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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 7, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Lady Knights slay RVHS, 59-44
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALT,ERS@MYOAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va. - A 20-8 second qu;lrter surge proved to be the
difference for Point Pleasant
during Monday's 59-44
non-conference vic tory over
visiting River Valley.
The Lady Knights shot 57.
percent t8-of-14) in that pivotal fran1e. turning a 13-9
first quarter lead into a sizable 33 - 17 intermission
advantage.
The Red and White. which .
led by . 20 points on . two
occasions in the secon'd half.
ended up shllot ing 22-of-55
from the field (40 percent)
while improving its· record.
io 9-10 overa ll. ·
'
The Lady Raiders (3- 15)
never got c loser than 15 the
re st ·Of the way, but did
outscore Point I S-16 'o ver
· the final eight minutes.
PPHS has now won fo ur
of its last five contests. and
coach Mitch Meadows
believes the success comes
from a simple formula ..
Take care of the basketBryan Walters/photo
ball.
Point Pleasant's Tessa Wyant (24) goes in for a layup over
"We've been cutting down
!'liver Valley defender Beth Payne, left, during Monday's con- on our turnovers Jnd. play-·
test ·in Point Pleasant. W. Va.
ing a lot better because of it .

Sayre, Lady·Falcons
blast Buffalo, 51-24
Je ssica
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Hoffman
contributed
BUFFALO. W. Va. - ·
three to the
Maybe it was the offense, or
triumph.
M a r y
maybe it was the defense.
Keb le r and
Whatever it was. it was
dearly Wahama 's night durKay anna
Sayre round'
. ing a 51-24 bashing of host
Buffalo Monday.
ed out the
The Lady Falcons (8-8)
Sayre
Wa h a ma
,improved 1o .500 thi s sea- ·
scoring with
son by hitting 10 three- two points apiece.
pointers and holding the
Howard believes the elder
Lady Bison to si ngle di gi ts Sayre's eight makes from
in each of the four quarters. behind the arc is a school
· KeithAnn Savre had a record , but could not con- •
game"-high · 28
points, firm by release time.
including eight trifectas,
BHS hit nnly I 0 field
and a 22"6 third quarter run goals in the entire ga me and
turned Wah am a's , 22-11 were led by Allison Hedges
halftime edge into a 44-17 with five markers.
blowout.
·
Cassie Conley, Tracy
" We've strug gled 'so me Grady and Kell y Lewis folwith the third quarter thi s lowed Hedges with fo ur
season," said' WHS coac h each.
·
Tim Howard. "We played ·The Ladv Falcons also
pretty well tonight."
con nected on 7-of-12 free
Six of the team's 3-pon- throws for 58 percent, while
ter: came in the third frame. Buffalo managed just 40
The guests also led 12-4 percent (4-of- 10) from the
after eight minutes of pl ay . charity stripe.
·
Amber Tully added a pair'
Wahama return s to action
of 3-pointers and followed today when it trave ls to .
· Sayre with I 0 points. Beth Rock Springs for a 7 p.m. · .
Keyes was nex,t six, while contest with Me igs.
BY BRYAN WALTERS

Southern
from PageBl
ments at the half. Reed who ·
had I 5 the first half was held
19 no points in the second
half and rarely touched the
ball thanks to defen se from
Sarah Eddy.
The rest of (he defense did
a credible -job as well and
Southern worked it offense
patiently. In a 13-9 third
quarter run, Southern twice '
cut the Vinton lead to just
five
points. The Vikes
recovered to lead 40-30 after
three round s.
. Committing .ortly six. ,\econd half turnovers. Southern
came bac k to seven points
twice early in the fourth
· round. VC started to hold the
ball out front. and then hit
numerous free throws after
the SHS de'fense pulled out of

Eastern

I thought we ers, Skye Smith followed
Boys Basketball
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
did
that with nine and Char Bibbee
SEO
ALL
a g a i n added eight to the win.
7-1
15·2
Warren
tonight."
7-1
10-6
Beth Payne paced the
Marietta
5-4
10·8
Jackson
s a i d Raiders with 15 points.
4-4
8-8
Gallta Academy
Meadow s. Kirsten Carter was ne xt with
2-7
5-12
Logan
" The pace eight markers, while Rachel
Q-8
2-16
Athens
wasn't what Walburn contributed six to
TAl-VALLEY COI'IFERENCE
we wanted the loss.
Ohio Division
early on. but
The Lady Knights were ·
ALL
TYC
14-3
7-1
Alexander
we played also impressive at the free
12·5
5·3
Belpre
Sommer
with more throw line, connecting •on
10-7
.
5·3
Nels-York
emotion in 13-of-16 attempts for 8 1
9·8
5·3
Vinton Co.
6-11
2-6
Wellston
that second quarter and r~al- percent.
'0-8
1·16
Meigs
Conversely, the Silver and
ly took control of the
Hocking Division
.
TYC
game."
Black made I0-of- 18 chariALL
12-5
6-2
Trimble
Point Pleasa11t had 14 ty tosses for 56 percent.
1~-5
6-2
Fed Hock
turn overs in the contest,
The Lady Knight s claimed
10-6
5·3
EaStern
including jttst six in the sec- a sweep with a 30-24 victo10-~
4-4
Waterford
8-9
2-6
Miller
ry in the junior va rsity tilt.
ond hal f.
1-7
2·15
Southern
RVHS. which shot 36 perTessa Wyant and Devin
cent ( 16-o f-44) frotn the Cottrill paced PPHS with I0
OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
OYC
ALL
tloor, committed 20 1niscues points each, while Courtney
7-Q
'14-2
• Chesapeake
in the setback.
Circle led the Lady Raiders
5-2
10-6
Fairland
Ri ver
Valley
coach with nine markers. RVHS
4-4
9-8
Rock Hill
4,4
B-8
South Point
Harvey Brown was v.ery trailed 18-16 athalftime.
3-5
7-10
River Valley
impressed with the home · River Valley will host
o-8
5·12
Coal Grove
team 's perforh1ance.
senior
night Thursday
OTHERnNDEPENDENTS
"We just got outplayed," against
Ohio·
Valley
ALL
Brown commented. "They Conference foe Rock Hill.
13·3
South Gallia
hu stl ed when we didn ' t and Game time is slated for 6
10-6
Wahama
8-5
Hannan
I think that was the . differ- p.m.
4·15
ovcs
cncc in the ball game."
Point Pleasant returns to
2-14
Pomt Pleasa11-t
Point had eight players. action Wednesday when it
reach the scoring column, travel s to Winfield for a '
Girts Basketball
led by · Anna Sommer's Cardinal
Conferenc~
SOlJTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
game-high 17 points. Tessa matchup. Tip-nff is sched.
SEO
ALL
#Warren
8·2 ·
14;6
Wyant chipped in 10 mark- uled 6 p.m.
7-3

14-4

Jackson

7-3
6-4

10-10
13·5

Gallia Academy
AtheilS

2·8
0-10

Logan
Mari.etta

HS Basketball Scoreboard

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .
;;o CI·.NTS • Vol. 5!). Nu. 124

Ohio Division

GALLIA ACADEMY 47, EASTERN 44
GALLIA ACADEMY (8-11)

Kristiina Williams 3 5-7 11, Linda Eddy 2
1-2 7. Whitney Wolfe-Riffle 2 0-1 4,
Ashley Rob1e 5 2-3 12,
Rachael
Pickens 1 o-o 2, l;mma Hunter 0 0-0 0,
Sarah Eddy 3 0-0 6 , Georgena Brickles
0 0-0 0. Virginia Br i ckle~ 2 0-0 4,
Ch~lsea Pape 0 0..0-0, Angie Apperson

Jackie WamSley 9 o~o 24. Leah.
Cummons 0 0·0 0. Michelle Johnson 0
0-Q 0. Brittany Elliott 3 Q..O 6, Kayla Perry
2 0-0 4, Alex is Geiger 1 0-0 2, Ryann 00-00. Totals18 8-1346
14 17 9 17 - 57
Leslie 2 0-0 4. ~indsey Niday 3 1-2 7. VInton Co.
Southern
8 9
13 16 .- ' 46
Totals 20-4·7 1-2 47.
3- Poinl GoaiS-VC 6 (Reed 5, Ankrom) ,
EASTERN (8-11)
Katie Hayman 3 0·0 6. Jillian Brannon 4 Southern 2 (L Eddy 2)
2-2 10, Erin Weber 8 3·4 19, Jenna
Hupp 2 0·0 5, JeSSICa Hupp 1 1·2 4.
Totals 19:.49 6-B 44.
·

Gallia

14 11 10 12- 47

·

Eastern • 16 4 15 9 - 44 ·
3-Point Goals--GA 6-17 (Wamsley 6).
Eastern 2-H (Jenna Hupp, Jessica
Hupp). Fouled Out-none. ReboundsGA 22 (Niday 5) . Eastern 25 (We b ~r 8)
Assists- GA 5 (Wamsley 2), Eastern 7
(Jessica Hupp 2). Steals- GA 8 {Geiger
3), Eastern 6 (Jenna Hupp 3) BloCks---;.
GA 1 (Wamsley). Easter n 1 (Weber)".
Turnovers -GA 16. Eastern 17. Total
Fouls- GA 10, Eastern 5

VINTON COUNTY 57, SOUTHERN 46
VINTON COUNTY (11 -7)
Megan Owings 7 6-9 20. Kelsey Day 1
4-5 6. Kristin Collins 1 1-2 3. Erica Reed
5 0-0 15, Diana Ankrom 1 6-9 9. Abbe
Batey 0 4-6 4, Ashley Graves 0 0'0 0.
Totals 15 21 -31 57

. SOUTHERN (8-m)

2 ·t-2 6. Beth Payne 5 4-8 15. Kirsten
Carter 3 2-4 8, Kayla Smith 2 0·0 4,
Margo Fraley 0 0-0 0, IIIana Corti as 0 22 2. Brooke Taylor 2 0-0 4, Ashl ey
MarCum 1 1-2 3 Totals · 16-44 10-18 44

• Meigs defense offends
Wahama. See Page B2

POINT PLEASANT (!H 0)
Leah Eddy 0 2-2 2, Anna Sommer 71-3
17, Char Bibbee 2 4-4 8, Tr ist~ VanMatre

1 1-1 3, Liz Sommervflle 0 0-0 0, .
Brittany Clonch q 0-Q.·a, Te ssa Wyarlt 4
2-2 10, Jody Hartley 3 0-!J 6, Meli sse
Adkins 2 0-0 4. Devin Birchflefd 0 0-1 0 .
Skye Smith 3 3·3 9. Totals· 22-55 13-1 6

59.

WAHAMA 51, BUFFALO 24
WAHAMA (8·8)

.

River Valley 9 8
9 18 - 44
Pt PkJasant
13 20 10 16 ~ 59 ·
KeithAnn Sayre 10 0-0 28, Amber Tully 3 3-point goals...!.RV 2 (Walburn, Payne).
2-2 10, Beth Keyes 3 0-2 6. Jessica . PP 2 (Sommer 2). Tu rnovers-RV 20.
Hollman 3-4·3, Mary Kebler 0 2·2 2. PP 14 . Team fouls~AV 20. PP 17.
Kayanna Sayre 1 0-0 2. Chelsea Fowler
FAIRLAND 73, OVCS 29
0 0-2 0. Totals: 17 7-12 51.
OHIO VALLEY CHRIST1AN (7-12)
BUFFALO (n/a) '
.
Julie Hussell 1 0-0 2. Ric helte
All tson Hodges 1 3-6 5. Cassie Conley 2 Blank enship 1 3-5 5. Sarah Burleson 2
0-0 4, Tracy Grady 2 0-0 4. Kelly Lewis 2 0-0 4, Aodrea VanMeter 1 0·0 4 . Kalee
Q-2 4, Janae Hicks 1 1·2 3, Brooke Edmonds 2 2-4 6. Laura Turner 2 0-Q 4 ,
Sarah Jenkins 010-0 0. Kri'sti Davis 1 4Wtthrow 1 0·0 2, Kayla" 11Jcker 1 0-0 2
4 6. Total s 10 9-13 29.
Totals : 10 4-10 24.
FAIRLAND (10-6)

o

Wahama t2 10 22 7 - 51
Buffalo
4 7 6 .7 - 24
3-poir'lt Qoals-W 10 (Ke_ilhAnn Sayre 8,
Tully 2). B 0 (none).
POINT PLEASANT 59,

Brianna Davis. 10 1· 1 21, Megan Auxier
2 0-0 5. Shay Berry 7 0:2 14. Kristin
Capper 2 2-2 6, Molly Baumgardner 6 0-

0 12. Erika Smoot 5 o-o 10, Emma
Baker 1 1-4 3. Destinee Spears 1 0.() 2.
Totals 33 4-9 73.

RIVER VALLEY 44
RIVER VALLEY (3·15)

ovcs
10 6 5 8 - 29
Fairland 17 21 9 26 - 73
3-Point Goals-OVCS (none), Fairland

Cou rtney Circle 1 0-0 2. Rachel Walburn

1 (AUxier).

#Aiexa11der
8-1
Belpre
6·3
· Vinton Co
5--3
Nels-York
5-4
Meigs
1-8
Wellston
1-7
, Hocking Division

Trimble
Waterfon:l

15-4
10·9
11 -7
11 · 7
4-14

4-1'3

ALL
17-2

7-1

14-4

4-5

8-11

4-5

4-15

3-6

8-11
8-10

Eastern
Fed Hock
Miller

South'ern

0-8

OHIO VALLEY· CONFERENCE .
' OVC
ALL
#South Po1nt
Coal Grove
·Fairland ·
· - Roc~· Hill
·

8-1

7-2

14·4
15-4

6·3

11 -7

3-6 .. 6-13

Chesapeake
River Valley

2-7

5-14

1·8

3-15

ALL
8·8

OVCS

9-10
8-11
7-12

Hannan

1- 14
If -

League champion

'

to

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
.will try to pass another tax
' levy for streetlights in May,
but in the meantime, the
Community
Middleport
Association hopes to keep
decora.tive . white lights in
downtown trees at lea~t
until spring.
Council will meet in special session at 5 p.m. on
Thursday · to begin the
Page AS
pr_ocess of placing another
current
expenses levy on the
• Joan Hayman
primary ballot to finance ·
• Richard Vernon Walters
street light operations. In
November, voters rejected
the 1.5-mill additional tax by
53 percent.
The village has 250 street
lights, not i.ncluding the·
• Human resource
lights in the two Middleport
professionals meet.
parks . AEP charges $2,500
See Page A2
per month under contract 10
light and maintain them.
• Family Medicine.
Late last year. Mayor Sandy
See Page A2 .
Beth SergenVpholo
lannarelli said the streetlights One of Racine's best assets are Star Mill Park and its ball fields and Mayor J. Scott Hill hopes to preserve those assetS' with ·
• Lydia Council plans
would remain on until June.
the formation of a parks and recreation comm1ttee. Here the ·lights from the ball fie lds in Racine reflect off the Oh io River.
That's
when the village's conactivities. See P~ge A3
with American Electric
·• Church group diseusses tract
Pdwer for maintenance of the
lending library use.
lights ends. If the lights were
to be turned off before that
See Page A3
time , the cost of doing so ai1d
• Meigs County Court
reconnecting them in the
News. See Page AS
event a levy is appr,oved

INSIDE

WEAmER

INDEX
2 SEC't10NS -

Calendars

• ltytMakeiap

tolooHa ...a;.-.

• A~ll-" '
• .D()()R PRIU:S!!

o J..(WW•r F•u
~ T•o (l)MI!!rod~:rmllbfl!si4
~

'&gt;
0

MaKJJI'II and •:yellner
Two (2) Endermologie Treatments

•

Classifieds ·

A:3
B2-4
Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Weather
© 2006 Ohio Valle)'

--------

12 PAGES

Comics

Sports

Please see Levy, AS

Meigs County
represented at
state summit on
flu pandemic
preparedness
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A&amp;

•

by parttc1pants and blood ·
samp le results can be given
to a Scientific Panel for use
in a long-term health study.
The Scientific Panel may
then at a later· date contact
participants to obtain continuing health information for
longer-term studies into the
poss ible health effects of
exposure to the chemical,
u'ed by DuPont in the manufa cture of Tetlon and other ·
products. . All . information
collecteLI 'through the C8 project is confidential.

BY BRIAN J, REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Mobile clinic brings
·free immunization clinics.
See Page A6
• Youth wi.ns diving
championship.
SeePage AS

.·

the result of a settlement
agreement concerning the
presence of CS in water supplies. The settlement directed .
that a community health project be completed to collect
data that may be used to
determine if a probable link
exists between C8 in drinking
water and human disease.
Tlm se who have already
visited the Pomeroy or anoth er C-8 testing site are now
being asked by Brookmar.
Inc . to sign release forms ,o
that health -histories provided

OBITUARIES

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS
. Wahama
Point Pleasani
South Gallia

in a news release that ques- "Those still waitin~ to be ·
tionnaires, either on paper or called for appotntments
on the website, are no longer should not be concerned 'if
being accepted.
their · questionnaires we;e.
However, officials of accepted. They are already in
Brookmar, Inc. , I he firm the system and· will receive
operating the C8 . Health appointments," he said.
Project, advises those who
Again it was stressed that
have already completed and those prepanng for an
successfully submitted ques- _appointment with the Project
tionnaires will reteive a pro- ' should visit the website,
cessing appointment.
www.c8healthproject .org to
Brookmar principal Dr. learn exactly what they need
Paul Brooks assures the pub- to bring to prove their identilic that testing will continue ty and eligibility.
until all 70,000 are processed.
The C-8 Health Project is

Middleport
to reconsider
street light
levy Thursday

ALL

8-1

'""' ·m"Loil"''"1i11.-t ,... ,

:!IHih

.'

8-11
2-18

TYC .

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - If you W&lt;Jited until now to submit your
_paperwork for participation
in the . C8 Health Project.
you've waited too long.
Tuesday it was announced
that the goal of 70,000 participants fo~ the collection of
health data to be used in
determining any probable
adverse . effect of C8 on
human health, has been
reached. It was emphasized

•

· TYC

\\'1-:llNLSI&gt;AY. FEBI{l '.\I{Y M.

C8 Health .Project no longer accepting questionnaires

SPORTS

TAl-VALLEY CONFERENCE
GIRLS BASKETBALL

Southern 'Goes Red'
to raise heart disease
awareness, A6

.

the box-and-one and went to
man-to-man defense. With
2:20 Vinton County led by 14
points. but Sduthern went to
full court pressure and cut it
to nine before fad ing to the
57-46 finish. ·
Southern hit 18-of-57 overall, hitiin g 16-of-43 two's. 2of- 1-f three\ , and ll-of-13 at
the . line . Southern had 29
rebo und &gt; (Robie 8, V.
Bric kle; 6. Sarah Eddy 6).
nine steals' (L. Eddx 3.
.William' 3 ). 21 turno ve r\.
five assists and 25 fou Is.
Vinton Cou nt y hit 15-of-44
overall. 9-of-30 two's. 6-of14 three\, and 21-of-31 at
the line. Vinton County had
30 rebounds (Owings 9.
Coll in ~ 8). three steals. II
turno vers. five a" ist; and IR
foul 0 .
There ' was · no reserve .
game .
Southern goes to Miller .
Thursday.

The home team went on a run
of its own. 15-3. to even rh e
. score at 35 entering the ti.nal
period .
from Page Bl
Eastern scored ' ix of the
first eight points to go up 41 swished a jumper at the fiN 37 but Warmky amwered
quarter buzzer to pull he r with a jumper. then a three
club to within 16: 14. Weber from th &lt; wing to give the
scored ·I I of the Eagles ' Angel&lt; the leau back at 42points in the first s tan ~a ..
41. Weber &gt;cored in the pm.t ·
Weber also scored all the to give Ea&gt;tern it.s final lead
Eastern points over the .sec- of the night at 43-42 .
ond eight ·minutes. bu t there
There was no junior varsity
wasn'r very many. as Gallia game .
Academy used ~n 11 -4 -corEastern plays its final regu '
ing edge to lake " 25-20 lead lar season game when it
. into halftime.
entertain s Federal Hocking
Thursday. · · Gall ia
The Blue Angel&gt; started on
. (ast in the third quarter and Academy wrl l wrap-up its
use~ a 7-0 run to go up 32-20
season on Saturday when
before Ea,tern finally ended Ri ver Valley makes the short
the drought at the 4:25 fl)ark . . tnp ro Gallipolis.

Youth score
touchdown against
hunger,A2

Hi&amp;h School
League Standings

BSection
A6
PubllshinJl, Cn.

POMEROY
Health
Commissioner
Larry
Marshall 'will be represe nting
Meigs County at a state summit on Feb. 17 in Columbus
that is mea nt to prepare for a
possible flu pandemic.
Marshall said the summit is
to focus on operational preparedness of state ~nd local
gover~ment in the event of a
llu pandemic.
.
The summit is possible
due in part to the United
States
Departm e nt · of
He alth and Human Services
releasing $100 million in
funding ·for state and local
Rreparedness in regard ~ to a
flu pandemic. ·
.
Ohio received $3.281.387
of that $ 100 million with
California receiving the highest award of $6,723,207. In
fact Los Angeles County
~lone received almost as
much as Ohio with its award
of $2,9()0,529 .
"I don't think a tlu pandenl- .
ic is terribly likely right nnw
bur we need to be ready."

Please see Summit. AS

parks

n

BY BETH .SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYS ENTI NEL.COM

RACINE - Racine Mayor J. Scott
Hill believes that one of the 1·illage ·s
best assets are its parks. includ ing Star
Mill Park and the baseball fields. and he
hopes to maintain those.assets by a.sk ing
for volunteers for a new parks anJ recreation committee.
Hill does not wish to eliminale the
current park board but incorporate it into
that new committee to take some of the
burden off of the board 's dwindlin~
numbers, that is if enough people are
interested in joining.

The Racine Youth League would also
fall under this new parks .and recreation
comm ittee.
·
·
"We want tu encourage more commu-'
nity involvement." Hill explained further
reasons fnr creating the new con1mittee.
This past December Racine Park
Board President Dale ,Hart told council
that unly seven members remained on
the park board. He then informed coun. cil that unles&gt; more volunteers stepped
up to he lp park board members with the
Fourth of Ju ly and Fall Festivals ·thm the
board could no longer hancjle the fes ti va ls. at least llllt alone.

At t hat council meeting Hart said that
around 12 more volunteers were needed.
At thi o particular time council said
there is no Fourth of Jul\ Festival
planned thnugh tha t cou ld quickly
change if volunteers s.tcp up for the ne\\1
committee .
,
Councilman Tom · Reed volunteered
his services for the new park' and recreation committee at th~&gt; week\ regular
'cssion of Raci ne Village Council.
Pan of Reed's dmies on the parks and
recreation committee 1if it gets established&gt;
will be to deale a :the year plan for Star

Please see Parks, AS

·Commu.nity A~sociation begins event plans
BY BRIAN J. REED
B8EED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Comnn1nity
Association will begi n plans
for a July 4 celebrati on at a
meeting next week, and will
kick off a memhershin drive
in March.
Committees were appoint -

ed at Tuesday ·s monthly
meet ing of th e assoc·iation.
i n clllllin~ an event~ committee which will hegin planning
the annual lnJcpcnJencc Day ·
celebration and th e Easter
Bunny Hop Bake Sale in
April. PrcsiJcnt BrenJa
Phalin appointed Susaq
Baker. Brenda D'" is. Ferman ·
and Rae 1\luore. Brian Reed

· Deputi~s

or

see

investigate B&amp;E, ·vandalism

GmHJ Timl'-.. lncatcd on
C'oulll 1 RnaJ 7 A. eli s&lt;.: ul'ercd
the dcii1r w the har huJ hccn
POMEROY
. Meigs l&lt;in:ed open and rhc lud anJ
County Sheriff's deputies arc hasp were fni"in~ .
investi gating a breaking and
Sh e reportcu that 3~ hurtle'
enteri ng at Good Till]es and .. f liqu or had heen ,111lcn . Nu
two local po.' t , hecr ,,:a... mi~-.ing . Bcq;lc
vandal ism
offices .
,aiel. The coin hoxc, nn
Sheriff Robert Beegle machines. illl·luding the jukere(lorted that a hartender at hm . po,ol tah le' and other
ST4FF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENT I N~L . COM

anJ Sue Stone to 'erve on the 1w hope thareveryone 'who is
committee. which will meet int~l\' &gt; tcd in panic'ipating in
fur the fiN t11nc on Feb . i 6. nur Jl,c u" ion' and our
Phalin said the annual c1cnh "ill JUrn u' at our
membership. Jri1c will begi'n · -mect inu s and bcwme memin March. with hopes of · ll~f' ... Pha1 1n ,aid .
recruiti ·n~ Ill'\\ member' a-nJ
o 11 ,. , ares 10 for indil'idual
r~tam i n g ~o.: urr~nt ll'leniher . . nn ,_ rnemher.., and $2) for husi the roll'
"We lla111thi' tu he a 'true · ne' ' ln cmber,hip&gt;. and a
communitY a"lll"iation . and
Please
Events, AS

mal'11itw' l1 aJ IHll hc·en tam-·
(X'fl'd \1 it h.
Syracu'c 1\l,tn~et&gt;tcr John
Hc1iJcr&gt;&lt;'ll rl'('&lt;ll·tcJ that th e
wind&lt;m 11f the
nfficc had
bct•n nad,,·J h1 a rod m
pellet ~un . .-\ "i i1d&lt;i\\ n .11 tlw
R.tL' ill l' P1hl orri. .:r.: \\'d ... ahn
l...'ra l..': ~t·J I ll a . . imi l.tr f~P.,hinn .
. B ce~IL' : ~&gt;h' u dll) &lt;lne with
infurmatJL)Il &lt;t btnll ·the inci -

i''"'

dcnh 111 c all the ~herill\
Je partmeil t.
•
Rcq:,lc al'o reported :
• lchh McConnick of Martin
Marietta ·, Apple Gml'e plant
repon,•d L'11 a11h. a space heater
.md &lt;1ther eyu ipn\ent stplen.
r:,u·iicr th" month. he renorted
that -the welding trtH:k there

Please see lnvest11ate, AS

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

LOCAL • STATE

•

Wednesday, February 8,

2006

BYTHEBEND
Soft-spoken dad won't control Community Calendar
Public meetings
his abusive teenage ·dpughter

The Daily Sentinel

PageA3
Wednesday, February 8,

2006

'

Human resource
professionals meet
RIO GRANDE - The their employees at all stages
River Bend Chapter of the of their work development
for
Human and offer professional assisSocie ty
Resource Manage[llent met · tance with retirement planin mid-January on the cam· ning, use of insurance benepus of the University of Rio fits and ideas for wellness
Grande. Debbie Crawford, · and training programs:
The River Bend SHRM
: president, presided over the
brief bu siness meeting_, Chapter meets the third
Which was preceded by a Wednesday of each month at
the University of Rio Grande,
continental breakfast.
Speaker for tfie event was beginning at 8:30 a.m . .
Mark
Curry,
Certified Interested human resource
Financial Planner, who out· professionals ~re invited to
lined the different "work life attend. For more information,
stages" of employees with contact Debbie Crawford,
regard to their employee ben- president, at (740) 245-5306
etlts. Curry encouraged those or Phyllis Mason, vice presipresent to commlmicate with dent, at (740) 245· 7228.

Coretta Scott King left
mark·at Ohio college
Submitted photo

Bv JAMES HANNAH ·

. CSI member Mallory Hill collects a monetary donation from Jessica Fisher during the "Souper Bowl of Caring" food drive at the
Racin e Uniteo Meth ooi st Church.
.
'

Youth score touchdown.against hunger
the food 'pantry. Th e food
drive was a part of the CSI's
effort to serve the community.
'When Super Bowl week end comes aro und eac h year.
most of the attention goes to
the drama of the game,'' said .
Pastor Kerry Wood. "But
there's a different kind of
drama happening here and
around the world - people
are going to bed tonight as

RACINE - The yo uth at was part of the "Sou per Bowl
the Racine United Met hodi st of Caring" program.
Those attending ch urch
Church scored a touch down
' again st hunger in Meigs were offered the option of
County with a &gt;Uccessful voting for thei r favorite S11per
Bowl pick by placing food or
food dnve.
Members of Christians money in the appropriate colServing and Inspiring (CST) lection pot. More than I00
&lt;;ollected food· and monetary · food . ite.ms collected altmg
donations for the Meigs with about $ 100 in cash donaCounty Cooperati ve Parish tions. The money and food
food pantry. The food drive will be delivered this week to

champimis of hunger. That's
a title no one wants. Our
youth dec ided they wanted to
be part of making a difference, so they led the ' Souper
Bowl of Caring ' i'n our congregation to put their faith in
ac tion . Our congregation
responded in faith on a
Sunday when the frigid winter weather made it easier to
just stay home." ·

FAMILY MEDICINE
Smokeless tobacco dangerous, has more nicotine than cigarettes
Question: lsn't smokeless
tobacco safe r tO use than
smoking cigarettes'' If it isn' t
safe , how can I quit'?
Answer: At the heart of
your question is a common
misconception . Since public
health official s have been so
successfu l · in ge tting the
message out about the dangers of smoking. some people assume that smokeless
forms of tobacco are safe.
This could not be further
from the truth .
Let me give you a few fact s
on smokeless tobacco. more
commonly .called chew or
'dip. According the Centers
for Disease Control and
Prevent·ion. spit tobacco contains more than . 28 cancercausing age nt&gt; and is a,
proven cause of human cancer. Specificall y, this ty pe of
tobacco ca n cause cancer of

the oral cav ity - including
the . tongue, lips, gum and
cheek. Oral cancer is very
seriou s and has only a 50 percent five -year survival rate.
Thi s five-vear . survival
ha s~
remained
rate
unchan ged for the past 50
years. Experts kel that ·this
is due primari 1-y to the
unfortunate fact that most

ora l cancers continue to be
diagnosed tn . ad"anced
stages. A number of studies
have shown that the survival rate for onil cancer
patients increases dramatically wh en the diagnosis is
, made in the early stages .
This alone is a good reason
to see your denti st twice a
year fo r teeth cleaning and
an ·oral examination . That
will insure an early diagnosis of any ural cancer that
you might develop.
' The best strategy, however,
also involves lowering your
odds or contracting oral cancer in the first place. Thi s
means quitting smoke less
tobacco if you use it: Because
smokeless tobacco contains
even more of the addictive
drug nicotine than cigarettes.
quitting can be hard.
For example. a two-can-aweek snuff dipper ge ts as
much nicotine into his or her
blood as a pack-and-half-a·
day smoker. Though it' s diffi:
cult. many people have been
successfuL It can be done,
and you can do it.
·
Since next week is Through
Wi·th Chew Week, this mi ght
be an espec ially good time to
· quit. Here are a few sugges-

lions that will help :
• Pick a detini te "quit date" ·
and write it down. Since it'll
take you time to prepare to·
quit. this should be ·a date at
least a week from' now - but
not more than a month away.
• Get mentally prepared to
quit by repeating to yourself
the reasons you want to quit.
This cou ld be health reasons.
to save mon~y. because
me1ilbers Of your . family .
don't . like · your habit, or
because your physician or
dentist told you to quit.
• Cut back before you
quit. This can help reduce
· the withdrawal symptoms
you' ll experience when
your quit date arri ves. A
good rule of thumb is to try
to cut back to half your
usual amount before you
quit. You might try to substitute sugar-free gum, hard
candy: or even mint-leaf
snuff every other time you ' d
normally t nke a dip of your
regular snuff or chew.
There are many other
pl ace' where you can find
help in your etl'orts to kick
the spit tobacco habi t. You
can talk to vour denti st or
fami ly physician , or call
your local chapter or the
'

American:Cancer Society·or
the
American
Lung
Association. ·Many local
health departments are an
excellent resource for this
kind of information. Also,
you can. call the National
Tobacco Quit Line at 1-800QUIT-NOW
Family · Medicine® is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio Univenity College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box JJO, Athens, Ohio
45701, or via e-mail to read·
erquestions@j'amilym~di·

cinenews.org. Medical infor·
mation in this colum11 is pro·
i!ided as ar1 educational ser·
vice only. lt does not replace
the judgment of your per·
sonal physician, who should
be relied on to f[iagnose and
recommend treatment for
any medical conditions. Past
columns are available online
at
www.familymedicine~
news.org.

'

BvANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS .
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS House
Speaker Jon Husted and
Senate President "Bill Harris,
seeking to avoid a wnte ~ ted
GOP primary in the race for
governo r, held pri vate meetings with both Republican
candidates to pef'uade them
to end their impasse.
The two he ld the &lt;,eparate
meetings wi th Sec retary of
Stat~ Kenneth Blackwe ll and
Attorney Genera l Jim Petro
in downtown Col umbu ~ (&gt;n
· Thursda y to disc u" ways to
avoid a two-wav batt le for
the gubernatorial'nominatlon.
"We weren't hrokeri no
c
anything. we were not
propming anything. we ju;t
wanted them to 'ec if there
was room for di,c u,s ion
betwee n the two of them ...
Hus ted told The A"ocialed
Pre." i on Tuesdav.
·Harris and ·Hu , ted. Ihc
state\ top legi, (ative leader\.
have a keen intere'-.1 i n ~~

stron g gubernatorial candi d~te . Conve.ntion;JI wi,dorn

say&gt; that a' strong top candi date can boost the party 's
nominees for lower.oflices-

'

was possible I would prefer
that there not be a primary. but
if there is I can live with that."
suc h a~ auditor or treasurer, . a~
A strong top of the ti cket is
well as the General Assembly es pec iall y important to
- while a weaker candidate Republican s · thi s year as
can hurt th e resl of the ticket. Democrat s hope to use
Husted. of the Day ton area, Ohio's corru ption scandal to
wouldn' t say what his prefer- break a 12-year-old GOP
ence wa\ or if he bac ked a lock on stme government.
si ngle GOP t1cket with the
State GOP chairman Bob
two runni ng toge ther.
Bennett commissioned a poll
The goal of the meeting was last month to persuade Petro
"if there was an y roo m fo r or · Blackwell to leave 1hc
them to compromi se on run- race. to no avail , The poll by
ning together. or avoiding th e Mclaughlin &amp; A"oci&lt;ites
primary. th.en we wan ted lo gave Bl ackwe ll an edge in
make ;ure they were talkin)! the primary bu i favo red Petro
with each other." Hu.sted .\aid. to beat Demoo'rat · Ted
H;n-r i; said he · held · th e Stqc kland 111 Nove mber.
mee tings because 'of his
In response. ·the GOP state
de;ire tn a•oicl a primary.
central committee conducted
"The speaker and I certainly ih own informa l poll thl1t
are concerned about making ' howed strong support fo r a
\ Ure that we. have a,-, ~trong a JOIDI tickc\ with Blackwell as
Republican ticket '" we can the candidate for govemor
going into the electi on,.. ~aid and Petro as hi; running mute.
Harris. an A&gt;hland Republican.
Bennett
then
a.sked
'',VI y concern is the ·amount Bl ackwell lO delay hi s
of money that has to be 'pent announceme nt of a running
in a primary ani.! then turn m;Jtc to give Blackwell and
i1round and ha ve to 'pend that Petro a c hance to di scuss
much more money in a ge ner- . suc h a ticket. ;aid Bennett'
al election." H ~ rr is said . "If ii 'pokc;man John McCie lia nd .

YELLOW SPRINGS · Caretta Scott King arrived at
Antioch College from rural
Alabama in I945 to get an
education at the tiny liberal
arts school known for its
social activism.
By the time she left,. Kin g
had touched teachers and
· residents alike, composing
and si1iging songs to the
young children she taught
and chang ing the racial
views of a woman she
helped after the woman fell
down some stairs.
Antioch has established a
cultural center · named for
King. whose funeral Tuesday
in Georgi a drew a crowd esti•
mated at I 0,000.
·
King received a full schol·
arship to attend Antioch and
majored in music education .
After graduating in 1951 ,
she attended the New
England Conservatory of
Music in Boston , where she
met he r future husband,
civi l-rights leader Martin·
Luther King Jr.
Antioch President Steven
Lawry said Antioch is committed to racial justice and
equa lity and had been
recruiting black students in
;tn effort to diversify ·the
student body when King
enrolled . She became one
of a handful of black stu-·
dents there.
"She would later say it
(Antioch ) really. gave her
hope that white Americans
would be responsive to her
husband's call for racial justice and equality in the· country,'' Lawry said.
Antioch was fertile grou nd
for thinking and discussion
of. civil rights and other
social issues.. Activi sm and
civil disobedience became
part of · the fabric of the

school,
with
anti-war
protests in the 1960s and ·
' 70's to the student takeover
of an administration building
in the 1990s.
Antioch feeds off of Yellow
Sp,rings , a liberal-leaning,
throwback -to-the-60s village
· where tank tops, sandals and
T-shirts emblazoned with the
likes of Bob Dylan are common atti re.
·
Retired Antioch history
professor Irwin Abrams
taught King in one of his
western civilization classes . .
But he really remembers her
as his son David's nursery
school teacher.
Friends and acquaintances said King had trouble getting a student-teach ~
ing post at local public
schools because of her race.
So she student-taught at an
Antioch nursery sc hool and
an
elementary
~chool
ow ned by Antioch .
"She used to sing a special
song to each child," Abrams
said. "What she sang to him .
was. 'Little David, play on
your harp."'
· .
,
Abrams said King had a
terrific voice and might have
gone on to become a great
· singer had she not met Martin
and gotten involved in the
civil-rights movement.
When Paula Treichler was
in second grade at Antioch
School, the arts-oriented ele·
mentary sc hool owned by
Antioch, it was King taught
who ·taught her mu si·c , ·
putting a song Treichler had
written to music.
"It was so thrilling,"
recalled Treichler, a 63-yearold Champaign, lll., woman
who teaches at the University
of .Illinois.
Treichler's mother · was
· King 's. faculty \ adviser at
Antioch, and KJiDg became
friends with 'Treichler's
family.

l
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extra
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everythihg
._,,i with your S&amp;ars card, even on sale prices · .)
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Top lawmakers try to end
GOP governor's race standoff

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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DEAR
ABBY:
~y
boyfriend, "Jeff,'' is a smgie ' parent. His daughter,
"Nicole," is 14. Jeff is very
soft-spoken and even-tempered . He hates conflict and
shies away from it if it arises. We have been in a loving and caring relationship
for nine years . We don't
yell at each other or call
each other names. ·
Over the last six .months,
Nicole's behavior toward
her father has changed radi- ·
cally. She has become ver·
bally abusive ·toward him.
'When she speaks to' him she
calls him names and uses
ungodly language. I cringe
when she starts screaming
and cursing at him.
I moved out of the house
because I can't he . part of a
household like that - it
!l1ade me sick. I have stated
on more than one occasion
that this kind of behavior is
unacceptable and not nQrmal.
Jeff says. he has read books
that say that it is. It has driven
a wedge ll'etween us. I'm concerned that if Nicole treats
her father this way, how is
. she treating her peers, teachers or strangers? Have you
any advice to offer? HEARTSICK IN FLORIDA
DEAR
HEARTSICK:
Nicole's behavior is .neither
normal nor acceptable. Your
boyfriend
should . have
asserted his 'authority tbe
first time ·it happened. The
longer he tolerates · his
daughterI's outbursts,
the
.
,

~ lmumriJt&gt;.r,e vai;JJ$6 )

OC!\1 .-w; aM &lt;m~oor Cllalfi?S
!fh'\VurSe.nft:ltot:li(I(MII!i

more they will escalate.
l don't know what her
problem is - whether she
has fallen i11 with the wrong
crowd, is experimenting with
drugs or having emotional
difficulties. But the time to
get to the root of it and put a
stop to it is NOW And if your
boyfriend refuses to face that
fact and act like a parent, he
is shirking his responsibility
to ~~1~uX~t~ryi I need som~
advice. I. married "F~i tz" in
February 200 I, during a spurof-the-moment trip to Las
Vegas. Afterward, we decided we would wait to tell &lt;.mr
parents because we wanted to
have a · traditional wedding
and invite.all.of our relatives.
. It has been more. than fout
years, and I am sti ll try in ~ to
get Fritz, at the bare mmi mum, to tell our families
that we ' re "engaged." B11t if
I bring up the subject, he
gets angry and refuses to
talk about it because he's
"not ready."
Fritz keeps sending me
mixed signals - he bovght
me :a $2,500 · diamond
engagement/wedding ring,

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
church lending library was
· discussed when the Tuppers
Plains United Methodist
Women met recently at the
church.
Meinbers were giveri a list
of books available in the
library and lists will be distributed to others of the
church. Prayer by JoAnna
Louks opened the · program
presented hy Joanna Weaver
and Sharon Louks.
It was noted that the group
received a certificate for com-

.

·

"~II

Clubs and
organizations

29'/• Off Our Entire Stock!

· "'

pleting the five-star giving
program for 2004 from the
West Ohio Conference. Terri
Soulsby read all the goals to
earn the five-&gt;tar giving
which the group will be working for again this year.
A birthday card was signed
for Rebecca Asedillo of New
York whose name was chosen
from the Prayer Calender
Book. A donation was made
to the President '.s lnitative
Fund for the Churches of
·Hurricane Katrina . Connie
· Rankin and Barb Roush will

ltctal savirQs $ll2.00l

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---·-· ----------__:_~_.,_--+

Husain A. Rasheed, M.D.
Medical Oncology and Internal Medicine
The O'Biene;s Health System welcomes Husain A. Rash eed, M.D ..
to the Castrop Center. H e is board certihed in medical.,ncn l,,g,· ,md
internal medicine.
Dr. Rasheed rec'e ived his medical degree at the Jawaharlal Nehru
Medi cal College in Indi a. He completed hi s residency in intern •1 l
medicine and h is fellowship in medical&lt; nK nlngv at rhe UniH·rsJry ,,(
Nebraska Medical Center.
Dr. Rasheed is a w mmunity phy~ i c ian l~lf The Ohi&lt;' ~rare Uni\'i:;rsil\· ·
Arthur G. James C ancer Hospital anJ Rich ;uJ J. s,,JUI'C Rc,carch
Institute Center.
Dr. Rasheed is accepting new p&lt;Hients hy refe rral in Suite 2'\i.~ ,,J
the Castw p Center, O'Blencss ~! edi&lt;:a l Park ; 75 Hosp!td l Dri1·e. 111
Athens. o r at Onct,logy/Hcmawlugy' Cnnsu ltants of SEll, In c. m
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&amp;.r'f L&gt;~r~t · ~"-; .• J• &lt;·•.' ~~ ·f ~~~n '~1:il&gt;@ LI!OI!\• ~t•nt, Sr~Jt ~"t' ~.'1'\. Cl!lnl,~l St11,,. d1~rnond1, Olllltt $l01t p11rc~ue~ . t mlog ordtr1 , ~trod~t1(lry ofltrl ,
lr:)£1w.u~ C olt l1114~ kt,r ~nAd ~ ta , a "11X.tt l, J A ~eM~!h '.Pod. Be~~ - Mtthi ~tl!l~u. Pl1~rrNcy tlttl J"d ,.,.,nt. Wtbtt. l ut()JT()fJVe itrvtett 5 el t~ hc e11ud bn!lluu~
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Set &lt;tci E IJI' 11!1 J ~s itOj)IJnl~ -'". ~~ JIE ''l! ...tn~ u~!eH ~~~~lw·st ~Or~ill~ ColO• I. CCUK'IOII. ~~~~ia!l(l~ ttlrl Stars IS J I!Q!SIII"~ trlC¥N•k ol $e~rs 6rUdl llC
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740~992-3785

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wrth l1ght, 4 temperatures. 6 cyclea Wnnkte

212 East Main • Pomeroy. Ohio

Coining thursd
. .&amp;in the Sentinel.-·

Refreshments will be

,.

1959

be sponsored in the Muscular
Dystrophy Walk to be held
April 22 in Marietta.
It was decided IQ send Easter
Cards and a cross to servicemen and women. A fundraiser
was discussed and tabled until
the next meeting. . Joanna
·weaver closed the meeting
with prayer. and refreshments
were served by Barb Roush to
Joanna Weaver. Sharon Louks.
Terri Soulsby, Mary · and
Connie Rankin; Anna Rice.
Betty Chevalier. Barb Roush,
and Judy Kennedy.

Thursday, February 9th
10 am- 11:30 am
.Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center

Qli, SEA~

ers
Quality since

·.

Blood Pressure
Clinic

ft..

'

.

'

~· ; -·. -~ . tfiC~ f~

-

Guanl' I. 1166732. Reg. 379.99, SBie 35Q.99.
FINAL323.99 aHor tO% SellS card m1t111 ·

Youth events

Birthdays

.
.
.
Church group discusses lending library use

467.99 final
AFTER 1
CARD SAVINGS

. Klftrrorl S.ptr Capac~y drjor 6.5·Cu. ft . drum

F
Wed nes!lay, eb. 8
POMEROY
Meig s
but l' m not allowed to wear County
Board of Health, regit in front of any family
·
f
.
I
members. He tells me he u ar mee tmg, 5 p.m., con er·
loves me· and I'm the onl)( ence room Meigs County
Saturday, Feb. II
Department.
person he's going to spend Health
TUPPERS PLAINS REEDSVILLE - Special
SYRACUSE -. Syracuse
the rest of his life with, but
' ..,
h'
VFW Post 9053 , 7 p.m.
1. Ol Ive
t.
,owns tp TI]Ursday at the haiL Meal at Youth Ball League. ba&gt;eball
this has become a re.al strain mee mg 0
sign-ups, 9 a.m. to I p.m..:
6:30p.m.. office, with , 30
on our relationsnip. I don't Trustees,
I
t'
·
f
II
.
'':
p.m.
.
Syracuse
Fire Station .
mg o owmg.
Friday, Feb. 10
understand why he won ' t regu armee
Thursday, Feb. 9
marry me publicly since we
POMEROY
_ Meigs
EAST MEIGS - Return
are already married legally. County Cort)missioners regu· Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Please help me. - WANTS Jar meeting, . 10 a.m. , instead DAR will meet at I p.m. at the
Friday, Feb. 10
MY M.R.S. IN ILLINOIS
f 1
Eastern Library social room .
0
LONG BOTTOM
DEAR WANTS: It appears · MlD~LEPORT
History essay awards will be
"Delive
red" at Faith Fult
that the man you married still Middleport Village Council, given by Mary Rose, chairGospel
Church,
7 p.m.
.
has a lot of growing up to do. sr.ecial session, 5 p.m., coun-. man. The Eastern . rn;11 c~otr
MIDDLEPORT
.
Duw·
He may have had second ctl chambers, to discuss levy . Will present the program ..
Dailey will be at the olcf
thoughts about marrying you, for operating expenses to be
· Satu~day, Feb. 11
American Legion hall ori
or he may be afraid of his placed on May ballot.
REEDSVJL~E
-. Fourth Street in Midd leport ar
parents' reaction. He could
Friday, Feb. 10
Reedsvtlle Unn.ed Methodi St 7 p.m. ·on Friduy. For more
also have a problem with
NELSONVILLE
·
Church,_ Valenune dmner, 5
information call Rev. Margaret·
commitment and feels that Region
14
Workforce p.m .. with a smg to follow at Robinson, 992-4520 ..
he 's "not really married" Investment Board, 9:30a.m ., 7 ~OMEROY
until tht!re's a formal Inn at Hockmg College.
"D 1.
d,
h
M .
announcement. Because l' m
e 1vere ,
t e
. e~gs
· Monday, Feb. 13
not a mind reader, I can't be
CHAUNCEY - . Region 14 County Chapter of Chnstwn
Thursday, Feb. 16
sure what his problem is.
Youth Council meeting, 9 a.m., Motorcycle AssocJatJon, reguSHADE -Elmer Bailey
However, there 's one thing Athens County DJFS, Ohio 13. lar meetmg, 9 a.m., Common
I know for sure. The way you
Thesday, Feb. 14
Grounds Coffee Shop, mfor- will celebrate hi s 85th birthday on Feb. 16. Card may be
are being treated is degradPOMEROY _ Bedford mat1on ca11992-206L
sent to him at 40053 S.R .
ing, and you should not toler· Township Trustees ·will meet
· Thesday, Feb. 14 .
ate it. Offer Fritz the option at the hall.
·
POMEROY
Metgs 681 , Shade, Ohio 45776.
of marriage counseling;
because whether or not he
wants to admit it, you ARE
married, or end this travesty
once and for alL
Dear Abby is written by
Wednesday, Feb. 8
Abigail Van Bure", also
POMEROY
-Meigs
know11 as Jeanne Phillips, County Ministerial Association,
a11d was founded by her I0 a.m., Rocksprings United
mother, Pauline Phillips. Methodist Church. All Meigs
Write Dear Abby at County pastors invited.
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Thursday, Feb. 9 ...
' Box 69440, Los .Angeles,
CHESTER - Shade River
CA 90069.
LOdge 453 will meet a! 7:30
p.m. at the'hall. Refreshments.
RACINE
BethanySm~el Now you can own ltl,e piCture of !hat Uflforg~tt1abfe
Dorcas Sonshine Circle, 7
moment captured lri !he newspaper. PhOtos become limelasa
,p.m., at the Bethany-Dorcas
when framed or printed on a ffiug or moose pact
United Methodist Church.
tributed, sheets were· passed
Vis~ www.mydailysenllnel.com ai&gt;d click 1he blue biJnon.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
out for listing of good works
to do in January, a survey was .
taken on spiritual gifts and
there was a valentine's quiz.
Madeline Painter had a
poem '"Jesus Hugs" and
SpeeitULLu
Sherry Smith gave the closing
·
~
prayer. Attending
were ·
~
Carolyn Nicholson, Sherry
Smith, Nancy Morris, Neva
Chapman. Paula Pickens,
Phyllis Baker. Madeline
Sale Ends 2/15/06
·
Painter, Charlotte Hanning,
Misty Dewees, Kathy Dyer,
Bre!lda Bolin, Brook Bolin.
Were
Sherry
Hostesses
Shamblin and Diana MaxwelL

Church events

'

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C1lr IJlOO tt&lt;ru ~b i I HOO

ENERGY STAR' qualified. 3.2-cu. tt. Triple
Action• agitator for great fabric care.
Aulomatic temperature control. 3-speed
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Abby

POMEROY -. Spring and participation were distributed.
Paula Pickens presided at
summer activities were discussed at a recent meeting of ' the meeting with reports
the Lydia Council of being given by the officers.
Bradford Church · of Christ Also presented was the curheld Monday night in the lain fund report. It was noted
activity building.
that cards and sunshine bags
A time for the annual moth: will be given to people who
er•daughter banquet will be need them and meals will be
r;lecided at the next meeting provided to a shutin. Cards
after members have a chance . are still being collected for St.
to vote on a preferred date.
Jude's and that will continue
Vacation Bible school will through February. The scrapbe held in June and a special booking program is moving
planning
meeting
was along, a . hymn sing at
announced for March 4. The Overbrook went well, as did a
mentoring program was dis- . hyll1n sing at Hemlock Grove.
cussed and sheets to sign up for
New Lydia books were dis-

Slil!ljatJ ocal ~IVBIY en"'"" ltlne ae~IEnP fl'le f P.llaltlr ,
dl:tOOn~all! OOJ\Inl OU1illll:lell i.IW/IH')' arM ~ p.]'jS /lfl

w.lf)

Dear

Chamber
of
Count y
Commerce business minded
luncheon, noon . Wildhorsc
Cafe .

·Lydia Council pl~ns· activities

lor MnX.rWi! O.. ~_ fillll&lt;''f.IIIQ OOWti" f.tr.:W.:'!&gt;ol1d sliri'J8 f1f'l0
&lt;ltln~liiJI c~ Pt:ba~ wN~

Garden Club, 6:30p.m. at the
home of Joy Bentley.
Program on techniques of
basic flower arranging .
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, II :30 a.m. St. Paul
Lutheran Church. Julia Proctor ·
and Joan Corder, hostesses.

·REHABILITATJON CENTER .
740-992-6606
f:qual Opportunity

Provider of Ser viu.f

36759 Rockspri ngs Road
Pomeroy, Ohio.45769

,,

O'BLENESS
.

EXTENDJCARE'•clllly

www.cKt.cnditan::.f:om

HEALTH SY '-1 f \1

�PageA4__

0 PINI0 N

The Daily Sentinel

.

Wednesday, February 8, 2006

Wednesday, February s, 2oo9,

Obituaries

~~~~==~------~--~~~~~~--------~~~~~~~
.
.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of. t~e
people peaceably to assemble, and to petttton
the Government J.or a redress of grievances.

.

-The First Amendment to the U.S.
. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. Feb. 8. the 39th day of2006. There .are
326 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History: . ·
' .
On Feb. 8, 1587. Mary. Queen of Scots, was beheaded at
Fotheringhay Castle in England after she was implicated in a
plot to l)mrder her cousin. Queen Elizabeth I. .
On this c:late:
.
In 1693. a charter was granted .for the College of William
and Mary in Williamsburg; Va.
·
In 1904, the Russo-Japanese War. a conflict over control of
Manchuria and Korea, began as Japanese forces attacked Port
Arthur.
In 1910, the Boy Scouts of America was incorporated.
In 1915, D.W. Griffith's groundbreaking as well as controversial silent movie epic about the Civil War, "The Birth of a
Nation," rremiered in Los Angeles.
In 1922, President Harding had ~ radio installed in the
Whit' House.
.
In 1924. the first execution by gas in the United States took
place at the Nevada State Prison in Carson City.
, In 1968. three college students were killed in a confronta·
tio n with highway patrolmen in Orangeburg, S.C., during a
civil rights protest against a whites-only bowling alley. .
In 1974. the three-man crew of the Skylab space statton
returned to Earth after spending 84 days in space. ' ·
,In 1989. 144 people were killed when an An)erican-chartered Boeing 707 filled with ltaliim tourists slammed into a
fog-covered mountain in the Azores.
Ten years ago: In a ceremony at the Library of Congress,
President Clinton signed legislation revamping the telecommunicatiohs industry, saying it would "bring the future to our
·
·
doorstep." · ·
Five years ago: A House committee· opened hearings into
former President Clinton's last-minute pardon of fugitive
financier Marc Rich. with former prosecutqrs complaining
that they hadn't been consulted before the pardon was granted. President Bush sent his proposed $1.6 trillion, I0-year tax
cut plan to"Congress.
One year ago: .Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas announced a cease-fire at
a summit in Egypt. An earlier-than-usual Mardi Gras festival
· opened in New Orleans with sparse crowds. Longtime CBS
newsman George Herman died in Washington at age 85. '
Doobie Brothers dt,ummer Keith Knudsen died. in Kentfield,
Cafif., at age 56.
.
··
. ·
Today's Birthdays: Composer-conductor John Williams is
74. Actor Jack Larson is 73.- Former ABC News anchor Ted
Koppel is 66. Actor Nick Nolte is 65 . Comedian Robert Klein
is 64. Country singer J)an Seals is 58. Singer Ron Tyson is 58.
Actress Brooke Adams is 57. Actress Mary Steenburgen is 53.
Author John Grisham is 51. Rock singer Vince Neil (Motley
Crue) is 45. Rock singer-musician Sammy LLanas (The
BoDeans) is 45. Actor Gary Coleman is 38. Actress Mary
McCormack is · 37. Actor Seth Green is 32. Rock musician
Phoenix (Linkin Park) is 29. Actor Ryan Pinkston is 18.
Actress Karle Warren ("Judging Amy") is 14.
Thought for Today: "Health is the thing that makes you feel
that now is the best time of the year."- Franklin P. Adams,
American journalist ( 1881-1960}.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel ·
Correction Policy ·
accurate. If you know ol an error in a
story. call the newsroom at (740) 992·

2156.

(USPs 213-sso)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published e-Jery afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street ,
Pomeroy. Ohio . Second-class postage'

paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Assoc1ated Press and the

Our main number is
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Department extensions are: ·

Ohio Newspaper. Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich . Ext 12

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- ··

Inside MeiQS County
13 Weeks ... :
. . . '32.26
26 Weeks . . .. • .... . .. '64.20
52 Weeks . .
. . .'127.11
Outside Meigs County
. . . '53. 55
. .'107.1 0

13 Weeks . .
26 Weeks . .
52 Weeks .

Republican primary lead doesn't have the power that
Black Repltblicans are
(currently at around . ten Ken Blackwell does to pull it"
making a run for a number
points) and· garnering the off. In one electoral triumph;"
. of big elections this year. In
national attention needed to Blackwell could achieve
Maryland, Michael Steele .
gaio support from his pears. what nu task force, outreach;·;
wants retiring Democrat
Ward Connerly, a black program or powerful speech;·,
Paul Sarbanes' Senate sea:t.
· Kathryn
political powerhouse, him- ever will- making it "safe':.:
Keith Butler is also running
Lopez
self, and successful crusader for blacks to routinely voty ·'
for Senate, from Michigan.
against racial and gender Republic'an instead ofbeing.,
· Lynn Swann, the former
,,
quotas in education, tells me, looked at as anomalies.
Pittsburgh . Steelers star,
And
Blachvell
would
do
!f.
,
"a Blackwell victory wquld
wants to be governor of the
Keystone State. Randy like that, you ask? "For be very significant because it in the health1est way poss1- ,
Daniels would like to be Blackwell is a fiscal and cul- would illustrate that being a ble - without ever playing-;
goven'lor of New York. And tural conservative ... who Republican is not the 'ki.ss of up race. "Blackwell is bel:;
. gunning for governor in a happens to be black with the death' for a 'black' ~spirant ting," Malanga writes, "th~L
many black Americans mat' :
key presidential electoral proven power to attract votes · for higher oflice."
It 's a message that the be ready for a candidate, like•.
state there is the great black from across a startlingly
hope for the Republican wide spectrum of the elec- "party of Lincoln" has him, who doesn't preacltf•
Party, Ohio Secretary of torate." Malanga continues. increasingly been trying to viciimology and doesn't see "
State Ken Blackwell.
."!:lorn in the projects of send. Republican outreach 'the world almost entirely ii1 ·
The "great black hope" is .Cincinnati to a meat-packer efforts a~e credited with · racial terms. Blackwell is ;a·;
probably_ the last phrase who preached the work ethic increasing President Bush's post-racial, post-civil rights'~
Blackwell would use to and a nurse who read to him · share of the black vote from .campaigner; race rare It
describe himself (1, myself, from the bible every eight f:ercent in 2000 to enters into his speeches an~
cringed while writing it). A evening, Blackwell has about 2 in 2004. The(e are is barely a part of his politi'·'~
phrase that cheapens, not to rejected the victimology of miles to go yet (obviously), cal platform. And even when
mention ghettoiZ\!S; in truth, many black activists -and but it's progress. And it's Blackwell does addrc,.,
Ken Blackwell is a great . opted for a . different path. something that Republican racial issues - the. achievtl.;;
Committee ment gap between black and
hope for us all.
championing s~hool choice,• National
In .a pmfile piece in the opposing abortion and advo- Chairman Ken Mehlman is white students, for instance
winter issue of "City eating low taxes as a road to devoted to - increasing - it's to tout free -market
. Journal ," contributing editor prosperity. The 57-year-old black Americans' identifica- solutions like vouchers and
Steven
Malanga calls ts equally comfortable tion with ihe Republican · charter -schools." Which i,1
Blackwell "Ronald Reagan's . preaching that platform to party - speaking about it why, Blackwell could prov~ ,
Unlikely Heir." Malanga the black urban voters of passionately both privately to be "Jesse Jack son' s· wor~t ·
...
· nightmare."
writes , "Ken Blackwell . has Cincinnati as to the white and publicly.
(Kathryn
Lopez
is
the
edii,.,
Addressing an NAACP ·
so many people 'worried .German-Americans .
in
because he represents a new Ohio''s rural counties or to · audience last fall, Mehlman tor ·of National Review'"
political calculus with the the state's business commu- said , "If you give us a Online . (www.nationalre,,-;
chance, we'll give you a view.com). She can be C0/1·
power to shake up American nity."
politics."
And Blackwell could win choice." That's good stuff tacted at klopez@natimwl1' ;
Who can have a power -having taken an early pre- we all go for, but Mehlman review. com.)

. .... .'214.21

:-r:UPPERS PLAINS - Joan E. Good Hayman of Tuppers
Plams passed away Feb. 3, 2006 at Select Specialty Hospital
in, Charleston, W.Va.
'
-She ,was born in Doylestown, Pa., to George and Marguerite
Hatler and moved to Port Charlotte, Fla. on Feb. 3, 1973. Joan
served as District Aux President and Post Aux President at
Post 569 in Port Charlotte. Joan had many jobs through her
life. includin~ being a wonderful mother.
.She IS surv1ved by her husband of 14 years, Manning "Doc"
Hayman of Tuppers Plains; a son, George G. (Tina) Good;
1\VO daughters, Pamela (Dennis) Krecklow and Michelle
Good, both of Port Charlotte; five grandsons: Dave and Brad
Good, Brett and Matthew Demers and Gerald Troxel, all of
Port Charlotte; a granddaughter, Ashley Troxel of Port
Charlotte; two sisters, Cheryl (Norman) Pratt of Chalfont, Pa.
.an~ Deborah Hatler of Doylestown, Pa.; a nephew, Michael
(C:'mdy) Kantor and their children, Zachary and Eli; a stepdaughter, Lmda (Jerry) Walker and their children, Derek ,
N11than and Abbey; a stepson, Kevin; and a number of nieces,
nephews and great friends.
.
.
.Services will be held at 2 p.m on Saturday, Feb. II , 2005, at
· White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville, with Rev.
Norman Butler officiatnig.
There will be no visitation .
;Memoriai contribution~ may be' made to the Diabetes
Foundauon m Joan Hayman 's name.

Deaths
•
'

; Richarct Vemon (Dickie) Walters
.GALLIPOLIS-· Richard Vernon (Dickie) Walters, 87, died
fv1onday, Feb. 6, 2006.
Visitation will be I to 2 p.m . Friday, Feb. 10 at the Christ
Episcopal Church with ·funeral services following at the
church. Burial will follow at Old Lone Oak Cemetery.
Arrangements . are under the direction of Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home , Point Pleasant, W.Va.
In lieu of flowers. contributions may be made to Christ
Episcopal Church, 804 Main Street, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550.

--------------------------------------~------------------------------~----------:

Local
Briefs
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Ohio Hunter Education
Class offered

POMEROY - An Ohio Hunter Education Class will be
held from 6 to 9 p.m. on March 27-29 and 9 a.m. to noon on
April I at the Pomeroy Gun Club on Pomeroy Pike.
Pre-registration is required and class size is limited .to 30
students. To register contact . the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District at 992-4282. The Ohio Hunter
Education course includes I 0 hours of instruction in hunter
ethics and responsibility, firearms , archery, first aid and
wildlife management and biology. 'Classes ;ue free and all
materials and manuals .are provided at no cost.

Singing valentines available
GALLIPOLIS - The French Colony Chorus, a local chapter of the women's barbershop group, Sweet Adelines
International, will perform singing valentines and deliver
flowers and photos on Feb. II and Feb. 13 and)4.
·
Appointment times will be confirmed _by phone prior to.the
visit to the' recipient's home, business, nursing home, hospital,
at civic. club. or church functions . or other sites in Galli a.
Meigs, Mason, and Jackson Counties.
',Information is available and reservations can be made by
calling 446-2476 or 992-5555, or online at frenchcolonychon{s@yahoo.colp.
·

Southern Band Boosters
plan dinner

J' I

I\

'" '

RACINE - A turkey/ham noodle dinner will be served
from I I a.m to 2 p.m s·unday at Southern High School. The
charge. is actults. $6,' students, $4. Dine-in or take out will be.
available. Proceeds go to the Southern Band Boosters for the
purchase of new instruments.

Dance classes offered

Die, Valentine's _Day, Die!
each other. A wife puts a day before that, and the day ...
Will you be my Valentine?
hubby in ·a trash compactor before that?"
·
:;
If you really love me, you'd
because he turned off Home
You could send a dozen ·.
buy me 24 long-stemmed
Shopping Network.
A heart-shaped Mylar balloons
roses. You'd buy me the
boyfriend runs a girlfriend to yol)r lover 's office with a
Serge Lutens' perfume ,
over
with a snow blower candy Kiss for each day
you 'd· buy me the Godiva
Jim
because she brought home you've known each other,
chocolates. If you're over
Mullen
the
wrong brand of beer. A . signed. with your pet names
16 and you still get excited
lover throw s a lovee into the like, ''To Snookums from
about Valentine 's' Day, I
wood chipper for not putting your Love Chunk 1" IJ:., ·
have four words for you - ·
the butter on the right side "Snukums" d&lt;:icsn 't die on.
iddy biddy widdie wickums.
It's time to grow up. H's be that half of all marriages of the bread. Trust me, it the spot• of embarrassment .•,
just
another
"fo liday" end in /livcirce. What they doesn't take much to get there will surely be a fatal ,
(Foliday: fake holiday that don 't tell you is that the yourself ki !led nowadays. . domestic quarrel . when the;, ,
True love is a walk in a ."Love Chunk" gets home.
exists only to push useless, other half of all marriages
end
in
murder.
Whoops'
minefield. One false step · How
about . inti mat&lt;;;...
non-retu rnable gifts and
greeting cards on a gullible You caught me exaggerat· and you can become a crime apparel? Did you buy thl(.·:
public. Personal Assistant's. ing . Please, don' t go squeal- statistic instead of another edible -teddy in a size 14: ·
Day, Bosses Day, Buy Me a ing like a stuck pig to Oprah notch in the divorce rate. when she 's a 20? Have you•"
you
celebrate crossed that thong-thin line
Present Day, etc). Want to (No real pigs were stuck to Before
make
that
si
mile).
Maybe
Valentine 's Day, beware of between romance and lech"•·
give your wife a real
Valentine? Don't get her a it's only 40 percent, but you lovers bringing gifts. It may ery?
get the picture. It 's a big· not turri out the way · you · The time spent shoppin•; ;
·card, go dean the -tuo for Valentine's !lowers, anJ-;
.
·
it ' ll knock her socks off. . If mistake to think that just expect.
because
some
couple
isn't
Will
it
be
a
bottle
of
wine
the time spent looking. fo;..
you're lucky, maybe some
means
that
they
are
divorced
from the year you met, a Valentine's cards, and th ~­
other clothes as well.
Want to show hubby you · happy. We all know better. toast and some cuddling - . time spent looking for ,·
love him'J Love him. If that Does O.J . ring a bei.P Scott · or two. dninkeil lovers fac- Valentine's perfume. and thil': :
doesn 't work, you don ' t Peterson'' Guess what'' ing off with a broken bottle? time spent looking foi:';
need a Valentine, you need a Scott Peterson's marriage The good news is that the Valentine 's chocolates ·~
wi ll never show up in the survivor will certain ly get a the time spen t looking for ,
lawyer.
miniseries of the week out that imc perfect thing is time ·
"Buy, ouy, buy" is .not , statisti cs on divorce.
Have
you
ever
noticed
of it.
you are not spendi ng wit ft.
"love, love, love ." It's the
Flowers are fine if you your Valentine . If you aren' t. ,
relationship paradox . Single that when you read about
people are unhappy because some particularly gruesome bring them home when it's the perfect girt. what is''
(Jim Mullen is the awhoi:
they are single, married peo· murder. the first suspect is not Valentine\ Day. B\lt if
always
someone
who
y&lt;1LI
only
buy
them
once
a
of
" II Takes a Village Jdin1:...
pie are unhappy because
"loves"
the
victim"'
Almost
year. it\ an invitation li1r Com1'limting tlw Sil"l"" ·
they are not. Is there a card
everyday
there·.,
a
\tory
·or
,
udden clcalh .
Lij(•" and " Bah r's 1-"in'/ .;
for that?
some
loving
couple
who've·
"So
where
were
the
y
yeshuroo. " Y.m can ;·each him'":
The . most depressing stathought
of~
new
way
to
kill
terday. h()t ·shot'! And th.c 'II jim_mllllen@m_n mr.mm ) . .•
tisiic of our tim~ has got to

GALLIPOLIS - The Ariel Theatre will be offering dance
classes with Sarah Fraser- Roush beginning Thursday. Various
classes will be scheduled on Thursday and Friday evenings,
and on Saturday for boys and girts : three through adult.
Classes will be taught. in ballet, modern and jazz. Group c!asse~ are $7 per session.
·
young people involved by
offering a variety of entertainment to appeal to all ages
at the festivals.
from PageA1
Hill al so had an idea to
Mill PM&lt;. including mainte- have one village festival a
nance. any new equipment , year that . does not conflict
how to enhance the park and with other festival s at surbaseball fields, and how to con- rounding villages to bring
tribute during village festivals. mo.re people into Racine and ·
All of the major decisions allow local businesses to only
made by the committee in be ·'hit up once a year" as Hill
regards to the festivals, park put it in regards to donations.
and ball field s would still have . For those interested in joining the parks and recreation
to be approved by co unciI.
Councilman Jim Harmon committee contact Hill at
sugge sted ge tting more 949-2296.

·Parks

~ ~1!~)/~~.!~i~!~~;(~~~~~~" ~

&amp;

~

..

.

-.~-

i. \(

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~

6

~

Pandora Jewelry .
Give Her Something New &amp; Different,
Fun and Whlmslcal!
Give Her Pandora Jewelry 14 K Gold
and Sterling Stiver
Troll beads In Sterling &amp; 18K Gold.

)!

1Ob E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Levy

Summit

Events ·

Call me ... Stop by... it's your choice!
•Auto •Home •Financial Products
•Business

scrap metal w~re stolen.
• Mailboxes on Morning
Star Road off County Road
from PageAi
28 were vandalized. ·
• The fence at the Amerkan
had been entered and a torch Electtic Power substation on
set. stolen. A large truck rim 'Ohio 7 was cut and several
wa' cut in IJa!( a dozen tracker pieces of wire were stolen. A
roller guide'. several pieces of trailer was ente red: but nothI 0-inch pipe and pieces of ing was reported stolen .

Investigate

Pomeroy ·
JEFF WARNER

113 W. 2nd

Street

992-5479

D
~In!

....

Nationwide•
On Your SKit·

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SlOt ......... -"f/1~

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ASK AN AUDIOLOGIST...•.
Q. Are digital heari11g aids better?
A. Digital heari11g aids offer more automatic features mrd
more complex sound processi11g strategies which mea11s the
signal received is more dear and "11atural .mu11di11g."

f$

Brandle :'\ance. 'l:\. ((. 'C·A

.)l

.lant' .o\nn ~urr Aarwstud. :\lA. t'Ct'·A
l. kt!nsed Au~ioloJ(isl

&lt;.{i

499 Richland Avenue, Athens, Ohio 45701

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992-7696
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~· ·

POMEROY
Meigs Carrboro, N.C. $150 and Columbu~. $30 and cmt1. 150 ;uspended. probation, dri County Court Judge Steven costs, equipment misuse; seat belt violation; Caleb W. ving under susp. I revoc .,. proL. Story recently processed Michael D. Lewis. Rutland, Owens, Sandyville, W.Va., bation, no taillights on vehicle;
the following c,ases:
$100 and costs, IOdays in jail, $38, probation, speeding, Carter J. Smith, Portland,
Charles
L.
Harmon, suspended, probation, criminal $200, 10 days in jail, seven $200, failure to control; Gary
Middleport. $20 and costs, fail- damaging/endangering. $1 00 S!!Spended, probation, no W. Somerville~ Marietta, $30
ure to control; Crystal G. and costs, 10 days in jail sus: operators license, $100, pro- and costs, speeding; Charmele
Harrison, Bidwell, $30. and pended, probation, criminal bation, false info. to police L. Spradling, Racine, $20 and
costs, seat belt violation; · trespass; Keith B. Locke, officer; John E. Partlow.- costs, · failure to control ;
Matthew M. Hart, Racine, $30 Chapel Hill, N.C.-, $30 and Langsville, $70, three days in Francis Straughters, Mt.
and costs, speeding; Charles K. . costs, speeding; Theodore jail, suspended, theft ; Francis Pleasant, Pa., $30 and costs,
Hetzer, Akron, $20 and costs, Loewendick. Gallipolis. $30 M. Pate, Airway Hts., Wash ., speeding; Euva J. Stumbo,
failure to control; Erin S. and costs, speeding; Shirley A. $20 and costs, violation-start- Symcuse, $350 and costs, 10
Holman, Racine, $30 and costs, Lude, Symcuse, $20 and costs, ing/backing;
Jason · R. days in jail, seven suspended;
speeding; Jerome D. Hamish, stop sign; Darlene N. Lynch, Peckham; Pomeroy, $30 and probation, driving under influThe Plains, $30 and costs, Stephenson, Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Charles J. . ence, $70, probation, failure to
speeding; , Roy W. Houser, costs, speeding; Christopher Pennington, Rutland, $30 and control,$ I00 and costs, probaGreen Mountain, N.C:, $35 and Manhart, Cincinnati, $30 and . costs, seat belt violation, $ 100 tion, no operators license.
costs, speeding; Jennifer L. costs, speeding; Thomas R. and ' costs, failure to control ;
James
M.
Thomas,
Howard, Waldo, $30 and costs, Mantle, McMurray, Pa., $31 Amy A. Perdue, Stephenson. Proctorville, $20 and costs, use
speeding; Darien R. Hughes, and costs, speeding; Diana M. W.Va., $30 and costs, speed- of unauthorized plates; Estel L.
Flint, Mich., $30 and cost~, Marlow, Worthington, $30 and ing ; Tiffany N. Priddy, Thompson, · Shady Spring,
speeding; Steven M. James, costs, speeding; .John R. Hebron, $30. and costs, seat W.Va., $30 and costs. seat belt
Racine, $50 and costs, equip- Maynard, Wharncliffe, W.Va., belt violation; MarkS. Prince, violation; Shawn A. Umbarger,
ment misuse; Michael P $35 and costs, · speeding; Hurricane, W.Va., $30 and Albany. $20 and costs. failure
Jenkins, Pedro, $50 and costs, Dawayne
Mcintosh , costs, speeding; Roben M. to control; Charles Valence,
hunt .deer vtio permission; Philadelphia, Pa. , $50 and Richard, Portland. $20 and Casselberry, Fla.. $50 and
Brandon S. Johnson; Amanda, costs, speeding; Zachary J. costs, assured clear distance.
costs, speeding; · Montgomery
$50 and costs, speeding; James McQuirt, Columbus, $30 and
Kelly
A.
Richmond.' Waddill, York, S.C.. $30 and
A. ·Jones, West Columbia, costs, speeding; Eric G. Columbus, $50 and costs, costs. speeding ; David R.
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Meinberg, Raleigh, N.C:, $100 speeding; Lynne M. Ricker- Walker, Dover, $30 and costs,
Jean A. Jones, Albany, $20 and and costs, equipment violation; Ward. Holgate. $50 and costs, seat belt violation; Chris Ward,
costs, right-of-way I public Samuel D. Mills, Columbus, speeding; Brent W. Rigsby, Trotwood, $300, 30 days in
·highway; Josepp D. Keller, . $30 and costs, seat belt viola- · Columbus, $ 100 and costs, jail, 20 suspended, probation,
f-lamilton, $50. and costs, tion ; Patrick B. Mitchell, equipment violation; Leandro driving under susp. I revoc.;
speeding; Myoung W. Kim, Parkersburg, . W.Va., $30 and , J. Riquene, Hialeah, Fla.; $20 Todd A. Warner, Hurricane,
Athens, $30 and costs. speed- costs, seat belt violation.
and costs, stop sign ; Lee A. W.Va., $30 and cost. speeding;
Jason A. Moore, Danville, Robinson, Washington, W.Va. , Charles E. Watkins, Raleigh,
ing; Randall Kimes, Long
Bottom, $350 and costs, 30 $30 and costs, seat belt viola- $20 . and .costs, stop sign ; N.C., $30 and cost~. speeding;
days in jail, 27 suspendOO, pro- tion; John J. · Morbitzer, Russell A. Robinson, Pomeroy, Claude J. Weese, Roseville,
bation, driving under influence, Tuppers Plains; $100, speed- $70, probation, hunting w/out $50 and costs, speeding; Jason
. $200 and costs, 30 days in jail, ing; Aaron A. Morgan, valid NR .license, $10 and Weith, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
27 suspended, probation, dri- Belpre, $50 and costs, speed· costs, probation, hunting w/out $30 and costs. seat belt violaving under OWl suspension, ing; Lou A. Morgan, special permit, S200 and costs. tion; Richard F. Wiegand!,
$70, probation, a~sured clear Williamstown , .W.Va., $50 probation, illegal! taking deer. Venice, Fla.. $30 and costs,
and costs, speeding; Chastidy $50 and costs. probation. hunt . speeding; Michael L. Wilson,
distance.
Timothy L. Kitts, Tazewell, D. Murphy. Reedsville, · $20 deer
w/out
permission: Whitman , W.Va. , $30 and
Va., $30 and costs, seat belt and costs, expired operators Douglas W. Rogers, Sylvania. costs. speeding; ian M. Wtse,
vjo!ation; Brian 0. Knapp, license; Walter V. Neese,
$30 and costs, speeding; Racine, $30 and costs. seat belt
Rutland, $20 and costs, failure Glasgow, Va .. $30 and costs, Joseph
H. Scott, Leroy. W.Va., violation; Jeffery B. Wood,
to register; John Laporte, · speeding; Stephen F. Nelson,
$30
and
costs. seat belt viola· Pickerington. $50 and costs,
Lancaster, $30 and costs. Gay, W.Va., $30 and costs,
tion;
Amber
D. Shadle. · speeding; Scott A. Wroblewski •
speeding: Jennifer R. Large, speeding; Robert L. Newlon,
Middleport, $ 100 and costs, Barboursville, W. Va,, $30 and Gallipolis. $30 and costs, Gallipolis. $100 and costs, no
expired operators . li cense; costs, speeding ; Erin M. speeding; Eric D. Shoults, operators license: Hirdaki
Vincent Lefebvre, Montreal, Norris, Ravenswood, W.Va., Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt Yamauchi, Hilliard, $30 'and
Canada, $20 and costs. stop $30 and costs, speeding: violation; Bradley \{. Sla)llon, costs, speeding; Bradley D.
Vinton. $! 00 and cqsts, proba- Young, Wellston, $30 and
sign;
Kelly
M: Leff; Jenny S. Nutter, Rutland. $20 tion,
hit skip/leaving scene; cosis, seat belt violation;
Centerville, $30 and costs. and costs, right-of- way I pubL. Smathers, Murray Roberta S. Young, Gallipolis,
Brian
speeding; Daniel L. Lehman, . lic highway; Brian C. Owens,
.
'
City, $30 and costs, speeding; $20 and costs, stop sign; Liza 1.
Anthony W. Smith, Cheshire, Zahran. Pomeroy, $30, seat belt
trees along North Second $100,' 30 days in jail, suspend- violation; Gregory L. Zeigler,
Avenue. The Community ed, resisting arrest, $50, [Xls· Bowling Green. $30 and costs, ·
Association, not the village , is session, SSOO, 180 days in jail, speeding.
.
paying
the
cost
of
those
lights.
from PageA1
They were first installed for the
The $1 00 million is part of
holiday season, but Phalin said
wouj,d be more \han the cost they
a
$35Q
million funding .packhave drawn so many comof keeping them on to begin . pliments that the Association
age of the recent emergency
with, Jannarelli sa'id.
appropriation for combating .
from PageA1
should consider keeping them
The filing deadline for burning at least through the
pandemic influenza passed by
levies and other issues for the dark months of winter.
Marshall said about why he is Congress this past December.
May ballot is . Feb. 16.
According
to
the
Each Christmas season, the auending the summit.
. . Department of Health and
Council will meet in regular association, mad~ up of local
"We need to make sure we Human Services the funds are
sesson on Feb.I3.
merchants and residents, pay have answers to these prob- meant to accelerate and inten- ·
There are over I 0,000 the difference in the village's
miniature white lights decorat- electric bill resulting from hoi- . Jems,'' he added when explain- · sify current planning efforts
ing the downtown business iday lights. Phalin said all of ing what he hoped the summit. for pandemic influenza with a
district.
and
although the downtown holiday lights, accomplished. "This (the sum- focus on practical, communiChristmas has come and gone. i ncluding snowflake pole dec- mit) is really about establish- ty-based procedures that could
they may remain up indefinite· orations and the small white ing a plan of action and setting prevent or delay the spread of
things into motion."
pandemic influenza. and help
ly if the non-profit Middleport lights in trees, cost $177.
Along with Ohio. receiving to reduce the burden of illness
Community Association can
Because the larger decorafunding
to combat a flu pan- communities would contend
finance the cost. ·
tions have · been removed
demic
were
all 50 states, seven with during an outbreak.
Brenda Phalin, Association from light poles and the
and
the
'The sky is not falling,"
President, said Tuesday inom: facade of buildings on Mill territories
Commonwealth
of
Puerto
Rico
Marshall
said of creating any
ing she has asked AEP to com- Street. the cost of keeping the
and
the
District
of
Columbia.
kind
of
panic
that a flu panpute the cost of lighting minia- ornamental trees· lighted is
ture white lights in the pear expected to be less than $1 00. Joining Los Angeles County in demic is inevitable but added
also receiving a cut of the $100 that no one could have figmillion pie were niajor metro- ured the probability of a level
'
for welcoming new businesses politan areas Chicago and New four hurricane destroying
into the Middleport retail com- York City.
New Orleans, until last year.
munity and will distribute gifts
· from Page A1
and informational material to
If You are Looking for a Low Plice,
•
them.
START Here. If You are L.ooki1g fQr . • •
The association will also
, membership recruitment letFun Setvice, Stop Here.
introduce a bi-monthly
ter will be mailed.
.
newsletter.
·to
be
distributed
Phalin also appointed a hos• Preferred-risk and '"tess-than-perfecf'
pitality committee. made up of to the membership by e-mail
drivers
herself, Baker and Stone: -The and to the general public in
• Convenient pay plans
committee will be rcsponsibl~ local stores.
• Competitive rates for a free auto quote,

~

-\:
·
·
·
HARTWELL
it
· ~
@
. -~
HOUSE i
K

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

MEIGS COUNIY COURT NEWS

Joan Hayman

I ll I

•

Our main concern in all stories is to be

of the Republican Party .

......

Leiters to th e editor are welcome. They sh011ld be less rhan
300 •mrds. ·All leiters are subject to editin g. musr be signed,
(lfld include address and telephone number. No unsigned leriers will he published. Letters should he ·in good last~.
addre.uing issues. nor personalities. Letters of thanks 10 orgalti:ations a11d i11dividuals wil111ot be accepted for publico lion.

Reader Services .

Changing the face

www .mydailysentinel.com

or 1-800-451-9806

AUDIOLOGY
AIDS ·

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

�PageA6

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel ·

SOUihem 'Goes Red'

Wednesday, February 8,

raise bean

2006

1\Jesday'a gamea

Boyo Booketboll
Southern 63, aves 46
Ale)(ander 61 , Eastern 41
Teays Valley 57 , South Gallla 54
Ravenswood 64 , Point P'leasant 49
Buffalo f09 , Hannan 58
Gatlie Academy 62 Athens 43
'
Gtrls Basketball
Meigs 39, Wahama 24

Local Weather
Today's Fo.r ecast

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

l..ocAL ScOREBOARD

city/Region
High 1Low temps

Wednesday, February 8, 2006

Tornadoes·take down Ohio Valley Christian, 63-46

29° 119°

BY ScoTT WoLFE

· Manefleld •
26" 118°

~

~

Break.

!J

Dayton·• ~.:
;.29• 119° L..3
1

LocAL SCHEDULE

*Columbua
29° 120°

GALLIPOLiS - A schedule ol upcomii'IQ COllege
and high school varsity sporting events ii)VOI\IIng
teams from Gallia , Meigs 11nd Mason counties:

~

Wednesday'• g1mes
Glrla Basketball
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 7:30 p.m.
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at Jackson
OVC tri ~ match
River Valley)

Cincinnati

tat

b Cioudy

p;rtly
Cloudy

b

Thursday's games
Girls Basketball
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley at South Gallia, 6 p.m. ·
Meigs at Alexander. 7:30p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
Southern at Miller, 6 p.m.

~

~
Showers

Wealher Underground • A,~

Wednesday .•• Mostly
cloudy. Highs in the. lower
30s. Northwest winds around
5 mph.
Wednesday night... Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows
around 19. Northwest winds
around 5 mph.
Submitted photo
Thursday .•• Partly cloudy.
Highs
in the lower 30s. West
Staff and students of the Southern Local School District recently wore red to raise awareness of heart disease . in women by .
participating in the American Heart Association's. "Go Red for Women." By wearing red clothing staff and students called atten- winds '5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night .•. Partly
tfon to the number one killer of women in the United States-' heart disease,

cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of snow showers. Cold
with · lows in the mid ' 20s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mpli.
Friday... Mostly
cloudy
· with scattered snow ·showers.
Highs in the mid 30s. Chance
of snow 40 percent.
Friday night •..Cioudy with
scattered snow showers. Cold
with lows in the lower 20s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.

Friday's games
Boya Basketball
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 7:30p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 8 p.m.
Pt. Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 8 p.m.
St. Joseph at Hannan. 7:30p.m."
South Gallia at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Waterford at Southern. B p.m.
M,an at Wahama, 7:30p.m. ·

Girls Baske1ball
OVCS at Grace, 5:30p.m,.

•

INSIDE

Mobile clinic brings free immunization clinics Local Stocks
ATHENS The Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopathic Medlc.ine (OUCOM)
. Childhood
Immunization
Program
(CBIP), a mobile health program, will provide free routine immunizations for all
area children from birth
through 18. years of age.
The service is available to
families of all mcomes even those with insurance
coverage. To receive immunizations, parents are asked to
take the child's previous shot
records.
If your chiJd has not had
chicken pox, it is suggested
that the child be given the

Residents are also reminded
vaccine during the clinic visit.
Complications from chicken that high school students who
pox increase the older the . will be li ving .in a college dorchild is when ~e/she gets the mitory soon might want to get
the new and improved
disease.
The schedule is as follows: meningococcal vaccine wh,ich
Tuesday s: Athens, Parks is now available through
hall . ground floor, I tn 5:30 CHIP for $115.
The clinics are provided by
p.~ . : Thursdays, 8:30a.m. to
OU -COM
Childhood
noon.
lmmu.
n
ization
Program's
Monday. Feb. 20. Belpre:
Howe's Grove Park from I community mobile health unit
to 2:30 p.m.; Reedsville: and the Ohio Department of
Meigs
Library Eastern Health in eooperation with
County ·
Health
Branch on SR 7 from 3:30 to the
Departments, AHEC. and the
4:30p.m.
Adult immunizations will site sponsors. For more inforbe available for a nominaL mation about the· immunizafee: Tetanus/diphtheria $1 0.; tion program call toll free 1800-844-2654
Hepatitis B S34.

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

Pepsico - 56.86
.Premier - 15.54
Rockwell - 66.87
Rocky Boots - 22.73
Sears -116.97
Wai-Mart- 44.74
Wendy's - 57.50
Worthington - 19.67

USB- 29.35
ACI- 81•.77
Gannett- 61.98
AEP-36.01
General Electric Akzo- 51 ·
Ashland Inc. - 63.69 . 32.31
QKNLY _..: 5.25
BLI-13.19
Harley Davidson ......;
Bob Evans - 26.96
50.35
BorgWarner - 55.36
JPM- 39.26
CENX- 36.47
' Kroger- 1.8.95
Champion ---.,. 4.41 ·
Ltd.- 23.05
Charming Shops NSC -48.95
12.51
Oak Hill Financial City Holding - 36.30
Col- 49'.96 ·
31.65
OVB- 25.20
DG -'-17.17
BBT- 38.43
DuPont - 39.18
Peoples- 28.54
Federal Mogul - .39

Close to·You

.Spartans strike
revenge on Eastern
BY BRAD

• Meigs defense offends
Wahama. See Page 82
• HS prep standings.
See Page 82

CONTAcrs ·

Sports Staff

Brad Sherman, Spons Editor
(740) 446·2342. ext: 33
bsherman@ mydailytribune com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740} 446·2342. exl. 23
bwalters@ myda ilytribune .com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
lcrum@mydailyregister.com

(740)JIJ..IIN

POMEROY
Molly
Wood, a sophomore· at
Westerville South Hi gh
School , won the O.C.C.
Central Division Diving
Championship, held on · ·Jan.
27 at the Dublin Recreation
Center in Dublin.
Her score was 348.75 ,
beating second place by
49.35 points.
Molly is the daughter of
Teresa and Mike Wood of
Westerville, and the granddaughter of Kenny and Gertie
Brewer, of Pomeroy.
She is the great-granddaughter ·of the late Lucille
Clay of Pomeroy and. the late
Allen and Audrey Brewer of
Portland.

• Cataract Sur~JY
• Diabetic Eye re
• Children's Exams

as hi

•

Ev•rywh•r• ·

•

.

'

.•

·•·
~

'

,I

Dr. Reaves is certified 1:11 the American Board of

Ophthalmology'.

The Daily Sentinel
'

.Lisa H. Reaves, MD

.

.

740.446.5421

goals in the stint with a ~reat
inside tlrst and ,ecQnd elfort .
In a matter of a couple min.- ·
utes and a pep talk from
Coach Bill ·· Burle&gt;On , the
Defenders had rallied back
into contention . Southern got
a boost from Crouch. Sellers,
and McKnight to end the
frame and lead 18-16 after
one round.
The second quarter was a
battle. OVC tied .the game
18-18 on a W~ber driver,
then SoUthern edged to leads
of 22-18. 26-22. and 28-25 ·
before settling into a slight
32-29 lead at the h·alf.
Soulhern 's Patrick Johnson
and We s Riflle I four and six
points respectively) paced the
Tornadoes in the streak. ·
Defender Coughenour drove
a stake into the hean of the
Tornado . with two three
pointers each time Southern
looked as though they had
build some preathing room.
Scouten and Weber added
buckets to round out the scor~·
ing for the half.
Fueled by a Josh Pape three
pointer, and a pair of goals
each from Johnson and
Sellers, Southern went on a
12-3 run right out of the gate
to stan the second half. That
came on the heel s of a Zach
Carr tri-fecta that made it 4032 Southern before · the
Tornadoes opened it up to 5Q34 and OYC called time out.
At the end of three round ~ •

.Please see So..-hern, B&amp;

Rawson ·

h
ltttle wrong with both of
them."
The . severity of the
injuries was not available at
press ti~e :
. If one or both have to mi ss
signitlcant time, it will be a
huge blow to the Eagles'
Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking Division title
hopes. They are one game
back and still ha v~ important games· against leanue
leaders Trimble and Fedlral
Hocking remaining. · '
. And more importantly,
t ere. might be something !l

Please see Eastern. Bl
~

.

~

MRC CT~ Bone Density &amp; Ultrasound
Nuclear Medicine
Rehabilitation Services
Sleep Disorders Center
Neuro-Physiology Center
Cardiac Rchabi Iitation
San1e Day Surgery
24-Hour Etnergency Services
Comprehensive Won1en ~s Health
&amp; Support Groups

•

and ~plate Eye Care

PROUD TO BE APART ..
OF YOUR LIFE..
Subtcri/Je today • 992-2155
WWW.,ydizllysentinel.,com
;,
.·,.,
.

rrlng;

- Cozart

.

Molly Wood

Youth wins diving.
championship

TUPPERS PLAJNS Alexander did .indeed
avenge one of its few losses
- but it was hardly against
the same Eastern team.
Daniel Skidmore scored
21 points and the Spartans
won their I Oth · in-a-row
after a bittersweet 61-41
boys basketball victory over
Eastern, which lost Nathan
Cozart and Kyle. Rawsori to
·
injury on Tuesday.
Cozart was knocked down
as he nailed a 3-pointer late
in the second quarter. The
senior standout appeared to
have rolled his ankle and
had to tie helped off the
floor. Likewi'se Rawson, the
team' s second scorer, left
,with an ankle injury soon
after halftime.
"Nathan and Kyle are both
going to the hospital to get
their ' ankles x·rayed,"
Eastern
coach Howi·e
Caldwell said afterward.
"Our trainer, · she thinks

.
...............................
..........
.........
•
••

HOLZER
CLINIC
Odlpolll
(740).uwut

SHERMAN

BSHE;RMA.N@MYDAILYTRIBI.-JNE.COM

Phone- 1·?40-446·2342 ext. 33
Fax - 1· 740·446-3008
E-mail -sports@ mydailysentineLcom

£'
If

GALLIPOLIS - Placing
eight of its I 0 players iri the
scormg column, the Southern
Tornadoes (3- 15) ·pulled
away from a
32-29 halftime score ·to
defeat the
Ohio Valley
Christian
Defenders
(7-13) 63-46
Tuesday
night during
boys nnnleague varsiJohnson
ty basketball
action on the
Ohio Valley
Christian
campus.
Prior to the
game
the
Defenders
celebrated
Senior night,
honor 'i ng
four senior '
Sellers
basketball
players and
three senior cheerleaders,
who were playing their last
Cha~te Shepherd/photo
home encounter. The seniors
Southern's
Weston
Counts
(34)
tracks
down a loose ball
were honored for their contrirebound
during
Tuesday's
63-46
win.
over
OVCS
in Gallipolis.
butions to the Defender winter sports programs. The several others close. Junior game with eight, Josh Pape
senior night
festivities ~atnck Johnson led the scar- notched
seven. Weston
seemed to fuel the Defender tng parade with 13 points, . Counts seve n, Brad Crouch
· intensity, making for a very while Corbin Sellers notched six and Jacob Hunter two.
close first half of play.
I~ points. · Sophomo~e Wes Kreig Kleski and Bryan
Southern placed two men Rtffle. netted etght. Jesse. Harris filled in well, but did
in double figures and had McKmght had a good· inside not score.

.

Brandon Coughenour led
the Defenders with a barrage
of four 3-pointer; that netted
the talented guard a game.high 15 points . Zack Weber
h~d another great game with
13 points, while Zach Carr
and Luke Stinson each had
five, Michael William s four
Luke Swiney two and Dre.;
Scouten two. Nathan Brown ··
Henry Patrick. and Richard
McCreedy had· good floor
games, but did not score.
·Southern took the opening
lead 2-0 on a Corbin Sellers ·
jumper from the short corner.
Then offen se stood at a.stand
still between an exchange of
turnovers and foul s. Finally,
the Tornadoe s burst out of the
gate on drives by Jesse
McKnight, Brad Crouch: and
another goal from Sellers to
take an 8-0 lead in a blistering 4-4 shooting stretch.
A Josh Pape driver sent the
.score to 10-0 as Southern
went 5-7 from the lloor right
out . of the starting blocks.
After missing its first three
attempts, the Defenders
buckled down behind the
cheers of an entbusiastic student body. OVC went 5-6 on
its next six possessions to cut
the score to 14- 11.
.
Stinson hit an inside post
jumper and a free throw,
Zack Weber drove the lane
from the high post and hit an
oJdlfashioned three-point
play, and Zach Carr drove the
baseline for . another score.
Weber netted two more tleld

' l ••

Dally stock reports ar.e
the 4 p.m. closing
. quotes of the previous
day's transactions, pro- .
.vlded by Smith Financial
Advisors of Hilliard
Lyons in Gallipolis.

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·-- -- ---. -------·--'---------- - -

�Page 8 2 • The Daily Sentinel

,

Boys Basketball
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
SEO
A LL
Warre n
7·1
15·2
Marietta
7-1
10-6

5-4
5-4
2-7
0-9

Gallia Academy
Logan
Athens

10·8
9-8
5-13
2· 17

TRI-VALLEY CONFER ENCE

Ohio Divisio n
Alexander
Belpre

Nels-York
Vinton Co.
We1iston
Meigs

Trimble
FeO Hock

TVC
7· 1

ALL

5·3
5·3
5·3
2·6
0·8

12-5

, 5·3
1 0·7

10·8
7-1 1
1- 16

Hocking Division
TVC
5·2

M111e,r

6·2
5·3
4·4
2·6

Southern

1·7

Eastern
Waterford

All
12-5
12·5
10-7
10-7
8·9
3-15

OHIO VALLE Y CONFERENCE
OVC
ALL

#Chesapeake

8-0
5-3

15-2
10-7 '

4-4

9-8

. 4-4

8-9

. Fatrland
Rock H 1ll

Soutn Point
. River Valley

7·10
·5· 12

3-5
0·8

· Coal Grove

All
13-4
10·6
8·6
4·16
2· 17

· So uth Gallia

: Wahama
Hannan
ovcs
Pomt Pleasant
Girts Bas ketball

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETI C
s eo
ALL

8·2
7·3
7·3
6-4
2·8
0-10

14·6
14-4
10-10
13-6
8-11
2·18

TRI·VALLEY CONFERENCE

Ohio Division
TVC

All

#Alexander
8-1
Belpre
6-3
V1ntonCo
5·3
Nels-York
5-4
1·8
Me1gs
Wellston
1-7
Hocking DiviSion
Trimble
Waterfoid
Eastern
Fed Hock
Miller
Southern

15-4
10-9
11-7
1f-8
5· 14
4-14

TVC

ALL

8-1
7-1
4-5
4-5
3-6
0-8

17·2
14-4
8-11
4-1 s
8-1 1
8-10

OHIO VALL"EY CON FERENCE

#South Pomt
Coal GrOve
Fairland
Rock Hill
· Chesapeake
R1ver Val.ley

ave

Al l

8-1

14-4
15-4
11 ·7
6· 13
5·14
'3'·1 5

7-2.

6-3
3·6
2·7
1·8

OTHEMNDEP.ENDENTS
ALL

Point Pleasitnt
Wahama
South GaUia
ovcs
Hannan

9- 10
8·9
6·11

7-12
t -14

#-League champ1on

BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS I t wasn't p r etty. but girl s basketbal l games are not
decided on style points.
Meigs lim ited W ah ama 's offen se to
t h ree
field
goa l s
through three quart ers T u esday
and
allowed a t o ta l of six
baskets during a 3924 n o n -con ference

more of i t.
''We're not real good offen sive l y,
so if we are go ing t o be close we have
to co m e o ut a n d do t hi ngs on
defe n se," h e said . "We haven ' t been
doing t hat l ate l y, .btn we did that rea l
well t o n ight. ··

The host s st y mi ed WH S into a 3of-30 sh oot i ng effort th ro ug h _ three

st re tc h to secur e the 15-point v i ctory.
Afterwa rd MHS co ac h Carl· W o l fe
about hi s t eam's tre m e n dou s defen si ve e ffort. an d h ow he· d like to see

After traili n g briefly (3-2) in t he
open in g st a n za, t he M aroon and Gold
wen t o n · an 8-3 ru n over t h e f i nal
seven m i nut es of the fi r st to est ab li sh
a 10 -6 edge. During t h at surge , Meigs
hel d th e R e d and W h ite scor e l ess ·
d uring t he f i n al 2:49 of the p e r iod.

..

10 r e bounds.
B eth K eyes c h i p ped in "six poi nts t o
the setback , w hi le A i rel Deri field w as
n ext with f ive m ark e r s.
Over all M e i gs o utr b o unde d t h e
g u ests 44-30 in the contest , including
a 16-12 e d ge o n t h e off en si v e -gl ass.
B oth
team s
f inish e d
w ith
10

Bryan Walters/photo
M eigs' A my Barr

(30)

looks for an

o pe n t eam mat e du ri ng Tue sday' s
2 4 wi n over visit ing Wahama .

39-

points. M eg C l e ll and foll o wed wi t h
six m a rk e r s, whil e both Amb e r

Cozart. w h o was a verag·
ing 17 po int s pe r gam e,
sco r ed I 0 be f o r e l eav ing
w hi le Ra wson was th e l ea di n~ r e b o uhde r w ith nin e.
Stili. Eas te rn w a s abl e to
h a n g w i t h th e pow erful
Spa rt ans t h ro u g h three quar ters be f o r e Al exan de r pulle d
aw.ay in the fo urth .
.
Sk idmo r e h it tw o free
t hrows
the n
R y l an
K i r k c 1ida ll , . w h o added 17 ·
po iiu s.
t osse d
in
three
stra i ght h oop s as the v i s i to r s
we nt o n a 8-0 run to go up
15 early in the fina l period.
The 'A the n s
Co untian s
o utscor e d E ast e rn 21· 8 o v e r
the final eight m i nutes .
A l exande r impro ved t o I 53 w ith the vi ctory, its lOth .
straig ht si nce East ern handBrad Sherman/photo
ed it a 62-61 overtime loss
Eastern's Mark Guess dribbles by an Alexand e r defender dur·
i n the f inal s of the Spartan s'
• ing Tuesday' s 61-41 toss 1n Tuppers Plai n s.
·
ow n h o liday tourn a m e n t.
Cozart scored a care e r - hig h
l:fe score d a season- low I 0
th eir priniary b all h a ndler.
46 po ints in that gam e.
on Tue sday, and w i thout
t h e Eag l e~ stru ggl e d . East e rn

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

c hippe d
in
f ive a p ie c e.
c ommit ted
15 of its 2 0
Mi c h ael Owen and R a w son
turnov e r s
afte r
Coza rt 's
each tossed in a buc ket.
injury.
Al exander jumped o ut to
" We had people in situ aa n 18-9 l ead after one quarti o n s t h at they hadn' t b een
ter. S kidmo r e m ade
p a tr ·o f
in,"
C a ldwell
admitted .
.
3-p
o
inters
and
scor
ed
eight
" Mo st of the turnov e r s that
points
in
th
e
p
erio
d
.
E
astern
,
w e h ad at the end, I w o u l d
whic
h
m
ad
e
ju
st
14-o
f-51
say o f those 15, eight or nine
sh o ts on the nig ht, e ndured a
o f those w e r e unfo r ce d."
cold start from the fi e ld.
E a stern (l 0-7), whic h saw
Th e Ea g l es h e at ed up ,
three-game win streak
thou g h and scored six of the
sn a pped , al so made jus t · 11 first eight points in the seco f - 26 from the f ree throw
ond quarter to pull to within
line.
,
six . Later on , Cozart 's 3" Foul shooting, there i sn ' t
pointer cut t~e defiCit to 25a ny e xc u se for the foul
21. After a brief d e lay . to
shooting," the veteran coac h
attend ·to the fallen C o z art ,
added . " You ' ve got to b e
McGrath made a l ayup to
able to st e p up a nd y ou ' v e
pull Eastern to within two.
got to b e able to make f o ul
· That w as a s close a s
-shot s."
East e rn · got
a ll
ni g ht.
A le xander m es h ed l 5-o f Alexander l ed 2 6 c23 a t half2 0 c harity to sses e n route to
time and n e ver saw its lead
the win . .
dip b elow three th e r est of
The
Sparta n s'
R~ a n th e n i ght.
Tho m as added e i g ht pomts
De spite an awful sho oting
and Z ach H edrick went ·for
di spl ay , the Spartans won the
third quarter 14- 10 b e fore
six.
pulling
a w ay i n th e fourth .
Bryce
Honake r
h e lpe d
Al e ll made 20-o f-53 floors
pi c k up th e scoring sl ack f or
shots on the nig ht.
Eastern , as h e tied Cozart for
Alex a nder return s to TVC
teani- hi g h honors with I 0 .
Al ex McGrath scored seve n
off the be ru; h while Marcus
Gue ss a nd Derek Rou sh

Ohio action Friday a t B elpre,
while Eastern f ace s Hoc king
leader Trimble .

AD NOW ONLINE

m:rtbune

~egt~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... · or Fax To (740) 446-3008 .
. or Fax To {740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) !)75-5234
To Place

Mo_nday thru Friday
HOW IQ WRJTE

AM AD.

\'\\ (t ! \i t \ II \ I \

~,r.·__

G_IVF:A.-•W•I!i•Y-_.11

4 mo old mixed breed pup·
pies to good home. Call
(740)448· 3897 .
8 month old btackJwhlte
female cat, +nside only. litter
lrained. (740)388.0523.
Black/white spayed female
.
lap cat,' indoor only
Blaeklwhite female cat, le~s
than 1yr. ·old, 1ndoor only
Will spay. (740)446-2700 .
Free fireWood. Approx. 3 P.U.
d~ l a wed .

3yr old yel low stripped cat.
Very fnendly, indoor only.
(740)446·2700.
:.........:..._
___
Sol1d White 5yr old Female
Registered
German
Shepherd, Spayed. to good
'Ho_m_~.....:.c
i 304.:....:1_
88'-2-·34
~B6___
To good hOme 1.5 year old
male Basset Hound, tri·
color. ha"Ye papers can be
AKC registered . (740)446·
3210.
To good home: 4 year old
female tri-color Basset
Hound, AK C registered.
(740)446·32 10
LobT AND

F

·

OlJND

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

Sunday Dl•play: 1 : DO p.m.
Thuraday for Suf')daya

Deac:rtptfon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

1r

%~

Senior Discount*
·on your home delivered
subscription!
Here's all you
need to do .. _,.
Fill ·out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a ·
copy ofyour photo ID.
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Address
City/State/ Zip -----~-----Pho n e
Mall or drop off this coupon atong
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Oh io V a ll e y Publi s hing P. O . Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 4p631

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POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlahlng r......,.. the right to «&lt;it, reject, or Cllnc.t any ad at any time. Enor1 must be reported on tile tiret d1y ol
1
Tribun...S.ntlnef-.Regltter wiU bt rHPOnalble tor no mort than the cott of tM t ,.C. oocupled by thtlfrOf and only the fi~1 in Mrtion. We shall not be I
any loa• or upe~ th.t ruulta fr om fhe publlc.tlon or omt. .lon of t n advertiMmtnt. c«rec:tlon wiUbe made In the firat avaiitabl e edition. • Bolt
art alway• confidential. • Current rtte card 1PPII11. • All real
a dvertiMmenta art
to ltlt Federal Fa ir Housing Act ot 1968. • Th lt
accept• only help wanted ede m•tlng EOE atendard,t. We wHI not knowingly accept any
wloletlo n of the law.

•tat•

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

- ~t50

1

around , : nted To Buy. Meigs
lyons
Add.
Mason. County· Store Script,' Store
Answers. to Oreo Male, Tokens, and currency from
neu tered&amp;missing bottom· Racme.
Pomeroy,
and
front
tooth
Mainly Middleport Ban ~s 740·992·
black&amp;whlte w/some brown 6040
on back paws. Has been
t \l l't l n \ 11 '\ 1
missing slhce approx.
begi nning oi Jan. Often
"'I I&lt;\ li I ..,
seen at Walmart . If you
have any/info. _Please call·
HF.J.PWANTFD
1304)n3-6061 or (304)593·
'1857 . Sadly missed by
Owners &amp; Children.
100 WORKERS NEEDEO
Assemble crafts,
wood items.
. .•Y•MID
. . SME
.. . . .
To $480/wk
__
Matenals pra"Yided
Free info rmation pkg 24Hr.
YARD SALE801-4:28-4649
"
G•"
~
'
"
L....._oiiiii~iiiiliilii~~
A keyboard player needed
-for new Chnstian rock/pra ise
Garage sale: 638 j ay Drive. and worshtp band. We are
B~y stuff, brand name ch ii- not teenagers and we are
drens clothes. Thurs-Sat . seasoned musicians. Great
12pi'n-4pm
sou nd system and light
shoW with fog machines win
be in place. Studio record·
WANlliD
ing with CD sales 1n addition
TOBIN
to . liv~ sho~s. 740~367·
7129. J1m
· Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. · - - - -- -- SliVer and Gold Coins, An Excellent way to earn
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre· money The NeW Avon.
1935
U.S
Currency, Call Marilyn 304-882~2645
Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S .
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-4462842.

r

~~-----....,

1110

HaP WANnD
·------·
Drivers:
Regional loads Great pay,
company beilefits &amp; bonuses. COL-A w/1yr vert. tractor
1rl exp. req Martin Transport
866-293-7435

Motor Route Q(lver
needed in the l eon area.
Pay over $1.000/month
Must have Reliable
Transportation
Contact
Sean' M. Cullen.
(30~ ) 675- 1 333 ext. 20

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears, 304675-1429 .

©liD!.

• NO EXPERIENCE NECESS... RY
' FULL· Tlt.1E CLASSES
' COL m.-.ININ G
" FINANCING AVAILABLE
' JOB PLACEMENT
• ENF'IOI..li:O.G NOW

Guard1ng Angels Child Care
Center 'is now accepting
applications for a Teacher's
Aide/Floater. This position is
a part ttme position . This
position ts des1gned to assist
the stall in meet 1ng the
needs of children If you are
self mo!JWateCI." dependable
and en1oy wor!Mg ~t h chil·
dren. then this could be the
position for you. You must be
at least t8 years of age and
have a h1gh schopf diploma
or cef'tilication ol high school
equivalency (GEDY by th e
state board of electton.ll you
. are interested in this posl·
liOn. please contact Becky
Hess or Dama ·schultz at
(740)388-8671 for more
information
Help wanted at the . Darst
Adult
Group
Home,
(740)992·5023

Local business l'ooking for
Secretary/Receptionist.
Must have good telephone
ALLIANCE
sk1lls &amp; good with the public,
;R~~i~oA6:ji~E:S
knowledge in computers &amp;
all 01her of11ce machines.
WYTHEVILLE. VA
Hours: 8am-5prn Monday1-800·334-1 203 Friday, 8·12 Saturday.
PO Box was published
.wrong please resubmit
Desk Clerk needed. Please
resumes to:
apply at Budget Inn.
local Business
Jackson Pike:_ Gallipolis. NO
PO. Box 755
phone calls please.
Gallipolis. OH 4~631
Orlvel'l Needed:
COL Dnvers w1lhnQ to dnve
for local re ady·miX+concrete
company E•perience IS
preferred .but not necessary
Med. 1nsuranco &amp; other
benefits available at1er wa1t·
mg period Dri'.ler must be
willing to do pre-maintenance,on trucks &amp; equipment, yard wo r ~ &amp; other
miscellaneous chor.as
Experience operaMg eqUipment &amp; extra sJcills such as
welding a plus.
Call (304)937·3410 .
Located 1n Mason County
near Buttalo WV

-~

L,.

Cortcealed Pistol Class AU
States Feb., 11 2006 ..
$75 .00.
9.00am. VFW
Mason WV Ph . (740)843·
5555.

EXTRA! EXTRA!

Attention Drwers:
R&amp;J
Trucking IS look1ng tor
Dri"Yers w/1 yr OTR,
Experience for Regional
Hauls. Average pay 40's lo
mid 50's 'Home every
Weekend
call
Kent
(800)462·9365

Srnoot.s

A new career in
Medical Office
Admini stration
starts with career
tra1ning @
Gallipolis Career
College
(740)446·4367
800·214-0452
12748

r

4x4's For Sate .. ...................................... .... .. 725
Announcement ............................... .... ......... 030
Antlques ... ................................... ..... .. .......... 530
Apartments for Rent.. ..............................·... 440
Auction arid Flea Market ........... .. .. .... ..........
Auto Parts &amp; Accesaorlos .......................... 760
Auto Repslr ............................ ...................... 770
Autos for Sate .....~ ................. .. ..................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sate ........................... .. 750
Buttdtng Supptlee ................. ........ ... ......:..... 550
Business and Buildings ........................ ..... 340
Business Opportunity .. ...... ... .. .... ................ 21 0
Business Tralntng ..................-......................140
Ca!llpers &amp; Motor Homes ............. .. ... ......... 790
Camping Equipment .................... ............... 780
Carda of Thanka ..................:·....................... 010
Chttd!Eiderty Care ........................... .... ........ 190
Electrtcai/Relrlgeratlon ...... .. ..... .................. 840
Equipment for Rent... ..... ............. ................480
Excavattng ............................. ...................... 830
Farm Equlpment.. .... .. .... .......... .. ................... 610
Farms for Rent., ...... .. ...... .. ...........................430
Farms for Sate ............................. ................ 330
For Lease .. ...... ......................... .......·............. 490
For Sale .. ... .... ............ ...................... ............. 585
For· Sale or Trade ... ... .. ..................... ............ 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetabtes .. .. .......... . : .. ...................
Furntahed Rooms ...... .. ........ .. .................. .... 450
Generai Hauttng.... .. ... ... .... ................, ....... :..850
Gtveaway ......................................................Q40
H'ppy Ads ............... .. ...... .. ..................... .. .... 050
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ........... .......... .. .......................... 110
Home tmprovements ...................................810
Homes for Sale ........................ .................... 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent ...................... .. ................... 410
In Memortam ................................................020
Insurance ......................................... ,........... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equtpment ........................ 660
Llvestock ...................... ......................... .. ... .. 830
Lost and Found .... ....................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreoge ...... .. .. .... ... .. .. .... ............; ...... 350
Mlacetlaneous.... .. ........ ..... ,.......................... 170
Miacellaneous Merchandtse............... ..: ... .. 540
Mobile Home Repalr ..........., ........................ 860
Mobtle Homeo for Rent ................ ............... 420
Mobile Homes tor Sate ................................ 320
Money to Loan .. .... ....................................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters .......................... 740
Musical tnstruments .. ... ........ : .... .. ............... 570
Personals .......... .. ......................................... 005
Pets for Sale .............. .. .... ; .. ......................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .... .... :.. ......................... 820
Profeastonat Servlces .. .. .. ......................... .. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repatr ..............,................ 160
Real Estate Wanted .................................... . 360
Schools lnatructton.:......................: ............ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllzer .. ............................ 650
Situations Wanted ........................................ 120
Space lor Rent. ........... ...... ........................... 460
Sporting Goods ............... ............................ 520
SUV "s for Sate .............................................. 720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ............. .. ................... :................ 870
Vans For Sato .................................. .-....... .. ... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm 5upplles .................. 620
wanted To Do .............. ................................ 180
Wanted to Rent ... ......................................... 470
Yard Sale- Gatllpolls ............................. ...... .. 072
Yard Sille-Pomeroy1Mtddle ......, .................. 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pteaaant ................................ 076

••••••••pe• I

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

or older?

~ttnb .ap f!ttme~

Oecullfir~

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

. Found : St Bernard · mix
puppy, approx 4 mo. old, St.
At . 554 area Bidwell. I buy Junk Cars (304)773·
(740)388·0321 .
5004
.

Are·you 66

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take on Al exa nde r. T i p-o ff i s slated
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Public Notice
PUBLICNOTICE
In compliance with
Amended
Secti on
319.11 · of the Ohio
Revised Code , a lull
and complete copy of
the annual financial
report of the Meigs
County
Board
of
Health is ~vailable for
public Inspection at .
the offtce of the
Meigs
C ounty
Audit or,
Mei gs
County Co urthouse .
The Auditor's office
ho urs are Monday
through Friday, 8:30
a.m . to 4:30 p.m . and
the telephone nu.m ber is 740-992-2698.
2/8

PLUS

1.:.....

p .m .
M ei gs
r e turn s
to
Tri - V a lley
C o nference Ohio Divi si o n ac tion
Thursday when it t ra vel s to ' Alba ny to

a

Diesel
1 B7KF26C9SS357365
2003 Bri-Mar Dump
Truck
Trailer
43YOC1 0293C02652
Tho Home National
Bank reserves the
right to reject any and
all bids. All vehicles
are sold, as is where
is , with no warra11ties
expressed or Implied.
For an appoin1ment
to see, -call 949·2210,
ask for Sheila .
(2) 8,9,10

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

W ahama next plays Thursday when
it travel s to M hton , W. V a., to play .
Hannan. Gam e tim e i s slate d f o r 7 .

a

·secti o n al tou r n a m e nt pl ay i s
o nly t wo wee k s m v ay.

Carter aka Pamela
Meigs County, Ohio.
Meigs County, Ohio.
Boso Properly AI:
Parcel Number: 07- Also, the Easterly
706
Sixth
Street,
00554.000. Current
one-Half of that porRacine, Ohio PPH 19·
owner : Michael &amp; ·tion of the Atley
00216, 19-oo217 Prior
Cindy Conley et al
which Is contiguous
Deed
References:
Property at 54435
with the Westerly
Volume 120, Page 703
New Portland Rd, boundary
of
the
Appraised
at
Portland, Ohio 45776. above-described Real
$60 ,000.00 Terms of
PPI 07·00554 Prio
Estate.
Subject to
sate. Cannot be sold
Deed
References :
Water Line Easement.
·· for tess than 2/3rds of
Volume 322, Page 437
Subject •to all Legal
·the appraised value.
Appraised
at
Highways
and
10% down .on day of
$50,000.00 terms of
Easements
of
sale , cash or Certified
sale: Cannot be sold
Record. Commonly
Check, balance due · for less th!iln 213rds of
known as : 181 Baech
on c onfirmation of
the appraised value. Street P"a srcel No. 15sale . The . appraisal
10% down on day of
Current
00103 .000
did not include an
sale-, cash or certified
owner :
Darrel
T.
interior examination
check, balance due · Young et at 181
of the house. Robert
on confirmation of
Beech
Street
E.
Beegle,
Meigs
sate. The appraisal
Middleport,
Ohio
County
Sheriff.
did include an interior 45760 PP# 15-00103
Attorney
lor
tho
examination. of the
Prior
Deed
Plaintill Stephen D.
house . Robert
E. · References : Volume
Mites.
" 18
W
Beegle , Meigs Coun~y
153,
Page
33
Monument
Ave,
Sheriff. Attorney for
Appraised
at
· Dayto n, Oh 45402
the Plalntilt Lerner
$27,500.00 Terms of
-(2) 8 , 15, 22
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss,
Sate : Cannot be .sold
P.O.
Box
5480, for less ·than 2/3rds o1
Cincinnati, OH 45201 ·
the ·appraised value .
Public Noti ce
5480, 51 3-241 ·3100
10% ·down on Day of
(2) 8, 15, 22
Sale,
Cash
or
Sherilt Sale
Certified
Check ,
Case
Number
Balance
due
on
05CV074 ·
· Public Notice
Confirmation of sale .
ABN AMRO Mortgage
The apprai sal did not
Group
Sheriff Sate
include an interior
Case
Plainti ff
Number
examination of the
vs
05CV083
house .
Robert E.
Mic ha e l
&amp;
Cindy
Wells Fargo Bank NA
Beegle, Meigs County
:Conley at al defen Plaintiff VS
Shorilt. Attorney for
,
.
dants
Darrel T Young et al
the Plaintiff Lerner '
Cour t of "COmmon
Defendants
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss ,
Plea s, Meigs County,
Court of Common
PO
Box
5480
Oh io.
Pleas, Meigs County, Cincinnati ,
Ohio
ln Pu rs uance of an
9hlo.
45201 -5480," 513.24.1ord er of sale to me
In pursuance of an 3100
d irected fr om said
order of sale to me
(2) 8, 15, 22 .
Co u rt in the above
~ irec ted from said
enti tled 3ction , I will
co urt in th e abo ve
expo se t o sale at
e ntitled actton , I wilt
Public Notice
Publi c Auction o n tho
expose to sale at
fro nt steps o f The
Public Auction on the
The Home Nation al
Meigs County Cour t
Front Stops of the
Bank will auction the
House on
Fri day,
Meigs County Court
follow ing ite m s on .
March 17, 2006 at 10
House on Friday,
Saturday, February
a.m . of said day, the
March 17, 2006 at 10 11 , 2006 al10:00a.m .
a .m . of said day, the
fo ll owin g described
at the bank's parking
Real Estate : Siluaied · fo llowing described
tot :
"in t he State of Ohio ,
Real Estate :
1997 FQrd Ranger 4x4
County of Meigs, and
Si tuated
In
t ho
1 FTCR1 5X4VTA11877
in t he TownSh ip of
County of Melgo , 1997 Ford F250 4x4
and
Leban o n
Village of Middlepo rt
o i e s e I
described as f o llows:
and State of Ohio, to·
1FTHX26F1 VEA65391
Bei n g Lot numb~r
wi t: behi g Lot No . 83
1994 Che vy
GK1
and 10 feet off the
eigh t (8), of New
1GCEK19 K2R E13653
Portland , as the same
North side of Lot No . 0
is
n um bered
and
82, in the Villag e of
.1992 Chev y K 1500
delinea ted upon the
Lower Pomeroy, now
1GCEK1 9HON11 5300
recored plat thereof,
incorporated into the
4
Recorder 's ·. O ff ice,
Village of Middleport, 1995 Dodge Ram 4x4.

G1lll.. County, OH

c.e nt.
Ther e w as n o jun i"or v arsi t y contest .

froni Page Bl

.
,
•Pul~u ..,. Notl c ._.. s ln N"" """' l,.ul u•r.s.
Ri g ht. In Kn••-~ f"J c ll vc r·e ... RIRhl to Y•ou r l); &lt;;uo r.

C L A S S I F I ·E D·

turn overs.
.
MHS a l so san k 15-o f -35 free
thro w s f o r 4 3 p erce nt , whil e W a hama
hit 10-of - 17 c hari ty tosses. f o r 5 9 per-

di g i t l ead (25- 14) with 7 :32 l e ft in the
f ourth and wer e u p as m a n y as 16
midw ay in th at ·. p e rio d ·. W a h a m a
n ever g ot cl oser th an .n ine the r est of
the w ay.
The Lad y Mara uder s h ad e i g ht
player s r each th e scori n g column , led
b y C atie W o lfe's ga m e- hi g h 17

t~ter

to j u st l 0 m ark ers. a ltho u g h the
se mor did h ave a d o uble-d o uble w ith

Eastern

Vnu r

r

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

si v e caro m s.
K e ithAnn Sayre. w h o a v e r ag es
over 2 0 p o ints per contest , w a s held

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Sheriff Sales
Case
Number
05CV077
'
Beneficial Ohio tnc
Plaintiff
VS
. Pamela L Carter aka
.Pamela
Boso
·Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
'
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed 1rom sal~
court In the above
entitled action, I ~ill
expose to sale at
Public Auction on the
Fro111 Steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on
Friday,
March 17, 2006 at 10
a.m., of said day, the
follow i ng des c ribed
Real Estate: Situated
· t he
Sutlon
in
Township,
Meigs
county. Ohio , In the
James M. Wel don
Addition
to
the
Villag e of Racine ,
being Lots Nos . 6 and
11 of said addition to
Racine, bounded and
· described as follows:
Beginning
at th e
Southwest corner of
Lot No. ·5 in said
Weldon Additon to
Racine; Thence Sout h
along the East .side of
Rac ine and Antiqvity
Road, 54 Feet To the
L uc i u s Cross · land :
Thenc e Eas t along
the so·uth side of sajd
lots Nos . 6 and 11 ;
186
fool
lo
lhe
Southeast corner of
Lot No. 11 o n 6th
Street; thence North
along the West s ide of
sixt h street, 56 feet to
the Northwest corner
of L ot No . 11; thence
West along t he North
sid e of said Lots Nos.
6 a nd 11 : 19 1 feet t o
the place of beginning , exceptin g th e
co a l, oil and o t her
minera ls u nd erlyi ng
said lots. Tax Map or
Parcel ID No .: 190021 6 .000, Tax Map or
Pa r ce l 10 NO .: 19·
0021.7.000, Tax Map or
Pa rcel td No : 1900216 .000.
Current
own er : Pame la
L

Wednesday, February 8, 2006

Burto n and M e li ssa G rueser add ed
four api ece to the w in.
L esle y Pree ce haule d i_n a .gamehi g h 13 r eb o und s for M e1gs, mcluding anothe r gam e-h igh eight o f f e n -

ho m e
victory
at
Larry R . M orr i son
Waha m a 's f ru strat ions conti n ued in
Gymnasi u m.
. t h e second frame, as t he guests con·The
Lady n ect e d o n j u st 1-of- 12 fie l d goal
M arau ders, w ho sho t a ttempts.
Wolle
just 29 per cent ( 12M e igs, o n the o ther han d , hit just 2o f -42) i n th e tri- of- 10 shots and he ld an . 18- l l interumph. held t he g u es t s t o 13 p ercent m i ssi o n ·ad v antage.
&lt;6-of- -+7 ) f r om t he fie l d e n route to
At"the break, MH S h e l d a 20- 12
improvi n g t h eir r ecor d to 5-14 this .e d ge in r e b ound i n g, includi n g a I 0-5
year. W i th th e l oss. th e Lady Falco n s l ead o n the offe nsi ve g l ass.
fell to 8-9 overall.
Th e hosts took th e i r f i rst d o u b l e-

period s and he l d a 23- 14 advantage,
t hen wen t o n a 16- 10 r u n d own the

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS

#Warren
Logan
ManeMa
Jackson
Gall ia Academy
Athens
·

Wednesday, February 8, 2006

Lady Marauders' defense offends Wahama, 39-24

High School.
League ·Standings

Jackson

www. niydailysentinel.com

Part-time pos1t1on available
for a Support Group
Fac1htator tor a WOmen 's
Shelter. This IS a contract
position lor approximately
hours
a week
lour
AppiiCa~ts should be familiar
w1th cns1s tntervent1on tech·
niques and group dynamics
Interested applicants should
send reSume to: Personnel ,
P 0 . Box 454 , Gallipolis, OH
4563t .

Home Health Agency look·
lng lo1 Fuii·T1me AN ,
General Hours Mon·Fn. Day
Shift We of!er benel1tS such
Experienced light duty as vacat1on and health
wreCke r operator Clean insurance
Please call
driving
record
Call (740)441· 1377 for furthe r
(740)388·8545
1nforma11on.

1

fiELp WAN11D

HFJ_,p WANTED

i'Ronx&lt;;IQNAt.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY /SSI?

No Fee UnleSs weWin I
1·886·582·3345
Ul \ I I 'I \II

Syracuse.· 3BR attach eO
DBLGar. block ut1hty pwldlng . new roof 7 acre tot
740·416·2786 or 740 ·9491062

HO!\oiES

M oRII.E HoMe;
FOR SAUl

FUR-SALE
112 Pleasant Street 3 bedrooms: 1 1/2 baths, New
Central AC, New Windows.
New Water Tank. Gas
Budgel $88 1304)675·4034

Hmm.')
lUI{ SAI.E

SiiRVIL"Ni

10 used homes ur&gt;der
$3 .000.00 Must Gal Call
Elaine 740-385-0698

16x80 homes startmg at
S25995 00 InclUdes vmyl
2 Unit Apartment Building . s1d1ngl shmgl e roof Cal f
Newl y Remodeled 1n Pomt Russ 740-385-2434.
Pleasant . Ready to Ac~ept
1964 tOx50 Aemorandt With
Renters (304)675-8635
furn1sh1ngs St 000 0 .8.0
For Sale- firewood , OaH . 3 Bedroom house. 6 years (937)981-2111 days.
6'x8' bed size. you haul, $35 , old. has two baths, new
1996 14 x70 lnd1es Sultan 2
~40)94 9-3061
washer and dryer. also stove
bedroom.,. 2 bath vmyl Sidand refrigator.
Large
Leuge Mini Storage
Ing. shmgled rool Askmg
For all your storage needs garage, sto rage bu llding. $18.000. (740)441-1547
f
r
o
m has approK. 2 400acres s1ts
on corner ol Eagle R1dge 1996 Skyline 28x64 3BR
5x 10.1 0•10, 10x20,20x30 '
boats,RV's. campers, cars , Road and Pinegrove Road :2B A'. l1replace. cnthedra
in Me1gs County. Eastern ce1lmg. $35 000 (740 1709·
tr uc~s. fenced outs1de park·
ing , 1st mon lree' with 4 School Otshict tJ2 mile off 1166
month tease. Hours Bam · Route lt7. Appra•sed Value
2006 16' wide Specral Pnce
dark 304-76:2- 11 17 or 304· $97 .000. 740-992· 1527.
S1fl1 /mo Call (740)385·
638-5981 or 304·762-2014 3. Bedroom, 2 Bath With 7571
.
Fireplace m R1o Grande
'96 · Fleetwoo'd 3 BR Oni~'
1180
WTAIVIIDD
Do
1.· barn
a•ea., 8
acres mil.
40&gt;60 St69/mo. Ca l! {740)385·
$120,000.
(740)709·
9948.
·-------~ -'11'-6_6._ _ _ _ _ __
Are. you in n~'ed of: A new 3 br/1 bath. 1.5 acre lot 1n li~e new 2002 Clayton
S148rm o
Call
roof, plumbmg fixed. framing Pomeroy, new root. leave 14.:52
(740/385·99 48.
a building or an)l kind of car· message, 740-5 17·5388
penter repairs if so give The
3-4M, partial bric~ house. Renta l Pfoperty for Sale
Handy-Man a call @ 3047acres. 646 Sand H1ll Rei. 1'970 H1llcrest on 50X225 lot
675-&lt;;857
C~.&gt;rren tl y
Pt Plea~ant. Needs some Hafflsonvll!e
~Certified Childcare Provider repM $75.000 (7 40)388- Rented $15,000 00 V'49·
742·40 -: i or 740·7&lt;12·5009
moved in Gr'een School 8366
01strict. Has openings. hot
l .m~ &amp;
3BR. 2 Car aMached Garage f350
meal. ref. (740)446·8340
on 1.06 ~cres S62 .000
ACRI:AGF
Complete ya rd work and (304)675·6331
small hOme repa1r 20 years
22 acres wonderfu l v1ew
38A. 2 full bath. 1,900 sq ft.
exp. Ca11 (740)446-3682.
nelgetop property close to
full basemen( 2 car
Computer Trouble Shoot attached garage. 3 acres ma1n h1ghway perfect tm 4·
wheeler tra ilS (7401707- _
and Repa{r. E~per1 Service. Chester Township. Eastern
21
09
740·992·2395
school d1stnct Off At. 7 near

Overbrook Center is current·
ly seeking a beautician to
·work in the facility's beauty
salon. Candidates should
possess a . valid menag1ng
l1 cense
olzer Sen1or Care Cente cosmetologist
·s a 70 bed long term car' Salary ts based on commisurs1ng fac1lity located 1 sion Interested cand1dates
ural Gallia County whos should contact the admintstr ator at (740)992·6472
ission focuses on quati
re for our res1dents. W EOE
ave a position 1or:
Residentia l
Treatment
Facility tak1ng applicatiOns
tor youth worker. Pay based
on
experience.
Paid
Insurance Call between
111c us aboul our:
EW WAGE STRUCTURE 9.00am-3:00pm Monday·
~r i day, (740)379·9083
enet1ts Include·
Memorial Gardens Call
SeekinQ fu ll t1me Secretary J&amp;C Tree Service
&amp;
(740)985-4321
aher 6pm
•Competitive Wages
/Para leQal ekp. required . Excavating 25 years 9Kp.
•Experience Credit
Please send ~esume &amp; Free estimates 304-675- 4bdrm, 2.5 bath hardwood
· •Regular Rate Increases
requirements to EB1 200 2213
floors new rooi. approx
•, H e a I t h I 0 e n I a I I L 1f
Main St Pt.Pieasant WV
3.000sq It ' Rrveiv1ew Rt7
II~
I
"
I
I
t
Insurance
25550,
south . $1 25000 No land
•40tk (after 1 year)
cortracts 1740)709-0299
10
•Uniform Allowance
8 UStl'o1:.&gt;S
The
Athens-Me1gs
•Vacation
Educational Service Center
·· OI'POR'lUI\'ITY
7BR SBA:. Forec losure . only
IS seeking a HEAD START
$18,000 For l1strngs ca ll
ome be part of the HOLZ
BUS DRIVER in the Tup~rs r--~~~~--"1 800-391 ·5228 ext F254
· A difference; stop in an
•·
•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
e us at 380 Colomal Dnv Pla1ns area 1n Me1gs County.
Attention! ·
1dwell. OhiO or g1v Minimum of High School
Local company offer1ng "NO
or equivalent
tephame Tra.ner. AN, diploma
u do business w1th peo
DOWN . PAYMENT' proSN, DON or Teresa Remy, required. Requires COL
le you know. and NOT t
grams for you to buy your
with sc:hoof bus classificaHA. LN HA. BS N, AN,
end money through lh · horne rnstead of rent1ng
yst8m Administ rator to tion. Previous bus dri ving
ail until you have mvest1
' 100 &lt;~.. f1nanc:1ng
ong Term Care a call a experience a n~ worktng with ~:;;
1o:;:d.1h e•o•ffer.,n-.
. _ _,. ' Less than perfec:t cred1t
preschool children pre- 1
00
740)446·5001 .
accepted
ferred. Ab tlity to 1111 30 lbs. TIRED OF GAS PRIC ES &amp; · Pay ment could be the
Must be w1ll1ng to particrpate COMMUTING?
same as ren1
m drug/alcohol testing CAREER DISTURBED ?
Mortgage
LOcators
Preference g1ven to qualified Chnsllan Owned Company t740f367·0000
present or past Head Start Offenng A Home Managed
parents and employees Business Part t1me or Full
ih1s poSition has Board time . , Full Support and
Home Hea lth A1de Classes· approved l;lenefit s. Subm1t Tra1n1ng . Fully lma nced
Agency IS looking for people let1er of mterest , resume. opportunity il qual1fied
interested in having a career and references to John D 1-800-946·7572 Pm 00 (If
1n the home health held. Costanzo. suPenntendent, no answer please reave All real ••tate advertising
Classes will last 2 weeks Athens ·Meigs Educat1onal message).
in th1a n• wspaper lS
and help with job placement. Serv1ce Center, PO. Box
subject to the Federal
Faif Housing Act of 1968
Class start date 1S Feb. 13th 684 Pomeroy, OH 45769.
MONEY
which mak•• it Illegal to
Please call (740)44 1-1 377 Appltcation deadline : Noon
rol.oAN .
actveniH "•ny
or (740)992 ·0990 for details. Feb. 10. The AMESC is an
Equal
Opportu nity
preference, Urrnt.tlon or
Employer/P'rov1de1.
The
dlac:rlmlnatlon ba-.d on
race , calor. rel igion. sex
Housekeeprng and laundry Athens ·Meigs Educat ional
familial • t•tu• or netional
posit19ns availablE( at Arbors Serv1ce Center !S seeking a
origin, or any intantlon to
of Galhpol1s. Apply 1n person HEAD START TEACHER
make any such
at 170 Ptneo rest DriYe. AIDE 1n the Tuppers Pla1ns
preference. limitation or
Ga llipolis ' Absolutely No area in Meigs County
disOfimmalion ...
Phone Calls Please.
Minimum of Htgh School
diploma . or eqUivalent
This newapaper w!U not
requ1red. CDA and prev1ous
knowingly acc:•pt
l ocal Company
ildvertiM ment• for r••l
Galhpohs based company 1s eKperience m early chtiCIeatat• whk:h ta In
seek.mQ cand1dates lor lull hood Senmg preferred. ThiS
position has Board appro"Yed
violation of the law. Our
and part-time pos1tions
rMdtrs •re hereb y
We of1er compet1t1ve Salary oenems. , Submtt lener of
Informed that •11
1
nterest.
resume,
and
refer
and complete benefits
d..ellnga tdvertlled In
ences
to
John
0
Costanzo.
paclo;age
thl• n.wapaPer er•
super1ntenCIMI.
Athens Applican ts must send
IYI II•ble on •n equal
Meigs
Educational
Serv1ce
resume to:
opportunitY b.... .
Center. P 0
Box 684
Peraonnel
Pomeroy OH 45 769
242 Thi rd " Venue
Apphcatron deadhna Noon
Country settmg 1n Gat!1a
Gallipolis. OH 45631
Feb 1o 1'he AMESC 1s an
County! 3 bedrooms. 2
Eq~al
. - Opportunity
baths . firep lace' S85 .000
Need Cashl Don't let th1s fmployer/ProVlder
1740 )709· 1166
opportunity pass you by L &amp;
r-::lln'T':E;;;:-z..-""£"~...,1n;;;cr.;;;.,.-..,:1
New Oout&gt;lewtde Repo
~ Wholesales lS now need·
never liVed rn. owne r fiance
lng hcensed dnvers 101 lOCal
on 1 3 acres. 8 m'11es north
meat aeUvery and sales
of Holler Hosp1tal an 160
company
Call 740-949·
1081 101 1nformat1on
(740)446·3570
HOLZER SENIO~ CARE
. CENTER NURSING .
OPPORTUNITIES

10

I

·------· ·-------,.1
1110

110

r

r

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

REAL E...-l.n.
\\A~TID

HO)JSe V'JV locatron "' OMO! 8
propeny vmntrt 10 rn•!es. ol
p- P le:is a n~ rar(f..· ~:yl e
1200-1600 S.J t.; ._.tll'lrd
a•1 heat gar.::ige .,1re 'e1 Jura
sett1ng please i.all 30 4·593·
3207
Need to ~e l l vour hOme?
Late on payments d1vo rce
JOb tra .... ster or a death.. , 1
can buy your home A!l castano qutck. ctosmg 7 J.Q-41 6·
3130
HI\ t \I -.,

10

Hot•s.:s
I'OK R t:W

1 BR Cab1n all ulilit1es pa10
Between R1o Grande S
vac)(son (7 40) 44 1-0 11 ;;'

2 Bd Rm nouse w1tr argekttchen Off stree1 pa r~o. 1 ng
aM storage,
Ask1ng
$425 00
Po SSible ' HUD
74()-243-5811
3 bedroom 2 1 2 baths 2
car gamge. tun 1shed cloS€
to
Holzer
Hoso 1a1
S850, month li40l44 1-0310
4br
1n
Sy1acuse
$600 month · &amp; Deposit ·
Wa ter Sewer 1ncluded Nc.
Pets 13041675·5332
96 , doubteWIOe Eas1err
School~ . TPC water 3 bea
rooms
2 bat hs
cal
(5021943-0386
Anent ion!
Local company oneMg "NC
DOWN PAYMEN T' oro
grams tor you tC" OUY vour
home mstead ot renhng
• I ()() "&gt;., t1nanonq
· Less than oeMett t' edlt
accepted
• Pa~ rnent coutO ~, 'i'lr·
same as rent
Mortgage
(740136 7 .()()()!
Stop renttng Buy 4 Oeo'VOrt
foreclosure $15 000 For 11st
mgs · 800-391 :5228 e~t
\709

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

It
One bedroom Apt. on
Second floor in Point
Pleasant Call 1304)6756645 If no answer 1eave
mes.saga. wiU return call

r

SPACE

FOR lbNr

~--------'

Downtown Offk::e Space- 5
room suite. $650/mo; 1 room
office- $225/mo.; 2 room
suite $250Jmo. Security
deposit required . You ,pay
2 bedroom trailer tor rent. No ·2BR apar tments. Starting at utilities. Al l spaces very nice.
$375/month. LocatJ!d on. SA Eleva!~. Call ~740)446-3844
pels. 1740)256-6803.
SA
850,
Bob
160.
Mobile Home Lot w/carport McCumick
Rd.
Call
next to MethOdist Church In (740)44 1-0194 or (740)44 1Kanauga, OH . Priv.ate. Call _1_
184
_. ------

(740)446·3570.
Newer 2 Bd . Rm. tra iler .
Central heat and air.
patio.
Covered
porch
Partly furni
shed. and$425
.00
7 40·243-5811 .

E.H .O
..;..._______
Beautifu l 2-story townhouse
overlook 1ng Gallipolis City
park. Kitche n, D.A. L.A .,
study. 38R, 2 baths, laund(y
area References required .
Nice 14X70 two bedroom ' secUrity deposi t. no pets.
with new carpet in Syracuse. $900 mo_ Call (740)446washe rfOryer. $400.00 plus 2325 or (740)446-4425.
· 1 nd tfl'es
740
d eposl
a
u 111 .
- BEA
. UTIFUL
AP·•RT992-7680.
M
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
,'\PARTh!Elffli
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
FUR RENT
Drive .from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
1 and 2 bedroom apartEqual
740 _446 _2568
ments, lurh1shed and unturHo,usmg Opportunity.
nished, security deposit ---'---'----:--:-----:-::-:-::required. no pets. 740-992· CONVENIENTLY LOCAT22 18.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

'STOVE. REF.,
' DISHWASHER
·GARBAGE DISPOSAL
' WIND BLINDS
~c E ILING FANS
' WATER, SEWAGE , &amp;
"TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL

1

1;*&lt;-"90VWt.-,.

2 bedroom apartment Meigs
County, very nice, clean.
$425 per month plus·
deposit, no p~tS, referen·ces
·. required : \740)992-5174
Help Wanted

WANTED:

Po si tion

r e tard a tion in
hrs/wk: Sat.
7 : 30pm -

8

8

available

..

with

M e i gs County.
pm -

8

25. 5

----

C~MI'FJt5 &amp;

·I_

1980 Chevy.Motoihome 23'
T
1 fl. 32 600
11
rave era .
,
m es:
New T.1res, Bra kes. Bauery
•
&amp;
Tune -up
$3,300 _ neg.
(304)67!;i-4022
-------1997 Hornet 23ft . 5th wheel,
w/air, awnihg, self-contained, light weight. $6,000
QBO. 1740)245-9109 or
1740)44 1-7632.

I

"'_ele, sable color. $
• (740)44 6- 341 3·

____

i

........._
Stop &amp; Compare·

VloL-ATo~.&gt; WIL-L-

Hill's Self
Storage

IE PvT

ON A ~AIL-ING L.I5T

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio.

45771
740-949-2217

Hartwood C3blnecry Aild FUrnij!JN

I

www.~oree-I&gt;IUIOU"y,.,.,m.

I

~...._,..-...,

I

SElfSJOUBE.
97 Beec h St r:eet

Stop by &amp; check ou~ our new additions to our
menu as well as your old favorites
Homemade deSSen s • Break fast served al l day
• Dai ly lunch special s

r
~

I
ORN LOSER
J:t

10X10X10X20

.

:'I

.[ ~"-\:&gt; T~f&gt;..TTI-\E:.IZ.E. DOC5i'I'T

992-3194

)-\ll\VE TO e.E "' FUEJ... ~0~\1«....

992·6635
,

'lHM f&lt;\IGMT Be., etJT 'I'OU woo'fl
P...LTE:.~P..ii'IE. ~RCE.5
fi CI&gt;.KI-\1'1\E.PIJLL\t\G, it\TOif\I&gt;.T
FOR. FUEL-E.'-I~ M/&gt;.NUitf.!
FILL\t\G
---------. ,----:::;:-1 I :::.TAiiO!'ol !

P"\1-\ERE:. p.,j{£ fo.IUI'\E.i:OU::;, ·

11r~~~. ~::'Ym:;~~~ c~~m~

•

paint. Used daily. Asking
$3,000. 1740)256-1253.
----------,-

FRUITS &amp;

"'

I.

"'Middleport's only
Self· S_torege•

r..--iliiiiiiiliiiiiot-..r-:-~--:--:---:---:.,...:~;::;:;::;;::~==~

100

j

IJt-t---=

Middleport. OH

Or

r.....-""1

Judy Kay's Has Re-opened!

pot.~~~~~~"""'!

.,.,. .. kt"')IUiur.,. ,cnm

YEP, DOC SAID .IF
HE'D HAFTA GIT
TH' PRICE OF GAS ,
A HYBRIJ)
WENT ENN't'
P
VEHICLE !!
HIGHER ...
1'-----..

740.446.9200
MDI~
I&amp; I G

years

goo d

drivin g

Buckeye· Community SlCrvices

I

~===;~~-l-j i
t:b£::.::1;~~~! 1--"C.....~
~IG

211 4 106.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Pre-empl oy ment drug testing .

NATE

E~ual Opponuniry Emp loyer.

.Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAL
DIESEL TECHNICIAN
At Jo hn San g Ford-Lincoln-Mercury we:ve
establi shed a

35 .year

re putation of honesty,

integrity and o utstanding c u stom er servicebefore and after the sale. With the holiest
. products on lhe marke t and as th e faste st
g r owing dealership in our re gion , we're add-

x:

Black 1994 Ford F150, 5.8L,
short bed, ~real condition,
$3,5oo. 17401367-7245.

r

VANS
FoR SALE

1989 Ford Club Wagon XLTn 991t miles. well main tained .
$2800
Call
(74lJ)441-9282
1999 Plymouth Voyager
66,000 m}les. Air, auto.
$4 ,000 080. 1740)2561233.
.
40

SMITH
SUPERSTORE·

FI~ ST THEY

S~R EWEi&gt;

SWIMMING., ANP
NOlo.' THI S . ~-' 1

MaroRcvru~

• Two week inilial &amp;
orien tat ion cla ~ses v.ith
coni inucd ongoing

lrainmg.

but not required.
. I f yo u it.re a pmfessional techn ician l ooking

lo start ·a new career or maybe you don't fee l
you're p a id or treated as we ll as you shou ld

1999 Harley Davidso'n Ultra
Cla$s1c. Loaded , Excellent
condition . 29,000 total miles.
Price $13,500. Call 740949-2217 until 7 pm

be and if you ' re tired of working for someone who i sn' t working for you, give Jim

• The hest management

Thomas a call today 1-740 -446- 9800 o r

· lcafTI in the country to
~sist you.

COMPENSATION ...
Bonuse:'i, Flat Rate.
Health Care, Disabllit{
Long Term Care and

-

1-800-272-5179. You may al so apply
per son at 195 U pper River RD .•

in

2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson
500 ATV with 34 miles
$4900
CARM ICHAEL
EQU IPM ENT.
1740)446 2412.

G;illipolis, Ohio M onday-Friday
99 Harley ·Fat Boy, 9,400
· miles. lots ol Chrome and
extras. (7 40)446-9954.

~ · UNCOLN

r

Auro . •

RFJ~~IN

81 Malibu ClassiC rnostly
redone. nice ca r. too much
to liSt
As_kmg $3 OOlJ
(740)379-9297.

BUCKEYE Saltation

06 Chev. Silverado
Reg . Ca,b New,
Auto Trans, Air cond

NOW TAKING
APPLI&lt;:;ATIONSI Washington DC Trip
4 Days/3 Nights ·
May 4, 2006 $460/person
Includes transportation,
hotel-&amp; Tourmobile
ticket Families welcome
Cash, checks and credit ·
cards accepted. Please
call (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
Limited seats!

'.

59f·8757

By Bernice Bede Osol '

author

56 Groovy
DOWN

1 Hoodad
lecke1

38
40
41
42

46

handiwork
S
-lo the
6
teeth
KFC piece
PyrHe .
7
Be lovesick 8
Almost
grada
9
London
"bye "
10
~hyph.)
11
Gallivant'
12
Bang down 16
Hypo _
units
Island oH .
Haly
18
Listen!

20 Provides

43 Furthest

Worlu!r's no.
Lucy
24
Lawlesa
,
role
26
Swallow up 27
Sugarloaf
locale
28
Nose-bag
30
morsel
Big T·shlrts 31
Mlaplace
Demeanor
37
North
39

lubrication ·
Done w~h
F,ret-party
orders
Boastful
knight.
Crumbles·
Russian
range
--grip!
Piccadilly
statue
Genetic
malarial
ROS&lt;! peats
She had

capital

for hair

Da~ota

-

Marquette

21

22

snakes

bound
44 S1rlpect
antelope

45 C - - eel
47 Makeo top
honors
48 Toward
shelter
49 Mantra
chants
50 •- upon
this quiet
IHel " ·
51 VIral
· infecUon
52 Aleta's eon

itt Shullle

complement

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Cl!lebrity C'pll~r cryp10grams are created from quotalicrli by, !amou5 ~- Past and present
Eadllell&amp;r l'lihe pph&amp;r ~tor anct!ler

TOday s clue: A equals S

" CP

.

RFF

FEJP

AABP
'

AWD,

TNH

~AJP

HZP

AAi!P

-

W X M l .A K

NMKPL

CP

HtP

KX. M ' H

ZXLEGXM. "

A K P MA N P l

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Time i~ lhe sublle tn1el ol youlh." - Jolin Millon
"Dollars cannot buy yesterday .• - Admiral H.arold R_Sta!11;
.

r:~~:~~;r S©R~lA-~t,~s· :::
ldilod ~y CUT I. ~Oli.AN - - - - - 0 f9ur
R:eorrange lette r• of !he
scrambled words below fo form four simple words.

I

AVCSAN

Your skills tor developing inner peace and
'' security will be considerably enhanced In
the year ahead. As a result, many power,·
lui and· rewarding changes could start to
take place, which will maKe your life far
FlKEN
richer
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t 9) - You could
3
liM that joint ,ventures that attract you
today could have more sizzle ·than sub·
stance. However. enterprises where you
perform on yOur own should still prove
One th ing 1 learned early in
profitable .
·
PISCES (Feb. 2D- March 201 - AnMietles,
s
life was that people
abou t whether you'll be accepti!d by a new
social group,you hope to impress today will
• won' take ad vice will never
prove to be unfounded. Re lax and enJOY
yourself; you 'll be a smashing successt
lake -------.
2Ji t06
ARIES {March 21;-April 19) - Don't be
dismayed today 11 early indicators suggest
6
17· () Complelc rhe ch \J ckle qvored
that things are not going your way. Your
1-.L--L--~-- L. .......J.
br fill rng in the m1U1ng WOfdJ
L.-.L.
luck may no! come 1nto play until a bit later.
~·ou develop trom Sl!p NQ. J below.
so just wa t! it out a bit and all will come out
well,
PRINI NUMSERfO lET-Tf&lt;S 1
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Don't be
IN 1HfSE S'.lUAP.ES
your own worst ene;my today by giving in to
negat1ve lhmk1ng_II you put on sm1le and
·uNSCRAMBLE
ro 1
act like a witiner. others will respond to you
GET ANSWEI ·
.•
in kind and you 'll get what you want.
GEMINI (May 2t·June 20) ~You could be
e,ctremely fortunate today, even 1n high
8CRAMLI!T8 ANSWERS 211100
stake.s situations, but only if you prime
Kennel c. Prowl - Novel - Walnut.- WELL KNOWN
yourself menta'lly so that .,-ou'll then be
able to pu! forth your ~es t efforts when it's
Profes~or of Hislory to h is class,
past
necessary.
CANCER (June' 21-July 22) .....:. When you'll
be the luckiest today will be in Situations
,where you are not involv,ed with persons
w1th whom you have close emottonal t1es
II you let feelings take over. It'll cloud your
1udgment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- l'nst,ead of worry·
YOU 11/E.J&lt;E. HAVII.l/i
tng about whether others will reciprocate
AUD DI&lt;EA!I\!
or not, foll ow your nobler 11istincts today
and give unselfishly of your time and
resources . You 'll be rewarded in ma ny
other ways
VIRGO (AUg, 23-Sepl• 22) - S)ick1ng to
your game plan has tiS merits , but today
yoU may find that exerc1sing a linte bit of
llex1brll ty at the right time when it is called
fo r w1ll wor.k out better than holdinQ a ngid
line
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) - In ,order to
advance your ambitions today. it may
reQ uire lar bolder methods on your part
th an you m1ght uSually employ. Don 't be
afra1d to take a Ch&lt;\nce where you see the
odds warrant 11
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) -You're apt
to be a bit rest less and adventurous today, .
OIJCE. ~ I ~; ~PE-R .IIlLO
so assOCiate yourself w1lh act1ve people ·
IUT~IIVE.IJ€,!1 fO fOILwho are go1ng places They can help sa!ISTHE F()i;1Cl~ Of ()I.IIK IJ~%-'
ty yqur y~:~n tor genmg around and do1ng
tun things .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21\ So m6thmg 1mportant in your l1fe 1s about to
make a'rad1cal shift. but don't be ,d1smayed
and get yourself m a dither YOu'll qu1ckly
d1scover the changes oe 1ng maoe w111
prove advan tageous .
CAPR ICO RN (Dec 22-Jan !9\ - There
•S a strong poss1blilty lha! once ag a1n you
wotl ,encounter someone loday wt-.c has
previOUSly Oeen lucky lor you. You II tina
nothmy w1ll have changed. the magtc rs
stil l 1i1 tack

:'(ES, MAAM .. M'&lt;HEAD SORT
DF &gt;1Uin5 ... I THINK MA'&lt;6E I
!-lAVE T14E GOLLYWOPPERS ...

·Economy Beef $7.35
·Shade River Beef $8.10
·Whole(Shell Corn $6.45/Bag
·Cracked Corn $7.45/Bag
·Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

YES. MAAM .. I I-lAD
A FLU 5&gt;-IOT A!'OUT
A MONTH A60 ..

NO. Mti.A.M .. THE AVERAGE
F~U 5&gt;-IOT HAS NO EI=FECT
ONTf.lE 60LLYWOPPER5 ..

1l-IE CM..Y SID£ uru:.-rs cr 11-l1s
D1aJG !!0 F/&gt;R ARE. MASSlVf.
CLASS ACTICN LAW.SUrTS

35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
. 740-985-3831

'========~-·.
Advertise
in this
.spqce for $1 04
per month.

.,..;;;;;;;

qARFIELD

'•

~;:::~;:::::::~~o;m;;p~le;te;;Tr~ee~C~a~r;e::.
Gallipolis, OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.
Owner .
Insured Free Est .

_:
:.

.,

GRJZZWELLS

•

Now Available At

HAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
"'Takirrg Tile .Stirrg Out Of
Hard Work!'"

4Whccl Drive Tractor
30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota E n g ines

Mi&lt;.I- Sit.e
with

BA UM LUM:SER
St. Rt.

124

Chester

II I

a

S,uNSHINE CLUB

Shade River AG Service, Inc

Units 10x20 10x1 2

-M-il

ri---:W-:-·-:-1-:-0-:E:--L

t

. .-

740 " 992• 6396
740-992·2272

who

9

A~JO~n~~~~~~~e ACE;~:~~;::~ICE

Gun Shoot
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Fri, Feb. 1Oth 6PM
12 guage- Buckshot
680 Bore
Everyone Welcome

•
P.EANUTS

StPTIC TANK PIJMPfNG $95.00
PORTABlE TOilfT RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TO~Y

Sweetheart Sale

c4stome r. Ford Service tra ining preferred

TRAINING •.•

Thurada~F~b . 9,2008

problem

54 Quit
55 Kiddie-lit

I 1I I I I
__,.,..G_E,_.R,_o,....,s_l
.~ I" I I I

AttenUon ·
Melga Co. R•ldental!!

Your Silverado

4WHm.ERS

ing diesel techni cian s to better service o ur

36

11 is ~enerally believed that one at an
ace's primary jobs is to decapitate an
enemy ki ng, not just to collect spot-cards.
(Should that be ~gui l lotine," given that our
deck is based on French cards?)
But is it always true? West leads the
heart king against five spades, How
should South plan the play? What would
have been the result tn five diamonds
d9ubled?
After West's overcall, North's three-spade'
jump was pre-emplive, pro'rnising fourcard S\Jpport but a weak hand. He would
have cue-bid three diamonds with a
stronger holding . That probably should
have persuaded South to double West's
five-diamond sacrifice. which wbuld net
300 (a tler North's spade-ace lead) , but
cou ld trawl 500 if North led a rounded suit
- a heart or a club -and South got a
club ruH.
South has th ree potential losers: two
hearts and a club. But he might establish
Qummy's heart Sl,lll before the-opponents
have taken !heir club trick. or he mighl
thrOw a heart loser on the club 10.
However, if declarer won the first trick and
returned a h'eart; he would be at the
mercy of West's next play. If West led a
diamond. everything would be fine ; but if
he found the club shift, live spades would
be dead .
Then South saw,the best play. He did not
kill the heart king with his ace; he let West
win trick one. West switched to a club, but
declarer look East's queen with h1s ace.
drew trumps, and returned the club jack
A moment later, South's remaining loW.
heart evaporated on dummy's club 10.
Declarer lost only one heart and one cll,lb.

'lllrlhrliiY:

of business

52 Graduates
53 Humld~y

I

446-·2282
2003 Jeep Wrangler
46,000 miles, 6 cyl. AIC ,
Crlu se.
CD,
$15,000 .
(740)446·6962.

Pass
Pass

Pass

-

!I:OLJTINE ,
SPAC..E
ALL '10lJRE
To Do OUR
DOt NC:.
ROUTINE! IS SKI&gt;.TIN6
--..• ....-11N C.tRC.LES!

Gallipolis

1996 Pontiac Sunfire . Red.
tinted windows, CD player,
automatic, 2 door. and
101,000 miles_ $2 ,500 or.
best offer. 74Q-992-0202
·
-------t-telp Wanted .

4 •

AstroGraph

Il" TAKE S

All rebates to dealer
1911 Eastern Ave.

New Bnd Used Furnaces.
lnstalltltion
available
1740)441-2667.

604, Jacl-son,_OH ·45640

34
35

E•st

~

Advertise in the Bulletin Board

Buy Now for $14,820

$5001 Police Impounds!
Large wo mens clothing,
Cars from $500. For listings
hOspital scrubs size 3x-4x,
800-39~ -5227 ext. 390 ~
baby · clothes &amp; h9usehold
item s 304-675·2801

Send re su me to :

Deadline for a ppli cants:

Chevy Colorado Ext. Cab
'05. Auto, 2WD. wfoedliner.
.e~~:cellent condition. Kelly
Blue Book $14,600, will sell
for $13,60tl. 1304)523-1179

33

The ace lets ·
the king live

74o-ou2-1m

MUIOR HoMES .

GIT-!T-DONE .
All .... ·pe
· s Home Repairs
·' an the vehicle, No pressure
'r
Also
AKC
&amp;,.. APRI sales .
Cook
Motors
25 yrs. Experience,
•
Free Estimates
Aegistet;ed Siberian Husky (740)446-Q103.
·
stud available tor breeding. ~=---~----,
'24 Eme rgency Service.
[15
TRUCKS
(304)675-3733 or
250
1740 707 1964
)
$
· Call
.
FUR SALE
1304)593-0129
Welsh
Corgi
pups, 8 Wks old 2 female, 1
,..
1 female.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapaired. New &amp; ReOOilt.ln
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1,•
800-537-9528.

insurance. $7.25/hr.

Bo11:

L.----~--,.1
....,.
•

.

am Sun: Sun.

expe ri e n ce and adequate · a utomob ile

P.O.

Ir

~~~~s~\~ ~~~4u;o~l~~:s~ ::~r1anYZ~r~~~1i~ic~:~:~~=~

~embroke

32

Openi~g lead: • K

.

r

ment a l

am MQn Must h ave high

three

v

0

Fur~iture·

ANnQUFS

Pass

BUILDING

Cinderella Strapless Style. 290 lbs. 1740)-388-7447.
One . of a 'kiM from Rose
HAY &amp;
tree. Size· &amp;. Brand new .
Never been worn to Prom. L,---GiliiiJtAiiiiiiiN--,...1
Reg. $444 Sell for $300 Call
1304).675-5688

to

sc h ool diploma/OED. valid drive r' s
license ,

A~

FOR S..

North

West
2 •

49 Place

makes ends 2 More
meet
unusual
25 Playing
3 Lily maid
card
of Aslolat
26 Navaho
4 Chow 29

Pas8

Remodeling

12004 Jeep Liberty, excellent
'\ I In It I '
condition, less than 15,000 mil""-~~---.,
• miles,
$17 ,000.
Call
10
HOME
.:_--'--::----:-----:-c::-:---::--c
(740)446·4028.
• .. ··-·ov•·•n~1 ~
New ·Furn~·1ure $450 . Ca11 81ock, br1c k, sewer p1pes,
·
IMJ'l(!
11:.1"1&amp;'.. ~ "
1740)446 7444
· •
1· t 1 t Cl d
·
·
wtnuows, In 9 s, e c. au e 95 ~-28, 350 auto T-Top,
.:_____:___ _---.,----.,---- Winters, Rio Grande, OH looks and runs ellcellenl
BASEMENT
Thompsons Appliance &amp; Call 740-245-512l
$5000.00. 92 Corsica V-6. 4
WATERPROOFING
Repair-675-7388. For sale,i
~;;,.:.::::=~0:.:."---,
Unconditional lifetime guarre-conditioned automatic
PEls
door auto $ 1800·00 · 740 • antee. Local .relerences furh
&amp;d
f·
mR'-"••...
742-4011 or740-742-5009.
was ers
ryers, re ngerct·
'''-" ~
nished . Established 1975.
tors, gas and electric
- - - - - - ' - - - C a l l 24. Hrs. (740) 446ranges. air conditioners, and AKC German Shep. pups Cavaliers, Sunfires, Saturns, 0870, Rogers Basement
wringer washers. Will do top bloodline, ready 2·26·06 Ford, Chevy and Dodge waterproofing.
repairs on major brands in $275l304)675-5724
Truck . Blazers anti Vans in
shop or at your home.
stock. 3 months- 3.000 mile

r

14

ROBERT
BISSELL
COISTRICnll

i·=-....,,.....----, --------

used .
store, 130
B 1 11 6 p 1k W h
d
u avl
e. ~s ers, ry-.
ers. gaslelectnc ranges .
1 · al
ma.tl e 5 se
re nger 0 ~·
r
s.
cou ches, dinettes~ chests,
much more. (740)446-4782,
Galli olis OH. Hrs. 11·3 IM·
S) p
'

10 9

,••. 5. ' J.
SoUth

NEW AND USED STEEL 1999 Olds Eight)'-Eight LS.
•
Steel BeO:ms, Pipe Rebar Well maintai ned. loadeu,
dl
For
Concrete,
Angle, newer tires, e~~:cellenl con ·
Ch anne,
1 F! at ear, St ee 1 r10 n, 127K miles , asking
Grating
For
Drains, $4,000. (740)2*5934.
l
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; --------.,--~
Scrap Metals Ope~ Monday, ~002 Dodge Neon 49,PQO
Tu_es~ay, Wednesday &amp; miles, 4 cy l., auto, air,
Fr1day. 8am-4:Jppm. Closed ' $3,500 OBO. (740)256·
Thursd~y.
Saturday
&amp; 1233 _
..
Sunday. (740)446-7300

SUPPI.JES

•

KQJ

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerable: North -South

Buy or sell. Riverine
. VreETARI.,.E';·
Antiques, 1124 East Main · ~--ri.iiliiiiriiiiiilii-_.1
1989 Oodge Dually 2WD,
on SR 124 E . Po meroy, 74o- ~
992 2526 A
M
Gress Greens for sale at Cummins Turbo Diesel. New
Gracious living . t and 2 bed•
·
uss
oore, McKeen
Farms,
556 batteries. Ru ns e11cel!ent
Centenary Road, Ga11·1po1·IS. 133,000 . m'les
$5,000.
room apartments at Village
•
p· ked $1'
b h 1
1740)446-34 13
Manor
and
Riverside
tC
, per us e or
Apartments in -Middleport ..__.
Pickyourown$6perbushel. ~-------From $295-$444. Call 7401999 GMC w/extended cab,
992-506 4. Equal Housing Bronco Spitfire Wood/Coal
lo'aded, 305 engine, au to
Opportunities
Stove. Paid $1,200. Two
transmissi~:m , 67,000 fniles,
p ortabl~ dishwashers. 740- ,,..._ _ _ _ ___, good clean, solid truck.
La rge mode~ Upstairs apt., 742-0519.
excellent condition, $8,500.
2 8 r_, near 1uppers Plains, ~-------·~
(740)441·1 0l4.
no pets.
$425.00 plus Fire
Wood
for
Sale · - - - - - - - "
deposit
740-985-4 169 or 1304)576·2642
or cell ------~614-264-6409.
(304)633-3219
3yr old "ngus bull - Sunset 2001 4dr V-6 Dakota auto--~----,..--New DE!sign 2702. $ 1,200 _ malic, 90,000 mnes, 4WD.
Middlep-ort 1 and 2 Bedroom Frigidaire Freezer Upright (740)367 _7047
$8,500. (740)339-1620.
furnished Apts. No Pets, 20.3 cu .ft. Frost Free 3 yrs '----'--------,..-- ------~­
deposit, and prev1ous rental old. $250 (304}67.5-7340 if 7yr old part Quarter' horse, 2001 Dodge Ram truck
references. 740-992.0165. no answer please leave a part Arabian gelding. $5!)0 2500 SLT Heavy Duty, ·
message
to a good home. (740)256- springs, camper special. 10:..
16:.:5::2·: ..__ _ _ _ _~ ply ti res. $7,500. Call Ed
Gorgeous
Lavender
Help Wanted
Sequined . Prom Dress. Pigs Ready to Butcher. 220· &lt;740 )36 l·062 4·

an ' individual

ass i s t

•

•

992-5682 .

·j

304 882 3017
)
-

&lt;

iG.i

EQua

MERCliANDISE

G.E. washer heavy duty
$95; G.E. diyerS95: refriger·
.
. i
.
ator 2 door frost free $ 25;
Maytag washer like new
$165. Genes Appliances 76
Vine St. (740)446-7100 or
(740)367-7886.
----

1BR' apt. close to Holzer. Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
,WID hOokup. Deposit/refer- RENT. Call (740j441-111 1
ence required (740)339·
for application &amp; information.
0 362 ce II num ber.
~SF( nicely tuinished apart- For l ease: 2 Floor. spamen t, quiet area. SUitable for cious, totally remodeled, .2
1 11
1 adult, private dri)leway
w/carport ,'
new
W/D.
water heater and appli(740)446-4782 .
$600
th .... ,
ances.
a man ' ""us
1ST MON. FREE RENT
utilities.
Downtown
WITH PAID DEP NEW
G II. I. S
.
d k
. a IJXl IS. . e_
cunty an
ey
ELLM V' IEW
depoM requored . No pelS.
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
reqwred.
NOW LEASING!
(740)446·6882 M·F. 8:00500
2
.
BOTH FLATS &amp;
Garage Apt. on Roush St.
TOWNHOU SES
Mason.
Furni shed .
AVAILABLE
$325/month + utilities. $100
"ALL ELECTRIC
utility/deposit
Available
·ceNTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
immediately (304)n3-5054

&amp;s3~~~~M

arehouse ., ----

Irib

l\1llnUANoous

East
• 85

• A 8
... A J

• Complete

in Henderson, WV. Pre• A "'
r·
ownev p"" 1canes star 1ng
1
$75
&amp;
1
1
a
up a un der
Warranty,
also
have
Household
Misc. Items
starling at .99C · &amp; up
(304)675-7999 .
·

r

Refe~ences

OH
on State Rt. 124
Pomeroy,

• Garages

r

\Vest
• 3

. QI07652 .
• KJ 9 3
... K 8 J
. Q96 5 2
South
• KQ7642
'I A 7 4

3 mileli west of

• New Homes

Appliance

_w
.

t$1 1Di4

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

·--ooii i i i i --,.1
.

••

'

48 TIJuana
farewell

1 Haiku and
sonneta
6 Duplicate
11 Serves the
soup
t 2 Hireling
t3 Decree
14 Gold bert
15 Coil ol yarn
16 Admirer
17 Get paid
18 Brooch
19 Gel • loecl of
23 Barely

North
02 ·01Hlll
• A J tO 9
• 86532

ROGER HYSEll ·
GARAGE

Gooos

Apartment available now
Mobile home spaces jn Riverbend Apts . New Haven
Country Mobile Home Park. WV. Now accepting applica (740)385-40 19.
lions lor Hud-Subsidized,
one Bedroom AptS _ Utilities
New Doublewide Repo. included. Based on 30% of
never lived in. owner fiance. adjusted Income
Call
on 1.3 acres . 8 miles north 1304.1882-3121 available lo r
of H.o1zer Hospl-,a1 on 160· SeniOr and Disabled People.

~~sd;eodom. a- pa~~ae~t· u~eu:

Phillip
Alder

HOUSEHOU&gt;

(740)446·4~82 .

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

Twin Rivers Tower is ·accepting applications for waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
apartment, call 675-6679
EHO

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
BRIDGE

Last
Word

needed to qualify 74Q-37B· provided. Water &amp; garbage
paid. Deposit required. Call
6111
1740)446-4345 afl8f 6pm.

MOBILE H~m;
Fl)R RENT
2 bedroom apt. WIO hookup.
"---~ioiiiiiiil._.l ' Water. trash, s'ewer pd.
$400.
14X70 trailer 3 bedrooms. 1 bedroom apt refrig . stove,
Electric heat. $300.00 a ·$325. water. sewer,. trash pd.
month and $250.00 deposit. (740)367-7746- (740)367No pets. Hud approved. 7015· (740)446-4734.
740,742-2 714
2 room 'turnlshed efficiency
2 Bd. Rm . Mobile Home 1n
apartment. c lean, downMiddleport. $250 a Month sta1rs,
utilities
paid.
and $250 deposit. · Year 1740)446·1519.
Lease . No Pets. and No
Calls after 9:00 P.M. 740- 2bd upsta irs apt. stove,
992-5039.
fridr;,e fur nished, water/trash
$325/month plus
paid
2 bedroom mobile home 1n deposit.
Racine, $350 mo. pluS. $350 3bd house $350/month plus
d9posit. years lease , no
deposit (740)446-7620 or
pets. no calls after 9pm,
(740)441-9872.
1740)992-5039

www.mydailysentinel .com

Good
to the

Bedroom
House, 2 bedroom Apt available jn Modern 1 b(ldroom apt.
Deluxe Kitchen Appliances Syracuse .
$200 deposit 1740)446-0390.
Furnished.
5475.00 per $350 per month rent. Rent
Month, $475.00 Security includes water, sewer, trash. Nice one BR unfurnished
Deposit Lease Aequ1red. No pets. Sufficient income apartment. Range &amp; refrig.

Two

740.992-5421 .

.Wednesday, February 8, 2006
ALLEVOOP

985·3301

•••
:

•

SO ASK~ Lf&gt;W-&lt;tR
mJG

IS

IF 11-\IS ·

GXD Rl&lt; Y. .. -.

, :r '+11&gt;.'5 &lt;l\l'5i
WA'li-11 \-IS l\1~ \1~5

tmus

"1l1c
can
be changed, just read the biography of a WELL
KNOWN person."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,

~U~I:

C)

SOUP TO NUTZ

�•

Page B6 • The Daily ~ti?el

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

Wednesday,Febru~try

NFL defends Supe~ Bowl officiating
BY DAVE GOLDBERG
ASSOCIATED PR ESS

people hut. to me. it was as well."
more important tbat I was
The questionable calls:
home with my boys:·
Replays on the oftenTwo-time M VP Terry sive interference call showed
Bradshaw and Miami 's Jake that Jack son' s arms made
Scott were the · only other contact with Pittsburgh 's
MVP' s who didn't attend. Chri s Hope and that they sepBradshaw reportedly want to arated afterward. Under the
be with hi s family, and Scott rules. pass interference took
was traveling in Australia. · pl ace bu.t sometimes the call
The officiatin g. though. isn' t made.
· has been:a the major topic.of
- The first TD of the
di scuss ion since Sunday game scored on a third-down
night. Right after the game, .rollout by Steelers quarterSeahaw ks coach
Mike back Ben Roethlisberger late
Holmgren suggesied that a in
the
first
half.
first-quarter offensive inter- Roethlisberger appeared to
ference
call
on
the come down short of the goal
Seahawks' Darrell Jackson, line, but it was unclear on
1 · whet her he had gotten
negming what wou ld· have repay
been the game's first touch- the ball to the line before
should have going down . Referee Bt'II
'down, probably
been "a no call."
Leavy upheld · the call
Holmgren, a former chair- because , there was not
· man of the NFL's rule-maR- enough· incontrove. rtible evii'ng competition committee, dence to overturn it.
fuel ed the debate Monday
- Holding call on Sean
during a rally for the Locklear in the fourth :
Seahawk s at Qwest Field Locklear 's penalty erased an
w·JJ.•PIJ l1c said.. "We knew it · 18-.yard completion · fro,m
was going to be tough going Matt Hasselbeck to Jerramy
up against the Pitts burgh Stevens to the Pittsburgh I
Steelers. I didn ' t know we that would have put the
were going to have' to play Seahawks in position to go
the guys in the striped shirts ahead 17-14 with arou nd 12
1

The NFL defended the offidating in the Super Bowl ,
and Joe Montana defended
himself.
Two days after the Steelers
beat the Seahawks 2 1 -~0 in
the NFL tit le game. the
league said Tuesday that the
game was "properl y officiated."
"Including, as in most NFL
games. some tight plays that
produced disagreement about
the . calls made by the offi cials," NFL spokesman Greg
Aiello said in a statemen t.
Meanwhile,
three -time
Super Bowl· MVP Montana
denied re33rts he had asked
for $l00. 0 10 appear with
other past MVPs at pre-game
ceremonies. He left Detroit
on frid ay, and returned home
t" att~nd .hi s sons' weekend
basketball games.
"I had told the m both
(sons) that I'd be there for
their ganies a1i d that we 'd
watch the Super Bowl
together," Montana said in an
interview with ESPN . Later,
Montana added, "The Super
Bowl is important to a lot of

-

minutes left. It was a close
call that was .difficult to see
on replay.
- One call that - clearly
appeared erroneous came
after that penalty, when
Hasselbeck threw an interception to Pittsburgh's Ike
Taylor, then made the tackle
but was called for a block
below the waist, giving the
Steelers an · extra 15 yards.
. They scored soon afterward,
on a pass from Antwaan
Randle El to Hines Ward.
Replay s showed Hassel beck
never made contact with the
player he was supposed to
have hit illegally, instead
·
· ht to or. ay 1or to
gmng
stratg
make the tackle.
Th ~ super Bow 1 crew
headed by Leavy. was compfised of officials who grad..
ed out best at each postt1on
during the regular season.
The NFL invited all paSt
Super Bowl MVPs, and gave
them two fi rst-class pl ane
tickets to Detroit as well as
$ 1,000 in ·spending money.
They also were free to accept
appearance fees at other
events associated with the
~ uper Bowl.
.

.

Robertson .trophy to be displayed at Conseco
.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Oscar Robertson firs t hit the
national stage as a do-everything
guard
for
the
University of Cincinnati , but
before that. he was filling
gyms as a high school player
in Indianapolis.
Because hi s first steps
toward stardom were taken .in
Indi ana. the : un ited S tates
Basketball
Writers
Association
announced
Tuesday that the Oscar
Robertson Trophy for the
college player of the year
· will be permanently di sat
Consi!CO
played
Fieldhouse in downtown
ln&lt;lianapolis.
Robertson led Crispus
Attu'cks High to Indiana state

'

titles in 1955 and 1956. mak- ''This is the cradl e of basketing· it the first all -blac k ball ."
school to win a champiIndiana University 's 1976
and 1981 national champion.Shl·p .
He won th e first two onship teams also will be
awards from the association honored at the March 3 1
in 1959 and 1960. It was e.vent, which will be open to
named for him in 1998. He the
public .
Robert son
will present it to .this sea- upstaged Indi ana's represenson 's win ner at · a breakfast tatives at Tuesday 's press
March 31 at Consec'u before conference , but "they didn ' t
the Final Four. .
mind.
Robertson played in 11
Although Robe'rtson was
born in Te nnessee and li ves NBA AII-S'tar games and led
in Cincin nati, lie beli eves the Milwaukee Bucks to a
the trophy belongs in ·championship in 1971. He is
Indiana.
the only player in NBA his"You look all · around the · tory to average a triple-doucountry at New York players ble for a season.
.
and
Kentucky
and
Quinn Buckner, a star for
California: but thi s is where the 1976 Indiana team, said
baske tball started." he said . . Robertson was a great all-

.
around player who em bodied the same team-first aliitude the Hoosiers used in
their unbeaten run.
"Oscar Robertson, when I
was growing up, was the
player everybody wanted to
be like," Buckner said.
· Ray Tolbert, a member of
the 198 1 tea m, thanked
Robertson · for helpin g to
pave the. way for black players and said the honor was
deserved:
"You go out to L.A ., you
see a statue of Magic
Johnson. You go to Chicago,
you see a statue of M1chael
Jordan," Tolbert said. "But
before Michael Jordan and
Magic Johnson, it was Oscar
Robertson. "

Browns QB Dilferhas.successful knee surgery
CLEVELAND (AP) Cleveland Browns quarterback Trent Dilfer on Tuesday
had surgery on his right knee
to correct a torn. tendon.
Team physician Anthony
Miniaci used a scope at the
Cle.veland Clinic to repair a
partial tear of the patella ten-

·don. Dilfer, 33, is expected to
be ready for the 2006 season.
the team said .
·'This ·'pas! season I had
some problems wit h my
· knee throughout the year, so
we felt it was best to have
the procedure and clean up
the knee duri ng the offsea-

son," Dilfer said in a statement.
·
Dilfer, an 11 -year veteran ,
si'g ned a fo ur-year deal with,
the Browns last year after
sti nts with the Baltimore
Ravens
ahd
Seattle
Seahawks. He went 4-7 as a
Browns starter before losing

the job ·to rookie Charlie
Frye ..
Coach Romeo Crennel has
said there will be an open
competition for the starting
job next season l:)etween
Dilfer and Frye, who went 23 as a starter after taking
over.

James opts ~or skiJJs competition, not dunk contest
NEW' YORK (AP) is a twoLeBron James wi ll try and
round timed
dethrone defending champi obs t ac l e
on Steve Nas h at the NBA
course , conskills challenge during All sis ting
of
Star weekend.
dribb li ng ,
James and .last year ' s
pass ing and
MVP will join Miami Heat
shooting staguard Dwyane Wade and
tions.
New Orleans rook ie .Chris
James, the
Paul in the contest on Feb .
y oun g e s t
James
I 8, the night before the Allplayer
in
Star game .
NBA history
The challenge, which to re ac h 5.000 points (21
debuted in 2003 in Atlanta, years. 22 day s on Jan. ·21,

Southern
from PageBl
Southern led 50-36, then a
solid effort pushed Southern
.to a 56-38 ~dvantage before
OVC made one final run .
Coughenour fueled the
comeback with a pair of
threes and a deuce, but the
run was too little, too late for
the Defenders and Southern
alo ng with Coach Richard
Stephens picked up the nice

2006). opted to enter the
ski lls challenge instead of
the dunk contest.
l'he Cavaliers star has
seven career triple-doubles.
Nash, a four-time All-Star
from the Su ns. leads the
league in assists with 11 .1
per game .
James will makes hi s second straight All-Star· appearance . He is averaging 30.9
points, 6.5 assists and 6.9
rebounds.
Paul has been Western

Conference rookie of the
month three times. He leads
all rookies in points (16.3
ppg), assists (7 .8 apg) and
steals (2 .2 spg).
Wade. who will start ·with
Jam es for the Eastern
Confere nce, is averag ing
27 .0 points, 6.9 assists and
2.0 steals. · .
Nash won the contest last
season, co mpleiing · the
course nearly 12 seconds
faster than Denver 's Earl
Boyki ns.

- tjOVS BASKETBALL

.

White House offers
select lawmakers details ·
on eavesdropping, A2

(Golden).

GtBLS BASKETBALL

RAVENSWOOD 64,
POINT PLEASANT 49

MEIGS 39, WAHAM.( 24
WAHAMA (8-9)
.
Amber Tully 0 1·2 1, Airel Derifield 1 2-3 5,
Jessica Hoffman oo-o 0, KelthAnn Sayre 2
5·6 1O, Mary Kebler 0 0·0 0, Beth Keyes 2 ·
2·5 6, Kayanna Sayre 1 0·1 2. Totals: 6-47
1G-H 24.
,
MEIGS (5-14)
Cayla Lee 1 0·0 2, Meghan Clelland 2 2-5
6, Calia Wolfe 5 7-17 H , Tawsha Neha 0
o-0 o, Amber Burton 1 2·4 4, Amy Barr 1
0·1 2, Lesley Preece 0 2·4 2, BrfllllnV
Preast 0 0-0 O, Whitney Smi~h 1 0-2 ~·
Melissa Grueser 1 2·3.4. Totals : 12· 42 t~
35 39 '
Waham~
6 5 3
10 24 ,::
Meigs
10 8 5
16 S9 r
3-point goals-W 2-15 (Ke . Sa~.
Deri"lield), M 0·7 (none). Total rebounds-:W 30 (Ke. Sayte 10) , M 44 (Preace 13).
Offensive· rebounds-W 12 (Ke. Sayre '4 ,
Ka . Sayre 4) , M 16 (Preece 8). Assisls- W
1 (Derilield ), M 5 (C lelland 2, Barr 2).
Steats-W 5 (Ka. Sayre 2), M 7 (Wolfe
Biocks-W 5 (Ke. Sayre 3), M 2· (Burton.
Grueser). Turnovers-W 10, M 10. Team
louls-W 27 , M 17.
"
Ohio High School Boya Bllkeiball,,

RAVENSWOOP (18-0)
Kirk Ritchie 2 0-1 4, Andrew Benford a 3-4

3, Anthony Sayre 12 9-10 33. Dusty
Mullins 6 3·7 14, Ben Wise 3 0-0 9, Travis
Ritchie o 0-0 o, Ben Miller a 1-4 1, Ell
Stagg 0 ().() 0, Matt Delong 0 0-0 0, Alex

COle 0 o-o O, Jordan Seabolt 0 0-0 0,
. Shima Lathey 0 ().{) 0. Tolals- 23 16·26
64.
I
,
POINT. PLEASANT (2-17) ' '
Stephen WalKer 2 0-0 4, Will Slone 0 4-4 4,
Jay Ellis 2 0-2 4, Kenny Du(ham 0 0-0 0,
Nathan Rimmey 2 2·2 7, Lasse Bartels 0

0-0 0. Jasti Stover 4 1-2 9, Steven Perr'y 0
0-D 0 , Stephen Browning 0 0·0 0, Bobby

Erren 10 i -5 21 . Totals-.20 8-1 5.49.
Ravenswood 9 15 14 11 - 64

PolntPieaaant 17 18 11 18 -

49

3-Poini Goals-Ravenswood 4 (Wise 3).
Point
1 (R fmmey). Fouled - OUt-

Ravenswood 1 (Ritchie), Point 2 (Walker,
Errett). _AebOunds-f;lavenswood 20
(Sayre 10}, Point 27 (Stover 11). AssistsRavenswood 14 (Ritchie 9) , Point 9 (Slone

'l-

4). Steals-Ravenswood 14 (Mullins 5),
Point 14 (Stover 5). Blocks-Ravenswood
2 (Sayre '2), Point (none). Team Fouls-

..

Ravenswood 14, Point 21 .

BUFFALO 109, HANNAN 58
HANNAN (8.a)
Kevin Blake 1 2-2 4, Ryan Canterburry 10
5-5 25, Aaron Payne I 0·0 2, Joe Kinnard
3 2-2 9, Wes Gue 6 3·3 14, Jared Taylor 1
0·0 2. PatricK Flora 1 0-0 2. Totals- 23 11 -

Tu esday's Results
~
Beverly Ft. Frye 68, Old Washington .
Buckeye Trail-40
Bloom-Carroll 72, Circleville Logan E!rh

Hillsboro 41 , London 40
Lakewood 63, Maple Hts. 52
Lancaster 66. Upper ArlingtOn 58
Lancaster Fairfield Union 62, Ashville
Teays Vall ey 54
'
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 56 . Cols. Harvest
Prep 53
LEibanon so. Middletown Fenwick 28,
Libe rty Christian 69, Musk1ngum ChriStian
24
Lic king 'county C h.ristian 72 , Madison
Christ ian
60
.Medina Highland 70, Lodi Cloverleaf 53
Milford Center Fai rban~s 56. Lima Tempte
Ctvistian 44
·
Mogadore Christian 72, Kingsway
Chris tian 56
Monroe 8 1". Greenville 73
N. R'idgeville
_N . Royalton 44
59
N. Ridgeville Lake Ridge 79, N. Eaton
Chnstian Comm. 51
Napoleon 57 . Bryan 55
Solon 71 , Mayfield Village Mayfield 34
Spring . N. 57, Wilmington 48
Spnng . Shawnee 63, Cedaryille 6 1
SpringbOro 71, W. Carrolhon 61
St. Paris Graham 47. Bellefontaine 31
Stow-Mu nroe Falls 6 1, Hudson 44
Sugarcreek Garaway 43, Newcomerstown
49
Xenia 84, Fairborn 56
Zane~Vi lle 73, Logan 46

(Dibe nedetto), Eastern 2 (Owen 2) . Fouls
- Ale)( 19, Eastern 15. Turnovers - AleK
14, Eastern 20.
GALLIA ACADEMY 62, ATHENS 43 .
ATHENS (2·17, 0-9 SEOAL)
Corey Poches 0 0-0 0, Derrick Walton 0 0.
. 9 o, Robert Elmore 7 0-3 18, Jason Riggs
o 1-2 1, Brad Bentley 1 4-6·6, Kyle Kruniel
0 0-D 0, Alan Still 4 2·8 10, Tom Simpson 0
0-1 o, Steve Eberts 1 t-2 3, K,urt Roberts 2
1·2 5. Totals ~ 5-48 9-24 43 .
· GALLIA ACADEMY (9-8, 54 SEOAL)
Chris McCoy 0 O·O O, Travus Stoul3 0·0 6,
Chris Miller 1 1-2 3, Shawn T.tiompson 7 O·
0 14. Jell Golden 3 5· 7 12. Jayme
Haggerty 1 0·0 2, Brad Caudill 4 0-0 8,
· Alex Kyger 0 3-6 3, Shaphen Robinson 5
2-4 12, David Rumley 1 0-0 2. Totals 25·52
11·19 62.
Athens
6 17 7 13 43
Gallla
15 16 15 16 62
3-Point Goals- Athe~ s 4 (Elmore 4). GA 1

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------ --- · --- - -· - ·- - - - - - ' ' - - - - - - -- -

12 PAGES

A3
B2-4
Bs

A3

Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

B6

Editorials

jn the affected water districts only.

·www.c8healtllproject.org

WEATHER

Calendars
. Classifieds

Kid's Buffet ' Free Beverage
ggt~: Ages
with any
.
. 4 -12
entree
3 &amp; u nder Free
purchase .at
U m rt 2 per adult m eal
regular priCe

'"'""m.•d.oil)"'"tilll·L•·•""

morning on State Route 7
near Chester.
It
remains
unclear
whether these inciden ts
.involve the same person or
two separate peopl e.
The Chester incident is also
being investigated by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Oftice.
Proffitt said the 18-yearoid
female victim who was traveling alone wished to remain
anonymous but described the·
suspect as driving a vehicle
with a flashing light bar similar to that of a police cruiser
and wearing a green jacket.
Upon
approaching
the
female's vei:Jicle he then
·asked to see her driver's .
license with profane and
whar Proffitt called "vulgar"
language that continued
throughout the traffic stop.
The female then ·said the

suspect asked her to get out license of an a(lult, male dri of her veh icle, had her face ver who was carp9oling with
her trunk and then frisked he r coworkers.
·
with an open hand.
The male driver got out nl
The suspect insi sted the his .vehicle to retreive hi ~
female remain facing forward 'li cense and observed 'the susso she did not get a good look pect was driving .a light blue
at him. The suspect eventual- sedan with two antennas on
ly let the female go on her it, one on the top of the car.
way, without a citation, but one on the rear bumper. The
said he would c'ontinue to su spect also had a red, osci l-.
keep his eyes on her accord- lating light in his vehicle's
ing to Proffitt.
.
dash that he used to pull the
Proffitt said the other inci- driver over.
·
dent happened short ly after
The male dri .ver said that
5 a.m. thi s Saturday outside while the suspect was standof Chesier near· Shade River ing alongside . him. the susAg Service . .
pect' s vehicle rol led out of
This incident involved gear and st~uck the male vicanother traffic stop where a tim 's veh icle.
'
suspect presenting himself as
At'thi s point one of the pasan officer pulled . over a sengers in the male vi ctim's
motorist and began shouting car got out of the vehi~ l e
profanities. · The suspect which may have caused the
asked for the operator's suspect to flee.

Home for
released
felollS
planned in
Columbia

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Valle y Publishing Co.

With Valentine's Day less •
than a week away
sweethearts everywhere are
getting ready to remind the
ones they love just how
much they love them with
chocolates, teddy bears ,
flowers and yes, cards. Here ,
pictured below, JoAnn Hayes
(center) helps her grandch ildren Emm.ah. and Griffin Buck
create valentines for the
special people in their lives.
Pictured at right, grandmother Debbie Finlaw also gives
her grandson Lucas Finlaw
some guidance on where to
glue the hearts on his
valentine for his older sister.
The grandmothers and their
grandchildren created their
vall!ntine cards after Spring
Story Time at the Pomeroy
Ubrary as part of their craft
project. Each week a differrary housing fac ility for ent craft project follows story
time at 2 p.m. on Mondays
felony offenders. The Bureau
provides · monitoring and
at the Racine Library; 2:30
funding for such facilities.
p.m. , on Tuesdays at the
while the Ohio Adult Parole
Eastern Library; 2 p.m . on
Authority supervises offend- · Wednesdays at the Pomeroy
ers housed in them .
Library ; 2 p.m. on Thursdays
The contract is expected to
at the Middleport Library.
be approved on Thursday,
' Beth Serpnt/ pho1oa
Janes said. The facility will
operate from the abandoned
SOCCO office complex on
Ohio 689 near Point Rock,
which has sat empty since the
coal mines closed in 1999.
Last year, Varney proposed
using the Veterans Memorial
Hospital building for the
fac ility. He abandoned his
plans to locate ·the housing
facility in the hospital building after public opposition
arose from Pomeroy residents.
.
Janes said the facility will
primarily house felons from
Meigs County who have been
released from . Ohio correctional facilities and would
otherwi &amp;e be homeless . The
program which funds the
facilities is designed to provide newly-released offenders with housing and job
opportunities. Those placed
in the facility will have
already . completed prison
programs, a halfway house
experienc~ or other programs

BY BRIAN

•

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"

,.

Adults
•n.•

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.JL.

.J L. ,

'"I

,

·,

J.. REED

POMEROY - The race
. for Meigs County Audit,or
may shape up to be the most
contested race in the May
Republican primary.
Rita Smith . Director of the
· Meig s County Board · of
·Elections, said Wednesday
four candidates have picked
up petition s for the auditor
race in the Republican primary. Carla Shuler of Long
Bottom has filed her petition
for the race, and three others
have picked up petitions for
circulation .
Auditor Nancy Parker
Grue ser announced earlier
this year that she would not
seek re,election to the post.
She has been County Auditor
since she was appointed to
the post in 1993.
Smith said Meigs County
Commi ss ioner
Mick
Davenport
and
another
Democrat are circulating
petitions for that post. along
with a potential Republican
candidate.
The deadline for candidate s
to' file for their respective prima ries is Feb. 16. Petition s
will be certified by the election ' board ot\ - f'eb. 21 .
Write-ins can file as candi dates in the pri mary until
March 13.
Th i., )ear·, elect ion is
expected tn draw attention
b e cau ' ~ of &gt;tatewide and
di stric1 race&gt;. ncl uding those
of Gn 1W nor. Att orney
General. Audit or of State,
Trea, urer of Stat e. and
Supre me Cn urt Ju stice .
CJndid &lt;ites ' for
St ate
Represe nt ati1e will also be
on the ballot.
· · The term of Common Pleas
Cou rt Judge is also up for
ek(' tion · ,thi, ye ar. The
( ,lunty Cllurt Judge po&gt;ition
will abo be li ll ~d . but not
unt il the "'Ln·ember ge neral ·
elect ion .
Mcmhe·r, of th ~ Mei gs
Coun t\ D ~mocra t ic and
Republica n
Ce ntral
. Cum mi itec' will abo be
elect eL] in MaY from eac h
l'ntin g prect nct -tn the county

Please see Home, AS

~··

Please see Pollee. AS

BREED@MYEJAILYSEN TI NEL.COM

-

.,

The male dri ve r described
the suspe.: t a&gt; ha ving a mili ·
tary s1yle haircut with light
hair and wearin g a black
trench coat. Both the male
and female victims in these
cases say the suspect is in his
earl y to late twe ntie s and uses
vul gar language.
"I don ' t believe it 's a police·
offi cer." Proffitt said of the
suspect( sl. "We don't know
for sure if the two incidents
are connected bu t it sounds
like it."
Proftitt has also been in
contact with law enforcement
in Mason County, W.Va. to
make them aware of the incidents.
,
.
Proffitt al so want s the public to be aware of the recent
incidents and to use caution,

Four considering
run for Meigs
County Auditor

'

• U.S, officials reported
·in contact with insurgent
figures; 3 more Americans
die. See Page A2
. ·• Holzer observes Wear
Red Day. · See Page A3
• Arbors resident to
celebrate 103rd ,birthday.
·By BRIAN J. REED
. See Page A3
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
• Local Briefs.
POl NT ROCK - A Gallia
See Page AS
County man is expected to
• Flu season is with us.
open a hou sing facility' for
sex
offenders and other
See Page AS
f~lons at the former Southern
• Transfers posted.
Ohio Coal Co. offices in
See Page AS .
Columbia Township.
Linda Janes, chtef of the·
• Top loser honored.
·ohio Bureau of Community
See Page AS
Sanctions, said W~dne sday
• Radiation oncologist
the agency is expected to
approve
a contract with Bill
joins cancer care center.
Varney for a 20-bed tempoSee Page A6
.

2 SECTIONS -

'

For more Information. please visit

INSIDE

INDEX

• NEW Lime Buttered Grilled Shrimp •
• Beer Battered Shrimp • Fried Shrimp • ·
• Coconut Shrimp • NEW Italian Stuffed S~ritnp •

POMEROY: Shortly
last
after
midnight
Wednesday an 18-year old
Pomeroy woman was fo llowed
across
the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge by a
person she believed was a
law enforcement officer who
then proceeded to pull the
young woman over for a traffic stop onto State Route 833
near the new bridge's
Pomeroy approach, only it
appears now that the officer
was not legitimate.
·
The theory that the officer
was an imposto r comes from
Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt who is
investigat ing the case as well
as a simil ar incident that
occurred this past Saturday

.

Details on Page A6

r----------------------r----------------------·

l 800
551 7658
. 1·304·8654205

Page AS
• Samuel Anderson, Jr., 43
• Richard Waiters, 87

q.eJ,., 10 - 14

i

~I .

OBITUARIES

eeklnde Vuientine,&lt;! :t&gt;u-tt

"ttlletlllllllttrrl•••
1HIS c~~~H '

""·· ~~

.........

~

ovcs

•

Con&lt;1Jctro oy

!JY BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

• Cavs survive tangle
with TimbeiWoives.
See,Page 81

25

41·
Alexander ·
18 8 14 21 61
41
· Eastern
9 14 10 8 3-Point Goals- Alex 6· 14 . .(Kirkendall 3.
Skidmore 2, Hedrick) , Eastern 2·12
(Cozart
2).
Fou led
Out-non e
Rebounds-Alex 30 {Malesko 8). Eastern
31 (Rawson 9) . Assists-Alex 7, Eastern 4.
Stea ls-Alex 5 (Skidmore '2), · Eastern 4
(Four tied wf 1). Blocks-:Aiex - 1

Tl IIIRSDAY. FEIIIH IARY &lt;J , :.!noll

Law enforcement investigating possible police impersonator(s)

SPORTS

Fttch 30

Before
C8 HEALTH
PROJEO
•

Pick one up today at a senior ·
center, library, or PAR MAR Store

r,o CENTS • Vol.;;;;, No.1:.!.')

Ca rdington-Lincoln 44, Ma'n sfield St.
Peter1s 37
Cen terburg 59, Mansfield Temple Christfa n ·

o.

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

BuCyrus 72, N. Robinson Col. Crawford 45
BucyrUs Wynlord 64, Mt . Blanchard
Riverdale 63, OT
Byesville Meadowbrook 64, · Whe~llnQ
(W.Va.) Linsley 45
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 50~ Barnesville 30
Can . GlenOak 62 , Un1ontown Lake 51
C~n . McKinley 97, Youngs. Austintown~

Cen terville eo·, Day. Belmont 58
Chagrin Falls 56, Kirtland 49
Chardon NDCL 61, Cle. Cen. Cath. 49
Ch8sapeake 82. Proctorville Fairland 29
Chesterland W. Geauga 53, Hunting Valley
University 50
Chillicothe 69, Grove City 59
Circleville 56. Cana l Winchester 54
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 45, Washington
CH. 44
Clayton Northmont 59. New Carlisle
Tecumseh 47
Copley 81 , Wadsworth 56
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 65, Can. Timken 48
Day. Christian 59, Middletown Christian 51
Day. Dunbar 102 , Day. Meadowdale 66
Day. Jefferson 59, Day. Miami' Valley 40
Day. Oakwood 64, Brookville 40
16 137 12 - 46
3-Point Goals- Southerr) 3 (Johnson, Day. Stebbins 51, Miamisburg 46 .
DeGraff Alverside 80, Marion Cath . 45
~ape, Counts), QVCS 5 (Coughenour 4,
Carr).
Delaware 70, Marysville 68
Delaware Christian 50, Northside Christian
ALEXANDER 81, EASTERN 41
48
ALEXANDER (15·3)
Dover 63, New Conco rd John Glenn 44
Nick Malesko 0 2·2 2, Rylan Kirkenc:talt 7 0- Doylestown Chippewa 64 . Norton 60
0 17, Zach Hedrick 1 3·4 6, Daniel Dublin Coffman 39 , Westerville N . 35Skidmore 7 5·8 21, Ryan ThOmas 3 2-2 8, Dublin Je ro me 36 , Powe ll O!entangy
Shawn Howson 1 o-o 2. Mike Bolin 0 0-0
Liberty 32
Matt Oemosky 0 0·0 O, Seth Fowler 0 0·0 Duplin Scioto 57, Pickerington Cent. 44 ·
0, Brian Lawson 0 1·2 1, Seth Shull 0 0·0 E. Can . 57, Bowerston Conation Valley 54
0, Burt Wilson 0 2· 2 2. Michael Fostoria 55, Shelby 53
Dibenedetto 1 0·0 2. Totals 20·53 15·20 Franklin 58, Carlisle 56
61 .
Garfield i-Hs. Trinity 66 , ElyfiB Cath . 58
EASTERN (1D-7)
Gates Mills Hawken 58. HudsonWRA 54
Josh Collins 0 o-o 0, Bf"yce Honaker 4 2-5 Grandview 70, Baltimore Liberty Union 35
10, Nathan Cozart4 0·0 10, Alex McGrath Green 57 , Richfield Revere 50
2 3·4 7, Daniel Buckley 0 0-0 0, Michael Greenfield McClain 72, Wash1ngton C.H.
Owen 1 0-2 2. Marcus Guess 1 3-5 5. Kyle Miami Trace 55
·
Rawson 1 o-1 2, Derek .Roush 1 3·6 5, · Hanoverton Unite:d 58, Columbiana
Alex Burroughs 0 0·0 0. Totals 14-51 11 ·23 Crestview 52
·

Psychologists from
across country support
Strickland, A6
·
..

•

68. 30T

11 58.
BUFFALO (16-1)
Justin RayneS 4 o-o 9, Josh G ilChrist 0 1· 1
1, Adam Scott 9 2·4 21, Chad Slots 1 0·0
2, Dave ParKer 3 0-0 9, David Robinson 9
5-1o 23 , Nick Harris 4 0·0 8, BrocK Duncan
· 3 2·2 10, Shane ·Harrison 1 0·0 2, Justin
Whittington 101 -1 22, Brad Lyons 1 0·0 2.
Totals-4511·18109 .
Hannan
16 18 13 11 58
Buffalo
33 24 27 25 109
3-Point Goals- Hannan 1 (Kinnard ),
Buffalo 8 (Parker 3).
·
SOUTltERN 63,
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 46
SOUTHERN (3-15)
Kreig Kleski 0 0·0 0. Patrick Johnson 5 0·
2 13, Zlacob Hunter 1 0·0 2 , Josh Pape 3 0·
o 7, Wes Riffle 2 4-4 8, Corb i~ Sellers 6 0·
012, Bryan Harris 0 0-D 0, Brad Crouch 3
0-D 6 . Weston Counts 3 0·0 7, Jesse
McKnight 4 0-0 8 . Totals 27 4·6 63
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (4·16)
Bran'd on Coughe'ho ur 5 1·3 15, M ichael
Wili'iams 2 0·0 4, ,Nathan Brown 0 0-0 0,
Zach Carr 2 D-0 5, lack Weber 5 3·3 13,
Henry Patrick 0 0·0 0, Richard McCreedy 0
0·0 0, Luke Swinfi!y 1 0-0 2, Luke Stinson
1 3·4 5. Drew Scouten 1 0·2 2. Totals 18 712 46.
Southern
18 141 8 13 63

Win .

South ern hi t 27- of- 44
overall, · hittin g 24- of-36
two 's, 3-of-8 three· s. and 4of-6 at· the lin e. Southern
· had 3 1 rebounds (Crouch 7,
Sellers 7 ), 16 ass i&gt;ts
(Crou ch 7) , seve n stea l'
(Crouch 3, Pape 2). 13
turnovers and 14 fouh .
OVC hit 18-of-64 ove rall.
hittin g 13-of-43 two ·s. 5of-21 three's, and 7-of- 12
at th e lin e. The Defe nders
had 29 rebound' (Weber 7.
Scouten 7. Stinson 7). fi ve
assis ts. two ' teills and
seve n foul, .
The re was ·no re&gt;c rvc
game .
Southe rn hosb Waterfo rd
for Seni o r ni ght on Frida y,

2006

HS Basketball Scoreboard

1

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