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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

r-cHiN~1&gt;Ns -,r-cHiN~1&gt;NB -,r-c HiNA-&lt;&gt;N8-,

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�NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Page·A2
Thursday, February: t6, 2006

Bush visits Ohio to boost state Republicans, push health savings accounts
Bv DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DUBLIN
President
llush mixed politics witjl his
preseription for what ails the
nation's health care system
on a trip Wednesday to Ohio,
which was a pivotal state in
his re-election and one with ·
_key races in this year's
midterm elections ..:·
· The president made his
case for health savi ngs
accounts
at · Wendy 's
International Inc.. where ·
9,000 employees have signed
up for the accounts ·since the
hamburger giant began offering them last year.
"After more than five years
of health care costs going at
double-digit rates, Wendy 's
overall health care costs rose
only by . 1 percent last year;"
Bush said:
"This has a positive effect
on the individual employee .
It's had a positive effect on
the income statement of the
company. They work."
The visit to Ohio, one of a
series of road trips Bush is
making to underscore themes President Bush speaks at Wendy's International Headquarters, Wednesday, in Dublin.
in his State of the Union
"By anyone's account, this Hobson . and Deborah Pryce.
address, had a political com- helped put Bush over the top
. year is an opportunity for Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio,
ponent too.
. in 2004.
Outgoing
Republican
Gov.
Democrats to try to' take who is in a toss-up race
THe Ohio governor "s race
Bob
Taft
and
two
former
advantage
of a different eli- against Democratic ·Rep.
and about a·half-dozen House
and Senate seats from the · aides have pleaded no contest mate," said John McClelland, Sherrod Brown, was· invited,
state are competitive in this to ethics charges in connec- a spokesman for the Ohio · but had a pr~viously schedyear's election, and whether tion with the investigation of Republican Party. "The uled event. ·
voters stick with Republican a coin dealer and GOP dynamics would be altered if . Brian Rothenberg, commuincumbents could foreshad- fundraiser hired to manage a Democrats were in the gover- nications director for the Ohio
statc investment in rare coins. nor's office. or there was a Democrati_c. Party, said Ohio
ow voter sentiment in 2008.
: Republicans have con- The coin dealer, Tom Noe, Democratic senator, but it's was an odd place for Bush to·
;rolled the Ohio governor's was charged Monday with going to come down to' who push health savings accounts
has ideas. As long as because the state recently has
~ffice. the state legislature embezzling at least $1 miland most statewide elected lion. And Rep. Bob Ney, R- . Democrats are negative, lost more than 200,000 manupositions for more than a Ohio, who is up for re-elec- they're going to come up facturing jobs, w~ich often
have comprehensive medical
:d~&lt;cade.
But Republican tion, faces scrutiny in a wide- short at the ballot box."
insurance
benefits.
ranging
congre
ssional
corBush
was
joined
at
the
jncumbents . running for re"Try telling somebody who
election are trying to avoid ruption investigation symbol- event by , Taft, George V.
fallout from an election-year ized by convicted lobbyist Voinovich, R-Qhio, and is underemployed, or workReps . Pat Tiberi, David ing at Wendy's; that they
·scandal in the state. · which Jack AbramofL

AP Pboto

should put money in a health
. savings account," he said.
"That's not a partisan issue.
That's a practical issue ....
Why he would come to a
place that's bleeding jobs like
Ohio and talk about health
care is beyond me."
· 1n pushing health savings
accounts, Bush said people
will become more responsible shoppers because they ' ll
pay more of the initial costs
of their health care. But
there's a catch:
·
To qualify, a person also
must buy a separate health
insurance policy with a high
deductible. · Such policies
req-uire individuals to pay the

first $1 ,050 in medical expenses a year; families have to·pay
the first $2,100. Some policies
carry higher deductiblcs. .
Bus h · wants to let consumers put enough money in
their health savings accounts
to cover all their health insurance costs. not just the
deductibles, as provided by
·current law. This would allow
.them to set aside more money
.tax, free.
But Democrats argue that
the accounts don't help those
in need. They say it takes
money to pay premiums on
. the high-&lt;.ledul:tible insurance
policie s. and that ti)e working
poor d.o not have extra money
to set aside in the accounts .
"Like the president's misguided Social Security pri vati zation proposal. hi s health
care scheme just helps the
healthy and wealthy. and
leaves the rest of America
behind,"
Sen.
Edward .
Kennedy, D-Mass. , silid.
The Bush admini st ration,
however, says that of the 3 .
million people who have
taken up health sav iitgs
ac,counts, 37 percent were ·
previously uninsured and '40
percent earned less than
$50,000 a year.
Bush also acknowledged
the ·rocky startup of the
Medicare prescription drug
benefit. He pledged to fix
problems that forced dozens
of states to step in to help pay
buy medicine for poor beneficiaries who had trouble getting drugs and were charged
above what they had paid
·under Medicaid.
House
and
Senate
Democrats, meanwhile. plan to .
hold a series of events nationwide next week to discuss the
problems people are facing,
·and present Democrmic proposals to improve the program.

Moussaoui behaves in Bomb kills four·Iraqi children heading to school in Baghdad
court during jury selection
Bv PAUL GARWOOD

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
ASSOOIATED PRESS WRITE.R

ALEXANDRIA. Va. Unexpectedly allowed back
· in court, confessed al-Qaida
conspirator
Zacarias
kept
quiet
Moussaoui
Wednesday as two Muslims
from South Asia and a
Marine Corps lawyer whose .
boss' Pentagon office blew
up on Sept. 1.1 cleared preliminary hurdles to sit on his
sentencing jury.
U.S. District Judge Leonie
Brinkema
had
barred
Moussaoui from jury selection Tuesday ' because he
wouldn't promise to stop giving insult-laden speeches.
Brinkema did not explain
her change of mind in court,
but she had said the day
before that she might reconsider if Moussaoui decided to .
alter his , behavior. Even
Moussaoui 's court-appointed
defense lawyers did not know
why she changed her mind.
Fifteen of the 24 prospecti.ve ju,rors interviewed
Wednesday were qualified for
service - three over defense
objections and one over government protest. Identified
only by number, they were
ordered to return March· 6
when lawyers will exercise
or unexperemptory plained - strikes to whittle
the pool to 12 jurors and six
alternates. More potential
jurors will be selected
between now and March 6.
· The jury will. decide
whether the 37-year-old
Frenchman of Moroccan
descent, who pleaded guilty
lilst April to conspiring with
al-Qaida to fly planes into
U.S. buildings, is executed or
imprisoned for life .
.
The 15 included three who
ex pressed deep concerns
about imposing a death penal·
ty and two who expressed
support for the principle of
"an eye for an eye.·• All said
they could follow the law
despite these views.
Nine pot~ntial jurors were
dismissed. Most were sent
home eit her because they
could not impose a death sen·
tence under any circumstance
or because a trial that might
last until the end of May
would pose financial hardship. One man , who ·served in
the Air Force during the
Vietnam war, was !lismissed
because he .knew so meone
who was killed in the Sept.
II. 200 l . attack on the
Penta,gon

. Clad in a white . knit cap
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A
and green prison jump stitt bomb exploded in Baghdad
with "prisoner" in white on Wednesday, killing three
block letters on the back, girls and a boy on their way
Moussaoui arrived through a to school as violence targeted
side door without warning all walks of life in the capital.
moments after the proceed- Nearly 20 people were killed
ing came to order. .He craned in car bombings and shoothis neck to scan the prospec-· ings elsewhere.
tive jurors' faces and intently
With the bloodshed showwatched them answer indi- ing no sign of abating, politividual questions.
. cians 'held protracted talks
Moussaoui kept silent over formation of a new govexcept wheri Brinkema asked ernment; which the U.S.
him if he would delay his mid- hopes will help stamp out the
day prayer from '12:30 p.m. insurgency by encouraging
until the I p.m. lunch break.
Sunni Arabs and Shiites to
"No, I'm going to pray," work together.
Moussaoui replied. But the
But new images aired qn
morning session concluded Australia's .
Special
before his appointed prayer Broadcasting Service of Iraqi
time anyway.
prisoners being abused and
His only other remarks sexually humiliate.d . at Abu
were barely audible to a few Ghraib prison in 2003 threatspectators sitting near the ened to fan the violence.
side door: . "God curse
"Bringing up these issl)es is
America," he muttered twice only going to ·add to heat to
as he left court for breaks.
an already fragile situation in
Brinkema qualified a Iraq and they don't help anyMuslim woman , originally body at all," said Labeed
from Pakistan, and a Muslim Abbawi, an adviser to the
man, born in
Kabul, foreign minister. "What Iraq
Afghanistan, after each said needs at this moment is calm,
their origin and religion butthese ·images, which have
would have no bearing on already been dealt with . and
their deliberations. She also seen people punished, will
qualified a woman who had only worsen the violent
worked as a secretary for the atmosphere."
CIA in the 1960s and for the
Meanwhile, a U.S. general
Drug
Enforcement said American forces had
Administration
in found the first evidence of a
Afghanistan in the 1970s.
death squad operating in
The three potential jurors . Iraq's Interior Ministry, the
who survived defense objec- Chicago Tribune reported on
tions included a female its Web site Wednesday
·
lawyer in the Marine Corps evening.
general counsel's office who .. Maj . Gen. Josepli Peterson,
said her boss ' office blew up who commands the civilian
in al-Qaida's attack on the police training teams in Iraq,
Pentagon though he was not said U.S. forces last month
injured. She told Brinkema found 22 me'n wearing police
she wasn't worried about commando unifonns who were
how her boss and co-workers about to shoot a Sunni man.
would react if she did not
The men were employed
·impose a death penalty.
by the Ministry of Interior as
Defense attorney Gerald highway patrol . officers,
Zerkin argued: "That 's a pret- Peterson told the Tribune.
ty close tie to events in the
The oodles of Sunni Arabs,
case .... I don't see how bound and gagged and shot in
someone like that can be fair the head, have been turning
no matter what they say." up in Baghdad for mo~th s,
Noting that the woman had fueling .allegations of sectari·
worked both as a prosecutor an killings. which Sunni Arab
and a defense attorney in her leaders , ay often are carried
career. Brinkema responded: out by Shiites in army or
"The fact that her boss' office pol ice unifo rms.
was blown up is not a su ffi The children killed · in the
. ciei11 con nectio n to this case." · bombing the bustlmg Fadel
A white-haired man with neighborhood were between
30 years of active and reserve 10 .and 14 years old and
duty fot the Navy, including included two ·daughters and a
time at the Pentagon. also son of Jamil Mohammed, a
survived defen~e objections. vendor in a nearby public
He sa id he knew a contractor market.
working in the building near
''We are poor ' ,people ~ho
the crash 1ite on Sept. I I.
· ha ve nothing to do with poli I'

tics," the father sobbed at the
police station. "We only wanted to live a decent life. What
is .the guilt of my dead children? They were only heading
to school. Now I am left with
only two children. This is a
disaster tor my family."
The bomb exploded near a
camera shop that also sells ·
alcohol, police Lt. Ali Mittab
said. The target was unclear,
but Islamic extremists often
attack stores that sell alcohol or
DVDs deemed pornographic.
The discovery of the death
squad came almost by chance
when an Iraqi army checkpoint in northern Baghdad
stopped the men in late
January and asked what they
were doing. They told checkpoint officials the truth~ saying they were · taking the
Sunni man away to be killed,
Peterson said.
.
Four of th€ men, believed
to be the rin gleaders , are .
being held at the U.S . detention facility at Abu Ghraib,
Peterson told the Tribune .
The 18 others, who were
like-ly following orders, are in
an Iraqi jail. The Sunni man,
who is accused of murder, is
also in Iraqi custody.
_ Gen. Hussein Ali Kamal, a

top official in the Interior
Ministry, told the Tribune that
a committee has been appointed to investigate the ca'le.
Many of the attacks
Wednesday appeared directed at Iraqi police, which the
United States hopes can take
over some security responsibilities so foreign Jroops can
withdraw: But civilians were
caught in the carnage, lOO.
A parked car bomb hit a
police patrol .in northern
Baghdad, killing four officers·
and wounding two civilians.
police said. And gunmen firing froni two cars killed a
police captain and his driver,
also· a policeman , in southwestern Baghdad.
Another car bomb killed
two civilians near J3aghdap's
University of Techn.ology and
wounded five other people,
including three policemen.
Gunmen elsewhere shot
and killed a blacksmith at his
Sadiyah workshop. a man
who opened his door in the
southern Dora neighborhood
and a civilian driving in the
western Ghazaliyah district.
An ex-member of Saddam
Hussein ' s former ruling
Baath Party was killed in a
drive-by . shoo!ing in the

northern city of Mosul.
Police also found a man
who had been shot in the·
. head left iri his car in Taji ,
north of Baghdad. The bodies
of live other men were found
shot in the head and dumped
near a Shiite nei~hborhood of
western Baghdad. apparently
victims of sectarian killin~ s.
U.S . soldiers, meanwhile .
killed five insurgenis within
24 hours. including one in a
shootout south of Baghdad
early Wednesday. the military said. ·'

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Th.e Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public ·meetings

celebrate its 200th anniver- League, yearly organizational
sary at 7 p.m. Special singing . meeting. I p.m.. Racine
by
Gospel
BIuegrass Legion Hall.
Thursday, Feb. 16
Gentlemen,
Hester
ad Henry
SALEM CENTER -Star
SYRACUSE
- Meigs Eblin
and
others. Grange #778 Fun Night and
County board of MRDD, 4 Refreshments. Display· on
potluck, 6:30 p.m .. followed
p.m. Carl~ton School.
church 'history planned.
by degree team practice and
, Thesday, Feb. 21
'fun
night.
. ·
RACINE
Racine
Monday,
Feb. 20
Village Council. 7. p.m.,
POMEROY Special
recessed session , Racine
of
Middleport
Lodge
meeting
Municipal Building.
363,
F&amp;AM
fo
r
entered
·
Wednesday, Feb. 22
Thursday, Feb. 16
aprentice practice and return
CHES HIR E - Board of
RACINE Pomeroy- of fellowcrafl examination.
Directors of· Gallia-Meigs Racine Lodge 164, F&amp;AM. ·
Refreshments.
Commu ni\Y Action Agency, 7:30p.m. regular meeting.
Thursday, Feb. 23
noon, Cheshire office.
RACINE - Ohio River · RACINE
- American
Producers, regular meeting, 7 Legion Auxiliary Post 602
p.m., Southern Vo-Ag room . regular meeting, 7 p.m. New
POMEROY - Meigs High members welcome.
School
class of 1986 reunion
Thursday, Feb .. l6
RUTLAN~
- Rutland planning session, 6:30 p:m. at
Youth League~ 7 p.m. at the the Wild Horse Cafe.
Friday, Feb. -17
Rutland Fire House. Anyone
Friday, Feb. 17
RACINE
Annual
interested in coaching ball to
POMEROY
- Cora Mae
inspection of Pomeroyattend.
.
Smith
will
be
84
on Feb. 17.
Racine Lodge 165, F&amp;AM.
Dinner 6:30 at United Cards may be sent to her at
Rocksprings
Methodist Church followed the
Rehabilitadtion
Center,
by inspection in fellow craft
Saturday, Feb. 18 ·
Rciom
136,
36759
degree at lodge hall.
CHESHIRE -Old Kyger
Rocksprings Road, P01:neroy,
Saturday, Feb. 111
Free Will Baptist Churc)l will
RACINE - Racine ·Youth Ohio 45769.

Clubs and ·
organizations

Youth events

Birthdays

Church events

TOPS honors top weight losers
COOLVILLE
Kim winners
were:
Roberta "A BC 's of Heart Healthy
Allen and Amy Ritchie were Henderson . perfect · atten- Eating" from the TOPS magnamed weekly best weight- dance; Dottie Bond, Penny azine and "50 Snacks Under
loss winners at Tuesday's Brooks, Buchanan. Joan I00 Calories." Connie Rankin
meeting of TOPS (Take Off Cole, Sharon Powell, Connie shared "TOPS Rededication."
PounJs Sensibly) Chapter Rankin and Pat Snedden,
The group meets every ·
'exercise· charts;
Bond, Tuesday at Torch Baptist
#OH 2013. Coolville.
There were 18 members Buchanan, Cole, and Powell, Church. Weigh-in is from
present. Allen and Doris food charts.
5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
Buchanan were recognized
New officers will be elected meeting at 6:30. For informafor their six-week straight at the ftrst meeting in March. tion, ,call . Snedden at 662weight-loss. January monthly Leader Pat Snedden shared 2633 or attend a free meeting.

OU-COM to provide screenings in Pomeroy
POMEROY - Breast and Department, 112 ):: Memorial 844-2654 for an appointment.
Provided as a community
cervical canl:er screenings and Drive. Poineroy.
education will be provided by
Pap tests. pel vic and breast serv ice · by
the
Ohio·
College
of
the Ohio University College examinations. breast health University
Medicine's
of Osteopathic Med icine's education, and referrals for Osteopathic
Service
(OU -COM I
Community n1amrnograms will be provid- Community
Service Program on Tuesday ed by appointment to unin- Programs. the Breast and .
. sured and underinsured . Cervical Cancer Projects of
March 28, 9 a:m. to 3 p.m.
Southeast Ohio, and the
The clinic will be held on women: ,
the Community Service · Appointments are required. Columbus affiliate of the
Mobile Health Van parked at Interested persons should call Susan G. Komen Breast
the Meigs c;ounty Health · 593-2432 or toll free at 1-800- Cancer Foundation .

· Sun. CLOSED

Family Medici-l!e® is a
weekly column. · To submit
questiom, write to Martha A.
Simpson, · D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio University College of
Osleoputhic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athe11s, Ohio
45101, or via e-mail to reade rqu estion s @familymedicinmews.org. Medical infor·
mation in this column is provided as U/1 educational ser·
·vice only. It does. not replace
tire judgment of your personal physician, who should
be relied on to diag11ose and
recommend treatment for
any medical conditions. Past'
columiiS are available online
at
www.fmnilymedicinellews.org.

Ciyil War workshop offered

Registration

Hi storical

Pre'\entation~

indud~ :

SL"huvkr Cone on clothing
'raslii(m,: Lit. Golowcnski on
period clothing and underpin . nings: Bobbie Reed. Body
Type tp Pattern, Fabrics to

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Sal. Xam • .\pm

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· to the table. I always leave a
generous tip for these
servers who go oul of their
way to make our evening aQ
enjoyable one. BEEN
AND
BACK,
THERE
Dear
EVERETT, WASH .
.
Abby
ABBY:
Your
DEAR
advice
to
'Torn
in
Framingham" was good. but
please go one step further
and advise family members.
Alzheimer's Association . T'he caretakers and other associtoll-free number is (8'00) 272- ates of dementia sufferers to
contact the Alzheimer'&gt;
3900. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: "Torn in Association and ask for the
Framingham, Mass." should book "The 36- Hour Day." It
hring her mother's . inappro- is filled with helpful suggespriate displays to the atten- tions and advice.
My oldest sister died
tion of the 'woman's physician . As a board-certified · recently at 79 after a I 0-yeargeriatrician. I oftel) see. fami- battle with Alzheimer's. and
lies with similar problems. my youngest sister ha s
Many of these disruptive recently been diagnosed with
behaviors can be controlled it. I have recommended this ·
with the proper medi cation or book to many people . Those
other forms of therapeutic who took the time to read it
find it very helpful. ·intervention.
Being the caregiver for an HORACE IN SPRING.
Alzheimer's patient can be a FIELD, OHIO
stress-filled, 24-hour-a-dav
Dear Abby is · written by
job. Help is available. and the Abigail Van Buren, also
assistance and compassionate known as jeanne Plrlllips,
understanding of profession-· and was founded b)· her
als can keep the Alzheimer's mother, ·Pauline Phillips.
patient a loving part of the Write
Dear Abby at
family. - ARTHUR EFROS, www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
M.D. , WEST BLOOM- Box 69440, Los Angeles, ('A
90069.
.
FIELD, MICH . .
DEAR ABBY: My husband , normally a very gentle
person , has Alzheimer 's.
When V(e are going out to
eat, I always call the restaurant and inform them of his
condition. I ask if there is a
time when they are riot busy.
and request' a table in the far
corner. In this way, I avoid
what could be ~n unpleasant.
situation for both the server
and my dear husband. I have
found if they know aheadiof ·
time, they will make every
effort to accommodate us. I
have even had servers
accompany him to the
restroom and bring him back

·,
~·-\' '

\ ' i'

prompt medical attention if
any of the following are true:
You have more than three
headaches a week or need
pain relievers al!lJOSt daily.
Your headache is accompanied by signs of illness, like
feve(, dizziness , slurred
speech. stiff neck or mental
confu sion. Your headache is
assoc i~ted with loss of phys- '
ical function or decreased
level' of consciousness. You
have a persistent headache
after a head injury. Your
headac he keeps getting
worse and won't go away.
You· re over 50 and are bothered by more frequent
headaches or have your
·•fi rst
and/or
worst"
headache of your Iife.

Question: Could you tell assessing a headache, espeme abou t how to tell when a cially in a hospital emerhead&lt;lche is a serious one'' . gency department.
,
A friend of ·mine. who is a
Here are so me of · the-se
nmse. 'told me tha.t the se are red flags:
called
secondary
• The worst headache of a
headaches. What causes person's life or the first tm~or
them and what should peo- headache ever.
ple watch out fo r?
• A headache that's accomA!.tswer: Headache· is one panied by double vision, dim·
of the . il)ost common com- · . vision. fever, pain in or
plaints that people seek med- behind the eye, one-sided
ical attention for. About 90 weakness .or disorientation.
percent of these headaches
• In a person that has a hisare what doctors call primary tory . of headaches. a
headaches. This mean s that headache that is decidedly .
ihe headache itsel f is the mal- different front his or her typ,
ady that is affecting the per- ical pattern.
• Headaches that awaken a
son. Primary headaches
incl ude migraines, tension person from sleep.
headaches
and
cluster
• An atypical headache that
headaches. ·
·
is associated with vomiting,
The remaining I0 percent sensiti vity to light and sound,
of headaches fall into the cat- especially after head trauma.
egory we call secondary
Some of the underlying
of
secondary
headaches. l n these cases, causes
the headac he is not the ill - headaches are hrain tumors.
ness, but is a symf)t01n of an infection · in the central ner-·
underlying medical problem. vous system , head trauma, as
Often thi s underl ying illness well as metabolic illnesses
can be a very serious medica.! such a~ diabetes. carbon
\'Ondition:
.
..
. monoxide poisoning , and
\'(hen a physician sees a kidney failure.
patient with a heiJdache. it is
Bleeding into the cranium
imperative that a· proper his- from an. aneurysm or other
tory and physical be done so vascular malformat.ion can
that the type of headache can cause secondary headaches.
be determined . Since m·ost Temporal arteritis. a condi·
patients with . a · l1eadac he tion that untreated can cause
· have a n('lrmal neurological loss of vision . is a fairly coit1·
exam. the history can be the mon cause of secondary
major key to determining the headache in older people .type of headache. There are "Also. substance ahuse should
seve ral "red flag s" that a always be considered.
physrcian looks for when
Finally. you should seek

Civil War Period Clothing
:md Cultural Workshop t'ro m
I0 a,m. to .J p.m. on March .J
:it Mcig&gt; High School.
at Cumpcth•e Prkl'S

DEAR .ABBY: "ToJn in
Framingham, Mass." wrote
thai her mother suffers from
an Alzheimer 's-like dementia. Her personality has
changed from polite . and
socially correct to losing the
checks and balances that pre- ·
vent her from saying whatever comes to mind. She went
on to ·say that her mother
sometimes ac!s up in public
places - like restaurants and asked how (D explain the
situation to the restaurant
staff without embarrassing
her mother.
I work as a server in an
upscale restaurant. As a party'
was being led to my section
recently, a woman from the
party left the others and
handed me a business card.
She smiled and asked me to
read it before .coming to the
table. I went to the server station and did so. It was printed
with information about her
spouse having Alzheimer's. It
was tasteful and informative .
Most important, 'she did not
have to say anything in front
of her husband that might
upset him. I thought it was a
great idea. I shared the card
with · our hostess · and the
cashier so that no misunderstanding could occur there,
NANCY IN
either.
HUNTSVILLE. ALA. DEAR NANCY: How kind
of you to write. Since that
letter appeared, I have
rece'ived mail from readers
coast to coast telling me that
cards such . as the one you
were handed are available
th'rough the Alzheimer's
Association. Typically they
read: "Tbe person with me
has
a disease called
Alzheimer's or a related disease. Please be kind and
understanding. Th.ank you."
Readers, if there isn't a
chapter of the Alzheimer 's
Association in your community, ·contact the National

.

C he ~ ter/S hade

HOURS
Mon - frl8am • 8pm
·Sot. Sam- 5pm

Dining with Alzheimer spatient
takes some advance planning

Secondary
headaches require medical attention
.

A\\Ociat ion ~ill sponsor a

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Thursday, February t6, 2006

FAMILY MEDICINE

POMEROY

c.trw Fonou

BYTHEBEND

PageA3

Patterns: · Boh White . on
stringed instruments of th era:
Rev. Allen Blackwood on
edged \vcaponry : · Owen
Blackwood on period toy &gt;
and , afct y i"ues: Arch Rose
on stt,,rytelling: ·and a prt:\L'II taiion by tile F:rhric Shop on
period fabric s.
The cost of' ~7 rrKI.utb a
luncheon. In formation "
avai lable
froin · Jeanie
Ridenour at 985-332H .. ·

deadline nears
RIO GRANDE - Feh. 28
is the deadline for Alli~d
He alth applications for fall at
Rill Grande Co mmunit y
College. Allied Health appli- ·
cation; cover radiologic technology. diagnostic mcdiL·a l
'onography and respiratmy
therapy programs .
·
lnforn)ation is' available at
2-15· 7~06.

WtiJht l.ou""' elltlbtitlted

pettOid t~ ~ date..To btllet

CompRI!eiiliWI Weipt l.blll .
you or alo\ltll oae ~like
.......... ......,.-oteout'tfrttiiOII.er
pl- a;ll:
.. J4C).446.SUS. ~
,.

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

~ursday,Februaryt6,2oo6

Thursday, February 16, 200~_

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing C6.

' .

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establi5hment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerCise thereof; or abridging the freedom .
o..f speech, or of the press; or tl1e right of the
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READER'S

VIEW
.

Fadors.
Bias not one-sided
Dear Editor.'
In 'O'Re ill y·, Feb. 12 co lumn. he suggests that the media,
speci fically the New York Times. gives Arabs a pass while
free ly offending Christians. Baloney. You could examine the
Times morgue and other media outlets and see over the years
a s uper-abundan~c of negative'Arab stereotypes.
There's one reason for media hostility toward Christianity
that 0 ' Reil ly dare not mention. When one considers what particular ethnic group holds a hammerlock on the media and a
large segment of tlie tllm industry as well (with its associated
"groupthink") things come more readily into focus.
Will O'Reilly ever "Factor This?" Hold not thy breath.
Jeff Fields
Syracuse

TODAY IN HISTORY

..

.

Today is Thursday.·Feb. 16. the 47th day of 2006. There 'are
3 1g days left in the year.
.
.
.
Today' s Highli ght in History :
.
On Feb. 16. 1945. American troops landed on the island of
Corregidor in the Philippines during World. War II.
On this date:
·
In 1804. Lt. Stephen Decatur led a s u cc~ssful raid into
Tripoli Harbor to burn the U.S . Navy fri gate Philadelphia,
whi ch had falle n into the hands of pirate s. ·
.
In 1862, during the Civil War, some 14,000 Confederate
so ldiers surrendered at Fort Donelson, Tenn. (Union Gen .
Ulysses S . Gra nt's .victory earned him the nickname
"Unconditional Surrender Grant.")
In 1868. the Benevo lent and Protective Order of Elks was
organized in New York City.'
·
In 1918. Lithuania proclaimed its independence.
· In 1923, the burial chamber of King Turankhamen's recently unearthed tomb was unsealed in Egypt.
In 1959. Fidel Castro became premier of Cuba after the
overthrow of Fulgencio Batista.
. In 1968. the nation's first 911 emergency telephone system
was inaugurated. in Haleyvi ll e, Ala.
In 1977, Janani Luwum , the Anglican arc hbi shop of
Uganda. and two other men were killed in what Ugandan
authorities said was an automobile accident.
In 1994, at least 217 people were killed when a powerful
earthquake 'shook Indonesia ·s Sumatra island. ·
··
Thought for Today: "There are two ways to slice easily
through life; to believe everythmg .?r to doubt everythinlj.
Both ways save us !rom thmkmg. - Alfred Korzybsk1,
Pol ish-A merican linguist ( 1879- 1950).
.·
.

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Iran, Iraq, ,Hamas make 2006 a crisis year for BushIf diplomacy fails, the
It 's a good thing t,hat
Mohammed
El-Baradei
administration
will be,
President Bu sh has a
said it would be " months"
small -bore domestic agenonce Iran begin s enriching forced to decide whether
da .this year.- beta use the
uranium.
to use military fore~
stakes cou ld not be higher
Morton
Bush clearly has adopt- . against Iran 's nuclear..
in the Middle East.
Kondrack ed a different foreign poli - ·facilities or allow Israe l to .
cy . approach in deali ng use U.S.-s upplied F-16s
This is the year when hi s
policy in Iraq eithe r suee
with ..lran from the o~e that
and bunker-buster bombs
ceeds or fails, with
led to the Iraq war RepUblican co ntrol of
from one dominated. by to do so. The conseCongress and, · possibly,
" neo-con servative s"
to quences could be $ 100-a-. ·
one I ed by " nco-reali sts," barrel oi l. rampant terror- '
.the prospect of impeachment hanging on the out- president,
Mahmoud . as the Wall Street Journal i~ m and a demand from ·
come.
Ahmadinejad, traveled to dubbed them.·
Iraq ' s Shiite-dominated
Thi s is also the . year Syria in January and not
With Secretary of State government that
u.~.
when Iran either is only sealed an alli ance Condoleezza Rice in the · troops leave the country.
stopped 1rom developing with that terrorist-aiding lead, the administration is
Democratic
critks
· multilateral charge that because U.S. ,
· nuclear weapons or SUC" regime , but alSo met with pursuing
~eeds in de mon strating leaders of Hezbt&gt;llah , diplomacy, not unilateral
that the world community, Islamic Jihad and the action, in its efforts to forces are tied down i1h
Iraq . they can't c redibly
· Popular Front for the contarn. Iran.
· ds
ledb y the Ui11te
tates, 1S . Liberation· of Palestine.
thr~a te n Iran' But it's al so
There's no \&gt;iay to know
Remarkably, Rice earlier
utterly feckless. .
And it's the year when a whether worldwide rioting this month got Russia and plau sib le that Bush 's in vaterrorist group , Hamas, over European cartoons China to join the . United sion of lr~q demonstrates
takes over control of the depicting the Prophet States and Europe in refer- U.S. willingness to use
.,.
Palestinian Authority and Mohammed emerged from ring Iran to the United . force when it has to.
Diplomacy would see ni,··
the world, again led by the those .meetings, but there 's Nation s Security Council
United States. decides little doubt that Iran and - the first step toward to be necessary in Iran·~·:
whether to force the tiew Syria encouraged them . impo sing sanctions on Iran case to build a case for
regime toward peace or let The
worst . outbreaks if it persi sts in violating military action, because
it consolidate and prep are occurred in
countries the
Nuclear Iran has not been subject
for war.
where their influence and Nonproliferation Treaty.
)he good news, perhap s, the terrorist apparatus are
After years of .being bat- to the decade of sanctions
is that Bu sh ha s changed strongest: Iran, Lebanon, tered by Democrats for that were applied rei Iraq
foreign. policies in hi s sec- Syria, Afghanistan , Sudan being " unilateral'i st" and prio r to the 2003 in vasion.
In the meantime, lruq
ond term and is now less and Pakistan.
"arrogant" toward allies ,
still
does not have a gov--isolated from other counIf Iran deve.lops nuclear .the administration · got hit
tries . Th~ danger is tha! weapons with radical by . Sen. Hillary Rodham . ernment , in surgent s . are ..
multilateral
diplomacy Islamists at the helm there Clinton (D-N .Y.) for "out- crippling reconstruc tion'·
will bog down and let ene- is every danger that it will .. sourcing" Iran diplomacY: and incidentS of ViO)eiH:e ·;
mie s like Iran cttrry the actually use them against Cll.nton obvwusly .1s run- seem to be rising. White ;
day. It's too much to say Israel _ a country that nrng for president rn 2008 House officials acknowl~ :
that Iran has replaced Iraq Ahmadinejad ha s said b.Y try111g to move . to tbe · edge that developments in
as the central crisis point should be wiped off the n ght of the Bush adm1n1 s;
for the admini stration, · but face of the earth - or .trail on and others 10 her Iraq dominate the public's
attitude toward Bu sh, ere- ,
it has achieved almost employ them to intimidate party.
equal status.
neighbors and deter re.taliThe . . · administration aring gloom even about a .
Th at's because Iran 's atlon for terrorist activities seem s to bdieve that robust economy.
extremist government is or . aggression, or hand diplomac y can bring Iran
Bu sh .has no large
not only defying the world them off to a terrori st to heel. either through the domesti'c initiative s on tap.
community in developing groijp. It's the world 's threat of sanctions or sa ne- for this year such as Soc·ial
nuclear weapon s, ·but is most dire ·nightmare. ,
tion s themselve s. It's Security reform. That 's ..
The Bush administration banking on Iran 's econom- good. Thi s year, hi s presihighly intluential in Iraq,
is allied with Hamas and · is operating on the ic dependency on foreign
will try to undermine. assumption that Iran is investment ) and gasoline den cy is riding on forci gll,
whatever economic pres- still "years" away from import s, its reluctance to policy.
( Marron Kondrac ke is
sure the United .States tries · having deliverable nuclear be internationally isol ated
execurive
editor of Roll
to · bring to force accom- weapons,
although - and the world's willmodation with IsraeL
International
Atomic ingness to actually get Call. ille neivspapa "f ·
Capiro/ Hill.)
Iran 's radical lslami st Energy Agenc y. Director tough on Iran .

.,.

·Will the real conservatives please stand up?

Obituaries

Local Briefs·

Board

Crow, &gt;ixth grade teacher a1
the Middle Schoo l was
accepted effe~ ti ve March I,
·
from
Page
A
1
along with the resignation
using, or use bottled water. ·
of Cindy Slwll "' a substiBoiled or bottled water
buses. The buses being sold tute teacher.
RACIN E - A boil adviso- should be . used for drinking, have been repla~ed by four
Hired on suprlemental
Jvi!DDLEPORT - Jaclde Arnold Wamsley of Middleport
ry has been issued until fur- making ice, brushing teeth, new buses· which arrived in nm trac·ts fo( the 2006 sea·
cxptred ,Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2006, at his residence.
ther notice for residents living washing dishes and food prepa- December.
Jack1e wasborn Nov. 28. 1945, in Mason, W.Va. · .
son' were Tim Dunn . head
H e 1s survived by his son, Timothy (Diane) Wamsley, and on Main Street from Fifth ration until further notice.
A disc ussion was held on Middl e School track coach;
Street east, including Spenc.er Boiling kills bacteria and other deficits in the school cafete- Jo Dunn . a,;istan t Middle
h1s mother, Juantta Wamsley, both of Middleport.
.He was preceded·m death by·his father, Granvel (Jack) Wamsley. Lane, Willow Lane and organisms in the water.
School track coach ; Vince
Raci ne off1cials said that ria programs inc luding how Reiber. a;sistant varsi ty
..He leaves two brothers, Roger and Sam Wamsley and two Walker Alley. Do not drink
to reduce program losses
S l~ter~_. D1x1e (Charlie) Leonard and Margie (John) Skidmore, the water .Without boiling. due to the tie in of a new -line, possi bly
through
and baseball coa~ h ; and Nick
all of Middleport ; three grandchildren: Adam Jenkins, first. BriQg all water to a ·boil, organisms that cause illness increase in the amo unt stu- Detweiller. junior varsity
S~anno':' K1dd and M1chael Davis; a great granddaughter, let it boil for at least one in people may have entered dents pay. It was noted by baseball coach.
Ptper K1dd ; three nephews: Cory, Tyler and Allen Wamsley; minute, and let it cool before into the water supply .
Substitute teachers hired
Marilyn Meier, food servi ce
aryd a n1ece, Joy Church of Columbus.
.
were
Rachae l A. Clark. cos· supervi sor, that there are
Jack1e was owner of Wamsley Trucking of Middleport and
metology;
and Joni L
ported and that one day can- more than twice as many
a \:inor employee of Western Electric of Columbus.
Scott
Fisher,
cer will be eliminated," said students on free and l)anie ls,
Pn vate fu neral services will be.arranged by the family and
Henry
A.
Sanders,
Ill,
Crisp. "Relay empowers can- reduced lunches as pay, and
there will be no calling hours.
'
Steve
;liesenhei
m.
Mary
cer survivors to battle cancer that price increases would
from .Page A1
in their pwn backyard. It affect only abou t a third of Gaus was hired as a substi·the population taking lunch- tu te custodian, and Scott
tion about the program's ser- reassures cancer survivors by es in the cafeteria.
Kell y as a substi tute mainvices arid examples of ways providing a sP.irit of together·Board members generally tenance person .
ness and instJils a knowledge
in which she has helped that survivors/patients are not agreed that the program wi II
Sharon Warner was hired
nunrerotrs Meigs County can- · alone in their fight . .
on
a purchased service conalways operate in the red . It
cer patients navigate their
"ft is the consensus of the was noted by the treasurer tract at the rate of $9. 19 per
cancer journey.
Meigs CountyACS Taskforce that enough money had hour to ·provide assistance to
·MIDDLEPORT -· Raymond Fowle~, 77, Middleport, died
At the event cancer survivors that our cancer survivors been budgeted to cover th e a hand icapped student at
· Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2006, at his residence. Arrangements will have an opportunity to·pre:
School.
Greg
inspire us to live life to the cost not covered by what is Carleton
aro: mcomplete~ ·and will be announced by Fisher Funeral
register
for
the
Relay
for
Life,
McCall
was
emp
loyed
as a
either
reimbursed
by
the
fullest and to cherish friends
H(]nie in Pomeroy. ·
·
which will take place on May and family because·you don't government or paid by the tuto r fur a health- handi 12-13 at the Meigs County know what lies ahead.
students. Breakfasts ·contin- capped student at the rate of
along with Shady Side in Fairgrounds. Cancer survivors
"We appreciate our cancer ue to be served free ·but trea- $20 an hour.
· Belmont County who also are encouraged to RSVP by survivors who have fought this . surer Mark Rhonemus noted
Attend ing the meeting
developed a source water Friday, March 3, by contacting tenible disease and have given that the government-funded were Superintendent William
protection plan.
from PageA1
Sim at 740-992-6626 (work) or us the desire to make a differ- program is "barely breaking Bu cklev. Rhone mu s. and
I
Less than I0 percent of all 740-992-1158 (home).
board · members.
Scott
ehce in the fight against cancer. even .H ·
Ohio
communities
have
"The
ACS
Relay
for
Life.
·We
took
forward
to
a
delightPersonnel
Walton.
Victor
Young,
Roger
!Debra Prim, a local repreDuring the meeting the Abbott. Ron Logan. and
sentallve of the Ohio EPA developed .source water pro- represents the hope that those ful evening of fun , food and
tection
plans.
The
Ohio
EPA
~ho face cancer will be sup- fellowship," 5he concluded.
resignat ion of Pame la L. Norman Humph reys.
wlio assisted Racine in developing the plan S(lid , the vil - has a goal of getting 50 per'
lage wa~ chosen to partici- cent of communities in Oliio
Councilwoman
Mary on both a 1995 and ·1996 Into execu tive sess ion to disto
develop
a
source
water
pate in the ,video because of
inquired
as
to
why police cruiser. Each bid was cuss personnel reasons and
McAngus
the peop le who volunteered protection plan by 2008.
discu&gt;S
four village vehicles had been for $351 a piece and was sub- .,pec ifica lly to
In developing a source water
their time to put the plan
• wrecked in two months and , mitted by Larry Hoffman :
Proffi tt 's actions during the
from PageA1
protection plan the village of
tdj;ether.
inc
iden t Roush brought up.
Pomeroy
.
Chief
no.
one
on
council
had
been
of
Police
•'The people were great and Racine may've increased its
When
the executi l'e session
notifiedry
Two
of
the
accidents
Mark E. Proffitt requested
it's a small town where eligibility for · various grants, intent of donating to the vil- involved police cruisers, a revenue the police depart- ·toncluded Musser announced
as a · Community lage whatever land is needed
e ~eryone knows one anoth- such
third involved a vehicle from ment receives from the state during the meeting's regular
Block Grant.
Oe\lelopment
for the roadway . .
er," Prim said.
&gt;CS&gt; ion thai all parities.
"The people are so consCiThese representatives also · the water department and the for the use of a crui ser at the including
."It shows the power of peocou nci l. Roush a~d
·bridge construction site as
p1e when they' re concerned entious here." "Prim said of indicated that the remaining fourth involved a vehicle
well as copy fee s for accident Proffilt &lt;~greed that Proffitt
al;&gt;oLit an issue," Jeff Crisler the residents, local govern- land will be donated to the from the street department. ·
Each accident has a $500 · reports and llngerprints be . ·'ac ted appropriately and difs;,id of the team' s ability to ment .officials and source Community lmpro·vement
fused what cou ld hme been a
water protection team. "What Corporation (CIC) for JlOssi- deductible from the insurance put into the safety fund to be bad
work to together.
·
si tu ati on." Roush and
used for uniforms.
Crisler is an environmental they'v ~ done with the their ble commercial development. company.
McAngus also inquired as
The state is paying the Proffitt were both in the room
The CIC will pay to have the
specialist for the Ohio EPA park and now the new water
·as was council when Musser
land surveyed. Musser could to how much money was in police department · $ 10 an made hi s an nouncement.
and alon'g . with Prim and plant is.exceptional."
The Racine Source Water only speculate but guessed the the cemetery fund which hour for use of the vehicles.
Ohio EPA Geologist Steve
Protection Team consisted of land in question consists of a · Clerk-Treasurer Kathy Hysel.l Council agreed to put the proS~ine s the tri o . recorded
reported as $39,347.92.
ceeds into the safety fund but
footage for 'the video that will educinors from the Southern total of three acres.
some
McAngus
suggested
Councilman
·Shawn Arnott
Hall and his company are
premiere in two weeks at a Local School District, local
of
this
money
could
be
used
to
said .this should be monitored
village officials and members also furnishing bulldozing
confere nee. in Athens.
put
up
a
back
gate
on
Beech
to make sure the .gasoline
and
compacting
work
as
well
The video will be less than oL the Ohio Rural Water
expense
Grove
Cemetery.
Councilman
for the cruiser does
as the operator, free of charge
a half-hour long and is meant Association.
&amp; .lt EDIC.'L EQUP~tF.~T
not
become
excessive. ·
Jim Sisson asked if the village
.·
The committee is headed by ro the village.
. to encourage other communiHysell reported to Arnott
Bridge contractors CJ could usl» some of the money
ties to organize and develop a Racine Street Commissioner
Home oXygen
that
the money due the vil to
reset
old
headstones
at
the
Porbtble Oxygen
source water protection plan. John Holman who has a copy Mahan are paying to haul the
Nebulizers
dirt to the site also free of cemetery. Musser said the vil- lage from proceeds received
.
Racine will be featured of the plan on file.
charge because i.t was the lage had already reset some of from scrap metal collected by • Electric Beds
• Wheelchairs
the.headstones.
r~e street department and
closest dumping site.
mittee IS now working on
•
Diape rS ·
Council
decided·
to
rake
sold
in
Marietta
was
turned
Nothing has been put into
plans to complete a planned writing in regards to the one
•
Chux
stre.et · department into her office in full.
skateboard facility in the donation of property and it is employee's salary from the
Resident Tom Roush leveled • Medicare/Medicaid
park.
and
will
work
with
volfrom PageA1
We do the
a "gentleman's agreement" at state highway fund instead of a complaint against Proffitt.
. unteers to construct jumps this point.
alleging he used his authOJity .
the general fund.
.
740-446-0007
Council agreed to purchase a to help a fellow friend during
J-je said the committee and and other improve ments in
Musser described Hall as a.
the
area
of
the
tennis
courts
Toll Free 877-669-0007 .
. "very generous person."
chair for the police dispatcher's an incident that involved
Pool Manager Dale Riffle will for skatebmlrders. ·
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Roush's son on Jan. 15.
In other business at this office in the amount of $!39.
pqrsue the possibility of rePlans to build a skateboard week's council meeting :
' m..ntd. lfe care about
The
meet
ing
was
call
ed
.
Council
accepted
two
bids
opening the wading pool this . park within Hartinger Park
sl!inmer, if repairs can be made several years ago never matei[\ time. That .portion . of the rialized. and funds raised by
p&lt;,lfll was closed last summer.
a committee of volunteers
,A special event is planned could be used to build wood•.
for opening weekend at the en jumps for the park,
p9ol a t the end of May, Peckham said.
Pe;ckham said.
Peckham told council the
There are other plans for committee will also look into
1-l_\lrtingcr Park this summer. some minor repairs heeded in
a~ . we ll . The recreation com- the shelter houses in the park.

Jackie Wamsley

Boil advisory

Dinner

Deaths

Raymond Fowler

Video

Council

r;~
OXYGEN

Pool

The longer the Bush
White Hou se pretends that ty agencies who place
the congressional reso lu - th e ir . loya lty to tl1e
administration
remain s
tion giving Bush the Constitut.ion above t.heir..
onstage, the' more it
re se mbles the .Theater of
authority · to use force fealt y to George W. Bush? ·
the Absurd: something by
again st the perpetrators of Would federal
co uru ·
the Italian dramatist Luigi
Sept. II also enables him e'nforce subpoenas ~om-'
Gene
Pirandello , perhaps, the
editors
and · ·
to set aside any law s he pel ling
Lyons
deem s inconvenient and to reporters to te stify about
Frenchman
Eugene
put the U.S Constitution whistleblowers
wh o
Jone sco, or the American
Homer Simpson . Consider
on indefinite hold . And leaked information that
thi s exchange between
that even if Con gress the president was violatSen . Joe · Biden, D-Del. , · wary of U.S. wiretaps, and intended no such thing. in g the FISA law? It see ms
and ·Attorney General to take evasive measures. the pre sident ' s powers as hi g hl y
unlikel.Y the y
Alberto Gonzale s during The New York Times' rev- commander in chief trump would.
re ce nt Senate hearin gs elatipn of NSA's warrant- the Bill of Right s. It 's as
easy
Con trary
to
about
the
National less spying on American tortuou s and in s ide-out an · rhe toric, the Valerie Plame
Sec urity Admini stration 's citizens told the ·enemy argument as it'S possible leak s· in ves ti gat io n pro~ ·
dido 't to imagine - to all intent s vi de s no useful preceden t
uncon stitutional eaves- nothing . they
weak - and purposes establishing It' s about protectin g a ·
already
know
and
dropping on American citened national security not the pre sident as an elected whistleblow er 1
izens.
Gonzales . · repeatedly at all. The only damage military dictator.
Ambassador Joe Wil so11,' .
criticized th e· pre ss fo r ·wa s to the Bush White
Maybe the oddest aspect · froni re tri bution for pointexposing Bush 's "domes'- House 's political interests. of the whole thing is that a in g out that the ad min isGonzales's legal jlistifi- compromi se
tic spying program ," terso lution trat ion had used bogus ·
minology he found objec- ,cations for the spy . pro- would see m available if intelligence about. Iraq.
tionable . Gonzales insist- gram are similarly prepos- the White Hou se really
Is it rea lly AI. Qaeda the
only wanted one. The FISA law White Hou se wants to
ed the stories endangered terous, proving
Ameri can security. Biden something el se we already · now requires that evidence fi ght? Or have domes tic
pronounced him se-lf con- knew: that in exchange for of probable cause be pre- opponents become the
fu se d. He asked the attor- a fancy title and an offi ce sented to the sec ret court preferred enemy ?
ne y general to explain, filled with expensive within three days of estabMea nwhi le, where are
"How has thi s revelation leather furniture, you can li shing a covert wiretap. If lh e conservatives? The
damaged · th e program?" find a mouthpiece to argue that 's too burden some, real
ones, . I
mean .•
Did he . ac tually believe damn ~ e ar anything. They Co ngress would likel y Recen tl y.
form er.
"that these very sophi sti- practically had · to tear amend the law to allow · Republ ican · Rep. Bob
c.ated AI Qaeda folks did- White Hou se lawyers off . two weeks, six months or Bart, &lt;me -time Hou se
n' t think we were inter- Pres ident Ni xo n's leg any thing eve n rem otely impeachment
manage r
cepting thei r phone call s?" · before he embarked upon plausible.
agai nst President Ginto n;
No, Gonzales didn 't that helicopter ride into · Nobody 's against spy ing ·.put thi s quest ion to a ·
th e sun set.
believe ihat.
on AI Qaeda wi'thin the Co nse rvative · · ·Politi ~ a!
At . one point , the attor- law. Nob6dy.
"You would ass ume,"
Action . Committee co nhe conceded "th at the ney general even see med
The Bu sh · ad mini stra- ven ti on near Washington:
e ne my is presuming tha t to suggest that President tion . how ev~r. appears " Do we truly remain a
we ~ re engaged in so me George Washington had hell-bent upon provoking soc· i.e ty th at belie\·e ' th .ti
kind of surve ill ance. But au th orized· · · ele ctronic a COI]Sti tution al confro nta- ... qe ry pre; ident mu·&lt;r
if they 're not rem inded e.avesd ropping , quite a tion . That's the only obvi- abide by the law ur this
about it all the time in the tri ck in 1789. Every his- . ous conclus ion to draw count ry ? I, a&gt; a co nse rvJ.precedent
'he· from what The New York ti ve. say yes . I hope yo11 as
newspapers and in storie s. torical
claimed took pl ace before Times reports is ".a rapidly conservative.s say. yes ." .
th ey sometimes forget. "
Laug hter broke ou t in · Co ngress e nacted the ~ expallding crim iiial invesThe Wa shingt o n Post
Foreign
Intellig ence tigation into the circum - report s that Barr wa s
th e cl)eap seats ..
"We ll. I hope yo u ... are Surveillance .Act in 197 8. stances surrounding ... .(irs greeted by slony silenc e.
right. th at they· re that st u- se tti'ng up a secret cou rt to own) article .published in
(Arka nsas D&lt;' lllucra r-"
pid .and nai ve," Bielen said review wiretapping war, December that di sc losed Ga~erre co lumni st U &lt;' lll!
"beca use· we're mu ch bet- rant s spec ifically to pre- the ex istence of a h1ghly Lyofls is a national ma gnter off if tha t's the case.''
vent the goVernment from c lassified domes tic eaves- : im~ wrard winner an,J n ~·
Alas. th.e CIA ha s long spying , on political dissi- dropping program. "
aurlwr of' "The H11111 i11g oj
dents
as
th
e
FBI
had
done
had. in its possession an 'AI
. Dnes the White Ho use rhe
Pre .' "''' '""
(S t.
Qacda tra ini ng manual under Pre sidenb Johnso n reall y intend a .Polithuro- Ma rrin 's· PreH. 2000). )'o u
from the 1990s warning and Nixon.
sty le purge of iJldividual s can e· mai/ Lyons ar ~f&lt;t&gt; fH':_
In e&gt;sence. the Bush wi thin the national sec uri - /y!&gt;/1.\2@ .\ hcg lob a l.11e1. J •
wou ld -be terrorists to be
.

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Wtdneaday'a games
High school glrla bukelballtournarnent

Local Weather

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The Daily Sentinel

locAL ScOREBOARD

Thursday,Februaryt6,2ooj

Division II - LOgan Mi&lt;k/18 Schoof
Gallla Academy 63. Vinton Counly 46
Athens 40, Jackson 36

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Thursday, Feb. 16 .

City/RegiOn

'Thursday, February 16, 2006

High I Low temps

Cavs outlast Boston in double OT
Youngstown •

some.
W~lly Szcze rbiak scored
17 points and .Oelonte West
added 15 point', I 0 rebounds
and eight a"ists for the
Celtic;.
Zydrunas llgauskas had 14
points for Cleveland, but
missed a pair of free throws
with 7.I seconds remaining
.in regulation that would have
iced the game.
Following llgauskas' misses , Pierce drew .a foul on
James with two-tenths of a
~econd remaining and hit
both free throws to send the
game into overtime.
Cleveland was just 25-of40 from the free-throw line .

57" I 38•

~Ekesk

,•;Dayton• ~
. . . .

LocAL SCHEDULE

•cOlumbus ·
57" 140"

139°

GALLIPOLIS- A schecMe of upcoming COllege
and hi(11 SChool varsity 1porting 8\'eOts Involving
teamalrom Gallia, Meigs and Mason oountlea.
Thurwdly:a Qlmtl

Glrt1 Tournament Baskltbell
River VaHey vs. Huntington (at Wellston
H.S.), 6:15p.m.
SOuthern vs. Trimble (at Athens H.S.). 6:15

p.m.

East~rn \IS. Gr.een (at "'thens H.S.), 8 p.m.

Submmtd ·photo

. Contractors conduct slte preparation work for the planned Holzer Clinic Ambulatory Surgery Center. The center will house three
operating rooms where minor surgical procedures can oe performed.

Holzer Clinic plans ambulatory surgery center
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDA)LYTRI BUN E. COM

GALLIPOLIS Years
ago, gall bladder surgery
meant at least a two or three
day stay in a hos pit~l.
Today, that same procedure.
like countless others, can be
done in more effectively and
with the patient going home
when it is completed.
The increasing number of
procedures that can be performed in that manner. coupled with more and more
demands on scarce operating
· room space, is why Holzer
Clinic is undertaking a $6.7
million expansion project.
. Work
on
the
new
Ambulatory Surgery Center is
scheduled to begin at the end
of March and wrap up in
November, said James Blevins,
associate administrator.
"We'll use 8,doo square feet
of the existing building where
our lab and medical records
used to be," he said. "Then ,
we'll buil.d a two-story addilion with another 8,000
square feet. "

The records department and
laboratory were relocated to
the clinic's office in the Dan
Evans Indu strial Park on Ohio
850, Blevins said.
The new center will . be
located on the east side of the
clinic, between the current
entrance and the parking
deck, Blevins ·said. It will
contain three operating rooms
on the first floor, a waiting
area on the second floor and
other offices and amenities.
The procedures that will be
performed in-the center currently are handled in the adjoining
hospital, Blevins said.
"As the cardio:vascular program expands (in the hospital ), it will take up more
(operating room) space," he
said. "What this ambulatory
surgery unit does is take those
cases out of the way."
And it will make. minor procedures more convenient for
patients, he said. Now, when
minor or elective surgeries are
scheduled. they are often
·moved because of more serious
cases from the emergency room
or elsewhere in the hospital.

Because the center will be
That bridge was removed
devoted to such procedures, this past Friday and.was donalhowever, the schedule will ed to the Gallia County Fair
not be at the mercy of the Board for use at the fairmore serious cases, he said.
grounds, said J.R. Sauer, physiThe new unit will free up the cian relations manager. The
busy hospital operating rooms fair board will use the two, 40by handling minor procedures, foot spans for improvements to
said G. Patrick Connors, asso- tne fairgrounds.
ciate administrator for operaWhen complete, the second
tions. When designing the new · floor of the addition is expectcenter, clinic officials had to ed to have room for retail
plan for the future.
space, possibly including a
"We had to plan with a restaurant or coffee shop,
vision of things to come," he Blevins said. It also will have a
said. "We had to plan for things deck just off the waiting rOQm.
that aren't even in use yet."
The primary entrance to the
The new· center will be run center wi.ll be on the second ·
by Carol Fairchild, who also floor from the existing .parkis in charge of the Ambulatory ing deck, Blevins said.
Surgical Center in Jackson, However, patients can access
Connors said. That center has it from the first floor through
been ranked in the top I0 per- the current clinic entrance.
cent of ambulatory surgery . Construction is expected to
centers in the country. :
end in November. About one
The clinic staff has worked month later, the center
hard to ensure that patients should become operational,
will experience as little dis- Blevins said.
ruption as possible, Blevins
Once patients are being
said. The biggest disruption so treated at the new facil ity, the ·
far has been the removal of the clinic will have to undergo a
bridge connecting the clinic to state licensing procedure,
.the nearby parking deck.
Connors said.

·EPA ~oard: Teflon chemical a likely carcinogen
Bv RANDALL CHASE

should be classified as a agency for review.
shortly before Wednesday's
· "'likely carcinogen," a finding
The same could not be said meeting, said the review
that went beyond the EPA's for a 2005 review sponsored panel should have considered
DOVER, Del. .- A group own determination th~t there by DuPont and 3M Co. chal- the DuPont-3M paper, and
of scientific advisers to the was only "suggestive evi- lenging the earlier study's should have offered . a
Environmental Protection dence·· from animal studies conclusion.
stronger rationale for upgradAgency yoted unanimously that PFOA and its salts are
"We do not feel that it rose ing the recommended cancer
Wednesday to approve a rec- potential huma11 carcinogens. to the same level of scrutiny descriptor from "suggestive
ommendation that a chemical
"Are we talking two-fifths as the other information we evidence" to "likely carcinoused in the manufacture of of the panel , or are we talking were considering," she said.
gen."
Teflon and other nonstick and about · a small number?" · But 3M st;ientist John ·
stain-resistant
products asked SAB Chairman M. Butenhoff accused the panel · Johnson, the EPA adminisshould be considered a likely' Granger Morgan , head of the of making "selective use" of trator, is free to accept the
SAB's
recommendations·
carcinogen.
to
..
make
an
department
of
engineering
information
regarding
PFOA
, or to reject
· The approval of the t;:PA's
and
public
policy
at
Carnegie
unwarranted.
recommendathem
.
· .
Science Advisory 'Board is
. tion about PFOA's potential
The EPA will use the report
· conditioned on 'minor clarifi- Mellon University.
Deborah
Cory-Slechta,
carcinogenicity.
"as
well as all new informacations being made to a draft
chair
of
the
PFOA
risk
·
Robert
Rickard,
director
of
tion that becomes available,
repon submitted by a review
assessment
review
paneJ.,
health
and
environmenLal
sci-.
to formulate the next steps in
panel , but no major changes
said
dissent
from
the
majori·
ences
~t
DuPont
's
Haskell
our
continuing assessment of
will be made to the panel's
ty
views
of
the
16-member
Laboratory,
said
the
company
these chemicals." said Oscar
finding s.
panel
on
issues
it
was
asked
had
asked
the
review
panel
Hernandez, director of the
The re~i sion s called for by
.to
study
typically
was
limited
after
its
February
2005
meetrisk
assess111ent division in
. the SAB include making a
to
three
or
four
members.
•
ing
if
it
would
be
appropriate
the EPA's Office of Pollution
. cover
letter
to
EPA
Cory-Slechta al so noted to submit new data, and was Prevention and To~ics.
Administrator
· Stephen
DuPont is funding a health
Johnson more reader-friendly that an unpubli shed study told it could.
from
the
1980s
linking
PFOA
.
.
The
only
SAB
member
to
study in the Mid-Ohio Valley
and clarifying the scope of
dissent among members iif to mammary tumors in !abo- offer .significant criticism of to se!tle a class~action lawsuit
the SAB pariel that reviewed ,ratory rats was considered l)y the PFOA review panel was ·by area residents who said
· the EPA's draft risk assess- the panel because it wa s peer- James Bus, a lead toxicolo- PFOA releases from the comment of perf! uorooctanoic reviewed within the EPA and gist for Dow Chemical Co.
pany's Washington Works
included in the original risk
Bus, who did not submit . Plant ih West Virginia contaacid, also known as C-8.
Board members also assessment submi!ted by the his written comments until minated their drinking water.
agreed that the report should
clarify why some unpublished scientifi c studies were
considered by the pam!! while
others weren 't, and that the
panel' s findings should not
be considered the last word
on PFOA but should be
updated as additi onal data
become available.
PFOA is a processing aid
used in the manufactu ring of
tluoropolymers, which have
a wide variet y of product
applications. including nonstick cookware.
The chemical also can be a
I,
byproduct 10 the manufactur'11
ing of fluorote lomers used in
..·.
.
surface protection products
•
'
for applications such as stainDr, Reaves is~ IJf the
resistant textiles and grease()phthalll"'IOogf.
. .
resistant food wrapping.
Wilmington-based DuPont
Co., owner of the Teflon ·
brand. is the sole producer o(
.
PFOA in NOrth America .
Some membef' of the
re view panel disagreed with
the majority view that PFOA
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

.Eye Examinatiorls

~ Cloudy ~
·
Thunder-~ Flurries ~
leo
.
.
saorms
~~
.
Partly~ 11~1 ~"
.
.. .....
~

t::._:)
ctoudr

Showera

~

Raih

•

*

Snow

.....

Thursday...Partly cloudy in. mph with gusts up to 30 mph:
Friday
. mght...Partly
.the moming ... Then becoming
mostly .cloudy. Highs in the cloudy. Much colder with
mid 60s. South winds 15 to 20 lows in the lower 20s. Nor!\)
mph with gusts up to 30 mph. winds 5 to 10 mph.
-•
Thursday mght ...Mostly
Saturday
through
. cloudy. A chance of showers Sunday..;Partly
cloudy,
after midnight. Lows in the Highs in the lower 30s. Lows
upper 30s. Southwest winds 15 around 15.
•.
to 20 mph with gusts up to 35
Sunday
night...Partly
mph. Chance of rain 50 percent. · cloudy. Cold with lows in the
Friday••.Partly cloudy with· lower 20s.
·a 50 percent chance of rain
Presidents Day · through
cloudy.
showers. Much cooler with Thesday...Mostly
highs in the . lower 40s. Highs around 40. Lows in the
Northwest winds 15 to 20 mid 20s.

Saturday's

Point Pleasan1 at Gallla Academy, 7:30

Elk Valley at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
Oak Hill at South Gallia, 6 p.m.

Monday

RedHawks breeze
past Ohio, 65-54
OXFORD (AP) - Nathan
Peavy scored 17 points,
including the first five in a 9-0
first-half run, to lead Mi&lt;1mi
· (Ohio) to a
65-54 victory .
over Ohio on
Wedne sday
night.
·
William
Hatcher led the RedHawks
(14-8, 11 -3 Mid-American
Conference)-with 21 points. .
Ohio (14-8, 8-6) led 11-9
after a free throw by Leon
Williams at the 14:29 mark.
Miami then ·ran off the next
nine points, with Peavy - .
who made ·all three of his 3pointers - starting the surge
with a shot behind the arc to
give the RedHawks the lead
for good. Peavy followed with
a layup before Hatch added a
. bucket and two free throws.
The RedHawks led 38-22
at the half and by as many as
23 points in the secpnd half.
Sonny Troutman and
Johnnie Jackson each scored
14 points for the Bobcats.
The victory was the fifth in
a row for Miami , which
came into the g;~me leading
the MAC in defense while
holding opponents to 57f
points a game .

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AP photo

Former Ohio State men's basketball coach Jim O'Brien tes·
tifies in this Dec. 12, 2005 file photo, in the civi.l trial in
Columbus against Ohio State University; which is separate
.from the NCAA's investigation into violations committed during O'Brien's coaching tenure with the Buckeyes.

0' Brien wins lawsuit
against Ohio State
COLVMBUS (AP) Ohio State, awaiting a decision on possible penalties
for NCAA rules violations
under forrrier basketball
coach Jim O'Brien, could
have to pay him millions of
dollars for firing him under
a judge's ruling Wednesday.
O'Brien claimed the uni· versity improperly fired him
in June 2004 for ·loaning
$6,000 of his own money 'to
a recruit.
Ohio Court of Claims
Judge Joseph T. Clark ruled
O'Brien broke his contract
by giving the loan and failing to inform university officials, but the error was not
serious enough to warrant
firing. The university viola!ed the contract by firing him
without compensation, the
ruling said.
The 55-year-old O'Brien
sued for $3.5 million in lost
wages and benefits. The
· award, which could reacl,1
nearly $9.5 million with
interest and other damages.
will be determined after
another hearing.
O'Brien said he was
pleas.ed with the decision,
but disappointed in the way
the dispute had to be. settled.

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and

Please see Cavs, B:Z

"As ., much as it's a nice
outcome for me, I still don 't
really feel that there are any
real winners in this thing,"
O'Brien said.
The NCAA is expected to
decide within the next few
weeks whether to penalize
the school for violations
committed during O'Brien's
tenure, including gifts of
cash, housing and other benefits to players. Earlier this
month, the NCAA found ·
seven violations in the bas- ·
ketball prograin and one
each in the football and
women's basketball programs.
O'Brien, who coached the
Buckeyes·. for seven years
and led them to the Final
Four in 1999, testified he
gave $6,000 in $50 and
$100 bills that l)ad accumuIated in hi s office desk
drawer
to
Aleksandar
Radojevic , a , 7-foot-J
prospect from Serbia'. He
said he gave Radojevic . the
loan in 1999 because the
·player's father was dying
and the family had no
money for medicine or the ·
funeral.

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ftbrulrv 20

Boy• Tournament Baaketblll
Sheridan vs . Meigs (at Logan H.S.), 7 p.m
Miller vs. Southern (at Weltston}. 8 p.m.
BoyoBoakotblll
Roane County at Ftoint Pleasant 7:30p.m.

Kroger - 19.80
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Oak Hill Financial ~ 31.75
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BBT- 39.41
Peoples - 29.16
Pepsico- 57.88
Premier - 16.00
Rockwell- 68.0"1'
Rocky Boots - 23.42
Sears - 122.95
Wai-Mart - 46.89 •
Wendy's - 56.86
Worthington - 19.38
Dally stock reports are the 4
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was a winnable game,"

West said. "Thi s one is tough
to swallow...
After a pair of Ryan
Gomes layups gave the
Celtics a 90-88 lead with
I :54 .remaining, James hit a
layup in traffic to tie the
game. ·
James then deflected a·
pass to Pierce, raced down
the floor. received an Eric
Snow pass at the free-throw
line and threw down a slam
dunk over West to put the .
Cavaliers up 92-90 with I :23
left.
Damon Jones made one of
two free throws. with 26.4
seconds remaining and
James blocked a West 3point atiempt ·i.n the closi ng
seconds.

Glrla Tournament Baakatball
Athens vs. Gallia Academy (at Logan
H.S.), 1 p.m.
Soya lllskotblll

Local Stocks
ACI- 70.01
AEP-35.58
Akzo ,;_ 51.20
Ashland Inc. - 65
BLI-13.62
Bob Evans - 28.08
BorgWamer - 55.83.
CENX- 35.90
Champion - 4.45
Charming Shops - .13.80
City Holding - 35.99
Col- 52.71
·
DG-17.82
DuPont - 40.69 ·
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 30.32
Gannett - 62.30
General Electric - 33.46
GKNLY - · 5.25
Harley· Davidson - 52.03
JPM- 40.32

~· It

Fr!d.y•1 QIQ)II
BoyoBukatball
Federal Hocking at Eastern ..B p.m.
River Valley at Rock Hill. 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander,' 8 p.m.
Hannan al Wir:t County, 7:30p.m.
OVcs·at ACSI ReQionafs, TBA
SOuthern at Miller, 6:30 p.m.
Glrte B•tkltball
Wahama at Caihoun County, 7 p.m:
OVCS at ACSI Aeglonals, TBA

Weattler UndorgrOIMld • ~p

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• Cataract Surgery
·• ·'Diabetic Eye l?are

Lisa H. Reaves, MD .

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Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.
Glrlo Booketblll
Ravenswood at Waha.ma, 7 p.m.
College Baokotblll
Urbana at Rio Grande, 8 p.m.
Women's College Bllketball
Urbana at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

~igh
.

.leo Boxs IIMKfiMt' SrMDINGS

.

Ohio Dlvl1lon

ALL
16-3
12 7
12-8
12 8

TVC

8-1
5-4
6-4
73
27
09

: #Alexander

• Belpre

• Nets-York
• V•nton Co
t Wellston

• Metgs

7-12

1-18

Hocking Dlvlalon
TVC

ALL
14 5
7-2
7-2
13·6
5-4
11-8
· Waterford
5-4
11·8
• Miller
2-7
8-10
1-8
: SOuthern
3·16
OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
OVC
ALL
: MChesapeake
• Fa•rlar'ld

9·0
5·4

16·2
10·9
I 0-9

. ROCk Hill
. South Poln1

4-5
4-5

8·1 0

• Coal Grove

1-8

6-13

• Atver Valley

4·5

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS
• South Galha
· Wahama

· Hannan
-ovcs

: Pomt Pleasant

8-11

ALL
14-5
12 7
9-9
4-16
2r19

AREA GIRLS ElM!(ETMll S!AND!NGS

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
•
SEO
ALL
• tWarren
8-2
14-6
· logan
7·3
16-4
• Manetta
7-3
1&lt;)·1 0
• Jackson •
6-4
13-8
• Gallta Academy
2-8
10-11
• Athens
Q-.1 0
4-18
TR~VALLEY

CONFERENCE

, Ohio Division

TVC
91

' #Alexander

· Belpre'

• Nefs York
Vmton Co •

Me&lt;gs•

Welfston

Hocking

7-3
64
6-4
1-9
1-9

Dlvlalon
TVC

ALL

16-4

1, _, 0
12-8
12-9

5·16
4-16

ALL
16-4
17-3
9-11
4-17
911
9-12

9-1
6-2
5-5
Fed Hoek'
4-6
Miller
46
Southern
010
OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
OVC
ALL

#Waterford
Tnmble
Eastern

ICoal Grove
tSouth Pomt

Fatrland
Roek H11t•
• Chesapeake•
Rtver Valley

8-2

B·2
7-3
4-6
2-8
1-9

16-4

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

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS
ALL
Flotnt Pleasant
I 0 11
South Gallla'
9 12
Wahama
99
ovcs
8 12
Hannan
1-15
• - league champton
• - season hmshed

Ohio High School
Girls Tournament

. Thursday, February 16, 2006

Wedna•day 'e Re•ult.

• COLUMBUS
(AP)
Three teams unaccustomed to
being No. I were jomed by
perennial powerhouse South
Euchd Regma as poll champions of the 22nd annual
Associated Press girls state
basketball poll
In the final media balloting
released
Wednesday,
Cmcmnati Pnnceton , Morrow
Little Miam1 and Columbus
Africentric each captured

- Sentinel - l\e ister
CLASSIFIED

Final AP Girls PoD
How a state panel of sports wnters and
broadcasters rates Oh1o high school gtrls
basketball teams In the s1;.:th and tm~ l
weekly Assoet&amp;.ted Press poll of 2006, by
OHSAA dtvlsions, w1th won-lost record
and total pomts (first·plae4 votes tn paren·
theses)

DIVISION I

Ctn Hughes 47 Ctn Turptn 46
Cin Mt Notre Dame 65, C!n Hamson 27
C1n Oak H1lls 49, Mason 41
Ctn Withrow 32, Ctn Walnut H1lls 28
Cols Whetstone 51, Cols w 40
Oubhn SciOtO 64, Galloway Westland 20
Huber Hts Wayne 55 Sidney 42
Logan 53 Thomas Worthington 33
OIVISION I
l&gt;.lew Carltsle Tecumseh 47, Vartdaha 1, C•n Prmceton (23) 19-0
248
Buller 44
2, Sylvan1a Southvtew 18-0
206
Spnngboro 61 Trotwood·Madtson 27
3,
Avon
Lake
18·1
183
ZanesVIlle 52 Cots Northland 39
4 , Cfn Mt Notre Dame H-3
156
DIVISION II
5. N Can Hoover (2) 18·2
153
Athens 40, Jackson 36
123
Bellefontaine BenJAmin logan 47, Spnng 6 Stow Munroe Falls 17·2
NW43
7 Amherst Steele 18 1
97
C1rctevtlle logan Elm 58, Waverly 41
8 Dublin Sc1oto 17 2
84
Cols Hamilton Twp 49 Whitehall-Yearling 9 j:)tckermgton Cent 17 3
56
24
10 Chardon172
47
Day Carroll 56 Bellefontaine 32
Others rece1vmg 12 or more points 11
Fran~lm 50 Day- Carroll 30
Gallipolis Gallta 46, McArth.ur Vmton Wadsworth 19
Counly 32
'
DIVISION II
Lewtstown lndtan Lake 51 Spnng S 45
Morrow l tttle M1amt 76 Trenton 1 Mor l1nle M1amt ('9) 2a-a 24B
~dgewood 31
2 Cuy Falls Walsh Jes (1) 17·1 186
New Concord John Glenn 57 Uhnchsv1lle 3 WarsawA•verVtew(4) 19-1 181
Claymont 52, OT
4 Mt&amp;mtirace (1) 17· 1
168
New Phtladelphta 58, Cad1z Hamson 5 UtiCa 20-o
163
Cent 31
130
6 lOUISVtlle 18·1
RIChmond Edtson 49 Dover 36
7 Shelby 17·2
93
Utica 71, Cols S 56
76
Warsaw River Vtew 67 McConnelsville 8 Kettenng Alter 18·2
9 Cols Eastmoor (1) 15-4
54
Morgan 28
Washmgton C H M•am• Trace 63 10, Cols DeSales 17·3
53
Greenfteld McClam 28
Others receiVIOQ 12 or more potnts 11 ,
DIVISION Ill
Chagnn Falls Kenston 13 12 {Ita),
Casstown Mlamt E 51 Day Chnstlan 35 Jefferson Area, Ctn McNicholas 12
Cols Ready 60 Howard E Knox 33
Fredertck1own 49, Mt Gilead 23
DIVISION Ill
Heath 44 Johnstown Northrtdge 29
I , S Euclid Reg1na (25) 19-0 259
Ironton 57 W Unton 28
203
Lemon-Monroe 57 W Alexandrta Twm 2. Jonathan Alder (1) 18·2
ValleyS 22
3, Ironton 18·2
191
Manon Pleasant 56 Lancaster F1sher 4 Carey 17-1
155
Calh 32
5 Cia Cenl Ca1h 16 3
118
Martins Ferry 38, Barnesville 27
6, Sugarcreek Garaway 18-2 115
MiddletoWn Fenw1ck so, Carlisle 15
7. Mt Blanchard Riverdale 18-1 84
Oak H1ll 67 F'1keton 28
70
Sarahsville Shenandoah 81 Belmont 8, Garfield Hts Tr1ntty 15-4
9, Columbus Grove 16-2
55
Un1on local 43
Sugarcreek Garaway 51 , Newcomerstown 10, Mtddletown Fenwtck 17-3 33
22
Others recetvtng 12 or more po1nts 11
Versatlles 74 New Lebanon Duue 21
SaraMsvtlle Shenandoah 27 12 Castalia
Waynesvtlle 72, C1n Fmneytown 36
Marga reM 16 13 Manon Pleasant 15
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 28 14, Coldwater 13
Gnadenhutten lnd1an Valley 25
DIVISION IV
DIVISION IV
Ctn Seven Htlls 65, Xema Chnsttan 28
Cols Harvest Prep 50, Morral Rtdgedale 1, Cols Afncentnc (18) 18·0 250
2, Hamler Pat Henry (8) 18·0 224
29
186
Cols Tree of Ute 58 Mt Vernon Academy 3, Ottovtlle 18·1
15
4, Berlin Hiland 18-2
173
Covmgton 59 Umon Ctty Mtsstsstnawa 5, Newark Cath 18-2
133
Valley 32
6, New Knoxvtlle 18·1
124
Danville 52, Mtllerspor140
7,
E
Can
16-2
102
Fayettevllle-Pe(ry 57, Cm Country Day 41
8,
Ft
Lotamte
18·2
53
Lathem We~tem 60, Manchester 47
47
Portsmouth Sctotovtlle 44 S Webster 42 9, New R1egel 16·3
10 Jac~son Center 16-4
39
OT
Sugar , Grove Berne Union 33 Gtlead Others recetvtng 12 or more potnts 11 ,
Chnstlan 25
Glouster Trtmble 12

theu first AP gtrls hoops poll
crown.
Regma ' won the 2003 AP
poll but is as much a constant
at the state tournament each
March as popcorn and hot
dogs. Regma has won five of
the last six state titles, all m
Division III.
The Royals are certainly no
s trangers to the AP poll,
either. They made their flfst
appeatance in the poll at the

No. 6 spot in 1999.
Pnnceton had never finIshed higher than eighth in the
poll - and hadn't placed m
the fmal top 10 m seven
years
Neither Morrow
L1ttle
Miami nor Africentnc had not
ever appeared among the top
I 0 teams in the final regularseason
{lOll,
although
Afncentric IS only in Its th1rd
year of existence.

Badgers upset No.12 Ohio State
MADISON, Wis (AP) Alando Tucker had 27 pomts
and 16 rebounds to lead
W1sconsm
to
Its
th1rd
~tra1ght victory, a 78-73 wm
over No. 12 Ohio State on
Wednesday night.
Trailing 64-59, W1sconsm
(18-7, 8-4 Big Ten) scored
seven straight pomts - five
by Ray Nixon and two free
throws by Tucker - to give
the Badgers their f1rst lead
since midway m the fmt
half
Jamar Butler h1t a JUmper
for Ohio State (18-4, 7-4 ),
the Buckeyes' only field goal
over a 6-minute stretch , to
tie the game. But N1xon ,
who finished with 13 pomts,
answered with another 3pomter to g1ve the Badgers
the lead for good at 69-66

O'Brien
from PageBJ
0 ' Brien argued the loan
d1d not VIolate NCAA bylaws
because he knew RadoJeVIC
already had lost ht s amateur
status by playmg professiOnally.
Radojev1c never pi ayed for
the Buckeyes becau se the
NCAA declared h1m mehglble for accepting about
$9,000 to play for a team m
his native country Umvers1ty
attorneys sa1d the loan broke
NCAA rules and O ' Bnen 's
contract bt:cause RadoJe v ic
hadn't yet been ruled ineligible.
Clark wrote tn the ruhng
that the poss1ble NCAA sanctions and damage to Oh10
State ' s reputatiOn from the
loan would have been re latively m111or, while 0 ' Bnen 's
loss of sa lary and benefits
was substantial
Andy Ge1ger, the former

B

nan

Butch,
who finished w1th
· 17 p01nts,
hit a 3pointer
I 46 left
to make It 72-68 and Ohio
State never had a c hance to
tie agam
Terence Dials was 5 - of- 5
from the f1eld and h1t both
free throw attempts m the
first half. He scored 12 of the
Buckeyes ' firs t 14 points as
Ohw State led by as many as
nine points
Dials f!mshed With 24
points and II rebounds,
wh1le Butler had 17 points
and Matt Sylves ter added 14
for the Buckeyes .
Tucker and
Kammron

OhiO State athletic director
who fired O ' Bnen, testified
that the basketba ll coach
acknowledged he Violated
NCAA rules with the Joan,
Bnen denies
wh1ch
Ge1ger sa1d he first learned
of the money when he spoke
bnefly wuh O ' Brien 111 Apnl
2004 S1x weeks later, Ge1ger
fired O ' Brien
In h1 s lawsUit, O ' Bn e n
contended he was f1red
before an mvest1gat10n ' had
determmed 1f he had violated
h1 s contract by breakmg
NCAA rule s A proviSIOn of
h1s con tract sa1d the NCAA
had to rule on alleged violatiOns be tore he could be tired
for that reason
Oh10 State pres1dent Karen
HolbrooJ( testified that she
d1dn ' t have to wan to hear
from the NCAA how senous
the v1olat1on was.
Holbrook defended the um versny's action s after the rul mg , saymg m a statement that
" we have acted forthnghtly
111 compli a nce wnh NCAA
rule s and m the b est mtere sts

o·

•

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

~ribune

Yellow Springs 49 New Madtson TrtVIIIage 47

Three newbies earn AP crowns

•

Thursday, February 16, 2006

School Basketball Scoreboard

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
SEO ALL
. tMar~etta
8-1
11 ·8
• Warren
7-2
16-3
· Jackson
6·4
12-8
• Galla Academy
5-5
1()-9
· Logan
3-7
7-13
• Athe!'ls
0·10
2·18
TRI-VALlEY CONFERENCE

• Trimble
• Fed Hoek
~ Eastern

www .mydailysentinel.com

'
Taylor
combined
for
Wi sconsin' s fmt 15 points
of the second half a nd the
Badgers tied the game at 57
Taylor f1mshed with 12
pomts.
But Butler hit a Jumper,
then Je' Kel Foster made a
steal and found Sylvester on
a fast break for a three-pomt
play that gave the Buckeyes
a 62-57 lead.
Ohw State set the tone
early, taking a double-digit
lead and prompting Badgers
coach Bo Ryan to yell "Get
over here!" to his team after
a blown as signment led to
easy
points
for
the
Buckeyes ,
Taylor, second on the team
at 15 points per game, d1dn't
score unt1l there was 2:06
left in the f1rst half

of the athletiCS program and
the umvers1ty "
The , judge disputed the
umverSily's
claim
that
O'Bnen acted m bad faith by
loam~g the money and then
covenng up what he had
done for more than live
years
'The ev1dence does not
support such a sm1 ster VIew
of plamt1ff' s mi sco nduct ,"
Clark sa1d.
0 ' Bnen has s a1d he did not
tell hi s s upenors a t Ohio
State . about th e loan nght
away because It became a
moot pomt
0' Bnen, who coached the
Buckeyes to a I 33-88 record
that included two B1g Ten
tllles and a conference tournament mle, sa1d Wednesday
he has not dec1ded whether
he will return to coaching.
" I can go on for days about
how sorry I am that th1s even
happened," he said. " My reputation in thi s bu s1ness has
always meant a lot to me and
with o ut que s tion th a t has
been so1led "
I

G all~

Ccnuuy, OH

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Offtee llot&lt;P-~

Brad Sherman/photo
Gallla Academy's Lindsey Niday (33) goes up for a JUmper over the outstretched arm of a
Vinton County defender dunng Wednesday's DIVISIOn II sect1onal contest at Kat1e Sm1th
Gymnas1um In Logan .

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

Angels vanquish Vinton County

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Athens upsets
top-seeded
lronladies in
other semifinal
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
LOGAN Katie Smith
GymnasiUm could JUSt as easily been called "upset central"
on Wednesday
On a night that also saw
top-seeded Jackson ehnunated, Gallia Academy received
a b1g game from Jackie
Wamsley and defeated higher-seeded Vmton County 6346 111 a ~lfls DivisiOn II sectional sem1final
The Blue Angels played so
well, howeve r, that they made
it look like an upset on the
paper bracket only. Wamsley
was a b1g reason why, as she
connected on SIX 3-pomters
and scored a game-h1gh 26
points in the lops1ded win .
"I think Jackie showed
tomght why she has the reputation she has of bemg a player," said Galha Academy
coach Duane Estep "She
· stepped 1t up tomght the same
as she d1d m the tournament
last year"
The senior sharp shooter
had one of her best basketball "
games m last year's district
tourney, when she scored 27
m a loss to Unioto.
"She JUSt comes on when
!Is tournament lime," he
added.
Galli a Academy (I 0 - 1 I)
meets an unlikely opponent,
Athens, for the sectional title
on Saturday
The Lady
Bulldogs continued their surpnsmg tournament run With a
40-36 upset of Jackson m the
earher game on Wednesday.
"'For Jackson to go out so
early, that was JUSt a shocker
to me," sa1d Estep , who lost

to Jackson twice dunng the
re*ular season.
'Athens got a taste of the
' W ' column a couple weeks
ago and has just been pounng
it on since then, so we're
going to have ,to come ready
to play Saturday."
The wm was the third
strmght
for
the
Lady
Bulldogs, who beat Federal
Hocking m the season finale ,
then rallied to beat Me1gs m a
play-in game on Monday.
Athens lost 18 times dunng
the regular season, mcludmg
twice to the Blue Angels.
Vmton County saw Its season end w1th a 12-9 overall
mark It was the second
s tra1ght 12-wm season for
Jeremy Ward's club, wh1ch
won its first sectional smce
1995 last season. But they ' ll
be no repeat district trip th1s
ume, as his Lady VIkings ran
mto a Galha Academy tea m
that played one of Its best
gmnes in weeks
"We would have had to
shoot ridiculously well, and
not tum the ball over to beat
(Gallia Academy) tomght,"
admitted Ward.
But the Lady Vikings did
neither. Vmton County made
18-of-46 from the floor and
turned the ball over 20 t1mes.
"We handled the ball mconSistently and shot the ball
mcons1stently," stated Ward
"It was three ~ood things ,
then three bad thmgs."
Gallia Academy, meanwhile. shot a blazing 49 percent
overall
(24-of-49) ,
mcluding a 7 -of-18 perfor;
mance from beyond the 3po111t arc.
Gallla' s Brittany Ell1ott
continued her solid second
half of the season play adding 16 pomts for the winners.
'The last SIX or seven
games, she 's really stepped n
up," Estep smd of ElliOtt, who
IS now averagmg close to II
pomts per game . "The first

part ot the season, she was
kind of hes1tant to ta ke the
ball to the hole - but that's
JUSt d1sappeared. She has no
fear to take It m there anymore ."
Lmdsey N1day added eight
pmnts for the wmners and
Ryann Leslie came off the
bench to score s1x Alex1s
Geiger, who led the team with
e1~ht assists, and Kayla Perry
ch1pped In four and three
pomts respectively.
M egan Owmg s led Vinton
County w1th 14 pomts and
Erica Reed also reached double ligures With II Kelsey
Day added seven
The
sectional cham pi onship ups at I p m . on
Saturday, also at Katie Smith
Gymnasmm o n the campus of
Logan-Hockmg
M 1ddle
School The Wilmer mo,es on
to next week 's d1 stnc t tournament at Southeastern Ross
H1gh SchooL
Gallia Academy will be
seeking its third stra1ght sectional tale Wednesllay's win ,
marked the fifth consecuuve
year that the Blue Angels
have won at least one postseason gam e.
GALLIA ACADEMY 63,
VINTON COUNTY 46
GALLIA ACADEMY (10-11)
Jackte Wamsley 8 4-4 26 Lau ren Kyger a
o-o 0 Leah Cummons 0 0·0 0 f',.t1chelle
Johnson 0 0 0 0 Bttttany Elliott 6 3·5 16
K1mber Dav1s 0 o-o 0 Kayla Perry 1 1 2
3 Joan SoJka 0 0-0 0 Alexts Ge1ger 2 0·
0 4 Ayann Lesl te 3 a-2 6 Lindsey Ntday
4 0·2 8 Ttera Burnette 0 0 0 0 Sydme
Montz 0 O.Q 0 Tonta Logan 0 0 0 0 Totals
24 49 8-15 63
VINTON COUNTY (12·9l
Megan Owmgs 7 0·1 14 Ashley Graves 0
0-0 0, Kelsey Day 2 3-4 7 Staph Williams
0 0-0 0 Abbie Batey 1 1 2 3 Knsltn
Colltns 2 ().{) 4 Jesst Harktns 1 1 2 3
JeSSI9 l alerty 0 a-o a Enca Reed 4 0·0
11 Diana An~ rom 1 2 3 4 Totals 18 46 7
12 46
Galha Acad 14 18 13 18 - 63
VInton Co 14 11 14 7 - 46
3·Potnt Goals-GA 7 18 (Wamsley 6
Elliott) VC 3-16 (Reed 3) Fouled OutNone Rebounds-GA 26 (EII1ott 5
Getger 5 leshe 5 Ntday 5) VC 30
(Collms 9) Ass1sts - GA 15 (Getger 8)
VC 11 (Owmgs 5) Sleals-GA 13 VC 3
Blocks-GA 1 VC 3 Turnovers ----GA 14
VC 20 Team fouls - GA 12 Vmton
County 15

Cincinnati squeezes the Orange
SYRACUSE. N . Y. (AP)
It was the firs t of three only four 111 the second hall.
- Syracuse sputtered at the straight home games against Gerry M c Namara had 14
wrong time, and Cincmnati conference toes for the strug- ponlts and Demetns N1cho! s
made the Orange pay dearly. g hng Orange ( 17-8 , 5-6 Btg I 3
C edric McGowan and East), who now find them - ' Cmcmnau sco red the t1rst
Jihad
Muhammad
each selves tra1l111g the Bearcats s1x pomts of 1he second half
scored 19 pomt s, James ( 17-9, 5-5) m the conference
Syracuse s hot JU St 33.3
Whae had 18 and the standmg s
percent m 1he second half
Bearcats
su rged
past , Clncmnall outrebounded alter hntin g ha lf at thw 32
Syracu s e
82-65
on Syracu se 44-25 , shot 5 I 5 shots m taking a 4 I -40 haltWednesday ni ght, deal! ng percent a nd h1t mne 3-pomt- tune lead. The Bearcats went
the Orange the1r s1xth loss 111 ers, repeatedly bealmg the 18-for-32 (56 percent) 111 lhe
eight games and fourth th1s Orange defense for w1de- second half and ln111ted the
season at home
,
open looks as the Bearcats Oran ge to only two baskels
It was a blow to Syracuse's avenged a 77-58 los s to over the tina! e1ght mmule s
postseason hopes and kept Syracuse a month ago .
Two free throws by H1 c k s
all~e those of the Bearcats
Syracuse
outrebounded put Cmcinnat1 up 57 -5 0 dt
"Th1s was huge Th1 s puts Cmcmnatl 51-27 111 that 1-2 5 2. ,md after G01man 's
us n ght back 111 the game," game.
three-pomt pla y mm ed the
• Cmt1nna11
coach
Andy
Devan Downey had 16 Orange back withm Four
Kennedy sa1d "Th1s was a pomts and seven a ss ists, and pomts , the Be.1rcat s took ott
marquee wm on the road m a Enc H1 c ks had eigh,t pomts,
C m c1nna11 se,1led 11 with ~
very tough place to wm. I five blocks and II board s to 15-2 run th ai left the Ca rner
hope It shows the NCAA up his career total to 806 Dome crowd boo1n g the
committee that we arc con- rebounds for the B earcats
hom e tea m
~
t111U111 g to play good basketEric Devendorf led the
Muhammad h1t to u r 3ball "
, Orange with 15 pomts but p01nte 1s and had three stea ls.

Cavs
from Page B1
James was outscored by
P1e rce 17-6 111 the fourth
quarte r and m1 ssed a potential ga me- wmmn g lay up 1n
the ciOSlllg SCC Oild S of the
fir st
overtime
before
redee m1n g him se lf m the

second overtime
'This IS a team w1n , but it
goes back to LeBron James
commg up b1g for u s,"
Brown said " H e's a heck of
a play er and he def1111tely
helped us get thi s w1n
tom ght "
Noles: The Cavaliers won
111 Boston for JUSt the seco nd
lime 111 14 tnes
Jame s has
e 1g ht career tnple-doubl es

... We st was se lec1eJ to
repl ace
Orl,l!ldo
Mag 1c
g uard J.unee r Nelson on the
sophomore team 1n the 2006
T-Moh1l e R ook1 e Ch.11lenge
Nc l" •n will 1111 ss tile g.une
wll h c~ &gt;pramed nght toot
Th e Ce lti C&gt; ba ven" t won
more than two con ,ec uu ve
g.nnes th1 s se ason
Th e
Celi!cs .tre 1-2 w1 tb G om e'
111 the starling line up

'

I
r

lnt:lude Complete

Description • Include A Price • Avoid AbbrevlaUons
• Include Phone Number And Adclre•• When Needed
•
• Ads Should Run 7 Day•

r

r

\'\\.411 '\.(I \II \.I'\

1\NNOIJNO:MINrs

W
""---AiirNiinO.m;..-,.1
~
TQ8UY

1 Absolute

Top Dollar U S
St iver and Gold Co ms
Dana A Willi ams Sr not Proolsets Gold R1ngs Pre·
responsible tor any debts 1935
US
Currency
other than
own S1gned Solitatre Otamonds M. T S
Coin Shop 151 Second
Avenue GalltpoltS 740-446
GI\'EAI'&lt;AV
2842

·-------,.1
~

Wanted To Buy Metgs
Free Extra large 'dog house County Store Scnpt Store
Call (740)367 7264
Tokens and currency from
Rac1ne
Pomeroy and
740- 992
=
leport
Banks
Larr i\Nll
FOliNI)
I \11'1&lt;&gt;1\11 \I
"'I I(\ It I .._
Found cane on S 411'1
Middleport, call lo 10
(7401992-4520

r

AewardH Lost male Eng ltsh
Po1nter Cenlenary area
Orange collar miSStng s1nce 100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
213106 Gall (740)446·9395
'HOOd •lems
To $480/wk
Matenals provtdaO
Free lnformalton pkg 24Hr
801 428 4649

1

HEu• WAIVI"ED

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 's For Sale
. .. .. -------------..
725
Announcement... . ......... .. ...... .
.. 030
Antiques .................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent.. .............................. 440
Auction and Flea Markel... ........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories........... .
760
Auto Repair
.... ......... . . ........... 770
Autos lor Sale.. ... ...... ............
........ . 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale................ ........ 750
Bulldl ng Supplies............... ,......,................. 550
Business and Bulldlngs .......................... 340
Business Opporlunlly ... "-- -- .................... 21 0
Business Training ..................... ... ... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes..........
.. ... . 790
Camping Equipment..................
... ....... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
Eleclrlcai!Relrlger at ton ........ .. ................... 840
Equipment for Rent.. ...
... . .. ...480
Excavating
. .. . ... . .. .
630
Farm Equipment................ . .. ................... 6 I 0
Farms for Rent ........................................ .430
Farms lor Sale ........................... ................ 330
For Lease
. .. .... . .. .... . . ............. 490
For Sale .
. . .... ... ... .. .. ..... ... ... 585
................ 590
For Sale or Trade.... .. . ..
Fruits &amp; Vegetables..
.. ..... ,......... 580
Furnished Rooms .......... ........................ 450
General Haulmg ................ , .................... 850
Giveaway .. ..................................... ..... ... 040
Happy Ads... .... .
.. ...... . .. .. 050
Hay &amp; Grain . ..... .
.... ... . . , 640
Help Wanted .
.. --------110
Home Improvements .... ......... .... ... .. .... 81 0
Homes for Sale ............... . ........................ 310
Household Goods ......... ........................ 510
Houses lor Rent.. ........ ..... .. ................ 410
In Memor~am ......... .
................. 020
Insurance . ....... .. .
....... ..... I 30
Lawn &amp; Garden ~qUJpmenl . ...... .. ..... 660
Llveslock....... . .... .... .............. . . .
630
Lost and Found ......
.... .......... .. ...
060
Lots &amp; Acreage
.. ............
. . 350
Miscellaneous.
.. .. 170
. .540
Miscellaneous Merchandise. ...
Mobile Home Repair.. ..........
860
Mobile Homea for Rent.... .............
420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................. ..
.. .320
Money to Loan ............................................ 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 WheeteNJ .................... ,.. ,,740
Musical lnst•uments ............................. 570
... .......... . ..
..,.005
, Personals.... .
Pels lor Sale . ...
............ . . . . 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
....... ....... ,_ . .. 820
Professional Services ................. .. . ..... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair................. .... .. ...160,
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools Instruction ..................................... 150
Seed, Plant 6 Fertilizer .............................. 65D
Sltuatlona Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent ......................................... ..460
Sporting Goods ............................ ............... 520
SUV 's for Sale
........................ 720
Trucks lor Sale .
. .. .........
.715
Upholstery ... ..
. . ... .. ..
870
Vans For Sale ............ .....
.. ......... 730
. ..... . ... ....
. .090
Wanlod to Buy,
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .
.620
Wanted To Do.. ..... .. ...... .............. .. .... 180
Wanted lo Rani. ........................... .. ............ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ............. ..... 074
Yard Sate-Pl. Pleasant.................. . . .. 076

r~i loF;.O.~ USINES .;. .;. .;. , ;. ;., ~r:IO:::~~o:~:::£::~~ cd ~::::
II\ \\.C I \I

"==~====~~ ~

l.wrlght2005C!!comcoolnet

ApplicatiOns can be ptcked
up outside the Aoadstrfe
Hotspot stalttng Feb 15
2006

r

Altentton Dnvers
A&amp;J
Truck1ng IS looktng lor
Dnvers w11 yr OTR
Experience for ~egtonal
Hauls Average pay 40's to
mtd • 50s Home every
Weeke nd
call
Kent
(80a)462-9365
VO.::.N
:::I.::_A:_I.::_IA:::r:::ee_s_l-To-Bu_y_o_r
cA:::
Sell Shlfley Spears 304·
675·1429
BELIEVE IT!
Work ror a local company
that offers a professiOnal
envnonment wtlh career
advacement opporlumttes
--!•WeeKly Pay + Bonus
·:·Full Benefits at 90 days
·:·Patd on-Site Tratrutlg
•:•Plus much more

lnteresled App11cants Call
A keyboard player needed
(7401446 "7442
for new Chnsttan rockJpratse .---.::.Ex__;t__;2..;4.::.55;__.;..,
11':!:1\'""-~:-"---., and worsh1p band We are
WAr--•ft-:D
not teenagers and we are
seasoned mus1ctans Great
111 BUY
sound system and light
show with fog machmes wtll
1 buy Junk Cars (304)773· be m place Studto record
5004
tng w1th CD sales In addltton
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
to llve shOws 740 367
FULL TIME CLASSES
7129 J1m
• COL TRAINING
FINANCING AVAILABlE
An E;xcellent way to earrt
JOB PLACEt.lf'NT
' ENROl ~INO NOW
money The NfiiW Avon
CaUMartlyn 304-882-2645
ALUANCE

SHOP _
CLASSIFIEDS

POLICIES. Ohto Yallew Publl•t'tlng ruwvu the right to edit, r.ject, or c•ncel •ny ad •t eny lim• Error• mu•t be repoft.ci on 0,. flrsl dtly of
will be ruponaibll lor no morl than the cost of the •pace occupied ~the •rror and only lhe fir,. lntertlon WI .nail not 1M
any to.. or exptfna that results from tt. publication or omlaslon ot an advartl&amp;ement Cotrectlon will be made m the f1r1t available adiUon • Boa
are 11waya confidential • Current rate c•d applies • All rul ..tile ad\lertl1ement1 are IUb~ to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thll ,..,_,..,.
accepla only help wented •d• ,.....lng EOE , .. ndlrd• W1 will not knowingly accept any adv•rtl•lng In \llolatlon of tha law

Trlbune-Sentine~egiater

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

Now you can have borders and graphics
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1!:&gt; 2006 by NEA, Inc

Overbrook Rehabt ltlatiOn
Center 1s currently accepting
appltcattons for full-llme
STNA S 7A-7P 7P-7A and
3A-3P sh1fts are available
Interested appliCants should
fill out an application at 333
Page Street Mtddleport No
phone calls please EOE
Home
Health
A1desS1gn
TRt\CTOR·TRAILER
On Bon.us Home Healthcare
T RAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA
of SE Ohto •s currently hm~
POSTAL JOBS
home health atdes compel•·
1-800-334·1203
ltve wages Call {740)662· $1567·52198/hr now htr
1ng For appllcatJOn and free
1222
governemenl jOb Into call
Home Heallhcare of SEQ tS Amer.can Assoc of Lebar 1
Drivers Needed
Accepltng 913·599-8042 24/hrs emp
COL Onvers w1lltng to dr1ve Currently
for local ready mn(-concrete Appllcattons For Full &amp; Part serv
company ExRenence tS lime AN's Compeltltve
preferred but not necessary Wages Bonuses &amp; Benehls,
Call Toll free 1-866·388 100
Med 111surance &amp; olher
benefits avatlable alte r watt Local Bank tS seektng Part·
tng pertod Ortver must be T1me teller Must be ava•l·
~ •1 ~ co • • "' " " "
wtllmg lo do pre matnle
able
M
onday
thru
Salurday
PROFESSIONAL
nance on truc~s &amp; equ1p Please forward 'resume to
ment yard work &amp; other
Da1ly Senttnel PO Box 729 Diesel Technician
mtscellaneous chores
34
Pomeroy OH 45769
Jotn the wtnntng team•
Expel1ence operat1ng eqUJp
·Two week 1nlltal
men! &amp; extra skills such as Local bus1ness looking for
Secretary/Recept1on 1st
nentat1on classes w1t
weldmg a plus
Must have good telephone ~blnoUnlllued.llllotJnnlgomg tratntng
Call (304l937-3410
- The bes
Located tn Mason County SkillS &amp; QOOd Wtlh the publiC
knowledge
computers
&amp;
anagement
team tn th
10
near Buffalo WV
all other offiCe macl'1mes
ountry to asstst you
Bonuses
Hours Sam Spm Monday· L-dllDIHmllli2nP
Full·t•me Med1cal Ass1stan1 Fr1day 8·12 Saturday
lat rale health care,
needed for busy Phystc!an s
PO Sox was published
1sat11llty Long Term Car
nd more
OHtce Must be dependable
wrong please resubmtl
and personable Send
' resumes to
At John Sang FordResume alid References to
Local Busmess
Lincoln--Mercury we ve
PO Bo:-: 16 Pont Pleasant
PO Box 7S5
established a 35 year repwv 25550
Gallipolis OH 45631
utallon of honesty mtegrlty
Ga111a County Counctl on
and outslandmg customer
Agmg 1s seektng an
serviCe-before and after
Executtve
Otrector Local lot 1oo1&lt;1ng lor expert
the sale Wtlh the honest
ResponslbtiiMS
InclUde anced used car detatler
products on the market
tmp lementatton of pollc•es send resume to Datly and as the fastest grow1ng
and programs staff employ Senllnel PO Box 729 32
dealership tn our reg1on
mentlt:levelopment f1Scal Pomeroy Oh 4576!:1
we re add•ng d1esel tech·
managemen1
proposal
ntc1ans to better serv1ce
preparatton program evalu Mamtenance posit1on open·
our customer Forlj
at1on mamta1n re1a110nsh1ps mg at the Vtllage of Rto Serv•ce tra1n1ng preferred
wtth olher agenc1es ew off• Grande P1ck up appilcalton
but not reqwred
c10 member at County at the Vtllage Hall 174 East
College Street App~atton
Counc•l
If you are a professiOnal
deadline 5 OOpm February
techniCian looktng to start
Bachelors degree m Soc•al :2::3_:2:::006:::__ _ _ __
a new career or maype
Serv1ce/8us•ness or related Mature Chtld Care Provtder you don t feel you re paid
f•eld w1th a m1mmum ot three needed In my Home Non
or treated as well as you
(3)
years
soc1al Smoker Approx 30 hours
should be and 1f you re
servtc8s'bus.ness expert· per week Wed Sun ltght 11red of work1ng for some
ence 1eqwad Bas1c knowl· House~eflpmg
prepare one who lsn 1worktng lor
edge of sentor c 112en needs meals Good dnvmg record
you gtve J1m Thomas a
and avatlable ser 11Ces need· Some
call today
Eventng
hours
ed Demonstrated orgamza· reqwed Send Resume and
1 740-446 9800 or
11onal rnanager'tal admllliS References to
1:800-272·5179
trattve ewpenence requ ~r ed Bo• TSC 13
You may also apply m
Compute• sktlls tncludmg 200 Mam Street
person at
M1crosofl Word and Internet Po•l Pleasant, WV 25550
195 Upper Atver AD
nav•gatton requrred Musl be
GBIIipoltS OhiO
oondable ana have a valtd Overbrook Cenler Is cunent·
Monda ·Fnda
ty seektng a beaut•oan to L-.::l=~~:l:...-.11
drrll'er's 11cense
wo~k 1n the tacil1ty s beauty
Taktng A.ppilcat1on5 for
Suom 1 applicalt ons Wllll salon Candidates should MachmtSI &amp; Welder 5 years
fesumes to GCCOA Ann possess a valid manag•ng experemce apply 7 30·
hcense 4 OOpm Ambrosia Machme
Counc11 Prestdenl 1165 cosmetolo ~tst
State Route 160 PO Bow Salary IS based on comm1s· Inc Route 2 Box 254 Pomt
441 Gall•polls Ot11o 4563 1 s1on lnleresled candtdates Pleasant WV
25550
by 3 JOpm on Feorua \ ~ shOuld contact lhe admtnt5 (304)675 1722
trator
at
(740)992·6472
2006 OCCOA Is an b ~ .Ja l
Opportuntty Employer
EOE
Help wanted at the Darst
Adull
Group
Home
(740l992-5023

mr

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

--

u do bustness w1t1'1 peo
le you ~now, and NOT t
nd money through th
atl un11t you have 1nvestt
ated lhe offenn

AU rql eatate .dvertlalng

TIRED OF GAS PRICES &amp;
COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED?
ChrtSt1an Owned Company
OHenng A Home Managed
Bus•ness Part t•me or Full
t1me Full Support and
Tramtng Fully fi nanced
opportunity '' quahf1ed
)-800·946-7572 Pm 00 (II
no answer please leave
message)
•

preference, ltmitatlon or
dlscrlmln•tlon baeed on

r

"J. · Iw

Gallipolis Super 8 Motel Is
now accept1ng applications
for the follow1ng positiOns
PT Fronl Desk Clerk must
be able to work all 3 shtfts
and PT HouseKeeptng day
sh1ft No phone calls please
Apply 1n person

'

MONEY

mLOAN

In thl1 new1paper Ia
aubject to the Federal
Fair 11_ou.Jng Act of 1968
which ""'ke1 It Illegal to
advertise any

race, color, religion, eex

familial statu• or national
ortgln, or any intention to
make any 1uch
preference, limitation or
discrimination.'

t

Thll newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaemenll for real
tltete which 11 In
vlol.tlon of the law. 0Uf
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertlnd In
thla newspaper are

co 'n

Morgan Townshtp
on
Morgan La ne approx 1 m1~
oft SA 325
Clay Townsh1p on Teens Run
Rd owner fmanctng available
(740)669·0143
(740)669-8614

t

REALEsrATE
WANriD

Approx 1 acre of land
Ready for House to be bl.:.ttlt
wtthtn 10 mtles of Pomt
Pleasant Aural Set1tng
secluded &amp; quiet sa 000 or
Jess Please call (304)593
3207
Need to sell your home?
Late on payments diVorce
toO transfer or a death? 1
can buy your home All cash
and qutck closmg 74a-416
3130
I~

I \.I \ I '

available on ., equal
opponunlty bene.

www comics com

Secretary/Personnel
Director
Full· Ttme, 2
Weekends Per Month Must
Posse.ss 2 Years Or More
Expenence, Must Be
Compvter Llterate
&amp;
Proflctent
Must
Be
Depe ndable, Orgamzed,
Efflc1ent &amp; Capable Of MulttTaskmg,
In terested
AppiiCanls May Apply By
Sendtng A Resume To
S e c ret a r yI Per so n n e I
Dtrecto r PO Box 307
Ravenswood WV 26164
References Are Reqwred
The Tuppers Pla•ns·Chester
Water Otstnct IS arxepltf1Q
appltcattons
for
AccounUC ierk pos1t1on The
poSitiOn
qua1tf1cattons
tnclude a degree In account•tlg
Knowledge of
Peachtr'ee MS Word Excel
and MS Explorer are
des•red You must be able to
work well w•th me public
You may ptck up an ap pltca·
tton Monday tMrough Fnday
trom8am to 430 pm at
39561 Bar 3a Road whiCh
Is three miles south of
Tuppers Pta1ns juSt oft State
Route 7 Phone No 740·
985 3315 Please state tn
the appltcatton whal prof•·
ctenctes are as some van
ances may be allowed
SCIUXJI-'
INlTRl(;'l10N

A. new career 1n
Medical Office
Admlnlatratlon

starls wtth career
trammg 0
Gallipolis Career
College
(740)446-4367
800-214-o452
12748
Concealed Pistol Class All
Stales Mar 1t 20a6 ,
S75 oo
9 ooam VFW
Mason WV Ph (7 40)843
5555

WA.-vnl&gt;
To Do
COITJpuler Trouble Shoal
and Aepa1r Ewpert Service
740·992·2395
House Cleanmo Serv1ces or
sltttng wtth Elderly m the•r
home Call (304)895 3211
to leave messafJe or for
tnformatton
J&amp;C Tree Ser..tce &amp;
E-.cavatmg 25 years e•p
Free es11mates 304·675
2213

arrow Smart Contac
hEI OhtO DI VI SIOn 0
Ftnanc•a l lnsllklt•on'
1f1ce of Consume
lfa1rs BEFORE you reh
ance you r home o
btatn a loan BEWAR
I requests for any larQ
dvance payments o
ees or msurance Cal
he OffiCe of Consume
ffa1rs toll free at t 866
78 0003 to lea rn tf lh
ortg age brok,er o
ender IS
properl
lcensed (Th1s •s a publ1
erv1ce anoouncemen
rom the Oh10 Valle

~=ubi~I:Sh~,n~C~o~m=·~n!~

j

------------ r-.1•0---~--~' .__.

New Doublewtde Aepo
nEwer liVed m owner ftance,
on 1 3 acres, 8 mtles north
of Holzer Hospital on 160
(740)446-3570

www.orv .com
Home Llatinga

LiS! your home by calltng
(740)«6-362(1
Vtew photos/mfo onltne
ew Haven WV
edroom 2 Bath 2 Ca
arage
Outbulldmgs
lose to town PRICE
0 S~LL ' Code 6505 o
all ( 304)86~ 3368

I'ROH:SSIONAL
~ER\1CES

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless we W1n1
1 888·582-3345
IH \I I . ., I \II
10

ar 2 slory unattacMe
arage gas welltfree gas
uttand
OH
Cal
740)740 - 3230
Cod

H!l!IIF.';
HlR SAil

l\IOBILF HnMES
HJRS•Lf

3 bedroom hOuse
'" 10 used homes under
Pomeroy oft matn road nver
000 oa Must Gal Call
V19W $27 000 (740)992 $3
Elatne 740-385-0698
2593
3·4bd parttal bnck house 16x80 homes startmg at
7acres 646 Sand Htll Ad S25995 oa Includes vtnyl
Pt Pleasant Needs some stdtngl "sli1ngle root Call
repatr $75 000 (740)388 Russ 740 385 2434
8366
1964 1Ox 50 Rembrandt With
3BR 2 Car al1ached Garage furn.shmgs $1 000 0 B 0
on 1 06 acres $62 000 (937)981 2111 Clays
i'lo4)675-6331
2006 16 w1de Spec•al PriCe
38R 2 full bath 1 900 sq ft 5181 mo Cal l (740)385
full ba se ment 2 car 7671
attached garage 3 acres
Chester Townsh1p Eastern 96 Fleetwood 3 8R Only
school d1stnct 011 At 7 near S169 mo Call (7401385·
Memonal Gardens Call 9948
(740)985·4321 atter 6pm
3BA 2bath ranch slyle L1Ke new 2002 Clayton
S148tmo
Cal l
home 25x30 attached 141152
garage 30x30 Pole barn (740)385 9948
t 33
acres.
S55 000
New Ooublew•de Repo
a401388 8380
never ltved 1n owner ftance
4bdrm 2 5 bath hardwood on l 3 acres 8 mrles nortn
lloors new roof approx at Holzer Hospital on 160
3 OOOsq 11 A1Verv1ew AI 7 (740)446 3570
south $1 25 000 No land - - - - - - - conu acts (740)709..fJ299
NICe 14)(70 Shultz 3br 1
batn new Fnoge Wale•
7BR SBA Forec-losure only heater carpel Porch I l4
$18 000 For hst•ngs call acres 5 mmules from Town
aoo 391-5228 ext F254
&amp; schools Excellent e:ond1
Attenuont
lion (3041593 a921 leave
Local company offertnQ "NO Message
DOWN PAYMENT" pro - - - - - - - - very Nice 20r 1 4)170 Heal
grams or yo u ro bu ~ YOur Pumo Detached Garage
' read o renI tn g
home tns
75 ~, 00 Lot S30 000 c811
'
• 1 00CV.. •nanctng
'
· Less than pertect credit :1304
tlll");e.
. B2~
26:"1•6--::---,
accepted
LoTs &amp;
· Payme nl cou ld be tne
ACRF.AGE
same as rent
L~---iliiiiiiiiiiiii-..,1
Mortgage
Locslors
(740)367-0CXJO
22 ec ~~es wonael1 ur vtew
r1dgetl)p property close 10
Beau11ful 4 br 3 lull baths 2 me1n rugnway per1ect tor 4
car garage lenGe&lt;l 1n lot wheeler tr811s (740)707
corrlpletely remodeled 304 2109
882 2391

-.

2 bedfoom Pomeroy $275
per month plus depoSit
(740)742-1 903
3 bedroom 2 112 baths 2
car garage furntshed diose
to
Holzer
Hosp11a1
$850/month (740)441-0310
3 to 4 bedroom home tn
Pomeroy HUD avat lab!e
$450 mo $450 deposit. call
(740)992 2979
4 bedroom 1 5 beth 5 mm
to Holzer hosptlal $850 plus
depostt &amp; utllittes (740)256·
81 52
4br
m
Syracuse
SSOOJmonth &amp; Deposit
Wa!er!Sewer tncluded No
Pels (304l675 5332
5 rQOms and bath slove and
retngerator 44 Oltve St
$385/mo S3851dep , no
pets (740)446-3945
96 do ublewlde Eastern
SchOols TPC water 3 bed
rooms 2 baths
call
(502)943 0386
Attention!

Local company oftenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams for you to buy yo~ r
home mstead ol renl!ng
' 1OO"~o tmanclnQ
· Less than pertect credtl
accepted
· Paymen1 could t&gt;e me
same as renl
Mortgage
Locators
1740l367 0000
Stop ren11ng Buy 4 bedroom
loreclosu re $15 000 For list
1ngs 800·391 5228 ext
1709.
Two bedroom house 1.bam
hardwood floors frreplace
and basement Close to
town
$45Q/month
t$4501depos 1t (740)441
0460 9am 5pm

-----,----- i

r

MOIIIFORLFD~u-~
tl\.l'.I'II

I
•

2 bedroom mobtle home m

Aacme $350 mo plus S350
deposit years lease no
pets no calls after 9pm
(140)992 5039
2 bedroom all electnc
Water and trash servtce pro
v•ded $350 monlh plus
depoSit
(740)44 1 7033
leave mess&amp;.ge
Jbr 2ba Mobile Home In
New Haven bes1de Grade
School
s 44 olmonlh
$400/deposll (304 )882
1107
,:.:::::_____~__
4BA on Cora Mill Rd wltree
gas 4 m11es tram A1o
Grande $500'montl"' plufi
depostt no pets reterences
(74a)245 5622
Mobtle home spaces 1r
Country Mob1le Home Part..
(740)385-4019
Trailer tor rent :2 bedroom
new carpet (740 )256 6803
or (740)645 3261

IFIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER IN THE CLASSIFIED ADS I

�Thursday, February 16, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 16, 2006
ALLEY OOP

SPACE

I'OR RENT

ntshed secumy
required. no pets.
2218

deposit

2 room
$25Q/mo. Secur11y
740· 992 ~ suite
deposit required . You pay
utlltties. All spaces very nice.
1BR apt , stove/
relr1dg. Elevator. can (740)446·364A
water/sewer/trash
paid, 1 ra
· 1
t.
1nmen
$325/month.
2BA apt WI D hookup,
sa we r/tras h/w8. le r
pa td . iiilo:;;;;;;H~&lt;M;;I;;SF;;:H;.(;,;)l;,;
,O;.;;;;;;;
$41XJ/monlh . (740)367-7015.
~
(740)367-7746, (740)446·
47:)4.
.

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

.~
1

TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING I
' SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
· TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
' ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC 8. HEAT
'STOVE. REF. .
' DISHWASHER
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS

ROGER HVSELL
GARAGE

'CEILING FANS
'WAT!i R. SEWAGE. &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
. PETS CONDITIONAL
(3041882-3017

2BR apartments. Starting at

$375/month . located on SA
1W

SA

850.

Bob

McCormick

Bd.

Call

(740)441-0194 or (740)441-

.

Box 189
~~;.,Middleport, OH
45760

3 miles west of
Warehouse
!n Henderson, W.V. Preowned Applicanes starting
at $75 &amp; up all · under
Warranty,
also ' have
Household
MiSc. Items

&amp;

.•
West

Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • cancer • Accident

992-5682

74P-843-5264

J 9.

Chuck Wolfe

9'7 Beech Street

Owner

Middleport. OH_

• 752
• 5
. AQJ9764

Dealer: South
Vulnerable; North-South

992-3194
or992-6635

•
••
'

•

=L • )"

,-

•

(740) 992-0496

/

12124/05.
Al l
female,
wormed twice. $25Jeach. For
more
information
call
(740)256:6374.
-------:--

Holland Tractor. 4 .wheel
drive. 17 HP Diesel only 995
Hrs.
Hydrostat transmission. 3 Pt. hitch, turf ti,res,
very nice cond . $3,950.00.
740-4
, 6·0918.
6 month old female Boston
Tercier, hou•ebroke, CKC,
$250, (740)992-3357

~~--------,

-,-------CKC Shih T:zu puppies. Two
female ,
one
mate,
$450/each. Paper trained,
had. 2nd shots. (740)388·

8965.
------'--Solid white male Pit ADBA
Reg. CH turtle buster. hou'Se ·
• brOken, 13 weeks. $500 .
(740 )256 _6657 _.

I

1

rlO ...~!~~ .

I

r

1999 Avenger 68k $4,995;
1999 Saturn 109k $3.495.
Si"nall &amp; Full size Trucks,
Vans , Blazers, and other
Cars in stock. 3 -months,
3,000 Mile Warranty. Cook
Motors, 328 Jacks!;m Pike,
(740)446·0103
.

•

~r.;:IO:;;;;;;;;~F:~AR!o;;;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~lENT

·--iiiliiiiiiiii;,;,_.l
Grilt guard to fit John Deere
790 1rac1or $100. (740)2561836. '

'05 . Auto, 2WO, wlbedliner.
excellent condilion. Kelty
Blue Book $14,600, will sell
k&gt;r $13,606. (304 )523-1179

r

26 Years Experience

www..tim.bercreelutaht.aetry.com

David Lewis

740.446.9200

740-992-6971

SUVs

ROCKY'S TREE
SERVICE

FOR SALE

Court

of

Common

Pleas
Pomeroy, ·Ohio
Claron G . &amp; Gloria P.
Schul1z ·
Plaintiffs,

vs·

A.J. Wa1son , e1. al.
defendants.
Case
No.06-CV·1 0.
Legal No1ice
To A.J. Wa1son and
J.B Phillips and/or

their unknown spous·
es, assigns, succes·
sors. administratiors,
executors, devises,

i

I~

next of kin or heirs at

law, if deceased, and
spouses of same, If
any.
Certain mineral (oil

mineral interest, that
thos,e minerals have
therefore re-merged
with the surface Interest In said trac1 , and
are now owned by

them. If you contend

and gas) rights were

otherwise, you must
file a respons,lve

severed or prossibly

pleading

severed from the sur·

Clerk of Courts office·
and serve legal counsel for Plaintiffs no

face in apx. 54+ AC

wl1h

the

loca1ed in 1he sw au
of Sec . 12 and 2.5+ AC
later than March 31s1,
located in 1he NW au
2006
of Sec. 11, Olive Twp., · Respectfully submit·
ted by;
Meigs counly, Ohio by
Frank A. Lavelle , Esq.
A.J. Wa1son and J. B ..
· Phillips ,
in
deed Attorney for Plaintiffs,
recorded on or about Reg . No. 0010195
February 161h, 1915. Lavelle Law O.fflces,
The 1as1 titled 1ransac·
L. P.A .
tion involving A.J. 8 North Court Street,
watson
and
J .B.
Second Floor,
Phillips
co'n cerning
Post Office Box 681 ,
Athens, Ohio
such mineral rights.
is a Deed recOrded on
45701·0661
or abotJt February
(740) 593-3347
161h, 1915 in Vol. 111 ,
(740) 592·6656· Fax
Page
548 .
Meigs
(I) 26 , (2) 2, 9, 16, 23,
(3) 2
Counly
. Deed

Stop by &amp;

che~k

menu as well as your old

Note We'st's lead. Against th ree no-trump,
he would have led his fourth -highest
' heart; but against a suit conlr!~ct, a short
strong suit is usually a better choice. A'nd.
. yes. he m1ght have seleclad lhe club jack.
You have three possible losers: One
spade, one heart and one diamond. If the
trump finesse is working and East does
not have all four diamonds, everything will
be fine . But here, if you take the diamond
finesse, West should win wilh his king
and ret urn a trump, which would leave
· you with those three losers. instead , p'lan
to ruff your spade loser on the board.
Take dummy's two spade winners, then
concede a heart to open communication
between your hand and dummy's. East
will shift to a tru mp. Win with yoUr ace,
trump the test spade on the board; ruff a
heart back to hand, and continue with the
diamond queen. Everything is under conlroL
·

favorit e..;

Homemade des~ert s • Breakfast serveU
• Daily lunch specials

~lll

d;.1y

"DiE BORN LOSER
'
.
~WOW I JUS\ LOOK./&gt;,J Tf\1&gt;-.\-&lt;1 f'"w,e:."1''R.e:. WI~ 10 ~1\\/t. ro-&lt;~
SNOW C.OMING OOWt-~1

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

.

I 1994

•

0

o•

o

0

•

0

Grap~

'lbur 'lllrthdliY:

Athens

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine , OhiO

45771
740-949·2217

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

ROBERT
BISSEll

I

. !·::;:}:_;:~?:=·:.- 1:'!::=::::!~~~~~!

'
coNmucnoN
• New Homes

~A NUTS

• Garag~s

• Complete
Remodeling

740-992·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

111411 mo. pd

Advertise
in this
space .for $1 04
per month.

•

SUNSHINE CLUB

,,

!
I

. Entertainment
Eagles 2171
Friday February 17th
. 7:30 to 11:30 pm

K andD Karaoke
&amp; Disc Jockey
Saturday February 18th
8:00 to 12:00 Mid .

"

GARFIELD

•

HOW ABOOT' A Nlc.E,
f'R01lN f'RUIT' 6MOOT'HIE?

&gt;oMY INNER BEAST ·
I&gt;E51RE:5. A 5NAC.K!

:26.00 PERMONTH!

Complete Tree Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.

'

'

f

J
i

1
i

Forked Run

Sportsman Club
Friday, February 17th
6pm .
12 Gauge Buckshot
680 Bo&amp;
. Everyone Welcome
•

·
Free Est.

1"-.(__

..

The:Daily Sentinel.

992·21.55•

Now Available At

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
flard Work!"

INNER BEASTS PON'T PO
f'ROiHc,&gt; AND f'RUITY

(

•' I(

Owner

Insured

lI
I

'•

Still Standing Bal:)d

Gun Shoot

Astro-.
Frid•~F•b. 17,2008

. ~~ - 1

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE .
CLASSIFIEDS

0

aJG.NATE

--------- 1" 4

FlO

•
0

••.a

"'A'.Iiski'in;;;g~;,;;;$;.3;..5.00•.-•P:-h.,. ~

NO!

0

il

"
t.:o

YE:.S!

C.,._,LL Orr SQ\OOL TOM~!

0

..

r

Meigs co'u nty since

severed

(sporty
rtmo)
24 Sorrowful
wall
25 Teeny bit .
28 Isle off

- Bagnold
43 Verno
· lklppor

44 Landfill
47 Pay dirt
48 A Guthrie
49 Social
Register
word
51 Wish
undone
52 "- Givon
Sunday"
(Stone film)
54 lnfant'a

29~
launch .
8CIIIld
31 Give
an tdgeto
32 Refuse
to vote
33 UN head-

quartt!rs

sound

37 Bummed

oul

·

40 Domino

1'/hiCh snould be beaten, Wast ducking
the first round of diamonds,

R~-Qpened!
out ou r new additions to our

I

AL=RI~

.Records.
No title
transactions concerning such severed minerals exist of record In

·Serve such

OKAY, SMIF, I'LL GIVE
YA TH' BENEFIT OF
TH' DOUBT ON
THIS
ONE!!

Judy Kay's Has

!'}'..•

that time.
The curr8nt owners,
Claron G. and Glori&amp;
P. Schul1z, submit that
under Ohio Rev. Code
Sec. 5301.56 et.seq.,
none of the conditions exist, which
would s'erve to pre-

41 Podro'o
honorffic
42 Novetlot

finesSes will lose unless you need one to
win to make the contract. So, assume that
all key honors are offside - &lt;1:5 in .this
deal. How would you try to make five diamonds after West leads the spade
queen?
North did well not to bid three no-trump,

(740) 992-0472

PUBLIC
NOTICES .
In the Meigs County

HONEST,
· SHERIFF,
I NEVER
SAW
TH' SIGN!!

Free

Will rul &amp; ~move 1~ or
2004
Chevy
Trailblazer·
will cut into fi~wood.
2002 Dodge Neorl. auto. air,
4WD
w/tow
pkg..
Kelly
TRIM TREES &amp;
3yr old AngUs bull- Sunset 49 ' 000 mile s, $J,600 OBO. Bluebooks. @ $22,000.
LAWN WORK
. (740)256· 1233
New Design 2t02. $1 .200.
n1any eMlras 10,500 miles,
(740)367-7047
2002 Su:zukl LX7 4x4, PW, excetlent condition, garage
·
·
Pl, CD. 60.000 (mostly high- kept
$17.900 (304)675- mill"'· ~--::~~~.,
Angus Bulls, two· X-breds, 4 way) miles. $9,500 OBO.
1408
- .
r60 AIJTO PARTS &amp;
heifers. Excellent breeding. CeliO (740)208·0495
4x4
.
Slate· Run
Farm. See
81
M81ibu
·Classic
mOstly
~
FOR
S.'\LE
·
·
•
,
www . sl aterun f a r m .com,
redone , nice car: too much
Varis size Ti res like new.
(740)286-5395.
to list. Aski(lg · $3,000. Black 1994 Ford _F150, 5.8L. Will put on 1or $25 each.
sh!?rt bed, great condition, 304 773-5004
For sale: Boer Club Goats. (740)379-9297.
740 367-7245
CAMPERS &amp;
$3,500.
Born in January. very limited 96 Buick LaSabre 97,000
number. Champion blood· mi., needS body work and
VANS
MmDR HoMES
lineS
on
both
sides.
FOR SALE
Professiona l
breeder. radia tor, new !ires, banery.
brakes and rotors, $1,500
1997 Hornet 23ft . 5th wheel,
(740)245-04{15 after 6pm.
080.
(740)446-9632.
Handicap
automatic
whee.l
w/e1
r, · awning, self-conu •y &amp;
chair lift. transportation van tained. light weight, $6,000
flA
97 ·Bu ick Lesabre Limite~
(1991 ). exc611ent conditiOn. OJ30. (740)245·9 109 or
GIWN
1215,000 mfles, Excellent
condition $4,000 (304)895~40)_367·7264 .
- - For sate 5)(5 round baleS of 3340
hay. Call (740)446-9777.
41
MUIURCYCIR;/
97 Ford E•p&lt;orer XLT with 1 . WHEELt:RS
BIO
HOME
b.1PROVEMI-NI'S
Very good mixed hay- trac cotllrol , V6, fully loaded,
sq uar~
o·ales. ,(740)446- 4x4, red , $4,500. Ca ll 1~95 H.D. Super Ghde,
(740)446·0350.
24 12 or {740)645-0608.
BASEMENT
20,500 miles . Too many
WATERPROOFING
II{\ \..,I'CJR I\ 110\
extras to list Call for a list.
r15
leaks
and
never Uncondi tional lifetime guarNo
antee. Local references furwrecked
.
$9,00b(Firm)
A~
nished. Established 1975.
740 -742-2768.
L~---I'OiliiRiiSAIEiiiiiii.-,l
Dodge Ram SLT, 2WD,
Call '24 Hrs. (740) 446318 Magnum V8, automatic, 1999 Harley Davidson Ultra 0870, Rogers Basement
1976 Lasalle Camper ,28ft .
long 9ed, 155,000 miles Classic . Loaded, Excellent Waterproofing,.
1995 Kawasaki Super Sport Runs great. Asking $3,300 cohdition , 29,000 total miles.
Jet
Ski. 1995
Seadoo 080. Leave message at Price $13,500. Call 740Bombardier Jet Ski, with (740)441-9378.
949·2217 until 7 pm.
GIT-IT·DONE
double trailer &amp; storage box.
All
Types
Home R"""lra
1999 GMC w/extended cab. 2003 Suzuki 4WO Vinson .
Priced to seii.Ai..lS
25 yrs. Experience,
loaded.
305
e
ngine,
aufo
500
ATV
with
34
rri
les.
Call Amy Carter @ 740-446·
Free Estimates,
transmis sion, 67,000 miles, $4900.
CARMICHAEL
9800 _
24
Emergency
S9rvice.
good clean, solid truck , EQUIPMENT
(740)446· .
(304)675-3733 or
condition.
$8,500.
excellent
2412.
1987 Plymouth Sundance.
(304)593-0129
Good condition, $900. Call (740)441·1q14.
99 Harley Fat Boy, 9,400
(740)441-7390.
2001 4dr V-6 Dakota auto- miles, lots of Chrome and
matic. 90,000 miles, 4WD. extras. (740)446-9954.
1999 Olds Eighty ~ Eight LS.
$8,500. (740)339-1620.
wen maintained, loaded ,
BoATS &amp; MoroR~
newer tires, excelle nt condi- 200 1 Dodge . Ram truck
FOR SALE
lion. 127K miles. asking 2500 SLT Heavy Duty,
$4,000. (740)245-5934.
sprinQs, camper special, 10- ' PT-35 CMT small outboard
ply tires. $7,500. Call Ed "motor power tilt &amp; trim $250.
2002 Dodge Stratus R!T V6. (740)367-0624.
. (740)256·1836.
sunroof.
remOte
entry,
leather, power everyth ing,
garage kept, red, 24k.
$9,400. (740)379-2748

LIVESTOCK

I .

condition , dual king , _thermonic heat. orb!ta l mas- ..,
ll'IOIKu!•u:.~.,•o
•
sage. heavy-duty fram ing.
(740)379-9057 leave mes- Gulbransen Sptnet piano fo r
sale .. Excellent condition
- - - - - - - - · $550 . After 4pm (740)446Firewdod split and delivered. "4525.
Nice one BR unlurn1shed Call (740)256-9115.
r~~-~f'R~UITS, ~&amp;!""'....,
apartment. Range &amp; refng .
V
.
JET
EGITABI..E'l
provided.
Water. &amp; garbage
p.:lid. Deposit required . Call
AERATION MOTORS
(740)446-4345 after 6pm.
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In Gress Greens for sale at
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- McKean
Farms, . 556
Pieasanl Valley Apartment ' 800-537·9528
Centenary Road. Gallipoli s.
Are now taking AppltcatiOQS
Picked S12 per bushel or
tor 2BR . 3BR &amp; 48R .,
Pick your own S6 per bushel.
Appt1ca110ns
are
taken NEW AND USED STEEL '-'7z14r0:;;44;::6;:;·~94:;:4;:,2·~---,
Monday thru Fnday, frOm. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar . Iii!:
.FOR SALE
9:00 A.M.-4 PM. Office tS For
Concrete,
Angle,
Located at 11 51 Evergreen Channel , Flat Bar, S!eel
Drive !?oint Pleasant. WV Grating
For
Drains,
Phone No. is (304)675- Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Commercial Property &amp;
5806. E.H.O
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Building for Sale. 9.9 acres.
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; Ambrosia Machine Inc.
Tw1n RIVers Tower 1S acceptFriday, Bam -4:30pm. Closed Route 2 Box 254 Point
ing applicatiClns for watttng
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Pleasant, WV
25550
list for Hud-substzed. 1- br,
Sunoay. (740)446-7300
(304)675-1722.
7:30apartment. call 675-6679
4 00
EHO
RUILI!ING
1 \lnl". 1'1'111,
WEEKLY AVAILABLE
~
SUPPI.It:S
.
,\ 11\I"'IIU h
Aefri ge rator / Mtc row ave Block, brick, sewer pipes',
From $150 To $175 College wind9ws, lintels, ·etc. Claude
H1ll Motel Call (740)245- Winters. A10 Grande. OH
5326
Call740-245-5t21 .

bi!Herfly

23 -wheels

was

Hardwood Cablnetrr And Furnlillre

2 black CKC Lab pups born- 1995 Model 111 0 Ford New 2000 Neon 89k $3,995; Chevy Colorado Ext. Cab

AKC Pomeranian pups. had
Black powder 'cannon 18"
1st.shot s and wOrmed. $350
ba.rrel on wooden carriage
each. (740)388-8642.
with 24" wood spoked
wheels $.1 ,500 .. (740)256Blac~ Lab pUppy, male ,
1836.
AKC, $195, frie ndly, love'S
r
kids : (740)992-3506

r

14
pal
58 Hydrox
rival
15 x cousin
DOWN
.16 One's good
name
18 Evergreen
1· Modem·
· tnte
,speed unlt
19 Newspaper 2 Grand
aoctlon
Canyon at.
(2 wda.)
3 Tendon
23 Me.
4 Flight dlr.
Zettorting
5 Sma II tlartc
26 Microscopic 6 Back when
27 Big pKcher 7 Benk on
30 laland
8 Uate out
wolcomaa
9 Weather
. 32 Arthurlan
word
paradise
10 Tiger
34 Swamp
Woods' org.
crmera
11 Bring under
35 India port
control
36 Hourglass 12 Family man
contenta - 17 Hottlme
~ Sonic boom
In Quebec
20 Prlzaa
maker
2t Give, ·
38 Rainbow
39 Manors
a time
42 Qoal
22 Old the

Humor ofte n features a sudd8n surprise.
drivFor example, as a senior eijlzen
ing down the Interstate, his car phone
rang . .Answering, he heard his wife's
voice warni ng him, ~H erma n , I just heard
on the news that there's a car going the
,wrong way on 140. Please be ca reful.~
~Heck ,~ said Herman, "i~s not just one ...
it's hundreds or t~em! ~

At.lliGttT ·•• Ttt~
P#lOrHM IS
TttAT IT
POESN'T FIT
MY IGNITIO,.., • .

WV#03971

AllTOl
FOR SALE

Middleportbedroom furntshed apartment, no pets,
deposit &amp; previous rental
references . (740)992-0165

Include~

East

All pass

the finesse lo.ses

.I JC""OW Tttf ~ey TO ' SUGG.fSS

•• •

Apanments in Middle.po,rt.
M1StWANE9lJS
From $?95-$444 Call 7-40 · 1 __
MERCHANDISE
992-5064 . Equal Housing
.
Opportuni ties
Craftmatic bed. excell~nt

.

N~rlb
~ •

Vaccinated

58 Bit of paata
57 Sneezy's

In brklge columns and prepared deals, all

SPORTING
GOOffi

r

West

Pass

Always assume that

Licensed Home Builder

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

Sou1b

3•

Opening lead; • Q

.
'.

'

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

10x10x10x20

Refrige1ator frost free , white
$125: small chest freezer
$125: washer heavy duty
$95: dryer S95: 30in White
ra,nge, like new 5125. Genes
Appliances 76 Vine St.,
GallipOliS (740)446-7100 or
(740)367·7886

DOwntown location. 1 ·sA __
ANTIQUES
apt. unfurnished , no pets.
,
sell.
Riverine
references ,
deposit . Buy
or
(740)446-0139.
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village 992-2526 . Russ Moore:
Manor
and
Riverside "ow:n:;•::'·" : " " - - - -.......,

,.; Q 10 8 I
Sou1b

·1184.

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apall ments.
Townhouse
and/or. small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1t11
tor application &amp; inlormation.

. 98643
. AQ
• 5

K 83

••

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

Relridg Whirlpool 18 cu ft,
like new 5200 .( 304)675·
1731

i

AK53
Easl

"" 7 4

New Couch &amp; Loveseat,
$450. Call (7401446-7444.

Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
U0-446-2568
Equal ~
Hous,ing Opportun ity.

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AK

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up

Thompso,ns Appliance &amp;·
3 room &amp; bath . lurnish~d
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
upi?tairs, clean , reference &amp;
re-conditioned . automaltc.
deposit
required .. Call
washers &amp; dryers, r~frigera­
(740)446·1519 .
tors , ga~ and electric
Beautiful 2-story townhouse ranges , air co'nditioners, and
o11ertooki r]g Gallipolis Ctty wringer washers. Will do
park. Kitchen . O.Ft L:A .. repairs on major brands in
study. 3BR. 2 baths. laundry shOp or at your home.
area. Aelerehces requtred .
security deposit, no pets. Used Furniture Store, 130
$900 mo. Call (740)446· Bulaville P1ke. Washers, dfy2325 or (740)446-4425
ers . gas/electric ranges,
retngerators , matt resses,
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
couche s, dinettes, chests,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
much more. (740)446-4782,
PRICES AT JACKSON
GaU1polls, OH. Hrs. 11·3 (M' ESTATES. 52 We!itwood
Drive from $344 to. $442. $)

55

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. 108742
• . 10 2

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_Repair

Appliance

starting at .~9c
(304)675-7999

45 Mountain
overlooking
1 Foundlllon
Troy
46 V11ali1y
5 Garden
opo1a
50 Kind
10 Cajun county
of ne1Work
12 Dove
53 Let go by
cousin

1ST MON . FREE RENT
WITH PAID DEP. NEW

ELLMVIEW

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

EMPLOYMENT

office~ $~25/mo .:

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

•

CI~ASSIFIEDS

1 and 2 bedroom apart· Downtown Office ' Space- 5
ments. turmshed and unlur· room su1te $650/mo; 1 room

wwvi.mydallysentlnel.com

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By S.fnlce B~ 0-.ol
Although your tinanclaltrends .loolc qutte
. encouraging to you for the year ahead and
you ·know you should be able to strengthen things considerably, ifs still importa,nt
nol to ~ake any wild cha nces 'o)'ith your
hard-earned money.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Being a
farseeing individual, you usually assess
situations quite logically. and accurately
Howev~r . today you could yield to Wishful
thinking and be given to impractical rationalization .
PISCES (Feb. 20-M~rch 20) - Unless
you're thou ghtful in handting your affairs
with a close lriend. a misunderstanding
with your pal could arise over, of all things,
something materi al. Don't let anything
affect this union.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Alth ough
the actions you take today may be the
most convenient and advantageoUs for
you, they might not be "&amp;s constructive .for
others and. sadly, you'll know it. It won't
win you any frierids .
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - Yoo may
think you're being kind by letting someone
who thinks he or she can handle a delicate
assignment do the job, but If !his individual
botches It up, all will end up paying for the
debacle.
Gj::.MINI (May 21 -June 20)- It's not like
you. but today because you care oo much.
yo u could step out of ·Character and be
unduly possessive of someone who needs
wings . This person win tee! bUllied , not
)oved.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) .....,.. Unless
you fully inteni:l to comply, don't make any
prom1ses or commitments to o t!'lers, espe·
cially those who depend on you. Yov'll and
up hurting these indtviduaiS very much:
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Sincerity ts
always essentt al when dealing with
trlends, so don't make the mistake that
today is different. even it all you 're trying to
do iS flatter sonleone. This person wtll le~l
manipulated.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)- That extraiJ·
agance bug that lies dormant most of the
time could rear "rts ugly head today and
encourage you to foolishly fritter, 111way
funds . You'll end up having noth ing to show
tor it .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. i3)- It's not like
you to slack on your social graces. but
tod ay that's exactly what could, happen ·
Have a . good lime and be yourself , but
don't do anything that. could detract from
your imag~ .
,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoV 22) - S~O!Jid
you dectde 10 wear your heart on your
sleeve today, you'll be leaving yourself
wide opoefh and vulnerable to being wounded b)' someone you lcwe who · doesn 't
exactly !eel the same.
SAGIITAAIUS tNov. 23 -DE:~e . 21)- Just
· because your financial ptctu(e looks p!Pm ·
istng at this parttcular lime doesn't •mean
you can foolishly make ml'penditures wtth
funds you don'\ yet have. Th ings never go
9101ctly as we th1nk
'
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�'

NASCAR edition
inside today's Sentinel
.

Thursday, February .16,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

---

Southern falls to
top-ranked Trimble, ·Bt

.

2006

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .
.10 CI ·: NTS • \ ol. .&gt;.&gt;. Nn .

• Lady Eagles advance
to districts. See Page 81
AMARCORD
'

.

'AMARCORD' COMING
. FEBRUARY 28

Kari Polcyn . of Gallipolis , looks forward to
people can see it." the artist •sat d.

1

RIO GRANDE - The first concert of 2006 in the Valley
Artist Series will be presented in 8 p.m . on Tuesday evening1
Feb. 28, 2006, in the Fine and Performing Arts Center at the
University of Rio Grande. Featured will be the Ensemble
AMARCORD, five former choristers of the famous St.
Thomas Boys Choir in Leipzig. who emerged in the past few
years as continental Europe's finest male a cappella quintet. :·
According to Valley Artist Series President Gary Stewafl,
"The Ensemble Amarcord has won a number of top international prizes in the t1eld, starting in 1995. They have performed coast-to-coast in the United Stats, making two tours
here each season, as well as in Canada, Asia and throughout
Joy Kocmoud/photo Europe. We are very fortunate to be able to have them be a
the exhibition every year. ' It's a good opportunity to get your work out there where part of this season's Valley Artist Series." ·
· At home in Leipzig, they recently performed their tenth
anniversary concert in the famous Gewandhaus, and two
months later performed there twice with the Gewandhaus
OrcheStra.
·
Last July they were featured artists at the national convention of the American Lutheran Church Musicians in New York
City. They have also sung at a number of conferences and
and offered for sale.
, stages. Everything submitted goes on events of the American Choral Directors Association.
Kari Polcyn, of Gallipolis, looks for- ·display and there is no entry fee, making
Their programming versatility is clearly demonstrated by the
ward to the exhibition every year. "It's a it a unique opportunity to see .work that range of their compact discs. These include secular music '
good opportunity to get your work out m1ght not get a chance to be m another through the ages, sptritual works from different centuries, and
most recently, an album of popular and show tunes.
.
there where people can see it," the artist show.
According . to · the Richmond (Virgini a) Times-Dispatch,
said. Polcyn is an'Art History major who
The exhibition will run February 17 to
loves to work in clay. In addition to a March 12, gallery hours are 2-5 p.m. "This German vocal quintet ensemble Amarcord has mastered
ceramic piece, she entered several pho- Wednesday through Friday and 1-3 p.m. the dift1cult art of makin!l an a cappella performance sound not
togrflphs of her travel s to exotic loca- on Sat11rday and ~unday. Groups ru:e as if lacking accompamment, but it's not necessary ... pertions.
welcomed by appomtment and there ts· formed flawlessly."
Season ticket holders are reminded of this exciting concert
Barbara · Summers, director, says the no admission fee.
For more information call (740)286- by Ainarcord, on Feb. 28th. Individual tickets will be available
show is important to the community
because it lets people see the work of 6355
or
send
e-mail
to at the door the night of the concert for $20. To reserve tickets
in advance, call 245-7364.
future professionals in their formative shac~zoomnet.com

New Dire.ctions in Art'
BY JOY KOCMOUD.
'

.
NEWS@MY0AILYTRIBUNE.CDM
JACKSON - Friday night there will
be an opening reception for the "New
Directions in Art" exhibit at the Markay
Cultural Arts Center located at 26'1 E.
Main Street in Jackson. The reception
will run from 7-9 p.m. and refreshments
will be served. ,
' The show features work by sludents of
the University of Ri.o Grande in a variety
of media. Sculptures, photographs and
drawings by .students will be di splayed

Black History Month exhibit-to
showcase Huntington artist Billy
Clemons at the Cultural Center
D.C., and Chicago where he had galleries
in people's homes and taught physically
· challenged children , Since returning
CHARLESTON, W.Va. _. The West home to Huntington, W.Va. in 1998, he
Virginia Division of Culture and Hi story has continued to be involved in communiunveiled its Black Hi story Month exhib- ty empowerment programs.·
it, Billy Clemons: Outsider Artist/Inner
According to Clemons, "I tried to tlnd
Views, on Friday, Feb . I 0, in the myself in my art because it tells me
B~lcony Gallery of the Cultural Center, where to go since I have been by myself
State Capitol Complex. Charleston since I was a little kid and learned how. to
W.Va .. An opening reception to meet the survive in the jungle of life." His paintartist will he held on Friday, Feb. 17, at ings reflect this journey. They are emo5:30 p.m. The recepti o n is free and open tiona! artworks with a very developed
· to the public. The exhibit will remain on design component and lively use of
display through Marc h 5.
col'or. They utilize patriotic, spiritual and
Clemons, of Huntington. W.Va .. grew African-American symbols. The show is '
up in a family of 18 .children and was compri sed of IS works in oil.
raised by hi s great grandmother who
For more information about the exhibtaught .him how to garden, clean 'house it, Billy Clemons: Outsider Artist/Inner
and encouraged his gift of dance. In his Views, contact Richard Ressmeyer.
early years, he developed a strong will director of arts for the Division. at (304)
and had trouble dealing with authority 558-0240, ext. 721.
t1gures. particularly in school. . This cui The West Virginia Division of Culture
minuted in the II grade, when he won a and History, an agency of the West
major art contest but was denied the Virginia Department of Education and
prize because of his lack of respect for the Arts, brings together.the state 's past,
school officials. Against family objec- present and future through programs and
tions, Clemons dropped out of school services in the areas of archives and hisand traditional society.
·
tory. the arts, historic preservation and
Clemons traveled the East Coast and museums. The Cultural Center is West
continued to paint, giving away most of . Virgini;i's oft1cial showcase for the arts.
his work. Ending up in Atlanta., he opened Vi si t the Division's web site at
a volunteer art class for inner city kids. In www.wvculture.org for more informacollaboration with other artists. he began tion about 'programs of the Division·. The
giving lectures in . business schoals to Divi sion of &lt;;:ul ture and Hi story is an
teach people how to succeed in the aft Equal Opportu nity/ Affirmative Action
world . l-Ie also worked in Washington. Employer.
StAFF· REPORT
' NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL,COM

Phil Dirt &amp; the Dozers to headline
Ariel's 'Indoor Beach Party'
GALLIPOLIS - The popular
"oldies" band Phil. Dirt &amp; the
Dozers will perform at 3 p.m. on
Sunday, April 23 at The Ariel's
Ann Carson Dater Performing
Arts Centre. Tickets for the event
are on sale now. Reserved VIP
seats in the front rows are available for $20 each. General .seating
is available on the main floor for
$15 and iii the balcony for $12.
Student general admission tiCkets
are $8 each. Tickets may be purchased by calling 446-ARTS
(446-2787) or by visiting the

Ariel - Dater Hall box office at
428 Second Avenpe, Gallipolis.
Box office hours are I 0 a.m. to 3
p.m., Monday-Friday.
.
Phil Dirt &amp; the Dozers will
headline an energetic, familyfriendly "Indoor Beach Party."
Various beach-themed activities
for kids are planned for the afternoon event. The concert will be.
part of a special weekend titled.
"Celebrate the Gift,". celebrating
the generous donation by Meigs
County native , Ann Carson Dater.
Mrs. Dater recently purchased the.

building which houses the Morris
and Dorothy Haskin's Ariel
Theatre for the Ariel organiza"
tion, providing a space to offer a
wide range of performing arts, as
well as . providing a permanem
home for the Ohio Valley
Symphony. The weekend will
include a performance by the
Ohio Valley Symphony on
Saturday, April 22 along with the
lighting of the new marquee. The
Indoor Beach Party with Phil Dirt
&amp; the Dozers will close out the
weeke.nd 's festivities.

Dwight Icenhower returns to The Ariel on Saturday .
GALLIPOLIS ·
Dwight
Icenhower, Elvis tribut.: artist, is
scheduled to perform at The Ariel Ann Carson Dater Performing Arts
Centre at 7 p.m. this Saturday.
Tickets are on sale now qt t~e Ariel
- Dater Hall box officefor the con-

cert .. A few seats were sti II available at press time. Tickets may be
purchased by calling 446-ARTS
(446-2787) or by visiting The Ariel
- Dater Hall box office at 428
Second Ave, Gallipolis.
Icenhower will perform the love

'
songs
made popular by "The King,"
Elvis Presley. Icenhower is a Mei&amp;s
Covnty native and an award-winning Elvis tribute artist. He has per~
formed numerous sold-out concerts
filled with adoring fans that return
to see him again, and again.

place for you.
The center has bound volumes
of Jackson's past newspapers
(some are already indexed with
births, deaths, martiages, and
divorces), census records, birth and
death records, cemetery records,
local history books, and many other
resources. There is no charge to .
come in and use the .centers
resources, and copies of most items

are available for ~ modest fee.
Hours for the genealogy center
are, Wednesdays from 1 to4 p.m.
Additional hours can be arranged
by appointment.. RSYP. ~9hmtee~ .
Barbara Scon. who hfi!!' done'exten- ·
sive research into her OWl). family,
staffs the center on 'Wednesilays,
and can assis1 with your research.

MARIETTA - The 14th . in Memphis. Tenn .
Thi~ year's competition will
.annual River City Blues competition , I he oldest and largest see a fu ll.afternoon and eveni ng
blues talent competition in the of greal blues acts from all over
stale of Ohio will be held Ohio. West Virginia. Illinois,
from noon to midni ght Feb. Michigan,
Indiana.
and
18 at the Lafayette. hotel. 101 Pennsylvania. Twenty bands
Front St.. Marietta. It is an will compete for $1,000 in cash
event sponsored by the Blues. and BJFM sponsorship to the
Jazz and Folk Music Society. lmernational Blues Challenge
The River City Ohio Blues in Memphis where they will ,
Competition is. a preliminary gain valuable exposure to
performance 1ha1 can lead to record label representatives,
an opportunity for blues musi- blue' industry professional s
cians to gain national expo- and fe&gt;tival promoters capable
·sure at the Blues Foundation's of providing · real career
· lnterilational .Blues Challenge ·advance ment for a serious

blues musician.
In addition, they will play
at the I Sth annual Ri ver City
Blues Festival· on March 1718, 2006.
The band lineup for the
Feb. 18 event is as rollows:
Mojo Sircet Blues. Chagrin
Falls. noon .
FFB Blues Band, Batavia,
12-:30 p.m..
Barrel hou se
Bonni
Charleston W.Va .. ,J p.m. ·
The
Mojo
Brothers,
Indianapoli s. Ind. I :30 p.m.
Mother "I:ucker, Huntington
WVa.. 2 p.m.

Bongo Joe and the Funk All Star Blues Review,
Ruckus, Cuyahoga Falls, 2:30 Waterford, Mich., 6 p.m.
.
. p.m . . .
Competing in the evening on
· Midnite Blues. Xenia, 3 thehourandhalf-hourbeginning
p.rrt.
at 8 p.in. will be Mudfork Blues
Mean Mother May I, · of Athens. Big Daddy &amp; The
Newark. 3:30p.m.
Hoodoo Men of Hartville,
'Code Blue Band. Urbana, 4 Malkum Gibson and The
p.m.
Mighty
Juke
Band of
Marci Stanley and The Ride Clarksville, Austin "Walkin '
Kings. Ravenswood, W.Va . Cane" of Fairview Park, Angel
4:30p.m.
Blue and The Prophets of
Dustin Troisi Blues Band. Valencia, Pa .. Larry Tarlor Blues
Huntington W.Va .. 5 p.m.
and Soul Band of Chicago. Ill..
The
Burnin'
Lloyd s. and Lightning Joe King and
Cambridge. 5:30p.m. ·
Blue Thunder of Akron.
The Rev. Robert Sexton's
River.
Ci ly
Blues

0BTIUARIFS
Page A5
•.Rosalee M. Wright, 81

INSIDE
• Authentic love.
See Page A2
• Evangelist to speak
at Abundant Grace.
Ministries. See .Page. A2
,. Parents of teen ·
missing in Aruba sue
Dutch youth in New York.
See Page AS
• Hugles announce birth.
See Page AS
• Benet~ dance to be
held. See Page A6

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

mills and for a period of five
years.
The levy is estimated to
RUTLAND - During its generate re.venue of $6,249 a
regular meeting this week year if I 00 J.ercent of taxes
Rutl and · Village Coun~il are collecte . The total tax.
voted to place an additional valuation of the subdivision
levy on the May 2 ballot for used in calculating the estipolice protection .
mated property tax reVenue
Mayor April Burke said the was $3,124,485.
levy is meant to help with
"We voted to place the levy
expen ses in maintaining the on the ballot to maintain
current police force of two, police protection in the village
part -time officers.
, due to lack of monies,"
'This will help with payroll Councilman Dean Harris said.
and almost pay for one of the . Harris added that it was
qfficer's salary," Burke sa1d. important to maintain a local
The levy would be for two (lOlice force due to limited
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

resources available from the
M'eigs County Sheriff's
Office at this time.
Rutland Chief of Police
· Jeff Miller said that in l ~ss
than a month his department
had investigated two burglaries, one attempted burglary.
two felony theft s and one .
sex ual assault.
Other business discussed at
this month's meeting included:
Accepting · the mayor 's
report which li sted a total of
$462 collected in mayor's
court fines.
Maintenance Supervisor
Dave Davis reported.that the

main sewer line had plugged
last wee.kend but was 11xed
by Monday.
Davis also said the plant
had a routine inspection from
a representative from the
Ohio ·
Environmental
Protection ·Age ncy
last
Wednesday though he has not
received the report on the
inspection yet.
· "I don't know how it Went,
all I can say is we were
ready," Davis said.
Harris maintai ned that
finding all the ordinances for
the village must be a priority
as well as discussing li ability

• Texas authorities
. close case into
Cheney's hunting .
accident. See Page A5

WEATIIER

StAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BRIAN J. REED .
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·POMEROY
· - Four
Republicans have filed for
the post of County Auditor in
the May 2 primary. ·
Thursday aftern&lt;i&gt;on was
the deadline for filing partisan ·petition s of candidacy
and local le vies and issues for
the spring primary..
Local issues will include a
four-mill levy in Southern
L-ocal School District and a·
local liquor permit option in
Racine.
·
Mary T. Byer-Hill , Marty
L. Cline, Fred L Hoffman
and Carla Shuler have filed
petitions with the Meigs
County Board of Elections,
seeking their party 's nomination for the auditor's race .
County
Commissioner
Mick Davenport. ·a Dempcrat,
and Ernest E. Spencer, a
Republican, were the only
candidates to file for the commiSSioner race. Common
Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow III filed as a Republican
in the race for the judge's,seat.

Merchants
discuss spring
festivities,
parking lot repair

.

,

Belli Sergentj pltoto

Winner of the 2006 Valentines Day Basket is Donna Ohlinger (second row, left). Gifts for the
basket were don&lt;Jted by 'various Me igs County businesses. Ohlinger registered at the Dairy
Queen of Middleport. one of many participating merchants . With the winner are left to right,
front. Dairy Queen em,ployees Corey Vaughan. Jamie Rickard. and Brittany Williams ; second
row. Ohlinger and her husband. Bill ; and th ird row, Dairy Queen Manager Beth Schneider and
Ttle Daily Sentinel advertising representative Brenda Davis .

Merchants award Valentine's Day basket
istered at local busine ss establishments that
participated in the promotion with the drawing bemg made this week at random at zThe
Daily Sentinel office . on Court Street. The
.
promotion has become an annual event.
As for this year's wi nner Ohlinger said she
would be sure to share some of the gifts with
her hu sband.
Gifts and the local merchants that donated
them in.clude: Dish towels from The Fabric
Shop, earrings from Clark's Jewelry Store,
tanning session and lotion from Love Your
Tan , $20 gift certificate from The Cutting
Crew, dinner for two from River Way Cafe,

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

'

1.2 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith • Values
Movies

A6

·83-4

Bs
A6

A4
A2-3

As

NASCAR

B2

Obituaries
Sports
Wt:ather ..

As
· B Section
, A6

© aoo6 Ohio Valle~' Publishing Cu.

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Police Department
along with the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Investig ation
(BCI ) are .i nvestig ati ng a
stabbing that allegedly took
place Wednesday night.
The
Pomeroy
Police
Department received a call
from the · Meigs County
Sheriff's Office at 10:27 p.m.
that a male subject was found
outside a residence on
Butternut Avenue, bleeding.
· When Pomeroy Poli ce Sgt.
Ronald Spaun and Patrolman
Brent Rose arrived on the
scene they surmi sed that the
male subject had been
stabbed.
The subject was then transported by Meigs Emergency
Medical . SerVices to Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis
for treatment
The allc;ged assai lant was
incarcerated and charges are
pending in Meigs County
Court:,
A full report including the
names of the assailant and
.victim were n.ot available
from the Pomeroy Poli ce
Department at press tirn~ but ·
Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt said the
report will be. forthcoming as
the investigation progresses.

POMEROY - "I never win anything,"
Donna Ohlinger of Pomeroy joked as ·. she
gratefully accepted a Valentine 's Day basket
filled with prizes donated by local Meigs
County Merchants.
. .
Ohlinger registered to win the basket at
Dairy Queen of Middleport where she and her
BY CHARLENE HoEFliCH
husband Bill are regular customers eating at
HOEFLICM@MYDAILYSENTI)IIEL.COM
the restaurant nearly every Sunday.
Dairy Queen Manager Beth Schneider said
POMEROY - Spring fesBY BRIAN J. REED
. tivities and vill age improve- · she couldn 't be happier that two of her cusBREED®MYDA ILYS ENTINEL .COM
·
ment projects were discussed tomers won the bas ket.
from
all
over
Meigs
County
regPlease see Basket. AS
Customers
at this week's meeting of the
POMEROY - Hendrix
· Pomeroy
Merchants
Heating imd Cooling . of
Assoc iation.
Tuppers Plain ~ is the apparIt was announceq that the
ent low bidder for plumbing.
.
vill age again this year will
and heating repairs at the ·
. sponsor the Easter egg hunt ~--------------------~
BY BRIAN J; REED
Portland
Communitv
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
on the football field with
Center. At Thursday 's re~u·­
Mi.chelle Noble as chairper·
·lar meeting . of Me1gs
MIDDLEPORT
.
son. It will be held on
. County
Commissioners.
Middleport ' resident s can bid s 'were opened on the
Saturday. April 15, the day
expect to t1nd ary empty gro- project. to be financed
before Easter.
cery bag on thetr doorknobs through the Community
June 2 and 3 were
this weekend. as youth group Devel oplnent Block Grant
announced as . the dates for
members
frc1m
the formula program .
·
.the Gold Wings and Ribs
Middleport
Church
of
Chrisl
Festival to be held on the
Hendrix bid the project at
distribute inforn1ation about $10.300 for both the heating
Pomeroy
park ing
lot.
their upcoming 30-Hour aod plumbing aspects of the
Questions were asked con·
Famine food drive .
pr.oject. Mark 's, Plumbing
cerning repair on the parking
. The youth group will pl,ace and He'ating of Reedsville
lot wall prior to the time festhe bags on doorknobs wa ~ the on l' other bidder,
tivals begin , and John
throughout the community on with a prop,)sal of $ 11.078
Musser, president, reported
Saturday. hoping re sident s for both heating and plumbbid s for the work have · been
wi ll fill them with food for ing work.
received..
·
the needy .
The engineer' :&lt; estimate for
The low bid of $116,000
·
On
.
Feb
.
24.
teens
from
the
project placed the co't at
came from J. P.' Masonry and
across
lhe
nation'
will
begm·
a
Caulking of Columbus. Bid
S I 0.500
JO,hour fasl in order to raise
The bid' were referred to
documen_ts have been sent to
money for "'orld hunger. Grant' Administrator Jean
FEMA for evalualion and
while completing a commu- Trw,sell for a recommendafunding decisions and once
. nity service project. The tion before bids are awarded
an answer comes back from
youth al the Church of Chri,t. .next week .
that agency, then Musser sa id
led by Donald Vaughan. Jr ..
Commissioners also:
the project wi ll get underway.
•
Reviewed a reque st from
will collect canned and non·
repair work should be
. ''The
~~··
J.
RHd/
pltotO
completed wi thi n 60 days Members of the youth group &lt;Jt Middleport Church of Chrtst . perishable food items for dis- Salisbury Township Tru stees
rename
TR : 632 ·
tribution to ·the Rejoicing to
after that." he said.
prepare collection bags for distri.bution this weekend to
•
Please see Portland, AS
Plene see Youth, AS
Please see Mttrch•nts, AS' Middlepor t residents.

Church youth prepare for fast, charity food drive

Details on Page A6

iss ue s with the village's
insu rance repreoentative in
regards to public use of the
Rutland Civic Center, housing an emergency squad in
the center and issues at the
village garage.
Harris also said the vi llage
needs to set ·a deadline for
spring cleaning around the
ball fields. ·
"lt 's got to be cleaned up in
a timely fashion ," Harris said.
All members of council
were present for tl)e meeii ng
and were joined by Fiscal
Officer Deborah Whitlach,
Miller and Davis.

Pomeroy
stabbing under
investigation

pnmary

Please see Primary, AS

:ll Sl!C110NS -

Competition weekend starts
otl at Juke Joint on Feb. 17 at ·
Oliver's . "Upstairs"
in '
Marietta with Willie Pouch &amp;
, the Upsetters; 9 p.m., $5 at the
door. Willie; who comes from
Tupelo. Miss .. via Columbus,
Ohio, has played at the Ri ver
City Blues in Marietta before.
·Several dntwings will take
place during the evening .
Tidets are $ 15 at the door. The
project is supported in ,part by
the Ohio Ri ver Border Initiati ve,
a joint project of the Ohio Arts
Council and tl;le West Virginia
Commission on the Arts.

ww" . m}dail~-.·"t i m· l . w"'

:.!006

•

For more infonnarioll, contact the
Jblles Museum ar (740) 286-2556.

River City Blues competition set for Feb. 18

1- .

Ballot set
for·May2

Genealogy center available
JACKSON - Genealogy is an
area of interest for many people.The
Carriage House Genealogy Center
is available for those doing family
research. It .is located behind the
Lillian · Jones Museum, 75
Broadway St., Jackson. If you need
help with where to start on your
family history, need to find resource
material , or just want someone to
share your t1ndings with. this is the

I'RI 1),\ Y. FEBRL\R\

Rutland Council·to place ·police levy on May ballot

SPORTS

.

1 :~ 1

,,
' 4

Bids·opened
on Portland
project

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