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                  <text>��OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

9~2-2157

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publish~r

Ctlarlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor ·

Congress shall make no laiV respecti11g an
establishment of religio11, or prohibiti11g the
free exercise thereof; or abridgi11g 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 grieva11ces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

-

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today i.s Tue sda y, March 21 ..the 80th day of 2006. There
are 285 days teft in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
Two hundred years ago. on March 21, · 1806, Mexican
statesman Benito Juarez was born in Oaxaca.
On this date.:
In 1685. composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in
Ei senach, Germany.
In 1790. Thomas · Jefferson reported to Pre sident
Washington in New York as the new secretary of state. ·
In 1804, the French civil code. or the "Code Napoleon" as
it was later called. was adopted . .
In 1945. during World War II. Allied bombers began four
day s of raids over Germany.
In 1946. the United Naiions set up temporary headquarters
at l:lunter College in New York.
In I956. 50 years ago. ''Marty'' won best piCture at the .
. Academy Awards: its star. Ernest Borgnine , won best actor.
Anna Magnani won best actress for "The Rose Tattoo ."
In I 960 . some 70 people were killed in Sharpeville, South
,
Africa, when police fired on demonstrators.
In I 965 , more than 3,000 civil rights demonstrators led by
the Rev. Man in Luther King Jr. began their march from Selma
to Montgomery. Ala.
In I 979, the Egypti an Parliament unanimously approved a
peace rreaty wi th Israel.
In 1985. police in Langa, South Africa, opened fire on
black s marching to mark the, 25th anniversary of the
.
Sharpeville shootings, killing 'It least 21 demonstrators.
One year ago: A high school student on the Red Lake Indian
reservation in Minnesota killed five schoolmates, a teacher
and an unarmed guard be'fore taking his own life; Jeff Weise
had earlier killed his grandfather and his grandfather's companion. Armed with a new law rushed through Congress and
signed by President' B~ s h , the attorney for Terri Schiavo's parents pleaded with a judge to order the brain -damaged
woman 's feeding tube re-inserted. (The judge ended up refus·
ing:) Ailing Chief Justice William H. Rehncjuist returned to
the Supreme Court berich to hear arguments despite his thyroid cancer. Cabaret ; inger Bobby Short died in New York
a~u•w .

''

•

·

·

Today' s Binhdays: Violini st-conductor Joseph Silverstein is
74, Actor AI Freeman Jr. is 72. Actress Kathleen Widdoes is
67. Singer Solomon Burke . is 66. Actress Marie-Christine
Barrault is 62. Singer-musician Rose Stone (Sly and the
Family Stone ) is 61. Actor Timothy Dalton is 60. Singer Eddie
Money is 57. Rock singer-musician Roger Hodgson
(Supertramp) is 56. Rock musician Conrad Lozano (Los
Lobos) is 55. Rhythm-and-blues singer Russell Thompkins Jr.
(The Styli~tic s ) is 55. Actress Sabrina LeBeauf is 48. Actor
Gary Oldman is 48. Actor Matthew Broderick is 44 .
Comedian Rosi e O' Donnell is 44. Rock musician Jonas
"Joker" Berggren (Ace of Base ) is 39. Rock MC Maxim
(Prodigy ) is 39. Rock musician Andrew Copeland (Sist~r
Hazel ) i ~ 38. ·'Hip-nop DJ" DJ Premier (Gang Starr) is 37.
Thou ght for Today : "Entre los indi viduos como entre las
naciones. el re speto al Jerecho ajeno es Ia paz." (Among individual s. as among nations.· peace 'is the respect of others'
rights:)
- Benito Juarez, M e x ic~n statesman (1806- I872).
.

.

believe it should be illegal in ers. the Roberts court is
The Supreme Court is
all cases.
still 5-4 pro-Roe. And by
highly unlikely to take
A
.December
Los
Angeles
that · margin , the court
South Dakota's bait and
Times
poll
showed
a
differmight well .decide not to
overturn the 197 3 Roe v.
ent result. Forty-three per- even hear an appeal if
,Wade abortion decision.
Morton
said aboniort should be lower courts strike down
And for that, Republicans
Kondrack cent
legal in all cases. But 41 per- the South Dakota law.
should thank their lu'cky
e
said it should be. illegal
Still, a breakdown of 5cent
stars.
with · "a few exceptions, 4 mean s that Roe is ju st
But South
Dakota' s
specifically,
cases of rape, on e vote away from being
"direct frontal assault" on
incest and to save the moth- ' .overturned ,' making it
Roe - to use Gov. Michael
er
's life." Twelve percent poss ible , tha t th e next
caused
the
party
to
lose
Rounds' (R) description it should be illegal in all nominat ion
to
the
the
South
.
said
·may well elevate abortion
Or, as one pro-choice cases. ·
Supreme Court will be
to the top of the nation' s
Republican
House
However,
those
results
criicial. If Bu sh doe sn' t
political agenda for th~
2008 presidential election, Member told me , "We' d conflict with a Fox News 'get another nomination ,
or even earlier if President be blown away in the sub- poll this month that showed .hi s succe ssor Iike.ly will
):lush gets the opportunity urbs , and you wouldn 't that voters would oppose the determine Roe 's fate ,
to
nominate
another see another Republican South Dakota law for their alon g with the post-2008
president for 20 years."
own state, 59 percent to 36 Senate.
Supreme Court justice.
A pro-chOice colleague percent. And 62 percent said
In pa st pre s,i dential :
The issue could be espeof
his
added,
"If
you
take
they s.upported abortion election s,
exit · polls
cially problematic for' Sen.
John McCain (Ariz.), cur- away a right that people when pregnancy "risks the showed that abortion is a
rently the GOP favorite have taken for granted, mother's mental heahh."
top-tier issue for 6 percent
they
will
rise
to
defend
it
·
By 61 percent to 28 per- to 20 percent of voters.
among moderates and the
media. On CBS ' "The A sleeping giant would be cent, the Fox poll showed Republicans us ually carry
Early Show" on Jan. 25, aroused."
that the public favors a ban thi s group bs . margins of
Polls overwhelmingly on late-term "panial-binh" 60 percent to 40 percent.
McCain said, "I've never
agreed with Roe v. Wade" indicate that Americans abortions, the , immediate
But if Roe is hanging in
and added that ':it wouldn't favor retention of Roe, aim of much of the anti· the balance , the issue
bother me any" if it were even if they also support . abortion movement and a could suddenly become
overturned.,
· limitations on abortion ..
matter due for decision soon much more important A Gallup Poll in January by the Supreme Court. ,
At a minimum, South
in thi s case. with dynam ·
that Americans
Dakot~ gives the pro- found
The high court conceiv· ic s that favor the abor ·
choice movement a graphic ·, oppose overturning the ably might revisit the Roe tion-rights side . McCain
example of what life might decision by 66 percent to decision along with partial· now win s in mos t 2008
be like in a large swath of 25 'percent. The poll . was birth abortion , but it is matchup s ·
· again st
America if Roe were ever taken when · now-Justice · thought unlikely to do so Democrat s, but this lead
Samuel Alita 's Supreme because it doesn 't have to.
overturned.
Court
nomination was Indeed, it's not clear when a could evaporate if voters
South Dakota has just
one abortion clinic, in before the Senate ; By ·56 challenge to South Dakota' s begin to consider hi111 an
Sioux Falls, open only one percent to 34 percent, new law will even get to the opponent of Rt&gt;e.
Even though he 's cut a
day a week. No doctor respondents said they'd . Supreme Court, or whether
from the state dares per- favor his rejection if they the court will even consider · moderate figure on a lot
of issue s in th e pa st, he
form an abortion , so out- became convinced ~e it when it does.
siders fly in , usually from would vote to overturn · Even though the state 's always has identified himanti -abortion
lawmakers · self as "pro-life ," and hi s
Minnesota. Women have to Roe .
The same poll showed . passed it expressly to give staff says that he oppose.s
travel up .to 350 miles to
that
only 38 perce'nt of the new Supreme Court a· abortion except in case s
get an abortion.
American
adults favor chance to overturn Roe. the of rape. ince st and when
And on top of such obstacles, · the state has now making abortion . laws votes aren't there to do that the mothe.r ' s · life is at
passed a law to ban the stricter, while 20 percent even after the arrival of Ali to stake .
Except for pro-choice
procedure entirely, includ- want · them made less and Chief Justice John
strict,
arid
39
percent
Roberts.
form
er New York Mayor
ing in cases of rape and
favor
retaining
current
Support . for Roe stood at Rudy Giuliani . oth~r GOP
incest, except to save a
laws.
Fifty-three
percent
6-3
on the court before the contenders ha ve stances
IJ10ther ' s life. The law ,is
told
Gallup
they
cqnsider
departures of the Ia'te Chief similar to McCain ~ s.
likely to be challenged in
themselves
''pro-choice,"
Justice William Rehnquist
Politip1lly. Republican s
. court before it can take
·
whi
Ie
42
percent
said
they
·
and ex-Justice Sandra Day · have to hope that Robert s
effect.
are
"pro-life."
O'Connor.
Now, it 's 5-2. and/or Aliro end ur
If Roe were overturned
An
ABC
with
Roberts
and Alita as embracin g Ro e, leaving
·- wiping away 30-plus
News/Washington
Post
poll
·· the couri 6- 3 pro.- Roe 9r
question marks.
years of national · legal
in
December
showed
that
17
Both
are
conservati¥e
s,
even · 7-2. Bec ause if Roe
protection for the procepercent
think
abortion
but both also told the Senate is · perceived to be under
dure and unleashing epic
should
be
legal
in
all
cases,
Committee that . threat, th e GOP is in trou Judiciary
battles at the state level
40
percent
said
it
should
and
they value precedent, ble.
-it could affect the ' GOP
(Morton Knndrackt' i.,.
in much the same way as be allowed in most , cases. which Roe definitely is
Twenty-seven
percent
after 33 years . on the executil'e editor of' Ro ll
the Democratic Party's
embrace of civil rights in believe it should be illegal in book s. But at worst for Call . the ne 1vspapa of
the 1960s, a move , that most cases, and I 3 percent abortion-rights support- Capitol Hill.)

The attorney general's failed roaq show

.

LETTERS TO THE
. EDITOR
Letters to the editor are H'eicome. They should be less than
300 word;. All/etters are subject to editi11 g. m~sr be signed,
and Include address and telephone number. No unsigned letre'rs will be published, Letters should be in good taste,
' addl'essing issues. nut personalities. Letters of thanks to orga·
ni:ations and individuals •rill not be acc·epted.for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

Our main concern in all stories 1s to be
1 accurate . It you know of 3n error in a
story, ca ll the newsroom at (740) '992 -

2156.

(USPs 213-960)
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Published every alte rnoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Cour1 Street .
Pomeroy, Ot1 io. Second-class postage
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E-mi(JII:
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13.Weeks .
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2006

Tuesday, March

www .mydailysentinel.com

21, 2006

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'

American prisons in Iraq
Alberto Gonzales. in a
and Afghanistan, and some
remarkably disingenuous
homicides during "coer·
London speech before the
cive interrogation."
·
International Institute for ·
During
his
London
exer·
Strategic Studies as
cise
in . obfu scation .
reported· by the Associated
Nat
Gonzales
noted proudly
Press on March 7
Hentoff
.
that American law prodestroyed his credibility
hibits cruel , inhuman and
before that knowledgeable
degrading tre i11nient of
audience in his defense
American detainee s anyagainst
criticism
by
European officials and stand that maltreaiment of where. He omitted the fact
human-rights groups on prisoners can provide a ral- that . in the Detainee
how we treat terrorism sus: lying cry for terrorist Treatment Act of 2005.
peels in our prisons over- movements."
signed by Oeorge W. Bush ,
Congre
ss overruled the
Surely
Gonzales'
London
seas.
Court
and
I Speaking . of
wrat the audience was also aware of Supreme
CIA perpetrates - and inqumes underway in removed the habeas-corpus
ca.lls "extraordinary rendi· Europe on whether offi· . rights of Guantanamo Bay
tions" - he denied that we cials of certain countries prisoners to protest 1n
kidnap and send terrorism there have cooperated in Ameri can courts ag ain st
'"coercive . interrogation ,"
suspects to countries, such these CIA kidnappings .
as Syria, known fonortur- . Italian and Canadian citi - including the force-feeding
zens who have been vic· torture· of hunger strikers. ·
ing their priso,ners.
I have written in this col· tims .of these "renditions"
But the attorney general
detailed
the
torture.
·have
umn, and have a burgeon assured the International
ing file about CIA "rendi· they experienced during In stitute for Strategic
lions" as documented by · these American operations. Studies that. detainees there
Yet, Gonzales assured are ·treated properly and.
New York University Law ·
School 's Center for Human hi s London audience - as indeed, are provided' with
Rights and Globai Justice; our president also repeat· legal protections. But no
Human
Rights
First; edly does- that "the U.S . · longer. he neglected to say,
Amnesty
International ; abhors torture and cate gor· the crucial due -proces s
Human Rights Watch, et ically rejects its use."
protections provided them
al. .
Then. however, our attar· in the Supreme Court' s
Such reliable sources as ney general backtracked· June 21:1 . 2004. &lt;.lecisi on in
and half a step by adding , "If Rasul et al. v. Bu sh.
The · Economi st
Financial Times have we went around this room.
Gon zales .did take pains
reported on these. CIA vio- people would have differ· to empha size · that the
ent definition s of what Guantanamo detainees are
lation~ of American and
.
international law, and for- constitutes torture, depend· "highl y dangerous people .''
mer CLA agents involved ing on the circumstances." However. in meticulou sly
In tlli s reminder to me of docurnented studi es , both
in these kidnappings have
President
Clinton 's diffi- the nonparti san Nation al
spoken of them · on CBS,TV's "60 Minutes" and culty in defining what "is" Journ al and Seton Hall
is. Gonzales know s of (New Jersey) School of
elsewhere .
Moreover·, in a Dec: 14 what he speaks . In 2002 Law di scovered - based
editorial - "U. S. Tactics and 2003 , when he . was entirel y on · analyses of
on Terror Are l\.1aking counsel to Pre sident Bu sh. Departm ent () f Defen se
Europe
Examine
It s Gonzal es orche strated the data on detai.ne.es it de sigCo mplicity"
the notoriou.s "torture memos." nate; as "e nemy co)nbat·
Financial Times declared : which set su ch in geniously ant;" - the· ac tual noli" Many Europeans argue . masked permi ss ion for dangerous na ture of most
that the Bu sh admin istra· actual torture that has led of the detainees.
these
cnme s
at
Report ed th e Nati onal
tion seems not to under· to

Journal: Only 8 percent of
rhe Guantanamo pri soners
have been connected to AI
Qaeda. And the Seton Hall
Law School study reported
that ."55 perce nt of the
detainee s are not · determined to have committed
any hostile acts again st the
United States or coalition
allie s." Significantly, the
Seton Hall inve stig ation
emphasi zed
that
the
detainees as a wh ole ," have
been afforded no meaningful opportunities to lest the
governm ent 's
evidence
against them,"
Gonz~le s is an int elligent , experienced lawy er.
Yet. he wa s an embarrass·
men! to thi s country in hi s
London addre ss. And like the rest of th is admin istration
he evades
telling Ameri ca n citizens
wh y, in the war againsl termri &gt;m, our all ies arc
in cre as in gly skeptical of
our commitment to the
human .r ight s our enemies
scorn .
We American s de serve
bett er of our gove rnment
lead ers.
And
the
Democratic
oppO Siti on
party. stru ggling to rally
around an iss ue fo r the
midterm elec ti ons. sh ould
speak of th eir conce rn on
how our enemies capi ta li ze
on

thi~

.go vernm ent 's

deg rading hum an-rig ht s
record with regard to our
pri so ners.
(Na t Hento.ff is (, IUition·
allr renowned &lt;illthorit r on
'rite Fint Am,·ndm enl . and
tht' Bill of Right s ""''
(tll tlw r of' 111 r.11 11 h rw ks.
includi;, g ." 1i ll' \Var 011 1he
. Bill ot', Ri!ilt t.&lt; mul tlte
Gat lleriu ~

(Ser en

2003 ). )

ResiH£m ce "

Stori es

. Press.

The Da ily Sentinel • Page As

'.

Southern FFA students
receive public speaking awards

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
'

'Tuesday, March 21,

GOP should hope Supreme Court' upholds Roe ruling

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740)

PageA4

Trailer destroyed in fire
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSE NTINEL.COM

CHESHIRE - An abandoned trailer burned to the
ground yesterday six miles
off of State Route 7 on Ohio
554 near Cheshire.
First.
responder
Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department received· an alert
time of 3:4 I p.m . and headed to the residence of Sandra
Stewart at 7053 State Route
554 ·where they encountered
a working trailer fire.
The trailer was abandoned
and sat beh.ind Stewart's new
home that was not dama~ed
though the abandoned trmler

was a total loss.
Middleport A" islant Fire
Chief . Bruce Swift said
although the cau ~e of the
fi.re has not been ofti cially
determined it appears it
may' ve started from embers
remaining from open burning near the old trailer that
was be\ ng torn down .
Swift said Stewart and
other residents were home at
the titl)e of the fire though
no injuries were reponed.
Assisting
Mi(ldleport's
four firefighters was the
Pomeroy Volunte.er Fire
Department with ' six fire fighters.

Local Briefs
Fund raiser planned
RAC INE - The Mt. Moriah Churc h of God located on
Mile Hill Road Racine. wi ll ha ve a ;oup and chili dinner and
a while elephan t sale at 5 :30 p.m. Saturday.

Job's Daughters dinner tickets on sale
MIDDLEPORT - Tickets at $20 eac h. are now on sale for
the Job's Daughters elimination dinner. There will be baked
steak dinner and entenai nmem: Door prizes will be awarded
with the prim prize being $1.000 to the last ticket at the end of
the night. Tickets must be purchased by Friday although they
can be picked up at the door on the night of the di nner. To pur·
chase tickets call 866· 276-2889 or contact any member of
Job's Daughters.
.
·
. .
· .

Justice Maynard·to·Boy
Supreme Court tackles several Scout gifts luncheon
open records issues

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. ~. before more than 250 commu·
.BY THE AssociATED PRESS. Security numbers were B. C. "Bundy" McGinnis. Ill. nity and business leaders at the
Two members of the Racine Southern FFA Chapter recently
blacked out. The ruling chairman of the MaJOr Gifts ..Ju.ndraising event for the Triparticipated in the District 10 public speaking contest at
Recent Ohio Supreme involved a Montgomery Luncheon to be held at noon S.tate Area Council , BSA
Alexander High School. Miranda McKelvey participated in the Court rulings regarding open County public defender 's Thursday at the Gu yan which serves 7,000 youth
, extemporaneous contl)st where she was given an agricultural records ~
request for criminal records Country Club has announced annually in the I0 counties in
topic and had 20 minutes to ·prepare a five minute speech .
from
the Moraine · mayor's that West Virginia Supreme the Tri-State in West Virginia,
March 17 :
Court of Appeals Justice Elliott Kentucky and Ohio. To attend
McKelvey received a silver rating for her efforts. Dustyn
• The · court rules that court.
E. "Spike" Maynard will be the the luncheon call the Tri-State
Sept. 7:
Johnson participated in the FFA creed speaking contest which Ohio 's · public records law
Area Council Scout Service
'• The court rules that state keynote speaker.
is only open to FFA freshman and 'received a bronze rating at trumps federal medical pri·
Justice
Maynard.
a
native
of
Center
at 304-523-3408.
the contest.
vacy rules in a decision employees' home addresses
Williamson,
W.Va.
has
over
30
Over
45 volunteers are servordering the Cincinnati may be. kept private because
Health Department to give they don't meet the defini · years of service to the Boy ing as table host. Vice chairs
The Cincinnati Enquirer tion of a record under state Scout~ of America and present· for the luncheon are Maurice
records
laws. Iy serves on the Executive Clark , David Coughenour,
records on lead paint haz· open
Addresses don 't document Board of the Buckshin Council John Liller, David Lunsford,
ards,
George . Lambros and Carl
The ruling said Ohio's the decisions, policies, func - . in Charleston, WV.
He t_s expected to speak Bowen.
law
take s
precedence tions and activities of govbecause
the
U.S. ernment, the ruling said .
COLUMBUS
school, applicants must be Department .of Health and
Aug. 10:
Application s are
being at least 21 years of age and Human Services clearly stat·
• The court rules that
accepted through Tuesday, have a valid driver's license . ed its intent that the medical pol ice officer photographs
May 2, for the next wildlife A two-year college degree privacy 'rule would not over- may be shielded under state
oftlcer training school, in fi sh and wildlife manage- ride state law,
public records law, rejecting
according to a release from · ment, criminal justice, enviby ·The Cleveland .
lawsuits
M~h 15:
the OhiO Department of · ronmental · law enforcement
Plain
·
Dealer
and The ·
• The court rules that
Natural Resources (ODNR) or a .related field· of study is
Vindica.tor,
Ohio State University does . Youngstown
.Division ot' Wildlife .
.also required.
which
were
:
seeking
photos
ODNR is seeking to fill at
Applicants mu st also be . not have .to release allimal of officers.
·
least I 5 new wildlife officer able to demonstrate physical testing records, saying pho·
The photos fall within an
position s throughout Ohio. fitness according to stan~ tographs. and video record· exemption in . the law that
Applications can be submit' dards developed by the Ohio ings of testing are covered shields any records identifyted beginning April 3.
Peace Officers , Traininjl by an 'intellectual property ing a person's occupa!ion as
Wildlife Officers have Commission . They . must exception to Ohio's open a law enforcement officer,
statewide jurisdiction to al so be able to swim 100 records law.
firefighter o'r . emergency
March I:
.
,enforce fish and game · laws, yards in t1ve .minutes and
medical technician, the rul· ·
• The court rules ;that a · ing said.
investigate allegations of tread water for five minutes .
water\"ay pollution and
Candidates who meet the cl.erk · of courts was permit·
serve warrants. They also minimum qualifications will ted to delay the release of
while
Social
conduct educational pro - be inyited to take a civil records
grams, advise landowners on service examination offered
dealing with wildlife and on June 3 in Columbus. Top
from Page A1 .
keep local conservation scoring candidates will then
organizations updated on undergo interviews and preand time to dedicate. to public
wildlife projects and regula- employment
evaluations.
office."
tions, They frequelitl)l work Those who are selected as
"I feel my qualific;Itions
alone and can be assigned cadets will attend the
GUYSVILLE- Kimberly with the community's support
,to any county in the state.
wildlife ofticer academy for and David Adams of 125 will allow me to be an effec"We are looking for indi- about six months. During Dutch Ridge Rd. , Guysville, tive county auditor."
victuals who are passionate peace officer training, cadets announce the birth of a son
Four candidates are seekabout our fi sh and wildlife will study wildlife law on March 5 at the O'Bleness ing the office of county audi·
resource s. can work inde- enforcement,
fish
and Memorial Hospital. The tor. The current auditor.
pendently, and excel in one· wildlife management tech- infant has been named Nancy Parker Grueser, is not
on-one contacts with the niques . and learn inforrna- Sydnee Arlene Adams.·
. seeking re-election .
public," said Patricia Mayes, tiona! 'and ~ducational skills.·
human resource ~ administra·
To obtain an. application
at most cash registers at par· This Syracuse Volunteer Firefighter tries to save a second
tor for the ODNR Division package,
call
1-800ticipating stores just as regular
of Wildlife.
WILDLIFE or visit the
cabin that caught fire at the Lazy T yesterday morning. The
debit and credit cards.
To be considered for the ODNR web page at · ohiod,
Cremeans said the card resort lost two of five lakeside cabins thanks to the ftres but
from Page A1
wildlife officer trainin g nr.com\wildlife .
resembles a credit card and the re are plans to rebuild and the Lazy T remains open 1or
those bene tits will not be lost when it js swiped in the gro- bus iness.
but carried over into the next cery line it will create less of a
inj ured .
month.
stigma for the user.
"I( they hadn 't re sponded
. If you do not receive your
Purchases can be tracked
lik e thev did I ·feel it
new card by March 26, via the Internet which will
'woul d've been so much·
from Page A1
Cremeans sugge sts calling track lost card s and cut down
worse. especially with the
Bv LISA CORNWELL
Sunday, saying in .a calm this cu stomer service number. on fraud by tracing out of state pine tree s that had shed its wind. the wind got cabin
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
voice: "I just killed a kid," I ,866-386-307 I, to report the purcha5es according to needles. causing the ground two." Mrs. Trent said. praisCremeans.
.
according to the recording problem ,
to catch fire in pl ace s.
ing the firefighters. "They
The new cards are said to
In theory all new Ohio
BATAVIA - A man who· released by Union Township
The first cabin was co m- sa•·ed th e rest of our cabins.
save the state $23 million · Direction Cards should be pletely destroyed with onl y We probably. would 've lost
·neighbors say was devoted to · police.
annually
in admini strative activated by April I.
his meticulously kept lawn is
He also tells the dispatcher:
two wall s remainin g while all of th em."
.
costs
.
·
Public service announce - the ,seco nd wa s !! Utt ed .
charged with murder in the "It's been going on for live
M" . Tre'nt said there are
One reason for the discount ments concerning the new Thre~
shooting of a I 5-year-old boy years ... I've been harassed by
lakesi de -c abi ns plan' tn re build the cabins
who apparently walked him and his parents for five is the magnetic stripe on the cards can be heard locally on remain intac t.
and the reso rt remains open
.
across his yard.
· All fi veca hin' were ren t- ft&gt;r bu sines s with a busy
years. Today just blew it up." new cards that can be swiped JOYFM .
Charles Martin , 66. of
The shooting stunned those
ed yesterday thou gh ne r) -. recreational season se t to
Union Township, near this in the . residential neighborprofessional education, pub- one made it out of the dan· ·start the first week of April.
li c infimnation , and research ger t one and no one \-vas weather permitting .
city about 20 miles east of hood and Students at Glen
on issues relatin g to illness.
Cincinnati, shot next-door Este High School, where ,
·loss,
grief. and bereavement.
neighbor Larry Mugrage in Martin was a fre shman and
from PageA1
Thi
s year. the program is
the chest with · a shotgun grief coun selors were on
"We are pleased to be able sponsored by the Foundation
· around 3:30 p.m. Sunday, hand Monday.
.
police .said . The youth ' was
"I think there's a great deal to offer thi s educational tele- for End of Life Care and
~RE YOU A RESIDENT OF
pronounced dead . at a hospi · of shock, for two reasons: conference to the community. Purdue Pharma , and proMEIGS COUNTY?
tal.
because of the age of the vic- We encourage all healthcare duced in cooperation with the
Martin was · being held tim and just how this profe ssionalS and members Adventist Communicati01is
In order to vote in the May 2, 2006 Primary Electron you
without bond Monday in occurred, killed over some of the community to attend ·Network, the Association for
this worthwhile session . Death
must be regislered by Apnl 3. 2006 . .
Education
and
Clermont County Jail. where' grass," Gaviglia said.
officials declined to give him
Neighbors said Martin Everyone is welcome," said Coun seling. the National
of
Soc ial
Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lrnes at the board
a message seeking comment. livei:l alone quietly, often sit- Kelli Templ eton , bereave- Associatio n
on Elec(ron Day by changing your address (it you have
Police said he told them he ting out in front of hi s one- ment coordinator for Holzer Workers. and the Veterans
Health
Admini strati on
moved Within !he COUnty) Or If you Changed your name, by
had several disputes about story home with its neat Hospice . .
(VHA)
The
teleconference
is
proneighbors walkmg · on · his lawn, well-trimmed shrubupdating your reg1stratton by Apnl 3. 2006
by
Hospice
Seating is limit ed. For
lawn . But Union Township bery and flag pole with U.S. duced
Police Lt. Scott Gaviglia said and Navy flags !lying. In hi s Foundation of Am eri ca. a more information, or to regisThe board of eleCtions will be open from 8:30a.m unlil
not-for-profit
organ
ization
.
.
ter
for
the
teleconference.
Martin had no crirni nal hi sto· fenced backyard, he had sev9:00p.m. on M o nd&lt;~y. April 3rd . 2006.
ry and last called police in eral birdhou ses and a shed which act&gt;as an advocate for plea se p ll Holzer Hospice .at
painted like a small red barn the hospi ce co n c~ pt of care (740 ) 446-5074 or toll free at
2003.
'
You may also reg1ster at !he followrng locat rons. Meigs
.
through ongoi ng programs of 1-l\00-500-4850.
Martin called 9 I I on with white trim.
County Depanment of Human Serv1ces . Meigs County
WIC Office. L1cense. Bureau, Board of MR!DD. Pomeroy
Publrc·Lrbrary. Mrddleport Puhlrc Lrbrary. Eastern Library.
Ptepare NOW /Jli_
Me1gs County Treasure r's Offrce, and all' area high schools.
Submitted pltoto

ODNR looking for 15
new wildlife officers

Cline

Birth

announced

Food

Police:·Man killed teen
for walking across yard

LazyT

· Holzer

.

NOTICE ·

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For ;my addrtronalrnformatron. call 992·2697. or slop by
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Off1ce located behrnd Holzer Clrnrc. Mergs Branch on
.second floor (former County Infi rmary )

�The Daily Sentinel

County must find new~
homes for 'caged kids~ .
BY JOH-N SEEWER

so many children with special
needs.
The children also are black,
NORWALK - The adop- and minorities historically
tive parents accused of fort· can be hard to place even if
ing their II 1pecial-needs they don't have disabilities.
c!Jildren to sleep in cag,s say
''There's no question that
they took care of kids that children should not remain in
nobody else wanted.
· abusive backgrounds," said
Now a county child welfare Gloria Houchinan, a spokesagency 11'lust find others wil l- woman fo r the National
ing to take the children into Adoption
Center·
in
new homes after a judge took Philadelphia. "But a change
away permanent custody in their environment .will
Monday from the couple.
affect them also. They ' re
Hu ron County J uveni Je going to need counseling."
Judge Timothy Cardwell
U.S. Department of Health
awarded custody of the II and Human Services defines
children to the county, saying spec ial needs to include
thilt allowing them to return yo ungsters with medical.
to Michael and Sharen mental or emotional problems
Gravelle wou ld be a threat to and children who are older or
the chi ldren's safety.
from ethnic or racial minoriThe county put the children . ties. The agency said 80 perin foster care last fall after a cent to 90 percent of such
social worker found t~e adopt ions are successful. .
cages. which the Gravelles
''Thirty years ago nobody
said 1vere necessary to protect thought these children were
the youngsters. who suffered adllptable." Houchman sa id.
from psychological · and "There are families out there
behavioral problems.
that do want them.''
Cardwe ll already had rulea
The Gravelle·, attorney,
the Gravelles had abused the Kenneth Myers, said he will
chi ldren. and he said ev i· appeal the judge's ruling this
dence showed there was a week and try to stop any
good chance they would adoptions from .taking place
. repeat the beha.vior. The cou· · until thut appeal is heard . .
pie have denied abus ing the
"The biggest tragedy is
children, ages 2 to 15. and what's goi ng to happen to
have pleaded not guilty to these children," Myers said.
charges incl uding child "Nobody told them this (the
endangerment in a separate family brea kin g up) was
crim inal case. ,
going to be permanent."
The childre n's guardi an,
Myers said the Gravelles
'Margaret Kern, said taking were devastated and he
the ch ildren . away fro m the . defended the couple. 'They
Gravelles wil'l give them a . were dealing with some
second chance at a normal extreme behaviors," he said.
life.
'They did the best they
"They're really great kids. could."
They' re no·rmaJ . ·everyd.ay
The judge said a history of
kids, but they didn 't have a sex abuse allegations against
chance because of the isola- the father was a key reason he
tion," . Kern said. "They' re fo und the Gravelles unfit.
ready to move on."
·
Cardwell wrote that his .
The children now are decision was influenced by
spread. among several foster testimony from Michael
homes.
Gravelle 's ·biological chilThe judge'ordered I0 of the dren , . Jenna and Jesse
children placed in the perma· · Gravelle, who said their
nent custody of the Huron fathe~ .
inappropriately
County Department of Job . touched Jenna when she was
and Fami ly Services. The a minor. Michael Gravelle
II th child, a 2-year-old girl, denie~ ..that accusat.ion.
was placed in temporary cusAdditionally, prosecutors
tody with the department presented evidence that while
because the Illinois adoption he was raising his children
agency that placed her with from an earlier marriage ,
the Gravelles has asked that Michael Gravelle signed . up
she be returned.
for a sex offender program
It's unlikely they will ever that required him to sign docbe together again if the uments acknow !edging that
judge.'·s nuling stands because . he was seeking treatment to
it will be difficult , if · not "control my inappropriate
impossible, for the county to sexual behavior toward chilfind one person who wiII take dren."
· ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

..

'

Local stocks
ACI- 69.78
AEP-35.17
Akzo- 52.62
Ashland Inc. - 67.25
BU :-:-- 13.90
Bob Evans -:- 29.80
BorgWarner -. · 59.40
CENX - 36.12
Champion - 5.82
Charming Shops-· 13.73
City Holding- 36.92
. Col- 54.43
DG -18.20
DuPont- 42.75
Federal Mogul - .35
USB-31.08
Gannett - 58.81
General Electric - 34.50
GKNLY- 5.65
Harley Davidson - 48.41
JPM- 41:45
Kroger - 20.44

Ltd.- 24.37
NSC- 53.99
Oak Hill Financial - 30.79
OVB- 25.2Q
'
BBT-40.60
Peoples - 28.70 ·
Pepsico - 59.86
Premier -:- 15.05
Rockwell- 72.99
Rocky Boots - 26.08
Sears -132.74 ·
Wa~Mart -'- 4 7. 76
Wendy's - 65.9Q
Worthington - 20.31
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.

Local weather
Thesday ... Sleet and snow
in
the
morn ing ... Then
rain .. ~ Snow. and sleet likely
in the afternoon. Snow and
sleet accumulation·around an
inch . Cooler with high s in
the mid 30s. Northeast winds
5 to 10 mph with gu&gt;ts up to
20 mph. Chance of precipita·
!ton 90 percent..
Tut;5day. mght.. .Mostlx_
cloudy. with a chance of
snow m the evenmg .. .Then
partly cloudy with . a sl ight
chance .of snow showers after
midnight. Cold wit h lows in
the lower .20s . Northwest
winds 10 to 15 mph . Chance
of snow 50 percent.
Wednesday ... part 1y
cloudy. Hi ghs in the lower
40s. ~orthwe.'l winds around
10 mph .
Wednesday night..Partl y
cloudy. Cold with low' in the
lower 20s . Northwe't winds
5 to I0 mph. ·

Thursday
through
Friday ... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 40s. Lows in the
mid 20s.
Friday
· night...Partly
cloudy · with a 30 percent
chance of snow sho-vers.
Cold with lows in the upper
20s .
Saturday.:.Mostl y cloudy
. with a chance of snow and
rain s hower~ . Highs in the
• .
.
Jov.:er 40s. Chance ol prectp·
llatlon 40 percen~ .
Saturday mght...Partly
c loud y w1th a chance of ram
and snow showers. Cold wi t.h
lows in the upper 20s.
Chance o( precipitatiOn 40
pe~ce nt.

Sunda y ... Partly ·cloudy.
High&gt; in the upper 4th..
Sunday · night
and
Mnnday ... Mmtly
clear.
Lows in the lower 30s . Highs
in the mid 'iOs.

OHIO

l'ageA6
Tuesday, March

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

21 , 2006

Tagliabue to retire in July, B2

vishto

Division 1-11 All-Ohio basketball teams. B2
Hager a finalist for Jimmy V award, B6

BY M.R. KROPKO
ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - About
150 war protesters banged
drums outside President
Bush 's
speech Monday
emphasizing progress in Iraq,
· and
qhanted
for
the
Republican to leave the heavily Democratic·city.
The demonsttation drew an
array of people but was
peaceful, and there were no
arrests, said Lt. Thomas
Stacho, a police spokesman.
About 60 officers from
Cleveland and other state and
local agencies watclied over
the protest, he said.
.
By contrast, no protesters
showed up at Vice President
Dick Cheney's appearance in
Hanove1ton, about 90 miles
southeast of Cleveland, where
he attended , a fundrai ser fo(
Republican
congressional
candidate Chuck Bl asdel. ·
The president spoke to
members of The City Club at
a hotel in downtown
Cleveland, one of the nation 's
poorest cities, where the
unemployment rate is ;lmong
the state's highest and where
the Bush-Cheney ticket won
only 33 perce"nt of the vote in
2004.
.
The re gion has been ·hit
hard by the war in Iraq,
including an especially deadly summer that including
heavy losses at the 3rd
Battalion, 25th Marines based
. in nearby Brook Park. The
battalimf lost 16 members,
including 14 killed in backto-back attacks within a week,
inspiring impromptu honietown memorials and refueling
war protests across the state.
The City Club, one of the
oldest nonpartisan free speech
forums in the country, is
known for its tough, unfiltered ~uestionin g of world
leaders over the years. The
ftrst question from the audience, which drew a chuckle
from Bush, was whether he
thought the war in Iraq and
the rise of terrorism were

Tuesday, Mareh 21, 2oo6

Kahne serves up victory in Golden Corral 500
which had ·
been post~oned
on
u n d a Y
because of
rain. But it
was not the

BY MIKE HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

locAL SCHEDUU
GALliPOLIS- A schedule of upcoming college
and high school \18rsity sporting ewn1s inV'Qiying
teams from Gallia, Mo1gs and Mason counlles.

Tuetday '&amp; QIOOBI
Baseball
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant. 5

p.m
Witliam~own

Softball
at Wahama. 5 p.m.

Wedne!lday't gamea

Baseball
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Softball
Point Pleasant at Poca. 5 p.m.
Wahama at Huntington St. Joe, 5 p.m.
Tbyrsday'a games

AP Photo

President Bush answers a question from the audience after speaking about the war on terror
in Cleveland , Monday.. President Bush on Monday cited success in stabi lizing an insurgent
stronghold in .northern Iraq, s.aying he has "confidence in our strategy" and critics should look
beyond .the images.of violence to see clear signs of progress.
signs of an apocalypse. Bush
said he had never thought of
the situation tliat way. ·
·
''1 guess J'm , more "of a
practical fellow. I vowed after
Sept. I I I'd do everything I
c9uld do to prot.ect the
American people," Bush said.
Across . the street, police
sectioned off a part of the
busy Public Square to closely
monitor protesters who held
signs reading . "Bush step
down" and "No blood for
oil."
Darren Harnm, 27, from the
Cleveland suburb Brooklyn,
carried his handmade sign
reading "All we have to fear
is Bush himself."
"I don't shout. But I believe
freedom via bloodshed is not
true freedom," Hamm said .
Greg Coleridge, 46, an
· organizer from Akron for the

American Friends Service I know ~hv we went to war
Comm ittee, helped . lead and' whut 'it's about and I
chant$ with a megaphone to believe we went for the right
the respons ive crowd who cause and that our men and
gatherc:d in 34-dcgree weath- women ure not going to die or
be injured in vain ."
er.
" It 's a good turnout of pcoIn Hanoverton. Cheney
pie who are very upset about defended U.S. involvement in
this ongoing and disastrous Iraq and said insurgents were
war · and
occupation." testing Ame rica's will.
''Now they' re making a ·
Coleriuge said . ·' People arc
seeiil£ and making the con· stand in Iraq. testin~ our .
nec·tion between the wa r re.solve once again, trywg to
abroad . and Jack of basic change American policy. tryneeds at home ."
ing to intimidate the United
Marcy Wessbecher, 50, a States into abandoning . our
Navy veteran, ventured imo .. friend s and permitting the
the .crowd to voice her dis- ovenhrow of that new Middle
agreement with their views. East democracy.'' Cheney ·
She said she wanted to sec the said at the fundraiser. held in
president but couldn ·r get a a heated tent in a parking lot
ticket to get inside. ·
behi nd · the Spread Eag le
" I love this country and I Tavern &amp; Inn. "Progress in
Jove the military experience I Iraq has not come easi ly. but
have had,'' she said. "I believe has been steady."

Baseball
Roane Cou nty at Point Pleasant, 4:30

p.m
. College Baseball
Rio Grande .ar Cedarville (DH),. 1 p.ll'J

· Wahama

Friday's games
Baseball
Huntington St. Joe. 5
Softball

at

p.m.

Wayne at Point Pleasant, 5 ::30 p.m .

Poca at Wahama. 5 p.m.

College Softball
Geneva at Rio Grande, 2 p.m.

S&amp;tyrday's qamas
·
Baseball
Point Pleasant at Logan, a p.m.
Poca at Wahama, 5 p,m

Softball
Poir1t Pleasant at Winfield. noon

Wahama at Suffato-G uyan Valley, noon
Track and Field

Gatlia Academy. River Valley, Sou th Gallia
at Warren Fairweatt)er R,tays, 9:30 cu:n.
,Point Pleasant at C&lt;~.pita l. TBA
·
College Baseball
Cedarville at Rio Grande (DH) , 1 p.m.
College Softball
Malone at Rio Grande. 1 p.m.

Reds edge
Blue Jays
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Ted Lilly pitched fi ve scoreJess innings for the Toronto
. Blue Jays .in a 4 -~ Joss to the
Cincinnati Reds on Monday.
Lilly alfowed six hits.
walked one and struck out
three . He threw 56 of his 88
pitche s for strikes in the
longest outing by a Toronto
pitcher thi s spring .
'.'It was be tter th an it has
.been," Lilly said.
Ken Griffey Jr. was back in
Cincinnati's. · lineup after
re turning from the World ·
Baseball Classic. He went J.
for· 3 with a single.
:'As 10 ng as I ha ve been in
baseball, he is one of the
most respected and most
well -li ked players by hi s
teammates I have ever seen,''
Reus inanager Jerry Narron
said. "Everyboqy nere really
thinks a lot of him, not·on ly
as a ballplayer but as a per·
son."

·

Toronto· s Reed John son
(tender right el"bow) played
center !"ield for the tirst time
this sprin g and cut down ·
Rich Auril ia at 'the pl ate
when he tried to score from
secilnd un Jason LaRue\ sin·
gle.
Johnson wen t 3-for-4 with
a double and two RB! s.
Blue Jays outl"ielder Frank
Catalanotto (right shoulder)
pl ayed in the field for the
first time in a week.
' " I had no problems,"
Catalanotto said. " It was
encouraging to get back into
a game aga in."
David Weathers all owed
·two unearned runs in two ·
inning s for Cincinnati. Brian
Buchanan' s two-out. two-run
single in the bottom of the
· ninth inning won it for the
Reds.
Noles: The Reds traded OF
Wilv Mo Pena to Boston for
RHP Bronson Arroyo. ...
. Cinc.innati reassigned LHP
Tommy Phelps to its minor
league .camp .

CONTACTS
Phone- 1-740-'446-2342 ext 33
Fax- t-740-4'16 -3008
E-mail - sports@mydallysenttnel.com
~P.!;)r\~ S~all

Brad Sherman , Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342 . e'~t 33
bsherman@ myda•lytr lbune com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446 •2342 . ext. 23
bwalter.s.@mydi3 ilytnbune com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
Ierum @myda•tyreg•ster com

HAMPTON, Ga. - Kasey
Kahne showed early signs .of
being a championship contender by winning at Atlanta
Motor Speedway on Monday
kind of perwhile Bill Lester fi nished '
formance he
way back in becoming the
hoped for, as
first · black driver lo race in
he finished
Kahne
· NASCAR's top series since
six laps off
the pace in
1986.
38th
Lester accomplished one of
"It was a very significant
his stated goals, stayi ng out
of trouble and racing to the learning experience for me,"
end of the Golden Corral 500, said Lester, the first black

driver in NASCAR 's top
series since Willy T. Ribbs.
" It was fun to be out there
with them. This is just the
b · ·
d
egmnmg an we have two
more (Nextel Cup) races to

g\~e

45 -year-old Lester,. a
regular
in
NASCAR's
Craftsman Tnuck Series since
2002. said he was a little
embarrassed to get so much
scrutin y despite running so
·far off the pace.
"I don' t reall y deserve all
the attention I've gotten," he
said. ''I' m looking forward to

·the time when it\ about racing instead of race."
But Lester, whose next Cup
race · is expected to be al
Michigan
lnternatiorrdl
Speedway in June , said he
hopes he earned some respect
from the other Cup drivers .
"I was able to brin g it home
.in one piece ahd able to build
up my database of knowledge," he said. "There were
some opportunitie;, for me· to
take so me chances and I
could have gotten in the way.
But I'm not tryi ng to do th&lt;tt "
The top Cup rookie in

2004. Kahne . slumped Ia&amp;~. ·
vear. But he\ started this sea·
~on with four strong perfor·
manccs, including an lith ·
place run at Daytona and two
founh-plac.e finishes before
earning the se~o nd victory of
his career. ·
His tlrst win came last May
in Richmonu and was the
highlight of a difficult sophomore season.
"We haLl momentum," said
Kahne , who also finished
second to .Jeff Burton in

Please see Kahne. B6

Reds deal
Cozart leads·Division I-II to vi~tory ·Pena for
pitcher
-~~~".'~' R ~~~ -~-;L_~!:.~:-=c~-·E.~~~~~~. ~ ~·~-~

BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYDAIL\'TRIBUNE.COM

RIO
GRANDE
Eastern's Nathan Cozart
scored a game-high 29
points, including 14 in the
second half, to help lead the
Division J. JI boys team to a
98-87 victory over Division
III-IV in the District 13
Coaches Association AllStar game at the Lyne
Center Monday on the campus of the University of Rio
Grarde.
Cozart, who played for
the Division IV Eagles durc
ing the regular season,. was
moved up to the D 1-11 squad
to help even out the rosters, ·
and the senior southpaw
torched his former mates
with four 3-pointers en route
to earning Most Valuable
Plaver honors.
South Gallia's C urt
Waugh also joined Cozart
on the D I-ll teatn, and the
I ,000-point career scorer
chipped in a dozen markers
to help the big schools claim
the
11-pm nt triumph.
Shaphen
Teammate
Robinson, from Gallia
A~ademy, also added five
point&gt; to the victory.
The Chesapeake duo of
Justin' Porter and P.J. Rase
guided the DIII-IV team
· with 19 and 13 points,
respectively, in the setback. '
Both teams combined for
:20 3-pointers in the contest. ·
with th~ DI-ll team making
13· in the win.
In the girl s contest,
Chelsea ClitiOn of WmTen
and Jackson's Vict01ia Leali
combined for 22 points to
help give Dl-11 a sweep with
a 66-62 victory in the earlier
game.
·
Clition, who won the girls
3-point shootout, led DI-ll
with a dozen markers, while
Leali added. I0 in helping
the bigger school come
away vict. oriou s. Jackie
Wamsley ,
of
Gallia
Academy added eight points
to the triumph.
Waterford's Hope .King
led the DIII-lV club and all
s&lt;:orers with 17 points. River
Valley\ Beth Payne and
Lmd&lt;1 Eddy of Southern
' each had four . markers,
while Kristiina Williams of
Southem had two points in

Plea•e see All- Star. B6

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern's Nathan Cozart soars to the basket for two of his game h1gh 29 points during
Monday 's Di strict 13 Coaches Association All-star game at the Un iversity of Flio Grande.

SARASOTA. Fla. (A:P ) - ·
Two weeks from Opening
Day, the Cincinnati Reds
final ly landed help for their
starting .rotation .
The Boston Red Sox on
Monday traded right-handed
pitcher Bronson Arroyo to
the .Reds for power-hitting
outfi elder Wily Mo Pena .
Arroyo was 14- 10 with a
4.5 1 ERA last season. The
right-hander, 29, was part of
a deep group of Red Sox
starters and had taken a
home-team di scount whelll he
signed a three-year contract
worth $11.25 mill.ion on. Jan .
' 19.
"The trade is good for both
clubs,'' Cincinnati manager
Jerry Narron sa id . "They ,
(Red Sox) needed a guy to
platoon ... and tl)ey gorthat in
Wily Mo. We get a starting
pitcher that we can put in tlie
iop of the rotation. I'm ·not
sure where yet. but somewhere after Aaron Harang.
"Arroyo Jove1 to compete
and can throw any pitch ,"
Narron sa id . " It is tough · to
get starting pitchers. and he's
a bona fide major league
starter."
Pena. who can't be a free
agentunti I after the 2008 season. batted .254 with 19
homers and 5 1 RB,I s last season and struck out 11 6 times
with 20 walks. Pena. 24,
cou ld play right fie lu instead
of lefty Trot Nixon when Jefthanders pitch against Boston.
Pena is consider&lt;!d a raw
tt.tlent with outstanding
power. ,
"Pi avers with this kind of .
power' usually develop a bette r \\·'alk rate as they go forward into their mid · to late20, ... Boston general manager Theo Epstein said .
·
Bo ston still has Curt
Schillini!. Tim Wakefield.
Josh Beckett. Matt Clement .
David
Welb a nd Jon
Papelbon a; staners . Arroyo.
who pitcheu five · shutout
mning~ Sunda\· after stru.ggling 'in hi; .tir\t three ex hibi·
lion
appearan .:es. ·was
expected to begin the "&gt;cason

Please see Pena, 86

Morgan and Cook are headliners on AU-Ohio teams
COLUMBUS (APJ
Canton Me Kinle'y's Ray mar
Morgan
and
Dayton
Dunbar's Daequan Cook' _
who will be opponents in col·
l&gt;ge- grabbed the spotlight
on the 2005-2006 Associated
Pre ss Divi sion I and II AJJ .
Ohio boys basketball team s
i·eJeased on Monda y. .
Morgan, a dominating 6·
foot -8 power player. was
selected as the player of the
year in the big-sc hool division. based on the recommendations of a state panel of
spans wri ters and broad&lt;;ast·
ers.. Cook, a smooth 6-5 .
s)a, he r. was the pick in
Divi,,ion II .
Morgan has. signed to play
nc~t ~~a -,pn al 'Michigan
State. wh ile Cook i' a part. of
coach Th ad Matta's heralded
recm ilin~ class at Ohio State.
Ruth will also he on dis-

play thi s week at the 84th
boys state tournament at
Ohio State's Value . City
Arena.
Complete I Morgan
e a d s
defendin
g
List, B2
c hampion
Mc Kinley
(23·2) up against Toledo St.
John \ (2 1 - ~ ) on Friday ni ght
with Lancaster (25- 1) meet ·
ing Trot wood-Madison ( ~05) in the nightcap. The win·
ners decide the state title on
Satu rday night.
Cook and Dunbar r2-+-2).
making a return trip to the
' Late's final four, take on
Akron St. Vincent-St. Marv
(21-~) on Frida~ aflernnmi.
not long after. Columbl!'
De Sales·( 19-h) plays Won,ter
Triway ( 25-0). The title game
i' late Saturday afternoon .
Morgan averaged · ~-+ .

----...,-----·

points and 9.-+ rebounds a Di,·ision llir&gt;l-team aiJ-,tate Zane"ille \tav"ille . whose .
game while shootin g 68.2 are: James Dev., (1 f Libert: duh \H'nt 1.1· 7 after winning
percent from the field . He has Township Lakota EJ&gt;t. 16·-+. a wmhined ''x ~ames the
scored more 'than 1;500 sr.. 27 .91: Solon\ . Dalla' pre,.iou' two years: and
career points and his team Lauderdale t6-9. jr.. 21.0 1: Stcphc·n White of Akron
has gone 71-7 with him in· the Mentor's Adam Mav l h·~ ..,r.. Buc·htd and Triwav \ Keith
starting li neup. The Bulldogs 22.6l: Javonte CLlnt&lt;&gt;n c&gt;f S1111dd~. l&gt;&lt;&gt;th ofwhc;m po&gt;ted
have never lo't a home game Reynoldsburg 16·. 1. &gt;r.. 23.1 1: 20-0 n~cnrJ, .
with Morgan as a starter.
Mansfield Senior·, R;l,h;id
C&lt;&gt;nh·, fe ll&lt;\" fir,t -teamers
· Hi s coach at McKinlev. Reed t6 -0. ,r..
I X. .:' 1: inc·l uJe . L"pper Sandusky's
Dave Hoover. &gt;hares the staie Lancaste r\ Chri' McKni ~ht .11111 D1chkr lh-7 . jr . 35 5) .
award with Lmcaster·s John 16-6. sr. . 14.0): and Ja;on · .l11nnn .I..I IIgliur't (,f Willard
Bedfnrd's Thompson of Bedford 111-.&lt;. 1'i • II . ,r.. .lll 4) : Marcm
Cofman and
·
Johlh(1n of St. \'i1Kent-St.
E\erett Heard . Hoover is sr. . 21 .0) .
shooting for hi &gt; third state
Cook .had a hi ~ 1e:tr for '.I an· 16-.l. 'r.. 18 .31:
champi&lt;m ship. ha1·ing also Dun par. a1 cragin£ 25 .6 Tri11.a1 ·, Ltnc· Rnnman t6- ~.
won a title in 1994 whili: at point' a game to gn \lith 10.2 'r.. lb 71: Dante Jacbon of
We,lervillc North .· Cofman rebounds and 5 a;si,h.
Grccnlicld l\kClain 16- ~. jr.. ·
guided Lan caster to its 'win The Division II ,·oaehe, ,,r 2X .71: Sean Elli&lt;'tt ,,f Canal
ninge\t seawn and a berth i1i ·the year \\ere : Ne" :\ l h;ul~ ·, Win c·hc ,t&lt;'I' lh-1. ' r.. 26. 11:
·lhe tina! four. whil~ Heard\ Sam Da'i'. whn k d hi' 1e.1m Drc,Jen Tr.I ·\"allc' ·, Andv
stcauy ham! helped Bedford to a 16--+ re ~ ul:IIAC ,J'" n mu1l K1l gur~ ih·h. sr.. 19.111. Tyler
10 an I K-~.. regular-se;is&lt;m . and
rh·c 'rc~io n;il flnuls Spark' o( OJm,lcd Fall- 16--+ .
mark, and a No. 10 ranking in despite )(1,11 1g ~hi' 1up "·urcr 1r. .:' 1.4 1. and \'.;arre n"·ille
the filial AP poll ..
in mid,ea&gt;clii to a hr,uu ·He1ghts' Joe Dtl\'h lh-0. ' L
Joiniup
Morgan
on t'umor : Greg \iaL1ghn ,,1 2X 11
'
-------

�Tuesday, March

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

2 1, 2006

Tuesday, March 21 , 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.com

NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue to retire in July
BY DAVE GOLDBERG
ASSOCIATED PREsS

NEW YORK
Paul
Taghabue 1s lea\ mg the NFL
and he s leavmg 1t both peace
tu l and prosperous
The 65 year old commisSIOner will step down m July
after 16 years h1s te nure
marked by l,1bor harmo ny and
unprecedented nc he, through
televiSIOn de,1ls
Ta g h&lt;~bue h,1s been 111
charge smce 1989 when he
succeeded Pete Rozelle and
agreed last March to stay to
complete the TV deal and a
long term contract with play
ers
He fm 1ll y got that done 12
days &lt;~go tnushmg the most
arduou s labor negotwt10n s
s111ce the le,Jgue and umon
agreed on a tree ,,gency salary
cap deal 111 1992
I really wan• to emphas1ze
how much of a pnv1lege 11 IS
to spend moq of your adult
hfe wtth the NFL Tht s 1&gt; not
an easy dec ts1on for me
Taghabue sa1d on a confer
ence call Monday
As d1fftcu lt as tilis dec tston
ts I also know 1t s the nght
dec1ston R1ght tor me R1ght
for the league he smd
Roger Goodell the NFL s
ch1ef operaun g officer, and
Atlanta general manager R1ch
McKay are the two leadtng
candtdates
to
succeed
Tagltabue Ballimore Ravens
prestdent D1ck Cass also ts
constde ted to have an outstde
chance and Senetary of State
Condoll;'eza Rtce has sa1d she

\\ ou ld hke the JOb
Ask her, Tagltabue smd
\\ hen qu1zzed about R1cc s
candidacy
Taghabue stad the search ts
wtde open and that he Will
stay on beyond July to avotd
the k1 nd of se , en month dead
loc k that occurred between
htm ,md the late Jtm Fmks
after Rozelle ste_pped dow n tn
March 1989
Owners w tll begtn to look
for a new commtsstoner at
thetr meeu ngs next week tn
Orlando Fla
As fo r h iS own ten ure
Tagltabue satd Butldtng a
stron g relat tonsh1p Wt th the
NFL Pl &lt;~yers Assoc tatton 1s
the thmg I m most proud of
Ever) one mvolved m the
NFL m the 80s s,tw that as a
ncgatt ve he satd
More tha n anythmg else
Tagltabue took over a league
that already had alread)
become Amenca 's ga me
under Rozelle and took 11 to
the next level, ennchmg tl and
restonng labor peace
In nMny cases he tumed
nulltona1re owners mto btl
honatres The 'alue of many
tranchtses has mcreased ten
fold smce 1989 - those worth
$70 mtlhon then are worth
$700 mtllton now
Wtth the labor and TV deals
done Tagltabue made no
secret that reurement was
near
Last wee k, he told players'
umon executive dtrector Gene
Upsha\\ that he \\Ould spend
the weekend at hts vacatton
home Ill Mame Tagltabue also

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WINTER HAYEN Fla
Grady Stze more tsn t only
wanted by the ladtes
Dunng an 111te rvtew last
week whtle Stzemore was
watch1ng some mmdless
MTY sho w after a mornmg
workout and lunch, 11 became
clear how tn demand
Cleveland s leadoff h1tter,
center fi elder and most eltglble bac helor has become
Grady I need you 111 the
tramer Ttm Maxey
pool
satd
R1 ght after I m done,
Stze more satd
Grady sorry to tnterrupt
satd an lndtans m111or league
coac i) ' If I lea\ e th1 s box of
baseball s at your locker wtll
you stgn them for m} son s
team? Onl y you
'Sure Sizemore sa1d
Grady I need you to dp
TV outstde satd medta rela
!tons ass istant Jeff S1bel
One sec ' S1zemore satd
These da) s everyone wants
a ptece of SIZemore Funny
how times change A yea r ago
111 spn ng tratnmg the lndtans
cut htm from thet r openmgday roster
But now Stze more IS the
cl ub s nsmg star and perhaps
the face of Cleveland s orga
mzatt on a 23 year old bundle
of hustle who emerged as one
of the AL s best all around
playe rs 111 2005
In hts ftrs t full maJor leag ue
seaso n S1zemore batted 289

V.ith 22 homers 81 RBis and

March 20,

Feb 28 2001 Sports Bus ness
June 29 1993 Owners and players Oct 5 1997 The
March 22 1989
Daily named Tagliabue the 2000
Comm ss1oner Pete Rozelle s1gned first ColteC11ve Barga1n1ng NFL s 10 OOOth
regular season game Sports lnduslnalist of the Year
announced ret1rement after Agreement (CBA) s1nce 1982
played 1n Seanle
lead ng the NFL tor 29 years agreement expired 1n 1987

2006
Tagllabue

announced

retirement

May 22 League

sen to be seventh

26 Tagt 1abue

Oct Nov Carolina Panthers

and Jacksonvtlle Jaguars

March 23, 1998
Expans1on Cleveland

L ch ef execu1 1ve

awarded expanston franchises

Browns approved

Feb 16 1990 College

Feb 9 1996 Cleveland franchise approved March 17, 1999

IUnlors became el1g1ble

to move to Balt1more w th new name

for NFL draft

Aprll30 Transfer of the Oilers from
March 18, 1992 Instant Houston to Nashville approved
replay not approved after

s1x years n use

realignment
approved

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

•m:•111: w•o1•

~·vo•

Dec 6 Former CommiSSioner Rozelle d1ed

Owners reapproved
1nstant replay
Oct 6 Houston

awarded expans1on
franchiSe

Saptember NFL
and game
offiCials agreed to
a SIX year CBA
end1ng a two
week locko ut

Nov 4 2003 April 27 2005 Steroids
The 24 hour program strengthened
NFL Network Oct 2 Card1nats and 49ers
launched on play 1n Mex1co C1ty the firSt
DirecTV
regular season game

satd he mtght look at buymg a
boat for rettrement
Upshaw
heard
about
Taghabue s dectston wh1le
vacattomng tn Hawau and e
matled htm I d1dn t expect
I'd start my Monday morrmg
th1s wa) l guess you bought
the boat
Turns out Tagltabue d1dn 't
- although he dtd go shop
ptng
Taghabue s ftrst phone call
wtth the news went to
Ptttsburgh 's Dan Rooney, the
NFL s semor owner The other
owners learned of 11 by e-matl
' We ve got the best labor
deal 111 sports We ve got the
best league He s been our
leader The whole way he's
done th1s has been wonder
ful ,'
Rooney told The

Three days after S1zemore
placed on the dtsabled ltst
wtlh a hamstnng mJury and
only had one at-bat all season
Thts spnng has been stressfree for Stzemore who no
longer has to prove he's ready
for tHe maJor leagues Thts
season hts name wtll be the
fi rst one manager Enc Wedge
penctls onto the ltneup card
before every game
"It s mce m the sense that I
can JUSt focus on try mg to get
better and get back to that
mtdseason form wtthout ally
thmg to worry about
Stzemore satd ' It's not hke l
have to go out there thmking
Man , I d better get three
htts It s ntce to know that
I've got a spot other than that
11 doesn t really change any
thmg
Stzemore 's spot 111 the l111e
up IS guaranteed however
you' d ne ver know tl from
watchmg htm on the field Hts
style ts full throttle - all the
ttme
He runs out every grounder
as tf tt's Game 7 of the World
Senes and see111g S1zemore
sh1ft mto another gear wh1le
leggmg out a tnple m a spnng
trammg game IS as warmmg
as the Flonda sunshme
Becau se of that dn ve
toughness and talent, Ch1cago
Whtte Sox manager Ozzte
Gu11len called S1zemore the
best all around player m the
AL Central' last season
The Ind1ans love Stzemore
even more

W nbusiT Shaker His Rayshawn Go ns Cleve RhOdes

Tyler Brady Chagnn Falls Kenston Retd Anderson
Lakewood St Edward Jacob Pelkac Mtddleburg Hts
M dpark Btlly Grant Solon Chns ZaJaC Brecksvtlle
Broadvtew Hts Charles Osby Bedford
James Wallace Youngs Au st ntown F tch Steve Kuzyk
Lad Clove eaf Er c Coblentz Untontown Lake Roddy
Ful er Warren Hardmg Steve P ekarsk Macedon a
Nordan a Todd Brown Ca nton McK nley Travis Larnck
Brunsw ck Brandon ScotGh 8 u nsw ck Nate West
Canton GtenOak Mark Young Mas s Washtngton
Dwa ne Lentes Mansfield Sr Wes Taylor Oregon Clay
Ryan Hoehner
Bowl ng Green Scott Perk ns
Perrysburg LaMont e Dawson Maumee Dathan Lyles
Lma Sr
Soya Olvlelon II All Ohio Llat
COLUMBUS(AP ) - The 2005 2006 Assoctated Press
D VIS on II boys All OhiO h gh schOol baSketball team
based on the recommendatiOns of a state med a panel
DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM Daequan Cook Dayton Ounoar 6 foot 5
sen or 25 6 po nts pe r game Jon D ebler Upper
Sandusky 6 7 )r 35 5 Jtmm')l Langhurst W )lard 5 11
sr 30 9 Marcus Johnson Akr SVSM 6 3 s 18 3 L nc
Ronman Wooster Tr way 6 2 sr 16 7 Dante Jackson
Green! e d McC a n 6 5 1r 28 7 Sean Ell ott Cana
W nchester 6 1 sr 26 1 Andy K tgore Dresden Tr
Valley 6 6 sr 196 Tyer Sparks Olmsted Falls 6 4 jr
21 4 Joe Dav s Warrensvt le Hts 6 0 sr 28
~layer of the year' Daequan Cook Dayton Dunbar
Coaches of the year Sam Oav s New Albany Greg
Vaughn Zanesville Maysv Ue Steven Wh te Akr Buchtel
Keith Snoddy Wooste r Tr way
SECOND TEAM M ke Fout Cols Hamilton Twp 6 5
sr 22 4 Andrew Boba l k E L verpool 6 2 sr 25 8
Heath Wh le C n Taft 6 2 sr 23 2 Evan Bla c~
C clev li e Logan Elm 6 2 sr 19 0 Ky e Hallock
Sandusky Perk ns 6 1 )r 21 0 Aydel 8 oaks Akr
Buchtel 6 1 sr 27 5
THIRD TEAM El Jah A len Cols DeSa es 6 4 Jr 17 0
Jake Wor ey New A bany 6 5 sr 6 5 Greg Bora ev ch
Cols Centenn a 6 6 sr 20 8 Dan el lfft Dove 6 3 Jf
16 I Kellen lawadsk T pp C ty T ppecanoe 6 3 Jr
16 6 Jam e Breneman Woos er Tr way 6 0 sr 17 7
Antwon Erv n Caf1ton S 6 2 sr 17 0 Kodey Haddox
Zanesvlle 6
r 51
Special Mention
Ivan Sm th Zanesv lie Maysv !e Dar M Ueson Cad 2
Harr son Cent Jason McKeegan W n1ersv lie lnd an
C eek Man Spears Carrotllon Danny McKeehan

~egtster
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m:rtbune
Sentinel
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played outs1de !he U S
AP

SOURCE Nal:lonat Footbal League

Assoctated Press
Tag habue wt ll stay on wnh
the NFL as a sentor executtve
and a consultan t through
2008 part of the contract
extensmn he stgned last July
Hts term wtll be remem
bered most for labor peace fol
lowtng stnkes m 1982 and
1987 Hts close relattonshtp
wtth Upshaw fi nall y led to a
long tenn agreement after fi ve
years wtthout a contract
But the bargauung was )lard
thts ttme wtlh three stra1ght
deadhne extensiOns needed
The agreement avotded the
pros pect of entenng free
age ncy thts year wtth the pos
stbthty of an uncapped year tn
2007
It came at the expense of
revenue shann g among the

He's already one of the
game satd Indtans general
manager Mark Shaptro, who
acqu1red Stzemore and lefthander Cliff Lee from
Montreal 1t1 the famed 2002
trade of Bartolo Colon
"Grady ts one of those rare
guys that e'ery smgle person
that watches htm can apprect
ate He runs out every ball even down here That destre
to get better comb111ed wtth
hts athlettc1sm and talent IS a
deadly combtnatton
"He's a JOY to watch If you
can't go watch and enJOY
Grady then you shouldn't be
watchmg baseball "
Stzemore has been gmng
I ull speed for so long that he
couldn t tmagt ne downshtft111g
' I don t know any other
way he satd It's who I am
I don't know how to go 111 any
other dtrectton or at any other
speed It s the way I ltke to
play It s fun for me that way '
And ltke a rock star
S1ze more s
All Amencan
good looks have won htm hts
share. of fe male admtrers
They bombard h1m w1th datl y
fan mat! scream ht s name
between mmngs at the Jake
and refuse to leave htm alone
" I' ve gotten mterestmg let
ters and proposals and stuff
St ze more satd, shaktng hts
head It sttll shocks me
Some of these women are
crazy

Divisions 1-11 All-Ohio Basketball Teams
Boys Dlv ls•on I All Oh1o L1Bt
COLUMBUS (AP) -The 2005 2006 Assoc ated P ess
Dlvtslon I boys All Oh o h1gh school basketball team
based on the recommandat1ons ol a state med a panel
DIVISION I
FIRST TEAM Aaym a Mo gan Canton McK nle~ 6 lao
8 sen or 24 1 po nts per game James Dews L berty
Twp Lakota E 6-4 sr 27 9 Da la s Laude oale Solon
6 9 1r 21 0 Ada m May Mentor 6 8 s 22 6 Javonte
Clanton Reynoldsburg 6 1 sr 23 1 Rashad Reed
Mansf eld Sr 6 0 s
8 2 Chr s McKn ght Lancaster q
6 sr 14 0 Jason Thompson Bedford 6 3 sr 21 0
Player at the year Raymar Morgan Canton McK nle'7'o
Coaches of the year Dave Hoover Canton McK nley
John Co lman Lancaster Everett Heard Bedford
SECOND TEAM Josh Ch chester W Chester Lakota
W 6 8 s 108 Wllam Bufo d To L•bbey 6 5 s9ph
22 Jonathan Dunn Tal St Johns 6 3 s 191 Darryl
Robe rts Tel St Franc s 6 0 sr 18 1 Mar o Edwa ds
16 7 Kosta Koufos Canton
Ma ss Wash ngton 6 2 s
GenOak 7
r 240
THIRD TEAM Lamar Skeeter Kettenng Fa rmont 5 10
1r 19 9 Kyle Lghtne Tol Scoft 4 8 sr 16 3 Marcus
Parkef Canton McK(nley 5 8 sr 11 0 Kenny Frease
Mass Perry 6 ~ 1 soph
18 6 Matt St eng Upper
Arl ngton 6 2 sr 19 7 Chris Wr ght T atwood Mad so n
~7 Jr
65
Spec1al Mentio n
Jeff Cumbe land Cots Brookhaven Mike Harr s Cos
Ma r on Fra kl n Adr on G aves Cm Hughes Steve
Pogue C n Oak H Is Detvon Roe Lakewood St Edward
Kyle Brown Strongsv le Rudy Ktrbus Cleve St IgnatiUS
Kyle Ca o a Parma No mandy Ale- Su I van Pa nesv lie
A vers1de Thaddeus G bson Euc •d Lou s Tumbl n
E yr a Danny Hosk ns Lora n Adm• a K ng W II am
ThOmas E Cleve Shaw Tyrone Bolden Cleve JFK
Da twan Epp nge Garfield Hts M chael Porrlnl Ma ss
Wash ngton N ck Sales Ba berton Err ck McCollum
Car1ton GlenOak Br en Morrow Stow RICky Jackson
Canton McK nley Adam G es F emont Ross
Honorab le Menti on
B J Cunn1ngham Westerv lte S Aust n Dahn Worth
Kilbourne Derron Gray Cols Br ggs Ryan Kennedy
Thomas Wo th ngtor1 Seth Pnce Grove C ly
Kyle Couv on Centerv lie B 11y Allen Ham lton Trav s
Brown Mason Lonn e Hayes C n Hug hes Kyle
Rudolph C n Elde Oenn s Nance W lm ngton
Lucas Wngnt Logan. Anthony Youngblood Mar etta
Desmond Mot ey Eud d Adr ene Rodr guez lo an
Southv ew JoA Haffey Lyndhurst Brush AI en Boyd
Cleve Glenv e C nt N c ho son Ea st ake N N ck

Me &amp;I ( &lt;&gt;unh (Ill

Nat1onat Football League CommiSSioner Paul Taghabue has decided to ret1re end1ng h1s t 6 year re1gn

22 steals He v. as the only was demoted Gonzalez was best ce nter ftelders tn the
player tn enhe r league to
record at least 20 doubles, I 0
tnples, 20 homers and 20
steals - and JUSt the fifth to
do tt thts decade
S1zemore also made 152
starts m center field fimshmg
wtth a 992 fieldmg percent
age and clos111g the year wtth
a 62 game errorless streak
Manager Enc Wedge placed
Stze more 111 the leadoff spot
on May 15 and he stayed
there
And, Stzemore, a three
sport htgh school star who
turned down a football schol
arsh1p at Washmgton also
became No
I among
Cleveland s female fan base
Some of St zemore s support
ers have banded together as
'Grady s Ladtes while others
wear 'Mrs S1ze more' T
sh!rls sold 111 the club s sou
vemr shop at Jacobs F1eld
"Oh man,' Stzemore says
wtth a sm1le sltghtly embar
rassed by the attentton I try
not to thtnk about any of that
stuff But tt 's hard not to
It s hard to tmag1ne what
the lndtans - th ey went 93
69 - would have done last
season Without St ze more
In the last days of spnng
tra111 mg, the 6 fo ot 2 200
po un de r was opttoned to
Tnple A Buffalo He was sent
down when the lndtans dec td
ed that Juan Gonzalez s bat
was more essenttal to their
ltneup than Stzemore s speed
yo uth and ups1de

CLASSIFIED

Tagliabue's tenure over the NFl

owne rs an 1ssue that had
diVIded h1gh reve nue and
small revenue teams and con
tnbuted to the deadlock He
d1d 1t wtth what has been con
stdered h1s greatest sktll as
commt sstoner,
patchtng
together a coahtton of nme
teams wtth d1ffenng vtew
pomts to reach a compromtse
constdered sati sfactory by ,,II
but two teams
He also oversaw a mdSSIVe
stadtum butldmg prog ram
More th an two th trds of the
NFL s 32 teams are etther
playmg m or bwld111g stadt
urns that dtdn 't extst when he
took over as comm1 sstoner tn
1989
He sa1d hts btggest regret as
commtsstoner was al low1ng
both the Rams and Ratders to

leave Los Angeles after the
1994 se !Son - the Rams for
St Lotus and the Ratde rs for
Oak J,md The league has been
trymg to get a team back 111
Los Angeles smce then
Before tak mg on thts JOb
Tag ltabue was a league lawyer
who spent much of that ttme
&lt;Is the NFL s representattve
and uno tttctal lobbyist tn
W,1s hmgton
We dtdn t always ag ree
but he encou raged the amng
ot d1fferent optmons and
phtlosnphtes un ongst the
enu re ow nershtp
Dallas
ow net Jerry Jones satd From
t person,1l perspecti ve l know
he brou"ht ou t the best m me
tn ''hat I could do to serve the
NFL ,md the fans of th1 s
league Th 11 s leadership

Indians' super Sizemore a rising star OSU proud of
BY ToM WITHERS

The Datly Senltnel • Page 83

Morrow L1ttl&amp; M am Bran Scott Day Cham nade
Juli enne Myles Trampe St Par:;; Graham Jared Larson
Lane Fa rl eld Umon Co ey Conrel Ch U Un oto T rteU
Cum berland H llsboro Alex Barth Vmcent Warren
Anthony Hitchens Chlllcothe Ae1d Arnold Jackson Joe
Ca ruso Rocky Atve r Trevor Wenze I Bay V t age Bay
Col n Vore1s Verm11 on Rudy Evans C eve Bened c t ne
A cky Stenz M entor l ake Cath Aeggte K ng
Chesterland W Geauga N ck Marotta Oran ge Scan
Aston Pa1nesv lie Harvey Nathan Luoma Geneva M1ke
Staley Mento Lake Cath Johnny Wolos nczuk Akr
Hoban M1cah Herndon Ravenna SE Tom Jeska Salem
Edd e Kershaw Youngs L1berty Devn;m Bu ssey Akr N
Josh Moo e T ff n Columb an Jeremy Dav s Napoleon
Aaron. Thomp son El da
Honorable Mention
El 1ah Cunn ngham Cols Beech croft Terrence Pearson
Cots M ffl n Kent Pr ce Pa n C ty Jonathan Alder
Ronme Steward Co s Eastmoor Acad Scott Tho mas
Delaware Buckeye Val
Matl Wa eh me New Conco(d John Glenn Chad West
Dresden Tn Va ley Logan A anhalt Zanesv le Just n
l nsc:ott Ca mbm:tge Ben Hodk nson Cad1z Hamson
Cent Bryce Sanbo n Dover David Swanson Warsaw
Ave V ew Zach Col aros Steubenville
Aaron Pogue Day Dunba
Con ner Wet ze C n
Wyom ng Danny Brunner Ketter ng Alt er Steve Dees
Day Cham nade Jul enne Scott e S be t F nneytown
Edd•e Gray C n Taft
Kyle Ae chetderter C rc ev111e Logan Elm R J Brown
C rclev lie Chr s G vens Ch II cothe Co ey While ChI
Un oto K C Ch r stan Iron ton Rock H 1 Justm H1l on
Waverly Dust n Guthr e McA rthu V nton County Chase
Bu ge Lane Fa rf1e d Un on
Dan Callahan Chagr n Fal s Adam Johnson Pe ry
Andy 0 Keele Per y Andrew W eg and Oberl n
F re ands B J Baran Bay V ll age Bay Julian Mangano
Pa nesv lie Ha vey Pau R ce Hunt ng Val Un v School
Cory Em'ar ne Olmsted Fa Is Alex R chey Geneva
Devonne Johnson Pa nesvllle Ha vey
Shane Young Be o I W Branch M ke Rounsavall
Can t eld Nate Ogg Canal FultQn NW Cory Bou qu n
Can ton S Brandon ShOT! 0 rv He Dust n Opa ka
Cortland lakev ew Edc;l e Mack ew cz
Cort!and
Lakev ew Matt War en Cooley Chr s B v ns All anee
Jerem Ma I n Can ton T mken Donald Ga th Akr
Buchtel
Josh Cat11er Shelby Adam Johns St Marys Me mar at
Sam Bast an Tot Cen Ca th Ch s V lalovos WauseoR
S~ane ~anns t an Norwalk

accomplishments,
looking to next year
BY RUSYY MIUER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS
Fot a
change, Ohto State basketball
made more news on the court
than m a courtroom
And 1f you thmk a 26 6
record an outnght Btg Ten
tttle and a tnp to the NCA A
tournament was a mce start
then watt unt1l you see what
the ex[)l!ctattons are next year
Desptte the specter of
NCAA sanctions hangmg ovet
them, and ugly details ~ppmg
up because of a lawswt b) the
man who brought most of
them to campus the Buckeyes
sttll racked up a lot of htgh
pomts before bowmg out of the
NCAA tournament wtth a loss
to Georgetown on Sunday
No one expected us to do
anythtng but we dtd ' JUntor
~ uard Ron Lewts sa1d 'It was
JUSt a great season I am look
111g forward to next season and
domg the same thmg '
It s odd that a team that loses
four starters mclud1ng three
fifth } ear semors and the B1g
Ten's playe r of the year "
lookmg forward rather th an
back Gone ts the top playe r 111
the conference, Terence Dmls
along With J J Sulhnger Matt
Sylvester and Je' Kel Foster
But coach Thad Matta who couldn t or wouldn t sav
he was offictally cotm ng bac k
to Oh10 State unttl JUSt a few
weeks ago - wtll replace
them wnh one of the greatest
recruumg classes at the school
No wonder Lewt s po1nt
guard Jamar Butler and the
other returnees are excued
The mcommg Buckeyes
mclude 7 foot Creg Oden the
consensus top player m the
nauon
and lndt anapohs
Lawrence North Htgh School
teammate Mtke Conley along
With stars Daequan Cook ol
Day ton Dunb ar and Da\ld
Ltghty of Cleveland Vt lla
Angela St Joseph
We re gm ng to take some
ttme and rest Matta sa1d &lt;~ I te r
Ohio State fell to tall and tal
ented Georgetown 70 52 m the
second round on Sunday mght
We have tour guys plavmg
tor state htgh school champ1
onshtps thts commg weekend
and I hope the) fin 1sh that off
We II come back after spnng
break and get ready to stan
bu li dmg agam That s the
beauty of wh,n I lmc to do 111
coachmg Put ull the ptc.ce s
together and go trt the nght
dtrecuon
No one doubts tn.u s ''her~
the) ,tre heddcd
A ma'''ve hi,Kk cloud co'
ered the progr&lt;~m v.hen pr Ic
lice bcg,m la' t October The
Eluckcyc' v,ent 20 12 111 2004
20()'i but dtd not get to pli) 1n
the pO&gt; l,CU\011 beL lli ' l the

Oeailtir~

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

• Stilr t Your Ads

All Dlaplay 12 Noon 2
llualnl!l&amp;&amp; Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thur•day far Sundays

A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Indude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. ,

rI

~;-:---.....;.;..;..;.;;;;_,

r

A NNOUN&lt;..l:MFNTS

Oh o V•lley
Publishing reserves
tho right to odlt
reject or cancel any
ad at any time
•Errors
Must
B
eported on the firs
ay of publ ication an
he Tribune Sentinel
agister
will
b
sponslb le for n
ore than the cost o
he spa ce oc c upie
y the error and onl
he first lnsertton W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expene
hat results from th
ubi catiOn or omls
ion of an advertis

GIVEAWAY

• All ads must be prepaid•

W~th

1

r

%~

Tokens and cur ency from
Rae ne
Pomeroy
and

t:IC!::-"-:----.,;,1"1

M ddleport Banks 740 992

t rrou:

I \11'1 II\ \II '\ I
,11{\l£1'

Found the most
well
behaved young dog found
on Park Dnve phone to
cia m 304 675 5265

Lost
Femal e Golden
Retnever 6 months old
G reer Ad B M te area
Please co ntact (304)675
66 16 lea11e message t nee
essary

Current

rate ca

pplles
All

admmtstrauon banned them as
a \\ay to red uce more severe
pcn,ll ucs ft om the NCA A The
rult ng body of college spons
found that coach Jtm 0 Brien
dnd hts stat! had commttted
SC \ en nldJOf \IOJatiOilS
So while the Buckeyes went
through the tr paces m the gy m
the} awa1 ted the other Nike to
drop
They had plenty ot expert·
ence but 1 lot ot questtons
Not ternbly 1&lt;~ 1 1 - at 6 9 Dials
w.1s the1r on ly mSide player and not ternbly deep the
Buckeye' no netheless ran off
I 0 stratgh t Wills m November
and Decembe1 tncludtng a
last second victory o'er
NCAA tournament he avy
we 1gh t LSU
They Jo,t th1 ee ot thetr first
seven Btg Ten games then
won II of the1r next 12 games
to ca\Jture the school s first
outrt g 1l confere nce tttle 111 14
years
L ttc tn tiMt n m they also
tounc\;..out that the NCAA
woul&lt;fl\m ke~p them out ot the
tourn,unent this year
1 he only damper on a
&gt; parklm~ se,!Son wa&gt; a shoot
mg slump that cost them m a
lo" tu lo"" m the Btg Ten
toUi nt menl llnale and the sea
son elldlftg IuS&gt; to the Hoyas
Su lltnger \\ ho ptcked up the
, f ~ck lll &gt;~ de desp1 te standmg
JUSt (, 6 ' "'d No one ever
gave us ,mv cred1t We \\ere
always underdo(;S
Ohm
State basketbal l ts back I rn
JUSt proud to sm I was part of
the gtoup th,tt helped th ts pro
gram get b,JCk 1nto the
NCAA
The Budeves \\ 1ll p1obably
not be undctdogs .1gmn til the
torcscc,Jblc future There s no
htd1ng the t 1ct that the pres
ence of Olkn who man) NBA
llh lders llli1Sider to be a once
til 1 deL&lt;~ck pl,l)Cr changes
e\eryt htnc

Butler the sophomore pomt
~ua rd "ho dc,e lopcd mto one
of the heq 111 the B1g Ten thts
yc 1r " '" l' k&lt;ll titer the
Gcor ~c tov. n It\" " hen hiS
rn1nu ""u ld d1ck forward to
2&lt;Klll 21Xl7
Rldll IH ' " I 111 thtn km g
1hou1 llc \l \c u nght now he
' ud I 111 oi l cl 1"c' thts week
md ,.., -.u1 n !.., \H.: ..,t ut cla ~se~
I 1111 ·"' " ~to go nght b,1ck to
"o1k tt ld tn to unpto\e my
• II IlL [ l Ill ( \\ Ill fnr those
r tcs hmcplll _tt here

Male Cocke'r Span el at
School
Me gs P ma ry
CAL L 740 992 5066

Real

dvertlsements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

968
Th is
newspape
ccepta only hel
anted ads meet10
OE standards

MISSING Black Lab dog no
colla r On Bu av1lle near
Shnne Clu b Fam1ty pet
(740)446- 1603

ro.O EXPER ENCE NECESSARY
FULL T I.IE LASSES
~_.ol TRA N N(;,
F ~ANC NG AVA LA BLE
JOS PLA EMENT

ENROLL NG NOW

t

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEV LLE VA

1·800-334 1203

L..::-=•"•"'oc""""''""'"'""''"''"~
'"-"'

WMTED

roBuv

110

110

1

HEI I' WANMJ

DRIVERS NEEDED
Home Eyarv Weekend
$1 DOD SIGN ON BONUS"
2 500 3 000 M les ptweek
33 cpm + Salety Bonus
Health L le Den 401K
A eq COL A 2 Yrs Exp
CoreTrans LLC

Absolute Top Dollar U s
Stive r and Gold Cams
Proofsets ~o l d R•ngs Pre An Excellent way to ea n
1935
US
Cu n e n e~ money The New Avon
800-422-4799 •248
"» We w II not knowing
Solla re Diamonds M T S Cal Manlyn 304 882 2645
y accept any adver
Con Shop 151 Second
Drtvers Needed
isement in v olalio
Avenue Gal pols 740 44 6 Ashton WV wo ksne seeks COL Dnvers w lu")g to d ve
MACH NIST
1he law
2842
tor local ready m x concrete
Ful I me pOSSible
company Expe en ce •s
sh t1 rota! on
prefe rred but not necessar~
Med nsurance &amp; other
Expe ence w th ma:nuat
benet
ts ava1lable after wa t
4ll4 a For Sale ....... :........
725
athes m II ng ma ch nes
ng pe r od Dr 11er must be
saws rad a dr lis Must be
w 1ng to do pre rna nte
Antiques
530
able to hold tolerances to
nance on trucks &amp; equ p
Apartments for Rent ..
440
0005 (Inches) on I ne work
ment yard wo k &amp; other
Au c tion and Flea Market
080
Ab hty to accurately cut varl
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
m sceltaneous chores
ous male and fe male E.)'; per ence opera! ng eqwp
Auto Repair
770
threads ( nclud ng butt ess ment &amp; extra sk Is such as
Autos for Sale
710
threads) Background must
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
weldmg a plus
nclude mach n ng of materiBuilding Suppttes
550
Call Robe tsburg
as of var ous hardness and
Business and Buildings
340
(304) 937 3410
mach1nmg c har ac ter~s t cs
Business Opportunrty
210
or lakn(304 )773 5234
M ust be able 10 read d aw
Business Training
140
Located 1n Mason County
Camper s &amp; Motor Homes
790
mgs and make the parts to
near BuHalo WV
Camping Equtpment
780
the app ~opr ate spec f ca
Cards of Thanks
010
tens Must be lam har w th - - - - - , - - - - Child/Elderly Care
190
Free
Health
shop safety rout nes and Dr vers
Elec tncai/Refngeratlon
840
p ocedu es
CNC lnsu an ce Excellent pay
Equipment for Rent
480
Prog ram n ng
&amp; bonuses &amp; home t me 1
Excavating
830
Troubleshoot ng eKper ence year tracto tra•le exper
Farm Equipment
610
requ red
Mart n
L tt truck operat on a plus ence
Farms for Rent
430
Schedu e
may
rotate T ansport 866 293 7435
Farms for Sal e
330
Workstte s located w lh n
ELECTRIANS
For Lease
490
to
c
lose
prox mlty
For Sale
585
Huntmgton WV and Pt
For Sale or Trade
590
osco lndustr es 1nc
WV
Appl
cat
on
Pleasant
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Jackson D•v s on has open
retJu red
US c t ze nsh p
Furni shed Roo ms
450
ngs lor ele ctr Clans All
requ ed nqu re w thm Tel
General Hauling
850
applic ant s must have knowl
866 231 2476
Giveaway
040
edge and expenence n a
Happy Ads
050
manufactur ng env ronment
Hay &amp; Gra1n
640
Attent on 0 ve s
R&amp;J be w lmg to work an)/ shtft
Help Wanted
110
ng
lor and have at leas t 2 yea rs
Truck
ing
s
look
Home Improvements
810
n ndus tr el
Dr vers
w/ 1
yr
OTA axpe ence
Homes for Sale
310
ma
ltenance
Exper
ence
tor
Regm
nal
Household Goods
5 10

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Announce~e~n~t~.i~·i·,;;;:::~~~~::~~·~~::~;·030

Ho uses l or Rent
In Memo riam
Insurance

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
Livestock
Lost and Found
Lots &amp;. Ac reage
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous Merchandise
Mdblte Home Repair
Mobile Homes for Rent
Mobile Homes for S ale

Money to Loan
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheel er s
Muslca lln strume nts
Pers on a ls
Pets f or S ale
Pl umbtng &amp; Heating

Profess to nal Services
Radio TV &amp; CB Repair
Real Esta t e Wanted
Scho ols Instruction
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
SitlJatlons Wanted
Spa ce for Rent
Sporting Goods
SUV a lor Sa le
Trucks fo r Sale
Upholstery
Vans For Sal e
Wanted t o Buy
Wan te d t o Buy
W anted To Do

Wanted to Rent
Yard Sale Gallipolis
Yard Sale Pomer oy/Middle
Yard Sale PI P le a • ant

570

720

71 5
870
730
090
62 0
180
470

072
074
076

Cou er "FT Must ha'.'e per
feel dn\1 ng record Resume
t&lt;X PO Box 33 Gall pohs
OH 45631
Now accept ng app cal ons
tor Ca ke Decoral ng pos 1on
and exper anced Produce
Cle k Send esume t~
Eastmans Foodland co
Oh o Valley Superma kets
PO Box 769 Galhpo s OH
456~1

Fuel t ruck dnver pas t1on
ava fa ble Stra ight truck
local rou te Compet1l ve pay
Good hours go¢ benehts
None H azmat &amp; tanker
endorse me nts will be co n
s1dered Ma I resume and
copy at d r 11 ng record to
CLA Box 555 clo Galhpo t s
Pb Box 469
Tr bune
Ga hpol s OH 45631

bIer No exper ence neces
sa ry M ust be deta led
organ zed good computer
and typ ng sk1 1ts Please
app y n person at Farn 1)1
Oxygen 70 P ne Street
Ga l pohs No phone calls
please

OSCO tndustr es Inc
PO Box 327
Jackson Oh o 45640
Expe anced G II Cook &amp;
Food P ep Apply n person
Parkf ont 0 ner 314 Second

sell ng A11on
3358
$16 781Hr PT Contract
post on tor loca Fede al
Oft ce though FY06 1 Yr
Operator eKp equ red
Apply on l neat
www coocOrdps r:om
CPS Inc or fax esume to
!8651675.0423
AnN GeoH Haas
CPS tnc EOE

IU\II.SI\11

H ng part 1 me Server
D shwasher &amp; K tchen Prep
Apply n pe~on J manettiS
P zza Buckeye Hills Ad
A a Grande
Home Health A des S1gn
On Bonus H om~ Healthcare
atSEOho scurrentyhnng
homa health a des compel
t ve wages Call ( 740)662
1222
HDme Heallhea e ol SEO s
Currently
Accepting
Appt cat10ns For Full &amp; Part
I me AN s Co!llpet 1ve
Wages Bonuses &amp; Bene! ts
Cal To I free 1 866 368
1100

Gall pol

s

OH 45631

POSTAL JOBS
Dry m 1 Hou r
S15 67 ~21 98/hr
ow h
Nc Steam o Sharnooc
ng Fof appl ca on and 1 ee
Fee t:. s ale"
gove nement JOO nto call
Clear v C ea
Ame can Assoc ol L:.abo 1
304 675 0022
913 599 8042 24 h s en p
Top
No ch
Bu ld' ng
Selv
Con acto s Nev. A.dd 1 ons
AN LPN (Home Healll"l)
Pole Ba ns Ha dwooct c oor
PatorFul lme pervst
and
Ce am c
T e
or hou y 40 t K caleter a
nsta laton Custvm Decks
plan m1leage U/'1 iorm
new
Roc1s
new
allowance CEU e mburse Construct on L censeo ana
men I Sam s Club Health &amp; r"' Sured
W\ ~ 0366€7
l te ns PTO y,h ch accu
J041£ ::. jQ42 u 304 5Q3
mula es lrorT' f st y, o 1o. oay
l '
Top pay
T Slttlt
S gn On 6 n~s
V
".: t ~
"e
800 99 5 3..J
H
~c::~&gt;l~&gt; ees
EOE
Ca
:'J ..1 BC. j "
I I
on

Overbrook
Reh ab I tat on
Canter s currently accept ng
appl ca t ons lor a AN
Superv sor Compe llt ve pay
scale and benet 1 package
ava lable The ava labia sh I
s 3P 1P
All nterested
epp catiOnS should p ck up
an app cat on a 333 Page
Street M ddleport OH Fo
lur her ntorma t1on pease
contact Holt e at 7 40 992 AN s needed o pro11 ~ t rst
W de Babys1 '1Q " my
6472' EOE
ad at co 1St uc t on s es ome State Ce t eel Non
Have Rete ences
011e orook
Rehab I tat on between Chesh e a 1d New Smoke
FT PT
F st Cal 740 949 1135
Center s cu rently accept ng Haven
appl canons tor a AN A a ER Occupal onat.Satety
t-1\\\( 1\1
Ca I
Superv sor Compel tlve pa~ exoer ence he plul
sea f1 and benet t package (8881269 6344

Pa t t me oartende1 needed
fOr Good T mes Pomeroy
must be 21 to appl)

---~~-~~

J2 1°

KI'SI\F~~

01'1~ lR'n

"'~ s" c
00! KennyCt (BehnO J
H g'i SchQOI) 3 Bed OOTT\S
fu I d y Basement
a
Hardwood F oars ExceUenl
Cond t on
S8 1 500 ca t
(3041675 3123 (304 675
0032
2 bedroom 1 bath
room d nn n&lt;;; oom
ment
r 1 rid
S.-0 000. .:~ o 9":1.::: 3t&gt;

I v ng
base
epor
"'

ana
LOcC!ted ., La
Call
o
(740 643 0518

en r

n

r: n

o~

L

rl

4 yea r old C co .11 oo
es aoc o• 90 ~ '"
b:l 2 ba ,._., ' a ]"' "J~,;
m a~ e 01
':&gt; .:::Sx J ~ h ""

a

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( 4D 446

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""BR 58A Fo ec J~u e or

S18 000 Fo q '1QS ca l
BOO 39 5228 e"t F254
P eag,ar

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WV .-BR
~sa

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Loca CO'TlOanv Ofie t1Q r-.jC

DOWN PAVt..1r: ~ T 0 c
g ams o yc tc f"l \ 'Ol
tome n~tear t- Pn n(;

OC

a

Less ... .,
1&amp;:
too
accep eo
Pay men cou d t&gt;e ~e
same as ent
Mo tgage
Locato !&gt;
(""40)367-0000

www orvb com
Home L st ngs
.,

:a no

"t"

(7 4 0 44 6 36?0

n e cf J st &lt;"~c 40
ooa
oorr 3 bat'l 2 a es 3 .. a
2 st o v unattar.;hed ga age

h

gas "Vt~ ll se ya~ Ru anc
0"-i Cal
J."' 42 3230
Aop o ntme.,ts
v Coae
2306

Code 3146
a

:-

""02:::~

Ra n,_.h svt e '1cFne &lt;tBD 3
bat'i 2 CR ga age huge
wo ~\.Sh oo C"e~"~ e OH

'm

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SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Hom~

10

s

cal

ava lable The a11a fable shift
s 7P 7 A
~I
n1erestea
appl cants snould p ck up an
app cat on at 333 Page
Street M CW epo I OH Fo
'u he nfo mAl on pease
contact Han e a 740 992
6472 EOE

COORD NATO A

TUR NED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SEC URITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless we W n
, 888 582 3345

1

Mad !-lome Health Ag,ency
Inc seek ng PAN Speech
TheraiJ st to Ga I 00 IS Oh o
and
su round ng
area
L censed both n Ohio and
W~s t Vrgna preered We
otte a com pet t ve sa tar,
E 0 E Please sertd resume
He p
wan)ed
Cooks
to 352 Second A11enue
Cast'~ ers &amp; Dr ~~e s App ly
Gall pohs OH 45631 At1n
vv th n P ua Plus 1044
Jude Reese o ema I
Jacl~son P ke Gal po s
)reese ft msa corp com

540

005
560
820
230
160
360
150
650
120
480
520

H l t P \\,IN icD

110

HELPWANTED

Overbrook
Rehab I tat on
Cente s currently accept1ng
appl cat ons tor a
AN
Supe v•so
The ava lab e
sh ft s 7P 7A A I nteresle.d
app tetnts sho uld p1ck up an
appl cat on al 333 Page
St eet Mddleport OH F01
furtho lnforma tt on please
contact Holle at 74CP992
6472 EOE

Hau ls A11e rage pa)l 40 s to
m d 50s Home eve ry Pay rate $ 14 8751o $16 125
weekend
call
Kent
Complete bene t Is package
(800)462 9365
nclud ng medtcal den ta l
AVON' A I Areas To Buy or nsurance and pens on pla n
Sell
Sh r ey Spea s 304
675 1429
Send esume lo

The Me 9'
Cou nty
ChamOer
ot
s acce pt ng
Commerce
resumes lor he post! on ol
CMmbe Coo rd nator Th s
post on req u res e&gt;:cel ent
w nen and ve bal comrpun1
cat on sk•lls organ1za1 onal
sk lis and se I mo t vat on
The cand dale must pas
eadersh p
sess st ong
sk lis Send resumes to 238
West Ma n Street Pomeroy
Oh o 45769

1''0

Pa nters wan ted w th expe T ed ol Not Hav ng Enough
r ence or w hng to learn M ane~ to M ake Ends Meet
Leave message (740 367 o Gong to Work For
-Someone E se? Ch stan
7680
- - - - - - - - owned Company ot ne arly 2
POS TION
flecades olfer ng a home
ANNOUNCEMEN T
Bu s ness
Opportun ty
MEIGS COUNTY
(304)576 2056 or (304 ~593
FCFC INTERSYSTEM
0466 If no answe please
COOROI"ATOR
leave message
The Me gs County Health
Department s accept ng
Wanted L censed
appl catiOns
for
the
Health Profess ionals
Intersystem Coo rdinator Po tamed c s seek ng e&gt;:pe
of the Me1gs County r enced Med TetnJLPN?RNs
0
Family and Children First to complete mob lc paramed
c
Gouncll Dulles nclude Out exams co loc spec mens &amp;
are no t m ted to develop ECGs n the Gal pols a ea
ment mp!ementat on and We schedule lt e appo nt
eva uat on ol coun tyw oe ments to you You Process
servi ce coo d nat on pnd med c&lt;r
nto mat on and
olhe plans program mon commun cate case st at us
tonng wo k ng w th commu da ty to the branch ott ce
ep resentmg Must have own 1 anspo ta
n ty groups
Fam y and Ch ld en F rst tonva l9 dr ve s lcense ~
Counc I at equ red meet year bloo d draw exper ence
equ ed Send esume v a
ngs and Iran ngs and occa
emalto
s10nal travel
ph ls 1 20mg r @ por
QuahfiC8IIOn S
The successful cand date tamedlc net Backg ound
w II possess the fo low ng
check s requ ed
WNW comics com
M n1mum of Bachelors
Degree Master s preferred
n elated I eld comb ned
w1 th exper ence work ng
•
HFJ p WANTFll
Class
ssues nvoJv1ng ch ldren and
thetr tam 1es
Oho WV Aprt 8 2006
Strong comm un cat on $75 00
9 OOam VFW
Now h1nng
EMTs
&amp;
Ma
son
W
J
Ph {740)84 3
management
and
organ
za
Paramedics Call (740)354
t anal sk liS
5555
5433 or 1 866 971 5433
Able Ia mu 1task
NOW HIRING•!!
Galllpol s Career CoHegtt
Expert se n grant wr t ng
lnfoC son 1n Gs Hpohs has
Competent compute sk Is
(Ca eers Close To Home)
pos 1ens ava lable start ng
nclud1ng use ot MIC osoft Call Today 740 446 4367
at SBihour We make ca Is Office app ICat ons
1 BOO 2 14 04:.2
on Oehalf ol non prof t and Benef t s
www ~ oo sea ee co! ege com
The Me1gs County Health
c eo ea Me moe ll.cc eo n~
pol t cal organ zat ons
Counc o
Oepe den C eges
NO EXPERIENCE
Department oilers emp oy ilnd Schoois ~ 2 ,.~~
necessary
ees a compel t ve bene ts ~1:'"'~~-~~-"1
160
oHealth Benel ts
package Po st ons s lui
R-\DI() I\
oPa•d Tram ng
t me w th stan ng salarv
&amp; l H N.H'\Ik
o Re t rement p en
dependent on educat o and ·--oiiliioiiiiioiii;.,,.l
oWeekly pay
expe ence
Aor s T J Sales anj Repa
oWeekly bonus plan
In erested
cand dates Appl ance
Wareho use
oF1xed schedules
should send a letter ot nter (304)675 7999
.
oCompet tive wages
est resume completed c v 1
110
oProfess10na atmosphere se,vce appl
on an d
J\1L&lt;;(l-JJ .~~EOl
Call to schedule an
three
ol elerence
to ·
---··---"'
Interview IOdlly 1
La
rry letters
0 Marsha
ll Health
~
Co n m ss oner Me gs Count Two year old lay ng hens tor
50 pe hen 74.0 985
Health Departm ent
1 2 sel
(740)446·7142
Ea st Memo al Dr Su le A. 3956
ext 2456
Pomeroy Oh 45769 C1v1j 180
servtce app catrons may be
1-877-463 624 7
p eked up at t he Heath
ext 2456
Department o on tt'&gt;e web at
Ca e
Hnrr-e
follow ng
add ess C'e t 1eo
Oh o Va ley Home Health th e
Ass
s
eo
&amp;
No
1
Ass
stea
nc h ng Full Tme AN and hno /fwww das on o QQ.W.Q&amp;
.,ea s &amp; snacl\s
Pc SorJ
pdf
1
obapp2
pdl
The
pas
Per 01am MSW ACcept ng
prov ced
E,-cce len Ca e
app lcatiO!"'S for LPN CNA 1on w II ema n open untl
30-'
)882
.5880
STNA
CHHA
PCA 1 led
Compel ttve Wages M1leage
Comp 5Ti?' T Dubie Shoote
and
be nellts
nclud ng
and Lawn Parts assoc ate and Repair Expe t Se v ce
Health Insurance Apply at
Health and et remefll bene 740.992 2395
1480
Jackson
P ke hts Must have compute
Gallpols or 241 5 Jac\l,son
SkillS Prefer ~arm oack
Avenue Pont Pleas ant WV
ground Send esume to
or phone toll tree t 866 44 1
Ct:.A Box 566 c o Gal po s
1393
Da y Tr bune PO Box 469

0 rector
Ma ntenance
Overbrook Rehab l lat•o n
s now accept ng
Cente
resumes fo the pos 1an of
Mamtenance 0 recto1 The
qual ted can d date must
possess strong 11erba and
wntten co mmun cat on skills
nclud ng te chmca l reoort
wnt ng and record keep ng
Must have exper ence n
general ma ntanance ncl ud
ng ca r pe ntry
pl umb ng
e ectnca t telephOne and
cable nsta lat1on pa nt ng
9 ound work evalua ti on and
nspect on ot eme gency
equ pment tem assembly
and bo le system opera t on
Must have knowledge ol
OSHA L fe Sa fety Code
Long Te m care exper ence
p elerred but not req u red
Ouaht ed cand dates may
Charla
send esume to
Brown McGutre AN LNHA
Adm n stra tor 333 Page
Street M ddleport Oh o
45769 EOE

410
020
130
660
630
060
350
170

860
420
320
220
740

1,

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood !ems
To $480/w~
Mater als pro\ltded
F'r ee mformat on pkg 24Hr
80 1 428 4649

HEtPW~NJ'ED

.

LEARN
TO
DRIVE

vaUable ed ition
)Box number ads a
lways confidential

Now you con hove borders and grophtcs
~
added to youn::toss1fied ads
j. ,1
1m
Borders $3 00/ per ad
~
Graphtcs 50¢ for small
S1 00 for Iorge

ro

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

6040

Found Tuesday 3 14 small
wh te dog n Camp Conley
area call to denhty 304 675
6639

VISA

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlthing reeerve1 the right to edtt rej ect. or cane~ any ad at any t1me Error1 must be
the fltll day of
Trlbu.,..Sentlnel Re,laktr w N be reeponalblelor no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and I the first naert on We
any 1011 o r expenae ttlet reeults from the publicat ion or omls&amp;lon of an advertisement Correct on wiU be made in the first available edition
are alwa~ a c onfidential • Current rete card appl ies • All real eetate adverti sements ate eub1e cl to the Federal Fa1r Houalng Act of 1968
accepts t help wanted adl
ltllndiVda We will not knowingly accep1 any adllert /slng In 11lola1lon ol the aw

Male Lab Boxe' m iX dog Wanted To Buy
MOIQS
w/dogbox
1 112yrs Good County Sto e Scr pi Store
Natu red Needs country run
mng room 740 949 2945

•

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

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

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT'

SH

ceo

e )'OU l(nuv.. arj NOT t
e11a .monet tr1 cugh th
a unt yOL. "l ave n'. eSt
ated he otte n

""~0

J

1

1,30

'
soega a.,.

"

al gas S:lO '~X Ga po s
Fe ry WV Me~S Of' Courty
Come see
Y'laKe o fle
304 J6 ""5 20:l2

�Tuesday, March 21,

2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
1.6 acres on Oak Hill Rd ..
Chester, Ohio.· water. gas,
electr iC
on
property,
$15,000. 304-463-7550

All realaatate ad\lartising
In thl1 newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ot 19613
which makes it illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlscrlmlnBtion bllsed on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or nationftl
origin, ~r any fntentlon to
make any such
preference, limitBtion or
discrimination."

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlsemef'\18 lor refill
estate which is In
viol!ltlon of the law. Ouf
readers are hereby
informltd that all
dwellings ad'llertised in
this newspaper are
avaiiBble on an equal
opportunity bases.
Crab

22 acres. wonderful v1ew,
ndgetop . property, close to
ma1n highway per1ect tor 4wheeler trails (740)707 2109

Everyone welcome . Com·e ·join

HousES

3 Bedroom house for ren) tn

Middleport.
All ~lectric,
$425.00 Plus Deposit No
1nside pets 7-40-4t6·1354
or ~92·3194 .

:_~-------­

380, 1ba. 17 acres. Green
schOols . S650/ month plus
uTilities.
plus
deposit.
1740)256-6152.

r

t"'R RENf

1ST MON . FREE RENT
WITH PAID DEP. NEW
ELLMVIEW
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
'ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE, REF.
'DISHWASHER
'GARAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
'CE ILING FANS
'WATER, SEWAGE &amp;
TRASH INCLUOED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-30 17

10x10x10xl0
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"
Complete Tree Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
20yrs. exp.
Gallipolis, OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.

Pool,' Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No

Plus

•

llousEHou:&gt;

Warehouse.

r

Mode rn 1 bedroom apt.
(740 )446•0390 .
Twin Aivers 'Tower is acc8pt·
ing applications lor wa1ting
!1st for Hud·subs1zed. 1- br,
apartment . ca ll 675-6679.
EHO

in Henderson, WV. Preowned Applicar)es starting
at $(5 &amp; up all t.mder
Warranty.
also
have
HOusehold
Misc . Items
starting ·8:t .99q; &amp; up
(304)675·7999
Moving Sale! Livingrooml
Dinning room furn ., mtn
bike, Weider weight room
(35011 + free) HousewareS:
Priced to move! 3120 _3124.
·can soon for more selection.
(740 )446 _2846 .
New Berber carpet $6.95/
yard . Remanents starting at
$25. Mollohan Carpet, 76
Vine
St.,
Gallipolis,
(740)446·7444.

:...2..:._..:.____

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair·675·738B. For sale,
re·conditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, retrigerators, gas and electric
ranges, air conditiOners, an~
wringer washers . Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.
Used Furniture store, 130
Bulaville Pike. Washers . dryers, gas/ .electric ranges,
mattresses,
couches,
dinettes·, . che sts,
much
more. Grave , Monuments
(740)446_·4782, ·Gallipolis,
OH. Hrs-: 11 -3 (M-S)
.,,__ _...;_.;.._ _

PJO

L

ANTIQUES .

Buy or sell
'Riverine
Antiques , 1124 East Main
on SR l 24 E. Pomeroy, 7 40992-2526. Russ Moore.
owner.

'

LAWN CARE

1996 Yamaha 350 Warrior
great condition K&amp;N air filter
Full Boer Billy 14 month $2300 .. 740·245·5770 or
$175. FeboBilly &amp; Weathers. 245-9214
Full, 314, 112, $75 each.
Steve Stapleton (740)4464172, (740)256-1619.
--------Reg . Angus Bulls and
Heiters
with
EPD's.
(740)446-9856 of (740)~6·
7421
· ·
- - - - - - - - - 2000 Yamaha Road Star
Shelled Com S3.50 per 50,
12% All Stock $5.40 per 50. loaded, 6.567 miles, exc.
.
01 her livestock 1eed avai·1 cond. $6.000 (304)675-2793
or (304)593-5157
able. 74P·698-09 11 ·

'

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe. Rebar
For
ConcreH(
Angle,
Channel , Flat 'Bar, .steB:I
Gfatlng
For
Oraihs,
DriveWays &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday ·&amp;

r

,·

,

...

'

a.

Pole Barn 30x50x12 feet
painted metal, slider. free
de!ivery,
Only
$7,595
(937)718·1471 , www.nation·
widepolebarns.com

(740) 992-2804

·The Daily Sentinel

992-2155.

•'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
•

,_~c "
~

GJ&gt; i---...;..;:.-..,

. . T'OMO~/lOvl wl£.1.- C.ONTINV~

'

HAJ&gt;t?s
W.fAtH#,(&gt;

(740) 517·6883

GLOOMY wiTt~ £.0Tf Of

./"'

$C.ATnll~l&gt; flll~STOilMS

2~

~!

ANl&gt; t416ti Pll~SSVIl~ FllONTS. !j
AND, AS ALwAYS, AN
~~
INfiNinSIMAL CtiANC.~ ~~

Of .flf~EZIN6 OV~/l.

;~

- -&lt;~N1.))
BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinecry .Alld FurhHure

IF TH' PRICE IS RIGHT, FOLKS'L,L
8U'&lt; ENNYTMIN' !! - · ~ -.,.----"

'W'WW.tlmbetc• &amp;ekcablnett:r.com

loff"'MJIUL

l

SOUGHT ALL THIS
..JUNK, DIDN'T

i ?1

"

. tf1ld

AIJ types of roofing:
24hr Enie~ency

New or Repair
SeamleSs,Guner
Downspout

s~nice

Llct!nsed &amp; Insured
Over JO years
experienct'
Ed Dill/owner
(740)992-4100

C huck Wolfe/Mgr,
(740)9'2-0496

591434ti

r

I·

~=.;...-~~----.

PE:rs

VW

L

Auro PAR1S &amp;

93 Toyota 4 Runner 4x4
Ac.UNSORIDi
FOR SALE
$.2,800.
93 Thunderbird SC Super
TRANSM IS·
Charged $2.700. (740)388- BUDGET
AKC Boxer pups, 7 males,
SIONS, Double bolted. All
0208 or (740)645· 7302
all colors. shots &amp; wormed
types. (740)245-5677 or
$300. (740)379-2666.
95 Camara. black, T-top. 740 645-7400
~UIO. $1,600. (740)256· 1618
CAMPERS &amp;
AKC Reg . Lab pups, shots &amp;
MOTOR HoMES
B
$
' or (740)25~·6200.
papers. orn 218/06. 2.00 .
·
(7~0)441·093 1
95·Z·28 Camaro T- Tops
Leather 350 Auto looks and 18 ft.. camper. covered
Full Blooded Adorable Collie Runs Great $4700.00. 92 - porch, located river front at
pupples·2 ma!eS. Main color Corsica 4 door, New Paint Lon e Oak Camp·Qcround
is black with' white and tan lots of New Parts. Runs and $1100.00 lot rent extra
(rare color)·. $50.00 Call looks Great.
$1 ,800 .00 . :sSoo.oo mcludes water ,
740.645-4155
740 -742-4011 .
electric 8: sewer · 304·882·
-----,-----3237
LabradOr Retrievers ·AKC 96 Buick LeSabre 97.000
registered . Different color. mi., needs body work and 2003 Jayco Eagle 34 · 5th
ages &amp; price. (740)256-6463 · radiator, new tires, battery, wheel w/slide out. New conor (740)645-6527.
brakes and rotors, $1,500 dition ,
$22,000
080.
OB0. 1740)446·9632.
1740),339.0218.
Pit Bull puppies ready March
TRUCKS
15
New 2002 Rockwood pop.
24. Vet . ch&amp;cked, dew claws
up camper. Air/furnace , 2
removed. wll l have vac . and L__..;I,;Uo;R;.Siil,w;iiilli
,
queen w/heated mattress. t
dewormed, p(uents weu'
behaved and good wlth chil· 1982 inter. Cab Over 400 twin , $5,000
dren , $150.00. 740-986· Big· -Cam, Jake Brake . 13 Lance truck camper 10.6 ft. ,
3940 or 74()..416-6392.
SPD., Welline , Good Truck. mint condition, air, refngera tor , full bath . qUeen bed.
$2,500 OBO.
740-992·
awning, $4,900. (740 )2565617 .
6522.

L,.-----;;;:;-;..J

r

1999 GMC w/extended cab,
loaded, 305 engine, au tomatic. 67,000 miles. good
clean , solid truck, excellent
condition ,· $8,500 080.
(740}441 -1014

~

FARM

EQuwMFNr

i

4x4

'\I IH IC I ""

Ho\IE

I·

~
FoRSALE
.
~. .._._.__,.,
1998 Che11. TAK 3500 e)(
cab 4x4 Dually 350 auto
trans. $10 ,000 . (740)256·
6111 .
.

AJu~p

on
SAVINGS

THE BORN LOSER

""rnest D\G.\'tM.. IJ\OC~ ru.o&gt;:.t65
1\~ N"Al\1'\G I

FREE
ESTIMATES

C.I&gt;J-.\

P~:'JE.

A LIVE. 5f\OW
NC\ 'ILt..li:£(.()~1&gt;\t-1(, IT, T\-\EI'&lt;
~--~&gt;TNt.\ IT llP "-hl\\t-.1

(740) 949-1405

-r-

L;1S!:l.,~1S!:l,!;

""t-~OW, It 1\\E.'i (.QIJLD WL'i (011'{.',
UP W\'il\ 1\ WI\'( TO Pl\ll:X:. RE:I\L
L\,Ft!

Li'-,1&lt;-"'"'"
i'\\551 r-IG 1'-,

--~

e.E.P..I'
I

1999 Jeep Grand Ct,erokee
Limited. GOOd oohd1tion. low
Cub
Farmall
with mileage. $9.800. (740)245·
Cultl11ators. $1 .400 Ford 3 5757 or (740)339-0BBS No
bo ttom
plows
$500 answer. leave message.
(304)576-2369
2001
Blazer LT' 4!(4 ,
Load TraiVLoad Max Trailers- 9.1.000mi . loaoed , New
Gooseneck s / 0 u m p s / Goodyears . Onstar. Leather.
Utli1!1es.
Carmichae l All Power. $7,900. (740)245EQuipment (740)446-2412.
9245 , (740)367 -0624

Ctasslfleds!

Pass

North

East

Db I.

Pass

Pass

PHSS

+·J

More on responder's
negative double

to a bard

organ

17 Filly's mom
t 8 45 or 78
20 Orchard
produce
22 - the Hutt
25 Dazzle ·
26 One·llme
JFK visitor
27 NATO turf
28 Large
flowers
31 Holland
export
33 201 ,
to Claudius
34 Sate
38 Whining
noise
39 Amigo
of Fidel
40 Trace
41 Milady's
escort
44 -Abner, of
the comics

63 Removad

64 &amp;·pointers
65 Crime lab
ew-ldence

66 Garmen1
. edges

I 9 Snow boot
21 Kiddie's
ammo
22 Mild oath
23 Imported
car
.
24 ·Type of
muffin
25 Moor
29 Pralaed
30 lab course
32 Movie
sludlo, for
short
35 Kinks ' tune
of 1970
36 Ele~ator
man
37 Type of
lock
42 Lightning

DOWN
1 Well output

2 Sapporo
sash
3 Alphabet
onder
4 Commuter's
home
5 latch onto
· 6 " The Gold
Bug" author
7 Thinner
8 Pounce
9 Translucent
gems
10 Skirt panels
14 Tree shelter

by-product
43 Part ofl
We&lt;!k
45 Blacktop
46 Wld•twake
47 Senoatlo!llll
50 Yacht
mooring
52 Rain
·
allckert
53 Zhlvago'l
love
56 WOosnam
of goff
58

Holt&gt;

. ..-.llld-. '
59 - de plume
60 Approves

Yesterday, we ·started to took at !he nega-

tive ·double . It is made by the responder
after his panner has opened one of a suit
and the ne)(!' player' has overcalled in a
diHerenl suil. If there is.one unbid major.·
a negative double prom1ses length in that
major. But wh~t i1 tHere are two unbid
majors? At the one-level. after one club one diamond, I like to play that a negative
double shows exactly 4·4 in the majors .
With only one lour-ca rd majot. bid it.
(At1er one diamond • two clubs, the
responder cannot wait for two four-card
majors, but it he has only one, he must .
·know what to do if his partner rebidS in
"wr0ng1' major.) ·
,

ihei

Here,. North doubles to show 4-4 in the
majors and six-plus high-card po1nts .
South makes a quantitative rebid of three
no-trump. West leads the diamond Jack: .
two, fh ree, king , How should declarer
plan the pl3y?
Since East did not play the diamond ace,
West must be hovering over South's
remaining diamon d honor. This make s
danger hand. -If East gains the
lead, he will tire a diamond through
South, and West will run his suit. But if
West wins a trick , he.cannot cas~ the diamonds.
This means that declarer shOuld play · a
club to the king on lhe board, then run the
club 1p. Here, it wins and South has nine
tricks: tour hea rts , one diamond and tou r
clubs. [He can even endplay West lor an
overtrick.)
But note thai if the club finesse loses,
declarer is protected from a diamond
attack and has time to set up a spade for
his ninth trick .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C.lebnt}' CIPI!erll'fp~rarns are c u~aled !rom quotaticlns bY famous peopll! , past aoo l)'nert
· · Eacl'i Jene1 1n the ooher Slands lor AnOitler

Today 's clue. P'eouars K

" POWNWF' LL ,

O'CF

FCFITBYOWK

OW

ZRLYFCOL
POWN

ZT

NOLGDCFIFN ,

MOUF ."

LOWKFI
ZFOWK

" JF

•

RIF

POWN ."

.O L

OLRRG
XRNF
FI 0 G

YOUUFI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Our Lord has wri«en tne prom'se ol reS\irreclion.

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

Athena

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCTION
·New Homes

Racine , Ohio
45771

• Garages

740.g49-2217

~-

• to.1o'lc3o··'

I

0

~'*

~~ 1

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

PEANUTS

·Complete
Remodeling

' ;Situ 5'.irtiJ•, ·-~

I

CAN'T .
BELIEVE
If..

140-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

.OUR BASEBALL SEASON
STARTS TODA't", AND WE
I-IAI/EI'n LOST YET..

1

COURSE, I I-IAVEN T
GOTTEN OUT OF !3ED
YET, EITHER ..

111411 mo. pd

Advertise
in this
spat;e
for
5-54 per
month

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addhlons &amp;
Remod'ellng
New Garages

Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing. &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Dec:ks
WV036725

SUNSHINE CLUB
.

l 1-iAVE- 1\X) U)ER(JI.. 1
~T~11'\JT

V.C. YOUNG Ill

1HiffiS.. 1 ((VST SlEEP
AT NI6\L 1 GW'T

992-6215
Pomeroy. Ohio
25 Vf!ars Local Expenenc e

.

1ro'Rf. Ull-1U2 F'AlLIOC:. 1/V
IOJ"- ~ ~/VG .. . SAM£
· ~S.BREATHE; _lUJTY

((YJ:::f.N(T('fiTI;

l• ••

-Eco1nomv Beef $8.25
Dlu ... Beef $8.75
Corn $7.25/Bag
Corn $8.25/Bag
1-Solthl!::~n Meal $13.25/Bag
River Hog Feed $8.85

. ·· Why Drive Anywhere Else?

GARFIELD
I 170N'1" KNOW,
GARFIEL.D...

Shade River AG Service, Inc
FOR RENT- ME1CS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547

BAlJM LUMBER

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-330 I

Wedneaday, Mareh 22, 2006
By Bernice Bode Oaal
Your leadership quali ties will be more
vastly Pro nounced in the year ahead.
Advancement . in your chOsen field of
endeavor is higher than it ever ha~ been,
and you may even strike out on your own
as an entrepreneur.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Be particularly cogn1zant and careful of how vou han·
die others today. II you come a ll ~s too
thoughtless ·or arrogant. It will Jessen the
respect that someone you like feels for
you
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -When chat·
ling away with fnends today, be aware of
what is being said so you can select your
topics of col'lversa110n w1se1y. OtherwiSe,
old and unpleasant issues coUld be unwit·
tinglY, dredged up. ·
GEMINI (May 21 -J une 20) - If you 're
smart. you'll keep your thoughts to yourselftoday. Don't offer suggest1ons to a friend
about how· s/he should handle a problem
,you couldn't solve 1n your own ltle .
CANCER {June 21 -July 22)- You might
be far too sensitive to be a good team player. So. 11 at all possible. avotd genmg yoursffif 1nto arrangements where you must
rely on a partner or where s/1'1e has to
depend on you.
LEO [July 23-Aug. 2~) - Unless you sho'!'"'
prope r gratitode toward a person who is
going out of h1s/her way to help you , thiS
Individual isn·t lil&lt;ely to be available to you
In the luture . 'Be appreciati ve .
VIRGO (Aug. 2·3·Sept. ,22) - S1de~tep
tJe nmg 1nvo1ved in any risky ~nterpnse
Joday, especially when~ someone else 1'5
calling all the shO ts. It you can 't be the cap ·
fa1n ot your own Ship. pass the act1on an~ .
even then , be careful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cr. 23 ) ..... Strangers are
likely In lind you a dehghth.JI pers on to be
around today. Out you m1ght not get the
sa.me glow1ng rev1ews from those Jo whnm
you are cl ose Keep your thoUghts to yo ur setr.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NO'II 22) - I!;'SUIMQ
orders tn others may com e easy for you
today. but not neeessanly taken so lightly ·
by others. ·If yoLJ want you r ed1cts (al lowed ,
you'd better be sure you set the pr np~ r
'
.
example
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23- De&lt;: . 21) - You 1
e)ltrava9a11t , impulses w1ll be vyn1g 'o r
expression today. so keep tt'IIS 1n m1nd
shOuld your m1nd be sei on snoo p1ng
Remember What you charge now must be
pa1d for later.
CAPRICORN [Dec. 22-Jan 19) .__;__Unless
you are completely certa1n you w1JI be able
to complete 11. do not undertaKe a ted1ous.
mator ho usehold oro) e&lt;:t 11 could end up
be1ng an Ugly eyesore.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb 191 ..:.._Treat all
ser1 ous and Importa nt man ers w1Tt1. tne
respect {hey dese r&gt;Je. but don'T w a~ t e yoUI
valuable emot1ons and energ te s worrytng
about linte thin gs that may never nSooen
PISCE S (Feb 20 -Ma1ch 20) - Yu.u n1ay·
tlave to deal w1\h ·someOne who has a
habit of prom1S1ng far mOre tna'n s 11e is
c apable ol deJ1venng Be ,honest 111 y0l11
assessment. 'and keep your 8)(pe01at,ons
real1st1C

GR1ZZWELLS
1'1.1 Y t&lt;J 11.J EY Do 111 t.l' ~ 'N ~ Y
C1JWf50Y~ '7l400l' FlRfl AI-ID
A~l{ QllESnol-\'5

IAIE:R ;&gt;

1'HI!!o PL.ACE L.OOK6

PRET'TY FANCY

WHICH ONE
15 FOR
5CRA1"CHINGYOUR NOSE?

•

WOlD
lAIII

O Aer:;l rronge

leuerJ ef tn,
wo~d1 b•
low to form fOur 5lrnpl, word't.
·four

scromblod

E L KT E T

I II I I I I
· lbr! trouble with aoargumeilt
is thai after aU is said and &lt;!on•
most people won'T agree to a
truce and --.

ll'21.(ll
f--r/-J,;...:..:.J,.:I:...;/_:.,/-1 0 Complo1e tho ch,ckle ouortd
W H. ~ R T T
•

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@ PIINT

•

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NI_...IU!O

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.

by filling in fh t fn iU inQ WOldS
YO\J dt¥flop frctrl step No. 3 btlo-.

LUTU$ IN

IHB! SQUAifS

t)

UNSCIAMBtE ABOVE t!TTEI~
fO GET ~NSWEI

SCRAMLETSANS~RS ~
Wbolly - Whiff - Hatch- S1eady - WHAT vou DO
As. a youth I found it difficult to decide on o ~- A
college counstlor told me that il _WB.! best not 1o do what
you like but to like WHAT you DO. ·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.

· 3553~ St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Now Available At

IIIAHAilT C./"N
'UUIII 0~

-.r'lllrthday :

IMPORTS ·

"Taki11g Tire Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Whecl Drive .Trac:tor
with .30hp &amp; ~Ohp Ku bota Engines

Shop

8 3

Anawer _to Prevloue Pu12M

48 Boal ·
Seep
Implement
Family MOo 49 Degrade
Run
51 Graduates
Wild goal
53 Cauatlc
- cH. jfoot· 54 Mo. Miles
note abbr.) 55 Woody's ex
Falry·tale
57 Gambling
word
town .
Stead
61 Mr. Seli,.eld
Above,
62 Sense

not 1n books alone. but in every leaf m springtime: - Mar1in luther

Scorpion Tractors

20 ton wood splitter, like new
$650 (304)882·2655 .

Q5
J

· 13

45 Good buddy

East the

L"'I'ROVE!Itmi'S
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Loca l references furniShed. Est8bli shed 1975.
Call
24 Hrs . 1740) 446·
0870 . Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

K I0 9

Opening lead:

Homes- Decks -·

Dlivcways- Equipmenl

rH~lWrh8S81
m ·and SOns

I+

'""

Jeff Stet hem - Owner

~ (EMfN(

We~;t

3 NT

F i r'(' ~-s !l!ll t,l &lt; 's Cl1J&lt;lfdf1 tt~ec.J L(lv\/ C!SI Prt n s

&amp;

2004 Dodge Neon 37,000 1997 Yamaha Jetski with
miles, runs great, good on trailer· yellow &amp;. 'white· ask·
gas, $3,800 OBO. (740)256- lng $2,700 OBO- call (3041
895·3840
9031 or (740)256·1233.

...

Suuth

Special. rates for

.x

.\11\ I ...,IIUI"

'

7 6 3
Q 7 52

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

L,.-------_.1

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I \1&lt;\1 .., , 1'1'111

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9 7 2
AJI09 .64

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IIAGRAINY

Chevy Colorado Ext Cab
'05. Aula. 2WO. w/bedliner,
Orlando/Disney area. 716 excellent co ndit[on . Kelly
nights stay. Paid $600 sell Blue Book $14,600, will sell
for $199 good for 1 yr. lor $13,000. (304)523-1179

$27.00 PERMONTHl'

•
t

+K

AI.JIUS

Fender
and
Gibson
Epiphone acoustic guitars,
new in box, your choice
$150 cash . 740 379·26m .

'

6 3 2

¥ AQ4

"02 " Honda 919, 2,200 miles
with cQver and .tank bag.
Great condition.
Asking
$4,500 call (740)446-4096

Angus Bulls, two X·breds, 4
heifers. Excellent breeding.
State Run Farm
See
www .s'later.un farm .com ,
(740)266-5395.

•

21YRS
EXP.

Mowing. Tre~
Dcgreasing- Bvats.Trimming . ACratio"' ~ Campers- Truck~ · Deck
Fenilizmion - planting ..
staining or painting
Mul,hing

Easl

•

.

K 10 9 6

,

1

5
8
11
12

15
16

South

POWER WASHING

4 ~

1

-.-1

·· ..

ON THIS PAGE'· FOR.
AS LOW.AS
.

LIVISIOCK

8 7 4

... 4

TRI-STfiTE mOBILE POWER WfiSH
linD LfiWO CHRE

~«1 WM~~~~:~
.
I

r

.

.

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304-675-2457
C&lt;&gt;ll
IESIIIITlll ' JU-1-6/4 '.n i'

1

ADVERTISE·YOUR ·.
BUSINESS
',,
.

'

j

K J 10 5

• AQ 5

Playgrounds

-Free Estimates

$2,800. 304-882-2440.

2000
Yamaha
Motorcycle 8700 miles,
black &amp; chrome with leather.
For sale Good mixed hay, Many extras. Must See.
never wet. large bale s $4,200. 304-675-1094 or
$20/bale. (740)446·1909 or 304·593·6886
(740)446-9160.
2001 Polaris 4 wheeler
Round Bales Of Hay For Sportsman 90 auto, elec.
Friday, Sam-4 :30pm. Closed
start exc. cond . $1,200 neg.
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Sale. 740-965·3829.
1998 Honda XA70 exc
Sunday. (740)446-:-7300
I I~\ \"'1'( ll{ I\ II()'\
cood $800. (740)446-2558,
(740)446-1635
Prom Dresses: 1 Tiffany pink
size· 8 $150; i Alyce pink
fUR SALE
2001.600 Grizzly Auto Less
Size-6 '$150; 1 red/silver
Than 350 miles on it.
size-2; 1 Afortiori navy size· $500! · Pollee Impounds! $4000.00 740.742-4011
314 $25. (740)441·0712
Cars frorri $500. For listingS
~005 CRF250R barely rid·
800·39 )·5227 ex!. 3!l01
Bun.DING
den
, never raced , $3,900
__
SuPfiJES
1993 Cadillac D6\lille 64,000 080. (740)245-581 5.
good shape. $4,000. 69 H d G
.
.
30" X '48' X 9' Pole. Barn miles,
(
,
_
on a ,Oidw1ng w/tra1 1.
Painted St&amp;el Sides and 740 645 0626
er, 6cyl., 45,000 miles, very
. RoOt, 3' Entry, 14'X9' Sliding
1994 Ford Escort LX 5 spd. good shape, well main·
door, lnsui .Roof, Gutter,
about 140,000 miles. Needs tained .. cover. extra lights
Erected Price $10,750.00 ..
chrorne.
$7,150.
, • Pole Barn engine. $800 obo. (740)339· . and
.X
24
32 9 4
(740)441-5540.
Painte~ Steel Sides and 2356
Roof.
• Entry, _ .X '
3
2 10 8 1998 Lumina, 43,000 miles, 99 Harley Fat Boy, 9.400
miles , lots of Chrome and
Overheads. Insulated Roof, exe. cond . $3,995.
99
extras. (740)446·9954.
Dodge
Dakota,
4
wheel
dr,
Overhang, Seamless Guner
. Erected $10,450.00. 740- auto, loaded, exe. cond.
742·4011 , or 1-600-396· 92,000
miles
$7,999
3026.
1304)882-2655
--------'---Block, brick, sewer pipes, 2001 Grand Jeep Cherokee 19~4 Sea Aay Cuddy.
windows, lintels, etc. Claude Limited, white, new tires. 140hp. 19ft. Interior in good
run s . great.
Winters , Rio Grande, OH excellent condition. $12.500. shape,
$3.300(neg.)
Call (740)99aCaii74Qo245·5121.
(740)446-4060 or (740)3677476 or (740)416-1903'
- - - - - - ' - - - 7762.

.
1

Appliance

(304)/?75-8635

w/appliances. pay own utili2 bedroom in 'country. CIA, ties , . $350/month
pius
(740 )245 .
absolutely No Pets · lns1de $ 350 /deposit.
3i 3SO/monfh. 5 350 deposit . 9595 leave message.
(740)245-9491
before
9:00pm.
Beautiful 2 bedroom aPartment in country, beautiful
2B A 5 minutes \ro m town .
tt'
1 d
&amp;
se mg, aun r y room
$400/month. deposit &amp; refer· appliances included. very
2001 doublewide on, 1.6 en~e required . .No pets. clean . $400/mo. (614)595·
7773 or ~ ·800·798·4686.
acres on Prospect Ctiurch (740)446·9342 ,af1er 6pm.
.
Ad . 3BR, 2BA w/1ireplace. AHentiori
Construction Brand
new 2BR apts. on
$80,000 (740)709·1166.
Workers Fully furnished -2 Bob McCorm1ck Rd. ·Call tor
· bedroom . 2 baths, very nice . details · (740)44 1-0 194 or
2006 16' Wjr:te
Located m quiet residential (740)441-1184
VInyl/Shingle
area in Pomeroy, Ohio. 740Only $18 1.00/mo.
992- 1517 or 740-992-0031 . CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
Call 1740)385-7671
ED &amp; AFFORD/IBLEI.
Bidwell area. clean 260,
Townhou'se
apartments,
includes
$375/month.
, MUST SELL
andfor smaU houses FOR
sewer /water. Releren ces
2002 Clayton 14x52
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
and deposit required , no
Pmts. Of $169/ mo
for applica.tion &amp; information.
pe ts. (304)576 -4037
Call (740)385-9946
For Lease: Attractive, unfurNice 1987 14x70 3 bedroom Mobile home Sites tpr up to riished, one bedroom apt.,
hOme. Only $ 8 .995 . Will help 16x80 1n Country Homes. .2nd floor, corner Second
with delivery. Call Elaine .17, 4.,0,;,
13_8_5_-4.,;0_1_9 _ _ _..., and
Pine
· No
pets.
Security
Reference
required.
APA1m1ENTS
(7.40)365'0698.
deposit, $300 per month,
Used mobile hOmes lor sal e. ___
FOR RENT
included,
Call
water
14' &amp; 16' wide. 2 &amp; 3 bed(740)446-4425 or 1140)446·
rooms 6 to choOse from 1 and 2 • bedroom apart- 3936.
1996 model &amp; up. (740)368· ments. furnished and unfur8513 (daytime). (740)388· niShed . sec unty depos1t Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed8017 (evenings) . (740)294 - required . no pets. 740-992· room apartments at Village
2218
Aiverside
Manor
and
0460 (weekends) ·
Apartments in Middleport.
1 Bedroom apt. Stove. refrig . Fro· m $295 $444 Call 74"
8USINFSS
·
·
~
water, trash , sewer pd . $325. 992 5064. E
1 H
·
ANil Buii .DIN&lt;~s
ousmg
· qua
(740)446-4734
Opportunities.

'

~

West

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

iLw---Gooos·---··.
10

663 Third , Gallipolis. ~BR. ·

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
l;tUDGEI
PRICES AT JACkSON
ESTATES; 52 Westwood
Onve from S344 to $442
Walk to shOR &amp; movies. Ca ll
740-446 -2568 ,
Equal
Housmg Opportuni1Y

r__

1997 Dodge Caravan Van
102,000 miles, runs great.

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

Downtown OHice Space· 5
room suite $650/mo; 1 room - - - - - - - - office· $.225/mo.; 2 room Uft
chair
$600
Call
suite $250/ mo. Security (740)388-9361 .
deposit required. You pay - - - - - - - - . . , - .,.
All
lc
Lincoln Ranger 250 welder
uti Jties.
spaces very n e.
'".
h
100
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644 Willi ffiiQ ~ttac ments
fool of lead $2800.
for appointment.
_ _:_:__ _ _ _ _ _ Hendy 14~xe ioot Lathe sin·
Retail and office space avail· gle·phase $2000.cell 304·
able in downtown Point 675-4144 if no answer leave
Pteasant, $500/month, next message:
'to Courthouse. Contact Julie
a
t
pointpleasant_comm_rental
@yahoo.cOm or {703)528'0617.

• SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

. Trucking companies

An Equal Opportunity Employer
M/F/DN

WEEKLY AVAILABLE
1 n c 1 u d e 5 20 bulb Beau Solei! Tanning
Refr ig8rator/Microwav8 'Bed for sale Good Condition
From $175 To $250 College $1 ,500 (304)675-1742
Hill Motel Call (740)245·
JET
5326
. AERATION MOTORS
Aepa i r~d. Ne.w &amp; Rebuilt _ln
Stock. Cell Ron Evans, 1600-537-9526.

man . + dep ·&amp; ref. no pets,
washer/dryer, r8fridgelstove ..,
Stop renting Buy 4 bedroom included in Pt. Pleasant
foreclosure $15,00!). For ljst· 304-593-3542
1ngs 800·391·5228 ext.
.2br Apartment. 600 sq. ft
1709.
16)180 mobJi e home 3 bedNewly remodeled . reference
room , 2 bath, heat pump . .,.~.,..,--~--..., requirOO, in Point Pleasant.

r~_20_M_O.;B,;,ILE-·H-o,;,M£S
_ __,
·I
FOR RENT

Lease

VANS

J

¥

• 2

FoR SALE

s_ec__"r-lly_De_po__·~_'_R_e_q_ul-re_d. ~ MlscELLANF.olNiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,.,l
(740)367-7086.
MEROIANIJL'iE • ~
-

·
•

Pets,

Free Eat.

03·21-06

•
•

Owner

Resumes sh'ould .be received no later
than : March 31,2006

Tara •
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 112
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby

.7195.

Plan~

Middleport. OH

Insured

APAKIMFNI'S

SAtt:

10 miles up At' 62 towards
Toyota
BuUalo.
Currently being used as a 2
Bay Auto Ce nter. w1th or
without all Equ 1pment.
1
acre Lot Busme ss at same
location .lor
50 years
(304)586-4666

97 Beech Street

New Haven, WV 25265

IrL----FOR--RENr·--,1

APARTMENTS

House for Rent in Po int _ _ __::_c:..:~--2 apar1ments lor rent
Pleasant
(304)675.-6224
Ca
leave message
Racine , Ohio (short drive
~~rage. Outbuildings.
from power plant) Deposit
p ose to town . PRICE
Immaculate 2 bedroom required , no pets. 17401992•
or (
)4 _
.
0 SELL' Code 6505 o
740 41 0110
house in country, sits on 1 5174
all (304)662·3366
acre lot, newly remodeled
inside 8: out. new carpet, 2 Bedroom Apar1ment availfresh ly pai nted . laundry &amp; able in Syracuse.' $200.00
storage rooms. $450/mo. dep9sit $350.00 per month
MOBILE H!JI\olfS
(614)595-7773 or 1-800- ren t. Rent includes wat~r.
FO~
sewer, trash .
No pets,
798-4666.
Sufficient income needed tO
$1.000 080 Call (304)675- Nice 3BD house. located on quality. 740·378-6111 .
Rt 160. 2 miles from Ho'lzer
3423
Hospital, big yard . (740)367· 2 br.upstairs apt. $400.00 a

5x_.8__d_e_c_k_v._r_'__
n'_'_el
· (740)36a-9170.
1970 Hill Crest Mob1\e Home
Two Bedroom, has new car·
pet, was bought new and
lived in for 30 years by older
couple . Great Sta rter Home
Rental
Unit
In
or
Harrisonville. $13.600.00
740-742-4011 .

MillErs
SEUSTIRUE

,,..._ _ _ _ _ _ __, ,.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _..,

~ew Haven , WV
~edfoom. 2 Bath, 2

1S New Singlewides
In Stock &amp; Ready
For Delivery!
Call (7 40)385-9948

North

P.O. Box 389

ahann 1n g@charter. n et. 4br
in
Sy~acuse ,
' Sorry No La nd Contracts.
$600/ month &amp; Deposit.
Water/ Sewer included. No
Sandhill 3br. 2ba. skylight. Pets (304)675-5332
painted interiors. LR ,FR.DA. ~:::.'::.::.:.c:.:..::...==--~­
Attention !'
,garden tub. appla1nceS ,
washer, dryer. 1+ acre, walk Local company otlering ''NO
proin closet. landscaping &amp; out· DOWN PAYMENr
buildings. Mu st S,ell $7.8.000 gramS for you to. buy your
'lome instead of renting.
OBO (304)593-0852
' 100°/o fll')ancing
www.orvb.com
· Less than •perfect credit
Home Listings .
accepted
List your home py calling
• Payment could be the
1740!446-3620
same as rent
Locators
Mortgage
View photos/info on lirie.
1740)367-0000

i

Alder

Attn: Human Resources

lw--,;Ft,;,liiR;.RiliiENTii&gt;i-_.1

kitchen , lots ot ·caqlnet s.
plus dining room , spacious
living room &amp; study on 3.2
acres: Beautiful ~oiling lawn
w/rilature shade trees &amp;.new
pond &amp; dock . n 1ce workshop
plus 4-outbuildings &amp; car port. $68.500. (304)675 4080

Help Wanted

AEP-PHILIP SPORN PLANT

IU " \ I s

PicturesqueconstructiOn
Old Cape Cod
Mme.Oak
3-4 -:
bedroom 1 bath . oig country

the fun 1

will be 20 reg~lar games and 2
l s~&gt;eci,al games and a coverall. Also we
I be selling chances on a sidewalk
basket you have to see it to want it.
chances are $1 each or 6 for $5.

Need to sell your home?
Late on· payments, divorce,
JOb transfe r or a death? I
can buy your home All cash
and qu1ck closmg 740-4163130

Road · t'llO

Creek

Basket Games
Racine American Legion
March 25, 2006
6:00p.m.
Sponsored by:
Rocksprings Rehab Center

REAL ESTATh '
WANrEil

Phillip

American Electric Power Company's
Philip Sporn Plant, located in New
Haven, WV is seeking personnel in the
Operations Department. Minimum
qualifications are
an
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rotating shift schedule as required .
Entry level wage rate of pay is $15.4B
per hour. Benefits include medical,
dental, vision, 401 k and retirement.
Interested candidates should submit
their resumes to:

Mason County' Acreage for
Sale 1916)455-3301
Rental property w/ 1.5 acres,
wfmob1le home . annual
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all
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1740)256-6522.

ACROSS

AEP - PHILIP SPORN

Sentinel • Page BS

SOUP TO NUTZ
JvsT srr,p To !He
T't-e Dx.:TCR

Wa\ST aND
vJll.. l..

Be \N

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 21,

2~06

Top-seeded Buckeyes ready for physical battle with Boston College
(

BY MICHAEL MAROT
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WEST LAFAYETTE, lml.
- Jim Foster cringes at the
notion top-seeded Ohio State
plays tinesse basketball.
He has one of the nation's
best post players in Jesska
Davenport. a solid interior
in
Debbie
complement
Merrill and a ' rebounding
·advantage that would 'atisfy
most teams.
But sirwe the Buckeyes usually stay .out cif foul trouble.
the perception is they prefer
avoiding slugfesls. something
they ~ikely . can't . avoid
Tuesday night against eighthseeded Boston College in the
second round of the NCAA
tournament.
For the Buckeyes. 11 s
another chance to prove their
detractors wrong.
"We work very. very. very
hard 'at stay ing in front of the
ball and n.ot fouling:·. the
Ohio State coach said
Monday. "We're a strong
team and a very discipli ned
team defensively."
Besides. Foster figures, you
can"t win the Big Ten
Conference regular-season
and tournament titles on
tine sse ·alone. ·
Ohio State (29-2). which
was eliminated in the regional

AP photo

Ohio State's Jessica Davenport responds to a question during
a news conference for their second round NCAA women:s basketball tournament game in West Lafayette, Ind . Mond.ay. Ohio
State will play Boston College Tuesday.
tinals last ·year, has no intention of falling short this time.
While its resume includes
being one fJf the nation's most .
potent 3,po int teams, shoot ing 40 percent, Ohio State
also has fared reasonably well
against opponents with strong
interior players.
After losi ng by 16 at home
to LSU in December, the
Buckeyes went 2- 1 against

All-Star
from Page Bl
the setback.
Leal i and King were named the
MVP's for their respective squads.
Garland Stiltner of Oak Hill
won the 3-point shootout on the
bOys side. and Poner was named
king of the airways after winning
the slam dunk contest.
District 13 Coaches AsSociation

GIRLS .

0

HI 66, 0 IIHV 62

Division 1·11
Kelly Smith 2 0-0 4, Kelsey Day 0 0-0 0, Jackie

Wamsley 4 0-0 8, Jennllynn Martin 2 0-0 4,
Victoria leah 3 3-4 to, Wh1tney Swa1n 2 2-2 6,

Kristin COllins 3 0-0 7, Madison Connery 3 00 6, Allison Angle 4 1-2 9, Chelsea Clifton 522 12 . Totals: 28 8-10 66 ..
Division IIHV

Haley Drayer 2 0-Q 4, Jessica Craft 2 Q-0 4,
Julie Trace 3 0-0 7, linda Eddy 2 0-0 4, Beth
Payne 2 0-0 4, Mandi McKenzie . 2 1·3 • 5,

Hannah Fat res 3 Q.O 6, Kristiin,a ·williar'ns 1 0..
0 2. Hope King 7 ~-3 17. Brianna Davis 4 0-0
9: Totals: 28 4·6 62
,
Division I-ll
29
37 -:- 66
Division III-IV
29
33 62
3-point goals-01-112 (leah, Cql!ins). DIII·DIV
2 (Trac e. Davis) .
MVP'a-Victoria Leali, Jackson (01-11) : Hope
King, Waterford .(Oiii-IV).
BOYS
' 0 1·11 98, 0 III-IV 87
Division HI
Dan Cawley 1 0-0 3, K.C. Christian 0 2·2 2,
Dustin Smith 4 Q.O 9, Marcus Boggs 5 0-D 14,
Ale.~e Barth 4 0·2 9,· Aobby Caldwell 1 0·0 3.
Shaphe~ Robinson 2 0·0 5, Antho ny
Youngblood 4 2-4 10. ·Nathan Cozart 11 3-4
29, Curt Waugh 6 Q-2 12 , Matt Owens 0 2·2 2.
Totals: 38 9·16 98.
Division Ill-tV
Matt Christman 2 0-0 4.-Rylan Kirkendall 2 00 5 ,' Anthony Dixon 1 2-2 4, Daniel SKidmore
3 1-2 8, Dustin Adams 2 0-0 6, Matt Townsend
3 0-Q 7, Justin Porter 7 4-4 19, Matt Schott3
3-6 9, Jerem1ah Taylor 6 0-0 12 . P.J. Rase 6 0o 13. Totals: 35 t0-14 87.
40
58 98
Division 1-11
Dtvision III-IV
41
46 87
3-point goals-01-tl 13 (Cozart 4, Boggs 4,
Cawley, Smith, Barth. Caldwell . Robinson),
Dill· IV . 7 (Adams 2, Kirkendall, Skidmore.
Townsend, Porter. Rase) _
MVP's-Natllan Cozart, Eastern (DI-11): Justin
Porter, Chesapeake (DIII-lV).

Girls 31)olnt champion-chelsea Clifton ,
Warren
Boys 3-point chainplon-Garland Stiltner.
Oak Hill
Slam dunk champion- Justin . Porter.
Chesapeake

.

'

Davenport, the Big ~en's _
player of the ·year, to 12 points
and three rebounds, Merrill
has 'become a major factor
and the Buckeyes have won
all 21 games that Ashley
Allen has started at the point.
Allen missed the first Boston
College game .
.
To the Eagles. the combination poses, as much ·a challenge physically as it doe s
mentally.
. .
.
''It's hard not llJ focus on
Jess because you ' ve got to
neutralize her as best you
can ,". coacl1 Cathy lnglese
said. "At the same time ,
they 've got good guard play.
You Can't take away everything, so hopefully you take
away the bigger parts." .
Boston College has the
brawn to do that.
Kathrin Ress · and Lisa
Macchia both ·stand 6-foot-4
while Brooke Queenan is 6-2,
and all three are strong
enough to make . life difficult
inside as Notre Dame found
out Sunday.
The trio combined for 43
points and 23 rebounds,
knocked out Notre Dame's
best interior player, Courtney
LaVere,· with a concussion
and repeatedly drew fouls in
the paint in a 78-61 win .
Plus, Boston College doesn' t need a scouting report to

out how to contend ·her team will embrace the
With the lanky 6-5 Davenport. challenge.
"I think our team likes play"lthink having more experience of when to double team ing in front of big crowds,"
her and when to come into the Olivier &gt;aid . "I think it's
post will help," Queenan said. somc[hing our . team wel"Other than that. she's such a comes with open arms."
great player.''
Purdue's strategy is simple:
If Queenan and her team- Slow the game down and
mates can contain Davenpon. exploit the Bruins soft middle.
they could be · headed io .'We're going to pick and
Albuquerqu e for a regional
semifinal contest against choose our spots. I think
either Utah or Arizona State . we're at our best when we're
Otherwi se the Buckeyes geui.ng some transition bascould be headed back to the · kets.'' ·Curry said . ·'We feel
l'ound of 16 for the second like' if we can keep it in the
low 60s, we've got a chance
straight year.
to
win."
Tuesday night's other game
The Buckeyes could win it
in West Lafayelle also will
either way.
.
showcase cont rasting sty les.
UCLA (2 1-1 0), the Pac- 10
If their guard s shoot better
champs .and fifth seed in the than they did in Sunday
Cleveland bracket, will ' rely night 's 68-45 victory over
on its three perimeter shooters Oakland, they' II pose more
- Noelle Quinn, Lisa Willis problems for Boston College.
and Nikki Blue - . against
But if the Buckeves must
host Purdue (25-6), the No. 4 get physical , they- want to
seed.
show the college bqsketball
The ·Boilermakers are big- world that they can slug it out,
ger. stronger and deeper than
the Bruins and also expect to . too.
have a significant home-court · "When you see a mati:hup
edge. Only a smattering of .between . twn po.s t players
.Bruins fans attended Sunday's against two post players who
74-61 victory over Bowling are aoou.t the same height and
same physical build. you're
Green.
But UCLA coac h Kathy going · to ask that question,"
Olivier, a. friend of Purdue · Davenport said. "But we're
coach Kristy Curry, believes physical. too. "
fi~ure

personal battle with cancer
sPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM
inspired the creation of The ·
V Foundation. In his memoCARY. N.C. - The V rable speech at ESPN's
Foundation for Cancer . inaugural . ESPY Awards
Research announced the announcing the l.'reation of
finalists for The
V . Foundation,
the
sixth Valvano's "Do n't Give UP,
annual
V ... Don't Ever Give Up!'
Foundation motto created a legacy from
Comeback which the Comeback Award
Award on has been created.
" I am pnce again amazed Wa shington 's Kayla Burt
Wednesday.
The award and inspired by the incredi - (2005)
is presented ble strength and resili ence
The V Foundation for
in partner- of .the student-athletes who
ship
with are nominated for The V Cancer Research was foundHager
ESPN and Foundation
Comeback ed in '1993 by ESPN and the
the recipient Award," said ·Foundation late Jim Valvano, legendary
will be announced during CEO Nick Valvano. "These NC State basketball coach
ESPN's basketball Final young people are outstand- and ESPN eommentator.
Since
199 3
The
Four/NIT weekend cover- ing student-athletes . who
. age.
have faced , tremendous Foundation has raised more
The finalists are: 'G rant adversity ~nd 'challenges than $50 million used to
Dykstra,
Western with incredible determina- fund cancer research grants
nationwide. The Foundation
Washington;
Tammy lion and strength.
awards
grants through a
Frazier,
Cheyney
"Every one &lt;;&gt;f these finalUniversity; Tiffanie Hager. ists truly captures the spirit co mpetitive awards ·proce ss
University of Rio Grande; of The V Foundation ," stricfly supervised by a
Review
. Brittney · Kroon, . Seattle ,\!alvano continued. ''They Scientific
of
top
PaCific Univ'ersity; Leon have embraced the 'Never Committee
University
of Give Up' attitude as they doctor/sc ienti sts · nationPowe,
California; imd Jamie Vick. have overcome great obsta- wide. The Foundation operSt. Vincent College (Pa). .
cles. I would be honored to ates with a small staff, a
The annual award is open have my brother's name be nationwide volunteer netto men and women colle- remembered with each and work and an all-vol unteer
g iate basketball siudent-ath- every one of them."
· Board of .Director s and
Review
letes in all NCAA divisions.
The 2006 recipient will be Scientific
ll is awa rded to an individ- selected by an eight-member Committee, assuring that
ual or a team who · has sub-committee of The V over the .past five years, an
accomplished a personal tri- Foundation · , Board
of average of 83 cents of every
umph .in the face of true Directors. Past recipients of dollar raised has been·availadversity, be it in health. life the award are Purdue's Katie able
to fund
cancer
or moral dilemma.
Oouglas (200 1), Western research.
The award is presented in Michigan 's Kristin Koetsier . For more information
· memory of Jim Valvano, the (2002), Arizona State's visit The V . Fowulation for
late basketball coach and Justin. Allen (2003), Texas' Cancer Research website ar
ESPN commentator, whose Jamie Carey (2004) and· ww1r.j immyl'. org.
ST"'FF REPORT

1ne
Middleport • J;»omeroy, Ohio
511 CENTS • Vol. 55, No. 15:1

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

• Boston College
upsets ·Lady Buckeyes.
See Page 81

POMEROY - . Tom Hunter,
press ~ecretary for West
Virginia
Governor
Joe
Manchi n returned home to
Meigs County yesterday to
address the Meigs Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee (LEPC) on hi s
"lessons learned" in regards to
the Sago and Aracorna mining
disasters earl ier this year.
With all the rumors abo ut the
reopening of coa l mines in the
co unt y. Hunter's visit was
meant to give local first responders in sight into how to handle
disasters of that magnitude.
If a mining disaster were to
happen Hunter suggested lock-

Pena

leader again.
Kahne. who led 85 laps
including the fina l 80, finished 1.929 seconds - about
from Page Bl
20 car length&gt; - ahead of
Saturday 's ·Busch Series .race Martin .
We just couldn 't beat
here. "We' ve had momentum
Kasey.'' Martin said. "He was
all week nd long.
strong
there at the end and
"M;t .' to
Atlanta .
really
got
up on the w)leel
one of my favorite . racewhen I got up with him there
tracks , i&gt; so cool. "
at
the end. Man , I thought I
It was the fiN vi tory at
wa
&gt; going to . have a win
Atlanta for a
e in 29
years. &gt;ince ich ard Petty. here."
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
won here in I 77.
.
third.
hi s best finish of the
Mark Martin ade a late
run at Kahn e. dr · 1g hi s year. He wa&gt; followed by Jeff
Ford al ong&gt;ide and n'ming Gordun. · rei gning series
ahead of Kahne·, No. 9 champion Tony Stewan and
Charger 12 laps from the end Paul . Menard. making only
of the 325- lap event. But hi' third Cup start.
Jimmi e John ., on. who won
Martin had to back off when
hi s car began to slide and he two race&gt; and fini,hed &gt;ecwas ni&gt;t able to chall enge ihc ·. ond. in the or her headin g into

sition, lefty Eric Milton, and
improving
left -hander
Brandon Claussen. , Righ thander Aaron Harang· heads ·
the ·rotation and was 11-13
with a 3.83 ERA in 32 starts
last year.
The trade also improves the.
Reds on defense. Adam Dunn
can move back to left tield,
'the position that he's played
most in his career: Scott
Hatteberg , a free agent who ·
played with Oi1kland last
year. will play first.
Signing Hatteberg was the
key to the deal. Krivsky said.
. Monday's event, wound up
&gt;ixth and will head to Bristol ,
Tenn. , next weekend holding
&lt;i 50-point lead over new runner-up Kahne in the standmgs.
Matt Kenseth, who came
into the rae~ in second. was
one of several drivers who
had tire problems Monday
and , after running near the
-front several time s~ finished
13th and now trai'Is Johnson
by 78 points.
Monday, with · fewer than
20,000 of the estimated
RO,OOO spectators returning
i\Jter sitting in the rain hoping
in vain for the race to start
Sunday. the 325 -lap race wa'
run under '' blanket of gray ·
cloud&gt; with temperature~&gt; in
the low 50;. But the predict,. ·
ed rain held off.

.County's
sales tax
revenue
up for first
quarter

Grant Dyketra, Senior, we·stern Waehlngton Ut:~lvltrelty
A three-time Con,eback Award finalist, Grant Dykstra has had to overcome adver·
sity Slrn(e lhj BQe of two when his riQht arm was Caught in a grain auger. Oyl&lt;stra
underwent 16 surgeries to save' h1s arm and the natural righthander learned to play
baskafbellleH handed. He earned a scholarship to 'Western Washington, where he
has started every game ttie last four years. A first-team All-Great Northwest AlhleUc
·Conference honoree and 2005 recipient of the United States Basketball Writers
Associatlon Most Courageous Award, Dykstra is West_,rn Washington's all-time
leading scorer witli 1,846 career points . He averaged 20.6 points, 5.-' rebounds, 4.1
.assists and a tea m-bast 2.0 steals per game as a senior.
Tarrimy Frazier, Junior, Ch•yney University

Less than two years after losing her mother to cancer, Tammy Frazier was diagnose&lt;:! with Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma in the tall of 2003 and $pent two months In
the hospital. During the winter of 2004 , she awoke to find herself paralyzed from
the wal&amp;r down. a temporary side affect of chemotherapy. She willed herself to walk
again two weeks later. and on March B. 2004, was told she was cancer-free. l..ast
October1 Frazier was diagnosed ~ith spots on her liver. Nonetheless, Frazier
r&amp;turneo to the court. She played In 15 games for Cheyney this yf!ar, starting 15.
She averaged more than 15 minutes per game· and was .tied tor third on the squad
in blocked shots. Frazier Is a thlrd~generation atnlete In her family: ~er father Marvis
and grandfather ~smokin' Joe" were lege~ndary boxers . .
Tl~lnle Hager, Senior, University of Rio Gr8nde
Tiffanie Hager has battled cancer and other health' Issues throughout her career.
She was first diagnosed with thyroid cancer In OCtober 2001 . Less than a yea r later,
she underwent a secofld throat surgery lhree days after havinQ arthroscopic
surgery on her lett knee. ln .June 2003, Hager had a third surgery on her tllroat after
.learning that the cancer had spread to her lymph nodes. Hager underwent surgery
on her right arm after being diagnosed with skin cancer in January 2004. She also
sutfered a hernia and had a second arthroscopic knee sUrgery. In October 2005,
Hager had surge'ry to remove two cysts born her stomach, one the size of a grapefruit. Noneth&amp;fess, Hager returned to the court, shootl,ng 50 percent from the ffeki
whtle pl~lng In nearly all of Rio Gra~e·s games.

Brlnney Kroon, Junior, Seattle P.eclflc University

a liver 1r8nsplant
in 2002 after being diagnosed with autoimmune hepatitis (where the body's
lmm~ne system a:ttacli:s its own liver). While still taking daily- medication to aid in her
ongoing recovery, Kroon is the starling center lor one at the nation's top NCAA
Division !I teams . Kroon teeds the NCAA and Oreal Northwest Athletic Conference
(GNAC) with an average of 4.3 blocks Per game and is No. 4 In NCAA career rejec~
tions. S~e holds every.·GNAC, and SP~ record tor bloc~s in a game, season and
career. This season Kroon averaged approximately 9 points and 6 rebounds per
game.
A two-time Comeback Award finalisf, Brlttney Kroon underwent

Leon Powe, Radahlrt Sophomore, University of Callforhla

leon PoW4;'t, who went 629 days between games due to a pair of knee surgeries
and a minor stress fracture in hi&amp; foot , returned to lead the Pac-10 in both scoring
(20.7 ppg) and rebounding (10.0 rpg) while earning AII-Pac·10 honors for the sec·
and time. He was the MVP of the' Pac-10 ToUrnament and 1s one of 22 tinal;sts"lor
the Wooden AII-Amer~a team. Powe o~Jercame edwnsity before ever setting loot on
the Cal ca mpus. His father lef1 when he was two and his molhor. wt'ld struggled 10
raise Powe and his siblings, died of a heart attack at age 41 when Powe waS 8
junior in high school. ,
~amie Vlck, Junior, !?alnt Vlneent College
Jamie Vick was diagnosed with leuKemia .as a sophomore in high school in
February 1999. After five years of remission. the leukemia returned in the spring of
2004 . Vick underwenl a bone marrow transplant on July 9, 2004 , and missed the
20,04·05 basketball season. She returned tO the cowt this year and played in 24 of
her team's 28.g,ames, serving as a team ~o-captam al()ngside her twin sister, Jodie.

hlilh 1hese SeruiceSpecials!

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Chase Spurlock

INSiDE
• Bush says troops
will still be in Iraq
when he leaves office.
See Page A2
• The Ariel to host
Scholastir; Book Fair.
See Page A3
• MHS Regional
Science Day competitors.
See Page AS
. • Transfers posted.
See Page AS
• Lydia Council reviews .
spring and summer
activities. See Page A5
• UMW conducts
progrp.m, mission report
See Page A6

WEATHER·

Did you know that a properly tuned engine gets better fuel mileage.
Over time heat and stress wears the electoral system and dirt and grim
plug~s your fuel system. Proper maintenance equal's better fuel
• - . . : : : : : ; Better fuel economy equals money saved.

MOST
6 CYl.
$205.00 +TAX

MOST
8 CY£.
$245.00 + TAX

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Oil lUBE
5 FilTER
$19.95 +TAX

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Don Tate
Motors
*'""'
P&lt;i« Lea&lt;in "" rie ~
East Main'Street • Pomeroy, OH
_t...

II GoodWididt

11-o&lt;:ou.. - ·no•• """'' '""'"' ,. ,,_,

ing down and securing commu:
nication at the incident command post. At Sago an unknown
person made a cell phone call
from the ponal to the mine to a
person awaiting news in a nearby church which caused the
rumor that 12 . miners were
found alive to spread through
the crowd. Of course only Qne
survivor was found a live·.
He compared this false information to a: jeanie in a bottle
and once it escaped it could not
be put back in .
.
A few weeks later at the
Aracoma minihg fire where two
miners were killed Hunter said
a blackout on all communications at the mine site was instituted, as was a ban on all cell
phone and pagers of r¢sponders

near the mine .site. Thi s was
what he referred to as a "lock
down" If) ensure the correct
information was released via
Ma;sey Coal Company. ·
Despite the state of "lock
down" Hunter told those at
yesterday's mcctiAg to keep
the lines or communication
and informalion open with regular briefings to the media and
families '·in accordance with
the families' wishe s."
Another important· lesson
learned at Sago according to
Hunter was arriving early and,
perimeter
estab lis hing a
around the disaster area.
.Hunter said that local and
national media had staked claim
early to spots near the Sago

Please see Hunter, AS

12 PAGEs

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics.

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Weather
~

:.r.oo6 Ohio Valley
I·

B Section
A6
Puhlishin~

Cu.

Beth Sargent/photo

Tom Hunter, (left) press secretary to West Virgin ia
Governor Joe Mancl]in, returned home to Meigs County
yesterday to discuss how local f1rst responders might ·han·
die mining disasters should a mine reopen in Me igs
County. Hunter is pictured with Meigs Emergency
Management Agency Director Robert Byer.

SCience·

BY CHARLENE HoeFIJcH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL..COM

POMEROY
Meigs
High School won the trophy
for the highest percentage of
superior projects of all participating schools in the
recent regional science day
fair competition at Ohio
University.
Five of those students
BY BRIAI'I J. REED
receivin g· superior ratings
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
were se lected to compete on
POMEROY - Revenue the state level. They are
from Meigs County's sales Kimi Swisher, Catie Wolfe,
tax appears to be on the ·rise. Ca.Iee
Reeves, Morgan
and if the first-quarter's trend Kennedy,
and
Caitlin
continue s. the county could Leslie.
see &lt;I $20.000 jump in tax
Schools taking pan in the
revenue this year. .
competition at OU were
Monthly tax recei pts can · South Gallia, River Valley,
be unpreaictable . though, Unioto,
Bishop
Flaget,
ancl cou nty officials have Wellston, Jackson. Z;tne
learned to remain cautious Trace, Southern Local, Paint
'\1bout how much to expect Valley and Meigs Local.
from this importan t source· of
Of the 24 Meigs students .
coullly funds.
participating, prizes for outAccording to a ·sales tax
comparison issued by Auditor standing projects went to
Nancy Parker Grueser, the Morgan Kennedy, first place.
cou nty 's collection of its one- $75 and 2 physics textbooks,
percent income tax is up for her physics project;
$5.425 .77 for the tiN quarter Andrew O'Bryant, $115 fQr
of 2006. when compared to hi s special topic project on
revenue for the lirst quarter of energy: Calee Reeves, third
la st year. The compari son place, · $25 , biological sc ishows revenue of $81, 144 in e nce ~; Amber Hockman .
January. $8 1,510 in February third place, $20, presentation
· in health, and Caitlin Leslie.
and $93.720 in March . .·
Revenue took a particularly third place, $50 savi ngs
large jump in January, from bond, psychology.
Other students selected to
$77.974.15 in 2005. to
$8 1. 143.59 thi s year. Those compete from Meigs High
receipts represent the tax col- School were Amy Barr.
lecred in November, 2005. Leslie Preece, Molly Smith.
However. the heavy hits the Casey
Smith.
M0rgan
county has taken in recent Kennedy, Lindsey Myers.
years is dearly seen when Wyatt
Ball.
Eugene
cyrrent receipts are compared Pallerson. Cara Lawless.
with tho&gt;e in 2'000. when the Jamie Bailey. Sarah Hubbard.
county collected $I 08.445 in April Oiler. Chad Bonnett.
Jai1uary. alone.
Anianda Gilkey. Chelsea
Meigs Cou nt y's one-per- Smallwood, Kerri VanReeth,
cent sales tax has collected Jaha nna Lydic. and Samantha
less revenue since that time, a . Pridemore.
year when a new car dealership
closed.. Pomeroy'S
Pam.ida q ure was shullered,
and Wai-Mart opened across
the river in Mason. W.Va.
While there have been periodic jumps in collection s.
end-of-year receipts have
been consistentl y less each
year - more than $100.000
less in 2005 than in 2000.
While a $5.000 quarterly
.increase may not appear signiticant. any po sitive indica ~
tion that comes from il could
be. The cullectiu'n rate is of

~ubmttted

photo

These Meigs High School students receiving special prizes at the Regional Science Day held at
Ohio University display the trophy awarded the schoo l for having wo n the highest percentage of
superior projects. They are left to right. front. Catie Wolfe. K1mi Swisher. and Ambe r Hockman,
and back . Andrew O'Bryant, Caitlin Leslie and Morgan Kennedy. Cate.e Reeve s. not pictured .
was also a special prize winner.

Clinic's

Wonka tickets Fleeing suspect
in federal' custody
Kelsey 'Rossiter of Rac1ne
didn't need a go lden t1ck·
et to win a front row se·at
to th is weekend 's Willy
Wonka and it1e Chocolate
Factory performance by
the Rive r C1ty K1ds.
Instead. Rossite r was.
chosen at ra ndom fro111
·over 200 other color1ng
entnes to rece1ve no t
only a free t1cket for herself but add itional tickets
for her fam ily courtesy of
Ho lzer Meigs Cl1n 1c.
D1anna Jeffers 1right\
manager of Holzer Me1gs
Clin iC . whi ch 1s a lso
.·sponsonng the performances. presents the
t1ckets and free Wonka
chocolate bars to
ROSSiter.

pai-ticular concern for tho...,e

Calendars

Sports

WW\\ ,mydllilysentind.cum

caPtures

WinDer of Holzer

GM TUNE UPS WITH INJECTION SYSTEM CLEANING

MOST
4 qYl.
$170.00 +TAX

\\'EUNFSUAY, MARCH 22, 2006

Hunter on Sago: 'Lessqns learned'

SPORTS

2006 V FOUNDATION COMEBACK AWARD FINALISTS

,

Oak Hill Banks
Donates to
Cancer Center, A6

"

Hager a fmalist for V Foundation Comeback Award

int? place rather quickly.
Theo Epstein and I have been
talking about this for three or
from Page Bl
·
four days.
With veteran Paul Wil son
to come back from
trying
in the Boston's bullpen.
shoulder
surgery, the Reds
He had career highs last
rotation
needed
help.
year with 14 win s, 32 stans
The
Reds
freed
.up salary in
and 205 1-3 innings pitched.
.. They have a surplw, of the offseason by trading popular first base.man Sean
seven starting pitch~rs in Casey to Pitt sburgh for Iefttheir mmd and I agree." Reds hander · Dave
Williams.
general manager Wayne Willia1i1s has been spotty so
Krivsky said. "They needed a far. but sti ll expected to be in
right-handed bat w comple- the rotation, along with last
ment Trot Nixon. ll all fell season's disappointing acqui-

Kahne

Purdue a[1d beat Oklahoma
75-71 in January, They also
won 66-61. in overtime at
Boston College on Dec. 3 . .
The Eagles (20- 11 ) had a
48-31 rebounding edge in the
tirst contest, but Ohio State
has transformed itself into a
better team· bOth inside. and
outside since the December.
game.
limited
Since
BC

Missing Ore. family
fowtd after two weeks
in a snowbowtd RV, A2

county agencies operat'ed
through the genera l fund.
County Commj"ioners rely
on the tax receipts to ·contribute to the cash llow of the
county. in ·making paymll' and
paying operating expense~ .
The collection rate has
been used to gau ge the health
of the local retail economy. as
well . The impo11ance of revenue {rom the lax to wntiliueJ ~crl'ii:cs from county
go\'ernmen·l has hccn cmptiasiLe.d as a reasori for supporting tOC&lt;II retail busincs&gt;CS.

BY PAUL DARST
PO~

RSToQ&gt;MY DAILYTRIB UNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS

A

,-

Sp r in ~fie l d 111'111 who was
arrc,rcd &lt;&gt;11 drug c· hargcs :~fter
o1 manhulll in (i ,dl i'l Countv
Urlier thi' lll&lt;lillh wa, taken

cu,tnd \

ll11ll

h'

fe.J eral .

a~l' llt\ n n \1 onJa~ .

Tan I. H. C11l1CI\ •n . .12. now
tac·c, tcdcr'd fch\n, · drug
c h.tr~e'.

tlt'c nrlil nt.!

'- Pi ~~~· ... mu n for tl~e
F 11 tnrr~n1L~nt

.-\ ~('lh.' \

hl

::1

Dru g·
nft\('C

in Columt&gt;Lh . (,,mc.n•n "a'
ch arged \\ ith p,)..,..,t•,.., ion of
2 0 .~

gram ' nf

1.: ra c ~ Cth..' all)e.

rile 'po l.c,man 'a1J
C Lmcn&gt;n " "' 111 the Gallia
Colllll\ Jail nn ~'( X I.( ~Kl c"a' h
hon d

trn nt

h r..,

;t iTe\1

on

12 unlil \\ oqd a\ .
"hell DEA a~c·n t ' r.•nl. h1in
~l.trl'l1

Beth Sergent; photo

in tP ~ li , I Otl) .

Please· see Custody. AS

..

•

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