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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, February 12, 2007

•

Ohio State survives Purdue
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRE SS

COLUMB US ,
Fru strated with the way
teams have been hacking
and grabbing him, Greg
Oden has kiddingl y asked
Ohio State coach Thad
Matta for a tear-away jersey.
He could have usell it on
Saturday.
With the 7-foot center in
foul trouble in a rough-andtumble game, Ron Lewis hit
a key driving layup and the
third-rankell
Buck~:yes
closed with an 11 -4 run to
hold oil' Purdue 63-56.
"(It was) ·basically the
same thing : just come at me
every time, hold me - I get
it all," Oden said after scoring 14 points and adding
nine rebounds, two blockell
shots and two steals in 21
minutes. ''I'm staning to get
used to il."
The Buckeyes (22-3, 10-1
Big Ten) were in trouble
throughout the second half
before Lewis broke a tie at
52-52 with a layup with 3:07
remaining off a long pass
from Mike Conley Jr.
Ohio State, which won its
ninth game in a row and ran
its record to 16-0 at home.
never trailed again but
Purdue threatened right up
to the final seconds.
The Boilermakers ( 16-9.
S-6) did most of their damage when Oden was on the
bench.
Teams have found that the
best way to play against
Oden is to get him off the
floor.
"I would say that's pretty
high on the totem pole,"
Matta said. "Putting us in
that situation, getting him on
the bench is obviously
advantageous for them both
offensively and defensively.
We've seen a lot of different
angles to try and get him in
those situations."
Oden had two fouls at the
half and picked up his third
early in the second half.
"Sometimes he gets a little
frustrated because he 's getting fouled on the other end
and not getting calls," said
Conley, who was also
Oden 's teammate in high
school. "They're pushing
and shoving him and then
when he comes back down
the court he 'II do the same
thing and he'll get a foul. It's
almost unfair sometimes,
because they think that he's
so big he should be able to
get pushed around like that.
He gets a little frustrated and
he gets a couple of fouls that
way."

Yat~s puts both cars on front

row
for Daytona 500; Montoya fourth \
BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
- Roben Yates Racing wem
from skid row to the front
row, emerging frnm the dark e"it sea,on in team hlstory ro
take thL· lld) tona ~ no spot light.
At lea't for a week.
David Gilliland and Ricky
Rudd won the top two starting spots Sunuay in qualifying for the Daytona 500,
putting Yates back on the raeIll£ map after a horrendous
season.
"There was a time last year
when I felt like I mayhe was
the problem. and wa&gt;n't in
love with it and really wanted
to leave (racing)," Yates said.
"I could have walked out of
here last year. I want this next
year to get this thing up, get
the sky that was falling on us,
get it up."
That dark time saw Yates
lose his drivers, a sponsor
and both of his r.;rew chiefs in
AP photo
a tumultuous year that saw
Ohio State's Jamar Butler (14 ) goes' to the basket for two the once-proud team collapse
as Purdue's Chris Lutz (4) gives chase during the first half to the point that Yates was
of a basketball game Saturday in Columbus.
convinced he was dying. But
Lewis' layup gave the just like a true racer. the car
Still, he scored critical
owner refused to close shop
points down the stretch Buckeyes the leall to stay.
"The defense almost and fought to keep the family
when he made two foul
shots - shooting with his thought we were about to business on the track.
He handed the keys to his
off (leti) hand - with just take a timeout or something.
two
cars to Gilliland, an
over 2 minutes left to They weren ' t as alert," said
unproven
rookie, m1d Rudd,
expand the lead to four. Conley. who addell 14
the
Iron
Man
of NASCAR
Oden still wears an elastic points and four assi sts. ··1
who
spent
last
year out of
brace on his right hand after saw Ron streaking down the
surgery last June to repair sideline and I hit him. We racing and mowing the 30
ligament damage in his were telling him to run more acres of grass on his North
Carolina farm.
·
and he got an easy basket."
wrist.
They
proved
Sunday
that
After Teague scored on a there's life in this Yates team,
David Teague led the
Boilermakers ( 16-9, 5-6) drive. Conley sci ssored after all.
with 17 points. with Carl through Purdue's defense
Gilliland turned a lap of
Landry adding 13 and for a layup in traffic. After 186.320 mph to win the pole,
Landry lost the ball when he and Rudd was right behind at
Tarrance Crump 12.
Ohio State outscored dribbleu it off his foot. 185.609 to put themselves on
Purdue 17 ~ 5 over the llnal 8 Lewis was fouled with 26 the front row for the seasonc
seconds left and hit one free opening Daytona 500 next
minutes.
Purdue, which has lost throw.
Sunday.
"We knew 11 was slipping
seven in a row and I 3 of the
"It's like a dream that I'm
past 14 meetings with Ohio away."' Painter said.
afraid to wake up from ," said
Jamar Butler and Lewis Gilliland.
State, grabbed a 51-46 lead
c~1ing
off
at the 7:58 mark. Down 46- added foul shots in the final Saturday night's Sl!~ond ­
43, they went on an 8-0 run seconds .
place llnish in the exhibition
with Teague hitting two 3On Purdue's last posses- Budweiser Shootout.
"
pointers sandwiched around sion, Keaton Grant drove the
a basket by Gordon Watt.
lane and Oden swatted his
shot
into the seats near the
Then the Boilermakers
went cold from the field.
Purdue bench.
"We had some shots not
The Buckeyes had one of
go down and some careless their worst shooting games
turnovers," coach Matt of the season, hitting just 14
Painter said. "They got of 21 free throws and makfouled in the boilus and ing 4J percent from the field
when we got fouled we - including just 3 of 17 3weren't in the bonus and pointers.
didn't have a chance to steal
Ohio State honored its
points. Then Greg Oden past captains at halftime.
comes back in the game and including former Boston
you uon 't gel a chance to Cellics star John Havlicek,
knock down points."
class of ' fi2 .

Gillilmid and Ruud were
the only two dri ve rs to loc k
down their start ing spots
under a complicated qualifying
procedure
for
NASCAR \ biggest event of
the year that was marred
when Matt Kcnseth and
Kasey Kahnc·s cars failed
inspecti on and Mi chael
Waltrip's was impounded
because of a &gt;uspicious part.
The top 35 drivers from
2006 are assured a ' pot in the
500, but their stanlllg position will he uctermincd by a
pair or qualifying races
Thursdav .• It leaves eioht
other sjJOts to fill . anll 26 drivers are vying for them. Dale
Jarrett i~ guaranteeu one of
them hy vinue of the past
champions provbional , as
are the three fastest llrivef\ in
qualifying from that group.
That caveat promised Boris
Said, Sterling Marlin and
Johnny Sauter spots in the
race.
Toyota, which is making
its Nextel Cup debut thi s season, had a horrendous qualifyinj,l elTon and will need
brilliant qualifying races to
~et the bulk of its Camrys
mto the lield.
Jarrett is in, along with
Dave Blaney, who earned a
benh because or hi s 2006
standings. Bt!l the rest of the
bunch struggled . including
Waltrip, whose intake manifold was confiscated at the
start of the day be..:ause
inspectors found a questionable substance inside the
part . .
Waltrip,
a
two-time
Daytona 500 winner. was
25th in qualifying and his
Camry was later impounded.
"There 's nothing wrong
with it," Waltrip insisteu .
··we just had an oiI problem
of some son."
David Reutimann was the
best of the Toyota bunch at
15th, and was followed by
Jeremy Mayfielu l 16th I,
Mike
Skinner
l lllth),
Waltrip. Blaney (39th), A.J .
Allmenuinger (40th). Brian
Vickers (45th l and Jarrett

(50th).
Juan Pablo Montoya llirted
with the front row. putting hi'
new No. -!2 Dodge in the 'econd spot only to be ~umped ·
from it moment s later by
teammate David Stremme.
Stremme ended up third
and Montoya was founh , hut
teamm ate Rcell Sorenson
was a di sappointing 44th
after blowing a battery in his
car on hi s seconu qualifying
lap. Still , it wa' a radical
improvement for the Chip
Ganassi Racing team, which
is lnoking to Montoya to help
ju!np-start a program that
ha' n·t won a Cup race since
2002.
But the day belonged to
Yates. who won the Daytona
500 pole for the lifth time in
hi s career. Davey Allison
won t~e llrst in 19'!2, then
Jarrett grabbed it in 1995,
2000 and 2005 .
Althtmgh the- pole means
very little in terms of the
a..:tual race , it puts Yates '
team in the spotligh1 for the
entire week leading up to the
event - sweet redemption
considering many wondered
if it w·ould even survive a disastrom. :woo.
Fir&gt;t Jarrett bolted for
Waltrip's new Toyota team,
and sponsor UPS followed.
Then Elliott Sadler asked out
of his contract forcing Yates
to essentially start from
scratch in his 40th year of
racing.
It had Yates so stressed out,
the owner was convinced he ,
was dymg and turned to prescription medication to alleviate the stress.
Indeed it is, and it all began
when Yates gambled on signing Gilliland, a West Coast
racer who rocketed onto the
NASCAR radar by winning a
Busch race last June in an
underfunded, pai1-time team.
It had car owners clamoring to sign the JO-year-olu
unknown, and Gilliland
chose the struggling Yates
team anlll'Ouldn 't have been
more sure of his decision
after Sunuay.

KUBOTA HAS A NEW WAY

TO LOOK AT SAVINGS!

Cleveland shows up Lakers
BY TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - LeBron
James finally doesn't have to
do it all - all the time - for
the Cavaliers.
James deferred to less-heralded teammate
Sasha
Pavlovic, who scored 13 of
his 21 points in the fourth
quarter, and Cleveland
clamped down on Kobe
Bryant when it mattered
most in a 99-IJO .win over the
Los Angeles Lakers on
Sunday.
Pavlovic, a recent spark to
Cleveland's offense, finished
with 21 points, Zydrunas
llgauska&gt; had 17 and
Anderson Varejao 12 - II
in the fourth - as the
Cavaliers followed up a win
over Miami on Friday with
another solid effort.
James had 18 'points, eight
rebounds and five assists, but
he bowed to Pavlovic and
others down the stretch, and
Cleveland's supporting cast
came through.
"I feel like a prophet," &gt;aid
James, who has been praising
Pavlovic for weeks. "People
were looking at me crazy.
I've always said that if Sasha
gets the opportunity. he is
going to be very good. We go
against each other in practice
and I know what type of.
player he is.
"He's showing it."
James was outscored 25-7
by Bryant after haltiime, but
the All-Star forward was
rewarded for sharing the ball
and still got to crown the
Cavaliers' win with a soaring
dunk in the final seconds.
Bryant scored 36 points to
lead the-Lakers. who went 3~ on an eight-~ame swing
through the bitterly cold

Easl. Bryant scored Los
Angeles' llrst 14 points in the
llnal period, hut with Larry
Hughes guarding him and the
Cavs running others at him
whenever he touched the
ball, he didn't score in the
closing 3:39.
"According to Kobe. no
one else wanted to step up in
that sequence." Lakers coach
Phil Jackson saiu. "That was
something we were looking
for : somebody else to try and
ge1 going.''
··
The Lakers led by three
points entering the founh but
were outscored 35-23 in the
final 12 minutes as the
Cavaliers, the NBA's worst
free-throw &gt;hooting team,
got to the line and made 13of-18 attempts.
"Our defense pretty much
C&lt;lved," Bry&lt;~nl said. "We
gave them a lot of easy
opportunities at the basket, a
lot of free throws. The fourth
quaner is when you really
want to hold a team down
and forc·e them to hit shots not put them at the freethrow line."
Vladimir
Radmanovi c
scored 12 points and Lamar
Odom II for the L&lt;~kers,
whose bench was outscored
46- 15.
James spent the ·nrst 5: 13'
of the founh sitting down.
but when he checked in, the
Cavs led-74-73.
Bryant's two free throws
put the Lakers up 79-7(i but
Varejao made two of his own
and Pavlovic hit a 3-pointer
off a feed from James before
Bryant's two free throws his la&gt;t points - tied it 81 81.
Varejao. a 61 percent freethrow shooter, made two
with 3: 20 remaining and
Jame'. who we nt R-of- 12

from the line. followell by
making a pair for his first
points of the second half to
make it R5 -RI.
Carried to that point by
Bryant , the Lake1:s dosed to
86-llS on Smush P&lt;1rker's
ju111per before James drove
the lane ami passed to an
uncovered Varejao , who
calmly sunk a 17 -footer to
put the Cavs ahead by three.
"Those guys malle plays," ·
Odom said of Cleveland's
reserves. "They understand
their roles. They did a great
job."
On the Lakers ' next trip,
the Cavaliers double teamed
Bryant, who had the ball
slapped out of his hands by
Hughes. Pavlovic picked it
up and raced to the other end
and was fouled by Parker
while making a layup.
Pavlovic, averaging 15
points in his last seven
games. completed the threepoint play to put the Cavs
aheau 91 -!l5.
"He made a great deft:nsive play," Bryant said of
Hughes . "I was looking to
read some of my cutters. try
to get guys involveu with the
double (team). He made a
great play.'"
With the C'u\'s paying extra
attention to Bryant. none of
the other Lakers stepped up
and when Varejao scoreu
with 4 7 seconds left the
Cavaliers were up 93-87 anu
on their way to a se~ond
straight impressive victory.
Pavlovic, who had a
career-high six assists against
the Heat. has ~otten more
playing time of Tate and he's
making the most of it.
Pavlo vi.: ha, averageu 15
points, 3.J rebounds and 2.7
assists in hi s last &lt;;even
gameo.;.

NEW YEAR!
New Deals!

Jury selection set to

Holzer Wellness
sponsors newsletter, A3

begin Monday in trial
of foster mother, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;o I I ' 1.., • \ ol. -;h . ' " · 1; 1

SPORTS

I\ I ..,ll \\ . I I IIRl ' \R\ I:l. :!on-

.

'""' · ""d.•it"•·nlll~&lt;·l., ,,"

Pomeroy considers idea of fiscal officer

• Schottenheimer gets
the axe. See Page 81

BY BETH SERG!NT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEID!NEL.COM

POMEROY - Last night
Pomeroy Village Council
discussed eliminating the
!illected position of clerk-treasurer in favor of a village fiscal officer, an appointed position.
By appointing a fiscal oftlcer council could set or raise
the position's salary on an
individual basis with more
flexibility in setting job and
performance criteria. Some
members of council felt the
current elected position of

clerk-treasurer
provides
more constraint in these
areas.
Councilman
Shawn
Amott brought up the fiscal
officer idea after Councilman
Pete Bamlmn revisited and
supponed a raise for the
clerk-treasurer's part-time
position which currently
pays $19,000 annually.
Clerk-Treasurer
Kathy
Hysell , who estimates she
works between 25-30 hours a
week at village hall,
informed council she'd started a new full-time job yesterday.

Hy sell sai~ she may be
leaving her p sition with the
village due 1 concerns of
losing money on her retirement at her current rate of
pay. She added she would be
working at her clerk's job in
the evenings for now.
Because Hysell's position is
elected she has no set hours to
which she must work.
According to Hysell the
clerk -treasurer's position has
had $4,000 in raises in 15
years.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun disagreed with raising
the clerk-treasurer's salary.

saying it was comparable to
the same position in other
surrounding villages for the
amount of hours Hysell
worked.
Barnhart and
Council woman
Mary
McAngus disagreed, saying
Pomeroy was working with a
bigger budget than some surrounding villages.
Councilman Jim Sisson
was hesitant to raise the
salary of the clerk-treasurer~s
position due to the fact that if
Hysell lost or decided not to
run in the next election he
was concerned someone less
qualified may enter the

PleaH HI Po111eroy, AS

Meigs High teacher
accused in drug offense

Nine charged
in alleged
poaching ring

BY BRIAN J. REm
BREE!J@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Nine men
and women from Meigs and
Franklin counties were
charged with a total of 59
wildlife violations in Meigs
. • Bush honors black his- County Court for their
tory through tales of
alleged involvement in a
poaching ring.
today's sua:ess ,
Suspects are accused of
See Page A2
poaching deer and wild
• Tentative accord
turkeys in the county,
according to a news release
reached on first steps
from the Ohio Division of
towaro North Korean
Wildlife .
nuclear disannament.
Charged were:
•
Hoben L. Cundiff, 41 ,
See Page A2
Langsville, with hunting
• Local mother eams
deer with the aid of a motor
extra funds for OVCS
vehicle, transportin~ a
loaded
firearm wi thm a
teachers . See Page A3
motor vehicle, hunting with• VFW contributes.
out permission, taking more
See PageA3
than one wild turkey per day,
hunting turkey without a
• Manley unable to
wild turkey permit, failure to
collect cans for recycling. tag
wild turkey, providing
SeePageA3
false information to a check
• Bush makes fresh prtch station, hunting deer without
a deer permit, failure totemfor free-trade policies as
porary tag deer (4), failure to
way to keep economy
check deer (4) and hunting
outside of legal shooting
healthy. See Page AS
times.
• Car bombs shatter
• Tracey L. Cundiff, 37,
Baghdad's oldest and
Langsville, with providing
largest market: at least 78 false information to a deer
check station and aiding and
~illed. See Page AS
assisting in taking deer ille • Perspective: Leaders at gally.
• Travis L. Cundiff, 18,
odds over timing of school
Langsville, with hunting
funding fix. See Page A6
without a hunting license
• Ohio gives snowbirds
(4 ), hunting deer without a
more time in state without deer tag (4), failure totemporarily tag deer, f~ilurc to
paying income tax.
permanently check deer,
SeePage A&amp;
hunting deer with a shotgun
during closed season (2),
take more than one antlered
deer,
possession
of
WEATHER
illegalluntagged parts, aid
an offender in violating

office , having run based on
the new salary. Estimates of a
new salary for the position
range from $23 ,000 to
$25,000 annually.
Sisson was in favor of
looking into the idea of
appoipting a fiscal officer as
was Mayor John Musser who
said he'd contact the village
solicitor to find out what
council needs to do to possibly eliminate the elected
position of clerk-treasurer.
A village fiscal officer
would be a l'ull-time village

POMEROY - A Meigs
High School teacher was
&lt;\ffaigned Monday morning
on a single count of corrupting another with marijuana
and was released on his own
recognizance.
Meigs
Local
Superintendent Bill Buckley
said Nathan M. Hansen has
been placed on paid administrative leave pending the disposition of the case, which
mvolves a juvenile victim.
Hansen, 34, Pomeroy, is a
nine-year employee of the
school distnct, teaching
social studies at the h1gh
school.
The complaint against
Hansen identifies the victim
as a juvenile, and specifies
that he knew the age of the

INSIDE

victim. Hansen was arrested
Friday
afternoon
and
appeared before Judge
Steven L. Story yesterday
morning. The charge is a
fourth-degree
felony.
Hansen signed a $10,000
personal recognizance bond
and was released from sheriff's custody following the .
hearing.
A preliminary probable
cause hearing was scheduled
for Feb . 22. Hansen was
restrained from any contact
with Meigs Local School
District students and facilities. He was also ordered to
abstain from drugs and alcohol as a term of his recognizance release.
Attorney
Pomeroy
Christopher Tenaglia was
appointed to represent
Hansen.

Migrant Workers· Outreach
to locate in Racine

Submitted plloto

Investigators conducted a search warrant and issued citations at seven Meigs County locations. Officials seized
dozens of white-tailed deer mounts and antler racks, as well
as firearms and all-terrain vehicles.
which will then become a
BY BETH SERG!NT
BSERGEIDC&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
permanent fixture for the
wildlife laws, and hunting without a fur-taker permit,
building and belong to the
deer with the aid of a motor hunting with the aid of a
RACINE - Although a village . The outreach can
vehicle.
motor vehicle, and transsometimes
hidden popula- move into the space on
• Jason L. Miller, 24, porting a loaded firearm in a
tion,
migrant
workers are March I.
Langsville, with hunting motor vehicle.
here
in
Meigs
County and
Council was approached
• Robert Crawford, 51,
without permission, taking a
second antlered deer, failure Rutland, with failure to !em- now there are plans for by Rev. Walter Hemz, pastor
to temporary tag a deer, fail- porary tag deer, providing Migrant Workers Outreach of Sacred Heart Church in
ure to permanently tag a false information to a check to open in the basement of Pomeroy to consider the
Racine
Municipal matter on behalf of the
deer, hunting with a shotgun station, taking deer by an the
church's Our Ladv of
during closed season (2), unlawful method and pos- Building.
Council
Racine
Village
Migrant
Guadeloupe
and hunting deer with the aid sessing untagged deer.
recently
granted
the
Migrant
Mission
and
the
local
of a motor vehicle.
• Tania Crawford, 45,
Outreach
permisWorkers
Migrant Ministry Board.
• Gerald W. McQuirt, 64, Rutland, with improperly
of Grove City, with posses- tagging turkey and provid- sion to use space for a $1 per The local board is compiled
sion of illegal deer parts, ing false information to a year lease in the basement of of Heinz, Kim . Jones,
the
Racine
Municipal Margie Lawson. Judith
hunting and taking deer with check station.
near
the
Friends Smedley, Sister Mariel
Building
the aid of a motor vehicle
• Sharon A. Thomas, 59,
and providing a check sta- Langsville. with attaching a and Neighbors Food Pantry. Kreuziger, Rose Poole and
tion with false information. temporary tag to a deer In turn, the outreach will Sister Francisca Aguillon.
Sister Francisca will be
• Dannie I L. McQuirt, 41, killed by another, receiving make improvements to the
basement, such as creating
of Grove City, with hunting PI•••• su Poachen. AS
Pluse SH RedH, AS
an office and all that entails
without permission, hunt

Lucky winner to receive basket of gifts
Minersville accident yields
minor damage; no one injured
BY CHAifLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

DWIIIa on P... All

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/800-710-1917
"limr Friemtly Oull'lotJr Pmf(&gt;r Equipment aml1hlctor Superstore"

INDEX
.

2

SllCiloN!i -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics
Annie's Mailbpx
Editorials
.
Sports

Weather

Bs
A3
A4

B Section
A6

© aoo? Obio Valley Puhlisb!"' Co.

POMEROY - In observance of Valentines Day, a
sweetheart basket filled
with gifts ranging from
roses to a warm throw will
be awarded in a drawing to
take place Wednesday.
Shoppers have until 3
p.m. on Wednesday to sign
up at the businesses participating in the give-away.
The drawing will take
place late Wednesday
afternoon and the winner
will be notified . The basket will be presented to the
winner and have a promotional photo taken at the
business location.
No purchase is required
to participate in the conStefl photo test. Only those over 18
There were no injuries and only minor damage in a one-car are eligible to enter.
accident on SR 124 at Minersville Sunday night. The Meigs
Taking pari in the conCounty Sheriff's Department reported that Lora M. Riffle of test are the Pomeroy
New Haven. W. Va. was turning around in a driveway when Flower
Shop.
the
her car slid and flipped over on its side .
Past
and
Riverfront

CNI- Hoelllch/pllato

This sweetheart basket filled with gifts from local merchants will be awarded on Valentine 's Day.
Present.
Pomeroy, the
Dairy Queen , Middleport;
Locker 219, The Shoe
Place, Middleport; Unique
Pomeroy :
Antiques,
Hartwell House. Pomeroy :

'·

•

Anderson's
Furniture,
Pomeroy : Swisher &amp;
Lohse
Pharmacy,
Pomeroy : Bun' s. Pomeroy:
and Clark 's Jewelry Store.
Pomeroy .

�NATION •

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

WoRLD

Tuesday,February13,2007

VFW contributes

Tentative accord reached on first steps
toward North Korean nuclear disarmtlment
BY BURT HERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

BEIJING - Six coun.tries reached a tentati ve
ag reement Tuesday on initial steps toward North
Korea's nuclear disarmament that could usher in the
first concrete progress after
more than three years of
talks marked by delay s,
deadlock and the communist country 's tirst nuclear
test explosion.
The U.S. envoy to the
talks, Assistant Secretary of
State Christopher Hill ,
emerged in the early morning hours of Tuesday looking weary after a marathon
16-hour negotiating session
·and announced that a tentative deal had been struck at
the latest round of six-party
talks on the North's nuclear ·
program.
The draft agreement contained commitments on disarmament and energy assistance along with "initial
actions" to be taken by certain deadlines, Hill said.
.Working groups will be set
up, hopefully in a month,
laying out a framework fm
·' dealing with regional tensions, he added.
He declined to give further details of the draft.
The agreement could herald the first step toward disarmament since the talks
began in 2003. The process ·
reached its lowest point in
October when North Korea
conducted its first nuclear
test explosion, alarming the
world and triggering U.N.
sanctions.
In the last few days, the

talks had appeared to be on
the verge of foundering and
envoys made cl ~a r that their
fru stration was increasing
and thei r patience growing
thin. The current round wa'
to conclude on Monday but
as they progressed toward a
deal, negotiators extended it
late into the night and then
into the earl y ho urs of
Tuesday.
Hill said the draft ~gree­
ment still must be reviewed
by the home governmen ts
of the six countries at the
talks, but he was upbeat
about it. He said he was in
··con stant communication"
with Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.
"We feel it \ an excellent
draft . l don't think we're
the problem," he said.
Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe welcomed the
progress but urged North
Korea to make further
efforts toward denudearization.
"We are closely watching
the development to make
sure North Kqrea makes the
right decision toward
nuclear abandonment," Abe
told a Parliamentary committee session Tuesday
mom mg.
North Korea did not
immediately make any public comment , but South
Korea's envoy Chon Yungwoo said he believed the
proposal would be acceptable to Pyongyang.
Chun said the live other
countries agreed to evenly
share the energy aid outlined under the deal.
Russia was more noncommittal. Deputy Foreign

Alexande r
Minister
Losyukov said there were
"ma ny questions · regarding
details," Russia's !tar-Tass
news age ncy reported.
Hill said the parties to the
talks will meet again later
Tuesday.
In September 2005, North
Korea was promised energy
aid and security guarantees
in exchange for a pledge to
abandon its nuclear programs. But talks on implementing that agreement
snarled on other issues and
that plan went nowhere .
Hill has repeatedly said
he hoped a resolution
would help improve stability in a region filled with
bitter historical disputes.
The two Koreas remain
technically at war since
their 1950-53 contlict
ended in a cease-fire that
has never been replaced by
a peace treaty.
"We' re trying to do more
than just do denuclearization for energy," Hill said.
"We' re trying to address
some of the underlying
problems."
Though he did not provide specifics, North Korea
has demanded improved
relations with the United
States. Japan and North
Korea remain fiercely
antagonistic in part because
of North Korea's acknowledged
but unresolved
abductions of Japanese citizens.
John Bolton, the former
U.S. ambassador to the
U.N., harshly criticized the
deal \lnd urged President
Bush to reject it, saying it
made the U.S. look weak .

•

Lovie Smith and Ton y
Dungy, who this month
became the first black
WASHINGTON - To coaches to take their teams
honor
black
history, to the Super Bowl. Or the
President Bush on Monday work of astronauts Robert
didn't spend much time Curbeam
and
Joan
looking back.
Higgenbotham,
whose
He focused instead on helped
the
rewire
people contributing today International Space Station.
-- those who are seizing
And then there's Tyrone
opportunities gained at Flowers, a once aspiring
great price, the president basketball star who was
said.
shot and paralyzed. Instead
"Their stories," Bush of seeking sympathy or
said, "speak a lot louder and revenge, Flowers became a
lawyer and teamed with his
a lot clearer than l could."
Like the breakthro11gh by wife to form a leadership

BY BEN FELLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'IDENT'S DAY ROADJ\.4' A
QUICK DRIVE 10 SUPER SAVINGS

Name:

.

Norman Hysell on
behalf ol the Tuppers
Plains Veterans ot
Foreign Wars Post
9053 presented contributions totaling
$3,500 to The
Cheste r Shade
Historical Association
lor programming
expenses, and
$2.500 to the VFW
Post 9053 Aux iliary
lor general expenses.
Jo Ann Ritchie accepted the check lor the
Chester group, Linda
Boggs for the
Auxiliary.

program for at-risk children.
"That's what we 're honoring today: ordinary citizens who do unbelievably
fine things," Bush said in an
East Room ceremony honoring Black History Month .
"Our call and our need is
to continue to remember the
promise belongs to everybody," Bush said. "And our
call for this country is never
to rest until equality is real.
opportunity is universal and
every citizen can realize his
or her dreams...

-·~ ':r ~...--

Charlene Hoefttch/photoo

Addreee: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone#:
.

I

L------~------------------------~
Bud and Bud Ught 24 pack case $14.99
12 pack bottles $7.99
Mlller 12 pack cans $6.99
Coors 18 pack cans $9.99
Coors 12 pack bottles $7.49
Natural Ute 24 cans 10.99

Community Calendar
Public meetings
..

......... .......,..••

bag
l • 11 pack Clnl
SOFT DRINKS, SNACKS, COFFff, CHIPS,
HOT DOGS, COOKifS, PlUS MUCH, MUCH, MORf!
OZ.

Thursday, Feb. 15
POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Community
Coalition. 7 p.m., Mulberry
Tuesday, Feb. 13
Community Center, speakers
on youth drug prevenPOMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of tion and education.
• Commerce, business-mindSaturday, Feb. 17
ed
luncheon,
noon,
RAGNE
Racine
Pomeroy Library, Mike
Gerlach.
Middleport Youth League, first meetDevelopment Group, speak- ing, election of ofticers, I
ing and The French p.m. , Racint Americ an
Chorders Quart et. RSVP. Legion Hall. contact Allen
Tucker, 247-2103.
992 -5005.
HARISONVILLE
Harrisonville Chapter 255,
OES . 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
hall. Program by Paula
Thesday, Feb. 20
Gaul, R.N. of Hol zer
POMEROY - Pancake
Hospice . Meeting will to l- supper, St. Paul Lutheran
low. Wear valentine colors . Church, 5-7 p.m.. celebrate

Bud &amp;Budlight 12pk Cans $6.99

Poor Boys Tires
mail-in rebate on any purchase
of $250 or more on the
CarCareONE'" credit card.

-Ash J-tednesday breakfast

$50 mail-in rebate on any
purchase of $500 or more on the
CarCareONE'" credit card.·
www.carcareone.net

POMEROY - The traditional Ash Wednesday
·• breakfast and quiet hour traditionally hosted by Trinity
Church will be held at 7:45
a.m. on Feb. 21 in the
church's Bethany Building.

•Subject to credit approval. Offer valid from 1/23107thru 2/28107.
See sales associate lor rebate
and redemption form.

Reservations either indi vidually or by church are tu
be made to Dianne Hawley
at 992-2722 or Peggy
Harris. 992-7569. The service is a time of preparation
for the Lenten season .

·: :. . - PROUDTOBEAPARTOFYOURLIFE.
'
The Daily Sentinel
'

' '.

•

sible. There are self-help
gro ups for ; pouses of sex
addicts, and the y can help
you fi nd (.' larity . Please
conl ac t
S-Anon
(sano n.org) , P.O. Box
11 1242 , Na shvi ll e. T N
37222 and COSA (cosarecovery.org) P.O. Bo.x
14537, Mi nneapolis , MN
5541 4. Good luck .
Dear Annie: Thank yo u
so much for publ i, hing my
le tt er. sig ned " Nina in
New York ." I hope it helps
ot her Crohn·, sufferers to
kn ow they are not alone .
SitK e writ ing yo u. l
have told seve ral of my
fri end ' abo ut my condi ti on, and l also have be gun
dating a very support ive
guy, whom l was able to
tell without feeling horri bl y se lf-c onscious. Thank
yo u again fo r printin g my
letter, and for your wo nderful words of wisdom.
- Nina in New York
Dear Nina: We' re glad
to hear you' re doi ng so
well. We heard from hundreds of people e xpress ing
support for you and saying
they, too , suffer from
Crohn's , but are livin g
wonderful and productive
li ves, and you can , too.
Annie',, Mailbox is
written by Kathy Mitchell
and Marcy Sugar, lm1g·
time editors of the Ann
Landers column. Please
e-mail your questions to
annie s mail box@com.
cast.net, or write to:
Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box JJS/90, Chicago, JL
606 JJ. To find out more
about An11ie 's Mailbox,
and read feature., by other
Creators Syndicate writ·
er.• and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.

Shrove Tuesday.
Wednesday, Feb. 21
POMEROY
Ash
Wednesday breakfast and
quiet hour, 7:45 a.m. in the
Bethany building, Second
Street entrance of Trinity
Congregational
Church.
Reservations,
Dianne
Hawley at 992 -2722 or
Peggy Harris at 992-7569.
POMEROY
, - Ash
Wednesday services, 7 p.m .,
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
imposition of ashes available .

TUPPERS PLAINS Walt Manley who is known
for raising thousands of
dollars for the Shriners
Children's Ho spital in
Cincinnati through the collection of cans and other
scrap metal is temporarily
off his route.
Manley fell while in
Parkersburg recently injuring a knee cap and shoulder and is now undergoing
therapy. For the next several weeks he will be unable
to continue his collections.
Roger Manley who operates Manley's Recycling in
Middleport has agreed to
accept cans and other recyclables and credit the
amount to Walt's account .
Concerned because he
may not be able to run his·
route for a few weeks, Walt
is hoping his regulars will
take their recyclables to
the Middleport center. Last
year through his project,
Walt, soon to be 93 years
old, made a donation of
$7,096
to Children's
Hospital. This year he has
set a goal of $8,000.

Submitted photo

Dr. Fredrick Williams , the administrator ol Oh io Valley
Christian School . accepts a check for $273.90 !rom Amy
Case. the mother of a student at the school. Case leads
the "Box Tops lor Education" program sponsored by General
Mills. Parents have donated enough box tops to earn this
money lor the elementary· school teachers to use for their
classrooms. Case collects the box tops the parents bring in
and organizes them to turn into General Mills tor the money.

Church events

At. 35 (304) 675·3331 Henderson, WV
Under new management Mike &amp; Vickie Justus
Offering 90 days, same as cash.

sso

Tuesday, Feb. 13
DARWIN Bedford
Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting , 7 p. m,
town hall .

Wednesdav, Feb. 14
MIDDLEPOin
Middleport Literary Cub, 2
p.m. Wednesday, at the
Pomeroy Library. Pat Holter
to review The Sunday Wife
by Cassandra King. Connie
Gilkey. hostess.

Clubs and
organizations

1:111 1/llf D .,IW" IIIII I:Ail
lfll ALWAYi I IIIli I fl CAlli

675-4 2

Or

The Holzer Medical CP.nter Community Health and Wellness and Community Relations
Departments recently sponsored the newsletter for the Meigs County Council on Aging,
"Pages for All Ages" . Acheck was presented to Diana Coates, MCCA stall, center, by Jenni
Dovyak, director of Community Relations. and Bonn ie McFarland, RN, BSN, Director ol
Community Health and Wellness .

'IIe Balle '.,

Mr. Bee s1.99 Coke 'I

11

Submitted photo

MASDI SMOKE SBAK

Dear Annie: l have
worked at my job for
seve n years. Recent_ly a
co-worker pulled me aside
to inform me that another
co-worker, "Jane," made
references about me being
a drug addict and then said
my hu sband was an addict.
too. Th is progressed until
Jane was prancing about
pretending she wa s on
drugs - her portrayal of
me. My friend didn't know
how to react and said she
didn' t believe l used
drugs , but no one else
defended -me.
My husband and l don't
even drink alcohol , let
alone use anything harder.
I do not socialize with
Jane, although during shift
changes , we have talked
and she always asks questions about my family. She
never gave any indication
that she didn't like me.
l went to the manager
and told her wh.at happened . The boss said she
didn't have any recourse,
because she personally did
not hear this. Since l see
Jane
infrequently,
l
promised to remain professiortal and not cause a
problem. l have been able
to maintain thi s, although
at times it is difficult. Jane
finds reasons to come to
work during my shift. She
seems to be provoking me .
l am concerned that others
may believe her lies. Since
we work in a child-related
environment, this kind of
slander can get me fired. It
has made my workplace
uncomfortable, and I am
considering leaving the
job. What should l do? Attacked in Wisconsin

Dear Attacked : First ,
talk to Jane directl y and
firml y. Tell her · you are
aware of her acc usal ions,
you don ' t understand why
she is malignin g you and
to please stop. That may
be enough. If not. talk to
your boss again . You are
entitled to a hostilit y-free
work en vironment. Ask ttte
co-worker who witnes;ed
the mockery to go with
you to the boss as backup .
You can fil e a lawsu il
against Jane or yo ur com pany, but slander is hard tn
prove - although so metimes just the threat of
legal action can work wonders.
Dear Annie: I have
been married over 30 yearand have two terrific ( hil dren . I thought our marriage was fine , until my
hu sband confessed he has
a sexual addiction th at·,
been going for years strip clubs, massage parlors and sex with prosti tutes, male and female .
My husband want s forgivenes s. We are both
going to counseling, and
he also participates in a
group for sex addict s.
We've both been tested for
STDs . We have separate
bedrooms and are civil to
each other. It has been I K
m·onths si nee l learned the
truth, and he claims he has
been clean the whole time .
l am so confused. l cuuld
forgive a drug or alcohol
addiction, but l am having
a real problem with this .
He says he' s always
loved me and wants to be
with me. l don 't know
what I want, or if l can
ever forgive him . . Any
advice '' - The Faithful
Wife
Dear Wife: Forgiveness
is difficult, but not impos-

Manley Local mother earns extra
unable to funds for aves teachers
collect cans
for recycling

..

-----,1

OFFICAI ENTRY FORM

Point Pleasant Food Mad

•

-

r---------------

1
I

MARCY SUGAR

AI' photo

BUSH HONORS BlACK JUSTORY
1HROUGH TAI.FS OF TODAY'S SUCCESS

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Legal action may be necessary against slanderous co-worker
BY KATHY MITCHELL

President Bush is pictured on stage with the Jackson High School Black History Tour Group
!rom Jackson, Mich., at an event marking African American History Month m the East Room
of the White House in Washington, Monday.

PageA3

YTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

•

•

...••

Subscribe today • 99&lt;2·2155

If you want to make farm life less taxing, talk to
your people at H&amp;R Block. Our people can
answer questions about things like-fuel credit,
farm income averaging and casualty losses.
Caii1-8DO-HRBLOCK or visit hrblock.com

618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Mon-Fri 9 to 6
Sat. 9 to 5
992·6674
Other Hours by Appointment

•
HaRBLOCK

' '•

~~~--

'

'

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I

'''

' ''

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.

J

�NATION •

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

WoRLD

Tuesday,February13,2007

VFW contributes

Tentative accord reached on first steps
toward North Korean nuclear disarmtlment
BY BURT HERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

BEIJING - Six coun.tries reached a tentati ve
ag reement Tuesday on initial steps toward North
Korea's nuclear disarmament that could usher in the
first concrete progress after
more than three years of
talks marked by delay s,
deadlock and the communist country 's tirst nuclear
test explosion.
The U.S. envoy to the
talks, Assistant Secretary of
State Christopher Hill ,
emerged in the early morning hours of Tuesday looking weary after a marathon
16-hour negotiating session
·and announced that a tentative deal had been struck at
the latest round of six-party
talks on the North's nuclear ·
program.
The draft agreement contained commitments on disarmament and energy assistance along with "initial
actions" to be taken by certain deadlines, Hill said.
.Working groups will be set
up, hopefully in a month,
laying out a framework fm
·' dealing with regional tensions, he added.
He declined to give further details of the draft.
The agreement could herald the first step toward disarmament since the talks
began in 2003. The process ·
reached its lowest point in
October when North Korea
conducted its first nuclear
test explosion, alarming the
world and triggering U.N.
sanctions.
In the last few days, the

talks had appeared to be on
the verge of foundering and
envoys made cl ~a r that their
fru stration was increasing
and thei r patience growing
thin. The current round wa'
to conclude on Monday but
as they progressed toward a
deal, negotiators extended it
late into the night and then
into the earl y ho urs of
Tuesday.
Hill said the draft ~gree­
ment still must be reviewed
by the home governmen ts
of the six countries at the
talks, but he was upbeat
about it. He said he was in
··con stant communication"
with Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.
"We feel it \ an excellent
draft . l don't think we're
the problem," he said.
Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe welcomed the
progress but urged North
Korea to make further
efforts toward denudearization.
"We are closely watching
the development to make
sure North Kqrea makes the
right decision toward
nuclear abandonment," Abe
told a Parliamentary committee session Tuesday
mom mg.
North Korea did not
immediately make any public comment , but South
Korea's envoy Chon Yungwoo said he believed the
proposal would be acceptable to Pyongyang.
Chun said the live other
countries agreed to evenly
share the energy aid outlined under the deal.
Russia was more noncommittal. Deputy Foreign

Alexande r
Minister
Losyukov said there were
"ma ny questions · regarding
details," Russia's !tar-Tass
news age ncy reported.
Hill said the parties to the
talks will meet again later
Tuesday.
In September 2005, North
Korea was promised energy
aid and security guarantees
in exchange for a pledge to
abandon its nuclear programs. But talks on implementing that agreement
snarled on other issues and
that plan went nowhere .
Hill has repeatedly said
he hoped a resolution
would help improve stability in a region filled with
bitter historical disputes.
The two Koreas remain
technically at war since
their 1950-53 contlict
ended in a cease-fire that
has never been replaced by
a peace treaty.
"We' re trying to do more
than just do denuclearization for energy," Hill said.
"We' re trying to address
some of the underlying
problems."
Though he did not provide specifics, North Korea
has demanded improved
relations with the United
States. Japan and North
Korea remain fiercely
antagonistic in part because
of North Korea's acknowledged
but unresolved
abductions of Japanese citizens.
John Bolton, the former
U.S. ambassador to the
U.N., harshly criticized the
deal \lnd urged President
Bush to reject it, saying it
made the U.S. look weak .

•

Lovie Smith and Ton y
Dungy, who this month
became the first black
WASHINGTON - To coaches to take their teams
honor
black
history, to the Super Bowl. Or the
President Bush on Monday work of astronauts Robert
didn't spend much time Curbeam
and
Joan
looking back.
Higgenbotham,
whose
He focused instead on helped
the
rewire
people contributing today International Space Station.
-- those who are seizing
And then there's Tyrone
opportunities gained at Flowers, a once aspiring
great price, the president basketball star who was
said.
shot and paralyzed. Instead
"Their stories," Bush of seeking sympathy or
said, "speak a lot louder and revenge, Flowers became a
lawyer and teamed with his
a lot clearer than l could."
Like the breakthro11gh by wife to form a leadership

BY BEN FELLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'IDENT'S DAY ROADJ\.4' A
QUICK DRIVE 10 SUPER SAVINGS

Name:

.

Norman Hysell on
behalf ol the Tuppers
Plains Veterans ot
Foreign Wars Post
9053 presented contributions totaling
$3,500 to The
Cheste r Shade
Historical Association
lor programming
expenses, and
$2.500 to the VFW
Post 9053 Aux iliary
lor general expenses.
Jo Ann Ritchie accepted the check lor the
Chester group, Linda
Boggs for the
Auxiliary.

program for at-risk children.
"That's what we 're honoring today: ordinary citizens who do unbelievably
fine things," Bush said in an
East Room ceremony honoring Black History Month .
"Our call and our need is
to continue to remember the
promise belongs to everybody," Bush said. "And our
call for this country is never
to rest until equality is real.
opportunity is universal and
every citizen can realize his
or her dreams...

-·~ ':r ~...--

Charlene Hoefttch/photoo

Addreee: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone#:
.

I

L------~------------------------~
Bud and Bud Ught 24 pack case $14.99
12 pack bottles $7.99
Mlller 12 pack cans $6.99
Coors 18 pack cans $9.99
Coors 12 pack bottles $7.49
Natural Ute 24 cans 10.99

Community Calendar
Public meetings
..

......... .......,..••

bag
l • 11 pack Clnl
SOFT DRINKS, SNACKS, COFFff, CHIPS,
HOT DOGS, COOKifS, PlUS MUCH, MUCH, MORf!
OZ.

Thursday, Feb. 15
POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Community
Coalition. 7 p.m., Mulberry
Tuesday, Feb. 13
Community Center, speakers
on youth drug prevenPOMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of tion and education.
• Commerce, business-mindSaturday, Feb. 17
ed
luncheon,
noon,
RAGNE
Racine
Pomeroy Library, Mike
Gerlach.
Middleport Youth League, first meetDevelopment Group, speak- ing, election of ofticers, I
ing and The French p.m. , Racint Americ an
Chorders Quart et. RSVP. Legion Hall. contact Allen
Tucker, 247-2103.
992 -5005.
HARISONVILLE
Harrisonville Chapter 255,
OES . 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
hall. Program by Paula
Thesday, Feb. 20
Gaul, R.N. of Hol zer
POMEROY - Pancake
Hospice . Meeting will to l- supper, St. Paul Lutheran
low. Wear valentine colors . Church, 5-7 p.m.. celebrate

Bud &amp;Budlight 12pk Cans $6.99

Poor Boys Tires
mail-in rebate on any purchase
of $250 or more on the
CarCareONE'" credit card.

-Ash J-tednesday breakfast

$50 mail-in rebate on any
purchase of $500 or more on the
CarCareONE'" credit card.·
www.carcareone.net

POMEROY - The traditional Ash Wednesday
·• breakfast and quiet hour traditionally hosted by Trinity
Church will be held at 7:45
a.m. on Feb. 21 in the
church's Bethany Building.

•Subject to credit approval. Offer valid from 1/23107thru 2/28107.
See sales associate lor rebate
and redemption form.

Reservations either indi vidually or by church are tu
be made to Dianne Hawley
at 992-2722 or Peggy
Harris. 992-7569. The service is a time of preparation
for the Lenten season .

·: :. . - PROUDTOBEAPARTOFYOURLIFE.
'
The Daily Sentinel
'

' '.

•

sible. There are self-help
gro ups for ; pouses of sex
addicts, and the y can help
you fi nd (.' larity . Please
conl ac t
S-Anon
(sano n.org) , P.O. Box
11 1242 , Na shvi ll e. T N
37222 and COSA (cosarecovery.org) P.O. Bo.x
14537, Mi nneapolis , MN
5541 4. Good luck .
Dear Annie: Thank yo u
so much for publ i, hing my
le tt er. sig ned " Nina in
New York ." I hope it helps
ot her Crohn·, sufferers to
kn ow they are not alone .
SitK e writ ing yo u. l
have told seve ral of my
fri end ' abo ut my condi ti on, and l also have be gun
dating a very support ive
guy, whom l was able to
tell without feeling horri bl y se lf-c onscious. Thank
yo u again fo r printin g my
letter, and for your wo nderful words of wisdom.
- Nina in New York
Dear Nina: We' re glad
to hear you' re doi ng so
well. We heard from hundreds of people e xpress ing
support for you and saying
they, too , suffer from
Crohn's , but are livin g
wonderful and productive
li ves, and you can , too.
Annie',, Mailbox is
written by Kathy Mitchell
and Marcy Sugar, lm1g·
time editors of the Ann
Landers column. Please
e-mail your questions to
annie s mail box@com.
cast.net, or write to:
Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box JJS/90, Chicago, JL
606 JJ. To find out more
about An11ie 's Mailbox,
and read feature., by other
Creators Syndicate writ·
er.• and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.

Shrove Tuesday.
Wednesday, Feb. 21
POMEROY
Ash
Wednesday breakfast and
quiet hour, 7:45 a.m. in the
Bethany building, Second
Street entrance of Trinity
Congregational
Church.
Reservations,
Dianne
Hawley at 992 -2722 or
Peggy Harris at 992-7569.
POMEROY
, - Ash
Wednesday services, 7 p.m .,
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
imposition of ashes available .

TUPPERS PLAINS Walt Manley who is known
for raising thousands of
dollars for the Shriners
Children's Ho spital in
Cincinnati through the collection of cans and other
scrap metal is temporarily
off his route.
Manley fell while in
Parkersburg recently injuring a knee cap and shoulder and is now undergoing
therapy. For the next several weeks he will be unable
to continue his collections.
Roger Manley who operates Manley's Recycling in
Middleport has agreed to
accept cans and other recyclables and credit the
amount to Walt's account .
Concerned because he
may not be able to run his·
route for a few weeks, Walt
is hoping his regulars will
take their recyclables to
the Middleport center. Last
year through his project,
Walt, soon to be 93 years
old, made a donation of
$7,096
to Children's
Hospital. This year he has
set a goal of $8,000.

Submitted photo

Dr. Fredrick Williams , the administrator ol Oh io Valley
Christian School . accepts a check for $273.90 !rom Amy
Case. the mother of a student at the school. Case leads
the "Box Tops lor Education" program sponsored by General
Mills. Parents have donated enough box tops to earn this
money lor the elementary· school teachers to use for their
classrooms. Case collects the box tops the parents bring in
and organizes them to turn into General Mills tor the money.

Church events

At. 35 (304) 675·3331 Henderson, WV
Under new management Mike &amp; Vickie Justus
Offering 90 days, same as cash.

sso

Tuesday, Feb. 13
DARWIN Bedford
Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting , 7 p. m,
town hall .

Wednesdav, Feb. 14
MIDDLEPOin
Middleport Literary Cub, 2
p.m. Wednesday, at the
Pomeroy Library. Pat Holter
to review The Sunday Wife
by Cassandra King. Connie
Gilkey. hostess.

Clubs and
organizations

1:111 1/llf D .,IW" IIIII I:Ail
lfll ALWAYi I IIIli I fl CAlli

675-4 2

Or

The Holzer Medical CP.nter Community Health and Wellness and Community Relations
Departments recently sponsored the newsletter for the Meigs County Council on Aging,
"Pages for All Ages" . Acheck was presented to Diana Coates, MCCA stall, center, by Jenni
Dovyak, director of Community Relations. and Bonn ie McFarland, RN, BSN, Director ol
Community Health and Wellness .

'IIe Balle '.,

Mr. Bee s1.99 Coke 'I

11

Submitted photo

MASDI SMOKE SBAK

Dear Annie: l have
worked at my job for
seve n years. Recent_ly a
co-worker pulled me aside
to inform me that another
co-worker, "Jane," made
references about me being
a drug addict and then said
my hu sband was an addict.
too. Th is progressed until
Jane was prancing about
pretending she wa s on
drugs - her portrayal of
me. My friend didn't know
how to react and said she
didn' t believe l used
drugs , but no one else
defended -me.
My husband and l don't
even drink alcohol , let
alone use anything harder.
I do not socialize with
Jane, although during shift
changes , we have talked
and she always asks questions about my family. She
never gave any indication
that she didn't like me.
l went to the manager
and told her wh.at happened . The boss said she
didn't have any recourse,
because she personally did
not hear this. Since l see
Jane
infrequently,
l
promised to remain professiortal and not cause a
problem. l have been able
to maintain thi s, although
at times it is difficult. Jane
finds reasons to come to
work during my shift. She
seems to be provoking me .
l am concerned that others
may believe her lies. Since
we work in a child-related
environment, this kind of
slander can get me fired. It
has made my workplace
uncomfortable, and I am
considering leaving the
job. What should l do? Attacked in Wisconsin

Dear Attacked : First ,
talk to Jane directl y and
firml y. Tell her · you are
aware of her acc usal ions,
you don ' t understand why
she is malignin g you and
to please stop. That may
be enough. If not. talk to
your boss again . You are
entitled to a hostilit y-free
work en vironment. Ask ttte
co-worker who witnes;ed
the mockery to go with
you to the boss as backup .
You can fil e a lawsu il
against Jane or yo ur com pany, but slander is hard tn
prove - although so metimes just the threat of
legal action can work wonders.
Dear Annie: I have
been married over 30 yearand have two terrific ( hil dren . I thought our marriage was fine , until my
hu sband confessed he has
a sexual addiction th at·,
been going for years strip clubs, massage parlors and sex with prosti tutes, male and female .
My husband want s forgivenes s. We are both
going to counseling, and
he also participates in a
group for sex addict s.
We've both been tested for
STDs . We have separate
bedrooms and are civil to
each other. It has been I K
m·onths si nee l learned the
truth, and he claims he has
been clean the whole time .
l am so confused. l cuuld
forgive a drug or alcohol
addiction, but l am having
a real problem with this .
He says he' s always
loved me and wants to be
with me. l don 't know
what I want, or if l can
ever forgive him . . Any
advice '' - The Faithful
Wife
Dear Wife: Forgiveness
is difficult, but not impos-

Manley Local mother earns extra
unable to funds for aves teachers
collect cans
for recycling

..

-----,1

OFFICAI ENTRY FORM

Point Pleasant Food Mad

•

-

r---------------

1
I

MARCY SUGAR

AI' photo

BUSH HONORS BlACK JUSTORY
1HROUGH TAI.FS OF TODAY'S SUCCESS

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Legal action may be necessary against slanderous co-worker
BY KATHY MITCHELL

President Bush is pictured on stage with the Jackson High School Black History Tour Group
!rom Jackson, Mich., at an event marking African American History Month m the East Room
of the White House in Washington, Monday.

PageA3

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OPINION

Tuesday,Februaryta,aoo7

'Income insecurity' emerges as leading issue in '08 campaign

After Iraq, the most contentious
issue in politics is
111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio
'" economic insecurity" - a
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
jumble
of items that includes
•
www.mydallysentlnel.com
•
stagnant wages, inequality of
incomes and opportunity,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
globalization, outo;ourcing of
jobs and immigration.
Dan Goodrich
ll's the Lou Dobbs agenda
Publisher
- the list of complaints that
the CNN anchor r.tils about
each night, which has given
Charlene Hoeflich
rise to protectionist populism
General Manager-News Editor
in both parties and which cries
out for some stmight talk and
novel remedies.
The worst temptation will
Congress shall make ,o law respecting an
be lor Congress to, reject trade
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
agreements that the Bush
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom vf admini stration is preparing to
:speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- submit. cutting the United
States off from both export
: pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the . and import opportunities.
: Government for 11 redress of grievances.
Instead, the United States
needs tu improve its competi-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution tiveness and bolster the safety
net lor workers who lose their
jobs.
One idea that's received lit·
tle attention - but should get
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 13, the 44th day of 2007. There more - is wage insurance, a
relatively inexpensive proare 321 days left in the year.
gram
to make up part of a
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 11 , 1935, a jury in Flemington, N.J. , found worker's salary loss.
kobert Litan of the
Bruno Richard Hauptmann guilty of first-degree murder in
Brookings
Institution, a major
the kidnap-slaying of the son of Charles and Anne
proponent of the plan, estiLindbergh. (Hauptmann was later executed.)
mates tlmt it would cost just
On this date:
In 1542, the fifth wife of England's King Henry VIII. $3.5 billion a year - charged
Catherine Howard, was executed for adultery.
to employers at $25 per workIn 1795, the University of North Carolina be~ame the er - to provide pennanently
first U.S. state university to admit students with the arrival displaced workers with 50
of Hinton James, who was the only student on campus for percent of their lost wages up
iwo weeks.
to $10,(XX) a year for two
· In 1914, the American Society of Composers, Authors years.
and Publishers. known as ASCAP, was founded in New
Litan argues that current
York.
U.S. safety-net programs,
. In 1920, the League of Nations recognized the perpetual including
unemployment
neutrality of Switzerland.
insurance
and
tmde adjust· In 1945, during World War II, the Soviets captured
ment assistance, are inadeBudapest, Hungary, from the Germans.
quate,
hard to obtain and actu·
' In 1984, Konstantin Chernenko was chosen to be generfll secretary of the Soviet Communist Party 's Central ally &lt;;!iscourage workers from
finding new jobs.
Committee, succeeding the late Yuri Andropov
The potency of the insecuriIn 1988, the 15th winter Olympics opened in Calgary,
ty issue was on display when
Alberta, Canada.
Ten years ago: Discovery's astronauts hauled the Hubble
Space Telescope aboard the shuttle for a I billion-mile
tuneup to allow it to peer even deeper into the far reaches
of the universe. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial
average broke through the 7,000 barrier lor the first time,
ending the day at 7,022.44.
Five years ago: John Walker Lindh pleaded not-guilty in
federal court in Alexandria. Va.. to conspiring to kill
Americans and supponing the Taliban and terrorist ol'gani zations. Britain's Queen 61izabeth II made former New
York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani an honorary knight. In
li startling development at the Salt Lake City winter games,
the head of the French Olympic team said the French ft~­
itre skating judge had been pressured to "act in a certam
way" before she voted to give the gold medal to the
Russians in pairs. Country singer Waylon Jennings died in
Chandler, Ariz., at age 64.
. One year ago: Auditors reported that millions of dollars
in Hurricane Katrina disaster aid had been squandered,
paying for such items as a $450 tattoo and $375-a-day
beachfront condos. Joey Cheek won the men's 500 meters,
giving the U.S. its second speedskating gold medal of the
Turin Games. Hannah Teter won gold and Gretchen Bleiler
won silver in the halfpipe. Tatiana Totrrtianina ami Maxim
Marinin won the gold medal in pairs figure skating, extendIng Russia's four-decade dominance of the event.
: Thought for Today: "The world has no sympathy with
lillY but positive griefs; it will pity you for what you lose,
but never for what you lack." - Anne Sophie Swetchine,
~ussian-French author (1782-1857).

.
..
.

;TODAY IN HISTORY

Mortal•

Sen. Jim Webb. Va., devoted
half of the Democratic
response to the State of the
Union address to it, asserting
that ."the middle class of this
country, our historic backbone
and our best hope for a strong
society in the future, is losing
its place at the table."
"fhe stock market is at an
all-time high, and so are corporate
profits,"
Webb
observed. "But these benefits
are not being fairly shared.
When I graduated from college, the average corporate
CEO made 20 times what the
average worker did. Today,
it's 400 times."
President Bush was compelled to respond on the issue
with a pair of speeches last
week' touting the strength of
the American economy,
defending his policies of tax
cuts and free trade, but
acknowledging that "income
inequality is real," blaming it
on disparities in education, not
greed.
However, he also was compelled to urge corporate
boards to "pay attention to the
executive compensation packages that you approve. You
need to show the world that
American businesses are a
model of transparency and
good corporate governance."
All of the 2008 Democratic
candidates for .president are
likely to make economic insecurity a mainstay of their campaigns, and Republicans - if

they are smart - should pay
attention to it as well.
Last week, in a speech to
the New America Fountlation,
Sen. Hillary Rodharn Clinton,
D-N.Y., called for "a new 21st
century American bargain" to
help the middle class, including a universal health insurance plan (yet to be outlined),
"baby bond" savings acc6unts
established for each child, and
"American Dream Grants" to
encourage colleges to accept
and graduate more srudents.
Her argument was that policies of the Bush administration had led to a "hollowing
out of the middle" and "wage
stagnation." Productivity has
grown by 17.5 percent since
2000, she said, while median
household income has fallen
marginally, health care l'OSts
have risen 8I percent and college tuitions have increased
50 percent.
The Bush administration
argues back that average
wages at la•t have begun to
rise - I. 7 percent in the past
year - and that income
growth during the current econorrtic recovery actually has
been greater than during the
boom times of the Clinton
administration.
According to Labor and
Commerce department statistics distributed by the White
House, hourly wages have
risen at a yearly average of 2.8
percent since 2003 but rose
only OJ percent during the
1990s, and personal inoome
has risen 3 percent, compared
with OJ percent in the 1990s.
Democrats argue that
income gains have been
skewed to the highest-inwme
earners and that .wages lor
lower- and middle-income
workers have been flat ·or
falling.
Dobbs and other protection-

ists blame the trend on globalization - the drive of corporations to send U.S. jobs to
low-wage countries - along
with illegal immigration,
which allegedly depresses
wages for American workers.
Arguing for renewal of
trade promotion authority which allows for fast-track:
Congressional approval of
trade agreements the
White House points out that
42 percent of the U.S. work:
force is employed in finns
engaged in iniernational trade
and that jobs supported by
exports pay wages 13 percent
to 18 percent higher than the
average.
.
Still, there's strong pressure
on Democrats to oppose trade
agreements. Only 15 House
Democrats and I I Senate
Democrats voted for the
Central American Free Trade
Agreement in 2005, for example. Both leading Democratic
presidential
candidates,
Clil)ton and Sen. Barack
Obarna, Ill., voted against it.
Former Sen. John Edwards,
D-N.C., running as a populist
and trying to lock up union
support, insists that all agreements contain tough labor and
environmental standards, a
demand likely to stifle trade
negotiations.
Despite strong econorrtic
growth, economic insecurity
is real. The challenge for
Congress, Bush and the 2008
candidates is to deal wilil it
constructively, not try to cut
America off from the world
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

FOUR SCORE &amp; SEVEN ...

Meeting rescheduled
CHESTER - Chester Township Board of Tru stees
wtll hold a rescheduled meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday at
the Chester Town Hall . Last week's meeting was cancel ed due to bad weather.

Postpone meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - The meeting of the Tuppers
Plam s Regaonal Sewer Di strict scheduled for Monday
has been rescheduled for Feb. 19.

Racine Youth League
RACINE - The Racine Youth League's first meeting
of the season will take place at I p.m., Saturday at the
Racme Amencan Legton Hall . The meeting will consist
of the electton of officers. Anyone interested in becom ing a league officer is asked to attend. Contact Allen
Tucker, 247 -2103 .

Office closed
_POMEROY - The Meig s County Health Department
wall be closed on Monday for Presidents Day.

Pancake supper
POMEROY - St. Paul Lutheran Church will begin
lent on Shrove Tuesday (Fat Tuesday) with a pancake
supper from 5 - 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 20 at the church.

Coalition meeting
PO~EROY - The Meigs County Community
Coalttton, a _grass-roots organization to provide youth
drug prevenlton and educational services to locals will
meet at 7 p.m. on Thursday at the Mulberry Community
Center. Speaking will be various coalition service
providers such as Health Recovery Services, Woodland
Centers, Meigs County Health Department, Abstinence
Butldmgs Character program, Meigs County
Department of Job and Family Services. Discussion to
constst of how these providers impact the community
and what services they perform.

Bush makes
fresh pitch for
free-trade policies
as way to keep
economy healthy

Nat
Hentoff

.

less be followed."
But too few Americans school children and adults know of how the Supreme
Court ha~ continually been at
the core of protecting our
essential liberties and rights
against fear-ridden majorities
of citizens and Congress in
times of national danger, as
well as presidents who
sweepingly ignore the sepamtion of powers. The Supreme
Court itself - as this series
demonstrates vi,vidly - has
also rolled over the
Constitution in titnes of crisis. as in its approval of the
internment
camps
of
Japanese-Americans during
World War II. !3ut this repul&gt;lie resiliently comes back to
its roots of liberty, in part
because of the Supreme
Court redeeming its rrtistakes.
But as many surveys have
shown - as well as Jay
Leno's impromptu quizzes of
college students on the
"Tonight Show" - many
Americans are educationally
disadvantaged in their know!edge of this history of who
we are - and who
black -robed justices are who
have the power to make ,deci- ·

those

sions not only on national
security, but also concerning,
at times, intimate details of
our personal lives.
How many of us kliow
what in the life and temperament of Chief Justice John
Marshall gave him the daring
to find in a Congressional act
setting up the federal court
system the power of the
Supreme Court, and other
federal courts, to declare acts
of Congress unconstitutional?
The 1803 decision Marbury
v. Madison changed the
course of this country.
How many of us know
anything about former slave
owner Justice John Marshall
Harlan, whose lonely dissents
tried to awaken the Court that
for years stopped the "equal
protection of the laws" guarantee in the Fourteenth
Amendment from applying to
black Americans?
These and other ''personalities and rivalries that defined
America" are brought back to
life in this invaluable TV
series - a true reality show
that both entertains and educates.
This series also has a longrange component a
national educational outreach
campaign to reach community groups, libraries and of
special importance, schools.
Because of the No Child Left
Behind Law, so much time is
heing spent on preparing students to pass reading and
math tests . that hardly any
time is left for the already
dirrtinishing classes in what

used to be called civics. We
are not educating a new generation to become citizens
actively informed in keeping
us both safe and free.
Among the companions to
this TV series is a wide-ranging Web site that will be live
online for four years
(www.pbs.org/wnetlsupremecourt) that contains all the
resources for educators.
The press reviews for the
four-part "Supreme Court"
TV series have been very
favorable - except for one. I
feel sorry for New York
Tunes readers who were put
off from watching by a stunningly supercilious and ignorant review (Jan. 21) by
Virginia Heffernan, who
found it ''boring."
The New York Tunes has
superbly
knowledgeable
Supreme Court reponers Linda Greenhouse and Adam
Liptak - but chose to assign
the review to a writer who is
very badly educationally disadvantaged.
But none of the rest of us
need be in that sad state
thanks to Thirteen/WNET
and PBS. There's more to
television than Donald
Trump and Rosie O'Donnell.

WASHINGTON - Freetrade policies that make it
easier for U.S. companies to
seII their products are
important to the economy 's
vitality, President Bush said
Monday as he projected a
year of good - though
somewhat slower - economic growth.
Bush, in his annual economic report to Congress,
made a fresh pitch for
breaking down trade barriers and energizing global
trade talks. He also called
on Congress to elltend his
authority to negotiate freetrade deals, a request likely
to face an uphill battle in the
De moe rat ic -c on t ro lied
Congress.
"This authority is essential to completing good
trade agreements," Bush
wrote in the introduction to
the report. "The Congress
must renew it if we are to
improve our competitive,
ness in the global economy."

Pancake supper set

(Nar Hemojf is a nationally
renowned autlwrity on the
First Amendment and the Bill
of Righrs ond autlwr of many
books, including "The War
011 rhe Bill of Rights and rhe
Gathering
Resislallce"
(Seven Stories Press, 2003).)

Poachers
from PageA1
or possessing an untagged
deer and providing false
information to a check station.
Meigs County Wildlife
Officer Keith Wood and the
division's covert enforcement unit conducted the
investigation , assisted by
the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, Meigs County
Sheriff's
Office
and
Pomeroy
Police
Department.
Investigators conducted a
search warrant and issued
citations at se ven locations
on
Friday
afternoon.
Officials seized dozens of
white-tailed deer mounts
and antler racks, firearms
and all-terrain vehicles.
"The undercover investigation, dubbed 'Operation

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"WE DEliVER"

Holzer offers health screening

AP ECONOMICS WRITER

With the United States
racking up record trade
deficits and facing intense
competition from rapidly
growing China and India,
global trade tensions have
intensified.
Democrats blame Bush's
free-trade policies for conRACINE - The Men's Group of the Racine United tributing to the trade deficit,
Methodist Church will sponsor a piancake supper costing U.S. factories jobs
Thursday with serving from 4 to 7 p.m . Donations for and exposing U.S. workers
the super wtll be used to help fun\! the ministry of the to unfair competition from
low-wage countries.
church. The public is invited.
"We need to shift focus so
that working Americans
start to feel as good about
our changing economy as
HARRISONVILLE - The Scipio Township Trustees those at the very top do,"
at a recent meeting elected Randy Butcher president and said Sen. Charles Schumer,
Robert Butcher vice piresident. The third member of the D-N .Y.
board is Roger Cotterill. Connie Chapman is the fiscal
Against that backdrop,
officer. Meetings will be held the ftrst Tuesday of each Bush faces a daunting chalmonth at 6:30p.m. at the Pageville town hall unless oth- lenge in getting Congress to
erwise announced.
renew the Trade Promotion
Authority, also known as
fast-track authority. It lets
English, explain the immi- the president negotiate trade
gration laws to them as well deals that Congress must
as help them with health approve without amendand food resources. In ments. That authority
from PageA1
regards to food resources, exp,ires on July I.
the outreach is also working
• Further trade liberalizathe face of the outreach in with
the Appalachian tion, particularly in serRacine, working directly Nutrition Network.
vices, could bring even largwith
the
mi11rants.
In addition to these
Francis~a·s order 1s the resources, the outreach will er gains to American conNorth American Union offer religious education sumers, firms and workers,"
Sister of Our Ladv of and an outlet for spiritual according to the report.
The Bush administration
Charity
in
Carrollton expression. Heinz said both
though she has previously the Racine and Bethany arl!ues that the way to deal
worked with the migrant United Methodist Churches wtth the trade deficit is
population . in
Meigs have offered space for through free-trade policies
County.
migrant children to receive that make it easier for U.S.
Sister Francisca said she a religious education under companies to do business
hopes to be in her office at the direction of the mission. abroad. Getting China to
least two nights a week as
Racine was chosen move to a more flexible curwell as some mornings. She because it seemed like the rene~ system, another
said she will be there to help best location to reach the admm~stration goal, also
translate for the migrants, migrants according to Sister would help U.S. exporters.
educate them in speaking Francisca.
Enough,' was the result of
local
sportsmen
and
landowners who had all
'had enough' of the alleged
criminal activity," ODNR 's
statement said.
If convicted, the suspects
will face fines, possible jail
time and forfeiture of hunting privileges. A first-time
wildlife offense involving
the illegal taking or possession of deer could result in
fines of up to $500 and a
maximum of 60 days in jail.
Violators may also be
required to pay restitution
for illegally taken animals,
at a minimum value of $400
per deer and $300 per wild
turke~. All illegally taken
wildlife. as well as firearms
and motor vehicles used in
the violations, may also be
ordered forfeited.
Investigation into this
case will continue and several char~es arc pending,
the wildltfe di vis ton said
yesterday.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

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Racine

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Scipio officers elected

The no longer mysterious Supreme Court

Fred Friendly, Edward R.
Murrow's longtime producer,
used to remind me that televiLetters to the editor are welcome. Thev should be less sion, at its beginning, was
tha11 300 words. Allletrers are subject to . editing, must be intended to educate as well as
.~igned, and include address and telephone number. No
entertain. In the historic,
~nsigned letters will be published. Letters should be i11
unprecedented four-part PBS
~ood taste, addre~·sing issues, not personalities. Letters of series "The Supreme Court,"
lhanks to organizations and individuals will nor be accept- the tumultuous history and
ed for publication.
the most influential, clashing
personalities of our "wurt of
last resort" have been made
available to the many
Americans for whom the
(USPS
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High Court seems very disRe~der Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
tant, though its rulings have
Co.
Correction Polley
affected milliohs of us for
Published every afternoon, Monday
generations.
Our main concern in aN stories is to
through Friday, 111 Cour1 Street,
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be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
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www.pbs.org/supremecourt.
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TV achievement. says: "The
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legitimacy and the accepGeneral Manager
Inside Melgt~ County
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Charlene Hoeftich, Ext. 12
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Tuesday,Februaryt3, 2007

Pomeroy
from PageA1
employee and therefore entitled to benefits such as insurance, sick leave, vacation
time, etc.
Spaun's motion not to
give the clerk-treasurer's
position a raise at this time
died for lack of a second.
In other council business:
Council approved paying
for two po11Ce r.hysicals .for
Pomeroy Patro men Ronnie
Spaun and Adam ·Holcomb
so that they may become full
time officers.
Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt informed
council his department had
purchased a 1999 Nissan
Sentra for law enforcement

RIVERVIEW

Chiropractic Center
Dr. Grepry L. Pimol I)('
(:'lliropnctk

P~ysi&lt;lan

•lnsun~nce

• Auto Accidents
• Worken Comp
• lled~id (WV &amp;OH)
•lledicat'll

Bad &amp; Neck Pain

c..--;p~~o~o

Nurses were kept busy taking blood for the various tests offered at the free health screening
Saturday sponsored by the Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wellness Services,
the Meigs County Health Department, and the Mulberry Community Center. Here front Robin
Schoonover, R.N. does a finger stick on Audrey Griffitts of Middleport for cholesterol and glucose evaluation, while Bonnie Mcfarland, R.N., , explains results to another participant.

CAR BOMBS SHATIER
BAGHDAD'S OLDEST AND LARGEST

MARKEr; AT LFAST 78 KillED
BY KIM GAMEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq
Thunderous car bombs shattered a crowded marketplace
in the heart of Baghdad on
Monday, triggering sec ondary explosions, engulfing an eight-story building in
flames and killing at least 78
people in the latest in a series
of similar attacks aimed at
the country's Shiite majority.
The blasts in three parked
cars obliterated shops and
stalls and left bodies scattered among mannequins
and oth~r debris in pools of
blood. Dense smoke blackened the area and rose hundreds of feet from the market
district on the east bank of
the Tigris River. Small fires,
fueled by clothing and other
goods, burned for hours in
the rubble-strewn street as
firelighters battled blazes in
two buildings.
"Where is the govern·
ment? Where is the security
~Ian?" survivors screamed.
'We have had enough. We
have lost our money and
l!oods and our source of livmg."
The attack ap~ared timed
to coincide wtth the first
anniversary on the
Muslim lunar calendar - of
the bombing of a Shiite
shrine in the town of
Samarta north of Baghdad,
an al-Qaida provocation
which unleashed the torrent
of sectarian bloodletting that
has gripped the capital for
months.
use for $1,800 from Warner
Pontiac in Parkersburg,
W.Va. The vehicle was purchased with drug-forfeited
money from the law
enforcement trust fund, has
70,000 miles on it and will
cost I he village $300 annually for liability insurance.
Proffitt said the vehicle will
be . used for a variety of services, including use by the
villa~e meter maid during
multtple, daily meter checks
downtown.
Arnott stated appreciation for the efforts of street
department employees dur-

ing the recent snow storm .
Council approved letting
Riverside Honda use the
parking lot for a weekend in
Match to display jet skis.
Council approved transferring $8,000 from the general fund to the street fund.

was optimistic about the
U.S.- Iraqi security sweep
that officials said will gain
momentum this week.
"We have great faith in our
security services, army and
police who have proved that
they are a real protectiva
force for this country, and
we have faith that Iraqis
have realized that there will
be no future for this country
unless terrorism is curbed,"
he said.
·
Brig.
Abdul-Karim
Khalaf, the Interior Ministry
spokesman, told Iraqiya
state television that three
suspects were arrested - an
Iraqi and two foreigners in the attack on the marketplace.
The car bombs exploded
within seconds of each other.
One of the cars was parked
near the entrance to a parking garage under one of the
two targeted buildings, aboui
200 yards apart.
.
Ambulances and pickup
trucks rushed many of the
166 wounded to nearby al.
Kindi Hospital in the large!~
Shiite neighborhood, whic
has been hit by a series o
deadly bombings this year.

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Monday's
bombings
wrecked the Shorja market,
Baghdad's oldest, a day after
joint U.S. and Iraqi forces
temporarily sealed an adjacent neighborhood. The
operation was part of the latest Baghdad security push to
which President Bush has
committed an additional
21,500 American troops.
The U.S. military would not
say if it had increased security patrols against potential
violence on the Samarra
anniversary.
Nationwide, 139 people
were killed or found dead in
violence
on
Monday,
according to police reports.
About 30 minutes before the
attack on the market, a suicide bomber detonated an
explosives vest in a crowd
near a popular falafel restaurant in the nearby Bab alSharqi area. Nine people
were killed and 19 wounded.
A IS-minute period of
commemoration in the capital marking the February
2006 attack on the alAskariya shrine had just
ended when attack on the
market took place.
The sound of two of the
blasts was caught on ta!'C as
Prime Minister Nourt alMaliki was delivering a
speech live on television
from the Cabinet building in
the heavily fortified Green
Zone at the end of the commemoration.
The Shiite prime rrtinister
didn't flinch - though his
bodyguards did - as he
called for unity and said he

Call ,.,..l.U.JOfO

or vtjlr uJ 1r ~.~. com

"A -.t ,,1,,·,'1 ,.,.._ '"" ~'--~ o)rill(ltf(J .tnd o»ffd/t(J

By Rolling Back Admission
&amp; Concession Prices To The
Same As They Were On
Friday February The 13th, 1998

�.The Daily S~ntinel

;.: The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

OPINION

Tuesday,Februaryta,aoo7

'Income insecurity' emerges as leading issue in '08 campaign

After Iraq, the most contentious
issue in politics is
111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio
'" economic insecurity" - a
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
jumble
of items that includes
•
www.mydallysentlnel.com
•
stagnant wages, inequality of
incomes and opportunity,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
globalization, outo;ourcing of
jobs and immigration.
Dan Goodrich
ll's the Lou Dobbs agenda
Publisher
- the list of complaints that
the CNN anchor r.tils about
each night, which has given
Charlene Hoeflich
rise to protectionist populism
General Manager-News Editor
in both parties and which cries
out for some stmight talk and
novel remedies.
The worst temptation will
Congress shall make ,o law respecting an
be lor Congress to, reject trade
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
agreements that the Bush
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom vf admini stration is preparing to
:speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- submit. cutting the United
States off from both export
: pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the . and import opportunities.
: Government for 11 redress of grievances.
Instead, the United States
needs tu improve its competi-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution tiveness and bolster the safety
net lor workers who lose their
jobs.
One idea that's received lit·
tle attention - but should get
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 13, the 44th day of 2007. There more - is wage insurance, a
relatively inexpensive proare 321 days left in the year.
gram
to make up part of a
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 11 , 1935, a jury in Flemington, N.J. , found worker's salary loss.
kobert Litan of the
Bruno Richard Hauptmann guilty of first-degree murder in
Brookings
Institution, a major
the kidnap-slaying of the son of Charles and Anne
proponent of the plan, estiLindbergh. (Hauptmann was later executed.)
mates tlmt it would cost just
On this date:
In 1542, the fifth wife of England's King Henry VIII. $3.5 billion a year - charged
Catherine Howard, was executed for adultery.
to employers at $25 per workIn 1795, the University of North Carolina be~ame the er - to provide pennanently
first U.S. state university to admit students with the arrival displaced workers with 50
of Hinton James, who was the only student on campus for percent of their lost wages up
iwo weeks.
to $10,(XX) a year for two
· In 1914, the American Society of Composers, Authors years.
and Publishers. known as ASCAP, was founded in New
Litan argues that current
York.
U.S. safety-net programs,
. In 1920, the League of Nations recognized the perpetual including
unemployment
neutrality of Switzerland.
insurance
and
tmde adjust· In 1945, during World War II, the Soviets captured
ment assistance, are inadeBudapest, Hungary, from the Germans.
quate,
hard to obtain and actu·
' In 1984, Konstantin Chernenko was chosen to be generfll secretary of the Soviet Communist Party 's Central ally &lt;;!iscourage workers from
finding new jobs.
Committee, succeeding the late Yuri Andropov
The potency of the insecuriIn 1988, the 15th winter Olympics opened in Calgary,
ty issue was on display when
Alberta, Canada.
Ten years ago: Discovery's astronauts hauled the Hubble
Space Telescope aboard the shuttle for a I billion-mile
tuneup to allow it to peer even deeper into the far reaches
of the universe. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial
average broke through the 7,000 barrier lor the first time,
ending the day at 7,022.44.
Five years ago: John Walker Lindh pleaded not-guilty in
federal court in Alexandria. Va.. to conspiring to kill
Americans and supponing the Taliban and terrorist ol'gani zations. Britain's Queen 61izabeth II made former New
York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani an honorary knight. In
li startling development at the Salt Lake City winter games,
the head of the French Olympic team said the French ft~­
itre skating judge had been pressured to "act in a certam
way" before she voted to give the gold medal to the
Russians in pairs. Country singer Waylon Jennings died in
Chandler, Ariz., at age 64.
. One year ago: Auditors reported that millions of dollars
in Hurricane Katrina disaster aid had been squandered,
paying for such items as a $450 tattoo and $375-a-day
beachfront condos. Joey Cheek won the men's 500 meters,
giving the U.S. its second speedskating gold medal of the
Turin Games. Hannah Teter won gold and Gretchen Bleiler
won silver in the halfpipe. Tatiana Totrrtianina ami Maxim
Marinin won the gold medal in pairs figure skating, extendIng Russia's four-decade dominance of the event.
: Thought for Today: "The world has no sympathy with
lillY but positive griefs; it will pity you for what you lose,
but never for what you lack." - Anne Sophie Swetchine,
~ussian-French author (1782-1857).

.
..
.

;TODAY IN HISTORY

Mortal•

Sen. Jim Webb. Va., devoted
half of the Democratic
response to the State of the
Union address to it, asserting
that ."the middle class of this
country, our historic backbone
and our best hope for a strong
society in the future, is losing
its place at the table."
"fhe stock market is at an
all-time high, and so are corporate
profits,"
Webb
observed. "But these benefits
are not being fairly shared.
When I graduated from college, the average corporate
CEO made 20 times what the
average worker did. Today,
it's 400 times."
President Bush was compelled to respond on the issue
with a pair of speeches last
week' touting the strength of
the American economy,
defending his policies of tax
cuts and free trade, but
acknowledging that "income
inequality is real," blaming it
on disparities in education, not
greed.
However, he also was compelled to urge corporate
boards to "pay attention to the
executive compensation packages that you approve. You
need to show the world that
American businesses are a
model of transparency and
good corporate governance."
All of the 2008 Democratic
candidates for .president are
likely to make economic insecurity a mainstay of their campaigns, and Republicans - if

they are smart - should pay
attention to it as well.
Last week, in a speech to
the New America Fountlation,
Sen. Hillary Rodharn Clinton,
D-N.Y., called for "a new 21st
century American bargain" to
help the middle class, including a universal health insurance plan (yet to be outlined),
"baby bond" savings acc6unts
established for each child, and
"American Dream Grants" to
encourage colleges to accept
and graduate more srudents.
Her argument was that policies of the Bush administration had led to a "hollowing
out of the middle" and "wage
stagnation." Productivity has
grown by 17.5 percent since
2000, she said, while median
household income has fallen
marginally, health care l'OSts
have risen 8I percent and college tuitions have increased
50 percent.
The Bush administration
argues back that average
wages at la•t have begun to
rise - I. 7 percent in the past
year - and that income
growth during the current econorrtic recovery actually has
been greater than during the
boom times of the Clinton
administration.
According to Labor and
Commerce department statistics distributed by the White
House, hourly wages have
risen at a yearly average of 2.8
percent since 2003 but rose
only OJ percent during the
1990s, and personal inoome
has risen 3 percent, compared
with OJ percent in the 1990s.
Democrats argue that
income gains have been
skewed to the highest-inwme
earners and that .wages lor
lower- and middle-income
workers have been flat ·or
falling.
Dobbs and other protection-

ists blame the trend on globalization - the drive of corporations to send U.S. jobs to
low-wage countries - along
with illegal immigration,
which allegedly depresses
wages for American workers.
Arguing for renewal of
trade promotion authority which allows for fast-track:
Congressional approval of
trade agreements the
White House points out that
42 percent of the U.S. work:
force is employed in finns
engaged in iniernational trade
and that jobs supported by
exports pay wages 13 percent
to 18 percent higher than the
average.
.
Still, there's strong pressure
on Democrats to oppose trade
agreements. Only 15 House
Democrats and I I Senate
Democrats voted for the
Central American Free Trade
Agreement in 2005, for example. Both leading Democratic
presidential
candidates,
Clil)ton and Sen. Barack
Obarna, Ill., voted against it.
Former Sen. John Edwards,
D-N.C., running as a populist
and trying to lock up union
support, insists that all agreements contain tough labor and
environmental standards, a
demand likely to stifle trade
negotiations.
Despite strong econorrtic
growth, economic insecurity
is real. The challenge for
Congress, Bush and the 2008
candidates is to deal wilil it
constructively, not try to cut
America off from the world
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

FOUR SCORE &amp; SEVEN ...

Meeting rescheduled
CHESTER - Chester Township Board of Tru stees
wtll hold a rescheduled meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday at
the Chester Town Hall . Last week's meeting was cancel ed due to bad weather.

Postpone meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - The meeting of the Tuppers
Plam s Regaonal Sewer Di strict scheduled for Monday
has been rescheduled for Feb. 19.

Racine Youth League
RACINE - The Racine Youth League's first meeting
of the season will take place at I p.m., Saturday at the
Racme Amencan Legton Hall . The meeting will consist
of the electton of officers. Anyone interested in becom ing a league officer is asked to attend. Contact Allen
Tucker, 247 -2103 .

Office closed
_POMEROY - The Meig s County Health Department
wall be closed on Monday for Presidents Day.

Pancake supper
POMEROY - St. Paul Lutheran Church will begin
lent on Shrove Tuesday (Fat Tuesday) with a pancake
supper from 5 - 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 20 at the church.

Coalition meeting
PO~EROY - The Meigs County Community
Coalttton, a _grass-roots organization to provide youth
drug prevenlton and educational services to locals will
meet at 7 p.m. on Thursday at the Mulberry Community
Center. Speaking will be various coalition service
providers such as Health Recovery Services, Woodland
Centers, Meigs County Health Department, Abstinence
Butldmgs Character program, Meigs County
Department of Job and Family Services. Discussion to
constst of how these providers impact the community
and what services they perform.

Bush makes
fresh pitch for
free-trade policies
as way to keep
economy healthy

Nat
Hentoff

.

less be followed."
But too few Americans school children and adults know of how the Supreme
Court ha~ continually been at
the core of protecting our
essential liberties and rights
against fear-ridden majorities
of citizens and Congress in
times of national danger, as
well as presidents who
sweepingly ignore the sepamtion of powers. The Supreme
Court itself - as this series
demonstrates vi,vidly - has
also rolled over the
Constitution in titnes of crisis. as in its approval of the
internment
camps
of
Japanese-Americans during
World War II. !3ut this repul&gt;lie resiliently comes back to
its roots of liberty, in part
because of the Supreme
Court redeeming its rrtistakes.
But as many surveys have
shown - as well as Jay
Leno's impromptu quizzes of
college students on the
"Tonight Show" - many
Americans are educationally
disadvantaged in their know!edge of this history of who
we are - and who
black -robed justices are who
have the power to make ,deci- ·

those

sions not only on national
security, but also concerning,
at times, intimate details of
our personal lives.
How many of us kliow
what in the life and temperament of Chief Justice John
Marshall gave him the daring
to find in a Congressional act
setting up the federal court
system the power of the
Supreme Court, and other
federal courts, to declare acts
of Congress unconstitutional?
The 1803 decision Marbury
v. Madison changed the
course of this country.
How many of us know
anything about former slave
owner Justice John Marshall
Harlan, whose lonely dissents
tried to awaken the Court that
for years stopped the "equal
protection of the laws" guarantee in the Fourteenth
Amendment from applying to
black Americans?
These and other ''personalities and rivalries that defined
America" are brought back to
life in this invaluable TV
series - a true reality show
that both entertains and educates.
This series also has a longrange component a
national educational outreach
campaign to reach community groups, libraries and of
special importance, schools.
Because of the No Child Left
Behind Law, so much time is
heing spent on preparing students to pass reading and
math tests . that hardly any
time is left for the already
dirrtinishing classes in what

used to be called civics. We
are not educating a new generation to become citizens
actively informed in keeping
us both safe and free.
Among the companions to
this TV series is a wide-ranging Web site that will be live
online for four years
(www.pbs.org/wnetlsupremecourt) that contains all the
resources for educators.
The press reviews for the
four-part "Supreme Court"
TV series have been very
favorable - except for one. I
feel sorry for New York
Tunes readers who were put
off from watching by a stunningly supercilious and ignorant review (Jan. 21) by
Virginia Heffernan, who
found it ''boring."
The New York Tunes has
superbly
knowledgeable
Supreme Court reponers Linda Greenhouse and Adam
Liptak - but chose to assign
the review to a writer who is
very badly educationally disadvantaged.
But none of the rest of us
need be in that sad state
thanks to Thirteen/WNET
and PBS. There's more to
television than Donald
Trump and Rosie O'Donnell.

WASHINGTON - Freetrade policies that make it
easier for U.S. companies to
seII their products are
important to the economy 's
vitality, President Bush said
Monday as he projected a
year of good - though
somewhat slower - economic growth.
Bush, in his annual economic report to Congress,
made a fresh pitch for
breaking down trade barriers and energizing global
trade talks. He also called
on Congress to elltend his
authority to negotiate freetrade deals, a request likely
to face an uphill battle in the
De moe rat ic -c on t ro lied
Congress.
"This authority is essential to completing good
trade agreements," Bush
wrote in the introduction to
the report. "The Congress
must renew it if we are to
improve our competitive,
ness in the global economy."

Pancake supper set

(Nar Hemojf is a nationally
renowned autlwrity on the
First Amendment and the Bill
of Righrs ond autlwr of many
books, including "The War
011 rhe Bill of Rights and rhe
Gathering
Resislallce"
(Seven Stories Press, 2003).)

Poachers
from PageA1
or possessing an untagged
deer and providing false
information to a check station.
Meigs County Wildlife
Officer Keith Wood and the
division's covert enforcement unit conducted the
investigation , assisted by
the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, Meigs County
Sheriff's
Office
and
Pomeroy
Police
Department.
Investigators conducted a
search warrant and issued
citations at se ven locations
on
Friday
afternoon.
Officials seized dozens of
white-tailed deer mounts
and antler racks, firearms
and all-terrain vehicles.
"The undercover investigation, dubbed 'Operation

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"WE DEliVER"

Holzer offers health screening

AP ECONOMICS WRITER

With the United States
racking up record trade
deficits and facing intense
competition from rapidly
growing China and India,
global trade tensions have
intensified.
Democrats blame Bush's
free-trade policies for conRACINE - The Men's Group of the Racine United tributing to the trade deficit,
Methodist Church will sponsor a piancake supper costing U.S. factories jobs
Thursday with serving from 4 to 7 p.m . Donations for and exposing U.S. workers
the super wtll be used to help fun\! the ministry of the to unfair competition from
low-wage countries.
church. The public is invited.
"We need to shift focus so
that working Americans
start to feel as good about
our changing economy as
HARRISONVILLE - The Scipio Township Trustees those at the very top do,"
at a recent meeting elected Randy Butcher president and said Sen. Charles Schumer,
Robert Butcher vice piresident. The third member of the D-N .Y.
board is Roger Cotterill. Connie Chapman is the fiscal
Against that backdrop,
officer. Meetings will be held the ftrst Tuesday of each Bush faces a daunting chalmonth at 6:30p.m. at the Pageville town hall unless oth- lenge in getting Congress to
erwise announced.
renew the Trade Promotion
Authority, also known as
fast-track authority. It lets
English, explain the immi- the president negotiate trade
gration laws to them as well deals that Congress must
as help them with health approve without amendand food resources. In ments. That authority
from PageA1
regards to food resources, exp,ires on July I.
the outreach is also working
• Further trade liberalizathe face of the outreach in with
the Appalachian tion, particularly in serRacine, working directly Nutrition Network.
vices, could bring even largwith
the
mi11rants.
In addition to these
Francis~a·s order 1s the resources, the outreach will er gains to American conNorth American Union offer religious education sumers, firms and workers,"
Sister of Our Ladv of and an outlet for spiritual according to the report.
The Bush administration
Charity
in
Carrollton expression. Heinz said both
though she has previously the Racine and Bethany arl!ues that the way to deal
worked with the migrant United Methodist Churches wtth the trade deficit is
population . in
Meigs have offered space for through free-trade policies
County.
migrant children to receive that make it easier for U.S.
Sister Francisca said she a religious education under companies to do business
hopes to be in her office at the direction of the mission. abroad. Getting China to
least two nights a week as
Racine was chosen move to a more flexible curwell as some mornings. She because it seemed like the rene~ system, another
said she will be there to help best location to reach the admm~stration goal, also
translate for the migrants, migrants according to Sister would help U.S. exporters.
educate them in speaking Francisca.
Enough,' was the result of
local
sportsmen
and
landowners who had all
'had enough' of the alleged
criminal activity," ODNR 's
statement said.
If convicted, the suspects
will face fines, possible jail
time and forfeiture of hunting privileges. A first-time
wildlife offense involving
the illegal taking or possession of deer could result in
fines of up to $500 and a
maximum of 60 days in jail.
Violators may also be
required to pay restitution
for illegally taken animals,
at a minimum value of $400
per deer and $300 per wild
turke~. All illegally taken
wildlife. as well as firearms
and motor vehicles used in
the violations, may also be
ordered forfeited.
Investigation into this
case will continue and several char~es arc pending,
the wildltfe di vis ton said
yesterday.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

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Scipio officers elected

The no longer mysterious Supreme Court

Fred Friendly, Edward R.
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Tuesday,Februaryt3, 2007

Pomeroy
from PageA1
employee and therefore entitled to benefits such as insurance, sick leave, vacation
time, etc.
Spaun's motion not to
give the clerk-treasurer's
position a raise at this time
died for lack of a second.
In other council business:
Council approved paying
for two po11Ce r.hysicals .for
Pomeroy Patro men Ronnie
Spaun and Adam ·Holcomb
so that they may become full
time officers.
Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt informed
council his department had
purchased a 1999 Nissan
Sentra for law enforcement

RIVERVIEW

Chiropractic Center
Dr. Grepry L. Pimol I)('
(:'lliropnctk

P~ysi&lt;lan

•lnsun~nce

• Auto Accidents
• Worken Comp
• lled~id (WV &amp;OH)
•lledicat'll

Bad &amp; Neck Pain

c..--;p~~o~o

Nurses were kept busy taking blood for the various tests offered at the free health screening
Saturday sponsored by the Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wellness Services,
the Meigs County Health Department, and the Mulberry Community Center. Here front Robin
Schoonover, R.N. does a finger stick on Audrey Griffitts of Middleport for cholesterol and glucose evaluation, while Bonnie Mcfarland, R.N., , explains results to another participant.

CAR BOMBS SHATIER
BAGHDAD'S OLDEST AND LARGEST

MARKEr; AT LFAST 78 KillED
BY KIM GAMEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq
Thunderous car bombs shattered a crowded marketplace
in the heart of Baghdad on
Monday, triggering sec ondary explosions, engulfing an eight-story building in
flames and killing at least 78
people in the latest in a series
of similar attacks aimed at
the country's Shiite majority.
The blasts in three parked
cars obliterated shops and
stalls and left bodies scattered among mannequins
and oth~r debris in pools of
blood. Dense smoke blackened the area and rose hundreds of feet from the market
district on the east bank of
the Tigris River. Small fires,
fueled by clothing and other
goods, burned for hours in
the rubble-strewn street as
firelighters battled blazes in
two buildings.
"Where is the govern·
ment? Where is the security
~Ian?" survivors screamed.
'We have had enough. We
have lost our money and
l!oods and our source of livmg."
The attack ap~ared timed
to coincide wtth the first
anniversary on the
Muslim lunar calendar - of
the bombing of a Shiite
shrine in the town of
Samarta north of Baghdad,
an al-Qaida provocation
which unleashed the torrent
of sectarian bloodletting that
has gripped the capital for
months.
use for $1,800 from Warner
Pontiac in Parkersburg,
W.Va. The vehicle was purchased with drug-forfeited
money from the law
enforcement trust fund, has
70,000 miles on it and will
cost I he village $300 annually for liability insurance.
Proffitt said the vehicle will
be . used for a variety of services, including use by the
villa~e meter maid during
multtple, daily meter checks
downtown.
Arnott stated appreciation for the efforts of street
department employees dur-

ing the recent snow storm .
Council approved letting
Riverside Honda use the
parking lot for a weekend in
Match to display jet skis.
Council approved transferring $8,000 from the general fund to the street fund.

was optimistic about the
U.S.- Iraqi security sweep
that officials said will gain
momentum this week.
"We have great faith in our
security services, army and
police who have proved that
they are a real protectiva
force for this country, and
we have faith that Iraqis
have realized that there will
be no future for this country
unless terrorism is curbed,"
he said.
·
Brig.
Abdul-Karim
Khalaf, the Interior Ministry
spokesman, told Iraqiya
state television that three
suspects were arrested - an
Iraqi and two foreigners in the attack on the marketplace.
The car bombs exploded
within seconds of each other.
One of the cars was parked
near the entrance to a parking garage under one of the
two targeted buildings, aboui
200 yards apart.
.
Ambulances and pickup
trucks rushed many of the
166 wounded to nearby al.
Kindi Hospital in the large!~
Shiite neighborhood, whic
has been hit by a series o
deadly bombings this year.

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Monday's
bombings
wrecked the Shorja market,
Baghdad's oldest, a day after
joint U.S. and Iraqi forces
temporarily sealed an adjacent neighborhood. The
operation was part of the latest Baghdad security push to
which President Bush has
committed an additional
21,500 American troops.
The U.S. military would not
say if it had increased security patrols against potential
violence on the Samarra
anniversary.
Nationwide, 139 people
were killed or found dead in
violence
on
Monday,
according to police reports.
About 30 minutes before the
attack on the market, a suicide bomber detonated an
explosives vest in a crowd
near a popular falafel restaurant in the nearby Bab alSharqi area. Nine people
were killed and 19 wounded.
A IS-minute period of
commemoration in the capital marking the February
2006 attack on the alAskariya shrine had just
ended when attack on the
market took place.
The sound of two of the
blasts was caught on ta!'C as
Prime Minister Nourt alMaliki was delivering a
speech live on television
from the Cabinet building in
the heavily fortified Green
Zone at the end of the commemoration.
The Shiite prime rrtinister
didn't flinch - though his
bodyguards did - as he
called for unity and said he

Call ,.,..l.U.JOfO

or vtjlr uJ 1r ~.~. com

"A -.t ,,1,,·,'1 ,.,.._ '"" ~'--~ o)rill(ltf(J .tnd o»ffd/t(J

By Rolling Back Admission
&amp; Concession Prices To The
Same As They Were On
Friday February The 13th, 1998

�The Daily Sentinel

bV1818C11011 ...

PageA6

OHIO

Tuesday,February13,2007

Leaders at odds over timing
of school funding fix

BY TERRY KINNEY
'

8Y JUUE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

AP plloto

Liz Carroll, left, consults with her attorney Gregory Cohen during jury selection, Monday in

Cincinnati. Last summer, Carroll triggered a massive search for her 3-year-old developmentally disabled foster child when she said he had disappeared from a suburban
Cincinnati park. Jury selection began Monday morning in the trial of Carroll. 30, in the
death of her foster son. who authorities said never went missing from the park, but died
after being wrapped in a blanket and packing tape and left in a closet while his foster parents traveled to Kentucky for a family reunion.
ing him.
Clermont
County
Common Pleas Judge
Robert Ringland has ruled
the typically secret grand
jury testimony can be presented at trial because the
transcript showed prosecutors repeatedly told Liz
Carroll she could stop
answering questions at any
time, and that if she
answered she could be
charged with a crime based
on what she said.
Since the boy's death, the
state has moved to revoke
the license of the private
a~ency that helped place
h1m with the Carrolls, who

also are charged here with surrounding the park. Liz
kidnapping,
felonious Carroll begged the public to
assault and r;hild endanger- continue looking even after
ing. Last week, Lifeway For authorities called off their
Youth said it would no search. By then. authorities
longer fight the decision say they had already begun
and will stop doing business investigating the Carrolls'
role in the boy's disappearin Ohio.
ance.
The Carrolls also face
Prosecutors have said the
trial on lesser charges,
including perjury and Carrolls' live-in companion,
inducing panic, in Hamilton Amy Baker, provided inforCounty, where they told mauon leading to the couauthorities Aug . 16 that ple's indictments. She is
Marcus wandered off or had among 14 people on the
beea taken from a park dur- state's list of potential witing an outing with Liz nesses for Liz Carroll's
CarrolL
triaL
Hundreds of volunteers
Ringland has set aside
spent days combing the area live days for the trial.

Ohio gives snowbirds more time in
state without paying income tax
CLEVELAND (AP) A change in law that
allows people who spend
the Ohio winters in
warmer climates to pay
less income taxes here can
help charities, proponents
of the change say.
The law allows snowbirds to spend more time
in Ohio without being
classified as residents.
who have to pay taxes on
any income and investment
earnings .
Nonresidents only have to
pay taxes on income they
earn or receive in the
state.
The ·House and the
Senate approved the final
version of the measure
unanimously last year, and
former Gov. Bob Taft
signed it into law before
leaving office.
The state ta~ department
has estimated the change
could cost Ohio up to $30
million a year in income

tax revenue·. But some legislators say that estimate
is too high and that
encouraging e~-Ohioans
to spend more time here
will boost sales tax revenue and strengthei1 charitable work and donations.
"It 'II definitely cost the
state in income tax there 's no question about
thaV' said former State
Rep. Jim Trakas, the
Independence Republican
who sponsored the change
in tax law. "But when you
look at the sales tax and
the multiplier effect of
these people living here
and buying goods and services , there's no comparison."

Jim Delaney, a retired
accountant who worked in
the Cleveland office of
Deloitte &amp; Touche and
now lives in Naples, Fla.,
estimated that more than
I 00,000
nonresidents
might spend an e~tra

month in Ohio. If they
spent $2,000 each during
that extra stay, he said,
they would generate $200
million in economic activity for the state.
Trakas put the estimated
loss in income tax at $7
million to $10 million.
Charities supported the
bill because they said they
were losing board members and contributors who
were advised by accountants and financial planners to sever their ties
with Obio or risk being
declared residents.
"We were losing some
of our best people," said
Sandra Wuliger, who leads
the . Jewish Community
Federation's development
committee. "This also
helps bring home charity
dollars to Cleveland."
Wuliger said the limits
forced some longtime supporters to step down from
boards or stop volunteer-

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Glrk tounuunent sc:om, Page Bl

PERSPECTIVE:

1111111

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BATAVIA - Last summer, a woman triggered a
massive search for her 3year-old developmentally
disabled foster .:hild when
she said he had disappeared
from a suburban Cincinnati
park .
Jury selection began
Monday morning in the trial
of LiL Carroll , 30. in the
death of her foster son, who
authorities said never went
missing from the park, but
died after being wrapped in
a blanket and packing tape
and left in a dose! while his
foster parents traveled to
Kentucky for a family
reunion. Potential jurors
were told Mondav to refrain
from reading or 'watching
media accounts of the case
and not to discuss it outside
of their jury duties.
Carroll and her husband,
David Carroll Jr., 29. have
pleaded not guilty to murder in a case that has led to
calls for reform in Ohio's
foster care system. David
Carroll, set to stand trial
March 19. also is charged
with gross abuse of a
corpse.
Prosecutors allege that he
took the body of Marcus
Fiesel to a rural area of
southwest Ohio, burned it
and dumped most of the
remains into the Ohio
River. Some small, charred
bone fragments have been
recovered near a crude, outdoor fireplace, but DNA
tests were not conclusive.
Liz Carroll acknowledged
in grand jury testimony
days after the child was
reported missing in August
that he had been left in the
closet and died, but she said
she had no intention of hurt-

InSide

ing in favor of working for
charities in the places
where they lived when not
in Ohio.
Stephen Weinberg, who
has helped the Jewish
Community Federation of
Cleveland with fundraising and strategic planning
during 30 years of volunteer work, said the change
will help him with record
keeping for ta~es .
He heads Weinberg
Wealth Management and
remains active in the business, but spends much of
the year in Florida.
The additional days
"make it so much easier,"
he said . "Now, I'm not
looking over my shoulder.
I think I' II be more effective."

COL UMBUS - House
Speaker Jon Husted is as
curious as the ne~t guy about
how the new Democratic
governor will propose to fix
Ohio's
unconstitutional
school funding system.
So are the education lobbyists. And the journalists.
Gov. Ted Strickland' s
answer is simple: He doesn't
know yet.
Strickland, who will present his lirst budget to the
Re publi c an -con t ro II ed
Legislature next month, has '
fended off Husted's suggestions that his liscal blueprint
should contain a proposed
solution to the tle.:ade-old
problem.
Options to address the
Ohio Supreme Coon's mandate to even out inequities
between rich and poor districts include raising taxes to
provide more overall mo11ey
or pooling property ta~es
statewide .
Strickland stuck to earlier
statements that he would
''begin a statewide conversation" on the issue sometime
after his budget proposal is
presented, engaging teachers, parents, businesses and
others with an interest in a
better way to dole out state
money for teachers, textbooks, lield trips ·and the
like. That document will recommend state spending for
the two years beginning July
I.
During a meeting with
reponers last week, Husted
appeared
miffed
that
Strickland would• blast
Ohio's way of paying for
public schools on the campaign trail yet not be forthcoming with remedies.
"We know what the
options are," said Husted, a
Kettering Republican. "We
want to work with him, don't
get me wrong, but your budget is your document that is
your two-year funding system for education."
The Ohio Supreme Court
declared the state's schoolfunding system unconstitutional three times before
ending a 12-year-old lawsuit
in 2004 and returning the
issue to lawmakers. Former
Gov. Bob Taft created a
committee to explore ways
to change how schools are
funded, but Taft ended his
eight-year
tenure
in
December with the issue still
largely unresolved.
Husted, who must leave
the House because of term
limits after this session, is
eager to debate publicly on
the issue. He vehemently
defends the progress both
traditional public schools
and alternatives such as
charter schools and voucher

programs have made m
recent years.
"In the last I0 years.
we've moved the ball a long
way," he said. 'The governor said he didn' t think it
was far enough. Right now,
we can't really work with
him on a solution until we
know what his solution is."
The current budget spent
$6.2 billion on schools in its
lirs1 year. which represented
a 2.3 percent increase from
the year before, and $6.4 billion this year. a 2.1 percent
increase. But it froze funding
for nearly a third of Ohio
school districts, inducting
the struggling Cleveland city
schools.
Husted, a young politician
whose name has been suggested for higher ofl'ice,
would miss a key political
and policy opportunity if
Strickland e~cludes signiftca,nt education changes from
the budget debate.
The new governor, however. .has signaled that he
will work on the problems
he perceives in the state with
measured patience.
He eschewed early pressure to have a " 100 Day
Plan" like that of his GOP
rival for governor, Ken
Blackwell, and has put off
the State of the State address
often delivered in January or
February until the middle of
March.
William Phillis. director of
the group of school districts
that sued the state over the
funding
system,
said
Strickland is justilied in
waiting.
Changes called for by the
Ohio Supreme Court to
make the system "thorough
and efficient" under the
Ohio Constitution are monumental, he said.
"We have per pupil fund.
ing that ranges from $17,000
down to $6.500 in some districts. we have gross inadequacies in educational
opportunities for some kids
in the poor districts, we have
levy fatigue in school districts that are going to the
ballot every two or three
years," he said. "This system
has never been ruled constitutional since it was established 156 years ago. How
could anyone within a couple of months remedy so
much neglect''"
Yet the coalition of teachers' union and other education groups, including
Phillis'. pushing a fall ballot
initiative has also signaled
its unwillingness to wait any
longer. The group's broadly
phrased
constitutional
amendment, an attempt to
address elements of the
school funding dilemma,
cleared regulators last week
and signature gatherers are
on the move.

Thesday, February 13, 2007

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAOV - A sc:t'wiWie cl ~ C01ege
and ~ school VlliSIIy spotW10 evenia l'lvoMng
...,... Iran Gda and t.te.gs CllU"'tiaa..

n·dn'• 9""''
Boyo Boolcotbotl

Hannan at South Gallia, e p.m.
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 7 p_m
Trtmble al Meigs, 6:30p.m.

w-··

Cot!ove Book-"

CedarviUe al Rio Grande, 8 p.m.

=

Coltogo Bookotboll
Cedarvilte at Rio Grande, 6 p.m
lhdnepq''Y'J

GIM Tournament

Redmen
swept at
Lee, Bryan

Eagles'
Reid taking
leave of
absence

BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO TH E SENTINEl

INII

CLEVELAND. Tenn.
The University of Rio
Grande Redmen baseball
team closed out the first
road trip of the season with
lburJdq'a prnu
on
Monday afternoon in a
BoyoBook_.l
twinbill at natiomilly ranked
Athens at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
GtrtoTournomontBootcoLee
University.
The
South Gallia vs. Green (at Athens), 6:15
Flames cranked up the
p.m.
Eastern vs. Eastern/St. Joe (at Athens•.
offense and pitched well in
&amp;p .m .
taking two from the
Redmen. winning game
one,
I0-0 and capturing the
Southern at Trimole. 6:30p.m.
nightcap, 6-3.
41exander &amp;1 Meigs, 6:30p.m.
Miller at Eastern. 6:30p.m.
Rio Grande (1 -4) strugRiver Val~y at Fairland. 6 p.m.
gled in game one as the
Redmen could not solve
Michael Oberg. Oberg was
nearly perfect as he hurled a
INSIDE
five-mmng· no-httter and
Edgar Mercado supplied the
offense and in the first game
as the Lee rolled to the win.
It was the second time on
the trip that the Redmen
failed to get a hit in a ball
game. Oberg struck out
four and walked two in
picking up his first victory
of the season.
Lee University (6-1 ),
ranked 19th in the NAlA
pre-:;eason roll, was led on
offense by Mercado, who
blasted home runs in both
games.
Mercado treated the
• Gallipolis elini'lated.
Redmen pitching staff rudeSee Page B2
ly, collecting four hits, four
RBI and four runs scored.
Freshman
righthander
Cody
Lawhorn
made his
CoNTACT US
first start of his college
career and took the loss. He
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
~ave up si~ runs and six hits
1-741&gt;-446-2342 ext. 33
m 2 113 innings, walking
Fu- 1·740-446·3008
four and not recording a
strikeout.
E-maU- sportsOmydaity&amp;entinel .com
Rio Grande team made it
sport• SlaH
a
contest in the nightcap.
BI'IICI Sherman, Sporta Editor
The
Redmen moved on top
t740)446-2342. ext 33
1-0 in the lirst. Lee put four
bshermanOmydiutytribune.com
runs on the board in the
Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
third inning to put the si~th
t740) 446·2342, ext 23
win of the year away.
lcrumOmydaityreglstercom
Dallas Sims started and
Alexander vs . River Valley (at
Welliton), 6:15p.m
Tri~ ws. Southam (at Athens), 7 p.m.
Meios &gt;JS. Fairfield Union {at
Alexander). a p.m.

::.-a:=.

Bryan Waltera, Sporta Writer
(740) 446· 2342. ext. 33
bwalters 0 m'l(lailyh ibune.com

PROFOODill

PluHIHhdlllen.82

San Diego
Chargers
coach Marty
Schottenheim
er shouts
instructions
at his players
during football practice
in this Jan.
10 file photo
in San Diego.
The Chargers
fired
Schottenheim
er on
Monday.

Bv Roa

MAADDI

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Schottenheimer fired
BY BERNIE WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO - Marty
Schottenheimer performed
well enough to go 14-2
last season despite what
team
president
Dean
Spanos called a "dy sfunctional situation" between
the coach and his general
manager.
The relationship got so
bad in the last month that
Spanos
fired
Schottenheimer
on
Monday night, another
shocking development for
a team that thought it was
Super Bowl -worthy ' but

lost its playoff opener.
Spanos said the e~odus
of assistant coaches - the
two coordinators became
NFL head coaches and two
assistants became coordinators - contributed to a
difficult situation that
resulted in the coach being
fired. Schottenheimer is
due more than $3 million
for the final year left on
his contract.
While confirming he had
no working relationship
with general manager A.J.
Smith,
Schottenheimer
seemed
puzzled
that
Spanos made the coach
take the fall for his assis-

"We deliver eve

PHILADELPHIA
Andy Reid is facing a crisis
far tougher than a quarterback controversy or a disruptive player.
The Philadelphia Eagles
coach will leave the team
for a month to deal with
developments that have
rocked his family the past
two weeks - one son tested positive for heroin,
another was arraigned on
drug and weapons charges.
The team said the leave
will last until mid-March.
"He 's not going to come
into the office. His priorities will be his family for
that period of time, but he
will be available to have a
couple of calls with us and
collaborate and if he needed to be here for a visit of a
free agent," Eagles president Joe Banner said
Monday. " He will retain
final.. say over whatever we
d0.

tants leaving.
"That is absolutely
unfair, in my view,"
Schottenheimer told The
Associated Press in a telephone interview. "We had
no control over two guys
who became head coaches
in this league. "We gave
two guys an opportunity to
be coordinators in this
league. We've added a
couple of guys that people
should be very pleased
with. The future coach
wi II be very pleased, as
well."
Schottenheimer
did

Reid , who is also the
team's head of football
operations, will miss the
NFL scouting combine and
the start of free agency,
Teams may begin voluntary
offseason workouts March
19. Reid plans to attend the
NFL owners' meetings in
Arizona in late March, and
will be back for the NFL
draft April 28-29.
. The Eagles have II unrestncted free agents, notably
wide receiver Donte'
Stallworth and backup
quarterback Jeff Garcia.
"Before any of this had
happened, we had finalized
our own plans as to what

Pleue see Fired. 82

Please HI Reid. 82

bing you expect:'

Complete Women's Health Care at PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Heart Fair

Company increases estimated
cost of uranium enrichment plant
PIKETON (APJ - The
company building a proposed uranium-enrichment
plant in southern Ohio said
MondaY. it will cost abol!t
$2.3 btllion, up from the
$1.7 billion the company
estimateq five years ago.
USEC Inc., based in
Bethesda, Md. , is developing
the
American
Centrifuge project at an old
atomic weapon!&gt; plant here.
It would produce fuel for
nuclear reactor\.
The company originally
planned to pay for the proJect by railing it&gt; own
money and borrowing, but
now \ay1 that to raise
money for 2008 and beyond
it will need to turn to investment or other participation
by other c.: ompanie' or the
U.S. government.
USEC did a comprehensive review of the project
last year and dted increased
materials and commodities
costs as the main difference
from the initial estimate.
wbicb was developed using
data from the
U.S.
l&gt;epartment of Energy 's
centrifuge project.

However, the company
said a one-year delay for
testing of machines to be
used at the plant turned out
to be lucky because the
machines built later had output that's 10 percent greater
. than originally eXJX:Cted.
The increased efftciency
will help offset cost increases, the company sai\1.
"The time we invested in
obtaining better performance proved to be very
beneticial," John K. Welch,
USEC president and chief
executive offtcer. said in a
statement.
"This is an ambitious plan
from both a cost and a
schedule perspective, and
the target estimate assumes
cost savings we are. working
to achieve in 2007."
USEC plans to begin
operations in late 2009 and
have about 11.500 machines
working in 2012. Tbe towering machines would rise
43 feet in the air and use
centrifugal l"orce to separate
the uranium, concentrating
isotopes into forms that can
be used as fue I.
The project would also

generaie tons of radioactive
waste - enough over 30
years to fill 41 ,000 cylinders weighing about 14 tons
apiece, according to the
Nuclear
Regulatory
Commission.
The new cost estimate
includes $371 million
USEC spent through 2006
to develop and demonstrate
the American · Centrifuge
technology.
USEC said it plans to
spend about $340 million
on the project in 2007 and
about double that amount in
2008.
USEC said it is also looking at .ways in which customers; project participants
and vendors could help support the financing.
The company says a small
number of centrifuges have
been installed at the site.
about 65 miles south of
Columbus. and have been
operated in the last three
months . Rel\lted systems
have been conditioned with
uranium hexatluoride gas.
and USEC expeC"ts to introduC"e the uranium gas into
the centrifuges soon .

• Blood Pressure Screenings Special Presentation at
12 Noon
• Cholesterol &amp; Glucose
Screenings (Non, Fasting)
• Body Fat Analysis
• Heart Healthy Food
Information
• Smoking Cessation Info
• Holzer Cardiovascular
Institute Information
• And Much More!!

MICIIAI:.L W. COitBIN,. MD

.Women and
Heart Disease

HOY J. ~WINDSOR, MD

•Poiut Pleasant Off'JCe:
Plea• •• ~ Ho&amp;pilal

Ph •ValltyiJosPt"
2:S20 \Wiey DriYe .
Se ., 215
Pod: PI! •• WV 2SSSO
'

bx_
Michael A. Englund. DO.
Curdio/ogisr
Holzer Cardiovascular Institute

(304) 67S..UB

A box lWich. provided by Pfizer
Phannaccuticals, will be available
to those who atten~ the presentation.

All are welcome!

-- !-----

2520 Valley Orne
Suile 214
Puialt Pic
WV&lt;lSSSO

=•,

(304) 675-4139

(304) 675-3405

MDI fl'lCt CliDit

140 Pinotll Slreet

'U~S«-A11~

~.W¥25271

Middkf"W"- OH 4-SM

(304) Jn-5756

(741) 992 6434
----- -----------

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

- --- - ·-

•Point Pleasant OffJCe:
Hospital
2520 Valin• DriveSuite !14
Point PleawJL WV 25S50

•Ripley,. wv Oflice:

•Middleport

, MARK W. NOLAN. MD

PlaMnt Valley

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�The Daily Sentinel

bV1818C11011 ...

PageA6

OHIO

Tuesday,February13,2007

Leaders at odds over timing
of school funding fix

BY TERRY KINNEY
'

8Y JUUE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

AP plloto

Liz Carroll, left, consults with her attorney Gregory Cohen during jury selection, Monday in

Cincinnati. Last summer, Carroll triggered a massive search for her 3-year-old developmentally disabled foster child when she said he had disappeared from a suburban
Cincinnati park. Jury selection began Monday morning in the trial of Carroll. 30, in the
death of her foster son. who authorities said never went missing from the park, but died
after being wrapped in a blanket and packing tape and left in a closet while his foster parents traveled to Kentucky for a family reunion.
ing him.
Clermont
County
Common Pleas Judge
Robert Ringland has ruled
the typically secret grand
jury testimony can be presented at trial because the
transcript showed prosecutors repeatedly told Liz
Carroll she could stop
answering questions at any
time, and that if she
answered she could be
charged with a crime based
on what she said.
Since the boy's death, the
state has moved to revoke
the license of the private
a~ency that helped place
h1m with the Carrolls, who

also are charged here with surrounding the park. Liz
kidnapping,
felonious Carroll begged the public to
assault and r;hild endanger- continue looking even after
ing. Last week, Lifeway For authorities called off their
Youth said it would no search. By then. authorities
longer fight the decision say they had already begun
and will stop doing business investigating the Carrolls'
role in the boy's disappearin Ohio.
ance.
The Carrolls also face
Prosecutors have said the
trial on lesser charges,
including perjury and Carrolls' live-in companion,
inducing panic, in Hamilton Amy Baker, provided inforCounty, where they told mauon leading to the couauthorities Aug . 16 that ple's indictments. She is
Marcus wandered off or had among 14 people on the
beea taken from a park dur- state's list of potential witing an outing with Liz nesses for Liz Carroll's
CarrolL
triaL
Hundreds of volunteers
Ringland has set aside
spent days combing the area live days for the trial.

Ohio gives snowbirds more time in
state without paying income tax
CLEVELAND (AP) A change in law that
allows people who spend
the Ohio winters in
warmer climates to pay
less income taxes here can
help charities, proponents
of the change say.
The law allows snowbirds to spend more time
in Ohio without being
classified as residents.
who have to pay taxes on
any income and investment
earnings .
Nonresidents only have to
pay taxes on income they
earn or receive in the
state.
The ·House and the
Senate approved the final
version of the measure
unanimously last year, and
former Gov. Bob Taft
signed it into law before
leaving office.
The state ta~ department
has estimated the change
could cost Ohio up to $30
million a year in income

tax revenue·. But some legislators say that estimate
is too high and that
encouraging e~-Ohioans
to spend more time here
will boost sales tax revenue and strengthei1 charitable work and donations.
"It 'II definitely cost the
state in income tax there 's no question about
thaV' said former State
Rep. Jim Trakas, the
Independence Republican
who sponsored the change
in tax law. "But when you
look at the sales tax and
the multiplier effect of
these people living here
and buying goods and services , there's no comparison."

Jim Delaney, a retired
accountant who worked in
the Cleveland office of
Deloitte &amp; Touche and
now lives in Naples, Fla.,
estimated that more than
I 00,000
nonresidents
might spend an e~tra

month in Ohio. If they
spent $2,000 each during
that extra stay, he said,
they would generate $200
million in economic activity for the state.
Trakas put the estimated
loss in income tax at $7
million to $10 million.
Charities supported the
bill because they said they
were losing board members and contributors who
were advised by accountants and financial planners to sever their ties
with Obio or risk being
declared residents.
"We were losing some
of our best people," said
Sandra Wuliger, who leads
the . Jewish Community
Federation's development
committee. "This also
helps bring home charity
dollars to Cleveland."
Wuliger said the limits
forced some longtime supporters to step down from
boards or stop volunteer-

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Glrk tounuunent sc:om, Page Bl

PERSPECTIVE:

1111111

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BATAVIA - Last summer, a woman triggered a
massive search for her 3year-old developmentally
disabled foster .:hild when
she said he had disappeared
from a suburban Cincinnati
park .
Jury selection began
Monday morning in the trial
of LiL Carroll , 30. in the
death of her foster son, who
authorities said never went
missing from the park, but
died after being wrapped in
a blanket and packing tape
and left in a dose! while his
foster parents traveled to
Kentucky for a family
reunion. Potential jurors
were told Mondav to refrain
from reading or 'watching
media accounts of the case
and not to discuss it outside
of their jury duties.
Carroll and her husband,
David Carroll Jr., 29. have
pleaded not guilty to murder in a case that has led to
calls for reform in Ohio's
foster care system. David
Carroll, set to stand trial
March 19. also is charged
with gross abuse of a
corpse.
Prosecutors allege that he
took the body of Marcus
Fiesel to a rural area of
southwest Ohio, burned it
and dumped most of the
remains into the Ohio
River. Some small, charred
bone fragments have been
recovered near a crude, outdoor fireplace, but DNA
tests were not conclusive.
Liz Carroll acknowledged
in grand jury testimony
days after the child was
reported missing in August
that he had been left in the
closet and died, but she said
she had no intention of hurt-

InSide

ing in favor of working for
charities in the places
where they lived when not
in Ohio.
Stephen Weinberg, who
has helped the Jewish
Community Federation of
Cleveland with fundraising and strategic planning
during 30 years of volunteer work, said the change
will help him with record
keeping for ta~es .
He heads Weinberg
Wealth Management and
remains active in the business, but spends much of
the year in Florida.
The additional days
"make it so much easier,"
he said . "Now, I'm not
looking over my shoulder.
I think I' II be more effective."

COL UMBUS - House
Speaker Jon Husted is as
curious as the ne~t guy about
how the new Democratic
governor will propose to fix
Ohio's
unconstitutional
school funding system.
So are the education lobbyists. And the journalists.
Gov. Ted Strickland' s
answer is simple: He doesn't
know yet.
Strickland, who will present his lirst budget to the
Re publi c an -con t ro II ed
Legislature next month, has '
fended off Husted's suggestions that his liscal blueprint
should contain a proposed
solution to the tle.:ade-old
problem.
Options to address the
Ohio Supreme Coon's mandate to even out inequities
between rich and poor districts include raising taxes to
provide more overall mo11ey
or pooling property ta~es
statewide .
Strickland stuck to earlier
statements that he would
''begin a statewide conversation" on the issue sometime
after his budget proposal is
presented, engaging teachers, parents, businesses and
others with an interest in a
better way to dole out state
money for teachers, textbooks, lield trips ·and the
like. That document will recommend state spending for
the two years beginning July
I.
During a meeting with
reponers last week, Husted
appeared
miffed
that
Strickland would• blast
Ohio's way of paying for
public schools on the campaign trail yet not be forthcoming with remedies.
"We know what the
options are," said Husted, a
Kettering Republican. "We
want to work with him, don't
get me wrong, but your budget is your document that is
your two-year funding system for education."
The Ohio Supreme Court
declared the state's schoolfunding system unconstitutional three times before
ending a 12-year-old lawsuit
in 2004 and returning the
issue to lawmakers. Former
Gov. Bob Taft created a
committee to explore ways
to change how schools are
funded, but Taft ended his
eight-year
tenure
in
December with the issue still
largely unresolved.
Husted, who must leave
the House because of term
limits after this session, is
eager to debate publicly on
the issue. He vehemently
defends the progress both
traditional public schools
and alternatives such as
charter schools and voucher

programs have made m
recent years.
"In the last I0 years.
we've moved the ball a long
way," he said. 'The governor said he didn' t think it
was far enough. Right now,
we can't really work with
him on a solution until we
know what his solution is."
The current budget spent
$6.2 billion on schools in its
lirs1 year. which represented
a 2.3 percent increase from
the year before, and $6.4 billion this year. a 2.1 percent
increase. But it froze funding
for nearly a third of Ohio
school districts, inducting
the struggling Cleveland city
schools.
Husted, a young politician
whose name has been suggested for higher ofl'ice,
would miss a key political
and policy opportunity if
Strickland e~cludes signiftca,nt education changes from
the budget debate.
The new governor, however. .has signaled that he
will work on the problems
he perceives in the state with
measured patience.
He eschewed early pressure to have a " 100 Day
Plan" like that of his GOP
rival for governor, Ken
Blackwell, and has put off
the State of the State address
often delivered in January or
February until the middle of
March.
William Phillis. director of
the group of school districts
that sued the state over the
funding
system,
said
Strickland is justilied in
waiting.
Changes called for by the
Ohio Supreme Court to
make the system "thorough
and efficient" under the
Ohio Constitution are monumental, he said.
"We have per pupil fund.
ing that ranges from $17,000
down to $6.500 in some districts. we have gross inadequacies in educational
opportunities for some kids
in the poor districts, we have
levy fatigue in school districts that are going to the
ballot every two or three
years," he said. "This system
has never been ruled constitutional since it was established 156 years ago. How
could anyone within a couple of months remedy so
much neglect''"
Yet the coalition of teachers' union and other education groups, including
Phillis'. pushing a fall ballot
initiative has also signaled
its unwillingness to wait any
longer. The group's broadly
phrased
constitutional
amendment, an attempt to
address elements of the
school funding dilemma,
cleared regulators last week
and signature gatherers are
on the move.

Thesday, February 13, 2007

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAOV - A sc:t'wiWie cl ~ C01ege
and ~ school VlliSIIy spotW10 evenia l'lvoMng
...,... Iran Gda and t.te.gs CllU"'tiaa..

n·dn'• 9""''
Boyo Boolcotbotl

Hannan at South Gallia, e p.m.
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 7 p_m
Trtmble al Meigs, 6:30p.m.

w-··

Cot!ove Book-"

CedarviUe al Rio Grande, 8 p.m.

=

Coltogo Bookotboll
Cedarvilte at Rio Grande, 6 p.m
lhdnepq''Y'J

GIM Tournament

Redmen
swept at
Lee, Bryan

Eagles'
Reid taking
leave of
absence

BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO TH E SENTINEl

INII

CLEVELAND. Tenn.
The University of Rio
Grande Redmen baseball
team closed out the first
road trip of the season with
lburJdq'a prnu
on
Monday afternoon in a
BoyoBook_.l
twinbill at natiomilly ranked
Athens at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
GtrtoTournomontBootcoLee
University.
The
South Gallia vs. Green (at Athens), 6:15
Flames cranked up the
p.m.
Eastern vs. Eastern/St. Joe (at Athens•.
offense and pitched well in
&amp;p .m .
taking two from the
Redmen. winning game
one,
I0-0 and capturing the
Southern at Trimole. 6:30p.m.
nightcap, 6-3.
41exander &amp;1 Meigs, 6:30p.m.
Miller at Eastern. 6:30p.m.
Rio Grande (1 -4) strugRiver Val~y at Fairland. 6 p.m.
gled in game one as the
Redmen could not solve
Michael Oberg. Oberg was
nearly perfect as he hurled a
INSIDE
five-mmng· no-httter and
Edgar Mercado supplied the
offense and in the first game
as the Lee rolled to the win.
It was the second time on
the trip that the Redmen
failed to get a hit in a ball
game. Oberg struck out
four and walked two in
picking up his first victory
of the season.
Lee University (6-1 ),
ranked 19th in the NAlA
pre-:;eason roll, was led on
offense by Mercado, who
blasted home runs in both
games.
Mercado treated the
• Gallipolis elini'lated.
Redmen pitching staff rudeSee Page B2
ly, collecting four hits, four
RBI and four runs scored.
Freshman
righthander
Cody
Lawhorn
made his
CoNTACT US
first start of his college
career and took the loss. He
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
~ave up si~ runs and six hits
1-741&gt;-446-2342 ext. 33
m 2 113 innings, walking
Fu- 1·740-446·3008
four and not recording a
strikeout.
E-maU- sportsOmydaity&amp;entinel .com
Rio Grande team made it
sport• SlaH
a
contest in the nightcap.
BI'IICI Sherman, Sporta Editor
The
Redmen moved on top
t740)446-2342. ext 33
1-0 in the lirst. Lee put four
bshermanOmydiutytribune.com
runs on the board in the
Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
third inning to put the si~th
t740) 446·2342, ext 23
win of the year away.
lcrumOmydaityreglstercom
Dallas Sims started and
Alexander vs . River Valley (at
Welliton), 6:15p.m
Tri~ ws. Southam (at Athens), 7 p.m.
Meios &gt;JS. Fairfield Union {at
Alexander). a p.m.

::.-a:=.

Bryan Waltera, Sporta Writer
(740) 446· 2342. ext. 33
bwalters 0 m'l(lailyh ibune.com

PROFOODill

PluHIHhdlllen.82

San Diego
Chargers
coach Marty
Schottenheim
er shouts
instructions
at his players
during football practice
in this Jan.
10 file photo
in San Diego.
The Chargers
fired
Schottenheim
er on
Monday.

Bv Roa

MAADDI

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Schottenheimer fired
BY BERNIE WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO - Marty
Schottenheimer performed
well enough to go 14-2
last season despite what
team
president
Dean
Spanos called a "dy sfunctional situation" between
the coach and his general
manager.
The relationship got so
bad in the last month that
Spanos
fired
Schottenheimer
on
Monday night, another
shocking development for
a team that thought it was
Super Bowl -worthy ' but

lost its playoff opener.
Spanos said the e~odus
of assistant coaches - the
two coordinators became
NFL head coaches and two
assistants became coordinators - contributed to a
difficult situation that
resulted in the coach being
fired. Schottenheimer is
due more than $3 million
for the final year left on
his contract.
While confirming he had
no working relationship
with general manager A.J.
Smith,
Schottenheimer
seemed
puzzled
that
Spanos made the coach
take the fall for his assis-

"We deliver eve

PHILADELPHIA
Andy Reid is facing a crisis
far tougher than a quarterback controversy or a disruptive player.
The Philadelphia Eagles
coach will leave the team
for a month to deal with
developments that have
rocked his family the past
two weeks - one son tested positive for heroin,
another was arraigned on
drug and weapons charges.
The team said the leave
will last until mid-March.
"He 's not going to come
into the office. His priorities will be his family for
that period of time, but he
will be available to have a
couple of calls with us and
collaborate and if he needed to be here for a visit of a
free agent," Eagles president Joe Banner said
Monday. " He will retain
final.. say over whatever we
d0.

tants leaving.
"That is absolutely
unfair, in my view,"
Schottenheimer told The
Associated Press in a telephone interview. "We had
no control over two guys
who became head coaches
in this league. "We gave
two guys an opportunity to
be coordinators in this
league. We've added a
couple of guys that people
should be very pleased
with. The future coach
wi II be very pleased, as
well."
Schottenheimer
did

Reid , who is also the
team's head of football
operations, will miss the
NFL scouting combine and
the start of free agency,
Teams may begin voluntary
offseason workouts March
19. Reid plans to attend the
NFL owners' meetings in
Arizona in late March, and
will be back for the NFL
draft April 28-29.
. The Eagles have II unrestncted free agents, notably
wide receiver Donte'
Stallworth and backup
quarterback Jeff Garcia.
"Before any of this had
happened, we had finalized
our own plans as to what

Pleue see Fired. 82

Please HI Reid. 82

bing you expect:'

Complete Women's Health Care at PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Heart Fair

Company increases estimated
cost of uranium enrichment plant
PIKETON (APJ - The
company building a proposed uranium-enrichment
plant in southern Ohio said
MondaY. it will cost abol!t
$2.3 btllion, up from the
$1.7 billion the company
estimateq five years ago.
USEC Inc., based in
Bethesda, Md. , is developing
the
American
Centrifuge project at an old
atomic weapon!&gt; plant here.
It would produce fuel for
nuclear reactor\.
The company originally
planned to pay for the proJect by railing it&gt; own
money and borrowing, but
now \ay1 that to raise
money for 2008 and beyond
it will need to turn to investment or other participation
by other c.: ompanie' or the
U.S. government.
USEC did a comprehensive review of the project
last year and dted increased
materials and commodities
costs as the main difference
from the initial estimate.
wbicb was developed using
data from the
U.S.
l&gt;epartment of Energy 's
centrifuge project.

However, the company
said a one-year delay for
testing of machines to be
used at the plant turned out
to be lucky because the
machines built later had output that's 10 percent greater
. than originally eXJX:Cted.
The increased efftciency
will help offset cost increases, the company sai\1.
"The time we invested in
obtaining better performance proved to be very
beneticial," John K. Welch,
USEC president and chief
executive offtcer. said in a
statement.
"This is an ambitious plan
from both a cost and a
schedule perspective, and
the target estimate assumes
cost savings we are. working
to achieve in 2007."
USEC plans to begin
operations in late 2009 and
have about 11.500 machines
working in 2012. Tbe towering machines would rise
43 feet in the air and use
centrifugal l"orce to separate
the uranium, concentrating
isotopes into forms that can
be used as fue I.
The project would also

generaie tons of radioactive
waste - enough over 30
years to fill 41 ,000 cylinders weighing about 14 tons
apiece, according to the
Nuclear
Regulatory
Commission.
The new cost estimate
includes $371 million
USEC spent through 2006
to develop and demonstrate
the American · Centrifuge
technology.
USEC said it plans to
spend about $340 million
on the project in 2007 and
about double that amount in
2008.
USEC said it is also looking at .ways in which customers; project participants
and vendors could help support the financing.
The company says a small
number of centrifuges have
been installed at the site.
about 65 miles south of
Columbus. and have been
operated in the last three
months . Rel\lted systems
have been conditioned with
uranium hexatluoride gas.
and USEC expeC"ts to introduC"e the uranium gas into
the centrifuges soon .

• Blood Pressure Screenings Special Presentation at
12 Noon
• Cholesterol &amp; Glucose
Screenings (Non, Fasting)
• Body Fat Analysis
• Heart Healthy Food
Information
• Smoking Cessation Info
• Holzer Cardiovascular
Institute Information
• And Much More!!

MICIIAI:.L W. COitBIN,. MD

.Women and
Heart Disease

HOY J. ~WINDSOR, MD

•Poiut Pleasant Off'JCe:
Plea• •• ~ Ho&amp;pilal

Ph •ValltyiJosPt"
2:S20 \Wiey DriYe .
Se ., 215
Pod: PI! •• WV 2SSSO
'

bx_
Michael A. Englund. DO.
Curdio/ogisr
Holzer Cardiovascular Institute

(304) 67S..UB

A box lWich. provided by Pfizer
Phannaccuticals, will be available
to those who atten~ the presentation.

All are welcome!

-- !-----

2520 Valley Orne
Suile 214
Puialt Pic
WV&lt;lSSSO

=•,

(304) 675-4139

(304) 675-3405

MDI fl'lCt CliDit

140 Pinotll Slreet

'U~S«-A11~

~.W¥25271

Middkf"W"- OH 4-SM

(304) Jn-5756

(741) 992 6434
----- -----------

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

- --- - ·-

•Point Pleasant OffJCe:
Hospital
2520 Valin• DriveSuite !14
Point PleawJL WV 25S50

•Ripley,. wv Oflice:

•Middleport

, MARK W. NOLAN. MD

PlaMnt Valley

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�~sday,

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, February 13.

February 13, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • ~age B3

www.mydallysentlnel.com

2007

ijtrihune - Sentinel - ~e ster
CLASSIFIED

Ohio High School Girls Basketball
Monday's Re•utts
Tourl\llment
DiVISI01j I

Gals. Mark&gt;n-Franklm 60, Cols. Nonhland 58
Westervtlle Cent 43 , Gr0\18 City 33

DIVISION II
Blanchester 61, C1n . SCPA 44
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 30 . Wmtersv•lle India n Cre ak 17
Carrollton 48, Raylan d Buckeye Loca l 22
Day. Oakwood 43, Trenton Edgewood 35
Dresden Tn- Valley 53. UhriChSVIlle Claymont 37
Ph•lo 6 1, New Conco rd John Glenn 48
Sl. Bern ard A~r Ba con 46 , Cin Wyommg 32

Galli a
Academy Blue
Angels'
Ryann Leslie
look s for
room to put
up a shot in
the post amid
heavy defensive pressure
from a pair of
Sheridan
Lady
Generals
defenders
Monday in
Albany.

Thornv1Ue Shendan 58. Gallipolis Gallla 36
W. Carrollton 53. Oldord Talawanda 49
DIVISION

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANIIMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ALBANY - For a team that looked
like it was finally starting to come
together in the final weeks of the regular season - it turned out to be a disappointing end for the Gallia Acad.emy
gtrls high school basketball team.
The Blue Angels had endured backto-back double digit losses - and that
carried over into the Division II sectional tournament, where they lost 5836 to the Sheridan Lady Generals
Monday at Alexander High School.
Gallia Academy had won three
straight prior to its last three losses to
wrap up the campaign. The Angels end
the first year of the coach Jeff Duduit
era with a 6-15 overall marl(.
Eighth-seeded Sheridan (6-15), on
the other hand, moves on to face top

we· re going to do and not
do with our own guys,"
Banner said. "We'd also
put together our preliminary plan for the non-Eagle
players that we could be
mterested in."
.
General manager Tom
Heckert and the team 's
assistant coaches will handle the interviewing of
players at the scouting
combine in Indianapolis.
though Reid might be able
to meet with some players
at another time.
Garrett Reid, 23, tested
positive for heroin after he
caused a traffic accident
Jan. 30, police said. No
charges have been filed ,
but prosecutors are looking
at the case. Police have said
he could be charged with
driving under the influence
of a controlled substance, a
misdemeanor.
Britt Reid, 21, was
arraigned on drug and
weapons charges. He is
accused of pointing a handgun at another driver tollowing a dispute and faces
a felony charge of carrying
a firearm without a license
as well as misdemeanor
charges of lying to authorities. simple assault. making
terroristic threats and possession of a controlled substance.
Asked if this leave could
lead to a longer one.
Banner said: "No. I don't
know if he's corning back
on (March) 13th or the 17th
or the 18th. That's why
that's a little bit vague, but

OH

Crooksv• lle 70, ChiiiiCOihe UntOIO 51
Magnolia Sandy Valley 44, l oaN ille Tuscarawas Valley 35
Minford 86, W1Uiamsport Westfall 33
·
Nelso nville -York 73. P1ke1on 38
Peebles 64, Scioto McDermon NW 39
S Pomt 59, Portsmouth 41
Wheelersbu rg 58, Seaman N . Adams 43
Zanesville Maysville 67, Bella1re 30
DIVISION IV
Beaver Eastern 54, Ironton St Joseph 32
Chillicothe Southeastern 57, Commg Miller 50
Cin_Summit Country Day 54, Middletown C hr1s11an 2 1
Fayetteville-Perry 80. Loc kland 48
Gahanna Christian 41 , Madison Christ1an 32
MI. Gilead Gilead Christian 56, Millersport 40
Newark Cath . 82, Northside Christian 27
Troy Chnshan 58. Spnngboro R1dgev111e Christian 9

nates

from PageBl

Cou~ty

Ill

Caledonia A •ver Valley 35 RIChwood N Umo n 32

Brad
Sherman/photo

Reid

Galli a

-~~

!,...,.. , ~ 3, Alii

Lo,. Portdnaon 2
-62-214,
2
5, Paige
2 0-0 4, Sam

o-o

Mautz 2 ~ 4 , Kristy

Robinson 2 o-o 4. Totals- 23 8-10 58.
Three poinl goals - GA 5 (EIIIptt 4. -

1;, S 4

(Mack 1. Kroftt 1, Brink 1, Custer 1).

seed Vinton County on Wednesday,
also at Alexander.
Mollie Brink led the winners with 16
points and Abby Rhodes added 14.
Both were key in helping the Lady
Generals establish a 12-6lead after one

he will be returning in and
around that time frame."
Reid has led the Eagles to
the playoffs six times,
including four trips to the
NFC championship game
and one Super Bowl, in
eight seasons as head
coach. He's dealt with several challenges the past two
seasons from the Terrell
Owens· soap opera and a
series of key injuries in
2005 to losing five-time
Pro Bowl quarterback
Donovan McNabb in Week
II this past season.
Despite
McNabb's
injury, the Eagles won
their final five games
behind Garcia, finished 106 to capture their fifth NFC
East title in six years and
reached the second round
of the playoffs. Many considered it Reid's hest
job
in
coaching
Phi !adelphia. Players credited his steady approach
for helping them overcome
a difficu It mid season
stretch and the season-ending injuries to MeN abb and
star defensive end Jevon
Kearse.
;.People deal with circumstances in life of all
different kinds. some more
serious. some less serious.
some more preoccupied
and less so. and are still
able to carry on with their
careers and their professions." Banner said. "I
think that's the kind of guy
that Andy is. that he ' II both
be able to have his priorities in the right place, do
what he needs to do. do the
right thing. and also be
able to return as the head
coach and do the same
quality job he's always
done."

quarter of play.
The Blue Angels were within 7-6 at
one point in the first, but after Sheridan
answered with five straight to close out
the stanza, Gallia Academy never got
closer than five the rest of the way.
Brittany Elliott, after a quite and
scoreless first quarter, nailed four
three-poiners and finished with a teamhigh 13 points. Ryann Leslie had eight
while Alexis Geiger and Amy Noe
each went for five . Amber Campbell
and Lindsey Niday had two and Rachel
Jones hit a free throw.
Sheridan built the lead utilizing
.quick scoring spurts including an 11-2
start to the second quarter and a 10-2
run to begin the third.
It was the final high school game for
Gallia Academy seniors Elliott,
Campbell. Leah Cummons and Jessica
Dingess.

Fired
from Page Bl
praise Spanos. the son of
team owner Alex Spanos.
for making a difficult
decision . "I don't disagree
with it," the coach said. "I
always put the team first."
Asked if Smith should
share
the
blame,
Schottenheimer said: "Uh.
I'll leave that judgment to
others."
Schottenheimer added:
"There is and has been no
relationship" with Smith.
Since when''
"How long's he been
here''"
Schottenheimer
said.
Smith was promoted in
April 2003 after John
Butler died of cancer.
Schottenheimer tightened up the time frame a
bit. saying: "In the last
couple of years, there has
been very little, if any,
dialogue ."
It's believed that the
Smith- Schottenheimer
feud sterns from personnel
moves by the OM. including allowing Drew Brees
to leave as a free agent a
year ago after the quarterback hurt his shoulder in
the 2005 season finale.
"I have no idea ,"
Schottenheimer
said.
''I've made inqu1ries
about it on a number of
occasions and he said, 'I
don't want to talk about
it." '

The firing was first
reported by ESPN.
Schottenheirner 's dis-

E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune .com

Your Ad,

been Schottenhei mer's
lame-duck status.
Three days after the 2421 playoff loss to New
England. Sch.ottenheirner
declined the team's offer
of a $4.5 million. oneyear extension through
2008, which came with a
club-option $1 million
buyout. Spanos and Smith
seemed visibly angry that
the coach turned them
down.
With a regular-season
record of 200- 126- l with
Cle,oeland, Kansas City ,
Washington and San
Diego. Schottcnheirner is
the most successful coach
never to have reached the
Super Bowl.
His 5-13 playoff record
has taken on a life of its
own . The loss to the Patriots
was his sixth straight in the
postseason dating to 1993.
and the ninth time a
Schottenhei mer-coached
team lost its opening play off game.· His teams have
failed four times to capitalize on the home-field
advantage that comes with
owning the AFC's No. I
seed,
He was 47-33 in five
seasons with the Chargers.
including 35 wins and two
AFC West titles in the last
three seasons ,
Led by league MVP
LaDain,ian Tomlinson, the
Chargers were thought by
many to be Super Bowlcaliber. But they had four
turnovers
and
made
numerous other mistakes
in losing' to the Patriots,
their first defeat at horne
in the 2006 season .

Call Today...

or Fax To

446-3008

''\\ I

Redmen

'

2007 record to 2-0.
Sophomore
Justin
Gregory started and lost for
the Redmen.
Game two started well fur
the Redmen as they touched
up Bryan starter Ben Young
for five runs in the first two
tnmngs.
Bryan (4-1) wouJd score
seven times in its final two
at-bats to gel the comefrom-behind victory. Drew
Friedrich drove in two runs
on the final swing of the day
to defeat the Redmen.
Matt Day (l-0) picked up
the win in relief.
Trailir.g 5·2 in the bot·
tom of the sixth the Lions
scored three runs to take

the lead 6-5 .
The Redmen answered
immediately with three runs
of their own to regain the
advantage at 8-6- heading
into the fateful bottom of
the seventh.
Rio collected II hits with
Sato. sophomore first base- ·
man J.P. Keefe. freshman
left fielder Cody Lawhorn,
senior designated hitter
Michael Warren and freshman second baseman Andy
Whewell all notched two
hits each. Warren and freshman third baseman John
Storey knocked in two runs
each.
Sophomore lefty Chris
Stewart started and lasted 5

•

2/3 innings for the Redrnen.
He scattered nine hits and
allowed five runs (two
earned) with four strikeouts
and one walk.
Red-shirt
freshman
Brandon Russell absorbed
the loss in relief. He
allowed four runs (three
earned) with two hits and
five walks in one inning.
Rio Grande falls to l-2 on
the season while Bryan
improves to 4-1.
Rio travels to pre-season
NAJA
No.
19 Lee
University on Monday for a
doubleheader beginning at I
p.m. Stretch ll!temet will
have play-by-play coverage
of both games.

992-2157

·

Oeatl~ir~

How you con have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslftedads
(.~
,.,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for larQe

Display Ads

All Dlaplay: 13: Noon a
Bu•tn. . .
Prior To
Publication
sunct.y Dlapa.y: 1:00
Thurwct.y for Sunday•

o..,.

' AM ad1 mutt be prepaid"

....,..ca ..

POliCIES: Ohio v.Mirr ltubllhing ..-....... U. right kJ .......... or~
lt'l'f tlnw. ErrOJI mul l btl r•ported on m. tir1t di!V ol
Tdbune-s.iltiMH'egiMer wMI M ,..,.,..... tor no IMN tMn thl COlt ot tne .,_., occupiM by tM .rrOf 1nc1 only 1M tlrat ln..r11on . We sMII not
M'f 10M Of 1&amp;1*\M thlt rMUita It-am the JKDIICIUon or OINUion of 11'1 MtvlrtlMmlnt. COifiCtlon wHi be mN1 WI 1M t!rat awaUib'll ldiUon. • Box
111 alwaya confkteutW.. • Curr..n raM card 11ppA1M. • AU rM1 .-... adw•U.•••ll .,.. MJbtect to the F.a.r.. F1lr Hol.dlng Act of 1161. • This
......,..,
·
wlol.tlon ottM lew.

· • Start Your Adi Wtth A Meyword • Include Complete
Desc:riptlon • Include A Price • Avokl AbbrtlvLattons
• Jndude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days·

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

•I \t I \II \ I '

HOM~

'S1'A\..~I~ Yo~.,·v;;

5321

~~,tit~l&gt;

111W\lf'S 10

~'{ f,fi\I~SS Ja)u11N~·

FOUND: Male Beagle at
RC Byrd Locl&lt;s &amp; Dam. Call
1304)575-3300 M-F
Tan Cocker Spaneil wlblack
nyloo collar. Enterprise Ad
by 33 auto CMnic . 740-992·
1429.

r
I

W~\'1111
TO Buv

-------.,
,

6
9 Chow mix pupnies.
..-·
weekS Qki_ No Shots. Free to
a good home. Leave amessage. 740-446· 7525

fteWIPIP•
only htl
lod ldo moolln

OE ollnclorda.

~

0

0

Silver and Gold Co1ns.
Proofsets. Gold Arngs, Pre1935
U.S.
Cuu ency.
Sollta~re Diamonds- M.T. S.
C oin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740.446·
2642.
- - - ----Bu~ing Junk Cars.Truck s &amp;
Wrecks. Pay Cash J 0
Sal11age
(304 )7'!3 ·5343

0

•

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'1 For Sate ................................. ............. 725

.

30

Announcement. .......... .. ... .............. .. ............ O

Antiquea ....................................................... 530

Al)llrlmenll lor Rent .... ,.............................. 440

080

~ucutotlonp rtand•F.,Iea Mlrk~!.. ···························760
""
I I
..cceaaor..a..........................
Auto Repair .................................................. no
Autos lor Slle ..................... .................. ....... 710

Boata I Motora for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies .................. ...................... 550
Bualneaa and Buildings ............................. 340

Opportunity .............................. ...210

BUiineaa Tralnlng ...... .................... .... ......... 140
Campere a Motor Home&amp; ........................... 790
"•mpln
v.
1 Eq Ulpment ....... .................... ........ 780
•~- of Thenkl ......... ............. ......... . .... ... ... 010
C• 1\R'
Chl~lderly Care ............................ ........... 190
~t rtca1/R~I
tlo n............................... 840
E -..
•·~ gara

Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
FFarm EquipRrnant ........:................................. &amp;10
arm• 1or ant............................................. 430
farllll for Sate ............................................. 330

Fruits I Vegetablea ............... .:.•••...•...........•580 .
Furni.•L-~
.-.. Rooml ................... .. ................... 450
"·--·
VW~nnl I HIUIIng........................................... 850
Giveaway ..................................... ................. 040

Happy Ada ....................................................OSO
Hay a Graln ........................... ....................... 640
Help Want.ct ................................................. 110
Homllmprovementa .......................~........... 810
Homtl for Sate ............................................ 310
Gooda ....................................... t o

HouMhokl
510
HouMa tor Rent .......................................... 4
In Memorlam ................................................ 02G

lneurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpltwnl ........................ 860
Llveetock .................... ................................ ..630
LOll and Found ... ........................................ OIO
LOU I Acreega ....................... ... ............. ,, ..• 350

Miscelle~WGU~.............................................. 170

Miscellaneous Men:handlu....................... 540
Molllkl Home Rel)lllr .................................... 860
u-L"~--lor Rent ......... ,..................... 420
~ nur1-

Custodran needed $7.50 per
hO ur .. Retail floor OKperi·
once a ptus. Please ca1! 304611-2782 or Fax 2 16·86 2·
0452
D 11111'1g Room Se rver. Full

time. Apply in Pe1son .
Holiday Inn at Gallipoli s.

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$16.53-$27.58/h r.. now h1r-

Call toda)' to achedule
an Interview!

1-ln-463-6247 •xt. 2301
Part-t1me posit ion a\lailable
tor a Support
Group
Facilitator for a Women's
shehe r. This is a contract
oosi\io n lor appro•imalely
lour
hours
•
week
Applicants should be famillahr
wrtn
crisis inter'llentJon tee •
~
ni ues and group dynamics.

.

Gallipolis,

Loca l Home Health Ag ency.
Now acceptinQ applications

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

lor all shift s. STNA. CHHA,
CN A, PCA. certification
required. call 740·44 1·1377

A,g, Pay $20ihr or
annually
Including Federal Benefit~
and OT.Paid Training.
Vacations-FTIPT
1-800·584-1775 Ext. W8923
USWA

Local Manulm:turiny Facility
Accepting Resumes for
General Labo r WeldinQ and
machine experience a plus.
Resumes must be sent to:
PO Bo• 176. Rio Clrande.
OH 45674.

$57K

R&amp;JTAUCKtNG
, ,...,. , . Way
R&amp;J TMJCI(ing now Hiring II our
New Hawn, WI/ Term1nal. For

Rtg ional H&amp;uii ·Dump Oi~ 1
)'ear OTR venfiable lf4i. Calll ·
IID&lt;Iti2-o:J6&gt;"" lor Klnl

Peraonaia ...... .. :••• ,... .. .. ............................... .. OOS

AN's, Dialysis Techntcians.
and Un• c~ needed lor
Pleasanl Valley Oiaty~s. an
independently owned oulpetient dialysis facility in

PetslorS.te ................................................ 580
Plumbing 6 HMtlng ................. .. ........... .. .. .. 820
tc
230
Prolen~l Serv ea ................... ..............
Radio, TV • CB Repllr .......... ..................... 160
AMI Eatlte WanMd ..................................... 3iO
SchCIOII k\ltructkH\...... ............................... 150

Pt. Pleasant,~Y· E~~:peri~
preferred. CandyeaseBa son
resumes 1o
rtram .
Louisa-Fori Gay Regional
o·
·
2 45 H' h
lalySIS..
1
IQ W"f
2565. louisa, KY 41 230 or

Seed. Ptent • Fertilizer ........ ...................... 650
,
·
SltUIIIona WanMCI.... ................ ... ................ 20
- f o r Aent .......................,., ,..,,, ..••• ,.,,., ,4IQ
..,_..
Sporting GoodS ........................................... 5.20
SUII'IIor Sate..............................................720
ll'uclia lot Sate ............................................ 715

y.,.. s.t.PorMroy/Middle......................... 074
v .... s.t.Pt. , ........ ................................ 078

"Health Benefits
' Paid Training
~Retirement Plan
''WeE!tdy Pay
' Weekly bonus plan
~FIKed schedules
"Paid Vacati ons

•o

4 Wheelers........... ............... 740

Yard s.t. GIHipotta....................................Dn

I

L.,-------'

401K ava •lab&amp;e. We take and5choo:U; 1274B.
pnde in our facility and res •:t.l ......,.... • .o.~o.n..Vl.IK:'
dents and need great team
llU"LI'.Ll""'-f"'PJU._"'

1176

lax to 606-638·3404.

The Town of Mason is
accepling applications for
the position at police patrol·
man. Applications must be
able to pass a physical
tv test as set forth by the
state. Appljcations can be
ptcked up at the crty building,
t60 1 secona
Streer.
Monday-Friday. Sam 10 Spot

encourages
workplace
diversity. MIF ON
Rocksprings Rehabihlatton
Center is looking tor dedicat·
ed compassionate State
Tested Nursing Assistants.
Competitive wanaot , health
~
and dental bene1its,
and
40lK available. we take
pride In our facility and resi·
dents and need great team
players to Join us. 1t ~ou

PO Bok 33
Gallipolis.. OH 4563 1

~!J:~~.O~IH~
n . ...

.:~AU

I
•

Mortgage
(740)367 -0000

Locators

3-4 Br.
1989 L1berty 14x70, 3 bed· House tor rent
Midd.
CIA.
740.843-5264.
rooms. 1 bath, Very Nic e

(
8170

Daytime

t 4K70 2 BR moblte home
S500.00 a mo nth 740-3670654 o r 740-645-34 13
1998 Trailer lor sale or lease
on land cont ract wittl down
payme nt
$375/month
Located l7 mites out oi
Gallipoli s {74 0)742 ·070 3
(740-742· 3201

(740)368· 0000. 2 Bedroom. Bulaville Pike .

Care for Elderly in their
home, any Shift, Reasonable
Rates, Ha\18 references.
Please call (740)44 1•9824

or (740~1 -9232.

20

Racine. Route 124.

94

9-

2253

_

740· 2750
740-367· 7762 or 740-446·
.::..::.::.__ _ _ _ __
Move 1n today• New 2007 3 4060

---~----

0

rib

r

Pl.

t

E&gt;·1An:

nome.

- - - --

I'll

:j:Publ::ishl;·ng;Gorr!&gt;&amp;nY;;:'=~I
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECUIIT'IISSI? needS some work, QOod
I -888-SB2·3345

starter home or rental -unrt
$19,500. 304·675-6349

SH P
CLASSIAEDS

House tor sale. 4 Bedroom.
2 bath. on 1+ acres. Sooth
Gallia S&lt;hool dlsu.:t. $7000
down and $578.82 por
month Cal l 740-256-1686

No Foe Unlass We Win!

..

___________

____ __
,

- -------

bedroom 2 bath
n1~
$199 .86 per montn. Set up wFor
ork'ercos." p2leBro.r,co2Xn5sO
i r."sct3&lt;5
oOn
minutes trom Atnens and
.
ready for immediate OCCU· plu s
dep
Gas
pancy. CaU
_ Heat.Syracuse 992-7680
_ _
740 385 4367
Racine . · Route 124. 740·
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
949-2253.
- -- - - - -Mobile Home Park •n
---,.-llo-n-ll_on_l___ NEW 2007 4 bed D/Wide ! Gallipoli s. OH
PhOne
$4 9, 179 · Midwest (740)828. (740)446-2003 or (740 )446·
~~~1':~~~~~ng ~~ ~2;,;75;::0-~----.,'. 4.::0~9:...- - - - - 5 Plus Acres, 2 Be.. Kit. ,
Din .. Front Am .. FuU base ..
story and 1/2, AC, single
garage/20 X 20 shop

-------o. ~ ....~·s
.
·
D
· 11
grams lor you lo buy your
nu&gt;~ ., .,
rywa 11 and pam
ng serviC·
.' •. Bt'II.U'•" .o.
.
"""'11
lJ"''-'~
1abor. 74o- home instead of renting
es.AI so, miSC.
100
985·3779 or 304·593.0541 . '
% financing
· Less than pertect credit F&amp;S Tire SA 7 &amp; SR 681 .
Tuppers Plains, Oh. include s
; ; ; : : : ; : : : : : : : : ; ~:;:nt could be the
all equipment , Frank WeH s
~
same as rent.
740 985· 3516
have these qualifications ~;:::OI'I'olmiNn:;;;:"/:~ Mortgage
Locators
please
apply
to·
{
)
_
lAirs &amp;
740 367 0000
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Al'RL\(;E
Center, 36759 Aocksptings
•NOIICE•
Road.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
47 acre s +/· Lievi ng Roa d
45769. Exlendicare Health
lNG CO. recommends
Country water. septic. pond
Services. Inc. is an equal
that vou do business with
&amp; barn, electri c. many home
·
that people you know, and
1
opportun•ty
empoyer
si tes
S125.000 fi rm
encou rages
workplace
NOT to send inoney
1304)882-31 31
All rHI eetlte edvertlslng
Qiversity. MIF ON
throogh the mail until you
In thll I'IIWII)&lt;Iper it
- -.:....--...,--...,--have •nvestiga.ted the
MobUe Home Lot tar rent
eubject to the FMieral
:~~ltute as ;eeded ~~~ :o:lfe;:ring=.; : : : : : : : = = Ftlr Hou•lng,Aet of 1968 near V1n1 on. Call (740)44 1·
.
per
pur.
en
1111
which mlklt It 1\leg.el to
resume to Early E~ion
adveftiM ''any
RLu.
Station 2t22 Jefferson Ave.
MoNEf
prefwtnct, Mmftltlon or
W~\TW
Pleasant, WV 25550
~~:::TO;J...ooi;;:~ O*:rimlnetlon based on
Wanted: Direct Supervision
rM&gt;e, coktr. religion, sex
Need to sen your hOme')
fwnlllal 1t.tue or natl~
employees to OVIfsee male
Late on pay~ents. d1vorctl.
origin, or tny lnt.ntion to
youth in a staff secure resi**NOTICE••
make lny IUOI'I
Job transfo r or a death? t
dentlal environment .. Must
~ llmRIUon or
ca n buy your hon'ie. All cash
pass
physical
training Borrow Smart. Contact
diKrimlnltlon...
and Qu1cll; closing. 740·416 requirement. Pay based on the Ohio Dfvitlon of
3130.
experience. Call (740)379- Financial
Institution's
Thle, newepeper w-Ill not
9083 betwHn 9-3 Mon-Fri
Office ol
Consumer
I{ I '\ I ' I ""
knowtngty .ec•pt
,
Affelts BEFORE VOO refl·
ld~Mmentt. for reel
Wenled: EMrs, Paramedlca nance your home or
Ml.llt Which Is In
&amp;
Dispatchers.
Lite obtain a loan. BEWARE
vloletion ol the law. Our
Ambolance Inc. Apply in per- of requests for any large
reecten•reMreby
:;',;~~_770 Jackson Pike, advance paym•nts of
Informed that •II
dwelllnga Mvertiud in
1eM Of insurance. Call the
$98/mol Buy 3bd HUO
tftllntW~Ire
Consumer
WO!I&lt; korn
no1 gel Office of
HOME! 4'%dn. 30yrs @ so,~ .
1v~IMII
on
11n
eQIAtJ
rich quick.~ involwd. For Alfaj" toll tree al 1-(!66For listings 800 -559-4 109
-"""'~'-·
lnlo. send S.A.S.E 1o PO 278-0003 10 feam it the
lt1 709
Bo• 454, Hamden OH mortgage brour or
lender
Is
proper ty For Sale: Ran ch Sty le 2 bedroom house loca1ed 1n
45634·
licensid. (This ia a public Home, 4 Bedrooms, 3 Bat1'1, Gallipolis (740)44 1·0 194
tefllice anl"lWncemen1 6 acres. (740)388-8639
2 Be d10om House on
rom the Ohio Valley
Country l ot. $400fm0. $400
Green 1TWp,
mi from
No
Pe ts,
town.
112 1mi1/2from
New deposit,
Albr9Cht FiNlllCiW Services.
GAHS, 38R Brick Ranch, References
Requirea .
L&amp;edo, Training, Quick Pay,
~
$140 ,000. (7401440-8131
17401388 9686
$36K·$95K PT/FT, 1-800.,...,,._...,
,
:,:;:,::;::,,..-.,
HouM lor tM : 2br. 1 ba. 2 or 3 Br. hOi.Jse. oo pets.
on Monroe Ave. Pt. Pleasant 740-992 -5858.

agm·

MTIMLT (ASCP) •
Full Time. Days

r

~ --~----- Evenings. (740)388·8017 or Trash/Wate r Pd, No Pets
5 Plus Acres. 2 Ek , K•l. , ,17_:4:.:
24_:5_:·9::
13
0l::.
2.c.
:..·_ _ _ _ Depos1t &amp; Ref~r en ces .
1
players IO join us. 11 VOO
~~r~ F~';:; ~/;, =~I ~:;~ 2007 312 Doublewlde ~~7~40:::1.::38::8:..·1:..1.::00:.____ __
have these qualifications
nt~.ra~,
X 20 shop. $37.970 Midwest (740)8281
1
Seasoned lire wood, Oak r- v2 Mob1le homes lor renl

Iii) . .,. . " ".,.

~· ~~ 1 454.

serv.

Musical tnotrumento ................................... 570

Wenlecl to Ren\ ............................................ 470

Tested Nursing Assistants.
Competitive wages, heallh
and dental benefits, and

ing. For application and fre e
governumen t Job info. call
Am erican Assoc . of Labor 1· Interested appliCants should
913-599·8042, 24/tus. emp. send resumes to : Personnel.

Mobile Homel; f9l' Sale. .......,, ..,.......••.•..... ... 320

UpliallllrY .................. ............ :.................... 870
v - For Sate................ ,.............................. 730
WIM*&lt;I to Buy ............................................. 090
Wenlecl to Buy- F.,m Supplies .................. 620
Wllnltd To Do .............................................. 180

·
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Cenler is k&gt;oklng fOf' dedlcat·
ed compassione.te State

or

Bartender wanted to start
Immediately. Appl).' in perso n
at Halfhill's Tavern . 234 Jrd
Avenue. Gallipolis . OH

Locat&amp;d in Gallipolis Ferf)l,
large ~ard , w/1&amp;80 Mobile
Home, 3br. 2ba, vaulted ce11ings, island kitchen. new
refndg .. All etectnc . covered
tronl porch. 2 large Garages
plus outbuildings ~304'16753161 asking $60,000
;.,.;..~...,::..;.;...;....;.._.,

IIIII"'"-~-----, 38R.1BA.,sitaonacretotwl Galhpolis (740 )742 -0703
ScHools
building
beside
H.T. (740-742·320t
116nl0C110N
Elemenlary. $38.000 Neg.
7 40)2 56-I063.
2003 16x76 Fleetwood,
38A. 2 Bath . Vinyl S1ding.
GllllpoJII Career College 3BR,
2BA.,
LA
with Shingle Roof. CIA, Very Nice
(Careers Oose To Homa) Fireplace. DR . Kitchen. Home.
1998
16K80
Call Todayl740.446-4367. Detached 2 car garage, on Riverside, 3BA, 2 Bath. V•nyl
1-80Q-214·04~
171x85 Lot Within walking Sidrng, Shingle Aool. CIA,
www.IJi!lipolilc.l~rHI'oollege.oom Distance ot new SGHS . New Carpet &amp; Viny l. Ask .
Accredited l.tewber "ccrediting Asking $80.000. (740)256· aPout our (3) 1411.70 hOme s.
0oo..onc11 b independenl Colleges

1111\

NOW HIRING!
Pease
app Y
to and Hdory split. You haul
Ap palacn1ans
Work
at
..
. bl Rocksprings Rehabilitation
home.
!6 17 14 36· 4624 We have posrtrons ava1 1a e C 1 36759 Rock ·
()( 1 haul· Take CM&amp; HEAP
I. I $8 s·~en er,
sprongs
Boston. Ma
star mg a
. umvur.
A d
Po
ON n7;4Q-~94=9-~2038;:~
· ......- - . ,
Make callS on behalf ot
4;:69 Ew:te:r:;e Healt~
AVON! All Areas! To Buy
political organizahons like
.
T•tln•u.r
the NAA
Sel"\lices, Inc. is an equal
To Do
~~_ :;irley Spears. 304 opportunity employer that

For LeaM ..................................................... 480
For Sale ......................................,.................585
For Sale or Trade .........................................5!10

liib

llnJ&gt; W.-\Nilll
1
~-------.,1 ~-------r

Now Hiring expe nenced
..,
Sawrmll help. App ly m perTwin
River
An Excellent way to earn son.
261 2
money The New A,on
Hardwoods
US RI3S,
Call Manlyn 304·88~·2645 Southside

--~-----

2br, House in Pt PI $465
Homestead Really Broker
\304 )675-4024 {304)6750799 ask for Nancy.
_ _ _ __ _:___ _
Attention!
Local company oftering ~NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams tor you to bu'JI your
home 1ns1eact of ~en t in g
• 100% fi nancing
· Less than pe rlect &lt;;redi t
accepted
' Payment could be the
same as rent

condi1ion. $6,000 OBO. Call Very n1ce house tor r&amp;nt 3
(740)446·5292 daytime or BR. 1 Bath. AC , Full
(740)367-0533 evening.
Basement, 2 Car Garage,
Large yard in count ry sening
1991 Trailer 3 bclrm. 2 bath
on Pomeroy Pike near
needs work! No Title $4,500
Chester, Eastern local
OBO
1540)745· 7729
Schools. $800imonth pl us
(540)765· 7786
deposit . No pets. Call
3bd 2ba HUD S23,3:MI
Only 1115/mo. 5% 00. 20 1998 Tra iler b sale or le ase (7 401992-2996
ym 0 8%. For listings 800· on land contrad with down
55~109 J~;F254
payment
$375/month
Located 17 m1te s out of

L"':....:2:;0::0.:.7,:b~y..;N,::E,::A.;:•:.,:I;:n;:.c.:,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _w,_w,_w..;...c..;,o_m_lc_•_·_•o_m._\

HELP WAI'liVJl

HUD HOME! 3bd $11 2/mo.
3bd 2bl S155Jmo. More
hom es availab le! 4o.odn.
30yrs @ 8% . For lislin os
800-559·41 09 KF 144

home. Corner lot, fireplace .

~

Hn..v WANTHl

14

lhan

modem kitchen, }acuui tub,
Pa)'men1 around $550 per
mon-lh_._7_•_o-_36_7_
-7_1_29_.__
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, fireplace
on P&amp;easant Valtev Rd. 112
mite trom Rio Grande.
Available with 1, 5, 01 8
(740i709- 11 66
aores.

'1- ~ ,~

L-------,.1
llU

with less

3 bedroom, 1 bath

this

~

116

Down even

perf&amp;ct credit is available on

tr ucks, $35-$130. Call Cell
Mi•ed
breed
pu pptes 1-3(}4-812-1037, attar 6pm ~
bea- (740)446·8955
IOOk•ng tor delivery staff tor
Husky/Sheppardx
Catering compan y. hour&amp;
1.r 14, 07
018 .12wks old
(304) 675•3126 no answer
mostly M-F day shift. Send
resume to 1364 Herman Ad.
leave message .
r.TII"'"_ _;..._..;....., Gallipolis, oh 4563 1

~~~~~~~~~m=i•~·(:7:40~)4~4:!)-~7~52~5~-,

Molorcyctu 6

0

I·

Free. Small F housebmken
dog . Spayed. Prelers adults.
(304)674· 1374
Owner has health prob. 740·
256· t 336
CASH Paid lor junk cars &amp;

Pups to giveaway, Chow

Bualnesa

1\ I \ I l . ._ I \ I I

_ _GIV!'.A\\A\
_ _ _ __. Absolule Top Dollar: U.S.

.,
· -2 nine week old F Golden
retriever m•x.ed puppies. ca ll
740-367·0624

Thll
ccept1

Waiting till Spring to
clean your Carpet ?
No Need!
Low Moisture carpet
cleaning drie6 in an hour!
Calvin LeportiCieartv Clean
(304)675+0022

lio~E5'f, I'M No'f

Found-White dog in Maso n
damaged ear. 304·773·

.;..;....0~1

!URSALI:

kllncorlyt.Ocomcoot. net

Money to Loan .................................., ...... .... 220

fre shman backstop Chris College. Bryan swept the
Mahon (Hamilton. OH) . Redrnen on Saturday winsemor Michael Wmren . ning II - l in the tirst game
senior right fielder Nate and 9-8 in the second.
from PageBl
Chau. Lawhorn and ' freshThe lone run for the
Redrnen
in game one came
won for the Flames. He man Brad Konrad added the
allowed three hits over fiv~ other base hits for the off back-to-back walks folinnings. Matt Montgomery Redmen. Konrad knocked lowed by a sacritice bunt
and a sacrifice fly off the pat
carne on to work the final in his tirst collegiate run.
Rio
Grande
will
return·
to
of junior shortstop Kenta
two innings and got credit
for his second save of the · the diamond next weekend Sato. That happened to be
at Pikeville College playing the only bright spot for the
young campaign.
doubleheaders
on Saturday Redmen as they were noSophomore lefty Mickey
and
Sunday.
Stretch hit.
Robinson pitched well bUt
Will Stokes threw the
took the defeat for Rio Internet will ha~e play-byGrande. Robinson yielded play cove(age all four first no-hitter in Bryan
College histol1'· pitching 5
eight hits and six runs in 4 games.
2/3 innings. He struck out
Rio also bad a tou&amp;h day innings allowmg 4 walks
five and walled four.
on the diamond in fmal two and striking out 3. Stokes
Junior center fielder games of the opening three- earned his second win of
Jordan Baker doubled and game series witb Bryan the season, improving his

or Fax To

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
Monday-Friday for Jn . . rtlon
Jn Next D•v~• P•per
Sunday In-Column: 1.:od p.m.
For Sunday• P•per

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

~egister

(740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333
Word Ads

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Sentinel

ijtrtbune

To Place

Regular Season
Akf. Firestone 52. Akr. Ellet 43
Akr. Kenmore 80, Akr. Buch tel 38
Akr SVSM 69, MassillOn Washington 66 , OT
Akron E. 46, Akr. Garl•eld 43
Andover Pymatuning Valley 48, Kinsman Badger 20
Arlington 60. lima Perry 18
Barnesville 65. Belmont Union Local 57
Bay Village Bay 51 . Rocky River Magmficat 44
Bloomdale Elmwood 60. Gibsonburg 27
Bridgeport 57, Mc:Mechen Donahue (W.Va .) 48
Brooki1eld 47 , Warren Champ•on 32
Castalia Margarena 56. P.ort .~li n ton 48
Celina 55, Ft. Loramie 50
Centerburg 45, Cardington-lincoln 21
Chardon 64, Eastlake N _37
Cin. Indian Hill 74, Cm. F1nneytown 46
C!e. John Hay 63, Carl Shuler 17
Cle. Success Tech 40, Cle. Margaret Ireland 2
Cots. E. 84, Gals. W. 50
Cols. Linden-McKinley 41 , Morral Ridgedale 31
Columbiana Crestview 45, N_lima S. Range 30
Convoy Crestvie\111 56, Haviland· Wayne Trace 32
Cornerstone Christ 62, Painesville Harv&amp;y 31
Cor11and Lakeview 62 . Youngs. Liberty 45
Delaware Buckeye Valley 69, Cots: Linden-McKinley 54
Delphos St. John's 64 , Van Wert lincolnOJiew 21
Dublin Scioto 53, Cola. Mifflin 41
Findlay Liberty-B_
enton 65, Tiffin Calvert 17
Ft Jenning&amp; 50. Delphoa Jefferson 48
Gallion Northmor 41 . Morral Ridgedale 31
Garren Morgan 59, Cle. School of Arts 37
Gene\18 54. Conneaut 29
Lima Cent. Cath. 65, Rockford Pa~way 39
Lisbon Beav'er Local 74, New Middletown Spring. 54
London Madison Plains 59. Cedarville 51
Lordstown 55, N. Bloomfield 29
Mansfield 78. Bartlerton 31
Mansfield Temple Christian 65. Lima Temple Christian 36
McDonald 50, N. Jackson Jackson-M•hon 42
Medina Hi~land 76, Shaker Hts. Laurel 30
Mentor 53, Colon 46
MogadOre Field 67 . Alliance Martinglon 42
Mowl)'stown Whiteoak 54. Felicity-Franklin 35
New Boston Glenwood 62 . latham Western 48
New Madison Tn·VillaQ&amp; 54, W AleJtandria Twin Valley S . 25
New Matamoras Front•er 51 , Caldwell 39
Newton Falls 57, Girard 49
Ottoville 76. Defiance Ayersville 53
Parma Padua 60. Garfield Hts. Trinity 53
Pemberville Eastwood 65. Tontoganv Otsego 27
Richmond Hts_43. Fairport Harbor Harding 34
Rockford Parkway 65. Lima Cent Cath. 39
Shadyside: 57, Toronto 45
Stow-Munroe Falls 75, Green 62
Streetsboro 69. Warrensville Heignts 56
Wapakoneta 60. Coldwater 58, OT
Waynesfie!d-Gosnen 64 , Manon Cath . 41
Wellsv~le 55, Berlin Center Western Reserve 38
Wickliffe 40. Perry 36
Youngs . Christian 67. E. U\lerpool. Cnristian 19

missal came after all other ,
Defensive coordinator
NFL
head
coaching Wade Phillips was hired
vacancies were filled.
as head coach of the
Cowboys
on
Dean Spanos. known to Dallas
be close friends with for- Thursday. Offensive coormer Dallas Cowboys dinator Cam Cameron was
coac~ Jimmy Johnson.
hired as head coach of the
and Smith said they plan Miami Dolphins on Jan.
to move quickly on hiring 19.
a replacement. Smith said
Tight ends coach Rob
he had a list of candidates Chudzinski
became
offensive
but refused to divulge Cleveland's
coordinator. and linebacknames.
Every
time ers coach Greg Manusky
Schottenheimer's
job was
as
San
hired
Francisco'
s
defensive
appeared to be in Jeopardy, Pete Carroll's name coordinator.
would pop up . Although
Schottenheirner said last
Carroll has said he 's com- week that change was
mitted to staying at inevitable, but Smith
Southern California, he . sounded concerned about
met with Dolphins owner losing the coordinators.
Wayne Huizenga in early saying. "Both in the same
January.
year. Wow. ..
Carroll said then he was
Although Schottenheimer
not offered the Miami was given the power to hire
coaching job, ~nd stressed and fire assistants. neither
that he has never thought Spanos nor Smith provided
about leaving USC since spedtics of what they kept
arriving after the 2000 referring to as an "untenseason.
able situation."
.
Spanos said in a state"We both wanted to win a
ment that he had expected world championship very
that
the
core
of badly," Smith said during a
Schottenheirner's coach- conference call. "It's just
ing staff would remain that my approach might
intact.
have been a little different
"Events of the last than his."
month have now conSpanos said disagreevinced me that it is not m~nts over future stalling
possible for our organiza- was "part of it. It's more
tion to function at a cham- the actual working relapionship level under the tionship that's been difficurrent structure," Spanos cult."
said in a statement . "On
Running backs coach
the contrary. and in the Clarence Shelrnon, who's
plainest possible lan- never been a coordinator,
guage. we have a dysfunc- was promoted to replace
tional situation here . Cameron .
Shelmon
Today I am resolving that accepted only ;t one-year
situation once and for all." contract due to what had

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

-

Nice 14~~:70 3 Bedroom . 2
Bath
home.
Locatea
between
Athens
and
Pomeroy
$365.00
pe r
monlh. Call (740)385·9948
Ali\RThli:N I'i

lUll

RL"'r

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apart ments
tor Rant. Meigs County. In
town , No Pets. Deposit
Required. (740 :199 2·5174 or
(740)441 -0110
1 and 2 bed room aparl ·
ments. furn1shed and unlu rnished. securit-,o deoosit
required . no pets 74()..992·
2218.
2tlr. Apt . on 5tn Street S375
ask lor Don (304)593· 1994

A HIDDEN TREASURE •
laurel
Corr1mon s
Apartments . Largest in 1he
area • Beatl!lfull y renQvateo
th roughout 1nclud1ng Nanc
new ~ 1 1ch en ana ba lh
StM 1ng at $405 Call 100ay1
!3041273-- 3344
Apa rtmen t tor rent. 1-2
Borm .. remooe•eo. new carpet. stove &amp; f T~ IiJ . . wate r.
sewer. trasn od. M1ddlei}C'rt
$425.00
No pets. Ref
req uired. 740-843- 5264

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
Dnve from $349 to $448
, Walk to shop &amp; mov 11~s Ca!l
2-3
Bed room
Du p le ~
740-446·2568
EQual
$420/mo plus deposit &amp; utili·
Hous1ng Opportunity
ties 1n Downtown Gallipol•s
No Pets , 740)446-0332 Clean, very n1ce 1 bedroom
6am-5pm Mon-Sat
furnished
Apartment
Depos11 (304)675·2970
3 BR. t bath. LeG,ande
Blvd, no pets. $625 mo. • Moder n ! BR apt. \740)446sec dep.(740l446-3644
0~90 .

�~sday,

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, February 13.

February 13, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • ~age B3

www.mydallysentlnel.com

2007

ijtrihune - Sentinel - ~e ster
CLASSIFIED

Ohio High School Girls Basketball
Monday's Re•utts
Tourl\llment
DiVISI01j I

Gals. Mark&gt;n-Franklm 60, Cols. Nonhland 58
Westervtlle Cent 43 , Gr0\18 City 33

DIVISION II
Blanchester 61, C1n . SCPA 44
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 30 . Wmtersv•lle India n Cre ak 17
Carrollton 48, Raylan d Buckeye Loca l 22
Day. Oakwood 43, Trenton Edgewood 35
Dresden Tn- Valley 53. UhriChSVIlle Claymont 37
Ph•lo 6 1, New Conco rd John Glenn 48
Sl. Bern ard A~r Ba con 46 , Cin Wyommg 32

Galli a
Academy Blue
Angels'
Ryann Leslie
look s for
room to put
up a shot in
the post amid
heavy defensive pressure
from a pair of
Sheridan
Lady
Generals
defenders
Monday in
Albany.

Thornv1Ue Shendan 58. Gallipolis Gallla 36
W. Carrollton 53. Oldord Talawanda 49
DIVISION

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANIIMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ALBANY - For a team that looked
like it was finally starting to come
together in the final weeks of the regular season - it turned out to be a disappointing end for the Gallia Acad.emy
gtrls high school basketball team.
The Blue Angels had endured backto-back double digit losses - and that
carried over into the Division II sectional tournament, where they lost 5836 to the Sheridan Lady Generals
Monday at Alexander High School.
Gallia Academy had won three
straight prior to its last three losses to
wrap up the campaign. The Angels end
the first year of the coach Jeff Duduit
era with a 6-15 overall marl(.
Eighth-seeded Sheridan (6-15), on
the other hand, moves on to face top

we· re going to do and not
do with our own guys,"
Banner said. "We'd also
put together our preliminary plan for the non-Eagle
players that we could be
mterested in."
.
General manager Tom
Heckert and the team 's
assistant coaches will handle the interviewing of
players at the scouting
combine in Indianapolis.
though Reid might be able
to meet with some players
at another time.
Garrett Reid, 23, tested
positive for heroin after he
caused a traffic accident
Jan. 30, police said. No
charges have been filed ,
but prosecutors are looking
at the case. Police have said
he could be charged with
driving under the influence
of a controlled substance, a
misdemeanor.
Britt Reid, 21, was
arraigned on drug and
weapons charges. He is
accused of pointing a handgun at another driver tollowing a dispute and faces
a felony charge of carrying
a firearm without a license
as well as misdemeanor
charges of lying to authorities. simple assault. making
terroristic threats and possession of a controlled substance.
Asked if this leave could
lead to a longer one.
Banner said: "No. I don't
know if he's corning back
on (March) 13th or the 17th
or the 18th. That's why
that's a little bit vague, but

OH

Crooksv• lle 70, ChiiiiCOihe UntOIO 51
Magnolia Sandy Valley 44, l oaN ille Tuscarawas Valley 35
Minford 86, W1Uiamsport Westfall 33
·
Nelso nville -York 73. P1ke1on 38
Peebles 64, Scioto McDermon NW 39
S Pomt 59, Portsmouth 41
Wheelersbu rg 58, Seaman N . Adams 43
Zanesville Maysville 67, Bella1re 30
DIVISION IV
Beaver Eastern 54, Ironton St Joseph 32
Chillicothe Southeastern 57, Commg Miller 50
Cin_Summit Country Day 54, Middletown C hr1s11an 2 1
Fayetteville-Perry 80. Loc kland 48
Gahanna Christian 41 , Madison Christ1an 32
MI. Gilead Gilead Christian 56, Millersport 40
Newark Cath . 82, Northside Christian 27
Troy Chnshan 58. Spnngboro R1dgev111e Christian 9

nates

from PageBl

Cou~ty

Ill

Caledonia A •ver Valley 35 RIChwood N Umo n 32

Brad
Sherman/photo

Reid

Galli a

-~~

!,...,.. , ~ 3, Alii

Lo,. Portdnaon 2
-62-214,
2
5, Paige
2 0-0 4, Sam

o-o

Mautz 2 ~ 4 , Kristy

Robinson 2 o-o 4. Totals- 23 8-10 58.
Three poinl goals - GA 5 (EIIIptt 4. -

1;, S 4

(Mack 1. Kroftt 1, Brink 1, Custer 1).

seed Vinton County on Wednesday,
also at Alexander.
Mollie Brink led the winners with 16
points and Abby Rhodes added 14.
Both were key in helping the Lady
Generals establish a 12-6lead after one

he will be returning in and
around that time frame."
Reid has led the Eagles to
the playoffs six times,
including four trips to the
NFC championship game
and one Super Bowl, in
eight seasons as head
coach. He's dealt with several challenges the past two
seasons from the Terrell
Owens· soap opera and a
series of key injuries in
2005 to losing five-time
Pro Bowl quarterback
Donovan McNabb in Week
II this past season.
Despite
McNabb's
injury, the Eagles won
their final five games
behind Garcia, finished 106 to capture their fifth NFC
East title in six years and
reached the second round
of the playoffs. Many considered it Reid's hest
job
in
coaching
Phi !adelphia. Players credited his steady approach
for helping them overcome
a difficu It mid season
stretch and the season-ending injuries to MeN abb and
star defensive end Jevon
Kearse.
;.People deal with circumstances in life of all
different kinds. some more
serious. some less serious.
some more preoccupied
and less so. and are still
able to carry on with their
careers and their professions." Banner said. "I
think that's the kind of guy
that Andy is. that he ' II both
be able to have his priorities in the right place, do
what he needs to do. do the
right thing. and also be
able to return as the head
coach and do the same
quality job he's always
done."

quarter of play.
The Blue Angels were within 7-6 at
one point in the first, but after Sheridan
answered with five straight to close out
the stanza, Gallia Academy never got
closer than five the rest of the way.
Brittany Elliott, after a quite and
scoreless first quarter, nailed four
three-poiners and finished with a teamhigh 13 points. Ryann Leslie had eight
while Alexis Geiger and Amy Noe
each went for five . Amber Campbell
and Lindsey Niday had two and Rachel
Jones hit a free throw.
Sheridan built the lead utilizing
.quick scoring spurts including an 11-2
start to the second quarter and a 10-2
run to begin the third.
It was the final high school game for
Gallia Academy seniors Elliott,
Campbell. Leah Cummons and Jessica
Dingess.

Fired
from Page Bl
praise Spanos. the son of
team owner Alex Spanos.
for making a difficult
decision . "I don't disagree
with it," the coach said. "I
always put the team first."
Asked if Smith should
share
the
blame,
Schottenheimer said: "Uh.
I'll leave that judgment to
others."
Schottenheimer added:
"There is and has been no
relationship" with Smith.
Since when''
"How long's he been
here''"
Schottenheimer
said.
Smith was promoted in
April 2003 after John
Butler died of cancer.
Schottenheimer tightened up the time frame a
bit. saying: "In the last
couple of years, there has
been very little, if any,
dialogue ."
It's believed that the
Smith- Schottenheimer
feud sterns from personnel
moves by the OM. including allowing Drew Brees
to leave as a free agent a
year ago after the quarterback hurt his shoulder in
the 2005 season finale.
"I have no idea ,"
Schottenheimer
said.
''I've made inqu1ries
about it on a number of
occasions and he said, 'I
don't want to talk about
it." '

The firing was first
reported by ESPN.
Schottenheirner 's dis-

E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune .com

Your Ad,

been Schottenhei mer's
lame-duck status.
Three days after the 2421 playoff loss to New
England. Sch.ottenheirner
declined the team's offer
of a $4.5 million. oneyear extension through
2008, which came with a
club-option $1 million
buyout. Spanos and Smith
seemed visibly angry that
the coach turned them
down.
With a regular-season
record of 200- 126- l with
Cle,oeland, Kansas City ,
Washington and San
Diego. Schottcnheirner is
the most successful coach
never to have reached the
Super Bowl.
His 5-13 playoff record
has taken on a life of its
own . The loss to the Patriots
was his sixth straight in the
postseason dating to 1993.
and the ninth time a
Schottenhei mer-coached
team lost its opening play off game.· His teams have
failed four times to capitalize on the home-field
advantage that comes with
owning the AFC's No. I
seed,
He was 47-33 in five
seasons with the Chargers.
including 35 wins and two
AFC West titles in the last
three seasons ,
Led by league MVP
LaDain,ian Tomlinson, the
Chargers were thought by
many to be Super Bowlcaliber. But they had four
turnovers
and
made
numerous other mistakes
in losing' to the Patriots,
their first defeat at horne
in the 2006 season .

Call Today...

or Fax To

446-3008

''\\ I

Redmen

'

2007 record to 2-0.
Sophomore
Justin
Gregory started and lost for
the Redmen.
Game two started well fur
the Redmen as they touched
up Bryan starter Ben Young
for five runs in the first two
tnmngs.
Bryan (4-1) wouJd score
seven times in its final two
at-bats to gel the comefrom-behind victory. Drew
Friedrich drove in two runs
on the final swing of the day
to defeat the Redmen.
Matt Day (l-0) picked up
the win in relief.
Trailir.g 5·2 in the bot·
tom of the sixth the Lions
scored three runs to take

the lead 6-5 .
The Redmen answered
immediately with three runs
of their own to regain the
advantage at 8-6- heading
into the fateful bottom of
the seventh.
Rio collected II hits with
Sato. sophomore first base- ·
man J.P. Keefe. freshman
left fielder Cody Lawhorn,
senior designated hitter
Michael Warren and freshman second baseman Andy
Whewell all notched two
hits each. Warren and freshman third baseman John
Storey knocked in two runs
each.
Sophomore lefty Chris
Stewart started and lasted 5

•

2/3 innings for the Redrnen.
He scattered nine hits and
allowed five runs (two
earned) with four strikeouts
and one walk.
Red-shirt
freshman
Brandon Russell absorbed
the loss in relief. He
allowed four runs (three
earned) with two hits and
five walks in one inning.
Rio Grande falls to l-2 on
the season while Bryan
improves to 4-1.
Rio travels to pre-season
NAJA
No.
19 Lee
University on Monday for a
doubleheader beginning at I
p.m. Stretch ll!temet will
have play-by-play coverage
of both games.

992-2157

·

Oeatl~ir~

How you con have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslftedads
(.~
,.,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for larQe

Display Ads

All Dlaplay: 13: Noon a
Bu•tn. . .
Prior To
Publication
sunct.y Dlapa.y: 1:00
Thurwct.y for Sunday•

o..,.

' AM ad1 mutt be prepaid"

....,..ca ..

POliCIES: Ohio v.Mirr ltubllhing ..-....... U. right kJ .......... or~
lt'l'f tlnw. ErrOJI mul l btl r•ported on m. tir1t di!V ol
Tdbune-s.iltiMH'egiMer wMI M ,..,.,..... tor no IMN tMn thl COlt ot tne .,_., occupiM by tM .rrOf 1nc1 only 1M tlrat ln..r11on . We sMII not
M'f 10M Of 1&amp;1*\M thlt rMUita It-am the JKDIICIUon or OINUion of 11'1 MtvlrtlMmlnt. COifiCtlon wHi be mN1 WI 1M t!rat awaUib'll ldiUon. • Box
111 alwaya confkteutW.. • Curr..n raM card 11ppA1M. • AU rM1 .-... adw•U.•••ll .,.. MJbtect to the F.a.r.. F1lr Hol.dlng Act of 1161. • This
......,..,
·
wlol.tlon ottM lew.

· • Start Your Adi Wtth A Meyword • Include Complete
Desc:riptlon • Include A Price • Avokl AbbrtlvLattons
• Jndude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days·

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

•I \t I \II \ I '

HOM~

'S1'A\..~I~ Yo~.,·v;;

5321

~~,tit~l&gt;

111W\lf'S 10

~'{ f,fi\I~SS Ja)u11N~·

FOUND: Male Beagle at
RC Byrd Locl&lt;s &amp; Dam. Call
1304)575-3300 M-F
Tan Cocker Spaneil wlblack
nyloo collar. Enterprise Ad
by 33 auto CMnic . 740-992·
1429.

r
I

W~\'1111
TO Buv

-------.,
,

6
9 Chow mix pupnies.
..-·
weekS Qki_ No Shots. Free to
a good home. Leave amessage. 740-446· 7525

fteWIPIP•
only htl
lod ldo moolln

OE ollnclorda.

~

0

0

Silver and Gold Co1ns.
Proofsets. Gold Arngs, Pre1935
U.S.
Cuu ency.
Sollta~re Diamonds- M.T. S.
C oin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740.446·
2642.
- - - ----Bu~ing Junk Cars.Truck s &amp;
Wrecks. Pay Cash J 0
Sal11age
(304 )7'!3 ·5343

0

•

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'1 For Sate ................................. ............. 725

.

30

Announcement. .......... .. ... .............. .. ............ O

Antiquea ....................................................... 530

Al)llrlmenll lor Rent .... ,.............................. 440

080

~ucutotlonp rtand•F.,Iea Mlrk~!.. ···························760
""
I I
..cceaaor..a..........................
Auto Repair .................................................. no
Autos lor Slle ..................... .................. ....... 710

Boata I Motora for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies .................. ...................... 550
Bualneaa and Buildings ............................. 340

Opportunity .............................. ...210

BUiineaa Tralnlng ...... .................... .... ......... 140
Campere a Motor Home&amp; ........................... 790
"•mpln
v.
1 Eq Ulpment ....... .................... ........ 780
•~- of Thenkl ......... ............. ......... . .... ... ... 010
C• 1\R'
Chl~lderly Care ............................ ........... 190
~t rtca1/R~I
tlo n............................... 840
E -..
•·~ gara

Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
FFarm EquipRrnant ........:................................. &amp;10
arm• 1or ant............................................. 430
farllll for Sate ............................................. 330

Fruits I Vegetablea ............... .:.•••...•...........•580 .
Furni.•L-~
.-.. Rooml ................... .. ................... 450
"·--·
VW~nnl I HIUIIng........................................... 850
Giveaway ..................................... ................. 040

Happy Ada ....................................................OSO
Hay a Graln ........................... ....................... 640
Help Want.ct ................................................. 110
Homllmprovementa .......................~........... 810
Homtl for Sate ............................................ 310
Gooda ....................................... t o

HouMhokl
510
HouMa tor Rent .......................................... 4
In Memorlam ................................................ 02G

lneurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpltwnl ........................ 860
Llveetock .................... ................................ ..630
LOll and Found ... ........................................ OIO
LOU I Acreega ....................... ... ............. ,, ..• 350

Miscelle~WGU~.............................................. 170

Miscellaneous Men:handlu....................... 540
Molllkl Home Rel)lllr .................................... 860
u-L"~--lor Rent ......... ,..................... 420
~ nur1-

Custodran needed $7.50 per
hO ur .. Retail floor OKperi·
once a ptus. Please ca1! 304611-2782 or Fax 2 16·86 2·
0452
D 11111'1g Room Se rver. Full

time. Apply in Pe1son .
Holiday Inn at Gallipoli s.

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$16.53-$27.58/h r.. now h1r-

Call toda)' to achedule
an Interview!

1-ln-463-6247 •xt. 2301
Part-t1me posit ion a\lailable
tor a Support
Group
Facilitator for a Women's
shehe r. This is a contract
oosi\io n lor appro•imalely
lour
hours
•
week
Applicants should be famillahr
wrtn
crisis inter'llentJon tee •
~
ni ues and group dynamics.

.

Gallipolis,

Loca l Home Health Ag ency.
Now acceptinQ applications

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

lor all shift s. STNA. CHHA,
CN A, PCA. certification
required. call 740·44 1·1377

A,g, Pay $20ihr or
annually
Including Federal Benefit~
and OT.Paid Training.
Vacations-FTIPT
1-800·584-1775 Ext. W8923
USWA

Local Manulm:turiny Facility
Accepting Resumes for
General Labo r WeldinQ and
machine experience a plus.
Resumes must be sent to:
PO Bo• 176. Rio Clrande.
OH 45674.

$57K

R&amp;JTAUCKtNG
, ,...,. , . Way
R&amp;J TMJCI(ing now Hiring II our
New Hawn, WI/ Term1nal. For

Rtg ional H&amp;uii ·Dump Oi~ 1
)'ear OTR venfiable lf4i. Calll ·
IID&lt;Iti2-o:J6&gt;"" lor Klnl

Peraonaia ...... .. :••• ,... .. .. ............................... .. OOS

AN's, Dialysis Techntcians.
and Un• c~ needed lor
Pleasanl Valley Oiaty~s. an
independently owned oulpetient dialysis facility in

PetslorS.te ................................................ 580
Plumbing 6 HMtlng ................. .. ........... .. .. .. 820
tc
230
Prolen~l Serv ea ................... ..............
Radio, TV • CB Repllr .......... ..................... 160
AMI Eatlte WanMd ..................................... 3iO
SchCIOII k\ltructkH\...... ............................... 150

Pt. Pleasant,~Y· E~~:peri~
preferred. CandyeaseBa son
resumes 1o
rtram .
Louisa-Fori Gay Regional
o·
·
2 45 H' h
lalySIS..
1
IQ W"f
2565. louisa, KY 41 230 or

Seed. Ptent • Fertilizer ........ ...................... 650
,
·
SltUIIIona WanMCI.... ................ ... ................ 20
- f o r Aent .......................,., ,..,,, ..••• ,.,,., ,4IQ
..,_..
Sporting GoodS ........................................... 5.20
SUII'IIor Sate..............................................720
ll'uclia lot Sate ............................................ 715

y.,.. s.t.PorMroy/Middle......................... 074
v .... s.t.Pt. , ........ ................................ 078

"Health Benefits
' Paid Training
~Retirement Plan
''WeE!tdy Pay
' Weekly bonus plan
~FIKed schedules
"Paid Vacati ons

•o

4 Wheelers........... ............... 740

Yard s.t. GIHipotta....................................Dn

I

L.,-------'

401K ava •lab&amp;e. We take and5choo:U; 1274B.
pnde in our facility and res •:t.l ......,.... • .o.~o.n..Vl.IK:'
dents and need great team
llU"LI'.Ll""'-f"'PJU._"'

1176

lax to 606-638·3404.

The Town of Mason is
accepling applications for
the position at police patrol·
man. Applications must be
able to pass a physical
tv test as set forth by the
state. Appljcations can be
ptcked up at the crty building,
t60 1 secona
Streer.
Monday-Friday. Sam 10 Spot

encourages
workplace
diversity. MIF ON
Rocksprings Rehabihlatton
Center is looking tor dedicat·
ed compassionate State
Tested Nursing Assistants.
Competitive wanaot , health
~
and dental bene1its,
and
40lK available. we take
pride In our facility and resi·
dents and need great team
players to Join us. 1t ~ou

PO Bok 33
Gallipolis.. OH 4563 1

~!J:~~.O~IH~
n . ...

.:~AU

I
•

Mortgage
(740)367 -0000

Locators

3-4 Br.
1989 L1berty 14x70, 3 bed· House tor rent
Midd.
CIA.
740.843-5264.
rooms. 1 bath, Very Nic e

(
8170

Daytime

t 4K70 2 BR moblte home
S500.00 a mo nth 740-3670654 o r 740-645-34 13
1998 Trailer lor sale or lease
on land cont ract wittl down
payme nt
$375/month
Located l7 mites out oi
Gallipoli s {74 0)742 ·070 3
(740-742· 3201

(740)368· 0000. 2 Bedroom. Bulaville Pike .

Care for Elderly in their
home, any Shift, Reasonable
Rates, Ha\18 references.
Please call (740)44 1•9824

or (740~1 -9232.

20

Racine. Route 124.

94

9-

2253

_

740· 2750
740-367· 7762 or 740-446·
.::..::.::.__ _ _ _ __
Move 1n today• New 2007 3 4060

---~----

0

rib

r

Pl.

t

E&gt;·1An:

nome.

- - - --

I'll

:j:Publ::ishl;·ng;Gorr!&gt;&amp;nY;;:'=~I
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECUIIT'IISSI? needS some work, QOod
I -888-SB2·3345

starter home or rental -unrt
$19,500. 304·675-6349

SH P
CLASSIAEDS

House tor sale. 4 Bedroom.
2 bath. on 1+ acres. Sooth
Gallia S&lt;hool dlsu.:t. $7000
down and $578.82 por
month Cal l 740-256-1686

No Foe Unlass We Win!

..

___________

____ __
,

- -------

bedroom 2 bath
n1~
$199 .86 per montn. Set up wFor
ork'ercos." p2leBro.r,co2Xn5sO
i r."sct3&lt;5
oOn
minutes trom Atnens and
.
ready for immediate OCCU· plu s
dep
Gas
pancy. CaU
_ Heat.Syracuse 992-7680
_ _
740 385 4367
Racine . · Route 124. 740·
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
949-2253.
- -- - - - -Mobile Home Park •n
---,.-llo-n-ll_on_l___ NEW 2007 4 bed D/Wide ! Gallipoli s. OH
PhOne
$4 9, 179 · Midwest (740)828. (740)446-2003 or (740 )446·
~~~1':~~~~~ng ~~ ~2;,;75;::0-~----.,'. 4.::0~9:...- - - - - 5 Plus Acres, 2 Be.. Kit. ,
Din .. Front Am .. FuU base ..
story and 1/2, AC, single
garage/20 X 20 shop

-------o. ~ ....~·s
.
·
D
· 11
grams lor you lo buy your
nu&gt;~ ., .,
rywa 11 and pam
ng serviC·
.' •. Bt'II.U'•" .o.
.
"""'11
lJ"''-'~
1abor. 74o- home instead of renting
es.AI so, miSC.
100
985·3779 or 304·593.0541 . '
% financing
· Less than pertect credit F&amp;S Tire SA 7 &amp; SR 681 .
Tuppers Plains, Oh. include s
; ; ; : : : ; : : : : : : : : ; ~:;:nt could be the
all equipment , Frank WeH s
~
same as rent.
740 985· 3516
have these qualifications ~;:::OI'I'olmiNn:;;;:"/:~ Mortgage
Locators
please
apply
to·
{
)
_
lAirs &amp;
740 367 0000
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Al'RL\(;E
Center, 36759 Aocksptings
•NOIICE•
Road.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
47 acre s +/· Lievi ng Roa d
45769. Exlendicare Health
lNG CO. recommends
Country water. septic. pond
Services. Inc. is an equal
that vou do business with
&amp; barn, electri c. many home
·
that people you know, and
1
opportun•ty
empoyer
si tes
S125.000 fi rm
encou rages
workplace
NOT to send inoney
1304)882-31 31
All rHI eetlte edvertlslng
Qiversity. MIF ON
throogh the mail until you
In thll I'IIWII)&lt;Iper it
- -.:....--...,--...,--have •nvestiga.ted the
MobUe Home Lot tar rent
eubject to the FMieral
:~~ltute as ;eeded ~~~ :o:lfe;:ring=.; : : : : : : : = = Ftlr Hou•lng,Aet of 1968 near V1n1 on. Call (740)44 1·
.
per
pur.
en
1111
which mlklt It 1\leg.el to
resume to Early E~ion
adveftiM ''any
RLu.
Station 2t22 Jefferson Ave.
MoNEf
prefwtnct, Mmftltlon or
W~\TW
Pleasant, WV 25550
~~:::TO;J...ooi;;:~ O*:rimlnetlon based on
Wanted: Direct Supervision
rM&gt;e, coktr. religion, sex
Need to sen your hOme')
fwnlllal 1t.tue or natl~
employees to OVIfsee male
Late on pay~ents. d1vorctl.
origin, or tny lnt.ntion to
youth in a staff secure resi**NOTICE••
make lny IUOI'I
Job transfo r or a death? t
dentlal environment .. Must
~ llmRIUon or
ca n buy your hon'ie. All cash
pass
physical
training Borrow Smart. Contact
diKrimlnltlon...
and Qu1cll; closing. 740·416 requirement. Pay based on the Ohio Dfvitlon of
3130.
experience. Call (740)379- Financial
Institution's
Thle, newepeper w-Ill not
9083 betwHn 9-3 Mon-Fri
Office ol
Consumer
I{ I '\ I ' I ""
knowtngty .ec•pt
,
Affelts BEFORE VOO refl·
ld~Mmentt. for reel
Wenled: EMrs, Paramedlca nance your home or
Ml.llt Which Is In
&amp;
Dispatchers.
Lite obtain a loan. BEWARE
vloletion ol the law. Our
Ambolance Inc. Apply in per- of requests for any large
reecten•reMreby
:;',;~~_770 Jackson Pike, advance paym•nts of
Informed that •II
dwelllnga Mvertiud in
1eM Of insurance. Call the
$98/mol Buy 3bd HUO
tftllntW~Ire
Consumer
WO!I&lt; korn
no1 gel Office of
HOME! 4'%dn. 30yrs @ so,~ .
1v~IMII
on
11n
eQIAtJ
rich quick.~ involwd. For Alfaj" toll tree al 1-(!66For listings 800 -559-4 109
-"""'~'-·
lnlo. send S.A.S.E 1o PO 278-0003 10 feam it the
lt1 709
Bo• 454, Hamden OH mortgage brour or
lender
Is
proper ty For Sale: Ran ch Sty le 2 bedroom house loca1ed 1n
45634·
licensid. (This ia a public Home, 4 Bedrooms, 3 Bat1'1, Gallipolis (740)44 1·0 194
tefllice anl"lWncemen1 6 acres. (740)388-8639
2 Be d10om House on
rom the Ohio Valley
Country l ot. $400fm0. $400
Green 1TWp,
mi from
No
Pe ts,
town.
112 1mi1/2from
New deposit,
Albr9Cht FiNlllCiW Services.
GAHS, 38R Brick Ranch, References
Requirea .
L&amp;edo, Training, Quick Pay,
~
$140 ,000. (7401440-8131
17401388 9686
$36K·$95K PT/FT, 1-800.,...,,._...,
,
:,:;:,::;::,,..-.,
HouM lor tM : 2br. 1 ba. 2 or 3 Br. hOi.Jse. oo pets.
on Monroe Ave. Pt. Pleasant 740-992 -5858.

agm·

MTIMLT (ASCP) •
Full Time. Days

r

~ --~----- Evenings. (740)388·8017 or Trash/Wate r Pd, No Pets
5 Plus Acres. 2 Ek , K•l. , ,17_:4:.:
24_:5_:·9::
13
0l::.
2.c.
:..·_ _ _ _ Depos1t &amp; Ref~r en ces .
1
players IO join us. 11 VOO
~~r~ F~';:; ~/;, =~I ~:;~ 2007 312 Doublewlde ~~7~40:::1.::38::8:..·1:..1.::00:.____ __
have these qualifications
nt~.ra~,
X 20 shop. $37.970 Midwest (740)8281
1
Seasoned lire wood, Oak r- v2 Mob1le homes lor renl

Iii) . .,. . " ".,.

~· ~~ 1 454.

serv.

Musical tnotrumento ................................... 570

Wenlecl to Ren\ ............................................ 470

Tested Nursing Assistants.
Competitive wages, heallh
and dental benefits, and

ing. For application and fre e
governumen t Job info. call
Am erican Assoc . of Labor 1· Interested appliCants should
913-599·8042, 24/tus. emp. send resumes to : Personnel.

Mobile Homel; f9l' Sale. .......,, ..,.......••.•..... ... 320

UpliallllrY .................. ............ :.................... 870
v - For Sate................ ,.............................. 730
WIM*&lt;I to Buy ............................................. 090
Wenlecl to Buy- F.,m Supplies .................. 620
Wllnltd To Do .............................................. 180

·
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Cenler is k&gt;oklng fOf' dedlcat·
ed compassione.te State

or

Bartender wanted to start
Immediately. Appl).' in perso n
at Halfhill's Tavern . 234 Jrd
Avenue. Gallipolis . OH

Locat&amp;d in Gallipolis Ferf)l,
large ~ard , w/1&amp;80 Mobile
Home, 3br. 2ba, vaulted ce11ings, island kitchen. new
refndg .. All etectnc . covered
tronl porch. 2 large Garages
plus outbuildings ~304'16753161 asking $60,000
;.,.;..~...,::..;.;...;....;.._.,

IIIII"'"-~-----, 38R.1BA.,sitaonacretotwl Galhpolis (740 )742 -0703
ScHools
building
beside
H.T. (740-742·320t
116nl0C110N
Elemenlary. $38.000 Neg.
7 40)2 56-I063.
2003 16x76 Fleetwood,
38A. 2 Bath . Vinyl S1ding.
GllllpoJII Career College 3BR,
2BA.,
LA
with Shingle Roof. CIA, Very Nice
(Careers Oose To Homa) Fireplace. DR . Kitchen. Home.
1998
16K80
Call Todayl740.446-4367. Detached 2 car garage, on Riverside, 3BA, 2 Bath. V•nyl
1-80Q-214·04~
171x85 Lot Within walking Sidrng, Shingle Aool. CIA,
www.IJi!lipolilc.l~rHI'oollege.oom Distance ot new SGHS . New Carpet &amp; Viny l. Ask .
Accredited l.tewber "ccrediting Asking $80.000. (740)256· aPout our (3) 1411.70 hOme s.
0oo..onc11 b independenl Colleges

1111\

NOW HIRING!
Pease
app Y
to and Hdory split. You haul
Ap palacn1ans
Work
at
..
. bl Rocksprings Rehabilitation
home.
!6 17 14 36· 4624 We have posrtrons ava1 1a e C 1 36759 Rock ·
()( 1 haul· Take CM&amp; HEAP
I. I $8 s·~en er,
sprongs
Boston. Ma
star mg a
. umvur.
A d
Po
ON n7;4Q-~94=9-~2038;:~
· ......- - . ,
Make callS on behalf ot
4;:69 Ew:te:r:;e Healt~
AVON! All Areas! To Buy
political organizahons like
.
T•tln•u.r
the NAA
Sel"\lices, Inc. is an equal
To Do
~~_ :;irley Spears. 304 opportunity employer that

For LeaM ..................................................... 480
For Sale ......................................,.................585
For Sale or Trade .........................................5!10

liib

llnJ&gt; W.-\Nilll
1
~-------.,1 ~-------r

Now Hiring expe nenced
..,
Sawrmll help. App ly m perTwin
River
An Excellent way to earn son.
261 2
money The New A,on
Hardwoods
US RI3S,
Call Manlyn 304·88~·2645 Southside

--~-----

2br, House in Pt PI $465
Homestead Really Broker
\304 )675-4024 {304)6750799 ask for Nancy.
_ _ _ __ _:___ _
Attention!
Local company oftering ~NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams tor you to bu'JI your
home 1ns1eact of ~en t in g
• 100% fi nancing
· Less than pe rlect &lt;;redi t
accepted
' Payment could be the
same as rent

condi1ion. $6,000 OBO. Call Very n1ce house tor r&amp;nt 3
(740)446·5292 daytime or BR. 1 Bath. AC , Full
(740)367-0533 evening.
Basement, 2 Car Garage,
Large yard in count ry sening
1991 Trailer 3 bclrm. 2 bath
on Pomeroy Pike near
needs work! No Title $4,500
Chester, Eastern local
OBO
1540)745· 7729
Schools. $800imonth pl us
(540)765· 7786
deposit . No pets. Call
3bd 2ba HUD S23,3:MI
Only 1115/mo. 5% 00. 20 1998 Tra iler b sale or le ase (7 401992-2996
ym 0 8%. For listings 800· on land contrad with down
55~109 J~;F254
payment
$375/month
Located 17 m1te s out of

L"':....:2:;0::0.:.7,:b~y..;N,::E,::A.;:•:.,:I;:n;:.c.:,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _w,_w,_w..;...c..;,o_m_lc_•_·_•o_m._\

HELP WAI'liVJl

HUD HOME! 3bd $11 2/mo.
3bd 2bl S155Jmo. More
hom es availab le! 4o.odn.
30yrs @ 8% . For lislin os
800-559·41 09 KF 144

home. Corner lot, fireplace .

~

Hn..v WANTHl

14

lhan

modem kitchen, }acuui tub,
Pa)'men1 around $550 per
mon-lh_._7_•_o-_36_7_
-7_1_29_.__
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, fireplace
on P&amp;easant Valtev Rd. 112
mite trom Rio Grande.
Available with 1, 5, 01 8
(740i709- 11 66
aores.

'1- ~ ,~

L-------,.1
llU

with less

3 bedroom, 1 bath

this

~

116

Down even

perf&amp;ct credit is available on

tr ucks, $35-$130. Call Cell
Mi•ed
breed
pu pptes 1-3(}4-812-1037, attar 6pm ~
bea- (740)446·8955
IOOk•ng tor delivery staff tor
Husky/Sheppardx
Catering compan y. hour&amp;
1.r 14, 07
018 .12wks old
(304) 675•3126 no answer
mostly M-F day shift. Send
resume to 1364 Herman Ad.
leave message .
r.TII"'"_ _;..._..;....., Gallipolis, oh 4563 1

~~~~~~~~~m=i•~·(:7:40~)4~4:!)-~7~52~5~-,

Molorcyctu 6

0

I·

Free. Small F housebmken
dog . Spayed. Prelers adults.
(304)674· 1374
Owner has health prob. 740·
256· t 336
CASH Paid lor junk cars &amp;

Pups to giveaway, Chow

Bualnesa

1\ I \ I l . ._ I \ I I

_ _GIV!'.A\\A\
_ _ _ __. Absolule Top Dollar: U.S.

.,
· -2 nine week old F Golden
retriever m•x.ed puppies. ca ll
740-367·0624

Thll
ccept1

Waiting till Spring to
clean your Carpet ?
No Need!
Low Moisture carpet
cleaning drie6 in an hour!
Calvin LeportiCieartv Clean
(304)675+0022

lio~E5'f, I'M No'f

Found-White dog in Maso n
damaged ear. 304·773·

.;..;....0~1

!URSALI:

kllncorlyt.Ocomcoot. net

Money to Loan .................................., ...... .... 220

fre shman backstop Chris College. Bryan swept the
Mahon (Hamilton. OH) . Redrnen on Saturday winsemor Michael Wmren . ning II - l in the tirst game
senior right fielder Nate and 9-8 in the second.
from PageBl
Chau. Lawhorn and ' freshThe lone run for the
Redrnen
in game one came
won for the Flames. He man Brad Konrad added the
allowed three hits over fiv~ other base hits for the off back-to-back walks folinnings. Matt Montgomery Redmen. Konrad knocked lowed by a sacritice bunt
and a sacrifice fly off the pat
carne on to work the final in his tirst collegiate run.
Rio
Grande
will
return·
to
of junior shortstop Kenta
two innings and got credit
for his second save of the · the diamond next weekend Sato. That happened to be
at Pikeville College playing the only bright spot for the
young campaign.
doubleheaders
on Saturday Redmen as they were noSophomore lefty Mickey
and
Sunday.
Stretch hit.
Robinson pitched well bUt
Will Stokes threw the
took the defeat for Rio Internet will ha~e play-byGrande. Robinson yielded play cove(age all four first no-hitter in Bryan
College histol1'· pitching 5
eight hits and six runs in 4 games.
2/3 innings. He struck out
Rio also bad a tou&amp;h day innings allowmg 4 walks
five and walled four.
on the diamond in fmal two and striking out 3. Stokes
Junior center fielder games of the opening three- earned his second win of
Jordan Baker doubled and game series witb Bryan the season, improving his

or Fax To

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
Monday-Friday for Jn . . rtlon
Jn Next D•v~• P•per
Sunday In-Column: 1.:od p.m.
For Sunday• P•per

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

~egister

(740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333
Word Ads

HOW IQ WRITE Aft AD

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.corn
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Sentinel

ijtrtbune

To Place

Regular Season
Akf. Firestone 52. Akr. Ellet 43
Akr. Kenmore 80, Akr. Buch tel 38
Akr SVSM 69, MassillOn Washington 66 , OT
Akron E. 46, Akr. Garl•eld 43
Andover Pymatuning Valley 48, Kinsman Badger 20
Arlington 60. lima Perry 18
Barnesville 65. Belmont Union Local 57
Bay Village Bay 51 . Rocky River Magmficat 44
Bloomdale Elmwood 60. Gibsonburg 27
Bridgeport 57, Mc:Mechen Donahue (W.Va .) 48
Brooki1eld 47 , Warren Champ•on 32
Castalia Margarena 56. P.ort .~li n ton 48
Celina 55, Ft. Loramie 50
Centerburg 45, Cardington-lincoln 21
Chardon 64, Eastlake N _37
Cin. Indian Hill 74, Cm. F1nneytown 46
C!e. John Hay 63, Carl Shuler 17
Cle. Success Tech 40, Cle. Margaret Ireland 2
Cots. E. 84, Gals. W. 50
Cols. Linden-McKinley 41 , Morral Ridgedale 31
Columbiana Crestview 45, N_lima S. Range 30
Convoy Crestvie\111 56, Haviland· Wayne Trace 32
Cornerstone Christ 62, Painesville Harv&amp;y 31
Cor11and Lakeview 62 . Youngs. Liberty 45
Delaware Buckeye Valley 69, Cots: Linden-McKinley 54
Delphos St. John's 64 , Van Wert lincolnOJiew 21
Dublin Scioto 53, Cola. Mifflin 41
Findlay Liberty-B_
enton 65, Tiffin Calvert 17
Ft Jenning&amp; 50. Delphoa Jefferson 48
Gallion Northmor 41 . Morral Ridgedale 31
Garren Morgan 59, Cle. School of Arts 37
Gene\18 54. Conneaut 29
Lima Cent. Cath. 65, Rockford Pa~way 39
Lisbon Beav'er Local 74, New Middletown Spring. 54
London Madison Plains 59. Cedarville 51
Lordstown 55, N. Bloomfield 29
Mansfield 78. Bartlerton 31
Mansfield Temple Christian 65. Lima Temple Christian 36
McDonald 50, N. Jackson Jackson-M•hon 42
Medina Hi~land 76, Shaker Hts. Laurel 30
Mentor 53, Colon 46
MogadOre Field 67 . Alliance Martinglon 42
Mowl)'stown Whiteoak 54. Felicity-Franklin 35
New Boston Glenwood 62 . latham Western 48
New Madison Tn·VillaQ&amp; 54, W AleJtandria Twin Valley S . 25
New Matamoras Front•er 51 , Caldwell 39
Newton Falls 57, Girard 49
Ottoville 76. Defiance Ayersville 53
Parma Padua 60. Garfield Hts. Trinity 53
Pemberville Eastwood 65. Tontoganv Otsego 27
Richmond Hts_43. Fairport Harbor Harding 34
Rockford Parkway 65. Lima Cent Cath. 39
Shadyside: 57, Toronto 45
Stow-Munroe Falls 75, Green 62
Streetsboro 69. Warrensville Heignts 56
Wapakoneta 60. Coldwater 58, OT
Waynesfie!d-Gosnen 64 , Manon Cath . 41
Wellsv~le 55, Berlin Center Western Reserve 38
Wickliffe 40. Perry 36
Youngs . Christian 67. E. U\lerpool. Cnristian 19

missal came after all other ,
Defensive coordinator
NFL
head
coaching Wade Phillips was hired
vacancies were filled.
as head coach of the
Cowboys
on
Dean Spanos. known to Dallas
be close friends with for- Thursday. Offensive coormer Dallas Cowboys dinator Cam Cameron was
coac~ Jimmy Johnson.
hired as head coach of the
and Smith said they plan Miami Dolphins on Jan.
to move quickly on hiring 19.
a replacement. Smith said
Tight ends coach Rob
he had a list of candidates Chudzinski
became
offensive
but refused to divulge Cleveland's
coordinator. and linebacknames.
Every
time ers coach Greg Manusky
Schottenheimer's
job was
as
San
hired
Francisco'
s
defensive
appeared to be in Jeopardy, Pete Carroll's name coordinator.
would pop up . Although
Schottenheirner said last
Carroll has said he 's com- week that change was
mitted to staying at inevitable, but Smith
Southern California, he . sounded concerned about
met with Dolphins owner losing the coordinators.
Wayne Huizenga in early saying. "Both in the same
January.
year. Wow. ..
Carroll said then he was
Although Schottenheimer
not offered the Miami was given the power to hire
coaching job, ~nd stressed and fire assistants. neither
that he has never thought Spanos nor Smith provided
about leaving USC since spedtics of what they kept
arriving after the 2000 referring to as an "untenseason.
able situation."
.
Spanos said in a state"We both wanted to win a
ment that he had expected world championship very
that
the
core
of badly," Smith said during a
Schottenheirner's coach- conference call. "It's just
ing staff would remain that my approach might
intact.
have been a little different
"Events of the last than his."
month have now conSpanos said disagreevinced me that it is not m~nts over future stalling
possible for our organiza- was "part of it. It's more
tion to function at a cham- the actual working relapionship level under the tionship that's been difficurrent structure," Spanos cult."
said in a statement . "On
Running backs coach
the contrary. and in the Clarence Shelrnon, who's
plainest possible lan- never been a coordinator,
guage. we have a dysfunc- was promoted to replace
tional situation here . Cameron .
Shelmon
Today I am resolving that accepted only ;t one-year
situation once and for all." contract due to what had

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

-

Nice 14~~:70 3 Bedroom . 2
Bath
home.
Locatea
between
Athens
and
Pomeroy
$365.00
pe r
monlh. Call (740)385·9948
Ali\RThli:N I'i

lUll

RL"'r

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apart ments
tor Rant. Meigs County. In
town , No Pets. Deposit
Required. (740 :199 2·5174 or
(740)441 -0110
1 and 2 bed room aparl ·
ments. furn1shed and unlu rnished. securit-,o deoosit
required . no pets 74()..992·
2218.
2tlr. Apt . on 5tn Street S375
ask lor Don (304)593· 1994

A HIDDEN TREASURE •
laurel
Corr1mon s
Apartments . Largest in 1he
area • Beatl!lfull y renQvateo
th roughout 1nclud1ng Nanc
new ~ 1 1ch en ana ba lh
StM 1ng at $405 Call 100ay1
!3041273-- 3344
Apa rtmen t tor rent. 1-2
Borm .. remooe•eo. new carpet. stove &amp; f T~ IiJ . . wate r.
sewer. trasn od. M1ddlei}C'rt
$425.00
No pets. Ref
req uired. 740-843- 5264

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
Dnve from $349 to $448
, Walk to shop &amp; mov 11~s Ca!l
2-3
Bed room
Du p le ~
740-446·2568
EQual
$420/mo plus deposit &amp; utili·
Hous1ng Opportunity
ties 1n Downtown Gallipol•s
No Pets , 740)446-0332 Clean, very n1ce 1 bedroom
6am-5pm Mon-Sat
furnished
Apartment
Depos11 (304)675·2970
3 BR. t bath. LeG,ande
Blvd, no pets. $625 mo. • Moder n ! BR apt. \740)446sec dep.(740l446-3644
0~90 .

�.•

Tuesday, February 13', 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· Twin Rlvefs Tower is accepting applications tor waiting
ED l AFFORDABL£1
Townhouse
apanments, l~t lof Hu&lt;l-ouboizod. 1· b&lt;.

BRIDGE

ardlor small houses FOR apar1ment, call 675-6879
RENl. Call (740)441·1111 Equal Housing ()ppoftunity
b ~icatoo &amp; inlofmation

Phillip

ACROSS
Alder

\II HI II \ \ 111" 1

Ellm View
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apanments
• Central heat &amp; IVC

Thompsons

•W&amp;sherldryer hookup

Aepa~r- 675-7388 .

• AU

e~ric-

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
1/2 mile west on SA

Appl~ance

&amp;
For sale,
automatic

124 to Rutland, Oh

re-conditioned
washers &amp; dryers, relrtoera-

avel'8glng

$50-$61l'month
•Owner pays water, sewer,

trasll

(304)882-3017

e

740.992-5682

tors. gas and electric
range S, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do

.

9am - 6pm

•RENTALS •SALF.S
•SERVICE
. •FREE DELIVERY
.
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

CI!-JJ-41

"

~~=~•

We1t

MONTY

East

•

9 6 2

•

J 10

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Wa•

Nor1k

Redbl.

2•
Pass

Pua
3 NT

2N"f

Middleport DepL

wtiAT'S TtiAT?
MIJST
Jf Tttf

Store
Sue's Seledables

March 2nd
5:00pm to 9:00pm
Man:b JnllO:OO am

'LONE

Auctioneer

fl.ANGftt!

BIUy R. Goble Jr.

740-416-1164
www.auctionzip.com

Hilmi ca~•••r AM hi IIIII a

BARNEY

.......... 1 ,.._

NOW WE CAN
OUT GA&amp;.a II

FIGGER

WattKproofing.

Hill-.

Baer Builders
&amp;Developers

~;,·II

~~ tt 'I , It It'
29670 llashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771

7.......2217

• Custom Baths
• Complete
Renovations
• Honey Do Lists
• Plumblng(Wlring

YOUR

BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

• Free Estimates

THE BORN LOSER
rWILl.'&lt;OU &amp;.
~'&lt; \lfo.~'{I~E1

High end Dry
Storage

......,.
Owner

Rhonda

Roofing, Siding,
Soffil, Declcs.
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
OrywaU,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Peters

Manager

~~~

~1'11-\11

740-317-4)531

e

NOTICES

NURSING ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applications lor lull-time and
per diem Nursing Assistants lor South
One and South Two. All shifts available.
Previous nursing assistance experience
preferred.
Holidays,
health
insurance,
single/family plan, dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long-term disability
and retirement
Send resumes to:
Plosant V.lley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
1510 V.lley Drive
Point PlaSIInt. WV 15550 ·
Or fax:

304-675-6975
Or apply online at:

-pvllley.ora
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

STATE TESTED NURSING ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Nursing
and
Rehabilitation Center has openings lor
State Tested Nursing Assistants. Twelve
hour shifts, shift differential, excellent
salary, holidays, health insurance
single/family plan, dental, life insurance,
vacation, long-term disability and
retirement
For tnore information, please contact
Angie Cleland, Director of Nursing.
(304) 675-5236.

AA/EOE

e

DIRECIOR OF HOME CARE SERVICES
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes lor a Director of Home
Care Services. Home Health experience
required. Experience in supervision and
management of a Home Care Agency
preferred.
RN with Bachelor's Degree. Must
maintain licensure in the states of WV
and Ohio. Applicants actively pursuing a
BSN will be considered.
Send resumes to:

PINsant v.ney HospiUI
t/o~RtsGUrces

UlO Vlllley Drift
Point ,...,... wv :1:5550
Or lax:
304-675-6915

Or apply online at:

-pvalley.Ofl
AA/EOE

Mason County ~occer

League
Spring Season FINAL Registration
Mon (2/12) and Tue (2113)
5:30 pm • 7:00 pm
Jon Parrack's Nationwide
Insurance
Open to Mason and Meigs County
youth born between 8/1 /2000 and
8/1 /1988.
For more info call Becky at
304-674-0108
Please do NOT call Nationwide

PUBLIC NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal
Comptny haa tubmlt·
ted an Appllcllion to
Revise • Coal Mining
ptrmll IR·354·60 to
the Ohio Oeptrtment
of N1tural Reaourcea,
Dlvlalon of Mineral
Resources management. The Application
to Revlae 1 Permit
(ARP) liN Is located

Y0111 R;pt lo Know, llfli!!l!d . .118 VIlli' I*

__P.;.;u.:.bl_lc_N_o_tl_c_e_
C
The Me1ga ounty
Department of Job IIICI
Family
Servlcta
(OJFS) 11 roqueallnt
propotala from 1 qui~
Hied vendor to provide
a promotional campalgn
aimed
11
enhancing the foster
ctreladoptlon
pro·
grams
at
the

Public Notice
The

2006

io

Easl
Obi.
Pass

All pass

Oscar Wilde wrote. 'The only 1hing to do
with goad adVIce ~ pass ~ an. It is .-r
any use to oneself.·
Some oo doobt 1ee1 that that oogn to
read: The ooly thing to do with good
advice ~ pass h an to one's bridge pannor. h ~ . - any use to anese\1.
So. cut out this column and mail h to
yoor panner. asking him how he would
plan the Ptav in three no-trump after
W8811eada the heart jack.
Over Eut'a takeout double. South'a
redouble shows IG-plus points (and nat
vtrl good &lt;Iamond IUppor!). Welt is
alklwod to jump in a long au~ in this Bit·
uaticn. because he Ia known to have lew
vaiUO!. (Thtre'a been an opa,;ng bid. a
takeoul- and a redouble; how can
lourth hand "'"'" much?) North's pass
over two hearts is iofcing - ~ denies •
weak. distribulional opening (he would
rebid immediate~). and lour decent
hearts (he would make a penalty double).
Hyour partner immediately leads a club
to clummy's queen or takes the diamond
finesse. he goes dawn here. Since East
is high~ Hkaly to hold both the club ace
and clamand ki~ your partner should
play a spade to dunvny's king. than cal
lor a low club. Eas! has oo defense. Hhe
wins with his club ace. South has nine
tricks via two SJl&amp;deS, two he&amp;ns. one
diamond and lour clubs. And ~ East
plays low. declarer wins with his club
jack, then takes the diamond finesse.
getting home with two spades, two
heans. lour diamonds and one club.
Hyour panner gal thai righl. keep him.

r---

AstroGraph
-'ilrthdoe':

_........,, - - , .. 2007
By llomk:e- Ooal
What will make the year ahead one of

your more happier and fonunate ones
wilt be your friends playing such helpful
roles in your affairs. In each situation
where a pal stepa in to assist yoy In
some way, the results will be favorabkl.

AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) calmness. persistence and a &amp;econd
effort are your more reliable allies. 11
you're going ah~u something momentous, keep a smile on your ta6e and don't
take "no" lor an answer.
PISCES (Feb. 2o-March 20) -

PEANUTS

Kveping
a calm head in competitive situations will
give you the edge over the other guy. You
have the ability to remain neutral and

detached without allowing emotion to
control your lalenl

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

ARIES {MarCh 21 -April 19) - A valuable
ally has been won to your cause through
your pleasant treatment of him or her
This person will willingly taKe a more
acti'Ve role in helping you achi&amp;\18 an
ambi1tous ob)ectiVil .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Social
gathering! or grcup activities could
prO'VQ to be a pleasant and positive experience for you . Good things oould result
at this time by mingling with the light

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

Annuli

Ane~~~~rt~the L.----------------------~

VIllage ~ lrtldclleport It
IVIIIIble lOr publiC
lntpectlon 11 tht
Fllctl Otllcer't otttce
In Chy Hall II 237 AICI
Street,
·Middleport,
Ohio 45780 between
the houra of D 1m •d
4 pm Uondly through
:~ t:fWs:~~::.r~~~ DJFSthrough
the Frldoly.
AdoptOhlo
Kids (2) 12, 13, 14
Coal Company. The Incentive Fund tor the
Appllc1don to Revlee 1 ptrlod of March 1 2007 - - - - - - - Permll (ARP) encom- through June 30.'2007.
Public Notice
pasoa1 10.1 acres and The daadHne far oub- - - - - - - - 11 located on the minion of propc&gt;.~all PUBLIC NOTICE
Rutland 1 112 Minute \o February 23, 2007 II NOTICE: Ia hereby
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle 12:00 noon. For pib. given th8t on Satunlly,
Map, approximately 1.8 gram lnfomuolion 'nd February 17, 2007 II
mlle• NCorthelltOhol1 guldellnoa,
contoct 10:00 1.m., e public
Sa1em
0 · Chrlo Sh1nk Socl1l eelt will be held 11 211
en1ar,
"';" 8 ffllllllmetely 1.7 Sarvlcel Su~ 11 W.
Second
St.,
m Ita orlhwell of the (740) 9112-2117 ext. 123 Pome"'Y, Ohio. The
lnteraectlon of Ohio or 175 Race SIIHI, Farmera e1nk and
Rouleo 124 end Middleport,
Ohio Saving• Company Ia
325.
45780
eelllng lOr ctah In
The application proAll · aubmltalona hend or certllted check
1
poaeo to conltruct
muat be ractlved by the foliowll)l co111111, _ mine water treat· mall or h•d dell- al:
·
ment ayaltm that will by the lbovl dale and 19111 Chevrolet 10
beutlll•ed .t orthetraat- time No materlala p 1 c k u p
ment of mtne drtlnage
.
1GCCS1"""-·
from Southern Ohio received Iller thet date
.....- ....110
.
will be Included In pr• 19119 GUC Jimmy 4x4
Coal Comptny a Ulna vlouuubiniltlont nor 1GKCT18WIXK5023ell
No. 2 IIICI Mine No. 31. will be conaldertcl. The The Furntr1 Bank lnd
Comptny,
the appllcltion Ia on DJFSreoarv81 the right Savlnt•
~~~l~ufC: to rejeCt any or all pro- Pome"'Y,
Ohio,
E
Second sireet ponla. The DJFSia reaaNM the right to
·
' prohibited from dlt- btd II thll ult, IIICI to
Pomoro~, Ohio 45768 crimination on the willldrtw the lbove
far publte viawint IIICI beals ot race, color, coltateral prior to lilt.
lhall remain 10 far 11 •natlonel origin oax Further The Farmll'l
least 30 days following
ion '
' a k '
Sa
the lest data of pubtl- age, rei 1g , political an
and
vtnga
calion ol• this notice. belief or dlsabllhy.
Company ,..., _ the
right to ra1tet tny or 111
Written comii'Minta or (2) 9, 12, 13
~Is far an lnforbldln:"""ltted. lbove
mat conr.rence may be
Public Nolict
dMcrlbed c~~--•
ftled with the Divlalon
will be loki • 81 le~
lllner1l Annual w here ,.
•-·, with no
manlgement
The
2006
2045
Morae Road ' Bulldlnt Flna~lallleport of the uprnr d or Implied
H•S Columbue Ohio V\1\tge ol Rutland It -~ given.
~ within 30 aval~blt far public
For 111111111' ............
days Iller the leal dele tnapec:tion .at the vi~ lion, or lor ., oppcl ._
ltge onlce on ll1ln ment to 1ntpe1:t of publlclllon of this St'"t in Rutl1nd. erat, prior to . . dale
w~ (2) 6 13
Ohio, 45775 between conhtcl Cyndle, Ken or
'
'
·
the houre of 9 em and Randy II 9112·2138.
2 pm Monday through (2) 13, 14, 15
Friday.
(2) 9, 12, 13

s-

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• HomeDII System
• Hellos System
~ ...O!It)ll:"~lf!·t~ij"ij!!!ft~....

r't'OU EXPE.C.\ I"£ TO fo.':&gt;l( A~
TUl-IA 1

.=..: 47~

It Fotka
12 Aealon

pr-

13 Bolivia

51 Opon

15=-~

55 Cobbler

56 Mini-play
Blatuo
57Un16 R-uo
lllllnation
loam, oflllll 56 Bolae"a at.
11 Conoldera 58 Orangutan
lobe
60 In-flight
20 Dentlll'l
lellure
order
61 La .....
21 Com-.
- pill

a:=.

A pass that does
not deny power

G
• you'RE so
FOXALKIOUS.,
...l&gt;lt&gt; l't'\ !,0 ...

We Deliver To You!
Pub1k Nolils itt Ntlliplplr\

SU~O!ltt&gt;
'\'OOO~Wf'

810 NATE

F- Eatirnata

Janet Jeffers

c

l

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Now Renting

(740) 992-5232

Help Wanted

,..6E£., WI-ll&gt;-'{ Nto..

(740) 416-1568

UJIIIIIII...

Help Wanted

'

network
1 "-!ion
40Panecha
lolmoute 41 Havedln4 T1ka
42LPapaed
44 Garage

10 Blows h
14 Find

fNture
32 llornbly

riiMY
33 !luporJMn.

prectlcal

scraped by

2 Gael
republic
3 Lag joint

5
j)ll'
&amp;Type
I"
of panot
35
7 lillie ...tt
36 Lean IOWan! 8 Orchant

r:.-;_

37P38 "h'a cold
out therel"

37 Rore

mlnorala
41 Aqu.tum
lMI doriiJOfo
Ancient IIIIo 43 Go billing
Colt
44 Roall bell
of reptlre
ou lhlnk over 45 "PuppY
Unlel
Love

companion
linger
25 Omanllhlo 46 ~
26 Getman
41 Muttunw
coal region 48 Opera 111
28 Budgol
In Egypt
hem
50 Ttmo porlod
29 Brimming 52 Motor pill
over
53 Colorlllon
30
1n
54 Time IPI"

r.....

lncognHo

10
22

23
24

• CowMy

34 ..Oh,

31 L.a!Of an
36 Aeltanc.

17tomb
Raider

23 Okramoreol
DOWN
24 Quip
27CIIIIPUS
1 Just

Opening lead: "' J

AUCTION

0870, Rogers Batemtnt

.

Soot•

30Nervo

pronoun

Vulnerable: Both

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

nished. E&amp;tabtished 1975.
CaH 24 Hrs. (740) 44&amp;-

K 7

6 A 10 9 7

Dealer: North

Stop &amp; Compote

IIASEIIENT
WAlERPROOFING
Unconciltonal llfebme guarantee. Local relerences fur·

9 K 3 2

+

• J 52
• J 6 4 32

---1111

parting, 12 min. trom Rio

~

"AQ

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Grande. Must see lo appreciate. $325/mo. (614)595m3. 900-798-4686.

8 6

Soutlo
• A. 7 4

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

lft'lmaculate 1 Bedroom Apt,
Newlv Carpeted, Freshly
Painted &amp; Decorated, New
appliances. WID Hookup.
Pri'llacy Fence. Private

• Q J 10 I
~

• 6 4 3
... 5

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
•New Homes

7 •

• A Q 10 9 8
... K Q a

rftunihl I•G1d!:•

repairs on maP brands in
shop or at your home.

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

.r.;
watcher

w-.

TljUIIIlll

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campos

c.bity Cip'lef cryp!Oglllfll •• a..a.d 11om quolalions b¥ 11mwt PIQOit, Pi$1..:1 I)I'IWt
EICtlletlef II til cillt* S1lrds b .ahlr.

Torlilys cve.·tiJIIJ'IS P

"SRW TXKO
XTXW . "
"10
10

ERYtW

AE

ST

RYDW

• LYEYYK

RTXTG

AE

CWYGWG

ST IW

SRYX

KAUW. " • Y'NGDYXSWE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'You must remember that same things that are

legally right are nat moral~ right.· • Abranam L1ncoln

1011
'=~=, S@"\\clllJ-~-s~s·
ljh4 for ClAY I. POllAN ....:;_ _ Ull
__

0 lqur
hatno""' lonors ol tho
""'lllbltd WOtd&gt; be-

I
PI I I 1

low to '""" '"'" llmplo -.IJ.

MICV!T

2

T Y CAH

1 I f T'
3

GU J E D

f I I Is

.
0

I

"
~

I
N

I think advatisen should spend
their money on improving their
products then they wouldo 't

1--r:H,....;...U.,.N,_R.,;.,I,.;. C~~ need 10 m~~~:b - ·- i
Comploto tho chucklo

1 I I I' I e

. ..J.'-.1..-l..
. ..J.W.
L-l..

qu..Od
by Iii!;~ in the milling _.,
you develop from llop No. 3 below.

c.owd

SUNSHINE CLUB

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
97 Betch Street

V C YOUN C Ill
'

'

I '

I

.

Middleport. OH .
10x10x10xl0
991-3194
or991-66J5
"Middleport's only

'

s.tf.Stor...•

r-~~~--~~--~---.

Manier.'•
Re-=ycl
ng
l~JI

~
0

t

•

GARFIELD

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - You are
likely to be exceptionally fortunate. especially when engaged In marketing
in'o'Oivements that have a potential tor
generating earnings tor everybody.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - What
makes you such an vftective negotiator
is the fact that you'll listen so attentively
to what others ha\16 to say when analyzing a matter of importance. They'll appreciate your great care.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- All you have to
do to get willing hands to pi1Ch in and
help you with things is to first set a
happy, pleuant 8J{8mple that would
encourage them to loUow your lead.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Because
you r personality is so charming and
magnetic. drawing others to you will
automatically happen. Where there is a
social gathering, the buzz of acth.1ity will
,hum around you .
liBRA 'Sep\. 23-0ct. 23) - Being in a
happy-go-lucky mood allOws you to JUggle several projects simul1aneously and
do an exceplionalfy good job on each ot
them . It prows optimism produces optimistic results.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - The
pleasant events of yesterday set a happy
tone for whatEWer plans yoo have. As a
result, your positive demeanor continues
to produce further happy activities and

events.

ll••••aa•
....
7

F p

. . .. . .

' ? . . .. . .
. . . . .t.fllllil

SAGIIT.4.RIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- This
in another day where you should be able
to tind ways to gratify )'Qiolr TlUITI&amp;rou&amp;
materiaNstic dMirM. The key is to want
something strongly enougn to give you
the initiative to go after it.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22 -Jan. 1 9) - Your
leadership qu•litktl will be quite pronounced. Friends Will quickly I'Upi;H1d to
your pleasant naturt and realize You're
the on. qualified to hand/to people and
glw tnem dlrec:ti ......

SOUP TO NUTZ

ICR•MLI1S ANSW11t1

2-12-07

Kil*-- - Doulla c - lHANK -liiOI'B
C_.,.t!an, "AI aldd IIIC:tecl up ill clus. I plarlcl
booky OllCieiiDCI die lllaCher soat mo •lHANK
you NOTE!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS .

�.•

Tuesday, February 13', 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· Twin Rlvefs Tower is accepting applications tor waiting
ED l AFFORDABL£1
Townhouse
apanments, l~t lof Hu&lt;l-ouboizod. 1· b&lt;.

BRIDGE

ardlor small houses FOR apar1ment, call 675-6879
RENl. Call (740)441·1111 Equal Housing ()ppoftunity
b ~icatoo &amp; inlofmation

Phillip

ACROSS
Alder

\II HI II \ \ 111" 1

Ellm View
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apanments
• Central heat &amp; IVC

Thompsons

•W&amp;sherldryer hookup

Aepa~r- 675-7388 .

• AU

e~ric-

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
1/2 mile west on SA

Appl~ance

&amp;
For sale,
automatic

124 to Rutland, Oh

re-conditioned
washers &amp; dryers, relrtoera-

avel'8glng

$50-$61l'month
•Owner pays water, sewer,

trasll

(304)882-3017

e

740.992-5682

tors. gas and electric
range S, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do

.

9am - 6pm

•RENTALS •SALF.S
•SERVICE
. •FREE DELIVERY
.
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

CI!-JJ-41

"

~~=~•

We1t

MONTY

East

•

9 6 2

•

J 10

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Wa•

Nor1k

Redbl.

2•
Pass

Pua
3 NT

2N"f

Middleport DepL

wtiAT'S TtiAT?
MIJST
Jf Tttf

Store
Sue's Seledables

March 2nd
5:00pm to 9:00pm
Man:b JnllO:OO am

'LONE

Auctioneer

fl.ANGftt!

BIUy R. Goble Jr.

740-416-1164
www.auctionzip.com

Hilmi ca~•••r AM hi IIIII a

BARNEY

.......... 1 ,.._

NOW WE CAN
OUT GA&amp;.a II

FIGGER

WattKproofing.

Hill-.

Baer Builders
&amp;Developers

~;,·II

~~ tt 'I , It It'
29670 llashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771

7.......2217

• Custom Baths
• Complete
Renovations
• Honey Do Lists
• Plumblng(Wlring

YOUR

BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

• Free Estimates

THE BORN LOSER
rWILl.'&lt;OU &amp;.
~'&lt; \lfo.~'{I~E1

High end Dry
Storage

......,.
Owner

Rhonda

Roofing, Siding,
Soffil, Declcs.
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
OrywaU,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Peters

Manager

~~~

~1'11-\11

740-317-4)531

e

NOTICES

NURSING ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applications lor lull-time and
per diem Nursing Assistants lor South
One and South Two. All shifts available.
Previous nursing assistance experience
preferred.
Holidays,
health
insurance,
single/family plan, dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long-term disability
and retirement
Send resumes to:
Plosant V.lley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
1510 V.lley Drive
Point PlaSIInt. WV 15550 ·
Or fax:

304-675-6975
Or apply online at:

-pvllley.ora
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

STATE TESTED NURSING ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Nursing
and
Rehabilitation Center has openings lor
State Tested Nursing Assistants. Twelve
hour shifts, shift differential, excellent
salary, holidays, health insurance
single/family plan, dental, life insurance,
vacation, long-term disability and
retirement
For tnore information, please contact
Angie Cleland, Director of Nursing.
(304) 675-5236.

AA/EOE

e

DIRECIOR OF HOME CARE SERVICES
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes lor a Director of Home
Care Services. Home Health experience
required. Experience in supervision and
management of a Home Care Agency
preferred.
RN with Bachelor's Degree. Must
maintain licensure in the states of WV
and Ohio. Applicants actively pursuing a
BSN will be considered.
Send resumes to:

PINsant v.ney HospiUI
t/o~RtsGUrces

UlO Vlllley Drift
Point ,...,... wv :1:5550
Or lax:
304-675-6915

Or apply online at:

-pvalley.Ofl
AA/EOE

Mason County ~occer

League
Spring Season FINAL Registration
Mon (2/12) and Tue (2113)
5:30 pm • 7:00 pm
Jon Parrack's Nationwide
Insurance
Open to Mason and Meigs County
youth born between 8/1 /2000 and
8/1 /1988.
For more info call Becky at
304-674-0108
Please do NOT call Nationwide

PUBLIC NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal
Comptny haa tubmlt·
ted an Appllcllion to
Revise • Coal Mining
ptrmll IR·354·60 to
the Ohio Oeptrtment
of N1tural Reaourcea,
Dlvlalon of Mineral
Resources management. The Application
to Revlae 1 Permit
(ARP) liN Is located

Y0111 R;pt lo Know, llfli!!l!d . .118 VIlli' I*

__P.;.;u.:.bl_lc_N_o_tl_c_e_
C
The Me1ga ounty
Department of Job IIICI
Family
Servlcta
(OJFS) 11 roqueallnt
propotala from 1 qui~
Hied vendor to provide
a promotional campalgn
aimed
11
enhancing the foster
ctreladoptlon
pro·
grams
at
the

Public Notice
The

2006

io

Easl
Obi.
Pass

All pass

Oscar Wilde wrote. 'The only 1hing to do
with goad adVIce ~ pass ~ an. It is .-r
any use to oneself.·
Some oo doobt 1ee1 that that oogn to
read: The ooly thing to do with good
advice ~ pass h an to one's bridge pannor. h ~ . - any use to anese\1.
So. cut out this column and mail h to
yoor panner. asking him how he would
plan the Ptav in three no-trump after
W8811eada the heart jack.
Over Eut'a takeout double. South'a
redouble shows IG-plus points (and nat
vtrl good &lt;Iamond IUppor!). Welt is
alklwod to jump in a long au~ in this Bit·
uaticn. because he Ia known to have lew
vaiUO!. (Thtre'a been an opa,;ng bid. a
takeoul- and a redouble; how can
lourth hand "'"'" much?) North's pass
over two hearts is iofcing - ~ denies •
weak. distribulional opening (he would
rebid immediate~). and lour decent
hearts (he would make a penalty double).
Hyour partner immediately leads a club
to clummy's queen or takes the diamond
finesse. he goes dawn here. Since East
is high~ Hkaly to hold both the club ace
and clamand ki~ your partner should
play a spade to dunvny's king. than cal
lor a low club. Eas! has oo defense. Hhe
wins with his club ace. South has nine
tricks via two SJl&amp;deS, two he&amp;ns. one
diamond and lour clubs. And ~ East
plays low. declarer wins with his club
jack, then takes the diamond finesse.
getting home with two spades, two
heans. lour diamonds and one club.
Hyour panner gal thai righl. keep him.

r---

AstroGraph
-'ilrthdoe':

_........,, - - , .. 2007
By llomk:e- Ooal
What will make the year ahead one of

your more happier and fonunate ones
wilt be your friends playing such helpful
roles in your affairs. In each situation
where a pal stepa in to assist yoy In
some way, the results will be favorabkl.

AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) calmness. persistence and a &amp;econd
effort are your more reliable allies. 11
you're going ah~u something momentous, keep a smile on your ta6e and don't
take "no" lor an answer.
PISCES (Feb. 2o-March 20) -

PEANUTS

Kveping
a calm head in competitive situations will
give you the edge over the other guy. You
have the ability to remain neutral and

detached without allowing emotion to
control your lalenl

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

ARIES {MarCh 21 -April 19) - A valuable
ally has been won to your cause through
your pleasant treatment of him or her
This person will willingly taKe a more
acti'Ve role in helping you achi&amp;\18 an
ambi1tous ob)ectiVil .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Social
gathering! or grcup activities could
prO'VQ to be a pleasant and positive experience for you . Good things oould result
at this time by mingling with the light

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

Annuli

Ane~~~~rt~the L.----------------------~

VIllage ~ lrtldclleport It
IVIIIIble lOr publiC
lntpectlon 11 tht
Fllctl Otllcer't otttce
In Chy Hall II 237 AICI
Street,
·Middleport,
Ohio 45780 between
the houra of D 1m •d
4 pm Uondly through
:~ t:fWs:~~::.r~~~ DJFSthrough
the Frldoly.
AdoptOhlo
Kids (2) 12, 13, 14
Coal Company. The Incentive Fund tor the
Appllc1don to Revlee 1 ptrlod of March 1 2007 - - - - - - - Permll (ARP) encom- through June 30.'2007.
Public Notice
pasoa1 10.1 acres and The daadHne far oub- - - - - - - - 11 located on the minion of propc&gt;.~all PUBLIC NOTICE
Rutland 1 112 Minute \o February 23, 2007 II NOTICE: Ia hereby
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle 12:00 noon. For pib. given th8t on Satunlly,
Map, approximately 1.8 gram lnfomuolion 'nd February 17, 2007 II
mlle• NCorthelltOhol1 guldellnoa,
contoct 10:00 1.m., e public
Sa1em
0 · Chrlo Sh1nk Socl1l eelt will be held 11 211
en1ar,
"';" 8 ffllllllmetely 1.7 Sarvlcel Su~ 11 W.
Second
St.,
m Ita orlhwell of the (740) 9112-2117 ext. 123 Pome"'Y, Ohio. The
lnteraectlon of Ohio or 175 Race SIIHI, Farmera e1nk and
Rouleo 124 end Middleport,
Ohio Saving• Company Ia
325.
45780
eelllng lOr ctah In
The application proAll · aubmltalona hend or certllted check
1
poaeo to conltruct
muat be ractlved by the foliowll)l co111111, _ mine water treat· mall or h•d dell- al:
·
ment ayaltm that will by the lbovl dale and 19111 Chevrolet 10
beutlll•ed .t orthetraat- time No materlala p 1 c k u p
ment of mtne drtlnage
.
1GCCS1"""-·
from Southern Ohio received Iller thet date
.....- ....110
.
will be Included In pr• 19119 GUC Jimmy 4x4
Coal Comptny a Ulna vlouuubiniltlont nor 1GKCT18WIXK5023ell
No. 2 IIICI Mine No. 31. will be conaldertcl. The The Furntr1 Bank lnd
Comptny,
the appllcltion Ia on DJFSreoarv81 the right Savlnt•
~~~l~ufC: to rejeCt any or all pro- Pome"'Y,
Ohio,
E
Second sireet ponla. The DJFSia reaaNM the right to
·
' prohibited from dlt- btd II thll ult, IIICI to
Pomoro~, Ohio 45768 crimination on the willldrtw the lbove
far publte viawint IIICI beals ot race, color, coltateral prior to lilt.
lhall remain 10 far 11 •natlonel origin oax Further The Farmll'l
least 30 days following
ion '
' a k '
Sa
the lest data of pubtl- age, rei 1g , political an
and
vtnga
calion ol• this notice. belief or dlsabllhy.
Company ,..., _ the
right to ra1tet tny or 111
Written comii'Minta or (2) 9, 12, 13
~Is far an lnforbldln:"""ltted. lbove
mat conr.rence may be
Public Nolict
dMcrlbed c~~--•
ftled with the Divlalon
will be loki • 81 le~
lllner1l Annual w here ,.
•-·, with no
manlgement
The
2006
2045
Morae Road ' Bulldlnt Flna~lallleport of the uprnr d or Implied
H•S Columbue Ohio V\1\tge ol Rutland It -~ given.
~ within 30 aval~blt far public
For 111111111' ............
days Iller the leal dele tnapec:tion .at the vi~ lion, or lor ., oppcl ._
ltge onlce on ll1ln ment to 1ntpe1:t of publlclllon of this St'"t in Rutl1nd. erat, prior to . . dale
w~ (2) 6 13
Ohio, 45775 between conhtcl Cyndle, Ken or
'
'
·
the houre of 9 em and Randy II 9112·2138.
2 pm Monday through (2) 13, 14, 15
Friday.
(2) 9, 12, 13

s-

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• HomeDII System
• Hellos System
~ ...O!It)ll:"~lf!·t~ij"ij!!!ft~....

r't'OU EXPE.C.\ I"£ TO fo.':&gt;l( A~
TUl-IA 1

.=..: 47~

It Fotka
12 Aealon

pr-

13 Bolivia

51 Opon

15=-~

55 Cobbler

56 Mini-play
Blatuo
57Un16 R-uo
lllllnation
loam, oflllll 56 Bolae"a at.
11 Conoldera 58 Orangutan
lobe
60 In-flight
20 Dentlll'l
lellure
order
61 La .....
21 Com-.
- pill

a:=.

A pass that does
not deny power

G
• you'RE so
FOXALKIOUS.,
...l&gt;lt&gt; l't'\ !,0 ...

We Deliver To You!
Pub1k Nolils itt Ntlliplplr\

SU~O!ltt&gt;
'\'OOO~Wf'

810 NATE

F- Eatirnata

Janet Jeffers

c

l

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Now Renting

(740) 992-5232

Help Wanted

,..6E£., WI-ll&gt;-'{ Nto..

(740) 416-1568

UJIIIIIII...

Help Wanted

'

network
1 "-!ion
40Panecha
lolmoute 41 Havedln4 T1ka
42LPapaed
44 Garage

10 Blows h
14 Find

fNture
32 llornbly

riiMY
33 !luporJMn.

prectlcal

scraped by

2 Gael
republic
3 Lag joint

5
j)ll'
&amp;Type
I"
of panot
35
7 lillie ...tt
36 Lean IOWan! 8 Orchant

r:.-;_

37P38 "h'a cold
out therel"

37 Rore

mlnorala
41 Aqu.tum
lMI doriiJOfo
Ancient IIIIo 43 Go billing
Colt
44 Roall bell
of reptlre
ou lhlnk over 45 "PuppY
Unlel
Love

companion
linger
25 Omanllhlo 46 ~
26 Getman
41 Muttunw
coal region 48 Opera 111
28 Budgol
In Egypt
hem
50 Ttmo porlod
29 Brimming 52 Motor pill
over
53 Colorlllon
30
1n
54 Time IPI"

r.....

lncognHo

10
22

23
24

• CowMy

34 ..Oh,

31 L.a!Of an
36 Aeltanc.

17tomb
Raider

23 Okramoreol
DOWN
24 Quip
27CIIIIPUS
1 Just

Opening lead: "' J

AUCTION

0870, Rogers Batemtnt

.

Soot•

30Nervo

pronoun

Vulnerable: Both

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

nished. E&amp;tabtished 1975.
CaH 24 Hrs. (740) 44&amp;-

K 7

6 A 10 9 7

Dealer: North

Stop &amp; Compote

IIASEIIENT
WAlERPROOFING
Unconciltonal llfebme guarantee. Local relerences fur·

9 K 3 2

+

• J 52
• J 6 4 32

---1111

parting, 12 min. trom Rio

~

"AQ

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Grande. Must see lo appreciate. $325/mo. (614)595m3. 900-798-4686.

8 6

Soutlo
• A. 7 4

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

lft'lmaculate 1 Bedroom Apt,
Newlv Carpeted, Freshly
Painted &amp; Decorated, New
appliances. WID Hookup.
Pri'llacy Fence. Private

• Q J 10 I
~

• 6 4 3
... 5

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
•New Homes

7 •

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GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - You are
likely to be exceptionally fortunate. especially when engaged In marketing
in'o'Oivements that have a potential tor
generating earnings tor everybody.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - What
makes you such an vftective negotiator
is the fact that you'll listen so attentively
to what others ha\16 to say when analyzing a matter of importance. They'll appreciate your great care.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- All you have to
do to get willing hands to pi1Ch in and
help you with things is to first set a
happy, pleuant 8J{8mple that would
encourage them to loUow your lead.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Because
you r personality is so charming and
magnetic. drawing others to you will
automatically happen. Where there is a
social gathering, the buzz of acth.1ity will
,hum around you .
liBRA 'Sep\. 23-0ct. 23) - Being in a
happy-go-lucky mood allOws you to JUggle several projects simul1aneously and
do an exceplionalfy good job on each ot
them . It prows optimism produces optimistic results.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - The
pleasant events of yesterday set a happy
tone for whatEWer plans yoo have. As a
result, your positive demeanor continues
to produce further happy activities and

events.

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SAGIIT.4.RIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- This
in another day where you should be able
to tind ways to gratify )'Qiolr TlUITI&amp;rou&amp;
materiaNstic dMirM. The key is to want
something strongly enougn to give you
the initiative to go after it.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22 -Jan. 1 9) - Your
leadership qu•litktl will be quite pronounced. Friends Will quickly I'Upi;H1d to
your pleasant naturt and realize You're
the on. qualified to hand/to people and
glw tnem dlrec:ti ......

SOUP TO NUTZ

ICR•MLI1S ANSW11t1

2-12-07

Kil*-- - Doulla c - lHANK -liiOI'B
C_.,.t!an, "AI aldd IIIC:tecl up ill clus. I plarlcl
booky OllCieiiDCI die lllaCher soat mo •lHANK
you NOTE!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS .

�Tuesday, February 13.2007

ww w.mydailysentine l.co m

Page B6 - The Daily Sentinel

•••

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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Middleport council to pursue new .three.;.miJIIevy
.

1zmo~ .

• Crew chiefs
suspended, drivers
docked points.
SeePageB1

MAXI-BLAST SkATEBOARD

Smoother than
the slick side of a
tadpole's tail !

By attaching the Moroccan largelunged AnteaterG)to the underside
of his skate board, local hot shot,

Skip "ROAD RASH" Treadwell
has created the ultimate in skating experience:

m.• underhill

~

simply kicking the pepper dispenser,
0the anteater unleashes a powerful
sneezing action which propels, our
hero forward, at incredible speeds.

...

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to estimates provided to
Fiscal Otticer Susan Baker
by County Auditor Mary
MIDDLEPORT
Byer-Hill, a one-mill levy
Middleport Village Council would generate $17,636, a
will place a three-mill oper- two-mill levy, $35,271, and
ating levy on the May 8 pri- a three-mill levy, $52,907,
mary ballot to replace a levy based on a I00-percent colvoters rejected last year.
lection rate .
Meeting
Monday
The village is operating at
evening, council approved a loss of $30,000 per year
the ballot issue baseq on a due to the defeat of a procomparison of projected posed levy renewal last
Council
revenue from one, two and November.
three-mill levies. According Member Jean Craig said a
Bv BRIAN

REED

BREEOOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Drug charges
filed following
ODNR
poaching raid

You don't want to
ride behind this phlegm
prone critter.

BY BRIAN

J.

three-mill levy is "mandatory," due to 1he village's
financial condition.
If the levy is approved in
May, the village will not
begin collecting proceed s
until January, 2008, Baker
said. The levy proceeds
would benefit the genera l
fund. and fund operations
in several village depart·
ments, including the police
department.
Other business
Baker reported that the

village has collected $4,760
in rental fees on 23~ units
since the village first mailed
bills to rental property owners last month. The annual
rental fee is $20 per unit.
Craig said the building
committee plans to meet
monthly with Building
Inspector Randall Mullins to
track progrt!Ss on an inspection program first proposed
last year. According to village records, only two rental
units were inspected in 2006.

She said Mullins will be
required 10 present a li st of
inspected properties to the
committee, and to report on
any citat10m issued.
Craig also said the vi 1lage should enforce the
S I00 penalty on the books
for rental property owners
who do not pay the $20
annual fee.
"'If this is what those of
us around this table have
Please see Levy, AS

Valentine tea

REED

BREE OOMYOA.IlYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY
A
Langsville man accused of
poaching in a Division of
Wildlife case also faces
drug-related charges filed
by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.
Hobert L. Cundiff, 41,
Langsville, was charged
Page AS
Mo'nday through Meigs
County
Court with 17
• Martha WoHe, 93
wildlife offenses aher stale
and local wildlife officials
and law enforcement officers conducted a search of
hi s home. Eight others
were also arrested on
• Police say off-duty
wildlife offenses.
officer prevented larger
While at the residence
wildlife officials,
assisting
killing spree in rampage
sheriff's deputies saw mariat Utah shopping mall.
juana in plain view in the
See Page' A2
Dexter Road residence, and
obtained and executed a
• Birth announced.
second search warrant at ihe
See Page A3
home, Deputy Rick Smith
Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo .
· • Trustees plan for
said. Officers found "a sub- About 32 little girls , all dressed up in their Sunday best, attended a Valentine tea held at the Meigs Museum annex
stantial amount" of marijua- Saturday afternoon. They had a light luncheon served with tea in miniature cups before decorating brimmed hats with col·
renovation of University
na and pre scription medica- orful flowers. The afternoon also included making teddy bear valentines and playing games.
Center. See Page A3
lion violations.
• VFW Post 9926
Cundiff was charged
to award scholarships.
Monday with tampering
with dru gs, felony possesSee Page A3
sion of marijuana, traffick• Grangers hear about
ing in marijuana, and posBY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDA.I LVSENTINEL .COM
contests. See Page A3 session of Schedule II
drugs. Smith said the pre• Local Briefs.
scriptions were for pain
POMEROY - Yesterday the topic of the
See Page AS
medications .
revitalization of downtown Middleport and
• For the Record.
ODN R charged Cundiff a few numbers sung by The Frenc h Chorders
Ladies Quartet was music to the members of
See Page AS
Please see Chai'JeS, AS
the Meigs County Chambe r of Commerce.
• New reports renew
Members were gathered for the chamold debate over cost
ber's monthly "business-minded" luncheon.
of quality education.
hearing speaker Mike Gerlach of the
Middleport Development Group speak on
See Page AS
the revitali zation of downtown Middlport.
Gerlach's speech covered a range of issues
including the ''streets&lt;: ape" plan to change the
look of downtown, calling it "si milar" to
WEATHER
what Pomeroy accomplished in enhancing a
small town aesthetic . Gerlach said the
streetscape plan was developed with a
$ 10,000 gram to help enhance not only downBY BETH SERGENT
town but to encoumge and support businessBeth Sargent/ photo
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM
es in Middlep&lt;it1 of which he said there were Members of The French Chorders Ladies Quartet (from left) Suzy Parker.
upwards of 60. Gerlach said the MiddleiXlrt Sue Priest, Bev Alberchinski, Nan Heiskell perform love songs in honor of
POMEROY - The deadValentine's Day for the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
Please see Chamber. AS
line to pay Pomeroy's rental
inspection fee ha s been
e,.;tended by 30 days from
Jan. 31 to March I.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Detallo on Pace A3
Spaun brought up the idea
it did in the times and li fe of
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
of an e,.;tension at the recent
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
Abraham Lincoln.
village council meeting
She spoke of Lincoln's
when Pomeroy Chief of
POMEROYDescribing
defeats in his personal and
Police Mark E. Proflitt said
the
pnlit
ical
climate
as
politic'al life and the fortionly about 50 inspections
·'somewhat
challenging
in
tude
&lt;Ind faith which drove
:1 SEcnoNs- 12 PAGES
have been scheduled. ·
2006."
Ohio
Senator
Jov
him
to a place where . he
"We have some landlords
Annie's Mailbox
A3 , coming
Padgett (R-20 District) called c·ould be elected president
in for applications
on party faithfuls tG "be m't in IR60. "He learned from
but
there
numerous ones
Calendars
A3 that have are
discouraged,
to remember hi s failure s. he applied those
not done that yet."
Ohio GOP's grassroots lessons to reach success.
Classifieds
82-4 Proffitt told council.
strength. and be Dptimistic and his message to us is
Proffitt , whose departabout recovery."
'don' t give up' . Remember
Comics
Bs ment is in charge of the
Padgett was speaker at the that fnrtitudc and faith is a
code enforcement officer
annual Lincoln Day dinner measure of charal'ter."
Editorials
A4 doing the inspections, said
of the Meigs County
She c·ommended Lincoln
he would be in favor of the
Republican Party held for speaking opening ahout
Obituaries
As extension only if the people
Monday night at Meigs his loyalty to country, his
paying the $25 inspection
High School. To the nearl y faith in God, his sense of
B Section fee late understood that it
Sports
170 attending she stressed compassion . and his will '
would be due again in
thal
adversity
t&gt;uillJ, ingnes;. to emhract' healing
Weather
January 2001:1. Proffitt said
strength of character and
Please see Dinner. A5
Senator Joy Padgett
determination today. j u. t "'
Please see Dudllnt1, A5
© aOU7 Ohiu Volley l'ubllshin&amp; Cv.

0BITUARIFS

LESSON 032

RIGHT&amp;DOWN

INSIDE

space
call

992-2155

Now that we've turned the head up &amp; down,
and side to side, it's time to combine the two. By
adding width to both ellipses we can create
a head looking right and down.
Remember the more width to the ellipse
the
the turn.

Rental
inspection
fee deadline
extended

at Lincoln Day dinner

Sen.

•

•

When the knob i5 pulled to tht~ .~en,wn•·
sign move up@or do101n

INDEX

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