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                  <text>Page 86 • The My Sentinel

Monday, March 19.2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gates promotes
•
•
computer triamng
in Colombia
conflict areas, A2

OSU survives OT scare from Xavier

.

AP photo

Maris\ guard Nikki Flores is carried by forward Sarah Smrdel after Maris! upset Ohio State
67-63 in a first-round game of the West Regional· of the NCAA women's basketball tol,lrnament Saturday in Stanford, Calif.

Marist stuns Lady Buckeyes, 67-63
STANFORD, Calif (AP) . NCAA trip in four years
- Nobody will overlook under fifth-year coach Brian
Marist anymore. The Red Giorgis.
Foxes would not be bullied
"It's the best win in . our
into an early exit this March. school's history," Giorgis
They drew offensive fouls said. "Just a tremendous job
and scrapped with a bigger, to beat a top- I0 school.
more physical Ohio State They believed. I looked in
team, shocking the heavily every single one of their
favored Buckeyes 67-63 on eyes, and they believed . ...
Saturday night to reach the It's the true dream season
second round for the lirst thus far."
time in school historv.
Trebilcock ·scored 23
Julianne Viani made six 3- · points for the Buckeyes (28pointers, including ihree in 4 ), who got a quiet 13
an 18-5 second-half run that points, five rebounds and
also featured a 3 by Meg two assists from three-time
Dahlman, and finished with Big Ten player of the year
24 points as Marist (28-5) Jessica Davenport - a 6eamed a Monday night date foot-S senior who st&lt;1yed
with Middle Tennessee and home in Columbus for colthe Blue Raiders' nation- lege but had herfarewell run
long 27 -game winning end earlier than she planned.
streak.
Davenport committed II
"The feeling, I can't turnovers.
"We weren't playing like
describe it in words," Viani
said. '"I definitely felt it. We ourselves and I have to take
all just had such a peace and the blame for that,"
they were falling."
Davenport said. "I know this
Viani convened two free team depends on me a lot
throws with 18.1 seconds and I didn't play the ~arne
left aft"r Ohio State cut the I'm capable of playing.'
Viani, who came in with a
lead to three, then Ashlee
Trebilcock hit a long 3 on team-best 33 3s, shot 6-forthe other end for the 10 from long range for the
Buckeyes. Nikki Flores Red
Foxes
from
swished a pair of free throws Poughkeepsie, N.Y., who
for Marist with 8.2 seconds won their seventh straight
to go and her team secured a and 19th in 20 - and have
loose ball as the buzzer held their opponents under
sounded - sending off a 60 points in all of those vicwild celebration at midcoun. tories. The team's lone loss
It was a monumental night during that stretcl) came at
for the little-known Metro Loyola on Feb. 16, 62-55,
Atlantic
Athletic and Marist was conference
Conference, which had been champion for the fourth
0-21 in the tournament straight year.
Marist suffered first-round
under its curre.nt membership before the 13th-seeded defeats in 2004 and '06 Red Foxes put the league on losing by double digits to
the map in the school's·third No. 3 seeds Oklohoma and

Johnson
from PageBI
needed."
Kenseth wound up third,
followed Jeff Burton and
heralded rookie Juan Pablo
Montoya. who barely held
off Clint Bowyer to record
his first top 10 and by far
his best finish in five Cup
stans.
'Tm getting the handle of
it,'' said Montoya, who also
won a Busch Series race on
a road course in Mexico
City several weeks ago and
got as high as _third in
Sunday's race before slipping a bit at the end.
Johnson, who has finishes

of second, first and first
since crashing out. in 39th
place in the opener at
Daytona. earned his 25th
career victory in his !87th
stan.
After breaking through to
win his first championship
in his fifth full season,
Johnson said it's not too
early to have has his sights
set on another one in 2007 .'
We're thinkin~ championship already,' he sa1d.
"That's really the mode
anymore. You have to think
about points and being in
the Chase."
Martin. who finished
IOth, remained in the lead
by eight point-s over
Gordon, who overcame a
tire problem and a lost lap
to · finish 12th. Burton

LEXINGTON. Ky. (AP)
- Ohio State thought Greg
Oden was its best shot at a
national
championship.
Turns out it was Ron Lewis,
and in the nick of time.
Lewis capped a furious
rally by hitting a long-range
3-pointer with two seconds
left to force overtime, and
the top-seeded Buckeyes
beat Xavier 78-71 Saturday
in a second-round South
Regional game.
Ohio State trailed 55-44
with 7 1/2 minutes left. and
was still down 61-52 with
2:54 lett. When Oden fouled
out with a hard sho'l'e after
the Buckeyes kept missing
in the la.~t 10 seconds. they
looked lost.
Xavier's Justin Cage then
made of one of two foul
shots with 9.3 seconds left
for a 62-59 lead, giving
Ohio State its last chance.
Lewis came down and. with
two defenders flying at him,
swished the tying 3-pointer
from several feet beyond the
arc.
With Oden on the bench,
· fellow freshman - and high
school teammate - Mike
Conley Jr. took over. He
scored II points in overtime
and the Buckeyes (32- 3) were
never threatened again in winning their 19th straight game.
The Buckeyes, who finished No. I in the final
Associated
Press
poll,
advanced to the round of 16
for the frrst time since they
went to the Final • Four in
1999. They will play the winner of Sunday s game
between Tennessee and
V"JCginia
Xavier (25-9), which has a
history of knocking off higher
seeds in the NCAA tournament, was unranked in the
final AP poll.
No one had to tell Ohio
State about Xavier's tourney
reputation. Buckeyes coach
Thad Matta helped build it,
serving as Musketeers coach
for three seasons before leaving the Atlantic 10 school in
2004. His good friend, Sean
Miller, took over at Xavier.
But this time, the
Musketeers couldn't quite get
the job done.
Cage, who led Xavier with
25 points. had a chance to all
but win the game. He made
his first foul shot but missed
his second, and Ohio State
had a chance to save its sea-

Georgia in those years.
Pulling off Saturday's
biggest upset might be
enough to erase all that.
"We just got sick and tired
of people underestimating
us," said Dohlman, who finished with seven points and
four steals and 'eamed kudos
for standing her ground
against Davenport. "They
definitely played physical
down low. but it's all about
staying within yourself."
The Red Foxes drew three
oft"ensive fouls in the second
half and forced fourth-seeded Ohio State into poor decisions down the stretch and
23 total turnovers.
Rachele Fitz, Marist's
leading scorer and rebounder averaging 15 points and
6.4 rebounds, made back -tobuck baskets to tie it at 49
with I 0:05 to play, then
Viani gave the Red Foxes
their first lead of the half on
a 3-pointer from the top of
the arc on their next possession.
Saroh Smrdel hit consecutive 3s early in the second
half and scored eight
straight in the stretch on the
way to 10 points, and Marist
overcame a 40-22 disadvan- son.
tage "n the boards. Ohio
Conley dominated the extra
State held a 30-11 rebound- period. He scored Ohio
ing edge midway through State's tirst seven points, then
four free throws m the final
the second half.
"They played a terrific 1:03.
Lewis finished with 27
game - a lot of intensity, a
lot of heart," Ohio State points, going 4-for-5 from 3coach Jim Foster said. point range and making all
"They showed a lot of char- seven of his free throws.
acter."
The teams' combined 55
w lits entering the game were
the most of any first-round
women's matchup.
remained third, II points
behind, and Johnson stayed
in fourth, moving to 28
points back.
But longtime NASCAR
star Martin, 48, switched
teams this year in order to
cut back to a partial Cup
schedule and has said he
will sit out next week's
race at Bristol and the
Martinsville race the following week, despite leading the points.
The Bristol race next
Sunday will also be the
debut of NASCAR's new
Car of Tomorrow, which
could throw a wild card
into the mix, depending on
which teams figure out of
the all-new, bigger and
boxier car first.

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;n l'FNTS • \'ol. ;)h, :'\u .

SPORTS

'
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - The deadline for residents to request
an informal conference
with the Ohio Division of
Natural Resources (ODNR)
in regards to the coal mining permit filed by Gatling
Ohio. LLC for Letart and
Sunon Townships is April
30.
Written
comments,
objections or requests for
an informal conference
may be sent to ODNR's
of
Mineral
Division

APphoto

Ohio State guard Mike Conley Jr.. left, blocks the shot of
Xavier's Drew Lavender during the second half of a secondround basketball game of the South Regional of the NCAA
tournament in Lexington, Ky.. on Saturday. Ohio State
defeated Xavier 78-71 in overtime.
Conley scored 21 and Oden
had 14 points, 12 rebounds,
two blocks and two steals in
35 minufes.
Matta played down the significance of facing . Miller.
Cage and Justin Doellman.
who were freshmen starters
on the team Matta led to the
final eight three years a~o,
also insisted there were no 1mgering hard feelings over the
coach's departure.
Xavier fans, who made the
one-hour
drive
from
Cincinnati, haven't been as
forgiving. Many hooed Matta
when he entered Rupp Arena
to watch pan of the

mmmg operation and so. the agency is ""95 perODNR's role in the permil cent sure" il will hold an
process.
.
·additional · 111formal meeh
Stillier said residents will ing in the area within tht:
not get their questions next ·month to help educat~
answered at the informal lhe public on what is hapconference though resi- pening at the mine site and
dents will have a chance to ODNR 's role in the permit
'
be heard. After the confer- process.
ence , the recording 1s
Since lhis informal meet turned into a taped tran- ing is not a legal requirescript where each question ment the agency is not
that was posed is answered. required to advertise for it
in writing. Answers are due like it is required to adver60 days from the day of the tise the informal conferconference.
ence should it be requested.
Stillier said although
Please see Mine, AS
ODNR is not required to do

The lesson - make positive choices
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Saundra K. Tillis

~U regional dckets go on sale Monday.

INSIDE

COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State will put its lllJot(nen\ of
1.250 ti~llts on sale Monday for its men's NCAA regional
semifillal game in Sl!R Antonio.
'l1lCI BIIC"ye
. s will play on Thursday ag.ainst the winner of
s~·s second-round
.
g~~~ betwl'4)n Tennessee and
VtJ'&amp;In!a: 'llle ftlgional chameiooship game, with the winner
beaiied for the final Four, wtll be played on March 24.
Orders will be filled 011 a first-come. fii'St-served basis.
The NCAA tournament South RegiOIII\1 tickllts muSI be
picked up at the~Ohio S~a~t~ fans will have the opportunity to pwchase tick~
~ begin!lln8 at S a.m. M?nday. nckets mu~ 1&gt;e purchased
a1 the1erome Schllttens~m Qlnter or by calling 1-J!OO.OO
~\JCI\S. Thot'o will be a limit of foiU' ti~ts per person.

• Postal rates to go up
May 14, forever stanip
approved. See Page A2
• Russia mine blast kills
78, leaves 50 missing.
See Page A2
• Brother visits Princess
Diana exhibit.
See Page A3
• Berea dean's list.
See Page A3
• Birth announced.
See Page A3
• Civil War essay
contest open.
See Page A3
• Court f\JieS to stop
Ohio execution; state
appeals. See Page AS
• State seeks
resignations of Cuyahdga
elections board members.
See Page AS
• Full-service gas
station sees customers
dwindle. See Page AS

General Orthopedics, Surgery &amp;
Specializing in Total Joints &amp; Sports Medicine

WEATHER

. Olfee.~
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building

SllbmiiiH photo

The Holzer Clinic Meigs branch believes in Fairy TaleS by sponsoring the upcoming musical
of the same name performed by the River City Kids April 13-15 at Meigs Elementary
School. Diana Jeffers. clinic manager said, "The kids really do benefit from these performances and it's great for the community itself. We're hoping to break attendance records.
I think it's going to be a great show. • Jeffers added the clinic is currently sponsoring a coloring contest which began yesterday and witt run until April 6. Children~ under 12, whether
they are the clinic's patient or not. are invited to pick up a coloring form at the clinic, submit it back by April 6 and be eligible to win three family packs of tickets to Fairy Tales. The
winners will be chosen at random on April 9. Jeffers is pictured with the cast of Fairy Tales.

POMEROY - Juniors
and seniors in all three
Meigs County high schools
will attend IMPACT 2007 to
be held in Athens, March 30,
for a motivational program
on making positive choices
when it comes to drinking
and driving.
The program, a project of
Prom Pledge/Impact, Inc ..
founded for the purpose of
saving -lives, will be held at
the
Ohio
University
Convocation Center. It is
held this time of year since
many accidenrs involving
drinking and driving occur
during the prom season. It
will feature motivational
speakers who will present a
sobering look at what can
happen when poor choices
are made.
An expected 6,000 high
school juniors and seniors
from 10 Southeast Ohio
counties as well as manv
Ohio University students arc

POMEROY -"I need
cakes," Debbie Jones, activities director at the Mei~s
County Senior Center satd
about the lack of entries for
next week's cake auction to
benefit Meals on Wheels.
As of yesterday, only
seven cakes have been rej:istered for the cake auctton.
Last year the public
responded with 96 . entries
and raised over $1,500 with
the cake auction.
Entry into the contest is
free and registration forms
can be picked up at the
Meigs
County
Senior
Center. Cakes can be regis-

tered and dropped off up
until 3 p.m. on March 29,
the day of the auction. All
proceeds from the auction
benefit the Meals on Wheels
program which delivers hot
meals to clients all over the
county.
Thts year's cake judging
contest is once again S{&gt;Onsored by
Rocksprmgs
Rehabilitation Center. Cake
judging will begin at 6:30
p.m. on March 29 with the
auction to begin at 7:15p.m.
,Around 10 judges, including
Jake Kane. anchorman from
WOWK-TV will be judging
cakes in the following categories: Chocolate cakes;
cakes made with fruit or
vegetables like carrot, apple.

applesauce, spice; decorated
cakes; any yellow or white
cake; coffee cakes, crumb,
pound.
There will be a best of
show and runner-up best of
show award as well as first
and second place awards in
each category.
There is no limit on the
number of cakes entered by
an exhibitor and there is no
age limit for the contestants.
Cakes can be single or double layers with all entries
having the entrant's name on
the bottom of the disposable
plate or pan. Cakes can be
homemade or made from a
mix.

Pluse see cakes. AS

Ple•se see Mei1s. AS

-

-IIEI.P, CAKES WANTED
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

expected to auend. About
400 of those students will be
from Meigs County. This
will be the second year for
local students from all three
high schools to be bused to
Athens for the IMPACT program.
Principals are enthusiastic
about the program and feel it
is beneficial in making students more aware of the dangers of drinking and driving.
"This program makes our
students think about what
can happen when they drink
and drive. This is a very
good way of getting that
message . across, it makes
them think about consequences.
said Dennis
Eichinger. Meigs High principal. He said students came
back last year with , highly
positive statements about
their experience.
Scou Gheen. Eastern principal, was equally supportive of the motivation program and the benefits

Stan photo

Jane Harris on t&gt;ehalf of the Merchants Association pr&amp;
sents a check for $340 to the Nancy Thoene for the work ol
God's NET. The check represents a portion of money raised
by the Association's church tour in December.

Power plant work to result in traffic alert Merchants look toward

O.talls on Pa&amp;e A3

TUXEDO RENTAL

INDEX

:·····································~
COUPON·COUPON·COUPON :

2

~ $5.00 Off Your Prom Rental~

•
Expires Mav 1, 2007
•
•.................•.•.....•.......•..
~

HOSPITAL

SEcrtONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4
As

'

Obituaries
Sports ·
Weather

+

lie review.
ODNR Environmental
Specialist Scott Stillier
said his office is not
required to hold a public
hearin!l but by statute his
office ts required to hold an
informal conference if it
receives only one request
to do so. The statute does
not call this informal conference a public hearing
but at the informal conference the public is invited,
the meeting is tape recorded and residents are permitted to voice their concerns over the proposed

Meigs students going
to IMPACf 2007

Fab..ic: Sb.op
·Poa•e..oy

Black.

Resources Management,
2045
Morse
Road,
Building H-3, Columbus,
43229-6693. These written
be
comments
must
received by April 30 which
is 30 days after the last
publication date of a public
notice currently runmng in
The Daily Sentinel concerning Gatling Ohio,
LLC's underground coal
minin~ permit.
The company's mmmg
permit is now on file at the
Meigs County Courthouse
in the Meigs County
Recorder's Office for pub-

game.

Even though the schools are
only about two hours apart
and both h&lt;1ve strong basketball traditions, the Buckeyes
and Musketeers met for just
the second time in the pa~t 73
years and the fourth time
overall.
~·
Ohio State teaa's to the
series 3- I, with Xavier's only
victory coming in the opening
round of the 1984 National
Invitation Tournament.

""" · "'~dail~-. · nlin..t .,·om

:!0 . :!tHO-

Musketeers' first -round victory over Brigham Young a.'"ld
voiced their displeasure again
when the Ohio State coach
was introduced before the

~be

Jlilagrnta

ll IS])\\ . :\I.\){( II

1,) &lt;)

Deadline set for 'informal conference' on coal mine

• District 13 all-star
games. See Page 81

David Felder, MD

ORDER NOW FOR PROM
New 2007 Styles
992-2284'
Open Mon.· Sat. 9:00-5:00

Diebler beats out
Jackson for D-11
Player of the Year, Bt

.B Seetion

CHESHIRE
Con&amp;truction continues on
the flue gas desulfurization
(FGD or scrubber) systems
at Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's
(OVEC)
Kyger Creek Power Plant
near Cheshire. FGD
chimney
and
absorber vessel foundation
work will move forward
when continuous concrete
pours take place this month.
During the scheduled evenls,
up to 30 concrete trucks per
hour will travel Ohio St. Rt.
7 nonh from batch plants to
the power plant, which is
located on the same route
"about five miles nonh of
Gallipolis. The batch plants
are located at Cruzet Avenue
andEastem Avenue (St. Rt.
7) in Gallipolis, and along
St. Rt. 7 near Addison.
"'During th~ times of the
--

--

-..,-~

-

continuous concrete pours,
the trucks will travel on
State Route 7 and enter and
exit 'the plant." said ~alph
Amburgey, Kyger Creek
Plant manager. "Drivers
should take extra care when
traveling in the area of the
plant. This volume of truck
traffic could create some
trallic slow-downs, so drivers may want to plan a few
eMra minutes of drive time
during these pours."
The Kyger Creek Plant
will employ a Gallia County
Sheriff deputy to manage
traffic as the concrete trucks
leave the power plant about
every three minutes during
the pours.
.
The continuous concrete
pours are tentatively scheduled to take place according
lo thE following schedule.
Dates and limes are subject

to adjustment.
• Tuesday. March 20,
2007; Rescheduled to March
22, 2007 - Exhaust chimney
BY CHARLENE HoEF\.tCH
foundation pour. This pour
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
begins at 6 p.m. and will
take place for up to 48 hours
Spring
POMEROY (ending 'at approximately 6
events
including
beautificap.m. on March 24 ).
• Wednesday. . March 28, lion projects in downtown
2007 - Absorber vessel foun- Pomeroy and lhe annual
dation p6ur. This pour starts Easter egg hunt are being
at 5 a.m. and takes place for planned by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association.
up to 12 hours.
At last week's mee.ting at
The addition of FGD
Fanners
Bank. George
equipment will enable the
.
Wrightaskedaboutmulchfer
power plant t!l continue to
comply with regional and the flower beds nearthe parknational air quality standards ing lot -and 'it was decided
in the most cost-effective John Musser. president. will
contacl Facemyer Lumber to
manner, Amburgey said.
OVEC
has
engaged arrange for it. As fort he hangAmerican Electric Power ing baskets used on the period
Service Corporation to serve lamp posts. they wi.ll be taken
as the project manager for to Bob's market to be tillect
with flowers .
the construction project.

spring projects

...-------·.-- -

of 1he sale of
Christmas bulbs featuring the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridges the one dedi~ated in 1928 and
the one currently under construction - wh"ich l?rovides
money for the beautification
of dowmo.wn Pomeroy was
discussed. It was deci~ed to
bring in a lithe bul'hs now in
busi;1e" places for sale and
then after an ~iccounting of
what is still available put
them back out during the
Sternwheel and holiday season . .
It was noted that Christmas
decorations now in the mini· park will be moved to the viiIage garage to be stored Wilh
' S1atus

Pluse see Prvjects, AS

�t

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

GATES PROMOTES COMPUI'ER
IN COLOMBIA CONFLicr AREAS
Bv FRANK BAJAK

PageA2
Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Postal
Bv RANDOLPH
E. SCHMID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
cost of mailing a letter
will go up on May 14, but
yo u 'II be able to lock in
that price - no matter
how rates ri se in the future
- by buying the new "forever" stamp.
The post office governing boarll agreed Monday
to accept the new 41 -ce nt
rate for first class mail
recommended in February
by the independent Postal
Regulatory Commission.
The board also agreed to
the proposal for a "forever
stamp," that will always
be valid for mailing a letter no matter how much
rates increase .
James C. Miller Ill ,
chairman of the postal
boa rd, said the forever
stamp could go on sale as
soon as next mof\th. at the
41 -cent rate.
The postal governors
asked the regulatory commi ss ion to reconsider
some of it s proposals. saying the sug!lestedprice for
sendmg thmgs ltke catalogs was too high.
For ·most people . the
fir st-class rate · has the
greatest impact and the
cost of sending a letter
will rise from 39 cents to
41 ce nts. a penny less than
the Postal Service had
originally requested.
But folks sending heavier letters - such as wedding invitations - will
see a reduction in the
price.
That's because the 41cent rate is for the first
ounce. but each additional
ounce will cost just 17
cents, down from the current 24 cents.
That means a two-ounce
letter will cost 58 cents to
mail. corppared with 63
cents now.

•

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

When tough love is the only route

78, leaves 50 missing
BY MIKE ECKEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MOSCOW - A methaRe
gas ex plosion deep in a
Siberian coal mine killed
at least 78 people and left
another
50
trapped
Monday in Ru ssia's worst
mining di$aster in a
decade.
Among the missing were
company officials and
safety experts who had
been inspecting a Britishmade hazard -monitoring
system,
said
Sergei
Cheremnov, a spokesman
for the regional government in Kemerovo where
the mine is located about
1,850 miles east of
Moscow.
A British man and his
interpreter were among
those killed , he said. It was
A# phoiG unclear' what the two were
Colombia's President Alvaro Uribe. right, inVites a local journalist to pose for photos with doing in the mine .
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, left. after a press conference in Cartagena, Colombia, Monday.
Up to 200 workers were
in the Ulyanovskaya mine
to
those
locatio ns.
Uribe said the nation has to put a particular empha- when
the
explos ion
Unfortunately, my sc hed- one computer per 40 stu- sis on Colombia to occurred about 885 feet
ule didn't otTer me the llents and wants to drop demonstrate some of our underground in the coalopportunit y." Gates said.
that number to 25. Fewer possibilities," Gates said.
rich
southern
region
The Colombia training than
7
percent
of
s,
known
as
the
Kuzbas
A competing model is
centers. first announced in Co lombian
households
emergency and · regional
October. have yel to open. have broadband Internet being promoted by Cuba officials said. At least 75
A Micro soft
spokes- access. higher than the and Venezuela, who seek people were rescued.
woman, Carolina Sanchez, Latin American average to free themselves of
Rescuers were checking
could only name two cities but well below the U.S. Microsoft dependence by a large section of the mine
- Valledupar and Cucuta broadband penetration of converting government for th~ missing pe~ple and
·
- where she wa s sure just over 50 percent.
computers to the Linux were 111 contact w1th some
centers would be created.
Asked at the press meet- operating system, which is of the surviving miners,
More tha n 30.000 right- ing about the hundred-dol- developed by a global officials said. It was
wing militias fi ghters ha ve lar computer project being
unclear if the survivors
demobili zed under a peace promoted by Nicholas community of program- were in immediate danger.
pact with the gove rnment Negroponte of the One mers who freely share
"Their work is complibut
authorities
have Laptop per Child associa- code.
cated by a great number of
Other countries
encountered huge difficul- tion, Gates said "We agree
obstructions,"
Eduard
ties findin g jobs for the with his goal in bringing China, Brazil and Norway Sivtsov, a spokesman for
paramili- the price down."
demobilized
among them have Yuzhkuzbassugol,
the
tarie s. Hundreds have
However. he s11id, "The encouraged Linux devel- company that operates the
rejoined illegal armed personal computer just opment.
mine. told NTV.
groups that continue to part of it. The Internet
Russian
television
The
hundred-dollar
kill, extort and intimidate. connection, the broadband
broadcast
footage
of one
Under one of the deal s connection is far more computer (actually they're miner, blackened and
si ~ned Monday, Microsoft
expensive than the com- to cost $150 each) is semiconscious, lying on a
expected to begin reaching stretcher on his way to a
will provide database soft- puter itself."
ware that will assist
Hence the regional focus children in July or so in hospital. At least five minColombia's government on libraries . Oates said Brazil.
Argentina. ers were injured.
track demobilized fighters 3,000 libraries have been Uruguay, Nigeria, Libya,
President Vladil)lir Putin
and internal refugees connected in Mexico with Pakistan, Thailand and the ordered
Emergency
forced from their homes Microsoft help.
Situations
Minister
Sergei
Palestinian territory. The
by the country's long-runMicrosoft is helping
Shoigu
to
travel
to
the
nm g
conflict,
said Colombia develop a sys- Inter-Ame ·rican area. and the industrial
Sanchez.
tem where citizens can go Development Bank is try- regulatory
a~ency
Another deal will help online for information and ing to get the laptops to Rostekhnadzor sent mvesmultiple Central American tigators.
put 15.000 more comput- services.
ers in Colombian schools.
"Microsoft has decided countries.
The mine is located in
the city Novokuznetsk, the
site of two of the deadliest
mine disasters in the past
decade. In 2004, a blast at
Al so expected to be an increase for some cata- ounces' •. presorted, 45.9 a mine ori the outskirts of
attractive to many people log mailers of as much as cents, down· from 54.4 the city killed 4 7 workers
and in 1997. a methane
is the forever stamp.
40 percent , more than cents.
explosion
killed 67 .
The first forever stamps double what the Postal
• Utility bill. barcoded.
Russia's mining industry
will se ll for 41 cents Service had proposed.
31 .2 cents , up from 29.3
fell
into disrepair when
apiece. but they won't
- The surcharge for cents.
have a price printed on larger items that cannot be
them and they will remain sorted by machines . The
valid for sending a letter postal governors would
regardless of any future like to see incentives for
rate increases .
mailers to provide letters
While a forever stamp that can be processed at
will always be valid for lower cost on sorting
mailing a latter, that does- equipment, but the comn' t mean the price won't mtssion didn't make a dif'
go up . If rates were to ferentiation.
increase to 45 cents, for
- The Priority Mail flatexample , that's what a for- rate box was set at $9.15
ever stamp would sell for. by the commission. The .
But stamps already pur- post office had recomchased at a lower rate mended $8.80.
could still be used without
The post office applied
for Example 011ly:
adding extra postage.
for the higher rates last
In a teleJ?hone interview, May and the regulatory
Miller satd there is no commission issued its
Name of Church
limit on sales of the forev - decision Feb. 26.
er stamps, but he said they
Date
Postage rates last went
are generally intended for up in January 2006.
Sunday Sunrise
.consumers and won't be
Under new legislation
produced in the massive the regulatory commission
Service
roll s often used by busi- has been directed to devise
nesses.
a new, simplified system
Morning Service
Shape-based pricing is· for setting postal rates. but
also included in the new the post office will be
Evening Worship
rates. For exam'ple, if the allowed to seek one more
con tent s of a First -c lass increase under the old sys7:00p.m.
large enve lope are folded tem in the meantime .
and placed in a letter-sized
Miller said the goverPastor
e nvelope. mailers can nors have not decided
reducepostage by as much whether to do that.
Pasto~s Name
as 39 cents per piece .
The rates taking effect
Imple mentation of one May 14 include:
Address of Church
part of the new rates was
• Letters . bill payments,
delayed unt il July 15 . That gree ting cards: 41 cents
covers higher prices for for the first ounce , up
magaz ines and new spa- from 39 cents.
pers. Miller said publish• Wedding invitation (2e rs need extra time to ounces). 58 cents, down
update the ir computers to from 63 cents.
Ojte
the new rates.
• Postcard. 26 cents. up
Three other provisions from 24 cents.
of the ruling will tak e
• Priority mail t1at-rate
effect with the rest of the envelope. $4.60, up from
rates in May. but the post $4.05 .
office as ked the regulatory
• Express Mail tlat -rate
.:ommission to reconsider envelope. $16.25. up from
them . Those are :
$14.40.
- Standard tnai I tlats. a
• Parce 1 Post. !-pound
category large ly co'm- package. $4.50. up from
posell n f .:atal ogs . The 3. 95 .
com miss ion recommended
• Bank stateme nt. 2

to pu6licizeyour upcoming ~£aster T.vent!
Contact Dave
or. Brenda at

Dear Annie: After 40
years of marriage, my sister's husband kicked her out
with nothing but the clothes
on her back. "Peggy" is an
alcoh.olic and a heavy
smoker who doesn't care
what she look- or smell s
like . She lo't her driving
privileges years a~o for
multiple DW I convtctions.
She doesn' t have a job.
When Peggy became
home less. she came home to
her family - two sisters
and a few niece s and
nephews. She said she needed a place ror a couple of
weeks, but it's turned into
II month s. She goes from
one of our homes to another,
sleeping on sofas.
AII those years when
Peggy was ruining her life
with alcohol abu se, my
other sister anti I were
working and making our
li ves better. We have finally
retired and want to relax
and do things we couldn 't
get around to before. Now
here comes Peggy who
refuses to get a job, so we
have to support her while
she sits arounll all day
watching TV and opens up a
smart mouth if you say anything about it. We need our
lives back . Pl.ease help. Fed Up
Dear Fed Up: There's no
inq:mive for. Peggy to get a
job or contribute to the
household if she can live
with you. free of rent and
responsibility. We know you
care about her, but she is an
alwholic, and your family
is enabling her to continue.
Please contact AI -Anon (alanon-alateen.org) at 1-88 8-

Jacob Lana Dellavalle

Birth announced

I

·~ spec{aFse&amp;tion .iii ihe lJJaifySentine£

'

740-992.. 2155

to have your
church included or
for more
Information.

~

1\dvertising peadline;
Monday, Aprill, 2007'
of Pupjleatlon;
Wednesday, April4, 2007

( enew

•

•

BY KATHY MITCHEU
AND MARcY SUGAR

government
subsidies
dried up after the Soviet
coll apse. At least 30 workers died in Russian mining
accidents last year, including 25 killed in a fire at a
Siberian gold mine.
In the U.S . last year, 47
workers died in coal mine
accidents. including 12 in
the Sago Mine accident in
West Virg inia. It was the
U.S industry's deadliest
year si nce ·- 1995, when 47
were killed.
In recent years, ·conglomerates like Evraz SA
have bought up coal mines
and similar enterprises and
consolidated operations,
selling raw and semi processed material to steel
smelters, electricity producers and other major
indu stry . Some government
officials
have
accusect' private companies
of cutting corners on safety measures to save
money.
Alexander
Sergiev.
chairman
of
the
Independent Coal Miners'
Union,
said
the
Ulyanov skaya mine operated with new equipment,
but he said that human and
natural factors always created the potential for accidents. He said miners may
have encountered a pocket
of methane while working
and he called for new safety regulations to help prevent such accidents.
"It's nece ssary. in my
view, to pa s~ legi slation
forbidding underground
coal mining without the
required (ventilation) from
the surface for methane,"
he told Ekho Moskvy
radio.
Sergiev also blamed the
blast on quota systems that
encourage miners to work
faster and harvest more
coal, potentially leading to
carelessness.
The families of the dead
will each receive at least
$25,000 in compensation,
Kemerovo Gov. Aman
Tuleyev was quoted by
ITAR-Tass news agency.
Nobody
answered
repeated
calls
to
Yuzhkuzbassugol.
The
company, an affiliate of
Rti'ssian coal and steel
company Evraz Group SA,
is Russia's leading producer of coking coal, producing 14 million tons in
2005, according to the
Evraz Web site.

ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

CARTAGENA,
Colombia - In his first
trip Hi this violencewrac keu country. Bill
Gates said Microsoft
Corp. was helping set up
compu ter learning centers
in areas where demobili zed paramilitary fighters
are in dire need of job
training .
Given the low Internet
penetration
in
Latin
America. he said. the software company's fol·us for
getting pwp le online in
the region is to promote
cen ters
in
computer
libraries.
The company said it wa;;•
donating $ 1 million over
three yea rs to set up nine
train ing centers in some of
the Colombia ·s most contlic ti ve regions.
Wearing a traditi onal
Caribbean guayabera shirt
tuc ked into dark slacks.
Gates held an outdoor
news confe rence in thi s
colonial
port
with
Preside nt Alvaro Uribe
aft er meetin g with the
Colombian leader, government ministers, educators
and business executives.
The Microsoft chairman
later spoke on the digital
re volution' s impact on the
news paper industry to
some 600 people at a
mee ting of the Inter
American
Press
Assoc iation.
The government and
Microsoft also two signed
agreements
Monday
stressing Uribe 's strong
commitment to Microsoft
products at a time other
countries in the region are
promoting the non-propi etary Linux operating system.
Gates, who arrived late
Sunday and was to depart
Monday evening after
addressing a regional
Microsoft leadership conference ,
had
been
approached by Uribe in
New York in October
about getting the jobtraining help.
"They wanted me to go

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

G Russia mine blast kills

•

RUTLAND - Jonathon
and
Julie
Dellavalle
announce the birth or their
second son, Jacob Lane
Dellavalle. born Jan . 27. He
weighed 7 pounds, 3
ounces. He has a brother,
Brady. Grandparents are
Dano and Joan King of
Pomeroy. Laura Dell avalle
of Dext er and Michael
Dellavalle of Florida.

4-AL-ANON ( 1-888-4252666) and find out when
and where the next meeting
will take place. All the fam ily members should attend.
Dear Annie: Recently. I
was discussing baby names
with my new sister-in-law.
"Amber." I told her I've
always dreamed of naming
a little boy "A lex." It's the
name of my late paternal
grandtather. and I also love
the way it sounds.
A week later, Amber
an nounced she was pregnant and said if it's a boy.
she wants to name him
Alex. I reluctantly agreed
that, since my brother was
the only one carrying on the
family name, they could use
Alex. After all, I'm not even
married and have no rights
to the name.
Unfortunately, the more I
think about it, the more
upset I get. My boyfrie nd
and I do plan on getting
married, and he. too, Iikes
the name "Alex ." I talked to.
my brother and told him
that despite what I originally said, I am still having a
hard time with it. It has been
suggested that we both use
the name , hut I really like
the idea of having a (lame
that isn't shared by other
family members.
I am thrilled that my
brother and Amber are hav ing a baby, but I can't get
past the name issue . I've
dreamed about having a
child with thi s name.
Should I tell them again
how upset I am? Am I being
irrational·• - What's in a
Name?
Dear What's : While it
would have been nice for
Amber to choose another
name, the fact remains that

you don't have a monopoly
on this one. You were gracious to t~ll your brother it
was OK with you. Please
don 't create hard feeling s
now. If you still want to call
your child '·Alex." by all
means. do so. Many cousins
share a name. But we hope
you will be open to other
possibilities.
Dear Annie: I'm 22
years old and a very attractive young lady. I find that
when most guys take me
out . they pay the bill for the
evening. On occasions
where I pay for myse lf, it is
awkward.
I always thought the person who asks for the date
should be the one to fork
over for the bill. Am I correct ? - Need the A~wer
in Pennsylvania
Dear Pennsylvania: On
a first date, the person who
asks should also pay. For
future dates, however, it's
not unusual to split the
costs. As the woman, you
should offer to do so (and be
sure you have enough
money with you), but don't
create a fuss by fighting
over the check. It's also OK
to treat your date once in a
while.
Annie's Mailbox is written by KaJhy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann lAnders
column. Please e-11Uiil your·
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
606ll. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read fealures by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Berea
dean's list

Brother visits
Princess
Diana exhibit

BEREA. Ky. -Jodi
Donohue of Pomeroy was
named to the dean's list for the
fall semester at Berea College.
She is the daughter of Gerald
and Linda Donohue.
To be eligible, a student
must earn a gmde point average of at least 3.2.
Berea is a non-denominational libeml arts college.
Students receive the equivalent of a full-tuition scholarship and work at least I0
hours a week to pay living
expenses.

CLEVELAND (AP) Princess Diana's brother
visited a much-traveled display of her gowns, jewels
and other personal items on
Monday and said he was
impressed by the scope of
the exhibit at the Western
Reserve Historical Society.
Charles, the ninth earl
Spencer, helped organize
the 3 1/2-month exhibit that
continues through June 10.
It includes 28 dresses, suits
and gowns, two diamond
tiaras and home movies.

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

Wednesday, March 21
CARPENTER - Meigs
County .
Firefighters'
Assoc tallon, 7:30 p.m..
Station 12, Columbia Vol.
Fire Dept. Several tniining
classes are being planned as
well as the 2007 exercise.
Nick Appleman, forestry
division. will have the program.
Southern
RACINE Local Schools Financial
Planning
Supervision
Commission, 10:30 a.m .•
high school library.
MIDDLEPORT
Variance Committee meeting , 5:30 p.m., Middleport
Village Hall.

POMEROY
"Remembering a Civil War
Veteran" is the tlieme of an
essay contest sponsored by
the General McCook Circle,
Ladies of the Grand Army of
the Republic.
lbe contest is open to any
7th grade student living in or
atten~ing school in Meigs
County. Essays are due on
April 2, and may be returned
to social studies teachers or by
mail to Kila Frank, General
McCook Circ Ie. Ladies of the
Grand Army of the Republic.
50539- Pinetree
Drive,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
Winners will be announced
in early May and will be invited to read their essays at a
local Memorial ceremony on
May 19.
Prizes of$100, $75 and $50
U.S. Savings Bonds will be
awarded to ftrst, second and
third place winners.
Essays must be at least 200
words in length. Name should
not appear on the essay. A

As

Cash*
&amp;. Adam Rodgers

Happy Easter
Love, Mom &amp;. Dad

Mall to or Drop oft at The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomroy, Ohio 45769
Child's Nam$_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
From _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Your Name _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone# _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
Ads Must Be Prepaid
••••••••

Thesday, March 20
CHESTER
Past
Councilors Club. Cheste r
Council 323. Daughters of
America , 7 p.m. at the
Masonic hall. · Hoste sse&gt;.
Thelma White and Dorothy
Mye rs. Games by Julia
Fleming and Charlotte
Grant.

Pm11eroy. Michae l Gerlach
will speak on "Underground
Railroad History in Meigs
County." Guem are welcome . Re,ervations by
March 20 at 992-3214.
TUPPERS PLAINS V FW Post 9053 to meet at
the hall , 7 p.m.
POMEROY Mei gs
County Relay for Life Team
Captain meeting. 5:30p.m ..
basement conferem:e room
of Pomeroy Library, Linda
Kin g and Joyce Brown of
t~
Meig s
County
Extension Oflice will conduct a brief presentation on
nutrition , capt ains bring
team!particpant registration
forms .
POMEROY Alpha
Iota Master. lu ncheon at
noon at the home of Eleanor ·
Thomas.

Church events
Thursday, March 22
MIDDLEPORT A
Community Lenten Service
sponsored by the Mei~s
Ministerial Associaton w1ll
be held at Heath United
Methodist Church. 7 p.m.
Rev. Kerry Wood of Racine
UMC
will
prea.:h.
Refreshme nts to foll ow.
Sunday. March 25
LAUREL CLIFF - ··The ·
Christys" will be singing at
the Laurel Cli ff Free
Methodist Church. 6 p.m.
Refeshments following the
servtce.

Civil Uilr essay contest open

12 Months
Same

ltwm

Wednesday, March 21
RACIN E - ' Southern
Athletic Boosters meet in g.
6 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria. Members and others interested in Southern
athletics asked to attend.
Plans to be made for spring
and fall events.

Thursday, March 22
Thursday, March 22
POMEROY
Meip
POMEROY
The
Meigs Soil and Water ·county Retired Teachers
Conservation District Board will meet for a luncheon at
of Supervisors will meet in the Second Street meeting
regular session II :30 a.m. room of Trinit y Church.

..

• Run date Fri.,
April 6, 2007
•.Deadline Mon.
·:April 2, 2007

at the district olfice m
Pomeroy.

Thesday, March 20
POMEROY Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee will meet a
week early, at 11 :30 a.m. at
Monday, March 19
Meig s County Senior
MIDDLEPORT
Center. 2007 required exermeeting
of
cise will be di scussed and Special
Middleport
Lodge
#363,
planned.
POMEROY
D(ew F&amp;AM. to practice Master
Webster Post 39 American Mason degree and return
Legion will have its annual any outstanding degree
celebration of the American exams. All membef' urged
Legion birthday at 7 p.m. to help with Fellowcraft
for
inspec tion .
for Legion and Auxiliary team
Refreshments.
members and their spouses.

GREETING!!

' ·Actual Size 1x3
. t 1 Person per ad

Tuesday, March ;!O, 2007

Community ';alendar

Local
weather
Thesday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 50s.
Northeast winds 5 to I0
mph.
Thesday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
30s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph .
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of rain. Not as cool
~ith highs in the mid 60s . .
Southeast winds 5 to 10
mph .
Wednesday
night... Mostly cloudy. Not
as cool with low s in the
upper 40s. South winds 5
to 10 mph.
· Thursday
and
Thursday night... Partly
Cloudy. Highs in the lower
70s. Lows in the lower 50s.
Friday ... Partly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Friday
night
and
Saturday ... Mostly cloudy.
A 30 perce nt chance of
showers. Lows in the lower
50s. Highs in the upper
60s.
Saturday night... Mostly
cloudy
tn
the
even ing ...Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 40s.
Sundav
through
Monday: .. Partly cloudy.
Hig'hs in the lower 70s.
Lows in the upper 40s.

PageA3

••

separate page including name, and sailors. and promoting
school, grade, address and patriotism.
telephone number should be
attached.
Essays will be judged on
content. organization, originality. and style/mechanics
(grammar. spelling. punctuation, word choice, sentence
construction). Essays become
the property of the General
McCook Circle, Ladies of the
Let us help you.
Grand Army of the Republic
and may be used. in whole or 1 We find all the credits &amp;
part, in Circle correspondedUC1ions you desel'lle
dence. such as newsletters.
• Every return we
Essays will not be returned.
The Ladies of the Grand
prepare come\ with our
Army of the Republic was
Basic Guarantee
organized
in
1886.
Membership is open to 1 Personalized, courteous
women with ancestors who
customer service
served honorably in the Union
Forces.
Their purposes include education on the service and sacrilices of Union soldiers and
CII/1-800-234-UUD
sailors, preserving Civil War or
visitw Jt www.j~ebonhtwitt.com
battlefields. artifacts, and ~t vH.t: f"' .~~~ ·~ u..•W &lt;t•,J ;Ctf'&lt;IIWI
monuments of Union soldiers

�t

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

GATES PROMOTES COMPUI'ER
IN COLOMBIA CONFLicr AREAS
Bv FRANK BAJAK

PageA2
Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Postal
Bv RANDOLPH
E. SCHMID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
cost of mailing a letter
will go up on May 14, but
yo u 'II be able to lock in
that price - no matter
how rates ri se in the future
- by buying the new "forever" stamp.
The post office governing boarll agreed Monday
to accept the new 41 -ce nt
rate for first class mail
recommended in February
by the independent Postal
Regulatory Commission.
The board also agreed to
the proposal for a "forever
stamp," that will always
be valid for mailing a letter no matter how much
rates increase .
James C. Miller Ill ,
chairman of the postal
boa rd, said the forever
stamp could go on sale as
soon as next mof\th. at the
41 -cent rate.
The postal governors
asked the regulatory commi ss ion to reconsider
some of it s proposals. saying the sug!lestedprice for
sendmg thmgs ltke catalogs was too high.
For ·most people . the
fir st-class rate · has the
greatest impact and the
cost of sending a letter
will rise from 39 cents to
41 ce nts. a penny less than
the Postal Service had
originally requested.
But folks sending heavier letters - such as wedding invitations - will
see a reduction in the
price.
That's because the 41cent rate is for the first
ounce. but each additional
ounce will cost just 17
cents, down from the current 24 cents.
That means a two-ounce
letter will cost 58 cents to
mail. corppared with 63
cents now.

•

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

When tough love is the only route

78, leaves 50 missing
BY MIKE ECKEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MOSCOW - A methaRe
gas ex plosion deep in a
Siberian coal mine killed
at least 78 people and left
another
50
trapped
Monday in Ru ssia's worst
mining di$aster in a
decade.
Among the missing were
company officials and
safety experts who had
been inspecting a Britishmade hazard -monitoring
system,
said
Sergei
Cheremnov, a spokesman
for the regional government in Kemerovo where
the mine is located about
1,850 miles east of
Moscow.
A British man and his
interpreter were among
those killed , he said. It was
A# phoiG unclear' what the two were
Colombia's President Alvaro Uribe. right, inVites a local journalist to pose for photos with doing in the mine .
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, left. after a press conference in Cartagena, Colombia, Monday.
Up to 200 workers were
in the Ulyanovskaya mine
to
those
locatio ns.
Uribe said the nation has to put a particular empha- when
the
explos ion
Unfortunately, my sc hed- one computer per 40 stu- sis on Colombia to occurred about 885 feet
ule didn't otTer me the llents and wants to drop demonstrate some of our underground in the coalopportunit y." Gates said.
that number to 25. Fewer possibilities," Gates said.
rich
southern
region
The Colombia training than
7
percent
of
s,
known
as
the
Kuzbas
A competing model is
centers. first announced in Co lombian
households
emergency and · regional
October. have yel to open. have broadband Internet being promoted by Cuba officials said. At least 75
A Micro soft
spokes- access. higher than the and Venezuela, who seek people were rescued.
woman, Carolina Sanchez, Latin American average to free themselves of
Rescuers were checking
could only name two cities but well below the U.S. Microsoft dependence by a large section of the mine
- Valledupar and Cucuta broadband penetration of converting government for th~ missing pe~ple and
·
- where she wa s sure just over 50 percent.
computers to the Linux were 111 contact w1th some
centers would be created.
Asked at the press meet- operating system, which is of the surviving miners,
More tha n 30.000 right- ing about the hundred-dol- developed by a global officials said. It was
wing militias fi ghters ha ve lar computer project being
unclear if the survivors
demobili zed under a peace promoted by Nicholas community of program- were in immediate danger.
pact with the gove rnment Negroponte of the One mers who freely share
"Their work is complibut
authorities
have Laptop per Child associa- code.
cated by a great number of
Other countries
encountered huge difficul- tion, Gates said "We agree
obstructions,"
Eduard
ties findin g jobs for the with his goal in bringing China, Brazil and Norway Sivtsov, a spokesman for
paramili- the price down."
demobilized
among them have Yuzhkuzbassugol,
the
tarie s. Hundreds have
However. he s11id, "The encouraged Linux devel- company that operates the
rejoined illegal armed personal computer just opment.
mine. told NTV.
groups that continue to part of it. The Internet
Russian
television
The
hundred-dollar
kill, extort and intimidate. connection, the broadband
broadcast
footage
of one
Under one of the deal s connection is far more computer (actually they're miner, blackened and
si ~ned Monday, Microsoft
expensive than the com- to cost $150 each) is semiconscious, lying on a
expected to begin reaching stretcher on his way to a
will provide database soft- puter itself."
ware that will assist
Hence the regional focus children in July or so in hospital. At least five minColombia's government on libraries . Oates said Brazil.
Argentina. ers were injured.
track demobilized fighters 3,000 libraries have been Uruguay, Nigeria, Libya,
President Vladil)lir Putin
and internal refugees connected in Mexico with Pakistan, Thailand and the ordered
Emergency
forced from their homes Microsoft help.
Situations
Minister
Sergei
Palestinian territory. The
by the country's long-runMicrosoft is helping
Shoigu
to
travel
to
the
nm g
conflict,
said Colombia develop a sys- Inter-Ame ·rican area. and the industrial
Sanchez.
tem where citizens can go Development Bank is try- regulatory
a~ency
Another deal will help online for information and ing to get the laptops to Rostekhnadzor sent mvesmultiple Central American tigators.
put 15.000 more comput- services.
ers in Colombian schools.
"Microsoft has decided countries.
The mine is located in
the city Novokuznetsk, the
site of two of the deadliest
mine disasters in the past
decade. In 2004, a blast at
Al so expected to be an increase for some cata- ounces' •. presorted, 45.9 a mine ori the outskirts of
attractive to many people log mailers of as much as cents, down· from 54.4 the city killed 4 7 workers
and in 1997. a methane
is the forever stamp.
40 percent , more than cents.
explosion
killed 67 .
The first forever stamps double what the Postal
• Utility bill. barcoded.
Russia's mining industry
will se ll for 41 cents Service had proposed.
31 .2 cents , up from 29.3
fell
into disrepair when
apiece. but they won't
- The surcharge for cents.
have a price printed on larger items that cannot be
them and they will remain sorted by machines . The
valid for sending a letter postal governors would
regardless of any future like to see incentives for
rate increases .
mailers to provide letters
While a forever stamp that can be processed at
will always be valid for lower cost on sorting
mailing a latter, that does- equipment, but the comn' t mean the price won't mtssion didn't make a dif'
go up . If rates were to ferentiation.
increase to 45 cents, for
- The Priority Mail flatexample , that's what a for- rate box was set at $9.15
ever stamp would sell for. by the commission. The .
But stamps already pur- post office had recomchased at a lower rate mended $8.80.
could still be used without
The post office applied
for Example 011ly:
adding extra postage.
for the higher rates last
In a teleJ?hone interview, May and the regulatory
Miller satd there is no commission issued its
Name of Church
limit on sales of the forev - decision Feb. 26.
er stamps, but he said they
Date
Postage rates last went
are generally intended for up in January 2006.
Sunday Sunrise
.consumers and won't be
Under new legislation
produced in the massive the regulatory commission
Service
roll s often used by busi- has been directed to devise
nesses.
a new, simplified system
Morning Service
Shape-based pricing is· for setting postal rates. but
also included in the new the post office will be
Evening Worship
rates. For exam'ple, if the allowed to seek one more
con tent s of a First -c lass increase under the old sys7:00p.m.
large enve lope are folded tem in the meantime .
and placed in a letter-sized
Miller said the goverPastor
e nvelope. mailers can nors have not decided
reducepostage by as much whether to do that.
Pasto~s Name
as 39 cents per piece .
The rates taking effect
Imple mentation of one May 14 include:
Address of Church
part of the new rates was
• Letters . bill payments,
delayed unt il July 15 . That gree ting cards: 41 cents
covers higher prices for for the first ounce , up
magaz ines and new spa- from 39 cents.
pers. Miller said publish• Wedding invitation (2e rs need extra time to ounces). 58 cents, down
update the ir computers to from 63 cents.
Ojte
the new rates.
• Postcard. 26 cents. up
Three other provisions from 24 cents.
of the ruling will tak e
• Priority mail t1at-rate
effect with the rest of the envelope. $4.60, up from
rates in May. but the post $4.05 .
office as ked the regulatory
• Express Mail tlat -rate
.:ommission to reconsider envelope. $16.25. up from
them . Those are :
$14.40.
- Standard tnai I tlats. a
• Parce 1 Post. !-pound
category large ly co'm- package. $4.50. up from
posell n f .:atal ogs . The 3. 95 .
com miss ion recommended
• Bank stateme nt. 2

to pu6licizeyour upcoming ~£aster T.vent!
Contact Dave
or. Brenda at

Dear Annie: After 40
years of marriage, my sister's husband kicked her out
with nothing but the clothes
on her back. "Peggy" is an
alcoh.olic and a heavy
smoker who doesn't care
what she look- or smell s
like . She lo't her driving
privileges years a~o for
multiple DW I convtctions.
She doesn' t have a job.
When Peggy became
home less. she came home to
her family - two sisters
and a few niece s and
nephews. She said she needed a place ror a couple of
weeks, but it's turned into
II month s. She goes from
one of our homes to another,
sleeping on sofas.
AII those years when
Peggy was ruining her life
with alcohol abu se, my
other sister anti I were
working and making our
li ves better. We have finally
retired and want to relax
and do things we couldn 't
get around to before. Now
here comes Peggy who
refuses to get a job, so we
have to support her while
she sits arounll all day
watching TV and opens up a
smart mouth if you say anything about it. We need our
lives back . Pl.ease help. Fed Up
Dear Fed Up: There's no
inq:mive for. Peggy to get a
job or contribute to the
household if she can live
with you. free of rent and
responsibility. We know you
care about her, but she is an
alwholic, and your family
is enabling her to continue.
Please contact AI -Anon (alanon-alateen.org) at 1-88 8-

Jacob Lana Dellavalle

Birth announced

I

·~ spec{aFse&amp;tion .iii ihe lJJaifySentine£

'

740-992.. 2155

to have your
church included or
for more
Information.

~

1\dvertising peadline;
Monday, Aprill, 2007'
of Pupjleatlon;
Wednesday, April4, 2007

( enew

•

•

BY KATHY MITCHEU
AND MARcY SUGAR

government
subsidies
dried up after the Soviet
coll apse. At least 30 workers died in Russian mining
accidents last year, including 25 killed in a fire at a
Siberian gold mine.
In the U.S . last year, 47
workers died in coal mine
accidents. including 12 in
the Sago Mine accident in
West Virg inia. It was the
U.S industry's deadliest
year si nce ·- 1995, when 47
were killed.
In recent years, ·conglomerates like Evraz SA
have bought up coal mines
and similar enterprises and
consolidated operations,
selling raw and semi processed material to steel
smelters, electricity producers and other major
indu stry . Some government
officials
have
accusect' private companies
of cutting corners on safety measures to save
money.
Alexander
Sergiev.
chairman
of
the
Independent Coal Miners'
Union,
said
the
Ulyanov skaya mine operated with new equipment,
but he said that human and
natural factors always created the potential for accidents. He said miners may
have encountered a pocket
of methane while working
and he called for new safety regulations to help prevent such accidents.
"It's nece ssary. in my
view, to pa s~ legi slation
forbidding underground
coal mining without the
required (ventilation) from
the surface for methane,"
he told Ekho Moskvy
radio.
Sergiev also blamed the
blast on quota systems that
encourage miners to work
faster and harvest more
coal, potentially leading to
carelessness.
The families of the dead
will each receive at least
$25,000 in compensation,
Kemerovo Gov. Aman
Tuleyev was quoted by
ITAR-Tass news agency.
Nobody
answered
repeated
calls
to
Yuzhkuzbassugol.
The
company, an affiliate of
Rti'ssian coal and steel
company Evraz Group SA,
is Russia's leading producer of coking coal, producing 14 million tons in
2005, according to the
Evraz Web site.

ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

CARTAGENA,
Colombia - In his first
trip Hi this violencewrac keu country. Bill
Gates said Microsoft
Corp. was helping set up
compu ter learning centers
in areas where demobili zed paramilitary fighters
are in dire need of job
training .
Given the low Internet
penetration
in
Latin
America. he said. the software company's fol·us for
getting pwp le online in
the region is to promote
cen ters
in
computer
libraries.
The company said it wa;;•
donating $ 1 million over
three yea rs to set up nine
train ing centers in some of
the Colombia ·s most contlic ti ve regions.
Wearing a traditi onal
Caribbean guayabera shirt
tuc ked into dark slacks.
Gates held an outdoor
news confe rence in thi s
colonial
port
with
Preside nt Alvaro Uribe
aft er meetin g with the
Colombian leader, government ministers, educators
and business executives.
The Microsoft chairman
later spoke on the digital
re volution' s impact on the
news paper industry to
some 600 people at a
mee ting of the Inter
American
Press
Assoc iation.
The government and
Microsoft also two signed
agreements
Monday
stressing Uribe 's strong
commitment to Microsoft
products at a time other
countries in the region are
promoting the non-propi etary Linux operating system.
Gates, who arrived late
Sunday and was to depart
Monday evening after
addressing a regional
Microsoft leadership conference ,
had
been
approached by Uribe in
New York in October
about getting the jobtraining help.
"They wanted me to go

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

G Russia mine blast kills

•

RUTLAND - Jonathon
and
Julie
Dellavalle
announce the birth or their
second son, Jacob Lane
Dellavalle. born Jan . 27. He
weighed 7 pounds, 3
ounces. He has a brother,
Brady. Grandparents are
Dano and Joan King of
Pomeroy. Laura Dell avalle
of Dext er and Michael
Dellavalle of Florida.

4-AL-ANON ( 1-888-4252666) and find out when
and where the next meeting
will take place. All the fam ily members should attend.
Dear Annie: Recently. I
was discussing baby names
with my new sister-in-law.
"Amber." I told her I've
always dreamed of naming
a little boy "A lex." It's the
name of my late paternal
grandtather. and I also love
the way it sounds.
A week later, Amber
an nounced she was pregnant and said if it's a boy.
she wants to name him
Alex. I reluctantly agreed
that, since my brother was
the only one carrying on the
family name, they could use
Alex. After all, I'm not even
married and have no rights
to the name.
Unfortunately, the more I
think about it, the more
upset I get. My boyfrie nd
and I do plan on getting
married, and he. too, Iikes
the name "Alex ." I talked to.
my brother and told him
that despite what I originally said, I am still having a
hard time with it. It has been
suggested that we both use
the name , hut I really like
the idea of having a (lame
that isn't shared by other
family members.
I am thrilled that my
brother and Amber are hav ing a baby, but I can't get
past the name issue . I've
dreamed about having a
child with thi s name.
Should I tell them again
how upset I am? Am I being
irrational·• - What's in a
Name?
Dear What's : While it
would have been nice for
Amber to choose another
name, the fact remains that

you don't have a monopoly
on this one. You were gracious to t~ll your brother it
was OK with you. Please
don 't create hard feeling s
now. If you still want to call
your child '·Alex." by all
means. do so. Many cousins
share a name. But we hope
you will be open to other
possibilities.
Dear Annie: I'm 22
years old and a very attractive young lady. I find that
when most guys take me
out . they pay the bill for the
evening. On occasions
where I pay for myse lf, it is
awkward.
I always thought the person who asks for the date
should be the one to fork
over for the bill. Am I correct ? - Need the A~wer
in Pennsylvania
Dear Pennsylvania: On
a first date, the person who
asks should also pay. For
future dates, however, it's
not unusual to split the
costs. As the woman, you
should offer to do so (and be
sure you have enough
money with you), but don't
create a fuss by fighting
over the check. It's also OK
to treat your date once in a
while.
Annie's Mailbox is written by KaJhy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann lAnders
column. Please e-11Uiil your·
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
606ll. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read fealures by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Berea
dean's list

Brother visits
Princess
Diana exhibit

BEREA. Ky. -Jodi
Donohue of Pomeroy was
named to the dean's list for the
fall semester at Berea College.
She is the daughter of Gerald
and Linda Donohue.
To be eligible, a student
must earn a gmde point average of at least 3.2.
Berea is a non-denominational libeml arts college.
Students receive the equivalent of a full-tuition scholarship and work at least I0
hours a week to pay living
expenses.

CLEVELAND (AP) Princess Diana's brother
visited a much-traveled display of her gowns, jewels
and other personal items on
Monday and said he was
impressed by the scope of
the exhibit at the Western
Reserve Historical Society.
Charles, the ninth earl
Spencer, helped organize
the 3 1/2-month exhibit that
continues through June 10.
It includes 28 dresses, suits
and gowns, two diamond
tiaras and home movies.

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

Wednesday, March 21
CARPENTER - Meigs
County .
Firefighters'
Assoc tallon, 7:30 p.m..
Station 12, Columbia Vol.
Fire Dept. Several tniining
classes are being planned as
well as the 2007 exercise.
Nick Appleman, forestry
division. will have the program.
Southern
RACINE Local Schools Financial
Planning
Supervision
Commission, 10:30 a.m .•
high school library.
MIDDLEPORT
Variance Committee meeting , 5:30 p.m., Middleport
Village Hall.

POMEROY
"Remembering a Civil War
Veteran" is the tlieme of an
essay contest sponsored by
the General McCook Circle,
Ladies of the Grand Army of
the Republic.
lbe contest is open to any
7th grade student living in or
atten~ing school in Meigs
County. Essays are due on
April 2, and may be returned
to social studies teachers or by
mail to Kila Frank, General
McCook Circ Ie. Ladies of the
Grand Army of the Republic.
50539- Pinetree
Drive,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
Winners will be announced
in early May and will be invited to read their essays at a
local Memorial ceremony on
May 19.
Prizes of$100, $75 and $50
U.S. Savings Bonds will be
awarded to ftrst, second and
third place winners.
Essays must be at least 200
words in length. Name should
not appear on the essay. A

As

Cash*
&amp;. Adam Rodgers

Happy Easter
Love, Mom &amp;. Dad

Mall to or Drop oft at The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomroy, Ohio 45769
Child's Nam$_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
From _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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Ads Must Be Prepaid
••••••••

Thesday, March 20
CHESTER
Past
Councilors Club. Cheste r
Council 323. Daughters of
America , 7 p.m. at the
Masonic hall. · Hoste sse&gt;.
Thelma White and Dorothy
Mye rs. Games by Julia
Fleming and Charlotte
Grant.

Pm11eroy. Michae l Gerlach
will speak on "Underground
Railroad History in Meigs
County." Guem are welcome . Re,ervations by
March 20 at 992-3214.
TUPPERS PLAINS V FW Post 9053 to meet at
the hall , 7 p.m.
POMEROY Mei gs
County Relay for Life Team
Captain meeting. 5:30p.m ..
basement conferem:e room
of Pomeroy Library, Linda
Kin g and Joyce Brown of
t~
Meig s
County
Extension Oflice will conduct a brief presentation on
nutrition , capt ains bring
team!particpant registration
forms .
POMEROY Alpha
Iota Master. lu ncheon at
noon at the home of Eleanor ·
Thomas.

Church events
Thursday, March 22
MIDDLEPORT A
Community Lenten Service
sponsored by the Mei~s
Ministerial Associaton w1ll
be held at Heath United
Methodist Church. 7 p.m.
Rev. Kerry Wood of Racine
UMC
will
prea.:h.
Refreshme nts to foll ow.
Sunday. March 25
LAUREL CLIFF - ··The ·
Christys" will be singing at
the Laurel Cli ff Free
Methodist Church. 6 p.m.
Refeshments following the
servtce.

Civil Uilr essay contest open

12 Months
Same

ltwm

Wednesday, March 21
RACIN E - ' Southern
Athletic Boosters meet in g.
6 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria. Members and others interested in Southern
athletics asked to attend.
Plans to be made for spring
and fall events.

Thursday, March 22
Thursday, March 22
POMEROY
Meip
POMEROY
The
Meigs Soil and Water ·county Retired Teachers
Conservation District Board will meet for a luncheon at
of Supervisors will meet in the Second Street meeting
regular session II :30 a.m. room of Trinit y Church.

..

• Run date Fri.,
April 6, 2007
•.Deadline Mon.
·:April 2, 2007

at the district olfice m
Pomeroy.

Thesday, March 20
POMEROY Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee will meet a
week early, at 11 :30 a.m. at
Monday, March 19
Meig s County Senior
MIDDLEPORT
Center. 2007 required exermeeting
of
cise will be di scussed and Special
Middleport
Lodge
#363,
planned.
POMEROY
D(ew F&amp;AM. to practice Master
Webster Post 39 American Mason degree and return
Legion will have its annual any outstanding degree
celebration of the American exams. All membef' urged
Legion birthday at 7 p.m. to help with Fellowcraft
for
inspec tion .
for Legion and Auxiliary team
Refreshments.
members and their spouses.

GREETING!!

' ·Actual Size 1x3
. t 1 Person per ad

Tuesday, March ;!O, 2007

Community ';alendar

Local
weather
Thesday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 50s.
Northeast winds 5 to I0
mph.
Thesday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
30s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph .
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of rain. Not as cool
~ith highs in the mid 60s . .
Southeast winds 5 to 10
mph .
Wednesday
night... Mostly cloudy. Not
as cool with low s in the
upper 40s. South winds 5
to 10 mph.
· Thursday
and
Thursday night... Partly
Cloudy. Highs in the lower
70s. Lows in the lower 50s.
Friday ... Partly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Friday
night
and
Saturday ... Mostly cloudy.
A 30 perce nt chance of
showers. Lows in the lower
50s. Highs in the upper
60s.
Saturday night... Mostly
cloudy
tn
the
even ing ...Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 40s.
Sundav
through
Monday: .. Partly cloudy.
Hig'hs in the lower 70s.
Lows in the upper 40s.

PageA3

••

separate page including name, and sailors. and promoting
school, grade, address and patriotism.
telephone number should be
attached.
Essays will be judged on
content. organization, originality. and style/mechanics
(grammar. spelling. punctuation, word choice, sentence
construction). Essays become
the property of the General
McCook Circle, Ladies of the
Let us help you.
Grand Army of the Republic
and may be used. in whole or 1 We find all the credits &amp;
part, in Circle correspondedUC1ions you desel'lle
dence. such as newsletters.
• Every return we
Essays will not be returned.
The Ladies of the Grand
prepare come\ with our
Army of the Republic was
Basic Guarantee
organized
in
1886.
Membership is open to 1 Personalized, courteous
women with ancestors who
customer service
served honorably in the Union
Forces.
Their purposes include education on the service and sacrilices of Union soldiers and
CII/1-800-234-UUD
sailors, preserving Civil War or
visitw Jt www.j~ebonhtwitt.com
battlefields. artifacts, and ~t vH.t: f"' .~~~ ·~ u..•W &lt;t•,J ;Ctf'&lt;IIWI
monuments of Union soldiers

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

PageA4

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Tuesday, March 20,2007

Bush, Congress can agree on immigration riform this year

about border enforcement and clear: truly tough border
Even a~ they banle over
enforcement. using fences,
employer
sanctions.
Iraq and assorted scandals
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
On the other side, as personnel and technology:
large and small, Republicans
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
President Bush revealed on tough penalties for employers
and Democrats owe it to
- w.mydallysenllnel.com
his trip to Latin America this who hire illegals: and tamperthemselves and the country to
week, his administration is proof identifiCation cards to
pass a comprehensive immiMorton
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
working intensively to pro- identify legal workers.
gmtion reform bill this year.
Kcnicw:Jo&amp;
The legislation also should
duce a '"coherent Republican
Republicans ought to be
position" in the Senate to take include a temporary worker
Dan Goodrich
chastened by the losses they
into
negotiations
with progrtun that ti lls a yawning
sullered in 2006 after adopt-·
Publisher
need for agricultural and lowKennedy.
mg a harsh anti-immigrant
skilled
service workers, with
Administration ofticials stru1ce and strive to get past
Fortunately, a lot of behindCharlene Hoeflich
the issue before it rips their the-scenes action is under with Commerce Secretary options fur such workers to
General Manager-News Editor
Gutierrez
and hecome pem1anent residents
pany apan in 2008.
way in the Senate to get start- Carlos
and citiiA:ns. It should include
Homeland
Security
Secretary
Democmts ought to want to ed on comprehensive immidemonstrate that a Congress gmtion reform, but it remains Mir hael Chertoff in the lead va~tly iocrea..OO special visas
they dominate can solve at to be seen whether a deal can - are hoping to increase for skilled workers and swift
Congress shall make no law respecting an
least one big national prot&gt;- really be cut by this summer. GOP support for comprehen- opportunities for citizenship
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
lem. And - short-tenn, at after which 2008 politics may sive immigmtion reform from for the most highly skilled.
the 20 senators currently serv- Also. there should be federal
d
h o. d
,# least - they'd probably benit impossible.
free exercise thereof; or a bri rging t e Jree om OJ efit politically amon~ Latino make
On one side. Sen. Edward ing who supported last year's impact aid for communities
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- voters by passing a b1IL
Kennedy, D-Mass., has bill to 25. a majority of GOP whose schools ;md hospitals
are burdened by illegal immi-·
But the basic reason for dropped his anempt to draft a senators.
Pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
They also are trying to con- gration and an eamed legalaction is that everyone agrees new, solves-every-problem
Government for a redress of grievances.
the immigmtion system is in bill with Sen. John McCain, vince some hardliners to drop ization pmgnun for the 12
shambles, with iUegal immi- R-Ariz., and has decided to unworkable ideas such as million people who now are
- The First Amendment to the U.S_ Constitution grants continuing to pile reintroduce last year's Senate requiring millions to return to here illegally. provided they
across the border, with Judiciary Committee compro- their home countries before pay tines and back taxes. have
employers not able to get the mise measure as a starting they can gain legal status. dean records and learn
Pro-immigration lobbyists English.
legal workers they need, and point for debate.
Members of Congress
say
there is a chance that up to
with 12 million illegal immiHe wa'&gt; moved to do so,
should
heed the urging of
Today is Tuesday, March 20. the 79th day of 2007. There grants living in fear of depor- aides and immigration experts 47 Democmts could combine
Gov.
Janet
are 286 days left in the year. Spring arrives at 8:07 p.m. tation and subject to exploita- say. both by the diftlculty of with 2~plus Republicans to Arizona
Napolitano,
who
said
at
the
send
a
comprehensive
bill
to
EDT.
tion.
reaching a deal with McCain
National
Pre&gt;S
Club
last
the
House
with
a
tailwind
of
Today's Highlight in History:
Most everyone also agrees on legal and wage prote\:tions
month that it is time 'lo end
On March 20. ll:ll 5. Napoleon Bonaparte returned to with Microsoft CEO Bill for temporary workers :md by nearly 70 votes.
But they say the danger is the rhetoric, stop the politics.
Paris after escapi ng his exi le on Elha, beginning his Gates that the United States a massive March 6 mid at a
"Hundred Days" rul e.
needs to allow in more skilled leather-goods factory in New that, to win support from 25 provide sustained funding and
On this date:
workers - indeed, it should Bedford, Mass.. that rounded Republicans, the administm- turn away from extreme.
In 1413. Eng land's Kin g Henry IV died: he was succeed- be giving out green cards up 350 tenitied workers and tion ·may agree to restrictive unworkable solutions that
ed by Henry Y.
. along with diplomas to for- led to charges against their provisions - such as a ban solve nothing and only delay
on temporary workers ever the benefits of real reform."
In 1727. physicist. mathematician and astronomer S1r . eign-born Ph.D.s - and employer.
It's worth noting that
Isaac Newton died in London.
· everyone ought to agree that
The raid, in which dozens becoming citizens- that will
Napolitano,
a Democrat and
In 1828, poet-dramatist Henrik Ibsen was born in Skien, states and localities deserve of women were detained and drive away Democmts, causNorway.
federal help in coping with unable to care for their chil- ing the whole effort to col- ;m advocate of tough enforcement and e:m1ed legalization,
In 1852, Haniet Beecher Stow'e's intluential novel about the burden of illegal immigra- dren, caused Kennedy to lapse.
won
re-election with 63 per-.
On
the
other
side,
adminisdecide that action on immi.
lion.
slavery. "Uncle Tom's Cabin." was llrst published.
In 1977. voters in Paris chose former French Pnme
This is a big, big problem gmtion reform couldn't wait. tmtion ofticials are wonied cent 0f the vote last year
Minister Jacques Chirm: to be the French capital's lirst that Congress and the White But that rdid, along with other that Democrats will demand against an opponent who said
mayor in more than a century.
House would do credit to high-profile roundups by the such a high level of worker she was '·soft" on illegal
In 1985. Libby Riddles of Teller. Alaska, became the tlrst themselves to resolve- and Bureau of Citizenship and protections-such as guanm- immigrant\ .
( Mortrm Komlmcke is
woman to win the lditarod Trail Dog Sled Race.
deserve public scorn if they lmmigmtion Services, also tees of prevailing union wage
convince
wary rates - as to drive away busi- necwi•·e editor of' Roll Celli,
In 1987, the Food and Drug Administration approved the cannot. It's a test of whether could
sale of AZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some our current crop of politicians Republicans that the execu- ness ;md GOP support . The . tlw "''"'·' l'"l"'r of Capitol
tive branch tinally is serious outIines of the basic deal are Hill.)
AIDS patients.
can get anything done.
In 1995, in Tokyo, 12 people were killed and more than - - - -- ' - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5,5.00 others sickened when packages containing the poisonous gas sarin were leaked on tlve separate subway trains
by Aum Shinrikyo cult members.
Ten years ago: President Clinton and Boris Yeltsin
opened talks in Helsinki, Finland, on the issue of NATO
expansion. Liggett Group, the maker of Chesterfield cigarettes, settled 22 state lawsuits by agreeing to warn on
every pack that smoking is addictive and admitting the
industry markets cigarettes to teenagers.
Five years ago: Three days ahead of a visit by President
Bush, a car bomb exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in
Lima, killing 10 people. Seven Israelis died when an
Islamic militant blew himself up in a packed bus. Con~ress
approved the most far-reaching changes to the natwn's
campaign finance system since the Watergate era.
Accounting firm Arthur Andersen pleaded not guilty to
charges it had shredded documents and deleted computer
files related to Enron. (Andersen was later found guilty of
obstruction of justice: it received probation and was fined
$500,000.)
One year ago: Beginning the fourth year of an unpopular
war, President Bush defended his Iraq record against skeptical questioning at the City Club in Cleveland. Anti-war
activists marked the third anni'versary of the U.S.-Ied invasion of Iraq with a "Bring 'Em Home Now!" concert to
benefit groups campaigning against the war. Paul Tagliabue
announced he would step down as NFL commissioner after
16 years. Japan beat Cuba 10-6 in the title game of the inautions of intemational treaties Secretary of State said An Italian judge has set
gural World Baseball Classic.
these
sovereign natioos have quoted in the Feb. 5. 2005
June
8
for
the
first
trial
anyThought for Today: "Spring has no language but a cry."
signed
are indeed strong indi- London Daily Telegraph:
where
of
CIA
agents
engaged
-Thomas Wolfe, American author ( 1900-1938).
cations of collusion between "There cannot be an abseoce
m "renditions" - kidnapping
CIA kidnappers and certain of moral content in American
terrorism suspects from varicountries' intelligence ser- foreign policy. Europeans gigous countries to be flown for
LETTERS TO THE
Nat
vil'eS. But to call the Italian gle at this. but we are not
interrogation to complicit
EDITOR
Hentoff
government's insistence on European. we are American,
nations known to torture their
redeeming its own rule of law rutd we have different priociLetters to the editor are welcome. The y should be less prisoners. Italy has indicted 25
"a hostile act against the U.S." ples."
than 300 words. All/etters are subject -to-editing, must be CiA ag~nts for snatching
cleric
Osama .
appears to say that to defeat
signed, and include address and telephone number. No Muslim
Not only Europeans have
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in Moustafa Hassan Nasr off the may weaken U.S. and · the viciously ruthless lawless ceased extolling a!. our claimgood taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of streets of Milan on Feb. 17, European coopemtion on terrorist enemy is to become
ing moral - and legal tha11ks to orga11izations qnd individuals will not be accept- 2003 ruxl taking him on a CIA intelligence gathering. He lawless ourselves.
priociples despite the CIA's
ed for publication.
"ghost plane" to Egypt. where wged European governments,
And on our end, the CIA
"extraordinary
renditions."
said the AP, "to challenge the renditions ARE lawless,
he was tortured.
As revealed in Stephen suggestions that Europeans despite the unilateral "special our treatment of prisoners at
Grey's heavily documented need to be coocemed about powers" the president has Guantanamo - rutd the CiA's
given the CIA to conduct ren- own "black sites." So it was
book on CIA renditions, CIA secret flights."
(USPS 213-960)
It's only the streets they live ditions and to 9pel"dte its own that when, on Feb. 6, nations
"Ghost Plane" (St. Martin's
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
Press, 2006), one of the on.
secret prisons. (The l'Olltinua- signed an intern;rtional treaty
Co.
However, as is evident in tion of this skewering of our protecting terrorism suspects
Egyptian interrogation tech,
Coneetlon Policy
Publi shed every afternoon. Monday
niques was to "hang Nasr the European press, citizens of rule of law is permitted by the from being lorced to disappear
OUr main concern in all stories is to
th rough Friday, 111 Co urt Street,
upside down and apply live countries visited by C lA Military Commissions Act of from any muntry 's streets and
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy. Ohio.
Second-class
wires to apply electric shocks "ghost planes" increasingly 2006. signed into law by kept in secret detention, the
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
to the sensitive part..~ of his are coocemed and angry. Says George W. Bush.)
.United States wa~ not an1oog
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
body, including his genitals." Kathalijne Buitenweg, a
A 1998 U.S. statute, part of the signers. There were no
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
On Feb. II of this year, Egypt Dutch memher of the the Foreign Affairs Refonn giggles at that evasion of our
Our main numter is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
and Restructuring Act, states: past pledges to the world.
released Nasr, saying that his European Parliament
(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
four-year detention had been unconvioced by the State "'It shall be the policy of the
Will the June trial in Italy of
Department extensions are:
Department's Bellinger "unfounded."
United States not to expel. the CIA kidnappers at last
Subscription Ratea
The CIA abductors left "People are being imprisoned extrddite or otherwise effect motivate Congress to conduct
By carrier or motor route
extensive
evidence of their without being tried first. That the involuntary re.uo\'al of a tnlly bipmtis•m investigation
News
One month
't0.27
involvement while executing is unacceptable."
any person to a country in of these CIA rendition~. which
Editor: Charlene Hoefl ich., Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
But not ewn Bellinger has which there are substantial •u-e self-inllicted wouJKb in
Daily
50"
the reoditioo in Italy - credit
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Senior Citizen rates
cards for hotel stays, the num- gone as far a~ the .lead editori- gruunds for believing the per- our war against barbirrous eneReporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
· One month
' 10.27
bers of their uma'Ured ceU al in the Feb. 26 Wall .Street son would be in danger ,,r mies who want to kiU u., ·? As
One year
•t03.90
phones, etc. The Bush admin- journal ("'The Italian Job") being subjected to torture ...
John Mc'Cain said before he
Subsaibers 500old """" in advance
Advertising
istration says flatly, however, "No one seriously claim&gt;...
I ha¥t heard administration
direct 10 the Dally Sentntt. No subOUtlildc:·Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
that if convicted, these that the CIA agents were in semanticists maintain that this shelved his principles and
scription by mail permitted in areas
Oubllde salea: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier sePik:e is availAmericans wiU not be extra- Italy without the explicit law applies only to prisoners voted for the Military
CIMsJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able .
dited to Italy for sentencing. knowledge and participation we hold in our own jurisdic- Commissions Act of 2006. we
Aside from that, the adminis- of Italy's security services. tion - not to suspects kid- mu ~t remember we are
Mail Subscription
trdlion has nolhing more to This is the crucial point - and napped off the streets . of An1eric:ms.
General _Manager
Inside Meigs County
(Nat Helllo/J' i., a nationnll~
explains whey the indicm1ents another country. I sometimes
say about Nasr's case.
Charlene Hoemch. Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.28
1'
1
.!11011'1/ed
authority o n ·rhe
But, as reported by the are a hostile act against the think there may be courses tor
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Associated Press (Feb. 28). U.S." (Didn ' t the United oflicials of this actministration Fin/ Amemlmenttmd the Bill
E-mail:
John Bellinger, legal adviser States l'Ommit a hosti 1;: act in how to conjugate what r1(' Right.\ and aurlu1r u( IIUJnv
news@ m~daitysentinel . com
Outside Meigs Counly
to Secretary of State against Italian laws!)
George
Orwell
called book&gt;. including .. 711e \\(lr 011
13 Weeks
'53.55
Part of the demands of "newspeak" - words and the Bill of Rights a11d the
Condoleezza Rice, did have
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
European
citizens for more meanings turned inside out.
Gathering Resistance" (Seven
something
to
say.
He
is
con52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysenlinet.com
exposure
of
the
CIA's
violacerned that these inquiries
Consider
what
our Stories Press, 2003 ). I

TODAY IN HISTORY

CIA exposed in Italy

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March• 20, 2007

Obituaries

State seeks resignations of Cuyahoga elections board members
BY JOE MILICIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Saundra K. 1111is
RUTLAND - Saundra K. Tillis, 58, of Rutland went to
be with the Lord on Sunday, March 18, 2007 at her residence.
She was born Dec. I0, 1948 in Charleston. W.Va., to the
late William R. and Imogene Sayre Dean. She was a school
teacher at the Meigs Local lntennediate School. She was
also a member of MALTA, founder and past president of
the Meigs County Quilters Guild and a member of the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene.
Surviving are her husband, Danny Tillis, children, Jayme
(Earl) Bickford, and Donny Tillis and fiance Joanie
Caruthers. all of Rutland: grandchildren:, Bethany and
Samantha Bickford : sister, Teresa (Lee 0 .) Wood, III of
Rutland, and special friends. Fred (Judy) Davis of
Chillicothe.
She was preceded by her parents and a son, Danny
William Mathew Tillis.
Services will be held on Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 2
p.m. at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene with the Rev.
Isaac Shupe offlciatin~ . Burial will follow at the Miles
Cemetery. Visitation w1ll be held from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. on
Wednesday. March 21, 2007 at the FisheE Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.
Online Condolences may be sent to: www.llsherfuneralhomes.com.

Court rules to stop Ohio
execution; state appeals
BY DAN SEWELL

Biros' lawyer, Timothy
Sweeney, said if the U.S.
Supreme Court allows the
CINCINNATI - The day execution, Biros still has an
before an execution, a feder- appeal before the 6th Circuit
al appeals court ruled that claims he was not conMonday to block that state victed of an offense that
from putting to death a man merits the death penalty.
who killed a woman, cut her
Other executions have
up and scattered her remains been delayed in the past
across two states.
year because of the lethal
Ohio prison workers still injection lawsuit. However,
prepared for the execution former cult leader Jeffrey
of Kenneth Biros, 48, Lundgren was executed Oct.
because the state appealed 24 despite his appeal.
to the U.S. Supreme Court
The execution would be
seeking a ruling to allow the the first under Gov. Ted
lethal injection.
•
Biros was moved Monday Strickland, who denied
to Ohio's death house at the clemency on Friday.
Biros acknowledged he
Southern Ohio Correctional
ltilled
Tami Engstrom, 22,
Facility in Lucasville, and
prison workers will be ready but said it was done during a
to carry out the execution as drunken rage.
They met after work in
scheduled Thesday morning
unless the Supreme Court 1991 at a tavern in Masury
stops it, prisons spokes- in northeast Ohio. Police
believed she fled his
woman Andrea Dean said.
advances,
perhaps ran from
A 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals panel in his car and fell or was sttuck
Cincinnati refused the or was strangled when Biros ·
state's request to lift a lower tried to quiet her.
A search based on Biros'
court's order against the
execution, saying Biros information led to body
should be able to continue parts that had been buried,
appealing a lawsuit with and some dug up and
other inmates arguing that reburied, near Masury and
Ohio 's method of lethal in adjacent areas of Venango
injection is cruet"and unusu- and Butler counties in
northwest Pennsylvania.
al punishment.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Project~
from PageA1
other off-season items. The
wiring in the mini-park was
discussed and while it is not
yet completed Musser said it
could be once the money
becomes available.
The Easter egg hunt sponsored bv the Merchants
Associati-on was aimounced
for Saturday, March 31, at the
Pomeroy football lield with
Michelle Noble as chairman.
The Easter bunny will be
there. The children will be
divided into age groups for
the hunt. The time of the hunt
will be announced.
A check for $340, a portion

CLEVELAND
A
request from the Ohio secretary of state that all four
members of the Cuyahoga
County elections board
resign because of a history
of problems was met
Monday with resistance.
Jennifer Brunner, the
state's chief election officer.
said her decision was based
on her pledge to restore trust
to elections in Ohio. She
said she will seek the board
members' removal through
public hearings if they don' t
leave by the close of business on Wednesday.
Brunner, a newl y elected
Democrat, called the four
board members Sunday
night and asked them to step
down.
"All of them were pretty
shocked," Brunner said
Monday. " I wanted to work
with this board but when we
have a crisis in public confidence ... our state deserves
better."
The state's most populous
county has had difficulty
adjusting to electronic voting. including numerous
problems during last May's
primary. Last week. a
Cuyahoga County judge
sentenced two elections
workers to I 8 months in
prison for rigging a recount
of the 2004 presidential

election so they could avoid
a more thorough review of
the votes.
''No one can deny there's
responsibility on the parts of
all four board members
when you have employees
going to prison for the way
they handled their job,"
Brunner said.
She said the prison terms
were the culmination of
problems that included a
five-day delay in wunting
votes during the primary.
The board's chairman ,
Robert Bennett, who also
heads the GOP in Ohi o,
made clear during a news
conference Monday at the
GOP headquarters that he
planned to tinish his tenn,
which ellpires in 2010.
"I would like to remind
the secretary of state ... that
the board d1d a good job in
this r,ast gubernatorial elec- .
tion. ' he said. "We are making progress on our major
goal, which is to restore
voter
confidence
in
Cuyahoga County elections."

The May primary was the
county's first attempt at
electronic voting and was
marred by absent or poorly
trained poll workers, lost
vote-holding
computer
cards and a polling place
that opened hours late.
In
November 2004,
Cuyahoga, which has more
than I million registered

voters, was among the
counties with long lines and
complaints over provisional
ballots.
Brunner said that as a
presidential election looms
m 2008 it's necessary for
the county to have better
leadership.
"I want to fulftll my
pledge to the voters that
they can trust their elections
system," Brunner said.
Bennett said Brunner
should
be
targeting
Cuyahoga
County
Prosecutor Bill Mason and
prosecutor Reno Oradini.
who advises the elections
board, saying they prosecuted two workers "for taking
action tha~ could have been
prevented with one word
from them."
Bennett said Mason knew
there were procedural problems and didn' t do anythin.!\.
"Bennett 's arrogance I S
boundless,'" Mason said. "A
judge and a jury rejected his
phony excuses and found
them guilty of rigging election results. Someone
should tell him that he is not
above the law."
The other board members
are Edward Coaxum Jr. and
both
Loree
Soggs,
Democrats. and Sally
Florkiewicz, a Republican.
Messages seeking comment
were left at Coaxum's
offices and the home and
office of Soggs. There was

no answer at the home of
Florkiewicz.
Bennett indicated that
Florkiewicz would not
leave. Brunner said Lhat
Coaxum and Suggs told her
they were committed to
serving on the board and
wouldn' t resign.
If they are removed,
Brunner would appoint new
members after reviewing
recommendations
from
Cuyahoga County's political parties. Two members
from each party serve on the
board.
Brunner will file complaints Thursday if the
board members do not
resij;n. She was hoping to
av01d public hearings. but
expects the process to move
efficiently if she has to go
that ro ute .
"We ' II be able to accomplish this for a smooth May
primary," she said.
The county 's embattled
elections chief, Michael Vu,
resigned last month. The
resignation was effective
March I, and Vu has agreed
to stay on through June as a
consultant to help the board
as it looks for and trains a
new director.
The county is without its
top three leaders because
the assistant director also is
leaving and its third-highest
ranking employee was one
of the two workers convicted.

Full-service gas station sees customers dwindle
BY BEN SUTHERLY
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOUTH CHARLESTON,
Ohio - The bell next to
Dave Sprague's desk clangs
when a car pulls up to the
pump. He seldom stirs.
It's a self-service world
now.
It's a rare regular who
wants a full-service fillup,
complete with oil and tire
checks and windshield
cleaning. Sprague, 76, is the
only gas station . owner
around to oblige.
Fifty years ago this Labor
Day, in 1957, he began
working at the Pure Oil Co.
station on U.S. 42 in this
town 35 miles west of
Columbus.
"It was a full-serve station
then," he said, ticlting off the
names of the seven service
stations that this town of
1,800 had at the time: Gulf,
Shell, Sohio, Fleetwing,

'
City Service, Sinclair and
Pure Oil - now Sprague
Oil Co.
Independent since Unioo
76 pulled out in 1998,
Sprague is a vestige of the .
service industry that sprout·
ed along U.S. 42 durin~ its
heyday as the primary high-·
way between Cincinnati and
Cleveland - an era that
quickly
ended
after
Interstate 71 opened in
1963·64.
So is Doris Cordle, the 83·
year-old proprietor of a I~
room motel that she and her
late husband, World War ll
veteran Delmer Cordle, built
in 1952, 3.5 iniles west of
London.
The
rooms,
attached to Cordle's house,
go for $4Q a night: they still
have panel-ray heat and their
original furnishings.
"When this was a major
highway, we were filled at 6
o'clock at night," Cordle
said. "They now have free-

of money raised on the
Association's church tour in
made noodles donated by
· December, was presented by
the Sunshine Circle will be
Jane Harris to Nancy Thoene
served beginning at 5 p.m.
for God's NET.
at the senior center: At 6:30
from PageA1
Harris said she had been
p.m. the Forgiven Four will
contacted by Cathy Erwin
entertain dinner guests.
about a donation for Phil Din
Chocolate cakes, cakes Chances for a $500 pre-paid
and the Dozers which will be made with fruit or vegeta- Visa card will also be taken
appearing at Middleport's bles, yellow and white as well as chances on a cash
Fourth of July celebration. cakes, coffee cakes will be drawing. Admission at the
The Association voted to scored by a maximum of 30 door is $6.50 or advance
make a $250 donation. points for appearance, 30 tickets purchased at the
Musser announced the points for texture, 40 points senior center are $6 with all
upcoming
Sternwheel for taste. Decorated cakes pi'CICeeds benefiting Meals
Festival scheduled for Sept. will be scored by a maxi- on Wheels.
.
13-15 and talked about the mum of 60 points for
This month's March For
planning sessions currently appearance and I or difficul- Meals has a fundraising
underway.
ty of design and 40 points goal of $15,000 to keep the
Membership
was for taste.
Meals on Wheels program
discussed and it was noted
In addit.ion to the cake rolling. Call Jones at 992that 31 members have paid judging contest and auction, 2161 for more information
dues.
a turkey dinner with home- on the cake contest.

Cakes

Baur Insurance Co. is a co- It included crushed vehicles,
sponsor with Robin White. accident victims, emergency
agent, in charge of organiz- support, Life Flight helicopters and the Highway
in~ participation.
from PageA1
'We want young adults to Patrol. That scenario will be
have an opportunity to 5ee repeated
m
2008.
derived by the students. the effects that sometimes Mendenhall said that by
"The reality of it really gets result when poor choices are staggering the crash simula·
to the kids." said Gheen. "If made," said White. "These tions and motivational proit saves one ~erson, it's choices my involve alcohol j:rams, all high school
worth the effort. '
and drugs, poor driving JUniors and seniors will have
Southern superintendent habits or peer pressure. This the opportunity to experiMark Miller was also enthu- method of getting the mes- ence both events.
siastic about IMPA'CT and sage out is through an
A number of area busithe impression it leaves with assembly type setting that nesses have signed on to
the students. " It gets them will make an 'impact' on the help support the program
thinking and anytime we can way they think."
by
making
donations
be proactive and any proThe State Highway Patrol toward transportation costs
gram which can get the trooper
talked
about and the luncheon which
word out to them and get IMPACT 2006 which was will be provided to all the
them thinking and making held on the Athens High students. Others who would
positive choices is well School football field featur- like to become a partner in
worthwhile.''
ing an accident simulation IMPACT 2007, can send
A featured speaker at this · that replicated a crash scene. checks to Prom Pledge ,
year's event will be Jim
Rockwell of The Rockwell
Project who will tell the
It's easy to subscribe to the
story of his poor choice to
drink and drive and the
The Daily Sentinel
result it has had on his life.
Sign up for home deMry
"Alcohol related accidents
are the number one killer
or a mail subscription
among teenagers. Mixing
go to
alcohol with driving is a
www.mydailysentinel.com
lethal combination.'' said
Jeremy Mendenhall. trooper
Sign up today .
with the Ohio State
Highway Patrol and organizer of the event. Reed &amp;

Meigs

"WE DEliVER"

Impact, Inc., P.O. Box 714,
Athens Ohio 45701.
Each student attending will
be given a key ring that has
a reminder to "Thi nk
Responsibility."
"We don't want any
school excluded from
bringing their students
because of cost," said
Mendenh 111. "These are
your kids and the leaders of
tomorrow. If we can influence just nne student to
make a better choice, it may
save a life. That is what
IMPACT is al l about."

RIVERVIEW

Chiropractic Center
Dr. (;...cy L. Piersol DC
('UopnKiic ....vtio:ioo

• IIISUIWICe
• Auto Accidents
•Work.... CoMp
·• flleciiCIIid (WV &amp; OHI
• flleclicaN

Back &amp; Ned Pain
Headaches
Personal &amp; Sports Injury

ways, which really changed
it."
Prior to 1926, the portioo
of U.S. 42 between
Cincinnati and London was
an intercounty highway
called Route 28, according
to the state Department of
Transportation. In 1926,
with the advent of the
nation's highway system, it
became a U.S. route.
U.S. 42 emerges from
Cincinnati's surging suburbs, then ambles through
the growing communities of
Mason and Lebanon, past
new housing developments,
horse fanns and the tack
shops that serve them. It
turns more rural in Greene,
Clark and Madison counties.
Even the highway's rural
stretches thrived in the
1950s and 1960s.
In the !960s,-six people four of them full time worked at the filling station
that Sprague owns. Today,

there are two: Sprague and
Bob Hamilton, 62, who
started part time in 1961 .
A drop in traffic isn't solely to blame.
"There's not too many
grease jobs anymore,"
Sprague said. He has two
bays, using one mostly to
repair brakes and rotate tires.
He recalls the gas wars of
the mid-1960s, when fuel
sold for as little as 15 cents a
gallon; today, it's more than
$2.
A bottle of Coke cost a
nickel in the 1950s, a dime
in the early 1960s. Sprague
still sells Coke in 8-ounce
glass bottles for a buck.
"The original Coke bottle
was 6-and-a-half ounces,"
Sprague said. The station's
employees and regulars
would often purchase bottles
of Coke and then see whose
Coke had been bottled farthest away,' he said . That
person won a dollar.

Mine

process could take eight
months to a year to complete . Yesterday. Stillier
added nothing has happened
to alter his original comment
in regards to changing or
acceleratin g that estimate
on the length of the permit proce ss.

from PageA1
Stitlier said the "word of
mouth" meeting will be
facilitated though ODNR and
the trustees of Sutton
Township. Stillier said no
decision has been made on
whether or not any officials
from Gatling Ohio, LLC will
be invited to the meeting.
"We're here to regulate the
coal industry and if people have
concerns we need to know
that," Stillier said about his
agencts role. "We listen to
both stdes, review the application, address every statute
and if residents' concerns
are legitimate and an application needs revised then so
be it.,
Gatling Ohio, LLC filed
an underground coal mining
permit with ODNR in
November. At that time
Stillier said the permit

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�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

PageA4

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Tuesday, March 20,2007

Bush, Congress can agree on immigration riform this year

about border enforcement and clear: truly tough border
Even a~ they banle over
enforcement. using fences,
employer
sanctions.
Iraq and assorted scandals
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
On the other side, as personnel and technology:
large and small, Republicans
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
President Bush revealed on tough penalties for employers
and Democrats owe it to
- w.mydallysenllnel.com
his trip to Latin America this who hire illegals: and tamperthemselves and the country to
week, his administration is proof identifiCation cards to
pass a comprehensive immiMorton
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
working intensively to pro- identify legal workers.
gmtion reform bill this year.
Kcnicw:Jo&amp;
The legislation also should
duce a '"coherent Republican
Republicans ought to be
position" in the Senate to take include a temporary worker
Dan Goodrich
chastened by the losses they
into
negotiations
with progrtun that ti lls a yawning
sullered in 2006 after adopt-·
Publisher
need for agricultural and lowKennedy.
mg a harsh anti-immigrant
skilled
service workers, with
Administration ofticials stru1ce and strive to get past
Fortunately, a lot of behindCharlene Hoeflich
the issue before it rips their the-scenes action is under with Commerce Secretary options fur such workers to
General Manager-News Editor
Gutierrez
and hecome pem1anent residents
pany apan in 2008.
way in the Senate to get start- Carlos
and citiiA:ns. It should include
Homeland
Security
Secretary
Democmts ought to want to ed on comprehensive immidemonstrate that a Congress gmtion reform, but it remains Mir hael Chertoff in the lead va~tly iocrea..OO special visas
they dominate can solve at to be seen whether a deal can - are hoping to increase for skilled workers and swift
Congress shall make no law respecting an
least one big national prot&gt;- really be cut by this summer. GOP support for comprehen- opportunities for citizenship
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
lem. And - short-tenn, at after which 2008 politics may sive immigmtion reform from for the most highly skilled.
the 20 senators currently serv- Also. there should be federal
d
h o. d
,# least - they'd probably benit impossible.
free exercise thereof; or a bri rging t e Jree om OJ efit politically amon~ Latino make
On one side. Sen. Edward ing who supported last year's impact aid for communities
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- voters by passing a b1IL
Kennedy, D-Mass., has bill to 25. a majority of GOP whose schools ;md hospitals
are burdened by illegal immi-·
But the basic reason for dropped his anempt to draft a senators.
Pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
They also are trying to con- gration and an eamed legalaction is that everyone agrees new, solves-every-problem
Government for a redress of grievances.
the immigmtion system is in bill with Sen. John McCain, vince some hardliners to drop ization pmgnun for the 12
shambles, with iUegal immi- R-Ariz., and has decided to unworkable ideas such as million people who now are
- The First Amendment to the U.S_ Constitution grants continuing to pile reintroduce last year's Senate requiring millions to return to here illegally. provided they
across the border, with Judiciary Committee compro- their home countries before pay tines and back taxes. have
employers not able to get the mise measure as a starting they can gain legal status. dean records and learn
Pro-immigration lobbyists English.
legal workers they need, and point for debate.
Members of Congress
say
there is a chance that up to
with 12 million illegal immiHe wa'&gt; moved to do so,
should
heed the urging of
Today is Tuesday, March 20. the 79th day of 2007. There grants living in fear of depor- aides and immigration experts 47 Democmts could combine
Gov.
Janet
are 286 days left in the year. Spring arrives at 8:07 p.m. tation and subject to exploita- say. both by the diftlculty of with 2~plus Republicans to Arizona
Napolitano,
who
said
at
the
send
a
comprehensive
bill
to
EDT.
tion.
reaching a deal with McCain
National
Pre&gt;S
Club
last
the
House
with
a
tailwind
of
Today's Highlight in History:
Most everyone also agrees on legal and wage prote\:tions
month that it is time 'lo end
On March 20. ll:ll 5. Napoleon Bonaparte returned to with Microsoft CEO Bill for temporary workers :md by nearly 70 votes.
But they say the danger is the rhetoric, stop the politics.
Paris after escapi ng his exi le on Elha, beginning his Gates that the United States a massive March 6 mid at a
"Hundred Days" rul e.
needs to allow in more skilled leather-goods factory in New that, to win support from 25 provide sustained funding and
On this date:
workers - indeed, it should Bedford, Mass.. that rounded Republicans, the administm- turn away from extreme.
In 1413. Eng land's Kin g Henry IV died: he was succeed- be giving out green cards up 350 tenitied workers and tion ·may agree to restrictive unworkable solutions that
ed by Henry Y.
. along with diplomas to for- led to charges against their provisions - such as a ban solve nothing and only delay
on temporary workers ever the benefits of real reform."
In 1727. physicist. mathematician and astronomer S1r . eign-born Ph.D.s - and employer.
It's worth noting that
Isaac Newton died in London.
· everyone ought to agree that
The raid, in which dozens becoming citizens- that will
Napolitano,
a Democrat and
In 1828, poet-dramatist Henrik Ibsen was born in Skien, states and localities deserve of women were detained and drive away Democmts, causNorway.
federal help in coping with unable to care for their chil- ing the whole effort to col- ;m advocate of tough enforcement and e:m1ed legalization,
In 1852, Haniet Beecher Stow'e's intluential novel about the burden of illegal immigra- dren, caused Kennedy to lapse.
won
re-election with 63 per-.
On
the
other
side,
adminisdecide that action on immi.
lion.
slavery. "Uncle Tom's Cabin." was llrst published.
In 1977. voters in Paris chose former French Pnme
This is a big, big problem gmtion reform couldn't wait. tmtion ofticials are wonied cent 0f the vote last year
Minister Jacques Chirm: to be the French capital's lirst that Congress and the White But that rdid, along with other that Democrats will demand against an opponent who said
mayor in more than a century.
House would do credit to high-profile roundups by the such a high level of worker she was '·soft" on illegal
In 1985. Libby Riddles of Teller. Alaska, became the tlrst themselves to resolve- and Bureau of Citizenship and protections-such as guanm- immigrant\ .
( Mortrm Komlmcke is
woman to win the lditarod Trail Dog Sled Race.
deserve public scorn if they lmmigmtion Services, also tees of prevailing union wage
convince
wary rates - as to drive away busi- necwi•·e editor of' Roll Celli,
In 1987, the Food and Drug Administration approved the cannot. It's a test of whether could
sale of AZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some our current crop of politicians Republicans that the execu- ness ;md GOP support . The . tlw "''"'·' l'"l"'r of Capitol
tive branch tinally is serious outIines of the basic deal are Hill.)
AIDS patients.
can get anything done.
In 1995, in Tokyo, 12 people were killed and more than - - - -- ' - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5,5.00 others sickened when packages containing the poisonous gas sarin were leaked on tlve separate subway trains
by Aum Shinrikyo cult members.
Ten years ago: President Clinton and Boris Yeltsin
opened talks in Helsinki, Finland, on the issue of NATO
expansion. Liggett Group, the maker of Chesterfield cigarettes, settled 22 state lawsuits by agreeing to warn on
every pack that smoking is addictive and admitting the
industry markets cigarettes to teenagers.
Five years ago: Three days ahead of a visit by President
Bush, a car bomb exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in
Lima, killing 10 people. Seven Israelis died when an
Islamic militant blew himself up in a packed bus. Con~ress
approved the most far-reaching changes to the natwn's
campaign finance system since the Watergate era.
Accounting firm Arthur Andersen pleaded not guilty to
charges it had shredded documents and deleted computer
files related to Enron. (Andersen was later found guilty of
obstruction of justice: it received probation and was fined
$500,000.)
One year ago: Beginning the fourth year of an unpopular
war, President Bush defended his Iraq record against skeptical questioning at the City Club in Cleveland. Anti-war
activists marked the third anni'versary of the U.S.-Ied invasion of Iraq with a "Bring 'Em Home Now!" concert to
benefit groups campaigning against the war. Paul Tagliabue
announced he would step down as NFL commissioner after
16 years. Japan beat Cuba 10-6 in the title game of the inautions of intemational treaties Secretary of State said An Italian judge has set
gural World Baseball Classic.
these
sovereign natioos have quoted in the Feb. 5. 2005
June
8
for
the
first
trial
anyThought for Today: "Spring has no language but a cry."
signed
are indeed strong indi- London Daily Telegraph:
where
of
CIA
agents
engaged
-Thomas Wolfe, American author ( 1900-1938).
cations of collusion between "There cannot be an abseoce
m "renditions" - kidnapping
CIA kidnappers and certain of moral content in American
terrorism suspects from varicountries' intelligence ser- foreign policy. Europeans gigous countries to be flown for
LETTERS TO THE
Nat
vil'eS. But to call the Italian gle at this. but we are not
interrogation to complicit
EDITOR
Hentoff
government's insistence on European. we are American,
nations known to torture their
redeeming its own rule of law rutd we have different priociLetters to the editor are welcome. The y should be less prisoners. Italy has indicted 25
"a hostile act against the U.S." ples."
than 300 words. All/etters are subject -to-editing, must be CiA ag~nts for snatching
cleric
Osama .
appears to say that to defeat
signed, and include address and telephone number. No Muslim
Not only Europeans have
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in Moustafa Hassan Nasr off the may weaken U.S. and · the viciously ruthless lawless ceased extolling a!. our claimgood taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of streets of Milan on Feb. 17, European coopemtion on terrorist enemy is to become
ing moral - and legal tha11ks to orga11izations qnd individuals will not be accept- 2003 ruxl taking him on a CIA intelligence gathering. He lawless ourselves.
priociples despite the CIA's
ed for publication.
"ghost plane" to Egypt. where wged European governments,
And on our end, the CIA
"extraordinary
renditions."
said the AP, "to challenge the renditions ARE lawless,
he was tortured.
As revealed in Stephen suggestions that Europeans despite the unilateral "special our treatment of prisoners at
Grey's heavily documented need to be coocemed about powers" the president has Guantanamo - rutd the CiA's
given the CIA to conduct ren- own "black sites." So it was
book on CIA renditions, CIA secret flights."
(USPS 213-960)
It's only the streets they live ditions and to 9pel"dte its own that when, on Feb. 6, nations
"Ghost Plane" (St. Martin's
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
Press, 2006), one of the on.
secret prisons. (The l'Olltinua- signed an intern;rtional treaty
Co.
However, as is evident in tion of this skewering of our protecting terrorism suspects
Egyptian interrogation tech,
Coneetlon Policy
Publi shed every afternoon. Monday
niques was to "hang Nasr the European press, citizens of rule of law is permitted by the from being lorced to disappear
OUr main concern in all stories is to
th rough Friday, 111 Co urt Street,
upside down and apply live countries visited by C lA Military Commissions Act of from any muntry 's streets and
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy. Ohio.
Second-class
wires to apply electric shocks "ghost planes" increasingly 2006. signed into law by kept in secret detention, the
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
to the sensitive part..~ of his are coocemed and angry. Says George W. Bush.)
.United States wa~ not an1oog
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
body, including his genitals." Kathalijne Buitenweg, a
A 1998 U.S. statute, part of the signers. There were no
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
On Feb. II of this year, Egypt Dutch memher of the the Foreign Affairs Refonn giggles at that evasion of our
Our main numter is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
and Restructuring Act, states: past pledges to the world.
released Nasr, saying that his European Parliament
(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
four-year detention had been unconvioced by the State "'It shall be the policy of the
Will the June trial in Italy of
Department extensions are:
Department's Bellinger "unfounded."
United States not to expel. the CIA kidnappers at last
Subscription Ratea
The CIA abductors left "People are being imprisoned extrddite or otherwise effect motivate Congress to conduct
By carrier or motor route
extensive
evidence of their without being tried first. That the involuntary re.uo\'al of a tnlly bipmtis•m investigation
News
One month
't0.27
involvement while executing is unacceptable."
any person to a country in of these CIA rendition~. which
Editor: Charlene Hoefl ich., Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
But not ewn Bellinger has which there are substantial •u-e self-inllicted wouJKb in
Daily
50"
the reoditioo in Italy - credit
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Senior Citizen rates
cards for hotel stays, the num- gone as far a~ the .lead editori- gruunds for believing the per- our war against barbirrous eneReporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
· One month
' 10.27
bers of their uma'Ured ceU al in the Feb. 26 Wall .Street son would be in danger ,,r mies who want to kiU u., ·? As
One year
•t03.90
phones, etc. The Bush admin- journal ("'The Italian Job") being subjected to torture ...
John Mc'Cain said before he
Subsaibers 500old """" in advance
Advertising
istration says flatly, however, "No one seriously claim&gt;...
I ha¥t heard administration
direct 10 the Dally Sentntt. No subOUtlildc:·Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
that if convicted, these that the CIA agents were in semanticists maintain that this shelved his principles and
scription by mail permitted in areas
Oubllde salea: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier sePik:e is availAmericans wiU not be extra- Italy without the explicit law applies only to prisoners voted for the Military
CIMsJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able .
dited to Italy for sentencing. knowledge and participation we hold in our own jurisdic- Commissions Act of 2006. we
Aside from that, the adminis- of Italy's security services. tion - not to suspects kid- mu ~t remember we are
Mail Subscription
trdlion has nolhing more to This is the crucial point - and napped off the streets . of An1eric:ms.
General _Manager
Inside Meigs County
(Nat Helllo/J' i., a nationnll~
explains whey the indicm1ents another country. I sometimes
say about Nasr's case.
Charlene Hoemch. Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.28
1'
1
.!11011'1/ed
authority o n ·rhe
But, as reported by the are a hostile act against the think there may be courses tor
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Associated Press (Feb. 28). U.S." (Didn ' t the United oflicials of this actministration Fin/ Amemlmenttmd the Bill
E-mail:
John Bellinger, legal adviser States l'Ommit a hosti 1;: act in how to conjugate what r1(' Right.\ and aurlu1r u( IIUJnv
news@ m~daitysentinel . com
Outside Meigs Counly
to Secretary of State against Italian laws!)
George
Orwell
called book&gt;. including .. 711e \\(lr 011
13 Weeks
'53.55
Part of the demands of "newspeak" - words and the Bill of Rights a11d the
Condoleezza Rice, did have
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
European
citizens for more meanings turned inside out.
Gathering Resistance" (Seven
something
to
say.
He
is
con52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysenlinet.com
exposure
of
the
CIA's
violacerned that these inquiries
Consider
what
our Stories Press, 2003 ). I

TODAY IN HISTORY

CIA exposed in Italy

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March• 20, 2007

Obituaries

State seeks resignations of Cuyahoga elections board members
BY JOE MILICIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Saundra K. 1111is
RUTLAND - Saundra K. Tillis, 58, of Rutland went to
be with the Lord on Sunday, March 18, 2007 at her residence.
She was born Dec. I0, 1948 in Charleston. W.Va., to the
late William R. and Imogene Sayre Dean. She was a school
teacher at the Meigs Local lntennediate School. She was
also a member of MALTA, founder and past president of
the Meigs County Quilters Guild and a member of the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene.
Surviving are her husband, Danny Tillis, children, Jayme
(Earl) Bickford, and Donny Tillis and fiance Joanie
Caruthers. all of Rutland: grandchildren:, Bethany and
Samantha Bickford : sister, Teresa (Lee 0 .) Wood, III of
Rutland, and special friends. Fred (Judy) Davis of
Chillicothe.
She was preceded by her parents and a son, Danny
William Mathew Tillis.
Services will be held on Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 2
p.m. at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene with the Rev.
Isaac Shupe offlciatin~ . Burial will follow at the Miles
Cemetery. Visitation w1ll be held from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. on
Wednesday. March 21, 2007 at the FisheE Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.
Online Condolences may be sent to: www.llsherfuneralhomes.com.

Court rules to stop Ohio
execution; state appeals
BY DAN SEWELL

Biros' lawyer, Timothy
Sweeney, said if the U.S.
Supreme Court allows the
CINCINNATI - The day execution, Biros still has an
before an execution, a feder- appeal before the 6th Circuit
al appeals court ruled that claims he was not conMonday to block that state victed of an offense that
from putting to death a man merits the death penalty.
who killed a woman, cut her
Other executions have
up and scattered her remains been delayed in the past
across two states.
year because of the lethal
Ohio prison workers still injection lawsuit. However,
prepared for the execution former cult leader Jeffrey
of Kenneth Biros, 48, Lundgren was executed Oct.
because the state appealed 24 despite his appeal.
to the U.S. Supreme Court
The execution would be
seeking a ruling to allow the the first under Gov. Ted
lethal injection.
•
Biros was moved Monday Strickland, who denied
to Ohio's death house at the clemency on Friday.
Biros acknowledged he
Southern Ohio Correctional
ltilled
Tami Engstrom, 22,
Facility in Lucasville, and
prison workers will be ready but said it was done during a
to carry out the execution as drunken rage.
They met after work in
scheduled Thesday morning
unless the Supreme Court 1991 at a tavern in Masury
stops it, prisons spokes- in northeast Ohio. Police
believed she fled his
woman Andrea Dean said.
advances,
perhaps ran from
A 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals panel in his car and fell or was sttuck
Cincinnati refused the or was strangled when Biros ·
state's request to lift a lower tried to quiet her.
A search based on Biros'
court's order against the
execution, saying Biros information led to body
should be able to continue parts that had been buried,
appealing a lawsuit with and some dug up and
other inmates arguing that reburied, near Masury and
Ohio 's method of lethal in adjacent areas of Venango
injection is cruet"and unusu- and Butler counties in
northwest Pennsylvania.
al punishment.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Project~
from PageA1
other off-season items. The
wiring in the mini-park was
discussed and while it is not
yet completed Musser said it
could be once the money
becomes available.
The Easter egg hunt sponsored bv the Merchants
Associati-on was aimounced
for Saturday, March 31, at the
Pomeroy football lield with
Michelle Noble as chairman.
The Easter bunny will be
there. The children will be
divided into age groups for
the hunt. The time of the hunt
will be announced.
A check for $340, a portion

CLEVELAND
A
request from the Ohio secretary of state that all four
members of the Cuyahoga
County elections board
resign because of a history
of problems was met
Monday with resistance.
Jennifer Brunner, the
state's chief election officer.
said her decision was based
on her pledge to restore trust
to elections in Ohio. She
said she will seek the board
members' removal through
public hearings if they don' t
leave by the close of business on Wednesday.
Brunner, a newl y elected
Democrat, called the four
board members Sunday
night and asked them to step
down.
"All of them were pretty
shocked," Brunner said
Monday. " I wanted to work
with this board but when we
have a crisis in public confidence ... our state deserves
better."
The state's most populous
county has had difficulty
adjusting to electronic voting. including numerous
problems during last May's
primary. Last week. a
Cuyahoga County judge
sentenced two elections
workers to I 8 months in
prison for rigging a recount
of the 2004 presidential

election so they could avoid
a more thorough review of
the votes.
''No one can deny there's
responsibility on the parts of
all four board members
when you have employees
going to prison for the way
they handled their job,"
Brunner said.
She said the prison terms
were the culmination of
problems that included a
five-day delay in wunting
votes during the primary.
The board's chairman ,
Robert Bennett, who also
heads the GOP in Ohi o,
made clear during a news
conference Monday at the
GOP headquarters that he
planned to tinish his tenn,
which ellpires in 2010.
"I would like to remind
the secretary of state ... that
the board d1d a good job in
this r,ast gubernatorial elec- .
tion. ' he said. "We are making progress on our major
goal, which is to restore
voter
confidence
in
Cuyahoga County elections."

The May primary was the
county's first attempt at
electronic voting and was
marred by absent or poorly
trained poll workers, lost
vote-holding
computer
cards and a polling place
that opened hours late.
In
November 2004,
Cuyahoga, which has more
than I million registered

voters, was among the
counties with long lines and
complaints over provisional
ballots.
Brunner said that as a
presidential election looms
m 2008 it's necessary for
the county to have better
leadership.
"I want to fulftll my
pledge to the voters that
they can trust their elections
system," Brunner said.
Bennett said Brunner
should
be
targeting
Cuyahoga
County
Prosecutor Bill Mason and
prosecutor Reno Oradini.
who advises the elections
board, saying they prosecuted two workers "for taking
action tha~ could have been
prevented with one word
from them."
Bennett said Mason knew
there were procedural problems and didn' t do anythin.!\.
"Bennett 's arrogance I S
boundless,'" Mason said. "A
judge and a jury rejected his
phony excuses and found
them guilty of rigging election results. Someone
should tell him that he is not
above the law."
The other board members
are Edward Coaxum Jr. and
both
Loree
Soggs,
Democrats. and Sally
Florkiewicz, a Republican.
Messages seeking comment
were left at Coaxum's
offices and the home and
office of Soggs. There was

no answer at the home of
Florkiewicz.
Bennett indicated that
Florkiewicz would not
leave. Brunner said Lhat
Coaxum and Suggs told her
they were committed to
serving on the board and
wouldn' t resign.
If they are removed,
Brunner would appoint new
members after reviewing
recommendations
from
Cuyahoga County's political parties. Two members
from each party serve on the
board.
Brunner will file complaints Thursday if the
board members do not
resij;n. She was hoping to
av01d public hearings. but
expects the process to move
efficiently if she has to go
that ro ute .
"We ' II be able to accomplish this for a smooth May
primary," she said.
The county 's embattled
elections chief, Michael Vu,
resigned last month. The
resignation was effective
March I, and Vu has agreed
to stay on through June as a
consultant to help the board
as it looks for and trains a
new director.
The county is without its
top three leaders because
the assistant director also is
leaving and its third-highest
ranking employee was one
of the two workers convicted.

Full-service gas station sees customers dwindle
BY BEN SUTHERLY
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOUTH CHARLESTON,
Ohio - The bell next to
Dave Sprague's desk clangs
when a car pulls up to the
pump. He seldom stirs.
It's a self-service world
now.
It's a rare regular who
wants a full-service fillup,
complete with oil and tire
checks and windshield
cleaning. Sprague, 76, is the
only gas station . owner
around to oblige.
Fifty years ago this Labor
Day, in 1957, he began
working at the Pure Oil Co.
station on U.S. 42 in this
town 35 miles west of
Columbus.
"It was a full-serve station
then," he said, ticlting off the
names of the seven service
stations that this town of
1,800 had at the time: Gulf,
Shell, Sohio, Fleetwing,

'
City Service, Sinclair and
Pure Oil - now Sprague
Oil Co.
Independent since Unioo
76 pulled out in 1998,
Sprague is a vestige of the .
service industry that sprout·
ed along U.S. 42 durin~ its
heyday as the primary high-·
way between Cincinnati and
Cleveland - an era that
quickly
ended
after
Interstate 71 opened in
1963·64.
So is Doris Cordle, the 83·
year-old proprietor of a I~
room motel that she and her
late husband, World War ll
veteran Delmer Cordle, built
in 1952, 3.5 iniles west of
London.
The
rooms,
attached to Cordle's house,
go for $4Q a night: they still
have panel-ray heat and their
original furnishings.
"When this was a major
highway, we were filled at 6
o'clock at night," Cordle
said. "They now have free-

of money raised on the
Association's church tour in
made noodles donated by
· December, was presented by
the Sunshine Circle will be
Jane Harris to Nancy Thoene
served beginning at 5 p.m.
for God's NET.
at the senior center: At 6:30
from PageA1
Harris said she had been
p.m. the Forgiven Four will
contacted by Cathy Erwin
entertain dinner guests.
about a donation for Phil Din
Chocolate cakes, cakes Chances for a $500 pre-paid
and the Dozers which will be made with fruit or vegeta- Visa card will also be taken
appearing at Middleport's bles, yellow and white as well as chances on a cash
Fourth of July celebration. cakes, coffee cakes will be drawing. Admission at the
The Association voted to scored by a maximum of 30 door is $6.50 or advance
make a $250 donation. points for appearance, 30 tickets purchased at the
Musser announced the points for texture, 40 points senior center are $6 with all
upcoming
Sternwheel for taste. Decorated cakes pi'CICeeds benefiting Meals
Festival scheduled for Sept. will be scored by a maxi- on Wheels.
.
13-15 and talked about the mum of 60 points for
This month's March For
planning sessions currently appearance and I or difficul- Meals has a fundraising
underway.
ty of design and 40 points goal of $15,000 to keep the
Membership
was for taste.
Meals on Wheels program
discussed and it was noted
In addit.ion to the cake rolling. Call Jones at 992that 31 members have paid judging contest and auction, 2161 for more information
dues.
a turkey dinner with home- on the cake contest.

Cakes

Baur Insurance Co. is a co- It included crushed vehicles,
sponsor with Robin White. accident victims, emergency
agent, in charge of organiz- support, Life Flight helicopters and the Highway
in~ participation.
from PageA1
'We want young adults to Patrol. That scenario will be
have an opportunity to 5ee repeated
m
2008.
derived by the students. the effects that sometimes Mendenhall said that by
"The reality of it really gets result when poor choices are staggering the crash simula·
to the kids." said Gheen. "If made," said White. "These tions and motivational proit saves one ~erson, it's choices my involve alcohol j:rams, all high school
worth the effort. '
and drugs, poor driving JUniors and seniors will have
Southern superintendent habits or peer pressure. This the opportunity to experiMark Miller was also enthu- method of getting the mes- ence both events.
siastic about IMPA'CT and sage out is through an
A number of area busithe impression it leaves with assembly type setting that nesses have signed on to
the students. " It gets them will make an 'impact' on the help support the program
thinking and anytime we can way they think."
by
making
donations
be proactive and any proThe State Highway Patrol toward transportation costs
gram which can get the trooper
talked
about and the luncheon which
word out to them and get IMPACT 2006 which was will be provided to all the
them thinking and making held on the Athens High students. Others who would
positive choices is well School football field featur- like to become a partner in
worthwhile.''
ing an accident simulation IMPACT 2007, can send
A featured speaker at this · that replicated a crash scene. checks to Prom Pledge ,
year's event will be Jim
Rockwell of The Rockwell
Project who will tell the
It's easy to subscribe to the
story of his poor choice to
drink and drive and the
The Daily Sentinel
result it has had on his life.
Sign up for home deMry
"Alcohol related accidents
are the number one killer
or a mail subscription
among teenagers. Mixing
go to
alcohol with driving is a
www.mydailysentinel.com
lethal combination.'' said
Jeremy Mendenhall. trooper
Sign up today .
with the Ohio State
Highway Patrol and organizer of the event. Reed &amp;

Meigs

"WE DEliVER"

Impact, Inc., P.O. Box 714,
Athens Ohio 45701.
Each student attending will
be given a key ring that has
a reminder to "Thi nk
Responsibility."
"We don't want any
school excluded from
bringing their students
because of cost," said
Mendenh 111. "These are
your kids and the leaders of
tomorrow. If we can influence just nne student to
make a better choice, it may
save a life. That is what
IMPACT is al l about."

RIVERVIEW

Chiropractic Center
Dr. (;...cy L. Piersol DC
('UopnKiic ....vtio:ioo

• IIISUIWICe
• Auto Accidents
•Work.... CoMp
·• flleciiCIIid (WV &amp; OHI
• flleclicaN

Back &amp; Ned Pain
Headaches
Personal &amp; Sports Injury

ways, which really changed
it."
Prior to 1926, the portioo
of U.S. 42 between
Cincinnati and London was
an intercounty highway
called Route 28, according
to the state Department of
Transportation. In 1926,
with the advent of the
nation's highway system, it
became a U.S. route.
U.S. 42 emerges from
Cincinnati's surging suburbs, then ambles through
the growing communities of
Mason and Lebanon, past
new housing developments,
horse fanns and the tack
shops that serve them. It
turns more rural in Greene,
Clark and Madison counties.
Even the highway's rural
stretches thrived in the
1950s and 1960s.
In the !960s,-six people four of them full time worked at the filling station
that Sprague owns. Today,

there are two: Sprague and
Bob Hamilton, 62, who
started part time in 1961 .
A drop in traffic isn't solely to blame.
"There's not too many
grease jobs anymore,"
Sprague said. He has two
bays, using one mostly to
repair brakes and rotate tires.
He recalls the gas wars of
the mid-1960s, when fuel
sold for as little as 15 cents a
gallon; today, it's more than
$2.
A bottle of Coke cost a
nickel in the 1950s, a dime
in the early 1960s. Sprague
still sells Coke in 8-ounce
glass bottles for a buck.
"The original Coke bottle
was 6-and-a-half ounces,"
Sprague said. The station's
employees and regulars
would often purchase bottles
of Coke and then see whose
Coke had been bottled farthest away,' he said . That
person won a dollar.

Mine

process could take eight
months to a year to complete . Yesterday. Stillier
added nothing has happened
to alter his original comment
in regards to changing or
acceleratin g that estimate
on the length of the permit proce ss.

from PageA1
Stitlier said the "word of
mouth" meeting will be
facilitated though ODNR and
the trustees of Sutton
Township. Stillier said no
decision has been made on
whether or not any officials
from Gatling Ohio, LLC will
be invited to the meeting.
"We're here to regulate the
coal industry and if people have
concerns we need to know
that," Stillier said about his
agencts role. "We listen to
both stdes, review the application, address every statute
and if residents' concerns
are legitimate and an application needs revised then so
be it.,
Gatling Ohio, LLC filed
an underground coal mining
permit with ODNR in
November. At that time
Stillier said the permit

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•

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answer questions ab6Ut things like fuel credit,
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Sat. 9 to 5
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�Tuesday. March 20. 2007

www.mydailysentinel .com

Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Braves scalp Indians, Page 82

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

Thesdav,
. March 20, 2007

B

LocAL BRIEFS

Southern Athletic
Boosters to hold
meeting Wednesday

Mareh 24th

RACINE
The
Southern Athletic Boosters
will hold their monthly
meeting this Wednesday.
March 21 at 6 p.m. in the
high school cafeteria.
All current members and
anyone wishing to join to
support Southern athletics is
asked to anend, so that the
group can plan for spring
and fall sports.

SERVING FROM 7:00A.M. TO 11:00 A.M.
Meigs ~ounty Senior Citizens
112 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio

Adults· 13 and up $5°

Children- under 12 $2° ~
0

.

Proceeds to Support
Co
Services

.........

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH

740-992-2155

Racine, OH

Syracuse, OH

74Q-949-2210

74Q-992-6333

Crow and Crow

Ingels Carpet

Attorneys at Law

175 N. Second Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy ·

992-5432

992-6059

Pomeroy

Downing- Childs
Mullen-Musser
INSURANCE
992-3381 • Pomeroy, OH

740-992-7028
Middleport, OH

992-3471

The Vaughan Agency

Dettwiller Lumber

505 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio

634 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992..9784

740-992-5500

Fisher Funeral Homes

Kebler Business Services

264 S 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
740-992-5141

590 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH
740-992-5444

Tradition- Service - Value

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

Ingels Electronics

Bernard V. Fultz

JeweJry and Picture Gallery
Middleport, OH

Attorney

992-2635

111 1/2 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-7101

i\c;coumil~g IRA's• , Rollover's' , Stocks• , Bortds•

Mutual

. Annuities•. long Tenn Care

Kebler Ill*
lc.,rtilfied Public Accountant
Ie-mtai'l :kk:ebler®charter.net

618 E. Main Street

Pomeroy. OH 45769
Phone: 74~992 - 7270

BROGAN WARNER
INSURANCE
992-6687.992-2143
Pomeroy,OH

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State recruits Kosta
Koufos of Canton GlenOak
and Upper Sandusky's Jon
Diebler are the top honorees
on the 2007 Associated
Press Division I and 11 AllOhio boys basketball teams
released on Monday. ·
Koufos. a versatile 7-foot2 player who can dunk or
shoot a 3, is the player of the
year in Division I. He'll be
on the big stage at Value
City Arena for this week's
slate tournament.
All the 6-7 Diebler did is
set a new Ohio prep scoring
k with more than 3,000
nts heading into the
ms' state semifinal game.
ed on the recommendations of a state media panel,
Diebler wa.~ the top player in
Division II.
The coaches of the year in

the big-sc hool di\ i,ion led
their teams to the state
tournmament: Eric Flannery
of poll champion Lakewood
St. Edward and GlenOak 's
Jack Greynolds Jr.
The 2006-2007 Associated
Press Division I and II boys
All-Ohio high school basketball team, based on the recommendations of a state
media panel:
DIVISION I
FIRST TEAM
Kosta Koutos. Cant GtenOak. 7-foot-2.
senior, 26.0 points per game; Det'von
-·Lakewood St. Edward, 6'6, Jr., 22.0;
William Buford, Tot Libbey, 6-5 , jr.. 28.4;

Chris Wright, Trotwood-Madison, 6-8, sr.,

19.6; Brett McKnight. lancaster. 6-6. sr.,
26.6.

Pf•yer of the r-r: Kosta Koulos, Cant.
GienOak.
..
CO.ChN of the year: Jack Greynolds
Jr.. Cant. GlenOak: Eric Flannery,
Lakewood St. Edward

Ya~ Gates, Cin. Wtthrow, 6·9. jr.. 19.4;

Troy Tabler, Cin. Moeller, 6-4 , sr., 13.5;

Chris Johnson. Cob. Brookhaven. &amp;-5.
jr., 23.4 ; Eric Coblentz, Uniontown Lake,
6-3, sr., 23.6: Chris Wyse. Tol. Scott. 6·3,
sr. . 26.7: Oaitwan Eppinger, Garfield
Hts., 6-6, sr., 19.1; Dallas lauderdale,
Solon. 6-9. sr.; 16.0 .

TIURDTEAM
Nick Winbush, Shaker Hts .. 6-6, sr.,
19.8: Kelsey Williams. Sandusky. 6-6.
sr., 22.0; Michael Porrini, Mass.
Washington, 6-2. sr . 19.9: N'Gai Evans.

N. Cant. Hoover. 6-1 , sr.. 16.9: B.J.
Cunningham, Westerville S., 6-2, sr.,
21.7; Kenny Frease, Mass _Perry, 7·0. J'-·
14.5;
Alex
Sullivan,
Painesville
Riverside, 5·11, jr., 25.5; Darrell Blanton,
Euclid, 673, 1r.. 17.9.

Special Mention
Greg Avery, Newark; Devon Moore,
Cols.
Northland: Lamar Skeeter.
Kettering Fairmont; Kyle Rudclph, C1n .
Elder; Billy Allen , Hamilton: Zach Maxey,
Mansfield Madison; Antwoine Smith,
Mansfield Sr . Joe Jakubowski, Tol. Sl.
John's: Christian Hunter. Chagrin Falls
Kenston; Chris Roberts, Cle. JFK ;
Keelyn Franklin, Warren Harding: Ramel
Mitchell. Akron Firestone; Barry Shetzer,
N. Cant. Hoover; Marco Richardson ,

AP phoiC!

Jay Burson presents Upper Sandusky guard Jon Diebler with
the game ball after Diebler scored 44 points to break
Burson's state career scoring record in a basketball game
Friday, Feb. 23, in Upper Sandusky.

Narron:
Freel to Close games highlight District 13 festivities
Dav~
Start l·n
Center

0

Support Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary

Ohio State recruits lead way on
Division I and II All-Ohio teams

SECOND TEAM

" - see Ohio, Bl

Bv BRAD SHERMAN

Haggerty, Meigs ;
Poole and Southern's Pat
Johnson all had two points.
Three point shoot-out
championships wen( to
Alexander 's Keilee Guthrie
made 8-of-10 to win the
girls side and Oak Hill's
Casey Love meshed seven
to take the boys' crown.
For the second straight
year, the slam dunk title
went to rock Hill '~ Nathan
Davenport, who electrified
the crowd by leaping over a
teammate. who was sitting
in the chair and lobbed him
the ball. He threw it down
with both hands for a perfeet 30 score from the
judges .

BSHERMAN@MVDAJLYTRJBUNE.COM

I

RIO
GRANDE
Brittany Elliott made a free
throw with four seconds to
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) play as the Most Valuable
- If Ken Griffey Jr. is Player sealed a 74-70 victoready to play on Opening ry for her Division 1-11-IV
Day, it will be in right field. club over Division Ill durCincinnati Reds manager ing the District 13 Coaches
Association all-star games
Jerry Narron said Monday.
Narron expects to start on Monday.
Elliott's charity toss made
Ryan Freel in center field.
because Griffey is still it a four-point game and
working his way back from gave the Gallia Academy
a broken left hand suffered product a total of 12 points,
in the offseason while good enough for MVP honwrestlit1g with his kids.
ors on her team.
· "Right now, that's what
It was the first of two
our plan is. We would have exciting games that went
loved for him to be avail- down to the wire at Newt
able Opening Day to play
Oliver Arena. In the boys
center field; it just didn't
game, Division lll-IV ralwork out," Narron said.
Griffey. a 10-time Gold lied from a double-digit
Glove winner, has taken fly second half deficit to claim
balls and made throws from an exciting 112-111 wtn
over Division 1-11-IV.
right field in practice.
The event, which also
Narron said he was very
featured
a slam dunk comcautious about makin~ the
del'ision to move Gnffey. petttton and three-point
37. from his customary spot shoot-outs.
showcased
in center.
some of the top high school
"We had to make a deci- basketball talent
from
sion. This late in the spring District 13, which includes
we need to get our dub out Gallia, Meigs, Jackson,
on the field," he said. "I've Vinton, Athens, Hocking,
got to do everything I can Washington and lawrence
do to put our best club out counties.
· there. My feeling is that
Seniors who made either
with Ryan Freel out there , it
gives us strong defense up first or second team in the
the middle with (shortstop coaches' all-district teams,
Alex) Gonzalez and (sec- were eligible to participate
ond baseman Brandon) in the games.
Elliott was one of four in
Phillips and FreeL"
Griffey's agent, Brian double figures for Division
Goldberg, said Griffey ·had 1-11-IV. Warren's Kristen
known the Reds' plans: Cozzens led the way for the
"Junior understands the winners with 16 points,
team tells us where he Megan Owings of Vinton
should play, and that's the County
had
II
a nd
way it should be."
.
Eastern·s Erin Weber finThe Reds optioned reliev- ished with 10. Weber ' s
ers Brad Salmon and Brian teammate, Jenna Hupp, and
Shackelford to Triple-A
Louisville. Shackelford has
bounced between the Reds
and the minor leagues the
past two seasons.
Matt Belisle. who has
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP)
emerged as the favorite to
With Joel Zumaya enterearn the job as the fifth
taining
fans, the Detroit
starter for the Reds, was to
Tigers
have
a new scorepitch in a minor league
board
showing
the speed of
game on the off day
Tuesday to keep on sched- pitches Joker Marchant
.
ule. Bobby livingston. Stadium.
The
hard-throwing
another starting candidate,
also was to pitch in the Zumaya didn't figure in the
decision Monday as the
minor league game.
Tigers beat the Cincinnati
Reds 6-2, but he' ll be
remembered by the crowd
of
7,767 .
CoNTACfUS
Zumaya was frequently
clocked at 102 mph by th~
OVP Scorellne 15 p.m.-1 a.m.)
new electronic screen
1-74Q-446-2342 ext. 33
installed atop the fence in
center, and one pitched regFu- 1-740-446·3006
istered 103 mph.
E·m•ll- sports@mydailysentinel.com
"There's a gun in every
Soorts Staff
major league park. I know
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor that," Tigers manager Jim
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
Leyland said. "I don't mind
bsherman @mydeilytribune.com
it at Comerica Park. It's part
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
of shoW business. But, I'm
(740) 446~2342', ext. 23
not a fan of it in spring
Ierum@ mydaityregister.com
training."
Zumaya, who ga,ve up
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
only a harmless si ngle in
(7401 446·2342. ext 33
bwalters@mydallylnbune .com
two innings. struck out

BOYS GAME
DIVISION IB-IV 112, DIVISION l-ll-IV 111
DIVISION III-IV (1!2)
Mike Stapleton 4 0 -0 9. Dustin McCombs

4 o-2 8, Garland Stiltner 5 2-4 14, Jordan
Thornhill 6 1·2 17, Jay Edwards 2 o-o 5.

Brad Sherman/photo

Meigs senior Dave Poole (44) battles Eastern senior Alex McGrath, left, for post position during the second half of Monday's District 13 Basketball Coaches Association all-star game at
the Lyne Center on the campus of the University of Rio Grande.
Meigs' Megan Clelland
each scored two.
Coal Grove's Chelsea
Mark.ins, MVP for Division
111, had 15 points while
Ironton's Mandi Boykin
and lacy Adkins of Oak
Hill each went for I 0. Sixfoot-3 Chesapeake center
Sarah Rucker had nine
markers.
In the boys contest.
Division lil-lY used a huge
second
half
from

Alexander' s Matt Demosky
to rally back and claim a
112-111 shoot-out victory.
Demosky scored 16 of his
26 points in the second half
en route to MVP honors.
Also for the winners,
Jordan Thornhill of Belpre
had 17, Oak Hill's Garland
Stiltner
14.
Chase
Me Whorter of South Point
went for 11 while Ironton' s
Chad Miller and Bryan
Morrow of River Valley

each scored I 0. South
Galli a's Dustin McCombs
had eight. Corbin Sellers of
Southern had two.
Eric Henry of Vinton
cou nty paced Division I-IIIV with 2 1 points while
MVP Andrew Stumbo of
Rock Hill had 16. Symmes
Valley's Kyle Meadows
scored 17. Six players
reached double figures in
the
setback.
Gallia
Jay me
Academy's

Alell McGrath 0 0-0 0. Chad Miller 4 0-1
10, Bryan Morrow 4 2-3 10 , Matt
Oemosky 13 o- 1 26. Corbin Sellers 1 0-0
2, Chase McWhorter 4 0-0 11 Totals 47 5· 13 112. Three point goals : 13
(Thornhill 4 , McWhorter 3. Stiltner 2 .
Miller 2, Stapleton 1, Edwards 11
DIVISION 1·11 (1 11)
Patrick Johnson 1 0·0 2. Eric f-!enry 8 4·
5 21. Mark Christman 5 1-2 11. Michael
Basedow 2 O· D 4, Chns Pekens 5 0-2 10.
Corey Kriec hbau rn 5 3-3 14, Jayme
Haggerty 1 0-0 2. Jared Albnght 4 1-2 12.
Kyle Meadows 6 4·6 17, Andrew Stumbo
8
16. Dave Poole 1
2. Totals 46 13-20 111 Three po1nt goals· 6
(Albright 3. Henf)' I , Kriechbaum 1

o-o

o-o

Meadowa. 1).

GIRLS GAME
DIVISION HHV 74, DIVISION Ill 70
DIVISION 1-11-IV (74)
Megan Owings 4 3-5 11 , Kriste n
Cozzens 5 3-4 16 . Bethany Amnne 0 0-0
0, Br1ttany Christ1an 3 0-0 7. Meghan
Clelland t 0-0 2 . Kyla Saunders 1 0-0 3 .
Brittany =:Uiott 5 2·4 12. Kristen Cassidy
1 4·4 7. Erin Weber 5 0-2 10. Jenna
Hupp 1 0·0 2. Angela Martm 2 0-0 4
Tabby Jenkms 0 0-0 0. Totals- 28 12-19
74 . Three poinl goals: 6 (Cozzens 3.
Christian 1. Saunders 1. Cassidy 1)
DIVISION Ill (70) "
. Shea Berry 1 0 -0 3. Mandi Boyki n 3 4 -6
10. Molly Baumgarder 1 o-o 2. l acy
Adkins 5 0-1 10. Bobb1 Harper 1 1-4 3.
Chelsea Markins 4 4-7 15. Rachel
Walker 3 1-2 7. Samantha Hall 2 3-3 7.
Sarah Ruckel 4 1-2 9. Sara Lee 1 2-5 4 .
Totals ..:.. 25 16-20 70. Three point goals:
4 (Markins 3 . Berry 1)

Tigers tame Cincinnati, 6-2
Mark Bell horn on a I 02
mph heater to start the seventh, then followed by fanning David Ross on a tantalizing 85 mph pitch.
Tigers starter Kenny
Rogers allowed a solo
homer in the fourth to
Adam Dunn, his third
homer of spring training.
Rogers gave up two runs
and three hits in five
Chris
innings,
with
Denorfia hitting an RBI
dollble in the fifth.
"I like bringin~ ZLimaya
in after Rogers,' ley land
said. "It's a big adjustment
·
for the hitters."
Reds starter Bronson
Arroyo. who entered with a
0.00 ERA. gave up four
runs - three earned - and
seven hits in 4 2-3 innings.
Two of Detroit's live doubles came off Arroyo who
left with an ERA of 2.31.
" It was good to get into
the game with some guys
on base." Arroyo said. "To
me. one of the worst things

you can do is go through
spring training and mow
every game."
Sean Casey also doubled
off Arroyo. Vance Wilson,
Magglio Ordonez and Neifi .
Perez doubled off the Reds'
Paul Wilson.
Gary Sheffield hit a solo
homer. his second of spring
training. off Arroyo.
Notes: Detroit c loser
Todd Jones. who gave up
two hits in a scoreless ninth,
took a liner on his right
thigh off the bat of Josh
Hamilton. Jones. who also
writes for The Sporting
News, said it might be the
subject of his next column.
"Oh, yeah. It'll be a ·rocket
shot,' then," Jones said with
a laugh. "And I dido· 1 rub
it." .. . Reds OF Norri s
Hopper left in the sixth
after running into the fence
Curtis
while
catching
Gnmderson 's tly ball. His
condition was not immediatelv known. but he left the
fieta under his own power.

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds center fielder Dewayne Wise, left. and right
fielder Norris Hopper collide trying to field Detroit Tiger's Ivan
Rodriguez's double in the first inning of a Grapefruit League
spring training baseball game in Lakeland . Fla .. on Monday.

�Tuesday. March 20. 2007

www.mydailysentinel .com

Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Braves scalp Indians, Page 82

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

Thesdav,
. March 20, 2007

B

LocAL BRIEFS

Southern Athletic
Boosters to hold
meeting Wednesday

Mareh 24th

RACINE
The
Southern Athletic Boosters
will hold their monthly
meeting this Wednesday.
March 21 at 6 p.m. in the
high school cafeteria.
All current members and
anyone wishing to join to
support Southern athletics is
asked to anend, so that the
group can plan for spring
and fall sports.

SERVING FROM 7:00A.M. TO 11:00 A.M.
Meigs ~ounty Senior Citizens
112 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio

Adults· 13 and up $5°

Children- under 12 $2° ~
0

.

Proceeds to Support
Co
Services

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COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State recruits Kosta
Koufos of Canton GlenOak
and Upper Sandusky's Jon
Diebler are the top honorees
on the 2007 Associated
Press Division I and 11 AllOhio boys basketball teams
released on Monday. ·
Koufos. a versatile 7-foot2 player who can dunk or
shoot a 3, is the player of the
year in Division I. He'll be
on the big stage at Value
City Arena for this week's
slate tournament.
All the 6-7 Diebler did is
set a new Ohio prep scoring
k with more than 3,000
nts heading into the
ms' state semifinal game.
ed on the recommendations of a state media panel,
Diebler wa.~ the top player in
Division II.
The coaches of the year in

the big-sc hool di\ i,ion led
their teams to the state
tournmament: Eric Flannery
of poll champion Lakewood
St. Edward and GlenOak 's
Jack Greynolds Jr.
The 2006-2007 Associated
Press Division I and II boys
All-Ohio high school basketball team, based on the recommendations of a state
media panel:
DIVISION I
FIRST TEAM
Kosta Koutos. Cant GtenOak. 7-foot-2.
senior, 26.0 points per game; Det'von
-·Lakewood St. Edward, 6'6, Jr., 22.0;
William Buford, Tot Libbey, 6-5 , jr.. 28.4;

Chris Wright, Trotwood-Madison, 6-8, sr.,

19.6; Brett McKnight. lancaster. 6-6. sr.,
26.6.

Pf•yer of the r-r: Kosta Koulos, Cant.
GienOak.
..
CO.ChN of the year: Jack Greynolds
Jr.. Cant. GlenOak: Eric Flannery,
Lakewood St. Edward

Ya~ Gates, Cin. Wtthrow, 6·9. jr.. 19.4;

Troy Tabler, Cin. Moeller, 6-4 , sr., 13.5;

Chris Johnson. Cob. Brookhaven. &amp;-5.
jr., 23.4 ; Eric Coblentz, Uniontown Lake,
6-3, sr., 23.6: Chris Wyse. Tol. Scott. 6·3,
sr. . 26.7: Oaitwan Eppinger, Garfield
Hts., 6-6, sr., 19.1; Dallas lauderdale,
Solon. 6-9. sr.; 16.0 .

TIURDTEAM
Nick Winbush, Shaker Hts .. 6-6, sr.,
19.8: Kelsey Williams. Sandusky. 6-6.
sr., 22.0; Michael Porrini, Mass.
Washington, 6-2. sr . 19.9: N'Gai Evans.

N. Cant. Hoover. 6-1 , sr.. 16.9: B.J.
Cunningham, Westerville S., 6-2, sr.,
21.7; Kenny Frease, Mass _Perry, 7·0. J'-·
14.5;
Alex
Sullivan,
Painesville
Riverside, 5·11, jr., 25.5; Darrell Blanton,
Euclid, 673, 1r.. 17.9.

Special Mention
Greg Avery, Newark; Devon Moore,
Cols.
Northland: Lamar Skeeter.
Kettering Fairmont; Kyle Rudclph, C1n .
Elder; Billy Allen , Hamilton: Zach Maxey,
Mansfield Madison; Antwoine Smith,
Mansfield Sr . Joe Jakubowski, Tol. Sl.
John's: Christian Hunter. Chagrin Falls
Kenston; Chris Roberts, Cle. JFK ;
Keelyn Franklin, Warren Harding: Ramel
Mitchell. Akron Firestone; Barry Shetzer,
N. Cant. Hoover; Marco Richardson ,

AP phoiC!

Jay Burson presents Upper Sandusky guard Jon Diebler with
the game ball after Diebler scored 44 points to break
Burson's state career scoring record in a basketball game
Friday, Feb. 23, in Upper Sandusky.

Narron:
Freel to Close games highlight District 13 festivities
Dav~
Start l·n
Center

0

Support Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary

Ohio State recruits lead way on
Division I and II All-Ohio teams

SECOND TEAM

" - see Ohio, Bl

Bv BRAD SHERMAN

Haggerty, Meigs ;
Poole and Southern's Pat
Johnson all had two points.
Three point shoot-out
championships wen( to
Alexander 's Keilee Guthrie
made 8-of-10 to win the
girls side and Oak Hill's
Casey Love meshed seven
to take the boys' crown.
For the second straight
year, the slam dunk title
went to rock Hill '~ Nathan
Davenport, who electrified
the crowd by leaping over a
teammate. who was sitting
in the chair and lobbed him
the ball. He threw it down
with both hands for a perfeet 30 score from the
judges .

BSHERMAN@MVDAJLYTRJBUNE.COM

I

RIO
GRANDE
Brittany Elliott made a free
throw with four seconds to
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) play as the Most Valuable
- If Ken Griffey Jr. is Player sealed a 74-70 victoready to play on Opening ry for her Division 1-11-IV
Day, it will be in right field. club over Division Ill durCincinnati Reds manager ing the District 13 Coaches
Association all-star games
Jerry Narron said Monday.
Narron expects to start on Monday.
Elliott's charity toss made
Ryan Freel in center field.
because Griffey is still it a four-point game and
working his way back from gave the Gallia Academy
a broken left hand suffered product a total of 12 points,
in the offseason while good enough for MVP honwrestlit1g with his kids.
ors on her team.
· "Right now, that's what
It was the first of two
our plan is. We would have exciting games that went
loved for him to be avail- down to the wire at Newt
able Opening Day to play
Oliver Arena. In the boys
center field; it just didn't
game, Division lll-IV ralwork out," Narron said.
Griffey. a 10-time Gold lied from a double-digit
Glove winner, has taken fly second half deficit to claim
balls and made throws from an exciting 112-111 wtn
over Division 1-11-IV.
right field in practice.
The event, which also
Narron said he was very
featured
a slam dunk comcautious about makin~ the
del'ision to move Gnffey. petttton and three-point
37. from his customary spot shoot-outs.
showcased
in center.
some of the top high school
"We had to make a deci- basketball talent
from
sion. This late in the spring District 13, which includes
we need to get our dub out Gallia, Meigs, Jackson,
on the field," he said. "I've Vinton, Athens, Hocking,
got to do everything I can Washington and lawrence
do to put our best club out counties.
· there. My feeling is that
Seniors who made either
with Ryan Freel out there , it
gives us strong defense up first or second team in the
the middle with (shortstop coaches' all-district teams,
Alex) Gonzalez and (sec- were eligible to participate
ond baseman Brandon) in the games.
Elliott was one of four in
Phillips and FreeL"
Griffey's agent, Brian double figures for Division
Goldberg, said Griffey ·had 1-11-IV. Warren's Kristen
known the Reds' plans: Cozzens led the way for the
"Junior understands the winners with 16 points,
team tells us where he Megan Owings of Vinton
should play, and that's the County
had
II
a nd
way it should be."
.
Eastern·s Erin Weber finThe Reds optioned reliev- ished with 10. Weber ' s
ers Brad Salmon and Brian teammate, Jenna Hupp, and
Shackelford to Triple-A
Louisville. Shackelford has
bounced between the Reds
and the minor leagues the
past two seasons.
Matt Belisle. who has
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP)
emerged as the favorite to
With Joel Zumaya enterearn the job as the fifth
taining
fans, the Detroit
starter for the Reds, was to
Tigers
have
a new scorepitch in a minor league
board
showing
the speed of
game on the off day
Tuesday to keep on sched- pitches Joker Marchant
.
ule. Bobby livingston. Stadium.
The
hard-throwing
another starting candidate,
also was to pitch in the Zumaya didn't figure in the
decision Monday as the
minor league game.
Tigers beat the Cincinnati
Reds 6-2, but he' ll be
remembered by the crowd
of
7,767 .
CoNTACfUS
Zumaya was frequently
clocked at 102 mph by th~
OVP Scorellne 15 p.m.-1 a.m.)
new electronic screen
1-74Q-446-2342 ext. 33
installed atop the fence in
center, and one pitched regFu- 1-740-446·3006
istered 103 mph.
E·m•ll- sports@mydailysentinel.com
"There's a gun in every
Soorts Staff
major league park. I know
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor that," Tigers manager Jim
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
Leyland said. "I don't mind
bsherman @mydeilytribune.com
it at Comerica Park. It's part
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
of shoW business. But, I'm
(740) 446~2342', ext. 23
not a fan of it in spring
Ierum@ mydaityregister.com
training."
Zumaya, who ga,ve up
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
only a harmless si ngle in
(7401 446·2342. ext 33
bwalters@mydallylnbune .com
two innings. struck out

BOYS GAME
DIVISION IB-IV 112, DIVISION l-ll-IV 111
DIVISION III-IV (1!2)
Mike Stapleton 4 0 -0 9. Dustin McCombs

4 o-2 8, Garland Stiltner 5 2-4 14, Jordan
Thornhill 6 1·2 17, Jay Edwards 2 o-o 5.

Brad Sherman/photo

Meigs senior Dave Poole (44) battles Eastern senior Alex McGrath, left, for post position during the second half of Monday's District 13 Basketball Coaches Association all-star game at
the Lyne Center on the campus of the University of Rio Grande.
Meigs' Megan Clelland
each scored two.
Coal Grove's Chelsea
Mark.ins, MVP for Division
111, had 15 points while
Ironton's Mandi Boykin
and lacy Adkins of Oak
Hill each went for I 0. Sixfoot-3 Chesapeake center
Sarah Rucker had nine
markers.
In the boys contest.
Division lil-lY used a huge
second
half
from

Alexander' s Matt Demosky
to rally back and claim a
112-111 shoot-out victory.
Demosky scored 16 of his
26 points in the second half
en route to MVP honors.
Also for the winners,
Jordan Thornhill of Belpre
had 17, Oak Hill's Garland
Stiltner
14.
Chase
Me Whorter of South Point
went for 11 while Ironton' s
Chad Miller and Bryan
Morrow of River Valley

each scored I 0. South
Galli a's Dustin McCombs
had eight. Corbin Sellers of
Southern had two.
Eric Henry of Vinton
cou nty paced Division I-IIIV with 2 1 points while
MVP Andrew Stumbo of
Rock Hill had 16. Symmes
Valley's Kyle Meadows
scored 17. Six players
reached double figures in
the
setback.
Gallia
Jay me
Academy's

Alell McGrath 0 0-0 0. Chad Miller 4 0-1
10, Bryan Morrow 4 2-3 10 , Matt
Oemosky 13 o- 1 26. Corbin Sellers 1 0-0
2, Chase McWhorter 4 0-0 11 Totals 47 5· 13 112. Three point goals : 13
(Thornhill 4 , McWhorter 3. Stiltner 2 .
Miller 2, Stapleton 1, Edwards 11
DIVISION 1·11 (1 11)
Patrick Johnson 1 0·0 2. Eric f-!enry 8 4·
5 21. Mark Christman 5 1-2 11. Michael
Basedow 2 O· D 4, Chns Pekens 5 0-2 10.
Corey Kriec hbau rn 5 3-3 14, Jayme
Haggerty 1 0-0 2. Jared Albnght 4 1-2 12.
Kyle Meadows 6 4·6 17, Andrew Stumbo
8
16. Dave Poole 1
2. Totals 46 13-20 111 Three po1nt goals· 6
(Albright 3. Henf)' I , Kriechbaum 1

o-o

o-o

Meadowa. 1).

GIRLS GAME
DIVISION HHV 74, DIVISION Ill 70
DIVISION 1-11-IV (74)
Megan Owings 4 3-5 11 , Kriste n
Cozzens 5 3-4 16 . Bethany Amnne 0 0-0
0, Br1ttany Christ1an 3 0-0 7. Meghan
Clelland t 0-0 2 . Kyla Saunders 1 0-0 3 .
Brittany =:Uiott 5 2·4 12. Kristen Cassidy
1 4·4 7. Erin Weber 5 0-2 10. Jenna
Hupp 1 0·0 2. Angela Martm 2 0-0 4
Tabby Jenkms 0 0-0 0. Totals- 28 12-19
74 . Three poinl goals: 6 (Cozzens 3.
Christian 1. Saunders 1. Cassidy 1)
DIVISION Ill (70) "
. Shea Berry 1 0 -0 3. Mandi Boyki n 3 4 -6
10. Molly Baumgarder 1 o-o 2. l acy
Adkins 5 0-1 10. Bobb1 Harper 1 1-4 3.
Chelsea Markins 4 4-7 15. Rachel
Walker 3 1-2 7. Samantha Hall 2 3-3 7.
Sarah Ruckel 4 1-2 9. Sara Lee 1 2-5 4 .
Totals ..:.. 25 16-20 70. Three point goals:
4 (Markins 3 . Berry 1)

Tigers tame Cincinnati, 6-2
Mark Bell horn on a I 02
mph heater to start the seventh, then followed by fanning David Ross on a tantalizing 85 mph pitch.
Tigers starter Kenny
Rogers allowed a solo
homer in the fourth to
Adam Dunn, his third
homer of spring training.
Rogers gave up two runs
and three hits in five
Chris
innings,
with
Denorfia hitting an RBI
dollble in the fifth.
"I like bringin~ ZLimaya
in after Rogers,' ley land
said. "It's a big adjustment
·
for the hitters."
Reds starter Bronson
Arroyo. who entered with a
0.00 ERA. gave up four
runs - three earned - and
seven hits in 4 2-3 innings.
Two of Detroit's live doubles came off Arroyo who
left with an ERA of 2.31.
" It was good to get into
the game with some guys
on base." Arroyo said. "To
me. one of the worst things

you can do is go through
spring training and mow
every game."
Sean Casey also doubled
off Arroyo. Vance Wilson,
Magglio Ordonez and Neifi .
Perez doubled off the Reds'
Paul Wilson.
Gary Sheffield hit a solo
homer. his second of spring
training. off Arroyo.
Notes: Detroit c loser
Todd Jones. who gave up
two hits in a scoreless ninth,
took a liner on his right
thigh off the bat of Josh
Hamilton. Jones. who also
writes for The Sporting
News, said it might be the
subject of his next column.
"Oh, yeah. It'll be a ·rocket
shot,' then," Jones said with
a laugh. "And I dido· 1 rub
it." .. . Reds OF Norri s
Hopper left in the sixth
after running into the fence
Curtis
while
catching
Gnmderson 's tly ball. His
condition was not immediatelv known. but he left the
fieta under his own power.

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds center fielder Dewayne Wise, left. and right
fielder Norris Hopper collide trying to field Detroit Tiger's Ivan
Rodriguez's double in the first inning of a Grapefruit League
spring training baseball game in Lakeland . Fla .. on Monday.

�Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydaiiY,sentinel.com

Tuesday, March 20; 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

Utrihune - Sentinel - l\e titer
CLASSIFIED

James, Braves scalp Indians, 6-0
inning "so I
didn't feel
goofy
throwing."
Atlanta's
starters
have ste llar
ERAs . Buddy Carlyle, who
has not allowed a run in 10
innings, is followed by
Lance Cormier ( 1.29). Tim
Hudson ( 1.80) and John
Smoltz ( 1.93). Braves
starters have a 2.25 ERA,
allowing 18 earned runs in
72 innings.
"I think a lot of the guys
are ready to go," manager
Bobby Co~ said.
Scott Thorman . who
takes over this year at first
base fo llowing the trade of
Adam LaRoche , l!it hi s
first homer and drove in
three runs .
"That was a good feeling ," Thorman said of his
two-run drive off Rafael

. BY CHARLES 0DUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Cleveland Indians outfielder Grady Sizemore. pops out to
end the second tnning with bases loaded, during a spring
training baseball game against the Atlanta Braves in lake
Buena Vista, Fla., on Monday.

KISSIMMEE. Fla.
Chuck James and the rest
of the Atlanta Braves' starting pitchers are heading
into the final stage of
spring training looking
strong.
James overcame control
problems to throw five
on
score less
innings
Monday. lowering his ERA
to 2.57 in the Braves ' 6-0
Win over the Cleveland
Indians .
James gave up · four hits
but walked three. He
loaded the bases in the second with two wa lks after
Casey Blake 's double, then
pitched out of the jam.
"I definitely was remi nded why we have a pitching
coach again," said James ,
who met wi th Roger
McDowell after eve ry

returns from an abdominal
strain.
Miller ,;aid he won't
complain if sent to TripleA Buffalo.
" I really wasn't planning
on making the team." he
said. "I was just happy to
have a chance to pitch.
They've already got five
great starters. They don't
need me right now, but
when they do I' II be
ready."
Aaron Fultz gave up four
runs in two innings. Brian
McCann hit a run-scoring
triple off Fultz in the sixth.
Notes: The Indians have
begun contract talks about
a multiyear contract for
Westbrook, who is eligible
for free agency after the
season.... Harris started in
center. He also has played
left fie Id. right field , third
base and second base.

Betancourt in the eighth .
"It 's just about getting your
timing down and feeling
comfortable at the plate."
Cleveland starter Adam
Miller allowed three hits
and one walk in five scoreless inning. He has given
up eight hits in 14 scoreless
innings over three starts.
"He has been as impressive as anybody in camp,"
Cleveland manager Eric
Wedge said . "When you
look at a young pitcher getting three starts, you can't
ask for much more than he
has done here. It was great
to get our eyes on him and
see him go out there and
perform."
Wedge has set his rotation to start the season:
C.C.
Sabathia.
Jake
Westbrook,
Jeremy
Sowers, Paul Byrd and
Fausto Carmona, who will
fill in until Cliff Lee

'

Ohio

WIN UP TO $1,000

Cant McKinley.

Honorabkl Mention
Nathan Balch. Lewis Center Olentangy;
Taylor Hobbs . Thomas Worthington :

Employees, Independent Contractors, Vendors and their immediate lamiily not eligible.

•••
'''

Centerville;
Robby
Schloemer. Lakota West Bobby Austin.
Cin_ LaSalle: Allen Roberts, Middletown:
Walt Gibler. C1n. St. Xavier. Lucas
Wright, Logan : Cory Kriechbaum.

on liMo

Wood.

FIRST TE4M
Jon Diebler. Upper Sandusky. 6-7. sr .
42.7: Danle Jackson . Greenfield
McClain , 6-5 . st.. 26.2: Ronald Steward.
Cols. Eastmoor Academy. 5- 10, sr ,
20.3: Kellen Zawadzki . Tipp City
Tippecanoe. 6-3, sr.. 21.3: Dan Boudler.
Louisville. 6 -7. sr.. 17.6: Sco11 Asian
Pai nesville Harvey, 5-10, sr .. 13.0: Tyler
Spark s. OlmS1ed Falls. 6-4, sr., 18.5:
Logan Aronhalt. Zanes11i lle. 6·4 . jr.,

17.3.
Player of the year : Jon Diebler, Upper
Sandusky.
.
Coaches of the year : Dan Addis .
Copley: Rick VanMatre . Greenfield
McClain

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Delroy Sm ith, Sleubenville: Kodey
Haddox. Zanesville; Philip Biggs ,
Byes11ille Meadowbrook: Adam Gay. St.
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Auto Parts • Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. no
Autos lor Sate ..............•....................•.......•.. 710
Boats • Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies ... ......•..••.......................... 550
Buslnett and Buildings ..............•.............. 340
Buainetl Opportunlty .................................210
Bu11neaa Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campera • Motor HomM ..•........................ 790
Camping Equipment .•..•..•..•.............•.......... 780
Carda ollllanka .........................................01 0
Child/Elderly Care .......••..•..............•............ 11M)

Etectrlcai/Relrigenltlon ...............................840

Equipment lor Rent. .................•.................. 480
Excav~lng ..........................•.............•.......... 830
Form Equlpment ............•..•.••.................•..... 610
Farms lor Rent. ....................•...................•... 430
Forms lor Sate .................•.............•..•.......... 330
For Lease ........................•..••..........•••........... 480
For Sale ........................................•............... 585
For Sate or Trade .........................................590
Fruita &amp; Vegelabtea ....•..•............................. seo
Furnlahed Rooms ............•........................... 450
General118ullng...............•..•...................•....850
Glveaway .......................................,..............040
Happy Ada•.••..........................•.....................050
Hay • Graln...••.............................................640
Help Wanted.................... ... ................. .........110
· Home lrnprovemenls ...................................810
Homea lor Sate..........•..•... ...............•...•...:..• 310
Household Goodl ......••...•..•.........•••.•••.••..... 510
Houseolor Renl .......................................... 410
IJ1Iolemorlam .....................•.., ....................... 020
lnouranc:e ...........................••..................•..... 130
lawn • Gerden Equlpment .........•.••..•..•..... 660
Livestock ........•....................•........................630
lost and Found ...........................................
lots &amp; Acreage ............................................350
Miscellaneous..................•............... .. ....•..... 170
. Miscellaneous Merchandlse....................... 540
Mobile Horne Repair ....................................860
· Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
Money to loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles l 4 Whaelora ..........................740
Uusicallnstruments ................................... 570

Paraonals ..................................................... oos

Pets lor Sate ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
• Proleaaional Sarvlces .................................230
· Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
: Schools INtruetion.....................................150
· Seed , Plant • Fertilizer ................•••.....•..... 850
· Sl1uationS
120
~ lor Rent. ..........•..••......................•.•....4&amp;0
Sporting Qooda .........•.•....................•.......... 520
SUV'alor Sate............•................................. 720
Trucks lor Sate ....•••••.....................•....•........ 715
· Upholatefy ...........•.....•.••.............................. 870
VIlla For Sate•.....................•..•........... ..........730
Wonted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .. .....•.......... 620
Wlllted To Do ...........•.:....•........................... 180
Wlllted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Safe. a.ltlpolls.................................... on
Yard Safe.Pomeroy/Micklle................. ........ 074
. Yard Sale-Pt. Pteaoant ................................ 076

llF.LP WAXIID

--------Hiring experienced tractor

• • • • • • • • " ' and tanker &lt;tivers. 740-388WORKERS NEEDED 8547
100
Assemble crafts. wOOd
items.To $4801wk MaterialS
provujed. Free information

--------an d
Hiring
mechanics
wrecker operators. 740-388-

H VAC Co. looking lor a proAn Excellent way to earn fessional installer. with 1
year or more experience.
money. The New Avon.
Also a helper with some
~I Mad~n 304·882-2645
knowledge ol HVAC. Pay
AVON~ All Areas! To Buy or based on experience. Send
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304- resume to: HVAC P.O.Box
572 Kerr, Ohio 45643. or call
675·1429.

740.441·1236

Bob Evans in Mason now
taking applications lor Day
shift Servers. Swing shift
Ser'w'ers &amp; Night shift
Serwrs for more information
call 304-773-61 12

CNA'S

&amp;

Small Trucking Company
Looking for Tractor Trailer
drivers with Flatbed experi·
en~ .
Home every week
end and some week days
delivering to 0H KY VA WV

funera l
director
and
embalmer. Privately-owned
funeral home located in
growing area of state.
Excellent salary, health
insurance and paid vacation .
send resume- to P.O. Box
3303,
Charleston. WV
25333.
Landscape/

Residenl manager needed
lor apt complex, free renl in
lieu of pay. call for detatls.
446-3481 or eves 446-1567
Security Officer needed in
New Haven. WV $7.66 hour,
all shifts. Must have a high
school clploma. clean criminal history, pass a drug
screen and background
ctlectt. Call1 ·800-275-8359.

Overbrook Center, 333 Page MFD\1.
St., Middleport, Ohio is cur·
rently accepting appWcaiiOns
for the position. of AN

Law n

oNOTI CEo

design:
1ng
implemenl!audttlmaintain
eflecti'w'e quality system to
ensure conllnued reu~ntion
of ISO 9001 certi fication:
participate in product ctevelopmen1 to provide proacllve

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
peop le ~ou know . and
NOT to send money
through lhe ma11 until yoo
have m~~estlgated the

quality influences from delinilion
to
launch :
develop/document comprehensive quality stralegy :
assure new product requirements, including tunctionah·
tylcostlreli ab tht ~lsatety to
mee1 customer needs:
assure functional specifications is generatedJmalntained throughout develop-ment
process :
assure
designs receiver awropriate
analysis/reviews including
electricaVcode, safety, derating, FMEA, reliabi lity
DFA, OFM and BOM :
assures
quality/accu racy/clarity of
wstomerlinternal ctocumentation; negotiatefdocumenl
re lease cri1eria. including

oHem-.g.

testing during product devel-

01J01ent oycle. Roq~&gt;res BS
Electronic or ,Electrical Eng,

$85,000/yea r. 8 AM · 5 PM
location , 250 McCorm1ck
Road,
Gallipolis,
Ohio
45631. Send or tax resumes
to
Attention: D-05194·
North Pearl St., Suite 510,
Dallas, TX 75201 . Fax 21 4237-9116

d:\0TI£t:u
Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO OtiiiSIOn ol
Financial
InstitutiOn's
OH1ce of
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests lor any large
advance payments of
tees or insurance. Call !he
OHice of
Consumer
Affairs toll tree
1-866278·0003 to learn 1f the

at

mortgage

lender

os

broker

or

properly

licenseel. (This is a public
serv1ce announcement
from · lhe Ohio Valley

~P:ubl:':'h:;"il
::C:om
::p:a:ny=)=~

i
11

I'Roi'llN(JNAl
SERVICIS

___

.--~

A little bit ot country
in the city!
3 slory·s on Appro11 . 5
acres. 1m1 From GAHS,
5BR. 3.5BA. Formal LA.
Formal OR. Full Kitchen,
Game Room. 3 Sitting
Rooms. 2 Gas Fireplaces
(natural gas &amp; electric ). 2
Car Garage. 3.5 fenced
1n acres over look1ng
Chickamauga
Creek.
With a split railed fence
and a bern w1th hay loft
Bade. yard fenced 1n also
tor any pets to run/play.
Also t-101: Tub and large
deck behind house. Also
Rental House Available
Ne111 Door for E11ha
Income (Extra house
included 1n price ). Ma1h
House. 4. t 00 sq t1 .
Rental Home, 1.800 sq
ft. Asking $360,000. Call
(740) 441 ·1605
for
appoi ntment.
Attention!
Local company otter1ng "NO

DOWN PAYMEN T" programs lor you to buy your
home instead of renting .
• 100°'&lt;. financing
HOMIS
• Less than perteCI credit
IUKSAlE
accepted
• Pa~·me n t cou ld be the
0 Down even with less than same as rent
perfect cre&lt;111 is available on
Morlgage
locators
lh1s 3 bedroom. 1 bath
( 740)~7 - 0000
home. Corner k:lt, lireplace.
modern kitchen. jacUZZI tub,
For Sale Newly remodeled
Paymenl around $550 pe1
House 3 bedroom. 2 oath,
monlh. 740-367·7129.
3408 Mossman Avenue
Point Pleasant $45.000 call
104
Talum
Dr.
New for an Appointment 304-576Ha'w'en.WV. 3bdl2ba . Ranch. 2247
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. great
area. 0 : 304-675-3637 E. GALLIPOLIS. 3bd 3ba
304-882·2334
home. Must Sell Fast!
More homes avaUabfe. For
loc:a listings call 800-559-

1·888·582·3345

4109 xF254
Move in ready 3 bedroom AU
new inside and out
Full
basement. wood lloors, gas
fireplace. cathedral ceilings
No land contracts. (304 )675 -

NEEDED.

Become state
licensed by att~nding trainings held on Saturdays
Earn $30-$45 a day for the
care of a child li11ing in your
home. Homes are needed
i11 your county. Call Oasis
loll tree 1-877-325-1558
Training will begin March 31
in Albany.

Competitive

!

Rl \I I 'I \II

FOSTER PARENTS AND
RESPITE
PROVIDERS

wages and benefits packages available. EOE and a
plrticipant of the Drug Free
Wort&lt;place Program.

c

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

I!INrKUt.TION

of state and fudefal regulations as well as quality
assurance standards. II you
are interested, plese stop by
our front olfi~ and pick up

•

til• . . .l \It
•
. ~

r

5 yrs in the job offered or 5
yrs as a au"ality Eng. Exp
must include Advanced
Quality
Engtneeong
toolsJp rocesses (APQP)
Functional Analysis (OFO
and/or Block Diagram).
FMEA (Failure Mode and
Eflecl Analysis); CP (ConUol
Plan-Quality Plan) Plan ):
SPC (Statistical Process
Control); MSA (Measuring
System Analysis -G R&amp;R) .
and DFMIDFA (Design lor
ManufacturabiliityfDesign for
Assembly). Exp requ1red in
pro bl em solving. failure
analysis, corrective/pre11en·
!alive action and exp or certificatiOn in ISO 9000:2000
requirements and auditing
and use of Microsoft programs.
$65 .000

.,.

1842 sq n. 3BA. LA . FA. 2364
Kitchen, 1 31'4 Baths, CfA., - - - - - - - - Plus many e11tras. located Ranch home near Me1gs
High School. 3100+ sq.tt
GAHS, 2.13 acres, Askiny- including f1n1shed basement
Hardwood floors. 2-ca1
$129.900. (740)245·5909
garage. 5 BA . 3 5 balhs.
2.5+
acres.
fir epla ce
S149,QOO. 7 ~0.416-4 765

on Chris Lane, Close to new

care

drillers license. reliable
transportation. Drug--screen
required. (740)388-~ 16

1982

Local Mom seeking busi·
ness minded Moms. Work at
home. No parties, No selling,
No risk!
Go to
www.KidsBesideMe.com or
call 740-698-0771

Eam up to $8.50 an hour.

Gollpollo CerMr Collogo
(Careers Close To Home)

Spring into, a new career in
Corrections!

Correctional
Medical Services has excel·
We offer a comprehensive lent 6ffiployment opportuni·
paid training, paid holida~s • ties lOr PAN positions, with
and weeldy pay + bonuses. potential lor fulltime employal Lakin Correctional
Call today to set up an
Ciinter. CMS is seeking
interview!
appliCants for LPN'S. AN's,
and
an
Administrative
1-an~47
AssistanUMedical Records
.... 2321
Clerk. For more information

merlt,

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

Call Today! 740·446·4367,
All ruJ H\lote advertising

1·800·214·0452
www gaHipoi11JCi118ercoll&lt;lge com
Accrodlled

Member

Accredll1119

Council lol' Independent Colleges
and Schools 127'48.

WAI'o'IUI

' ToDo

2029. EOEIDTRIAAP

Avg. Pay $20/hr or
Truck Drivers COL Class A
$5 7K annually
lnOuding Federal Benefits Required, minimum of 5
and OT,Paid Training,
years driving exp. 2 yrs
Vacations-FTfPT
Experience
on
loads.
1-800-584-1775 Ext. 18923 Overdeimensional
Must have good dri-ving
USWA
r9COftl. Earn up 10 $2.000
weefdy. For applicalion Call
The Village of Syracuse wHI
(304)722·2184
M·F
be accepting resumes for

l

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

In this MWSp~~per Ia

subj.c:t to the Federal
Houtlng Act ot 1He
whkh makes It iNegel to

VF';,,

J P"l,_.""'

All Types Masonry, Bnck,
BlohM, Stone, Free Estimate.

(304)773·9550 . 304·593·
contaCI Christi Hendrix. AA 6421 .
at 1-304-674-2 440 ext.

Looking for babySlner. for 2
children in my home. Apr011 .
5 days per mon th, 1n the 1ho po&lt;;tioo ol London Pool 8:30em-4pm
Bidwell area. Good pay. Manager, deaclline is noon
Please call 645--3204
AprM 4th, resume can be
mailed to PO_ Box 266,
Needed .. Cieaning
lady, S~racuse . Oh 45779 or
must be dependable. and dropped off at \IHtage Hall
have reterences. 740-367- Clerk's Office. 2581 Third
:2~~;~~~:J
Street
7328

-

Jill'-~,

assure qualrty, rel;ab;lrty dur·

SCHOOLS

The successful
candk:tate must have 2 or

~ication .

rr========';i

Of changed products 10

Manager.

an

10

M·F 8:30 IO 5:00. EEO· 18 192, AJB 39774621, 700

helper. Mus1 be experi- - POS
,...,-I=
TIONS
- -,.-WA
- IcLA
-- 8- L-:Eenced. hardworking. Valid
IMMEDIATELY

Person
Engineer, Ill
Pro11icle expertise in elec.
design, hardware specs.
ASLogix &amp; RSView, high
speed ctala acquisition. eleclricaJ test equipment, automated control systems. Reg
8-+ yrs related exp; BSEE:
US citizenship &amp; ehgibilily for
clearance; AutoCAD e~~p:
stron~J verbal &amp; writttm communication .
Supervisory
experience a plus.
UTRON, Inc.
Ashton, wv
FAX 866-231-2567
www.utroninc.com

Local Home Health Agency
looking for self motill8ted
individuals for a variety of
shi"s. PCA, CHHA, CNA,
STNA certification. We have
training available and we
assist with job placement
ApplicatiOns are being
accepted or mail to : PO 8oJC
707, Gallipolis, Oh 45631 ,
(740)441-1377 or lax to
(740)441 -1648

- - - - - - - - - more years of long term
Immediate opening lor a care experience and must
Wes1
Virginia-license d have a wor~ng knowledge

Darst Adult Group Home Law Office seeks Legal
has an opening for a day Secre18ry/Parale9al Reilley
position, must be able to do to Be»; EB17 200 Main St.
heavy lifting. Temporary PI, Pleasant. WV 25550
possibly pe rmanent posiLocal buaineu
tion. 740·992·5023.
Looking for 9 pit reps
Comm .. bonuses. car
Oomioo's Pizza Now Hiring
bonuses. No salary. Wk 5·
Sale Drivers &amp; Management
15 hrs weekly. $29 refundPoint Pleasant, Gallipolis &amp;
able slart-u&amp;;~ cost. 740-441·
Pomeroy locations Apply in

Elec.fContr~s

Ohio Valley Home Health,
Inc. Passport/Private Care
De pt. is hiring CNA 's,
STNA's, CHHA's, Personal
Care Aides. Competit ive
wages with benefits .including health insurance and
mileage. Apply at 14 5~
Jackson Pike Suite 3,
Gallipolis. or phone 740-

441·9263.

I Need One Driver!

Resident IN 330-527·2789

Assistan ts. Interviews Are
Now Being Conducted For
CNA &amp; Resident Assistant
Positions. If You Are A
Caring,
Enthusiastic,
Dependable Person, Then
We Want You To JOin Our
Team Come On Over &amp;
Chad&lt; Us Out! You'll Be
Glad You Outl Competitive
CNA
Wages,
!=laid
Vacations. Paid Meals.
Many
Other
Benefits.
Ravenswood Ca re Center,
1113
Washi ngto n
St.,
Ravenswood, WV. (Across
Ritchie Bridge. At. 2 North,
l-ast Busi ness On A1ght)
References Required.

Meigs lnckJStries, Inc. is hir- Ready tor an independent .
rewarding and flexible
CaTeer in home heal1h?

ing part time crewleaders fof'
Janitorial
and
Lawn
Maintenance
positions.
$6.85/hour, experience in
Janitorial/custodial
work
preferred. Meigs Industries
provides services lor adults
with developmental disabili·
ties. Must have a valid Ohio
drivers license and high
school diploma or GEO.
Send resume 10: Meigs
Industries, Inc .. P. O. Bmc
307, Syracuse. Ohio45779.

8547

pkg. 24Hr. 801-428·4649

I BtSl~ I~,r.'o--f~o:*•~~-~--""
Anunm••r~==OI'I'I.::llll:':N:m:·:-

lb:J.J'WAo,,Ul

s.n1or
0ua111y
EnginMr
to plan/validate

I

ll.10•••••••""11110
WA.'O'ID

"'::::.:::1

....anv

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

We are buying anything
Free to good home 1-1 1f2 OOing with Shirle~ Temple.
FEDERAL
year old Yellow Lab. Female,
Dons. bOOks, clothes. etc.
POSTAL
JOBS
Spayed. 740-388-0069
Also buying Sulfide Matbles $16.53-$27.58/hr., now hirand German Swirls. Call ing. For application and free
Male Tabby c*:at. fixed,
after 8:()()pm (740)441-1236 governement job info, call
declawed, tree to good
American Assoc. ot Labolt I \11 '1 (I' \ II \ I
hOme. LOII&amp;S kids. (740)992·
913-599-8042.
24/hrs. amp.
' I 1\\ I 1 I '
7093
=,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; serv

iJ;.

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
Sl.OOforlorge

POUCtES: ONo V.U.V Publlahlng ~ h right to tdlt. ~or CMCel any 8d •I .,-.y u.n.. ErrCHs must be r~&gt;PQ!Wd IK' the fiflt clll~ of
"~* wll be rwponsibte tor no more 1hln the co.t of 1ht 1P1C41 occuplltd by the
and ontv the first insertion. We shall not be I
-~ ~ 01QilllftM1hM rMUIII from tM ~licit· en 01 CJfNuion of M acl'oMrtl..n.nt. CorrKtion •Ill be mad. ln the firstawailablos edition. • Bo•
. . llhfaya conftclsntlM. • Cunent ....., c-d ...... • AM reel Mtlle actv.rtiMmenta •• ~ to the F_..,al Fair HoYsing Act or 1968. • This r
~ onlr Wp.......,
EOis_.,dL We
~an~ Hvertlslng in 'lio&amp;Miorl ot the law.

Bidwell. Cash reward. call
446-4266 or 446-4197

Free Pit Bull puppies. 6 wks answer leave message.740old. 10 good home. 740-367- 388·0011

w-.. . . . . . ... . . . . .

........

Kyle Smlttl, Norwolk; Juo11n Caudlll,

Another satisfied
Customer!

seen

6 weeks old puppies to g1ve- Buy1ng Junk Cars,Trucks &amp;
Wrecks. Pay Cash J D
awa~ (304)675--5361
Salvage
(304)n3-5343
AKC Reg. lemale Boxer. 5 ( 304)674~1374
yrs. old. fixed. fawn 10 color.
Great lamity/kids clog. 74().
Buytng JUnk cars. Paying
379-2668
!rom $50
$200. It no

oeo

. BErie '

ChUIIcolho: Jaymo Haggeny, Gaillpollo
Oallla Acad .: Andrew Stumbo, lrontor)
Rock Hill: Jerrod AlbriQI'It, McArthur

Oberlin Flrelands: Cameron Wrlghl, Cle,

8:~0-Spm

Just

Around The
Corner

Moss, Copley; Brandon Short, Orrville:

Offic·cl

(740) 446" 7619

It ~\·

Greg Preer, Akron SVSM

Po~•

Opcu Mon. - Thurs.

304-937-3348

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MA,CCC-A

Owner &amp; Audioluwist

THIRD TEAM

Sandusky Perkins: Chris Dudlca,
Shelby; Jerin Butler, Lima Shawneeo;
Chril Morrow, Van Wen; Paul Ourra.
Geneva; Andy Emrt1ein, Parma Padua;
Kevin F illinger, Fairview Park: Oerrlck
Ftynn, Parma Padua; Tom Krakowlak,
Parma Hts . Holy Name: Jeff Spikes,
PainWvllle Harvey; Andrew Wiegand,

!!TOP I~ A~D !!H OUR IJ[W
AIR IAATTR[~

Z007l!PRI~G

B.J. Mullens. Canal Winchester. 7- 1. jr ..
26.8 : Paris Harris, Kettering Aller. 6--3.
sr.. 16.4: Ben Hodkinson. Cadiz
Harrison Central. 5-9. sr.. 22.0; Anthony
Hitchens. Ch1jlicothe. 5-9. jr .. 18.5: Man
Warren , Copley. 6·2. sr.. 16.9: Kyle
HallocK. Sam:lusky Perkins. 6- 1. sr ..
20.6 : Reggte King, Chesterland W.
Geauga. 6-2. jr.. 18.0: Alex Kellogg,
Cols DeSales. 6·6, sr., 18.3; Elijah
Allen, Cots. DeSales. 6-4. sr .. 18.3.

Joe Caruso . Rocky R1ver. 6-0. sr.. 22.8 ;
Scott Thomas , Delaware Buckeye
Valley. 6-6, Jr . 24 4: Derek Shoecratt.
Cin. Wyoming, 6-3. sr.. 20.0: Tirrell
Cumberland. Hillsboro. 6·1 . sr., 20.3;
Andrew Moss. Copley. 6-2, sr.. 17.5:
Kyle Miller. Alliance Marllngton, 6-3 , sr ..
19.9; Jock 8ottman. Wooster Triway. 64, sr . 18.6: Chns V1llalovos, Wauseon .
6-2. sr., 19.2.

Gl\'t:AWAY

'II

Equipment and Suoollea
CPAP Machines
Mlak
TUbing
Filters
Reaperonlca

842 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH

740.446-9020

Publlc.tlon
Sunday Dlaplay: :1.:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays'p •. .,..,.

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
12 bags of leaves for com- S1tver and Gold Coins,
post &amp; large garbage can for Proofsets. Gold Rings, Pre1935
U S.
Currency,
storage (304)675-5790
Solitaire D1amoods- M.T.S.
Co1n Sho p, 151 Secood
4 Gray Kinens, 6 Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446-

3rench City

" FREE" Carpet Giveaway
Registration at Superior
Flooring 8c Cabinets

In Next Day'a Pa~r ·
Sund•y In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Prlldav Por Sunchlya Pa~Mi~r

reward for' lost male
Pomeranian-Shitzu
milt.
Cecil 0 King. will be cefe,. Blacl&lt; &amp; '¥"-Y· Has a huge
brating his 80th Birthday on bump on has belly, miSSing
Uarch 25,2007, flom 2-Spm on ~11107 . Bittersweet Dr.
at the Bidwell U.M. Church
Gallipolis. 740.441-6421
111 Church St Bidwell. Oh
This is a SECRET surprise. Losl. 5yr. old Tricolored
Please come1
Ba- -n&lt;l. 65 Lbs. Las1

8195

*Home Decor •Furniture •Hand
Puppets tor Children
• Antiques lor the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 square loot store
offers thousands of g11ts for
the entire family.

Bualneaa Days Prior To

____

10
month
old
AKC
Registered
Choc. lab.
house broken (304)675-

~tique &amp; Cta~ .l1all

All Dlapl•y : 1::1 Noon ::1

Description • lndude A llrk• • Avokl ~
• Include Phone Number And Adds . . WMn IMeded
• Ads Shouklltun 7 Deys

r

r

.,_lly In-column: 1 : 00 p .m .
MonUy- P'rlday for ln-rtlon

• StArt Your Ada wtt1t 4 Keyword • Include Complete

losT&lt;\ND

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

tiiii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I~$50-•Fou•m-..•
ANNOUNO:MF.NfS
~

r

Meinert. Tel. St. Francis: A.J. AChier.

DIVISION II

Monday thru Friday

Mull

Marietta; Luke Kraus. Findlay; Nick
Andrew

OuultirM
Word Ads
Display Ads

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~rihune
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Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or FIX To 1740) 446-3008
or FIX To (740) 992-2157
675-5234

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Brown. New Carhsle Tecumseh: Man

Perrysburg : Jordan Fortney. Bowling
Green; Ramona Austin, Cle. E. Tech;
Kendall Holt, Cle Glenville: Randal
Holt, Bedford: Reggie Keely, Bedford:
Chris Kimbro . Lorain Admiral K1ng: Nale
Korinchak, Strongsville. Mike Powers .
Lyndhurst Brush: Dave Reichlin . A'w'on
Lake. Parker Hewit. LOOi Clo11erleaf:
Sean Kelly. Brunswick: Paul Rackela.
S!ow: Mark Oumn. Cant. GlenOak:
Adam Moore. Sarber!on: Sheldon
Brogdon. Warren Harding: Greg Fite ,
Mass. Perry: Damian Eargle. Warren
Harding: Leo Turpin . Cant McKinley

OH

HOW I0 WRITE AM AD

Jared Sullinger, Cols. Northland; Robbie
Taylor. Gahanna Lincoln : Bryan
WickhHe , Cols. St. Charles. Adam

Oregon

Gallla
County

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

from PageBI

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Housecleaning 1n Mason
County. Weekly or Bi -week ly Good References 304-

773-5045
--------Johnsons Cons. Roofing.
Siding and remodeling. Free
estimates. 740- 245· 9660
- - - - - -- - Pro f ess1 o nal
Office f Housecl ea n 1ng
References (304)675-2208
Will care fo1 elderly. Male or
Female . 16 yrs e-.penence.
Will ckl l1ght housework,
laundry and cooK Will work

......-tise " an~

limit•tion or
discrimlnltlon based on
rect, color, religton, sex
f•millatl ttetus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make an~ such
pre,.,..nce, limitation 01
chcriminalion ...
Thia newapapet will not

knowingly acc.pt
advertisements tot" '"'
..tatt which is in
violation of the 1. .. Our
reeders .,. hertlby
informtd tnac Ill
dwellings advertised in
this newapap11r are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

Counlry settmg New Haven
a1ea 4BR. Home. 2.800
sq.ft. 2 ac1es. Hardwood
floors .
lnground
pool
$148,500 Senous 1nquines
only
(3041674· 59 2 1 or

2nd/3rd sMt or 24·5's. 740388-9783 or 740.591 -9034
13041593·887 1

SA 7 SoUih. 4 BA 3 BA.
New Roof. New heat system . hardWood floors . 2 car
detached garage. no land
co ntracts
$125 .000

(740)709-0299
Th ree bedroom. 2 1i2 bath,
2.5 acres 32X45 two slor)'
farm barn. 740-992-5 189

Mollll.t: HoMt:.'
lllll SALE
01 Fleetwood l 61180. 3BA
28.4.. K11 appl. 2 decks. CIA
Valued at $24.000. selling
lor $ 1 9 . ~ 740·441·0955
t 989 't 4x60 Claylon Mobile
home. 2BD. 2 dath. with a
t2X18 additional B~ and a
12X6 mud room. on a 1i 2
acre lot w. cha1n link fence .
and a lO X I 0 buildmg
S40 000 740-379-2668

1999 14X70 Clayton .
3 bedroom. 2 bath.
central air. very clean .
wheels &amp; axles, with
12x 12
building
$16.500 neg 304-6755924

�Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydaiiY,sentinel.com

Tuesday, March 20; 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

Utrihune - Sentinel - l\e titer
CLASSIFIED

James, Braves scalp Indians, 6-0
inning "so I
didn't feel
goofy
throwing."
Atlanta's
starters
have ste llar
ERAs . Buddy Carlyle, who
has not allowed a run in 10
innings, is followed by
Lance Cormier ( 1.29). Tim
Hudson ( 1.80) and John
Smoltz ( 1.93). Braves
starters have a 2.25 ERA,
allowing 18 earned runs in
72 innings.
"I think a lot of the guys
are ready to go," manager
Bobby Co~ said.
Scott Thorman . who
takes over this year at first
base fo llowing the trade of
Adam LaRoche , l!it hi s
first homer and drove in
three runs .
"That was a good feeling ," Thorman said of his
two-run drive off Rafael

. BY CHARLES 0DUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Cleveland Indians outfielder Grady Sizemore. pops out to
end the second tnning with bases loaded, during a spring
training baseball game against the Atlanta Braves in lake
Buena Vista, Fla., on Monday.

KISSIMMEE. Fla.
Chuck James and the rest
of the Atlanta Braves' starting pitchers are heading
into the final stage of
spring training looking
strong.
James overcame control
problems to throw five
on
score less
innings
Monday. lowering his ERA
to 2.57 in the Braves ' 6-0
Win over the Cleveland
Indians .
James gave up · four hits
but walked three. He
loaded the bases in the second with two wa lks after
Casey Blake 's double, then
pitched out of the jam.
"I definitely was remi nded why we have a pitching
coach again," said James ,
who met wi th Roger
McDowell after eve ry

returns from an abdominal
strain.
Miller ,;aid he won't
complain if sent to TripleA Buffalo.
" I really wasn't planning
on making the team." he
said. "I was just happy to
have a chance to pitch.
They've already got five
great starters. They don't
need me right now, but
when they do I' II be
ready."
Aaron Fultz gave up four
runs in two innings. Brian
McCann hit a run-scoring
triple off Fultz in the sixth.
Notes: The Indians have
begun contract talks about
a multiyear contract for
Westbrook, who is eligible
for free agency after the
season.... Harris started in
center. He also has played
left fie Id. right field , third
base and second base.

Betancourt in the eighth .
"It 's just about getting your
timing down and feeling
comfortable at the plate."
Cleveland starter Adam
Miller allowed three hits
and one walk in five scoreless inning. He has given
up eight hits in 14 scoreless
innings over three starts.
"He has been as impressive as anybody in camp,"
Cleveland manager Eric
Wedge said . "When you
look at a young pitcher getting three starts, you can't
ask for much more than he
has done here. It was great
to get our eyes on him and
see him go out there and
perform."
Wedge has set his rotation to start the season:
C.C.
Sabathia.
Jake
Westbrook,
Jeremy
Sowers, Paul Byrd and
Fausto Carmona, who will
fill in until Cliff Lee

'

Ohio

WIN UP TO $1,000

Cant McKinley.

Honorabkl Mention
Nathan Balch. Lewis Center Olentangy;
Taylor Hobbs . Thomas Worthington :

Employees, Independent Contractors, Vendors and their immediate lamiily not eligible.

•••
'''

Centerville;
Robby
Schloemer. Lakota West Bobby Austin.
Cin_ LaSalle: Allen Roberts, Middletown:
Walt Gibler. C1n. St. Xavier. Lucas
Wright, Logan : Cory Kriechbaum.

on liMo

Wood.

FIRST TE4M
Jon Diebler. Upper Sandusky. 6-7. sr .
42.7: Danle Jackson . Greenfield
McClain , 6-5 . st.. 26.2: Ronald Steward.
Cols. Eastmoor Academy. 5- 10, sr ,
20.3: Kellen Zawadzki . Tipp City
Tippecanoe. 6-3, sr.. 21.3: Dan Boudler.
Louisville. 6 -7. sr.. 17.6: Sco11 Asian
Pai nesville Harvey, 5-10, sr .. 13.0: Tyler
Spark s. OlmS1ed Falls. 6-4, sr., 18.5:
Logan Aronhalt. Zanes11i lle. 6·4 . jr.,

17.3.
Player of the year : Jon Diebler, Upper
Sandusky.
.
Coaches of the year : Dan Addis .
Copley: Rick VanMatre . Greenfield
McClain

FREE Re~noval
FREE Se·t-Uia
FREE Delivery
''l.D~t Vnspokt i.~ l..orf l :'Jtlmuwn"'

Reamed

Slly it a.·ith...

Request Family Oxygen

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-446-0007

SECOND TEAM

week~_ old

)OUrll~)'

•

GH GRI:AT I~TRODUCTORY
Wr PRIC[!!I

/)ianumd Jrwdry

'~

-4'} rom Our }{ume '!i.J •)[,ur..; "

~t:::

Cor6in &amp; Snyier Jurniture

•••

151 "''" ...... ' 5liipolis, 014
· -.. ~!-N•II-tm·-

PL PINSant675·34IJO

Diane McVey

,
---.
.
.
rl··----~

•·

ltJ llil.!fill iJ.!J.llillil !iliJ
V6, Sun rool, lactory warranty.
20,000 miles.

iJJ~1-DUD

DILL-; Ill \1{1\t.
( 'I '\ I I I~

Gallla Auto Sales

GALLIPOLIS

2147 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH

Spec;:lal Mention
Norri s Cole Day. Dunbar: Derrick
Hannon, Spring. Shawnee: Roben
Goldsberry. Tipp C1ty Tippecanoe:
Delroy Sm ith, Sleubenville: Kodey
Haddox. Zanesville; Philip Biggs ,
Byes11ille Meadowbrook: Adam Gay. St.
Clairs'w'ille: Eric Dummermuth, Dover;
Sammy . Bonanno.
Uhrichs'o'ille
Claymont; T1m Congrove. Circlevill e
Logan Elm, Dustin Guthrie. McArthur
Vinton County; Ke11in Murphy, Galion;
Adam Johns. St. Marys Memorial: Sam
Bastian. Tol . Cent Cath · Garrick
Sherman. Kenton Carlon Brown .
Warrensville Hts_; Dave Pellerite ,
Olmsted Fa lls ; De'o'onne Johnson .
Pa1nes11i lle Harvey: Colin Voreis,
V~rmilion ; Joe Carbon, Canfield: Mychal
Doblan ski. Youngs . Liberty; Andrew

435'/, Second A&gt;enut
IA.:rr...._, from

(740) 446-0724
David Mink- Owner

Honorable Mltntlon
Jonathan Carroll, Bexliy; Jamis Davis,
Cols. Linden-McKinley: Stevin Howard.
London; Tequin Monk, Cols. East; Cody
Ryan, Newark Llcl&lt;ing Valley; J .J .
Laumann, Kettering Alter: Kevin Vest.
Day. Carroll; Aaron Pogue, Day .
Dunbar; Eddte Brown, Hamilton Badin ;
. Kyle Corbin, Tipp City Tippec:anoe :
· Connor Wetzel, C1n. Wyoming; Michael
Howard, Greenfield McClain: Chrla
Givens, Chillicothe; Ray Chamblra,

Phone

_lwo hx,•adpns

.,,..,_wv

1!4 mile north oii'Citntroy -liMon

77$-1721

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

Auto/Home/Business/Life/
Health/ Annuity
An Independent Agency

Representing Erie

a'l lnsurarCEt

675-4340

(304)675-7036
lU Slxlb Sl. Pl. Ple118111ll, WV
rivercltleslnsO sudden linkmall.

Vinton County; Trevor Welle, Waverly ;
Dan6el lfft. Dover; Steve Maland&amp;, New
Concord John Glenn: Adam Blce,

TO DAY'S
NUMBER

Or- Tri.Valley: ~ah Mills, Oovtr:

Zach Collaroa, Steu~nville; Cedric
Harri;, Zane1vllle; Justin Llrli&lt;:Ott,
Cambridge; Joey Wlflts, E u..-rpool;

Benedictine; Jotmny Adams . AkrOI"t
Buc;:htel; Marcus Golden. Akro n
Kenmore ; Jordan Jenn1ngs, Navarre
Fairless; Mike Kaisk. Akron Springfield:
Ryan
Pa rks .
S!reetsboro;
Ben
Klafczynsk1. Med1na Highland : Lou
Coppola . Poland Semrnary: Chri s
Bivins. Alliance : Kyle Rockwell. Bel011
W. Branch, Justin Allen , Niles McKinley :
Corey Hirt. Hubbard : Er1c Howell , Ai&lt;ron
East.

•

·.~

"Cull liS lodt~y und you

could be smiling too! "

""

~ADVANCED HEARING
CENTER

1122 Jackson Pike • GallipoliS

(7401441-1971

(800~1 94

• All lids must be prepaid'

on

.,,Of

*

ro
new

/

3117 Kerr Road,

/

t

· H.-.Jr Care &amp;. Makeup
· ,'\WI Care • ~tellx Cut&gt;
• Facials·&amp;. Waxing

· Mass.lge · Body Wraps
· Sf." l'ilck.J.ges • Cl1~1cal !'eels
• Mkroderm Abr,lslon&lt;•
326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-2933
Hours:
M f IQam - CICM

Z•

.

' w.

L\VC'St~
ftQild ' .

K••

~--441 804! "

(7~)

(740) 3lt 13110'
••1V!WIUU

RaceMt .....
I

"

2842

www.comica.com

ll'ltt""_ _ _ _ _ __, nl'tll'_______, ll'litt""_ _ _ _ _ _.,

fiELp

IIELP WJ\NIU)

IllI

fiELp \\'J\NIU)

0202.

"1110

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Announc:ement .. .......................................... 030
Anllques .......................................................530
Apartment• lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................080
Auto Parts • Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. no
Autos lor Sate ..............•....................•.......•.. 710
Boats • Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies ... ......•..••.......................... 550
Buslnett and Buildings ..............•.............. 340
Buainetl Opportunlty .................................210
Bu11neaa Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campera • Motor HomM ..•........................ 790
Camping Equipment .•..•..•..•.............•.......... 780
Carda ollllanka .........................................01 0
Child/Elderly Care .......••..•..............•............ 11M)

Etectrlcai/Relrigenltlon ...............................840

Equipment lor Rent. .................•.................. 480
Excav~lng ..........................•.............•.......... 830
Form Equlpment ............•..•.••.................•..... 610
Farms lor Rent. ....................•...................•... 430
Forms lor Sate .................•.............•..•.......... 330
For Lease ........................•..••..........•••........... 480
For Sale ........................................•............... 585
For Sate or Trade .........................................590
Fruita &amp; Vegelabtea ....•..•............................. seo
Furnlahed Rooms ............•........................... 450
General118ullng...............•..•...................•....850
Glveaway .......................................,..............040
Happy Ada•.••..........................•.....................050
Hay • Graln...••.............................................640
Help Wanted.................... ... ................. .........110
· Home lrnprovemenls ...................................810
Homea lor Sate..........•..•... ...............•...•...:..• 310
Household Goodl ......••...•..•.........•••.•••.••..... 510
Houseolor Renl .......................................... 410
IJ1Iolemorlam .....................•.., ....................... 020
lnouranc:e ...........................••..................•..... 130
lawn • Gerden Equlpment .........•.••..•..•..... 660
Livestock ........•....................•........................630
lost and Found ...........................................
lots &amp; Acreage ............................................350
Miscellaneous..................•............... .. ....•..... 170
. Miscellaneous Merchandlse....................... 540
Mobile Horne Repair ....................................860
· Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
Money to loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles l 4 Whaelora ..........................740
Uusicallnstruments ................................... 570

Paraonals ..................................................... oos

Pets lor Sate ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
• Proleaaional Sarvlces .................................230
· Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
: Schools INtruetion.....................................150
· Seed , Plant • Fertilizer ................•••.....•..... 850
· Sl1uationS
120
~ lor Rent. ..........•..••......................•.•....4&amp;0
Sporting Qooda .........•.•....................•.......... 520
SUV'alor Sate............•................................. 720
Trucks lor Sate ....•••••.....................•....•........ 715
· Upholatefy ...........•.....•.••.............................. 870
VIlla For Sate•.....................•..•........... ..........730
Wonted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .. .....•.......... 620
Wlllted To Do ...........•.:....•........................... 180
Wlllted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Safe. a.ltlpolls.................................... on
Yard Safe.Pomeroy/Micklle................. ........ 074
. Yard Sale-Pt. Pteaoant ................................ 076

llF.LP WAXIID

--------Hiring experienced tractor

• • • • • • • • " ' and tanker &lt;tivers. 740-388WORKERS NEEDED 8547
100
Assemble crafts. wOOd
items.To $4801wk MaterialS
provujed. Free information

--------an d
Hiring
mechanics
wrecker operators. 740-388-

H VAC Co. looking lor a proAn Excellent way to earn fessional installer. with 1
year or more experience.
money. The New Avon.
Also a helper with some
~I Mad~n 304·882-2645
knowledge ol HVAC. Pay
AVON~ All Areas! To Buy or based on experience. Send
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304- resume to: HVAC P.O.Box
572 Kerr, Ohio 45643. or call
675·1429.

740.441·1236

Bob Evans in Mason now
taking applications lor Day
shift Servers. Swing shift
Ser'w'ers &amp; Night shift
Serwrs for more information
call 304-773-61 12

CNA'S

&amp;

Small Trucking Company
Looking for Tractor Trailer
drivers with Flatbed experi·
en~ .
Home every week
end and some week days
delivering to 0H KY VA WV

funera l
director
and
embalmer. Privately-owned
funeral home located in
growing area of state.
Excellent salary, health
insurance and paid vacation .
send resume- to P.O. Box
3303,
Charleston. WV
25333.
Landscape/

Residenl manager needed
lor apt complex, free renl in
lieu of pay. call for detatls.
446-3481 or eves 446-1567
Security Officer needed in
New Haven. WV $7.66 hour,
all shifts. Must have a high
school clploma. clean criminal history, pass a drug
screen and background
ctlectt. Call1 ·800-275-8359.

Overbrook Center, 333 Page MFD\1.
St., Middleport, Ohio is cur·
rently accepting appWcaiiOns
for the position. of AN

Law n

oNOTI CEo

design:
1ng
implemenl!audttlmaintain
eflecti'w'e quality system to
ensure conllnued reu~ntion
of ISO 9001 certi fication:
participate in product ctevelopmen1 to provide proacllve

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
peop le ~ou know . and
NOT to send money
through lhe ma11 until yoo
have m~~estlgated the

quality influences from delinilion
to
launch :
develop/document comprehensive quality stralegy :
assure new product requirements, including tunctionah·
tylcostlreli ab tht ~lsatety to
mee1 customer needs:
assure functional specifications is generatedJmalntained throughout develop-ment
process :
assure
designs receiver awropriate
analysis/reviews including
electricaVcode, safety, derating, FMEA, reliabi lity
DFA, OFM and BOM :
assures
quality/accu racy/clarity of
wstomerlinternal ctocumentation; negotiatefdocumenl
re lease cri1eria. including

oHem-.g.

testing during product devel-

01J01ent oycle. Roq~&gt;res BS
Electronic or ,Electrical Eng,

$85,000/yea r. 8 AM · 5 PM
location , 250 McCorm1ck
Road,
Gallipolis,
Ohio
45631. Send or tax resumes
to
Attention: D-05194·
North Pearl St., Suite 510,
Dallas, TX 75201 . Fax 21 4237-9116

d:\0TI£t:u
Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO OtiiiSIOn ol
Financial
InstitutiOn's
OH1ce of
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests lor any large
advance payments of
tees or insurance. Call !he
OHice of
Consumer
Affairs toll tree
1-866278·0003 to learn 1f the

at

mortgage

lender

os

broker

or

properly

licenseel. (This is a public
serv1ce announcement
from · lhe Ohio Valley

~P:ubl:':'h:;"il
::C:om
::p:a:ny=)=~

i
11

I'Roi'llN(JNAl
SERVICIS

___

.--~

A little bit ot country
in the city!
3 slory·s on Appro11 . 5
acres. 1m1 From GAHS,
5BR. 3.5BA. Formal LA.
Formal OR. Full Kitchen,
Game Room. 3 Sitting
Rooms. 2 Gas Fireplaces
(natural gas &amp; electric ). 2
Car Garage. 3.5 fenced
1n acres over look1ng
Chickamauga
Creek.
With a split railed fence
and a bern w1th hay loft
Bade. yard fenced 1n also
tor any pets to run/play.
Also t-101: Tub and large
deck behind house. Also
Rental House Available
Ne111 Door for E11ha
Income (Extra house
included 1n price ). Ma1h
House. 4. t 00 sq t1 .
Rental Home, 1.800 sq
ft. Asking $360,000. Call
(740) 441 ·1605
for
appoi ntment.
Attention!
Local company otter1ng "NO

DOWN PAYMEN T" programs lor you to buy your
home instead of renting .
• 100°'&lt;. financing
HOMIS
• Less than perteCI credit
IUKSAlE
accepted
• Pa~·me n t cou ld be the
0 Down even with less than same as rent
perfect cre&lt;111 is available on
Morlgage
locators
lh1s 3 bedroom. 1 bath
( 740)~7 - 0000
home. Corner k:lt, lireplace.
modern kitchen. jacUZZI tub,
For Sale Newly remodeled
Paymenl around $550 pe1
House 3 bedroom. 2 oath,
monlh. 740-367·7129.
3408 Mossman Avenue
Point Pleasant $45.000 call
104
Talum
Dr.
New for an Appointment 304-576Ha'w'en.WV. 3bdl2ba . Ranch. 2247
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. great
area. 0 : 304-675-3637 E. GALLIPOLIS. 3bd 3ba
304-882·2334
home. Must Sell Fast!
More homes avaUabfe. For
loc:a listings call 800-559-

1·888·582·3345

4109 xF254
Move in ready 3 bedroom AU
new inside and out
Full
basement. wood lloors, gas
fireplace. cathedral ceilings
No land contracts. (304 )675 -

NEEDED.

Become state
licensed by att~nding trainings held on Saturdays
Earn $30-$45 a day for the
care of a child li11ing in your
home. Homes are needed
i11 your county. Call Oasis
loll tree 1-877-325-1558
Training will begin March 31
in Albany.

Competitive

!

Rl \I I 'I \II

FOSTER PARENTS AND
RESPITE
PROVIDERS

wages and benefits packages available. EOE and a
plrticipant of the Drug Free
Wort&lt;place Program.

c

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

I!INrKUt.TION

of state and fudefal regulations as well as quality
assurance standards. II you
are interested, plese stop by
our front olfi~ and pick up

•

til• . . .l \It
•
. ~

r

5 yrs in the job offered or 5
yrs as a au"ality Eng. Exp
must include Advanced
Quality
Engtneeong
toolsJp rocesses (APQP)
Functional Analysis (OFO
and/or Block Diagram).
FMEA (Failure Mode and
Eflecl Analysis); CP (ConUol
Plan-Quality Plan) Plan ):
SPC (Statistical Process
Control); MSA (Measuring
System Analysis -G R&amp;R) .
and DFMIDFA (Design lor
ManufacturabiliityfDesign for
Assembly). Exp requ1red in
pro bl em solving. failure
analysis, corrective/pre11en·
!alive action and exp or certificatiOn in ISO 9000:2000
requirements and auditing
and use of Microsoft programs.
$65 .000

.,.

1842 sq n. 3BA. LA . FA. 2364
Kitchen, 1 31'4 Baths, CfA., - - - - - - - - Plus many e11tras. located Ranch home near Me1gs
High School. 3100+ sq.tt
GAHS, 2.13 acres, Askiny- including f1n1shed basement
Hardwood floors. 2-ca1
$129.900. (740)245·5909
garage. 5 BA . 3 5 balhs.
2.5+
acres.
fir epla ce
S149,QOO. 7 ~0.416-4 765

on Chris Lane, Close to new

care

drillers license. reliable
transportation. Drug--screen
required. (740)388-~ 16

1982

Local Mom seeking busi·
ness minded Moms. Work at
home. No parties, No selling,
No risk!
Go to
www.KidsBesideMe.com or
call 740-698-0771

Eam up to $8.50 an hour.

Gollpollo CerMr Collogo
(Careers Close To Home)

Spring into, a new career in
Corrections!

Correctional
Medical Services has excel·
We offer a comprehensive lent 6ffiployment opportuni·
paid training, paid holida~s • ties lOr PAN positions, with
and weeldy pay + bonuses. potential lor fulltime employal Lakin Correctional
Call today to set up an
Ciinter. CMS is seeking
interview!
appliCants for LPN'S. AN's,
and
an
Administrative
1-an~47
AssistanUMedical Records
.... 2321
Clerk. For more information

merlt,

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

Call Today! 740·446·4367,
All ruJ H\lote advertising

1·800·214·0452
www gaHipoi11JCi118ercoll&lt;lge com
Accrodlled

Member

Accredll1119

Council lol' Independent Colleges
and Schools 127'48.

WAI'o'IUI

' ToDo

2029. EOEIDTRIAAP

Avg. Pay $20/hr or
Truck Drivers COL Class A
$5 7K annually
lnOuding Federal Benefits Required, minimum of 5
and OT,Paid Training,
years driving exp. 2 yrs
Vacations-FTfPT
Experience
on
loads.
1-800-584-1775 Ext. 18923 Overdeimensional
Must have good dri-ving
USWA
r9COftl. Earn up 10 $2.000
weefdy. For applicalion Call
The Village of Syracuse wHI
(304)722·2184
M·F
be accepting resumes for

l

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

In this MWSp~~per Ia

subj.c:t to the Federal
Houtlng Act ot 1He
whkh makes It iNegel to

VF';,,

J P"l,_.""'

All Types Masonry, Bnck,
BlohM, Stone, Free Estimate.

(304)773·9550 . 304·593·
contaCI Christi Hendrix. AA 6421 .
at 1-304-674-2 440 ext.

Looking for babySlner. for 2
children in my home. Apr011 .
5 days per mon th, 1n the 1ho po&lt;;tioo ol London Pool 8:30em-4pm
Bidwell area. Good pay. Manager, deaclline is noon
Please call 645--3204
AprM 4th, resume can be
mailed to PO_ Box 266,
Needed .. Cieaning
lady, S~racuse . Oh 45779 or
must be dependable. and dropped off at \IHtage Hall
have reterences. 740-367- Clerk's Office. 2581 Third
:2~~;~~~:J
Street
7328

-

Jill'-~,

assure qualrty, rel;ab;lrty dur·

SCHOOLS

The successful
candk:tate must have 2 or

~ication .

rr========';i

Of changed products 10

Manager.

an

10

M·F 8:30 IO 5:00. EEO· 18 192, AJB 39774621, 700

helper. Mus1 be experi- - POS
,...,-I=
TIONS
- -,.-WA
- IcLA
-- 8- L-:Eenced. hardworking. Valid
IMMEDIATELY

Person
Engineer, Ill
Pro11icle expertise in elec.
design, hardware specs.
ASLogix &amp; RSView, high
speed ctala acquisition. eleclricaJ test equipment, automated control systems. Reg
8-+ yrs related exp; BSEE:
US citizenship &amp; ehgibilily for
clearance; AutoCAD e~~p:
stron~J verbal &amp; writttm communication .
Supervisory
experience a plus.
UTRON, Inc.
Ashton, wv
FAX 866-231-2567
www.utroninc.com

Local Home Health Agency
looking for self motill8ted
individuals for a variety of
shi"s. PCA, CHHA, CNA,
STNA certification. We have
training available and we
assist with job placement
ApplicatiOns are being
accepted or mail to : PO 8oJC
707, Gallipolis, Oh 45631 ,
(740)441-1377 or lax to
(740)441 -1648

- - - - - - - - - more years of long term
Immediate opening lor a care experience and must
Wes1
Virginia-license d have a wor~ng knowledge

Darst Adult Group Home Law Office seeks Legal
has an opening for a day Secre18ry/Parale9al Reilley
position, must be able to do to Be»; EB17 200 Main St.
heavy lifting. Temporary PI, Pleasant. WV 25550
possibly pe rmanent posiLocal buaineu
tion. 740·992·5023.
Looking for 9 pit reps
Comm .. bonuses. car
Oomioo's Pizza Now Hiring
bonuses. No salary. Wk 5·
Sale Drivers &amp; Management
15 hrs weekly. $29 refundPoint Pleasant, Gallipolis &amp;
able slart-u&amp;;~ cost. 740-441·
Pomeroy locations Apply in

Elec.fContr~s

Ohio Valley Home Health,
Inc. Passport/Private Care
De pt. is hiring CNA 's,
STNA's, CHHA's, Personal
Care Aides. Competit ive
wages with benefits .including health insurance and
mileage. Apply at 14 5~
Jackson Pike Suite 3,
Gallipolis. or phone 740-

441·9263.

I Need One Driver!

Resident IN 330-527·2789

Assistan ts. Interviews Are
Now Being Conducted For
CNA &amp; Resident Assistant
Positions. If You Are A
Caring,
Enthusiastic,
Dependable Person, Then
We Want You To JOin Our
Team Come On Over &amp;
Chad&lt; Us Out! You'll Be
Glad You Outl Competitive
CNA
Wages,
!=laid
Vacations. Paid Meals.
Many
Other
Benefits.
Ravenswood Ca re Center,
1113
Washi ngto n
St.,
Ravenswood, WV. (Across
Ritchie Bridge. At. 2 North,
l-ast Busi ness On A1ght)
References Required.

Meigs lnckJStries, Inc. is hir- Ready tor an independent .
rewarding and flexible
CaTeer in home heal1h?

ing part time crewleaders fof'
Janitorial
and
Lawn
Maintenance
positions.
$6.85/hour, experience in
Janitorial/custodial
work
preferred. Meigs Industries
provides services lor adults
with developmental disabili·
ties. Must have a valid Ohio
drivers license and high
school diploma or GEO.
Send resume 10: Meigs
Industries, Inc .. P. O. Bmc
307, Syracuse. Ohio45779.

8547

pkg. 24Hr. 801-428·4649

I BtSl~ I~,r.'o--f~o:*•~~-~--""
Anunm••r~==OI'I'I.::llll:':N:m:·:-

lb:J.J'WAo,,Ul

s.n1or
0ua111y
EnginMr
to plan/validate

I

ll.10•••••••""11110
WA.'O'ID

"'::::.:::1

....anv

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

We are buying anything
Free to good home 1-1 1f2 OOing with Shirle~ Temple.
FEDERAL
year old Yellow Lab. Female,
Dons. bOOks, clothes. etc.
POSTAL
JOBS
Spayed. 740-388-0069
Also buying Sulfide Matbles $16.53-$27.58/hr., now hirand German Swirls. Call ing. For application and free
Male Tabby c*:at. fixed,
after 8:()()pm (740)441-1236 governement job info, call
declawed, tree to good
American Assoc. ot Labolt I \11 '1 (I' \ II \ I
hOme. LOII&amp;S kids. (740)992·
913-599-8042.
24/hrs. amp.
' I 1\\ I 1 I '
7093
=,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; serv

iJ;.

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
Sl.OOforlorge

POUCtES: ONo V.U.V Publlahlng ~ h right to tdlt. ~or CMCel any 8d •I .,-.y u.n.. ErrCHs must be r~&gt;PQ!Wd IK' the fiflt clll~ of
"~* wll be rwponsibte tor no more 1hln the co.t of 1ht 1P1C41 occuplltd by the
and ontv the first insertion. We shall not be I
-~ ~ 01QilllftM1hM rMUIII from tM ~licit· en 01 CJfNuion of M acl'oMrtl..n.nt. CorrKtion •Ill be mad. ln the firstawailablos edition. • Bo•
. . llhfaya conftclsntlM. • Cunent ....., c-d ...... • AM reel Mtlle actv.rtiMmenta •• ~ to the F_..,al Fair HoYsing Act or 1968. • This r
~ onlr Wp.......,
EOis_.,dL We
~an~ Hvertlslng in 'lio&amp;Miorl ot the law.

Bidwell. Cash reward. call
446-4266 or 446-4197

Free Pit Bull puppies. 6 wks answer leave message.740old. 10 good home. 740-367- 388·0011

w-.. . . . . . ... . . . . .

........

Kyle Smlttl, Norwolk; Juo11n Caudlll,

Another satisfied
Customer!

seen

6 weeks old puppies to g1ve- Buy1ng Junk Cars,Trucks &amp;
Wrecks. Pay Cash J D
awa~ (304)675--5361
Salvage
(304)n3-5343
AKC Reg. lemale Boxer. 5 ( 304)674~1374
yrs. old. fixed. fawn 10 color.
Great lamity/kids clog. 74().
Buytng JUnk cars. Paying
379-2668
!rom $50
$200. It no

oeo

. BErie '

ChUIIcolho: Jaymo Haggeny, Gaillpollo
Oallla Acad .: Andrew Stumbo, lrontor)
Rock Hill: Jerrod AlbriQI'It, McArthur

Oberlin Flrelands: Cameron Wrlghl, Cle,

8:~0-Spm

Just

Around The
Corner

Moss, Copley; Brandon Short, Orrville:

Offic·cl

(740) 446" 7619

It ~\·

Greg Preer, Akron SVSM

Po~•

Opcu Mon. - Thurs.

304-937-3348

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MA,CCC-A

Owner &amp; Audioluwist

THIRD TEAM

Sandusky Perkins: Chris Dudlca,
Shelby; Jerin Butler, Lima Shawneeo;
Chril Morrow, Van Wen; Paul Ourra.
Geneva; Andy Emrt1ein, Parma Padua;
Kevin F illinger, Fairview Park: Oerrlck
Ftynn, Parma Padua; Tom Krakowlak,
Parma Hts . Holy Name: Jeff Spikes,
PainWvllle Harvey; Andrew Wiegand,

!!TOP I~ A~D !!H OUR IJ[W
AIR IAATTR[~

Z007l!PRI~G

B.J. Mullens. Canal Winchester. 7- 1. jr ..
26.8 : Paris Harris, Kettering Aller. 6--3.
sr.. 16.4: Ben Hodkinson. Cadiz
Harrison Central. 5-9. sr.. 22.0; Anthony
Hitchens. Ch1jlicothe. 5-9. jr .. 18.5: Man
Warren , Copley. 6·2. sr.. 16.9: Kyle
HallocK. Sam:lusky Perkins. 6- 1. sr ..
20.6 : Reggte King, Chesterland W.
Geauga. 6-2. jr.. 18.0: Alex Kellogg,
Cols DeSales. 6·6, sr., 18.3; Elijah
Allen, Cots. DeSales. 6-4. sr .. 18.3.

Joe Caruso . Rocky R1ver. 6-0. sr.. 22.8 ;
Scott Thomas , Delaware Buckeye
Valley. 6-6, Jr . 24 4: Derek Shoecratt.
Cin. Wyoming, 6-3. sr.. 20.0: Tirrell
Cumberland. Hillsboro. 6·1 . sr., 20.3;
Andrew Moss. Copley. 6-2, sr.. 17.5:
Kyle Miller. Alliance Marllngton, 6-3 , sr ..
19.9; Jock 8ottman. Wooster Triway. 64, sr . 18.6: Chns V1llalovos, Wauseon .
6-2. sr., 19.2.

Gl\'t:AWAY

'II

Equipment and Suoollea
CPAP Machines
Mlak
TUbing
Filters
Reaperonlca

842 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH

740.446-9020

Publlc.tlon
Sunday Dlaplay: :1.:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays'p •. .,..,.

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
12 bags of leaves for com- S1tver and Gold Coins,
post &amp; large garbage can for Proofsets. Gold Rings, Pre1935
U S.
Currency,
storage (304)675-5790
Solitaire D1amoods- M.T.S.
Co1n Sho p, 151 Secood
4 Gray Kinens, 6 Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446-

3rench City

" FREE" Carpet Giveaway
Registration at Superior
Flooring 8c Cabinets

In Next Day'a Pa~r ·
Sund•y In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Prlldav Por Sunchlya Pa~Mi~r

reward for' lost male
Pomeranian-Shitzu
milt.
Cecil 0 King. will be cefe,. Blacl&lt; &amp; '¥"-Y· Has a huge
brating his 80th Birthday on bump on has belly, miSSing
Uarch 25,2007, flom 2-Spm on ~11107 . Bittersweet Dr.
at the Bidwell U.M. Church
Gallipolis. 740.441-6421
111 Church St Bidwell. Oh
This is a SECRET surprise. Losl. 5yr. old Tricolored
Please come1
Ba- -n&lt;l. 65 Lbs. Las1

8195

*Home Decor •Furniture •Hand
Puppets tor Children
• Antiques lor the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 square loot store
offers thousands of g11ts for
the entire family.

Bualneaa Days Prior To

____

10
month
old
AKC
Registered
Choc. lab.
house broken (304)675-

~tique &amp; Cta~ .l1all

All Dlapl•y : 1::1 Noon ::1

Description • lndude A llrk• • Avokl ~
• Include Phone Number And Adds . . WMn IMeded
• Ads Shouklltun 7 Deys

r

r

.,_lly In-column: 1 : 00 p .m .
MonUy- P'rlday for ln-rtlon

• StArt Your Ada wtt1t 4 Keyword • Include Complete

losT&lt;\ND

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

tiiii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I~$50-•Fou•m-..•
ANNOUNO:MF.NfS
~

r

Meinert. Tel. St. Francis: A.J. AChier.

DIVISION II

Monday thru Friday

Mull

Marietta; Luke Kraus. Findlay; Nick
Andrew

OuultirM
Word Ads
Display Ads

Ohio Volley
Publishing'"""'"
liMo rigllllo edh,
rt1oct or cancel any
1ld ot ony tlml.

Kavanaugh ,

Clay:

Websites:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-mail
www.mydailysentinel.com
classified@ mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregisler.com
YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
l\egister·
To Place
~rihune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or FIX To 1740) 446-3008
or FIX To (740) 992-2157
675-5234

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Brown. New Carhsle Tecumseh: Man

Perrysburg : Jordan Fortney. Bowling
Green; Ramona Austin, Cle. E. Tech;
Kendall Holt, Cle Glenville: Randal
Holt, Bedford: Reggie Keely, Bedford:
Chris Kimbro . Lorain Admiral K1ng: Nale
Korinchak, Strongsville. Mike Powers .
Lyndhurst Brush: Dave Reichlin . A'w'on
Lake. Parker Hewit. LOOi Clo11erleaf:
Sean Kelly. Brunswick: Paul Rackela.
S!ow: Mark Oumn. Cant. GlenOak:
Adam Moore. Sarber!on: Sheldon
Brogdon. Warren Harding: Greg Fite ,
Mass. Perry: Damian Eargle. Warren
Harding: Leo Turpin . Cant McKinley

OH

HOW I0 WRITE AM AD

Jared Sullinger, Cols. Northland; Robbie
Taylor. Gahanna Lincoln : Bryan
WickhHe , Cols. St. Charles. Adam

Oregon

Gallla
County

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

from PageBI

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Housecleaning 1n Mason
County. Weekly or Bi -week ly Good References 304-

773-5045
--------Johnsons Cons. Roofing.
Siding and remodeling. Free
estimates. 740- 245· 9660
- - - - - -- - Pro f ess1 o nal
Office f Housecl ea n 1ng
References (304)675-2208
Will care fo1 elderly. Male or
Female . 16 yrs e-.penence.
Will ckl l1ght housework,
laundry and cooK Will work

......-tise " an~

limit•tion or
discrimlnltlon based on
rect, color, religton, sex
f•millatl ttetus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make an~ such
pre,.,..nce, limitation 01
chcriminalion ...
Thia newapapet will not

knowingly acc.pt
advertisements tot" '"'
..tatt which is in
violation of the 1. .. Our
reeders .,. hertlby
informtd tnac Ill
dwellings advertised in
this newapap11r are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

Counlry settmg New Haven
a1ea 4BR. Home. 2.800
sq.ft. 2 ac1es. Hardwood
floors .
lnground
pool
$148,500 Senous 1nquines
only
(3041674· 59 2 1 or

2nd/3rd sMt or 24·5's. 740388-9783 or 740.591 -9034
13041593·887 1

SA 7 SoUih. 4 BA 3 BA.
New Roof. New heat system . hardWood floors . 2 car
detached garage. no land
co ntracts
$125 .000

(740)709-0299
Th ree bedroom. 2 1i2 bath,
2.5 acres 32X45 two slor)'
farm barn. 740-992-5 189

Mollll.t: HoMt:.'
lllll SALE
01 Fleetwood l 61180. 3BA
28.4.. K11 appl. 2 decks. CIA
Valued at $24.000. selling
lor $ 1 9 . ~ 740·441·0955
t 989 't 4x60 Claylon Mobile
home. 2BD. 2 dath. with a
t2X18 additional B~ and a
12X6 mud room. on a 1i 2
acre lot w. cha1n link fence .
and a lO X I 0 buildmg
S40 000 740-379-2668

1999 14X70 Clayton .
3 bedroom. 2 bath.
central air. very clean .
wheels &amp; axles, with
12x 12
building
$16.500 neg 304-6755924

�•

Tuesday, March 20, 2007
ALLEYOOP
t999 16I76 Royal MallOI'b'f
SkyllM, 4bedroom. 2bath,
CIA. Wl)'l S!Ong. si\Klf,jled
Joof, OfiQIOai QWnel, but lwed
'" less than 3 yrs. call 740245-9418 Of 740-33~02 16

3 Br. house 1n Pome•oy
large &amp; very clean. 1 112
bath. A/C. hardvilood Hoors,
lull basement. 2 car garage,
small baO. yard. 740-949-

2303, Of 591 -3920

2004 ClaytOn 14x52. 2 BR. ~A house, unfurniShed .n
Vinyl S&lt;ing. Shingle Aool. GaJII)OiiS. wit!&gt;n wattung cisCI A. 2 decks- t8 'x8 ' &amp;
of Wal "• $4751
--n.
...J
l
&amp; ~;. mo
No
7'10.•6'.
Stove
&amp; lance
~us uti rues ~·
Retngerator,
S17,000. Pets. Must haw strong ,...
erences. Cal (740)446-9712
(74&lt;)!256-6994

between

BESTBIY

tile

""""

1 Bedroom- ~tar'lees -near
Rutland-ideal for ekkuly,
S350 plus deposn-no pets·
utilitieS PD. 740-7o42·295 1

lmmacylate 2 . bed1oom
apartment Nvw carpet &amp;
cabinets. lreshty palflted &amp;
decorated, W/0 hookup
Beautiful countrv sett1ng
1 e.q Apt. A/C, Stove. Must see to appr&amp;c&amp;ate.
Aehidg., Wate&lt;, No Pets. $400/mo. (614)595-7773 01
133 2nd Ave, $325/mo. Cd t..aoo-7'98-4686.
c(7_
&lt;W_;)44&amp;4859______ --:---:------:-:-:.
1 BR ......,....
·~· ,.,
~ """""
.....,. .. "" """'"·
.. - r ....,., i n - ana ...... $100
Call 441 -9668 or vts•t on the lir1t month's rent.
2BR Acts. &amp; m•tes hom
=-~ring-valley-proper - Holter water. sewer. trash

$0,919
-M.IIUIII
mymidwMthome.com

24fT HOME
STORE

A-tlonl
Taking
local company altering "NO A HIDDEN TREASURE!

M-.IHomes

mymldweslhome.com DOWN PAYMENr pro- laurel
Commons
grwns tor you to ouy your Apartments. Largest in the
n
ew
aven

home instead or renltng.
area! Beautifully renovated
• 100% financing
lhr~ including bfand
• less than perfect credit new kitchen and bath
accepted
Starting at $405. Call toda~!

~-od 14x70 31&gt;1.
heatlair $9,

=12=

applicahons

A'""'' ,_, '" "',. . ........

BEAUTIFUL
3-4 B&lt;

llobl .. tloma Lot for rent: Midd. CIA. 74()..843-5264.

IIENTS

AT

APART·

BUDGET

i

i

REAL ESIAn:

WA.'1Jl)

I

·
-- home?
"·
Need
to seUyour
l ate on payments. di"VOrce.
job .transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
and quiclf. closing. 74()..4163130.

Molltv!!o~II!S

i

_0:iir-un
Wort .i1y~------,

PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood - -

near Vinton . Call (740)441HUD
HOliES!
2bd
111
1.
$ 1261mo,
_ Drive from $365 to $560.
2..
3bd
u.
$185/tno. More homes avail· Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
able! 5% dn. 20yrs O So/o. 740-446-2568.
Equal
Hou$ing Opportunity.
For listtngs call 1-8()()-5594 109~eF144
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED. AFFOIIIIAIII.EI
Townhouse
apartments,
-·u.oo ftLi~•
• andlm small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 - 1111
16x80 3 Bedroom. 2 Full lor application &amp; information.
Old Farmhouse Tract 32.2 Bath. S550/mo ~us deposit
acres, restorable. Pre-Civil (740)367-0654 01 (740)645War home &amp; various out 34 13.
buildings. 4.5 m1les S of Pt. - - - -- - : - - Pleasant. wv (740)992- 2 Bedroom Tra1ler lot rent
2420, It no answer. leaiiEI close 10 Rulland. Ohio, No
pets. 74Q-742-2014
message. $200 .000 .

I

2 Mob1le homes tor rent.
740-367-7762 or 740·44S.

=-::::-:-=--=--=--

4060 28A, R10 Grande area.
3BR,
No
pets
References

required. $425/mo. $425

dep. 74(}.367-7025
Ooublewide- 3 BR. 2 Full
Bath, 1 Ca1 Garage, $600
plus depos't (74&lt;))367-0654
01 (74C)645-3413

for

...

pickup.
(740)«Hl94 t , ( 74&lt;))&amp;155946. CM HEAP oe&lt;epted.

511\ct:

tUK

lb'J\'T

kit. converts
Harley Spottster lfllo a triKe.
(7.0)38&amp;-0401

BRIDGE

-~-~~-:---,

Phillip
Alder

i

b~c~~
......_ ~

1986

Baal Trackef

17

foot

r

.~~~

IYIUIUI&lt;IIUl&gt;~

'

barns.com

1026

S-.~=~2 ~rm ~~~I
'I I;\ I • I '

PUPPIES! Poodtes-sur.ndard. AKC. Parli. bVwh,
S600. Collies····AKC. blue

BASEMENT

WAT£RPIIOOI'tNG

AKC

r1

C
'F
ommerdal building
or
4 GRent" 1600 square teet. ott 7!l!
i:o44
_,.1 -..;9~5 t.o•. -::-. .-..,
,_,
G t ....
~.
street parl\lng. rea .......aFOR ~\1.[
tion l 749 Third Avenue 1n
OR l'ltADt:
Gallipolis. Rent S4001mo. L - - - - - - - . , 1
Call Wayne (404)456·3802
- - - - - - - - For Sale or Trade 2. Jyr okl
Commercial building "For female goats. 1 spotted. &amp; 1
Rent• 1600 square feet, oH blacl&lt; with blown 304-937street parking. Great loca- 2705

r
~

r

Dealer: South

Rates

Vulnerable: Eui-West

*Insured

JONES'

Sootb
l•
2+
4•

Tree Service
Top • RtiiiOWII • Trim
• Stuq) Grinding
• Buckd TNCk

740- 7~2 - 229J

Please leave messa c

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

HITCHC:O~'S
"'THE I~PS"'

level,

llarftood bbBry And FIU'Iialre

BARNEY
THAT DEPENDS,
JUGHAID!!

D''I'OU PLAN ON

1

JD Model 750 no till dril,
good opener &amp; boots, markers &amp; cover $17.000 304·
562-5747 304·552-3274

• New Homes
• Garages

45771
740.94&amp;-2217

• Complele
Remodeling

-.tt'X'IO'

Mt-112-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

'

1

l.ll'\ll\111

Concrete Removal
and Replacemenl

AU Types Of
I""

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

~~~!or ml'\'( Uo\I'LO'&lt;~

74G-992·6971

' '&lt;OVmTI-\EmTLO(M.,ID.'t

ln1u
Fre. E1Um1t

1114/1 mo_pd

....

mE. ~Tt\Ff' E:.IJ~\JI&gt;..l\00 ICEPORt'5

David Lewis

,~

,..UOU.'&lt;, C.IAIE.f, TAAT 1:, :,o ..,.
f'l~H~~&lt;:.. l t&gt;OO'l QUITE.
...___, I(KOW WW..\'1'0 ~'( !

~I&gt; I'UMC.WN.!

Kllll)ER..
THAT'!. ALL!
I LIKE TO
JOKE ARoUNI&gt; '
THAT~ NOT
I

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

HE'r', CHUCK .. [ NEED

70 Pint St""'l • Gallipolis
446-0007

SCI-IOOL ASSii6NNIEN!

YOUR ~ELP Wlnl A

03 Hondo Accord LX, 751&lt;, 4
Of. 4 cyl V-tech, Black,
Clean. good car, !Ike new.
Call740-245-0621

1990 Dodge 112 ton, auto,
Reese hitch. solid bOdy,
needs WOfk and pafflt. make
offer. 1994 IntrepiD, bod~
and glass good, no trans.

$250. 74(}.446-6566
1997 Convertible Chr~sler
sebring at reasonable price
304-675.0180
1998

KIA

Sephia

$400

OBO. 740-416-5973.
1999 Chevy lumina. 446-

3714

~eW~.::f 83 F01d LTD B&lt;ouiham 4&lt;1&lt;.
$400 call(304)675·5966
97 Buick leSabre_ Make
good WOf'k car. Great shape
$3900. 7&lt;W-379-2ti57

Public

Nolice

-•ary

onice.

notice. Writt1n com·

tnenlllor.....-lalor
en informal confer·
81 Dodge 1/2 ton 4welnvo 4 LEGAL NOTICE
'ence may be !tied wllh
spd, rebuilt 318 w/38" Southern Ohio Coal the Olvialon of Mlntr81
Sprswampers $3,200. 740- Company has submH· R e s o u r c e s
256-6543.
led an applicalion lo Managemenl,
2045

revise a coal mining Morse Road, Building
parmH (APR) •R-035457
lo
the
Ohio
Department
of
NaiUral
93 Harley Sportster 883,
Custom paml, fat bob tank , Resources, Division of
~·sources
wide lenders, saddle bags, Mineral
Management
This
custom seat (740)388-0401
ARP is localea in

H-3, Columbus, Ohio
43229--6693, wHhin lhir·
1y dllys alter lhe Iasl
dale of publication of
ll!ls nollce.
(3) 20, 27, (4) 3, 10

CARPENTER
SERVICE

WE HAVE TO INTERVIEW
A 6LI51NESSMAN .. WIIAT
DOES YOUR DAD DO?

A !JAReER?ASK
I-IlM IF TI-IAT'S

A BUSINESS ..

-Go.._
Eleotrloal I;

Plum~ng

Roofing I Gultef1
VInyl Sldtn; I hinting
P.. io and Polch O.Ck1

10x10x10x20

WV03e725

992·3194
or992-6635

V C YOUN G Il l
':l'l2 t&gt;..' 1--.
I' • I '1&lt;
•

If~

f

~~ &gt; '\111 ~~

l t \ ,'l''

SUNSHINE CLUB

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

Atmodtllng

Seii-Storaae·

Manley's
Recycling

his hand, plays a spade to dummy's ace

(!he honor from·!he shorter side first),

~

49 Bolly peril
51 Famouo
lest word
52 Hell

ss s-t

murmw

56 Light brown
57 Collon gin
,_
58 Accounl
IXIC

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campos
Cellbf1y ~ crn:tv•••n11tllt«&lt; ~ ~s by l~ PIQPe. PISf: Wid~
Each** n hop.. U'OI b' ilf'(llha

Torillysc!ie: Bequa/5 P

"WKCPC YH

DIIW Tl YISK RZ

JYZZCPCISC DCWUCCI

WKC

SIIHKYRICJ SKTEDCP TIJ WKC
BTJJCJ SCGG. " .. X. O . SKCHWCPWRI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Interest your kids in bowling. Get !hem off !he

Sl106ls and into lhe alleys.• • Don A~

wou ·

14111
'=~='
S@\\~lA-~~~s·
_
_ _....;.....;
l4il•• loy ClAY l . POUAN ...,;;____ _
_
lolllts ol tho
0 loarroogo
fOIIf ICI'OIIIbltd -.fs bo·

low to

font~ lovr .....,. wtll'ds

S HI S ET

GARFIELD

e_

. . . . 1 dllfl'l . . . . . . .
..........1%:11 . .

0

PIYINI liP PIICES Ill

~I
_.......,I

D I asllll•l t1s• II
IDMJ!Iilllllll With• . . . .

7' rn•Dnl

GRIZZWELLS

op further
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) • Something
which can help you achieve an ambitious
objeclivv could dewlop out of the ordi·
nary. Once you recognize it, you'll have
to react to it quickly because ita offer is

I» 'bJ lltAR .. ~---.
'!li:llt\E111 I~ "'

what auignment. Use theu gHta productlvoly.
SAGITTARIUS (New. 23-0.C. 21 ) - One
of your ~ II to eometlrnee let
thing~~ go unli!IJ'Ie lUI minute. HoWever,
this may be ~ of thole daya wn.,.
you'll hive no trouble lqUHZing In jobe
just In the nick of time.
CAPRICORN iDeo. :12-Jen. 19) - It In
your hute to get !hinge done situations
"ren't looking 10o goOd, cton'1 ...., think .
about throwing In the to.oMI. 'r'ou 'll be a
r~ flnleher and could II.II'Jiflte

yourutt w*" the rMUitl.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Foll. 19)- Molollol

-~

·
UOipi!Onally
fol
you. Therw - II ...en
a poMiblllty that you

wave.

might raap galna In IIYiral
you'd
INII expect. Once opened, theM
awnYet wNI rernaKI eo.
PISCES (Fet&gt; 20-,.. . , 20) - Thlngo
m~t not go M you had envt.loned
them, but the r•ulta will be ewer)~ btl u
acceptable u thole for which you had
&lt;tHtgned . a. tttxtbl• and rMCty 10 now
With the tid•.

SOUPTONUTZ

.

Chance

Into the future.
SCORPIO (Oct .. 2"-Nov. 22) - You are
gi1led with two valuable aNeta: "rbur talent fol organization and your ability to
etf&amp;ctlvety del9gllte who thoutd be gtwn

"Middleport's only
.'

Declarer wins with dummy's ace, cashes
two rounds of tru~ using honors lrom

avenues for adVancement will come
through arrangements you have with
some of your more progressive oontae1s.
lnvotvernents with a tradittonalist could
slOw you down.
LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) - Because you
are so extremely resourcefUl. yoo could
conceive some radical concepts. Vet,
don't discount them just because they
are a departure from your normal way of
thinking.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-S&amp;pt. 22) - When In
con'w'ersations with others, truly hoar
what they are trying to tell you . Someone
with whOm you'll have contact could fUrnish you will a valuable insight you hadn't considered.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Don't hesi-tate to apply something new and untest·
ed to old procedures and/or au~n ­
ments. n might be a terrtflc step-saver
that could enhence your productivity weN

UNun
SElF STDRIII

Floom Additions I

39C'*

Tokyo
42 Bargo
44 AuthoriiH
45 Biller
46 Cutting

one--no-

fleeting .
CANCER (June 2t..Jul~ 22) - "rour best

r

YOUNG 'S

ea.,

trump response, begin wi!h one notrump, then tebid three of partner's
major.)
By the by, ~ you read n a book that you
may jump-raise a one-heart 01 onespade opening straigiii!O ttvee With only
th&lt;ee-oard support, give " to your owonenls and tel them how wonderlul " iS!
Here, alter North shows 10-12 pointS
wnh !hree hearts, South knows they

bring you in contact once again with
someone with whom you have had only
a nodding acquaintance. Thia time vou'tl
find a connection you will want to devel -

PEANUTS

Hay.
Grass.

Meigs Counly, Salem
Township, Sacllon 34,
llld Ia localea on the
Wilkesville
7
112
minute U.S.G.S. quadrenglt map. approximately 2.0 milts Hll
of Wilkesville, Ohio.
This ARP proposes lo
lnslall 1Wo borehoiM
end
appurtenencH
10 lrenatw
walar from the undefground workings of
lhe Meigs Ml• No. 2
inlo lhe undotground
workings of lhe Meigs
Mine No. 31. This
lnol•ltallon will laclll·
late poal·reclamatlon
waler handling and
trealment lor Soulhern
Ohio Coal Company'a
Meigs Mine No. 2 and
Meigs Mine No. 31 .
This appllcallon Is
on file lor public vlewing . al lhe Meigs
Counly
Recorder 's
Meigs Counly
Courl House, 100 E.
Second
Streel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
llld shell remain so lor
11 lhlrty dllya fol.
lowing lhe lui dllte of
publication of lhls

Ut-.,...,

rna~

Ha~ and Grain for sale.
Garden ready manure.'
$10.00 a pick-up load.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
NAIIIE OF COLTON
JOHN MORRIS.KNISS
TO COLTON JOHN
MORRIS
CASE NO. 20076017
NOnCE Of HEARING
ON CHANGE OF NAME
Appllcllll hereby glvea
nollce lo all In-lea
pen10na lhal the appllcanl has flied an
Appllcallon
lor
Cha~ of Name In lhe
Probtlla Courl ol Meigs
County, Ohio. requesl·
lng lhe change of
name ol Colton John
llorria-Knlss to Colton
John Morris.
The hearing on lhe
appllcallon will be held
on lhe 20th day of
April 2007, al 1 :30
o'clock p .m . in lhe
Probale Courl of Meigs
County, loealed al 100
East Second Slreel,
Courthouse, 2nd FlOor,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Viclor J. Morris Sr.
30190 Bowler Road
Langsville, OH 45741
(3) 20

two-over-one and a forcing

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -

Rw&amp;
GRAIN

11.:\\-,l'•ll{l\ l ltl\

(2--1
59 ~rlesor
17 lly
elew
1ranapor1
60 Untold
18 Flah domain
conlurlH
19 "-end
61 Vlllty
Rocldn' •
62 Hlbernale
10
mel
21 .......
63 - . - .
..,.~~~or
64 SciMOI'I
14 Trig
24 UPS !rUCk
sound
funclion
25 Got lhe drill
16 " Siar Waro"
26 Odllnaplrw . DOWN
prince11
27 Dls!Url)
20 Annepolio
30 Archoolo1 Pari of
gred
gilt'lflnd
RSVP
2f Satloly
32 -like
2 Navajo lot 22 Plkillan'o
3 Slep
lorl-1
Ianvuege
33 Dllds
oniMgoo 23 Snooly one
37 Sldmpy lOp 4 Justmedo 24 Eloelora
5 Cowlloy'o 28
Ill •
38P29 Chick-lo-be
shoul
31 Porto erllcle
640 Pottery
Whl .... 34 Medicinal
ptenl
lnogmenla
7 Swlndltd
Q B111NII'1
8 Sllclty lnllt 35 lllblla
Mel• Jlllyboan
36G.-e
.. Phyllcl
41 Y11, In
shapeo

bargaina.

~ ...r..~&gt;"':J~·"z~ar4"':""•

Timothy/Orchard
379-2290

lrwbll

promises

--... 21' 2007
By Bomloo- Olol
II you have the means and d&amp;sire to do
so. more travel than usual oan be a possibility tor you. Much of it oouk:l be spurof-the-moment. You'll enjoy It all. even
the sofooms that were unplanned _
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll19) - Your shOpping instincts will be 8ltoeptiona!ty quldl.·
wmed and acute, with lmpu&amp;se bUying
being some of your better decisions. This
should enable you to pick up some real

nt A

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

of

immediately

W~r:r!,

BIG NATE

we Deliver To You!

Bales

which

~Astro-

Addilions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construclion Interior Remodelin
Residenlial &amp; Commercial
740-985·4141 Office
74()..416-11134

Round

+2

claims.

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

EMPLOYMENT

Pass

returns a spade to his ~ng, and rufls his
last spade With dummy's heart jad&lt; (so
lhere·s no risk of an ove"utf by East).
Finally, Sou!h lrumf)ll a club bacl&lt; 10 hiS
hand. dtaws Easfs lhird !rump, and

III'CIIIII CansbacUon and
Bean Caalractlng

CI .ASSIFIEDS r

East
Pass
Pass
Pus

diamond ace, and continues With a !hlrd
tound, WliSI rutting eway South's queen.
Now suppose WeSI shills to a club.

THE BORN LOSER

26 Years Experience

5411HIIIutlnl

"-h.

have game values.
Wesl guesses well to lead !he diamond
two. East wins wnh his kilg, cashes !he

Concrete Work

't\t'10't8Q'

GITTIN'

MAimiED f!

Lll '\...,11 \Ll ' Ill'\

Racine. Ohio

-car

-

values, you support
partner at !he minimum level. (H you usa

I I \ \ I ...,

29670 Bashan Road

CIISIIICIIII

48G-ol
5 Bla -.ot1
olrlllogy
8 Plil on
50 Rich peslry
t 1 Ovid'I rou1t 52 A Slooge
12 Tlnl
53 Blob'o
13C.....,...

gamt~-invitational

www.--..lu:aMtt...,..«&lt;.

ROBERT
BISSELL

Gore

WIYII

This week, we are looking at raising
partner with only thr....card support.
The opener bids one heart 01 one
spade. When you, !he tesponder, have a
game-invitational hand With lhlee cards
1n partners rna.&lt;&gt;&lt;. you adopt a lwo-step
process. You bid a suil. then support
partner's major, perhaps with a jump. H
your fitst response is at !he one-liM!,
you must rebid !hree ot partners suit.
But ~ yout initial response is at the lwo-

WEA, ~ISSES

Free Estimates

H1ll s Self
Storayc

Nwtb
2•
2•

Two steps to raise
with three trumps

C:IWE~ATIG
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

"

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

FreeEstlmat. .

0% Financing - 36 Mos.
available now on John ·
i!DjQr-:':~~~~., Deere z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
llolSF.HOU&gt;
5.99% F1xed Rate on John
..___oiGoottii i i i iO, __pl Deere Gatol'tl CarmiChael
•
Equipment (740)446-2412

A K 7 5

••

74()-367·0536

\II 1, 1 II \\Ill" !

t

• K J 10 8

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-367..()544

FAR~I
F:QIJD'IIIENT

2

47 ~

)

South
• K 76
" A K Q 10 6
• Q J lO 9

Local Contractor

1 l.lnl-.tt'l'll l..,

io

•

740-446.0007 Toll Free 877-669·0007

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

·-·,.
and Female. 8 weekS Old.

.\. I I\ I ' I 1 11

* Rea~onahle

.. 7.

1 Ride lhe

15

Eoal
• Q 10
• 98 3

• 9 6 53

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

more into. call 740·7"2·
.:.
052'--'.8_
. ------,=

ck.......ruon bloodlines. Male

Gallipolis. Rent $400/mo.
Col Wayne (404)456-3802

*Prompt and Quality
Work

A 4.

West
. J98.&gt;32

MONTY

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Jim's Small Engine
Repair
741}992·2432
Gel ready tot spring
also selling ATV Pans
32119 Welchtown Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

SmaU Beagle Hound p~..~p-pies! Male &amp; female. For

a

• J $ z
• 8 6 43
• A Q 7%

·rfamihl 1•!:1'@8:1

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Call Gary Stanley ii&gt;

males 5500. female S600. 9

I

I

nished. Established 1975.

....... 74(}.76_7-4875

tion! 749 Third Avenue in

740-992-5929
740 •t6-1698

Re£erenct'~ Available!

A.KC,

pupp1es

e

antee. Local references lur·
Call 24 Hrs (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

RENTALS SALES
I SERVICE I FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
I

*Ex~rienc.:d

merle, $400. Shehies-AKC,

Vorkie

ypes concre

l

UrlCOO(jfiooal lifetime guar·

Wlnlwh, $400. CALL 74(}.
696-1085
Schnauzers. Giant

•"'

AU I

...

2000 Keystone
Coach
camper.
37.5
footer.
Excellent cOndition. 516000.
74Q-&amp;45-7273 or 74Q-256-

====-:-::--:---

1'w.·se
"---...Conc-te
----,

I

NEA CroiSword Puzzle
ACROSS

I

Pole Barns 30x•Ox10'$6.495. 40x80x12'=$12.995
Free Delivery Call (937)7181471 www.nationwtdepol&amp;-

for old. AKC Reg. Excellent
Modern 1 BR. No pel$. Bloodlines. 740-245-5823 or
$275/mo
includes 74o-645-t912
water/sewer. $200 deposit ~--:---:---:-~;:------:1740}446-3617
Full blooded Norwegian
- - - - - - - - puppies. No papers Call
Tara
Townhouse )94·895·3796 or 304·895·
Apartments, Very Spacious, 8835

• Payment could be the ,(304 73"'·3344
=::__ __
2 Bed&lt;ooms, CIA. I 112
same as rent
Apartment tor rent. 1·2 Bath, 4c1utt Pool &amp; Bab~
Mortgage
Locators Bdrm., rernocleled, new car- Pool, PallO, Start $425/Mo.
pet. stov~ &amp; trig .. water. No Pets. lease Plus
I'::I::"P.:":::I:""'ft::::"'r:::l:l (740)367·0000
sewer, trash pd. Uiddlepolt. Security Deposit ReQUired.
Duplex
tor
rent
m
(74C)367-7086.
•
Middleport , 2 bedroom $425 ·00· No pets. Ret.
18q&lt;fi&lt;ed. 74(}.843-5264
-------apartments, both recently
Tw'n
•
ov-... ~ ~..,.....remodeled. $450 upstairs Beaut1tul 1 bl/1ba, availabte ing "'nnlications tot wartirvl
~Hud-subsized. 1· ..br,
·•
and S475 downstairs. Extras right away. must see to list tor
~ sunroom. appreciate . cable ·--·
like new de.......
,.......,...up, apartmentJor
the
garage,
s!Of'agtt,
Call first. last, P'us depo$il, refer- elderly/disabled call 675Potnt Pleasant over
es Call 304·675·249
(740)992·5094 and leave eoces, (740)992-3543
6679
Equal
Housing
er 6:30
message.
_ _;;;;._ _ _ __. House lot &lt;ent .

tilewood

Oak

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

l nsta ~ trike

115 HP Me&lt;cu&lt;y&amp;9.9 HP
&amp; Johnson Ex. Cond.garage
$4500
kepi, many extru.
saki. 080. 740-388-8910.

Thu&lt;sday,
Satunlay
Sunday. (740)446-7300

pa&lt;l. 740-{;82-9243"'- Deli,..ed

o•

10:D0amlo6:00pm0NLV.
3and4&lt;oomfulniSIIedaptS. 6130
•·
~- • ct""" WID -UO· No oets. ----:c-:----,_ceptlng applications 1\.11 .r
New 2BR
apartments.
.. ....v.. Ref. and deposit required.
bedroom. 2-bath &amp; la........ ,
Washer/dru.Ar
hoc:*"•'.
""""" --~
740-446-1519
,.
~
room 2 stOfy ·~ wouo out - ' - ' - - ' - - - - - - - stovelrefngerator ~luded.
building. Stovre &amp; refr~ator
Also. units on SR 160. Pets
included Nice corner lot in
WelCOme! (740)441 -0194
Point Pleasant tst month$
deposit required $6001
Newty built 2br Apt. Stove &amp;
month. $600 Cleposi1. No
Relridg included, 3 miles
pets. Ava1lable April 1st.
from Gallf:dis Walmart 304·
593-8448 or :.D4-675-3400
740.446·9595.

NEW 2007 4 Bed

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel &amp;ams, P1pe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
on...ewaya &amp; Wa*ways. L&amp;l
St&lt;ap Me!all Open Mondo\'.
Tuesday, Wealesda~ &amp;
Fr&lt;lay, 8an&gt;-1:3()pm. Ctoood

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

~

WH T I C

I

5

0
N

I

I
l-;11"'7rTI._rl-,1'8-,-l-t
~

E FE N 1 l

"Vanity of olbers," sighed the·
beau!)' to her companion, "can
really interfere •••• -··· ."

G)

Complo:e ih&lt; chv&lt;klt q1101td
by j,Jhog in the "'t1111'9 wordt
'-...1.-.1...-J.-J-..J.....J 1011 d&amp;volop hom ttop No. 3 below.
•

•

•

•

•

•

1
.t:l. PRINT NIJMSfREO
':I l11f!RI IN IOUAREI

€) u~CRAMal!

FORI

I IIII

1 1 1
....,j__.__..__,

__;,;;.
AN;,;:,;,;IW,;;,;;.fl-...1.-

SCRAM-LETS . ANSWERS

Commit - Begun - Saule - Peruse - ENEMIES
"Your wiU find," Gf"'llllll$ loetwed, "that having money
will buy a better class of ENEMIES. "

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�•

Tuesday, March 20, 2007
ALLEYOOP
t999 16I76 Royal MallOI'b'f
SkyllM, 4bedroom. 2bath,
CIA. Wl)'l S!Ong. si\Klf,jled
Joof, OfiQIOai QWnel, but lwed
'" less than 3 yrs. call 740245-9418 Of 740-33~02 16

3 Br. house 1n Pome•oy
large &amp; very clean. 1 112
bath. A/C. hardvilood Hoors,
lull basement. 2 car garage,
small baO. yard. 740-949-

2303, Of 591 -3920

2004 ClaytOn 14x52. 2 BR. ~A house, unfurniShed .n
Vinyl S&lt;ing. Shingle Aool. GaJII)OiiS. wit!&gt;n wattung cisCI A. 2 decks- t8 'x8 ' &amp;
of Wal "• $4751
--n.
...J
l
&amp; ~;. mo
No
7'10.•6'.
Stove
&amp; lance
~us uti rues ~·
Retngerator,
S17,000. Pets. Must haw strong ,...
erences. Cal (740)446-9712
(74&lt;)!256-6994

between

BESTBIY

tile

""""

1 Bedroom- ~tar'lees -near
Rutland-ideal for ekkuly,
S350 plus deposn-no pets·
utilitieS PD. 740-7o42·295 1

lmmacylate 2 . bed1oom
apartment Nvw carpet &amp;
cabinets. lreshty palflted &amp;
decorated, W/0 hookup
Beautiful countrv sett1ng
1 e.q Apt. A/C, Stove. Must see to appr&amp;c&amp;ate.
Aehidg., Wate&lt;, No Pets. $400/mo. (614)595-7773 01
133 2nd Ave, $325/mo. Cd t..aoo-7'98-4686.
c(7_
&lt;W_;)44&amp;4859______ --:---:------:-:-:.
1 BR ......,....
·~· ,.,
~ """""
.....,. .. "" """'"·
.. - r ....,., i n - ana ...... $100
Call 441 -9668 or vts•t on the lir1t month's rent.
2BR Acts. &amp; m•tes hom
=-~ring-valley-proper - Holter water. sewer. trash

$0,919
-M.IIUIII
mymidwMthome.com

24fT HOME
STORE

A-tlonl
Taking
local company altering "NO A HIDDEN TREASURE!

M-.IHomes

mymldweslhome.com DOWN PAYMENr pro- laurel
Commons
grwns tor you to ouy your Apartments. Largest in the
n
ew
aven

home instead or renltng.
area! Beautifully renovated
• 100% financing
lhr~ including bfand
• less than perfect credit new kitchen and bath
accepted
Starting at $405. Call toda~!

~-od 14x70 31&gt;1.
heatlair $9,

=12=

applicahons

A'""'' ,_, '" "',. . ........

BEAUTIFUL
3-4 B&lt;

llobl .. tloma Lot for rent: Midd. CIA. 74()..843-5264.

IIENTS

AT

APART·

BUDGET

i

i

REAL ESIAn:

WA.'1Jl)

I

·
-- home?
"·
Need
to seUyour
l ate on payments. di"VOrce.
job .transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
and quiclf. closing. 74()..4163130.

Molltv!!o~II!S

i

_0:iir-un
Wort .i1y~------,

PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood - -

near Vinton . Call (740)441HUD
HOliES!
2bd
111
1.
$ 1261mo,
_ Drive from $365 to $560.
2..
3bd
u.
$185/tno. More homes avail· Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
able! 5% dn. 20yrs O So/o. 740-446-2568.
Equal
Hou$ing Opportunity.
For listtngs call 1-8()()-5594 109~eF144
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED. AFFOIIIIAIII.EI
Townhouse
apartments,
-·u.oo ftLi~•
• andlm small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 - 1111
16x80 3 Bedroom. 2 Full lor application &amp; information.
Old Farmhouse Tract 32.2 Bath. S550/mo ~us deposit
acres, restorable. Pre-Civil (740)367-0654 01 (740)645War home &amp; various out 34 13.
buildings. 4.5 m1les S of Pt. - - - -- - : - - Pleasant. wv (740)992- 2 Bedroom Tra1ler lot rent
2420, It no answer. leaiiEI close 10 Rulland. Ohio, No
pets. 74Q-742-2014
message. $200 .000 .

I

2 Mob1le homes tor rent.
740-367-7762 or 740·44S.

=-::::-:-=--=--=--

4060 28A, R10 Grande area.
3BR,
No
pets
References

required. $425/mo. $425

dep. 74(}.367-7025
Ooublewide- 3 BR. 2 Full
Bath, 1 Ca1 Garage, $600
plus depos't (74&lt;))367-0654
01 (74C)645-3413

for

...

pickup.
(740)«Hl94 t , ( 74&lt;))&amp;155946. CM HEAP oe&lt;epted.

511\ct:

tUK

lb'J\'T

kit. converts
Harley Spottster lfllo a triKe.
(7.0)38&amp;-0401

BRIDGE

-~-~~-:---,

Phillip
Alder

i

b~c~~
......_ ~

1986

Baal Trackef

17

foot

r

.~~~

IYIUIUI&lt;IIUl&gt;~

'

barns.com

1026

S-.~=~2 ~rm ~~~I
'I I;\ I • I '

PUPPIES! Poodtes-sur.ndard. AKC. Parli. bVwh,
S600. Collies····AKC. blue

BASEMENT

WAT£RPIIOOI'tNG

AKC

r1

C
'F
ommerdal building
or
4 GRent" 1600 square teet. ott 7!l!
i:o44
_,.1 -..;9~5 t.o•. -::-. .-..,
,_,
G t ....
~.
street parl\lng. rea .......aFOR ~\1.[
tion l 749 Third Avenue 1n
OR l'ltADt:
Gallipolis. Rent S4001mo. L - - - - - - - . , 1
Call Wayne (404)456·3802
- - - - - - - - For Sale or Trade 2. Jyr okl
Commercial building "For female goats. 1 spotted. &amp; 1
Rent• 1600 square feet, oH blacl&lt; with blown 304-937street parking. Great loca- 2705

r
~

r

Dealer: South

Rates

Vulnerable: Eui-West

*Insured

JONES'

Sootb
l•
2+
4•

Tree Service
Top • RtiiiOWII • Trim
• Stuq) Grinding
• Buckd TNCk

740- 7~2 - 229J

Please leave messa c

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

HITCHC:O~'S
"'THE I~PS"'

level,

llarftood bbBry And FIU'Iialre

BARNEY
THAT DEPENDS,
JUGHAID!!

D''I'OU PLAN ON

1

JD Model 750 no till dril,
good opener &amp; boots, markers &amp; cover $17.000 304·
562-5747 304·552-3274

• New Homes
• Garages

45771
740.94&amp;-2217

• Complele
Remodeling

-.tt'X'IO'

Mt-112-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

'

1

l.ll'\ll\111

Concrete Removal
and Replacemenl

AU Types Of
I""

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

~~~!or ml'\'( Uo\I'LO'&lt;~

74G-992·6971

' '&lt;OVmTI-\EmTLO(M.,ID.'t

ln1u
Fre. E1Um1t

1114/1 mo_pd

....

mE. ~Tt\Ff' E:.IJ~\JI&gt;..l\00 ICEPORt'5

David Lewis

,~

,..UOU.'&lt;, C.IAIE.f, TAAT 1:, :,o ..,.
f'l~H~~&lt;:.. l t&gt;OO'l QUITE.
...___, I(KOW WW..\'1'0 ~'( !

~I&gt; I'UMC.WN.!

Kllll)ER..
THAT'!. ALL!
I LIKE TO
JOKE ARoUNI&gt; '
THAT~ NOT
I

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

HE'r', CHUCK .. [ NEED

70 Pint St""'l • Gallipolis
446-0007

SCI-IOOL ASSii6NNIEN!

YOUR ~ELP Wlnl A

03 Hondo Accord LX, 751&lt;, 4
Of. 4 cyl V-tech, Black,
Clean. good car, !Ike new.
Call740-245-0621

1990 Dodge 112 ton, auto,
Reese hitch. solid bOdy,
needs WOfk and pafflt. make
offer. 1994 IntrepiD, bod~
and glass good, no trans.

$250. 74(}.446-6566
1997 Convertible Chr~sler
sebring at reasonable price
304-675.0180
1998

KIA

Sephia

$400

OBO. 740-416-5973.
1999 Chevy lumina. 446-

3714

~eW~.::f 83 F01d LTD B&lt;ouiham 4&lt;1&lt;.
$400 call(304)675·5966
97 Buick leSabre_ Make
good WOf'k car. Great shape
$3900. 7&lt;W-379-2ti57

Public

Nolice

-•ary

onice.

notice. Writt1n com·

tnenlllor.....-lalor
en informal confer·
81 Dodge 1/2 ton 4welnvo 4 LEGAL NOTICE
'ence may be !tied wllh
spd, rebuilt 318 w/38" Southern Ohio Coal the Olvialon of Mlntr81
Sprswampers $3,200. 740- Company has submH· R e s o u r c e s
256-6543.
led an applicalion lo Managemenl,
2045

revise a coal mining Morse Road, Building
parmH (APR) •R-035457
lo
the
Ohio
Department
of
NaiUral
93 Harley Sportster 883,
Custom paml, fat bob tank , Resources, Division of
~·sources
wide lenders, saddle bags, Mineral
Management
This
custom seat (740)388-0401
ARP is localea in

H-3, Columbus, Ohio
43229--6693, wHhin lhir·
1y dllys alter lhe Iasl
dale of publication of
ll!ls nollce.
(3) 20, 27, (4) 3, 10

CARPENTER
SERVICE

WE HAVE TO INTERVIEW
A 6LI51NESSMAN .. WIIAT
DOES YOUR DAD DO?

A !JAReER?ASK
I-IlM IF TI-IAT'S

A BUSINESS ..

-Go.._
Eleotrloal I;

Plum~ng

Roofing I Gultef1
VInyl Sldtn; I hinting
P.. io and Polch O.Ck1

10x10x10x20

WV03e725

992·3194
or992-6635

V C YOUN G Il l
':l'l2 t&gt;..' 1--.
I' • I '1&lt;
•

If~

f

~~ &gt; '\111 ~~

l t \ ,'l''

SUNSHINE CLUB

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

Atmodtllng

Seii-Storaae·

Manley's
Recycling

his hand, plays a spade to dummy's ace

(!he honor from·!he shorter side first),

~

49 Bolly peril
51 Famouo
lest word
52 Hell

ss s-t

murmw

56 Light brown
57 Collon gin
,_
58 Accounl
IXIC

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campos
Cellbf1y ~ crn:tv•••n11tllt«&lt; ~ ~s by l~ PIQPe. PISf: Wid~
Each** n hop.. U'OI b' ilf'(llha

Torillysc!ie: Bequa/5 P

"WKCPC YH

DIIW Tl YISK RZ

JYZZCPCISC DCWUCCI

WKC

SIIHKYRICJ SKTEDCP TIJ WKC
BTJJCJ SCGG. " .. X. O . SKCHWCPWRI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Interest your kids in bowling. Get !hem off !he

Sl106ls and into lhe alleys.• • Don A~

wou ·

14111
'=~='
S@\\~lA-~~~s·
_
_ _....;.....;
l4il•• loy ClAY l . POUAN ...,;;____ _
_
lolllts ol tho
0 loarroogo
fOIIf ICI'OIIIbltd -.fs bo·

low to

font~ lovr .....,. wtll'ds

S HI S ET

GARFIELD

e_

. . . . 1 dllfl'l . . . . . . .
..........1%:11 . .

0

PIYINI liP PIICES Ill

~I
_.......,I

D I asllll•l t1s• II
IDMJ!Iilllllll With• . . . .

7' rn•Dnl

GRIZZWELLS

op further
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) • Something
which can help you achieve an ambitious
objeclivv could dewlop out of the ordi·
nary. Once you recognize it, you'll have
to react to it quickly because ita offer is

I» 'bJ lltAR .. ~---.
'!li:llt\E111 I~ "'

what auignment. Use theu gHta productlvoly.
SAGITTARIUS (New. 23-0.C. 21 ) - One
of your ~ II to eometlrnee let
thing~~ go unli!IJ'Ie lUI minute. HoWever,
this may be ~ of thole daya wn.,.
you'll hive no trouble lqUHZing In jobe
just In the nick of time.
CAPRICORN iDeo. :12-Jen. 19) - It In
your hute to get !hinge done situations
"ren't looking 10o goOd, cton'1 ...., think .
about throwing In the to.oMI. 'r'ou 'll be a
r~ flnleher and could II.II'Jiflte

yourutt w*" the rMUitl.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Foll. 19)- Molollol

-~

·
UOipi!Onally
fol
you. Therw - II ...en
a poMiblllty that you

wave.

might raap galna In IIYiral
you'd
INII expect. Once opened, theM
awnYet wNI rernaKI eo.
PISCES (Fet&gt; 20-,.. . , 20) - Thlngo
m~t not go M you had envt.loned
them, but the r•ulta will be ewer)~ btl u
acceptable u thole for which you had
&lt;tHtgned . a. tttxtbl• and rMCty 10 now
With the tid•.

SOUPTONUTZ

.

Chance

Into the future.
SCORPIO (Oct .. 2"-Nov. 22) - You are
gi1led with two valuable aNeta: "rbur talent fol organization and your ability to
etf&amp;ctlvety del9gllte who thoutd be gtwn

"Middleport's only
.'

Declarer wins with dummy's ace, cashes
two rounds of tru~ using honors lrom

avenues for adVancement will come
through arrangements you have with
some of your more progressive oontae1s.
lnvotvernents with a tradittonalist could
slOw you down.
LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) - Because you
are so extremely resourcefUl. yoo could
conceive some radical concepts. Vet,
don't discount them just because they
are a departure from your normal way of
thinking.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-S&amp;pt. 22) - When In
con'w'ersations with others, truly hoar
what they are trying to tell you . Someone
with whOm you'll have contact could fUrnish you will a valuable insight you hadn't considered.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Don't hesi-tate to apply something new and untest·
ed to old procedures and/or au~n ­
ments. n might be a terrtflc step-saver
that could enhence your productivity weN

UNun
SElF STDRIII

Floom Additions I

39C'*

Tokyo
42 Bargo
44 AuthoriiH
45 Biller
46 Cutting

one--no-

fleeting .
CANCER (June 2t..Jul~ 22) - "rour best

r

YOUNG 'S

ea.,

trump response, begin wi!h one notrump, then tebid three of partner's
major.)
By the by, ~ you read n a book that you
may jump-raise a one-heart 01 onespade opening straigiii!O ttvee With only
th&lt;ee-oard support, give " to your owonenls and tel them how wonderlul " iS!
Here, alter North shows 10-12 pointS
wnh !hree hearts, South knows they

bring you in contact once again with
someone with whom you have had only
a nodding acquaintance. Thia time vou'tl
find a connection you will want to devel -

PEANUTS

Hay.
Grass.

Meigs Counly, Salem
Township, Sacllon 34,
llld Ia localea on the
Wilkesville
7
112
minute U.S.G.S. quadrenglt map. approximately 2.0 milts Hll
of Wilkesville, Ohio.
This ARP proposes lo
lnslall 1Wo borehoiM
end
appurtenencH
10 lrenatw
walar from the undefground workings of
lhe Meigs Ml• No. 2
inlo lhe undotground
workings of lhe Meigs
Mine No. 31. This
lnol•ltallon will laclll·
late poal·reclamatlon
waler handling and
trealment lor Soulhern
Ohio Coal Company'a
Meigs Mine No. 2 and
Meigs Mine No. 31 .
This appllcallon Is
on file lor public vlewing . al lhe Meigs
Counly
Recorder 's
Meigs Counly
Courl House, 100 E.
Second
Streel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
llld shell remain so lor
11 lhlrty dllya fol.
lowing lhe lui dllte of
publication of lhls

Ut-.,...,

rna~

Ha~ and Grain for sale.
Garden ready manure.'
$10.00 a pick-up load.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
NAIIIE OF COLTON
JOHN MORRIS.KNISS
TO COLTON JOHN
MORRIS
CASE NO. 20076017
NOnCE Of HEARING
ON CHANGE OF NAME
Appllcllll hereby glvea
nollce lo all In-lea
pen10na lhal the appllcanl has flied an
Appllcallon
lor
Cha~ of Name In lhe
Probtlla Courl ol Meigs
County, Ohio. requesl·
lng lhe change of
name ol Colton John
llorria-Knlss to Colton
John Morris.
The hearing on lhe
appllcallon will be held
on lhe 20th day of
April 2007, al 1 :30
o'clock p .m . in lhe
Probale Courl of Meigs
County, loealed al 100
East Second Slreel,
Courthouse, 2nd FlOor,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Viclor J. Morris Sr.
30190 Bowler Road
Langsville, OH 45741
(3) 20

two-over-one and a forcing

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -

Rw&amp;
GRAIN

11.:\\-,l'•ll{l\ l ltl\

(2--1
59 ~rlesor
17 lly
elew
1ranapor1
60 Untold
18 Flah domain
conlurlH
19 "-end
61 Vlllty
Rocldn' •
62 Hlbernale
10
mel
21 .......
63 - . - .
..,.~~~or
64 SciMOI'I
14 Trig
24 UPS !rUCk
sound
funclion
25 Got lhe drill
16 " Siar Waro"
26 Odllnaplrw . DOWN
prince11
27 Dls!Url)
20 Annepolio
30 Archoolo1 Pari of
gred
gilt'lflnd
RSVP
2f Satloly
32 -like
2 Navajo lot 22 Plkillan'o
3 Slep
lorl-1
Ianvuege
33 Dllds
oniMgoo 23 Snooly one
37 Sldmpy lOp 4 Justmedo 24 Eloelora
5 Cowlloy'o 28
Ill •
38P29 Chick-lo-be
shoul
31 Porto erllcle
640 Pottery
Whl .... 34 Medicinal
ptenl
lnogmenla
7 Swlndltd
Q B111NII'1
8 Sllclty lnllt 35 lllblla
Mel• Jlllyboan
36G.-e
.. Phyllcl
41 Y11, In
shapeo

bargaina.

~ ...r..~&gt;"':J~·"z~ar4"':""•

Timothy/Orchard
379-2290

lrwbll

promises

--... 21' 2007
By Bomloo- Olol
II you have the means and d&amp;sire to do
so. more travel than usual oan be a possibility tor you. Much of it oouk:l be spurof-the-moment. You'll enjoy It all. even
the sofooms that were unplanned _
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll19) - Your shOpping instincts will be 8ltoeptiona!ty quldl.·
wmed and acute, with lmpu&amp;se bUying
being some of your better decisions. This
should enable you to pick up some real

nt A

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

of

immediately

W~r:r!,

BIG NATE

we Deliver To You!

Bales

which

~Astro-

Addilions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construclion Interior Remodelin
Residenlial &amp; Commercial
740-985·4141 Office
74()..416-11134

Round

+2

claims.

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

EMPLOYMENT

Pass

returns a spade to his ~ng, and rufls his
last spade With dummy's heart jad&lt; (so
lhere·s no risk of an ove"utf by East).
Finally, Sou!h lrumf)ll a club bacl&lt; 10 hiS
hand. dtaws Easfs lhird !rump, and

III'CIIIII CansbacUon and
Bean Caalractlng

CI .ASSIFIEDS r

East
Pass
Pass
Pus

diamond ace, and continues With a !hlrd
tound, WliSI rutting eway South's queen.
Now suppose WeSI shills to a club.

THE BORN LOSER

26 Years Experience

5411HIIIutlnl

"-h.

have game values.
Wesl guesses well to lead !he diamond
two. East wins wnh his kilg, cashes !he

Concrete Work

't\t'10't8Q'

GITTIN'

MAimiED f!

Lll '\...,11 \Ll ' Ill'\

Racine. Ohio

-car

-

values, you support
partner at !he minimum level. (H you usa

I I \ \ I ...,

29670 Bashan Road

CIISIIICIIII

48G-ol
5 Bla -.ot1
olrlllogy
8 Plil on
50 Rich peslry
t 1 Ovid'I rou1t 52 A Slooge
12 Tlnl
53 Blob'o
13C.....,...

gamt~-invitational

www.--..lu:aMtt...,..«&lt;.

ROBERT
BISSELL

Gore

WIYII

This week, we are looking at raising
partner with only thr....card support.
The opener bids one heart 01 one
spade. When you, !he tesponder, have a
game-invitational hand With lhlee cards
1n partners rna.&lt;&gt;&lt;. you adopt a lwo-step
process. You bid a suil. then support
partner's major, perhaps with a jump. H
your fitst response is at !he one-liM!,
you must rebid !hree ot partners suit.
But ~ yout initial response is at the lwo-

WEA, ~ISSES

Free Estimates

H1ll s Self
Storayc

Nwtb
2•
2•

Two steps to raise
with three trumps

C:IWE~ATIG
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

"

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

FreeEstlmat. .

0% Financing - 36 Mos.
available now on John ·
i!DjQr-:':~~~~., Deere z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
llolSF.HOU&gt;
5.99% F1xed Rate on John
..___oiGoottii i i i iO, __pl Deere Gatol'tl CarmiChael
•
Equipment (740)446-2412

A K 7 5

••

74()-367·0536

\II 1, 1 II \\Ill" !

t

• K J 10 8

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-367..()544

FAR~I
F:QIJD'IIIENT

2

47 ~

)

South
• K 76
" A K Q 10 6
• Q J lO 9

Local Contractor

1 l.lnl-.tt'l'll l..,

io

•

740-446.0007 Toll Free 877-669·0007

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

·-·,.
and Female. 8 weekS Old.

.\. I I\ I ' I 1 11

* Rea~onahle

.. 7.

1 Ride lhe

15

Eoal
• Q 10
• 98 3

• 9 6 53

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

more into. call 740·7"2·
.:.
052'--'.8_
. ------,=

ck.......ruon bloodlines. Male

Gallipolis. Rent $400/mo.
Col Wayne (404)456-3802

*Prompt and Quality
Work

A 4.

West
. J98.&gt;32

MONTY

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Jim's Small Engine
Repair
741}992·2432
Gel ready tot spring
also selling ATV Pans
32119 Welchtown Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

SmaU Beagle Hound p~..~p-pies! Male &amp; female. For

a

• J $ z
• 8 6 43
• A Q 7%

·rfamihl 1•!:1'@8:1

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Call Gary Stanley ii&gt;

males 5500. female S600. 9

I

I

nished. Established 1975.

....... 74(}.76_7-4875

tion! 749 Third Avenue in

740-992-5929
740 •t6-1698

Re£erenct'~ Available!

A.KC,

pupp1es

e

antee. Local references lur·
Call 24 Hrs (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

RENTALS SALES
I SERVICE I FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
I

*Ex~rienc.:d

merle, $400. Shehies-AKC,

Vorkie

ypes concre

l

UrlCOO(jfiooal lifetime guar·

Wlnlwh, $400. CALL 74(}.
696-1085
Schnauzers. Giant

•"'

AU I

...

2000 Keystone
Coach
camper.
37.5
footer.
Excellent cOndition. 516000.
74Q-&amp;45-7273 or 74Q-256-

====-:-::--:---

1'w.·se
"---...Conc-te
----,

I

NEA CroiSword Puzzle
ACROSS

I

Pole Barns 30x•Ox10'$6.495. 40x80x12'=$12.995
Free Delivery Call (937)7181471 www.nationwtdepol&amp;-

for old. AKC Reg. Excellent
Modern 1 BR. No pel$. Bloodlines. 740-245-5823 or
$275/mo
includes 74o-645-t912
water/sewer. $200 deposit ~--:---:---:-~;:------:1740}446-3617
Full blooded Norwegian
- - - - - - - - puppies. No papers Call
Tara
Townhouse )94·895·3796 or 304·895·
Apartments, Very Spacious, 8835

• Payment could be the ,(304 73"'·3344
=::__ __
2 Bed&lt;ooms, CIA. I 112
same as rent
Apartment tor rent. 1·2 Bath, 4c1utt Pool &amp; Bab~
Mortgage
Locators Bdrm., rernocleled, new car- Pool, PallO, Start $425/Mo.
pet. stov~ &amp; trig .. water. No Pets. lease Plus
I'::I::"P.:":::I:""'ft::::"'r:::l:l (740)367·0000
sewer, trash pd. Uiddlepolt. Security Deposit ReQUired.
Duplex
tor
rent
m
(74C)367-7086.
•
Middleport , 2 bedroom $425 ·00· No pets. Ret.
18q&lt;fi&lt;ed. 74(}.843-5264
-------apartments, both recently
Tw'n
•
ov-... ~ ~..,.....remodeled. $450 upstairs Beaut1tul 1 bl/1ba, availabte ing "'nnlications tot wartirvl
~Hud-subsized. 1· ..br,
·•
and S475 downstairs. Extras right away. must see to list tor
~ sunroom. appreciate . cable ·--·
like new de.......
,.......,...up, apartmentJor
the
garage,
s!Of'agtt,
Call first. last, P'us depo$il, refer- elderly/disabled call 675Potnt Pleasant over
es Call 304·675·249
(740)992·5094 and leave eoces, (740)992-3543
6679
Equal
Housing
er 6:30
message.
_ _;;;;._ _ _ __. House lot &lt;ent .

tilewood

Oak

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

l nsta ~ trike

115 HP Me&lt;cu&lt;y&amp;9.9 HP
&amp; Johnson Ex. Cond.garage
$4500
kepi, many extru.
saki. 080. 740-388-8910.

Thu&lt;sday,
Satunlay
Sunday. (740)446-7300

pa&lt;l. 740-{;82-9243"'- Deli,..ed

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10:D0amlo6:00pm0NLV.
3and4&lt;oomfulniSIIedaptS. 6130
•·
~- • ct""" WID -UO· No oets. ----:c-:----,_ceptlng applications 1\.11 .r
New 2BR
apartments.
.. ....v.. Ref. and deposit required.
bedroom. 2-bath &amp; la........ ,
Washer/dru.Ar
hoc:*"•'.
""""" --~
740-446-1519
,.
~
room 2 stOfy ·~ wouo out - ' - ' - - ' - - - - - - - stovelrefngerator ~luded.
building. Stovre &amp; refr~ator
Also. units on SR 160. Pets
included Nice corner lot in
WelCOme! (740)441 -0194
Point Pleasant tst month$
deposit required $6001
Newty built 2br Apt. Stove &amp;
month. $600 Cleposi1. No
Relridg included, 3 miles
pets. Ava1lable April 1st.
from Gallf:dis Walmart 304·
593-8448 or :.D4-675-3400
740.446·9595.

NEW 2007 4 Bed

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel &amp;ams, P1pe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
on...ewaya &amp; Wa*ways. L&amp;l
St&lt;ap Me!all Open Mondo\'.
Tuesday, Wealesda~ &amp;
Fr&lt;lay, 8an&gt;-1:3()pm. Ctoood

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Commit - Begun - Saule - Peruse - ENEMIES
"Your wiU find," Gf"'llllll$ loetwed, "that having money
will buy a better class of ENEMIES. "

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�TueSday, March 20, 2007

www .mydailysentinel .com

Pa!!f 86 - The Daily Sentinel

Missing ~!\: Scout
found alive er 4 days
in N.C. wilderness, A2

Gizmos

Masons contribute to
·Holzer Hospice, A3

•

little help...

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,-,' 1 (

MOUUMATIC AUTOMATIC

IJL

DOOR OP~NING ~Y~T~M

I \ I :'-.. • \ o I. ) h . '\ o .

• Bucks convinced
they're better than
last time against Vols.
SeePage 81

By attaching "scary cat" graphic
panels to the toes of your shoes G),
the swivel harnessed mouse®,
automatically opens your
doors@ as you approach.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY
Mediation can save litigants
time and money while giving them a strong voice in
the proceedings.
Now a ,grant from the
Supreme Coun of Ohio has
made it possible for Meigs
and Athens Counties to have
a full-time mediator available to settle disputes pending on the couns' docket.
A mediator has already
been hired and has an office
in the Meigs County
Judge
Courthouse,

ADVERTISERS VISIT:

IIZIOSAIS.COI

May not
work in homes
with cats
To achutbt in tbis space

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Frederick Crow, Ill said
1\tesday. "Having 'a mediator here will be a real adv anlage to the county," said
Crow, noting that the same
one will be serving in both
Athens and Meigs counties.
"lbe main advantage of
having a mediation pro~·" the judge said, "is that
11 will get everybody to the
table to try to settle cases, to
come up with resolutions in
less time and at less cost to
the people involved when it
comes to attorney fees,"
Mediation is an alternative
to trial. It is an informal, confidential hearing in which the

mediator assists parties in
finding a mutually acceptable settlement to the case.
Voluntary settlements o~n
result in fewer legal expenses, and a quicker resolution
of the case.. Crow noted that
local cases are currently
being sent for mediation.
Five judges, including
Crow, and L. Scott Powell
of Meigs County, and
Robert W. Stewart, L Alan
Goldsberry, and Michael
Ward of Athens County all
worked together to secure
the grant.
Stewart, who has taken
primary responsibility for

securing as well as the
oversight of the Mediation
Services program said, "We
are pleased to be able to
offer mediation as an additional resource in Common
Pleas cases. Initially this
grant will fully fund the
program and give us an
opportunit~ to develop sustainability. '
Martha Camp has been
hired to serve as Mediation
Coordinator. She will be
mediating cases filed in the
General Division and the
Probate/Juvenile Division
of each coun.
Typical cases, according to

underhill

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Stewan, might include personal injury. business. malpractice, workers compensation, guardianship, child protection, and custody cases.
Camp is a resident of
Pomeroy and has been mediating cases for 20 years. She
was one of the founders of
Main Street Mediation
Service in Perry County and
more recently .staff mediator
for the Richland County
Court of Common Pleas.
She has been the recipient of
the
Ohio
Mediation
Association's Better World
Award for her contributions
to the mediation profession.

PASSPORT
in-home care
wait over

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Coli992-21SS

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Common Pleas Courts add Mediation Service

SPORTS

And these cat
graphics make an outstanding
fashion statement.

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·Gov. Strickland
overrides
budget limit

H

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
~ HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENT I NELCOM

POMEROY Meigs
Countians who qualify for
PASSPORT. a Medicaid Inhome care program, but
have been put on a waiting
list, won't have to wait any
longer for services.
Gov.Ted Strickland has
issued a directive that overrides the current budget
limit and redirects funding
to ensure that PASSPORT is
available to all senior citizens who qualify and
request services. He has
also called for the elimination of current waiting lists.
"Access to the popular
program that allows elderly
Ohioans to receive lessexpensive care in the comfan of their own homes has
now been expanded," said
Rick Hindman, director of
Area 8 Agency on Aging.
The agency which is a program of the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development District serving Athens. Hocking. Meigs,
Monroe. Morgan. Noble,
Perry and Washington

;¢!To

advertise
In this
spoce

call

OBITUARIES

992·2155

Page AS
• Althea Doris Miller, 96
• James D. Miller, 84
• Albert C. Howard, 61

INSIDE

The thinnest line weight closest to the light source
can also fade to nothing. This often happens to
the tops of cheeks when the lighting comes from
above or where there is a smooth transition
from one form to another.
...... . ····-····

• Long rifle exhibit
coming to Marietta.
See Page A3 ·
• March donations to
Holzer Pediatraic Fund.
See Page A3
• Meigs County Court
news. See Page A7
• Welsh students
celebrate St. David's
Day at ceremony.
See Page AB

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

H FIDD

Please see C.re, AS

'Relay' team
captain
meeting set

WEATHER

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which lived In t~ taw

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Cline speaking at Women in Business luncheon

INDEX

I I I IOIPitluiLI loi-

2

SEcrJoNs -

Annie's Mailbox

Joj

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

14-6

loi

Comics

87

loJ

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries

8 Section

S1&gt;0rts
•

Weather

AS

© 2007 Obju V.aley Publlobin&amp; Co.

•

•

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16 PAGES

loi
lei
loi

Nothing says spring has
arrived like a herd of first
graders storming the playground with the sun shining
above. Here, first graders
from Southern Elementary
play an energetic game of
tetherball which not even
Napoleon Dynamite could
BY BETH SERGENT
handle. while other class·
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSE NTINE L.COM
mates build bridges. ditches and roads in the gravel
POMEROY - Captains
for their toy cars to travel
, of teams participating in the
through. This year's
Meigs County Relay for
Farmers· Almanac says
Life are asked to gather for
spring arrived yesterday
a meeting at 5:30 p.m. on
evening at 8:07 p.m. with
· Thursday in the basement
summer set to make its
conference room of the
appearance at 2:06 p.m.
Pomeroy Library.
on June 21 .
The team captain s are
asked
to bring completed
Sor&amp;ont/pllotoo
team I participant registration forms w the meeting in
order to waive the $15 entry
fee . Refreshments will also
be served.
.
Courtney Sim. Relay· ~
Cline has been with WSAZ since team re\.'ruiter. said . beyond
1999 where she serves as the anchor receiving the official regisof tbe "First at Five" program and tration forms . the meeting is
contributes a weekly Cover Story for meant to provide informathe 5:30p.m. newscast. Cline said she tion on team development.
is proud of the Ohio Public Images Paul McClellan . income
Award she received for a story she did development director with
on the Passion Flower Project in the American
Cancer
Athens. highlighting tbe artistic tal- Society will be on hand to
ents of people with developmental provide that information to
the 27 teams already regi sdisabilities. ·
In her spare time Cline is a Big tered for this year's relay.
Sister with the Big Brothers and Big
"We will still take more
Sisters of the Tri-State and is involved teams." Sim said of those
in her church. Cline and her husband that wish to sign up for
Jasper are also busy parents of what is Relay but haven' t yet.

SERGENT

BSERGENTII&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Carrie Cline, anchor
for WSAZ's "First at Five" newscast,
will be the featured speaker at the
"Women in Business .. .Stories of
Success" luncheon at noon on April 4
at the Wil4 Horse Cafe.
,
Tickets to the luncheon are $10 and
seatin~ is limited. Those interested in
attending should RSVP with Brenda
Roush at 992-3034. The "Women in
Business .. ..Stories of Success" series is
sponsored by the Meigs County
Community Improvement Coqxmllion,
the Meigs County Commissioners,
Fanners bank, and the Meig~ County

.

..

./ '

Economic Development
Oflk'C.
Cline will share her
personal insights and
experiences in the
business world. talk
about obstacles she has
faced in her career, and
Cenle Cline offer advice for success for women in
toda~·s workplace.
·
Clme was born in Texas, grew up in
SL Louis. Mo. and graduated from tbe
University Of Missouri ' School Of
Journalism in Columbia, Mo. She has
reported and anchored newsca~ts in St.
Louis. Columbia, and Cape Girardeau.
Mo., before coming to the area.

.

P1111e -

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Pl11se see Ret.y. AS

.

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