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                  <text>Teamu

x-advaneaa to a.eond round

FIRST ROUND
GROUp A

WL Pet

GB

x-South Korea

3 o

1000 -

x..Japan ·

2 1 .667

1

TafwaQ
China

1 2 333 2
0 3 000 3
Friday, March 3
At Tokyo
South Korea 2, Ta1wan 0
Japan 18, Ch1na 2, 8 innings
S.turday, Martt'l 4
At Tokyo
Soulh Korea 10, China 1
Japan 14. Taiwan 3. 7 1nnlngs
Sunday, March 5
At Yokyo
· Taiwan 12, China 3
South Korea 3. .Japan 2

shuts out axico, 2-0

W L Pet

GB

1 0 1.000 -

Canada

1 0 1.000 Mexico
· 0 1 .000 .J
Soutl'l Alrica
0 1 .000 1
Tuesday, March 7
At Phoenix
United States 2, Mexico 0
At Scottsdale, Ariz.
Canada 11 ,. South Africa 8.

Wednesday, March a
At Phoenix
Canada at United States. 4 p.m .
At Scottsdale, Ariz.
Me)(icO vs. South AJnca. 9 p.m.
Thursday, March 9

...

At Phoenix
Canada vs Mexico, 8 p.m .
Friday, March 10
At Scottsdale, Ariz.
South Africa at United States, 3 p.m.

GROUP C
WL
1 0
0 0
0 0

Puerto Rico
Cuba
Netherlancts

Panama

Pc)
1.000
.000
.000

GB
·~
·~

o 1 .000. 1

Tuesday, March 1
At San Juan. Puerto Rico
Puerto Rico 2. Panama 1
Wednesday, March 8
At Sen Juan, Puerto Rico

Cuba vs. Panama, 1 p.m.
Netherlpnds at Puerto ,Rico , 7:30

p.m.
Thursday, March 9
At San Juan, Puerto Rico
Cuba vs. Netherlands, 7 p.m.
Friday, March 10
At San Juan, Puerto Rico·
Panama vs. N~therlands , 1 p.m .
Cuba at Puerto A 1co.. 7:30 p.m.

GROUP P

·

W L Pet

GB

Domin1can Rep . 1 0 · 1.000 -

Italy
1 0 -1.000 Australia
0 1 .000 1
Venezuela
0 1 .000 1
Tuesday, March 7

At KI-ssimmee, Fla.
Dominican Republic 11, Vene+uela 5
Italy 10, Australia 0
·•
Wednesday, March a
At Kissimmee , Fla.
Venezuela vs. llatY, 1 p m
Thursday, March 9
At Kissimmee, Fla.
Dominican RepUbl ic vs. Italy, 1 p.m.
Venezuela vs. Australia , 8 p.m.
Friday, March 10
At Kissimmee, Fla.
Dominicci.n Republ ic vs. Australia_. 7
p, .

photo
Team USA third baseman Chipper Jories watches. with Team Mexico
pitcher Oscar Villarreal. Jones ' solo home run during the seventh
inning of Round 1 of their World Baseball Classic game at Cha·s e
Field in Phoenix. Tuesday.

'

Christman
from Page 81
staff has worked extremely
hard since December, we .
been out watching a lot of
games. we're on a lot of kids
· and Matt just happens to be

AP

French discussed what he come in and do whatever he
the first domino to fall.
"He's the first kid to sign liked about Christman and can to help the program out
with our new· staff here and about where he may fit in. · and contribute.
' we' re very excited about it,'' "Right now, it's kind of hard
"He's got a great mindset,
French added.
"I · think to. tell exactly where he' ll tit he's going to put the work in
Matt's going to fit in very in , because we don ' t know to be able to contribute any
well with our program and · the rest of the recruiting class way possible," French added .
. our in stitution and we're yet,". French said. · "The one "And obviously we're .not
excited to get this citliber of thirig he's got going for him going to have ;my concerns
you ng man. acad~mically righ.t now is he has a great ·about this young man acadeattitude about just wanting to mically."
and athletically."

the re would be one more if
there is an agreement until 12:0 I a.m. Friday . to
give te-ams time. to get
from Page 81
everything in order.
If there is no settlement,
come up with something.
then 2007 would have no
but.it 's still up jn the air. It 's sa lary · cap and create the
going to be long and drawn kind of uncertainty that neiout and tough."
ther side really wants.
Finding a sol ution now is
Revenue sharing hasn' t
critical because free agency. been dealt · with during the
pushed back twice, is sched- negotiations. even though
uled to start Thursday with a Upshaw has contended all
$94.5 million salary cap that along that no agreement can
could go as much as · $10 be reac hed without it.
million higher if there is an
If nothin~ else, the tone of
extension. And although the owners~ was far different
both sides have agreed there at this ti1eeting than in Ne_;, ·
will be no more extension s York last Thqrsclay; when

Owners

fied to the gra nd jury in late
2003 th;lt he used a clear
substance and a cream given
to him by his per.sonal trainfrom Page 81
er. Gre g Anderson. who.
pleaded gui lty in the
regimen. which they write BALCO case last July to
staned in 199g with injecroiu distribution and
tions of Winstrol, a powerful ste
money laundering . Bond;
steroid also linked to Rafael said he didn't know that
Palmeiro.
\vhat he w.as using was· a
According to the book. &lt;te roid. the newspap.er
Bonds was using two unde- reported.
tectable desi gner stero.ids,
In October. Anderson was
informally known as the sentenced to three months in
·cream and the clear, plus pri so n and th ree months in
insulin, human grow th hor- home confi nement. Con te
mone and .other performance wa~ among three other men
enhancers by 200 I. when he · who also pleaded gui lty to
hit 73 home runs for the their role in supply in g
·Giant s. to break Mark steroids to elite athletes.
McGwire' s si ngle-season · Acco;ding to the book,
.record of 70 set in 1998.
Bonds ·used .severa l subThe seven-time Nl,. MVP stances in various forms enters this season with 708 b&gt; injecting him se lf wit h a
' hoine rs. seven shj( of pag,- sy ring e. taking injections
ing Babe Ruth and 48 from . from Anderson. g u l pi.ng
breaking Hank Aaron's pill:-. putt ing li~u id drops
career mark .
under hi s tongue or rubbing
"Game of Shadows" is cream ·oil his sk in.
schedu led to be published
Bonds became so experi March 27 by Gotham ?ooh enced and well-ver,eu with
BALCO. the Bay Arell the regi men that he occaLaboratory Co-Operative siomll v overruled Anderson
run by Victor Conte. kept and took control of his own
track of Bonds· drug use in dopin~ schedule. the book
detail, with folders and cal- '-.U)'\.
that
chronicled · Baseball cu rnrni " iuner
endars
everything from 'sc hedules Bud Selig had n01 rc' icwed
and quantitie; to his te stos- the material and had no comterone levels. · Much of thai ment. · spo kcstmin , Rich
information wa' obtained by Levin saiJ . Scliu was en
federal agents when they ruutc from Mil ,;;aukee to
raided (he lab. in September Phoeni x for the World
2003. '
'.
Base ball Cla., ic.
According to report s in
Bonds. who will turn 42 in
The Chronic le. Bonds .test i- Jul y. rlayed in only. 14

Bonds

This is exactly what com- Carlos Beltran, Carlos
niis&amp;ioner Bud Selig had in Delgado ,
and . Ivan
PHOENIX - A pair of mind when he pushed for Rodriguez, Puerto Rtco IS a
big . swing~ and a parade of the World Baseball Classic, heavy favorite to finish
the
Dominican among the top two teams ID
. strong arms got tile United and
States off to a. suceessful Republic and Venezuela its group and advance to the
start in the World BasebaH made the concept look like second round. Cuba and the
.a stroke of genius.
Netherlands are also in PO&lt;~l
Cl aSSI·C.
Derrek Lee and Chipper · David ·Orti z and Adrian C.
Jones hqmered, Jake Peavy Beltre each .homered twice,
Rios' homer in · the fift~
and six U.S. relievers com- leading · the
powerful tied the score at I an(:!
bined on a four-hitter and Dominican Republic to an chased Panama starter
. Team 'USA beat Mexico 2-0 fl -5 victory in the opening Lenin Picota after 60 pitch·
Tuesday.
ga me of Pool D , a tough es.
·'
Lee connected off starter grouping that also includes
Vazquez left in the fou~h
Rodrigo Lopez and Jones Australia and Italy.
with two on and none out·.
homered on the first pitch
Bartolo Colon, the 2005 He threw 57 pitches.
·
he saw in the tournament -. AL Cy Young winner for
The winning pitcher was
off Oscar Villarreal in the the Los Angeles Angels, Jose Santiago, who went !
seventh.
pitched three scoreless 2-3 innings. Manuel Acosta
That was plenty ·of innings for the win before took the loss .
Italy 10; Australia 0 · ·
offense for the pitching-rich leaving after SO pitches -· .·
well below the openingKISSIMMEE; Fla. (AP')
U.S. teatlJ.
Peavy allowed one hit -·
round limit of 65.
- Mike Piazza doubled and
Johan Santana;· the 2004 scored a run and Jasoil
an infield siQgle by Karim
Garcia to ·start the· game. AL Cy . Young recipient, Grill1 was almost perfect ill
The 24-year-old San Diego yielded Ort'iz's first homer 4 2-3 inning s of work, lead'
Padres right-hander struck and took the lo3s. He threw ing Italy to a victory over in
out three, throwing just 23 61 pitches in 3 1-3 innings. the first round of the Wor14
pitches.
Ortiz and Beltre each hit a Baseball Classic.
Mike
Timlin ,
Chad two-run homer in the ninth
Grilli left to a standing
Cordero, Dan Wheeler, as the Dominicans broke ovation after allowing only
Todd Jones, Joe Nathan and open a 6-5 g~me.
a one-out, fourth-innin~.
Brad Lidge . each threw an
Puerto Rico 2, Panama double to Trent Durrington.
1
He al so struck out seven.
inning of relief for the .U.S.
squad; which has II relievSAN JUAN , Puerto Rico Riccardo DeSantis finished
ers on its roster.
(AP) - · Bernie Williams hit with 2 l -3 perfect innings . •
The U.S. pitchers com- a tiebreaking single, Alex
Piazza , the All-Star catch':
bined for nine strikeouts Rios homered and Puerto er who left the Mets and
·and no walks. shutting out Rico opened the World signed · with the San Diego
Mexico in 2 hours, 6 min- Baseball Classic with a vic- .Padres in the offseason, was ·
utes.
tory over Panama.
l-for-4.
,No. Mexican hitters got
Javie( Vazquez got ' help
Frank Menechino, now
beyQnd first. Three baserun- from his bullpen , and 'with the Cincinnati ·Reds
ners.were erased on double · Williams ' single up the after several years witb
and Toronto,
plays.
middle scored Alex Cintr0n Oakland
Dominican Republic 11, in the fifth inning to put keyed a three-run secong
Venez'uela S
Puerto Rico ahead before a. inning for Italy with a twoKISSIMMEE, Fla. - A home crowd . of more than run double . That helped to
lively sellout crQwd, two 19,000 at Hiram Bithorn chase Australia starter John
All-Star lineups and a cou- Stadium.
Stephens. who allowed
ple of Cy Young Award
With a roster that also three earned runs in l 2-3
winners.
features major league stars innings . '

Southern Elementary
Star Search winners, A6

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

lll!Q!.II' J!

Uniled States

Wednesday, March 8, 2006

www .mydallysentinel.com

Page '86 • lhe Daily Sentinel

they took just 57 minutes to Philadelphia, for instancereject the union proposal. should , contribute proporLater that day, they extend- tionately to the player pool
ed the · deadline for free because they can earn far
agency . for three days .and more in non-football income
again -' extended Su,nday such as advertising and local
night just as it seemed talks radio rights. Those high-revhad broken off.
enue teams might contribute
That led to thi s meeting only 10 percent of their outand the discussion over rev- side money compared with
enue sharing, which will be 50 percent or more for lownecessary to meet the revenue teams.
union 's proposal for just
If there is no agreement, it
under 60 percent of the would leave a nutnber of
league 's total revenues . .
free agents commanding far
Low-revenue temps such less tlran they thought they
as Buffalo, Cincinnati and could get and a glutted marIndianapolis say high-rev- ket filled with veterans who
enue teams
Dallas, . could be cut to provide cap
Washington
and room .
games las t season, all in
September, following three
knee operations. He showed
signs of hi s old self in his
brief return. hitting five
homers in 42 at-bats:
He caused a stir before
spring training this year with
contradicting interviews in
February. Bonds told USA
Today that his knee bothered
him so .much he would prob. ably retire after the season,
with or without the home run
re cord. Then he tolq
MLB .com thai his kne e
brace fe)t good enough for
him to· possibly play l 0 more .
. seasons.
Bonds has been working
out with the Giants in
Scottsdale, but has not
played in a spring training
game yet.
He is in the final season of ·
hi&gt; S90 million, five-year
colltract and will be eligible
for free agency ~ fter the
World Series, meaning his
ti1~1e with the Giants coulu
be up even if he doesH't
retire . He said he would
have a hard time envisioning
playing with another team .
The Chroni cle reporters,
who based the book on a
two-year
investig,ition ,
included an. extemive summarv on their sources.
including court documents.
affidavit' filed by BALCO
inves ti ga tors.
uocuments
wrillen by federa l age nt&gt;,
grand jury te;timony. audio
recordings and inter v iew ~
with more than 200 peopl e.

'

-

\..

ne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,n l'l·. NTS • Vol. ;,;;. No. t.t&lt;l

"w" . rnydail~wntinl"l .mm

Til U RS I&gt; AY, MARCH 9, 2006

Teacher named in Wednesday indictment

SPORTS
• Cavs survive scare
lrom Raptcirs again.

corruption of a minor, a.fir st- · dismissed without prejudice . Prosec'uting Attorney Patrick gat ion im ol ving the sex ual
degree mi sdemeanor.
by a visit ing County Court Story to resolve the case.
assault of a juvenile victim.
The indictment alleges two judge in December.
·.
'There is no indication to
Knight
said
Longo's
POMEROY - A Southern separate incidenJs involving
Wickline was re-instated in me that the offen;,e alleged appointment wa&gt; unnecesElementary School teacher one victim. Wl]ile .the vic- his teaching position after the ever took place:· Knight said. sary. and said there has been
has been indicted on charges tim 's age is not included in · charge was dismissed. He "I've trieu to contact the pros- no claim of' a conflict of
of unlawful sexual conduct the indictment, the charges had been placed on paid ecutor abo ut the case for six interest or other legitimate
with a minor and corruption state that the. alleged · victim : administrative leave while months. but he\ refused to reason for a special prosecu·
of a minor. ·
was 13 but less than 16. and the case W&lt;ts pending.
discuss it on every oca,ion." tor appoimrnent. However,
Scott A. Wickline, 38, that Wickline is 10 or more
Wickline's
attornev.
Knight believes a special , Story's signature appeared on
Racine, was named in a years older than the victim.
Charles Knigh t of Pomeroy. prosecutor was appointed la't the indictment.
three-count indictment filed.
Wickline was first arrested sa id
in
4
state ment week 10 handle the gra nd
Also indi cted were:
Wednesday morning. He is on
the
allegation
in Wedne sday afternoon the jury 's inve stigation of the
• Daniel Thacker: I~. and
charged with two counts of November, 2005. but the sin- case cou ld have been charges . Scoll Longo of the
Allen
J. Murphy. 20. addressunlawful se xual conduct with gle' felony count against him , resolved without an indict- Ohio Attorney. General's
es
not
·reported. on a single
a
minor,
third-degree charging unlawful sexual ment being filed. He said he Office was appointed la st
felonies, and one count · of conduct with a minor, was ·has been unabl e to work with . week in an unnamed in vesti- Please s~ Indictment. AS
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDil!&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

SeePageB1

Action on
condemned .
block waiting
until late April

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@r;IYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The Meigs
·county Cancer Initiative
(MCCI) is attempting to raise
BY BRIAN J. REED
awareneSs of colorectal canBREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL,COM
cer with a localized educational campaign that strives to
MIDDLEPORT - More
let the public know that col-.
than
a month must pass
orectal cancer is "prebef01'e
any demolition can
ventable, t~eatable. bearable!"
Page AS
begin on four condemned
MCCI has been submitting
1 • Thomas Klein, 45
building s in downtown
colon cancer educational
Middleport . Mayor Sandy
information for insertion into
lannarelli said·Wednesday.
church, community and
lannarel li said the 90-day
school. newsletters and is colwaiting
period allowed Jack
laborating .with local ph~ato
repair or demolish
Carsey
cies ani:! insurance agencies to
his
tmilding
on North Second
• Critics say workers'
encourage those citizens who
Avenue will end on April 25.
comp bill sullied by
have health insurance coverAt thm time. Caro;ey and
additions. See Page A2
including Medicare and
owner'
uf three buildings
;_:;-__ ·j-ll4001w·aKI·t{) be-screened.· ~
next
to
his
will be forced by
• Club memblirshear
MCCI member Courtney
villa2e ordinance to tear them
review of Ann Ross novel. Sim also report,ed that Meigs
down
at their expense.
See Page A3
County colon cancer sur:
The
three buildings owned
vi vors John Manley and
Submitted photo
by
Lenny
Tennant.' lannarelli.
• Enron's Fastow faces
Donna Nelson recorded pub- Recognizing Colorectral Cancer Awareness Month are colon cancer survivers (from left) Joe
and Rex and Brenda Darst
tough cross-examination.
lie service anr1ouncements, Bolin. Alice Wolfe and John Manley.
were . condemned
in
See Page AS
which are · currently being
December.
and·
the
90-day
aired on WYVK this March Meigs County Colorectal those statistic s when he was never made it to Mexico but
• Pomeroy student wins
which is National Colorectal Summit which will t.ake diagnosed with colon cancer. Manl'ey did get ou t of the sit- period for repair of those
buildings has come and gone.
award in art exhibition.
Cancer Awareness Month.
place ilj the fall 2006. ·
Manley had been suffering uation with his life.
lannarel li ha' said that all
See Page A6
MCCJ has also joined
Manley went through 25 the buildings must be d~mol­
Cancer is the second lead- with symptoms of.colorectal
• Local artist donates
forces with the Appalaci)ian
cancer at the age of 52 when · treatments of radiation. ished at the same time;
Community · Network to ing cause of death in Meigs
painting. See ' Page A6
help facilitate patient-physi- County. Colorectal cancer his wife finall y made him go surgery and · a year of because Tennant's Riverboat.
to the doctor to be checked chemotherapy to batt le his Inn building on the corner of
• OU students
cian communication in local rat~ll'also higher in Meigs
cancer that was diagnosed as Mill and North Second
clinics regarding . the need Cod'4ty compared to rate s in . shortly before the couple
donate activity bags.
Avenue 'is literally 'supporting
were to take a trip to stage three.
for colorectal cancer screen- the state of Ohio .
1he
two immediately adjaAt the time of hi s surgery,
In 1994 John Manley of Cancun. Mexico.
See Page A6
ing. The local non-profit
• · 4-H member
group is planning. another Pomeroy become · one of
.\leedless to say the L'ouple
Please see Cancer, AS
Piease see Block. AS
attends conference .
------~-----------------~--------------------,--~-....,

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See Page A6

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2006. HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
.

will be here Friday, March 24, 2006
.

.

Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The. Daily Sentinel

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ....
• Hardware • Furniture
• Appliances
• Carpet
• Electrical
• Paint
• Construction • Wallpaper
• Banks
• Insurance ·

eaa

'It's a Grande Knight'
in Point Pleasant, AS

• Plumbi.ng

• And More ...

(74o) 44&amp;-2342
(740) 991:..2155 '
(304) 675-1 333

Work resumes ·after .
stack declared safe

• Three college
students arrested in
Alabama church arsons. ·

See Page A7
• Gunmen storm Iraqi
security company offices.

Bv TIM ·MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYD.AILYREGISTER.COM

See Page A7

WEATIIER

Det~lls on·Page ,A2 .

INDEX
2 SECfiONS- 16 PAGES '

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Places to go
Sports
Weather

A3
Bs-6

B7
A3

A4
As
AS

B Section
A2

© aoo6 Qhao y~llc)' ruhli!ihlng Co.

NEW HAVE N. W.Va. Work on the ne\v stack at the
Mountaineer Plant in Se"
Ha\'en resumed Tuesdav after
shutting .down in the wC!ke of
the fatal accident al the
Kammer-Mirchell Plant tn
MoundSI·i!Ie. ·
Gerald W Talbcri. 27. of
Wheatla11d'. Ind .. an en1plo1cc of' tile same Pullman
, .Pcnvcr co mpan) \\hkh i'
dcling
the
"'''t
til
Mou;Haineer. \las kilkJ
when a fi re bn,~e · &lt;'UI
Saturda.1 uuri·n~ in'ialbtion
Photo courtesy Brewce ~artln
a fih~r~la"' I1ning •n ~iJe ~l
Skatopia. a skater's utopia outside of Rutland has attracted people from all over the world, of
Ill'" ... bel. th~ ~a me \\ l1rh
including documentary filmmakers who will be arnving in the vtllage to shoot mqre fo otage for . that j.., ta-1-..ing placl' in 'e\\
their growing film this month. Skatopla's founder Brewce Martin is seen here with April and Phil HaYe n.
Margera during fil ming for-MTV's Viva La Bam at Skatopia in 2004.
·
Thrc·e L'n-\\orl..er' \\ ert'
pluc~ed fmm awp the 'nll&gt;l..e·
,1,1!•.' 1-. in a drarn;.HiL' hdi~,.· npH.~r
r.:--·uc atkr h e in ~ trapped fm
aht&gt;Ut l\\0 hoqr' aho\C the
'
BY BETH SERGENT
Rutland as well a~ following ,lonallv sk~tehoarJin~ since flame' .
P'"' t'r
Apral;tchian .
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM
Skatopi'a 's skating . team the 1'17(1'&lt; and has li\cJ on spoke&gt;man Phil ~1o1e ,aid
Citizens Instigating Anard1y his K~ - acrc f&lt;trm t&gt;utsidc . of' \\Urk \\a'l · ..,topped al tlw
RUTLAND - Skatopia is &lt;Cit\) to · variou' competi- Rutla.nd 11 ith hi, son ~hHJrllaincl'r plallt a" ... nun &lt;h
known for many things. some ti ons around the cmultry fnr BranJon. al-..,\) a prnfe...,,iPnal
Ill'''" of the fire \\&lt;1"
,~aler. fn( the past II )Car,.
.good, some bad. some notori- several months.
The fa rm ha . . been tran:o;- rcce1' cU .
ous. some untrue. but up until
House anJ Pi.l\\'er,. \\'ho
"On 1\l onda; . \\C ''otnplet now it has not heen known live m Philauelphia. haw formed into a . . ~clhlr"' theme ,·d a thornuuh \\'alkd"" n ·llf
for being the, subject of a doc" remeu a house in Rutland aml par~ ut \\ ulu..i~n and ~.-nncrct(• the· ,t;Kk al ~h&gt;u ntainc·cr."
umentary.
will he moving in this monlh -.. kdl lnc b~on\ J,, tt \\ ~ ··odt&gt;n \1,')'' 'aid . " \\'e putJ partll··
That is about to change.
to g.t~thcr mure foot;1gc · hall-pipe and 20.tltHI-ptl'l't' ular atlention In .tn\ thtn ~
Filmmakers Laurie H,uu'e. according to Skatopia f\&gt;unJcr \~atehoan..l rnu~curn ... cat tert'd thai \lotiiJ be a potcnttal firt•
throu ~h,rut the prt&gt;pcn~ .
h;ll a rd ...
anu Colin Powers have been and guru Brewce Manin.
.
.
filming life at Skatopta in
Please see Skatopla, ·As
\Vurk. rc . . um-cd Tuc..,da~
Martin has been pt'ulcs -

.Skatopia, the movie

after the ' 'tack wa&gt; declared
safe bv both American
Electric· Power and Kansas
City, Mo .- ha~ed Pullman
Pt1wer.

"Both AEP and Pullman
(cd confident that the work
,ite :11 Mmintaineer is safe:·
MtlVe ;a iJ . "Before we
resumeJ wnrk. we wanted I.O
make sure "e ha,·e a safe
'\t~cure.
\\CUll ...

i.l!ld

t:·n \' lfOilment. and

"lil\ C· ,aiu essentiallv the
,a me·· work is beinu done at
the ~lountaineer plant as is
lakin." ]i&gt;IJCe at the Kammer" li tchel l plant.
"OI:H'inus h . an acciuent
ltkc• thi' rn.&lt;tke' you step
hac:\. ;mJ take a l&lt;)llg. hard
]oH&gt;k ,it the situalit111-vou're
111 if '"u·re Join~ ·work that
J\ ,1inilar. \\hH:h w·e are
d1111112

.~t

th'e ~1 t)un tameer

planl·..._he ' '"d
.\It",. s;1iJ there have been

fhl ......~nPu" al· l'ident~ at the

\h'l!llt;ttllCc'r p!Jnt.
Otic ' ,,f the \\ orkers who
""' rc.sc·ucd Sanirda' had
.lpp.trc•ttth. npresseJ co n~· crn ahnut h1.., ... afet~ before
tilt' frrc
Da' td Earle\ II told his
lather that a Ji,,ist used for
matcnal' anJ "cll'ker&gt; had no
h1 .tkc- anJ "a' held aloft
tlllh b\ It" ~l' ar ... .
·•i' hcrc needs to be a safe
altcrnati' c tn ge l people
Please see Stack. AS

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�PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sen~el

Thursday, March 9, 2006

Critics say workers'.camp bill sullied by additions Buffal? roam with. the paving
Bv CARRIE
·SPENCER GHOSE

ing the bill ior purely politi- and state parties at $250.
and comributors to comply
cal reasons.
"That board is trying its with," Buehrer said.
"This bill . preserves bene- darnedest to clean up the
Donations by investment
fits," said House Speaker Jon mess. and one of the very managers could be addressed
Husted, of the Dayton area. first things they did was take again when the Legislature
"What it does is it manages a strong stand against politi- takes up lobbying reform ,
the system in a better way."
cal influence in the selection Rickel said .
Business groups had urged of investment managers."
Burga and bemocmts &lt;!I so
passage of the bill, stalled since said Sen. Eric Fingerhut , a blasted the minimum wage
the Senate first passed it in Cleveland Democrat.
change. which raises Ohio ~ s
June as the scandal led to the
Under the bill , contribu- minimumto$S.IS·fromitscur- ·
ouster ·o f key bureau otlicials tions would follow current rent range of $2.80 to $4.25.
and criminal charges against a law, limiting contributions to They back a proposed constituformer fund manager -. also a $1,000 for the governor's · tional amendment to raise the
top GOP political donor.
race and $10.000 for other minimum to $6.85 hourly.
_ Union and business groups statewide races.
"If we really wanted to do
had worked together crafting
"They added in sult to· justice, we would approve a
the initial bill. which reduces injury," said Bill Burga. state living wage." said Rep. Dan
the period workers can file AFL-CIO chief and a mem- Stewart,
a •Columbus
claims for wages lost from ber of the
Oversight Democrat.
work-related injuries. cur- Commission who proposed
Ohio's minimum applied to
rently I0 years. and claims · the policy limiting donations. about 92,000 workers at busifor medical payments, now . Rep. Stephen Buehrer, a nesses With less than
six years. Both would be lini- northwest Ohio Republican $500,000 in sales that have
ited to four years. It also who ushe.red the bill through no commerce with other
eliminates some payments .the House, and leaders of states, according to a 2005
for loss of limb. For instance. both chambers said only law- report by Policy Matters
a worker who loses a leg · makers should set campaign Ohio, a research group that
would only be able to file a finance rules.
argues for better worke·r benclaim for one limb, instead of
"As soon as we start grant- efits. Otherwise, the federal
both the leg and the foot.
ing administrative boards that . rate already applies, with
Labor dropped its support power. you'd very quickly some exceptions for specific
after the changes involving have a checkerboard for cam- types of work, like baby sitcontributions and the mini- paign .finance that would be ters and those paid by salm'~
mum wage.
very difficult for candidates or comm rsston.
The bill invalidates a policy passed by the bureau 's
Oversight Commission last
·fall that limited campaign
contributions to candidates

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS .- Critics
say politics sullied a proposal
. meant only to change the way
Ohio pays injured workers
and not touch on an ongoil)g
investment scandal at the
· state Bu.reau of Workers'
Compensation.
' Last-minute changes to the
bill - which the Republicancontrolled House and Senate
voted ;1long party lines
Wednesday to send to Gov.
Bob Taft - included provisions to make Ohio meet the
federal minimum wage and to
allow political contributions of
up to $10.000 from . the
bureau's investment managers.
. Taft, also a Republican,
intends to sign the bill into
law, spokesman Mark Rickel
said.
Democrills argue that lhe
bill cuts benefits to workers
without tightening regulations that led to overpayments to some hospitals · and
about $300 million .in invest.
ment losses.
Republican supporters of
the legislation; which will
save Ohio employers about
$100 million on workers '
compensation
premiums,
said Democrats are criticiz- .

equipment at this refuge

WARREN (AP) - These
Andy Yount, who operates
buffalo roam with paving a pav.ing company, said he
equipment at an animal received his first pair of bison
19 years ago for his 70th .
refuge in northeast Ohio.
Andy Yount's property near birthday as a gift from his
· Warren is home to 26 bison, employees.
his pond occasionally attracts
Abqut 60 million bison
water fowl and, a few years once roamed from Canada
ago, the front yard served as to MexiqJ, grazing the
Great Plains and frequentplayground to wild turkeys.
Though Yount doesf! 't ~eek ing the mountain areas of·
publicity for his sanctuary, North America.
By the early 1800s, trade
people often stop after seeing
the bison from the road.
in buffalo robes and buffalo
"Lots of people stop to .· tongues ·.
significantly
look," said Margaret Yount, increased. At the end of the .
Andy's wife.
century, there were only
Children from the Notre about 300 bison left in
Dame Schools plan an out- North America, according ·
jng every year to see the ani- to estimates.
mals. They usually bring two
The . National
Bison
or three bus loads of kids, Association estimates there
many dressed in cowboy are about 150,000 bison in
hats and ·other Western public and private herds in
clothes, she said.
the United States lbday.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.·.:·

· The Daily S;ntznJ.l &gt;:. ' ~'' ',.

Subscribe today • 992-2i55

" .~.my&lt;I~I!Ysel')tl~~~.~ " '
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Today's Forecast
Forecast for Thursday, March 9

CltyiReglori
High I Low temps

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Showers

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Flurries

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Ice

Snow

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Rain

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Weather Underground .· AP

Tbursday ... Partly cloudy.
Warmer with highs ih . the
lower 70s. South winds 10
to 15 mph with gusts up to
"251'nph.
.
Thursday night.:.Partly
cloudy in the evening .. .Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
slight chance of thunderstorms. A chance of showers
in the evening .. .Then. showers likely after midnight.
Lows around 50. South winds
I 0 to 15 mph with gusts up to
30 mph. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Friday... Mostly
cloudy
With showers likely. Windy
with highs . in the mid 60s.
Southwest winds 15 , to 25
mph with gusts up to 35 mph.
Chance of rain 60 per~ent.
.Friday
night... Partly
cloudy and breezy. Cooler
with lows arou nd 40. South
winds 15 to 20 mph with
gusts up to 30 mph.
Saturday and · Saturday
night ... Partly cloudy with a

30 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 60s. Low.s
in the lower 50s.
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
mid 70s. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Sunday
night... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
·. showers . and .thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Monday ·and Monday
night... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs around 70.
Lows in the mid 40s. Chance
ofrain 50 pen;ent.
Thesday.•• Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent chance or
showers. Highs "in the lower
60s.
The~day ·
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percen•
chance Of showers. Lows in
the upper 30s.
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 50s.

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.TodaJ's Number is

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"&lt;

DEAR ABBY: 1have never
written you before, but the
letler you printed from
"Dismayed Grandmother" in
Laredo, Texas, brought back
memories. I couldn't have
Dear.
been more than 8, and it was
my father;s birthday. There
Abby
were flowers on his birthday
cake, a.nd he said to me·,
. "Sme ll the flowers. Go
ahead, smell the flowers!" I
hesitated, but he insisted, so I behind him ar her pus.hes
bent over the cake to smell . their face into it.
,
the flowers and he pushed my
I assume that' s what hapface into the frosting.
pened at the party the grand- ·
I am now 72, and I still mother attended, since it was
remember how it felt to be from Laredo, Texas, which is
deceived and humiliated by on the border with Mexico. 1
my father; Other people in the personally do not enjoy being
room may have been laugh- pushed into the cake (as I
ing, but I wasn 't. My father have been on several occathought he was being funny. · sions), and yes. some kids do
Instead, he lost his daughter's cry when it happens. But it's
love and trust that day. all done. in fun, and I believe
WISHES HE HADN'T IN ·it's. important to be a good
sport·about it.
SAN DIEGO
DEAR WISHES HE HADWhether this tradition
N'T: As I said in my reply to should or should not be· con"Dismayed Grandmother," I · tinued .is debatable - but
have never found humor at frankly, you are not the one
. the expense of others to be who should be debating (or
funny. In fact, I consider it cri.ticizing) it. When you
cruel, hosti'le, and a form of 'referred to this custom as a
bullying. That a parent would form of "bullying," you were
tolerate, much less partici- speaking from a U.S. cultural
paie in, the humiliation .of his perspective. You and the let-.
or her child is an appalling ter writer may have been
breach of trust. Your reaction "aghast" out of cultural i,t;noproves the truth of my state- ranee - . just as people from
ment.
other countries might considRead on, because the letter er the '"pinching" (ow') that
to which you referred happens on St. Patrick's Day
brought in some interesting in the United States to be
mail.
physical abuse. - ROBIN
DEAR ABBY: The same IN MEXICO CITY
· thing happened to me. The
DI;:AR ABBY: Birthday
person who did it was my parties shouldn't involve
former father-in-law. He tears, and it's a shame that the
thought It was the funniest boy's ceiebration was spoi led
thing he had ever seen. by this tradition. The hosts of
Surprisingly, however. when the party should have better
HIS birthday rolled around, it prepared the child for the
wasn't · so funny anymore. event.
Imagine
that'
. I was introduced to that
LAWRENCE IN QUEEN birthday tradition while livCREEK, ARIZ.
ing and teaching in northern
DEAR ABBY: You missed Mexico. It shocked me the
the boat. on the face-in-the- · first time it happened, but
birthday-cake letter. Here in students explained that, for
Mexico it .is common- nay, . many 'Chi ldren, it's an eag·erly
usual - for the birthday boy anticipated part.of their birth~r girl (or man or woman) to day ce'lebration. - AMY IN
have his· or her face pushed CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA
into the cake. After the canDear Abby is written by
dies are blown out, the birth- Abigail Yan Buren, also
day person is supposed to knowh as }~anne Phillips,
take a little bite of the cake and was founded .by ·her
with his or her mouth -not mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
using any utensils - for Write
Dear Abby at
good luck . It is usually when www.DearAU(jy:com ()r P.O.
the ·person 's face is near the Box 69440, tos A11ge/es, CA
cake that someone standing 90069.

'

Clubs and
organizations
T.hursday, March 9
CI:IESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 monthly stated
meeting, 7:30"p.m. at the hall.
Refreshments.
. HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411,
special meeting, 7 p.m. work
in the entered apprentice
degree.
POMEROY - ' Alpha Iota
Masters, II :30 a.m. , St'. Paul
Lutheran · Church. Charlotte ·
Elberfeld, Clarice. Krautter to
be hostesses. Joan Corder to

present prqgram .
(:'hapter "Delivered," regular
TUPPERS PLAINS
meeting, lJ a.m .. Masonic
VFW Post 9053 will meet at Lodge. open to all .
. 7 p:m. at the hall. Meal at
6:30p.m.
·
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club to meet I p.m.
Thursday, March 9
at the home of Shirley
RUTLAND
Rutland
Hamm . Hal Kneen to conduct
educational program on pe st Youth League ball sign ups, 6
- 8 p.m. , Rutland Fire
control for houseplants.
RACINE - OAPSE 453, 7 Department.
POMEROY
p.m., Southern Elementary,
·Parent/teacher conferences :
election of officers·.
4 to 7 p.m., Meigs High
Friday, March 10
POMEROY - Widow ' s School.
Saturday;.March 11
Fellowship will meet at noon
SYRACUSE
- Sign. ups
Friday at the Wildhorse Cafe
for
Syracuse
Youth
League. 9
for a luncheon and meeting.
a.m. to I p:m., Syracuse Fire
Saturday, March 11
SALEM CENTER - Star Station.
RACINE - Sign ups for
Grange #778 degree teams
Racine
Youth League , 11
practice ·at 6 p.m ., with
potluck supper following . All a.m. to I p.m., Racine Legion
Hall.
.
members asked to anend.
CHESTER
- Final sign
POMEROY- The annual
Charter · Day luncheon of ups . for Chester Ball
Return . Jonathon · Meigs Association, noon to 2 p.m ..
Chapter of the Daughters of Chester Fire Department.
the American Revolution will coaches' meeting after sign
be held at noon at the Meigs up.
County Library in Jlomeroy.
Nancy
Rey,
So~theast
District director. will be the
speaker. June Ashley will be
Thursdav, March 9
presented the dedicated
ROCKSPRINGS . -Rev.
se)lior member award.
Walter Heinz will lead comMIDDLEPORT The munity Lenten service, 7:30
Christian
·Motorcycle p .m. , Rock springs United
Association's Metgs CountY Methodi st Church . Weekly

Youth events

POMEROY - · "Miss Julia
Speaks her Mind" by Ann B.
Ross was reviewed by Pat
Holter at Wednesday's meeting of rthe Middleort Literary
Club held at the Pomeroy
Libraty. Nadine Goel;&gt;el
served as hostess.
The book is Ross ' first
novel and the first in :a series
of seven novels fe'aturing the
sJ:munky Miss Julia. A resident of north Carolina, Ross
has taught .literature at the
University of North Carolina
at Asheville.
The action-packed and
funny story takes place in the
fictional town of Abbottsville.
N.C. The central character is
the very proper Southern lady
Julia Springer, known to all as
Miss Julia. She is the recent

~e r v ic e &gt;

spon1orcd by Meigs
Ministerial A &gt;~oci at io n .
Friday, March 10
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn &gt;ing will he held at 7
p.m. at the Faith Full Gospel
Church at Long Botto m.
Mu sic wi ll be by Rogie
Bissell and Just for Now.
Sunday, March 12
RUTLAND - Hyse ll Run
Community Church. re-dedicati on of new 1anctuary. 2
p.m.
Speci al
singing.
Refre1hme nt s.
.
TUPjlERS PLAI NS
Family night at 5 p.m. at St
Paul UM Chtrrch Tu pper&gt;
Plains. Everyone Welco me.
Thesday. March 14
POMEROY Revi\'a l
services will be heiJ 7 p.m.
each evening March 14- 1R at
the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
located on , Rutile 14,1.
Pomeroy. B. J. Walker will he
the evangeli st. Th ere will
special singing each evening.
Re v. Charles McKenzie. 9922952 is pastor. ·

Birthdays

.Church events

Saturday, March 11
POMEROY
\1 ari e
Hautk will observe he r J'l !Jth
birthday on March II . Card s
may be sent w . her ;11 644
Osborn St.. Pomeroy. Ohio
45769.

.widow of ·Wesley Lloyd boy. In defiance of the wag- other older women. fi..:tional
Springer, her husband of 44 ging tongues. Miss Julia or real. who are not afra id to
years and the miserly town acknowledges the child as speak their mincb . The next
banker.
her husband's son and takes nieeting will be on March 15
As story unfolds , she finds him inlo her home.
at the Pomeroy Library. Gay
herself to be a wealthy widow
Holter in her review pointed Perrin will be the hos1es s
and begins to plan the remain- to the cast of colorful charac- and Connie Gilke y will
ing years of her I ife. {\I so to ters some admirable and some rev iew "The Lost Hi story or
her surpri se, on Hazel ·Marie very' shady. and to Hazel's a Horse and a Man Who
Puckett shows up at her door backwoods · televangeli st · Changed the World" by Mim
one day with a little boy. uncle who kidnaps Hazel and Eichler Rivas.
'This is Wesley Lloyd little Wesley. Then there is
Springer,
Junior," . she Jul.ia's pastor who unscrupuannounccs, "and your hus- lously tries to get his hands on
band is his father." One 'look her money for the churcn.
at the little fellow and Miss Throughout it all, the feisty
Julia knew .it wa~ true.
Miss Julia speaks her mind as .
Hazel declares that she is she and Lillian rescue Wesley
on her way to beauty school · and Hazel Marie and fend off
The Daily Sentinel
and demands that Miss Julia those who are after her Subscribe toda)' • 992-2155 .
take the boy. The towrt gas- money.
www.myddily.ienritrel.com .
sips had known all along · Members and two guests
about Hazel and the little answered roll call by naming

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SUbmitted pllolo

The birth of Andrea Taylor, 'being· held here by her great-greatgrandmother. Mrs. James R. Ingles of Middleport, brought the
. family to five generations. Pictured seated left is the infant's
mother, Kimberly Miller of Columbus. Linda Mohler of
Middleport, standing left, is the great.grandmother, and Kenda
Mohler. right, is Andrea's grandmother..

Thursday · Half Ch1cken Dinner

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2006

Club members hear review of Ann Ross novel

BINGO

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Ltd. - .23.42
NSC- 48.96
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OVB .L 25.20
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Peopi~s- 27.95
Pepsico - 59.82 ·
Premier "- 15.05
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Wal-Mart - 45.27
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Worthington - 19.30 .
Daily stock reports are
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of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons in
Gallipolis.

Thursday, March 9
. POMEROY AthensMeigs Educational Service
Center, 7 p.m., East - Main
Street office. ·
Thesday, March 14
POMEROY - Bedford
Township . Trustees' regular
meeting, 7 p.. at !he town
hall.
Thursday, March 16
POMEROY
Local
Professional Qevclopment
Committee of the AthensMeigs Educational Service
€enter: 3 p.m . at the Athens
ESC office.

Five generations gather

Local Stocks
ACI-72.31
AEP -35.91
Akzo- 49.94
Ashland Inc. - 64.10
BU -13.20
8ob Evans - 28.17
BorgWarne(- 54.95
CENX- 34.78
Champion - 5.98
Charming .Shops- 13.58
City Holding- 35.64
· Col- 52.20
DG -· 17.34
DuPont - 40.56
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 30.56
Gannett - . 60.77
General Electric - 33.43
GKNLY - 5. 70 .
Harley Davidson -:- 51.28 ·
JPM- 41.60
Kroger- 20.47

. Thursday, March 9,

Cake-in-thejace birthday Community Cal'endar
tradition has foes and fans Public meetings .

· Foun•llll•

·

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

�111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor "'
•

. Cpngress sha(l make no law respecting an
' : establishmeirt of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
: of speeclr, or of the press; or th~ right of the ·
· people peacea.bly to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances. ·
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Resource
Rebut1t mmputerprogram a help
Dear Editor:

I am _writing this to acquaint area readers with a very good
progcam in our area called, Student PCs.
Thi,; is a non-profit program that rebuilds used computers.
for handicapped and developmentally challenged children, to
help improved their quality of life: that otherwise would not
be able to ·have one.
These computers are free of charge to all that qualify, all
over the United States. The program was founded by Dwight
Ross in Vinton County. and there is an outreach· branch in
Meigs County also. The computers are delivered· and set up
wherever there is a need. There is a Web site you can go to, to
find ou t more about the program, which is www.studentpcsoilline.com. Please feel free to e-mail any questions you may
have.
·
Norris Northup Dodge dealership kindly donated . a
Plymouth van to ·help with the deliveries of the computers.
Mike Northup and Jamie Adamson have, through their generosity. made it possible for the program to flourish. Mr. Ross
gets his drive to keep the ·program going, even though, on very
little or no funds, because of the smile·on a recipient's f.ace or
a parent reporting how their child has improved or excelled.
because he cared enough to "make the difference one gift at a
t·ime."
Barbara Sprou$e
Middleport

TODAY. IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, March 9, the 68th day of2006. There are
297 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 9, 1954, CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow critically reviewed Wisconsin Sen. Jost.ph R. McCarthy's anti"
Communism campaign on an episode of "See It Now."
On this date:
In 1661. Cardinal Jules Mazarin. the chief minister of
France. died, leaving King Louis XJV in full control.
In 1796, the future emperor of France, Napoleon Bonaparte,
married Jos·ephine de Beauhamais. The couple divorced ·in
1809 . .
In 1860. the first Japanese ambassador to the United States
. (Niimi Buzennokami) al'}d his staff arrived in San Francisco.
In 1916, Mex ican raiders led by Pancho Villa attacked
. Colu mbLt&gt;. N.M., killing more than a dozen people.
Thought for Today: "Work expands so as to till the time
. avai lable for its completion." - ''Parkinson's Law," by C.
Northcote Parkinson (1909-1993).

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Former
Rep .
Billy
Tauzin . R-La ., is writing to
every member of Congress
to deny and denounce
Democratic charges that he
helped pass the 2003 preMatton
scription drug law while
Kondracke
negotiating for his job as ·
pre sident of the pharmaceutical lobby.
On the basis of documents Tauzin attached to the drug law has caused
hi s letter and information seniors • to pay higher
provided by hi s lawyer, price s for their prescripTauzin definitely see ms tions.
In fat:t , he said , drug
innocent of the charge.
which repeatedly has been imports from Canada were
leveled as part ' of the down 30 percent this
Democrats' "c ulture . of January " because seniors
corruption"
campaign are . getting access to
· cheaper drugs through
against the GOP.
Even so, Tauzin is wide- their (Medicare) insurance
.. ·
I
. ly cited as a trigger for two pans.
He also outlined what
pro vision s of lobbying
reform legislation that PhRMA is doing to repair
even Republica·ns are the ,industry 's sour image,
pushing in Congress: one which. he acknowledged,
. that doubles the time · is "only slightly better
· members
of
before an ex-member can than
lobby, and the other Congress.'; c1ne program
requiring members to dis- provides free· drugs to I. 7
low-income
close employment negotia- million
patients at a cost of $5 biltions.
Tauzin insists that he had lion , so far. Another
nothing to disclose when, reforms drug advertising:
Tauzin's letter to mem.
as chairman of the Energy
and
Commerce bers of Congress recounts
Com.mittee , he helped his own two-year battle
shepherd the Medicare with duodenal cancer,
drug bill through to com- including surgery, radiapletion. Pres.ident Bush tion and chemotherapy.
"Since Jan . 2005," the
· signed it into law on Dec.
8, 2003, and Tauzin's let.tcr says, "I have worked
lawyer, Charles Work, first for the companies whose
received a call from a n1edicines literally saved
headhunter for the pharma- my life . I am very proud of
decision .
ceutical · industry late that that
Unfortunately,
during
month. '
Actual negotiations with these two years and espe· the
Pharmaceutical cially lately, congressional
Research
· and critics of my career deci Manufacturers Association sion have continued to
(PhRMA) didn't begin repeat totally false and
until Jan . 15, 2004. Work 's inaccurate .claims" about
time sheets show. Prior to negotiations with PhRM-A,
that, Tauzin told me in an he wrote. "For several
. interview · "there were no years now, I have endured
contacts. There were no repeated injury to my
hints: no nods , no whis.- name and reputation as a
result of those false claims
pers, no discussions of impropriety." he added.
nothing :"
Also in an interview, asking members to stop
.
disputed repeating them. ·
Tauzin
The charges surfaced in
Democratic charges that

.

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2006

·Obituaries

Tauzin denies.. charge he sought job while working on drng bill

Tl)e Daily Sentinel

READER'S

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

'•

· Thursday, March 9, 2006

'

a privileged resolution
filed by House Minority
Leader
Nancy
Pelosi
· (Calif.) in December 2005
broadly denouncing the
"c ulture of corruption"
surrounding the drug bill.
It charged that Tauzin
"was actively engaged in a
job search with the pharmaceutical industry at the
same time he was negotiating on major provisions of
the bill."
In a press conference,
· Pelosi said that "seniors
pay a higher price for prescription drugs becau ~e the
. pharmaceutical _ ~ndustry
wrote the prescnpt1on drug
bill."
That charge has become
a staple of Democratic
criticism,
along _ with
clai(lls that gasoline prices
are high because of GOP
connections to the oil
mdustry
and · · that
liurncane Katnna was
badly handled because of
.
"cronyism."
Tauzin told me he sent a
letter io Pelosi after to
assure her. that he'd had no
contacts with PhRMA durmg the drug b1ll dehber~twns. Sull, the charge ts
being
repeated,
by
Democratic Sens. Barack
Obama (Ill.) and Debbie
Stabenow (Mich.) within
the past month . alone.
Other Democrats, mcluding Sens. Dick Durbin
(Ill . ) ·. an d Joh n K erry
(Mass.), seek to make a
scandal out of the fact that,
having helped pass the
drug bill, Tauzin later went
'to work for PhRMA at a
salary asserted to be $2
. mt!h_on a year, 1 ~plymg
that 1t was a payoff.
It seems certain that
"revolving . door" leg isla.lion that governs the time
that former members and
staff are barred from l9bbying will now expand
from one year to two,
. although powerful .e x-legislators such as Tauzin
customarily do little actual
button-holing themselves ,

lbomas Klein

instead gtvmg "strategic
advice" to lobbyists they
employ.
Senate Republicans also
included a provision in

(Morton Kondracke· is
executive editor of Roll
Call, tile newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

Tell · me agam about
So what. will right-wing eration 's Churchill - has
President. Bush 's fabled
character assassins now long suggested putting it:
say about William F. Mr. President, Iraq isn't
intuition, hi s born leader 's
gift for choosing the right
Buckley? Writing in · the Normandy, it's Dunkirk, a
National Review, the mag- tactical retreat from an
course of action by natural
Gene
azine he founded, one of
instinct. Oh. ·and yes, the
overexposed . and unsuspeerbs political genius ·of
L
contemporary
conser. bl
..
Karl Rove. Because if you
yons
vatism's elder statesmen · tatna e postllon.
. In the "War on Terror"
didn't know any better, it
has seen enough.
would appear · that the
"One caq't doubt that it's not D-Day, 1944, it's
administration' s grandest
the American objective · in more like 1940.
schemes have go ne badly CBS News poll. Bush 's Iraq has failed," Buckley
On the other hand, how .
awry. confronting · the · approval rating stands at concludes. ·~ our mi~sion . can anybody reason with a
White Hou se with a pol it- · 34 percent, down 8 points has failed because Iraqi poliiician who committed '
ical
cnsi &gt; seemingly from January.
. animosities have proved the spectacular folly of the
beyond its control.
·
Only three months ago, uncontainable
by
an Dubai Po~ts deal? Persons
For the. longe st time, Republican pundits excori- invading army of 130,000 eager 10 save Bush from
Bush was the GOP and the · ated
DNC
chairman American.s. The ·great
GOP was Bush. Although Howard Dean for express- human ·reserves that call . the consequences of his
I've always seen the cull ing doubts that the Iraq for . civil life haven't heedless bullying characof personalily surrounding war could be "won" in proved strong enough. No terize opposition to handthe president as a frantic any traditional sense, c&amp;ll- doubt they are latently ing over control of U.S.
rationalization of hi s man- ing for ~he immediate there, but they have not harbors to a state-owned
ifest shortcomings of char- . withdrawal . of National been able to . contend company run by a herediacter and intellect, there Guard troops, and the . against the ice men who tary Arab monarchy as
was no denying its power. phased pullout of all U.S. move about · in the shad- "quasi-racist scaremongerNow, the illusion appears forc'es within two years. ows with bombs and ing," "global ethnic profil. to be fading. Both the "Howard the Coward," gr'ena&lt;,les and pistols. "
ing" and worse.
Will GOP apparatchiks
What rubbish.
ongoing catastrophe · in one called him .
Iraq and the in comprehen ·They . derided highly . question Buckley's patrio~
If there's a racial comsible political blunder of decorated Marine veteran· tism? Call him a traitor?
trying to hand over man- Rep. Jack Murtha, D-Pa., · "The administration has, ponent to the drspute,
agement of U.S . ports to a · after he referred to contin - now. to ·cope with failure," Bush'·s
fear"mongering
company headquartered in ued U.S. occupation of he adds "Mr. Bush has a created it. Furthermore,
· the United Arab Emirates Iraq as " a flawed policy very difficult internal. there are perfectly . legiti have brought about the wrapped in an illusion," problem here because to mate political objections
unthinkable: open . di s~e nt and called for · a tactical make th.e kind of conces- to handing . operating c'onfrom
·
prominent · retreat. 'White
House sion that is strategically trol of U.S. · ports to a
Scott ·appropriate requires a mit- state-run company anyRepubl icans, and discon- . spoke sman
tent among the Republican · McClellan accused Murtha 1gatoon of pohcoes he has where. in . the world _
base .
of wanting '' to surrender several tunes . affirmed Ill -. much less 10 a Middle
The scary part is that to the terrori sts."
h1gh-flown
pronounce- E
h
.h
Bu sh's seco nd term has an
Now the· destruction of ments . His challenge is to
'l.S 1ern monarc Y Wit a ..
almost unimaginable three . the Askariyah Shrine 111 persuade him se lf that he demonstrated htstory of
years to run · lon ger Sarnarra. a site · almost ·as can submit to a hi storicar allowtng ttself to be
manipulated by extremists.
than the eiuire presidency hol y to Shia. Muslims as reality."
of John F. Kennedy. St. Peter 's Basilica to
Tran slation: Bush must
If he 's lucky. Bush's felBecause the way thin gs Rom an Catholics, see ms eat crow for ·the country's low Republicans will find
are going. we mas- · be to· have set the nation on a sake . Alas, reality has some pretext to save him
irreversible never been his strong suit. . fro·m the trap he's . created.
about to find the authori- 'ee min gly
turi an rock-bottorn : that is, path 10 open civil war' - · He prefers a1rcraft _earner
(Arkansas
De~ocrat­
how.omny Ame ricans will so me thing Oean and other photo ops. Assum1ng any- Gazette colt•mni.&lt;t Gene
profess unthinking loyalt y oppo nent s of invading bhody in theh White House Lyolis is a national maga •
to any president cal lin g Iraq. with its seething s~cas enoug courage to
:
d . ·
d
him,elf. ''Ch ri \lian." "con - tarian and tribal rivalries. brave one of Bu sh's ~ me awar wrnner an co, · scrvat ive" and retai ning wa rned against years ago . famvus temper .tantrum s. author of " The H.~ntin g of
the support of right -win g Arrocity foll ows sicke·ning · however, here 's how thi s rhe
Pres rdent
(St.
fadio ho&gt;ts.
atrocity. which .U.S. and col umn - aware of the Marrin :1 Press, 2000). You
Roughl y one·third is my British troops appear pow - president's penchant for l'atl e- mail Lyons ar gene.- .
.f!Ue&gt;S , According the latcq erie" to prevent.
s~eing hiomelf as his gen- lyrms2@sbcglobql.ltet.)

BY ERIN McCLAM
~p NATIONAL WRITER

HOUSTON
Enron
Corp.
chief
executive
Kenneth Lay was aware of
the company's withering
finances in late 200 I even as
he gave glowing reports to
employees and the media, the
admitted architect of schemes
· that helped sink the company
testified Wednesday.
· .
Andrew Fastow, the former
Enron chief finqncial officer,
provided the most direct link
yet between Lay and fraud at
Enron just before facing a ·
blistering attack from a
lawyer for ex-chief executive
JetTrey Skilling. who is on
trial with Lay.
Fastow said he gave Lay a
rundown of .huge looming
1:nassive
write-offs,
a
accounting error that would
force a $1.2 billion writedown in shareholder equity
and deterioration of fragile
financial structures that
Enron. used to mask losses.
Still, Lay insisted publicly
in late 200 I that the company
was fundamentally sound.
Months later, it collapsed into
' f;
bankruptcy proceedings.
In an interview with
Mullins said Carsey's build- BusinessWeek on Aug. 24,
ing is structurally unsound, 200 I, days after . taking the
primarily as a result of water CEO reins from Skilling, Lay
damage. He said the floors in said Enron had no accounting
from PageA1
tlie building are unstable, the problems and declared, "The
centhnd apparently Carsey's roof must · be repaired and company is probably in the
other code enforcement strongest and best shape that
:building as well. .
· :, Carsey had indicated to vil- issues must be addressed if it has ever been in."
the building is to remain
Fastow testified that four
lage officials that he planned standing.
days earlier, Lay and other
to repair the building and
The Darst building was top executives attended a
bring it up to code. However, damaged m a September fire, meeting and heard about a
he has since said a sale may and the . l~lliJarelh. and "hole in the earnings" - probe pending .
·
Tennant butldmgs are VICtims · jectiops that Enron would fall
Building Inspector Randall of years of neglect.
far short· of Wall Street
expectations for the quarter.
Asked by a federal prosealleged offense and is sub- cutor
about the Lay interject to forfeiture.
view,
Fastow
said: "I think
• Anthony J. Thomas,.
of
the
statem~ts in
most
Middleport, for possession
from PageA1
· of crack cocaine arid traf- there are false."
· The · testimony stands in
ficking in crack cocaine,
count of receiving stolen wi~h specification that . the stark contrast to Lay's claim
. property, a fourth-degree quantity _was less than five that he believed Enron was
felony. with the specification grams, that the offense took healthy right to the end.
Fastow said he also met
'hat the property was a motor place in the vicinity of a
vehicle.
.
ivith
Lay in September 200 I
juvenile, and that $463 in .his
• Frank E: Camelin II, 28, control ar the time of the to discuss detailed questions
. Vinton, for failure to appear offense was the result of the
after recognizance release, alleged offense and is sub'· wi.th specification that the ject to forfeiture . . .
original offense was a
• Samuel A. Smith, 45,
felony.
Pomeroy, . for possession of
from PageA1
' • Tressa Thomas, 43 , cocaine, with the specificaMiddleport, for possession tion of a quantity less than
of crack cocaine and traf- · five grams . .
Skatopia h'as received visificking in crack coc!line,
• Joshua W. Rowe. Racine, tors from all over the world,
with specification that the for failure to appear after rec- including celebrities like
quantity was less than five ognizance release, · a fourth- Tony Hawk and Bam
Margera who taped footage
grams, that the offen.se took degree felony.
place in the vicinity of a
• Benjamin D. Carroll , for his MTV show Viva La
juvenile. and that $463 in Portland. for receiving Bam at Martin's compound.
The Skatopia mystique .
her control at the time of the stolen property, a fourththat has drawn celebrities,
· offense was the result of the degree felony. ·
musicians and skaters from
all over the world may
explain why House and
Powers were drawn to Meigs
County to film .
House and Powers are the
in
principal
partners
Headlamp Pictures that specialize in production of documentaries for television, universities and non-profits .
House and Powers . have

of

Block

I
I

I
I

Personality cult encounters reality

Enron's Fast~w faces tough cross-examination

POMEROY -Thomas Arthur Klein, 45, Pomeroy, passed
l\Way on March 6, 2006, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
· .- He was born Sept. 8, 1960, son of the late Charles Henry
· t&lt;.lein, Sr., and Virgie May Russell Klein .
,
, Besides his parents. he was !'receded in death by three sisters: Hanna Klein, Hazel Klem, and Gertrude Wise, and a
.brother, Paul Klein.
· •: Surviving are his wife, Becky Lee Klein of Pomeroy; a
·r:taughter, Rebecca Lynn Klein of Pomeroy; a son, Thomas
-Avery Klein of Pomeroy; sisters: Donna Klein of Pomeroy,
.Connie Klein of McArthur, Darlene (Dennis. Sr.) Boyd of
J&gt;omeroy, Edna {Jesse) Buchanan of Pomeroy. Mary Gerlach
New Haven, W.Va., and Kathryn Sue (David) Lewis of
- ~omeroy: brothers: Gene (Aunda) Klein of Miadlepon,
William Klein of Middleport, Lawrence (Patricia) Klein of
. Minersville, Charles Henry, Jr. (Carol) Klein of Pomeroy,
David . Klein of Pomeroy and Kenneth Klein of Pomeroy;
. many nieces .and nephews; and extended family members:
Richard and Lana Hudson of Pomeroy, Dencil and Cyndra
Hudson of Syracuse, Virgil and Johanna Hudson of Rutland,
Jonathan and Rosalyn L.e.wis of Bidwell, William Edward
Lewis, Jr., Oak Hill, Nancy and Mike Clouncy of Vancouver,
British Columbia, Cheryl Ann Cook of Gallipolis and Mary
and Bill Saxon of Gallipolis.
" Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, March 10, 2006,
· pt Fisher Funeral 1-lome Pomeroy Chapel, with burial in Beech
Grove Cemetery.
·
·
·
: Friends may call from ·6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home.
: Memorial contributions will be accepted toward funeral
expenses c/o Fisher Funeral Home.

their lobby reform · bill
requirin·g discl&lt;;Jsure of
job-search negotiations by
members unless they . had
declared they were not
· running for re-.election. ,
While he was chairman,
Tauzin · did _negotiate with
the
Motion
Picture
Association · of America
· about succeeding ·the retiring Jack Valenti, and he
disclosed that fact. He
. .
broke off those talks on
Jan. 24, .2004 - mdependent, he says. of dtscussions with PhRMA.
After his cancer diagnosis in February 2004,
· Tauzin ·said, he and Mr.
.
Work stopped talkmg to
PhRMA for mne months,
resummg 111 November. He ·
also stepped down as
Commerce chairman in
February:
Democrats are free tci
·
make hay out ,of the Jack
Abramoff lobbying scandal and the corruption of
ex-Rep.
Duke
Cunningham, R-Calif. And
there ' s no question that
·
h H
·
.Repubhcans run t e ouse .
H ..
.
S
1tke, as . en. · 111 ary
Rodham Chnton, D-N.Y.,
pur it, a plantation.
They can attack Tauzin,
if they wish, f&lt;;Jr taking the
PhRMA job. But it's
wrong to say 'seniors aren't
.
·
bemg helped by the drug
bill he worked on, and it's
dirty pool to charge that he
was
dickering
with
PhRMA when he wrote the
bill.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Indictment

AP Photo

Former Enron CFO Andrew Fastow, left, who has pleaded guilty to conspiracy and agreed to
serve up to 10 years in prison , and his attorney David Gerger, 'right, leave the feder;31 court.
house after Fastow. testified in the fraud and conspiracy trial of Enron founder Ken Lay and former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling Wednesday in Houston.
·
'

raised by The .Wall Street known Enron 's true condition.
In mid-October 200 i Enron
Journal about En ron 's off-balance-sheet deals and money disclosed hundreds of milFastow was making off finan- lions of dollars in ·third-quarcial partnerships with Enron . ter losses and slashed shareHe said Lay decided to holder equity by $1.2 billion.
issue a brief statement back- Six weeks later, the company
ing the partnerships rather sought bankruptcy protection.
· The federal indictment
than answer the questions.
· Fastow said he suggested accuses Lay of repeatedly makmajor restructuring for ing false statements to employEnron. including a possible ees. the media and the public. A,
merger, before Lay said in a conspirdcy charge accuses him
September 200 I online chat of lying to employees and anawith employees that the com- lysts by claiming Enron was
pany was sound and had a healthy in late 200 I when he
knew it was not.
strong balance sheet.
Two wire fraud counts refer
The ex-CFO said he and
Lay met with Goldman Sachs ·specifically to Lay's September
&amp; Co. executives to discuss 2001 online chat with employoptions. though nothing came ees, when he claimed the comof it. Fastow said he chose · pany was "looking great." And
Goldman ·because it wasn't four securities fraud counts
among Enron's lenders, who allege Lay mislep credit rating
would have blanched had they agencies imd analysts about

Enron's health.
For much of the day in
court, Fastow faced a toiJgh
cross-examination
from
Daniel Petrocelli . the head
lawyer for Skilling. who wa.'
chief operating officer for
Enron in the late 1990s and
CEO for six months rn 200 I.
The cross-examin~tion provided some of the most tense
and dramatic ·moments so far
in the federdl trial of the former chief executives.
Petrocelli focused on the
willingness of the fanner chief
linancial .oftlcer to watch his
wife, Lea, serve a year in
prison rather than come clean
with .federal investigators
about ·kickbacks he received
from Enron. in 1997. and·
Fastow's admission that his
own children were indirectly
caught up in his crime;.

So how did this couple end
produced, directed, written or
edited work for PBS, A&amp; E up gathering rolls of film at
Biography, ESPN, HGTV. Skatopia in Rutland'!
Powers, who · skates, surfs
American Movie Classics.
History Channel, MTV and · and snow boards; met Martin
in Oregon 12 years ago.
Showtime.
PictureS Martin invited Powers to
Headlamp
describes their mtsswn as ci]eck out Skatopia and 12
lillJ1makers to "break down years later he and House did
complex social and historical just that.
The movie is said to asl\ .
subjects into intelligent, clear
these "simple questions" and entertaining programs."
One of those recent pro- "How do we live life to the
grams was the. half-hour pro- ·hilt? Does risking your life
gram "Beyond the Bottom mean you're stupid? Or ·does
Line: ··American Worker it make you more alive? Do
Cooperatives" that aired on we need our visionaries to be
PBS - stations around the perfect humans? What are the
unspoken rules within anarcountry.
.
Besides their resume in the . chy? How much money can
entertainment field House you make off of society. withhas a degree in neuroscience out becoming part of it?"
House and Powers plan to
from Oberlin College while
Powers has a degree in geog- edit their footage this fall and
raphy from the University of winter but until then clips
can be viewed on the website
Califomia at Berkeley.

" Skatopi a: 88 Acres of
Anarchy.''
at
www.skatopiathemov ie .com.
A link to the video clips can
also can be found at
www.skatopia.org where not .
only clips but all things
Skatopia can be found.
Through the Skatopia website ·fans can al so pmt their
ideas for the movie's title .
The winner · rece ives a free
pair of Skatopia shoe1 now in
major markets.
. ·
No word on when' the
movie will be released or if a
distributor is already lined up
but then again the nionths of
upcoming footage may seal.
that deal.

Skatopia

&amp; MEDICAL EQtmtENT

• Home Oxygen

family history of colon cancer: who have colon/rectal
polyps ; who have inflammatory
bowel disease · are at
from PageA1
.gre'atest risk of developing
Manley was not sure if he'd colon cancer.
Other risk factors include:
ever get to see his two grandchildren that were not born a high-fat . diet. being over,
yet but on the way but now . weight, smoking and lack of '
than](s to going .to the doctor. exerc1se.
Symptoms
include :
his treatment and follow-up
testing he has had II years changes in bowel habits; feelwith those grandchildren that ing that a bowel movement is
nece.ssary but there is · no
now number three.
Manley has a colonoscopy relief after doing so: rectal
every three years to check for · bleeding or blood in the
any reoccurance of his cancer. stool ; cramping or abdominal
"I'd ·recommend dn yone 50 pain ; weakness: fatigue.
Colon cancer usually
or older get checked at least
begins
with a polyp. Testing
one 'time for colorectal canto
find
polyps before they
cer," he said. "Having cancer
·changes your life I00 percent.'' turn into cancer is importan~
The American Cancer to save lives. Colon cancer
Society (ACS) agrees with can be prevented. if polyps
are removed before they ru·rn
Manley' s advice.
, According to the ACS any into cancer.
Also, your risk for developadult can have colon cancer.
Most often the disease strikes ing colon cancer may.be lowpeople aged 50 yeats or older. ered if you eat a low-fat diet
People _with a personal and/or . that is rich in fruits.

Cancer

Tim' Maloner / photo
work resumed Tuesday on installation of the fiberglass liner
Inside the new stack at the Mountaineer Plant in New Haven .
It· had been halted after a fire .kil led an employee of Pullman
Power at a similar stack it is building at the Kammer-Mitchel!
Plant in Moundsville .
only one with a \vorking·
radio and talked to Talbert
.:right untrl his last breath,"
Ea.rley Sr. said:
from PageA1
"He can't talk to me about
down ," his . father. David what that boy told him." he
Earley, told The Associated said. " David is OK physical_Press. "My &gt;OH asked for ly. Mentally he's a· basket
case He just keeps cryi ng.''
that. ..
Talbert had just moved his
Earley said his &gt;on's stomach and thighs were burned .pregnant wife and two small
through three layers of children from Wheatland.
Ind . He had worked fo r
clothes.
David Earley II was the' Pullman Power ·si nce June.

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COMMUNITY-.

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 9, 2006-

-

su1Hi11tted plloto

Local artist Sheila McGuire donates a painting to be sold at
the Mason County Commun ity Foundation dinner. Accepting on•
b~half of .the Foundation is Amy Leach. a committee member:

Local.artist donates painting:

Submitted photo

These students from Southern Elementary were recently chosen as winners in their categories for the school's third annual &amp;tar
search event. These students will be back on April 5 to compete. in Southern Elementary's Super Star Search.

Southern Elementary Star Search winners
RACINE - . Stars aren't
just found in the sky but at
Southern Elememarv where
the Third Annual Star Search
recently took place.
The Star Search competition was student driven
which trlmslated into the.stu. dents proving the talent.
playing the music . working
the light s, curtains. show
line up, ~ign ups and performing roaster ·of ceremonies duties.
During a standing room
only crowd students were
picked as winners who are
now eligible to compete at

Southern Elementary Super category, Braden Spencer,
Star Search at 6 p.m. on first. place, Darien Diddle and
April 5.
·Lacey Hupp, second place.
Kindergarten through third , Bay lee Hupp and ·Katie
grade winners in the "other'' Jenkins,
third
place;
category, Marlee Maynard, · ''kal'llo\&lt;e" category, Emily
first place , Jessica Cook, sec- Ash, fi~st place, . Elizabeth ·
ond place: "singing" catego- Shuler, second place, Kayia
ry. Spencer Harrison, first Me Knight, third place;
place, Dimitrious Lamm, sec- . "singing" category, Alison
ond place; "karaoke" catego- Brown, first place, Natalie
ry, Sylvia· Richard , Japsen Wood, second place, Clayton
Wolfe. Madison Maynard, Findley, third place.
tlrst place. Tyler Miller, secThe production crew for
ond place. Katelyn Hill and the ·event included Lynzee
Cassie Roush, third place.
Tucker, Nathan Roush, Colby
Fourth through eighth Roseberry, Braxton Thorla,
grade winners in the "other" Chase Graham, Troy Pickens, ·

&amp; Tannat Diehl; MC's were
Alisha Sinclair, Amanda
Linkous, K&amp;tey Patterson,
Dustin Salser.
Also participating at the
event were Chad Dodson,
Southern Elementary Bank
D~rector and The River City
•.
Dancers.
Southern Elementary Star
Se~rch was made possible by
Southern Local Title I, Title
IV, the Gailia-Jackson-Meigs
Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction , Mental Health
Services and the Southern
!&gt;TO and the many parents
who volunteered .

MASON. W.Va. - Sheila
McGuire, a local artist, has
donated one or' her original
creations, "Good Morning ,
Sunshine," to a worthy cause.
The painting will be framed
and auctioned to the highest
bidder at the first annual
Mason County Community
Foundation dinner to be held at
the Riverside Golf Course in
Mason 6;30 p.m. tm March 23.
The function of the Mason
County
Community
Foundation is to establish a
permanent endowment that

will distribute grants to noli' :
profit organizations in tlie
community, according t!).
Amy J. Leach , d_irector Of
marketing and . public rei(
tion s . at Pleasant Valley
Hospital and a member of the'
marketing committee for the'
Foundation.
'"
Tickets to the dinner can l:(e;
purchased for $40 each an~ :
corporate sponsorships arealso avaiiapie, Leach said.
Foi· more information Bend·
are resident may call, (304),
675-4340, Ext. 1492.

'"

OU studepts donate activity bag~:

Pomeroy student.wins award in art exhibition

'

Ohio University students from the Child Life Student
Organization spent Tuesday afternoon making activity bags for .
children who visit O'Bieness Memorial Hospiral and hilVe til
spend time'.in a waiting area. From left are Jenna Kosti.va'l.
Ashley Moszkowicz. Patty Hi rt. Jacquie Wludyga and
Samantha Kull. The · students bought the crayons, coloring
pages , puzzles and stickers and made a memory game to pur
in the activity bags.
,

H I

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Audrlonna Pullins

4-HMEMBER

.

and Stacie Pullins ~of Long
Bottom. While at the conference the youth took part in chat
sessions and round-robi n interview s. She served on , the
Meip County 4-H Fashion
Board and is a six-year member of the Me.igs County Better
LivNock ~-H Dairy Club.

Thursday, March 9,

.·

,

Bv JAY REEVES

:

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

2006 '

I

, • BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Three . college students,
llicluding two aspiring actors
' Ia!own around campus as
pranksters, were arrested
Wednesday in a string of nine
'1.1Jurch fires that spread fear
&lt;jrross Alabama .last month.
-:,Federal agents said the
&lt;iefendants claimed that the
first few blazes were set as "a
joke" and that the others were
started to throw investigators
off the track.
·Gov. Bob Riley said the ·
frres did not . appear to be
"any type of conspiracy
against organized religion" or
the Bapti st faith. With the
·arrests, he said, "the faithbased community c.an rest a
little easier."
·
Benjamin Nathan Moseley
~nd Russell Lee DeBusk Jr.,
i?Qth 19-year-old students at
~ irm tngham- Southern
College, appeared in federal
. court and were ordered held
on church . arson charges
pending a · hearing Friday,
Matthew Lee Cloyd, 20-yearoldjunior attheUniversity of .
Alabama at Birmingham,
was also arrested.
' The fires broke out at five
Baptist churches in Bibb
County south of Birmingham
on Feb. 3 and four Baptist
churches in west Alabama on
Feb . 7. The federal Alcohol,
Tobacco; Firearms
and
Explosivesagency had made
the investigation its top priority, with scores of federal
agents joining state and local
officers.
· "While all three are entitled
to have their day in court. we
Are very hopeful that this is
the end to the fear that has
been . rampant . in West '
Alabama." said Rep. Artur
Davis, D-Ala.
~ Federal agents traced tire

motori'" who had purchased:
thm mode I. one .of whom was .
Cloyd's mother.
The day before the arrests, :
authorities
spoke
with·
Cloyd's parents, Kimberly:
and Michael Cloyd. The '
father &gt;.aid hi' son admitted ·
that "he knew who did it and '
he wa' there ." according to .
court papers.
,
An attorney for Cloyd.:
Tommy Spina. declined to ·
comment on the charges but'
added: "This is not a hate .·
crime. Thi' is not a religious
crime_"'

AP Photo

Tuscaloosa County Sheriff Ted Sexton speaks about the arrests of three college students believed to be responsible for nme
church fires in .february, during a news conference Wednesday in Tuscaloosa. Ala . Benjamin Nathan Moseley and Russell Lee
Debusk Jr. are students at Birmingham-Southern College. Matthew Lee Cloyd is a student at the University of Alabama at
Birmingham. Federal agents said the defendants claimed that the f1rst few blazes·were set as "a joke" and that the others were
started to throw investigators off the track.
tracks found at some of the
churches to one suspect's
parents, who then ac'knowl.edged their son was involved.
Five
churches
were
destroyed and four damaged.
In many cases, the tire was
set in the sanctuary near the
altar. No one was injured .
Acquaintances
said
DeBusk and Moseley were

both amateur actors who
were known as pranksters
and dreamed of becoming
stars.' They performed in
campus plays and appeared
in a documentary film.
Moseley confessed to the·
arsons after his arrest. inves- .·
tigators said in court papers.
The papers said Moseley
told agents that he, Cloyd and

DeBusk went to Bibb County
in Cloyd's sport utility vehiclc on Feb. 2 and set lire to
fiv e churches in the early
morning hours of Feb. J. A
witness quoted Cloyd as saying Moseley did it "a~ a joke
and it got out of hand."
·
Moseley also told agents
the · four fires in west
Alabama were set "as a

diversion to throw investigators off." an attempt that
''obviously did not work." the
court papers said.
Authorities had said earlier
that they were looking for two
men seen in a dark SUV near
a couple of the church tires.
Agents analyzed tire tracks
found at the scene of six fires
and rev iewet.l records or local

A lawyer for DeBusk did
not immediately return a
me,.age seeking &lt;;omment,'
and .court fib. did not list an
attorn ey for Moseley.
In vestigators said prev.iously that there appeared to be .
no racia l pattern in the fires: .
.four were . white congregatiim s. five were black : While .
all were Baptist ch urches,:
that is the dominant fai th in
the region. and agents were
ui1certain if tha t. denomina1ion was a factor.
The three students are
white and all either attend or
previously were enmlled at .
Birmingham-Southern.
a
Methodist-affiliated liberal
arts college.
Jim Parker. pastor of Ashby
Baptist Church at Brierfield,
a Bibb County church
demoyed in the &gt;pree, said
the congregation had been
worried iharthe arsonists had.
some "political or religious
agenda ." He said he had spo- .'
ken to ,federal agents and
, under&gt;tood the defendants
were promising students
from good families.
"We really are concerned
about them as people." he said.
··t would just like to know
what they were thinking."
· Associated Press writer
Samira Jaj(u·i in Tu,ca/oosa
comribwed 10 rhis ,:enon
·

:,Return to market for Gunmen stonn Iraqi security company offices, abduct 50 workers
· ~multiple sclerosis drug
would mark rare move ·

Womens
Colol:!nes,
Perfumes,
Gift Sets

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD,
Iraq
Gunmen wearing commando
unifonns of the Shiite-domi nared . Interior Ministry on
· Bv ANDREW BRIDGES
band, David, traveled from Wednesday stonned an Iraqi
, ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
the Pittsburgh area to speak.
security compan~ that relied
. Bingen Idee and Elan with- heavily on Sunm ex-military
WASHINGTON
A drew Tysabri from the market men from the Saddam
promising drug for multiple in February 2005 after two regime, spiriting away 50
sclerosis should be returned patients in clinical trials hostages. The ministry denied
to the market despite ques- involving 7,000 people died involvement and called the
lions about a rare brain dis- of PML. Should sales operation a '.'terrorist act."
ease, scientific advisers told resume, even more patients
Police and the U.S. mili the government Wednesday.
eventually. will get the often- tary, meanwhile , reported
The unanimous vote by fatal virus believed to cause finding the bodies of 24 men
advisers to the Food and PML, said Dr. Russell Katz, garroted or shot in the head,
Drug Administration came .director of the FDA's most of them in an abandoned
amid regulators' own con- Division
of
Neurology bus in a tough Baghdad Sunni
cerns about the drug Tysabri , Products.
neighborhood.
and whether there is any way
FQA staff . have recomThey also reported the
to minimize ri sk from the mended patients be moni- deaths of at least 13 others
a'pparent rare side effect.
tored during treatment and· across iraq. including a U.S. ·
The advisers were debating for at least five years there- soldier and a Marine.
~ome controls oil who could after to minimi ze the ri sk of
The Sunni minority. which
t~se the. drug, agreeing to ·a infe.ction iissociated with was doniinant in the country
'!lanufacturer proposal for a Tysabri . also known as natal- under Saddam Hussem . has
mandatory patient registry. izumab.
complained bitterly that it is
'they were scheduled to
Three studies recently pub- under attack from death
decide later in the day who · iished by the New England squads associated with the
would be allowed I() enroll in Journal of Medicine found Interior Ministry, in charge of
the regi stry, and how !ightly that Tysabri alone or with Iraq's police. And. over the
drug usc would be limited.
standard intederon treatment past two weeks - since the
; Tysabri has been linked to a cut the rate of relapse in MS bombing of a Shiite shrine in
potentially fatal brain .infec- patients by as much as two- Samarra violence has
tion called progressive multi- thirds after two years and · become increasingly sectari fpcal leukoencephalopathy. reduced the number of people an. Nearly 600 people have
or PML The drug's manufac- · whose MS · got worse. com- been killed since. Feb. 22.
uirers voiuntari1y pulled it pared to those on a dummy
M;my of the dead in that peri. from the market lust year. fol - treatment or interferon alone. od were Sunnis. killed at close .
lowing the deaths of two .
patients. The drug had been
sold for just four months.
· · Now Biogen Idee Inc. and
· Elan Corp. PLC want to bring
back Tysabri under a still93 West Franklin Street Suite 302
e:volving ri sk-manage ment
pian that would control and
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range after apparently being
captured by overwhelming
numbers of attackers. The .·
nature of the killings suggested
that a well-annedandorganized
. force carried out the attacks.
Interior Minister Bay an
Jabr and one of hi s assistants
may themselves have been
targets of assassination
attempts Wednesday.
A bomb hidden under a
parked car detonated as police
from Jabr's protection force
were driving through Baghdad,
killing two officers and wounding a third. police said . Four
bystanders were injured.
And gunmen attacked the
convoy of Interior Ministry
Undersecretary
Hekmet
Moussa in west Baghdad.
killing two hodygLmrds and
injuring two others, police said.
Neither Jabr nor Moussa
were in the conn1y~. .
The sectarian blopdshed.
has complicated Shiite Prime
Minister Ibrahim ai-Jaafari's
'bid for " seco nd term . AIJaafari is opppsed by a coali-

tion of Sunni Arab, Kurdi sh seven Shiite parties that make
and secular Shiite politiCians up the United lraqi . AIIiance.
- led by Pre sident Jalal the largest bloc in parliament
Taiabani. a Kurd.
At the same time, however,
' The president has ope~ly Abdui-M&lt;ihdi's change of
challenged al-Jaafari's candida- heart signaled a potentially
cy on grounds he is too divisive · dangerou s and growing interand would be unable to form a nal dispute among the coungovernment representing all try's majority Shiite political·
Iraq 's religious and ethnic rae- factions over the nomination
tions. There was also great of ai-Jaafari. who has been ·
unease over ai-Jaafari 's close criticized for not addressing
ties to radical · anti-American Sunni complaints about the
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
lntenor Mini stry.
On Wednesday. Shiite Vice
The.al-'3-awafid Security Co. ·
President Adil Abdui-Mahdi was attacked after gunmen'
finally co-signed a presiden- · arrived in a convoy,of ~ehicies,
tial decree to call parliament including several white SUVs
into session for the first time and a pickup· truck mounted
since the Dec. 15 elections.· with a heavy gun. that they
The about-face appeared 10 · used 10 carry away the
break a political deadlock hostages, &gt;aid Interior Ministry
that had blocked attempt's to Maj. Faiah al-\1ohammedawi.
begin the proc·e,s of forming·
· He said the ,·ictims. who
the c:ountry's first permanent. included bodyguards. drivers.
computer technicians and
post-inva~ioll'government.
"He &gt;igned the decree toda) . uther empioye~s. did not
I expect the first session to be resist because thcv believed ·
held on Sunday or by )he end their abductors v.:ere police
of next week at the lilte·st." said 're.:ial for.:es working for the
Nad1m al-Jabiri. head llf one '" r Int erior M'inistrv.

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ATIENDS ·CONFERENCE.
LONG
BOTTOM
Audrionna Pullin&gt;. Meigs
County's nominee for 2006
Ohio · State ~ - hi Fashion
Board. attended the 4- H
Conference held in Co.lumbus
at the Greater Columbus
Conventioi1 Center.
She i' the dau ghter of Tom

RL

THREE COLLEGE SroDENTS ARRESTED IN AlABAMA CHURCH ARSONS

BY ALEXANDRA ZAVIS

Submitted t&gt;hoio

.

ASHLAND- Pomerov resident Andrea Burdette received
the drawin g award in thejuried
student art exhibition at
Ashland University's. Don
Coburn Gallery for her work
titled "Hiding."
The exhibition ·opened Feb.
, 23 and will run through
March 17.
A 2003 Meigs High School
graduate, Burdette is a junior
majoring in art education at
Ashland University. She is the
daughter of Robert and Ruth
Burdette of 34421 Toymship
Road 205.
.
· The Coburn Gallery is located
outside Hugo Young Theatre in
AU's Art s and Humanities
Building , o n the corner of Grant
Street and College Avenue.
Normal gallery h()urs are I 0
a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. The
gallery is also open other hours
by appointment.
Andrea Burdette is pictured with her award-winning, drawing, "Hiding."

PageA7

'"

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NATION· •

The Daily Sentinel

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffie, R. Ph.
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS
Mon- Fri 8om- Spm
Sot. Som- Spm
Sun. CLOSED

F'rescription Ph. 992-2955

'TillS •

: Dozens of tearful multiple
stlerosis patients pleaded
with FDA's advisory committee Tuesday to allow them to
choose
for themselves
whether to t;~ke Tysabri .
' "I am at the end of my
road . in terms of what I can
take. I want it to be my
choice,"
said
Barbam
Crooks. 48. shortly before
testifying. She and her hus-

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The Daily Sentinel

-Inside
World Baseball Classic roundup, B2
Matta. Dials claim top Big Ten honors. B2

....
Page ~8 • The Daily Sentinel

Prep Basketball Tournament S&lt;;oreboard, 88

_.......
Thursday, March 9, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 9, 2006

'.

·Broadway to Bizet on OVS p~ogram for Saturday
jeering with great clarity and expression
GALLIPOLIS - Take a trip down the
... a commanding .performance that near·
great white way with the Ohio Valley
ly stopped the concert dead in it' s
Symphony and bass baritone, John
scores
...a gloriou s theatrical achieveShuftle, in the historic Morris &amp; Dorothy
~
ment.
GALLIPOLIS - "A Lifetime of Photogra'phy," an exhibi- Haskins Ariel Theatre located in the
Hh American performance s· have
tion of the works Galli a County native Robert Eugene Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performing Arts
included
companies and orchestras in
Wallace . will be presented at the French Art Colony March 8- Centre in downtown Gallipolis.
Chicago. Lo s Angele s, . Atlanta,
· 31 .
Join the orchestra, under the direction
Phoenix,
Denver,
Cleveland,
Wallace i.s a photographer and author of "Anxieties in the of Music Director Ray Fowler, at 8 p.m.
Indianapolis,
Boise
.
Cincinnati
,
Outhouse." The di splay is sponsored by Gallipolis Career Saturday, March II, for a program of
Fort
Milwaukee,
St.
Louis.
Columbus,
College. Saunders Insurance and Thomas Do-lt Center. ·
)3roadway and Bizet. ..
Wayne, Lexington and Charle ston,
An opening reception and book signing will be held at the
Attendees at the March II OVS conamong
. many others. His concerts have
FAC on Saturday. March II from i.O a.m . until noon for cert will get a 10 percent discount on
been
heard
on various NPR affiliated
Wallace 's .new book. "Buttercups in Her Hair."
tickets for the ~006-07 season" if they
and he records on the
broadcasts,
The FAC galleries ani open Tuesday through Friday from 10 purchase the1r t1ckets that n1ght. Th1s
Clarion/EaglesNest label.
a.m. until 6 p.m.. and Sunday from I to 5 p.m. For more infor- . concert IS Ohw Valley Bank Night at the
Scott . Michal will continue with hi s
marion contact the FAC at 446-3~ 34.
.. symphony when 100 emplo~ees from
pre-concert chats on Saturday at 7 p.m .
'
the bank are the orchestra s spec1al
in the banquet hall at Ariel Dater Hall .
guests.
Have a 'glass of wine and sit back and
. The stage is set with the Prelude to
enjoy
the ever entertaining Michal as he
Bizet's Carmen. Bizet died just months
JACKSON - · A Se'~ies of World War r years films Will be after its 1875 debut and never knew the
leads you through the repe11oire giving
you the inside information as only a
. sh.own in the Potter Room of the Jackson Library at 7 p.m. on world wide fame his opera would evenJohn Shuffle
composer can.
the second Thursday of each month. beginning today. March tually attract. Bass baritone John Shuffle
9.
Concluding the concert is Mozart's
The public is encouraged to attend
will then join the OVS for the bombastic
There will be a guest scholar from Marshall University, Dr. "Toreador Song" from the same opera. Symphony No. 35 (Haffner). Composed rehearsals for free· on Friday, March I0,
David R. Woodward.for the firs.t session to give an overview The versatile soloist will also perform in just a few weeks time, this beloved from . 7 to I0 p.m. and on Saturday,
Gershwin's "I Got Plenty 0' Nothin'" symphonic work is considered by many March II from I to 4 p.m . OVS Saturd~y
of the war and its impact on history.
The filrn and speaker are made possible thanks to the from · Porgy and Bess and "The to be their favorite work by this amazing dress rehearsal s are an excell ent way ~e
.
introduce young children to symph01jf~
University of Rio Grande and the National Endowment for the Impossible Dream" from Man of La genius.
Chicago-based Shuftle is a veteran mus1c.
-~
Humanities in conjunction with the Lillian Jones Museum , Mancha.
singing
actor
and
classical
musician
who
The
Ohio
Valley
Symphony
is
spoo:
Bouncing
back
to'
the
18th
century,
" Southern Hills Arts Council. Jackson City Library and t.he City
the OVS will gallop through the has appeared to critical acclaim in over sored in part by the Ohio Art s Council; a
of Jackson Tourism Board.
·
Overture
to Marriage of Figaro, from I00 different stage and concert roles in state agency that supports public prtf
There i ~ no admi ssion charge .
Mozart's delightfully silly opera that some 30 states, Australia, New Zealand, gra1'ns in the arts. This cohc:ert is funded
pokes fun at class distinctions.Shuffle Switzerland, Finland and lsraei.He regu- in part by the Gallia County Meclicll,l ·
will rollick his way through "Se vuol larly performs in a diverse repertoire. Society, Baker &amp; Hostetler and the Ann
easily
between
opera, C. Dater Foundation.
ballare, signor c.ontino" and "Hai gia moving
Ti.c kets fnr the X p.m. cow,:err are $22,
vinta Ia causa.'' Don't be confused by Broadway, oratorio, inspirational and
JACKSON - Artwork by Dave Snyder of Rio Grande is the Italian titles, almost everyone will jazz performances . Reviewers have $20 for se11iors and $/Ofur students, and
currently on display at the 'Lillian June's Museum, 75 be familiar with these . tunes oft paro' noted his· ".:.rich, substantial ~oice and · are availahle at the Ariel Dater Hall box
died in cartoons, commercials and TV . ex'pressive nuances ... phrasing with ele- office at 428 SeCimd AI'(' . For more
Broadway St .. Jackson.
·
·
'
gance and rhythmic astuteness
pro- informatiol! call ( 740) 446- 2787 (ARTS). ·
This versatile arti st has created many notable pieces of shows.
sculpture in wood, ceramic. ·metal, glass and mixed media, and
the upcoming exhibit will showcase a sampling of these.
Snyder describes his work in the following way: "When I
build or paint a piece, it 's .more about the process of assembly
than following the general rules of line, shape, or form. I seek out
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
different ways to create objects and allow my work tb find its - The annual musical proown way, to becon1e what .it will. Through process, I find inspi- duced and performed by Point
ration, and in the end, my art becomes expressive on it's owri." Pleasant High School band
Snyder ' s suclptures are on display now th'rough March 22. members under the direction
Winter hOurs for the Lillian Jones Museum are Tuesdays of Jeff Hilbert will be presentand Wednesdays froliJ I to 4 p:m. (closed on Saturdays). ed at the middle school gym
Additional hours and group tours Cl\n be scheduled by appoint• this wc:.ekend .. · ·
men!. The Carriage House Genealogy Center is open on
Performances of this year's
Wednesdays from 1. to 4·p.m. and .additiooal hours by appoint' musical, with the theme
ment.
~·drancte Kiiigfits," wifl' take
For more information , call (740) 286-2556, e-mail us at &lt;lil- place at 7 p.m. Friday and
lianjones@dragonbbs.com&gt;, or 'vi sit our Web site at http://lil- Saturday; and 3 p.m. Sunday.
lianjones.museum.com. There is no admission charge.
·Tickets will be $7 at the
door for the Friday and
Sunday shows. The Saturday
.
. performance will be $8, with
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The West Virginia Symphony $1 from each ticket sold that
Orchestra has announced its annuaS~·ring Tour with three per- evening going to the Point
High
School ·
Pleasant
formances from March 24.:26.
Concerts will be performed in Charleston· at St. Timothy's Auditorium fund-raising cam.
Submitted phO\o
Lutheran Church , located on Corridor G, at 7:30p.m. March paigtL The public is invited to
24; Harper-McNeely Auditorium at Davis &amp; Elkins College in come and join the band mefl)- Pictured are performers from the opening number "It's a Grande Knight. " Seated from left in
Elkins at 7:30p.m . March 25 : Woodrow Wilson Auditorium in bers for a great show which front are singers Rebecca Cline, Kevin Estep and Suzanne Caplinger. Standing in back are
Beckley at 3 p.m. March 26 .
promises to be entertaining dance partners Jami Calandros, Andy Stepp. Austi Sergent, T.J. Riffle, Heather Crum, Dustln
Peaytt, Tracy Johnson, Cody Jordan, Brittany Clonch and Codie Atkinson.
The program features Robert Turizziani, principal Glarinetist and a lot of family fun.
of the WVSO,as soloist in the sublime "Ciafinet Coni:ef\o" by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Other works on the program. titled "Classical Elegance,"
include Mendelssohn's ·'Overture: The Hebrides" (also known
COLUMBUS (AP)- Here is a list of and Village, Oak·Hill Rd ., Bath.
as "Fingal 's Cave") and Beethoven 's "Symphony No.8."
currefll and upcoming Ohio festivals
. Through March 22
. Grant Cooper. arti stic director and conductor for the WVSO, and events:
Quilt Show 2006, Lake Metroparks
MIDDLEPORT - A full -day workshop
will conduct.
Through March 17
· Farmpark, Chardon Rd., Kirrland.
.
in ballroom dance will be held Saturday at
Hofflnan Challenge Clothing Show, ·
Through March.2006
the Riverbend Arts Council headquarters at
John Mcintire Library, N. 5th St.,
Exhibit: "Tommy: The Amazing 290 N. Second Ave .. Middleport. on
Zanesville.
Journey," The Rock and Roll Hall of Saturday.
Through March 19
Fame and Museum, Cleveland.
The dance workshop, sponsored by ihe
Through April 2
S.t. Patrick's Week Celebration,
Riverbcnd Arts Council. will have a mornHUNTINGTON. W.Va. - The Lone Star Rodeo Company Young's Jersey Dairy, Springfield- · Art E"hibition-Completely Floored : ing session from I 0 a.m. to noon and art
wil.l be bringing a little bit of the old and the hew to the Big Xenia Rd ., Yellow Springs.
· Oriental, Artist Designed .and American afternoon sess ion from 2 to 4 p.m. , with a
Sandy Superstore Arena March 17-18 with exciting events of . Columbus .International Auto Show, Indian Rugs, Decorative Arts Center of time for practicing dancing skills following
new technique and tougher competition.
.
Greater Columbus Convention Center, Ohio, E. Main St .. Lancaster.
the afternoon ·session. .
·
The company will show how cowboys do rodeo in a·modern N.. High St., Columbus.
Zelda by Herself: The Art of Zelda
Gerald and Mary Powell. inwuctors, note
. style during the Mega Bucks Tour.
Exhibit: Girls on Film, Canzani Fitzgerald, Massillon Museum. Massillon.
that
the work s.hop will include absolute ·
· Lone Star Rodeo Company will continue to provide specta- Center, Columbus College of An &amp;
Through April 9
· beginner instruction in waltz, 's wing, ·rumba '
AAUW
Scholastic
Student
tors wit,h the best in western style. family entertainment. Design, comer of Cleveland Ave and E.
·
Gay St. , Columbus.
Exhibition, Zanesville Art Center, and ChaCha on the 2:500 square foot wood
dance floor.
Events will include bareback bronc nding, steer Wrestling,calf
Exhibit: Con Agua de Cielo-Wiih Military Ril., zanesville.
ropl·n·g, break-away rop1· ng, saddle bronc r·1.d1.11g, Brahma bull Water from Heaven, Canzani Center,
The charge for the full day of in struction
Exhibition-Images in · the Heaven,
riding, cowgirls' barrel racing and team roping.
C
is
$30 a couple. For more information. conOn Friday night, there will also he a diamond dig where the Columbus . allege of Art &amp; Desigh; Patterns on the Earth: The I Ching.
tact
Mary Wise at (740) 992-2675.
comer of Cleveland Ave and E. Gay Richard M. Ross Art Museum. Ohio
first 500 ladies will have a. chance to win a diamond ring. St.. Columbus.
Wesleyaf1 University, s. Sandusky St ..
Other· things . planned to be held at the
Saturday night will have the save a horse·. ride a cowboy conThe Turned .vessel: Inspirations in Delaware.
Riverbend Arts Coun0il facility include a
test were the winner will receive a trip to the ACM Awards in Wood, Ohio Craft Museum, W. Fifth
St. Patri ck\ Day Dance for 7:30 to 10:30
Through April 16
Ave .. Columbus.
Las Vegas .
Exhibit: · Quilt National '05 , ~it'fe p.m. on Friday. March 17, with live mu sic
Both shows will begin at 7:30 p.m. lickets are available at
Exhibition-Sling: Sampling Hip Hop Gallery, Riffe Center, S. Hi'gh St., by George Hall. Charge for thm is $20 per
couple .
the Arena box office. all Ticke tmaster locati ons and online at Fashion &amp; the Urban Aesthetic, CCAD, Columbu s.
Canzani Cente~. corner of Cleveland
www.ticketmaster.com .
· Through April 23
Also planned is .a Ladies Afternoon Tea
For more information on the Lone Star Championship Ave. &amp; E. Gay St., Columbus.
OH+5 : Ohio Border Biennial , Dairy from I to 3 p.m . on March 23. where the
Rodeo and other ,upcoming events, visit ww w.bi gsandyare '
Through March 26
Barn Cultural Arts Center, Dairy Ln., emph&lt;isis will tcJe on enjoying tea, along
na.com .
Maple Sugaring Days, Hale Farm Athens.
with li vely co.liversation anctenter ~ainment.

Photo display at FAC in March

BY DAVE GOLDBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

..

WWI film series begins March 9

Jones Museum features
local artist

'lt~s

a Grande

Spring tour will feature Mozart
.

FFSTIVALS, EVENTS SCHEDULED FOR OHIO

Time to lasso
up a good time

Owners approve union deal, labor peace back to NFL

Dance workshop
set for Saturday

LocAL S~HEDULE
GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of upcoming college

and hi~ school vs.'rslty sporling events Involving
teams from Galli&amp; , Me1gs 11.nd Mason counties.

Saturday. March 11

College Etaaeball
Rici Grande on Spring Trip
Collogo Softball
Rio G rande on Spring Trip

Thy[Jday. March 1's '
College Track and Field
Rio at t,JNCW Seahawk Invitational
Friday, March 11
College Track and Field
Rio at UNCW Seahawk ln\litational

Thursday. March 23 ·
College Baseball •
Rio Grande at Cedarville. 1 p.m. (DH )

Middleport Youth
League sign-ups
set for March
MIDDLEPORT
MiddleFort Youth League
basebal and · softball sign-ups
for girls rages 5-18) and boys
(ages 5-17) will be held 10
a.m. until2 p.m. March II and
18 at the Middleport Council
Chambers.· ·
Copies of birth certificate~
are required for new players.
For more information, call
Dave B'oyd a1 992-3668,
Tanya Coleman at 992-5481
or Tim Ebersbach at 9927747.

Meigs youth ·
baseball camp
POMEROY

-

. Meigs

be holding a

youth camp for baseball players from grades . 3-8 on
Saturday; March I 8, head
junior varsity baseball coach
Nick Dettwiller announced
today. ·
"We will be working on the
basic .skills ·and terminology
used by the TVC champion
Meigs Marauders. There · wi II
be !-shirts for the first 50
campers," said Dettwiller.
Dettwiller
asked
that
campers bring ·clothes and
equipment to participate outside and inside, along with a
sack lunch. Questions about
the event are to made with
Dettwiller. 740-416-0344.

Meigs Baseball
Alumni Game
POMEROY - Meigs base. ball will be holding its annual
alumni game at I p.m. on
Sunday, March 19.
''We will take batting practice . before the game With a
home run derby nght after. We
will then divide the teams
evenly and riay a double header. There w1ll be t- shirt ~ tor all
participants, This is a great
chance to come out and support the TVC champion Me_i_gs
Marauders and meet up w1th
old friends and teammates so
try and get the word out," said
Nick Dettwiller, head junior .
v.arsity baSeball coach.
"Thi' is also the weekend of
our vouth baseball camp on
Saturday the I Sth, and wi.th
il\.our donations and participallon we hope . to make this a.
successful weekend for the
· youth. alumni , and current
Marauders as they prepare to
win back-to-b:1ck TVC championships," he added.
For answers .lll questions or
to give suggestions contact
Dettwiller at 740-4 I 6-.0344 .

CONTACTS~
Phon~- 1·746·446·2342 eXt. 33
Fax - 1·740·446·3008
E-mail :_.spor tsC myd aify sfi!n tinel corr\

·Sp'o_rls Stall
Brad Sherr"an, Sports Editor
(740) 448· 2342 . ext 33
·
bsherman C mydallytnbune.com

Bryan Waltera, Sporl1 Writer
(740) 446·2342,, ext . 23

bwalters @ mydaHytribune .com

Lerry Cr~m; Sports Writer
(740) 446· 2342, ext 33
tcrumOmyrtailyre glster com

1

by
the
C a r o lina
*
Panther s
···~·
•• t
" ••
•• ,., "'*** last week to
clear about
$1.5 million of cap
space.
"It was
Notebook eventually
going
to
h ·a p pen ,
they had to gt;l it done," he
said. "But it 's good because
now it gives guys who put in
the time tb become a big-time
free agent , the guy s like
Edgerrin James: the chance to
go· out and get what they' ve
earned ."
No CBA deal would' ve led
to an uncapped year in 2007 .
Now, the salary limit is

......

expected to go up by as much reve nue tea1m - Dallas. ·
as $10 million with an ex ten- Was hington and Philadelphia.
sion in place .
for imtance - should con~
"It 's also good for the guys tribute proportionatel y to the
like· me because now some- playe r pool because th ey can
· body has a little extra money earn far more in nonfootball
and they can go after a veter- income from thin gs such as
an who might ha ve gotten a d v~rti ; in g and local radio
squeezed out in thi &gt;. " rights.
·
Buckner said . "''m sure the
Those high-revenue teams
veteran minimum is going to mi ght contribute only 10 pergo up, so guys like me can go cent of their outside money
out and get a one-year some- · compared with 50 percent or
where and ~ee l good about the more for low-revenue teams.
situation they are going into.''
Gene Upshaw, the execuThe real debate was tive director of the NFL
between the owners them- Players· · Association , · has·
selve s on the important iss ue in sisted throughout more than
of expanded revenue sharing. a year of negotiation; that thi s
The iss ue involves low - div is ion m~ s t he resolved
incom e teams such as before agreement can be
Buffalo. Cincinnati and reached on a contract extenIndianapolis who say hi gh- "011.

Cavaliers s~rvive ~aptors again·

BRIEFS

Ba~

GRAPEVINE, Texas
Labor peace was re~tored to
the NFL when the owners
agreed to the players' union
proposal Wednesday, extendmg the collective bargaining
agreement for six years.
There . were · no further
details on the accord, including whether it includes
expanded revenue sharing.
The vote was 30-2, with
Buffalo and Cincinnati, two
low-revenue teams, voting
against it.
Free agency, put off twice
by the protracted negotiations
between the owners and players, now will start at 12:01
a.m. Friday.

" It was a good compromise," said Jim lrsay, owner
of low-revenue Indianapoli s.
"We're h~ppy with it - 30-2
is a good vote." .
The agreement comes after
a week of on-aga.in , off-again
.negotiations, culminating in a
two-day owners meeting.
No work stoppage was
imminent - at least for the
next two years· - but no
agreement would have . sent
teams scrambling to get under
a lower salary cap, at $94.5
million. That would have put
a number of veterans on the
street and limited the amount
of money available for other
free agents.
·
Some were already let go.
such as Brentson Buckner, a
13-year veteran who was cut

TORONTO (AP) - If
Damon Jones was distracted by a possible sexual .
offen se charge against
him. he sure didn't show
it.
Jones made a 3-pointer
at the buzzer to g1ve the
Cleveland Cavaliers their
fourth straight victory, a
98-97 win over the
on
Toronto
Raptors
Wednesday night.
Morris Peterson had
given Toronto the lead
with a 3-pointer with 4.8
seconds left, but a doubleteamed · LeBron James
found· a wide-open. Jones
in the corner for the winning bucket.
.
Detective s in Arizona
were to interview a · 23year-old
woman
Wednesday who alleges ·
Jones committed a sexual
offense againsi her. The •
woman filed a complaint
against Jones on Sunday
in Chandler, Ariz., after
returning from a visit to
the Cleveland area.
· Police
interviewed
Jones earlier this week.
:'My focus is always
going to be on basketball.
That's No. I goal , my No.
I job. That 's how I feed
my family," Jones said.
"And anything el~e . I'm
going to take it in stride
and I deal with it when it
comes about.".
James had 35 points for
the Cavaliers, who also
beat Toronto on Tuesday
night.
Peterson scored a season-h-igh 31 points and
Mike James added 30 for
the Raptors, who have lost
eight of nine.
After
Mike James
missed a long jumper as
the shot clock was about to
expire,
Chris
Bosh
grabbed the rebound and
passed it to Peterson, who .
buried the 3-pointer from
!he top of the key.
But after a timeout,
LeBron
James drove
· Please see.Clvs. 82

No givens .
in MAC
tourney
fiy ToM WITHERS ·
ASSOCIATEQ PR ESS

AP pholo

Cleveland Cavaliers LeBron James , left. is fouled by To ronto Raptors' Ch ris Bosh dunng first
half NBA action in Toronto Wednesday.

Selig to review book on Bonds' alleged steroid use
SCOTTSDALE.
Ariz.
(AP) - Bud Selig wants to
read the book before making
any decisions about Barry
Bonds.
.
On a clay when Bonds was
in California for a child cu stody hearing, baseball kept
buzzing
about
him
Wednesday - specifically,
about an upcomin g book
.that describes in vi .vid detail
the . slugger's
alleged
steroids use.
Selig has nu plans to meet
with the San Francisco star.
Instead. the commis sioner
will wait. .
··1 will review all the mate rial that's relati ve in every
-way." he said. "Obviously.
we've only seen part&gt; of
thin gs.
'
'The book itself doesn ' t
come nut until the end of the
month ," ·he 'a id in Phoenix
at the World Baseball
Cla" ic · g.tme hctwec n
Canada and ' the Un ited

States. " But pOsted a note on his Web site
we
will than king fan s fur the ir sup r e v i c w port without. ment ionin g the
ev ery thin g new est all egari·o n.,. Hi s
there is to . lawyer. mca nwhi k . quc slook at and tinned th e book:S ercdibilit v.
at
&gt;o mc
Al l aro und ha &gt;c baii .
appro pri ate BonJ, was topi.: No, I.
time
I'll · Bo,ton pit.: her Da1·id
'have further Wel h said Bl1nd, sho uld "lx
&lt;: n mm e n t. a man and ,;ome out and "I )
· Bonds
but I don't that he di d 1t" if he u.seJ
have
anv \te ro i&lt;.k Wells saiJ Bnmh
further comment at th (, "probahly" u.,eJ them.
point."
.
" If you ' re guilt) J nd )&lt;l U
The Giants responlled to got caught. come clean. I
Selig's comment; hy 'ltying think yuu ca n ~ ~ ~ a Jut mnre
they would cooperate full y reo, pl'ct f rom · peopl e tlwn
with the c onuni ~Si.o n e r.
1h\) I\ in ~- .. \\'cl b said.
''The Giants .full y sup,pllrt
'Rc!gl'r ' C kmt:n ' offered
and will a&gt;S isl wi th w mmi ,. another c•pinion.
sioner Bud Selic.'s rcvie " of
"] W&lt;'IT)' morc .about 'the
the .:ircum stances surw uml· man ·, hc;tlt h 1h:111 I chl' ;1t&gt;nu t
in g the rc&lt;:e nt puhli shed !11111 hiaing ho me ru n&gt; i&gt;r
repo rt abou t Barrv 13 unJ, ." 11 hatc 1er thi, " ilc'h. htllll
the team ' aid in a 't at&lt;:mcnt. . llc' rc on. " the Tc·a m l 'SA
Bonds. who has l'~pea t e d · act: ' ai J .
ly denied u' in g jw rfll r·
" I think he ~ &lt; ' l ha nllllc' rc·d
. m a n ct:- - r:n han c i n~ . dru p .... r rc H~ ~ l) !)d l~l... . l ~ \..',lr. a nd It
•'

o,;ee m ~ tu be happ~ n in ~ d_ga in
thi &gt; y,.ear. I dun "t 1-no\\ if it·,

goinu to \.-·hanue ;un thin g."

r," , ; ill.

•

·

•
Ya nk~(' :-.
· m ~u lag!.? r
Joe
Torre ' aiJ Blllllh ' Hall of
Fame \ lat u, " a' up to indi ,·iJual voter, . He &lt;aiJ the
t11'e ru ll &gt;leruids 'rand al had
gi1 c• n the' ' P" rt "a hi ad, eve"
and wa lercd d&lt;m n 't he home
.ru n'mark :-..

" I th'ink right nnw 11 c have
alread y dilut ed t h;~t ." he
-., aiJ .

13 o nJ, , with 70X hnme
nt n' and nnh ~ H , ]n nf
hre a~ ing

l'a r~~r

H ~:ln t...

rcronJ. .

\\ 01 ~

Aar;H1 ·,
ah..,c nt

from G i &lt;.tnt ~ · camp becau . . e
l'f a h&lt;':u·i n~ that " '" " hcduled 1nnrc I han a month :.1gu .

But 1t ce rt ainl y le i! a1 the
right time r,, J1r'" Il k him a
hri d re&gt;pll c. J d.t) aftc·r
Sport' ll luq rated rck&lt;hcd
cxct:rrt" frum "Game pf
Please see Bonds, 88

CLEVELAND - There
are preciou s few secrets in
the
Mid·American
Conferen~e . where everybody knows everybo,dy's basketball busineso,.
In recent years. the regular
seas on has followed a familiar, humdrum script : hon\e
team usuall y wins; Kent State
racks up 20-plus victories :
Miami's defense causes
coache s msomnia: Ohio
catches a late spark.
' Surpri ses. for the most part.
are rare.
But it' s in March . at tournament· time. when all the fun
starts. MAC madness . a 72hour affli cti on. even&gt; things
out.
"On Thursday. all eight
temns, that walk through the
door know they have a great
chance 10 win it,'' said Kent
State coach Jim Christian.
"That' s why it's always
tough."
.
.For the first time since their
magical nm to the Elite Eight
in 2002. the Golden Flashes
come to Cleveland 's Quicken
Loai1 s Arena as the MAC's
. regul ar-season champion. the
No . I seed and the 'team to
beat.
· Kent Stat e ( 22 ,8 I opens
play in Th ursd ay's third quarterfinal matchup against No .
8 , eed Buffal o 1.19- 12). a
team that too k the ·Golden
Fl a:; he&gt; to two ove rtimes
befnre losi ng 111 -107 last
month .
In the fir't q uarterfinal. "Jo.
7 'eed Toledt• ( 18- 10 ) plays
l\o. 2 seed i'\ onhern Illinois
II 7- I01. fo!l6wed by "Jo. 6
' ecd Western '.1ichi gan' ( I~ '
161 a ~ ai n, t !\lo. J seed Akron
( 21.-KI In the la.,t quarterfi nal. de fendi n g 10u rn ament.
l'ham
pion. ~ o~ 5 seed Ohio
.
1 I K- 1Ol . play .' No. ~ seed
!VII ami I 18-9 1.
The ' cmifina b are Friday
nig h1 "ith the cham pionshi p
on Saturda1.
f
A' ·i, u,"ua ll\ is the case.
there are 'i\ te~m' l'a pable of
"inn1ng the \1.-\C tournament ~tllll the aut omati c
;&gt;.; CAA tl1 urne' herth that
· coe&gt; with. it. .:\u it takes is
\ · three wins in three days .
La' t vear. Ohio c·ame in as
the• :-.; ,,: ~ ,e.:d. knocked off
Kcn1 SLtle a nd top -s e~ded
\1iami to make the final and
1
1hen t&gt;cal Ruffa lo nn freshma n Lt'&lt; m Will iam, · tip-in at
'j the bulLer 1u win the Iitle
TIJal e \ pcrience ' hould
help the Bohcat&gt;. who ·were
·expcc·tcJ I ll do more thi s 'ea'"n hut ha1e 't ru ~g l ed .. and
re ce n t !~ . · h"(
'ophumore
, guard Jcrc' l11' f ear' . who left
the program.l or pnsonal rea- .
I'

·I

Please see MAC, 82

�Thursday, March 9.

·wwW .mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Blame Canada: USA upset at World Baseball Classic
PHOENIX (AP) - Adam Stem hit
an inside-the-park homer, drove in
four runs and made two sensational
catches in center Wednesday, leading
Canada to a surprising 8-6 victory
over the United States In the first
· round of the inaugural World BasebaH
Classic.
Adam Loewen, a 21-year-old leftbander, gave ur. three hits and walked
three but didn t allow a run in 3 2-3
innings and got the victory for Canada
(2-0).
Jason Varitek 's 448-foot grand slam
helped bring the United States back
from an 8-0 deficit. but a Canadian
team made up largely of minor leaguers held on.
.
Chase Utley thought he had given
,the United States the lead in the
eighth, flipping his bat and raising
both arms m triumph after he hit a
long drive to center with two on. But
Stem made leaping catch at the .wall
near the 407-foOI sign to end the
inning.
The United States (1-1) must beat
South Africa on Friday. when 43-year'
old Roger Clemens . starts for the
Americmis, or have Mexico lose one
·o r its remaining games to stay alive in
the 16-nation tournament.

2006

Thursday, March 9.

WORLD
BASEBALL
CLASSIC

Pirates blank Cincinnati, 5-0
Casey plunked in
helmet during ·first
game against Reds·

x-ed¥ancu to MCOnd round
FIRST ROUND
GROUP A
' GB
W L PC1
x·South Korea 3 0 1.0oo
1
x.Japan
2 1 .667
'2
. Tl!lwan
1 2 .333
3
China
0 ~ .000

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - ·
Sean Casey was hit in the helmet by a pitch during the
Pittsburgh Pirates' 5-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in
a
split-squad
game
Wednesday but came away
only with minor swelling
above his right eye.
Facing his former team for
the first time since he was
traded last December, Casey
renewed friendships on the
field before the game and got
a nice ovation from the crowd
before his first at-bat, which
ended with a routine fly out.
In the third inning, leftbander Michael Gosling hit
Casey in the helmet. The first
baseman lay on the ground
for several seconds, then got
up and went to first base. He
left the game as a precaution
after the inning. ·
"Yeah, I thought I had some
friends over here," • Casey
joked. "But, hey, that's basebalL It hap~ns. The ball got
away from him. That's the
way it ~oes. You take that risk
every ume you get in the batter 's box."
Gosling, tryin'g to impress
the Reds in case they need a
fill-in while Paul Wilson
recovers from shoulder
surgery, covered his head
after hitting Casey. After the
inning, Casey approached
· Gosling to let him know he
had no . problem with the
pitch.
Gosling pitched three
scoreless innings, but was
upset with his control and the
pttch that hit Casey.
Craig Stansberry hit a
three-run home run off
Cincinnati's Josh Hall, who
missed last season following
shoulder .surgery.
Tom
Gorzelanny, Marty McLeary
and Scott Strickland each
threw three .scoreless innings
for the Pirates.

Frkflll', 3
At Toll\'!l
South Kof§t 2, TaiWall 0

Japjln 18, Chth&amp; 2, 8lnnlngo

~Mafc~4

AlTo~~\'!~
'
• SOt.llb l(i)'roa .10, China 1·

a• ..,.14, ii'Biwan a, 71nnir!90 , .
-~., SunciiW, ~~~- 5 ' '
AlTo~~\'!~

.

.

"

.

Taiwan 12, China 3 ·' 1,:
South - . 3. \Jtlpan ll.
' GAOOPi

WL · Pct,,
o 1,000
UnHod ~tater .1 1 .500
MoxJeo
,&gt; , ·1·· .500
South Afr~a
0 2 .000

Canada

GB

2

.,

'&gt;;:"

1' ,_
1 '·'

2.

&gt;

'lllo~.-7

At P"-lx '

UnHod States 2.

-leo 0

Alllcoltl&lt;iale,.Artz.

Canscta 11,. So~th Africa 8.
w~.Morche
. At PIIOenl~

,

Canada 8, UMitod Statea 6
AI Scolladlle, Altz.
~axlco 1D. South Africa 4
Tho~.

lthf'Ch •

AtP-b&lt;

-leo.

Canada vs.
8 p.m.
· Cuba 8, Panama 6
Frtdioy, lolaroh 10
11 innings
AI SCotttdale, A~a.
'South Africa at UnHod Stat\is, 3 p.mo
SAN JUAN , Pueno Rico (AP) Cuba won its World Baseball Classic
GBPII~C
opener, but only after a ninth'inning
W L Pet
GS
AP photo
meltdown.
2 0 1.000
PuertoRieo
1 0 , 1.000
CUba
Panama scored twice in the ninth to Team Canada celebrates its 8-6 win over the United States after their round one World Baseball Classic game
0 t .000
Nathlrtanda
force extra innings, but pinch-hiner Wednesday at Chase Field in Phoenix.
Panamq .
0 2 .000
Yoandy Garlobo had a tiebreaking sinTuetdoy, Marcil 7
AI s.. Juan, PUitiD RICO
· Rodriguez and Beltran hit-back-togle in the II th that led the Cubans to
Panama staner Bruce Chen gave up . unbeaten team in Pool D. ·
.
Puerto Rkn,.2, Panama f
an 8-6 victory Wednesday.
two runs and four h!ls in five mnmgs. ·. In front of a raucous,· partisan hack homers in the seventh to make it ·
. . WOdneadl\t, Mori:~ 8
Yuliesky Gourriel drove in four runs. Rivera's three-run, opposite-field Venezuelan crowd, Garcia· and three 7-3.
At Son Juon,......,., Rico
Jair Jurrjens allowed three earned
for the Cubans with a two-run homer, homer to right off Vicyhoandry Ode! in other pitchers combined on a two-hitCuba 8, Panama 6, 1t Innings
PUBrto Rico 8. Nethartanda .3 ,
a double and a sacrifice fly. .
put Panama ahead 4-2 in the sixth. ter and struck out II. Carlos Silva runs in one inning and Braves outThuiHI'/,- e
Ruben Rivera hit a three-run homer Cuba tied it in the seventh on Eduado gave up a hit in 3 2-3 innings, and fielder Andruw Jones was 0-for-3 with
AI S... Juan, RICO
for Panama (Q-2), which trailed 6-4 in Paret's RBI single and Gourriel's sac- Rafael Betancourt and Francisco a walk for the Netherlands (0-1).
Cuba vs. Nethe!land8. 1 p.m.
Friday, lolaroh 10
the ninth and loaded the bases with no rifice fly, then went ahead in the niinh Rodriguez ·each pitched a hitless
At
S...
Juan, . ....rto Rico
outs against the Olympic champions. . on Gourriel's homer against Manuel inning for Venezuela.
Mexico 10; South Africa·4
Panama vs. ~therlands, 1 p.m . .
Yumeski Maya struck out Freddy .Acosta. ··~
Italy's Mike Piazza struck out thJee
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP)
Cuba at Puerto Rico. 7:30p.m.
Herrera, but Olmedo Saenz blooped a· Cuba plays the Netherlands on times and briefly argued a call at first Jorge Cantu and Vinny Castilla each
GROUPO
single to center. Carlos Lee· then Thursda~ and Puerto Rico on Friday. base after grounding out in the ninth had three hits and Cantu drove in three
W L Pet
GB
struck out. but Maya forced in the Panamas.only remaining game is also mnmg.
runs to lead Mexico to the win in the
Dominican Rep. 1 0 1.000
tyin;; run when he .hit Sherman against the Netherlands on Friday.
World Baseball Classic.
Italy
1 1 .500
Obando on a hand with a pitch. Rivera
Puerto Rico 8, Netherlands 3
Mexico rapped out 12 hits and
venezuela
1 1 .500
Q 1 .000
followed with an inning-ending fly- .
Venezuela 6, Italy 0
SAN JUAN , Puerto Rico (AP) - scored . in every inning except ihe Allstralia
llleldly,7
out. ·
KISSIMMEE, Fla. ·(AP)- Miguel Javy Lopez, Ivan Rodriguez and fourth and eighth. Mexico pnchers
AI klulmmee, Fta.
Michel Enriquez staned Cuba's go- Cabrera homered for the second Carlos Beltran each hit solo home runs Francisco Campos, Pablo Ortega,
Dominican Republic t 1. Voilezuala 5
Italy 10, Australia Q
ahead rally with two outs in the II th straight game and drove in two runs in Puerto Rico's 8-3 win in the World Edgar Gonzalez, Antonio Osuna,
-.clly,Mafoll.
against Jorge Cortes when he was hit and Venezuela rebounded from a loss Baseball Classic.
Roberto Ramirez and Dennys Reyes
At KtUimmee, Fla.
by a pitch for the third time in the in its World Baseball Classic opener.
Pueno Rico qualified fonhe second combined to strike eut J5.
v.rezuefa 6, Italy o
. game. Gourriel walked, and Garlol)o
Freddy Garcia struck out seven and round with the win, improving to 2-0
Mexico, shut out on four hits by the
Thunday,Mafolll
At Klulmrnee, Fla.
singled to. center. Frederich Cepeda allowed one hit in 3 1-3 innings for in Group C, and will face rival Cuba U.S. on Tuesday, opened up .a 5-0 lead
OQminlcan
Rlput&gt;llc vs. Italy, 1 p.m.
· followed with another RBI single.
· Venezuela; which improved to 1-1 in · on Friday.
after three innings agamst · South
Venezuela vs. AustraHa, 8 p.m.
Ma~a got the win and Yadel Mani, Pool D play aiJd dropped Italy to 1-1.
Jose. Valentin. put Puerto· Rico ahead · Africa starter Darryn Smith. .
Frlday,~10
At Klutm-, Fie.
Cuba s fifth pitcher, got three outs for The Dominican Republic (1-0) was . for good in the sixth with a sacritice
Brett Wallemburg had three hits for ·
Dorillnfoan Republic Yll. Australia, 7 p.m.
the save.
idle Wednesday and remained the only fly to right field .
South Africa.

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds catcher Jason LaRue kneels over Pittsburgh
Pirates'· Sean Casey after Casey was hit by a pitch from Michael
Gosling Wednesday at baseball spring training in Sarasota, Ra.

- The Minnesota Twins paid Metrodome.
As for the game ; Edwin
tribune to Kirby Puckett
when they played Wednesday Encarnacion and Dewayne
at their spring training home Wise homered for the Reds.
for the first. time since the Encarnacion is . hitting .500
Hall of Farner's death.
(8-for- 16) with four homers,
The grounds crei.v stenciled seven extra-base hits and 10
Puckett's retired uniform No. RBis during spring training.
34 in red in front of the third
Twins right-hander Scott
and first-base lines. Flags Baker,
competing with
flew at half-staff. and players Francisco Liriano to be the
and fans observed a moment fifth starter in the rotation,
of silence before the Twins' got out of a first-inn'ing jam
3-2 loss to the Cincinnati when Chris De11orfia groundReds.
ed out and left the bases
CenterTielder Torii Hunter, .loaded.
who served as an apprentice
"That's
probably
the
to Puckett while Hunter was biggest confidence builder
in the minor leagues. hung a .you can have." Baker said.
Puckett. jersey next to his · "You · want to be efficient in
locker and said he will bring these games. but at the same
it with him when th« team time, it 's not bad to see some
breaks camp and heads back adversity and get yourself out
to Minneapolis.
of it. "
Some of the Twins· players
Hunter s.cored for the Twins
and coaches will make the on an error in the fourth
trip ·· to Minneapolis on . inning, and Ronde II White hit
Sunday to attend a memorial an RBI sin~le that scored
Reds 3, Twins 2
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) service for Puckett at the Jason Kubel m the ftfth .

Tribe splits pair with Mets, Toronto
DUNEDIN , Fla. &lt;AP) Andy Marte went 4-for-4
with a home run. double and
three RBls Wednesday to
lead the Cleveland Indians
over the Toronto Blue Jays 74 in a split-squad game.
Toronto starter A.J. Burnett
allowed four runs, five hits
and one walk in three innings
and was the loser. He started
just seven of IIi batters with
strikes.
"He looked really good the
first inning, he .was ~etting
. his breaking ball over, ' Blue
Jays manager John Gibbons
satd. ''Then he kind of .lost
hi s feel for the strike zone."
Eric Hinske and Guillermo
Quiroz hit . solo homers for
Toronto, and Ru ss Adams
had two hits, including a
triple.
'
Cleveland starter Jeremy
Sowers allowed two runs,
AP photo
five hits and two · walks in Cleveland Indians catcher Kelly Shoppach, left. talks with
three innings.
Ind ians pitcher Paul Byrd in the second inning of a· spring
training baseball game Wednesday· in Winterhaven. Fla.
Mets 7, Indians (ss) I
WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
"l had no feel for mv slid- loose." he said . "No pain . I( '
(AP) - Japanese import er," lriki said. "The baseball good.'"
Yasaku . Iriki pitched three here is horsehide and more
Travis Hafner played first
impressive inning·s for New slippery than the Japanese ba&gt;e for Cleve land amJ made
York and Sandy Martinez ball, which is cowskin.'"
a diving slop of a 1harr
homered to help the Mets to
Byrd, signed to a two-year: grounder to his right lo get
a 7-I win over a Cleveland $14.25 million deal as a free an·out i.n the second inning .
Indians
split
squad agent in December, didn 't That came ~fter he mi stakenWednesday.
have his best stuff, either.
ly cui off a throw from right
Paul Byrd ( 1-1) gave \lP , "I had no zip on my fast- field.
seven runs and nine hits in I pall. got some pitches up.
"Mv faull. but it was a
2-3 innings. while Guillermo and when I made a good good 'refresher course for me
Mota struck out two in one
they hit those, too." he to remember not to do that ...
inning 'in his first .outing' f&lt;lr pitch,
said. "But the time to worry said ·Hafner. normally the
Cleveland.
lriki ( 1-0), a 33-year-old in is if you are hun . I feel good. designated hiller. ··1 forgot
his second
month in I know I'm not going to lead that when nobody yell' oui
America. said he wasn't sat- the Grapefruit League in anything, you let the throw
go. If I let it go. the guy was
isfied with allowing one run ERA.''
After
two
starts.
hi
s
ERA
is
out."
and one hit - a two-out RBI
Notes: Indians rookie RHP
si ngle by Jhonny Peralta in 19.64.
Three rookies keyed the Fausto Carmona struck out
the third.
.
Mets'
15-hit
attack. two over three scorele's.,
"Too many walks." lriki
Shortstop
.
Anderson
innings .... Indians C Kelly
said through an . interpreter
after walking three and strik- Hernandez went 2-for-3 with Shoppach went 1-for-2 in
two runs and an RBI. second · trying to throw out speedy
ing out two.
The right-hander, whl) baseman Jeff Keppinge r was Milledge on steal anempts . ·
pitched eigiH years in Japan's 2-for-4 with two runs and an Shoppach. ·acquired frqtn
while
outfielder Boston in January. threw out
pro leagues and once was a REi I
Litstings
Milledge
drove in 44 percent of potential base- ·
teammate of Yankees star
two
runs.
stealers 1n Tnple-A ball m
outfielder Hideki Matsui ,
Mota.
who
mi
ssed
half
of
2005.
Mels CF Tike
signed a one-year contract in
January_ He said adjusting to last .season with tendinitis in Redman made a nice play in
a different style of baseball is his right shoulder and ·elbow, the left-center gap to rob OF
Jason Cooper of an exrraas difficUII as learnin g threw 24 pitches.
"Everything felt' nice and base hit and end the game .
· A'meric·an customs.

.U £. 1 ••

•

·Matta, Dials share awards with rest of OSU Buckeyes' Dials, Matta
COLUMBUS (AP) Thad Matta is not one of those
self-assured coaches who
never doubts himself. Far
from it.
''I' II be completely honest
with you, every night I drive
home and·J say, ' I don 't know
what the heck I'm doing;:· the
Ohio State coach said
Tuesday.
Evidently his colleagues
disagree.
·
Matta's fellow Big Ten
coaches named him coach of
. the year Tuesday, and center
Terence Dials was tabbed as
the conference's top player.
Maita leads a team of over. achievers that has rocketed
into the national conscious-.
ness with a 23-4 record. The
Buckeyes.
unranked in
December but up to No. 7
now. were a pleasant surprise
a year ago when they finished
sixth in the Big Ten. A year
later. they captured the
school"s first outright conference title in 14 years.
Ohio State's perfonnance
this season illu strates how
Matta's players believe in him
far more than he believes in
himself. Dials was more comfonable talking about every-

Cavs
from Page 81
toward the basket. Mike
Jame s left Jones alone to help
Peterson guard LeBron
Jame s.
"·I was going to live with it
if I was the goat or the hero.
I'm glad I was the hero,"

MAC
from PageBl
sons.
Still , Ohio must be
watched - closely.
" It 's .a plus to go · to
Cleveland and know you can
win three games in three
. days."' coach Tim o· Shea
said.
·
With four seniors leading
the way. Kent State w9n ill

win top Big Ten honors

thing Matta what kind of a guy he was," ence," he said. "I wouldn't
has done .for Foster said. "Once we had the . say that the talent is low.
the
team first conversation on the They've proven that on given
than he was phone, we kind of hit it off. I nights there are guys who are
t a I k i n g knew he was the kind of gu~ I capable of stepping up and
about his wanted to play for and l m having ·big nights. You look at
own award. glad I made that decision to the four seniors, each guy has
" Y
u come here."
had over a 20-point game..
can't put it into words," said
Great teams seem to follow The hard pan as a coach is
Dials, a 6-fobt-9 senior. when Matta around, for reasons that putting it all together." .
asked about Matta's role in elude him. He is harshly criti- · The Buckeyes are the top
the Buckeyes ' turnaround. cal of the job he does, yet his seed at .this week's Big Ten
"He took a team that was sup- teams - his first one at his · tournament in Indianapolis.
posed to be seventh in the Btg alma mater, Butler, three at They · meet the Penn StateTen to No. I. I mean, what he Xavier, and the pa&gt;t two at Northwestern winner Friday
does is beyond what you see Ohio State - all have won 20 at noon .
on the court. It goes so much games.
Dials is a prime example of
further than that. J1e's getting
"I fet;l completely blessed why the Buckeyes have flourthe respect he deserves. And . in my coaching career, .first ished this year. He was almost
there's more to come."
the places I've been able to an offensive afterthought ·
Guard Je' Kel Foster. named coach and, two, the kids I've midway through the Big Ten
second-team All-Big Ten. been' able to coach," he said. season. as Ohio State wori
cornmiued to Ohio State two "If you look at my young games with eye-popping 3years ago when he was com- coaching career ... all · three point shooting by Foster, vastmg out of junior college. Then have been ~;~reat basketball ly improved point guard
co.ach Jim O' Brien .was fired schools. I'd hke to take. some Jamar Butler and jumpingfor what the NCAA deter- credit for it, but I can't"
jack forward JJ. Sullinger.
·
mined were rules violations
Matta said people miss the
Down the stretch as the
and Matta was hired away point when they say Ohio Buckeyes won nine of their
from Xavier before Foster State doesn't have a lot of last 10 games, however, Dials
arrived on campus.
great players.
was the go-to guy.
Foster . said he toyed with
"Quite honestly. the one
Matta said Dials is a part of
the idea of going elsewhere. thing that people may over- the whole. a bunch of guys
but one phone call frqm Matta look is three fifth-vear seniors who are far better together
erased any doubts.
em the . team and a fourth than they are muividually and ·
"I was .anxious to find out senior - that's great ex peri- have bought into that concept.

PARK RIDGE. Ill. (AP) 'Ohio State center Terence
Dials was named Big Ten play"
er of the year Tuesday by the
league's coaches and the
media. -His coach, Thad Matta
was named the conference's
coach of the year.
· Dials, who led the ninihrankecl Buckeyes to their. first
outright Big Ten title in 14
years, was joined on the first
team in the coaches' poll by
Illinois guard Dee Brown .last season's Big Ten player of
the year - Wisconsin forward
Alando Tucker, Iowa forward
Greg Brunner and Illinois center James Augustine.
On the media's first team,
Dials was joined by Brown ,
Brunner, Tucker and Michigan
guard Daniel Horton.
Iowa cente( Erek Hansen.
who averaged 2.3~ blocks per
game and led the Big Ten in
blocked shots for the second
time in hi s four-year career,
was named defensive player of
the year by the coaches.
Hansen was joined on the
l ea~ ue\ first-ever Art-Big Ten
defensive team by Illinois'

o

Jones said .
LeBron James said Jones,
who has struggled at times in
his first s;;ason in Cleve la nd
and even been booed at
home, had the better shoi.
- "He's been cri ticized at
times, but I' ve never lost
confidence him. That's why
we picked him up. He 's a
shooter." James satd.
Jones said he ne·ver hcks
confidence, He had elght

points for the Cavaliers. who
ha ve won four· strai ght
against Toronto.
.
· James repeatedly received
fou l calls in his favor down
. the stretch. frustrating the
Raptors.
Toronto
coach
Sam
Mitchell took just three
questions from the. media
before leaving in a huff.
''LeBron made ·a great
play, he found the open guy

and 'Damon Jones hit the
shot." Mitchell said .
Peterson had 10 points as
Toronto led 28- 19 after the
first quarler, but Cleveland
outsc.ored Toronto Jl-14 in
the ·second quarter to lead
50-42 at halftime.
Bosh was scoreless in the
first half, but Toro!)lo began
, the third quarter on a 8-0 run
capped by his lay~p and
Jumper.

Brian . Randle, Michigan
State 's Shannon
Brown,
No.rthwestern's . Mohamed
Hachad and Ohio State 's JeKel
Foster.
The coaches also named
Penn · State forward Jamelle
Comley freshman of the year.
He was joined on the Big Ten
all ~ freshman team by Illinois'
Jamar Smith, Nonhwestern 's
Craig Moore, Purdue 's Chris
Lutz and Joe Krabbenhoft of
Wisconsin.
Iowa forward Doug Thomas
was named the conference's
first-ever sixth man of the
year.
.
Dials ranked thi.rd in field
goal percentage in Big Ten
play, hitting .559 percent of his
shots. He ranked eighth in .
scoring in Big Ten play with
16.3 points a game and fifth in
rebounds with 8.4 a game. He
blocked 1.0 shots a ·game.
ranking him third in league
play.
Dials is the first Ohio State
player to win· the award since
Scoonie Penn was named player of the year by the media in
1999.

Bosh finished with 15 improved. "In only . hi s secpoints and .14 rebounds.
ond vear I think he's grown ·
Notes: Mitchell was voted a lot: I've seen a big change
'Yorst coach in a poll of 248 from the beginning of last
NBA players by Sports year to now," Peterson said _
Illu strated. " In my short .. . When Mike James saw on
year-and-a-half
I've television that Canada was
coached · 248 players?" beating the United States 8Mitchell said. "You ask the . 0 in the World Ba se ball
few players that have played Classic. he said : ·''That's not
for me and I'm sure they supposed to be happening!
would beg to differ.'' · That's not right!" C;mada
Peterson said Mitchell has won 8-6.

i(

Place Yodr"' Paid Classified
n .···1·n·
··,ad
s Gallipolis
···Daily
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'-Ran ·For
FREE In 7ba ·
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,,

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.*itf/(1'

fifth MAC East title in six one ·of them hasn't started. December. But he worked · defense. Even in their lean points, respectively.
years. Now, Na\e Gerwig, the But the y all handled it. They hi s way back into the star,t- years. the Bull s have always
Still, •second-year coach
lone link to the school' s have stuck through it."
. ing five and had his be st all - been a thorn for the Golden . Keith Dambrot knows better
immortalized 2002 .squad,
Early in the · season, around season.
Flashes.
than to overlook anyone in
and fellow seniors Kevin Warzynski. a 2005-0ii pre''I'm so proud of him ,''
·"You don· t have to con- the MAC.
Warzynski. Jay Youngblood season all-conference selec- Christian said . "Even When vince our guys to get up for
''Yo u' re talking about a
and DeAndre Haynes have a tion. lost his startipg job to he wasn 't playing well, he Kent State ," coach Reggie team that has great recent
chance· to make their own sophomore -forward Mike was sti ll leading our team. Witherspoon said.
tradition
in
Western .
history.
Scott. But instead of pouting What he ha1 done has made
Akron would appear to Michi gan," said · Dambrot.
"The seniors are the rea- on the bench, Warzynski all the difference for our ha ve the eas iest route 10 the wht"c team was eliminated
son we play," said Chri&gt;ti an , embraced his new role as a ~asketball learn ."
fin.aJ : The Zip' heat We.stern by the Bronws in the tour86-3 9 in four seasom al sub anti \vas named the con:
If there\ a team capable Michigan hy 14 and 22 ney a year ago. "Our guys
Kent. " It 's our program , but ferencc·, Si .,th Man of the of a ~uarterfinal surpri.,c. point , . and handled hath aren't stupid. They know
it 's their team . These guys Year thi s v. cek .
·
it's Buflalo. v. hi ch can pu1h Toledo and Northern Illinoi s lhineam is capable of beat have overcome· so much . AI
Haynes. too . found him- the tempo on offense and - pfi&gt;~ihle se mifinal .oppo- in ~ us . We know we ha ve tn
one time or another, each se lf on the bench 111 \low i1 to a (,: rawl on ncnll
by 17 and ll play &lt;Jur best haskethall."
I

.

17,

H

''

.
.

OLDS!

~alltpolis, 1llailp

The Daily Sentinel
'acribune
(740) 992-2155
(740}446-2342
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i

�·Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 9t

Thursday, March 9, 2006

2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

:orange squeezes out win over Bearcats OSU backup center
questionable for
NEW YORK (AP)
we have the chance to put
Gerry McNamara has made
ourse lves m a position to
· plenty o( b•g shots for
make the NCAA tournaSyracuse. T-his one might
ment," Wtiite satd. "A lot of
have toppe¢ them all
people satd we couldn't. I
The se nior guard drove the
mean, we're lookmg for
length of the court and hit a 3more.'1
pmnter with a half-second
Eric Hicks added 17 points
· left. leadi ng Syracuse to a rivand 12 rebounds for the
. eting 74-73 victory over
Bearcats, who won three of
Cincmnati on Wednesday in
the1r last five regular-season
the first round of the Big East
games.
tournament. The Orange
Syracuse led 39-34 at the
greatly
improved
their
half and jumped ahead 50-36
. chances of earnmg an at-large
on a dunk by Watkins.
NCAA be11h.
Cincinnati twice drew within
··1 thmk this, With the Situafour
points before Devan
tion we' re 111 and under the
Downey's driving layup with
Circumstances, is probably the
7:55
left made it 62-60.
most Important to me right
Watkins
hit a layup 25 secnow," McNamara said. "Thi s
onds later to make it a fourIS the mo&gt;t Important shot
point game again. After Hicks
I've hit "
sank
a free throw to make it
With the Orange (20-11 )
64-61
, Eric Devendorf got
trm hng 73-71 and just more
Syracuse's lead up to five on a
than 6 seconds to go.
Hicks cur tt to three on
dnve.
McNamara dribbled through
two
more
free throws, and
the Cmc1nnat1 defense and
Muhammad's layup made it
hm steu " one-handed shot
66-65 with 4: 39 left.
between the NBA and college
A minute later, Downey
3-pmnt hnes.
stole
the ball from Devendorf
OttiCial Curtis Shaw •mmeand his layup put Cincinnati
dmtely IUled the shot a 3. and
the play was reviewed and
up 67-66. Demetrts Nichols'
upheld McNamara was then
layup sent Syracuse in front
serenaded bv . chants of
· with 2:46 left, but Wh1te fol ''Gerry' Ger"ry!" by the
lowed With a 3-pointer for
Madtson Sq udre Garden
Cmcmnatt to make It 70-68.
crowd.
Watkms tied it with I: I0 to go
'·J wanted to take what I .
on
a dunk and Roberts gave
.
AP photo
got:· McNamara satd. "lf I'm
the
Orange a one-point lead
gomg to take a runner, I'm not Syracuse's Gerry McNamara, right, drives past Cincinnati's w1th 30 seconds remaining.
going to step on the hne I Jihad Muhammad dunng the second half 1n the f1rst round of After WhJte's JUmper gave
made sure I was behind the the B1g East Men's Basketball Champ1onsh1p Wednesday at the Bearcats a 72-71 lead with
hne ··
New York's Madison Square Garden. McNamara scored 17 I0 seconds left, Downey stole
Jihad Muhammad took a pomts as Syracuse defeated Cmc1nnat1 74; 73.
the inbounds pass by Ntchols
de,pe1atron shot from near
and was fouled Downey sank
includ1ng
5-of-8
from
3-pomt
and
we
need
to"
halt court that h1t the front of
Coach Jim Boeheim angrily the first shot and missed the
the rim at the buzzer, seahng range. for ninth-seeded
setting
up
Syracuse. Terrence Roberts responded to comments by second.
the w1n for Sy1 acuse.
McNamara's
heroics.
added
16
pomts
and
nine
unidentified
assistant
coaches
"We had our opportumties
ani.! we didn't take advantage rebounds, and Darryl Watkins in Syracuse-area newspapers · "He's been our backbone
that called McNamara over- thts year.'' Roberts smd. "He's
of them:· Bearcats coach had 15 points.
carm:d us."
McNamara
helped
the
rated
Andy Kennedy satd "When
The teams split their two
Orange
wm
a
natiOnal
cham"Without
Gerry
you _51ve a team hke Syracuse
regular-season,
meetings, with
and vou let Gerrv McNamara pionship when he htt stx 3- McNamara, we wouldn't
winnmg ' at
have a WllldOW of OpportUill· pointers agamst Kansas in have won 10 game s this Syracuse
Cmc1nnati
77-58
and the
2003,
and
scored
43
pomts
year."
Boeheim
said.
ty. unfortunately sometimes
Bearcats
winning
at the
James White scored a
you have to hve wtth the feel- agamst BYU in an NCAA
tournament win the following . career-h•gh 32 pomts for the Carrier Dome 82-65.
mg we currently have."
Cmcmnatt was one of three
The Orange. who lost their year But thts shot was some- e1ghth-seeded Bearcats (19thmg
else.
12),
whose
NCAA
tournaformer
Conference USA
previous th ree games, will
"Every k1d dreams of mak- ment hopes hinge on the deci- teams playmg m the Big East
play top-ranked Connecticut
in the second round Thursday. ing a shot," McNamara said. sion of the NCAA selectton tournament 111 their tirst sea·
The Husktes (27-2) earned a ''I'm glad I made it. More committee. It's expected the son in the conference, JOmmg
fir,t-round bye.
tmportantly, we won the Big East v.ill get at least eight Louisville and Marquette.
McNamara finished with 17 game. That's really all that teams 'into the field of 65.
DePaul and South Florida
points on 6-of-17 shooting, matters here. We move on,
"I think 11 is a positive that didn't qualify.

I

Qtrtbune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

co~erencetourney
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
State backup center Matt
Terwilliger had an appendectomy Wednesday and is questionable for the No. 7
Buckeyes in th1s weekend's
Big Ten tournament, the
school said .
Terwilliger will not travel
with the team, which was to
leave Thursday for its quarterfinal game Friday in
Indianapolis against the win·
ner of the Penn StateNorthwestern game, Ohio
State
spokesman
Dan
Wallenberg
said.
The
Buckeyes (23-4) earned the
top seed and a first-round bye
by winnmg their first outrtght
conference title in 14 years.
Terwilliger had some discomfort Sunday, and tests

CaUUI County, OH

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Tuesday prompted doctors to
schedule
the
surgery,
Wallenberg said. The 6-foot8, 230-pound sophomore,
who is averaging 2.3 points
and 1.6 rebounds backing up
conference player of the year
Terence Dials, is to rejoin the
Buckeyes in Indianapolis.
The
team
expects
Terwilliger to be ready for the
NCAA
tournament,
Wallenberg said.

ca~f;~::v... (7!?a~ To446-2342
Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

scored
I I.
Markel
Humphrey
finished with
10 points.
T
h
e
Thundering
MARSHALL Herd, which
was successful from 3-point range in the
first half. mtssed II of 12
shots outside the arc in the
second half.
·
The two teams were tied at
56 with 2:26 remaining, but
Marshall could manage only
two free throws by Humphrey
the rest of the way.
By halftime, Marshall
already had surpassed its
offens1ve output when it lost
61-36 in the regular-season
meetmg between the two
teams. After hitting 7-of-15
from beyond the arc,
Marshall led 37-32 at the half.
Davis led Tulane with 13
points at the half. There were
nine lead changes in the first
half with Marshall's 5-point
lead at intermission ,. its
biggest of the game. ·

1(

~

r~l :::A:~.1

~

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley

Publishing reserves
the righllo edit

rejector cancel any
ad alany lime.
Errors Muat B
eponed on lhe lira
ay of publlcallo
nd lhe Tribune
tntlnet·Reglate
Ill be reopqnotbl

m1sled taxpaye rs and
officials by
contending
that . they
needed a
new stadi Notebook
um to be
pro t i table
and mtght move tf they did-

n 't get one

Hamtlton County taxpayers approved a one-halfcent sales tax increase m
1996 to fmance the $450
milli o n
stadium .
Commi SS ioners signed a
lease wi th the Bengals the
following year
Th e lawsui t was filed in
2003, three yews after the
team began u smg the sta·
dtum.

Calpari named C-USA
coach, ·Carney POY
'

MEMPHIS , Tenn (AP)Memphi s sen ior forward
Rodney Carney was named
Conference USA player of ( CONFERENCE.
the year Wednesday, and
Ti gers coach John Cal 1pan
took home coach of the year
honors.
Earlier 111 the · week. 40 percent, and his 88 3s set
Memphis torward Shawne . a Memphts record
Will1ams wa's ' named the
Caltpan led the fifth league's freshman of the ra nked Tigers to a 27-3
year, rharkmg on ly the sec- record 111 hi s s1xth season at
ond · t1me tn league htstory Memphis. He noted that
that a school has won all such honors make people
three awards . Cincwnat1 want to put you r ptcture on a
coach Bob H~ gg t ns and stamp on ly to see them spitKenyon Martin were hon- ting on that stamp a year
ored in 2000. along with later
fre,s hman of the year DeMarr
"I did a better job last year
. John son
than I d1d this year, "
Carney, already named to Caltpart satd at a team that
the all -conference team ear- reached the Conference USA
lier thi s week with teammate champiOn sh ip game a year
Darius Washington, led ago. "Awards are great Our
Memph" 111 sco rin g with award we' re trymg to get
17. ':! points a game and here is trying to · w1n thi s
ranked second 111 the confer- tournament I'm happy for
ence hehmd Rtce\ Morris Rodney. happy for all the
Alm ond
The preseason players who get these
player of the year abo was awards becau se they've
fourth 111 J -pomt shootmg at ~orked hard for them.''

\ ..Y@@aJ

i

NEW YORK (AP) - Pssst
Wanna see Terry Bradshaw
naked?
·
What's that you say'' Should
be ~ood for a laugh, tf you
don t tum into a ptllar of salt
tirst?
That's OK wnh Bradshaw.
As usual, he d1d it to make you
crack up.
Bradshaw bares all in
"Fat lure to Launc h." m which
he co-stars with Oscar-winner
Kathy Bates as the parents of a
35-year-old man {Matthew
McConaughey) still ltvmg at
home They're reduced to htrmg a woman (Sarah Jessica
Parker) to seduce thetr son and
mduce htm to leave.
Once he's out. h1s room
becomes daddy's Naked
Room
"Not that I got a lot to show
off here. But I really thought,
and I thmk I' m right,"
Bradshaw says. ·•you seemg
my butt is a shocker
"I Just thought 11 shows the
people that I've got the guts to
do somethmg like t'hat. Which
'ts tmportant fo r me It was
kmd of a brave thmg for me. I
got a fam1ly I got to ansv.er to
r got kids . my older parents
and my preachers and ewrybody,l' he says, then busts out
laugh•ng "I'm g01ng to have
to ansv.er for· this."
In an mterview With The
Assoctated Press. Bradshaw
offers the same h1gh-energy.
easy-to-laugh persona sport'
fan s enjoy on televtsion until the bombast and ostensible buffoonery g1ve way to a
contemplative 57-year-o ld
man banng hts soul
But back to the bare butt for
a moment In hi s playmg days,
the
ex-quarterback
got
undressed mnumerable times
111 locker rooms With pienty of
people around, so he didn't
tret too much before walking
to the mm·te set ·
''Once I drorred my boxer
shorts and exrmed myself to
the entire crew. it was kind of
relreshmg 111 a way.'' he says.
c hortlm ~ ,,gain. "I was like: I
can BREATHE
" It ~&lt; as lun to do I wtsh I
was about \10 pounds hghter.
but 11 w," fun to do.,
The BrJd,haw you see in

the movte tipped the scales at
244. He's down to 228 and
hopes to get to his playing
weight of 215.
He packed on the pounds
because of back problems that
he says stem more from running than from injuries during
hts National Football League
career.
Bradshaw has joked about
bemg ugly, but that's always
just been shtick, he says.
"Now if l'm next to
Matthew McConaughey, am I
ugly? Yeah, yeah. Yeah, I'm
ugly. But $0 are YOU," he
says, laughing uproariously
and addm~: "I don't want to
hurt )'our teelings."
·
But looks aren't a concern
for Bradshaw smce he's not
planning a feature-film .comeback anyway.
It's been a quarter-century
since he appeared in "Smokey
and the Banda II" and ''The
Cannonball Run," playing
htmself or a variation of himsel f. He took the part in
"Failure to Launch" only after
being approached and even
initially tuming it down and sttpulatlng that he would
play a '·Jow-key guy."
Tom Dey. the film's director. says: "This turned out to
be one of those times when
vou have a hunch about castIng and tt works out even better than you could have tmagmed "
Bradshaw has stgned on for
one other mov1e gtg, and that's
only because Oscar-wmmng
Bob
screenwnter Btlly
Thornton told htm he's writing
a dramatic scene espectally for
him
Bradshaw says tt wa~ hard
to be taken senously as an
actor 25 years ago after bemg
a football star
" I actually wanted to be
accepted, and I wanted to
leam the craft of actmg, the
techmques - and told the
agents that I found, 'I don 't
want big role,,. I don 't deserve
big roles. I want to earn 1t. 11 ke
the others do: Study . do little
sce nes'."
He wan ted to build a
resume. '·but I never could get
to first base. and so that\ why
I quit."

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and
Vme
'Gallipolis/Exxon store If
you are seek•ng employment and you are reliable
trustworthy and a team
player we are looking tor
youl We ask that you be
t11endly, Wlllmg to work any
shift, ava1 lable to work
weekends and be a deta•l·
onented person
We offer an enwonment
that 1s e11ctllng and salls~
1ng tor IndiViduals who will
mutt,jally snare w1th us the
pnnc1pals ot ta1rness and
respect creat1ng a workplace that 1s m the best
1nterest of you and those
of Par Mar stores For sen·
ous rnqurres go by one of
these locations and submit
your appiloaiiOn today I

Calf

(7 40)354-5433 or 1·866·
971·5433

Lawn Care, miSCellaneous
odd jObs free est1mates

Call (740)446·6861

ble

www.comics.com

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Barn Help-Wanted M ust
be able to work around
, Horses
18 yrs old or

1 ... ..

1 ·1

1·800-334-1203
Assemble crafts,
wOOd 11 ems
To $460/wk
Matenals provided
Free 1nformat1on pkg
24Hr

$10.450 00

3BR 2 bath den 8 m11es
from Holzer Hosp1tal on
160
North
Owne r
Fmance. FHA approved

5857 or (304)593·2387
US FleN1ble schedu le wrth
a "C an DOH BMIIudel
Thorou gh tra1n1ng _.IS pro·
v1ded and career promo·
t1on poss1b1ht•es are poss•·

• FINANCING AVAILA.Bt.!!

Announcement ............................. .............. 030
Anltquea ......... ........... ,. ........ .......... ........ ....... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flee Market ......................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorles .......................... 760
Aulo Rapalr ...................... ... ......................... 770
Autos lor Sate ........ ...... ..... ............ .... .. ......... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppllea .......~ ...... ................... 550
Buetne81and Bulldtng~ .................... 340
Bualnooo Opponunlty ................................. 2t0
Business Training ................ ............ ........... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ~ .................................. 780
Cards or Thanks ................ .............. .. ........ 010
Child/Elderly Cera ..... .......... ......... .. ............. 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ... ..... .................... 840
Equipment tor Rent........... .. . ..................480
Excavating........... .. ......... ... .... .. ............. 830
Farm Equipment .............. .............. ............ 610
Farma for Rant ............................................. 430
Farm a for Sale ...... ....................................... 330
For Lean ............................. ... . ............... 490
For Sale ...................... ....... . .. . .......... ........ 585
For Sale or Trada ........................... .............. 590
Fruits &amp; Vagetables ......... ...................... ...... 580
Furnished Rooms ...................................... 450
General Hauling .... ............. w ......... ...... 850
Giveaway .................................................... 040
Happy Ada ..... .... ............................. .............. 050
Hay &amp; Grain........................................ .. .... 640
Help Wanled .................... . .. . ........ .. .•. 11 0
H~me Improvements.... . . .. .................... 810
HOITies tor Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 51 0
Houses for Rent ............ ,............. .............. 410
In Memoriam ........................ .......... ...... 020
Insurance ............ ...................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Llveatock ............. ..................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................ 060
Lots &amp;: Acr8age .................. ......................... 350
Mlscellaneoua .............................................. 170
Mlaeellaneoue Morchandlse ...... :................ 540
Mobile Home Repair....... . , ... ................. 860
Mobile Homes for Rent... ..
................... 420
Mobile Homea for Sale ............................... 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220

. ........

Apply 1n person
Tuesday March 14th
7am-11am and 3pm-8pm
at ALOI Foods
176 Upper A1ver Ad
Gallipolis, O H

' FULL Tll,lE CLASSES
'CDL TRAINING

24X

32 X9 4' Pole Barn Parnted
Steel Stdes and Root 3
Entry, 2·10'X8' Overheads,
Insulated Roof, Overhang.
Seamless GuHer Erected
4011 or t -8Q0-396 3026

Now Accepting
Appllcatlane tof our
Galllpollo, OH Store

AVONI All Areas I To Buy or
Selt Sh1rley Spears 304·

4x••a For sale ......... ................................. 725

$ 10 75000

In The Bag!

hralwk, llmlled benefits)

5 ft used 3 pt hoOkup

Motorcycles lr 4

Great Career Is

$9.501Hr

TRACTOR TRAILER

An Estate Sale on Friday,
March 10 &amp; Saturday
March 11 9am-5pm at 714
2nd Ave We ha\le (a little
bit of e\18 hm

•

At Aldl A

I \ 11' 1 tl\ \ II ' I
"' I IH II I ._,

ALLIANCE

YARD SALE·
GAUlPOLL'&gt;

30~ X 48' X 9' Pole Barn
Pamted Steel S1des and
Roof 3' Entry 14 X9'
Sltd1ng door 11'\.SUI Roof
Gutter
Erected
Pnce

Reta11

740·992·6040

FOUND

Ad 740 446·1 170

We wiH not know
ngty accept an
dvertlaement
I
lolatlon or the law.

WANJlD

led : : : : Metgs

lorrAND

Last seen

This newapape
ccepts only hel
anted ada meetln
OE olandards.

CARLYLE

LEARN
TO
DRIVE

wrth brown markrngs Very
fnendly, answers to T1ppy

The fonner football star has,
He's been through "tons of
uh, certainly rounded the therapy" and Paxil CR has
bases in other ways, gaimng worked for him, but he's been
popularity in sportscasting, off tt for e1ght months first on CBS and now on Fox, which has led to some recent
after winning four Super headaches. chest pains, rapid
Bowls with the Pittsburgh pulse and shortness of breath.
Steelers.
He knows he'll get back on
Bradshaw, who lives in a it, but in the meantime. "I'll
Fort Worth, Texas, suburb, is jqst deal with it. I' II just deal
signed to do "NFL Fox with it throush prayer I'll.just
Sunday" for six more years. pray about tt. Me and God.
He also raises quarterhorses in God'U get me through thts ....
Oklahoma and hopes to (It's) not gomg to kill me.''
"eventually downsize" and
What makes htm happiest is
fknd ~few months a year in two weeks of "doin' nuthin' !"
awan.
- which entails enjoying his
In his_youth, the Shreve]Xlrt. house and four dogs, spendmg
La., nat1ve who was born mto time with his brothers, playmg
a farrmng fam1ly thought he , golf and fishing wtth his dad.
:-.vanted to ~ an evangelist. "Just being a bum, mst bemg
But early .m my Itfe, too, · lazy I · love that/' It also
everythmg Impressed me. (I mcludes .spendmg time with
was) very conscu;lUs of heaven his teenage daught~rs.
and hell and bemg saved. ··
And what's the one · thing
Too eas1ly mtluenced by people would be shocked to
ev,:rythmg. . , ·
find out about him?
"That I'm qu'et
. I really ~ldn t have an
1 '" he says'
.
.
mdependent s1de of me, as I
th
do now. I'm real confident at ':.:tp1am~ng .at whe~, ~e golfs
this point of my life. But for
th ~ 15, " fnends, ~ ';" not
the most part in my hfe, I screamm and ho!!enn - 1
haven't been a real confident hardly say a word.
person about anything _ too
But what the rest of the
eager to please, 100 eager to go world sees from h1m most of
along with, do what every- the time goes back to that vulbody else wanted to do .. And ne,~abli•lty he long felt .
you do that pnmarily to be
You find out m ltte that
accepted. I don't really care people really ltke Y?U ~nny?
about being accepted now 1 So what do you. g1ve em.
wtsh I had been like that.earh- Humor. And then tf you show
er.''
them the other side, they don 't
It's only been in recent years like you as much . I find, too,
that he feels so evolved that I can htde behind the
"That 's pretty amazing, isn't idiot's mask being funny, and
u? I'm a late bloomer, thou Ph, you never see the sorrow or
m everything. Ever felt tfke the pain."
that in your life? I'm just late
Some of that suffering dates
1:m late, late, LATE! ... 1don't back to his playmg days in the
like confrontation. I've bee'n '70s, when the Dallas
through three divorces and . Cowboys'
Thomas
totally devastated · b,y the fact "Hollywood" Henderson said
that I could even trl~ke three Bradshaw "couldn't spell cat
bad decisions like that. "
if you spotted h!m the 'c' and
Does that make hnn skittL~h the 't."'
about getting married a fourth ' And it still hurts, Bradshaw
ttme? ·
says. "I could go into a tirade.
"Absolutely Absolutely But n has scarred me forever.
Absolutely:· he says, w1th a Absolutely. It hurts."
rueful chuck le.
The pro football hall of
Brad shaw openly talks farner feels some people
about bemg diagnosed w1th always will thmk of him as the
chntcal depre"ton and ADHD Bayou Bumpkin, even though
- a combo. he says, that no quarterback has more
"make &gt; lor a pretty .screwed- Super Bowl nngs nor has done
up dud~ "
·
better on TV over the yea~s.

&amp;

Call

Los t- Male dog, Borde r

th

* All ads must be prepaid*

puppres

to ~J a good home
(740)256·1652

rst lneertlon. W

by

J!7e

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To
Publication
~
Sunday Dl•play: 1 :00 p.m .
Thursday for Sunday•

Free
puppiesBeagle/small Collie mix,
very cute, 5 weeks old,
(740)992·0143

rror and only lh

coupled

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders$3.00/perod
E!
Graphics SO¢ for small
$ 1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

To Do

rmo

r

no more than I
o•t of the apac

County commissioners Bradshaw bares all
his body in his
to appeal judge's ruling latest movie, his soul in ·an interview

CINCI NNAT I (APl
Hamtlton Co unty will
~ppeal a judge's di sm i s~al
of a tederal antit·rust laws un
against
the
Cincinnatt
Bengals,. offictals sa id
Wednesday.
The county sued the team
. and the Natwnal Footbdll
· League alleging they used
monopoly power to win
co nstrucuon of Paul Brown
Stad ium and a lease that is
h1¥hly favorab le to the
Bengal s at the ex pense of
taxpaye• s
U.S D1stn ct Judge S
Arthur Spiege l ruled Feb. 9
that the suit was f1 led after
the four-year statute of lim,t at 1ons expired. The ruling
d1d not address the county 's
argument th at the Bengals

7

.(7!~~ To~ ~~~!~~6 (304) 675-1333

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon
In Next Dayls P•per
s~tn•tay In-Column: 1:0Q p.m.
For Sund•y• Pap•r

KIT

\ ' \ til \ ( I \II\ I '

3Regi1iter

Sentine I

Word Ads

Thlane edges out Herd
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Davtd Gomez scored 21
points, matching his career
high, and grabbed I0
rebounds Wednesday night as
·Tulane moved to the quarterfinals of the Conference USA
Tournament with a 64-58 win
over Marshall .
The Green Wave (12-16),
the tournament's No. 8 seed,
connected on 10 of 12 free
throws m the final 5:24 to
move mto the next round
against t~e tournament's top
seed, No. 5 Memph1s, on
Thursday.
Gomez was part of the
Green Wave's control of the
interior. as Tulane outscored
ninth-seeded 'Marshall 44-20
on points in the pamt and 1710 on second-chance pomts.
Quincy Davts scored 17
points on 8-of-14 from the
field, but was hampered by
foul trouble . Donnie Stuh
added 13 points and seven
rebounds.
Marshall ( 12- J6) was led
by Mark Patton with 15
points, while Joe Miles

\lJ: rtbune

To Place

Part-time bartender need·
ed for Good T•mes
Pomeroy must be 21 to
apply

POSTAL JOBS
$15 67 S21 98/hr
now
hlrmg For applicatiOn and
tree governement JOb 1nto
call Amencan Ass oc ot
Labor
1·913·599·8042
24/hrs emp serv
TransitiOns for Youth IS
seek1ng a part 11me LSW
to liCense al)d recruit lostel homes and to do publiC
relations With county agenCieS Make vour own hours
and work frOm home
Please send resume to
TranSII•ons lor Yout h
5801 State Route 141
GallipoliS, OhiO 45631
No phone calls please
T1red of Not Hav1ng
Enough Money to Ma~e
Ends Meet or Gomg to
Work For Someone Else'
Christian owned Company
of nearly 2 oecades otler
1ng a hOme Bus.ness
Oppo rtunity
p04)576
2056 or (304 )593·0466 II
no aC\SWer please leave
message
AN s needed to prOv1de
tust .au:l at con stru C!I0/'1
Sites netwee n Che sh!le
and New He ven FT PT

F

s

I

Ald/ER/Occupatlonal'Satet
y e.11pe nence helpful Call

888·269-6344

YOU
Outstand1ng
Custo mer
Serv1ce,
and
a
Moll\latiOn
Commrtment to Teamwork
and
Performance
Accurate Cash Cont rol.
eff•clent operat1on of the
cash reg1sters system,
cleanmg and stock1ng mer·
chand1se Must be able to
work between Sam-1 Opm
Mon Sat H1gh St;:hool
Diploma or GED requlled.
Candtdates must be 1
yrs or older to apply No
work on Sundays

e

Ald1
•s
an
Eouaf
Opportunity Employer No
Telephone
Calls
Please/Apply 1n Person

ALDI
Takmg Appl1cat1ons for
Mact11 mst &amp; Welder
5
apply
years e11peremce
7 30-4 OOpm
Amb rOSi a
Machme Inc Route 2 Box
254 Pomt Pleasant WV

BUSIN~

$125 000 1740)446·7029

OProtmJNm•
•NOTICE.
HIO

VALLEY

PUB

nds that you do buSI
ass w•th people yo
now, and NOT to sen

TIRED OF GAS PRICES
&amp;COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED?
Chnsllan
•
Owned
Company
Oftenng
A
Home Ma.;raged Bus•ness
Part 11me or Futt t•me Full
Support and Tram1ng Fully
tma nced oppor tu nity 1f
quallh&amp;d
1·800·946·7572 Ptn 00 (II
no answer please leave
message)

r

MONEY
ffiUHN

25550 (30')675·1722

e

ata
oun
Off1ce 1s seek
ng to fill a part t1me pos1
ron for a female corn;~c
1ons of11cer This pos1
10n cou ld lead to lui
1me employment w11
nel1 ts tncludlng h0sp1
allzal1on 1nsurance an
et1rement plan for th
1ght cand1date Sh1
ork may be reQuired
uahf1catlons are as tal
ows good health h1g
a.
choo l gr aduate
qUivalent no cr1m1na
ecdrd able to pa s
ackgrour'ld ch eclo. abl
o pass drug screen
ble to pass CVSA (trult
er~f1ca t 10n test) OP01
ert1hca11on
1
orrecttons lor a)ulltlm
ac1hty tS preferred how
er w1!! proviC1e tra1n1.,
t cand10ate IS otherw1s
uallf1ed
o phone calls please
ppllcahons may b
•eked up at the Galli
ounty Sheriffs OH1ce.
t8
locust
Street
alllpolls Ohto Mon&lt;fa
hru Friday pu rmg regu
ar bus1ress hours Mus
ubmtt a resuMe w1t
ompleted app hc at1on
ha
Gal l1 a
Cou 11
her~ff 's

~orrow

Smart Contac
he Ohto 01v1S10n o
f inanctal lnstrtut•on'!
~)fhce of Consume
~ !fa i rs BEFORE yo
et1nance your hOme o
~btam
a
loan
~EWARE at request
or any large advancE
~ ayments of fees o
nsurance
Ca ll thE
p111ce at Consume
fttalrS toll tree at i
~56 278 0003 to lear
t the m c•lg dJC troke
~ r 181'1dPr 1S prop('l .'
IC€0Sed t I hiS 1$ 8 Pl 'b·
1c se'" 'ce announce
1en t l roro 1t"oe Ot&lt;1
IYalley
P u bl1sh1n~

f!30 I'Rt lt~M lMt
SERI ICF.~

. LOW-MOIStUre
Ca rpet-Ciean tng
Brand New MeThod
Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam-or Shampoo
Free Est1ma1es
. .. Clearly Clea n' "

(304)675·0022
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY

1&lt;1\11 ... 1\11

S&lt;:Hoc:H .~
b.~llliCllON

7BR. SBA, Foreclosure
only $18 000 For hstmgs
call 800·391-5228 ext

F254
909 Mossman Circle Pt
Pleasant WV 38R 1 bath
full basement saa 000

(304 )675·68()4
AHentlon!
Local company otferrng
~NO DOWN PAYMENt
programs for you tO buy
your home •nstea'CI of rent

"9
• 100% fmancrng
• Less than pertect c redit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rem
LocaT ors
Mortgage

1740)367·0000

All rea l es1ate ad\lenlslng
m lhiB 11eW&amp;paper ts
aubrecllo the- Federal
Fatr HoUt11ng Act of 1968
which makes 11 Illegal to

adven1se any

pr.ference l1mUat1on 01
dlscOmmahon bas&lt;e-d on
race color reltgton sex

tamlliat atatua 01 naltonal
ongln. Of 11ny Intention to
make any such
pr•fererice, Umltat1on 01
dtscr~mlnalton

Thus newspaper wr U not
knowmgly accept

advertisements tor real
estate whiC" IS I M
VIOIBIIOn ol \he ,aw Our
reade rs 8te h ereb~
tnforfT'ed It-at at
dwellings r1dvert1sed m
lh1s new !'l paper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

)JIU

HOM&gt;:&gt;;

Cou'ltry horne 1n Jar ., sor
Co Seven rooms 1 5 batll
nardwood floors !e~ ll t)ase
menl 2 5 car garage
11 27 scres two Darns
mature ptne tree s Pr1ce
$149 000 ~ 937~515·8670
or (740)286 7212
F1ve bedroorn
~ 5 batthouse 111 QUiet ne1gt•b01
hOod
near
PofT'ero.,.
Hardwo:o !IQOf5
oa ~
dOor~ a•&lt;c •• ,.... '~-.'l"!.t~
car J&lt;l'f'I JP
... , ~
I..!IChens .:' . '1
c&lt;o•rt,
storage roor· )10 sa
teet $ 164 900 Cdll "'4Q
416-4765 alte r .1 00 PM
House tor, sa1e bv owner
BesT Qffe~ 900 Th•ra Ave
Gallipolis
Oh10
Call
(937)5 8,·8 111

mRS·\ U.

Gallipolis CerHt

College
(Careers Close To Home \
Call Todayl 740-446·4367
t .8()0.2, 4 -0452
www ;r1111OQIJK.Ireetcbli&amp;Q!I com

20 acre fa rm with ba rn and
4 bedroom 3 bath home
Located 1n Lawrence Co
Ca n
lo1
ml ormat10n

17 40)643 0518

Act•edoled I.Aemb8r Accrf(J tong

COolflCI tor lnaeooenoent
B'\\1 ~~0015 1.;'~18

Illl

:»1'1"91!!

\h:-&lt;m&gt;

To Do
Compute r Trouble Shooter
al'ld Repau
Exper t
ServiCe 740-992-2 395

3 Bearc•om .,ouse tn
PYJmQrO\o 0 '1 ma1n road
g ,ve· \ IE'~~ S2- JfXJ 1
7.&amp;0·992 2593
3 bedroom 2 112 o.a Th 1
2 acres w!ttl oarn

to

$120 000 130' 188 2 8227
01 ,304 )882·2890

Newlv rAmOOPir•d ~ n ~
bedrooons 11-&gt;~1
" " ' 1•
basemenT
harowooc
'loors detached g'arage
la rg e
CV\er ed
oatto
lenced oac11. ¥e.rel ClOse to
sc.t"'ools Pomt Pleasant
$69 ~ ,~401709 1382

'
J

.

li:ompany)

!SSt?
No Fee Unless we Win'
1·888·582 ·3345

150

4 year old Colomal on 3
acres approx 1 900 sq tt
3 bdr 2 baths 2 car
garage master bdr •s
, 28x24 With a JaCUZZI tub

�Tht,nsday, March 9, 2006
ALLEYOOP

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

$78.000 OBO (304)5930852

REAL F.srAT£
WANTED

Home Listings.
list your home by calling 17&lt;0)446·3620
View photos/Into online.

Distinction

3 bath.
eras. 3 car. 2 sto.r
nanached garage. ga

8111lree · gas, Rutland.
H . Call {740}742-3230

ppointments only Cod
306.

Ho"':s
FOR SAi..E

MOBILE

16:.80 mobile home 3 'bedroom, 2 bath , heat pump.

5X8' dack. Very
t740)3B8·9170

nice!

1987 Oakwood 14x70
2BA, 2bath. m excellent
condition. Ready to move
in, setup on private lot, lot
rent $125/ month. New professionally installed carpet
and vinyl throughout. ax20
pOrch/ room
add1tion.

16M24 garage. Wo rth
$21 ,000 . must sacrifice for
$14.000 . (740)645- 1968
(740)645-3440.

or

2002

16:.c80

Clayton

Mobile

Home,

3

bedhidden
· Laundry Room , Front anc!
Back Decks go with Ho,me.
Asking $25.000 (304)6755569
.
r ooms , 2

bath,

2004 16x80 Clayton vinyl
siding ,. Shingles, 3 bed·
room. 2 bath. mb "walk-in
closet, .excellent condition
740-379-9189

·gg 16x80 Schultz New
Generation V1nyl siding ,
shingled 2x6 outs1de wails,
3 bedroom, 2 bath. mb
garden
tub.
stand-up
shower, kitchen appliances, central AIC. ~ heat
pump, gas fUrnace. 8x12
covered front po'rch . shingled roof mini barn .·
(740 )256-6427
or
(740)256-1 084

I

~-~-

Need to sell your home?
Late on payments, divorce·,
iob transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All
c;ash and quick closing
740-416-3130.
Retinng tram military, com·
ing home after 20 years.
Looking to~ 38Rt home or
5+ acr e building site in
Eastern • school district
close tb Tuppers Plai~s or
RT 7 wilh utilllies on site.
Contact Jell 301 -6380664
E-rnail
etcshlflet@yahoo com

HI' t \I"

r

I.

Hous~

FOR RtN!

L.--iOiiiioiiiiiioio-,.1.

3BR ,
balh, ·porch,
$500/month.
Bidwell .
$500/deposit. 3 references
required . Very clean. no
pets. ( 740)388-95~ 5.
ApplicatiOns ere now being
accepte9 tor small farmhOuse near Rio Grande.
$400/month plus utili1ties.
bedroom
One
Background Check will be
preformed . Sec. deposit
requ 1red . ·Available Apri l
.. 1st. For application email
JHooper2360@peo ;
plepc com
or
call
(740)245-0037/(304) 67~7624.

Attention!
Local company offering
"NO DOWN PAYMENT"
programs tor you to buy
your home 1nstead of re11t·
1ng.
• 100% financing
' Less than perfect credit
accepted .
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Morlgage ·
Locators.
(740)367-0000

unfurnished,
security
deposit required, no pets,
740-992·2218.
5 room &amp; bath, range &amp; ref.
furnished, washer/dryer
hookup.2nd
floor;
$425/dep. you pay utili·
ties.(740)441-Q596.

Used Furniture store, 130
Bulaville Pike. Washers,
dryers.
gas/
electric
ranges .
manresses,
couches, dinenes, chests,
much
more.
GraV'e
Monuments
{740)446·
4782, Gallipolis, OH. Hrs.
.. 11·3 (M·S).

BEAUTIFUL ' APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 lo $442:
Walk to · shop &amp; movies.
Call 740-446-2568. Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Buy or ' selL Riverine
Antiques, 1 124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
740-992·2526.
. Russ

4 tickets for Martinsville,
Va race April 2nd, 2006,
Grand
stand
$280,
Furnace and heat pump
$500 lor both. 1740)388·
0031 .
Appliance
Warehouse
101. New and Gently
Used
Appliances
wtwarrantly.
Washers.
Dryers, · Refrigerators .
Located ne~et to the
Downtown Ripley Post
Office. Open M·F. 304·
372·6186

bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riverside Apartments in
Middleport. From $295·
$444. Call 74d-992·5064.
Equal
Housing
Opportunities.

Pleasant Valiey Apartment
Are
now
taking
Applications for 2BA, 3BA
&amp; 4BR ., Appli cations are
taken Monday thru Friday,
frorh 9 :00 A.M.-4 P.M.
Office is Lqcated at 1151
Eve rgreen · Drive Point
Pleasa nt. WV Phone No. is
(304)675-5806. E.H.O
Tara
Town house
Very
.Apartments ,
Spa·cious, 2 Bedrooms.
CIA. 1 1/2 Bath. Adult
Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Patio.
Start $425/Mo. No Pets,
Lease
Plus
Security
Deposit
Required ,
1740)367-7086.
Twin A1vers Tower is
accepting c!ppHcai ions for
waitfng. list ~or Hud-subsized , 1- br. apartment,
call 675-6679 EHO

Nice 1987 14x70 3 bed·
room home. Only $8.995.
Will help witn delivery. Call
Elaine (740)365-0698

e ere, o t e oroe,
BR . 2BA. · LA. Kitchen,
Deck&amp;Buildings. Air. S.e
t 676 Oshel Ad .will con
ider trade of house 1n
own of e ual value .

' loTs&amp;
ACREAGE

2 Bedroom Mobile Home
For Rent $350.00 Per Mo.
$350.00 Deposit, No PetsOn One Acre Lot, 740992-9052. Total Electric.

2 bedroom moljile home in
Racine , $350 mo. plus
$350 deposit, years lease,
nO pets. no calls after 9pm.
1740)992·5039

1 .6"

acres on ·Oak Hill Ad ..
Chester, Ohio, water_ gas.
electric
on
property,
$15,000, 304-483-7550
22 acres. wonderful view, ,
ndgetop. property. close to
main highway perfect for 4wheeler trails. (740)7072109
Land for Sale 30 acres.
New Haven area. $95.000
(304)882 -2890

2

bedroorri
trailer.
furstove/ refrigerator
nished
WID
hoo~up .
Renter pays utilities. No
inside pets. .$350/mo.
s1 50fdeposit . ( 740)446·
3870.
.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa ired, New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stoc~. Call Ron Evens,
1·600·537·9528.
Martin Industries vented
gas stove, 'good condition .
$100.
White riding mower 42in .
. cut. 17.5 horse $700 .
(740)388-8669.
NEW ~NO USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
. Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways .
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monday,
Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8am4;30pm. Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
· Twin Captains bed, 3 draw·
er platform &amp; night stand
a'nd
bedding.
$150.
(3Q4)6(5-5979.

.i

Mobile Home for rent. Call
(740)446-1279.
Mob1le home Sites for up to
16x80 in Country Homes.
1740)385-4019.

iL.~....,;FOoiiiRitOiRENr--·I·
SPACE

· D&lt;;~w!ltown Office Space- 5
room suite $650/mo; 1
· room office- $225/mo.: 2
suite
$250/mo.
room
Security deposit required .
You pay utilities. All spaces
very nice EleV'ator. Call
(740)446-3644 for appointment.
Retai l and office space
available in downtown
Point
Pleasant.
$500/month .
ne~et
to
Cou rthouse . Contact Julie

a

1

pointpleBsant _comm_re nl
al@yahoo.com
or
(703)528·06.17.

r

Want to rent trailer space
in Gallipolis or Rio Grande

MEDICALASSISTANTILPN '
Current ly a.cccpling resumes for a full
tim e - Medical Assistarit/LPN. One-year
experience in a physician o ffice or hospital

related area. worki ng wit h direct patient
care required.
·
·
Exccflent salary, holidays , health in sur-

. ance . dental plan and vacation :
Send resume's to:

Pole Barn 30x50M12 feet
painted metal, slider, free
delivery. Only $7,595.
1937)718·1471 •.
www .natio n w idepolebarns.com

Pf:rs

FOR SA!£
7 Pu re Breed Pit Bull
Pups. Brindle, Black, Tan ,
Beautiful
Chocolate.
markings. Must see I! $200
(304}675·~ 105 after 5pm

AKC Golden Retrievers .
First shOts. and wormed,
light gold in color. $250
Calll740)286·9808.
A.KC Labrador Puppies, 3
chocolate, 2 black
1st
wormer &amp; Dew Claw
removed $250 (364)675·
3840 No answer LeaveMessage

i304) 675-4340
AA/EOE
www.pvalley.org
Help Wanted

Orlando/Disney area. 7/6
stay. Paid $600 sell
tor $~ gg· good for 1 yr.
1304)382-Q014

93 Saturn Sl2, 4 doors,
auto, clean, S~ ,000 down
and $150.00 a Month .
Wide Setection. low down
payments.
M&amp;J · Auto .
Monday-Saturday, . 2:006:00 PM. 74().338·9693·
or-740·742·2662.

~ nigl'lts

95 Camaro, black . T-top,

F.QuiPMENI'

auto. $1,800. (740)256·
1618 or (740)256-6200.

Load
Tra1L'Load
Max
Trailersa o ose n ecks / 0 u m p sl
Utilities.
Carmichael
Equipment
1740)446·
2412 .

96 Buick leSabre 97,000
mi., needs body work and
radiator, new tires, battery,
brakes and rotors, $1 ,500
OBO. (740)446·9632.
CaY'aliers,
Sunflres,
Saturns, Ford, Chevy and
Dodge traCk . Blazers and
vans in stock. Priced from
$750 to $5,495. 3 months3,000 miles Warran,ty.
a ·u al ity Vehicles for 11
years. All prices l~:ted on
the. vehicle, No p~essure
· saies.
Cook Motora
1740)446-0103:

Treated Pine Fence Posts
$4.00 each. Call (740)446-

r
4734 .

L~~K

,

1 year old Pinto miniature
stud. $350 080. Cell
(740)256· 1233.
.
Angus Bulls, two X-breds.
4 .heifers. Excellent breeding.· Slate Aun Farm. See
www.s I ater u nla rm .com ,
(740)286·5395.

1999 GMC w/extended
cab, loaded, 305 engine.
automatic, 67,000 m11es,
good clean, solid truck ,
excellent co ndition , $8,500
080. 1740)441·1014.

Beef Bull Black and White
about 2yr Old. For Sale
$650.00 or Trade lor
Horse.
John Eynon.
27357
Apple
Grove
Dorcas Road, Racine,
Ohio, 740.949-2324

2001 Dodge Ram truck
2500 SLT Heavy Duty,
springs, camper special,
10-pty tires . $7,500. Call
Ed (740)367·0624.

For sale: Boer Goals.

Born in Janu~. very limit~
ed ~umber. Champion
bloodlines on both sides,
also several purebred
breeding
age . males.
Professio nal
breeder.
(740)245-0485 aMer 6pm.

Chevy Colprado Ext. cab
'05. Auto, 2WO, w/bedlilier,
excellent condi tion. Kelty
Blue Boo~ $14,600, wili
sell lor $13.000. (304)523·
1179

c

Shelled Corn $3:so per 50,
12% All Stoc~ $5.40 per
50. Other livestock feed
available. 740-698-0911.

r

GIWN

For sale 5x5 round 6ales
of hay, $17.50 . . Call
(740)446·97n.

1996 Chevrolet Z71 4x4
extended cab
$5.000
080. Call 1740)446-4355
o r 1740)645-6529.

of hay.
Delano
~ay- ·

Very good mixed

square bales. (740)4462412 or (740)645-0608.

II{\ \'-1'4 IH I \ IIC l'\

Al!ID&gt;
FiJRSALE

•

$5El0! Poliri:e Impounds!
Cars from $500. For listings BQ0-391-5227 ext.
3901

4x4
FoR SALE

1990 F250 7.3 liter diesel.
4x4. 5 speed, $6,6oo.
2002 Yamaha ITA 125L,
just like new, $~ ,500.
Riding gear available.
(740)388-8358.

HAY&amp;

Round bates
(304)675- H43
Jackson Farm.

Blazer LT 4x4,
. 91 ,OOOmi, loaded, New
Goodyears,
Onst'ar,
Leather. All Power, $7.900.
(740)245-9245. (740)3670S24.

,

200~

93

1500 4X4 Che11y
Silverado e&gt;ctended Cab.
4.3 4 Speed Overdrive
$2,500 1304)895·3012

t 4~~~,
40

1997 Toyota Camry LE.
White &amp; beige Int. cloth,
well equipped. good condition. 4 cyl. auto, 25-33
mpg , $4,995 . (740)4460014.

1984 FLHTC- , 1340CC
19,000 miles, Blklsilver.
$7,500 Firm. (740)2867212 or (937)515-8670.

2001
Grand
Jeep
Cherokee Limited, white,
new ti res . e~ecelle nt condition . $12,500. (740)446·
4060 or (740)367·7762.

1999 Harley Davidson
Ultra Classic. Loaded.
Excellent
condition ,
29,000 total miles.· Price
$13.500. Call 740-949,
2217 until 7 pm.

2002 Suzuki LX7 4)(4, PW,
PL. CO. 80,000 (mqstly
.highway) mile's. $8.500
080. Celt# (740)208·0495

1999 Honda 400 EX ,
many e)(tras. plastic in
rough condition $1,500
OBO. (740)446·1327.

2 Whirlpools
washer,
Kenmore dryer, burgundy
rec)in'er." red ·cook stoVe,
winm mormng coaL/wood
burner, entertainment center. Call (740)44_1-8959 .
4 rooms of carpet. Largemi)led brown- $100. rust$50 , cream- $50, mauve$50. (740)245-5181.
New Berber carpet $6.95/
yard . Aemanents starting
at $25. Mollohan Carpet.
76 Vi ne St. , Gallipolis,
(7,40)446-7444 .

Help Wanted

Phillip
Alder
•;

ROGER HYSELl
GHRHGE
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
3 miles west of
Pomeroy,OH

on State Rt. 1.24

Shar-Pei puppy, 12wks
old, male, brindle, up to
date on
shots
and
wormed. Lots of wrinkles
$300 (740)645-4787

~70

MUSICAL

IN&lt;rrRIJM~
Musical
equipment.
Guitars. processors, keyboards, drurri machme,
. etc. 740 446-9709.

Commercial Property' &amp;·
Building for Sale.
9.9
acre S. Ambrosia Machine
Inc. Route 2 Box 254 Point
25550
Pleasant WV
(304)675-1722 .
7:30-

MEDICAL/SURGICAL MANAGER

~

Pleasant Val le y Ho sp ital is c urrentl y
accep t in~ rc ... um co;, l'or.

Manager in the

i:l

M edici:J I/Su rgica l

Medi ca l/Surgical

unil . A

mimi mum of th ree yCaro;; expe ricm:e 1r:1 an .
acute
care
"iclting .
Prl:viou s

managemcnth. uperviso ry experien ce in
clinical o;;cn·icc area' required . GraQuate of
a ~choo l of nuro;; ing . Currc m West Virginia
lice nsee BS N preferred .
' Ex cell ent sa lary, ho!iday s, health

in"unmce -'ing le/farnily plan. dent al p·Jan .

UNIT CLERK
un it clerk tn th e
medical/surgJcaJ Jepartmcnt . AppliLa.nl
mu'it have exce llent c..: u~torm:r rclat1on ski lb .
a

Medical terminulogy and
are required .

Hol iday s. hcahh insurance. ~i ngl c/family

plan.

Send resumes to:

Send re 11u me11 to ~

1304) ~75-4340
.
AAIEOE .

www.pvallc y.( lri.'
'-

comput~r ~kills

plan. li fe insurance. vacat ion
disability and retirement.
,

dental

Jong ~ t~rm

Pleasant Valle~ Hospital
2~20 Vall~y Drive

1304) 675-4340

St. Patrick's Day
Dinner
March 18, 2006
6:00pm-8:00pm
Beef Tips &amp; Noodles,

rio Human Resources
Point Pleasant, WV

Eagles 2171

255so ·
-

AA/EOE
www.pvalley.org

Green Beans, Salad,
Roll , Dessert
Cost $6.00 Public Welcome

, •

•

UP.

• .-n'lt.i!l recommend you skip

recommend

you ignore

the inverted text at the

this comic tomorrow and

"";; :

bottom o(this panel.
,l~ri "--h:l!&gt;l go directly lo Garfield.
.J
'Hfl_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,., ,au6aset9&gt;tlf lfBWS »IJC/tlli Aw op ..C4M

Chuck Wolfe

fRANK &amp; EARNEST .

YOIJ SAil&gt; Tt41S T!lAN5ff:ll
wOIJLl&gt; Bf: A G!ltAT·
OPPOttTIJNITY
"

Licensed Home Builder

(740) 992-0496

Will cut &amp; remove trees or

"·mcut Into nrewood.
TRIM TRE:F.S &amp;

FOil Mt!

LAWN WORK

Hardwood Calllnecry And Furnlillre

SENTiMENTAL.

www.tlmberaeekcabln.try...,,.

·~ELVlNEY !!

NUTHIN' WENT

WRONG

REASONS,

740.446.

THAT

MONTH I!

2.459 St. Rt. 160 •

(740) 992-0472
!!t!!l!!.!!L"'!!!!!l!!

H.l. wrtlltlll
and son·

r4~~~- ,
2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson
500 ATV With 34 miles.
CARMICHAEL
$4900.
EQUIPMENT. (740)4462412.

89

Honda
Goldwing
w/trailer, Scyl., 45 ,000
mites, very good shape.
well maintained, cover.
e~etra light~ and chrom9,
$7,150. (740)441-5540.

"

,.,.

2002 Harley Davidson,
Ultra Classic, 6400 miles.
(304)895·3825

A" types of roofing: ·
24hr

l:10ergenc~·

Ovt"r 30 yean&gt;

experiencr
Ed l&gt;illlowner
(740)992·4!00
Chuck

THE BORN LOSER

~1&gt;0~1 WORR.\ M.'i 1:&gt;0'1,

New or Repair
Seafllless Gutter
Downspout

Service
Licen."'L-d &amp; ln.'Ourcd

~~~~~~U4~~~~~~

..xu-tN Qo.st

LOOK\1-o\GOUT rt•~
FOR 'lOUR e£:)1
, INTE.Re'&gt;T:l

I'l&lt;\

FREE
ESTIMATES

E_.~,

•
•

"' A 0

5 2
K Q

¥

+

• . l 0 y fi 5

... J 7603
•
South

I""

.

'

\)()YOU f&lt;:.EALL'{

. I'"1\\'!&gt;SOLUiE.l'(! I~~ ()1-.\L':f hlf-IE.i{
I'l&lt;\ L'&lt;II&lt;IG ii'\1&gt;-T 'l'OU r&lt;c~

1&lt;\E.N'I iAA\?

~

G.OLL'I, (f-\lt.F,

t'\E.E.C&gt; iO LbOK.

i OUT!

lr---

(740) 949-1405
"' !il!aSL"'S!a!i&lt;l!il!liSII!ItaSJalilq

•

6 '

•

7 '

"' !0 2

Dealer: East
Vulnerable : Bolh
South

West

North

3•

Pass.

?'1

Astro-·
Graph

&gt;URSA.!.£

t'\VNC~'&lt; .

Ul'.p

NARF

) 1

-

MRS . GODFREY

CfloHp

EATING

~t.OP SL

24ft. Pontoon boat. 48HP
engine. Nea rly new trailer.
7401446·1543.

~PEAK! NE. OF
'I
T&gt;1tNK I'VE .JUST

ALL

DAY tS

Pli:.E~NANCY,

GROSSING
ME OLJT.

COME ·OOWN WITH
A BAD CA.SE OF

HOMrF
BUDGET
TRANSMISSION'S, Double boltect. All
types. (740)245~5677 or
740 645·7400

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional
lifetime
guarantee . Local references
furnishetl .
Established 1 975_ Call 24
Hrs. (740) ' 446·0870,
Basement
Rogers ·
Waterproofing.

Get A Jump
on

SAVINGS

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohi o

-ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIICnOI
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

45771
740..949-2217

Slael 5'x10'
It;". ,., 10- '
Hours

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

reject any and all bids.

Anyone , Wanting to
look al the slate q _n
contact Mayor Sanily
lannarelli at 992·2705.
i3) 3, 5, 8, 9

,.

PEANUTS

WE CRA6!3'1' CRABIW..
TOPAI'
I FEEL

Remodeling

740-992-1611

F=IN~.

• Prompt &amp; quality
.work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
.740-742-2291

• Leave a message

GOOD .. MAY' I SURE .
ASK 'I'OU A
60
RIGHT
PERSONAL
AI-lEAD..
QLIESTION?

IS THE SCHOOL
5 1-1ERE YET"'?

~

CARPENTER
SERVICE
'

SUNSHINE CLUB

Electrical &amp; Plur'nblng
Roofing &amp; Guners
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch O.Ck•
WV036725

I'M OOT SLDWIN&amp;
(:O.U\) ~ 1 STOPPED 1

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 -62 15
Pomeroy Oh1o
25 Yr"ars Loc:il l E~per1en " {

., '.

0

'

GARFIELD
WE HAVE WI'TH US TONIGHT
A MAN WHO HASN'T ~POKEN

lN 3Z 't'e.ARS. GOOP EVENINI$,
61R

35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
7~0-9M;·3H31

NO 51R. YOU
PISTINC"TI.Y

!lpot&lt;E

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
. I Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740~416-5547

GRIZZWELLS
~ATis \~AT ',b\.n~E

Nnw Availa'blr At

HAUI\1 LUI\1HER
Scorpion Tractors
"'lirki11g The Sli11g Out Of
/lard m&gt;rk !"
Mid - Si~ee 4Wheel Dri ve Tractor
w ith JOhp &amp; 40hp Kub.ota Engines

Even if you are rather shy about 11. ut1hze
your im agi nation and creatrv1ty to the
f~ll es t rn the year ahead . The~ s allributes
will enable you to pull ott somethrng rather
grand. wh1ch w1ll have a benefiCia! effect
on your Hie
P,i SCES' (Fe b. 20·M arch 20) - An rmpor·
ta nt obJeCtive can be achreved today. But
you might fmd out, much to your chagnn .
you can do. so only 1f you clear up a num -.
ber ot small , distasteful tasks you 've been
avording. Get a jump on lite by understandrng the mlluences that are governrn g
you thts year.'
ARIES (March 21 ·April 19) - A strong
des1re lor somethmg you want Immediately tould cause you to bi=.!ha\le rn way~ you
normally wou ldn t and bnng additiona l
problems down the llne Oon'l be 1mpa ·
tu:tnt.
rAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - It' others
dan·t do things exac tly as you would liKe
thorn today. don't lose your 1emper and
lnl1mrdat1ng or browbea11ng w1 11 make mat ·
'
ters worse.
GEMIN I (May 2 1-June 20) - Someone
you have l1eated Q!'!'nerOusly may reCiprocate .m a ·strngy la.s hron today Don't let th 1s
person'S oeh avi'or de term1 ne the sta n•
dards you now s8t when dealihg wrth .oth ·
ers who need help
C'ANCER (J1.me 21 -July 22) - '?au may
have. to ne')OtJal e a del1cate matter today
wrth someone 'wno rsn·r 100 Clhlcal Be
sman enough not to lei hrs or hor glib talk
m8K8 ·you 1gnore wh al you can see W1lh
yo\1 r own eyes
, LEO (July 23-AuQ 22) - Sc r1ou~ maners
:;hould nol be treclled w•tll JndJJfererJce or
1n a lrghtpear teC laSh!Oil today II. you do
yoiH behav1or co uld cos I you.the respect ol
someone who now 8I:Vllr1es ,.au
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) - Sornenung
yo+J ag retJ.d to do for anCither mtgh t lt•H1 out
to b€ tar more diff iCult than you had anl+CI'
p:lled Nevertheless. honor YOlA commitment 11 you don t. you'll look bad
!.I BRA tSept ~3-0cl 231- A ch anneltt]al
you usu ally can cm.lnl on mqy be closed
today Don 1 waste lrm e try1ng to brea l\
down the door Instead . look lOr other
rOules, th at _. re availa ble tc you
SCORPIO tOct 24-Nov 22 ) ~ Someone
whOse assrstance you've been cour111n'g
on may, let you down brg t1me today,
However tl you plug along on ~'Our own,
you 'll drscovcr you dtdn t noed th +S persons help rn lhe IJrSI place .
SAG ITIARIUS.{ Nov 23·De c 21) - II Pt.t,.e
lew ness is tho reason yo u fa tI to trntsh· yo'ur
assrgnmenJs. 1nose depenamg on you Will
be unlqrg•v1ng Mal&lt;.e an ellon and do
what you tan
CAPR ICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19 1 ~ A1
acoua1ntance you thmk 15 great.m1gn1 d1s:
app01111 yo&lt;~ today but loved ones wo n·r
Th1s can prove to be an 1mpor1ant lesson
aoou t .whore yo ur lo yaiM_s st""lould 110 'n tr+e
future
AQUAR IUS (Jari 20·Feb ' 19) - ' GuiJrd
agarnst 1endet"1c1es JO teward tr-e une1e ·
ser·,•ng ....,h1le tgnor tng somoone to whur~
you truly should be tr&gt;d ebted. 1ust because
t1e m she tsn t hsted arnorg lt"l ase wno are
socrally popul ar.

YOUNG'S

Room Additions ·&amp;
Remodeling
New Garages

'lllrthiiiiY :

Friday, March 10, 2006
By Bernice Bede Osol

50 Major
oppllenca
t Senior
52 Saddle
6 -, right!
horses
10 Triangle
54 Wonderful
tips
· thing .
.12 Insurance
58 Speech
claims
openers
14 Massages
59 Apollo's
15 Pearl maker
priestess
16 Dismisses
60 Bernord- ·
(2 wcjs .)
of CNN
18 Commotion 61 Lebanon
I 9 - noire
neighbor
21 Steal a
glance
DOWN
23 Tint
24 Wire unit
1 Furniture
26 Aria
wood
pertOrmer
2 Hosp.
29 Tra~el
staffer
choice
3 Biliy30 Hold genlly
Williams
32 Movie
4 Glorlly
34 Rode the
5 Cash In
banister
coupons
36 Unit of work 6 Vacillated
37 Likewise
7 Sup~rman's
38 Seiad bowl
emblem
·
wood
8 Nick and
40 Invisible
Nora's dog
substance
9 Listen
42 Citrus
carelully
· cooler
11 Sleek plane
43 Lawn pest
12 Theater
45 Not rosy ·
section
47 Peace,
13 No-seats
In Russia
sign

39
41

crazy
Muscular
Like
haunted
houses
Snapshot
Orders for
dlnne&lt;
Hotel
freebie
Essential ·
Battery's
"+" end
.
Links org.
Want ad
abbr.
Flood
control
Act sef'olile
Asparagus

CE~EBRITY

CIPHER

t9
20

22
23
25
27
28
31

33
35

Ups
44 Bonny miss :

46 Matrix
47 2001 ,

to Ovld
48 Free
electrons
49 ·:Ask Dr.-·
51 MD
employer
53 Huntar's
org.
55 TV sdlunct
56 Actor
-Wallach
57 Meadow

by luis Campos
Celebrt( Cr!Jile+cryp1og rams are crea~ lfOm Quota 110m l7y' lamou$1)8(1ple, pastllld present
Each letter 11l llle CJ~ starr:ls lor iflOihel

Todays clue· d equals K
" FR

RFC

STF

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WTGCFW ;
WTGCFW

TPPYNC

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TGRFC. ' XRJ

URPO
YFWR

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION ., 'I have never seen a more lucid . better balanced ,
mad mmd than mine." - Vladimir Naboko&gt;J

,~~:ti~'
.

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14Mfj ~y "AY l . ,OII.AN

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QReorre~ngt

t.u•rs of lht
leur ocrcmbled word1 beto• rc form fo.vr slmplt ..-orch

If you have children t~king
l.-.l---l.--L.._.!__!,,

music lessons you will kJtO\\'
that the sweetest music may

,-~-------, lurn oul to ·- - --·- ·-.

SQ!EGU
1

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D~tNKI~ DECAI"FE\~Al"ED
corn:~.

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SCRAMLETS ANSWERS

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. ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUT~
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" Magtcian

One: collc:tg'uc 19 another, '' .A miser li\'CS v•ithin his
i ~comc. thot • b c1·makcs h11n a MAGICIAN··

'

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rl. 124 Cht&gt;st~r 9115-3301
.,

t7 Spends like

attempt to force them 1nto compliance

Stop &amp; Compare

Shade River AG Service, Inc

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids are being accept·
ed for the slate off !he
roof of the old freight
depot in Dave Diles
Park. Approximately
2000 pieces will. be
sold as one lot. No bid
lower than $2000.
Bids "!ill be accepted
until March 13 2006 at
4:00 pm . Bid opening
:ovlll be on March t 3.
2006 at 5:00 p.m. The
Village has lhe righllo

'

~===~::.±J ! lr=~
1

·Why Drive Anywhere Else?

. Public Notice

;

;

M't',AREN'T 1M NOT

·Economy Beef $8.25
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
·Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
-Soybean Meal $13:25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85

Shop
Classifieds!

1"\0RNING SICKNESS.

1114/ 1 mo. pd

STANL~TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

t.

A single -ju mp ove rcall promises a sixca rd SUit. A double-Jump overcall shows a
seven-carder - with one more card. ,bid
one level higher. This is a~in to a. weak·
three opening bid. The overcaller should
have 5~10 high-card poi.nts and a
respectable sBven-card suit - traditional ly. two of the top three honors or three of
the top five.
How does the overcal!er 's partner react?
The same way as opposite a weak JUmp
overcalL except that he does not have a
two-no-trump •nQuiry available. With a
borderline hand . he may have to guess
well. He decides whether they have sulfi C•ent high-card power.to attempt a gal'l')~­
The better the ,fit for partner's suit. .the
few~ r po1nts he needs lo b1d game .
Look at the North han&lt;~ . East opens one
. heart, South jumps to three spades. and·
West passes. What would you do now?
After you have decided, move 1nto the
South seat. Against your lil'lal contract of
four spades, West' leads )he heart ~ing .
He continues with the heart queen. then
shifts to the diamond ,0, What would you
do tram there?
'
South's hand is a minimum for a vulnera' ble three -spade overcall, especially with
the quas1·balanced 7·2·2·2 distnbution.
Usually. 7"'3-2-1 would be prefert~;ble .
North, with 16 points, must bid game. II
might not make. but the game bonus
should be an irresistible carrot.
Should you take the diamond fmeSse?
No - il will surely lose. Instead, call for
dummy's diamond ace and Immediately
· cash the three top clubs, discarding your
last diamond. The defenders get only
their three top tricks.

BIG NATE
Nl'\l..F

East

Opening lead: • K

•

ATS&amp;M&lt;riORS

.98 5

lloK Qt0986'

9~ Harley Fat Boy, 9.400

mlles. lots of Chrome and
extras. (740)446·9954.

AJtfl96

KJ 2

A double~jump
overcall is longer

Owner

New Homes • Additions
1 Remodeling

West

punch line ·revealed, -we

Self-Storage•

50% OFF

full ·t ime

I

"Middleporfs only

HovtE

Entire Stock of
3 Stont:J Jewelry
Acquisitions Fine
Jewelry

'J

If you 're a fan of the hit ~
comic Garfield and you
do not want tomorrow's

992-3194
or 992-6635

IJIIPROVEMF.M'S

, Pleasant Valle y H o&gt; rital Is curren tl y
~cekjng ·

life in..,urance. vac at ion. long- term di~abilily
and retii'Cment.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 255511

Help Wanted

..-:011 :J04 \!l-1 J311

If you're a fan of the l1it
(.}lll--•" 1 series Lost and you do
not w.ant alllhe island's
mysteries re&lt;Jealed , we

MiddlepOrt. OH
10x10x10x20

4 :00pm

Help Wanted

304-615-2451

97 Beech Street

'excellent condi!IOn . used
only a lew times, $8 ,000.
Call (740)446-3438.

$200/per person
• Based on double
occupancy Harrah's Casino
&amp; Resort
Private jet out of
Charleston , WV
LIMITED SEATS!
Call (304) 67q-4340,
Ex.!. 1326.to make
reservations
Hosted by PVH Community
'Relations

SPOILER SECONDARY
SPOILER
ALERT
ALERT

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •
- Free Estimates Playgroun-ds

MANLEn
SElF STORAGE

28 ft. Eagle Jayko camper,

'Atlantic City Getaway.
May 12, 2006
to May 14, 2006

• SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

I

ROCKY'S. TREE
SERVICE

J 7
7 5 4 2
A Q B3

"' AKQ

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

"I R\ It I ..,
Registered Border Collie
pups. Wormed &amp; ~St shots.
Imported blood lines, know
for hearing instincl and
classic colors. {740)3799110.

•
•

I

2003 Jayco Eagle 34 ' 5th
wheel w/slide out . New ,
condijion , $22,000 080.
(740)339·0218.

AKC registered German
Shorthaired Pointers. Vet
chec~ed , 1st shots. excellent .bloodlines. Call anylime (740)388-9338.

Ill

992-5682

MmuR HoMES

each . 1740)388·8642.

OJ fl!i oo

North

CMIPERS&amp;

AKC Pomeranian puppies

Oooos

ACROSS

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

4 males &amp; 1 female $350

THompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388. For sale.
re-condil ioned auto melic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators, gas and electnc
ranges . air" conditiOners,
and wnrlger washers . Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

SUPI'LIES

Stock. brick, sewer pipes,
windows ,
lintels,
etc
Claude
W inters,
Rio
Grande. OH Call 74().2455121 .

iitiiiiii

Help Wanted

BUILDING

~

· HOUSEliOUl
Help Wanted

77 Olds Cu11ass does not
run 080. Handmade clubhouse with porch. Mking
$150. 1740)387-7204.

FARM

Brand rew 2BR . apts. on
Bob McCormic~ 'Rd . Can
lor details (740)441·0194
or (740)441·1184

New 28 A apts . Watson
A~ . near St. At. 35,
Rodney Pike/850 area.
Ref. Dep. required, no
pets. Call (740)446·1271,
(740)709-1657.

Fir&amp; Wood • Seasoned
Hardwood
Split
and
Delivered. Call 740-9492038

I \U \I " ' 1' 1'1 I I ...,
,\II\ I "I I II h

House for rent in Clifton ,
WEEKLY AVAILABLE
WV. , 3 bedroom, $425.00 · '1 n c I u d e s
a M plus deposit. 740Ref ri gerato ri M icrowave
742-1903.
From $175 To $250
College Hill Motel Call
Stop renting Buy 4 bed·
rooep foreclosure $15,00(). (740 )245" 5326

Doublewide Repo · 3BR , 2
baths on Ohio St., Point
Pleasant Land &amp; home ,
For listings 800-391·5228
$59,500 . Owner Finance.
..... 1t09. .
.
.
(740)446-3570

t

1 and 2 t&gt;edroom apartments, furnished and

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED
&amp; AFFORDABLE!'
Startin g new JOb. Loo~ i ng
. Townhouse apartments,
lor approx. 20-30 acres in
central Melgs county to · and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441· 1111
build a nome. Contact Rick
lor application &amp; informa·
937-376 ~ 412 7 .
E-mail
lion
elocr1996@ wmconnect .co
m
Gracious living. 1 and 2

10

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

River view vacant lot
9Bx75
Front
Street.
Midcltepor t, Ohio. Call
1740)992-2849

www.orv

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

•

loTs&amp;
ACREAGE
Sandhill. over 1 acre. 3BR,
28TH. Move in Ready.

www.mydallysentinel.com

\ '

�,.

Page 88 • lhe Ually :::.entinel

www .mydaily$entinel.com
'

Thursday, March 1), 2006

'

U.S. to begin transferring
Abu Ghraib prisonet:s
in three months, A2

High School Basketball Scoreboard
Girls Tournament Results

Bay V11tage Bay (22-.3) '.IS. Mentor Lake Cath. (15- 10),

Friday, 7:30p.m
At Ontario High School
Copley (21-4) vs. Sandusky Perkins {22-2). Friday. 7:30

Wednesday

p.m.

DIVISION Ill
Castalia Margaretta 52, Columbus Grove 49
.Coldwater 50, Doylestown Chippewa' 34
Gar1ield Hts. Trinity 61 , S. Euc lid Aeg1iia 53
Ironton 33, Oak H1ll 32

At Zanea11111e High School
Cols. OeSales {21·3) Ys. Warsaw River View (23- 1),
Friday. 6 :30p.m

·

Plain City Jonathan Alder 72, Cin. Hills Christian
Academy 47 , ,
Sugarcreek Garaway 56. Cols. Ready 40
Versailles 44, Anna 40

Tal . onawa Hills ( 18-6) , Thursday, 8 p.m. Finals:
Saturday, 7:30p.m.
At Maulllon Pwry
Mansfield St. Peter's (18-5) vs. E. Can. (21 -2), Thursday,
6:15 p,m,; McDonald (23·1) vs, Bedford Chane! (15·9),
Thursday, 8 p.m. Finals: Saturday, 7:30p.m.
(Statr1 Tournamen t Matchups: Pk*erington vs. Vandalia ;
Elida vs. Massillon)

(State Tournament Matchups: Vandalia vs. Barberton:
Ontario vs. Zanesvflle)
'
·

B_oys Tournament Results
'

DIVISION Ill

Wednesday

Regional Semifinals
At Cuyahoga Falls High School
DIVISION I
,
'
· Youngs. Ursuline (20·4) vs. Garfield His. Trinity (19-5) ,
Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 58, Parma Normandy 56
Girls tournament pairings
Satu,rday, 1:30 p.m
·can. McKinley 71 , Can .. GienOak 45
·
At Lancaster High School
COLUMBUS (AP) - Reg1onal pa ~rings for the 2006 g1rls Sugarcreek Garaway (23·2) vs. Ironton (23·2) , Saturday, Men·tor 58, Chagrin Falls Kenston 41
Solon 64, Cle. Sl. Ignatius 54
basketball tournament .
1:30 p,ill,
Stow 44 , Macedonia Nordo nia 40
At Vandalia Butler High School
DIVISION I
Versailles (2Q-5) vs. Plain City Jonattlan Alder (23-2). StronQsvitle 86. Lorain Adm1ral King 81 , OT
DIVISION II
Regional Finals
Saturday, 1:30 p.m.
·
Akr. SVSM 70, Copley 45 .
,
AI Wright State University, Dayton
'
. AI Lexington High School
Cin. Oak Hills (23·2) vs. Cin. Mt. Nbtre Dame (22-3) Coldwater (18·5) vs. Castalia . Margaretta (22·.3), Can. S. 49, Canal Futton NW 39
Cin. Woodward 52, Day. Chaminade-Jullenne 45
Saturd8y, 1 p.m.
Saturday, 1:30 p.m.. ·
Cle. Benedictine 71, Ravenna 45
At Otterbein College, Westervllle
Pickerington N. (20-5) vs. P1ckenngton Cent. (22·3), (State TotJmament Matchups: Cuyahoga Fs/ls vs. Day. Dunbar 79. Beltefonta1ne 36
Parma Padua 64, Bay Viii&amp;Qfl Bay 62
Saturday, 1 p.m.
Lanc.as1er; Vandalia vs. Lexington)
Tipp City Tippecanoe 55, Cin. Taft 53
At Canton Civic Center
DIVISION IV
Upper Sandusky 73, Norwalk so
N. Can. Hoover (23-2) .vs ..Wadsworth (22-3). ~riday. 7:30
p.m.
Regional semltlnala
Wapakoneta 69, Tol. Cent. Cath. ss
At Norwalk High School
At Pickerington North Hlgh.School
Wiiuseon· 53, Elida 47
Solon (21 -3) vs. Amherst Steele (23· 1), Saturday, 1 p.m. Waterford (19·4) vs. Cols. Africentric (24·0) , Thursday, Willard 62 , Port Clinton 51
6:1.5 p.m.; Glouster Trimble (20-3) vs. Berlin Hiland (22- Wooster Triway 65, Beloit W. ,Branch 52
(State ·Taumamenr Matcf!ups : Fairborn vs. Westerville: 2). Thu rsday. 8 p.m. Fjnals: Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
. Zanesville 62, CarrQUton 42
. Canton vs. Norwalk)
At Vandalia Butter High School
DIVISION Ill
Maria Stei.n Marion· Local (18-5) vs. Ft. Loramie (22-2). Carflpbell Memorial 56, Warren JFK 53
DIVISION II
ThurSttay. ·6:15 p.m.; Jackson Center (20-4) vs. S. W. Salem NW 75, Can. Cent. Cath. 64
Ct'1arleston SE (20-4), Thursday, 8 p.m. Finals : Saturday. Youngs. Ursuline 50, Youngs, Mooney 41
RegionAl 5emltlnals
7:30 p,m.
·
DIVISION IV
At Vandal ia Sutler High School
AI Elida High School
Lancaster Fisher Cath . 59 . Milford Center FairbanKs 56
Day. Carroll (20-5) vs Morrow L1Uie Miam1(25·0) , Frid!'l)'.
Hamler PatricK Henry (23-0) vs. Bascom Hopewell· Morral Ridgedale 46, Cols. Tree of Life 43
7:30pm,
Loudon (20.3), Th1,1 rsday, 6: 1 ~ p.m.: H? lgate (19·4) vs. Zanesville ROsecrans 59. Wellsville 53
At Barberton High School
Youngs. Ursuline 60 , Atwater Waterloo 42

.

'

'

.

'

'

'

;)0 ('E:'IITS • Vol.;),) , :'lin. q ;;

SPORTS

ww\\ . m~d.,ilysentinel.com

FRI(),\\ , \L\RCII 10, :wo6

Teacher placed on paid administrative leave
.

• Panthers chase down
. WVU, 5_ee Page B1

.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL,COM

RACINE - A Southern
Elementary School· teacher
has been placed on paid
administrative leave after
being indicted on charges of
unl awful sexual conduct with
a minor and corruption of a
minor,
Scott A, Wickline, 38,
Racine, was named in a
three-count indictment filed

'

,

.

'

Wednesday morning. He is
charged with ·two counts of
unlawful sexual conduct with
a
minor,
third-i.legree
, felonies , and one count of
corruption of a minor, a firstdegree misdemeanor,
·
"Mr. Wickline has been
placed on paid administrative
· leave while the board funher
investigates the charges
against him," Southern Local
Schools Superintendent Robert
Grueser said in a statement

Southern Local School
Board
Presi dent
Susie
Grueser said the school
board's "hands are tied" at
the moment as they await the
outcome and resolution of
Wickline's ·case, preveming
her from commenting further
on the situation.
Afler Wickline was first
arrested regarding lhese allegations in November, 2005
he was placed on paid admi nistrative leave until being

reinstated into his position as with ofll cials from lhe Meigs
a physical education and County Sheri ff\ Office in
health teache r this past regards to the statu s of the
January,
investjgation,
The charge of unl aw ful
A subst.itut e teacher has
sexual conduct with a minor once again been placed into
had been dismi ssed against Wickline 's
posit ion
at
Wickline without prej udice in Southern Elemenlary with
Meigs ,County Co urt in the district in effect paying
December, 2005.
IWo salaries for one position,
Mrs. Grueser said the deci - which was another considerasion to reinstate Wick line in
January was· partially based , tion · in bringing Wickline
on the board's discussion s
Please ·see Teacher, AS

Commissioners
OK amendment
in Middleport
grant project

'

AP phot~

BY MIKE HARRIS

Cleveland Cavaliers Damon Jones, center, is swarmed by
teammates after scoring the game-winning basket to beat the
Toronto Raptors 98-97 in Toronto Wednesday.

PRESS

Woman who accuses
Jones to be interviewed
ToM

Cha ndl er poli ce wu uld ,
not re lease. more details ,of
the 'complaint or interviews,
CLEVELAND - A 23- saying the ·investig ati on is·
year-old
woman ,
who ongomg.
alleges Cleve land· Caval iers
Earlier thi s week , Jones .
guard Damon Jones com- was
inlerviewed , by
milled a sex ual offen se Westlake poli ce. who 'are
again st her, was schedul ed wa it ing for informalion
IO be i,nterv iewed ' on from the Chandler departWedne sday by detecti ves in ment befor e · proceeding
Arizona.
· with their inves tigation,
The woman, recen tl y visWestl ake police Capt.
iting Ohio. filed a complaint Guy Turner, said ~is d eparlagai nst Jone s on Sunday in ment was still trying: to conChandler, Ari z.. sa id Sgt. tac t the victim,
Rick Griner. a spokesman
On Tuesda y, Jones deni ed
for the Chandler Police lh e acc usati ons. calling
Department Griner would them ''false" and say ing he
not say wh at type of offense wi ll be ··vindi cated of all
the woman is alleging took charges" when the investi place,
, gation is completed. To thjs
Detectives also plan to point. Jone s has not been
speak with peopl e with her charged with anyt hi ng ,
in Ohio over the week end,
Jones, in his fi rst season
Gri ner said . Pol ice have not w(th Cleve land after 'signsaid when the alleged crime ing a four-year free agent
occurred.
contract thi s summer,
The interview s wi ll be scored seven points in lhe,
sent to poli ce in Westlake , Cavs ' win ·over Toronto on
Ohio, where Jones li ves . Tuesday night,
Griner said the woman
underwent a medi ca l test
A.&lt;sociot~d Press Writer
concerning the all egation . Amtmda Lee M\'ers in
He did not say what lhe lest Ph oenix cmHribute~l to this
revea led. ·
report.
BY

BY BRIAN

will be here Friday, March 24, 2006 ·

Bonds
from Page Bl
Shadows," written 'by two
San Francisco Chronicle
reporters. ·
·
"I wan t to thank you all for
your e-mai ls and the words of
support and encouragement
yesterday," Bond s wrote on
, hi s Web site ,
"There are a lot of exc it ing
things going on in baseball
right now, I wou ld li ke to
congratulate Team USA on
their win over Mexi co. I con. tinue to be focused about this
spring and the upcoming sea"
son. Later. Barry Bonds,''
At the San Mateo Count y
Superior Courthouse in
Redwood City, Calif , Bonds
smi led as he exitec,l with his
legal staff He did not
respond to a barrage of questions aboul the book as he lefl
the building,
Hi s altorney, Mi chae l L.
Raim, issued a statemen t on
Bond&lt;;' site. ww1~ . barry ­
, bonds.cum.
"My client, Barry Bonds,
has not read the Sporls
Ulustrated arti cle and doe s
not i'n tend to. Furthermore.
he does not in tend to read the

'

I

Schmidt: "Just ·let him play,
Whatever happened, happened,"
"Testing's in place now, If ,
that was an issue before,
obviously it can't be an issue
now. It 's a d,ifferent game, ·
We're all under the same
ru les. It's a done deal ," he
said .
Bonds, who testified before
a C;1lifornia federal grand
jury investigating steroid use
. by top athletes, has insisted
his accomplishments are
purely a result of hard work
and talent
In their book, authors Mark
Fainaru-Wada and Lance
Willi ams describe how
B011d s started using steroids
hecause he wa' jealous of the
alten tion paid lo Mark
McGwire's home run race .
with Sammy Sosa in 1998.
"For whateve r one wants to
say. from 1998 on we'.ve
'
come ~s a sport
a long way, "
Se lig ' aid. referring \O base. ball \ improved drug-testing
pohcy. "I can onl y deal wnh
the present and the future .''
AP Sp orrs Writ e r 8 oh
Rmnn · in Pho enix and
Assuciwed Press
Writer
Terrmce Chea in Redwo(ld
Citr, Calif. contrih!lte'd to
rhi.i 'storr.

Supplement to:
.Point.Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Qaily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
Page As
.• Clyde Bumgardner, 88
• Cheryl A. James, 49

INSIDE

,

• Officer deployed,
See Page A3
• Panel recommends
suspension for inmate
tumed rawyer. •

eaa

• Furniture
• Carpet
• Wallpaper
• Insurance

• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Dubai-owned company
drops US. ports plan.
See Page AS
• The city rejoices.
See Page A6
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Falwell denies report ·
that he believes Jews
don't need Jesus.
See Page A6

WEATHER

musi-c-. to Southern Band's ears
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL ,COM

POMEROY - A donation of $2,000
from the Peoples Bank Foundation was
music to the ears of the Southern Band
Boosters who have )aunched ·an instrument drive.
The instrument drive is designed io
help the b!Jo~ters raise money for new
instruments crucial to both a marchmg
and concert band ,
, Southern Band Boosters' President
Kim Romine said the ·boosters have
saved $10.300 for new instruments
.

· ~~

Details on Page AS
'

(7~o) 44&amp;-2342

(740) 99~·2155

(304) 67$-1333

I:tlt:lll,:l ~ :!1iUJ Ii'i H: tn: 111: n, :tnhi Iali H:m: HU I~ :!J1hl 13~'n· ;;-r:rn:l~.;r:.M':!':'I':mi"'T:n:l':

INDEX
2 SI!CJ'IONS -

Calendars ·
Classifieds

A3
84-6

Comi~

B7

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3

A4

Faith • Values

A6-7

Movies

As

NASCAR

B8

·Obituaries
Sports
Weather
'

'

POMEROY - Ohio University Bobcat foo t- ,
ball will be coming to Meigs County in the form
of OU 's Head Football .Coach Frank Solich who
will be the ke ynote speaker at noon on Tuesday
during the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's bu siness-minded luncheon at the
Wild Horse Cafe.
,
Solich just completed hi s first season as head
Please ' " Sollch, AS

16 PAGES

As
B Section

AS

© 2006 Ohio Valley Puhli.shlng Co:

Point doctor faces
drug investigation
BY

TIM

Please see Project. AS

though $ 15,000 was still 'needed despite more donations and are planning several
recent donations from the Peoples Bank fundraisers to pay for lhe instruments,
"These were basically core pieces of
Foundation , the Mason VFW and
the program that were missing such· as
Pomeroy American Legion.
The band boosters signed · for a low concert percussion that will enable us to
interest loan fo r $15.000 to purchase Ihe ex pand our repertoire and advance the
instruments with hopes of paying off the maturity of the band further,'' Southern
loan as soon as possi ble so that they may Band Direclor Chad Dodson said of the
BY BRIAN J. REED
continue to serve the growing band pro- need for .the instruments.
BREE D@MYDAI LYSENTINEL .COM
Those instruments are costly like the
gram at Southern.
marching
baritone and euphonium that
Having signed for the loan themselves
POMEROY -· Villages
without help from the fin ancially Southern Band members di splayed to will li kely rely on . county
strapped Southern Local School Peoples Bank of ~omeroy Manager Joan go l'ernment to support
swimming pools and other
Please see Band, AS
District , the boosters are hoping for
faci litie,, and !hose services
will be necessarv to attractin g new resident!&gt; here . a
Syracuse residenl told Meigs
Count\'
Co mmi ssto ners

Solich to speak at
Chamber luncheon

.....

• Appliances
• Electrical
• Plumbing
• And More ... ·

Beth Sergont/ photo

.Peoples Bank donation is

See .Page A3

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM·

• Hardware
• Paint
• Construction
•Banks

.

The Southern Band' Boosters have made a commitment to expand the band program by purchasing new instruments and are
asking for the public's help during their instrument drive. The Peoples Bank Foundation was one of the first organizations to
donate to the drive with a check for $2 ,000. Here, Joan Wolfe (center) of Peoples Bank of Pomeroy exchanges the $2 ,000 donation for a $2839 euphonium from Aclam Phillips who is stand ing next to fellow band member Katie Woods with her $2419 march·
ing b.aritone. South,ern Band Boosters' President Kim Romine and Southern Band Director Chad Dodson are also pictured,

BY BETH SERoeift',

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ••••

REED

POMEROY
Meig s
County
Comm'issioners
amended
a
5500,000
Community Di stress grant
program in Middleport
Thursday, to intlude the
installation of new lighting at
General Hartin ger Park ,
The
Community
Developme'n,t Block Grant
application originally includ,ed
plans to purchase and demolish five abandoned houses in
the vi llage. but according to
Grants Administrator Jean
Trussell. only three properties
have been purchased , so far.
One other is now in the control
of a predatory mortgage lender
and. cannot be purchased, and
the other has been sold.
Owners of other house's
'deemed substandard are asking too much for the propertie s, Trussell said,
So far. the village has spent
$42.900 on the clearance portion of the grant, leaving a
balance of $15.000 for that
portion o( the ,village-wide
proj ect The 15 new lights for
the park are expected to cos.t
approximate ly that muc h,
Tru ssell said.
According to Tru ssell. survey s of residents in the county

WITHERS

2006 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

J.

HR EED@MY DAILYSENTI N EL. COM

ASSOCIATED PRESS

book from which the article
is excerpted., Barry r!!gards
thi s as an unfortunate distraction to his friends and team. mates at the San Francisco
Giants and to the good name
and the . great pfayers In
Majo'r League Baseball," he
sa id .
"The
ex ploitation
of
Barry 's good name ,, may
make those respon sible
wealthy, but in the end. have
misled the public .in the imeresl of financia l and professional se lf promotion ;' he
said .
Bonds was expected to
ret urn to Arizona late
Wednesday in time to work
out Thursday - or perhaps
play for the first time this
spri ng,
The 4 1-year-old Bonds has
been pul of the exhibition
lineup after play ing onl y 14
g ame~ lasl season·because of
three operat ions on his trou blesome ri ght knee. Giants
manager Fel ipe Alou didn 't
rule out the seven-time NL
MVP playi'ng Thursday
against the Ange ls in Tempe .
Ari L
··My wish is fm 1omorrow,''
Alou sa id after 1he Giants
beat Seattle 4-2. "It 's gotng
to happen very soon ."
Said Giants pil cher Jason

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Who·-will be ·the first.inductee in
NASCAR's ·new Hall of Fame?
~SSOC I ATED

Pilates coming to
Wellness Center, AS

MALONEY

TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

CHARLESTON, WVa. - Point Pleasanl physician Dr. Breton Lee Morgan faces a heari ng before
the West Virginia Board of Medicine in April and is
under investi gation by the Drug Entorceme nt
Agency for alleged misconduct to support hi s
alleged addiction to narcotics.
,
Court .records on file at the board of medicine

Commissioners
consider offering
·lifeguard assistance
for London Pool

(OOKIE SAlES BEGIN

Thurs(ia ~ ,

Robert Wingell, S vracuse
If you did n't
Village
• Couri'c ilman
rece1ve a v1sit from . Michael Jacbon and Sutlon
.a local Girl Scout
To" nsh ip ·• l'ru&gt;l ee Jerry
in Januar y, it's not 1 Hayman mel '"'h commi&gt;too late to' buy
I sioners yestenla~ lo request
your favonte Girl
a&gt;si,tance r:o m the ' courity
Scout cookies.
in .. cllmpleu ng repm r&gt; and
These scouts .are , llperating the London Pool
prepanng for cook· li thi s summer. Village olliie "booth sa les"
,·iah mel with the board earth is wee kend.
lier this year. but a commit ·
E•tra Girl· Scout
tee has sin,·c rai,ed thousands in Jonauons for the
cookies of all vari·
repai r of the poo L
eties will be avail·
Wingett'. "lm serl'es on a
able from loca l
,
cititen
,·ommlttee working to
· troops at ,all area
raise funds tor the project. ·
· supermarkets on
saiu
"ill age· po(11s - both
. Saturday, P1ctured
, P&lt;&gt;ol and the ,
London
is Abiga il Houser
Midd leport Pod! - serve
from troop 1120. ·
rc,ideni'
from th roughout the
the ,Southern
county, and said villages will
'Brownies. Houser
rely more on the ~ou nt y to
sold 1 .123 boxes
prt&gt;\'ldc tlnancial support for
of cookies to make their (1perations ,
her the top seller'
·"\\'c ha"' 1o be in thi s
in the county,
gan1c wgcthcr."'Wi ngett sai d,
lleth 'Sercent/ photo ,
"The villages can no longer
"I

1

I

Please ' " Doctor, AS

- - - - - - - ' - - ------;-"--'----'---''-------------

---"-

Please see
Pool, AS
'
.

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