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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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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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8,

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20", OFF

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•

.JL.' ·''' ··

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�..

.The Daily Sentinel

.

NATION • WORLD

·PageA2
Thursday, February 9, 2006;

White House offers select lawmakers details on eavesdropping
broadened
the
scope
it was legal. "My direction or very little left to the imaginaWednesday to include more
was
changed tion" of those memhers who
thinking
sensitive details about how
allended the briefing.
tremendously."
WASHINGTON ~ After the program works.
Said California Rep. Jane
Still, Cramer said, some
weeks of insisting it would
Harman,
the panel's top
"I think we've had a
memhers remain angry and
not reveal details of its eaves- tremendous impact today,''
frustrated, and he didn't Democrat, "The ice is. meltdrop.ping · without warrants, Wilson said at a news conferknow why the White House ing, and we are making
the White House reversed ence as Attorney General
waited so long to inform progress.''
course Wednesday and pro- Alheno Gonzales and G~n .
While Hannah cominues to
Congress of its actions.
vided a House committee Michael Hayden. the nation's
Lawmakers 'leaving the support the program, she said
with highly classified infor- No. 2 intelligence official..
briefing .said it covered the . she remains uncomfortable
mation about the operation.
briefed the full Intelligence
Foreign
Intelligence with the administration's
The White House has heen Committee.
·
Surveillance Act. Justice legal justification. Harman
under heavy pressure from
"I don't think the White
Department papers outlil)ing said she believes the adminislawmakers who wanted more House would have made the
leg~! justifications for the tration should have used the
inforniation
about
the decision that it did had 1 no:
operations. limited det:)ils on court processes set up under
National Security Agency's stood up and said, 'You must
success stories and soi11e , the FISA law and gotten warmonitoring . Democrats and brief
the
Intelligence
rants before eavesdropping
highly sensitive details..
many Republicans rejected Committee,"' said Wilson. a
on
Americans.
. The White House has
the administration's con- U.S. Air Force veteran.
Wilson, Harman and other ·
insisted that it has the legal
len.tion that they could not be . ·When asked what promptco1111ilittee
members want to
authority to monitor terrortrusted with national security ed the move to give lawmakhpld
hearings
on that law to
related international commu·secrets.
·
ers more details, White
review
whether
it should be
nications in cases in · which
The shift came the .same House spokeswoman Daria
one party to th" ca ll is in the updated . Hoekstra saic! he
day
Senate
Judiciary Perino said .the administrawas open to hearings on the·
United States.
. Committee Chairman Arlen tion has stated "from the
Jaw
but · said such a review
For . more than 50 days ,
Specter. R-Pa., announced he heginning that we will work
has
··nothing
to do" with the'
senio~ otficials have argued
is drafting · legislation that with members of Congress, .
thar President Bush ·and Vice president 's program.
·.would require the secretive and we will .continue to do so
President Dick Cheney were
foreign
Intelligence regarding this vi.tal national
within the law when they
Surveillance Court to re view security program." .
. chose to brief only the eight .
the administration's monitorQuestions from Congress
lawmakers . who lead the
ing program and determine if about the monitoring abound.
House and S.enate and t~eir
AP Photo
it is constitutional.
House Judiciary Committee
I .It also came after . Rep. · Chairman
· James Rep. Heather Wilson, R·N.M., chairwoman of the . House intelligence committees. ·
Iii a PBS interview
Heather Wilson. R-N.M .. Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., sent Subcommitt\1e on Technical and Tactical Intelligence, speaks
Tuesday.
Cheney said that if
chairwoman of a House intel- a letter to Gonzales with 51 to the media during a press · conference on Capitol Hill ,
ligence subcommittee that questions he wants answered Wednesday, in Washington . Breaking with the White House, ·all 70 members of the House
oversees the NSA. broke with by early March. . ·
Wilson who chairs the panel that oversees the National and Senate intelligence coin-. • FREE 2417 Technical Support ,
ihe Bush administration· and
As part of his upcoming · Security Agency wants Congress to change a 1978 foreign · mittees were briefed over the , • Instant Messitging · keep your buddy llst!
. called for a full review of the bill , Specter said he wants the intelligef]ce law following the disclosure of President George program' s four years, "i t's
• 10 e.ml'lil addresses w1th Webmaill
not
a
good
way
to
keep
a
• Cu stom Start Page - news , weatt}er &amp; morel
:NSA's program. along with FISA coutt to review the pro- W. Bush's eavesdropping program.
secret."
:legislative action to update gram to weigh the nature of
House
lntell igence ·
6X taster0
·the 1978 Foreign Intelligence the terrorist threat, the pro- maintain our civil liberties," number of questions.
JUSI 53 mor-e
:surveillance Act.
grahl 's scope, the number of Specter said.
"It 's a different program Ci)llunittee Chairman Peter
Sign Up Online I www.locaiNet.com
: She and others also wanted people being monitored and
At least · one Democrat left than I was . beginning fo Jet ·Hoekstra. R-Mich.. one of the
Call Today &amp; Save!
:the full House Intelligence how the information is being the
four-hour
House myself
believe,·• . said eight fully briefed. said he still
:nt~
•~ommittee to be briefed on handled. If the judg.es find the Intelligence Committee ses· Alabama Rep. Bud· Cramer, knows more abou't the pro:rhe . program 's operatio~al program unconstitutional, he sion saying he had a better the senior Democrat on ihe gram than the rest of the com- LocaJNef
Re hable Interne t Accoss Smt:(J 199 4
·tletml s. Although the Wh1te said the administration understanding of . legal an.d Intelligence
Committee's mittee. But, he said .. "there is
:!'fouse initially promised only should make changes.
operational aspects of the anti~ oversight subcommittee.
mformation about the legal
"The president should have terrorist surveillance program,
"This may be a valuable
· rationale · for surveillance, all the tools he needs to fight being conducted without war- program," Cramer . said, .
. administration ·
officials terrorism, but we also want to rants. But he said he still had a adding that he didn't know if
Bv KATHERINE SHRADER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

(t:';r:;:

(740)992·6260

U.S. officials reported in contact with
insurgent figures; 3 more Americans die
Bv PAUL GARWOOD
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD. Iraq - U.S .
officials have met figures
fr01n some Sunni Arab insurgent groups but have so far
not received any commitment
for them to lay down their
arms, Western diplomats in
~aghdad and neighboring
Jordan said Wednesdai
Three more U.S. troops
were killed in Iraq -. two of
them in roadside bombings,
lhe U.S. command said.
The meeting s. described as
being in the initial stage, have
not included members of ai Qaida in Iraq or like-mi1ided
religious extremists, the
diplomats said on co ndition
of anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the :.ubject.
; Contacts have taken place
~n western Iraq, Lebanon and
the United Arab Emirates ,
according to two diplomats
based in the Jordanian capital , Amman . One of them
said talks might shift to
!Egypt "at some ~poi nt. "
, U.S. offic ials have said
establi shing a 'dialogue w'ith
the insurgents was difficult
because of the lack of a unified command structure
among the variou s. groups
and the absence of a leader~hip capable ·of speaking for
~ost of them.
' Lt. Col. Barry Johnson, a
U.S. military spokesman, in
Baghdad, said the United
States is involved in talks on
promoting Iraq's political
process with "all sons of
groups," but declined to say
if any insurge nts were
among them.
However, a Western diplomat in Baghdad who is famil iar with .the dialogue said the
U.S. was reaching ilut to
r·sunni Arab nationalists" and
t'some .Islami·sts from the
fihiite and Sunni sides,"
1-nany of whom have grievances about jobs and r.econMruction money.
t "We hear. all the time that
they are interested in coming
In but we haven't see n signs."
the diplomat said. ''We wamto
see attacb 'itopped. The question is. can tliey help end the
violence if they want to join:·
' The United State' is promotg effo.ns to form a national
nity government 111 which
aq's Shiite and Kurcli ' h leadwou ld offer Sunni . Arab
figure' key po'it1"n' to try to
purb the insurgency.
Talh on a nev. government

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Community Calendar

PageA3
Thursday, February 9, 2006

Generous grandmother expects
thank-you to come with love

Public meetings

United Methodist Church.
Commerce business-minded
SYRACUSE - Wildwood . luncheon, noon, Wildhorse
darden qub, 6:30p.m. at the Cafe.
Thursday, Feb. 9
POMEROY
·- Meigs home of · Joy Bentley.
DEAR ABBY: I am a
eye, and ;he\ the best thing
on techniques of
County Commissioners regu- Program
who
lives
indepenwidow
·
that has ever happened to me .
lar meeting, I0 a.m., instead basic flower arranging.
dently . .I do my own cookAlpha
Iota
POMEROY
In recent years we have
. of l p.m.
. Saturday, Feb. ll
ing, shopping and laundry. I
Masters,
ll
:30
a.m.
St.
Paul
been
fortunate ·e nough to
MIPDLEPORT
SYRACUSE
Syracuse
have
good
friends
,
play
travel our great country from
Middleport
Village Lutheran Church . Julia Youth Ball League, baseball cards, go to movies and, in
Proctor
and
Joan
Corder,
coast
to coast. We .have done
Council, special session, 5 ·
Dear
sign-ups, 9 a.m. to I p.m ., general. enjoy life .
hostesses.
pretty
much everything you
p.m., council chambers, to
Abby
I recently gave my only
Syracuse Fire Station.
TUPPERS PLAINS can imagine, going out to eat.
discuss levy for operating VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m.
granddaughter, ··wendy,'' a
going to movies. I just don' t
expenses to be placed on Thursday at the .hall . Meal at
sizable sum of money. After
have a clue about what to do
May ballot.
30 days and no acknowledg6:30p.m.
for
our 15th year of heing
Friday, Feb. 10
ment, I mailed her a blank
Friday,
Feb.
10
together.
· Any ideas? Plea1e
NELSONVILLE ·
Friday, Feb. 10
thank-you card. Here's the good manners. · Her parents respond soon . - . CHRISTOEAST MEIGS - Return
Region
14 Workforce · Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
LONG
BOTTOM
response I got:
should have taught her by PHER fN MICHIGAN .
Investment Board, 9:30a.m. , DAR will meet at I ·p.m. at ··Delivered" at Faith Full
"Grandmother: Thank you example from earliest childDEAR CHRIS: 1 ha,·e a
Inn at Hocking College.
the Eastern Library si1cial · Gospel Church, 7 p.m .
for the money. It couldn't hood to say thank you when a
Monday, Feb. 13
MIDDLEPORT - Dave have come at a better time. kindness was extended, and novel idea. Becau;e she \ the .
room. History essay awards
CHAUNCEY -· Region. will be given by Mary Rose, Dailey at the Legion Annex, and .my family is very grate- the importance of a prompt best thing that ever happened
14 Youth Council meeting, 9 chairman. The Eastern. bell South 'Fourth Ave., 7 p.m.
ful. I have always appreciated thank·you note. (And "fami- to you, why not propose mara. m., Athens County DJFS. choir. will. present the 'proriage? And here's ho w: Tell
Sunday, Feb. 12
everything you have done for ly" is no exception!)
Ohio 13.
If Wendy "loves" you, she her that since you hav e
TUPPERS PLAINS gram.
me, but I didn't realize that
Tuesday, Feb. J4.
has
a strange and self-serving already traveled thi s great
Guest Pastor Jeremy Dunlap · 'family ' had to thank one ·
Saturday, Feb. 11
POMEROY -·
Bedford
and singers at Amazing another for· every gesture of way of showing it. She owes country from coast to. coa,t,
REEDSVILLE
Township Trustees will meet Reedsville United Methodist Grace Church.
kindness. I always believed you an arology, and if it is you think it's time you both
at the .hall.
Church, Valentine dinner. 5
POMEROY -Afternoon that love was thanks enough. not fonhcoming, you have went for a cruise on the :.ea
. p.m ., with sing to follow at ·of Eucharistic Adoration,
"I love you very much and every right to direct your · of matrimony. I'll bet she'll
7 p.m.
noon to 5 p,m., Sacred Heart want to be a part of your life attention - as well as your be surprised.
Dear Abby is wriiten by
POMEROY
Church.
and have you be a part of estate - to the grandsons
.
who
have
heen
both
loving
Abigail
Van Buren, also
"Delivered,'' the Meigs '
my life· and my family's
known as .feanne Phillips.
County Chapter of Christian
lives - but it's up to you. and respectful.
thursday, Feb. 9
DEAR
ABBY:
I
liave
been
and
was founded by her
Motorcycle Association, regIt 's your decision, because
CHESTER - Shade River . ular meeting, 9 a.m. ,
with
my
significant
other
for
mother,
Pauline Phillips .
we have a lot of love to give
Thursday, Feb. 16
Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30 Common Grounds Coffee ·
Dear Abby at
and share together with no 15 years. and I would like a Write
SHADE - Efmer Bailey thanks required or nece s- suggestion as to what I can · www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
p.m.
at
the
hall. Shop, information call 992Refreshments.
will celebrate his 85th birth- sary. Love, Wendy."
2061.
do for this special occasion. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
RACINE · - · BethanyTuesday, Feb, t4 ·
day on Feb. 16. Card may be
Abby, this is a girl with a We have always seen eye to CA 90069.
Dorcas Sonshine Circle, 7
POMEROY
Meigs sent to him at 40053 S.R. good education and a job she
p.m., at the Bethany-Dorcas County
Chamber
of 681, Shade, Ohio 45776.
· has held for 12. years. The
• • • • • • • • • • •
only time I see Wendy is at
COUPON
family gatherings. I used to
t~ke her shopping and to
lunch. I stopped that when
W'll b ·
GS
she never reciprocated or
I
e g1ven in MEl · COUNTY by
GALLIPOLIS -· Holzer
invited me to her home.
~lee TM HEARING AID CENTER
Medical Center and the
From infancy through colHolzer
Cardiovascular
~r. A. Jackson Bailes Office .
.
lege I have given Wenqy
Institute observed Wear Red
toys. clothing, furniture;
New Location: 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH
Day, a. national recognition
money- but no more! My
grandsons .never ask for anyFRIDAY, Feb. 10th• 9:00am-noon • (740) 446·1744
by the. American If Heart
thing
and
are
loving
,
and
.
Call
Toll Free 1-SOQ-634-5265 lor an immediate appointment.
Association for women and
The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist.
respectful. I feel fooli sh and
heart disease, .Friday.
used. - GRANDMOTHER
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
.
A special guest for the
IN
IDAHO
conversation
is
invited
to
have
a
FREE
hearing
test
to
see
II
event was June Alley of
DEAR GRANDMOTHER:
this problem can be helped I Bring this coupon with you lor
Jackson, a recent open heart
·surgery patient of the Holzer
For someone with a "good"
·your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
education, your gninddaugh- .
UMWA • UAW • .ARMCO. AND All OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
Cardiovascular
In stitute.
Alley was given the honor of
ter seems ignorant of basic I.
WALK·INS WELCOME
•
.
.I
lighting a spedal heart
wreath displayed in the front
lobby of the hospital in
Gallipolis that will stay lit
during February, obser~ed
across the nation as American .
Heart Month.
Employees of Holzer
Health Systems and the
Holzer .. Cardiovascular
Institute participated i.n the.
event by wearing red wristbands to sy mbolize the spe'
cia! day. Matt . Johnson;
executive director of the
Holzer
Cardiovascular
Institute . .presented Alley
with a dozen of roses .
It was announced that the
Center's annual hea.rt fair
Submitted photo
on
will
take
place
Valentine's Day from 8:30 to Matt Johnson of the Holzer Cardiovascular Institute presents a
I I :30 a.m. in the Hospital 's bouquet of red roses to June Alley of Jackson, a recent open
Education &amp; Conference heart surgery patient, during an observance of the American
Center in Gallipolis.
Heart Association's Wear Red Day. -

Youth events

· Church events

a

·Clubs and
·organizations

Birthdays

Holzer observes Wear Red Day

REE HEARING TESTS

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Hundreds of thousands of Process ions ·of men whipShiites are expected to take ping their backs with metal
part in ceremonies in 'chains marched outside the
Baghdad and the southern gold-domed Imam Hussein
city of Karbala, where shrine in Karbala on
Hussei n is believed · buried. · Wednesday.

formal certification this week
of the results of the Dec. 15
parliament elections. Shiite
religious parties won 128 of the
275 seats - but not enough to
govern without partners.
Sunni Arabs have insisted
that the Shiites give up control
of the police in the new government hecause of alleged
human rights abuses by. the
Shiite-run security services.
On Thursday, Shiite leader
Abdul-Aziz
al-Hakim
'il.ussell Stover&amp;
Wom~ns Colognes
ad'dressed Slinni concerns
. when he· urged security forces ·
.Whitman's Valentine
Gift Sets
to obey the constitution in
Hearts
performing their duties.
"We. call upon our faithful
Reg. $9.99
security forces ... ·to continue
Extra Special Friday Only
strongly confronting terrorists ·
30%off
Only
but with more consideration
•
to human rights," al-Hakim
Whitman's Valentine
said in a nationally televised
Russell Stover
speech at a Shiite mosque
Hearts
Cream Hearts
attended by 5,000 people.
Reg. $1.19
U.N.
envoy
Ashraf
Reg. 49¢
Jehangir Qazi met the head of
a ·prominent Sunni group, the
Association of Muslim
Only34¢
Scholars, Wednesday f,or
talks on Sunni allegations of
human rights abuses.
"We ·have emphasized to
the Iraqi government the need
to stop these nightly raids and
we constantly purs.ue the ·
Meris &amp; Womens
veracity of these allegations,"
U.N. spokesman Said Arikat
said. "We worry that if these
acts continue, they can only
exacerbate the same kind of
violence. which will widen
·the gap between the two dif- .
ferent communities."
Complete Stock
On Wednesday. the U.S .
1 Pound· Reg. $7.99
military said an Army soldier
· from the 4th Squadron. 14th
Cavalry Regiment died of .
wounds suffered three days
earlier in a roadside bombing
Whitman's.Sampler
in An bar province.
Valentine Heart
A Marine assigned to the
2nd Marine Logi stics Group,
Reg. '$8.99
If Marine Expeditionary
30% off
Force .(Forward) was killed
Monday in a bombing in
E;xtra Special Friday Only
Only
Anbar. the command said .
50%
Another Marine a'sig ned
to the 2d Marine Divi sion. II
Marine Expeditionary Force
(Forward). died ih a non ·ho,tilc vehicle accident Tuesday
during combat operation'
near Qaim on the horder with
kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
HOURS
Syria. the military said.
Charles Riffie, R. Ph.
Mon- Fri Sam- 8pm
Thou.,ands of police and
112 East Main Slreet
Sot. Sam - Spm
'ol dier' ha ve heen deployed
.
Sun. CLOSED
ahead of Thur,day \ Ashoura IPom~&gt;J•ov. Ohio
. C).ualrt ~ Pn.:"LTirtion .~ervic c &lt;H Conm.::titiVl' Pri l'l'~
feast. the climax of a month
l
"tilii } I'Ll) llll'nh ,'VIon -Stu 8am · 6j1m : S~11. ~Ltm - .\ pm
or commemorations by
Shiites mourning the 7th ce nPrescription Ph; 992-2955
tury death of a revered Shiite
Open
'TillS • Friendly Service
'aint. Imam Hu ssei n.

BY THE BEND .

;I'he Daily Sentinel

;;:,~~ ~;~(: ~· !1..'-111-Q
Queen Set. . . .
'King

set . .... ·. ·

Arbors resident to ·
Birth
·celebrate 103rd birthday announced

. ,.

'

GALLIPOLIS Edith
Erdman of 1715A Elizabeth
St., · Belpre, will celebrate
her I 03rd birthday on Feb.
13. An open house in her
honor is planned for Sunday,
.3 to 5 p.m. in the conference
room of the Arbors of
Gallipolis, 170 Pinecrest
Drive . Gallipolis, Ohid
45631. It will be hosted by
her family and staff of the
Arbors. Those unable to
attend may send cards to her
at the Arbors.

COOLVILLE - Autumn
and Jason Ash of 42901 .
Tucker Road, Coolville.
announce the birth of a daughter, Riley Ellyn Soncerria, on
Jan. 3 1. at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens.

•

Proud to be apart
of yourlife. ·

.

'

Subscribe today • 992-2155

Edith Erdman

.:••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.a•
•"
Overbrook Rehabilitation Cente'r is :

••

• •

•

on

: •
•
•
:

•
••
•••

••

sponsoring a Sweethearts Breakfast •
•

Saturday, february 11, 2006.
Bring your sweetheart and enjoy a
delicious breakfast while helping
out a great prof? ram.

:
•
•
: .

•
••
•••

.:

Breakfast will be from 8-11 am. The menu will include
pancakes, sausage, coffee, milk andjuiL:e.
Tickets are $5.00 per person, with all proceeds ben~fiting the
Meigs Co.unty Meals on Wheels Program.
:

·!

&amp;emn~ook C3eAte-t .

:

333 Page

S~reet

740-992-6472 · Middleport, OH 45760

!
:

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Wabt!ou ;ns ettabtishtd
J)ertoimed to eWe. 'To better
Compreb 1 11i:ve Weisht Loss
.~

.....,or l loved OM 'Wbuld like
snraerr or
title Holzer
pl... Clllt '740.446.SUS or

..,_t

�The Daily Sentinel

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 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging .the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
· . the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

OPINION

.

'

PageA4-

Thursday, Febru~ry 9,

..

Thursday, February 9, 2006
'1

Deaths

·Bush's 2006 domestic agenda is 'small ball'
President Bush famously
disdains "small-ball" policymaking, preferring to
swing for the long ball .
But, with the exception of
big new tax .cuts and hi s
competitivene ss initiative,
his 2006 domestic agenda
· ai ms at scoring single s, not
homers·.
The gigantic tax cuts,
costing at least $2 trillion
ove r 10 years if Congress
merely extends .current
redu'ctions,
plus
a
Republican
desire
to
ap pear fiscally " responsible,'' are preventing Bu sh
from undertaking ambitious efforts on health care,
education and energy.
He will extend health
insurance to only a .fraction of th e 45 million
Americans who lack it,
make only modest investments in health-information technology, postpone
the extension of his No
Child Left Behind education reform s to high
schools and fall far short
of a "Manhattan Project"
for energy independence .
And Bush 's 2005 failure
to gain trac tion for his
long- ball Social Security
reform' plan has forced him
to pu sh the enormou.s
problem of the baby boom
generation's retirement a challenge made worse by
his tax cuts - onto yet
another commission .
The competitiveness initiative , co~ting $136 billion over 10 years, is a
departure .from the smallball pattern and is being
praised, , dese rvedly, by
sometime critics such as
former Lockheed-Martin
CEO Norm Augustine and
former
Speaker Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga.
Augu stine, who' chaired
a National Academy of
Sciences (NAS) study that
Bush cited in his State of
the Union speech, told me
that he was "extremely
happy" with Bush's proposal to double funding for
re search in the physical
sciences over 10 years, to
permanently ·extend tax
credits for research and
development, _ and
to
upgrade science and math
. education .
The NAS study warned

Morton
Kondracke .

that the United States is in
danger of losing its traditional competitive advantage· in high ' technology to
China and India, two countries that are making huge
in vest ments in research·
and science education. ·
item
on
the
One
Augu st ine agenda that 's
not included in Bush's program, because he doe sn' t
want to spend th e money,
would fund 25,000 undergraduate and 5,000 graduate scholarships in science
and
engineering
and
10,000 scholarships for ·
science teachers.
Gingrich told me that
Bush is "modestly .breaking with the pa st, but it 's
nonetheless real. It starts a
new dialog."
He noted that a bill sponsored by Sens. Lamar
Alexander, R-Ten n., and
Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M. ,
which incorporates the
N AS propo~als , now has
60 co-sponsors , 30 from
each party, and he recom mended that the White
Hou se
and
Hou se
Republicans pu sh for
bipartisan action, too .
On · the healt.h front ,
Gingrich said he was "puz'zled" by the fact that "they
keep talking about electronic health records, but
they don ' t act decisively. I
think it's very dangerous
for the country to not go to
electronic' health records as
rapidly as pos sible."
It's "dangerous," he said ,
· ~ because paper kill s. We
kill between 44,000 and
98,000 Americans in hos' pitals every year from mi stake s. If things like that
were happening i'n civil
aviation, you'd. have an
absolute rebellion .' But
people just shrug off these
deaths ."
He said it would cost
less than $10 billion, but
would save much mqre in

Samuel Ray A~derson, Jr. , 43, of Hartford, died Thesday,
Feb. 7, 2006. He Js survived by hi s wife, Tamara Anderson.
Funeral services will be held on Saturday at I p.m. at
Anderson Funeral Home with Rev. Bill Murphy officiating.
Bunal wtll follow at the Zirkle Cell)etery.' Vis1ting hours will
be on Fnday from 6-9· p:m. at the funeral home. An on-line
.
registry is available at www.anderson'rh.com.

Richard Vemon Walters
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. - Richard Vernon (Dickie)
Walters, 87, died Monday, Feb. 6, 2006.
~1S1tat10n will be I to 2 p.m: Friday, Feb. 10 at the Christ
Ep1scopal Churc·h, Point Pleasant, W.Va., with funeral services following at the church. Burial will follow at Old Lone '
Oak Cemetery. Arrangements are under the direction of CrowHussell Funeral Home, -Point Pleasant, W.Va.
In lteu of flowers, contributions may be made to Christ
Eptscopal Church, 804 Main Street, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550.

·LOcal Briefs
Hospitalized
'.

Middleport taxes due
MIDDLEPORT - Those who provide childca·re under
Certifie_d Type-B Profession al 'Childcare provisions are
responstble for a one-percent income tax on earned income
from child care services provided in Middleport.
A fmal return form from the village will be ·mailed. Those
childcare providers who do not receive a form are still responsible to request it, or download it from the village website at
www.vtllage. mJddleport.oh.us, and file a return.
Those with questions can contact the tax office at 992-2827.

1

..

•

Transfers posted-· Woman reports 1960s-era:

POMEROY
- Mei ~s ·
County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the following transfers of real estate:
Dawn M. McCombs, John
P. Byrne, to Marcia A. Oyler,
.deed, Columbia.
Ralph E. Steinmetz, Faye
Steinmetz, to J.P. Morgan
Chase Bank, Bank One,
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs N.A., sheriff's deed, Scipio.
April E. Ritchie, April 'E.
County Probate Court to Geron Olan Harvey, 30, Albany,
Henderson,
Darrell
L.
and April Daw,n Hart , 32, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Lowen
Henderson,
to
Steven
Pau
1
Webster Smith , Jr. , 55 , Ravenswood, W.Va., and Dean Ann
Erwin,
deed,
Chester.
Johnson, 46, New Haven, W.Va .; Billy Gene- Jones, 29,
Timothy Curtis', deceased,
Rutland, and Carrie Renea Walker, 20, Rutland; Terry L.
to
Crystal Curtis, affidavit,
George, 51, Rutland, and Rebecca M. Pate, 44, Rutland;
Oratige.
.
Stephen Allen Burton , 50. Syracuse, and Teresa Kay
Bruner
Land Co., Inc., to
. Eakins, 41, Syracuse; Bill Edward Buchanan, 49, Lynda J. Fraley, deed, Bedford.
. Reedsville, and Kenda Kay Osborn; 41, Reedsville; and
Charles Houdashelt, Mary
Ronnie Lee Casto, 29, Pomeroy, and Kirstin Nicole Black, Ho~da s helt, . to Tuppers
27, Pomeroy. ··
·

Marriage licenses

Divorces ·
POMEROY -An action for di vorce was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by James B. Thomas,
Gallipoli~. against Darla Thomas, Syracuse.
A divorce was granted to Daniel Scott Bable from Mary
Joy Sable.
.

of

Dissolution
POMEROY -A di ssolution was granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Lea M. Carpenter and
·
James R. Carpenter.

.,

Civil suit ·
POMEROY ~A civil suit was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by CACV of Colorado, Denver, Colo. ,
against Mila Woods, Pomeroy.

bulls. A more ',.manly," in
the sense of dange rou s ly~
deranged, . sport cannot b0"
imagi ned,
And yet these boys are
"queers." The film. makes
its audience deal with it in
·ways its characters cannot.
Enni s and Jack ca n' t fit
their · desi res into the lives
they think they need to lead.'"
Part of me kept thinkin ~ · ~
"these boys need to move tiJ'.
Denver." Except that, as it
happens, one of my oldest''
friends runs a sheep and cat-::
tle ranch in Montana. I vi siC·
him whenever I ca n, partly, .
for the fishing Jack and
Enni s lie to their wives
about. That cou ntry gets, ,
inside you. Move . tQ;.
. Denver'! He'd rather die. .. ..
Lately, an intere s ting~·
debate has broken out in the .
New · York Review of-.Books , about whether '
"Brokcback Mountain" is a"
"universal love story" as•. .
many critics have insi sted\' '
or "a tragedy about the
speci ficall y• gay phenomenon of the 'c lo set,"' as
author Daniel Mendel sohn '
puts ' it. "If Jack a~d Enni s ·;

Police

' from Page A1
however he does not want the
public not to yield to emergency vehicles.
As for recognizing legiti·
mate police crui sers Proffitt
said , "If a legitimate law
enforcement officer pull s.you
over, their vehicle will be lit
up like a Christmas tree.'~
Proffitt added that if a
motorist is unsure of an officer who is tryi ng to pu II
them over a motorist should
lock their doors, put thei~
flashers on and go to the
neare st li ghted area with
caution and pull over. From
their vehicle Proffitt said
motorists should roll their
·window down a few inches
to speak with the officer.
Telling the officer your
conce rn s if yo
. u are pulled

.

over may result in them
voluntarily providing yo u
. with identification though
mo st will have name tags,
badges,
in signias
and
patches visibl e on their
dre ss identi fy ing them and
their agency.
Proffitt al so suggested carry ing a cell phone especially
for those traveling alone and
at night. Motorists may call a
dispatcher to verify the
age ncy making the. traffi c
stop altho ugh a dispatcher
· can not reveal why the
motorist was pulled over. ·
, As for the suspect(s) Proffitt
said, "Who knows what his
(their) intentions are."
The incidents remai11 under
investigation.
Those with information on
this • case can call the
Pomeroy Police Department
at 992-64 11 or the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office at
. 992-3371.

Plains-Chester Water District,
ri ght of way, Bedford.
Mark Patrick Gres s, Debra
Ann Gress, to Christopher A.
Wyatt, deed , village of
Middleport.
Jam.es Mason fisher to
Orri s Gordon Fisher, William
Mason Fisher, Roland Ray
Fisher, Carla Jean Danko,
Barbara Kay Fisher, certifi-'
cate, Sutton.
Roger E. Riebel · 11, Robin
Riebel, to Hazilee Riebel ,
Robin R. Riebel, deed, Chester.
Carql J. Sauber Tru st,
Theodore P. Sauber Trust,
Theodore P. Sauber, Carol J.
Sauber, to Kelly P. Sauer,
deed, Bedford.
DGris J. Proffitt to Roy W
Proffitt, deed, Chester.

Top loser honored
COOLVILLE - Connie
Rankin was na m~d weekly
best weight-loss · winner. at
Tuesday's meeting of TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Chapter
#OH
2013 ,
Coolville.
A yellow rose, certificate
and KOPS (Keep Off
Pound s Sensibly) charm
was pre sented to May Frost
for reac hing her goal

weight. Leader Pat Snedden
presented part two of a program entitled Bevera ge
dWai st."
The group meets every
Tuesday at Torch Bapt ist
Church. Weigh-in is from
5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
meeting at 6:30. ·for information, call Pat Snedden at
662-2633 or attend a free
meeting.

Home

will have a total of 92 beds in
six facilities under contract.
"We ' re purchasing housing
and case manage ment serfrom PageA1
vices for offenders who would
·otherwise
be homeless," Janes
and are considered "stabilized"· in terms of their readi- said . "Other needs are
ness to hve outside of pri son, assessed on an individual
basis by the facility and the
Janes said .
Those who · live in· such offender's parole officer."
While Pomeroy residents
facil ities do so voluntarily.
opposed
the facility when it
"We first try to accomodate
offenders from the county in was proposed for the VMH
which the facility is located, site, Janes said placing such
and depending on eligibil ity, offenders in a central location
we move on to offe nders · makes good se nse, and ·
frp'tn contiguou s counties," should make residents feel
safer, rather than threatened.
Janes said .
The "independent house". "We feel safer in the comprogram has been in place in munity if (the offenders) are all
Ohio for two years. When in one location and are moni"
Varney House is open, the state tored by a group or people."

abuse by now-dead priest

ATHENS (AP)
A
woman reported to police this
week that she was abused by
her Roman Catholic pri est in
the 1960s 'when she was a
young girl. .
Carol Zamonski, . 42, of
Columbus, made the report
now because she wanted to
inspire other viCtims to come
forward, she said Wednesday.
"It seems that it's a time in
the world that this movement
to hold the Cath9lic Church
accountable and help children ·
be safe in the future is gaining
momentum," Zamonski said.
"Anyone who comes forward
at this time adds streng\h to
that movement."
She told police Tuesday that
the Re v. Robert Marrer sexually assaulted her when she was
3 years tp 6 years old and'living· in Athens. 66 miles south- .
east of Columbus. Her fami ly
lived on property owned by
Christ the King Parish, and her
parents were close friends with
Marrer, often sending her to
spend time with him. she said.
"At that young age, I just
figured my parents knew this
was happening and that it ·
was OK with them,'' she said.
In 1995, someone reported
abuse by Marrer from the
1960s to church otlicials and
received pastoral care. the.
. Diocese of Steubenville said
in a statement. Marrer was
priest of Christ the King
Parish in Athens .from 1966
to 1970. left the priesthood to
stuqy for a doctoral degree in

1971 and died in 1996.
Zamonski. who said she is ·
no lol]ger involved in the
church. remembered the
abuse in her 30s and said she ·
has been undergoi ng vario us
types of counseling.
She said she did not file the
report to try . to elicit a
response from the diocese.
"I just .wan t other people to
know that if this has happened to them it's not their
fa ult." Zamonski said. "It can ·
be ·reall y helpful for them to
talk about it. "
Jud y Jones, director of the
Steubenville chapter of the
Survivors Network of those
Abused by Priests, said she
hopes Zamonski's actions·
will inspire other victims to .
come forward.
'They find the courage .
When the y go to the diocese,
they' re always told they' re
the only one," said Jones,
who grew up in Woodsfield,
Ohio. in the Steubenville diocese and lives in St. Louis.
. The Steubenvilk Diocese
did no1 respond to a question
on whether there were any
other complaints about Marrer.
Zamonsk.i would not be
among those able to sue the dio- ·
cese if a bill becomes law
allowing a one-year window for
sex abuse victims to sue over .
abuse dating back 35 years. but
she said she supports the bill.
It passed the Senate and is
in ·a House committee. If it .
became law this year, the cut- .
off date would be 1971.
"Frontrunner"
or "Champ'·

Anyone Lose
A Couple Billion?
ll=:am~ad

Income Tax Credit. You could significantly

·ncrease. your refund. Last year billions in EIT(' wt•n1

are tainted ," he wri tes "it's :

not because they're gay, bu't :
because they pretend not· to :
be : it's the lie that' poisons :
everyone they touch."
:
I'd say it 's both , and it. ~
will open your mind and ;
heart if vo u let it.
'
IArkaiLws
Dem ocrat- ,

lun,claitmt&gt;d. and som~ of that money might be yours . ll&amp;ll Block will
if you quali fy for thr Earned lnromt• Tax ('n&gt;(llt, b&lt;-cauS&lt;' wt•
lalwatiS get yuuthl" maximuml·tofund you'n• t.•ntltletl to, ~uarantt'{·d ·

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mail Lro11s ar gmelrons2 @:lh&lt;'global.net.)
..

ATHENS - Heading to a or sneezes, the viru' rides are more common in children tant for people wi!h higher
remote island to avoid getting tiny droplet' of moisture · than adults. Murry clarified health ri&gt;kf.. But in recent
sick this winter isn't an through the air. A virus can that ~tomac h flu (medically years not enough flu vaccine
opt,ion for most of us . transfer to any object . such termed gastroenteriti s) in · has been available for everyInstead, we stock up on vari- as a doorknob or hands • which the patient has vomit- one . There is also a small perous cold and infl uenza (tlu ) when a sick person has ing and diarrhea. has nothing centage of the population that
remedies and cross our just- touc hed their mouth , nose or to do with flu virus.
may not want to get the vacwashed fingers that we won't eyes or used the bathroom
"Other viruses cause the se cination for various reasons,
suffe r the worst of seasonal without washi ng their hands. illnesses, such as rotaviruses, inc luding . allergies. Some
ailments.
According to the World enteroviruses, or they can be fear they may become ill
But there is more we can do Health Organization the caused by bacterial illness from the vaccine, but that is a
than just hold our breath influenza virus . A wi ll stay such as Salmonella in bad myth -- inactivated influenz.;a
when someone sneezes. · alive · on metal for 24 to 48 food," Murry said.
·vaccine contains noninfecUnderstanding how flu or hours, on cloth, paper or tisWho gets jhe flu?
tious killed viruses and cancold viruses spread, what to sues for 8 to 12 hours.
Anyone can become ill with not cause influenza.
do to help prevent illness and
A contagious respiratory the flu virus. Considered high
Since the flu season lasts
how to cope if the illness illne ss, flu can cause mild to risk are people who are 65 until about the middle of
strikes ·can help allevi ate severe .illness and at times years and plder; li ve in nurs- . April, ;t 's sti ll not too late to
some of the worry.
can lead to death. According ing homes: have chron ic ill- ge t a flu shot , accorqing to
How we get sick
to the Department of Health ness such as respiratory, heart Patricia Parker, R.N., B.S.N.,
According to Andrew R. and
Human
Services or lung ; are smokers; are 0 / Bleness · infection control
Murry, M.D., infectious dis- Centers for Disease Control pregnant; are chi ldren 6 to 23 'coordinalor, · the flu season
eases/internal medicine spe- and Pre venti on, every year months of age; and have any lasts until the about the seccialist, seasonal flu is caused in the United States, on condition that compromises .ond week of Apri l. She noted
by two main types of influen- average, five to twenty per- respiratory func tions.
hat it takes about two weeks
za virus, A and B. Murry has cent of the population gets
Infants are at hi gher ri sk for a vaccination to be fu lly
a clinic at the Castrop Center the flu, more than 200,000 for serious flu comp.lications eff~ctive.
·
at 0 ' Bleness Medical Park in people are hospitalized· from but. cannot receive vaccine or
Frequent hand washing,
Athens once a month. He also tlu complic ations and about antiviral drugs. so protecting · avoidi ng touching the eyes,
practices
medicine
in 36,000 die from fl u.
them from flu is especially nose and mouth, and staying
Lancaster. "The makeup of
Symptoms of flu include important.
away from crowded are as
these viruses change every fever
high) , ·
(us ually
How to prevent
were suggestions
from
year," Murry said. "That is headache, extreme tiredness.
getting sick ·
Parker. She also noted that a
why the flu virus seems more dry cough, sore throat, runny
Anyone who wams to proper diet, plenty of sleep
severe some years and also or stuffy hose and muscle reduce the chance of getting and rest. can boost the
' .
why the flu vaccine changes aches. Stomach symptoms, the flu should get vaccinated immune system.
. every year."
such as nausea, vomiting and each .year. Murry said flu vac(Submitted by O'B!eness ·
When a sick person coughs diarrhea also can occur but cination is especially impor- Memorial Hospital)
·

·.·For.the Record

'Brokeback Mountain' art, not propaganda

. The Daily Sentinel

·CHESTER - Mary Showalter ·o f Chester is a patient at St.
Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. Cards can be sent to
Room 419-2.

·.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

FLU SFASON IS WITH US

Samuel Anderson

the long run because of lack · insurance during patt
reductions in liti gatio n of a year and about 20 mi 1-·'
costs and recovery from lion who lack it all year
might become"
unnecessary
medical long new ly
covered . under •.
errors.
And, Ging ri ch said, the Bush's plan s, but it's·•
federal government should · almost certain to be fewer•
be doing more than Bush than the 6 millioJi who
proposes to advance med- would ha ve peen newly
ical "transpare ncy," pro- covered by proposals he .
viding information to made in 2004 and 2005. '
patients about drug costs
The
administration"
and hospital and physicitm cla ims that the number of
performance.
HSAs has jumped from 1'
Ging ri ch noted . that in million to 3 million in the··
Florida, Bush's brother, past year, but critics poi nt '
Jeb , has introduced a Web out , correctl y. ·that thi s is•
site called FloridaCo mpare the in surance industry's
( ww w. fl or i daco mpare- es :im ate of the numbe r of·
care.gov) , where ·patients hi gh-deductibl e poli c ies
can punch ih their ZIP sold, not HSAs created. •
code, and the ·drugs they . In a White Hou se brief;.:
take and ge t readouts on ing, Bush economic advi sdrug pr'ices , saving as er AI Hul]bard said that
much as two-thirds. They just 37 . percent of those
can also get information on with such policies were
hospital costs and quality previously uninsured anp
performance.
th at' 40 . percent h a~,:.
In forma tion ·is key to in comes . under· $50,000,&gt;:
Bush's No. l health-re form seemingly validating c riti idea .
Hea lth
savings cism that HSA s are attracaccounts (HSAs) aim to tive mainly to "the · rich,
put more power and the young and the well. "
responsi bilit y into the
On energy, former · oi,l ,
hands of consumers, who man Bu sh has definitely,,
will "shop" for health care ta ken a turn by de.clarihg, ~
and reduce overall costs.
that the ·united States is
Bu sh
proposes
to ''a ddi cted" to oil amj ,
increase the amount of proposing up grades i(l,.
mone y that p,eople can
research on . al ternative..
deposit on a tax-favored
basis into HSAs to use to fuel s including clean coal,
ethanol,
pay out-of-pocket medical "ce llulosic"
costs and to bUy hi gh- hydrogen apd lithium car
nucle &lt;ll:
deductible insurance poli ~ batteries and
•
cies that cover catastrophic power.
Still, the investments are
medical costs.
Critics contend that , in mainl y in the million s of
medical crises, sick people dollars, not billions. The
and their families aren 't · admi~istration acknow lable to "shop around" and edges that human activity
that, in any event, accurate mi ght cause global warmc'•
in format ion isn ' t available. ing , but ' it has yet to com~ ·
They also contend that up with answers on how t\l'.
l_owe r-in·co me people don 't stop it , and it re fu ses !tl,.:
ha ve .money to invest in mandate energy efficiency:
HSA s and derive little tax for SUVs in order to prd; ;
advantage from setting up teet domestic automaker$·-~;
accounts be cause they pay It also adamantly o pp os~~ .
gasoline taxe s.
' ·.;
so ·little in taxes.
I agree with Gingrich,: , .
Moreover, they charge,
Bush
is " modestly" breakHSA s could encourage
employers to stop provid- ing with the past ~nd is
ing in surance coverage to addressing "the ri ght topth eir workers, thereby ics." But "s mall ball"
increasing the rank s ·of the won ' t solve America's bi g ,
probl ems.
.,
uninsured.
·
(Monon Ko ndracke (s
Administration officials
have no estimate yet of · executive editor of Rol( ,
how many of the unin sured Ca ll. the newspape r .
-· 45 million of whom Capiro / Hill.)

Today is Thursday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2006. There are
325 Q;tys left in the year.
' .
Today's Highlight in Hi story:
On Feb. 9, 1943. the World War II battle of Guudalcanal in
the southwest Paci fic ended witti an American victory over
Japanese forces.
On this date:
In 1773, the ninth president of the United States, William
Henry Harrison. was born in Charles City County, Va.
In 1825, the House of Representati ves elected John Quincy
Adams president after no candidate rece ived a majority of
electoral votes.
In 1861 , the Provi sional Congress of the Confederate States
of America elected Jefferson Davi s president and Alexander
·
H. Stephens vice president.
In 1870. the U.S. Weather Bureau was established .
In 1942, daylight-savi ng "War Time" went into effect in the
United States, with clocks turned one hour forward.
In 1950. in 3. speech in Wheeling, W.Va., Sen. Joseph McCarthy, R-Wis., charged the State Department was riddled
·
with Communists.
In 1964, The Beatles made their first live American television appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show" on CBS.
In 1971 , the Apollo 14 spacecraft returned to Earth after
man's third landing on the moon.
In 1984. Soviet leader Yuri Y. Andropov died at age 69, less
than 15 months after succeeding Leonid Brezhnev; he was
·
.
succeeded by Konstantin U. Chernenko.
Ten years ago: In Fort Lauderdale, Fla., a former member of '
the city's beach detail shot and 'killed five former co-workers
.before killing hiniself.. A colli sion of rush-hour commuter
trains in Secaucus, N.J., claimed the lives of both engineers
and a passenger. The Irish Republican Army ended' its ceasefire with a · truck bombing in London that killed two and
•injured 37.
·
Five years ago: A U.S. Navy submarine collided with a
Japanese fi shing boat off the Hawaiian coast, killing nine men
and boys aboard the boat.
One year ago: Hewlett-Packard chief executive CarlyFiorina was forced out by board members, ending her nearly
six-year reign. A new postage stamp honoring President
Reagan was issued in ceremonies across the country. ·
Today 's Birthdays: Actress Kathryn Grayson _is 84.
Television journalist Roger Mudd is 78. Actress Janet Suzman
is 67. ·Actress-politician Sheila James Ku'ehl ("The Many
Loves of Dobie Gillis") is 65. Singer-songwriter Carole King
is 64. ·Actor Joe Pesci is 63. Singer Barbara Lewis is 63.
Author Alice Walker is 62. Actress Mia Farrow is 61. Singer
Joe Ely is 59. Actress Judith Light is 57. Rhythm-and-blues
musician Dennis "DT" Thomas (Kool &amp; the Gang) is 55.
Actor Charles Shaughnessy is 51. Country singer Travis Tritt
is 43. Actress Julie Warner is 41. Country singer Danni Leigh
office in Clovis lately.
The inability to toferate
is 36. Actor Jason George is 34. Actress Ziyi Zhang
As for the "homosexual
ambi guity defines the
("Memoirs of'! Geisha'') is 27. Actor David Gallagher is 21.
agenda,'' i.f you had only
authoritarian mind. To conActress Marina Malota is 18. Actress Camille Winbush ("The
"Brokebac k Mountain'' ·to
trol
freaks,
there's
no
such
Bernie Mac Show'') is 16.
go by, you' d say that being
thing as art, only propaganThought for Today: "What we call progress is the exchange
gay ·guarantees a life of selfof one nui sance for another nui sance ." - Havelock Ellis,
da. Every story must have a
Gene
hatred, guilt, sorrow and
English psychologist ( 1859- 1939) .
. ' didactic message, the simLyons
loneliness. Stated abstractpler the better. In that
ly, the film's theme is very
regard,
.
self-styled
LETTERS' TO THE
c lose
to
that
of
"Christians," in the politiShakespeare's
"Romeo
and
cized
-sense,
are
much
like
EDITOR
Marxist
advocates
of of the:; Christ" to " Bi g Juliet'': when two people
Letterno the editor are welcome. They should be less than
fo rbidden. to love each other
"Socialist realism."
Momma's House 2."
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
Hence the success . of a
Do creative people ge ner- do love eac h other, catastrocomplex , deeply humane ally tend to be more social- phe fo llows . The s.tory
and include address and releplwn e number No unsigned letfilm
like ·"Brokeback ly tolerant than, say, CPAs?. unfolds with the inevitabiliters will ·be published. Letters should be in grad taste,
Mountain" can't help but Basically, yes. Unless · ty of classic Greek tragedy.
addressing issues, not personaliries. Letters of thanks ro orgaEven · the sex scenes
induce anxiety. The movie's you're eager to hu stle down
nizations and individuals w;/1 not be accepted fo r publication.
struck
me as anything but
recent Oscar nominations to the Cinemaplex to see
brought out the usual hired "Turbo
Tax
2006 : . erot ic: because Jack . and
scolds to peddle cant about Director's Cut," you ' d bet- Enni s, ranch hands drawn to
each other during a sumh1er
the film industry's alleged ter get used to it.
promotion of. the dread
What's reall y worrying tending sheep on a remote
Reader Services
(USPs 213-960)
,
·"homosexual agenda."
the "Chri stian" contro l Wyoming m·o untain, are
Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
I saw a particularly inane freak s (I don ' t accept the almost fighting. Fi ghtin g
Our main concern n all·stories is to be Pubhshed every afternoon. Monday
report
on ABC World New s hijacking of the word by ·t-hemse lves, fi ghting each
through Fm1ay, H 1 Court · Street.
accurate. If you know of an error m a
claiming Hollywood was fundamentalists) is that other, and lighting the doorn
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
story, ca~ the newsroom ~~ (740) 992· pald at ~omeroy.
. "schizophrenic" because it "Brokeback Mountain" is that the laconic Enni s in
2156
Member: The Assoc1ated Press and the
can't decide whether to playing so weli in the particular fears can onl y
Ohio Newspaper Association
make films about "gay cow- American outback . I saw it come of giving in to their
Post maa1er: Send address corrections
Our main number Is
boy s" or allegories like with 'my wife and her fri end desire . To reassure the skitto The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street,
(740) 992·2156.
''Chronicles of Narnia," fea- on a Sunday afternoon in tish, there's nothing either
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Department extensions are:
turing African lions as Little Rock along wi th an ge ntle or explicit about it.
Subscription Rates
Christ symbols.
audience of about 400. Two
It 's partly the film's bril By
carrier or motor route
· ls it possible for TV new s weeks later, it's sti ll playing liant. use. of the iconography
News
One month ......... ..•10.21
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
to
get any dumber?
at two theate rs here. of · the America west
One year .. . . ... .... ! 123.24
Reporter: Brian Reed . Ext . 14
Dally ..................50'
To begin with, it's·offen- According to The New York (despite its being fi lmed in
Repo-;ter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
Senior Citizen rites
sive to use "schi zophrenic," Times. it's a[so do ing very Alberta, Canada) that gives
One month .• , .... . ... .'9.24
a devastating mental illness, well in cities like Bozeman it so muc h or its power.
One year .......... , .'103.90
Never mind the nervous
as a sy nonym for "con· and Missoula; Mont.
. Advertising
Subscribers should rem~ 1n advance dred
Outside SaleS: Dave Hams. Ext 1?
to the Daily Sentinel No subscription by
fused." Second, there's no
Pundits who predicted the jokes about Jake and Enni s
Outside SaleS: 9(enda Davis, Ext 16 mail permitted iri areas where home
such thing as "Hollywood" .. film would have no audi- being sheepherders, not
earner service .is f~Vailab!e .
taass.!Circ.: Judy Clark, f::xt 10
in the propagandistic way ence outside New York. Los cowboy s. These boy s can
people
use the word . Angeles and San Francisco ride sk itti sh horses into the
Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
There 's:a large, enormously are be i1;g forced to recant. hi gh cou ntry, livin g comGeneral Manager
13. Weeks
. ... '32 .26
varied fi lm industry - one ·Slate's Mickey Kaus wa' fortably in a primitive camp
Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
26 Weeks ............ '64 .20
all summer and shooting elk
of America's few remaining reduced to chort ling tha t it\
52 Week s
.....'127 ·11
E·mall:
ipternationally competitive evidently bombing . 111 for meal. It se'ems idyl lic
news@mydallysenllnel.com
indu;tri es - that churns out ··clovi s, N.M. I wonder what on ly to tho'e who've never
Outold~ Mel'gs County
13 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . . '53.55
every kind of picture movie with no car chases. tried it. Jack, the more vo,al
26 Weeks ............. ' 107.10
Web
investors think might make explosions or talking ani - . of the two, meets his wife
52 We~ks .
. ... '214 .21
www.mydailysenlinel com
a buck, from "The Passion · mals has done big box during a stint riding rodeo

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

• La5ts up to 1o hours at a setting of 2.
• Takes 1bout 40 seconds lo fill .
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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February9,

2006

Wadnaadey'e game
High echool girls baoketboli

Radiation oncologist joins cancer care center .Local Weather
GALLIPOLIS
The
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care is announcing the addition of Dr. Heather A. Jones.
radiation oncologist.
Jones received her medical
degree from the Howard
Univ.ersity
School
of
Medicine, her master's
degree in biostatics and epidemiology. and undergraduate degree · in physiology
from the University of
Toronto. She is board certified in radiation oncology by
the American Board of
Radiology.
Prior to her arrival at .
Dr. Heather A. Jones
Holzer, Jones was a clinical
instructor in the Department ThGrapeutic Radiology and
of Radiation Oncology at the Oncology (ASTRO) and the
Hospital of the University of American Society of Clinical
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. Oncology tASCO).
and senior Oncolink correlo addition. she spent time as
spondent at meetings for the a swff clinician in the
American
Society · for · Deparonent of Radiation

Oncology at the Netherlands
Cancer Institute in Amsterdwn.
Jones' postgraduate training included an internship at
the Washington Hospital
Center
Department .of
Internal
Mepicine
m
Washington D.C.; ·and resi ~
dency at the Hospital .of the ·
University of Pennsylvania.
Jones has · a number of
research publications and
abstracts with a focus on.
breast cancer research, and
has lectured by invitation at a
number of hospitals and cancer centers.
She is ·a member of the
American
Medical
Association, American Society .
of Therapeutic Radiology and
Oncology, American College
of Radiation Oncology and the
Association of Residents . in .
Radiation · Oncology, and
comes to the Holzer Center for

Cancer Care with wonderful
recommendations from fellow
fac·ulty at the University of
Pennsylvania.
.
"The eiHire staff at the
Hoi zer Center for Cancer
Care are elated and proud to
have attracted Dr. Jones and
her family to our area, said
Dr. James Ungerleider, medical director of tb,e Holzer
Center for Cancer Cin-e. "She ·
combines excellent technical
skills with a warm, caring
personality; and will be an
asset to our cancer program
and communities."
Jones wi ll soon be available to see patients at the
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care. For more information
about Jones or the c'ancer
programs at · the H.olzer
Center for Cancer Care, call
(740) 446-5474 or to!!-free at
(800) 82 1-3860. .
.

Psychologists from across country support Strickland

Winfield 62, Point Pleasant 50

today's Forecast
Forecast for Thursday, Feb. 9

City/Region

High I Low temps

Youngstown •

.

Maneflald •

.

29" I 17"

BY JoN KRAWCZYNSKt

30" 115"

~

ASSOCIATED PRESS

t:._:)

.t
.i

Dayton•

~

32" 116"

~

*Columbus
32" 11 r

LocAL SCHEDULE

c___,_:)

GAl-LIPOLIS -A schedule ol upcomirlQ cony
and high iiehool varsity sponing events involving

teams trom Gama. Meigs and Mason counties.

Thursdiy's games
Girls Basketball

Cincinnati

Federal Hocking at Eastern, 6 p.m.

.Teays Valley at South Gallla. 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 7:30 p.m.
RocK Hill at River Valley, 7:30p.m.

&lt;'

-ot. •

•.,..

'

Southern at Miller, 6 p.m

~
r..:__:)
Partly

Cloudy

~

~
~
-. .
..· - . Thunder~
stoons
•1 / 1

~
'
; .,/

Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 30s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in the
lower 20s. Southwest winds 5
to 10 mph.·
Friday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
snow showers . Highs in the
upper 30s. Southwest winds
I 0 to IS mph with gusts UJ3

c

"

.

'

Rain

Flurries

~
~
•

•

~
~
·.:.:.

Snow

Ice

~
~
~

• " ...

to 25 mph.
Friday
night...Cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
snow showers. Cold with
lows in the lower 20s. West
winds 5 to I0 mph with gusts
up to 20 mph.
·
Saturday and Saturday
night... Cloudy with a '30 percent chance of snow showers.
Highs in the lower 30s. Lows
in the lower 20s.

COLUMBUS - · Hundreds
of psychologists from around
the country are contributing
to the governor's campaign of
Democrat Ted Strickland, a
fellow psychologist they say
is worth supporting both as a
colleague and for his politics.
Of Strickland's more than
6,900 contributions last year.
38) or 5.5 percent were from
psychologists. their employees
or other people working in the
field, according to a review of
campaign finance reports by
The Associated Press. ·
Of those, 216 were from
ACI- 80.56
Kroger - 19.18
Ohio, with the rest coming
AEP -35.95
Ltd. - 23.30 .
from 30 other states and the
Akzo- 50.72
N5C -48.30
District of Columbia. Those
Ashland Inc. - 64.08
Oak Hill Flnan~:Ial - 28.31
include 22 from New York,
BLI-13.50
OVB- 25.15
18 from California, II from
Bob Evans - 25.26
BBT- 38.88
Massachusetts and one from
BorgWarner- 54.35·
Peoples - 24.54
New Hampshire.
CENX- 35.19
Pepsico- 57.28
The contributions total
Champion - 3.30
Premier - 15.01
$34,705, or just over I perCharming Shops - U ..62
Rockwell - 68.24
cent of the $3 million
City Holding - 36.07
Rocky Boots - 22.71
Strickland raised last year.
Col- 50.62
Sears - 118.70
"I have supported him not
DG -17.40
.Wai-Mart - 45.40
just because he's a psycholoDuPont - 38.88
.Wendy's- 56.91
AP Photo
gist but because !like what he
Federal Mogul - .45
Worthington - 19.82
stands for and I like what I ~sychologist Barbara Baisden sits in her den Wednesday ·a t her home in ColumbuS': Hundreds USB- 29.57
Dally stock reports are the·4
know of him ~s a person," said . of psychologists from around the country are contributing to the . governor's campaign of Gannett- 60.87
p.m. closing quotes of the
Jerome Siller, .75, a psycholo- Strickland. a fe llow psychologist they say is worth supporting both as a colleague and for his General Electric - 32.74
previous day's transactions,
gist and retired .psychology politics. Of Strickland's more than 6',900 contributions last year, 385 or 5.5 percent were from GKNLY- 5.15
provided by Smith Financial
professor in Manhasset. N.Y. psychologists, their employees or people working in the field, according to a review of campaign Harley Davidson - 51.33 ·
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In
who gave $50 in October.
finance reports by The Associated Press.
Gallipolis.
·
JPM- 39.60
Strickland, a congressman
Psychologist
Barbara
representing eastern Ohio
in
suburban
since 1996, received a doc- Baisden
supported
torate in counseling psychol- Worthington
Strickland
for
Congress
ogy from the University of
because she felt his backKentuc;ky in 1980.
He was a psyc hology pro- ground would make him senfessor at Shawnee State sitive to professional · issues,
University and a consulting such as requiring health
psychologist at the Southern insurance companies to offer
The Multi-Slice Cf Scan
Ohio Correctional Facility in coverage for mental illness.
"I just · fe lt he would be
' provides the most
Lucasville. His wife, Frances,
attentive
to
a
lot.
of
social
is also a psychologist.
comprehensive ·imaging
Strickland's con tributors issues that I was concerned
may hope he shares ideologi- . about. and also to the eco- ·
available. The new
is
cal beliefs and professiohal pri- nomic problems of northeast
orities, though their ability to Ohio." said Baisden, who
currently available at Holzer
help elect him is questionable .. grew up in Warren . .
Clinic Gallipolis and Holzer
said Justin Buchler, a Case . Raymond Bakaitis. a
California
psychologist
who
·
Western Reserve University
political scientist who studies grew · up in . suburban .
Cleveland, contributed $35 to
campaign finances.
'
"I don't see . how it could Strickland last month..
Gallipolis (740) 446-5289
Bakaitis. 56, of Los
have any effect on ~jther his
Jackson(740)39~854
electoral prospects or on pol- Angeles, said he appreciates
icy, given that we're talking Strickland's background as a
about a small amount of Methodist minister and what
he .believes is Strickland's
money," Buchler said.
to use government to
efforts
Still, any base of support is
help
peop,le.
useful when fundraising. said
'T ve wanted to support reliSue O'Connell. research and
gious
people who .share those
communications director for
LoaJ~­
values
and the. fact that he's a
the National Institute on·
psychologist j ust makes it easEIIfii'YWhet&amp;
Money in State Politics.
ier
for
me
to
d.
o
that."
he
said.
"It's just·so much easier to
make that phone call or write
that Jetter when you have a
connection with them some .
· way," O'Connell said.
Strickland uses a database
of psychologists he's created
since first running for
Congress in 1992 to contact
people in the profession each
campa1gn.
In that fundrai sing letter. he
reminds them of their professional connection and- their
shared concerns about publi c
policy.
,
"So in that way they tend lo
be
a special
group," ·
Strickland said.
·
Psychologists have gotten
to know Strickland over the·
years and ap~reciate his posi·Dr. Reaves is rertified by the American Board of ·
tions, said IV!icheal Ranney.
executive di(ector of ihe Ohio
Ophthalmology.
.
Psychologi cal · Associat ion
and a contributor of $200.
"Our
members. ' both
Democrats and Republican'.
that I've talked to, are work ing hard for Ted because they
believe in him,'' Ranney said .

Local Stocks

HOLZER CLINIC

New CT Scan
Now Available
cr

Clinic Jackson:

Med'tcal Excellence

Eye Examinations-and_Q:mplete Eye -Q3re

• Cataract Surgery ·

•
•

Diabetic Eye Care
Children's Exams

HOLZER
CLINIC

740.446.5421

Lisa H. Reaves, MD

---- ·-

-----.- -

____,

Thursday, February 9, 20o6

Cavaliers s~rvive tangle with Timberwolves

Toledo•
31 " 118"

Weather Underground • AP

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPON'oENT

',

M ICH.

Cloudy '-c.__:_) Showers

BY ANDREW
WELSH·HUGGl NS

Bl

,The Daily Sentinel

LocAL SCOREBOARD

A1edica/ExceUence

·

Local Caring:

Frld'ay'a gamea
Boys Basketball
Marietta at Gallia Academy. 7:~0 p.m.
. South Point at River Valley, ? :jo p.m.
Nelsonville· York at Meigs. 8 p.m.
Pl. Pleasant at Herber1 Hoover, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 8 p.m.
Sl. Joseph at Hannan , 7:30p.m.
South Gallia at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 8 p.m.
Man at Wahama, 7 :30p.m .

Girts Basketball
OVCS at Grace, 5 :30p.m .

Saturday's games ·
Boys Basketball
Meigs at Eastern, 8 p.m.
Hannan at St. Marys, 7 :30p.m.

Wahama at Wood County, 7:30p.m.
Glrlt Basketball
River Valley at Gatlia Academy, 2:30 p.m.
· Waterford at Southern, TBA
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 3 p.m.
Wahama at Wood County, 7:30p.m.
Wrestling
Ga!lia Academy at SEOAL
TVC Meet at Wellston
Wahama at Johnson Central (Ky.)
.
College Ba~ketbatl
Rio Grande at Tiffin . 4 p.m .

INSIDE

MINNEAPOLIS
Le Bron James dominated in
the . fourth quarter while
Kevin Garnett disappeared.
James scored 12 of his 35
points in the fourth to lift. the
Cleveland Cavaliers over
the .
Minnesota
Timberwolves 97-91 on
Wednesday night.
.
In a match up of two of the
most successful players to
make the jump from high
school to the · NBA, James
and Garnett needed plenty
of help from their team- .
mates in this one.
James got off to a slmv
stan and was just 11-of-34
from the field, but he made
the · big
shots · when
Cleveland needed them
most, following a turnaround jumper on the low
block with a 3-pointer that .
gave the Cavs a nine-point
lead'with 3 minutes to play.
Garnett was just 1-for-5 in
AP photo
the fourth quarter and finished with 21 points, 18 Clevelant1 Cavaliers center Zydrunas llgauskas, left , of Lithuania, is fouled by Minnesota
rebounds and six assists.
Timberwolves center Mark Madsen during the first quarter of an NBA basketball game in
The Timberwol ves went Minneapolis on Wednesday..
·
on a 6-0 run late in the game
to cut Cleveland's lead to ing out on. a triple-double and Marshail had 10 points Minnesota 51-41 ..
At tim~s it appeared as if
90-88 wi.th 36 seconds to go, for the second straight and 13 rebounds.
but James came· right back game. He also had plenty of · The Cavaliers trailed by Garnett was left to battle the
from
Zydrunas 15 midway through the first Cavs alone on the boards ,
with a driving layup to hand help
Minnesota its fourth loss in llgauskas and Don yell quarter, but their control 'of and it clearly wore him
MarshalL
the boards allowed them to down in the closing minutes.
five games.
·
· Ricky Davis led the
llgauskas
scored
10
of
hi
s
creep
back in the gaine.
James added II rebounds
Cleveland 'outrebounded Timbe!'wolves with 33
and eight. assists, just miss- 21 points in the first quarter

• ·Navratilova plans return
to Slams. See Page 82

Clippers' new
stadium will be
Huntington Park
COLUMBUS (AP)- The
Col umbus Clippers' ,yet-tobe-built new ballpark has a
name: Huntin'gton Park.
Huntington
Bancshares
Inc. will pay $ 12 million over
AP.photo
the next 23 years to put its
Wayne Krivsky breaks into a smile during a news &gt;:onference
name and logo on the $55
Wednesday in Cincinnati after he was hired &lt;;~s the
million ballpark, set to open
Cincinnati Reds' next general manager, ending a two-week.
by 2008. The deal was
search that involved eight candidates. Krivsky had been an
announced Tuesday.
assistant general manager for the Minnesota Twins.
Huntington Park will be .
built downtown in the same.
area as Nationwide Arena,
home of the NHL's Blue
Jackets. The ballpark will
replace 74-year-old Cooper
Stadium, which is in a neighborhood near downtown.
CINCINNATI (AP) . The two share passionate
The Clippers , owned by
Minnesota's Wayne Krivsky personalities and similar
Franklin County, are the
overwhelmed the Cincinnati views on how to run a team
Triple-A affiliate of the New
Reds' new owner during an - hire good people. develYork Yankees and play in the
int'erview Wednesday. then op ~ strong farm system,
International ,League.
· got the job as their next gen- make sur~ to connect with
County
co mmiss-ioners
era! manager.
tans.
want to break ground for the
Krivsky's hiring ended a
"We connected," Krivsky
ball park bY, the end of the
two -week
search
that said. "Very compatible. Very
year.
involved eight candidates similar ideas on how you
Huntington, a Columbusand ultimately came down run a quality organization ."
based regional bank holding
to two - him and Reds speIn a symbolic gesture. ·
company, will pay $5 million
cia! adviser Jim Beattie . Castellini inscribed a baseQf its $12 mill ion to help with
Krivsky's second interview ball and handed it to
construction, officials said.
went so well that owner Bob · Krivsky, 5 1, who comes
Castellini didn't need any fro m a small-market team
more time tb think it over.
that knows how to win . The
"He was totally prepared," Twins won three straight AL
Castellini said . "He blew us Central titles from 2002-04 '
away."
with comparable payrolls,
Phone - 1 -740-446-~342 ~t . 33
Krivsky was a- leading
"It was a v.ery big considFax - 1• 740-446·3006
candidate for the Reds' job eration
very big."
e-mail- sportsOmydailysanttnet .com
two years ago. but former Castellini said.
Sgorl$ S.!D.tl.
owner Carl Lindner chose
Krivsky knows a lot about
Brad Sherman, Spona Editor
Dan
O'Brien.
who
had
the
Reds already. They were
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33 ..
worked for the Houston one of the teams he scouted
bshermar} 0 mydaily1ribune.com
Astros and Texas Rangers. for the Twins, watching. perBryan Waite,., Sports Writer
O'Brien · was . fired last haps 40 games a year.
(7401 446-2342.' ext. 23
month by Castellini, who
He also knows a lot about
bwalterS@ mydailytribune .com
wanted to bring in his own their history as a model franL.arry Crum, Sports Writer
executive to run the baseball
(740) 446· 2342. ext. 33
operation.
Ple~se see Krlvsky. 82
Ierum C mydaHy~eg lster. c om

Reds pick Krivsky as
new general manager.

.These are
just a lew of the n1any
ser\'ices
'
.
at Pleasant Valley Hospital \rhere you will
find millions of' dollars \H&gt;rlh of technology,
medical and technological specialists
and ·d~zens of options, all to treat
just one condition ... THE Hl : ~L-\\ 0\E.
.

CONTACfS

I·

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Val ley Drive • Point Pleasant. WV • 201 -bed facility

301-675-1310

/

I

�\ Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, February 9.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

mribune -. Sentinel - Register
CLASSIFIED

Michaels out at ABC/ESPN, headed to NBC Navratilova plans full
·I
schedule with Slams
NEW YORK (APl -

Do

~ou believe tn switchtng net-

works? Yes!
AI Mtchaels appears headed to NBC after ESPN hired
former quarterback Joe
Thetsmann, Washington Post
: colummst Tony Kornhetser
pnd Mtke Ttnco · as tls
Monday mght broadcast crew
' Mtchaels had. been wtth
ABC smce 1976 and had been
the play-by-play ;mce ot
''Monday Ntght Football"
~tnce 1986. when he replaced
•frank Gtftord. A tour-tune
:iEmmy-Award wmner, he ts
: best known tor cxclaumng
"Do you believe in nmacles''
Yes!" when the Umted States
upset the Soviet Umon in the
1980 Winter Olympic hockey
:tournament
:1 NBC takes o&lt;er Sunday
· ltight games next season trom
John
Madden.
AP photo
:f:SPN.
:Michaels' broadc.tst partner AI Mtchaels is shown during the 11th annual ESPY Awards, in
; for the last tour · s~ as~n.s. thts Ju ly 16 , 2003 file photo, tn Los Angeles. AI Mtchaels
- ~greed 111 June to a SIX-) ear appears headed to NBC after ESPN htred former quarterback
·contract with NBC.
·
:· ''AI was not comfortable Joe Thetsmann, Washt ngton Post columnt st Tony Korn he tser
. and let us knov. he was not and Mtke Tlnco as tts Monday mght broadcast crew.
: comfortable with our vtston broadcast Sunday mght tomorrow," NBC Sports
. of where we are go tng . " games on ESPN . with Mtke chatrman Dtck Ebersol satd m
. ESPN executt ve vtce prest- Patnck and Paul MaoUire
an e-mail to The Assoctated
dent John Sktppet said after
"I teelltke I'm a c;eature of Press
Wednesday's announcement Monday mght. I'm home and ' Mtke Breen wtll replace
" B ack m November he said it I'm stay mg home " Mtchaels Mtchaels as the lead NBA
: as the greatest JOb ever smd then 'The three words play- by-p lay announcer on
. nvented
So
so me tune ' Monday Ntght Football' res- ABC/ESPN He will be
between the last couple of onate like no other "
joined by former NBA coach
week' and November apparSktpper was· evasive when Hubie Brown, htred in
ently he had a change of asked about spectfics on December 2004 a5 the anaiheart "
Michaels. saymg only a "sat- lyst
I At a news conference July tstactory resol ulton" had been
ES PN plans to use tls van26, Mtchaels smd he would reached Pat Gtbbons, a mar- ous televtston and radm netrematn v.tth "Munday Ntght ketmg representative for v. orks and Web sites for day,
Football" when ll sw ttched to Mtchaels, smd he could nut long bmldups to the Monday .
ESPN after 36 seasons on' reach the broadcaster
mght games, whtch wtll start
" We wtll probably dtscuss at 8'40 p m , about 25 mmutes
ABC He was to be pmred
with Thet smann . who had qnd update our pos1t1on earlier than prevmusly. MNF

~

hired him in 1994 as a special
asSIStant. He has spent the
last eight years as asststant
ge neral manager, involved m
al l aspects of runnmg the
team.
"Probably the goal of his
h fe was to become a general
manager, and it' s become
reality," Twins general manager Terry Ryan sa1d. "He's
bright. He's organized. He's a
relentless worker. He's the
type of guy that pays attenl!on to detail He's good with
rules He 's good with contracts He 's a good evaluator
"He's got a lot of the attnb-

Krivsky
from

Page 81

chtse m the 1970s, when they
won back-to-bac k World
'series champtonsh tps as the
Btg Red Machme
"There:s absolutely no reason we can't get back to
being regarded m that hght
by the baseball fratermty,"
~nvsky
satd.
"There's
'absolutely no reason "
Krivsky worked for the
Rangers be fore the Twms

has not had a three-man booth
smce Mtchaels was teamed
wtth Dan Fouts and Denms
Mtller 111 2000-0 I.
Theismann was an NFL
quarterback for 12 seasons
and had worked on ESPN's
Sunday night games since
1988. Komnetser, who had
audittoned for the MNF JOb
Miller got, has written for the
Post smce 1979 and has cohosted
"Pardon
the
Interruption" on ESPN since
September 200 I wi th Michael
Wtlbon, another Post writer.
"I've got about 27 gtgs right
now," Komheiser satd. "J'ye
got radto, I've got television,
I've got The Washmgton
Post."
He thmks listeners do care
about who broadcasts games,
especially "if the telecast has
a Certam amount Ol S!ZZ)e "
"Roone
Arledge
and
Howard Cosell , among others, s~rt of changed the. ~~ew­
mg habtts of Amenca, he
satd.
He also must adj ust hts
schedule.
"I live ltke a barn am mal . I
go to sleep a~,9:30 and wake
up at about 5, he satd.
Ttrico
has
bee n
a
"SportsCenter"
host for
ESPN · and handled play-byplay of the last Orange Bowl
He has worked for ESPN and
ABC since 1991.
"It's the best play-by-play
chatr in sports," Ttrico said
"To be the next person to sit in
11 ts humbling:·
Michele Tafoya tetums for
her tht rd season as a "Monday
Ntght Football'' stdeline
reporter, and Suzy Kolber was
added dS a second sideline
reporter.

utes that you would want to offense last year, but cou ldn't
assoctate wuh a general man- overcome the lack of a
ager."
de pendable rotation and
Knvsky got a two-year bullpen. The Reds let starter
contract from the Reds that Ramon Orttz leave after the
includes mutual options for season. and got left-handed
starter Dave Williams from
two additional years.
The Reds are coming off Pittsburgh m a trade for Sean
their fifth straight losing sea- Casey.
son, their longest such streak
The Reds failed to develop
in 50 years. Krivsky's biggest pitching under general manchallenge wtll be to stgmfi· ager Jim Bowden, who was
cantly upgrade the Reds' fired m 2003, mtdway
pitching staff, whtch has through the first season at
been among the league's Great American Ball Park.
worst overall for several Dunng Bowden 's tenure,
several pitching prospects
years
•
Cmcmnatt had the NL's top hurt thet.r arms m the mmors.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

n happen' II r m ready, then
I'll play If I'm not, then I

BY HOWARD fENDRICH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

won 't '

Even dS she approaches het
50th birthday and recovers
from knee surgery, Martina
Navratilova plans tQ play a full
schedule of doubles toumaments m 2006, mcludmg the
Grand Slams, and mtght take
another stab at smgles.
"I JUst feel like I'm not qune
done yet." Navrati lova smd
Wednesday 111 a telephone
mtervtew wtth The Assoct.lted
Press ftom her home in
Sarasota, Fla. "When l leel li kc
I'm done. then I'm done. And I
don' t know when lliat wtll happen."
In a sense, she's lin.1lly being
hollest with herself and her
fans, after havin o repeatedly
made 'This ume f reany mean
tt" dec larations about when she
would hang up her racket But
tarewell tnllr followed tarewell
tour.
Navratilova onginally reured
m 1994. wtth a record 167 Sillgles tttles and havmg spent 331
weeks ranked No l She
teturned to the tour as a doubles
player in .2000, anti eventually
couldn't resist dabbling m smgles, mcl udmg a tirst-round vtctory at Wnnbledon 111 2004
Now&amp;lavs, she won't n1.1ke
any predictions abollt how
muc h longer she' ll play or
whether she'll agam gi;e smglcs a try against players halt
her age - or younger
"We' ll see how the body's
go mg
I mtght get on the
grass agam," she said when
'asked about play ing singles.
·'Right now, tlldt's so far away:
I'm n0t warned about ' tt or
t~mkmg about n II It happen,.

She mtured her left knee during an exhtbttion event 111
November and had arthroscopic surgery the next month, foreing het to miss the Austrahan
Open and other events. Back at
practice, Navranlova ts auning
to return to the WTA Tour at the
Feb 20-25 hard-court tournamem at Dubat, United Arab
Emu ates, then wants to play the
next week at Doha, Qatar
Her partner at those tournaments will be 29-year-olcl
Liczcl Huber, who teamed wtth'
Cara Black to win Wimbledon
last year After that, who
knows'' Navratilova satd that tf
thmgs, don't work out with
Huber - "Hopefull y, I ~~~
· keep up my end of the bargam,
N&lt;~vrattlova satd - she' ll look
for another partner, perhaps
Martlll&lt;t Hingis.
Hingis, who was named after
Navrati lova, recently returned
from her own three-year rellrem~nt, wmmng the mixed doubles tt tlc and reaching the singles quarterfinals at the
Australian Open
She hopes to play doubles a~
15 tour events thts season and
also could enter the mtxed doubles at the French Open,
Wunbledon ,md U.S Open. But
Navrattlova will take time off
fiom tennis m April to promote
her new book, ''Shape Your
Sell," v.h tch she descnbes as "a
health and litnes' hook (about)
gettmg the in'tde organized
belorc you can get the outstde
lookmg better . It's a guide of
how to do It wtth little baby
steps tnstead ol a dras'ttc
Jilc&gt;tyle ~hange "

0' Bnen instituted a pttch Mozel tak. Atlanta vtce presilimit m the mmors to try to dent Fr.mk Wren , and lour Ill cut down on the m.tune s He house ~andtdates spectal
also gave left -hander Enc asstst.tnt Leland Maddox,
Mtlton a $25 5 million, three- tnterndllonal scoutmg dtrecyear dea l to upgrade the 1ota- tor Johnny Almaraz, Beattie,
tion, a move that tmmedmte- and Brad Kullm an, who
ly bac kfired. Milton went 8- served as GM dunng the
15 and gave up 40 homers search process.
Knvsky won't have much
last season, the most m the
room to make an Immediate
maJors.
O'Bnen had a year left on unpact The Reds plan to
ht s contract when he was keep thetr payroll aro und
tired Jan. 23. Others mter- $60 mtllton - same as last
vtewed for the job were season - and the roster IS
Philade lphta assistant general ..generally set wtth the start of
manager Mtke Arbuckle, St. spn ng tnumng only one
LOUIS
aSSIStant
John week away

Help Wanted

wise, you must file a

responsive pleading
wit!l the Clerk of

Courts off1ce and
serve tegal counsel

for Plain~ffs no tater
than March 31st, 2006
Respectfully submit·
ted by:
Frank A. Lavelle,

es, assigns, succes-

Esq. Attorn'~)' for
Plaintiffs, Reg. No.
OOt0195 Lavelle Law
Offices, L.P.A..
8 North Court Street,
Second Floor,

sors, administratiors,

Post Office Box 661 ,

Iexecutors , devises ,
next of kin or heirs al

any.

Athens, Ohio
45701-0661
(740) 593-3347
(740) 592-6656- Fax
(1) 26, (2) 2, 9, 16, 23,

Certain mineral (oil

(3) 2

law, If deceased, and
spouses of same, If

and gas) rights were
severed or prosstbly
severed from the sur-

lace In apx. 54+ AC
located in the sw au
· of Sec. 12 and 2 5+
AC located in the NW
au of Sec. 11, Olive
Twp , Meigs county,
Ohio by A.J. Watson
and J. B. Phillips, tn
deed recorded on or

about February 16th.
1915. The last ltlled
transactton involving

A.J. Watson and J.B.
Phillips concerning

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
IS

hereby

g1ven lhat the Board
of Education of the
Me1gs Local School
District,
41765
Pomeroy

Pike ,

Pomeroy, Oh10 45769,
will offer for sate by
sealed brd at 1:00pm ,

Tuesday, February 14,
2006, the following
veh1cles:

time .

1990 International
Bus ~3
1990 International
Bus #4
1990 International
Bus #5
1990 International
Bus #15
1982 International
Commodity Bus 19
1997 Ford Econo Van
#69
All sealed envelopes

The current owners,

containi ng bids

P Schultz, submit
that under Ohto Rev

the outside. Terms of

such mineral rights.
is a Deed recorded on

or

about

February

16th, 1915 1n Vol . 111 ,
Page 548, Metgs
County
Deed
Records. No title
transactions
concerning such severed
minerals exist
of
record
in
Meigs
County smce that

Claron G and Gloria

Code Sec. 5301· 56

et.seq., none of the
condltions

ex1st,

whtch would serve to
, preserve such sev8red mineral tnterest,
that those mmerals
I have th~re fore re-

merged with the sur·

face tnterest m satd
tract , and are now
owned by them. If
yotJ contend other-

from,

Treasurer's

Office,
· 41765
Pomeroy Pike, P.O.
Box 272, Pomeroy,
OhiO 45769, or by
calling (740) 9925650.
Mark E. Rhonemus,
Treasurer

TRAINING ...

Meigs Local Board of
Education
P.O. Box 272
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(2)3,7,9, 13

• Two week mltlal &amp;

oncntat1on cla.'isCs with

•'Ibe

Public Notice
The Home Nat1onat

are

to

be marked clearly on

1

e

s

e

retect any and all, or
paris of any and att
b1ds. Questions can

be answered by Mr.
Pau l
McElroy,

Transportation

Supervisor at (740)
742·2990
All btds must be

~-

Bonuses Fla t Rate
Health Cure. Dlsablllly.

At John Sang Ford-Lincoln-Mercury we've
established a 35 year reputatiOn of honesty,
mtegmy and outstandmg customer servtce·
before and after the sale. With the hottest
products on the market and as the fastest
growmg dealership m our regmn, we 're addmg d1esel tec hn ICtans to better servtce our
customer Ford Servtce trainmg preferred
but not required.
If you are a professional techmcian lookmg
10 stan a new career or maybe you don't feel
you· re patd or treated as well as you should
be ~nd 1f yo u're It red of workmg for someone who tsn 't working lor you. g~&lt;c J 1111
Thomas a call today 1-740-446:9800 or
1-800-272-5179. You may also appl y 111
person at 195 Upper Rtver RD .
Gall1polis. Ohto Monday-Fnday

Need a
lob Done?

Shop.
f'lle

Long Term Care and

~$

I

1FTHX26F1 VEA65391
1994 Chevy GK1
1GCEK19K2RE13653

-ID-

LINCOLN

.MIRCUOY

Equal Opportumly Employer

Classilietls ~

~~~

0

1992 Chevy Kt500
1GCEK19HON115300

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

4

1995 Dodge Ram 4x4

D i e s e I
1B7KF26C9SS357365

2003 Bri-Mar Dump
Truck

Trailer

43YDC1 0293C02652
The Home National
Bank

reserves the

right to reject any and
all bids. All vehicles
are sold , as Is where
Is, with no warranties
expressed or implied
For an appointment

to see, can 949·2210,
ask for She1ta.
(2) 8,9,10

sale will be cash or

money order. Said
Board reserves the
right to waive lnfor~
maht1es, to accept or

COMPENSATION ...

Saturday, February
11 , 2006 at 10:00 a.m.
at the bank's parking
lot:
1997 Ford Ranger 4x4
1FTCR15X4VTA11877
1997, Ford F250 4x4
D

betil manugement

team m the country to
aSSISt YOU

Bank will auction the
following Items on

Public Notice
Not1ce

DIESEL TECHNICIAN

received In, and bid
specification sheets
may be obtained

.SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

-- ------

--

WANTED: Position ava tl ab le to

ass tst an tlldivtdudl v.i th mental
retardat1 o11 111 Metgs Coun ty. 25 5
hrs/wk, Sdl &amp; pm - 8 am Sun, Sun
7 30 pm ·X am Mon Must have htgh
'chool dip loma/GED. ;ahd dnver's
lt ce11se. three years good dnv 111g
expencnce dnd adeyudte dutomubtle
tmurdnce S7 25/hr
Send·re,ume to :
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Uox 604, Jackson, OH 45640
Dcadltne tor app lt cdntS. 2114106
Pre -employment dru g test tng
Equ.d Opponun11y Emrfoyet.

CT .ASSIFIE I )S
i,;:::=:::=:::=:.J §j~~E. M PI .&lt;&gt;Y ~ E~N~-y~-~~~~~~~

FIND A JOB OR A NEW
CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIED$

G.1IILI CIKI IIty, OH

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

(

Call TOday... .

r ~~ I 7:~d S~lul· :::
m, !

Mother's Day Bus Tnp At
554 area B1dwell
Dresden,
Homestead (740)368-0321
Saturday May 6th Payment - - : - - - - - - -·
March 1st V1 s Beawty Shop Lost Border-Come aro und
$65 (304 )675·5503 or
Lyon s
Add
Mason
Answers , to Oreo M ale,
304 675·6937
neutered&amp;m1ss1ng bottomIron!
tooth
Mamly
GIVF.AWA.Y
black&amp;whlle w/some brown
on back paws Has been
8 month old blacklwh1te missing smce approx
female cat, •ns•de only, litter beginni ng of Jan 1 Ofte n
I rai ned l 40)388-o523
If you
seen at Walmart
have arJylinfo Please call·
Black/wt'ute spayed female (304)773-6061 or (304)593i 857
Sadly m1ssed' by
lap cat, 1ndoor only
Black/whlte female cat, less Owners &amp; Children
than • 1yr old •ndoor only
Lost Cat mate. black/white,
Will spay (740)446·2700
has Scratc hes on lace,
answers to 'Boo· Lost near
Free f.rewood Approx 3 PU
Watson Ad Please ca ll
loads (74o)256·8138
(740)441 · 1280

(740)446·2700

r

I•

--~

-----------

- -- -

All Dlaplay : 12 Noon 2
Buslne•• Days Prior To
Publication

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

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.

Antiques ...................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ................................................. 770
Autos for Sate .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate ............ .. .......... 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ................................. 2t 0
Business Training .................................... t40
Campers a. Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
EtectrlcaVRelrlgeratlon .................... ,..........840
Equipment lor Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ............................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. ......................................... 6t o
Farms lor Rent ....................... ,..................... 430
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sate ..................................................... 585
For Sate or Trade ........................................ 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetaliles ..................................... 580
Fumtshed Rooms ........................................ 450
General Hauling ..........................................850
Giveaway,................ ,... .. ...........................040
Happy Ads.................... .. ........... ..........050
Hay a. Grain .............................................. 840
Help Wanted.................. ............ .. ............. 110
Home lmprovements .......... ,........................ 81 0
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ...................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ...................................... . .020
Insurance .................................................... 130
Lewn &amp; Garden Equipment ...................... 660
Llvestock ..................................................... :630
Loll and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .......................................... 350
Miscellaneous.............. .... . ....................... 170
Mlecellanaous Merchandise ....................540
Mobile Home Repair..... ...... .. ..... .. ............860.
Mobile Homes for Rent... ............................ 420
Mobile Homes for Sate .................. ., ............320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
Mustcel Instruments ................................... 570
Peraonals ..................................................... 005
Peta lor Sate ................................................ 560
Plumbing I Heating ..................................820
Professional Servlcee ................................. 230
Radio, TV I CB Rep.olr ............................... 160
Real Eatate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schootslnatructlon ................................... 150
Seed, Plant a Fertilizer ............................. 850
SIIUatlone Win ted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 480
Sporting Gootll ........................................... 520
SUV'elor Sale .............................................. 720
Truck• for Sate ............................................ 715
Uphotatery ................................................. 870
vane For Sale .............................................. 730
Wanted to Buy ...................................... 090
wanted to Buy· Farm Supplltl ............... 620
Wanled To Do .......................................... 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ...................... 074
Yard Sate-Pl. Pleasant ..... . ... , .............. 076

HotJSF.s
REtvr

FOR

2 Bd Rm house w1th large
kitchen Off street parkmg
and storage
Askmg
$425 00
Poss1ble HUD
740·243·5611
All real eatate advertltllng

retngerator 44 Ohve 51
$385/mo
5385/dep
no
pets (740)446 3945

su bject to the Federa l
Fau Housmg Act of 1968
which melees II Illegal to
advert1se 'any
prefenlnce , ltmllatlon or
discrimination baaed on
race, coiOI", religion, Hit
familial status or national
orlgrn , OC' any Intention to
ma~e any such
preferencs, limitation or
dlac:nmlnatlon '

I \ 11'1 4)\ \ 11 '\ I
.., I H\ It I "'

HEJ;PWANIFD

5 rooms and bath stove and

In thla newapaper Ia

l

96 doublem:je
Ea stern
Schools TPC water 3 bed

Assemble crafts
wood nems

l-'f

fu:ulkby
©2006

NEA , Inc

www.comics.com

•to

I

m1sceHaneous chores

Expenence operatmg equipment &amp; ex1ra skills such as
weldmg a plus

Calll304)93'l·3410
Located 1n Mason County
near Buflalo WV

Exper~enced

wrecker
dnvmg

llght

operator
record

duty
Clean
Call

1740)388 8545

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1·888· 582 ·3345
IU \I I ..., I\ II

l.

HF.LPWM1FD

llt!lo

•.

~--·
Home Health

Sotoot.s
1Ns!RUCI10N

Ii

I1
10

• --,

A new career •n
Medical Office
Administration
starts w1th career

HOME'i

liOR S4.LE

call

Attention!
Local com pany offer1ng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams lor you to buy your
home •nstead ol renting
· i 00% l1nanc•ng
• Less than perlect cred1t
accepted
• Pay.ment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators

(740)367 0000
Small 3br House SR , 50
1
$450 mor,th
Deposit
Reterences
reqUired
no t
HUD

Galhpolls

MORII.£ HOMFl'i

1'1'::1-~~--..,

baths

(502)943 0386

knowingly accept
advertisements for real
eatate whlcl:ll1 In
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelhngs advertised 1n
th la newspaper 11re
available on an equal
opportun1ty base•

100 WORKERS NEEDED

2

rooms

This newspaper will not

Thurs·Sel

%~

H~

FllRSAu·

us

seasoned musiCians Greal
sound system and hghl
~
FOUND
liJm-4pm
show With log machmes wtll
Drivers Needed:
be tn place Stud•o record
COL Onvers wdhng to dnve
Female BlaCk Lab 10 a good [
lng With CD sales m add1110n lor local ready-m~:~c-con&lt;:rete
home 14-16 m onths old, - 740 367company' Expenence IS
very
good
natured I buy Junk Cars (304)n3- to h\le shows
7 129 J1m
preferred
but not necessary
(740)446·7595
5004
Med 1nsurance &amp; other
An Excellent way to earn benel1ts ava1lable after walt·
money The New Avon
109 l)enod Onver musl be
Call Marilyn 304 882·2645
wllhng to do pre-mainte4x4's For Sale ............................................. 725
nance on trucks &amp; eqwp·
Announcement ...........................................030
ment, yard work &amp; other
drens clothes

POLICIES. Ohio Valley Publl6hlng raiNfVaa the right t&lt;J ..:Itt, rajKt, or c;:ancal any Mlat 1ny tim. Errors mual ~report..:! on the f1rat day ol
II
Trlbun•Sentlnei·Reglster will be responsible for no more than the coat Of the apace cx:cupled'by the enor and ont-w the flrtt lnHrtion We shall not be
any loss or expenH that r-.eulta from the publ ication or omlufon of an advertiHment COfrectfon wi ll be made •n the f1rst avellable edition • Box
are slwt'(t confidential • Current rate card appllel • All real estate advertisements are tubject to lht Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968
accepta only help wanttld ads maellng EOE sr.ndards We will not knowingly aocept any advertising In 'o'lolatlon of lhe law

S1lvar and Gold Cams,
Proolsets Gold R1ngs Pre
1935
US
Currency
Solllalre D1amonds- M TS
com St)op, 151 Second
A\lenue, Gallipolis, 740 446·
2842
----:--:---:--Wan1ed To Buy
Meigs
County Store Scr1pt, Store
Tokens and currency from
Racme,
Pomeroy
and
Middleport Banks 740 992
6040

801·428-4649

YA.RDSAIE-

Thursday for Sundays

t.wnght2005@comcast net

Matenals provided
Free mtormalion pl&lt;g 24Hr

---

Paper

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Sol•d White Syr old Female
GAIJ.J~
A keyboard player needed
Reg•sterea
German ~~--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiioor
tor new Chr.st1an rocklpra1se
Shepherd Spayed to good Garage sale 698 Jay Dnve and worsh•p band We are
HOme (304)8B2-34BS
Baby stuff, brand name ch1l· not teenagers and we ere

Lorr AND

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

• All ads must be prepaid'

To 6480/wK

YA.RDSAU.

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!.iii1
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Disolay Ads

'rlclay For Sundays

\'\\Ill \1 I \ II ' I'-

puppy, apprmc 4 mo old, St

~2-2157

Oearltiru

• Start Vour Ada With A Keyword e Indude Complete
Det~crlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre ... latlons
e Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Day1

Items

r
r

· or Fax To

Word Ads

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

Male neutered declawed
3yr old yellow stnpped cat
Very lnendly, 1ndoor only

'

Register

Sentinel

or Fax To (740l 44&amp;-3oos

Offtee 11()~~

Snd

''

(7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Your Ad,

..
- ------ - -

mrtbune

To Place

CLASSIFIED INDEX

PROFESSIONAL
In the Meigs County
Court of Common
Pleas
Pomeroy, Ohio
Claron G. &amp; Gloria P
Schultz
Plaintiffs,
vs
A.J. Watson, et. at.
defendants.
Case No.O&amp;·CV-10.
•Legal Notice
To A.J. Watson and
J.B Phillips and/or
their unknown spous-

Mdp Cuun.ty OH

approved

tOH SALE

1304~674 - 5935

Stop re!"'t1ng Buy 4 t&gt;edroom

homes under foreclosure $15 DOC For list·
$3 000 00 Must Gal Call mgs 800 391 5228 e;:.;•
Ela1ne 740 3B5 0698
1709
tO

used

1t2 Pleasant Street 3 bed
1 1/2 bath s New
Central AC N'ew Windows 16xao homes startmg at
Two
Bedroom
House
New Water Tank
Gas S25995 00 Includes v1ny l
Deluxe K1tchen Appli ances
tra1mng @
srdlng/
shingle
roof
Call
Budget $88 (304)675 4034
Fu rnished
$47 5 00 per
Gallipolis Career
Russ 740 385 2434
Month $475 00 Secur 1ty
College
2 Umt Aparlment Bwld1ng 1964 10x50 Rembrandl w1!h Depos1t Lease Requ1rea
(740)446·4367
Newly Remodeled m Pom1
furn1sh•ngs $1 000 0 8 0
740·992·5421
800·214·0452
Pleasant Ready to Accept (937)~ 8 1 -21 11 days
12748
Renlers (304)675 8635
1"'111
HINI..'i
Housekeepmg and laundry
i 996 14x70 lnd1es Sullan 2
FOR
3 Bedroom hOuse 6 years bedroom , 2 bath v•nyl Sid·
poSitions a\la1lable at Arbors
Concealed P1stol Class All
old has two baths new •no shmgled roof Ask•og
of Galhpolls, Apply 1n person
14X70 tra1ler 3 bedrooms
States Feb
11
2006 , washer and dryer, also stove
at 170 P1necrest Dn\le,
$18.000 (740)441 1547
Elect riC heat
$300 00 a
$75 00
9 OOam VFW and refngator
large
Ga\hpoiiS Absolutely No
Mason WV Ph (740)843- gara ge storage bwldn'HJ 2006 16 w1de Spec1al Pnce month and $250 00 de~s•t
Phone Calls Please
No pets
Hud appr011ed
5555,
has approx 2 400acres sits $181/mo Call (7,40)385
740-742·271 4
Local business look1ng for
on corner of Eagle A1dge 7671
'
Secretary/Aecept•ontst
Road and P1negrove Road '96 Fleetwood 3 BR Only
2
Bd
Am
M obile Home tn
Must have good telephone
1n MeiQS County Eastern $169/mo Call (740)385 Mtcldleporl $250 a Mon th
sk1lls &amp; good with the public.
School Distract 112 m11e off 9948
and $250 depoSit
Year
knowledge In computers &amp; For Sale- f1rewood, Oak , Rout~ #7 Appra•sed Value
Lease
..
No
Pets
and
No
6
x8
bed
s•ze
,
you
haul
$35
all other office mach1nes
L1ke new 2002 Clayton
$97 000 740-992 1527
Calls aher 9 00 P ~
740
Hours 8am-5pm Monday- 7401949·3061
14x52
$1 48,m0
Call
992 5039
Fnday 8 12 Sa!urday
3 br/ 1 bath , 1 5 acre lot 1n (740)385 9948
1
1 '"'
. WAN'IFD
PO Box was published
Pomeroy new roof leave
Do
New Ooublew1de Aepo ~ bedroom mobde heme 1n
wrong please resubmit
message 740-517 5388
ne\ler lrvect 1n owner fiance Rac1ne 5350 mo plus 5350
resumes to
depos•t 11ears lease, no
Are
you
m
need
of
A
new
3·4bd, partial brack house on 1 3 acres 8 m1les north
Local Busm'ess
pets no calls a1te• 9pm
roof
plumbing
f1xed
frammg
of
Holzer
Hospital
on
t
60
7acres 646 Sand Hill Ad
PO Box ?55
(740)992·5039
a bUI!drng or any kmd of car- Pt Pleasant Needs some 1740)446 3570
GalltpoiiS OH 45631
penter repa1rs 1f so grve The repair $75 000 (740 )388·
Renta l Property tor Sale 2 bedroom tra•ler tor rent No
Handy-Man a call @ 304- 6366
1970 Hillcrest on SOX225 tot pets (740)256 6803
Loc al Company
Arde Classes-

Agency IS look•ng for people
tr"flerested 1n hav1ng a ca reer
m the home health field
C lasses w111 last 2 weeks
and help w1th ,lOb placemefllt
Class start date IS Feb 13th
Please call (740)441·13n
or (740)992.·0990 for details

rooms

MOBU.E
RENl

To

Help wanted at the Darst
Group
Home
1740)992·5023

Adult

Attention
Trucking

Onvers
IS lookmg for
w/1
yr
OTR

Drf\lers
Expenence lor Aeg•anal
Hauls Average pay 40's to
m1d 50s Home
Weekend

ca ll

1800)462·9365

HOLZER SENIOR CARE
CENTER NURSING
OPPORTUNITIES
olzer Semor Care Cente
s a 70 bed !ong term ca r
ursmg facility located 1
ural Gali1a County Whos
lss•on focuses on qualit
are lor our res•dents W

AVON• All Areas ! To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley Spears, 304-

675·1429 •
sk us about our:
EW WAGE STRUCTURE

©©ll.

' NO EXPERIENCE NECESS.-,R\1
' FVI,L TIME CL.-.SSES
' COL TRI'.INI NQ
• FINANCING -.v41LA8LE
' JOB PlACEMENT

• ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE

nef1ts Include
• Compet11111e Wages
• E:o~perlence Cred•t
• Regular Rate Increases
• H ea It h / 0 en t a Il l II
nsuranc;e
•40tk (after 1 year)

• Uniform Allowance
•Vacation

orne be part o1 the HOLZ

1-800-334-1203

A d1f1erence stop 1n an
ee us at 360 Colomal Dnv
ldwell
Oh io or gw
t eph~me
Tra 1ner
AN ,
SN DON or Teresa Remy

Desk, Clerk needed Please
apply
at Budget Inn,

HA LNHA BSN AN
ystem Admm1strat or lo
ong Term Care a call a
740)446 500 1

TR~CTOA·TRA ILER

TAA1r-41NG CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE

YA

Jackson Pike, Gallipolis No
phone calls please
Part·t1me poslt1on available
for
a
Suppori
Group
Facilitator for a Women s
Shelter Th15 IS a contract
position lor approX1ma1e1y
four
hours
a
week
Applicant• should be familiar
wtth crisis lnter\lent1on techmques and group dynamics
Interested appliCan ts should
send resume to Perr;onnel ,
P 0 Box 454 GallipoliS OH

4563(,

675·5857

Currently
3BR :a Car attached Garage Harnsonv•lle
Mobile Home Lot w 'carport
740. ne)(l to Methodist Church 111
00
000
on 1 06 acres $62 000 Ranted SIS
Cert1f1ed Chlldcare PrO\IIder
742-4011 or 740-742 5009
moved In Green Sdlool (304) 675-6331
Kanauga OH P nva te Call
D•stnct Has openmgs hot
[.(rrs &amp;
(740)446-4782
meal ref (740 )446-8340
3BR 2 lull bath 1 900 sq ft
ACREA( a:·
package
l ull
basemen t
2 car "---i.iiiiiiiiiii'ii·- - ' Mob1le home spaces m
attached garage 3 acres
·
Country Mobtle Home Park
Applicants must send
resume to·
Computer Trouble Shoot Chester TO~\nsh p Eastern 22 acres wonderful v1ew 1740)385·J019
Pers onnel
and Repair Ellpert SeNrce school d1stnct Qtl At 7 near (l dgetop property close to
Memonal Gardens Call ma•n htghway perfect tor 4 Newer 2 Bd Rm tre.ter
242 Third Avenue
740·992·2395
(740)965-4321 aHer 6pm
wheeler tra•ls (7 40)707 Cenlral heat and atr
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Covered pmch and patiO
2109
Partly furmShed
$425 00
Servtce
J&amp;C
Tree
&amp; 4bdrm 2 5 bath hardwood
Need Cash' Don 't lei th1s
RrAI. t:'\'n rr
740 243*58 I I
Excavat1ng 25 years e~&lt;P floors new root approx
WA,.lll)
opportuml)' pass you by L &amp;
Free est1mates 304 675 3 OOOsq f1 R1vervlew At 7 t..,.,;._.;,;liiiiiiiO..-,.t
A Wholesales rs now need
N1Ce , 4X70 TWO OedtOOm
2213
south $12.5.000 No land
1ng licensed drrvers for local
w1tn new carpe t tn Syracuse
Approx
1
acre
of
land
con!racts (740)709·0299
1
meat delivery and sales
Reacty tor House to be built washer 0ryer $400 00 pi~
11\\\tl\1
company
Call 740·949oepoSII ana ut1lft1es
740
w1th10
1
0
m11es
ot
Pomt
7aA 5BA Foreclosu re only
Aura l Set11ng 992 7680
1_0~6~1-lo~•~on-lo!..&lt;m~•~'~'o.:..n_ _ _ . i10
BlNINThS
$18 000 For hs tmc;~s oall Pleasant
secluOOO &amp; qwet sa 000 or
800·391 5228 ext F254
0PPOR'n'Nfl'l:

Gallipolis based company IS
seektng ca ndidates for lull
and partt1me poSitions.
We offer competitiv-e salary
and complete benefitS

Overbrook Center IS curren t

~==::;::~

ly seeking a beautiCian to •
work m the !ac11itys oe auty
salon

Candtdate s should

possess a valid managmg
cosmetologiSt
license
Salary Is based on comm1s
s•on Interested candidates
should contact the adm1ms
trator

at

(740)992-6472

~E_
O_E_______
Res1dMt 1al
Treatment
Fac1l1ty tak mg appliCations
tor youth worker Pay ba'Sed
on
8kperlence
Paid
Insurance Can between

9 OOam 3 OOpm Monday
F r~day (7 40)379 9083

'I

j

•NOTI CE•
pHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
tfou do busmess wrth peo
le you know, and NOT 1
end money through th
,, III yOU have IO\IeS 1I
rh..
.. at1 un

less Please call (304)593

Anentlon!
Local company offenng ~No
,DOWN PAYMENT pro·
grams lor you 10 buy your
home 1nstead of renting
· 100° 0 hnanc1ng
• Less than perfect credn

3207

House WV location home &amp;
property w1th1n t 0 m1!es of
PT Pleasant ranch style
1200 1600 sq ft central
a~r heat garage prefer rural
sen1riQ please caJI 304·593·
accepled
3207
ljlia::;le:i:d.Oih•••o::;«,::•r:o'"~
a . _ _... · Payment could be the
same as rent
Need to sell your home'
Loc ato rs Late on payments d1vorce
Mortgage
TIRED OF GAS PRICES a
[740)367-(1000
JOb tra nsfer or a death? I
COM/&lt;IIUllNG?
can buy your home All cash
CAREER DISTURBED?
New Doublew•de Repo
and Quick closmg 740·416·
Christian Owned Company
never IJVed 1n owner l1ance
Oftenng A Home Managed on 1 3 acres 8 m1les norlh 3130

Business Par1 t1me or Full
Full Support and
Tra1r1mg
Fully financed
Seulo;nl~ !uti t1me Secretary
opportunity II qualified
'
/Pa ra legal exp req wed
t -800·946 7572 P1n 00 (It
Please send resume &amp;
no answe r please leave
reqUirements to EB1 200
Home Heallh Agency look- Ma1n St Pt Pleasant WV message)
mg for Fuii-T1me
AN
25550
General Hours Man Fr1, Day
Shih We offer benefits such
as vaca11on and health'
1nsurance
Please
call
(740}44 1- 1377 for further
Information

t1me

of Holzer Hosp•tal on 160
( 740 }«&amp; 3570

;;::=:;.====~·

1 and 2 bedroom 8pa'l
ments 1urn1sheo and un1ur
rr1sheo securaty depos1t
reqwred no oets 740·992

2216
1BR apt close to Hol:zer
WID Moku~ OepoSIL" eler

ence requtred

(740•339

0362 oe11 number
1 BR mealy lurn.shed apart
ment Qutet area suitable lor
1 adl.lll prlvale dr1veway
wl carport
new
WD

[740)446-478.2
For Lease 2 Fico· !lpa
Syracuse 3BA anachl:ld
o10us tolally remodeled 2
DBLGat blOCk utility build·
FOR Roo
bedroom , , 2 balMs ~..m lur
1 acre tot
1ng new roof
n1st'led ap8rtmenl
'/P.'II
740·41 6-2786 or 740 949·
1
BR
Cet&gt;10
sll utilll i8S paid wate r heater a'"'t!
1082
Between Rio Grande &amp; snces $600 a rno"l
utli1t1eS
Downt:w.
Jackson (740)44 1-01 17
GalhpoiiS SecurJty ana ke~
3 bedroom 2 1'2 balhl 2 oaposit reqUired No pets
ca r oarage lurnlsheO close References
reau•rea
to
Holzer
Hospltar 1740)446 6682 M F B 00
$850/monlh (7 -40) .. 41 ·0310 500

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS,
BARGAINS AND MORE BARGAINS!

r
!'!:

16

H~

�r~.,__AP..;,FORo;&gt;\R'O-~-r•.s _.~I, r
1ST MON . FREE RENT
WITH PAID DEP. NEW

ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSE!APTS
NOW LEASINGI
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; ~BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES

apartment. ·Can

·Friday; Feb. 10

675-6679

EHO

SPACE
FOR RENT

2005 Model GM Factory
Prog'ram Cars ~
Low price &amp; miles!
LeSabre
Custom &amp; Limiteds
Impalas, Malib.U LS,
Monte Carlo, Century,
Grand AM, Cadillac,
Tahoe, Century,
, Uplander

Elevato r. Call (740)446-3644

__;

HOUSF..HOlD

GooDS

(740)367~

Appliance

apa rtment , clean , downWarehouse
sta irs,
utili ties
paid .
(740)446·1519.
. in Henderson, WV
Pre owned Applicanes starling
2BR apartments. Starting at
at $75 &amp; up all .under
$375/month. Located on SR
Wa_rranty,
also
have
160,
SA
850.
Bob
Household
Misc. Items
Ad .
Call
McCormick
&amp; up
(740)4A 1~01 94 or (740)44 1~ starting at .99cc
(304)675-7999
1184.
'

WV. Now accepting applica- Thompsons Appliance &amp;
tlons lor Hud -Subsidized,
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
one Bedroom Apts . Utilities re-condit ioned
automatic
included. Based on 30% of
adjusted Income:
Call washers &amp; dryers , refrigera(304)882-312 1 available tor tors, gas and e lectric
ranges . air cond ilioner.s, and
Senior and Disabled People. wringer washers . W ill do
E.H.O
· repairs oh major brands in
Beautiful 2-stOry townhouse shop or at your 'home.
overlooking Gallipolis City Used Furniture Store, 130
park . . Kitchen. D.R , L.R .. Bulavll1e Pike. Washers, drystudy. 3B R. 2 baths. laundry
ers. gas/electric ranges.
area. References required , refrigerators . mattresses ,
security depoSit, no pets. couches . dinettes, c hests,
$900 mo. Call (740)446 - much more. (740)446-4782,
2325 or (7 40)446-4425.
Gallipolis, OH. Hrs. 1J-3 (M-

r

BEAUTIFUL
APART- =S;;:
) :------~
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT · JACKSON
ANTIQUES

ESTATES, 52 Westwood ~~-------_.1
Orive from $344 to $442.
or
sell.
R iverine
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Buy
740-446-2568
· Equal A,ntiques, 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 740H ousin~ Opportunity.
992 -2 526. Russ M oore,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· owner.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments. Indoor Pre Price Sale at
and/or small houses FOR Aucti.on House Glenwood.
RENT. Call (740)441-1111 WV Feb 10-11-12, 10arr1for application &amp; into,rmation. 7pm Semi Trailer load . ol
high qual1ty tools, 'house·
Garage Apt . on Roush St. ware
&amp; misc. (304 ) 762 _
Mason .
Furnished . 11 l7 (304)638-5981
$325/month +utilities, $100
utilily/deposil
Allailable
~1JSCELLANEOUS
;mmedia1ely (304)773~5054
J\fERCHANDISE
--•
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at VIllage Bronco Spi t1ire Wood/Coal
Pa&gt;·d 51 .2 oo. ~wo
Manor
Aiverslde Slo ·~.
1'
a nd
n&gt;
Apartments in ' Middleport. portable dishwashers 7 40- .
From 5295-$444. Call 740- 742-0519
·
992-5064. Equal Housing - - - - - - - - Opportunities.
Fire · Wood
lor · Sale
(304)576-2642
or ' cell
Large modern upstairs apt.. (304)633-3219
2 Br., near Tupp9rs Plains.
no pets.
$425 _00 . plus. Firewood split and delivered.
·call (740)256 9115
deposit
740-985-4 169' or
·
614-264-6409.
Frigidaire Freezer Upright
20.3 cu.h . Frost Free 3 yrs
Middleport 1 and 2 Bedroom
old. $250 {304)675~7340 il
furnished Apts. No Pets;
no answer please leavfi! a
· depOsit. and pre~ious rental
message
references. 740-992-0165.

r

Thursday, February 9th
5-7 pm

J40-992·1&amp;n

740-992•6971

&gt;

6pm

I nsured

•

Advertise
in this
space
for
.'
$52 per ·:
month · ·

South
1•
4 NT
6•

· FRANK &amp; EARNEST

:· I

.

. / .I.

TtlY TO

I

•

BARNEY ·
PAW, ~ICH HAIRDO
DO 'YA THINK
I SHOULD
GIT?

1·

WELL, THAT'S
A NO-BRAINER,
MAW!!

TH'

,

MI])'I)LE

J

ONE !!

j

J

E
~

...l...l,_____;.....J...._~2.:.,_~~ i

' ~. &lt;Wll'$riir§tiijt"~~ H~)ltidel

THE BORN LOSER

rfJ;Eili);IJ)iki,\!an~f,t,;}lmt.lW\utr-~

~GLt'o.C&gt;-6, Tf.\1:. RO~\ &amp;£\" ~

"Fri~s-Bi¢llk 'lj}~l8f~S4PDI

i " All b@!bu~et;~J~sh 1191 ftoJ;M! ·,;;,.t
195 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH
740-992~ 1622 .

When you are faced with a two-finesse
position like this, you should first cash
your top-trick winners in the longer suit:
. then . if the key hOnor does not drop, take·
the finesse in the other sUit. Start by
cashing the ace and king ol clubs. Does
the queen appear? If So, claim ;'if not, play
a diamond to qummy's queen. At best ,
you make the slam: at worst, you go down

• ~L\C.~:) Wlil-1, EA~ 1

1 1emale.
Also
AKC
&amp;
APRI
Registered Siberian Husky
stud availabiB for breeding.
$250. Call (740)707-1964.

r

I \I n I ..,1 1'1'1 II ..,
,\11\l..,llH"

2004 Jeep liberty, excellent
condition. less than 15,000
mtles,
$17.000.
Call
(
740 ) 446 _4028 _

1 ... ~,

LoJY.t.;')JULI\.

...__ _ _ _ _ __ . ---~---81 Mal!bu Classic moslty
,Jyr old ·Angus bull- Sunset redone., nice car, too m.uch
New Design 2702. $1 ,200. to iis!. Asking .$3,000.
(740) 367 •7047•
(740 }379-9297.

7yr old part Quarter horse, 95 Z-28 , 350 auto T-Top,

r·O

.

I

A~
tUK

SALE

1995 Ford Crown Victoria

LX 135k miles, good condi·
lion. new' tires. $2.600 : Call
(740)44 1~9282

}.

,~,

1980 Chevy "Motorhoi'ne 23·
Travelcra lt , 32 ,6bO miles
.2004 ,t;:;heYy Trailblaze r New Tires, Brakes, Banery&amp;
n eg.
4WO w/tow pkg ..
Kelly t une-up · $3,300
Bluebooks @ $22,000. (J0&lt;!)675~4022
many extras 10.500 miles.
1997 Hornet 23ft. 5th wheel,
excellent condition, garage
w/air, aw nin g, sell-co nkept. $17,900 (304)675tained , light weight. $.6.000
1408
OBO. (740)245 -9109 · or
X
4 4
(740)441-7632.
.

~··

.

$26.00.PERMONfH!

.,

The Daily Sentine'

992-2155

... 15{\tfl ....

THE
POND

fi.C.Ufl.E.

~KI\TERS

~TI'VaEP

1

HO&amp; -

~kATIN(',,

K

-... 'llrthde,y:

FIGURE

DON'T YOU ?

Ptt&gt;N 'T you SEND A
FAN LETTER TO
MICHELLE !&lt;WAN 7

0

0

•

;

I

0
0

MEAN .. .
WfV',T 7

U~ ...

0

t~o'

WHo ?

. 0

D

•
•

.

GIN(', THE . ICE i

r

Waterproofing.

15

TRUCKS
.
I'OR SAJ.E
~,-------.,.1

1989 Ford ClUb Wagon.- XLT·
1T. 99k miles, well maintained.
$.2800 .
Call
1989 Dodge Dually 2W0,' (740)441-9282.
Cummins Turbo DieseL New ---~---1999 Plymouth Vo. y.ager
batteries. Run s. eMce!lent.
miles
SS,OOO. 66,000 miles. Air, auto,
.133 ,000
(740)446~3413.
.
$4,000 060. (740)256~
1233.

Good
to the

That's the word from .
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news·
stories, ~ining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports f;lnd so
much mpre!

' .

SEPTIC TANK PIJMPINC $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMEm TODAY

r~a~

Cavaliers. Sun tires, Saturns." 46 ,000 mi les, 6 cyl ,. AJC,
CD,
$15.000.
cruise ,
Ford, Chevy and Dodg e (740 )446-6962 .
BASEMENT
Truck. Blazers and Vans in
WATERPROOFING
stock. 3 months- 3,000 mile Black 1994 Ford F150, 5.8L,
Warranty. Quality -vehicles short bed, great cClndition, Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references 1.ur for 11 years. All prices listed $3,500. (740)367-724 5.
nished. Eslabli sh8d 1975.
on the vehicle, No pressure
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446 sales .
Cook
Motors
0670, Rogers Basement
(740~446.0103 .

F

ti&gt;OWN AT

IMPORTS
Athens

..UT YOU

ffiRSALE

Last
Word

OK THIS PAGE FOB
;- AS LOW AS
~

MOTOR HoM~

\'!:J~;~/ . Graph

GENTS! WE WERE .
X THOLJ{,~T UNTIL 50ME
YOU ·wei&lt;E
5TUPID

I

r

ADVERTISE vou·R
..BUSINESS. ,.
,Z

r

1

SlNs

··Astro-

~IG NATE

Suzuki 4WO Vir\son
500 ATV with 34 miles .
CARMICHAEL
Chevy Co lorado Ext. Cab $4900.
EQUIPMENT.
· , (7 40)446 ~
'05. Auto, 2WD, wlbedliner,
excellent condition. Kelly 2412.
Blue Book $14,600, wiU sell
/W
CAMP£RS &amp;
for $13,600. (304)523·1179

part Arabian gelding. $500 looks and runs exce llent
to a good home. (740)256- $5000.00. 92 Corsica V-6, 4
1652.
· door auto $1800 .00. 740742-4011 or740-742-5009.
Pigs Ready to Butcher. 2.20·
290 lbs. (740)-388-74 47.
96 Buick leSabre 97,000
";,p.;.;...;...~~--.., mi., needs body work. and
HAGRAIN\:
'&amp;
radiator, new tires. battery, ..._ ...F·OR-·S·ALE
_ _,..
brakes and rotors, $1,500 '
OBO. (740)446-9632.
2003 Jeep Wrangler X.

•'

I

.··____-/

200~

Solid white male Pit AOBA $500! Police l.ri"lpoundsl
_Reg. CH turtl~ buster, house cars from $500. For listings
bmKen , 13 weeks . $500. 800-391 -5227 elrt 3901
(740)256-6657.
Welsh P~mbroke Corgi
pups, 8 wks old 2 lemale, l
male. sable color. $1.00 .
(7 40)446~ 34.1 3

two.

1999 HarleY Davidson Ultra
Classic . loaded , Excellen t
condi tion, 29 ,000 total m iles.
Price $13.500. Ca ll '740949-221 7 until 7 pm .

Installation
· ava ilable.
/740)441-2667 :

G I T~IT~DONE

All Types Home Repairs
25 yrs. E11.pe rience.
Free Estimates,
24 Emergency ServiCe.
(304)675 ~ 3733 or
(304.)593-01 29

24 Visualize
26 Dlatort data
29 However
30 Mach 2 Iller

1 QB 'socores
2 - de
cologne

3 " Exodus"
hero
4 Hands ,
slangily
5 Muzzles

2D Say
22 Go-aheads
6 Cake
23 PBS
loppers
supplier
7 Crayola
32 Royal
25 Tikkanen
honorWic
choice
o1 hockey
34 Average . 8 Norwegian 27 Pillow tiller
grades
monarch
28 With dry
36 Corroded,
9 Roulette
humor
as acid
color
31 Dice throw
37 Pigmenl
11. Watchdog 's 33 Cartoon
38 Bola Mo.
· warning
shriek
40 ·Packing
12 Rubalyal
35 Ave.
slip, !Jrlelty
author
eros sen
42 WllfiHI
13 Prefix
39 Geronimo's
43 Bridge
tor pod
tribe
section
17 Swelling
41 Faucela
45 Twlsled
causa
44 Sc ulpture
47 KLM rival
(2 wds.)
and.dance
50 Sporty sock 19 Dissolute
i16 Pondar,
52 Afloct
leilows
as evidence

Bro or slo
48 In a frenzy
49 Rotated
51 Puppy
47

sound

53

Epoch

55 Muslim

honortflc
56 Gao·pump
abbr.

57

Fabric

· meaa.

(10.12 sup-

take? If your chok:e loses. you wi ll be
down; if ~ wins, you can start counting
your winnings.
·

MaroRCY(.Uli/ ·
4WHEELER~
.

New and Used Furnace s.

21 Proof word
23 Plant sci.

DOWN

not seen them before might take ages to
he might plunge down the wrong
road.
·
In this deal, you are South, in six spades.
West leads a heart to his partner's ace
and a heart comes bad&lt;. After you draw
trumps, how would you continue?
North made a limit raise, showing tourplus trumps and eight losers

o!(J .

=.::_:_::_.::.;_:_::::.:.c___ _

.

carpets

port points). South laUnched into
Blackwood. learning that an ace was
missing. Here is a kEiy rule of Blackwood
If one ace is missing, bid six. But ij you
plan to sign off at five when an ace is
absent , do not Whee) out the 01' Black.
It looks as though you need a minor·suit
finesse to work, byt which one should yoU

c

baby clothes &amp; household
items 304-675-2801

14 Gentleman
caller
15 Plane's
milieu
16 Headgear
18 WHkda.
19 Auto·body

At the bridge table, it can be the opposite:
all destination - the final contract - but
no signpost - how to get home. Also.
there are some card -play techniques tha t
an experienced driver - declarer spots immediately, but someOne who has

Hardwood CablneO'f And FurnHurt

· · · al~

large womens clothing,
hospital scrubs size ·3x-4x,

59 Fastened

10 Adventurous
down a tent
12 Nocturnal
6C Log ]olni
wildcat
61 Thick

no dest ination .~

'

Judy Kay's Has Re~opened!
Stop by &amp; check out .our new addit ions to oUr
menu as well as your old favorites
Homemade desserts • Breakfast served all day
• Daily lunch special s

~-------

EaRl
Pass
Pass
Pass

+

Ball clubs

Louis Kronenberg wrote 1 ~The troublE!
with our age is that it Is· all. Signpost and

j 1...--u-':::.....

AERATION -MOTORS
Repai red, New &amp; Rebuilt l'n
tack. all Aon Evans, 1•
800-537-9528.

~orth

J•
5
Pass

Two chances are
better than one

l

ffiRSAJ .E

Wesl
Pass
PaSs
Pass

Opening lead: • 2

740.446.9200

FORSAU

AK J

Vulnerable: Both

w-ww.'tb:aberore•Juta'blaetry.~

VEGE'li\B!£S

K 8 0

Antwer to Previous Puzzla

building
58 Branches

find , or

12 Gauge- Buckshot
680 Bore
Everyone Welcome

TRucKS

i :l 2

? ~ B5

• 4

Free Esrimales

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577 1
740-949-2217

AIJIUS

•

•

Hill's Self
Storage

FRurrs&amp;

+ " II

? IU9ii 5

South
.AK J762

··~·

·Gun
Shoot
.
.
Forked Run
Sportsman Club

For sa le 5x5 round Qales of
AKC German Shep. pups hay Call (740 )44 6-9777
lop bloodline, ready 2-26-06
·
·
$275 (304)675·5724
Straw &amp; Hay k&gt;f sale . phone
Full blooded Husky puppies (304)670·1925- no answer
1or sale 5300·450, 4 males, leave messag~

.

David Lewis

Stop &amp;Compare .

February 12th

re•.,
ffiR S"-LE

lJ

Re~olac.lme,nl

26 Years Experience

· Remodeling

Columbia Township Fire Hall

r . . . . Ir

f or
~ . g
A New Home.?
Tr ~ t h.e
Classl,fl'eds.f.f

• Complete

JET

I

;;..,~kin

andd

• New Homes .
• Garages

Limited seats!

r

I

I I II IS
I 0'\( Ill II
I 0'\S II&lt; I ( I ill\
Con~rete Removal

All Caliber's of Muzzle Loaders
&amp; 22 Long Riffles Match
No Scopes
Starts ·at Noon

s

t

... '! 3

1

54 Zoo

6 Press

problem

• 4
¥ A9 4

"' 8 3
• 10 7 6 2

740-843-5264

BONSTRUcnOII

Department &amp;
Middleport'Pomeroy
Rotary Club

Broad Run Gun Club

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
·
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Wal kways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Opefl Monday,
Tuesday, WedneSday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Lave'nder Sunday. {140)446-7300
Modern 1 ·bedroom apt Gorgeous
Sequined Prom
Dr8ss.
(740)446-0390 ..
Cinderella Strapless Style.
BUILDING
Nice one .BA unfurnished One of a k1nd from Rose ___
Sum.IES
apartment. Range &amp; refrig . tree. Size 6. Brand neW.
provided . Water &amp; garbage_ ~ever been worn to Prom. Bl ock, brick, sewer pipes,
paid, Deposit required . Call Reg. $444 Sell lor $300 Call wi ndows. hnlels·. etc. Claude
(740)446-4345 after 6pm.
(304)675-~8
Win.Ters , Rio Grande, OH
F-::::ii~:""'"""~~~~~~,..='::::;:;::;m Call 740-245-5121 .

n

Meigs County Health

Ext. 1326

~,.C.MiscEu.ANF.ous.-MER-.rn-.o\N•D.ISi·_.~I• t

MONTY

..
45760
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

ROBERT
BISSELL

Sponsored by

Fri. Feb. 1Oth

.. 7 6 4 2
East

Wf'!el

Dealer: South

Outreach Immunization
Clinic

NOW -TAKING
RESERVATIONS!
Washington DC Trip
4 Day~ Nights
May4, 2006
$460/person
Includes transportation,
hotel &amp; Tourmobile
ticket Families welcome
Cash, checks and credit
cards accepted~ Please
call (304) 675-4340,

Box 189

~~i'-Middleport, OH

Repair
3 miles west of
Pomeroy,OH

992-5682

446-2282

Apartment ,.available now New Furniture $450. Call
RivEirbend Apts. New Haven (740)446-7444.

/

Auto&amp;Truck

on Stale Rt. 124

1911 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis

North
02.00-00
• Q 10. 5
• Q .r 3
t AQ

/

Up for grabs!!

SMITH GM
SUPERSTORE

2 room furnished .efficiency

ROGER HYSEll 1 Rocky Hupp Insurance
GARAGE '
and Financial Services.

BIGGEST
PROGRESSIVE
JACKPOT EVER

'30' Fresh Arrivals

Downtown Office Space· 5
room suite $650/mo: 1 room
office· $225/mo.; 2 room
suite $250/mo. Security
deposit required . You pay
utilities. All-spaces very nice.

7015· (740)446-4734.

NEA Crouword Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

SPECIAL
BINGO

____ ~
(740)367~7746·

Jhe Daily Sentinel • Page 8 .5
BRIDGE

WV Jobs Foundation ;
Pt. Pleasant, WV

One bedroom Apt. on
Second floor in Point
Pleasant
Call (304)675·
6645 II no answer leave

2 bedroom apt. W/0 hoo"up.
Water, trash , sewer · pd.
$400.
1 bedroom apt refrig , stove,
$325, water. seWer. trash pd.

www.mydailysentinel.com

FOR R ENr

Tw1n R1ve rs Tower is acceptIng applications tor wailing
list for Hud-subs1zed , 1- br,

'ALL ELECTRIC
'CENffiAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE, REF,
'DISHWASHER
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
'WATER , SEWAGE . &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882·3017

Thursday, February 9, 2006
ALLEY OOP

AP!\R1111ENTS

message. will return call

AVAILABLE

Thursday, February 9, 2006.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel ·

PEANUTS

RATS! I ALWAYS MISS .
T14E GOOD DAYS I

\lOW DiD EVER'f. THING GO

. AT SC ~OOL TODAY, MARCIE?
~EMEM6ER 7

591·8757

~AD

TO60

HU~'t=

..

·Advertise
in this
space for $1 04 •:

SUNSHINE CLUB

60TIA LOSt- IJ.£64T

p~rmonth.
.

J'M 9-'lFPtAX&gt; Amw

MY P:XTOR SAYS I

f(lR

A FAT COC11:R. .

..

·Economy Beef $7.35
·Shade R1ver Beef $8.1 D
·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?

•
' .

GARFIELD
'!'HIS ISN''f BUC:. ~PRAY .
1'1''5 CO\..OONE

Shade River AG ·Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

7 -9

I

0

..

I

Complete Tree . are :

•

ACE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, OH
••
Rick Johnson 1 Jr. ' '
Owner
Insured

Free Eat

BAUM LlJl\IHER
Scorpion Tractors
"Ta ki11g The Sting Out Of
Hard Work ! 11

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 10hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 C ht:ster 985-3301

0

HEY,
BIGG-UY

L....:_~::__::~~
GRIZZWELLS
'lt&gt;U I&lt;No'N 't-Jt'l&lt;t A \.OT.
'\.IKE lfl05[
¢1JYS IN

.WE

~'--::!{,.fL-.~-·--'--11-"'-~p--~:~

CC.OL I 'N\.IIC~j
o~£ 15 1\.1£
SMARI 0\-\f

Af\D WU\C\-1

SllCil7Y

ON£ 15 \HI:

,MOVIES

Of\t:'

t&gt;UMB

liELL,I\1A1"7 •0
0\4LY

llt.CA\.1\'Jr
I

~EAO
~\PI

Friday, Feb. 1O, 2006
By Bernie•· Bede Oaol
Tne . year ahead could lind you having
greater courage tor taking the initiative
toward furthering . your ambitiOns . By
launching the necessary actions. it) w\11
ena,ble you to ma~e changes in conditi ons
more to your liking.
AOUAAIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -You r success factor is looking extremely encouraging at thiS poinT m time. especially when rt
comes to Situations where your prime concern 1s in' trymg to provide r!JOre fo r those
yOu love.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March' 20)- Sometimes
you hesitate to use bolder tacti cs wnen
cal led for. but 'today in order to further a
personal ambitiOn. you may need to
employ them. You can be danng wrttloul
bemg recKless . '
ARIES (March 21_- A.pril 1_ 9~- Grve top prionty today to those affairs that mrght be
meanmgful to you in financia l ways. You're
Quite 1ortunate now and could do much lor
yours elf 1n producmg profitable situa tions
TAURUS (Apr il 20-May .20) - Don "! siT
around hoping things you want wil l somehow drop rnto your lap today. II you feel that
things are developmg fast enough to su1t.
you . do sdmethrng aoout rl by takin~ ·
action
GEMINI [May 21-June 20)- A lot can be
don'e at this time to rmp ro ve your financ;ial
pos itron by us1ng your talents and smarts
"to the fullest advanta~;~e . You already have
everything it takes to be successtul todav,
so go tor rt
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - There's a
chan-c·e you could f1nd yourseU involvt!d
today m a new protect that you'll hnd
e~~.t remely stimulatr ng
Don't hesrtate to
grve it atlthe 11me and effort you're able to
spare
LE:O (July 23- Aug 221 - Condrllons Are
apt to be far more favo rable than usual at
Th iS time lor genmg an assoc•ate ro qo yOu
a Javor. so don't srt on makrng a request of
hrm/her today Timrng IS everytl1rng
VIRGO (Aug . 23·S9pt 22) - Don't hllSrtate to put rnto rmmedrate pract rce tdday
some new knowledge you've acqUired Not
un\rl you put it to wo~~ will yoy d1scover
ho w man.,. different wa~·s 11 can be useo
successtu lly .
LIBRA (Se pt 23-0ct 231 - That frght Ancl
determinatiOn you possess could surface
today whe n you frncl yourself rn a cOmpetr trve career srtuatron Instead of "takrng a
back sea t as e)( pected. you 'll g o for the
gold
SCOFIPIO (Oct . 24- Nav .2'2) -, If your
cow11erpart rs ar1yw~1 e re near as bold and
as ~ertrve as you are today. a oartnershrp
arrangement shoul d work out tar '110re success fu lly Tt"lan anybody thought Set t'1e ·
example
SAGI TTARIU S (Nov 23-Dec 21) AlTh ough a maner rn whrch you lrnd ','Qr..r·
sell tocla',' may not be at your makrrig once
rnvolved. you'U devote most of yo&lt;• r e~orts
and energres toward rna~ rf&gt;g sure rt per 'rves
benelr)s
CAPRIC ORN (Dec 22-Jan 19 ) - There s
a loyal hrend waitrny 111 the wrn g5 todaY
who IS rn a oosrt ro11 to help ','OU aovan ce
your sell-mterests All 11 w111 ta Ke rs lor ~·olt
to make trriS person aware of your oo.sr toon

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
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SCRAMLETS ANSWI!RSltMI&lt;I

Canvas- Knife ~ Dregs - :"\1ildcw - \\~ARNING
One thing I learned early in life was thai people
wiJo won't take advice will'nevcr take
WARNING .
ARLO &amp; JANIS

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�Ohio sisters make
working out at work
successful business, AS

Retirement edition
inside today's Sentinel
Page 86 • l he Ua1ly

Thursday, February 9,

www .mydailysentinel.com

~entmel

2006

•

ScUlpture on display

ENTERTAINMENT BRIEFS
FAC hosting art exhibition
GALLIPOLIS - French Art Colony, 530 Fir.st Ave .,
Gallipo lis, wi ll feature the fac ulty staff exhibition from
Bowling Green State University Jan. 27 through Feb. 26. . •
The exhibition is a selection of pieces from the ongm al
show recently ending at Bowling Green's Dorothy Uber Bf'):'an
Gallery. Local sponsors of the exhibition are Burnett's Heattng
and Cooling, Cherrington, Moulton and Evans, Sears Roebuck
of Gallipolis and Steve Chapman. CPA.
The FAC gallery is open to the public Tuesday through
Friday -fro m 10 a.m. until 6 p.m., and on Sunday fro m l to 5
p.m.
For informatioll, call .4 46-3fU{

Artwork by Dave Snyder of
Rio Grande, such as the
ceramic instal lation "The
· · Long Voyage Home," seen
above, will oe on display at
the Li llian Jones Museum, 75
Broadway St. Jackson.
through Ma rch 22. This versa. tile artist has created many
notab le pieces of scu lptu re in,
wood . ceramic. metal, glass
and mixed media ; and this
exhibit showcases a sampling
of these. Snyder describes
his artwork in the fo llowing
way: "When I bu ild or paint a
piece , it's more about the
process of assembly than following the general rules of
'line, shape, or form. I seek
out different ways to create
objects and. allow it to find its
own way, to become what it
will. Through process, I find
inspiration, and in the enp ,
my art becomes expressive
on its own."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 ('1-:NTS • Vol.!).'), No. t:.!h

SPORTS .
• Lady Eagles rise above
Fed Hock. See Page 91

.

The Rev. Robert Sexton's All Star
In addition , they will play at the 15th
MARIETTA - The 14th annual Ri ve r
City Blues competition, the oldest and annual . Ri ver City Blues Festival on Blues Review. Waterford. Mich .. 6 p.m.
Competing in the evening on the hour
largest blues talent competition in the Marc h 17- 18, 2006.
state of Ohio will be held from noon to
and half-hour beginning at 8 p.m. will be
midnight Feb. 18 at the Lafayette hotel,
.The band lineup for the
Mud fork Blues of Athens, Big Daddy &amp;
10 I Front St. , Marietta, It is an event
Feb. ts·event is as follows:
The Hoodoo Men of Hartville, Malkum
sponsored by the Blues. .Jazz and Folk
Mojo Street Blues, Chagrin Falls . . Gibson and The Mighty Juke Band of
Music Society.
noon.
Clarksville, Austin "Watkin' Cane" of
The River City Ohio Blues
FFB Blues Band, Batavia, 12:30 p.m .' Fairview Park. Angel Blue and The
Competition is a preliminary perfor- . B-arrelhouse Bonni Charleston W.Va.. Prophets of Valencia, Pa., Larry Taylor
mance that can lead to an opportunity for 1 p.m.
Blues and Soul Rand of Chicago, Ill.,
blues musicians to gai n national exposure
The Mojo Brothers, Indianapolis, Ind. ·and Lightning Joe King and Bl ue
at the Blue s Foundation's International
p.m.
Thunder of Akron.
Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tenn.
. 1.:30
Mother Tucker, Huntington W.Va .. 2 · Ri ver Ci ty Blues Competition weekend
This year's cdmpetition will see a full p.m.
starts off at Juke Joint on Feb. 17 . at
afiernoon and evening of great blues acts
from all over Ohio , West Virginia . -B011go Joe and the Funk Ruckus. Oli ver's "Upstai rs" in Mariet_ta with Willie
Pooch &amp; the Upsetters. 9 p.m., $5 at the
Illinoi s, Michi gan, Indiana, and Cuyahog~ Falls, 2:30p.m . .
Blues,
Xenia,
3
p.m.
door.
Willie,' who comes from Tupelo,
Midnite
Pennsy lvania. Twenty bands will comMean Mother May L Newark, 3:30 p.m. Miss .. via Columbus, Ohio, has played at
pete for $ 1,000 in cash and BJFM sponCode
Blue Band, Urbana, 4 p,m.
the Ri ver City Blues in Marietta before,
sorship to the Internat ional Blues
Marci Stanley and The Ride King s,
Several drawings will take pl ace durChallenge in Memphis where they will
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
4:30p.m.
ing
the evening. Tickets are $15 at the
gain valuable exposure to record label
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - In honor ' of Black Hi story
Dustin
Troi
si
Blues
Band,
Huntington
door.
The projec t is supported in part by Month, the West Virginia Division of Culture and History will
representatives. blues industry p rofe~­
the Ohio Ri ver Border Initiative, a joint present a special free encore performance of the Charleston ·
sionals and festival promoters capabl e of W.Va. , 5 p.m.
The Burn in' Lloyds, Cambridge, 5:30 project of the Ohio Arts Council and the
providing real career advancement for a
Stage Company's (CSC) production of " For Colored Girls
p.m .
West Virginia Comm~ssion on the Ans.
serious blues musician .
Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf' on
Tuesday, Feb. 14 at 7 p.m ., in the Norman L. Fagan West
Virginia State Theater at the Cultural Center, State Capitol
Complex, Charleston.
.. .
·
ATHENS
Ohio that em pl oy a variety of landscape or organic occur- divides hi s time between proThe award-.winning play was wntten by Ntmake Shange.
Uni ve rs ity's Alden Library media on canvas and wood, rences. Sometimes a )luman or jects in Ohio and New · First produced in 1975, the play ex plores what it was like to
will 'host an exhibi tion of incl uding Sumi ink. oil paint. ' animal figure appears. A boot Mexico. Hi s art has been be a woman of color in the 20th century. The playwri ght comselected · works by abstrac t enamel and pencil. Each work falls from the sky and turns exhibited in Boston, New bines li-terary and theatrical styles to develop a unique medium
painter Mateo Galvano, Feb . offers a imique interpretive into a bird; a small girl is run- York. · Santa Fe, N.M :. that includes a series of monologues linked together by dance
I0 to March 18, The art will composition rhat "deals with ning to hide in the brush.''
Norman, Okla. , and Provence, and music . Categorized as a "choreopoem," the play is perbeing
In re gard to the cre-ative France, and it is. included in formed· with_minimal scenery and props. ·
be on di sp lay in the Learning emoti pn · wit hout
·c ommons, located on the sec- Exp ressionistic." Galvano' s process, Galvano describes "a numerous private collections
The pl ay is directed by Patricia Thomas, a resident of Ohio;
an is not esoteric: rather. he combi nation of accident, of the tHroughout ·the United States
ond floor.
who
also co-directed the CSC productio n of "The Colonia
An opening reception will s'avs it "reveals itse lf and artist's hand, and strongly ·col- and Europe. This is Galvano's·
Museum,"
The cast inCludes Patt y Rosebourgh as Lady in
be held on Friday, Feb . I 0. . invites the viewer to find, per- i:Jred forms · and ruled lines." first exhibition in Ohio,
Brown; Janelle Willi ams as Lady in Red: Jas mine Smith as
from 5 to 7 p.m. In addition, haps. a reflection of the Self." There is a "weathered look"
Addison
Arts
Gallery
in
Lady
in Blue: Jai Dy e~ as Lady in Purple; Katara Sowell as
Galvano will host an informal In his work, Galvano travers- · inherent in his paintings. "as if
gallery talk on the subject of es "a path between chaos and they have been exposed to the Santa Fe, N.M., and Mainsite Lady in Yellow; Olubnm i Kusimo as. Lady in Green : and ·Pia
.
hi s creative proce ss a\ the co ntemplation. res ulting in elements and some of the paint Contemporary At1 in Norman . Edmonds as Lady in Orange.
Ok la., currently represent
Tiffany Wesley created the choreography and performs as .a
exhibition site on Saturday, canvases-that suggest intuitive rubbed or worn away.··
Galvano.
featured
dancer, as does ·Brittany Triggs. a member of the .
Born near N~w York -City,
Feb. 11 , at 5 p.m. The public maps to inner' resol ut ion.''
f~;r
more
inj(mnation
about
Capital High School Dance Company.
.
·'Most of the work is non rep- fo rn'terl y a resident of Santa
is invited to both everns.
For more 111f(mnatio11 aboia the .free Cu ltuml Center peljorEntitled " Heartland ," the resentational.'' says Galvano, Fe, N.M .. and c u~rentl y resid- his art.fJie{/.\e •·isit lvww.addismqnce of'" For Colored Girls. :.", c0 ntacr (304) 558·0 162.
exhibition presents paintings but some- piece' ".reference ing · 1n Athens, Galvano onart.\·.com ·
The West Virginia Division 0{ Culture cmd History, an
ill
agency of the West Virginia Department of E_duC"alion and the
Arts, brings togetl1 er the state\ f'l/S r, {&gt;resent and ji aure
ATHENS - .An intimate photographs from KMA's Print Monk, to name a few. are leg- of high art. They believed that th mugh program.•· and services in the areas of archil·es w 1d
look at a wide range of sub- Co llection. a collection that endary. Many of Leonard·~ photography had inherent history, the arts, historic presen •ation and museun1s.
ject matter and images by consists of over 1.000 images. photographs ar~ a lso housed i,n qua lities making it di stinct- ------:----~--------,---;------renowned photographers can Anim featured in the exhi - the Smnhsoman Institutes from o~her art forms. In 19 14.
be seen at the Kennedy bition include Ohio Uni versity .permanent archtves of mus.cal Whtte lounded the Clarence H.
Museum of An's newest exhi- alum Herman Leonard &lt;BFA htstory m Washmgton.
Whttc School of Photography
bition. "Photo-Communique ." photography. '47), dubbed by
The exhibition al;o features in New York and went onto
The tmages share one Com- performer Tony Bennett as worh from Clarence t-J . teach ~sptnng photograr.hers.
LatJra
G!l ptn,
mon thread, says Paul Legris. "the greute't living photogru" White , a native . 11f \\ie't tncludmg
the John B. and Daret h A. . pher ofjau mu,icians ."
Carlt,le. Ohio . Whi te'' ,en'e Dorothea Lange. Margmct
ATHENS - J,anu sz Gowacki's "The 4th Sister" is. being
Gerlach director of ·the
l.eumtrd. who retetved the of roma nti cism , unusual -light- Bourkc-Whnc. Karl Stru&lt;,sand p·~ese n ted Feb. 9, 10 and II. .and 15 · and 18. · by 'the Ohi o
Kennedy Museum of Art .
University\ Medal of Merit in in~ and soft_ focus are clmac- Paul. Outcrbndgc .
University School of Theatre in the Eli7abelh Evans Baker
"Each image has_the abilny 1992. began his education in tenst1c of ·h1 s devot1on to the
Gallery how·, at the Kennedy Theater, loqted in Kantner Hall.
to convey objecttvtty even the College of Fi'ne -Art'1 pho- photographic . movement. Mu;cum of Art arc Tuesday.
The story revolves around th'ree sisters in moJern day
through the lens of careful tography program in 1940. as cal led P1ctonahsm. of wh1ch Wcdn~sday , Fnday. noon to 5 Moscowhungry for love and happine's amid st the uncertaincompoSition . Photography ts it was the only &lt;,chool in !he he was a foundtng arttst.
p.m.: fhursduy,-no&lt;,mto 8 p.m.: ty of a new world order. When an American filmmaker come'
a medium that co nveys a country that . offered a deg ree
White was also a founding and Saturday and Sunday, I 19 to town, the , i&gt;ter&lt;; see .a chance to change their fates and perse nse . of realism .and human in photography. His images of member o( Alfred Stieglitz's 5pm. CI\Jscd Mondays and halexperience. somethmg other 1940' and 1950, Jal.z greats Photo-Sece"1on gro11p m New tday'&gt;. A' always. admtS'&gt;IOn IS haps get to Holl ywoc,lll.
Regular admission is $14 and $ 12 for students and seniors.
mediums may not ·nece"anly like Benny Goodman twhom York in the early 20th century. free .
Vt"t
be able to do ... he &lt;;ay&lt;
he fiN photographed a' an Tile Photo-Sccel,ionist were www.ohio.edu/mu&gt;eum or call For tide! infurrnati mi anu rese rvations. call the Fine Arts-tick The
exhibition.
which Ohio Univer,ity · \ludent ). an avant-garde group of pho- (740) 593-.1304 fo r more mlor- et office. (740) 593-4800.
Willium Fisher. school of theater facu lty member, is directopened Jan . 13 and run s Diz~y Gillespie. Mile' Davi &gt;. tographcrs who aimed to ele- mation aboutthb and other curthrou gh March 26 . . feature ' Ella fitt.gc rald and Theloniou' . vatc photography -to the ·level rent and UjJl:Oilllllg exhlbltiOill . ing the produ(lion.

'"For Colored Girls ... "
on stage Feb. 14

Alden Library hosts Mateo Galvano exhibition

weekend at Ohio U.

---------

.....,....

_____________ _

revenue from a new onemill l.evy. The levy, if
approved at the Feb, 13 reguilir c.ouncil meeting , will be
placed on the primary ballot.
American· Electric Power
charges the villajle $2,500 to
light and maintam 250 street
lights. The cost does not
include lights in parks or
parking lots. Last May, voters rejected · a · one-mill ·
renewal of the levy, and in
November, urned down a
1.5-mill additional tax for
the lights.

Those lights will be
turned off in June when -a
contract with AEP expires,
unle~s voters approve a
.levy in May.
.
Council members Sandra
Fultz Brown and Robert
Robin son voted against
s eekin~ information about a
one-m11l levy, because it
would
not
completely .
finance the cost of the lights .
They,
instead,
favored
another 1.5-mill proposal,
since a one-mill levy . will
pay only about half of the

$30,000 annual cost for especiall y if we are clear
street lights. A 1.5-mill levy abo ut the need for the
would generate approxiately . levy," Craig said,
$27,500 based on lOO-perRobin &gt;on agreed that a
cent collections .
"full explanation" is necesThose who voted in . favor sary in order for any levy to
of the one-mill proposal succeed, but said the village
President Stephen Houchins, would only have to "come
Jeff Peckham and Jean Craig back for more" if on ly one- said they think a one-mill mill is sought.
levy is more likely to receive
Baker said the village may
voter approval.
be unable to use funds from
. "With recent increases in othe r so urces in order to
water, sewe r and refu se make up the difference in a
fees, .a· one-mill le vy is
more likely to succeed ,
Please see Levy. AS

StrUble
announces
for 92nd seat

I

STAFF REPORT .
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES .
Pag~ . AS

• Peart Donahue, 84

INSIDE
• Muslim and Arab voices
urge calm over cartoon
issue. See Page A2
o HMC Heart Fair Set
for Valentine's Day.
See Page AJ
• Tillis recognized for
service. See Page AJ
• Ohio businesses
fall in line to pay new
tax on gross receipts.
See Page A3
· , • Meigs Local honors
rolls announced,
See Page AS
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Election board refers
'
· former Taft aide for
possible prosecution.
See Page AS

WEATHER

POMEROY
,
Representatives qf American
Municipal Power (AMP)Ohio will be making a stop at
the· Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce's busine ss
.minded luncheon at noon on
Tuesllay at the Wildho_rse
Cafe to di scuss progress on
its proposed .coal-tired power
plant for Letart Township.
Kent Carson, AMP-Ohio
.director of member relations·,
said that . .the 15-minute pre·sentation will update cham_.
ber members and the public
on where the project is at this
time as well as explain just
what AMP-Ohio and municipal power are all about.
"We're comfortable with
where we are right now,"
Carson said of that progress
of the project. "Since we
made the initial announcement of the plant in October
we're finishing up negotiations with property owAers
and doing some preliminary
work that needs to be done,"
Thi s preliminary work
includes core drilling that has
been done in anticipation of
application
the
permit
although that application has
not been filed yet.
AMP-Ohio began the
lengthy applica!ion . process

Please see Plant, AS

Federal
investigators
stilllqoking
·.at plane crash
BY DtANE PoTTORFF
DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies
As
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
A8

PLEASANT.
Investigators With
the National Transportation ·
Safety Board have released a
preliminary investigation into
the Jan. 3 l plane cras h along
us. 35.
Keilh Holloway, public
affairs officer with the
NTSB, stated that the agency
has not determined the cause
of the crash. He said an
Associa ted · Press report
· which said a preliminary
finding of pilot error was
made is pre mature.
'
The final report of the crash
may not be completed for at
least six months to one year.
:'It is not set in stone,"
Holl oway said of the
timetable to release the
report. " It' is estimated that it
could be six ' to 12 months or
12 to 18 months before the
report i•. released. It varies.''
Lantz Bruce Bricker. 2.'i. of

© 2006 Ot}io Valley Publishing Co.

Please see Crash. AS

Cha~ene

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

~--

t6 PAGES

______________.,___
__;_

Hoeftlch/ pholo

Jim Pullins, a walking mall route carrier in Pomeroy for the past 20 years. knows only too
well how difficult it can be to get to mailboxes to del iver mail when the sidewalk is covered
with snow and ice.

Sidewalks free of snow
make mail delivery safe
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL

POMEROY - With snow predicted over
the next several days, ·Pomeroy Postmaster
Tom -Sanders is· reminding residents to be
kind to their mai I carriers by keeping their
sidewalk.s free of snow and ice.
"We want to ·be sure there are no delays in
mail delivery caused by carriers being unable
to get to your mailboxes safely,'' said Sanders.
He noted that all mail carriers are advised to
not risk a vehicle accident or a fall if access to
a mailbox is not free of snow or ice. ln those
cases, he said, the mail may be returned to the
post office and then the carriers will reattempt
delivery the following day.
· ·
· Sanders said when winter weather hits,
injuries to letter carriers increases, primarily
from slips, trips and falls . Last year injurie s
from falls due to snowy conditi ons doubled in

the Postal Services' s Eastern Area which
_includes Pomeroy, he said.
"Winter takes it toll on employees," said
Chet Marsh, the area's safety manager, noting
that many of the injuries cause lots of pain
and suffering along with life-changing conse·
quences for the carriers.
· "Our chief concern is fur the safety of our
employees," Marsh said. "But there is a financial toll as well. Last winter alone cost the Postal
Service's Eastern Area some $15.5 million dollars in medical and compensution expense."
Sanders said customers can help limi t
injuries and assure their mail gets throug h by
clearing snow from curbside boxes to allow
mail delivery vehicles to approach and drive
away without the need for backing. by clearing walkways of snow and ice and providing
traction on steps and porc he s~ and by clearing
overhangs to avoid falling ice and 'dripp ing
water th'at can freeze into icy patches.

The road to the new water treatment plant

WVa -

Kennedy Museu. offiefS t"lltl'ma'te l00k at photography

'4th slSter
• ' OpenS·t_hiS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSE NTINEL.COM

AMP-Ohio to
give update on
proposed plant
-at chamber
luncheon

Festival directory now available

River
City Blues competition set for Feb. 18
.

Middleport to try one-mill light levy
MIDDLEPORT , .
Middleport Village Council
voted three to two to begin
the process of placing another levy for street lights on the
· May ballot.
·Meeting in special session
on Thursday .. afternoon ,
council authorized Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker to seek
certificatiol\ from County
. Auditor
Nancy
Parker
Grueser. of' the anticipated
.

JACKSON - Genealogy is an area of interest for many
·people. The Carriage House Genealogy Center is availabl_e for
those doing family research. It is located behmd the Lilhan
Jones Museum, 75 Broaaway St., Jackson . If you need help
with where to start on your family hi story, need to find
· resource material , or just want someone to share your findings .
with, this is the place for you.
The center ha's bound volumes of Jackson's past newspapers (some are already indexed with births. deaths, m.aniages,
and divorces), census records, birth and death records, cemetery records, local hi story books, and · many other resources.
There is no charge to corne in and use the center-'s resources,
and copies of most items are available fqr a modest fee.
Hours for the genealogy center are Wednesdays ·from l to 4
p.m. Additional hours can be arranged by appointment. RSVP
volunteer Barbara Scott, who has done extensive research into
her own family, staffs the center on Wednesdays, and can
assist with your research.
For more information , contact the l&lt;mes Museum at- (740)
286-2556.

COLUMBUS ~ The Ohio Arts Coundl'S 2006 Ohio Arts
·Festivals and Competitions Directory is available. The directory contains detailed information about arts and crafts festivals and competitions throughout 2006. The directory is published by the Ohio Arts Council and distributed in partnership
with the Ohio Arts and Crafts Guild and Ohio Designer
Craftsmen.
The listings are compiled by Lorz Communications of
Columbus.
A copy of the 2006 Ohio Arrs Festivals _and Competitions
Directory will be mailed directly to you. For the online versio~
of
!he
2006
directory.
pl ease
also
vtsU
· http ://oac.state .oh.us/search/OACFesti val/SearchFesti vals.asp
For more information abour rhe Ohio Arts Council and other
curmzr projects pleas e ••isit the OAC Web sire ar
11 •1vw.oac.state.oh.us.
The Ohio Arts Council is a stare agmcy that fu nds and supports quality a rts experiences to strengthen 0/iio L·ommunities
culturally. educationally a11d economically. · ·

.

'

Genealogy center available

. Submitted photo

"'"'-"'~dHil~·"·ntirol'i . t·om

FRIIl -\Y , 1-f ·. BRl ', \K\' 111, :!OO(&gt;

Dorothy might've followed the yellow brick ·
road to Oz but for those.
building Racine ·s new
water treatment plant
their path is made of
gravel. Yesterday dump
tru~ks were busy placing that gravel onto the
. road that will lead up to
the plant due to 6e in
operation in six
months. Also thts week
construction workers ·
have finally made it to
the she where the $2 .5
million plant wiB sit
along Pearl Street.
Dowmng Constructton.
which won the bill to
actually construct the
plant. has set up its
trailer on site where
excavating work has
begun.

__,_

_ _
_;_

_.;....

___

. Beth Seraent/ photo

SYRACUSE - . Mi chael
Struble of Syracuse has
a,nnou nced he is entering the
Democratic primary for the
92nd Ohio House District.
Struble
announced his
candidacy at
the Syracuse
Co mmun ity .
Center
on
Tue s day
eveni ng, and
in Athens on
Michael
Wednesday
Struble
evening:
Struble is a
grad uate of Ohio University,
and served on Syracuse
Village Council and Meigs
County Tuberculosis Board
of Trustees. He now serves as
president and legislative liaison for the Athens- Meigs
Educational Service ·center.
He worked for over 15
years for the Ohio Bureau of
Workers' Compensatio n.
''The. current di smal status
of our state's ethical image,
educational problems, and
lack of economic progress
have compe lled me to enter
thi s race," Struble said. "We
are squandering · our best
re,ources and abi lities on
programs and policies that
Pleas~

see Struble, AS

Letart man
sentenced.
.
in another
man's death
'

BY OtANE POTTORFF
DPOTTORFf'@MYDAILYREGI STER .COM,

POINt
PLE~SANT.
W.Va. - A Letart ri1an has
been sentenced to five vears
in , a
West
Virginia
Correctional facilitv after he
pleaded guilt y to "voluntary
man&gt;laughter
back · in
December.
Michael Lee Neal Jr. was
one of two men accu,ed of
catisinQ the death of Francis
Leroy ' Pickens in hi; Letart
h(lme m Julv 2004 .
Neal wa; 'entenced on
'.1onda) to ,;,rw fi\·e years
for ,-oluntarv man slaug hter.
one to fiw · 'ear&gt; for con'pirac\. ~iven five vears
rrobation' and wa s given ·
credit for time served bv
Ma,on County Circuit Judge
David Nibert .
Dming the evening of .
Jul) II , 200-l . Neal and.
Jeffrey A. Dor&gt;ey .· were
invi1hed in what investiga tor' helie\ed to be ' an alterc·atton w1th Picken' at hi'
Quine;·
Road
home .
Picken' died the following

1·

Please see Death, AS

'
-:---------------------"- - - - - - - - --

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