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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March 26,2008

Easter Egg Hunt .

'Grease is· .
the word,' A7

winners,A2

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Valley Lumber
&amp; Supply Co.
555 Park St, Middleport, Ohio
740-992-6611 1-800-733-3334
. Mon.-Fri. ·7 -5 • Saturday 7-3

INSIDE
• Meigs County Court
· News. See Page A2
·• Stream sweep set
April19 in Rutland.
See Page A3 .
. .• Unveiling of .ARC trail
· map set for Saturday.
See Page AS
• Stewart completes
basic training.
See Page A6
:.. April FAC exhibit
. showcases local artist's
work .. See Page A7
• OOofA expands
choice of care setting
.for older citizens.
See Page A8

} r,,. ,.
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' Id

Taylor Motors.
250 Columbus, Rd., Athens
740-59-HONDA
Toll Free 1·877-772-8993

1'06 N. 2nd Avenue
Middleport, Ohio
740-992-2825

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

. JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT,,INC•.

WEATHER

' · 2150 Eastern Avenue
- - , GallipoHs, OH
IHHCILAID

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., . EX
IND

YOUR CAl &amp;IIIUCK SUPERSTORE NEXT Ill WAL-MAIT
1900 EASTERN AYE. •GAUIPOUS, OH
Free 1-877-446-2282 • '*'*'~""•'0"1

Mnn. -S at. 8-7 • Sunday ll -5

2 SECI'IONS- 16 PAGI!S

&lt;;alendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Annie's Mailbox

9{f_etf Casft tif{ Payday?

OHIO VALLEY

CHECK CASHING &amp; LOAN

Party Barn
(740) 446-7619
(800)237-7716

218 Upper River Rll· Galllpoll1, Ohio
'I• Mile 10uth.of the Sllvwr lrldp

Comics

B7

Edi~orials

A4
A.5

'

Obituaries

446-2404

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rlaces to go
Sports

A7
B Section

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BY Bmt 5ERGENJ
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

MIDDLEPORT - Animals communicate with' people through an
unspoken understanding which spoken conversations between human
beings sometimes lack, making pet
therapy at places like Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center so important.
Recently, Shaggy, the downtown
dog who has been adopted by
Pomeroy businesses, made a visit to
Overbrook residents. It took people
reaching out to Shaggy to help
rehab her back into shape, allowing
Shaggy to pay back the kindness by
visiting Overbrook residents, many
who are also being rehabilitated.
Emily Casto, activities director at
Overbrook, led Shaggy through the
halls into the residents' rooms for a
quick hell.o and that unspoken con-

versation known only. to Shaggy
and the residents.
Resident Dorothy Burris, formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., had
dogs ~fore moving into Overbrook
with her favorite breed being .a
American Eskimo Spitz.
"They (dogs) will be there· when
·everyone else goes · away," Burris
said while patting Shaggy. "They'll
sit with you when no one 'else wm."·
Burris smiled at Shaggy's smile,
which is missing a few teeth, and
joked, "she must be . relation to
me" before similarly smiling back
at the dog.
.
"She's an angel," :Burris said as
Shaggy turned to leave but not before
siopping to speak io Burris' roommate Alta Dill and pose for a picture.
When Shaggy arrived at resident
. Patty Frazier's. room, Frazier recognized the dog immediately from her

Virginia Salser, who grew up in Reedsville and is now a resident at
Overbrook Rehabilitation Center, feeds Shaggy her favorite treat. cheeSE!.
appearances in The Daily Sentinel.
Frazier said she had saved the
newspaper clippings.
"I never thought I'd get to meet
her," Frazier said while petting
Shag~y and feeding the dog her
favonte treat, cheese.
A resident . who was unable to
verbalize well
could call
Shaggy's name and maneuvered
her wheelchair to the dog who sat
and shook hands.
"I Jove you, Shaggy," the resident
in the wheelchair said, clearly.
Resident Charles Grueser was
sure to take·a picture of Shaggy with
his Polaroid camera while Shaggy
v.islted residents in the dining hall.

Before leaving Overbrook a. tes.i,
dent down the hall from Shag~y
was calling "Lassie, Lassie" whtle
using one foot to steer his wheelchair. Shaggy was sure to stop and
say goodbye to the man who said he
used to have a bulldog.
Many residents remarked about
their former pets and how . ~hey
missed them, but the truly meal\m~,
ful conversations happeii~i:l:;.,. tl '.
silence while Shaggy sat best . '
those same residents who gave he~ a
pat on the head.
· .·
Call Casto at 992-6472 for mot;e
information oil the pet therapy pl'O'or if you're interested in bring-.
mg your pet to visit the residents.

wam

dips
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BY IRIAN J. REED

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· Daily specials.
for
in the drive-lhru

An unspoken understanding

Eastern musicians play the 'Big Apple' Jobless rate
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636 East Main Street Pomeroy, OH
992-6121
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Pet therapy .

BRE£011MYDA1LYSENT1NEL.COM

Rt. 2 By Pass Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-5200

PLEASANT
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HOSPITAL

a.th lerpnl/pllotoo

740•446•9777

Lil) Holzer
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Overbrook yesterday.
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grade levels; and specific ,
contact time requirements
for students in service provided by gifted intervention specialists.
Buckley implied that
meeting some of the
requirements, detailed in the
information released , will
require more in-depth study
before any decision can be
made on program changes
for Meigs Local. The intent,
however, according to the
superintendent, is still to
develop an individual di strict program for the talented and gifted .
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The new operating standards, effective July I,
accordipg to the ODE mformation., "significantly raises the bar for gifted education services provided by
districts while creating new
flexibility in providing
appropriate challenges and
supports for gifted and tal_.
ented students."
With the new standards
the main changes include:
More specific requirements
for the development and
implementation of written
education plans for gifted
students; increased flexibil~
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distributed copies of the
results of a survey of Meigs
Local parents and teacher
which showed an 84 percent
satisfaction rate wah the
current arrangement. He
also discussed a directive
from the Ohio DeP.artment
of Education deta11ing the
March 2008 revised or.:erat- .
ing standards for identifying
and serving gifted students.
The action was taken
"following
numerous
statewide research studies
and broad stakeholder
input," according to an
information Sheet released
by .the Ohio Department of
Education:

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HOEFliCHOMYDAILYSENT1NEL.COM
rentJy provides that service
to all school districts in
· POMEROY - The dis- Meigs County.
cussion on how the talented
The contention of the
and gifted program in the Meigs Board as indicated in
Meigs Local schools will be meetings is that, the district
carried out next year was could better serve the stucontinued at . Tuesday dents by operating as a sinnight's meeting of the gle entity. The intention,
Meigs Local Board of according to Superintendent
Education.
William Buckley, has been
Currently ·the district that the district would
contracts with the Athens- develop a program and have
Meigs Educational Service it in place when school
Center for the services of starts in the falL
the cooi'dinator and teach,
However, he reported at
ing staff for special . pro- Tuesday night's meetine;.
grams for students i\fenti- · that there may be a delay m .
fied as talented and gifted. achieving that·objective. He

• Ohio State beats
· Dayton, headed to
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Meigs Board postpones gifted program decisio~

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NEW YORK - Musicians with . the ·
Eastern High .School concert band and bell
choir performed last week at IBM world ·
· headquarters in New York,'N.Y.
The high schoolers and their adult chaperones, led by Music Director Cris Kuhn, also
enjoyed several days of sightseeing and
exploration of the city.
Students were on spring break last week,
and traveled by tharter buses. 53 members
of the band and bell choir and II parent
chaperones went along for the trip'.
The band performance was on March 21,
and before and after, the group enjoyed dining at the Hard Rock Cafe! and Bubba Gump
Shrimp Co., and a nighttime view of the city
skyline from the Top of ~ Rock atop
Rockefeller Center.
''Our days were fun-filled and busy," Kuhn
said. '1be weather was sunny and cool, and a
very brisk wind was blowing each day while
many of the kids enjoyed touring New York's
burroughs in open-air double-decker buses."
These "country kids" also enjoyed glips,es
of the many, · many ethnic cultures of the
city, visiting Little Italy. Chinatown,

PleaM ... Eattem.AI
'

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BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLVC!&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - With
the exception of two area
counties, unei11ployment
rates in southeastern Ohio
dipped in February after
posting a sharp increase
during January.
County -by-count y data
was released Tuesday by the
Ohio Department of Jobs
and
Family
Services,
revealing that the jobless
rate for Gallia and Meigs
counties had declined. but
not by any great amount.
Gallia's rate declined by
four-tenths of a percent,
from 7 percent in January
to 6.6 percent in February.
Meigs County dropped
five-tenths of a percent,
-..m..a ·photo from 11 .2 percent in
The Eastern High School concert band and bell choir performed at IBM
Pl.. u 1H Jobless, AS
World Headquarters in New York City last week.
'I

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PageA2

·coMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

•

•

•

•
•
•

Stream sweep set
-Truth hard to determine over Internet April19 in Rutland

...- - - - - - AND MARCY SUGAR

E(g hunt winners, 10 to 12 years old

•

Easter Egg Hunt winnerS

Egg hunt winners, 1 to ~ age group

MEIGS Co

• (

POMEROY
-. Meigs speeding; Michelle D.
County Court Judge Steven Folmer, Pomeroy, $30 and
L. Story recently processed costs, . speeding; .Kerrick J.
the following cases:
Forrest, Kernersville, N.C.,
Kevin
T
Adkins, $30 and costs, speeding;
Davisville, W.Va., $30 and Julia A. Fout, Columbus,
costs, speeding; John W. $30 and costs, speeding.
Armel, Little Hocking, $30
Matthew
R.
Frank,
and costs, seat belt violation; Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
Erin K. Aukward, Roanoke, probation, spotlighting, $100
Va., $30 and costs, speeding; and costs, probation, hul)t
.Penny M. B&lt;)fker, J&gt;omeroy, deer/archery/ after hours,
$30 and costs, ' speeding; $100 and costs, 30 days in
Scott A. Barnes, Tomball, jail 27 suspended, probation,
Texas, $30 and costs, speed- hunt/shoot deer from vehiing; Cynthia L. Bascom, • cle, $100 and costs, probaBluefield, W.Va.,' $30 and tion, hunt raccoon I vehicle I
costs; speed'mg; Andre"' T. bow, $100 and costs, probaBauer, Pomeroy, $85, I0 tion, shoot from public roaddays in jail, suspended; pro- way, $100 and costs, probabation, passing bad checks; lion, spotlighting, $400 and .
Ozzie E. Blair, Portland, $20 costs, probation, hunt deer
and cost~. failure to control; w/o permission; Rachel L
Joseph
.0.
Boakye, Garey, Middleport, $33 and
Columbus, $30 and costs, costs, speeding; Layton M.
·speeding; Michael L. Bobby, Gillen, Groveport, $30 and
·illythewood, S.C., $30 and costs, speeding; Chad A.
.costs, speeding; Brian K. Graham, Chesapeake-, $30
Bobo, Millfield, $30 and and costs, speeding; Carl J.
:cost.s, speeding; Sharon K. Haas, New Albany, $30 and
·Bonds, Guysville, $80 and costs, speeding; Randy D.
:costs, speeding; Judson P. Haning, Pomeroy, $350 and
.Boso, Huntersville, N.C., $30 costs, 30 days in jail, 27 sus': and costs, speeding; Joseph pended, probation, phy. cont.
A. Brammer, Sutherland, Va., veh. intox; Paula E.
$30 and costs, speeding; Hannaway, Charlotte, N.C.,
Dustin . J. Brewer-, Dublin, · $30 and .costs, speeding;
$30 and costs, speeding; Thomas C. Harte, West
.William C. Brewer, Pomeroy, Rutland, Vt.; $70 and costs,
'$30 and costs. speeding; illegally
taking
deer;
:Amy R Buratti, Dublin, $30 Heather G. Haynes, Canal
·and costs, speeding; Charles Winchester, $30 and costs,
F. Burk~an , Hilliard, $30 and speeding; Glenn G. Heeraux,
costs, speeding; Brenda S. Columbus, $30 and costs,
Casto, Lancaster, $30 and speeding; Virgil D. Hoback,
costs, speeding; Lucas S. Ashland, Ky., $30 and costs,
Clark, Brownsburg, Ind., $30 speeding; Phillip C. Hobbs, ·
and costs, speeding; John Q. . Venetia, Pa., $30 and costs,
·Clarke,_Pomeroy, $350 and .. speeding; ~ameron ~-Horn,
costs, phy. cont. veh. intox.; Rockbridge, $30 and costs,
Mark A Compson, R.acine, ~at !Jelt violation; Phillip V.
$30 and costs, speeding; Hovatter, Middleport, $30
Gerald Conkle, Bidwell, $35 and costs, speeding.
and costs, probation, passing
Joshua
H.
Hunter,
bad checks; Daniel A. Cooke, Columbus, $200 and costs,
Columbus, S30 and costs, I0 days in jail, seven susspeed mg.
pended, probation, no ·operVlctor
G.
Counts, ator's license; Christopher
Syrac~se, $30 and costs, D. Irwin, Oliver Springs,
speedmg;
Robyn
N. Tenn., $50 and costs, huntDashnaw, Vanburen,, $30 ing "'/out special pennit;
and costs. speeding; Ronald Dennis R. Irwin, Clinton,
G. Davi s, Pomeroy, $175, Tenn., $50 and costs huntfive d&lt;~ys in j~il , suspended, ing w/out special pennit;
probauon. d1sorderly con- Joey L Jarrell, Racine,
duct; Bradley D. Dawson; $100 and costs · hunt/shoot
Winterville.$ _100 and costs, deer from, vehi~le; Daylon
45 da~s m Jail,_ suspended, G. Jenkins, Pomeroy, $30
probauon. en mmal damag- and costs, seat belt viola- .
mg/endangeri ng; Charles R. tion; James B. Johnson,
Dill , Pomeroy, $50 and Hartsville, S.C., $30 and
costs, three days in jail, sus- costs, seat belt violation;
pended. probation, disorder- Cornelious .S.
Jones,
ly conduct: Cheryl R. Dunbar, W.Va., $30 and
Dipiero, Charle,ton. W.Va., costs, speeding; Roger. L.
$30 ~ nd co&gt;ts. equipment Jones, Racine, $70, 30 days
vtola tlon: Kobcrt · P. Drake, in jail, suspended, probaAibany, $30 and costs, seat tion, disorderly conduct;
belt . violation; George S. Erik P. Kendall, Hickory,
Drew, Marion, $30 and N.C., $30 and costs, speedcosts, speeding; Gregg A. ing; Douglas J. Kerr,
Dufort, Westerville, $30 and Onnonito, Wy., $30 and
costs, speeding; Michael E. costs, speeding; Joseph B.
Durst, Letart, W.Va., $20 King, Pome(oy, $50 and
and costs, assured clear dis- costs, p~obation, drug
George
M.
lance; Steven J. Eby, abuse;
Simpsonville, S.C. $30 and Kleinman, Portsmouth, $30
costs, speeding; Trny G. and costs, equipment violaEdwards. Che,hire. $20 and tion; Paul M. Lafayette,
costs. failure 10 regi&gt;te r: Plain City, $30 and costs.
Harold F. Elli&lt;&gt;tl. Racine, speeding;
David
G.
$20 and costs. tinted glass; · Lambert, Pomeroy, $30 and
Walter A. Ellis, Rutland, costs, speeding; Joseph A.
$30 and wsi~. se&lt;ll belt vio- Larin, Clinton , Ma., $30
lation ; Paul D. Fcrgw.on, and
costs,
speeding;
Louisa, Ky... S&gt;JO and cost.s, Melinda K. Laudermilt,

Ohlinger, Kia Sattt;rfield, Lacie
Mullins and Chase Stewart The
7-9 age group winners includ~d
Ravep Rogers, Austm Adams,
Caleb Jamora, Jimmie Wood,
Nick Newell, McKenzie Roush
and Christopher Courtney.
Taking honors in the 10-12 age
group · were Ali sa PinsoA,
Makinley Higginbotham and
Monika Barlar.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- filled with goodies. Popcorn was
The Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp; handed-out by the Auxiliary and
Rehabilitation Center recently the PVNRC residents enjoyed
hosted the amiual Easter Egg -watching the children gather
Hunt sponsored by the Pleasant eggs. Winners in the 1-3 . age
Valley Hospital Auxiliary and group included .Cameron Divers,
Medical Staff. Over 75 children, Ethan Rogers, Justin Wood,
from I through 12 years of age, Quintin Utterback, Allyson
sought out hidden eggs around Gillespie, Jada Kent and Landon
the grounds for pri.zes ranging Richmond. Claiming prizes in
from cash to large Easter baskets the 4-6 age group · were Jaxon

(OURT .NEWS

Middleport, $20 and costs,
failed to yield; David S.
Leffler, Amesville, $30 and
costS; speeding; Christopher
J. Lucskay, Wickliffe, $30
and
costs,
speeding;
Jeannette N: Gardella·
Lutter, Minneapolis, Minn.,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Joshua P. Lynch, Lancaster,
$30 and costs, speeding.
Vikrant Mastoli, Duputh,
$40 and costs, speeding;
Michael
T.
McCall,
Columbus, $30 and costs,
Cathy · S.
speeding;
McClelland, Monroeville,
N.J., $30 and costs, equipment misuse; Kenneth W.
McCloy, Coolville, $20 and
costs, unreasonable speed
for conditions; Casey R.
McCourt,
Ravenswood,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Nicole C. McDaniel,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
speeding; Ryan A Mingus,
Athens, $30 and costs,
speeding; Brett A. Moone.
Coolville, $30 and costs,
speeding; Thomas A. Moore,
Ravenswood, W.Va., $20
and costs, unreasonable
speed for conditions; Tarrent
J. Morrison, Columbus, $50
and costs, possession;
Richard L Neal, Bidwell,
$400 and costs, overload;
J.
Nutter,
Anthony
Reedsville, $40 and costs,
probation, speeding, $200
and costs, 180 days ·in jai I,
170 suspended, probation,
driving under suspension,
$30 and costs, probation,
seat belt violation; Deborah
A. Oliver, -Pomeroy, $20 and
costs, . failure. to control;
Joseph Osei, Fayetteville,
N.C., $30 and costs, speeding; . David L Parsons,
Millwood, W.Va., $130 and
costs, hunting without valid
NR license, $70 an costs

hunting w/out special per- ing; Perry A. Smith, Racine, archery I after hours; Phillip
mit; Marjorie M. Parsons, $200 and costs, 30 days in Wtley, Harts,.W. Va., $30 and
Ripley, W.Va., $30 and costs, jail, suspended, probation, costs, · speeding; Seth "L
L. driving under suspension; Williams, Detroit, Mich.,
speeding;
Rachael
Parsons, Racine, $30 and Phillip D. Smith, Walker, · $100 and costs, equipmeJJt
costs, speeding; Earl 0. W.Va., $20 and costs, traffic misuse; William T. Williams,
Pickens. Syracuse, $50 and cont. dev./ signs; Richard A. Long Bottom, $130, prolitcosts, illegally taKing deer, Smith, Malvern, $30 and tion, illegally taking deer,
$70, hunt/shoot deer from costs, s~ding; Kayla R. $130, probation; hunt . deer
vehicle; Shannon S. Pierce, Stover, Racine, $25 and w/o pennissiQD; James R.
Racine, $100 and costs, costs, traffic cont. dev/signs; Winfree, Columblls; $30 and
huntlshoot deer from vehi- Patrjcia L. Streetman, costs, speeding; David: J.
cle; Michael E. Post, St. Ravenswood, W.Va., $200 Wolfe, Pomeroy, $200 and
Albans, W.Va., $30 and . and .costs, 10 days in jail, costs, 30 days in jail, '27 sqscosts, seat belt violation; suspended, probation, no pended, probation, no.driver
Shelly A. Price, Rutland, $30 operator's license; Mark W. license, $25 and costs, proand costs, speeding; Janetta Suver, Crown City,_$30 and bation, use of unauthorized
R. Proffitt, Racine, $20 and costs, ·seat belt violation.
plates; Morgan J. Wolfe,
costs, assured clear distance; .. Bradley ' A. . Swisher, Minersville, $200 and costs,
Jan B. Reed, Columbus, $30 Racine, $30 .and costs, fl,lil- 30 days in jail 27 suspended,
and costs, speeding.
·ur~ to .control; Roger S. probation, no driver license;
Johnny
S.
Robert, , Thompson, Cary, N.C., $30 Jacob T. Woods, Blacksburg,
Catlettsburg, Ky., $30 and and costs, speeding; Brent E. Va., $39 and costs, speeding;
costs, speeding; Nikki' L. Tribett, RavensWood, W.Va., Peggy A. Wypyhoski; Fon
Robinson, Racine, $30 and · $30, speeding; Dustin R. Pierc~, Fla. , $30 and costs,
costs. speeding; Sean G. Vaninwagen, Middleport, speeding;
Dwayne . A.
Rogers, Columbus, $30 and $30 and costs, speeding; Young, Bidwell, $400, 180
A.
Vanmatre,
costs, speeding; Robert G. Clark
Roush, Racine, $30 and Middleport, $30 and costs, days in jail, 177 suspended,
driving under suscosts, speeding; Dennis J. seat belt violation; Kathleen probation,
pension; Jonathan W. Young,
Sargent, Long Bottom, $30 E. Volpe, Westerville, $30 Salem, Va., -$30 and costs,
and
costs,
speeding; and
costs,
speeding;
Shannon
Scholderer, Benjamin S. W~ldman, speeding.
Middleport, $35 and costs, Springfield, Va., $30 and
three days in jail, suspended, costs, speeding; Derek B. ·
probation, passing bad Wears, Oallipolis, $30 and
checks; Aaron J. Sellers, costs, speeding; Gregory F.
Portland, $100 and costs, Welker, Lancaster, $30 and
illegally taking deer; Corbin costs, speeding; Joyce A.
J. Sellers, Portland, $100 Werry, Chester, $20 and
and costs, illegally taking costs, equipment misuse;
deer; James D. Sellers, Long Chadd
M.
Whitlach,
Bottom, $100 iuid costs, ille- Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
• FRIE W1 Ttdlnkll eU,ori
gaily taking deer; Johnny R. ; probation, spotlighting, $100
• """"' Meuoglng ·loeoC&gt;.,.., buddy"''
Sellers, Racine, $850 and and costs, probation, shoot
• 10 ti'MIIIGOree. . wtltl W~H
costs, 180 days in jail; 174 from public roadway. $100
•eu.om $18ft Plu• . news. wnther &amp; moret
suspended,
probation, and costs, probation, spotlicense suspended, DWI ·lighting, $100 and costs, 30
6X last.rl'
~-----)WII3 .... ~·
and/or drugs of abuse; Marlc · days in jail, 27 suspended,
lltn Up Onllnol ..-.locllNotcom
E. Shuller, Pomeroy, $85, 30 probation, hunt I shoot deer
days in jail, suspended, pre- from vehicle, $400 and
bation, passing bad checks; costs, probation, hunt deer
Bryan A. Smith, Lexin~on, w/o permission, $100 and
Va., $30 and costs, speed- costs, probation, hunt deer I

( f! ;,-,;

.

: Dear Annie: I just dis·covered that my 14-year-old
::daughter, "Melissa," has a
-;MySpace account where
:she is posing as a 21-year, old. She posted pictures of
: some other fe·male and said
.they were of herself.
·: A military man, 27 years
old, has been e-mailing her,
and some of his letters are
rather explicit Of course, I
will take steps with my
daughter to see that this does
·_Oot hap~n again and I hope
commumcation between us
gets better. But I am furious
_wjth · this man. Perhaps he
legitimately thought she was
Zl, but I don't believe it.
Any adult with half a mind
could ask the right questions
and discover the writer was
·a child. I could tell from her
'first e-mail. Assuming he
isn't stupid, there is nothing
. else to think but that he is a
predator.
·
I have his name, phone
)lumber and address, and I
have turned that information
over to the authorities in my
state and the military. Please
advise anyone legitimately
trying to fmd a mate online
to ask the right questions to

detennine whether the future
mate is of age. For example,
ask a supposed 21-year-old
if she is in school and what
subjects she's taking. If she
tells you she's studying fracti.ons and geometry, you
know she's barely out of
grade
school.
Disappointed and Furious ,
Dear
Disappointed:
Don't be naive. Any girl who
would lie about her age
could just as easily lie about
what subjects she's taking 'in
school. We know you are
frightened for your d®ghter
and worried about what
might have happened, and
we ~on't blame you. But it is
very difficult to discern the
truth over the Internet. Yes,
adults need to be circum- ·
spect, but a'll parents should
supervise what their children
are doing online, teaching
them how to protect themselves from predators and
why delibera(ely misrepresenting themselves can lead
to major trouble or worse. ·
DearAnnie: What do you
make of a man who finds it
necessary to tell you about
his past love life, how many
women he's been with, how
great sex is when you are
high (I don 't do drugs), and
who says he is "used to hav-

ing sex and lots of it"?
I have been seeing this man
for three· years, and every so
often he comes out with this
stuff. I nave told him I don't
lik,e it and don't want to hear
it, but he can't seem to cease
and desist. We are both in our
50s with grown children from
previous marriages. - Too
Much Information
Dear Too Much: We
think your boyfriend is terribly .insecure and desperate
to impress you with ·his sexual experience. You might
point out that those who are
truly knowledgeable tentl
not to brag about it.
Otherwise, if you can't
ignore him, try to laugh
about it. We suspect that will
take care of the problem.
Dear Annie: The letter
from
"Confused
in
California" broke my heart.
His best friend, "Ale)(," is
gay and Dad "t'on't let them
hang out anymore. As you
can see, homophobia hurts
everyone, not just gay people.
There isn't much a 15year-old .can do when he's
living under the tyranny of
· such a misguided fat he(
except try his best to continue with what he believes is
right and be a true friend .
One day soon, both boys

will be able to move away
from home and be friends
with . 'whomever they like,
but sadly, not soon enough.
I'm a 26-year-old gay
man, and when I came out, I
was lucky to have friends,
gay and straight, who cared
enough to help me through
the difficulties with my parents. If "Confused's" mother
doesn't share Dad's backward attitude toward gay
people, he should continue
talking to ber, even if she is
unable to persuade his father
to be more reasonable.
I wish both kids the best
The next few years are going
to be tough, and they will
need the kind of strong friendship they have in each other.
- Supportive in Quebec
Annie's Mailbox is writtell by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Writeto; Ant~ie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by l)ther
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page .at www.creators.com.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - The eighth
annual Leading Creek
Stream Sweep will be held
from 9 a.m. to noon ,
Saturday, April 19 at Jim
Vennari Park in Rutland.
"This will be the eighth
annual Stream Sweep ansi
is a great opportunity to do
something good for the
environment, have fun, eat
pizza and get a free Tshirt," sald Raina Fulks,
Leading Creek watershed
coordinator with the Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District.
. Individuals, community
and youth groups are all
invited to participate.
"This is a great and easy
opportunity for youth
groups like 4-H, scouts or
~ tudent organizations to
help make a difference in
the1r communities," Fulks
said.
The Leading Creek
Stream Sweep coincides
with Earth Day and is
sponsored by the Meigs
SWCD, Rutlail'd Township
Board of Trustees, Meigs
County Transfer Station
and the Leading Creek
Conservancy District.

In 2007, 35 volunteers of
all ages turned out to help
clean up the Leading
Creek watershed, which
consists of approximately.
150 sq uare miles and
extends from the Ohio
River at Middleport to
Albany. Volunteers filled
two dump trucks, belonging to the Rutland
Township
Board
of
Trustees, with trash collected from throughout the
watershed, from locations
around Albany, Langsville,
Rutland,. Bradbury and
Laurel Cliff.
Gloves and trash bags
are provided. For their service, volunteers will
receive a Leading Creek
· Stream Sweep T-shirt and
pizza for lunch. For more
information or to register
contact the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District in Pomeroy at
.
992-4282.
Tons of trash and debris
have been removed from
Little Leading Creek and
Leading Creek.over the past
eight years through this litter clean up. In addition, the
2008 Meigs SWCD Photo
Contest winners will also be
.announced at the Stream
Sweep on April 19.

Worksite Well ness Conference

Community Calendar
I •'

'

''

_Public meetings

·. · Thursday, March 27
· POMEROY Meigs
-Soil
and
Water
'conserVation District, regu- .
lar meeting, II :30 a.m.,
·office on Hiland Road.
Monday, March 31
RACINE - . Southern
·LOcal School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media room.
: POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
·a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
Wednesday, April2
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., Meigs County Healt)l
:Department, third reading
·amendments to sewage treat- .·
ment rules, third reading
jncrease in food service operarion license fees in regards
to vending machines.
•

Thursday, March 27,2008

ANNIE '.S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHELL

Egg hunt winners, 7 to 9 age group

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

__The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, ~arch 27, 2008

Clubs and
organizations

Thursday, March 27
TUPPERS PLAINS . Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall.
SYRACUSE - Meigs
County Board of MRDD, 4
, p.m. at Carleton School.
HARRSONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
. to meet II a.m. Blood pres, sures will be taken, potluck

and meeting to tollow. · .
Saturday, March 29
RACINE -. Meigs CAN,
discussion on revisions to
Gatling Ohio's proposed min,
ing permit, 4 p.m.-5:30,p.m.,
Racine Library, call949-2175
for more information.
· Monday, March 31
POMEROY- OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public Library.

Church events ·
Friday, March 28
GUYSVILLE - Revival~
7 p.m. Friday and Saturday at
the
Carthage
Gap
Community Church, Rdute
50, Guysville. Friday, "Never
Too Late'.' will sing; Sartuny
Anderson will
preach;
Sl\turday, Jarvis Famil}' will
sing; Calvin Jarvis will speak.
Saturday, March 29
RACINE ·-Meigs CAN,
discussion on revisions to
Gatling Ohio's proposed mining permit, 4 p.m.-5:30 p.m.,
Racme Library, call949-2175
for more information . .
Sunday, March 30
MIDDLEPORT - The
Cornwell Twins, Blaine and
Boyd, will sing at the 10: 15
a.m. service a\ the Middlepon
First Baptist Church.
MIDDLEPORT
Humor Sunday to be
obsetved at the II a.m. service of the Middleport

Solutions to Rising Healthcare Costs

Presbyterian Church.
CARPENTER
Carpenter Baptist .Church ,
30711 Route 143, Albany,
to host community fellowship, 6 to 8 p.m. 'The
Buckeye Gospel Singers" to
be featured. Potato bar with
trimmings served. Everyone
welcome to free event.
Questions, caltPastor Whitt
Akers, 591-1236.

April4, 2008-8 am- 12 pm
Middlepo·rt Church of Christ
Family Life Center
Keynote Speaker Sharon Covert

-

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

Who Should Attend:
• Administrators • Human Rt&gt;.Source Personnel ·
• Wellness Directors • WeUness Committee Team Members
•.Healthcare Professionals • Government Officials
• Anyone Concerned About Rising Healthcare Costs

Youth.events
· Saturday, March 30
POMEROY - pomeroy
Merchants
Association's
annual
Easter
egg
hunt, II
.
a.m. at. Bob Roberts football
field in Pomeroy. Kids hunt in
.age groups. Prizes awarded.

Birthdays
Monday, March 31
POMEROY .- Maxine
Goeglein will celebrate her
84th birthday today, cards can
be sent to 35610, Aatwoods
. Road, Pomeroy, 45769.

Sponsored bY=· --~;s~---~~~~~--~::~=~
Jr
Heart

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·Pomeroy
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PageA2

·coMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

•

•

•

•
•
•

Stream sweep set
-Truth hard to determine over Internet April19 in Rutland

...- - - - - - AND MARCY SUGAR

E(g hunt winners, 10 to 12 years old

•

Easter Egg Hunt winnerS

Egg hunt winners, 1 to ~ age group

MEIGS Co

• (

POMEROY
-. Meigs speeding; Michelle D.
County Court Judge Steven Folmer, Pomeroy, $30 and
L. Story recently processed costs, . speeding; .Kerrick J.
the following cases:
Forrest, Kernersville, N.C.,
Kevin
T
Adkins, $30 and costs, speeding;
Davisville, W.Va., $30 and Julia A. Fout, Columbus,
costs, speeding; John W. $30 and costs, speeding.
Armel, Little Hocking, $30
Matthew
R.
Frank,
and costs, seat belt violation; Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
Erin K. Aukward, Roanoke, probation, spotlighting, $100
Va., $30 and costs, speeding; and costs, probation, hul)t
.Penny M. B&lt;)fker, J&gt;omeroy, deer/archery/ after hours,
$30 and costs, ' speeding; $100 and costs, 30 days in
Scott A. Barnes, Tomball, jail 27 suspended, probation,
Texas, $30 and costs, speed- hunt/shoot deer from vehiing; Cynthia L. Bascom, • cle, $100 and costs, probaBluefield, W.Va.,' $30 and tion, hunt raccoon I vehicle I
costs; speed'mg; Andre"' T. bow, $100 and costs, probaBauer, Pomeroy, $85, I0 tion, shoot from public roaddays in jail, suspended; pro- way, $100 and costs, probabation, passing bad checks; lion, spotlighting, $400 and .
Ozzie E. Blair, Portland, $20 costs, probation, hunt deer
and cost~. failure to control; w/o permission; Rachel L
Joseph
.0.
Boakye, Garey, Middleport, $33 and
Columbus, $30 and costs, costs, speeding; Layton M.
·speeding; Michael L. Bobby, Gillen, Groveport, $30 and
·illythewood, S.C., $30 and costs, speeding; Chad A.
.costs, speeding; Brian K. Graham, Chesapeake-, $30
Bobo, Millfield, $30 and and costs, speeding; Carl J.
:cost.s, speeding; Sharon K. Haas, New Albany, $30 and
·Bonds, Guysville, $80 and costs, speeding; Randy D.
:costs, speeding; Judson P. Haning, Pomeroy, $350 and
.Boso, Huntersville, N.C., $30 costs, 30 days in jail, 27 sus': and costs, speeding; Joseph pended, probation, phy. cont.
A. Brammer, Sutherland, Va., veh. intox; Paula E.
$30 and costs, speeding; Hannaway, Charlotte, N.C.,
Dustin . J. Brewer-, Dublin, · $30 and .costs, speeding;
$30 and costs, speeding; Thomas C. Harte, West
.William C. Brewer, Pomeroy, Rutland, Vt.; $70 and costs,
'$30 and costs. speeding; illegally
taking
deer;
:Amy R Buratti, Dublin, $30 Heather G. Haynes, Canal
·and costs, speeding; Charles Winchester, $30 and costs,
F. Burk~an , Hilliard, $30 and speeding; Glenn G. Heeraux,
costs, speeding; Brenda S. Columbus, $30 and costs,
Casto, Lancaster, $30 and speeding; Virgil D. Hoback,
costs, speeding; Lucas S. Ashland, Ky., $30 and costs,
Clark, Brownsburg, Ind., $30 speeding; Phillip C. Hobbs, ·
and costs, speeding; John Q. . Venetia, Pa., $30 and costs,
·Clarke,_Pomeroy, $350 and .. speeding; ~ameron ~-Horn,
costs, phy. cont. veh. intox.; Rockbridge, $30 and costs,
Mark A Compson, R.acine, ~at !Jelt violation; Phillip V.
$30 and costs, speeding; Hovatter, Middleport, $30
Gerald Conkle, Bidwell, $35 and costs, speeding.
and costs, probation, passing
Joshua
H.
Hunter,
bad checks; Daniel A. Cooke, Columbus, $200 and costs,
Columbus, S30 and costs, I0 days in jail, seven susspeed mg.
pended, probation, no ·operVlctor
G.
Counts, ator's license; Christopher
Syrac~se, $30 and costs, D. Irwin, Oliver Springs,
speedmg;
Robyn
N. Tenn., $50 and costs, huntDashnaw, Vanburen,, $30 ing "'/out special pennit;
and costs. speeding; Ronald Dennis R. Irwin, Clinton,
G. Davi s, Pomeroy, $175, Tenn., $50 and costs huntfive d&lt;~ys in j~il , suspended, ing w/out special pennit;
probauon. d1sorderly con- Joey L Jarrell, Racine,
duct; Bradley D. Dawson; $100 and costs · hunt/shoot
Winterville.$ _100 and costs, deer from, vehi~le; Daylon
45 da~s m Jail,_ suspended, G. Jenkins, Pomeroy, $30
probauon. en mmal damag- and costs, seat belt viola- .
mg/endangeri ng; Charles R. tion; James B. Johnson,
Dill , Pomeroy, $50 and Hartsville, S.C., $30 and
costs, three days in jail, sus- costs, seat belt violation;
pended. probation, disorder- Cornelious .S.
Jones,
ly conduct: Cheryl R. Dunbar, W.Va., $30 and
Dipiero, Charle,ton. W.Va., costs, speeding; Roger. L.
$30 ~ nd co&gt;ts. equipment Jones, Racine, $70, 30 days
vtola tlon: Kobcrt · P. Drake, in jail, suspended, probaAibany, $30 and costs, seat tion, disorderly conduct;
belt . violation; George S. Erik P. Kendall, Hickory,
Drew, Marion, $30 and N.C., $30 and costs, speedcosts, speeding; Gregg A. ing; Douglas J. Kerr,
Dufort, Westerville, $30 and Onnonito, Wy., $30 and
costs, speeding; Michael E. costs, speeding; Joseph B.
Durst, Letart, W.Va., $20 King, Pome(oy, $50 and
and costs, assured clear dis- costs, p~obation, drug
George
M.
lance; Steven J. Eby, abuse;
Simpsonville, S.C. $30 and Kleinman, Portsmouth, $30
costs, speeding; Trny G. and costs, equipment violaEdwards. Che,hire. $20 and tion; Paul M. Lafayette,
costs. failure 10 regi&gt;te r: Plain City, $30 and costs.
Harold F. Elli&lt;&gt;tl. Racine, speeding;
David
G.
$20 and costs. tinted glass; · Lambert, Pomeroy, $30 and
Walter A. Ellis, Rutland, costs, speeding; Joseph A.
$30 and wsi~. se&lt;ll belt vio- Larin, Clinton , Ma., $30
lation ; Paul D. Fcrgw.on, and
costs,
speeding;
Louisa, Ky... S&gt;JO and cost.s, Melinda K. Laudermilt,

Ohlinger, Kia Sattt;rfield, Lacie
Mullins and Chase Stewart The
7-9 age group winners includ~d
Ravep Rogers, Austm Adams,
Caleb Jamora, Jimmie Wood,
Nick Newell, McKenzie Roush
and Christopher Courtney.
Taking honors in the 10-12 age
group · were Ali sa PinsoA,
Makinley Higginbotham and
Monika Barlar.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- filled with goodies. Popcorn was
The Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp; handed-out by the Auxiliary and
Rehabilitation Center recently the PVNRC residents enjoyed
hosted the amiual Easter Egg -watching the children gather
Hunt sponsored by the Pleasant eggs. Winners in the 1-3 . age
Valley Hospital Auxiliary and group included .Cameron Divers,
Medical Staff. Over 75 children, Ethan Rogers, Justin Wood,
from I through 12 years of age, Quintin Utterback, Allyson
sought out hidden eggs around Gillespie, Jada Kent and Landon
the grounds for pri.zes ranging Richmond. Claiming prizes in
from cash to large Easter baskets the 4-6 age group · were Jaxon

(OURT .NEWS

Middleport, $20 and costs,
failed to yield; David S.
Leffler, Amesville, $30 and
costS; speeding; Christopher
J. Lucskay, Wickliffe, $30
and
costs,
speeding;
Jeannette N: Gardella·
Lutter, Minneapolis, Minn.,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Joshua P. Lynch, Lancaster,
$30 and costs, speeding.
Vikrant Mastoli, Duputh,
$40 and costs, speeding;
Michael
T.
McCall,
Columbus, $30 and costs,
Cathy · S.
speeding;
McClelland, Monroeville,
N.J., $30 and costs, equipment misuse; Kenneth W.
McCloy, Coolville, $20 and
costs, unreasonable speed
for conditions; Casey R.
McCourt,
Ravenswood,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Nicole C. McDaniel,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
speeding; Ryan A Mingus,
Athens, $30 and costs,
speeding; Brett A. Moone.
Coolville, $30 and costs,
speeding; Thomas A. Moore,
Ravenswood, W.Va., $20
and costs, unreasonable
speed for conditions; Tarrent
J. Morrison, Columbus, $50
and costs, possession;
Richard L Neal, Bidwell,
$400 and costs, overload;
J.
Nutter,
Anthony
Reedsville, $40 and costs,
probation, speeding, $200
and costs, 180 days ·in jai I,
170 suspended, probation,
driving under suspension,
$30 and costs, probation,
seat belt violation; Deborah
A. Oliver, -Pomeroy, $20 and
costs, . failure. to control;
Joseph Osei, Fayetteville,
N.C., $30 and costs, speeding; . David L Parsons,
Millwood, W.Va., $130 and
costs, hunting without valid
NR license, $70 an costs

hunting w/out special per- ing; Perry A. Smith, Racine, archery I after hours; Phillip
mit; Marjorie M. Parsons, $200 and costs, 30 days in Wtley, Harts,.W. Va., $30 and
Ripley, W.Va., $30 and costs, jail, suspended, probation, costs, · speeding; Seth "L
L. driving under suspension; Williams, Detroit, Mich.,
speeding;
Rachael
Parsons, Racine, $30 and Phillip D. Smith, Walker, · $100 and costs, equipmeJJt
costs, speeding; Earl 0. W.Va., $20 and costs, traffic misuse; William T. Williams,
Pickens. Syracuse, $50 and cont. dev./ signs; Richard A. Long Bottom, $130, prolitcosts, illegally taKing deer, Smith, Malvern, $30 and tion, illegally taking deer,
$70, hunt/shoot deer from costs, s~ding; Kayla R. $130, probation; hunt . deer
vehicle; Shannon S. Pierce, Stover, Racine, $25 and w/o pennissiQD; James R.
Racine, $100 and costs, costs, traffic cont. dev/signs; Winfree, Columblls; $30 and
huntlshoot deer from vehi- Patrjcia L. Streetman, costs, speeding; David: J.
cle; Michael E. Post, St. Ravenswood, W.Va., $200 Wolfe, Pomeroy, $200 and
Albans, W.Va., $30 and . and .costs, 10 days in jail, costs, 30 days in jail, '27 sqscosts, seat belt violation; suspended, probation, no pended, probation, no.driver
Shelly A. Price, Rutland, $30 operator's license; Mark W. license, $25 and costs, proand costs, speeding; Janetta Suver, Crown City,_$30 and bation, use of unauthorized
R. Proffitt, Racine, $20 and costs, ·seat belt violation.
plates; Morgan J. Wolfe,
costs, assured clear distance; .. Bradley ' A. . Swisher, Minersville, $200 and costs,
Jan B. Reed, Columbus, $30 Racine, $30 .and costs, fl,lil- 30 days in jail 27 suspended,
and costs, speeding.
·ur~ to .control; Roger S. probation, no driver license;
Johnny
S.
Robert, , Thompson, Cary, N.C., $30 Jacob T. Woods, Blacksburg,
Catlettsburg, Ky., $30 and and costs, speeding; Brent E. Va., $39 and costs, speeding;
costs, speeding; Nikki' L. Tribett, RavensWood, W.Va., Peggy A. Wypyhoski; Fon
Robinson, Racine, $30 and · $30, speeding; Dustin R. Pierc~, Fla. , $30 and costs,
costs. speeding; Sean G. Vaninwagen, Middleport, speeding;
Dwayne . A.
Rogers, Columbus, $30 and $30 and costs, speeding; Young, Bidwell, $400, 180
A.
Vanmatre,
costs, speeding; Robert G. Clark
Roush, Racine, $30 and Middleport, $30 and costs, days in jail, 177 suspended,
driving under suscosts, speeding; Dennis J. seat belt violation; Kathleen probation,
pension; Jonathan W. Young,
Sargent, Long Bottom, $30 E. Volpe, Westerville, $30 Salem, Va., -$30 and costs,
and
costs,
speeding; and
costs,
speeding;
Shannon
Scholderer, Benjamin S. W~ldman, speeding.
Middleport, $35 and costs, Springfield, Va., $30 and
three days in jail, suspended, costs, speeding; Derek B. ·
probation, passing bad Wears, Oallipolis, $30 and
checks; Aaron J. Sellers, costs, speeding; Gregory F.
Portland, $100 and costs, Welker, Lancaster, $30 and
illegally taking deer; Corbin costs, speeding; Joyce A.
J. Sellers, Portland, $100 Werry, Chester, $20 and
and costs, illegally taking costs, equipment misuse;
deer; James D. Sellers, Long Chadd
M.
Whitlach,
Bottom, $100 iuid costs, ille- Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
• FRIE W1 Ttdlnkll eU,ori
gaily taking deer; Johnny R. ; probation, spotlighting, $100
• """"' Meuoglng ·loeoC&gt;.,.., buddy"''
Sellers, Racine, $850 and and costs, probation, shoot
• 10 ti'MIIIGOree. . wtltl W~H
costs, 180 days in jail; 174 from public roadway. $100
•eu.om $18ft Plu• . news. wnther &amp; moret
suspended,
probation, and costs, probation, spotlicense suspended, DWI ·lighting, $100 and costs, 30
6X last.rl'
~-----)WII3 .... ~·
and/or drugs of abuse; Marlc · days in jail, 27 suspended,
lltn Up Onllnol ..-.locllNotcom
E. Shuller, Pomeroy, $85, 30 probation, hunt I shoot deer
days in jail, suspended, pre- from vehicle, $400 and
bation, passing bad checks; costs, probation, hunt deer
Bryan A. Smith, Lexin~on, w/o permission, $100 and
Va., $30 and costs, speed- costs, probation, hunt deer I

( f! ;,-,;

.

: Dear Annie: I just dis·covered that my 14-year-old
::daughter, "Melissa," has a
-;MySpace account where
:she is posing as a 21-year, old. She posted pictures of
: some other fe·male and said
.they were of herself.
·: A military man, 27 years
old, has been e-mailing her,
and some of his letters are
rather explicit Of course, I
will take steps with my
daughter to see that this does
·_Oot hap~n again and I hope
commumcation between us
gets better. But I am furious
_wjth · this man. Perhaps he
legitimately thought she was
Zl, but I don't believe it.
Any adult with half a mind
could ask the right questions
and discover the writer was
·a child. I could tell from her
'first e-mail. Assuming he
isn't stupid, there is nothing
. else to think but that he is a
predator.
·
I have his name, phone
)lumber and address, and I
have turned that information
over to the authorities in my
state and the military. Please
advise anyone legitimately
trying to fmd a mate online
to ask the right questions to

detennine whether the future
mate is of age. For example,
ask a supposed 21-year-old
if she is in school and what
subjects she's taking. If she
tells you she's studying fracti.ons and geometry, you
know she's barely out of
grade
school.
Disappointed and Furious ,
Dear
Disappointed:
Don't be naive. Any girl who
would lie about her age
could just as easily lie about
what subjects she's taking 'in
school. We know you are
frightened for your d®ghter
and worried about what
might have happened, and
we ~on't blame you. But it is
very difficult to discern the
truth over the Internet. Yes,
adults need to be circum- ·
spect, but a'll parents should
supervise what their children
are doing online, teaching
them how to protect themselves from predators and
why delibera(ely misrepresenting themselves can lead
to major trouble or worse. ·
DearAnnie: What do you
make of a man who finds it
necessary to tell you about
his past love life, how many
women he's been with, how
great sex is when you are
high (I don 't do drugs), and
who says he is "used to hav-

ing sex and lots of it"?
I have been seeing this man
for three· years, and every so
often he comes out with this
stuff. I nave told him I don't
lik,e it and don't want to hear
it, but he can't seem to cease
and desist. We are both in our
50s with grown children from
previous marriages. - Too
Much Information
Dear Too Much: We
think your boyfriend is terribly .insecure and desperate
to impress you with ·his sexual experience. You might
point out that those who are
truly knowledgeable tentl
not to brag about it.
Otherwise, if you can't
ignore him, try to laugh
about it. We suspect that will
take care of the problem.
Dear Annie: The letter
from
"Confused
in
California" broke my heart.
His best friend, "Ale)(," is
gay and Dad "t'on't let them
hang out anymore. As you
can see, homophobia hurts
everyone, not just gay people.
There isn't much a 15year-old .can do when he's
living under the tyranny of
· such a misguided fat he(
except try his best to continue with what he believes is
right and be a true friend .
One day soon, both boys

will be able to move away
from home and be friends
with . 'whomever they like,
but sadly, not soon enough.
I'm a 26-year-old gay
man, and when I came out, I
was lucky to have friends,
gay and straight, who cared
enough to help me through
the difficulties with my parents. If "Confused's" mother
doesn't share Dad's backward attitude toward gay
people, he should continue
talking to ber, even if she is
unable to persuade his father
to be more reasonable.
I wish both kids the best
The next few years are going
to be tough, and they will
need the kind of strong friendship they have in each other.
- Supportive in Quebec
Annie's Mailbox is writtell by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Writeto; Ant~ie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by l)ther
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page .at www.creators.com.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - The eighth
annual Leading Creek
Stream Sweep will be held
from 9 a.m. to noon ,
Saturday, April 19 at Jim
Vennari Park in Rutland.
"This will be the eighth
annual Stream Sweep ansi
is a great opportunity to do
something good for the
environment, have fun, eat
pizza and get a free Tshirt," sald Raina Fulks,
Leading Creek watershed
coordinator with the Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District.
. Individuals, community
and youth groups are all
invited to participate.
"This is a great and easy
opportunity for youth
groups like 4-H, scouts or
~ tudent organizations to
help make a difference in
the1r communities," Fulks
said.
The Leading Creek
Stream Sweep coincides
with Earth Day and is
sponsored by the Meigs
SWCD, Rutlail'd Township
Board of Trustees, Meigs
County Transfer Station
and the Leading Creek
Conservancy District.

In 2007, 35 volunteers of
all ages turned out to help
clean up the Leading
Creek watershed, which
consists of approximately.
150 sq uare miles and
extends from the Ohio
River at Middleport to
Albany. Volunteers filled
two dump trucks, belonging to the Rutland
Township
Board
of
Trustees, with trash collected from throughout the
watershed, from locations
around Albany, Langsville,
Rutland,. Bradbury and
Laurel Cliff.
Gloves and trash bags
are provided. For their service, volunteers will
receive a Leading Creek
· Stream Sweep T-shirt and
pizza for lunch. For more
information or to register
contact the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District in Pomeroy at
.
992-4282.
Tons of trash and debris
have been removed from
Little Leading Creek and
Leading Creek.over the past
eight years through this litter clean up. In addition, the
2008 Meigs SWCD Photo
Contest winners will also be
.announced at the Stream
Sweep on April 19.

Worksite Well ness Conference

Community Calendar
I •'

'

''

_Public meetings

·. · Thursday, March 27
· POMEROY Meigs
-Soil
and
Water
'conserVation District, regu- .
lar meeting, II :30 a.m.,
·office on Hiland Road.
Monday, March 31
RACINE - . Southern
·LOcal School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media room.
: POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
·a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
Wednesday, April2
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., Meigs County Healt)l
:Department, third reading
·amendments to sewage treat- .·
ment rules, third reading
jncrease in food service operarion license fees in regards
to vending machines.
•

Thursday, March 27,2008

ANNIE '.S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHELL

Egg hunt winners, 7 to 9 age group

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

__The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, ~arch 27, 2008

Clubs and
organizations

Thursday, March 27
TUPPERS PLAINS . Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall.
SYRACUSE - Meigs
County Board of MRDD, 4
, p.m. at Carleton School.
HARRSONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
. to meet II a.m. Blood pres, sures will be taken, potluck

and meeting to tollow. · .
Saturday, March 29
RACINE -. Meigs CAN,
discussion on revisions to
Gatling Ohio's proposed min,
ing permit, 4 p.m.-5:30,p.m.,
Racine Library, call949-2175
for more information.
· Monday, March 31
POMEROY- OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public Library.

Church events ·
Friday, March 28
GUYSVILLE - Revival~
7 p.m. Friday and Saturday at
the
Carthage
Gap
Community Church, Rdute
50, Guysville. Friday, "Never
Too Late'.' will sing; Sartuny
Anderson will
preach;
Sl\turday, Jarvis Famil}' will
sing; Calvin Jarvis will speak.
Saturday, March 29
RACINE ·-Meigs CAN,
discussion on revisions to
Gatling Ohio's proposed mining permit, 4 p.m.-5:30 p.m.,
Racme Library, call949-2175
for more information . .
Sunday, March 30
MIDDLEPORT - The
Cornwell Twins, Blaine and
Boyd, will sing at the 10: 15
a.m. service a\ the Middlepon
First Baptist Church.
MIDDLEPORT
Humor Sunday to be
obsetved at the II a.m. service of the Middleport

Solutions to Rising Healthcare Costs

Presbyterian Church.
CARPENTER
Carpenter Baptist .Church ,
30711 Route 143, Albany,
to host community fellowship, 6 to 8 p.m. 'The
Buckeye Gospel Singers" to
be featured. Potato bar with
trimmings served. Everyone
welcome to free event.
Questions, caltPastor Whitt
Akers, 591-1236.

April4, 2008-8 am- 12 pm
Middlepo·rt Church of Christ
Family Life Center
Keynote Speaker Sharon Covert

-

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

Who Should Attend:
• Administrators • Human Rt&gt;.Source Personnel ·
• Wellness Directors • WeUness Committee Team Members
•.Healthcare Professionals • Government Officials
• Anyone Concerned About Rising Healthcare Costs

Youth.events
· Saturday, March 30
POMEROY - pomeroy
Merchants
Association's
annual
Easter
egg
hunt, II
.
a.m. at. Bob Roberts football
field in Pomeroy. Kids hunt in
.age groups. Prizes awarded.

Birthdays
Monday, March 31
POMEROY .- Maxine
Goeglein will celebrate her
84th birthday today, cards can
be sent to 35610, Aatwoods
. Road, Pomeroy, 45769.

Sponsored bY=· --~;s~---~~~~~--~::~=~
Jr
Heart

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740-985-3444
34740 St. Rt. 7
·Pomeroy
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The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March

27, 2008

Bear
Stearn~ shows financial (world has.changed/
The Daily Sentinel
new·regulations needed, Treasury chief says
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
_www.mydallyeentlnel.com

BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

widely different rules.
"This latest episode has
highlighted that the world
has changed as has the role
of other nonbank financial
·institutions and the interconnectedness among all finan- ·
cia! institutions," Paulson
said .."These changes require
us all to think more broadly
about the regulatory and
supervisory framework that
is consistent with the promotion and maintenance of
financial stability," he added. I
In extraordinary actions
.aimed at preventing a meltdown of the U.S. financial
system, the Federal Reserve
recently backed JPMorgan
Chase's takeover of Bear
Stearns and agreed to provide a multibillion-dollar
lifeline for the deal. In addition, the Fed, in the broadest
use of its lending authority
.since the 1930s, said it
would let squeezed Wall
Street investment houses
come to it directly for emergency loans. That has long
been a privilege just for
commercial banks.
Paulson said he supported
that action but added that it
raised important policy considerations about the over-:
sight of investment houses.
The secretary said commercial banks' access to the
Fed's emergency lending
"discount window" has traditionally been accompanied by regulatory oversight
and supervision. "Certainly
any regular access to the
discount window should
involve. the same type of
regulation and supervision,"
Paulson said.
And he suggested that the .
Federal Reserve collect as
much information as necessary on investment houses
to "make informed lending
decisions." He said the Fed
is currently working -to do

WASHINGTON - If big
Wall Street investment
Dan Goodrich
houses are allowed to run to
Publisher
the Federal Reserve for
emergency lending, they
must face stepped-up reguCharlene Hoeflich
lation,
Treasury Secretary
General Manager-News E~itor
Henry Paulson declared
Wednesday.
The demise of once-mighty
Bear Stearns proves ... the
Congress shall make no law respecting an
world has changed," underestablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
scoring a need for the governfree exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom of ment to adapt, too, he said.
The Bush administration
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- . will soon put forth an oversight blueprint in an effort
, pte peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
to promote smoother funcGovernment for a redress of grievances.
tioning of financial markets,
Paulson said in a speech to
.,.- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution the U.S. C"amber of
'.
Commerce.
The implosion of investment house Bear Stearns
and fears that others could
Today is Thursday, March 27, the 87th day of 2008. be in jeopardy have sent a
tremor rippling through
There are 279 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: On March 27, 1977, 583 trading rooms of Wall
people were killed when a KLM Boeing 747, attempting to Street, the corridors of offitake off, crashed into a Pan Am 747 on the Canary Island cial Washington and the living rooms of many
of Tenerife.
.
On this date: In 1513, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Americans. The situation
has raised new questions
Leon sighted present-day Florida.
.
In 1625, Charles I acceded to the English throne upon the about whether regulations
need to be revamped to betdeath of James I.
·
In 1794, Congress approved "An Act to provide a Naval ter keep up with the world of
modem finance and to avert
Armament" of six armed ships.
In 1836, the first Mormon temple was dedicated, in a repeat of the chaos now
confronting the country.
Kirtland, Ohio.
Commerci!!l banks; a
In 1945, during World War II, Gen. Dwight D.
national
financial bedrock,
Eisenhower told reporters in Pruis that German defenses on
are subject to regulations,
the Western Front had been broken.
In 1958, Nikita Khrushchev became Soviet premier in \ncluding bank examinations arid rules for submitaddition to First Secretary of the Communist Party.
In 1964, Alaska was hit by a powerful earthquake and ting detailed financial information; to help regulators
tsunamis that killed about 130 people. ·
gauge
their safety and
In 1968, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man to
soundness.
orbit the earth, died in a plane crash.
However, the modern
. In 1980, 123 workers died when a North Sea floating oil field
platform, the Alexander Kielland; capsized during a storm. · U.S. financial system has
In 1996, an Israeli court convicted Prime Minister become a complex web of
Yitzhak Rabin's confessed assassin of murder, then sen- financial players - institutions and individuals and
tenced former law student Yigal Amir to life in prison. ·
that are subject to
practices
· Ten years ago: The Food and Drug Adminis)ration approved
the drug Viagra. made by Pfizer, saying it had helped about
two-thirds of impotent men improve their sexual function.
Ferdinand Porsche Jr., who founded the sports car firm that
bears his name, died at age 88 in Zell am See, Austria.
Five years ago: Serbian police killed two major suspects
in the assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic.
Russia's Evgeni Plushenko won his second World Figure
Skating Champi9nships title, edging American Tim
Goebel.. Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Paul Zindel died
in New York at age 66.
· .
One year ago: Truck bombs hit markets in Tal Afar, Iraq,
killing at least 152 people and wounding more than 150.
NFL owners voted 30-2 tQ make the video replay system a
permanent officiating tooL
Today's Birthdays: Dance company director Arthur
Mitchell is 74. Actor Julian Glover is 73. Actor Michael York
is. 66. Rock musician Tony Banks (Genesis) is 58. Actress
Maria Schneider is 56. Rock musician Andrew Farriss
(INXS) is 49. Movie director Quentin Tarantino is 45. Actress
Tal!sa Soto is 41. Actress Pauley Perrette is 39. Singer Mariah
Carey is 38. Rock musician Brendan Hill (Blues Traveler) is
38. Hip-hop singer Fergie (Black Eyed Peas) is 33. Actress
Emily Ann Lloyd is 24. Actress Taylor Atelian is 13. .
Thought for Today: "Only when' we are no longer afraid
do we begin to live." - Dqrothy Thompson, American
PeoPle who tire of sports
journalist ( 1894-1961 ).
metaphors have my understanding, if not always my
sympathy. Even so, watching ·
Democrats
overwrought
LETTERS TO THE
~ on about the extended
Gene
EDITOR
presidential primary season, it
Lyons
· Letters tp the editor are welcome. They should be le~s was my wife, a baseball and
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be basketball coach's daughter,
signed, and include address and telephone number. No who wondered, "Haven't any
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in of these people ever seen a
Jonathan Alter, were calling
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of seven-game series?"
Exactly.
Take
my
favorite
for Hillary Clinton to withtha11h to organizations and individuals will not be acceptever, the 2004 American draw even before her big
ed for publication.
League
Championship Game 5 wins in Texas, Ohio
Series. Baseball fans alteady and Rhode Island. Alter's
know where I'm going with reasoning was that there was
this. With my Boston Red no way Clinton could catch
Sox down three games to up in the delegate count;
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
none, I was determined to hence, she was only hurting
Ohio Valley Publishing
ride Game 4 out to the bitter Democrats by staying in the
Co.
Correction Polley
end. It wasn't like I'd never race. The problem is that
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our main concern in au stories is to
seen a Yankees victory cele- .Obama appears equally
through Friday, 111 Court Stnle1,
be accurate. If you know of an error
bration
before. Bill Mueller unlikely to win enough
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
was coming up in the ninth. elected delegates to win the
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.·
He figured to get on base'. contest outright.
992·2156.
Member: The Associated PreS&amp; and
Anything could still happen. . A lead's only a lead, sports
the Ohio Newspaper Asaodatlon.
Anything did. Mueller fans, until the final out.
Poltmaeter:
Send
address
correeOur main number Ia
tiono to Tho Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
drove· in the tying run, Big
Game 6 wiU be played .in
(740) 992-2156.
Street, PomafOy, Ohio 45769.
Papi hit a walk-off shot in Pennsylvania, which strikes
Department extensions are:
the 12th, and the Red Sox many Obama supporters as
silbecrlptlon Rataa
endect up winning the ALCS manifestly unfmr. In his
By can_. or motor route
and sweeping the World Newsweek politics. blog;
News
One month
'10.27
Series. That was the year Andrew Romano endorses
Editor: Chanene Hoeflich. E•t. 12
One year
'1-15.84
Curt
Schilling, my kind of the reasoning of one
Dally
50'
Rep6rter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Republican,
pitched Game "Maggie22," who argues that
Sanlor Cltlun l'llbla
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
6
with
an
ankle tendon · "(t)he media isn't choosing to
One month
'1 0.27
One year
.'1 03.90
sutured in place and his focus on the uncenain conshoe filling with blood'.
Advertising
lih&lt;liMd remit n ad\lanco
tests. It's choosing to focus
dQct to tho Dolly Sontlnel. No sub·
See, here's the thing about on the contests where Clinton
· · Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
scription by mail permitted In areas
sports fans: We know the should win. Pennsylvania ...
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext16 where hOt'flS Carner service is avail·
rules,
we know how the has an Ohio demographic
able . •
CloeoJCirc.: Judy Ciar1&lt;. Ext. 10.
game's scored, and we and the added handicap for
know it ain't over until it's Obama of being a closed priMall Mecrtptton
General Manager
over. We have little patience · mary ...The only difference
lnelcle ..... COIIIIly
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
for dilletantes who don't between PA and MS is tha~
13 Week•
ia2.26
26 Weeks
!64.~
Would that overwrought Clinton has succeeded in
52Weeks
'127.11
political pundits. and convincing the media that the
E-mail:
Barack Obama supporters, states that matter are the ones
news 0 mydailysentinel.com
Outafde Malga Counw
to
come to the point, under- that she happens to have an
13 Weaks
'53.55
stood
those things.
·
advanlage in."
Web:
26 Weeks
'107. 10
Some,
including
respected
As "22" may indicate
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
friends such as i'J'ewsweek's Maggie's age, let's go easY,

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

that. Paulson sug!lested the
Fed, 'the Secunties and
Exchange Commission and
the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission also
continue to work to build a
framework on this.
·These steps, he said,
"would enable the Federal
Reserve to protect its balance
sheet, and 'ultimately protect
U.S. taxpayers," he srud.
Paulson defended the
government's role in coming to the aid of Bear
Stearns, an action that has
been criticized by some
Democrats and others as
akin. to a federal bailout.
"Bear Stearns found itself
facing bankruptcy," Paulson
said. "The Federal Reserve
acted promptly to resolve the
Bear Steams situation and
avoid a disorderly winddow!l. It is the job of regulators to come together to
address times such as this,
and we did so. Our focus was
the stability and orderliness
of our financial markets."
On the broader situation, he
said it's' too soon to conClude
that other potentially importaut financial firms should
have permanent access to the
Fed. He also said the Federal
Reserve's action so far
"should be viewed as a precedent only for unusual periods
of turmoil."
On Capitol Hill, some
la~makers were still skeptical about the Bear Stearns
arrangement.
Max Baucus, D-Mont.,
the · Senate
Finance
Committee chairman, and
Charles E. Grassley of Iowa,,
the panel's top Republican,
demanded details about the
sale and any possible etTect
on taxpayers. The lawmakers asked Paulson and Fed
Chairman Ben Bemanke to
give them specifics of the
transaction by week's end.

Chris Dodd, D-Conn.,
chairman uf the Senate
Banking Committee, summoned Paulson, Bernanke,
Bear Steams President Alan
Schwartz and JP Morgan
Chairman James Dimon and
others to apPear before his
panel next Thursday to lay out
the rationale behind the Bear
Stearns takeover deal and its
implications for taxpayers.
The Fed originally agreed to
guarantee $30 billion of Bear
Stearns assets, including risky
mortgage-backed securities.
Under new terms reached ear,
tier this week. JPMorgan said
it will now take on the first $1
billion of losses. while the
Fed backs the remajni ng $29
billion.
Those were signs that
Congress, racing to deal
with a housing mess that
encapsulates voters ' deep
concerns about the economy, has placed the financial
crisis at the top of the election-year agenda, with
investigations and legislation likely to follow.
With home foreclosures at
record highs, Paulson said
the administration will
explore additional ways to
help distressed homeowners. But he was cool to some
of the proposals put forth by
Democrats, saying that
"most are not yet ready for
the starting gate."
Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial
Services Coll)mittee, wallts
new regulations on invest,
ment banks similar to those
·thai apply to regular banks.
That includes mandatory
requirements for cash
reserves to cushion losses.
The Fed or another government entity should be designated as a "financial services regulator" with the
power to limit risky practices, said Frank, D-Mass.

Daily Sentinel

•.

27,2008

:·Obituaries

www .mydailysentinel.com

Dorothy Hawk

STAFF REPORT
NEWS41MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

STEUBENVILLE
CHESTER - Dorothy Hawk, 85, Chester, passed away
Ohio's First Lady, Frances
on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 in Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
. She was born on March 3, 1923 in Meigs County to the Strickland, assisted by Rick
_late Milford and Addie (Haselton) Hawk. Ms. Hawk Peltz of the Appalachian
. worked !n a casket factory for most of her life. She attend- Regional Commission will
unveil the Appalachian
_ed the Silver Run Baptist Church in Cheshire.
... She is survived by sisters, Maxine and Carl Hunnell of Driving Trail Map at the
.. Columbus, Betty and William Stivers of Pomeroy, brother- Spotlight on Appalachia
; m-law, Darrell Hawthorne, · Long Bottom, sister-in-law, Arts, Music and Travel
.. Detore~ Hawk, Long .Bottom; several nieces and nephews. . Show at 10:30 a.m.Saturday
She was preceded m deth by her parents, two brothers, at the Fort Steuben Mall in
Steubenville .
Paul and Robert Hawk, and a sister, Norman Hawthorne.
The map was released as
~. . Funeral services will be held on Friday, March'28, 2008 at
.. II a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy an insert in the April issue
. , With Rev.. Steve Little officiating. Burial will fol!ow in the . of the National Geographic
. Mound Hill Cemetery in Chester. Visitation will be held from Traveler magazine to ·sub·4 to 8 p.m.. on Thursday, March 27,2008 at the funeral home. scribers and newsstands
. . Online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com nationwide in late' March
2008.
The National Geographic
Society which published the
map has described the
; ' . POMEROY- Robert W. Reed, 87, of Pomeroy passed Appalachias as "the land of
' away March 25, 2008, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center. legends and inspiration." It
· Bob was born July 19, I 920, the son of the late Lawrence encourages visitors to expe' ·and Frieda Martin Reed.
·
rience and·explore the land· ; · He is survived by his wife Golda Heih)lan Sargent Reed; scape, tour authentic attrac: ·two sons, Tom (Carol) Reed and Richard (Charlotte) Reed; tions, and learn about local
·. two stepchildren, Guy Sargent. and Carol Sprouse and
legends while dri vin$ along
:,daughter-in-law Gail Houlette; seven grandchildren, Jon . one
of the 28 des1gnaied
·"(Robyn) Sargent, Krissie Sar~ent, . Kim (Jim) Higgins,
Sherri (Phillip) Johnson, Patricia (Daril' \ Bryan, Matthew scenic driving trails.
Through a partnership of
· Reed and Wesley Reed; II great-grandchildren; three
the
Ohio Governor's Office
.· ·brothers, Gene (Beulah) Reed, Jim (Jackie) Reed, and Dick
of Appalachia and the
Reed; and several nieces and nephews.
Appalachian
RegionaJ
&gt;·. · Bob was a veteran of the U.S. Army and a Master Commission,
the
Driving·
···Carpenter. He was a member of the Zion Church of Christ
Trail
Map
was
created
to
·: and was very inyolved in many building projects there. .
.· Bob's record 1s as follows: Hemlock Grange No. 2049, assist visitors in experienc'Past Master; Meigs County Pomona Grange, Past Master; ing all the beauty and won· .flrew Webster Post 39, American Legion; Harrisonville der of the Appal;~chian
· Chapter 255, Order of Eastern Star, Past Worthy Patron; Mountain Region.
An event was held at the
·· Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 F. &amp; A. M., Past Master; Past
National
Geographic
··District Education Officer, 12th Masonic District; Past Ex.
Society
Headquarters
in
High Priest, Pomeroy Chapter No. 80 Royal Arch Masons;
: .Ohio Grand Council, Order of High Priesthood R. A. M.; .Washington DC on March
. Past ILL. Master, Bosworth Council No. 46, Royal &amp; Select
·Masters; Council of Anointed Kings, Order of the Silver
.Trowel; Past Commander, Ohio Valley Commandery No. 2,
· Knights Templar; Knight Commander of the Temple;
. ·Shannon Council No. 28, Knight Masons of Ireland; Ohio
· River Valley Council No. I04, Allied Masonic Degrees;
FOREST (AP) - Dean
·:.Knight of the Royal Order of the Red Branch of Eri; Ohio Tackett still tires easily, but
, Priory No. 18, Knights York Cross of Honor. .
· he said his wife noticed an
· Calling hours will be Thursday, March 27, from 4 to 8 immediate change for the
·p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, Ohio. The better this month after he
. Masonic service will occur Thursday, March 27, at 7 p.m. became the ftrst person in the
· .and the funeral will be Friday, March 28; at I pm at Ewing .u.s. to receive an experimen·Funeral Home. Burial will be in Carleton Cemetery with tal implant to improve the
military rites at the cemetery.
·
pumping of a damaged heart.
"The first thing she said to
me was that I . had color.
Before I was pale and gray,"
said Tackett, 64, who underwent his procedure March
II at Ohio State University
Center
'in
Medical
Columbus. It had been done
15 times · before, though
PAGE VILLE -Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District never in the U.S.
has scheduled a shut down 'o f water service for the
device about an inch &lt;llld
Pageville area, to allow for a water line relpcation .and tie a A
half
tall shaped like an
in, and a boil advisory. The advisory is in effect from 9 a.m.
inside-out
parachute was
to 4 p.m. on Thursday for Ohjo 684 from Vance Road, not
inserted
into
a section of
including Vance Road, King Ridge Road, Ohio 692,
Pageville, Pageville Road, Ohio 681 from and including
Sand Ridge Road and Goose Creek Road.
·
Affected customers are advised to boil the water they use
for cooking and drinking for tfiree minutes before consuming it. The advisory will be in effect until 4 p.m. on Friday.

·-·
., . +'

10

0

1

2

3

-4

SMiles

'

'\

ARC Illustration

This section of the Appalachian Driving Tour Map developed by the Appalachian Regional
Commission and published by the National Geographic Society, shows several of Meigs
County's points of interest
·
20, 2008 .to announce the
national release of the map.
Attending the event were
the Executive Director of
the Governor's Office of
Appalachia Fred Dee!, and
representing three of the
. Ohio trails, Sharon ,Manson
of Pike County representing
the Adventure Trail, Sonja
Cropper of Brown County
representing the Clothesline
of Quilts Trail, and Debbie
Robinson . of Guernsey
County r~presenting the

Nationill Road Trail and the product of a year long
Linda Basye who represents endeavor of the Tourism
the 29 county Appalachian Council with representatives
Region in Ohio to the ARC from each of the 13 states in
Tourism Council attended the Appalachian Mountain
the special event.
region.
There are four Ohio trails
The map was produced as
featured on the map. and the a vehicle to increase tourism ·
accompanying web site, · and the retail sale of products
www. visitappalachia.com. in the Appalachian Regions
The 'fourth trail represented thereby creating an economon the map is the Ohio River · ic impact for the businesses
Scenic Byway which touch- and artists in those regions.
es 12 counties in Ohio along
The event in Steubenville
its route. This project was is open to the public.

Opjoan frrst to receive experiment9l heart implant

Jobless .
from Page A1

'

Republican in 2004.)
So unless Obama pulls an
upset in Pennsylvania, this
thing's going seven, by
which I mean, Florida and
Michigan, two more crucial
swing · states Democrats
need come November. Dpover primaries are mandatory between· now and the
Democratic convention. To
date, both campaigns have
re5isted, .Clinton's because
her (insupportable) jlosition
is that she's already won
them, Obama' s because he
(secretly) fe\U'S that he can't.
No other altemative will be
seen as fair. Think of them
as rescheduled rainouts.
And if nobody' s won after
seven? Well, the rules s~y
the "superdelegates" get to
decide. And when they d'o.
they'll be looking at the
stats: Si!Ch as Obama losing
83 of Ohio's 88 counties;
the fact that Clinton's so far
won states totalling 263 ·
electoral votes to Obama's
193, or which one polls
ahead of GOP nommee,
Sen. John McCain, and
where.
Meanwhile, fans hyperventilate. Recently, I've
seen Clinton· called "monstrous," a "zombie" and~ a
"fratricidal maniac," and
Obama's supporters derided
as "cultists' and ''latte-sip·ping airheads."
My advice? Calm down,
everybody, it's a long sea~on.
(Arkansas
DemocratGazette columnist Ge11e
Lyons is a national magazine award winner and co- .
author of "The Hunting; of
the ?,resident" (St. Martin's
Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at genelyons2@sbcglobal.net.)' :

·f··-·•-ct•

Robert W. Reed

Boil advisory

on her. The most obvious difference
between
Pennsylvania
and
Mississippi can be expressed
as a football score: 21-6. Not
a blowout, but decisive. I'm
speaking of 'electoral votes,
according
to
which
Pennsylvania's exactly 3-1/2
times more important than
· Mississippi. Then, too,
Mississippi vot~d 60 percent-40 percent for President
Bush in 2004. It's a lead-pipe
cinch to vote Republican
come November. No bookie
would take the bet.
So, yeah, Pennsylvania, a
must-win swing state for
· Democrats, is far more
important - this year and
every year. It's also more
important than a bunch of
states Obruna has won: South
Carolina, Georgia, Alabruna,
Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, North
Dakota, etc. So when the candidate himself, a Harvard
Law graduate, talks about
how he's won more states
than Clinton, he knows he's
blowing smoke- giving you
the old "okie-doke," as he
likes to tell black audiences.
I'm sure Washington Post
columnist Eugene Robin~on
knows it, too. "To paraphrase Orwell," he wrote
recently, "some states are
more equal than others." On
"Countdown," lie and Keith
Olbermann had a wonderful
time pretending amaze111ent
at this bewilderingly complex "Clintonian" ;ugument. "Could it be," Bob
Somerby asks at The Daily
Howler, "because two mil· lion Democrats voted in
Ohio last week - and
.roughly ten thousand did so
in Wyoming?" (Wyoming
voted 69 percent-29 percent

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Unveiling of ARC. trail map set for Saturday

Local Briefs

It ain't over until it's over

!h~

Thursday, March

PageA4

. For the Record
Accident reported
MIDDJ_.EPORT- A two-car accident at Couflty Road 5
·.and Ohio 7 was reported yesterday afternoon. The
Middleport Fire Department, Medic 5, Squad 44 responded
to the accident where injuries were reJ??rted. The Ohio
·State Highway Patrol is handling the ll;CCJdent report . .

Board
from PageA1
Action oMhe original pro. posal for change was post·poned until the next meeting
to allow time for the superin.·tendent to further review the
:new regulations and any
·problems of implementation.
·
Other business
A resolution accepting the
.amount and rates as deter-

mined by the county's budget commission and authorizing the necessary tax
levies and cenifying them to
the county auditor was
approved by the Hoard. The
funds include 3.80 mills
(inside) and 16.20 mills outside (voted,) along with the
bond retirement levy, 2.90
mills (voted) and the new
building capital maintenance
levy of .50 mills (also voted.)
The Board approved the
sale by seal bid of the 1997

January to 10.7 perce!Hiast
month.
'Athens County also fell
by five-tenths of a percent
to 5.9 percent in February
after hitting 6.4 percent during · January.
Jackson
County's rate dipped by the
same amount, from 8.9 percent in January to 8.4 percent the following month.
Ford buses with Thomas
bodies, ·along with a 1995
Chevy truck.
Personnel matters handled
included accepting the resignation of Greg Browning as
a custodian and as. boys
assistant baseball coach, and
naming Greg Smith as interim boys assistant baseball
coach effective immediately: Vickie Jones was given a
three year contract as assistant principal at Meigs primary, and David Deem was

· Tackett's he;ut damaged by a
major heart attack last May .
that left him unable to walk
even a few steps without
becoming winded. The
CardioKinetix VPD Implant
System essentially blocks
off an inefficient portion of a
.weakened heart chamber in
hopes of relieving symptoms
such as fatigue and shortness
of breath, the research hospital said io a news release.
"We really hope people
get better from this," said
Dr. Ernest L. Mazzaferri Jr.,
the Ohio .. State cardiologist
who performed the surgery.
He noted that tests
showed the pumping action
of Tackett's heart improved
from 25 percent to the mid30s right after the surgery.

Normal is 55 percent.
..
However, Mazzilferri said
he cautioned his patient that
since Tackett was implanted
as part of a safety and feasibility study, he may not see
any benefit at all.
Tackett was sent home to
this town 60 miles south of
Toledo the day after his procedure. He acknowledged
it's too early to know his
long-term prognosis, but
was encouraged by the way
he no longer needs to keep
pausing to rest while getting
ready in the morning.
"Now I get right out of
bed, shave, shower amj get
dressed all in one motion,"
Tackett said.
According to Ohio State
University Medical Center,

some 5 J million Americans
suffer from congestive heart
failure, defined as a heart
that's not pumping blood
efficiently, most often
because of a damaging heart
attack. ·The ·implant, made
by CardioKinetix Inc. of
Redwood City, Calif., has
the potential to help many
of those patients, said Dr.
William Abraham, Ohio
State's director of cardiovascular medicine.
The hospital said it is one of
five participating in the study
approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
Twenty patients will . be
implanted and, if initial data
show the device is safe, a
larger trial will be conductel;i.
Mazzaferri said.

Joblessnt;ss in Vinton
County fell slightly from 9
percent during January to
8.8 percent in February. The
rate increased by one-tenth
of a· percent, from 5.3 to 5.4
percent in February for
Lawrence County, and by
two-tenths of ·a percent,
from 5.7 to 5.9 percent in
Washington County.
The state says Ohio's
unemployment rate was 5.3
percent in February, down
from 5.5 percent in January.
The figures released last

Friday show that the num'ber of unemployed workers
last month was 3 1'6,000,
down from ~29,000 in
January. The number of
unemployed people has
decreased by I 0,000 in the
past 12 months.
.
The rate this February
was down from a 5.5 percent rate a year earlier. ·
The state's 5.3 percent
unemployment figure tops
the national rate of 4.8 percent.
·
.
The ODJFS says the slight

decline in the unemployment rate must be' tempered
by the fact that total employment decreased in both
goods-producing and service-providing industries.
(The Associated Press
contributed to this story.)

given a two year contract as
assistant principal at Meigs
Middle School.
In other action Tony ·
Dugan as gmnted a shortterm medical leave of
absence, Jordan Hill was
hired as golf coach at Meigs
Middle School. Kevin
Sheppard and Christine
Miceli as tutors for health
handicapped students, and
Lori Shinn, Travis Smith and
Elizabeth Wiifong as substitute teachers for the rem.ain-

f't'R}'Ok\fl!\'(; :\ltf~ l'l:\TN£

Ohio Valley
Symphony
Pianist Lori Sims
March 29th
8PM

der of the school year. .
Attending the meeting
were · Roger Abbott, Ron
Logan, Barbara Musser,
Larry Tucker and Scott
Walton, Board members, and
principals and assjstant principals and other personnel of
the Meigs Elementary School
where the meeting was held.

Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gafllpolla, OH (7401446-ARTS

Eastern
'

'

from PageA1

.Greenwich Village and SoHo.
· ' They shopped the street vendors
.and department stores, and toured
Ellis and Liberty Islands.
··" Several selections played by the
·Eastern musicians were particular•ly appropriate to the recent St:
Patrick's Day celebrations in the
:city, Kuhn said.
· . "Corporations like IBM realiZe the
importance of supponing the arts,
.both locally and nationally," .Kuhn
said. "By providing performance
·opportunities tP student musical
•groups, ffiM encoumges participa: tion m the arts across the nation."
Submitted photo
· "IBM welcomes young musiMembers
of
the
Eastern
High
School
concert
band
and
bell
choir
are
pictured .with
·cians from urban and rural settings
their director, Cris Kuhri, front and center, and their chaperones.
throughout the c.ounty."

· If you want to make farm life less taxing, talk to
your people at H&amp;R Block. OLJr people can answer
question~ about things like fuel credit, farm income
averaging, and casualty losses.
Call1-800-HRBLOCK or visit hrblock.com ·
618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-(;674
'

. Mon·Frl 9:00 - 6:00
Sat. 9:00 - 5:00
Other hours by appointment

_.

.,...,..•,. H.R BIOc:k'

......

02006 HilA BlOck SeNie&amp;l, Inc.

•

�•

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March

27, 2008

Bear
Stearn~ shows financial (world has.changed/
The Daily Sentinel
new·regulations needed, Treasury chief says
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
_www.mydallyeentlnel.com

BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

widely different rules.
"This latest episode has
highlighted that the world
has changed as has the role
of other nonbank financial
·institutions and the interconnectedness among all finan- ·
cia! institutions," Paulson
said .."These changes require
us all to think more broadly
about the regulatory and
supervisory framework that
is consistent with the promotion and maintenance of
financial stability," he added. I
In extraordinary actions
.aimed at preventing a meltdown of the U.S. financial
system, the Federal Reserve
recently backed JPMorgan
Chase's takeover of Bear
Stearns and agreed to provide a multibillion-dollar
lifeline for the deal. In addition, the Fed, in the broadest
use of its lending authority
.since the 1930s, said it
would let squeezed Wall
Street investment houses
come to it directly for emergency loans. That has long
been a privilege just for
commercial banks.
Paulson said he supported
that action but added that it
raised important policy considerations about the over-:
sight of investment houses.
The secretary said commercial banks' access to the
Fed's emergency lending
"discount window" has traditionally been accompanied by regulatory oversight
and supervision. "Certainly
any regular access to the
discount window should
involve. the same type of
regulation and supervision,"
Paulson said.
And he suggested that the .
Federal Reserve collect as
much information as necessary on investment houses
to "make informed lending
decisions." He said the Fed
is currently working -to do

WASHINGTON - If big
Wall Street investment
Dan Goodrich
houses are allowed to run to
Publisher
the Federal Reserve for
emergency lending, they
must face stepped-up reguCharlene Hoeflich
lation,
Treasury Secretary
General Manager-News E~itor
Henry Paulson declared
Wednesday.
The demise of once-mighty
Bear Stearns proves ... the
Congress shall make no law respecting an
world has changed," underestablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
scoring a need for the governfree exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom of ment to adapt, too, he said.
The Bush administration
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- . will soon put forth an oversight blueprint in an effort
, pte peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
to promote smoother funcGovernment for a redress of grievances.
tioning of financial markets,
Paulson said in a speech to
.,.- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution the U.S. C"amber of
'.
Commerce.
The implosion of investment house Bear Stearns
and fears that others could
Today is Thursday, March 27, the 87th day of 2008. be in jeopardy have sent a
tremor rippling through
There are 279 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: On March 27, 1977, 583 trading rooms of Wall
people were killed when a KLM Boeing 747, attempting to Street, the corridors of offitake off, crashed into a Pan Am 747 on the Canary Island cial Washington and the living rooms of many
of Tenerife.
.
On this date: In 1513, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Americans. The situation
has raised new questions
Leon sighted present-day Florida.
.
In 1625, Charles I acceded to the English throne upon the about whether regulations
need to be revamped to betdeath of James I.
·
In 1794, Congress approved "An Act to provide a Naval ter keep up with the world of
modem finance and to avert
Armament" of six armed ships.
In 1836, the first Mormon temple was dedicated, in a repeat of the chaos now
confronting the country.
Kirtland, Ohio.
Commerci!!l banks; a
In 1945, during World War II, Gen. Dwight D.
national
financial bedrock,
Eisenhower told reporters in Pruis that German defenses on
are subject to regulations,
the Western Front had been broken.
In 1958, Nikita Khrushchev became Soviet premier in \ncluding bank examinations arid rules for submitaddition to First Secretary of the Communist Party.
In 1964, Alaska was hit by a powerful earthquake and ting detailed financial information; to help regulators
tsunamis that killed about 130 people. ·
gauge
their safety and
In 1968, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man to
soundness.
orbit the earth, died in a plane crash.
However, the modern
. In 1980, 123 workers died when a North Sea floating oil field
platform, the Alexander Kielland; capsized during a storm. · U.S. financial system has
In 1996, an Israeli court convicted Prime Minister become a complex web of
Yitzhak Rabin's confessed assassin of murder, then sen- financial players - institutions and individuals and
tenced former law student Yigal Amir to life in prison. ·
that are subject to
practices
· Ten years ago: The Food and Drug Adminis)ration approved
the drug Viagra. made by Pfizer, saying it had helped about
two-thirds of impotent men improve their sexual function.
Ferdinand Porsche Jr., who founded the sports car firm that
bears his name, died at age 88 in Zell am See, Austria.
Five years ago: Serbian police killed two major suspects
in the assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic.
Russia's Evgeni Plushenko won his second World Figure
Skating Champi9nships title, edging American Tim
Goebel.. Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Paul Zindel died
in New York at age 66.
· .
One year ago: Truck bombs hit markets in Tal Afar, Iraq,
killing at least 152 people and wounding more than 150.
NFL owners voted 30-2 tQ make the video replay system a
permanent officiating tooL
Today's Birthdays: Dance company director Arthur
Mitchell is 74. Actor Julian Glover is 73. Actor Michael York
is. 66. Rock musician Tony Banks (Genesis) is 58. Actress
Maria Schneider is 56. Rock musician Andrew Farriss
(INXS) is 49. Movie director Quentin Tarantino is 45. Actress
Tal!sa Soto is 41. Actress Pauley Perrette is 39. Singer Mariah
Carey is 38. Rock musician Brendan Hill (Blues Traveler) is
38. Hip-hop singer Fergie (Black Eyed Peas) is 33. Actress
Emily Ann Lloyd is 24. Actress Taylor Atelian is 13. .
Thought for Today: "Only when' we are no longer afraid
do we begin to live." - Dqrothy Thompson, American
PeoPle who tire of sports
journalist ( 1894-1961 ).
metaphors have my understanding, if not always my
sympathy. Even so, watching ·
Democrats
overwrought
LETTERS TO THE
~ on about the extended
Gene
EDITOR
presidential primary season, it
Lyons
· Letters tp the editor are welcome. They should be le~s was my wife, a baseball and
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be basketball coach's daughter,
signed, and include address and telephone number. No who wondered, "Haven't any
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in of these people ever seen a
Jonathan Alter, were calling
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of seven-game series?"
Exactly.
Take
my
favorite
for Hillary Clinton to withtha11h to organizations and individuals will not be acceptever, the 2004 American draw even before her big
ed for publication.
League
Championship Game 5 wins in Texas, Ohio
Series. Baseball fans alteady and Rhode Island. Alter's
know where I'm going with reasoning was that there was
this. With my Boston Red no way Clinton could catch
Sox down three games to up in the delegate count;
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
none, I was determined to hence, she was only hurting
Ohio Valley Publishing
ride Game 4 out to the bitter Democrats by staying in the
Co.
Correction Polley
end. It wasn't like I'd never race. The problem is that
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our main concern in au stories is to
seen a Yankees victory cele- .Obama appears equally
through Friday, 111 Court Stnle1,
be accurate. If you know of an error
bration
before. Bill Mueller unlikely to win enough
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
was coming up in the ninth. elected delegates to win the
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.·
He figured to get on base'. contest outright.
992·2156.
Member: The Associated PreS&amp; and
Anything could still happen. . A lead's only a lead, sports
the Ohio Newspaper Asaodatlon.
Anything did. Mueller fans, until the final out.
Poltmaeter:
Send
address
correeOur main number Ia
tiono to Tho Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
drove· in the tying run, Big
Game 6 wiU be played .in
(740) 992-2156.
Street, PomafOy, Ohio 45769.
Papi hit a walk-off shot in Pennsylvania, which strikes
Department extensions are:
the 12th, and the Red Sox many Obama supporters as
silbecrlptlon Rataa
endect up winning the ALCS manifestly unfmr. In his
By can_. or motor route
and sweeping the World Newsweek politics. blog;
News
One month
'10.27
Series. That was the year Andrew Romano endorses
Editor: Chanene Hoeflich. E•t. 12
One year
'1-15.84
Curt
Schilling, my kind of the reasoning of one
Dally
50'
Rep6rter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Republican,
pitched Game "Maggie22," who argues that
Sanlor Cltlun l'llbla
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
6
with
an
ankle tendon · "(t)he media isn't choosing to
One month
'1 0.27
One year
.'1 03.90
sutured in place and his focus on the uncenain conshoe filling with blood'.
Advertising
lih&lt;liMd remit n ad\lanco
tests. It's choosing to focus
dQct to tho Dolly Sontlnel. No sub·
See, here's the thing about on the contests where Clinton
· · Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
scription by mail permitted In areas
sports fans: We know the should win. Pennsylvania ...
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext16 where hOt'flS Carner service is avail·
rules,
we know how the has an Ohio demographic
able . •
CloeoJCirc.: Judy Ciar1&lt;. Ext. 10.
game's scored, and we and the added handicap for
know it ain't over until it's Obama of being a closed priMall Mecrtptton
General Manager
over. We have little patience · mary ...The only difference
lnelcle ..... COIIIIly
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
for dilletantes who don't between PA and MS is tha~
13 Week•
ia2.26
26 Weeks
!64.~
Would that overwrought Clinton has succeeded in
52Weeks
'127.11
political pundits. and convincing the media that the
E-mail:
Barack Obama supporters, states that matter are the ones
news 0 mydailysentinel.com
Outafde Malga Counw
to
come to the point, under- that she happens to have an
13 Weaks
'53.55
stood
those things.
·
advanlage in."
Web:
26 Weeks
'107. 10
Some,
including
respected
As "22" may indicate
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
friends such as i'J'ewsweek's Maggie's age, let's go easY,

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

that. Paulson sug!lested the
Fed, 'the Secunties and
Exchange Commission and
the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission also
continue to work to build a
framework on this.
·These steps, he said,
"would enable the Federal
Reserve to protect its balance
sheet, and 'ultimately protect
U.S. taxpayers," he srud.
Paulson defended the
government's role in coming to the aid of Bear
Stearns, an action that has
been criticized by some
Democrats and others as
akin. to a federal bailout.
"Bear Stearns found itself
facing bankruptcy," Paulson
said. "The Federal Reserve
acted promptly to resolve the
Bear Steams situation and
avoid a disorderly winddow!l. It is the job of regulators to come together to
address times such as this,
and we did so. Our focus was
the stability and orderliness
of our financial markets."
On the broader situation, he
said it's' too soon to conClude
that other potentially importaut financial firms should
have permanent access to the
Fed. He also said the Federal
Reserve's action so far
"should be viewed as a precedent only for unusual periods
of turmoil."
On Capitol Hill, some
la~makers were still skeptical about the Bear Stearns
arrangement.
Max Baucus, D-Mont.,
the · Senate
Finance
Committee chairman, and
Charles E. Grassley of Iowa,,
the panel's top Republican,
demanded details about the
sale and any possible etTect
on taxpayers. The lawmakers asked Paulson and Fed
Chairman Ben Bemanke to
give them specifics of the
transaction by week's end.

Chris Dodd, D-Conn.,
chairman uf the Senate
Banking Committee, summoned Paulson, Bernanke,
Bear Steams President Alan
Schwartz and JP Morgan
Chairman James Dimon and
others to apPear before his
panel next Thursday to lay out
the rationale behind the Bear
Stearns takeover deal and its
implications for taxpayers.
The Fed originally agreed to
guarantee $30 billion of Bear
Stearns assets, including risky
mortgage-backed securities.
Under new terms reached ear,
tier this week. JPMorgan said
it will now take on the first $1
billion of losses. while the
Fed backs the remajni ng $29
billion.
Those were signs that
Congress, racing to deal
with a housing mess that
encapsulates voters ' deep
concerns about the economy, has placed the financial
crisis at the top of the election-year agenda, with
investigations and legislation likely to follow.
With home foreclosures at
record highs, Paulson said
the administration will
explore additional ways to
help distressed homeowners. But he was cool to some
of the proposals put forth by
Democrats, saying that
"most are not yet ready for
the starting gate."
Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial
Services Coll)mittee, wallts
new regulations on invest,
ment banks similar to those
·thai apply to regular banks.
That includes mandatory
requirements for cash
reserves to cushion losses.
The Fed or another government entity should be designated as a "financial services regulator" with the
power to limit risky practices, said Frank, D-Mass.

Daily Sentinel

•.

27,2008

:·Obituaries

www .mydailysentinel.com

Dorothy Hawk

STAFF REPORT
NEWS41MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

STEUBENVILLE
CHESTER - Dorothy Hawk, 85, Chester, passed away
Ohio's First Lady, Frances
on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 in Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
. She was born on March 3, 1923 in Meigs County to the Strickland, assisted by Rick
_late Milford and Addie (Haselton) Hawk. Ms. Hawk Peltz of the Appalachian
. worked !n a casket factory for most of her life. She attend- Regional Commission will
unveil the Appalachian
_ed the Silver Run Baptist Church in Cheshire.
... She is survived by sisters, Maxine and Carl Hunnell of Driving Trail Map at the
.. Columbus, Betty and William Stivers of Pomeroy, brother- Spotlight on Appalachia
; m-law, Darrell Hawthorne, · Long Bottom, sister-in-law, Arts, Music and Travel
.. Detore~ Hawk, Long .Bottom; several nieces and nephews. . Show at 10:30 a.m.Saturday
She was preceded m deth by her parents, two brothers, at the Fort Steuben Mall in
Steubenville .
Paul and Robert Hawk, and a sister, Norman Hawthorne.
The map was released as
~. . Funeral services will be held on Friday, March'28, 2008 at
.. II a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy an insert in the April issue
. , With Rev.. Steve Little officiating. Burial will fol!ow in the . of the National Geographic
. Mound Hill Cemetery in Chester. Visitation will be held from Traveler magazine to ·sub·4 to 8 p.m.. on Thursday, March 27,2008 at the funeral home. scribers and newsstands
. . Online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com nationwide in late' March
2008.
The National Geographic
Society which published the
map has described the
; ' . POMEROY- Robert W. Reed, 87, of Pomeroy passed Appalachias as "the land of
' away March 25, 2008, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center. legends and inspiration." It
· Bob was born July 19, I 920, the son of the late Lawrence encourages visitors to expe' ·and Frieda Martin Reed.
·
rience and·explore the land· ; · He is survived by his wife Golda Heih)lan Sargent Reed; scape, tour authentic attrac: ·two sons, Tom (Carol) Reed and Richard (Charlotte) Reed; tions, and learn about local
·. two stepchildren, Guy Sargent. and Carol Sprouse and
legends while dri vin$ along
:,daughter-in-law Gail Houlette; seven grandchildren, Jon . one
of the 28 des1gnaied
·"(Robyn) Sargent, Krissie Sar~ent, . Kim (Jim) Higgins,
Sherri (Phillip) Johnson, Patricia (Daril' \ Bryan, Matthew scenic driving trails.
Through a partnership of
· Reed and Wesley Reed; II great-grandchildren; three
the
Ohio Governor's Office
.· ·brothers, Gene (Beulah) Reed, Jim (Jackie) Reed, and Dick
of Appalachia and the
Reed; and several nieces and nephews.
Appalachian
RegionaJ
&gt;·. · Bob was a veteran of the U.S. Army and a Master Commission,
the
Driving·
···Carpenter. He was a member of the Zion Church of Christ
Trail
Map
was
created
to
·: and was very inyolved in many building projects there. .
.· Bob's record 1s as follows: Hemlock Grange No. 2049, assist visitors in experienc'Past Master; Meigs County Pomona Grange, Past Master; ing all the beauty and won· .flrew Webster Post 39, American Legion; Harrisonville der of the Appal;~chian
· Chapter 255, Order of Eastern Star, Past Worthy Patron; Mountain Region.
An event was held at the
·· Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 F. &amp; A. M., Past Master; Past
National
Geographic
··District Education Officer, 12th Masonic District; Past Ex.
Society
Headquarters
in
High Priest, Pomeroy Chapter No. 80 Royal Arch Masons;
: .Ohio Grand Council, Order of High Priesthood R. A. M.; .Washington DC on March
. Past ILL. Master, Bosworth Council No. 46, Royal &amp; Select
·Masters; Council of Anointed Kings, Order of the Silver
.Trowel; Past Commander, Ohio Valley Commandery No. 2,
· Knights Templar; Knight Commander of the Temple;
. ·Shannon Council No. 28, Knight Masons of Ireland; Ohio
· River Valley Council No. I04, Allied Masonic Degrees;
FOREST (AP) - Dean
·:.Knight of the Royal Order of the Red Branch of Eri; Ohio Tackett still tires easily, but
, Priory No. 18, Knights York Cross of Honor. .
· he said his wife noticed an
· Calling hours will be Thursday, March 27, from 4 to 8 immediate change for the
·p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, Ohio. The better this month after he
. Masonic service will occur Thursday, March 27, at 7 p.m. became the ftrst person in the
· .and the funeral will be Friday, March 28; at I pm at Ewing .u.s. to receive an experimen·Funeral Home. Burial will be in Carleton Cemetery with tal implant to improve the
military rites at the cemetery.
·
pumping of a damaged heart.
"The first thing she said to
me was that I . had color.
Before I was pale and gray,"
said Tackett, 64, who underwent his procedure March
II at Ohio State University
Center
'in
Medical
Columbus. It had been done
15 times · before, though
PAGE VILLE -Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District never in the U.S.
has scheduled a shut down 'o f water service for the
device about an inch &lt;llld
Pageville area, to allow for a water line relpcation .and tie a A
half
tall shaped like an
in, and a boil advisory. The advisory is in effect from 9 a.m.
inside-out
parachute was
to 4 p.m. on Thursday for Ohjo 684 from Vance Road, not
inserted
into
a section of
including Vance Road, King Ridge Road, Ohio 692,
Pageville, Pageville Road, Ohio 681 from and including
Sand Ridge Road and Goose Creek Road.
·
Affected customers are advised to boil the water they use
for cooking and drinking for tfiree minutes before consuming it. The advisory will be in effect until 4 p.m. on Friday.

·-·
., . +'

10

0

1

2

3

-4

SMiles

'

'\

ARC Illustration

This section of the Appalachian Driving Tour Map developed by the Appalachian Regional
Commission and published by the National Geographic Society, shows several of Meigs
County's points of interest
·
20, 2008 .to announce the
national release of the map.
Attending the event were
the Executive Director of
the Governor's Office of
Appalachia Fred Dee!, and
representing three of the
. Ohio trails, Sharon ,Manson
of Pike County representing
the Adventure Trail, Sonja
Cropper of Brown County
representing the Clothesline
of Quilts Trail, and Debbie
Robinson . of Guernsey
County r~presenting the

Nationill Road Trail and the product of a year long
Linda Basye who represents endeavor of the Tourism
the 29 county Appalachian Council with representatives
Region in Ohio to the ARC from each of the 13 states in
Tourism Council attended the Appalachian Mountain
the special event.
region.
There are four Ohio trails
The map was produced as
featured on the map. and the a vehicle to increase tourism ·
accompanying web site, · and the retail sale of products
www. visitappalachia.com. in the Appalachian Regions
The 'fourth trail represented thereby creating an economon the map is the Ohio River · ic impact for the businesses
Scenic Byway which touch- and artists in those regions.
es 12 counties in Ohio along
The event in Steubenville
its route. This project was is open to the public.

Opjoan frrst to receive experiment9l heart implant

Jobless .
from Page A1

'

Republican in 2004.)
So unless Obama pulls an
upset in Pennsylvania, this
thing's going seven, by
which I mean, Florida and
Michigan, two more crucial
swing · states Democrats
need come November. Dpover primaries are mandatory between· now and the
Democratic convention. To
date, both campaigns have
re5isted, .Clinton's because
her (insupportable) jlosition
is that she's already won
them, Obama' s because he
(secretly) fe\U'S that he can't.
No other altemative will be
seen as fair. Think of them
as rescheduled rainouts.
And if nobody' s won after
seven? Well, the rules s~y
the "superdelegates" get to
decide. And when they d'o.
they'll be looking at the
stats: Si!Ch as Obama losing
83 of Ohio's 88 counties;
the fact that Clinton's so far
won states totalling 263 ·
electoral votes to Obama's
193, or which one polls
ahead of GOP nommee,
Sen. John McCain, and
where.
Meanwhile, fans hyperventilate. Recently, I've
seen Clinton· called "monstrous," a "zombie" and~ a
"fratricidal maniac," and
Obama's supporters derided
as "cultists' and ''latte-sip·ping airheads."
My advice? Calm down,
everybody, it's a long sea~on.
(Arkansas
DemocratGazette columnist Ge11e
Lyons is a national magazine award winner and co- .
author of "The Hunting; of
the ?,resident" (St. Martin's
Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at genelyons2@sbcglobal.net.)' :

·f··-·•-ct•

Robert W. Reed

Boil advisory

on her. The most obvious difference
between
Pennsylvania
and
Mississippi can be expressed
as a football score: 21-6. Not
a blowout, but decisive. I'm
speaking of 'electoral votes,
according
to
which
Pennsylvania's exactly 3-1/2
times more important than
· Mississippi. Then, too,
Mississippi vot~d 60 percent-40 percent for President
Bush in 2004. It's a lead-pipe
cinch to vote Republican
come November. No bookie
would take the bet.
So, yeah, Pennsylvania, a
must-win swing state for
· Democrats, is far more
important - this year and
every year. It's also more
important than a bunch of
states Obruna has won: South
Carolina, Georgia, Alabruna,
Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, North
Dakota, etc. So when the candidate himself, a Harvard
Law graduate, talks about
how he's won more states
than Clinton, he knows he's
blowing smoke- giving you
the old "okie-doke," as he
likes to tell black audiences.
I'm sure Washington Post
columnist Eugene Robin~on
knows it, too. "To paraphrase Orwell," he wrote
recently, "some states are
more equal than others." On
"Countdown," lie and Keith
Olbermann had a wonderful
time pretending amaze111ent
at this bewilderingly complex "Clintonian" ;ugument. "Could it be," Bob
Somerby asks at The Daily
Howler, "because two mil· lion Democrats voted in
Ohio last week - and
.roughly ten thousand did so
in Wyoming?" (Wyoming
voted 69 percent-29 percent

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Unveiling of ARC. trail map set for Saturday

Local Briefs

It ain't over until it's over

!h~

Thursday, March

PageA4

. For the Record
Accident reported
MIDDJ_.EPORT- A two-car accident at Couflty Road 5
·.and Ohio 7 was reported yesterday afternoon. The
Middleport Fire Department, Medic 5, Squad 44 responded
to the accident where injuries were reJ??rted. The Ohio
·State Highway Patrol is handling the ll;CCJdent report . .

Board
from PageA1
Action oMhe original pro. posal for change was post·poned until the next meeting
to allow time for the superin.·tendent to further review the
:new regulations and any
·problems of implementation.
·
Other business
A resolution accepting the
.amount and rates as deter-

mined by the county's budget commission and authorizing the necessary tax
levies and cenifying them to
the county auditor was
approved by the Hoard. The
funds include 3.80 mills
(inside) and 16.20 mills outside (voted,) along with the
bond retirement levy, 2.90
mills (voted) and the new
building capital maintenance
levy of .50 mills (also voted.)
The Board approved the
sale by seal bid of the 1997

January to 10.7 perce!Hiast
month.
'Athens County also fell
by five-tenths of a percent
to 5.9 percent in February
after hitting 6.4 percent during · January.
Jackson
County's rate dipped by the
same amount, from 8.9 percent in January to 8.4 percent the following month.
Ford buses with Thomas
bodies, ·along with a 1995
Chevy truck.
Personnel matters handled
included accepting the resignation of Greg Browning as
a custodian and as. boys
assistant baseball coach, and
naming Greg Smith as interim boys assistant baseball
coach effective immediately: Vickie Jones was given a
three year contract as assistant principal at Meigs primary, and David Deem was

· Tackett's he;ut damaged by a
major heart attack last May .
that left him unable to walk
even a few steps without
becoming winded. The
CardioKinetix VPD Implant
System essentially blocks
off an inefficient portion of a
.weakened heart chamber in
hopes of relieving symptoms
such as fatigue and shortness
of breath, the research hospital said io a news release.
"We really hope people
get better from this," said
Dr. Ernest L. Mazzaferri Jr.,
the Ohio .. State cardiologist
who performed the surgery.
He noted that tests
showed the pumping action
of Tackett's heart improved
from 25 percent to the mid30s right after the surgery.

Normal is 55 percent.
..
However, Mazzilferri said
he cautioned his patient that
since Tackett was implanted
as part of a safety and feasibility study, he may not see
any benefit at all.
Tackett was sent home to
this town 60 miles south of
Toledo the day after his procedure. He acknowledged
it's too early to know his
long-term prognosis, but
was encouraged by the way
he no longer needs to keep
pausing to rest while getting
ready in the morning.
"Now I get right out of
bed, shave, shower amj get
dressed all in one motion,"
Tackett said.
According to Ohio State
University Medical Center,

some 5 J million Americans
suffer from congestive heart
failure, defined as a heart
that's not pumping blood
efficiently, most often
because of a damaging heart
attack. ·The ·implant, made
by CardioKinetix Inc. of
Redwood City, Calif., has
the potential to help many
of those patients, said Dr.
William Abraham, Ohio
State's director of cardiovascular medicine.
The hospital said it is one of
five participating in the study
approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
Twenty patients will . be
implanted and, if initial data
show the device is safe, a
larger trial will be conductel;i.
Mazzaferri said.

Joblessnt;ss in Vinton
County fell slightly from 9
percent during January to
8.8 percent in February. The
rate increased by one-tenth
of a· percent, from 5.3 to 5.4
percent in February for
Lawrence County, and by
two-tenths of ·a percent,
from 5.7 to 5.9 percent in
Washington County.
The state says Ohio's
unemployment rate was 5.3
percent in February, down
from 5.5 percent in January.
The figures released last

Friday show that the num'ber of unemployed workers
last month was 3 1'6,000,
down from ~29,000 in
January. The number of
unemployed people has
decreased by I 0,000 in the
past 12 months.
.
The rate this February
was down from a 5.5 percent rate a year earlier. ·
The state's 5.3 percent
unemployment figure tops
the national rate of 4.8 percent.
·
.
The ODJFS says the slight

decline in the unemployment rate must be' tempered
by the fact that total employment decreased in both
goods-producing and service-providing industries.
(The Associated Press
contributed to this story.)

given a two year contract as
assistant principal at Meigs
Middle School.
In other action Tony ·
Dugan as gmnted a shortterm medical leave of
absence, Jordan Hill was
hired as golf coach at Meigs
Middle School. Kevin
Sheppard and Christine
Miceli as tutors for health
handicapped students, and
Lori Shinn, Travis Smith and
Elizabeth Wiifong as substitute teachers for the rem.ain-

f't'R}'Ok\fl!\'(; :\ltf~ l'l:\TN£

Ohio Valley
Symphony
Pianist Lori Sims
March 29th
8PM

der of the school year. .
Attending the meeting
were · Roger Abbott, Ron
Logan, Barbara Musser,
Larry Tucker and Scott
Walton, Board members, and
principals and assjstant principals and other personnel of
the Meigs Elementary School
where the meeting was held.

Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gafllpolla, OH (7401446-ARTS

Eastern
'

'

from PageA1

.Greenwich Village and SoHo.
· ' They shopped the street vendors
.and department stores, and toured
Ellis and Liberty Islands.
··" Several selections played by the
·Eastern musicians were particular•ly appropriate to the recent St:
Patrick's Day celebrations in the
:city, Kuhn said.
· . "Corporations like IBM realiZe the
importance of supponing the arts,
.both locally and nationally," .Kuhn
said. "By providing performance
·opportunities tP student musical
•groups, ffiM encoumges participa: tion m the arts across the nation."
Submitted photo
· "IBM welcomes young musiMembers
of
the
Eastern
High
School
concert
band
and
bell
choir
are
pictured .with
·cians from urban and rural settings
their director, Cris Kuhri, front and center, and their chaperones.
throughout the c.ounty."

· If you want to make farm life less taxing, talk to
your people at H&amp;R Block. OLJr people can answer
question~ about things like fuel credit, farm income
averaging, and casualty losses.
Call1-800-HRBLOCK or visit hrblock.com ·
618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-(;674
'

. Mon·Frl 9:00 - 6:00
Sat. 9:00 - 5:00
Other hours by appointment

_.

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•

�'

CoMMUNITY
Stewart completes basic training

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

toms, first aid, firefighting, water safety and survival, and shipboard and aircraft safety. An emphasis was also
placed on physical fimess.
The capstone event of boot camp is
"Battle Stations." This exercise gives
recruits the skills and confidence they
need to .succeed in the fleet. "Battle
Stations" is designed to galvanize the ·
basic warrior attributes of sacrifice,
dedication, teamwork and endurance

POMEROY Navy Seaman
Recruit Sean Stewart, son of Judith L
Stewart of Pomeroy, Ohio and Thomas
.L Stewart of New Marshtield, Ohio,
recently completed U.S. Navy basic
training
at
Recruit _ Training
Command, Great Lakes, IlL
During the eight-week program,
Stewart completed a variety of training which included classroom study
and practical instruction on naval cus-

in each recruit through the practical
application of basic Navy skills and
the core values of Honor, Courage and
Commitment. Its distinctly "Navy"
flavor was designed ·to take into
account what it means to be a Sailor.
Stewart is a 2007 graduate "of
Alexander High School of Albany,
Ohio.to Stay Active." Installation of
the new chapter officers will be held
on April I.

TOPS honors best weight losers
TUPPERS PLAINS Marie
LaChance was named weekly best
weight-loss winner at the March 18
meeting of TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) Chapter #OH
2013
Coolville with 17 members present.
Recognized was Dottie Bond for her
upcoming birthday. At the March 25
meeting Debbie Moodispaugh was
named weekly best weight-loss win-.
ner and Roberta Henderson runner-up
with 16 members present. The month-

ly weight-loss winner for March was
LaChance and the quarterly weightloss winner was Henderson. Cindy
Hyde was recognized for having six.
weeks with no gain.
KOP,S (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly)
members · Mary Cleland and Patricia
Richmond were in leeway. February
monthly winners were LaChresia
Bogardus, Dottie Bond, Diane Burns,
Mary .Cleland and Connie Rankin, .
exercise charts; Bogardus, Bond, Jane

Oldaker and Patricia Richmond, food
charts.
Bums presented a program from the
TOPS News Magazine onthe "Ten Way
to Stay Active.:" Installation of the new
chapter oftij:ers will be held on April I.
The group meets every Tuesday at
Torch Baptist Church. Weigh-in is
from· 5:15 to 6:16p.m.with the meetin·g at 6:30 p.m. For information call
Pat Snedden at 662-2633 or attend a
free meeting.

0

· Thursday, March

29', 2008

Cash music comes
.alive in 'Ring of Fire'

•

-

Page A7 • The Daily Sentinel

--

PORTSMOUTH - Based on the popular songs of
Johnny Cash comes "Ring of Fire," a unique musical about
love and tmth, struggle and success, rowdiness and
redemption, home and family.
:
At 7:30 p.m. on Monday, March 31 at Shawnee Sta(e
University's Vern Riffe Center for the Arts a cast of I~
multi-talented performers takes you en a jo~rney into the
world J?hnny. Cash cr~ated in his songs.
:
For ticket mformauon, call the McKinley Box Office
from I 0 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at (74Q)
351-3600~ .
.
.
'
Though not a traditional story musical, "Ring of Fire''
loosely follows three couples at different stages of life. All,
at some pomt, capture and evoke Cash and his beloved se&lt;!ond wife, June Carter.
·
.
The "man in b~ack" began as a country 'music maveric.k
who became an ~eon for country and rock fans alike. His
music made heroes of the downtrodden, and ennobled till:
disenfranchised.
.•
. "Ring o~. Fire" features 38 of t~e music legend's son~s
mcludmg Country Boy," "A Thmg Called Love," "Five
Feet High and Rising," "Daddy Sang Bass," "Ring of Fire:'
"I Walk the Line," "I've Been Everywhere,'~ "The Man ip
Blac.k" and his final hit, "Hurt." ·
,
The F~;~mily Pops Series is sponsored in pait by USEC.:

www .mydRilysentinel.com

--

-

Thursday, March 27,

--

2008

'Grease is. the.word...'
.

The musical •

· •Grease" will lie
~ntedby .

th!l M~igs High

SchoOl Dratna

Club a't 7 p.m·: ·
Friday end ·
saturday In the
Meigs High
School gymnes~
um. Doors wtll

o~n at6 p:m.

.

Admission
is $5
.
c~:!?J;~ul~s. and ,.,

'

There "IS" Such A Thing As
AFree Lunch!

•

''•

.~Point to host French, Indian War commemoration

·: 'POINT
PLEASANT,
~W.Va. - · The ftrSt major
:eyent Jo jump-start the 2008
: ~urism season is almost here.
; - The French and Indian
'·War Series will be 10 a.m.-5
:"p.m. Saturday at Th-Endie:Wei State Park in Point
:Pleasant. The event was ere-ated to celebrate the ~50th
~niversary of the french
and Indian War.
·! .. Dou~ Wood of Trails Inc.
"'ind hts group of historic
~nterpreters will serve as
:event presenters. The raids
:that were led by ·Cherokee
&lt;:l&gt;mmanders Ostenaco and
'bconostota along the Ohio
River to. the vicinity of Fort
;Ouquesne 250 years ago in
·:1758 will be highlighted. ·

Enter Here For A

$30 Gift Certificate
To One Of These Great Restaurants

Drawing Each Week!
Name=---------,----Phone# ___________________

Sign Up Ta Win
a$30.Gift
Certifi:cate! .
•

Mail to: Free Luncb
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631

•

0

..Dorothy·Le't!
:Win.n er!

$3.95

'

Cabell counties will present a
-.i:oncert of old-time music as
part of the Appalachian
.Studies
Association
:Conference, "The Road
;Ahead:. The Next Thirty
·Years · of Appalachian
.Studies," scheduled March
:28-30 at Marshall University.
! The evening presentation
·will take place at 9 p.m.
:Saturday, March 29 in Smith
Music
Hall
on
the
Huntington campus.Bemard
· Cyrus . and Tim and Dave
Bmg, three outstanding perjormers of traditional music,
will perform at this free pubevent.
·
::. Cyrus, ~ho is from Fort
:Gay in Wayne County, is a
&gt;banjo and dulcimer player
:,&amp;id maker. His fascinatton
-ias a youth with the dulcimer
:;and banjo came from two
'l'llder players, Ezra and
:Senny Bartram, who lived
l!ear his home-place on Big

lUNCH BUFFET

1540 Eastern Av&lt;!nUio ·,-:,,
• Gallipolis, OH

. (740)446-6888

ff:OO

•

m, ·3:30 PM

!tWN·SAr.

:uc

228 W Main, Pomeroy
' . 992-5432

.

.
•'
-·.

~

'

It was ·their inspiration that
led to his lifetime· interest in
old-time string music. Cyrus
is a highly skilled wood
worker whose dulcimers and
banjos are appreciated by
players for their outstanding
craftsmanship. He will bring
some of his instrllments to
show at the event.
Cyrus also has a fas~ina­
tion with wild orchids. He
has combed the region while
identifying more than 40
varieties.of the orchid family.
He has documented .wild
flowers through photography
· and has amassed a collection
of more than I0,000 ~!ides.
Some of his photographs will
be presented at his concert
performance as well.
Cyrus' lo\;e of traditional
music, craftsmanship, native
plants, storytelling, the occasional sip from a jug, and oldtime mountain.ways in ~ener­
al will come through m his
petformance. He describes

.

:_Egg hunt Saturday
'

~~~:~~r;~~:~\..ll'am
BUFFET (11·3:30 pm) 4.95 per

&amp; much

203 West Main St.
McArthur, OH
740-596-9349

1

Dine In or .D rive ·Thru
_.

- - -· -

_.

Buy one Sonny Burger
Sandwich Get One Free!
Must Present Coupon
To McOures
. ·-·

..

Children 4-10 yrs. old 13.50
NNI~R BUFFET (4·9 pm) '6.50 per persor
w/crab legs
Children 4-10 yrs. old 13.95
SUNDAY ALL DAY 14.95

&gt;ruo

wv

E.xp. 412108

'

the music he plays as having
an "ancient sound." He will
play locally learned tunes on
both banjo and dulcimer and
tell a story or two. ·
Dave and Tim Bing are
natives of Cabell County
with deep roots in the East
Lynn section · of Wayne
County, where they spent a
lot of growing-up time. Both
are outstanding musicians, a
fact proven by their many
first-place finishes on fiddle
and banjo at West Virginia's
state-sponsored Vandalia
Gathenng in Charleston.
They spread old-time
music far and wide, recently
returning frorh a tour in
England, where their brand of
mountain music garnered
rave reviews. When not winning contests, Tim Bing
works as an irunworker in
Huntington, while Dave stays
busy playing and teaching
old-time music. Dave is now
well known as a violin maker,
working out of his shop at his

.

home in Roane County.
After they quickly became
proficient on fiddle (Dave)
and banjo (Tim), people
responded to their music and
demanded that they play
publicly. Both performed
and recorded as members of
the Bing Brothers Band, and
Dave now plays and has
recorded with the old-time
string band, Gandydancer.
Since doing an apprenticeship for fiddle making
through
the
Augusta
Heritage Center program,
Dave has been improving
his fine woodworking skills
to the point where his instrllments are in high demand.
When not playing or teaching music, Dave works at
filling the orders he has for
his band-crafted fiddles.

For more information,
Green,
contact Chris
Appalachian
Studies
Associati011
Conference
program chair, at (304)
696-6269.

The Rio Grande workshop is open
to students grades 7-12 and will focus
on improvisation. The cost is $12 per
student.
Pre-registration is required. Contact
Cathy Erwin at (740) 992-6759 or
(740) 416-8666 for the Meigs workshop and call (7 40) 645-0063 for the
Rio Grande workshop.

Kennedy program is sponsored by the
Friends of the Kennedy Museum and is
free and open to the public.

Art talks

JACKSON - The current exhibit,
"Fashion and Acces~ori~s." will be on
display through March 31 at the Lillian
Jones Museum, 75 Broadway St.
Take a few minutes to stop and see
the flapper dresses, . furs, woven
gowns, scarves, jewelry, · shoes and
designer bags and hats. These items
range in dates between the 1850s to
the 1980s. This particular fashion
exhibit takes a tour through history.
Admission is free and special
appointments for touring the museum
can be arranged.
The museum's next exhibit,
"Women's Work of Appalachia," featuring art by women frqm the region,
will be opening April 15 and on display through June 30.

' .

hed led

April JfAC exhibit
showcases local
artist's work
GALLIPOLIS - The April exhibit. in the Galleries at
Riverby will feature the works of Jack Park from Point
Pleasant,. W.Va., expressed in three media: charcoal, pen
and paint, according to Carrie Napora, executive director of
the French Art Colony.
· ·
The exhibit is entitled "Interpretations from the Ohio River."
A student of ·art while still in junior and senior high
school, following graduation from Point. Pleasant High
School, Park attended Marshall University, majoring in art
education. He earned an AB from Marshall and a master's
in art and sculpture, also from Marshall.
He also has a CR from the Famous Artists School in
Danbury, Conn., in commercial art and illustration.
Park has a surreal sense of the normal and precise visual
movement, with this collection of works to be the April
exhibit at Riverby. As he points out, "This exhibition is not
a retrospective of my art. It is, however, but a journey of
one artist's experience through the process of painting.
"My early attempts at the precursor of painting were drawing from the Disney cartoons and movies of the late thirties and
earl&gt;.&lt; forties," he added. ''1ben these were the only sources
avrolable at movie theaters and in print Another source was my
father, Victor Park, a graduate of the Cleveland School of Art.
Dad was both mentor and tutor until his death in 1948."
"My generation is from a world molded by crass TV programs, movies, comic books, popular music, advertisemepts
and commercials," Park added, pointing out in referring to the
exhibit, "These are my paintings and indeed my philosophy."
His exhibitions have included the Huntington Art
Gallery, Charleston Allied Art Show, a one-man show in
Huntington, and senior and master's exhibitions at
MarshalL He is a recipient of the West Virginia Arts and
Humanities Council Purchase Prize.
The opening reception for the exhibit, w,hich will be featured in the ~alleries from April 4-27, will be Friday, April
.4 from 5 unttl 7 p.m.
. Also; a free exhibit workshop, entitled "Surrealism Made
Easy ... Transform Your Imagination," will be conducted by
Park on Saturday, April 5 from 10 a.m. until noon, for ages
12andup.
·
Sponsors for .the April exhibit are Dr. E. John Strauss Jr.,
Sears Roebuck of Gallipolis and I.E. Morrison &amp; Associates.
Gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday, I0 a.m. unti16
p.m., Saturdays from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m., and Sundays, I
to 5 pm. The galleries are closed on Mondays. ·
1be date of the French Art Colony annual meeting has been
confmned for Friday, May 2, 2008, at the Holiday Inn. Details
and ticket availability will be announced in the near future .

Rock and Roll Hall of Famers
performing Sunday at Fur Peace

For more infqrmation, call (740)
POMEROY -Meigs County will host two Rock and
593-1304 or visit us on the web at Roll Hall of Famers this Sunday when Roger McGuinn
www. ohio. edu/museum.
joins F~r Peac~ Rancher Jorma Kaukonen at the Fur Peace

Current exhibit
"

ATHENS - The Friends of the
Kennedy Museum once again sponsors "Inside/Outside: Art Talks at the
Kennedy" series on Thursday, April 3
at 5:30 p:m. with . Paul McFarland,
preparator, art preservationist and fine
SC
U
· art framer.
•
McFarland's t'\lk will touch upon the
GRANDE - The Imagination ' role of the museum preparator, under. · :~actory's Joseph Wright will hold two standing the seven enemies of art and a
·workshops this weekend, one in Meigs discussion of the maintenance and safe
;jlt the Middleport Family Life Center display of personal collections, impor::aild one in Rio Grande at the tant documents and family mementos.
•University of Rio Grande.
The art talk will take place at
~ The Meigs workshop, "Acting Kennedy Museum of Art at the Ridges
-Wild,'' is open to all students, grades on the Ohio University campus. The
·~-12· and the cost is $5 ~r student.
"Inside/Outside: Art Talks" at the

•·
!Workshops

21fdSirrtl

_______.:_•---------------:----':...________________________ ...

.

; .POMER9Y - · The annual Easter
:iegg hunt sponsored ~y the Pomeroy
:Merchants Association will be held at
~ 11 a.m. Saturday on Bob Roberts Field
jJl Pomeroy. ·
•• ,Children will be divided into three age
~ups for the hunt. Finders of the .gold.en eggs in each group will receive a nice
iJnze. Smaller. prizes will go to all chilliten who find eggs. The Easter bunny
;wm be there to greet' the children.
:: The egg hunt was post(!Oned from
;lile day before Easter to th1s Saturday
~ue to the cold weather and wet condi;~~m of the football field.

· 356 East Main
Pomeroy, OR
740,992-6292

Gen. Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, OH
740-992-5248.

-

Entertainment Briefs

·-

820 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH
740·446-3837

.

Conference features old time music concert,

! HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- · Hurricane·Creek.

swooo,m.u

0

French captive, a Delaware
captive, a Shawnee captive, a
Virginia captive of Shawnees
returning to Virginia with the
Cherokee war gang, a
Virginia soldier embedded
with the Cherokee war gang, ·
Cherokee warriors and a
Cherokee war woman.
Point Pleasant will be the
first location of tlie series,
as the ot!ler two series are
scheduled to take place at
Blennerhasset Island · in
Parkersburg in June and
Tomlinson Run in Hancock
County in August
The ' event · is free of
charge. For more information, call (304) 558-2764 or
visit www.tu-endie-weistatepark.com.

1

·Three riatives of Wayne and

nSB,SBIIMP
CBICUN, SALAD lAB,
CW LEGS, DISIEIT BAR,
SALMON, ICE CWM, .
PIOG LEGS

Those in attendance will lance travel, communicahave the ·opportunity to tion techniques and local
interact with costumed his- landmarks that were signifitory interpreters who will cant in the war.
shed new light on the
An overview of the French
alliance that was formed and Indian War in the region
between the colony of will start at 3 -.p.m. The
Virginia and the Cherokees overview will use an audio- ·
to oust the French from the visual presentatiQn with
Ohio Valier· ·
maps and historical images
. Warriors camp living liis- .that interpret the landscape;
tory· demonstrations will events and people of the;
kick off the event at I 0 a.m. area. This activity will take
From II a.m. to noon, the place at Fort Randolph
series presenters will focus Terrace, which . is located
on the prisoners and their next door to· the. park.
fates. Noon to 2 p.m. will
From 4 to 5 p.m., the day
provide an opportunity to will conclude with a presensee more warriors' camp tation
of
Cherokee
demonstrations. Also at 2 Commander
Outacite
p.m., there will be a warrior Ostenaco at Fort Randolph
hike to emphasize long ·dis- Terrace. Portrayals include a

Submitted photo

This work by Jack Park of Point Pleasant. W.Va., will be
among those exh.iblted at the Fren·ch Art Colony, 530 First
Ave., Gallipolis, through the month of April.
·

0

For i11jormation. call (740) 286-2556.

o

Station Concert Hall on St. Clair Road, Pomeroy.
The show is sold. out as are the station's upcoming concerts with Tommy Emmanuel and Warren Haynes.
,
This is McGuinn's second visit to Fur Peace Station and '
he' II be joining Kaukonen on stage during the set on
Sunday. McGuinn was inducted into the Rock and R,oll
Hall of Fame in 1991 with his group The Byrds, which had
·
several hits in the 1960s.
Some of The Byrds' greatest hits include "Mr. Tambourine
Man" (1964), "All I Really Want to Do" (1965), "Thm!
Thm! TUm!" (1965). "Eight Miles High" (1966), "So You
Want to be a Rock and Roll Star" 0 967), and "Wasn't Born
to Follow" (1969} from the "Easy Rider" Soundtrack.
McGuinn is also known for his familiar Rickenbacker gui!ar
and blending the sound of Dylan's folk with Beatles' rock.
Kaukonen was inducted into the hall in 1996 with members of his 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 to Love" and "Embryonic Journey."

For more iriformatimi on the concert serie.s at Fur Peace
Station Concert Hall, go to www.furpeacerarrch.com or
call (740) 992-6228.

•

�'

CoMMUNITY
Stewart completes basic training

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

toms, first aid, firefighting, water safety and survival, and shipboard and aircraft safety. An emphasis was also
placed on physical fimess.
The capstone event of boot camp is
"Battle Stations." This exercise gives
recruits the skills and confidence they
need to .succeed in the fleet. "Battle
Stations" is designed to galvanize the ·
basic warrior attributes of sacrifice,
dedication, teamwork and endurance

POMEROY Navy Seaman
Recruit Sean Stewart, son of Judith L
Stewart of Pomeroy, Ohio and Thomas
.L Stewart of New Marshtield, Ohio,
recently completed U.S. Navy basic
training
at
Recruit _ Training
Command, Great Lakes, IlL
During the eight-week program,
Stewart completed a variety of training which included classroom study
and practical instruction on naval cus-

in each recruit through the practical
application of basic Navy skills and
the core values of Honor, Courage and
Commitment. Its distinctly "Navy"
flavor was designed ·to take into
account what it means to be a Sailor.
Stewart is a 2007 graduate "of
Alexander High School of Albany,
Ohio.to Stay Active." Installation of
the new chapter officers will be held
on April I.

TOPS honors best weight losers
TUPPERS PLAINS Marie
LaChance was named weekly best
weight-loss winner at the March 18
meeting of TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) Chapter #OH
2013
Coolville with 17 members present.
Recognized was Dottie Bond for her
upcoming birthday. At the March 25
meeting Debbie Moodispaugh was
named weekly best weight-loss win-.
ner and Roberta Henderson runner-up
with 16 members present. The month-

ly weight-loss winner for March was
LaChance and the quarterly weightloss winner was Henderson. Cindy
Hyde was recognized for having six.
weeks with no gain.
KOP,S (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly)
members · Mary Cleland and Patricia
Richmond were in leeway. February
monthly winners were LaChresia
Bogardus, Dottie Bond, Diane Burns,
Mary .Cleland and Connie Rankin, .
exercise charts; Bogardus, Bond, Jane

Oldaker and Patricia Richmond, food
charts.
Bums presented a program from the
TOPS News Magazine onthe "Ten Way
to Stay Active.:" Installation of the new
chapter oftij:ers will be held on April I.
The group meets every Tuesday at
Torch Baptist Church. Weigh-in is
from· 5:15 to 6:16p.m.with the meetin·g at 6:30 p.m. For information call
Pat Snedden at 662-2633 or attend a
free meeting.

0

· Thursday, March

29', 2008

Cash music comes
.alive in 'Ring of Fire'

•

-

Page A7 • The Daily Sentinel

--

PORTSMOUTH - Based on the popular songs of
Johnny Cash comes "Ring of Fire," a unique musical about
love and tmth, struggle and success, rowdiness and
redemption, home and family.
:
At 7:30 p.m. on Monday, March 31 at Shawnee Sta(e
University's Vern Riffe Center for the Arts a cast of I~
multi-talented performers takes you en a jo~rney into the
world J?hnny. Cash cr~ated in his songs.
:
For ticket mformauon, call the McKinley Box Office
from I 0 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at (74Q)
351-3600~ .
.
.
'
Though not a traditional story musical, "Ring of Fire''
loosely follows three couples at different stages of life. All,
at some pomt, capture and evoke Cash and his beloved se&lt;!ond wife, June Carter.
·
.
The "man in b~ack" began as a country 'music maveric.k
who became an ~eon for country and rock fans alike. His
music made heroes of the downtrodden, and ennobled till:
disenfranchised.
.•
. "Ring o~. Fire" features 38 of t~e music legend's son~s
mcludmg Country Boy," "A Thmg Called Love," "Five
Feet High and Rising," "Daddy Sang Bass," "Ring of Fire:'
"I Walk the Line," "I've Been Everywhere,'~ "The Man ip
Blac.k" and his final hit, "Hurt." ·
,
The F~;~mily Pops Series is sponsored in pait by USEC.:

www .mydRilysentinel.com

--

-

Thursday, March 27,

--

2008

'Grease is. the.word...'
.

The musical •

· •Grease" will lie
~ntedby .

th!l M~igs High

SchoOl Dratna

Club a't 7 p.m·: ·
Friday end ·
saturday In the
Meigs High
School gymnes~
um. Doors wtll

o~n at6 p:m.

.

Admission
is $5
.
c~:!?J;~ul~s. and ,.,

'

There "IS" Such A Thing As
AFree Lunch!

•

''•

.~Point to host French, Indian War commemoration

·: 'POINT
PLEASANT,
~W.Va. - · The ftrSt major
:eyent Jo jump-start the 2008
: ~urism season is almost here.
; - The French and Indian
'·War Series will be 10 a.m.-5
:"p.m. Saturday at Th-Endie:Wei State Park in Point
:Pleasant. The event was ere-ated to celebrate the ~50th
~niversary of the french
and Indian War.
·! .. Dou~ Wood of Trails Inc.
"'ind hts group of historic
~nterpreters will serve as
:event presenters. The raids
:that were led by ·Cherokee
&lt;:l&gt;mmanders Ostenaco and
'bconostota along the Ohio
River to. the vicinity of Fort
;Ouquesne 250 years ago in
·:1758 will be highlighted. ·

Enter Here For A

$30 Gift Certificate
To One Of These Great Restaurants

Drawing Each Week!
Name=---------,----Phone# ___________________

Sign Up Ta Win
a$30.Gift
Certifi:cate! .
•

Mail to: Free Luncb
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631

•

0

..Dorothy·Le't!
:Win.n er!

$3.95

'

Cabell counties will present a
-.i:oncert of old-time music as
part of the Appalachian
.Studies
Association
:Conference, "The Road
;Ahead:. The Next Thirty
·Years · of Appalachian
.Studies," scheduled March
:28-30 at Marshall University.
! The evening presentation
·will take place at 9 p.m.
:Saturday, March 29 in Smith
Music
Hall
on
the
Huntington campus.Bemard
· Cyrus . and Tim and Dave
Bmg, three outstanding perjormers of traditional music,
will perform at this free pubevent.
·
::. Cyrus, ~ho is from Fort
:Gay in Wayne County, is a
&gt;banjo and dulcimer player
:,&amp;id maker. His fascinatton
-ias a youth with the dulcimer
:;and banjo came from two
'l'llder players, Ezra and
:Senny Bartram, who lived
l!ear his home-place on Big

lUNCH BUFFET

1540 Eastern Av&lt;!nUio ·,-:,,
• Gallipolis, OH

. (740)446-6888

ff:OO

•

m, ·3:30 PM

!tWN·SAr.

:uc

228 W Main, Pomeroy
' . 992-5432

.

.
•'
-·.

~

'

It was ·their inspiration that
led to his lifetime· interest in
old-time string music. Cyrus
is a highly skilled wood
worker whose dulcimers and
banjos are appreciated by
players for their outstanding
craftsmanship. He will bring
some of his instrllments to
show at the event.
Cyrus also has a fas~ina­
tion with wild orchids. He
has combed the region while
identifying more than 40
varieties.of the orchid family.
He has documented .wild
flowers through photography
· and has amassed a collection
of more than I0,000 ~!ides.
Some of his photographs will
be presented at his concert
performance as well.
Cyrus' lo\;e of traditional
music, craftsmanship, native
plants, storytelling, the occasional sip from a jug, and oldtime mountain.ways in ~ener­
al will come through m his
petformance. He describes

.

:_Egg hunt Saturday
'

~~~:~~r;~~:~\..ll'am
BUFFET (11·3:30 pm) 4.95 per

&amp; much

203 West Main St.
McArthur, OH
740-596-9349

1

Dine In or .D rive ·Thru
_.

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Sandwich Get One Free!
Must Present Coupon
To McOures
. ·-·

..

Children 4-10 yrs. old 13.50
NNI~R BUFFET (4·9 pm) '6.50 per persor
w/crab legs
Children 4-10 yrs. old 13.95
SUNDAY ALL DAY 14.95

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'

the music he plays as having
an "ancient sound." He will
play locally learned tunes on
both banjo and dulcimer and
tell a story or two. ·
Dave and Tim Bing are
natives of Cabell County
with deep roots in the East
Lynn section · of Wayne
County, where they spent a
lot of growing-up time. Both
are outstanding musicians, a
fact proven by their many
first-place finishes on fiddle
and banjo at West Virginia's
state-sponsored Vandalia
Gathenng in Charleston.
They spread old-time
music far and wide, recently
returning frorh a tour in
England, where their brand of
mountain music garnered
rave reviews. When not winning contests, Tim Bing
works as an irunworker in
Huntington, while Dave stays
busy playing and teaching
old-time music. Dave is now
well known as a violin maker,
working out of his shop at his

.

home in Roane County.
After they quickly became
proficient on fiddle (Dave)
and banjo (Tim), people
responded to their music and
demanded that they play
publicly. Both performed
and recorded as members of
the Bing Brothers Band, and
Dave now plays and has
recorded with the old-time
string band, Gandydancer.
Since doing an apprenticeship for fiddle making
through
the
Augusta
Heritage Center program,
Dave has been improving
his fine woodworking skills
to the point where his instrllments are in high demand.
When not playing or teaching music, Dave works at
filling the orders he has for
his band-crafted fiddles.

For more information,
Green,
contact Chris
Appalachian
Studies
Associati011
Conference
program chair, at (304)
696-6269.

The Rio Grande workshop is open
to students grades 7-12 and will focus
on improvisation. The cost is $12 per
student.
Pre-registration is required. Contact
Cathy Erwin at (740) 992-6759 or
(740) 416-8666 for the Meigs workshop and call (7 40) 645-0063 for the
Rio Grande workshop.

Kennedy program is sponsored by the
Friends of the Kennedy Museum and is
free and open to the public.

Art talks

JACKSON - The current exhibit,
"Fashion and Acces~ori~s." will be on
display through March 31 at the Lillian
Jones Museum, 75 Broadway St.
Take a few minutes to stop and see
the flapper dresses, . furs, woven
gowns, scarves, jewelry, · shoes and
designer bags and hats. These items
range in dates between the 1850s to
the 1980s. This particular fashion
exhibit takes a tour through history.
Admission is free and special
appointments for touring the museum
can be arranged.
The museum's next exhibit,
"Women's Work of Appalachia," featuring art by women frqm the region,
will be opening April 15 and on display through June 30.

' .

hed led

April JfAC exhibit
showcases local
artist's work
GALLIPOLIS - The April exhibit. in the Galleries at
Riverby will feature the works of Jack Park from Point
Pleasant,. W.Va., expressed in three media: charcoal, pen
and paint, according to Carrie Napora, executive director of
the French Art Colony.
· ·
The exhibit is entitled "Interpretations from the Ohio River."
A student of ·art while still in junior and senior high
school, following graduation from Point. Pleasant High
School, Park attended Marshall University, majoring in art
education. He earned an AB from Marshall and a master's
in art and sculpture, also from Marshall.
He also has a CR from the Famous Artists School in
Danbury, Conn., in commercial art and illustration.
Park has a surreal sense of the normal and precise visual
movement, with this collection of works to be the April
exhibit at Riverby. As he points out, "This exhibition is not
a retrospective of my art. It is, however, but a journey of
one artist's experience through the process of painting.
"My early attempts at the precursor of painting were drawing from the Disney cartoons and movies of the late thirties and
earl&gt;.&lt; forties," he added. ''1ben these were the only sources
avrolable at movie theaters and in print Another source was my
father, Victor Park, a graduate of the Cleveland School of Art.
Dad was both mentor and tutor until his death in 1948."
"My generation is from a world molded by crass TV programs, movies, comic books, popular music, advertisemepts
and commercials," Park added, pointing out in referring to the
exhibit, "These are my paintings and indeed my philosophy."
His exhibitions have included the Huntington Art
Gallery, Charleston Allied Art Show, a one-man show in
Huntington, and senior and master's exhibitions at
MarshalL He is a recipient of the West Virginia Arts and
Humanities Council Purchase Prize.
The opening reception for the exhibit, w,hich will be featured in the ~alleries from April 4-27, will be Friday, April
.4 from 5 unttl 7 p.m.
. Also; a free exhibit workshop, entitled "Surrealism Made
Easy ... Transform Your Imagination," will be conducted by
Park on Saturday, April 5 from 10 a.m. until noon, for ages
12andup.
·
Sponsors for .the April exhibit are Dr. E. John Strauss Jr.,
Sears Roebuck of Gallipolis and I.E. Morrison &amp; Associates.
Gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday, I0 a.m. unti16
p.m., Saturdays from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m., and Sundays, I
to 5 pm. The galleries are closed on Mondays. ·
1be date of the French Art Colony annual meeting has been
confmned for Friday, May 2, 2008, at the Holiday Inn. Details
and ticket availability will be announced in the near future .

Rock and Roll Hall of Famers
performing Sunday at Fur Peace

For more infqrmation, call (740)
POMEROY -Meigs County will host two Rock and
593-1304 or visit us on the web at Roll Hall of Famers this Sunday when Roger McGuinn
www. ohio. edu/museum.
joins F~r Peac~ Rancher Jorma Kaukonen at the Fur Peace

Current exhibit
"

ATHENS - The Friends of the
Kennedy Museum once again sponsors "Inside/Outside: Art Talks at the
Kennedy" series on Thursday, April 3
at 5:30 p:m. with . Paul McFarland,
preparator, art preservationist and fine
SC
U
· art framer.
•
McFarland's t'\lk will touch upon the
GRANDE - The Imagination ' role of the museum preparator, under. · :~actory's Joseph Wright will hold two standing the seven enemies of art and a
·workshops this weekend, one in Meigs discussion of the maintenance and safe
;jlt the Middleport Family Life Center display of personal collections, impor::aild one in Rio Grande at the tant documents and family mementos.
•University of Rio Grande.
The art talk will take place at
~ The Meigs workshop, "Acting Kennedy Museum of Art at the Ridges
-Wild,'' is open to all students, grades on the Ohio University campus. The
·~-12· and the cost is $5 ~r student.
"Inside/Outside: Art Talks" at the

•·
!Workshops

21fdSirrtl

_______.:_•---------------:----':...________________________ ...

.

; .POMER9Y - · The annual Easter
:iegg hunt sponsored ~y the Pomeroy
:Merchants Association will be held at
~ 11 a.m. Saturday on Bob Roberts Field
jJl Pomeroy. ·
•• ,Children will be divided into three age
~ups for the hunt. Finders of the .gold.en eggs in each group will receive a nice
iJnze. Smaller. prizes will go to all chilliten who find eggs. The Easter bunny
;wm be there to greet' the children.
:: The egg hunt was post(!Oned from
;lile day before Easter to th1s Saturday
~ue to the cold weather and wet condi;~~m of the football field.

· 356 East Main
Pomeroy, OR
740,992-6292

Gen. Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, OH
740-992-5248.

-

Entertainment Briefs

·-

820 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH
740·446-3837

.

Conference features old time music concert,

! HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- · Hurricane·Creek.

swooo,m.u

0

French captive, a Delaware
captive, a Shawnee captive, a
Virginia captive of Shawnees
returning to Virginia with the
Cherokee war gang, a
Virginia soldier embedded
with the Cherokee war gang, ·
Cherokee warriors and a
Cherokee war woman.
Point Pleasant will be the
first location of tlie series,
as the ot!ler two series are
scheduled to take place at
Blennerhasset Island · in
Parkersburg in June and
Tomlinson Run in Hancock
County in August
The ' event · is free of
charge. For more information, call (304) 558-2764 or
visit www.tu-endie-weistatepark.com.

1

·Three riatives of Wayne and

nSB,SBIIMP
CBICUN, SALAD lAB,
CW LEGS, DISIEIT BAR,
SALMON, ICE CWM, .
PIOG LEGS

Those in attendance will lance travel, communicahave the ·opportunity to tion techniques and local
interact with costumed his- landmarks that were signifitory interpreters who will cant in the war.
shed new light on the
An overview of the French
alliance that was formed and Indian War in the region
between the colony of will start at 3 -.p.m. The
Virginia and the Cherokees overview will use an audio- ·
to oust the French from the visual presentatiQn with
Ohio Valier· ·
maps and historical images
. Warriors camp living liis- .that interpret the landscape;
tory· demonstrations will events and people of the;
kick off the event at I 0 a.m. area. This activity will take
From II a.m. to noon, the place at Fort Randolph
series presenters will focus Terrace, which . is located
on the prisoners and their next door to· the. park.
fates. Noon to 2 p.m. will
From 4 to 5 p.m., the day
provide an opportunity to will conclude with a presensee more warriors' camp tation
of
Cherokee
demonstrations. Also at 2 Commander
Outacite
p.m., there will be a warrior Ostenaco at Fort Randolph
hike to emphasize long ·dis- Terrace. Portrayals include a

Submitted photo

This work by Jack Park of Point Pleasant. W.Va., will be
among those exh.iblted at the Fren·ch Art Colony, 530 First
Ave., Gallipolis, through the month of April.
·

0

For i11jormation. call (740) 286-2556.

o

Station Concert Hall on St. Clair Road, Pomeroy.
The show is sold. out as are the station's upcoming concerts with Tommy Emmanuel and Warren Haynes.
,
This is McGuinn's second visit to Fur Peace Station and '
he' II be joining Kaukonen on stage during the set on
Sunday. McGuinn was inducted into the Rock and R,oll
Hall of Fame in 1991 with his group The Byrds, which had
·
several hits in the 1960s.
Some of The Byrds' greatest hits include "Mr. Tambourine
Man" (1964), "All I Really Want to Do" (1965), "Thm!
Thm! TUm!" (1965). "Eight Miles High" (1966), "So You
Want to be a Rock and Roll Star" 0 967), and "Wasn't Born
to Follow" (1969} from the "Easy Rider" Soundtrack.
McGuinn is also known for his familiar Rickenbacker gui!ar
and blending the sound of Dylan's folk with Beatles' rock.
Kaukonen was inducted into the hall in 1996 with members of his 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 to Love" and "Embryonic Journey."

For more iriformatimi on the concert serie.s at Fur Peace
Station Concert Hall, go to www.furpeacerarrch.com or
call (740) 992-6228.

•

�•

•
•

The Daily Sentinel

.Page AS

LOCAL • STATE

·ODofA expands
choice of care setting
for older citizens

Local Weather

Thursday, March

·Local Stocks

Inside

27,2008

~B2

'

Wahama loses to rival Point, Page 83

Friday nigl;tt ... Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance. of rain showers.
Much cooler with lows in
the lower 30s. North winds
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph.
Saturday and Saturday
nlght...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 50s. Lows in the
lower 30s.
Sunday...Partly sunny.
Highs around 60.
~unday night.;;Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid40s.
, Monday and Monday
night...Mostly cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the mid
60s. Lows in the upper 40s.
Thesday and Thesday
nlght ••• Mostly cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower
60s. Lows in the lower 40s.

AEP (NYSE)- 41.47
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 79
Aahland Inc. (NYSE)-

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 54.44
Ohio Valley a..c Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE)- 33.53
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 2&amp;.01
Papaleo (NYSE) - 71.16
Premier (NASDAQ) U.69
R~kwell (NYSE) - 56.21
Rocky Bo¢a (NASDAQ)-

48.68

Bll Lots (NYSE) - 23.31
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 28-77

Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) 42.82
Cantury Aluminum (NASDAQ)-67.20
Cham~on(NASDAQ)-

'

Thursday, March 27,2008

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAav -A schedule of upcoming high
IIChool varalt~t sporting avan1&amp; lnvoMng
teams f~m Meigs and GaiUa counllet.

Sltyrctwy, Mlnth 29

5.56

Boya Bulboll
Minford at Meigs, noon
Wosffa" at Meigs, 4 p.m.
lnock and Field
tlaUia Academy at ChiRk:olhe, 11 a.m.
River VaHey at Warren. 10 a.m.

5.24
Royal Dutch Shell - 68.54 ·
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
Sears Koldlng (NASDAQ)-5.08
'107.83
City HoldlnjJ (NASDAQ) Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 52.90
40.88
Wendy's (NYSE) - 23.78
Collins (NYSE) - 56.68
. Worthington (NYSE)- . ·
DuPont (NYSE)- 46.83
17.48
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.90
Dally stock reports ara tha
Gannett (NYSE) - 30.44
4 p.m. ET cloaln&amp; quotes of:
Genaral Electric (NYSE) transactions for March 28, ·
37.13
2008, provided by Edward ·
Harley-Davldaon (NYSE) Jones ftnanqlal advisors : ;
38.97
luac Mills In Gallipolis at ·
JP Morpn (NYSE) - 44.U (740) 441-9441and ~
Kropr (NYSE)- 25.17
Marrero In Paint Pleasant at
Umlted Branda (NYSE)(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.
.
17.09

Monday llm;D 31

BoyoBIIHball
Gallla Academy at Ironton, 5 p.m.
River VaHey at Eastern, 5 p.m.

South tlallia at Huntington St.
p.m.
Ripley at Southern, 5 P·"'·
Olrto Softball

~lver Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Roane County. 5 p.m.
·
Tonnlo
Clallla Academy at Athena, 4:30p.m.

Tttttclwy. Apr. 1
Boyolhoeball
Parkertburg Sooth at Eutem, 5 p.m.
Southern at Alvar Valley, S p.m.
Glrla Softball .
Eaatern at Athena, 5 p.m.
Point Pleaaant at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
Southom at Alver Valloy, s p.m.
lnock and Flold
Eutorn al Belpre, 4 p.m.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

men:ltlesiu@suddellliUmaiLtvll

For more information
about Tastefully Simple
products, taste-testing par·
ties or the business opportunity, contact Terri Hoschar
at 740-992-9263.
j .

Aoto/Home/Boslnasl
.
Life/Annuity
An lndependeat Agency

Joe. 5

tiannan at South Galli&amp;, 5 p.m.

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

POMEROY
Terri
Hoschar of Pomeroy has
become an independent consultant with Tastefully Simple
Inc., a ·national direct-sales .
company featuring easy-toprepare gounnet products.
As a consultant, Hoschar
offers the company's gourmet
foods and beverages to guests
at home taste-testing parties.
Guests receive samples, e;15y
meal ideas, recipes and serving suggestions.
"The Tastefully Simple
opportunity is designed to
be life fnendly," says Jill
Blashack ·
Strahan,
Tastefully Simple Inc .
founder
and
CEO. ·
"Consultants find a great
deal of satisfaction through
its fun nature, flexibility,
unlimited earning potential
and top-notch products.''

Bl

'

Reds' Bailey to Triple-A, Page B8

Thursday••• Rain with a
chance of thundetstonns in
the morning ... Then show·
ers likely with a slight
chance of thunderstonns in
the afternoon. Highs in the
upper 50s. Southeast winds
5 to I0 mph... Becoming ·
north in the afternoon.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Thursday nlght...Cioudy.
Showers likely with a slight
chance of thunderstorms in
the evening...Then a chance
of showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Lows
in the upper 40s. Northeasi
winds
around
5
mph ...Increasing to southeast
10 to 15 mph after midnight.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
. Friday...Rain with thunderstonns likely. Highs in
. the mid 50s. North winds 5
to I 0 mph with gusts up to
· 25 mph. Chance of rain 80
percent.

COLUMBUS- The fed- call toll-free 1-866-243eral Centers for Medicare 5678 to be connected to the
and Medicaid Services has area agency on asing servapproved amendments to mg your commumty.
the Ohio Department of
The Ohio Department of
Aging's Assisted Living Aging provides leadership
Medicaid Waiver Program for the delivery of services
that, among other provi· and supports ihat improve
sions. allow the department and promote quality of life
to open thedrogram to cur- and personal choice for older
rent assiste living facility Ohioans, adults with disabilresidents · who have quali- ities, their families and their
fled for Medicaid. but other- caregivers. Working with 12
wise. would have been area agencies on aging Jl!ld
~eqmred to move to a ours- other community partners,
mg.ho~e for care under the · the department offers homeold gmdehnes.
and
community-based
The Assisted Living Medicaid waiver programs
Waiver Program, launched in such as PASSPORT the
July 2006, was initially open ·long-tenn care ombudsman
to eligibl~ .individuals cur- program, . the
Golden
ren~ly restding m a nursing Buckeye Card and more.
facthty or enrolled in a homeand community-based waiver
program, such as PASS.PORT, Choices or Home
Care. The approved amendments expand eligibility to
include iridividuals who have
been current residents of
Ohio assisted living facilities
for at least six months.
"Older Ohioans have
never been more diverse
than they are today, and that ·
. diversity includes a range of
preferences about how and
where they wish to rec~ive
the care they need as they
ase," said Barbara E. Riley,
dtrector of the department.
"Ensuring continued access
to assisted living services to
those who are already benefi~ting from them is a cru·
cial step to providing real .
choice iJtlong-tenn care.''
Assisted living promotes
aging in place by supporting
consumer desire for mdependence. choice and privacy.
The service.s · help preserve
the independence of the individual, as l'.rell as maintain
ties to family and friends.
In addition to the guidelines above, interested par·
ticipants must also be age 21
or older; need hands-on
assistance with certain tasks
such as dressins. bathing,
toiletin~, groommg. eating
or mobtlity; meet the financial criteria for Medicaid eli·
Ritbecca
gibility (as determined by
Breshears,
the county Department of
Au.D.,
CCC-A
Job and Family Services);
be able to pay room and
board costs established by
the state and reside in a
435'/, Secpnd Avenue
licensed residential care
(740) 446-7619
facility certified by the
Department of Aging to proATHENS
vide assisted living servtces.
275 West Union Street
Facilities interested in
accepting waiver partici(740) 594-3571
pants must be licensed as
residential care facilities by
the Ohio Department of
Health and certified by the
Ohio Department of Aging
as an Assisted Living
Provider. Consumers can
find participating facilities
in their area by visiting the
Long-term Care Consumer
Guide Web site (www.Itcohio.org) and using the keyLUTCF,A...I
word: "waiver."
·
For information about
. 215-A Sixth Street
consumer enrollment or
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
provider certification, con·
304-675-7036
tact your local PASSPORT .
Fu:.
304-675-7387
admtnistrati ve agency or

Pomeroy resident
joins ranks of
direct sellers

The Daily Sentinel

Hugg!JM, 'Een prepare ror Xavier,

· •

WtdDIIW· Apt 2

Boyolhoeball
llcuthorn at South Qallla, S p.m.
.
Glrll&gt;·lloftball
Southern at South QaiHa, s p.m.

'·

SPORTS BIUEFS

Buckeyes ready to get started
on spring practice sessions
BY RUSTY MtUER
foP SPORTS WRITER

COLUMBUS - Between
aJ}other painful championship-game loss last
January and an early-season
showdown with Southern
California coming up on
Sept. 13, Ohio State has a lot
of work to do.
Since almost everybody's
back from last year, not
much time will be spent on
introductions or on giving
the newcomers directions to
the practice field.
"You'd think we'd be a
smarter football team with
all the experience we have,"
coach Jim Tressel said on
Wedn~sday, the day before
the first official practice of
the spring.
·
Experience?
The
Buckeyes have an abun-

osu

dance of it. A remarkable 47
players have been with the
team for at least four .years.
The Buckeyes were beaten
38-24 by LSU in the Bowl
Championship
Series
national title game last Jan.
7. Since then, almost all of
the news for the program has
been positive. ·
Only one underclassman,
defensive lineman Vernon
Gholston·, elected to give up
his last year of elis.ibility to
make htmself avaJiable· for
the NFL draft late next
month.
Gholston's departure along with that of senior
starters Kirk Barton at right
tackle, Dionte Johnson at
fullback and Larry Grant at
linebacker - means the
Buckeyes welcome back 10
starters from one of the
nation's top defenses and

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TODAY'S
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MILL OUTLET, INC.

Your Area's #1 Floor
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COLUMBUS . - Ohio
State's, season will end
where it started.
Kosta Koufos scored 2I
points and Jamar Butler
' RUTLANP
The added 12 to lead the
Rutland Youth League will Buckeyes past Dayton 74be holding baseball and 63 Wednesday night in an
softball sign-ups for boys NIT quarterfinal.
The Buckeyes (22-13)
and girls ages four to 16
today from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. advance to meet Mississippi
at the
Rutland Fire (24-1 0) in_the NIT senufibepartment.
nals at New York's Madison
For more infonnation Square Garden on Tuesday.
contact either .Mindy The Rebels beat Virgima
8I-71
earlier
~rinker at 992-7870 or Tech
.
Angie Russell at 742-3116. Wednesday night.
Ohio State won three
games in the NIT Season
Tip-Off before l9sing to
Texas A&amp;M 70-47 in the
championship game at the
·Garden on Nov. 23.
Evan Turner added II
points and Jon Diebler came
off the bench to score 10
more, all in the second half.
for the Buckeyes, who have
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
won five of their last six
games.
•
· DA'(TON - The
The game was played
University of Rio Grande before a loud, capacity
Redwomen soflball team crowd of 19,049 at Value
~tepped to the plate to face
City Arena, with Dayton
the big girls of NCAA fans making up at least a
bivision Wright State on quarter of those in atten'
Tuesday and dance. It was the sixthfound out l!!fgest crowd ' to ever withow tough ness the Flyers play and was
the D•IIevel the biggest they have played
is as Wright in front of in 13 years.
State,
an
Brian Roberts had 20
NCAA points and Chris Wright 12
Tournament for the Flyers (23-11 ), who
from a year ago, swept the were trying to make their
Redwomen in convincing first trip to the NIT semififashion, 15-4 and 12-0 in a nals since 1968. Their
pair of run-rule games. The resume inc1uded wins over
second game was a com- . NCAA-tournament teams
bined no-hitter.
Pittsburgh and Louisville,
· 'Rio Grande (5·5) started the latter on the road.
out ip great shape and it
Koufos hit 9-of-II shots
looked as if the upset might from the field including his
'
be on as the Redwomen
scored two runs _in ·the ftrst PleeH 1M B11ckeyes, A
inning on an error and an
RBI single off the bat of
SOJ?hQmore third baseman
ijnttany
Creviston ..
Creviston led the Rio
li{fense, going 2-for-3 with
tWo RBis.'
· ·.
:: .Rio had seven hits in the
game. Senior catcher
BY TOM WtTHERI
:Whimey Harless knocked in
foP SPORTS WRITER
apm for the Redwomen and
®phomore first basemen
CLEVELANb· - David
Mtmi Mahon (Hamilton West's 17-footjumper. com:Was I-for-3 with two runs ing on Chris Paul's 20th.
sCored.
assist, with less than a sec..' .·. .
ond left · gave the New
:&lt; PIHH ... Swept. B:S
Orleans Hornets .their fifth
.•"
straight win, 100-99 over
the Cleveland Cavaliers on
Wednesday night.
P,NTACfUS
Paul drove left, picked up
'•
a screen against LeBron
:7. 1· 740·446-2342 ext. 33
James and drew three
defenders in the lane before
F~ - HIQ-446·3008
·spinning around and whip·
~~II - oportsO mydallys~ntlnel.com
ptng a pass back to West.
~aStlft
The Hornets' All-Star for·
~lc Randolph, Sports Writer
ward then calmly dropped
1740) 4411-2342. oxt. 33
his jumper with 0.6 seconds
•)'Bn&lt;IOiph Omydfllysentlnel.com
left.
..
'
Cleveland
inbounded the
Jlr:van Waite,., Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ..... 33
ball to James, whose 75-foot
I&gt;+JtoraOmydallytnbune.com
heave at the hom bounc~
off the 24-second clock at
i;ITY Crum, Sporte.Writer
the other end. James, who
l7&gt;\0) 446-2342, oxt. 33
ICrumOmydallyreglator.ccim
bar~ed in · frustration at

Redwomen
swept at
Wright State

Slop I•

'

s·

Shaw Carpet 1111d Floor Center
Re5ldentlal • Conunen:lal •
Wholesale • Retail

'

4247 State Route 160
GaiUpolls, Ohio

Please •• Sprlna. Bl .

AP photo

Redmen CR.,·
Baseball -~

BY

MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE' SENTINEL

ATHENS
The
University of Rio Grande .
Redmen baseball team kept
it close, but just could not
gGnerate any offense in
falling 2-0 to the Ohio
Bobcats on Tuesday at Bob
Wren Stadium.
Rio Grande (11-10) lost
for the fourth straight time,
despite solid pitching and
outstanding defense. The
offense mustered only six
hits and fanned 11 times in
the game.
·
Ohio (9-9) pushed across
two runs in the second
inning and .southpaw Zach
Fairbanks made it stand up
in the route going perfor·
mance.
The Redmen had a shot in
the eighth inning 'after a single by sophomore second
baseman Andy Whewell,
freshman
centerfielder
Chad Miller narrowly ·
missed tying the game with
a deep fly ball to warning
track m left-center field.
Red-shirt
Brandon
Bouley started and lost the
game for the Redmen, but
· did not pitch badly. Bouley
( J.J) pitched 5 113 irini ngs,
allowing I 0 hits and two
. runs with two strikeouts and
one walk.
Fairbanks ( 1- 1) was able
to keep the Redmen off-bal,ance all game , as he scatAP photo tered six hits and fanned II
Dayton's Marcus Johnson (32) shoots over Ohio State's Kosta Koufos (31) in the first half without a walk in nine
of the quarterfinal round of the National Invitational Tournament basketball game
Wednesday at Value City Arena in Columbus. Ohio State's David Lighty, right, looks on.
Please see Rio, 84

West, Hornets sting
Cavaliers at buzzer

' , 41\\

Repruenllag Erie lnsanmce

nine starters on offense.
The returning ·headliners
are
linebacker
James
Laurinaitis, a ftrst-team All·
American who won the
Butkus Award and was the
Big Ten's top defensive
player, tailback · and team
MVP Chris "Beanie" Wells
and quarterback Todd
Boeckman.
Laurinaitis anchors a
defense that also returns the
entire secondary· (comers
and
Malcolm Jenkins
Donald Washington, safeties
Kurt Coleman and Anderson
Russell) and has several
solid players up front.
Despite the hoopla over
the stgning of blue-chip
quarterback ;rerrelle Pryor,
who won't be on campus
until the middle of the sum-

Redmen
blanked by
Bobcats

·Rutland YL
baseball-softball
sign-ups today

1J!&lt;.f0i'.;,.,.,t':4"ttlftt\i)top Shop For
.All Your Medical
Equipment Needs!,

file photo,
Ohio State
football
head coach
Jim Tressel
is shown
during a
news conference in
Columbus.
Coming off
their sec·
ond ·consec·
utive loss in
the national
title game,
the Ohio~ _
State
Buckeyes
begin to
gear up for
another
season
when they
open spring
practice on
Thursday.

BY RusTY MIWR
foP SPORTS WRITER

•

In this Dec.
13,2007

E:lr
~ ill740·446-2107

.

. It\ }tist

Around The

Corner

.'

I

teammates earliel' in the
fourth quarter, punched his
hand in his fist and complained . to assistant coach
Mike Malone before heading to tht; locker room.
· Peja Stojakovic .scored 25
points - 18 on 3-pointers
-West added 20 pomts and
Paull5 for the Hornets, who
came in with the Western
Conference's · best record
and improved to 2-0 on a
six-game road trip against
Eastern Conference teams.
New Orleans. playing the
second ga.mi: of a back·toback, · snapped Cleveland's
nine-game home winning
streak.
·
Zydrunas llgauskas scored ·
a season-high 29 points with
15 rebounds. James had 21
points and eight assists but
AP photo
wasn't able to get a defensive stop in the closing sec- Cleveland Cavaliers forward Joe Smith, right, battles. New Orleans Hornets Jannero Pargo
for a rebound duting the se.cond quarter In an NBA basketball game Wednesday in ·
. PI
Stl
B:S
Cleveland. The Hornets won 100-99. ,
HM ~
~1-

'

�•

•
•

The Daily Sentinel

.Page AS

LOCAL • STATE

·ODofA expands
choice of care setting
for older citizens

Local Weather

Thursday, March

·Local Stocks

Inside

27,2008

~B2

'

Wahama loses to rival Point, Page 83

Friday nigl;tt ... Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance. of rain showers.
Much cooler with lows in
the lower 30s. North winds
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph.
Saturday and Saturday
nlght...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 50s. Lows in the
lower 30s.
Sunday...Partly sunny.
Highs around 60.
~unday night.;;Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid40s.
, Monday and Monday
night...Mostly cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the mid
60s. Lows in the upper 40s.
Thesday and Thesday
nlght ••• Mostly cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower
60s. Lows in the lower 40s.

AEP (NYSE)- 41.47
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 79
Aahland Inc. (NYSE)-

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 54.44
Ohio Valley a..c Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE)- 33.53
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 2&amp;.01
Papaleo (NYSE) - 71.16
Premier (NASDAQ) U.69
R~kwell (NYSE) - 56.21
Rocky Bo¢a (NASDAQ)-

48.68

Bll Lots (NYSE) - 23.31
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 28-77

Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) 42.82
Cantury Aluminum (NASDAQ)-67.20
Cham~on(NASDAQ)-

'

Thursday, March 27,2008

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAav -A schedule of upcoming high
IIChool varalt~t sporting avan1&amp; lnvoMng
teams f~m Meigs and GaiUa counllet.

Sltyrctwy, Mlnth 29

5.56

Boya Bulboll
Minford at Meigs, noon
Wosffa" at Meigs, 4 p.m.
lnock and Field
tlaUia Academy at ChiRk:olhe, 11 a.m.
River VaHey at Warren. 10 a.m.

5.24
Royal Dutch Shell - 68.54 ·
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
Sears Koldlng (NASDAQ)-5.08
'107.83
City HoldlnjJ (NASDAQ) Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 52.90
40.88
Wendy's (NYSE) - 23.78
Collins (NYSE) - 56.68
. Worthington (NYSE)- . ·
DuPont (NYSE)- 46.83
17.48
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.90
Dally stock reports ara tha
Gannett (NYSE) - 30.44
4 p.m. ET cloaln&amp; quotes of:
Genaral Electric (NYSE) transactions for March 28, ·
37.13
2008, provided by Edward ·
Harley-Davldaon (NYSE) Jones ftnanqlal advisors : ;
38.97
luac Mills In Gallipolis at ·
JP Morpn (NYSE) - 44.U (740) 441-9441and ~
Kropr (NYSE)- 25.17
Marrero In Paint Pleasant at
Umlted Branda (NYSE)(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.
.
17.09

Monday llm;D 31

BoyoBIIHball
Gallla Academy at Ironton, 5 p.m.
River VaHey at Eastern, 5 p.m.

South tlallia at Huntington St.
p.m.
Ripley at Southern, 5 P·"'·
Olrto Softball

~lver Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Roane County. 5 p.m.
·
Tonnlo
Clallla Academy at Athena, 4:30p.m.

Tttttclwy. Apr. 1
Boyolhoeball
Parkertburg Sooth at Eutem, 5 p.m.
Southern at Alvar Valley, S p.m.
Glrla Softball .
Eaatern at Athena, 5 p.m.
Point Pleaaant at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
Southom at Alver Valloy, s p.m.
lnock and Flold
Eutorn al Belpre, 4 p.m.

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about Tastefully Simple
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at 740-992-9263.
j .

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WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

POMEROY
Terri
Hoschar of Pomeroy has
become an independent consultant with Tastefully Simple
Inc., a ·national direct-sales .
company featuring easy-toprepare gounnet products.
As a consultant, Hoschar
offers the company's gourmet
foods and beverages to guests
at home taste-testing parties.
Guests receive samples, e;15y
meal ideas, recipes and serving suggestions.
"The Tastefully Simple
opportunity is designed to
be life fnendly," says Jill
Blashack ·
Strahan,
Tastefully Simple Inc .
founder
and
CEO. ·
"Consultants find a great
deal of satisfaction through
its fun nature, flexibility,
unlimited earning potential
and top-notch products.''

Bl

'

Reds' Bailey to Triple-A, Page B8

Thursday••• Rain with a
chance of thundetstonns in
the morning ... Then show·
ers likely with a slight
chance of thunderstonns in
the afternoon. Highs in the
upper 50s. Southeast winds
5 to I0 mph... Becoming ·
north in the afternoon.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Thursday nlght...Cioudy.
Showers likely with a slight
chance of thunderstorms in
the evening...Then a chance
of showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Lows
in the upper 40s. Northeasi
winds
around
5
mph ...Increasing to southeast
10 to 15 mph after midnight.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
. Friday...Rain with thunderstonns likely. Highs in
. the mid 50s. North winds 5
to I 0 mph with gusts up to
· 25 mph. Chance of rain 80
percent.

COLUMBUS- The fed- call toll-free 1-866-243eral Centers for Medicare 5678 to be connected to the
and Medicaid Services has area agency on asing servapproved amendments to mg your commumty.
the Ohio Department of
The Ohio Department of
Aging's Assisted Living Aging provides leadership
Medicaid Waiver Program for the delivery of services
that, among other provi· and supports ihat improve
sions. allow the department and promote quality of life
to open thedrogram to cur- and personal choice for older
rent assiste living facility Ohioans, adults with disabilresidents · who have quali- ities, their families and their
fled for Medicaid. but other- caregivers. Working with 12
wise. would have been area agencies on aging Jl!ld
~eqmred to move to a ours- other community partners,
mg.ho~e for care under the · the department offers homeold gmdehnes.
and
community-based
The Assisted Living Medicaid waiver programs
Waiver Program, launched in such as PASSPORT the
July 2006, was initially open ·long-tenn care ombudsman
to eligibl~ .individuals cur- program, . the
Golden
ren~ly restding m a nursing Buckeye Card and more.
facthty or enrolled in a homeand community-based waiver
program, such as PASS.PORT, Choices or Home
Care. The approved amendments expand eligibility to
include iridividuals who have
been current residents of
Ohio assisted living facilities
for at least six months.
"Older Ohioans have
never been more diverse
than they are today, and that ·
. diversity includes a range of
preferences about how and
where they wish to rec~ive
the care they need as they
ase," said Barbara E. Riley,
dtrector of the department.
"Ensuring continued access
to assisted living services to
those who are already benefi~ting from them is a cru·
cial step to providing real .
choice iJtlong-tenn care.''
Assisted living promotes
aging in place by supporting
consumer desire for mdependence. choice and privacy.
The service.s · help preserve
the independence of the individual, as l'.rell as maintain
ties to family and friends.
In addition to the guidelines above, interested par·
ticipants must also be age 21
or older; need hands-on
assistance with certain tasks
such as dressins. bathing,
toiletin~, groommg. eating
or mobtlity; meet the financial criteria for Medicaid eli·
Ritbecca
gibility (as determined by
Breshears,
the county Department of
Au.D.,
CCC-A
Job and Family Services);
be able to pay room and
board costs established by
the state and reside in a
435'/, Secpnd Avenue
licensed residential care
(740) 446-7619
facility certified by the
Department of Aging to proATHENS
vide assisted living servtces.
275 West Union Street
Facilities interested in
accepting waiver partici(740) 594-3571
pants must be licensed as
residential care facilities by
the Ohio Department of
Health and certified by the
Ohio Department of Aging
as an Assisted Living
Provider. Consumers can
find participating facilities
in their area by visiting the
Long-term Care Consumer
Guide Web site (www.Itcohio.org) and using the keyLUTCF,A...I
word: "waiver."
·
For information about
. 215-A Sixth Street
consumer enrollment or
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
provider certification, con·
304-675-7036
tact your local PASSPORT .
Fu:.
304-675-7387
admtnistrati ve agency or

Pomeroy resident
joins ranks of
direct sellers

The Daily Sentinel

Hugg!JM, 'Een prepare ror Xavier,

· •

WtdDIIW· Apt 2

Boyolhoeball
llcuthorn at South Qallla, S p.m.
.
Glrll&gt;·lloftball
Southern at South QaiHa, s p.m.

'·

SPORTS BIUEFS

Buckeyes ready to get started
on spring practice sessions
BY RUSTY MtUER
foP SPORTS WRITER

COLUMBUS - Between
aJ}other painful championship-game loss last
January and an early-season
showdown with Southern
California coming up on
Sept. 13, Ohio State has a lot
of work to do.
Since almost everybody's
back from last year, not
much time will be spent on
introductions or on giving
the newcomers directions to
the practice field.
"You'd think we'd be a
smarter football team with
all the experience we have,"
coach Jim Tressel said on
Wedn~sday, the day before
the first official practice of
the spring.
·
Experience?
The
Buckeyes have an abun-

osu

dance of it. A remarkable 47
players have been with the
team for at least four .years.
The Buckeyes were beaten
38-24 by LSU in the Bowl
Championship
Series
national title game last Jan.
7. Since then, almost all of
the news for the program has
been positive. ·
Only one underclassman,
defensive lineman Vernon
Gholston·, elected to give up
his last year of elis.ibility to
make htmself avaJiable· for
the NFL draft late next
month.
Gholston's departure along with that of senior
starters Kirk Barton at right
tackle, Dionte Johnson at
fullback and Larry Grant at
linebacker - means the
Buckeyes welcome back 10
starters from one of the
nation's top defenses and

bVDIJIDD,

• s, o., Shmo•t
UBofll'
~
S•rrlul

Acerwditld "' tAt

Iolii Co•1Ussio11

.'

TODAY'S
'NUMBER
IS:
.

HAFFELT'S
MILL OUTLET, INC.

Your Area's #1 Floor
Covering Dealer! ·

COLUMBUS . - Ohio
State's, season will end
where it started.
Kosta Koufos scored 2I
points and Jamar Butler
' RUTLANP
The added 12 to lead the
Rutland Youth League will Buckeyes past Dayton 74be holding baseball and 63 Wednesday night in an
softball sign-ups for boys NIT quarterfinal.
The Buckeyes (22-13)
and girls ages four to 16
today from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. advance to meet Mississippi
at the
Rutland Fire (24-1 0) in_the NIT senufibepartment.
nals at New York's Madison
For more infonnation Square Garden on Tuesday.
contact either .Mindy The Rebels beat Virgima
8I-71
earlier
~rinker at 992-7870 or Tech
.
Angie Russell at 742-3116. Wednesday night.
Ohio State won three
games in the NIT Season
Tip-Off before l9sing to
Texas A&amp;M 70-47 in the
championship game at the
·Garden on Nov. 23.
Evan Turner added II
points and Jon Diebler came
off the bench to score 10
more, all in the second half.
for the Buckeyes, who have
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
won five of their last six
games.
•
· DA'(TON - The
The game was played
University of Rio Grande before a loud, capacity
Redwomen soflball team crowd of 19,049 at Value
~tepped to the plate to face
City Arena, with Dayton
the big girls of NCAA fans making up at least a
bivision Wright State on quarter of those in atten'
Tuesday and dance. It was the sixthfound out l!!fgest crowd ' to ever withow tough ness the Flyers play and was
the D•IIevel the biggest they have played
is as Wright in front of in 13 years.
State,
an
Brian Roberts had 20
NCAA points and Chris Wright 12
Tournament for the Flyers (23-11 ), who
from a year ago, swept the were trying to make their
Redwomen in convincing first trip to the NIT semififashion, 15-4 and 12-0 in a nals since 1968. Their
pair of run-rule games. The resume inc1uded wins over
second game was a com- . NCAA-tournament teams
bined no-hitter.
Pittsburgh and Louisville,
· 'Rio Grande (5·5) started the latter on the road.
out ip great shape and it
Koufos hit 9-of-II shots
looked as if the upset might from the field including his
'
be on as the Redwomen
scored two runs _in ·the ftrst PleeH 1M B11ckeyes, A
inning on an error and an
RBI single off the bat of
SOJ?hQmore third baseman
ijnttany
Creviston ..
Creviston led the Rio
li{fense, going 2-for-3 with
tWo RBis.'
· ·.
:: .Rio had seven hits in the
game. Senior catcher
BY TOM WtTHERI
:Whimey Harless knocked in
foP SPORTS WRITER
apm for the Redwomen and
®phomore first basemen
CLEVELANb· - David
Mtmi Mahon (Hamilton West's 17-footjumper. com:Was I-for-3 with two runs ing on Chris Paul's 20th.
sCored.
assist, with less than a sec..' .·. .
ond left · gave the New
:&lt; PIHH ... Swept. B:S
Orleans Hornets .their fifth
.•"
straight win, 100-99 over
the Cleveland Cavaliers on
Wednesday night.
P,NTACfUS
Paul drove left, picked up
'•
a screen against LeBron
:7. 1· 740·446-2342 ext. 33
James and drew three
defenders in the lane before
F~ - HIQ-446·3008
·spinning around and whip·
~~II - oportsO mydallys~ntlnel.com
ptng a pass back to West.
~aStlft
The Hornets' All-Star for·
~lc Randolph, Sports Writer
ward then calmly dropped
1740) 4411-2342. oxt. 33
his jumper with 0.6 seconds
•)'Bn&lt;IOiph Omydfllysentlnel.com
left.
..
'
Cleveland
inbounded the
Jlr:van Waite,., Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ..... 33
ball to James, whose 75-foot
I&gt;+JtoraOmydallytnbune.com
heave at the hom bounc~
off the 24-second clock at
i;ITY Crum, Sporte.Writer
the other end. James, who
l7&gt;\0) 446-2342, oxt. 33
ICrumOmydallyreglator.ccim
bar~ed in · frustration at

Redwomen
swept at
Wright State

Slop I•

'

s·

Shaw Carpet 1111d Floor Center
Re5ldentlal • Conunen:lal •
Wholesale • Retail

'

4247 State Route 160
GaiUpolls, Ohio

Please •• Sprlna. Bl .

AP photo

Redmen CR.,·
Baseball -~

BY

MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE' SENTINEL

ATHENS
The
University of Rio Grande .
Redmen baseball team kept
it close, but just could not
gGnerate any offense in
falling 2-0 to the Ohio
Bobcats on Tuesday at Bob
Wren Stadium.
Rio Grande (11-10) lost
for the fourth straight time,
despite solid pitching and
outstanding defense. The
offense mustered only six
hits and fanned 11 times in
the game.
·
Ohio (9-9) pushed across
two runs in the second
inning and .southpaw Zach
Fairbanks made it stand up
in the route going perfor·
mance.
The Redmen had a shot in
the eighth inning 'after a single by sophomore second
baseman Andy Whewell,
freshman
centerfielder
Chad Miller narrowly ·
missed tying the game with
a deep fly ball to warning
track m left-center field.
Red-shirt
Brandon
Bouley started and lost the
game for the Redmen, but
· did not pitch badly. Bouley
( J.J) pitched 5 113 irini ngs,
allowing I 0 hits and two
. runs with two strikeouts and
one walk.
Fairbanks ( 1- 1) was able
to keep the Redmen off-bal,ance all game , as he scatAP photo tered six hits and fanned II
Dayton's Marcus Johnson (32) shoots over Ohio State's Kosta Koufos (31) in the first half without a walk in nine
of the quarterfinal round of the National Invitational Tournament basketball game
Wednesday at Value City Arena in Columbus. Ohio State's David Lighty, right, looks on.
Please see Rio, 84

West, Hornets sting
Cavaliers at buzzer

' , 41\\

Repruenllag Erie lnsanmce

nine starters on offense.
The returning ·headliners
are
linebacker
James
Laurinaitis, a ftrst-team All·
American who won the
Butkus Award and was the
Big Ten's top defensive
player, tailback · and team
MVP Chris "Beanie" Wells
and quarterback Todd
Boeckman.
Laurinaitis anchors a
defense that also returns the
entire secondary· (comers
and
Malcolm Jenkins
Donald Washington, safeties
Kurt Coleman and Anderson
Russell) and has several
solid players up front.
Despite the hoopla over
the stgning of blue-chip
quarterback ;rerrelle Pryor,
who won't be on campus
until the middle of the sum-

Redmen
blanked by
Bobcats

·Rutland YL
baseball-softball
sign-ups today

1J!&lt;.f0i'.;,.,.,t':4"ttlftt\i)top Shop For
.All Your Medical
Equipment Needs!,

file photo,
Ohio State
football
head coach
Jim Tressel
is shown
during a
news conference in
Columbus.
Coming off
their sec·
ond ·consec·
utive loss in
the national
title game,
the Ohio~ _
State
Buckeyes
begin to
gear up for
another
season
when they
open spring
practice on
Thursday.

BY RusTY MIWR
foP SPORTS WRITER

•

In this Dec.
13,2007

E:lr
~ ill740·446-2107

.

. It\ }tist

Around The

Corner

.'

I

teammates earliel' in the
fourth quarter, punched his
hand in his fist and complained . to assistant coach
Mike Malone before heading to tht; locker room.
· Peja Stojakovic .scored 25
points - 18 on 3-pointers
-West added 20 pomts and
Paull5 for the Hornets, who
came in with the Western
Conference's · best record
and improved to 2-0 on a
six-game road trip against
Eastern Conference teams.
New Orleans. playing the
second ga.mi: of a back·toback, · snapped Cleveland's
nine-game home winning
streak.
·
Zydrunas llgauskas scored ·
a season-high 29 points with
15 rebounds. James had 21
points and eight assists but
AP photo
wasn't able to get a defensive stop in the closing sec- Cleveland Cavaliers forward Joe Smith, right, battles. New Orleans Hornets Jannero Pargo
for a rebound duting the se.cond quarter In an NBA basketball game Wednesday in ·
. PI
Stl
B:S
Cleveland. The Hornets won 100-99. ,
HM ~
~1-

'

�•

{

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 27, 2008

www. mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 2 .7 . 2008

www ;myd;ri.Jysentinel.com

.

Huggins' Mountaineers prepare to take on Xavier in NCAAs
BY ANDREW BAGNATO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX
The West
Virgini a Muuntaineers are
far difler~nt than most of
Bob Huggin," lean", except
111 one wa y.
They wi n.
.
Huggin., inherited a team
or shaq"hooters recruited
by John Beilein , who
stressed an intricate offense,
and tr~nsfonned it into a
• squad thai plays man-to-man
defen'e and scraps for
rebound, .
.
No one will confuse these
Mountaineers with Huggins'
big, bad Cincinnati Bearcats.
But Wesl Virginia (26-I0)·
has reached the NCAA tournument.\ rt1tmd of 16, where
the
seventh-seeded
Mountaineers will face
third-seeded Xavier (29-6)
in the West Region on
Thursday night.
"He's completely flipped
everything around, with
rebounding, defense, intensity and goal-wise," forward
Joe Alcxander said after the
Mountain~ers practiced at
U.S. Airways Center on
Wednesday. "The goals
changed when he came,
from day one. They went
from making the NCAA
tournament to winning the
NCAA tournament."
The 54-year-old Huggins ·
returned to his alma mater
after Bcilcin. who went I 0460 in five seasons in
Morgantown, bolted for

Michigan last year.
The players knew little
about Huggins. a 1977.graduate of Wesl Virginia. aside
from the glowering figure
they had seen stalking the
sidelines on television.
Huggins has shown his
players a softer side since
arriving. But he also brought
a commitment to defense
that has paid off in the first
two . rounds of the · ,tournament; when West Virginia
limited I Oth-seeded Arizona
to 65 points and secondseeded Duke to 67.
"I think the defensive end
took a lot of getting used to,"
backup point guard Joe
Mazzulla said. "Last ·year,
we did two hourS of offense
and 10 minutes .of defense
(in practice). This year, we
do two hours of defense and
half-hour of offense.'"
From the start, Huggins
and his staff pushed the
players into the weight
room. He also brought a
treadmill to practice, and
players who mess up are
asked to go for a spin.
"When I first heard that he
was going to get one in the
gym, I was like, 'Man, that's
not going to happen,'" backup forward Wellington
Smith said. "When I frrst
saw it, I was like; 'Man; I'm
going to be on ·there· a lot.'
I've been on there a lot."
His transgressions?
"Not box out," Smith said.
"Let a guy go middle. Just
being, maybe, soft."

APphoto

West Virginia coach Bob Huggins chats on the sideline's
while his team practices for an NCAA West Regional men's
basketball tournament game Wednesday in Phoenix. West
Virginia will face. Xavier on Thursday.
If there's one thing
Huggins can't stand, it's
being soft. 'But while
Huggins likes to in'still discipline in his players, it has, at
times, been missing from his
personal and professional
life.
His 16-year tenure at

Cincinnati produced a trip to
the I 992 Final Four and two
other regional final appearances. It also included player arrests, NCAA probation
and Huggins' drunk driving
arrest in 2004,
Huggins was forced out in
2005, but he wasn't fi~ished.

He spent one season at
Kansas State before taking
the job at West Virginia .
Huggins is 6 I6-221 in 26
college seasons.
Reinventing himself as a
coach wasn't a big deal for a
man who had · survived a
heart attack in, the fall of
2002.
But then, Huggins said he
didn't really change .after
that seemingly life-.altering
event, although he had
planned to at.the time.
"S3!'1e thing you do New
Year's Eve," Huggins said.
"You said, 'I'm going to do
this,' and about the third of
January you are back doing
what you did before.
"I haven't really changed
all that much," Huggins
said. "I mean, I would like to
sit here and tell you that I
probably eat better, but look
at me. That's obviously not
the case."
The beefy Huggins paused
while reporters laughed.
"Honestly, I don't think
about it very much, which is
kind of hard," Huggins said.
"But I just believe with all
my heart when God says it's
your time, it's your time .
You don't get to debate that.
He decided for whatever
reason it wasn't my time."
Xavier coach Sean Miller,
who has known Huggins for
most ofhis life, said he's not
surprised that Hug~ins has
returned with a passJOn.
"He is such a survivor,"
Miller said. "He is so strong-

willed. I don 't know if it surprised anybody that not only
is he back as a coach, but
better than ever."
Arizona coach Kev-in
O' Neill , a longtime friena,
called Huggins "probably
the most underrated coach1n
the whole game . He's gotng
to be in the Hall of Fame: •
Huggins' blunt . style
makes for good copy bl!t
isn 'i always endearing. f1e
still bristles over the perception - some of it fueled .hy
the media, he believes -·
that his Bearcats were a lawless bunch.
•
"I understand to make: a
good story,'there's got to lie
white hats and black hafs,
otherwise we never would
have had a cowboy movie,"
Huggins said. "That's the
way it is."
To stress his point,
Huggins recalled the 199.2
Final Four.
· "The reality is in 1992 we
go to the Final Four with
three bluebloods - it is
Indiana,
Duke
. and
Michigan," Huggins said.
"And then here we come in
with J0 transfers.
·
"Didn't matter that they
were the most articulate, the
funniest , the best interview,"
Huggins said. "They re!llly
were.· the highlight of the
whole deal. It was a story.
And I' understand that, and
I'm good with it. I'm 54
years old, shocked back to
life three times, you know?
I'm fine with it."

NCAA Tournament returns to·court today with pivotal matchups
BY JIM O'CONNELl.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. ·'. Firat Round

.
Second Round

National

~nna11

NM!onll .· · Netlonal
Chemplonlhlp &amp;emlflnall RegiOnal• Second ROund

. First Round

A look at the matchups for
the third round of the NCAA
·n
tournament' (seedings in
parentheses):
Thur;m•s Games
EAST
GIONAL
St. 74
. At Charlotte, N.C.
Fri .. 30 min.
,7:27p.m.
North Carolina (I) vs.
Wa~hington State (4)
Something has to give. •
North Carolina, second in
lhe nation in scoring at 89.9
points per game, became. tJ1~
·ctwrkllte, N.c.
HoultOn
first team since Loyola
54
29
Marymount in 1990 to break ·
E A S T . March ,----:-:-'--.,.-..----,
... c~~~Q
Maroh 30 S 0 UTH
the I00 mark in its ftrst two .
games. Washington State, second in the natton in defense
. allowing 56.1 points per
game, allowed a total of 81
Championship
points in its first two games•.
. Game
one of the lowest figures in
I
the shot clock era.
30mil.
Sen A~
The Tar Heels want 'to get
AprH7
Butler 71
out and run. The Cougars
want to get the pace their way
TelC4S .
with palience and disruption.
This is the chy;sic offensedefense matcl\up but the
biggest difference could be
S....Antonto
location. The, game is being
..
played jusr a few hours from
April5
Kansas as
AprilS
..
the North Carolina campus.
St 61
Tennessee (2) vs.
Louisville (3)
Tennessee struggled for
most of its opener against
American and then needed
overtime to beat Butlcr. The
Volunteers went a combined
11-for-38 from 3-point range.
Louisville shot 59 percent in
an easy second-round win
over Oklahoma but it was the
Phoenix
,Cardinals' defense that was
· most impressive, especially
r-7......_-::-""--::-:-Mtut:h
c..;;
29
on the perimeter- 9-for-35
from 3-point range - and in
forcing a total of 35 turnovers . ..
All nmesEDT
Botfi teams look good when
01'1111111, Neb.
Wisconsin
they're running but both can
. 71
get physical up front so this
might not be the high-scoring
CSU Fl.iltenon 56 .
game most_people expect.
WEST REGIONAL
•
At Phoenix
UCLA (l)vs. Western
Kentucky (12)
UCLA set a modern record
allowing a tollil of 78 points in
the first two games. Still, the
Brums Just squeaked by Texas
AP
A&amp;M m the second round as
. Kevin Love and Darren again in the s~nd round Scottie Reynolds who .aver· · top defen~ive teams in the games.
·
guards in the country in t&gt;.J.
Collison combined for 40 of against Purdue.
.
aged 23 points and six country yet the Hoyas had no
Michigan State won a phys- Augustin, who averages 19
West Virginia beat two rebounds in the two tourna- way to stop Curry as they lost ical matchup with Pinsl&gt;urgh points a game, and his back·
their 53 points and made
every big play down the schools With impressive ment wins.
all of a !?·point lead. · inlheseconaroundandfound courtpanner,A.J. Abrarnshas
stretch. Western Kentucky NCAA resumes ·in !he first
The Jayhawks had two easy Davidson is effectiye with its its much needed third scorer startea to come out of his
had the signature moment of two rounds - Ariwna and wins because of their defense, subtle defensive . pressure in freshman guard Kalin shooting slump. However, the
the first round - Ty Rogers' Duke
and
the but its their size that will give which forced Georgetown Lucas, who had 19 points in . numbers tQa~ are scary from
26-footer at the overtime Mountaineers held them to a Villanova problems. Kansas into 20 turnovers. Curry will that win. The Spartans are the second-round win over
buzzer against Drake - and combined 11-for-37 from 3- outrebounds opponents by have to have a third great per- always one of the best Miami is that Texas shot bet·
also lost double-figure leads point range. Still, !hey have to almost eight a game, while the formance to keep the nation's rebounding teams in the coun- rer from 3-poinl range (13in both wins ..
make sure Joe Alexander gets Wildcats only average 2.8 longest winnillg_Streakalive. tryandiheyhadacomfortable for-26) than the free throw
UCLA's late-season run of his share of shots . which more.
SOUTII REGIONAL
edge in Iiiith wins. Tom lzzo, line (12-for·21).
close games with controver- seems to open things up for
Wisconsin (3) V&amp;.
At Houston
one of the best NCAA toumaStanford can expect coach
· .
sial calls hasn't hurt its per- others.
Davidson (10)
Memphis (1) vs.
"ment coaches of this genera- Trent Johnson to be around
ception of regipnal favorite.
Wtsconsin is the top defenMichigan State (5)
lion, is a master 6f getting the whole game after he was
·
Xivler (3)
sive team in the country,
Since Memphis lostJUSI one teams ready for pfiysicru ejected in the ftrsl half of the
vs. West Virginia (7)
At Detroit
allowing 53.9 points per game game this season there isn't a games.
overtime
win
against
These teams have almost
Kansas (l)
and neither Cal State lot to go on about how to beat
Thxas (2) vs.
Marquene. The ?·foot l:.opez
identical profiles as far as
vs. VIllanova (12)
Fullerton nor Kansas State the Tigers . A good guess
· Stanford (3)
twins have become as doll\ioffense, defense and depth.
Usually a No. l seed has a reached 60 in the ftrst two would be .physical play and
This is another matchup nant frontcoun duo as there is ·
The one advantage may be .big break getting a 12 in the rounds. Neither of those keeping it close so free throw where the stats ~ almost in the country but Brook
Xavier's experience in the th1rd 'round but Villanova is teains had Stephen Curry. The shooting becomes a factor. identical but each team's Lopez has been the standout.
tournament and the fact the far from a typical team from :Wildcats rode the sophomore For all the gaudy numbers, strength is ala different part of His game-winning shot
Musketeers ;,till · harbor the that line. The Wildcats come .guard to the round of 16 on Memphis puts up 1t's tough to the court.
against the Golden Eagles
disappointment of last year's from a power conference and two· of the most impressive . ignore .59 percent shooting
The Longhorns, who will may not have been as draffiatsecond-round loss to Ohio have faced a number of quali- second halves seen in the from the line and the Tigers have ~ decided advantage ic as some of the long jumpers
State where they blew a big ty teams. They will rely fieav- tournament in a long time.
were 22-for-35 and 15-for-32 playing in their home state, others hit, but the degree of
lead late, something they did ily on sophomore. guard
Georgetown is one of the . in their two tournament have one of the best point difficulty was off the charts:
l .
\

Men's Division I
Basketball Champl,nshlp

I

MID{Mf~AL

The Daily Sentipel • Page B3

Big Blacks edge Wahama
BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. Ashton Jones
clubbed a fifth inning lead
off home run in addition to
tossing a five hit, six strikeout performance against visiting Wahama Wednesday
evening to .lead host Point
Pleasant past its Mason
County neighbors by a 5-2
margin.
·
Jones collected two hits on
the night offensively and
blanked the White Falcons
through the first six innings
before losing his shutout bid
on a seventh inning, two OIJI,
two rim double by Derek
Veazey. Point Pleasant captured its first win of the season after dropping its first
two decisions of the young
2008 diamond season while
Wahama fell to 0- I after los"
ing its season opening affair
to the Big Blacks.
D.W. Herdman joined
Jones in the spot! ight for
Point Pleasant with three
hits on the evening while
Curt Grimm added a pair of
safeties for Coach Jamie
Higginbottom 's diamond
nine. Eric Veith added the
remaining base hit for PPHS
with Jones' round tripper
being the only extra base
knock for the winners.
·
Veazey drove in a pair
with a single and a double to
Larry Crumlphoto lead Wahama offensively
Point Pleasant pitcher Ashton Jones throws a ball to a Wahama player 'during the first inning with G~rrett Underwood
of a high school baseball game Wednesday night in Point Pleasant. The Big Blacks won also swatting a double for
their home opener 5-2.
the White Falcons. Jacob

Indians patiently waiting for
infielder Marte .to progress
· WINTER HAVEN, . Fla.
Marte's situation.' He has
(AP) - With Andy Marte
impressed Wedge· by workout of options,
the
ing even harder during the
Cleveland Indians are
bad times .
"I like his approach,"
almost forced to not run out
of patience with· him.
Wedge said a few weeks
Marte, the key player
ago after Marte had two
acquired in a trade with
homers and six RBis, but
more importantly to the
Boston in January 2006,
likely will be on the
manager also two walks in
Indians' Opening Day ros· the same game.
"He's tried to do too
ter again,.but in a "!uch dif-.
·
much," Wedge said. "He's a
ferent role.
Unless manager Eric A and got called up to good kid. · When you're
Wedlle makes a surprise replace the injured Chipper working with someone with
deciston to keep someone Jone&amp; in Atlanta.
that much ability,. someelse, Marte will be the 25th
Marte flopped, batting times the be~t thing we can
man on a roster of 25 when .140 in 24 games. Before he do is get out the way a· bit.
the Indians open at home knew it, he was traded to You try to put all that away
Monday
against
the Boston in December then to and just play. That's what
Chicago White Sox at Cleveland a month later.
I'd like to see him do."
Progressive Field. A year
"It was a crazy time for
Marte finds that difficult.
ago, Marte started at third ·me," Marte said. "I didn't
"They say relax and 1
base in · the opener iri know where I was, who try," he said. "I make a misChicago. .
wanted rne or · not. The take and I want to make up
"He's had off-and-on Indians really did and I for it. Sometimes I make
moments, good days and wantto play for them, show another (error or strikeout)
bad,"
Wedge
Si!id them they were right."
and 1 feel worse." ·
Wednesday, one day after
The Indians painfully
A year ago, Marte started
the 24-year-old had both in recall going down this road Cleveland's first eight
a spring game against the before with a top prospect. games, hit .179, and went
New York Yankees.
In 2002, general manager on the disabled list with a
.
· ·
C
In the early innings, Mark Shapiro acquired
Marte looked tentative in multi-talented
infielder hamstnng · IllJUry.
asey
.Blake
took
his
·
job
and
making two errors, nearly a · Brandon Phillips from
third · and bouncing into a Montreal. Phillips hit only Marte went back to Tripledouble play. In the eighth, .208 a year later in ABuffalo.
he stepped up and delivere d Cleve I an d an d was sent . "It wasn't anybody 's
a go-ahead three.-run homer. back to the minors. He fault, I got hurt and I can't
·. Such erratic play n.ot only sulked, fell out of favor, and blame them for playing
has the Indians scratching eventually ran out of Casey,': Marte said. "Ws up _
their heads and wondering, options.
to me to earn a spot. 'fhat's
but confounds Marte.
Dealt to Cincinnati for a why I'm playing some at
"I try 'not to get frustrated, minor•leaguer in April first base now. I like third
but 1 do," Marte said. 2006, Phillips developed base more, I think first base
'!Maybe I'm thinking too · just as Shapiro had forecast is easier, but I'll do whatevmuch."
- too late for the Indians. er they want."
·
Marte worries about ful- An all-star middle infielder , "He's always proven himfilling the expectations put hitting 30 homers and steal- · self to be a good defender,"
on him ever since he hit 21 ing 32 bases for the Reds in Wedge said. "There's been
homers with 105 RBls in 2007 did them no good. .
times this spring when he's
Class A ball in 2002 in the
The organization clearly been a little in between with
~tlanta Braves system. doesn't want to make a sim- his .footwork. He's got to
Three years later, at age 21 , ilar mistake, though there is get in a better position .to
-he had 20 homers at Triple- one ,distinct difference in receive the baseball."
'

.

Sting

...'

from PageBl

.

. -.onds against Paul, one of his
._Closest friends . Anderson
Varejao added 15 rebounds
for the Cavaliers.
Two .free throws by
•James brought Cleveland
within 96-95, but the
Cavaliers couldn't get a
··rebound at the other end
·:ahd Tyson Chandler's putliack dunk put the Hornets
·libead by three with 47 sec~nds remaining .
Following a timeout,
James missed a left-handed
·layup but ~l~ausk~s wa.s
.there to Up 11 m to make 11
98-97. On the Hornets'
next trip, Jannero Pargo
was left wide open in the

corner on another bacl
defensive rotation by ·
Cleveland but missed a 3·
pointer.
James thep drove past
Stojakovic for a layup with
7.7 seconds left to give
Cleveland a · 99-98 lead.
But the Cavaliers couldn't
p~event the
ultra-quick
Paul from getting deep
penetration on the Hornets'
last possession, . leaving
West wide open.
The
Cavaliers
had
expected to have back
guard Daniel 'Gibson, who
has been sidelined since
Feb. 20 with a badly
sprained
left
ankle.
However, with a favor&lt;)ble
. break in the schedule Cleveland doesn't play
again until Saturdar - the
Cavs decided to gtve him

and center Ben Wallace,
nursing a sore back, more
rest.
Cleveland could have
used someone to slow
Paul, who finished one
assist shy of his season
high.
.
With the MVP candidate
orchestrating everything
for New Orleans' offense
and Pargo making three ).
pointers while playing the
entire second quarter, the
Hornets, one of the
league's best perimeter
shooting teams, opened a
56-50 lead at hal fume.
Paul, who had II assists
at the break, ..toyed with '
any defender the Cavaliers
put on him defensively. He
dribbled in .and out of traffic effortlessly
while
always looking for an open
teammate.

Swept
from PageBl
The lead for Rio Grande
was short-lived as Wright
State (10- 12) scored 10 runs
in the bottom of the first
frame.
,
Jamie Perkins, Jherica
Williams
and Kristen
Bradshaw had three RBI's
each for the Raiders while

Roach and
Anthony
Bond added
a
single
each
for
Coach Tom
Cullen' s
WHS baseball crew.
William
Zuspan, the
Herdman
first
of
t h r e e
Falcon
pitchers in
the outing
was tagged
with
the
loss after
giving up
three runs
on four hits
'------'through
Veazey
two and one
t h i r d
innings. Jerry Berkley
allowed one run on two hits
with Garrett Underwood
giving up a run on two hits
during bis one inning stint
on the hill for the White
Falcons. Zuspan fanned
three and ·Underwood two
with Wahama pitchers issuing three walks in addition
to hitting a couple of PPHS
batters.
Point Pleasant broke open
a scoreless duel with a three
run third frame with the Big
Blacks taking advantage of
three free passes in the
inning. Phillip Allen drew a
leadoff
walk · before
Herdman put runners at the
corners with a single to left.
Grimm chased home the

first run of the game with an
RBI single before Jones
walked to load the bases.
Clay Krebs forced home
another run with a bases
loaded free pass before Veith
drove in the third run of the
inning with a sacrifice fly to
right.
•
PPHS made it a 4-0 contest in the fifth after Jones
led off the inning with a
towering home run to deep
left field. The Big Blacks
tallied its final run in the
sixth when Justin Weaver
was hit by a pitch before
advancing on a single by
Herdman and a run scoring
safety by Jones.
Wahama avoided the
shutout in its final turn at the
plate when Justin Arnold
walked and ·Anthony Bond
followed with a sharp single
back through the middle.
Jones then · retired Jacob
Roach and · Terry Henry
before Veazey · doubled
home both runners to pull
the White Falcons to within
three at 5-2 but Jones would
quickly slam the door shut
by inducing Underwood to
bounce back to the mound ·
for the final out.
The Big Blacks are scheduled to host Poca in a 5:30
pm affair on Friday while
Wa~ama is slated to visit
Williamstown at 5:00 pm
today in the two teams next
diamond encounters.

Michelle Logan knocked in
two.
Senior pitcher Miranda
Laws was roughed up in the
loss, allowing 14 hits and 15
run~ ( 13 earned) in four
innings of pitching. Laws
(3·2) struggled with her
control as she issued five
walks without a strikeout. ·
In game two, Rio's bats
were silent as Wright State
pitchers Sharon Palma ·and
Jamie Perkins combined ori
a no-hitter. Perkins allowed

one walk to Harless which
kept the performance from
bemg a perfect game.
Sophomore Sophia Young
drops to 2-3 on the season
with the loss in the second
'game.
Rio now heads home for
three straight doubleheaders
beginning with Cedarville
on Friday at 2 p.m. and the
start of the American
Mideast Conference South
Division portion of the
schedule.

w

PP
Jones and Herdman. Zuspan, Berkley
(3), Underwood (6) and Underwood,
Bond (6). WP- Joiles.LP- Zuspan

A SPECIAL SECTION
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• ~alltpolisllailp mrtbunt
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Advertising Deadline:
MONDAY, APRIL 14, 2008
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{

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 27, 2008

www. mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 2 .7 . 2008

www ;myd;ri.Jysentinel.com

.

Huggins' Mountaineers prepare to take on Xavier in NCAAs
BY ANDREW BAGNATO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX
The West
Virgini a Muuntaineers are
far difler~nt than most of
Bob Huggin," lean", except
111 one wa y.
They wi n.
.
Huggin., inherited a team
or shaq"hooters recruited
by John Beilein , who
stressed an intricate offense,
and tr~nsfonned it into a
• squad thai plays man-to-man
defen'e and scraps for
rebound, .
.
No one will confuse these
Mountaineers with Huggins'
big, bad Cincinnati Bearcats.
But Wesl Virginia (26-I0)·
has reached the NCAA tournument.\ rt1tmd of 16, where
the
seventh-seeded
Mountaineers will face
third-seeded Xavier (29-6)
in the West Region on
Thursday night.
"He's completely flipped
everything around, with
rebounding, defense, intensity and goal-wise," forward
Joe Alcxander said after the
Mountain~ers practiced at
U.S. Airways Center on
Wednesday. "The goals
changed when he came,
from day one. They went
from making the NCAA
tournament to winning the
NCAA tournament."
The 54-year-old Huggins ·
returned to his alma mater
after Bcilcin. who went I 0460 in five seasons in
Morgantown, bolted for

Michigan last year.
The players knew little
about Huggins. a 1977.graduate of Wesl Virginia. aside
from the glowering figure
they had seen stalking the
sidelines on television.
Huggins has shown his
players a softer side since
arriving. But he also brought
a commitment to defense
that has paid off in the first
two . rounds of the · ,tournament; when West Virginia
limited I Oth-seeded Arizona
to 65 points and secondseeded Duke to 67.
"I think the defensive end
took a lot of getting used to,"
backup point guard Joe
Mazzulla said. "Last ·year,
we did two hourS of offense
and 10 minutes .of defense
(in practice). This year, we
do two hours of defense and
half-hour of offense.'"
From the start, Huggins
and his staff pushed the
players into the weight
room. He also brought a
treadmill to practice, and
players who mess up are
asked to go for a spin.
"When I first heard that he
was going to get one in the
gym, I was like, 'Man, that's
not going to happen,'" backup forward Wellington
Smith said. "When I frrst
saw it, I was like; 'Man; I'm
going to be on ·there· a lot.'
I've been on there a lot."
His transgressions?
"Not box out," Smith said.
"Let a guy go middle. Just
being, maybe, soft."

APphoto

West Virginia coach Bob Huggins chats on the sideline's
while his team practices for an NCAA West Regional men's
basketball tournament game Wednesday in Phoenix. West
Virginia will face. Xavier on Thursday.
If there's one thing
Huggins can't stand, it's
being soft. 'But while
Huggins likes to in'still discipline in his players, it has, at
times, been missing from his
personal and professional
life.
His 16-year tenure at

Cincinnati produced a trip to
the I 992 Final Four and two
other regional final appearances. It also included player arrests, NCAA probation
and Huggins' drunk driving
arrest in 2004,
Huggins was forced out in
2005, but he wasn't fi~ished.

He spent one season at
Kansas State before taking
the job at West Virginia .
Huggins is 6 I6-221 in 26
college seasons.
Reinventing himself as a
coach wasn't a big deal for a
man who had · survived a
heart attack in, the fall of
2002.
But then, Huggins said he
didn't really change .after
that seemingly life-.altering
event, although he had
planned to at.the time.
"S3!'1e thing you do New
Year's Eve," Huggins said.
"You said, 'I'm going to do
this,' and about the third of
January you are back doing
what you did before.
"I haven't really changed
all that much," Huggins
said. "I mean, I would like to
sit here and tell you that I
probably eat better, but look
at me. That's obviously not
the case."
The beefy Huggins paused
while reporters laughed.
"Honestly, I don't think
about it very much, which is
kind of hard," Huggins said.
"But I just believe with all
my heart when God says it's
your time, it's your time .
You don't get to debate that.
He decided for whatever
reason it wasn't my time."
Xavier coach Sean Miller,
who has known Huggins for
most ofhis life, said he's not
surprised that Hug~ins has
returned with a passJOn.
"He is such a survivor,"
Miller said. "He is so strong-

willed. I don 't know if it surprised anybody that not only
is he back as a coach, but
better than ever."
Arizona coach Kev-in
O' Neill , a longtime friena,
called Huggins "probably
the most underrated coach1n
the whole game . He's gotng
to be in the Hall of Fame: •
Huggins' blunt . style
makes for good copy bl!t
isn 'i always endearing. f1e
still bristles over the perception - some of it fueled .hy
the media, he believes -·
that his Bearcats were a lawless bunch.
•
"I understand to make: a
good story,'there's got to lie
white hats and black hafs,
otherwise we never would
have had a cowboy movie,"
Huggins said. "That's the
way it is."
To stress his point,
Huggins recalled the 199.2
Final Four.
· "The reality is in 1992 we
go to the Final Four with
three bluebloods - it is
Indiana,
Duke
. and
Michigan," Huggins said.
"And then here we come in
with J0 transfers.
·
"Didn't matter that they
were the most articulate, the
funniest , the best interview,"
Huggins said. "They re!llly
were.· the highlight of the
whole deal. It was a story.
And I' understand that, and
I'm good with it. I'm 54
years old, shocked back to
life three times, you know?
I'm fine with it."

NCAA Tournament returns to·court today with pivotal matchups
BY JIM O'CONNELl.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. ·'. Firat Round

.
Second Round

National

~nna11

NM!onll .· · Netlonal
Chemplonlhlp &amp;emlflnall RegiOnal• Second ROund

. First Round

A look at the matchups for
the third round of the NCAA
·n
tournament' (seedings in
parentheses):
Thur;m•s Games
EAST
GIONAL
St. 74
. At Charlotte, N.C.
Fri .. 30 min.
,7:27p.m.
North Carolina (I) vs.
Wa~hington State (4)
Something has to give. •
North Carolina, second in
lhe nation in scoring at 89.9
points per game, became. tJ1~
·ctwrkllte, N.c.
HoultOn
first team since Loyola
54
29
Marymount in 1990 to break ·
E A S T . March ,----:-:-'--.,.-..----,
... c~~~Q
Maroh 30 S 0 UTH
the I00 mark in its ftrst two .
games. Washington State, second in the natton in defense
. allowing 56.1 points per
game, allowed a total of 81
Championship
points in its first two games•.
. Game
one of the lowest figures in
I
the shot clock era.
30mil.
Sen A~
The Tar Heels want 'to get
AprH7
Butler 71
out and run. The Cougars
want to get the pace their way
TelC4S .
with palience and disruption.
This is the chy;sic offensedefense matcl\up but the
biggest difference could be
S....Antonto
location. The, game is being
..
played jusr a few hours from
April5
Kansas as
AprilS
..
the North Carolina campus.
St 61
Tennessee (2) vs.
Louisville (3)
Tennessee struggled for
most of its opener against
American and then needed
overtime to beat Butlcr. The
Volunteers went a combined
11-for-38 from 3-point range.
Louisville shot 59 percent in
an easy second-round win
over Oklahoma but it was the
Phoenix
,Cardinals' defense that was
· most impressive, especially
r-7......_-::-""--::-:-Mtut:h
c..;;
29
on the perimeter- 9-for-35
from 3-point range - and in
forcing a total of 35 turnovers . ..
All nmesEDT
Botfi teams look good when
01'1111111, Neb.
Wisconsin
they're running but both can
. 71
get physical up front so this
might not be the high-scoring
CSU Fl.iltenon 56 .
game most_people expect.
WEST REGIONAL
•
At Phoenix
UCLA (l)vs. Western
Kentucky (12)
UCLA set a modern record
allowing a tollil of 78 points in
the first two games. Still, the
Brums Just squeaked by Texas
AP
A&amp;M m the second round as
. Kevin Love and Darren again in the s~nd round Scottie Reynolds who .aver· · top defen~ive teams in the games.
·
guards in the country in t&gt;.J.
Collison combined for 40 of against Purdue.
.
aged 23 points and six country yet the Hoyas had no
Michigan State won a phys- Augustin, who averages 19
West Virginia beat two rebounds in the two tourna- way to stop Curry as they lost ical matchup with Pinsl&gt;urgh points a game, and his back·
their 53 points and made
every big play down the schools With impressive ment wins.
all of a !?·point lead. · inlheseconaroundandfound courtpanner,A.J. Abrarnshas
stretch. Western Kentucky NCAA resumes ·in !he first
The Jayhawks had two easy Davidson is effectiye with its its much needed third scorer startea to come out of his
had the signature moment of two rounds - Ariwna and wins because of their defense, subtle defensive . pressure in freshman guard Kalin shooting slump. However, the
the first round - Ty Rogers' Duke
and
the but its their size that will give which forced Georgetown Lucas, who had 19 points in . numbers tQa~ are scary from
26-footer at the overtime Mountaineers held them to a Villanova problems. Kansas into 20 turnovers. Curry will that win. The Spartans are the second-round win over
buzzer against Drake - and combined 11-for-37 from 3- outrebounds opponents by have to have a third great per- always one of the best Miami is that Texas shot bet·
also lost double-figure leads point range. Still, !hey have to almost eight a game, while the formance to keep the nation's rebounding teams in the coun- rer from 3-poinl range (13in both wins ..
make sure Joe Alexander gets Wildcats only average 2.8 longest winnillg_Streakalive. tryandiheyhadacomfortable for-26) than the free throw
UCLA's late-season run of his share of shots . which more.
SOUTII REGIONAL
edge in Iiiith wins. Tom lzzo, line (12-for·21).
close games with controver- seems to open things up for
Wisconsin (3) V&amp;.
At Houston
one of the best NCAA toumaStanford can expect coach
· .
sial calls hasn't hurt its per- others.
Davidson (10)
Memphis (1) vs.
"ment coaches of this genera- Trent Johnson to be around
ception of regipnal favorite.
Wtsconsin is the top defenMichigan State (5)
lion, is a master 6f getting the whole game after he was
·
Xivler (3)
sive team in the country,
Since Memphis lostJUSI one teams ready for pfiysicru ejected in the ftrsl half of the
vs. West Virginia (7)
At Detroit
allowing 53.9 points per game game this season there isn't a games.
overtime
win
against
These teams have almost
Kansas (l)
and neither Cal State lot to go on about how to beat
Thxas (2) vs.
Marquene. The ?·foot l:.opez
identical profiles as far as
vs. VIllanova (12)
Fullerton nor Kansas State the Tigers . A good guess
· Stanford (3)
twins have become as doll\ioffense, defense and depth.
Usually a No. l seed has a reached 60 in the ftrst two would be .physical play and
This is another matchup nant frontcoun duo as there is ·
The one advantage may be .big break getting a 12 in the rounds. Neither of those keeping it close so free throw where the stats ~ almost in the country but Brook
Xavier's experience in the th1rd 'round but Villanova is teains had Stephen Curry. The shooting becomes a factor. identical but each team's Lopez has been the standout.
tournament and the fact the far from a typical team from :Wildcats rode the sophomore For all the gaudy numbers, strength is ala different part of His game-winning shot
Musketeers ;,till · harbor the that line. The Wildcats come .guard to the round of 16 on Memphis puts up 1t's tough to the court.
against the Golden Eagles
disappointment of last year's from a power conference and two· of the most impressive . ignore .59 percent shooting
The Longhorns, who will may not have been as draffiatsecond-round loss to Ohio have faced a number of quali- second halves seen in the from the line and the Tigers have ~ decided advantage ic as some of the long jumpers
State where they blew a big ty teams. They will rely fieav- tournament in a long time.
were 22-for-35 and 15-for-32 playing in their home state, others hit, but the degree of
lead late, something they did ily on sophomore. guard
Georgetown is one of the . in their two tournament have one of the best point difficulty was off the charts:
l .
\

Men's Division I
Basketball Champl,nshlp

I

MID{Mf~AL

The Daily Sentipel • Page B3

Big Blacks edge Wahama
BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. Ashton Jones
clubbed a fifth inning lead
off home run in addition to
tossing a five hit, six strikeout performance against visiting Wahama Wednesday
evening to .lead host Point
Pleasant past its Mason
County neighbors by a 5-2
margin.
·
Jones collected two hits on
the night offensively and
blanked the White Falcons
through the first six innings
before losing his shutout bid
on a seventh inning, two OIJI,
two rim double by Derek
Veazey. Point Pleasant captured its first win of the season after dropping its first
two decisions of the young
2008 diamond season while
Wahama fell to 0- I after los"
ing its season opening affair
to the Big Blacks.
D.W. Herdman joined
Jones in the spot! ight for
Point Pleasant with three
hits on the evening while
Curt Grimm added a pair of
safeties for Coach Jamie
Higginbottom 's diamond
nine. Eric Veith added the
remaining base hit for PPHS
with Jones' round tripper
being the only extra base
knock for the winners.
·
Veazey drove in a pair
with a single and a double to
Larry Crumlphoto lead Wahama offensively
Point Pleasant pitcher Ashton Jones throws a ball to a Wahama player 'during the first inning with G~rrett Underwood
of a high school baseball game Wednesday night in Point Pleasant. The Big Blacks won also swatting a double for
their home opener 5-2.
the White Falcons. Jacob

Indians patiently waiting for
infielder Marte .to progress
· WINTER HAVEN, . Fla.
Marte's situation.' He has
(AP) - With Andy Marte
impressed Wedge· by workout of options,
the
ing even harder during the
Cleveland Indians are
bad times .
"I like his approach,"
almost forced to not run out
of patience with· him.
Wedge said a few weeks
Marte, the key player
ago after Marte had two
acquired in a trade with
homers and six RBis, but
more importantly to the
Boston in January 2006,
likely will be on the
manager also two walks in
Indians' Opening Day ros· the same game.
"He's tried to do too
ter again,.but in a "!uch dif-.
·
much," Wedge said. "He's a
ferent role.
Unless manager Eric A and got called up to good kid. · When you're
Wedlle makes a surprise replace the injured Chipper working with someone with
deciston to keep someone Jone&amp; in Atlanta.
that much ability,. someelse, Marte will be the 25th
Marte flopped, batting times the be~t thing we can
man on a roster of 25 when .140 in 24 games. Before he do is get out the way a· bit.
the Indians open at home knew it, he was traded to You try to put all that away
Monday
against
the Boston in December then to and just play. That's what
Chicago White Sox at Cleveland a month later.
I'd like to see him do."
Progressive Field. A year
"It was a crazy time for
Marte finds that difficult.
ago, Marte started at third ·me," Marte said. "I didn't
"They say relax and 1
base in · the opener iri know where I was, who try," he said. "I make a misChicago. .
wanted rne or · not. The take and I want to make up
"He's had off-and-on Indians really did and I for it. Sometimes I make
moments, good days and wantto play for them, show another (error or strikeout)
bad,"
Wedge
Si!id them they were right."
and 1 feel worse." ·
Wednesday, one day after
The Indians painfully
A year ago, Marte started
the 24-year-old had both in recall going down this road Cleveland's first eight
a spring game against the before with a top prospect. games, hit .179, and went
New York Yankees.
In 2002, general manager on the disabled list with a
.
· ·
C
In the early innings, Mark Shapiro acquired
Marte looked tentative in multi-talented
infielder hamstnng · IllJUry.
asey
.Blake
took
his
·
job
and
making two errors, nearly a · Brandon Phillips from
third · and bouncing into a Montreal. Phillips hit only Marte went back to Tripledouble play. In the eighth, .208 a year later in ABuffalo.
he stepped up and delivere d Cleve I an d an d was sent . "It wasn't anybody 's
a go-ahead three.-run homer. back to the minors. He fault, I got hurt and I can't
·. Such erratic play n.ot only sulked, fell out of favor, and blame them for playing
has the Indians scratching eventually ran out of Casey,': Marte said. "Ws up _
their heads and wondering, options.
to me to earn a spot. 'fhat's
but confounds Marte.
Dealt to Cincinnati for a why I'm playing some at
"I try 'not to get frustrated, minor•leaguer in April first base now. I like third
but 1 do," Marte said. 2006, Phillips developed base more, I think first base
'!Maybe I'm thinking too · just as Shapiro had forecast is easier, but I'll do whatevmuch."
- too late for the Indians. er they want."
·
Marte worries about ful- An all-star middle infielder , "He's always proven himfilling the expectations put hitting 30 homers and steal- · self to be a good defender,"
on him ever since he hit 21 ing 32 bases for the Reds in Wedge said. "There's been
homers with 105 RBls in 2007 did them no good. .
times this spring when he's
Class A ball in 2002 in the
The organization clearly been a little in between with
~tlanta Braves system. doesn't want to make a sim- his .footwork. He's got to
Three years later, at age 21 , ilar mistake, though there is get in a better position .to
-he had 20 homers at Triple- one ,distinct difference in receive the baseball."
'

.

Sting

...'

from PageBl

.

. -.onds against Paul, one of his
._Closest friends . Anderson
Varejao added 15 rebounds
for the Cavaliers.
Two .free throws by
•James brought Cleveland
within 96-95, but the
Cavaliers couldn't get a
··rebound at the other end
·:ahd Tyson Chandler's putliack dunk put the Hornets
·libead by three with 47 sec~nds remaining .
Following a timeout,
James missed a left-handed
·layup but ~l~ausk~s wa.s
.there to Up 11 m to make 11
98-97. On the Hornets'
next trip, Jannero Pargo
was left wide open in the

corner on another bacl
defensive rotation by ·
Cleveland but missed a 3·
pointer.
James thep drove past
Stojakovic for a layup with
7.7 seconds left to give
Cleveland a · 99-98 lead.
But the Cavaliers couldn't
p~event the
ultra-quick
Paul from getting deep
penetration on the Hornets'
last possession, . leaving
West wide open.
The
Cavaliers
had
expected to have back
guard Daniel 'Gibson, who
has been sidelined since
Feb. 20 with a badly
sprained
left
ankle.
However, with a favor&lt;)ble
. break in the schedule Cleveland doesn't play
again until Saturdar - the
Cavs decided to gtve him

and center Ben Wallace,
nursing a sore back, more
rest.
Cleveland could have
used someone to slow
Paul, who finished one
assist shy of his season
high.
.
With the MVP candidate
orchestrating everything
for New Orleans' offense
and Pargo making three ).
pointers while playing the
entire second quarter, the
Hornets, one of the
league's best perimeter
shooting teams, opened a
56-50 lead at hal fume.
Paul, who had II assists
at the break, ..toyed with '
any defender the Cavaliers
put on him defensively. He
dribbled in .and out of traffic effortlessly
while
always looking for an open
teammate.

Swept
from PageBl
The lead for Rio Grande
was short-lived as Wright
State (10- 12) scored 10 runs
in the bottom of the first
frame.
,
Jamie Perkins, Jherica
Williams
and Kristen
Bradshaw had three RBI's
each for the Raiders while

Roach and
Anthony
Bond added
a
single
each
for
Coach Tom
Cullen' s
WHS baseball crew.
William
Zuspan, the
Herdman
first
of
t h r e e
Falcon
pitchers in
the outing
was tagged
with
the
loss after
giving up
three runs
on four hits
'------'through
Veazey
two and one
t h i r d
innings. Jerry Berkley
allowed one run on two hits
with Garrett Underwood
giving up a run on two hits
during bis one inning stint
on the hill for the White
Falcons. Zuspan fanned
three and ·Underwood two
with Wahama pitchers issuing three walks in addition
to hitting a couple of PPHS
batters.
Point Pleasant broke open
a scoreless duel with a three
run third frame with the Big
Blacks taking advantage of
three free passes in the
inning. Phillip Allen drew a
leadoff
walk · before
Herdman put runners at the
corners with a single to left.
Grimm chased home the

first run of the game with an
RBI single before Jones
walked to load the bases.
Clay Krebs forced home
another run with a bases
loaded free pass before Veith
drove in the third run of the
inning with a sacrifice fly to
right.
•
PPHS made it a 4-0 contest in the fifth after Jones
led off the inning with a
towering home run to deep
left field. The Big Blacks
tallied its final run in the
sixth when Justin Weaver
was hit by a pitch before
advancing on a single by
Herdman and a run scoring
safety by Jones.
Wahama avoided the
shutout in its final turn at the
plate when Justin Arnold
walked and ·Anthony Bond
followed with a sharp single
back through the middle.
Jones then · retired Jacob
Roach and · Terry Henry
before Veazey · doubled
home both runners to pull
the White Falcons to within
three at 5-2 but Jones would
quickly slam the door shut
by inducing Underwood to
bounce back to the mound ·
for the final out.
The Big Blacks are scheduled to host Poca in a 5:30
pm affair on Friday while
Wa~ama is slated to visit
Williamstown at 5:00 pm
today in the two teams next
diamond encounters.

Michelle Logan knocked in
two.
Senior pitcher Miranda
Laws was roughed up in the
loss, allowing 14 hits and 15
run~ ( 13 earned) in four
innings of pitching. Laws
(3·2) struggled with her
control as she issued five
walks without a strikeout. ·
In game two, Rio's bats
were silent as Wright State
pitchers Sharon Palma ·and
Jamie Perkins combined ori
a no-hitter. Perkins allowed

one walk to Harless which
kept the performance from
bemg a perfect game.
Sophomore Sophia Young
drops to 2-3 on the season
with the loss in the second
'game.
Rio now heads home for
three straight doubleheaders
beginning with Cedarville
on Friday at 2 p.m. and the
start of the American
Mideast Conference South
Division portion of the
schedule.

w

PP
Jones and Herdman. Zuspan, Berkley
(3), Underwood (6) and Underwood,
Bond (6). WP- Joiles.LP- Zuspan

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The ·

• ~alltpolisllailp mrtbunt
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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 27,

2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Orioles·say Brian Roberts probably staying put; Beckham gets yellow card
Kelvim Escobar unsure about return to Angels against France in his
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ner for the Angels last season, told reporters he has a
While the Baltimore tear in his pitching shoulder
Orioles say they plan to keep and might need surgery. The
Brian Roberts around, the · team hadn''t confirmed that
Los Angeles Angels aren't diagnosis by the end of
• sure if Kelvim Escobar will Wednesday's 7-5 loss to the
be back at all this season.
Chicago Cubs.
Orioles presidenJ of base- The 31-year-old right-hanball
operations
Andy der said he would continue
MacPhail said Wednesday to try and strengthen his
he's not close to completing arm, but admitted surgery
a deal that would send could be a possibility.
Roberts to the Chicago Escobar, 18-7 with a 3.40
Cubs and the two-time All- ERA ·last Se&lt;!son, hasn.'t
Star 'w ill likely begin the pitched this spring.
.
season as Baltimore's secAngels mana&amp;er Mike
ond baseman.
Scioscia said he s holding
"I've mentioned to Brian out hope that Escobar will
that I think it's unlikely that pitch this . season. ,But it
. something
happens," seems.certamh~ won t do so
MacPhail said in Florida.
fo~ qune ~orne ume. . .
There s , ~o ~ertamty
Roberts has been the sub· ject of trade speculation for where Kelv1m ·S g~.mg. ~o ~e
three months, and the Cubs a '!lo.nth from now, · .Sci~,scia
would like to add him to sal~ 10 Tempe,: Afi~· But
their tevamped lineup as a we. re su.n optimistic that
leadoff hitter. MacPhail has we re g?mg~o s~ him at
already dealt away shortstop S?me. pomt. e sun feel our
M.
1 11 · d
H .
p1tchmg IS a strength. If we
Jgue eJa a to oust~n start losing a coupfe of more
and left-handed ace Enk guys, some of our answers
B.edard to Seattle as pa~ of might have to · come from
his ov.erhaul of an, Onoles outside the organization, but
franchise that ~asn t had a we're not to that point xet." '
wmnmg season m a decade.
The Angels also will be
Thus far, MacPh!lll has not without John Lackey to start
been presented with a .sun- the season. The 29-year-old
able package of players m right-hander has a strained
exchange for Roberts. .
right triceps. He won I 9
The Cubs an? Onoles games and led the AL with a
have been talktng about 3.01 ERA last year.
Roberts smce before spnng
At Surprise Ariz Gerald
training, and scouts from Laird beat ' out., Jarrod
~ch team hav~ been watch- Saltalamacchia for the job as
mg. the other s players m Texas • starting catcher.
maJor and m1nor league Saltalamacchia.
was
optioned to minor league
games for weeks.
The 29-year-old Robe~s . camp. .
.
has met several times with
At Peoria, Ariz., reliever
MacPhail this spring, most Chris Reitsma left Mariners
recently last weekend, to be camp after learning he
updated on the progress of would not make Seattle's
trade discussions.
· roster for the start of the sea~
"I think with each passing son.
hour. at this point, it's less
At a morning meeting,
and less likely," MacPhail Reitsma was t~&gt;ld the
said. "The further we get this Mariners wanted him to conclose into (the regular sea- tinue his throwing program
son), the greater likelihood into early April with a possithat we're going to start with bility of bemg added to the
what we have."
roster later.
"He is going to go home
Escobar, an 18-game win-

and think about it," manager
John McLaren said. "He's
not sure what he wants to do
right now. We're hopeful
that he does think about continuin!l his throwing program.'"'
In other news. All 7Star
right fielder Alex Rios and
Toronto are closing in on a
six-year contract extension
through 2014 that would
guarantee him ·about $65
million . The deal might
include a 2015 option that
could make it worth about
$80 million.
Ami in Tokyo, the Red
Sox and Athletics concluded
their season-openin~ series
with a two-game spht.
Rich Harden struck out
nine over six innings and
Emil Brown hit a three-run
homer, leading Oakland to a
5-1 victory over Boston.
In spring training games:
Marlins 7, Mets 5
At Port St. Lucie, Fla.,
Pedro Martinez threw 80
pitches over six innings
against minor leaguers and
pronounced himsc;lf healthy
heading into the season.
Phillles 4, Yankees 0
At Clearwater, Aa., Brett
Myers looked great in his
final tuneup for opening day,
allowmg · two hits 10 five
innings for Philadelphia.
Chien-Ming Wang, New
York's opening-day ~tarter,
was tagged for four runs and
six hits in five innings.
Pirates 7, Tigers 4
At
Bradenton,
Fla.,
Dontrelle Willis had another
bad outing for Detroit,
allowing seven runs - six
earned - and eight hits
while walking four in three
innings. Pittsburgh's Zach
Duke struck out five while
permitting one run and five
hits ove~ five innings. He
also drove in three runs with
a pair of.singles.
Indians 7, Astros 6
At Kissimmee, Aa., a day
after manager Cecil Cooper
criticized his team for bad
throws, Houston made three

'&lt;!tribune - Sentinel - .1\egtt)ter
CLAS' SIFIE·D

tOOth international game

errors and a costly baserunning mistake. AL Cy Young
Award winner C. C. Sabathia
BY ROBERT MILLWARD
as the teams came out and
allowed three runs in seven
. ASSOCIATED PRESS
waved to· the fans. But the
innings, striking out six.
French fans whisiled
Twins 4, Rays 2
SAINT-DENIS, France whenever he had the hall
At Fort Myers, Flit, - David Beckham got a or ran over to take corner
Minnesota's
Livan yellow card in his I OOth kicks.
Hernandez warmed up for international game for
He was shown a yellow
opening day with a strong
start. He struck out five and England and was taken off card .in the 38th' minute
pitched six innings of one' in the 62nd minute of his for pulling Frank Ribery's
team's 1-0 loss at France. shirt and hauling him
run ball.
Despite. specuiation the down as the Frenchman,
Brav~ 10, Nationals 2
At Kissimmee, Fla;, Jeff Los Angeles Gala.xy mid- who had given his side the
Bennett pitched four sharp fielder would be on the lead from the penalty
innings for Atlanta, extend- bench, England coach . spot, tried to run past him.
Under instructions to
ing his scoreless streak to II Pabio Capello placed him
this spring. Mark Teixeira in the starting lineup for help Brown, ~eckham did
hit a two-run homer and a Wednesday's exhibition well to race back and
double.
match at the Stade de tackle Florent Malouda,
Cardinals 8, Orioles 2 · France.
wlio went on a dangerous
. ,
At Jupiter, Fla.• St. Louis
"I was happy to start the run down the left.
opening-day starter Adam game, but it was more
When he went off the
Wainwright allowed one run about getting on the pitch • . field to be rephlced by
in six innings. Baltimore's getting that I OOth cap," David Bentley, the 'whOle
· Jeremy GuWuie worked four
shutout innings before strug- said Beckham·, who dido 't crowd stood and loudly
have a shot on goal , made applauded as he trotted to
gling in the fifth.
little impression with his a place on the bench .
Brewers 12,
trademark
long passes and
Beckham was dropf!ed
White Sox 10
AI Tucson, Ariz., Jim spent much of his time by Capello's predecessor,
Thome hit two of Chicago's covering for right back Steve McClaren, after the
2006 World Cup and
four home runs off an inef- Wes 6rown.
fective Ben Sheets. Alexei
Beckham was over- missed nine England
Ramirez helped his bid to looked for Capello's first . matches. He was recalled
play center field for the game in charge, a 2-1 vic- a year later by McClaren
White Sox on opening day .lory over Switze.rland at following a string. of poor
by hitting a grand slam.
Wembley last month, results .
.
Diamondbatks It,
because the Major League
Goalkeeper
Peter
Rockies 8
Soccer season had fin.- Shilton has played !he
At Tucson, opening-day ished and the former most games for England
starter Jeff Francis pitched England captain was not with 125 in 1970-90. Next
five solid innings for
are Bobby Moore (lOS),
Colorado, which got homers playing any matches.
Beckham was third from Bobby Charlton (106) and
from Matt Holliday and
r.unning onto the field Billy Wright (I 05).
last
Troy Tulowitzki. Arizona's
Randy Johnson was roughed
up by White Sox minor lealead-off man Matt Stiffler,
guers.
who
went 3-for-4 and drove
Cubs 7, Angels 5
in
one
run. Trace Vosbell
At Tempe, Jered .Weaver
· went I -for-3 and knocked in
fromPageBl
held Chicago to one run in
the other run for Ohio.
six innings and lowered his
Adam Gecewich and
spring ERA to 1.67. Los
innings
on
the
hill.
.Zach Keen collected two
Angeles closer Francisco
Whewell went 2-for-3 at hits as the Bobcats recorded
~odriguez allowed five runs
in the seventh. New Cubs the plate to lead the offense safeties for the game.
closer Kerry Wood.pitched I · for Rio Grande while · Rio will be on the road at
·on
2-3 hitless innings. Chicago sophomore catcher Tyler Miami-Hamilton
Saturday for a doubleheader
ace Carlos Zambrano gave Plumpton was 2-for-4.
The Bobcats were led by beginning at I p.m.
up four runs in four innings.

Rio

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

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Free Puppies, Beagle/Husky diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
mix 304•675-.4879
151 2(ld Avenue, Gallipolis.
446·2842
to Good Home German - - - - - - - Shepherd 4 ~rs old female, Wanted to b_uY Junk Cars,&amp;
lg. booed rag. needs yard to Farm Mactl_inery call 740run some 304-458·1515
388.()884 ~n Call Colloc1

AH rul

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In ttlla ntw1peper It
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which mak" It 11119111 to
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Wanting to Buy Junk Cars.
304-675·2176

· ·~
· ~~~
CLASSIFIED INDEX

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
.Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Dally Sentinel, AndJtWill Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

· 4x4'a f&lt;lr Salo .............................................. 725
Announcomenl ..........................................:.oao
Antlquoa ...............................:.......................530
Apaortmentalor Rent ..................... ;............. 440
• Auction ond Flea Markot. ............................OBO
; , Auto Parts &amp; Accoooo~oo .......................... 760
, · Auto Ropolr ..................................................770
- ·. AutoolorSale ..............................................710
' llo8te &amp; Molano tor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppllea..:.....................................sso
, Bualnoao and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Bualnoaa Opportunlly.................................210
•· Bualnoaa Tralnlng .......................................140
· Campero &amp; Motor Homea ........................... 790
, Camping Equipment ................................... 780
· · Card• Of Thanka ...................... .,.................. 010

ChlldiEiderly Care ....................................... 190
' · Eleelrlcai/Re!rlgoratlon ...............................840
:l•• Equl-t
......... for Rent.... ;................................480
Excevlllng ................................................... 830
:" Farm Equlpment..........................................610
Forma lor Ront.............................................430
.,. Farma for Sale ............................................. 330

· .• For Leau ............-........................................ 490
•

For Sllle ........................................................ 585

• :· f&lt;lr Sale or Tr-.........................................590
:, Fruita &amp; v~ .....................................580
• Fumlahed Roomo ........................................450
• a.n.nlllaullng...........................................850
'•· Gtv-ay......................................................040
-·~, HIPPY Ado..;.................................................050
·, Hoy &amp; Greln ..................................................840
·. Help Wanted .................................................11 o
• Homolmprovements................................... B10
·. : Homeolor Salo...................................,. .....:.310 .
'· • Houaehold Good a ....................................... 510
Houaealor Rent ................... :............. :....,... 410
· ' In Memorlam ................................................ 020
. . Inourance .....................:............................... 130
"' Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ...............~ ........ 680
Llveotock......................................................830
, Loatond Found ..................:........................ OBO
Loll &amp; Acreage...............,.................-..........350
• Mlecelleneous ...............................................170

; . MIICtlllonooua Merchandloe.......................540
Mobile Home Repalr...................................860
Mobile Homea tor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobllio Homeator Sala................................320
Manoy to Loan .............................................220
MotorcyciH &amp; 4 Whoelera..........................740
Muolcallnotrumento ................................... 570

~
l

~oint l81easant legister

304-675-1333

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The Dally Sentinel
740-992-2155 '

· www.mydai~sentineLcom~

oos

:· Peraonela .....................................................
•
Pet1 for S.le ................................................ 560

·; Plumbing &amp; Hoatlng .................................... 820
• ProleiiiCMial Sarvlcoa .................................230
. Rlldlo, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 180
floel Eotshl Wonted .........................-...........380
Schoolo tnotructloo .....................................150
SMd, Plant &amp; Fertlllnr........... :.................. 650
SHuatlonl Wanted....................................... 120
SJH1C8 for Rar,t .............................................480
• · Sporting Gooda ....................................... .'..• 520

SUV'elor Sale ..............................................720
Truckllor Sale ............................................ 715
Uphol.tery ................................................... 870
Vono For Sai1...............................................730
Wanted to luy............................................. 090
wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllea .................. 620
'7 Wanted To Do ........... :.................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yord Sail, Golltpollo.......................... ,.........072
·. Yard Sa-omeroy/Middf!I ......................... 074
Yard Salo,PI. Plea-' ................................ 078
' I

Service
Full Time Receptionist needWe have Immediate
ed in busy Doctot''s Office.
full·thlll Cuetomer
Pick
up applications at Suite - - - . , - - - - - Service poeltlon In our
112,
Pleasant
Valley
main office.
Hospital. Resumes may be
Succno!ul appiiCinlo
attached to the application
Avg. Pay $20Alr or
mull bo people orient·
$~7K/yr, includes
od, en)ov ,.lng till
Full time truck driver needed
Federal Benefits, or.
phOne,
with valid drivers license and Offered by Exam Services,
computer llterltllnd
insurance. Must be depend- not offered w/ USPS who
onJov worillng with
able, haw good customer
hires.
nurnbon. Pveltlon
services skiffs and be able to
t-866-403-2582
offlro oil compony
load and unload trucks. Must - - - - - - - lncludlnil
be able to work weekends. Super 8 Motel now hiring
hnlth lnd lrle
Send resumes to CLA Box housekeepers. Position is
lneurence, 401k, paid . 101, c/o Gallipolis Daily part-time and you must be
vacation end personal
Trlbuhe, P.O. Box 469, able to work fle)!ible hours.
dave.
Gallipolis. OH 45631
Apply In person. No phone
- - - - - - - - calls please.
·
For ompiO)'mont
Gultar Player looking for liJ~~~~'!IP.!
conllderltlon, Hnd
Drummer .&amp; Bass Player to
me a met ll
rttume to:
play · mostly original Rock
Ollnt Hltl
music. 985-44 t6 after-5:00
Take inbound
cJo Golllpolla Tribune
customer service calls
1 Help wp.nted at Oarst Home
,825 Third Ave,
Group Home. ~40·992·5023
for Fortune 100
Gllllpolll, OH 45831

bon-

No Phono Calli PIHH
F"st ·4 You, In Mason now
hiring, must be 18 &amp; available aM stifts, must pass a
Drug Test. Apply within.

.,

FEDERAL
.POSTAL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27fhr., now hlr·
lng. For applicatiOn and free
governement Job Into, call
American Assoc. of LabOr 1·
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.

=::._______

Metal Fabricator is accept·
ing resumes for the following
positions: 30 Drafter (Auto
CAD). experienced Tig
Welder, Machinist CNC
experience and entry level
Receptionist. Compensation
based upon experierlced.
Pieass submit resume and
profes&amp;lonal references to:
70764 St. At. 124, Vinton,
OH 45686 by April 4.

lite Ambulant in Gallipo6s is
looking for diivers, dispatch·
ers, paramedics &amp; EMT's.
Competitive wages. 740·
445-7930
-------Ohio Valley Home Hefilhh,
1nc. hiring STNA. CNA.
Home Health .Aides and
Personal . Care Aides. Full,
Part Time and Per Diem
positions available. Apply at
1'480
Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis, phone 441~1393
tor Skilled Office or apply at
1456 Jackson Pike, phone
441·9263
lor
PassporVPrivate
care
Office. Competiti'ole· wages
and benefits Including heahh
Insurance and mileage reimbursement.
-------Manpower is now hiring for
the following positions
Automobile
Produtlon
Workers in the Buffalo, WV
Area Benefits a'olallable Gall
Today 304-757·3338

Companies

Including: .

Time Warner Cebte
Now Hiring
Full Tlme Day Shift
Full Time E11ening Shift
•Up to SB.501hour

AJ B
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Truck Drivers COL Class A
Raquired, minimum of 2
years
driving
exp.
Exp.erience
on
Overdeimensional loads.
Must ha'ole good driving
record. Earn up to $2,000
weekly. For application Call
(304)722-2184
M-F
8:30am-4pm
- - - - ' -- - - Welders needed. 1yr. eKperience.. Good wages &amp; bene·
fits. Send resumes to: CLA
Box 1os, c/o GallipOlis Daily
Tribune. PO Box -'69,
Gallipofts, OH 45631

130 ''~IJCJ10N
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Call Today! 740·446-4367. ,
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Looking tor an updated famNew home, never lived in. ily home, on 1 ecre m/1 w/
2BR. 2 baths, 3 acres more ba cky8rd privacy fence in
or less in Gallipolis. Asking Galfipolis.lhis 2100 SO Fl. 3
$80,000. 740·446·7029
br. 2 ba. w/lg. bonus room
Small 2 Br. house,Racine vinyl sided ranch has new
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on approx. 1 acre.Asking garage , refinished hardwood floOrs is ready to
$45,000. 740·949·2539.

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 27,

2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Orioles·say Brian Roberts probably staying put; Beckham gets yellow card
Kelvim Escobar unsure about return to Angels against France in his
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ner for the Angels last season, told reporters he has a
While the Baltimore tear in his pitching shoulder
Orioles say they plan to keep and might need surgery. The
Brian Roberts around, the · team hadn''t confirmed that
Los Angeles Angels aren't diagnosis by the end of
• sure if Kelvim Escobar will Wednesday's 7-5 loss to the
be back at all this season.
Chicago Cubs.
Orioles presidenJ of base- The 31-year-old right-hanball
operations
Andy der said he would continue
MacPhail said Wednesday to try and strengthen his
he's not close to completing arm, but admitted surgery
a deal that would send could be a possibility.
Roberts to the Chicago Escobar, 18-7 with a 3.40
Cubs and the two-time All- ERA ·last Se&lt;!son, hasn.'t
Star 'w ill likely begin the pitched this spring.
.
season as Baltimore's secAngels mana&amp;er Mike
ond baseman.
Scioscia said he s holding
"I've mentioned to Brian out hope that Escobar will
that I think it's unlikely that pitch this . season. ,But it
. something
happens," seems.certamh~ won t do so
MacPhail said in Florida.
fo~ qune ~orne ume. . .
There s , ~o ~ertamty
Roberts has been the sub· ject of trade speculation for where Kelv1m ·S g~.mg. ~o ~e
three months, and the Cubs a '!lo.nth from now, · .Sci~,scia
would like to add him to sal~ 10 Tempe,: Afi~· But
their tevamped lineup as a we. re su.n optimistic that
leadoff hitter. MacPhail has we re g?mg~o s~ him at
already dealt away shortstop S?me. pomt. e sun feel our
M.
1 11 · d
H .
p1tchmg IS a strength. If we
Jgue eJa a to oust~n start losing a coupfe of more
and left-handed ace Enk guys, some of our answers
B.edard to Seattle as pa~ of might have to · come from
his ov.erhaul of an, Onoles outside the organization, but
franchise that ~asn t had a we're not to that point xet." '
wmnmg season m a decade.
The Angels also will be
Thus far, MacPh!lll has not without John Lackey to start
been presented with a .sun- the season. The 29-year-old
able package of players m right-hander has a strained
exchange for Roberts. .
right triceps. He won I 9
The Cubs an? Onoles games and led the AL with a
have been talktng about 3.01 ERA last year.
Roberts smce before spnng
At Surprise Ariz Gerald
training, and scouts from Laird beat ' out., Jarrod
~ch team hav~ been watch- Saltalamacchia for the job as
mg. the other s players m Texas • starting catcher.
maJor and m1nor league Saltalamacchia.
was
optioned to minor league
games for weeks.
The 29-year-old Robe~s . camp. .
.
has met several times with
At Peoria, Ariz., reliever
MacPhail this spring, most Chris Reitsma left Mariners
recently last weekend, to be camp after learning he
updated on the progress of would not make Seattle's
trade discussions.
· roster for the start of the sea~
"I think with each passing son.
hour. at this point, it's less
At a morning meeting,
and less likely," MacPhail Reitsma was t~&gt;ld the
said. "The further we get this Mariners wanted him to conclose into (the regular sea- tinue his throwing program
son), the greater likelihood into early April with a possithat we're going to start with bility of bemg added to the
what we have."
roster later.
"He is going to go home
Escobar, an 18-game win-

and think about it," manager
John McLaren said. "He's
not sure what he wants to do
right now. We're hopeful
that he does think about continuin!l his throwing program.'"'
In other news. All 7Star
right fielder Alex Rios and
Toronto are closing in on a
six-year contract extension
through 2014 that would
guarantee him ·about $65
million . The deal might
include a 2015 option that
could make it worth about
$80 million.
Ami in Tokyo, the Red
Sox and Athletics concluded
their season-openin~ series
with a two-game spht.
Rich Harden struck out
nine over six innings and
Emil Brown hit a three-run
homer, leading Oakland to a
5-1 victory over Boston.
In spring training games:
Marlins 7, Mets 5
At Port St. Lucie, Fla.,
Pedro Martinez threw 80
pitches over six innings
against minor leaguers and
pronounced himsc;lf healthy
heading into the season.
Phillles 4, Yankees 0
At Clearwater, Aa., Brett
Myers looked great in his
final tuneup for opening day,
allowmg · two hits 10 five
innings for Philadelphia.
Chien-Ming Wang, New
York's opening-day ~tarter,
was tagged for four runs and
six hits in five innings.
Pirates 7, Tigers 4
At
Bradenton,
Fla.,
Dontrelle Willis had another
bad outing for Detroit,
allowing seven runs - six
earned - and eight hits
while walking four in three
innings. Pittsburgh's Zach
Duke struck out five while
permitting one run and five
hits ove~ five innings. He
also drove in three runs with
a pair of.singles.
Indians 7, Astros 6
At Kissimmee, Aa., a day
after manager Cecil Cooper
criticized his team for bad
throws, Houston made three

'&lt;!tribune - Sentinel - .1\egtt)ter
CLAS' SIFIE·D

tOOth international game

errors and a costly baserunning mistake. AL Cy Young
Award winner C. C. Sabathia
BY ROBERT MILLWARD
as the teams came out and
allowed three runs in seven
. ASSOCIATED PRESS
waved to· the fans. But the
innings, striking out six.
French fans whisiled
Twins 4, Rays 2
SAINT-DENIS, France whenever he had the hall
At Fort Myers, Flit, - David Beckham got a or ran over to take corner
Minnesota's
Livan yellow card in his I OOth kicks.
Hernandez warmed up for international game for
He was shown a yellow
opening day with a strong
start. He struck out five and England and was taken off card .in the 38th' minute
pitched six innings of one' in the 62nd minute of his for pulling Frank Ribery's
team's 1-0 loss at France. shirt and hauling him
run ball.
Despite. specuiation the down as the Frenchman,
Brav~ 10, Nationals 2
At Kissimmee, Fla;, Jeff Los Angeles Gala.xy mid- who had given his side the
Bennett pitched four sharp fielder would be on the lead from the penalty
innings for Atlanta, extend- bench, England coach . spot, tried to run past him.
Under instructions to
ing his scoreless streak to II Pabio Capello placed him
this spring. Mark Teixeira in the starting lineup for help Brown, ~eckham did
hit a two-run homer and a Wednesday's exhibition well to race back and
double.
match at the Stade de tackle Florent Malouda,
Cardinals 8, Orioles 2 · France.
wlio went on a dangerous
. ,
At Jupiter, Fla.• St. Louis
"I was happy to start the run down the left.
opening-day starter Adam game, but it was more
When he went off the
Wainwright allowed one run about getting on the pitch • . field to be rephlced by
in six innings. Baltimore's getting that I OOth cap," David Bentley, the 'whOle
· Jeremy GuWuie worked four
shutout innings before strug- said Beckham·, who dido 't crowd stood and loudly
have a shot on goal , made applauded as he trotted to
gling in the fifth.
little impression with his a place on the bench .
Brewers 12,
trademark
long passes and
Beckham was dropf!ed
White Sox 10
AI Tucson, Ariz., Jim spent much of his time by Capello's predecessor,
Thome hit two of Chicago's covering for right back Steve McClaren, after the
2006 World Cup and
four home runs off an inef- Wes 6rown.
fective Ben Sheets. Alexei
Beckham was over- missed nine England
Ramirez helped his bid to looked for Capello's first . matches. He was recalled
play center field for the game in charge, a 2-1 vic- a year later by McClaren
White Sox on opening day .lory over Switze.rland at following a string. of poor
by hitting a grand slam.
Wembley last month, results .
.
Diamondbatks It,
because the Major League
Goalkeeper
Peter
Rockies 8
Soccer season had fin.- Shilton has played !he
At Tucson, opening-day ished and the former most games for England
starter Jeff Francis pitched England captain was not with 125 in 1970-90. Next
five solid innings for
are Bobby Moore (lOS),
Colorado, which got homers playing any matches.
Beckham was third from Bobby Charlton (106) and
from Matt Holliday and
r.unning onto the field Billy Wright (I 05).
last
Troy Tulowitzki. Arizona's
Randy Johnson was roughed
up by White Sox minor lealead-off man Matt Stiffler,
guers.
who
went 3-for-4 and drove
Cubs 7, Angels 5
in
one
run. Trace Vosbell
At Tempe, Jered .Weaver
· went I -for-3 and knocked in
fromPageBl
held Chicago to one run in
the other run for Ohio.
six innings and lowered his
Adam Gecewich and
spring ERA to 1.67. Los
innings
on
the
hill.
.Zach Keen collected two
Angeles closer Francisco
Whewell went 2-for-3 at hits as the Bobcats recorded
~odriguez allowed five runs
in the seventh. New Cubs the plate to lead the offense safeties for the game.
closer Kerry Wood.pitched I · for Rio Grande while · Rio will be on the road at
·on
2-3 hitless innings. Chicago sophomore catcher Tyler Miami-Hamilton
Saturday for a doubleheader
ace Carlos Zambrano gave Plumpton was 2-for-4.
The Bobcats were led by beginning at I p.m.
up four runs in four innings.

Rio

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

Meigs County, OH

Galli a

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.' '

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• Include Phone Number And Addrea Wilen Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Day•

*POLICIES*

OhloVolleV
Publllhlng rtotrvtl
the right to odH,

...

rt]oct or concelatl)'

ad at any Ilmt.
Mull B
on lht n

Errors
oportod

of publiciUon I

he Tribune-Sentinel
loler wHI
oponolbtt for n
ore lllln the cott
ht

,,

1~ce

occuple

r

\'\\ ( 1\

'\( I \ II \ I "

r~---%~

l!,ii4

POLICIES: Ohio V.lley Pu~llfllng ntnr~esthll right to edit, re!Kt, or ~ncelany ad al any lime. Errore must bt reporilld on the finlt day af
Trlbun..S.ntlnei-R.glater will be retponelble for 1'10 more than the caet at tM
occupied by the fti'Tor and only the tl...t lnMrtP,. We

.-.=•

any IOU or axpen" that r..unalrom the publication or oml•slon of an advtrtiMment Corr!M:tlon will b. m1uH In tM rlr.t avall1bl1 edl1lon, •
are alw•~• eonlldentlll. • Currant rete c•rd •ppllea. • All r•l .-... advertl..,...t• are
to the Federal Fair Houtlng Act Of 1988. • Thll .,..,..,,..

1

..

GIVEAWAY
L,__"""
____.• 1 Absolute

Top Dollar - sil·
ver/gold
coins,
any
1 yr. ~d Blact&lt; &amp; Tan dog 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry•
e'lc. watch dog, good wl kids den1al gl&gt;d, pre 1935 US
(740)446-7644
currency, proal/mint sels,

Free Puppies, Beagle/Husky diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
mix 304•675-.4879
151 2(ld Avenue, Gallipolis.
446·2842
to Good Home German - - - - - - - Shepherd 4 ~rs old female, Wanted to b_uY Junk Cars,&amp;
lg. booed rag. needs yard to Farm Mactl_inery call 740run some 304-458·1515
388.()884 ~n Call Colloc1

AH rul

"t8t• advertlllng

In ttlla ntw1peper It
, aubiect to the Federal

Flir Housing Act ot 11611
which mak" It 11119111 to
lltdvartlae "any

preflranct, limitation or
dltcriiTMnatlon baaed on

I \II I Ill \I I \ I

the orror and o
he·flral lnoertlon. W

' I In I! I "

race, color, religion, ••
familial atatua or national
origin, or any lnlenllon to

II not be liable fo

.

(.~

added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOc for small
$1.00 for large

make any auch

L. ,,

preference, limitation or
dltcrlmlnltlon."
Thlt new1p11per will not
knowingly ecc:ept
,l dverflaetMnttlor
Htlte which 111n
violation of ttwJ ltw. Our

ru1

....

I'Mdll'llrl hereby

lnform«&lt; that all
dwtllllnp advertiaed In
thla n...,.per are

ll'l!allabte on an equal
opportunity b....

REACH 3 COUNTIES
.

.

We will not knowing
occepl anv adver
l•r;nent In vlolatlo
t.. IIW.

Wanting to Buy Junk Cars.
304-675·2176

· ·~
· ~~~
CLASSIFIED INDEX

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
.Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Dally Sentinel, AndJtWill Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

· 4x4'a f&lt;lr Salo .............................................. 725
Announcomenl ..........................................:.oao
Antlquoa ...............................:.......................530
Apaortmentalor Rent ..................... ;............. 440
• Auction ond Flea Markot. ............................OBO
; , Auto Parts &amp; Accoooo~oo .......................... 760
, · Auto Ropolr ..................................................770
- ·. AutoolorSale ..............................................710
' llo8te &amp; Molano tor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppllea..:.....................................sso
, Bualnoao and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Bualnoaa Opportunlly.................................210
•· Bualnoaa Tralnlng .......................................140
· Campero &amp; Motor Homea ........................... 790
, Camping Equipment ................................... 780
· · Card• Of Thanka ...................... .,.................. 010

ChlldiEiderly Care ....................................... 190
' · Eleelrlcai/Re!rlgoratlon ...............................840
:l•• Equl-t
......... for Rent.... ;................................480
Excevlllng ................................................... 830
:" Farm Equlpment..........................................610
Forma lor Ront.............................................430
.,. Farma for Sale ............................................. 330

· .• For Leau ............-........................................ 490
•

For Sllle ........................................................ 585

• :· f&lt;lr Sale or Tr-.........................................590
:, Fruita &amp; v~ .....................................580
• Fumlahed Roomo ........................................450
• a.n.nlllaullng...........................................850
'•· Gtv-ay......................................................040
-·~, HIPPY Ado..;.................................................050
·, Hoy &amp; Greln ..................................................840
·. Help Wanted .................................................11 o
• Homolmprovements................................... B10
·. : Homeolor Salo...................................,. .....:.310 .
'· • Houaehold Good a ....................................... 510
Houaealor Rent ................... :............. :....,... 410
· ' In Memorlam ................................................ 020
. . Inourance .....................:............................... 130
"' Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ...............~ ........ 680
Llveotock......................................................830
, Loatond Found ..................:........................ OBO
Loll &amp; Acreage...............,.................-..........350
• Mlecelleneous ...............................................170

; . MIICtlllonooua Merchandloe.......................540
Mobile Home Repalr...................................860
Mobile Homea tor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobllio Homeator Sala................................320
Manoy to Loan .............................................220
MotorcyciH &amp; 4 Whoelera..........................740
Muolcallnotrumento ................................... 570

~
l

~oint l81easant legister

304-675-1333

www.mydailyreg~ter.com

The Dally Sentinel
740-992-2155 '

· www.mydai~sentineLcom~

oos

:· Peraonela .....................................................
•
Pet1 for S.le ................................................ 560

·; Plumbing &amp; Hoatlng .................................... 820
• ProleiiiCMial Sarvlcoa .................................230
. Rlldlo, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 180
floel Eotshl Wonted .........................-...........380
Schoolo tnotructloo .....................................150
SMd, Plant &amp; Fertlllnr........... :.................. 650
SHuatlonl Wanted....................................... 120
SJH1C8 for Rar,t .............................................480
• · Sporting Gooda ....................................... .'..• 520

SUV'elor Sale ..............................................720
Truckllor Sale ............................................ 715
Uphol.tery ................................................... 870
Vono For Sai1...............................................730
Wanted to luy............................................. 090
wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllea .................. 620
'7 Wanted To Do ........... :.................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yord Sail, Golltpollo.......................... ,.........072
·. Yard Sa-omeroy/Middf!I ......................... 074
Yard Salo,PI. Plea-' ................................ 078
' I

Service
Full Time Receptionist needWe have Immediate
ed in busy Doctot''s Office.
full·thlll Cuetomer
Pick
up applications at Suite - - - . , - - - - - Service poeltlon In our
112,
Pleasant
Valley
main office.
Hospital. Resumes may be
Succno!ul appiiCinlo
attached to the application
Avg. Pay $20Alr or
mull bo people orient·
$~7K/yr, includes
od, en)ov ,.lng till
Full time truck driver needed
Federal Benefits, or.
phOne,
with valid drivers license and Offered by Exam Services,
computer llterltllnd
insurance. Must be depend- not offered w/ USPS who
onJov worillng with
able, haw good customer
hires.
nurnbon. Pveltlon
services skiffs and be able to
t-866-403-2582
offlro oil compony
load and unload trucks. Must - - - - - - - lncludlnil
be able to work weekends. Super 8 Motel now hiring
hnlth lnd lrle
Send resumes to CLA Box housekeepers. Position is
lneurence, 401k, paid . 101, c/o Gallipolis Daily part-time and you must be
vacation end personal
Trlbuhe, P.O. Box 469, able to work fle)!ible hours.
dave.
Gallipolis. OH 45631
Apply In person. No phone
- - - - - - - - calls please.
·
For ompiO)'mont
Gultar Player looking for liJ~~~~'!IP.!
conllderltlon, Hnd
Drummer .&amp; Bass Player to
me a met ll
rttume to:
play · mostly original Rock
Ollnt Hltl
music. 985-44 t6 after-5:00
Take inbound
cJo Golllpolla Tribune
customer service calls
1 Help wp.nted at Oarst Home
,825 Third Ave,
Group Home. ~40·992·5023
for Fortune 100
Gllllpolll, OH 45831

bon-

No Phono Calli PIHH
F"st ·4 You, In Mason now
hiring, must be 18 &amp; available aM stifts, must pass a
Drug Test. Apply within.

.,

FEDERAL
.POSTAL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27fhr., now hlr·
lng. For applicatiOn and free
governement Job Into, call
American Assoc. of LabOr 1·
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.

=::._______

Metal Fabricator is accept·
ing resumes for the following
positions: 30 Drafter (Auto
CAD). experienced Tig
Welder, Machinist CNC
experience and entry level
Receptionist. Compensation
based upon experierlced.
Pieass submit resume and
profes&amp;lonal references to:
70764 St. At. 124, Vinton,
OH 45686 by April 4.

lite Ambulant in Gallipo6s is
looking for diivers, dispatch·
ers, paramedics &amp; EMT's.
Competitive wages. 740·
445-7930
-------Ohio Valley Home Hefilhh,
1nc. hiring STNA. CNA.
Home Health .Aides and
Personal . Care Aides. Full,
Part Time and Per Diem
positions available. Apply at
1'480
Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis, phone 441~1393
tor Skilled Office or apply at
1456 Jackson Pike, phone
441·9263
lor
PassporVPrivate
care
Office. Competiti'ole· wages
and benefits Including heahh
Insurance and mileage reimbursement.
-------Manpower is now hiring for
the following positions
Automobile
Produtlon
Workers in the Buffalo, WV
Area Benefits a'olallable Gall
Today 304-757·3338

Companies

Including: .

Time Warner Cebte
Now Hiring
Full Tlme Day Shift
Full Time E11ening Shift
•Up to SB.501hour

AJ B
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Truck Drivers COL Class A
Raquired, minimum of 2
years
driving
exp.
Exp.erience
on
Overdeimensional loads.
Must ha'ole good driving
record. Earn up to $2,000
weekly. For application Call
(304)722-2184
M-F
8:30am-4pm
- - - - ' -- - - Welders needed. 1yr. eKperience.. Good wages &amp; bene·
fits. Send resumes to: CLA
Box 1os, c/o GallipOlis Daily
Tribune. PO Box -'69,
Gallipofts, OH 45631

130 ''~IJCJ10N
~'" ..

1

Galllpollo C~roer College
(Careers O!ose To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367. ,
1·800-214-1!452
WWN.geAipollscereeroollege.&amp;du
Acoedlted Member Accredl11ng
())undl lor lntJepBodelll Collegu
1nd

Scllools 12748

on
SAYINGS

• Medica1/DentaU401 k
• Prolesslonat worlc
environment

1-1188-IMC-PAYU
Ext. 2347
www.lnfoclslon.com
wanted:
29 Serious People 10 work ·
from home using a computor.
Up 10 $500.00 to
PTIFT
1 500 00

Shop

s

~. H ~me lncome4· U .com

Looking tor an updated famNew home, never lived in. ily home, on 1 ecre m/1 w/
2BR. 2 baths, 3 acres more ba cky8rd privacy fence in
or less in Gallipolis. Asking Galfipolis.lhis 2100 SO Fl. 3
$80,000. 740·446·7029
br. 2 ba. w/lg. bonus room
Small 2 Br. house,Racine vinyl sided ranch has new
area 2 outbuildings,carport, root, attached carport, 2 car
on approx. 1 acre.Asking garage , refinished hardwood floOrs is ready to
$45,000. 740·949·2539.

Classlfleds!
I

Good
to the

Last
Word
'

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily.
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

r•o ~

1r

3 Bd. -lbath-WID-HU-HUOapproved.Good references.
$450 Mo.-·$400 dep. 740·
416··2232.

APAR'IliiENlS
FOR RE:!&gt;T

Al/JOS

.\ I I\ I ' I t u 1,

121138 · nice White siding
building. kitchen, LA, bath,

etc., very livable. buyer must

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; NC
•Washerldryer hookup
• All electric- averaging
$50.$80/month
•Owner pays water, sewer,
trash

4BA, 2 baths at 91 Cedar St.
$650 per month + $650
deposit. References req.
740-388-1100

~~

1r~1 ilrii~a;;;;;;;;;;;.,~A;;;RM;;;.._...,
I \ tnl ..,I 1'1'1 II '-

Ellm View
Apartments

4 Bedroom House for Rent
$600/rent
$600/deposit
(740) 446-4060 or 367-n62

Thursday, March 27, 20(18

(304)882·3017

e

moVll 304-882-2389

r,

I:....::=..:..:===-·--

i

starling at $1500 to $8300.
Financing available with
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER warranly.
. COOK

ble trailer asking $5500. EQUIPMENT

TRAILERS,
EXPRESS &amp;

r15

CARGO/CONCESSION
TRl\ILERS. B+W GOOSE- 00 Tacoma, 4 cyl. au1o, 4x4

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In

I

r

i

I

'\

Coding Clerk
Holzer Clinic of Gallipolis
Successfu l applicants will have CPC, RHIT or
equivalenl coding experience. CPTIICD-9CM/HCPCS knowledge/experience desirable.
Medical tenninology experience desirable.
Skilled in basic math
Skilled in typing and 10-key calculator.
Computer/PC aptitude desirable

Competitive benefit package
including:
Health, Dental. Life, Disability, 401(k) &amp; Profit
Sharing
.

ar:---::""'---,

r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Twin Rivers Tower Is acceptlng applications tor waiting
list for Hud-subsized, i- br,
apartment,for
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing
Opportunity

..

party payor reimbursement. Ability to interact
with administration. clinical and operational
managers, healthcarc professionals and other
clinic employees. Ability to' identify and
cultivate strong professional relationships
emphasizing service C)(Cellence with Holzer
Clinic customers, working as a liaison be1ween
internal and exrernal customer groups. Excellent
communication skills (oral_and wriuen) with a
proficiency in public speaking. Professional
bearing and appearance.
Proficient wilh
specialized coding software, Microsofl Word,

Excel and PowerPOint. as well as other software
product• utilized (Pinpoi nt , IDX, etc .).
Competitive henefit package including: Health,
DentaL Life. Disahility, 401(k) &amp; Profit Sharing
Applicants may apply to:
Holzer Clinic
Human Resource l&gt;t!partment

96 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Or lax to 740-441-3592
~ww.holzen:Unjc,com

Equal Opportunity Employer.

,

j

.,

Stop &amp; Compare

r

MASON MOWER
304-773-5061

304·882·3294
Servicing Lawn

Tractors, Mowers~

Tillers, Murray,

Craft~man, MTD,
Briggs &amp; Strattori
H MHonest

I· Integrity
S-Ser"'ice

10 Yea~
•"

lsi Roa&lt;ltn le·'t ahnve
J'

Mason Golf Course
Harvey Road Mason, WV

We~t

.n.thiS

I t

1

Pass

Space

: FRANK &amp; EARNEST

eor
11

$64

iH~S~ T~')(i M~SSAG~S fflOM

'OMPANY All~ i .
~IL/,ING M~!

.'

llardrood Culnecrr And FurniCure

h

1(t() • GaiHpolls

;===~:::::::~::';!~~~;:;;;;;;;;~

STOP

~~~

NEVER
GONNA
KETCH
NO FISH !!

740.446.9200'

CRUMBS

YOU NG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
RoOm Additions &amp;
R•modellng

NewGaragH
Electrical &amp;: Plumbing

:THE BORN LOSER

Rooting &amp; Gutter-a

VInyl Siding &amp; Painting

Pallo and Porch O.Cka

WV036725
V. C . YOUNG

III

6) 1...

Ol11n

ll [ II

o

•

:r'C.L.~~' W/1,~ AA'&lt;CN( /&gt;.e,L( ~
\0 LE:.. ~t-1 W~t--1 ii-IE. WOR.t&gt;
:: miR~m!&gt;l~;.u!2:.
;' - ti\E.N-IS 7

P"fll'i POl' Sf&gt;..'(~ IT'5 11-\t ~M"""
C.OU!':.SE.I!-1 r&gt;.. f~'(

F~

fo\E:I&gt;..L!

.

•

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

740·367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40·367-0536

J&amp;L
Con$truction :
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roollng
• Deeke
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room AddHions
Owner:
JamesK-11
742·2332

Manley's
Recycling:

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

... ,1 1 JflliliGI:II•••·
Public Nolim in Nt·•&gt;PII•rs.E

IOTICES

on all
Skechers &amp; Keds ,
Thurs- Sat.
300 Second Ave.
· Across from City Park
LafayeHe Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) ~1- 9010
Mon. - Sat 9-5
WV Jobs Foundation

BINGO
124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-3877

Friday, March 28
$5 PACK SPECIAL

$1000
GUARANTEED
COVERALL!I
$300 EOM Drawing
Net proceeds to benefit
the Mason Co. Youth Football
League
Doors Open 4:00 p.m .
(min. 2 pack purchase)

The Home National
Bank will aucllon the
following Item on
Saturday, March 29,
2008, at 10:00 a.m. at
the Bank's parking lot.
2007 Harley Davidson
FX9TC
Motorcycle
1HD1JL5187Y019877
Ple818 nolelhla Harley
has 182 miles, color Is
Suede Blue wlblack.
The Home Nallonal
'Bank reserves the
right to r8ject any and
all bids. All vehicles
are sold, aa is where
1&amp;1 with no warranties
expressed or Implied.
For an appointment to
see, call 949-2210, ask
for Sheila.
(3) 26, 27,28

Street,

-- '

'
.
.
'' ITS TOO eAD 't'OU DIDN T
LIVE DURING WORLD WAR I ..

YOU COULD I-lAVE !!EEN A
CARRIER P16EON .,'(00 COULO
llAVE DELIVERED IMPORTANT
MESSA6E5 TIIROII6H tHEM'( FIRE

~~~ l:~~~:~~~dsh~.!l~!.a;;e~~~

Celat:rJt;! Ci~ cryp~Qgram• are erRed lrornquotalionB by lamoospeople, pas: and present.
Erd1 lllter in the ciplw,slands lor mher.

checks the points. He Is mls~ng only tB
high-card poiniS, but West opened lhe
bidding and EaSI has shown up wllh the
. heart ace, West must have the clt.i&gt;
quaen, so South finesses through him to
make the contract.
Nola that n West has the heart aoo,
declarer should play East lor the clt.i&gt;
quean. Wtry?
West probably has a balanced hand.
And il he also has the ~ub queen, he
wookl have 16 points and would hal'!!
opened one no-trump, not one dlamond.

advance

•'
1
,'

·-·-·1 ....IJI
PIYIIIGTIP PIICES . .

l!o!*lcl ,...... 5:r
7 II *111111 ....

'

Courthouse, collaboration of the
2nd Floor, Pomeroy, State .Departments of
Ohio 45769.
Health and Job and
Daniello R. Drake
Family Services and
47443 Riebel Rd.
the local DJFS's. lhe
Guttering
Longbottom, OH 45743 program serves chll·
dren 0 lo 3 years and
Seamle~s Gunars
(3) 27
families • . Roottng, Stdtng, Gutters
- - - - - - - thetr
Preference will be
Insured &amp; Bonded
740.853-9657
__
P_u_bi_Ic_N_o_t_Ic_e_ given to the proposer
which presents the
Notice Is hereby given .most Integrated and
that the annual meat- coordinated approach,
lng olthe llhareholders Including the utilize·
ol
Farmers tlon of aub-conlracts,
Bancshares, Inc . .will to serving this popula·
be
held
at
the lion. For a copy of the
Middleport Church of Requesl for Propolel
Christ Family Life (RFP), contact Jane
Center,
437
Main Banks at the Meigs
Sllreet,
Middleport, County Department of
Ohio, on the ·third Job &amp; Family Services
Wednesday of April, (740) 912-21.17 ext. 106.
2008, at 4:00 p.m. Proposals shall be
according
to
its submitted to • Jane
Public Notice
bylaws, for the pur· Banko, Administrative
pose of electing dlrec- Assistant,
Melga
PROBATE COURT OF tors and the transac- County DJFS, P.O. Box
MEtGSCOUNTY,OHIO llonolaucholherbusi- 191 , 175 Race Street,
IN RE: CHANGE OF ness as may property Middleport, OH 45760
For Remodeling and New House Building
NAME OF JOSHUA D. come before aald no later than April 14,
SMITH
meeting.
2008 at 4:00 p.m. All
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
to Joshua D. Drake
Jo
Ann
Crisp, submlosfons must be
:Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl ;.
NOTICE OF HEARING Setratary
received by mall or
ON CHANGE OF NAME (3) 27, (4) 6, 9, 15
hand delivered by the
and Wood Siding • Rooting • Pole "
Applicant hereby gives
above dale and lime.
· Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks ·notice to all lnleresbtd
No malerlals received
persona and lo Joshua
Public Notice
alter thai date will be
S. Smith that the appllIncluded In previous
cant has flied an LEGAL NOTICE
submlealons nor be
47239 Riebel Road , Long Bottom, OH
Application for Change The Meigs Counly considered.
The
of Name In the Prabate Department of Job and department reserves
Court ol Meigs County, Family
Services the right to reject any
Cell: 740-416-1834
Ohio, requesting the (DJFS), serving as tha or all proposals. In
25+
years
experience Free Estimates
change of name of admlnlotrallve agent accordance with 29Joshue Daniel Smith for the Meigs County CRF- part 31,32 Meigs
lo Joshua
Oanlel Family end Children County DJFS Ia proDrake. The hearing on . Firat Council, Is sollcll· hlblled lrom dlscrlmllha application will be lng propoaals .t o lmple- nation-on the besls of
held on the 28th day of ment the county'o Help race, color, national ,
April 2008, at 1:30 p.m. Me Grow Program tor "origin, sex, age, railIn lhe Probale Court of the parlod ol July 1, gion, potltk:al belle! or
Meigs County, located 2008 lhrough June 30, disability,
st 100 Eaol Second 2009. Tho program Is a (3) 27, (4) 3, 10

;COW and BOY
NOW I CAN GO. 'PCMI
I GOT SIX KIDS AND
I STILL DON'T KNOW
WHY YOU WON'T BlJY
ME ANEW BIKE.'

H&amp;H

_)

'GARFIELD

DOING SOMETHING GOOIJ,
I'M NOT CALLING YOlJ
AN IDIOT THIS TIME.

SO

, c_

.1.

'"'

MAYIII!, I..IZ 1&amp; RIGH'f.
MA'&lt;I~ THIS P'I..ACf

COUL.C' U&amp;ll A
C1oOOP CI..eANINCt...

by Luis Campos
Torlay's durt: Sequals H

"PC

big way.

FVO

FVO'K
RV

JHMRZK

RPZ

JHRIS

GZ
VOE

UPKZVW."-

RV

KVJM

RVEROEZ
HMK

CPEWR

DVM

AVM

GZ,

CVEIZ

GZ

CPUZ
DVUP

PREVIOUS SO,UTION -'Once ts happenstance. Twice is caincidenca.
Three times is anemy aclion.'- A. Goldfinger (ian Remtng)

tAIII
':~:t:~ S~1\(t~-/.tttfS'
11r ClAY I. roU~-:-..;...--

WOP

_;,~_;..,-..;, Utll1ool

0 r::r:~b::m"'l:. ::
low to

-

CANCER
21.July 22) - People
will stop and ta e notiOe ol you, because
you will have an extremely pleasan1 way •
of presenting yourself. Even if you crith
dze, you'll do so In a manner that will be
highly acceptable .
LEO .(July 23-Aug. 22) - Flow with the
tide of events at !his time, because shiftIng conditions or attered circumstances
will work to your benefit In ways that will
bring you opportunities you wouldn't otherwise hav.e.
VIAGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Usually
you have a reasonable amount of energy, but you are likely to be even more
lively and sPirited thari normal. You'll utilize your dynamism In ways that will pro-

!arm four

~mplt

wtll'ds.

EVYGOA·

I I I

I'

2

I

1

MY E R E
1have c:omc 10 111e ·
conclusion Jbat

what is left over from rith
IIIICe!IOrs when the - is

-.

KOMONI
1

1a

genti!lty is

9

8

Compltle

I"'

chucltlt qualld

by ~lltng In the mialrllf ~
you &lt;Mvelop !rom step No. 3 lieloW .

8m~~R~UMSEREO I l 1 1 1: I'
I' I
I I I I I~ I I. I I l
3

7

4

1

,.

SCitAMollfS ANSWQS 3•2 6 •Q a
Lawyer- Wnmg- Maa:h- Flight- WHAT you WANT
"ExperiatCe: ~the mom to her son. "is wllll you

get whea you doD't get WHAT you WANr

ARLO &amp; 'JANIS

duce many followers and admirers.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) -Your harmo·

nlous relationships with your fellow workers will inspire everyone to Insert a new
enthusla•m into their assignments,
which may haw been mundane to them
previously.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24~Nov. 22) - You're
exceptionally charismatic at this time and
win function particularly well as a cataly&amp;1
to all vour relationships. Happy change!
seam to follow wherever you go, producIng fun circumstances.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Because you feel especially creative,
imaginative and artistic, you'll be using
your outstanding gifts and lm;:llnatlona to
beautify whatever you encounter, atway11
leaving a better place behind you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Others are likely to recall your' action&amp; •
better than they will your words at ~Is
time. Your Cleeds wlll leave &amp;uch a favorable lmprqsJon that 11'11 crowd out all
other thoughts ·and be the only thing

.'

remaining.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Thl&amp;illl a
particularly favorable cycle concerning
your financial or commarclal affairs.
Do(l't healtate to get right In the thick of
things, because you can come &amp;W&amp;l' with
mort than UsUal.
PISCES (Feb. 20-¥arch 20) - Vour
Inherent charm and warmth can be used
to your ad'ttSintage at thll lime In more
ways than one. You will g1t whatever you
want by elmply ullllzJng your pleaeant
peraonallty.

I;

•I

'

MIKE W. MIRCUM.IWIIEI

~ K\lp'+l, 1 SOUP TO NUTZ
~1\~,
)'c\1 tb
....,~--·

--.::

740-985-4141

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

YOU'RE INADVE~TENTLY

an amateur

51 Colorful
carp
52 Goal .
54 Cut off

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ter one because you will make positive
changes In your life. Although they won't
be disruptive, they will be e)leeptlonally
effective In bringing about many of your
fondest w6ahes and desires.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Usually
you're someone who likes to be first out
of the starting blocks, making things happen . You can still do so, but your chart
indicates ~;~ood things_are happening
without your even trying.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Standing
out In a crowd ls·one of your best assets,
as today will demonstrate In a big way.
You'll not go !,mnoticed regardlesa of
your 1size, accomplishments or beauty.
SlmJ;~IJ, you'll be sparkling.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - New e)(periences will seek you out at this time,
adding a great deal ot8)(c!1ement to your
life. Whatever happen~. you'll see It B8 8
lantastl~pportunlty to grow and

~ PEANUTS

44 ClaosHy
47 Poleo'
connector
48 Two cups
49 Not

Bridge experts are sometimes accused
of having X-ray \lision because they
always seem to know which opponent
holds what cards. But usually it has nothing to do wnh super powers, only analyzing a deal correctly- as In this example.
South is in four spades. West cashes two
top diamonds, then shifts to a trump.
How should declarer plan the play?
What do you think of the auction?
lnBJ(perlenced players often advance
partner's takeout dOubae Incorrectly, bid·
ding their longest suit at a minimum ltwel
regardless ol hand strength . It the
adVancer, as the doubler's partner is
known in some quarters, is not a passed
hand, a simple Bllh-bld shows 0-8 points
With 9-t 1, halumps In a sun, as South
did here. And with 12 or more points, he
cue·bids the opener's suit. (It the
advancJr is a passed hand, these
ranges changa to 0-7, 8-9 and 10-11.)
South, wtth one heart and twO diamonds
to lose, must guess the club suit correctly. Declarer should leave that suit for as
late in the play as possible: First, he

Frldav, M.-ch 28. 2008
By Berl11ce B.cte Oaol
The year ahead promises to be a red-let-

'

I

_:.._

AND IT
ISN'T
EVEN
"' SLOYI
, SONIS .

',

·-111."!1

________ _______

"'"'~ ,,..

WE AIN'T

.......-w.tlml&gt;uCJ ..koabia«ry.ao81

+A

through the cards

TH~ PHON~

""-\
v0',

month

Pn ,,,.., o)'

4.

East
Pass
All pass

As if he can see

per

!)')/

North
Db I.

Opening lead:

~

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; ~emoval

i

Dealer: West
VUlnerable: East-West

~

2459 St. Rt.

• 9 5 2
• 7 6 4

., Q J 7
• 8 6 3
olo K tO 9

I,

~;

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

i

$5~00 off

• 7 4 2.
9 A 10 6 3

V~!,!&gt;!,

HOl5EIIOw
Beech St., Middleport, 2 br. iO
Gooffi
furnished apt., no pets, ~..__ _ _ _ _ __.J
dep.&amp;
ref.
required, .,
(740)992-0t65
Saie: BJS &amp; mattress 1/2$t20, Full $t50. Q $225.
Clean!
Clean!
Clean! Rocker Recliner $150. 2 pc
Downtown Gallipolis apt., LA Suite $325. Table &amp; 4
upstairs, 2BA, 2 Baths. Chairs $300. Mollohan Furn .
$500. 446-9209 '
202 Clark Chapel Rd. 388CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· 0t73
ED • AFFDADABLEI
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR.
RENT. Call (740)441-1t11
lor application &amp; information. .

Save now on
Spring Arrivals

55~..
56 Hooded
cloak
mounter
57 R.,k
13 ~y.sllky 58 MoaquHo,
to us
14 Otyore
15 Cellist
DOWN
-Ma
16 FHI
1 TIIuana kid
remorse
2 Uko cuelard
18 Survey
3 BusYbOdY
19 Egg~eylng 4 CaiHornlli's 23 Codgers'
mammals
Big - ·
querln
23 Kind
5 Give II a go 24 Winsome
of system
6 Dual cloth . 25 Lyric
26 P01110 11.
7 Qusrk's
poems
'0 Tiny speck
homo
28 capture
30 Foolbell
8 ·-Usa"
29 Pharaoh's
formellon
9 Kind of
god
32 Flowery
lchool
31 Pot name
34 Iron llloys 10 Milko 1
32 Skipped
~ lndlsguleo
comment
33 Publishing
36 ..... af 11 Rose Bowl
execs
. ."La Bill'. ."
37 Lela's
event•
~ Whllckod
12 Knuckle
. rescuer
38 Jr. naval
under
40 Young
officer
17 Ms. Hagen
follows
39 Tells .
20 Aclress
41 Snell'slrail
42 Crtes ats
- Langtry , 42 VIking
circus
21 Sea rover ,
n-.me
45 Colony
22 ·charged
43 Fabulous
member
particles
diamond

~Astro-

\ lllil ll \ \ ill ... l

Kipling Shoe Co.

East

6 3
8 54
A K Q J 10 ·
Q52
South

Advert"lse

,,., it' H \ { (

Location in Gampolis 1800
sq. ft. building $400 mo. off
street parking call WJ:a\Jn9 at
_,
(404) 456-3802
_..:.__ _ _ _ __
RatiiiiWirehou.WStorage
Location in Gallipolis 1800
sq. ft. liuikllng $400 mo. off
street parking call Wayne at
(404) 456·3802

West

'====:':11:4/:t:m:o·~ ~~~~~~~~

r

'

•
•
t
•

J40·BB2-1m

Hours
7:09AM • 8:00 PM .

03-27-08

• K 9 8 5

RetaiVWarthouHIStotllge

Equal Opportunity Employer.

designation such as RHIA, RHIT, CPC, CSS-P,
CPC-H, or CSS required - one or more
specialty proficiency preferred. Working
knowledge of c&lt;ldingldoclimentation guidelines
required. Proven proficiency of CPT4, ICD-9CM
1·2-3, and HCPCS. A
working
understanding of anatomy, physiology and
medical tenninology. Experience with third

l to •.,.,.

.,

www.holzerclinic.c:om

Successful appll~.:ants will possess an Associates
degree; at lea:o:t one year of coding education
and audiling '- ~ periencc required; professional

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete ,
·· Remodeling

IIIII
i•.iiO'
"I
.
.
~

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley@
740-59 I-8044

96 Jackson Pike

Holzer Clinic of GaiUpolis

I

*Insured
*Experienced

l'liP_..;....,___.,

GalUpolis, Ohio 45631
Or fax to 740-441-3592

Coding Education Coordinator

I

ce~t~~~ma•

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

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates

Applicants may apply to:
Holzer Clinic
Human Resource Department

Help Wanted

I

North
• A Q J 10
9 K 9 2
• 7 4
• A J 83

ROBERT
BISSELL

I

,

Help Wanted

Hill s Self
Storaqe

r

.:. :.: : ._______ i~--IURiiiiOtiiRENriiii,;,..,l

r

5-~

Reinherder
50 Appeared
53~~
.

10 Register
(2-.)
12 Soapbox

eiCt cab, loaded, exc. shape.

-------- 1.--•L•I\•'JoSI'O'CK•--'"

SPACE

Mon-··

1 loch

TRUCKS

CARGO
FOR SALE
HOMESTEADER..__ _ _ _ __

JET
AERATION MOTORS

46

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

BUILT,
VALLEY MOTORS 328 Jeck&amp;On Pike.
2 ·1997 Kawasaki stx1100 HORSE/LIVESTOCK 740-446-0103
jet ski&amp;, 3 seaters with doo- TRAILERS, LOAD MAX ll'l'r"'_":::"_ _ _....,

7~5-6434

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE·

.Quality cars, trucks, vans

r

I_

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

EQuiPMENT

-.J

move in, central air &amp; natural
NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA.
1,700+ sq fl $49,989 ·
gas furnace, !:!tOne FP in
LA, Kitchen has new oak
lrom $397 Month
cabinets, new vinyl flooring,
Midwest 740.828-2750
lg. pantr.y&amp; laundry room
mymidwesthome.com
Spacious master suite wl
F.P &amp; · private entrance. New 3 Bedroom hOmes from
Priced to sell iOii,OOQ Now $214.36 Per month, Includes
$88,000. call (7401645-875t many upgrades, delivery &amp;
se1-up. (740)385-2434
' : : MOBILE HOMES
n&gt;R SALE
.
USED HOME SALE
Nice 3BR Slnglewides
from $2900 Down Pmt
t 6XBO 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
M1'dwes1 740·626:2750
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
h 740 3B5-- - - - - - - - $230
9948 .per mont ·
. WHY PAY RENT? 3 bed 2
.
bath, $199 a month . 7-40446 3384
2000 16x70 2 bed 2 balh -;:i:--;.;.;.-:-~:--.,
Fleetwood, 2002 i6x80 3
Lors &amp;
bed 2 bath Oakwood, 1999
A
·
16, 80 3 bed 2 bath Fortune. l --lliiiiCRFAiiiiiiiGEiiiiit-r•
·Daytime 388·0000, Evening
3 acres for Sale on Sancllill
388 _8017 or 245_9213
Ad $25,000. 304·895-3929
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sectional home $279 per month MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
740-385-7671.
RENT, 103t Georges Greek
Ad, 441-1111
2008 sectional home 3 - - - - - - - - 1BR, WID hook-up, stove &amp;
Bedroom 2 Bath delivered Prime residential building lot fridge (um., water &amp; trash
and set up $38,695. "140- in Rio Grande on Lake Dr. included. No pets. Ref. Req.
385-9948.
·
$2 4,900.· Phone 260 _495 _ 74~367-7453 or 645-7214
5114
2 bedroom apt in Centenary.
lrom $199 Month
New 2008 Singlewide
a!l u~ilities pd except electric,
Midwest 740-628-2750
$350/mo, call . (740)256,myrlll'dwas thome.com
~~~~1!""'-~---...., 1135
iO
HOl.!ill&gt;
12BR apt. (740) 44t-Q194
like new 3 bed 2 bath on .50
}UR lbNr
acres. $400 a month. Owner ..__.,;iiiiiitiiiii;,.-" 2br spacious apt, ref/stove
financing available. 740-446w/d hookup, water pd. dose
3570
, 2 Br. house in Pomeroy for to hospital &amp; university on
rent $400 a mo.• $400 dep. Centenary Ad, no pets,
44•9442 ft 5
lot 88')(124' w/14'x70' trailer, 740-992,6385.
~
a er pm
3 br.. 2 b, panially furnished, ~--,-:-,-----,-.,-- Beoutllul Apts. ot Jlict&lt;oon
2 covered porches, 2 car 2br Mobile Home, Kitchen
carport, large block storage Furn., deposit required &amp; Eatatu. 52 Westwood
DriVe; from 5365 to $560.
'building, $40,000, (740)992- 2br, House, in Mason, 304·
740-446-2568.
Equal
3057
675-7763
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Help Wanted
Opportunity Provider and
Help Wanted
Employer.

www:mydallysentinel.com

!'OR SALE

HITCHES.
Stock. Catl Ron Evans, 1- NECK
EQUIP after 5pm. Asking $9500.
CARMICHAEL
• 245-5946 or 645-3743
attached gar.. 2 car
: _6D0-5::·::37:_·::_95;,:2;,:8:_.
. .:
- - - - ME NT/GA AM I CHAE L
detached gar., out bldg.,
NEW AND USED STEEL TRAILERS SALES &amp; SER4X4
!ridge., dshwshr., 2.75 acre
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar VICE. SPECIAL 20FT L--·F1iiOiiiRiiSALEiiioi' _...
off
Hwy
124,
For Concrete,
Angle, GOOSENECK FLATBED ~
$600mol$400dep. 740"742 ' "F-ur-n-ishe-d~A-pl-,_2_n_d_A_v-e, Channel, Flat Bar, steel $3999. VIEW OuR-ENTIRE 2004 Fold Escape XLT, 4x4,
1151
For
Drains, TRAILER INVENTORY AT tealher, sunroof, loaded
Upstairs, All Utilities pd. Grating
miles
asking
House for rent in Pomeroy, 1BR, No Pets, Gat_
lipolis, Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L WWW .CARM ICHAEL- 55,000
Scrap Metals Open Monday. TAAILEAS.COM 740·446·· $12,800. 740 5-6434
11550 Lincoln Hill, $375 a Call 446-9523
•
month
plus . deposit, - - - - - - - - Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 3825
MomRCYGm
Gracious Living 1 and 2
740
742
1903
4 WHEELERS
( ) Bedroom Apts. at Village Friday, aam-4:30pm. Closed Have you priced a 'ohn
House or Rent Pomeroy Manor and Riverside Apts. in Thursday, 40 Saturday
&amp;
Deere
lately?
You'll
be
sur......
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio-_.1
7300
prised! Check out our used 2006 HD Softtail Standard
Area. No pQts. Call 740-992- Middleport, from $327 to Sunday. F ~
'sass.
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal Portable Sawmill for Sale, inventory
at Excellent Cond. 10, tOO
Housing Opportunity
Sharpener, blades &amp; hand W W W. C A A 610. C 0 M miles. t t/4"T-Bars, V&amp;H Big
M~n'!~
setter $9,200 call 740-4t8- Carmichael Equipment. 740· Shots pipes. Badlander and
.. .__ RLr~l
• Honeysuckle
Hills 1616
446-2412
Factory seats. Must sell
Apaitments now accepting
John Deer A 1947 Trac1or, $11,600.740-645-7963
2Br at Johnsons Mobile applications for 1 and 2 Br pi!O
.
Plm&gt;
Electric Stan High &amp; Low --~---Home Park. Call 44 6.2003 apts. located on Cotonial LI_ _.,;;IUR,;,,;;Sw::::;;::;,
'
Transmisson·, New Aims, 4-wheeter 300EX, $1,000
Drive next to Holzer Senior
Tires &amp; Paint. 2002 Hard (740)446-4060
Ideal tor 1 or 2 people, refer· Care Center. No rental
ences, no pets. 5 miles from assistance at thls time. Rent 9 month old gray Parrot Top ForCJ? Jeep. caug49_ ~~;.;,;;~,;,;,.-~-.,
CAMPERS &amp;
Gavin. no calls . after starts at $320 and $350. female, S1arting to talk, whl&amp;· 2305 for Information.
MmoR HOM£'i
6pm.441-0181 .
Equal Housing Opportunity. tie, wlcaga. 740-742-3706
· Leiy Redder Rake Reese --740-448-3344
8h, Drum Mower, $2,000
Mobile Homes for Rent in - - - - - - - - AKC reg. rnini dachshund
D
29ft, sleeps
1
app Ies. each Have Manuals Tom 1983 Camper,
·
Cl
Point Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis Jordan Landing Apartments. pups, rare coors,
vet
checked,
1st
shots,
'erown
304-882-2632
4,
sell
contained,
'A Heat.
Ferry. HUO accepted call 2·3 Bedroom Apartments
304-675-5752
304-675-3423
availabfe. All utilities paid wormed 5375 . and up. 740 _
256·1498
e)(cept electric. March Rent
Taking applica'tions for 2BA.
2005 29' Puma Camper, like
Special $100 oft Rent. Squirrel Dog lor Sale 2 •
new. Two slides Ac &amp; Heat.
No pets. $275/month
Please call 304-674-0023 or
$200/depasn. 446-3817
years old, pup 8 months old 4_H club pigs for sale. $125• $17,000. 740-367-0463 or
304-610-0776 lor more
304·675-6132
5175. Call 74o-701-3170 or 645 •0734
Trailer for rent and 101 for rent
Yorkles small, reduced loW- 740 -642-2n 3
also, both In Green Terrace
AV Service ' at Carmichael
11 ~\\..,!'t ll~ l \ II! J\
Mobil~ Home Court. Call
est price ever, M&amp;F, champiTrailers 740·446-3825
information.
740-245-5041
on bloodline serious calls
only
(140)44t -95t0
Aums
APARIMEI'ffii
Modern t eadroom Apt.,
" I ll\ It I "'
FOR SAIJ::
~n n~~
Call (740)446-0390
.
...._ .....
~.............._...
"70
rto
HoME
0 BR
76 v· St
r·
MUSICAL
ne
apt.
lne reet.
INsrRllMENTS
01
Hyundai
Accent
L\1PHOVEMENTS
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Gallipolis. $125/week, utiliHatchback. 5 speed trans. Lw-iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiilments, furnish ed and unfur- ties included. 740·367·7886
65,310 mites, good condinished, and houses in
Baldwin SPinet Piano $300 lion. needs catalytic convertBASEMENT
t Rooms for Rent. No pets. OBO 17401992 _5859
WATERPROOFING
P
nd M1'ddl
2
0
740
omeroy a
epor' Call 740·992-7508.
er. Asking $ 2° · Call
• Unconditional lifetime guar·
709 -6 339security deposit required. 00 .:=:..:..:.:..:.::.:..:.::::..__
antee. Local references fur·
15 740 992 22 8
.::•_ :._:_":.:..:_.:_":..:..t:..·_ _ Tara
Townhouse
-,P:_"
s · ·
03 Oldsmobile Alero , excel- nished. Established t975.
1br &amp; 2br_all ut'"
·
·d · Apa rtmen1s, "very
IHtleS pa1 1n 2 8 d
CIA paciOus,
t t /2
lent cond., runs great,_ Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
9
Point Pleasant 304-360rooms,
' ·
0870. Rogers Basement
Oi6J
Bath, ~dull Pool &amp; Baby
73,000 ' mites $5900. 740· Waterproofing.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. L;;:::::;::::;::;;::::::;:::::;:=-~5~78:·t0:3::__0
~ _ _ _T'7-~;.,..~~---.
1BR Apt, W/0 hookups, No Pets, Lease Plus
close to hospital . Call 740- Security Deposit Req~,Jired,
::.33:.:9-0..:.:38:.:2;______ (740)367-054(.
4BA, 2 F Bath , 2 car

'Thunday, March 27,2008
OOP .

-----."'

... OOJT

~ :t ~TIT:..
":~:» L.i~re.
Li&lt;&gt;N ..."

t

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a StSS'o' IN

a SHEeP~ -

a

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�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

r•o ~

1r

3 Bd. -lbath-WID-HU-HUOapproved.Good references.
$450 Mo.-·$400 dep. 740·
416··2232.

APAR'IliiENlS
FOR RE:!&gt;T

Al/JOS

.\ I I\ I ' I t u 1,

121138 · nice White siding
building. kitchen, LA, bath,

etc., very livable. buyer must

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; NC
•Washerldryer hookup
• All electric- averaging
$50.$80/month
•Owner pays water, sewer,
trash

4BA, 2 baths at 91 Cedar St.
$650 per month + $650
deposit. References req.
740-388-1100

~~

1r~1 ilrii~a;;;;;;;;;;;.,~A;;;RM;;;.._...,
I \ tnl ..,I 1'1'1 II '-

Ellm View
Apartments

4 Bedroom House for Rent
$600/rent
$600/deposit
(740) 446-4060 or 367-n62

Thursday, March 27, 20(18

(304)882·3017

e

moVll 304-882-2389

r,

I:....::=..:..:===-·--

i

starling at $1500 to $8300.
Financing available with
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER warranly.
. COOK

ble trailer asking $5500. EQUIPMENT

TRAILERS,
EXPRESS &amp;

r15

CARGO/CONCESSION
TRl\ILERS. B+W GOOSE- 00 Tacoma, 4 cyl. au1o, 4x4

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In

I

r

i

I

'\

Coding Clerk
Holzer Clinic of Gallipolis
Successfu l applicants will have CPC, RHIT or
equivalenl coding experience. CPTIICD-9CM/HCPCS knowledge/experience desirable.
Medical tenninology experience desirable.
Skilled in basic math
Skilled in typing and 10-key calculator.
Computer/PC aptitude desirable

Competitive benefit package
including:
Health, Dental. Life, Disability, 401(k) &amp; Profit
Sharing
.

ar:---::""'---,

r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Twin Rivers Tower Is acceptlng applications tor waiting
list for Hud-subsized, i- br,
apartment,for
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing
Opportunity

..

party payor reimbursement. Ability to interact
with administration. clinical and operational
managers, healthcarc professionals and other
clinic employees. Ability to' identify and
cultivate strong professional relationships
emphasizing service C)(Cellence with Holzer
Clinic customers, working as a liaison be1ween
internal and exrernal customer groups. Excellent
communication skills (oral_and wriuen) with a
proficiency in public speaking. Professional
bearing and appearance.
Proficient wilh
specialized coding software, Microsofl Word,

Excel and PowerPOint. as well as other software
product• utilized (Pinpoi nt , IDX, etc .).
Competitive henefit package including: Health,
DentaL Life. Disahility, 401(k) &amp; Profit Sharing
Applicants may apply to:
Holzer Clinic
Human Resource l&gt;t!partment

96 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Or lax to 740-441-3592
~ww.holzen:Unjc,com

Equal Opportunity Employer.

,

j

.,

Stop &amp; Compare

r

MASON MOWER
304-773-5061

304·882·3294
Servicing Lawn

Tractors, Mowers~

Tillers, Murray,

Craft~man, MTD,
Briggs &amp; Strattori
H MHonest

I· Integrity
S-Ser"'ice

10 Yea~
•"

lsi Roa&lt;ltn le·'t ahnve
J'

Mason Golf Course
Harvey Road Mason, WV

We~t

.n.thiS

I t

1

Pass

Space

: FRANK &amp; EARNEST

eor
11

$64

iH~S~ T~')(i M~SSAG~S fflOM

'OMPANY All~ i .
~IL/,ING M~!

.'

llardrood Culnecrr And FurniCure

h

1(t() • GaiHpolls

;===~:::::::~::';!~~~;:;;;;;;;;~

STOP

~~~

NEVER
GONNA
KETCH
NO FISH !!

740.446.9200'

CRUMBS

YOU NG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
RoOm Additions &amp;
R•modellng

NewGaragH
Electrical &amp;: Plumbing

:THE BORN LOSER

Rooting &amp; Gutter-a

VInyl Siding &amp; Painting

Pallo and Porch O.Cka

WV036725
V. C . YOUNG

III

6) 1...

Ol11n

ll [ II

o

•

:r'C.L.~~' W/1,~ AA'&lt;CN( /&gt;.e,L( ~
\0 LE:.. ~t-1 W~t--1 ii-IE. WOR.t&gt;
:: miR~m!&gt;l~;.u!2:.
;' - ti\E.N-IS 7

P"fll'i POl' Sf&gt;..'(~ IT'5 11-\t ~M"""
C.OU!':.SE.I!-1 r&gt;.. f~'(

F~

fo\E:I&gt;..L!

.

•

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

740·367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40·367-0536

J&amp;L
Con$truction :
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roollng
• Deeke
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room AddHions
Owner:
JamesK-11
742·2332

Manley's
Recycling:

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

... ,1 1 JflliliGI:II•••·
Public Nolim in Nt·•&gt;PII•rs.E

IOTICES

on all
Skechers &amp; Keds ,
Thurs- Sat.
300 Second Ave.
· Across from City Park
LafayeHe Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) ~1- 9010
Mon. - Sat 9-5
WV Jobs Foundation

BINGO
124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-3877

Friday, March 28
$5 PACK SPECIAL

$1000
GUARANTEED
COVERALL!I
$300 EOM Drawing
Net proceeds to benefit
the Mason Co. Youth Football
League
Doors Open 4:00 p.m .
(min. 2 pack purchase)

The Home National
Bank will aucllon the
following Item on
Saturday, March 29,
2008, at 10:00 a.m. at
the Bank's parking lot.
2007 Harley Davidson
FX9TC
Motorcycle
1HD1JL5187Y019877
Ple818 nolelhla Harley
has 182 miles, color Is
Suede Blue wlblack.
The Home Nallonal
'Bank reserves the
right to r8ject any and
all bids. All vehicles
are sold, aa is where
1&amp;1 with no warranties
expressed or Implied.
For an appointment to
see, call 949-2210, ask
for Sheila.
(3) 26, 27,28

Street,

-- '

'
.
.
'' ITS TOO eAD 't'OU DIDN T
LIVE DURING WORLD WAR I ..

YOU COULD I-lAVE !!EEN A
CARRIER P16EON .,'(00 COULO
llAVE DELIVERED IMPORTANT
MESSA6E5 TIIROII6H tHEM'( FIRE

~~~ l:~~~:~~~dsh~.!l~!.a;;e~~~

Celat:rJt;! Ci~ cryp~Qgram• are erRed lrornquotalionB by lamoospeople, pas: and present.
Erd1 lllter in the ciplw,slands lor mher.

checks the points. He Is mls~ng only tB
high-card poiniS, but West opened lhe
bidding and EaSI has shown up wllh the
. heart ace, West must have the clt.i&gt;
quaen, so South finesses through him to
make the contract.
Nola that n West has the heart aoo,
declarer should play East lor the clt.i&gt;
quean. Wtry?
West probably has a balanced hand.
And il he also has the ~ub queen, he
wookl have 16 points and would hal'!!
opened one no-trump, not one dlamond.

advance

•'
1
,'

·-·-·1 ....IJI
PIYIIIGTIP PIICES . .

l!o!*lcl ,...... 5:r
7 II *111111 ....

'

Courthouse, collaboration of the
2nd Floor, Pomeroy, State .Departments of
Ohio 45769.
Health and Job and
Daniello R. Drake
Family Services and
47443 Riebel Rd.
the local DJFS's. lhe
Guttering
Longbottom, OH 45743 program serves chll·
dren 0 lo 3 years and
Seamle~s Gunars
(3) 27
families • . Roottng, Stdtng, Gutters
- - - - - - - thetr
Preference will be
Insured &amp; Bonded
740.853-9657
__
P_u_bi_Ic_N_o_t_Ic_e_ given to the proposer
which presents the
Notice Is hereby given .most Integrated and
that the annual meat- coordinated approach,
lng olthe llhareholders Including the utilize·
ol
Farmers tlon of aub-conlracts,
Bancshares, Inc . .will to serving this popula·
be
held
at
the lion. For a copy of the
Middleport Church of Requesl for Propolel
Christ Family Life (RFP), contact Jane
Center,
437
Main Banks at the Meigs
Sllreet,
Middleport, County Department of
Ohio, on the ·third Job &amp; Family Services
Wednesday of April, (740) 912-21.17 ext. 106.
2008, at 4:00 p.m. Proposals shall be
according
to
its submitted to • Jane
Public Notice
bylaws, for the pur· Banko, Administrative
pose of electing dlrec- Assistant,
Melga
PROBATE COURT OF tors and the transac- County DJFS, P.O. Box
MEtGSCOUNTY,OHIO llonolaucholherbusi- 191 , 175 Race Street,
IN RE: CHANGE OF ness as may property Middleport, OH 45760
For Remodeling and New House Building
NAME OF JOSHUA D. come before aald no later than April 14,
SMITH
meeting.
2008 at 4:00 p.m. All
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
to Joshua D. Drake
Jo
Ann
Crisp, submlosfons must be
:Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl ;.
NOTICE OF HEARING Setratary
received by mall or
ON CHANGE OF NAME (3) 27, (4) 6, 9, 15
hand delivered by the
and Wood Siding • Rooting • Pole "
Applicant hereby gives
above dale and lime.
· Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks ·notice to all lnleresbtd
No malerlals received
persona and lo Joshua
Public Notice
alter thai date will be
S. Smith that the appllIncluded In previous
cant has flied an LEGAL NOTICE
submlealons nor be
47239 Riebel Road , Long Bottom, OH
Application for Change The Meigs Counly considered.
The
of Name In the Prabate Department of Job and department reserves
Court ol Meigs County, Family
Services the right to reject any
Cell: 740-416-1834
Ohio, requesting the (DJFS), serving as tha or all proposals. In
25+
years
experience Free Estimates
change of name of admlnlotrallve agent accordance with 29Joshue Daniel Smith for the Meigs County CRF- part 31,32 Meigs
lo Joshua
Oanlel Family end Children County DJFS Ia proDrake. The hearing on . Firat Council, Is sollcll· hlblled lrom dlscrlmllha application will be lng propoaals .t o lmple- nation-on the besls of
held on the 28th day of ment the county'o Help race, color, national ,
April 2008, at 1:30 p.m. Me Grow Program tor "origin, sex, age, railIn lhe Probale Court of the parlod ol July 1, gion, potltk:al belle! or
Meigs County, located 2008 lhrough June 30, disability,
st 100 Eaol Second 2009. Tho program Is a (3) 27, (4) 3, 10

;COW and BOY
NOW I CAN GO. 'PCMI
I GOT SIX KIDS AND
I STILL DON'T KNOW
WHY YOU WON'T BlJY
ME ANEW BIKE.'

H&amp;H

_)

'GARFIELD

DOING SOMETHING GOOIJ,
I'M NOT CALLING YOlJ
AN IDIOT THIS TIME.

SO

, c_

.1.

'"'

MAYIII!, I..IZ 1&amp; RIGH'f.
MA'&lt;I~ THIS P'I..ACf

COUL.C' U&amp;ll A
C1oOOP CI..eANINCt...

by Luis Campos
Torlay's durt: Sequals H

"PC

big way.

FVO

FVO'K
RV

JHMRZK

RPZ

JHRIS

GZ
VOE

UPKZVW."-

RV

KVJM

RVEROEZ
HMK

CPEWR

DVM

AVM

GZ,

CVEIZ

GZ

CPUZ
DVUP

PREVIOUS SO,UTION -'Once ts happenstance. Twice is caincidenca.
Three times is anemy aclion.'- A. Goldfinger (ian Remtng)

tAIII
':~:t:~ S~1\(t~-/.tttfS'
11r ClAY I. roU~-:-..;...--

WOP

_;,~_;..,-..;, Utll1ool

0 r::r:~b::m"'l:. ::
low to

-

CANCER
21.July 22) - People
will stop and ta e notiOe ol you, because
you will have an extremely pleasan1 way •
of presenting yourself. Even if you crith
dze, you'll do so In a manner that will be
highly acceptable .
LEO .(July 23-Aug. 22) - Flow with the
tide of events at !his time, because shiftIng conditions or attered circumstances
will work to your benefit In ways that will
bring you opportunities you wouldn't otherwise hav.e.
VIAGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Usually
you have a reasonable amount of energy, but you are likely to be even more
lively and sPirited thari normal. You'll utilize your dynamism In ways that will pro-

!arm four

~mplt

wtll'ds.

EVYGOA·

I I I

I'

2

I

1

MY E R E
1have c:omc 10 111e ·
conclusion Jbat

what is left over from rith
IIIICe!IOrs when the - is

-.

KOMONI
1

1a

genti!lty is

9

8

Compltle

I"'

chucltlt qualld

by ~lltng In the mialrllf ~
you &lt;Mvelop !rom step No. 3 lieloW .

8m~~R~UMSEREO I l 1 1 1: I'
I' I
I I I I I~ I I. I I l
3

7

4

1

,.

SCitAMollfS ANSWQS 3•2 6 •Q a
Lawyer- Wnmg- Maa:h- Flight- WHAT you WANT
"ExperiatCe: ~the mom to her son. "is wllll you

get whea you doD't get WHAT you WANr

ARLO &amp; 'JANIS

duce many followers and admirers.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) -Your harmo·

nlous relationships with your fellow workers will inspire everyone to Insert a new
enthusla•m into their assignments,
which may haw been mundane to them
previously.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24~Nov. 22) - You're
exceptionally charismatic at this time and
win function particularly well as a cataly&amp;1
to all vour relationships. Happy change!
seam to follow wherever you go, producIng fun circumstances.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Because you feel especially creative,
imaginative and artistic, you'll be using
your outstanding gifts and lm;:llnatlona to
beautify whatever you encounter, atway11
leaving a better place behind you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Others are likely to recall your' action&amp; •
better than they will your words at ~Is
time. Your Cleeds wlll leave &amp;uch a favorable lmprqsJon that 11'11 crowd out all
other thoughts ·and be the only thing

.'

remaining.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Thl&amp;illl a
particularly favorable cycle concerning
your financial or commarclal affairs.
Do(l't healtate to get right In the thick of
things, because you can come &amp;W&amp;l' with
mort than UsUal.
PISCES (Feb. 20-¥arch 20) - Vour
Inherent charm and warmth can be used
to your ad'ttSintage at thll lime In more
ways than one. You will g1t whatever you
want by elmply ullllzJng your pleaeant
peraonallty.

I;

•I

'

MIKE W. MIRCUM.IWIIEI

~ K\lp'+l, 1 SOUP TO NUTZ
~1\~,
)'c\1 tb
....,~--·

--.::

740-985-4141

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

YOU'RE INADVE~TENTLY

an amateur

51 Colorful
carp
52 Goal .
54 Cut off

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ter one because you will make positive
changes In your life. Although they won't
be disruptive, they will be e)leeptlonally
effective In bringing about many of your
fondest w6ahes and desires.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Usually
you're someone who likes to be first out
of the starting blocks, making things happen . You can still do so, but your chart
indicates ~;~ood things_are happening
without your even trying.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Standing
out In a crowd ls·one of your best assets,
as today will demonstrate In a big way.
You'll not go !,mnoticed regardlesa of
your 1size, accomplishments or beauty.
SlmJ;~IJ, you'll be sparkling.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - New e)(periences will seek you out at this time,
adding a great deal ot8)(c!1ement to your
life. Whatever happen~. you'll see It B8 8
lantastl~pportunlty to grow and

~ PEANUTS

44 ClaosHy
47 Poleo'
connector
48 Two cups
49 Not

Bridge experts are sometimes accused
of having X-ray \lision because they
always seem to know which opponent
holds what cards. But usually it has nothing to do wnh super powers, only analyzing a deal correctly- as In this example.
South is in four spades. West cashes two
top diamonds, then shifts to a trump.
How should declarer plan the play?
What do you think of the auction?
lnBJ(perlenced players often advance
partner's takeout dOubae Incorrectly, bid·
ding their longest suit at a minimum ltwel
regardless ol hand strength . It the
adVancer, as the doubler's partner is
known in some quarters, is not a passed
hand, a simple Bllh-bld shows 0-8 points
With 9-t 1, halumps In a sun, as South
did here. And with 12 or more points, he
cue·bids the opener's suit. (It the
advancJr is a passed hand, these
ranges changa to 0-7, 8-9 and 10-11.)
South, wtth one heart and twO diamonds
to lose, must guess the club suit correctly. Declarer should leave that suit for as
late in the play as possible: First, he

Frldav, M.-ch 28. 2008
By Berl11ce B.cte Oaol
The year ahead promises to be a red-let-

'

I

_:.._

AND IT
ISN'T
EVEN
"' SLOYI
, SONIS .

',

·-111."!1

________ _______

"'"'~ ,,..

WE AIN'T

.......-w.tlml&gt;uCJ ..koabia«ry.ao81

+A

through the cards

TH~ PHON~

""-\
v0',

month

Pn ,,,.., o)'

4.

East
Pass
All pass

As if he can see

per

!)')/

North
Db I.

Opening lead:

~

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; ~emoval

i

Dealer: West
VUlnerable: East-West

~

2459 St. Rt.

• 9 5 2
• 7 6 4

., Q J 7
• 8 6 3
olo K tO 9

I,

~;

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

i

$5~00 off

• 7 4 2.
9 A 10 6 3

V~!,!&gt;!,

HOl5EIIOw
Beech St., Middleport, 2 br. iO
Gooffi
furnished apt., no pets, ~..__ _ _ _ _ __.J
dep.&amp;
ref.
required, .,
(740)992-0t65
Saie: BJS &amp; mattress 1/2$t20, Full $t50. Q $225.
Clean!
Clean!
Clean! Rocker Recliner $150. 2 pc
Downtown Gallipolis apt., LA Suite $325. Table &amp; 4
upstairs, 2BA, 2 Baths. Chairs $300. Mollohan Furn .
$500. 446-9209 '
202 Clark Chapel Rd. 388CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· 0t73
ED • AFFDADABLEI
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR.
RENT. Call (740)441-1t11
lor application &amp; information. .

Save now on
Spring Arrivals

55~..
56 Hooded
cloak
mounter
57 R.,k
13 ~y.sllky 58 MoaquHo,
to us
14 Otyore
15 Cellist
DOWN
-Ma
16 FHI
1 TIIuana kid
remorse
2 Uko cuelard
18 Survey
3 BusYbOdY
19 Egg~eylng 4 CaiHornlli's 23 Codgers'
mammals
Big - ·
querln
23 Kind
5 Give II a go 24 Winsome
of system
6 Dual cloth . 25 Lyric
26 P01110 11.
7 Qusrk's
poems
'0 Tiny speck
homo
28 capture
30 Foolbell
8 ·-Usa"
29 Pharaoh's
formellon
9 Kind of
god
32 Flowery
lchool
31 Pot name
34 Iron llloys 10 Milko 1
32 Skipped
~ lndlsguleo
comment
33 Publishing
36 ..... af 11 Rose Bowl
execs
. ."La Bill'. ."
37 Lela's
event•
~ Whllckod
12 Knuckle
. rescuer
38 Jr. naval
under
40 Young
officer
17 Ms. Hagen
follows
39 Tells .
20 Aclress
41 Snell'slrail
42 Crtes ats
- Langtry , 42 VIking
circus
21 Sea rover ,
n-.me
45 Colony
22 ·charged
43 Fabulous
member
particles
diamond

~Astro-

\ lllil ll \ \ ill ... l

Kipling Shoe Co.

East

6 3
8 54
A K Q J 10 ·
Q52
South

Advert"lse

,,., it' H \ { (

Location in Gampolis 1800
sq. ft. building $400 mo. off
street parking call WJ:a\Jn9 at
_,
(404) 456-3802
_..:.__ _ _ _ __
RatiiiiWirehou.WStorage
Location in Gallipolis 1800
sq. ft. liuikllng $400 mo. off
street parking call Wayne at
(404) 456·3802

West

'====:':11:4/:t:m:o·~ ~~~~~~~~

r

'

•
•
t
•

J40·BB2-1m

Hours
7:09AM • 8:00 PM .

03-27-08

• K 9 8 5

RetaiVWarthouHIStotllge

Equal Opportunity Employer.

designation such as RHIA, RHIT, CPC, CSS-P,
CPC-H, or CSS required - one or more
specialty proficiency preferred. Working
knowledge of c&lt;ldingldoclimentation guidelines
required. Proven proficiency of CPT4, ICD-9CM
1·2-3, and HCPCS. A
working
understanding of anatomy, physiology and
medical tenninology. Experience with third

l to •.,.,.

.,

www.holzerclinic.c:om

Successful appll~.:ants will possess an Associates
degree; at lea:o:t one year of coding education
and audiling '- ~ periencc required; professional

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete ,
·· Remodeling

IIIII
i•.iiO'
"I
.
.
~

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley@
740-59 I-8044

96 Jackson Pike

Holzer Clinic of GaiUpolis

I

*Insured
*Experienced

l'liP_..;....,___.,

GalUpolis, Ohio 45631
Or fax to 740-441-3592

Coding Education Coordinator

I

ce~t~~~ma•

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

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates

Applicants may apply to:
Holzer Clinic
Human Resource Department

Help Wanted

I

North
• A Q J 10
9 K 9 2
• 7 4
• A J 83

ROBERT
BISSELL

I

,

Help Wanted

Hill s Self
Storaqe

r

.:. :.: : ._______ i~--IURiiiiOtiiRENriiii,;,..,l

r

5-~

Reinherder
50 Appeared
53~~
.

10 Register
(2-.)
12 Soapbox

eiCt cab, loaded, exc. shape.

-------- 1.--•L•I\•'JoSI'O'CK•--'"

SPACE

Mon-··

1 loch

TRUCKS

CARGO
FOR SALE
HOMESTEADER..__ _ _ _ __

JET
AERATION MOTORS

46

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

BUILT,
VALLEY MOTORS 328 Jeck&amp;On Pike.
2 ·1997 Kawasaki stx1100 HORSE/LIVESTOCK 740-446-0103
jet ski&amp;, 3 seaters with doo- TRAILERS, LOAD MAX ll'l'r"'_":::"_ _ _....,

7~5-6434

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE·

.Quality cars, trucks, vans

r

I_

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

EQuiPMENT

-.J

move in, central air &amp; natural
NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA.
1,700+ sq fl $49,989 ·
gas furnace, !:!tOne FP in
LA, Kitchen has new oak
lrom $397 Month
cabinets, new vinyl flooring,
Midwest 740.828-2750
lg. pantr.y&amp; laundry room
mymidwesthome.com
Spacious master suite wl
F.P &amp; · private entrance. New 3 Bedroom hOmes from
Priced to sell iOii,OOQ Now $214.36 Per month, Includes
$88,000. call (7401645-875t many upgrades, delivery &amp;
se1-up. (740)385-2434
' : : MOBILE HOMES
n&gt;R SALE
.
USED HOME SALE
Nice 3BR Slnglewides
from $2900 Down Pmt
t 6XBO 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
M1'dwes1 740·626:2750
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
h 740 3B5-- - - - - - - - $230
9948 .per mont ·
. WHY PAY RENT? 3 bed 2
.
bath, $199 a month . 7-40446 3384
2000 16x70 2 bed 2 balh -;:i:--;.;.;.-:-~:--.,
Fleetwood, 2002 i6x80 3
Lors &amp;
bed 2 bath Oakwood, 1999
A
·
16, 80 3 bed 2 bath Fortune. l --lliiiiCRFAiiiiiiiGEiiiiit-r•
·Daytime 388·0000, Evening
3 acres for Sale on Sancllill
388 _8017 or 245_9213
Ad $25,000. 304·895-3929
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sectional home $279 per month MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
740-385-7671.
RENT, 103t Georges Greek
Ad, 441-1111
2008 sectional home 3 - - - - - - - - 1BR, WID hook-up, stove &amp;
Bedroom 2 Bath delivered Prime residential building lot fridge (um., water &amp; trash
and set up $38,695. "140- in Rio Grande on Lake Dr. included. No pets. Ref. Req.
385-9948.
·
$2 4,900.· Phone 260 _495 _ 74~367-7453 or 645-7214
5114
2 bedroom apt in Centenary.
lrom $199 Month
New 2008 Singlewide
a!l u~ilities pd except electric,
Midwest 740-628-2750
$350/mo, call . (740)256,myrlll'dwas thome.com
~~~~1!""'-~---...., 1135
iO
HOl.!ill&gt;
12BR apt. (740) 44t-Q194
like new 3 bed 2 bath on .50
}UR lbNr
acres. $400 a month. Owner ..__.,;iiiiiitiiiii;,.-" 2br spacious apt, ref/stove
financing available. 740-446w/d hookup, water pd. dose
3570
, 2 Br. house in Pomeroy for to hospital &amp; university on
rent $400 a mo.• $400 dep. Centenary Ad, no pets,
44•9442 ft 5
lot 88')(124' w/14'x70' trailer, 740-992,6385.
~
a er pm
3 br.. 2 b, panially furnished, ~--,-:-,-----,-.,-- Beoutllul Apts. ot Jlict&lt;oon
2 covered porches, 2 car 2br Mobile Home, Kitchen
carport, large block storage Furn., deposit required &amp; Eatatu. 52 Westwood
DriVe; from 5365 to $560.
'building, $40,000, (740)992- 2br, House, in Mason, 304·
740-446-2568.
Equal
3057
675-7763
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Help Wanted
Opportunity Provider and
Help Wanted
Employer.

www:mydallysentinel.com

!'OR SALE

HITCHES.
Stock. Catl Ron Evans, 1- NECK
EQUIP after 5pm. Asking $9500.
CARMICHAEL
• 245-5946 or 645-3743
attached gar.. 2 car
: _6D0-5::·::37:_·::_95;,:2;,:8:_.
. .:
- - - - ME NT/GA AM I CHAE L
detached gar., out bldg.,
NEW AND USED STEEL TRAILERS SALES &amp; SER4X4
!ridge., dshwshr., 2.75 acre
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar VICE. SPECIAL 20FT L--·F1iiOiiiRiiSALEiiioi' _...
off
Hwy
124,
For Concrete,
Angle, GOOSENECK FLATBED ~
$600mol$400dep. 740"742 ' "F-ur-n-ishe-d~A-pl-,_2_n_d_A_v-e, Channel, Flat Bar, steel $3999. VIEW OuR-ENTIRE 2004 Fold Escape XLT, 4x4,
1151
For
Drains, TRAILER INVENTORY AT tealher, sunroof, loaded
Upstairs, All Utilities pd. Grating
miles
asking
House for rent in Pomeroy, 1BR, No Pets, Gat_
lipolis, Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L WWW .CARM ICHAEL- 55,000
Scrap Metals Open Monday. TAAILEAS.COM 740·446·· $12,800. 740 5-6434
11550 Lincoln Hill, $375 a Call 446-9523
•
month
plus . deposit, - - - - - - - - Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 3825
MomRCYGm
Gracious Living 1 and 2
740
742
1903
4 WHEELERS
( ) Bedroom Apts. at Village Friday, aam-4:30pm. Closed Have you priced a 'ohn
House or Rent Pomeroy Manor and Riverside Apts. in Thursday, 40 Saturday
&amp;
Deere
lately?
You'll
be
sur......
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio-_.1
7300
prised! Check out our used 2006 HD Softtail Standard
Area. No pQts. Call 740-992- Middleport, from $327 to Sunday. F ~
'sass.
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal Portable Sawmill for Sale, inventory
at Excellent Cond. 10, tOO
Housing Opportunity
Sharpener, blades &amp; hand W W W. C A A 610. C 0 M miles. t t/4"T-Bars, V&amp;H Big
M~n'!~
setter $9,200 call 740-4t8- Carmichael Equipment. 740· Shots pipes. Badlander and
.. .__ RLr~l
• Honeysuckle
Hills 1616
446-2412
Factory seats. Must sell
Apaitments now accepting
John Deer A 1947 Trac1or, $11,600.740-645-7963
2Br at Johnsons Mobile applications for 1 and 2 Br pi!O
.
Plm&gt;
Electric Stan High &amp; Low --~---Home Park. Call 44 6.2003 apts. located on Cotonial LI_ _.,;;IUR,;,,;;Sw::::;;::;,
'
Transmisson·, New Aims, 4-wheeter 300EX, $1,000
Drive next to Holzer Senior
Tires &amp; Paint. 2002 Hard (740)446-4060
Ideal tor 1 or 2 people, refer· Care Center. No rental
ences, no pets. 5 miles from assistance at thls time. Rent 9 month old gray Parrot Top ForCJ? Jeep. caug49_ ~~;.;,;;~,;,;,.-~-.,
CAMPERS &amp;
Gavin. no calls . after starts at $320 and $350. female, S1arting to talk, whl&amp;· 2305 for Information.
MmoR HOM£'i
6pm.441-0181 .
Equal Housing Opportunity. tie, wlcaga. 740-742-3706
· Leiy Redder Rake Reese --740-448-3344
8h, Drum Mower, $2,000
Mobile Homes for Rent in - - - - - - - - AKC reg. rnini dachshund
D
29ft, sleeps
1
app Ies. each Have Manuals Tom 1983 Camper,
·
Cl
Point Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis Jordan Landing Apartments. pups, rare coors,
vet
checked,
1st
shots,
'erown
304-882-2632
4,
sell
contained,
'A Heat.
Ferry. HUO accepted call 2·3 Bedroom Apartments
304-675-5752
304-675-3423
availabfe. All utilities paid wormed 5375 . and up. 740 _
256·1498
e)(cept electric. March Rent
Taking applica'tions for 2BA.
2005 29' Puma Camper, like
Special $100 oft Rent. Squirrel Dog lor Sale 2 •
new. Two slides Ac &amp; Heat.
No pets. $275/month
Please call 304-674-0023 or
$200/depasn. 446-3817
years old, pup 8 months old 4_H club pigs for sale. $125• $17,000. 740-367-0463 or
304-610-0776 lor more
304·675-6132
5175. Call 74o-701-3170 or 645 •0734
Trailer for rent and 101 for rent
Yorkles small, reduced loW- 740 -642-2n 3
also, both In Green Terrace
AV Service ' at Carmichael
11 ~\\..,!'t ll~ l \ II! J\
Mobil~ Home Court. Call
est price ever, M&amp;F, champiTrailers 740·446-3825
information.
740-245-5041
on bloodline serious calls
only
(140)44t -95t0
Aums
APARIMEI'ffii
Modern t eadroom Apt.,
" I ll\ It I "'
FOR SAIJ::
~n n~~
Call (740)446-0390
.
...._ .....
~.............._...
"70
rto
HoME
0 BR
76 v· St
r·
MUSICAL
ne
apt.
lne reet.
INsrRllMENTS
01
Hyundai
Accent
L\1PHOVEMENTS
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Gallipolis. $125/week, utiliHatchback. 5 speed trans. Lw-iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiilments, furnish ed and unfur- ties included. 740·367·7886
65,310 mites, good condinished, and houses in
Baldwin SPinet Piano $300 lion. needs catalytic convertBASEMENT
t Rooms for Rent. No pets. OBO 17401992 _5859
WATERPROOFING
P
nd M1'ddl
2
0
740
omeroy a
epor' Call 740·992-7508.
er. Asking $ 2° · Call
• Unconditional lifetime guar·
709 -6 339security deposit required. 00 .:=:..:..:.:..:.::.:..:.::::..__
antee. Local references fur·
15 740 992 22 8
.::•_ :._:_":.:..:_.:_":..:..t:..·_ _ Tara
Townhouse
-,P:_"
s · ·
03 Oldsmobile Alero , excel- nished. Established t975.
1br &amp; 2br_all ut'"
·
·d · Apa rtmen1s, "very
IHtleS pa1 1n 2 8 d
CIA paciOus,
t t /2
lent cond., runs great,_ Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
9
Point Pleasant 304-360rooms,
' ·
0870. Rogers Basement
Oi6J
Bath, ~dull Pool &amp; Baby
73,000 ' mites $5900. 740· Waterproofing.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. L;;:::::;::::;::;;::::::;:::::;:=-~5~78:·t0:3::__0
~ _ _ _T'7-~;.,..~~---.
1BR Apt, W/0 hookups, No Pets, Lease Plus
close to hospital . Call 740- Security Deposit Req~,Jired,
::.33:.:9-0..:.:38:.:2;______ (740)367-054(.
4BA, 2 F Bath , 2 car

'Thunday, March 27,2008
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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Mareh 27, 2008

Reds ·option RHP Bailey to Triple-A Louisville ·

APphoto

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Homer Bailey throws against the
Toronto Blue Jays in a spring training baseball game in
Sarasota, Fla:, on Mond;ly.
·

Toronto doubles up Reds
.

.

DUNEDIN, Aa. (AP) Jesse Litsch pitched seven
solid innings, Frank Thomas
hit his first homer of the
spring and the Toronto Blue
Jays beat the Cincinnati Reds
6-3 on Wednesday night.
Litsch didn't allow a hit
through the fust six innings
but gave up two runs in the
seventh on two hits. The former Tampa Bay batboy
· walked one, struck out two
and hit a batter with a pitch.
"I feel I am right where I
am at to go out and pitch my
first game of the season," he
said.
Litsch, the team's No. 5
starter, threw 52 of his 76
pitches for strikes and is
happy his sinker is working.
"I've got a lot of. confl-

Buckeyes
fromPageBl
only 3-point attempt. He
also made both free throws
and had five rebounds, an
assist and a blocked shot.
Butler, a first-team AliBi~ Ten player averaging I 5
pomts a game, hadjust·three
m the first half but did con,. tribute six assists. He joined
with Koufos to lead the
Buckeyes ,on a decisive
spurt.
Down 31-30 at. the break,
the Buckeyes took the lead
early in the second half and
then pulled away, at first by
going inside to Koufos and
later by kicking passes out
for 3-pointers or slashing
through the lane.
With Ohio State ahead
36-35, Diebler hit a 3-pointer on a pass back outside
from Koufos before Koufos
followed a Dayton miss
with two foul shots. Butler
was on ·a break when his
alley-oop pass was batted
up in the air by Roberts.

·Spring
from Page In
mer, Boeckman is a lock to
be the starter.
After a year in which he
completed 64 percent of his
passes for 25 TDs with 14
interceptions , Boeckman
will be counted on to be in
tune with the rest of the veterans around him on
offense.
"Todd Boeckman's got to
make sure he and Brian
Hartline and Brian Robiskie
and Jake Ballard, Chris
Wells- whoever he throws
it to-'- that those guys really grow in understanding,"
Tressel said.
Even though Pryor won't
start, he may compete for
playing time, and quickly.
"His ability to adjust to
the system and the speed of
the game will determine
where he is in the mix,"
Tressel said. "But I tell all
the guys at every position,
'l)on ' t come in thinking
you'll redshirt because if
you can help this football
team, let 's go."' .
Wells, who rushed for
1,609 yards as a sophomore
last season, will have a
tough act to follow. ·He went
for 222 yards and both
touchdowns in a 14-3 viotory at rival Michigan which
put the Buckeyes in their
second con secutive BCS
title game, then had 146
yards and a touchdown in

dence in it now," he said.
"I'm working it around the
zone and bein$ able to locate .
it. It•s been a b1g pitch so far.".
Blue Jays catcher Gregg
Zaun thought Litsch maintained his stuff through all
seven innings.
· ·
"The third time through the
lineup they made some
adjustments," Zaun said.
'The first hit was just a good
hit and the second was just a
good at-bat."
When the club breaks
camp, Litsch will stay behind
in Aorida and pitch against
minor leaguers Monday.
Aaron Harang went six.
innings for the Reds, allowing three runs and eight hits
on 89 pitches, 61 strikes. He
struck out two.
·Butler leaped high to catch
it, then drove to the basket
and hit a left-handed layup
to push the lead to 43-35.
Dayton's Wright ended a
3-minute scoring drought
with two free throws before
Diebler, shooting 29 percent
behind the arc on the season, hit another 3 and Butler
came off a pick unchallenged and hit a 3 of his
own for a 49-37 lead with
just under I 2 minutes left.
The Flyers never got closer than nine points again.
With three 3-pointers in
the opening half, Roberts
passed Tony Stanley's
school record of 291 3pointers made.
. The teams had not met
since trading home-andhome games in the late
1980s.
The game was played on
the anniversary of Ohio
State's only previous NIT
championship.
Dennis
Hopson had 26 points and
Brad Sellers 17 in the
Buckeyes' 73-63 win over
Wyoming in the 1986 title
game.
the LSU defeat.
Wells is still wearing a
cast from sur~ery this winter on his wrist and won't
face contact for most - if
ai)Y - of the !'Juckeyes' 15
workouts leadmg up to the
annual spring game on April
19 at Ohio Stadium.
"In the live scrimmages
f
or at least a couple of
weeks he won't be cleared
to (get hit) because you
wouldn't want to risk it,"
Tressel said.
Not everyone is a grizzled
t v
th
h
ve · 'oungsters e coac ing staff will be watching
closely this spring inc;lude
offensive lineman J.B.
Shugarts,
linebackers
Etienne Sabino and Andrew
Sweat,
receiver
Jake
Stoneburner and lineman
Mike Adams, all of whom
are incoming freshmen
already enrolled in classes.
Tressel said the clash with
USC in Los Angeles, pitting
two of the top teams in the
country this fall, would
likely kick off a 5 p.m. local
time or 8 p.m. in Ohio.
That game is just one of
· the many carrots to put in
front of a team, Tressel said.
~ 'At every step there are
different things that m'otivale you and inspire you.
You have a whole 13 games
of experiences whether it's
the thrill of this win or the
disappoi_ntment of that loss,
the championship loss or
whatever,' he said. "We've
just got more things because
the players have experienced all those things."

DUNEDIN, Fla. (APl- .
Homer Bailey is headed
back to the mmors to work
on that control.
The Cincinnati Reds sent
their former first-round
draft pick to Triple-A
Louisville on Wednesday,
settling the last question
about their rotation. Rightbander Josh Fogg will get
the final open spot.
The Reds gave the 21 year-old Bailey every
opportunity to make it, even
rearran~ing their. schedule
to let h1m pitch on Monday
night in what amounted to
his last chance. When he
walked six batters in less
than five innings, the deci- ·
sion essentially was made. ·
"We had a nice, long con·versation," manager Dusty
Baker said. '' You see how
long we stuck with him. He
was heavily in considera-

tion. He showed vast
improvement from last year
to this year. ·He showed big
improvement from the
beginning of spring training."
.
The right-hander didn't
make enough progress in
his biggest shortcoming. He
still needed too many pitches to get through innings,
limiting how long he was
on the mound. Iri 19 innings
this spring, he walked a
team-higli 16 and gave up
24 hits. He finished with a
5.21 ERA.
"I told him to go down
there, and when you come
back I hope you're here to
stay for a long, long time,"
Baker said. "He has the
stuff to win. His future is
very bright, I thiilk."
Bailey came into camp
h()ping to win one of the
three open spotS in the rota-

tion behind Aaron .Harang
and Bronson Arroyo. Righthan,der Johnny Cueto and
Edinson Volquez moved
ahead of Bailey by pitching
much better.
·
Although the rotation
came into focus Wednesday,
the bullpen and the last few
spots on the bench
remained open while players got readr to head north
for Monday s season opener. They still had 35 healthy
players in camp, 10 over the
opening day limit.
Four auto carriers lined
up on the street outside the
Reds' complex in Sarasota
on Wednesday afternoon,
preparing to ship players'
vehicles north. A truck with
team supplies and players'
packages was getting ready
to head for Interstate 75
north.
Baker had hoped to have

most of the decisions made
by now, but the Reds are
looking at the waiver wire
and weighing various
options.
'
"There's a lot of tossing
and mixing and matching of
names," Baker said. "The
names are still the same. It's
a tough time right now. It's
a tough time to make the
club if you' re on the bubble, a tough time to make
those decisions, a tough
time to get a job if yo!J
don't make it."
·
The Reds added another
twist to their deliberations
on Wednesday by deciding
to let catcher David Ross
play in .a major league
game. Ross has missed
most of spring training
because of lower back
spasms, and had been catching minor league games the
past few days.

•
SPORTS
• Xavier ends WVU's
. season. See Page 81

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1007 Ponllac •llld Prix,

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Spacial

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Lois HiU Bell, 78
. • Oma M. Wamsley, 91

:i

INSIDE
iDD'f lhlck LIICr. . . CIL
Loadltr,Loedod,
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GM ~~J car,.4s4,
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1008 Cn z~~ec C'l'l lo:'•w

: • IRS assisting residents
)'ilth stlmulue payment
forma. a. Plgt M
... -eomblned choir
to p,._nt cantata.
.Siit Page~
• Road trips build
relationships.
SeePageA6

WEATIIER

•

Yost advances to general election after count
J.

yesterday's official count,
which included 122 provisional ballots.
Provisional ballots are
those cast by registered voters · who have moved from
one voting precinct to another after the deadline for
changing voter information.
The official count gave
Yost two more votes.
Unofficial results released
on Election Day show the.
race at 1,84'8 to 1,815 in
favor of Yost.
Yost is a deputy under
Treasurer Howard E. Frank.
Cline is a local businessman.
Results of all other races
were conclusive at the unof-

ficjal Election Day count.
.Official results of other contested races ~eported yesterday are :
· ·
(Republican) Prosecuting
Attorney: Story, 1761.
Williams, 2, 104; Sheriff:
Beegle, 2,245, Heater, I ,653;
County Conunissioner ( l/2),
Anderson, 1,722, Frank,
750,
Iannarelli,
567,
Williams, 603 .
(Democratic)
County
Commissioner
( 1/2):.
Barrthart, 671 , Burke, 782,
Lowery, 1,279, Young, 564.
Absentee ballots were
counted after polls closed
on Election Day, wit!t the
ballots cast . at precinct
polling places.

Conintunity responds to 'Meals'

Independent

BY BRIAN

It was business
as usual
Thursday for
Deputy'
Treasurer Peggy
Yost, who was
named the
winner of tl)e
Republican race
for County
Treasurer at
yest!!rday' s
official count of
ballots. In
the end, she
defeated Marty
Cline by just
35 votes.
a~

1107 CIIIIVJ Uplaa• Van

Bishop, seminarians
devote break to
mission work, As

Spring Sports Guide
inside today's Sentinel

REED

BREEOOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - . Peggy
Yost of Rutland will
advance to the general election as the Republican .and only - candidate for
county treasure~ following
Thursday's official count of
ballots cast in the March 4
pnmary.
According to official
results of the primary provided Thursday by the
Meig s Ccmnty Board of
Elections, Yost defeated
Marty Cline of Pomeroy by
35 votes -· 1,870 to 1,835.
The outcome of that "race
depended on the results of

... J. RHdfplloto

BY BETH SERGENT

.

.

BSERGENTeMVDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY- "God takes
care of our needs," Beth
Shaver, director of the Meigs
County Council on Aging,
said while looking out at a
room full of people supporting the county's home-delivered meal program.
Last night's spaghetti dinner and cake auction was
attended by over 100 people
and thouah the final tally
had yet to . be n,ured,
Shaver was j)leged. · -·
·
Shaver tofd the .IUdlence
last Yell!' during 'March For
Meals, the goal was $15,000
and it was met. Then, in
November and December,
when the program was in
"desperate need" the community rallied to not only hold
off a projected $25,000 deficit
for the end of 2007, but raise
enough for the pro&amp;ram to

PIHse- 'Mu~,' A:S

petitions
validated
BY

BRIAN J.

REED

BREE~MYOAILVSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Petitions
of two independent candidates ·. for Meigs County
Commissioner were validated Thursday by the board of
elections, while a third was
rejected. ·
William C. Quickel of
Pomeroy, wl\1 appear on the
Nov. 4 general .election bal·
lot with RepUblican Tom
Anderson and.,.Democrat
Tom Lowery in the race for
.the Jan. 2 term, that seat
now held by J_eff Thornton.
Michael Bartrum of
Pomeroy will appear on the
ballot against Jim Sheets,
the Republican commissioner whose next term
would begin Jan. 3. No
Beth iefcent/photo
Democrat
filed for that seat.
More than 100 people contributed to the Meals on Wheels program during last nlght:s Seventh
Annual March For Meals Fundralser which included a spaghetti dinner and cake auction. ·
Pleirse see Petitions. ~3
.

'

.

'

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. OU athletics get boost from Holzer Clinic
StAFF REPORT
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INDEX.
II

SECilONS -

ATHENS
Ohio
Athletics and Holzer Clinic
announced a $1 million partnership Thursday afternoon
in the Convocation Center.
Holzer will sign a
$200,000 per
contract
for five years With Ohio, with
$50,000 of that amount going
directly to the Ohio Athletics
Operational
Endowment ·
Campaign, which was kickstarted last Janllilry by the
generosity of Dr. Vern Alden,
president of Ohio University
from 1962 to 1969.
.
"We are extremely excited to announce this sponsorship agreement with .
Holzer Clinic," said Ohio
Director of Athletics Kirby
Hocutt. "Holzer Clinic's
· tremendous commitment to
Ohio athl~tics will assist
this department in providing
a ~uallly experience to all
Ohio student-athletes."
In addition to this new
pru:ne~ship. Holzer Clinic
lll31nta1DS Its C0111Jllltment tO

16 ·PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
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B7
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A4
Faith • Values
Afr7
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A3
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B8
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Sports
B Section
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A3
l!:laoo8 Ohio Volley I'ubllobln&amp; ea•.

.

l

SUbmitted pholo

Ohio University and Holzer Clinic officials display a ceremonial check to commemorate a $1 million partnership
between the clinic and OU athletics In a Thursday press conferance at the Convocation Center. Pictured from left is
Kirby Hocutt, Ohio University athletic director ; Dr.
Christopher Meyer, me.dical director of Holzer Clinic Athens;
and Dr. Wayne Munro, president of Holzer Clinic.

'Relay' Lmninaries
The art of remembering
those winning the battle
against cancer.
· The luminaries . for the
POMEROY ·- What has Meigs' Ri"L are personalbeen described as one of the ized by artists Mary Wolfe
more moving moments of and Melissa Lambert,
the Meigs County Relay For making them more than
Life is the lighting of lumi- just a candle in a paper bag
naries meant to honor those
lost to. those living with and
PIHsesee'Rel•y.' A:J
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

provide scholarships to the
Ohio University College of
Medicine and fund numerous community and school
enhancement projects.
"We are dedicated to
doing our part to ensure the
long-term stability of Ohio

From new Jet
Skis

We have a
loan to fit
your needs

athletics as we realize the
. value of the athletics program in the community and
to the economic success of
the area," said Dr. T Wayne
MQnro, president of Holzer

~·H- Boost, A:S

to a swimming.pool

•'

c£;:latVIIaET.

PONTIAC

Thank -You Ohio &amp; West Virginia For Supporting Us Since 1954!

fill,,

1900 E11tem Ave. • Gallipolis, OH """",...•._•....,..
, ree..ot•1n

...

At Home Natloulllallk, we ondentand how Important It Is to !)ave a little extra money
around for your unique llfeds-.borne theater system, a champion porebrtd dog, a jacuzzi ,or a
new concrete driveway. Tbtt's why we're oll'erlng you our Personal Loan services.

The Any Purpose Loan Store
•

Beth Sercent/photo

Melissa LambeFt (le{t) and Mary Wolfe are in charge of ere·
ating luminaries (also pictured) for this year's Meigs County
Relay For Life, May 9-10 at the Meigs County fairgrounds.

....

RaCine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-6333

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