence m the Holy Land. Connec•.icut beat
;Oklahoma 82-70 to conclude its second unbeaten season with
third women's national championship.
: · Today's Birthdays: Actor William Daniels is 76. Hockey
·tlall-of-Famer Gordie Howe is 75. Actress Shirley Jones is
:69. Country singer-songwriter John D. Loudermilk is 69.
:Actor Richard Chamberlain is 68. Musician Herb Alpert is 68.
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D- Vt.) is 63 . Actor Christopher Walken is
:oo. Comedian Gabe Kaplan is 58. Former Vice President AI
:Gore is 55. Actress Rhea Perlman is 55. Actor Ed Marinaro is
:53. Rock musician Angus Young (AC/DC) is 48 . Actor Marc
·McClure is 46. Actor William McNamara is 38. Actor Ewan
:McGregor is 32.
· Thought for Today: "Time is rhe lonr.:est disra nce berween
:rwo places. " - From "Th e Glass Menagerie " by Tennessee

:a

·Williams

(1911 · 1'1~3).

SPEAK OUT!
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.Aew spaper that gets your dander up')
: 1\(ext time you get the urge to express your opinion, pick up
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tone .

G.

Great gap between Ttest and Middle East

Maybe it's so obvious that
it 's a given. But since
"givens" are just taken for
granted, I'll say it anyway.
As we see proof in the war on
Iraq that Western warfare has
been retooled to minimize
civilian casualties, we should
also see that peace in this
world is increasingly under
attack by foes , mainly
lslamists, whose strategy is
the exact opposite: to maximize civilian casualties.
This presents a stark contrast and perhaps the simplest
lesson to sink of the frrst
week of war in Iraq. It's not
just the ins and outs of
"shock and awe"; the pros
and cons of "embedded"
reporters; the debate over
troop strength; or Saddam
Hussein's whereabouts that
we should now be pondering.
What we might also focus
on, even in the face of whipping sand, thudding bombs
and flapping lips, is this
chasm that has opened up in
recent years. It marks an
important . divide between
civilization and barbarism in
the 21st century.
To realize thts is not to pat
ourselves on the back although curtailing death lP}d
destruction while waging war,
both the aspiration and its
execution, should be se!!n as a
signal moment in the continuing evolution of homo sapiens. Taking stock of this
aspect of the war effort, the
Weekly Standard's David
Brooks asked an excellent

Diana
West

question last week: "Has there
ever been a conflict in the history of man in which the one
army strove so mightily to not
kill the soldiers of the other
army?" Another question, of
course, is whether a war has
ever been waged on such a
grand scale with the same
strategic and tactical concern
for civilian lives on the other
side. "The battlefield's a verv
hazardous location," Maj.
Gen. Victor Renuart said this
week in Qatar, sounding a little more like a traffic cop than
a wartime military briefer.
"We must continue to ask all
citizens in Iraq to remain in
their towns and homes,
because it's very difficult to
guarantee their safety on this
battlefield."
Granted, such regard for
human life has not only moral
but also political roots, both
of which, it is hoped, will
sprout in a bmtquet of goodwill from an Arab world
thrilled by a liberated Iraq,
regional tranquility and
democratic reform. Or so the
theory goes. So far, however,
such goodwill is still stuck in

the mirage phase. And so far, hysterically as he ran out of
the Iraqi regime's stomach- his shop ... 'Oh beloved
turning war crimes to date - Saddam , bomb, bomb Tel
the execution of American Aviv,' (a group of about 50
POWs; the transformation of school girls) chanted as
a hospital into an armed passersby and shopkeepers
guerilla headquarters (com- greeted them with the tradiplete with 3,000 chemical tional Islamic battle cry of
wart'are suits); the firing of Allahu akbar (God is great).
U.N.-prohibited
missiles ; As they marched through the
even the reported shootings of streets, the girls, some
its own people - are coming younger than I0, urged
Saddam to eliminate Israel.
up roses in the Arab world.
According to United Press 'Oh Saddam, we love you,
International , Persian Gulf why don't you annihilate all
television stations have orga- the Jews?'"
nized furidraisers for their
This scene is not without
Iraqi "brother heroes," while its terrible irony. For as the
the Jordan Times writes that United States and Britain
people "are fed up with throw their best men and
everything American, includ- armor at the terrorist-harboring democracy." The Arab ing, terrorist-supporting Iraqi
League has officially decried dictatorship, they also prethe invasion. And, a report pare for what comes aftet: a
!rag,
minus
from the London-based pan- reformed
Arab daily AI-Quds al-Arabi Saddam Hussem, and a
(via the Jerusalem Post) tells Saddam-supporting
us the favorite name for Palestinian state. Or so
Palestinian baby boys these British Prime Minister Tony
days is Saddam.
Blair all-but-stated before
This last bit is only to be meeting with President Bush
expected,
given
the this week at Camp David.
Palestinian Authority's mass According to the Israeli
exaltations induced by Iraqi newspaper Haaretz, Mr. Blair
forces capturing American told Parliament that he and
soldiers. "Everyone here was President Bush were deterhappy to see pictures of mined to resolve the IsraeliAmerican soldiers in Iraqi Palestinian conflict, "calling
custody," a policeman at it the one issue that most
Yasser Arafat's headquarters divides the pan-Muslim
told. the Jerusalem Post. "I world from the West."
felt like kissing people all
Not quite.
(Diana West is a columnist
around me ," said another.
'"They have just shot down for The Washington Times.
two Apache helicopters,' an She can be contacted via
exci\ed merchant shouted · dian&lt;i ww@ attg loba l. net.)

On Thursday morning
before sunup , 46-year-old
Anthony Pires made his way
throush the lobby of San
Francisco's Cosmo hotel and
out to Post Street. The doctors wanted him at the hospital by 6 a.m. Surgery was
scheduled for 7:30 a.m. He
still had time to change his
mind.
Some people thought he
was crazy for doing this. His
mother was so angry she
threatened
to
cancel
Christmas. But his wife,
Kathy. sitting now in the car
next to him as they drove the
quiet San Francisco streets
toward California Pacific
Medical Center, understood.
Anthony is a strong, deci sive man with a farm boy's
uncomplicated sen se of
what's ri ght. A woman who
works with him in the insurance-products department of
Modesto's
Automobile
Association of America
insurance office needs a kidney. He wanted to give her
one of hi s.
He sold life in surance. He
saw her mostl y when she
passed his door on her way to
the ladies' room. They had
never had Iunch toge ther in
the empl oyee break room .
They had never sat in a meeting together.
Now, a hundred miles from
the office, as morning,began

•
Joan
Ryan

to lighten the windows in
their separate hospital rooms,
they slid their street clothes
into plastic bags and slipped
their arm s into pale blue
gowns.
Toni Hanson-Owens hadn't known what to make of
Anthony 's offer to give her
one of his kidneys.
"I want to test to see if I' m
a match ," he said one morning in earl y October.
She was pi cking up papers
at her mail slot. Anthony was
using the type writer nearby.
He had heard through the
grapevine that Toni had been
born with one kidney and
that the kidne y was failin g.
No one in her famil y coul d
donate; her husband also had
onl y one kidney, hav ing Joq
the other to a tumor a decade
ago. One brother had diabetes, the other hi gh blood
pressure. Two friends at work
who had volunteered to
donate were not appropriate
matc hes.

Toni told Anthony several
times she couldn't accept his
offer. When he persisted, she
gave him a brochure that
detailed the risks: allergic
reaction to anesthesia, infection, blood clots, post-operative bleeding. Fifteen minutes later, Anthony came by
Toni's desk.
"OK ," he said, "what's the
next step?"
When Anthony told his
family, his mother said he
should think about his two
children: What if one of them
needed a kidney and he no
longer had one to give? What
if he developed kidney problems of his own later on in
life? He di smissed the questions as nothing more than a
mother's fears.
"1 can't predict the future,"
he to ld her. " All I kn ow is she
needs a kidney now. If one of
the kids needs it, I'll leave it
in God's hands."
The da y before the surgery.
Anthony and Toni ate lunch
in the California Pacifi c
Medical Center's cafe. Kath y
and the two children were
there. So was Toni 's hu sband, Jim.
" I don't know if I'll ever be
able to figure out why he's
do ing this," said Toni, who is
50. "It 's just an incredihl e
thing. I can't pu t it into
wo rd,. "
An thony himse lf kep t cir-

cling around the answer, as if
he suspected he ought to
have an eloquent, philosophical explanation. It 's a good
cause, he said, like someone
serving in the Army. It's
about seeing what happened
to that poor girl named Jesica
who died last month from a
botched transplant: It's about
someday looking back on
your life, he said, and knowing you made a di!ference . ·
At midday Thursday. as the
television in the waiting
room flashed pictures of
American troops in the
Middle East and President
Bush talking about North
Korea, two AAA co-workers
rested after surgery, their
I ives changed,
Maybe Anthony wi II one
day regret giving a part of
him self to a woman who happens lo work down the hall.
But sometimes the world gets
whittled down to what is
right in front of you. to what
can be transformed by your
own hands. That' s when the
big universal questions about
life and about yourself tap
you on the shoulder, in that
small qu iet moment, and .
demand some answers.
(Joan R1•an is a column ist
fo r th e · San Fran cisc'o
Chronicle. Send'commellts ro
her in care of th is newspaper
or send her e-mail m joan ry{// 1-~ fch ror ricl e. com.)

Page A5

Obituaries

Local Briefs

'Active for Life' program begins in Racine

Clinton Faulk

Road Closure
slated for State
Route681

Staff report

POMEROY
- Clinton
"Randy" . Randall Faulk,
Pomeroy, went to be with the
Lord on Friday, Man;h 28,
2003 at the age of 46.
He was born Dec. 5, 1956 in
Mason, W.Va., son of Wanda
Bias Faulk of Hartford, W.Va.
and the late Clinton !odor
Faulk. He was a 197 5 graduate
of Meigs High School and was
the first freshman at Meigs
High School to receive a varsity letter. He was a coal miner
for 14 years at the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. He attended
Hysell Run Holiness Church.
Besides his mother, he is survived by his wife of 22 years,
Brynda Black Faulk of
Pomeroy; two sons, Clinton
Tyler Faulk and Warren
Zachary Faulk, both of
Pomeroy; two sisters, Trina
Faulk and Cindy Faulk, both of
Hartford, W.Va.; a brother, Tim
Faulk of Belpre; his mother-inlaw, Esther Black of Rutland;
brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law: Jerry and Sharon Black of
Rutland, Roger .and Sharon
Black of Rutland, Lynn and
Joyce Black of New Haven,
W.Va., Barbara Black of
Cheshire, Debbie and Mike
Gilmore of Rutland and Lynda
and Tom Bates of Columbus;
and a host of nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held at II
a.m. on Wednesday, April 2,
2003, at Fisher Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Rev. Earl
Fields officiating. Burial will
follow at Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m.
on Tuesday.
Friends may send condolences and register online at
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Deaths
Valerie Neigler
RACINE
- Valerie
Johnson Neigler, Racine,
died Sunday, March 30,.2003
at her residence.
Arrangements are under
the direction of Roush
of
Fun'eral
Home
Ravenswood, W.Va. and will
be announced.

MEIGS COUNfY - The
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation announces that
State Route 681, approximately
I00 yards west of U.S. 33 in the
Oarwin area, is closed while
beams are being set for a newly
constructed bridge in conjunction with the Athens to Darwin
Connector project. The closure
will be in effect from 8 a.m.
until 7 p.m. daily, and is scheduled to reopen by April 3 weather permitting. The roadway will remain bpen throughout the weekend. State Route
68 I from Darwin to Thppers
Plains will also remain open.
Motorists are asked to use the
following detour: U.S. 33 to
U.S. 50 back to State Route 681.

Plan dinner
REEDSVIllE - Reedsville
Squad 90 will hold its annual
steak dinner, beginning at 11
a.m. Sunday. lbe menu will
include cubed steak, mashed
potatoes and gravy, green beans
or com, roll, pie and soda for $6.

Auxiliary meets
TUPPERS PLAINS
Thpper Plains VFW Auxiliary ·
9053 will hold its regular meeting at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
hall.

Announce spring
clean-up
REEDSVILLE -The Olive
Twp. Tiustees wish to arinounce
that spring clean-up of township
cemeteries has begun, and anyone having flowers on graves,
they wish to keep, should
remove them at this time.

Cemetery
cleanup set
RUTLAND - Cemetery
Cleanup Set spring cleanup for
ce!IH!teries in Rutland Township
will begin on Monday April 7.
Those who have decorations on
graves that they would like to
keep are asked to remove them
·until Memorial Day Weekend to
allow for spring cleanup and
mowing until that time.

For the Record
EMS LOG

File indictments

POMEROY
-Meigs
County Grand Jury has .issued
indicunents against the following:
o Derek C. McDaniel, I 8, burglary, a second-degree felony.
o Christopher W. Cross, 34,
gross sexual imposition, a fowthdegree felony.
• Charles Spurlock, 31, unlawful sexual conduct with a minor,
a third-degrc;e felony.
o Sandra 1-!ubbanl, age unreported, theft, a fifth-degree ·
felony; tampering with records, a
POMEROY -A marriage fifth-degree felony; falsification,
license has been granted in a fourth-degree felony ; and
Meigs County Probate Court defrauding a creditor, a fnurthto Robert Clarence Stewart degree felony.
o Bengy J. Rhoades, 28, failure
III, 20, Middleport, and
as
a sex offender to provide
Christina Mabel Jane Skaggs,
notice of residence address
21, Middleport.
change, a fifth-degree felony.

POMEROY
The
Emergency Medical Service
responded to these. calls
Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Sunday 3-30
6:04 a.m. Cheryl Graham,
Blake Hill Road, Holzer
Medical Center
5:34p.m. Edward Mitchell,
Jack's Street, Holzer Medical
Center

Issued licenses

Two co-workers and a lasting gift

The Daily Sentinel •

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 31, 2003

Monday, March 31, 2003

Wi.Jusr

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

•1n10n
•

Iraq
from PageA1
going to do anything before
we're ready," he said. "We'll
just continue to draw the noose
tighter and tighter." .
Myers and Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rurnsfeld, making
the rounds of the Sunday televi"
sion talk shows in Washington,
predicted an assault on Baghdad
could be brutal.
"It's going to get more difficult as we move closer to
Baghdad," Rumsfeld said. "I
would suspect that the most
dangerous and difficult days are
still ahead of us."
'Rumsfeld and Myers said
coalition ground forces were
closing in on Baghdad from the
south, west and north.
The majority of more than
2,000 weekend airstrikes were
focused on three Republican
Guard
divisions
around
Baghdad: The Hammurabi, to
the north, west and south; the
Medina; to the south; and the
Baghdad, centered southwest of

the capital around Kut.
The military also was tracking five Guard brigades seen on
the move last week. It was not
exactly clear how they were
repositioning
themselves,
though some Iraqis captured
south of Baghdad were reponed
wearing the amn patches of the
Nebuchadnezzar
Division,
which was supposed to have
been , guarding cities in the
north.
The u.s. military has detect·
ed signs that reinforcement~ are
being sent to some front-line
Republican Guard units, while
other Iraqi units are pulling
back, closer to Baghdad,
according to a senior defense
official, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
Defense officials said commanders want to be sure the
Republican Guard troops are
significantly softened up before
coa'lition troops meet them ip
ground fightmg . During the
1991 Gulf War, U.S. ground
forces didn't attack until
Republican Guard units had lost
50 percent to 60 . percent of
their capacity.

Society wellnes s sites.
The goal of the program
is to increase the activity
level of the participants.
Laura Horsley, cardiovas cular coordinator of the
Meigs County
Health
Department, and Junie
Maynard, a registered nurse
with the school district, are
directing the 10-week pro-

RACiNE - A 10-week
prngram desi gned
for
healthy· living . called
"Active for Life ." is underway in the Southern Local
Schools which are designated as American Cancer

gram for the staff of the
school.
The goal is to encou rage
a moderate , active life style
because 255 ,000 death s
eac h year are attributed to
the lack of physical ac tivity.
Studies conducted by the
Am erican Cancer Society
have shown that peopl e

who are ph ysicall y ac tive
Iive longer.
Horsley sugges ted a
minimum goal of 30 min utes per day of activity
should be se t by each participant. A li st of 10 weekly
activitie s th at would be
held at Southern Local
Schools was given to the
staff.

NBC severs its ties with journalist Peter
Arnett after inte.rview with state-run Iraqi TV
NEW YORK (AP) - NBC
fired journalist Peter Arnett
on Monday, saying it was
wrong for him to give an
interview with state-run Iraqi
TV in which he said the
American-led coalition's initial plan for the war had
failed because ofltaq's resistance. Arnett called the interview a "misjudgn\ent" and
apologized.
·
Arnett, on NBC's "Today"
show on Monday, said he
was sorry for his statement
but added "I said over the
weekend what we all know
about the war."
"I want to apologize to the
American people for clearly
making a misjudgment," the
New Zealand-born Arnett
said. He said he would try to
· leave Baghdad now, joking
"there's a small island in the
South Pacific that I've inhabited that I'll try to swim to."
NBC
defended
him
Sunday, saying he had given
the interview as a professional courtesy and that his
remarks were analytical in
nature. By Monday morning
the network switched course
and, after Arnett spoke with
NBC News President Neal
Shapiro, said it would no
longer work with Arnett.
"It was wrong for Mr.
· Arnett to grant an interview
to state-controlled Iraqi TV,
especially at a time of war,"
NBC spokeswoman Allison
Gollust said. "And it was
wrong for him to discuss his
personal observations and
opinions in that interview."
Arnett,- who won a Pulitzer
Prize reporting in Vietnam
for The Associated Press,
gained much of his prominence . from covering the
1991 Gulf War for CNN. One
of the few American television reporters left in
Baghdad, his reports were
frequently aired on NBC and
its cable sisters, MSNBC and
CNBC.
Leaving a second network
under a cloud may mark the

end of his TV career. Arnett
was the on-air reporter of the
1998 CNN report that
accused American forces of
using sarin nerve gas on a
Laotian village in 1970 to kill
U.S. defectors. Two CNN
employees were sacked and
Arnett was reprimanded over
the report, which the station
later retracted. Arnett left the
network when his contract
was not renewed.
In the Iraqi .TV interview,
broadcast Sunday by Iraq's
satellite television station and
monitored by The Associated
Press in Egypt, Arnett said
his Iraqi friends tell him there
is a growing sense of nationalism and resistance to what Reporter Peter Arnett is shown on Iraqi television in thi~
the United States and Britain
frame shot from CNN Monday. Arnett, covering the war from
are doing.
He said the United States is Baghdad, told :&gt;tate-run Iraqi TV in an interview aired Sunday
reappraising the battlefield that the American-led coalition's first war plan had failed
and delaying the war, maybe .because of Iraq's resistance and said strategists are "trying
for a week, •"and rewriting to write another war plan." (AP)
the war plan. The !irs! war
plan has failed because of denying that coalition forc!!s n't be reporting for "National
Geographic Explorer," either.
Iraqi resistance. Now they were stalled.
The Iraqi TV interview was
are trying to write another · A Republican congresswar plan."
woman,
Ileana
Ros- broadcast in English and
"Clearly, the American war Lehtinen, told Fox News translated by a uniformed
plans misjudged the determi- Channel on Sunday that Iraqi anchor. NBC said
nation of the Iraqi forces," Arnett's
remarks
were Arnett gave the interview
Arnett said.
"Kafkaesque" and "just when asked shortly after he
attended an Iraqi government
Arnett said it is clear that crazy."
within the United States there
"Let's hope that he's being briefing.
In the April 5 issue of TV
is growing opposition to the coerced," Ros-Lehtinen said.
Guide,
Arnett said he felt he
war and a growing challenge
The first Bush administrahad
found
redemption reportto President Bush about the tion was unhappy with
·
war's conduct.
Arnett's reporting on the ing on the current war.
"I was furious with (CNN
"Our reports about civilian Gulf War in 1991 for CNN ,
casualties here , about the suggesting he had become a founder) Ted Turner and
resistance of the Iraqi forces, conveyor of propaganda. (then-CNN chairman) Tom
are going back to the United Arnett was denounced for Johnson when they threw
States," he said. "It helps reporting that the allies had me to the wolves after I
those .who oppose the war bombed a baby milk factory made them billions risking
when you challenge the poli- in Baghdad when the military my life to cover the first Gulf
cy to develop their argo- said it was a biological War," Arnett told TV Guide.
"Now
(Turner
and
ments."
·
weapons plant.
Johnson)
are
gone,
the
Iraqis
At a briefing Sunday in
Arnett went to Iraq this
Qatar, Gen. Tommy Franks year not as an NBC News have thrown the CNN crc:w
ticked off major achieve- reporter but as an employee out of Baghdad, and I' m still
ments of the war campaign, of the MSNBC show here," he said. "Any satisfacGeographic tion in that? Ha, ha, ha, ha."
including the advance of "National
He said the Iraqis allowed
troops to within 60 miles of Explorer." When other NBC
Baghdad. He found himself reporters left Baghdad for him to stay in Baghdad
answel'lng questions about safety reasons, the network because they respect him
whether he had enough began airing his reports. and "see me as a fellow wartroops · toJdo the job and NBC said Monday he would- rior."

Kmart announces 660 more job cuts
DETROIT (AP) - Kmart
Corp. ;mnounced the elimination of 660 jobs as part of the
bankrupt retailer's efforts to
cut costs.
Some 400 jobs will be cut
at headquarters in ·suburban
Troy, 123 corporate positions
will be cut around the country, and an additional 13 7
positions currently open will
be eliminated.
The announcement of the
job cuts comes about a month
before Kmart plans to exit

Chapter 11 protection. The
'company said in January it
would cut jobs at headquarters, but did not at the time
disclose the extent of the cuts.
Kmart filed for bankruptcy
on Jan. 22, 2002. Last year, it
closed 283 of its 2,114 stores
across the nation, affecting
more than 22,000 workers.
Earlier this year, Kmart shuttered an additional 316 stores,
affecting more than 34,000
employees.
"We continue to take the

necessary ·actions to create a
financially healthy, costeffective organization that is
positioned to compete in the
discount sector," Julian Day,
Kmart 's president .and chief
executive, said in a statement.
Day said the cuts will save
the company $150 million a
year.
It is trying to focu s on a
longer-term goal of differentiating itself from competitors
like Wal-Mart and Target by
tailoring its stores to the

neighborhoods where they
are located.
Kmart
had suf.
'
fered as Wai -Mart offered
lower prices and Target established a more stylish image .
A week ago, Kmart reported that it lost $3.22 billion for
fiscal 2002. For its fiscal
fourth quarter ended Jan. ~­
it had a net loss that narrow~d
to $1.10 billion , or $2 .13 per
share, compared with a loss
of S 1.65 hi \lion. or $3.3 1 per
share, a year ago.

any other cause.

Talk with your doctor about heart
disease. Learn more about heart health
under O'Bleness' Health Resources at
www.obleness.org, or call (740) 592-9300.

The deadliest disease
for women is also the
most preventable.

I

AO'BLENESS

W

Memorial Hotpital

-11Jit

~~
·l~u-

OhioHealth

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

�Monday, March 31, 2003

wwllv.mydallysentinel.com ·

Page A&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

waakiJ Writing

Carner

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
Scoreboard, Page B2
Southern diamond previews, Page B2
~eds open with Pirates,·Page B3
~angers thump Angels, Page 83

Page Bl
Monday, March 31, 2003

, Editor

ROCK

a

ROLL

e 1981-ls

It's Hip to Be Square

Little Stinker!
Tell a tale of a little
stinker.
Deadline: April 27, 2003
Published: Week of May 25, 2003

Send your story to:
Teenagers graduating from high
Den Dickerson
school in the 1980s had spent more
~allipolis 1!9ail!' t!J:ribune
time watching commercial television 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631
than sitting in the classroom. Even
in schools, cl as~rooms became ~,..;r:'•:;:•::se;.:in:::c:!!lu::!d!.ey~o:::u:;,;rs:·ch:::oo::::t:,:a:,:nd:!.!:!!::;..J
equipped with ins'tructional TV and s..~~;:;:~:~ •• •onco
videos. It's little wonder that MTV Sponsors
Po;nt Plemnt, WI/
of: Mrs. Ooeffinger's 3rd gradce class
became more popular than radio. Point
North Po;nt Elementary
Pleasant. WV

The
Material
irl

Home N.tlonal a.nk
Racine, OH
SponsOf's of: Mrs. McNickle's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Racine, OH

Amerlun Electrk Power • GaVin Plant
Cheshire, OH
Sponsors of: Ms. Crum's 3rd grade class
Addaville Elementary
Addison, OH

Few stars
have caught
public
eye as
forcefully
· the rock diva
Madonna. Her first Top Ten
hit, "Borderline," was the
first of 17 consecutive Top
Ten hits.

Toler &amp;Toler
Insurance Services
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Perry's lrd s:rade class
Rio Grande Elementary
Rio Grande, OH
Skyline Lanes
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sandra WaiJ&lt;er's 3rd grade class
Pomeroy Elementaty
Pomeroy, Ohio

Rock &amp; Roll Benefits

Buckeye Rural Eledrlc Co-op
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Becky Woodyard's lrd1grade class
Southwestern Element"ry
Rio Grande, OH

In 1984, a group of English
musicians recorded the song
"Don't They Know It's
. Christmas," and raised
millions of dollars to help
people starving in Ethiopia.

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sheila BeYins' lrd grade class
Middleport Elementary
Middleport, OH

The compact disc was
introduced in 1982. The CD
was more durable than vinyl,
held more songs and had
better sound. By the end of the
'80s most record companies ·
stopped pressing vinyl records.

Hob:er Clinic:
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ours' 3rd grade class
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH
Holzer Clink
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Little's 3rd grad'e class
Central Elementary
Point Pleasant, WV

Live Aid concert
telecast watched
by 1.5 billion
people in 160
countries.

Former
Beatie
John
Lennon
murdered IITiimb,erl:akel~~~
in N.Y.C.

Vauc:hari's Supennarket
Middleport. 10H
Sponsors of: Sandy Needs' 3rd grade class
Eastern Elementary
Middleport. OH

Vauchan's SUpertnarket
M;ddleport, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Struble's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport, OH

D•rrell Norris and M1rshall Roush GreenhouHI
letart Falls, Ohio
Sponsors of: Ms. Holter's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport, OH
Aclvan~~:ed

Hearlna Center

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Sandra Mock's Jrd grade class
Ohio Valley Christian School
Gallipolis, OH
Dr. a Mrs. Gerald Shute
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Jerry Howell's 3rd grade class
Green Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Hit song:·
Call Me

by
Blondie

· Jividen's Powtr Equipment
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Davenport's 3rd
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, 011

Rork's llottesl Tirl..et
In 1987, a rock and roll band made
the cover of Time magazine. Time
hailed them as "Rocks' Hottest
Ticket." Led by singer Bono, their
concerts sold out in cities
worldwide. Their songs topped the
charts in 22 countries. Color each
square with an even number yellow,
and each odd-numberd square red
to find out the name of this band.
3 4 6 9

8 9 7 3 l
7 6 8 7 6 2 4 2 7
5 2 4 7 2 7 5 7 5
8 8 5 8 3

9

2 4 7

4

I

8 8 6
4 6 2

9 7 3 7 4 7 5 9 7

BEY0 N0
--

-

\t:\

PONTE VEDRA BEACH,
Fla. (AP) - Davis Love III
provided the charge everyone
expected from Tiger Woods
and delivered a performance
every bit as dominant in The
Players Championship.
Love pulled away with five
slraight birdies and closed
with an S-under 64 to match
the best final round by the
winner in the 30-year history
of the tournament known as
the fifth major.
Love finished at 17-under
271 and won by six strokes
over 49-year-old Jay Haas
and Padraig Harrington of
Ireland, who shared the lead
going into the final round but
never stood a chance against
such a barrage of birdies.
Robert Allenby had a 7under 65 to finish at 278, a
score that looked as though it
might be good enough to win,
with the wind starting to
l!owl and temperatures dropping. But Love made sure
that wasn't the case.

Meunier-Lebouc
has fun beating
Sorenstam

Rlonre
Rio Gnmde, OH
Sponsors of: Phyllis Brandenberry's 3rd grade class
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

The end of vinyl?

7

Love Ill wins
TPC crown

Rockln?
1980s

Adjectives
Find five words in
the newspaper that.
describe each of
the rock and roll
stars from the
1980s you read·
about on this page.
Write each star's
name on a sheet of
paper and glue th~
words you fmd in
the newspaper ,
underneath each
name.
StauctoodiiJnll: Grammor; WIMI&amp;

undOrotand and usa a&lt;ljac!lvea and
deSCrlpttve language In writing.

Find the words in the puzzle,
COMMERCIAL &lt;then in this week's Kid Scoop
CONCERTS
stories and activities.
SPACE
K v E p u B L I c E
VINYL
L A I c·R E MM 0 c
DANCE
I J D N A s T c N N
VIDEOS
VACATION
E A 0 0 y p G R c A
JACKSON
c c p R u L s A E D
GLOVE
I K 0 R 0 c K D R I
RADIO
L s E v c K s I T v
ERUPT
PUBLIC
0 0 E v I D E 0 s A
DIVA
p N 0 I T A c A v T
•
POLICE
Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognizing identical
ROCK
words . Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling pattems.

grad~

class

Edward Jones lnvelbnents
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Sara Spurlock's 3rd grade class
Vinton Elementaty
Vinton, OH
J R Morrison &amp; Associates
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsor.; of: Mrs. Fellure's 3rd grade class
Hannan Trace Elementary
Mercerville, OH
Letlrt Corporation

Gallipolis Ferry, WV
Sponsors of: A 3rd grade class
Beale Elementary
Gallipolis Ferry, wv

Basketball Tum
University of Rio Grande

WonK' ~ ·.,

Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Price's 3rd grade class
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Ohio Yallty Tech Prep
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mr.;. Saunders' 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

Ohio Volley Tech Prtp
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Short's Jrd 11rade dass
Adda~o~ille Elementary
Addaville. OH

Ohio Volley Ttch Prop

Scoo

Rock the News
Select a story from the newspaper. Write
down the key facts that tell who, what,
when, where, why and how. Tum your
news story into the lyric s for a rock and
roll song.
Standards Link: Reading comprehension: Identify lhe main

For more information on becoming a classroom sponsor, contact Den Dlcktraan at (740) 441·2542

. :RANCHO
MIRAGE,
Calif. (AP)
Patricia
rvieunier-Lebouc kept talking
a1i week about how much fun
it : was to play with Annika
S.&amp;renstam. It didn't compare,
itJOugh, to the joy of beating
Q6r to win a major champi·
qriship.
: Meunier-Lebouc shook otT
a:rl out-of-bounds tee shot
\l{ith some steady play in the
fi.,al holes to win the Kraft
Nabisco by a shot, denying
Sorenstam's bid to become
the first LPGA player to win
the same major ti tie three
years in a row.
Meunier-Lebouc birdied
the 13th hole to take the lead,
then parred her way in before
a · meaningless 3-putt bogey
on the final hole gave her a lover 73 and a one-shot win
over Sorenstam.
Eighth-grader Michelle
Wie was never a factor, missing several short putts to finish ~ght shots back after a ·
final-round 76.
Sorenstam finished with a
!-under 71 for second place,
a stroke ahead of rookie
Lorena Ochoa, who shot a
fjaal-round 68.

Agassi wins at
Key Biscayne .
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(AP) -Andre Agassi won a
record sixth · Key Biscayne
title, capturing· the tourna·
rnent for the third straight
year by beating Carlos Moya
6·3, 6-3 in the Nasdaq-1 00
Open final.
- Still unbeaten in 2003,
Serena Williams rallied past
Jennifer Capriati for the seventh consecutive time 4-6, 64, 6-1, to win the women's
title Saturday.

Hopkins stops
Hakkar
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Bernard Hopkins stopped
European champion Mormde
Hakkar after eight rounds
Saturday night to defend his
middleweight title for the
I(jth time.

Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Lou Ann Sh&amp;Wer's Jrd grade class
Green Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Melp County Economic Development Office
Pqmeroy, OH
Sponsors of: Marge Gibbs' Jrd 11rade class
Salisbury Elementary
Pomeroy, OH
Gallla Reads
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of:
Juila Vaughan's 3rd 11rade
Mindy Young's 3rd grade
Marge Gibbs' 3rd grade
Plus 9 additional
.lrd grade classes

•

NASCAR

Newman
gets it right
in Texas
BY MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press

FORT WORTH, Texas Things finally went right for
Ryan Newman on Sunday.
First, he caught a break
when half the drivers on the
lead lap made green-flag pit
stops before a caution .flag
allowed Newman to make his
stop without losing ground.
Then, on his final stop, the
25-year-old racer gambled on
changing only two ·tires, los.t
the lead to Dale Earnhardt Jr.
on the ensuing restart but was
able to retake the lead from
the crowd favorite with ll
laps to go.
Newman pulled away at the
end
to
win
the
Samsung/Radio Shack 500 by
half the final straightaway.
"It was great when all those
lead cars got caught in the
pits," Newman said. "I was
worried for sure when Junior
passed me after the last stop. I
thought for sure they would
have made their car a little bit
better, too."
The tire gamble by last
year's top rookie paid off
with his second career victory
and first since Sept. 15, 2002,
in New Hampshire.
"Tires and track position
were key, for sure," Newman
said. "We didn't think four
tires were going to make that
much of a difference and we
needed to get to the front
some way."
Newman, who led four
times for 77 laps, appeared to
gain control when he took the
lead on lap 224 of the 334-lap
event. That came during a
caution period- one of I 0 in
the race - in the middle of a
series of green-flag stops.
Newman hadn't pitted, yet,
and found himself in front.
Newman lost the lead
momentarily
when he made
Ryan Newman celebrates with champagne following h\S NASCAR Samsung/Radioshack 500
his final stop on lap 286. He
victory Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. (AP)

regained the top spot the next
time around the 1 112 -mile
oval when Dale Jarrett, who
stayed on the track to get the
five-point bonus for leading.
finally made his stop.
Earnhardt's Chevrolet was
second when the green flag
came out for the restart on lap
289 , and the son of the late
seven-time Winston Cup
champion brought most of the
crowd of more than 200,000
to their feet when he took the
inside lined and charged past
Newman 's Dodge.
All the other leaders took
four tires on their last stop,
and it appeared for a while
that Newman's gamble was
going to fail. After Earnhardt
took the lead, he built a mar·
gin of up to 20 car-lengths
before his car developed a
handling
problem
and
Newnian began to reel in the
leader.
The cars were side-by-side
as they crossed the finish line
on lap 323, and Newman then
pulled steadi ly ahead, moving
away to win by 3.405-sec·
onds.
"He had a better restart,"
Newman said. "He got by me
and we raced each other
clean. That's a hard thing to
do at a place like Texas,
where lhe speeds are so high
and you have to come off the
corners so close.
"After I finally got by
Junior, I felt a lot better,"
Newman said. " It was just
awesome to finally win."
Newman,
one
of
NASCAR 's heralded "Young
Guns" ~ave Penske Racing
South Its first win since
switching from Ford to
Dodge this winter. No Dodge
driver had finished better than
fifth in the first six races this
season.
Newman, the seventh different winner in 2003, averPlease see Texas. Bl

'Horns survive tough weekend for ·No. 1s
Associated Press

SAN ANTONIO - The Texas
Longhorns are the last No. I seed
standing, headed to the Final Four for
the first time in 56 years.
T.J. Ford had I 9 points and 10
assists to lead Texas to the biggest
victory in school history Sunday,
senping the Longhorns past Michigan
State 85-76 in ·the South Regional
final - just 80 miles from their
Austin campus.
With chants of "Texas Fight" and
"final Four" reverberating through·
out the Alamodome, the Longhorns
earned the school's first trip to the
Final' Four sin, e 1947, when the
NCAA tournament field wa~ eight
teams.
As the final seconds ticked off,
Ford dribbled to halfcoun, flashed a
"Hook 'em Horns" sign to the crowd
and hugged coach Rick Barnes. Ford
was named the most valuable player
of the regional.
The Texas wins means the Big 12
will have two teams in the Final Four
for the second straight year. Kansas,
the league's regular-season champion, won the West Regional on
Saturday.
The loss kept Michigan State from
appearing in its fourth Final Four in
five years.

Lorbek had 14 points and nine
rebounds.
The Spartans had a 38-28 rebounding advantage but couldn't match
Texas' 49-percent shooting and 29of-38 etTort from the foul line. Texas
never trailed after leading 18-16 in
the first half, and the Spartans never
got closer than five in the second.
Texas dictated the fast pace it wanted in the frrst half, shooting 53 per·
cent as Boddicker and Harris com·
bined to hit five 3-pointers to counter
the Spartans' 23-11 rebounding
advantage.

Driving to New Orleans
The field ~ seltor the final lour 1eams wl1ich
begin play on Salurda~. 1M remaining teams,
and who they best to adVance.

....._

Oef. Kentucky, 83-69

SyrtcUH
Del. Oklanoma. 63-47

I

filsv~51

Ma!qulh

J

!

I

NaUon.l Chlmplonthlp
6:22p.m. • CBS • Ch. 1:3

r . . ... .

Mondly, Aprll7
r~·

..............,.. Hmoo PST.trf". _........,
Klnu
T1lll1

......

Dei.Arizona. 78-75

Tow

Del. Ml&lt;:hlgen Sl:. 85·76

.

The last time only one No. I seed
made the Final Four was 2000, when
top-seeded Michigan State won the
national title.
Texas (26-6) will play Syracuse
(28-5) in the national semifinals next
Saturday. The Orangemen beat
Oklahoma earlier Sunday.
Texas · had five players score in
double .figures. Brandon Mouton had
16, Brian Boddicker 15, Sydmill
Harris 12 and Brad Buckman II as
the Longhorns tied the school record
for victories in a season.
Paul Davis led Michigan State (2213) with 15 points and Erazem

Syracuse 63, Oklahoma 47
ALBANY, N.Y. Carmelo
Anthony stepped up from the start
and Syracuse's zone defense. did the
rest.
Next stop for the Orangemen: New
Orleans.
Anthony scored 20 points and
added 10 rebounds to lead coach Jim
Boeheim and Syracuse back to the
Final Four for the first time in seven
years with a 63 -47 victory over top·
seeded Oklahoma in the East
Regional final Sunday.
The third-seeded Orangemen (28·
5) will face the winner of the South
Regional final between Texas and
Michigan State next weekend.
After slow starts in the first three

games of tl\e NCAA tournament,
Anthony came out strong. The 6·
foot-8 freshman star scored lO points
in the opening 12 minutes.
Syracuse 's 2-3 zone took over from
there, causing the Sooners (27- 7) fits
inside and outside. The Sooners man·
aged just three points over the final 8.
1/2 minutes of the first half as
Syracuse took a 30-20 lead.
Things got worse for Oklahoma.
Syracuse scored the first eight
points of the second half to take its
biggest lead on a 3-pointer by fresh·
man Gerry McNamara with 15 :35 to
play that capped a 22·3 run.
The last time Syracuse was in the
Final Four was 1996 when it lost to
Kentucky in the national championship game. The last time the
Orangemen were in New Orleans for
a Final Four they lost to Indiana in
the 1987 championship.
Now. Boeheim ~ets another chance
at that elusive national title.
As the final seconds ticked off,
Anthony finally looked like a fresh·
man as he stood near midcourt jump·
ing up and down before flinging the
ball high toward the roof of Pepsi
Arena.
When he was announced as the
regional MVP, the partisan sellout
crowd of 15,207 started chanting
"One more year," hoping that this
Please see NCAA, BJ

,

�NCAA Men's Tournament
By The Associated Pres•

All Times EST

EAST REGIONAL
Semifinals
At Pepsi Arena
Albany, NV

Colorado
0
0
000
Los Angeles
0
0
000
San D1ego
0
0
000
San Franc1sco
0
0
000
Today's Gemea
Montreal (Armas Jr 12 12 ) at Atlanta
(Maddu:.: 166) 1 05p m
Ch1cago Cubs (Wood 12 11) at N Y Mats
(Gi a111ne 18-1 1} 11 0 p m
Phlladetphta (Millwood 18-8) at Fton da
(Beckett 6 7) 4 05 p m
M1lwaukee (Sheets 11 · 16) at St LOUIS
(Morri s 17 9) 4 10 p m
PittSburgh (Benson 9-6) at C1nc1nnat1
(Hayn.. 15·101 4 10 p m
Los Angeles (Noma 16 6) at Anzona
(Johnson 24·5) 5 05 p m
San Franc1sco (Rueter 14·8) at San
Otego (Lawrence 12·12) 6 05 p m
Tuesday'• Oamea
Colo rado at Houston 7 05 p m
Los Angeles at Arizona, 8 35 p m
San FranciSCO at San Diego 10 05 p m
Wedneldey'a Gamea
Montreal at Atlanta, 7 OS p m
Philadelphia at Flonda 7 05 p m
Ch1cago Cubs at N Y Mats 7 1o p m
Pittsburgh at Clnc1nnat1, 7 10 p m
COlo rado at Houston 8 05 p m
Milwaukee at St LOUIS 8 10 p m
Los Angeles at Anzona , 8 35 p m
San FranciSCO at San D1ego 10 05 p m

$299 667
(7) Jet1 Gordon Chevrolet 334
$249,753
4 (5} Jerry Nadeau Pont1ac 334
$187 725
5 (32) Mark Martin, Ford , 334,
$173,058
6 (17) Matt Kenseth Ford 334
$142 950
7 (14) Jeff Green, Chevrolet 334
$118,575
6 (4) Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet, 334
$119,575
9 (301 Kurt Busch, Ford. 334,$133150
10 (24) Jamie McMurray, Dodge, 334
$101,150
11 (191 Todd Bodine, Foid, 334
$111,750
12 (331 Ward Burlon, Dodge, 334
$127,906
13 (231 Dalo Jarrell Ford, 334,
$136,528
14 (101 Rusly Wallace, Dodge 333,
$126 692
American league
15 (8) Kevm HarviCI&lt; Chevrolet, 333,
East
$128,128
W L Pel. GB
16 (12) Terry Labonte Chevrolet 333,
8alt1more
0
0 OQ()
$115,656
Boston
17 (37) Michael Waltnp Chevrolet 333,
0 0 000
New York
0 0 000
$102 500
18 (21 1Robby Gordon, Chevrolet, 333,
Tampa Bay
0 0 000
$112 387
Toronto
0 0 000
19 (43) John Andrettl, Dodge, 333,
Central
WLPCIGB $121.753
20 (29) Jeff Burton Ford, 333,
Chocago ., ..........o 0 000
$120.492
Cleveland
0
0
000
21 (38) A1cky Craven , Pontiac 333,
Detro1t
0
0
000
$102,075
.
Kansas C1ty
0
0
000
22 (31 } Jack Sprague Pcnttac 333,
M1nnesota
0
0
000
$78,975
West
23 (40) Kenny Wallace, Dodge, 333,
WLPctGS
$90 164
Texas
1
0 1 000
,, 24 (421 Ken Schrader, Dodge 333,
Oakland
0
0
000
$75,975
Seattle&gt;.. .. ............ o 0 000
25 (271 Jeremy Mayfield Dodge, 332
1'
Anaheim
0
1
000
' $85,525
Sunder 1 Game
26 (161 Rocky Rudd, Ford, 332, $84,17%
Texas 6, Anaheim 3
27 (281 Casey Mears, Dodge, 331,
Today'a Games
M1nnesota (Radke 9·5) at Detro1t (Maroth $82,475
28 (201 Grog BIHie, Ford, 330, $68,975
6101 105pm
29 (361 Slerllng Marion, Dodge, 328,
Cleveland (Sabathla 13-11) at Bathmore
$111475
(Lopez 15·9) 3 05 pm
30 (351 Larry Foyl Dodge, 328,
Chtcago White Sox (Buehrle 19· 12) at
$69,185
Kansas C1ty (Hernandez 4·4) 3 05 p m
31 (251 Bre1t Bodlna, Ford, 325,
Boston (PMartmez 20 4) at Tampa Bay
$87,775
(Kennedy8·11) 515p m
32 (13) Johnny Benson Pontiac, 322,
NY Yankees (Clemens 13-6) at Toronto
engtne $92,450
(Halladay 19 71 705 pm
33 (18) Jimmy Spencer, Dodge, 294,
Tuesday'a Oamea
crash, $63 075
N Y Yankees at Toronto. 3 35 p n1
34 (22) Tony Slewarl, Ch011rolel. 293,
Boston at Tampa Bay, 7 15 p m
engine $113,728
Texas at Anahe1m 10 05 p m
35 (9) Joe Nemechek Chevrolel 279,
Seattle at Oakland 10 05 p m

Friday, March 28
Oklahoma 65 Butler 54
Syracuse 79 Aubu rn 76
Champlonahlp
At Pepsi Arena

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

SOUTH REGIONAL
Semifinals
At The Alamodome
San Antonio

Friday, Man:h 28

Texas 82 Connect icut 78

M1ch1gan State 60 Maryland 58
Champlonahlp
At The Alamodome
San Antonio
Sunday, March 30
Texas 85 M1Ch1gan State 76

MIDWEST REGIONAL
Semifinals

At The Hubert H Humphrey
Metrodoma
Minneapolis

Thuraday, March 27
Kentucky 63 WISCOMSIO 57
Marquette 77 Pittsburg h 74
Championship
At The Hubert H Humphrey
Metrodome

Minneapolis
Saturday, March 29
Marquette 83 Kentucky 69

WEST REGIONAL
Semifinals
At Arrowhead Pond
Anaheim, Calif
Thursday, March 27
Anzona 88 Notre Dame 71
Kansas 69 Duke 65
Championship
At Arrowhead Pond
Anaheim, Calif
Saturday, March 29
Kansas 78 Anzona 75

FINIIL FOUR
At The Loulalana Superdome
New Orleans
Semifinals

Salurday, l.prll 5

Marquette (27 5) vs Kansas (29-7)
Syracuse (26·5) vs Texas (26·6)
Championship
Monday, April 7 •
Sem1hnal wmne ~ 9 22 p m

NCAA Women's Tournament

Wedneaday'a Games
Chtcago White Sox at Kansas C1ty 2 05

pm

AltTimaa EST

EI.ST REGIONAL
Semifinals

Sunday, March 30
At University of Dayton Arena
Dayton, Ohio
ConnectiCut 70 Boston College 49
Purdue 66 Not re Dame 47
Championship
Tuesday, April 1
At Unlveraity of Dayton Arena
Dayton, Ohio
Connecticut (34 1) vs Purdue (29 5) 7

pm

MIDEAST REGIONAL
Semifinals
Saturday, March 29
At Thompaon·Boling Arena
Knoxville, Tann
Villanova 53, Co lorado 51
Tennessee 86 Penn State 58
Championship
Monday, March 31
At Thompson -Boling Arana
Knoxville, Tenn
Villanova (28 5) vs Tennessee (314)
7 30 p m

MIDWEST REGIONAL
Semifinals
Sa1urday, March 29

Texas at Anaheim 4 05 p m
N Y Yankees at Toronto 7 05 p m
M1nnesota at Detro1t 7 05 p m
Cleveland at Baltimore 7 05 p m
Boston at Tampa Bay 7 15 p m
Seattle at Oakland 10 05 p m

Pro basketball
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlentlc Division
W
L Pel.
GB
11.-New Jersey 45
28 616
x Philadelphia 43
29
597
1&gt;
Boston
40 34 541
5'1
Orlando
39 34 534
6
Washington
34
39 468
11
32
42
432
131,
New York
M1am1
23 51 311 22 &gt;
Central DMalon
WLPCIOB

)( Detro1t
x-lncliana
New Orleans
Milwaukee
Atlanta
Ch1cago
Toronto
Cleveland

46
43
41
35
29
26
23
14

26
30
33
39
45
46
49
59

639
589
554
473
392
35 1
319
192

x-Dallas .... .. ...... 55
x San Anton1o 53
46
Minnesota

16
20
29

753
726
613

pm

Ulah

51 9 30

WEST REGIONAL

LSU 69 LOUISiana Tech 63
Texas 73 M1nnesota 60
Championship
Tuesday, April 1
At Maples Pavilion
Stanford, Calif
LSU (30 3) vs Texas (28·5) 9 p m
At The Georgia Dome
AHanta
Semlfmala
Sunday, April 6
East champion vs West champ1on
Mideast champ1on vs M1dwest cham pion
Game ttmes 7 and 9 30 p m
Champlonahlp

Tuesday, April 8

Sem1f1nal wmners 6 30 p m

Baseball

Cmcmnat1
Houston
Milwaukee

0
0
0

0
0
0

000
000
000

Pittsburgh

0

0 000

St LOUIS

0

0

000

We1t
W
L

Pel

Anzone.

GB

000
000
000
000
000

WLPciGB
o o 000

Chicago

0

0

000

589
521
356

17
57
230
Pacific Divlalon

LAClippers

THE FINAL FOUR

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
a
0
a
Central

Houston
Memphis
Denver

43 30
36
35
26 47

x-Sacramento
Portland
LA Lakers
Phoemx
Golden State
Seattle

Slanford, Calif

Atlanta
Flonda
Montrea l
New York
Philadelphia

12
18
21
23

32 '~

2

10
12
17
29

381

WLPCIGB

Semifinals
Sunday, March 30
At Maples Pavilion

National league
Eaat
W LPcl

3 '•
6

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
WLPctGB

AI The Pll

Albuquerque, N M
Duke 66 Georgta 63
Texas Tech 71 New Mextco 48
Championship
Monday, March 31
At The Pit
Albuquerque, N M
Duke (34 11vs Te.as Tech (29

Sunday from the Samsunof'adlo Shack
500 race lor NASCAR's Winston Cup
Senes at Texas Motor Speedway list1ng
startmg pos1tton m parentheses driver car
laps completed w1th reason out 1f not run·
nmg at the rm1sh and money won
1 (3) Ryan Newman Dodge 334
$406 500
2 (11) Dale Eamhardt Jr Chevrolet

52
45
42
38
36
35

23

22
27
31
36
38
37

50

703
625
575
521
486
486

315

6

91·
16
16

13 ~,

28'11

x-cllnched playoff apot
Saturday's Gamea
Philadelphia 11o Atlanta 89
Boston 110 Cleveland 106
New Jersey 109 Golden Sta te 97
San Antomo 101 Utah 81
Houston 102 Denver 89
Sacramento 107 Ch1cago 92
Sunday'a Games
Toronto 95 New York 86
Dallas 119 Minnesota 95
Milwaukee 109 M1am187
lndtana 92 Phoent)( 61
Detroit 99 Sacramento 68
San Antomo 92 New Orleans 90
Denver 68, Washmgto n 72
Seattle 119 L A La kers 98
LA Clippers 102 Memphts 100
Today'a Gamea
Philadelphia at Orlando 7 p m
Milwaukee at M1am1 , 7 30 p m
Houston at New Jersey. 7 30 p m
Memphis at LA Lakers 10 30 p m

Tu11d1y's Gam11
DetrOit at Toronto 7 p m
Sacramento at lnd1ana 7 p m
Orlando at San Antonio a 30 p m
Seattle at Chicago 8 30 p m
New Orleans at Dallas, 8 30 p m
Denver at Phoenix 9 p m
Golden State at Portland 10 p m
Utah at L A Clippers 10 30 p m

Auto racing
OB

NASCAR Wlnaton Cup
SomounDflodlo Bhoclt 500
FORT WORTH Texas - ReouiiB

334

3

iReds haven't learned
to win in new park, yet

Southern opens season tonight
Bv ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent
RACINE - After losmg
seven graduatmg semors
from a 12-7 season one year
ago, the Southern Tornadoes
are m the midst of a rebuilding year in 2003 gomg into
the season opener tonight
against Nelsonville· York in
Racme's Star Mill Park.
The team will return to
action with a new cast of
players and a new head coach
m Ryan Lemley, who served
as reserve coach for several
seasons under veteran mentor
Mtck Wmebrenner. The last
two seasons the team was
coached by Scott W1ckline.
Graduated from last year's
squad are Brice Hill , Matt
Ash, Dally Htll, Brandon
Pierce, Joe Manuel, Tyler
Little, and Aaron Ohlinger.
The returns only three letter
winners this season-Justin
Allen, Curt Crouch, and Wes
Burrows.
,
Lemley cites a lack of expe·
rience as the number one pitfall for the young Tornadoes
with only the three lettennen

returning, but also adds some
good young talent IS up from
last year's successful reserve
team. Another weakness is
Southern's lack of pitching
depth. Lone returning starter
Jusun Allen wtll be expected
to shoulder the bulk of the
Tornado p1tchmg chores.
Others seemg lime on the
mound will be Curt Crouch,
Jordan Bass, Wes Burrows,
and Joey Phillips.
Yet another setback 1s
Southern 's potentially tough
overall schedule, a schedule
that should prepare the
Tornadoes well for a good
tournament run .
Lemley
ex~cts both divistons ol the
Tn-Valley Conference to be
very tough as well as the nonleague schedule that includes
double headers with Symmes
Valley and Fort Frye
Lemley expects Meigs,
Vinton County, Well ston, and
Alexander to vye for the Ohm
Di vis1on IItle, while he says
"the Hocking will be wide
open with Eastern, Waterford,
Trimble and Federal Hocking
lead the battle "
Added Lemley, "We hope
to be compellttve, but have a

very tough schedu le, a n!:W
coach, and only three return·
mg letter winners. We w11l be
learn10g as we go. Our
defense has shown Its mexpe·
nence with 20 errors 10 three
pre-season contests. We are
going to have to make
defense a prionty early 10 the
season."
Southern strengths mclude
the return of Justin Allen as a
startmg pitcher, the return of
e1ght seniors, and good numbers m the fact that 29 players
are vying for starting posi·
lion s in the program.
Be sides pitching Crouch
and Allen will see time m the
mfield along with Adam Ball
at second base and Justin
Connolly at first. Jordan
Bass, Jeremy Yeauger, and
Wes Burrows have-been shuffling around for an infield
positiOn , while Yeauger,
Ph1lson, and B J. Marnhout
are getting time behind the
plate at catcher.
Vymg for outfield ume are
Tommy
Theiss,
Curt1s
Ne1gler, Jordan Htll , Chns
Copp1ck, Andrew Phtlson,
and Ty H1ll

· Bv JoE KAv
,• Associated Press

Pirates at Reds

•
!

Southern opens season today

RACINE-.Commgotfa 15·
I 0 season last year, the Southern
crash, $60 125
36 (39) Dave Blaney Ford 268, engine,
Lady Tornadoes return all but
$67,075
two components to the 2003
37 (1) Bobby Labonte Chevrolet 260,
crash, $117,108
team and are looking forward to
38 (281 ChnSIIan Flttopaldl Dodge 240,
the upcoming season opener
crash, $64,950
39 (151 Sieve Park Chevrolol 234, tonight against Nelsonville·York
crash $82 087
40 (411 Moke Skinner, Ponllac, 233, at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Graduated from last year's
c rash $56 850
41 121 EllooH Sadler, Ford 187, crash, team are designated hitter and
$92,060
right fielders respectively·
42 (34) Tony Rames Chevrolet, 152,
engine, $56,765
Rachel Marshall and Lmdsey
43 (6} 8111 Elliott Dodge, 46, engine,
Smith. Southern returns AII$100,781
Race atatlaUc1
Distnct 13 catcher, jumor
Average speed 134 517 mph
Katie Sayre and second team
T1me of race 3 hours 43 minutes 28
seconds
selection and senior Pitcher
Marg1n of VIctory 3 405 seconds
Rachel Chapman With that
Cautton penods 10 for 52 taps
Lead changes 19 among 1 t drivers
battery mtact Southern hopes
Lap leaders B Labonte 0, E Sadler 1~3 ,
to
compete for its first TriB ElliOtt 4-46, E Sadler 47·88, J Gordon
89 102 MKenselh 103, A Newman 104· Valley Conference champi105, J Green 106·~07 , J Spencer 108, S
Park 109, R Craven 110·111, E Sadler onshtp m several years
112·157, M Kenaeth 158·220 J Gordon
Sayre, Chapman, and senior
221·222, MKenselh 223, A Newman 224· shortstop Bngette Barnes all
285, D Jarrett 286 A Newman 287·288 0
Earnhardl Jr 289·323, R Newman 324· earned first team All· Tri334
Valley Conference Honors last
Unofficial po1nts standings 1 M Kenseth
1,090, 2 K Busch 935 3 D Earnhardl Jr season, while Barnes was hon924, 4 MWallrop 898,5 J Johnaon 885, 6 orable mention all-district
J Gordon 864, 7 T Slewart 649, B R

Team awards went last year
went to Katie Sayre, best batling average, most walks, and
best defensive;
Barnes,
Chapman and Emily Htll ,
most 1mproved; and Brooke
K1ser, coach's award.
Southern returns eight letter
wmners and went through the
pre-season at 3-0 overall
Senior letter wtnners were
Chapman
(pitcher) and
Barnes (shortstop) ; juniors
Katie Sayre, Emily Hill (centerfield), Deana Pullins (second base); and sophomores
Brooke Kiser (third base),
Ashley Roush (first base), and
Joanne Ptckens (left field)
Senior Jeri Htll adds depth at
several positions , wh1le
sophomores Holly Duffy and
Ashlee Hill wh·o came up to
varstty late last season as
freshmen have been doing a
good job in right field and
designated hitter respectively.
Freshmen Bethany · Riffle
picked up the varsity win as
pitcher in one scrimmage, and
could be a force at the varsity

level, but will spend time
gaming pttchmg experience at
the reserve level Kristiina
Williams also adds speed and
defense to the hne·up.
Desptte returnmg e1ght
players, Southern is still relatively young wllh five sophomores and two freshmen
competing at the varsity level.
Southern 's strengths mclude
its pitching battery of
Chapman
and
Sayre.
Chapman has won all but one
of Southern' s vtctones over
the past two seasons, und
Sayre 1s one of the best defenSIVe catchers m the game
Scott Wolfe begms hi s
fourth season as varstty softball coach wtth varsity assistant Rebecca Evans and
reserve coach Martie Rose
and assistant Marvin Eddy.
Reserve players competmg
for pos1tions are Nick1 Tucker,
Ntkki Riffle, Susan Brauer,
Mirinda Davis Jordan Neigler,
Angela
Hayman,
Kasie
Sellers, Linda Eddy, Kristiina
Williams, and Bethany Riffle.

BASEBALL
ANAHEIM ANGELS--Qplloned INF
American League

Alfredo Amezaga INF Chane Ftggtns C
W11 N1eves, OF Jeff DaVanon and LHP
Mark Lukas1ew1cz to Salt Lake of the PCL
Reassigned LHP RICh Rodriguez and AHP
Doug N1ckle to Salt Lake Transferred RHP
Matt Wise !rom the 15- to the 6o-day diSabled list Purchased the contract of OF
Julio Ram1rez from Salt Lake
BOSTON RED SOX-Acqwred RHP
Ryan Cameron hom Colorado to complete
the March 18 trade for LHP Javier Lopez and
QPtloned Cameron to Pawtucket of the IL
Destgnated RHP Dicky Gonzalez tor assignment Purchased the contract of RHP Steve

Woodard loom Pawluckel ollhe IL
CHICAGO WHITE SOX--Qplloned LHP
Dav1d Sanders to Charlotte of the IL
CLEVELAND INDIAN&amp;-Traded C AJ

Hmch to Detroit for a player to be named
Purc hased the contracts of RHP Jose
Santiago LHP Billy Traber, C T1m Laker, INF
Casey Blake, and INF Boll Selby loom Buffalo

ol lhe IL Placed LHP CloHLee, RHP Bob
WiCkman RHP Mar1( Wohlers and INF RICky
Guiterrez on the 60-day disabled list
Optioned OF Jody Gerut to Buffalo Sent
RHP Dave Burba to their minor ~ague camp

DETROIT TIGERS-Placed AHP Danny

Patterson on the 15-day disabled list
Purchased the contract of AHP Jeremy
Sonderman from Lakeland of the Florida
State League and C Matt Walbeck from
Toledo of the IL

MINNESOTA TWINS- Oplloned 16

Todd Sears and OF Michael Rya n to
Rochester of the IL Purchased the con·
tract of RHI' Mike Fetters tram
Rochster

NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed RHP

Mariano Rivera, RHP Steve Karsay and
RHP Jon Lieber on the 15-day disabled
list Optioned LHP Randy Choate to
Columbus of the IL. Purchased the con·
tract of C John Flaherty from Columbul
Ot~lgnated C Chris Widge r for assign·
ment

Texas

at the end I tried to hold season was seventh in Las
(Newman) on the bottom and Vegas, moved from 15th to
make h1s car push, but he still eighth in the standings, trail·
got by me. Then I had a real ing the leader by 242 points.
from Page 81
good fight with Gordon."
There were several crashes
Sa1d
Gordon:
"He
made
11
tn
the race, including one
aged 134.5 17 mph m the race
hard
on
us.
If
we'd
have
been
involving
pole-winner Bobby
sfowed by 52 laps of caution .
for the win , we proba· Labonte, but no injuries were
After Newman took con· going
bly
would
have wrecked."
reponed. Labonte wound up
trol , Earnhardt hud to fend off
Jerry
Nadeau
fmished
in the 43-car field.
four-time series champton fourth, followed by Mark 37th
Labonte's
teammate, Tony
JetT Gordon for second place.
Martin and series points Stewart, the defending series
Gordon chased down and leader
and last year's TeKas champion, had a terrible
passed Earnhardt on lap 333, winner Matt Kenseth.
weekend. First, he had his
but Earnhardt bumped past
Busch
finished
ninth
Kun
primary
car im~ouncled
Gordon 's Chevrolet on the and now trails his Roush
NASCAR on Fnday after tt
fmal strmghtawuy to take the
by
I
~ ~ failed inspection. Then, on
Racing
teammate
runner-up spot by 0 002 sec· points m the standings.
Sunday, he fell out of the race
onds - a malter of mches.
JUmped
fro
m
ftfth
after
293 laps with an engine
Earnhardt
"We had a good car, but not
third, 166 behind Kenseth problem m his backup car
good enough, " Earnhardt to Newman,
whose best pre- and finished 34th
sa~ d. "My car was JUnk there
VIOUS fimsh In SIX races thiS

br

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO PUBLIC
OF A ANDING OF NO
SIGNIFICANT
IMPACT ON THE
ENVIRONMENT
(FONSI) COMBINED
NOTICE
To All Interested

prepare
an
Environmental
Impact
Statement
under tha National
Environmental Policy
Act of 1969, as
amended.
Environmental
Revllw
Record(a)
(ERR) lor aach of tha
Project(a)
listed
above have baen conducted by the VIllage
of Pomeroy. The
ERR(s) documents
the environmental
reviews of the pro]·
act(a) and more fully
sets forth the reasons
why such statement
Ia not required. The
ERR(s) are on tile and
available tor tha pub·

On or about, but not
before, April 16, 2003
the
Village
of
Pomaroy will request
the State of Ohio to
release Federal funds
under Section 104 (g)
of Title I of the
Housing
and
Community
Development Act of

determination
required by section
58.35, 58.47, or 58.53
lor the project, aa
applicable; (c) the
responsible entity
has omltt~d one or
more of the steps eat
forth at subpart E of
24 CFR Part 56 tor the

Persons,

Agencies,

and Groups:
The
VIllage
of
Pomeroy proposes to
request the State of
Ohto to release
Federal lunda under
Section 104 (g) of
Title I of the Housing
and
Community
Development Act of
1974, as amended;
Section 2se of Title II
of the Cranston
Gonzatea National
Affordable Housing
Act (NAHA), as
amended; and/or Title
tV of the Stewart B.
McKinney Homel..a
Assistance Act, ••
amended; to be used
lor the following prot·
ect(a):
Project Name: Village
of Pomeroy Water
Treatment
Plant
Improvements
Project
Ltat
at
Pro act'• Actlvltlaa: 1)
Water
lo
Sewer
2)
Faclllllaa,
Protaaelonal F"'· 3)
Oeneral
Administration
Source at Federal
Funde: CDBO Water
lo
Sewer
Grant
Project Purpose •
Daecrlptlon: Water
roduced by the
lllage at Pomeroy'•
water treatment plant
..ceeda the alan·
darde tor manganeee
aet by the OhiO I!PA.
The Village propa"'
to canetruct a new
water treatment plant.
Single Pra!Ht
Location: VIllage• of
Pomeroy A 8yrtau"
and Iutton Tawnehlp,
In Melge County, Ohio
latimetad Caet of
ProJect: 11,214,800
II haa baan datar·
mined that euch
Requeet tar Rella"
of l'unde will nat can·
llitute an eotlan elg·
nllloantly affecting
the quality of the
human environment
and accordingly the
Vlltage of Pomeroy
h.. decldad not to

e

llc'a examination and

copying,
upon
request, between the
hours of 9:00 a.m. to
4:00 p.m., Monday
through
Friday
(except holidays) at
the above address.
No further environ·
mental review otauch
project 11 propoead to
be conducted, prior
to the requall lor
releaae of Federal
lunda.
The VIllage of
Pomeroy plane to
undertake the pro]·
ect(a) deecrlbed with
the Federal lunda
cited above. Any
Interaatad paraon,
agenclaa,
and/or
groupe, who have any
comment• regarding
the environment or
who dlaagr•• with
thle Finding of No
Slgntllcant Impact
declaton, are Invited
to aubmll written
commentator coneld·
eratlon to the VIllage
ol Pomeroy at the
addraaa abova liatad
by 1:00 p.m. on April
18, 2003, which ta at
IIIII 11 dlyl lftar the
publication ot thte
combined nattoa. A
nctlca ragardlng the
raaponalble entity'•
intent to raquaat
raleaaa of Iunde ta
llattd tmmtdlataly
below. NOTtCI! 01'
INTI!NT TO RI!QUI!IT
A R!LI!ASI!
OF
FUNDS (NOI/RROF)
To Ali lntaraatad
Peraone,

Aaencl11 1

and Groupe:

1974, as amended;

Section 288 of Title II
of the Cranston
Gonzales National
Allordable Houelng
Act (NAHA), aa
amended; and/or Title
IV of the Stewart B.
McKinney Homelasa
assistance

Act, aa
amended; to be used
lor the pro)act(aO 11&amp;1·

ad above
The VIllage at
Pomeroy Is certifying
to the Slate of Ohio,
that the VIllage and
Mayor John w.
Blaattnar, In hls/har
olllclal capacity as
mayor,

consent

to

accept the jurisdiction of Federal courts
II an action Ia brought
to enforce raaponal·
bllltlaa In relation to
environmental
revlewe,
declalon-

maklng, and action ;
that
th..a
and
reeponelbllltlea have
been 81tialled.
The legal affect of
tha cerlllicetlon 11
that
upon
Ita
approval, the VIllage
of Pomeroy may uea
the Federal Iunde,
and the State of Ohio
will have eatlelled Ita
raeponelbllltlea under
the
National
l!nvlronmental Polley
Act ot 1889, ••
amended.
The &amp;tala of Ohio
will aooapt an oblta·
lion to 111 approval ol
tha ralaaat of lunda
and acoepttnce of the
certification only 11 It
Ia on one of the fol·
lowing grounda: (a)
the certification waa
nat, In fact, ••eoutad
by the reaponelbla
entlty'l
Certifying
Officer; (b)
tha
reaponelbla entity
hal felled to meka
one at the tow lind·
lng1 purauanl to
Section d8.40 or to
make the written

CINCINNATI- Bunts hug
the foul lines. Grounders flat·
ten on the tnfteld grass. Fly
balls rhumba m the sw1rllng
winds.
Two exhtbition ~ames have
provided the Cmcmnati Reds
wuh a good tdea of how their
new
fie ld
handles.
Unfortunately, a v1tal part of
• the owner's manual seems to
' be missing.
They can't figure out how
to wm at Great Amencan Ball
Park
. The f1rst two tnes were well
off the mark The Cleveland
. Indians swe pt their two-game
dry-run over the weekend,
leavmg the Reds feeling lost
; n thm new place .
It 's not home· sweet-home
wtthout a wm
"Hopefully when 1t counts,
we' ll be able to count one,"
shortstop Barry Larkm said
The last time they opened a
ballpark, they d1d JUSt that
The Reds rumed the commg-out party for Ptttsburgh 's
•PNC Park on Apnl 9, 2001,
"beating the P1rates 8-2
Pittsburgh native Sean Casey
hit the park's first homer and
drove m five runs, carvmg a
place m Pirates ' history.
Fmmgly, the Pirates wtll
open the Reds' new ballpark

4:10p.m., today
Great American Ball Park
today, getting a chance to
spot! someone else's maugural
"I hope tt's enJoyable,"
manager Lloyd McClendon
satd. "It's a part of history, so
you certainly take a lot of
pnde m it. I hope tt's special.
The people of Cincinnati are
proud of their new ballpark. I
hope it's a nice night."
McClendon was referring
not to the weather forecast,
but to the Ptrates' chances of
following Cleveland 's example and enJoymg a stroll m the
new park. Recent htstory suggests there 's a good chance.
The Reds haven't been
much m home openers recently, gettmg one win, three losses and a ram-forged t1e m the
last f1ve years. They're
already
0-2
at
Great
Amencan, although those two
practice-game losses were
wntten m scorecard penCil
rather than record-keeping
mk.

After former Prestdent
Bush throws out a ceremomal
first pitch at 4 p.m. EST on
today, the pressure will be on

the home team.
"Thts Will be my SIXth
opemng day, and we've only
won one," smd second baseman Aaron Boone, who hu
the last homer at the old stadium. "There's always so much
hype with opening day here in
Cincinnati. It's such a crazy
day, such a fun day, but we
always end up losing ."
They lost their frrst game at
Rtverfront Stadium on June
30, 1970, when Hank Aaron
htt the first homer and the
Braves won 8-2 A day later,
Tommy Helms htt the Reds'
first homer to get them their
first win
They've had more practice
at opemng ballparks in recent
years, and gott&lt;:n mixed
results. Three day s before
they opened PNC Park With a
victory, they played the first
game at Mtller Park in
Milwaukee and lost to the
Brewers 5-4
Casey also gm the ftrst htt
m Milwaukee's new park, and
would love to make 11 three m
a row. He Jammed h1s right
wnst while dtvmg for a ball
on Fnday night, but dtsmissed
thoughts that he m1ght have to
stt out the opener.
"Are you guys hurting for
news stories?" he sai~. laughmg.
Pirates
reliever
Scott
Sauerbeck wouldn't mmd 1f

Casey got the first h1t, as long
as he got the f1rst game ball
Sauerbeck grew up 1n
Cmcmnall, sk1pped school to
attend many an opener, and
can rectte all the htstoric
Rive rfron t
moments
at
Stad1um.
He'd love to make one such
moment m the new place
"I'm sure I' II put some dirt
from the mound in my pock·
et," Sauerbeck said. "If I get
in, I'm gomg to ask for the
ball when I leave the game
"I'm gomg to try to treat tt
hke any other game, but tt's a
childhood dream come true
I'm excited It's a btg day for
me. I was a dte-hard Reds fan
I just wtsh Pete Rose could be
there."
Rose can't Hts lifetime ban
for gambhng prevents h1m
from parttcipating m the
opemng, and he turned down
offers to lead the annual
downtown parade and sit m
the stands wuh the mayor
In stead of the past, th e
focus w1ll be on the f1eld .
Who gets the f1rst hit? Who
htts the ftrst homer? Who
wins the first game that
counts?
Who wouldn 't love to pla1&lt;
m a game like th1s?
"We' re lookmg forward to
the crazmess," Boone sa1d

_Indians, Orioles s~k fresh start in opener
Bv DAVID GtNSBURG
Associated Press
BALTIMORE The Cleveland
Indians and Baltimore Orioles aren't
expected to participate in the playoffs
this year, so Monday 's opener JUSt mtght
.be the most s1gmficant game of the season for both rebwldmg teams.
. For the winner, 1t 's first place- even
, 1f only for a day.
That's how 11 was last year for the
, Orioles, who opened the 2002 season by
.crushmg the then-defendin~ AL champion New York Yankees I0-3 before a
dehnous sellout crowd at Camden Yards.
. -The h1 ghllght of the game - and maybe
, the enttre season for Baltimore - was
the grand slam Tony Batista htt off
Roger Clemens
. "I thmk It was a great moment, espectally tacmg Roger Clemens and the
,Yankees," Bati sta sa1d last week .
"Wmnmg on openmg day was an excttmg moment for our players, for our team
and for the city."
Th1s opening day for the Onoles tsn' t
so much about gettmg otf to a good start
as 1t is burying the memory of an
'absolutely homd f1m sh

Newman 848, 9 R Craven 840 10 K
Harvtck 802

Transactions

Rangers double'
up Angels on
opening night .

"

l

Prep softball
Correspondent report

ll1e Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Major League Baseball

Prep baseball

Scoreboard
College basketball

Monday, March 31, 2003

Monday, March 31, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Sunday's workouts were wtped out by
snow. The last time the OAoles stepped
on the field at Camden Yards, they were
m the process of completing a 4-32 sktd
A season that began wtth an upllftmg
rout of Clemens and the Yankees ended
wtth a 12-game losing streak that capped
the most m1serable 36-game run in the
history of the Onoles.
Now 1t's lime for Baltimore to start
anew.
"Last year is still on our minds,"
Orioles leadoff hitter Jerry Hairston said.
"We want to erase that, and we can do
that by getting off to a good start."
The start of the regular season will also
enable the Onoles to put some d1stance
between themselves and a spnng training
marred by the death of Steve Bechler,
who died of heatstroke on Feb. 17.
It's hard to predict what effect, tf any,
Bechler's death wtll have on the team.
"You put It m Us proper place and go
on about what you' ve got to do Then
you revisit It when you want to," Orioles
manager Mtke Hargrove satd
The Onoles st1ll have plenty of the
same players from a team that was 63-63
before flopping at the fmish The Indians,
conversely, have undergone a dramatic

change smce the1r 74-88 fm1 sh m 2002
New manager Enc Wedge, 35, has
been placed in charge of a team f1lled
wah youngsters and one Without slugger
Jim Thome, who ended h1s run with the
Indtans by def!r_ctmg to Phlladelphw
Cleveland's i-uss1on th1s season m1r·
rors that of the Onoles Lay the ground·
work for the future. If wmmng comes
sooner than later, even better
"The talent IS real," Indians general
manager Mark Shapiro satd. "I ' thmk
what's exc1t10g IS that It's not contmgent.
or dependent, upon one guy We 've go(
multiple optmns at mult1ple position s
There are very few areas where we don ' t
have young, exciting alternatives."
The same can be sa1d of the Onoles
The similarity between the teams even
extends to their youthful opemng·day
starters.
Baltimore's Rodngo Lopez made the
team as a rehever out ot sprmg trammg,
stepped into the rotation 10 late Apnl and
fimshed 15-9. Now he's the fourth open·
ing-day starter for the Orioles over the
past four years
For the Ind1ans, C.C Sabath1a went
13· 11 10 2002 and IS now considered to
be the ace of the staff at age 22

fo r lhe save . He had 40
lasl sea son for Boston last
year
Texas reltevers combined tor one-h1t ball over
tou1 1nmngs
9 The Angels' runs came
Bv KEN PETERS
on an RBI s1ngle by Brad
Assoc1ated Press
Fullmer 1n (he first uwmg,
ano1her run-sconng smgle
by Garret Anderson in the
ANAHEIM. Cahf
With Game 7 w1nner John th 1rd, and Dann Erstad's
Lackey on the mound , RBI groundout 1n the fifth.
Rodriguez, hampered by
ThunderS!Ix 1n the stands
and the Rally Monkey on a herniated d1sk m his
the
scoreboard.
th e neck th1s spnng, made 11
Anahe1m Angels started S-2 with a solo homer m
lh1s season the same WdY the filt h. He began trotting
alm ost as soon as the ball
they began last year lett h1 s but, and the ball
w1th a thu d
landed
deep m the leftAlex Rodnguez, Juan
Go nzalez and M1chael field seats .
Rodnguez m1s sed two
Young hom ered , mak 1n g
manager Buck Showa lter a weeks thi s spnng because
wm ner 10 h1 s Texas debut of the neck 1nju ry but
as the Rangers beat the played th e l1nal three
World Senes champwn ex h1b1t10n games He hasAngels 6-3 Sunday n1ght n ·1 m1ssed a regular-sea111 the maJor league open , so n game s1nce s1gmn g a
record I 0-ycar, $252 miler
liOn contrac t with the
Lackey was h1t hard as
Ran gers on Dec II of
the Angel s dropped the1r
fourth stra1ght ope ner 2000
The ho mer was the
Last year, they started ott
299th for th e 27 ·year-old
w1th a 6-0 loss to
A-Rod, begmmng h1 s
Cleveland and fell to a
eighth full b1g league seafranchi se-worst
6·14 son He went l·for-5 and
before com 10g back
1s 5-tor-34 1n season openAlte1 ro us10 g pregame ers
cere mome s that included
Gonzalez , co ming back
the n11s111g of the Angels' trom an mJury -plagued
f1rst World Senes cham pi- year, had a home run, douonsh ip fl ag 111 the1r 42- ble and smg le
year his tory, Young qUietBes1des the sea of reded the crowd wnh a three- clad tan s 1n the sellout
lull shot ove1 the center· crowd of 43,525, there
field wall oft Lackey to disc was a strong red,
g1ve Texa s a 4-2 lead 10 wh ile and blue theme. A
the fourth 1n111ng
hu ge '·USA" was mowed
The Rangers rocked 1nto the outf1eid grass,
Lackey for t1ve 1uns on th ere was a mo ment of
e1ght h1ts 111 f1~e 1nmngs silence fo r U.S . serviCeIn h1 s la st outi ng . th e 24· men and a fi yove r by
ye&lt;~r - old
nght·hancler Navy lighter Jets The
became the fu st rook1e to nat1 o nal
anthem
was
wm the seventh game ot a played by the I st Manne
World Se nes 1n 93 years Expe ditio nary
Force
when he gave up one 1un Band
1n liv e 1nmngs o ( the
Tun Sa lmon, the Angels'
Angels' 4·1 VIC!Ory over seniOr member, he lped
San Fra nc1sco on Oct 27 1.11se the World Series flag
lsmae l Valdes made h1 s near the left-field seats .
first start 1n an opener ,md Jack1e Autry, w1dow of
gol the w1n ag,un st h1s lor· tormer team owner Gene
me1 teammates , allowmg Autry. al so partiCipated 10
th1ee ru ns on seven h1t s 1n the fia g· ra1s1ng cere mony
f1ve 1nnings
Anahe1m manager Mike
Ugueth Ur b1n .1 , &gt;~g n ed Sc 1oscw threw out the first
dS a I ree l1gen t over th e ball , to I11S 14-year old
winter. pitc hed the n111th son. Matthew

Texas spoils
Anaheim's
World Series
celebration

conduct, preparation,

publication and comat
an
pletion
Environmental
Impact Statement, (a)
the recipient haa
committed lunda or
Incurred

coats

NCAA
from Page 81

not

authorized by 24
CFRPart 58 before
release ol lunda and
approval of the envl·
ronmental cartlllca·
tlon by State, or (I)
another
federal
agency acting pursuant to 40 CFR Part
1504 haa submitted a
written ltndlng that
the project Ia unaatletectory from the
standpoint at anvl·
ronmentat quality.
Written objections
mull be prepared and
eubmttted In accor·
dance
with
the
required procedure
(24 CFR Part 68), and
muet be addre..ed to
the: State at Ohio;
Environmental
Officer; OffiCI Of
Housing
and
Community
Partnarehlpa: P.O.
Sox 1001; Calumbua,
Ohto 43218·1001.
Oblaotiona to the
RafHat of Funde on
b811a other than
thoea elated above
witt not be coneldarad
by the &amp;tale of Ohio.
No
obJaotlona
received altar May 7,
2003, (Whloh II 18
daye altar It Ia antlol·
patad that lha &amp;tala
will racalva a requHI
for rei•••• ot lunda),
will be aonaldtrld by
ha &amp;tall ol Ohio.
Tha addraee of the
certifying ofltcar 11:
Mayor John
W.
lllaattnar
VIllage ot Pomeroy
Pomeroy VIllage Hall
320 I!Bit Main &amp;t.
Pomeroy Ohio 417811
(3) 31

I

I

•wouldn 't be h1 s first and last
·NCAA tournament.
Hak1m Warrick had 13
pmnts and nine rebounds for
Syracuse, which was playing
JUSt 2 1/2 hours from us cam·
.pus.
· The Orangemen shot 52
percent from the field (25·
·ror-48) - just 2-for-12 on 3s
and
outrebounded
Oklahoma 40-28
De' Angelo Alexander had
14 pomts for Oklahoma.

:Marquette 83,
Kentucky 69
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Marquette did what no team
had done in three months,
and what many people
. thought was tmposstble
Dwyane Wade and the
Golden
Eagles
upset
Kentucky 83-69 Saturday,
endmg
the
top-seeded
Wtldcats' 26-game winmng
streak and earnmg a trip to
the Fmal Four m New
.Orleans.
Cheered by a sea of yellow -clad
fo llowers,
Marquette's surprismg rout
,ga ve the school its thtrd
regional tllle and first smce1
1977, when AI McGmre
coached the Golden Eagles to
their only national title.
If Wade keeps it up, they
ought get another. He showed
again why he's one of the
nation's top players wtth a
triple-double - 29 pomts, I i

rebounds and II asststs.
As he stood on the floor
celebratmg, Marquette's fans
began chanting "One more
year, One more year" to the
talented JUntor, who IS a top
NBA prospect.
Wade d1d gel plenty of help
in this game. Burly 6·foot- IO
Robert Jackson, a transfer
from Misstssippi State, had
24 points and 15 rebounds,
and freshman Steve Novak
hll five 3·pmnters and scored
i 6 to hell? the Golden Eagles
wm convmcingly.
Marquette (27-5) used a
35-12 run over the final 12
minutes of the first half to
take a 45-26 lead agamst the
stunned Wildcats, who hadn 't
lost since Dec. 28, against
Louisvtlle.
Kentucky's star guard,
Keith Bogans, wore a protecuve brace on the left ankle he
sprained 10 Thursday 's semifinal win over W1sconsin.
He scored 15 points on 4of-11 shootmg in 24 minutes,
but with hts quickness hampered, the Wildcats stmply
couldn' t
re spond
to
Marquette 's offense. Gerald
Fttch also scored 15.
Kentucky (32·4) pulled
within 12 with 10:50 left and
had a chance to cut it to I0.
But after a great spmmng
move to the basket, Antwam
Barbour was called for an
offensive foul , sending
Wildcats coach Tubby Smith
into a dance of d1sgust.
From there, Wade was too
much for the Wildcats to control, sconng several of his
baskets on ey ~- popping
dunks
After Scott Memtt h11 a

scored
JUmper,
Wade
Marquette's next II pomts
w1th two three-point plays
and a 3-pomter to put the VIC·
tory away.

Kansas 78,
Arizona 75
ANAHEIM, Calif (AP) Ntck Collisop d1d 1t one
game, K1rk Hinnch the next.
That's how it works at
Kansas, and the payoff is a
return trip to the Final Four.
Hmrich went from h1s least
producttve performance of
the season to one of his best,
scoring 28 points and blocking a 3-point attempt by
Jason Gardner in the final
seconds Saturday as the second -seeded Jayhawks beat
top-seeded Arizona 78· 75 to
wm the West Regional.
"He struggled three or four
games thts season and the
next game, he was sensation·

al," Kansas coach Roy
W1lhams said . "He was se nsational today. He always
competes."
The VICtory was the I ,SOOth
for Kansas - th1rd· most m
NCAA h1 story The Jay hawks
will play m the1r 12th Final
Four, the fourth m Roy
Wilhams' 15 years as coach
Williams has a 417-100
career record and h1s .807
wtnmng percentage is the
best among active coaches,
but he's never won a national
championship
The Jay hawks (29· 7) wil l
face Marquette 10 New
Orlean s. The thil:tliseeded
Golden
Eagles
(27 ·5)
stunned No. I Kentuck~ 83·
69 earher Saturday to wm the
M1dwest RegiOnal
The Jayhawks blew leads
of 16 points in the first half
and 14 in the second, but did
enough in the end to wm
Hinrich was a mtserable 1-

He shot IO-of·23. mcludmg 6·ot-17 lrom 3-pomt
lUnge. and added f1ve
rebounds live ass1sts, two
steals .md two blocks
Jeff Graves had 13 pomts
and 15 rebounds, and Kenh
Langford a lso scored 13
pomts lor Kan sas
Gmd ner led the Wildcats
(28·4l w1th 23 pmnts Luke
Walton had 18 pmnts, 10
rebounds and s1x ass1sts, and
R1ck Anderson ,md Hassan
Ad,uns added I i po1nts each

of-9 tor two pmnts 111 K,msas
69·65 VICtory over Duke m
the rcg1onal sem1tinals
So Coill'on took over
sconn g .1 career· h1 gh 1'
po1 nt s and grabb1 ng 19
rebounds 111 a performance
W1lllams called the best he 's
ever had by one of h1 s players
m a b1g g&lt;~me .
The Wildcats n1.1de life d1f·
f1cu it for Co l11 son 111 th1 s
game. holdmg h1m to e1ght
pomts and mne rebounds
So Hmm;h took over

FREE 2·ROOM
SATELLITE TV SYSTEM

Income Tax by DanTax

fHf.r,·.&gt;! ·t' •

12 ""'"' salellote TV

OVER 50 ALL ·OIGITAL CHANNHS

S)Siem I~ $1'1'J

We are prepared ror your "Return"

St

12 monlh ~ I eq uopmenl
tr!Oi rtl lt~o l $1~1 mok&lt;ni

Whatever your
direction DanTax
is the path.

·~~~~.·· ~u.·r~.·

!0" l!llem fill

14 Yllio!y CfoaniOis
9 romo~ Ct&gt;annols

8 NewY!n1o ChoniOis
6 l""""i Cfoannels

nu: SI!Oda~

4 Sjlorts Channels

4 Musot Cfoannd&gt;

Prote sstol'lallnstallat10n

........

-..•

s.nttt.n.l "' .......

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,..,.

www dantax.org

(304)675-4020
328 Main Street

Point Pleasant, WV

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. Page 84 • The

www.mydailysentinel.com

LldlllY

Monday, March 31, 2003

m::rthune

Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

,

'' ..

~~~rBoArs&amp;MuiORSI

ister

~~~

FORSAu

Full Blooded Bloodhound Large Round bales for sale, 2001 Dodge Ram Quad 1997 Marada MX·1 Sport
pups, $150 each, 5 females , $20 per bate. Call (304)875· Cab, lots of elrtras. 25,000 17'10" with
110 135
must sale ASAPI Call 1743 after 6·00 m
miles. Asking $2 1,900 Mercruiser. Loaded. ellcel(740)245.()304
(740)256,1426
lenl condition, garage kept ,
used very little Tra1ler has
Only 1 left- Ready tor
VANS &amp;
spare tire mounted All fo r
Mothers Day, AKC Female
4-WDs
$7,000 Call (740)446·2444
Order tobacco plants now. , ._ _ _ _ _ _ __. anytime or leave a mes·
Shlh·Tzu. (740)367-7999
Dewhurst
Gree nhouse.
1990 Chevy, 4x4, lull sage.
Pet Groommg· dog&amp; &amp; cats,
loaded.
4 1n lift, (740)845·
pick-up &amp; delivery, Linda
Wade,
Side H111 Rd ,
_09_88___________

'.

r

....'

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONI WE

m:rtbune

To

Place

V1s1t us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ rnydallytrl bune.corn

Your
Aci---

v,sit us

a~

Rutland, (740)742·8916

Reg. AKC Lab Pupp1es,
Yellow or Black , shots &amp;
wonned, $200. Parents on

ll\:egi£iter

Sentinel

111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992- 2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E - mail us at:
classified@ rnydallysentlnel.corn

Premises. (7401379·2843

Visit us a t : 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
{Cax us at· (304) 675-5234
I!E- rnail us at:
classified@ rn•vdallyreglster.corn

Registered Border Collie
puppies Imported working
bloociUnea. Standard mark-

Ings. (7401379·9110

iiiiiiama
lo

Up Td' 15 Word&amp;, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must: Be Prepaid

n••

O.•crlptlon • Includ• A Prlc• • Avoid Abbrevl•tlons
• lnclud• Phone Number And Addr••• When Neecl•d

"'4

rANN~~I
C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
for sale, Chesler Townshtp ,
~ Metgs County. send leHers
• • of Interest to The Oatly
: ; Sent1nel, PO 8011 729-20.
: ; ~omeroy. Ohio 45769

'
'
· Do you need your GED or

· ~ Righ-School Otploma? Do
· · you know how to wnte an
: effect1ve resume? Do you
know what qual1ttes employ. ·, ers are looktng For tn -an
• employee ? Do you know
; · flow to keep a JOb once you
• get it? We can Help! For
~ more mformation, call the
~ Me1gs
County
STEP/JOG/ABLE" Program
at 740·992-6600 or 740 992-6930, or stop 1n Monday
through Friday at 111 West
Second Street 1n Pomeroy.
1 Oh
Make a difference 1n
your hfe Today!

PPHS "0-KAN" Yearbooks
from 1952-1963 W111 pay
$25 each, plus postage
Email Apnl Wamsley N1cola
at nlcolaja@att net

YARJJ SALE·

PoMt;ROY~{IDilLE

Large garage sale· ram or
s hme Monday March 31 Sl.
Tues Apnl 1st. Formally Jo's
Gift Shop. Stale Route 124.
Syracuse, brass hall tree,
miCrowave magaz1ne rae~ .
toys , lots o l mce whalnots ,
d1shes. shoes , women s
dresses . sweaters , Jeans.
blouses. kids clothi ng, dif1erent s1 zes baby clothing tw1n
bed mattress boxspnngs &amp;
frame &amp; lots more

r

AuenoNAND

F'LEAMARKIT

Kessel's Produce and Flea
Mkt. Open Thurs- Fn -Sat.
Now renting spaces. 1354
JacKs t;m P1ke, (740)446-

7797

t

WANThll

TOBIN

Absolute Top Dollar U S
S1lver.
Gold
Coins.
Proofsets Diamonds. Gold
Amgs
US Currency,·
M.TS Co1n Shop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,

740·446·2842
I \11'1 0' \II '\I
"I R\ I( I· '-!

HuJ&gt; WAN'Il-D

1'10 liELPWANTED
East ot

Iro

EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
PAYI Assemble Products at
Home. Call Toll Free 1-800-

467·5566 Ext 12170
Full -t1me front desk clerk/
mght auditor Apply 1n person at the front desk of lhe
Holiday Inn, Gall1pol1s.
Full-t1me secretary needed
lor a fast-paced Galhpolis
busmess Applicant needs to
be fam1har w1lh bas1c oH1ce
procedu res, telephone communicatiOns &amp; computers,
and entOY dealing With the
public Send resume to P.O.
Box 1133. Gallipolis, OH

4563 t.
Hel p wanted canng for the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying m1nimum wage,
new sh1fts. 7am-3pm, 7am5pm , 3pm- 11pm, 11pm7am, call 740-992-5023
Jo1n the team of qual1ty care
professionals at Overbrook
Center We are tak1ng appb·
catio ns tor
part
t1me
LPN s/RN 's for 12 hour
sh ifts
Benef1t package
available Please come in
and complete our appllcatton today at 333 Page
Street M1ddleport, Oh

FoUND

TIIAT OAIIT
PUUUR

••• etweys confldentle l

S©"RJUlA-""E~s·

::!:

open1ng for a Copy Editor/
Pagmator. The pos1tion IS
located 1n Gallipolis, Ohio, a
piCturesque small town near
maJor c1t1es OVP publishes
the GaR1polls Da11y Tnbune,
Pomeroy OaHy Sentinel l}nd
Pomt
Pleasant
(WV)
Reg lster at 1ts Gall1pol1s
location Candidate must be
proficient m Quark Xpress,
possess strong des1gn and
headline wntlng sk1lls and
knowledge ot AP style
Excellent pay and
great
opponu nlty for
advance ment with large
co mpany. E-mail resumes

to.
bp&amp;a!ce@ myda!IYirJbune com
Sna1l·mail work samples to.
Bette
Pearce,
Group
Manag1ng Ed1tor, Gallipolis
Dally Tnbune, PO Box 469,
Gallipoli s. OH, 45631

Registered Nurse (RN) lor
full t ime and pa r1-ttme work
in a 114 Bed Long Term
Care State Facility Full-time
employment offers an exten·
s1ve bene fit package , includIng State c1v11 s erv~ce retire ment earn up to 15 days
vacatron, 18 days sick leave.
and 12 plus pa1d holidays.
health/life Insurance IS available. Salary 1s commensu rate
with
expenence.
Con tact K1m Billups, DON at
Lakm Hosp1tal , Laktn, ~Vat
(304)675-0860, ext 126,
Monday thru Fr~day from
8.00 a m -4 00 p.m Lakin
Hosp1tal Is an EEO/AA
Employer

THERAPISTS NEEDED
AZ Diversified Healthcare 1s
lookmg for ful1-t1me. part time and PAN L1censed
Phys1cal Therapi sts , and
ASSIStants m Pt Pleasant
and surroundtng areas ThiS
pos1h0n would entail cl1n1cal
evaluations and treatment s
m home heahh care environ ments Full benefits
avail able. New graduates welcome to apply
For more inform ation please
contact Stacy Grooms at. 1800-577-4310 of tax you r
resume to 1-937-695-1375
azdlyerslf!edhea!thcare@ ya
boo com

l•orrcnge ltHtr• of the
fet~r Kro ..bltd word• be-

T R UH

0

A

Galllpolle Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740·446-4367,
1-800·214..(}452
WWW gallipohSCillf69roollege com
Reg 11:90-05·12748

675·3798

E)(penenced careg1ver LiveIn or hourly Reliable dedicated , t rustworthy, certificates/
references
on
req uest Faye O (740)256-

N0 G Y U

t097

...,-P-rl_A-,..;C;....,M-11 ..!,

rs I

Disappointed man to his auto
mechamc, "What I really need is

I I
'"::~=::;===~
a money machine.· Laughing the
i
.. mechamc says to man , "I already
' R have one - • ·!"
S A Gy E

I

I0

r--r,-:6;-;,,;_~~r-TI..:..:,.1-;';-l

~-.JL-.....1-....1.--L-.....1-..J

-

(!· ••

Complete the clluckle qu01od

~'I' fill.ng In the tnlstin9 words

you develop from llop No. 3 below,

Tawdry· Mutch· Bleak- UnpairJ. WE HAD
' When we become parents,· the old lady sail! to the
new mom. "it g tves us the chance to become ljle par·
enls we always hoped WE HAD •

No Fee Unless We Win!

200 Sq tt 3 bedroom,
2 bath , heat pump, attached
garage, 1 acre lot To be
completed mtd Apnl, 4 m11 es

1-889·582-3345

out Sandhill Ad. $89,000. To

I~ I

\I I ..., I \II

many options to list Call Tim

HOMFS
mRSALE

(740)446-4165 evemngs

at (304)675·7824 days or
Pnce for qu1ck sale- 3 bedroom home 1n Middleport
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up plus 1 bedroom rental on
for 1mmet11ate possess1on all same klt, reduced down to
w1thm 15 m1n of downtown $52,000 (740)992·6154
Gallipolis Rates as low as
6% (740)446·3218
Priced to Sell! $90.000
1998. 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
1 acre , riverfront. bnck and large ki tchen, stone firevmyi, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, 2 place. On State Route 588
fireplaces, hardwood floors, Immediate
Possession
approximately 2000 sq ft (740)983·0730
Full basement , $160 000
(740)446·0539
Ranc h style brtck hou se, 5
bedrooms, 3 full baths 2-car
BEOROOM HOME garage, fm1shed basement;
3
Only $8,000 For ll st1ngs ca ll 2 frplce. hardwood ftrs,
1-8(){}-719-3001 Ext F144
(740)992·5199
3 Bedroom newly remodeled, 1n Middlepo rt , call Tom
Anderson after 5 p m
992-3348
3 bedroom. 2 bath , brick
home , n ew carpet , pa1nt.
appliances, concrete dnve
$45,000 00, 163 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy 740-3941211 even1ngs, 740-380-

9800 days
3br 2ba . attachecl 2 ca r
garage, pool, many ex tras
Ser1ous
InQUires
only

$100 000. (304)892·2531
4 bedroom, 2- 1/2 bath
Ranch Home on 2 acres
1n
Jackson
Vis 1t
www greathome 1tgo.co m

Call(740)296·9609
5 bedroom, 2 bath, 10
acres. Call Melissa Pettit
Century Homes. Holley and

Assoc. (740)286·7113

All rBBf e•t•t• adVIrtlelng
In thle Mwt.paper Ia
aublect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ot 1968
whtch makes It Illegal to
advartl" "any
~
preference, limitation or
discrimination basad on
race, color, religion, aex
tamUial lllttJI or na11onal
origin, or eny intention to
make any auch
pret.rence, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon "
Thl• newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which Ia In
violation ot the law. O~o~r
readera are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings IKI\Iertlted In
thla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity batea.

Sandhill. (304)895·3741}

W11f stay w/elderly 1n the :t
home. n1ghts only Nurs1ng
w/25yr
Techmc1an
E Mperience
Good
Reference s In no answer
leave message (304)675·

1895

HOUSFJIOI.D

Goull6

New 3 bed roo m trailer 1n the Good Used Appliances.
Aecond1t1oned
and
Ouaranteed .
Was hers ,
Dryers ,
Ranges,
and
APARIMEI'ITS
Refngerators, Some stall at
fUR RENT
~r~--~LO'rs--&amp;~--,
$95 Skaggs Appliances, 76
ACRFAGE
Vme St , (740)446·7398
1 and 2 bedroom apart__
ments, fum1shed and unfur- Hotpomt washer, good con1/3 acre lot on 554 1n Porter, niShed, secunly deposrt dition, works well. $ 100.
all uttllt1es (1ncl ud1ng sewer) reqwred, no pet s, 740-99 2- (740)245·0460
Ready to bu ild $16,900 2218
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
(740)256·9200
Bedroom Apartmen ts Chapel Road. Porter. Oh1o.
at
$289/mo , (740)446·7444 '·877·930·
32 acres ten minutes from Starling
Holzer Med1ca1 Center Off W as~erf Dryer Hookup , 9162 Free Estimates, Easy
160 North Co unty water Stove and Refrige rator f1nanctng, 90 days same as
cash V1sa/ Maste r Card
available N1ce homesite No (740)44H519.
Drive- a· li ttle save alot
land contrac ts, $40 ,000
1br. apt $300. a month All
(740)446·3228
ut1lities included
$ ~ 00 . Used Furniture Store , ~ 30
4 5 ac res , no restnct1ons secunty depos11 (304)675- Bulav1lle P1ke We sell mattresses, dressers, couches ,
Call Melissa Pettit
at 3654
bunk beds, bedroom SUites,
Century Homes, Holley and
Apartm ent Available Now reclmers Grave monuments
Assoc (740)286·711 3
R1verBend
Place, New (740)446 -4782 Gat11polrs,
Patnot area , 20+ wooded Haven, WV now accepting OH Wanted to buy- good
acres, cou nty water, electric, applications for HUD-subst· used couches, mattresses,
good home site. Adjacent d12ed. 1 bedroom apa rt- dressers.
Wayne Nat1onal Forrest ment Utilllles mcluded Call
Excellen t hunt1ng $32 000 (304 )982·3121 Apartment
AmlQUES
(740)379-9141
available for qualified senlor/disabled person EHO
Buy or
se ll. Riverine
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Antiques. 11 24 East Ma1n on
MENTS AT BUDGET SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740House &amp; few acres of prop- PRICES .« f JACKSON 992-2526
Russ Moo re,
erty. Must have good roof &amp; ESTATESRV52 Westwood owner
free of termites (740)245- Dnve from $297 to $383
Walk to shoP &amp; mov1es Call Very old cann1ng Jars. pop
0460
740·446·2568.
Equal bottles, Mmers Lunch Pa11
Po1son,
8 11ters.
Inks,
Housmg Opportunity
Med1cme bonles. Gallipolis
Beech St Middleport, 2 bed- History Items, d1tferent colHOUSF.'&gt;
room furnisheQ apartment, ored fiddles and more Will
utilities pa1d. deposit &amp; refer- not spli t up . Sell all $1000
ron RENT
ences, no pets . (740)992- Call (740)441·1236 it no

for sale/ rent
Second
Aven ue Askmg $102,000.
(740)286·2828 or (740)7101467

country (740)256·6574

r

r

r

14x46 1981 1· 1/2br , bath,
large LA, mce s12e kitchen ,
new stove/refng , new car0165
answer, leave message.
pet. gas-heat. underpmnmg 1 -3 Bedroo ms Foreclosed
included.
Very
Good Homes From $199/Mo , 4% Furmshed efficiency, downDown, 30 Years at 8 5%
Condition (304)576-2950
stairs, 919 2nd Avenue 3
AP R For Listings, 800-319·
rooms &amp; bath All uhhtles
3323
Ext
1709
1977 Holly
Park 14x70,
pak1 $2951 mo (740)446· 18 Horsepower nd1ng lawn
2 bedroom, ask1ng $7,000
2 br newly remodeled. ref &amp; 3945
mower, 42 mch cut $450
Poss tble
fin ancing.
dep. no pets 304 -675-6224
(740)286·2829 or (740)71(). leave me ssage
Furnished effiCMmcy All utili- (740)399·8972
1467.
ties pa1d, share bath, $1 35 3 Prom Dresses Red 2
3BR, 1 bath, 1800 Chestnut month , 919 2nd Avenue . p1ece, Stze 5/6, Navy Blue
1984 14x70 mobile home, St . Gallipolis City SChools (740)446·3945
s1ze 8, Black S1ze small
7x21 ft . extens1on, deck and Good locatron. $450 montfl
Never Been Worn $60
bU1Id1ng
Green School $400 depoSit Call (304)675· Grac1ous hvmg 1 and 2 bedroom llPBrtments at Village Each (3u4)675·B612
01slnct (740)245-9084
2525 after 6pm
Manor
and
Riverside BURN
Fat.
BLOCK
95 16x80 mobile home, House for rent m West Apartments 1n Mrdd1eport.
Crav1ngs. and BOOST
$19 ,500 OBO Must be Columbia on At 62 1 mrle From $279·$348. Call 740· Energy L1ke
You Have
moved
(740)256·6558 from Mason Walmart OfW 992-5064 Equ al Housing Never Expenenced
leave me ssage
whirl pool tub, 2br. Lg Opportun1t1eS
WEIGHT· LOSS
K 1 tch /L B / Dec:k
REVOLUTION
95 Commodrore C1tat1on
North
Fourth
Ave ,
$4DO.mol$400.
Sec
New
product
launch October
14x72 3br 2ba. Very Good
Depos1t Full Basement or Middleport, 2 be droom fur- 23 2002 Call Tr acy a t
Cond1t1on Asking $18,000
Will
co ns1 der
se lhng ntshed apartment, depOsit &amp; (740)441-1982
for more mfo (3 04)675re.!!rences ,
no
pets.
(304)773·9167
3686
(710)992·0t65
For sale- new baby bed &amp;
House for rent- 3 BA. 1 bath ,
mattress, used two tim es.
Blowout sale on all S1ng1e fireplace, close lo town- Now Takmg Appllcatlonscell phone 304·687·5372
SectiOn homes save thou- $550
West
2 Bedroom
References
and 35
sands good until February depos1t reqUired Please call Townhouse
JET
Apartment s,
29. (7401446·3093
AERATION
MOTORS
Includes
Water
Sewage,
W1seman Real Estate at
Trash, $350/Mo , 740-446- Rep aired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
(740)446·3644
Good used 3br/2bth Only
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1·
0008.
$7995 Includes delivery , Now taking apphcat1ons for
800·537·9528
Call Karena 740-385·9948
Townhouse
small 1 bedroom house, Tara
$300 per month. $300 Apartments. Very Spac1ous
Land Home Packages availLarge swmg set, lull s12e
deposit, (740)992-6 t 54 after 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA, 1
able In your area, (740)446truck
cap, love seat; older
112 Bath, Newly carpeted ,
5pm.
3384
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool , child's chopped 3 wheeler,
Patte. Start $385/Mo. No (740)985·3910
Last 2002 Mode l Lmcoln
Pets, Lease Plus Secunty New &amp; used Heat PumpsPark, 64K28 3 bedroom,4
Depos1t Reqwred, Days· Gas
Furnaces
Free
bath , total electnc, heat
pump, delivered &amp; set on 12x60 2br Located on Finch 740·446-3461 , Evemngs· Estim ates. (740)446-6308
Pomt
Pl easant 740-367-0502
your foundation, red uced Dnve.
NEW AND USED STEEL
{be
hmd
Fo:oc's
P1zza )
from
$55 365 to only
Twin
R1vers
Tower
IS
acceptSteel
Beams, P1pe Reba r
$47,48!. Cole's Mobi le $350 00/mo. cal l (304 )675Concre te .
Angle,
Ing applications for wa1hng For
3423
Homes . U.S
50 Ea st.
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, Channel, r.;lal Bar, Steel
Athens. Oh . 740-592- 1972.
For
Ora1 ns ,
14x70 2br With Den located apartment, call 675-6679 Grafing
"Where You Get Your
O r~vewe ys 8. Walkways. L&amp;L
on Fmch Duve, Pomt EHO
Money's Worth"
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Pleasant (behind Fo)( 's
SPACE
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Mob1le Home Park for sale 7 PIZZa) $435 00/mo Call
mRRENT
Friday, 8am -4·30pm . Closed
lois &amp; 2 mob1le homes w1th (304)675·3423
Thursd
ay.
Saturday
&amp;
It $65.000 (304)882·1107 2 bedroom mobile home, 2
Trailer space for rent in Sunday (740)446-7300
I
New 2003 Ooublew1de. 3 full ba th , a1r condlt1on, $350
9R &amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 per month plus deposit, 2
from
Pomeroy,
OOwn and &amp;295/mo 1-800- mtles

r~l

r

691 -6777

(740)696·1227

2 bedroom , a1 r, porch, very
New 3br/2 bth Only $995
n1ce Galllpol1s (740)446down and on ly $197 47 pe r
2003 (740)446·1409
month Call Harold, 740385-7671
Beautiful RIVer V1ew Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People ,
We have new sectiOnal
References. Deposit , No
homes as low as $23,995
Pets , Foster Tra1ler Park.
and new single w1de homes
740-441 -018 1
as low as $19,995, 1-SOQ837·3238
Mob1le home lor rent, no

r
3129

Mother of 2 w111 babys1t Day
shift only Fenced 1n yard on

4211 MOBILE HOMES
FOR RENT

3 Ofl1ce Building/ Apartmoots

bedrooms.
2
baths,
$129,000. Call (740)2459268
- -------Home w1th four bedrooms
and large garage. Located
across from Graham School
Road , on SR 14 1 For more
mformation Call (740)9926797 If no answer, leave
message
New~

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

8 USJNES'i

AND BUILDINGS

FARMS
. FORSALE

Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
Custom built Cape Cod, 33 acres At 2 N Beaut1ful
m1ll JU SI call 304-675-1957
2,200 sq ft. , 4 BR , 3 bath, settmg House. bam above
Handyman. yard work , Askmg $128 000 (740)441 groun d pool Ca ll (304)895·
{740)992-2741 ask for Tim
0602

W ill pressure wash homes,
trai lers . decks, metal buildIngs and gun ers. Call
{740)446·0151 ask for Ron
or leave message

SCIIAM-LUS ANSWERS

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO recommends that
you do business With people
you know. and NOT to send
money through the ma1l un1rl
you have investigated the

1'40

Buy1ng mfant &amp; todd ler
clothes &amp; OVO &amp; Disney
movie s used or new 304-

low to form fovr &amp;imple words.

I Oobb1e Dnve, Gat11pol~

55 acre farm on SA 554. 3
bedroom, 2 bath house with
Wanted LICensed Pract1ca1 basement 2 barns 10 acres
Nurse for a community pasture Spnng fed livestock
home for people with mental tank Good huntmg Stocked
retardation In Gallia Co pond Free gas $125,000
Current LPN License, OOP- Call (740)367·7266 between
NES or NAPNES , valid dn- 9am &amp; 9pm
ver 's license and three
years good dnv1ng expen- Beauuful312 home 1n pnvate
ence reqwred Hours 7am· Charolais Lake on 3 acres
3pm M-Th: 12n-8pm Fn; m/1 Many e:octras Must See!
Salary. $10.00/hr. Excellent (740)441-0381
benefit package
Send
Bnck Ranch Home 3br
resume to Cecll1a Baker.
2ba 1 ca r Attached garage.
Buckeye
Commun1ty
1 car detached ga rage .
Services, P.O. Box 604,
lnground pool On 1/ 2 acre
Jackson .
OH
45640
lot. Seritlus InqUires only.
Deadline for applican ts
(304)675·8051
4/3/02 Equal Opportumly
Employer

- - - - - - l~lto&lt;l ~y CU.T R. POllAN - ; _ - - . . . , . -

0

OPI'ORTUNfiY

a division of CNHI , has an

~

pets, (740)992·5958
Mobile homes for rent 2
bedroom. kitchen appli ances furn ished No pets ,
securi ty deposit reqwred
Call (740)441 ·4540 alter

5pm

1920s Dmette set, Duncan
Ph1fe Ch1na Cabinet, BuHet,
table, 6 cha1rs , s1de table
(7 40)441 -1824
Bed (ball &amp; sp1ndle head/
footboards) dresser/lg m1r·
ror, chest , mattress/box
spnngs SOlid Maple $325

r
r

VEGEP.BLES

Diane Eddlo

• Curr•nt r ate oerd epplles. • All 1&gt;- l eetele aclvenl••m•nt• ••• eubjeol to the Fe-rsl Felr Hou•tng Act 01 1841'8.

I FJ!I'1::io~"""::B~USINESS------, to :~~

ChiCago P1zza Ohio Valley Pubt1sl11ng Co ,

Co now hlnne all shifts
&amp;
~it1ons
Also need
Delivermg dnvers, flex1ble
sched uling. Apply w1thm ,
1540
Eastern
Aven ue,
Gallipolis {740)441-1234

Would hke to hear from any
Attn: Work from home.
one who went to school at
$500· $1500/mo. PT
Stoney Pomt School, m
$2000· $4500/mo FT
Guyan Township on State
800·286·9748
Route 218 Contact Merrill
www retlre4 11 com
C
Johnson.
31611
Pembroke. Llvoma. MI. Avon
Repre sentatives Llcensed Practical Nurses
48152
wanted (740)446·33~
(LPN) for full-t1me and part1
l..u.TAND
AVON' All Areas To Buy or time work m a 114 Bed Long
Sell
Sh1rley Spears, 304- Term Care State Fac ility
Fuii-T1me employment oHers
675·t429
anc:l e1C!ens1ve benefit packFOUND Female black tern·
Community Ac110n IS seek- age , 1nclu d1ng State CIVIl
er~n Lin coln Ave Pt PI on
Ing a Laborer/ R ecord s sennce ret1rement, earn up
Wel:tnesday
even1ng
Clerk for the Weathen2atron to 15 days vacation, 18 days
(304)675·3971
Program
Wea th erization s1ck leave, and 12 plus pa1d
e~tpenence preferred Good holidays, health/life Insurreadmg , wntmg , co mpre - ance is available Salary IS
he ~lon , orgamzahonal and commensurate with expencomputer sk 1l ls a MUST ence Contact Kim 81llups
ThiS IS a full l1me pOSitiOn DON at Lakm Hosp1tal ,
Send or deliver resume and Lakm, WV at (304)675references to GMCAA . 0860. ext 1 26, ~nday lhru
Attentton Sandra Edwards Fnday fro m 8:00 am 4:00
80 10 N State Route 7, p m Laktn Hospital is an
Chesh 1re, OH 45620 by EEO/AA Employer.
4/ 11/03 GMCAA IS an EOE.
Local body shop seeks qualCommumty action IS seek- lfted repa1r tech Competitive
Ing a Laborer/Records Clerk pay, good working enwonYARDSALEfor the
Weat henza t1on ment Call to set up mterGAL!JI'OUS
Program
Weathenzati on view (740)446·4466
expenence preferred Good
Aprl l 1&amp;2, garage sale TV's, readmg , wnt1ng, comp re- Need someone to Mow
ti.ble &amp; cha1rs man1cure henSIOn, orgamzatlanal and Yard. Call(304)675·1523
t8ble, desk, end tables. baby compu1er skills a MU ST
· clothes
lots more 576 This 1s a full time pos1tton
NURSES (RNsl
Orchard H1ll Rd , Galli ohs
Send or del1ver resume and $4 7.00
pe r
hour.
YARD SALE~
references to GMCAA, Columbus, OH . All Units,
PoMEROYJr\llmoLE attent1on Sandra Edwards FULL TIME (900)437·0348
l.,.toioiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiii-1 8010 N. State Route 7
CheShire , OhiO, 45620 by Oh10 Valley Publlshmg Co
Apnl 1-2, Barretl residence
04-11-03 GMCAA IS an EOE has a part-lime opemng
124, Rutland, weather pe r1n the ma11room Please
i mittlng,
exerc1se
b1ke , Demo/ Samplerel Event apply 10 pe rson Mondaybass1net .
a1r
hoc key. Personnel. E"celleni pay, Thursday 8· 10am 825 Third
clothes dresser
h1ghesi 10 area samplers Avenue Gallipolis, OH Ask
needed 10 loca l retai l store for Tommy Long
Fle:oc1ble weekend work, Sat!
Sun. 6 hours a day Look1ng Truck Drlvera, Immediate
Garage sa le- April 1-2nd, 8- for hard work ing, self motl- hire class A COL requ1red,
3pm, brand name NB-Adult, va led people who w1ll take excellent pay, experie nce
toys ,
matermty, pnde in the1r work . Fo r more reqwed
Earn up to
L-ongaberger. m1sc , Durst 1nf ormat1on cell 01ana al 1- $1,000 per week.Call 304·
Noble--summ1t
888-547-3366
675-4005

r

liELPWANTFJl

t

c:•nc••

POLICIES· Ohio V•n•v PuDU•hln9 •••....,••
right to .-tl~ , ....,.,or
eny •CI •• •nv t ime E rror• mue1- r eponed on tile f l r•t
Tollbu.-Sentlnei-R•gl•ler will tMo •••POn•lbl• t or no mor• ll'lsn th• co•t of the •Ptl&lt;:e oocupl-..;1 by the e"or snd only the first ln-rtlo n
W.v l o•• or ••~nee th•t ••suite ' ' ""' the publlc sllon or &lt;&gt;&lt;nl•slon o f •n sdvsnlsem•nt Corr•C11o n will be rntod• In the float avalleble ,..uuon

• St•rt You.- Ads With A M•y-ord • •ndud• Cornpl•t•

Block, bnck. sewer pipes,
Windows, lintels, etc Claude
Wlnlers, R10 Grande, OH

Call 74().245·5121.

PETs
tuRSALE

AKC male tn colored
Shelt le,
shots,
m1croch1pped , $200; 2 AKC
Pomeran1ans
2 males,
(304)675·54 16
shots. 8 wks old, $350
each. 1 AKC male Collie
For Sale: Reconditioned
Blue Merle, 9 mas old. cerwashers, dryers and refng·
tifred , normal eyes, shots.
eralors
Thompsons
micro ch1pped $200, P
Appliance 3407 Jackson
(740)696·1095
Avenue , (304)675-7388
I MOPit l)ltl.v£.
Q&amp;.T5 He.R! SOON
'fli rfM THI N&amp;.W

't1Ml lA6
!.QUIPM!.Nl.'

Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Tumaround

WE REPAIR

843~

3/4 Ton GMC Work Van,
34M, Onginal Owner, air,
auto, tilt, cruise $10,500.

(740)446·2957

..., 1 I(\ I ( I ...,

eo~~

(7401256·8800

FRurrs&amp;

HAULING:

$12,000. Call (304)675·

good, needs motor, asking

(304)875-6529

TR.UCKING

1999 GMC J1mmy SLT, 4dr,

1988 Buick Skylark, bodies 6962
(7401742·2481

R.B.

r: M~~

1987 Tioga Arrow Motor
leather, moon roof, Bose
Home
24ft. 45 .000 actual
S500 POUCE IMPOUNOSI Excellent, loaded , low miles Sleeps 6. Excellent
Hondas, Chevys, etc1 Cars/ mileage, (740)845·2127
Condit1on. Has Gene rator.
Trucks from $500
FOr
Phone (304)675·5053
listings 1-800·719·3001 ext. 2001 Dodge Durango SLT,
3901
loaded, 4x4 41 ,000 miles, 2001 Camper 24 feet ,
$18,900 080. (740)446· sleeps 6. Used 3 times

Registered Tri-color cocker
spaniel pups. Will be 6 1994
Dodge Shadow,
weeks old Apnl 4th. Daytime 134,000, AIC , rea r spoiler,
(304)736-831 0
evenings runs good, 32 mpg, $1500.

Otftfee to/Oa;-.s'
Monday t h r u Friday
8 : 0 0 a.m. t o 5:00 p.m.

Aurns
FORSALE

F
~

$300,

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

94 GMC Jimmy, 4 dr., black
BASEMENT
leather seats, C D player,
WATERPROOFING
199 4 Oldsmobile Cuilass,
152,000 m11es. $3300, Unconditional lifetime guar$2500; t993 Grand AM , (740)992·2748,
740·590· antee. Local references fur$2200, (740)448·6869 o• 0465
nished. Established 1975
(740)845·1213

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

Call 24 Hrs (740} 446·
Congratulations! You have
0870, Rogers Ba sement
won 2 free movie tickets to ~ 996 Saturn 4d. 90k
JIM'S SMALL
Waterproofing.
the Spring Valley 7 m Excellent
Condition,
Ga1Upolls. Call the Register $3,195, 1996 Grandam 2d.
today lor detalls.(304)675· 78k 53 ,995 , 1995 Grandam . 1994 Hartey Davidson 1200
32119 Welshlown Rd.
C&amp;C
General
Home
1333
2 d. 99 k, $2 ,895 . 16 others m Sportster, excellent condiMaintenancePainting,
vinyl
Pomeroy, OH 45769
stock COOK MOTORS tlon, 7500 miles, many
I \In I ' I 1'1'1 II "
stdlng, carpentry, doors,
(740~ 103
extras,
$6500,
(740)949·
,\ I I\ I ..., I I II 1,
windows , baths, mobile
2233
home repair and more For
1997 Ford Contour, auto,
tree estimate call Chet, 740· ""EV_AN_,S,_LA_W_N_CA.,-R~E
1997 Ford Escort, auto, 1995 Yamaha Kodiak 400,
992·6323.
Rod .., OH
6,000 miles, $2150 each, 4&lt;4. (304)675-5906
• F,..btJmat.s•
(740)742·2357
LownMalntalnenu, Shrub
14x60
Ribstone
SUo
Trtmmlnt, SnowR.mowt
Harley
,
996
Road
Kmg
w/unloader, $1500; 2 yr old 1999 Dakota Spon, 5sp, V·
&amp; Other Lawn Care HHds
mites $13,500.
black Angus bull proven sire, 6, 58,000, &amp;Kcellent shape, 8,000
Jem~e Evans
Linda Evans
14
$1 ,000; will trade 1 or both purple,
$4,850, 1994
(740) 94~21 08 (140) 843·51 tti
tor brushhog of equal value; Camero, T·tops, Ssp, atr,
Paser (800) 976-2471 1 ...

• Limestone
• Sand

• Dirt
• Ag Line
740.985-3564

Arevou
Laid on;»
You could be
eligible for FREE
help getting

backtoworl&lt;

For more tnformat1on ,

call Gall1a Mei9s
Community Ac11on
Agency

(740) 992·2222 or
(740) 446-1018

1998

Skylark,

V-6,

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

4dr,

93,000, $3,250; 1998 Grand 19' 305 Chevy MercCrulser,

1953 John Deere model 60 Am, 2dr, automatic, clean,
1/0 265hp, well maintained,
Tractor. 3 point hitch, new 137,000,
$3,000; 1997 nice boat, $3800, trade 4
tires, llva power &amp; dual Cavalier, 4dr, automatic, air,
wheeler, (740)992·7312

Hydraulic. (304)882·3236

r:~

clean, 1t7,000, $2,995,
(740)742·3802

2000 Pontiac Grand Am,
72k m1les, good condition,

1 Palomino + saddle &amp; tack,

1986 Fisher Marine, 16', 70

i'li

"

&gt;

'

,~'

' " ".

t

fdi!Cdi!OH .'·&gt;!11r/'; t

1.wmr NewsJ!a:c:.;·;

hp Johnson, (740)992·3701

-

I

.~

97 Beech St.

middleport, OH

'

-- [10'K10' 61D'K20')
-- (740) 992-3194
- 992-6635
------

askmg
$7500
OBO :J 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 L:
1 Arabian Paint. (740}256- (740)446-0283 8-5; AHer -6143
--5:30 (740)446·0211 or (740)256·t069
-Pair ol Miniature goa1s. $75.
(304)982·2287
2002
Chevy
Cavalier, ~
Yellow, Chrome wheels with

Rei). Angus bulls· Top per· sport package. Still just like
formance bloodlines, Maine new, 18,200 miles. Asking
Chi· Angus show heifers, $9500. Phone
(7401256·
helftrs, bred heifers and 1253 leave message If no
crossbred bulls. State Run answer
Farm,
Jackson,
OH

(740)286·5395

2002 Ford Mustang all
options.

LX 5,000 miles.

$12,000. 2001 Ford Eacon
Stud Rad Dun. Contact Kim ZX2 with all options 30,000
miles . $6,700 (304)675·
(304)773·6000

Registered syr old AOHA

r

3354

Registered 8 grade Angus. 2
year old bred heifers. Start
calving In April, 2 Reg.
Angus Bulls, 1&amp;2 year old

TRUCKS

FORSAu

(740)256·1352

1978 Ford PicK-up, very

Registered

good condition, 302, auto,
rebuilt engine, toot box, bed·
liner, body very good condl·

Angus

Bulla

(740)288·1480 call aHer
5pm.

tion, (740)256·1235

Registered black Angus 1998 Ford Bronco 11. 4x4, 5·
bulls for sale, top bloodline, speed, good condition,

------

--- HARTWELL
GUlU I,'' 30;'o.Hl' UI:.!\Ulii&lt;IL
·STORAGE
2 Cl' PI•/ lJilY 3tfiHE PLBLIC.A IC~J ':~
1;;\. ii~ii"FN;t,)ftr.:~th.&gt;&gt;.&lt;+ ·,;;;~',;l'ilii''{''\;., ;ll!Ji. • · lOxlO
•

•

•
April 1st 6:30pm
1 Pack $10.00
All after $5.00
Starburst $1150

American Legion
Middleport

call al1er 5pm (740)949· 129,000 miles. (304)675·
1522.
2393

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF AVAIL•
ABILITY TO THE
PUBLIC STATE OF
OHIO DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORTA·
'TION Columbus, Ohio
The
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation
(ODOT) hereby notifies all Interested par·
eons that the proposed FY 2004-2007
Statewide
Transportation
lmprovemenl
Program (STIP) will
be available lor
review end commenl
at twanty·nlne loca·
tiona throughout the
elate. These locations
era the Planning and
Programming
Administrator's
OHice In uch of the
twelve ODOTDietrlct
the
OHicee,
ODOTCentrai-OIIIce
of Urban and Corridor
Planning located In
Columbue, Ohio and
each of the olxhllln
Ohio
Metropolllan
Planning
OrgaJIIzatlon (MPO)
OHicee dUring normel
bualnen hoUri from
March 31, 2003 to
April 11, 2003. The
STIP ldlntlllll the
lllleWide progrlm of
highway and tra11111t
malnlanllllce and new
capacity; and bicycle
and other trenaporll·
• tlon rel1ted projiCII
that will be Imp ...
mented throughout
the 1t11a over the
naKI 4 yeara. The
ODOTDielrlcl Offici
11rvlng your ll'N 11
IOOIIId
II
311
Mueklngum
Drive,
Marleltl, Ohio (740·
3~21 2). The MPO
11rvlng
the
Waahlngton County,
Ohio 'l rll II the
Wood·WII~Ington·

Wlrt
lnllrllltl
Planning
Comml111on
(304~1
421-48111 IOOIIId II
111 Mlrkll ltl'Nt,
Parkereburg, W11t
VIrginia, To l1cllltlll
thl ITIP NIVIIW, thl
Dletrlot 1nd the
Wood •WIIhlngton·
Wlrt
lnleralate
Pl1nnlng
Commleelon
wlfl
Jointly aponeor an
on
open
houee
Wedneeday, April 2,

10x20

740-992-1717
St Rt 1 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy
J&amp;C Lawn Service
Mow&amp; Trim

740-992-6694
Please leave
message if no
answer

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

2003 from 4 PM to 8
PM at the Washington
Public
County
Library, 615 Fifth
Streel, Marietta, Ohio.
The Olatrlct OHice will
hold several other
open
houaea:
Monday, March 31,
2003 at the Morgan
County ODOTGarage,
4205
Monastery
R
0
8
d
I
McConnelsville;
Tuesday, April 21,
2003 at the Athena
County ODOTGarags,
700 West Union
Avenue,
Athena;
Thursday, April 3,
2003 al the Nobel
County ODOTGarags,
17229
CR
40,
Caldwell; Friday, April
4, 2003 at the Ohio
Valley Vlsltora Center,
61
Court Street,
Gallipolis; Monday,
April 7, 2003 at the
Meigs County ODOT
Garage, 34449 SR 7,
Pomeroy; Tueaday,
April 8, 2003 at the
Monroe
County
ODOTOarage, 47028
SR 26, Woodalleld;
Wedneeday, April 9,
2003 11 thl Hocking
county ODOTGerage,
13178 SR 884 8.,
Login; and Thuredly,
April 10, aoo3 at the
VInton County ODOT
Garage, 31211 8RI3,
H1mdln. All meetlnga
will be from 4 pm to 8
pm.
Any
comment•
concerning
the
IIIIIWidl
Traneportltlon
Improvement
Progrem ahould be In
written form and
tr•namlttad to:
Ma. luaann Gad,
Admlnlllrelar Olfloa
ot Urb1n and Corridor
P11nnlng, 2nd l'loor
OhiO Dlpartmlnl Of
Traneportltlon 1810
Wtll lrOid llrlll
Columbue,
Ohio
441223
Wrlttln oomm1nta
mull be received by
lhl claM ol bualnen
on April 14, 2001.
Gordon Prootor
Department
of
Tr1naportat1on
(3) 24, 31

applications and/or
verified complalnta
were r~eelved and the
following draft, proor
final
posed,
action• were lsaued,
by
. the
Ohio
Environmental
Prolectlon Agency
(OEPA) last week.
"Actions" Include the
adoption, modification, or repeal of
ordaro (other lhan
emergency orders);
the lssuancs, denial,
modification or revocation of llcenaea,
permlta, leases, varl·
ances, or csrtlllcates;
and the approval or
disapproval of plana
and specifications.
"Draft Actions" are
wrlltan stl1ements of
the
Director
of
Environmental
Protection's
(Director's)
Intent
with reepect to the
Issuance, denial, etc.
of a permit, llcenae,
order, etc. Interested
persona may submit
wrllten commenll or
request a public
meeting regarding
draft
acllone.
Comment• or public
meeting
raqu1111
muet be aubmllted
wllhln 30 daya of
notice of the draft
action. "Propo11d
1ctlona" are written
e11tament1 at the
director'• lnllnt with
riiPICI
to
the
11euanoe,
denial,
modification, revocation, or rentwal ol a
permit, llcanae, or
variance.
Written
aommenta
and
requeeta lor 1 public
milling regarding 1
propolld aotlon lillY
be aubmlttad within
30 daya of notlot ol
the propoaed aotlon.
An ld)udlcetlon hnrlng m1y be hlld on a
propond lotion II 1
heerlng requul or
objection 11 reOII~
by the OIPA wllhln 30
dlyl ol IIIUince of
thl propoeld aotlon.
Written oommenll,
requttll lor publlo
mlltlnge, 1nd adjudl·
cellon
hearing
requ11t1 muet be
11nt to: Hearing
Clerk,
Ohio
Environ menU I
Protection Agency,

P.O.
!lox
1049,
Columbus,
Ohio
43218·1049
(Telephone: 614-6442129). "Final Actions: *HOME
are actions of the
dlreclor which are
effective
upon dUM lESS
lseuance or a stated
effective
date.
GlnER
Pursuant to Ohio
Ravlssd
Coda •fl'll hllmllas•
Section 3745.04, a
final acllon may be
appealed
to the
Environmental
Review
Appeals
Commlaalon (ERAC)
(Fonnerly Known As
The Environmental
Board Of Review) by
a person who wee a
party to a proceeding
• New Homes
betore the director by
• Garages
filing an appeal within
• Complete
30 daya ol notice of
the final action.
Remodeling
Pursuant to Ohio
Code
Revised
Section 3745.07, a
Stop &amp; Compare
final action lsaulng,
denying, modifying,
revoking, or renewing
a parmlt, llcenae, or
verlance which Is not
preceded by a propoled acthm, may be
lflpllled to the ERAC
by filing an appeel
within 30 daye of
Issuance of the final
CARE
action. ERAC appeala
mual be filed with: Randall L Shust
Environmental
owner
RIVIIW
Apptlll
c.rtllled Arboltat
Commllllon,
238
Eaat Town Street, 11111 RalltiC ol serv1ces
Room
300,
Columbus,
Ohio
43211. A copy of the
appeal mual be
aei'YICI
on
the
Director within 3 daye
alter filing the IPJIIIII
with thl I!RAC.
Final IIIUinDI Of
RlniWII of NPDI!I
Permit
Autllnd ITP
P.O. lax. tl20
Rutland, OH
IIIUI Dill 01101/2003
Rloelvlng WAtere:
Lillie L11cllng Cl'llk
l'aolllty Daaorlptlon:
Munlolpallly
&lt;0. 1
MOD
Ptrmll
No.
OPAOOOI2'1!D
Thlt final action not
preceded by pro·
poled action 1nd 11
IJIIIIIIIIbll to I!RAC.
(3) 31

PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLICNOTICE
The
following

Cellular

Jeff Warner lnsi
992-5479 '
1

33795 H1land Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740..992-2432

949-2452 evenings

.ALLtEL

~~~
High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

ENGINE REPAIR

740949·2453 days, 740· sharp, 115,000, $4,250,

•

740-992-5232
Pomeroy Eogles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bononza
GetS FREE

Tree Service

M

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 lsi Thursday
of every month
All pack $5.00

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

Top • R~moval

• Trim

• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calla

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 67jr5282
www.wvpcdr.com
doctorOwv dr.com

Gravely

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271 . ·.

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

"W.Vs #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

MR1nnir1n K. Roush

BISSEll
BUilDERS IHC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemenl
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Best Service at
the Best Price

CANCER CHECK
FinaiJy...

Money paid to ~ when cancer :

strikes. You choose the amount up to $50,000!
Pays in addition to other insurance.

You use the money howe ver you like.
Cancer

Will :o.tnke when you least expect rt.

It wdlleave ) OU and your famil y financi ally ~
strapped . CAN'CER CHECK will be
th ere when you need 11.
Ope11
Fn:ctulm~tes.

Call now to reserve j!jlU[ chec k.
ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE

9am-~ pm

ff\•e In home picku p

C~ll o1 fllr all )UUI clllnl'll cr

'""'U'

&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
Box 189 MlotJLEPOKl , OH 45760

(740) 446-1812

740-992-7599

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
dOOFIIG

1-800·822-0417;

Ad; .u~ilhmd rlllr

~tn ra

Hill 's Self
Storage
2967D Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

um1111cE

740-843-5264

1'/aru '

JAS Painting

VI Btf11

25 yrs . experience

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINmGI

friendly &amp; Professional

Let me dG 1\ fGr ysu'

llltrior, Exterior. Cornrnt rd•l

for free estimates
74()-g92-567B

45771
74G-949-2217

1149-1401

ROBEIT

BISSEll
COISTRIOTIOI

748-992-1611

THOMPSON'S
WATER
Smce 1979

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

Aulhorizetl Strv1c:e Provider For

RalnSoft

Custom
Building
• Remodeling

Largest selection ot perennlills 6- shrubs

Over 16 years E"penence
• Room Add1t1ons

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

• Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
• Replacement Windows

• Porches. • Decks • Garages
• Sidmg • Roofing
• Complete Rehabs

Bur 6 get I FREE

at the lowest prices In Meigs county
1-740-949-2115

G&amp;R Sanitation
Batl ey Run Rll
Pn1uerow. DH 4~769

33~61

Fully Insured

·servtce vou ca n Cblll11 orr

Free Estimates

Cene Arms

740·192·1119

992·3114

Seamless Gutter
Seroices
• No Seanu
• No Leak•
• Free Eetimatea
Owner Operoltd
David Rhodrs &amp; Narmn Rhmlt.•

omce (740) 985-3511
985-3622

Parts • Service
Bags • Belts

R1lnbow1, Kirby, Electrolux, Hoonr, Eureka,
Tri·SIIr, Rollin• I&lt; moot olhor bronda,
Plru ahlpped UPS • Fu~ Dopentboble Service
(

dli'•lli II III

!i( ••111\/11

(304) 273-4098

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garages
• Electrlcal &amp; Plumblnb
• Roofing &amp; Guners
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Patio and Porch Decks

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pom• ro~.

3124 TFN

V '

OhiO

I

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

871-2417 or 448-2111
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2451

Driveways I Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
1 Roads 1 Streets
t

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Building
Service
• Dc' k11 &amp; Purche11
• Ronrn Addltlon~t

• Rcx&gt;Ona
• Vinyl &amp; Wood
Sldina
• Interior Romod•lln»
Oenerul Carpen try Work

Mike Morcum, Owner

Ovtr 25 years in Busint.u
• '2l.OO oervice roe for plcklna
up •weepers mt your home

YOUNG'S

IT 00\9TIIJCTICN
Roofing , Siding,
Painting, Electrical,
Decks, Etc.
Free Estimates
1112·11111 11112-2802

I DUll'S
I

LAWN

C111
LAWN
MOWING
CONTRACTS

S15- $25 for
small yard
SJ5 per acre
call now to :
acheclul1 you,

1-care
••rvlca.
In au reel

740-848·1111
1-888-21····

I

�Monday, March 31, 2003

www.mydailysentlnel.com ·

· Page 86 • .The Daily Sentinel

Q

41 Iowa hrs.
42 Razor filler
1 Sine - non 45 Working cat
4 London's 48 Yes,
Oldto Yves
7 Winter woe 49 A Judd
10 Luxury car 51 Obtain
11 Short skirts 53 Flit about
13 Dawn
54 Mine
goddess
passage
14 Hot tub
55 Sigh of
15 Rocker
content
DEAR NEEDING HELP:
- Vedder 56 Hire a
In your case it's vice versa -- 16 FedEx units
lawyer
the bad outweighs the good. 17 Aussie city 57 "-Given
Sunday"
You are married to an abuser. I 19 Courage
58 Not rainy
hope you end this disastrous 21 Bride's
reply
umon before any children are
DOWN
(2
wds.)
involved.
22 toon
If Joe threatens you after
Chihuahua 1 TO
you tell him you're unhappy. 23 Jogs
passers
2 Out callers
call the police or the DomestiC 26 Mole runs
3 Not at
Violence Hotline: 1-800-799- 30 Splits
home
31
Is
no
7233.
4·Movie
longer
Dear Abby is written by 32 Like Capp's
rental
Abigail Van Buren. also
5 The- 500
Abner
known as Jeanne Phillips, and 33 Give-- 6 Ll doubled
7 Took a spill
was founded by her mother;
chance
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear 34 Fruit drink 8 Gray wolf
9 Cold War
Abby at www.DearAbby.com 35 BBs
power
36 Roman
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
11 Fixes
ships
Angeles, CA 90069.
12 Dice throw
39 Fumble
18 Dah
40 HBO
partners
receivers

Annual adoptathon finds
homes for orphaned pets
DEAR ABBY: This year
will be a great one for ammal
lovers. The North Shore
Animal League America's
annual Tour for Life, held in
conjunction with the San
Francisco SPCA, has already
~gun. On Thursday, March
27, three 35-foot mobile adoption units left New York on a
cross-country journey of more
than 16,000 miles. The league
will work with animal groups
in 21 cities to help find loving
home.s for dogs and cats in
their care. The first stop will
be April 2 in San Francisco.
But Tour for Life is only the
beginning. It signals the
league's
worldwide
Pet
Adoptathon May 3 and 4.
Since 1995, Pet Adoptathon
has placed more than 125,000
pets, and this event has grown
to include animal organizations on every continent.
· This year, North Shore
· Animal League America is
asking those who want to give
a lifetime of love to an animal
orphan to set aside time on
Saturday and Sunday, May 3
and 4, to visit their local Pet
Aaoptathon shelter. It's the
best place for potential
ailopters to find a special dog
or cat who will give them
unconditional love in return.
JOHN STEVENSON,
PRESIDENT,
NORTH

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
SHORE
ANIMAL
LEAGUE AMERICA
DEAR JOHN: I know your
announcement will be greeted
with enthusiasm by animal
lovers everywhere.
Readers, for more information , please call the Pet
Adoptathon toll-free hotline:
1-877-BE-MY-PAL (1-877236- 9725) or visit the Web
site: www.petadoptathon.com.
You'Jl be glad you did.
DEAR ABBY: l have a
problem with my mom and
my sister. Every time they go
shopping, they buy something
for me. Sometimes it's just a
soda, but other times it's
clothes or accessories.
I'm kinda on the boyish side
and I like wearing baggy
clothes. But my mom and sister always buy me tight shirts,
tight pants and lots of pink
stuff.
•
How can I tell them to stop
without hurting their feelings?

- NEEDS HELP IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR NEEDS HELP:
Thank them for their thoughtfulness and explain that their
taste is not your own, so you
would
appreciate
being
included in the buying trips.
Tell them that pink IS not your
color and tight clothes are not
your style, and you don't want
them to waste money. (It's not
insulting, it's actually considerate.)
DEAR ABBY: I have been
with this guy, "Joe," for more
than two years- married just
one. He is very nice at times,
giving me flowers and back
rubs . Other times, however,
Joe calls me names, pushes
me around, abuses our dog,
keeps my money, spends all
his time with friends, lies
about stupid things and makes
fun of my family.
In the past Joe has hit me,
but I've always forgiven him.
However, nowadays I just
never feel happy. I don't know
what to do, Abby. We've both
been through counseling at
church, but nothing has
changed. My friends and fam ily say I deserve better, but I
love Joe with all my heart.
Can the good outweigh the
bad in our case? Or is it vice
versa?- NEEDING HELP
IN BEDFORD, IND.

ACROSS

20 Actress
.-Sheridan
22 Clever ploy
23 Spruce
24 Gam or
Rudner
25 Fiery gem
26 Kids
27 "Biondie"
kid
'28 Like a
dishrag
29 Wild plum
31 Customs
35 -and
crafts
37 Soho co.
38 Levels off
39 NASA outfit
(hyph.)

41 Cozy
42 Swamps
43 Maul
cookout
44 Nurse's
helper
45 Kvetch
46 Mild oath
47 Caboose's
olace
SO 1'Sol"
52 Quaker
pronoun

The
newspaper 1s
a valuable
learning tool for
students of
all ages.

It
connects

the
principles and
facts they learn in the
classroom with stories and
events that are
happening here and around

Astrograph
Tuesday. April I. 2003
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL
In the year ahead you could
get involved in a very worthy
endeavor that will not only
benefit you but others as well.
The enterprise will have pronounced material rewards for
all those who participate in it.
· ARIES (March 21-April
19) - You're exceptioqally
capable of handling a broad
range of interests today, but
d~n't limit yourself to insignificant ones:Go after something that is truly substimtial.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Be particularly allen,
tive today to any business
proposals that are offered to
you by people who have a
good track record. There· s a
strong possibility that one
could turn out to be quite
valuable.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Although it could be very
easy for you to act without
forethought today. you' II
know it's to your advantage
to patiently weigh both sides
of an important issue before

taking any action on it.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Be ·doubly diligent
about issues concerning your
work or career !oday. because
something extremely opportune could come out of acting
in a responsible and produc11 ve manner.
·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're likely to feel in a
rather expansive and gregarious mood today, but yo1,1'll
know how to incorporate your
thinking with past experience.
This makes you a very formidable person.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Financial conditions look
extremely encouraging today.
There IS a strong chance you
could profit from something
you have worked on for a
long time by merging it with
another person's work.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Give much credence to
your bright ideis today, because it' II be in the arena of
imaginative and mental pursuits where you are the
strongest. What you concei y.e
of can be put to good use.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Although you may
center the greatest portion of
your attention on your material affairs today, it will be
worth it. Gains are highly
possibl ~ by exercising your
bargaining strengths.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21)- You'll be happiest today associating with
people who share similar recreational interests. so'mething
· good could come from your
involvements with old, valued
friends.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19)- Some of your best
results can be achieved today
through working on labors of
love that mean a lot to your

family as well as to yourself.
Orchestrate that which makes
everyone happy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Things are starting to
look better and better pertaining to a relationship that
means a l9t to you. Don't let
any negative thoughts seep in,
however, and blur the pros. peels.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Compensation or rewards due to you that have
been slow in coming may
happen for you today. They" II
prove that, where you ve
made a genuine contribution,
you have not been overlooked.

Answer
to
previous
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JUDD'S TOTAL

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LOST ON THE DEfENSIVE
END! SO PIE ASKED
A COL LEACOUE OF MINE
TO 6t'VE YOV A BRIEF

ll.EFRESHER COURSE '

LM)IE.S,

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TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

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DIRECnONS: Make a 2· to 7·1ettar word lrom the letters on each yardllne.
Add points to each word or ktner using scoring directions at right. Seven4ettttf
words get a 60-polnt bonus. An words can be found In Webster's New Woftd
COllege Dictionary.
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
C 2003 Unltd F:ttlurt Syndatt, Inc.

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