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Page D6,

GARDENING

Swtday, March 23, 20o8

Pope praises those who
convert, appeals for
p~ace in Tibet, Iraq, A2

Wildflower rescue groups
often operate one step ahead
of developer bulldozers

ovcs installs

new computers, A3

•

BY DEAN FOSDICK
FO~

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Before the bulldozers
arrive, Jane Pausch· is there
to save the flowers'."
She rubs shoulders with
poison ivy, works " in stifling heat, gets hassled by
the local constabulary and
even deals with the occasional warning shots from
landholders or motorists
screaming insults about
what they perceive to be
plant poaching or trespassing.
"We've been fired at and
hollered at," said Pausch,
who with her husband,
Brad, operates Wildflower
Rescue of MN, a commercial venture sanctioned by
Minnesota to gather threatened or endangered wildflowers facing habitat
destruction. "It's not glamorous work."
Why bother? Plant rescue
is an important way to
ensure that valued wild- ·
flower species survtve.
There's also the issue of
protecting diversity as invasive plants gain ground with
a kudzu-like hold and begin
to dominate as America's
woodlands and wetlands
become urbanized.
"Many plants are rare
because of their unique
growing conditions," said
Gerry. Moore, director of
science for the Brooklyn
Botanic Garden . "They
can't be easily replicated
somewhere else. Many
wildflowers fit that category. Yet they' re quickly disappearing due to habitat
degradation."
Pausch specializes in collecting Lady's Slipper
orchids. The Showy Lady's
Slipper, a pink and white
varietal, is the Minn~;sota .
state .flower. She and her
husband have permission to
save flowers in any habitat
threatened by construction.
"We'd be open to any
other 'kind of (plant threatening) activity but it's largely a matter of getting permission," she said.
Many in the field refer to
the loss of wildflowers in
terms reminiscent of the
extinction of the passenger
pigeon, the most common
bird in · North·. America
when the first European
settlers arrived. There was
no safety in numbers, however. Valued for their
plumage, meat and eggs,
they soon were hunted out
of existence.
"The· extinction o( the
passenger pigeon and the
decline of · the American
chestnut remind us that fairly abundant, even ubiqui- ·
tous species can sometimes
be quickly lost due to a
combination of over-harvesting, disease and loss of
habitat,"
writes
Gary ·
Nabhan in "Renewing
America's Food Traditions:
Saving and Savoring the
100 Most
Continent's
Endangered Foods," out in
May from Chelsea Green
Publishing.
What was thought to be
the world's last passenger ·
pigeon died . at a Cincinnati
zoo in 1914.
"You can't help but think
about the passenger pigeon
when you look around and
see all the building that's
going on," said Alan
Mizeras, coordinator of the
Native Plant Rescue Group
of Henderson
County
(North Carolina). "We're
losing a lot of stuff. Huge
amounts of flora and fauna
are disappearing from the
scene. · That's our botanical
diversity."
Mizeras was an environmental monitoring specialist before retiring' to · the
scenic
Blue
Ridge
Mountain country of westem North Carolina in 200 I.
Along with a small cadre of
volunteers, his current project involves transplanting
wildflowers ' taken from a
117-acre parcel on a mountainside
near
Hendersonville, destined
eventually to be the site of
80 freestanding homes.
"This will be our second
·year working on the property," Mizeras said in a

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o ( .I :\ I S • \ .o I. ;;-. :\ o .

SPORTS
• NCAA tournament
roundup. See Page 81

This undated photo shows Pink Lady's Slippers In the
George Washington National Forest, Va. The first rule In
wHdflower rescue Is ·do no harm." Don't take the plant If
you aren't confident you can save It from a developer's bulldozers. These Pink Lady's Slippers are members of th~
orchid family and are among the most treasured wildflowers
In the forest They're also among the most difficult to trans·
plant, requiring specific soil types and fungus.
telephone interview. "Last of others."
year, we took out 97
Wildflowers are a hardy
species or a total of 934 lot but many varieties don't
plants on that site. Azaleas take kindly to being transwere the most prominent planted - especially into
- 350 or so which is pret- areas unlike those where
ty good for a shrub. We they were found:
also took out quite a lot of
"Orchids are an example
Bloodroot, Dwarf crested of a group of plants that preiris, Mountain be!lwort, sent a lot of challenges in
Lily of the valley, Showy trying to cultivate them," the
lady-slippers, Christmas Brooklyn Botanic Garden's
ferns, Trillium and a bunch Moore said. "Terrestrial

.

AP phDiol

This undated photo shows trillium grandlflora In Shenandoah National Park, Va. Trillium
grows In 4(). to 50 different varieties and appears In early spring. Picking a flowering trllll;.
urn can injure or kill the plant since the characteristic three leaves beneath the bloom are
its primary f9od source.
'orchids that grow in the soils
require very specific soil
and fungi conditions. They
can be quite challenging to
grow outside of their native
habitat."
Rescue groups · are selective about where they trans~lant the recovered blooms.
'Putting them in a remote
site and throwing water at
them a couple' of times is
not going to get the job
done," Mizeras said. "We
place them in public parks
or private gardens. We don't
care where they go as long

as they survive."
Mizeras is tickled that the
owner of the residentialdevelopment-to-be
has
become so interested in the
wildflower recovery effort
that he's gotten involved.
"The developer dido 't
know
anything about
native plants when we
started all this last . year.
But he's getting into it now
and taking, some of them
out for himself."

...

Recommended reading:
"Wildflowers in the Field

\1 ( I:\ II \ \ . :\I \ IU ' II :!-l . :!0 oH

1-:!

•

"'" ' . 11n d.i i I'"'''' '" l'l .t'""'

More local meetings set on AMP plant
April · 2 at Southern review includes evaluating
Elementary School. In addi- proposed impacts to isotion, an informational ses- lated wetlands which are
RACINE -What seems sion on AMP-Ohio's Solid not connected to other sure
like a never-ending cycle of Waste
Permit-to-Install face waters.
meetings concerning the application will be held at
The OEPA, along with
American
Municipal 6:30 p.m., April 16 at guidance from the United
Power-Ohio.
coal-fired Southern Elemt:ntary.
States EPA, has developed
power plant continues with
The OEPA's job in terms water quality standards
two local meetings sched- of the 40 I Water Quality specifically for wetlands.
uled for April.
Certification is to review According to the EPA, wetThe Ohio Environmental applications
regarding .land water quality stanProtection Agency will hold projects that would physi- dards
are
important
a hearing on AM~-Ohio' s cally impact waters of the because they are· the primapending Water Quality state, including streams, ry tool used in water certiCertification at 6:30 p.m. , lakes and wetlands. Their fication decisions.
BY BETH SERGENT

Water quality standards
have three primary components: Designated uses, criteria to protect those uses,
and an antidegradaticin policy. States designate uses
based on the functions and
values of their wetlands. At
a minimum these uses must
meet the Clean Water Act's
goals to protect and propagate fish, shellfish, and
wildlife, and for recreation
in and on the water.
The meeting on April 2
will offer residents a chance

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

and Forest: A Field Guid~
to the Northeastern United
States,"
by
Steve.ri
Clemants
and
Carol
Gracie. Oxford UniversitY,
Press. List price: $35.
:

University
cheers new
accord with
RGCC
.

On the Net:
For more about growing
wildflowers in gardens and
landscapes,
see
thi$
Clemson University Home
and Garden lnforrruJtiOii
Center
fact
sheet:
http:l!hgic.c/emson.edu/facf
sheets/HGICJ 157.htm.

STAFF

Page AS
• Ernma Adams
• Robert Leslie Jacobs
• Rita Camill Little
• Meda·Jane Stout

INSIDE
• Scout camping
.opportunities announced.
Page A3
• Mobile heaHh
unit ~ing with
free immunizations.
.BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
See Page A3 '
HOEFLICH&lt;IJ&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• can't find your .
'.: 1099? lfs online!
Elderly Meigs
POMEROY Countians who are uncertain about
See Page A3
how they can participate in the U. S.
· • For the Record.
Government's economic stimulus .
package can get that information as
See Page AS
well as any assistance they need in
:. Sonshine Circle
applying !II the Meigs County Senior
makes contributions,
Citizens Center. ·
Volunteers of the Retired Senior
carries out projects.
, Volunteer Program are there on
See Page A6 ·
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9· a.m. to .
·• O'Bieness offers
11 . a.m., to assist residents in com- ·
pleting
the necessary forms. The
class on breaslfeeding.
See Page A6

:See

Cancer
ResoUrce
Center
dedication

WEATIIER

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTC&gt;MYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM

DetalllonPeeeA&amp;

'

..~EX ·
'

~

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGI'S
~-.

Annit!'s Mailbox

A3

~lendars

A3

tbissifieds

Comics
Editorials

83-4

Bs
A4
.,

Obituaries
..
'

$ports
Weather'·

As
8 Section
A6

1!.' aooll Ohio yillley PubU.hlna Co. ,

.'
'

REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS

•

to voice support or concern
about the issljance of the
401
Water
Quality
Certification.
The Solid Waste Permitto-Install application refers
to the landfill association
with the proposed plant .
The meeting on this application, unlike the Water
Quality Certification, is n.ot
a hearing put only meant to
educate the public about the
application, the OEPA's role
in reviewing the permit and
the role citizens can play.

POMEROY
The
American Cancer Society's
Ferman E. Moore Cancer
Resource Center will be
dedicated on April I at its
new home, the Meigs
County Health Department.
The dedication was canceled back in·December due ·
to inclement weather but the
second time's a charm for
next week's reception,
hopefully, which is from 4-6
p.m. with a door prize being
awarded and light refreshments served.
The CRC was renamed
for the late Moore, a past
president of the ACS'
Meigs County Advisory
Board. Members decided to
rename the center in
Moore's honor because of
what they described as his
positive attitude and always

Please IH Center, AS

..

RSVP pro~ram will continue
through April 15, the deadline for
filing a tax form. For further information or to make an appointment to
see one of the volunteers, call the
Senior Citizens Center, 992-2 161.
To qualify for a stimulus payment,
taxpayers must ftle a federal tax return
that shows at least $3,000 in qualifying income durin~ 2007. This can be
in the form of Soctal Security, benefits
from the Veterans Administration, disability benefits, earned income, pension
or
survivors
benefits.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
does not qualify.

Even if a qualified senior has not
filed an income tax form for many
years, they must do so this year if
they are to receive the benefit,
according to the regulations· set forth
by the U.. S. Government. Under the
Economic Stimulus Act of 2008, people may be eligible for the minimum
payment of $300 ($600 for married
couples) even if they do not normally
file a tax return. ·
The stimulus payment will not
reduce the amount of other benefit
payments, and is not considered taxable income for o;:ither federal · or
state purposes.

,.

'

County
recognized for
workers comp
management
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SUbmitted photo

·SHS student Jacob Wilson runs into several roadblocks, like

these·steps, along the route from school to downtown Racine.
Wilson, like other handicapped residents traveling this path,
have to go Into the highway to get around the steps. There is
no sidewalk on the other side of the street. A Slife Routes to
Schools grant would provide funding to build a safe, direct
route from the cen,ter of the village to·the school campus.
shot at funding this project. ·
We would have liked to
have had the sidewalk .
already in place."
Spencer noted that t~e
Southern Local School
District has taken an active
role in helping the village
secure funds for this project.
Superintendent Tony Deem

Please see Rio, AS

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

School and village collaborate~~n £1dewalk project

RACINE
Racine
Village and the Southern
Local School District are
collaborating on a Safe
Routes. to Schools Grant for
a srdewalk extension from
downtown Racine to the
Southern Local campus on
Elm Street.
Originally, the project
was to be funded as a Phase
II project from Issue II
funds. Phase I was the sidewalk replacement from Oak
Grove Road along Elm
Street
to
Southern
Elementary School.
.
With re-allocations of
funds, thl! Ohio Department
of Transportation recom- ·
mended that Racine Village
seek funding through the
Safe Routes to Schools program.
According to village clerk
Dave Spencer, "We were
one of 47 projects statewide
that were funded in the tirst
round for preliminary engineering. We are disappointed that Phase 11 has not
come as quickly as we
· would have liked, but we
are 'thrilled we still have a

RIO GRANDE - Dr.
Greg Sojka, interim president of the University of
Rio Grande, has expressed
the institution's full support
for the agreement reached
between the university and
Rio Grande Community
College to continue their
partnership in serving students in southeast Ohio.
"The new contract was
forged with the a~sistance of
the chancellor of the Board .
of Regents, and cpntinues
the . educational partnershiP,
between the institutions, '
Sojka said ....It assures students that the same opportunity for quality educational
programs - from associate
to master's degrees - will
be offered through the
University of Rio Grande.~·
The contract was signed
last weekend by the chair-.
men of the boards of
trustees for both institutions
- Steve Chapman for the

and
Administrative
Assistant Scott Wolfe have
met several .times for input
on the project and the
Southern Local · School
District Board of Education
has pledged 'its support of
the project.
'

PI11H 1H lhl•llk. AS
.'

. POMEROY Meigs
County has again been recognized by the third party
administrator of its workers
compensation program for
effective management.
CompManagement Health
Systems, Inc ., which oversees the risk management
activities for the county. recognized the county . for
effective . return-to-work ·
management for the first
quarter of 2008. Vicky
Cundiff is the administrator
of the county 's workers
CO!J1pensation program.
The county has taken a
number of steps to reduce
its workers com)J'ensation
claims and its premiums,
including the institution of
safety meetings and training
sessions, designed to reduce ·
the risk of on-job injury.
The county has also been
commended for returning
workers to the job quickly
after they have been injured.
Such measures are considered by the Bureau of
Worl5ers Compensation when
premiums are calculated.
Commissioner Jim . Sheets
said the sheriff's department
and county highway department reported the most workers compensation claims.

. ,._,.·... county,AS

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WORLD

Page~

Bv RAcHEL D'ORo
ANCHORAGE, Alaska
...._ Four crew members died
Sunday and another was
. missing after a Seattlebased fishing boat sank in
high seas off Alaska's
Aleutian Islands, the Coast
Guard said.
•T he dead were among 47
crew members . who abandoned ship after the 184foot Alaska Ranger developed problems. Forty-two
crew members were recovered safely, but a searc~ 'Yas
continuing for the mtssmg
person, said Chief Petty
Officer Barry Lane.
Th~ vessel started taki~g
on water shortly before 3
a.m. after losing control of
its rudder 120 miles west
of Dutch Harbor, which is
on Unalaska Island. Seas
with up to 8-foot waves
and 25-knot winds were
reported at the time of the
•
AP photo sinking, Lane said. The
Pope Benedict XVI, center, delivers the Urbi et Orbi (Latin .for "to the city and to the world") address and mass in St. P_eter's Coast Guard is investigatSquare at the Vatican on Easter Sunday. The pontiff rejoiced over conversions to Chnst1amty a day after he. baptized a ing the cause of the acciprominent Muslim, marking Easter Sunday in a rain-drenched appearance he used to renew calls fqr peace m Iraq, the dent, he said.
·
Holy Land and Tibet.
.
.
· State environmental re,gulators were notified that the
ship was carrying 145,000
$allonsofdieselwhenitsank
· m deep seas, according to

sunken vessel's sister ship,
the Alaska Warrior. The vessel took pan in the rescue
operation along with two
· Coast Guard helicopters
that were used to plu_ck
crew members from life
. rafts, Lane said.
Other survivors were on
board the Coast Guard cut. ter Munro, which remained
at the scene to search for the
· missing crew member. Lane
said the names of the dead
would not be released until
their next of km had been
notified.
A C-130 also remai~e~ to
help search for the mtssmg
.crew .member.
.
Coast Guaid Lt. Eric
Eggan said it was unkn~wn
how or when the four dtel!.
The identities of the dead .
were unknown.
Chuck Harvey, a harbor
officer on duty in Dutch
Harbor, said his office was
notified by the Coas~ Guard
to clear a dock for its
arrival, expected around II
p.m. EDT Sunday.
The Coast Guard also told
harbQr officials to hav.e an
ambulance ready, but didn't
specify the degree.or nature
ofany injuries, Harvey .said.
"lfigurethere'squiteabit
of )lypothermia going on,"

Alaska Department of
Environmental Conservation.
ing in .every corner of the
An oil sheen covered an
planet, al~ugh they lire area of a quart~r mile· by a
often ignored ,and some- half mile, Coast Guard
times delibera'iely con- spokesman Ray Dwyer
cealed, wounds that torture said. Because of the stt'ong
the souls ·and -bodies .of winds, however,
any
countless .of our · brothers cleanup effort is unlikely,
and sisters," the pontiff said, although those conditions
speaking over the sound of would dispc:rse a spill much
·. heavy rain in the square.
more qUickly than calm
At
times,
thunder weather, Pearson said.
drowned out a paramilitary
Some of those on board
band playing in the square the Alaska Ranger were
and the voices of a choir heading to Dutch Harbor in
singing "Alleluja."
a Coast Guard cutter and the

he;h!d.Alaska Ranger is
owned by . Seattle-based
Fishing Company · of ·
Alaska. A man w.ho
answered the company's
phone Sunday· afternoon
.declined to identify him- ·
self or comment. He. said
no one else was available
to comment.
"Today, the{re all pretty
much tied up;' he satd:
Coast Guard Petty Officer
Levi Read said the comp~ny
had sent an insurance
adjuster to Dutch Harbor,
who was expected to arrive
Sunday afternoon.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·
'Pope pra•·ses
. those
. •w h0. .C0fi'7:ert
. . .•. ';.
·peace m Tibet·, Iraq .~~s~e~an':;g::n~~e~~~
appeals .e.or
I•
of Carriere della Sera bin Laden, in a new -audio
newspaper, was born a J;~~essage posted last week,
Mushm in Egypt, but was accused Benedict of playing
VATICAN CITY- Pope educated by Catholics and a role in what he called a
Benedict XVI rejoiced over says ~te has never been a "new Crusade" against
conversions to Christianity practicing Muslim.
Islam. The Vatican ha's
in ail Easter Sunday Mass
He wrote in a front-pa~e described the accusation as
on the steps of St. Peter's letter published Sunday m baseless..
.
Basilica a day afier he bap- Corriere that he was .now
Security during papal
tized a prominent Muslim lakin$ on the midc:Jle. n~e public appearances was
newspaper editor. ·
· . Cristiano - · Christian m stepped up m 2001 after the
A whue canopy protected Italian.
Sept. 11 attacks, and ·there
the 80-year-old pontiff from
·He expressed his grati- · has been no noticeable
a downpour while· thou- tude to .Benedict, calling increase in protective measands of pilgrims, · tourists Saturday "the most beauti- sures since the new message
and Romans braved thunder ful day of my life."
surfaced.
and wind-whipped rain.
''The miracle of the resurIn a speech at the end of
The faithful were cele- rection of Christ reverberat- the Mass, Bepedict said that .
brating their belief in the ed in my soul, freeing it on the joyous day of Easter,
resurrection of Jesus after from the shadows of a . "in panicular, how can we
he was crucified. Thanks to preaching where · hate arid fail to remember certain
·the apostles' preaching mtolerance toward he who African regions, such as
about the · resurrection, is. different, toward he who Darfur and Somalia, the
"thousands and thousands is condemned as an "tormented Middle East,
of persons coiwerted to 'enemy,' prevailed over espeCially the Holy Land,
Christianity," Benedict said. love and respect for .your Iraq, Lebanon and fil)ally
Tibet, all of which I encour"And this is a miracle neighbor," Allam wrote.
which renews itself even
His
criticism
of age to seek solutions that
today," the pope said, hours Palestinian suicide bomb- will safeguard ~?;ace and the
after a Saturday night Easter ings prompted the Italian common good. '
·
vigil service in which he government to pro.vide him
Benedict singled out the
baptized seven adults. The with a sizable security detail Middle East · and Tibet
converts included Magdi . in 2003 after Hamas singled ' among places most in need
Allam, a prominent journal- him out for death, Allam has of peace and denounced
ist and commentator in Italy said in an interview.
"selfishness, injustice, hatred
who has received death
The pope himself has and violence" between indithreats for his denunciations come under verbal attack viduals and peoples.
of Islamic fanaticism.
from Islamic militants.
"These are the scourges of
AI-Qaida leader Osama humanity, open and festerAllam, 55, deputy editor
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~- !he

Monday, March 24, 2008
--..,..

.4 dead, 1 missing as fishing
boat sinks offAlaska' s coast;
42 crew members rescued

.BY FRANCES D'EMIUO

•

Community Calendar

•

·Public meetings
Monday, Murch 24
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Library Board, reg.ular meeting, 3 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
·
. Wednesday, March 26
. MARIETTA - District
18 Small Governm~nt .
Committee,
2
p.m.,
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development District, 1400
· · Pike St., Marietta. l'urpose
.to select I 0 projects for submission to Ohio Public
. Works Commission.

Clubs and
·organizations
,Monday, March 24
POMEROY - 'Pomeroy
·. · 186 OES, regular meeting,
7:30p.m. Refreshments. ·
Meigs
POMEROY -

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

RAMALLAH, West Bank
- Palestinian leaders asked
Vice President Dick Cheney
on Sunday to pressure Israel
to halt settlement construe. tion and voiced other complaints
that
deflated
Cheney's hopeful, words
about Mideast peace.
Palestinians had linle
expectation their meetings
with Cheney, a strong
defender of the Jewish state,·
would produce anything
concrete. While that was the
case, the Bush administration did get another chance
to nudge the two sides
toward an agreement before
President Bush leaves office
in
January.
The
Pale.stinians, too, had another shot (\t expressing their
frustration s.
The vice president said
neither side should pass up
.this latest opportunity for
an accord despite · rancor
over Israeli settlements
and the retaliatory anacks
from each that have disrupted negotiations in.tended to lead to Palestinian
sta k hood .
"Thi s can be done, and if
all concerned stay at the
work. success will be
achieved," Cheney said,
striking a hopeful tone on
Easter Sunday during his
first vice presidential visit
to the Palestinian territory.
'

After talks with Israeli
officials in Jerusalem,
Cheney flew to the West
Bank by helicopter, touching down at Mahmoud
Abbas' presidential compound near the grave of
longtime Palestinian h;ader
.Vasser Arafat, who died . in
2004..
·
· ·Abbas met Cheney at the
end of a long red carpet and
they ' walked between two
row$ of presidential guards.
Palestiman officials said
there were no breakthroughs in Cheney's talks
with Abbas and Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad, and
that Cheney essentially paid
a court~sr call, repeating .
U.S. posttlons.
Saeb Erekat, an Abbas
· aide, said Abbas cited the
need for calni in the West
Bank and Gaza, and said
Israel must halt settlement
eKr,ansion.
·
I can't say that Mr.
Cheney brought anything
,new in his visit, but he reiter- .
ated President Bush's vision
and commitment to 'having
an independent Palestinian
state," Erekat said.
cheney's visit was pan of
the administration's strategy
to keep the pressure on
negotiators. Bush visited
the region in January and
returns in May, while
Secretary · of
State
Condoleezza Rice came this
month and is back in April.
Israel has pursed peace

wiih Abbas, a moderate
Palestinian in control of the
West Bank. Hamas militants wrested control of the
Gaza Strip in June from
Abbas-allied forces. Ham as
has pounded southern
Israel with rockets; Israel
has retaliated with attacks
in Gaza.
"Peace and stability will
not be achieved through a
settlement exransion or the
setting up o checkpoints
around towns and villages ,
and the military escalation
against Gaza, nor the
incursions,
continuous
incursions into West Bank
villages and towns, as well
as the arrest which led to
more than ·11,000 pnsoners
in the ls(aeli jails," Abbas
said, detailing Palestinian
complaints.
"We also reiterate our
condemnation and rejection
for the firing of missiles
being launched from Gaza
against Israel," he said after
meeting Cheney.
Cheney said a peace deal
will mean "painful concessions" by both sides, and
require the will to defeat
those who are committed to
violence and refuse to
accept the other side's right
to exist.
"Terror and rockets do not
merely kill innocent civilians," Cheney said. "They
also kill legitimate hopes
and aspirations of the
Palestinian people."

BYTHEBEND
.

County Right to life, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Library.
Thursday, March 27
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall.

Other events
Friday, March 28
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:30-6
p.m., Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
Meat loaf, au gratin potatoes, green beans and
dessert.

Birthdays
Wednesday, March 26
RACINE - Eileen Buck,
retired Southern Local
School District teacher, will
observe her 90th birthday
on March 26.·Cards may be
sent to her at P.O. ·Box 96,
Tombstone, Ariz. 85683.

..

Can't find yo11r
_:_.1099? It's online!
Social Security benefits
may be subject to income
ATHENS, OFFICE •
tax for individuals with a
combined income between
We're deep into tax sea- $25,000 and $34,000, or for
.. son, and the days left for ftl- couples with a combined
. ing are numbered. Millions income between $32,000
. of taxpayers are busy gath- and $44,000; and
.' .ering all the forms and doc• Up to 85 percent of
· uments they need to file Social Security benefits
- their federal, state and local may be subject to income
·tax returns.
tax for individuals with a
It is important to remem- combined income above
· · ber that some people who $34,000, or for couples with
receive Social .Security may a combined income above
, have to pay taxes on a por- $44,000. (Note: ''Combined
tion of their benefits. If income" means adjusted
• .you're one of these individu- gross income, plus nontax·
. ·als, a Social Security Benefit · able interest, plus one-half
Statement (Form SSA-1099) of Social Security benefits.)
· ·is an important tax docuJ;Ilenl
About a third of current
Social Security beneficiafor you to have.
If you normally don't file ries have incomes that
a tax return and are doing so exceed the thresholds,
; this year only because of the requiring them to pay taxes
' stimulus payment, you · on a portion of their Social
: don't need your I 099. But if Security benefits. For more
! you normally do file a tax information on taxation . of
: return, you should be sure Social Security · benefits,
; that you have one when you visit the TRS website at
• file this year.
www.irs.gov.
; The SSA-1 099s for tax
Remember that if you
; year 2007 were automatical- normally don't file a tax
: ·IY mailed to beneficiaries by return and the only reason
• ·January 31, 2008. If you or you plan to this year is to
; . someone you know who receive your stimulus pay:· receives Social Security has ment, you won't need a
: ~not yet received a Form 1099 for that. All you need
·~ SSA-1099for2007,butneed to do is to fill out an esti~ 'to
a tax return, there's no mate of how much your
: ·need to wbrry. You · can benefits were during 2007
:;request a replacem~~t online based on your monthly pay: at www.socJalsecunty.gov .
ment amount on an IRS
• ; The SSA-1 099 shows the form. I 040 or I 040A.
For· more information
: ·total amount of benefits
: received in the ·previous about social Security, or to
; :year and is _!JSed to fi~d out request .a.replaceme':'l SSA, 'tf any benehts are subJect to 1099, vrstt www.socra{secu; tax, and to complete a feller- · rity.gov. Or you can call .
: ·al income tax return. The Social Security's toll ,free
· :federal tax .laws about · number, 1-800-772-121}
: :social Security benefits (1TY1-800-325-0778) and
: ;state that:
·
. ask for a replacement SSA; : • Up to · 50 percent of 1099 over the phone.

.....

ANY KUBOTA IS
A GOOD· CHOICE

BY

EUZABETH CRUMP

SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER,

PageA3
Monday, March 24,

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Don't jumP to conclusions
8Y KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My son-inlaw is everything a mother
could pray for. He and my
daughter. have been married
four years and have a beautiful 9-month-old child.
I was babysitting in their
home last week and went to
check my e-mail on their
computer (as I have done
many times). The computer
. was already logged on to
the same mail server that I
use, so I just clicked.
"inbox," not realizing my
son-in-law's e-mail was
already open. As I glanced
at the page, I happened to
see that the sender of the
· first e-mail was a website
for an online dating service
with a reply for him.
I am torn up inside. I didn't mean to snoop and I didn't open tlie e-mail. I don't
know if I should say anything to him or to my
daughter. I am devastated
and want to forget about it,
but I can't. If I decide to ask
him about it, what should I
say?
- . · Distraught
Mother-in-Law
Dear Distraught: Don't
jump to conclusions. Your
son-in-law may have a perfectly innocent reason . for

that .reply in his inbox, so whole story, and she agreed
give him the opportunity to to see me. I'm hoping she
explain. We assume:: you had will talk to Bianca on my
permission to use their com- behalf. Is that a good idea?
puter. Tell him, privately, -No More BFF
that
you
accidentally
Dear No More: You have
noticed the e-mail subject nothing to lose by trying.
line when you were babysit- · You hurt Bianca all those
ting and it upset you. If he years ago. and we don't
becomes angry, chances are know what it will take for
he's hiding something. her to forgive you. It also
Otherwise, please listen will require a great leap of
·with an open mind.
faith for her to risk her feelDear 'Annie: Is it possi- · ings again. We think it's
ble for two ex-friends to worth another . attempt,
make amends after not although, sqrry to say, there
being in each other's lives are no guarantees.
for 10 years? I ended _a
Dear Annie: "Curious in
friendship with "Bianca" the East" asked how chilbecause I thought it wasn't dren feel when Mom leaves.
working out.., After rive
From my own experience,
years, T tried to make it up I can tell you that the pain
to her, with no luck.
and hurt may lessen, but
I miss having Bianca in they never go away.
my life and now realize the
When I was 12, my
breakup was a stupid lmd mother decided she needed
harsh thing for me to do. I a "change," hooked up with
know we can't go back to an old boyfriend and
what we had, but I'd like moved to another city. My
to at least be able to call father a~d grandparents
from time to tinie so we tried thetr best, but the
can be there for each other. added stress caused heart
It's better than having problems for Grandma, so
nothing at all.
my mother had no choice
Is there anything I can do but to take custody of my
or say to get her to forgive younger brothers . . They
me and give me another were left alone and afraid
chance? I· called Bianca's at Mom's apartment while
mother and asked if I could she worked evenings.
come over and explain the Eventually she gave up on

her "new 1ife" and came
back.
Even though our farents
tried to make a goo it, the
'damage was done. We lost
respect for her, and the
resentment ran so deep that,
after 35 years, 1 still feel ·
betrayed. We have a decent
relationship, but if the time
coines when she can't live
on her own, T' 11 have rio
regrets about putting her in
a nursing home.
As a mother myself, l will
_never understand how she
could turn her back on us.
-Still Hurting
Dear Hurting: Your letter
is
heartbreaking.
Unfortunately, it seems
there are some wounds that
time does not completely
heal.
Annie's Mailbox is writ· ten by KJzthy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi. tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anni~sma!l­
box@comcast.net, or wnte
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and carwonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

OV·CS installs new ·computers
Ohio Valley Christian
School recently
obtained and
installed 34 new
Dell co.mputers in
the elementary and
high school buildings. Funds were
supplied by auxiliary
funding based on
· the school's chartering in 2006.
Shown is Harold
Taylor, the Science
and Computer
teacher at Ohio
valley Christian
School, orienting
·freshman Alexis
Henry to the Dell
laptop.
Submitted photo

file

Palestinians complain to Cheney
about Israel's settlement construction
BY DEB RtECHMANN

Daily Sentinel

•

: --------------------~----

~:Mobile health unit
~ . co~·dng with free
;.-•• · inununizations

·' ATHENS - The Ohio
: :University College of
. : Osteopathic Medicine (OU• .€OM)
Childhood
: ·immunization
Program
: :(CHIP), a mobile health
:: program, will provide free
· .routine immunizations for
:: a11 area children from birth
: ·through 18 years of age.
• :- This · service is available
; to families of all incomes : :even those with insurance
; :coverage. To receive immu: : nizations, please bring your
· ;child's
previous
shot
; :records.
: The schedule is as fol: lows:·
: Every 'TUesday in Athens
; County, Park Hall ground
: floor, I to 5:30p.m.
·

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593'-3279 / 800-710-1917

..

Every Thursday in Athens
County, Parks Hall ground
floor, 8:30 a.m. to noon .
Monday, April 28, Meigs
County, 'TUppers Plains,
Coolspot on State Route 7,
3 to 4 p.m.
The shot records of each
child is to be presented. .
The clinics are provided
by OU-COM Childhood
Immunization . Program's
community mobile health
Ohio
unit
and
the
Department of Health in
coopemtion with the Athens
City-County
Health
Department, AHEC, and the
site sponsors. For more
information about the
immunization program call
toll' free 1-800-844-2654.

Scout camping opportunities announced
. HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- Several camping oppor!unities are available to the
Boy Scouts of America.
They include:
• Cub Scout Family
Camp, May 16-18, Camp
Arrowhead, Ona, W.Va. Cub
Scout Family Camp is an
activity for the entire family
in an pvernight outdoor setting. You may bring your
own tent or.rent one of ours.
You may stay for Friday
and/or Saturday nights.
Choose to participate in the '
many activities or set around
the lake and fish all day.
This event is designed to be
an overnight event.
All participants must register and pay with the exception
of youth who are five years
old or younger. Each Cub .
Scout attending must have at
lea5t one registered family
member at least 18 years old
present. Ages ·6-12, $15.00
Ages $13 and up $13.00. For
applications contact John
Pinkerman at 304-523-3408
or www.tsacbsa.org Email at
r.franks®tsacbsa.org.
•
Scouting
Comes
Naturally Cub Scout day
camp: June 9-13, Camp
Arrowhead, Ona, W.Va.;
Moose Lodge Point Pleasant,

W.Va., Northeastern Fish &amp;
Garnes Club, Cannonsburg,
Ky. Choose from three locations. For every five Cub
Scouts attending there must
be at leas~ one leader. Every
Cub Pack with a Cub Scout
attending must provide a
leader. Parents who do not
normally serve as leaders are
welcomed. Each day can be a
different parent. This year's
activities will center on
nature and the environment.
There will be some emphasis
on completing requirements
at Day C&lt;lffip. Cub Scouts
should bring their lunch each
day. Day Camp stans on
Monday at 8:30 p.m. and
ends a:t 4 p.m. Friday ends
with a Family Closing
Ceremony. Rising fifth
graders are not ·allowed at
Day Camp and should attend
Resident Camp. Fee $55. For
applications contact Ray
Franks at 304-523-3408 or
www.tsacbsa.org Email to
r.franks@tsacbsa.org
•
Native American/
Frontiersman Cub Scout res- '
ident camp: June 19-21 Camp
Arrowhead. For all Cub
Scouts camp for three days I
two nights overnight in two
man wall tents wtth fl~':S. &amp;
cots. Many of the activities

will be-oriented toward completing Cub Scout advancements while allowing time
for fun. Each Cul&gt; Scout
attending must have one
adult. Meals are served in the
dining hall. Additional parents and leaders are invited
to attend the closing camp- ·
· ftre. Cost $85 per couple. For
applications contact Robin
McChristian at 304-523- .
3408 or www.tsacbsa.org. Email to r.franks@tsacbsa.org.
Resident Boy Scout Camp,
Camp Arrowhead, Ona.
W.Va.
Three sessions beginning
on July 6, July 13 and July
20. Each session runs
throu~h Saturday morning.
Activtties include, repelling,
canoeing rowing, fishing,
·rifle, archery, shotgun, camp
craft, handicraft, swimming,

nature and more. Boy Scouts
stay in wall tents with floors
and eat in the dining hall. Fee
$180. For application contact
Jim Rastetter at 304-5233408 or www.tsacbsa.org. Email to r.franks@tsacbsa.org.
• Camp Cherokee High
Adventure, Yatesville Lake,
Ky.: Three sessions beginning
on July 6, July 13, and July 20
lasting through Saturday of
the same week for Boy Scouts
at least 14 years old, spend the
week on Yatesville Lake
canoeing, fishing, fly fishing,
cooking, camping and waterskiing. Operated out of Camp
Cherokee this event will
involve canoeing to remote
primitive campsites. Fee
$180. For anplication contact
Jim Rastetter at 304-5233408 or www.tsacbsa.org, E·
mail to r.franks@tsacbsa.org

Board of Directors
• Invite you to the .

15th Annual Meeting
of the

Uniited Fund for Meigs County
at the

Pomeroy Library
Downstairs Meeting Room

; ----------~----~

r

;. PROUD TO BEAPARTOFYOURLIFE.

"Your Friendly Outdoor Power Equijnnent and Tractor Superstore"

'•

'

.

'

.

A dessert buffet will be served,

The Daily sentinel

United Fund for Meigs County
PO Box 424, Middleport. OH 45 760

•

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WORLD

Page~

Bv RAcHEL D'ORo
ANCHORAGE, Alaska
...._ Four crew members died
Sunday and another was
. missing after a Seattlebased fishing boat sank in
high seas off Alaska's
Aleutian Islands, the Coast
Guard said.
•T he dead were among 47
crew members . who abandoned ship after the 184foot Alaska Ranger developed problems. Forty-two
crew members were recovered safely, but a searc~ 'Yas
continuing for the mtssmg
person, said Chief Petty
Officer Barry Lane.
Th~ vessel started taki~g
on water shortly before 3
a.m. after losing control of
its rudder 120 miles west
of Dutch Harbor, which is
on Unalaska Island. Seas
with up to 8-foot waves
and 25-knot winds were
reported at the time of the
•
AP photo sinking, Lane said. The
Pope Benedict XVI, center, delivers the Urbi et Orbi (Latin .for "to the city and to the world") address and mass in St. P_eter's Coast Guard is investigatSquare at the Vatican on Easter Sunday. The pontiff rejoiced over conversions to Chnst1amty a day after he. baptized a ing the cause of the acciprominent Muslim, marking Easter Sunday in a rain-drenched appearance he used to renew calls fqr peace m Iraq, the dent, he said.
·
Holy Land and Tibet.
.
.
· State environmental re,gulators were notified that the
ship was carrying 145,000
$allonsofdieselwhenitsank
· m deep seas, according to

sunken vessel's sister ship,
the Alaska Warrior. The vessel took pan in the rescue
operation along with two
· Coast Guard helicopters
that were used to plu_ck
crew members from life
. rafts, Lane said.
Other survivors were on
board the Coast Guard cut. ter Munro, which remained
at the scene to search for the
· missing crew member. Lane
said the names of the dead
would not be released until
their next of km had been
notified.
A C-130 also remai~e~ to
help search for the mtssmg
.crew .member.
.
Coast Guaid Lt. Eric
Eggan said it was unkn~wn
how or when the four dtel!.
The identities of the dead .
were unknown.
Chuck Harvey, a harbor
officer on duty in Dutch
Harbor, said his office was
notified by the Coas~ Guard
to clear a dock for its
arrival, expected around II
p.m. EDT Sunday.
The Coast Guard also told
harbQr officials to hav.e an
ambulance ready, but didn't
specify the degree.or nature
ofany injuries, Harvey .said.
"lfigurethere'squiteabit
of )lypothermia going on,"

Alaska Department of
Environmental Conservation.
ing in .every corner of the
An oil sheen covered an
planet, al~ugh they lire area of a quart~r mile· by a
often ignored ,and some- half mile, Coast Guard
times delibera'iely con- spokesman Ray Dwyer
cealed, wounds that torture said. Because of the stt'ong
the souls ·and -bodies .of winds, however,
any
countless .of our · brothers cleanup effort is unlikely,
and sisters," the pontiff said, although those conditions
speaking over the sound of would dispc:rse a spill much
·. heavy rain in the square.
more qUickly than calm
At
times,
thunder weather, Pearson said.
drowned out a paramilitary
Some of those on board
band playing in the square the Alaska Ranger were
and the voices of a choir heading to Dutch Harbor in
singing "Alleluja."
a Coast Guard cutter and the

he;h!d.Alaska Ranger is
owned by . Seattle-based
Fishing Company · of ·
Alaska. A man w.ho
answered the company's
phone Sunday· afternoon
.declined to identify him- ·
self or comment. He. said
no one else was available
to comment.
"Today, the{re all pretty
much tied up;' he satd:
Coast Guard Petty Officer
Levi Read said the comp~ny
had sent an insurance
adjuster to Dutch Harbor,
who was expected to arrive
Sunday afternoon.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·
'Pope pra•·ses
. those
. •w h0. .C0fi'7:ert
. . .•. ';.
·peace m Tibet·, Iraq .~~s~e~an':;g::n~~e~~~
appeals .e.or
I•
of Carriere della Sera bin Laden, in a new -audio
newspaper, was born a J;~~essage posted last week,
Mushm in Egypt, but was accused Benedict of playing
VATICAN CITY- Pope educated by Catholics and a role in what he called a
Benedict XVI rejoiced over says ~te has never been a "new Crusade" against
conversions to Christianity practicing Muslim.
Islam. The Vatican ha's
in ail Easter Sunday Mass
He wrote in a front-pa~e described the accusation as
on the steps of St. Peter's letter published Sunday m baseless..
.
Basilica a day afier he bap- Corriere that he was .now
Security during papal
tized a prominent Muslim lakin$ on the midc:Jle. n~e public appearances was
newspaper editor. ·
· . Cristiano - · Christian m stepped up m 2001 after the
A whue canopy protected Italian.
Sept. 11 attacks, and ·there
the 80-year-old pontiff from
·He expressed his grati- · has been no noticeable
a downpour while· thou- tude to .Benedict, calling increase in protective measands of pilgrims, · tourists Saturday "the most beauti- sures since the new message
and Romans braved thunder ful day of my life."
surfaced.
and wind-whipped rain.
''The miracle of the resurIn a speech at the end of
The faithful were cele- rection of Christ reverberat- the Mass, Bepedict said that .
brating their belief in the ed in my soul, freeing it on the joyous day of Easter,
resurrection of Jesus after from the shadows of a . "in panicular, how can we
he was crucified. Thanks to preaching where · hate arid fail to remember certain
·the apostles' preaching mtolerance toward he who African regions, such as
about the · resurrection, is. different, toward he who Darfur and Somalia, the
"thousands and thousands is condemned as an "tormented Middle East,
of persons coiwerted to 'enemy,' prevailed over espeCially the Holy Land,
Christianity," Benedict said. love and respect for .your Iraq, Lebanon and fil)ally
Tibet, all of which I encour"And this is a miracle neighbor," Allam wrote.
which renews itself even
His
criticism
of age to seek solutions that
today," the pope said, hours Palestinian suicide bomb- will safeguard ~?;ace and the
after a Saturday night Easter ings prompted the Italian common good. '
·
vigil service in which he government to pro.vide him
Benedict singled out the
baptized seven adults. The with a sizable security detail Middle East · and Tibet
converts included Magdi . in 2003 after Hamas singled ' among places most in need
Allam, a prominent journal- him out for death, Allam has of peace and denounced
ist and commentator in Italy said in an interview.
"selfishness, injustice, hatred
who has received death
The pope himself has and violence" between indithreats for his denunciations come under verbal attack viduals and peoples.
of Islamic fanaticism.
from Islamic militants.
"These are the scourges of
AI-Qaida leader Osama humanity, open and festerAllam, 55, deputy editor
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~- !he

Monday, March 24, 2008
--..,..

.4 dead, 1 missing as fishing
boat sinks offAlaska' s coast;
42 crew members rescued

.BY FRANCES D'EMIUO

•

Community Calendar

•

·Public meetings
Monday, Murch 24
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Library Board, reg.ular meeting, 3 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
·
. Wednesday, March 26
. MARIETTA - District
18 Small Governm~nt .
Committee,
2
p.m.,
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development District, 1400
· · Pike St., Marietta. l'urpose
.to select I 0 projects for submission to Ohio Public
. Works Commission.

Clubs and
·organizations
,Monday, March 24
POMEROY - 'Pomeroy
·. · 186 OES, regular meeting,
7:30p.m. Refreshments. ·
Meigs
POMEROY -

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

RAMALLAH, West Bank
- Palestinian leaders asked
Vice President Dick Cheney
on Sunday to pressure Israel
to halt settlement construe. tion and voiced other complaints
that
deflated
Cheney's hopeful, words
about Mideast peace.
Palestinians had linle
expectation their meetings
with Cheney, a strong
defender of the Jewish state,·
would produce anything
concrete. While that was the
case, the Bush administration did get another chance
to nudge the two sides
toward an agreement before
President Bush leaves office
in
January.
The
Pale.stinians, too, had another shot (\t expressing their
frustration s.
The vice president said
neither side should pass up
.this latest opportunity for
an accord despite · rancor
over Israeli settlements
and the retaliatory anacks
from each that have disrupted negotiations in.tended to lead to Palestinian
sta k hood .
"Thi s can be done, and if
all concerned stay at the
work. success will be
achieved," Cheney said,
striking a hopeful tone on
Easter Sunday during his
first vice presidential visit
to the Palestinian territory.
'

After talks with Israeli
officials in Jerusalem,
Cheney flew to the West
Bank by helicopter, touching down at Mahmoud
Abbas' presidential compound near the grave of
longtime Palestinian h;ader
.Vasser Arafat, who died . in
2004..
·
· ·Abbas met Cheney at the
end of a long red carpet and
they ' walked between two
row$ of presidential guards.
Palestiman officials said
there were no breakthroughs in Cheney's talks
with Abbas and Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad, and
that Cheney essentially paid
a court~sr call, repeating .
U.S. posttlons.
Saeb Erekat, an Abbas
· aide, said Abbas cited the
need for calni in the West
Bank and Gaza, and said
Israel must halt settlement
eKr,ansion.
·
I can't say that Mr.
Cheney brought anything
,new in his visit, but he reiter- .
ated President Bush's vision
and commitment to 'having
an independent Palestinian
state," Erekat said.
cheney's visit was pan of
the administration's strategy
to keep the pressure on
negotiators. Bush visited
the region in January and
returns in May, while
Secretary · of
State
Condoleezza Rice came this
month and is back in April.
Israel has pursed peace

wiih Abbas, a moderate
Palestinian in control of the
West Bank. Hamas militants wrested control of the
Gaza Strip in June from
Abbas-allied forces. Ham as
has pounded southern
Israel with rockets; Israel
has retaliated with attacks
in Gaza.
"Peace and stability will
not be achieved through a
settlement exransion or the
setting up o checkpoints
around towns and villages ,
and the military escalation
against Gaza, nor the
incursions,
continuous
incursions into West Bank
villages and towns, as well
as the arrest which led to
more than ·11,000 pnsoners
in the ls(aeli jails," Abbas
said, detailing Palestinian
complaints.
"We also reiterate our
condemnation and rejection
for the firing of missiles
being launched from Gaza
against Israel," he said after
meeting Cheney.
Cheney said a peace deal
will mean "painful concessions" by both sides, and
require the will to defeat
those who are committed to
violence and refuse to
accept the other side's right
to exist.
"Terror and rockets do not
merely kill innocent civilians," Cheney said. "They
also kill legitimate hopes
and aspirations of the
Palestinian people."

BYTHEBEND
.

County Right to life, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Library.
Thursday, March 27
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall.

Other events
Friday, March 28
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:30-6
p.m., Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
Meat loaf, au gratin potatoes, green beans and
dessert.

Birthdays
Wednesday, March 26
RACINE - Eileen Buck,
retired Southern Local
School District teacher, will
observe her 90th birthday
on March 26.·Cards may be
sent to her at P.O. ·Box 96,
Tombstone, Ariz. 85683.

..

Can't find yo11r
_:_.1099? It's online!
Social Security benefits
may be subject to income
ATHENS, OFFICE •
tax for individuals with a
combined income between
We're deep into tax sea- $25,000 and $34,000, or for
.. son, and the days left for ftl- couples with a combined
. ing are numbered. Millions income between $32,000
. of taxpayers are busy gath- and $44,000; and
.' .ering all the forms and doc• Up to 85 percent of
· uments they need to file Social Security benefits
- their federal, state and local may be subject to income
·tax returns.
tax for individuals with a
It is important to remem- combined income above
· · ber that some people who $34,000, or for couples with
receive Social .Security may a combined income above
, have to pay taxes on a por- $44,000. (Note: ''Combined
tion of their benefits. If income" means adjusted
• .you're one of these individu- gross income, plus nontax·
. ·als, a Social Security Benefit · able interest, plus one-half
Statement (Form SSA-1099) of Social Security benefits.)
· ·is an important tax docuJ;Ilenl
About a third of current
Social Security beneficiafor you to have.
If you normally don't file ries have incomes that
a tax return and are doing so exceed the thresholds,
; this year only because of the requiring them to pay taxes
' stimulus payment, you · on a portion of their Social
: don't need your I 099. But if Security benefits. For more
! you normally do file a tax information on taxation . of
: return, you should be sure Social Security · benefits,
; that you have one when you visit the TRS website at
• file this year.
www.irs.gov.
; The SSA-1 099s for tax
Remember that if you
; year 2007 were automatical- normally don't file a tax
: ·IY mailed to beneficiaries by return and the only reason
• ·January 31, 2008. If you or you plan to this year is to
; . someone you know who receive your stimulus pay:· receives Social Security has ment, you won't need a
: ~not yet received a Form 1099 for that. All you need
·~ SSA-1099for2007,butneed to do is to fill out an esti~ 'to
a tax return, there's no mate of how much your
: ·need to wbrry. You · can benefits were during 2007
:;request a replacem~~t online based on your monthly pay: at www.socJalsecunty.gov .
ment amount on an IRS
• ; The SSA-1 099 shows the form. I 040 or I 040A.
For· more information
: ·total amount of benefits
: received in the ·previous about social Security, or to
; :year and is _!JSed to fi~d out request .a.replaceme':'l SSA, 'tf any benehts are subJect to 1099, vrstt www.socra{secu; tax, and to complete a feller- · rity.gov. Or you can call .
: ·al income tax return. The Social Security's toll ,free
· :federal tax .laws about · number, 1-800-772-121}
: :social Security benefits (1TY1-800-325-0778) and
: ;state that:
·
. ask for a replacement SSA; : • Up to · 50 percent of 1099 over the phone.

.....

ANY KUBOTA IS
A GOOD· CHOICE

BY

EUZABETH CRUMP

SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER,

PageA3
Monday, March 24,

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Don't jumP to conclusions
8Y KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My son-inlaw is everything a mother
could pray for. He and my
daughter. have been married
four years and have a beautiful 9-month-old child.
I was babysitting in their
home last week and went to
check my e-mail on their
computer (as I have done
many times). The computer
. was already logged on to
the same mail server that I
use, so I just clicked.
"inbox," not realizing my
son-in-law's e-mail was
already open. As I glanced
at the page, I happened to
see that the sender of the
· first e-mail was a website
for an online dating service
with a reply for him.
I am torn up inside. I didn't mean to snoop and I didn't open tlie e-mail. I don't
know if I should say anything to him or to my
daughter. I am devastated
and want to forget about it,
but I can't. If I decide to ask
him about it, what should I
say?
- . · Distraught
Mother-in-Law
Dear Distraught: Don't
jump to conclusions. Your
son-in-law may have a perfectly innocent reason . for

that .reply in his inbox, so whole story, and she agreed
give him the opportunity to to see me. I'm hoping she
explain. We assume:: you had will talk to Bianca on my
permission to use their com- behalf. Is that a good idea?
puter. Tell him, privately, -No More BFF
that
you
accidentally
Dear No More: You have
noticed the e-mail subject nothing to lose by trying.
line when you were babysit- · You hurt Bianca all those
ting and it upset you. If he years ago. and we don't
becomes angry, chances are know what it will take for
he's hiding something. her to forgive you. It also
Otherwise, please listen will require a great leap of
·with an open mind.
faith for her to risk her feelDear 'Annie: Is it possi- · ings again. We think it's
ble for two ex-friends to worth another . attempt,
make amends after not although, sqrry to say, there
being in each other's lives are no guarantees.
for 10 years? I ended _a
Dear Annie: "Curious in
friendship with "Bianca" the East" asked how chilbecause I thought it wasn't dren feel when Mom leaves.
working out.., After rive
From my own experience,
years, T tried to make it up I can tell you that the pain
to her, with no luck.
and hurt may lessen, but
I miss having Bianca in they never go away.
my life and now realize the
When I was 12, my
breakup was a stupid lmd mother decided she needed
harsh thing for me to do. I a "change," hooked up with
know we can't go back to an old boyfriend and
what we had, but I'd like moved to another city. My
to at least be able to call father a~d grandparents
from time to tinie so we tried thetr best, but the
can be there for each other. added stress caused heart
It's better than having problems for Grandma, so
nothing at all.
my mother had no choice
Is there anything I can do but to take custody of my
or say to get her to forgive younger brothers . . They
me and give me another were left alone and afraid
chance? I· called Bianca's at Mom's apartment while
mother and asked if I could she worked evenings.
come over and explain the Eventually she gave up on

her "new 1ife" and came
back.
Even though our farents
tried to make a goo it, the
'damage was done. We lost
respect for her, and the
resentment ran so deep that,
after 35 years, 1 still feel ·
betrayed. We have a decent
relationship, but if the time
coines when she can't live
on her own, T' 11 have rio
regrets about putting her in
a nursing home.
As a mother myself, l will
_never understand how she
could turn her back on us.
-Still Hurting
Dear Hurting: Your letter
is
heartbreaking.
Unfortunately, it seems
there are some wounds that
time does not completely
heal.
Annie's Mailbox is writ· ten by KJzthy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi. tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anni~sma!l­
box@comcast.net, or wnte
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and carwonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

OV·CS installs new ·computers
Ohio Valley Christian
School recently
obtained and
installed 34 new
Dell co.mputers in
the elementary and
high school buildings. Funds were
supplied by auxiliary
funding based on
· the school's chartering in 2006.
Shown is Harold
Taylor, the Science
and Computer
teacher at Ohio
valley Christian
School, orienting
·freshman Alexis
Henry to the Dell
laptop.
Submitted photo

file

Palestinians complain to Cheney
about Israel's settlement construction
BY DEB RtECHMANN

Daily Sentinel

•

: --------------------~----

~:Mobile health unit
~ . co~·dng with free
;.-•• · inununizations

·' ATHENS - The Ohio
: :University College of
. : Osteopathic Medicine (OU• .€OM)
Childhood
: ·immunization
Program
: :(CHIP), a mobile health
:: program, will provide free
· .routine immunizations for
:: a11 area children from birth
: ·through 18 years of age.
• :- This · service is available
; to families of all incomes : :even those with insurance
; :coverage. To receive immu: : nizations, please bring your
· ;child's
previous
shot
; :records.
: The schedule is as fol: lows:·
: Every 'TUesday in Athens
; County, Park Hall ground
: floor, I to 5:30p.m.
·

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593'-3279 / 800-710-1917

..

Every Thursday in Athens
County, Parks Hall ground
floor, 8:30 a.m. to noon .
Monday, April 28, Meigs
County, 'TUppers Plains,
Coolspot on State Route 7,
3 to 4 p.m.
The shot records of each
child is to be presented. .
The clinics are provided
by OU-COM Childhood
Immunization . Program's
community mobile health
Ohio
unit
and
the
Department of Health in
coopemtion with the Athens
City-County
Health
Department, AHEC, and the
site sponsors. For more
information about the
immunization program call
toll' free 1-800-844-2654.

Scout camping opportunities announced
. HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- Several camping oppor!unities are available to the
Boy Scouts of America.
They include:
• Cub Scout Family
Camp, May 16-18, Camp
Arrowhead, Ona, W.Va. Cub
Scout Family Camp is an
activity for the entire family
in an pvernight outdoor setting. You may bring your
own tent or.rent one of ours.
You may stay for Friday
and/or Saturday nights.
Choose to participate in the '
many activities or set around
the lake and fish all day.
This event is designed to be
an overnight event.
All participants must register and pay with the exception
of youth who are five years
old or younger. Each Cub .
Scout attending must have at
lea5t one registered family
member at least 18 years old
present. Ages ·6-12, $15.00
Ages $13 and up $13.00. For
applications contact John
Pinkerman at 304-523-3408
or www.tsacbsa.org Email at
r.franks®tsacbsa.org.
•
Scouting
Comes
Naturally Cub Scout day
camp: June 9-13, Camp
Arrowhead, Ona, W.Va.;
Moose Lodge Point Pleasant,

W.Va., Northeastern Fish &amp;
Garnes Club, Cannonsburg,
Ky. Choose from three locations. For every five Cub
Scouts attending there must
be at leas~ one leader. Every
Cub Pack with a Cub Scout
attending must provide a
leader. Parents who do not
normally serve as leaders are
welcomed. Each day can be a
different parent. This year's
activities will center on
nature and the environment.
There will be some emphasis
on completing requirements
at Day C&lt;lffip. Cub Scouts
should bring their lunch each
day. Day Camp stans on
Monday at 8:30 p.m. and
ends a:t 4 p.m. Friday ends
with a Family Closing
Ceremony. Rising fifth
graders are not ·allowed at
Day Camp and should attend
Resident Camp. Fee $55. For
applications contact Ray
Franks at 304-523-3408 or
www.tsacbsa.org Email to
r.franks@tsacbsa.org
•
Native American/
Frontiersman Cub Scout res- '
ident camp: June 19-21 Camp
Arrowhead. For all Cub
Scouts camp for three days I
two nights overnight in two
man wall tents wtth fl~':S. &amp;
cots. Many of the activities

will be-oriented toward completing Cub Scout advancements while allowing time
for fun. Each Cul&gt; Scout
attending must have one
adult. Meals are served in the
dining hall. Additional parents and leaders are invited
to attend the closing camp- ·
· ftre. Cost $85 per couple. For
applications contact Robin
McChristian at 304-523- .
3408 or www.tsacbsa.org. Email to r.franks@tsacbsa.org.
Resident Boy Scout Camp,
Camp Arrowhead, Ona.
W.Va.
Three sessions beginning
on July 6, July 13 and July
20. Each session runs
throu~h Saturday morning.
Activtties include, repelling,
canoeing rowing, fishing,
·rifle, archery, shotgun, camp
craft, handicraft, swimming,

nature and more. Boy Scouts
stay in wall tents with floors
and eat in the dining hall. Fee
$180. For application contact
Jim Rastetter at 304-5233408 or www.tsacbsa.org. Email to r.franks@tsacbsa.org.
• Camp Cherokee High
Adventure, Yatesville Lake,
Ky.: Three sessions beginning
on July 6, July 13, and July 20
lasting through Saturday of
the same week for Boy Scouts
at least 14 years old, spend the
week on Yatesville Lake
canoeing, fishing, fly fishing,
cooking, camping and waterskiing. Operated out of Camp
Cherokee this event will
involve canoeing to remote
primitive campsites. Fee
$180. For anplication contact
Jim Rastetter at 304-5233408 or www.tsacbsa.org, E·
mail to r.franks@tsacbsa.org

Board of Directors
• Invite you to the .

15th Annual Meeting
of the

Uniited Fund for Meigs County
at the

Pomeroy Library
Downstairs Meeting Room

; ----------~----~

r

;. PROUD TO BEAPARTOFYOURLIFE.

"Your Friendly Outdoor Power Equijnnent and Tractor Superstore"

'•

'

.

'

.

A dessert buffet will be served,

The Daily sentinel

United Fund for Meigs County
PO Box 424, Middleport. OH 45 760

•

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

•

Monday, March

PageA4
Monday, Mm:ch

24, 20Q8

As a conservative in no
- "a secure and stable" forces; 70 percent think U.S .
way comforted by the
state, to be sure, "friendly"- forces have dqne a bad or
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992·2~57
Clinton-Obama-Pelosi-Reid
ish to the United States, and very bad job; and, most
www.mydallysentinel.com
rhetoric on the war in Iraq, I
"victorious" over Saddam appalling, 42 percent think
Hussein, all fruits of an earli- attacks on U.S. forces are
should have taken heart from
the
president's
fifth-anniver'
er
U.S. victory. But there acceptable.
Acceptable!
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diana
sary remarks revisiting the
was , • absolutely · nothing This last figure ·is down 15
West
Battle of Baghdad, the overtransformative about that . points from six months ago,
Dan GQodrich
.'
throw of Saddam Hussein,
not in the so I suppose we should
accomplishment,
Publisher
the thrill of Iraqi elections,
region, not in the Muslim applaud the "progress." But
the perfidy of At Qaeda terworld. (You'd think we'd at just imagine if, after D-Day
Charlene Hoeflich ·
least
get a break on oi I prices in 1944, 42 percent of the
rorists, the Anbar Awakening, mative power of liberty"
General Manager-News Editor
from
countries we saved French believed att11cking
and the success of the surge. always hits a rut m·a Shana1 didn't.
based society, but such a from Saddam Hussein.) Do Americans was "acceptWas it because the speech, blip still doesn't show up on we have reason to expect able"; or if after the Battle of
that even a democratic Iraq Chosin Reservoir in 1950,
with its tone of meandering the presidential radar.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
reminiscence, sounded more
Rather, as Bush put it, "a will turn into something bet- 42 percent of South Koreans
- a linchpin of our did, too; or if 42 percent of
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the · appropriate to a Soldiers free Iraq will fight terrorists ter
Middle
Eastern strategy?
Grenadians afier being liberHome remembrance 40 years instead of harboring them"
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom hence? Or was it beCause I'd _although wasn't Itaq per~
Listening to Gen. David ated by Ronald Reagan in
heard it all 40 times before? fectly happy to "harbor" Petraeus low-ball the much- 1983 were of the same vioof speech, or of the press; or the right of the
("Defeating
this enemy in arch-terrorist
Mahmoud vaunted surge's effect - "I lently anti-American mind:
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition Iraq wilt make
Would we consider such
it less likely Ahmadinejad ·a little earlier wouldn't ever use the word
the Government for a redress of grievances.
success
or
.
victory
or
anypeoples worthy of American .
that we' ll face the enemy this month? (And didn't
here at home." .. , "The future more than 100,000 Baghdad thing like that," he recently blood and treasure? And
-The First Amendment to the U_S, Constitution of the Middle East belorlgs to residents rally in favor of told Voice of America- and would we consider them
freedom.") That's part of it. Hezbollah in 2006?) "A free express frustration at the likely linchpins of a lon·gBut there was something Iraq," the president contin- pace of Iraqi "reconcilia- term alliance?
."Five years into this batelse. In these remarks taking ued, ''will be an example for tion" to The Washington
Post,'
it's
hard
to
say
yes.
tle,
there is an understandstock five years later, there others of the power of liberty
.
was very little sense of, well, to change the societies and to And especially not after sift- able debate over · whether
Today is Monday, March 24, the 84th day of 2008. There taking stock.
displace despair with hope." ing through the more dis- the war was wm:th fighting,
are 282 days left in the year.
·
Indeed, the president was
Such is the conservative turbing findings of a. recent whether the fight is worth
Today 's Highlight In History: On March 24, 1958, rock- . still rhapsodizing about the dream - and, more trou- BBC poll of Iraqi opinion. winning, and whether we
and,roll singer Elvis Presley was inducted into the Army in "transformative power of bling, the conservative stmte- For selective opttmists, the can win it;" the president
Memphis, Tenn. (After nearly six months of basic training liberty" -. even as such · gy to thwart jihad coming poll does indeed reflect an said. Me, I'm still waiting
at Fort Hood, Texas, Presley was posted to Friedberg, West power has failed to trans- from the Middle East. Charles increasing Iraqi optimism, for a straightforward discusGermany; he was honorably discharged in 1960.)
·form any of the Islamic soci- Krauthammer recently con- which has cheered conserva- sion of what it is we can reaOn this date: In 1765, Britain enacted the Quartering Act, eties we have been micro- templated Iraq in similar tives as happy anniversary sonably expect to win.
requiring American colonists to provide temporary housing managing over the past few terms: "Imagine the transfer- news. What has gone more
(Diana West is a coluntllfst
to British soldiers.
years, from Afghanistan to · mative effects in the region or less overlooked (or dis- for The Washington Times.
In 1882, German scientist Robert Koch announced in Hamastail, into anything . and indeed in the entire missed) are . the survey She is the author . of "The
'Berlin that he had discovered the bacillus responsible for resembling liberty-based Muslim world, of achieving a results indicating a shocking Death of the Grown-up:
tuberculosis. .
societies. ("Liberty" in secure and stable Iraq, friend- Iraqi hostility to America's How America's Arrested
In 1944, in occupied Rome, the Nazis executed more Hamastan has practically Iy to the United States ana efforts on Iraq's behalf.
Development Is . Bringing
than 300 civilians in reprisal for an attack by Italian parti- destroyed Israel, a bona-fide victorious over AI Qaeda."
For example, 79 percent Down Western Civilization.-''
sans the day before that had killed 32 German soldiers.
ally and genuine democra.I dunno. I look across the of Iraqis have not much or She can be contacted via
In 1955, the Tennessee Williams play "Cat on a Hot Tin cy.) Turns out the "transfer- Iraqi border and see Kuwait no confidence in U.S. dianowest@verizon.net.)
Roof' opened on Broadway. .
. ·
In 1976, the presidel)t of Argentina, Isabel Peron, was
deposed by her country's military.
·
In 1980, one of El Salvador's most respected Roman
Catholic · Church leaders, Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo
Romero, was shot to death by gunmen as he celebrated
Mass in San· Salvador.
.
In 1989, the nation's worst oil spill occurred as the Sllpertanker Erion Valdez ran aground on a reef in Alaska's Prince
William S.ound and began leaking II million gallons of crude,
In 1995, after 20 years, British soldiers stopped routine
patrols in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
In 1999, NATO launched airstrikes against Y1,1goslavia,
marking the first time in its 50-year existence that the
alliance had ever attacked a sovereign country.
Five years ago: Iraqi state television showed two men
said to have been the U.S. crew of an Apache helicopter
forced down during heavy fighting in central Iraq. (Chief
Warrant Officer David Williams and Chief Warrant Officer
Ronald D. Young Jr. spent three weeks in captivity before
they were released with five other POWs.) ·
One year ago: The U.N. Security Council unanimously
voted to impose·new sanctions against Iran for its refusal to
stop enriching uranium. Japan's Miki Ando won the
women's title at the World Figure Skating Championship in
Tokyo; leading a t-2 finish for the host country with Mao
Asada second.
Today's Birthdays: Fashion and costume designer Bob
Mackie is 68. Actor R. lee Ermey is 64. Movie director Curtis
Hanson is 63. Comedian Louie Anderson is 55. Actor Robert
Carradine is,54. Actress Kelly LeBrnck is 48: TV personality
BY RACHEL BEcK
slowly tightening vise- an are calling for advice on how buy their homes are now
Star Jones is 46. Actress Annabella Sciorra is 44. Rock singerinterconnected web of fac- to deal with grown children defaulting on the loans at
AND ERtN McCLAM
musician Sharon Corr (The Corrs) is 38. Actress Lara Flynn
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
. tors combining to squeeze who have moved back in with alarming rates. Many . art!
Boyle is 38. Football player Peyton Manning is 32.
- - - - - - - - - - . , - Americans from all sides.
Mom and Dad after losing a ·"upside down" on their
Thought for Today: "Not to be able t.o grow old is just as
NEW YORK For . Take Jaci Rae of Salinas, job or just to save money.
loans, meaning they owe
ridiculous as to be unable to outgrow childhood." - Carl moilths, Americans have Calif. She runs a company,
• Less trash is being set on more on their mortgages
G. Jung, psychiatrist (1875-1961).
been subjected to a sort of Luco Sport, that sells golf the curbs of Mesa, ,Ariz., than their homes are worth. '
economic water torture- a · ·bags· and accessories. The where surging home foredoNearly 9 million housemaddening drip of bad news merchandise is made with ~ures are leaving more hous- holds now have upside- •
about jobs, gas prices, sag- foam, which is based on es empty. That means fewer down mortgages, and for the
LETTERS TO THE
ging home values, creeping petroleum, so record oil homeowners paying the city first time ever, . aggregate
·inflation, the slouching dol- prices have taken a heavy toll. $22.60 a month for pickup. . mortgage debt is bigger than
EDITOR
lar and a stock market in
On the other end, her And William Black, the · the total value'of homeownLetters to the editor ·are welcrJme. They should be less bumpy descent.
•
clients are feeling the pinch, city's solid-waste manage- er equity - bigger by $836
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be · Then came Bear Steams. too, and cutting back. Sales ment director, says people billion,
according
to
signed, and include address and telephone number. No One of the five largest U.S. to retail clients are an eighth aren't throwing out as many research by Merrill Lynch.
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in invesunent banks nearly col- of what they were a year appliances and bulk items,
The housing problem set
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of lapsed in a single day before ago. So Rae had to cut five like furniture. They're stick- off the dominoeS: Surging
.thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- the government propped it up of her 20 employees loose.
ing with what they have.
defaults meant the morted for publication.
by backing emergency loans
Now the company isn't
securities
On top of an economy gage-backed
and a riv;;U stepped in to buy buying products as far in that was already groaning plunged in value. That dried
it for a paltry $2 per share.
advance. With gas prices under the weight of a down- up the money to fund new
To the drumbeat~ of signs running high, she wa1ts for turn, Bear Stearns came home loans, and lenders
that seemed 'to foretell a tra- shipping companies to pick down like an anvil.
.
.
&lt;
everywhere became tighter
up
products
from
her
headditional
recession,
this
lt
tied
together
so
much
of
with credit.
(USPS 213-9QO)
Reader Services
having
·
added
a
nightmarish
specter
quarters
instead
of
llear Steams found itself
what's .wrong with today's
Ohio Valley Publishing
- an old-style run on the an employee drop them off. · economy - the housing in the cross hairs. Market
Co.
Correction Polley
She is nickel-and-dimibg crash, the credit crunch and ·rumors began to swirl aboqt
•
Published every afternoon, Monday · bank, customers clamoring
Our main concern in all stories is to
to pull their cash, a stately expenses at home, too. She a loss of confidence among the size of its exposure ~o
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate . If you~ know of an erro~
Wall Street tirm brought to eats in every night, has investors and consumers mortgage securities, whether
Pomeroy. Ohlo .
Second-class
.in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage _paid at Po.meroy.
its knees.
stopfll:'d going on road trips alike.
it had ample reserves to
992-2t56.
Member: The Associated Press and
The combination has · to VISit her family, dropped
Understanding
how . cover potential losses.
the Ohio Newspaper Associatkm. ,
forced the economy to the her satellite dish and can- things got so bad means Clients and investors began
·
Poatmatter:
Send
address
correcforefront
of the national celed
her
monthly rewinding to the start of the to demand their money back.
Our main number is
ti.ons to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court
conversation in a way it has Blockbuster movie rental.
housing boom. Wall Street.
"This problem begins with
(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
not
been
since
the
go-go
"I
want
to
make
sure
I
and
the
banks
made
it
far
the
fact that we underwrote
Department extensions are:
1990s,
and
for
entirely
have
enough
money
to
feed
easier
for
people
with
shaky
mortgages
sloppily, which
Subscription Rates
opposite
reasons.
my
family,"
Rae
says.
credit to get a mortgage - · means no one really knows
By carrier or motor route
As economists and Wall
Signs of the pinch are known as a subprime loan.
News
what those assets are worth,"
One month
'1 0.27
Street types grope for his- showing up everywhere:
Edhor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Investors wanted a piece said Lyle Gramley, a former
One year
'115.84
torical perspective - which
• By the end of 2007, 36 of the fast-growing mort- Federal Reserve .governor
Dally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. i 4
Senior
Citizen
rates
is
another
way
of
saying
a
percent
of consumers' dis- gage pie, so there was plen- and now an analyst with
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
One month
'1 0.27
road map out of this mess posable income went to food, ty of money sloshing Stanford Financial Group.
One year
'1 03.90
- Americans are nervously energy and medical care, a· around the market to pay for "That makes banl;ers very
Subscribers should . remit in advance
Advertising
wondering about retirement bigger chunk of income than the loans.
leery, and has resulted in a
Outoide Saloo: Dave Harris, Ext 15 direct to lhe Daily Senti1el. No sub·
savings,
interest
rates,
jobs
at
any
time
since
records
Financial
·
firms
sliced
up
significant
contraction in the
scription by mail permitted in areas
that had seemed safe.
Outolcie Saioo: Brenda Davis, Ext 1~ where home carrier service is avail~
were first kept in 1960, the mortgages and sold them availability of credit." .
They are surveying the aq:ording to Merrill Lynch.
Cllloo./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
as complex inve~tments,
The credit crunch means
able.
economic landscape and
• People are treating them- finding eager buyers among corporations can't horrow·as
asking: Just how bad is it?
selves less often. The pension funds, hedge funds eas1ly, so they are delaying
Mail Subacrlptlon
General Manager
.
lnalde Mflge County
They are peering over the National
Restaurant and more who were chasing big projects, which cuts into
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
' 32.26
edge and asking: How far Association says ·54 percent higher returns and willing to the JOb market. And many of
26 Weeks
'64 .20
down?
of restaurants reported declin- overlook risks.
the same companies were
52 Weeks
' 127.11
E·mall:
And the scariest part of ing traffic in January, and the
As long as housing prices already smarting from the
news @mydailysentinel.com
all? No one can say for sure. government says eating at went up, the strategy worked. downt11m in housing, which
. Outside Meigs County
•••
home increased last year for When they began to crumble, has made many Americans
13 Weeks
'53.55
Even before the crippling the first time since 2001.
·so did financial stability.
uneasy about their hou~Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
of
Bear
Stearns,
the
U.S.
•
Financial
planners
say
The
same
pc:ople
who
hold
wealth and caused
52
Weeks
'
214.21
www.myda1tysentinei.com
economy was acting as a . that more than ever, parents made a financ1al stretch to them to scrimp on spending.
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

AN EARlY
WITHDRAWAL
PENALTY IF
I USETHE
MONEY TO
FUEL MY
CAR?

~nto

the economic abyss: How deep will it go?

The Daily Sentin.el

Sentenced

MIDDLEPORT - Robert Leslie Jacobs, 69, of Middleport,
passed away on Saturday, March 22, 2008 at his residence.
. fie was born · on Nov. 16, 1938 to the late Robert and
Ninetta (Myers) Jacobs in Columbus. Mr. Jacobs worked as
a weld~r at Mid-Ohio Products for 24 years from where he
retired m 2003. He was also and avid sportsman, loving to
deer hunt and fish.
He is survived by his wife of 26 years Judy Jacobs,
Middleport; and children, Susan Jacobs, Keith and Rhoda
Jacobs and Jennifer and l\1att Albert, all of Columbus; Lisa
Marcum and Bob Anderson, Penny and Jim Sheets, and
'Donald Steinmetz, all of Middleport; Rick and Connie
.Steinmetz of Fort Gay, W.Va.
· • ·•
Also surviving are his brothers and sisters, Ronald and
June Jacobs and Clara and Roy Woolever, all of
Reynoldsburg, Linda O'Neal, and John and Pamela Jacobs,
all of Grove City; Rosemary and Robert 'Boswell of
Reynoldsburg; numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren, a spiecial friend, Johnny Estep of Columbus, and
several nieces and nephews. •
. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by brothers
and sisters, Roger Jacobs, Barbara Hunter and Gaty Jacobs,
and a brother-in-law, Bob O'Neal.
· Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, March 26,
2008 at the Fisher Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Dr. James Acree officiating. Burial will follow in the Wells Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 2-4 and
from 6-8 p.m. on Thesday March 25, 2008 at the funeral home
Online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

POMEROY -Alex A.
was sentenced in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to a year in
·prison on a charge of unautho.rized use of a motor
vehicle. Sentencing on a
charge of failure to appear
after recognizance release
was continued.

Rita camill Little
· ·. LONG BOTIOM - Rita Camill Little, 63, of Long
Bottom,Ohio,passedawayonFriday,March21,2008,at.
the Ohio State Medical Center in Columbus.
.. She was born on Dec. II, 1944, in Remington, W.Va.,
· .daughter of the late Rev. John and Cozetta Simpson.
. She is surviv~ by her h\lsband, Jerry Little .Sr., daughter
Teresa Lynn .(Chris) Weidner of Bremen, Ga_, three sons:
·Jerry G. (Jennifer) Little Jr. of Russellsport, Ohio, Bill J.
Little of Longbottom, and Eric J. Little of Jackson Center,
.Ohio; nine grandchildren; five sisters: Jean (Jim) Criss of
Texas, Nancy (Frankie) Malcolm of Akron, Ohio, Emma
. Milholm of Parkersburg, W.Va.. Mary Heavner of
Sistersville, W.Va .• and Johnenne (Ralph) Gannon of
'Bryon, Maine; brother, John Edward Simpson of
Flemington, W.Va., and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
a.sister, Connie Riffle.
Funeral services will be at II a.m. on Wednesday, March
26, 2006. at the Fisher-Anders'on-McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport, with Pastor John Simpson officil1ting. Burial
will follow at Riverview Cemetery. Visiting bouts will be
from 6 until 8 p.m. Thesday at the funeral"home. ·
A re~istry is available online by visiting www.andersont
mcdamel.com.

d tit.
"believing . ~,00
mgs
1
.could happen.
·
. :Despite having been in the
county and funded by · the
ACS for a few years now,
the CRC remains one of
what advisory board n:tembers consider a best kept
secret, a secret they hope
more people 'bear about. ·
The center offers free
resources to cancer patients
and their families, including
access to the ACS' Patient
Navigator Program which

•

POMEROY - Divorce
actions were filed in Meigs

County Common Pleas some trees.
Court by Tabitha Storms,
Arms suffered non-incaMiddleport, against Randall pacitatin~ injuries and her
Storms, Jr., Racine; Andrew car sustamed disabling damCoffman, Racine, against age. She was cited for failure
Amy R. Coffman, Racine; to control.
•••
and Leonard .W. Watkins,
POMEROY - Jessica P.
Pomeroy, against Kristina
Marie Kanieki Watkins, Roberts, 18, 300 Hudson
St. , Middleport, was cited
Pomeroy.
for failure to yield following a two-car accident
Wednesday evening.
.
According to troopers, at
POMEROY - Lacee K. approximately 5 p.m.
Arms, 16, 33561 Bailey Roberts was driving a
Run Road, was transported 1998 Ford Aerostar minito the Holzer Hospital van when she failed to
Emergency Room by Meigs yield the right of way from
County Medics following a a stop sign at the intersecone-car
accident tion of Ohio 7 and Leading
Wednesday morning.
Creek
in
Salisbury
, According to troopers, Township. She then struck
she was driving south- a Mark J. Minshall, 32,
bound on Baileys Run just 162
Mulberry
Ave .,
north of Ohio 124 when . Pomeroy, ·while he was
she lost control of the 1989 traveling northbounq in his
Pontiac · Grand Prix she Porsche 924.
·
was driving and slid off of
No injuries were reported,
the right side of the road- but Minshall's vehicle susway; Her vehicle then tained disabling damage
struck a cui vert, rolled and Roberts' vehicle nonover, and came to rest amid functional damage.

Highway Patrol

,
I
•
hlldbirth
I
. c ass
0 B.· eness to 01'T.e·c .
ea Y '

.

ATHENS _ . Expectant
mothers and their birth

Lower Level room 010.
The class focuses on include a tour of the
First-time parents, as well as breathing . apd, relaxation O'Bieoess Birth Center.
The class is free of charge
coaches ot cmiipanions are experienced parents, will techniques . as well as other
leilrn
what's
new
in
materniand
will be held six times
_?ptio~s.
The
cl!JSS
pain-relief
. Q.~~~e~~
to Me:::Cfa~ ty. care. · Expectant parents
also provtdes mfoimatton on alternating months this
. Hospital's childbirth class will also learn the stages of about hospital rrocedures year. For more information
Sunday, April6, from 2 f'm. labor and delivery and ·what and variations o labor. An or to register, call the
to 6 p.m. The location o the to expect before and after introduction to the maternity O'Bieness Birth' Center at
services at .•O'Bieness will (740) 592-9275.
class will be in O'Bleness' the baby is born.
----------------------------------------

Rio
from Page A1

'County

from PageA1

Divorces

POMEROY
Foreclosure actions were
filed m Meigs County

Mecla Jane Stout

'

POMEROY -Actions
for dissolution of marriage
were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Kelly P. Sauber, Shade, and
Cindy J. Poole, Athens, and
Tiffany
Lynn
White,
Racine, and Shawn Keith
White, Pomeroy.
A dissolution was granted
to Michelle · L. Baker and
Richard L. Baker.

Foreclosures

·Deaths

\

Dissolutions

,
POMEROY - Marria~e
licenses were issued m
Meigs County Probate
Court to John Jay Proffitt,
40, Pomeory, and Martha
Anne Varian, 35, Racine,
and to Michael Wamsley,
23, Pomeroy, and Felicia A.
See, 18, Middleport.

Sidewalk

v
•

Marriage
licenses

Emma Adams

ana

Common Pleas Court by
Home National Bank,
Racine, against Troy E.
Boggs, Long Bottom, and
others; and by Hocking
Valley
Bank; Athens,
against Jammi Gillilan,
Tuppers Plains, and others.
A foreclosure was granted
to Home National Bank
against ·
Samuel
A.
Diamond, and others.

C~g

, .
university andTom Karr for
RGCC. The . agreement
ended an, impasse between
the boards over a new
instructional
contract
between the university and
the community college to
RACINE - Emma Adams, age 96, of Racine, died replace the contract that was
Saturday, March 22, 2008, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation to expire June 30.
The current contract has
Center, Pomeroy.
·
b
een
extended to June 30,
She was born on April 30, 1911, daughter of the later Carl
Easterday and Lela Smith Easterday. She was a retired, 2009.
In addition to extending
Registered Nurse. She .was a member of Racine Baptist
Church, Racine Grange, the Meigs County Historical the institutions' partnership
for another year, ·the new
Society, and the Osterag-Easterday Association of Ohio.
In addition to he( parents, she was preceded in death byd
h!)r husband, Cleo Adams, brother, David Easterday .an
sister, Mary Virginia Easterday.
·
She is survived 'by a sister, Myrtle Easterday Holter of
Racine and a brother, Marion "Curly" Easterday of Racine.
Graveside services will be at I p.m. on TUesday, March 25,
from PageA1
2008, in the Oak Grove Cemetery. Interment will be oin Oak
Grove Cemetery. Calling hours will be from 6 until 8 p.m. on
The
Racine Village
Monday, March 24, 2008, at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
In lieu of flowers,.donations can be made to the Meigs County Council and Mayor ' Scott
Hill have pledged their supSenior Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
port of Spencer in his efforts
to secure the grant funding.
Spencer and Wolfe met
with ODOT representatives
last Wednesday to discuss
securing a state-approved
consultant on the project
and beginning the implementation timeline. Terry
CINCINNATI -. Meda Jane (nee Werner) Stout died Myers, an engineer for the
March 22, 2008 at Hospice of Cincinnati. She was the wife. TRIAD Companx. has
.of Dr. E. Wayne Stout of Mason Christian Village . .
worked with the v1llage to
Visitation will be held Thesday, March 25, from 10 a.m organize a "direct 'route to
to I p.m. with services-at I·p.m. il.tChristCiwrchofMason, school plan", and to engi5165 Western Row Road, Mason, Ohio. Additional services neer the project at implewill be held at North Street Church of Christ in Caldwell mentation. STANTEC was
Wednesday, March 26, 2008 with visitation hours from ~OU assigned to the village for
a.m. to I p.m. Services will be held a~ I p.m. ~ter_nment ~~
consulting purposes.
·follow at Ragan's Chapel Cemetery m Hoskinsvllle, Ohio.
· .Safety survey
Southern . Local also
recently initiated a safety
sioners approved a change survey for students and parorder l!IId approved a bid ents. "It is very important to
from KAL Electric of · have data to su~rt your
Athens for the installation grant needs," sa1d Wolfe.
from PageA1
of new lighting at the "It's also good to know
Racine Ball Field. The pro- what the people in your
Sheets said department
community think. Both parheads and others, mcluding ject will be financ ed ents and students prov1ded
.commissioners, have com· through the Community an ovei'Whelming response
.pleted a management train- Development Block Grant to survey questions."
Although both Racine
mg program, and scheduled formula program.
];&gt;resent
were
safety meetings for the
Commissioqi,rs s~· and
rem3inder of the ye$r. '
Mlck Davenl""l
'Clerk
·
Other business
Gloria
Kloei.
·
·
Meeting Friday, commis·

Center

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

For the Record

Robert Leslie Jacobs

T 0 DAY I N H I S T 0 R Y

IS THERE.

www.mydallysentinel.com

.Obituaries

Afterfive years, what have w.e ·won?

Tbe Daily Sentinel

24, 2008

,

contract puts into place
measures .that will enable
them to work more effeclively together in the future,
Sojkannoted.
' ''The agree~nt allows the
chancellor to appoint a coordinating officer who will
help the institutions make
critical decisions for the
future and who is also
responsible for working with
the college and the university to improve the working
relationship . and continued
viability for both," he said.
''The university welcomes
the creation of the new
coordinating officer's posilion to guide this unique

Village and the Southern
· Local feel that the community ·is very safe, some parents expressed safety con·
cerns and fears of their child
being abducted.
"We live in a great corn~
munity," said Wolfe. "But
the world i$ changing and
some of the concerns that
. we used to think about being
only in big cities are now
real concerns in small town
America. Those concerns
are here in Mei~s County."
' "Ultimately,'
said
Spencer, "We found that we
would have more kids·walking to school if they had a
safe path to take. The poor
condition of the existing
sidewalk, the steps, and the
traffic ... all of those are con,
- cerns that. parents have:"
Wolfe emphasized that
the school currently has a
health/wellness ·policy in
place and that students are
regularly educated on the
benefits of a healthy
' lifestyle.
Additionally,
school nurse Junie Maynard
leads the wellness charge
and through regular programs, all staff at Southern
encourage students to be
active and eat healthy.
"Part of the Safe Routes
grant addresses Ed!lcation
and Encouragement. We

Local Briefs

works with local families to
·help them navigate through
tile many issues and probPOMEROY ---, Tl)e Meigs County Health Department
lems cancer c·reates. The
will
offer an childhood immunization and adult flu shot
center also offers free wigs
clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. tomorrow.
and prosthetics.
The center has a mission
to increase local access to
· cancer' prevention, eill'ly
detection and quality of life
information for cancer
"CariiJ6/Vr cracll...,.,.,. 011/llwy..,., • . . , - . •f.., ownfam/111"
patients, families, loved
Penoaal Remo•al ' .
ones and the general public.
you with .U your q-tiooo)
For morv! "information on
the dedicationlreception/CRC
services call Courtney Sim at
992-6626.•The ACS' Ferman
TUcker- FUMrlll Director In Chii'IJI
l Ray "Reel" Tucker· Family Owned
E. Moore CRC is open from
8-4 p.m., Monday-Friday at
lad Sift&lt;! 304-773-5561 Muon, WV
, the health department.

Immunization clinic

collaboration that' ·has provided such benefit to our
·students, staff and the_entire
community for over three
decades," Sojka said.
·Sojka praised · Regents
Chancellor Eric Fingerhut
and his leadership in orga· nizing a March 10 meeting
of trustees and presidents of
both institutions that allowed
the parties to move forward
and construct the agreement.
Chapman expressed his
pleasure that the educational partnership will continue
and that the institutions wi.JI
receive assistance in planning for the future.
"We look forward to

workifig with the new coordinating officer who will
help us resolve the issues
which were discussed in
mediation," he said.
Chapman included both
financial and governance
issues among those that
must be addressed to
improve the working relationship and long-term viability of both institutions.
Both Sojka and Chapman
noted that resolution of
these issues represents a
challenge, "but we are hopeful that an objective outsider
with experience in higher
education will bring .a fresh
perspective," Sojka said.

feel we address those needs
well," said Superintendent
Tony Deem. "We are to the
implementation stage. We
could get more kids walking
to school if we had a safer
. path for them to follow."
Another concern of both
the village and !he school is
the lack of handicap access
now existing. There are severa) handicapped students
and citizens in the community that have to physjcally
go into the highway to get
around steps on , the side- .
walk. Spencer reports that
currently there are five sets
of steps on the current route
to school. This area is part
·of the area to be addressed
in the. grant. ·
Survey results
Of the surveys returned to
the school, students reported that they walked to
school or rode a bicycle to
school with the following
pattern: 17 always, 18
almost always, and 28
sometimes for a .total of 63
kids that walked to school at
least some of the time. 220
students reported that they
never walked to school.
18 students walked to
school every day, 17 walked
3-4 times a week, and 28 of

those students walked 1-2
times a week. Although !54
students felt they lived too
far away to walk to school,
39 reported they did not
walk to school because they
were afraid (23 were afraid
of an accident, 16 were
afraid of being abducted).
20 simply did not want to
walk to school, but lived
within Z miles, and 42 students had parents that simply did not want them to
walk, but lived within the
two miles. Parent surveys
reflected similar results.
Survey results indicated
that 176 of 295 kids (60%)
walked the same path or
approximately .4 of a mile
(The same route addressed
in the Safe Routes To
Schools grant) to Hill's
Sunoco after school or after
some type of after-school
activity.
Racine Village and the
Southern Local School
District are also collaborating on other projects including a grant to develop the
Community Fitness Center at
Southern Local. Other recent
projects in which the two
have worked together have ·
been impro.vements at the
ball fields at Star Mill Park.

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

•

Monday, March

PageA4
Monday, Mm:ch

24, 20Q8

As a conservative in no
- "a secure and stable" forces; 70 percent think U.S .
way comforted by the
state, to be sure, "friendly"- forces have dqne a bad or
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992·2~57
Clinton-Obama-Pelosi-Reid
ish to the United States, and very bad job; and, most
www.mydallysentinel.com
rhetoric on the war in Iraq, I
"victorious" over Saddam appalling, 42 percent think
Hussein, all fruits of an earli- attacks on U.S. forces are
should have taken heart from
the
president's
fifth-anniver'
er
U.S. victory. But there acceptable.
Acceptable!
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diana
sary remarks revisiting the
was , • absolutely · nothing This last figure ·is down 15
West
Battle of Baghdad, the overtransformative about that . points from six months ago,
Dan GQodrich
.'
throw of Saddam Hussein,
not in the so I suppose we should
accomplishment,
Publisher
the thrill of Iraqi elections,
region, not in the Muslim applaud the "progress." But
the perfidy of At Qaeda terworld. (You'd think we'd at just imagine if, after D-Day
Charlene Hoeflich ·
least
get a break on oi I prices in 1944, 42 percent of the
rorists, the Anbar Awakening, mative power of liberty"
General Manager-News Editor
from
countries we saved French believed att11cking
and the success of the surge. always hits a rut m·a Shana1 didn't.
based society, but such a from Saddam Hussein.) Do Americans was "acceptWas it because the speech, blip still doesn't show up on we have reason to expect able"; or if after the Battle of
that even a democratic Iraq Chosin Reservoir in 1950,
with its tone of meandering the presidential radar.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
reminiscence, sounded more
Rather, as Bush put it, "a will turn into something bet- 42 percent of South Koreans
- a linchpin of our did, too; or if 42 percent of
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the · appropriate to a Soldiers free Iraq will fight terrorists ter
Middle
Eastern strategy?
Grenadians afier being liberHome remembrance 40 years instead of harboring them"
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom hence? Or was it beCause I'd _although wasn't Itaq per~
Listening to Gen. David ated by Ronald Reagan in
heard it all 40 times before? fectly happy to "harbor" Petraeus low-ball the much- 1983 were of the same vioof speech, or of the press; or the right of the
("Defeating
this enemy in arch-terrorist
Mahmoud vaunted surge's effect - "I lently anti-American mind:
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition Iraq wilt make
Would we consider such
it less likely Ahmadinejad ·a little earlier wouldn't ever use the word
the Government for a redress of grievances.
success
or
.
victory
or
anypeoples worthy of American .
that we' ll face the enemy this month? (And didn't
here at home." .. , "The future more than 100,000 Baghdad thing like that," he recently blood and treasure? And
-The First Amendment to the U_S, Constitution of the Middle East belorlgs to residents rally in favor of told Voice of America- and would we consider them
freedom.") That's part of it. Hezbollah in 2006?) "A free express frustration at the likely linchpins of a lon·gBut there was something Iraq," the president contin- pace of Iraqi "reconcilia- term alliance?
."Five years into this batelse. In these remarks taking ued, ''will be an example for tion" to The Washington
Post,'
it's
hard
to
say
yes.
tle,
there is an understandstock five years later, there others of the power of liberty
.
was very little sense of, well, to change the societies and to And especially not after sift- able debate over · whether
Today is Monday, March 24, the 84th day of 2008. There taking stock.
displace despair with hope." ing through the more dis- the war was wm:th fighting,
are 282 days left in the year.
·
Indeed, the president was
Such is the conservative turbing findings of a. recent whether the fight is worth
Today 's Highlight In History: On March 24, 1958, rock- . still rhapsodizing about the dream - and, more trou- BBC poll of Iraqi opinion. winning, and whether we
and,roll singer Elvis Presley was inducted into the Army in "transformative power of bling, the conservative stmte- For selective opttmists, the can win it;" the president
Memphis, Tenn. (After nearly six months of basic training liberty" -. even as such · gy to thwart jihad coming poll does indeed reflect an said. Me, I'm still waiting
at Fort Hood, Texas, Presley was posted to Friedberg, West power has failed to trans- from the Middle East. Charles increasing Iraqi optimism, for a straightforward discusGermany; he was honorably discharged in 1960.)
·form any of the Islamic soci- Krauthammer recently con- which has cheered conserva- sion of what it is we can reaOn this date: In 1765, Britain enacted the Quartering Act, eties we have been micro- templated Iraq in similar tives as happy anniversary sonably expect to win.
requiring American colonists to provide temporary housing managing over the past few terms: "Imagine the transfer- news. What has gone more
(Diana West is a coluntllfst
to British soldiers.
years, from Afghanistan to · mative effects in the region or less overlooked (or dis- for The Washington Times.
In 1882, German scientist Robert Koch announced in Hamastail, into anything . and indeed in the entire missed) are . the survey She is the author . of "The
'Berlin that he had discovered the bacillus responsible for resembling liberty-based Muslim world, of achieving a results indicating a shocking Death of the Grown-up:
tuberculosis. .
societies. ("Liberty" in secure and stable Iraq, friend- Iraqi hostility to America's How America's Arrested
In 1944, in occupied Rome, the Nazis executed more Hamastan has practically Iy to the United States ana efforts on Iraq's behalf.
Development Is . Bringing
than 300 civilians in reprisal for an attack by Italian parti- destroyed Israel, a bona-fide victorious over AI Qaeda."
For example, 79 percent Down Western Civilization.-''
sans the day before that had killed 32 German soldiers.
ally and genuine democra.I dunno. I look across the of Iraqis have not much or She can be contacted via
In 1955, the Tennessee Williams play "Cat on a Hot Tin cy.) Turns out the "transfer- Iraqi border and see Kuwait no confidence in U.S. dianowest@verizon.net.)
Roof' opened on Broadway. .
. ·
In 1976, the presidel)t of Argentina, Isabel Peron, was
deposed by her country's military.
·
In 1980, one of El Salvador's most respected Roman
Catholic · Church leaders, Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo
Romero, was shot to death by gunmen as he celebrated
Mass in San· Salvador.
.
In 1989, the nation's worst oil spill occurred as the Sllpertanker Erion Valdez ran aground on a reef in Alaska's Prince
William S.ound and began leaking II million gallons of crude,
In 1995, after 20 years, British soldiers stopped routine
patrols in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
In 1999, NATO launched airstrikes against Y1,1goslavia,
marking the first time in its 50-year existence that the
alliance had ever attacked a sovereign country.
Five years ago: Iraqi state television showed two men
said to have been the U.S. crew of an Apache helicopter
forced down during heavy fighting in central Iraq. (Chief
Warrant Officer David Williams and Chief Warrant Officer
Ronald D. Young Jr. spent three weeks in captivity before
they were released with five other POWs.) ·
One year ago: The U.N. Security Council unanimously
voted to impose·new sanctions against Iran for its refusal to
stop enriching uranium. Japan's Miki Ando won the
women's title at the World Figure Skating Championship in
Tokyo; leading a t-2 finish for the host country with Mao
Asada second.
Today's Birthdays: Fashion and costume designer Bob
Mackie is 68. Actor R. lee Ermey is 64. Movie director Curtis
Hanson is 63. Comedian Louie Anderson is 55. Actor Robert
Carradine is,54. Actress Kelly LeBrnck is 48: TV personality
BY RACHEL BEcK
slowly tightening vise- an are calling for advice on how buy their homes are now
Star Jones is 46. Actress Annabella Sciorra is 44. Rock singerinterconnected web of fac- to deal with grown children defaulting on the loans at
AND ERtN McCLAM
musician Sharon Corr (The Corrs) is 38. Actress Lara Flynn
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
. tors combining to squeeze who have moved back in with alarming rates. Many . art!
Boyle is 38. Football player Peyton Manning is 32.
- - - - - - - - - - . , - Americans from all sides.
Mom and Dad after losing a ·"upside down" on their
Thought for Today: "Not to be able t.o grow old is just as
NEW YORK For . Take Jaci Rae of Salinas, job or just to save money.
loans, meaning they owe
ridiculous as to be unable to outgrow childhood." - Carl moilths, Americans have Calif. She runs a company,
• Less trash is being set on more on their mortgages
G. Jung, psychiatrist (1875-1961).
been subjected to a sort of Luco Sport, that sells golf the curbs of Mesa, ,Ariz., than their homes are worth. '
economic water torture- a · ·bags· and accessories. The where surging home foredoNearly 9 million housemaddening drip of bad news merchandise is made with ~ures are leaving more hous- holds now have upside- •
about jobs, gas prices, sag- foam, which is based on es empty. That means fewer down mortgages, and for the
LETTERS TO THE
ging home values, creeping petroleum, so record oil homeowners paying the city first time ever, . aggregate
·inflation, the slouching dol- prices have taken a heavy toll. $22.60 a month for pickup. . mortgage debt is bigger than
EDITOR
lar and a stock market in
On the other end, her And William Black, the · the total value'of homeownLetters to the editor ·are welcrJme. They should be less bumpy descent.
•
clients are feeling the pinch, city's solid-waste manage- er equity - bigger by $836
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be · Then came Bear Steams. too, and cutting back. Sales ment director, says people billion,
according
to
signed, and include address and telephone number. No One of the five largest U.S. to retail clients are an eighth aren't throwing out as many research by Merrill Lynch.
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in invesunent banks nearly col- of what they were a year appliances and bulk items,
The housing problem set
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of lapsed in a single day before ago. So Rae had to cut five like furniture. They're stick- off the dominoeS: Surging
.thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- the government propped it up of her 20 employees loose.
ing with what they have.
defaults meant the morted for publication.
by backing emergency loans
Now the company isn't
securities
On top of an economy gage-backed
and a riv;;U stepped in to buy buying products as far in that was already groaning plunged in value. That dried
it for a paltry $2 per share.
advance. With gas prices under the weight of a down- up the money to fund new
To the drumbeat~ of signs running high, she wa1ts for turn, Bear Stearns came home loans, and lenders
that seemed 'to foretell a tra- shipping companies to pick down like an anvil.
.
.
&lt;
everywhere became tighter
up
products
from
her
headditional
recession,
this
lt
tied
together
so
much
of
with credit.
(USPS 213-9QO)
Reader Services
having
·
added
a
nightmarish
specter
quarters
instead
of
llear Steams found itself
what's .wrong with today's
Ohio Valley Publishing
- an old-style run on the an employee drop them off. · economy - the housing in the cross hairs. Market
Co.
Correction Polley
She is nickel-and-dimibg crash, the credit crunch and ·rumors began to swirl aboqt
•
Published every afternoon, Monday · bank, customers clamoring
Our main concern in all stories is to
to pull their cash, a stately expenses at home, too. She a loss of confidence among the size of its exposure ~o
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate . If you~ know of an erro~
Wall Street tirm brought to eats in every night, has investors and consumers mortgage securities, whether
Pomeroy. Ohlo .
Second-class
.in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage _paid at Po.meroy.
its knees.
stopfll:'d going on road trips alike.
it had ample reserves to
992-2t56.
Member: The Associated Press and
The combination has · to VISit her family, dropped
Understanding
how . cover potential losses.
the Ohio Newspaper Associatkm. ,
forced the economy to the her satellite dish and can- things got so bad means Clients and investors began
·
Poatmatter:
Send
address
correcforefront
of the national celed
her
monthly rewinding to the start of the to demand their money back.
Our main number is
ti.ons to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court
conversation in a way it has Blockbuster movie rental.
housing boom. Wall Street.
"This problem begins with
(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
not
been
since
the
go-go
"I
want
to
make
sure
I
and
the
banks
made
it
far
the
fact that we underwrote
Department extensions are:
1990s,
and
for
entirely
have
enough
money
to
feed
easier
for
people
with
shaky
mortgages
sloppily, which
Subscription Rates
opposite
reasons.
my
family,"
Rae
says.
credit to get a mortgage - · means no one really knows
By carrier or motor route
As economists and Wall
Signs of the pinch are known as a subprime loan.
News
what those assets are worth,"
One month
'1 0.27
Street types grope for his- showing up everywhere:
Edhor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Investors wanted a piece said Lyle Gramley, a former
One year
'115.84
torical perspective - which
• By the end of 2007, 36 of the fast-growing mort- Federal Reserve .governor
Dally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. i 4
Senior
Citizen
rates
is
another
way
of
saying
a
percent
of consumers' dis- gage pie, so there was plen- and now an analyst with
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
One month
'1 0.27
road map out of this mess posable income went to food, ty of money sloshing Stanford Financial Group.
One year
'1 03.90
- Americans are nervously energy and medical care, a· around the market to pay for "That makes banl;ers very
Subscribers should . remit in advance
Advertising
wondering about retirement bigger chunk of income than the loans.
leery, and has resulted in a
Outoide Saloo: Dave Harris, Ext 15 direct to lhe Daily Senti1el. No sub·
savings,
interest
rates,
jobs
at
any
time
since
records
Financial
·
firms
sliced
up
significant
contraction in the
scription by mail permitted in areas
that had seemed safe.
Outolcie Saioo: Brenda Davis, Ext 1~ where home carrier service is avail~
were first kept in 1960, the mortgages and sold them availability of credit." .
They are surveying the aq:ording to Merrill Lynch.
Cllloo./Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
as complex inve~tments,
The credit crunch means
able.
economic landscape and
• People are treating them- finding eager buyers among corporations can't horrow·as
asking: Just how bad is it?
selves less often. The pension funds, hedge funds eas1ly, so they are delaying
Mail Subacrlptlon
General Manager
.
lnalde Mflge County
They are peering over the National
Restaurant and more who were chasing big projects, which cuts into
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
' 32.26
edge and asking: How far Association says ·54 percent higher returns and willing to the JOb market. And many of
26 Weeks
'64 .20
down?
of restaurants reported declin- overlook risks.
the same companies were
52 Weeks
' 127.11
E·mall:
And the scariest part of ing traffic in January, and the
As long as housing prices already smarting from the
news @mydailysentinel.com
all? No one can say for sure. government says eating at went up, the strategy worked. downt11m in housing, which
. Outside Meigs County
•••
home increased last year for When they began to crumble, has made many Americans
13 Weeks
'53.55
Even before the crippling the first time since 2001.
·so did financial stability.
uneasy about their hou~Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
of
Bear
Stearns,
the
U.S.
•
Financial
planners
say
The
same
pc:ople
who
hold
wealth and caused
52
Weeks
'
214.21
www.myda1tysentinei.com
economy was acting as a . that more than ever, parents made a financ1al stretch to them to scrimp on spending.
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

AN EARlY
WITHDRAWAL
PENALTY IF
I USETHE
MONEY TO
FUEL MY
CAR?

~nto

the economic abyss: How deep will it go?

The Daily Sentin.el

Sentenced

MIDDLEPORT - Robert Leslie Jacobs, 69, of Middleport,
passed away on Saturday, March 22, 2008 at his residence.
. fie was born · on Nov. 16, 1938 to the late Robert and
Ninetta (Myers) Jacobs in Columbus. Mr. Jacobs worked as
a weld~r at Mid-Ohio Products for 24 years from where he
retired m 2003. He was also and avid sportsman, loving to
deer hunt and fish.
He is survived by his wife of 26 years Judy Jacobs,
Middleport; and children, Susan Jacobs, Keith and Rhoda
Jacobs and Jennifer and l\1att Albert, all of Columbus; Lisa
Marcum and Bob Anderson, Penny and Jim Sheets, and
'Donald Steinmetz, all of Middleport; Rick and Connie
.Steinmetz of Fort Gay, W.Va.
· • ·•
Also surviving are his brothers and sisters, Ronald and
June Jacobs and Clara and Roy Woolever, all of
Reynoldsburg, Linda O'Neal, and John and Pamela Jacobs,
all of Grove City; Rosemary and Robert 'Boswell of
Reynoldsburg; numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren, a spiecial friend, Johnny Estep of Columbus, and
several nieces and nephews. •
. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by brothers
and sisters, Roger Jacobs, Barbara Hunter and Gaty Jacobs,
and a brother-in-law, Bob O'Neal.
· Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, March 26,
2008 at the Fisher Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Dr. James Acree officiating. Burial will follow in the Wells Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 2-4 and
from 6-8 p.m. on Thesday March 25, 2008 at the funeral home
Online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

POMEROY -Alex A.
was sentenced in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to a year in
·prison on a charge of unautho.rized use of a motor
vehicle. Sentencing on a
charge of failure to appear
after recognizance release
was continued.

Rita camill Little
· ·. LONG BOTIOM - Rita Camill Little, 63, of Long
Bottom,Ohio,passedawayonFriday,March21,2008,at.
the Ohio State Medical Center in Columbus.
.. She was born on Dec. II, 1944, in Remington, W.Va.,
· .daughter of the late Rev. John and Cozetta Simpson.
. She is surviv~ by her h\lsband, Jerry Little .Sr., daughter
Teresa Lynn .(Chris) Weidner of Bremen, Ga_, three sons:
·Jerry G. (Jennifer) Little Jr. of Russellsport, Ohio, Bill J.
Little of Longbottom, and Eric J. Little of Jackson Center,
.Ohio; nine grandchildren; five sisters: Jean (Jim) Criss of
Texas, Nancy (Frankie) Malcolm of Akron, Ohio, Emma
. Milholm of Parkersburg, W.Va.. Mary Heavner of
Sistersville, W.Va .• and Johnenne (Ralph) Gannon of
'Bryon, Maine; brother, John Edward Simpson of
Flemington, W.Va., and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
a.sister, Connie Riffle.
Funeral services will be at II a.m. on Wednesday, March
26, 2006. at the Fisher-Anders'on-McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport, with Pastor John Simpson officil1ting. Burial
will follow at Riverview Cemetery. Visiting bouts will be
from 6 until 8 p.m. Thesday at the funeral"home. ·
A re~istry is available online by visiting www.andersont
mcdamel.com.

d tit.
"believing . ~,00
mgs
1
.could happen.
·
. :Despite having been in the
county and funded by · the
ACS for a few years now,
the CRC remains one of
what advisory board n:tembers consider a best kept
secret, a secret they hope
more people 'bear about. ·
The center offers free
resources to cancer patients
and their families, including
access to the ACS' Patient
Navigator Program which

•

POMEROY - Divorce
actions were filed in Meigs

County Common Pleas some trees.
Court by Tabitha Storms,
Arms suffered non-incaMiddleport, against Randall pacitatin~ injuries and her
Storms, Jr., Racine; Andrew car sustamed disabling damCoffman, Racine, against age. She was cited for failure
Amy R. Coffman, Racine; to control.
•••
and Leonard .W. Watkins,
POMEROY - Jessica P.
Pomeroy, against Kristina
Marie Kanieki Watkins, Roberts, 18, 300 Hudson
St. , Middleport, was cited
Pomeroy.
for failure to yield following a two-car accident
Wednesday evening.
.
According to troopers, at
POMEROY - Lacee K. approximately 5 p.m.
Arms, 16, 33561 Bailey Roberts was driving a
Run Road, was transported 1998 Ford Aerostar minito the Holzer Hospital van when she failed to
Emergency Room by Meigs yield the right of way from
County Medics following a a stop sign at the intersecone-car
accident tion of Ohio 7 and Leading
Wednesday morning.
Creek
in
Salisbury
, According to troopers, Township. She then struck
she was driving south- a Mark J. Minshall, 32,
bound on Baileys Run just 162
Mulberry
Ave .,
north of Ohio 124 when . Pomeroy, ·while he was
she lost control of the 1989 traveling northbounq in his
Pontiac · Grand Prix she Porsche 924.
·
was driving and slid off of
No injuries were reported,
the right side of the road- but Minshall's vehicle susway; Her vehicle then tained disabling damage
struck a cui vert, rolled and Roberts' vehicle nonover, and came to rest amid functional damage.

Highway Patrol

,
I
•
hlldbirth
I
. c ass
0 B.· eness to 01'T.e·c .
ea Y '

.

ATHENS _ . Expectant
mothers and their birth

Lower Level room 010.
The class focuses on include a tour of the
First-time parents, as well as breathing . apd, relaxation O'Bieoess Birth Center.
The class is free of charge
coaches ot cmiipanions are experienced parents, will techniques . as well as other
leilrn
what's
new
in
materniand
will be held six times
_?ptio~s.
The
cl!JSS
pain-relief
. Q.~~~e~~
to Me:::Cfa~ ty. care. · Expectant parents
also provtdes mfoimatton on alternating months this
. Hospital's childbirth class will also learn the stages of about hospital rrocedures year. For more information
Sunday, April6, from 2 f'm. labor and delivery and ·what and variations o labor. An or to register, call the
to 6 p.m. The location o the to expect before and after introduction to the maternity O'Bieness Birth' Center at
services at .•O'Bieness will (740) 592-9275.
class will be in O'Bleness' the baby is born.
----------------------------------------

Rio
from Page A1

'County

from PageA1

Divorces

POMEROY
Foreclosure actions were
filed m Meigs County

Mecla Jane Stout

'

POMEROY -Actions
for dissolution of marriage
were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Kelly P. Sauber, Shade, and
Cindy J. Poole, Athens, and
Tiffany
Lynn
White,
Racine, and Shawn Keith
White, Pomeroy.
A dissolution was granted
to Michelle · L. Baker and
Richard L. Baker.

Foreclosures

·Deaths

\

Dissolutions

,
POMEROY - Marria~e
licenses were issued m
Meigs County Probate
Court to John Jay Proffitt,
40, Pomeory, and Martha
Anne Varian, 35, Racine,
and to Michael Wamsley,
23, Pomeroy, and Felicia A.
See, 18, Middleport.

Sidewalk

v
•

Marriage
licenses

Emma Adams

ana

Common Pleas Court by
Home National Bank,
Racine, against Troy E.
Boggs, Long Bottom, and
others; and by Hocking
Valley
Bank; Athens,
against Jammi Gillilan,
Tuppers Plains, and others.
A foreclosure was granted
to Home National Bank
against ·
Samuel
A.
Diamond, and others.

C~g

, .
university andTom Karr for
RGCC. The . agreement
ended an, impasse between
the boards over a new
instructional
contract
between the university and
the community college to
RACINE - Emma Adams, age 96, of Racine, died replace the contract that was
Saturday, March 22, 2008, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation to expire June 30.
The current contract has
Center, Pomeroy.
·
b
een
extended to June 30,
She was born on April 30, 1911, daughter of the later Carl
Easterday and Lela Smith Easterday. She was a retired, 2009.
In addition to extending
Registered Nurse. She .was a member of Racine Baptist
Church, Racine Grange, the Meigs County Historical the institutions' partnership
for another year, ·the new
Society, and the Osterag-Easterday Association of Ohio.
In addition to he( parents, she was preceded in death byd
h!)r husband, Cleo Adams, brother, David Easterday .an
sister, Mary Virginia Easterday.
·
She is survived 'by a sister, Myrtle Easterday Holter of
Racine and a brother, Marion "Curly" Easterday of Racine.
Graveside services will be at I p.m. on TUesday, March 25,
from PageA1
2008, in the Oak Grove Cemetery. Interment will be oin Oak
Grove Cemetery. Calling hours will be from 6 until 8 p.m. on
The
Racine Village
Monday, March 24, 2008, at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
In lieu of flowers,.donations can be made to the Meigs County Council and Mayor ' Scott
Hill have pledged their supSenior Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
port of Spencer in his efforts
to secure the grant funding.
Spencer and Wolfe met
with ODOT representatives
last Wednesday to discuss
securing a state-approved
consultant on the project
and beginning the implementation timeline. Terry
CINCINNATI -. Meda Jane (nee Werner) Stout died Myers, an engineer for the
March 22, 2008 at Hospice of Cincinnati. She was the wife. TRIAD Companx. has
.of Dr. E. Wayne Stout of Mason Christian Village . .
worked with the v1llage to
Visitation will be held Thesday, March 25, from 10 a.m organize a "direct 'route to
to I p.m. with services-at I·p.m. il.tChristCiwrchofMason, school plan", and to engi5165 Western Row Road, Mason, Ohio. Additional services neer the project at implewill be held at North Street Church of Christ in Caldwell mentation. STANTEC was
Wednesday, March 26, 2008 with visitation hours from ~OU assigned to the village for
a.m. to I p.m. Services will be held a~ I p.m. ~ter_nment ~~
consulting purposes.
·follow at Ragan's Chapel Cemetery m Hoskinsvllle, Ohio.
· .Safety survey
Southern . Local also
recently initiated a safety
sioners approved a change survey for students and parorder l!IId approved a bid ents. "It is very important to
from KAL Electric of · have data to su~rt your
Athens for the installation grant needs," sa1d Wolfe.
from PageA1
of new lighting at the "It's also good to know
Racine Ball Field. The pro- what the people in your
Sheets said department
community think. Both parheads and others, mcluding ject will be financ ed ents and students prov1ded
.commissioners, have com· through the Community an ovei'Whelming response
.pleted a management train- Development Block Grant to survey questions."
Although both Racine
mg program, and scheduled formula program.
];&gt;resent
were
safety meetings for the
Commissioqi,rs s~· and
rem3inder of the ye$r. '
Mlck Davenl""l
'Clerk
·
Other business
Gloria
Kloei.
·
·
Meeting Friday, commis·

Center

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

For the Record

Robert Leslie Jacobs

T 0 DAY I N H I S T 0 R Y

IS THERE.

www.mydallysentinel.com

.Obituaries

Afterfive years, what have w.e ·won?

Tbe Daily Sentinel

24, 2008

,

contract puts into place
measures .that will enable
them to work more effeclively together in the future,
Sojkannoted.
' ''The agree~nt allows the
chancellor to appoint a coordinating officer who will
help the institutions make
critical decisions for the
future and who is also
responsible for working with
the college and the university to improve the working
relationship . and continued
viability for both," he said.
''The university welcomes
the creation of the new
coordinating officer's posilion to guide this unique

Village and the Southern
· Local feel that the community ·is very safe, some parents expressed safety con·
cerns and fears of their child
being abducted.
"We live in a great corn~
munity," said Wolfe. "But
the world i$ changing and
some of the concerns that
. we used to think about being
only in big cities are now
real concerns in small town
America. Those concerns
are here in Mei~s County."
' "Ultimately,'
said
Spencer, "We found that we
would have more kids·walking to school if they had a
safe path to take. The poor
condition of the existing
sidewalk, the steps, and the
traffic ... all of those are con,
- cerns that. parents have:"
Wolfe emphasized that
the school currently has a
health/wellness ·policy in
place and that students are
regularly educated on the
benefits of a healthy
' lifestyle.
Additionally,
school nurse Junie Maynard
leads the wellness charge
and through regular programs, all staff at Southern
encourage students to be
active and eat healthy.
"Part of the Safe Routes
grant addresses Ed!lcation
and Encouragement. We

Local Briefs

works with local families to
·help them navigate through
tile many issues and probPOMEROY ---, Tl)e Meigs County Health Department
lems cancer c·reates. The
will
offer an childhood immunization and adult flu shot
center also offers free wigs
clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. tomorrow.
and prosthetics.
The center has a mission
to increase local access to
· cancer' prevention, eill'ly
detection and quality of life
information for cancer
"CariiJ6/Vr cracll...,.,.,. 011/llwy..,., • . . , - . •f.., ownfam/111"
patients, families, loved
Penoaal Remo•al ' .
ones and the general public.
you with .U your q-tiooo)
For morv! "information on
the dedicationlreception/CRC
services call Courtney Sim at
992-6626.•The ACS' Ferman
TUcker- FUMrlll Director In Chii'IJI
l Ray "Reel" Tucker· Family Owned
E. Moore CRC is open from
8-4 p.m., Monday-Friday at
lad Sift&lt;! 304-773-5561 Muon, WV
, the health department.

Immunization clinic

collaboration that' ·has provided such benefit to our
·students, staff and the_entire
community for over three
decades," Sojka said.
·Sojka praised · Regents
Chancellor Eric Fingerhut
and his leadership in orga· nizing a March 10 meeting
of trustees and presidents of
both institutions that allowed
the parties to move forward
and construct the agreement.
Chapman expressed his
pleasure that the educational partnership will continue
and that the institutions wi.JI
receive assistance in planning for the future.
"We look forward to

workifig with the new coordinating officer who will
help us resolve the issues
which were discussed in
mediation," he said.
Chapman included both
financial and governance
issues among those that
must be addressed to
improve the working relationship and long-term viability of both institutions.
Both Sojka and Chapman
noted that resolution of
these issues represents a
challenge, "but we are hopeful that an objective outsider
with experience in higher
education will bring .a fresh
perspective," Sojka said.

feel we address those needs
well," said Superintendent
Tony Deem. "We are to the
implementation stage. We
could get more kids walking
to school if we had a safer
. path for them to follow."
Another concern of both
the village and !he school is
the lack of handicap access
now existing. There are severa) handicapped students
and citizens in the community that have to physjcally
go into the highway to get
around steps on , the side- .
walk. Spencer reports that
currently there are five sets
of steps on the current route
to school. This area is part
·of the area to be addressed
in the. grant. ·
Survey results
Of the surveys returned to
the school, students reported that they walked to
school or rode a bicycle to
school with the following
pattern: 17 always, 18
almost always, and 28
sometimes for a .total of 63
kids that walked to school at
least some of the time. 220
students reported that they
never walked to school.
18 students walked to
school every day, 17 walked
3-4 times a week, and 28 of

those students walked 1-2
times a week. Although !54
students felt they lived too
far away to walk to school,
39 reported they did not
walk to school because they
were afraid (23 were afraid
of an accident, 16 were
afraid of being abducted).
20 simply did not want to
walk to school, but lived
within Z miles, and 42 students had parents that simply did not want them to
walk, but lived within the
two miles. Parent surveys
reflected similar results.
Survey results indicated
that 176 of 295 kids (60%)
walked the same path or
approximately .4 of a mile
(The same route addressed
in the Safe Routes To
Schools grant) to Hill's
Sunoco after school or after
some type of after-school
activity.
Racine Village and the
Southern Local School
District are also collaborating on other projects including a grant to develop the
Community Fitness Center at
Southern Local. Other recent
projects in which the two
have worked together have ·
been impro.vements at the
ball fields at Star Mill Park.

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�Page.A6

'L OCAL • STATE
Local Weather
Sonshine Circle makes
contributions, caJ•t•ies out projects

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 24, 2008

RACINE - Reports on VFW which will ship them
contributions made and overseas.
projects carried out by the
Cakes, pies, and other
Sonshine Circle were goodies along with some
given at the group's recent other food collected by
meeting held at the Kathryn Hart were taken to
Bethany United Methodist God's NET for the kids who
attend there. The Sonshine
Church.
Contributions made by Circle decided to pay for
the group included f $250 to . having the carpet in the fela family who lost their lowship
haft
cleaned.
home by fire, $1800 to the Sq.1ffed.animals for a special
Southern
Equal project are being collected ;
Opportunities Mission who They are to be taken to the
will be starting a store in next meeting. It was. noted
Racine, and the regular that there are already 35
monthly gift of $25 to the stuffed items.
Senior Citizens Center.
It was announced that
Projects currently include luminaries are for sale for
collecting old greeting $10 for the Relay fpr Life
cards to be donated to an which will take place in
organization which makes May to raise money for the
new cards from the ·old American Cancer Society.
ones.
Members
were Kathryn Hart presided at the
reminded to take pop tabs
to the next meeting, and to
bring items which troops
overseas can use to be
given to the Tuppers Plains

meeting with re,P!JrtS being·
given by Ann Ztrkle, secretary, and Julie Campbell,
treasurer. Edie Hubbard
reported on correspondence
which included I 8 cards
sent out and 70 more signed
at the meeting making a
total in March of % cards
sent out. It was noted that
all of the cookbooks have
been sold.
Hubbard
cad "Each
Spring God Renews His
promise," and Blondena
Rainer read "I Know That
My Redeemer Liveth."
Evelyn foreman had prayer
before members exchanged
Easter basket lunches. The
group sand Happy Birthday
to Avis Harrison, Betty
Proffitt and Ann · Zirkle . .
Lillian Hayman and Shirley

Beegle also had March
birthdays, but were unable
to attend. To close the meeting, HubbarQread "Church
Bulletin Bloopers" and
Rainer read "Welcome to
One of My days." Rainer
also has an Easter prayer.
Members attending were
Blondena Rainer, Mattie
Teaford,
Martha
Lou
Beegle, Betty Proffitt, Avis
Harrison, Jackie White,
Kathy McDaniel, Ruth
Simpson, Judy Gilmore,
Mabel Brace, Mary Ball,
Louise
Frank,
Edie
Hubbard, Evelyn Foreman,
Kathryn
Hart,
Julie
Campbell, and Ann Zirkle.
Next meeting will be April
10 and hostesses will be
Louise
Frank,
Mattie
Beegle and Kathryn Hart.

Monday... Mostly cloudy showers. Not as cool with
with a chance of flurries in lows in the lower 40s.
the morning .. . Then partly Southwest winds 10 to 15
sunny with a chance of mph with gusts up to 30
snow showers with a slight mph.
Wednesday ... Mostly
chance of rain showers in
the afternoon. Highs · in the cloudy in the morning ...Then
lower 40s. Northwest winds . becoming partly sunny. A4Q
around 5 mph. Chance of percent chance of showers.
precipitation 20 percent.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Monday nlght... Partly
Wednesday night an!f
cloudy
in
the Thursday••• Mostly cloudy
evening... T,hen
clearing. with a 50 percent charice
Lows in the upper 20s. of showers. Lows in the
Northwest winds around 5 lower 40s. Highs in the
mph in the evening... mid 60s.
·
Becoming light and variThursday nlght••• Mostly
able.
cloudy
in
the
Thesday•••Partly sunny evening ... Then becoming ·
with a 20 percent chance of' partly cloudy. Lows in the
rain showers. Not as cool upper 40s.
with highs in the mid 50s. • Friday••• Mostly sunny.
Southwest winds 10 to 15 Highs around 70.
.
Friday
night ...Mostly
mph with gusts up to 25
mph.
cloudy with showers likely.
Thesday night...Cioudy Lows in · the mid 40s.
with a 50 percent chance of Chance of rain 60 percent.

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,,

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(740) 446-7619

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275 West Union Street

594-3571
.'

A 011e Stop Shop For ·
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11:11.~Hl*dl"it0 AJt1~ ('f:'fllt.t;

Mlntor~ at Gallla Academy, 5 p.m.

Saturday. M1rch

29

BayoBa...,.ll
Mlntorc, at Meigs, noon
Westfall at Meigs, 4 p.m.
'n'aick and Field

Galla Aqademy at Chillicothe, 11 a.m.
River Valley at Warren. 10 a . m~
Monday. March 31

BoyoBoHball
Galla Academy at Ironton, 5 p.m.
River valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
South Gallla at Huntington St, Joe, 5

p.m.
Ripley at Southern, 5 p.m.
Gl~o

Softball

Hannan at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.

-

215-A Slith Street
rt. Pleuant, WV lSSSO
384-675-7136
Fax: 304-675-7387

MILWAUKEE (AP) Cleveland coach · Mike
Brown has seen enough of
Mo Williams and the
Milwaukee Bucks for this
season.
Williams scored 29 points
and had 13 of Milwaukee's
26 assists, and the Bucks
snapped a six -game losing
streak with a I 08-98 victory
over the Cavaliers 'on
Saturday night.
Williams had four points
and six assists in the first
quarter, 12 points and five
assists in the third, and II
points and one assist in the

fourth to lead the Bucks past
the Cavaliers for· the third
time in the four-game season
series.
"We got our behinds
kicked," Brown said after
his team gave up, I 00 points
or more for the sixth straight
road game. 'T m glad we
. don't play those guys 82

times because Mo Williams
may be the all-time greatest
player ever, if we did."
Williams was 10-of-12
from the free throw line and
had on'e turnover.
"He's an excellent player,
but against us he has. more
than our number," Brown
said.
Nobody on Cleveland
could stop or keep up with
Williams as he raced up and
down the court. Brown even
faulted himself for not finding way to slow him down.
"It started with me,"
Brown said. "I was·at a loss

a

on'ship.
But
. now
Krzytewski's team is on a
two-year drought, having
WASHINGTON - Back bowed out in the first round
at his alma mater, back in in 2007.
the NCAAs, Bob Huggins
"No matter how well or
looked and sounded just like how hard you're playing,
the Bob Huggins everyone you've. got to put the ball in
remembers.
the
basket,"
said
He yelled . He groused. He Krzyzewski, whose team
drew an early technical foul. was held to 38 percent
And he willed jlis. No. 7- shooting and missed. J5 conseeded West Virginia past secutive 3-pointers in one
second-seeded D11ke.
stretch. "We didn't do that
Playing tough ,man-to- today."
.
man defense, grabbmg what : · Gerald Henderson scored
seemed like every loose 18 points fo.r Duke. But
ball, West Virginia used'Joe DeMarcus Nelson had only
Alexander's 22 points and six points on 2-for-ll shootII rebounds and all sorts of ing, a game after scoring .
contribution's from unlikely two when the Blu.e Devils
sources for a 73-67 victoty eked out a one-point victory
over Duke on Saturday, get- over No. I 5-seed Belmont
ting to the NCAA tourna- in the first round.
ment's round of 16 in
This time, there was no
Huggins' first season.
escaping. ·Instead, Huggins
"His passion, his lack of could appreciate a quick
fear1 is. something we try to · personal' comeback. "Qtiii'iS,
put out on the court," said after all, a guy who was out
Alex Rooff, whose 17 points of work two years ago.
included a 3 at the shot- · He got fired at Cincinnati
clock buzzer that tied the - a school he led to the
game at 37 in the second 1992 Final Four - after a
haiL "When you see that drunken dr-iving arrest, then
passion on the sideline, the sat out a season before surlast thing you want to do is facing at Kansas State in
let that man down."
2007. He took that team to
While the Mo)lntaineers the NIT, losing in the second
(26-1 0) will face No. 3 round.
Xavier or No. 6 Purdue in
Now he's back home in
Phoenix on Thursday, the West Virginia,· at the school
Blue Devils (28-6) must he played for, and back
deal with a second consecu- among basketball's elite.
·
tive early exit.
"People think I sit around
· Every year from 1997 and think about that stuff. I
through 2006, Duke was a .don't," Huggins said in the
participant in the round of hallway outside his team's
16. Every single year. lfs a locker room, his voice nearAP photo
stretch that featured three ly a whisper between bites Duka guard Greg Paulus walks off the court as West Virginia's Joe !Yiazzulla (3) and Cam
trips to the Final Four and
.
Thoroughman celebrate in the background ln a second·round NCAA West Regional basket·
the 200 I · national champiPlease see
116
ball game Saturday in Washington. West VIrginia defeated Duke 73-67.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

W!f!!:

NCAA Tournament Roundup

Top seeds survive;
Hoyas eliminated
Bv THE AasoctATED PIIPs

Pldl• He Upset. 116

.

.... .

· '1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

•

.

l!lx
-1-740-Me-3008
~
'-mill- spo&lt;t&amp;Omydailytrlbuno.com

Llfe/Anauity
Aa lndepudlint Aaency

'no~ Stiff

bprneatina Erie IDliuraate

BfY11n Waltera, Sports Writer
(7ol0) «6-2342, oxt. 33
' liwaltenoOmydailytnbuno.com

frlc Randolph, Sports Writer
(F4C$4*,2342. oxt. 33
tPQrtaOmydallysentinel.com

. ' Crum, Sporta Wrllar
l:.arry

(740) 446-2342, oxt. 33
Ierum 0 myQaltyreglster.com

..,.-

---·-

on how to stop him."
and a jumper that gave the
LeBron James scored . 29, Bucks a 14-point cushion.
Zydrunas Ilgauskas added Redd op&lt;;ned the fourth with
20 and Wally Szczerbiak 14 three straight jumpers.
as Cleveland failed in its
Williams came in averag·
first attempt at ~oing II ing 25 points the first three
games over .500 th1s season. times the teams met this sea"I give Milwaukee credit," son.
·James said. ''They domina!"He's· played pretty well
ed us all year."
against us all year," James
Michael Redd, who fin- said.
ished with 21 points, and . Williams said he would
Williams sparked a stretch like to see that kind of prothat bridged the third and · duction· more &gt;:onsistently
fourth quarters and gave against every opponent.
Milwaukee a 90-76 lead
"I don't think it .had to do
with 8:24 left to play.
_,
Williams had seven points
I"'USe see cavs, B&amp;

BY HOWARD FENDRICH

C9NTACI'US

Box Olllce: 428 2nd Ave.
GIHipolll, OH (740) 446-ARTS

-------

Williams' 29 points leads the Bucks past the Cavaliers

\

. .t

JMI Co-IIIID•

Ohio Valley Symphony
Pianist Lori Sima
· March 29th
SPM

of

!..

AutoiH01ae/Buslae111

Att:,.,.,. ,, ,

.. DES MOINES, Iowa _
Ohio State is going home
early yet again_ and this
time, it wasn't even close .
. Tanae Davis-Cain scored
27 points, one shy of her
career high, and Mara
f'reshour added 14 points
and 12 rebounds to help
lith-seeded Florida State
ilpset ·sixth~ seeded Ohio
State 60-49 on Saturday
night in the first round of
the New Orleans Regional.
. The Seminoles, a somewhat surprising at-large
pick after losing seven of
their last 11 games, sure
looked . as though they
belonged against the listless
Buckeyes. Florida State
(19-13) extended its streak
fllst-round victories tO
six dating to 1991.
"It's a rule," Florida State
coach Sue Semrau said of
her team's flfst-round suecess. :'I think it's our conferencei the way our conference:prepares us for this."
. The Seminoles advanced
io - · play
third-seeded
Oklahoma State on Monday
Qrght. The Cowgids beat
East Tennessee State 85-73
on Saturday for their first
NCAA tournament win in
J2years.
. This was.the third straight ·
NCAA tournament trip that
lhe Buckeyes (22-9) would
just as soon forget. Ohio
State lost in the second
round to Boston College as
a No. I seed in 2006 and
was stunned by !3th-seeded
Marist 67-63 last season ..
Ohio State held 'Florida
State to just 32.8 percent
from the field, but the
Seminoles grabbed 19
offen'sive rebounds and
went 9-of-16 from 3-point
r.ange.
· "Our decision making in
transition wasn't · really
good," Ohio State coach
Jiln Foster said. "I think we
played hard and made some
good dl:cisions at the end,
but you have to control the
glass and ·not have those
second-chance opponunities."
: :Ohio State fell behind by
tl .early and never really
recoverM. The Seminoles
ihen·i"'l'ounced on the
Bu~k~es ·at the ~tart of t_he
~ecpnd half; reehng off an
· I 8-18 run to push their lead
to 48-30. Davis-Cain keyed
thai stretcn with three 3s,
aii4 she scored 15 points in

.

LUTCF,.\plll

rlnrellilllillllsllllilnllllltmaiLCIIID

A.Cappella Vocal Band
lnpulu
Tuesday, March 25th
7:30pm

-- ---

GALLIPOUS - A schedule ot ~ hig'l
tchool varsity sporti1g events ifwoMng teams •
Cla.. ...., Meigs"'""""·
Tbugcley Mereb 27 ~
• 8ay1B1.....11

Florida St.·
upsets
Ohio State

·TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

HAFRLT'S

~A_,
"
' 7 .&lt; o
. u;l
.,::.

LocAL SCHEDULE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

._':&lt;N C~,e

Monday, March 24, 2008

BY LuKE MEREDITH

Anny official
tells residents
that levee is
being repaired
ZOAR (AP) - Gov. Ted
Strickland viewed flood
damage in eastern Ohio
Sunday evening and also
met with residents worried
about a levee that is in need
of reJ?airs.
Strickland and Col. Dana
Hurst of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers spoke at
a public meeting attended
by about I 00 people in Z\lar
in Tuscarawas County.
Hurst said last week's
rains and flooding have
damaged a levee administered by the Corps. He said
an excessive amount of
seepage is moving some
soil and earth in the levee.
The lower part of Zoar, a
village of fewer than 200,
wou Id be affected by further
flooding.
Hurst said the levee is not
in immediate danger of failure. · But he said the Corps
hopes to· make enough
repairs over the next several
days to fix the seepage.

'

Gallia Academy at Athens, 4:30p.m.

PLAY COVERALL BINGo··

ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital in
Athens will offer a free
breastfeeding class for
expectant mothers.
The class, which is held in
conjunction with the lactation program sponsored by
the O'Bleness Birth Center,
will take place Wednesday,
April 2, from 5:30 until 8
p.m. in O'Bleness' Lower
Level Room 010.
Michele
Biddlestone,
O'Bleness' · international
board certified lactation
consultant, will lead the
class. Topics to be discussed
will include: advantages of
breastfeeding for mother
and child, anatomy of the
breast, physiology of breastfeeding, preparation for
breastfeeding, maintenance
and management of breast- ·
feeding, and advice for
working mothers.
The class is provided
free of char~e; no registration is requued. For more
contact
information,
Michele Biddlestone at
(740) 592-9364.

Bt ·

The Daily Sentinel

Tiger's slmlk in jeopardy, Page B6
MLB spring training roundup, Page 86

Tennl1

'

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!·

O'Bieness
offers class on
breastfeeding

Inside

•

•

'J

AP pltoto

Davidson's Stephen Curry (30) celebrates as Georgetown's Jessie Sapp (21) walks away fol· lowing Davidson's 74--70 win in a second-round NCAA basketball game in Raleigh, N.C. Sunday.

,,

\

RALEIGH,
N.C.
Stephen Curry scored 25 of
his 30 points in the second
half and Davidson staged a
remarkable
comeback
behind its star sophomore to
stun mighty Georgetown 7470 on Sunday in the second
round of the Midwest
Regional.
·
Curry missed 10 of his
first 12 shots but stepped up
at crunch time for Davidson,
which trailed by 16 points
with.I5 minutes left. He had
the ~o-ahead basket, a key.
3-pomter, and then hit five
of six free throws in the final
23 seconds.
Jason Richards added 20
points for Davidson (28-6),
which hadn't won an NCAA
tournament game since
1969 before Friday. The
Wildcats advanced to face
Wisconsin on Friday in
Detroit.
.
Jessie Sapp scored 14
points and Jonathan Wallace
added 12 points for secondseeded Georgetown (28-6),
which lost despite shooting
63 percent from the field.
VU!anova 84, Siena 72
TAMPA, Fla. - Scottie

Reynolds scored 25 points
and Corey Stokes added 20
as the 12th-seeded Wildcats
beat tiny Siena to reach the
round of 16 for the third
time in four years.
Villanova (22- 12), one of
the last teams picked fur the
tournament field , advanced
to · play top-seeded Kansas
(33-3) in the regional semifinals .
Alex Franklin led Siena
(23-11) with 18 points, but
the Saints didn't get the kind
of perfonnances they need.
ed from Kenny Hasbrouck,
Edwin · Ubiles and Tay
Fis~er, who a11 played major
roles in the team's 21-point
. upset of fourth-seeded
Vanderbilt in the first round.
Hasbrouck had 17 points.
but was only 5-of-15 from

PleaH- NCAA. 11

�Page.A6

'L OCAL • STATE
Local Weather
Sonshine Circle makes
contributions, caJ•t•ies out projects

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 24, 2008

RACINE - Reports on VFW which will ship them
contributions made and overseas.
projects carried out by the
Cakes, pies, and other
Sonshine Circle were goodies along with some
given at the group's recent other food collected by
meeting held at the Kathryn Hart were taken to
Bethany United Methodist God's NET for the kids who
attend there. The Sonshine
Church.
Contributions made by Circle decided to pay for
the group included f $250 to . having the carpet in the fela family who lost their lowship
haft
cleaned.
home by fire, $1800 to the Sq.1ffed.animals for a special
Southern
Equal project are being collected ;
Opportunities Mission who They are to be taken to the
will be starting a store in next meeting. It was. noted
Racine, and the regular that there are already 35
monthly gift of $25 to the stuffed items.
Senior Citizens Center.
It was announced that
Projects currently include luminaries are for sale for
collecting old greeting $10 for the Relay fpr Life
cards to be donated to an which will take place in
organization which makes May to raise money for the
new cards from the ·old American Cancer Society.
ones.
Members
were Kathryn Hart presided at the
reminded to take pop tabs
to the next meeting, and to
bring items which troops
overseas can use to be
given to the Tuppers Plains

meeting with re,P!JrtS being·
given by Ann Ztrkle, secretary, and Julie Campbell,
treasurer. Edie Hubbard
reported on correspondence
which included I 8 cards
sent out and 70 more signed
at the meeting making a
total in March of % cards
sent out. It was noted that
all of the cookbooks have
been sold.
Hubbard
cad "Each
Spring God Renews His
promise," and Blondena
Rainer read "I Know That
My Redeemer Liveth."
Evelyn foreman had prayer
before members exchanged
Easter basket lunches. The
group sand Happy Birthday
to Avis Harrison, Betty
Proffitt and Ann · Zirkle . .
Lillian Hayman and Shirley

Beegle also had March
birthdays, but were unable
to attend. To close the meeting, HubbarQread "Church
Bulletin Bloopers" and
Rainer read "Welcome to
One of My days." Rainer
also has an Easter prayer.
Members attending were
Blondena Rainer, Mattie
Teaford,
Martha
Lou
Beegle, Betty Proffitt, Avis
Harrison, Jackie White,
Kathy McDaniel, Ruth
Simpson, Judy Gilmore,
Mabel Brace, Mary Ball,
Louise
Frank,
Edie
Hubbard, Evelyn Foreman,
Kathryn
Hart,
Julie
Campbell, and Ann Zirkle.
Next meeting will be April
10 and hostesses will be
Louise
Frank,
Mattie
Beegle and Kathryn Hart.

Monday... Mostly cloudy showers. Not as cool with
with a chance of flurries in lows in the lower 40s.
the morning .. . Then partly Southwest winds 10 to 15
sunny with a chance of mph with gusts up to 30
snow showers with a slight mph.
Wednesday ... Mostly
chance of rain showers in
the afternoon. Highs · in the cloudy in the morning ...Then
lower 40s. Northwest winds . becoming partly sunny. A4Q
around 5 mph. Chance of percent chance of showers.
precipitation 20 percent.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Monday nlght... Partly
Wednesday night an!f
cloudy
in
the Thursday••• Mostly cloudy
evening... T,hen
clearing. with a 50 percent charice
Lows in the upper 20s. of showers. Lows in the
Northwest winds around 5 lower 40s. Highs in the
mph in the evening... mid 60s.
·
Becoming light and variThursday nlght••• Mostly
able.
cloudy
in
the
Thesday•••Partly sunny evening ... Then becoming ·
with a 20 percent chance of' partly cloudy. Lows in the
rain showers. Not as cool upper 40s.
with highs in the mid 50s. • Friday••• Mostly sunny.
Southwest winds 10 to 15 Highs around 70.
.
Friday
night ...Mostly
mph with gusts up to 25
mph.
cloudy with showers likely.
Thesday night...Cioudy Lows in · the mid 40s.
with a 50 percent chance of Chance of rain 60 percent.

.:-.;· . , J'o
v ·•.

-r.

l

'('"

,-'

..... ..•

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

uu. OVTLB'I; INC.

"~···Area's #1

Floor
Covering Dealer!

Shaw.Carpet 1111d Floor Centn

Residential • Commercial •
Wholesale • Retall
4247 State Route 160
· GaUipolls, Ohio

11740-446·2107

It's Just

Rebacca
Bra1heara,
Au.D., CCC-Ai

r

Around The
Corner
,,

435'/, Second·Avenue
(740) 446-7619

ATHENS
275 West Union Street

594-3571
.'

A 011e Stop Shop For ·
All Your Medical ·
Efuipment Needs!

&gt;
"-i

St., I•
• s,. 011
S""""'-1 ·

,-,..;
-~-

'""""'"'······--··

.

11:11.~Hl*dl"it0 AJt1~ ('f:'fllt.t;

Mlntor~ at Gallla Academy, 5 p.m.

Saturday. M1rch

29

BayoBa...,.ll
Mlntorc, at Meigs, noon
Westfall at Meigs, 4 p.m.
'n'aick and Field

Galla Aqademy at Chillicothe, 11 a.m.
River Valley at Warren. 10 a . m~
Monday. March 31

BoyoBoHball
Galla Academy at Ironton, 5 p.m.
River valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
South Gallla at Huntington St, Joe, 5

p.m.
Ripley at Southern, 5 p.m.
Gl~o

Softball

Hannan at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.

-

215-A Slith Street
rt. Pleuant, WV lSSSO
384-675-7136
Fax: 304-675-7387

MILWAUKEE (AP) Cleveland coach · Mike
Brown has seen enough of
Mo Williams and the
Milwaukee Bucks for this
season.
Williams scored 29 points
and had 13 of Milwaukee's
26 assists, and the Bucks
snapped a six -game losing
streak with a I 08-98 victory
over the Cavaliers 'on
Saturday night.
Williams had four points
and six assists in the first
quarter, 12 points and five
assists in the third, and II
points and one assist in the

fourth to lead the Bucks past
the Cavaliers for· the third
time in the four-game season
series.
"We got our behinds
kicked," Brown said after
his team gave up, I 00 points
or more for the sixth straight
road game. 'T m glad we
. don't play those guys 82

times because Mo Williams
may be the all-time greatest
player ever, if we did."
Williams was 10-of-12
from the free throw line and
had on'e turnover.
"He's an excellent player,
but against us he has. more
than our number," Brown
said.
Nobody on Cleveland
could stop or keep up with
Williams as he raced up and
down the court. Brown even
faulted himself for not finding way to slow him down.
"It started with me,"
Brown said. "I was·at a loss

a

on'ship.
But
. now
Krzytewski's team is on a
two-year drought, having
WASHINGTON - Back bowed out in the first round
at his alma mater, back in in 2007.
the NCAAs, Bob Huggins
"No matter how well or
looked and sounded just like how hard you're playing,
the Bob Huggins everyone you've. got to put the ball in
remembers.
the
basket,"
said
He yelled . He groused. He Krzyzewski, whose team
drew an early technical foul. was held to 38 percent
And he willed jlis. No. 7- shooting and missed. J5 conseeded West Virginia past secutive 3-pointers in one
second-seeded D11ke.
stretch. "We didn't do that
Playing tough ,man-to- today."
.
man defense, grabbmg what : · Gerald Henderson scored
seemed like every loose 18 points fo.r Duke. But
ball, West Virginia used'Joe DeMarcus Nelson had only
Alexander's 22 points and six points on 2-for-ll shootII rebounds and all sorts of ing, a game after scoring .
contribution's from unlikely two when the Blu.e Devils
sources for a 73-67 victoty eked out a one-point victory
over Duke on Saturday, get- over No. I 5-seed Belmont
ting to the NCAA tourna- in the first round.
ment's round of 16 in
This time, there was no
Huggins' first season.
escaping. ·Instead, Huggins
"His passion, his lack of could appreciate a quick
fear1 is. something we try to · personal' comeback. "Qtiii'iS,
put out on the court," said after all, a guy who was out
Alex Rooff, whose 17 points of work two years ago.
included a 3 at the shot- · He got fired at Cincinnati
clock buzzer that tied the - a school he led to the
game at 37 in the second 1992 Final Four - after a
haiL "When you see that drunken dr-iving arrest, then
passion on the sideline, the sat out a season before surlast thing you want to do is facing at Kansas State in
let that man down."
2007. He took that team to
While the Mo)lntaineers the NIT, losing in the second
(26-1 0) will face No. 3 round.
Xavier or No. 6 Purdue in
Now he's back home in
Phoenix on Thursday, the West Virginia,· at the school
Blue Devils (28-6) must he played for, and back
deal with a second consecu- among basketball's elite.
·
tive early exit.
"People think I sit around
· Every year from 1997 and think about that stuff. I
through 2006, Duke was a .don't," Huggins said in the
participant in the round of hallway outside his team's
16. Every single year. lfs a locker room, his voice nearAP photo
stretch that featured three ly a whisper between bites Duka guard Greg Paulus walks off the court as West Virginia's Joe !Yiazzulla (3) and Cam
trips to the Final Four and
.
Thoroughman celebrate in the background ln a second·round NCAA West Regional basket·
the 200 I · national champiPlease see
116
ball game Saturday in Washington. West VIrginia defeated Duke 73-67.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

W!f!!:

NCAA Tournament Roundup

Top seeds survive;
Hoyas eliminated
Bv THE AasoctATED PIIPs

Pldl• He Upset. 116

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BfY11n Waltera, Sports Writer
(7ol0) «6-2342, oxt. 33
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frlc Randolph, Sports Writer
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..,.-

---·-

on how to stop him."
and a jumper that gave the
LeBron James scored . 29, Bucks a 14-point cushion.
Zydrunas Ilgauskas added Redd op&lt;;ned the fourth with
20 and Wally Szczerbiak 14 three straight jumpers.
as Cleveland failed in its
Williams came in averag·
first attempt at ~oing II ing 25 points the first three
games over .500 th1s season. times the teams met this sea"I give Milwaukee credit," son.
·James said. ''They domina!"He's· played pretty well
ed us all year."
against us all year," James
Michael Redd, who fin- said.
ished with 21 points, and . Williams said he would
Williams sparked a stretch like to see that kind of prothat bridged the third and · duction· more &gt;:onsistently
fourth quarters and gave against every opponent.
Milwaukee a 90-76 lead
"I don't think it .had to do
with 8:24 left to play.
_,
Williams had seven points
I"'USe see cavs, B&amp;

BY HOWARD FENDRICH

C9NTACI'US

Box Olllce: 428 2nd Ave.
GIHipolll, OH (740) 446-ARTS

-------

Williams' 29 points leads the Bucks past the Cavaliers

\

. .t

JMI Co-IIIID•

Ohio Valley Symphony
Pianist Lori Sima
· March 29th
SPM

of

!..

AutoiH01ae/Buslae111

Att:,.,.,. ,, ,

.. DES MOINES, Iowa _
Ohio State is going home
early yet again_ and this
time, it wasn't even close .
. Tanae Davis-Cain scored
27 points, one shy of her
career high, and Mara
f'reshour added 14 points
and 12 rebounds to help
lith-seeded Florida State
ilpset ·sixth~ seeded Ohio
State 60-49 on Saturday
night in the first round of
the New Orleans Regional.
. The Seminoles, a somewhat surprising at-large
pick after losing seven of
their last 11 games, sure
looked . as though they
belonged against the listless
Buckeyes. Florida State
(19-13) extended its streak
fllst-round victories tO
six dating to 1991.
"It's a rule," Florida State
coach Sue Semrau said of
her team's flfst-round suecess. :'I think it's our conferencei the way our conference:prepares us for this."
. The Seminoles advanced
io - · play
third-seeded
Oklahoma State on Monday
Qrght. The Cowgids beat
East Tennessee State 85-73
on Saturday for their first
NCAA tournament win in
J2years.
. This was.the third straight ·
NCAA tournament trip that
lhe Buckeyes (22-9) would
just as soon forget. Ohio
State lost in the second
round to Boston College as
a No. I seed in 2006 and
was stunned by !3th-seeded
Marist 67-63 last season ..
Ohio State held 'Florida
State to just 32.8 percent
from the field, but the
Seminoles grabbed 19
offen'sive rebounds and
went 9-of-16 from 3-point
r.ange.
· "Our decision making in
transition wasn't · really
good," Ohio State coach
Jiln Foster said. "I think we
played hard and made some
good dl:cisions at the end,
but you have to control the
glass and ·not have those
second-chance opponunities."
: :Ohio State fell behind by
tl .early and never really
recoverM. The Seminoles
ihen·i"'l'ounced on the
Bu~k~es ·at the ~tart of t_he
~ecpnd half; reehng off an
· I 8-18 run to push their lead
to 48-30. Davis-Cain keyed
thai stretcn with three 3s,
aii4 she scored 15 points in

.

LUTCF,.\plll

rlnrellilllillllsllllilnllllltmaiLCIIID

A.Cappella Vocal Band
lnpulu
Tuesday, March 25th
7:30pm

-- ---

GALLIPOUS - A schedule ot ~ hig'l
tchool varsity sporti1g events ifwoMng teams •
Cla.. ...., Meigs"'""""·
Tbugcley Mereb 27 ~
• 8ay1B1.....11

Florida St.·
upsets
Ohio State

·TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

HAFRLT'S

~A_,
"
' 7 .&lt; o
. u;l
.,::.

LocAL SCHEDULE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

._':&lt;N C~,e

Monday, March 24, 2008

BY LuKE MEREDITH

Anny official
tells residents
that levee is
being repaired
ZOAR (AP) - Gov. Ted
Strickland viewed flood
damage in eastern Ohio
Sunday evening and also
met with residents worried
about a levee that is in need
of reJ?airs.
Strickland and Col. Dana
Hurst of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers spoke at
a public meeting attended
by about I 00 people in Z\lar
in Tuscarawas County.
Hurst said last week's
rains and flooding have
damaged a levee administered by the Corps. He said
an excessive amount of
seepage is moving some
soil and earth in the levee.
The lower part of Zoar, a
village of fewer than 200,
wou Id be affected by further
flooding.
Hurst said the levee is not
in immediate danger of failure. · But he said the Corps
hopes to· make enough
repairs over the next several
days to fix the seepage.

'

Gallia Academy at Athens, 4:30p.m.

PLAY COVERALL BINGo··

ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital in
Athens will offer a free
breastfeeding class for
expectant mothers.
The class, which is held in
conjunction with the lactation program sponsored by
the O'Bleness Birth Center,
will take place Wednesday,
April 2, from 5:30 until 8
p.m. in O'Bleness' Lower
Level Room 010.
Michele
Biddlestone,
O'Bleness' · international
board certified lactation
consultant, will lead the
class. Topics to be discussed
will include: advantages of
breastfeeding for mother
and child, anatomy of the
breast, physiology of breastfeeding, preparation for
breastfeeding, maintenance
and management of breast- ·
feeding, and advice for
working mothers.
The class is provided
free of char~e; no registration is requued. For more
contact
information,
Michele Biddlestone at
(740) 592-9364.

Bt ·

The Daily Sentinel

Tiger's slmlk in jeopardy, Page B6
MLB spring training roundup, Page 86

Tennl1

'

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!·

O'Bieness
offers class on
breastfeeding

Inside

•

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'J

AP pltoto

Davidson's Stephen Curry (30) celebrates as Georgetown's Jessie Sapp (21) walks away fol· lowing Davidson's 74--70 win in a second-round NCAA basketball game in Raleigh, N.C. Sunday.

,,

\

RALEIGH,
N.C.
Stephen Curry scored 25 of
his 30 points in the second
half and Davidson staged a
remarkable
comeback
behind its star sophomore to
stun mighty Georgetown 7470 on Sunday in the second
round of the Midwest
Regional.
·
Curry missed 10 of his
first 12 shots but stepped up
at crunch time for Davidson,
which trailed by 16 points
with.I5 minutes left. He had
the ~o-ahead basket, a key.
3-pomter, and then hit five
of six free throws in the final
23 seconds.
Jason Richards added 20
points for Davidson (28-6),
which hadn't won an NCAA
tournament game since
1969 before Friday. The
Wildcats advanced to face
Wisconsin on Friday in
Detroit.
.
Jessie Sapp scored 14
points and Jonathan Wallace
added 12 points for secondseeded Georgetown (28-6),
which lost despite shooting
63 percent from the field.
VU!anova 84, Siena 72
TAMPA, Fla. - Scottie

Reynolds scored 25 points
and Corey Stokes added 20
as the 12th-seeded Wildcats
beat tiny Siena to reach the
round of 16 for the third
time in four years.
Villanova (22- 12), one of
the last teams picked fur the
tournament field , advanced
to · play top-seeded Kansas
(33-3) in the regional semifinals .
Alex Franklin led Siena
(23-11) with 18 points, but
the Saints didn't get the kind
of perfonnances they need.
ed from Kenny Hasbrouck,
Edwin · Ubiles and Tay
Fis~er, who a11 played major
roles in the team's 21-point
. upset of fourth-seeded
Vanderbilt in the first round.
Hasbrouck had 17 points.
but was only 5-of-15 from

PleaH- NCAA. 11

�•
'

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

NCAA

· free throw and Gordon's the Tar Heels raced to a
long jumper at the buzzer double-digit lead in the first
wasn't close.
5 minutes of the blowout
North Carolina (34-2)
East Rel!ional
from Page 81
will face founh-seeded
LouisviRe 78.l
Washington
State
on
Oklahoma 4!1
the tleld. Ubiles missed his
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Thursday night in Charlotte,
first seven shots ami tinished Earl Clark scored 14 points . the same arena where they
'3-of-ll for 12 points, while and Louisville handed won the Atlantic Coast
Fish,er was held to five Oklahoma its most-lopsided Conference tournament last
points.
loss in the NCAA touma, weekend.
South Regional
ment, building a 44-22 halfThe Tar Heels scored the
Texas 75, Miami 72
time lead and coasting from first nine points, led 51-26
NORTH LITTLE ROCK, there.
at halftime and shot 68 perArk. - AJ. Abrams'calmly
Louisville matched its cent for the game. They
sank two· free throws with · biggest rout in the NCAA became the first . team to
&lt;J .S seconds remaining, giv- tournament,
having score 100 points in their
second-seeded trounced Kansas State by 30 first two NCAA games
ing the
Longhorns just enough,mar- in 1968. Startipg five play- since Loyola Marymount
gi n to hold off Mianu.
ers born outside Kentucky, did it agamst New Mexico
Abrams gave Texas a 74- · the third-seeded Cardinals · State and Michigan in 1990.
6&lt;J lead, but the Longhorns (26-8) reached the round of
Sonny Weems scored 19
weren't quite safe _yet. 16 for the first time since for Arkansas (23-12) , which
Miami's Raymond HtcRs 200S. They will take on never got closer than 2.1
made a 3-pomter, and D.J. Tennessee, which beat after halftime.
Au crustin then shot an .air Butler 76-71 in overtime, on
· West Regional
balf on his first of two free Thursday night in Charlotte,
Western Kentucky 72,
throws with 1.8 seconds to N.C.
San Diego (i3 .
play. Augustin made the sec- .
David Godbold hit four 3s
TAMPA, Fla. - Behind
ond, though , to preserve the and finished with IS points Courtney Lee's dazzling
win.
for sixth-seeded Oklahoma first-half performance and
. Abrams scored 26 points (23-12). Star freshman .some clutch shooting down
· on six 3-pointers for the sec- · · Blake Griffin was held with- the stretch, the 12th-seeded
and consecutive game. out a shot for 12 minutes Hilltoppers advanced to the
Texas (30-6) advances to the and had eight points.
round of 16 for the first time
rel'!;ional semifinals to play
Tennessee 76,
in 15 years and have a date
Butler 71, OT
th1rd- seeded Stanford on
with top-seeded UCLA in
Friday in Houston. . .
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
Phoenix.
Jack McClinton scored 18 JaJuan Smith bit Jour
Lee finished with 29
points for Miami (23-11 ). · straight free throws in the points, including a huge 3.
Memphis 77,
final 13.6 seconds of over- pbinter that gave his .team
Mississip~ ~tate 74
time and the Volunteers sur- the lead for ~ood with 6: 17
E ROCK, vived a game they nearly remaining, Stx straight free
NORTH LI~
Ark. -Joey Dorsey had 13 turned into a rout
throws in the final 34 sec:
points, 12 rebounds, a s-eaThe Vols (31-4) scored six onds sealed the victory.
son-high six blocks and an straight points inside after
Tyrone Brazelton added.
untold number of bumps the Bulldogs took their first 15 points for·the Hilltoppers
and
bruises,
helping lead in the final2 minutes of ·(29•6).
Memphis wins its ninth OT, including benched
Gyno Pomare had 20
. straight and advance to the guard Ramar Smith's basket points and nine rebounds
round of 16 for the third with 27 seconds leftto.make for the Toreros (22-14 ), who
·
it 72-68.
That after overcame a IS-point deficit
straight year.
Derrick Rose and Chris Tennessee led by 13 early in in the second half before
·
Douglas-Roberts added 17 the game. ·
fading in the closing minpoints each for the Tigers
A.J. Graves led Butler utes.
(35-1 ), who will play fifth- (30-4) with 21 points on just
seeded Michigan State (27- 6-of-18. shootuig. ~tke
Sundafs Results
. 8) in the regional semifinals Green added 15 pomts,
Xavier 8 , Purdue 78
on Friday.
seven rebounds ana five
WASHINGTON - · C.J.
~amont Gordon had . 21 . assists before fouling out Anderson
and
Drew
pomts and Ben Hansbrough . late in overtime.
Lavender each scored 18
for
eighth--Seeded , It .was the first time two points and Josh Duncan had
19
Mississippi .State (23-11), teams with 30 wins played 16, and Xavier was surpriswhich hasn't made it out of each other in the second ingly efficient on offense.
the flfst weekend since the round.
The Musketeers (29-6)
1996 team went to the Final
North Carolina 108,
shot 54 percent in breaking
Four, .
.Arkansas 77
the school record for wins,
Gordon's layup cut the
RALEIGH, N.C.
going 2~-for-33 at the free
Mississi{lpi State ·defiCit to . Wayne Ellington scored 20 . throw hne and 27-for-50
76-74 wtth 4.2 seconds left, points, 1)t Lawson had 19 from the floor agamst . a
but Douglas-Roberts made a points ana seven assists and · team that led the Btg Ten m

field -goal
percentage
defense . Their 85 points
were the most allowed by
Purdue this season.
Keaton Grant scored 19
for the Boilermakers (2S-9),
who have won I 0 straight
first-roond games but have
exited without another win
in hal.f those tournamentsincluding two in a row.
Lavender. '!I 5-foot-7
· guard, had nine assists and
provided Xavier with a pivotal basket after the
Musketeers frittered away
an almost insurmountable
lead in this defensive struggle.
West Regional
UCLA 53,
TexasA&amp;M49
ANAHEIM, Calif.
Darren Collison scored the
go-ahead basket on a onehanded layup with &lt;J 112
seconds remaining, Josh
Shipp contested Donald
Sloan's final drive and top- .
seeded UCLA held on for a
· victory over Texas A&amp;M.
The Bruin s (33-3) won
1heir 12th in a row and will
face Western Kentucky or
San Diego next week in
Phoenix.
Urged on by 17,600 proUCLA fans that made it
. seem like a home game, the
Bruins rallied from a 10point deficit in the second
half.
.
Kevin Love' had 19 _points
and II rebounds - hts 21st,
double-double
and
UCLA overcame the combined·· 3.-of-14 shooting of
Shipp
and
Russell
Westbrook .
Sloan led the Aggies (25ll) with 12J'oints and Josh
Carter adde I 0. A&amp;M was
trying to get back to the
final 16 for the second
straight year.
Mtdwest Regional
Wisconsin 72,
Kansas State SS
OMAHA, Neb. - Trevon
Hughes matched his career
high with 25 points, and the
third-seeded Badgers shut
down Kansas State freshman star Michael Beasley in
the second half.
. Beasley had 23 points for
the II th-seeded Wildcats,
but just six after halftime.
Michael Flowers had l S
points and Greg Stiemsma

.'

. Monday, March 24, 2008
14 for the Badgers (3 1-4),
who set a school record for'
wins in a season and head to
the round of 16 in Detroit
with 12 straight wins and 25
victories in the last 27
games. They'll play the
winner
of
Sunday's
Georgetown-Davidson
game.
Beasley, just 2-for-6 in
the second half, hugged
teammates and coaches
when he left the game with
53.9 seconds left. -Many
expect him to declare for
the NBA draft.
Bill Walker added 18 for .
the Wildcats (21-12), who
were 0-for- 13 from 3-point
range.
·
Kansas 75, UNLV 56
OMAHA. Neb. - Mario
Chalmers scored 17 points
and
the
top-seeded
Jayhawks pulled away from
UNLV in ihe second hall m
another romp that sent
Kansas to the round of 16.
Chalmers had plenty of
help: Russell Robinson
scored 13, Brandon Rush .
had 12 and Sherron Collins
I 0. That depth proved too
much for the Runnin'
Rebels ' (27-8); who barely
had enough personnel to
finish the game after two of
their I0 players in uniform
fouled· out.
The Rebels shot 27 percent ( 12 of 45) and were
. 36-26.
outrebounded
Kansas (33-3) shot 58 percent in what amounted to a
brisk workout hefore playing the winner of Sunday's
Villanova-Siena game next
week in Detroit.
. East Regional
Washington State 61,
Notre Dame 41
DENVER
Derrick
Low scored 18 points and
Kyle Weaver added 15, and
the Cougars won a clash of
styles by shutting down
Luke Harangody · and t~e
high-flying Ftghting Irish.
Washin~ton State held the
Big East s Player of the
Year to I 0 points, half his·
average, and limited the
Irish (2S-8) to . half their
scoring
average,
too.
Harangody did have 22
rebOunds.
Washington
·
State
advanced to play the winner
ofS unday 's Arkansas-North

Carol ina game.
.
.
Robbie Cowgill added.J2
points for the fourth-seeded
Cougars (26-8), who WO!J a
second game in the tournament for the flfst time since
I '!41; when they lost: to
Wi sconsin in the nat ional
championship game.
:
South Regional •
Stanford 82, :
Marquette 81, OT·
ANAHEIM, Calif. . Ejected for unsportsmanlike
behavior in the first tialf, ·
Stanford
coac h
Ttent
Johnson wasn ' t around to
see Brook Lopez make a
baseline leaner with 1.3 seconds left that sent the thirdseeded Cardinal to the
round of 16.
Lopez, one of the
Cardmal's twin ? -footers,
scored eight of their I)
points in overtime ahd finIshed with 30, one shy of a
career high. The go-ahead
bucket came on Mitch
Johnson's career-high 16th
assist, and sent Stanford
(28-7) to play the winner of
Sunday's . Miami-Texas
game.
Lopez was · an effective
counter to Marquette sharpshooter Jerel McNeal, who
scored a career-high 30
points, and hit three 3-pointers in overtime for the No. 6
seed Golden Eagles (25-1 0).
But McNeal misfired on a
I s :footer with I 5 seconds
!eft, setting up Lopez's winner.
Michigan State 65,
Pittsburgh 54
DENVER
Drew
Neitzel and Kalin Lucas
went on a late ballhandling
and scoring spree to help
Michigan State pull away
from Pittsburgh.
Lucas and Neitzel combined for 21 of the final 25
points for the t1fth-seeded
Spartans to help them win a
battle of the .· bullies - a
game
rough-and-tumble
between · two Rust Belt
teams who brought their
to
the
Rocky
show
Mou'ntains.
Neitzel .(ed the Spartans
with 21 points, and Lucas
finished with 19.
·
Levance Fields had 19
points for fourth-seeded Pitt
(27-10), which had won six
straight.
·

_ Monday, March 24, 2008

Gallia ·
County
OH
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able for home health care In
the Gallipolis area, Part time
days a11ailable. Ventftrach
exp. helpful. Please contact
Denise!Mi'chela at Primary
care Nursing Services BOO·
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• ; Houses tor Renl .......................................... 410
,, In Mem·orlam .........................................:...... 020
•..u.ance..................................................... 130
'--·. , lAwn &amp; Gardin Equlpment ...............; ••• :.... 680

330

P!Alliohing Company)
1-888-IMC-PAYU

~ Lots a. ACNige ............................................ 310
lltacetlaneouo ........... :.............:................ ,,;170
.. MlacellaneaulllerchandiH....................... 540

llobtle Home Repatr ..........: ......................... 680
lloblle llotnellor Rent ............................... 420
IIOblle Homellor S8te................................ 320
2G
Money to Loin............................................. 2
llolorCyCIH &amp; 4 Wheetel'l ..........................740
Mualcalln•rumenta ........................_......... 570
• P8110nale ......................................~.............. 005
• . hlalor Stita ................................................ 580
Plumbing &amp; H..Ung .................................... 820
ProleUI9nal Servlces ................................. 230
' RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repalr............................... 160

~ ~ 'ANI Eatate Wanted ..................................... 380

Schoolllnetructlon ..................................... 150

Seed , Plant &amp; Fei'lltl-.............................. 650
SRuatlona Wantlld ....................................... 12G

Spece for Rent ••• :......................................... 460
Sporllntl Goods ........................................... 52G
SUV'I for Seta ..................... ......................... 72G
Trucks lor Sale .....................................:..•••• 715
Upholltery ................................................... 870
YMI For Sale .. ."......... ...................................7~
Wantedto' Buv •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••., ••• 090
Wanted to Bur- Farm Suppllea •••••••••••••.••.• 520
Wanted To Do .............................................. 160
W•nted to Rent ...................~ .........·................ 470
Yard Sate- Galltpotla .................................:.. o12
Yanl Sata-Pomeror/Middle ......................... U74
Yard Sata-PL PIHHnt ............. :.................. Ot8

j

Ext 2347
~ • ~~

Vl'o- .

';ww~w=·=•o:m=lc:a:.c:o:m::;~;======~CC&gt;;;2008;:::b:y:N:E:A~,:'":•:·;

II

1110

Ho.PWANIID

11''0

ffiuWANTFD

11'.'0

Hn.PWANrnD

Box 103, c/o Gall!&gt;olis ll(llly
Tribune. PO Box 469,

Gallipolis, OH 45631.

c ..... ~..,

·

benelll pacl&lt;age Including
Sta1 Clv'l
v1
1'
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
e
t ser ce re treSell. Shirley Spears. 304- ment, earn up to 15 days
vacaHon per year, 18 days
675•1429
otck leai'O, and 12 plus paid

Manpower Is now hiring for
the

lollowlng

positions
Produllon
Worlcers In the Buff'8to, WV
AraB Benefits available Call
Today 304 _757•3338

Aulomo~lle

...,-----:--:---::-

Mason's and laborers with
Masonry experience needed
lmmedla1ely, Ful nmo wilh

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg.Pay$20/hror
$57Kiyr, Includes
Federal Benefits, OT.
Offered by Exam Services,
not offer- wl USPS wile

~

hires.
1-866-403·2582

:~--::-:--:-:--:-:-

INs'rRtn1oN

rlB

I

HOMES

(p/1) ~-"·son Co"""' Head

,

·~ ~
. --,
Start/Early Head Start.
Requires diploma or GED,
current,
valkf,
drivers
license, prool olllll\.o liability
insurance and good communication skilla. Must pass
drug screen and back·
ground check.' FfT pos~lons
available in Cabell Cty.
COmmerical Drivers Ucense
within 6 mo. of hire required.
Send cover letter, resume
and 3 ilrs ot ret. to SCAC·

holidays; health/life lnsur-

.

· 0 down payment.

0

HR. 540 Fifth Ave., Htgn.,
WV 25701 EOE
· Fun Time Receptionist needed in busy Doctor's Office.
Pial&lt; up applicatlono at Sune
112.
Pleasan1
• U StOffi
Hoapn.tl. Aeeumos may be
attached IO the application
-------FuH time ruck-drlvor needed
1

c

'

Needed mcperlencad ltuck
Driver for hauling blacktop.
Clan A 304·674·3311 or
3()4-593-0839

o
r.

er

(careers ose o ome
Caii 'Today! 74&lt;r446·4367,
1-800-214-0452

s

e

e

wo

~

::d

held and ctass space Is lmlted. Anyone interest in
::---::--::-----::--:--:: attending he ctoss needs to
1
ResCara Home Care is pickupanapplk:ationat
333
·accap11ng appilca11ons tor Page St. Middleport, Ohio
Direct Care personnel,
between 9am and . Spm
CNA's &amp; STNA's. lt you Monday-Friday. Applica~ons .
wOuld like to take aMntage must be submitted prior to
of this opporturiily, you may interviews for approval. NO
apply Monday through PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
Friday 8am-4pm at 8204 On the day the interviews
01
Carta Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio. ask for Hollie Bumgarner,
You niay also tax a resume LPN St ff D e1
.
· · .,
a
ev opmen1
10
Coordinalor," 71h·April 161h.
rharrlsonOre&amp;C?Sre.com
EOE. Participant of the Drug
Free workpiece Program.
0
PublllhlnQ Co.
111
Is seo~ng a motiV. e&lt;1,
1
•
To Do
to be a paglnatorlpage
designer)n the dally
Handyman Servtce. In need
production of llelhreo
ot ropen around 1he hOme?
nowspap.... Tho
A e a s 0 n a b 1 e
au---~·1 applicant·
ratos.20yrs.••~rlance.Ptl.#
~u
__,.....
would
wort&lt; under 1ho
740·508-tl408
lsi ot 1ho •two
011
superv
·~
-.
~
department. Duties
""""" . !L\'

°

m.

I
.

·

2007

16x78,

Payments

4 bed· under $300/month. Owner
740-594·

--;------2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec·
2000 Custom built Cape· tlonal home $279 per month
.,.,,.""''"'..,"".., "'' Cod. 4/58A, 2 ba1h, Fin 740·385· 7671 .
Accr8dltecl Uember Ac(:rediting B
loca d
·d
Cwncll lor tndepl:lndent ca~ege~:~
asement,
te ou1Sl e 2008 sectional · home 3
and Schools 127•&amp;. .
of Rio Grande Ill' a beautiful
Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
woode&lt;116ca11on. $199,900.
Overbrook Rehab Center Call lor an oppt. 74Q-245· and set, up $38,695. 740·

o· o~
•• 339 Ra····--··•
~·~~.

OhiO VBitey Home Hoanh,
Inc . hiring STNA, CNA,
Homa Health Aides end
PenKIIIIII care Aides. Full,
Part Time and Per Clem
wtth valid drivers license and poi~OI\8
·
rv lc
avalloblo. Apply "
insurance. Must be depend- 1480
Jackson
Pike
able, have
good
customer
· phone 441-1393'
hovolmii\Odlolo
eervlceo
skills
and be
ablelo Gaiii&gt;OiiS.
tui~Ume Cuotomor
load and unload 1rucks. Must lor Skille&lt;l Office or apply 81
lndude atoctron~
Servk:e poettton kl our be able to work weekends. 1456 Jackson 'Pike, phQne
generation of nawa
main office.
Send resumes to CLA Box -441 ·9263
for
pages, along with some
Succenful appllclntl
Ol,
clo
Gallipolis
Dally
Passport/Private
Care
copy
edhlng and headline
1
mutt be PfOple orfentbu
P.O B
Office.
Competitive
wages
·
writing,
as well as,
469
......, en•-- Ullng lito
Gralllo'pone,:s, :_. ·
proofreading .of pages
x
• and beneflts Including health
1 0 4563 1
ph
·
insurance anil m1aage
rmmproduced by other
~ '"'
n
·1
·
computer:... ond
bu,..mont.
paglna1ors. Cofl"lliJier
enjoy WOrking wtth
Guitar Pla~er looking ior --=--::-c-~::--skins and knowledge of
numbera. Poaltton
. Drummer &amp;· Bass Player. to Part Time Driver: Transport
Quark XPreas and Adobe
on.... 111 comp11ny
play mostly original Rock
consumers to and from
Photoshop are required.
bonoftlllncludlng
music. 985-4416 attor-5:00 medical appointments in tho
Past experience In paJIO
haltth and
Mason County area, 20
or graphiC design is not a
lnourance, 4011&lt;, paid
Help wan1811 at Darst Homo
hours per week. Must be
requiromem. The p&lt;islllon
....Uon ond - o l
Group Home. 740·992-5023. able1o maintain accura1e
Is full·time, 40 hours a
dlye.
reports and aosist
wvok and includes
consumers on and off,the
benefits. Interested
For employment
van as needed. Requires
appl~nts can sond
conaldemia~ und
valid drivers license. cle~m
resumes to:
rMUIM to:
driving record and
Kevin Kelly
Dlllno Hill
kno~e&lt;lge ollocal routes.
- Managing Editor
r:lo Gatllpollo Tribune
Resumes \\rill not b;o
Ohio Valley Publishing CQ ·
US11II.n l Ave,
accepted. Applicalioris can
825 Thlnl Avo.
Gollpolle, OH 4M:Il
belound ol
aotll
Ohio 4M31
www.prestera.orglcareers.ht
Clioml or our 716 Main St. Pt.
Pleasant office. Subm~
Fael 4 You, In Mason now
appllcaUon !&gt;Y fax 304-525·
hiring, must be 18 &amp; avail·
7893 or mail to:
able all shifts. must pa&amp;s a
Prosto(a Center
Drug Test, Apply ~thin.
HA/Drivor
3375 U.S. Rou1e 60 E
Hun11ngtoo, WV 25705'
FEDERAL
EOE/AA

~

rooms. Large yard. Covered financing-WAC.

WV 26164

Valley ~-----~- do18i~orlon1adlndlvlduai

MoDFOHuS~•~

GolllpoiiJg•r•~ ~oN"'\" deck.Attache&lt;lgarago. 740· 7962

arrost.

4
-~:;--:-~~--Hospital Is an EEOIAA -,
Emptoyer
Metal Fabliel\tOr is· accept·
lng resumes lor thalolklwlng
positions: 3D Drafter (Auto
Foetor 1'11Nnlt: Boon think· CAD). expol"ioncod Tig
lng ·about It-Apply now! Welder Machinist CNC
R
1
$30 $45 a day •
'
eceve
•
· 8)1p8rience and entry 18'1&amp;1
reimbursement, paid respit~ Receptionist. Compensation
and SUPJJ:Oft for the vout based upon experienced.
placed m VOUf home. Please submk· resume and
Training b~glns Ma.rch~9 81 professional references to:
Albany.
all asls
star 70764 St. At. 124, Vinton,
care lor more Information: OH45886.by Aprll4
11.otl Froe1-866' 3&lt;!5·1558. ·
.

~

388·8017 or 245·9213

367·7129.

:n,::~,:~:.ro:~~~~:; :~r~r ~:~~:;,:,e:aci will be oonducting intarviews at 25
dedicated and motivated ~~~ a::~~e. at CoL:~ ~.ta.ngmasonry.com, Fa!C Supervision
Self ~~Tt;:!dS:~m~~:
Individuals willing to work Hospital at
-67
~
,
complete applications &amp; starter and detail Oriented. ~m-3pm lor the upcoming 4br, 2 N;, Pool, Clry New
304 5 0860
1
Haven, $139,500 call aner
with low income c~li~ren elCt 112, Monday thru Friday Resume rf available to (74b) Traveling '· involved Mond~tY S.T.N.A. class. This is the
6pm 304·593·8871
5
anlt families as ubitltutes from aam. pm
Lakin 749-3500
· thur Fri. Mall resume to:
only day lmerviews w~l be
Currently seeking caring

j

Daytime 388·0000, Evening

FOR SAt..E

1

•

(7401949·2217

be&lt;1 2 bath .Oakwood, 1999
16x80 3 bod 2 bath Fortune.

.:Ju1uu•...,

ow

Excellent condition readf Ia
move· in. $255,000.00, Call:

16XBO 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
• Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
$23() per month. 740·385·
SOCIAL SECURllY ISSI? 9948 ·
- - - - : : - : : ----..,
No Fee Unles's We Win!
bed
bath
2000 161170 2
2
1 Fleetwood, 2002 l6x80 3 · ·
1·888·582·3345

Weldors needed. 1yr. export·
ence. Good wages &amp; bene·
fits. Send resumes to: CLA

.II'D

l'ltomlitoNAL

, SERVJ!E&gt;
__
TURNED DOWN ON

www.lnfoclalon.com

~
·

Ranch siyle housa with 4
bedrooms, living room, dinIng room, kitchen, large family room, central air, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
large .Florida room completely cedar opens onto
patiO &amp; pool area. Heated in
~und pool enclosed by privacy fencing and 1andscaped . Finishsd 2 car
garage attached to house
~ finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.

service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

• Professional work

__..

area. Approx. 4 acres, all ·
professionally landscaped.

aDvance payments of

environment

=

· • LlWitock......................................................
: • Lo8t end Found ..........................................~

House for sale in Racine

lees or Insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278..()003 lo learn if the
mortgage - broker or
l~nder
Is
properly
licensed. (This is a public

•Up to $8.50/hour
• MedicaVOentalf401 k

·

· Auto Repalr..................................................no

I

lme Warner C&amp;ble

exp. required. Permanent

o:

. .:. Bualneaa Tralnlng ....................................... 140
! ~ tam para &amp; Motor Homes ....- ..................... 790

H~

FOR SAlE

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Di'llislon of
Fll)anclal
Institution's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
oblain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large

ompanles Including·

'

pooltlon, COOlPany training Food Service Worker for full
Lost: Male Yorl&lt;shire Terrier, provided, Must be HS grad- time and temporary (90
laa1 seen 3119108 In u81o, FT poomon, $585iw1&lt;, dey&amp;) work In a 114 Bod
Centenary area. Black &amp; rapldactvancements+bene· Long Term care State
Gold. deeply missed by little · fits. For an tnterview call FaciHty. Full-lime emplOY,girl,
REWARD,
Call (740)446·7798.
· ment offers an eX1enslve

· ~ Bualneu pportun.~, ................................ ;

'

Oo~'l1'ttP!.olll AWftY

Pistol on Patters Creek $100 Customer Service Dept., No

1

'
E I
t fo R nt
' _. qu pmen
r e

Take inboond

customer service calls
for Fortune 100

HWWANIID

Black' Case with 4ttn: Local Company with

Autoalor Sale •••••••••••••••••, ............................ 710
BoateaMotontorSale ............................. 750
_ Building SupptiH ........................................ 550
Buelneaa end Buildings ................. ............ 340
•
0
rtu
210

/'

·.

' l 1\\ II I "

------~-

... 4x4'1 For 91111 .............................................. 725
Announcement .........................:..................
,~ Antlq.uee
. ........................................................ 5
- Apartmenl8 tar Rent .........,......................... 440
: Auction and Flea Markat............................. OIO
' Auto P - &amp; Acceaaorlel ........... ............... 760

www.mydailyreg~ter;com

lf\IC A fMo1&lt; .

Wanting to Buy J'unk Cars.
304-675·2176
l\i l 'lt l\\ ll \.1

LOST:

~

www.mydailytribune.com

o~

~--..,...~--..,--­

An l!xcellent Wffi to eam
Carpenter/Oyesvllle, $300 money. The New Avon.

MONEY
TO loAN

**NOTI£E**

Wante&lt;llo buy Junk Coos,&amp;
Farm Machinery call 74Q388·0884 Can Call Collee1

988.
nowopape
only htl

r

;;WANIID;::;I, ~

;IIELP:
.

•

any

lor sate re1um, (740)698· Call Manlyn 304·882-2645
2.267

Thlo
ccopll

740-992-2155
www.mydailysentineLcom

POLICIES: Ohio Vlllty Publtlhlng .......,.. lhe right to lflt. rtttct, or e~nceleny 1d 11 •nv tltne. ErrDrS mu•I·O. NpOI"'.r on the flrtt dlr of
Trlbun.s.nllnei-A.;IIter Will M reapon~lble tor no mor• lt\ln lhl co.t ollhl epace occupied by the error 1r1d only thl first ln..rtton.. We 1hllll not bl
•ny lou or elp«\141 h i reeulls from tht publicllllon or oml1slon of 1n ldvtwtiHrMnt. Correction will be m11de In tne ftr-' IYellebJt tdltlon. • Box
I n llwa¥1 UHitldeiitllil. •Current rllte can! eppllll. • All reellltltl ldvlftlllmll'ltS are IUit}lot to thl FliCflnl Felr Hou1lng Act of ,188'.: • Thil ,.,.,. .,..,..
ltlndlrdl. W. will not knOWingly ecc.pt •IIY ldvlt'tleh• In vlolltlon of tht IIW.

30th, wl81llchos In belly &amp;
re&lt;l
collar,

~==~~~~~9:866:_.-=-=::-:--'-,

304-675-1333 ..

ads must be prepaid* .

'

Absolute. Top Dollar • sil-

Eliot
d'Mrtleements ar
bltelto lho Fedn
air Houalng Act

(740'709·6199 "' {740)446·

.~oint ~leasant' iegister·· The Dally Sentinel

Sunday Dl•pl•y: 1:00
Thunday for Sundaye

Found: • Small
dog
Centerville-Thurman area. 100 WORKERS NEEDED
Coll614·893·1689
Assemble crafts, wood
~oms.To $480/wk Materials
Lost·
female
German provided. Free ln1ormalion
Shop~erd la81 seen Jan. pkg. 24Hr. 801-428·4649

'

_{.:r_

Bu•lneu D•y• Prior To
Publication
"

kltncarlyle@lcomcast.net

~00:0 ~~ 110

t

OUNTIES

~be ~allipolis 1.Dailp ~ribune
740446-2342

All Dl•pley: l:Z Noon 3:

Now you con hove borders and Qraphlcs
~
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

~~ . I rK:-IT_&amp;_c..,.A..,.R..,L:_~L_E_~~---r--,.;._---..,1~n=o

t

Spotting Scope and 9MM FT &amp; PT positions in our

&gt;

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mond•y... Prlday for Jnaertlon
Jn N•xt D-v'• Paper
sUnday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
l'or Sund•y• P•per

Mole Border Collie, Female 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry,
lab puppy 4fnon old, half dental gold, pre 1935 US
Lab half Border Collie. 245· currency, proof/mint sets,
5297
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
446·2842

"

REACH ()VER
17,0()() HOUSEH()l_JllS!

Display Ads

• Stllrt Your Adl With A Keyword 1 Include COmplete
o.cttptlon • lndude A Price • Avoid Abtnv..tlane
• lncluda Phane Number·And AddreN When Needed
• Ada Sho1111G Jl¥n 7 O.YI

Succeuful Ads
'·
Should Include T h - Items
To
Get Response ...

''

Place Your Paid ClassifiedAd In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

Word Ads

• All

,;.

REACH

~~--------------·

/}eaa'lfirthf'

-

·~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

CLASSIFIED

')
'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1'

I'*

WANIID

I

Child care done in my home,
infants welcome, . meals
included, lots of activities for
your child, days, night and
"" · $2 ·00 per hour·
weo'•nds
Call 256-1438 ask tor

385-9948.

For rent or sale. located in
Bidwell, 3BA. 2 bath
Unfurnished. If sold must be
moved. Call 388·8446 or
--~----=- 615·830·4499
77 Hawthorne Ln., Pt. --~-:--::---:-Pteesant, 3br, 1ba, 1015/SF
from $199 Month
New floor coverings, fresh
New 2008 Singtewide
paint, new heat pump
Midwest 74o-828-2750
$79~000 304-674-3698
mymidwesthome.com

Attention!
Local company offering ~No
DOWN PAYMENT" pro~ms for you to buy your
home instead Ot renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect aedit

lot8B'x124'w/14'x70'~iler,

3 br., 2 b, partialy furnished.
2 covered porches, 2 car
carport, large block storage
building, $40,000, (740)992-

_30_5_7_ _ _ _ __
NEW 200114 BA-2BA
1, 700+eq ft 5'9,989
from $397 Month
Midwesl
_ .
740 828 2750
mymldweSihom8.com

accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
locators.
(740)387·0000·

G)
=·

~--"":"---,

r

Allrnllntahl..:lvtrttlalng
lnth1new.paper
•
•ublocttolhe
....,.,
Footr Houolng Act ol1118
wbtch mlk• n IIIIQII to
edvertiH "any
pritel'lnce, llmltetlon or
dlecrlmlnl11on biMd on
race, coloi', religion, ...
•
tomll''"'lltat\11
or n111onal
origin, or ony tnlondon 1o
prefe".:.:.~~~~~':J~n or ,
dlecrlmlnetlon."
Thla newapeper will not
knowlnglr ....pt
edwirtiiMI"MNN tor real
ettete which lain
vloletlon of thltew. Our

rtadere ari hereby
lnfoimed thlt all
dwelling• ldvertllld In
thll nni•JMIPif ....
ewellabte on en eq11111
-rlunhylrnH.

New3Bodroomhomaslrom
$214.:)6 per mon1h, Includes
manv upgrades, delivery &amp;
set·up. (740)385·2434
USED HOME SALE
Nlco 3BR s·ong1OWl'des
from $2800 Down Pmt

j

Midwest740-~8-2750

ims \!&lt;

ACREAGE
__
3 acres tor Se.le on sandhill
Ad $25,000. 304·895·3929
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Cleorgos Creek
Ad, 441-1111
One acre + Restricted Lot
on Watson Rd, . Bidwell.
$18,000.00. Call 740·441·

9772
Prime residential building lot ~
.in Rio Grande on lake ·or.
$24,900. Phone 260-495·
5114
I\ I \ I \ I '

No-

POSTAL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27/hr., now hirlng. For oppticailon and !roe
governement Job
call
American Asaoc: of Labor 1913·599-8226, 24/hrs. omp,
oerv.

rnto.

Palrlollc Focda Inc . - ·
SOl to 300$ dal~. Aoule
Sales Delivery Oriv!!r. Bring
a Partner. Company
Vohk:lo provided call

304-812-0270

SHOP.
CLASSIFIEDS

HouiSe or Rent Racine Area
No pets. Call740·992·5858 .

�•
'

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

NCAA

· free throw and Gordon's the Tar Heels raced to a
long jumper at the buzzer double-digit lead in the first
wasn't close.
5 minutes of the blowout
North Carolina (34-2)
East Rel!ional
from Page 81
will face founh-seeded
LouisviRe 78.l
Washington
State
on
Oklahoma 4!1
the tleld. Ubiles missed his
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Thursday night in Charlotte,
first seven shots ami tinished Earl Clark scored 14 points . the same arena where they
'3-of-ll for 12 points, while and Louisville handed won the Atlantic Coast
Fish,er was held to five Oklahoma its most-lopsided Conference tournament last
points.
loss in the NCAA touma, weekend.
South Regional
ment, building a 44-22 halfThe Tar Heels scored the
Texas 75, Miami 72
time lead and coasting from first nine points, led 51-26
NORTH LITTLE ROCK, there.
at halftime and shot 68 perArk. - AJ. Abrams'calmly
Louisville matched its cent for the game. They
sank two· free throws with · biggest rout in the NCAA became the first . team to
&lt;J .S seconds remaining, giv- tournament,
having score 100 points in their
second-seeded trounced Kansas State by 30 first two NCAA games
ing the
Longhorns just enough,mar- in 1968. Startipg five play- since Loyola Marymount
gi n to hold off Mianu.
ers born outside Kentucky, did it agamst New Mexico
Abrams gave Texas a 74- · the third-seeded Cardinals · State and Michigan in 1990.
6&lt;J lead, but the Longhorns (26-8) reached the round of
Sonny Weems scored 19
weren't quite safe _yet. 16 for the first time since for Arkansas (23-12) , which
Miami's Raymond HtcRs 200S. They will take on never got closer than 2.1
made a 3-pomter, and D.J. Tennessee, which beat after halftime.
Au crustin then shot an .air Butler 76-71 in overtime, on
· West Regional
balf on his first of two free Thursday night in Charlotte,
Western Kentucky 72,
throws with 1.8 seconds to N.C.
San Diego (i3 .
play. Augustin made the sec- .
David Godbold hit four 3s
TAMPA, Fla. - Behind
ond, though , to preserve the and finished with IS points Courtney Lee's dazzling
win.
for sixth-seeded Oklahoma first-half performance and
. Abrams scored 26 points (23-12). Star freshman .some clutch shooting down
· on six 3-pointers for the sec- · · Blake Griffin was held with- the stretch, the 12th-seeded
and consecutive game. out a shot for 12 minutes Hilltoppers advanced to the
Texas (30-6) advances to the and had eight points.
round of 16 for the first time
rel'!;ional semifinals to play
Tennessee 76,
in 15 years and have a date
Butler 71, OT
th1rd- seeded Stanford on
with top-seeded UCLA in
Friday in Houston. . .
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
Phoenix.
Jack McClinton scored 18 JaJuan Smith bit Jour
Lee finished with 29
points for Miami (23-11 ). · straight free throws in the points, including a huge 3.
Memphis 77,
final 13.6 seconds of over- pbinter that gave his .team
Mississip~ ~tate 74
time and the Volunteers sur- the lead for ~ood with 6: 17
E ROCK, vived a game they nearly remaining, Stx straight free
NORTH LI~
Ark. -Joey Dorsey had 13 turned into a rout
throws in the final 34 sec:
points, 12 rebounds, a s-eaThe Vols (31-4) scored six onds sealed the victory.
son-high six blocks and an straight points inside after
Tyrone Brazelton added.
untold number of bumps the Bulldogs took their first 15 points for·the Hilltoppers
and
bruises,
helping lead in the final2 minutes of ·(29•6).
Memphis wins its ninth OT, including benched
Gyno Pomare had 20
. straight and advance to the guard Ramar Smith's basket points and nine rebounds
round of 16 for the third with 27 seconds leftto.make for the Toreros (22-14 ), who
·
it 72-68.
That after overcame a IS-point deficit
straight year.
Derrick Rose and Chris Tennessee led by 13 early in in the second half before
·
Douglas-Roberts added 17 the game. ·
fading in the closing minpoints each for the Tigers
A.J. Graves led Butler utes.
(35-1 ), who will play fifth- (30-4) with 21 points on just
seeded Michigan State (27- 6-of-18. shootuig. ~tke
Sundafs Results
. 8) in the regional semifinals Green added 15 pomts,
Xavier 8 , Purdue 78
on Friday.
seven rebounds ana five
WASHINGTON - · C.J.
~amont Gordon had . 21 . assists before fouling out Anderson
and
Drew
pomts and Ben Hansbrough . late in overtime.
Lavender each scored 18
for
eighth--Seeded , It .was the first time two points and Josh Duncan had
19
Mississippi .State (23-11), teams with 30 wins played 16, and Xavier was surpriswhich hasn't made it out of each other in the second ingly efficient on offense.
the flfst weekend since the round.
The Musketeers (29-6)
1996 team went to the Final
North Carolina 108,
shot 54 percent in breaking
Four, .
.Arkansas 77
the school record for wins,
Gordon's layup cut the
RALEIGH, N.C.
going 2~-for-33 at the free
Mississi{lpi State ·defiCit to . Wayne Ellington scored 20 . throw hne and 27-for-50
76-74 wtth 4.2 seconds left, points, 1)t Lawson had 19 from the floor agamst . a
but Douglas-Roberts made a points ana seven assists and · team that led the Btg Ten m

field -goal
percentage
defense . Their 85 points
were the most allowed by
Purdue this season.
Keaton Grant scored 19
for the Boilermakers (2S-9),
who have won I 0 straight
first-roond games but have
exited without another win
in hal.f those tournamentsincluding two in a row.
Lavender. '!I 5-foot-7
· guard, had nine assists and
provided Xavier with a pivotal basket after the
Musketeers frittered away
an almost insurmountable
lead in this defensive struggle.
West Regional
UCLA 53,
TexasA&amp;M49
ANAHEIM, Calif.
Darren Collison scored the
go-ahead basket on a onehanded layup with &lt;J 112
seconds remaining, Josh
Shipp contested Donald
Sloan's final drive and top- .
seeded UCLA held on for a
· victory over Texas A&amp;M.
The Bruin s (33-3) won
1heir 12th in a row and will
face Western Kentucky or
San Diego next week in
Phoenix.
Urged on by 17,600 proUCLA fans that made it
. seem like a home game, the
Bruins rallied from a 10point deficit in the second
half.
.
Kevin Love' had 19 _points
and II rebounds - hts 21st,
double-double
and
UCLA overcame the combined·· 3.-of-14 shooting of
Shipp
and
Russell
Westbrook .
Sloan led the Aggies (25ll) with 12J'oints and Josh
Carter adde I 0. A&amp;M was
trying to get back to the
final 16 for the second
straight year.
Mtdwest Regional
Wisconsin 72,
Kansas State SS
OMAHA, Neb. - Trevon
Hughes matched his career
high with 25 points, and the
third-seeded Badgers shut
down Kansas State freshman star Michael Beasley in
the second half.
. Beasley had 23 points for
the II th-seeded Wildcats,
but just six after halftime.
Michael Flowers had l S
points and Greg Stiemsma

.'

. Monday, March 24, 2008
14 for the Badgers (3 1-4),
who set a school record for'
wins in a season and head to
the round of 16 in Detroit
with 12 straight wins and 25
victories in the last 27
games. They'll play the
winner
of
Sunday's
Georgetown-Davidson
game.
Beasley, just 2-for-6 in
the second half, hugged
teammates and coaches
when he left the game with
53.9 seconds left. -Many
expect him to declare for
the NBA draft.
Bill Walker added 18 for .
the Wildcats (21-12), who
were 0-for- 13 from 3-point
range.
·
Kansas 75, UNLV 56
OMAHA. Neb. - Mario
Chalmers scored 17 points
and
the
top-seeded
Jayhawks pulled away from
UNLV in ihe second hall m
another romp that sent
Kansas to the round of 16.
Chalmers had plenty of
help: Russell Robinson
scored 13, Brandon Rush .
had 12 and Sherron Collins
I 0. That depth proved too
much for the Runnin'
Rebels ' (27-8); who barely
had enough personnel to
finish the game after two of
their I0 players in uniform
fouled· out.
The Rebels shot 27 percent ( 12 of 45) and were
. 36-26.
outrebounded
Kansas (33-3) shot 58 percent in what amounted to a
brisk workout hefore playing the winner of Sunday's
Villanova-Siena game next
week in Detroit.
. East Regional
Washington State 61,
Notre Dame 41
DENVER
Derrick
Low scored 18 points and
Kyle Weaver added 15, and
the Cougars won a clash of
styles by shutting down
Luke Harangody · and t~e
high-flying Ftghting Irish.
Washin~ton State held the
Big East s Player of the
Year to I 0 points, half his·
average, and limited the
Irish (2S-8) to . half their
scoring
average,
too.
Harangody did have 22
rebOunds.
Washington
·
State
advanced to play the winner
ofS unday 's Arkansas-North

Carol ina game.
.
.
Robbie Cowgill added.J2
points for the fourth-seeded
Cougars (26-8), who WO!J a
second game in the tournament for the flfst time since
I '!41; when they lost: to
Wi sconsin in the nat ional
championship game.
:
South Regional •
Stanford 82, :
Marquette 81, OT·
ANAHEIM, Calif. . Ejected for unsportsmanlike
behavior in the first tialf, ·
Stanford
coac h
Ttent
Johnson wasn ' t around to
see Brook Lopez make a
baseline leaner with 1.3 seconds left that sent the thirdseeded Cardinal to the
round of 16.
Lopez, one of the
Cardmal's twin ? -footers,
scored eight of their I)
points in overtime ahd finIshed with 30, one shy of a
career high. The go-ahead
bucket came on Mitch
Johnson's career-high 16th
assist, and sent Stanford
(28-7) to play the winner of
Sunday's . Miami-Texas
game.
Lopez was · an effective
counter to Marquette sharpshooter Jerel McNeal, who
scored a career-high 30
points, and hit three 3-pointers in overtime for the No. 6
seed Golden Eagles (25-1 0).
But McNeal misfired on a
I s :footer with I 5 seconds
!eft, setting up Lopez's winner.
Michigan State 65,
Pittsburgh 54
DENVER
Drew
Neitzel and Kalin Lucas
went on a late ballhandling
and scoring spree to help
Michigan State pull away
from Pittsburgh.
Lucas and Neitzel combined for 21 of the final 25
points for the t1fth-seeded
Spartans to help them win a
battle of the .· bullies - a
game
rough-and-tumble
between · two Rust Belt
teams who brought their
to
the
Rocky
show
Mou'ntains.
Neitzel .(ed the Spartans
with 21 points, and Lucas
finished with 19.
·
Levance Fields had 19
points for fourth-seeded Pitt
(27-10), which had won six
straight.
·

_ Monday, March 24, 2008

Gallia ·
County
OH
Websites:
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Your Ad, . · (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 4411-3008
· Fax To
992-2157 · . ·
or Fax To
&amp;75-5234

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

IQ WRITE AN AD

r

\ \ \(H

1

\ ~I

\ II '\ I '-

GIVEAWAY

I

LPNs/ANs posftlons avail·
able for home health care In
the Gallipolis area, Part time
days a11ailable. Ventftrach
exp. helpful. Please contact
Denise!Mi'chela at Primary
care Nursing Services BOO·
518·2273 or 614·764.01!60.

All

R01t

ver/gold

coins,

anted ada metln
OEollndenlo.

1

~
~·

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•

Reward Cal 740-441·1720

A~~1't\l~ "1+!1\l
~~s~'f ~M'GtL.
L.1~ 1"ot"JA.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Now Hiring
Full Time Day Shift
Full Time Evening Shift

Camping Equipment ................................... 780
ot Thanki .......................................... 010
• Child/Elderly Care ........................................ 190
Carde

Elect'rlcametrlgeretlon................................ 840

••~
·····-······:···•··················"""a30

'·: Excavating...................................................
~ Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610

· flll'fl'll for A8nt ............................................. 430
• :. F•inalot Sate ............: ................................
'· For'Lea....................................................... 490
:0 for Sate........................................................ 585
, For Sale or Trlde .......................................... 590
; • FruKs &amp; VegetllbiH ..................................... 580
' ; Fumlahed ROIIma........................................460
:. General Heullng........................................... 860
• ' Glvuwer......................................................040
' • Happy Ada.....................................................O&amp;O
:0 Hay &amp; Gratn..................................................640
• ; Help Wanted ................................................. 110
• Home lmprovementa ...................................810
· • Homea for 8818 ............................................ 310
" • Houaehold Goada ........................................ 510
• ; Houses tor Renl .......................................... 410
,, In Mem·orlam .........................................:...... 020
•..u.ance..................................................... 130
'--·. , lAwn &amp; Gardin Equlpment ...............; ••• :.... 680

330

P!Alliohing Company)
1-888-IMC-PAYU

~ Lots a. ACNige ............................................ 310
lltacetlaneouo ........... :.............:................ ,,;170
.. MlacellaneaulllerchandiH....................... 540

llobtle Home Repatr ..........: ......................... 680
lloblle llotnellor Rent ............................... 420
IIOblle Homellor S8te................................ 320
2G
Money to Loin............................................. 2
llolorCyCIH &amp; 4 Wheetel'l ..........................740
Mualcalln•rumenta ........................_......... 570
• P8110nale ......................................~.............. 005
• . hlalor Stita ................................................ 580
Plumbing &amp; H..Ung .................................... 820
ProleUI9nal Servlces ................................. 230
' RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repalr............................... 160

~ ~ 'ANI Eatate Wanted ..................................... 380

Schoolllnetructlon ..................................... 150

Seed , Plant &amp; Fei'lltl-.............................. 650
SRuatlona Wantlld ....................................... 12G

Spece for Rent ••• :......................................... 460
Sporllntl Goods ........................................... 52G
SUV'I for Seta ..................... ......................... 72G
Trucks lor Sale .....................................:..•••• 715
Upholltery ................................................... 870
YMI For Sale .. ."......... ...................................7~
Wantedto' Buv •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••., ••• 090
Wanted to Bur- Farm Suppllea •••••••••••••.••.• 520
Wanted To Do .............................................. 160
W•nted to Rent ...................~ .........·................ 470
Yard Sate- Galltpotla .................................:.. o12
Yanl Sata-Pomeror/Middle ......................... U74
Yard Sata-PL PIHHnt ............. :.................. Ot8

j

Ext 2347
~ • ~~

Vl'o- .

';ww~w=·=•o:m=lc:a:.c:o:m::;~;======~CC&gt;;;2008;:::b:y:N:E:A~,:'":•:·;

II

1110

Ho.PWANIID

11''0

ffiuWANTFD

11'.'0

Hn.PWANrnD

Box 103, c/o Gall!&gt;olis ll(llly
Tribune. PO Box 469,

Gallipolis, OH 45631.

c ..... ~..,

·

benelll pacl&lt;age Including
Sta1 Clv'l
v1
1'
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
e
t ser ce re treSell. Shirley Spears. 304- ment, earn up to 15 days
vacaHon per year, 18 days
675•1429
otck leai'O, and 12 plus paid

Manpower Is now hiring for
the

lollowlng

positions
Produllon
Worlcers In the Buff'8to, WV
AraB Benefits available Call
Today 304 _757•3338

Aulomo~lle

...,-----:--:---::-

Mason's and laborers with
Masonry experience needed
lmmedla1ely, Ful nmo wilh

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg.Pay$20/hror
$57Kiyr, Includes
Federal Benefits, OT.
Offered by Exam Services,
not offer- wl USPS wile

~

hires.
1-866-403·2582

:~--::-:--:-:--:-:-

INs'rRtn1oN

rlB

I

HOMES

(p/1) ~-"·son Co"""' Head

,

·~ ~
. --,
Start/Early Head Start.
Requires diploma or GED,
current,
valkf,
drivers
license, prool olllll\.o liability
insurance and good communication skilla. Must pass
drug screen and back·
ground check.' FfT pos~lons
available in Cabell Cty.
COmmerical Drivers Ucense
within 6 mo. of hire required.
Send cover letter, resume
and 3 ilrs ot ret. to SCAC·

holidays; health/life lnsur-

.

· 0 down payment.

0

HR. 540 Fifth Ave., Htgn.,
WV 25701 EOE
· Fun Time Receptionist needed in busy Doctor's Office.
Pial&lt; up applicatlono at Sune
112.
Pleasan1
• U StOffi
Hoapn.tl. Aeeumos may be
attached IO the application
-------FuH time ruck-drlvor needed
1

c

'

Needed mcperlencad ltuck
Driver for hauling blacktop.
Clan A 304·674·3311 or
3()4-593-0839

o
r.

er

(careers ose o ome
Caii 'Today! 74&lt;r446·4367,
1-800-214-0452

s

e

e

wo

~

::d

held and ctass space Is lmlted. Anyone interest in
::---::--::-----::--:--:: attending he ctoss needs to
1
ResCara Home Care is pickupanapplk:ationat
333
·accap11ng appilca11ons tor Page St. Middleport, Ohio
Direct Care personnel,
between 9am and . Spm
CNA's &amp; STNA's. lt you Monday-Friday. Applica~ons .
wOuld like to take aMntage must be submitted prior to
of this opporturiily, you may interviews for approval. NO
apply Monday through PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
Friday 8am-4pm at 8204 On the day the interviews
01
Carta Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio. ask for Hollie Bumgarner,
You niay also tax a resume LPN St ff D e1
.
· · .,
a
ev opmen1
10
Coordinalor," 71h·April 161h.
rharrlsonOre&amp;C?Sre.com
EOE. Participant of the Drug
Free workpiece Program.
0
PublllhlnQ Co.
111
Is seo~ng a motiV. e&lt;1,
1
•
To Do
to be a paglnatorlpage
designer)n the dally
Handyman Servtce. In need
production of llelhreo
ot ropen around 1he hOme?
nowspap.... Tho
A e a s 0 n a b 1 e
au---~·1 applicant·
ratos.20yrs.••~rlance.Ptl.#
~u
__,.....
would
wort&lt; under 1ho
740·508-tl408
lsi ot 1ho •two
011
superv
·~
-.
~
department. Duties
""""" . !L\'

°

m.

I
.

·

2007

16x78,

Payments

4 bed· under $300/month. Owner
740-594·

--;------2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec·
2000 Custom built Cape· tlonal home $279 per month
.,.,,.""''"'..,"".., "'' Cod. 4/58A, 2 ba1h, Fin 740·385· 7671 .
Accr8dltecl Uember Ac(:rediting B
loca d
·d
Cwncll lor tndepl:lndent ca~ege~:~
asement,
te ou1Sl e 2008 sectional · home 3
and Schools 127•&amp;. .
of Rio Grande Ill' a beautiful
Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
woode&lt;116ca11on. $199,900.
Overbrook Rehab Center Call lor an oppt. 74Q-245· and set, up $38,695. 740·

o· o~
•• 339 Ra····--··•
~·~~.

OhiO VBitey Home Hoanh,
Inc . hiring STNA, CNA,
Homa Health Aides end
PenKIIIIII care Aides. Full,
Part Time and Per Clem
wtth valid drivers license and poi~OI\8
·
rv lc
avalloblo. Apply "
insurance. Must be depend- 1480
Jackson
Pike
able, have
good
customer
· phone 441-1393'
hovolmii\Odlolo
eervlceo
skills
and be
ablelo Gaiii&gt;OiiS.
tui~Ume Cuotomor
load and unload 1rucks. Must lor Skille&lt;l Office or apply 81
lndude atoctron~
Servk:e poettton kl our be able to work weekends. 1456 Jackson 'Pike, phQne
generation of nawa
main office.
Send resumes to CLA Box -441 ·9263
for
pages, along with some
Succenful appllclntl
Ol,
clo
Gallipolis
Dally
Passport/Private
Care
copy
edhlng and headline
1
mutt be PfOple orfentbu
P.O B
Office.
Competitive
wages
·
writing,
as well as,
469
......, en•-- Ullng lito
Gralllo'pone,:s, :_. ·
proofreading .of pages
x
• and beneflts Including health
1 0 4563 1
ph
·
insurance anil m1aage
rmmproduced by other
~ '"'
n
·1
·
computer:... ond
bu,..mont.
paglna1ors. Cofl"lliJier
enjoy WOrking wtth
Guitar Pla~er looking ior --=--::-c-~::--skins and knowledge of
numbera. Poaltton
. Drummer &amp;· Bass Player. to Part Time Driver: Transport
Quark XPreas and Adobe
on.... 111 comp11ny
play mostly original Rock
consumers to and from
Photoshop are required.
bonoftlllncludlng
music. 985-4416 attor-5:00 medical appointments in tho
Past experience In paJIO
haltth and
Mason County area, 20
or graphiC design is not a
lnourance, 4011&lt;, paid
Help wan1811 at Darst Homo
hours per week. Must be
requiromem. The p&lt;islllon
....Uon ond - o l
Group Home. 740·992-5023. able1o maintain accura1e
Is full·time, 40 hours a
dlye.
reports and aosist
wvok and includes
consumers on and off,the
benefits. Interested
For employment
van as needed. Requires
appl~nts can sond
conaldemia~ und
valid drivers license. cle~m
resumes to:
rMUIM to:
driving record and
Kevin Kelly
Dlllno Hill
kno~e&lt;lge ollocal routes.
- Managing Editor
r:lo Gatllpollo Tribune
Resumes \\rill not b;o
Ohio Valley Publishing CQ ·
US11II.n l Ave,
accepted. Applicalioris can
825 Thlnl Avo.
Gollpolle, OH 4M:Il
belound ol
aotll
Ohio 4M31
www.prestera.orglcareers.ht
Clioml or our 716 Main St. Pt.
Pleasant office. Subm~
Fael 4 You, In Mason now
appllcaUon !&gt;Y fax 304-525·
hiring, must be 18 &amp; avail·
7893 or mail to:
able all shifts. must pa&amp;s a
Prosto(a Center
Drug Test, Apply ~thin.
HA/Drivor
3375 U.S. Rou1e 60 E
Hun11ngtoo, WV 25705'
FEDERAL
EOE/AA

~

rooms. Large yard. Covered financing-WAC.

WV 26164

Valley ~-----~- do18i~orlon1adlndlvlduai

MoDFOHuS~•~

GolllpoiiJg•r•~ ~oN"'\" deck.Attache&lt;lgarago. 740· 7962

arrost.

4
-~:;--:-~~--Hospital Is an EEOIAA -,
Emptoyer
Metal Fabliel\tOr is· accept·
lng resumes lor thalolklwlng
positions: 3D Drafter (Auto
Foetor 1'11Nnlt: Boon think· CAD). expol"ioncod Tig
lng ·about It-Apply now! Welder Machinist CNC
R
1
$30 $45 a day •
'
eceve
•
· 8)1p8rience and entry 18'1&amp;1
reimbursement, paid respit~ Receptionist. Compensation
and SUPJJ:Oft for the vout based upon experienced.
placed m VOUf home. Please submk· resume and
Training b~glns Ma.rch~9 81 professional references to:
Albany.
all asls
star 70764 St. At. 124, Vinton,
care lor more Information: OH45886.by Aprll4
11.otl Froe1-866' 3&lt;!5·1558. ·
.

~

388·8017 or 245·9213

367·7129.

:n,::~,:~:.ro:~~~~:; :~r~r ~:~~:;,:,e:aci will be oonducting intarviews at 25
dedicated and motivated ~~~ a::~~e. at CoL:~ ~.ta.ngmasonry.com, Fa!C Supervision
Self ~~Tt;:!dS:~m~~:
Individuals willing to work Hospital at
-67
~
,
complete applications &amp; starter and detail Oriented. ~m-3pm lor the upcoming 4br, 2 N;, Pool, Clry New
304 5 0860
1
Haven, $139,500 call aner
with low income c~li~ren elCt 112, Monday thru Friday Resume rf available to (74b) Traveling '· involved Mond~tY S.T.N.A. class. This is the
6pm 304·593·8871
5
anlt families as ubitltutes from aam. pm
Lakin 749-3500
· thur Fri. Mall resume to:
only day lmerviews w~l be
Currently seeking caring

j

Daytime 388·0000, Evening

FOR SAt..E

1

•

(7401949·2217

be&lt;1 2 bath .Oakwood, 1999
16x80 3 bod 2 bath Fortune.

.:Ju1uu•...,

ow

Excellent condition readf Ia
move· in. $255,000.00, Call:

16XBO 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
• Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
$23() per month. 740·385·
SOCIAL SECURllY ISSI? 9948 ·
- - - - : : - : : ----..,
No Fee Unles's We Win!
bed
bath
2000 161170 2
2
1 Fleetwood, 2002 l6x80 3 · ·
1·888·582·3345

Weldors needed. 1yr. export·
ence. Good wages &amp; bene·
fits. Send resumes to: CLA

.II'D

l'ltomlitoNAL

, SERVJ!E&gt;
__
TURNED DOWN ON

www.lnfoclalon.com

~
·

Ranch siyle housa with 4
bedrooms, living room, dinIng room, kitchen, large family room, central air, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
large .Florida room completely cedar opens onto
patiO &amp; pool area. Heated in
~und pool enclosed by privacy fencing and 1andscaped . Finishsd 2 car
garage attached to house
~ finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.

service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

• Professional work

__..

area. Approx. 4 acres, all ·
professionally landscaped.

aDvance payments of

environment

=

· • LlWitock......................................................
: • Lo8t end Found ..........................................~

House for sale in Racine

lees or Insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278..()003 lo learn if the
mortgage - broker or
l~nder
Is
properly
licensed. (This is a public

•Up to $8.50/hour
• MedicaVOentalf401 k

·

· Auto Repalr..................................................no

I

lme Warner C&amp;ble

exp. required. Permanent

o:

. .:. Bualneaa Tralnlng ....................................... 140
! ~ tam para &amp; Motor Homes ....- ..................... 790

H~

FOR SAlE

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Di'llislon of
Fll)anclal
Institution's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
oblain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large

ompanles Including·

'

pooltlon, COOlPany training Food Service Worker for full
Lost: Male Yorl&lt;shire Terrier, provided, Must be HS grad- time and temporary (90
laa1 seen 3119108 In u81o, FT poomon, $585iw1&lt;, dey&amp;) work In a 114 Bod
Centenary area. Black &amp; rapldactvancements+bene· Long Term care State
Gold. deeply missed by little · fits. For an tnterview call FaciHty. Full-lime emplOY,girl,
REWARD,
Call (740)446·7798.
· ment offers an eX1enslve

· ~ Bualneu pportun.~, ................................ ;

'

Oo~'l1'ttP!.olll AWftY

Pistol on Patters Creek $100 Customer Service Dept., No

1

'
E I
t fo R nt
' _. qu pmen
r e

Take inboond

customer service calls
for Fortune 100

HWWANIID

Black' Case with 4ttn: Local Company with

Autoalor Sale •••••••••••••••••, ............................ 710
BoateaMotontorSale ............................. 750
_ Building SupptiH ........................................ 550
Buelneaa end Buildings ................. ............ 340
•
0
rtu
210

/'

·.

' l 1\\ II I "

------~-

... 4x4'1 For 91111 .............................................. 725
Announcement .........................:..................
,~ Antlq.uee
. ........................................................ 5
- Apartmenl8 tar Rent .........,......................... 440
: Auction and Flea Markat............................. OIO
' Auto P - &amp; Acceaaorlel ........... ............... 760

www.mydailyreg~ter;com

lf\IC A fMo1&lt; .

Wanting to Buy J'unk Cars.
304-675·2176
l\i l 'lt l\\ ll \.1

LOST:

~

www.mydailytribune.com

o~

~--..,...~--..,--­

An l!xcellent Wffi to eam
Carpenter/Oyesvllle, $300 money. The New Avon.

MONEY
TO loAN

**NOTI£E**

Wante&lt;llo buy Junk Coos,&amp;
Farm Machinery call 74Q388·0884 Can Call Collee1

988.
nowopape
only htl

r

;;WANIID;::;I, ~

;IIELP:
.

•

any

lor sate re1um, (740)698· Call Manlyn 304·882-2645
2.267

Thlo
ccopll

740-992-2155
www.mydailysentineLcom

POLICIES: Ohio Vlllty Publtlhlng .......,.. lhe right to lflt. rtttct, or e~nceleny 1d 11 •nv tltne. ErrDrS mu•I·O. NpOI"'.r on the flrtt dlr of
Trlbun.s.nllnei-A.;IIter Will M reapon~lble tor no mor• lt\ln lhl co.t ollhl epace occupied by the error 1r1d only thl first ln..rtton.. We 1hllll not bl
•ny lou or elp«\141 h i reeulls from tht publicllllon or oml1slon of 1n ldvtwtiHrMnt. Correction will be m11de In tne ftr-' IYellebJt tdltlon. • Box
I n llwa¥1 UHitldeiitllil. •Current rllte can! eppllll. • All reellltltl ldvlftlllmll'ltS are IUit}lot to thl FliCflnl Felr Hou1lng Act of ,188'.: • Thil ,.,.,. .,..,..
ltlndlrdl. W. will not knOWingly ecc.pt •IIY ldvlt'tleh• In vlolltlon of tht IIW.

30th, wl81llchos In belly &amp;
re&lt;l
collar,

~==~~~~~9:866:_.-=-=::-:--'-,

304-675-1333 ..

ads must be prepaid* .

'

Absolute. Top Dollar • sil-

Eliot
d'Mrtleements ar
bltelto lho Fedn
air Houalng Act

(740'709·6199 "' {740)446·

.~oint ~leasant' iegister·· The Dally Sentinel

Sunday Dl•pl•y: 1:00
Thunday for Sundaye

Found: • Small
dog
Centerville-Thurman area. 100 WORKERS NEEDED
Coll614·893·1689
Assemble crafts, wood
~oms.To $480/wk Materials
Lost·
female
German provided. Free ln1ormalion
Shop~erd la81 seen Jan. pkg. 24Hr. 801-428·4649

'

_{.:r_

Bu•lneu D•y• Prior To
Publication
"

kltncarlyle@lcomcast.net

~00:0 ~~ 110

t

OUNTIES

~be ~allipolis 1.Dailp ~ribune
740446-2342

All Dl•pley: l:Z Noon 3:

Now you con hove borders and Qraphlcs
~
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

~~ . I rK:-IT_&amp;_c..,.A..,.R..,L:_~L_E_~~---r--,.;._---..,1~n=o

t

Spotting Scope and 9MM FT &amp; PT positions in our

&gt;

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mond•y... Prlday for Jnaertlon
Jn N•xt D-v'• Paper
sUnday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
l'or Sund•y• P•per

Mole Border Collie, Female 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry,
lab puppy 4fnon old, half dental gold, pre 1935 US
Lab half Border Collie. 245· currency, proof/mint sets,
5297
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
446·2842

"

REACH ()VER
17,0()() HOUSEH()l_JllS!

Display Ads

• Stllrt Your Adl With A Keyword 1 Include COmplete
o.cttptlon • lndude A Price • Avoid Abtnv..tlane
• lncluda Phane Number·And AddreN When Needed
• Ada Sho1111G Jl¥n 7 O.YI

Succeuful Ads
'·
Should Include T h - Items
To
Get Response ...

''

Place Your Paid ClassifiedAd In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

Word Ads

• All

,;.

REACH

~~--------------·

/}eaa'lfirthf'

-

·~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

CLASSIFIED

')
'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1'

I'*

WANIID

I

Child care done in my home,
infants welcome, . meals
included, lots of activities for
your child, days, night and
"" · $2 ·00 per hour·
weo'•nds
Call 256-1438 ask tor

385-9948.

For rent or sale. located in
Bidwell, 3BA. 2 bath
Unfurnished. If sold must be
moved. Call 388·8446 or
--~----=- 615·830·4499
77 Hawthorne Ln., Pt. --~-:--::---:-Pteesant, 3br, 1ba, 1015/SF
from $199 Month
New floor coverings, fresh
New 2008 Singtewide
paint, new heat pump
Midwest 74o-828-2750
$79~000 304-674-3698
mymidwesthome.com

Attention!
Local company offering ~No
DOWN PAYMENT" pro~ms for you to buy your
home instead Ot renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect aedit

lot8B'x124'w/14'x70'~iler,

3 br., 2 b, partialy furnished.
2 covered porches, 2 car
carport, large block storage
building, $40,000, (740)992-

_30_5_7_ _ _ _ __
NEW 200114 BA-2BA
1, 700+eq ft 5'9,989
from $397 Month
Midwesl
_ .
740 828 2750
mymldweSihom8.com

accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
locators.
(740)387·0000·

G)
=·

~--"":"---,

r

Allrnllntahl..:lvtrttlalng
lnth1new.paper
•
•ublocttolhe
....,.,
Footr Houolng Act ol1118
wbtch mlk• n IIIIQII to
edvertiH "any
pritel'lnce, llmltetlon or
dlecrlmlnl11on biMd on
race, coloi', religion, ...
•
tomll''"'lltat\11
or n111onal
origin, or ony tnlondon 1o
prefe".:.:.~~~~~':J~n or ,
dlecrlmlnetlon."
Thla newapeper will not
knowlnglr ....pt
edwirtiiMI"MNN tor real
ettete which lain
vloletlon of thltew. Our

rtadere ari hereby
lnfoimed thlt all
dwelling• ldvertllld In
thll nni•JMIPif ....
ewellabte on en eq11111
-rlunhylrnH.

New3Bodroomhomaslrom
$214.:)6 per mon1h, Includes
manv upgrades, delivery &amp;
set·up. (740)385·2434
USED HOME SALE
Nlco 3BR s·ong1OWl'des
from $2800 Down Pmt

j

Midwest740-~8-2750

ims \!&lt;

ACREAGE
__
3 acres tor Se.le on sandhill
Ad $25,000. 304·895·3929
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Cleorgos Creek
Ad, 441-1111
One acre + Restricted Lot
on Watson Rd, . Bidwell.
$18,000.00. Call 740·441·

9772
Prime residential building lot ~
.in Rio Grande on lake ·or.
$24,900. Phone 260-495·
5114
I\ I \ I \ I '

No-

POSTAL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27/hr., now hirlng. For oppticailon and !roe
governement Job
call
American Asaoc: of Labor 1913·599-8226, 24/hrs. omp,
oerv.

rnto.

Palrlollc Focda Inc . - ·
SOl to 300$ dal~. Aoule
Sales Delivery Oriv!!r. Bring
a Partner. Company
Vohk:lo provided call

304-812-0270

SHOP.
CLASSIFIEDS

HouiSe or Rent Racine Area
No pets. Call740·992·5858 .

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
6

t' :r

li_,

I..,r__

Ail_FOR_:urrMFNl_Roo"
__

e

www.mydailysentinel.com

~· 'riO

II(\ ''I'C

: ' mo OOdep. 4 .

i

_

MooFORtLEn~!IDi

ap~~;; v~;:ellon

I"ORSAU:

Apartments

n.r..i'lt

• 2&amp;3 bedroom _apartments

Model
YAS·62 $1600.
98 Jeep Wrangler. autOmat740·446·1305
ic, air; 99 Jeep Wrangler 4
•Owner pays water, sewer.
JET
cyl., 5 spd. Take your chdl&lt;e
trash
AERATION MOTORS · $5700. 04 Buick le.Sabre
(304)882·3017 Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In 77,000 miles $6700. B&amp;D
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- Auto Sales, Hwy 160 N. 740~ 800-537-9528.
446·6865
.
•
NEW AND USED STEEL Quality cars, lrucks, vans
Steel Beams, PiPe Rebar starting at $1500 to-$8300.
- - - - - - - - For Concrete, Angle , Financing available with
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel warranty.
COOk
For
Drains. MOTORS 328 Jackson Pike:
Upstairs, All Utilities pd. Grat ing
G - · Driveways &amp; WalkWays. l&amp;L 740·446·0t03
18R, No Pets, a 1II pOliS,
;;;;;.;;;;;;.;,~----...
_c_al_l4_46_·_952
_3_ _ _ _ Scrap Metals Open ~onda~ ~15 . TRUCKS
Tuesday, Wednes ay
FOR SALE
Gr-.:iou1 Living 1 and 2 Friday, sam-4:30pm. Closed Lw------rl
Bedroom Apts. at Village Thursday, Saturday &amp; ..,
Man01 and Riverside Apts.ln Sunday. (740)446-7300
00 Tacoma, 4 cyt . auto, 4x4
Middleport, from $327 to
ext vab, loaded. axe. shape.
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal Porta~e Sawmill for Sate, after Spm. Asldng $9500.
Housing Opportunity.
Sharpener, blades &amp; hand 245·5946 or 645-3743
.....::.::.:....:.....::.:...._ ..:.___ seller $S,200 call 741J.418- - - - - - - - Honeysuckle
H_ttls 1616
, 1996 Ford Ranger, E:d. Cab,
Apartments now ,accepting ·
Automatic, 3.0 engine. 304applications for 1 and 2 Br Prom dresses for sale. Sizes 675-2032
apls. Located on Colonial 4 and s. Call 446-7077 or iir.,;,;.;,"""!!~~--,
Drive neld to Holzl'!r Senior 645-5262
SUVs
Care Center. No rental
FoR SALE
assistance at this time. Rent Two spaces in the Ohio ..__ _ _ _ _ _,.J
starts at $320 and $350. Valley Memory Garden 1997 Chevy Tahoe. 4DR,
Equal Housing Opportunity. Mausoleum . $4500 for both. 4 4 I08 ded 120 000 1.I
Gall740·446·1267
. garage
)( • kept,' new' cond1t1on.
m..es,
740-446-3344
.
Jordan landing Apartments
I'Ers
$5600 obo. 740-256-6772
2-3 Bedroom Apartments __
l'llR SALE
2001 Dodge Durango.
available. All utilities paid
Asking $8500. 740-645·
,
except electric. March Rent 9 month old gray Parrot 7966
1
Special $100 off Rent. female, starting to talk, whlsPlease call304·674·0023 or lie, w/cage. 740-742-3708.. .r «l.4WMHEELERSOIORCYCLES'
304-610-0776 lor more
Squirrel Dog for Sale 2
•
years old, pup 8 moriths old
, 304_675-6f32
4·wl1eeler 300EX. $t,OOO
.7"'4"'0;;;44;;:6,;;·4;;;06~0~!"""-...
information.
I \In I '- I 1'1'1 II'-

2BR on Private lot on
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis
city schools. $550 rent
1ncludes an utilities. $500
deposit ref. required. 740446-2847 or 645-1668
2Br, 1 bath, CIA, No pets.

1624 Chatham Ave. 740446-4234 or 740-208-7861
3br, bath with addition, dishwasher, Country ""Setting_,
Jericho area . $ 425/month
plus Deposit &amp; Lease. Day
304•273 _6622 or evening
4 74
4
30 -6 -62°
For rent or sate. Located in
Bidwell . 3BR. 2 bath .
. Unfurnished. If sold must be
· moved. Cal l 388·8446 or
.
15 830 4499
6 - :
'"
Ideal for 1 or 2 people, references, no pels. 5 miles from
Gavin. no calls after
6pm.44.1-0181
-'--'-----MobI'!e Hames Ior RenI .In

r

ti)

Trailer for rent and lot for re nt
also, both in Green Terrace - - - - - -- Mobile Home Court. Call Tara

740-245 _5041

r

___~

I

Townhous.e

,\ I I\ I "I ( It

BoATS &amp; MOTORS

"-

FOR SAu:

Apartments, very Spacious, r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 1/2 10
FARM

1968 River Queen houseBath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby L--~EQulPMmr·::;:--.·.,J boat $3000 . Contracto rs
Poot, Patio. Stan $425/Mo.
•
truck topper, fits smaller
-5
No Pets. Lease Plus (2) g· New Holland Hay
trud&lt;. $150. 256·1710 or
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Se&lt;:urity Deposit Required, Bines $1200/each. (1) 7'
645·7550

APAimlnNIS
FOR RENT

ments, furnished and unfur· (740)367-054?.
nished, and houses in Twin Rivers Tower is acceptPomeroy and Middleport, ing appricat1ons
1;
•
1or WBII· 1ng
security deposit required, no list fo r Hud-subsized, 1· br,
pets, 740·992-2218.
apartment,for
the

1BA, W/D hook-up, stove &amp;
fridge turn., water &amp; trash

New Holland Hay Bine $500.
Heavy duty log splitter $500.
01her misc. farm equip. 388·
98:_:0.:._
5 --~--..,.­
:_

rM~~· I

EBY. INTEGRITY. KIEFER 1983 Camper. 29ft, sleeps
elderly/disabled call 675· BUILT,
VALLEY 4, sell contained, AC!Heat.
6!)79 ' Equal Housing HORSE /L IVESTOCK 304·675·5752 .

included. No pets. Ref. Req. Opportunity
8J.ACE
74().367-7453 or 645·7214

I

iLw-llllliiiiiitliiiiiiio-rl
FUR

RENT

TRAILERS, LOAD

MAX RV Service at Cctrmichael

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS; Trailers 740·446·3825
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;

.,,o;;_"'"HOME
.!'___.,.
deposit requirad, (740)949· Retaii/WarehouHIStortiiJa TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· riO
2 bedrooms, 1 112 bath, Hud
references &amp; ...,

approved,

\517
2BAapt. (740)441·0t94
IINutllul Apto. at Jtld&lt;aon
Eetlttl.

52

Location in Gallipolis 1800
sq. ft . building $400 mo. off
streetparkingcaiiWayneal
(404) 456-3802

Westwood

740·446·2568.

NECK
HITCHES .
CARMICHAEL
EQUIP·
MENT ICARMICHA.EL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
VICE .

Drive, from $365 to $560. RetaiiiWerthoUMIStorage

...,1 1n11 1 "

H 0 M E ST E AD EA
C ARGO /CO NC ESSION

SFtECI'"-

GOOSENECK

Clean!

Clean!

Downtown Gallipolis apt.,
upstairs, 2BR, 2 Baths.
$500. 446·9209
Rooms lor Rent. No pets.
can 740 .992 •7508 .

304-773-!061
304-882-3294
Servicing Lawn
Traclors, Mowers,
Tillers, Murray.
Craftsman. MTD,
Briggs &amp; Slrallon
H-Honesl
J. lnlegrity
S-Service
10 Years
I sr Road tu left above
Mason GolfCourse
Harvey Road Mason, WV

Advertise..
in this
space
for
$64
per
month

Sou1ll

Subscriber's Name ________

20FT Unconditional lifetime guar·

FLATBED antee. Local references fur-

24 Hrs. (740) 446·

I

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

I

I

: Phone'--------~----1

I

Mil II or drop off lhll coupon along

:
wHh a copy of yotir photo ID to ·
•
Ohio Valley ·Publlahlng P.O. Box 489, Galllpolla, OH .45831 :
.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition• l

'Prompl and Qualily
Work
• Reasonable Ra1es

A•modeUng

NtwG•r~gn

ElectrtOII l

'£ W~TTO TURI't ~K&lt;llo\T, ~~

Plumbing
Roofing I Outterl ·
Vlnvl Siding 1 P1lntlng
Patio •nd Porch Deoka

*Insured

'Experienced
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . References Available!
Call Gary S1anley @
740-591-8044

,..&amp;.C~U5E. ffiE St&lt;M ~It£""'
mE Llc.t-\1 ~~y~ •R16~T 0~
RE:t&gt;"!

I'fo\ WNTit-\C. FOR TI-\E. LI~T

wv 0311725

• • •I

rrr-;;=~~rum ~t&gt;...

V.C YOUNG Ill
')(), 1), 1 1
f'
!

I

Ill

"

"

,

I ,1,

, I ,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
crrm-

Celel::llily CifM" ~s .we crehllrom ~~ by larnoos ~ - past ard p~esenl
E.:h llll• In 1M
O'dli!Or aAOthar

T0&lt;18y's tloo: R BqJ!lis C

ace, ruffs a club on the board, cashes
the spade king, trumps a spade In his
hand, ruffs another club, and trumps a

"CNMODC

"-------r'·
H:w 1

ADVERTISE
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

:

CI .ASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMENT

Public Notice

youth. Propoula mutt
demonslrale the cape·
blllty to meet pel1cirm·
ence atlndarda and to
quantify program oul·
comes. A copy of lhe
Requeat lor Propoaal
may be picked up from

Porlltlnd Communlly
Canler
. Elaclrlcal
Pro)acl
Thla Ia a Prevailing
Wage project. Sea
Specifications In bid
pack81. Speclllclllona,
and bid forma may be

KME

Thareu Lavender or eecured at the Office

Jona Banks at Tha
Malge County Job and
Family Services, 175
Race
Slreet,
Mlddleporl,
Ohio
45760.
Propoasle ahould be
eubmllted to Thereaa
Lavender,
Malga
County Depertml!nl of
Job
and
Family
Servlcaa, 175 Race
Street, Potl Office Box
191, Middleport, Ohio
45760, no . later than
Friday, April 4, 2008 at
12:00 pm. All aubmla·
alona must be recalvad
by mall or hand dellv·
ery by lhe above data
and lime. No m-laltl
received aller lhe date
will be Included In prevloua aubmlaalons nor
be considered. The
deparlmenl relerves
lhe right to reject any
or all proposals. 111
accordance wllh 29
CFR part 31, 32, Melge
County Depertrnenl of
Job . and
Family
ServlcH Is prohlbllecl
from diiCrlmlnetlon on
lhe balls ot race, color,
nallonal origin, aax,
age, religion, poiHicel
beliefs, or dlublllly.
(3) 17, 24,31

of
Meigs
County
Com m Is sl one ra ,
Courthouoa, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45789 Phone 740·
992·2195. A depoolt ol
0 dollars will be
required lor each oal ol
plans and apecHica·
lions, check made
payable to·. The lull
amounl
will
be
returned within lhlrty
(30) daya alter receipt
ol bids.
Each bid must ba
accompenled by allher
a bid bond In an
amount of100% ot the
bid amount wllh a
surety ..tlafaclory 10
the aloreaald Melga
C o u n t y
Commlaalonera or by
certified
check,
caahlers check, or let·
tar of credll upon a aol·
vent bank In lhe
amounl ot not leas
lhan 10% ol lhe bid
amounlln tavor ot lhe
atoreuld
Melga
C o .u n 1 y
Commlaalonera. Bid
Banda ahall be accom·
panled by Proof of
Authority otthe oltlcltll
or agent algnlng lhe

REQUEST FOR PRO·
POSAL
The Meigs County
Department ot Job and
Family Servlcaa Is
aaeklng propoaala to
provide a comprehan·
elva year·rou!ld youth
program to eligible
youth agee 14-21 con·
alatanl wllh Melga
County'a Worklorce
Oevelopmenl
Plan,
provlslona of lhe fed.
eral
Workforce
bond.
lnveatrnenl Acl (WIA),
Blda shall be sealed
and rellltd federal and
and marllecl as Bid lor
Portland Community
atata regulatlona. In
youth
Public Notice
Center
Eleclrlcal
aatabllohlng
Projecl and mailed or
acllviHea under WIA,
oarvlce providers are PUBLIC NOTICE
delivered to:'
expeclod to link pro- The Meigs County Meigs
.
County
grama with local ltlbor Comml11lonera are Commllllonara
a now accepting bids lor CourlhoUII
needa, provide
strong
connection co. .trucllon ot IIepa Ponleroy, Ohio 45769
belwMn academic and at
the
Chaster Altentlon of bld!fera Ia
occuplllonal learning, Academy Building et called to all ot the
and tallblllh pro· Chesler, Ohio. Bid raqulremanla
con·
grama which prepare packett may be picked lalnedln lhltl bid peck·
al
lbe el, pertlcularly to lhe
youth tor poiiiiCOndo up
ery tducallon
or Comml10lonere' Dttlca Federal
Labor
unsublldiHCI employ· and relurned by April Slandarda provlalona
and
Davla·Bacon
rnent •• appropriate. 101h 81 1:00 p.m.
Servlc"
ahould (3) 24, 31
Wagea, varlouo lnaur·
anca requlremanla.
Include: datarmlnlng
varloua equal opportu•
eligibility tor WIA programs, providing a
Public Notice
. nlty provlalona, and
comprehenslva array
the requirement tor a
of oarvlcae lo. eligible · NOTICE TO CONTIIAC. peyrnent bond and per·
lorminca bond tor
youlh and lncorporal· TORS
lng the len program Sealed propoula lor 100% of tha contacl
Portland price. No bidder may
elemants under WIA. lha .
Two program• ivlll be Community
Canter wllhdraw hla bid wllhln
ProJacl, lhlrty (30) days alter
awarded and program . Electrical
coli muat no1 exceed Melga County, Ohio 11 the aclual dlla of lha
$100,000 each (subject per apecHicallonil In opening thareol. The
County
to 8VIIIIable lunda) and bid piCbt will be Malga
ahall be tor the period received by. the Malga Com m Is al on a r a
of· July 1, 2008 to June C o u n I y re-va I he right lo
30, 2009.
Comm1111onare
at reject any or all bids.
Davenport.
Admlnlatratlva cost lhalr olllca at lha Mlck
may not 'e xcatd 10% of Courthouae, Pomeroy, Prealdenl
the lolal contracl Ohio 45781 until 1:00 Meigs
County
award. In addition, 30% pm April 3, 2008 lind Comml11lonara
of tho Iota I contracl u.n at 1!15 pm II 11kt (3) 14, 19, 24
award muat be ullllll lo olftcot ClpelleCiand reed
aarva out-ot-achool aloud lor lhe following:

tUII

Of:'"':.,bl::r
-iwarda.~
law "' form fattr

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions .
Local Contractor

740·367-&lt;1544
Free Estimates

740·367·0536

~ttlpla

I
it I I 1 I .

Bya.nlco-Oaot
In .the year ahead,

you can make a uta~
will offer greatet

THEWIN

altering adjustment that

rewards

• VInyl Siding
• Raplacernenl
Wlndowo

and

unlimtt.cl

happiness.

2

pertalna to your career,
romance or fr1endlhtpa," It will be one ol

Whether II

the bell thingl You've ew~r done.

• Rooting .
• Dacka
• Garages
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Addlllona
owner:
James Kee188 II •
742·2332

W0 L C N

·1 1 1-,1

TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - 'll&gt;u .,..
apt to be In for a pleallnt surprise:
Someone you thought ·dkln't care much
for you Ia In actuality an admiring friend

••

.

...,

..

...

0

- . .. .

.. . . .. .-....

•

:cowandBOV
.I

GuHering

· CAN SOMEONE

IT'S SPRING BI&lt;EAJ&lt;

ELSE WAITrzESS

AND WE'rzE TEETERING

~W? MY SJ(Ii1T

ON THE BRINK OF

IS ITCHING.

RECESSION.

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·853·9657

make a ahltt on Its own end becof:ne
almost BYerything ycl!U've wan1«ll1l0 be.
CANCER (Juno 2t.Ju!y 22)- Thor&lt;~ lo
simply no reuon you lhould compare
yourMif unfa\oorabty to )lOUr BH&lt;ldatee. If
events don't prove 1hat to you now, It wlH
be your own .lauh. Your popularity Is actu-.
at~qulteh~ .

LEO (July,23,Aug. 22)- -1110 you
lhought would be qloite difficult ooufd rum
·out to be a snap lo aooompt/sh, owing
moetty to a whole lot of luck and a great
deal of unexpected http. Count your
bleaslnga, not your dludvantagee.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) - 4 for more
oppoollng aottvlty might oopture Yl?"'
fancy and ca~ :fOU at the latt minute to
real't'ange your plana that aleo Include
others. Fortunately, everyone wiN go
alOng With your deiii'M.

LIBRA

(S.pt. 23-0ct.

I Is 1 I .""•".
6

-

•

•

.

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS ·

financial SUOC888, 10 If .there Is some
kind of positMI action you .Cin take to
generate a profit. don't hold bac:k regard-

leN of your fears.

C4PAICORN (Dec. 22·Jtln. 19)- Don't

'

&amp;IOn .

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Something you've been unable to
arx:omplleh on your own 11 about to be
taken ~re of through • aurpriH occur-

.GRIZZWELLS
- !XJ)bU

1U~

. ~ lt'\ll.K
· CCWf.'7 FR*\
·C~

ranee -thanks to the lalt peraon In the
.

world you'd ever expect.

ValoCtll..m: "V" ·~. Mil,£. CoMf.S '\1
t:i-1\I'Z ~
. F~ 1\i lJ.~ CA~~ SOUP TO NUTZ
FmVI
t\-\Oto~/1.~
C::O'+I~

(t:W'?,
6lltml~"

.01:11 ... ,
~\11 ,
)

,,
-- - -·- ~ -,

____..__ ________ ·-· -------

.....

...

,

~ lhtp

No. 3 below.

ICU.M-LITS ANSWIIS 3 •21 •oe
.Btfect - Lofty-~ - Gender- REFLECT
Woman to liiatd in SllJre 61ling room, "Mirrors should lhillk
Joopr"befilre lhey RBFLBCT."

oro om.tl,

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Take .
cart~ not to-rock the boat In 11tuatione that
relate to )'OlM' work or career. If ~lngs
sudde:nfy look as If they're too good to be
true, put your toolbox awrt, and don't try
. to fix what Is fixing Itself. It'• not an lllu-

,.. dMiap

TIERS

anythl_ng you orcheltrate.
SIIGrTTARIUS (Nov. 23·0... 2t) - Thla
le a betler·than-uaual time to achieve

dream•.

•

PRINT NUMBERED
lfnERS

4 tedious
·but extremely important~ can be
effortleeaty achieved beclluae of help
from an unlikely aource - Lady Luck

be dlacouraged if Indicate.-. repeatedly
atgnal that Hfe Ia a atruggle. Everytnlng Is
about to change for you and In ways that
oould help you realize aome unbeMevable

professor told his eduatlioo
claM, "is tbll every child
.lhoiiJd be given die -10

I' . . .
17
~:1:8 :1::1:1::1': 0 ~= :·lha~~
8
I' r r r r I' I' 1· r 1
u~.... ce I I I ·I lml I I I I I

they w&gt;H be significant.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - To more
fuiiV enjoy wt1at 11 being offered, don't
take yourwlf, othe,. or .wnts too eerloualy. If you let ......m. run lt*r own
oourwe., you'll do better for youi"Mtf than

:GARFIELD

"The impothWt tfliDg," the

· PRINEP

23) -

hof10ff. E,., K her offonngo

~

S U QH A

who lo etmply a bit ohy.

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)- Something
you've wanted to change for a long time
could suddenly, due to outekle factors,

..

I

.

3

goes your Way.

c:C&gt;

H&amp;H

'

ARIES (March 21-Apr11 19) - II you
don't like thi1 day, It'll be your negative
thinking that will be the culprit. Remain
pOolllvo and upbool regard- of What ·
oocura and watch how qulady everything

~

I ,

WOlD

1\leadoy, March 25, 2001

J&amp;L
Construct loll.

• OMYTS

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "No pain, no palm; no lhoms, no lhrone ; no gall, no
· ~ory; no cross, no crown." . William Penn

.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

BTSI TS AW RZEORZ ."

FZWD

FTAATWUC

G _....,.....,
•

ZEUWS ATBG TS

"T ·DZMEPZO AWROMCCG FWC

AstroGraph

NOTICES

TC

UTROMRMCU." • ZMFWOI RMCGAA

spade with his heart jack. Well may
overruff with his heart queen, but dectar·
er must score his dlamO!ld ace and two
more hean tricks on the board for nina in
all . .
HQw could 1ho board be passed out?
WaSt has 13 poiniS, and most Norlhs
would be happy to open one spade wi1h
that hand. Weird!

0870, Rogera Basement
Waterproofing .
· Eaatern Local School
==--"---'--Dlatrlcl, ·. 50008 State
Wanted:
serious
People
to
work
Route 681, Reedavllle,
29
!rom home using 0 comput· Ohio 45n2 Ia acc:apl·
er. up to $500.00 to lng bldo tor I 71 pel·
s1,50o.oo
PTIFT sanger achool bua.
www.Homelncome4·U.com SpecHk:lllona lor !Mia
'$120, Full $150. a $225. carmichael Equipment. 740can be obblned by
Rocker Recliner $150. 2 pc 446·241 2
calling lhe aupertnl8n·
LR suoe S325 Table &amp; 4 :..::::..:..:.::...._ _ _~danl'l offll:e al 740·
chairs $300. Mollohan Furn. Lely Redder Aaka Rease
667-6071. Bids will be
2
202 Clark Chapel Rd. 388· : : ;ho~:ve M~-:~.1: ~:
opened In the lreaaur·
om
er's ottlca at noon on
====B=rown .304·882·28&gt;J:32~;:~~~~~;ii~~ Monday, April 7, 2008.
:
The board r-rve• the
right lo reJect any or
any part ol the bid.
Bide should be labeled
"Bid lor School Bus"
and malted lo:
Eaalern Local School
Dletrlcl
Treasurer'• Office .
BID FOR SCHOOL BUS
50008 Sltlll Route 8111
Reedavllle, Ohio 45n2
(3) 17, 24

I!

down
36 $harp ridge
39 Auall
40 Affirmative

wtth club support, the
lower-ranking of the minors. A twospade CIJo-bld shows a forcing bid In dla·
mondo. And a 1wo-dlamond response Is
natural but nonforclng.
South. wi1h lhree hoart!t and two aces,
should be happy to compole with a
ttwee-hear1 bid, and no one else has any
tll&lt;tras to justily lurthor positive action.
Tlvee hearts is makable wtth careful
play. West would probably lead 1ha club
ace and shift to either a trump Of a dia·
mond. Suppose nIs a trump. South nsos
wi1h dummy~ king, plays a spade 1o his .

: City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

slreetparklngcaiiWayneat WWW .C ARMICHAEL ·
404 456 3802
( 1. "
TAAILERS.COM 740·446·
3825
lj'l'l10~-::----., Have y&lt;iu priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be sur·
prisodl Chock out our used
'
lnvantory
at
Sale: BIS &amp; maHress 112· w w w. cARE a . c .oM

.

tional ~alues

I

• • • • • • • • • • •

Gore

3S Frllz"s tum·

Ntulral
shade
Space
Barbor'acu
Kepi under
wrapo

aging. A common method against
Michaels is to use two hearts, the lower
cue-bid; to show at taUt game-lnvtta~

H1'dnod WiletrJ An Fllnlilrt

I

• • • • •

34ft:lnd

mate

This was tho . first one. The- bidding
sequence looks sane. After west open!
one club, North overcalls two clubs, a
Michaels Cue-Bid showing a! least 5·5 in
1ha majors.
East's raise tq three dUbs is not encour·

www.Ciottlllvcnt...,.llln I Q -

I • • • • • • • • • • • •

s•

Eul

Blu~~man

- Redding
Ohio col·
lege lown
Tarzan's

Approximately ovary two weeks. !rom
Novamber to Apnl inHobe Sound, Fla., I
run a ohort duplicate gam a. On Fob. 18,
two pllha 14 board&amp; caught my eye. On
both occasions, at the seven tables in
play, two Nortll·South pairs bid 1o game
on a deal that was passed out at anoth-

I

I

=.,..

31
1
32 London lav
33 GymnMI'I

Pass it out
or bid game?

: Address .___________

1

(hyplr.)

Fabio writer
Take.a the
belt
Highland
daggers
HaTry
humanoid

er table.

I
I

1

AlJpas!"

tororldt
53 Shlllow pen
54 Cult a
nolclled
tdga
55 King,
lo monsieur
56 DevoiM'I
autllx
12 Grldlocktd 39
57 - Pltllnoa 18 Defendant's 39
58 &amp;porta ott.
&amp;newer
20 Before
41
DOWN
marriage
· 22 Long sighs 42
1 Durlllon
23 Vow
2 Eureolan
24 Popular
43
renge
cookie
3 Werrlor
25 Whining
44
prl,_u .
noloe
4 llubecrlbe ' 26 Hinder
45
again
27 Fl&amp;ata .
5 ll8turod
cheere
46
6 Hoop oHa
28 Pate de 7 DeNnie
gras
47
29 Typetoce
48
rapubllc
8 Yeah, rlghll 31 Snow boola 51
(2 wda.)
35 Adjoining
9 trut gently 37 Top - d's
11 P...a
reward

30 l&gt;livwolll

Opening lead: • A

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~ . •

I

Wet* Norib
1•
16

.3.

6unbap ·tltim~ -6tnttntl

1

6A
• J 10 I
tAI751
.65t2

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Bolb
MASON MOWER

-1

Qame . - .
15 Mollonlaaa
16 Trl111gular
1111
17 Slipped by
19 Consolldlla
21 Sclenlltlo
principle
22 Poker card
23 Exudte
26 Cook"l
contMI

Souib

The Daily Sentinel

I
I

1.

6 .J I B 4
• I
t KJ 8
• Q to 9 8 1

'

airport

· 52 Take

13 Thla - -

Eul

• AK3

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

Housing Opportunity. This sq. ft. building $400 mo. off TRAILER INVENTORY AT Call

Clean!

! New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

biPROVEiftNI"S

Equal Location .1n Galllp&lt;&gt;ls 1800 $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE nlshed. Establlllhed 1975.

lnatitutlon is an Equal
Opporlunity Provider and
Employer.
Beech St., Middleport, 2 br.
lurnished apt., no pets,
dep.&amp; rei.
required,
(740)992·0165
'--'--------

W•~•
• Q72
• Q975
• Q 43

Stop &amp; Compare

l9otnt l9lea.Gant Btlt•ttr

I

s

.J

140-912-lm

•allipoli.G JBailp tlttibune

I:

,...._.

6 K 10 ~ 5

29670 Bashi!O Road
Racine, Ohio
45nt
740-84&amp;-2217

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or :mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I

7 Groovy
10 Unlbragt
11 Gamblfng

•AKB!Z
. • 10 6

S1oi,HJC:

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

r

~~~- ~e~an~c!e~=~i~~:

H·l s SPI!

Senior Discount*

1·

304-675·3423
-------Nice 28A. 2 bath ,
$450/month and deposit.
Call740-645·776.5
r 2BR
Taking applications or
·
. No pets. $275/month
$200/depostl. 446·3617

at"BBI••·

'

Saxophone. 4388

41 Reformer
Dorolhel 42 Join•
45 Unouln~~t
49 Riviera
oummer
50 Chlcogo

1 Wedding
rental
4 a.totto

Alder

If so, you qualify for a

04
Craftsman riding $1500. 1976 Classic Olds 98
mower, 17 H.P. Kohler, 42w $3000. Both Exc Cond. Both
cut, ,Ydrostat trans. $700. for $4000. After 4pm. 446Yamaha Alto

ACROSS

Phillip

Nortll

• All electric· averaging
$50-$60/month

2Br at Johnsons Mobile
Home Park. Call 446-2003

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

$::-2-200-:._ca-11_7_40·

Ask-·633_1_":_
.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE .

or older? :

.,.P""....-----,

1985 Olds Delta 88. 1 owner

14X70 3 Br. mobile home • Central heat &amp; AJC
$350 rent. 250 pep. No Pets. • Washer/dryer hookup

740-742·271 4.

r ~ I_;~_·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

•re you.65.

Auro;

ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
yd remnants 540 .00 &amp; up
Town house
apdr tments , Mollohan Carpet. 221 2 01
Hyundal
Accent
• Ga11·1po,.IS, Oh Hatchb·a·ck. 5 sp'e.od
andlor small houses fiOA Eastern ,..ve,
"- trans.
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111 740-446-7444
65,310 miles, good condif
r ti &amp; 1 f
·
lion. needs catalytic convert-

. or

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP

I\ II• 1\.

L,------_.1

4BA, 2 F Bath, 2 car CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Sala: Berller Carpel $5.95
anached gar.. 2 car
detached gar., out bldg.,
!ridge .. dshwshr., 2 75 acre
off
Hwy
124,
$600 1$4
7 o 742

II(

:M~nday, March 24, 2008

Monday, March 24, 2008

~~~in dorm!

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
6

t' :r

li_,

I..,r__

Ail_FOR_:urrMFNl_Roo"
__

e

www.mydailysentinel.com

~· 'riO

II(\ ''I'C

: ' mo OOdep. 4 .

i

_

MooFORtLEn~!IDi

ap~~;; v~;:ellon

I"ORSAU:

Apartments

n.r..i'lt

• 2&amp;3 bedroom _apartments

Model
YAS·62 $1600.
98 Jeep Wrangler. autOmat740·446·1305
ic, air; 99 Jeep Wrangler 4
•Owner pays water, sewer.
JET
cyl., 5 spd. Take your chdl&lt;e
trash
AERATION MOTORS · $5700. 04 Buick le.Sabre
(304)882·3017 Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In 77,000 miles $6700. B&amp;D
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- Auto Sales, Hwy 160 N. 740~ 800-537-9528.
446·6865
.
•
NEW AND USED STEEL Quality cars, lrucks, vans
Steel Beams, PiPe Rebar starting at $1500 to-$8300.
- - - - - - - - For Concrete, Angle , Financing available with
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel warranty.
COOk
For
Drains. MOTORS 328 Jackson Pike:
Upstairs, All Utilities pd. Grat ing
G - · Driveways &amp; WalkWays. l&amp;L 740·446·0t03
18R, No Pets, a 1II pOliS,
;;;;;.;;;;;;.;,~----...
_c_al_l4_46_·_952
_3_ _ _ _ Scrap Metals Open ~onda~ ~15 . TRUCKS
Tuesday, Wednes ay
FOR SALE
Gr-.:iou1 Living 1 and 2 Friday, sam-4:30pm. Closed Lw------rl
Bedroom Apts. at Village Thursday, Saturday &amp; ..,
Man01 and Riverside Apts.ln Sunday. (740)446-7300
00 Tacoma, 4 cyt . auto, 4x4
Middleport, from $327 to
ext vab, loaded. axe. shape.
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal Porta~e Sawmill for Sate, after Spm. Asldng $9500.
Housing Opportunity.
Sharpener, blades &amp; hand 245·5946 or 645-3743
.....::.::.:....:.....::.:...._ ..:.___ seller $S,200 call 741J.418- - - - - - - - Honeysuckle
H_ttls 1616
, 1996 Ford Ranger, E:d. Cab,
Apartments now ,accepting ·
Automatic, 3.0 engine. 304applications for 1 and 2 Br Prom dresses for sale. Sizes 675-2032
apls. Located on Colonial 4 and s. Call 446-7077 or iir.,;,;.;,"""!!~~--,
Drive neld to Holzl'!r Senior 645-5262
SUVs
Care Center. No rental
FoR SALE
assistance at this time. Rent Two spaces in the Ohio ..__ _ _ _ _ _,.J
starts at $320 and $350. Valley Memory Garden 1997 Chevy Tahoe. 4DR,
Equal Housing Opportunity. Mausoleum . $4500 for both. 4 4 I08 ded 120 000 1.I
Gall740·446·1267
. garage
)( • kept,' new' cond1t1on.
m..es,
740-446-3344
.
Jordan landing Apartments
I'Ers
$5600 obo. 740-256-6772
2-3 Bedroom Apartments __
l'llR SALE
2001 Dodge Durango.
available. All utilities paid
Asking $8500. 740-645·
,
except electric. March Rent 9 month old gray Parrot 7966
1
Special $100 off Rent. female, starting to talk, whlsPlease call304·674·0023 or lie, w/cage. 740-742-3708.. .r «l.4WMHEELERSOIORCYCLES'
304-610-0776 lor more
Squirrel Dog for Sale 2
•
years old, pup 8 moriths old
, 304_675-6f32
4·wl1eeler 300EX. $t,OOO
.7"'4"'0;;;44;;:6,;;·4;;;06~0~!"""-...
information.
I \In I '- I 1'1'1 II'-

2BR on Private lot on
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis
city schools. $550 rent
1ncludes an utilities. $500
deposit ref. required. 740446-2847 or 645-1668
2Br, 1 bath, CIA, No pets.

1624 Chatham Ave. 740446-4234 or 740-208-7861
3br, bath with addition, dishwasher, Country ""Setting_,
Jericho area . $ 425/month
plus Deposit &amp; Lease. Day
304•273 _6622 or evening
4 74
4
30 -6 -62°
For rent or sate. Located in
Bidwell . 3BR. 2 bath .
. Unfurnished. If sold must be
· moved. Cal l 388·8446 or
.
15 830 4499
6 - :
'"
Ideal for 1 or 2 people, references, no pels. 5 miles from
Gavin. no calls after
6pm.44.1-0181
-'--'-----MobI'!e Hames Ior RenI .In

r

ti)

Trailer for rent and lot for re nt
also, both in Green Terrace - - - - - -- Mobile Home Court. Call Tara

740-245 _5041

r

___~

I

Townhous.e

,\ I I\ I "I ( It

BoATS &amp; MOTORS

"-

FOR SAu:

Apartments, very Spacious, r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 1/2 10
FARM

1968 River Queen houseBath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby L--~EQulPMmr·::;:--.·.,J boat $3000 . Contracto rs
Poot, Patio. Stan $425/Mo.
•
truck topper, fits smaller
-5
No Pets. Lease Plus (2) g· New Holland Hay
trud&lt;. $150. 256·1710 or
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Se&lt;:urity Deposit Required, Bines $1200/each. (1) 7'
645·7550

APAimlnNIS
FOR RENT

ments, furnished and unfur· (740)367-054?.
nished, and houses in Twin Rivers Tower is acceptPomeroy and Middleport, ing appricat1ons
1;
•
1or WBII· 1ng
security deposit required, no list fo r Hud-subsized, 1· br,
pets, 740·992-2218.
apartment,for
the

1BA, W/D hook-up, stove &amp;
fridge turn., water &amp; trash

New Holland Hay Bine $500.
Heavy duty log splitter $500.
01her misc. farm equip. 388·
98:_:0.:._
5 --~--..,.­
:_

rM~~· I

EBY. INTEGRITY. KIEFER 1983 Camper. 29ft, sleeps
elderly/disabled call 675· BUILT,
VALLEY 4, sell contained, AC!Heat.
6!)79 ' Equal Housing HORSE /L IVESTOCK 304·675·5752 .

included. No pets. Ref. Req. Opportunity
8J.ACE
74().367-7453 or 645·7214

I

iLw-llllliiiiiitliiiiiiio-rl
FUR

RENT

TRAILERS, LOAD

MAX RV Service at Cctrmichael

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS; Trailers 740·446·3825
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;

.,,o;;_"'"HOME
.!'___.,.
deposit requirad, (740)949· Retaii/WarehouHIStortiiJa TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· riO
2 bedrooms, 1 112 bath, Hud
references &amp; ...,

approved,

\517
2BAapt. (740)441·0t94
IINutllul Apto. at Jtld&lt;aon
Eetlttl.

52

Location in Gallipolis 1800
sq. ft . building $400 mo. off
streetparkingcaiiWayneal
(404) 456-3802

Westwood

740·446·2568.

NECK
HITCHES .
CARMICHAEL
EQUIP·
MENT ICARMICHA.EL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
VICE .

Drive, from $365 to $560. RetaiiiWerthoUMIStorage

...,1 1n11 1 "

H 0 M E ST E AD EA
C ARGO /CO NC ESSION

SFtECI'"-

GOOSENECK

Clean!

Clean!

Downtown Gallipolis apt.,
upstairs, 2BR, 2 Baths.
$500. 446·9209
Rooms lor Rent. No pets.
can 740 .992 •7508 .

304-773-!061
304-882-3294
Servicing Lawn
Traclors, Mowers,
Tillers, Murray.
Craftsman. MTD,
Briggs &amp; Slrallon
H-Honesl
J. lnlegrity
S-Service
10 Years
I sr Road tu left above
Mason GolfCourse
Harvey Road Mason, WV

Advertise..
in this
space
for
$64
per
month

Sou1ll

Subscriber's Name ________

20FT Unconditional lifetime guar·

FLATBED antee. Local references fur-

24 Hrs. (740) 446·

I

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

I

I

: Phone'--------~----1

I

Mil II or drop off lhll coupon along

:
wHh a copy of yotir photo ID to ·
•
Ohio Valley ·Publlahlng P.O. Box 489, Galllpolla, OH .45831 :
.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition• l

'Prompl and Qualily
Work
• Reasonable Ra1es

A•modeUng

NtwG•r~gn

ElectrtOII l

'£ W~TTO TURI't ~K&lt;llo\T, ~~

Plumbing
Roofing I Outterl ·
Vlnvl Siding 1 P1lntlng
Patio •nd Porch Deoka

*Insured

'Experienced
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . References Available!
Call Gary S1anley @
740-591-8044

,..&amp;.C~U5E. ffiE St&lt;M ~It£""'
mE Llc.t-\1 ~~y~ •R16~T 0~
RE:t&gt;"!

I'fo\ WNTit-\C. FOR TI-\E. LI~T

wv 0311725

• • •I

rrr-;;=~~rum ~t&gt;...

V.C YOUNG Ill
')(), 1), 1 1
f'
!

I

Ill

"

"

,

I ,1,

, I ,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
crrm-

Celel::llily CifM" ~s .we crehllrom ~~ by larnoos ~ - past ard p~esenl
E.:h llll• In 1M
O'dli!Or aAOthar

T0&lt;18y's tloo: R BqJ!lis C

ace, ruffs a club on the board, cashes
the spade king, trumps a spade In his
hand, ruffs another club, and trumps a

"CNMODC

"-------r'·
H:w 1

ADVERTISE
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

:

CI .ASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMENT

Public Notice

youth. Propoula mutt
demonslrale the cape·
blllty to meet pel1cirm·
ence atlndarda and to
quantify program oul·
comes. A copy of lhe
Requeat lor Propoaal
may be picked up from

Porlltlnd Communlly
Canler
. Elaclrlcal
Pro)acl
Thla Ia a Prevailing
Wage project. Sea
Specifications In bid
pack81. Speclllclllona,
and bid forma may be

KME

Thareu Lavender or eecured at the Office

Jona Banks at Tha
Malge County Job and
Family Services, 175
Race
Slreet,
Mlddleporl,
Ohio
45760.
Propoasle ahould be
eubmllted to Thereaa
Lavender,
Malga
County Depertml!nl of
Job
and
Family
Servlcaa, 175 Race
Street, Potl Office Box
191, Middleport, Ohio
45760, no . later than
Friday, April 4, 2008 at
12:00 pm. All aubmla·
alona must be recalvad
by mall or hand dellv·
ery by lhe above data
and lime. No m-laltl
received aller lhe date
will be Included In prevloua aubmlaalons nor
be considered. The
deparlmenl relerves
lhe right to reject any
or all proposals. 111
accordance wllh 29
CFR part 31, 32, Melge
County Depertrnenl of
Job . and
Family
ServlcH Is prohlbllecl
from diiCrlmlnetlon on
lhe balls ot race, color,
nallonal origin, aax,
age, religion, poiHicel
beliefs, or dlublllly.
(3) 17, 24,31

of
Meigs
County
Com m Is sl one ra ,
Courthouoa, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45789 Phone 740·
992·2195. A depoolt ol
0 dollars will be
required lor each oal ol
plans and apecHica·
lions, check made
payable to·. The lull
amounl
will
be
returned within lhlrty
(30) daya alter receipt
ol bids.
Each bid must ba
accompenled by allher
a bid bond In an
amount of100% ot the
bid amount wllh a
surety ..tlafaclory 10
the aloreaald Melga
C o u n t y
Commlaalonera or by
certified
check,
caahlers check, or let·
tar of credll upon a aol·
vent bank In lhe
amounl ot not leas
lhan 10% ol lhe bid
amounlln tavor ot lhe
atoreuld
Melga
C o .u n 1 y
Commlaalonera. Bid
Banda ahall be accom·
panled by Proof of
Authority otthe oltlcltll
or agent algnlng lhe

REQUEST FOR PRO·
POSAL
The Meigs County
Department ot Job and
Family Servlcaa Is
aaeklng propoaala to
provide a comprehan·
elva year·rou!ld youth
program to eligible
youth agee 14-21 con·
alatanl wllh Melga
County'a Worklorce
Oevelopmenl
Plan,
provlslona of lhe fed.
eral
Workforce
bond.
lnveatrnenl Acl (WIA),
Blda shall be sealed
and rellltd federal and
and marllecl as Bid lor
Portland Community
atata regulatlona. In
youth
Public Notice
Center
Eleclrlcal
aatabllohlng
Projecl and mailed or
acllviHea under WIA,
oarvlce providers are PUBLIC NOTICE
delivered to:'
expeclod to link pro- The Meigs County Meigs
.
County
grama with local ltlbor Comml11lonera are Commllllonara
a now accepting bids lor CourlhoUII
needa, provide
strong
connection co. .trucllon ot IIepa Ponleroy, Ohio 45769
belwMn academic and at
the
Chaster Altentlon of bld!fera Ia
occuplllonal learning, Academy Building et called to all ot the
and tallblllh pro· Chesler, Ohio. Bid raqulremanla
con·
grama which prepare packett may be picked lalnedln lhltl bid peck·
al
lbe el, pertlcularly to lhe
youth tor poiiiiCOndo up
ery tducallon
or Comml10lonere' Dttlca Federal
Labor
unsublldiHCI employ· and relurned by April Slandarda provlalona
and
Davla·Bacon
rnent •• appropriate. 101h 81 1:00 p.m.
Servlc"
ahould (3) 24, 31
Wagea, varlouo lnaur·
anca requlremanla.
Include: datarmlnlng
varloua equal opportu•
eligibility tor WIA programs, providing a
Public Notice
. nlty provlalona, and
comprehenslva array
the requirement tor a
of oarvlcae lo. eligible · NOTICE TO CONTIIAC. peyrnent bond and per·
lorminca bond tor
youlh and lncorporal· TORS
lng the len program Sealed propoula lor 100% of tha contacl
Portland price. No bidder may
elemants under WIA. lha .
Two program• ivlll be Community
Canter wllhdraw hla bid wllhln
ProJacl, lhlrty (30) days alter
awarded and program . Electrical
coli muat no1 exceed Melga County, Ohio 11 the aclual dlla of lha
$100,000 each (subject per apecHicallonil In opening thareol. The
County
to 8VIIIIable lunda) and bid piCbt will be Malga
ahall be tor the period received by. the Malga Com m Is al on a r a
of· July 1, 2008 to June C o u n I y re-va I he right lo
30, 2009.
Comm1111onare
at reject any or all bids.
Davenport.
Admlnlatratlva cost lhalr olllca at lha Mlck
may not 'e xcatd 10% of Courthouae, Pomeroy, Prealdenl
the lolal contracl Ohio 45781 until 1:00 Meigs
County
award. In addition, 30% pm April 3, 2008 lind Comml11lonara
of tho Iota I contracl u.n at 1!15 pm II 11kt (3) 14, 19, 24
award muat be ullllll lo olftcot ClpelleCiand reed
aarva out-ot-achool aloud lor lhe following:

tUII

Of:'"':.,bl::r
-iwarda.~
law "' form fattr

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions .
Local Contractor

740·367-&lt;1544
Free Estimates

740·367·0536

~ttlpla

I
it I I 1 I .

Bya.nlco-Oaot
In .the year ahead,

you can make a uta~
will offer greatet

THEWIN

altering adjustment that

rewards

• VInyl Siding
• Raplacernenl
Wlndowo

and

unlimtt.cl

happiness.

2

pertalna to your career,
romance or fr1endlhtpa," It will be one ol

Whether II

the bell thingl You've ew~r done.

• Rooting .
• Dacka
• Garages
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Addlllona
owner:
James Kee188 II •
742·2332

W0 L C N

·1 1 1-,1

TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - 'll&gt;u .,..
apt to be In for a pleallnt surprise:
Someone you thought ·dkln't care much
for you Ia In actuality an admiring friend

••

.

...,

..

...

0

- . .. .

.. . . .. .-....

•

:cowandBOV
.I

GuHering

· CAN SOMEONE

IT'S SPRING BI&lt;EAJ&lt;

ELSE WAITrzESS

AND WE'rzE TEETERING

~W? MY SJ(Ii1T

ON THE BRINK OF

IS ITCHING.

RECESSION.

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·853·9657

make a ahltt on Its own end becof:ne
almost BYerything ycl!U've wan1«ll1l0 be.
CANCER (Juno 2t.Ju!y 22)- Thor&lt;~ lo
simply no reuon you lhould compare
yourMif unfa\oorabty to )lOUr BH&lt;ldatee. If
events don't prove 1hat to you now, It wlH
be your own .lauh. Your popularity Is actu-.
at~qulteh~ .

LEO (July,23,Aug. 22)- -1110 you
lhought would be qloite difficult ooufd rum
·out to be a snap lo aooompt/sh, owing
moetty to a whole lot of luck and a great
deal of unexpected http. Count your
bleaslnga, not your dludvantagee.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) - 4 for more
oppoollng aottvlty might oopture Yl?"'
fancy and ca~ :fOU at the latt minute to
real't'ange your plana that aleo Include
others. Fortunately, everyone wiN go
alOng With your deiii'M.

LIBRA

(S.pt. 23-0ct.

I Is 1 I .""•".
6

-

•

•

.

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS ·

financial SUOC888, 10 If .there Is some
kind of positMI action you .Cin take to
generate a profit. don't hold bac:k regard-

leN of your fears.

C4PAICORN (Dec. 22·Jtln. 19)- Don't

'

&amp;IOn .

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Something you've been unable to
arx:omplleh on your own 11 about to be
taken ~re of through • aurpriH occur-

.GRIZZWELLS
- !XJ)bU

1U~

. ~ lt'\ll.K
· CCWf.'7 FR*\
·C~

ranee -thanks to the lalt peraon In the
.

world you'd ever expect.

ValoCtll..m: "V" ·~. Mil,£. CoMf.S '\1
t:i-1\I'Z ~
. F~ 1\i lJ.~ CA~~ SOUP TO NUTZ
FmVI
t\-\Oto~/1.~
C::O'+I~

(t:W'?,
6lltml~"

.01:11 ... ,
~\11 ,
)

,,
-- - -·- ~ -,

____..__ ________ ·-· -------

.....

...

,

~ lhtp

No. 3 below.

ICU.M-LITS ANSWIIS 3 •21 •oe
.Btfect - Lofty-~ - Gender- REFLECT
Woman to liiatd in SllJre 61ling room, "Mirrors should lhillk
Joopr"befilre lhey RBFLBCT."

oro om.tl,

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Take .
cart~ not to-rock the boat In 11tuatione that
relate to )'OlM' work or career. If ~lngs
sudde:nfy look as If they're too good to be
true, put your toolbox awrt, and don't try
. to fix what Is fixing Itself. It'• not an lllu-

,.. dMiap

TIERS

anythl_ng you orcheltrate.
SIIGrTTARIUS (Nov. 23·0... 2t) - Thla
le a betler·than-uaual time to achieve

dream•.

•

PRINT NUMBERED
lfnERS

4 tedious
·but extremely important~ can be
effortleeaty achieved beclluae of help
from an unlikely aource - Lady Luck

be dlacouraged if Indicate.-. repeatedly
atgnal that Hfe Ia a atruggle. Everytnlng Is
about to change for you and In ways that
oould help you realize aome unbeMevable

professor told his eduatlioo
claM, "is tbll every child
.lhoiiJd be given die -10

I' . . .
17
~:1:8 :1::1:1::1': 0 ~= :·lha~~
8
I' r r r r I' I' 1· r 1
u~.... ce I I I ·I lml I I I I I

they w&gt;H be significant.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - To more
fuiiV enjoy wt1at 11 being offered, don't
take yourwlf, othe,. or .wnts too eerloualy. If you let ......m. run lt*r own
oourwe., you'll do better for youi"Mtf than

:GARFIELD

"The impothWt tfliDg," the

· PRINEP

23) -

hof10ff. E,., K her offonngo

~

S U QH A

who lo etmply a bit ohy.

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)- Something
you've wanted to change for a long time
could suddenly, due to outekle factors,

..

I

.

3

goes your Way.

c:C&gt;

H&amp;H

'

ARIES (March 21-Apr11 19) - II you
don't like thi1 day, It'll be your negative
thinking that will be the culprit. Remain
pOolllvo and upbool regard- of What ·
oocura and watch how qulady everything

~

I ,

WOlD

1\leadoy, March 25, 2001

J&amp;L
Construct loll.

• OMYTS

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "No pain, no palm; no lhoms, no lhrone ; no gall, no
· ~ory; no cross, no crown." . William Penn

.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

BTSI TS AW RZEORZ ."

FZWD

FTAATWUC

G _....,.....,
•

ZEUWS ATBG TS

"T ·DZMEPZO AWROMCCG FWC

AstroGraph

NOTICES

TC

UTROMRMCU." • ZMFWOI RMCGAA

spade with his heart jack. Well may
overruff with his heart queen, but dectar·
er must score his dlamO!ld ace and two
more hean tricks on the board for nina in
all . .
HQw could 1ho board be passed out?
WaSt has 13 poiniS, and most Norlhs
would be happy to open one spade wi1h
that hand. Weird!

0870, Rogera Basement
Waterproofing .
· Eaatern Local School
==--"---'--Dlatrlcl, ·. 50008 State
Wanted:
serious
People
to
work
Route 681, Reedavllle,
29
!rom home using 0 comput· Ohio 45n2 Ia acc:apl·
er. up to $500.00 to lng bldo tor I 71 pel·
s1,50o.oo
PTIFT sanger achool bua.
www.Homelncome4·U.com SpecHk:lllona lor !Mia
'$120, Full $150. a $225. carmichael Equipment. 740can be obblned by
Rocker Recliner $150. 2 pc 446·241 2
calling lhe aupertnl8n·
LR suoe S325 Table &amp; 4 :..::::..:..:.::...._ _ _~danl'l offll:e al 740·
chairs $300. Mollohan Furn. Lely Redder Aaka Rease
667-6071. Bids will be
2
202 Clark Chapel Rd. 388· : : ;ho~:ve M~-:~.1: ~:
opened In the lreaaur·
om
er's ottlca at noon on
====B=rown .304·882·28&gt;J:32~;:~~~~~;ii~~ Monday, April 7, 2008.
:
The board r-rve• the
right lo reJect any or
any part ol the bid.
Bide should be labeled
"Bid lor School Bus"
and malted lo:
Eaalern Local School
Dletrlcl
Treasurer'• Office .
BID FOR SCHOOL BUS
50008 Sltlll Route 8111
Reedavllle, Ohio 45n2
(3) 17, 24

I!

down
36 $harp ridge
39 Auall
40 Affirmative

wtth club support, the
lower-ranking of the minors. A twospade CIJo-bld shows a forcing bid In dla·
mondo. And a 1wo-dlamond response Is
natural but nonforclng.
South. wi1h lhree hoart!t and two aces,
should be happy to compole with a
ttwee-hear1 bid, and no one else has any
tll&lt;tras to justily lurthor positive action.
Tlvee hearts is makable wtth careful
play. West would probably lead 1ha club
ace and shift to either a trump Of a dia·
mond. Suppose nIs a trump. South nsos
wi1h dummy~ king, plays a spade 1o his .

: City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

slreetparklngcaiiWayneat WWW .C ARMICHAEL ·
404 456 3802
( 1. "
TAAILERS.COM 740·446·
3825
lj'l'l10~-::----., Have y&lt;iu priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be sur·
prisodl Chock out our used
'
lnvantory
at
Sale: BIS &amp; maHress 112· w w w. cARE a . c .oM

.

tional ~alues

I

• • • • • • • • • • •

Gore

3S Frllz"s tum·

Ntulral
shade
Space
Barbor'acu
Kepi under
wrapo

aging. A common method against
Michaels is to use two hearts, the lower
cue-bid; to show at taUt game-lnvtta~

H1'dnod WiletrJ An Fllnlilrt

I

• • • • •

34ft:lnd

mate

This was tho . first one. The- bidding
sequence looks sane. After west open!
one club, North overcalls two clubs, a
Michaels Cue-Bid showing a! least 5·5 in
1ha majors.
East's raise tq three dUbs is not encour·

www.Ciottlllvcnt...,.llln I Q -

I • • • • • • • • • • • •

s•

Eul

Blu~~man

- Redding
Ohio col·
lege lown
Tarzan's

Approximately ovary two weeks. !rom
Novamber to Apnl inHobe Sound, Fla., I
run a ohort duplicate gam a. On Fob. 18,
two pllha 14 board&amp; caught my eye. On
both occasions, at the seven tables in
play, two Nortll·South pairs bid 1o game
on a deal that was passed out at anoth-

I

I

=.,..

31
1
32 London lav
33 GymnMI'I

Pass it out
or bid game?

: Address .___________

1

(hyplr.)

Fabio writer
Take.a the
belt
Highland
daggers
HaTry
humanoid

er table.

I
I

1

AlJpas!"

tororldt
53 Shlllow pen
54 Cult a
nolclled
tdga
55 King,
lo monsieur
56 DevoiM'I
autllx
12 Grldlocktd 39
57 - Pltllnoa 18 Defendant's 39
58 &amp;porta ott.
&amp;newer
20 Before
41
DOWN
marriage
· 22 Long sighs 42
1 Durlllon
23 Vow
2 Eureolan
24 Popular
43
renge
cookie
3 Werrlor
25 Whining
44
prl,_u .
noloe
4 llubecrlbe ' 26 Hinder
45
again
27 Fl&amp;ata .
5 ll8turod
cheere
46
6 Hoop oHa
28 Pate de 7 DeNnie
gras
47
29 Typetoce
48
rapubllc
8 Yeah, rlghll 31 Snow boola 51
(2 wda.)
35 Adjoining
9 trut gently 37 Top - d's
11 P...a
reward

30 l&gt;livwolll

Opening lead: • A

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~ . •

I

Wet* Norib
1•
16

.3.

6unbap ·tltim~ -6tnttntl

1

6A
• J 10 I
tAI751
.65t2

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Bolb
MASON MOWER

-1

Qame . - .
15 Mollonlaaa
16 Trl111gular
1111
17 Slipped by
19 Consolldlla
21 Sclenlltlo
principle
22 Poker card
23 Exudte
26 Cook"l
contMI

Souib

The Daily Sentinel

I
I

1.

6 .J I B 4
• I
t KJ 8
• Q to 9 8 1

'

airport

· 52 Take

13 Thla - -

Eul

• AK3

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

Housing Opportunity. This sq. ft. building $400 mo. off TRAILER INVENTORY AT Call

Clean!

! New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

biPROVEiftNI"S

Equal Location .1n Galllp&lt;&gt;ls 1800 $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE nlshed. Establlllhed 1975.

lnatitutlon is an Equal
Opporlunity Provider and
Employer.
Beech St., Middleport, 2 br.
lurnished apt., no pets,
dep.&amp; rei.
required,
(740)992·0165
'--'--------

W•~•
• Q72
• Q975
• Q 43

Stop &amp; Compare

l9otnt l9lea.Gant Btlt•ttr

I

s

.J

140-912-lm

•allipoli.G JBailp tlttibune

I:

,...._.

6 K 10 ~ 5

29670 Bashi!O Road
Racine, Ohio
45nt
740-84&amp;-2217

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or :mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I

7 Groovy
10 Unlbragt
11 Gamblfng

•AKB!Z
. • 10 6

S1oi,HJC:

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

r

~~~- ~e~an~c!e~=~i~~:

H·l s SPI!

Senior Discount*

1·

304-675·3423
-------Nice 28A. 2 bath ,
$450/month and deposit.
Call740-645·776.5
r 2BR
Taking applications or
·
. No pets. $275/month
$200/depostl. 446·3617

at"BBI••·

'

Saxophone. 4388

41 Reformer
Dorolhel 42 Join•
45 Unouln~~t
49 Riviera
oummer
50 Chlcogo

1 Wedding
rental
4 a.totto

Alder

If so, you qualify for a

04
Craftsman riding $1500. 1976 Classic Olds 98
mower, 17 H.P. Kohler, 42w $3000. Both Exc Cond. Both
cut, ,Ydrostat trans. $700. for $4000. After 4pm. 446Yamaha Alto

ACROSS

Phillip

Nortll

• All electric· averaging
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:M~nday, March 24, 2008

Monday, March 24, 2008

~~~in dorm!

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, M~h 24, 2008

wWw.mydailysentinel.oom

Bush says 4,000 US
deaths in Ir;:~ will
'lnerit the sac · ce,' A2

Ogilvy holds lead at Doral, and Tiger's winning streak in jeopardy
BY TtM REYNOLDS
ASSC)CIATED PRESS

Coast Guard still
s.e arching for missing
crew member, A2

•

.

;
I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o ( 1-.:\ IS • \ 'ol. :;- . \o . 1- :1

' SPORTS ·
• Ohio State advances
in NIT. See Page 81

l'l:J·:SI&gt;A\' . \I \RCJJ

:!;) .

'

ww" ""'lail"•·nt 111 d .m 111

:!onH

Hours cut on Pomeroy K-9 unit
BEnt SERGENT

dog to work five days a ·not have to fund this unit, 27-May l. The llxl7 signs evening tent service on the
week from Long Bottom in that it would be taken care will be handmade and denote · Pomeroy Parking Lot scheda special K-9 equipped car.
of by donations, but council . messages about what people uled for April 30 and May 1.
POMEROY- Last night
Mayor John Musser, was funding at least part of might want'to pray for such
Council also , permitted
at Pomeroy Village Council Pomeroy Chief of. Police the unit if it was buying the as better government or other the use of the parking lot on
it was decided to cut the Mark E. Proffitt and council . gasoline to transport the community issues.
April 26 for a bike run and
hours ' the police depart- members agreed that with dog, Proffitt said yes, he did
In recent discussions all June 5-7 for the Gold Wings
ment's K-9 unit is on active gasoline at $3.39 a ga11on, say that, but that Queen was members of council were and Ribs Festival.
duty, taking it from five cuts needed to be made in charge of donations to against political signs on the
Council
transferred
days a week to two.
where possible. Musser said fund the unit. Queen was walking path but since the $10,000 from t~e general to
ordinance never passed and the street fund.
The K-9 unit will now comparing the price of the not at .the meeting.
only be on duty Friday and round-trip to Long Bottom
Despite weeks of debate is still in committee, there is
Council adjourned into
Saturday nights. The current and the results the unit was over political signs on the no law preventing the signs executive session to discus s
K,9 unit, Jonesy, a Labrador · recently producing was what walking path and village at this point. The council is in personnel matters, includretriever, is under the care prompted the discussion.
property, council permitted a support of the National Day ing
compensation
of
of Pomeroy Assistant Police
Councilwoman
Mary group with the National Day of Prayer and other events emJ?loyees in the street and
Chief Allin Queen who McAngus · pointed out ofPrayerto place signs along that week ·such as permitting pollee department, and a
tran~ports himself and the Proffitt said council would the walking path from April a breakfast, youth event and legal matter.
BY

BSERGENT41MVOAILYSENTINEL.coM

SHS

Underage
drinking
topic of town
hall meeting

BY BETH SERGENT

MLB Spring Training Roundup

Cabrera closing in on big deal with Tigers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cabrera and the Tigers
have reached a preliminary
agreemenr on a $152.3 million, eight-year contract,
according to a person familiar with the deal. The person
sppke · to The Associated·
Press on condition of
anonymity because the contract was not. yet completed.
The slugger must pass a
physical before the agreement can be finalized.
Acquired from Florida
with pitcher Dontrelle
Willis in a blockbuster trade
last December, Cabrera
agreed on Jan. 18 to an
$11.3 million salary for this
season. The new deal adds
$141 million over the following seven seasons:
He will earn $15 million
in 2009, when he would
have been eligible for salary
arbitration. He will average
$21 million annually over
the next six seasons, when
he would have been eligible
for free agency.
Cabrera's average salary
of $19,037,500 will be the
fourth-highest in the major
leagues behind those of
New York Yankees third
baseman Alex Rodriguez
($27 .5 million), New York
Mets pitcher Johan Santana
($22,916,667) and Boston
left fielder Manny Ramirez
($20 million).
His deal . will be the
fourth-highest
package.
Rodriguez is starting a $275
million, I 0-year contract,
Yankees ·shortstop Derek
Jeter is entering the eighth
season .of a $189 million,

10-year deal and Ramirez is
in the final guaranteed season of a $160 million, eightyear contract.
Cabrera averaged 32
homers and 115 RBis while
hitting .31li the past four
seasons for the Marlins.
In spring training ~ames:
Red Sox 9, Yomturi 2
At Tokyo, J.D. Drew hit
his second homer · in two
exhibition games, a grand
slam in the sixth innin~ to
help Boston rout Ymruuri.
Boston
starter
Tim
Wakefield gave up two rims
iq five innings. ·
Cardinals 14, Mets 4
At Port St. Lucie, Fla.,
both leading candidates for
the Mets No. 5 starter job
got roughed up: as Orlando
Hernandez
and
Mike
Pelfrey combined to give up
13 runs and 17 hits in 7 1-3
innings.
Twins 3, Orioles 1
At Fort Myers, ' Fla.,
Minnesota's
Francisco
Liriano pitched four hitless
innings m his fourth start of
the spring. He is hoping to
break camp with the team
15 months after elbow
surgery.
.
·
Phillies 15, Blue Jays 7
At
Dunedin,
Fla.,
Toronto's A.J. Burnett
allowed seven runs and
eight hits in 5 1-3 innings
and . Philadelphia's Cole
Hamels gave up five runs
and nine hits in 5 1-3
innings.
·
Braves 4, Astros 2
At Kissimmee, Fla., Mike
Hampton gave up two runs
in six innings in his quest to
come back after two elbow

injuries, and Atlanta beat
Woody
Williams
and
Houston.
.
.
Rays 10, Reds 9
At Sarasota, Fla., Johnny
Cueto of Cincinnati was
roughed up for the first time
this spring, retiring only two
of the I 0 batters he faced in
the frrst inniQg anlj getting
chased after only 19 min•
.
utes.
Indians 3, Tigers 3,
10 Innings
At Lakeland, Fla., Yorman
Bazardo retired all nine batters he face in Detroit's tie
with Cleveland. Fausto
Carmona gave up three runs
- two earned - and six
hits in six innings for
Cleveland.
Pirates 8, Yankees 0
At
Bradenton,
Fla.,
Pittsburgh's Paul Maholm
allowed two hits in six
shutout innings against a
New York squad composed
·
mostly of backups.
Marlins 4, Nationals 2
At Jupiter, Fla., Rick
VandenHurk made a solid
case for a spot in the Florida
rotation, allowing two runs
- one earned - and four
hits over four innings.
·
Rockies 8, Dodgers 2
At Tucson, Ariz., Kip
WeJls
is
headed
to
Colorado's bullpen after
manager Clint
Hurdle
decided he would be a better
fit in a relief role. Brad
Hawpe was back in the lineup for the Rockies after
missing the last 11 games
with a bum left elbow.
Hawpe finished 2-for-3 with
a double and a triple to raise
his spring average to .417.

wvu

"His message," Alexander called
timeout,
and
said, "was that we couldn't Mazzulla screamed and
·. play any worse and we were pounded his ·chesi, first
dpwn by five."
·,
with one fist, then the other.
fromPageBl
If Huggins does anything,
Cam Thoroughman, a 6it's
.
make
his
players
foot-7
freshman who had
of popcorn. "I don't think
believe,
and
West
Virginia
16
rebounds
all season and
about the past. I mean, I try
to learn from the past. But I managed to force Duke into . postpo~ed knee surg~ry to
15 c.onseculive misses from stay wtth the team m the
don ' t dwell on-the past."
3-point range and figured tburnamertt; grabbed two
And that .is precisely the · out a way to hold a 47-27 consecutive boards to keep
attitude he sought from rebounding edge.
one possession alive, then
West Virginia (26-10) after
Huggins apparently ·got .eventually made a layup
a frrst half in which is was
for a 62-51 lead with 3 1/2
the best out of everyone.
outscored 34-29, went- o..Joe minutes left.
·
Reserve
guard
for-6 on 3-pointers and Mazzulla, all 6-foot-2 of
He forged that, perhaps,
by Huggins' him, had II rebounds to go with his infamous threemissed count - five layups.
.along , with 13 points and hour practices, about twice
The Musketeers gathered eight assists.
as long as his predecessor
at the break to hear about
"The MVP of the game," John Beilein.
their failings.
Krzyzewski said.
Nexander didn't know
And there was certainly
When Alexander made a much about what he was
,some of that in Huggins' layu.P off the glass while getting into when Huggins
speech, delivered after his gelling fouled and then arrived.
players heard a IQud bang completed the three-point
"The biggest thing that
emanate from the coach's play with 14:38 left in the surprised me is how calm
office. Some speculated it game, he put West Virginia he is, most of the time,"
was the , sound of a tossed ahead 40-38, its first lead Alexander said. "He's
chair, given that, as Ruoff since 4-3.
notorious for being a yeller.
put it, "He does that someMazzulla's drive down Oh, he's a yeller. Big time.
times."
the lane made it 47-40 with But most of the time, he's
But · Huggins actually under t2 minutes left, cap- calm. · And first, he's a
offered a positive twist: ping an 18-3 run. Duke teacher."

He also ~rove in four runs.
Royals 6, White Sox S
At Tucson, White Sox
starter John Danks allowed
five runs, six hits an.d four
walks in 4 1-3 innings.
Royals starter Zack Greinke
gave up two runs and four
hits in six innings, his
longest stint of the spring.
Angels 8, Mariners 2
At TemJ?C. Ariz., Dustin
Moseley pttched five scoreless innings and Los
Angeles got home runs from
Gary Matthews Jr. and Juan
Rivera.
Brewers S,
Diamondbacks 4
At Phoenix, Rickie Weeks
returned from a hand injirry
and hit a three-run homer
for Milwaukee.
Right-hander Jeff Suppan
started for the Brewers and
went five innings, allowil!g
five hits and· three runs two earned.
Cubs 7, Padres 3
At Peoria, Ariz., Kerry
Wood struck out two in a
scoreless · inning during his
third appearance in · four
days, and the Cubs scored
seven runs off Greg
Maddux. In contention to be
Chicago's closer, Wood has
a 3.60 ERA in 10 innings
this spring with 10 strikeouts and no walks.
. · ·
Rangers 4, Giants 2
At. ~urprise, Ariz., Tim
Lincecum, slowed by a
mildly strained right groin,
made only his fourth start
for San Francisco this
spring and gave up a tworun homer to Ben Broussard
in six innings. He struck out
seven.

.Cavs

BSERGENTC&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Mexico City, San Juan, Tokyo, .
Toronto to host 2009 WBC rounds·
TOKYO (AP) - Mexico
City, San Juan, Tokyo and
Toronto
were
selected
Monday to host frrst-round
games during the second
World Baseball Classic in
2009.
The 16-nation tournament
will switch from a rouqdrobin to a double-elimination
format during the frrst two
rounds. Japan won the initial
WBC in 2006, beating Cuba
10-6 in the final at San
Diego.
Sttes for the later rounds
been
have · not . yet
announced. Dodger Stadium
in Los Angeles is the leading
candidate to host the semifinals and final.
"The 2009 World Baseball
Classic will further demonstrate the remarkable global
growth of our game," baseball commissioner Bud Selig
said. ''There has been incredible: demand to host the

games of the second Worllj
Baseball Classic."
·
-China, Japan, South
Korea and Taiwan will play
m Group A at the Tokyo
Dome frOm March 5-9.
-· Australia, Cuba, Mexico
and South Africa will play in
Group B at Mexico Ctty's
Foro Sol Stadium from
March 8-12.
-Canada, Italy, United ·
States and Venezuela will
play in Group C at lbronto 's
Rogers Centre from March
8-12.
.
-Dominican Republic,
Netherlands, Panama and
Puerto · Rico will £lay in
Group D at San Juan s Hiram .
Bithom·Stadium from March
7-11.
Unlike 2006, teams that
advance from the second
round will cross over for the
semifinals and face opponents from the other side of
the bracket.

quick points~ capped by a 3
from Packer, to get within
· nine with 5:32 left. Bui
fromPageBl
Packer. misfired on a 3 and
was called for charging, and .
Jacinta
Monroe hit a tumthe second half.
"I thought they were around in the paint with
going to be in my griJI, but 2:32 left that essentially
they were playing off and ended the drama.
Florida State jumped
sagging back so I JUSt decidahead
16-4 on 3s by Alysha
ed to shoot. They were
Harvin
and Davis-Cain:
going in, so I continued,"
Lavender was the only &lt;)hio
Davis-Cain sl\id.
.
State
player to score in th~
Freshman
Jantel
Lavender Jed Ohio State opening 10 minutes, as the
with 21 points and nine Buckeyes trailed 30-22 at
rebounds, and Marscilla the break.
Florida State reserve forPacker added 13 points.
The Seminoles went up ward Cayla Moore left the
by as much as 53-33 before . game late in the first half
Ohio State woke up. The because of an apparent leg
Buckeyes reeled off II injury. She didn't return. ·

Upset

"I'm worried," he said.
"If we expect to be a very
good playoff team, we've
got to know how to win on
fromPageBl
the road."
with who i1 was or who 1
The Bucks also snapped a
was . playing
against," five-game ,losing streak at
home and won .the season
W~lliams said. "I just got it series 3-1. It was their first
gomg, got to t!!e spots I series victory over the
wanted to get to. ·
Cavaliers since a 4-0 sweep
Damon Jones made two during the 2002-03 season
frlee I thdrowt s 97~o9J p~thll . -.the one before James
C eve an
o
wt
arnved.
I :42 to go, bu! Desmond
·Andrew Bogut scored 16
Mason _sank a 14-footer to points and grabbed 15
P!-lt· Mtlwauk~e ahea~ by· rebounds for the Bucks in
et~ht. James htt a 3-pomter his first game back at center
wtth 56 seconds to play that after mis~ing the last two
cut the lead to five, the clos- games with a thigh injury.
est the Cavs got before
It was the Bucks' first
Redd s~ two free throws game since general manager
and Wtlharns mll!le two to Larry Harris' contract was
push the lead back to 107- not renewed on Wednesday.
98 wi!h 25 seconds left.
The Bucks made the playWhile Clevelaqd has won offs twi~re since Harris took
nine straight at home, they over in July 2003, but finhave lost seven of the last ished last in the Central for
eight on the road, including three straight seasons. they
·five in a row.
are currently in the cellar
The poor showing away with 14 games to $0 in the
from home h115 Brown con- regular season. Smce the
cerned.
All-Star break, the Bucks

have won just five times in
15 games.
"It felt good to win
again," Redd said.
Williams, who had 12
points and five assists in the .
quarter, started a 9-2 run
with a layup and Bogut fin.
ished it with a dunk as
Milwaukee ended the third
with a 78-67 lead.
Notes: Cleveland's Ben
Wallace did not play due to
back spasms. He left Friday
night's game against the
Toronto Raptors in the third
quarter and didn't return.
He missed a game March
12 with the same problem.
... Before the game, Brown
was asked what it was like
coaching James. "We work
together," Brown said.
"He's not my boss. I'm not
his boss." ... Bucks G
Charlie Bell had to be
helped to the locker room in
the fourth. As James drove
e lane, Bogut was
ocked backward and
ded on Bell, who left
wtih a right knee sprain.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Golda R. Heiney, 91
• Owens McDade, 66

INSIDE

• Rare chestnut tree in
·Ohio no longer a secret.
See Page AS
• Land transfers.
. Seepage A5
· • Response slqw to
cake contest, auction.
See Page A3
• Amateur photo
contest deadline nearing.
See Page A3

WEATHER

RACINE- It's been said
"the past is prelude" to
remind us all to learn from
the past just as students at
Southern High School
recently did by demonstrating their knowledge of
American Revolutionary
War History.
Juniors and seniors wrote
original essays on an ideal
associated
with
the
American
Revolution,
Declaration
. of
Independence or framing of
the
United
States
Constitution as pan of' the
George S. and Stella M.
Knigllt Essay Contest. The
contest is nationally sponsored by the Sons of the
American Revolution and
locally by Chapter Ewing
SAR which includes Meigs,
Gallia, and Athens counties.
The Ewing Chapter is 011e
of 40 in Ohio.
.
Sarah EI-Dabaja, senior at _
SHS, won the essay contest
which was judged out of the
cm,mty. El-Dabaja's topic
was
"Ben
Franklin's
Influence on Colonial
America." The essay was
sent in to the SAR's state
chairman .for state competition where it placed fourth.
James Smith, president of
the Ewing Chapter, presented EJ-_Dabaja with a ,certifi- ·
cate from his chapter as
well as the state competition
along with the $75 top
prize. In all 13 students participated in writing the 8001,000 word essays with all
of them receiving certificates as well during a reception at SHS. SHS teacher
and Ewing Chapter member
PINH 1H

.

Submitted photoo

Teacher ~yan Lemley, back row (far left), introduced students to the SAR's essay contest
ott Amencan H1story. Students who wrote essays are: (Back row, second fr~m left) Ryan
Chapman, Teddy Brown, Wes R.lffle; second row, Morgan Brown, Ashley K1ser, Lmdsey
Buzzard, Chelsea Freeman, Enn Chapman, SAR Ew1ng Chapter Presfdent James M.
Smith; first row, J.D. Whittington, Courtney Ginther, Sarah EI-Dabaja, Kaylyn Spradling,
Abigail Jenkins.
·
·
·

History, AS

Essay winner Sarah El·
Dabaja (center)
receives her award
from Bill B~egle (left)
and James Smith of
the Ewing Chapter of .
the Sons of the
American Revolution.
The essay placed first
locally and fourth in
· the state..
·

POMEROY
Most
problems have both a ·root
and a solution and 'for manx,
adults with substances abuse
issues that root can be traced
to alcohol abuse which is
what an upcoming town .hall
meeting is all about.
Alcohol abuse by Meigs
County youth as well as solutions to the problem wil) be
the hot topic during the meet· ing held at 7 p.m., Thursday,
April 3 at the Meigs High
School cafeteria.
The meeting is being held
by the Meigs County
Community
Coalition
which received a grant to be
one of hundreds of communities nationwide holding
similar meetings. The
MCCC is- working in collaboration with the Federal
Government' s Interagency
Coordinating Committee
for the Prevention of
Underage Drinking as a cosponsor fonhe event.
The meeting will provide
a forum for parents, teachers, officials. youth and
other community members
to be educated about, discuss and raise awareness
about the issue of underage
drinking. The meeting will
include discussions by panelists: The Honorable L.
Scott Powell, Dr. Doug
Hunter, Meigs County
Assistant
Prosecuting
Attorney Matt Donahue.
local and state law enforcement representatives, as

Pluse see Meeting. AS

Eastern board approves ·Area historians to meet
coaches, other staff
~ Pomeroy April12
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYSENT.INEL.CoM

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern
Local
Board of
Education approved spring
coaching staff and other supplemental contracts at the regular
'. ·~ ...
board meeting last week.
,
.:II SI!CTIONS - 12 PAGES
The following supplemental
contracts were approved: Brent
' . ,...
Annie's Mailbox
A3 Bissell and Ken Amsbary, varsity
'
assistant baseball .coaches; Chris
calendars
A3 Tenoglia, volunteer assistant
~'.
.
baseball coach; Brian Cummins,
Classifieds
83-4 varsity
assistant softb~J coach;
Comics
Bs Lester Stewart, volunteer varsity
assistant softball coach; Fred
Connery,
varsity assistant track
Editorials
A4
coach and Ross Holter, volunMovies
As teer assistant track coach.
Greg Jeffers and Travis Smith
Obituaries ·
As were
approved as substitute
teachers
for the remainder of the
Sports
B Section school year,
pending proper cerWeather
A6 tification. Jodi Parker and Lanna
, Teaford were approved as
teacher aides.
@ ooo8 Ohio Valley Publlahlntl Cb.
Detlllll on Pep Afl

.

~

•,

..

'
\

. BY BETH SEROENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.,

The board approved the fol STAFF REPORT
Bowald of Robbins Crossing Living
.)owing chaperones for the band
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
History Farm, and "Basic Techniques
trip to New York, N.Y., leaving
for Preserving Archival Materials,'' with
on March 20 and returning on
. POMEROY- The Ohio Association Janet Cl\fleton of Ohio University.
March 23: Nancy Broderick, of Historieal Societies and Museums
The meeting concludes with a tour
Renee . Carson, Steve Carson, and the Meigs County Historical of the Meig~ County Hi slorical
Rhonda Davis, Gwen Hall, Jan Society will host a gathering of south Society Museum.
Holter, Becky Maxson , Mary central Ohio history and heritage orgaRegistration is $27 ($20 for Ohio
P!;rdas, Shery I Roush and nizations Saturday, April 12, from 9 · Association of Historical Societie' &amp;
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the local Historical Museums members), atid include'
Sandy West.
Society, 144 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
The board also:
lunch . The meeting is open to the pubThe meeting is open to anyone active lic . Advance registration by April 7 is
• Approved a resolution accepting the amounts and rates as in historical socieues and museums or required. To register, or for more infordetermined by the Budget ·preserving local history in Athens, mation, call toll free 1-800-858-6878 .
Commission and authgrizing the Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Visit www.ohiohistory.org/register
The meetin~ is one of 10 regional
necessary tal( levies and certify- Meigs, . Pike, Ross, Scioto,. or Vinton
ing them to the county auditor for counties. The theme is "Keeping Ohio Associauon of Historical Societies
Ohio's History Healthy: Caring for and &amp; Museums meetings being held
fiscal year 2008-09.
throughout the state in March and April.
• Approved the Student Managing Our Collections."
The
program
includes
presentations
The Ohio Association of Historical
Accident Insurance for the 2008on
"Biennerhasset:
Its
History,"
and
Societies &amp; Museums. organited in 1959
09 school year with Brogan
"Building
a
Successful
Historical
under sponsorship of the Ohio Hi,tmical
Warner Agency as provider.
Organization,"
with
historian
Ray
Society,
is composed of local hi,toriGil
• Approved amending the
Swicks
of
West
Virginia
State
Parks
and
societies.
historic preservation group,,
2007-08 school calendar to
include March 20 and 24 as Joane Prisley of the Athens County history museums, archives. libnuies. and
Historical
Society;
"Historical genealogical societies throughout the
calamity make~ up days.
Interpretation: What Is It and How Do state involved in collecting, preserving,
We Use Jt?," with Norman Fox and Ken and interpreting Ohio:s history.
PltaH ... hltern,AS

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <elementText elementTextId="13762">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13761">
              <text>March 24, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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      <name>adams</name>
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    <tag tagId="3087">
      <name>easterday</name>
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    <tag tagId="975">
      <name>jacobs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="19">
      <name>little</name>
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    <tag tagId="166">
      <name>simpson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="713">
      <name>stout</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
