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                  <text>Tuesday, February 14. 2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

'.

Cheney victim has
mild hem1 attack after
shotgun pellet travels
. to his heart, A2

Cavaliers, James overcome one of NBA's best teams
.

two minutes, the crowd
Brown said.
chanting
"M-V-P."
The win ended a two-game
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tim Duncan scored just
slide for the Cavaliers and
three
of his 19 points in the
CLEVELAND - LeBron ' stopped another streak for the
second
half. He led San
James and the Cavaliers play Spurs - a franchise-record
Antonio
with I0 rebounds
like title contenders at home nine straight road vtctones.
and five assists .
against the NBA's best.
James got plenty of help
"In the second half, our
Monday night was the per- from Zydr.unas ll ga uskas.
guys
stepped up and tried to
feet example.
who had 17 points and II
play him more physical,"
James dominated with 44 rebounds and Drew Gooden,
Brown said. ·"We ·also kept
points and Cleveland defeat- who fini shed with 10 points
him·guessin!l in the post with
ed defending champion San and I0 rebounds.
.
our double teams."
Antonio 101 -87 to end the
C leveland has reac hed the
. James covered Tony Parker,
Spurs' nine-game winning 30-win mark before the Allthe
Western Conference playstreak.
Star break for the second
er
of
the week, for most of the
Now, if the Cavs could:jusl straight season.
night and Parker struggled,
be as good against the bad · At 30-21, the Cavaliers
shooting 2-for-7 for four
teams.
have the same record as last
with four asststs and
points
Cleveland is 14-2 at home season after 51 games. They
·
seven
turnovers.
against teams over .500. and collapsed in the second half
"A lot of.teams like to put a
5-5 against teams under .50,0. last year, going 12- 19 and
bi~ger player on me," Parker
The win over the Spurs came missing . the playoffs by a
satd. "A lot of times. I backed
two days after a lacklu ster · game.
'
him off but didn't hit the shot.
"We know the feeling of
home loss to Golden State.
I've got to hit the shots."
"We have to grow up," having 30 wins at the All-Star
Manu Ginobili, · who got
James said. "We can 't keep break and not making the
into
foul . trouble , finished
beating Phoenix , Detroit and playoffs." Gooden said .. "We
with 12.
San Antonio and then lose to don't ·want 'that to happen
.
The Spurs committed 18
·
again."
sub-par teams."
turnovers,
resulting in 20
James led Cleveland with
Down 51 -50 early in the
his sixth game over 40 points third, the Cavaliers patiently Cleveland Cavaliers • LeBron James, right, knocks the ball points and allowed 18 offensive rebounds.
this season. He went 19-for, huilr a lead on a 21-10 run
loose
from
San
Antonio
Spurs'
Tim
Duncan
in
t~e second quar"It was a bad combination
33 and added five assists, fueled by James.
for
LeBron to be great and us
three rebounds and four · . His nightly highlight came ter of NBA basketball •action Monday in Cleveland.
giving up all those turnovers
steals. James scored 18 in the when he drove around Nazr
With James spending some for jump shots and never and offensive rebounds,"
third quarter, tying his career Mohammed under the rim for rare minutes on the bench, the recovered.
·
Spurs coach Gregg Popovich
high for pomts m a penod, a reverse slam. He followed . Cavaliers extended their lead
James capped his night said .
and had 36 through three with a running jumper and a .to 81-64 early in the fourth with a steal and a soaring
It was the first loss for. the
quarters.
free throw ' to give the
k
d dunk. He drew a standing
1
·spurs
on their eight-game
"He willed himself to the Cavaliers a. 71-61 with · 12· quarter behind I gaus as an
Rodeo
Road Trip,' an annual
ovation
moments
later
when
rim and he willed this win for seconds left in the third quar- Eric Snow.
us," Cavaliers coach Mike ter.
The. ·Spurs began settling he took the bench for the final event that' puts them on the

· Bv JOE MILICIA

road when the rodeo comes tq
the AT&amp;T Center ~:ach
February.
..
They looked sloppy at
times after beating Indiana on
Sunday afternoon.
.
"We were not aggresst ve
and we made a lot of
turnovers," ,Girtobili said.
"LeBron made us pay for
that.''
·
Beno Uddh tried to get the
Spurs back ipto .it, scori~g.l2
points in fo\lr mmut~s , httt!ng
all foqr of his shots, mcludtng
three 3-pointers.
. :
The Cavaliers fell behmd .
by nine in the first quarter.
then took their first lead on
Donyell Marshall's 3-pointer
at the I0: 13 mark in the sec·
ond quarter. They led 45-44
at the half behind James' 18
points.
The Cavaliers are 20-2
when they hold opponents to
45 points or less in the first ·
half.
.
,
Notes: The Cavaliers are 4;
2 this season when James
scores 40 or more .... Spurs P. .
Robert Harry was place4
back on the inactive list with
a lower abdominal strain. H~
was 0-for-9 shooting in hi~
last two games. ... San
Antonio is 20-5 against
Cleveland since 1993 .... The
Spurs end their eight-ga~e
road trip Wednesday til
Philadelphia.

Shadowed by scandal, Bucknell cracks Top 25.
Gretzky heads to Thrin
Men'scollele
IIISUIIIalllllll
ASSOCIATED PRESS .

APTOP25

4

1f~R~~~~~: 'Jt~::3~[·1~

Hughes .to have second
surgery on.broken finger ·

y

-L--------------------.1

...

'.

·------- - --- --- ··---- -

-~ - ·--

__ _____

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CENTS • Vol.;.;;. No ,

_.c_----:-----~-

\VEDNI·:SIMY. FEBRUARY

12&lt;)

w"'"m~dail)"'ntin .. l.•·mn

15, 2 006

AMP-Ohio officials update-Chamber on proposed power plant

SPORTS

Bv

Kent Carson of AMP-Ohio
gave t;hamber members a
.
progress report and update
POMEROY - The pro- . on the plant.
posed coal-fired power plant
Thompson reported that at
for Letart Falls will be the this time AMP-Ohio . was
"flag ship" of American. involved· in the regulatory
Municipal Power (AMP) of ·proce sses of bringing the
Ohio according to its repre- pl ant to Meig s County,
sentatives that spoke to a including preparing to file
packed house at yesterday's for the proper permits in the
business minded luncheon of next few month s and
the Mei gs County Chamber throughout 2006. Thi s perof. Commerce held at the mit process will include a
Wild Horse Cafe.
public meeting similar to the
Jolene Thompso n and one recently held by

• Gretzky arrives in Turin.
See Page B1

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@M¥DAILYSENTINEL.COM

American Electric Power at
Southern Elementary. That
publ k meeting has not yet
been scheduled.
Some core · drilling has
already taken place on the
1400 acre site in Letart
Falls. This week residents
may notice work goi ng on
along the river to ~ urvey
what may become the barge
facility and water intake
area . In the next two · to
three week s an archeological and hi stori ca l survey
will take place.

Middleport .
Council
considers need,
am.ountof .·
rental fee hike

a

young kids had had lot ~f
success early they wouldn t
have beeil tough enough te
sustain what they have. The .
The giant killer is now .
among college basketball's
one blessing is what we went .
weeks
leading
to
the
Super
through helped this .team get
Gretzky
wanted
to
discuss
big names.
The top 25 teams in ThO Associated
BY JOHN WAWROW
Bowl.
Tocchet
is
on
an
indefA'SSQCIATED PRESS
Canada's defense ot' its gold
Bucknell, the Patriot Press' men's college basketball poll, where it is now."
inedal. The Phoenix coach inite. leave from the Coyotes.
League school that has beaten with first place votes in parentheses,
Kansas had been in the preJones has not been charged
· MISSISSAUGA. Ontario declined . to take questions
some of'the country's premier records through Feb . 12, total points season poll every year since
on 25 points lor a first-place
Wayne Gretzky side- about a gambling ring that with any cril)1e but is expectprograms the last two .sea- based
1991, and was out of the top
vote through one point for a 2Sth-p~
· stepped questions about the · authorities said was financed ed to be subpoenaed to 'testify
sons, joined The Assoctatei;l vote and las1 week's ranking :
I 0 · only three times in that
gambling investigation th at by Coyotes assistant coach before a grand jury investigatPress' Top 25 for the first
span . The Jayhawks had the
TEAM
RECORD PTS P11
has engulfed him and hi s Rick Tocchet and allegedly ing gambling activity, attortime Monday.
second-longest streak for
1.- .C:.o.~~!"'ti~~t..(!EL .•2.2~ ~ . _t...?~~ ....t
neys said.
wife, and insisted Monday he took bets from Jones.
"This is so neat for the .2.
poll appearances
consecutive
Duke t4) ·' . _2.3~1 .•1...?~~ ..2
.Team Canada
players
won't distract the Canadian
'·Not much really to add to
school and everything like :J.. ;,;~;;;,Ohis............. _22~2_1 ...s.:l?. ..3 to Duke, a run of 93 polls dat.
Olympic team despite a scan- what I said two days ago," backed Gretzky.
that. I won't play it down ~... .Vil!~~~~.~..m......... _19 ~~..t,~!. 4 ing to the preseason poll of
"He's
put
this
team
together
dal that has shaken all of. Gretzky said after practice at
because it's wonderful for ~. .&lt;30.~~~~ ............. -~ ~L1,:;Q? ....s 2000-01.
hockey.
a rink · in suburban Toronto. and we 're excited he's compeople to have that kind of §... :r~~a.~.......................2.1 ~~ ...1A27... -~
Connecticut received 67
7. Geo. Washington 20·1 1 .289 8
Gretzky spoke for just 4 1/2 "Nothing for me to talk about. ing a11d that he'll be a part of
respect for our program," ·s.t;;;;;;;;;;s;;;;
first-place
votes and 1.795
· 'is-a T21a 11
minutes in a news conference I'm not involved . .It's been a that," team captain Joe Sak1c
Bucknell coach Pat Flannery f~P.itii~U.i9i1.~ :.:::·. :;~.:Jj.}fi,14 points from the national
said. "I know peopl.e are trycut off by a Hockey Canada hard week for my family.''
said. "At the same time, we 10. Florida
21-3 1,157 .7
media panel. Duke (23-1)
"The only focus I have right ing to bring up, 'What's going
official when the NHL great
have the kind of kids who can E,:w~~~~; iiJiiiiii~ :·::: :1~:~ :; .}9~ :.:e was second with four No. ·I
repeatedly was l\Sked about now is this hockey team get- on with Wayne'' ... It's not an
18·3
95319
take it. in stride to be ranked 12. 0hioSt.
votes . and 1,635 points.
the integrity of the game.·
ting ready for the Olympic issue."
i
·
~
::~~~iiiii(;Otiii9ii
:1
~:~:
:
::e:J.s:::;t
among that company."
Memphis
was third and
2Q-4 . 825 10
Said goaltender Martin
"That's not for me to talk Games," he said .
·
Bucknell (20-3) moved 14. Illinois
Villanova
received
the only
about," Gretzky said.
•Philadelphia Flyers coach Brodeur: "You feel for people
into the poll at No. 24, two
other first-place vote.
Gretzky 's· shoulders sagged Ken Hitchcock, an assistant that are getting judged for
spots below 'another new- .17., (l~~rll"t~:wn..... .....17.~~ .... ~74...1.5
Gonzaga
and
Texas
at one point, and he reacted on the Canadian squad, said sometimes no reason. So for
comer used to being among 1B. lowa
19·6
596 18
remained
fifth
and
sixth,
with a nervous laugh a couple the players are so focused on people to waste any energy
the ranked.. Kansas (18-6 ), ifoi&lt;iahoma · ·· is:s 47f2o· respectively, while George
2'0:wa:5iiin~ion ······ · 1a:s ···· 4592i
oftimes. Hockey Canada offi- a gold medal that he doesn't asking us these questions, you
one o.f the big-time programs 2
·1·:·N:c. si:i;;···· ...... ·19:s ···· 435·is Washington moved up · one
cial Andre Brin interrupted think they "would dare .let just brush it off and move on
the Bison beat last season, 22:'i&lt;8ii5i.i8 '''''.''''''''''''i i:s······29i'' ::: place to seventh. Tennessee
five times to say Gretzky something like this'distractton to the next question."
entered for the first time this 23 Niiiili carOiiiia·····i s:s ··..,291' 23 jumped three spots to etghth
Gretzky is in his first season
would take only game-related get in their way."
season at No. 22, then held §H~tk~~ii ······.···~~~:::·: 1 ~ ··:~ and was followed by
questions.
Gretzky acknowledges the as Phoenix's coach . . The
off Oklahoma State 64-49 in
Pittsburgh and Florida.
· "There's no story about me, pre·ssure on Ca1,1ada to repeat investigation is the latest bur"
·Stillwater on Monday night. Oth8ra receiving votes: California
West Virginia, which lost to
den in what has been a tough
that's what I keep trying to as gold medalists.
Connecticut {22-2) was a 67, N. Iowa 61 , ·Nevada 41. Wichita
Pittsburgh
and
beat
for
him.
two-month
stretch
tell you. I'm not involved,"
"They're always under the
runaway No. I for the fourth St. 27, Wisconsin 23,.George Mason Georgetown last week,
Gretzky 's mother, Phyllis,
Michigan 18, Colorado 13, S.
Gretzky said.
microscope," he said. "We're
' straight week. but that run 19,
Illinois 11, UAB 10. Indiana 9, Akron.
dropped from No. 9 to II and
This was Gretzkv's final a team that's always looked died of lung cancer on Dec.
should be over as No. 4 e, Creighton 7. Louisville' 4, Stanlcird
19·.
Three
weeks
later,
his
.
was followed by Ohio State,
media availability before he upon to winning gold medal s.
Villanova beat the Huskies 4, W\s.-Milwaukee 4, Air Force 2,
Boston College, Illinois,
grandmother died.
left for Turin. The Canadian This will be no different."
69-64 on Monday night. . UTEP 2, W. Kentucky 2, Marquette
Canadian national team
UCLA, Michigan State,
team was to · fly from
New Jersey authorities
' The next five teams after 1, N. Arizona 1.
Georgetown
,
Iowa,
Pearson announced charges last week players arrived . by bus . in
Toronto' s
Connecticut held their posiMississauga,
an
hour
east
of
AP
Oklahoma
and
Washington.
lntern~tional Airport after against Tocchet. a New Jersey
tions in the rankings, but it
practice.
,
state trooper and another t;~ew Gretzky 's hometown of
The last five ranked teams
was Bucknell that drew the for us to. put our best foot forGretzky was scheduled to Jersey man · for rlfmng. a Brantford in the early afterward."
were North Carolina State,
attention.
fly with the team and Brin . nationwide sports gamblmg noon. About l00 fans cheered
Kansas,
which
has
·
won
Kansas, North Carolina,
Tile Bison beat Pittsburgh
said it was his understanding operation. State police .said the players, and one fan held a
eight
straight
and
IS
of
17,
Bucknell and LSU . .
and Saint Joseph's last season
of
that Grerzky 's wife. Janet wagers - primarily on pro- poster-sized . picture
The other newcomer this
before shocking Kansas in lost three seniors from the
Jones. was also tlying with fessio nal football - exceed- Gret~ky in a Los Angeles
team
that
was
ranked
No.
I
week
was LSU ( 16-7), which
the first round of the NCAA
them.
·
ed $ 1.7 million in the five Kings uniform.
last
season
before
losing
to
was
ranked
for one week
tournament, the ftrst win for a
Patriot League team. They Bucknell as a No. 3 seed. The twice thi's season. The Tigers
didn't.miss a beat this·season, Jayhawks, led . by freshmen come in having lost two of
Brandon Rush · and Mario three, the most recent loss at
winning at Syracuse.
"I think going to Pitt and Chalmers. lost four of tlleir Florida on Satutday.
Michigan ( 16-6) dropped
winning and Saint Joe's got first seven games in a tough
early
schedule.
out
from 22nd having lost
the baH rolling and as we
"I don't think any coac~ three straight including losses
went along we got confiwants to get off to the start we last week to Ohio State and
dence," Flannery said.
The Bi son have won II . did," Kansas' Bill Self said Purdue .
strai ght since losing two Monday, hours before the · Indiana ( 13-8), which had
frustrated by the setback. · don' t think so. But Larry is
BY JOE MILICIA
straight on the road to Santa . Jayhawks played Oklahoma been ranked all season and .
ASSOCIATED PRESS
If Hughes came back now, more important than basketClara and. then-No. I Duke. State. "We weren 't mature got as' high as No.9, drop{Jed
he could do damage · to the ball. He ·bas to take as long as
Their other loss this' season enough to go to Maui. We mit from 24th after losses last ·
bone , which hasn't healed he needs to get right." ·
CLEVELAND
.was to No. 4 Villanova.
didrft know enough about week to Wisconsin and Iowa,
Cavaliers .· guard
Larry properly, Ferry said. Getting . Hughes has had a variety
"Our place is filled every ourselves and then lost a. cou- Northern Iowa (21-5) fell
Hughes will have surgery for Hughes healthy is the team's of injuries in his NBA career,
night and buses come with us pie more when we came back from 25th ' after losinjl at
the second time in six weeks priority, Perry said.
including a broken right
on the road," Flannery said. .home.
home to Missouri State on
on his broken right middle
'·He's an important part of thumb and .left wrist, a
"This has created such excite"Looking back now if those Saturday.
finger.
ment and as long as we take
our foundati on. We ' re not sprained right ankle and a
strained
right
shou\deF.
The surgery will be perit in stride, we have some
h
formed Tuesday by Dr. going to worry about t e ne xt Before he broke hi s . finger.
size and some handlers, the
he had missed 97 games in
Thomas J. Graham , chief of couple weeks." he said.
components to be able to
.
Hughes,
who
signed
a
fi
vethe
last
five
seasons
and
hasthe Curtis Natio~a l Han d
compete with people."
Center at Unio n Memorial year. $60 million cl) ntract in n't played a .complete season
The Bison play at
Hospital in Baltimore. The the offseason. averaged 16.2 since 1999-2000.
Lafayette on Wednesday
The Cavaliers expect' to
team did not say how long points and 3.9 assists in 28
and at Northern Iowa,
games
for
the
·
Cavs
before
have
a
better
idea
after
the
another
school which
Hughes will be out.
entered the poll for the ftrst
Hughes, the team \ second- ' itting out 'the Jan . 4 game surgery when Hughes will.
Milwaukee . return . Ferrv s'aid that could
time this season, on
leading scorer, was supposed against
Cleveland
started
the
&gt;ea,on
affect
whether
the
'Cavaliers
· Saturday in a Bracket Buster
to miss six to eight week s
game.
after having surgery Jan . 6. 18-40 with Hughes and is 12- make a move before the Feb.
II
in
his
absence
after
a
10123
trade
deadline.
"It is a big game in a sense
However, doctors concluded
87
victory
over
San
Antonio
.
Forward
Ira
Newble
was
in
of being a TV game that's
last week that the fin ger hadbig fo r our conferences, but
the locker room Mondav for
n't healed as quickly as the on Monday night.
ftrst we have.a league game .
"Right
now.
we're
good
the
first
time
since
he·
was
team had hoped .
.
that's huge," Flannery said.
Cava'!iers general manager enough to be in the playoffs," hospitalized Jan . 31 with an ·
"Then
we'll be on a national
forward
LeBron
James
said:
infection
in
hi
s
face
.
He
Danny Ferry said Hughe s
scale
and
it will give peopl~
was in disbelief that he need - "To make a run deep in the ex pects to be ready · to play
a chance to see us again and
ed another surgery and i ' · playoHs without. Larry ... I after the All -Star break.

Bv JIM O'CONNELL

·. Couple accused of .
keeping special needs kids
· in cages indicted, A6 .

OBITUARIES

BY BRIAN

J.

Thomp son said nothing
Thompson al so announced
has so far been found to that AMP-Ohio will be
impede the progre ss of the open ing an office in
proposed plant being built in Pomeroy on April 6 that will ·
be staffed part-time. AMPMeigs County. ·
is leasing the office
Ohio
Constructior is scheduled
to begin in 2008 and the plant space from Farmers Bank on
Wes,t Main Street. An open
is due to go online in 2012.
Once the permit P\Ocess is hous( reception will be
complete AM p:ohio wi II . schedul ed in the spring . ·
Possibly available next
know what kind of coal the
month
will be a regional
pi ant will burn and what
technologies they will use to economic impact study by
burn it. It 'is estimated the AMP-Ohio though yesterplant would burn 300 milli&lt;;&gt;n . day Th orn pson ·spec u Ia ted
tons of coal a year.
Please see Plant. AS
'

'

.

..

• .
.

•
'I

REED

BREED@MYOA ILYSENTINEL .COM

Page AS
• Ernest Lambert, 82
• Donald Alvin Maurer, 83
• Lloyd Middleton, 67
• David W. Putney, 57
. • Tracy L. Rood, 59

MIDDLEPORT · An
increase in the annual fee
charged to owners of rental
,properties is designed to
improve the condition of
in
rental
properties
Middleport . but some landlords and council me(Tlbers
feel the increase might be
excessive.
At Monday evening's regular meeting, .' Middleport
Village Council conducted a
• Asbestos fund
second
reading of an ordi-·
opponents.force bill
nance which would incr~ase
off Senate floor.
the annual per-unit fee .from
$ 12 to $25. The increase is
See Page A2
designed to finance an
• British lawmakers
'increased inspection program
approve total ban on
and code enforcements. It was
smoking in all pubs in
proposed by the Middlepon
Pl ti nnin g Commission, and
England. See Page A2
was lirsl considered at coun• Japanese Astronaut to
ci l's Jan . 23 meeting.
speak at Ohio University.
Rental property owners are
now
required to register their
See Page A3
properties with the village and
• Mason native
pay the $12 fee, but no inspecBeth Sercent/ plloto
retires from Air Force.
. tion s are required. Building
The
Meigs
County
Senior
Center
crowned
Manley
Christy
(left)
and
Thelma
Walton
as
their
Valentine's
Day
King. and Queen
inspector Randall Mullins
See Page A3
said last mont~ the fee yesterday. The -real life sweethearts were given free flowers from the . Pomeroy Flower Shop .and boxes of chocolate from
• Baughman gets
·
mcrease. would allow him to Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy.
promotion. See Page A3 closely monitor the condition

INSIDE

• Rio receives $121,000
math/science grant.
See Page A3 ·
• Meigs County
selected fm Northern
bobwhite quail initiative.
See Page AS
• .Governor's candidates
take aim wtth corruption · ·
allegations. See · Page A6

Please see Rental

f~.

AS

Legal opinion
given on vote
·reconsideration
on·Pomeroy .
Council
. BY BETH SERGENT

WEATHER

BSERG ENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL. COM

~8
BY

and quem for a ffia[rntine's) day

muzzle loader once .
Christy and Walto.tl were voted
upon by their peers at the center
POMEROY - "This is the first time ' shortly before yesterd ay's Valentine 's
in my life I've ever been u king." Da y Lunch . ·
Manley Christy of Middleport said of
The center is an important part in the
being awarded Valentine's Day King at couple 's life because that is where they
the Mei gs County Senior Center. .
met. Both had spouses that have si nce
Christy's queen is his real life sweet- passed away and the two now "run
heart Thelma Walton of Racine.
around together" as Christy put it..
''It 's a surpri se to me.'' Wallon said of add ing ttiat Walton does the driving.
her award . sayi ng she had ne ver wo n
The couple has now been a couple for
anything oth er than bingo while · four years, making them real sweetChristy laughed and said he had wnn a , hearts and not just on· Valentine's Day.
BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

"I couldn't do without it." Christy said
of his relationship with Walton. "You
have to have a friend. You haye no busi- ·
ness being alone all the time .··
··
In addition to their gifts, the king and
queen had their luDche s delivered to
their table by staff at the center,
.
The Pomeroy Flower Shop provided
Walton's flower spray and Christy's
boutonniere · free of . charge while
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy provided
the couple with one pound boxes of
free chocolate · candy in .heart-shaped
packages.

POME~OY

Delatlo on Page A6

INDEX
2 SrenoNs - 12.

PA GES

Ca lendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

·ss

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

(C :zon6 Uhiu \'Iiliey l'uhlishin~ Co. '

Cou ncilm an Jim Sisson cannot legally reconsider a previous ly cast ba!Iot made
during th e Jan . 9 organizational and regular meetings
of
Pomeroy
Village
Cou ncil. thi s according to
Village
Solicitor
Christophe r E. Tenoglia.
Tenoglia wrote a legal
opinion on the matter at
. Sis son's request. The opinion was reviewed at this
week's meeting of Ponieroy
Village Counci l.
The request stemmed from
Si sson 's
concern · that
Robel'l' s Rules of Order,
which councU . operates
under, were violated when
the Jan . 9 meeting left the
prepared agenda without a
vote. Sisson said parliamen tary procedure states counci l
cannot go out of order or
sequence of the agenda with-·
out tlrst taking a vote ~ith a
two-third &gt; majority.
Si"on and Councilwoman
Ruth Spaun were concemecl
that if the rules of order were
vio.lat ed. new ly-appoin ted

Sweet serenades
Gerald Powell.
Gerald Kelly,
Vinton Rankin
and Michae l
'Edleman of Parle
· 4 Quartet
serenaded their
'way around
Pomeroy on
Valentine ·s Day.
singing classic
love songs and
handmg out
roses. Here . they
serenade Susan
Clark at her
Jewelry store .
Brian J. R-( plioto

. Please see Council, AS

- -, ..

- --...--- --

--------

�.'

PageA2

NATION •WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,February15,2006

Cheney victim h.as mild .heart at~ck after shotgun pellet travels to his heart
.

Bv LYNN BREZOSKY
AND

NEDRA PICKLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

CORPUS CHRISTl, Texas
- The 78-year-old lawyer
wounded by Vice President
Dick Cheney in a . hunting
accident suffered a mild heart
attack Tuesday after a shotgun pellet in his chest traveled to his hearr. hospital
officials said.
Harry Whittington was
immediately moved back to
the intensive care unit ·and
will be watched for a week to
· make sure more of the metal
pellets do not reach other
vital organs. He was reported
in stable Condition.
Whittingt,on suffered a
"s ilent heart atrack"
obstructed blood flow, but
without · the classic heartattack symptoms of pain and
pressure; according to doctors
at Christus Spohn Hospital
Corpus Christi-Memorial.
The doctors said they
decided to treat the situation
conservatively and leave the
pellet alone rather than operate to remove it. They said
they are highly optimisti c
Whittington will recover and ·
Jive a healthy life with the
pellet in him.
Asked whether the pellet
could move farther into his
heart and become fatal·, hospital officials said that was a
hypothetical question they
could not answer.
.
Hospital officials said they
were not concerned about the
six .to 200 other pieces of bird, shot that might still be lodged
in
Whittingtop 's
body.·
Cheney was usirtg 7 1/2 shot
from a 28-gauge · shotgun.
Shotgun pellets are typically
inade of steel or. lead: the pellets in 7 1/2 shot are just under
a tenth of an inch in diameter.
Cheney watched the news
conference where . doctors
described Whittington's com"
plications. Then the v·ice
president called him, wished
him well and asked if there

AP photo

Dr. David Blanchard, iett, director of emergency services at Christus Spohn Hospital Corpus Christi-Memorial and hospital offi.
cial Peter Banko speak to the media, Tuesday, in Corpus Christi , Texas. Despite the heart prol:llem of the man wounded l:ly Vice
President Dick Cheney, doctors say removing the shotgun pellet from his chest prol:lal:lly won't l:le necessary, and digging it out
could do more harm than good.
was anything that he needed.
"The vice president said that
he stood ready to assist. Mr.
Whittihgtnn 's spirits were
good, but obviously his situation deserves the careful monitoring that his doctors are providing," the vice president's
office said in a statement.
Cheney, an experienced
hunte(, has not spoken publicly about the accident,
which took place Saturday
night while the vice P.resident
was aiming for a qua!l, Critics
of the Bush administration

On Tuesday morning, the
called for more answers from Democratic Leader · Harry
the Cheney himself. .
Reid of Nevada. "I think it's Wl!ite House spokesman
Whittington
has
said . time the American people briefly joined in . the merrithrough hospital officials that heard from the vice president." ment, joking that the orange
. he does not want to comment . Before hospital officials school colors of the visiting
on the shooting. A young man announced
details
of University of Texas champiilt Whittington's Austin home · . Whittington's condition, the onship football team should
who identified himself as his hunting accident had pro- not be mistaken for hunters'
grandson said Tuesday he did duced a raft of Cheney jokes safety gear.
"The orange that they're
not have time to talk · to a on late-night television. . ·
reporter and dosed the door.
"I think Cheney. is starting wearing is not because
The furor over the accident to lose it," Jay Leno said. they're concerned that the
and the White House delay in ~' After he shot the guy he vice president may be there,"
Assoc imed Press Writer
secretary
Scott
making it public are "part of screamed, 'Anyone else want press
the secretive nature of this to .call domestic wiretapping McClellan said . "That 's why . Nedra Pick/a co11trihuted to
this report from Washington . .
I'm wearin~ it. "
administration," said Senate illegal ?!'"

Asbestos fund opponents force bill ofT Senate floor
Bv LAURIE ~ELLMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a! move that allows him to
bring it up again. ·
Sen. Daniel . ~nouye, · 0WASHINGTON
Hawaii, did not vote. Specter
Opponents of a $140 billion said Inouye would have been
trust fund for asbestos victims the 60th vote that·would have
forced Senate leaders to with- kept the vote alive.
draw it Tuesday. but its spon- · '"He went home because
sors said they would bring it his wife was sick,'.' Specter
back up. Next time . they pre- said. "We will have him on
dicted, the bill would pass.
the motion to reconsider and
"As John Paul Jones said, we may change another vote
we have just begun to f1ght,': or two so we may win this
declared
Judiciary one yet." .
Committee Chainnan Arlen
The cliffhanger vote folSpecter, R-Pa.
lowed a furious lobbying
The 58-41 vote to send the effor( on the Senate floor.
bill ba~k to the Judi ciary
rhe bill, sought by many
Committee was a severe set- · manufacturers and their
back. Opponents said the insurers, would end decades
fund would be drained by · of lawsuits that have bankclaims .against it, lea've tax- rupted more than 70 busipayers liable and violate fed- nesses. According to supporters, tens of thousands of peo.
eral budget rules.
The bill's supporters need- ple sickened by asbestos and
ed 60 votes to keep the mea~ related diseases have gone
sure alive on the ~enate floor. uncompensated.
Drawing .on his se1iiority,
They had 59 before Prist, RTenn., switched his vote at Judiciary Committee Arlen
lhe last minute in a procedur- Specter, R"Pa. , issued a per-

Hospital officials said they
knew that Whittington had
some birdshot near his heart
and that there was a chance it
.could move closer since scar
tissue had not had time to hard- ·
en and hold the pellet in place.
After Whittington developed '
an in;egular heartbeat, doctors
perfo1J11ed a cardiac catheterization, in which a thin, 11extble
tube is inserted into the heart,
to diagnose his condition, said
Peter Banko, the administrator
at' the hospital.
The shot :was either touching or embedded in the heart ·
muscle near the top chambers, called the atria, officials
said. Two things resulted :
• It caused inflammation
that pushed on the heart in a
way to temporarily block
.blood flow, what the doctors
called a.''silent heart attack."
Thi's is no~ a traditional heart
attack where an artery is
blocked.
They
said
Whittington's arteries , in
fact, were healthy.
• It irritated the atria,
.caused an irregular heartbeat
known as atrial fibrillation,
which is not immediately
life-threatening. But it must
be treated because it can spur
blood clots to form. Most ·
cases can be corrected with
medication.
·
White . Hou se physicians
helped advise on the course
of treatment, hospital officials said.
Texas officials said the
shooting was an accident and
no charges were brought
against the vice president.
·
A Tex as Parks and Wildlife
Department report issued
Monday said Whittington
\!'US retrieving a downed' bird
,.and stepped out of the hunting line he was sharing with
Cheney. •· Another covey- was
flushed and Cheney ·swung
. on a bird and fired, striking
Whittington in the face, neck
and chest at approximately
30 yards," the report .said.

sonal appeal on behalf of have spare companies that
would be driven out of busithe bill.
"Give me the benefit of the ness by legal fees and lawdoubt," he told the Senate suits, supporters say. ·More
than .70 companies have been
moments before the vote.
Opponents and supporters forced into bankruptcy over
crossed party lines, and busi- asbestos liti gation.
nesses and labor unions were
Asbestos. is a fire-retardant
equally split.
Minority material made up of fibers
Leader Harry Reid: 0-Nev. , that cause illness ·when
said the bill is so flawed that inhaled. The illness can lie
even two weeks of debate dormant .for decades, meanweren't enough to get it into ing future asbestos victims
might be 'seeking damages
acceptable shape.
"It is doomed ·to fail," Reid for .years to come.
For different reasons, libersaid.
The measure would have·. als and conservatives and
forced defendant companies interest grou'ps across the
that dealt with asbestos-con- political spectrum have [lnittaining produc.ts to con- ed to defeat the bill by setting
tribute to a $140 billion trust up procedural hurtle s.
The
showdown
vo te
fund from which claims
would be paid to those sick- Tuesday focu sed on the bill 's
ened by asbe stos. In impact on the federal· budget.
exchange for payouts of up Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev.,
to $1.1 million, based on age challetiged the legislation oh
and exposure level, victims the grounds that claims
would drop · all asbestos- would drain the fund and
related Court proceeding s.
leave taxpayers holding·a bill
Such legislation woul9 . for billions of dollars.·

,I

British lawmakers approve total ban
on smoking in all pubs in England
fewer deaths from smokingrelated illnesses.
·
:'Every day around 30 peo. LONDON Brit&lt;iin's ple die in the U.K. as a result
lower house of Parliall)ent of second- hand smoke.
voted on Tuesday to ban Today's vote will mean the
smoking in all public places beginning of the end to t\1ese
in · Engl'and - · including fri ghtenin g ·statistics," said ·
pubs, both public and private. Dr. Viviehne Nathanson.
Prime Minister Tony Blair · head of ethics and scie.nce ·at
had allowed all lawmakers the
British
Medical
from his Labour Party to vote · Association.
their conscience on the issu.e
Smokers groups and mem- . rather than toeing the bers of the tobacco industry
party line - following wide- said they felt let down by the
spread criticism of the party 's vote for a total ban .
.
earlier plans to exempt pri"We ha've always W&lt;lnted
vate clubs and pubs that do . choice for smokers becau se
not serve food.
it is what .the public have
The measure, which will consi stently asked for," said
take effect by summer 2007 if Tim Lord. chief exec uti ve
ratified by the llpper cham- of
th e
Tobacco
ber, extends the no smoking Manufacturers' Association.
law to publi c places such as "The government has not
cinemas,. offices, factories kept to its manife sto com and shopping mall s.
mitment of giving the large
Health officials · haile&lt;;l minority of the population
Parliament's decision. saying who smoke a place to enjoy
the legislation would lead to a cigarette."
BY TARIQ PANJA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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VVednesday,Februaryt5,20Q6

Daughter struggles to reveal
details of moms violent death

p.m.; followed by degree
team practice and fun night.
DEAR ABBY: My mother
Monday, Feb. 20
was murdered by a serial killer
POMEROY Special about 16 years ago. Whenever
meeting of Middleport Lodge the subject of parents comes
363, F&amp;AM for entered up at work, I don't know what
aprentice practice and return to tell people when they ask
Dear
of fellowcraft examination . about my mom.
Refreshments.
Abby
I am 26. Once in a whi le,
they will ask me about what
Saturday, Feb. 18
happened to her. but when I
CHESHIRE - Old Kyger
open my mouth to say someFree Will Baptist Church will
thing. I get nervous and start
celebrate its 200th anniver:
blu shing . This might be says he had a talk with her
Thursday, Feb. 16
sary at 7 p.m . Special singing
RUTLAND
- Rutland because I know people get and that it will stop, but it
by
Gospel
BJuegrass
Youth League, 7 p.m. at the uncomfortable when you talk hasn' t. I Jove rny job and
Gentlemen, Hester ad Henry
Rutland Fire House. Anyone about stuff like this. I also feel don 't like being treated this
Ehlin
and
others.
interested in coaching ball to weird . telling them that my way, yet I feel my only option
Refreshments. Display on
mother was a prostitute and is to leave . Can you please
attend.
.
church history pla1)ned .
how .she was murdered. help? - . UNCOMFORTthat's
HARRISONVILLE
Sometimes
I say she was in an ABLE IN CALiFORNIA
Harrisonville outh League
"accident"
but that's a lie.
DEAR UNCOMFORT- .
summer ball sign ups, noon to
Can· you ·give me any ABLE : Leavin'g is NOT yo ur
2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 21, and
Thusda, Feb. 23, 6 to 8 p.m. advice on the proper way to . only option. Document the
Thursday, Feb. 16
at the Scipio Fire Department. discu ss this in the office times. dates and examples of
SHADE -Elmer Bailey
For · more in formaton call . without it being weird for me the sexual haras sment. Give
will celebrate his 85th birthSarah Thompson, 742-2623 or the other person? - · copies to your boss and ·
day on Feb. 16. Cards may be
MOTHERLESS . DAUGH- explain that the conduct has
or Regina Hill , 698-2804.
sent to him at '40063 S.R .
TER IN, WASHINGTON
continued. According to my'
DEAR
MOTHERLESS
'
.
employment Jaw expert.
DAUGHTER : The'·. fact that Nancy Benrando, if the boss
you become "nervous" when doesn' t deal with this, you
trying to discu ss what hap- should file a complaint with
degrees
of
Medicine.
The
Fritz
J.
arid
·across
the
traditional
·
pened to your mother mean s the California Department of.
ATHENS - Chiaki Mukai . the tirst Japanese woman to fly
Employment
and
an astronaut with the Japan in space and the tlrst Japanese Dolores H. Russ College of engineering spectrum and in - to me - that you are sti ll Fair
Engineering and Technology the technology disciplines of traumatized by the circum- Housi ng. (It is li ~ted in your
Aerospace
Exp loration astronaut to ,fly twice.
· book
under
She has held faculty posi- and the Society of W9men aviation, computer science, stances of her death , phone
Agency, will give a free. puband
industrial
technology.
(Frankly,
that's
understand.
Govern.ment Agencies .)
lk lecture on Feb: 16 from lions at Baylor College of Engineers, Ohio University
Strategic researc h areas able.) When someone asks
DEAR ABBY: I am being
12: I0- 1·p.m. in Stocker Center f\lledicine. Keio University chapter. sponsor the talk.
The Fritz J. and Dolores H. include-bii:lengineering, ener- about your mother~ it's not married in· May. I want to .
I03 on Ohio University 's School of Medicine in Tokyo.
Athens Campus. Mukai's lee~ and International Space Ru ss Co llege of Engineering .gy and the environment, and necessary to give chapter and wear my wedding gown to
wre wi ll retlect on her person- University in France . She and Technology at Ohio smart civil infrastructure . verse unless you want to. Tell the airport and on the plane.
al experiences in space flight, also was a visiting s cienti~t dt Universit y in Athens edu- Named for alumnus Frirz the ·person · your mother Is this common? Is it proper1
John son
Space cates we ll -rounded profes- Ru ss and his wife Dolores, passed away many years ago, Please let me know. -· ·
Also a cardiovascular sur- NASA
TERRE
gemi. Mukai has flown more Center's Space Biomedical ' ional s with both technical · the Russ College is home of which is the truth. If you are BRIDE-TO-BE,
and team-project skills who the Russ Prize, one of the top pressed for details, say that HAUTE, IND.
than 560 hours in space, Research In stitute.
BRIDE-TO-BE:
DEAR
Credited with approximately become our business. gov- three engineering prizes in . the topic is painful and
including three NASA Space
There
is
no
"law"
against it,
For
more
informathe
&gt;ubject.
You
are
the
world.
change
ernment,
and
industry
leadShuttle !lights. One of those sixty publications since 1979,
but
I
would
recommend
under
tion
,
visit
no
snci&lt;1l
obligation
to
·
was with Ohio Sen. John she holds a Ph.D. and an M.D.. ers. The college otfers underagainst wearin~ your bridal
bare your soul to anyone ..
and
graduate www.ohio .edu/engineering.
Glenn in 1998. Mukai also was from Keio University School graduate
DEAR ABBY: I am a 24- gown to the atrport because
year-old male with a prob- the idea is impractical. Airport
. !em. I work at a small busi- floors are dirty and could soil
nes~ with six employee s and the gown. A trip up or down
12 contracted associates . My ·an escalator could tear the
problem
concerns one of the hem. The compulsory security
On July 5, 1979 his career in Air Force Outstanding Unit
STAFF REPORT .
screening could also create a
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
tlie Air Force began with. his' Award (3 Bronze Oak Leaf female associates, "Stella."
Over the past year, Stellq problem. and so would the
entry into Basic Military clu sters), Air Force Good
has
made sexual · advanc.es seating on the aircraft.
MASON, W.Va. -· Senior
Training at Lackland Air . Conduct Medal (I Silver Oak
It would be much better !o
me . She asks me to
toward
Leaf cluster and 2 Bronze
Master
Sergeant
Todd
Force Base. Texas.
do
brides traditionally
. Rawling s. has retired after
He received his Associate of Oak Leaf clusters), National come over and watch movies do: what
After the reception; .
serv ing 26 . years in the
Science
Degree
in . Defense Se!V'ice Medal (I while her hus.band is away ;· change into comfortable travshe
asks
for
hugs
while
I'm
Maintenance · Production Bronze Star), Global War on
United States Air Force.
eling clothes and leave your
Rawling s describe s his
Management
from
the Terrorism Service Medal , busy with customers, and wedding gown at home .
years 1n the military as an
Community College of the Air Korean Defen se Service · shows me her ·new undergarDear Abby is wri#en by
When I told Stella l
".incredible honor and a fasci'Force in June 1986. His pro- ·Medai, Armed Forces Service . ments.
Abigail Van Buren, also
was
uncomfortable
with
the
natiilg journey." · Durint~ hi s
fessional military educatioh Medal, Air Force Overseas situation she placed me in, known as Jeanne Phillips,
retire me nt ceremony at
indudes the Air Force Senior Ribbon (Shari Tour - 2 she became upset and and was founded by her
Noncommissioned Officer's Bronze Oak Leaf clusters),' accused me of being rude, mother, Pauline Phillips.
Elmendorf Air Force Base.
Alaska. Rawlings was asked '
Academy in residence, the f.ir Air Force Overseas Ribbon unprofessional and sexually Write Dear Abby al •
Force
Noncommissioned (Long Tour - 4 Bronze Oak · discriminatory.
.why he served those 26 years .
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Academy
in resi· Leaf cl!lsters), Air Force
Oftlcer's
Hi s repon se was because of
Box
69440, ws Angeles, CA.
I have brought this ~o the
Senior Master ,Sergeant
dence, the Noncommissioned · Longevity Service (I Silver attention of my employer. He 90069.
the flag and the freedom it
Todd R,awllngs, Ret.
represents." I served for free- .
OtTtcer's Leadership School Oak Leaf cluster), U.S. Air
.
re sidence· ' and the Force PME Graduate Ribbon
clom and h'umbly for God." he does fo r freedom and .. the in
he commented .
&lt;I we some puwer that God Noncommissioned Officer's . .(2 Bronze Oak .Leaf clusters),
Arms
Expert
"Our great flag 11ies around gave us all in ' uch freedom. . Prepatory Course in . resi· Small
dence.
Sergeant
Rawlings
is
a
Marksmanship
Ribbon,
Air
the country sadly enough too
Colonel Amv Bouchard.
GALLIPOUS - James D. Creek Plant in 2000 as an assooften at half mast. There are 3rd Maintenan ce Group Di stinguished· Graduate from Force Training Ribbon, and
Baughman
has been promot· ciate chemist in the Chemical
·
men and women who have died Commander. presiding over three of the four courses of the NATO Medal.
Militarv
Ra\vlings. son of Mr. and ed from an assistant chemist Department. In 200 I he was
and continue to die for vou and the retireme'nt ceremony. . Professional
.. Mrs. Richard Rawlings of · to a chemist in the Chemical promoted to assistant chemist.
111C every day. There are thOSe
remarked "throu ghout hi' Education.
Hi s. assignments tOok him Mason. is currently attending Department. effective Feb. I He is a· graduate of the
who have been imprisoned in career. no Iilatter what the
POW camps who never made it venue he found himself at. to ntlmerous ·states including Embry-Riddle Aeronautical at the Ohio Valley Electric University of Rio Grande with
out. There are also men w1d Sergea nt Rawlings rme to the Ala,ka. and to Ital y ' twice . University where he is pursu- Corporation's Kyger Creek a bachelor of science in biolowomen who are serving our occasion. Consistentl y Jea(l- Korea th ree times. and . ing a B'achelor of Science· Plant. Ralph E. Amburgey. gy and a minor in chemi stry.
Baughman and his · wife .
degree
in
. Technical plant manager. announced.
c·nunuy who have not seen their ing by example. with integri- Germany.
Nancy.
reside in Gallipoli s.
Hi,
awards
and
decoration
s
~au
g
hman
joined
Kyger
cs.
Management
Logi
sti
families for months at a time ty. honor and commi tment as
and often those months tum into his tool s. he created a legacy include the Meritoriou s
· a year &lt;md beyond. So. I served of impeccable credential&gt;. the Servile Medal (3 Bronze Oak
for freedom ancl in the honor or highe st standard s of e xcel ~ · Leaf dusters ). Air Force
all sacrilices past. present and Jcnce and except ional de vo- C&lt;)mmendati on Medal (!
Bronze Oak Leaf cluster), Air
. those· to comc.in my loot&gt;tep&gt;.'' tion to dut y and country."
FMce Achie\ement Medal .fl
Rawlings.
entered
the
Air
. Raw lin gs said that he will
continue to serve ;inyay he Force in hlllC 1979 under the Bron t.e Oak Lear clu ster):
can and he a true patriot in all Delayed Enlistment Program . Joint Meritorious Uni t Awarp,

Public meetings

Thursday, Feb. 16
RACINE Pomeroy.Racine Lodge 164, F&amp;AM.
· 7:39p.m. regular meeting .
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers, regular meeting, 7
p.m., Southern Yo-A~ room .
POMEROY - Metgs High
School clas s of 1986 reunion
planning session, 6::30 p.m.at
the Wild Horse Cafe. Anyone
interested asked to attend.
Friday, Feb. 17
RACINE
Annual
inspection of PomeroyVVednesday,Feb. IS
Racine Lodge 165, F&amp;AM
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literury Club will Dinner 6:30 at ·United
meet at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy Methodi st Church followed
Library.
Olita by inspection in fellow craft
Public
Heighton
will
rev1ew degree at lodge hall.
.Saturday. Feb. 18
"Obsessive Genius: The inner
RACINE - Racine Youth
world of Marie Curie" by
Barbara Gold smith. Jeanne League. yearly organizational
meeting, I p.m. , · Racine
Bowen will be hostess.
.
SYRACUSE - London l.,.egion Hall.
Pool Steering · Committee,
SALEM · CENTER
regular meeting. 6:15 p.m. , at- Star Grange #778 Fun
Night · an.d potluck , 6:30
. the home of Bob Wingett.

681, Shade, Ohio 45776 .
Friday, Feb. 17
POMEROY
- Cora Mae
Thursday, Feb. 16
Smith
will
be
84
on Feh. 17.
SYRACUSE . - Meigs .
County board of MROD, 4 Cards may be sent to her at
the
Rocksprings
p.m. Carl eton School.
Rehabilitadtinn Center, Room
136, 36759 Rockspring s
Road, Pomeroy. Oh.io 45769. ·

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

· Birthdays .

Youth events

Japanese Astronaut to speak at Ohio University

Mason native retires from Air Force

·Baughman gets promotion

V US FIRST
·vuSLAST
But Whatever you do
tl Our C.D. Rates

Rio receives $121,000 math/science grant
state to parti cipate 111 pro- Universi ty. to offer workshops
grams that bring the expertise for teache" in the region. The
of Oh io's college faculty into work,hop' will foc us on
RIO GRANDE - The the sc hools . Of the pl'ujech method, · for assessing the
Uni versit y of Rio Grande/Rio . funded thi s ve'ar. 14 wdl cffectil·e,le's of math and scilira nde Community Coll ege focu s ,pecifi ~;ill y on scie nce. cnce projects and whether
has rece ived a $ 121 ;000 grant th ree wi ll focus specifically class goitis. arc being met.
tu fund a program to help un math . improvements and
ln the W()rkshop, teachers
math and science tea&lt;.:hers in nine will address both &gt;L·i- wi ll. he abl e to di sc uss their
the region.
ence ;ind math .
methods with other teachers
Jmpro&lt;ing Teacher. Quality.
Thi s year's Impro vi ng and pick up new ideas fur
.1 federal program that providTeacher Quality Prog ram 1hcir own work.
ed money to the Ohio Board of · drew 50 proposals from 21
The· workshop s wi.ll al so
Rq;cnts to support teac her&lt; colleges and uniH'r,itie' in meet req ui re ments for teach aro und Ohio, is prov iding $3.~ Ohio. A I7- me mber revicv. er' · prufe"io nal develop-•
mil li on in fund s to support 26 panel rcprcsellli)lg all level' 1i1ent needed to stay current
math and sc ience educati on . of mmh. anJ scie nce edm·a- in their prngr:um .
projcc:ts across the state.
'tio n ran~ed the propm:lis and
Hat fi eld ' aid that Rio
. Improving Tead1er Qualll y made lundi11g rt'Plllllllend&lt;~- Grande locu'e' much of ih
p1ojcc'h .are designeu tu pm- t inn~ to the boa rd.
effort' on trainiug new teach' itk ,u.11ained, int ensive,
The lmp rO\ in~ Tea.: her crs in it' education "program.
hi~h - qu a li ty
. ·pro fe" i.o nal Quali ty Stat e Ci ranh Pmgram · bu t it alsc1 reaches nut to
dcl'elt&gt;IJil\e nt oppOrtlll.liti c' i' part &lt;&gt;f 1hc le(ieral No Ch ild work in g tcad1er' i11 the com·
fm pmct iL·ing elementary and Left Beh ind Act pf . 2001. . munit~ by o fl~ring them pm·
,e,·ondan ,c hou! teacher' whic h di ., tribute' kdcr:li ~r;um. 'cmi nar' and work ·
and :ltl nlifli ,tra\nr' from high- t'und ' to all )() ,q atc' 10 'UJl· ~ hop' to help them impn\\C
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'-l'hOt)l-.

~o ' they

cul

in

tum prm ide challenging
learning ex periences in " ·icncc and ma th for their qu dent' Pm1cct activitic' mu't
f&lt;K'l" 1111 the Ohi•' (\cadcmll.'

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The l h project&gt;. will pro'
. , ide an &lt;&gt;pportuni ty for more
. than 2.500 teac hers acros' the

port al'li\ it it:,' JL:-.iglll..'d In

thl!ir ll'aching ..,k ill" .

incrc:t'c ,tudent aclnc\CIIll'nl .

The work.' h"J" wi ll he held
l:ttt'r thi' )Car. and one nf the
prngram' I\ ill he held at Rio· '
Clr:u1dc.

hy clc1ating te ac her qu :li111

lntcnm
Prm·o,t/V It'c
Pn:,idcn l for .'\t'&lt;llicnn v
Affairs Dr. Harhara Hatilc ld
~a ill th at Rio ( inuH.k ], \\'~)rk -

ing wnh olhet '""·' cu lkgc'
and unlvcr,lt lc' .. ,uch "' Oh1u
Ll n1wr"I Y·"nd Shawnt'C Stat,·

i11/lmnation on
H'o.rkshop,, or 011
rile · iiiif"'"' ing
ht~ cher
(}lt&lt;lillr
Pm.~ram.
cull

37* month 5.10% rate s.22APY
13* month 4.80% rate 4.so% APY
·.: Home

"~ National

;· Bank

Racine
740-949-221 0 .
FDIC

INS URED

Syracuse
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f'or 111111'&lt;'

rill·

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'Annual percenlage y•eld (.APY) •s current ot the date ot thiS tssue out ;s su Of&amp;el to change $500 00 m1mmurn· ooellmg depos•t
requ 1rM There 1s a oena lty tor ear1)1 withdrawa l, unless the w1tndrawa t •S made with•n the f1rst 10 cal.enda r Mys after maturtty
One r1me opt 1ons to tncrease1ate may be used d unng the h,rstterm onty NoT a11at tat&gt;le fo r IAAs or brokered lunds Thts spectal 15
only avatlabte tor a. ttmtted !tme Phone or come 1n tor addt!IOna l detatls

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily .Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

·

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

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. Feb. 15. the 46th day of 2006. There are
3 I9 days left in the year.
Today'sJ-Iighlight in History:
.
On Feb. 15, 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine mysteriously blew
up in Havana Harbor. killing more than 260 crew membe~ and
bringing the United States closer to war with Spain.
On this date:
·
In 1564, Italian asironomer Galileo Galilei was born in Pi sa.
In 1764, the citY of St. Louis was established.
In 1820. American suffragist Susan B. Anthony was born in
Adams, Mass.
In 1879, President Hayes signed a bill allowing female attorneys to argue cases before the Supreme Court.
.
In 1933, President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt escaped an
assassination .attempt in Miami that claimed the life of Chicago
Mayor Anton J. Cermak.
.
.
·In 1942. the British colony Singapore surrendered to the
Japanese during World War II. ·
·
In 1961 , 73 people. including an 18-member U.S. figure skating team en route to Czechoslovakia, were killed in the crash of a
Sabena Airlines Boeing 7f)7 in Belgium.
·
In 1965, Canada's new maple-leaf tlag was unfurled in ceremonies in Ottawa.
·
In 1986, the Philippines National Assembly proclaimed
.Ferdinand E. Marcos president for another six years, following an
election marked by allegations of fraud. (Marcos was later ousted.)
In 1989, the Soviet Union announced that the last of its troops
had left Afghanistan, after more than nine years of military intervention.
Five years ago: President Bush said the Pentagon should review
its policy on civilian participation in military exercises like the
emergency ascent drill a Navy submarine was perfonning when it
sank a Japanese fishing vessel off Hawaii. Hans-Joachim Klein, a
fanner Geiman terrorist, was sentenced to nine years in pris~:m by
a German court for killing three people in a 1975 attack on an
OPEC meeting in Vienna, Austria.
One year ago: Defrocked priest Paul' Shanley was sentenced in
Boston to 12 to 15 years in prison on child rape charges.
Christopher Pittman, a teen who claimed the antidepressant Zoloft
had driven him to kill his grandparents at age 12, was found guilty
in Charleston, S.C., of murder and sentenced to 30 years in prison.
· Today's Birthdays: Actor Kevin Mc~arthy is 92. Actor Allan
Arbus is 88. Country singer Hank Locklin is 88. Former U.S. Rep.
John Anderson. R-!11. is 84. Comedian Harvey Korman is 79.
Actress Claire Bloom is 75. Author Susan Brownmiller is 71.
Songwriter Brian Holland is 65. Rock musician Mick Avory (The
Kinks) is 62. Jazz musician Henry Threadgill is 62. Actress Jane
Seymour is 55. Singer Melissa Manchester is 55. "Simpsons" creator Matt Groening is 52. Actor Christopher McDonald is 51.
Reggae singer Ali Campbell (UB40) is 47. Musician Mikey Craig
(Culture Club) is 46 . Country singer Michael Reynolds
(Pinmohkey) is 42. ActOr Michael Easton is ~9. Actress Renee
O'Connor is 35. Actress Sarah Wynter is 33. Rock singer Brandon
Boyd (Incubus) is 30. Actress Ashley Lyn Cafagna-Tesoro is 23.
Thought for Today : "We live by encouragement and die without it ~ slowly, sadly and angril y."- Celeste Holm, .American
. actress.

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EDITOR
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addressing issues, not persmralitie;·. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be &lt;lcceptedfor publication.

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Correction Polley .
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accurate. If you know a·f an error in a
' story, call the newsroom at (740) 992 -

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fageA4-

Inside Meigs County
13 weeks
.. ' 32.26
26 Weeks
... ' 64.20
52 Weeks . . . .
. , .'127.11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
... ' 53.55
26 Weeks .
.'107. 10
52 ,Weeks .
.'214.21

vvednesday,Februaryts,2oo6 .

TM&gt;men who make women look bad
wrought with "soul-numbI simp! y have no patience ·
ing sacrifices.". Obviously,
for women .
women will find mothsome
Odds are I don't mean
erhood and home life not for
you , your wife or your
them. (Though even some
mother. I do mean, however,
hardened femini sts have
the type of gal who tends to
Kathryn
written
about the reality
grace the likes of The New
Lopez
check that falling in love .
York Times editorial pages.
with their baby meant for
I'm thinking in particular
the·
ir own gender biases.)
of Judith Warner. Warner is
But Warner's answer is to
the author of a book called
" Perfect
Madness:: the merits . of Marxi st eco- universalize her experience
Motherhood in the Age of nomics, persuaded far too and encourage women .to put
Anxiety" (Penguin Group, many women that a sellless their kids' childhoods into
2005). In memorializing the devotion to iheir families the "soul-numbing sacrifice"
recently deceased feminist was a recipe for misery, category. Some women
"founding mother" Betty helped create the National rather celebrate the opportuFriedan (as she Hi frequently Organization for Women nity.
described), Warner heralded (NOW), ancj des(ructively · Warner, as she explains it
Friedan's "The Feminine politicized relations between in her book, believes that the
village should raise the chi!Mystique" (W. W. Norton, the sexes."
.
dren.
In "Perfect Mac)r\ess,"
Likewise in .2006, Judith
1963) as "surprisingly rele"
vant today" -· indeed, "hor- Warner seems to want to Warner calls for "i nst itulions
base a revived Friedanism th~t can help us ·take care of
ribly familiar."
and
reinvigorate. our children so we don ' t
To understand Warner, one
must understand Friedan. "destructively politicized have to do everything on our
"The Feminine Mystique," a relations between the sexes" own.'' wanting French-style
feminist classic, has a chap- - on personal choices she's month-long mommy vacater
entitled
"The not entirely delighted with. tions and other big-governComfortable Concentration Her problem seems to stem ment solutions.
Now, don't get me wrong,
Camp." Friedan was a seri- from a husband who doesn't
ously despera\e housewife, clean up his socks. Warner a m'onth off sounds great in a
comparing women raising · writes, "The outside world "Calgon take me away"
kids at home to the hopeless- has changed enormously for kinda way. And I don' t mean
ness of American POWs in women in these past 40 to diminish the stress and
Korea. She was married .and years. But home life? Think a'nxiety that comes with
unhappy and based a philos- about it. Who routinely families making hard choicophy on her personal coping unloads the dishwasher, puts es. sometimes a single parstrategy. Friedan moved on, away the laundry and picks ent making it. But ... can we
but not without leading oth- up the socks in your house? be serious?
Her thinking is pulled
Who earns the largest share
ers astray with her ideas.
out of Betty Friedan.
straight
the
money?
Who
calls
the
of
As my friend and colFriedan wrote: "But even if
league Kate O'Beirne writes shots?"
Warner
seems
to
consider
a
woman does not have to
in her book, "Women Who ·
work
·to eat,. she can fin!l
Make the World · Worse" the life of a mom \VhD can
(Sentinel, 2005), Friedan ·got choose to stay at home with i!lentity only in work that is
a divorce, "btit unfortunately her children, working at of real value to ·society ·not before she expounded on writing for minimal hours, work for which, usually, our

( Kathi-yn Lope~ is the edi· '
tor of National, Re1'ie11!'
Onli11 e . (1n v11·. nationalre.- "
vie1r.com ). She can be cml·
tacted at klope::@ national- ~
·

.
..

Obituaries

Meigs County selected for Northern bobwhite quail initiative .

POMEROY "Bob ...
WHITE!"
Once a familiar sound to
southeastern Ohioans. the call
POMEROY - Donald Alviri Maurer, 83, Pomeroy passed of the Northern bobwhite quail
away on Feb. 12, 2006 at the Ohio Veterans Home in . is now heard in only a few, isoGeorgetown, Ohio after an extended illness.
lated locations, but a new proHe was born on March II, 1922 in Stire City, W.Va. to the gram offered by the U.S.
late Herman J. and Catherine .J. Brewer Maurer. Donald Department of Agriculture and
served in World War II, he was a member of the DAY Post Oh10 Department of N&amp;tural
#5) Po meroy, 99th Infantry Division Association, 924th Resources
Division
of
Field Artillery Association, National Battlefield Commission Wildlife is hoping to tum that
· VFW Tuppers Plains Post #9083, and American Legion Post around.
#128 Middleport.
·
A program to restore habiHe was preceded in death by his parents, sort, Beryl B. tat for Northern bobwhite
Maurer, and a son, Mark Alvin Maurer.
quail is now available to
He is s urvived by his wife, Betty Maurer, Pomeroy; chil- property owners in 35 mostly
dren, Dtane (Btlly Joe) Shelton, S!Jiiths, Ala., Donna (Jack) western and southern Ohio
Carter, Knoxville, Tenn., and David Timothy (Robin) Maurer, counties , including Meigs
Columbta, S.C. and grandchildren, Jason (Danielle) Leon, · and Gallia counties, accord,
Phoenix City, Ala., Jarrett Leon, Covington, La., Charlene in~ to the ObNR Division of
(Thomas) Posey-Blahnik, San Benito, Texas, Trish McAfee, Wtldlife.
The Northern Bobwhite
Knoxville, Tenn., Shawn (Crystal) McAfee, Knoxville, Tenn ..
· Mike McAfee, Knoxville, Tenn., Jessica Maurer, Columbia, Quail Habitat/Upland Bird
S.C., Marissa Maurer, .Columbia, s:c.. Christian Maurer, Initiative, sponsqred by the
Farm
Service
Tampa, Fla.; great grandchildren, Cheyenne and Dakota Leon, USDA's
Agency
Conservation
Jennifer McAfee, Kay.Ia and Christopher McAfee, Neilani and
Cameron Maurer; a brother Herman Jack Maurer, Reserve Program, aims to
Parkersburg, W.Va., and a sister, Violet Virginia Maurer, create 250,000 acres of
essential upland bird habitat
~edford, Ore. along with several nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Meigs in 35 states nationwide. In
Senior Center, 112 E, Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio, ~5769. Ohio, the goal is 14,200
No services are to be cond~cted. Arrangements are being
handled by the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy.

a

Emest tambert
RUTLAND -.· Ernest Ralph Lambert, 82, Rutland, passed
away ·Feb. 13, 2006, at his residence.
Born Dec. 18, 1923, at Mud fork Logan, W.Va., to the
lat.e Andrew and Maggie Kitchen Lambert, he was a member Of the Rutland Church of God. He was· a coal miner,
farmer and veteran of World War II, having served in the
infantry tank division.
He is survived by his wife, Mary Frances Lambert of
Rutland: children: Sherry (Bob) Gagne, Jacksortville, Fla.,
Michael (M~ry Ellen) Lambert, Paul (Irene) Lambert and
Debbie (Glen) Brown, all of Rutland; a sister, Virginia Colette
of Rutland: six grandchildren and seven great grandchildren;
and many nieces and nephews.
' .
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his brothers, Andrew, Jr. , Drexel , Raymond, and Jim Lambert; a sister,
Marie Trent, and a grandson, Andrew Lambert.
Services wi.Il be held at II a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2006,
at Rutland Church of God with Rev. Ronald Heath officiating,
and burial following .in Miles Cemetery in Rutland.
The family received friends from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on
Tuesday at the Rutland Church of God ..
Arrangements are under the direction of Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland.
·

Uoyd Middleton
I'LL

FIND THAT
WASCAllY

QUAIL! ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Donald Alvin Maurer ·

society pays." Warner. whe
has. in fact, been dubbed ,
"The New Betty Friedan,:··
would easily run the hysteria
marathon with the femini st ,
torch of victimization held ..
high. But that's nothing to ,
award a gold meda I for.
·
Friedan/Wamer thinking i~
a slap-in -the-face to stay-athome moms who are home ~
because they actually want
to be there. And it's an ani- .
tude that is damaging to ·
children. O'Beirne summa~ '
ri zes the research and ·'
debates well in a chapter of ·
"Women Who Make the /
World Worse" called "Day Care Good; Mother Bad.K :
Besides the ear infection s ·
and other physical disadvan- :
rages or sending your kid off .
to an institution, an expert '
on the first three ·years of
childhood, 0 ' Beirne cite s,
says it all - and it's all so
natural : "babies form their
first human attachment onl}'
once. Babies begin to learn
language only once .. . The
outcome of these processes
play a major role ii1 shaping
the futu re of each child ."
I' m not looking to inllame
~o-called
Mommy Wars ·
here, but it's pretty simple~ _,
If you can stay home with
your kid, it's a good thing. '
Embrace it. Don ' t let 'modern day bottl.e burners tell .
you any differently.

rer;eH'.com,)

~e~nesday,February15,2006

acres. The new program
seeks to create nesting and
brood-rearin g cover along
cropland field borders, while
establishing travel corridors .
Participating farmers and
landowners will be required
to plant a 30-to-120-foot
wide border of warm-season
grasses, forbs and !lowers
aro~nd. enrolled crop fields;
in return, they will be rewarded with incentive payments,
bonuses and annual rental
payments pn their property.
In addition, the ODNR
Division of Wildlife is offering a one-time $50-per-acre
bonus payment for farmers
and landowners who enroll
before March 31.
Grassland buffers along
crop fields enhance the
movement of existing quail
coveys and are a critical component of this restoration program. The program wiII provide a much-needed habitat
niche that is lacking in counties within the existing quail
range.
Natipflally, Northern bob-

white quail numbers have
declined in the past 20 years;
largely due to loss of grassland corridors and the growth
of once grassy field s into
woods and row crops. In
Ohio, the blizzards of 197778 decimated quail numbers.
which have yet to rebound to
1977 levels.
Counties selected for the
initiative provide the greatest
potential for some reestablishmeot of quail . and other
upland bird populations. They
are Williams, · Defiance,
Wyandot, Marion , Shelby,
Darke, Miami, Clark, Greene,
Fayette, Pickaway, Fairfield,
· Perry, Morgan, Washington,
l'locking,
Preble,
Montgomery, Butler, Warren,
Clinton, Ross, Vinton, Athens,
Hamilton, Clermont, Brown,
Hijlhland, Adams, Pike,
Sctoto, Jackson, Lawrence,
Oallia, and Meigs counties.
To be eligible, fields to be
enrolled must have been
farmed to row crops four of
the six years from 1996 to
2001. To determine individ-

have authority to evict tenants
because of poor living conditions, he does have the authority to force repairs and confrom PageA1
demn unsafe properties. A regular inspection schedule
of rental properties, enforce would allow him to track those ·
building codes, force needed properties, he said last month.
repairs, and improve the ~ver- .
Council President Stephen
all condition of rentals.
·
Houchins and others attend- ·
The · inspections would ing Monday's meeting said
include electrical, plumbing, the fee increase of $13 might'
and heating and air condi- be excessive, and council distioning systems, and sani(ary cussed lowering the annual
health and environmental rental fee but imposing fees
standards, including ' an · for second inspections when
inspection for rodents. Rental they are necessary and new
certificates would be issued fines for those property own·once a successful inspection ers who are found in nonas completed.
compliance with building
While Mullins would not codes . The final reading and

Rental ·fee

ual el igibility for the initiative. Meigs County farmers
and landowners in the counties named should check with
their local Farm · Service
A~ency office at 33101
Htland Road, Pomeroy, or
call (740) 992-6646.
The following payments
are offered for eligible acres:
• One.time signing incentive payments of up to $100
·
· per acre ;
• Practice incentive payments of up to 40 percent of
the eligible establishment
cost. When combined with.
cost-s hare assi stance of 50
percent , up to 90 percent of
reimbursable practice costs
are covered.
• Producers will receive
annual rental payments for up
to I0 years.
Program sign~up at local
Farm Service Agency offices
began Dec. 10, 2005, and eligible land may be enrolled at
any time until the 14,200
acres approved for Ohio have
been established· or Dec. 31,
2007, whichever comes first. .

"We' re trying to make sure
vote on the proposal will take
that what happened to the
place on Feb. 27. .
Brenda Phalin , Cllairman buildings on Second Avenue
of the Planning Commission , doe s not happen to other
and Commission Member properties in Middleport,"
Paul Reed attended Monday Reed said. "By recognizing
even.ing's meeting, and said needed improvements and :
they encourage ~ouncil to addressing those improveconsider other remedies to ments, we can protect the
improve the ·quality of rental interests of landowners while
we ensure a higher quality of
properties in the village.
"Anything we do is designed life for our residents."
"This could be a good serto help council address bad living conditions in the village, vice to the landlords of
and to put teeth in the ordi- · Middleport, as well," Reed ·
nances we already have in said , "because ultimately it
place to do that," Phalin said. protects their investments."
"This plan is not designed to
There are approximately 400
be unfai or adversarial. It's apartment units, rental houses
designed to be fair to the land- and rental mobile homes in the
village, Mullins said.
lords and the tenants."

·Plant
from PageA1
that the plant may have a
$20 million impact on the
local economy. ·
Thompson
encouraged
feedback from the community on the $1.2 billion power
plant and thanked community members for their "gra.
.cious" reception.
The chamber presentation
was meant to keep the lines
of communication open
between AMP-Ohio and the
community.
Thompson said AMP-Ohio
made the decision to build its
own coal-frred power plant to
have "control over ·our own
destiny" and provide the com· Beth s.rcerit;ploolo pany with an asset that would
in tum contribute to providing · Meigs County Chamber of Commerce President Donald Vaughan (center) takes a moment to
municipal power to 360,000 speak with AMP-Ohio representatives Jolene Thompson .and Kent Carson at yesterday's.
chamber luncheon.
·
customers in four states.

COOLVILLE - Lloyd Michael Middleton, 67, died Feb.
13, 2006, at St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Born May 14. 1938 in Cleveland, he served 13 years as a
police officer in Rocky River before relocating to Columbus
in 1972. He worked as an undercover nar)!otics agent and private. investigator in the C::olumbu~ area before eventually relocating to Coolville where he was co-founder of The Middleton
Doll Company with Lee Middleton in 1973. He founded
Lloyd Middleton Dolls with his wife Janice in 1990. The business is curr~nlly operating in Coolville.
Throughout his life, Lloyd's charisma and love allowed him
to successfully share hi s Christian faith with many. His generosity was extended to countless area organizations as he
never refused a request to donate a doll to assist fundraising
efforts. He will be .missed by many.
Lloyd was an Army veteran and a member of the Bethel
Worship Center. He was an evangelist and traveled to Africa.
Surviving are his wife, Janice Middleton; his son, Daniel
(Kelly) Middleton; a daughter, Laura (Mark) Putinski; stepsons. Michael Rader: Cary (Cheri) Null and Jamie (Amy)
Null; stepdaughters, Bryna (Robert) Riordan and Trina
ously acted, so long as the business has already been legal opinion at this week's
(Eddie) Hart. He is also survived by his brothers David and
interest of a third party have conducted in' reliance upon meeting of council he wanted · .
Jack Middleton and a special nephew, Jeremy Moore. Lloyd
not vested.
tire prior vote. Unfortunately, ' to be dear that the question .
was a grandfather to 21.
·
. ·
However,
Sisson's
vote
because of this reliance, you he posed to Tenaglia was not
from PageA1
He was preceded iri death by his ·parents, Lloyd and Fdythe
helped
install
Arnott
who
in
may not now call for recon- meant to be personal and as
· Gcrbick Middleton ; and his brother Robert.
turn
cast
votes
later
in
the
Jan.
sideration of council' s prior such he had nothing personal
Services will be held II a.m: . Thursday, at the Bethel Councilman Shawn Arnott 9 meeting on other business.
against anyone on council in
vote. accprding to the law."
Worship Center, with Pastor Rob Barber officiating. Burial may not have been legitimateTenaglia's letter then went
When Sisson addressed the asking that question.
will be in · the Fairview Cemetery. Friends may call at the ly sworn into office, and other on to quote case law in Ohio,
Bethel Worship Center. State Route 71 .•. Tuppers Plains votes; including Arnott's in saying a vote upon reconsidWednesda y from 2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m.
favor of Councilman George eration may be be taken at
Arrangements are by W,hite-Schwarzel Funeral Home, · Stewart
New from Nationwidefor
Council any time before the rights
Preside'nt, may not be valid . · have intervened in purCoolville.
IDENTITY.THEFT COVERAGE
Tenoglia'.s written legal suance of the vote taken, or
opinion dealt with Sisson's 'before · rights have interspecific question noted in the vened in pursuance of ,the
Nationwide recognizes identity theft victims
opinion as "Can I ask to call vote taken, or before the sta· need eXj)ert assistance. Our Nationwide
REEDSVILLE. - Tracy L Rood, 59. of Reedsville , died for a new vote on sbmething
tus
quo
has
changed.
Tuesday, Feb,. l4, 2006. at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital, that council has already
homeOwners policy .is designed to SAVE YOU
This could be interpreted as
Parkersburg, W. Va. following a brief illness.
· .
time, money and hours of frustration.
voted on , if I was on the preShe was born March 3, 1946 in Belleville, W.Va .. daughter vailing side of the prior vote meaning the status quo
'
changed when Arnott was
Call us tor more information
of the iate Everett and Georgia Randolph Mays. .
.
and I now, may, want to installed.
She is survived by her husband , Foster Rood; three s.ons, change my vote."
.
In his legal opm10n
Timmy Rood , Gary Rood and Hank Rood all of
Nationwide•
Tenaglia went on to say Tenaglia stated in writing to
Reedsville ; a daughter and son -in·law, Robin and Shawn that both the opinion of the
On Your SiM that, "The problem
Nitz of Athens; four grandchildren, Mathew, Clifford, Ohio Attorney General and Sisson
l'.(ith the facts that you have .
Dominique and Tracy Boswell; two brothers Charles Mays common law in Ohio states
~IIJI~IJI--.ot~n
related to me is that for each
and Donald Mays both of Reedsville; and five sisters, that council always has ihe of
the votes you specifically
Arizona Wigal of Pomeroy. Alice Chevalier and Beryle
an(II~Cif ~\JI -.....~.
told
me that you would like to
right to recon.sider those mat~ Oftir: c..aa. ~ 4321s.m0
Barber both of Reedsville , Florence Arnold of Ton:h, and ters
upon which it has previ- have council reconsider. other
Marlene Maxson of Logan.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a
son , Tony Rood ; a dau ghter, Norma Joan Rood: and a brother,
Harold Mays.
. .
Friends may call at the White-Schwarzel Funeral Home,
Digital Technology,for
Coolville, on Friday, Feb. 17, from noon to 2 p.m. and after
.B etter Hearing and Better Living!
visitation there will be graveside services at the Rood Family
Cemetery, Reedsville .

Council

Saving for a. (non) rainy day
. I painted some bookshelves over the weekend.
and · when I ·cleared the
shelves I realized I had
become a pack rat There
were books there I haven't
looked· at or read in years.
A 1994 AAA · guide to
Arizona. I like Arizona. So
do a lot of other people.
That's why a few gazillion
·people have moved there
since 1994. 'And while I
doubt that the Grand Canyon
and the Petrified Forest have
changed n\uch in the geological snap .of the fmgers we
call I 2 years, I' II bet the
hotel and restaurants sure
have . There are propably
even a few new roads. I'm
an AAA member. They'll
give me a new, up-to-date
guide for free. Wh y am I
holding on to this book as· if
it were some kind of good
ltlck charm ''
I pulled down a ratt y,
paperback copy of "Jaws."
There . was a strip of fading
masking tape holding the
spine together. The page'
were ye II ow and brittle , the·
corners· of the pages were
h'anging on lik e chads Oi1 a
Florida ballot. ·Wh y am I
keeping thi s'' They primed
600 mi ll ion copi es ·of
"Jaws .' ' ll 's about as r&lt;~re and
val uable as a 2006 penn y.

Jim
Mt.itlen

Am I every going 10 read it
again? No. But I liked' it and
it got me to reading other sea
stories. Like "Moby Di ck."
Which is basically a retelling
of "Jaws." In "Jaws" this
crazy captain is searching
for a great white shark, and
in "Moby Dick" this crazy
captain is searching for a
great wh.ite whale. In "Jaws''
the shark destroys the ship
and ki li s almost everybody
on .board . in "Mohy Dick"
the . whale destroys the ship
and leaves one survivor.
Wh y this Mel vill e guy
thought he could get away
with (tpptng off Peler
Benchlcy by changing a few
words. I' ll nevet know.
Here ·s a box ·Of cassette
tape &gt;. My car stereo onl y
ta~ e&gt; CD,. Wh y am I &gt;av in g
these things? I doubt they
. are gqi ng tn ge t hetter wit h
age . If we li ve in a di &gt;pD'ab le &gt;O\: icty. why am I not
d isposing'' .Is there some-

thing wrong with me? Why
am I not doing' my part?
My last cassette player has
been' in the basement for
seven years. I don ' t even
want to think about what 's in
the basement. It's full · of
things that aren ' t worth fix ing · anymore . Computers ,·
tuners. DVD players. If one
breaks, it's cheaper to buy a
new one than have the old
one repaired.
r ve got a box of wires and
q bles and connectors and
adaptors for all the gadgets
I' ve bought over the years.
Like all that stuff that comes
in the box with you r new
answering machine that let's
vqu mount it on the wall.
1' ve never seen or heard of
an yone ever mounting their
answering machine on the
wall . hut if yo u wanted to.
here's a plate and · a few
sc rews.
At first. I was very good
about labeling al l the wire·s
and powb· cables with tho'e
boxy tr;tnsformcr s &lt;Ill the
end. I'd write. lhe. mime of
the gadge t on a label and
.atlad! it to the cord . All the
ink has faJeJ . r don 't kumv
what goes wi th what. Will I
c\cr thro\1- \hem out'.' No .
But just when I· thought I
was bau. I heard ahuu t
&gt;(&gt; mchody that w;ts wor,c .

My friend Gene bought a
new hou se. a fi xer,-upper that
. he was going to repair ail by
hin1self. I went to .see .him
. the other Jay and there was a
trash dumpster on his fronr
lawn. full to the brim. ready
to be taken away.
·
·"Wow. a whole dumpster. ·
Who could believe there was ,
so much junk in one little ..
hou se·•" I said.
Gene 'glared at me.
'Thi s is the seventh dumpster," he said. 'These people
neve r threw an ything away,
Do you knnw what ·r found .
in the're'' Piles of old newspapers and paperb acks that
ha ve n ' 1 been tou ched in
years. Wires for th ings that
don ' t even ex i st anymore.

magazines that time forg ot. I
had to walk thwu gh little
tun neb of old news papers in
every ronm . O'rle ro(l m w a~

full of oiJ . broken radios anil"
stereos. What kind of person
would li ve like that 0 "
There was onl y nne thing I
C&lt;&gt;UIJ say.
"It 's a dcspemtc ny fdr
hdp. they mus t be deeply
J isturbed." ,
(.Iiiii ·Mu ll"" ;,- tilt' author-ol
" II l i1kn '' \iill"gt ' Jdirii:. ·
c,!lll!ilimting the Sim, ,/,. u {e'' ·
and "/l&lt;i/!1·:, Fi~:1t 7imw ... Y, ,II

nm

n!uch

him.

j im_mulin l (a ,myH ·a u ., "" )

at

·Tracy Rood

D

_____. _

_,._

.....,

"'"' ........

Hear for yourself at Karr Audiology &amp; Hearing Aids how digital
hearing aids restore the treasured sounds of your world again ....
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Deaths

Free Hearing Consultation

David W. Putney
POI NT PLEASANT, W.Va.- David W. Putney. 57, Point
Pl ea,ant. W.Va. died Mbnday. Feb . 13, 2006 at St. Mary 's
Medi cal Center in Huntington.
Funeral servi ces will be held at II a.m. Friday,' Feb. 17 , at
the Wil coxen Funeral home. Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday at the funeral home . Burial will. be in Mt. Union
Cemetery, Pliny. W.Va .
.
In lieu of !lowers memorials caw be sent to Nathan Ray
Putney. Route I. Box 271 , GallipOli s Ferry, W.Va. 25515 .

499 Richland Avenue, Athens, Ohio 45701

594-6333 or 1-800-451-9806

�.

'

Page A~

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

LocAL SCOREBOARD
fuuday'a gomat
Boys Basketball
South Gallia 79, Hannan 47
Ga111a Academy 50, River Valley 37
Jackson 60. Point Pleasant 38

BY CONNIE MABIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

An Ohio couple accused of
forcing some of their II adoptive, special needs children to
sleep in cages was charged
Tuesday with child endangerment and other crimes.
A · grand jury indicted
Michael and Sharen Gravelle
on 16 counts of felony child
endangering, ' eight mi sdemeanor counts of falsifying
adoption applications and a
felony count of lying under
oath when being qualitied for
adoption funding , Huron
County Prosecu tor Ru ss
Leffler said .late Tuesday.
The Gravelles, who live near
Wakeman in a rural area 50
miles southwest of Cleveland,
have denied mistreating the
children. ages I to 15. They
have been fighting to regain
. custody sinc.e the children were
removed and placed in foster
care last fall, after a county
social worker examined the
wood and chicken-wire cages
stie likened to kennels. ·
,.
Elaine Thompson , a private
soc ial worker hired by the
Gravelles, also was charged
AP Photo
Tuesday with 16 felony
Sharen,
right,
and
Michael
Grayelle
display
photos
of
changes
counts of child endangering,
eight ·misdemeanor counts of made to the bedrooms in their home following_ a hearing in
complicity to child endanger- Huron County Juvenile Court in Norwalk. Ohio, Jan. 18. The
ing and eight . misdemeanor Gravelles, accused of forcing some of their 11 adoptive, special
counts of failure to repon needs children to sleep in cages, were charged Tuesday with.
child end·angerment and other crimes. A grand jury indicted· the
cl)ild abuse or neglect.
Thompson testitied during a couple on 16 counts of felony child endangering, eight misdecustody hearing that she meanor counts of falsify iQg adoption applications and a felony
approved of the cages as a way count of tying under oath when being qualified for adoption fundto help handle the children she ing, Huron County Prosecutor Russ Leffler said late Tuesday.
described as unruly because of
The couple' s attorn ey, Ken demoni ze these people and
their behavioral and other
problems. But she said she Myers, said the pa ir was now they '.re trying to put
never asked the youngsters upset but determined to fight them in jail. The Gravelles are
how they felt about the enclo- the criminal charges in court. . good people and they were
sures during her weekly coun- The Gravelles have defended trying to do the right thing by
the enclosures , saying they raising these children and takst;Iing sessions with them.
Thompson's
attorney. were · necessary to keep the ing on an almost impossible
Marilu Laubenthal in Elyria, ch~ldren from harming them- task,:' Myers said. " Instead of
said her . 'client, · who has selves or one another.
·
giving the Gravelles .the help
and
the resources they needThe
children
have
problems
Worked with adopted children
such as fetal alcohol syndrome ed, the county has seen it tit to
for 40 years, is devastated.
"She has just turned into a and a disorder that involves spend countless thousands of
dollars to try to make sure
puddle ," Laubenthal said. eating nonfood items.
"It's a shame that the coun- that these people are ruined.''
"To end her career like this is
Leffler said the grand jury
ty has first attempted to
)ust too much."
'

wanted to se nd a message.
"The grand jury decided
this kind of extreme cruelty
towards children could not go
unpunished," he said.
Last month, assistant Huron
County Prosecutor Jennifer
DeLand asked a judge to put
the children in the permanent
custody of the coljnty.
Juvenile Judge Timothy
Cardwell has set a hearing to
hear evidence in ·the custody
request for Feb. 22, the same
day the Grave lles, who were
not arrested Tuesday, are to
be arraig ned on the criminal
charges. The custody case is
separate from the criminal
proceeding s.
Cardwell ruled in the custody case in December that
the Gravelles, though wellintended tor adopting the sick
children, abused them , by
making thern sleep with only
blankets in the, cages .
Because of that ruling, convincing a criminal ,court that
Thompso n did not turn a
blind eye to abuse will be
tough, Laubenthal said.
"It's going to be a very difticult charge to overcome,"
she said. " We ' re going 'to
give it our all."
Myers has said the couple
has removed wire, alarms and ·
doors on-the enclosures, making the beds look like qrdiflary bunks. He .said Tuesday
that the criminal charges only
strengthened their desire to
fight for the children.
"It's just another hurdle to
overcome," Myers said.
If convicted. the Gravelles
would face one to tive years
in prison and a maximum
fine of $10,000 for each
felony child endangering
count, plus up to six month ~
in prison and a $1,000 fine
for each Ihisdemeanor.
Thompson faces one to five
years in prison .and a maximum fine of $10,000 if convicted of the felony charges .
Her misdemeanor counts
carry a penalty of up to 30
days in prison an&lt;;! a $250
fine upon con.viction.

Today'$ Forecast
Forecast lor Wadneaday, Feb. 15

will either be Jim 'Noe' Petro, fundraising star to manage the
or Ken 'Noe' Blackwell.''
, $50 million rare coin funds.
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
· Not was charged Monday ·· ..•'Ph~&gt; ·1eport·"1&gt;y Inspector ··
with embezzling at 'least $1 General Tom Charles said
COLUMBUS- The politi- million in an election-year personal calendars, ethics
cal fallout from a 53-count scandal that has Republicans . records and telephone· records
indictment against a prominent nervous and Democrats hopGOP contributor and fundrai s- ing to break a 14-year GOP
er became clear Tuesday with · lock on statewide oftices.
both
Democrats
and
A I 0-month investigation
Republicans seizing on . the preceding the charges led to
charges as campaign fodder.
. sweeping changes at the state
Secretary of State Kenneth insurance fund for injured
Blackwell accused his GOP workers and prompted lame- .
rival, Attorney General Jim duck Gov. Bob Taft and two
Petro, of ignoring warnings former aides to plead no conabout problems stemming test to ethics charges. Two
from in vestment's in rare other former Taft aides were
coins by · Tom Noe, while charged last week, accused of
Democrat Ted Strickland con- failing to report loans and
fmned the scandal will have other favors from Noe.
center stage in his campaign . A report by the state watchover the next ten months.
dog released Tuesday hinted
Strickland and ninning mate that ttie scandal might grow
Lee Fisher "will be running beyond the Ohio Bureau of
against one of two candi - Workers' · Compensation,
dates," Strickland quipped. "It whi ch !)ired the former

46" I 3,1'

Bob Evans- 27.87
BorgWamer - 55.71
CENX -35.91
Champion - 4.37
Charming Shops - 13.57
City Holding - 36.42
Col- 52.84
DG ..,-17.41
DuPont __;. 40.99
Federal Mogul - .41

\ ,

Steak
Dayton•~

•
, 46" 133'

~

~
·

*Columbus
49' 133"

//

' '/ /

LocAL SCHEDULE

'

GALliPOLIS - A schedule ol upcpming collage
end !'ligh school versrty sporting. events involving

teams trorn Ga:IWa, Meigs and Mason count(es
Wadnesdav 's aamas
Girls Tournament Basketball
Gallia Ac-ademy ;o~s. Vir\ton County (at

Cincinnati

Logan H.S.), 8 p.m.

~....

~
Partt

ct:dv

aoooy
.

6

~
,.,. ,.;

Showers

Th1under
. · ~· Flurries
sorms
.
~';\,~
·
' \
•• •••

Thu[Jday's games .
Girls Tournament Basketl)all
R!ver Valley vs. Huntington (at We llston
H.S.), 6:15p.m.
South Gallia/Southern vs. Trimble (at
Athens H.S.), 6: 15pm.

r:;:r-.._

~

Ra1n

~

•

&amp;low

Ice

0'........._

~
-o 4 4 • o

-

Weathe r Underground • AP

Wednesday... Partly cloudy. the a ft erno on. C hance .of
Highs in the mid 50s. South rain 50 .percent .
winds 5 to I 0 mph .
.
Friday
night
and
Wednesday night. •. Mostly Saturday... Partly
c loudy.
cloudy with a 20 perce nt Low s around 20. Highs in the .
chance of showers. Lows in lowe r 30s.
the lower 40s. South winds 5
Saturday
night ... Partly
to 10 mph .
cloudy. Cold with · lows
Thursday ... Mo s tly around 15 .
cloudy. Warmer with hig hs
Sunday... Mostl y
sunny.
in the mid 60s. Southwest Highs in the mid 30s.
winds I 0 to 15 mph with
Sunday
night . and
gusts up to 30 mp~ .
Presidents
Day ••. Partl y
Thursday night .•. Mostl y cloudy. Lows around 20 .
cloudy with a 40 percen't Highs in the upper 30s. ·
chance of showers. Lows
Monday
night ... Partl y
around 40. Southwest winds cloudy with a chance of rai.n
15 to 20 mph with gusts up to and snow:Cold with lows in
30 rriph.
. the upper 20s. Chance of preFriday ... Mo stly cloudy ci pitation 40 perce nt .
with a chance of rain show Thesday ... Mostly . cloudy
ers. Much cooler with hi ghs with a chance of snow showin the mid 40s . Temperalure ers. Hi ghs in the upper 30s.
falling into the mid 30s in Chance of snow 40 percent. ·

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

revealed
relationships
bet1&gt;feen government officials
and individ11als· involved in
business r~lationships at the
workers ' comp bureau "and
other government agencies."

,.

friday's games
Boys Basketball
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 8 p.m.
River Valley a t RoC~ Hill: 6 p.m
M~igs at. Alexander. 8 p.m.
Hannan at Wirl County, 7:30p.m.
OVCS at ACSI Regionals. TBA
Southern at Miller, 6·30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Calhoun County, 7 p.m.
OVCS at ACSI Reg1onals. TBA

SatUrday's games
Girls Toumament Basketball
. Mei_gs/AthensiJax vs . VC/GA (at Logan

H.S.), I p.m.
Boys B~sketball
Point Pleasan.t at Gallia Academy. 7:30

p.m.

E.lk V~ll ey at Hannan, 7:30p. m.
Oak Hill at South G&lt;ilkq , 6 p.m .
.
.
Monday. February 2o
Boys Tournament Basketball
Sheridan vs. Meigs (at Logan H.S.). 7 p.m
Mill ~r vs . Southern (at ~ellston). 8 p.m.
Boys Basketball
Roane County at Point Pleasant. 7:30p.m.

New Hannan
football coach
resigns already

The Daily Sentinel .

·\.

TMALONEY@MYDAlLYREGISTER.COM

.,..

Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydaitysentinet.com

"

,,

HOLZER CLINIC

Urgent Care
Open 7 Days. a week, with
convenient locations in:
'

Gallipolis
Jackson
Athens
Meigs

740.992.0060
Medical Excellence.

Local Caring...

Everywhere

ASHTON. W.Va. - . Former .
Huntington High offensive
coordinator Brad Fuller is not
going to coach the Hannan
Wildcat football team after all.
After being hired in Janoary,
FuiJer began · to cond uct
weight lifting and was cleaning
up the athleti c building at
Hannan . put decided to resign.
" It just didn't work out the
way he wanted it. I guess."
Assist&lt;mt Superintendent Vana
Bordman said.
Fuller teaches irr Laval ette.
which is no ·short drive from
Hannan High School. When
the hiring was approved in
Jrumary, board president James
Wil so n, who is from the
Hannan area, expressed reser\'ations about how it was going·
to work opt with Fu ller having
to uri vc so far.
Board member Thomas
Nunnery asked during a sc hool
board meeting Tuesday if
Fuller had . been ' to Hannan
before he applied lor the job.
Bordman, who' conducted the
int erviews, said he had.
' "(Assistam prin cipal) Mru'k
Swann, took him all over' the
school," she said.
.
While there were two other
appli cants for th e . job. the
coaching vacancy will have to
be reposted, and the application
process wi ll ha\·e to stan over

again.

.

Eye

30.18
Ga.nnett - 63.13

General Electric - 33.46
GKNLY- 5.25
Harley Davidson -'- 51.87
JPM- 40.10
Kroger- 19.81

'

.

Eyertdre

• Cataract s_urgery .
• Di?,~,~ye{3are

''

.CONTACfS

Oak Hill Financial -

31.72

'

OVB- 25.50

.,•

'

"It's early enough that we
can get sonieoi1e who will be
able to do the job." said .
Superinte.ndent • Dr. Larry
Pmso tls.
n e football tea m is not tlie
only one with a ...;oachi ng
vacancy at' Hannan. The board
also accepted the resignation of
varsity baseball coac h Frank
Hudnall Tuesday. The position
of girl&gt;· softball coach also was
Jl(bled for appltcation&gt;.
~=====

• Chii&lt;;Jren $ Exams.

Ltd.- 23.81
NSC.- 49.64

'

Eastern vs. Green (at Athens H.S.). 8 p.m:
Boys Basketball
Wahama.at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.
Girts Basketball
Ravenswood at Wahama. 7 p.m.
College Basketball
Urbana at Rio Grande, 8 p.m
Women's College Basketball
Urbana at Rio Gra~de, 6 p.m.

BY TIM MALONEY

Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors .
of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

USB-

BBT _;_ 39.59
Peoples - 28.63
Pepsico- 57.95
Premier - 16.04
Rockwell - '68.59
Rocky Boots - 23.24
Sears - 121.85
Wai-Mart - 46.45
Wendy's - 56,83 .
Worthington - 19.81

·

Boys Basketball
Hannan at Hamlin, 7:30p.m

.

BLI-13.61

Movie about Marshall plane.crash may take name fro~ cheer
Youngstown •

Local Stocks
·
.
ACI- 71.87
AEP --35.75
Akzo- 51.76
Ashland Inc. - 65.11

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

. Toledo•
43' 134'

Governor's candidates take aim wiili .~orruption allegations
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

cttyllleglon
High I Low temps

Phone - 1-7 40-446·2342 ext. 33
FlUI -

Dr. Reaves is &lt;8tified l7y the American Board of
()phthal~

,,

.

740.446.5421

.Lisa H. Reaves, MD
...

·~

HOLZER
CLINIC

Medical Excellence.

Local Caring·
----

------- - ........,...---

1-740-446-JOOS

E-mail -

sports @my da~lyse nttnelcom

~port s Statf
.Brad Sherman. Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, e:oct. 33

bsherman @mydallytnbune com
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2 342 . SIC! 23

bwalters@ mydallytrlbune co1n

'

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ex! 33
Ierum@ myda11yrcg1ster com

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(A P) - The feature tilm ~bout
· the 1970 Marshall University
plane crash and its aftermath
may take its title from .the
school's primary · athleti c
cheer.
The Panhenon, the Marshall
student newspaper, reported
Tuesday · that the Warner
Brothers film will be called
"We Ate ... Marshall," citi.ng a
source at the company.
WSAZ-TV reported that
"We Are
Marshall" is a

potential title but that the
film 's producers told it there
are le~al issues preventing th e
cheers usc.
"Once you see the movie
you will understand why
Warner Brothers would want
to ca ll it 'We Are ...
Marshall ,"' Marshall Vice
President H. Keith Spears told
The Parthenon .
The plane crash is considered the worst sports disaster
in history Seventy-five players, coac hes and supporters

Were re.tuming
from a football gaine at
East Carolina
on Nov. 14,
1970. when
·their chanered
jet
crashed
short of the
runway at Tri-State Airport in
Kenova.
But the film is about more
than football. The story is how
the community rebuilt after
the tragedy, producer Basil

Iwanyk said.
·
· " I knew we had something
when I let · ~or.Ie read the
script ," he sa1d. · We had people who were sports fans and
not sports fans. We had men .
We had women. We had
young. We had old. We had
people of di fterent races and
of different sex u;il orientat ions
and everyone cried. Not just
one or two everyone. These
are people who didn 't know
anythin g about Marshall, who
didn 't · know anything about

football. They were just so
swept up in the story that they
'
just cried," Iwanyk said.
The co mpan y is seeking
professional football players
as consultants and Iwanyk
wants to get former Marshall
quanerback Chad Pennington,
now with the New York JeJs,
involved.
More than I 00 cast members and crew are set to arrive
March 20 to begin filming in
Huntington and on Marshall's
campus . .

'

·Gretzky arrives at Turin Olympics
TU~IN,

Ital y (AP) Wayne Gretzky said he
didn't do it. Aga in .
.He said his own troubles
won't affect Canada's supposedly
good-as-gold
Olympic hockey team .
Repeatin g himself there,
· too .
·
Gretzky arrived at the
Olympics ·with Team
Canada on Tuesday, recapping \vhat he' s said for
days but is vowing not to
talk about anymore: that
he placed no wagers with a
betting ring allegedly run
by one of his best friends
and possibly patronized by
his wife.
· " As I sai.d seven days
ago, it doesn' t involve
me." Gretzky said. "''ve
said it for seven dax s. it's .
over and done with. '
But where he said it at the Olympic games - ·
was different.
·
So was the size of the
audience . His press conference was te le vised live
throughout Canada, where
the NHL's all-time leading
sco rer is &lt;1 trusted, respect-.
,
ed cultural icon .
Now, like it or not ,
Gretzky understands hi s
pro bl ~ ms . could immerse
others should Canada not
li ve up to its own immense
expectation s in a tournament it won in 2002 and i ~
. expected to win again.
" If we don ' t win the
gold medal obvious! y I' II
. get blamed, but I've been
blamed for .losses before. ,
It's not ~oing 10 change
my life, said Gretzky.
who as Canada's executive
director is effectively the
team's ge neral man ager.
No matter what happens,
the P~ Qe nix Coyote s
coach said he won't discu'&gt;S again at Turin th e
ga mbling ring alleged to
Please see Grebky, 86

GHughes
out eight to .
10 weeks

AP photo

CLEVELAND (AP) Cavaliers · guard
Larry
Hughes is likely to mi ss the
rest of the reg ular season
after having surgery on
Tuesday for the second time
in six weeks on his broken
right middle finger.
Hu ghes, the team's second, leading scorer. was supposed
to miss six to eight weeks
after havi'ng surgery Jan . 6.
How.ever. doctors co ncluded
last week th at the finger hadn' t he aled as quickly as the
team had hoped. The . team
said he will now miss an
additional eight to I 0 weeks.
"If all goes well for him
and all goes well for our team
... he could possibly be back
and partic.ipate in the postseason, · Cavaliers general manager Danny Ferry said.
Hughes, who signed a tiveyear, $60 million co ntract in
the offseason. averaged 16.2
point s and :1.9 assists in 28
games for the Cavs before
sitting out the )an. 4 game
against
Milwaukee
Cleveland started the season
18-10 with Hughes and is 12··
1I in his absence.
Hughes', second surgery
was performed by Dr.
Thomas J. Graham, chief of
the Curti s National Hand
Center at Union Memorial
Ho spital
in
Baltimore .
Additional bone graftin g was
performed and one of the
three screws inserted during
the fi rst surgery had to be
tightened·.

Wayne Gretzky, execu tive director of Canada's Olymp ic men ice hockey team . looks on during practice at the 2006 Win ter Olympics Tuesday m Turin , Italy.

Please see Hupes, B6

Blue Devils surge past
River Valley, 50-37 ·
BY

BRAD SHERMAN

BSHEAMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - Jayme
Haggerty scored 22 points,
includ ing fo ur 3-pointers,
whi le
leading
Gallia
Academy to a 50-37 boys
basketball victory . over
Ri ver Valley on Tuesday at
Newt Oliver Arena.
It was a new season-~igh
for the athletic junior, who
ent ered ·I he game averaging
9.6 point s per · gttme. Hi s
previous high was 19, which
a lso cam e against the
Raiders in their earli er mee ting.
. The win earned Galli a
Academy season sweep of
its rival. and prope lled the
Blue Devils back above .500
on the seaso n at 10-9. Ri ver
Va ll ey, on the oth er hand.
fe ll to ~ - 1 1 .
The Raiders were wi thin a
po int. 35-34. earl y in the
fourt h quarter after Ryan
'Henry nailed a 3-pointa
from th e rig ht wing - hut
Ga ll ia Academy used a l ) -3
scoring edge the rest of 1he
way to annex the "in.
That run was fueled bv t~c
Blue Dev il det~nse. \Vh ich
forn·U
four
lLi rilovcr..,,
including a pair of stc&lt;ds by
Haggerty
and Shaphcn
Robin"m tha t led to laynps .
RohitJSon scored five points

Robinson

a

Cordell

in the quarter. including a· dunk.
and
finished with
nine points.
Shawn ·
Tholl'Ip su n
added eight
point s . . six
rebound s
arid
five
steals for
the winners.
Michael
Corde ll
wen t for l3
point s
10
pace River
Va ll ey.
T y I e. r
Th o m pso n
added e ight
and Brya n
Morr""

c hi pped in si.x.
Cordell helped hi s club
get off to a fast start as he hit
a 3-pointer and scored six
points in the opening quarter. Tea mm ate
Mttr-c u'
Fra1.icr al'o nailed a ·'·pointcr. hi' only poims of 1he
~ a me. and the Raider' led '1 R at the fir,! 't&lt;1p. Shaw,,
Th111np.son cnumereu "tth
four fnn the Dcvib "hilc
Jeff GniJcn and .Robilblln
al'n tnsseu in huc·kets . '
Please see .surce. 86

--------·- ·-- ____;_

'

-

Brod Sh&lt;ormanlphoto

Galtia Academi.'S Jayme Haggerty (23) ret~ases a Jumper over the outstre.tched arm of
Rtver Valley defender Mtchaet Cordell (32 ) during the ftrst naif of Tuesday's con test a! the
Un1versity of R10 Grande.

______________ ____ ________
__;_

..,.-

....___

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

High School Basketball
AREA Boy s BA§KEIBAl l STJ.NptNGS

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
sEo
ALL
8 1
1, 8
~Manetta

Warren

72

Gan a Academy
Logan

55
37
0 10

Jackson
Athens

16 3
12 8
10-9

64

7 13
2 16

TR~VALLEY

CONFERENCE
Ohio Division
TVC
ALL
oN Alexander
8 1
16 3
Belpre
54
12 7
12 8
Nets York
64
V nton Co
12 8
73
Wei ston
7 12
27
Megs
1 18
09
Hocking Divlslon
lVC
ALL
72
Tnmbte
14 5
Fed Hock
72
13 6
Easte n
54
118
54
Waterford
118
Mt er
27
8 10
Southe n
18
3 16
OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
OVC
ALL
•chesapeake
90
16 2
Fatrland
54
10-9
Rock Hill
45
10 9
45
8 10
South Pont
Rver Valley
45
8 11
Coal Grove
18
6 13
OTHERnNDEPENDENTS
ALL
14 5
12 7
9-8
4 16
2 19

South Gallta
Wahama

Hannan

ovcs

Po nt Pleasant

AREA GIRLS 8.tSKET8,AU. STANDINGS

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
SEO
ALL
HWarren
a2
t4 6
Logan
73
15 4
Manetta
73
10 10
6-4
13 7
Jackson
28
9 11
Gall•a Academy
0 10
3 18
Athens
CONFERENCE
Ohio Division
ALL
lVC
16 4
9 I
11 10
73
64
12 8
64
12 8
5 16
19
4 16
19

TR~VALLEY

!Mimc.ander
Belpre•
Nels York
Vtnton Co

Megs•

Wetrston

Hocktng Division

TVC
9

1f'Watertord
Tnmbte
Eastern
Fed Hock•
M1ller
Soulhe n

8 2
55
4-6
46

o io

ALL
16 4

17 3
9 11
4 17
911
9 12

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
#Coal Grove
#:South Pm nt
Far and
RocK H If"
Chesapeake
A1ver Yalley

OVC

ALL

82

16 4
15 6
12 8
7 14
5 16
3 17

82
73
46

28
19

OTHE~NDEPENDENTS

Po nt Pleasant
South Gall a•
Wahama

ALL
10 11
9 12

99

ovcs

8 12

Hannan

1 15

~

-

League champ on
season f n shed

Boys BASKETBALL

GALLIA ACADEMY 50
RIVER VAL LEV 37
GALLIA ACADEMY (1 0-9)
Travus Stout 0 Q..O 0 Shawn Thompson 4
0 0 8 Jeff Golden 1 4 4 6 Jeff Golden 1 44 6 Jayme Hagge ty 8 2 2 22 Brad Caud1l
o o-o o A ex Kyger 2 1 1 5 Shaphen
Aobmson 4 1 2 9 lotals 19 40 8 9 50
RIVER VALLEY (11-11)

Cory Ehman o 0-0 o Jason Jones 0 1 2 1
Bryan Morrow 2 1 3 6 Matt N1be I 0 0-Q 0
Michael Cordell 5 2 4 13 Ty er Thompson
2 4 4 8 Ryan Henry 1 0 0 3 Marcus
Frazer 1 0 0 3 Scot Ward 1 1 1 3 Totals
123381437
GAcademy
8 16 11 15 - 50
A Valley
9 7 15 6 37
3-Po nt Goals-GA 4 12 (Haggerty 4) AV
4 14 (Morrq.w Cordell Henry Fraz er)
Fouled Out -none Aebounds~A 19
(Thompson 6) RV 18 {Frazle 4) Ass stsGA 10 (Golden 5) RV 5 (Ehman 2)
Steals-GA 11 (Thompson 5) AV 6
(Morrow 2) Blocks-GA 2 (Kyger
~ob nson) RV 3 (N bert Hen y Ward)
:Turnovers -GA 14 RV 17

SOUTH GALLIA 79 HANNAN 47
SOUTH GALLIA (14-5)

Ty er Porter 1 0 0 ~ Ryan Ge ger 0 o-o 0
Josh Wrghl 8 0.0 19 Berme Fu ks 52 6
13 Seth W II amson 0 0 0 0 Robert Corey
2 Q-0 4 Justin Tr plett 0 0 0 0 Cu t Waugh
7 4 4 19 Dewey Cantrell 1 1 2 3 Tyer
Duncan 3 1 2 9 Aaron Ph1l ps 2 5 7 9
Steven Call 0
0 Michael Pope 0 0-0 0
Josh Skidmore 01 4 1 Totals 29 14 25 79
HANNAN (H)
Kevm Bake 2 2 2 6 Ryan Canterbury 6 5
5 21 Aaron Payne 0 0 0 0 Joe K nnard 1
o-o 2 Wes Gue 58 11 18 Ja ed Taylor 0
0 0 0 Patnck Flora 0 0.0 0 Joe Kelly 0 0
0 0 Justm Eastam 0 0 0 0 Totals 16 5 16
47
S
24 19 1 25
79
Hannan
10 9
3 15
47
3 Po1nt Goals-S Galha 7 (Wnght 3)
Hannan (t'lone) Fouled Out- S Ga ha
(none)
Hannan 2 (K nna d Gue)
Rebounds
S Gall a 42 (Wr gl'1t 14)
Hannan 32 (Gue 15) Ass sts S Gal a 15
(W ght W II amson Waugh Ph 11 ps 3)
Hannan 6 (Canturbury 4) Steals- S
Gal a 24 (Waugh 6) Hannan 10
(Canterbury 4) Bocks- S Gall a (none)
Hannan 5 (Gue 5\ Team Fouls-S Galha
14 Hannan 16

o-o

Gallla

JACKSON 60
POINT PLEASANT 38
JACKSON (12-8)

o-o

Re d Arnold 8
16 Marcus Boggs 5 0 0
10 Seth landrum 0 0 2 0 Bronson
Ostrander 0 0 2 0 Patrck D I 4 2 2 11
Anthony Fowle a 1 2 1 And ew Wasch a
0 0 0 Gao ge lowry 2 0 0 4 Jo dan Ratz
t 3 4 5 Evan Osborne 2 0:.0 4 Robe t
Tot no 0 1 2 1 Matt Johnson 0 0 0 0 Andy
Buescher 2 4 6 8 Totals 24 47 11 20 60

POINT PLEASANT (2 19)
Stephen Walker 1 0 0 3 W I Slone 1 0 0 2
JaY' E IS 1 2 4 4 Kenny Durham 0 Q..O 0
Nathan A mmey 0 0-0 0 Lasse Ba tels 0 0
0 0 Josh Sto11er 4 3 5 13 Steven Perry 0
o-o 0 Stephen Brown ng 0 0 0 0 Bobby
Errett6 4 7 16 Totals 13 47 9 16 38
JaCkson
16 12 16 14 60
Point
76025-38
3 po nt goals-J 1 8 (0 II) PP 3 10
(Stover 2 Walker) Total ebounds-J 26
{lowry 5 Boggs 5) PP 31 (ErreH 10)
Offens ve ebounds-J 8 (lowry 3) PP 14
(Erren 6) Ass sts-J 10 (landrum 2
Boggs 2 Ostrander 2 Ratz 2) PP 4 (Slone
2) Steals-J 16 {Boggs 51 PP 5 (Slone 2
Stover 2) Blocks-J 1 (Arnold) PP 2
(Stover Erren) Turnovers---J 12 PP 23
Team touls-J 18 PP 17 JV score---J 61

Berea 70 C e MLK 31
Tontogany Otsego 75 Kansas Lakota 43
Trotwood Mad son 88 Vandal a Butler 64
B~l n H land 61 Newcomerstown 29
Bloom Ca roll 50 Ashville Teays Va ley 24
Twtnsburg Chamberlin 53 Aurora 44
Bloomdale
Elm wooct
69
E more
Uh chsv lie Claymont 54 Coshocton 44
Woodmore 61
Warren Ha d ng 53 Youngs Ursuhne 43
Brooklyn 56 W ckllffe 49
Warsaw R -.er V ew 36 Cambridge 35
8 unswick 85 l?arma Sr 61
Wash ngton C H 63 W Jefferson 54
Campbell Memorial 68 Niles McK nley 54
Wellsv I e 51 L sbon Dav1d Anderson 42
Canal Fulton NW 57 Can S 42
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 64 Adrian
Canal
W nchester
74
Amanda
Mch 46
Clea creek 47
W Uoughby Hils Cornerstone Chr 46
Cant eld 60 Youngs Mooney 52
Youngs Chr st an 40
Centerburg 71 Howard E Knox 43
Woodsf eld Monroe Cent 55 Caldwe 142
Centerv le 56 P QlJJ!i 49
Worth ngton K !bourne 57 Westerv lie N
Chagnn Falls Kenston 42 Geneva 39
35
Chardon 59 Beachwood 58
Xen a 75 Day Stebbms 51
Gin Anderson 55 Harr son 40
Youngs Boardman 69 Struthers 55
C1n Clark Montessor 69 M Ito d 47
Youngs L1berty 68 Warren Champ on 59
Cm Elder 66 Cm Calera!'! 33
Zanesv jle 61 Manetta 54
C n Moeller 67 G n MeN cholas 53
Zanesv lie Rosecrans 59 Cols Ready 57
C n Puree! Mar an 56 Norwood 53
Zanesv tie W Musk1ngum 57 Thornville
C n Seven H Is 54 C•n Chr stan 37
Sherdan 44
C n St Xaver 73 Kener ng A ter 45
C n Sycamore 67 C n Winton Woods 45
Ohl,o High School Gh11 Basketball
C rclevlle 68 Cots Hamilton Twp 48
Tuesday s Results
C rclevl e Logan Elm 64 Lancaster
Tournament
Fa rf eld Umon 53
DIVISION I
e Cen Cath 57 Gar1 eld Hts Tr n ty 43
Cm Ursuline 63 Middletown 40
C e G env lte 67 Eastlake N 55
Dublin Coffman 47 Pataskala Watk ns
Cle Her tage Chr st an 72 Elyr a F rst
Memonal22
Bap Sl Chr 50
Mner ng Fa mont 65 P qua 18
C e Hts Lutheran E 62 Astabu a Sts
Westervlte N 71 Powel Olentangy
John and Paul 49
L berty 43
C e JFK 86 Cle Bened ct1ne 78
C e VASJ 70 Mentor lake Cath 44
DIVISION II
Cots Be)(ley 59 Hebron Lakewood 52
Cle mont NE 5 Norwood 32
Cols Briggs 61 Gro 11e C ty Central
Delaware Buckeye Valley 50 GranVIlle 33
Cross ng 59
Q)(fOrd Talawanda 63 Goshen 55
Cols DeSales 64 Cots S1 Charles 58
Spnng Kenton R dge 58
Spring
Cols E 57 Cots S 47
Shawnee 42
Cols Harvest Prep 63 Millersport 38
Urbana 47 Eaton 24
Cols Independence 69 Cos Whetstone
DIVISION Ill
37
Ca d ngton l ncoln 36 Ga 10n Northmo
Cots M ff n 78 Cols Eastmoor 77
29
Cols Tree of Life 69 Norlhs de Ch 1s!lan
Ham1lton Bad n 74 Lees Creek E Cl nton
46
34
Cots w 60 Cos North and 54
London Mad son Plarns 44 Caledon a
Ave Valley 32
Cots Watterson 42 Cols Hartley 41
Columl:l1ana 60 Hanoverton Un ted 50
M1dd etown Mad son 47 Jamestown
Corners tone Chr stan 46 Youngs
Greenev1ew 42
Ch 1st an 42
DIVISION IV
Cortland Lakev ew 69 G1rard 56
Pitsburg Frankl n Monroe 58 Day M am1
Cov ngton 53 W A exandr a Tr County N Valley 30
31
Troy Chr st1an 62 Day Jefferson 23
Crown Cty S Galla 79 Hannan WVa 47
Regular Season
Cuyahoga Fats CVCA 47 Chagnn Falls
Ash and Crestv1ew 59 Lucas 32
42
Ashtabula Lakeside 35 Burton Berkat11re
Day Oakwood 57 W Milton Millon Un on 34
3
Avon 53 Rocky R111er Lutheran W 40
Day St \l'ers 62 Casstown M am E 47
Bel evue 49 T ffrn Columb an 48
Delaware Chr stan 62 Powell V llage
Bel ville Clear Fork 59 Ontar o 36
Academy 52
Can Her tage Chr st1an 47 Elyna
Chnst an g
Delphos St Johns 54 El da 39
Dover 59 Byesv1le Meadowbrook 50
Carey 63 Van Buren 34
Oublm Sc oto 62 Galloway Westland 58
Casta a Margaretta 73 Clyde 68
E L11erpool 70 Warren HoWland 67
Cel ne 44 l 1ma 43
Chardon 72 Ashlabula EdgeWOOd 53
E Palest ne 66 Leetoma 56
Fa rborn 79 Frankl n 69
Collins Western Reserve 62 New london
Fa1 I eld Chr stan 42
Mt Vernon
38
Academy 40 OT
0
~ ld
l=ostor a 74 Tal Wh tmer 65 OT
ef ance 53 rau lng 35
Delta 50 Gorham Fayene 42
Ft Jenn ngs 54 McComb 49
Ft Reco"Wery 59 Arcanum 56
Fa1rport Harbo Hard1ng 63 Pa nesvllle

c

I
I

C
I Harvey 32
Ga hanna Chr stan 72 L ••
60
~rty hnst an I F ndlay 54 Lima Bath 51
Gahanna Cols Academy 58 Wh teha 1 1 F ndlay L berty Benton 36 Bluffton 34
Yearl ng 56
Fostona St Wenclelm 47 Rawson Cory
Gall pOlls Gall a 50 Chesh re Atver Valley Rawson 32
1 Geneva 35 Perry 32
37
Garf etd Hts 73 Macedonia Nordon.a 65
Kenton 63 Ada 57
Gates M lis G mour 68 Cle Cuyahoga
latayene Allen E 51 L ma Shawnee 48
His 51
l berty Center 40 PettiSVIlle 34
Gates M lis Hawken 56 Hunt ng Valley
l rna Ce111 Cath 50 Spencerville 23
Un vers ty 49
Loram Admral K ng 62 Sandusky 56
Gibsonburg 62 Genoa 55
Mansfield 51 Peters 69 Mansfteld
Mad1son 56
Greenup Co Ky 57 Portsmouth W 50
Greenw ch S Cent 69 M1lan Edison 60
Mansfield Temple Christian 54 l me
Groveport 60 Cols Walnut Aldge 57:
Temple Chnshan 40
Haviland Wayne Trace 60 Van Wert
Mar a Stem Marion Local 49 St Marys
L ncolnvl8w 54
Memonal 37
H II ard Darby 57 Oubhn Jerome 30
Monroev Ue 44 Mansfield Chr stian 40
H 11 ard Dav dson 51 Westerville Cent 42
N Eaton Chr Commumty 57 N Ridgeville
H llsboro 66 Seaman N Adams 52
Lake A dge 55
Huber Hts Wayne 78 Day Cham nade
N Aidgevtlle 41 Eastlake N 36
Jul enne 68
Oak Harbor 62 Huron 40
Jackson 60 Pomt Pleasant WVa 38
Perrysburg 51 Bowhng Green 39
Johnstown Monroe 92 Pataskala Watkms
Rossford 44 Holland Sprmg: 37
Memor al 55
Sandusky Perk ns 7i M tan Ed son 32
Kal da 42 Defiance Ayers\/ lie 38
Sandusky Sl Mary 48 Norwalk St Paul
34
LakeSide Danbury 64 Old Fort 48
Lanca ster F1sher Cath 56 NewarK Cath
Shelby 73 Gat on 28
36
Sidney Fairlawn 54 N Lew Sburg Trtad 51
logan 63 New Lexmgton 53
Smithville 47 Loudonv lle 41
Lo dstown 54 K nsman Badger 37
Swanton 49 Edgerton 28
loudonVIlle 40 Fredericktown 32
Sylvan 8 Northv1ew 56 Whitehouse
Lou sv lie Aqwnas 49 Mass lion Jackson Anthony Wayne 53 OT
47
Sylvan a SouthVIew 66 Maumee 35
Lyndhurst Brush 85 Pepper P ke Orange
Un ontown Lake 62 Salem 37
65
Upper Sandusky 63 Norwalk 38
T~~~~o!~ Sandy VallEly 51 Massillon Van Wert 70 Rockford Parkway 27

I

Malvern 66 Strasburg Franklin 52
Vanlue 63 Waynesl eld Goshen 48
Manon P!easant44 Sparta Highland 21
Wapakoneta 71 St Henry 51
1
Massillon Wash ngton 72 Hudson 47
Wauseon 57 Napoleon 56 20T
May11eld llage Mayf 1ek:j 71
lkJughby
W liard 56 Foster a 43
58
wlloughby 54 Kirtland 50
Med na n Parma Normandy 66
Youngs Chr sllan 50 Cornerstone
Med na Buckeye 57 Norton 53
/ Chr stan 20
M amisburg 59 W Carrollton 45
M dd eburg Hts M dpark 62 Cte Hor~zon 1
W Va prep b88ketblll score•
Science 26
Tuelday' a Resulta
M dd etown Ch stan 50 Xen a Naza ene
Glrla
47
Brooke 54 Oak Glen 30
M ddletow n Mad son 68 New Par s
Buckhannon Upshur 66 E kms 48
National Tra I 63
Clay County 65 51 Albans 39
M1lford 85 Loveland 65
Doddrldge County 54 Calhoun 36
M ne a A dge 66 Lowellv le 59
Grace Chr stan 58 Fatr Haven Chr stan
Mmford 75 P octorv lie Farland 51
44
Montpel e 58 Monclova Ch1 st an 42
Greenbrier East 58 Prlnceton 53
Mow ys own Wh teoak 61
Sa dn a
Guyan Valley 53 Ha ts 43
Eastern Brown 53
Haml n 46 Matewan 25
Mt Vernon 69 Me on Hard ng 53
Hamps/l re 48 Petersbu g 33
N Eaton Chr Commun ty 82 Wooster
Hedgesville 51 Poolesv I e Md 41
Remer Ad Chr stan 54
Hunt ngton 68 Cabell M dland 32
N L ma S Range 45 Sebr ng McK nley
James Mon oe 53 Wyom ng East 50
44
Jefferson 51 Be ~eley Spr ngs 49
New Albany 57 Heath 35
John Marsha I 71 Wheel ng Pa k 68
lew s County 33 G afton 29
New Ca r sle Tecum seh 73 Upper
Arlington 65
L ncoln 71 L be ty Harr son 45
77
New
Conco d
John
Glenn
Morgantown 87 Fa1rmont Sen or 62
N cho as County 60 Braxton County 48
McCanna sv le Mo gan 65
New M ddletown Spring 68 Be In Cen e
Parke sburg 47 w rt County 42
Western Re serve 52
New Ph ladelph a 53 Gnadenhutten ;;arke sburg Cathol c 57 G lmer County
lnd1an Valley 43
New Ph ladelph a Tusca rawas Cent Cath
Parkersburg South 67 W llamstown 39
60 Bowerston Conotton Valley 49
Roane County 63 Herbert Hoover 54
New A egel 68 To onawa H Is 52
S ssonvlle 51 Scan 42
Newark L ck ng Val ey 48 Granvl e 46
Summers County 72 Westside 58
Newbury 58 Ashtabula Edgewood 36
Tucker County 54 Mooref eld 48
Newton Fa Is 60
ookf etO 55
Tygarts Val ey 67 Webster County 40
Obert n 69 N A dgev 1e Lake A dge 48
Unrve sty 69 North Manon 46
Oxford Ta awanda
6B
M ddletown
Wheel ng Central 57 Magnol a 55
Fenw Ck 44
Boys
Pa nesvllle Avers de 69 Mad son 49
Bella re Oh o 90 Magno a 74
Bluef eld 7 Summe s County 44
Parma His Holy Name 46 Cha don
NDCL 31
Burch 64 Scott 42
Parma His Valley Forge 56 N Royalton
Cross lanes Chr stan 67 Teays Va ley

w

v

I

s

s

•

Perry 81 JeHerson Area 49
Pian C ty Jo n~uhan Alder 60 Lewistown
lnd an Lake 36
Plymouth 57 Att ca Seneoa E 54
Poland Sem nary 66 Youngs Chaney 65
Portsmouth 65 McDermott Sc oto NW 47
Portsmoulh Clay 43 Frank! n Furnace
Green 31
Portsmouth E 61 Mancheste 54
Richmond His 80 Columba Stat on
Columba 64
A dgeVII e Chr stan 60 Carl sle 59
PP34
Rocky A ve lu heran W 64 ROCky R va
46
Ohio High School Soya Basketball
Rootstown 78 Mogadore F eld 65
Tueedey 1 Reeulla
Sat nevI e Sou he n 47 Columb ana
Ak Buchtel 72 Akr Kenmore 51
C esMew 39
Ak Hoban 75 Elyr a Cath 51
Sherwood Fa rv ew 43 W Umty H llop 33
Al1ance 63 Ca ro lton 44
S dney
lehman
53
Un on town
Andove Pymatun ng Val ey 67 Br stolv lie M ss ss nawa Valley 38
Br stol 62
Spr ng S 59 Sp nQ N 36
Ann Arl:l or (M ch ) G eenh Is 54 Tol
St Berna 0 Roger Bacon 56 Hamilton
,Badm 53
Emmanuel Bapt st 51
Strongsv 1e 91 E yr a 75
Anna 49 Ft Loram e 46
A wa e Water oo 76 Ravenna SE 73
Sugar Grove Be ne Un on 66 Balt1mo e
L be ty Un on 57
Barberton 4ti Slow Munroe Falls 36
Sugarcreek Ga away 57 W Lafayene
Barnesvlle 75 Bella re Sl John 53
Ridgewood 42
Bata11a Amela B2 C n Tu pn46
Summ1t Stat on
L ck ng Hts
64
Bay V nage Bay 60 B ecksv I e Broadv ew
Grandv ew 58
Hts so
Beavercreek 69 Day Col Wh te 46
Sycamore Mohawk 48 F emont Sl
Bedfo d Chane 83 Pa ma Padua 69
Joseph 35
Be mont Un on Local 56 0 d Wash ngton
Thompson Ledgemont 85 Fu~hS Mmach
Buckeye ~ a 54
68
Bela t W 8 anch 65 All ance Mar ng on
Tal Cent Cath fl1,. Sylvan a Nor hVew 59
40
To Sl F anc s 66 F emon Ross 63 OT

~~MM

Elk Valley Ch st an 101 Seneca Tra1l
Ch r stan 37
Fran~fort 53 East Hardy •9
George Wash ngton 74 Cap1tal 51
G lbert 81 Iaeger 34
1
G eater Beckley Chnst an 71 Fayenev lie
62
G eenbre Wesl61 Mount Hot)e 58
Harts 99 Guyan Val ey 66
Hetl'gesvlle 55 Pools11lle Md 36
Hur cane 65 Cabe 1M d and 62
Independence sa L berty Rate gh 51
Jackson Oh o 60 Pomt Pleasant 38
Jef,lerson 7B Hampsh re 56
John Marsha 162 Ty ler Consol dated 56
logan 79 Man 65
Madonn a 74 Cameron 46
Meadow Bridge 65 Cov nglon va 47
Nitro 84 Wmf eld 63
Noire Dame 90 G lmer County 53
Oak Glen 70 Toronto Oh o 57
S
..., H
Sh
60
0 a,. 11 70
a0Y P ng
Paden Cry 79 Valley Wetzel 63
Poca 54 He l:ler Hoove 47
A chwood 60 M dland Tra I 54
A lch e County 72 St Marys 64
She by Val ey Ky 58 W !Hamson 55
South Charleston 62 A versldiit 60
St Albans 60 A pley 56
Tols a 65 Sl Joseph 34
Tug Val ey 92 Ctlapmanvlle 80 20T
Wayne 58 S ssonv tie 56 OT
We 53 Broo ke 49
We sts de 81 Mount Vew 64
Wood ow W lson 90 Pa Ke rsbu g 68

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Datly Sentinel • Page 83

-

~ribune

- Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

Walker makes most of
his moment without O.J.

i!iter
Mdp CO\UIIJ OH

Bv RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

For a change, Robm got top btllmg over Batman
Cmcmnau North College Hill 's JUntor forward BtU Walker, frequently lost m the stzable
shadow of retgmng Ohto Mr Basketball 0 J Mayo, stepped mto the bnght hght last week
end
Wtth Mayo restmg an InJured foot, Walker scored 50 pomts and grabbed 25 rebounds m
a 100 68 v1ctory over Covmliton (Ky) Holmes
"He played hke an ammal North College Htll coach Jam1e Mahaffey sa1d "That's how
B1ll1s Blll1s a player who no matter what the odds, he 's gomg to go out there and fight '
Another NCH star, 6 foot ll Keenan Elhs, also m1ssed Sunday s game He wa~ sus
pended from the team for dtsctphnary reasons, leavmg Walker to lead lhe TroJans final
tuneup for Saturday mght's showdown m Cmcmnall wtth unbeaten Oak Htll Academy
from Mouth ofWtlson Va Oak Htllts No I and NCH No 2m USA Today s natiOnal prep
rankmgs The game ts a sellout at 16,500-seat US Bank Arena m Cmcmnall
'I knew I was gmng to have ptck up the load today,' Walker satd Thts was my ftrst
ume playmg wtthout lloth of them
Mayo IS out wtth a stress fracture but ts expected to return for the Oak Htll game
LATE FIREWORKS: Leadmg Delphos St John s 46 43 wtth 3 3 seconds left
Coldwater s boys were hit wtth a techmcal foul for argumg a foul call Wtth four chances
at the lme the Blue Jays made JUSt two of the free throws and mtssed a desperatiOn shot
at the buzzer to gtve the Cavaliers the 46-45 wm
BIG MAC. The Mtdwest Athletic Conference - constdered the best small school
league m the state - has a doozy of boys hoops race New Bremen leads the MAC at 6
I wtth Versrulles St Henry, New Knoxvtlle and Mmster wtth two losses St Henry and
Versatlles play on Fnday with New Bremen and Mmster playmg next week Only three
umes m the 32-year htstory of the MAC has the conference champiOn had two losses
PRODUCTION LINES: Upper Sandusky's Jon Dtebler, an Ohto State recruit, d1dn't
break hts school record of 77 pomts but he dtd htt 11 of 16 3 pomters and scored 52 pomts
m a 93 75 wm over Bellevue Spnngfield Northwestern's Aubrey Stemon had 46 pomts
and 12 rebounds man 83 47 wm over Mechamcsburg, Ben Haarman had 40 pomts seven
rebounds and five assists as St Bernard-Elmwood Place beat the Cmcmnall School for
Creative and Performmg Arts 85-58, Zanesville Rosecrans semor guard Joe Dalton scored
a career-htgh 32 pomts m an 89-73 loss to Worthmgton Chnsuan then came back for 38
m hts next game, htttmg 19-of-22 foul shot!&gt;, m a 56 48 wm over Columbus Watterson
Rafael Cueller had 37 pomts and 18 rebounds but Cmcmnau Western Hills sulllost 72 59
to Mount Healthy, and Btlly Allen, son of h1s coach Larry Allen, had 32 pomts, 12
rebounds and stx asststs as Hamtlton beat Mtddletown 72 55
NOTEWORTHY: Upper Sandusky gtrls coach Andra Bell ptcked up her SOOth career
wm Fnday when her Rams beat Ttffm Columbtan 60 34, Fmdlay Ltberty Benton s Nathan
Hyde scored 33 pomts and broke hts school record by makmg 16 free throws m a 50-43
wm over Bluffton Plam Ctty Jonathan Alder JUmor Lauren Prochaska recently became the
school s all ume leadmg scorer m basketball tor etther boys or gtrls wllh more than I 600
pomts, Chesapeake won the boys bhto Valley Conference for the II th stra1ght year and
Cincmnall Pnnceton s gtrls ftmshed 19 0, theu firsl unbeaten regular season by beatmg
Sycamore 57-45
2K FOR TVAA: Youngstown Ursuline's Tyra Grant eclipsed 2 000 career pmnts wtth
26 agamst Ltsbon Beaver m a 62 29 wm Headed to Penn State on a full nde Grant has
2,024 for her career and IS 42 pomts behmd former teammate Courtney Davidson's school
record Davtdson 1s now at M1ch1gan State
STILL REMEMBERED: Plam Ctty Jonathan Alders boys beat Dayton Suvers 56 51
on Saturday mght It was rtearly 95 years aso that Plrun Ctty Htgh School faced Dayton
Sttvers for the 1910-1911 state champ10nshtp Plam Cay won that game and 1he champt
onshtp trophy from that contest was rededicated to Jonathan Alder dunng a halftime cere
mony on Saturday by four hvmg sons and grandson of members of that team
ODD NUMBERS: Canton McKmley ts 16 0 agamst Dtvtston I and DtvtsiOn II teams
but 0-2 agamst Dtvtston DI and DIVIsiOn IV But lhere s a catch McKmley's Divmon III
Joss was to North College Htll and tts other setback was to nallonal power Oak Htll
Academy, whtch would be classified as 01VISIOO IV tn Ohto

Rebels rout Wildcats, 79-47
Bv

mance

lARRY CRUM

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

l

s

Wednesday, February 15. 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

ASHTON WVa - Sitting
on a two game losmg streak
It was clear South Galha was
gomg mto Tuesday s game
agamst Hannan motivated
And the Rebels showed 11
The Runnm Rebels (14 5)
exploded out of the gates wuh
a couple of b1g runs m the
first quarter and h11 a stnng of
3 pomters m the second to
blow the game w1de open
taking a 79 47 vtctory over
Hannan (9 8) Tuesday mght
mAshton WVa
The wm snaps a two game
losrng streak for South Gal11a
wh1ch had also lost three of
1ts last four Hannan mean
wh1le contmues Its roller
coaster nde m the month of
February stltmg at 2 4 on the
momh
Hannan s1mply could not
keep up wtlh the fast paced
R~bel atlack wh1ch created
24 steals and passed very effi
Cle(JtJy With 15 aSSIStS In the
game They also brought
down 42 rebounds m an
absolutely dommatmg perfor

e
Rebels were
led by Josh
Wnght who
came close
to a tnple
double with
19 p01nts 14
rebounds
seven steals
Wright
and
three
assists Curt
Waugh went for 19 pornts s1x
rebounds six steals and three
asststs and Bernte Fulks had
13 pomts four rebounds and
tour steals
Also sconng for Soulh
Galha were Tyler Duncan
wtth mne pomts and SIX
rebounds Aaron Phillips wuh
mne pomts four rebounds
and three ass1 sts Roberl
Corey with four pomts
Dewey Cant1 ell w1th th1 ee
pomts Tyler Porter with two
pomts and Josh Skidmore
w1th one pomt
Hannan could not hang
w1th the tough South Galha
attack commg down wtth 32
rebounds and grabbmg I0
steals bul dtd walk awav wuh
T

h

five blocks all of wh1ch came
from Wes Gue
The Wtldcms were paced
by Ryan Canlerbury w1th 21
pomls ltve rebounds tour
steals and four ass1sts Gue
w1th 18 pomls 15 rebounds
and (lve blocks Ke\ m Blake
w1th SIX pomts three steals
and two asSISts and Joe
Krnnard w1th two pomts
Aaron Payne added tour
rebounds and two steals m the
setback
Whtle South Gallra con
nected on seven tre) s rn the
game, Hannan dtd not man
age to h1t a smgle 3 pornler
desptle altemptmg them
throughout the game
The Runmng Rebels shot
40 percent (29 of 72 J from
the field whtle Hannan could
only hn29 percent (16 of 56)
on the nrght
South Galha wtll relum 10
aclton 6 p m Salurdav v. hen
they return home for a semor
mght malchup ag unst Oak
H1ll whtle Hannan conunues
wllh thetr second of four
games 111 the week when they
tra"el to face Hamlin 7 30
p m tomghl

Ironmen hammer Point Pleasant
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

POINT PLEASANT W
Va - Sometimes you JUSt
have to gtve the de~ tl hts due
Jackson s defense was sun
ply too much for Poml
Pleasant to handle Tuesday
dunng a 60 38 setback 10 non
conference acuon
The B1g Blacks (2 19) man
aged JUSt 13 pomts on 5 of 24
shooung before halfttme then
commttted I0 turnovers and
went scoreless over th" next
e1ght mmutes 10 trail 46 13
alter three penods of plav
Pmnl
ou tscore,d
the
lronmen (12 8) bv a 25 14
margm m the final fra me but
the rally came up v.ay short
Afterward PPHS coach
R1ch Blam had nothmg but
pratse for the opposrt1on s
perfonnance
G1ve Jachon some CI CUII
Delenmely they made us
work for e~cry 1h1n g he sa1d
We got some good looks bul
we couldn t get them to drop
They were )Ust more th 10 we
can handle
The B1g Blacks tuushed lhe
mght 11 of 47 !rom the lleld

for 28 percent but were JU St
5 of 28 ( 18 percent) through
24 m10utes of play The hosts
shot
8 for 19
agarn st
Jackson s reserve squad and
also clatmcd a 17 :l rebound
rng edge down the slretch
help10g Pornt wm the battle
on the boards by a 31 26 mar
giO

rebounds m the loss Josh
Stover added 11 pornts ,md
nme rebounds whrle Jay Ellis
fol)owed w1th tour markers
Stephen Walker and W1ll
Slone rounded out the sconng
w1th three and lwo pomts
respelttvely
Retd Arnold paced J 1ckson
wah I1\ pornts 10 ol wh1ch
came If\ the openmg stanza
Pmrrck Dtll was next with II
markers and Marcus Boggs
added I0 to the 'lllOr) Both
Boggs and George Lowrv led
the lronmen With l~he caroms
aptcce
The guests bi£!(CSl lead
"'" 33 p01n1s II the end oi lhe
1h1rd qu.mcr
Jackson dalmecl ,1 sweep
wnh 1 ()I 14 \lctorv rn the
JUniOr \ tNty tilt
Ry&lt;tn Borden had d g 1me
htgh I1\ jJ(IInts rn I he Iron men
trrumph v.h1le Stc1cn Perry
paced Pomt With 14 markers
The guests led 26 11 11 hall

That late production v. as
the lone bnght spot for the
Red, Slack and Whtte and
Blam felt hts club showed
some character m 1he finale
We were resr lrenl In the
fourth quarter Blam com
mented The ktds made a Ill
tie run showed some prrde
and some heart
JHS fin1shed the mght 24
ut 47 from the treld lor 51
percent but were JUst 1 of 9
over the tina! etght mrnutes
The lronmen also had onl)
12 IUrno,ers 10 the trrumph
nearly half ot Po1nt Plea'''"' s
21 g1ve.~ways
The Red and Whtte led 16 tii11C
7 after one quaner and ~ere
Po1n1 Pl easanl returns to
ahead 28 11 11 the 111ternm aciJOil S 1turday when rt trav
:&gt;.1011
ci s lo G,rlltpolrs to 11ke on
Bobby Errett led Pomt wtlh Gallr 1 Academv 111 1 crms
a d6uble double scorrng 16 met fl\o1lry Game tune IS
po1nh and g11bb1ng 10 slaled lot 6 p m

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4
s For Sale •. :::::::.::::::::::::: ··:::::::::
:: ::::.:::: 030
725
Announcemenl
..
Antiques
530
Apartments for Rent
440
Auc:;tlon and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repair
770
Autos for Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750

Building Supplies
Busmess and Buildings
Business Opportunity
Business Training
Campers &amp; Motor Home•

550
340
210
140
790

Camping Equipment

780

Cards of Thanks

010

Child/Elderly Care

190

Electrlcai/Rofrlgeratlon
Eqwpment for Rent
Excavating
Farm Equipment
Farms for Rent
Farms for Sale
For Lease
For Sale
For Sale or Trade
Frutts &amp; Vegetables
Furnished Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway

840
480
830
610
430
330
490
585
590

Happy Ads
Hay &amp; Grain
Help Wanted

Home Improvements

580
450

850
040
050
640
110
810

Homes for Sale.·-··'············v···:··············'
Household Goods
Houses for Rent
In Memonam
Insurance
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
Livestock
Lost and Found
Lots &amp; Acreage
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous Merchandise
Mobile Home Repair
Mob le Homes for Rent
Mob le Homes for Sale
Money to Loan
Mo1orcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Mus1cal lntltruments
Persona ls
Pets tor Sale
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Professional Services

310

R•dlo TV &amp; CB Repair

160

Real Estate Wanted
Schools Instruction
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
Situations Wanted
Space tor Rent

360
150
650
120
460
520
720
715
870
730
090
620
180
470
072
074
076

Sperling Goods
SUV s for Sale
Trucks for Sale
Upholstery
Vans For Sale
Wanted to Buv
Wanted to Buv Farm Supplies
wanted To Do
Wanted to Rent
Yard Sale Gallipolis
Yard Sale Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sale Pt Pleasant

510
410
020
130
660
630
060
350
170
540
860
420
320
220
740
570
005
560

820
230

ENCE NE ESSA

ME CLASSES
RANNO
~AN C NG A\lA L)loBlE
JOB PL)IoCE'-'EN

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tO used homes unde

$3 000 00 Must Go Call
E. a1ne 740 385 0698
16x80 homes starting at
$25995 00 Includes v nyl
sld ngJ shlngle roof Call
Russ 740-385 2434
1964 1Ox 50 Rembrandt
w1th fu n sh ngs $1 000
0 B0
(937)981 2111
days

Anent! on I
Local company otfe ng

J&amp;C

Serv ce &amp;
25 years exp
Free estimates 304 675
2213

TRAINING CENTERS

Tree

E~~:cavallng

WYTHEV LLE VA

1 BOO 334 1203

It\\\( I \I

COL Onvers w II ng to
d ve lor loca eady m x
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Exper ence s prefe ed
but no r1ecessary M~d
nsurance &amp; other benet ts
ava lable alte wa t ng
pe od Dr ver mus be
w II ng to do pre ma nte
nance on t ucks &amp; equ p
ment yard work &amp; o he
m scellaneous chores
E)(pe ence ope at ng
equ pment &amp; ext a Skills
such as
weld ng a plus
Cal (304)937 3410
located n Mason County
near Buffalo WV

Full t me Medical Ass stan
needed
to
busy
Phys ca n s Off ce
Must
be dependable and per
soneb le Send Resume
and Rete ences to PO Box
16 Pont Pteasa t WV
25550
Ga l a County Cou nc I on
Ag ng
s seek ng an
Elcecut ve
D rec o
Resp ons bIte~
nc ude
mp emental o o pol c es
and
programs
s aff
employment/development
I seal n anagemenl p o
posal preparal o
pr o
gram eva uat on manta n
e al onsh ps w th other
agenc es ex off c o mem
tJe of County Counc1
Ba ~helor s
deg ee
n
Soc al Serv ce Bus ness or
elated feld wlh a mn
mum of lh ee (3) yea s
soc1a scrv ces ousmess
expe ence equ P.d Bas c
know edge ol sen or c I
zen ne eds and ava able
serv ce s
needed
Demon s a ed organz a
Ilona manage al admin
stral ve
ex per ence
equ red Compule sk Is
nclud ng M c osoft Word
and nter nel nav gal on
equ red Mus be bond
able and have a val d dr
11er s cense

Subm t appl C:::l. ons WJ1h
esumes to GCCOA A.ttn
Counc I Pes den
1165
Sta e Route 60 P 0 Box
441
Gal po l s
Oho
45 63 1 by 3 30pm on
22
2006
Feb ua y
GCCOA
s an Equal
Opportun ly Employer
local bl s ness ook ng o
Secreta y Rccep on s
Must hal/e good IF! epnone
slo. s &amp; good w lh the pub
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mach nes ~ ou r!:. a :~m
5pm Monday F Jda)' 8 12
Satu da(
PO Boll was oubl shed
wrong pease resubm 1
esumes to
loca Bus ess
PO Box 55
Ga po s OH 456:11

Ma n enarce
os on
ope ga heVageo
A o G ~ de P \,;~ p "~PD
ca on A the Vtage Ha
174 Easl Co ege St ee
App ca on
dead ne
5 OO om
Feb ua y 23

1995 Schutz 16~~:80 for
sale (740)949 207~

NO DOWN PAYMENT

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRA ER

2000

4bdrm 2 5 bath hard
wood floors new root
approx
3 OOO~q It
A ver-. ew
At 7 south
$125 000 No land con
tracts (740)709 0299

CO

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programs lor you to buy
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Payment could be the
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Mo tgage
locators
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Truck ng s took ng tor
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E11.per ence lor Reg1ona
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(800)462 9365

FOR SALE

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Abso ute Top Dollar U S
S Iva and God Cons
Proofsels Gold R ngs
Pr e 1935 US Currency
Sol ta e D amonds M TS
Con Shop 151 Second
Ave ue Ga pols 740
446 28 42

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WANll'Il

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A keyboard player needed
tor
new
Chr stan
ocklpra se and wors h p
band
We a e not
teenage s and we are sea
soned mus c ans G eat
sound system and I ghl
show With fog mach nes
w II be n place Stud o
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add1t1on to llve shows
740 367 7129 J m

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POUCIES Ohio '11•1-r Pubtl•hlng rHW¥81 ttt. right to edit rel.ct Of eancitl•ny IMt el 1ny lime Erro • muat boa report.d on the fb.t d•y of
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accepts ani~ help wanted ada
slanc:lerd•
I
of the law

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Found cane on S 4th
M dd eporl call to ID
(740)992 4520
male
Rewa dt
Engl sh Pointe Centenary
a ea 0 ange colla m ssng s ne e 2 3/06 Cat
(7 40)446 9395

In Next Day • Paper
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KIT

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110

110

1.

HI-Ll

.
1

W\NlHl

HaPWMmll

TIRED OF GAS PRICES
&amp; COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED?

Nus ng Mgmt
Great Career
Opportumty
olzer Health System

s seeking an Executlv
Director tor Hotze
aslsted Llvmg
I
ackson Ohio
Requ re ments
os t on nclude
A. I censed nurs ng home
adm n strator
Or
A Reg stared Nurse w lh
2000 hours o1 d1rect
ope allonal respons b I ty
fo a semo care tac tty
Or
A Baccalau eate degree
1 nu s ng ma kel ng or
bus ness adm n st at on
arJd dale must posses
trong leadersh p com
un c at on market ng
nd I nanc al sk. Is an
us! alla n and mana
el ned occupancy ev
s If you ae an ene
el c &amp;elf mol-.ated ca
ng nd v dual and want!
chedule a pe sonal a
ani den tal m~el ng w 1
mesa Re ny LNHA
MHA BSN AN Sys1e
dm n sl ator !Of Lon
e m Ca a call (740)446
00 1
Equal Qpportun ty
Em o e
Help waned at the Oa st
Adu ll
G oup
Home
I 40 992 5023

Lucal Bank s se ek ng
Part T me tel e
Musl b~
a11a table Monday thru
Sat day P ease forwa d
esume to Da y Sent net
PO Box 729 34 Pomeroy
OH 45769

Heartland of Jac~son has
an e~~:c t ng ca eer opportu
n ty available for an

MDS NURSE
COORDINATOR/
ADON

to
8oxTSC 13
200 Mfl n St eet
Po Peasant WV

25~50

r--eed Cash Don 1 et th s
oppo l&gt;~r"lly pass you by l
&amp; A Wholesales s now
nped ng cansed dr ve s
to 1oca meat de wery and
sa es company Ca I 740
949108 t o fomal on

PROFESSIONAL

Diesel
Technician

Qual t ca t ons nclude a
current AN I cense 1n Oh o
2 yrs o d long erm care
exper e nee and
pr o
superv sory e•peuence
St ong management and
communtcat ens sk11fs are
a must MOS exper ence
p eterred

Chr sl an
Owned
Company
Offering
A
Home Managed Bus ness
Part me o Full 11me Fu I
Suppo t and Tra n nQ Ful y
fmanced oppor1un ty it
qual fled
1-800 946 7572 Pin 00 (II
no answer please leave
message)

r

MoNt'.
mLoAN

S GN ON BONUS
OFFERED
We otfer compe it ve pay a
comprehens ve benefits
package nclud ng 401 (k)
w1th
co mpany match
u t1on assistance and
more
Pease forward resume to
Deborah Thomas AN
AONS at Hear land of
Jackson 8668 St At 93
Jackson OH 45640 Fax
740 286 0295 www her
mana rca e com
EEOID ug Fee Employe
Commilnl.Jnt

Overbrook Cente s cur
ent y seek ng a beaut1c an
o work n he facltys
beauty sa on Cand1dates
should possess a va l d
manag ng cosmetolo g st
license
Salary s based
on comm ss on lnte ested
cand dates should contact
he
admln strator
at
(7401992 6472 EOE

Ove b rook Rehab I tat on
Center s cu ren ly accept
ng appl ca ons for fu 1
tme STNAS 7A 7P 7P
7A and 3A 3P sh Its are
a v~ lab e lnle ested app
cants shOu d !I out an
app l cat on at 333 Page
Street M ddlepo 1
No
pho ne calls pease EOE

$1567 $2198hr
now
h J ng For appl cat on and
free gove nement 10b nfo
ca ll Amer can Assoc ot
Labor
1 913 599 8042
24/h s emp se v

nanc a
nst tul !!In
of Consume
Ma s BEFORE yo
el nance your home o
bta n
a
Joan
EWARE at request
o any large advanc
ayments of fees o
nsurance
Cal th
fltce of Consume
ffa rs tol f ee a
66 278 0003 o lear
f the mortgage broke
Iande s proper!
ce nsed (Th s sa pub
c ser11 ce announce
ent I om !he Oh
Pubhsh n

thee

At John Sang Ford
Uncoln--Mercury we ve
establ shed a 35 year
repulat on of

t~:~~;:~~,n~:·~;~~ and

products on the m111kEot-~
and as the fastest
ng deale sh p n

"-'PI• Sr «~gth

POSTAL JOBS

P ov de needed n my
H ome N on Smoker
App 011 30 hou s pe week
Wed
Sun
~ ght
Housekeep ng
prepa e
mea s
Good d v ng
ecord
Some Even ng
hou s requ ed
Send
Pesu ne and Rete ences

H 0 VALLEY PUB
ISHING CO recom
ends that you do bus
ess w1th people yo
f10W and NOT to sen
oney th ough the ma1
nt t you have nvesl gat
the offer n

serv ce our customer~ ~
Ford ServiCe 1 a nmg
preferred but not
requ red
11 yau are a proles,;ion,alll
t echniCIC~,n ook ng to
start a new career or
maybe you don t fee l
re pad o 1 eated
wei as you should be
and !you etredol
wo F ~ ng for someone
whO sn two kng for
you g ve J m Thomas
ca I today
1 740 446 9800 or
1 BOO 272 5 79
You may also app y n
person at
95 Uppe Ave r AD
Gall pols Oho

Tak ng Appf cat ons tor
Mach n st &amp; Welder
5
yea s expere nee
app y
7 30 4 OOpm
Amb osa
Mach ne Inc Route 2 8011
~5 4 Pont P easan WV
25550 (3041675 1722

)150

Smoots
iN.TRUCll&lt;Jr\
A new ca eer n
Medical Office
Admlnlatratlon
sta ts wth ca ~
ranng 0
Galllpoll• Career
College
(740)446 4367
800 2 14 0452
12748

Sec e1ary Personn e
D rector
Full T me 2
Weekends Pe
Month •
Must Po ~sess 2 Yea s 0
More E )(pe eflce Must Be
Compu te
L ie ate
&amp;
P of c e n
Must
s'e
Dependable 0 gan zed
Elf cent &amp; Capab e 0
Mult Task TiQ nte es ed
Appl cants May Apply By
Send ng A Resume To
Secreta y Personna
D ec tor PO Box 307
Mas on W V
Ravenswood WV 26 64
5555
Reto on "'S A re Requ red

I'Rllfl ~ONAI
SER\10.-&lt;;
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
/SSI?
No Fee Unless We W
-888 582 3345
HI \I 1..,1 \II

f-' 10

HOMES

. FOR

S-\1 E

2 Un 1 Apa tme nt Bu ld ng
Newly Remodeled n Po nt
P easan
Ready
c
Accep Renters (304)675
8635
3 Dedroom house n
Pomeroy off ma n road
rve
v ew
$27000
(740)992 2593
3 ~bd pa 1a br ck house
7acres 6-46 Sand H II Ad
PT Peasant Needs some
repa $75 000 (7 40) 388
8366
3BR 2 Car anached
Ga B~e on
06 ac as
$&lt;52 000 (2041675 633
3BA '2 tul bath 1 900
sq It full basement 2 ca
aNacned garage 3 liCres
Chaste Townsh p Ease n
schoo d !11 ct Qtf Al 7
neo Memor al Gardens
Ca
740)985 4321 af e

All real estete advertlalng

In thl&amp; nevnpeper Ia
tubject to the Federal
Fair Houling Act ot 1968
which makes it lll~~gt~llo
adverttae any
preference llmiWtion or
dlacrlmmetlon baled on
race color religion "x
temlllel atalus or national
origin 01 any Intention to
make any 1uch
preference hmltatlon Of
dt.crlminetlon

(7 40

386 8380

N1ce 14~~:70 Shutz 3br 1
bath new Fndge Water
heater carpet
Porch
1 34 acres 5 m nutes trol"('t
Town &amp; schools E~tcelfent
condition (304)593 0921
leave Message
Very NiCe 2br 14)(70 Heat
Pump Detached Ga a~e
75x100 Lot $30000 call
13041882 2618

Thil newapeper wtll not

knowingly accept
advartlaements tor rut

estate WhiCh II In

vloletion of the lew Our
readera are hereby
lnfonned lhat ell
dwtlllngs ltdvertiaed In
th11 newap~~per are
available on an equal
opportunity biiHS

I

New Doublewide Repo
I ved n owner
neve
t ance on 1 3 acres 8
m las north ol Holzer
HOSp!tB on 160 (740)446
3570

PUBLIC NOTICE

r

Lars&amp;
ACKEAGE

22 acres wonderful VIew
r dgetop property close to
ma n h ghway perfect for 4
wheels t a Is (740)707
2109
Lana for sa e Gallla Co 1n
Morgan Townsh p
on
Morgan Lane app 011. 1
mile off SA 325
Clay Townsh p on Teens
Run Rd owner hnanc ng
ava table (740)669.0143
(7401669 8614

Real Estate Auct on

By court bank or seller
order 3046 STATE ROUTE
14 r GALLIPOLIS SBR
1BA 875sl+ s ng e lam ly
OPENING B D $1 000
Pope ty Se Is 10 30am
Mon Feb 20 at 301 E A

STREET WELLSTON
Inspect ons
4pm Sun
befo e sale day and 2 hrs
l:lefoesaetme
V s 1 w amsauct on com
o cal 800 801 8003
OH
W&amp;W
REn004006()79 Dean c
W ll ams
b oker.
AE•20030P 722
Kev n
W
e
n
d
AUC#5 7 987~0969
on 1Oacres w tn a heated
g ound sw mm ng pool
stocked POnd ba n &amp; 3 ca
ga age 4 huge bedrooms
2bahs (3800sqtt ) 31 e
places ha dwood flo ors
30m nutes from Gall po s
10365 Co Ad 4 WaterlOo
(740)643-20 9

wwworv com
Hom• Llatin9J
L 61 you home by call
ng (r.0)446-3620

ew Haven WV
room 2
2 Ca
a age
Outbu fd ngs
lose lo town PRICE
0 SELL Code 6505 o
a (304 )882 3368

a..m

Ostnc1on

3 baf l1
c es 3 ca 2 stor
nattached QB age ga
entree -gas RuTland
H Cal (740)740 3230
ppo ntments on y Cod

306

5orn
3BA 2bath ranch ~ty e
home 25x30 allact\ed
ga age 30x30 Poe be n
1 33
acre s
$55 000

New Doublew de Repo
never J ved n owner
f ance on 1 3 acres 8
m les north of Holzer
Hospta on 160 (740)446
3570

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

App 0)( 1 ac e of land
Ready fo House o be
bull wthn 10 mles of
Po n Peasant
Rural
Sett ng sec uded &amp; QUiet
$8 000 or ess Please call
304 593 3207
Need 10 se I your hQme ?
L.ate on payments d vorce
jOb transte or a death? I
can buy your home
AI
cash and quiCk c os ng
740 4t6 3130

3 bedroom 2 1 2 baths 2
ca
garage furn shed
close to Ho ze Hospital
$850 month
(740 )441
0310

3 to 4 bedroom home n
Pomeroy HUD ava lable
$450 mo $450 deposit
cal (7 40 992 2979
4 bed oom 1 5 bath 5
m n o Holzer hosp1ta l
$850 p us depos t &amp; utlh
t es (740)256 8152
4b
n
Sy acuse
$600 month &amp; Deposit
WBter Sewer ncluded No
Pets ~JlW)675 5332
5 ooms and bath stove
~ M refr gerator 44 01 ve

St $385 mo $385 Clep
no pets (74014-46 3945
7 ac e coun try home 3
Oedroom 2 ftil baths w d
efnge a1o range electr c
&amp; Wate oa d free yard
moWing propane hea &amp;
woodbu ne newly emod
eled $ 200 pe month
p us depos 1 call between
9 2pm at 740)67-4.-6951

�Wednesday, February 15, 2006' ·

Wednesday, February 15,2006
Al-LEY OOP

www.mydallysentlnel.com

In Memory
96 doublewide, Eastern
Schools, TPC w ater, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. call

Downtown Office Space- 5
room sui te $650/mo: 1
room office- $225/mo.: 2
roo m
suite
$250/mo.
Security deposit required
You pay utilities. All spaces
very nice. Elevator. Call
(740)446-3644 for appointment.

1ST MON. FREE RENT
WITH PAI D DEP. NEW
ELLM VIEW

TOWNHOUSEIAPTS

(502)943-0386
Attention!
Local company ot1erir1g
"NO DOWN PAYMENT'
programs fOr you to buy
your home instead of rentIng.
• 100% financ ing
• Less than pet1ec1 credit
accepted
• Payment could be ·the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Lbcators

(740)367-0000
Stop renting Buy 4 bed room foreclosure $15.000
For listings 800-391 -522 8
ext. 1709. '

NOW L.EASINGI
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;

TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE

\\11{1 11\'\111"1

"ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT

2 bedroom mobile home In
Racine, $350 mo. plus
$350 deposit, years k3ase ,
no pets, no calls after 9pm,

JET
AERAOON MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stock. Can Ron Evans,

"CEILING FANS

Warehouse

3 room &amp; bath , furnished
upsta irs, clean, reference
&amp; deposit required .. Call
(740)446-15 19.
BEAUTif UL
MENTS AT

APART·
BUDGET

2 bedroom . all electric.
Water and trash service
provided. $350/month plus
deposit. (740)441-7033
l ~ve message.

3br. 2ba. Mobile Home in
New Haven , beside Grade
School
$44bimontll,
$400/'deposit
(304 )882·

CONVENIENTLY LOCATEO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse apartments.
anctror small !louses FOR .
RENT. Call (740)441-1 11 1
lor application &amp; informa tiOn.
·

Trailer for rent 2 bedroom.
new car pet. (740)2566803 or (740)645-3261 .

r
-

AP..~mw"-s
•URRENf

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and
unfurn ished . · secu rity
deposit required . no pets,
740-992-2218.

1BR apt. stove/

refr idg.
waterfseWer/trasll paid
. $325/month .
29~ ap1 WID hookup.
sew.er/trash/wa:ter paid .
$400/month.
(740)367 (740)367-7746 .
7015 ,

(740)446-4734 .
Beautiful 2-~tory toWn-,
house
overlooking
Gallipolis
' City
park .
Kitchet1 , D.R, L.A .. study.
3BR, 2 baths. laundry
area. References requir!Kl.
sec urity deposit, no pets.
$900 mo. Call (740}446·
2325 or (740)445-4425.

Drive from $344 .to $442
Walk to sllop &amp; movies.
Call 740-446-2568 . Equal
Housing Opportunity

Gracious living. I and 2
bedroom apar tments at
Village
Manor , and
Rivers ide Apartments in
Middleport From $295 $444. Cal l 740-992·5064
Housing
Equal
·opportunities.
Middleport- 1 bedroom furnished apartment, no pets,
depo·sit &amp; previous rental
references. (740)992·0165
Modern 1 bedroom apt.
(740)446-0390

vs

Pamela L Carter aka
PamelaBoso
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuan~e of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the above
entmed action, I will
expose to .sale . at
Public Auction on the
Front Steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday,
March ·17, 2006 at 10
a.m., of said day, the
following described
Real Estate: Situated
In
ihe
Sutton
Townahlp ,
Meigs
county, Ohio, In the
Jamea M. Weldon
Addition to 1he Village
of Racine , being Lots
Nos. 6 and t1 of said
addition to Racine ,
and
bounded
deacrlbed as follows:
Beginning at ,the
Sot.rthwest corner of
Lot No. 5 In said
Weldon

Addlton

to

Rac'ine; Thence South
along the Eaat side of
Racine and Antiquity
RoOd, 54 Feel To the
LL!Cius . Cross land j
Thence East along
the south aide of said
Iota Noo. 6 and t1:
186 feet to 1he
SOutheast corner of
. Lot No. It on 6th
Street; thence North
along 1he West side of
olxth street, 56 feet to
tha NOrthwest corner
of Lot No: 11; thence
West along the North
side of said Lots Nos.
· 6 and 11 ; 19t foet.to
tho place of beginning, · excepting the
coal, oil and other
minerals underlying
said lots. Tn Map or
Parcel ID No.: t900216.000, Tax Map or
Parcel ID NO.: 19·
00217.000 , Tax Map or
Parcel ld No: 1900216.000. Current
owner: Pamela . l
Carter aka Pam ela
Boao Properly At: 706
Sixth Street, Racine,
Ohio PP# 19-002t6,
1~217 Prior Deed
References :

· 120,

·

Volume
Page
103

•

in Henderson, WV. Preowned Applicanes 'starting
at $75 &amp; up all under
Wa rranty.
also, have
Household Misc. Items
st arting at

.99c &amp; up

(304)67 5-7999
New Couj::h &amp; L.oveseat.
$450. Call ( 740)446 ~7444 .
Aelrldg Whirlpool 18 cu fl ,
like new $200 (304)6751731
.
Refr igerator f rost free,
white $125; sma ll chest
freezer $125 ; washer
heavy duty $95; dryer $95;
30m white range, like new
$125. Genes Appliances
76 Vine 51., . Gallipo lis
{740)446-7100
or
(740)367-7886
Th ompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675 -7388. For sale,
re-c on ditlor1ed autom atic
washers &amp; dryers. refrigerators. gas and el8ctric
ranges . air conditio ners,
and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your h~me .
Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulavilfe Pike. Washers,
dryers.
gas/electric
ranges. refrigerators, mattresses, Couches. din ettes,
mucf1
more.
chests ,
(740) 446-4782, Gallipolis,

r

OH . Hrs . 11·3 (M-S)

SPORTING

Gooos
Nice one BR unfurnished
apartment. Range &amp; r6frig.
provi ded. Wa ter &amp; garbage · Black powder cannOn 1BH·
barrel on wooden carriage
.pa,id . Deposi t requ ired
with 24" wood spoked
Ca ll ' (740 )446-4345 alter
wlleels $1,500. (740)2566pm .
1836..
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are
now
laking
ANnQuES
•
Applications tor 2BA , 3BR
&amp; 4BR .. Applications are
taken Monday tt1 ru Friday. · Buy or sell. RiVerine
·from 9:00 A.M.-4 PM .
An1iques. 1124 Ea st Main
Off1ce is ~ocated at t 151
Q.i 'SA t24 E. Pomeroy,
Evergreen Drive· Point
740-992-2526 ·
Ru ss
Pleasant. wv Phone No. Is
Moore, owner.

i

Commercial Property &amp;
Bu ilding for .Sale. f 9.9
acres. Ambrosia Machine
Inc. Route 2 Boll 254 Point
Pleasant, WV
25550 .

'

I

&amp;;;:;;;;;;=-";;,;.___,
:: !.~~

I_

(304)675-5606. E.H.O

"urru.~

Grill guard to lit John
Deere 790 tractor $100

r

(740)256 -1836.

I.

Block. brick. seWer pipes,
windows,
lintels,
etc .
Claude
Winters,
Rio
Grande. OH Call 740-2 455t21.
.

r.

1995 Model 11 10 Ford
New Holland Tractor. 4
wheel drive, 17 HP Diesel
only 995 Hrs. Hydrostat
transmission, 3 Pt. hitch ,
turt tires, very nice cond .
$3,950.00. 740-41 6-0918.

Pi:Is
roRSALE

2 black CKC Lab pups
born-12124/05. All fema le,
wormed twice.· $25/each
FOr more information call
(740)256-6374;
9 month male AKC
creamed Pomeranian for
sale $250. House tra ined.
good with kids. (740)388-

8309.

.AKC Pomerar1iar1 pups.
had
1st
shols
and
wormed.
$350
each.

UVENIOCK

1

7yr old 'p art Quarter horse,
part Arabian g.elding. $500
to a good home. (740)2561652.
Angus Bulls, two X-breds,
4 lleilers. EKcellent breed·
lng. Slate Run Farm. See
www .slaterunlarm .com,
(740)286-5395 .
sa le : Boer Club
~ata . Born in January,
very . lrmited
number.
Champion bloodlines on
botll s'ides. PrCiessional
breeder. (740)245-048 5
after 6pm.
For

r

HAY&amp;

(740)368-8642.
Black Lab puppy, mala,
AKC , $195. friendly. love's
kids. {740)992-3506

Vf)ry good mixe d haysquare bales. {740)446·
24 t :2 or (740)645-0608.

CKC Sllih Tzu puppies.
Two female, one . male ,
$450/each . Paper trained,
ll&lt;'td 2nd shots. (740)388·
'aoo5.
Solid white male Pit ADBA
Reg . CH turtle buster,
llouse broken, 13 weeks .

$500. (740)256-6657.

M!NICAL

INsrRUMENTS

GulbranSen Spinet piano
for sale. Exce llent condi:
lion $550. Al1er 4pm

(740)446-4525.

Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications for .
waiting list tor H ud-su~­
Firewood split and de!iv·
sized. 1- br. apartment.
ered. Call (740)256-9115.
.ca ll 675-6679 EHO

' Publk NuliL~ In N~:~::•~::;;
Yuur Right lo Know, Delivered Rillhl lo

Appraised
at for less than 2fJrds of 001 O:i Prior Deed
$60,000 .00 Terms of ·the appraised value.
References: Volume
sale. Cannot be sold
10% down on day of 153,
Page
33
for less th8n 213rds of
sale, cash or certified
~ppralsad
at
the appraiSed value.
check, balance due $27,500.00 Terms of
10% down on day of on confirmation of . Sale: .Cannot be sold
sale, cash or Certified
sale, The appraisal tor less than 213rda of
Check, balance due did Include a" Interior the appraised value.
on confirmation of
examination of the
10% down on Day of
sale. The appraisal
house. Robert E.
Sale,
Cash
or
did not include an . Beegle, Meigs County Certified
Check,
interior examination
Shariff. Attorney lor Balance
due
on
.of the house. Robert
the Plaintiff Larner Conflrma~lon of sale.
E. Beegle, Meigs
The appraisal did not
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss,
County
Sheriff. P.O.
Box
5480,
Include an Interior·
Attorney
for
the
Cincinnati, DH 45201- examination of the
Plaintiff Stephen D. 5480, 513-241·3100
hous8.'
Robert E.
Miles,
1.8
W (2) 8, 15, 22
~eegle, Meigs County
· Monument
Ave,
Sheriff. Attorney for
Dayton, Oh 45402 ·
the Plaintiff Lerner
(2) 8, 15,22
Public Notice
Samplon 6 Rothfuss,
PO
Box
5480
Sheriff Sale
Cincinnati,
Ohio
Case
Number 45201-5480, 5t3-24tPublic Notice
3t00 '
05CV083
.Sheriff Sale
Wells Fargo Bank NA
(2) 8, 15, 22
Number
Case
Plaintiff VS
05CV074
Darrel T Young et at
ABN AMRD Mortgage
Defendants
Public Notice
Court' of Common
Group
Plaintiff
Pleas. Meigs CountY. Sprlilg cleanup of
VS
Rutland
Township
Ohio.
Michael
&amp; Cindy
Cemeteries will begin
In . pursuance of an
Conley at al defen- order of sale to me on March 15, 2006 . All
dlre.cted from said
dants
decorations will ·be
Cou'r t of Common
court in the abo've removed by March 15
Pleas, Me'igs County,
entitled action, I will and l,e ft oH until April
Ohio .
expose to sal~ at 7. Anyone who wants
In Pursuance of an
Public Auction on the
to save decorations,
order of sale to me Front $1eps of the are asked to remove
directed from said Meigs County Court them until April 7.
Court in the above
House on Friday, (2) 12, 15, t7
entitled action , 1 will
March t7, 2006 at 10 .
expose to sale at
a.m. of said day, the - - - - - - - Public Auction on the
following described
Public Notice
front steps of The
Real Estate:
Meigs County Court
Situated
in
the Rutland
Township
House
on
Friday, .County of Meigs, Trustees will accept
March 17, 2006 at 10 . Village of Middleport bids tor cemetery
a.m .· of said day, the
and State of Ohio, tomowing contract . for
following described
wit: being Lot No. 83
Miles and Robinson
and 10 feet off the
Real Estate: Situated
Cemeteries for the
In the State of Ohio,
P~~:orth side of Lot N.o.
2006 mowing season.
County of Meigs, and
82, In the . VIllage of . Cemeteriea are to be
in the Townsh i p of
Lower Pomeroy, now mowed .al leaal 10
Lebanon
and
incorporated_into the
times throughout ·the
described as follow s :
VIllage of Middleport, season with special
Being Lot number
Meigs County, Ohio. emphasis on .holl·
eight (8). of New
Also , · the Easterly
days. Blda must ·blt
.Portland, as the same
one-Half of that par~ received by the town·
Is numbered and
lion of the Alley ship by 4 pm on
delineated upon the
which Is contiguous Monday, March 6, to
recored plat thereof,
wilh the Weaterly the Rutland Township
Recorder's
Office , boundary
Of
the
Trustaea, PO Bo~ 326,
Meigs County, Ohio . above--described Real Rutland , DH 45775 :
Parcel Number: 07·
Estate . Subject to , Bide must · Include. a
00554 .000. Current
Water Line Easement. copy of liability InsurSubject to all Legal ance coverage with
owner: Michael &amp;
. Cindy Conley et at
Highways
and Rutland
Township
Property at 54435
Easements
of
named as an addl·
New Portland Ad , Record. Commonly tiona! Insured and
Portland, Ohio 45776.
known as : 181 -Beech two (2) references.
PP* 07· 00554 Prlo
Street Pasrcel No. 15~
Rutland
Township
Deed
References:
00103.000
Currant reserves the right to
Volume 322, Page 437
owner:
Darrel
T.
reject any afld all
App raise d
ai
Young at al181 Beech
bids.
S't reet
Middleport, (2) t2, IS, l7
SSO,OOO.OO terms of
sale: Cannot be sold
Ohio 45760 PPt 15-

3 miles, west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

FOKSALE

2004 ChevY Traflblaze r
4WD w/tow pkg. ·Kelly
'B1uebooks @ $2 2, 000.
many eKtras 10,500 miles.
. excellent condition , gara~
kept. $17,900 (304)675-

f

Black 1994 Ford F150,
5.8l, short bed , great con ~
dition, $3,500 , (740)3677245.

·r

VANS

~

FOR SALE

Handicap automatic wheel
chair lift. t ransportat ion
van (1991 ), excellent condition . Asking $3,500. Ph.
740)367-7264

1999 Harley Davidson
Ultra Classic. Loaded.
Excellent
condition ,
29,000 total miles, Pric·e
$13.500
Call 740-94922 17 until? pm.

roRSALE

j7508()ATS &amp; MOTORSI

'(.·!)
·..'
.

16

t987 Plymouth Sundance.
Good condition, $900. Call
(740}441-7390 .

1997 . Horne t 2311. 5th
wheel , '!"lair, awn1ng, se lf contained , light weight,

1999 Okls Eighty-Eight
LS.
W ell
maintained ,
loaded , newef tires. exc61lent condition , 127K miles.
asking $4,000. (740)245·
5934.

'

(301 )675- t 643

Varis size Tires like new.
Will put on for $25. eacll.

CAMrER'i &amp;
Maroa Ho~IDJ

I

2002 Dodge Stratus R!T
V6 , sunroof, remote entry,
leather, power everything,
garage kept , red , 24k.

$9 ,400. (740)379-2748.
2002 SUiuki LX7 4K4, PW,
PL. CD. 80,000 · (mostly
highway) miles. $9 ,500
OBO. Celt# (740)208-0495
81 Malibu Classic mostty·
redone. nice Car. too mucll
to list. Asking $3,000
(740)379-9297.
.96 Buick LeSabre 97.000
mi., needs bOdy work and
radiator, new tires, bat1 ery,
brakes and rotorS. $1.500

080. (740)446-9632.
97 Buick L.esabre Limited
t 26.000 miles. EKcellent
condition
$4.000
{304)895-3340

· 97 Ford EKplorer XL.T '!VII~
trac control, V6 , fully
loaded, 4x4. red . $4 ,500.
Call (7 40)446-0350.

~..15

L

TRUCK~
FOil SALE

I

1989 Dodge Dually 2WD,
· Cummins Turbo Diesel.
New baneries . Runs excellent, · 133,000
miles
$5,0Q0. (740),446 -3413
1994 Dodge Ram SLT,
2WD, 318 Magnum V8 ;
automatlt:,
long
bed.
155,000 miles. Runs greal.
Asking
$3,300
080.
Leave
message
at
1740)441 - 9~78 .

1999 GMC wl eJC tended
cab. loaded. 305 engtne.
auto transmissi on , 67,000
m•les good clean , solid
truck , excellent condition ,
$8,500. 1740)44t - t 0 t4 .
2001 4dr V-6 Dakota automattc . 90 ,000· miles. 4WD.
$8.500. (740)339-1620
2001 Dodge ' Ra m truck
2500 SLT HeaV"y Duly,
springs: camper spectal,
fO-p!y tires. $7,500. Call

Ed (7 40)367-0624.
C h ~ vy Colorado Ex;t Cab

'05. Auto, 2WD. Wl bedlin9r
excellent oonditton Kelly
Blue BoOk $ 14 ,600, w1H
Sell tor $13,600 {304)523·

11 79

f~ANF ANt&gt; i!lNEST

~~f~IGE~ATEP

Licensed Home Builder

(740) 992-0496

GOMPANI~S

,~FOil~ (0MIN6

TO US.

.,

A "COAT OF

~·

MANY (00L~IlS"{ i

BARNEY
HOLD ON, SNUFF"f-SUMPIN' ·AIN'T RIGHT
I CAN FEEL TH' HAIRS

IT'S THAT TURRIBLE HAIRCUT
ELVINEY GIVE YA !!

YO'RE RIGHT,
LUI&lt;EY, SUMPIN'S

SNORELY

STANDIN' UP

WRONG .••

ON TH' BACK
OF MY
NECK

lady Kay's Has Re-opened!
by &amp; check nut our new additions to our

··

~~~ ',Wins t\11t"su&amp; 4~1&gt;m wilh. hot()enla;~Je; ·
o:irfginai.~F.Ii&lt;l,y•-. Stealcnite Sta,.4 pm
·. 1

NO-ll'S ot-1~ OF ""'I

...,,~~~Bil!Ck'jingPs 'phil~ st~•ijl!.!-1'1

' ". A!l'l'.:unh!!r!fer made .tresb not f ro•en f

Sit,.r :·u\J'
''f:l~ky 4'R'il":

rr:'?;~~ S~O\IE.LS, ..

9~ Columbus Rd. ·

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

7411-949-2217

MOVED

SEARLS TOWING
(formerly Marathon Service ·
Center, Pomeroy)

has moved to
39515 Bradbury Rd .,
Middleport, OH
&amp; 750 Pike St. ,
Hartford, WV
Call (740) 992-1393

Gun Shoot
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Friday, February 17th
..
6pm
.

12 Gauge Buckshot

680 Bo~e
Everyone Welcome
MASON CO. YOUTH
SOCCER REGISTRATION

Open to Meigs co.
Pomeroy Library
Feb. 16th and 23rd
6 pm- 8 pm
open to boys/girls .5-18
Contact 304-593-1

Slm's•xto'
&lt; toto·~· ·
~-~::t ·* '
\i

Hour$
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

FOR A VERY RE ...SOIII ·
ABLE FEE, I C AN
HELP You ACQUIRE
.T HE TOOLS YoU NEED

97 Beech Street
Middleport OH

10x1QxiOxlO
992-3194.
or 992-6635

Saturday, Feb. 18
9:15am- 12:30 pm
PPMS Gym
Sponsored by

Willa's Bible
Bookstore
. 304-675-5833

TO WIN AT THE GAME
O F LIFE!

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTRICTIOII
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671

PEANUTS
JJ.lAT LITTLE RED
&gt;IAIRED GIRL 15 AT
THE 000~ ---

Stop &amp; Compare.

S~E

SAYS ·SJ.lE FORGOT TO
GIVE '(OLI A VALENTINE SO
SJ.IE CAME Bl' TO GIVE
IT TO VOl! NOW ...

.. OR FEBRUARV OR.
MARD-I OR W~ATEVER

APRIL FOOL!!

"Middleport's only
Self-51orage"

'l "All 'I) pes Of ·' ·

SUNSHINE CLUB

Wotk· ,,
~.

26 Years E:tt: perience

AJ.J&gt; SO
ISMfRV

Dav.id Lewis
740-992-6971
'

tJ(jFF110

t'n!'&gt; llreiil
Fr~Cl' E~ti ma t e,.-

-Economy Beef $7.35
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.10
-Whole/Shell Corn $6.45/Bag
-Cracked Corn $7 .45/Bag
-Soybean Meal S13.25/Bag
-Shade River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?
Rf

GARFIELD

TRIM TREES &amp;

(740) 992-0472

I

•

J

I
'-------..------' I

'

7 N • Pomerov, Ohio 45769
740-985-383i

Will r ul &amp; rrnmH lrrt'li or
wiiii'IJI int 1~ tire.,., nod .

I

DONOf
DISfURB I

Complete Tree Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand St.
Gallipolis , OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.
Owner
'Insured · Free Est.

BAUM LUMBER

'tJW WA5 IT W"" ~\9 'il\E tiEII&lt;'5 ~1-lALL

·

~~ur~m

I"E

Scorpion Tractors

tA&gt;ml "

··rqkittg The Stiu g Out qr

·7

Hard Work." ' .
Mid -Site -! Whe el Dn ve Trac lor
w itl1 30hl' &amp; -! Ohp Kuhola Eng ines

BAUM LUMBER
St.

Kl.

124

Chester

9115-3301

.1,

DONOf
Dl5fURB

~~D--lj.____ _ _.____
GRIZZWELLS

Now A\·a ilahle At

DOT

40 Stat
formally
42 Cook in oil
43 Heat unit
44 NFL atats
46 Pral~e
animal
49 Drumor'a
goals
53 . Slratchod
to 1ee
54 Eye par1
55 Farmer,
In spring
t3 Fe1chea
56 PoiHo chops t 8 On the go
t9 Root
DOWN
vegetable
20 a..thovln'•
1 Cry
Third
ol discovery 22 Drawing
2 Whoala
23 Whol ''*&gt;"
3 Previously
~
4 Wllh
24 Affair
compe'lence 25 Prim
5 Rhlnoploaty 28 -soda
12 wda.)
30 Arapaho
a Pond
foo
growth
34 Acid
,7 Pamplona
. In vinegar
runner
35 Retriever
8 Have debts 40 Make
9 After t1xe1
a remark
10 MSreaders 41 Hlrod
t2 Abolish
a lawyer

43 Rover's
-.rd
45 Drl«&lt;-up
46 Vocclno
amta.
47 G.l_,
corgo
46 S-.e off

couree

50 Fi,_. ,..,.
In 8dvk:e
51 Grin!
opprovol
52 Airline 10
S1ockholm

by Lujs Campos

c~ ~ cr')'IJI09fwns are ereate&lt;l frQm qJOiations tlf rarro.Js people , Pllll..:l ~­
EICft 1e11er on fie d~ ltlrds tor another

Today's clue: BBqtJB/s C

" FAlX

GIBN

ED

VVAYGY. "

"" L!iY

MAS

P XE C H Y l

AWGF

DEW

IWNEWC ."

ED

YGPYXl

FAI

lXYAL

A ' C A·W W Y G G
LA

PY

MJPPRXC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Love is an act ol endless forgiveness , a tender
look which becomes a habit." - .Peter Ustinov

~~i:t~~' S©R~N\.-lGt-~sc

:::

l.il•al Ly CLJ.Y l . POUAN -.:...--,----

~e~rOf'ge le11t rs ol
0 fovr
scrombltd ...,ord1

....,.,..........,,........

th• 1"'~

be

lew to form for.rr slmp 1, wordt

TAURUS (April 20-May '20) - Tcd~~y is
an excel lent day to finalize to yotJr satista clion so me sticky maners you've bMn
unable .to senle . This time you won'f leave
any loose ends hanging tha t'l l give you
trouble.
GEMINI (May 21 -JtJ ne 20) ~ That
c pporltJnity you've been looking for may
present itself today and enable you to dis ClJSS Wltf1 a tr~end a delicate ml!itte• that
needs clearing up. Be prepared to say
.wf1at's neces sary.
CANCER (Ju ne 2 1-J uty 22) SotTteone who thinks a great deal of yotJ
bu t usually doesn'1 show it might make it
po ssible today for yotJ Ia acqtJire someth ing you've bean wanting lor a long lime .
Be sure to show gratitude.
LEO (J uly 23-Aug. 22) ~ It might take a
wf1ole lot ol determ i~at ion . blJt if you g1ve
It your all today, you will ba able IO substantially advance a pe rsonal mteresl that
on J.y yoll r::an make a reality.
VIRGO {Aug . 23-Sept 22) - There are
~
a number cf tJ ndertylng ways .in whkh yotJ
' 8
' can advance your ma teria l int erest s Ieday.
YotJ won 't have to do anyth1ng undtlrhandij_
ed , but yolJ'd be wise 1(.1 do your th mQquietly
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0c t. 23 1 - Eltecltve.
tenaciotJs melhods are needed to bring
something tor which yotJ 've been hoping
. mto a reality Ieday. Bul it yotJ believe in
yotJrset! and are wilt1ng tc be persiSient.
you can do it
·
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Ncv 22) -One ol
yo ur greate st assets ha s 11lways been
bein g able to' take a lew ingredients and
trar1slorm them into so meth1ng grand. It
appears that you will use th iS gilt. in two
separate areas today.
SAGITIAA IUS (N ov 23-Dec. 2t ) - An
· old and trusted trtend wh o has not been
am tJ nd lcr some 11me may reenter yotJr life
tqday, ll nqr 1ri pe r5on it may be' tf1rctJ'jlh a
ccmmlJI'Itc alion at soril e kind. It 11 take you
back a lew years.
CAPRI COR N {Dec 22-Jan . 19) ~ Jomt
ventures can wor ~ oul qui18 W€ 11 for you
tod ay: as long as ltiose w1th whom you
___;__J
team lJP can contnbute a.s much kno w!·
ed ljle cr means as VOIJ can or, maybe.
even more

I

NAN :Hu o

-I I' I' I I
L UQI '
T

I I 1I
3

!asked
why
he always seemed happy. He
replied, happily, "I never

G L UF N 1

I I I I'

~!ss a chruKe for a go~~s:·

1--rSriC_:.;,RrE'-T-U-'DT--ll

1 I I I I ()ro."
5

.

_

.

.

.

.

C.

on: p lere

t~e cbu&amp;le

qu'lted

b.~· ! dlin g il\ t he miu•no words
a eve!op !rom Sfe-~ No. 3 belo..,. ,

8 PRIN T NUMBHfD l fTT!RS IN
T ~! SE SQU~I[S

t) UNSCI.WSl [

MOVE t[lfERS

TO (&gt;£! ANSWER

·

.·

SCRAMLI!TS ANSWI!RS

2114.'06

OITcr - Knave - Gimlel - MA.RKET
The inventor wa~ having trouble scUing his new
idea. He thinks, no matter how silly, a product
·will always find a MARKET.
Locket -

ARLO &amp; JANIS

=-------------...J

L

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 Sl

39 H blnnod

2

l

Pu-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

There could be a large shift in cooditicns ·
in the year ahead that yotJ'II lind .qtJite
appealing and beneficial. You are not likely tc be the' one wl1o brings them about.
but it'll take know-how to take advantage
of what is dropped into your lap.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - It may
be your tat in life to be the person who settles a serious decision that he$ others up
in arms. You 'll lake it in st ride and let past
elCpe rience artd know ledge gp'lern }lour
decision. '
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) - ~hOuld
' testy· conditions prevail in an araa. th at
affects y&lt;&gt;ur work or career. yotJ'II be up tc
the task of f1andling them welL Actually
yatJ'II be in your £tiement in overco ming
these obstac les
ARIES (Marcf1 2 1-April 19)- A good
friend wl']o always seems to be there for
yotJ when yotJ need him cr her the mos1
won 't let yctJ dawn again today_Tt11s person will step onto thtl stage rigf1t on your

'".

II

( "0\SI"Rl &lt;I HI\
Concrete Removal ·.:
and Replacement , ,

George Bernard Shaw wrote. DSeH-sacrifice enabjes us to sacr ifice other people
wi1hout blushing.~
You meet someone wllo will give you two
dollars every time yOt.J give tlim one dollar. Assum ing he is not passing you counterleit bill s, you will happily play tl1at
game forever. In brictge, you sho uld be
happy to sacrifice one trick if it produces
m.ore than one originally unattainable
trick in return
With that absurdl y generous hint, tiow'
would you · try to land th ree no-trump in
this deal? Wast !eads the spade ~ueen.
·Note South's rebid . Two diamonds would
have shown 12-14 points, and three dla·
monds 15-17 points. Whh more, 18·20,
South does not want to rebid four diamonds, beca,use that would be beyon.d
three no-trump. So, he rebids tllree notrump to show tllis lland type. The single ton lleart is not unusual; ·the lack of a lull
c lub slopper is.
You would like to reac h durilmy's th ree
lleart winners, but how do you get the re?
You do not have ti me to play on c; lllbS.
The opponeills would get three spades
and two clubs. Instead . !ocHo: fondly on the
diamond 10. Alter winning the first trick
and unblocking the heart ace." continue
with the diamond jack. II East plays low,
you win two spades. one heart and six
diamonds. If he takes the trick with hi s
diamond queen and returns a spade, you
collect two spades, fou r hearts and live
diamonds.
Ooes it cost to cash the diamond ace
before leadi ng the jack? 'Yes! ·East win s
with the diamond queen and returns a
spade , killing your communication . You
can no, longer run botll red suits.

By S.rnlce Bede Oaol

Athens

'··Concrete

Pass

4nowor to Prtvi&lt;Hio

- Bexttr

Thursday, Feb. 1&amp;: 2006

1.1 \\IS

LAWN WORK

VBS
WORKSHOP

IMPORTS ·

Cll'\("1{1

East
Pafis
Pass

~~!e,

BIG NATE

1114/ 1 mo. pd

MUlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

Pass

Nortb

~Astro-

., Hul)p'

9109 or (740144 1-7632.

TI-\E. 1-\I&gt;..NDLE. 50\\""'I
WI-\ILE I 1-llo.:';&gt;
5!\1)\JE.I:..ING
TI-lt. SNOW I

Tfl.O::£ C.~E.I&gt;..P

;

195 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH
740-992-1622

$6.000 080. (740)245-

,.

One sacrifice is
worth three

If (AiltFUL !NITti MS. SMYTtlfJ"
/
FUll. J"tlt Tlll~l&gt; ~IX · OTI-tt~
.. ~.;...

Fv~
Sio~AGf

\~

2000 Neon 89k $3,995;
t999 Avenger 68k $4 ,995;
199!:1 Saturn 109k $3,495.
Small &amp; f ull size Tru cks,
Vans. Blazers, and other
Cars in stock . 3 months,
3,000 Mile Warranty. Cook
Molora, 328 Jackson Pike,
(740}446-0t03.
2002 Dodge Neon. auto,
air. 49,000 miles, $3,600
080. (740)256-1233.

'

... THE
NEWSPAn.-nl
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

·4 Tires lor sate P265.75R-

r

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• New Homes • Additions
.• Remodeling

S(op

Pass

Opening lead: • Q

as well as yo ur old favorites
HOmemade dessens • Breakfast served all day
• Daily lunch spcai uls

.

(304)773-5004

.3NT

menu

roRSA1.E

1978 Lasall e Canipar 28ft.
1995 Kawasaki Super
Sport Jet Ski.1995 Seadoo
Bombardier Jet Ski.with
double i:railer &amp; ~lorage
box .
Priced to sell AslS.
Galt Amy yarter @ 740·
446-98d0.

I t

740.446.9200 :

$500! Police Impounds!
Cars !rom $500. For li stinQs 800·391 -52.27 ext.

3901

~S?u~!&amp;.4

Soulb . West

w-ww:tlmber«Hkca blaet:ry.eom

NOMArrER
WI-/AT Ynii.PI
STYLE. ..

J 10 8

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Owner

(740)446-

A K 2
A

t AKj875

·Har4wood Cabine~ry And Furniture

99 Harley Fat Boy, 9,400
miles, lots ol C.hrome and
eKtras. (740)446-9954.

L

South

•

WATERPROOFING

CARMICHAEL

• 9 6 4 3
• . 9863
• Q ..

olo A 6
·.
•

740-843-5264
wv

Chuck Wolfe

2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson
500 ATV with 34 miles.

East

• 6
... K94

GI.T-iT-DONE
All Types Home Repain
25 yrs. Experience.
Free Estimates ,
24 Emergency Service.
(304)675-3733 or
(304)593-0129

40 MomRcva.ESI
4 WHEELF.RS

West
. QJ 1087
• 7 54 2

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
·Medicare S"P· • Cancer • Accident

BASEMENT
Unconditional'
lifetime
guarantee.. Local rerer•
ences
furnished .
Established 1975. Call 24
Hrs. (740) 446-0870,
· Rogers
Basement
Waterproofing.

PT-35 CMT small outboard
tilt &amp; trim

Aurns

HOME

IMPROVEII1ENI'S

MONTY

45760 .

992-5682
riO

4x4
FOR SA!£

~~·

02·15-otl

• K Q J .10
• 10 3 2
. Q 75 3 2

inal1tcial Services

I

'

North
• 5

Insurance

Box 189
Auto &amp; Truck
I ~;!_~~Middleport, OH
• · Repair·

SUVs

EQU IPMEN T.
24 12.

For sale 5JC5 round bales
of hey. Call (740)446-9n7.

ROGER H't'SELL
GARAGE

:;:=:;;;:==~

$4900.

GRAIN

)

Ieider

1 VIII-•
8 Mokt
rettHutlon
11 Port cltv
13 Looktd
hippy
14 Familiar
lhrlll
(2 wda.)
15 While
heron•
18 Slangy
afflrmltlve
17 Chlneoe
"w•y" ·
18 Put sway
21 "The Body"'
Ventura
23 Babysltlor'a
bene
26 Mongrel
27 Acorn
dro26 Brlghl
objecl
29 Hot water
31 spumanta
32 Monogram
pt
·
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Page' B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

NASCAR to begin
policing bump drafting
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)- track.
In · response to comments from
"It's a serious matter," Pemberton
Nextel Cup champion Tony Stewart said~ "To leave it in our hands whe.n
that somebody could get hurt or we're not out there, they may get a
·
killed at Daytona hllernatio~al call they didn't bargain for. "
Speedway if changes aren't made,
Two-time Daytona 500· winner
oflicials will begin policing the high- Michael Waltrip. said the new policy
speed bumping that has become could be a problem.
"That 's going .to be really arbitrary
commonnlace on NASCAR's biggest
tracks.
. to police because even the most subTwo days after Stewart said "bump lime bump drafts at a time when a
drafting" .- slamming into the rear guy's getting ready to make a move
of another car to maintain mon1en- in another direction can result in
tum - is out of control at Daytona, sending a guy out of control,"
NASCAR said that spotters will be Waltrip said. " It seems to me it
placed in zones" in the turns on the would have to result in a crash before
2.5-mile oval track. They will feed (NASCAR) could react.
information to NASCAR. which will
"If you bump draft going straight
then ·determine whether to penalize really hard, that 's OK. You have to
the drivers during Thursday's twin know the other 'guy is going to con150-mile qualifying races and tinue in a straight line. Even if you ·
Sunday's Daytona 500.
bar~ly bump draft him. it would .
Bump drafting is common at cause a crash if he' s starting to make
Daytona and Talladega, the only two a move."
NASCAR tracks that require carbuDarby said N ASCAR is going to
retor restricto(-plates to sap horse- try to work with the competitors on
power and keep speeds- -down. But the situation.
"Every bump draft will .not create a
Stewart was particularly upset and
vocal after a wild ride in Sunday penalty," Darby said. "Every time a
night's Budweiser Shootout exhibi- car touches ·another car will not cretion.
ate a penalty. Unle$S it becomes very
NASCAR officials quickly came to apparent 'to us that there is an unnecthe conclusion that something need- essa ry hit, specifically in one of the ·
ed to be done.
no zones, we will not issue a penalRobin Pemberton, vice president of ty."
competition, and Nextel Cup director
Darby not.ed that bump drafting in
John .Darby outlined a pl'an Tuesday and o( itse lf is not an offense.
to begin policing the bump drafting.
"ft can enhance the excitement of
"As we go forward in attempting to the race," he said. "As it transfers to
control bump drafting in those areas. stock cars, and particularly applies to
there's going to be some very subjec- Daytona and Talladega, with the cars
tive calls being made," Darby said. running closer together, _a bump draft
"That's the reason we 'd like to get at the right time in the right place is
this under way as quickly as possi- not the worst thing in the world. But
ble .... Hopefully we don't have to it has been turning bump drafting
make a call. But if we do make acall into slam. drafting because the hits
in the twins. it wouldn't be quite as just keep getting harde.r and harder
. painful as having to make it in the and harder." ·
Daytona 500."
. .
Pemberton said having ,officials
Pemberton said penalties for police bump drafting is not a longoverzealous bumping could range term solution.
from driving through the pit lane at
"There are a number of things that
. the pit road speed limit to being can be done," he said. "But we have .
to do it right and make sure that
parked for repeat otTenses.
He said it will be up to the drivers whatever ·the fix is, the cars are at
to keep from getting into trouble on least as safe as they are n(lw." .

Gretzky
fromPageBl
be run by one of assistant
coaches
and · longtime
friends , Rick Tocchet.
·
"Quite frankly, this . is the
last time I'm going to talk
about it," said Gretzky, the
NHL's all-time scoring
leader
and
arguably
Canada's most revered citizen. "I've stood ·forward
each and every day, and I' II
talk hockey all day long, take
any quesiions about the

.hockey team or the Olympic
games. But, quite frankly, it's
over and done with .."
Gretzky was accompanied
· to Turin by wife Janet Jones,
who is alleged to have placed
bets with the gambling ring.
Also making the trip was
Gretzky's fl\ther. Walter, who
darted around. the press conference room looking for a
gpod vantage point as his son
talked.
Not that the elder Gretzky
heard anything different Gretzky repeated much of
what he said at . a pre- ·
Olympics news conference
Monday
in
suburban

Hughes
from Page Bl
Ferry said both surgeries
were necessary and no one in
the organization is secondguessing whether Hughes
should have waited unfil the
offseason.
"He could have run into
complications that would
have affected his use of that

Surge
from PageHl'
Haggerty, who didn't
score in the first quarter.
hit a pair of threes and also
nailed two short jumpers. in
the second to ·help Galli a
Academy open up an eight
point halftime lead, 24-16.
H~ s second trey came at the
buzzer, as. he hit a 30-footer on the run.
A Morrow 3-pointer was
the only River Valley field
goal during the second
eight minutes, but the
Si.lver and Bl ack responded
out of halftime with a I 0-2
run. to pull even
at 25
.
ap1ece.
But Haggerty spuck
agam from deep. He· connected on two · more treys.
sa ndwich ed between ·a
Cordell score 'in the po st.
to give hi s club a 32-38
advantage .
Gallia
Academy's Alex Kyger and ·
Scot Ward traded old fa shioned 3-point plllys and the
score stood 35 -3 1 entering
·
the fourth .
Henry made a three ,
which pulled the Raiders to
within one, to sta rt the

hand going forward." Ferry
said.
Hughes has had a variety of
injuries in his NBA career.
·including a broken right
thumb and left wrist, a
Sprained right ankle and a
strained right shoulder.
Before he broke his linger, he .
had missed 97 games in the
last live seasons and hasn't
played a complete season
since 1999-2000.
Hughes ' injury will .be a

Wednesday, February 15. 2006

'

Redick ~ets NCAA career 3-point record
DURHAM. N.C. (AP) - J.J.
Redick set up the screen perfectly
and lost his defender in the process.
The short pass was perfect, and he
caught it, turned and launched yet
another 3-pointer. . ·
It swished through, as his
jumpers often do, but this one was
spec ial. It made Redick the
NCAA's new career 3-point leader.
"It's a special night. to set a
national record is very neat and I'm
proud," he said.
The Duke senior moved to the
top of the list with four 3s on his
way to 33 points, helping the secand-ranked Blue Devils run away
from Wake Forest 93-70 Tuesday
night to remain undefeated in the
Atlantic Coast Conference. .
"I'll never be able to eompletely
shed the label of just being a shooter, and that's fine with me," Redick
said. ''It doesn't stop me from
AP photo
working on my game and trying to Duke's J.J. 'Redick acknowledges
get better."
the crowd after being presented
In other Top 25 games, it was: with the game ball after breaking
No . 3 Memphis 80, Southern the NCAA three-point career high
Mississippi 41; No. 6 Texas 90. record during this college basketBaylor 63; Seton Hall 71 , No. II ball game against Wake Forest on
· West Virginia 64; and No. 18 Iowa · Tuesday in Durham , N.C.
66, No. 16 Michigan State 54. ·
Freshman Josh McRoberts had said. "When he's shooting the ball
12 of .his 16 points' in the first half like that, it's not really technique or
and Shelden Williams also scored none of that stuff. It all has to· do
16 for Duke (24-1, 12-0 ACC), with contidence and his confidence
which is in. position to rechiim the is through the roof right now."
No: I. ranking in The Associated
Redick totaled at least 3Q points
. Press poll .next week following for the fourth straight game, setting
Connecticut's loss to Villanova on a new school record:
Monday night.
"I've never had anybody who
'Tv,e tried not to focus on the had so many 30-point games,"
records, I've tried to focus on what buke coach Mike Krzyzewski said.
our team's doing," he said. "We're "We're not always looking for him.
having a heck of a season as a team, We're trying to be balanced. He's
and that's been a lot of fun to be a just an incredible player."
Even better, Redick passed
part of."
The Demon Deacons (13-12, ~- Virginia's Bryant Stith for fourth
I 0) lost their seventh 'conference on the ACC career scoring list, and·
game in a row. Justin Gray led he remained on pace to pass Dickie
them with 18 points, while Eric Hemric at the top of the list.
Williams finished with .17 points Hemric had 2,587 for Wake Forest,
· and 13 rebounds.
and Redick now trails him by 60
Redick got two 3-pointers in the points with five games remaining
frrst 12 1/2 minutes to pass the in the regular season.
mark previously i)eld by Virginia's
The Blue Devils led by 14 at the
Curtis Staples. who had413 from break .before Wake Forest briefly
1994-98. Redick added twci more rallied. A tip-in by Kevin Swinton
and .now has 416:
made it 54-43 before Duke
Staples was in attendance ·and responded with a 12-2 run - compresented.RediCk, With a game ball pleted with a layup from Redick in .a ceremony following the game. and the Deacons never recovered.
"It's his confiilence level," Gray . "You know. I've pretty inu~h got

that's exactly what they
Toronto .
There, Gretzky repeiued he e~pep of thems~Ive s and
did not place any wagers · we 're all going to move for·
with any betting ring and ward."
there was no reason for him
However, Gretzky's link to
to leave his job witb the the.gambling ring has taken a
Olymp!c team. Canada's visible toll. He looked weary
players have fully supported following an overnight flight
him, and several said the from Toronto, and he
investigation 'will not be a acknowledged the gambling
distraction as they try to questions are wearing on
repeat as gold medalists.
hi!Jl.
.
"We're thinking about
"It's been a hard week for
what athletes have to think my family and the only focu s
about: and focus on the job at I have right now is this hockhand," Canada coach Pat ey team," Gretzky said.
Quinn said. "They have .to
But while he looked nerput things aside,and. whatev- . vous and fidgeted during
er that distractipn may be, Monday's news conference,
factor in the team's decisionmaking as the trading deadline approaches Feb. 23, ·
Ferry said.
Guard Sasha Pavlovic has
struggled recently starting in
Hughes' place, scoring just
four points and committing
four fouls in 18 minutes during Monday night's win
against San Antonio.
However. guard Stephen
· Graham, recently signed to a.
10-day contract, has played

through the part of feeling sorry for
myself and ·soriy for lhe team."
Eric Williams 'said. 'The only thing
we can do now is keep fighting.
We've got to play it game by game.
That's all we can do."
·· No.3 Memphis 80,
Southern Mississippi 41
Rodney Carney scored 15 points
and Kareem Cooper had 13 points
and 13 rebounds m host Memphis'
12th straight victory.
Dari us Washington and Shawne
Williams had II points each for the
Tigers (23-2. 9-0 Conference
USA), who led 34-10 at the half.
Courtney Beasley scored 15
points for Southern Mississippi (8·
17, 2-8).
No.6 Texas 90, Baylor 63
LaM arcus Aldridge had 23 points
and 12 rebounds in Texas' rout of
visiting Baylor.
·
;
P.J. Tucker added 2.1 points and
Brad Buckman had 12 points and
II boards for the Longhorns (22-3,
10-1 Big 12), who are off to thei~
best start in conference play. ·
Aaron Bruce scored 15 points to
lead Baylor (2·9, 2-9), which ha&gt;
lost 17 in a row against Texas.
. Seton Ha1171, .
No. ll West Virginia 64
At East Rutherford, N.J., Kelly
Whitney had 21 points and 12
rebounds to help Seton Hall bolmce
ba~k from a 42-point loss to topranked Connecticut.
Brian Laing added a. career-high
19 R&lt;Jints for tlie Pirates (16-7. 7-4
Big East), who had won six straight
before the 99-57 loss to
Connecticut last Saturday.
Kevin Pittsnpgle had 24 points
for the Mountaineers (18-6, 9-2),
who had won four of five.
No. Hi Iowa 66,
No. 16 Michigan State 54
Greg Brunner scored 15 points
and grabbed I 0 rebounds. Jeff .
Horner added 15 points and six
assists and Iowa picked up its fifth
straight win over a ranked opponent.
·
The Hawkeycs (20-6, 9-3 Big
Ten) set a school record with their
16th consecutive win at CarverHawkeye Arena, and are now a full
game ahead of' Ohio State in the
standings:
. .Paul Davis led Michi gan State
(18-7. 6·5) with 17 points and 11
rebounds.

he was more Gretzky-like in
Turin, taJI.;ing more forcefully - determined his own
problems won't spill over to
his Team Canada. ·
"The concern is to worry
about playing hockey. The
concern is for these athletes
... everybody who's part of
this is excited," Gretzky said .
Oretzky became linked to
the gambling ring when a
New Jersey state trooper,
another New Jersey man and
Tocchet were charged with
runninjl a nationwide sports
gambling operation. State
police said wagers exoeeded
$1.7 million in the five

;;11 l' E NTS • \' ol. :;:; , No. 1:10

• 0' Brien wins
lawsuit against OSU.
SeePage 81

BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Raymond Fowler, n
• Jackie Wamsley, 60

INSIDE
• Bush visits Qbio to
boost state Republicans,
push health savings
accounts. See Page A2
• Civil War workshop
offered. See Page A3
• Family Medicine.
See Page A3
• OU·COM to provide
screenings in Pomeroy.
See Page A3

"S tr~ngthening .
Ohio's
leadership in the research,
development and deployment
of new clean coal technologies is paramount to our success as a state and as 'the
fourth-largest industrial energy user · in the nation."
Stewart said . "Through this
legislation and through the
continued efforts of the legislature in bringing FutureGen
to Ohio, we will work to sup. port a major and . valuable
resource of Ohio."
. Stewart sa id Substitute
House Bill 440 was brought
to his attention by the Ohio

Editorials
Obituanes
Places to go
Sports
Weather

12 PAGES

A3
B3-4
Bs

A3
A4

As
B6

B Section

A6

Air Quality Development
Authority. It expands the
definition of an approved
"air quality facility" , in
Ohio to include any coal
re search and development
project conducted under the
Coa l
Res earch
and
·
Development Law.
"Through this simple revision of an air quality facility
definition by the OAQDA.
Ohio has an increased
chance in bringing the
FutureGen project and its
positfve economic and environmental impacts to Ohio."
Stewart said.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

'
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Village Council approved
an inde111nity agreement
With Jaymar, Inc. at its regular meeiing this week in
regards to the dumping of
dirt from the bridge construction · onto property
along West Main Street that
may someday be a new
entrance into Monkey Rim.
Mayor John Musser said
that the property where the
dumping is currently taking
place is owned by Jaymar, Inc .
whose president is Jay Hall . .
By signing the indemnity
agreement the village takes
on the responsibility for
where the dirt is placed.
Musser said he recently met
with representatives from
Jaymar, Inc. who said at this
time the company has the
.Pie•n IH Coundl, AS

CH~RLENE HoEFUCH ·
HOEFLICH®MYOAilYSENTINEL. COM

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

wnl ilwl .&lt;'""'

Middleport Pool
to open with
admission hikes

Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo

Courtney Sim and JoAnn Crisp, active for several years in Meigs County's Relay for Life, plan a
survivors recognition dinner sponsored by the American Cancer SocietY.

cancer survivor recognition dinner planned
STAFF REPORT

'

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

all

POMEROY- "It's about our survivors.
They're our reasop to Relay." · said Meigs
County Relay for Life co-chairperson JoAnn
Crisp in announcing the upcoming Meigs
County Cancer Survivor Appreciation Dinner.
.The dinner will be held at 5:30 p.m. on
March 17 at the Middleport Church of Christ
· Family Life Center. The recognition is being
sponsored by the American Cancer Society
(ACS) (Southeast Ohio Office - 74-375464) as a reinvestment of local Relay funds
into the community.

Meigs Board
of Education
sells old buses.

© 20o6 OhiO Val,ley Publi§hing ~o.

I

vying for the state.of-the-art River site for the plant, hopresearch facility. .
ing Meigs County 's proximiThe FutureGen Project, the ty to Ohio University will
product of a partnership attract the plant here. Three
between the U.S. Department sites in Athens County are
of Energy and a coalition of also being proposed as potensome of the largest electric tial locations. Other proposed
utilities and coal companies Ohio sites include a four.in the Uniled States, will coun,ty area near Canton. and
· demonstrate advanced coal- a site promoted by Clermont
based technologies that allow and Hamilton Counties.
companies to generate elec- . Officials e.xpect the U.S.
tricity in a more environmen- · Department of Energy to
tally friendly manner. than select a "short lise' of potenprevious methods.
tial sites by mid-year. Once
. Athens and Meigs County operational, the·prototype will
ofticials joined togeiher a be the cleanest fossil fuel fired
year ago to promote an Ohio power plant in the world.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Bv

2 SECI10NS -

Nledlall £Kallence.
LocalCaring:

" " " . Ill\ da il~

:! OO h

Council
approves_
indemnity
agreement

INDEX

HOLZER
CLINIC

REED

COLUMBUS
Legislation passed . by the
·Ohio House and designed to
attract the FutureGen project
to Meigs County or another
.Ohio site, will now go to the
state Senate for approval .
State Rep. Jimmy . Stewart,
R-Aibany, said the Ohio
House
unanimously
approved a measure designed
.to attract the new, .zero-emission, clean coal power plant
to Ohio. There are 20 sites
across ·t.he United States

Detallt on Pale A6

Close.to You

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

\

Advanced Technology

J'lll ' KS II \ ' • H . Ill{ l · \I{' 1h .

FutureGen legislation passes from House to Senate

SPORTS

WEATIIER

The Area•s Most Comprehensive Medical
Imaging MRI is Now Available

'New Directions
in Art,' B6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

weeks le.ading to the Super
Bowl. and were mostly on
·pro football. Authorities said
Tocchet. Gretzky's longtime
friend, financed the ring.
Charges came following a
six-week police investigation
called Operation Slap Shot.
The ring allegedly was
patronized hy NHL players,
but there is no evidence any
bet on hockey games.
Gretzky's wife , a film
actress,
hasn 't
been
charged, but she is expected
to be subpoenaed to .. te stify,
before a grand jury investigating gambling activity,
attorneys said.

well off the bench and had
eight points and five
rebounds against the Spurs . .
. At 30-21, the Cavaliers
have the third best record in
the Eastern Conference. Ferry
believes the team's current
makeup is good enough for
them to reach the postseason
for the first time since !'998.
"I believe that this is a playoff team," Ferry said. "The
guys in the . locker room
expect that as well."

fourth quarter. But a four Division III sec tional p.m. Wednesday at Lo,gan
minut~
scor in g drought semifinal. The Blue Devil s Middle School . against .
followed,
and. Gallia take to the tourney trail 8 Fairfield Union.
Academy took advantage ..
Ha gge rty and Robin son
made fa st break layups off
Shawn
stea ls · · and
Thompson made a jumper
to give the Devil s· a 41-34
lead. ·
Corde.ll made a I 0-foot
jumper at the 3: I 0 mark,
but that was the final River
Valley field goa l as
Gallipoli s finished the
game on a 9-1 run to win
by a comfortable margin .
Chris McCoy sco red 2 I
points for Gallia Academy
in the junior varsi ty gam'e,
which the Blue Devil s won
5 1c42. David Rumley
added 12 for the winners.
Sean S~nds ~ nd Ryan
Eggleton led the Raide rs
with 17 and i5 respecti vely ..
Both · teams have one
tune-up left before sec tion al tournaments begin nex t
week. River Valley is at
Rock Hill on Friday · and
Gallia Academy play; host
to cross- rive·r rival Point
Pleasant Saturday.
The Raiders face Oak
Hill fi: 15 p.m. on Tuesday
at Athe1is Hi gh School in a

Holzer Clinic
plans ambulatory
surgery center, A6

It is being coordinated by a Meigs County
ACS Taskforce .sub-committee consisting of
.ACS representative Leigh Anne Hehr and Crisp.
Ferman and Rae Moore and Court!ley Sim.
The event, whiGh will feature a St. Patrick
Day's theme, is free to all Meigs County cancer
survivors/patients and their guests. A buffetstyle meal will be caterec! by Hometown
Market and entertainment will be by the French
City Barbershop Chorus of which Gerald
Powell and Gerald Kelly of Pomeroy are. a pan.
ACS Patient Navigator Coleen Krub l, who
serves Meigs County, will provide informaPie•se see Dinner. AS

MIDDLEPORT - · The
Village of Middleport has
begun to .make plans for the ·
summer season at General
Hart.in ger Park and the
Middleport Pool. which will
open on · Memorial Day
weekend.
At Monday's regular meeting
of Middlepon Village .Couneil.
Councilman Jeff Peckham,
chairman of the recreation com. minee. discussed plans for the
park and pool. and some
changes in the pool's operations
for the upcoming season.
Peckham said · some minor
repairs are needed at the pool,
including plumbing repitit;s.
Admission fees and pool
party rental fees will increase
thi s year. Peckham said. from
$2 fo r students and $3 for
adults t.o $3 and $5. respectivelv. Passes will cost $50
for an individual and $1 ()()
for a family pa&gt;S.
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker
. said lhe pool cost the village
$42.&lt;XXl to .operate IN year.
Despite a succe&gt;Sful &gt;eawn and
good attendance figures, the
village &gt;till helped finance the
pool operation from the general fund . Bal&lt;er sad the pool generated 525.300 from daily
admission and pass fees. concession revenues and rental
cos.ts. swimming lesson fees,
and nearly $6.000 in donations,
Plu~e see Pool, AS

Racine to be featured in
Ohio EPA training video

POMEROY - Bids on
four of the six vehicles advertised for sale by the Meigs
Local School District have
BY BETH SERGENT
been accepted by the Board
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
of Education.
Accepted were · Walter
RACINE· Members of the Ohio Environmental
Laudermilt's bids of $1,250
Protection
Agency
(EPA) were in Racine yesterday
each
for
two
1990
International buses desig- filming interviews with members of the village's
nated as 3 and 4; Shannon Source Water Prote.ction Team to be featured in a
Spaun's bid of $301 for the training video to assist other ,Ohio communities in
1992 International com- developing a plan to protect their drinking water.
·Racine is one of only a handful of com munities in
modity bus , and Richard
Southeastem
Ohio and the frrst in Meigs .County to
Feuy:s bid of $380 for .the
1997 Ford Ecorto Van . In develop a source· water protection plan_ These
each instance the highest "plans" fall under a United States EPA funded-program whiCh is voluntary for communities to particibid was accepted.
Rejected were bids of pate in but mandatory for the Ohio EPA to assist
·
$737 .for 1990 International these comm'unities in implementing.
The team'.s job was to identify possible contaminabuses 5 and 15. Action was
taken during a Board meet- tion sources for t)le village's well water and to eduing Tuesday night to read- cate homeowners on the proper disposal of chemicals
vertise for bids on those such as antifreeze. pesticide,s. motor oil , etc.
Pluse sH Video, AS
Pl•ase SH Bo•rd, AS

Debra Prim. Steve
Saines (kneeling) and
Jeff Crisler from the
Ohio Enwonmental
Protection Agency
were in ·Racine yester·
day collecting footage
for a traimng video
that will be distributed
across Ohio _The ·
video will be a -how
to " for small communities that w•sh to
implement a source
water protection plan
to protect their 'drinkIng water. Racine is
one of only .a handful
of communities in
Southeastern Oh io to
compiete a source ·
water protection plan.
Beth Sergenl/ l)hoto

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BUFFET IISATURDAY BUFFETIISATURDAY BUFFET!
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