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Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Lewis re-signs with
Ravens, Browns add
two possible starters
. BY THE AssOCIATED PRESS

Jamal Lewis is staying
with Jamal Lewis is back
with the Baltimore Ravens.
The free-agent running
back, who has had troubles
on and ·off the field since
rushing for 2,066 yards in
2003, re-signed Monday
with the team that drafted
him in 2000.
Carolina's
Will
Witherspoon signed with St.
Louis after the ·Rams lost
· Adam .
strong
safety
Archuleta to Washington,
which as usual was one of
the busies! teams during the
opening of the free-agent
period.
Philadelphia signed passrushing
defensive
end
Darren Howard, who was
bothered by injuries with
New Orleans last season.
And Tennessee signed linebacker David Thornton from
Indianapolis, the third Colt
in three days to leave.
But Baltimore's decision
to re-sign its one-time star
· was the highlight of the day.
Lewis rushed for a 'careerlow 906 yards in 2005 after
serving a four-month federal
prison sentence on a drug
charge and undergoing offseason ankle surgery. His
average of 3.4 yards a carry
. was a full yard below his
career average.
The Ravens had considered putting the franchise tag ·
bn their leading career rusher, who has 6,669 yards
rushing in his six seasons in
Baltimore. Lewis then
rejected an offer for a twoyear incentive-laden deal
that include.d a signing
bonus.
.
"We are so ·excited ·tO have
Jamal back," Ravens general
manager Ozzie Newsome
said. ·~If you look at his history, he always rebounds in a
big way from adversity."
Witherspoon, an · outside
linebacker with Carolina,
was one of the top free
agents at his position available . . He signed with St.
Louis to. play in the middle
for a deal that includes a $9
· million signing bonus.
Archuleta, a better run
stopper than pass defender,
.left the Rams after five seasons · and got a $10 million
signing . bonus from the
Redskins, who have added
four players .since free
agency st.arted Saturday.
That's generally been the
way the Skins have operated
since Daniel Snyder bought
them in 1999, getting things
done as quickly as possible,
often for prices considered
over market value.
Howard, who had 11 sacks
in 2004·, had just 3 l/2 . last
season in an injury plagued
year. He had been protected
by the Saints as their fran-

-

Tuesday, March 14. 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

Buckey~

slide past perennial powers·

Bv RUSTY MIUER

fourth-seeded Purdue (twice) No. 2 seeds it became apparIJ&gt; SPORTS WRITER
and eighth-seeded Boston ent that Ohio State would get
College (on the road).
its first No. I seed since 1993.
COLUMBUS- Ohio State
Critics will point out that
The 'Buckeyes made the,
has pulled off the first major Ohio State is only No.7 in the most of that chance, going all
upset of the 2006 NCAA tour- RPI index, and that the Big the way to thfil national chamTen is ranked as the nation's pionsh1p game before falling
nament.
Surprising · many,
the seventh-best conference. In to All-American Cheryl
Buckeyes grabbed a No. I addition, the Buckeyes ' 'Swoopes and Texas Tech, 84seed on Monday night and strength of schedule - 82.
will play Oakland in the frrst because of a perceived down
''I'm pretty excited about
round of the NCAA women's year in the conference - is the No. 1 seed," said Ohio
tournament on Sunday night only 19th-best in the country. · State leading scorer and twoin West Lafayette, Ind.
Foster said it wasn't a cer- time Big Ten player of the
Ohio State coach Jim Foster tain trophy or a particular year Jessica Davenport.
fully anticipates that there game that got the selection "People may have a different
will be complaints- particu- committee's attention.
opinion about what they think
larly from perennial power"It's the body of work," he is right, but we worked hard
houses such as Tennessee and said, standing in his living and we deserve it."
Connecticut that the room where he ·and his team
Should it beat Oakland (ISBuckeyes .(28-2)
don't . watched . the
bracket 15), the only team in. the 64.deserve a top seed.
announcement. "It's 19 games team field without a winning
"Robert Kennedy said that in a row. it's winning the Big record, Ohio State would play
if you give a million dollars Ten regular season, winning the winner of ninth-seeded
away, 20 percent of the people the conference tournament.
·
·
1
Notre c
Dame
((19
18-11)
and
are
gomg
o come uo WI'th a . How many teams d!'d that?. B
11
II) Th
·reason not to take. it,'~ he said It's a pretty simple formula oston . 0 ege
· ·. e
with a laugh. '·'So we ' ll just when you really, really sit Buckeyes beat BC 66-61 in
·
overtime Dec. 3 in Chestnut
keep ch uggmg
a1ong an d 1e1 down and look at 1't."
those 20 percent suffer as they · With players lying on the Hill, Mass.
will."
floor or slouched on chairs
The Buckeyes have had a
The Buckeyes are ranked and couches, the tension built week off since capturing the
No. 2 in both the media and as the brackets from the . Big Ten tournament title last
coaches polls, have won their Cleveland, Bridgeport, Conn., Monday with a 63-60 victory
last 19 games, captured both and San Antonio regionals over Purdue, They will be
the Big Ten regular-season were announced with no men- making their 15th appearance
and tournament titles and tion· of the Buckeyes. But in the NCAA tournament.
have quality wins against sec- after Tennessee, Oklahoma
Foster has taken all four of
ond-seeded
Oklahoma, and Connecticut were given his Ohio State .teams to the

NCAA tournament, and is
making his 20th trip to the
tournament in his last 23
years of coaching. The
Buckeyes lost in the second
round in both 2003 and 2004.
A year ago, they fell 64-58 in
the regional · semifinals to
Rutgers. a team they had beaten earlier in the season at
Value City Arena.
"It's hard .to argue with a
team that is 28-2 and No. 2 i!l
the country,'' guard Brandie
Hoskins said. ''Our record
said a lot for us."
·
:
Np. 23 Bowling Green (282), the regular-season arid
tournament champions of the
Mid-American Conference:,
also will play in We&amp;)
Lafayette, meeting UCLA
(20-10) on Sunday afternoon.
The Falcons are making theit
eighth · NCAA tournament
appearance.
:
Just like Ohio State, th~
Falcons and their fans don't
have to travel far to play. '
· "I was excited. especially ·
about the location ," coach
Curt Miller said. "Our fans
have been tremendous, and
what a following we had i'n
Cleveland (for the MAC
Tournament). Now, we get a
bus trip to West Lafayette ....
We couldn't 'be happier.':

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doriation,A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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____

East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH .Goadw:aidl
""""'_._ ... ,_.

-·--~------------~r----~--~--------------------------~--------~----------------~--------

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT The
need for · increased code
enforceme nt in Middleport
neighborhoods was brought
home to Village Council
Monday evening with a list
of 22 unsightly, unsafe properties and anoiher li st of 16
vehiCles without proper registration found on a random
Sunday drive through town.
Council Members Sandra
Brown and Jean Craig presented the li sts. which includ-

ed street addresses, of code
violations. The two compiled
the li st on a two-hour tour of
the village last Sunday. Brown
said the two council members
only visited a portion of the
vi llage, and did so after a resident complained about one
property in particular.
The list of homes Brown
read to other council members included the burned-out
remains of two buildings.
trash piled in yards and on
porches, and one with a
"dead rat in plain view of
anyone walking by."

One business and village
hall arc also on the li st.
Brown and Craig included
village hall because of the
condition of the exterior stairs
leadi ng to the second floor.
Craig said if vi ll age police
offieers are 'too busy to visil
property and vehicle owners
abo ut the code violations,
council should consider hiring an officer who does nothin~ else. At a meeting earlier
this month, Police Chief
Bruce Swift said understaffing and a heavy case load
makes it difficult for officers

to enforce code violations
such as those listed.
Craig said she holds Mayor
Sandy lannarelli responsible
for enforcemem in the
absence of police enforce. ment, becaus·e she oversees
ihe police chief and, indirectly, all village employees.
"With committees working
so hard to make Middleport an
inviting place to live, shop and
visit, we are doing a great disservice to the village if we do
not see that these ordinances
are enforced." Craig said.
Council also:

• Approved the 2006 permanent appropriations, totaling $1.982.000 for all departments. .
·
• Approved the · mayor's
report of fee&gt; a·nd tines collected in February. in the
amount of $3.685.
• Approved re-codification
of village ordinances for
2007.

Present were Council members Stephen Houchins,
Robert
Robinson, . Jeff
Peckham. Sandra Brown, Jean
Craig and Ferman Moore, and
Fiscal Officer Susa'n Baker.

Solich gives keynote speech at Chamber luncheon · Beautification
.

' ·
·

BY

·

·

BETH SERGENT

ssERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

effort planned
for General
Hartinger Park ··

POMEROY - Visitors to
yesterday's Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce lunBY BRIAN J. REED
cheon had plenty to chew &lt;in
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .
with side dishes of the Meigs
County Relay for Life, the
MIDDLEPORT -"Let's
unveiling of the Meigs
make
the park beautiful, and
County Visitor's Guide, the
let it start there."
. ·
announcement . of Willy
At Monday evening's reguWonka coming to Meigs lar meeting of Middleport
Elementary, and a main Village
Council,
Park
course of Ohio Univer'sity Manager Dale Riftle unveiled
Bobcat Football.
plans for a dogwood tree
Frank Solich, OU's Head 'beautification 'program at
Football Coach gave ,the General Harting~r Park as a
keynote speech that focused means to improve the busy
on two key elements of being park's appearance while cona successful coach.
tributing 1.0 the vi llage's ongoSolich said those two ele- ing re-development project.
. ments Were "believing in
Council authorized · Riffle
yourself' and "surrounding to continue plans to plant I 00
yourself with good people ."
dogwood trees, hut commitSolich explained.those two ted no village funds to the
elements to success came io proposed $5.000 planting
handy during his initial stints project. Council will consider
.
Beth Sergonl/phot&lt;i
at coaching high school foot- contributing to the cost from
Ohio University's Head Football Coach Frank Solich addresses members of the Meigs County
Page AS
a special tree fund.
Please see Sollch, AS
• Herbert Olen Hoover, 77 Chamber of Commerce at yesterday's luncheon at the Wild Horse Cafe.
·'Middleport needs downtown revitizatiori, we . have
homes in need of . improvement," Riffle said. "Why not
slart in the park and let it
spread from there .''
By CHARLENE HOEFliCH
Riffle said he will ask
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN6L.C OM
• Company blames
churches and organizations to
'
· lightning for deadly Sago
purchase a tree, ~and individuPOMEROY
Meigs
Mine blast. See Page A2 Middle School student s of
als in honor or memory of
someone.
· Denise Arnold showed their
• Pennington to speak
Riffle hopes to ut.e part of
. creative s~ills in writing and
at Boy Scout fundraiser.
an
inactive tree . fund to
presenting information to
See Page A3
defray lhe e'tirnated $5 ,000
members of the Meigs Local
10 $6.000 neeqed Io plant the
.• Fun horse sh.ow
Bourd of Education in power1rees
&lt;tlong the park's boundpoint.tri-folds, and· b;:ochures
slated at Portland.
aries.
The fund represents the
at Tuesday's meeting.
See Page A3
halance of a grant the village
. The presentations were
receive'd from the Ohio
• Family Medicine.
done as a part of recognition
Department
of Na1 ural
of student achievement in the
See Page AS
'-Re,ource&gt; several years ago
school system being carried
• Dam iri Hawaii bmsts,
for 1ree planling.
out by the administration.
'
Mary Wi&gt;e . a member of a
killing one person and
Describing the II presenters
tree
· committee appointed
and their projects as the "best·
washing out key road.
when the ~rant was first
of 145 students' ' Arnold said
See Page A6
awarded.
asked that the comthe a~signment was to research .
mittee
be
given input into
some aspect of Meigs County
how much of the tree fund is
and then deternune a way to
Charlene Hoolllch/ photo
'
present it effectively to others. .Outstanding achieve.ment pins were presented to ~$igs Middle School students of Denise u'ed for the project.
C
ounci
I
\'Oted
unanimously
The students gave a prescnta- Arnold. center front , following historical presentations before the Meigs Local Board of
tion after which they were · 'Education. Students receiving the awards. leff ·to right, front were Brittany Parsons. Erin to authorize the project. but
given outstanding achieve- Patterson, (Arnold) Tyler Brothers, and Justin Cotterill, and back, Jacob Dunn , Dawn Bissel l. Councilman Ferman Moore
cautioned council to carefully
ment pinsBuckley
by Superintendent
· t y Lew;·s .
William
on behalf of Tyler Andrews. Darby Gi\more. samue 1 Mcca11 . cay 1a Tay1or. an d, Ch ns
cnn,ider spending fun(ls from
the board.
tion. Kayla·Taylor gave a his- the history of Pomeroy, its achievements and contribu- the $~. 659 tree fund. because
Darby Gilmore's presenta- tory of the founding of public early settlers and . industrial tions back to his home .:om- the fund will hkel\ be needed
to meet Tier l -downtown
lion dealt wilh history of the
.b ranes
. .111 Me1gs
. County, th e hi' story 01· s·alt and ,:
11
·
, 0 .,11. aiid munily. '
Rock Spring' Fairgrounds, 1ts
·Jacob Dunn showed a tri- re,·itali zation grant match
.
d 1
locations and the role of the its development over the
umqueness. · eve opment
fold on the· e"randstand and requ iremcnts.
..
,.
Carneg;·e
Foundation
years:
while
Tyler
Fry
pre(
Riftle plans a dogw()()d festh
lh
over e years. e ac l VI ;es
·
horse. track at the fairwhich take place there and
Erin Patterson's topic was sented a powerpoint on Mike
tival at the park on April 22 in
conjunction with Eanh Day.
his fami ly's longtime connec- "Life in a River Town'" using Bartrum 's · NFL &lt;.:areer. his
Plene see Board, AS

0BIWARIES

School board recognizes students for excellence

.INSIDE

.WEATIIER

. Details on Page

A8

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\VEUNESDAY, MARCH 15, 2006

Council presented list of building,·vehicle code violations

SPORTS

Everybody in the pool! It's time for March Madness

Every year about this time,
the 65 teams. And across the wagers and prizes. too.
Eddie Gontram's architeccountry in Florida, St. Louis Arnie Wexler. a certified
ture firm becomes one of the
Cardinals infielder Scott compulsive gari)bling counmost popular in the country.
Spiezio joked that· someone selor who runs a national hot
Hundreds of people he
·had copied his bracket.
line, worries that something
"I've got Duke winning it that seems as harmless as an
doesn't know - · and probably will never meet- check
all," Spiezio said. "I've got a NCAA pool could trigger
couple of surprises in there, gambling problems.
out his Web site, eagerly
but I can't say what.they are.
"For most people, it' s no
chise piayer the last two sea- awaitin' the latest news.
And
were
not
talking
about
Then
I'd
I
.have
to
split
my
danger,"
Wexler said, "But
sons and fills Philadelphia's
blueprints
for
that
new
day
·
money."
.
for
those
that have the perneed for an outside pass
spa.
ing,
where
the
start
of
the
Ah,
money.
sona'lity
or
the gene. they
rushers , some!hing they
"It's March Madness," season is less than a month
An estimated $2.5 billion could be off ancl running.
lacked during a 6-10 season
Gontram
said
Monday.
away,
the
real
ag·
o
nizing
is
reportedly bet on the This could be' the start."
in 2005. ·
Sure .is, baby!
isn't over who will win · the NCAA iotirnament, with
And the ·chicago-based
"I can't think of a player
next
three
weeks,
job
at
third
base,
but
who
only
$80
million
bet
legally
job-search
· firm
of
For
the
we tried harder to ·get over
and
the last several years," · you'll . find sports nuts, will come out of the grueling in Nevada sports books. C~allenger, , Gray
alums
·
and
people
Minneapolis
regional.
Bets
placed
with
bookies
Christmas
estimates
the
devoted
Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie
who
don't
know
a
·
layup
Back
in
1988,
when
the
account
for
some
of
the
rest,
three
weeks
of
the
tournasaid. •
from a loose-ball foul break- Dodgers were paid their and there are plenty of big- ment could cost employers
Thornton, who signed a ing down their picks, annual visit by FBI agents ticket pools.
as much as $3.8 billion in
$22 million, five-ye;u: deal obsessing over little-known for a talk on the evils of
But much comes from lost productivity.
with the Titans, is the third schools like Monmouth arid gambling, th,e feds were small pools, the $5. $10 and
That doesn't mean pools
starting linebacker in four Pacific, and talking trash made to wait While the Los $20 wagered by average are all · bad. ·- Challenger, .
years to leave the Colts. about that 8-9 matchup.
Angeles ·players finished up Joes who don't otherwise Gray and Christmas said
Mike · Peterson
joined · The World . Series and some important business. gamble.
they often are good bonding
Jacksonville in 2003 and NBA finals have their devo- Seems they had to finish up
"It's a crapshoot," said activities, bringing together
Marcus Washington signed tees, and clever ads and their tournament picks.
Mariners pitch~~ Jamie employees who wouldn't
with
the
Washington .queso dip make the Super
Things have lightened up · Moyer, who' gets some normally interact.
Redskins in 2004.
Bowl an all-inclusive party. since then, but the brackets inside info from his father- · At Hodes, Ulman, Pess in
He is also the third When it comes· to the NCAA in almost every clubhouse in-law, ESPN analyst Digger and Katz, the Maryland law
Indianapolis player to go in tournament, though. there's are still serious business.
Phelps. "You're dealing with firm, about !!0 percent of the .
three days. Defensive tackle something in those brackets
San Francisco Giants kids, 17to 21 years old. 120 employees participate,
Larry Tripplett got ,a five- that converts even the least pitching
coach
Dave That's a ·lot of pressure . said Kevin Bress. a partner
year, $18 million · deal with sportsminded folk into rabid Righetti hasn't decided if Think of all the pressure -·. · who heads the elder law
the Buffalo Bills on fans.
he's going to enter a pool and the money that is bet on department and run s the
Saturday. Two-time NFL
"Part of it is it's so easy to yet, hut he still spent part oJ it, legally and illegally. It 's pool.
rushing champion Edgerrin become involved," said his morning Monday debat- amazing."
No other company activity
James ·signed a four-year, Scott Sepich, who has. run a ing whether Cal , the seventh
Many offices have stopp(!d comes close to that.
$30 million deal with the pool for about 70 friends for seed in the Atlanta Regional, charging any fees to avoid
"Not even the Christmas
Arizona
Cardinals
on the last 10 years.
can make a serious run.
legal issues. Gontram 's pool party," Bress s~id.
Sunday.
Indeed, brackets
are
The Seattle Mariners were is free, with prizes donated
Miami, another team that everywhere these days. hard at work on their picks by local businesses. The law
AP Baseball Writer Ben
has been active early, signed Printed in virtually every soon after they arrived" at firm of Hodes, U)man , Walk er and AP Sports
left tackle L.J. Shelton from newspaper. Online. Passed · camp Monday. The Mariners Pessin and Katz in Towson, Writers Gregg · Bell, Howard .
Cleveland · and added two out in neighborhoods, hospi- have two pools, one ·of the Md., foots the bill for its Fend rich
and
Jani e
potential starters in line- tals and church groups.
players' own brackets and office pool prizes.·
McCauley comributed ro
backer Sedrick Hodge from
Even the most li'uttoned- the other a random draw of
The costs go beyo\]d this report.
New Orleans and cornerback down of offices get · the
Andre
Goodman
from fever. Instead of talk about
DetrOit.
mergers and acquisitions or .
tax season, watl!rcooler
chatter centers on the · latest
games, who 's winning the
pool and what the prospects
COLUMBUS (AP) - The 2()05.2006 Associated Press OMsion II girls AJt.&lt;lhiO high
are for the next round.
school baskatball team, based on the recomrTleodations of a state media panel:
.
DMSIONII
And the true beauty? No
FIRST TEAM: Kristin Daugherty, W11$tw River View, 6·1001·1, junk&gt;r, 18.9 points per
expertise
is needed. You
game; Liz AepeiiB., Steubenville, 5-10, jr., 27.5; Lynzoe Johnson, Bellbt00k, .5-10, sr., .
20.9; Bree Hinkle, Cols. Bexley, !HI. sr , 16.9; Samantha Leach, WCH Miami Trac&amp;, 5-9,
could render Dick Vitale
Did you know that a properly tuned engine gets better fuel mileage.
jr., 14.7; Haley Kapferer, Jefferson Areli, &amp;.3. jr.• 22.2; Ellie Shields, Warren Howland, 6knowlspeechless
with
your
Over time heat and stress wears the electoral system and dirt and grim
3, jr., 18.0; Alit&amp; Clifton, Van Wert, 5-11 . sr. , 19.9; Cierra Brevard, Sandusky Perkins, 6-2,
IOI)h .. 22.2.
.
edge of college hoops, sweat ·
plug's your fuel system. Proper maintenance equal's better fuel
PlayM'I of the yeer: Kristin Daugherty, Warsaw River VteW; Liz Aepella, Steub6nvllle.
for days over RPls and
Coachee of the yM-: Mark Shqrt. Hamilton Littie Miami.
""'". ...:::::;~s:e~tt~e~r;:fuel
equals money saved.
power conferences, and still
SE~O TEAM: Miasy Ramsey, Hamitton Little Miami, 5-S, jr., 11 .3; Ganie Oyer,
Copley, 5-9, ar., 14.0; Melissa Goodall, Lexington, 6-2, jr.. 14.3; Ango&gt;a Groves. Sltai&lt;er
lose to people who make .
Hts. H81haway Brown. 6-1, soph., 15.4; Ayanna Dunning, Cola. Eastmoot' Acad., 6-3,
their picks based on nick-.
IOI)h .. 19.0; Macio Blinn, Groefllli.,, 6-0, soph., 19.4; Deseroe Bynl, Cin. TaH, S.B, jr.,
18.0.
.
.
.
names and uniform colors.
THIRD TEAM: Maxine Oha~m . Cols. DeS&amp;Has, 6-1 , SOjlh., 14.7; B!111any Mathie,
"My 4-year-old daughter
Mil-.rsburg W. Holmes, 5-11, sr., 11 .3; Kelly Polen. Cadiz 'ti&amp;nlson Cenl .. 5'10, sr.. 18.3;
Marquita Byrd, Warrensville Hts.. S.S, sr., 14.5; Sandra Busser, Parma Padua
beat
me last year," qontrani
FfW_'dJCan, S.5, sr., 12.5; P~.ris ~ie6e. Bay Village. Bay, 5-10, sr., 17.0; L.eah Seaman,
admitted.
"She was within a
Looisvtlle, 5-8, sr.. 13.2: Jarne Beckett, Wooster triway, 5-8, sr., 15.8; Megan Sellera,
Nofwalk, 5-8, sr., 19.6; Amy Simindinger, Uma Bath, 5-8, sr., 14.1.
whisker of winning the
Special6 CYl.
8 CYL.
CYl. ·
whole thing."
Sierra Fletcher, Utica; Tanni Scott, Col&amp;. Centennial; Hayley O'Hara, UhrichsVille
Claymon1; Sakara Hoose, Spring. Kemon Aldg&amp;; Kristen A ~hardson , O&gt;t1ord TaJawanda;
At baseball's spring train-

Meigs students win gold
in Regional SkillsUSA
competition, AS

Walk America

2 SECflONS -

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Chissifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A8

© :.;r;oob Ohio \'alley Puhlishintt Co.
(•

· · Prenatal program continues to
bring healthy babies into the .world

Tami Boyd and ·
her husband ·
Dennis Boyd, Jr.
consult with
physician Wilma'
Mansfield, MD ,
(sitting) and
Connie Little. RN
about the .upcom·
ing birth of their.
son. The Boyds
are participating
111 the Meigs
County Health
Department' s
Prenatal Clinic
that provides
prenatal care. for
clients close to
horne .

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILY SENTINEL. GpM

POMEROY ~ Despite hann E! no major ho,pital co m ~
plex to give birth, to lheir children. lhe wonu;n of Meigs
Countv do not have to tra,·e\ nut"de I he countv 10 recetve
prenat:tl care.
·
·
For 1he past 22 )Car' Meig' Count\ wom&amp;n and their
familie' have had an all) in 1he Meig' Cmlnty Health
Department 's Prenatal·Clinil' that prmidc' prenatal care for
the fip.;t 26 weeb of pregnane! .
The clinic i&gt; fnr all women re ~ardk·,, of age. tinancial
l· irc um 'it~uKe or po..,~e!«o . . ion of he;~ lth insuran~.:e .

· ·

Client' withnul itNirance ma! qualil! for Medicaid to
pay fnr the program·, 'en·ice'" hile other' may qualify for
,en·ice' by p'lying at" reduted ratl' 1111 a ,11d1ng-fee "ale.
Please.see Prenatal, AS

Both Sergent; photo

'•

)r

�.. .

... .

;

PageA2

REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

·wednesday, March 15, 2006

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MORGANTOWN . W.Va.
- Within hours of the Jan.
2 explosion at the Sago
Mine. speculat ion focused
on lightning.
·
· Thunde~storms had peppered the nearby town of
Buckhannon ·with powerfu I
bolts early that morning,
some striking close to the
underground · coal mine
where two 13-man crews
were just starting the day
shift.
Twci and a half months
later, the mine's owner says
it has evidence w prove the
theory. Though it can' t fully
explain how. International
Coal Group Inc. helieves
electricitv from above found
some conduit into the earth.
sparking methane gas that
had · accumulated in a
worked-out,
sealed'off
chamber.
It was. say, CEO Ben
Hatfield . "u npredictable and
highly unusual '' And ordinarily; hard to prove.
But ICG 's own in vestig•ition of the blast that trapped
and killed 12 men found what
Hatfield be lieves is compelling evidence from three
different clocks in three different locations.
At 6:26 a.m .. professional
weather watchers confirmed
an unusually large lightning
stri ke near the mine. he said.

Some 70 miles away in · hearings and submits a final · 300 feet from a utility pole the months leading up to the
Morgantown.
a · U.S. report later this year. ·
that supplied power to the accident, Hatfield said the
Geological Survey station
Tony Oppegard. ·a former mine. ICG said it's pos sible company's findings confirm
confirmed a seismic event at MSHA official, said he, too, an electrical charge entered that none of those violations
Sago. And deep inside the wants to see the final ruling the mine that way. perhaps was related to the blast. Still ,
mine, atmospheric alarms from federal investigators.
traveling along a conveyor Ashland, Ky.-based ICG
expects to be under the
"If, in fact. that is the belt frame. ··
sounded, signaling the carbon monoxide that comes cause, that doesn't end the
Hatfield said there was. also microscope.
with fires and explosions.
inquiry in terms of .the com- an abandoned water pump iti . "Frankly, we welcome
that scrutiny," he said. "We
One crew escaped the pany's
liability,"
said . the sealed area. ·
blast, but· another' was Oppegard, a ·Ke ntucky
Lu luBelle Jones, whose have worked hard to address
trapped some 260 feet under- lawyer who represents coal son Jesse died at Sago, said all concerns and are configround for more than 41 miners in injury cases. "It 's she 's not surprised to hear dent that we will ' provide a
hours. By the time rescue a frequent refrain · when lightning was the likely · safe working environment
for our miners."
teams ,reached them, all but there's an accident to call it cause.
The explosion occurred
one had perished in the poi- · an act of God . It 's a little
"It 's what we thought," she
behind 40-inch-thick seals
soned air. Survivor Randal L. · easier for' a company to do said.
.
McCloy Jr. is still recovering this when lightning is the
Another
son,
Owen, that were designed to withfrom brain damage. but was ignition source. "
escaped the blast that ki lled stand 20 pounds per square
well enough Tuesday to
ICG doesn 't claim to have his brother and has been back inch of pressure. The seals
leave his Morgantown reha- ·au the ·answers yet.
· undergroun'd for weeks,. were pulverized by ·. forces
bilitation hospital for a trip to
Hatfield said his investiga- rebuilding venti lation sys- that ICG believes were at
his home in Simpson, where tors found no power snurce in tem s and other struc tures least three times that.
.
he spent three hours visiting the ' sealed area, and no track needed to resume production.
Hatfield
told ' The
'.'iith family.
Press
late ·
or C\Jnveyor belt from the Mrs. Jones worries about him Associated
Hatfield said that whi le active parts 'o f the mine more than she used to. but Tuesday that ICG wiii no
ICG'~ . investigation is "not extended intb it. Steel mesh said there 's little chance he' ll 'longer install seals at Sago
the final word on the explo- that had once lined the roof ever quit the mine, which was and will ventilate ex ist ing
sion, we are confident that of the worked-out section had set to resume production sealed areas with - boreholes
the joint federal-state investi- been removed. and there was Wednesday.
to the surface. In time, the
gation will reach· a simi lar· no energized electrical equip"I think it's just in his company hopes to adopt a
conclusion.''
technology used in some
ment in the area.
blood," she said.
Gov. Joe Manchin, who
Though MSHA had cited other mining countrie s,
One of the confirmed lightwas a constant presence dur- ning stri kes that morning was the mine for 208 violations in pumping nitrogen into the
ing the di saster, did not
immediately weigh in.
Manchin . spokeswoman
Lara Ramsburg said it would
be pre matu~e to discuss the
findings until the state team,
h.eaded by former federal
Mine Safety and Health
Admi nistration chief Davitt
McAteer. conducts public

.

DEAR ABBY: A few _years
ago, you helped me w1th an
~nhtpp\ relationship I was
m. d too b'your adv!ce, and It
rna ~, a tg tmprovement m
my 11e.d1 am
f Inow engaged to
a ~on er u h won:tan, and
we re very appy. I never
thought _I would have to wnte
.
you agam .
Abby, I_ am seemg some
behaviOr m my 15-year-.old
ne~hew ,~.at has n:te w~rtted.
He s a htgh achtever and,
bas1cally, ,a pretty good kid.
Maybe he sunder stress from
sc.hool or sports, but he h as
been. havmg some shock,mg,
angry outbursts. Whether
agamst hts parents, ht s broth-.
er or h1s g1rlfnend, he w1ll fly
mto a rall_e. He shouts,
pounds ht s hsts on_ the table,
sl.ams doors (breakmg a glass
pane) and stonms out of t~e
house. I saw htm shove ht s
brother dunng a recent ar~umen(, and I have· heard h~m
threaten to . put h1 ~ f1st
thrn~gh a wall. Lucktly, he
hasn t follo~ed through.
He doesn I have .a htstory
of causmg trouble, ~nd these
angry outbursts doit t happen
all the ttme. J know you have

abandoned areas to make
them inert.
"That's something we're
going to take a hard look at."
he told the AP. "We will not
be constructing seals until we
can be absolutely certain that.
an explosive environment is
not being·created."
The inert gas technology ·
could also ·be used at other'
ICG mines. ·
"We can't discount the possibility' that it could occur
somewhere else," he said. ·
Historically. the industry
has believed seals were the
safest way to manage abandoned areas, Hatfield said.
When worked-ou t areas are
not w;llled .off, a fireboss :
mu st be sent in periodicallY:
to confirm the area is being:
ve ntilated and dea&lt;ily or:
explosive gases · are not
'
gathering.
ICG bought the Sago Mine:
near Buckhannon from bank-.
rupt Anker West Virgini a
Mining Co. last March . The
operation has been producing'
coal since September 1999
and had 145 employees at the
time of the accident.

1

contains constr~ctivc information about anger and su~gestjons for defusing it 111
healthy ways. It can be
ordered by. sending a business-s 1'zed ' · se lf-add resse d
Dear
Abby
envelope, plus check or
. money order for $6 (U .S.
funds) to: Dear Abby _
Anger Booklet, P.O. Box
447 , Mount Morris , IL
61054-0447. (Postage is
a booklet about controlling included in the price.)
.anger. Do you think it might
DEAR ABBY: 1 have been
help h1m, and how can I order house-sitting - and paying
one?- WORRIED UNCLE, rent - for a retired couple
ANNAPOLIS, MD.
' tor the last six months. They
DEAR
WORRIED are traveling in an RV, so I
UNCLE: We all have moved into the spare room.
moments when . we react collect their mail and keep
without
thinking . Your their house in order.
nephew is you ng, and his
They come back to town
problem could be caused by a every few weeks so one or
number of things - includ- both of them _stays a night at
ing immaturity, lack of self- the home. Th1s was OK until
control and raging hormones. last night.
If you have a good level of
The husband wasn't supcommunication with him, the posed to be at the house. I
first thi~g you should do is was expectin g him tonight
have a talk with him and ask because he has . a doctor 's
what's really going on.
appomtment
tomorrow.
If he is not havi ng emotion- When I came home and saw
al or substance abuse prob- · him there, I was a little surlems, my · anger booklet prised. J was tired from a
might be helpful to him. It hard day at work. so 1 went

Walk America donation

Ji\nti.qW! &amp; Craft liMaU

--·

CINCIN NATI - A magi;.trate mled Tue&gt;day . that an
80-year-old woman will
have to give up the house
she's lived in for alm ost half
a ce ntury to make way for a
road project.
City officials say the project is .in the interest. of publie safety. but Emma Dimasi
arg tted the rea l reason the
city want' her hou.se is to
help .a: nearby hospital wi th
it&gt; expansion · She has said
~akin g her home violate&gt; a
one-year ban in Ohio on &gt;eizing property that wil l end up
in the hand&gt; of another pri vate owner.
Good Sal)lafitan Hospital is
contributing ~1.28 million
toward the $-1 million project.
which wi ll gi1e the hospital
more room for it- $122 million cxpan&gt;ion . The hospital
also geh whatever land i' left
over al)er const ruction for $1.
Cities and state.s ha ve the
power to take pri1a1e proper~
ty to gi1e Hi Wltithcr pri1·atc
owner. But the U.S. 'it&lt;prcme

Court also has said states can
enact stronger rights for
property owners.
Hamilton·
County
. Common Pleas Magistrate
Richard Bernat ruled that the
city did not commit fraud or
abuse it s discretion when it
took the land.
Dimasi's son and attorney.
Vincent Dimasi. said he
would file an objecti'on with
Hamilton Co unty Common
Pleas Judge Melba Marsh
within two weeks.
Diniasi said his mother was
upset. but he had been
preparing her for the pos sibility that the ruling could . go
aga 1n&gt;t her.
"She\ l\0 years old and
has lived in that house most
of her life ." Dimasi said.
"She's
always
been .
adaman t about maintaining
her own independence for
as long as possible. and thi s
is difficult for her." ·
The son. who owns adj()in·in g property that is also heing
tak en, said if Marsh does not
overrule the magi .strate. the
decision cannot be appealed
to i1 higher ·court.

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Monday - FREE Drinks
Tuesday- $1.00 off any Dinner
We&lt;ln&amp;Jday- Half Rack Dinner
$7.99- 10 Wings $3.00
Thursday - Half Chicken Dinner
$5 99
EdliAy · Platters $5.99
Saturday ; Chicken &amp; Rib Dinner
$9.50
Sunday .' Pork Chop Dinner
1 pc. $5.99 2 pc. $7.99

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• Openings
• Closings
• Uners

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1111- I pm tun_ 11

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Pelmington to speak.at Boy Scout fundraiser
~

f?)

ASHLAND - The TriState Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America will hold
its annuaiAshland Leadership
Luncheon, · at 12 noon
Thursday at the Addington
Corporate Center.
,
Doug Sparkman; manager
.of the Marathon Catlettsburg
Refining Plant, is chairing
this year's event. The gue st
speaker will be Chad
Pennington, Quarterback of
the New York Jets and former
Marshall Herd Quarterback.
The event will also feat.ure
Eagle Scout Bradley Kelly.
Funds (ai-sed fro m this
event will help finance the

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Week

Submtnod photo

Terry Eller, left, community director of the tri-county walk for.March of Dimes, recently received
a sponsorship from lnfoC ision Management Corp for the upcoming Walk' America event. The
two most common·sponsorship levels a·re .the Gold Sponsorship, which is a $1,000 donation.
and a r:sh1rt Sponsorship, which is a $500 donation. Eller is shown accepting the donation
from Kerry Nourse of lnfoCiston. Walk America will take place Sunday, May 7 at Krodel Park
1n Po1nt Pleasant. For more 111format1on abo ut the event or to make a donation, contact Eller
at 675-6029.

IERVING GALLIA fl

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u

s

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Wednesday, March l5.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education , 6 p.m., Eastern
Library Conference Roorri.
Thursday, March 16
POMEROY
Local
Professional Development
Committee of A\hens-Meig s
ESC, 3 p.m. at Athe'ns office.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Tru stees,. 6:30
p.m., township hall.

Clubs and
organizations

Carson and Fcr~ier on liability
issues for woodland owner'
..mcludmg
· . ATV ndcrs
.
on per-·
sonal property Call593-85~5
· · ·· · ·

Youth events
Salurday, March 18
POMEROY - Meig' youth
baseball camp. grade'~ to R. IIJ
a.m. to 2 p.m. Work on basic
and . terminology.
skill\
Registration 1):30 a.m. For more
information contact Coach
Nick Denwiller, 416-0344.
RUTLAND - Last time w
signup for Rutland ball. I to -1
p.m. at the Rutl and Fire
Department.

Wednesday, March 15
_POMEROY -· Middleport
Lttenuy Club, 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. Connie
Gilkey 'to review "Beautiful Jim
Friday, March 17
Key: The Lost History of a
POINT PLEASANT WVa,
Horse and a Man Who Changed -· The Kirigsmen Quanet 111
the World" by Mim Eichler concert , 7 p.m.. ."•aiOna
t.
1
Rivas. Gay Perrin. hostess:
Guard Armory. Doors open at
Thursday, March 16
6 p.m. Free-will offering to
POMEROY
Meigs benefit Jacob's Well Mini strie&gt;
Cou nt y Retired Teachers in New Haven. W v;~,
Association noon luncheon at
POMEROY -Stations of
Trinity_Chu rch meeting room the Cross, 7 p.m .. Sacred
Second Street entrance. · Heart Church, each Frida)
Michael Gerlach to speak on through Lent.
·
the Civi l ,war in Meigs
Saturday, March 18
County. Make reservation at
MASON , WVa. - Benefit
992-3214. Guests welcome.
sing for mi ssons at Christian .
MIDDLEPORT - Special Brethren · Church. 7 p nL
meeting of Middleport Lodge Singers inGiude Proclaim.
363 F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. to Earthen Vessel&gt;. Glorvland
practice for inspection. Believer's, Randy Parsmis and
Offic ers to attend.
Marty Short. Contact Pallor
Saturday, March 18
John Elswick. 593-7390.
MIDDLEPORT - Special
FLATROCK. W.Va.
meeting of Middlteport lodge Mason County Area Gospel
363, R&amp;AM , 7:30p.m. at the Choir's first gospel sing. 7
Masonic Temple for annual . p.m.. Gpod Shepherd United
inspection in entered appre n- · Methodist Church. The
tice degree . All off1ce to Humphrey s Family of Dunbar.
attend. Meal, 6:30p.m. with WVa. and the Mason Countv .
members to take pies for Area Gospel Choir featured. ~
dessert. Take non-perishable
Sunday, March 19
food ite ms for the Grand · PIOMEROY - . Reviv al
Masters food bank program. services cointinuing at. the·
Monday, March 20
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel.
ATHENS - ·Southeast Route 143. Pomeroy. 7 p.m .
Ohio Woodland · Interest through Sunday. Evangelist
Group, 7 p.m. at the Athens B. J. Walker: secial si nging
County Extension office. each evening.

Church events

..
•

program for the I,200 youth
served annual by the Cardinal
District which includes those
communities, along the Big
Sandy River in Wayne
County West Virginia and
Boyd, part of Greenup, Carter
and Lawrence co unt ies in
Kentucky and Burlington and
South Point in Ohio.
·
The
budget
includes
camperships for more than 75
scouts and supplements for
camp fees of all you th attending summer' camp and district
and council activities. It al so
supports the counci l's local
Scout camps located at
Yatesville Lake, Louisa,

Kentucky, Ona, West Virginia
and Camp Kiashuta· at
Chester. Ohio. Many of the
dollars raised at this event
will help maintain a safe and
busy summer camp season
througho ut the entire t(i-state.
Cardinal Distri ct is part of
. the Tri -State Area Counci l,
BSA which was one ·of only
2 1 co un ciIs in the Central
Reg ion. BSA to earn the
Di stin!;ui shed
Quality.
Council Award.
For those who would like to
attend the luncheon or contribute to the Tri-State !\rea
Counc il. cal l 304-523-3408 or
606-921-2004.

Kent, Ohio regional campuses
announce degree-cooperatif)n deal

COLUMBUS (AP)
scores ''the historical regional
Students attending branch mi ssion of each institution,"
camp uses at Kent S t ~ te Kent State Presidenl · Carol
University
and
Ohio Cartwright said.
University
will
have
access
Research shows residen ts.
PORTLAND -· A fun
to
classes
at
both
universitie
s
in'
33 counti es could take
show sponsored by the Ohio
River Producers will be held under a program announced advantage of the program.
Saturday at the new horse Tuesday aimed at increasi ng said Roderick ·: McDavi S,
show ring · behind . the the number of Ohioans with president of Ohio, whose
main campus is in Athens.
· Portland Community Center. college degrees.
The
program
will
·be
avai
lEach university is pledging
Exhibition will take place at
$1.1
million for the first three
10 a.m. and the show will begin able to students at seven Kent
at II a.m. with 18 classes. State campuses and tive Ohio . years of what's expected to be
According to Bruce McKelvey University campuses. Dubbed a five -year rollout of the plan.
The. universities wi ll offer
(843-5216l there will not be· a ''Complete to Compete.'' the
goal
is
to
make
it
easier
for
stu.
special
counseling services
sanctionedjudge, proper foot
dents
to
complete
their
degree
for
students
to help them use
attire is required, there wi II be a
the program. which will
closed gate, and rain. snow or to tinct good-paying jobs.
indude on l'ine cla;ses.
tinderThe
collaboration
extreme cold could cancel.
The classes are exhibition,
halter. showmanship. lead-in ,
walk-trot. western pleasure,
egg-n-spoon. dollar bill mce.
four comers. speed-n-comrol.
Daily
catalog . race. down-n-back.
youth poles; open poles. conesSubsc~ibe today • 992-215·5 • www.mydailysentinel.com
n-barrels. pee-wee barrel s.
youth barrels. and open barrels.

The term "Chiropractic" comes from the Greek words '.' cheiro ·a nd praktikos''
meaning "done by hand". The Chiropractic model of health is centered on the
philosphy that the human body, being knit together in a wondenul way, will heal ·
itself given the right opportunity and circumstances. Doctors of Chiropractic (DCs)
essentially promote the healing process by minimizing nerve interference.
The purpose of the Cliir~pr;tctic approach to health care (the wellness model) is to
uncover the cause of your health condition, not merely cover up your symptoms. The
absence of symptoms (pain) does not equal good health! The clearest way to
illustrate this is by reviewing the statistics on heart attacks. Research reveals that 'in
approximately 33% of all heart attacks the first symptom of the attack is death!
Wellness Care encompasses several aspects of overall health, which can be, physical,
emotional. mental and spiritual.
Most Americans are unaware that today'sDocto'rs of Chiropractic undergo an
intense educational process that is similar to medical doctors over the first two vears
of schooling. Medical students and chiropractic students alike spend a tremcnd;ms
amount of time studying anatomy, physiology, neaurology 'and other "basic
sciences". The main difference during the first two years is that medical students
have a heavy emphasis pn Pharmacology,(study of prescription drugs) and
chiropractic students emphasize nutrition and natural alternatives to drugs.
The programs take a different turn after the first two years. Medical students
prepare for their "trade" by rotating each month to a different medical specialily
such as pediatrics, orthopedics and family medicine.
The second two ·years of education for chiropractic students focuses on learning I he
tools of their "trade". manuel and physical methods of treatment. This is. learned
through chiropractic physiotherapy devices (such as electrical muscle stimulation
?'nd therapeutic ultrasound) and rehabilitative techniqes.
·
Both doctors of medicine and chiropractic are 1•ery well trained to treat their
respective patients utilizing the skills uf their profession. The most promising and
encouraging changes in today's treatment environment is that many healthcare
cJinics pruvidc c.hiropractic and medical care for their patients!

BEND AREA
CHIROPRACTIC
CENTER
1065 South Second Street
Mason, WV 25260
'

.

Dr. Kelsey M. Henry, D.C. HeaU.er Edwards, LMT
Mon·Wed-Friday
8am-Spm
Thes 8-12

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Chiropractic health care is a branch of the healing arts based on the scientific fact
that our nervous systemco.ntrols or inOllences the function of every cell in our body.
Interference to the nervous system (caused by the vertebral subluxalion complex)
will effect how the. nervous system relates to the cells to which it travels.

326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

740·446·90:&amp;0

Magistrate says city can·take .
80-year-old .woman's property
BY LISA CORNWELL

Medical Excellence.
Local Carini.
EverYwhere

ti4Z :lad Ave. GIIDipaU., OR

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

HOLZER
CLINIC

Local student
·named art
club officer
POMEROY Andrea
Burdette
of
34421
Township
Road· 205,
Pomeroy, has been named
co-director of publicity of
the Art Club at Ashland
University. She is ·the
daughter of Robert and Ruth
Burdette and is an art education major. .
The Art Club parti cipates
in demonstrations and trav els to different rnuseums'.
The members also visit variou s art workshop s, where .
they learn diverse art
trades. Membership is ope n
to any student.

S:reneh City ·
*Home Decor 'Furniture
*Hand Puppets for
Children
*Antiques for the ·
Antique lover .
Our 19,1)00 square foot
store offers thousands of
gilts for the entire family.

.

to bed early. This morning , 1
awoke at 6·15 to my door
opening. Th~ hu sband came
into my room. said he was
cold, and jumped into my
bed . He was na ke d'. 1 to ld
him he was a freak, jumped
out of bed, ru&gt;hed into my
bathroom, locked 'ihe door
and got ready to 'leave for .
work. 1 didn't see him
before 1 left.
Should 1 call the wife and
tell her what happened? 1 am
staying at a friend's tonight
because 1 don't want to run
into him again. I no longer
feel safe with him there .
Should 1 find a new place to
live? I' m 31 and he is in his
60s. Yuck 1 - GROSSED
OUT IN CALIFORNIA
· DEAR GROSSED OUT:
The answers to both of your
questions is yes - · and the
sooner the better.
Dear Abby is ·written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as J eanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
· mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Bo~ 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069.

W.Va. hemlocks threatened
by sap-eating p_
est
BECKLEY, W.Va. (A P) - of infested nursery stock.
"We found · HWA in fo ur
West Virginia's eastern hemlock trees are being wiped counties in West Virginia' in
out by a tiny s&lt;lp-sucking 1992 and since then it has
insect that has alreadv moved southwest across the
claimed thou sands of trees ii1 state.'' Ki sh said. "Last year,
the e,ast~rn United States. a our surveys' found HWA in 24
state agriculture official said. counties."
The hemlock woolly adelThe insect feeds on the sap
gid. which is similar to an produced by a h emlock. A ·
aphid. was first detected in tree can .be killed withi'n three .
the state in 1992. Since then years after it's infected.
"You probably could not
it has killed thousands of
trees. said Karen Kish, a for- even fi nd HWA if you were
est entomologist wit h the ' looking for -it, because they
West Virginia Department of are so small ," Ki sh said.
Agric ulture.
· 'They are most commonly
"At thi s rate, it's not going fo und on the underside of a
.to be too long before we lose hemlock tree's needles where
all the hemlocks in the state," they produce a white, waxy
she said.
substance that the y use to ·
State parks where large · protect their eggs and themhemlock 'lands are _prevalent se lve s from predators.
cou ld look differen t if the
"It looks like the tips of
scourge continues. For exam- cotto:J balls."
pie, the black water in the · Efforts to control the
Blackwater Ri ver in Tucker spread ha ve not been sueCounty is the result of tannic cessful.
acid from fallen hemlock and
Since 1999, the state has
red spruce needles .
released nearly 100,000
The insect is believed to predatpry beetles to feed on
have mi grated from As.ia and the insects, but the results are
. was first found on the West · inconclusive. Since 2004.
Coast in 1924. It's not con- 598 high profile trees on state
sidered a pest in Asia because land have been treated with
trees there have adapted and . insecticicles &lt;1bsorbed through
the insect is a food source for a tree's roots. The insects die
some animals.
after eating the treated sap,
The insect can now be but the insBcticide has to -be
found from Maine to Georgia updated every few years.
and as far west as Tennessee.
Kish .said the "chemical
Scientists say the insects suppression system" will be
advance at a rate of about 15' continued .this year and more
miles a year and are carried -by predators may be released to
wind, birds and the movement help the dying hemlocks.

Wednesday, March 15, 2oo6

Teens angry outbursts raise red flags for concerned uncle Community Calendar

COMPANY BLAMES UGIITNING FOR DEADLY SAGO MINE BLAST.
Bv VICKI SMITH

Page A3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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OPINION

· The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Wednesday, March 15, aoo6

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

·Obituaries ·
..,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

·

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

Congress shall make no law 'respecting an
establishittent of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances;
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, March 15, the 74th day of2006. There
are 291 days left in the year. This is the Ides of March- and
·
the day the buzzards return to Hinckley, Ohio.
Today 's Highlight in Hi story: .
Fifty year ago, on March 15, 1956, the Lerner and Loewe
musical play "My Fair Lady," starring Rex Harrison as
Professor Henry Higgins and Julie Andrews as. Eliza
Doolittle, opened on Broadway.
..
On thi s date:
·
· In 44 B.C., Roman dictator Julius Caesar was assassinated
by a group of nobles that included Brutus and Cassius.
.
In 1493 , Christopher Columbus retumed to Spain, concluding his first voyage to the Western Hemisphere.
In 1767. the seventh president of the United States, Andrew
.
Jackson. was born in Waxhaw, S.C.
In 1820. Maine became the 23rd state.
In 191 3, President Wilson held the· first (&gt;pen presidential
news conference, .
·
In 19 19, th e American Legion was founded in Paris.
.
In 1944. during World War II, Allied bombers again raided
.
German-held Monte Cassino.
In 1964, actress Elizabeth Taylor married actor ·Richard
·Burton in Momreal ; it was her fifth marriage, his secm:)d.
In 19'75, Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis died
ncar Paris at age 69.
In 1977, .th~ U.S. House of Representatives began a 90-day
test .to determine the feasibility of showing its sessions on
television.
·
·
Five years ago: Federal authorities confirmed that remains
found on a Texas ranch were those of missing atheist leader
Madalyn Murray O' Hair and two of her relatives. (David
Waters, the key suspect in the slayings, was sentenced to 20
. years in prison on a federal extortion charge in connection
' with the case.) Chechens hijacked a Russian plane after it left
Turkey and forced it to land in Saudi Arabia. (Saudi special
forces stqrmed the plane the following day; a flight attendant,
a passenger and a hijacker wer.e killed.) Actress Ann Sothem
. died in Ketchu!Ti, Idaho, at age 92.
. Today 's Birthdays: Country si nger Cart Smith is 79. Former
astronaut Alan L. Bean is 74. Supreme Court Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg is 73 . Jazz musician Cecil Taylor is 73. Actor
Judd Hi rsch is 7 I. Rock musician Phil Lesh is 66. Singer
Mike .Love (The Beach Boys) is 65. Rock singer-musician Sly
Stone is 63. Rpck singer-musician Howard Scott (War) is 60.
Rock si nger Ry Cooder is 59. Actor Craig Wasson is 52. Rock
singer Dee Snider (Twisted Sister) is 51. Actress Park Overall
is 49. tv)ovie director Renny Harlin is 47. Model Fabio is 45.
Singer Sananda Maitreya (formerly Terence Trent D' Arby)' is
44: Rock singer Bret Michaels (Poison) is 43. Singer
Rockwell is 42 . Rock singer Mark McGrath (Sugar Ray) is
· 38. Actress Kim Raver is 37. Rock musician Mark l;loppus
(Blink 182) is 34. Actress Eva Longoria .is 31. Rapper-musician will.i .am (Black Eyed Peas) is 31. Rock OJ Joseph Hahn
(Linkin Park) is 29. Rapper Young Buck is 25. Actor Sean
Biggerstaff is 23. Actress Caitlin Wachs is 17.
Thought for Today: "People are, if anything, more 1ouchy
about being thought silly than they are about being thought
unjust." - E. B. White, American author and humorist ( 18991985 I

.LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less ·than
· 300 word.1. A/1/erters ~re subject to editing; must be signed.
:and include address and telephone number. No unsigned let; rer's will be published. Letters should be i1z good taste,
:addressing ·issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks. to orga. ni:ations and indh·idua/s will not be accepteqjor publication.

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How churches are harboring·criminals
On the comer of a busy
road in a New York City suburb recently, I noticed a sign
outside a small Chri stian
church welcoming day laborers - an apt image for the
Kathryn
state of immigration in the ·
Lopez
United States today. ·
The day laborers the
church is welcoming ate,
most likely, illegal immigrants.. We all know they're lawbreaking. A former Texas
here and you may, like the pa ~ tor a!:lually compared
churchmen , also
know c,hurches providing a safe
where. You may be one. You haven to illegal immigrants
may employ one. 'You may to the Jewi sh asylums of
even pass a group of illegal World War II_. The an'a logy is
immigrants waiting for a day Iudicrous on more than one
job on the way to your own level. For one: If •enforcejob. Needless to say many ment of immigration laws
illegal immigrants are good were a priority in the United
people just like you and me States, the aforementioned
(in many cases just trying to church sign would not be so
care for their families) tran sparent and unapoloexcept ·for a problem that . getic. If government were
can't be overlooked: They' re actually polici ng immigrain the United States illegally. tion, that sign would be read
While attending a meeting as: "Pol 'ICla,
. acqm.. '"
of some 30 pastors of indeAccording to the Pew
pendent Christian · churches Hispanic Center's most
in. Southern California, recent study, there are curwriter Christine A. Schetter rently about 12 million ille- ·
of "Christianity Today" was gal immigrants living in the '
t.oid by one of the pastors that United States. The same
not only is his congregation study indicates that 66 per50-percent illegal, but that cent (as of last March) of the
among the group assembled, "unauthorized population"
"We have a lot of pastors · has been in the United States
who are illegal." The attitude for I0 years or less, 40 perScheller encountered among cent of those for five or less
sugge sting their roots
pastors was almost com- pletely accommodating to aren't deep here and amnesty

and amnesty-like solutions
are far from the only - or
even most obvious answers to our immigration
problems.
As . it happens, one pastor
told "Christianity Today"
that although he "had
crossed the border illegally
as a young man to marry his
Mexican-American fiance," ·
he now "believes the current
process for getting into the
IJ nited States is ' great' and
'necessary.'" He says that
"When an undocumented
worker responds to the
gospel, 'the Lord will not be
glorified' if that. person continues to live a lie." Could
we put him in charge of
enforcement?
Unfortunately. though, the
clergymen with the bullhorns
on immigration are putting
their emphasis somewhere
else entirely. In a joint' statement on immigration, the.
Catholic bishops of the
United States an(! Mexico
express their concern that:
"Alarmingly, migrants often
are treated as criminals by
civ il e.nforcement authorities." But, dear bishops,
when we are speaking of
those. illegally migrating,
their actions do, in fact, fall
under the ·:crime" category.
Cardinal Roger Mahoney
has recently made headlines
for encouraging the priests in

••

Herbert ·Herbie' Olen Hoover

his archdiocese of Los
Angeles to defy a proposed
federal law that he and his
supporters on this front are
assuming
would
mean
churches would be legally
forbidden from providing
bas.ics to an immigrant in .
need - bread, for ,instance,
both of the consecrated and
Wonder varieties. But a look
at the proposed language
suggests something different,
and at least one expert tells
me he's betting this tempest
becomes a moot point before
a new law is passed.
But even when that legista- , .
tive hurdle is overcome,
there's the spirit of the cardi~
nat's · protest. At an · Ash
Wednesday Mass at Our
Lady of Angels Cathedral in
Los Angeles,
Cardinal
Mahoney echoed the same
general sentiment as that
bi.shops' statement, blasting
"increasing hostility toward
immigrallls." While minis·
tering to least of these among
us, he could spare some
prominent · words for good
citizenship - which doesn't
have a prayer of a chance
without actual citizenship.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online · (www.nationalre- ·
view.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.) ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydallysentinel.com

FAMILY MEDICINE
Fear of 'stomach flu' shouldn't keep reader from cruise

Question: I am planning sea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever cially after vomiting or using you feet well.
MIDDLEPORT - Herbert
on
going on a cruise in a few and stomach cramps. People the bathroom. This more than
Enjoy your cruise . You
~·Herbie" Olen Hoover, 77, of
weeks,
and
I
just
heard
about
also
feel
tired,
achy
and
can
anything can help prevent the might want to take antidiarMiddleport, died March 12,
another
·
outbreak
·of
the
have
a
mild
headache
.
The
spread
of the virus. It's also rheal medi cation with you, a'
2006 at his residence after an
stomach
flu
on
a
ship.
What
illness
typically
starts
very
very
important
to clean any well as some over-theextended ill ness.
can
I
do
to
prevent
this
probsuddenly,
but
only
lasts
24
to
contaminated
surfaces
imme- " counter "sea sick pills,"
· He was born Sept. 24, 1928,
lem?
Should
I
go
on
my
48
hours.
The
infected
indidiately
and
to
wash
any which can help with nausea,
the son of William and
cruise?
vidual usually feels very ill. clothing or linens that have no matter the cause. You
Gladys
Mae
(Harvey)
Answer:
Before
directly
Despite
the fact that most been used by the sick person should check with your fami Hoover. Mr. Hoover was a .
answering
your
question,
let
people
call
this the stomach with soap and hot water.
ly physician or pharmacist
World War It United States
me
clarify
a
few
bits
of
··flu,
it's
not
actually
related
to
someDirect
contact
with
about
possible dru g interacArmy veteran and a member
nomenclature. What you call the influenza .that you get flu one who is itt, such as kissing tions and dosage if you take
of Veterans of Foreign Wars ·
"stomach
flu" is referred to shots for.
or sharing food , drink or other medications.
of the United States . .
.
Viral
gastroenteritis
is
usuas
viraL
gastroenteritis
by
utensi Is, can at so spread the
He was also a 32-consecudoctors.
The
actual
viruses
ally
not
life
threatening
in
Family Medicine® is a
viruses . You ·are contagious
i:ive year member of Feeneythat are the primary cause of otherwise healthy people, but from the moment you feel ill weekly column. To submit
Bennell ·Post 128 American
this disorder in humans· have . frail adults and children can until at least three full days questions, write to Martha A.
Legion and a member of the
gone
by several different . easily get dehydrated and after recovery. In some cases. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
l&gt;omeroy Masonic Lodge #
in the past, including· become seriously ill. Gelling you can -be contagious for up Ohio University College of
names
164 F&amp;AM. He retired as an
Herbert "Herbie"
Norwalk-like viruses and medication to stop the vomit- to two weeks: Because there Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
electrician from Columbus
Olen Hoover
.
Calici
viruses. According to ing can be helpful. Not only are so many different strains, Box 110, Athens, Ohio
Southern Power· Company ·
the
·
Centers
for Disease will this make you feel better, you don't develop immunity 45701, or via e-mail to readtmd was a member of the Jnteniational Brotherhood of
Control and Prevention, the it'll make it easier to "keep and can become infected erquestions @jamilymedi ·
Electrical Workers Local 1466. . ·
·
' He is survived by three sons, Rick (Jacqueline) Hoover of term Norovirus was recently down" fluids, which can help multiple times throughout cinenews.org. Medical infor·
·
motion in this column is prodehydration . your life.
Middleport, Steven (Cindy) Hoover, Sr. of Pomeroy, and approved as th!! official name prevent
for
this
group
vided as an educational ser·
of
viruses.
Appropriate
fluids
are
oral
There
is
no
vaccine
to
preDavid (Dhronda) Hoover of Pomeroy; seven grandchildren
vent
thi~
type
of
viral
infec~
Stomach flu occurs at rehydration fluids (a special
vice only. It does not replace
Ricky Hoover of Akron, Corrie Hoover of Middleport, Stevttn
home,
in
hospitals,
in
schoo)s
blend
of
glucose
and
election
and
no
antiviral
medicathe
judi(menl of your per·
Hoover, Jr. of Gallipolis, Mic~&lt;!el Hoover and fiance, Nicole
and
daycare
centers,
as
well
trolyte
solution),
juice
and
S011al
pfiysicilln, who should
tion
can
be
used
to
treat
it.
Bryant of Middleport, Ashley Hoover of Gallipolis, Nathanael
as
be
relied
on to dillgnose and
on
cruise
ships.
Staying
water.
Was
hing
your
hand
s
after
Hoover of Pomeroy, Wyatt Olen Hoover of Pomeroy; three
Noroviruses &lt;tre very cor1- using the · toilet and before recommend treatment for
great-grandchildren Jeness.a Hoover of Rockbridge, Trinity home from your cruise does
not
.mean
that
you
won't
get
tagious.
The stool and vomi- eating can lessen you chances any medical conditions. Past
Hoover of Gallipolis, Steven R. Hoover Ill of Gallipolis, one
this
infection.
tus
of
infected
people carry of getting it, You should not columns are available online
sister-in-taw Elenor Hoover of. Gallipolis; special ·friends
of
a
the
virus.
Frequent
hand- prepare food while you are ill at
www.familymedicine·
The
symptoms
Manford and Peggy Hutton of Middleport, several nieces and
news.org.
Norovirus infection are nau- washing is important, espe- or for up to three days after
··
·
.
nephews and many friends. ·
.. In addition to his parents· he was preceded in death by a
brother Robert Hoover, a sister Dorothy Collins, and a grand·
son Matthew Hoover.
Visiting hours will be held at Acree Funeral Home 5 to 9
BY MARILYNN MARCHIONE Americans have, defined as . Researchers gave 391 peo- for by a drug company. it is
p.m. Thursday at the Acree Funeral Home in Middleport.
AP MEDICAL WRITER
btood pressure readings from pte the drug and 381 others "very important" and will be
120 over 80 up to 139 over phony pills for two years, then strongly considered when fedATLANTA - . Treating 89. Below that is considered had everyone take dummy eral guidelines are next
people who don't yet have normal and above it; high.
reviewed. · Nabel
said .
pills for two more years. .
High blood pressure greathigh blood pressure but are
During the first two years, Guidelines now advise starting
well on their way to it can ly raises the risk of heart fail- !54 people on fake pills devel- treatment when the "big numdelay the condition but not ure, stroke, heart attacks and oped high blood pressure ver- ber" hits 140, but study participants who had ''high normal"
permanently prevent it unless other medical problems. sus only 53 given the drug.
However, in the next two readings averaging 134 were
POMEROY- A spaghetti dinner will be served at the new ·drugs are taken lifelong, new Doctors had hoped' that two
years of early' treatment could years when those on the drug too far down the road to derail
Museum annex Friday beginning at II a.m: Cost is $5 and research suggests.
includes with the spaghetti a salad and drink. Cake is $1 ·extra . .
It is the first extensi vi: permanent! y halt the progres- went off; !55 develope&lt;:~ high the disease, she said. .
The study also supports the
Take out orders may be placed by calling 992-3810 on study of treating prehyperten- sion from prehypertension to blood pressure, matching
Thursday or before II a.m on Friday.
what happened in the first two growing realization that
sion, a condition 45 million that more dangerous state.
. The study suggests they may · years in the placebo group.
. "high" blood pressure is a connot have started early enough.
This suggests the disease tinuum rather than an arbitrary
how funds raised from the entertainment options at state
"We may need to rethink was just delayed, not truly pre- threshold, said Dr. Tom Giles,
Meigs County Relay for Life parks' and outdoor trails . ·
what we consider a normal vented, said Dr. James Stein, a president of the AmeriCan
will and are directly effecting
Bets~ Nicodemous remind·
blood pressure," said Dr.. University of Wisconsin- Society of Hypertension .
the people of Meigs County. ed visitors. of the upcoming Elizabeth Nabel, director of Madison cardiologist who had
· from Page A1
"You can 't just look at the
This year 's relay will take production of Willy Wonka the National Heart, Lung and no rote in the research.
number~ The disease process
. ball where his team won only place May 12- 13 at the Meigs and the Chocolate Factory Blood Institute.
"Once people stop therapy, is in place before the blood
2 games during his first sea- County Fairgrounds . . Last which will be presented by
Dr. Stevo Julius of the blood pressure goes !IP inex- pressure actually goes up at
. year's relay raised over the Rivet City Kids at 7 p.m. University of Michigan in · orably, so I'm not. sure we can all," he said.
son as coac h . . .
.
$40,oilo.
on March 25 -25, and at 2:30
·Blood pressure also gener- ·
Steve Beha spoke about dif- p.m. on March 26 at Meigs Ann Arbor and doctors at 70 prevent hypertension," he said.
Of , cou~se . Sohc~ dtd not.
ally
rises with age. Julius said
other
sites
around
the
country
Results
were
presented
: stay m htgh schoo football ferent sponsorship opportuni- Elementary School.
'study
participants were relatested
treating
prehypertenTuesday
at
an
American
and .eventually worked h1s ties for the relay, including a
Chamber President Donald sion with candesartan, a drug College of Cardiology meet- tively young, average age 48,
way mto the JOb of head foot~ $250 silver sponsorship that Vaug~an also acknowledged
as
Atacand
by ing and published online by "b.ut I wish they had been
ball coach at The Umverstty will include a corporate Chamber Coordinator Erin sold
Astra,Zeneca
PLC.
The
comthe New England Journal of much younger than that" ·
o~ Nebraska where he took name/logo placed on the Roush who is leaving ]]er
because they appeared to
h~s team to a nallonal cham- relay's ofticial tshirt. For more position to devote time 10 her pany sponsored and helped Medicine.
need treatment sooner.
design
the
study.
Although
the
study
was
paid
pronsh1p
game
against infmmation on sponsorship family's business Riverside
contact Beha at 992-6681.
Miami in 200 l. ,
· Golf Course.
The
Daily
Sentinel's
The coach's visit to the
Other Chamber announcedevelopment
of
Camp ball season junior varsity
luncheon was meant to pro- General Manager Charlene ments:
· Kiashuta where ihe cabin was coach. ·and approved volunmote the Bobcat football Hoeflich sroke about the
16th Annual . Chamber
· !milt in 1936 by the CCC and teers, Tim Ebersbach, Mark
program ~hich .is _competing unveiling o the 2006 Meigs Spring Dinner/Dance, 6 ·• ·tt
talked.about the opportunities Kimes, and Stacey Price, volfrom PageA1
for att~n~ton agamst seven County Visitor's Guide.
p.m., at the Lazy T Royal
it offers fo'r scouts; and unlelif assi stant coaches;
The Daily Sentinel produced Chaparral; tickets and sponother Or vision l college footChristy Lewis · presented hired as substitute teachers
grounds;Dawn Bissell talked
boll programs m the state as the visitor's guide for the office so~ships currently available.
material on the Hope Equine Aniber Baker and Nicole
about
the Sand Hill Cemetery
. well as two professtonal of Meigs County Tourism.
AMP-Ohio "business after
Mount : and G Ioria Van Reeth
Team and its activities.
Drill
football programs. , . , . · Hoeflich expressed her hours" open house, 4:30-6:30 at Long Bouom, Briuany
and Pam White as tutors for
In
the
business
session
the
. Rrusmg t~e Bobcat s V!Sibll- appreciation to the Meigs p.m., April 6, AMP-Ohio Parsons gave a history of the Board too~ action as follows : health handicaped students;
tum of the century Sugar Run
tty may be 2006 non,confer- County Commissioners (who office, West Main Street.
• and entered into an agree• approved fin.ancial reports ;
ence ~ames . aga1~s1 the funded the project) for their
Chamber business minded Mill, its move from Leading
• accepted resignations ment with Craig McGuire of
Umverstty of M1ssoun and the confidence in awarding the luncheon , noon , April l !', Creek to Pomeroy, and its from Jesse Vail as a McGuire and Associates to
. current operation; and 'f'Yler
J,Jniversity of Illinois, though project to The Daily Sentinel. Wild Horse Cafe.
teacher/coach at
Meigs provide grant . writing assisthe game with lllinois has not
"We wanted to make this
"Cruise Into Murder," mur- Brothers showed a brochure Middle School effective May tance to the district.
been confirmed yet. No won! visitor's guide'more inclusive der mystery dinner theater, · he had prepared for his par- . 31 for retirement purposes;
Attending were Buckley,
on if the Bobcat's. will ever where every community is 6:30p.m. , April 29, Riverside ents' business, Ohio Valley
Mary Grueser as a Spianish treasurer Mark ·Rhonemu s..
.play the Comhuskers.
· well .represented," Hoeflich Golf Course, Mason, W.Va., Game Birds, and the acti vi· teacher and Matt Fields as and board members . Scott
ties which take place there .
. With his Cornhusker~s past said . "We felt. that was the . tickets available soon.
varsity golf coach at the end Walton . Victor Yung, Roger
Justin Cotterill presented' a
behind him Solich praised right thing to do.':
Coffee,
Commerce,
of the school year;
Abbott. R.on Logan, and
OU's call) pus, 'academics and
In closing Hoeflich stated Conversations for · March tri-fold of the history of King
• htred Abby Harri s as soft- Norman Humphreys.
administration for supporting that she felt the guide would are sponsored by Meig s Hardware established as a
attract visitors to the area County Extension and 4-H, family busil)es s 54 years ago
the football program.
Visitors from the American with its features on local fes- 8 a.m. every Friday at the ·and still in operation today;
Prepare NOW for
Samuel McCall discussed the
Cancer Society spoke about tiVals. life on the river and chamber office .

.

Drug may delay development of high blood pressure in people prone to it

Local Briefs

Spaghetti dinner set

·NO . . .

Solich

THAT'S
UP ONE

HELL?

FLOOR,MR.
frlll05EVIC.

•

Board

I

Is·there a gourmet in .the house? ·
If you ' ve been in a hospital
ried.
can do it, why can't a hospi- ·
before, you 've probably
If they can't get the little. taJ?
eaten .food that made your,
easy-to-do things right, what
Could it be that the people
high school cafeteria seem
makes us· think they'll get who run hospitals aren't as
like a four-star restaurant. If
the big, complicated things smart as the people who run
a hospital can't do something
right''
grocery stores? If that's not .
Jim
simple, like make dinner,
Anyone
who
has
ever
scary, _what is' An? trust me
Mullen
what makes you think they
been. through an .airport has no grocery store is ever
can do something a bit m'ore
to wonder: If they can 't get going to send you a bill for
complex, . like replace your
so mething
simple Hke $133,000 .. For that kind of
hip? Isn' t that kind of trust a
chcckmg our luggage nght, m·oney, every hospital meat
your what makes us thmk they . should be caviar and steak
little optimistic on your part? under-microwave
Right this minute, you unseasoned. skinless chicken can do somethm g :comphcat; . served by a waiter wc:aring a ·
could ·drive down to the breast and your Jell-0 , and ed hke, tlymg a JU mbo Jet. tuxedo ..Every dessert should
humon gous warehouse store then load it onto a metal cart w~~t II the guy checkmg the be ''SOlhething"-flambe. That
and buy ;1 microwave oven to help cool it down quickly. engmes IS the same guy \Vho
. ht h
Your meal will be wheeled se nt my luggage 10 Dallas m1g c eer peop 1e up more
for around 589. You could
. than any n:tediCI!Ie .the doctor
.buy two; three ~ heck, for to an elevator. where it will instead of Dulles?
If y0ur bank can't figure can prescnbe.
less than a $ 1.000 you could wait until finally, when it has
have a microwave oven in achieved proper room tem- out after t 00 years that lunch
There · was a story the
every room in your house. perature, it will be taken to time is not the time to let other day about a hospllal
Or you could be like a giant your floor, or · somewhere most of their tellers·go lunch. somewhere that was serving
hospital and buy one close to it - li ke the ' main why would we think they ' re . pat1ents gourmet meals on
microwave oven for thou - lobby. There the food cart ' smart enough to handle our chma plates wtth real sliver- .
ware. That sounded ~ondersands of dollars and put it in wi ll be pushed ever so slow- money'
your basement. Then, any ly down miles of hallways
You can go into any one of ful, but 11 proves Its .even
time you wanted to eat a hot until it's tinally given to your · a million fan cy supermarkets worse than I thought . You
meat, all you 'd ha ve to do is. roommate in ·the other bed.
across the country and buy know thmgs are bad when
fill out a form th e ni ght · Just then. one of the bril- prepared meal s - roasted bemg served good food m a
. before, give it to so meone liant ,peop le who came up chickens and chef &gt;al ads and hospital is such a rare event
who will give it w ;omeone with this food delivery sys- sus hi rolts .and pasta primuv- that it 's news.
who will give it to someone tem will walk into the room era - :limost anything your
(Jim Mullen is the author
else who will take it down to tri announce he' ll be doin g heart desi res for five or six o{ ''/r rakes a Village Idiot:
the basement: The ne xt day. open-hean ' urgery nn you. . bucks. They &gt;crvc hundreds Cumplicating the SimfJ/e
a guy who lost his la&gt;t job al Never minu thai you' re in of people every day. And Life" and "Bubv 's Fiw
a fast food re1 taurant due In · for a gal lstone. · He can't people like it, or the y would- · Jimoo." Yr}u can reach him
"office politic1" will over- or undef,wnu why you' re wor- n't huy il. If a grocery store &lt;Ujim ~mullen @ myll-'a.r.co m)

'

ORDER NOW!

appropriate
appointments
with physicians such as ultra
· sounds and Jab work.
Although Boyd ·did not
from PageA1
heed help with transportation
· to thes e . appointments the
Clients · with insurance are prenatal clinic also offers
also eligible for the program. transportation to clients that
· The goals of the clinic · require it.
include c.oordinating appointWithout the prenatal clinic
ments of prenatal car~ for the Boyds and many like
pregnant women, identifying toem would be traveling out
women at high risk duripg of the county to receive their
their pregnancy and referring prenatal care.
. them · to the appropriate
Clients also receive consophysicians. educating women lations with Dr. Wilma
· of childbeari ng age on the Manstield, MD, of Holzer
importance of good health . Clinic who has been with the
. and prenatal care, pqwiding prenatal clinic 's ince 1984.
counseling and education for
Prenatal. Clinic Coordinator.
women who either desire to Connie Little. RN, said that
become pregnant or who are she and her assistant Becki
attempli ng to prevent preg- Ball as well as Mansfield have
nancy, assist eligible clients more time to talk to the clients
.to apply for Medicaid pro- about not only prenatal care
grams and develop a system but any otlier wcial issues the
to remind clients of upcom- · client may be grappling with
ing medical appointments.
in the ir li ves, settin g the clinic
Tami Boyd of Pomeroy is apart from others.
expecting her fourth child
"What makes this clinic an
with her husband Dennis asset to Meig&gt; County is its
Boyd . Jr. and has been accessibly, plus we can spend
through · .the prenatal c!inic more time with clients -..ho
before . · ·
have social isslic&gt; ." Littl e
Boyd said the clini c helped said. "We have time here to
her stop smoking during a help !hem accomplish ;olu·
previou&gt; pregnancy and the· tions to their probl ems."
~linic stall he lped arran ge
Sometimes thlll &gt;nlu tion

Prenatal ·

.

'

may be as · complicated . as
" The Meigs County Health
assisting 'in finding food, Department 's
Prenatal
hou sing or clothing for a Clinic's philosophy is that all
client or as simple as provid- t hildren , regardless of race, ·
ing a pregnancy test.
ethnic group or socioecoClients who receive preg· nomic status, should be born
nancy lesting with positive healthy," Little said.
results are counseled and eduBabies that do not receiYe
cated about the importance of prenatal care can have chronearly.prenatal care. Those who · ic health problems as well as
find they are not pregnant are perform poorly. in school.
.
either.utTered family planning
If you wish· to give your .
services or counseled about child a good start in life. call .
taking good care of their bod- Little at 992-6626. ext. 57 to
ies if they are attempting to find out if the prenatal clinic
become pregnant.
is right for you.

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The Daily Sentinel

&gt; .

PageA6

ACROSS THE NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Dam in Hawaii bursts, killing one person and washing out key roa&lt;J..
BY JAYMES SONG

·ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

KILAUEA. Hawaii - An
earthen dam burst on the
Hawaiian island of Kauai on
Tuesday, sweeping away at
least two houses and washing
out the only road along the
island's north shore. One
person was killed and as
many as seven others were
reported missing.
The Kaloko Reservoir dam
gave way without warning
after days of heavy rain, cutting off access to thousands
of rural houses and luxury
condominiums.
Search crews recovered an
unidentified body. · Coast
Guard spokesman Michael
De Nyse sa id . Though a
search plane and a helicopter
had returned to base late
Tuesday, the Coast Guard
was still searching for victims in the lloodwaters.
The Kaloko dam. about 40
feet high and 800 feet · long,
captured runoff from small
streams. Authorities estimat·
ed •that about I,400 acre-feet
of water poured out of the
reservoir. which is enough
water to cover 1.400 acres a
l'opt deep, .or more than 60
million cubic feet.
Debris from the wall of
water could be seen clinging
to electrical wires. The surge
uprooted 200- foot trees. taking out garages, sheds and
massive dirt embankments.
"Sounded like a 747 jet
crashing here in the valley. all
the trees popping and snapping and everything," Kilauea
res.ident Joh n Hawthorne
said. "It was just a horrendous
sound, and it never quit."
· State officials were assess-

BY STEVEN R. HURST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

'. BAGHDAD, Iraq - · Iraqi
authorities discovered at least
87 corpses - men shot to
death execution-style - as
Iraq edged closer. to open civil
warfare . TWenty-nine of the
bodies, dressed only in underwear, were dug out of a single
grave Tuesday in a Shiite
neighborhood of Baghdad.
'. Some of the bloodshed
.appeared to be retaliation for.
a· bomb and mortar attack in
the Sadr City slum that killed
at least 58 people and wounded more than 200 two days
earlier.
. Iraq 's · Interior Minister
Bayal) Jabr, meanwhile, told
· The Associated Press security
officials had foiled a plot that
would have put hundreds of
al-Qaida men at critical guard
posts ·around Baghdad's
heavily fortified Green Zone,
home to the U.S . and other
foreign embassies, as well as
the Iraqi government.
A senior Defense Ministry
official said the 421 ai-Qaida
fighters were recruited to
storm the U.S. and British
embassies and take hostages.
'AP Photo
Several ranking Defense ·
Ministry officials have been Relatives mourn at the funeral of Mahdi army militiamen, in the Shiite d.istrict of Sadr city, in Baghdad, Iraq. Tuesday. The Mahdi
jailed in the plot, said the offi- &lt;~rmy militiamen were killed in clashes which erupted Monday evening between the Mahdi army and a group of gunmen who
cial, speaking on condition of were trying to hit t~e City with mortar rounds.
anonymity because of the
early
Monday, Sunni Muslims and their cler- in the capital, presumably Interior Ministry ofticial Lt.
sensitivity of the information. bodies
Defense Secretary Donald although the discoveries were ics. Dozens of mosques were because residents wou ld not Col. Falah ai-Mohammedawi
be able to get to work. said. He estimated the vicH. Rumsfeld said Tuesday that not immediately reported. damaged or destroyed.
on moVement tims were killed about . three
Restrictions
The
gruesome
finds
continunease
in
Underlining
the
he had not received anything
definitive on the report, but. ued throughout th e . day the capital, Interior Mini stry also had been put in place on days ago -· before the Sadr
ca.utioned that earlier accounts Tuesday. police said, marking officials announced another the two weekends after the City attack Sunday evening.
Residents watched. some
the second wave of seciarian driving ban, from 8 p.m. Samarra bombing in an
are often adjusted later on.
"We've always known that retribution killings since Wedn.esd:iy to · 4 p.m. attempt to quell the violence. 'covering their eyes in horror.
. The most gruesome find others offeri ng scarves and
there are people who have bombers destroyed an impor- Thursday to protect against
tant
Shiite
shrine
last
month.
·
Tuesday
- the 29 bodies new spapers to cover the bod·
car
and
suicide
bombs
whi
le
tried to infiltrate the various
ies as they were pulled from
In the mayhem after the the Iraqi parliament meets for dressed only in underwear security forces and · tried to
get close access to places that . golden (lome atop the the first session si nce the · was made after police. acting the grave.
on a tip, di scovered an I R-byAn abandoned minihus conthey ought not to be," he said. Askariya shrine in Samarra Dec. 15 election.
After the dri.ving ban was 24-foot grave i·n an empty . taining 15 other bodies was
"There's nothing new about was de stroyed on ·Feb. 22,
more than 500 people have announced, the Cabinet said field in Kamal iyah. a mostl y found earlier on the main road
that that I know of."
Police began unearthing . beeln killed, many of them Thursday would be a holiday Shiite east Baghdad suburb, between two mostly Sunni

Police: Student opens fire with.handgun, injures two classmates Tax returns·sent through IRS free·
file program down 20 percent "

BY SCOTT SONNER

RENO, Nev. - ~n eighthgrader opened fire with a
pistol Tuesday outside hi s
middle school cafeteria,
injuring two classmates.
authorities· said.
A teacher at Pine Middle
· School coaxed the .boy to
drop the gun, then "bear
hugged" him until more statf
arrived, said Reno police Lt.
Ron Donnelly.
"It was a heroic job done,''
he said. "She de-escalated a
very dangerous situation."
James S. Newman, 14, was
charged as an ad'ult with
attempted murder and was
jailed on $ 150,000 bail ,
Donnelly said. He also was
· charged with use of a deadly
weapon and use of a firearm
by a minor.
'The victims' injunes were
not life-threatening, he said.
A boy was treated for a gunshot wound 10 arm, and a
AP Photo
girl was treated for a super: Pine Middle School assistant principal Prim Walters , right, tries to calm students waiting for
ficial leg ·wou nd from their buses Tue'sday morning in Reno, Nev., following a shooting' at the school that inj ufed two
.
shrapnel.
,students. The alleged shooter, James Scott Newman , was arrested and pol ice said they recov' Donnell y· said the victims ered the weapon. a .38-caliber pistol.
·
had no relationship with the ,
.
suspected gunman, nor had heard three gunshots, she us stay' in the classroom
and
A&gt;sociated Pres.&gt; Writer
they had any. disputes or came out into the hallway bolt the door and put papers Sandra Chereb comributed
arguments with him .
from a nearby room and conto this report.
"It appears he decided to fronted the boy, Donnelly up against the window s."
engage in school violence," said .
the officer said. "He brought
"S he basically challenged
a gun to scho0l today and
.
him
, verball y challenged
..
•'
..
randomly targeted these two
him. ' Drop the gu n, put the
students."
'
gun
down,'" Donnelly told
In vestigators were withKKOH
radio in Reno. "She
holding the names of the victims and the teacher. who empathized with him, tried to
school officials said did not be understanding and de'
.
·escalated the situation."
want to be identified.
As a precaution, authorities
Police recovered the .38put
the school on lockdown
caliber pi stol. and were trying
for
·about
an hour, then canto determine where the boy
celed Classes.
got it.
"Some people were cryMore than a dozen students
' Your guide to weekend
ing.''
Jan1ie Coombs , who
and others witnessed the
shootings just before 9 a.m., was in math class at the time,
.tertalnment In the Tri-State
police said. Whe'n the teacher told KOLO-TV. "They made

increases the chance fhat
they'll do so.'' he said.
Bert DuMars, IRS director
WASHINGTON
An , of electronic tax administra· lnteq1al Revenue Service pro- rion. said new program rule~
gram that provides free tax ' n\ay be dri ving down usage
. preparation software to encour- of the free fi ling program, but
. age electronic filing is attract· they're not the only factor.
ing fewer taxpayers this yem·.
Budget cuts mean the IRS
Tax returns 'sent through the has no money to publicize the
free · fil ing program have progrmn thi s year, DuMUI'\
dropped 20 percent compared said. People who used to file bj', .
with this time last year. accord- telephone. an option no Ionge~
ing to statistics the IRS provid· available. may be taking som~.
ed to Sen. Max Baucus of time to examine their options.: .
Montana. the top 'Democrat on
The current agreement
the Senate Finam;c Committee. hetween the IRS and tax soflc'
The free filing program lets \•:are co mpanies makes the
some taxpayers access free services available to 93 mil-'
tax preparation software lion people, 70 percent ~f.
through the IRS Web site. taxpayers.
•
"
Baucus said he's concerned
"We JUst need more p~opts
that more restrictive eligibi li- to take advantage of 1t,
ty criteria may be forcing DuM ars said.
·· ·
some taxpayers to buy soft- · Under the old free filing
ware, visit paid preparers or agreement, companie s had tti'
even go back to pencil-and- otfer free tax preparation sere·
paper preparation.
v i ~es to at least 60 percent of.
"Making it · easier and taxpayers. Last year. some;
cheaper, for taxpayers .to ti le companies offered free fi lin~
their returns accu rate ly serv1ces to everyone.
AP TAX WRITER

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel.,....
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west Baghdad neighhorhoods
- not far from where another
minibus containing 18 bodies
was discovered last week, alMohammedawi said.
At least 40 more bodies
were recovered elsewhere in
Baghdad: in both Sunni and
Shiite neighborhood, , aiMohammedawl ;aid. Police·
found three oth·e r corpses
dumped in the northern city·
of Mosul.
Also Tuesday. the U.S. mil- ·
itary reponed the deaths of
two more soldiers in fighting
in An bar• province. The sol-'
diers, a;sig.ned to the 2nd·
Brigade Combat Team of the
28th Infantry Division.
Pennsylvania Army National'
Guard. were ki lied Monday:
brl.nging the number of U.S.
mi·litary members killed to at'
least 2.3 10 'ince the fray war
started in March 2003 ,
according to an Associated·
Press count.
Rumsfeld .. hinted that U.S .'
troop levels may increase·
slightly in Iraq in the coming
days because of pi lgrimages
, connected to the holiday of
Ashura. The holiday. whi~h
end s March 20. includes pil-.
grimages to holy sites in
Najaf and Karbala. Increased
attacks marked the celebration during ·2004 and 2005.
Rumsfeld said Gen. George
Casey. the top U.S. mi litary
officer in lray. "may decide
he wants to bulk up slightly
for the pilgrimage ... He did
not elaborate.
Scores of frightened Shiite
families haye tled predominant ly Sunni parts of
Baghdad in recent weeks,
some at gunpoint. More than
100 families arrived between
Monday and Tuesday alone
in Wa ~i t pro.vince. in the
southern -Sh1ite heartland,
said Haitham Ajaimi Manie,
an official with the provisional migrat ion directorate.

BY MARY DALRYMPLE

.

rrf11_

Wednesday, March 15,2006

"

the night away from home
returned and was searching for
four family members.
There was no warning abour
the d&amp;m 's strength or the
amount of water in the reserf
voir behind it. Morita said. ~
"I think everybody wa!&gt; .
taken by surprise," she· said."
Rod Haraga, state trans-portation director, said too
, force of the water washed OUI
I00 yards of highway, strand, ,
ing many motorists .
'"
The small airport at
Princeville remained opeq:;
but tourists.with tlights from·
the main airport .in Lihu~
would he unable to ~et thero:
umil the road is repmred. ,.,
Tom Pickett, owner of a.
bakery and pizzeria in the
community of Kilauea, · sai~
many of his employees could"
''
not get to work from the
other side of the massive
break in the highway.
,,.
,.'· ··,
· "Appaie.nily a pretty bi®,
piece of highway is gon(l&gt;;
Everythin g washed out of.
that valley." Pictures taken by.
re sidents showed a lot of
trees, din and mud , he said.
Two sc hools were bei~
used as emergency shelters. ''
Roy Matsuda. lead forecaster at the Honolulu office.
of the Na(ional Weath!lf
Service, said a storm dumped
5 to·6 inches of rain on Kauii.i; ·
,
AP Photo
in the last 24 hours.
,,
In this photo maoe available Tuesday by the Kauai county government, Morita Reservoir is seen. An earthen dam burst on Kauai
''Kauai ))as been fully satllr,
on Tuesd13y, sending a 50-foot wave into the Pacific Ocean. sweeping away at least two houses and wash ing out the only road rated," he said. He said the
along the island's north shore. One person was killed and asmany as seven others were reported missing . Authorities tried to storm had le ft Kauai but was
headin,g east toward too
drain the Morita reservoir to relieve the pressure on that dam.
is land of Oahu.
·•
ing the safety of other dams director of civil defense. said Kauai," Teixeira said.
muddy all around the pop~lar
The weather service issued
in the Kauai hills, which are in Honolulu that officials
Parts of golf courses and resort island.
. a tlood warning for the entire
' clotted with private earthen were worried about erosion ·shopping center parking lots
State Rep. Hermina Morita. · state, cautioning residents of
dams such as the one that cimsed l;&gt;y tloodwaters:
were tlooded, and major whose di strict includes the the. threat of llooding. .
.
broke· open.
.
"I would characterize thi s runoff into the normally blue area where the dam failed, said
Kauai is the wesl ernm os~
· Ed Teixeira, state vice as a growing crisis on ocean turned the waves a constituent who . had spent of Hawai i's main islands. ,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA7.

AROUND THE WORLD
:Jn renewal of revenge killings, police find at least 87 more bodies ·

Wednesday, March 15, 2006'

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Milosevic had access to smuggled
medication and alcohol, officials say
. BY ANTHONY DEUTSCH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

THE HAGUE, Netherlands
- Slobodan Milosevic had
r~gular access to drugs and
· ~Jcohol smuggled into his
prison cell, yet the U.N., war
crimes tribunal failed to tak~:
~ction despite wamings, tribunal officials said Tuesday.
TWo ·officials told The
Associated Press the unit's
prison warden had cautio11ed
the tribunal president and
~egistrar that as a result, .
Milosevic 's health could not
be guaranteed.
Nevertheless, they said, no
action was -taken to tighten
supervision. The officials
spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the tri l;&gt;una!'s strict confidentiality
rules:
The officials, who had
access to confidential reports
on Milosevic's incarceration,
.were· countering allegations
by Milosevic's loyalists that
the former Serb president
was poisoned or unwittingly
given harmful drugs. They
said two doctors had concluded that Milosevic intentionally took drugs that
undermined the medicine
prescribed for hi s he an ailments, in order to slow the
pace of his war crimes trial.
Hours earlier, Milosevic's
son alleged hi s father was
murdered in cusiody. "He got
killed . There's a murder."
Marko Milosevic told · AP
· Television News.
.
The Milosevic family. and
Serb authorities agreed the
former president would be
buried in B.elgrade, according
to ·announcements in The
Hague and in the Serb capital. Debate had centered over
whether he should instead be
buried in Moscow, where hi s ·
son and widow, · Mirjana
·Markovic, live. ·
It was not clear how. the
services would affect· the
arrest warrant for Markovic. ·
Considered the power behind ·
the scenes during Milosevic's
autocratic ·rule in the 1990s,
she faces charges of abuse of
power.
.
,
'A Belgrade court sa1d the
warrant for Markovic would
be suspended, but that she
would be required to surrender her passport when she
came 10 Serbia for the funeral.
Milorad Vucelic, vice pres·
ident of the Socialist Pany of
Serbia. said "the decision has
been reached · to organize a

dignified funeral for our late ·
president" in the Serb capital.
Vuceljc, who was charged by
the fami ly with organizing
the funeral, said it would be
held Thursday or Friday.
Milosevic, · who presided
over four Balkan wars and
the breakup of Yugoslavia
that cost some 250,000 lives.
died of a heart attack in bed
in his jail cell, according to
preliminary autopsy findin gs.
Hi s body was found
Saturday.
· Russian medical experts
came to the Netherlands on
Tuesday to examine the
autopsy results, say.ing they
distrusted the findings and
the care Milosevic received .
Leo Bokeria, who headed
the delegation , later told
Russian ·state-run tele vision
the team was sati sfi ed with
the autopsy.
.
"The examination was conducted at a very high level, it
was very detailed, they have
12 hgurs of video footage and
a huge number of slides, pho·
tos, graphs and so on," he
said.

Israeli forces raid jail, sparking unprecedented ·
Palestinian violence against foreigners
were sti ll in captivity - two
French . citizens and a South
Korean journali st.
JERICHO. West Bank It was the most widespread
Israeli troops using tan ks, yiolence since Hamas mil iheli copters and bulldozers tants swept Palestinian parliapounded a Palestinian-run mentary elections Jan: 25 prison in the West Bank on ' and could foreshadow broad~
Tuesday to se ize a Palestinian er confrontations between
militant leader and hi s Israel and the Palestinians.
accomplices in the assassinaAngry Palestinians blah1ed
tion of an Israeli Cabin et the British and Americans for
minister.
the raid: British monitors left
The dramatic 10- hour the jail 20 minutes before the
standoff ign ited an unprece- Israelis arri ved Tuesday
dented spasm of violence , morning. citing concerns for
against foreigners across the their · own safety, Three
Palestinian areas. Aid work- Palestinians were- killed in
.ers, tea.c hers and journalists the assault.
tuok refuge at Palestinian
Israel denied coordinating
,security .headquaners in Gaza the. attack with the U.S. or
as militants attacked offices Britain. It said recent statelinked to the U.S. and ments by Palestiriia11 ofllcials
Europe, burning cars and and Hamas leaders of plans
torching the British ·counci l to release its most-wanted
building in Gaza City.
prisoners, co mbined with the
Gunmen kidnapped at least withdrawa l of the monitors.
10 foreigners, including ari forced it to act.
,
American professor who was
The assault on the jail came
held at an abandoned ceme- amid a breakdown in a 4tery; after nightfall , three year-old deal among the
BY SARAH EL DEEB

ASSQCIATED PRESS WRITER

Before Your
C8 HEALTH
PROJEO
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C8
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Pll~~fc'JH,

URE!

Pick one up today at a senior
· center, library, or PAR MAR Store
in the i;lffected water districcts only.

1-800-551-7658
1·304-865-4205 .

..•

OSU Extension. Meigs Co. Heart Heal th
Coa lition and the Meigs Co. Health Department'
wi ll be offering .
&gt; "Dining with Diabetes"
Registration Dead Iine. is 3/ 16.
Classes will be held on Thursday evenings
starting 3/23/06 and will end on 4/13/06.
Each class will begin at 6:30p.m. New diabetics,
long time diabetics and the family meti1bers of
diabetics are encouraged to anend. The classes
are FREE, but· are lim ited to 25 people.
Contact Andrew Brumfield at 992-6626 ext. 33
to register or for more information .

•••

HE.L PFUL

HINTS: ,

1.
2.

3.

6.

.....,~...........;

•••

Be·fore you go...

Read the brochure.
·A water bill with your name
and physical address is ONE
of the best ways to document ·
water consumption.
A minor child needs three
official pieces of 1.0.

license or divorce decree.

Conduct~ by BROOKMAR,INC.
..
.
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you're a m~rriedlqivorced
bring your marriage

CS HEALTH
l,ll()J I:CT
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Palestinians. " Israe l, the cial s · sa.id they had com-.
United States and Britain piained repeatedly to the
over the guarding of the pris- . Palestinians about sec urity'
oners , and it underscored the ·conditions at the prison and
collapse of relations between threatened in a letter last
Israe l and the Palestinians week -a copy of which was
.since Hamas' victory at the sent to Israel - to remove
.their monitoring teams if
Polls.
British ·and American ofli- things did not impro\'e.

Read the brochure in total.

For more 1nformat1on . please vis1t

www.c8healthproject .org

'

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The Daily Sentinel

•

LOCAL •· STATE

Southeast
Regional
interactive media group to
NEWS@MYDAILVSENTINEL .COM
SkillsUSA participants from
~ompctc in Missouri.
Other Meigs students com- Belmont. Career Center,
POMEROY
Three peting at New Philade lphia Buckeye Career Center,
Meigs studems part i cipatin~ in.:ludet.l Bill Hess in elec- Coshocton County Career
in the Southea&gt;t Rc~ional tronic tcchi10logy: Taylor Center, Jefferson County
SkillsUSA
comp~tition Boyd in welding; and Nikki JVSD, Knox County JVSD,
returned home from l he Parwns. Vinda Ratcliff, CTEC Licking County,
Buckeye Career Center in Charissa S\anley, Valerie Meigs High School, Mid East
New Philadelphia where they Diddle. Jessann Steinmetz, Zanesville, Morgan High
Submitted pilot.,.
Swiss
Hills .
competed on Mard1 II as Ashley· Ashworth , and . School,
Anessa WQife in he various Vocational School, Tri- Tim Matthews of Racine,
gold medal winners.
Career
Center, Meigs IT-Network s·ystems
· The teani of Rebecca health contests. Ri chard County
Rader, daughter of Rev . Feny. Linda Yonk'er. Jackie Washington County Career computer maintenance proKeith and Debra Rader of Newsome, and M. Suzanne Center. and Mid East Buffalo gram, won a bro~le medal 'in
Syracuse·.·
Kandis Bentz. teachers, traveled with competed in twenty-six dif- the Southeast Regional Skills
USA held at New Philadelphia.
ferent contests.
Humphrey. daughter of Joe the group.
and Jamie Humphrey of
pomeroy.
and
Sahri t\a
·Oldaker, daughten1f David
Leach of Pomeroy. took the
gold medals for their show- .
case
presentation
on
Weavin g
Stitches.
a
Pomeroy business .. All three
are enrolled in the Meigs ITInteractive Media program
with instruc tor M. Suzanne
Bent z. The team's win qualifies the three to compete at
the · National SkillsUSA
competition to be held ln
Kansas Citv, Mo ..in June.
. Winning ·a bronze medai in
the competition in coniputer
v. as
Tim
maintenan ce
Matthews. son of Tom and
Joy Matthew s of Racine.
who is enrolled in the Meigs
IT-Network Systems pro~
gram with instructor Scon
Brinker. Tim will compete at
the State SkillsUSA competition April 28 · and 29 in This team of Sabrina Oldaker, Becky Rader and Kan,dis Humphreys , students in the Meigs ITColu mbus. If he wins a gold Interactive Med ical program at Meigs High School, left to right, won a gold medal in the
medal there. he will join the Southeast Regional SkillsUSA competition at New Philadelphia.
·
STAFF REPORT

'

Wednesday, March 15,

NORWALK (AP) - A the written final pleadings
judge is expected to decide and expected to have a ruling
within a week who should by early next· week.
·
have custody of I I adopted
The Gravelles, who live a
special-needs children" some. few miles south of Norwalk
·of whom were made to sleep in northeast Ohw, have
'in wood-and-wire enclosures pleaded not guilty to several
that investigators described charges, including ~hild
as cages.
endangerment, m a ~eparate
Huron County is seeking · criminal case involvmg the
permanent custody. Adoptive children.
parents Michael and Sharen
The adopted children, who
Gravelle are trying to win are ages l to 15, h~ve been
court approval to get the chil- described as suffenng from
dren back.
various behavioral and psyJuvenile Court administra- chological problems and
tor Christopher Mushett said have been in foster care since
Thesday that Judge Timothy · the enclosed beds were disCardwell had just received covered last fall.

Today's Forecast

vice president of student
atl'airs. said in the notice.
The school's trustees voted
to require students who do
not have health insurance to
purchase insurance 'through
the ·school or another insurer
start ing thi s fa ll.
·
The, optional plan the university, has offered in previ ous vears has covered abor. tions. said Teri Sharp, a
Bowling· Green spokeswoma n..
More schools have started
mandating the coverage to
save the unin sured from
huge hi li s and coll ege hospitals .from getti 'ng stuck with
the cost. College adm,ini strator; are findin g that some
students are forced to drop
out when faced with big

medical expenses.
Most public universities,
though, still leave the decision about insurance up to
students.
University of Toledo students hav~ been required to
have health in surance. for
several years. That plan
includes abortion coverage.
· . A gro up at Bowling Green
collected more than 400 signatures on petitions saying
that students should not be
required·to pay for abortions .'
" I think we still have a ways
to go. but this is a positive step
in the right direction," said
Kelly Schulz, a grad uate student who is involved with a
Catholic student organization
called Creed.
She said her organization

would continue to work to
persuade people that abortion
is not a good choice and that
there are alternatives to oral
contraceptives.
Sharort Cook, chairwoman
of the university's board of
trustees, said there were
strong feelings from students
on both sides of the issue .
She said allowing abortion
coverage for an extra fee was
a good compromise.
Patrick Watkins, a senior at
Bowling Green, said ·he sup.ported the plan announced
Monday.
"Making an elitra fee is a
better compromise," he said.
"Legally. people in this country have a choice, but you
.can't force everyone to help
pay for it."

Miner injured · State agency suspends admissions to Fairfield Center
FAIRF IELD (A P) - The correcting its problems·. . .
followed
by falling rock state
has · bl ocke d new
" If they can' t correct these strangling death of Joseph
i n ves ti ~tio n s

GLOUSTER (AP ) - A
rock fell fro~l the cei ling of a
sou thea st Ohio mine anc\
injured a miner 'who was
struck in the head and ; hou lder Tuesday morning. a state
mining safet y official said.
Jeff Hi.l l was injured abou t
5 ·a.m. at a Buckingham
Coal mine near Glou ster.
said Jerry Stewart. a · mine
safety n1anager with the
Division
of · Mineral
Resources Mana2.emen1..
Hill was taken 'w Doctor\
Hospital in Nelsonville and
then. transferred 10 Gran t
111
Medt cal . wCenter
Columbus
h~rc he, was
treated and then released.
Stewart said .
The mine · ce iling ·wa&gt;
properly secured. Stewart
·sa id . It is the kind of injury
that .occurs from time to
time, he said.
A .'woma n who an swered
the phone at the mine ' aid
no one was available to
comment.

I

admi ss ions at a home for the
mentally retarded where a
n1an 1vas killed last month ,
and a second sta~e report has
found the center fai led to
protect him.
The Depanme.nt of Mental
and
Retardation
Developmenta l Di,abil ities
'aiel in a report Tuesday that
the Fairfield . Center 's shortcomings "con, litule a pattern
of serious noncompliance or
create a substantial risk to the
health and safety. of residents
of your facility."
The a~encv. which licenses
centers that care for the mentally· retarded. gave .the center
14 days to subm it a plan for

issues, the license could be
in .jeopard y," department
spokesman Robert Jennings
said.
The center can' t admit new
clients until MRDD authorities are ·satisfied with its plan
for compliance, he said. The
department earlier ordered the
center 'to increase supervision
of residents and said siate
inspectors will step up ·unannounced visits.
A message was left at tile
center Tuesday.
The MRDD report, citing
five deficiencies at the center. followed' one released
Monday· by the Ohio
Department' of Health. The

t~e

Beaudoin on Feb. 21.
Edward Shuman, 20, who
had been admitted to the center five days earlier, is
charged with murder.
The MRDD report said the
center failed to ensure
Beaudoin's safety, did not
properly evaluate Shuman
before admitting him, didn't
provide necessary training to
care for Shuman, didn't maintain records of staff training
and didn't follow a safety
plan requiring regular checks
on Beaudoin.
The Department of Health
said its investigation found
insuffi cient monitoring and
safeguards.

c1\}i!Reglon
High 1 Low temps

A11-Tri-Valley Conference hoops lists. B8

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

WR's Owens and Keyshawn cut;
Culpepper and Brees find new .homes .

Mansfield •
4t 'l23' .

39' 126'

~ .·
~

v~

*Columbus
46'125'

~ Cloudy ~
.
Thunder- ~ Flumes ~
k:e
L._2&gt;
~
storms
~~
Partlv ~ ;~,-;. ~ · •
. • \'
• . .... ~
, ~
~
doup~

·

Showers

1

.

; 1

'

Rain

•

• ·

Snow . · ~ • •••

Weather Underground · AP

Wednesday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 40s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph with gusts
up to 30 mph.
.
Wednesday night ••. Mostly
clear. Cold with lows in the
mid 20s: Northwest winds · 5
to 10 mph with gusts up to 25
mph .
· Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
rain. Highs in the upper. 40s.
North winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night ... Rain
showers likely. Lows in the
·lower 30s. West winds 5 to
I0 mph. Chance o f rain 70

percent. ·
· Friday... Mostly doudy.
· Cooler with highs · in the
upper 30s.
·
Friday .. night ... Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in the
mid 20s.
·
Saturday
through
Sunday.. :Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 40s. Lows in the
niid 20s.
Sunday
night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 30s.
Monday
through
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 40s. Lows
in the lower 30s.

Local Stocks .
ACI- 72.96
AEP -35.49
Akzo- 52.88
.Ashland Inc. - 67.25
Bll-13.09
Bob Evans - 29.50
Borgwarner - 56.32
CENX - 36.01 .
Champion - 5.87
Charming Shops - 13.24
City Holding - 36.88 ·
Col- 53.10
·
DG -17.45 .
DuPont - 41.92
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 30.86 .·
Gannett - 61.52
General Electric- 33.78
GK.NLY _;_ 5.68
·Harley Davidson - .49.97
JPM -41.38 . .
Kroger - 20.72

Ltd.- 23.97
NSC- 51.49
Oak Hill Financial 31.04
OVB- 25.20
BBT -40.38
Peoples - 28.83
Pepsico - 60.43 .
Premier - ·1 4. 75
Rockwell- 71.66
Rocky Boots - 25.20
Sears -117.27
Wal-Mart - 45.54
Wendy's - 63.42
Worthington - 19.55
Dally stock reports are .
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors
of Hilliard lyons In
Gallipolis.

EyeQire

•, cataract Surgery
·• · Diabetic Eye lRlre

!

"·

• CtlUdren's,E&gt;cams .
...

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS -A schedul(t of upcoming college
and high school varsity sporting events Involving

teams from Gallia. Meigs and Mason counties

Today's gam8s

Thursday 's games
College Baseball
Rio Grande vs. S1. Francts College, (in

Ormond Beach, Fla.) 3 p.m.
College Softball

Rio Grande vs. Dorclt (in Tucson , Ariz.).
10 a.m.

Ophthal~.

Frame t.t .............
phoiO Of pmt t1 on 1

tT\Ig Of mouN pad,

Lisa H. Reaves, MD

.

CLINIC

740.446.54.21
..

Medical Excellence.

Local Caring:

Wide rece·iver Terrell Owens acknowledges the media as he
arrives for his arbitration hearing Friday, Nov. 18. 2005 in
Philadelphia. The Ph.iladelphia Eagles released the exiled
Owens on Tuesday ending a tumultuous, two-year re lationship
with the wide receiver. ·
'

College Baseball
Rio Grande vs. Missouri Baptist. (in
Ormond Beach, Fla.) 10 a.m

Middleport Youth
League sign-ups
set for March

NEL

BY BRYAN WALTERS

ATHE('JS · . Meigs
County had I0 h1gh school
basketball players, both
· !Joys and girls, named to
. . - - - - ;· the 2005-06
Al l -T ri V a I I e y

POMEROY ·
Meigs
Baseball will be h o ldi ng~ a
youth camp for haseball players frop1 grades J-8 on
Saturday. March 18. head
junior varsi tv baseball coach
Nick De.llwiller announced
today.
·
· "We will be working on the
· basic ski lls and tenninology
used by the TVC champion
Meigs Marauders. There wi II ·
be t-shirts for the tirst 50
campers." said Detlwiller.
Detlwiller . asked
!.hat
campers bring clothes a11d .
equipment to panicipate Olll~ide and inside. along with a
sack .Junch . Questions &lt;'1bout
the event are to made \\ith
Denwiller, 740-416-0344. I

l

\

. POMEROY - Meigs base- \
ball will be holding its an nual
. alumni ~ame at 1 p.m. on 1
Sunday. l\1arch I'1.
1
"We will take batting prac- \
tice hefore the game w1th a
home run derby nght after. We '
will then divide the teams \
evenl y and play a double header. There wlil he !-shirts for all
participants, This is a great
chance to come om and support the TVC champion Meigs
Marauders and meet up with
old frie nds and teammates so
·try arid get the word out,'' said
Nkk Dettwiller. head junior
varsi ty baschall .:oach. ·
"This is also.Lhe,weekend of
our ym1th baseball camp (m
Saturday ·the 18(h, and wi th
your donations and panicipation we hope to make this a
succ;essful weekend for the·
youth. alumni . and current
Marauders as they prepare to
win back ~to ~ hack TVC championships." he a(lded.
For answers to questions or
lo give s u gges~ion s contact
Oettwiller at 740-416-0344.

1·740- 446-2342 ext 33

1-740-446 -3006

E·mall -:

~ports@myda•iysent•ne! . co m

SIXlr\$ Stall
Brad Sherman. Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342 . 8111 33
~sherma n @

myda1 lytn bune.com.

Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer
(740 ) 446-2342 , 81':1. 23
· bwalters@myda•lytr•bune com

.

Larry Crum, Sporte Writer
(7401 446·2342. e•t 33
Ierum @myda;lyreg; stor com

.

BWALfERS@MYDAILYTRIBUN E.COM

Meigs youth
baseball camp

Meigs Baseball
. Alumni Game

...

Meigs County has 10 makeAU-TVC teams

MIDDLEPORT
Middlefort Youth League
basebal and softball sign - up~
for girls (ages 5- 18) and boys
(ages 5- 17) will be held I0
u.m. until 2 p.m. March 18 at
the Midd leport . Council
Chambers.
·
Copies of birth cenificates
are required for new players.
. For more infonm1tion. cal l
Dave Boyd at 992-3668.
Tanya Coleman at 992-5481
or Tim Ebersbach at 9927747 . .

,F II -

HOLZER

AP

p.m.

PhOne -

Dr. Reaves is anfied ·t1/ the American Board of

ASSOCIATED PRESS

io(

CONTACfS

~

................. . .

Orleans ,
agreed to a
*
.,
six-year
Two star quarterbacks • • 'It
deal with
round new home s on.
the Saints
Tuesday and two talented but
·s h or 1 1 y
.
troublesome receivers went
after the
on the open market.
V i k i n gs
Daunte Culpepper landed
t raded
Notebook
Culpeppet
in Miami and Drew Brees in
New Orleans, a few hours
.
to
the
before Terrell Owens was · Dolphins for a second-round
released. by Philadelphia and pick. However, Brees' agent.
Keyshawn Johnson was cut Tom Condon, said his client
by Dallas. For the Eagles; had been leaning toward the
parting ways . with Owens Saints in the last two days.
was inevitable. But the
Not only did that take the
Cowboys' move was unex- two exper:ienced QBs off the
peeled and ·is sure .to fuel · market, but it raised another
speculation that Owens question : does New Orleans
could be headed to the dangle the second pick In the
Cowboys, where he could draft for teams seeking
never have coexisted with Southern California quarterJohnson, sometimes dubbed back Man Leinart? Aaron
"Me-shawn."
Brooks, the Saints' starting
The quarterbacks played quarterb&lt;1ck for the p'ast five
off each ot her.
years, is likely to be relea5ed,
Brees, who had been con- addi ng another quarterback
sidering Miami and New who still has some value to
BY DAVE GOLDBERG

•

Friday 's garries
SOftball
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant, 5

Eye

4 .,

MLB spring training Ohio roundup. B4

Rio Grande liS. Finlandia (in Tucson,
Ariz.}. .noon

Youngstown •

Bl

Hannan hires new football coach, B4

College Baseball '
Rio Grande at Embry~ i ddle 5 p.m.
College Softball
Rio Grande vs Minot State (in Tucson.
Ariz .}, 10 a.m.

Local Weather

University's insurance will cover abortions for an extra fee
BOWLING GREEN (AP)
Bowlin g Green State
University students opposed
io a . health . in surance plan
covering abortions )Ne(e
pleased that the school · has
decided to offer coverage for
aportions only to studen ts
who pay an extra S60 a year.
Students received notice on
Monday ihat studen t health
insurance wi ll allow for .the
opt ional coverage for abortion. The ba&gt;ic plan will cost
$1,234 a year.
··
The student health imurance will cover birth' control.
·:we believe the university 's ~tudent health insurance
program will give individuals
the ability to niake health
choices based on their personal needs." Ed Whipple ..

2006

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Judge getting closer to custody
decision in caged kids case

MEIGS STUDENTS WIN GOLD IN
REGIONAL SKiLLSUSA COMPEiti'ION

.

PageA8

Conference
teams.
T,he number five tells
the . story.
Five boys
and
fiv·e
' - - - - . . J girl s. Five
fir st-team·Hupp '
ers and an
equal' number on· the
second.
And one
Co-Most
Valuable
Player.
Nathan
Cozart's
resume continues
to
Eddy ·
grow after
,....,.....,..._ _..., j o i n i n g

Trimble'.s
M a I l
Christman
as the top
performer
within
Hockin g
c o m p·e t i Lion .
Cozart,
Weber
the Player
of the Year
in both the
District 13
Coac h es
Association
and Ohio
Val l ey
Pub li shing
12
Super
basketball
teams, gu ided
the
Wolfe
Eagle' to an
I l-l 0 overallmark by averaging 2~.3
points per game.
The senior will be the
Division 111-IV re.presenta~
tiv'c in the North-South .
game and was the only
first team boys selection in
Bryan Walters/OVP file
the count y.· CoLart was
Eastern's
·Nathan
Cozart.
with
ball.
goes
for
a
layup
over
two
Miller
defenders
during a Tri·
also a first-team All-TVC
Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division
game
on
December
20.
2005.
in
Tuppers
Plains.
Cozart
pcrfr\rmcr last year.
was named Co-Mo!lt Valuable Player with Trimble 's Matt Christman within the TVC Hocking.
Please see AII-TVC, BB
Cozart averaged 26.3 points per game for the Eagles.

the market.
Both Culpepper and Brees
are . coming off major
111JUrtes.
Brees. a standout for the
Chargers the la&gt;t two 'season s, injured his throwing
shoulder in the team's final
game and underwent surgery.
He has said he expects four
or five months of recovery,
but doe.,n't anticipate any
long-tenn effects.
The Saints will pay him
$60 mi II ion over s1x years,
$ 10 n1illion guaranteed .
Culpepper threw just six
touchdowns and had 12
inten.:eptions last season,
playing just seven games
before he tore th'ree ligaments i-n hi s knee. The
.Dolphins declined to confirm
the deal, although the
Vikings announced it.
·
"Anything we do is contingent on a player passing a
Please see NFL. B.&amp;

Girls baskEtball

Trio shares
top honors
Jn .both ·
Division
illandiV
COLUMBUS (AP)
Three players apiece in each
division shared the player of
the year honors on the 20052006
Associated
Press
Division Ill and IV All-Ohio
girls high school basketball
teams· announced Tuesday.
Youngstown
Ursuline\
Tyra
Grant.
, Lauren
Prochaska of Plain City
Jonathan Alder and Carla
Jacobs of South Euclid
Regina all grabbed a piece of
the top , player award in
Division HI , b!lsed on the recommendations of a state
panel of sports ':"rilers anil
broadcasters .
In Division lY. Maria Stein
M&lt;1rion
Local' s
Maria
Moeller shared the honors
with Berlin Hiland's Lindsay
Stuckey and Jennifer Grandy
of Glouster Trimble.
The respectin: coaches of
the vear were Ursuline's Sean
Durkin in Di,·ision Ill and
Will McKinney of poll champion Columbus Africentric in
Division IV
· Grant. a 5-foot-11 senior,
leads Ursuline (21-4) into .
thi s week's Division III state
· semifinab
against
Sugarcreek Garaway (24-2 )'
on Thursdav ni~ht. Prochaska
and Jonathan "Alder (24-2)
take on Castalia Margaretta
(2~ - 11 in the other semi. ~ith
the sta ll' champ decided on
Satunlav afternoon .
A Pe~n State signee. Grant
al so averaged 10.7 rebounds.
3. 7 steals. "2 .9 assists and 2.8
blocked shots a game during
the regular season.
Pwchaska. a 5-11 junior.
was .good for~~ . ~ P&lt;'int&gt;. 8.4
rebounds. 5.3 'teal' and I .8
assists a game while shooting
50 percent from the field ..'\6
pcn:clll on 3-pointcrs and 80
pcr~c'nt at the line .
Please s.e e Sblte, Bl

South Korea blasts USA
ANAHE IM. Calif. (A P)
- The pnnr play of the
United Stutes '"" all too
clear to \1ark Teixeira.
"We could have hit better.
we could ha\e fielded betier. ·
we could haw pitched better." the first baseman said .
"But they just beal us."
The 7 ~ 3 loss tn South
Korea on ·Monday ni~hl left
the American' in precarinus
shape again at lhe World ..
Baseball Classic They routed South Africa 17-0 In
at.lvan~e to Round 2. . and
now ;&lt;I most ,urcl' ne~d to

defeat Mexico - a much
;.trimger opponent than
South Africa ·- for a tnp w
the semifi nal s.
·
"Another one of those 'it
aruu nd and · figure out the
,i:enarios .. That's about all
you can 'ay," Derek Jeter
said, "We had our chances
right from the first lnnin~ .
We just didn't get an) hits
wi th guv' on base . I'm we' ll
aware o'tf what it takes to
win . We just Jidn 't do it .''
Hee-Seop Chni 's three Please see Blasts, BB.

Breton L. Morgan, MD is currently on a temporary family ·
medical leave of absence. The primary concem of our staff is the
·continued care of our patients until he retums. At the present.
W~ are in the process of getting Co\·erage Jorthe office·.
We Truly appreciate your patience and understanding

�JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Center

2150 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

740-446-7112

.740-446-9777

170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis; OH 45631

~ FMNHAHI)

' KlngiCultoor

Iii NEW IDEA

www.cxtcndi~arc.com

ro~nd

Second round

Nattonal
"mlflnala

EQUIPMENT, INC.

Fl,..t round

Second round

Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446~9800

Equa{ Opporttmir,\' Pro vider of Services

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

740-446-9777

..

· 435 Sec;ond ~venu&amp; • Gallipolis,
National
Champlon&amp;hlp

M .~.,CCC-A

'

(740) 446;.7619 .

7 40·44G-9800 1-800·272-5179

..........

. (800)237-7716

'

~

HOURS: Mon. • Thur. 6:30·5:00

VfiSCONSIN

National Champion

Tbe coach's Corner
Custom Daslga· Silk Scraanlau

1···...

SchltiiiJperal ·

......................1.................

Chacl out our lEW
loCIUIR lprH 20081

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
N. CAROliNA STATE

AI tlmae EST

1

(740) 446-7150 .

l

'

Morvnou!h (8-131

Member .

Thppers Plains

(740) 992-2136

F.D.J.C

(740) 667-3161

.MASON
FURNITURE CO.
~.~~

~b

:n

:loit center.

Jet. Ht. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis, Ohio

2nd Street Mason, WV

740-4,~6-2002

·

216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
'IZ Mile south of the Silver Briclge
Uctt~lt CC7000n.OOO and 001
Llconn Cl 7!10041.000 .M 001

LSU

TEXAS A&amp;'M

West VIrginia Jobs
Foundation

JIM'S FARM

EQUIPMENT, INC.

BINGO

SETON HALL

DILES
HEARING
.
CENTER
435 Second Avenue .• Gallipolis, OH

(304) 675-3877

PLEASANT
VALLEY .
HOSPITAL

AIR FORCE

WEST VIRGINIA

PT PLEASANT, WV .·
J

Carolina Lumber Building Across from CSX

_Holzer
I'(!/ Clinic

·u
.
a
.

'

Diane McVey
_\LA .• ClT· A
O" ner &amp; A udio!u~i s l

Ererv
Frlll•v &amp;heslllr Nlaltts
124 HIGHLAND AVE.

.
(740) 446-7619
.

(800)237-7716'
HOURS: Mon.· Thur. 8:30·5:00

M O NTANA

.

Holzer Clinic of West Virginia
2605 Jackson Avenue
~oint

..

Pleasant, WV 25550

(304)675·4498

Katzer Meig• Cl inic
88 Ea&amp;t Memorial Drive

Holzer Clinic

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

90 Jackson Plkti
Gallipolia, Ohio 45631

(740) 992-0060

(740),446·5411

. 2150 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

. 740.;446-9777
~MASSEY

rJf!!tl'l c.areer Is Just A..Ole«

VALLEY

ft.

.

Stdefti~ 7
675-3400'
418 Main Stteet

Point Pleasant, VfV

~

·VISh Us It:

· Rt&gt;glf 90-05-lli.JB
Accrt'di ll'd Memhn Acr:R'diliRS! Council

675-5332

· · -5~''&lt;

~
1/4 mile north of
Pomeroy -Mason Bridge
~as~arn Avenue
·Mason West Virginia
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone '
773·57 21
Phone (740) 446-1711
OPEN 7 DAii'S A WEEK

INDIANA

. OHIO VALLEY
L.Vf"ll.l

216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
'/, Mile south of the Silver Bridge ·

446·2404

~ LINCOLN

' £AR
.MIRCURY

Gallipolis, Ohio

740=446-9800 1·800-272-51

~~

"l'l&gt;ur Co111plcte Hom~
Furnisltirt~ Store "

Riverfront Past &amp; Present

INGELS

108 W. M ain Po meroy, Ohio

Phone (740) 992-7100
Hours: Mon · Sat lllim·6pm
.
Stop in and see us' We
have baskets, antiques,
Country crafts, Candl es and
much more.

Dri~te

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(740) 992-0060

(Behind the Spring VaJiey Cin ema )

2nd Street . Mason, WV

(304) 773-5592

CARPET
PLEASANT
VALLEY

992-7028

OHIO VALLEY

. CHECK CASHING &amp; LOAN
216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
'/, Mile Iouth of the Sliver Bridge

446·2404

~

SjJeciatJ

(740) 446·5411

.

MICHIGAN STATE
· Delicious ·
Authentic ·
Mexican Food

Rt. 2 By Pass Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-5200
· Mon. -Sat. 8-7 • Sunday ll-5

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

NORTHWESTEI\N STATF

'•

Po.lfl

740·441·9196 ' .

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

380 State Rt.7 N.
G II' I I' OH

800-446:-084 2
252 Upper

R iv~ r

Rd

Gallipolis, OH 4563 I

"

216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
'I• Mile south of the Silver Bridge

446-2404

740-446~9777

I 18 E. Main Street
.Pomeroy, OH

740-992-3200 .

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS

FLAIR

'

JON W. PARRACK II
809 Viand Street. Point Pleasant

.

"BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT
DISCOUNT PRICES"

Nationwide• ·
Is On \'our Silk*

809 Viand Street. Point Pleasant

Rte 2, Gallipolis Ferry, wv

~
~

-

.

675-4132

.FURNITURE

parracj1 0 naUonwlde.cOm

Insurance &amp;
Pmancial Serv1ces

JON W. PARRACK II ·
parracj1 Onatlonwide.com

[J

Nationwide•

·

Insurance &amp;
~

F.nanc,al ServK:es
OOr&gt;WJOi! Is,

1371

Or I':JUr SIC!e'

.

l.!!!.I
~--

WICHITA STATE

.DAIRY ·
·CITY
QUEEN
BRAZIER ICE &amp; FUEL

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

700 2nd Avenue • Middleport

IOWA

BOSTON COLLEGE

. 992-3322

[F' IJ] Farmers Bank
~ We' re Your Bank for
. Pomeroy, OH · ~l•miM:r
(740) 992-2136
F.ll. I.C.
Mason, WV

(.1Q4J 7.73·6400

Cife.,

Plains
(740) 667-3161

Rt. 62 North • Point Pleasant ·

Don Tate Motors ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
@

'1\tpJH'rS

Gallipolis, OH
(7 40 r 446-226$

. Phone 675-1700

Ulll C fl:

'

~

~f'!'V\C'

Y~A'Eac

Skilled Nursing atid Rehahilitation Center

GMC:. 740-446-7112
310 East Main St . .• Pomeroy, OH 170 Pinecres1 Drive
Q

Oldsmobile

.

Gallipolis. 011 45631

Err=E""ND=Ic.,...,ARE'""• ·
' • 't/rr ~

WW\\'

175 North 2nd Ave. • Middleport, OH

,

'

·-N- STUFF

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

2150 Eastern Avenue
·Gallipolis, OH

675-4132

CHECK CASHING &amp; LOAN

PARTYS

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC •

c

555 Park St. Middleport, Ohio
740-992-6611 1-800-733-3334
Mon.-Fri. 7-5 • Saturdav 7-3

OHIO VALLEY

CuhU:ZA~

;!/~ Wide

· Valley Lumber
&amp; . Supply Co.

OKLAHOMA

,

WINTHROP

9{.ed Casli til[Pagtfag?

88 .fasl Memorial

MASON
FURNITURE .CO. '
I~

CHECK CASHING &amp;

-

.lfl.ltd &amp;

Holzer Clink:
90 Jack~:on Pike
QaiNpoUt, Ohio 45631

Holzer Meigs Clinic

311 Buckridge Road
· Gallipolis Ohio
'

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

. 114 St. St. • Gallipolis, OH
· Call (740) 441-9970
cell: (740)709-1017

"at4

KENNY'S AUTO Thomas
CEN7ER
:lo it center.

Driving School

ror lndtperkknt c" u,.~ ' ""~!!..--"'

\V ASHINGTON

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Wai-Mart Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio

Dine in or Carry-out
Hrs. 8-7 Everyday

(304) 675-4498

FLORIDA

The Right Layne

. ''"'"'"

Spring Quarter Starts Apr. 3
446-4367 or800·l14-0452

r

·OUTLET

446-3283

St. Rt. 124 • Syracuse, Ohio

Point Pleasant, WV 25550

PITTSBURGH

www.uatllollscaraercollaue.coll ·

·TIRE

"·~

FER(;USON'

'

OHIO

tJ.elJJetefti~

. .

1l.iver'uJay Cafe

Holzer Clinic of We•t VIrginia
· 2605 Jackson Avenu e

356 E. Main St. General Hartinger 820 Jackson Pike
Parkwav
Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH
Middlepo~ OH
.446-3837
992-6292
'192·5248

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL .

446-2404

Mon .-Sat. 8-7 e Stintiay ll-5

CALIFORNIA

1/4 mile north of
Pomeroy ·Mason Bridge
.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mason. West Virginia
Phone (304) .773-5721
Phone (740) 446·1711
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
•. ~
. !
! I

·

An 'Dat,

I{!/ Clinic

McClure's
Restaurant

•

•

•

•

SYRACUSE

Thomas

"Your Complete
Horne
.
Furnishi11g Store" .

(304) 773-5592

flnllb ( M~~

Lon1tnl/ Soon Pr. Pleasant .

'Nr&gt;nlng team Wll bit lt\8 , 61'1 aMd
In lhe Uinneapoll' region
90VRCE: NCAA

.,"~"'

TANOt:M

(740) 446-2265

311 Buckridge Road
Gallipolis,.Ohio .

"&gt; ,··." ~

·

Galliplifi~, OH

@.

Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-2265

aLi1 Holzer

'

t- "l-t . f.- U'"9

992-2507

G:t
tr=

Mason, WV
(304) 773-6400

for Cife.,

Pomeroy, OH

;

(740) 667-3161

Scenic Hills
Nursing Center

UTAH STATE

':

t".D.I.C.

BRADLEY

OHIO STATE

· • .•. .:..~·······-·····-··-· ""'"'1'"'

(740) 992·2136

DUKE

740-446-9971

~ We're Your Bank

"Helping you get back home"

Thppers Plains .

.

338 Sacand Ava.
GaHIPOIIS
l140J 441-0133

IF' B) Farmers Bank

.Scenic Hills
Nursing Center

Member

(740) 446-7150

Owner &amp; Audiologid

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-1998

fife.,

Pomeroy, OH

"Helping you get back home"

· Diane McVey

Indianapolis
Apr\13

.ME:~CURY

OH

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

WIS. Mit Vt- \UK EE

300 Second Avenue • Gallipolis. Ohio

DILES· ~~¥1~G
l iNCO L N

1-800·272-5179

~ We're Your Bank

2150 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

,~J.

.MUtURY

The PLrple Turtle IF,:nJ Farmers Bank
for

2006 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship
Flrlt

LINCOLN

,,~~~~I)'

PACIFIC

JIM'S FARM

w

~

··===-=·

EXTIND1CARE-

1--~-----------'---------- ~· --

·- -· .. - -

.-

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

extcndicart C"om

�f ,a ge 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentineJ.com

~ Hannan hires
BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYOAILYREG ISTER COM

ASHTON , W Va - And
. nov., the mag mftce nt II ''
: Way ne Rtch ardson, who
: coached the Hannan Htgh
· bas ketball team to tts mag1cal
: ru n to the state tmals m 2000,
: was htred by the Mason
; County Board ot EducatiOn
· Tuesday to be the head varst: ty loot ba ll coach at the
: school
"We have every hope that
' he can do for lootball what
: he dtd lor basketball," satd
: Pnnctpal Tom McNeeley
Rt chardson ts "great wtth
: motJ v.tt mg students" and ts a
: Hannan Htgh graduate.
; Mc Neeley satd He was cho. sen lor the post tJOn m a narrow 3-2 vote by the school
. board
Members James Wilson, Jo
· H&lt;Inn.th RQrrer and Matthew

Wednesday, March 15. 2006

Richardson as football coach

Thompson voted in favor of ,.....-----. JOb, but soon
the hmng, whtle Tom
restgned
Nunnery and Mtck Cottrill
"We had
were opposed
two
very
Cottnll satd he thought the
good candt ·
job should have been given
dates here.''
to Brent Bl ake, who IS
he sa1d.
employed already by the d•sCurtt s
Campb e ll ,
tnct as a bus dn ver
a SS I Stant
"I have nothmg against Mr
football
Richardson." Cottrill said. "I
Richardson
coach
at
thmk he 's a great guy. I JUSt
Hannan. satd
thmk tt's a s•nack 111 the face
he
was
looking
forward to
tor the other applicant
because he works m the sys- working wtth Rt chardson.
tem and he didn' t get any- , "I know he's a good basketball coach," he satd ,
thmg "
Supenntenctent Dr Larry "now, I guess we ' ll tinct out tl
Parsons sa1d the school sys- he's a good football coach. I
tem was m a good suuauon do know that he knows footm
p•ckmg
between ball "
Sports programs at Hannan
Ri chardson
and
Blake
because both are quality mdi- are now under the dtrecuon
v•duals Huntmgton High of Mark Swann, the new
offens1ve coordmator Brad assistant pnnctpal and athlet·
Fuller had been htred for the tc dtrector. He told the board

m:rfbune - Sentinel- l\e ster
CLASSIFIED

Tuesday that he wants to see
a continuity m the sports progrc~ m ,, from seventh grade to
varsuy
Last year, H,mnan Jumor
High dtd nor have a football
team, because nobody wanted to. coach Thompson satd
he agreed wtth Swann' s proposal to allow the head varstty coach to ptck hts JUnior
htgh coaches, because they
mtght lmd somebody to
coach the team that way
Parsons satd he believed
Rtchardson was a good
ch01ce because he has the
support of the Ashton commumty After all, tt was he
who coached the 2000 basketball team to perhaps the
greatest moment tn Wtldcat
sports htstory
''Mr Rtchardson has a long
ht story of coachmg -successtull y at the school," he smd

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tlefenstve coordmator
Recently s1gned nose tackle Ted Wa s hm~ton , who
played With McGmest on the
Patnots' 2003 champtonshtp
team, has satd he w11l
encourage h1s former teammate to come to Cleveland
The Browns, wtth nearly
$25 milhon to spend on free
agents, have been one of the
most acttve teams thts offseason,
stgmng
center
LeCharles Bentley, w1de
recetver Joe Jurevtctus,
offenstve
lmeman Jeff
Shaffer,
punter
Dave
Zastudtl and Washmgton
But they have yet to

Major League Baseball -

addres s
thetr pass
rushm g, an
area that
general
manager
p h I I
Notebook Savage hsted as a pnonty after the Browns
ranked last m sacks last season
Cleveland 's mterest tn
McGmest
may
have
mcreased Tuesday afin
defenstve end Kaltmba
Edwards re-stgned wtth
Detrott The Browns had
pursued Edwards wtth the

mtent ol shtftmg htm to uu!·
stde llneb.tcke r m thetr 3-4
defense
McGmest earned a salary
cap ftgure ol more than $7
mtlllon for next season
New
McGme st,
wtth
Eng l,tnd hts enttre career,
has 78 career sacks , mcludmg stx last se,tson
The two-ttme Pro Bowler
ts the NFL's all -ttme postseason s.tck leader wtth 16 He
played m lour Super Bowls,
tncludtng three Patnots VICton es
C on e decltned comment
on the other teams McGmest
plans to VISit

Spring training

Reds beat Boston; Tribe swept by Tigers, Toronto
FORT MYERS , Fla. (AP) stratght loss.
some fastballs and l ' ve seen
After Harang left, Boston htm htt a couple out of the
- Aaron Harang made a
qut ck recovery from a shoul- scored four runs m the thtrd park one-handed "
der mlment and Edwtn olf Mtchael Gosling on a
Encarn.tcton htt hts stxth two-run smgle by Trot Ntxon,
Blue Jays (ss) II,
home run ol the spnng as the an RBI smgle by Manny
Indians (ss) 5
Ctncm'hatt Reds beat the Ramtrez and a bases-loaded
WINTER HAVEN . Fla
Boston Red Sox 9-7 Tuesday walk to J T. Snow
(AP) - Josh Towers now
Harang. a candtdate to start
wtshes he would have chosen
on openmg day. pttched two
Tigers 14, Indians (ss) 10 hts words more carefully Or
scoreless mn mgs He was
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) better, kept his mouth shut
scratched last Thursday Ramon Santtago homered,
Toronto's
nght-hander
agamst Ptttsbur~h becahlse of tnpled, doubled and drove m angered
Cleveland
the
mflammat10n m hts nght five runs, leadmg the DetrOit Indtans last season tor comshoulder
Ttgers over a Cleveland spht ments he made about Casey
Harang was the thtrd Reds squad 14-10 Tuesday m a Blake and Aaron Boone lolstartmg pttc:her to llllSS time game featunng 10 home runs lowmg an Aug 8 game Aftet
thts spnng He satd the lllJUry
Ryan Mulhern htt two of gtvmg up home runs to Blake
was caused by recent changes · Cleveland's homers. Tigers and Boone m a 4-1 los s.
m hJS deh very
starter Kenny Rogers was Towers satd, "The two home
"ll was mce JUSt to see htm roughed up tor seven runs runs, those aren't very good
out there on the mound and and mne hits m four mmngs hltlers Nothm~ tor nothmg,
pttch well," Reds manager
Santiago started at second but thex' re htttmg 240 for a
Jerry Narron satd "He base for the Ttgers on open- reason '
mtssed hts last start so we mg day m 2003, and ts now
Looking back, Towers
only wanted to gtve htm two hopm15 to wm a backup JOb in re~rets the comments
mmngs He dtd a good JOb thetr mtield He was part of
'That's not me," he said
He thre v. a little btl m the the trade that sent Carlos Tuesday whtle a spill squad
' pen aftet that He satd he felt GUillen I rom Seattle to of Blue Jays was bcaung the
Detrott m Jan11ary 2004, and lndtans 11-5. "I screwed up I
tine ..
Red Sox starter Bronson has spent most of the last two smd some stuptd thmgs I ve
Arroyo ga;e up live runs in years m Tnple-A
never gotten a chance to apol'He's a defenstve player, ogtze I probably won' t ~ o up
three mnm os. leavmg htm
wtth a 17 sf ERA after three don't get me wrong," Ttgers to their faces and apologtze to
strmght poor outmgs
manager Jtm Leyland said. those guys, whtch ts more of
The Reds' first five hitters "Actually, he's been swmgmg_ a pnde thmg than anythmg,
m the ga me all scored Fehpe the bat halfway decent down but they deserve one "
Lopez h1t a two-run smgle here But I've JUSt been
Blake and Boone played m
and Scott Hattebet g had a tmpressed wtth the way he's a spin-squad game at
handled htmself "
three- run homer
Lakeland, Fla , and dtdn ' t get
"I guess I was tnt ssmg the
''He's really caught my to see Towers
location.· Arroyo satd "I was eye," Leylan~ satd "He
"Probably a 1\o!ld thmg,"
takmg 11 as senous. as a real catches everythmg Hts range Towers satd, smthng
game I JU St dtdn t get tt ts excellent. He's JUSt made
Ryan Roberts htt a godone ·•
pia~ after play thts spnng ahead, two-run homer and
An oyo settled down after He s been very tmpresstve, Mtke Mahoney added a
Hatteberg 's homer and rettred qutetly "
three-run shot 111 Toronto's
nme of ht s fi nal 10 batters
Omar Infante went 3-for-3 seven-run mnth as the Blue
·'He doesn' t need to change wtth a home run and three Jays rallied to wm after bemg
thmgs," Boston manaJ;er RBls for the Ttgers He down 4-0 after four mning s
Terry Francona sat d. "He JUSt mt ssed five games because of and 5-3 m the etghth.
needs to ttghten up the break- shoulder tendtnths before
Roberts htt ht s second
mg ball , start locatm ~ h1s returmng Monday
homer of the spnng ott leftMulhern homered off bander Jason Stanford, who
fastball and Bronson wtll be
JUSt fme "
Rogers and rookte Joel also allowed Enc Kratz's solo
And y Abad and Bnan Zumaya
homer m the etghth
Buchanan al so homered lor
' Mulhern
ts
country
Stanford. bound for Tnplethe Reds Dustan Mohr and strong," lndtans manager Enc A Buffalo. also ~ave up two
Jeff Batley homered for the Wedge satd "I' ve seen htm walks and an RBI tn ple m the
Red Sox tn thetr fourth htt curveball s He's turned on n111th before Ben Howard

NFL
from PageBl
medtc al exam,'' Mtamt spokesman
Har\ ev Gree ne satd
Mtarm re leased las t year's starter.
Gu s Frerotte, who would have cost
the ted m 54 3R mt lhon aga mst the
salary cap
Anot her veteran quarterback, Jon
Kttn a ts gomg to Detroit, accord mg
to hts agent '&gt;ltchael Moye Kttna
backed up Carson Palmer m
Cmcmnatt for two years after bemg
voted the NFL's Comeb.1ck Player
of the Year 111 2003 hts ftrst season
~tth the Bengal\ and ht s onl y one as
a sl.trtet wtth them

Then there were the recetvers
Owens and Johnson were partly
responstble for a clause tn the new
labor agreement that prevents teams
from benchmg players by deactt va tmg thelll
It first happened wtth Johnson m
Tampa Bay m 2003 , when coach
Jon Gruden deacttvated htm for the
fina l stx games for dtsctphnary reasons The Eagles did the same last
season wtth Owens, suspendmg htm
for four games, then deacttvatmg or "Ke ys hawnmg" - htm for fi ve
Owe ns' release was ttmed so that
the Eagles could avmd paymg h1m a
$5 mtllton roster bonu s du e
Wednesday In add1t10n to Dallas.
Denver, Kansas Ctty and Mtam• are
satd 10 be mterested
In other moves Wednesday

.

~

allowed Mahoney's homer
Chad Mottola and Mtguel
Negron also homered for
Toronto. connectmg m the
fifth oft Indians closer Bob
Wtckman
TraviS Hafner and Brandon
Phtlhps htt homers for the
Indtans Cleveland starter
Jason Johnson pttched four
shutout mmngs
Andy Marte, the lndtans'
htghly touted. thtrd base
prospect who wtll begm the
season m the mmors. added
two RBi s as Cleveland
JUmped out to a 4-0 lead
Towe~s . hkely to be the
Blue Jays ' fourth or ftfth
starter, couldn't lind umptre
Mtke Reilly's stnke zone m
the ftrst mnmg, when he
walked three and gave up two
runs
Todd Hollandsworth smgled and Towers walked two
to lo.1d the bases before stnkmg Out Ben Broussard
Marte, battmg 391 with six
RBi s m nme games thts
sprm~ . follow ed wnh a tworun smgle
"I thtnk I th rew more
stnkes than I got credit lor "
Towers satd dtplomattcally
"I was around the zone a lot
I defimtely got my work 111 "
Phtlhps hit ht s second
homer 111 the fourth mmng, a
sho1 to left fi eld that strengthened hts chances of makmg
the club ,,s " u11hty 111llelder
Phillips won the lnd t.ut s'
st,utmg JOb at second base 111
2003 but was demoted before
the All-Star break
He spent all of 2004 at
Buffalo, and only appeared 111
SIXgames lor the lndtans last
season The club ts out of
opuons on the 24-year-old, so
unless he beats out Ramon
Vazquez fo r the 'u!Jhty spot,
Cb el.md ts likely to trade
htm
Phtlltps added a double 111
the fourth, scored 1w1ce and
combmed wtth shortstop
Jhonn y Per.tl ta to turn a tHce
double pl&lt;~y 111 the thtrd

In addttl on to agrecmg 10
terms with Knn a, Detroit re -stgned
defen stve end K,tlunba Edwards
and ktck returner Eddte Drumm ond
to fi ve-year deals
- Former New England wtde
recet ver Davtd Gt ve ns stgned \\Ith
Tenn essee Gtvens. who had "
career-htg h 59 catches last season
has seven touchdow ns 111 the postseason, a htgh for New Eng land
The Tuan s also stgned 35-year-old
Kev m Mawae, the stx- ume Pro
Bowl center \\ ho was cut bv the
•
New York Jets last mon th
. - Mtke Wtll t.tm s, the fou rth
overall pt ck 111 the 2002 draft. was
stgned by Jac ksonville The 360pound offen sive lmeman \\ '" u tt
by Bu ffa lo alter be111g a ma Jnf dts
appomtment

..

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

AP photo
\ \ \ 01" I \II \I..,

r

Mavs down Cavs, 91-87
DALLAS (AP) - On the
mght Avery Johnson moved
mto the NBA record book,
the Dallas Mavencks made
thetr detense-onented coach
proud wtth a little htstory ol
thetr own
The mjury-depleted Mavs
erased a 19-point thtrd-quarter deftclt by holdmg the
Cleveland Cavahers to only
etght po111ts - the fewe st
they ' ve ever allowed m any
quarter - and kept rallytng
lor a 9 1-87 vtctory Tuesday
mght, giVIng Johnson ht s
record 66th vtctory over hts
ftrst 82 game s tn charge
Dtrk
Nowttzlo
and
Marqtns Damels combtned
I or 20 pomts dunng Dallas '
29-4 run !rom the opening
mmutes of the thml quarter
to the start of the fourth ,
pultl ng the Mavencks up by
stx. E\en alter Cleveland 's
LeBton Jame s, v.ho had 36
pomts and I 2 rebounds, htt a
Nowttzk1
long JUmper,
,msv. ered with a 3-pomter
that stretched the lead and
got the crowd back on its
feet
Cavalter s never
The
regatned the lead alter
Dallas ' btg rally, although
they were wtthtn 86-84 after
a bas ket by James with 15
sec onds left. The Mavs held
them off by making ftve of
stx loul shot s the rest of the
way and ' eemg Cleveland 's
Zydrunas ll gau skas mt ss
three strat ght ttp-tn attempts
on one po ssessiOn
Nowttzkt fm1 shed wtth 30
po tnt s and 13 rebounds.
Jason Terry scored 20 pmnts
and Damels had 17 Enck
Dampter had seven pomts
and 13 rebounds, plus made
one ot the btggest plays durmg the comeback. a clean
block ot a dunk attempt by
Drew Gooden that left
Dampt er scre ammg wtth
deli ght
and
team mates
bumptng chests
Playmg wtthout starte rs
Josh Howard and Adnan
Gnlftn , and al so mtssmg key
reserve Devtn Hams, Dallas
remamed at least !ted wtth
San Antom o for the be st
re cord tn th e We ste rn
Conference and clinched a
st xth str.Jt ght 50-wtn sea son
The M.t vs also swept the seasun senes at ho me agatnst
team s !ro m the East, go tn g
15-0 '
Johnson was gu,tr.mteed ol

The Btlls re-&gt;~gne d lo ng-snapper
Mt ke Schneck
- Phtl adelpht d stgned former
Bengal Matt Schobel to back up
L J. Smtth at ti ght end Sc hobel
caught 90 passes for 938 yards and
mne touchdowns tn four seasons
wt th the Bcngal s
- Pt o Bowl guard Wtll Shtelds
restructured hiS contract wt th
Kansas Cny. guar,m1ee111g he wtll
fmt sh hi' career with the Cht efs
Bu1 the Chtef' Joq ba&lt;:k up quarterback Todd Coll tn s who we nt to the
Redl ktns lor a tv. o-year. S2 5 mtl·
Iton deal tnclud mg a $450 000 stgn111g bonu'
- St Lout s stg ned cornerback
Fakhtr Brrm n !rom New Orle,ms
He w," pnm.ml y a mckel hack and
s pec t &lt;~ l tedtm rl.tye t fm the Sat nt s

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publlahlng rHervea
lhe rlghlto edit,
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time
Must
Error.•
eported on the flra
of pubUcatlon 1
he Tribune-sentinel
e~later
will
b

'

havtng the most vtctones of
any coach after the eqUivalent of a full season regardless of the result , the previous mark was 62 by Paul
Westphal
The Mavencks have only
lost consecutive games once
under Johnson, but seemed
headed toward another twogame sktd - and posstbly
more - wtth a startmg ]meup that featured undrafted
rooktc Rawle Marshall
Fellow rookie Josh Powell
JOmed htm on the court in the
ftrst quarter and Dallas
played hke a ragtag bunch,
mtsstng not only shots but
passes, too They scored only
34 pomts, matchmg the1r
lowest half of the season
Now1tzki missed I0 of his
tirst II shots , whtle James
and Ilgauskas had thetr way
over the ftrst two quarters
Then Johnson opened the
tturd quarter wtth a lmeup of
hts ftve best healthy players,
stuck wnh them nearly the
enure thtrd quarter and was
rewarded with one of the best
12 mmutes of the season
The Mavs outscored the
Cavs 27-8, out rebounded
them 17-8 and dtdn't have a
turnover.
Cleveland lost 1ts third
stra1ght game overa)l and
stxth stra1ght m Dallas.
Mavencks
center
DeSagana Dtop had only two
pomts and four rebounds m
hts ftrst game agatnst hts former team He played only 15
mmutes, most dunng the
early meltdown . faihng to
show the Cavaliers how
much he's tmproved smce
getting off the end of thetr
bench
Notes: Thts was the fifth
time Dallas has won after
tratllng by at least 17 . The
teams ha ven ' t met all sea~on,
but wtll agam Mat ch 29 10
Cleveland
Johnson was
eJected from the prevtous
game for argumg about nocalls when he thought
Now1tzkt was getttng hammered. Notmg the 28 free
throws James had m his pregame,
Johnson
vwus
quipped. "That 's my dream
for Dtrk . . I'll take 28 m
two
games "
Actually,
Nowttzkt had 16 and 12 m
con secutt ve game s earher
tht s month , but 11 was the
only ttme that's happened all
season

last season
- The New York Gtants attempted to ftrm up a weak secondary by
s1gnmg a raft of defenstve backs
Th ey confmned last week's s1gmng
o f former Dolphms cornerback
Sam Madtson a!ld Monday' s deal
wtth R W McQuarters, and signed
Jaso n Bell and Quentm l:farri s
They al so re-stgned three veterans
bac kup
quarterback
Ttm
Hasselbeck , oftenstve tackle Bob
Wh ttfteld, and ktck returner Chad
Morton
- Safety Ryan Clark stgned a
fo ur-year co nt ract wtth the Steelers,
gtvmg the team a replacement for
free agent Chn s Hope. Clark has
st,lfted 27 games over four years
wt th the Ne w York Gt,mt s and
W.ts hmgton Redskms

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Autos tor sale • ...
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Boats
Motors lor Sale ..... ... .... • ..
750
Building Supplies......... ••
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Business and Buildings .... . • .. •
, 340
Buolneas Opportunlly . • • •
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Business Training....... .... ..
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Campers 1o Motor Homes. ... ..
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Camping Equipment.. . .... . • .
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Cards of Thanks............ ...
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Chlld/Eiderl~ Care....... ... ...... .
• 190
Electrical/Refrigeration.. ..
• . . . ..... 840
Equipment lor Rent........ ...... • .......... .480
Excavating.. • .......... ............. .. .. .. .. . • ...... .. 830
Farm Equipment............... .. •
... • ..... . 610
Farms lor llent.............. ..... . .. .. ......... . 430
Farms lor Sale ........ .... .......... . ....
• ..... 330
For Lease...... ......... .......... .. • . • .. ......... 490
For Sale........................... • .... • ........... . 585
For Sale or Trade........... .. .
• ... ....... . 590
Fruita
Vegetables...... . .. . ... • .. • ...... . 580
Furnlahed Rooma.... .. .. ........... ... ... ....... • 450
General Hauling... • • .. .. .... ........ ........ 850
Giveaway ..... ....... •
...... .... ... .... ........ . 040
Happy Ads
... .
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Hay 1o Grain. • • . ....... ....................... . 640
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Homes for Sale .... .... • • • • •
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~ousehold Goods.................. •
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Houses for Rent................... • • .. ........ 410
In Memoriam .... .. • • • .. •
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Insurance ... .... ........ .. . ...... . . • . .. .... .. .. t30
Lawn
Garden Equipment ..
•
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Mlacellanaous Merchandise................ .. . 540
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• ... ... ......
870
Vona For Sole • . .......................... • ..
730
Wonted to Buy . • •
...........................
090
Wanted lo Buy· Farm Supplies ........... .... .. 820
Wanled To Do.:. ..
.......................
180
Wanted lo Rant ..... .......... .... .... .............. 470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis.. .... .. .... .. ...... .... .. .... 072
Yard Sel•Pomoroy/Middla ............... .. • ... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant .........................
076

a

Bu•lneas Day• Prior To
Publlc•tlon
Sunday Display: 1:00 -..;;;;;,,.
Thursday for Sunday• 1

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_(.
!f"!'t
Borders$3.00/perod
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

I wnght2005@detnews com

CLASSIFIED INDEX

a

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

• All ads

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Co1 ns
new1pape
Proofsels GOld A1ngs Pre
ceepts only hal
1935
US
Currency
antect ads meetln
Soltta1re DJamonds M T S
AdmiSS IOn
Concess on
OE standards
Com Shop i5 1 Sec ond
Lifeguard s and Ass1sta nt
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446
Pool Manage r wan ted al the
We will not knowing
2842
Gall1polls Mun1c1pal Pool
eccept any adver
CertlfiCaiiOn Is req uired fo r
iaement In vlolatfo
I buy Junk Cars ( 304)773 lifeguards Appllcatrons may
1 the law
5004
be p1cked up at th e Parks
and Recreation Offtce 51 8
Second Avenue Gallipolis
Ohio All applicatiOns must
4x4 'a For Sale
.. 725
b e tu rned m by Friday
Announcement
.•• . •
.. .. 030
March 31 2006
Antiques ..
•• .. . . •
••• 530
An Excellent way to earn
Apartments tor Rent
... . • .... ...... . .. .. • 440
money Tile New Avon
Auction and Flea Market.
... 080
Call Mar lyn 304 892 2645
Auto Porto &amp; Accessories. ... .
• 760

a

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
,frlda'y For Sundays Paper

%~

l.arrAND

Lost Male dog Border
Colt e/Shepllerd m1x Black
with brown markings Very
fnendly answers to T1ppy
Las1 seen 211 0 on Ke eler
Ad (740)446 11 70

t

t

or Fax To
992·2157
----~~~~~.

Oea.d'lfirU'
Word Ads
Display Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Cleveland Cavalters forward LeBron James shoots over Dallas
Mavencks guard MarQuts Dantels dunng second half of thetr
NBA basketball game Tuesday In Dallas

l\egfster

Sentinel

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

Offtee llo~~

'LB McGin~st to visit Browns, former coach
CLEVELAND (AP) · Free age nt linebacker Wtllte
: McGt nest. cut by New
En gland last week m a salary
cap move, could teuntte wtth
sollle former Patnots In
Cleveland
McGtnest wtll vtstt the
Browns on Tuesday mght ,
satcl Steve C.utc, spokesman
lot Las Vegas based Premter
Sports Ma~1agement, whtch
represents the 12- year veteran
The 14-year-old McGmest
wtll be wooed by Browns
coac h Romeo Crennel, who
spent four seasons coachmg
McGmest as New England's

mrfbune

To Place

Taylors
Staffin g
@
&lt;74 0) 44 6·3305
lo r ' an
appointmen t
Monday
Thursday 10am-2pm We
are no w hmng Sta te Tested
Nursmg AsSistants LPN s &amp;
RN s EOE
- -...,-- - - - Dommo s PIZZa Now Hlrmg
Safe
Onve rs
Pom t
Pleasan t
Gaii Jpohs
&amp;
Pomeroy toca!IO ns Apply In
Person

Full t1me Med1ca1 Cla1 m
biller No expenence nece~
sary Must be detailed
orgamzed good compuler
and typmg skills Please
apply 1n person at Fam11y
Oxygen 70 P1ne Street
Gallipolis No phone calls
please
Full T1me Temporary Off1ce
Clerk
Pos1t1on Involves
greeting public phone co m
puter &amp; map sk1lls anO all
ott1ce aciiVIItes ApplicatiOn
are available at Mason
Co unty FSA Office 22 4A
F1rst Street Pomt Pleasant
wv 25550 No calls Last
date to ftte IS COB March
24th FSA IS an EOE
Home Heallh Aides· S•gn
On Bonus Home Healthca re

of SE Ohto IScurrently htnng
home health aides competl·
live wages Call (740)GS2 •
1222
Home Healthca re of SEO IS
Cu rren lly
Acceplm Q
ApplicatiOns For Fu ll &amp; Part
ti me RN s
Compettttve
Wages Bonuses &amp; Benefits
11 "
1 _
86
_0_11 _1 r_••_
,.-6_3_88
--::1_00~

------~-- .

_c_._

Babysitting Care ol Elderly
Housekeeping References
(304)895 3723

3BR 2 bath den 8 m1les
from Holzer Hos p1tal on 160
North Owner F1ne:nce FHA
approved (740)446·3570

4 ~ear old Colonml on 3
acres approx 1 900 sq ft 3
bel r 2 ba ths 2 car garage
master bdr tS 28 ~e 24 W!th a
J8CUZl l
tub
$125 000
(740)446 7029
7BR 5BA Foreclosure only
$1 9 000 For hslmgs call
BOO 391 5228 ext F254
909 Mossm an C1rd e Pt
Pleasant WV 38A 1 bath
fu ll basem ent $88 000
(304 )675 8804
____A_H_e-nt-oo_n_l _ __
Local company otfenng ·No

~:::::::; ~~~:sN torp::uM~N:y ~~r

ownea Company of nearly 2

Pos1110n eva1l8ble tor Fa rm
and Lawn Parts assoc1ate
Health ano ret1remen1benellt-5 Must have comouter
Drivers Excellent pay tree
sK1IIS Prater !a rm back·
heanh 1nsurance oenef1ts &amp;
ground Send resume to
home 11me 1 yea! 1ractor
h1nn-1
EMTs
&amp; Part 1me bartender needed CLA Bo x 566 C/O Galhpol s
tra 11er expenence reQUired Npw
Mar tin Transpor l 866 Z93 ~aramed iC S Call ( 740)354 lor Good T1mes Pome roy D a1~ Tnbune PO Box 469
Gallipolis OH .15631
must be 21 to apply
5433 or 1 866 97 t 5433
1435

__,..1

10

Oh1o Valley Home Heallh deca des oflen ng a nome
Inc h1nng Full T1me RN and Busmess
Opportunity
Per Diem MSW Accept ng P 04)5762056or (304 )593
appl catiOOS for LPN CNA 0466 II no answer ple ase

Qyerbroo k Re hab 1t1tat on
Center ts cu rrently acc ept ng
apphcat1on s tor a
RN
SuperviSOr
The ava1lable
Shift IS 7P 7A All lr)terested
.-.1..
appf 1can s shou'd p ....... up an
'
P.g.
1
t
333
I
app '1Ca 0n a
S' ree I Mlddl epor I OH For
I urther 1n ormallOn pIease
1 c1 u ' 11
740992
con a
roO 1e a1
6472 EOE

L.--~,;;;,;:,;;;;

,,,,,41\1

and personable
Salary
Me•gs lndustnes Inc Is based on qualifiCation s
Hlrm g Crewleade rs lor
JanitOrial
and
Lawn Applican ts are to submit
Mam tenance
Pos1t1ons resumes to the Ga !ha
E ~epenence
1r1 Cou nty Veteran s Ser vice
Jan•tor Jai/Cust odlal Work Office at 1102 Jack son p ke
Preferred
Must Have a Gallipolis No tater than
Valid OhiO Onvers License Marc h 21 ~006
and H1gh School 0 1p1oma or - - - - - - - - GE D
Send Resume To Tired ot Not Haymg Enough
Meigs lndustMs Inc PO Money to Ma~e EMs Meet
Box 307 Syracuse OhiO or Goi ng to WorK For
45779
Someone Else? Chnst1an

ST N~
CHH A
PCA
Compel hve Wages M1leage
and
benef1ts
nclud1ng
Health Insurance Appl'y at
t480
Jackson
P1ke
Gallipolis or 24t5 Jackson
AYenue Pomt Pleasant WV
or phone toll fr&amp;e 1-866 44t
1393

2 bedroom 1 bath llvtng
room dm mng room base
ment
Middlepo rt
$36 000 (740)992 3057

20 acre farm With barn and 4
bedroo m 3 bath home
~lL~I\'lXJUS
Located 1n Lawrence Co
Call
for
tnformahon
6 steel beams approx 20 (740)643 0518
feet each easy access call
house 1n
9 Bedroom
740 992 2704 leave mes
Pomeroy
Off matn road
R ver V1ew $27 000 1 74Q992 2593

Cert1f1ed
Care
Home
A.SSIS! ed &amp; Non- Ass•sted
Persons meals &amp; snacks
Super 8 Motel Gallipoli s IS
Excelle nt Gare
prov1ded
seek1ng an energetiC outgo
(304)882 3880
1ng personable person tQ
work PT for pos1t10n for Computer Trou ble Shooter
Breakfast Bar Attendant and Repair Expert Serv1ce
Th s rs an early mormng 74().992-2395
poSition
Pl ease apply n
perso n No phone call s I m Interested m Patnt ng
please Only senous applt and Papenng your InteriOr
ca nts need apply
Walls call me (304 )675·5857
or (304)593 2387
Tak1ng Appl te8!1ons
for
Mach1n1sl &amp; Welder 5 years Lawn Care misce llaneous
e~epere mce
apply 7 30 od d JObs lree estt mates
4 OOpm Ambrosta Machme Call (740)446-686 1
Inc Route 2 Box 254 Po1nt
Top
Notch
Butldmg
Pleasant WV
25550
Contractors New AdditiOns
(304 )675 I 722
Pole Barns Hardwood Floor
and
Ceram c
T1le
The Gall1a County Veterans Installation Custom Decks
ServiCe Off1ce IS seek1ng a ne w
Roofs
new
fu ll t1me benefitS counselor/ Construction LICensed and
secrelary The rob will be to Insured
WVti 036667
ass1st el g1ble persons m f1l (304)675·3042 or (304)593
mg cla1ms w1th lile Veterans 111 5
Admt mstrat1on pertor mmg
general secretanal duttes
office admmtst ratlon and ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
olher dut1es as needed
BLIS'JNEI).'S
n..~ ... ,.._
The applicant must be a
vrnm.t u J"'IIt
Veteran With an honorable
discharge Wllh at least a 1
high school diploma/college
•NOTICE•
IS preferred Other qual!hca pHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
tlons tnc lude a valid dr vers lN G CO recommends tha
hcense mmlmum of one
ou do bus 1ness wrth peo
year sec retarial wor k 10
le you know and NOT 1
Include the use of comput
end money thr.ough tt1~
er/word processors Must be P,a11until you have 1n..,est1
able to commun1cate et1ec bated the ottermq

Me1gs County Chamber of
Commerce. IS seek1ng coor
dmator of Operations wtth
lund ra1s1ng a plus Salary
ba5:ed on expeM nce Send
resume to 238 Wes t Mam l ively both m verbal and wnt
lmmed1ate Open1n g for Part Stre et Pomeroy Oh 45769 ten form The desired appli
t1me Onver at Mason County Deadl1ne March 31 2006
cant must be dependable

ActiOn Group Inc
Must
have a clean dr vmg record
and be Wllhng to work lle~ei
ble hOurs ApplicatiOns can
be PICked up hom Rut h
R1ce
Transport ation
Manager at Mason County
Action Group Inc l 01 2 nd
Street PI Pleasant WV on
Thursday March 16 2006
fr om 9 am Ull 3 pm
Applicatons will be accept
ed one day only at he I mes
------~- specif ed No phone calls
Expenenced CosmetologiSt please EOE M/F AlA
11
:th
Local Dental OffiCe seeking
Booth
rental
Serous
th
tu
1 and mare
an en uslas!C
mqul ne s
only
please •ndiVIdualto tramasaPTfFT
dental ass1stant must have
(740)645 2653
-..,.--N eeded computer sktll s
Senc:l
Fosl.r Par."ls
''
resume and a hand wrmen
HaYe an extra bedroom and note 01 yo ur mterest to
WJSh to help a ch1ld Dental ASSIStant PO Box
Becom e a therap eutiC Iosier 704 Pomeroy Oh•o 45769
care Q1ver tor youth 018
Oas 1s pr ov1ded tra mng
reimbursement $33 $48 a WANTED Full·tlfll e employ
ment 1n your own home as a
day paid res p1te and sup
Home Serv1ces Wo rker w1th
port lor the youth 10 your
Buckeye
Commun 1ty
T1 a1nmg begms
home
rch
25
at
Albany
Call
Services
We
pr
ovide
salary
Ma
b
Ill s and a da 11Y
I
Oas 's Foster Care tor more Pus ene ~
rd
1 ~ou
l Free 1 877 room and """'8
rae
'nfo'mal,on Tol
"
d
h
ld
325-15$:8
provl e a ome gu ance
.,..
and tnendsl1tp 1n a family
atmosphere ReqUited abd1ty
Fuel tr ue~ dr1ver POSIIIOn to teach personall tv1ng skills
ava1table Stra1gh t tru ck and a co mm1tment to the
local route Compeithlle pay nrowth and development at
•
Good hours good benefitS two
1nd1V duals w1th menta l
None Hazmat &amp; tanker retardation Home must be
endors ements will be oon
n Gallla County II Interested
Sldered Mall resume anc:l contact Gee he at 1 800
copy at dnvrng record to 531 ·2302 or (7 40)286 5039
ClA Box 555 c/o GallipOli S "Pre @m ployment
O.rug
Tnbune
PO Bo~e 469 Testing Equ al Opportunity
GallipOliS OH 4563 t
Employer

f:a~:~e: 1 ~er;;:11 1;~,~~

Mamtenance
Duecror
Overbrook RehatH II tafiOn
Center Is now accepting
resumes lor the pos1110n of
Ma1ntenance Director The
qual1f1ed candidate must
possess strong verbal and
written communlcat1o n skills
mcludmg techn1 ca1 report
wr ling and record keep1ng
Must have e~epenence 1n
general maintenance mclud
mg carpentry
plumtnng
electnc!.l telepho,.,e and
cable Installation pamt1ng
ground work evaluation and
1nspect1on of e me rg enc~
equ1pmenl 1tem assembl y
and boiler system operatiOn
Must have knowledge of
OSHA u te Safety Code
Long Term care expenence
preferred bu t not requ1red
Qu alliled candidate s may
send resume to
Charla
Brown McGu re AN LNHA
Admtn1strato r 33J Page
Street Middlepor t Ohm
45769 EOE

Au!l and Village Council
acceptmg resumes tor temporary part·t1me off1ce manager/ wa1er sewer clerk
resumes acce pted by ma11
only P: 0 Bolt 420 Rutland
Oh1o 45n5

1001 Kenny Ct (Behm d Jr
H1gh School) 3 Bedrooms
lull dry Basernent
all
Hardw ood Floors E~tcellen l
Cond111on
$8 1 500 call
(304)675 3 123 (3041675 0032

leeYe message

i

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

••NOTICt: ••
~ a r row Sm art Contac
he

:a

DIVISIOn o
lnslltu!IOn'
p f! Jce c1
Consume
JA tta Jrs BEFORE you ref1
.,ance your home o
otaln a loan BEWAR
f requests tor any tar~
dva nce payments o
ees Of Insurance Cal

G:t
--

Ohio

~ 1nanc1a1

hf~a~~~~~ ,~;eCa~n~u;~

'"'
78 000 3 to lea rn I1 tn.
~ortgage oroker o
ender
1S
proper!
1censed (Th1 s tS a publt
erv1ce announcernen
rom tne On•o Valle
Publlshlno Company)
~=~~~~~~~

S("'YM,,

Concealea P n~ I OI Class
OhtO WV Aprtl 8 2006
9 ooam VFW
$75 00
Ma son WV Ph (740)8435555

Beaut•ful 4 br 3 tul l ba ths

m Lo~
~:~od;~~g~ous~o~~~~::!
~;::;~~=~=~ 304 882 2391

Wanted-U cenaed
Health Proteulonala
Portamed1c IS seeKmg expe
renc ed MedTech;LPN?RNs
to complete mob le para mad 230
f'I«)Ff~""\h l\.-\l
exams collect specimens 8
___
G
SUl\ ICI-~
ECG s 1n th e a11100 1IS area
We schedule lhe appo1nt
p
Low-Moisture
ment.s lor you Vou recess
medtc al 1nform a110n Mel
Carpei-Cieantng
commumc ate t ase sta tus
Brand New Method
dally to the branch office
Dry In 1 Hour
Must have own trans porta .
No Steam or Shampoo
t1on/v81ld dnvers lteense 1
Fre e Est1mates
Year blood draw experience
• "Cie_~~! Ctean· · ·
req u1 &amp;d Send resume V18
(304J0 75-ocm
ema1lto
TURNED DOWN ON
ph l s120mnr0po r
•
tamedlc ntt
Ba ckground SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
check 15 reqw ed
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1-888 582-3~4 5 .
1!10

L'&lt;sn u l ·no~

home Instead of renting
' tOO"'O f1nanc1ng
• Less than pertect cred t
accepted
• Pay men t cou ld be the
same as rent
Mortga ge
Locators
(..40)367-0000

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

All real estllte adver1isln.g
In tt1 •• n.wspeper 11
subtect to the filtderal
Fair HOUSing Act of 1K8
whi ch m.kea lt1lleg•l to
&amp;d 'll ertu~e any
preference Um1tatton Of
disc: rlmlnstton beNd on
raee color reHg1on ...
familial 1tatu1 or natiOnll
an~ Intention to
make any such
preference hmt tat1on Of
discrimination

origin or

TP'lis n ew spt~ r Will not
knowingly accept
•dvwrtlseme-nts for real
eet8te wf'lk t'l II In
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
tnformed that • II
dwethngs ad\ieMIHd IR
thl1 newspaper are
avell•ble on en tqUIII
opportun ity baNS

.

Country home 11'1 Jadcson
Co Seven room s 1 5 bath
hardwood floors run base
ment 2 5 car garage 1 1 'l7
acres two ba tM mature
p1ne trees Prtee $1 49 000
(937)515 8670 or (740)266
7212
House tor sale oy owner
Best O"er 900 Thlra o\ve
Gall1poJ1S
Ot'111~
Ca
1937)581 ~11
Sa ndhill over 1 acre 3BR
2BlH
Move tn Ready
!7 8 000 O BO 1304)593
0852

�Announcements

Announcements

. Help Wanted

Announcements

llllp llglllclaaal Claa If •••
SAVE THE DATE!

Family picnic in the afternoon, adults onl)' gathering in the evening.
You will receh·e more information this spring... we hope to see you there!
a 1991 MHS graduate or kno~ of one, update t~ddresses
at mhsclassl991@hotmail.com

HOMEJ&gt;

Moutu: HOM!oS

IURSALE

mRSALE

Crab
Creek
Road.
Picturesque Old Cepe Cod
home.OaK 'construction 34
bedroom 1 bath, big country
kitchen, lots of cabinets.
plus dining r'oom, spacious
living roo'm &amp; study on a.2
acres. Beautiful rolling lawn
w/rnature shade trees &amp; new
pond &amp; dock, nice workshOp
plus 2-outbuildiligs a, car·
port . $68.500. (304)675·
46BO
ahanning@charter . net.
. Sorry ~ 0 Land Contracts.

200616' Wida
Vinyl/Shingle
Only $181 .00/mo.
Call (140)385-7671

porch. shingled roof mini
barn
(740)256-6427 or
&gt;f[40)256·1084

';,&amp;·' o;.

~-~
')' j,.," '

Doublewide Repo 3BR, 2
baths . on Ohio St., Point
Pleasant . Land &amp; tiome
$59.500. Owner Finance .
- (7401446·3570
Newly remodeled. 3 or 4
MUSJ, SELL
bedrooms, central ai r. lull
2002 Clayton 14x5~
basement. hardwood floors.
Pmts. Of $ 169!mo
dethehed garage, large covCall (740)385·9948
ered Patio, fenced back
Nice 1987 14x70 3 bedroom
. close to schools, Point
home. Only $8.995. Will help
$69.500
witn delivery. Call Ela.ine
(740)385-0698.

List your home by callmg

(7401446·3620
View photoslinfp or~ line.

www.orv .com
Home listings.

list your home by calling

(740)446·3620
View pho\os/info online.
ew HaYen , WV.
edroom, 2 Bath, 2 Ca
arage,
Outbu ildings,
lose to town . PRICE
0 SELL! Code 6505 o
all (304)882·3368

r

MOBILE i-Ja-.rn;
'
FORSALE

3BA. 1 beth, porch, Bidwell
$500/mol)th, $500/deposit,
3 references required. Very
clean, no pets. (740)388·
9515.

Attention!
Local Company offerlog ~ No
DOWN PAYMENT ~ · programs lor you ro buy your
hOme 1nstead of renting.
• 100°/0 financing
• Less than pertecr credit
accepted
' P~yment could be the
same as· rent
locators,
Mortgage
(740)367·0000
Nice 3BD house, located on
AI. 160, 2 miles from Holzer
Hospital, big yard . (740)3677195.
· cS-to"p'-T-en-tin_g_B_u_y_4_b_e_d,-oo-m-

On One Acre lot. 740·992·
1.6 acres on Oak Hill Ad. , 9062. Total Electric.
Chester. Ohio. water, gas,
electric
on
properly, 2 bedJOom mobile home in
Racine. $350 m.o. plus $350 ·
$15,000. 304·483·7550
deposit. ·ye"ars lease, no
22 acres . wondertul Yiew, pets. no Call s after 9pm,
ridgetop property. close to (740)992·5039

i

Need to sell your home ?
Late on payments, divorce,
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your horne. All cash
and quic'k closing . 74Q..416~
31130_

UBLIC
NOTICES

vs

Jamie Lambert aka
Barrett
&amp;
Curtis
Lambert
Defendants
Court of common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
· c~urt · In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at pub·
lie auction on the
front. steps ol the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday, April
7, 2006 ·at 10 A.M., of
said day, lhe follow·
lng described Real
Estate : Situate in the
Township of Rutland ,
f,leigs ·county, OhiQ:
Situate In Section 19,
T. 6N. R. 14W of the
Ohio
Company "s
Purchase and being
described as follows:
SEGINNlNG at an Iron
rod .on a fence line on
the North line of
Seeton 19 about 1715
feet East· from the
N.W.
corner
of
Section 19; thence
East413 .0B feet along
the fence on the said
North line Of Section
19 to a point in the
centerline
of
Township Road 41
{Parkinson
Road),
passing a~large stone
at 391 feet lor refer·
once ; thence S. 25
Dog. 22"12"" West,
213.01 loot along the
centerline of ' sold
Township Road 41 to
a point; tho.nce S.33
Deg . 23"06"" West,
137.38 feet along the
centerline of said
Township Hoad 41 to
a point; thence s. 44
Dog . 41 ' 22 "" West,
111 .00 feel along the

·I

centerline of said
Township Road 41 to
a point; lhen~e N. 23
Deg. 32'04"" West.
421.12 feet to the
point of BEGINNING
passing an iron rod at
30 feet for reference.
containing 2.00 Acres
more or less. ,
Excepting all legal
easements, righ1 of
ways, restrictions and.
reservations
of
record .
FOR LAST SOURCE
OF ttTLE SEE O.R.
Vol. 88, Pg.7n of the
Meigs County, Ohio
Records of Deeds.
Parcel
No.
11 01084 .001
Property
address:
34314
Parkinson
Road ,
Middleport,
Ohio 45760.
Current owner Jamie
lambert aka Jamie
Barrett
&amp;
Curtis
Lambert Property at
34314
Parkinson
Middleport,
Road,
Ohio
45760
PP*
11 .01084 .001
Prior
Deed
References
Volume 88, Page n7.
Appraised
at
$45.000.00 terms of
sole : Cannot be sold
lor less than 213rds of
the appraised valUe.
10% down on day of
sale, cash or certified
check, balance d\te
on confirmation of
sale . The appraisal
did include an interior
examinatiOn · of the
house . Robert
E.
Beegle. Meigs tounty
Sheriff.
Altorney
lor
the
Plaintiff McCown &amp;
Associates, 311 . Park
Ave, Ironton, Ohio
45638. 740·532·8744
(3)1,8,15
Public Notice
Public Not.lce
Notice: is hereby
given
that
on

o.

II AK1094

. '

'

+ K 10

WOLFE~ :

Vulnerable: East-West

Chuck Wolfe

Owner

(740) 992-0496

-

South

I NT

r

fRANK .&amp; EARNEST

'.

•I

oI

.·'''
I

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

~

fEKru.tZI:R

SUI'Pt.JES
Cabbage plants and Pepper
plants $9.00 a flat. (740)4461578 . .

30" X 48 ' X 9' Pole Barn
Painted Steel Sides and
Root , 3' Entry,' 14'X9' Sliding
door, lnsu i.Rool, Gutter,
Erected P rice $1.0,7'50.00 ..
24'X 32'X9'4" POle Bar n
Painted Steel Sid~s and
3' Entry, 2-10'X8'
Roof.
Overheads, Insulated Roof.
Overhang, Sea mless Guner
. Erected l$10 ,450 ~ 00 . 740 :.
742·40 1 1 or 1-800·396·
3026.

II~\ \"'I'OR

I\ 110'\

:c.__:________

Twin RiYers Tower is accept·
ing applications for Waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1 - br,
aparlment, call 67.5 -6679
EHO .

room suite $650/mo; 1 room

Farmers Bank
Savings o ff ice~ $225/mo.; 2 room
suite $250/mo. Security
deposit required . You pay

Company Is selling
lor cash In hand or
certified check lhe utilities. All spaces very nice

Ele'Jator. Call (740)446· 3644

following collateral:
. for appointment.
2002 Pontiac Sunllre
1G2JB524027144464 Retail and office space avail·
1992
Dodge D50 able in downtown Point
JB7FM24W7NP01274 Pleasant, $500/month. next
9
.· to Courthouse. Contact Ju,ie
1993 Toyota . T100 a
t
1T4VD20A3P0004505 pointple asant_comm_ rental
1992
·Oldsmobile @yahoo.com or (703)528·
.
.
R o y. a ' I e 0617.
1G3HN53L4NH346357
\IIIH II\ \ l lh l
1990 Ford Ranger XLT
1FTCR11 YOLUC16462
HOUSEHOU&gt;
1994
Chevrolet
Goons
Beretta
1G1LV1540RV174108
1998
Chevrolet
Malibu
LS
1G1NE52M4WY16959
Appliance
1
1986 Chevrolet Blazer
1G8EK18HOGF198460
Warehouse
1996 Chevrolet S-10
1GCCS1446TKI00607 in Henderson , WV. Pre·
The Farmers Bank owned Applicanes starting
and
- Savings at $75 &amp; up all under
Company, Pomeroy, Warranty,
also
have
Ohio reserves the Household
Mi sc. Items
right to bid at this
sale, and to with.d raw starting at .99t &amp; up
(304)675-7999
the above collateral
prior to ·sale . Further, New Berber carpet $6.951
The Farmers bank yard. Remanents starting at
and
Savings $25. Mollohal:l Carpet. 76
Company reserves Vine
St. ,
Gathpol1;&gt;,
the right to reject any (740)446·7444 .
or all bids submitted.
The
above Thompsons Appl iance &amp;
described collat~rat Aepair-675·7388 . Fer sale.
will be BOld ""88 . Ia· re· conditloned automatic
where-Is", wilh no washers &amp; dryers, re1rigera c
expressed or Implied tors , gas and electriC
ranges , air conditiOners. and
warranty Biven. ·
For further Infor- wringer washers . W ill do
mation , or for an repairS on maJOr brands In
appointment
to shop or at your home
inspec1
collateral,
Used Furn1ture store. 130
prior to sale date con·
tact Cyndle, Stacy or Bulaville ,Pike. Washers . dry·
ers . gas/ electnc ranges ,
Randy at 992-2136.
mattresses.
couches .
3/15,1 6,17
Cl inelles , cHesls,
much

r

c .
. ~

.. ..
(II'.,,

~

FoR SALE

MaroRCYU.F.oil

4 WHEti.Eit5
89 Honda Gotdwing w/trait·
er. 6cyl. , 45,000 miles. very
good shape , we ll main·
tained , coYer, extra lights
and
chro me,
$7.150.
(740)44 t -5540 .

&amp;

~--INsrRiliiiiiiiiilll\litiiEiiil-_.1
NTS
98

Dodge Dakota Sport. 2
'
WD, Red. Auto. VS mag ...
Fender
and
Gibson nice. $5,800.00. 388·9693
HOllE
Epiphone acoustic guitars. or 740-742-2662.
IMPROVEMfNJS
new in box. your choice
Chevy Colorado Ext. CaD
S150 cash. 740 379-2601
BASEMENT
'05 . Auto. 2WD, w/Oedliner,
FoR.SALE .
W~TEAPROO FING
excellent condition . Kelly
Blue Book $14.600. will' sell Unconditional litet1me guar·
for $13,000. (304)523- 11 79 antee. \,.occll references fu r·
nished. Established 1975.
Commercial Property &amp;
4x4
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Building for Saie. 9 .9 acres
0870, Roge rs Basement
.
FOR
SALE
Ambrosia Machine Inc.
Waterproofing.
Route 2 Bmc 254 Potn.t
Plea sant. WV
.25550 . 1998 Jeep Wra~gler 4X4. d
(304)675 - 1722
7 30 _ · ctd .. aut? . a1r, soft top.
4:00pm
84.000 m1., $8.500.00. 740·
742-2357 .

liB

40 MmoRcva.t:'il
4 WHEEI.ERS

;:;:r-~..;;:.:;;;;---,

riO
FARM
~,--oiEQiliiiiiiUiiiPMENT
ii'liiiiio-.,J

"02" Honda 919, 2.200 m iles
"
Load Trai l/Load MaJ~ Trailers· with cover and lank bag .
Asking
GoosenecKs / Dumps / Great cond ition.
$4,500
call
{740)446-4096
Utilities.
Carm1chael
Equipment (740}446-2412.
1999 Harley Davidson Ultra
· c1ass1C. loaded, E11celle~11
condition . 29.000 total m11es
Pric;:e $13.500
Call 740·
949-221 7 until7 pm.
~ooo Yamaha Road

Star
~740)446-0946
loaded 6.567 miles . exc.
m~;...,;;..;,;.;,;;____., . cond S6.odo (304]675 -2793

j

.-

LIVE.iiTOCK

,tM

1

or (304)593·5157

·

2002 Harl~y OavJdson uu'ra
· Class 1c ,
6400
m 11es,

1 year old P11'liO rTIInJature ~
3041895 _ 3825
slud
$350 OBO
Ca P
(740)256-1233
2005 CRF250R bare ly 11d·
den . mNer . raced. $3 .900
Angus Bulls. tw9 X-b~eds. 4
0~0 (740)245-58 15
he1fers ~xcellent . tlreedmg
· more Gra11e Monuments Slate
Run Fa·rm
See 99 Harley Fat Boy. 9.400
(740 ]446·4782 ,. GaU1pohs. www slate r u·nfarm com m1les. lots of Chrome and
OH . Hrs 11·3(M-Si
1740)286·5395
e11tras 1740)446·9954

All typtJB o~ roOtJng:
New .or Repair
Seamless Guner
Downspout

24 hr E m er~e m·:'
Servict!
LkenSl'd &amp; lnsur.·d .

Over 30 ~' CHI'S

. THE BORN LOSER

~WI-\I•J'S WIT&gt;\ Tf.\1~ GV'&lt; 7

cx pcricnct'
•=d Dill/i,wnrr
1740)992·4l1Hl
C hu ck Wolfe/Mar.

,_.AA~&amp;. f\till.II'&lt;K':l, tt"

""'

\-JE. 0--t·i""~
1-Jt\TG\ 1-\IM, f.\€. Ct\t-1

i

==l

•7~0 1992· 04%

591 -434R

I

WP..TC!-l.

~

~

•~

1997 Yamaha Jetsk1 with
tra iler- yellow &amp; white- ask·
ing $2,700 OBO. call (304)
895-3840

r

Treated P1ne Fence Posts.
$4.00 each . Call (740)446·
4734
--------T~oy BUill PTO 8 horse
model
h.1 ller/forrowe r.

alii SOns
•

BIG NATE
I "M STIL-L Tl'-'1tNC:. TO
f'GU~E OUT Ttit S
PHEROMONE STUFF. .

IMPORTS

Athena

•

•

•

Hill's Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSEll

~

\

/(!) ~\

l ' --·-

'J

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

AII.E•fT . A 6001&gt; 11/\"]"CH.
IS THI'&lt;T IT? DOES
T&gt;i,O.T t1E,O.N r ·vE GOT

•

NO C.HA.Nc.E.?

0

0

0

0

'.

..

29670 Bashan Road
· Racine, Ohio

·

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

45771
740-949· 2217

' Sizes -5'x10'
to 1D'X30'

•

•

0

,EANUTS ·
NOW, WI-lEN UJE; ASK ~IM IF

YOU 14Av'E A FRIEND WJ.lO
TO PLA'f ON OUR TEAM?

'{01.1 CAN PLA'f. DON'T LET
I-liM KNOW 'fOU;RE 50 SI·WRT

Stbp &amp; Compare

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

0

...

740-992-1611

Hours

0

•
0

1/ 14/1 mo. pd

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

CONTRACTING

• Prompt &amp; quality

Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp; PlUmbing
Roofing &amp; Guners
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decks

work
• Affordable Rates
' References

Available
• Free Estimates

wv 036725

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740-742-229l
• Leave a message

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992- 62 t 5
Pomeroy Oh10
25 Yea1 s l ocill Expcr1env'
I '·

-Economy Beef $8.25
·Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
·Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
·Soybean Meal $1l25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85

GARFIELD
•

ei..L.E:N PU1"

'

ME ON HOLD

35537 St Rl 7 N • Pomerov. Ohio 45769
740-985-383 i

IN1"E:RE:51"1NG
50NG ...

J
.'

FOR RENT;- MEIGS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
l Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547
Now Available At

BAlJl\1 LUI\1BER
Scorpion Tractors
"'Taking i"lr. Sting !Jut Of
HaniiVr~rk!"'

GRIZZWELLS
; ~1-\AHb YoU

1B
21
23
26

28

5

32
33
36
37

38
39
40

13 Astronaut
Shepard
1B Practical
19 Setlorth
·
20
22

n
24
25
·
28
30
34
35
40

41 Cato "s
highway
43 Moth
results
autho r ita~
45 Romance,
lively
to Pedro
Imposed
46 Plndar lone
taxes
47 Kind of kilo
Coneen
48 Pan ofTNT
venues
50 Ostrfchllke
Sharper·
bird
edged
5I Handy
Natural
abbr.
Mortarboard 52 Tint ·
feature
Slrong-1
Metro RRs
Gawkers
Off course
Money in
the bank

Yesterday 's deal - repeated here generated so me queries. In a match
between England and Ireland last
January. So uth opened one spade
because one no·trump wou ld have
st1own 12·14 points. Bul if one no-trump.
promised 15·17 pomts. would you open
one spade or one· no-trump?
Some experts always open one no-trump ·
with a five-Ca rd ma,or, some do it Occasionally, and some never. I prefer to open
one no- trump . showing my hand~type
(Snd strength) as quickly as poss1ble. This
also makes 1t easier to find a 5-3 heart 111. ·
eYen when partner has a weaK hand.
(Remember, you may run 'lrom a One·notrump opening·even with zero points.) 111
open one spade and partner responds
one no-trurnp, I would have to reb1d lwo
no-tru mp.

0

0

•

YE.S!
I"LL \.JE/\1'

US~'~

North m1~ht raise to three no-trump, tak·
ing a chance · on hearts, and get very
lucky because the East-West heatts are
blocked.
II North could make an immediate three~
hearJ response to show a singleton heart
and 5-4 in the minors (as ·some . p'a1r6
play), South would continue with . three
spades, and North would ra1se to tour
Spades. Then South. migh t move higher.
If North could respond two spades , a
transler to clubs , South would say that he
' liked club!? (rebidding three clubs in my
style) . . North would con tinue with three
hearts, showing his singleton. {Go. to
www.phil lipalderbridge .com for information about these trans fers.) South would
bid three spades. which North woyld
raise . Now South might use Blackwood.
But 1t is a tough slam to reac~ .

G

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity C'pher cryp~ograms ar~ crellled lrorr quctatJans by larnous people past and
EacMietter •n lhe Cipller star'()Sior anoc.tler

~esent

Today's clu€f 0 equals Y

"' AH

GX

VLCA

VX

G X B H P .X V L C A
GXBHPNDS ,
INEX ."'-

CJX , C DU

AH

V X C J X 8 C W C G I X· H E

NR

ALX

GCJTBL

HD I O XDU

HE

RWNDHYC

.PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The dubious privilege ol a lree·lance wnte1 is
give~· the freedom, to starVe anywhere." - S.J. Pere lman

he·s.

Astro-

Graph

-... 'lllrthday:

Thursday, March 16, 2006
By Bernice Bede Osol
An exci!ing year ahead coult1 be in lhe off Ing lor you because of a st rong desire to
substantially expend your horizons,
Although you are likely to attempt many
things 'you 've never prev10usly tned, most
Will add lo your success ·
PISCES (Feb_ 20-March 20) - AlthD!JQh
you are likely to place considerable
emphS:sts on your ' personal 1n1erests. you
will do so in such a manner that gams sup·
port from others, not oppoSiti on. Try1ng to
·patch up a broken romance ?
ARIES (Marc h 21-April 191--' Condittons
in general Should be lar more favorable tor
you than they are aPt lo be tomorrow If
you're working on an Important ass1gn·
men!. get 11 out ot the way now.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - This 15 an
e-.cellent day to put aside sorne t1me tor
tormulat1ng your goals and e11pect"hons
tor the next couple ot weeks What you lay
out today will moye you 1n the d1rec1101l you
wish to go
GEMINf {May 21·June 20) · Someth1119
that had looked to be only moderately prol·
ttable wtll tu rn out to be rather grand in ttle
long run becaus.e of the tim e and eHort you
apply In it. Your smarts w111 turn the tnck
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - E-ma11 or
telephone someone who 1S presently sep·
arated from you by Clistance ana wilh
wh om' you've neglected to stay 1n touch as
mllch .as you should Some thmg gooU w1ll
come lrom 11.
LEO {July 23-Aug 22)...,.. II wtll be di fftcult ,
tor an'yone to dece tYe you because you
s8e lh mgs CfLJ119 Clearly at !hiS lime
Howe11er. 11 you snould eaten someone
te!ling a small l1b, aon't make a b1g deal out
of 11
VIRGO !Aug . 23·Sepl. 22) ~ Fnends wtll
~f,nd you pn agreeable co mpanton today
beca,Jse ot your strong Jncllnalfcn to be'
cooperative . You see all Sides ol1ssues. so
11 11 be easy tor you to make conce ssrons
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Establish
mea11Jngful obt€1QtJves today where yout
wor l&lt;. or caret=r tS conc erned Th1 s •S one of
those days where b1g thmgs can be
accomp!iShed ,t yOLfYe got a , m1nd to do

\

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

~

While attending a political
mettinc' I heard·a
woman
.
•ell her friend. '"Making
a long stc.ry sho11 may

f--..;T-i-1
-~--rl. E-r.
; ~l_Y-r--ij ~~::.;::~ -~:" cnucllo
7

t

q~ed •

1
. I I I
by. f•iling In tho "'iuing words ·
'--...1.-.L.....JC.......I.C....J.......J vou develop frllm s:cp NO' J b~ .

@)

UNSnAMBL!

·A~~W£&lt;

FOil.

IIII

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 3114106
Worker - ·wager -·Blind - fcl\lny . .~LL .GRIEF
The J¢solate teenage girl had broken up with her long
time bovfricml. "Patience."" her mother consoled her. ""is
the cur; for Al.LGRIEF.""

ARL·O &amp; JANIS

,o

J{ts-

Shade River AG Service, Inc

'

... IJNLESS "(O\J CAN
SOMEHOW CliAN&amp;E
YouR ~~E~~~~

PHEROI10N E5

D

Why Drive Anywhere Else?
NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR
STYLE...

•

"I: Mt=.&gt;\.N. IF
'(
PliEf'.OMONES AND

JENNY'S

16
17

42 CSA
monogram
Seme here! 43 One-time
Fable wr~er
JFK arrival
tsol-tc 44 Hurler's stat
Outfit
4&amp; Not alen In
Meter/gram
perception
49 Encircled
system
Give some 53 Tvpe of
slack
wmdow
Night before 54 Putting
First name
on airs
In advice
55 Occupy
Tennestime and
athlete
space
Silty
56 Elegance
Model, to
begin wilh
DOWN
High
dudgeon
1 Equine
Always,
mother
to Keats
2 -been
Olin or
hod!
Horne
3 Trtm a dolly
Unfavorable 4 Automotive
Has a
purchase
cra ving
5 Noted
Pitch water
Hamlet
Nine-day
portrayer
6 Repair a
devotions
Embroiders, . ·:wrong
maybe
7 Jacket style
Stone or
8 Family
Atomie
nickname
Cousteau"s 9 Great Lakes
summer
cargo
Wind up
· 10 Desk Item
Ticket info 1 2 Film sets

Suppose South opens on9 no-trump.
What happens n'ext?

0

__...,

1"1&lt;•&lt; 1,

r

GOT
IT

i

l\1(ffilllS

·sa.

~\II\

1

tURSALE

2004 Dodge Neon 37,000
miles, runs great, good on 2 man Bass Bpat New w1th
7 Pure Breed Pit Bull Pups. gas. $3,800 OBO. (740)256· electnc anchor. 4.5 gasoline
Br indle
Black
Tan 903-l or (740 )256 . 12 33 . '
Mercury eng1ne. new batiery
Chocol~te. Be aut;tul mark:
$2 ,300
080
(740)441·
ings.
Must see!! $200 95 •Cama ra. Olac~. T-top,
8299.
(304)675·1105after5pm
auto: $1.800.(740)256·1618
- - - - - - - , - - - 01 (740)256·6200
24ft. Pontoon boat. 48HP
AKC Bassett hound pups, 6
engine. Nearly new trailer.
weeks old , $250 ma.le. $300 96 Buick leSabre 97.QOO
(7401446· t 543
female. Call ( 7401256 ~ 6877
mi .. needs body work and
' radiator. new tires. ballery, 60 Aum PARTs-&amp; .
AKC Boston Terrier puppies . brakes and rotors, $ 1.500
Acet:.&gt;-'iORtES
2 brindle. 2 black and wh ite . OBO. (740)446-9632.
$400. Ready 3115/06. Call - - - - - - - - (740)441 -1047.
99 Fo rd Mustang V6 , . 5 Brand new. ong1na1 package
'94 Chevy,
--'--- - - - - - - speed, 90,000 miles. black, 2"-3~ lift kit,
CKC Chihua hua puppy, great
condition ,
many t /2-314 lon. $100. (7401367·
·
female. 18 wks old. light options $5,000. (740)446· 7899, 7-9pm .
lawn and white , 3.31bs. 1327:
T RANSMIS·
S350 firm (740)992-5859
~~--:::-~--, BUDGET
15
SIONS. Double bolted. All
TRUCKS
F01c Terrier puppies. 1st
typ es. (740)245·5677 or .
FOR SAl£
shots. 1st worming . $150
1740)645·7400
(740)446-4446
1999 GMC w/extended C?tb, For sale· Parts Yeh1cles.
Minia tu re
long
Haired loaded, 305 engine, auto· 1991 F250 3/4 ton picKup,
Dachshund puppies for sale. 'rnat1c, 67,000· miles, good lull site Bronco. 87 &amp; 86
Females $350. male $30Q. clean, solid truck , e11.cellent Bronco ll. (740)379·9887.
cond ition, $8,500 080.
(740)367..0590 after 6pm.
(740)441'1014
C\MPER~ &amp;
Registered Border Collie · - - - - - - - - MaiUH HOJ\tF.."J.
pups. Wormed &amp; t st sho ts . 2001 Dodge R&lt;;~m truck ~,o_.:;,;l;ii;;;!o:,;
Imported Olood lines. ~now 2500 SLT HeaYy Duty.
2003 Jay co Eagle 34 · 5th
tor hearing Instinct and etas· springs, camper speci8.1. 10·
wheel w/slide out . New con·
SIC colors _(740)379-91 10.
ply tires . $7 ,500. Call Ed
diti6n,
$22.000
080.
MUSICAL
(740)367·0624.

OrlandO/Disney area
7f6
Blazer LT
4x4 .
n1ghts stay. Pa1d $600 sell 2001
loaded,
New
lor $ t 99 good for 1 yr. 91,000ml,
Goodyears. Onsta r, Leather,
(304)362·0014
·All Power, $7,900. (74Q)24~·
I \l{\1\1 1'1'1 II..,
9245. (7401367·0624.

AN' AIN'T ALREADY
A WIFE TO PROVE

H.l. Wrhestl

David Lewis

BoATS

1

':"l.:'l:'l.S!:aS..!i e

26 Years Experieitce

40

..&gt;EST ONCE I'D LIKE
TO MEET A FELLER
WHO'S TH' MARRYIN'

I

Free l:~ ti inate.'o
S500! 'Police Impounds!
Cars from S500. For listin g's
800·39 1·5227 ext. 3901

HOW "S '1'0\JR
LOVE LIFE,
LUREEN?

KIND !!

J

ln"urcd

L----I'Elsj,j;liil'liil-_.11 . 7762.
0

W"WW.tlm!Hr.,...,.,koabmetry.aom

740-992-6971

i994 Ford Escort LX 5 spd .
OpportunitieS.
about 140.000 miles. Needs
_:_:__ _ _ _ _ __
eng ine. $800 obo. {740)339·
Lg 3·Bedroom. pt, Pleasant, ----~---2356
Kitchen furnished, AC and Bloc k, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels. etc. Cla.ude
all Electric Deposit required. Winters. Rio Grande. OH 1995 ~rown Vic ., Runs
Good ,
Looks
Good.
$JOO/rent ( 304 l 675 -7783 · Call740-245·5121 .
$1,250.00 740-992·1493 or
leave ITlessage
740·4 16· 1472
Modern 1 bedroom apt. Pole Barn 30x5011 12 feet
painted .metal, slider, free 200 1 Grand Jeep CherOkee
(740)4464!390.
deliver y.
Only
$7.595.
·
Lim ited, w~ 1 te, n~w tires .
New 2BR apts. Watson Rd . (937)718- 1~71, www.nation- e)(cellent condition. $12,500
near St. 'At. 35, Rod ney wid~potebarns .com
{
)
.
or (
•
740 446 4060
7401367

Pi ke/850 area. Ref. Dep
reQuired, no . ·pets 'call
(740)44'6 ·1271, (740)709·
1657.
---------.
Tara
To'wn house
Apartments , Very SpaciOus,
2 Bedrooms, _ CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No
Pets.
Lease
Plu s
Security Deposit ReqUired,
(740 ) 367_7086 .

Hardwood C3blnetry Alld FurnHure

F.ast

From a slam
to a·n opening bid

STEEL

~UILDING

North
??'

Opening lead: ¥

WV#O 971 4

I "0"\('IU. II·.

West
Pass

15

29
31

Dealer: South

CONSTRUCTION~~

1.1.1\IS

J 3 2

4o K Q 9

'

1
6
11
13
14

27

South

n 11

Cl'll '~0 t hI~

IUIIIIIW

·.;-~llTYI'fS ~ !:

or

r

t., Pomeroy,

992-5682

304-675· 2457

details (740)441·0194
(740)&lt;41·1 184

Saturday, March 18,
SPA&lt;E
2006 at 10:00 a.m .,a
FOR RENT
public sale will be
htild at 211 W. Second
Downtown Ot1ice Space- 5
Ohi
S
The
and

.

03 15·06
3

• A 754
ofo AJH52
We~t
East
(I J
4 ·8 6 5 2
¥ Q7654
¥ A K 10 8
• Q8 6 2
• J " J
ofo I 0 7 4·
... 6 3

• SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •
Eslimales Playgrounds

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

Q7

•••

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. ! 24

I 0"\S.IIH I ·110\
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

WEEKLY AVAILABLE
n cludes
A efr iger ator/ M ic row ave
From $ 175 To $250 College;
Hill Motel Call (740)245·
5326

Public NOtites i • ~~~:~~,;:~.

I

(I

!

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

MENTS
AT ,
·For sale 5x5 rou nd ba les of
PRICES AT JACKSON Channel . Flat Bar, Steel
hay, $17.50. Call (740)446·
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Grating
For
D rain s,
9777.
Drive from $344 to $442. Driveways &amp; WalkWays. l &amp;L
Walk to shop &amp; movies . can Scra p Metals Open Monday, R ound
of
hay.
bates
740~446-2568.
Equal Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; (3041675-1743
Delano
Housing Opportunity~
_ __:_...:_:__ _:__--,'- Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed Jackson Farm _
Brand new 2BR apts'. on Thu rsday,
Saturday
&amp;
SEFJJ, PLANT &amp;
Bob McCormick Rd. Call fo r Sunday. {740)44~7300

Townhouse
apartments,
anc1/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 - 1.111
for appl [car ion &amp; information .

and deposit requifed, no
pets. (304)576-4037.

Yuur Right to Know. Ddh·ered 'Right to

North

Licensed Home Builder

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· · - - - - - - -

Bidwe ll area. clean 2BD,
$375/monlh ,
includes
sewer/water.
References

IYJ··~~

I

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

NEW AND. USED

ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

bedroom, 2 baths, very nice.
Located in quiet residenlial
area in Pomeroy, Ohio. 740992· 1517 or 740-992-003i .

r

ROGER HVSELL
GHRHGE

APART. Steel Beams. Pipe AetJar
BUDGET FOr · COncrete ,
Angle ,

. main highway perfect for 4·
2BR 5 minutes from town .wheeler trails, (740 )707$400/month, deposit &amp; refer- Gracious living. 1 and 2 b'ed2109
ence req uired. No pets. room apartments al Vil lage
g acrfis wilh 28v32 barn, s . (740)446-9342 after6pm. . Manor
and
,Riverside
acres, 2 trai ler hOokups. Call
Apartments in Middleport
Attention
Construct 1on From $2 95 _$4 44 . call 740·
(740)256-1922.
Workers. Fully furnished_·2 992 _5064 . . Equal Housirig

·1 t
t
M b.l h
. Retiring from military, com- . o I e ome 51 es or up o
1
11
$1,000 OBO Call (304)675· ing home alter 20 years.
6 80 in Country Homes.
740 385 4019
3423
Lookirlg for 3BA+ home or (
1 •
·
5+ acre building site, in
A ......
15 New Slnglewjdes
Eastern schooi district close
n;~R;;;"'
In Stock &amp; Ready
to Tuppers Plains or AT 7 L.~---iiiiliiiiiiioo-,1
For Del lveryl
with utilities on site . Contact ·
Call (740)385-9948
Jeff 301 _638 _0664 . E-mail 1 and 2 ·bedroom apartments . furnish9d and unfurnishet1 , security deposit
room, 2 bath, heat pump,
required , no pets, 740-992nice!
S118
deck. · Very
2218.
·
(740)388·9170.
2 apa rtments lor rent.
1994 14x70 Oakwood 3
Al!lcine: Ohio (shon drive
Bdrm. 1 bath . $ 10 .500.
from power· p l~nt) Deposit
Must .be moved from current
required, no pets·. (740)992·
location {304)576·2 101
5174 or (740)441-011 0.

Sheriff Sales
Case
Number
05CV059
Walter
Morgege
Company
plaintiff

BEAUTIFUL

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

2bi Apartment. 600 sq. ft.
Newly r~modele d , reference
required, in Point Pleasant.
(304)675·8635

loreclosure $15,000. For li st-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

Phillip
Alder

2 .Bedroom Apartment avai l ~
able in Syracuse. $200.00
deposit $350.00 per month
renl. Reilt ir:~cludes water,
sewer. trash.'
No pets,
SuffiCient income needed to
qualify. 740-378-6111 .

r

REAL F.SlJ\TE
WANim

r

.r_AMl_Q_UiiS_..I

LIVESJUCK

www.mydailysentinel.com
BRIDGE

(it

Used mobile homes for sale ings 800· 39 1-5228 e1&lt;t.
14' &amp; 16' wide. 2 &amp; 3 bed- 1709.
rooms 6 10 choose tram
1a9s model &amp; up. 1740)388·
20 MOBllEFOR
. n'!.?~ .
·8513 (daytime). (740)388·
.IUJ'It
8017 {evenings). ~740)2940460 (weekends)
2 Bedroom Mobile Hom e
For Rent $350.00 Per Mo.
U:m &amp;
$350.00 Deposit. No Pets·
ACRF.AGF.

r

==

1ST MON . FREE RENT
WITH PAID DEP. NEW
ELLMVIEW
TOWNHOUSEJAPTS
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2&amp; 3BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
'All ELECTRIC"
"CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE, REF.
"D ISHWASHER
"GARAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BLINDS
"CEILING FANS
"WATER , SEWAGE &amp;
TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882·3017

3 Bedroom .hOuse for rani in
All electric,
---~----­ Middleport.
99 161C80 Schultz New $425.00 Plus Deposit. No
Generation. Vinyl "siding, insrde pats. 740-4 16·1354
stlingled 2x6 outside walls. 3 or 992-3194.
bedroom .• 2 bath, mb. garden tu~ . stand-up shoWer. 3BD, 1ba, 17 acres, Green
Kirchen appliances. central schools. $650/month plus
plus
deposit.
NC. heat pump. gas fu r- utilities.
nace. 8x12 coYered front (740)256-8152.

House tor Sale 3 miles out
Sandhill Road. 3 Bedroom,
1 Bat~ (304)675-2507

Home Listings .

r

I&lt; I '\ I \I ...,

)Yednesday, March 15, 2oo6
~L.LEV OOP

Help Wanted

WANTED: Positions available to assisl an
individual with mental retardation in
Meigs County (Racine Area):
I) 17 hrs: 10am-6pm Sat; . 4-8pm
SUiliMon;
2) 17 hrs: 4-8pm Tues-Fri;
Must have high school diploma or GEP.
val id driver's license, three years good
driving experience · and adequate
automobile insurance. $7.25/hr. Send
resume to: Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640 oremail to: beyecset'v@yahoo.com. Deadline
for applicalions: 3117/06.
Pre"employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Saturday, May 27, 2006
lf ~·ou a~

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel .

FEEL LI\&lt;..'C.

SCORPIO tOCt l4 ·Nov 22J . ____ You nav.e
tne ability today to grasp and absoro
~n owledge q~ucl&lt;.er I han, usual So tf !here
1s.any research or study1ng you neod to do
r!on't put 11 ott Youf task w1ll come 'ar ft3S·
1er toi you nnw
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec 21 J -- The
· Snd results sllould work ou t as yoU anhCI·
pate . prov1ded you don 't leave anyth1ng up.
to chan ce You can contra! events by faytng
oui a g~me plan
CAPR ICOR N (Dec 22-Jan
191 'Sunshine sr1ould start to IJI!el '1n1o several
S1tuat1ons .that '.\Jere prcv1ouslyo shrouded
by clouds When ·~ou Eiee the lig111 1t'll stlfll·
ulatt= your enthuSidS•n and elevale you1
optrtf-tsm
AOUARIUS 1Jan 2G·Feb 19· -. Yo11r
11nanCial p1Ct1Jre tooks qwte ~nCOL.13QJng
IOdav. espec1ally tn maner~ v. h•~re you c;an
IJ\1!· your e~p~;~rt•st- or serv1ce~ !o .... or~
Com1Jensttt1o1i w11 • 1:'1:1· f'IOIJOrtlonate IY
VOUI PIOdUC!IYity

i.'&gt;t.W ~II.E. A\JY DAY fHAT EIJD6
WIT~ "\'"''

SOUP TO NUTZ

P:,ltlrG

."Vtfi::(?

·

Drive Tru~tor
with 'Ohp &amp; 40hp Kuhola Engines
MiLl -Site --I Wheel

BAUM LUMBER
St. HI. 124 C hestt"r 9!!5-3301

'

_I

�,,
I .

Ohio women's coach Bria resigns
ATHENS (AP ) - O hio
women's bas ketball coach
Lynn Bria resigned Tuesda y
after st!ven sea son s in
which the Bobcats fa iled to
finish with a wrnn rng
record .
Athletk direc tor Ki rby

Hocutt said th e un iversity
will co nduct :1 national
search to find a replace ment.
After leadin g Central
Florida to the 1999 NCAA
to urnament and a 50 -3 6
reco rd in. three seasons ,

Bria went 77- 123 at Ohio\
including a 43-69 record in
the
Mid-American
Conference . Her seasonhigh for victories was 13.
reached three times.
Ol]io finished 9-20 this
season, 5-ll in the MAC .

GIRLS BASKETBALL

BOYS BASKETBALL

--.

l'nlllllm
Alexander i.

5-8

~

6-0

G
G

~9

(]

Jordon ThornhUI'

Belpre
Belpre

Jay Edwar&lt;ts'

NOII·'II&gt;r~

5-10
5-1
6·1
6·2
6·5

G
G
F

O'urotln Adorn$'

Alodndor

-Clu!Mo'

Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
Jr
Jr
Jr
So

~11Jrrtl~

-ndor
Belpro
Melgl
Nels·York
Nels·'OI&gt;rk
VInton Co
VInton Co
We116tQII,

Cde-

S,.,..tso C11ne'
Megan E&lt;Nrarda'

5-10
5-10

F

G

5-11 ' Cl
5·2
(]
5-11 .F

Jr
Jr
Sr
' Fr
Jr

5-5
(l
So
Choi hit three homers in a
Sr·
5·9
.
F
Vinton
Co
Kr18Un
Collins
Jared ,Albright•
G
game against Minnesota last
Jr
6·9
Cl ·
Vlnlon Co
Dustin Guthrie
c
. Me~~ Owlnge
5·5 G. .So
season.
Erin sturgftl
Second
t
..
m
"This Is different - it's for
Slcondtum
Alel(ander
5-7
G
Jr
Zach Hedrick
my own country," he said
Affl'/ Smltll· .
AleXander
H
G
Jr
Belpre
6-4
0
Sr
8rad Loylllnd
through a translator. "And we
Marando Bliktr
' Belpre ·
s-a G ' Sr
Jr
MelQ$
6'3
C
David Poole
Taooa Oucl&lt;v(oi1h
Belpre
5-10 F/C Sr
were ab le to beat the U.S.,
Sr
Erk: VanMeter
Molgo
• 5-10 G
Kour1ney
llonnleon
Net$YOrk
5-a
F
Fr
waono.o
:.
5-11
•
f
,
M
att
Eberts
Jr
!"
which is tl1e best team in the
Jr ,~
Mo~Wllle Wallerl Nolt·'ll&gt;rk
5-4
G
fr
Wollll1on
J 5-1 0
G
E~
Henry
world."
·.. t&lt;o1seY Day
.
VIntOn Co
5-5
G
Sr
Team · USA's problems
,
' t·C:: :L··:. . '
'' 11oetV~ ~'..,.,I&lt;SIIeeGuthrlo, Aloxan®r ·
.
began with Willis.
.CooCft of lilt YNi' ...- O...ion Guthrie; At.,anr:ler ,
" 1 just had bad rhythm
today," he said . "I think I was
TVCHocking
very composed out there. I
Flrst.l&lt;ltUI\
had a gre.at game plan, I just
flflll tum
Nathoo Cj&gt;urt'.
Eastern
6.0
G .Sr
Sr
5-5
G
Eastern
didn't exec ute. I' m just not
Brandon Bemhort' Fed floe!&lt;
6-0 . F
Sr,
Jesstci Hupp'
F
Jr
·.
5·1
0
Evan
Garratt
·
Fed
l;fQol&lt;
.
..'
e.c
'
F
.
..
Jr
Eas\Orn,
E~nw~
playing the best baseball I
Sr
5-6 • G
Fed HOck
. Shane Lu~lng
Miller
,
~
·
G
Sr
•
. Ef1111y Duo"'"
can possibly play. My confiSr
G
5-3
Sou!liern •
Lindo Eddy
Matt ChriStman
. THmbte
~
C
Sr
dence is still up."
Sr
G
5-5
Anthony Dixon
Trlmbtll
5-10 G
Sr ·
Jenniltr Grandy' · .'t)tmblo
T~mble
,
·
Sr
G
s-a
JlilleTrooo
Martinez hasn' t lost faith in
Matt Scho1l .•
WaterfOrd
6-3
F
.Sr
Sr
G
Haley
Oraytr"
waterlortl
s-a
Matt
Townsend
WaterfOrd
6-0
G
Sr
the Florida Marlins left-hanSr
6- 1
F
Hope King'
Watorforll
der.
Blie0nd1Mm·
"I don't think there's a man
..;,..ndleom
Mer1&lt; G&lt;*$
Eastern
5-iJ G
Sr
5·11 c
So
.FedHoctc
Ryan Fleler .
i'Jier ChadWoli , Fji&lt;;IHOill&lt;
s.a G : Jr.
in that clubhouse who doesSr
Kelstllrown
Mlliei
,
Brandt
Dey
Fed,
Hock
·
.
6-2
F
:
'
Jr
··
5·7
G
'
n't want to give 'the ball to
s-11 ·. c·
Sr
Ashley H...v.ner Millet'·
DuaUri Householder MU18r
6·1
F
So
Dontrelle Willis," Martinez
Sr
5-a G
Palflci('Johnson
SoultiOi1) •
w· G . ' 'Jr:' , Krlotitna WIPilrrit' Soojthern
' 5-4
G
said. "It's just a matter of givSr
'Trimble
Cllaz Mohler
' · l)lmble .
, · ~10 G
Sr
Hannah Flirts
'
.
.
.
'
:,
Fr
5-7
G
Jo.taloa Drayer .. ware~
ing him one more chance.
Co-Moll
Vrlllllble
P
I
Na1l1ah
COurt
(EM101'n),
Matt
We're go ing to do everything
'
Cllri&lt;tn!'lll (Trimble)
,
. . .
·
• . _ • ~- Yal~- ~ ~ .Haley. Drll)'er (Waterford),
we can to give him the ball."
. co.coe,c11M of!MYH! - Greg'Koope (ll'ln)ble), T(\m'!llmflll Jer)nller G"ndy (Tnmllle)
"
Jeter and Ken Griffey Jr.
(Waterjl)f~
' , :. •.
·· '. ·
:\' ;
, CDIIC~alhW.r ·~,JerryCioae,Waterford
· '
had three hits each. Griffey
drove in two runs with a
Belpre's Jordan Thornhill Williams also made the sechomer in the third off winner
was named the Ohio ond team in the Hocking
Min ·Han Son and a·n RBI sinDivision
MVP.
while Divi sion.
gle in· the ninth, when the
Hupp ,
Weber
and
Alexander's Blaine Gabriel
from Page Bl
Americans' scored their final
was named TVC Ohio Williams are repeat All,
two runs.
TVC selections from a seaCoach of the Year.
"Now we have two days
On
the
other
side,
four
·
son ago.
Classmate Mark Guess, as ·
off before we play again,"
The
Alexander
well as Southern junior area girls were named to the
Martinez said . ''Certainly
Patrick Johnson, were also first team in their respective . father/daughter combin ahaving the ga me in hand and
tion of Denton and Kei lee
named to the Hocking's sec- conferences.
now our record is 1-1 with
The Eastern duo of senior Guthrie won Coach of the
ond team.
the prospect s of Rog~r
Greg Koons of Trimble Jessica Hupp and junior Erin Year and Most Valuable
Clemens going against
and Waterford's To1n Simms Weber, as well as Southern Player, respectively. in the
Mexico on Thursday, it's a .
shared TVC Hocking Coach senior Linda Eddy, took top Ohio Division.
pretty good situation."
Two seniors, Waterford's
honors in the Hocking
of the Year honors.
The Meigs duo of senior Division . while freshman Haley Drayer and Jennifer
Eric VanMeter and junior Catie Wolfe was the lone Grandy of Trimble. shared
in
th e .
David Poole were the only Meigs representati ve within MVP honors
representatives in tbe Ohio the Ohio Division, earning Hocking Division. Jerry
Girls Dlvlolon IV Ati-Ohto .U .l
. .
'
Division. Boih Marauders first team accolades in her Close of Waterford was
COLUMBUS (AP) - The 2005·2006 A&amp;socla!ed Press Division
named the conference 's top
earned
second-team acco- first varsity season.
IV gins All-Ohio high school basketball t"!!rrl, baSed on 1he rep·
ommendations of a state media panet;
Southern senior Kristiina coach.
lades.

Nets-'OI&gt;rk

Usa Meade

lo

.

rIll girls Alt-Ohio high school be~ketball team 1 based on the recommendationS of a state media panel:

DIVI$10N Ill
FIRST TEAM: lYra Grant. YoU~s. Ursuline, 5-loot-1 1, senior,
30.-6 points per game; Mk:ki Kuns, Castalia Margaretta. ~-11 . sr.,
18:2; Laur(tll Prochasl(a, Plain City Jonathan Alder, 5·1 1, jr..
24.3; Ashley Vavrek, Bellaire, 5-8, sr., 28.0; Sarah .Schulze.
Anna, 6-1, jr., 23.0; Keisa Davis, Oak Hill. 5-8; sr., 17.0; Carla
Jacobs, ~- Euclid A"egina,_ 5-7. sr., 18.9: c'ha:ntel Lavender, ,
Cleve. Cent. Cath., 6:4, jr.. 20.7: Aachele Fltz. Garfield Hts.

Tri(llty, 6·1 , sr., 24.0.
Players of the year: Tyra· Grant, Youngs . Ursuline; Lauren

Prochaska, Plain City Jonathan Alder; Carta Jacobs, S. Euclid
Regina.
C0.Chls of lhe rear: Sean Durkin. Youngs. Ursuline.

SECOND ~M : Laura Bardall, Sugarcreek Garaway, 5-11 ,
soph., 13.5; Tiffany Mauk. Marion Pleasant, 5-10, jr., 20.8;
Sydney Huntley, Cin. Purcell Marian, S-5, Jr., 14.5; Kristen
Bradshaw. McOermotl NW, 9-6. sr.,' 14.0; Shay Shelby, S. Euclid
Regina, 5--9, soph., 22.1; Lindsey Gaul, Navarre Fairless, 5-4 ,
sr., 22.4; Natasha Graboski, Upper SanduSky, 6-3, sr.. 13.7.
THIRD TEAM : Sarah Williams:, Galion Northmor, 6·1, sr., 18.3:
Molly Cruz, Sarahsville Shenandoah, 5·8, jr., 13.7; JUstine
Aaterman, Ver~lles, 6·1 , soph ., 17.8; lauren Gray. S. Euclid
Regina, 5-11, jr.: 13.4; Chlissy Summers, Doylestown Chippewa,
5-S, sr., 22.4; Kelly Zuercher, Apple, Creek Waynedale, 6-1 , jr.,
16,1; Kortney Kin, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale, 6-1, sr., 13.7; Kendra
Robbins, Coldwater, 6-Q, jr., 17.9; Abby Uvigne, Swanton, 5--11 ,
Jr., 16.6.
·
Specia'l Mention
Lacie Condon, WorthingtOn Christian: Ashley Lutz, Cols. Ready:
Stacy McFarland, Coshocton; Heather Parker. Newcomerstown;
Abby Nolan , Beverly Ft. Frye; Missy Gossett, St. Clairsville;
Marianne McQoron, Middletown Fenwick; Jill Cropper,
· Georgetown; Bri«any Jones, Hamilton Badin: lydia
Bridenbaugh , Chillicothe Huntington ; Kara Cayton, Minford;
Mandl Boykin. trontop; Chelsea Marklns, Coal Grove DawsonBryant; Sarah Rucker, Cllesapeake; Keilee ·Guthrie, Albahy
A.lexenc:ter: Hearher Stagge , Lynchburg-Clay; Dayna. Smith ,·
Garlield Hts. Trinity; Tiffany Tyree. Gates Mills GHmour; Jackie
Palus, Independence; Jen Caiola, Chagrin Falls; Ariel Calhoun,
Lorain Clearview: Morgan Bonekavlc, Brookfield; Cara ~edard,'
Atwater Waterloo; l auren Gandee, Akron Manchester; Brianne
Phif6s, Columbian a Crestv.ew-; Carlee Gault. Creston Norwayne;
Kart! Volkme r. N. Robinson COl. Crawford: Kirsten Auen,
Columbus Grove:
tlonorable Mention
,
Liz Gliem. Cardington Uncoln: Jessica Jennette. Marion Elgin:
Korianne Reed. Milford Ctr. Fairl:lanks , Rachel Seibel ,
Johnstown-Monroe; K81le Schurr, Bloom-Carroll ;
.·
Amy Kittle, Old Wash. Buckeye Trail; Tessa Pohovey, Zoarville
Tuac_ Vat; Rachel Ke1'1 n, w. Lafayette Ridgewood; Samantha
McNeely, Coshocton; Morgan Cook. Magnolia Sandy Val.;
Hannah Nelson, Old. Wash. Buckeye Trail, Kayta Pickana, St.
Clairsville; p inny Petties, Steub. Catn. Cent ;.Ashley Falknor, Arcanum; All ie Peterson, Casstown Miami E.:
Diondra Holllday( Cin. Clark Montessori, Cayla Stutz, FeHcity·
Franldin; Liz Shank, Waynesville; Joy Maxel: "Brookville;
Chelsey Eblin, Chillicothe Huntington; Shayna .Cox. Ch i llico~e
Zane Trace; Heather Ellis, Mc~rmott NW; Jennifer Bet')dolph,
PortsmOuth: Sara Hacker. Ironton; Jessica Waddle_, Ironton:
Brianna Davis, Proc torvill e Fairland: Megan -Edw8rds,
Nelsonville- Y~ ; Cindy Reeves, Sardin ia Eastern Brown ,
Csndyce Flynn, Cle\le. Cent. Cath.; Kalynne PrOctor, S. Euclid
.Regina; 5andrea Coleman. S Euclid Regina; Jessica Va ughn,
Cl_eve: VASJ; Anjil1ia Lyons. Cleve. Coot Cath.;
.
Emily MontgQmery, Newton Falls; Vannessa Dickson, Youngs.
Ursuline; Christy Warren, New Middletown Springfield;
Samantha OiCello, E. Palestine: Ashley Cllristanl, Rootstown;
Elizabeth Ghindia, Warren Champion; OeVonne ·Howard ,
Orrville; NaTasha Stroh, Appl~ CreeK Waynedale:
Kate Stimpert, Ashland Crestview; Paige Watw n, Carey; Clare
Aubry, Upper Sandu sky; Lex Kennedy, Archbold; Amanda
Schroeder. Columbu s Grove: J~an n e Bockey. Delphos St.
John's; Danielle Sidell, Collins _Western Reserve
·

State

1

8, sr., 19.2; Jenni1er Graridy, GlOuster Trimble, 5-5, sr., 30.9;

.

• Browns sign' McGinest,
reunites with Crennel.
SeePage B~ '

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Vivian Albaugh, 87
• Herbert Olen Hoover, 77
• Della Lloyd, 87

INSIDE -

Alison Lemon, S. Charleston SE, 5-7, sr., 24.8; Sarah Cl-r,
Newark Cath., 6.(), sr., 21.~; Melanie Williams, Willoughby
Andrews SchOO, 5-9, Jr., 25.6; Alihlelgh Tondo, Mcobnald, 5·6,
sr.. 20.8; Katy Ariok, E..CaniDn, 5-11, sr., 21 .7. '
Playera o1 the year. Maria Moeller, Marla Stein Marion LOcal;
Lindsay Stuckey, Berlin Hiland; Jennifer Grandv. Glouster
Trimbte.

Tressa

RING
GUIDE

'

Coach of the yeer: Will McKinney, Cots. A-ric.
SECOND TEAM: Courtney Reed, Ft. Loramie, 5-6, sr., 14.2;
Alison Meyer. Hamler Patrick Himry, 6-0, sr., 12.4; Brandl
Chaffins, Plymouth, 5·6, sr., 22.2; l'yeaaha Moss, Cots.
Afrlcentric, 5-8, soph., 17.9; Bre Burkhart, Shadyside. 5-7, sr. ,
18.4; Whilney Llndaay, Mensftsld St. Peter's, 5·7, Jr., '17.1 ; NicOlo
Wright, New Knoxville, &amp;-0, sr., 15.4; Amy Honlgfo~ Oltoville, 5w
11.sr., 15.5.
THIRD TEAM: Natalie Burchfield, Toronto. 5·10, ir.; 25.5;
Michelle Mey-er, Covington, s-9, sr., 14.2; Julie Trace, Gfou8t8r
Trimble, 5-6, sr.. 20.3; Haley D"'\'er, Waterford, 5-8, sr.. 15.r.;
Hope King, Walerford, 6·1 ; sr., 16.2; Kaltlln Hartman, l!:uyahOga
Hts .. s-a, jr.', 11 .7; Kelll Pollool&lt;, Mogadore, 6-9, Jr.. 21.8;'
Courtney Cook. Bedlord Cllanel, 5-11, soph., 14.0.
Spoelolllontlon
.
Alesia HoWard , Cola. Afrlcentric; Kayla Lutsch, Cots. Tree ot Life;
Hannah Reiff, Marion cath.; Jena Stutzman, Bertin Hiland;
Ramsey, Caldwell; Megan

Dollinga, Zanesville

Rosecrans; Jasmine Richardson. Wellsville; Asllk&gt;V Hlle. Cin.
Summit Country Day; Catle Halberstadt, Jackson Ctr.; Emilie
Seger, Sidney Lehman; Kavtee Helton, Latham Wastem; Jessica
Waugh, Glenwood Now Booton; Katie O~ij. Por!SmOuth Clay;

ini!

Thursd

h 30. 2006

Erin Weber, ReedtvHie Eaetern; Katetyn Prince, Thompson

Ledgemont Ka~n Tinney, Ashtabula Sts. John an(! ·Paul;
Angela Notte, Ashlabuta Sis. Johri and Paul; Katie Bubna,
Bedlord Chanet; Inez
Kirtland ; Hope Halotsad, Elyrle
Open Door; Lindsay; SimpsQn, Klrtlarldi Krista Johnson.
Columbiana: Dani Forrer, Dalton; Tamara Meyer, Kidron Cent.

n-.

Christian; Brooke Bowers,' Delphos Jefferson; Melanie
Schroed-&lt;Jr, Miller City.
Honorable Mention
Mariah Alford, Gahanna Christian Acad. ; Afrrj COx, Newark
Cath., Simone Culver, Canal Winchester Harvest Prep; Sarah
Hartman, Delaware Christian; Alex Panzlno, Grove City
Christian:
·

K0ie Kklder, Bellaire Sl. John; Natalie Perzanowskl, Beltairo St.
John; Maggie Brunoni, New Matamoras Frontier; Sam

Caldwell;

Ale~

~.

Abas, New Phil. TUS&lt;. Corj!. Calh.; Brianne

.. fraac~

Whitman, S1rasburg-Franklin; Jlll BoWersock, ~ Mata.morils
Frontier: Andrea Thomas,.Toronto;
.
Stacey Rossetot. Fayetteville; Sarah Layman, Cln. Seven Hills;
Abbey Davenport, Pitsburg Fratlklin-Monroe; Mallory Albers, Ft.
Loramie: A~anda ·Frands, Sidney Fairlawn; Kendra &amp;,Jnedlct,
Troy Christian;
Elista Hall, Franktlrr Furnace Green; Kristen Monroe, RIChmond

Pav1isko, Kirtland; Georgia DiOrio, N. Ridgeville l:.ake Ridge
Acad.;,
.
Kara Cooper, Vo.ungs. Christian; Caidin Sharp, E. Canton; Ashley
Amabeli, Sebring McK1nley; Kaitl,yn McCarthy, LoweHviUe; Amy
Oolaak, McOon~ld: Lauren Roscoe, Vtenna Metl1ewa; Altison
Hostetler, Dalton;
.
Ashley Coilllns, New Wash . Buckeye Cent; Jackle Albright,
Mansfietd Christian; Courtney Schmerssl, Pandont..OIIboa;
Courtney Ritzter, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon; Jamie Oepfntt,

New Riegel; Holly Stein, Ft. Recovery; Brmatly Bogan, Tot.
Northwood; Stephanie McCord, Gorham Fayette.

20 h and Rachele Fitz of
G:1rfic ld Heights Trinity (6-l ,

• Saddam calis on
Iraqis to fight Americans,
prompting judge to close
'
court. See Page A2
• House allows
restrictions on access
to conceal carry perm its.
See Page AJ
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Workers bring Sago
Mine back to life.
See Page AS
• WHS Choir will
be 'On the Radio.'
.. See Page A6. ·
• Stuart's Opera
House presents classical
guitarist. See Page A~
• Historian William C.
Blizzard will speak on
miners' struggles.
See Page A6
•

WEATHER

""" · m ~ d"il~~entincl.cmn

2 1101&gt;

.

to discuss a plan to deal with
the layer of shale found
embedded in the hillside's
POMEROY - Removing rock face.
more dirt from the hillside
Once exposed to moisture
above the n·ew Pomeroy shale can deteriorate quickly
bridge approach may result and lead to slippage or part or
in adding more expenses to the hillside that ha' been ·
the budget of the multi-mil- stripped of trees and debris in
lion dollar bridge construe- . preparation for blastin g the
tion project .
rock face for the Pomeroy
Work near the bridge approach belmv.
apprmtch came to a halt a
That plan lc&gt; deal with the
couple of week s ago as engi- shale has not been tinalized
neers and consultants for the though based on preliminary
Ohio
Department
of discussions with those engiTransportation (ODOT) met neers and consultants ODOT
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN El .COM

I

.may consider increasing the ODOT's statewide coordinaamount of excavation neces- tor after gfli ning a recommensary to scale back the hill side . dati on from its central otfice
even more, thi s according to and consultants. No word yet
ODOT Public Information on how much funding will be
'Officer for Di strict I 0 asked for or allotted to the
Stephanie Fi Ison .
prt)ject at this point .
" Whenever there's an
Those deci sitm s will come
increase in earth work it is when a llnal decision on the
inevitable there will he some approach\ redesi gn is made .
increase in costS:' Filson
"We' re trying to be thorexplained. addin g that she did ough and make the ri ght decinot anticipate a significant sion on how best to proceed,''
increase in regards to the $51 Filson said of the delay regardmillion project.
· ing the approach 's redesign.
Thi s request for increased "We're not going .to cut corfunding would go before n~rs at the expense of safety.''

Once
the
approach 's
rede sign i' appro ved. blasting of the roc k face will commence but not before th e
public'
i'
alerted
vra
announcement s in local
media outlets including The
Dail y Sentinel.
Fil son said she antici ptlted
decisions on the redesign and
blasting .schedul e ' oon .
Des pite the delay s con- .
cerning . the
Pomeroy
approach. the progression of.
con structi o n on the new
Pomeroy Mason Bridge will
I)Ot be affe(· ted.

Middleport Pool
management
considers potential
competition

Vinton man
faces trial
onMarch29

Bv BRIAN J, REED
BREED@MYDAILYSEfHINEL.COM

K K ELLY@MYDA ILYT ~ IB U NE . CO M

BY KEVIN Keuv

MIDDLEPORT - Last
summer. Middleport's public
pool was the on ly one open in ·
the area. This year, however,
the historic pool will have
competition. and the village
may have to take steps to
ensure a succe ssful swim-

miiH! season .
Continued improveme nt s
are in the work s for·the pool
fac ili ty, and events· planned
for the summer are designed
to sustain attendance at least
at last year's level, accordi ng
to Manager Dale Riffle.
Both London Pool in
Syracuse and the New
Haven. W.Va . pool were
closed last yi!ar, but Riftle
told Middleport Village
Council on Monday eveni ng
the re -opening of th0se pools
could affect attendance this .
year at Middleport 's.pool. He
has as ked the village to consider using funds origi1ially
raised for the constru ction of
a skateboard park to finance
pool improvement's . .
Several years ·ago, a coml ••
mittee of vo lunteers raised
approximately $ 1.500 to
finance the construc tion of a
. skateboard area in General
Beth Sergonl/pholo
Hartinger Park , but that pro- Registration for next year's kindergartens will be held in April in al l three school districts. Here.
ject never materialized. this year's kindergartners learn to count money in Ms. Taylor's class at Meigs Primary School.

Please see Poo!. AS

Pomeroy
Merchants to
sponsor Easter
egg hunt

Kindergarten registration announced ,
for .Eastern, Meigs, Southern ·

McARTH UR - A tri al
will beg in March 29 in
Vinton County Common
PICas Court for a Vinton man
charged in connection with a
man \ death last year. authoriti es said .
Judge Jeffrey SimrT)ons is
expected to preside over a
three-da y tri al for Donovan
K. Cremeens, Ill.
Cremeens was arrested by
Vinton Co untv auth oritie s
shortly after the slaying of
53-year-old Marvin Hunt of
Ew ington on Jan . 14. 2005.
Cremee.ns, indi cted last
year for agg ravated murder,
is rep re&gt;ented by Athen s
attorney He rman Carson .
His . trial was ori gin all y
scheduled
for
last
September. but was postpon ed at the reques t of
Cremeens · then -attorn ey,
William
Hende'rson
of .
Logan . He nderson wi thdrew
from the ~ a se lat e last year,
Vinton C nunt v Prmecuting
Attorne y Tim Glee son said .~
. Aggravated murder. an
unclassified felonv. carries a
penalty o f 15 years to life
impri sonment.
Cremeen s and Ruth Ann
Wood, 3R. of De xter. were
charged with luring Hunt to
a cemeterv ne;~r Wilkesv ille.
Wood sh ~l t Hunt to death
and Cremeens i, 'alleged to
have driven Wnod"s car over
Hunt aft e r ih e sho&lt;iting .

Please see 'Trial. As
Center announced the followin g regis tration
and screening schedul es for all school di stricts in the county : Apri l 10- II at Southern ·
POMEROY - It's that time of year again Elementary. call 9-19-4222: April 12-13 at
- . daffodils are blooming. the weather is E&lt;isterh Eleme ntary. call 985- 330-1: April -1 -7
'
warm one day and free zing the next. and par- at Meigs Primary. ca ll 74 2-3000.
ents are tninking about registerin g their chilParent s or ·g uardian, are ~s ked to call or
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
dren for kindergarten·.
. .
vi&gt;it one of the :ibove listed schoob to arran ge
HOEFLICH@MY DAILY SENTINEL .COM
Children who will be five vears old on or for an appointment for kindergarten reg.istrabefore Aug. 1., 2006 arc eligible . to attend tion and times.
..
BY Titwt MALONEY
POMEROY - Again th is kindergarten during the 2006-07 school years
When regi,aering &lt;l child parents or guardians ·1 TM~LONEY@MYDAILYR EGI STER . COM
year the Pomeroy Merchants in the Eastern. Meigs and .Southern Local must bring thei'r child who is enrolling to re gis·
Association wi ll sponsor an. School Districts.
APPLE GROV E. W.Va.Easter egg hunt.
The Athen s-Meigs Educat icuial .Service
Please see Register, AS
.'\ n a~e discrim ination lawI
The hunt will take place on
, uit h) 6"1 fnrnic r empl&lt;&gt;yees
Saturday. April 15 on the
against M&amp;G Polyme rs in
football field . Mi chelle
Appk . Gn11e ha s been
Npble will . chair the event
returned f rom federal to state
Bv BETH SERGENT
again this ye;~r and prizes
ju ri,Jktion.
·
will be awarded to the find - BSE RGENT@MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM
L'nrte d St,rtes Di,t rk t
ers of spec ial · eggs. · The
Ju uge Robert C. Chambers
Ea,ter bunn y will be there to
POMEROY -· Although
orucred .'\ h mu;l\ th at the case
give out treats to the chi t-. the water has not begun to
he ,~ n l had ,.
sa;d the fed·
dren . The Merchanis · voted llow into the London Pool ,
cral ,·uurt 1.\ds il; n ,didlllll ,
to contribute $ 150 to the cost yet. millley has been llowing
an,! that ren1l&gt;' ;il fro m the
of the hunt.
into the London Pool Fund
; tate let d I\ as improper.,
Approval was giv en to with the latest donation of
The ~mpl&lt;') ees fi led the
Bo bbi Karr and Su san $2 .000 coming from the Ohio
,uit in C\'Ja,on Count\' Crrc·uit
1 Court on Dec . 17. 200-1 .
...... .- .. ,
) Cl'lttM 'j
Clark Din ge ss to. proceed Val ky Bank Corporation.
. with th e purc hase of ;wo
"We want you to ):!Ct those
;,tlk~in~.; the' \\ \.~ rc di,c n mi"'--~--~·~--, '"
~·
· ~·"· ~
set s of banners for the kids back in thai pool." OVB
n.rt~~d ,i'gai n ~l &lt;' n· the ba;is of
downtown pe ri od lights . It Pres ident and C EO Jeff
th~ir a ~e in ' i&lt;1lation of the
wa s noted th at a rc pre&gt;en- ·Sm ith said upon pre , enti rlg
\\'eq Virgin ia Huma n Rig ht'
tat ive of th e co mpan y wh o the $~. 000 r hcck, to Symcuse
Act "hen the\ were la1d off
produces the banners will May or Eric C unnin gham.
in April 200~- The "a'e has
he in town thi s week to Syracuse Co undlwo man Joy
1· re nrar ned rdk , sinc·e bei ng ·
l tran, fcm·d (tr fe deral Ct&gt;urt .
meet with 1he commii tee.
Bentle y and London Poo l
Beth Sorgonl/pholo
Th,, laid-o tT wllrk cr' were
As fm receptacl e&gt; Qn tile . Stecrin~ Committ ee Memher Ol1io Valley Bank Corporat;on recently donated $2.000 t (\ the
the" th'Ws thi &gt;
.:ckhrat111c
li ght pll k s. John Mu" er. · Dun Whan .
London Pool Fund . bnngrng the fund's total to . JUSt over
pre siden t. rc purteu th at h;JS
The chcd was pre,c ni cd $26.000. Pictured are (frbm left) Joy ·Bentley. Syracuse coun· \\ 1.'1.'~ . ..,,1\ Inc it u ~l'.. the ti rst
b~l' \1 delay&lt;'d but will be han - h)
Sm ith an d Po mcr&lt;J\ c;Jwoman·. Jeff Sm1th. presrdent and CEO OVB . Er rc li111l' "'K·,. the~ inst their ]&lt;&gt;t"
died 'ometimc " 'on. He ab o Supe r
Bank
Rra nch Cun-ningham. mayor of Syra'Guse. Pam Johnson. OVB Ponwroy 1 thai ""' dec rsron had ~e n
maJ,· i 1i the 1r fa" &gt;r.
noted that repair on the pari, - Manage r Pam Jnhmon at
Super Bank brancl1 manager. Don WIJan. London Pool steering
co;'nm'rt1ee member.
·
. Please see Mlr"·· A5
. Please see Egg hunt, AS
Please see Donation,,AS
BY BETH

SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

M&amp;G lawsuit
transferred back
to state court

1

&amp;f;e~J

Dale SE; Rebecce Capper, Wilow Wood Symmes Val.; Kyle
Saars, Leesbur!i Fai~ield; Broot&lt;e Jolly, MowryJtown Whlt808k;
Ka~a 5eip. MowrysiDWn Whiteoak; Ashly Heavener. Corning
Miller; Amy Nordrum, L.ucasville Val.;
Alisha Bouzaher, N. Aktgevilie Lake Ridge Acad.; Atibeoca
Heller, Thompson Ledgemont; liffa"Y. Oster, Newbury; ·Katen

llll ' HSIIAY , 1\1 ,\Rl'll t(&gt;,

More earth'work at bridge approach may require more.funding

SPORTS

FIRST TEAM: Maria Moeller, Marili Stein Marion l.Dcal, 5-faot-7,
senklf, 17.0 points per game; Undoay Stuol&lt;.e)l. Berlin H~ond , 5-

Saturday.
.
Grandy. a 5-5 senior, hit for
'1'.. 2~0).
· .10.9 points per game to finish
In
Divi,ion
IV
.
.
VI
oe
ller
i'
&gt;
a
with more than 2,500 career
from Page Bl
'i- 7 senior who ha' signed to points. putting her securely .in
play next year for Jim .Fo, ter · the top I 0 all time in Ohio in
Jacuhs . a 5-7 'e nior who
crt Ohi ll Sta te. She ave raged scoring.
has o..i gned tj 'l he 1:1 C inci nn ati
Others on the first team
Bearcat nex 1se;r,on , ha d &gt;tats 17 point&gt;. 5.7 a." ish and 4.3
stea
l&gt;
a
2a
me
thi&gt;
seaso
n
with
the three players of the
of 18.9 point'&gt;. 4.2 ;r-,sish. 3.7
steals and ~ .7 re hou nds for afte r ber ng na med the most year included : Alison Lemon
South
. Charleston
outstanding pl ayer at the 'iate ·of
the AP poll champ ions.
sr.. 24.8):
Southeastern
(5-7.
tourna
ment
as
a
freshman.
·
·Joining those three on th e
Stu ckey 15-8. st.. 19.2) Newark Catho lic 's Sarah
All-Ohio fi rst team are:
leads
a powerful Hiland team Clapper 16-0. sr.. 2 1.9) :
Margarett a's Mic ki Kuns tS Willi ams
of
11 , sr , 16.2!: Ashley Vavrek 124'2) into Th ursday after- Melanie
of Bellaire 15-K sr.. 2X.OJ: noon\ l ir..,t \ la te "emi final Wil loughby Andrews School
Anna :; Sarah Schulte lti- 1. ;rgairhl Fort Loramie 124-2 ) (5-9 jr.. 2'i .R): McDonald's
jr.. 23.0): Kcisa Da'" r~f Oa!, Lh t C rnto n (2.1-2) meels As hle igh Tondn 15-fi. sr..
· Hill (5 -8. sr.. 17.01 : Ch:m tcl Hamler P;rtrick Hen ry 125':0) 20.HJ: and East Canton ·, ;tate
· La vender ol
CJc ,c lnnd 111 the other game. wi't h the se mi &gt;-bound Katy Arick (5-·
Central Ca th oi rc lh- ~ . ji .. · winnt;" deciding the .title on 1.1. , ,. , 2 1 7)
I

;,n CENTS • \'ul. ;,;,. Nu. i.l&lt;J

All~TVC

' DIVISION IV

.

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

j

Girls Division III-IV. AII..Ohio
_
Gl~s Division Ill AII·Ohlo List
COLUMBUS (AP)- The 2005·2006 Associated Press Division

·Valley Artist Series
to feature. famed
.
musical 'Marne,' A6

TVC Ohio ·

TVCOhio
Rylan .Kirkandall
Dontol S!ddmoro

MHS Drama Club to
present 'Shakespeare
Unleashed,' A3

Conference·teams

.2005..06

.Jo&amp;hwaners

Willis allo wed four hits,
four walks and three runs in
three innings. He gave up
fi ve hits and six runs in 2 2-3
'from Page Bl
innin gs in a n 8-6 loss to
CanaCta las t week that
run homer off Dan Wh eel~ r dropped the American&gt; to 1- l
in ihe fo urth innin g was the · in Round l .
key blow for South Korea.
The Ameri cans put the first
the
tournament \
only .two runners on base i·n the
unbeaten team.
first. fomth and fifth innings. .
"Something
happe ned but came up . empty each
today which nobody could time.
·
"They pit&lt;.:hed very effecbelieve. " South Korea n manager In Sik Kim said. "But ti vel y to the heart of our
not just because it 's the USA order." U.S . . manager Buck
team. but it's the bc't of all Martine z said . "We hit .some
the best major league playe r, . balls hard. They made quality
It's very diffi cult ·to believe pilches when they had to ."
what happened. But this is
South Korea led 3, l when
baseball. You ne,·e r know . Min Jae Kim. who had three
what mi ght happen ..
hits. doubled with two outs in
Before an ann o unced the .fourth . Se ung Yeop Lee
crowd of 2·1.288 at Angel was walked intentionally
Stadium. the U.S. received befo,re Choi hi't a towering fly
another poor performance into the right-tleld corner that
from starte r Dontrelle Willi s eluded Ver non Wells. landing
and fai led to deliver timely j ust fair and in the second
hitting. Shoddy field ing row. making it 6- 1.
made things onl.Y worse.
Lee put Sout h Korea ahead
"We definitely could have for good by hitting his WBCplayed better." said Teixeira. leading fifth homer off Willis
who we nt hitless in four at- in the first. Lee. came to the
bats with two strikeout s. plate in the fo urth with seven
"Anytime you lose. there are hits in 15 at-bats. seven runs
things you could have done and 10 RB! s in ,the Classic,
'better."
makin ~ the decision· to walk
South Korea (2-0) will play him seem reasonable . But
its final game of Round 2 Choi. a Los Angeles
·against Japan on Wednesday Dodgers· reserve pinch-hit night. Japan (0-l) will face ting for Tae Kyun Kim.
Mexico (0- l) on Tuesday. spoiled the strategy.
and Team USA ( 1- l ) wil l
"Lee has been red hot in
play Mexico . on Thursday. thi' .t(Jurnament." Martinez
The top two teams will meet said. "I just felt lik~ it was t~e
S;nurday in the semifinals in hest move. I felt li ke we.
San Diego. ·
would take our chances."

Blasts

Wednesday, March 15.2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

..

·

OVB donation puts.London Pool Fund at $26,000

•

•

Reserv~yqur ,c~dvertlslog ,~pace

· ..

'' Ad\tertlsin'g · ~aaCIIine
t

.

.I

.w

today!
is
·

Detalls .on Page A2

He

INDEX

P.rlday, MEnch 24, 2006

.

2 SEC!'IONS - 12 PAGFS

Calendars
Classifieds

· h'.1
t

Call Dave 'Or Brenda·
at 992-215.5 I

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go
Sports

A6

l:l Section '
A2

Weathvr

I

---

B3-4

Comics

© '2uu6 Ohio Valley

-- ....

.. A3

· ~
~

l'uhli ~ hinK

Cu'."

L--______

,.

.

•

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          <elementText elementTextId="16145">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16144">
              <text>March 15, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1529">
      <name>hoover</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
