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                  <text>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

�.

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, March 25,

2008

Coast Guard still -searching
for missing crew member
BY STEVE QUINN
ASSOCIATED PRE::SS' WRITER

JUNEAU, Alaska- The
Coast Guard scanned the
icy Bering Sea on Monday
for a fisherman who may
have been dropped from a
rescue basket after the vessel he was on-sank, killing
'
four people and leaving surAP photo
vivors bobbing across a .
President Bush. accompanied by Secretary of State mile of ocean.
The 203-foot Alaska
Condoteezza Rice , makes a statement at the State
Ranger
was on its way to
Department in·Washington Monday.
mackerel grou.nds when it
began taking on water
Sunday in rough seas. A former captain of the ship
recalled the vessel Monday
note the losses, albeit as being "very unstable."
BY BEN fELLER
Forty-two people on
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
briefly and without taking
board
were helped by resquestions from reporter~.
cue
swimmers
and hoisted
WASHINGTON
As always, hi s message
to helicopters after the
Marking a grim milestone. was determination.
Seattle-based
ship sank;
a determined President
"Our strategy going for-· ·
additional
help
came from
Bush oeclared Monday the ward will be aimed at maklives of 4,000 U.S. military ing sure that we achieve crew on a nearby fishing
men and women who have victory and, therefore, vessel. The captain and
died in Iraq "were not lost America becomes . more three crew members died ;
pllolo
in vain." The White House secure," he said. Just last it wasn 't immediately
signaled anew that addi- week, Bush said the high clear what caused the ship The Coast Guard said four crew members died Sunday and another was missing after the
184-foot Alaska Ranger began sinking in high seas off Alaska's Aleutian lslahds. The
tional troops won 't be cost in lives and treasure to sink.
'
pulled out soon.
was necessary to halt the · A preliminary investiga- Ranger Is shown here in January 2006 at the Dutch Harbor, Alaska, dock.
tion
shows
the
four
men
did
A roadside bomb in spread of terrorism and
not make it to life rafts and ship. That might have been rescue operation that field services ship but had
Baghdad killed four U.S. keep Iraq out o( chaos.
died
of hypothermia, said the result of him not mak- began about 2 1/2 hours been converted for fishing,
soldiers Sunday night,
One option that has .found
Alaska
Wildlife Troopers ing it."
·.
after the mayday call was . Canty said.
pushing the death toll to favor in the Pentagon is for
.
The boat's owner, the received. ·
" It was a mess," he said.
4,000.
Bush to announce in April a Sgt. Greg Garcia.
"It appears they were in Seattle-based
At ' least 13 survivors "It was a top-heavy' boat. It
Fishing
'That number pales com- relatively brief pause in
pared with those of other troop reductions beyond the water for about six Company of Alaska, has spread out over a mile were was unstable." .
Officials with the boat's
lengthy U.S. wars, but it is July, without saying when hours, and as you may know identified the captain as not in life boats, but were in
much higher · than many dr at what pace further cuts the Bering Sea is phenome- Eric Peter Jacobsen, 65, of the open water.
owner, the Seattle-based
· Lynnwood, Wash.'
"Saving 42 people in Fishing . Company
Americans, including Bush, will be made. During the nally cold," Garcia said.
of
"I
don't
know
if
there
Bering
Sea
in
the
winter
is
The
missing
crew
memever expected after the pause ,
Alaska, did not immediately
Gen.
David
swift U.S. invasion of Iraq Petraeus, his top comman- wasn't enough room in the ber was identilied as Sdtashi an incredible accomplish- return calls seeking comfive years ago.
der in Iraq, would make yet rafts or not for them', but it Konno of Japan. The cutter ment," Coast Guard Cmdr. ment.
Bush proclaimed the end another assessment of con- sounds to me that the hier- searched for Konno· until Todd Trimpert said in a preJacobsen's son, Scott
of major combat operations . ditions in Iraq, possibly in archy wanted to assure ·(ate Monday, when it left for pared statement.
Jacobsen, told KIRO-TV in
The Alaska Warrior deliv- · Seattle the family wants to
in Iraq in May 2003. Almost September, ·before recom- everybody else is saved," Dutch Harbo·r, about 120
all of the U.S. deaths there mending specific troop he said, based upon the miles to the east. Aerial ered 22 survivors and three know what would cause
have happened since then.
reductions for- the final troopers' interviews with searches continued late of the dead crew mem hers such a large vessel to sink.
members of the Rangers' Monday, Lane said.
to· Dutch Harbor. The ship
"One day people will months of2008.
"(It) . raises ·the question.
sister
vessel.
the
Alaska
Konno, whose age was went into a private dock, something was wrong,
look back at this moment in
White House press secrehistory and say, 'Thank tary Dana Perino said Bush Warrior, which assisted in unknown, was wearing a where there was no public went really · wrong, so
survival suit, but even so, access to survivors.
God there were courageous sees "some merit" in that rescue efforts.
we're interested in the
Two
Colorado
brothers
The remaining 20 sur- details;" he said. "Things
water temperatures are a
people willing to serve, idea. "I think that's not
who haq considered work- dangerous 36 degrees, vivor~ and the ·fourth. dead like that don't just happen.
becau se they laid the foun- unlikely," she said.
dations. for peace for generOne factor arguing ing on the Alaska Ranger said Chief Petty Officer crew member were still on a My dad's be.en fishing all
Coast Guard cutter assisting hi s life· and he's never had
ations to come,"' Bush said against a quick resumption this year saw the short list of Barry Lane .
and
were
relieved
to
victims
"
It
's
not
a
pleasant
state,"
in the search.
after a State Department in troop cuts after July is
anything remotely close to
The company identified this happen.''
briefing about long-term the likelihood that Iraq will see that none of their friends Lane said on Monday. "We
diplomacy efforts.
hold provincial elections in were among the missing or are trying to find him as the other victims as chief
engineer Daniel Cook,
quickly as possible."
"I . nave vowed in the October, an event that deceased.
hometown unknown; mate
Will
and
Doug
Sterner
of
Konno
perhaps
fell
into
past, and I will vow so long probably will require
Pueblo received updates the water from a rescue bas- David Silveira of San
as I' m president, to make heightened security.
sure that those lives were
"It's now a question of from a friend oo. the ship, ket, and officials were Diego; and crewman Byron
not lost in vain - that, in how much time do we pause whom they declined to investigating. It was not Carrillo, believed to be from
fact, there is an outcome for," said Max Boot, a con. identify because the compa- clear whether that person Seattle. '
that will merit the sacri- servative expert on national ny insists crew members not . might have been Konno, ,J!roblems began early
Sunday when the ship's rudfice," Bush said.
security and a senior fellow speak publicly about the officials said.'
When the ship sank, der room began taking on
The news of 4,000 dead in at the Council on Foreign smking, the Siemers said.
"They saiq the ship went waves tip to 20 feet and water. A distress call went
Iraq came the week after the Relations. "Petraeus has
•I'II!!Mn- . . _
war rolled into its sixth year, been pushing for it, and I down fast once it started winds of nearly 30 mph out just before 3 a.m.
• ~.,.. c' •. - )11Ubt.ll3dy ....
Richard Canty, now a tug
dominating most of Bush's think the president will cer- going, about 15 minutes," were reported, · Lane said,
• tO IHIIIIII iddroi:Miwlfi.WIIwnall!
presidency. Almost 30,000 tainly give it to him. He has said 22-year-old -Doug revising earlier estimates of boat operator in New York.
~ eu.bnm.rtPege ~ news. ~&amp;mcnf
captained
the
A Iaska
U.S. service members have a pretty good hand right Sterner, who did one three- 8-foot waves.
Coast Guard swimmers . Ranger 12 years ago.
been wounded in the war.
now just from the political month stint last year on the
6X ~u.rD
ju81 13 more
.
plucked several crew . "There were a lot of rudEarly in April , Bush is calculus - he can make a Alaska. Ranger.
Sign
Up
Onllnel
www.LoeaiNel.com
expected to announce the decision on the merits with- ' "They said the captain me!llbers - most of whom der problems on that boat,"
next steps in the war, and he out having to be panicked had been very brave about were able to pull on sur- Canty said. " It was a very
the whole thing," he said. vival suits - either out of unstable boat."
is likely to embrace a pause into a political decision."
The vessel used to be in
in any troop withdrawals
The war . has taken an "He was one of the last, if the 'sea or from life boats
beyond those scpeduled to enormous toll on Bush's not the last, to abandon onto helicopters during a the Gulf of Mexico as an oil
end this July.
own
standing.
Most
Democrats in Congress A~ericans polled think the
and on the presidential cam- U.S. invasion of Iraq was a
pai&amp;n trail continue to push mistake.
. for a faster end to war. But
Security has improved
Bu sh still has the upper there, credited largely to the
hand for I0 months.
increase in U.S. military
"Americans are asking might last year. But the pace
how much longer must' our of political progress has
troops continue to sacrifice exasperated U.S . lawmakers
for the sake of an Iraqi gov- and military leaders.
ernment thai is unwilling or
The U.S. has about
unable to secure its own 158,000 troops in Iraq. That
future ;" said House Speaker number· is expected to drop
Nancy Pelosi . She said the to 140,000 by summer.
cost to the U.S. reputation is
Bush met for two hours
immense. and the threat to Monday with his national
the economy at home is security team. Petraeus and
unacceptable.
Ryan Crocker, the U.S .
Senate Majority Leader ambassador to · Iraq, took
testimoni~l
Harry Reid said the death part by video linkup.
toll is a reminder that the
Meanwhile,
both
nation must . get out of an Democratic
presidential
"endless civii war and make contenders made note of the
Ameri ca more ~ec ure."
4,000 deaths.
The White House was
Sen. Hill ary ·Rodham
carefu l in its reaction to the Clinton told a campaign
milestone. calling it a sober audience in Pennsylvania
moment hut emph asizi ng that she would honor the
that deaths are g·rieved no fallen' by ending the war and .
matter what the number. bringing home U.S. troops
Bush said people are pray- . "as quickly and responsibly
ing for the families of those as possible." Her rival for
killed wheth er they were the nomination, Sen. Barack
among the. first or the must Obama, said, " It is past time
recent casual ties.
to end this war that should
The number killed in Iraq never have been waged by
is far less than in other mod- bringing our troops home,
ern American wars.
and finally pushing Iraq 's
In Vietnam. the U.S. lost leaders to take respon;ibilimore than 58.000 troops , ty for their future.'
passing the 4,000 mark in
Vice President Dick
1966 a~ dr ath' ro'e qui ckly Cheney, mean,while . cri tialong with e'calali ng cized Clinton and Ob&lt;lllla
American involvement. .
for advocating a U.S. withGrim mile, tunes 'uch as drawal from Iraq. Without
new death toll often go mentioning them by name,
unremarkcd by Bush. But he said such a pullout would.
·
he chme on thi' occasion to put the U.S. at risk .

Bush says 4,000 US deaths in
Iraq will 'merit the sacrifice'

(t:/, :;::

'Otbe ~allipolis mailp 'Otribune,
~be joint f)leasant 3L\egister

and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a
story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would·
like to share please email to:
kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoetlich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
'500-750 words.

Please include a phone number
·
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The Daily Sentinel

•

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar
Youth events

SO, Guysville. Friday,
"Never Too Late" will sing;
Sammy Anderson will
Saturday, March 30
preach;
Saturday, Jarvis
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Merchants Association 's Family will sing; Calvin
annual Easter egg hunt, II Jarvis will speak.
Sunday, March 30
a.m. at Bob Roberts football
MIDDLEPORT
- The
. field in Pomeroy. Kids hunt
: in age groups. Prizes award- Cornwell Twin s, Blaine and
Boyd, will sing at the I0:15
. ed.
a.m.
service at the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
MIDDLEPORT
Wednesday, March 26
Humor. Sunday to be
RACINE -Eileen Buck, observed at the II a.m. serretired Southern Local vice of the Middleport
· School District teacher, will Presbyterian Church.
observe her 90th birthday
CARPENTER
on March 26. Cards may be Carpenter Baptist Church,
sent to her at P.O. Box 96, 30711 Route 143, Albany,
Tombstone, Ariz. 85683.
to host community fellowship, 6 to 8 p.m. "The
Buckeye Gospel Singers" to
be featured . Potato bar with
trimmings served. Everyone
Wednesday, March 26
welcome to free event.
MIDDLEPORT .- The Questions,
call Pastor Whitt
adult
choir
of
the
Akers,
740-591-1236.
· Middleport Church of
: Ghrist will present the can. tata, "My Chains Are
· Gone ," ? ·p.m . at the church.
:
Friday, March 28
Friday, March 28
GUYSVILLE- Revival,
MIDDLEPORT ..- Free
· 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday community dinner, 4:30-6
at the Carthage Gap p.m., Middleport Church o(
•Community Church, Route Christ Family Life Center.

Birthdays

Church events

Other events

Meat loaf, au gratin potatoes,
green beans and dessert.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, March 27
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers· Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall .
SYRACUSE - Meig s
Counfy Board of MRDD, 4
p.m. at Carleton School. •
Meigs ·
POMEROY County Retired Teachers
~ roup, noon luncheon meetmg. at the Wild Horse Cafe.
Walter Bevins: the new
Southeast Ohio director of
ORTA, will speak on current issues 'of retirees,
including health care. The
River Blend quartet will
entertain. Guests welcome .
POMEROY- Alpha Iota
Masters, II :3(}' a.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodi'st
Church.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville
Senior
Citizens to meet II a.m.
Blood pressures will be
taken, potluck and meeting
to follow.
Saturday, March 29
RACINE -Meigs CAN,

di scussion on revisions to
Gatling Ohio's proposed
mining permit, 4 p.m.-5:30
p.m., Racine Library, call
949-2175 for more information.
Monday, March 31
POMEROY- OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public'Library.

Public meetings
Tuesday, March 25
POMEROY - Re·gular.
meeting of the Meigs
County
Emergency
Planning Committee, I I :30
a.m., in the downstairs conference room of the Senior
Citizens Building . .Lunch
available.
Wednesday, March 26
MARIETTA -District
18 Small Government
Committee,
2
p.m. ,
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
.
Regional
Development District, 1400
Pike St., Marietta. Purpose
to select I 0 projects for submission to Ohio Public
Works Commission.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, special
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village Hall.
·

ing trophies for best of show
and reserve best of show in
the following categories:
Chocolate cakes; cakes made
with fruit or vegetables (such
as carrot, apple, spice, etc.);
decorated cakes; any yellow
or white cake. This' year there
is also a junior division for
decorated cakes for entrants
18 and younger.
Cakes may be single or
double layers. All entries
must have the entrant's
name on the bottom of the

plate or pan so it:s not
showing to the public. The
entering exhibitor should
make all baked goods. All
baked goods should be on
or in a disposable container
because they will be auctioned off after judging to
benefit Meals on Wheels.
Entry forms can be picked
up at the senior center during regular business hours
or the day of the auction.
Call Debbie Jones at 9922161 for more information.

Amateur photo contest deadline nearing
POMEROY
- The
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District and
Leading Creek Watershed
Group are still accepting
·entries for their fourth ama.teur photo contest.
This year's theme is "The
.Streams of Meigs County"
and the deadline for submission is March 31. This contest is open to Meigs
County residents of all ages,

but photos must be taken cash prizes. Photos will be
withm Meigs County and judged by a panel of local
relate to the theme.
experts and residents.
There is a limit of two
Submissions are due to
photo submissions per per- the Meigs SWCD office by
son, and pictures of any for- March 31. ·
mat, size, black &amp;. white, or
Photos can be delivered to
color will be accepted. All the Meigs SWCD office or
pictures are welcome, cur- e-mailed
to
rent or historical, and wi II Raina.Fulks@oh.nacdnet.ne
be displayed at the SWCD t. Winners will be announced
office, but only three win- at the Annual Leading Creek
ners will be chosen for the Stream Sweep, which will

take place at 9 a.m. on April
I 9 at the Jim Vennari Park in
Rutland.
The top three photos will
also be displayed at the
Meigs SWCD booth during
the Meigs County Fair and
the SWCD's '2008 Annual
Banquet. To obtain the
required entry forms and
detailed contest rules contact the 1eigs SWCD office
at 992 .82.

O'Bleness to offer refresher course for older drivers
ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in
Athens will offer a classroom course aimed at helping older people to refresh
, and improve their driving
-skills.
0' Bleness is offering the
AARP
Driver
Safety
Program session I on
Monday, April 14, from 1.to
5 p.m. , and session II on
. Wednesday, April I 6, from
I until 5 p.m. in O'Bleness'
'Lower Level Room 010.

Tuesday, March

Participants mu st attend course helps drivers update ..
both sessions. All drivers, their driving knowledge and
especially those who are 50 skills, prevent traffic crashyears old or older, are invit- es and violations, and mained to participate in the pro- tain mobility and independence.
gram.
.Wanda Llewellyn, AARP
Developed
by
the
American Association of driver safety instructor, will
Retired Persons (AARP), present · informntion about
the comprehensive class- normal changes in vision,
room refre sher course is hearing and reaction time
geared toward the specific associated with aging and
needs of drivers who are 50 provide practical techniques·
years old
or older. to compensate for these
According to AARP, the changes. The following top-

ics will aiso be covered: the
impact of medications on a
person's driving abilities,
basic driving rules, license
renewal, local traffic hazards, adverse road conditions, "road rage," energy
conservation
measures,
'proper · vehicle use and
maintenance, and accident
prevention tactics.
There is a $10 charge for
materials. Call O'Bleness'
Community Relations office
at (740) 566-4814 to register.

A time to proceed
with caution
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My father
passed away suddenly of
complications fo llow ing
surgery. We are all very
upset, but my mother is suffering most of all. She and
Dad did everything together. They were best friends
and never wavered in their
love for each other throughout their 42 years.
I have one sibling, a 36y~-old brother who is an
alcoholic and recovering
heroin addict. He is on
methadone. While Dad was
in the hospital, my brother
and I had a terrible fight. I can
honestly say he started it. He
is bipolar and not taking his
medtcation and flies off the
handle at the drop of a hat.
Today, my brother asked
Mom if he could move back
in with her. He saxs he 'll
live in a camper in her yard,
even though he 'II have no
running water or other basic
necessities. I object to this
becau se he is not going to
· make Mom 's life easier.
He will disrupt things just
like he did when he was
younger. My mom's television would· not be hers, her
kitchen would not stay clean.
and she'd have more laundry
and headaches to deal with .
Am I wrong to object?
Dad would not allow my
brother to live there and I
think Mom should honor
Dad's intentions. I' m looking like the bad guy here.Trying To Protect Mom
Dear Trying: You are
right to be worried, but ultimately, thi s is not your deCision to make. Although he
may indeed become a burden, your brother also is
. company at a time when
Moln is lonely and vulnerable to his request to move i,n.
Discuss your concerns
lovingly with your mother,
and see if she is fearful of
your brother and needs your
help to keep him away. If
not, you will have to Jet her
make up her own mind and
try to accept the result graciously. (And please resist
the urge to say "I told you
so" when things go south.
She 'II need your support.)
Dear Annie: I've been
married for.29 years and my
husband is an alcoholic. His
company went out of busi ness five years ago. After
three years of being· unemployed, he got a menial job,
but quit.after two months. At
his next job, he called in sick
so often, the boss told him he
was on probation. So he quit.
Now he sits on the Gouch
all day and night staring at
the TV. He will occasionally

learn ho~ to recog~ize a persons.
To register for the course,
life-threatening emergency,
how to provide basic life visit O'Bleness' community
support, and what to do in relations office. The course
the case of an airway ·fee of $15 per person is
obstruction or choking. payable with registration
Upon successful completion and covers the cost of a
of the course, panicipants ' CPR instruction book,
receive a card to confirm
that they attended and completed the course. This is
not a ' professional rescuer
CPR course, but it is intended for community or ·lay

Herman Michael,
Pomeroy, celebrated his
90th birthday on March
5. Family members joining him at his home for
cake and ice cream
were Ryan, Amanda ,
Little Ryan and Jenna
Dill ; Joyce, Jamie , ano
Jeremy
Ash ; Jim .and
,
'
James Ryan Beach and
Matt Morris. Other family me.mbers sent cards
and gifts as WE!II.

which must be read before
attending.
.
The fee is waived for anyone unable to pay. For more
information,
call
O'Bieness' community relations department at (740)
566-4814.

Submitted photo

Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Proctorville, Chesapeake

Birth announced
. RACINE - Jamey and
. 'Angie Nelson of Lancaster
announce the birth of their
· ffirst son, Kase William Lee,
·· born on Jan . 9 at the
. · Fairfield Medical Center in
.. Lancaster.
The
infant
i:weighed 8 pounds, 3 ounces.
:~ Maternal grandparents are
. William and Cathy Carleton
; ;of Racine. Paternal . grand:. pa(ents are · Marly · and
Debbie Morarity of Racine,
: and the paternal great-grand. parents are CRarle'S and Ann
· Findley, also of Racine.
..

wash a load of laundry, but
otherwise does nothing
aro und the house . He doe'
not help pay any bills. He
will not go to the doctor.
I've made appointments and
he cancels them . He tried
counseling a few years ago.
but decided he wa~ smarter
than they were and stopped.
He absolutely refuses to
look for a job.
'
My fa mily and friends
wonder why I don't leave
him. The answer is, I think
he would end hi s life and I
couldn 't live with the guilt.
But I fear by not doing anything I' m somehow making
it worse. He is not a danger
to himself or anyone elsehe is just existing. I need to
know what to do. - Need
Help
Dear Need Help: You arc
not responsible for what your
hu sband chooses to do witl1
his life . However, we understand your ·fear that he may
not survive and-we can tell
that you still care about him.
Your husband sounds severely depressed - which is not
uncummon with .alcoholics.
who often use liquor to selfmedicate. Keep encouraging
him to talk to his doctor, and
also contact Al-Anon (alanon.alateen.org) at 1-888'4AL-ANON
( 1-888-425 2666) and ask for help.
Dear Annie: You've
printed a lot of letters from
older people who seem to
have a hard time finding '
relationship s.
Someone
should develop · a dating
website for people 50 and
above . Of course, yQu have
to be careful, but I know
there is someone out there ·
for almost everyone . My
son met a great gal online.
Why can' t there be a dating site specifically for the
over-50 crowd that is moni tored and safe? I dun 't have
the expertise to accomplish
this, but I'm sure someone
does. Our senior citizen'
deserve to find love . Compassionate for Their
Plea in Louisinna
Dear
Louisiana:
Actually, there are such site'
and we'll recommend one :
SeniorFriendFinder.com.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
col11m11. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.llet; or writ'e
to: A11nie's Mailbox, ·P.O.
Box 1/8190, Chicago, lL
60611. To fitld, out more
abolll Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartomiists, visit the
Creators Sy11dicate Web
page at _www.creQtors.com.

goth birthday celebrated

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital to offer community CPR training ·
ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer a Cardiopulmonary
Resuscitation (CPR) course
·. Wednesday, April 16, from
6:30 until 9:30 p.m. in
0' Bleness' Lower Level
room 010.
This American Safety &amp;
.: Health Institute course
·teaches participants the
:skills needed to administer
CPR to adults, children and
infants. Participa11ts also
•

25, 2008

ANNIE 'S MAILBOX

·Response slow to cake contest, auction
POMEROY - '{hursday's of Meigs County.
cake contest and auction to
Entry into the cake contest
benefit the Meals on Wheels is free and thi s year includes
prognun is off to a slow stan a junior divi sion . Cakes
with organizers hoping tht; should be at the Meigs
community will respond like Senior Center by 3 p.m. on
it has in the past.
Thursday with judging to
Last year 96 entries were begin at 5:-30 p.m. That
received but this· year less same day a spaghetti dinner
than 20 have registered for will take place at the senior
the judging at this point. center from 5 p.m. - 6:30
The contest and auction p.m. The cake auction starts
help keep the home deliv- at 6:45p.m.
ered meal program rolling
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
to shut-ins and the elderly Center is once again sponsor-

PageA3

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EXTRA! EXTRA!-READ All ABOlJT IT
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Veteran Benefits not required (o file a Tax Return
will want to file to get money from the IRS
starting in May of 2008.
We at Jackson Hewitt will complete and mai l your
return for the small fee of $20.
This special price is only available to the persons
not required to file but qualify for the stimulus
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�.

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, March 25,

2008

Coast Guard still -searching
for missing crew member
BY STEVE QUINN
ASSOCIATED PRE::SS' WRITER

JUNEAU, Alaska- The
Coast Guard scanned the
icy Bering Sea on Monday
for a fisherman who may
have been dropped from a
rescue basket after the vessel he was on-sank, killing
'
four people and leaving surAP photo
vivors bobbing across a .
President Bush. accompanied by Secretary of State mile of ocean.
The 203-foot Alaska
Condoteezza Rice , makes a statement at the State
Ranger
was on its way to
Department in·Washington Monday.
mackerel grou.nds when it
began taking on water
Sunday in rough seas. A former captain of the ship
recalled the vessel Monday
note the losses, albeit as being "very unstable."
BY BEN fELLER
Forty-two people on
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
briefly and without taking
board
were helped by resquestions from reporter~.
cue
swimmers
and hoisted
WASHINGTON
As always, hi s message
to helicopters after the
Marking a grim milestone. was determination.
Seattle-based
ship sank;
a determined President
"Our strategy going for-· ·
additional
help
came from
Bush oeclared Monday the ward will be aimed at maklives of 4,000 U.S. military ing sure that we achieve crew on a nearby fishing
men and women who have victory and, therefore, vessel. The captain and
died in Iraq "were not lost America becomes . more three crew members died ;
pllolo
in vain." The White House secure," he said. Just last it wasn 't immediately
signaled anew that addi- week, Bush said the high clear what caused the ship The Coast Guard said four crew members died Sunday and another was missing after the
184-foot Alaska Ranger began sinking in high seas off Alaska's Aleutian lslahds. The
tional troops won 't be cost in lives and treasure to sink.
'
pulled out soon.
was necessary to halt the · A preliminary investiga- Ranger Is shown here in January 2006 at the Dutch Harbor, Alaska, dock.
tion
shows
the
four
men
did
A roadside bomb in spread of terrorism and
not make it to life rafts and ship. That might have been rescue operation that field services ship but had
Baghdad killed four U.S. keep Iraq out o( chaos.
died
of hypothermia, said the result of him not mak- began about 2 1/2 hours been converted for fishing,
soldiers Sunday night,
One option that has .found
Alaska
Wildlife Troopers ing it."
·.
after the mayday call was . Canty said.
pushing the death toll to favor in the Pentagon is for
.
The boat's owner, the received. ·
" It was a mess," he said.
4,000.
Bush to announce in April a Sgt. Greg Garcia.
"It appears they were in Seattle-based
At ' least 13 survivors "It was a top-heavy' boat. It
Fishing
'That number pales com- relatively brief pause in
pared with those of other troop reductions beyond the water for about six Company of Alaska, has spread out over a mile were was unstable." .
Officials with the boat's
lengthy U.S. wars, but it is July, without saying when hours, and as you may know identified the captain as not in life boats, but were in
much higher · than many dr at what pace further cuts the Bering Sea is phenome- Eric Peter Jacobsen, 65, of the open water.
owner, the Seattle-based
· Lynnwood, Wash.'
"Saving 42 people in Fishing . Company
Americans, including Bush, will be made. During the nally cold," Garcia said.
of
"I
don't
know
if
there
Bering
Sea
in
the
winter
is
The
missing
crew
memever expected after the pause ,
Alaska, did not immediately
Gen.
David
swift U.S. invasion of Iraq Petraeus, his top comman- wasn't enough room in the ber was identilied as Sdtashi an incredible accomplish- return calls seeking comfive years ago.
der in Iraq, would make yet rafts or not for them', but it Konno of Japan. The cutter ment," Coast Guard Cmdr. ment.
Bush proclaimed the end another assessment of con- sounds to me that the hier- searched for Konno· until Todd Trimpert said in a preJacobsen's son, Scott
of major combat operations . ditions in Iraq, possibly in archy wanted to assure ·(ate Monday, when it left for pared statement.
Jacobsen, told KIRO-TV in
The Alaska Warrior deliv- · Seattle the family wants to
in Iraq in May 2003. Almost September, ·before recom- everybody else is saved," Dutch Harbo·r, about 120
all of the U.S. deaths there mending specific troop he said, based upon the miles to the east. Aerial ered 22 survivors and three know what would cause
have happened since then.
reductions for- the final troopers' interviews with searches continued late of the dead crew mem hers such a large vessel to sink.
members of the Rangers' Monday, Lane said.
to· Dutch Harbor. The ship
"One day people will months of2008.
"(It) . raises ·the question.
sister
vessel.
the
Alaska
Konno, whose age was went into a private dock, something was wrong,
look back at this moment in
White House press secrehistory and say, 'Thank tary Dana Perino said Bush Warrior, which assisted in unknown, was wearing a where there was no public went really · wrong, so
survival suit, but even so, access to survivors.
God there were courageous sees "some merit" in that rescue efforts.
we're interested in the
Two
Colorado
brothers
The remaining 20 sur- details;" he said. "Things
water temperatures are a
people willing to serve, idea. "I think that's not
who haq considered work- dangerous 36 degrees, vivor~ and the ·fourth. dead like that don't just happen.
becau se they laid the foun- unlikely," she said.
dations. for peace for generOne factor arguing ing on the Alaska Ranger said Chief Petty Officer crew member were still on a My dad's be.en fishing all
Coast Guard cutter assisting hi s life· and he's never had
ations to come,"' Bush said against a quick resumption this year saw the short list of Barry Lane .
and
were
relieved
to
victims
"
It
's
not
a
pleasant
state,"
in the search.
after a State Department in troop cuts after July is
anything remotely close to
The company identified this happen.''
briefing about long-term the likelihood that Iraq will see that none of their friends Lane said on Monday. "We
diplomacy efforts.
hold provincial elections in were among the missing or are trying to find him as the other victims as chief
engineer Daniel Cook,
quickly as possible."
"I . nave vowed in the October, an event that deceased.
hometown unknown; mate
Will
and
Doug
Sterner
of
Konno
perhaps
fell
into
past, and I will vow so long probably will require
Pueblo received updates the water from a rescue bas- David Silveira of San
as I' m president, to make heightened security.
sure that those lives were
"It's now a question of from a friend oo. the ship, ket, and officials were Diego; and crewman Byron
not lost in vain - that, in how much time do we pause whom they declined to investigating. It was not Carrillo, believed to be from
fact, there is an outcome for," said Max Boot, a con. identify because the compa- clear whether that person Seattle. '
that will merit the sacri- servative expert on national ny insists crew members not . might have been Konno, ,J!roblems began early
Sunday when the ship's rudfice," Bush said.
security and a senior fellow speak publicly about the officials said.'
When the ship sank, der room began taking on
The news of 4,000 dead in at the Council on Foreign smking, the Siemers said.
"They saiq the ship went waves tip to 20 feet and water. A distress call went
Iraq came the week after the Relations. "Petraeus has
•I'II!!Mn- . . _
war rolled into its sixth year, been pushing for it, and I down fast once it started winds of nearly 30 mph out just before 3 a.m.
• ~.,.. c' •. - )11Ubt.ll3dy ....
Richard Canty, now a tug
dominating most of Bush's think the president will cer- going, about 15 minutes," were reported, · Lane said,
• tO IHIIIIII iddroi:Miwlfi.WIIwnall!
presidency. Almost 30,000 tainly give it to him. He has said 22-year-old -Doug revising earlier estimates of boat operator in New York.
~ eu.bnm.rtPege ~ news. ~&amp;mcnf
captained
the
A Iaska
U.S. service members have a pretty good hand right Sterner, who did one three- 8-foot waves.
Coast Guard swimmers . Ranger 12 years ago.
been wounded in the war.
now just from the political month stint last year on the
6X ~u.rD
ju81 13 more
.
plucked several crew . "There were a lot of rudEarly in April , Bush is calculus - he can make a Alaska. Ranger.
Sign
Up
Onllnel
www.LoeaiNel.com
expected to announce the decision on the merits with- ' "They said the captain me!llbers - most of whom der problems on that boat,"
next steps in the war, and he out having to be panicked had been very brave about were able to pull on sur- Canty said. " It was a very
the whole thing," he said. vival suits - either out of unstable boat."
is likely to embrace a pause into a political decision."
The vessel used to be in
in any troop withdrawals
The war . has taken an "He was one of the last, if the 'sea or from life boats
beyond those scpeduled to enormous toll on Bush's not the last, to abandon onto helicopters during a the Gulf of Mexico as an oil
end this July.
own
standing.
Most
Democrats in Congress A~ericans polled think the
and on the presidential cam- U.S. invasion of Iraq was a
pai&amp;n trail continue to push mistake.
. for a faster end to war. But
Security has improved
Bu sh still has the upper there, credited largely to the
hand for I0 months.
increase in U.S. military
"Americans are asking might last year. But the pace
how much longer must' our of political progress has
troops continue to sacrifice exasperated U.S . lawmakers
for the sake of an Iraqi gov- and military leaders.
ernment thai is unwilling or
The U.S. has about
unable to secure its own 158,000 troops in Iraq. That
future ;" said House Speaker number· is expected to drop
Nancy Pelosi . She said the to 140,000 by summer.
cost to the U.S. reputation is
Bush met for two hours
immense. and the threat to Monday with his national
the economy at home is security team. Petraeus and
unacceptable.
Ryan Crocker, the U.S .
Senate Majority Leader ambassador to · Iraq, took
testimoni~l
Harry Reid said the death part by video linkup.
toll is a reminder that the
Meanwhile,
both
nation must . get out of an Democratic
presidential
"endless civii war and make contenders made note of the
Ameri ca more ~ec ure."
4,000 deaths.
The White House was
Sen. Hill ary ·Rodham
carefu l in its reaction to the Clinton told a campaign
milestone. calling it a sober audience in Pennsylvania
moment hut emph asizi ng that she would honor the
that deaths are g·rieved no fallen' by ending the war and .
matter what the number. bringing home U.S. troops
Bush said people are pray- . "as quickly and responsibly
ing for the families of those as possible." Her rival for
killed wheth er they were the nomination, Sen. Barack
among the. first or the must Obama, said, " It is past time
recent casual ties.
to end this war that should
The number killed in Iraq never have been waged by
is far less than in other mod- bringing our troops home,
ern American wars.
and finally pushing Iraq 's
In Vietnam. the U.S. lost leaders to take respon;ibilimore than 58.000 troops , ty for their future.'
passing the 4,000 mark in
Vice President Dick
1966 a~ dr ath' ro'e qui ckly Cheney, mean,while . cri tialong with e'calali ng cized Clinton and Ob&lt;lllla
American involvement. .
for advocating a U.S. withGrim mile, tunes 'uch as drawal from Iraq. Without
new death toll often go mentioning them by name,
unremarkcd by Bush. But he said such a pullout would.
·
he chme on thi' occasion to put the U.S. at risk .

Bush says 4,000 US deaths in
Iraq will 'merit the sacrifice'

(t:/, :;::

'Otbe ~allipolis mailp 'Otribune,
~be joint f)leasant 3L\egister

and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a
story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would·
like to share please email to:
kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoetlich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
'500-750 words.

Please include a phone number
·
in your email.
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•

•

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•

,.

The Daily Sentinel

•

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar
Youth events

SO, Guysville. Friday,
"Never Too Late" will sing;
Sammy Anderson will
Saturday, March 30
preach;
Saturday, Jarvis
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Merchants Association 's Family will sing; Calvin
annual Easter egg hunt, II Jarvis will speak.
Sunday, March 30
a.m. at Bob Roberts football
MIDDLEPORT
- The
. field in Pomeroy. Kids hunt
: in age groups. Prizes award- Cornwell Twin s, Blaine and
Boyd, will sing at the I0:15
. ed.
a.m.
service at the
Middleport First Baptist
Church.
MIDDLEPORT
Wednesday, March 26
Humor. Sunday to be
RACINE -Eileen Buck, observed at the II a.m. serretired Southern Local vice of the Middleport
· School District teacher, will Presbyterian Church.
observe her 90th birthday
CARPENTER
on March 26. Cards may be Carpenter Baptist Church,
sent to her at P.O. Box 96, 30711 Route 143, Albany,
Tombstone, Ariz. 85683.
to host community fellowship, 6 to 8 p.m. "The
Buckeye Gospel Singers" to
be featured . Potato bar with
trimmings served. Everyone
Wednesday, March 26
welcome to free event.
MIDDLEPORT .- The Questions,
call Pastor Whitt
adult
choir
of
the
Akers,
740-591-1236.
· Middleport Church of
: Ghrist will present the can. tata, "My Chains Are
· Gone ," ? ·p.m . at the church.
:
Friday, March 28
Friday, March 28
GUYSVILLE- Revival,
MIDDLEPORT ..- Free
· 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday community dinner, 4:30-6
at the Carthage Gap p.m., Middleport Church o(
•Community Church, Route Christ Family Life Center.

Birthdays

Church events

Other events

Meat loaf, au gratin potatoes,
green beans and dessert.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, March 27
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers· Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall .
SYRACUSE - Meig s
Counfy Board of MRDD, 4
p.m. at Carleton School. •
Meigs ·
POMEROY County Retired Teachers
~ roup, noon luncheon meetmg. at the Wild Horse Cafe.
Walter Bevins: the new
Southeast Ohio director of
ORTA, will speak on current issues 'of retirees,
including health care. The
River Blend quartet will
entertain. Guests welcome .
POMEROY- Alpha Iota
Masters, II :3(}' a.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodi'st
Church.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville
Senior
Citizens to meet II a.m.
Blood pressures will be
taken, potluck and meeting
to follow.
Saturday, March 29
RACINE -Meigs CAN,

di scussion on revisions to
Gatling Ohio's proposed
mining permit, 4 p.m.-5:30
p.m., Racine Library, call
949-2175 for more information.
Monday, March 31
POMEROY- OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public'Library.

Public meetings
Tuesday, March 25
POMEROY - Re·gular.
meeting of the Meigs
County
Emergency
Planning Committee, I I :30
a.m., in the downstairs conference room of the Senior
Citizens Building . .Lunch
available.
Wednesday, March 26
MARIETTA -District
18 Small Government
Committee,
2
p.m. ,
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
.
Regional
Development District, 1400
Pike St., Marietta. Purpose
to select I 0 projects for submission to Ohio Public
Works Commission.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, special
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village Hall.
·

ing trophies for best of show
and reserve best of show in
the following categories:
Chocolate cakes; cakes made
with fruit or vegetables (such
as carrot, apple, spice, etc.);
decorated cakes; any yellow
or white cake. This' year there
is also a junior division for
decorated cakes for entrants
18 and younger.
Cakes may be single or
double layers. All entries
must have the entrant's
name on the bottom of the

plate or pan so it:s not
showing to the public. The
entering exhibitor should
make all baked goods. All
baked goods should be on
or in a disposable container
because they will be auctioned off after judging to
benefit Meals on Wheels.
Entry forms can be picked
up at the senior center during regular business hours
or the day of the auction.
Call Debbie Jones at 9922161 for more information.

Amateur photo contest deadline nearing
POMEROY
- The
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District and
Leading Creek Watershed
Group are still accepting
·entries for their fourth ama.teur photo contest.
This year's theme is "The
.Streams of Meigs County"
and the deadline for submission is March 31. This contest is open to Meigs
County residents of all ages,

but photos must be taken cash prizes. Photos will be
withm Meigs County and judged by a panel of local
relate to the theme.
experts and residents.
There is a limit of two
Submissions are due to
photo submissions per per- the Meigs SWCD office by
son, and pictures of any for- March 31. ·
mat, size, black &amp;. white, or
Photos can be delivered to
color will be accepted. All the Meigs SWCD office or
pictures are welcome, cur- e-mailed
to
rent or historical, and wi II Raina.Fulks@oh.nacdnet.ne
be displayed at the SWCD t. Winners will be announced
office, but only three win- at the Annual Leading Creek
ners will be chosen for the Stream Sweep, which will

take place at 9 a.m. on April
I 9 at the Jim Vennari Park in
Rutland.
The top three photos will
also be displayed at the
Meigs SWCD booth during
the Meigs County Fair and
the SWCD's '2008 Annual
Banquet. To obtain the
required entry forms and
detailed contest rules contact the 1eigs SWCD office
at 992 .82.

O'Bleness to offer refresher course for older drivers
ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in
Athens will offer a classroom course aimed at helping older people to refresh
, and improve their driving
-skills.
0' Bleness is offering the
AARP
Driver
Safety
Program session I on
Monday, April 14, from 1.to
5 p.m. , and session II on
. Wednesday, April I 6, from
I until 5 p.m. in O'Bleness'
'Lower Level Room 010.

Tuesday, March

Participants mu st attend course helps drivers update ..
both sessions. All drivers, their driving knowledge and
especially those who are 50 skills, prevent traffic crashyears old or older, are invit- es and violations, and mained to participate in the pro- tain mobility and independence.
gram.
.Wanda Llewellyn, AARP
Developed
by
the
American Association of driver safety instructor, will
Retired Persons (AARP), present · informntion about
the comprehensive class- normal changes in vision,
room refre sher course is hearing and reaction time
geared toward the specific associated with aging and
needs of drivers who are 50 provide practical techniques·
years old
or older. to compensate for these
According to AARP, the changes. The following top-

ics will aiso be covered: the
impact of medications on a
person's driving abilities,
basic driving rules, license
renewal, local traffic hazards, adverse road conditions, "road rage," energy
conservation
measures,
'proper · vehicle use and
maintenance, and accident
prevention tactics.
There is a $10 charge for
materials. Call O'Bleness'
Community Relations office
at (740) 566-4814 to register.

A time to proceed
with caution
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My father
passed away suddenly of
complications fo llow ing
surgery. We are all very
upset, but my mother is suffering most of all. She and
Dad did everything together. They were best friends
and never wavered in their
love for each other throughout their 42 years.
I have one sibling, a 36y~-old brother who is an
alcoholic and recovering
heroin addict. He is on
methadone. While Dad was
in the hospital, my brother
and I had a terrible fight. I can
honestly say he started it. He
is bipolar and not taking his
medtcation and flies off the
handle at the drop of a hat.
Today, my brother asked
Mom if he could move back
in with her. He saxs he 'll
live in a camper in her yard,
even though he 'II have no
running water or other basic
necessities. I object to this
becau se he is not going to
· make Mom 's life easier.
He will disrupt things just
like he did when he was
younger. My mom's television would· not be hers, her
kitchen would not stay clean.
and she'd have more laundry
and headaches to deal with .
Am I wrong to object?
Dad would not allow my
brother to live there and I
think Mom should honor
Dad's intentions. I' m looking like the bad guy here.Trying To Protect Mom
Dear Trying: You are
right to be worried, but ultimately, thi s is not your deCision to make. Although he
may indeed become a burden, your brother also is
. company at a time when
Moln is lonely and vulnerable to his request to move i,n.
Discuss your concerns
lovingly with your mother,
and see if she is fearful of
your brother and needs your
help to keep him away. If
not, you will have to Jet her
make up her own mind and
try to accept the result graciously. (And please resist
the urge to say "I told you
so" when things go south.
She 'II need your support.)
Dear Annie: I've been
married for.29 years and my
husband is an alcoholic. His
company went out of busi ness five years ago. After
three years of being· unemployed, he got a menial job,
but quit.after two months. At
his next job, he called in sick
so often, the boss told him he
was on probation. So he quit.
Now he sits on the Gouch
all day and night staring at
the TV. He will occasionally

learn ho~ to recog~ize a persons.
To register for the course,
life-threatening emergency,
how to provide basic life visit O'Bleness' community
support, and what to do in relations office. The course
the case of an airway ·fee of $15 per person is
obstruction or choking. payable with registration
Upon successful completion and covers the cost of a
of the course, panicipants ' CPR instruction book,
receive a card to confirm
that they attended and completed the course. This is
not a ' professional rescuer
CPR course, but it is intended for community or ·lay

Herman Michael,
Pomeroy, celebrated his
90th birthday on March
5. Family members joining him at his home for
cake and ice cream
were Ryan, Amanda ,
Little Ryan and Jenna
Dill ; Joyce, Jamie , ano
Jeremy
Ash ; Jim .and
,
'
James Ryan Beach and
Matt Morris. Other family me.mbers sent cards
and gifts as WE!II.

which must be read before
attending.
.
The fee is waived for anyone unable to pay. For more
information,
call
O'Bieness' community relations department at (740)
566-4814.

Submitted photo

Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Proctorville, Chesapeake

Birth announced
. RACINE - Jamey and
. 'Angie Nelson of Lancaster
announce the birth of their
· ffirst son, Kase William Lee,
·· born on Jan . 9 at the
. · Fairfield Medical Center in
.. Lancaster.
The
infant
i:weighed 8 pounds, 3 ounces.
:~ Maternal grandparents are
. William and Cathy Carleton
; ;of Racine. Paternal . grand:. pa(ents are · Marly · and
Debbie Morarity of Racine,
: and the paternal great-grand. parents are CRarle'S and Ann
· Findley, also of Racine.
..

wash a load of laundry, but
otherwise does nothing
aro und the house . He doe'
not help pay any bills. He
will not go to the doctor.
I've made appointments and
he cancels them . He tried
counseling a few years ago.
but decided he wa~ smarter
than they were and stopped.
He absolutely refuses to
look for a job.
'
My fa mily and friends
wonder why I don't leave
him. The answer is, I think
he would end hi s life and I
couldn 't live with the guilt.
But I fear by not doing anything I' m somehow making
it worse. He is not a danger
to himself or anyone elsehe is just existing. I need to
know what to do. - Need
Help
Dear Need Help: You arc
not responsible for what your
hu sband chooses to do witl1
his life . However, we understand your ·fear that he may
not survive and-we can tell
that you still care about him.
Your husband sounds severely depressed - which is not
uncummon with .alcoholics.
who often use liquor to selfmedicate. Keep encouraging
him to talk to his doctor, and
also contact Al-Anon (alanon.alateen.org) at 1-888'4AL-ANON
( 1-888-425 2666) and ask for help.
Dear Annie: You've
printed a lot of letters from
older people who seem to
have a hard time finding '
relationship s.
Someone
should develop · a dating
website for people 50 and
above . Of course, yQu have
to be careful, but I know
there is someone out there ·
for almost everyone . My
son met a great gal online.
Why can' t there be a dating site specifically for the
over-50 crowd that is moni tored and safe? I dun 't have
the expertise to accomplish
this, but I'm sure someone
does. Our senior citizen'
deserve to find love . Compassionate for Their
Plea in Louisinna
Dear
Louisiana:
Actually, there are such site'
and we'll recommend one :
SeniorFriendFinder.com.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
col11m11. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.llet; or writ'e
to: A11nie's Mailbox, ·P.O.
Box 1/8190, Chicago, lL
60611. To fitld, out more
abolll Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartomiists, visit the
Creators Sy11dicate Web
page at _www.creQtors.com.

goth birthday celebrated

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital to offer community CPR training ·
ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer a Cardiopulmonary
Resuscitation (CPR) course
·. Wednesday, April 16, from
6:30 until 9:30 p.m. in
0' Bleness' Lower Level
room 010.
This American Safety &amp;
.: Health Institute course
·teaches participants the
:skills needed to administer
CPR to adults, children and
infants. Participa11ts also
•

25, 2008

ANNIE 'S MAILBOX

·Response slow to cake contest, auction
POMEROY - '{hursday's of Meigs County.
cake contest and auction to
Entry into the cake contest
benefit the Meals on Wheels is free and thi s year includes
prognun is off to a slow stan a junior divi sion . Cakes
with organizers hoping tht; should be at the Meigs
community will respond like Senior Center by 3 p.m. on
it has in the past.
Thursday with judging to
Last year 96 entries were begin at 5:-30 p.m. That
received but this· year less same day a spaghetti dinner
than 20 have registered for will take place at the senior
the judging at this point. center from 5 p.m. - 6:30
The contest and auction p.m. The cake auction starts
help keep the home deliv- at 6:45p.m.
ered meal program rolling
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
to shut-ins and the elderly Center is once again sponsor-

PageA3

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Veteran Benefits not required (o file a Tax Return
will want to file to get money from the IRS
starting in May of 2008.
We at Jackson Hewitt will complete and mai l your
return for the small fee of $20.
This special price is only available to the persons
not required to file but qualify for the stimulus
payment from IRS .

You )Viii already be helping to
stimulate the econom1•

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•

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Tuesday, March

PageA4

25, 2008

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Obituaries·

Tuesday, March 25,2008

LAND TRANSFERS

•

Obamas
pastorand
populism
-foster
disunity
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydailysentlnel.cam

Ohio Valley Publishing Co~
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

,

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, March 25, the 85th day of 2008. There
are 281 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On March 25, 1965, the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led 25,000 marchers to the
state capitol in Montgomery, Ala., to protest the denial of
voting rights to blacks.
·
•
On this date: In 1634, English colonists sent by Lord
Baltimore arrived in present-day Maryland.
In 1865, during the Civil War,- Confederate forces
attacked Fort Stedman in Virginia, but were forced to withdraw by counterattacking Union troops.
in 1894, Jacob S. Coxey began leading an "army" of
unemployed from Massillon, Ohio,. to Washington to
·
demand help from the federal government.
In 1918, French composer Claude Debussy died in Paris.
In 1911, 146 people, mostly female immigrants, were
killed when fire broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist Co. in
NewYork.
.
In 1947, a coal mine explosion in Centralia, Ill., claimed
ll I lives.
In 1975, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia was shot to death by
a nephew with a history of mental illness. (The nepliew was
beheaded in June I 975.)
In I 988, in New York City's so-called "Preppie Killer"
case, Robert Chambers Jr. pleaded guilty to first-degree
manslaughter in the death of 18-year-old Jennifer Levin.
(Chambers received a sentence of 5 to 15 years in prison;
he was released in February 2003.)
Five years ago: The Senate voted to slash President
Bush's proposed $726 billion tax-cutting package in' half,
hl)ntling the president a defeat on the foundation of his plan
to awaken the nation's slumbering economy. Former
Waterbury, Conn., mayor Philip Giordano was convicted
by a federal jury of violating the civil rights of two preteen
gtrls by sexually abusing them. (Giordano was later sentenced to 37 years in federal prison.)
One year ago: Iran announced it was partially suspending
cooperation with the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency, citing
'what it called "illegal and bullying". Security Council sane"
tions imposed on the country for its refusal to stop enriching uranium . Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi won Mauritania's
first free presidential election.
Today's Birthdays: Modeling agency founder Eileen
Ford is 86. Former astronaut James Lovell is 80. Feminist
activist and author Gloria Steinem is 74. Singer Anita
Bryant is 68. Singer Aretha Franklin is 66. Singer Elton
John is 61. Actress Lisa Gay Hamilton is 44. Actress Sarah
Jessica Parker is 43. Baseball pitcher Tom Glavine is 42.
Olympic bronze medal figure skater Debi Thomas is 41.
Actor Sean Faris is 26. Auto racer Danica Patrick is 26.
Singer Katharine McPhee ("American Idol") is 24.
· Thought for Today: "Uninterpreted truth is as useless as
buried gold." - Lytton Strachey, English biographer
(1880-1932).

Sen. Barack Obama is
absolutely right, as he said
in his Philadelphia speech.
on Tuesday, that Americans ·
are "hungry" for his "message of unity."
But his relationship with
the Rev. Jeremiah Wrightand not only that, but his
whole liberal-populist agenda - raises profound questions about whether he. is
capable of delivering on it.
By choosing- and stickmg with ·- Wright as his
spiritual adviser, Obama has
damaged his ability to heal
the nation's racial wounds.
And his agenda offers nothing
that will attract
Republicans and end political polarization.
In the 1960s, black
Americans had a choice ·
whether to side with the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
or Malcolm X - the healer
who sought to fulfill
America's highest ideals
through nonviolent struggle, or the raging polarizer
who tried to mobilize blacks
out of resentment of whites.
Wright - not just back
then, but to this day took the Malcolm X route.
And Obama chose Wright
as his pastor.
·
And Obama stuck with
him. Whether Obama was
in church the day Wright
"Goddamn
declared
America" for systematical,ly
mfecting blacks with drugs
and HIV, or when he said
that America's "chickens
were coming home to roost"
on Sept. II, 200 I, surely
Obama had to have heard
about it.
Surely, he heard about
Wright's pilgrimage to
Libya's Muammar Gaddafi
and his "lifetime achievement award" for Louis
Farrakhan.
Now, Obama says, he
rejects and abhors what
Wright said and did. No
doubt he does. But he
could cite no instance
when he ever intervened
with Wright to protest his
hateful
nonsense.
Reportedly, Oprah Winfrey
quietly
left
Wright's
church. Obama did not.
Obama asptres to be
America's "post-racial" unifier, the political equivalent
of Winfrey or Tiger Woods.
In the political realm, for-

Obama's agenda that a
Republican could remotely
be attracted to. It is lil)eral
from top to bottom. His proposal for Social Security
reform, for instance, is to
raise taxes - period. No
shaving benefits, no private
accounts - no "bargain."
By one GOP estimate,
Obama 's new spending
("investment") proposals
Iota') $1.2 trillion over five
years.
Rolling back President
Bush's tax cuts for every
family earning more than
$250,000 a year would raise
a little more than half !hat
meaning that taxes
would have to go up even
more.
Some funds would be
saved by pulling out of Iraq
- $9 billion a month is the
figure Obama cites - but
that, too, would be rejected
by Republicans.
'
Obama could do what he
proposes by means other
than "bridging differences"
with Republicans. lie could
assemble what he called on
Feb. 19 "a working majority
for change." "That's l'low
we win elections, that's how
we will govern."
He said, "I want to reach
out to everybody." But if
Obama could win a smashing victory in November
and bring m five or six
Democratic senators and
IS -pius new Democratic
House members, concetvably he could claim a 1964s~yle mandate and push
through his program with
next to no Republican votes.
This would not be "reaching out to everybody." It .
would be a repeat of the
George Bush/Karl Rove
strategy of 50 percent pius
I - a very polarizing way
to govern.
But that possibility probably has been spoiled by
Wright - unless the economy and the Iraq War are
truly wretched in November
or if McCain stumbles
badly. If he's elected,
Obama will have to show a
capacity for reaching out
that. he hasn't shown up to
now - except rhetorically.
He is very good at rhetoric.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

The torture president

lll}mediately after 9/11,
Colin Powell said the terrorists were clearly engaged in
a war on civihzation itself.
Soon after, as secretary 'of
State, he prophetically
warned the president- and
the
lawyers drafting and
LETTERS TO THE
justifying "torture memos''
EDITOR
in the Justice Department
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less -that this country's rejectthan 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be ing the Geneva Conventions
signed, and include ad'dress and telephone number. No and our own laws on the
unsigned letters will be published. Letters :should be in treatment of t~rrorism-relat­
good iaste, addressing is&amp;ues, not personalities. Letters of ed prisoners would "underthanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- mine public support among
ed for publication.
critical allies, making military cooperation more difficult to sustain."
Increasingly, as Powell
predicted . while the presi(USPS
213-960)
dent
strongly insists that the
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
CIA be allowed to continue
·
Co.
:
practicing what Bush calls
Correction Polley.
Published every afternoon, Mon,day
"its
specialized interrogaOur main concern in all stories is to
th rough Friday, 111 Court Street,
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Significant, moreover, is
Department extenalon&amp; are:
the refusal of FBI Director
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Robert Mueller to permit
Ely carrier or motor route
his agents to engage in
News
One month
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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
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oany
sO"
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senior
CHizen
rates
involve
torture.
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
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Outside Sales: Brenda Da11is, Ext 16 where home' carrier service is aiJalllawless treatment of prisonCtauJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 1o
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General Manager
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13 Weeks
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Outside Meigs County
· Nonetheless, on March 8,
13 Weeks
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George W. Bush vetoed a
·web:
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bill that includes a mandate
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that there be, a single stan-

The Daily Sentinel .

..

---··----~

campaign has been stirring
up the Fuzzy Zoellers. (Golf
pro Zoeller infamously .
jibed that Woods would ask
that watermelon and collard
greens
be served at the
Morton .
Masters champions dinner.)
Kondracke
And the . Clintons have
succeeded: Witness widening support for Clinton
among· whites, especially
mer Secretary of State Colin working-class whites, and
Powell, a retired · general African-Americans.
The Wright controversy
and a Republican, could
will
not dampen that trend.
perform that function.
Maybe Secretary of State Maybe Obama's recitation
of the wrongs done blacks
Condoleezza Rice could.
But can Obama, now that led to Wright's "anger
burdened by the record of and bitterness" will peel a
his
association
with few white liberals away ·
from Clinton. But it will
Wfight? I ddu bt it.
to
resistance
Obama's
speech on harden
Thesday was eloquent and Obama among more consophisticated, full of histo- . servative whites.
If Obama still wins the
ry, hope and calls for healing. It got r!lve reviews from · nomination, Wright will be
an (unasked for) gift that
liberals in the. media.
on
giving
to
But what will its effect be keeps
Sen.
John
on white voters in the Republican
Obama
and
and McCain.
Democratic Party
among white· Independents McCain will be in a battle
for white Independents, and
in the general election?
Obama's leading problem Obama 's connection to
as a candidate - .also, to Wright surely will repel
some extent, his advantage them.
His relationships with
- is that he is new on the
national scene, largely an Wright and indicted lllinois
. unknown. He has become political fixer Tony Rezko
the Democratic front-run- raise , questions ·. about
ner by filling the data void Obama's judgment. He may
with soaring rhetoric and have been correct to judge
promises to end the politi- the Iraq War a mistake from
cal polarization that pre- the distance of the IlLinois
vents action to solve state Senate. But, up close
to Wright and Rezko, his
America's problems.
Sen. Hillary Clinton has judgment was lousy.
This isn't all that's d.ubi- .
been lo!!dly protesting that
Obama lacks the experience ous about Obama's claimed
to be president and hasn't · hope to bring about national
been "vetted," as she has. unity. His method of reachHer "vetting," not inciden- , ing out to working-class
tally, leads nearly half of all whites was to find common
voters to say they'd never enemtes - "a corporate
culture rife with inside dealsupport her.
In ·desperation,
the ing, questionable accountClinton campaign decided ing practices and short-term
to use Obama's race against greed, a Washington domihim, evidently figuring that nated by lobbyists and spe- when all is said and cial interests, economic
done - there are more policies that favor the few
whites in the Democratic ov€r the many."
Party than blacks.
Were he to be elected, if
Whether a memo ever he truly wanted to foster
was written instructing her unity and end polarization,
,minfons to play the "race he would have to reach out
card," lots of them did: to Republicans to reach a
Clinton,
her husband, series of "grand bargains"
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed on entitlement reform,
Rendell and former. Rep. health care, education funding and energy and environGeraldine Ferraro.
If Obama is trying to be mental policy.
Tiger Woods, the Clinton
Yet there is nothing in

Nat
Hentoff

dard of interrogation by ail
our forces - very . intentionally including the CIA.
As a result of Bush's veto,
the United States, by validating torture as a tool of
interrogation, has become a
less civilized nation. The
bill the president disdained
(thereby staining his legacy)
would have made the Army
Field Manual the standard
of all interrogations. Among
the practices it prohibits are:
placing boods or sacks over
prisoners' heads (as in CIA
exposing
"renditions");
them to extreme heat or
cold (as often reported) ; and
waterboarding (as disclosed
about 'CIA prisoners at
"black sites"), a procedure
that makes the prisoner
believe he is about to .drown
- and he will drown if it's
not stopped.
The CIA has finally
admitted it has used waterboarding, and though it
claims it no lqnger does,
the White House says that
this "specialized interrogation" remains potentially
permissible in future interrogations.
John McCain has called
waterboarding an ''exquisitely" painful torture, but he
voted against making the
Army Field Manual the
standard for interrogations,
thereby giving cover to
some of the members of

-----;------ - - - · - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - -··-- ·-.. .. ...

Congress who joined him to has shamed us among our
support the president. Why allies, CBS News and the
criticize them when the Associated Press reported
Republican
presidential (March 8) that according to
nominee has been the icon Newsweek:
of those, in and out of our
"The Canadian governmilitary, who oppose tor- ment is refusing to use testiture? This human rights sta- mony from alleged AI
tus for McCain has nqw Qaeda
. leader
Abu
Zubaydah ., (now
at
been tarnished badly.
In contrast to McCain 's . Guantanamo Bay) in its
current stance, there has prosecution of two terror
been continuing strong suspects, because the testic
support of including the mony was acquired during
Army Field Manual in the CIA interrogations in which
. CIA techniques by 31 Zubaydah was waterboardretired Army, Navy and ed." The CIA destroyed
Marine Corps generals who videotapes of that "specialinsist - as Human Rights ized" questioning to hide it
·
First reports - that "the from our laws.
United States not sanction
Human Rights Watch's
the use of interrogation .senior terrorism counsel
methods it · would find Jennifer Daskal predicts
unacceptable if inflicted by that Bush "will go down in
the enemy against captured history as the torture president" for his continuing
Americans."
Documented reports of protection of CIA "specialCIA interr0gation methods ized"
procedures.
by human rights organiza- Congressman · William
. tions,
and
by
both Delahunt, D-Mass., adds:
American and overseas "History is going to judge
reporters, include accounts us all"- including the next
of barbarous assaults on president if he or she conprisoners that; if practic.ed tinues to debase our values
on A.merican captives in as we ligtll the terrorists.
other countries·, would
If the president is so conenrage us to demand swift vinced he's right, why
and harsh punishment of doesn't he demand that
the perpetrators.
Petraeus order his troops in
It has long been evident Iraq to discard the Army
that the Bush administra- Field Manual , which the
tion, in addition to giving general insists they not
the CIA extra-legal powers, stray. from as their standeliberately incarcerated dard. He strongly rejects
terrorism
suspects
at the use of torture.
Guantanamo Bay in its
(Nat Hnttoff is a nationbelief that· the American ally renowned authority on
rule of law would not apply the First Amendmelll and
there, any more than in the the Bill of Rights and author·
CIA secret prisons or the of many book,s, including
torture cells in countries "The War on the Bill of
where CIA captives are sent Rights and the Gathering
in "renditions." Currently, Resistance" (Seven Stories
as an index of how the CIA Press, 2004)

Golda R. Heiney

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
Golda R. Heiney, 91, formerly 'of Racine, passed away at reported the following land
10:55 p.m. on Sunday, March 23, 2008, in the Convalarium transfers:
at Indian Run, in Dublin, Ohio.
Rickey J. Weisenmuller,
Born Aug . 24, 1916. in Meigs County, she was the Brooke E. Roush, to
daughter of the late Charles and Sarah Rowan Forman. She Chantel M. Dearth, deed,
· married Ray Heiney. yvho preceded her in death in 1989.
Salisbury.
' Surviving is her daughter, Yvonne (Gregg) Theodore,
J. Tucker Williams, Jessica
Plain City. Ohio, two grandchildren, Lisa (Ken) Boock, R. Williams, to Russell Hill,
Dublin, and Todd (Kyle) Theodore,. Hilton Head, S.C., Dreania
Hill,
deed,
great grandchildren, Graydon Boock, Brenna and Chase Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
Theodore, and brother-in-law, Kenneth Ours, Wellsville,
Greg L. Mills, Teresa L.
. Ohio, and many nieces and nephews.
Mills, to Gatling Ohio ,
In addition to her parents and her husband, she was pre- LLC, deed, Sutton.
ceded in death by her .sisters, Edna Our's, Ellen Amott,
Roger Riggs , Helena
Estella Clarke, and Elsie Zahrndt.
Riggs, to Jason A. Riggs,
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, March deed, Rutland.
28, 2008, at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine with Rev. · Mary .Ann Green · to
Kerry Wood officiating. Interment wi II be in the Letart Arnold C. Green, deed,
Falls Cemetery at Letart Fails, Ohio. Friends may call from Rutland.
Home National Bank to
II: 30 a.m. until the time of service on Friday at the funerHudson,
Kyla
al home. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the fam- Heath
Hudson, deed, Olive.
ily by visiting www.cremcensfuneralhomes.com.
Frances
I.
Keaton,
deceased,, to Robert Lee
Keaton, certificate of transfer, Orange .
Gharles Keith Pyles,
Randy K. Pyles, to Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., sher-

Deaths

'

OWens Lee 1'atol' McDade

Owens Lee "Tator" · McDade, 66, of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., died Saturday March 22, 2008 at his home
· Funeral service will be held on Wednesday, March 26,
2008 at I p.m. at the Deal Funeral Home with Rev. Bud
··Richmond officiating. Burial will be in the Pine .Grove
Cemetery, Leon W.Va. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Tuesday at the funeral hom . To send condolences visit deal·
.funeral @·suddenlinkmail.corrt.

Local Briefs
Present cantata
MlDDLEPORT - The adult choir of the Middleport
Church of Christ will present the cantata, "My Chains Are
·Gone" at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the church.

Scholarship benefit
POMEROY - An ail you can eat spaghetti dinner to
'benefit the Cooperative Parish Scholarship Fund is
planned . for 4-7 p.m., April 4 at the Mulberry
Community Cehter.
De ssert and beverage are included. Tickets are $6 for
adults, and $3 for children under I 2. They are available
'from the scholarship dinner committee: Rev. Walter
Heinz, Kathryn Hart, Joanna Weaver, and Becky Zurcher,
·through any member churches in the Cooperative Parish
and at the door.

Road closed
RACINE - The Sutton Township Trustees have closed
the lower portion of Sutton Township Road No. T-1 09
Carmel in the area of Inman Hill due to recurrence of a
severe roadway slip.

Real estate tax
payments due April 4
POMEROY - Most Meigs Countians have by now
received their real estate tax bills and .are being reminded
by Treasurer Howard Frank that they have until April 4 to
pay their taxes without a penalty on the real estate.
Frank said that t])is year the real estate anq manUfactured
home tax bjl'ls were created on a new computer system and
the bills were mailed out from another location between
March 7 and I I . He said that some of the bi lis have been
returned to the treasurer's office.
"If you have not received a real estate or manufa~!ur~d
home tax bill yet, please call our ulftce at 992"2004, satd
· Frank. He noted that according to the Ohio Revised Code,
Section 323.13, failure to receive a tax bill does not excuse
·failure or delay to pay taxes, special assessments, or other
'charges shown on the bill or to avoid a penalty, interest or
charge for such delay.
Frank emphasized the "very last and final day to pay real
·estate taxes without a penalty is April 4. They have to be tn
our office on that date."
.
He said that those who owe manufactured h.ome taxes
. have until April 17 to pay without penalty.

Soup dinner today ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

•

iff's deed. Sutton.
Phina Sabel. Bruce Sabel,
to Pnina I. Sabel Trust,·
deJ"d, Salisbury.
·
Richard w: Mora to Jason
N. Mora, Marjorie A. Mora,
deed. Chester.
Arnold Spencer, Frances
H. Spencer, to Clifford D.
Stevens,
Patricia
A.
Stevens, deed, Olive.
Frank H. Capehart ill,
Linda Capehart. to Clay G.
Enslen, Ashlee D. Enslen ,
deed, Chester.
Tony -R. Dugan, .Danielle
E. Dugan. Dameile E.
Grue ser, to Timothy R.
Hood , Tracey L. Hood,
deed, Chester.
Charles E. Mansfield, Jr..
Stephanie M. Mansfield, to
Joseph P. Williams, deed,
Lebanon.
Fran sico Eugene Althouse
to Ronald Hysell, Dian
Hyse ll, deed, Scipio.
, Lois A. Sterrett to
Chapman Family Property,
deed , Sutton.
Brian R. Arnold, Nancy

Arnold, David Ri chard
Arnold, to Ri ck L. Price.
Tatjana Price, Thomas J.
Lorenz. James E. Lorenz,
deed , Bedford.
James B. Thomas, Jr. to
Lois A. Sterrett, deed,
Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
Timothy H. Parson s to
Tory A. Panniter, deed,
Scipio.
Sheila Westfall. Roger
Westfall , to Stacy M.
Qillon, Jerem x L. Reed,
deed, Olive .
Sharon Tuttle, Walter
Tuttle, David Matheny.
Aida Matheny, Clarestine
Matheny, Harold Boston,
Eloise Boston, Herbert E.
Matheny.
Martha . Sue
Matheny, to Ronald D.
Murris, Karen J. Morris.
deed, Olive.
David
Bumgardner,
Shirley Bumgardner. S&amp;D
income. Properties, David
Bumgardner Trust, Shirley
Bumgardner Trust, to David
Shirley
Bumgardner,
Bumgardner. deed. Village

no

tree in
SANDUSKY (AP)- For
about seven years, the state's
natural resources leaders
have harbOred a secret. .
They still won't reveal the
exact location of it or allow
·outsiders to see it.
·
. This Ohio treasure's existence was closely guarded
until last week when the
director of the Ohio
Department of . Natural
Resources revealed that a
full-sized
American
Chestnut tree· still stands in
a marsh near Lake Erie.
For tree experts, it's a big
deal.
. American chestnuts that
grew up to 120 · feet once
accounted for about 25 percent of the forests in the
eastern half of North
America .until a fungus
wiped out ail but a few.
"They are often referred
to as the redwood of the east
because of their tremendous
size," Gary Obermiller, a
regional manager for the
Division of Natural Areas
and ·Preserves.
The fungus was first
detected in 1904 in trees in
New York City, and by 1950
some 3.5 billion trees about 90 percent of the
species - were dead. •
Only · a few trees had
resistance to the fungus and
survived.
In Ohio, most American
chestnut trees were found in
the eastern half of the state.
The state's largest existing
chestnut ·tree- known only
to a few until last week - is
in Sheldon Marsh, a 465acre state nature preserve
about midway between
Toledo and Cleveland.
The tree stands 89 feet tall
and has a 5-foot circumference. "To our knowledge,
we don't have any that
come close to this size,"
Obermiller said.
Most surviving chestnut

asecret
American
chestnut trees
once dominated
landscape
(AP) -

trees:
• American chestnut
trees once made up
about 25 percent of
forests in eastern North
America ..
• The trees grew up to
120 teet tall and lived up
· to 600 years.
• It 's wood was valuable because it was
straight, light and rotresistant.
• A fungus that eventually wiped out most of
the trees was first found
in 1904 in New York.
• All American chestnut trees in New York
City were dead by 1912.
• By 1950 about 3.5
billion trees - about 90
percent of the species
-were dead.
AP phGto

. In this photo released by Ohio Department of Natural
· Resources, the state champion American chestnut is shown
· during the official measurements by the Division of Forestry
Jan. 31 in Sandusky. For about seven years, the state's
natural resources leaders have harbored a secret. They still
· won't reveal the exact location of it or allow outsiders to see
it. This Ohio treasure's existence was closely guarded until
last week when the director of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources revealed that a full-sized American
Chestnut tree still stands in a marsh near Lake Erie.
trees are small. sprouting
from the roots of trees killed
by the fungus.
.
Steve Maurer, the new
chief of Natural Areas .and
Preserves, decided the pub-. ·
lie should be told about the
. tree, Obermiller said. "He
realized this was a very special tree," Obermiller said.
Maurer has asked the

Chestnut
American
Foundation if it wants samples of the tree to determine
if th e tree is resistant to the
chestnut blight. Obermiller
said.
The. tree produces fr-uit,
but the seeds aren't viable
Si-'P i f~(3 VALL[Y
: I

from PageA1

RUTLAND
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department La~ies Auxiliary will have a soup dinner
with serving from 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 24, at the
Rutlal)d Fire Station.

~

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\

1

'

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I "

7

I~(

counties that participated.
Smith said the contest was a
success at Southern in part
due to the participation of ·
Ryan
Lemley, history
·
teacher.
. Smith said the reasoning
behind the contest included
the importance of ·remembering history "the way it
was" and· to promote
American heritage so that it
won 't·be forgotten.

Bill Beegle also helped with
the presentation.
Smith said he hopes participation in the essay contest continues· and spreads
to other schools. Southern
was the only school , in
. · RUTLAND - Free , preventative health screen.i.ng as- Meig s. Galiia or Athens
well as sandwiches will be served today at Women's Health
Day in Rutland until around 4 p.m. a~ t~e ~utland Ci~ic
·Center. The Meigs County Cancer In~ttattve. IS sponsonng
solutions. The meeting will
·the event which will include free testtng estimated to cost
provide an opportunity for
$500 if done privately. Free scree~ings i!lclude ~emoglo­
parents, teachers, olflcials,
·bin, cholesterol and glu~~se screemngs wt~h on-stte rel!ul!s
youth
and other community
· from Page A1
given; a nurse pracuuoner from .Ohw Umverstty s
members to voice their conOsteopathic Me~icim;: will provi~e cltmcal breast e:"ams;
cerns
and suggest ideas for
an exercise phystologtst wtil provtde body fat an~ysts and well as a drug and alcohol
preventing young people
exercise fitness information; the county extenswn office . treatment provider.
will provide nutritional infor~ation o~ healthy snac~s;
Members of the MCCC from using alcohol.
Al so during the meeting,
screenin~ for colon cancer wtll be a~atlabl~ along wtth have said the overall pl\ll)Ose
information on the dtsease; Holzer s Metgs Tobacco of the meeting is to increase . Meigs County high school
'Prevention Center will provide "quitting" information; the community awareness on the students who have particiDex-a-Scan for osteoporosis will be available. Many other issue of underage drinking, pated in an essay contest
free services will also be otTered. Ail Metgs County women identify how underage about alcohol use .and
:are welcome to attend.
drinking affects the commu- · underage drinking, will be
nity, and brainstorm possible recognized.

Free women's health clinic today

Facts about
chestnut

American

1 I' T I T•

History

of Pomeroy.
Wayne A. Delli to Gatling
Ohio, LLC. deed, Salisbury.
Steven A. Millhone, Betty
P. Millhoan. to Thomas B.
Wolf, deed. Olive.
Raymond L. Andrews,
Megan L. Andrews·, to
Cassie Turner, deed , Village
of Pomeroy.
Robert J. Holmes, Patricia
A. · Holmes. to Mohamad
Sidani,·deed, Scipio.
Garland E. Gledhill ,
Marilyn J . Gledhill , ' to
Michael D. Boggs, deed,
Rutland .
Philip E. Eggers, Judith
Claugus Eggers, to Phillip
. E. Eggers, Judith C. Eggers.
Beth E. Eggers Irrevocable
Trust, deed, Orange.
Philip E. Eg,gers, Judith
Claugus Eggers, to Phillip
E. Eggers. Beth Eggers
Irrevocable Trust, Judith C. .
Eggers, deed, Orange.
Darley Caldwell. Dianne
E. Caldwell , to Charles K.
Marshall ,
Pamela
K.
Marshall, deed, Rutland.

Meeting

because there isn't another
tree to pollinate it, he said. ,
Natural resources director
Sean Logan let it slip last
week that the tree exists. He
said during a meeting of the
Ohio Lake Erie Commission
that. he was going to visit it
later that day.
But the exact site is still
protected.
State officials want to make
su re the tree remains, and
there is an eagle's nest in it.
~-~N C.1~· .

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P[IUIJR\UM, .UO ~n\"JU

A Cappella Vocal Band
lnpulse
Tuesday, March 25th
7:30pm
Ohio Valley Symphony
Pianist Lori Sims
March 29th
BPM
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

Tax Preparation Service
1Accurate and affordable service year-round
1Exper~nced, trained tax profession~ls
1Convenient evening and weekend hours ·
I Audit assi1tance
'
.' I Electronic
filing
.,
'

'

.

•

.,

Eastern
from PageA1
• Approved NEOLA
Board Policy update for
second half of 2007-08
school year as recommend-

ed by the superintendent.
• Approved the School
Calendar for the 2008-09
school year.
• Approved the date of the
next regular meeting, for
6:30p.m. on April 16 in the
.elementary library conference room .

618 East Mail St.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR'LIFE.

Pomeroy, OH 45769

The Daily Sentinel

740-992-6674

Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

IIRBLOCK'
..'

.I

�..
•

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Tuesday, March

PageA4

25, 2008

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Obituaries·

Tuesday, March 25,2008

LAND TRANSFERS

•

Obamas
pastorand
populism
-foster
disunity
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydailysentlnel.cam

Ohio Valley Publishing Co~
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

,

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, March 25, the 85th day of 2008. There
are 281 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On March 25, 1965, the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led 25,000 marchers to the
state capitol in Montgomery, Ala., to protest the denial of
voting rights to blacks.
·
•
On this date: In 1634, English colonists sent by Lord
Baltimore arrived in present-day Maryland.
In 1865, during the Civil War,- Confederate forces
attacked Fort Stedman in Virginia, but were forced to withdraw by counterattacking Union troops.
in 1894, Jacob S. Coxey began leading an "army" of
unemployed from Massillon, Ohio,. to Washington to
·
demand help from the federal government.
In 1918, French composer Claude Debussy died in Paris.
In 1911, 146 people, mostly female immigrants, were
killed when fire broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist Co. in
NewYork.
.
In 1947, a coal mine explosion in Centralia, Ill., claimed
ll I lives.
In 1975, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia was shot to death by
a nephew with a history of mental illness. (The nepliew was
beheaded in June I 975.)
In I 988, in New York City's so-called "Preppie Killer"
case, Robert Chambers Jr. pleaded guilty to first-degree
manslaughter in the death of 18-year-old Jennifer Levin.
(Chambers received a sentence of 5 to 15 years in prison;
he was released in February 2003.)
Five years ago: The Senate voted to slash President
Bush's proposed $726 billion tax-cutting package in' half,
hl)ntling the president a defeat on the foundation of his plan
to awaken the nation's slumbering economy. Former
Waterbury, Conn., mayor Philip Giordano was convicted
by a federal jury of violating the civil rights of two preteen
gtrls by sexually abusing them. (Giordano was later sentenced to 37 years in federal prison.)
One year ago: Iran announced it was partially suspending
cooperation with the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency, citing
'what it called "illegal and bullying". Security Council sane"
tions imposed on the country for its refusal to stop enriching uranium . Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi won Mauritania's
first free presidential election.
Today's Birthdays: Modeling agency founder Eileen
Ford is 86. Former astronaut James Lovell is 80. Feminist
activist and author Gloria Steinem is 74. Singer Anita
Bryant is 68. Singer Aretha Franklin is 66. Singer Elton
John is 61. Actress Lisa Gay Hamilton is 44. Actress Sarah
Jessica Parker is 43. Baseball pitcher Tom Glavine is 42.
Olympic bronze medal figure skater Debi Thomas is 41.
Actor Sean Faris is 26. Auto racer Danica Patrick is 26.
Singer Katharine McPhee ("American Idol") is 24.
· Thought for Today: "Uninterpreted truth is as useless as
buried gold." - Lytton Strachey, English biographer
(1880-1932).

Sen. Barack Obama is
absolutely right, as he said
in his Philadelphia speech.
on Tuesday, that Americans ·
are "hungry" for his "message of unity."
But his relationship with
the Rev. Jeremiah Wrightand not only that, but his
whole liberal-populist agenda - raises profound questions about whether he. is
capable of delivering on it.
By choosing- and stickmg with ·- Wright as his
spiritual adviser, Obama has
damaged his ability to heal
the nation's racial wounds.
And his agenda offers nothing
that will attract
Republicans and end political polarization.
In the 1960s, black
Americans had a choice ·
whether to side with the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
or Malcolm X - the healer
who sought to fulfill
America's highest ideals
through nonviolent struggle, or the raging polarizer
who tried to mobilize blacks
out of resentment of whites.
Wright - not just back
then, but to this day took the Malcolm X route.
And Obama chose Wright
as his pastor.
·
And Obama stuck with
him. Whether Obama was
in church the day Wright
"Goddamn
declared
America" for systematical,ly
mfecting blacks with drugs
and HIV, or when he said
that America's "chickens
were coming home to roost"
on Sept. II, 200 I, surely
Obama had to have heard
about it.
Surely, he heard about
Wright's pilgrimage to
Libya's Muammar Gaddafi
and his "lifetime achievement award" for Louis
Farrakhan.
Now, Obama says, he
rejects and abhors what
Wright said and did. No
doubt he does. But he
could cite no instance
when he ever intervened
with Wright to protest his
hateful
nonsense.
Reportedly, Oprah Winfrey
quietly
left
Wright's
church. Obama did not.
Obama asptres to be
America's "post-racial" unifier, the political equivalent
of Winfrey or Tiger Woods.
In the political realm, for-

Obama's agenda that a
Republican could remotely
be attracted to. It is lil)eral
from top to bottom. His proposal for Social Security
reform, for instance, is to
raise taxes - period. No
shaving benefits, no private
accounts - no "bargain."
By one GOP estimate,
Obama 's new spending
("investment") proposals
Iota') $1.2 trillion over five
years.
Rolling back President
Bush's tax cuts for every
family earning more than
$250,000 a year would raise
a little more than half !hat
meaning that taxes
would have to go up even
more.
Some funds would be
saved by pulling out of Iraq
- $9 billion a month is the
figure Obama cites - but
that, too, would be rejected
by Republicans.
'
Obama could do what he
proposes by means other
than "bridging differences"
with Republicans. lie could
assemble what he called on
Feb. 19 "a working majority
for change." "That's l'low
we win elections, that's how
we will govern."
He said, "I want to reach
out to everybody." But if
Obama could win a smashing victory in November
and bring m five or six
Democratic senators and
IS -pius new Democratic
House members, concetvably he could claim a 1964s~yle mandate and push
through his program with
next to no Republican votes.
This would not be "reaching out to everybody." It .
would be a repeat of the
George Bush/Karl Rove
strategy of 50 percent pius
I - a very polarizing way
to govern.
But that possibility probably has been spoiled by
Wright - unless the economy and the Iraq War are
truly wretched in November
or if McCain stumbles
badly. If he's elected,
Obama will have to show a
capacity for reaching out
that. he hasn't shown up to
now - except rhetorically.
He is very good at rhetoric.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

The torture president

lll}mediately after 9/11,
Colin Powell said the terrorists were clearly engaged in
a war on civihzation itself.
Soon after, as secretary 'of
State, he prophetically
warned the president- and
the
lawyers drafting and
LETTERS TO THE
justifying "torture memos''
EDITOR
in the Justice Department
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less -that this country's rejectthan 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be ing the Geneva Conventions
signed, and include ad'dress and telephone number. No and our own laws on the
unsigned letters will be published. Letters :should be in treatment of t~rrorism-relat­
good iaste, addressing is&amp;ues, not personalities. Letters of ed prisoners would "underthanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- mine public support among
ed for publication.
critical allies, making military cooperation more difficult to sustain."
Increasingly, as Powell
predicted . while the presi(USPS
213-960)
dent
strongly insists that the
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
CIA be allowed to continue
·
Co.
:
practicing what Bush calls
Correction Polley.
Published every afternoon, Mon,day
"its
specialized interrogaOur main concern in all stories is to
th rough Friday, 111 Court Street,
tions" in its secret prisons,
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
and "renditions" (kidnapin a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
ping Europeans to be tor992·2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
tured
elsewhere), we have
the Ohio Newspaper Associatio~ .
lost the trust and respect of
Postmllter: Send address correc·
Oui main number Is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
many our allies' citizens.
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Significant, moreover, is
Department extenalon&amp; are:
the refusal of FBI Director
Subs.c rlption Rates
Robert Mueller to permit
Ely carrier or motor route
his agents to engage in
News
One month
'1 0.27
s4ch "coercive" CIA-style
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
inter~ogations that often
oany
sO"
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senior
CHizen
rates
involve
torture.
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month ·
'10.27
Also opposing the torone year
'103.90
tured use of language by
Subscribers
shotAd
remit
in
atlvance
Advertising
high oflicials of the admindirect to the Daily Santin&amp;!. No sub·
OutBidt S81ea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
istration to disguise this
scription by mail permitted in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Da11is, Ext 16 where home' carrier service is aiJalllawless treatment of prisonCtauJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 1o
eble.
ers, which would make any
such "evidence" thrown out
Mall Subscription
of
'o ur federal courts, are.
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
Gen. David Petrai:us and Lt.
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
Geh. Michael Maples,
26 Weeks
'64.20
director of the Defense
52 Weeks'
' 127.11
E-mail:
Intelligence Agency:
news@mydaflysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
· Nonetheless, on March 8,
13 Weeks
'53.55
George W. Bush vetoed a
·web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
bill that includes a mandate
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
that there be, a single stan-

The Daily Sentinel .

..

---··----~

campaign has been stirring
up the Fuzzy Zoellers. (Golf
pro Zoeller infamously .
jibed that Woods would ask
that watermelon and collard
greens
be served at the
Morton .
Masters champions dinner.)
Kondracke
And the . Clintons have
succeeded: Witness widening support for Clinton
among· whites, especially
mer Secretary of State Colin working-class whites, and
Powell, a retired · general African-Americans.
The Wright controversy
and a Republican, could
will
not dampen that trend.
perform that function.
Maybe Secretary of State Maybe Obama's recitation
of the wrongs done blacks
Condoleezza Rice could.
But can Obama, now that led to Wright's "anger
burdened by the record of and bitterness" will peel a
his
association
with few white liberals away ·
from Clinton. But it will
Wfight? I ddu bt it.
to
resistance
Obama's
speech on harden
Thesday was eloquent and Obama among more consophisticated, full of histo- . servative whites.
If Obama still wins the
ry, hope and calls for healing. It got r!lve reviews from · nomination, Wright will be
an (unasked for) gift that
liberals in the. media.
on
giving
to
But what will its effect be keeps
Sen.
John
on white voters in the Republican
Obama
and
and McCain.
Democratic Party
among white· Independents McCain will be in a battle
for white Independents, and
in the general election?
Obama's leading problem Obama 's connection to
as a candidate - .also, to Wright surely will repel
some extent, his advantage them.
His relationships with
- is that he is new on the
national scene, largely an Wright and indicted lllinois
. unknown. He has become political fixer Tony Rezko
the Democratic front-run- raise , questions ·. about
ner by filling the data void Obama's judgment. He may
with soaring rhetoric and have been correct to judge
promises to end the politi- the Iraq War a mistake from
cal polarization that pre- the distance of the IlLinois
vents action to solve state Senate. But, up close
to Wright and Rezko, his
America's problems.
Sen. Hillary Clinton has judgment was lousy.
This isn't all that's d.ubi- .
been lo!!dly protesting that
Obama lacks the experience ous about Obama's claimed
to be president and hasn't · hope to bring about national
been "vetted," as she has. unity. His method of reachHer "vetting," not inciden- , ing out to working-class
tally, leads nearly half of all whites was to find common
voters to say they'd never enemtes - "a corporate
culture rife with inside dealsupport her.
In ·desperation,
the ing, questionable accountClinton campaign decided ing practices and short-term
to use Obama's race against greed, a Washington domihim, evidently figuring that nated by lobbyists and spe- when all is said and cial interests, economic
done - there are more policies that favor the few
whites in the Democratic ov€r the many."
Party than blacks.
Were he to be elected, if
Whether a memo ever he truly wanted to foster
was written instructing her unity and end polarization,
,minfons to play the "race he would have to reach out
card," lots of them did: to Republicans to reach a
Clinton,
her husband, series of "grand bargains"
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed on entitlement reform,
Rendell and former. Rep. health care, education funding and energy and environGeraldine Ferraro.
If Obama is trying to be mental policy.
Tiger Woods, the Clinton
Yet there is nothing in

Nat
Hentoff

dard of interrogation by ail
our forces - very . intentionally including the CIA.
As a result of Bush's veto,
the United States, by validating torture as a tool of
interrogation, has become a
less civilized nation. The
bill the president disdained
(thereby staining his legacy)
would have made the Army
Field Manual the standard
of all interrogations. Among
the practices it prohibits are:
placing boods or sacks over
prisoners' heads (as in CIA
exposing
"renditions");
them to extreme heat or
cold (as often reported) ; and
waterboarding (as disclosed
about 'CIA prisoners at
"black sites"), a procedure
that makes the prisoner
believe he is about to .drown
- and he will drown if it's
not stopped.
The CIA has finally
admitted it has used waterboarding, and though it
claims it no lqnger does,
the White House says that
this "specialized interrogation" remains potentially
permissible in future interrogations.
John McCain has called
waterboarding an ''exquisitely" painful torture, but he
voted against making the
Army Field Manual the
standard for interrogations,
thereby giving cover to
some of the members of

-----;------ - - - · - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - -··-- ·-.. .. ...

Congress who joined him to has shamed us among our
support the president. Why allies, CBS News and the
criticize them when the Associated Press reported
Republican
presidential (March 8) that according to
nominee has been the icon Newsweek:
of those, in and out of our
"The Canadian governmilitary, who oppose tor- ment is refusing to use testiture? This human rights sta- mony from alleged AI
tus for McCain has nqw Qaeda
. leader
Abu
Zubaydah ., (now
at
been tarnished badly.
In contrast to McCain 's . Guantanamo Bay) in its
current stance, there has prosecution of two terror
been continuing strong suspects, because the testic
support of including the mony was acquired during
Army Field Manual in the CIA interrogations in which
. CIA techniques by 31 Zubaydah was waterboardretired Army, Navy and ed." The CIA destroyed
Marine Corps generals who videotapes of that "specialinsist - as Human Rights ized" questioning to hide it
·
First reports - that "the from our laws.
United States not sanction
Human Rights Watch's
the use of interrogation .senior terrorism counsel
methods it · would find Jennifer Daskal predicts
unacceptable if inflicted by that Bush "will go down in
the enemy against captured history as the torture president" for his continuing
Americans."
Documented reports of protection of CIA "specialCIA interr0gation methods ized"
procedures.
by human rights organiza- Congressman · William
. tions,
and
by
both Delahunt, D-Mass., adds:
American and overseas "History is going to judge
reporters, include accounts us all"- including the next
of barbarous assaults on president if he or she conprisoners that; if practic.ed tinues to debase our values
on A.merican captives in as we ligtll the terrorists.
other countries·, would
If the president is so conenrage us to demand swift vinced he's right, why
and harsh punishment of doesn't he demand that
the perpetrators.
Petraeus order his troops in
It has long been evident Iraq to discard the Army
that the Bush administra- Field Manual , which the
tion, in addition to giving general insists they not
the CIA extra-legal powers, stray. from as their standeliberately incarcerated dard. He strongly rejects
terrorism
suspects
at the use of torture.
Guantanamo Bay in its
(Nat Hnttoff is a nationbelief that· the American ally renowned authority on
rule of law would not apply the First Amendmelll and
there, any more than in the the Bill of Rights and author·
CIA secret prisons or the of many book,s, including
torture cells in countries "The War on the Bill of
where CIA captives are sent Rights and the Gathering
in "renditions." Currently, Resistance" (Seven Stories
as an index of how the CIA Press, 2004)

Golda R. Heiney

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
Golda R. Heiney, 91, formerly 'of Racine, passed away at reported the following land
10:55 p.m. on Sunday, March 23, 2008, in the Convalarium transfers:
at Indian Run, in Dublin, Ohio.
Rickey J. Weisenmuller,
Born Aug . 24, 1916. in Meigs County, she was the Brooke E. Roush, to
daughter of the late Charles and Sarah Rowan Forman. She Chantel M. Dearth, deed,
· married Ray Heiney. yvho preceded her in death in 1989.
Salisbury.
' Surviving is her daughter, Yvonne (Gregg) Theodore,
J. Tucker Williams, Jessica
Plain City. Ohio, two grandchildren, Lisa (Ken) Boock, R. Williams, to Russell Hill,
Dublin, and Todd (Kyle) Theodore,. Hilton Head, S.C., Dreania
Hill,
deed,
great grandchildren, Graydon Boock, Brenna and Chase Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
Theodore, and brother-in-law, Kenneth Ours, Wellsville,
Greg L. Mills, Teresa L.
. Ohio, and many nieces and nephews.
Mills, to Gatling Ohio ,
In addition to her parents and her husband, she was pre- LLC, deed, Sutton.
ceded in death by her .sisters, Edna Our's, Ellen Amott,
Roger Riggs , Helena
Estella Clarke, and Elsie Zahrndt.
Riggs, to Jason A. Riggs,
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, March deed, Rutland.
28, 2008, at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine with Rev. · Mary .Ann Green · to
Kerry Wood officiating. Interment wi II be in the Letart Arnold C. Green, deed,
Falls Cemetery at Letart Fails, Ohio. Friends may call from Rutland.
Home National Bank to
II: 30 a.m. until the time of service on Friday at the funerHudson,
Kyla
al home. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the fam- Heath
Hudson, deed, Olive.
ily by visiting www.cremcensfuneralhomes.com.
Frances
I.
Keaton,
deceased,, to Robert Lee
Keaton, certificate of transfer, Orange .
Gharles Keith Pyles,
Randy K. Pyles, to Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., sher-

Deaths

'

OWens Lee 1'atol' McDade

Owens Lee "Tator" · McDade, 66, of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., died Saturday March 22, 2008 at his home
· Funeral service will be held on Wednesday, March 26,
2008 at I p.m. at the Deal Funeral Home with Rev. Bud
··Richmond officiating. Burial will be in the Pine .Grove
Cemetery, Leon W.Va. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Tuesday at the funeral hom . To send condolences visit deal·
.funeral @·suddenlinkmail.corrt.

Local Briefs
Present cantata
MlDDLEPORT - The adult choir of the Middleport
Church of Christ will present the cantata, "My Chains Are
·Gone" at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the church.

Scholarship benefit
POMEROY - An ail you can eat spaghetti dinner to
'benefit the Cooperative Parish Scholarship Fund is
planned . for 4-7 p.m., April 4 at the Mulberry
Community Cehter.
De ssert and beverage are included. Tickets are $6 for
adults, and $3 for children under I 2. They are available
'from the scholarship dinner committee: Rev. Walter
Heinz, Kathryn Hart, Joanna Weaver, and Becky Zurcher,
·through any member churches in the Cooperative Parish
and at the door.

Road closed
RACINE - The Sutton Township Trustees have closed
the lower portion of Sutton Township Road No. T-1 09
Carmel in the area of Inman Hill due to recurrence of a
severe roadway slip.

Real estate tax
payments due April 4
POMEROY - Most Meigs Countians have by now
received their real estate tax bills and .are being reminded
by Treasurer Howard Frank that they have until April 4 to
pay their taxes without a penalty on the real estate.
Frank said that t])is year the real estate anq manUfactured
home tax bjl'ls were created on a new computer system and
the bills were mailed out from another location between
March 7 and I I . He said that some of the bi lis have been
returned to the treasurer's office.
"If you have not received a real estate or manufa~!ur~d
home tax bill yet, please call our ulftce at 992"2004, satd
· Frank. He noted that according to the Ohio Revised Code,
Section 323.13, failure to receive a tax bill does not excuse
·failure or delay to pay taxes, special assessments, or other
'charges shown on the bill or to avoid a penalty, interest or
charge for such delay.
Frank emphasized the "very last and final day to pay real
·estate taxes without a penalty is April 4. They have to be tn
our office on that date."
.
He said that those who owe manufactured h.ome taxes
. have until April 17 to pay without penalty.

Soup dinner today ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

•

iff's deed. Sutton.
Phina Sabel. Bruce Sabel,
to Pnina I. Sabel Trust,·
deJ"d, Salisbury.
·
Richard w: Mora to Jason
N. Mora, Marjorie A. Mora,
deed. Chester.
Arnold Spencer, Frances
H. Spencer, to Clifford D.
Stevens,
Patricia
A.
Stevens, deed, Olive.
Frank H. Capehart ill,
Linda Capehart. to Clay G.
Enslen, Ashlee D. Enslen ,
deed, Chester.
Tony -R. Dugan, .Danielle
E. Dugan. Dameile E.
Grue ser, to Timothy R.
Hood , Tracey L. Hood,
deed, Chester.
Charles E. Mansfield, Jr..
Stephanie M. Mansfield, to
Joseph P. Williams, deed,
Lebanon.
Fran sico Eugene Althouse
to Ronald Hysell, Dian
Hyse ll, deed, Scipio.
, Lois A. Sterrett to
Chapman Family Property,
deed , Sutton.
Brian R. Arnold, Nancy

Arnold, David Ri chard
Arnold, to Ri ck L. Price.
Tatjana Price, Thomas J.
Lorenz. James E. Lorenz,
deed , Bedford.
James B. Thomas, Jr. to
Lois A. Sterrett, deed,
Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
Timothy H. Parson s to
Tory A. Panniter, deed,
Scipio.
Sheila Westfall. Roger
Westfall , to Stacy M.
Qillon, Jerem x L. Reed,
deed, Olive .
Sharon Tuttle, Walter
Tuttle, David Matheny.
Aida Matheny, Clarestine
Matheny, Harold Boston,
Eloise Boston, Herbert E.
Matheny.
Martha . Sue
Matheny, to Ronald D.
Murris, Karen J. Morris.
deed, Olive.
David
Bumgardner,
Shirley Bumgardner. S&amp;D
income. Properties, David
Bumgardner Trust, Shirley
Bumgardner Trust, to David
Shirley
Bumgardner,
Bumgardner. deed. Village

no

tree in
SANDUSKY (AP)- For
about seven years, the state's
natural resources leaders
have harbOred a secret. .
They still won't reveal the
exact location of it or allow
·outsiders to see it.
·
. This Ohio treasure's existence was closely guarded
until last week when the
director of the Ohio
Department of . Natural
Resources revealed that a
full-sized
American
Chestnut tree· still stands in
a marsh near Lake Erie.
For tree experts, it's a big
deal.
. American chestnuts that
grew up to 120 · feet once
accounted for about 25 percent of the forests in the
eastern half of North
America .until a fungus
wiped out ail but a few.
"They are often referred
to as the redwood of the east
because of their tremendous
size," Gary Obermiller, a
regional manager for the
Division of Natural Areas
and ·Preserves.
The fungus was first
detected in 1904 in trees in
New York City, and by 1950
some 3.5 billion trees about 90 percent of the
species - were dead. •
Only · a few trees had
resistance to the fungus and
survived.
In Ohio, most American
chestnut trees were found in
the eastern half of the state.
The state's largest existing
chestnut ·tree- known only
to a few until last week - is
in Sheldon Marsh, a 465acre state nature preserve
about midway between
Toledo and Cleveland.
The tree stands 89 feet tall
and has a 5-foot circumference. "To our knowledge,
we don't have any that
come close to this size,"
Obermiller said.
Most surviving chestnut

asecret
American
chestnut trees
once dominated
landscape
(AP) -

trees:
• American chestnut
trees once made up
about 25 percent of
forests in eastern North
America ..
• The trees grew up to
120 teet tall and lived up
· to 600 years.
• It 's wood was valuable because it was
straight, light and rotresistant.
• A fungus that eventually wiped out most of
the trees was first found
in 1904 in New York.
• All American chestnut trees in New York
City were dead by 1912.
• By 1950 about 3.5
billion trees - about 90
percent of the species
-were dead.
AP phGto

. In this photo released by Ohio Department of Natural
· Resources, the state champion American chestnut is shown
· during the official measurements by the Division of Forestry
Jan. 31 in Sandusky. For about seven years, the state's
natural resources leaders have harbored a secret. They still
· won't reveal the exact location of it or allow outsiders to see
it. This Ohio treasure's existence was closely guarded until
last week when the director of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources revealed that a full-sized American
Chestnut tree still stands in a marsh near Lake Erie.
trees are small. sprouting
from the roots of trees killed
by the fungus.
.
Steve Maurer, the new
chief of Natural Areas .and
Preserves, decided the pub-. ·
lie should be told about the
. tree, Obermiller said. "He
realized this was a very special tree," Obermiller said.
Maurer has asked the

Chestnut
American
Foundation if it wants samples of the tree to determine
if th e tree is resistant to the
chestnut blight. Obermiller
said.
The. tree produces fr-uit,
but the seeds aren't viable
Si-'P i f~(3 VALL[Y
: I

from PageA1

RUTLAND
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department La~ies Auxiliary will have a soup dinner
with serving from 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 24, at the
Rutlal)d Fire Station.

~

I

),

\

1

'

,, '

I "

7

I~(

counties that participated.
Smith said the contest was a
success at Southern in part
due to the participation of ·
Ryan
Lemley, history
·
teacher.
. Smith said the reasoning
behind the contest included
the importance of ·remembering history "the way it
was" and· to promote
American heritage so that it
won 't·be forgotten.

Bill Beegle also helped with
the presentation.
Smith said he hopes participation in the essay contest continues· and spreads
to other schools. Southern
was the only school , in
. · RUTLAND - Free , preventative health screen.i.ng as- Meig s. Galiia or Athens
well as sandwiches will be served today at Women's Health
Day in Rutland until around 4 p.m. a~ t~e ~utland Ci~ic
·Center. The Meigs County Cancer In~ttattve. IS sponsonng
solutions. The meeting will
·the event which will include free testtng estimated to cost
provide an opportunity for
$500 if done privately. Free scree~ings i!lclude ~emoglo­
parents, teachers, olflcials,
·bin, cholesterol and glu~~se screemngs wt~h on-stte rel!ul!s
youth
and other community
· from Page A1
given; a nurse pracuuoner from .Ohw Umverstty s
members to voice their conOsteopathic Me~icim;: will provi~e cltmcal breast e:"ams;
cerns
and suggest ideas for
an exercise phystologtst wtil provtde body fat an~ysts and well as a drug and alcohol
preventing young people
exercise fitness information; the county extenswn office . treatment provider.
will provide nutritional infor~ation o~ healthy snac~s;
Members of the MCCC from using alcohol.
Al so during the meeting,
screenin~ for colon cancer wtll be a~atlabl~ along wtth have said the overall pl\ll)Ose
information on the dtsease; Holzer s Metgs Tobacco of the meeting is to increase . Meigs County high school
'Prevention Center will provide "quitting" information; the community awareness on the students who have particiDex-a-Scan for osteoporosis will be available. Many other issue of underage drinking, pated in an essay contest
free services will also be otTered. Ail Metgs County women identify how underage about alcohol use .and
:are welcome to attend.
drinking affects the commu- · underage drinking, will be
nity, and brainstorm possible recognized.

Free women's health clinic today

Facts about
chestnut

American

1 I' T I T•

History

of Pomeroy.
Wayne A. Delli to Gatling
Ohio, LLC. deed, Salisbury.
Steven A. Millhone, Betty
P. Millhoan. to Thomas B.
Wolf, deed. Olive.
Raymond L. Andrews,
Megan L. Andrews·, to
Cassie Turner, deed , Village
of Pomeroy.
Robert J. Holmes, Patricia
A. · Holmes. to Mohamad
Sidani,·deed, Scipio.
Garland E. Gledhill ,
Marilyn J . Gledhill , ' to
Michael D. Boggs, deed,
Rutland .
Philip E. Eggers, Judith
Claugus Eggers, to Phillip
. E. Eggers, Judith C. Eggers.
Beth E. Eggers Irrevocable
Trust, deed, Orange.
Philip E. Eg,gers, Judith
Claugus Eggers, to Phillip
E. Eggers. Beth Eggers
Irrevocable Trust, Judith C. .
Eggers, deed, Orange.
Darley Caldwell. Dianne
E. Caldwell , to Charles K.
Marshall ,
Pamela
K.
Marshall, deed, Rutland.

Meeting

because there isn't another
tree to pollinate it, he said. ,
Natural resources director
Sean Logan let it slip last
week that the tree exists. He
said during a meeting of the
Ohio Lake Erie Commission
that. he was going to visit it
later that day.
But the exact site is still
protected.
State officials want to make
su re the tree remains, and
there is an eagle's nest in it.
~-~N C.1~· .

~'A
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Ci:;"

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~
.

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c\

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-;
.i . ....

u.::

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,

·---·¥- ·· ~··-··

P[IUIJR\UM, .UO ~n\"JU

A Cappella Vocal Band
lnpulse
Tuesday, March 25th
7:30pm
Ohio Valley Symphony
Pianist Lori Sims
March 29th
BPM
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

Tax Preparation Service
1Accurate and affordable service year-round
1Exper~nced, trained tax profession~ls
1Convenient evening and weekend hours ·
I Audit assi1tance
'
.' I Electronic
filing
.,
'

'

.

•

.,

Eastern
from PageA1
• Approved NEOLA
Board Policy update for
second half of 2007-08
school year as recommend-

ed by the superintendent.
• Approved the School
Calendar for the 2008-09
school year.
• Approved the date of the
next regular meeting, for
6:30p.m. on April 16 in the
.elementary library conference room .

618 East Mail St.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR'LIFE.

Pomeroy, OH 45769

The Daily Sentinel

740-992-6674

Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

IIRBLOCK'
..'

.I

�•

The Daily Sentinel·

•

.PageA6

OHIO

'

Inside

Tuesday, March 25,, 2008

BY TERRY KINNEY

CINCINNATI - Efforts
to recrui · foster parents in
three ,outhwest Ohio counties have foundered since
the death of a child who was
bound aml left in a closet.
· Tough background checks
were instituted to weed out
bad risks, but the increased
scrutiny also led good
prospective foster parents to
walk away.
"There's been a negative
stigma attached tc:i foster
parenting," said Brian
Gregg, spokesman for the
Hamilton
County
Department of Job and
Family Services. "A lot of
people have gotten out of it
because of that; they don't
want the extra scrutiny."
Some background checks
have uncovered serious
offenses, such as child
endangering or felonious
assault; others show minor
traffic violations. Tfte
checks have spooked people

Local Weather

with any sort of record,
Gregg said.
Hamilton County has
contracts with about 260
private foster homes, about
one-third fewer than two
years ago, Gregg said.
Background checks came·
about after the August 2006
. death of Marcus Fiesel, a 3·
year-old developmentally
delayed boy who was
· placed · by Butler County
with a couple in Clermont
County. Both counties border Hamilton County.
The boy died when he
was bound and left in a closet while his foster parents,
who were convicted of his·
murder, attended a weekend
family reunion in Kentucky.
Investigators later found the
couple's background should
have raised numerous red
tlags about their fitness to
be foster parents.
A year ago, . Hamilton

County created a system to
So far, 157 people have hoping ro reduce the numcompare the names of foster responded to the ads, Gregg . ber of children sent to other
parents, and · those who said. But it takes four to six counties.
applied to be foster parents. months to get through the
"Our first ' priority is the
with pol ice and court · process 'of becoming a fos- kids, and staying close to
records. The system was ter parent, so it's too early to home is 'what's best for
expanded last fall to include say how many will end up them," said Director Mike
national databases.
being certified.
. Fox. "It enables us tei serve
To make up for its short- , The Clermont County them better.'' .
fall, Hamilto.n County Department of Job and
Fox said the shortage of
kicked off a $1 million Family Services has sched- ·local . placements predates
campaign iri January to uled a series of public pre- . the de11th of Marcus F,iesel,
recruit I00 new foster sentations through May to and tha~ . about 70 percent of
homes. The TV ads show attract
foster
parent· Butler County children livordinary people in tights prospects.
ing in foster care are sent
and a cape performing
·
"We know many people out of the cou'nty.
everyday functions, Iike in Clermont County have
Gregg said Hamilton
washing dishes or taking I ilought about becoming County has about 850 chi Iout the trash. It calls them foster parents but are con- dren in foster care on any
"Everyday Heroes" whose cerned about how it will · given day, and that about 30
status is confirmed by their affect their lives and fami- percent ·of them must be
willingness to take foster lies," said department sent outside the county.
children into their homes.
Recruitin!l foster parents
Director Tom McCartney.
The agency also is setting
Butler County Children is a statew1de problem, he
up recruiting events at Services is runnjng televi- said.
·
libraries, coffee shops and sion spots and a mail-in
"Everybody's
havin'g
adoption fairs, and is doing campaign
·aimed
at trouble recruiting," said
some direct mailing.
prospective foster parents, Karen Jorgenson , execu-

~CAA tourney

.

tive director of. the
National Foster Parent
Association based in Gig
Harbor; Wash . She said
reimbursement is a prob!em, particularly in Ohio.
"Jt:s not just because of
the scrutiny," she said. "It's .
the cost of Jiving, of two
parents working, although,
mdeed, negative press does
have an impact."
She said Ohio's reimbursement rate is way
below the national average
of $50 I a month for a
school-age · child. Ohio's
basic rate of $275 a month,
regardless of the child's age,
she said, while the true cost
. of care is $727 - and more
for a teenager.
" We are working with
.Ohio, advocatiag a change
there," Jorgenson said.
"We're not in it for the
money, But we at least wanf
our cost covered."

'

update, Page B6

Thesday, March 25, 2008

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY- A schedule of upcoming high
school varsl1y sporting events Involving

Gama counties.
Tbul'ldly March 27

Minford at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Saturday. M1rcb

21

BoyoBa.-11
Minford at Meigs, noon

\Vesttall at Meigs, 4 p.m.
Tnock ond Field
Gatlia Academy at Chillk::othe, 11 a.m.
River Valley at Warren, 10 a.m.
Moodly Men:b 31

BoysBouboll
Gallia 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.
01~1 Soltblll
Hannan at Soutll Gallla, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
sOuthern at Roane County. 5 p.m. . ·

Tennle
·
GalUs Academy at Athens, 4:30p.m.
Tugdq. Apr. 1

1

Soutllern at River Valley. 5 p.m.
. Ot~o Soflblll
Eastern at Athena, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
Southern at River Vatley,~S p.m.
Treck end Field
Eastern at Belpre, 4 p.m.

BRIEFS

SYLholding
baseball-softball
.
sign-ups Saturday
.

..

• '1'·.. •

·Local Stocks

II

. :o' DI!Iti '

Rebecca
l!lraaheara,
Au.D., CCC-A

...

~ ~t

~:··,;Jk'"

4247 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio

AEP (NYSE) - 40.33
Aklo (NASDAQ) - 80
Ashland Inc. ( NYSE) - 48.01 .
Big loto (NYSE)- 23.69
Bob Evano (NASDAQ) - 29.03
Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE)- 43.70
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)-

HEARING CENTER

.•,s..o.,su.r....r
.s,.,,.

.«ti•

J4Boll1'
BIIRflltt]

435'/z Second Avenue

S;nlu!

(740) 446-7619

ATHENS

~t:'
JobltC
'•

740·446·]107

275 West Union Street

594-3571

740446-0007 •

61.68
Champion (NASDAQ) - 5.82
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

. SYRACUSE
The
. Syracuse Youth League will
be holding sigQ-ups for
baseball and softball for
boys and girls on Saturday,
March 29, from 9 a.m. until
noon at the Syracuse Fire
Station.
For more information
contact Eber Pickens at
992-5564.

Rutland YL to
hold baseballSoftball·sign-ups
RUTLAND
The
Rutland Youth League will
be holding baseball and
softball sign-ups for boys
and girls ages four to 16 on
'Thursday, March 27, from 6
p:m. to 9 p.m. at the Rutland
Fire Department.
: For more information
contact
either
Mindy
Brinker at 992-7870 or
Angie Russell at 742-3116.
''

.

Chester to hold
baseball-softball
•
sign-ups

5.10
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Collins (NYSE)- 57.09
DuPont (NYSE) - 46.68
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.67
Gannett (NYSE) - 31.76
General Electric (NYSE)- 37.40
Hao1oy-Davtdlon (N'(SE) - 40.65
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 46.55
Kror;or (NYSE) - 25.24
Limited Brands (NYSE) -17.74
Norfolk Southem (NYSE) - 54.34
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
\

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BBT ( NYSE) - 35.27
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 24.95
Pepsico ( NYSE) - 71.45
Premier (NASDAQ) - U.65
Rock-11 (NYSE) - 56.34
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 6.41
Royal Dutch Shell - 66.60
Searo Holding (NASDAQ) -

U1.59

Powell's

FOODFAIR
700 East Main Street
Pomeroy. OH

740 992 ·5252

LUTCF, AKOIII

It's Just
Around The
Corn,er

21S·A Sixth Street
Pt Pleasant, wv 25550
304·675· 7036
Fax: 304·675·7387
river~itiesins@suddenlinkmail.com

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Phone (740t 446-1711

Two locadom

Waf.MIIrt (NYSE) - 53.63
Wendy'o (NYSE) - 24.10
Worthlncton (NYSE) -17.23
Dally otock reports are the 4 p.'m.
ET ctoslnc quotes of transactions
for March 24, 2008, provided by
Edward Jo-.a ftnanclal advlsol"'
loaac Millo In Gallipolis at (740)
441·9441 and Leoley Marrero In
Point Pleasant ot (304) 6740174. Member StPC.

CHESTER
The
Chester Ball Association
will be holding baseball and
softball sign-ups at the
Chester Firehouse on
Saturday, March 29, from
II a.m. to I p.m. A copy of
thll p&lt;trticipating child's
birth certificate is required
at sign-up.

Mei)S softball
tournament in
Marietta
MARIETTA - There
will be a USSSA Mens class
p and E softball tournament
Saturday, April 12, in
Marietta.
: The tournament will be
round-robin with single
elimination rounds to follow: The cost is $115 with
awards given to ftrst and
~econd place.
: ·For more information.
please contact B.J. Mayer at
:,40-3 36-5660

114 mile north or Pomero~ -M110n
Bridge , M11on, WV

Phone

AP phnto

Parkersburg South at Eastern, 5 p.m.

,. ~PORTS

Residential • Commercial •
Wholesale • Retail

Illinois
State's Levi
Dyer, right,
falls in front
of Dayton's
Charles
. Little (15) in
the second
half of the
NIT basketball game
Monday at
Redbird
Arena In
Normal, Ill.

BoyoBouboll

·

.Shaw Carpet and Floor Center

NORMAL, Ill. (AP) Dayton went on a 17-0 second-half run to break open a
close game en route to a 554S victory over Illinois State
in an NIT second-round
game on Monday night.
Brian Roberts led Dayton
(23-10) with 16 points. The
Flyers go on the road to face
Ohio State (21-13) in a quarterfinal game Wednesday.
The Flyers trailed 32-28
with · 17:03 left before
Illinois' State (25-1 0) went
more than I 0 minutes with·
out scoring. The Redbirds
missed 12 .straight shots
before Dinma Odiakosa 's
basket with 6:38 left ended
the drought. Odiakosa led
the Redbirds with 14 points.
. Illinois State closed the
gap to 51-47 with 57 sec.. onds left, but couldn't get
~loser. The Redbirds shot 26

BoytBIMIIIII

PLAY· COVERALL BINGO

Stop Sllop For
Your Metliclll
Eqrlipment Needs!

Roberts leads Dayton to 55-48 NIT win over Dlinois State

tu.ma from Meigs and

WIN UP TO $1,000 !!!

Tuesday... Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 50s. South
winds .
5
to
10
mph .. .Increasing to around
15 mph in the afternoon.
Thesday night...Cioudy.
A chance of showers after
midnight. Not as cool with
lows in the lower 40s. ·
Southwest winds 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with a -40 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the . mid 50s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the Iow!!r 40s. South winds
5 to 10 mph.
Thursday.. ;Cioudy with
showers likely. Highs in the
lower 60s. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Thursday ntaht and
Frtday...Cloudy with a 50
percent chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
around 60.
Friday
night
and
Saturday... Cioudy
with
showers likely: Lows in the
mid 40s. Hi~hs around 60.
Chance of ram 60 percent .

Bl

Daily Sentinel

Chad Johnson sitting out voluntary
workouts, Page B2

Background checks one reaSon foster parent recruiting dragging·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Th~

Spring training roundup, Page B2

n:l-5721

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

Bv RusTY MtwR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - Bruce ·
Springsteen ended up being
Ohio State's sixth man.
Jamar Butler scored 20
points and spurred a 17-2
ftrst-half run with three 3p(Jinters to lead Ohio State ·
past California 73-56 in an
NIT second-round game on
Monday night played before
·a raucous sellout crowd of
13,276 at 52-year-old St.
John Arena,
"It was loud. The crowd
got us going out there,"
Butler said. "That's what
players want to do, to play
m environments like this.
They gave us a little boost
to get us going."
·
The game was shifted to
the · .old building lhe
Buckeyes left a decade ago
because Value City Arena,
their current home, was
booked for a concert . by
Bruce Springsteen and the E
Street Band.
,
"It was electric in there,"
Ohio State coach Thad
Matta said of the wild
atmosphere at St. John
Arena. "It was funny, driving over from the
Schottenstein Center, it took
me about two liours to ~et
here - and then just, seemg
the people lining up to get
in die building. They did a
tremendous job for us."
·
The Buckeyes (21- 13),
who were fifth in the Big
Ten, advance to host a quar.terfinal game on Wednesday
ni_ght against Dayton (2310), a 55-48 victor at
Illinois State on Monday
night. It' II be the first meet·
ing between the Flyers and
Buckeyes since 1988.
"We haven't seen them a
lot,"
Matta
said.
"Obviously, they're a very,
very good basketball team.
They've been through some
/'
AP photo
injuries this season . . We'll Ohio State's Matt Terwilliger (42) dunks over California's Harper Kamp (43) in the second
.
'
half of the second round .of the National Invitation Tournament basketball game Monday at
Plean ... Powers. 86 St. John Arena In Columbus.

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

hx- 1·740·44&amp;3008
~-moll - sportaOmydailysentlnal.com

Stott

Eric Randolph, Sporte Wrller
. ~740) 446-2342, "'"· 33
erandolphO mydailysentinel.com

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

...... Mill!""'

(740) 448-2342, axt. 33
bwallersOmyda!lytribune.com

.•

Lar'ry Crum, Sporte Writer
(740) 446·2342, m&lt;1. 33
tcrumOmydallyreglster.com

--~

... .

-

~--··

--

·-

•

:
•'

'

Warren scores 22,
leads Bradley to
79-73 victory over
Bobcats in CBI
PEORIA, Ill. (AP)
Andrew Warren and Jeremy
Crouch led Bradley to a· 7973 victory· over Ohio in the
quarterfinals of the College
Basketball Invitational. on
Monday night.
Warren scored 16 of his
game-high 22 points and
Crouch had 13 of his IS
points after the break as
Bradley (19-15) used a 21-3
burst to overcome a 63-49
deficit with 9:09 left.
During the stretch, which
ended ·on a Theron Wilson
dunk at 2:55, the Braves
forced six Ohio turnovers,
scoring off five of them.
Matt Salley 's layup at
4:15 gave Bradley the lead
for good at 68-66.
D.aniel Ruffin added 13
points and Wilson scored
10 for Bradley, which
trailed 42-29 at the half on
39 percent (9-of-23) fieldgoal shooting. The Braves
improved to 55 percent
shooting (16-of-29) in the
second half.
Leon Williams led Ohio
(2.0-13) with 20 points and
13 rebounds and . Bubba
Walther scored 19 points,
including five 3-pointers,
for the Bobcats. Jerome
Tillman added II points
and. 10 rebounds for Ohio.
Bradley advances : to
Wednesday's
semifinal
round against Tulsa (2213)

Homer Bailey struggles·in Reds' 5-3 win over Toronto

:- 1 -740·446·2342 ext. 33

Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer

Please see Dayton. 86

24-4 spurt powers Buckeyes to NIT Win over Cal

CoNTAcrUs

~port•

percent in the second half to
finish at 34 percent .
Dayton freshman forward
Chris Wright, who had been
out since Jan. 9 with a bro"
ken bone in his right ankle,
scored eight points.
Roberts sank 4-of-6
attempts from 3-point range.
The senior g11ard moved into
second place on Dayton's
all-time 3-point basket list
with 289, two .behind •Tony
Stanley.
Osiris Eldridge, who led
Illinois State by averaging
16 points a game, made his
f,irst shot, a 3-pointer, before
missing his next · 13
attempts. Eldridge finished
with 10 points. .
Eldridge sat out the final
9:25 of the first half after
picking up his second foul.

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Homer Bailey throws against the Toronto Blue Jays in a spring training baseball game in Sarasota, Ra., Monday. Bailey struggled in his 4 1·3 innings, walking
six batters and throwing only 42 strikes on 84 pitches. Reds manager Dusty Baker still has'
confidence in tile 21-ye&lt;~r-old, but he's running out of time to land a spot in the starting
rotation.
''

SARASOTA, Fla.
Giveri a chance to make his
pitch on the big .stage,
Cincinnati's Homer Bailey
gave another off-the-plate
performance ·Monday night
during a 5-3 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays" . .
The 21-year-old pitcher
failed tu last five innings in·
a start that will go a long
way in deciding his immediate future. Bailey walked six
in 4 1-3 innings, throwing
only 42 strikes out of 84
pitches.
In the . fifth inning alone,
he threw 21 pitches - only
six strikes - while walking
the bases loaded. At that
point; manager Dusty Baker
decided he had seen enough.
"He's looking better,"
Baker said. ''He's got to find
a way to eliminate those
walks. He's got the stuff. Sil\
walks - in the big leagues,
that will haunt you."
The former first-round

pick came into spring trainmg hoping to win a spot in
the rotation, but struggled
with his control while two
others passed him by. Right·
banders Johnny Cueto and
Edinson Vo!que~ have
moved ahead of him, lea.ving Bailey and Josh Fogg
essentially competing for
the last spot in the rotation.
Baker decided to start
Bailey in the major league
game Monday night instead
of having him throw against
minor leasuers earlier in the
day. In h1s most impor~ant
start of the ~pring. Bailey
would have center stage.
"Yeah, it's a big start for

Homer," Baker said bcfo~c
the game. "It's not do-ordie, but it could sure help hi&gt;
cause a lot."
The right-hander kept his
pitches•to a minimum at the
outset, the main ihing h~
hadn't done all spring. The
longer he went. the more he
lost his touch .
PleaH see Bailey. 82
I

�•

The Daily Sentinel·

•

.PageA6

OHIO

'

Inside

Tuesday, March 25,, 2008

BY TERRY KINNEY

CINCINNATI - Efforts
to recrui · foster parents in
three ,outhwest Ohio counties have foundered since
the death of a child who was
bound aml left in a closet.
· Tough background checks
were instituted to weed out
bad risks, but the increased
scrutiny also led good
prospective foster parents to
walk away.
"There's been a negative
stigma attached tc:i foster
parenting," said Brian
Gregg, spokesman for the
Hamilton
County
Department of Job and
Family Services. "A lot of
people have gotten out of it
because of that; they don't
want the extra scrutiny."
Some background checks
have uncovered serious
offenses, such as child
endangering or felonious
assault; others show minor
traffic violations. Tfte
checks have spooked people

Local Weather

with any sort of record,
Gregg said.
Hamilton County has
contracts with about 260
private foster homes, about
one-third fewer than two
years ago, Gregg said.
Background checks came·
about after the August 2006
. death of Marcus Fiesel, a 3·
year-old developmentally
delayed boy who was
· placed · by Butler County
with a couple in Clermont
County. Both counties border Hamilton County.
The boy died when he
was bound and left in a closet while his foster parents,
who were convicted of his·
murder, attended a weekend
family reunion in Kentucky.
Investigators later found the
couple's background should
have raised numerous red
tlags about their fitness to
be foster parents.
A year ago, . Hamilton

County created a system to
So far, 157 people have hoping ro reduce the numcompare the names of foster responded to the ads, Gregg . ber of children sent to other
parents, and · those who said. But it takes four to six counties.
applied to be foster parents. months to get through the
"Our first ' priority is the
with pol ice and court · process 'of becoming a fos- kids, and staying close to
records. The system was ter parent, so it's too early to home is 'what's best for
expanded last fall to include say how many will end up them," said Director Mike
national databases.
being certified.
. Fox. "It enables us tei serve
To make up for its short- , The Clermont County them better.'' .
fall, Hamilto.n County Department of Job and
Fox said the shortage of
kicked off a $1 million Family Services has sched- ·local . placements predates
campaign iri January to uled a series of public pre- . the de11th of Marcus F,iesel,
recruit I00 new foster sentations through May to and tha~ . about 70 percent of
homes. The TV ads show attract
foster
parent· Butler County children livordinary people in tights prospects.
ing in foster care are sent
and a cape performing
·
"We know many people out of the cou'nty.
everyday functions, Iike in Clermont County have
Gregg said Hamilton
washing dishes or taking I ilought about becoming County has about 850 chi Iout the trash. It calls them foster parents but are con- dren in foster care on any
"Everyday Heroes" whose cerned about how it will · given day, and that about 30
status is confirmed by their affect their lives and fami- percent ·of them must be
willingness to take foster lies," said department sent outside the county.
children into their homes.
Recruitin!l foster parents
Director Tom McCartney.
The agency also is setting
Butler County Children is a statew1de problem, he
up recruiting events at Services is runnjng televi- said.
·
libraries, coffee shops and sion spots and a mail-in
"Everybody's
havin'g
adoption fairs, and is doing campaign
·aimed
at trouble recruiting," said
some direct mailing.
prospective foster parents, Karen Jorgenson , execu-

~CAA tourney

.

tive director of. the
National Foster Parent
Association based in Gig
Harbor; Wash . She said
reimbursement is a prob!em, particularly in Ohio.
"Jt:s not just because of
the scrutiny," she said. "It's .
the cost of Jiving, of two
parents working, although,
mdeed, negative press does
have an impact."
She said Ohio's reimbursement rate is way
below the national average
of $50 I a month for a
school-age · child. Ohio's
basic rate of $275 a month,
regardless of the child's age,
she said, while the true cost
. of care is $727 - and more
for a teenager.
" We are working with
.Ohio, advocatiag a change
there," Jorgenson said.
"We're not in it for the
money, But we at least wanf
our cost covered."

'

update, Page B6

Thesday, March 25, 2008

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY- A schedule of upcoming high
school varsl1y sporting events Involving

Gama counties.
Tbul'ldly March 27

Minford at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Saturday. M1rcb

21

BoyoBa.-11
Minford at Meigs, noon

\Vesttall at Meigs, 4 p.m.
Tnock ond Field
Gatlia Academy at Chillk::othe, 11 a.m.
River Valley at Warren, 10 a.m.
Moodly Men:b 31

BoysBouboll
Gallia 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.
01~1 Soltblll
Hannan at Soutll Gallla, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
sOuthern at Roane County. 5 p.m. . ·

Tennle
·
GalUs Academy at Athens, 4:30p.m.
Tugdq. Apr. 1

1

Soutllern at River Valley. 5 p.m.
. Ot~o Soflblll
Eastern at Athena, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
Southern at River Vatley,~S p.m.
Treck end Field
Eastern at Belpre, 4 p.m.

BRIEFS

SYLholding
baseball-softball
.
sign-ups Saturday
.

..

• '1'·.. •

·Local Stocks

II

. :o' DI!Iti '

Rebecca
l!lraaheara,
Au.D., CCC-A

...

~ ~t

~:··,;Jk'"

4247 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio

AEP (NYSE) - 40.33
Aklo (NASDAQ) - 80
Ashland Inc. ( NYSE) - 48.01 .
Big loto (NYSE)- 23.69
Bob Evano (NASDAQ) - 29.03
Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE)- 43.70
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)-

HEARING CENTER

.•,s..o.,su.r....r
.s,.,,.

.«ti•

J4Boll1'
BIIRflltt]

435'/z Second Avenue

S;nlu!

(740) 446-7619

ATHENS

~t:'
JobltC
'•

740·446·]107

275 West Union Street

594-3571

740446-0007 •

61.68
Champion (NASDAQ) - 5.82
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

. SYRACUSE
The
. Syracuse Youth League will
be holding sigQ-ups for
baseball and softball for
boys and girls on Saturday,
March 29, from 9 a.m. until
noon at the Syracuse Fire
Station.
For more information
contact Eber Pickens at
992-5564.

Rutland YL to
hold baseballSoftball·sign-ups
RUTLAND
The
Rutland Youth League will
be holding baseball and
softball sign-ups for boys
and girls ages four to 16 on
'Thursday, March 27, from 6
p:m. to 9 p.m. at the Rutland
Fire Department.
: For more information
contact
either
Mindy
Brinker at 992-7870 or
Angie Russell at 742-3116.
''

.

Chester to hold
baseball-softball
•
sign-ups

5.10
City Holdtnl (NASDAQ)- 40.93
Collins (NYSE)- 57.09
DuPont (NYSE) - 46.68
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.67
Gannett (NYSE) - 31.76
General Electric (NYSE)- 37.40
Hao1oy-Davtdlon (N'(SE) - 40.65
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 46.55
Kror;or (NYSE) - 25.24
Limited Brands (NYSE) -17.74
Norfolk Southem (NYSE) - 54.34
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
\

'

-26
BBT ( NYSE) - 35.27
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 24.95
Pepsico ( NYSE) - 71.45
Premier (NASDAQ) - U.65
Rock-11 (NYSE) - 56.34
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 6.41
Royal Dutch Shell - 66.60
Searo Holding (NASDAQ) -

U1.59

Powell's

FOODFAIR
700 East Main Street
Pomeroy. OH

740 992 ·5252

LUTCF, AKOIII

It's Just
Around The
Corn,er

21S·A Sixth Street
Pt Pleasant, wv 25550
304·675· 7036
Fax: 304·675·7387
river~itiesins@suddenlinkmail.com

www.foodfairmarkets .com

WHY PAY MORE ?;:&gt;
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES!
,.

Auto/Home/Business/
Life/Annuity,
An Independent Agency
Representing Erie Insurance

2400
G111ipoll1, Ohio
Phone (740t 446-1711

Two locadom

Waf.MIIrt (NYSE) - 53.63
Wendy'o (NYSE) - 24.10
Worthlncton (NYSE) -17.23
Dally otock reports are the 4 p.'m.
ET ctoslnc quotes of transactions
for March 24, 2008, provided by
Edward Jo-.a ftnanclal advlsol"'
loaac Millo In Gallipolis at (740)
441·9441 and Leoley Marrero In
Point Pleasant ot (304) 6740174. Member StPC.

CHESTER
The
Chester Ball Association
will be holding baseball and
softball sign-ups at the
Chester Firehouse on
Saturday, March 29, from
II a.m. to I p.m. A copy of
thll p&lt;trticipating child's
birth certificate is required
at sign-up.

Mei)S softball
tournament in
Marietta
MARIETTA - There
will be a USSSA Mens class
p and E softball tournament
Saturday, April 12, in
Marietta.
: The tournament will be
round-robin with single
elimination rounds to follow: The cost is $115 with
awards given to ftrst and
~econd place.
: ·For more information.
please contact B.J. Mayer at
:,40-3 36-5660

114 mile north or Pomero~ -M110n
Bridge , M11on, WV

Phone

AP phnto

Parkersburg South at Eastern, 5 p.m.

,. ~PORTS

Residential • Commercial •
Wholesale • Retail

Illinois
State's Levi
Dyer, right,
falls in front
of Dayton's
Charles
. Little (15) in
the second
half of the
NIT basketball game
Monday at
Redbird
Arena In
Normal, Ill.

BoyoBouboll

·

.Shaw Carpet and Floor Center

NORMAL, Ill. (AP) Dayton went on a 17-0 second-half run to break open a
close game en route to a 554S victory over Illinois State
in an NIT second-round
game on Monday night.
Brian Roberts led Dayton
(23-10) with 16 points. The
Flyers go on the road to face
Ohio State (21-13) in a quarterfinal game Wednesday.
The Flyers trailed 32-28
with · 17:03 left before
Illinois' State (25-1 0) went
more than I 0 minutes with·
out scoring. The Redbirds
missed 12 .straight shots
before Dinma Odiakosa 's
basket with 6:38 left ended
the drought. Odiakosa led
the Redbirds with 14 points.
. Illinois State closed the
gap to 51-47 with 57 sec.. onds left, but couldn't get
~loser. The Redbirds shot 26

BoytBIMIIIII

PLAY· COVERALL BINGO

Stop Sllop For
Your Metliclll
Eqrlipment Needs!

Roberts leads Dayton to 55-48 NIT win over Dlinois State

tu.ma from Meigs and

WIN UP TO $1,000 !!!

Tuesday... Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 50s. South
winds .
5
to
10
mph .. .Increasing to around
15 mph in the afternoon.
Thesday night...Cioudy.
A chance of showers after
midnight. Not as cool with
lows in the lower 40s. ·
Southwest winds 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with a -40 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the . mid 50s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the Iow!!r 40s. South winds
5 to 10 mph.
Thursday.. ;Cioudy with
showers likely. Highs in the
lower 60s. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Thursday ntaht and
Frtday...Cloudy with a 50
percent chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
around 60.
Friday
night
and
Saturday... Cioudy
with
showers likely: Lows in the
mid 40s. Hi~hs around 60.
Chance of ram 60 percent .

Bl

Daily Sentinel

Chad Johnson sitting out voluntary
workouts, Page B2

Background checks one reaSon foster parent recruiting dragging·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Th~

Spring training roundup, Page B2

n:l-5721

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

Bv RusTY MtwR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - Bruce ·
Springsteen ended up being
Ohio State's sixth man.
Jamar Butler scored 20
points and spurred a 17-2
ftrst-half run with three 3p(Jinters to lead Ohio State ·
past California 73-56 in an
NIT second-round game on
Monday night played before
·a raucous sellout crowd of
13,276 at 52-year-old St.
John Arena,
"It was loud. The crowd
got us going out there,"
Butler said. "That's what
players want to do, to play
m environments like this.
They gave us a little boost
to get us going."
·
The game was shifted to
the · .old building lhe
Buckeyes left a decade ago
because Value City Arena,
their current home, was
booked for a concert . by
Bruce Springsteen and the E
Street Band.
,
"It was electric in there,"
Ohio State coach Thad
Matta said of the wild
atmosphere at St. John
Arena. "It was funny, driving over from the
Schottenstein Center, it took
me about two liours to ~et
here - and then just, seemg
the people lining up to get
in die building. They did a
tremendous job for us."
·
The Buckeyes (21- 13),
who were fifth in the Big
Ten, advance to host a quar.terfinal game on Wednesday
ni_ght against Dayton (2310), a 55-48 victor at
Illinois State on Monday
night. It' II be the first meet·
ing between the Flyers and
Buckeyes since 1988.
"We haven't seen them a
lot,"
Matta
said.
"Obviously, they're a very,
very good basketball team.
They've been through some
/'
AP photo
injuries this season . . We'll Ohio State's Matt Terwilliger (42) dunks over California's Harper Kamp (43) in the second
.
'
half of the second round .of the National Invitation Tournament basketball game Monday at
Plean ... Powers. 86 St. John Arena In Columbus.

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

hx- 1·740·44&amp;3008
~-moll - sportaOmydailysentlnal.com

Stott

Eric Randolph, Sporte Wrller
. ~740) 446-2342, "'"· 33
erandolphO mydailysentinel.com

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

...... Mill!""'

(740) 448-2342, axt. 33
bwallersOmyda!lytribune.com

.•

Lar'ry Crum, Sporte Writer
(740) 446·2342, m&lt;1. 33
tcrumOmydallyreglster.com

--~

... .

-

~--··

--

·-

•

:
•'

'

Warren scores 22,
leads Bradley to
79-73 victory over
Bobcats in CBI
PEORIA, Ill. (AP)
Andrew Warren and Jeremy
Crouch led Bradley to a· 7973 victory· over Ohio in the
quarterfinals of the College
Basketball Invitational. on
Monday night.
Warren scored 16 of his
game-high 22 points and
Crouch had 13 of his IS
points after the break as
Bradley (19-15) used a 21-3
burst to overcome a 63-49
deficit with 9:09 left.
During the stretch, which
ended ·on a Theron Wilson
dunk at 2:55, the Braves
forced six Ohio turnovers,
scoring off five of them.
Matt Salley 's layup at
4:15 gave Bradley the lead
for good at 68-66.
D.aniel Ruffin added 13
points and Wilson scored
10 for Bradley, which
trailed 42-29 at the half on
39 percent (9-of-23) fieldgoal shooting. The Braves
improved to 55 percent
shooting (16-of-29) in the
second half.
Leon Williams led Ohio
(2.0-13) with 20 points and
13 rebounds and . Bubba
Walther scored 19 points,
including five 3-pointers,
for the Bobcats. Jerome
Tillman added II points
and. 10 rebounds for Ohio.
Bradley advances : to
Wednesday's
semifinal
round against Tulsa (2213)

Homer Bailey struggles·in Reds' 5-3 win over Toronto

:- 1 -740·446·2342 ext. 33

Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer

Please see Dayton. 86

24-4 spurt powers Buckeyes to NIT Win over Cal

CoNTAcrUs

~port•

percent in the second half to
finish at 34 percent .
Dayton freshman forward
Chris Wright, who had been
out since Jan. 9 with a bro"
ken bone in his right ankle,
scored eight points.
Roberts sank 4-of-6
attempts from 3-point range.
The senior g11ard moved into
second place on Dayton's
all-time 3-point basket list
with 289, two .behind •Tony
Stanley.
Osiris Eldridge, who led
Illinois State by averaging
16 points a game, made his
f,irst shot, a 3-pointer, before
missing his next · 13
attempts. Eldridge finished
with 10 points. .
Eldridge sat out the final
9:25 of the first half after
picking up his second foul.

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Homer Bailey throws against the Toronto Blue Jays in a spring training baseball game in Sarasota, Ra., Monday. Bailey struggled in his 4 1·3 innings, walking
six batters and throwing only 42 strikes on 84 pitches. Reds manager Dusty Baker still has'
confidence in tile 21-ye&lt;~r-old, but he's running out of time to land a spot in the starting
rotation.
''

SARASOTA, Fla.
Giveri a chance to make his
pitch on the big .stage,
Cincinnati's Homer Bailey
gave another off-the-plate
performance ·Monday night
during a 5-3 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays" . .
The 21-year-old pitcher
failed tu last five innings in·
a start that will go a long
way in deciding his immediate future. Bailey walked six
in 4 1-3 innings, throwing
only 42 strikes out of 84
pitches.
In the . fifth inning alone,
he threw 21 pitches - only
six strikes - while walking
the bases loaded. At that
point; manager Dusty Baker
decided he had seen enough.
"He's looking better,"
Baker said. ''He's got to find
a way to eliminate those
walks. He's got the stuff. Sil\
walks - in the big leagues,
that will haunt you."
The former first-round

pick came into spring trainmg hoping to win a spot in
the rotation, but struggled
with his control while two
others passed him by. Right·
banders Johnny Cueto and
Edinson Vo!que~ have
moved ahead of him, lea.ving Bailey and Josh Fogg
essentially competing for
the last spot in the rotation.
Baker decided to start
Bailey in the major league
game Monday night instead
of having him throw against
minor leasuers earlier in the
day. In h1s most impor~ant
start of the ~pring. Bailey
would have center stage.
"Yeah, it's a big start for

Homer," Baker said bcfo~c
the game. "It's not do-ordie, but it could sure help hi&gt;
cause a lot."
The right-hander kept his
pitches•to a minimum at the
outset, the main ihing h~
hadn't done all spring. The
longer he went. the more he
lost his touch .
PleaH see Bailey. 82
I

�•

•

Page B2 • The Dmly Sentinel

www.mydail~s cntincl.com

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Busy day for closers: Brad Lidge to start season on DL, Kerry Wood gets new job
8¥ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
On" hu'' d.11 1111

K~.?JI\ \\ 111.ld ~lH

cillM~r '.

a nC\\

j(lb

\\ llh tit~ CIIIL'ol~l) ('ttbs aml
Joe N.ull.tll ~~zc11cJ .1 bi~
c()ll!L.tllll•&gt;tll the ~ltlliiC'lll:t
T\\ 111'-

Bidd l.tdge .1nd B J Ryan
-w tllm1" the ,t,ut of the season. hm~cver. .tddmg to a
long ltst ol key players burde~ted by Ill JUnes dunng the
fm.tl week of spnng tram.
'
mg.
The NL Central ~h.unp1on
Cubs made Wood the1r closer on Mond&lt;~y and p1cked
J.tson Marqms as the team's
No 5 st.trter
A;, a rookie I 0 years ago.
Wood !Led .1 maJor league
record 111 h1s fifth start by
stnktng out 20 ballets 111 ,,
· game again~! Houston
Conve1ted to a reltcver last
se.tson to preserve h1s troublesome nght arm and
shou lder, the oft-InJured
Wood entered sprmg lrammg in a three-w.ty competition a1tet the Cubs moved
former
closer
Ryan
Dempster to the rotation
Manager Lou Pintella
chose Wood over Bob
Howry and Carlos Marmol
because he values durab1hty
111 his setup men and thtnks
clos1ng wtll put less stress
on the nght-hander's arm. It
d1dn 't hurt that h1s fa,tball
has been clocked in the htgh
90s, e1 ther.
"It's going to be somethmg new, but that's excit1ng for me," Wood sat d.
"I'm lookmg torward to 11."
Nathan is staymg w1th

Mlllne,ot.t r.ilhet than fol lowing Johan S,un.ma. Torit
Hunter .IIlLI C.ulm Sliv.t out
or town
A t11n ttme All St.tr
N.tth,m ,md the Tw1m
.tgleed to tenm [)11 ol $47
mllhon, four-yeat contract,
a deal that mcludes a 2012
club opllon on the 33-ye&lt;~r­
old nght-hander
The Twms weren't gomg
to get nd of thetr rehahle
clostrr, not alter decidmg to
deal S,mtana and watchmg
Hunter anti S1lva depart as
free agents dunng the offseason
" II was deftmtely a pnonty tor us ," asSIStant general
manager Rob Antony said
"I thmk a lot of people
thought, when 11 became
clear we were gomg to trade
Johan Santana, that Joe was
next That wasn't the case at
all We look at Joe as a key
member of the core of thts
ballclub We hdd to take
care of some other !lungs
first
but when the tune
was nght we dtd 1t And II
was well worth 11 "
Ltdge, the Ph1lhes' new
closer, w1ll start the season
on the IS-day dtsabled hst
wh1le he rehabilitates h1s
knee 1ollowmg arthroscoptc
surgery last month
Tom Gordon w1ll hll 111 at
closer for the 31-year-old
L1dge, who ts ehg1ble to
come off the DL on April 5.
" It's not what I wanted,"
he said in Clearwater, Fla "I
was trying to get ready as
fast as poss1ble and unfortunately m the end my arm
strength is behind. I was try-

mg h.l'lcall~ to cram fou1
weeks of spring 1r,11nmg 11110
,, ltttle 01 cr .t week "
The Toronto Blue Ll\'
\1 til be 11 tthoul Ry.m .tiu.l
tlmd h.tscm.m Scoi t Rolen
when lhe 'c'""n sl.uls
Ry,m, who had 38 saves
.md ,, I 17 ERA tor Toronto
111 2006, IS still recovenng
lrom elbow surgery and
isn't expected hack untd at
lej!sl nud-Apnl. Rolen had
surgery on his broken tmger
Monday and w1ll be out two
weeks or more.
Both will stay behmd m·
Florida when the Blue Jays
break camp this week and
head north. They. open the
season next Monday at
Yankee Stadium.
Ryan made two appearances thiS spnng. After the
second
one, · agm nst
Pittsburgh on March 17, he
felt some soreness 111 his
elbow, slowmg h1 s return
The left-hander threw 111
the bullpen Monday
"The best -case scenano is
the m1ddle ot Apnl. As he
continues to make stndcs I
don ' t want to put a date on 11
because I think that IS unfa1r
to the player and us," general manager J.P R1cc1ard1
sa1d
At Wmter Haven, Fla.,
Atlantd p1tcher John Smoltz
dec1ded not to test h1s sore
nght shoulder, opl!ng to
postpone a throwing sess1on
that
could
determtne
whether he opens the season
on the disabled ltst.
Smoltz remained at the
team's
complex
111
K1ss1mmce whtle the Braves

Cleveland Gary Matthews Jr. spramed
his nght ankle agamst San
lnJwns
"P111h.thly tomonow, for D1ego and 1s day-to-day
At Sconsdale, Anz , San
sutc." Smo ht sdid when
FranciSco
Giants utili!}
·"~cd
:Vlnn&lt;Jay mormng
mfieldcr Kev1n Frandsen
o~boul hts pl,u" 10 throw.
Smlllt/ mt"eLI Iu s sched- ruptured h1s left Ach11les·
uled st,nt Fnday because of tendon in a m1nor league
ltghtness 111 the back of the game and could miss the
shollldc l
entire season
In other news, p1tche1
and manager
Smolt'
Bllbby Cox say they don't John Patterson &lt;~g reed to a
beheve the dtscomfort IS a rrunor league cont1 act w1th
serious concern Smoltz said Texas, four days aftet he
Fnday he would have was released by
the
pitched with the lightness 111 Washin~ton Nationals
a reg ular-season game.
In spnng trammg games
Rays 13, Pirates 4
At Tampa. Fla., Andy
Pelltlle made 47 throws on
At St. Peters but g, Fla .
level ground, two days after Edwin Jackson threw seven
the New York Yankees' left- strong mnings, allowmg
hander was scratched from a seven hits and only two
schedu led start due to lower first-mning runs tor Tamp.t
Bay. Carlos Pena htl a threeback spasms.
" I feel beller," Pettitte run shot, his fourth home•
sa1d. "I felt good enough to this spring. '
go out there and throw"
Mets 1, Orioles 0
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla .
Pettllle threw for five
mmutes on a back field with John Maine allowed only
pttchmg coachmg Dave Nick Markak1s' smg le over
Etland
six shutout inmngs for Ne-..
" It 's st1 ll t1ght," Pettitte York, combinmg wtth two
smd "There's still a little reheyers OIU two-hitler
pull back there when I try to
Tigers S, Nationals 3
At Viera, Fla, Paul Lo
get out over my front s1de
So we ' ll see how I feel Duca went 2-for-3 wtth an
tomorrow''
RBI double for Washington
' starter
Nate
Pet1111e could throw off a T1gers
mound
Wednesday
or Robertson allowed one run
Thursday He currently IS 111 5 1-3 mmngs.
slated to m;tke h1s first reguCardinals 8, Twins 4
lar-season start Apnl 2
At Fort Myers, Fla ,
agamst Toronto, but he Carlos Gomez, who won
m1ght be pushed back
M mnesota 's
center-f'1eld
The Yankees aren't plan- JOb, went 1-for-5 with an
nmg to put Pet11tle on the tnfield smgle He also struck
disabled list.
out three limes and was
At Tempe, Anz , Los caught steahng
Angeles Angels outfielder
Diamondbacks 6,
pi&lt;~) ed

the

CF Corey PatterSon gets second
chance with Cincinnati Reds
BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SARASOTA, Fld - The
sprmg games had already
begun &lt;~cross Flonda and
Anzon&lt;~
All
Corey
Patterson could do was work
out on IllS own and watt.
Only 28 years old, the
speedy center fielder found
h1mself out of baseball at the
start of M.trch He was
working out at h1s home in
Atlanta, lookmg tor an offer
to prolong h1s career m the
m.tJors
He got the best one poss1ble
M.mager Dusty Baker,
who had watched hun develop ,md then crash wtth the
Ch1cago Cubs, wanted to
bnng h11n to the Cmcmnati
Reds Baker has a hunch that
Patterson ts a late bloomer.
He got a mmor league contract on March 3 with a
prom1se that he could compete for a JOb
Patterson has been on the
f&lt;~st track e~er smce.
Once he got the rust oft
from hiS layoff, the former
ftrsi-round draft p1ck has
pl.tyed h11nself mto conten!lon for the pnmary job in
center field. Norns Hopper
also is m the runnmg, with
Ryan F1eel - whn started m
cemer last year - moving
mto a utthty role
W1th one week left before
opemng day, Patterson IS
batt1ng 167
'II \ gomg like I thought it
would," he sa1d. "It takes

you a good week, week and
a half tO get in the games
and get the adrenalme flowing and get into baseball
shape No comr.laints " .
Baker sure likes what he
sees.
"For a guy who came m
late, he's looked very good,
actually," Baker said. "He's
worked on his bunting. He's
always been a good outfielder. He's got a good arm. He's
probably one of the fastest
guys in baseball. I don't
think most people know
that."
Few know him as well as
Baker.
Patterson was the third
overall p1ck in the June 1998
draft, Immediately earning
the label of can't-m1ss out"fielder. With his speed, the
Cubs envisioned him leading off the lineup for years
to come
He played 59 games m the
maJors in 2001, then took
over full-lime the next season He had a tantalizing
season m 2003, when he batted 298 with 13 homers and
16 steals.
It seemed that he was JUSt
getting started. Two years
later, after he batted .215
w1th five steals, he was gone
from the Cubs and the
Natmnal League He played
two years m Baltimore, batling 276 with 45 steals 111
2006 and .269 w1th 37 steals
last year
Then, he was back horne
111 Atlanta, lookmg for someone to give him another

chance
Baker, who managed him
for three years in Ch1cago,
felt he deserved one. Baker
thinks that Patterson has a
chance to finally blossom m
Cincinnati
"He's domg thmgs we'd
hoped he would have done
earher than now, but everybody doesn't get it at the
same tune," Baker satd "He
was in on-the-job traming m
the b1g leagues That's"dllhcult."
When Patterson got h1s
contract, h1s teammates
knew th1s was more than just
another mmor league signmg. Freel figured 11 meant
an end to hiS chances of
playmg m center.
"When they go out and get
Corey Patterson, you can't
help but think about what's
going on," Freel sa1d.
Patterson is getting the
bulk of the lime m center
field as opening day
approaches. He was m the
lineup again Monday ntght
agamst Toronto Patterson
knows h1s relauonsh1p With
Baker has been a factor 111
gettmg him th1s chance.
"When you have a manager or a general manager who
has seen you at your best 111
person, they really know
what you can do," Patterson
said. "I thmk that's a plus for
anybody m that Situation I
tbmk that was a big part of
11 I'm glad he's here He had
a pretty b1g mfluence on me
gettmg over here, so I have a
lot of respect for h1m."

Giants 5
At Tucson, Anz , M1cah
Owmgs gave up tour runs,
1ncludtng two homers, 111 5
1-3
tnnmgs
lor
the
D1.tmondbacks He ts 0-2
wtlh .1 9 77 ERA. Conor
Jackson
homered
for
Arizona.
Rockies 6, Brewers 5
At Phoenix, Colorado
starter Ubaldo J1menez
allowed I0 hits and five
runs 111 four mnmgs Chns
lanncua went 3-for-3 w1th a
douhle, a home run and two
RBis
Cubs 7, Rangers 6
At Mesa, Anz., Mark
DcRosn hll a three-run
l10me1 and Eric Patterson
stnglcd home the wmning
run 111 the nmth 1nnmg for
Ch1cago
Mariners 3,
White Sox 1
At Peona, Anz., Jarrod
Was hburn tossed seven
shutout mmngs tor Seattle
and lch1ro Suzuki went 2for-3 wtth a double and two
stolen bases
Houston 10,
Marlins 10, 10 innings
At J upller, Fla , Cameron
Maybm wtll start the season
111 the minors for Flonda
One of baseball's top
prospects and a centerpiece
of the trade that sent
Dont'relle Willis and M1guel
Cabrera to Detroit tn
December, the 20-year-old
Mayb1n was optioned to
Double-A Carolina. He
went httless 111 h1s final 18
at-bats, fmishing the spring
wtth a 190 average, three
homers and eight RBis.

Cleveland
Indians' Grady
S1zemore,
right, IS congratulated
after scon ng
on a throwing
error on
Atlanta Braves'
Jeff Rtdgway 1n
the fifth mmng
tn a spnng
trammg baseball game,
Monday m
Wmter Haven,
Fla.
\

AP photo

Westbrook pitches six perfect
innings as Indians beat Braves 8-0
WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) - Jake Westbwok
struck out eight over six
perfect iRnings and the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Atlanta Braves 8-0 Monday.
Westbrook struck out the
si'de in the fu:st and extended hiS scoreless streak to 14
mnings over four spnng
starts The right-hander has
yet to y1eld a run, allowmg
only five htts wh1le strikmg
out 16.
"I don ' t th1rtk the '27
Yankees could have h1t that
guy today," Braves manager
Bobby Cox smd. "That's as
good as you can get, and he
had all of hts p1tches, all of
them."
Westbrook, who had a
sore 11ght arm early 111
camp, su1d he feels as strong
as he eve1 has with one

week to go before opemng
day
''I'm glad they sat me
down a couple days early,"
Westbrook sa1d. "I feel real
strong and confident wtth
all my p1tches."
Westbrook was so efficient, throwmg onl} 65
pitches, that he went to the
bullpen to throw 30 more,
JOkmg that he walked one
there to rum h1s perfect
game.
''I'd hke to string mne hke
that some time in the regular
season or playoffs, but 1t's
so darn tough," he' 'said.
"Casey (B lake) was yelhng,
'Send h1m back out there."'
lnd1ans manager Enc
Wedge took no chances with
Westbrook, who m1ssed
seven weeks early last season with an oblique stram

and finished with only a 6-9
record after amasst ng 44
wins over the prev1ous three
years
"Jake was real good,"
Wedge sa1d. 'The thing
ahout htm ts he's so conststent. I'd like to set&lt; him go
the whole season for us"
Ch1pper
Jones
got
Atl,mta's f1rst hit, a two-out
double 111 the seventh off
Jorge, Juho.
Bra\es starter Buddy
Carlyle gave up one nm
over four mnings, but lefty
Jeff R1dgway probably
pitched h1s way back to
Tnple-A wtth a poor mntng
that mcluded his own tworun throwing error, a balk,
two walks, four h1ts and SIX
runs allowed
" He had a rough day,"
Cox sa1d.

Bengals WR Chad Johnson skipping voluntary workouts

;Bailey

and the offseason, and they
Clj\ICINNATI (AP) Chad Johnson sk1pped the are not a beanng on any one
start of the Bengals' offsea- , particular player," Lew1s
son workouts Monday, the said. "Whatever occurs, this
latest mo~e to show he's 1s professional football. You
unhappy with how he's per- have to deal w1th it in your
ce1ved 111 Cmcmnat1
way."
Johnson said in mterJohnson became indigviews last week that he is nant last season after a local
sk1pp1ng the voluntary newspaper colummst sugworkouts to remforce his gested his look-at-me antics
message that he'd like to were hurtmg the team, Fans
play somewhere else. The also critiCIZed his approach
Bengal s have sa1d repeated- as the season careened to a
ty that they have no inten- 7-9 fintsh.
uon of trading h1m
He stopped talkmg to the
T J. Houshmandzadeh, local medta last season, but
who tied for the NFL lead in went on national mterview
receptions wtth 1121ast sea- shows before the Super
son, also 1s skippmg the Bowl and agam last week
voluntary workouts for the relteratmg that he feels
second
stra1 ght
year unappreciated. Johnson has
Johnson has been a regular sa1d repeatedly that he'd
at the workouts unul now.
like to play for another
Coach Marvm Lew1s team.
The Ben gals would take a
addressed the absences With
the other player&gt;
huge htl to the1r salary cap
"What I addressed 1s that 1f they traded h1m . Johnson
111 the NFL there are a lot of has four years lei t on h1s
d1flerent s1tuattons that contract, wh1ch was extendoccur throughout the season ed 111 Apnl 2006 He w1ll

from PageBl

f1ve runs and seven hits.
"When he was down, he
was good," manager John
G1bbons satd. "And when
he was up, he got hit."
Marcum IS scheduled to
· pnch in a minor league
game on Saturday, then will
start Toronto's home OP.ener
agamst Boston on Apnl 4.
Notes: Toronto 3B Scott
Rolen and closer B.J. Ryan
.will miss the start of the
season because of mjuries.
Rolen had surgery on his
broken f1nger Monday and
w1ll be out two weeks or
more. Ryan, still recovenn~
from elbow surgery, isn t
expected back until at least
mid-April .... Reds C David
Ross caught six innings of a
minor league game and
went 2-for-5 with a walk.
Ross hasn't played with the
major league team this
spnng because of back
spasms. The Reds are cons!denng startmg the season
w1th h1m on the 15-day DL.
C Pau I Balco was out wuh
a v1rus. Bako and Jav1er
Valentin are the other two
catchers 111 camp.

f

make $3 milhon in base
salary next season, and can
make $18.5 m1lhon over the
rest of the deal.
He caught 93 .passes for a
club-record I ,440 yards and
eight touchdowns last season, when he became the
Bengals' career leader in
catches and yards.
"I wish they were here,"
quarterback Carson Palmer
said of the two rece1vers,
"but well work w1th what
we've got and the guys that
are here. Thats exc1ting,

too"
Houshmandzadeh
is
spepding the offseason in
California with a personal
trainer Johnson is staying
away to make a pomt.
"lm not going to get too
mvolved m 11," Palmer sa1d.
"I know t]Je guys that arc
here are worktng the1r butts
off and workmg lor a spot. .
"I'm not worned We've
got a good group of guyssome mature guys, some
veteran guys - th at wont
I

let any off-the-field distractiOns get in the way of what
needs to be done, all of the
work thats going on right

now."

With
Johnson
and
Houshmandzadeh
elsewhere, No 3 receiver Chris
Henry was the top returning
rece1 ver at workouts on
Monday. Henry was suspended by the leqgue for the
first eight games of last season He caught 21 passes
for 343 yards and two
touchdowns after his return.
His four ' arrests and
repeated punishment have
set him back.
"That's all 10 the past,"
Henry said. "I'm just excited and ready to get started
again."
Henry m1ssed having
Johnson around.
"He ts ltke a brother,"
Hen1y 'a1d. ''He's been here
smce I've been here, and he
really took me in when I got
here. I'd hate to see him
lea\ e "

"That's probably the first
time I've gone on three
days' rest since A-ball, and I
just got a little tired," Bailey
said. "I think I've thrown all
ri$hl. There's always a few
thmgs you can work on ·maybe those one or two batters where I kind of lose
focus and end up walking
them. If I cut those out, it's
not so bad."
Left-hander
Jesse
Carlson, competing for a
spot in the Blue Jays'
bullpen, pitched the fJrSt
inning so he could face
some of the Reds' top hitters. He gave up a single
and induced a double-play
fr:oun~er from Ken Griffey
Right-hander
Shaun
Marcum followed Carlson
and gave up Adam Dunn's
solo homer and a two-run
shot by Joey Votto Marcum
went SIX 1~nin gs, g1vmg up

•

· Tuesday, March 25, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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opportunity batH
29 Ser1ous People to Wor~ No Fee Unless We W1nl
-girl, REWARD. Call tant manager for local con·
from
hOme
USing
a
comput
,
·888-582-3345
(740)709-6199 Of (740j446·
er Up to $500 00 to
Rl \I I ..,I\ II
venience
be ~;::::::N:E:A:·:I:n:c·~;======:;;~w;w:w:·:c:om=•c:•:
· c:o:m:! $1,500
Small 2 Br house Rac1ne
available tostore
work allMustshifts
,
9866
00
PTIFT m~:;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ area 2 outbulldmgs,carport
No phone calls Apply m
11
www Homelncome4·U com iD
0
1110 Hl:LPWANTED
Ho~ms
on approx 1 acre Ask1ng
person
a1
Par
Mar
#38
_ _ _ _ _ _.11
Hl:LPWANIID
YARDS.W:
1
15289 Hunllngton Road,
..
IIFLPWANIED ..
,
mR SAt [
. $45 ooo 740·949·2539
Welders needed 1yr ex pen·
Gallipolis Ferry
MOBILE HoMES 1
enoo Good wages &amp; bene '--oitiiiiiiiiiiiiil-rl
0
down
payment
4
bed
•DR SALE
4
An
Excellent
way
to
earn
FEDERAL
Patriotic Food• Inc Make fils Send resumes to CLA
YARD SAt.&amp;
r'ooms Large yard Covered ..__llliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-rl
money
The
New
Avon
POSTAL
JOBS
50$
to
300$
dally
Route
BaM
103
rJo
Gallipolis
Dally
~ i'oMEROY!MtooLE .
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645 $17 89·$28 27/hr, now hlr·
Sales Delivery Ouver Bring Tnbune, PO BoJI 469 deck Attached garage 740 t6X80 3 Bedroom 2 Batn
367 7129
1ng
For
applicatiOn
and
free
a Partner Company
Gall1polis OH 45631
V1nyl Siding Sh1ngle Roof
Basement Sale Rutland Attn Local Company w1th
governement
JOb
tn1o
call
Veh1cle
provided
Call
,30
ScnooLs
$230
Church ol God Fnday, FT &amp; PT positions tn our
2000 Custom bu1lt Cape 9948 per month 740.385
Amencan
Assoc
of
Labor
1·
12
270
March 28 9 00 to 400
Cod 415BR 2 bath Fm
Customer Serv1ce Dept , No 913-599 8226 24fhrs emp
~ .0
OOrRUCTION
1
Basement, located outstde -:-2000:-:-:--1-6x_7,_0,_2___,be_d_2-ba-Lh
-----exp requ1red Permanent serv
POST OFFICE NOW
posltton.
Company
tratn1ng
of
Rto Grande 1n a beaut1lul Fleetwood 2002 16xBO 3
Golllpolla
coCollege
. CLASSIFIED INDEX
HIRING
provi(jed, Must be HS grad- Food serv1ce Wortcer for tull
wooded
location $199 900 bed 2 bath Oakwood, 1999
(Careers
Close
To
Home}
4x4's For Sate.. ..... ........... ..... ....... .725 uate
Avg Pay $20/hr or
FT
pos1hon
$585/wk.
t1me
and
temporary
(90
Call
for
an appl 740 245 t6xBO 3 bed 2 bath Fortune
Call Today! 740·448-4367.
Announcement ............................................ 030 rapldadvancementstbene- days) work 1n a 114 Bed
$57K!yr mcludes
0125
Daytime 388·0000. Evening
1
800-214
0452
Antlquea ....................................................... 530 hts For an Interview call Long Term Care State
Federal Benefits, OT
388·8017
or 245·9213
gai111)011Scareercollego
&amp;du
Apartments lor Rent ..... .. ....................... 440 (740)446 7798
Offered by Exam Services Accredited Member Aeered tmg 4br, 2 AC Pool, Ctry New
Fac11ity Full·t1me employ·
Auction ani! Flea Market... ....... ............. 080
not
offered
w/
USPS
who
Haven,
$139
500
call
after
2007 16x76, Payments
Counctl fer II"'CCependenl Coll&amp;ges
ment offers an eletens1ve
Aula Parts &amp; Accessories ......:................... 760 AVONI All Areas! To Buy or benefit
htres
6pm 304·593 8871
ar~d Schools 12749
under $300/month Owner
package Including
Aulo Repair ............................... .................. no Sell Shirley Spears, 304 " Slate C1v1l servtce retlre1-866-403·2582
l1nancmg WAC 740·594·
Autos lor Sate............ .............................. .71 o '675-1429
Overbrook Rehab Center 77 Hawthorne Ln Pt 7962
- - - - - - - ment earn up to 15 days
3br 1ba 1015/SF
------Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale .........................,... 750 ResCare
Home
Care
is
wdl beThursday
conductingMarch
1nterv1ews NPleasant
hCurrently
seek1ng
carmg
vacation
per
year
18
days
1
11
on
ew
oor
covenngs,
res
2008
bedroom 2 bath sec
Building Supplles ........................................ 550 dediCated and motivated s1ck leave and 12 plus p81d
27 pamt new heat pump 11onal 3home
accepting appllcat1ons for
$279 per month
1
Business and Buildings ...................... 340 1nd1V1duals
Otrect
Care
personnel
willing
to
work
holidays
health/lila
lnsur2008
from
9am
11am
and
$79 000 304 674 3698
740
385
7671
Business Opponuntty .... ..... ...... ..... .210 WIIh low Income children ance IS ava1lable Contact
CNA's &amp; STNA's If you 1pm·3pm lor the upcommg - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Business Training ...................................... 140 and families as Substitutes Wanda Sm1th, at Lakin
would ltke to take advantage STN A class Th1s IS the
Attention!
2008 sect1onat home 3
Campara &amp; Motor Homea .......................... 790 (pit) for Mason County Head Hospital at 304·675..0860,
of this opportunity you may only day 1nterv1ews w111 be Local company offering "NO Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
apply Monday through held and class space IS 11m- DOWN PAYMENT" pro· and set up $38 695 740
Camping Equipment ..... ..... .. .......... 780 Start/Early Head Start ext 112 Monday thru Fnday
Fnday 8am-4pm at 8204 lted Anyone mteresf 1n grams for you to buy your 385·9948
Carda of Thanks ......................................... 010 Requtres diploma or GEO, from 8am-4pm
Lakin
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190 current vahd drivers Hospital IS an EEO/AA Mason's and Laborers With Carla Onve, Gallipolis, Oh1o attend1ng the class needs to home 1nstead of renting
--For rent-orsale- Located
1n
Eleclrtcai/Refrlgeratlon ....................... 840 license proof of auto !1abll1ty _Em_p_lay_:__er_____ Masonry experience needed You may also tax a resume p1ck up an app I1ca I ton a1333 • 100% f1nanc1ng .
Btdwell,
3BR,
2 bath
M
ddl
I
Oh
Pa
51
to
Equipment lor Rent... ..... ...... ...... .. ..... 480
ge
I epor
IO · Less than pertect credit Unfurmshed If sold must be
end good commu- Foeter Parents Been think- Immediately, Full T1me w1th rhamsonCrescare com
between 9am an d 5pm acc..nted
Etcavatlng ................................................... 830 msurance
ntcatlon skills Must pass mg about II·Apply now! beneflls after probation penAn 1 1
~~
Monday Frld 'ir'i ,...p
tea tons · Payment
could be the moved Call 388 8446 or
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610 drug
screen
and
backR
·
s
s
d
od,•"pllcai!Ons
available
at
"ed
1
615·830·4499
30
45
I
be
b
ecelve
·
a
ay
.,...
Super
8
Motel
now
hiring
mus
su
m111
prtor
o
same
as
rent
Farms lor Rent... ........ ......................... 430 ground check Fff pos1t1ons
b
nt
d
..
www
langmasonrycom.
~ax
PoSitiOn Is 1nterv1ews for approval NO Mortgage
Farms lor Sale ....................................... 330 available In Cabel! Cly re1md urseme
Locators
from $199 Month
art Iorpa1theresp11e,
ulh complete applications &amp; housekeepers
yo
part-t1me
and
""'U must be PHONE CALLS PLEASE 17401367 OOOO
For Lease ................................................, .. 490 Commenca IDnvers Ucense an1 supp
New
2008 Smgtew1de
d
home Resume If available to (740) able to work flexible
•· hours On the day of the 1nterv1ews - . , - - - -- - Midwest
740-828·2750
For Sale.................................... ...... .. .... 585 w1thm 6 mo of hlfe required 1iPace b1n your
M
h
9
1
749
3500
ra1mng eg1ns arc 2 a - - - - - - - - ""
Anply 1n •··
~on No phone ask lor Hollie Bumgarner House tor &amp;ale m Racme
my1111dwesthome com
For Sate or Trade ...... . . ..... ...... ..... .590 Send cover letter, resume Albany
•
l PN Staff Development area A~prox 4 acres all
Oas1s Foster
calls please
Fruits &amp; Vegetabtes ..................................... 580 and 3 ltrs of ret to SCAC- Care for Call
more tnformatton Metal Fabricator Is accept 11'-'l'l'.'l~~l'.lll~'""il Coordtnator 7th Aptil 18th professronally landscaped Lot8Bx124'w/14'"M7D trailer
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450 HR 540 Fifth Ave. Htgn. Toll Free 1•866.325_1558 mg resumes for the following
EOE Parltelpant of the Drug Ranch style house with 4 3 br , 2 b partially furniShed
0 1
General Hauling .................................... 850 WV 25701 EOE
pos~ons 30 Drafter (Auto
•
rt
Free Workplace Program bedrooms ilvtng room dm 2 covered porches 2 car
Publllhlng
Co.
Giveaway ................................................... 040 • - - - - - - - , Full Time ReceptiOnist ne8&lt;J.. CAD) expeninced Ttg IS seeking
It'll
a
motivated
WAN'rm
mg room kitchen large fam carport large block storage
Happy Ads ....................................................050
ed 1n busy Doctors Offtce Wekler. Uach1n1s1 CNC detatl~mented IndiVIdual
To
Do
1ly
central arr gas heal, bUildtng, $40 000, ·(740)992
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
P1ck up apphcat10ns at Swte experience and entry level to be a pag1nator/page ..__ _ _ _ _ _... androom,
1 hreplace Additionot a ._
'0,-5_7___,----,--,-Help Wanted ............................................ 110
Customer 112 Pleasant Valley Receptionist Compensation
destgner
1n
the
dally
large
Flonda
room
com
NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA
Hospi1al Resumes may be based upon expenenced
Home Improvements................................810
ot 1ts three 'Handyman Serv1ce In need pletely cedar opens oniQ
1 700+ sq fl $49 989
attached to the application Please submit resume and productiOn
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
ol repairs around the home? pat1o &amp; pool area Heated 1n
newspapers The
trom
Month
Household Goods ..................................... 510
professional
references
to
successful
appWcant
Reasona ble ground pool enclosed by pn· Midwest5397
FuII lime truekdnver needed 70764 St At 124 Vmton.
740
828_2750
Houses lor Rent.. ................................ 410
rates 20yrs axpenence Ph # vacy fencmg and land
with
valid
drivers
ltcense
and
OH
by Apnl
woukJ wof't( under the
45686
4 - - ~MSI011 of the news 740·508·0408
In Memoriam ........................................... 020
scaped Ftmshed 2 car mymldwesthOme com
Service
1nsurance Must be depend- - ---ln•urance ..................................................... 130
garage attached to house New 3 Bedroom homes from
able have good customer Needed expenenced Truck.
department Dulles
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. ..................... 660
Spr1ng Cleantng for Lawn &amp; and hn1shed &amp; heated 3 car $214 36 per month, lndudes
Wo hove Immediate
serv1ces sk1lls and be able to Driver tor hauling blacktop
mclude etectromc
Livestock.....................................................630
Garden 304 675 22f!1
garage
una1tached many upgrades delivery &amp;
tull-tlmD Customer
load and unload trucks Must Class A 304·674·3311 or
generafton of news
Loat and Found ........................................... 060
E)(cellent cond1t1on ready to SOl up (740)385·2434
Service poaiUon In our be able to work weekends 304·593·0639
pages along with some 1
CIUUIIF.IDF.RL\
move 1n $255 000 00 Call
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
main office
Send resumes to CLA BoK - - - - - - - - copy editing and headline
USED HOME SALE
Mi1callsneoua............................................. 170
wr-tng, as wei! as,
..__ _siCAiiiiiREiioo-.-l (740J949-221 7
Succeaaful hppllcanto t01, cio Gallipolis Detly Part Tima Driver Transport
N1ce 38A SmglewideS
Ml1cellaneous Merchandlse.......................540
muet be people orient· Tribune, P:O BoJI 469, consiM'Tlers to and from
proolreading of pages
Mobile Home Repair ....................................880
Child care done tn my home Duplex tor Sale on Land lrom $2900 Down Pmt
od, enjoy ualng the
Gallipolis OH 45631
medical appotntments In the
produced by other
Midwest 740·828·2750
Mason County area, 20
pagmators Computer 1nfants welcome, meals Contract 740·992 5858
Mobile Homes lor Ront ............................... 420
phone,
skillS and knowledge of InCluded lots of activities tor
Mobile Homes lor Sale ............................320
computer literate end GUitar Player looking far hours per week Must be
Drummer &amp; Bass Player to able to ma1ntaln accurate Quark &gt;&lt;Press and Adobe your ch1ld drrys n1ght and
enjoy wortclng with
Money to Loan ............................................ 220
play
mostly or1g1nal Rock
reports and ass1st
Photoshop are requtred weekends $2 00 per hour
numbero Polltlon
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers...................... 740
mus1c 985 4416 after 5 00 consumers on and off the Past e:q&gt;enence in page Call 256 1438 ask for
ott.rs all company
Mualcallnalrumenta . ..... ...... ...... ... .570
benelltolnctucllng
OhiO Val~ Home Health van as needed Requ1res or graphic design 1s not a
Personals........... . ...... ...... ..... .. ............. 005
CURRENT EVENTS
hHHh end life
Inc hlnog STNA, CNA 11alld drivers license, clean requ1rement The position
Peta lor Sale ............................:................... 560
lneurance, 40111:, paid Home Health Aides and
dnv1ng record and
Is full Ume 40 hours a
Plumbing &amp; Heating ................................. 820
vacation and peraonel Personal Care Aides fllll knowledge of local routes
week and tncludes
Professional Sarvlees........ .. ..... . ....... ... 230
drtl
Part T1me and Per Diem
Resumes Will not be
benefits Interested
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................. 160
1,
positions avatlable ApJMy at accepted Appl1cat1ons can
applicants can send
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
For employment
1480 Jackson Pike
,be found at
resi.ITlee to
Schoolalntttructlon .................................. ISO
consideration,
Hnd
Gall•pahs phone 441-1393 wwwpresteraorg/careershl
Kevin Kelty
•NOTICE•
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer............ .. .............. 650
reaume to:
for Skilled Office or apply at mt or our 715 Main St Pt
Managing Editor
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Shuetlona Wantad ....................................... 120
Diane Hill
Oh1o Valley Publishing Co lNG co recommends
1456 Jackson Pike, phone Pleasant off1ce Submit
Space lor Rent............................. .. ......... 460
clo Galllpolla Tribune
441
9263
for
application
by
fax
304·525·
825 Third Ava
that you do business with and more ...
Sporting Goods............. .... ... . ........... 520
825 Third Avo,
Passport/Private
Care
7893 or mall to
Galli Ia Ohio 45631
people you know, and
SUV's lor Sale ............. .......................:......720
Galllpolil, OH 45631
Off1ce Compe1tt1ve wages
Prestera Center
NOT to send money
Trucks for Sale................................... .. .... 715
and
benefits
Including
health
HR/Drtver
Trucf(
Drivers
.
COL
Class
A
through
the mall unlit you
Upholstery.................. .................... .. .... 870
No Phone Cells Please Insurance and mileage relm· 3375 US Route 60 E ReqUired, mlntmum of 2 have Investigated the
Vans For Sale.......................................730
bursement
Huntington WV 25705 years
dnv1ng
eKp offenng
Wantad to Buy ............................................. 090 Fast 4 You tn Mason now -EOEIAA
E~eper+ence
on ....,..____..
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ............ 620 h1nng must be 18 &amp; avatl· Manpower Is now hlnng lor ,-,F..,IN"".....,A,-J"""'B., Overde1mens1ona1 loads
Own a computer? Put 111o
Wanted To Do .... ................................... 180 able all shifts, must pass a the follow1ng pos1t1ons
Must have good dnv1ng
work' Up to $1500 to
To Subscnbe Call
Wanted to Rent ........................................... 470 Drug Test Apply w1thln
Automobile
Produtlon
IN
THE
record
Earn
up
lo
$2,000
$7500/mo
PT
1FT
Yard Sale- Galllpolls....................................072 - - - - - - - - Workers 10 the Buffalo, WI/
The Dally Sentinel
weekty For application Call
Free tnlormaUon1
Yard Sai..Pomeroy/Middle... .... .. .......... 074 Help wanted at Darsl Home A'ea Beneflls ava&lt;lable Call CLASSIFIEDS (304)722·2184
M·F www fam1lyb11123 com
992-2155
Yard Sai..PI. Pleasant ............................... 076 Gro141 Home 740.992·5023 ' Today 304 757 3338
' - - - - - - - - ' a 30am·4pm
I

~

r

r
r

l'.'

I

r

°

I

j

WHW

-t'o

COUPONS

~

TECHNOLOGY

COMICS SPORTS

ENTERTAINMENT

..
•s•••
•-••••

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•

Page B2 • The Dmly Sentinel

www.mydail~s cntincl.com

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Busy day for closers: Brad Lidge to start season on DL, Kerry Wood gets new job
8¥ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
On" hu'' d.11 1111

K~.?JI\ \\ 111.ld ~lH

cillM~r '.

a nC\\

j(lb

\\ llh tit~ CIIIL'ol~l) ('ttbs aml
Joe N.ull.tll ~~zc11cJ .1 bi~
c()ll!L.tllll•&gt;tll the ~ltlliiC'lll:t
T\\ 111'-

Bidd l.tdge .1nd B J Ryan
-w tllm1" the ,t,ut of the season. hm~cver. .tddmg to a
long ltst ol key players burde~ted by Ill JUnes dunng the
fm.tl week of spnng tram.
'
mg.
The NL Central ~h.unp1on
Cubs made Wood the1r closer on Mond&lt;~y and p1cked
J.tson Marqms as the team's
No 5 st.trter
A;, a rookie I 0 years ago.
Wood !Led .1 maJor league
record 111 h1s fifth start by
stnktng out 20 ballets 111 ,,
· game again~! Houston
Conve1ted to a reltcver last
se.tson to preserve h1s troublesome nght arm and
shou lder, the oft-InJured
Wood entered sprmg lrammg in a three-w.ty competition a1tet the Cubs moved
former
closer
Ryan
Dempster to the rotation
Manager Lou Pintella
chose Wood over Bob
Howry and Carlos Marmol
because he values durab1hty
111 his setup men and thtnks
clos1ng wtll put less stress
on the nght-hander's arm. It
d1dn 't hurt that h1s fa,tball
has been clocked in the htgh
90s, e1 ther.
"It's going to be somethmg new, but that's excit1ng for me," Wood sat d.
"I'm lookmg torward to 11."
Nathan is staymg w1th

Mlllne,ot.t r.ilhet than fol lowing Johan S,un.ma. Torit
Hunter .IIlLI C.ulm Sliv.t out
or town
A t11n ttme All St.tr
N.tth,m ,md the Tw1m
.tgleed to tenm [)11 ol $47
mllhon, four-yeat contract,
a deal that mcludes a 2012
club opllon on the 33-ye&lt;~r­
old nght-hander
The Twms weren't gomg
to get nd of thetr rehahle
clostrr, not alter decidmg to
deal S,mtana and watchmg
Hunter anti S1lva depart as
free agents dunng the offseason
" II was deftmtely a pnonty tor us ," asSIStant general
manager Rob Antony said
"I thmk a lot of people
thought, when 11 became
clear we were gomg to trade
Johan Santana, that Joe was
next That wasn't the case at
all We look at Joe as a key
member of the core of thts
ballclub We hdd to take
care of some other !lungs
first
but when the tune
was nght we dtd 1t And II
was well worth 11 "
Ltdge, the Ph1lhes' new
closer, w1ll start the season
on the IS-day dtsabled hst
wh1le he rehabilitates h1s
knee 1ollowmg arthroscoptc
surgery last month
Tom Gordon w1ll hll 111 at
closer for the 31-year-old
L1dge, who ts ehg1ble to
come off the DL on April 5.
" It's not what I wanted,"
he said in Clearwater, Fla "I
was trying to get ready as
fast as poss1ble and unfortunately m the end my arm
strength is behind. I was try-

mg h.l'lcall~ to cram fou1
weeks of spring 1r,11nmg 11110
,, ltttle 01 cr .t week "
The Toronto Blue Ll\'
\1 til be 11 tthoul Ry.m .tiu.l
tlmd h.tscm.m Scoi t Rolen
when lhe 'c'""n sl.uls
Ry,m, who had 38 saves
.md ,, I 17 ERA tor Toronto
111 2006, IS still recovenng
lrom elbow surgery and
isn't expected hack untd at
lej!sl nud-Apnl. Rolen had
surgery on his broken tmger
Monday and w1ll be out two
weeks or more.
Both will stay behmd m·
Florida when the Blue Jays
break camp this week and
head north. They. open the
season next Monday at
Yankee Stadium.
Ryan made two appearances thiS spnng. After the
second
one, · agm nst
Pittsburgh on March 17, he
felt some soreness 111 his
elbow, slowmg h1 s return
The left-hander threw 111
the bullpen Monday
"The best -case scenano is
the m1ddle ot Apnl. As he
continues to make stndcs I
don ' t want to put a date on 11
because I think that IS unfa1r
to the player and us," general manager J.P R1cc1ard1
sa1d
At Wmter Haven, Fla.,
Atlantd p1tcher John Smoltz
dec1ded not to test h1s sore
nght shoulder, opl!ng to
postpone a throwing sess1on
that
could
determtne
whether he opens the season
on the disabled ltst.
Smoltz remained at the
team's
complex
111
K1ss1mmce whtle the Braves

Cleveland Gary Matthews Jr. spramed
his nght ankle agamst San
lnJwns
"P111h.thly tomonow, for D1ego and 1s day-to-day
At Sconsdale, Anz , San
sutc." Smo ht sdid when
FranciSco
Giants utili!}
·"~cd
:Vlnn&lt;Jay mormng
mfieldcr Kev1n Frandsen
o~boul hts pl,u" 10 throw.
Smlllt/ mt"eLI Iu s sched- ruptured h1s left Ach11les·
uled st,nt Fnday because of tendon in a m1nor league
ltghtness 111 the back of the game and could miss the
shollldc l
entire season
In other news, p1tche1
and manager
Smolt'
Bllbby Cox say they don't John Patterson &lt;~g reed to a
beheve the dtscomfort IS a rrunor league cont1 act w1th
serious concern Smoltz said Texas, four days aftet he
Fnday he would have was released by
the
pitched with the lightness 111 Washin~ton Nationals
a reg ular-season game.
In spnng trammg games
Rays 13, Pirates 4
At Tampa. Fla., Andy
Pelltlle made 47 throws on
At St. Peters but g, Fla .
level ground, two days after Edwin Jackson threw seven
the New York Yankees' left- strong mnings, allowmg
hander was scratched from a seven hits and only two
schedu led start due to lower first-mning runs tor Tamp.t
Bay. Carlos Pena htl a threeback spasms.
" I feel beller," Pettitte run shot, his fourth home•
sa1d. "I felt good enough to this spring. '
go out there and throw"
Mets 1, Orioles 0
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla .
Pettllle threw for five
mmutes on a back field with John Maine allowed only
pttchmg coachmg Dave Nick Markak1s' smg le over
Etland
six shutout inmngs for Ne-..
" It 's st1 ll t1ght," Pettitte York, combinmg wtth two
smd "There's still a little reheyers OIU two-hitler
pull back there when I try to
Tigers S, Nationals 3
At Viera, Fla, Paul Lo
get out over my front s1de
So we ' ll see how I feel Duca went 2-for-3 wtth an
tomorrow''
RBI double for Washington
' starter
Nate
Pet1111e could throw off a T1gers
mound
Wednesday
or Robertson allowed one run
Thursday He currently IS 111 5 1-3 mmngs.
slated to m;tke h1s first reguCardinals 8, Twins 4
lar-season start Apnl 2
At Fort Myers, Fla ,
agamst Toronto, but he Carlos Gomez, who won
m1ght be pushed back
M mnesota 's
center-f'1eld
The Yankees aren't plan- JOb, went 1-for-5 with an
nmg to put Pet11tle on the tnfield smgle He also struck
disabled list.
out three limes and was
At Tempe, Anz , Los caught steahng
Angeles Angels outfielder
Diamondbacks 6,
pi&lt;~) ed

the

CF Corey PatterSon gets second
chance with Cincinnati Reds
BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SARASOTA, Fld - The
sprmg games had already
begun &lt;~cross Flonda and
Anzon&lt;~
All
Corey
Patterson could do was work
out on IllS own and watt.
Only 28 years old, the
speedy center fielder found
h1mself out of baseball at the
start of M.trch He was
working out at h1s home in
Atlanta, lookmg tor an offer
to prolong h1s career m the
m.tJors
He got the best one poss1ble
M.mager Dusty Baker,
who had watched hun develop ,md then crash wtth the
Ch1cago Cubs, wanted to
bnng h11n to the Cmcmnati
Reds Baker has a hunch that
Patterson ts a late bloomer.
He got a mmor league contract on March 3 with a
prom1se that he could compete for a JOb
Patterson has been on the
f&lt;~st track e~er smce.
Once he got the rust oft
from hiS layoff, the former
ftrsi-round draft p1ck has
pl.tyed h11nself mto conten!lon for the pnmary job in
center field. Norns Hopper
also is m the runnmg, with
Ryan F1eel - whn started m
cemer last year - moving
mto a utthty role
W1th one week left before
opemng day, Patterson IS
batt1ng 167
'II \ gomg like I thought it
would," he sa1d. "It takes

you a good week, week and
a half tO get in the games
and get the adrenalme flowing and get into baseball
shape No comr.laints " .
Baker sure likes what he
sees.
"For a guy who came m
late, he's looked very good,
actually," Baker said. "He's
worked on his bunting. He's
always been a good outfielder. He's got a good arm. He's
probably one of the fastest
guys in baseball. I don't
think most people know
that."
Few know him as well as
Baker.
Patterson was the third
overall p1ck in the June 1998
draft, Immediately earning
the label of can't-m1ss out"fielder. With his speed, the
Cubs envisioned him leading off the lineup for years
to come
He played 59 games m the
maJors in 2001, then took
over full-lime the next season He had a tantalizing
season m 2003, when he batted 298 with 13 homers and
16 steals.
It seemed that he was JUSt
getting started. Two years
later, after he batted .215
w1th five steals, he was gone
from the Cubs and the
Natmnal League He played
two years m Baltimore, batling 276 with 45 steals 111
2006 and .269 w1th 37 steals
last year
Then, he was back horne
111 Atlanta, lookmg for someone to give him another

chance
Baker, who managed him
for three years in Ch1cago,
felt he deserved one. Baker
thinks that Patterson has a
chance to finally blossom m
Cincinnati
"He's domg thmgs we'd
hoped he would have done
earher than now, but everybody doesn't get it at the
same tune," Baker satd "He
was in on-the-job traming m
the b1g leagues That's"dllhcult."
When Patterson got h1s
contract, h1s teammates
knew th1s was more than just
another mmor league signmg. Freel figured 11 meant
an end to hiS chances of
playmg m center.
"When they go out and get
Corey Patterson, you can't
help but think about what's
going on," Freel sa1d.
Patterson is getting the
bulk of the lime m center
field as opening day
approaches. He was m the
lineup again Monday ntght
agamst Toronto Patterson
knows h1s relauonsh1p With
Baker has been a factor 111
gettmg him th1s chance.
"When you have a manager or a general manager who
has seen you at your best 111
person, they really know
what you can do," Patterson
said. "I thmk that's a plus for
anybody m that Situation I
tbmk that was a big part of
11 I'm glad he's here He had
a pretty b1g mfluence on me
gettmg over here, so I have a
lot of respect for h1m."

Giants 5
At Tucson, Anz , M1cah
Owmgs gave up tour runs,
1ncludtng two homers, 111 5
1-3
tnnmgs
lor
the
D1.tmondbacks He ts 0-2
wtlh .1 9 77 ERA. Conor
Jackson
homered
for
Arizona.
Rockies 6, Brewers 5
At Phoenix, Colorado
starter Ubaldo J1menez
allowed I0 hits and five
runs 111 four mnmgs Chns
lanncua went 3-for-3 w1th a
douhle, a home run and two
RBis
Cubs 7, Rangers 6
At Mesa, Anz., Mark
DcRosn hll a three-run
l10me1 and Eric Patterson
stnglcd home the wmning
run 111 the nmth 1nnmg for
Ch1cago
Mariners 3,
White Sox 1
At Peona, Anz., Jarrod
Was hburn tossed seven
shutout mmngs tor Seattle
and lch1ro Suzuki went 2for-3 wtth a double and two
stolen bases
Houston 10,
Marlins 10, 10 innings
At J upller, Fla , Cameron
Maybm wtll start the season
111 the minors for Flonda
One of baseball's top
prospects and a centerpiece
of the trade that sent
Dont'relle Willis and M1guel
Cabrera to Detroit tn
December, the 20-year-old
Mayb1n was optioned to
Double-A Carolina. He
went httless 111 h1s final 18
at-bats, fmishing the spring
wtth a 190 average, three
homers and eight RBis.

Cleveland
Indians' Grady
S1zemore,
right, IS congratulated
after scon ng
on a throwing
error on
Atlanta Braves'
Jeff Rtdgway 1n
the fifth mmng
tn a spnng
trammg baseball game,
Monday m
Wmter Haven,
Fla.
\

AP photo

Westbrook pitches six perfect
innings as Indians beat Braves 8-0
WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) - Jake Westbwok
struck out eight over six
perfect iRnings and the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Atlanta Braves 8-0 Monday.
Westbrook struck out the
si'de in the fu:st and extended hiS scoreless streak to 14
mnings over four spnng
starts The right-hander has
yet to y1eld a run, allowmg
only five htts wh1le strikmg
out 16.
"I don ' t th1rtk the '27
Yankees could have h1t that
guy today," Braves manager
Bobby Cox smd. "That's as
good as you can get, and he
had all of hts p1tches, all of
them."
Westbrook, who had a
sore 11ght arm early 111
camp, su1d he feels as strong
as he eve1 has with one

week to go before opemng
day
''I'm glad they sat me
down a couple days early,"
Westbrook sa1d. "I feel real
strong and confident wtth
all my p1tches."
Westbrook was so efficient, throwmg onl} 65
pitches, that he went to the
bullpen to throw 30 more,
JOkmg that he walked one
there to rum h1s perfect
game.
''I'd hke to string mne hke
that some time in the regular
season or playoffs, but 1t's
so darn tough," he' 'said.
"Casey (B lake) was yelhng,
'Send h1m back out there."'
lnd1ans manager Enc
Wedge took no chances with
Westbrook, who m1ssed
seven weeks early last season with an oblique stram

and finished with only a 6-9
record after amasst ng 44
wins over the prev1ous three
years
"Jake was real good,"
Wedge sa1d. 'The thing
ahout htm ts he's so conststent. I'd like to set&lt; him go
the whole season for us"
Ch1pper
Jones
got
Atl,mta's f1rst hit, a two-out
double 111 the seventh off
Jorge, Juho.
Bra\es starter Buddy
Carlyle gave up one nm
over four mnings, but lefty
Jeff R1dgway probably
pitched h1s way back to
Tnple-A wtth a poor mntng
that mcluded his own tworun throwing error, a balk,
two walks, four h1ts and SIX
runs allowed
" He had a rough day,"
Cox sa1d.

Bengals WR Chad Johnson skipping voluntary workouts

;Bailey

and the offseason, and they
Clj\ICINNATI (AP) Chad Johnson sk1pped the are not a beanng on any one
start of the Bengals' offsea- , particular player," Lew1s
son workouts Monday, the said. "Whatever occurs, this
latest mo~e to show he's 1s professional football. You
unhappy with how he's per- have to deal w1th it in your
ce1ved 111 Cmcmnat1
way."
Johnson said in mterJohnson became indigviews last week that he is nant last season after a local
sk1pp1ng the voluntary newspaper colummst sugworkouts to remforce his gested his look-at-me antics
message that he'd like to were hurtmg the team, Fans
play somewhere else. The also critiCIZed his approach
Bengal s have sa1d repeated- as the season careened to a
ty that they have no inten- 7-9 fintsh.
uon of trading h1m
He stopped talkmg to the
T J. Houshmandzadeh, local medta last season, but
who tied for the NFL lead in went on national mterview
receptions wtth 1121ast sea- shows before the Super
son, also 1s skippmg the Bowl and agam last week
voluntary workouts for the relteratmg that he feels
second
stra1 ght
year unappreciated. Johnson has
Johnson has been a regular sa1d repeatedly that he'd
at the workouts unul now.
like to play for another
Coach Marvm Lew1s team.
The Ben gals would take a
addressed the absences With
the other player&gt;
huge htl to the1r salary cap
"What I addressed 1s that 1f they traded h1m . Johnson
111 the NFL there are a lot of has four years lei t on h1s
d1flerent s1tuattons that contract, wh1ch was extendoccur throughout the season ed 111 Apnl 2006 He w1ll

from PageBl

f1ve runs and seven hits.
"When he was down, he
was good," manager John
G1bbons satd. "And when
he was up, he got hit."
Marcum IS scheduled to
· pnch in a minor league
game on Saturday, then will
start Toronto's home OP.ener
agamst Boston on Apnl 4.
Notes: Toronto 3B Scott
Rolen and closer B.J. Ryan
.will miss the start of the
season because of mjuries.
Rolen had surgery on his
broken f1nger Monday and
w1ll be out two weeks or
more. Ryan, still recovenn~
from elbow surgery, isn t
expected back until at least
mid-April .... Reds C David
Ross caught six innings of a
minor league game and
went 2-for-5 with a walk.
Ross hasn't played with the
major league team this
spnng because of back
spasms. The Reds are cons!denng startmg the season
w1th h1m on the 15-day DL.
C Pau I Balco was out wuh
a v1rus. Bako and Jav1er
Valentin are the other two
catchers 111 camp.

f

make $3 milhon in base
salary next season, and can
make $18.5 m1lhon over the
rest of the deal.
He caught 93 .passes for a
club-record I ,440 yards and
eight touchdowns last season, when he became the
Bengals' career leader in
catches and yards.
"I wish they were here,"
quarterback Carson Palmer
said of the two rece1vers,
"but well work w1th what
we've got and the guys that
are here. Thats exc1ting,

too"
Houshmandzadeh
is
spepding the offseason in
California with a personal
trainer Johnson is staying
away to make a pomt.
"lm not going to get too
mvolved m 11," Palmer sa1d.
"I know t]Je guys that arc
here are worktng the1r butts
off and workmg lor a spot. .
"I'm not worned We've
got a good group of guyssome mature guys, some
veteran guys - th at wont
I

let any off-the-field distractiOns get in the way of what
needs to be done, all of the
work thats going on right

now."

With
Johnson
and
Houshmandzadeh
elsewhere, No 3 receiver Chris
Henry was the top returning
rece1 ver at workouts on
Monday. Henry was suspended by the leqgue for the
first eight games of last season He caught 21 passes
for 343 yards and two
touchdowns after his return.
His four ' arrests and
repeated punishment have
set him back.
"That's all 10 the past,"
Henry said. "I'm just excited and ready to get started
again."
Henry m1ssed having
Johnson around.
"He ts ltke a brother,"
Hen1y 'a1d. ''He's been here
smce I've been here, and he
really took me in when I got
here. I'd hate to see him
lea\ e "

"That's probably the first
time I've gone on three
days' rest since A-ball, and I
just got a little tired," Bailey
said. "I think I've thrown all
ri$hl. There's always a few
thmgs you can work on ·maybe those one or two batters where I kind of lose
focus and end up walking
them. If I cut those out, it's
not so bad."
Left-hander
Jesse
Carlson, competing for a
spot in the Blue Jays'
bullpen, pitched the fJrSt
inning so he could face
some of the Reds' top hitters. He gave up a single
and induced a double-play
fr:oun~er from Ken Griffey
Right-hander
Shaun
Marcum followed Carlson
and gave up Adam Dunn's
solo homer and a two-run
shot by Joey Votto Marcum
went SIX 1~nin gs, g1vmg up

•

· Tuesday, March 25, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

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POLICIES Ohio Vtlllwy Pubtlshlng rwMrVn the
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Borrow Smart Contact
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AHa1rs BEFORE you reft·
nance your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
ot requests for any large
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fees or rnsurance Call the
Offtce of Consumer
Afta1rs toll free at 1-866·
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•Up to S8 50/hour
Lost· female German
• MedlcaVDental/401k
Shepherd last seen Jan
301h w/stltches m belly &amp;
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Cf!rpenter/Dyesvllle.
$300
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• Profess1onal work ·
This newtpaper wtll net
LOST Black Case w1th .._______r
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..tate which •• In
Ptstol on Potters Creek $100 Assemble crafts wood
1·888·1MC·PAYU
violation of the law Our
Reward Call740-441 1720 1tems To $480/wk Matenals
Ext. 2347
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readers are hereby
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SERVICES
1
www
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Informed that all
Lost Male Yorksture Ternir pkg 24Hr 801·428 4649
dwelllnta advertised In
last seen 3119/08 1n
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SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Gold, deeply m1ssed by little lull time experienced assls
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(740)709-6199 Of (740j446·
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Small 2 Br house Rac1ne
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15289 Hunllngton Road,
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IIFLPWANIED ..
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. $45 ooo 740·949·2539
Welders needed 1yr ex pen·
Gallipolis Ferry
MOBILE HoMES 1
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An
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50$
to
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dally
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~ .0
OOrRUCTION
1
Basement, located outstde -:-2000:-:-:--1-6x_7,_0,_2___,be_d_2-ba-Lh
-----exp requ1red Permanent serv
POST OFFICE NOW
posltton.
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tratn1ng
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provi(jed, Must be HS grad- Food serv1ce Wortcer for tull
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location $199 900 bed 2 bath Oakwood, 1999
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FT
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t1me
and
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Call Today! 740·448-4367.
Announcement ............................................ 030 rapldadvancementstbene- days) work 1n a 114 Bed
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Daytime 388·0000. Evening
1
800-214
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Antlquea ....................................................... 530 hts For an Interview call Long Term Care State
Federal Benefits, OT
388·8017
or 245·9213
gai111)011Scareercollego
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Apartments lor Rent ..... .. ....................... 440 (740)446 7798
Offered by Exam Services Accredited Member Aeered tmg 4br, 2 AC Pool, Ctry New
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Auction ani! Flea Market... ....... ............. 080
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Counctl fer II"'CCependenl Coll&amp;ges
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- - - - - - - ment earn up to 15 days
3br 1ba 1015/SF
------Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale .........................,... 750 ResCare
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is
wdl beThursday
conductingMarch
1nterv1ews NPleasant
hCurrently
seek1ng
carmg
vacation
per
year
18
days
1
11
on
ew
oor
covenngs,
res
2008
bedroom 2 bath sec
Building Supplles ........................................ 550 dediCated and motivated s1ck leave and 12 plus p81d
27 pamt new heat pump 11onal 3home
accepting appllcat1ons for
$279 per month
1
Business and Buildings ...................... 340 1nd1V1duals
Otrect
Care
personnel
willing
to
work
holidays
health/lila
lnsur2008
from
9am
11am
and
$79 000 304 674 3698
740
385
7671
Business Opponuntty .... ..... ...... ..... .210 WIIh low Income children ance IS ava1lable Contact
CNA's &amp; STNA's If you 1pm·3pm lor the upcommg - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Business Training ...................................... 140 and families as Substitutes Wanda Sm1th, at Lakin
would ltke to take advantage STN A class Th1s IS the
Attention!
2008 sect1onat home 3
Campara &amp; Motor Homea .......................... 790 (pit) for Mason County Head Hospital at 304·675..0860,
of this opportunity you may only day 1nterv1ews w111 be Local company offering "NO Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
apply Monday through held and class space IS 11m- DOWN PAYMENT" pro· and set up $38 695 740
Camping Equipment ..... ..... .. .......... 780 Start/Early Head Start ext 112 Monday thru Fnday
Fnday 8am-4pm at 8204 lted Anyone mteresf 1n grams for you to buy your 385·9948
Carda of Thanks ......................................... 010 Requtres diploma or GEO, from 8am-4pm
Lakin
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190 current vahd drivers Hospital IS an EEO/AA Mason's and Laborers With Carla Onve, Gallipolis, Oh1o attend1ng the class needs to home 1nstead of renting
--For rent-orsale- Located
1n
Eleclrtcai/Refrlgeratlon ....................... 840 license proof of auto !1abll1ty _Em_p_lay_:__er_____ Masonry experience needed You may also tax a resume p1ck up an app I1ca I ton a1333 • 100% f1nanc1ng .
Btdwell,
3BR,
2 bath
M
ddl
I
Oh
Pa
51
to
Equipment lor Rent... ..... ...... ...... .. ..... 480
ge
I epor
IO · Less than pertect credit Unfurmshed If sold must be
end good commu- Foeter Parents Been think- Immediately, Full T1me w1th rhamsonCrescare com
between 9am an d 5pm acc..nted
Etcavatlng ................................................... 830 msurance
ntcatlon skills Must pass mg about II·Apply now! beneflls after probation penAn 1 1
~~
Monday Frld 'ir'i ,...p
tea tons · Payment
could be the moved Call 388 8446 or
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610 drug
screen
and
backR
·
s
s
d
od,•"pllcai!Ons
available
at
"ed
1
615·830·4499
30
45
I
be
b
ecelve
·
a
ay
.,...
Super
8
Motel
now
hiring
mus
su
m111
prtor
o
same
as
rent
Farms lor Rent... ........ ......................... 430 ground check Fff pos1t1ons
b
nt
d
..
www
langmasonrycom.
~ax
PoSitiOn Is 1nterv1ews for approval NO Mortgage
Farms lor Sale ....................................... 330 available In Cabel! Cly re1md urseme
Locators
from $199 Month
art Iorpa1theresp11e,
ulh complete applications &amp; housekeepers
yo
part-t1me
and
""'U must be PHONE CALLS PLEASE 17401367 OOOO
For Lease ................................................, .. 490 Commenca IDnvers Ucense an1 supp
New
2008 Smgtew1de
d
home Resume If available to (740) able to work flexible
•· hours On the day of the 1nterv1ews - . , - - - -- - Midwest
740-828·2750
For Sale.................................... ...... .. .... 585 w1thm 6 mo of hlfe required 1iPace b1n your
M
h
9
1
749
3500
ra1mng eg1ns arc 2 a - - - - - - - - ""
Anply 1n •··
~on No phone ask lor Hollie Bumgarner House tor &amp;ale m Racme
my1111dwesthome com
For Sate or Trade ...... . . ..... ...... ..... .590 Send cover letter, resume Albany
•
l PN Staff Development area A~prox 4 acres all
Oas1s Foster
calls please
Fruits &amp; Vegetabtes ..................................... 580 and 3 ltrs of ret to SCAC- Care for Call
more tnformatton Metal Fabricator Is accept 11'-'l'l'.'l~~l'.lll~'""il Coordtnator 7th Aptil 18th professronally landscaped Lot8Bx124'w/14'"M7D trailer
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450 HR 540 Fifth Ave. Htgn. Toll Free 1•866.325_1558 mg resumes for the following
EOE Parltelpant of the Drug Ranch style house with 4 3 br , 2 b partially furniShed
0 1
General Hauling .................................... 850 WV 25701 EOE
pos~ons 30 Drafter (Auto
•
rt
Free Workplace Program bedrooms ilvtng room dm 2 covered porches 2 car
Publllhlng
Co.
Giveaway ................................................... 040 • - - - - - - - , Full Time ReceptiOnist ne8&lt;J.. CAD) expeninced Ttg IS seeking
It'll
a
motivated
WAN'rm
mg room kitchen large fam carport large block storage
Happy Ads ....................................................050
ed 1n busy Doctors Offtce Wekler. Uach1n1s1 CNC detatl~mented IndiVIdual
To
Do
1ly
central arr gas heal, bUildtng, $40 000, ·(740)992
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
P1ck up apphcat10ns at Swte experience and entry level to be a pag1nator/page ..__ _ _ _ _ _... androom,
1 hreplace Additionot a ._
'0,-5_7___,----,--,-Help Wanted ............................................ 110
Customer 112 Pleasant Valley Receptionist Compensation
destgner
1n
the
dally
large
Flonda
room
com
NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA
Hospi1al Resumes may be based upon expenenced
Home Improvements................................810
ot 1ts three 'Handyman Serv1ce In need pletely cedar opens oniQ
1 700+ sq fl $49 989
attached to the application Please submit resume and productiOn
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
ol repairs around the home? pat1o &amp; pool area Heated 1n
newspapers The
trom
Month
Household Goods ..................................... 510
professional
references
to
successful
appWcant
Reasona ble ground pool enclosed by pn· Midwest5397
FuII lime truekdnver needed 70764 St At 124 Vmton.
740
828_2750
Houses lor Rent.. ................................ 410
rates 20yrs axpenence Ph # vacy fencmg and land
with
valid
drivers
ltcense
and
OH
by Apnl
woukJ wof't( under the
45686
4 - - ~MSI011 of the news 740·508·0408
In Memoriam ........................................... 020
scaped Ftmshed 2 car mymldwesthOme com
Service
1nsurance Must be depend- - ---ln•urance ..................................................... 130
garage attached to house New 3 Bedroom homes from
able have good customer Needed expenenced Truck.
department Dulles
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. ..................... 660
Spr1ng Cleantng for Lawn &amp; and hn1shed &amp; heated 3 car $214 36 per month, lndudes
Wo hove Immediate
serv1ces sk1lls and be able to Driver tor hauling blacktop
mclude etectromc
Livestock.....................................................630
Garden 304 675 22f!1
garage
una1tached many upgrades delivery &amp;
tull-tlmD Customer
load and unload trucks Must Class A 304·674·3311 or
generafton of news
Loat and Found ........................................... 060
E)(cellent cond1t1on ready to SOl up (740)385·2434
Service poaiUon In our be able to work weekends 304·593·0639
pages along with some 1
CIUUIIF.IDF.RL\
move 1n $255 000 00 Call
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
main office
Send resumes to CLA BoK - - - - - - - - copy editing and headline
USED HOME SALE
Mi1callsneoua............................................. 170
wr-tng, as wei! as,
..__ _siCAiiiiiREiioo-.-l (740J949-221 7
Succeaaful hppllcanto t01, cio Gallipolis Detly Part Tima Driver Transport
N1ce 38A SmglewideS
Ml1cellaneous Merchandlse.......................540
muet be people orient· Tribune, P:O BoJI 469, consiM'Tlers to and from
proolreading of pages
Mobile Home Repair ....................................880
Child care done tn my home Duplex tor Sale on Land lrom $2900 Down Pmt
od, enjoy ualng the
Gallipolis OH 45631
medical appotntments In the
produced by other
Midwest 740·828·2750
Mason County area, 20
pagmators Computer 1nfants welcome, meals Contract 740·992 5858
Mobile Homes lor Ront ............................... 420
phone,
skillS and knowledge of InCluded lots of activities tor
Mobile Homes lor Sale ............................320
computer literate end GUitar Player looking far hours per week Must be
Drummer &amp; Bass Player to able to ma1ntaln accurate Quark &gt;&lt;Press and Adobe your ch1ld drrys n1ght and
enjoy wortclng with
Money to Loan ............................................ 220
play
mostly or1g1nal Rock
reports and ass1st
Photoshop are requtred weekends $2 00 per hour
numbero Polltlon
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers...................... 740
mus1c 985 4416 after 5 00 consumers on and off the Past e:q&gt;enence in page Call 256 1438 ask for
ott.rs all company
Mualcallnalrumenta . ..... ...... ...... ... .570
benelltolnctucllng
OhiO Val~ Home Health van as needed Requ1res or graphic design 1s not a
Personals........... . ...... ...... ..... .. ............. 005
CURRENT EVENTS
hHHh end life
Inc hlnog STNA, CNA 11alld drivers license, clean requ1rement The position
Peta lor Sale ............................:................... 560
lneurance, 40111:, paid Home Health Aides and
dnv1ng record and
Is full Ume 40 hours a
Plumbing &amp; Heating ................................. 820
vacation and peraonel Personal Care Aides fllll knowledge of local routes
week and tncludes
Professional Sarvlees........ .. ..... . ....... ... 230
drtl
Part T1me and Per Diem
Resumes Will not be
benefits Interested
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................. 160
1,
positions avatlable ApJMy at accepted Appl1cat1ons can
applicants can send
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
For employment
1480 Jackson Pike
,be found at
resi.ITlee to
Schoolalntttructlon .................................. ISO
consideration,
Hnd
Gall•pahs phone 441-1393 wwwpresteraorg/careershl
Kevin Kelty
•NOTICE•
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer............ .. .............. 650
reaume to:
for Skilled Office or apply at mt or our 715 Main St Pt
Managing Editor
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Shuetlona Wantad ....................................... 120
Diane Hill
Oh1o Valley Publishing Co lNG co recommends
1456 Jackson Pike, phone Pleasant off1ce Submit
Space lor Rent............................. .. ......... 460
clo Galllpolla Tribune
441
9263
for
application
by
fax
304·525·
825 Third Ava
that you do business with and more ...
Sporting Goods............. .... ... . ........... 520
825 Third Avo,
Passport/Private
Care
7893 or mall to
Galli Ia Ohio 45631
people you know, and
SUV's lor Sale ............. .......................:......720
Galllpolil, OH 45631
Off1ce Compe1tt1ve wages
Prestera Center
NOT to send money
Trucks for Sale................................... .. .... 715
and
benefits
Including
health
HR/Drtver
Trucf(
Drivers
.
COL
Class
A
through
the mall unlit you
Upholstery.................. .................... .. .... 870
No Phone Cells Please Insurance and mileage relm· 3375 US Route 60 E ReqUired, mlntmum of 2 have Investigated the
Vans For Sale.......................................730
bursement
Huntington WV 25705 years
dnv1ng
eKp offenng
Wantad to Buy ............................................. 090 Fast 4 You tn Mason now -EOEIAA
E~eper+ence
on ....,..____..
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ............ 620 h1nng must be 18 &amp; avatl· Manpower Is now hlnng lor ,-,F..,IN"".....,A,-J"""'B., Overde1mens1ona1 loads
Own a computer? Put 111o
Wanted To Do .... ................................... 180 able all shifts, must pass a the follow1ng pos1t1ons
Must have good dnv1ng
work' Up to $1500 to
To Subscnbe Call
Wanted to Rent ........................................... 470 Drug Test Apply w1thln
Automobile
Produtlon
IN
THE
record
Earn
up
lo
$2,000
$7500/mo
PT
1FT
Yard Sale- Galllpolls....................................072 - - - - - - - - Workers 10 the Buffalo, WI/
The Dally Sentinel
weekty For application Call
Free tnlormaUon1
Yard Sai..Pomeroy/Middle... .... .. .......... 074 Help wanted at Darsl Home A'ea Beneflls ava&lt;lable Call CLASSIFIEDS (304)722·2184
M·F www fam1lyb11123 com
992-2155
Yard Sai..PI. Pleasant ............................... 076 Gro141 Home 740.992·5023 ' Today 304 757 3338
' - - - - - - - - ' a 30am·4pm
I

~

r

r
r

l'.'

I

r

°

I

j

WHW

-t'o

COUPONS

~

TECHNOLOGY

COMICS SPORTS

ENTERTAINMENT

..
•s•••
•-••••

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

:Tuesday, March 25, 2008
.ALLEY OOP

Tuesday, March 25, 2008
FARM

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily: Sentinel • Page BS

EQUIPI\IfNf
3 acres fof Sale oo SandhiH For rent or sate. located in

Ad $25.oop. 304-895-3929

Bidwell, 3BA.

EllmView
Apartments

2 balh.

Unlumished. If sold must be

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR mo~~ed. Call 388·8446 or

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek 615-830-4499
~Central
heat &amp; AJC
Rd, 441· 1111
---~----

Find all the
news that
matters
to you.

'

9772

bath,
Prime residential building lot
$450/monlh
ond
deposk.
in Rio Grande on Lake Dr.
$24,900. Phone 260·495· Call 740-645-7765
5114
Taking applications 10&lt; 2BR.
No pels. S275/month
IH \ J \I"'
$200/dapook. 446-3617
Nice

1!9alhpolis JiBailv l!;ribunr

tJoint ~lrasant ll\r!Jtlitrr
The Daily Sentinel
ilunbap m:imrs -i&gt;rntinrl

NOTICES

2BA,

2

Shellv·Mechanicsbura
Shelly-Springfield
Sand and Gravel
Shellv-Coshocton
Shelly·Oslrandet·Ouar~

I Shelly-Lancaster
I S.nd &amp; Gravel

(304)182-3017

e

Trailer for rent and lot for rent Gracloua Living 1 and 2

·also, bot~ In Green Terrace
Bedroom Apts. al Village
Mobile ~orne Court. Call
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
740.245-5041
Mlddlepon, lrom $327 10
3 Bd. · lbalh·WID-HU-HUD·
$692. 740-992·5064. Equal
approved.Good references.
APAR'IMINIS.
Housing OpponunRy.
5450 Ma.~-$400 dep. 740·
FQR ltJiNr
416-·2232.
Honeysuckle
Hills
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Apartments now accepting
4 Bedroom House tor Rent ments, furnished and unfurapplications lor I and 2 Br
$600/rent
$600/deposit nished, and houses in apts. Localed on Colonial
(740)446-4060 or 367-7762 Pomeroy and Middleport,
Drive nexllo Holzer S0&lt;1ior
4BR, 2 baths at91 Cedar St. security deposit required, no Care Centt)r. No rental
pets, 740-992-2218.
assistance at this time. Rent
$650 per month + $650
deposit. References req. - - - - - - - - slarts al $320 and $350.
1br &amp; 2br all utilities paid in Equal Housing Opportunity.
740-388-1100

r

ACROSS

Deere lately? Vou'll be sur·
prisedl Check; out our used
inventory
at
WWW . CAREQ . COM
Carmichael Equipment. 740446-2412

Phillip
Alder

•

John Deer A 1947 Tractor,
Electric Start High &amp; tow
Transmlsson , New Alms,
Tires &amp; Paint. 2002 Hard
04
Craftsman riding Top For CJ7 Jeep. Call949·
ITIOWGf, u H.P. Kohler, 42" 2305 for lnlormation.
cut, hydrostat trans. $700.
Yamaha Alto
Saxophone, Lely Redder Rake Reese
Modal
YAS-62 $1600.' 8ft, Drum Mower. $2,000
each Have Manuals Tom
740-446-1305
Brown 304·692·2632
JET

I I ~\ '"'I'« HU

AERATION MOTORS
Aepalred, New &amp; Rebuilt In

r10

Storage

IISSEll

• Q J 9
• 5 3

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

etaTIICTIU

..t....

A~

'====:':":

Wednesday

MASON MOWER
304-773·5061
304-882·3294

Servicing Lawn

&amp; 1985 Olds OeHa B8, 1 owner

Friday, 8am·4:30pm. Closed $1500. 1976 Classic Olds 98

Trncto", Mowers,

Thursday, Saturday . &amp; $3000. Both E•c Cond. Both
Sunday. (740)446--7300
for S4000. Attar 4pm. 446-

Tillers, Murray.
Craftsman, MTD,

ic, air: 99 Jeep Wrangler 4
cyl., 5 spd. Take your choice
$5700. 04 Buick LeSabre
77,000 miles $6700. B&amp;D
Aula Sales, Hwy 160 N. 740·

S-Service
10 Years

acre

ljouse or Re'nr Racine Area. Beautiful Apta. It Jtckaon
No pets. Caii74D-992·5858. Eltltll. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 to '$560.
EquaI
~•
740-44 6-2568.
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
14X70 3 Br. mobile home Opportunity Provider and
$350 renl, 250 dep. No Pels.
Employer.
740·742·2714.
Beech Sl., Middeporl, 2 br.
2Br at Johnsons Mobile tarnished apt., no pets,
Home Park. Call446-2003 dep.&amp;
ret.
requtred,
740
92
0165
19
1
2BR on Private lol on
•
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis Clean! Clean!
Clean!
city schoOls. $550 rent 0 own 1own GaIll po ,.IS ap1.,
BR'
includes all utilities. $500
upstairs. 2 . 2 Baths.
deposit ref. required. 740- $500 446 9•09
446-2847 or 645-1668
- - ·. , ·
-'- - - - - CONVENIENTLY
LOCAT·
2Br, I balh, CIA, No pels. ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
1624 Chelhem Ave. 740· Townhouse
apanments,
446·4234 or 740·208·7861
and/or small houses FOR
3br, bath wilh addition, dish· RENT. Call (740)441·1111
washer, Country Setting, for application &amp; Information.
Jericho area. $425/monlh Tara
Townhouse
plus Deposit &amp; Lease. Day Apertmenls, Very Spacious,
304-273-6622 or evening 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
304·674·6204 ,
Balh, Aduk Pool &amp; Baby
Ideal lor! or2people,refer· Pool, Pallo,' Start $425/Mo.
ences. no pets. 5 miles from No Pets, Lease Plus
Gavin. no calls after Security Deposit Required,
6pm.441·0181
(740)387·0547.

·c

MOBFOR!LED~

Public Notice

I

-------Public Notlca

Street Address

City

5441 Casev Rd.

Mecltanicsbura

4301 S. Charleston Pike
45500 CountY Rd. 23
8328 Watkins Rd .

3232 Loaan·Lancaster Rd.
Shellv·Weslerville
6715 Weslerville Rd. ·
Sheff;;:-~mbus Limes one 3300 Jackson Pike
_I "h•"• -Lockbourne
• 4"' Lnnrlonfirnvonort Rd.
Shellv-Marblecliff
2650 Old Dublin Rd.
SheiiV-Tri·Countv Ouarr
4664 Hardin-Marion Rd.
Sh~II~·Hardin Quar!Y
12484 State Route 701
Shell~· Alexandria
1400 Th•m l'lrl.
A8?4 Ml V•rnon Rrl,
Shell~·:&gt;t. Louisville
Shellv-Belle Center
1558 Countv Rd. 105
SheiiV-East Libertv
4704 S. Stale Aoule 292
Stoneco. Inc.
• 'Di•
00.0
I limo "'ty. "'"""
Stoneco, Inc. Maumee Ouarrv
1360 Ford St.
Shellv·Racine
49947 State Route 338
Stoneco Inc. Coline
6430 Karch Rd.
Shelly-East Fultonham
.OU•n:v
.
"'"" "•lo;!n Rrl F•&lt;l
Shellv-Dresden
1985 Memorial Drive
Stoneco, Inc.·
Rockv Ridoe Quarrv
3017 N. Stale Route 590
Stoneco, Inc.·
I wh;.., c~•
r l'lrl
•Rnn
Stoneco, Inc.· Auolalze
13762 Counlit Road 179 ·
Shelly·Chillicoll1e
Sand and Gravel
1177 Honetown Rd.
Shellv·AIIied Corn.
3848 Erie S.W
She~V--:.Jetterson Material
85805 Stale Route 14
ShellY-York Center .
20620 Soanaler Rd.
Stoneco , Inc. ·
Scott Quarrv
2384 Ritchie Rd .
Shelly·WIIIOW Island
31330 State Route 7
Stoneco . Int.· Po~aae
11580 S. Dixie Hiahwav
Stoneco Inc.·
Wyandol Dolomite
t794 County Rd. 99

Sorinafield
Coshocton
Ostrander
Lancaster
Westerville
Grove Cit\
L
m•
Hlllia rd
Kenton
Kanton

New•rk
Belle Center
Zanesfield

. .___

IIiJI

in~~~~....:-=:....~

Clark
Clark
Coshocton
Delaware
Fairfield
Franklin
Fr•nklin
Fmnklin
Franklin
Hardin
Hardin
;,,,.,i
Lleklnn
Locan
. Locan

AKQ106 5

• 10 6
+K10 7 4:2

South
Pass

HaNIOOCI

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I'

$64

YOlJ'~f

per
month

FlflST

·------_.1

(404)456·3802
CARGO/CONCESSION 196ll River Que.en house·
- - - - - - - - TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE- boat $3000 . Contractors
Retaii/WarehouMIStorage NECK·
HITCHES. truck topper. fits smaller
Locallon In Gallipolis 1600 CARMICHAEL . EQUIP· lruck. $150. 256·1710 or
sq. ft. building $400 mo. ol1 MENTICAAMICHAEL 645·7550
street par~ng calt Wayne at TRAILERS SALES &amp; SER· ~~,;:;;;~--":"'"""1
(404)456-3802 . .
VICE. SPECIAL 20FT
c~ &amp;
GOOSENECK FLATBED
MoroR HOME'l
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
•riljo~~H~cxmtOIJI;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;~ TRAILER INVENTORY AT 1983 Camper, 29ft, sleeps
~
WWW . CARMICHAEL" 4, self contained, AC!Heet,
· - - - - - - TRAILERS.COM 740·446· 304-675·5752
~5
--------------Sale: Berber Carpet $5.95
AV Service at carmichael
yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.
Traitors 740·446·3825
Mollohan Carpet. 2212
Eastern Ave, Gallipolis, Oh
. 740-446·7444

r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Coding Clerk
.Holzer Clinic or Gallipolis
Successful applicants will have CPC, RHIT or
equivalent coding experience. CPTIICD4
CMJHCPCS knowledge/experience desirable.
Medical terminology experience desirable.
Skilled in basic math
Skilled In typing and 10-key calculator.
Compuler!PC aptiiUde desirable

Competitive benefit package including:
Health, Dental, Life, Disability, 40l(k) &amp; Profit
Sharing ·
·

I

'Insured
•Experienced
References Available'
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

Roofing 1

~ ~~
~

.BARNEY

I'VE DECIDED LIFE'S TOO SHORT
TO WASTE MY TIME ON
RUMORS AN' HEARSAY
ELVINEY !!

·THE BORN LOSER
·r fl.,{{£ '(OJ
'iES W~'( ~
C.E:Kifo..\1-1 '(OlJ

V.C. YOUN G Ill

; v-11-\1'..I t'fl\
! TELLI~

IJ9?·G?1 r,
0

'(()\.)?

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Nfelime guarantee. local references furnished. Establishsd 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 ,
Basement

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eatlmatea
740-367~0536

OT+1E:R'&gt; 1'\A'{ HAL.16N
T.HE 80s, ~UT To ME,
TH05E TEN ~EARs WERE
THE PINNAC\.E Of
MUSIC, CULTURE A~D ·
CLITTIN&lt;O • UGE FASHIOII( !.

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

HelpWanhld

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

•

VOU KNO~W~AT l1D00 .
IF I WERE VOU?

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

Wf.l'f' ARE: VOU 50
MI'\PW TO TALK TO ?

WELL, I'LL TELL VOU, BUT

FIRSI, TELL ME WHAT VOV
IWEii'&lt;E 601No TO DO BEFORE: I
ASKED VOU IF '(OU KNEW
I'D DO IF I WERE't'OU,

Jefl24114

. . . . . . . . .12:11 ..

'

PIYIIITIP PIICES.

f
-.•

Coding Education Coordinator
Holzer Clinic of Gallipolis
Successful apnlicanls ~ill possess an Associates
degree; at least one year of coding education
and auditing experience required; professional
designation such as RHIA, RHIT, CPC,
CPC·H, or CSS required - one or more
specialty proficiency preferred. Working
knowledge of coding/documentation guidelines
· required. Proven proficiency of CPT4, ICD--9CM
1-2-3, and HCPCS. A working
understanding of anmomy, physiology and
medical terminology. Experience with third
pi111y payor reimbursement. Ability Ia inleract
wilh administration, clinical and operational
managers, healthcare professionals and other
clinic employees. ·Ability to identify and
cultivate slrong professional relationships
emphasizing service excellence with Holzer
Clinic customers, working as a liaison between
internal and external customer groups. Excellent
communication
(oral and written) wilh a
proficiency in public speaking. Professional
bearing and appearance.
Proficienl wilh
specialized coding soflwarc, Microspft Word,
Excel and PowerPoim, as well as other soflwarc
products ulilized (Pinpoint, IDX, etc.), ·

WITH TCDA. Y'S ADVANCES
IN GENETIC ENGINEE~ING,
I SEE A.fUTI.JIE FILLED
WITH NEW SPECIES
OF A.NIMA.LS.

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing,. Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
74Q-653-9657

v

css:p,

Dresden

Muskinaum

Gravtown

Ottawa
'

Oakwood

Rauldlng

Chillicothe
Massillon
Streetsboro
West Mansfield

Ross
Stark
Summit
Union

Convov
Marietta
Po~age

Van Wert
Washington
Wood

Carey

Wyandot

You are hereby notified that this action of the Director is final and may be appealed 10 the
Environmental Review Appeals Commission pursuant lo Section 3745.04 of .the Ohio Revise Code.
The appeal musl be in writing and sel fo~h the action complained of and the grounds upon which the
appeal ·is based. The appeal musl be filed with the Commission within thirty (3) days after notice of the
Director's action. The appeal must be accompanied by a filing fee of $70.00 which the Commission, in
Its discretion, may reduce if by affidavil, you demonstrate lhal payment of the full amount of the lee
would cause extreme hardship. Notice of the filing of the appeal shall be filled with the director within
three (3) days of tiling with lhe Comm1ssion . Ohio EPA requesls that. a copy of the appeal be served
upon lhe Ohio Attorney general's Office; Environmenlal enforcement Section. An appeal may be filed
with the Environmental Review Appeals Commission at the following address :
Environmental review Appeals Commission 309 Soulh Fourth Street, Aoom 222
Columbus, Ohio 43215
All inquines concerning lhis action may be directed tol he contact 1denlified beldw. Michael Carper,
Ohio EPA SoUtheast District OHice, 740·385·850t
(3) 25

skills

Applicants may apply to:
Holzer Clinic
Hunian Resource Department
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipelis, Ohio 4563 I
Or fax to 740-441-3592
www.holzers;lipic.c:om
Equal Opportunily Employer.

"riS

THEY W., YFI~ALLY
BE 1\BLE TO CREATE
A. WINGED BOVINE.

AflfiNDN,

IF YOU WILL.

l/

'GARFIELD
WHAf 1&amp; fHI6 "VACUUM"

fHINC; OF WHICH YOU

35

tank

36 Upscale
cheese
37 Intense
38 Stein filler
39 Coffee dis·
pensers
40 Salt Lake
slale .
41 Genetic

Kid's wife

52 - be an
honor!
53 Raw metal .
54 Wimple
sporter

'1bur 'lllrlh&lt;IIIY:

~AK?

A nurnbar of substanUal opportunities
might be olfered through good frlEJnds
in the year ahead . However. lor raesons known only to you , you might opt
lo Igno re tllem, but then sadly you witl
end up regretting your lack of actio n .
ARIES (Marc h 21 -April 19) Good
concepts and worthwhile ldaes could
b8 abandoned or s u ti"dued if yo u psr·
sis! In viewing everYthing I rom a nega.tive perspective. In order to be successful. you must first t h ink p o sitive ly.
TAURUS (April 2 0- Ma.y 20) - If your
budget needs to bs held In check , II
would be wise to avo id a friend who .:.
lands to ble adravagant in h is or her
spending habits. This person will wear
yo u d own and bust your bank a c count.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Should
you and your mate hold strong opp osIng positions owr s o mething that is
lmp:lrtapt to both o f you , U would be
best to walt a couple of days before
acting on II. Events could change your
m ind.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - lady
Luck is not going to s upply you with
any frae rides to suc c e~ s. Yo u 're going
to have to do that yourse lf by maintaining a posilive attitude and the willIngness to do what 's necessary to
succeed .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - You are by
nature a good mixer. even when min·
gllng in unfamiliar social circles .
However. if you don't take the11me to
get to know people. you aren 't apt to
make any new friends .
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sept . 22) Needlessly form ing a partnership
arrangement might be more of a lia bility than en a s set. e specially if each is
depending upon the other tor the
sarrie Information that both lac ks.
Watch out.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0 ct. 23) II you
depen d upon Lady Luc k or anyone
else 'to help get things d one, disappointment Is all you 'll find. Roll up you r
sleeves and g ot to work if you want
results.
SCORPIO (Oc!. 24- NOv. 22) - If you
think with your heart and not your
head, a shrewd manipulatOr wlt l take
advantage of your generous na1ure.
EWn when you know you're being
had, you may still allow the person lo
dO SO.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) Your staying power Is Questio nable at
beat, causing you to au;u t a n.umber of
things that you'll never tl.nlah. Select
one thing at a ume In hOpes that you r
enjoyment will hold you to it.
CAPRICORN (Ole. 22-Jan . 19)- On
occasion, you can reward an unde·.
serving Pl.fiOn vou like ln1t1ad of •
Worthy one you don't. If you'r. not
careful, this pt~rltcular ch1ract.r flaw
might b1 lv1dentln your behavior now.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
are created !rom qootatoos by lamous people, past and pri!ISft't
EaCh Iefier 11111\e Clp!\81 stands lor nmar

Cel ebnt~ C.ph!!l cry~ rams

roaay·s due:c equa~ a
"W D W G 0 T X W A E Y N W X A M_E Y S
KWYES

TXVW

NWXAME

RYE

Y OWYG;
RAE

Y GWYK

TGANAXYK

V' K T E W G S T N W S R W G , "

•

ACWVE

NWT GN

KAVRSWXPWGN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION _;, "Sports is human l~e in microcosm.· · Howard
Cosell
'I though! lacrosse was whal you lioo il11a church.'· Robin W~liams

t::~::~l S(O"\\dl~-~r.~s·

:::

~~~~~~~~aAY~~UAN--~------

Rearran;o llfllts of
0 fovr
o:rombiod word•

lilt

b•
low 10 lomt lour •lmpfo w«d.o.

B u Dl y M

I
I
I I I! I I
1

11111
PWOHO

2

r

"'TjE;;.."

;,;,Nj,;....l_,_.rj-11

LT-1

!

"Bad weather always looks

=:-=:·==·==·==~~~

,.

wmse,"lhelittle
momboy,
told"her
frightened
when

L.

r

_,.;A~N...:D~·;.l..:W;...::.R.---~,

~ 1

16 I I 1
-L-...1--1---1.--L.....J

L..

A
"(ill

o

you look out the-.·

m.

Comploto
c:hudci• quoted
by -ftllln~ In !he mlalng wcrds

\'011 develop from llop No.

:r beloW.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

0 u~~'G~8 ~N~~~E Lf~ERS

I ·I I ·I I·I l

SCRAMolE"IS ANSWERS 3 '2 " • o8
Wbiten- Clown- Quash- Nipper- WISH to LEARN
'The important thing." the professcr told his eduCation class,
&gt; that eveiy child should be given the WISH to LEARN

·ARLO &amp; JANIS
!~LOOK!~

AHH£D00~

TO ~OE'!&gt; fl!()/l. ..

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20•Fib. 1 8) CaNiully .arutlnlze every detail It a

Give Yourselr or
Your Child The
Gift of Music

PianolK.eyboard
Lessons
. June VanKranken

28 Years E.perience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

740-992-9752 .
Competitive benefit package including: Heallh,
Dental, Life, Disabilily, 401(k) &amp; Profit Sharing

UKE, IF YCXJ WA.NT YOUR
PET TO LOOK.ACERTA. IN
WA.Y, SCIENTISTS CA.N
ACTIVATE AGENE,
COMBINE It WITH
ANOTHER ANIMAL'S
GENOME. AND
CREATE EXACTLY
WHAT YOU'RE
LOOKING FOR.

AstroGraph

By B&amp;intca Bed• 08ol

~ PEANUTS

Manley's
-Recyc,llng

Help Wanted

29

type
37 Landfill
41 Groio out
43 Valuable
thing
44 Machine
part
·
45 Mr. Sandier
46 Sotto48 Cookie man
49 Promonlory
50 Sundance

Here is the second deal from the sevenlabia duplicale in Hobe Sound. Fla., lasl
month, where one table passed it out but
IWo olhers bid game.
I do not know how the ·auctions' went, but
this one seems sensible.
Some Souths would open two spades,
hoping 1o show the diamonds on the
nexl round, bul I do not like lhal style:

Wedne•day, March Q8, 2008

• Decks

··-ltfdllll........

A

Another no~bid
and game-bid deal

G

iBIG NATE

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
·Doors, Winclows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Ro9m
Additions

Pass

high·card lhe
points,
the'hand
excellent
six-card
Anhough
West
-has only
11'
, suit and easy rebid make ~ easily worth
an opening bid. Then.North has an auto·
malic takeout double, showing short
club·s and length in the other three suits.
SO JEST GIMME TH' JUICY STUFF
Easl now has a tricky bid. He musl do
YA KNQW TO BE TRUE
something with nine points, t.&gt;ut raising
whal mi\111 be a three-card club suil is
chancy. Of course, one no-trump with
lwo low spades is hardly appelizing, bul
at least lhis response describes the
strength and nature of East's hand.
Now Soulh should nol lhink ' eight
points," bul ' double Iii." He is easily worth
his leap lo lour spades.
This contract made once and went down
one once. Obviously, the successful pair
got its diamond ruff. Yes, down two is
possible: Diamond to East's ace, diamond ruff, club to Easl's queen, dia·
Tl-l.t. Oil-\01.. fl.t&gt;-.Lf C,OC')"'' mond ruff, and wait tor a heart trick. But
that is unrealistic. (Here Is an ,idea for
~ 0\IE:.~
experts: Assuming you normally lead
'(0\.)R,I-\(fl.D! ace from ace-king, lead the king from
ace-king when you are thinking about
shifting to a singleton at Irick lwo.)
Note that five clubs doubled cosls only
100 points, which is cheap if you are nol
going lo de!eal four spades.
'

'

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Pass

East
I NT

~""to..~\&gt;

HOME

IMPRoVEMENTS

27

36 Cake-pan

"t..,......,E$

Gunen ,

Pnm 'IO\ r lh"
II' [ to{ I f •!I II

23
24

Instant lawn
Hansoms
Holds
Memorable
decade ,
Biology gel
Ms. Bovary
Sci·fi gun
Formal ball
Root beer
treal
Psi follower
Cal Teeh ri·
val
Part of LAX
Zeus, to
Romans
Statuesque
model
Bad-mouth
Bard's river
Diner sign
Reply at a
wedding
(2 wds.)
Brewery

slrand
42 Woolen cap
44 Gave in,
slangily
47 Elbow room
51 Humane
Society
goal
55 Bathroom
item
56 Knight's
weapon
57 For real
58 Choose
59 Brooks or
Gibson
60 Fender
mishap
14 Santa 61 Oolphtn's
winds
· 17 Weir6home
sounding
birds
DOWN
19 Hymn ftnale
1 Feudal un· 22 - del
derllng
Fuego
2 Spoken
23 Breaking
3 The Banana
news
Boat Song . 24 Coffee or
(hyph.)
Island
4 Cholla and 25 Squashed
· nopal
circle
5 Back when . 26 Go to the
6 Flying fox
polls
7 Mumbai Mr. 28 Water pipe
29 ·Count
8 Rudders
9 Jacques'
calories
girlfriend
30 Thought
1o MeJro haze 31 Ex-frosh

1~!~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~==~~====:::~:~~-~~S~

Patio and Porch Decke
WV0311725

(I

f!:

~· ®

VInyl Siding I Painting(

.'"

~~;

~~ i
~

:::! ~

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•Reasonable Rates

Vf~¥
PATI~NT--­ ! ~_,~~

YouTuB~ TI'IIS1

I

r404

MY

MINI&gt; If I.

~===~~~~~~~~~~==~

r

Pass

North
Obi.

Opening lead: •

Al)d Furmmre

www.•• ·

West
1 ""

4•

I.

i.O

20
21

34

Vulnerable: Neither

cOr

MaJ0/1 Golf Course

12
13
15
16
18

Dealer: South

Advertl'se
•n th1's
1
space

1st Riwd to left above

1
4
8
11

32
33

• 10

Stop &amp; Compare

~~~~~~~~!

:cow and BOY

Lucas
Meigs
Mercer

I r.ley__CeDJA•

• 7 2
• 98
"K 85 3
" QJ '
• 3
t A8 6 5
ofoAKJ 9 8 2
• Q 76 '
South

9 month old gray Parrot
female, starting tO talk, whislie, wlcage. 740·742·3706.

rl5

Ea!lt

140-992-1611

446-6865 ,
~=H:•rv::e:y::R:o:•d:M::•so:•:·::W::V~~======~
-------Quality cars, trucks, vans
Slanlng
"$1500
IO $6300.
_
Financi ng
available
with
Md
d
A
warranh•.
COOK
1
8
o ern
a room pt., Squirrel Dog tor Sale 2 MOTOR''s
J ~
p
_c_•'-'(:...7_40:..1446-0
__
390___ years old, pup 8 months old
, ,. 328 8~,;1\SOn Ike.
740~· 0103
304·675-6132
One SA apt. 76 Vine Street,
Gallipolis. $125/week. UliliTRUCKS
ties included. 740-367-7886
...,
FOR SALE . . .
Rooms lor Rent. No petS.
F•bu
ca•~~~err
nAI"''
00 Tacoma, 4 cyl. auto, 4x4
Cell 74Q-992·7508.
"~--J!.Vl.llrMuu
ext cab, loaded, exc. shape.
'uca•ekcablaetrJ'.oo•
Twin Rivers Tower is accepl· L.o.-.;;iiiiiliiliiillio_.J after Spm. Asking $9500.'
ing !iPJ)Iicatlons for waiting · (2) 9' New Holland Hau 245•5946 or 645•3743
'
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br, Bines $1200/Gach. '(1) 7'
1996 Ford Ranger, Ext Cab,
1
Automatic, 3.0 engine. 304·
apartment,for
the NewHollandHavBine$500.
elderly/disabled call 675·
Heall)l duly log spliHer $500. 675_2032
6679
Equal
Housing Olher mlsc. larm equip. 388- ~~~..:----~-,
~O:i:ppor-rlu-nRy~~--...., _9a_o_5_ _ _ _ _ _ _
WM~R!!a.E'J/
YOUNG'S
~
Stanley TreeFOR~&lt;;!_EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
.......,,
BUILT,
VALLEY
Trimming
·--iiiiitiiii.ii._.l H 0 R S EI ll V E 8 T 0 C K 4-wheeler 300EX, $1 ,000
&amp; Removal
RtlaiUWareltouHIStorago TRAILERS, LOAD MAX ii71i40e446;;;;,;·4;;:060~~~-"''
Room AddltiOne I
'Prornpl and Quality
Location in Gallipotis1600 EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
BoATS &amp; MOTORS
Remodeling
sq. "- building $400 mo. ol1 CARGO . EXPRESS &amp;
FOR SALE
NewO.regn
Work
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
'
street parking call Wayne al H 0 M E S T E A DE R

~

Applicants may apply lo:
Holzer Clinic
.Human Resource Department
90 Jackson Pike
Galllpells. Ohio 45631
Or fax to 740-441-3592
www.bob&amp;rc:Uplc.com
Equal Opportunity Employer.

'

.

"C

County

I LurA&lt;
Maumee
Racine
Celina

available. All. utilities paid setter $9,200 call 740·4~8·
except electric. March Rent _16l!itl"6--"'!"---..,
Special $100 oN Rent
Please call304·674-0023 or
ru:~
304·610•0776 lor mors
t'OR SALE

MONTY

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Briggs &amp; Strauon

·4388

H - Honest
I - Integrity

fridge., dshwshr., 2.75
~;:~:e~r~-~ pw:~~rR:f. ~eqs~
oH
Hwy
124.
$600mo/$400dep. 740·742· 740·367-7453 or 645·7214
1,151
2BR apt (740)44Hl194

:m:o·:"'~

41 1
:

A 9 7 2

West ·

• New Homes

~·'a10'

Sc~ap MetalS Open Mooday, - - - - - - - -

4 A J 43
•

\1 111 \

Channel. Flal Bar, Steel tlon.needscalaly1icconverlGrating
For
Drains, or. Asking $2200. Call 740·
Driveways &amp; Wal-ys. L&amp;L 709-6339.

0.1·25 ·011

IDIERT

NEW AND USED STEEL 01
Hyundal
As:cent
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
For
Concrete,
Angle , 65,310 miles, good condi- •

Tuesday,

Nonh

H1ll's Sell

' '-..;.-..;.. .:.ii,..-111
Slocl&lt;. Call Ron Evans, 1·
600·537·9528.
Lw-..iii'OiiRiiSiiALEiiiiii-r
Hours
- - - -- - - ,
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

4BR, 2 F Bath, 2 car _o1_63
_ _ _ _ __ _ - - - - - - - -

Public Notice

I

Have you priced a John

at1ached gar., 2 car
Jordan Landing Apartments. Portable Sawmill for SSie,
detached gar., . out bldg., 1BR, WID hOOk-up, stove &amp; 2.3 Bedroom Apartments Sharpener, blades &amp; hElM 98 Jeep Wrangler. automat-

PUBLIC NOTICE
ISSUANCE OF PRE-APPROVAL TO RELOCATE A PORTABLE AIR CONTAMINANT SOURCES FOR
SIDWELL MATERIALS, INC.
Ohio EPA has received a request to pre-approve rslocalion of the following portable air contaminant
sources owned and operated by Sidwell Materials, Inc. to the following locations as identnied below.
Ohio EPA believes that the identitied of operations will not cause appreciable degradation of the air
quality in the area surrounding the subject s~e(s) and therefore approves the stte(s) listed below,
pursuant to Ohio Administrative Code (OAC) rule 3745·05(E). Relocation of any source to any of the
listed sttes requires the permitee to submit a not~ication to Ohio EPA atleasl fifteen (15) days prior to
relocation of the source.
,
·
Facility ID, Facility Name, Facility Description, PTI #, Issued
0660950006,'TriSon Screen Plant, Aggregate Screener, 06-07965, 6/2212006
0660950007 Irock ADS-20 Crusher Aggregale Crusher 06·07702 4119/2005
06609500t2, Eljay Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06.()7964, 6/22/2006
06609500t3, CEC· Minyu Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06·07966, 6/2212006
0660950014, lrock 300 Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06-08028, 3116/2006
0660950015, Chie~ain 1400 Power Screen, Aggregate Screener, 06-07255, 11/18/2003
0660950016, Eljay Horizonta.l Screen Plant, Aggregate Screener, 06·08029, 4/27/2006
06609500t7, lrock 150 Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06-08032,6115/2006
06609500t9 , HP200 Cone Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06·08092 and 06-068306 61t5106 and 6/20/02
0660950022 , Irock 450 TPH Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 17·1583 and 011·08123 12/3198 and 6/15106
0660950027, Hazmag Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 13·03400 612812001
0660960023, 3406 CAT Generator, Diesel Generator, 06·07790, 6116/2005
0660960044, 3412 CAT Generator, Diesel Generator, 06-07857,9/20/2005
0660960045, 3456 CAT Generalor, Diesel Generator, 06·07858 9/20/2005.
0660960046 3456 CAT 2 Generator, Diesel Generator 06·07863, 9/B/2005
0660960055 3508 CAT Generator Diesel Generator 06.()7573 7/29/2004
0660970002 McNeilus Concrete Painl, concrete Balch Plant 06·07573, 7/29/2004
0660970004 Zanesville Plant #2, Concrele Batch Plant 06-06763, 4111/2002
0660970006, Zanesville Plant #4, Concrete Batch Plaint 06·07449, 32S/2004
Proposed Sites:
Name of .Site

lrash

Point Pleasant 304-360· 740-446-3344

NOTICE OF SECOND and comment on the
PUBLIC HEARING
County's
proposed
The Meigs County RHP application.
Commissions intend· Written comments will
to apply tor the be accepted until 1:00
USDARural Housing pm, ~prll1 0, 2008, and
Preservation P!Ogram. may be malted to Jhe
This program provides Meigs
County
home repair assls- Com m I ssi one r ·s ,
lance to eligible very Courthouse, Pomeroy,
low Income house· Ohio 45769.
holds who own and If a participant will
-occupy their homes. need auxiliary aids
Ohio hao been allocat· (Interpreter, bralled or
ed $277,391.51 for this taped material, assls·
program. Applications live listening device,
will not be approved other) due to a dlsabll·
lor more than Iitty per- lty, please conl~ct
cent of the states allo- Gloria Kloes, Clerk,
cation to a single enti- prior to April t 0, 2008
· ty. On Man:h 20, 2008, at (740) 99_2·2895 In
the County conducted order to ensure that
Its llrst public hearing your needs will be
to Inform citizens accommodated. The
about
the
Rural Meigs
County
Housing !'reservation Courthouse Is handl·
program, what actlvl· capped accessible.
ties are eligible, and Baaed on the needs
oJhar
Important assessed, the follow·
requirsmants.
lng activity will be
A second public heor· undertaken In the
lng will be held on Meigs County with the
April 10, 2008 at 1:15 USDARural Housing
p.m. at the Meigs Preaervallon program
C o u n t y · application.
Commissioners office, Jim Sheela, President
Meigs Counly Court Meigs
County
Hou&amp;:e, Pomeroy, Ohio, Commissioners
to allow citizens an (3) 25
opportunity tO review
Public Notice

Mobile Homes for Rent In •Washer/dryer ~up
One acre + Restricted Lot Point Pleasant &amp; GallipOits •All electric- averaging
on Watson A!.I, Bidwell . Ferrv. HUO accepted call
$60-$60/monlh
$18,000.00. Call 740-441 · 304-675-3423
•Owner pays water, sewer,

Sale: BIS &amp; mattress 112$120, Ful $150. 0 $225.
Rocker Recliner $150. 2 pc
LR Suite $325. Table &amp; 4
chairs $300. Mollohan Furn.
202 Clark Chapel Ad. 388·
0173

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

proposal that require• a cash Invest·
ment le present.&lt;:~ to you . Thle Is true
even If the offtlrlng 11 from a well·lnt•n·
tlonld pt~r.an you e~~n trust. His or har
Judgment might be faulty.

PISCES (Fab. 20·Maroh 20) - If ~ r
anantlon 11 focuaed a61aly ori an
objective that only you deslr'tl to f*r•
form- and about which othara couldn't oare I••• - ba prepared to go II

alona and possibly ba

labeled •• 111r-

Mrvlng.

§at Sometfiina to s
to that S_pecia( Somepne

Say it in .

q-'fie C(assifteds!

SOUP TO NUTZ
'1bo can'T J!Jsr waSH
eve~'/11-IING- ~~-

Ha~ lb Set'Cif&lt;llllt.

O&gt;lPRS
lloll\lTh9 ...

fA&gt;M THe

c.an'r

1f.te'l'

au. :ruST

GeT 8lONG '?

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

:Tuesday, March 25, 2008
.ALLEY OOP

Tuesday, March 25, 2008
FARM

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily: Sentinel • Page BS

EQUIPI\IfNf
3 acres fof Sale oo SandhiH For rent or sate. located in

Ad $25.oop. 304-895-3929

Bidwell, 3BA.

EllmView
Apartments

2 balh.

Unlumished. If sold must be

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR mo~~ed. Call 388·8446 or

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek 615-830-4499
~Central
heat &amp; AJC
Rd, 441· 1111
---~----

Find all the
news that
matters
to you.

'

9772

bath,
Prime residential building lot
$450/monlh
ond
deposk.
in Rio Grande on Lake Dr.
$24,900. Phone 260·495· Call 740-645-7765
5114
Taking applications 10&lt; 2BR.
No pels. S275/month
IH \ J \I"'
$200/dapook. 446-3617
Nice

1!9alhpolis JiBailv l!;ribunr

tJoint ~lrasant ll\r!Jtlitrr
The Daily Sentinel
ilunbap m:imrs -i&gt;rntinrl

NOTICES

2BA,

2

Shellv·Mechanicsbura
Shelly-Springfield
Sand and Gravel
Shellv-Coshocton
Shelly·Oslrandet·Ouar~

I Shelly-Lancaster
I S.nd &amp; Gravel

(304)182-3017

e

Trailer for rent and lot for rent Gracloua Living 1 and 2

·also, bot~ In Green Terrace
Bedroom Apts. al Village
Mobile ~orne Court. Call
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
740.245-5041
Mlddlepon, lrom $327 10
3 Bd. · lbalh·WID-HU-HUD·
$692. 740-992·5064. Equal
approved.Good references.
APAR'IMINIS.
Housing OpponunRy.
5450 Ma.~-$400 dep. 740·
FQR ltJiNr
416-·2232.
Honeysuckle
Hills
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Apartments now accepting
4 Bedroom House tor Rent ments, furnished and unfurapplications lor I and 2 Br
$600/rent
$600/deposit nished, and houses in apts. Localed on Colonial
(740)446-4060 or 367-7762 Pomeroy and Middleport,
Drive nexllo Holzer S0&lt;1ior
4BR, 2 baths at91 Cedar St. security deposit required, no Care Centt)r. No rental
pets, 740-992-2218.
assistance at this time. Rent
$650 per month + $650
deposit. References req. - - - - - - - - slarts al $320 and $350.
1br &amp; 2br all utilities paid in Equal Housing Opportunity.
740-388-1100

r

ACROSS

Deere lately? Vou'll be sur·
prisedl Check; out our used
inventory
at
WWW . CAREQ . COM
Carmichael Equipment. 740446-2412

Phillip
Alder

•

John Deer A 1947 Tractor,
Electric Start High &amp; tow
Transmlsson , New Alms,
Tires &amp; Paint. 2002 Hard
04
Craftsman riding Top For CJ7 Jeep. Call949·
ITIOWGf, u H.P. Kohler, 42" 2305 for lnlormation.
cut, hydrostat trans. $700.
Yamaha Alto
Saxophone, Lely Redder Rake Reese
Modal
YAS-62 $1600.' 8ft, Drum Mower. $2,000
each Have Manuals Tom
740-446-1305
Brown 304·692·2632
JET

I I ~\ '"'I'« HU

AERATION MOTORS
Aepalred, New &amp; Rebuilt In

r10

Storage

IISSEll

• Q J 9
• 5 3

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

etaTIICTIU

..t....

A~

'====:':":

Wednesday

MASON MOWER
304-773·5061
304-882·3294

Servicing Lawn

&amp; 1985 Olds OeHa B8, 1 owner

Friday, 8am·4:30pm. Closed $1500. 1976 Classic Olds 98

Trncto", Mowers,

Thursday, Saturday . &amp; $3000. Both E•c Cond. Both
Sunday. (740)446--7300
for S4000. Attar 4pm. 446-

Tillers, Murray.
Craftsman, MTD,

ic, air: 99 Jeep Wrangler 4
cyl., 5 spd. Take your choice
$5700. 04 Buick LeSabre
77,000 miles $6700. B&amp;D
Aula Sales, Hwy 160 N. 740·

S-Service
10 Years

acre

ljouse or Re'nr Racine Area. Beautiful Apta. It Jtckaon
No pets. Caii74D-992·5858. Eltltll. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 to '$560.
EquaI
~•
740-44 6-2568.
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
14X70 3 Br. mobile home Opportunity Provider and
$350 renl, 250 dep. No Pels.
Employer.
740·742·2714.
Beech Sl., Middeporl, 2 br.
2Br at Johnsons Mobile tarnished apt., no pets,
Home Park. Call446-2003 dep.&amp;
ret.
requtred,
740
92
0165
19
1
2BR on Private lol on
•
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis Clean! Clean!
Clean!
city schoOls. $550 rent 0 own 1own GaIll po ,.IS ap1.,
BR'
includes all utilities. $500
upstairs. 2 . 2 Baths.
deposit ref. required. 740- $500 446 9•09
446-2847 or 645-1668
- - ·. , ·
-'- - - - - CONVENIENTLY
LOCAT·
2Br, I balh, CIA, No pels. ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
1624 Chelhem Ave. 740· Townhouse
apanments,
446·4234 or 740·208·7861
and/or small houses FOR
3br, bath wilh addition, dish· RENT. Call (740)441·1111
washer, Country Setting, for application &amp; Information.
Jericho area. $425/monlh Tara
Townhouse
plus Deposit &amp; Lease. Day Apertmenls, Very Spacious,
304-273-6622 or evening 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
304·674·6204 ,
Balh, Aduk Pool &amp; Baby
Ideal lor! or2people,refer· Pool, Pallo,' Start $425/Mo.
ences. no pets. 5 miles from No Pets, Lease Plus
Gavin. no calls after Security Deposit Required,
6pm.441·0181
(740)387·0547.

·c

MOBFOR!LED~

Public Notice

I

-------Public Notlca

Street Address

City

5441 Casev Rd.

Mecltanicsbura

4301 S. Charleston Pike
45500 CountY Rd. 23
8328 Watkins Rd .

3232 Loaan·Lancaster Rd.
Shellv·Weslerville
6715 Weslerville Rd. ·
Sheff;;:-~mbus Limes one 3300 Jackson Pike
_I "h•"• -Lockbourne
• 4"' Lnnrlonfirnvonort Rd.
Shellv-Marblecliff
2650 Old Dublin Rd.
SheiiV-Tri·Countv Ouarr
4664 Hardin-Marion Rd.
Sh~II~·Hardin Quar!Y
12484 State Route 701
Shell~· Alexandria
1400 Th•m l'lrl.
A8?4 Ml V•rnon Rrl,
Shell~·:&gt;t. Louisville
Shellv-Belle Center
1558 Countv Rd. 105
SheiiV-East Libertv
4704 S. Stale Aoule 292
Stoneco. Inc.
• 'Di•
00.0
I limo "'ty. "'"""
Stoneco, Inc. Maumee Ouarrv
1360 Ford St.
Shellv·Racine
49947 State Route 338
Stoneco Inc. Coline
6430 Karch Rd.
Shelly-East Fultonham
.OU•n:v
.
"'"" "•lo;!n Rrl F•&lt;l
Shellv-Dresden
1985 Memorial Drive
Stoneco, Inc.·
Rockv Ridoe Quarrv
3017 N. Stale Route 590
Stoneco, Inc.·
I wh;.., c~•
r l'lrl
•Rnn
Stoneco, Inc.· Auolalze
13762 Counlit Road 179 ·
Shelly·Chillicoll1e
Sand and Gravel
1177 Honetown Rd.
Shellv·AIIied Corn.
3848 Erie S.W
She~V--:.Jetterson Material
85805 Stale Route 14
ShellY-York Center .
20620 Soanaler Rd.
Stoneco , Inc. ·
Scott Quarrv
2384 Ritchie Rd .
Shelly·WIIIOW Island
31330 State Route 7
Stoneco . Int.· Po~aae
11580 S. Dixie Hiahwav
Stoneco Inc.·
Wyandol Dolomite
t794 County Rd. 99

Sorinafield
Coshocton
Ostrander
Lancaster
Westerville
Grove Cit\
L
m•
Hlllia rd
Kenton
Kanton

New•rk
Belle Center
Zanesfield

. .___

IIiJI

in~~~~....:-=:....~

Clark
Clark
Coshocton
Delaware
Fairfield
Franklin
Fr•nklin
Fmnklin
Franklin
Hardin
Hardin
;,,,.,i
Lleklnn
Locan
. Locan

AKQ106 5

• 10 6
+K10 7 4:2

South
Pass

HaNIOOCI

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I'

$64

YOlJ'~f

per
month

FlflST

·------_.1

(404)456·3802
CARGO/CONCESSION 196ll River Que.en house·
- - - - - - - - TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE- boat $3000 . Contractors
Retaii/WarehouMIStorage NECK·
HITCHES. truck topper. fits smaller
Locallon In Gallipolis 1600 CARMICHAEL . EQUIP· lruck. $150. 256·1710 or
sq. ft. building $400 mo. ol1 MENTICAAMICHAEL 645·7550
street par~ng calt Wayne at TRAILERS SALES &amp; SER· ~~,;:;;;~--":"'"""1
(404)456-3802 . .
VICE. SPECIAL 20FT
c~ &amp;
GOOSENECK FLATBED
MoroR HOME'l
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
•riljo~~H~cxmtOIJI;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;~ TRAILER INVENTORY AT 1983 Camper, 29ft, sleeps
~
WWW . CARMICHAEL" 4, self contained, AC!Heet,
· - - - - - - TRAILERS.COM 740·446· 304-675·5752
~5
--------------Sale: Berber Carpet $5.95
AV Service at carmichael
yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.
Traitors 740·446·3825
Mollohan Carpet. 2212
Eastern Ave, Gallipolis, Oh
. 740-446·7444

r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Coding Clerk
.Holzer Clinic or Gallipolis
Successful applicants will have CPC, RHIT or
equivalent coding experience. CPTIICD4
CMJHCPCS knowledge/experience desirable.
Medical terminology experience desirable.
Skilled in basic math
Skilled In typing and 10-key calculator.
Compuler!PC aptiiUde desirable

Competitive benefit package including:
Health, Dental, Life, Disability, 40l(k) &amp; Profit
Sharing ·
·

I

'Insured
•Experienced
References Available'
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

Roofing 1

~ ~~
~

.BARNEY

I'VE DECIDED LIFE'S TOO SHORT
TO WASTE MY TIME ON
RUMORS AN' HEARSAY
ELVINEY !!

·THE BORN LOSER
·r fl.,{{£ '(OJ
'iES W~'( ~
C.E:Kifo..\1-1 '(OlJ

V.C. YOUN G Ill

; v-11-\1'..I t'fl\
! TELLI~

IJ9?·G?1 r,
0

'(()\.)?

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Nfelime guarantee. local references furnished. Establishsd 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 ,
Basement

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eatlmatea
740-367~0536

OT+1E:R'&gt; 1'\A'{ HAL.16N
T.HE 80s, ~UT To ME,
TH05E TEN ~EARs WERE
THE PINNAC\.E Of
MUSIC, CULTURE A~D ·
CLITTIN&lt;O • UGE FASHIOII( !.

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

HelpWanhld

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

•

VOU KNO~W~AT l1D00 .
IF I WERE VOU?

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

Wf.l'f' ARE: VOU 50
MI'\PW TO TALK TO ?

WELL, I'LL TELL VOU, BUT

FIRSI, TELL ME WHAT VOV
IWEii'&lt;E 601No TO DO BEFORE: I
ASKED VOU IF '(OU KNEW
I'D DO IF I WERE't'OU,

Jefl24114

. . . . . . . . .12:11 ..

'

PIYIIITIP PIICES.

f
-.•

Coding Education Coordinator
Holzer Clinic of Gallipolis
Successful apnlicanls ~ill possess an Associates
degree; at least one year of coding education
and auditing experience required; professional
designation such as RHIA, RHIT, CPC,
CPC·H, or CSS required - one or more
specialty proficiency preferred. Working
knowledge of coding/documentation guidelines
· required. Proven proficiency of CPT4, ICD--9CM
1-2-3, and HCPCS. A working
understanding of anmomy, physiology and
medical terminology. Experience with third
pi111y payor reimbursement. Ability Ia inleract
wilh administration, clinical and operational
managers, healthcare professionals and other
clinic employees. ·Ability to identify and
cultivate slrong professional relationships
emphasizing service excellence with Holzer
Clinic customers, working as a liaison between
internal and external customer groups. Excellent
communication
(oral and written) wilh a
proficiency in public speaking. Professional
bearing and appearance.
Proficienl wilh
specialized coding soflwarc, Microspft Word,
Excel and PowerPoim, as well as other soflwarc
products ulilized (Pinpoint, IDX, etc.), ·

WITH TCDA. Y'S ADVANCES
IN GENETIC ENGINEE~ING,
I SEE A.fUTI.JIE FILLED
WITH NEW SPECIES
OF A.NIMA.LS.

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing,. Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
74Q-653-9657

v

css:p,

Dresden

Muskinaum

Gravtown

Ottawa
'

Oakwood

Rauldlng

Chillicothe
Massillon
Streetsboro
West Mansfield

Ross
Stark
Summit
Union

Convov
Marietta
Po~age

Van Wert
Washington
Wood

Carey

Wyandot

You are hereby notified that this action of the Director is final and may be appealed 10 the
Environmental Review Appeals Commission pursuant lo Section 3745.04 of .the Ohio Revise Code.
The appeal musl be in writing and sel fo~h the action complained of and the grounds upon which the
appeal ·is based. The appeal musl be filed with the Commission within thirty (3) days after notice of the
Director's action. The appeal must be accompanied by a filing fee of $70.00 which the Commission, in
Its discretion, may reduce if by affidavil, you demonstrate lhal payment of the full amount of the lee
would cause extreme hardship. Notice of the filing of the appeal shall be filled with the director within
three (3) days of tiling with lhe Comm1ssion . Ohio EPA requesls that. a copy of the appeal be served
upon lhe Ohio Attorney general's Office; Environmenlal enforcement Section. An appeal may be filed
with the Environmental Review Appeals Commission at the following address :
Environmental review Appeals Commission 309 Soulh Fourth Street, Aoom 222
Columbus, Ohio 43215
All inquines concerning lhis action may be directed tol he contact 1denlified beldw. Michael Carper,
Ohio EPA SoUtheast District OHice, 740·385·850t
(3) 25

skills

Applicants may apply to:
Holzer Clinic
Hunian Resource Department
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipelis, Ohio 4563 I
Or fax to 740-441-3592
www.holzers;lipic.c:om
Equal Opportunily Employer.

"riS

THEY W., YFI~ALLY
BE 1\BLE TO CREATE
A. WINGED BOVINE.

AflfiNDN,

IF YOU WILL.

l/

'GARFIELD
WHAf 1&amp; fHI6 "VACUUM"

fHINC; OF WHICH YOU

35

tank

36 Upscale
cheese
37 Intense
38 Stein filler
39 Coffee dis·
pensers
40 Salt Lake
slale .
41 Genetic

Kid's wife

52 - be an
honor!
53 Raw metal .
54 Wimple
sporter

'1bur 'lllrlh&lt;IIIY:

~AK?

A nurnbar of substanUal opportunities
might be olfered through good frlEJnds
in the year ahead . However. lor raesons known only to you , you might opt
lo Igno re tllem, but then sadly you witl
end up regretting your lack of actio n .
ARIES (Marc h 21 -April 19) Good
concepts and worthwhile ldaes could
b8 abandoned or s u ti"dued if yo u psr·
sis! In viewing everYthing I rom a nega.tive perspective. In order to be successful. you must first t h ink p o sitive ly.
TAURUS (April 2 0- Ma.y 20) - If your
budget needs to bs held In check , II
would be wise to avo id a friend who .:.
lands to ble adravagant in h is or her
spending habits. This person will wear
yo u d own and bust your bank a c count.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Should
you and your mate hold strong opp osIng positions owr s o mething that is
lmp:lrtapt to both o f you , U would be
best to walt a couple of days before
acting on II. Events could change your
m ind.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - lady
Luck is not going to s upply you with
any frae rides to suc c e~ s. Yo u 're going
to have to do that yourse lf by maintaining a posilive attitude and the willIngness to do what 's necessary to
succeed .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - You are by
nature a good mixer. even when min·
gllng in unfamiliar social circles .
However. if you don't take the11me to
get to know people. you aren 't apt to
make any new friends .
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sept . 22) Needlessly form ing a partnership
arrangement might be more of a lia bility than en a s set. e specially if each is
depending upon the other tor the
sarrie Information that both lac ks.
Watch out.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0 ct. 23) II you
depen d upon Lady Luc k or anyone
else 'to help get things d one, disappointment Is all you 'll find. Roll up you r
sleeves and g ot to work if you want
results.
SCORPIO (Oc!. 24- NOv. 22) - If you
think with your heart and not your
head, a shrewd manipulatOr wlt l take
advantage of your generous na1ure.
EWn when you know you're being
had, you may still allow the person lo
dO SO.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) Your staying power Is Questio nable at
beat, causing you to au;u t a n.umber of
things that you'll never tl.nlah. Select
one thing at a ume In hOpes that you r
enjoyment will hold you to it.
CAPRICORN (Ole. 22-Jan . 19)- On
occasion, you can reward an unde·.
serving Pl.fiOn vou like ln1t1ad of •
Worthy one you don't. If you'r. not
careful, this pt~rltcular ch1ract.r flaw
might b1 lv1dentln your behavior now.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
are created !rom qootatoos by lamous people, past and pri!ISft't
EaCh Iefier 11111\e Clp!\81 stands lor nmar

Cel ebnt~ C.ph!!l cry~ rams

roaay·s due:c equa~ a
"W D W G 0 T X W A E Y N W X A M_E Y S
KWYES

TXVW

NWXAME

RYE

Y OWYG;
RAE

Y GWYK

TGANAXYK

V' K T E W G S T N W S R W G , "

•

ACWVE

NWT GN

KAVRSWXPWGN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION _;, "Sports is human l~e in microcosm.· · Howard
Cosell
'I though! lacrosse was whal you lioo il11a church.'· Robin W~liams

t::~::~l S(O"\\dl~-~r.~s·

:::

~~~~~~~~aAY~~UAN--~------

Rearran;o llfllts of
0 fovr
o:rombiod word•

lilt

b•
low 10 lomt lour •lmpfo w«d.o.

B u Dl y M

I
I
I I I! I I
1

11111
PWOHO

2

r

"'TjE;;.."

;,;,Nj,;....l_,_.rj-11

LT-1

!

"Bad weather always looks

=:-=:·==·==·==~~~

,.

wmse,"lhelittle
momboy,
told"her
frightened
when

L.

r

_,.;A~N...:D~·;.l..:W;...::.R.---~,

~ 1

16 I I 1
-L-...1--1---1.--L.....J

L..

A
"(ill

o

you look out the-.·

m.

Comploto
c:hudci• quoted
by -ftllln~ In !he mlalng wcrds

\'011 develop from llop No.

:r beloW.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

0 u~~'G~8 ~N~~~E Lf~ERS

I ·I I ·I I·I l

SCRAMolE"IS ANSWERS 3 '2 " • o8
Wbiten- Clown- Quash- Nipper- WISH to LEARN
'The important thing." the professcr told his eduCation class,
&gt; that eveiy child should be given the WISH to LEARN

·ARLO &amp; JANIS
!~LOOK!~

AHH£D00~

TO ~OE'!&gt; fl!()/l. ..

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20•Fib. 1 8) CaNiully .arutlnlze every detail It a

Give Yourselr or
Your Child The
Gift of Music

PianolK.eyboard
Lessons
. June VanKranken

28 Years E.perience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

740-992-9752 .
Competitive benefit package including: Heallh,
Dental, Life, Disabilily, 401(k) &amp; Profit Sharing

UKE, IF YCXJ WA.NT YOUR
PET TO LOOK.ACERTA. IN
WA.Y, SCIENTISTS CA.N
ACTIVATE AGENE,
COMBINE It WITH
ANOTHER ANIMAL'S
GENOME. AND
CREATE EXACTLY
WHAT YOU'RE
LOOKING FOR.

AstroGraph

By B&amp;intca Bed• 08ol

~ PEANUTS

Manley's
-Recyc,llng

Help Wanted

29

type
37 Landfill
41 Groio out
43 Valuable
thing
44 Machine
part
·
45 Mr. Sandier
46 Sotto48 Cookie man
49 Promonlory
50 Sundance

Here is the second deal from the sevenlabia duplicale in Hobe Sound. Fla., lasl
month, where one table passed it out but
IWo olhers bid game.
I do not know how the ·auctions' went, but
this one seems sensible.
Some Souths would open two spades,
hoping 1o show the diamonds on the
nexl round, bul I do not like lhal style:

Wedne•day, March Q8, 2008

• Decks

··-ltfdllll........

A

Another no~bid
and game-bid deal

G

iBIG NATE

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
·Doors, Winclows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Ro9m
Additions

Pass

high·card lhe
points,
the'hand
excellent
six-card
Anhough
West
-has only
11'
, suit and easy rebid make ~ easily worth
an opening bid. Then.North has an auto·
malic takeout double, showing short
club·s and length in the other three suits.
SO JEST GIMME TH' JUICY STUFF
Easl now has a tricky bid. He musl do
YA KNQW TO BE TRUE
something with nine points, t.&gt;ut raising
whal mi\111 be a three-card club suil is
chancy. Of course, one no-trump with
lwo low spades is hardly appelizing, bul
at least lhis response describes the
strength and nature of East's hand.
Now Soulh should nol lhink ' eight
points," bul ' double Iii." He is easily worth
his leap lo lour spades.
This contract made once and went down
one once. Obviously, the successful pair
got its diamond ruff. Yes, down two is
possible: Diamond to East's ace, diamond ruff, club to Easl's queen, dia·
Tl-l.t. Oil-\01.. fl.t&gt;-.Lf C,OC')"'' mond ruff, and wait tor a heart trick. But
that is unrealistic. (Here Is an ,idea for
~ 0\IE:.~
experts: Assuming you normally lead
'(0\.)R,I-\(fl.D! ace from ace-king, lead the king from
ace-king when you are thinking about
shifting to a singleton at Irick lwo.)
Note that five clubs doubled cosls only
100 points, which is cheap if you are nol
going lo de!eal four spades.
'

'

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Pass

East
I NT

~""to..~\&gt;

HOME

IMPRoVEMENTS

27

36 Cake-pan

"t..,......,E$

Gunen ,

Pnm 'IO\ r lh"
II' [ to{ I f •!I II

23
24

Instant lawn
Hansoms
Holds
Memorable
decade ,
Biology gel
Ms. Bovary
Sci·fi gun
Formal ball
Root beer
treal
Psi follower
Cal Teeh ri·
val
Part of LAX
Zeus, to
Romans
Statuesque
model
Bad-mouth
Bard's river
Diner sign
Reply at a
wedding
(2 wds.)
Brewery

slrand
42 Woolen cap
44 Gave in,
slangily
47 Elbow room
51 Humane
Society
goal
55 Bathroom
item
56 Knight's
weapon
57 For real
58 Choose
59 Brooks or
Gibson
60 Fender
mishap
14 Santa 61 Oolphtn's
winds
· 17 Weir6home
sounding
birds
DOWN
19 Hymn ftnale
1 Feudal un· 22 - del
derllng
Fuego
2 Spoken
23 Breaking
3 The Banana
news
Boat Song . 24 Coffee or
(hyph.)
Island
4 Cholla and 25 Squashed
· nopal
circle
5 Back when . 26 Go to the
6 Flying fox
polls
7 Mumbai Mr. 28 Water pipe
29 ·Count
8 Rudders
9 Jacques'
calories
girlfriend
30 Thought
1o MeJro haze 31 Ex-frosh

1~!~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~==~~====:::~:~~-~~S~

Patio and Porch Decke
WV0311725

(I

f!:

~· ®

VInyl Siding I Painting(

.'"

~~;

~~ i
~

:::! ~

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•Reasonable Rates

Vf~¥
PATI~NT--­ ! ~_,~~

YouTuB~ TI'IIS1

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r404

MY

MINI&gt; If I.

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Pass

North
Obi.

Opening lead: •

Al)d Furmmre

www.•• ·

West
1 ""

4•

I.

i.O

20
21

34

Vulnerable: Neither

cOr

MaJ0/1 Golf Course

12
13
15
16
18

Dealer: South

Advertl'se
•n th1's
1
space

1st Riwd to left above

1
4
8
11

32
33

• 10

Stop &amp; Compare

~~~~~~~~!

:cow and BOY

Lucas
Meigs
Mercer

I r.ley__CeDJA•

• 7 2
• 98
"K 85 3
" QJ '
• 3
t A8 6 5
ofoAKJ 9 8 2
• Q 76 '
South

9 month old gray Parrot
female, starting tO talk, whislie, wlcage. 740·742·3706.

rl5

Ea!lt

140-992-1611

446-6865 ,
~=H:•rv::e:y::R:o:•d:M::•so:•:·::W::V~~======~
-------Quality cars, trucks, vans
Slanlng
"$1500
IO $6300.
_
Financi ng
available
with
Md
d
A
warranh•.
COOK
1
8
o ern
a room pt., Squirrel Dog tor Sale 2 MOTOR''s
J ~
p
_c_•'-'(:...7_40:..1446-0
__
390___ years old, pup 8 months old
, ,. 328 8~,;1\SOn Ike.
740~· 0103
304·675-6132
One SA apt. 76 Vine Street,
Gallipolis. $125/week. UliliTRUCKS
ties included. 740-367-7886
...,
FOR SALE . . .
Rooms lor Rent. No petS.
F•bu
ca•~~~err
nAI"''
00 Tacoma, 4 cyl. auto, 4x4
Cell 74Q-992·7508.
"~--J!.Vl.llrMuu
ext cab, loaded, exc. shape.
'uca•ekcablaetrJ'.oo•
Twin Rivers Tower is accepl· L.o.-.;;iiiiiliiliiillio_.J after Spm. Asking $9500.'
ing !iPJ)Iicatlons for waiting · (2) 9' New Holland Hau 245•5946 or 645•3743
'
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br, Bines $1200/Gach. '(1) 7'
1996 Ford Ranger, Ext Cab,
1
Automatic, 3.0 engine. 304·
apartment,for
the NewHollandHavBine$500.
elderly/disabled call 675·
Heall)l duly log spliHer $500. 675_2032
6679
Equal
Housing Olher mlsc. larm equip. 388- ~~~..:----~-,
~O:i:ppor-rlu-nRy~~--...., _9a_o_5_ _ _ _ _ _ _
WM~R!!a.E'J/
YOUNG'S
~
Stanley TreeFOR~&lt;;!_EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
.......,,
BUILT,
VALLEY
Trimming
·--iiiiitiiii.ii._.l H 0 R S EI ll V E 8 T 0 C K 4-wheeler 300EX, $1 ,000
&amp; Removal
RtlaiUWareltouHIStorago TRAILERS, LOAD MAX ii71i40e446;;;;,;·4;;:060~~~-"''
Room AddltiOne I
'Prornpl and Quality
Location in Gallipotis1600 EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
BoATS &amp; MOTORS
Remodeling
sq. "- building $400 mo. ol1 CARGO . EXPRESS &amp;
FOR SALE
NewO.regn
Work
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
'
street parking call Wayne al H 0 M E S T E A DE R

~

Applicants may apply lo:
Holzer Clinic
.Human Resource Department
90 Jackson Pike
Galllpells. Ohio 45631
Or fax to 740-441-3592
www.bob&amp;rc:Uplc.com
Equal Opportunity Employer.

'

.

"C

County

I LurA&lt;
Maumee
Racine
Celina

available. All. utilities paid setter $9,200 call 740·4~8·
except electric. March Rent _16l!itl"6--"'!"---..,
Special $100 oN Rent
Please call304·674-0023 or
ru:~
304·610•0776 lor mors
t'OR SALE

MONTY

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Briggs &amp; Strauon

·4388

H - Honest
I - Integrity

fridge., dshwshr., 2.75
~;:~:e~r~-~ pw:~~rR:f. ~eqs~
oH
Hwy
124.
$600mo/$400dep. 740·742· 740·367-7453 or 645·7214
1,151
2BR apt (740)44Hl194

:m:o·:"'~

41 1
:

A 9 7 2

West ·

• New Homes

~·'a10'

Sc~ap MetalS Open Mooday, - - - - - - - -

4 A J 43
•

\1 111 \

Channel. Flal Bar, Steel tlon.needscalaly1icconverlGrating
For
Drains, or. Asking $2200. Call 740·
Driveways &amp; Wal-ys. L&amp;L 709-6339.

0.1·25 ·011

IDIERT

NEW AND USED STEEL 01
Hyundal
As:cent
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
For
Concrete,
Angle , 65,310 miles, good condi- •

Tuesday,

Nonh

H1ll's Sell

' '-..;.-..;.. .:.ii,..-111
Slocl&lt;. Call Ron Evans, 1·
600·537·9528.
Lw-..iii'OiiRiiSiiALEiiiiii-r
Hours
- - - -- - - ,
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

4BR, 2 F Bath, 2 car _o1_63
_ _ _ _ __ _ - - - - - - - -

Public Notice

I

Have you priced a John

at1ached gar., 2 car
Jordan Landing Apartments. Portable Sawmill for SSie,
detached gar., . out bldg., 1BR, WID hOOk-up, stove &amp; 2.3 Bedroom Apartments Sharpener, blades &amp; hElM 98 Jeep Wrangler. automat-

PUBLIC NOTICE
ISSUANCE OF PRE-APPROVAL TO RELOCATE A PORTABLE AIR CONTAMINANT SOURCES FOR
SIDWELL MATERIALS, INC.
Ohio EPA has received a request to pre-approve rslocalion of the following portable air contaminant
sources owned and operated by Sidwell Materials, Inc. to the following locations as identnied below.
Ohio EPA believes that the identitied of operations will not cause appreciable degradation of the air
quality in the area surrounding the subject s~e(s) and therefore approves the stte(s) listed below,
pursuant to Ohio Administrative Code (OAC) rule 3745·05(E). Relocation of any source to any of the
listed sttes requires the permitee to submit a not~ication to Ohio EPA atleasl fifteen (15) days prior to
relocation of the source.
,
·
Facility ID, Facility Name, Facility Description, PTI #, Issued
0660950006,'TriSon Screen Plant, Aggregate Screener, 06-07965, 6/2212006
0660950007 Irock ADS-20 Crusher Aggregale Crusher 06·07702 4119/2005
06609500t2, Eljay Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06.()7964, 6/22/2006
06609500t3, CEC· Minyu Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06·07966, 6/2212006
0660950014, lrock 300 Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06-08028, 3116/2006
0660950015, Chie~ain 1400 Power Screen, Aggregate Screener, 06-07255, 11/18/2003
0660950016, Eljay Horizonta.l Screen Plant, Aggregate Screener, 06·08029, 4/27/2006
06609500t7, lrock 150 Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06-08032,6115/2006
06609500t9 , HP200 Cone Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 06·08092 and 06-068306 61t5106 and 6/20/02
0660950022 , Irock 450 TPH Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 17·1583 and 011·08123 12/3198 and 6/15106
0660950027, Hazmag Crusher, Aggregate Crusher, 13·03400 612812001
0660960023, 3406 CAT Generator, Diesel Generator, 06·07790, 6116/2005
0660960044, 3412 CAT Generator, Diesel Generator, 06-07857,9/20/2005
0660960045, 3456 CAT Generalor, Diesel Generator, 06·07858 9/20/2005.
0660960046 3456 CAT 2 Generator, Diesel Generator 06·07863, 9/B/2005
0660960055 3508 CAT Generator Diesel Generator 06.()7573 7/29/2004
0660970002 McNeilus Concrete Painl, concrete Balch Plant 06·07573, 7/29/2004
0660970004 Zanesville Plant #2, Concrele Batch Plant 06-06763, 4111/2002
0660970006, Zanesville Plant #4, Concrete Batch Plaint 06·07449, 32S/2004
Proposed Sites:
Name of .Site

lrash

Point Pleasant 304-360· 740-446-3344

NOTICE OF SECOND and comment on the
PUBLIC HEARING
County's
proposed
The Meigs County RHP application.
Commissions intend· Written comments will
to apply tor the be accepted until 1:00
USDARural Housing pm, ~prll1 0, 2008, and
Preservation P!Ogram. may be malted to Jhe
This program provides Meigs
County
home repair assls- Com m I ssi one r ·s ,
lance to eligible very Courthouse, Pomeroy,
low Income house· Ohio 45769.
holds who own and If a participant will
-occupy their homes. need auxiliary aids
Ohio hao been allocat· (Interpreter, bralled or
ed $277,391.51 for this taped material, assls·
program. Applications live listening device,
will not be approved other) due to a dlsabll·
lor more than Iitty per- lty, please conl~ct
cent of the states allo- Gloria Kloes, Clerk,
cation to a single enti- prior to April t 0, 2008
· ty. On Man:h 20, 2008, at (740) 99_2·2895 In
the County conducted order to ensure that
Its llrst public hearing your needs will be
to Inform citizens accommodated. The
about
the
Rural Meigs
County
Housing !'reservation Courthouse Is handl·
program, what actlvl· capped accessible.
ties are eligible, and Baaed on the needs
oJhar
Important assessed, the follow·
requirsmants.
lng activity will be
A second public heor· undertaken In the
lng will be held on Meigs County with the
April 10, 2008 at 1:15 USDARural Housing
p.m. at the Meigs Preaervallon program
C o u n t y · application.
Commissioners office, Jim Sheela, President
Meigs Counly Court Meigs
County
Hou&amp;:e, Pomeroy, Ohio, Commissioners
to allow citizens an (3) 25
opportunity tO review
Public Notice

Mobile Homes for Rent In •Washer/dryer ~up
One acre + Restricted Lot Point Pleasant &amp; GallipOits •All electric- averaging
on Watson A!.I, Bidwell . Ferrv. HUO accepted call
$60-$60/monlh
$18,000.00. Call 740-441 · 304-675-3423
•Owner pays water, sewer,

Sale: BIS &amp; mattress 112$120, Ful $150. 0 $225.
Rocker Recliner $150. 2 pc
LR Suite $325. Table &amp; 4
chairs $300. Mollohan Furn.
202 Clark Chapel Ad. 388·
0173

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

proposal that require• a cash Invest·
ment le present.&lt;:~ to you . Thle Is true
even If the offtlrlng 11 from a well·lnt•n·
tlonld pt~r.an you e~~n trust. His or har
Judgment might be faulty.

PISCES (Fab. 20·Maroh 20) - If ~ r
anantlon 11 focuaed a61aly ori an
objective that only you deslr'tl to f*r•
form- and about which othara couldn't oare I••• - ba prepared to go II

alona and possibly ba

labeled •• 111r-

Mrvlng.

§at Sometfiina to s
to that S_pecia( Somepne

Say it in .

q-'fie C(assifteds!

SOUP TO NUTZ
'1bo can'T J!Jsr waSH
eve~'/11-IING- ~~-

Ha~ lb Set'Cif&lt;llllt.

O&gt;lPRS
lloll\lTh9 ...

fA&gt;M THe

c.an'r

1f.te'l'

au. :ruST

GeT 8lONG '?

�.,

Page B6 • The paily Sentinel

www.mydailyse,ntinel.com

Tuesday, March 25,

2008

AU the top seeds move on in NCAA tournament, so do three double-digit underdogs
BY EDDIE PELLS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

All the top seeds made it
through. So did a couple of
the country's top freshmen.
Stanford's coach will be
back on the sidelines. Duke
will watch the rest. of the
tournament from the couch.
George Mason is gone, but
three double-digit seeds with
George Mason-like dreams
remain.
After Sunday's games,
there are only 16 teams
remaining in the NCAA
tournament, though many of
-the story lines that existed
when. the br'\cket came out
are still alive and well ..
The conversation starts
with the No. I seeds.
· UCLA, Kansas, Memphis
and North Carolina all made
it through. The Jayhawks
and Tar Heels did it most
·impressively. winning their
four games by an average of
28. Memphis and UCLA,
meanwhile, looked vulnerable in their second-round
victories.
The Bruins, . in fact, lost
two points on Sunday even
though they didn't play.
NCAA officials said the
final score of their Saturdaynight win over Texas A&amp;M
should be 51-49 instead of
53-49 because a meaningless, last-se'cond dunk 'by

Powers·
fromPageBl
go back and take a look at
them. It's a quick turnaround, so we'll have to get
ourselves ready."
Kosta Koufos had 17
points and Othello Hunter
controlled the paint with a
career-high 16 rebounds to
go with II points.
"Othello played like a
man tonight and did a
tremendous job on the
glass," Matta said.
Asked the last time that
his coach had paid him such
a compliment, Hunter

Russell Westbrook didn't
.come before the buzzer.
"We've been gettin~
everybody's best game,'
Bruins coach Ben Howland
said after UCLA barely
escaped. "That's why this is
the greatest sporting event in
all of American sports,
because anybody can beat
anybody."
Speaking
of
which,
UCLA's next opponent in
the · W~st Regional is
Western Kentucky, one of
three double-digit .seeds
remaining in the tournament.
The J2th-seeded Hill toppers
were part of the craziness in
Tampa,
where · upsets
reigned and 12th-seeded
Villanova also advanced out
of the Midwest Regional.
The Wildcats were one of
the final bubble teams to
make the tournament, and
wound up as one of .the few
pieces of good news for the
Big East, which took eight
team's into the first weekend
-. more than any conference
-and left with only three.
Louisville rolled through
its two· ~ames, including a
78-48 wm over Oklahoma
on Sunday, and West
Virginia also advanced with
an upset over secon' ;eeded
Duke.
The Mountaineers, who
play Xavier next in the West,
are coached by the com-

and
said,
grinned
"Tennessee, probably."
In that game, he had his
previous best in rebounds
with 14 against the sixthranked Volunteers.
Jerome Randle had 18
points and Ryan Anderson,
averaging 21.4 a game,
added II for Cal, making its
first
appearance
in
Columbus since Dec. 23,
1949. . .
·
,
"It wa~ an off night for
me," Anderson said. "I can't
sa)' it was all me. They defimtely played great defense
. throughout the game."
The lead never dipped
below 14 points again after
the Buckeyes opened the
second half with a 7-0 run

Johnson 's next game, knocked out another No. 2
should he choose to stick seed, Georgetown, for an
around for ii, could be a encore.
good one, against Texas and
Kansas plays Villanova on
Rick Barnes in the South the other side of the
Regional in Houston.
Midwest bracket. Those
. The other South game pits familiar with their NCAA
Memphis,- a 77-74 winner history will note thal
over Mississippi State, matchup as a stark reminder
against Michigan State. The that not all underdogs have
Spartans, after being a popu- to be from nowhereland.
Jar pick to win the Big·Ten,
In 1988, it was Danny
didn't live up to expectations · Manning and K~nsas knockand played m11ch of the sea-. mg off heav1ly favored
son under the radar.
Oklahoma in .the finals .
It means freshman Kalin Three years earlier, Rollie
Lucas might not be as much Massimino ~nd Villanova
of a household name as pulled off one of the biggest
either · Michael Beasley upsets ever, in a 66:64 victo(Kansas State) and O.J. ry over Georgetown for the
Mayo (USC) - both of title.
.
whom are gone from the
'Nova is in the regional
tournament - or Kevin semis for the third time io
Love (UCLA) and Derrick the last four years.
Rose (Memphis), who still
In the East, . No. . 3
remain.
Louisville · plays No. 2
But maybe not for long. Tennessee and No. 4
Lucas combined with senior Washington State plays No.
Drew Neitzel to help the I NOrth Carolina. ·
Spartans pull away from Pitt · Form held perfectly there,
AP photo for a 65-54 win Saturday though the Volunteers strugXavier guard Dante Jackson, left, pressures ·Purdue's and keep Tom Izzo in the gled mightily against both
Marcus Gre,en during the first half in a second-round NCAA running for his fifth Final American and Butler, while
Washington State was surWest Regional men's basketball tournament game Saturday Four.
In
the
Midwest,
Big
Ten
prisingly impressive in
In Washington.
champion Wisconsin will blowouts over Winthrop and
bustible Bob Huggins, Trent Johnson of Stanford. · take on the NCAA's other Notre Dame.
though Huggins was hardly Ejected in the first half double_-digit surprise. That
Even bigger steps will be
the biggest newsmaker on against Marquette, Johnson would be
lOth-seeded taken beginning Thursday in
the coaching front over the watched from the locker Davidson,
which
beat Phoenix and Charlotte, N.C.,
weekend.
.
room as his team won by one Gonzaga for its first tourna- then Friday in Detroit and
Instead, that honor· went to in overtime.
ment win since 1969, then Houston.
to' extend a spurt in which old Cow Palace in San
they outscored the Golden Francisco -.Ohio State's
Bears 24-4 to take com- only national championship
mand.
in men's basketball.
"The last few minutes of
The Buckeyes started out
the first half they created slowly on Monday night,
some separation," Cal seemingly caught up in the
coach Ben Braun said. moment. The atmosphere
"That really hurt us."
was decidedly non-NIT The meeting was the first . more like a clash with a Big
between the teams since the . Ten heavyweight. Even
1960 national championship though the most recent bangame. Those Buckeyes, led ner hanging from the rafters
bysuper sophs Jerry Lucas . was for the 1992 Big Ten
and John Havlicek, along championship, St. John
with Joe Roberts, L11rry Arena became a hornets'
Siegfried, Mel Nowell and a nest.
·
. little-used sub named Bob · Down 19- 18 with 6 1/2
Knight,
pounded
the ritinutes left in the half, the
defending national champi- ,. Buckeyes scored 17 of the
on · Golden Bears of coach next 19 points for a 35-21
Pete Newe!l, 75-55 at the lead - Butler scoring nine

points, all on 3s, along with
thtee inside shots by Koufos
and a follow by Hunter.
They made just I of their
fromPageBl
first II shots behind the arc
before Butler hit three each met with a louder roar Dayton led 14-11 at the
from the crowd. After Cal time, but Illinois State made
broke the spell to cut the five straight shots to take a
lead to 35-23 on an 19-161ead.
The advantage went back
Anderson drive, Ohio State
continued-their hot streak in and forth the rest of the half
the second half to pull out before Roberts swished a 3•
pointer with five seconds
·
ofreach.
"It was our defense ' " left for a 28-all tie at the
.
Butler said of the key to the intermission·. Illinois State
spurt. "We turned them did most of its damage
over, which led to. easy inside in the first half,
buckets. I think they just outscoring the Flyers 18-6
lost me a few times and I in the paint as the Redbirds
took
advantage
and had I0 assists on their 12
knocked them down."
baskets.

Special education
. class learns by
making coffee, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.1111 I '\1 .... •\ol. -,-. '\o . 1· 1

• Buckeyes to face
Dayton next in NIT.
SeePageB1

BY BRIAN

MIDDLEPORT .
Middleport
Village
Council hired a new clerk
.for the mayor's court and
discussed new computer
hardware and software for
the court at Monday
evening's regular meeting.
Council hired Joyce Fry
as part-time clerk to
process court documents,
receive fines and perform
other clerical duties. A sec-

'

\\1 1\\. lll ~ tlail"'' "linl'l.&lt;·om

ond court clerk·also works
part-time and additional
hours . as a police department disP.atcher.
Counctl
authorized
Mayor Michael Gerlach to
purchase a new software
system for ·the court, based
on a recommendation from
the finance committee.
The software system is an
upgrade to a system now in
use, which Gerlach said is
·not adequate to handle the
court cases, because it is
designed for smaller courts.

.

Gerlach said fines issued by
the village have doubled
since the first of the year.
He said he anticipates fines
collection could reach
$50,000 ..this year.
Council also authorized
the purchase of a new laptop computer to operate
the software. The new laptop will allow the clerks to
work in different areas, as
needed, and will ensure
that the system is accessed
only by those authorized
•
to do so.

Fiscal Officer Susan
Baker told the finance
committee earlier Monday
that the software upgrade
will allow ·the court 'to
operate more efficiently,
and save the village the
cost of printe4forms.
The purchase · will be
made from a special fund
for computer equipment
made up of part of court
costs paid by defendants in
the court. The software will
cost $5,600, but the villa~e
will receive credit for tts

purchase of the ''ligh,t" system to be replaced.
Council approved a
proclamation declaring the
National Day of Prayer in
Middleport on May I.
Brenda Barnhart of the local
National Day of Prayer
Committee met with council to discuss the schedule
of events for the week-long
observance.
Participants will form a
"circle of prayer" around the
Please see Council, AS

Bv BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES
· Page AS
· • Dorothy Hawk
• Golda A. Heiney
· • Nedra Wilhelm Jones
·• Robert W. Reed

•. '•·

., ,. ,·. l;!J,
!.

"

'

'

'

ll

••

..WEATHER

Detatts on Pace A8

INDEX
a SECilONS- 12 PAGES

malnt'd 20J~.S55-615-55H
JN
77k- exc dvuli
") ...COMPACT
....u. • .,MV\ ..........
..._--

II :! h . ..! OII H

BSERGENTCPMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

·.

199.$ GOMPACT ,U l.., o il PW(. weli

\1{(

Conunents
taken on
wetlands,
water quality

I

Annie's Mailbox

A2

Calendars

A3

dassifieds

I

J. REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL,COM

. ~lion. See Page A2
• CSHAplans
benefit dinner for
Chester Courthouse.
See Page A2
• Grandparenting class
offered. See Page A2
• OOOT shares
short-term plan
for reopening Ohio 7.
See Page A3
• State to settle
svit.against patrol.
See. Page AS
• Fbr the Record.
.~~AS
.
[~:;\,egion Auxiliary active
;~mmunity service.
,
. Page A&amp;

304-675-1333
740-992-2155
.
www.mydailyreg~ter.com ww.w.mydailysentinel.com ~
~ssr·

\1

.

• Family Medicine:
Aching toe may benem
from rest, ice and

Joint Jleasant legister · . The Daily Sentin~l

\\111'\1...,11\'

Middleport approves court clerk, new software

SPORTS

INSIDE

·Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentine~ And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

•

•

Dayton

REACH 3 COUNTIES

Red Sox, Athletics
open season
in Japan, Bt

'

82-4

Comics

8s

l!.ditorials

A4
As

Obituaries

8 Section

Sports
Weather
f

. A6

aoo8 Oblo Valley Pulllloh1ntl Co.

'·

RACINE - The Ohio
Environmental Protection
AgelicY. is taking comments
by mall until April 9 and at
its April 2 meeting in
Racine
concerning
American
Municipal
Power-Ohio's
pendmg
water quality certification.
The OEPA meeting begins
at 6:30 p.m. at Southern
Elementary School inside
the cafetorium. During the
meeting an infonnatiop session abOut tlie pending certification will take place followed by questmns and
comments from the public.
So what exactly are residents supposed to comment
about? According to OEPA,
AMP-Ohio's "preferred alternative" involves filling a total
of 1.01 wetland acres and
10,359 linear feet of headwater stream' . The barge fleeting fac II 11 would involve
,&gt;lacing IL m&lt;&gt;&lt;'ring cells, six
·unloading cells and a 60-feet
wide by 15-feet deep channel
for equipment unloading.
Stabilizing the Ohio River
bank 1,800 feet upstream
from the barge mooring facility would involve excavating
the river bank.
.
According to OEPA, AMP
says stabilization would be
achieved using approximately 45,000 cubic yards of
nprap with an average diameter of I 8 inches. The OEPA
will also consider other alternatives resulting in lessor or
no impacts to Water quality.
AMP-Ohio is required to
seek this ce.rtification as is any
other entity that wishes to discharge dredged or fill material to waters of the state. AMP~
Ohio must obtain a water
quality certification from both
the OEPA and a permit from
theUrutedStatesArmyCoqm
of Engineers. OEPA's review
is to ensure the project will
comply with Oliio' s water
quality standards. ·
In a statement, the OEPA
said AMP-Ohio's proposed
project may result in a chans.e
from the current water quality · conditions in the Ohio
River and upland tributaries
. and wetlands, but cannot violate Ohio's water quality
standards that protect huptan
health and the environment.
The OEPA will consider the
technical, economic, social
and enviromnental as~ts of
the project before dectding to
issue or deny a water quality
certification.
·
. Written comments, concerns or support of the certification can he mailed to
Ohio EPA, Division of.
Surface Water, Attn: Permits
Processing Urut, P.O. Box
1049, Columbus, 43216. 1049. Those wishing to be
pi3Cef:l on an interested par~
ties mailing list may also use
this address. Correspondence
about this permit should reference OEPA project number
073145. '

c....._ Hoelllch/photot
Lef!.Qra Leifheit, R. N., left, draws blood from Cathy Nettles of Middleport to test cholesterol and glucose leveis at
Women's Health Day.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

They calculated body mass
iqdex, and provided colon
cancel' screening kits, along
. '
.
RUIT{.,AND - . Many with distributing educationMeigs County women got al material on nutrition and·
a better understanding of smoking cessation.
their current health condiThe mobile van from
tions and what preventa- Ohio State University's
tive measures they need to James Cancer Center was
take to remain healthy at brought in for the day to do
the Women's Health Day mammograms, free of
Rutland charge to those uninsured .
program · in
Tuesday.
or underinsured or with a
The . . Meigs
County high deductib)e. Also on
Can¢er Initiative with help site was a nurse practition- .
from its .'"Think Pink" pro- er from Ohio University's
gram, along with other Osteopathic· Medicine to
agencies and health care do breast examinations on
facilities provided free women.
Brian Hoffman, exercise physiologist at the Wellness Center
screenings for cancer, lung
O'Bleness
Memorial of the Meigs County Council on Aging, explains body mass
function, cholesterol, gluPluH see Clinic. AS
index results to one ·of the health clinic participants.
cose, and osteoporosis.
HOEFLICHCJMYDAILYSENTINELCOM .

.

.

.

April is 'Clean Up Month' in Middleport
BY BRIAN J. R.EED
BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - April ·
has been declared "Clean
Up Month" in Middleport.
Residents are asked to participate by cleaning· and
beautifying their properties.
Meeting Monday e~ening, .
Middleport Village Council
approved the proclamation,

'
"If we all try, Middleport . "This is the month we can
encouraging residents to pick
be that pretty town . all help, by cleaning up the
can
up litter, landscape and make
other cosmetic improve- again," Gerlach said. "I've yard, painting, planting
ments to their .properties.
been impressed with h(lw more flowers than usual,
"An image has developed ~any people are volunteer- picking up trash we see in
of what people want for mg !::&gt; work toward that the street and throwing it
·Middleport,"
Mayor goal.
away. If it is big, drag it .to
Michael Gerlach said. "It is
Gerlach said h~ has heard the curb and we' 11 try to get
the 'good old days,' pretty from man.Y residents an.d it hauled away on our reguhouses, flower beds, tree- for~er res1de~ts about the1r lar trash pickup days."
lined streets - a place to deme to 1mprove the
appearance of the village.
Please see April, AS
raise a family."

Meigs receives visit from rock hall of fame
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCPMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County will host two Rock
and Roll Hall of Famers this
Sunday
when Roger
McGuinn joins Fur Peace
Rancher Jorma Kaukonen at
the Fur Peace Station
Concert Hill! on St. Clair
·Road, Pomeroy.
The show is sold out as are
the station's upcoming con-

certs with Tommy Emmanuel
and Warren Haynes. .
Thi~ is McGQinn's second
visit to Fur Peace Station and
he'll be joining Kaukonen on
stage during the set on
Sunday. McGuinn was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in 1991 with his
group The Byrds which had
several hits .in the 1960's.
Soll)e of The Byrds' greatest hits include Mr.
Tambouri~ Man (1964), All

I really Want to Do (1965),
Thm! 1\trn! Thrn! (1965),
Eight Miles High (1966), So
You Want to be a Rock and
Roll Star (1967), Wasn't
Born to Follow (1969) from
the Easy Rider Soundtrack.
McGuinn is also known for
his familiar Rickenbacker
guitar and ·blending the
sound of Dylan's folk with
Beatles' rock1
Kaukonen was inducted
into the hall in 1996 with

members of )lis group ·the
Jefferson Airplane . . The
Jefferson Airplane received
acclaim in 1967 with the
release of its Surrealistic
Pillow album containing the
hits
White
Rabbit,
Somebody tb Love and
Embryonic Journey.
. For more information on
the concert series at Fur '
Peace Station Concert
Hall, go to www.furpeaceranch.com or cal/992-6228.

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