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·.

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

•

.

www .mydailysentinel.com
'

Wednesday, Janaury 4,

}

•

It was not immediately
MBNA. the intensified Friday, Lerner met
credit - r~rd with hrs GM, Crennel and clear if Collins will remain
giant found- Co ll ins, who later said the with the team or take a posiBEREA - John Collin ed by his group had "renewed; our tion in Lerner's corporate
late father. vows."
joined the Cleveland Browns
holdings company: Phone
from the NFL office with the
AI Lerner.
However, it seemed 1hai message;; left for Coli ins at
reputation of being a strong
B u t irreparable damage had been his office and on his cell
Notebook C o I I i n s ' done to . the group's chem- phone were not immediately
negotiator in the boardroom.
Less than two years later. he
depru1ure is istry.
Savage
politcl.y returned.
left without saying a wonl
just the latest upheaval for the declined to comment on his
Following the Browns' 20Collins resigned Tuesday as Browns. who· ve been marked statu s · before or after 16 win over the Raven s.
the club's president, ending a by. chaos and controversy since Sunday's game. which he Collins sai d "thank s for
late-season power siruggle in returning tQ the leag ue 1999.
watched in Lerner's suite everythin g" before drjvi ng
On Friday, a repotl said the along with Collins.
Cleveland's front oftice that
ol'f in his car.
outraged already disgusted Browns were on ·the verge Of
Browns fans and nearly Jed to firing Savage. 'considered one
the firing of general manager of the NFL's top talent cvalua- .
.
Phil Savage.
.
tors. He will celebrate hi~ one,
CLEVELAND (AP) - ,Browns rookie wide .receiver
Browns owner Randy year anniversary with the club
Braylon Edwards had successful surgery Tuesday to repair a
·Lerner, hoping to put the· focus this week.
back on football , capped a ·few
Collin' adamantly denied torn ligament in his right knee and faces months of rehabilbizarre days of rumors and tur- that Savage's job was ever in itation.
Edwards, the No.3 overall pick in last year's draft, injured
moil by releasing a statement jeopardy, but only after rumors
m whtch he satd Collms ·had to the contrary led to a back- his knee trying to make a leaping ca~ch 111 Cleveland's Dec.
resigned and Savage and coach lash from fans. who swamped 4 game against Jacksonville. Edwards tore his anterior cruRomeo Crenne l will remain in the club's headqumers with ciate ligament when his knee buckled awkwardly to the
their current roles. Lerner will phone calls and e-mail mes- inside after he .landed stiff-legged on an incompletion:
assume Cop ins' duties until a sages two days before ·the seaHe missed the Browns' final four games, and had to Wait
new president is hired.
son' tinale against Baltimore.
until swelling in his knee subsided before he could have
Lerner said he hasn't set a
Savaoe
re leased a. state- surgery. A player typically needs eight months to recover
" also the
time frame to bring in another ment through
team.
from the operation, a timetable that co!lld make it difficult
" \ came to Cleveland for Edwards to he ready for Cleveland's 2006 season openexecutive and has no candidates. · ·
because of my belief in Randy er.
.
"My priority is to give the Lerner, his · integrity and his
But Browns coach .Romeo Crennel is hopeful Edwards,
general manager and head commitment to making the one of the team's top playmakers, will he bac.k sooner.
coach all the resources neces- Cleveland Browns a champi- , "I think that he '11 be able to do a little 'bit before then, and
sary to make the Browns sue- onship team," Savage said. " I 1) think that we'll be able to have an idea of what he's capacessfu\," he said.
at\1 excited about continuing as ble of doing, to a degree," Crennel said. "If he's out there
That's what L.:emer had in · GM and am more committed still limping in training camp, then we're going to ~ay, 'Hey,
mind when he hired Collins in than ever to this franch ise and. it's not going to work. He's going to need more time.' But if
May 2004. Lerner had met to helping the organization he's moving areund pretty well and ir looks like he can catch
Collins. a milrketing executive brin¥ the Browns fans a win- and run and all those things, then we'll be rnore encourwho helped broker more than ner.
.
.
.
$1 billion in sponsorship deals
The club said Savage will be aged."
Edwards finished with 32 catches for 512 yards and three
for the NFL, while doing bus;: . available to the media Jan. 9.
touchdowns.
ness · with the league for
As the rumors abou t Savage

EASTERN 53, RIVER VALLEY 49
RIVER VALLEY (44)
Cory Ehman 3 0·0 6, Jason Jones 1 0·0
3.BryanMorrow32·210,1anLewisOO·
o O, Matt Nibert 2 1·2 6, Michael Cordell
3 0·0
Tyler Thompson 2 1-4 5, Ryan
Henry 3 1-2 7, Scot Ward 2 1-1 5 Totals
19-64 6-11 49..
EASTERN (7·1)
Bryce Hona~er 1 4-6 6, Nathan Cozart
10 3-5 26, Alex McGrath 0 0-0 0, Michael
Owen 2 0-0 4, Marcus Guess 1 1-2 3,
Nathan Carron o O..Q O, l&lt;:yle Rawson 53113. Derek Roush 0 1-2 1. Totals 18-47
12·22 53.
R Valley 14 11 14 10 49
-Eastern 14 9 18 12 53
3-Point (~o·als-RV 5·24 (Morrow 2, ·
Jones. N.berl .' Cordell). E 3-10 (Coz~rt
3). Fouled f&gt;ut-none . Rebounds-RV
32 (Thompson 9), E 18 (Rawson 4)
Ass ists-RV 7 (Jones 2. Morrow 2), E 2
(Coza rt ,
Guess).
Steals-AV
5
(Thompson 2), E 10 (lou r tied w/2).
Blocks-RV 1 (Ward), E 3 (McGrath 21.
Turnovers - RV 11 , E 10. Fouls· - AV
·
20, E 14.

BY TOM WtTHERS
ASSOCIATEO PRESS

1:

Browns' Edwards has knee surgery
,

WAHAMA

Whips
from Page 81ter for the Defenders in the
v1sttors most produc'tive
eight minute span of the contest.
· _ ln the final canto Falcon
Coach Jame s Toth went to his
bench to finish out the basketball outing. Both .teams
scored just eight points in a
sloppily· played founh quarter with the White Falcons
ending the affair with the

se,

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTlAN 28
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (2·8)
Drew Scouten 4 1-1 9. Luke Stinson 1 34 5. Zach Carr 2 0-0 5, Kyle Scouten 1 00 3, Brandon Coughenour 0 3-4 3,
Michael Wright o 0-0 o. Nathan BrOWn o
0-0 O, Zach Weber 1 0-0 2, Henry Patr1ck
0 1-2 1. Richard McCready 0 0-0 0. Luke

"Thriller
from Page Bl
would have won the game.
Rio Grande made it difficult 011 itself, despite 64.4.
percent (29-of-45) from the
field for the game. The
Redmen shot a blistering 77
pe(cent ( 17-ofc22) in the
second half. The trouble
spot can1e at the foul line.
Rio shot only 48 percent
from
( 12-of-25)
.
'
. the charit.y.
.
stnpe.
In addition to Patt~rson 's
21 points, Hate Mtissey
added 17 points (I 0 in the
second half) and Bryan

'

easy 68-28 triumph.
WHS shot 53 percent frpm
the floor on 26 of 49 shooting
in addition to connecting on
·15 of 22' from the free throw
stripe. The White Falcons
enjoyed an overwhe lming
410-18 edge on the boards in
addi tion to comm itting :;w
turnovers wnh almost half ol
· .that number com ing in the
final period.
Ohio Valley shot a horrendous 17 percent m the game
but converte~ a htgh-qualtty
e tgh t of II trom the chan ty
, line. The Oefenders totaled

Officials: 12
miners hung a
curtain and waited ·
to be rescued, A2

HS Basketball
Scoreboard
.•

Browns president resigns, GM Savage stays

I

2006

18 rebounds and turned the points followed by Luke
ball over \9 times with 13 of Stinson and Zach Carr with
those coming in the first half. five points apiece. Stinson
Brenton Clark led all scor- · also led the Defend.ers with
crs on ·the evening with 12 six rebounds on the night.
points followed by Clay . Wahama will put its 5-l
Roush and .Casey Harri son record on the · line tonight
with II each. Kevin Wasonga when the Bend Area team
came off the bench to tally I 0 takes to the road for a pair of
points for the White Falcons games against St. Marys
with Brandon Fowler totaling before hosting Hannan on
eight
markers. WHS Friday. Ohio Valley will
received .eight rebo unds from· co~c\ude a .grueling nine
Roush with Clark hauling in · game a.way swing on Friday
when they visit Teays Valley
seven boards.
Drew Scouten paced Ohio be fore finally returning home
Valley offensively with nine next week against Hannan .

Redwomen
from PageBl
of-14 (28.6 perc~nt) from
three-point land and 10-of13 .(76.9 percent) from the
free throw 1i ne.
The Redwomen were outrebounded 53-39. Both
teams committed a high

Swiney 0 0-0 0, Totals 9 8-1, 28.
WAHAMA (5·1)
Brenton Clark 6 0·0 12, Casey Harrison
3 4-5 11. Clay Roush 4 3·3 11 , Kevin
Wasonga 4 2-2 10, Brandon Fowler 2 4·
4 8, Kameron Sayre 2 0-0 4, Brandon
Russell 1 1·2 3, Justin Arnold 1 0-0 2,
Gabe Roush 1 0·0 2, K911h Pearson 2 04 4, Thorsten Hornig 0
0, Josh
Pauley 0 1·2 1, Totals 26 15-22 68.
OVCS
1
3
16 8
28
Wahama 17 18 25 8
68 •
3-Point Goals-Ohio Valley 2 (K
Scouten. Carr) . Wahama 1' (Harrison) .

o-o

~

81

POCA 56, POINT PLEASANT 37
POCA(3·3)
.

Chns Burdene 0 0..{) 0, Josh Nett 4 0-Q
, 9, Seth Martin 0 0-0 0. Tyler Ragon 0 0o o. Drew Nutter 2 1·2 5, Alex Duran 0 00 0, Daniel Jarrell 3 1-6 7, Josh Jenkins
1 0-0 2. Jacob Thomas 0 0·0 0, J.W.
Ashworth 0 0·0 0, Tyler Sigman 10 12-1 2
33. Totals-2_0 14-2056.
POINT PLEASANT (0-6)
Trasawn Bonecutte r 1 1·2 3 , Stephen
Walker 3 o-0 6. Will $lone _2 ·o- 1 4, Jay
Ellis 0 0-2 0. Jared . Mea1ge 0 0-0 0,
Nathan R1mmey 3 1-1 9, Lasse Bartels 0
0-0 0, Josh Stover 4 1·3 9, Steven Perry
0 0-0 O: Steph en Browning 0 0-0 0.
Bobby Errett 3 0·2 6. Totals- 16 3·1 1
37 .
'
Poe&amp;
17 9 12 18 56 '
· Point
7
15 10 5
37
3-Point Goats-Poca 2 (Josh Non. Tyler
Sigman), Point 2 (Nathan Rimmey 2).

r

tne

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;ol'l·'\IS•\ol.-'\o.too
·•·•·

l 'lll i i{S\1\\
' ·• J\''
l ' \1')
- ' '1111
'
·"
".) ~,,

'

• Texas unseats USC for
nation.al title. See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - This ·past
Monday night Rlllland
Village Counci l saw three
new members take the oath
of office while three seats
remain v.acant.
Dean
Harris,
David
(_Mick) Robin son, and Gary
Thomas were given the oath
of office by Mayor April
. Burke. Harris ·was elected
to a four year term, while
Robin son and Thomas were
appointed by Burke for two
year terms.
.
. Burke said she has 30
days frorri Jan . l to appoint
residents to the remaining
seats and after that the deci sion belongs to council to
appoint the seats by major.ity vote.
Burke sa id · she hoped

those remaining ~ea ts cou\(1
" I think if we can do
be filled in a few months something positive it will
but for now she wanted the give everybody in' town a
nearly 500 residents of different perspective on
Ru'tland to know that they thing s," he said. "When
do have local government they see things happening it
in place for 2006.
creates an enthusiasm and
''I'm looking forward to helps everybody, not. onlv
working together with the in our village but it mush·.
new counc il ," she said opti- rooms over into other areas
~stically.
.
of the county."
'"Optimism is a common . Thoma s has lived in
sentiment amongst the new Rutland since \999 and said
council members.
he accepted th e appointHarris, 1vho has lived in ment because he wanted to
Ru!land fo r the last six t.ry and help the ~ommunity.
years, sa id that he ran for
"We want to get the viicouncil beeause he wanted \age out of the financial
to be part of .some positive state it 's in, that is definiteJy a ·priority, " Thomas said.
changes in the village .
He al so cited his desire to
Thomas also wants to
get the village financiall y make the vill&lt;ige look
stable as a ·primary goal as "more prese ntabl e" as he
well as cleaning the village put it Part of ·his plan for
up and looking for ways to making this happen is to
bring in development
work more in Vennari Park.

IS IT JANUARY? .

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Violet Larkin
'• Tina Lee 'Tiny Bug' St.
Marie

f

••

i
i
i
i Place Your Paid Classified Ad·ln Wednesday's
i Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pl~asant Register, or.
i
Daily Sentinel, And It Will.Run For FREE .In
••

••

•••
•
••

••

•••

.

'

The Tri-County Marketplace!
.
'

\

..

WEATHER
.
.

Details

On Page

AS

INDEX
Classifieds ;
·'

Comics
Dear Abby

RobinsDn ha s ideas of
utilizing the Rutland Civic
Center more and Vennari
Park to bring money into
the vill age. He also hopes
that the village can create a
draw by spon sori ng a festi val ~ imilar to .ones in other
'urrounding villages like
Ra cine which has a fall festival and Chester which ·ha's
Chester-Shade Days.
"We need to draw people
in for the day and get more
people involved ." Robinson
sa id . ·There are a lot of
chang es I'd like to see done
in Rutland."
·
This latesi version of
Rutland Village Co uncil
will meet for its first official regular session at 6
p.m. on Monday in council's chamber s to begin
some of tho!(e changes.

REED

Attorney. 197 ,000 ; Bureau
of
Inspection. 35,000;
.Planning .
Commiss ion,
7,000; Ju ven ile Court,
$93 ,588; Probate . Cour,
87 ·-783 ; Coroner. 26 .Il l . ·
Sheriff.
583.517 .04:
County
Court
,. 81,071;
.
Boar'd
of
Elections,
166.285: Maintenance and
operatioos. 1 187, 771.38;
Recorder, 74.32.8: Public
Defender.
60.000;
Agrjculture.
l 00.200;
County
Home.
228;
Soldier' s Relief. 36,450;
Veterans . Servic~. 80,548;
Plat Map and Hou se
Numbering. 150.000: Law
Liqrary. 5.000: Hi storical
Society. 7.000; Insurance,
12,000.
·
· Other county offices and
,en·ices
are
funded
through speciiil revenue .
includi·ng levy-fu nded programi and programs which
receive special tax support,
such as the county high-'
way ·
department, ·'
Tuberculosis .office and
health department. Those
agencies are not included
in general fund appropriation s. but commissioners
appro1e funding appropriatinns for tho se departments. as v.ell.

New entrance to Beech
Grove Cemetery

B~an

J. Reed/ Beth
sergenl photos

A3
B3-4 ·
Bs

Fire destroys trailer

on a . wurJ..ing trailer fire at Jeet~.ecl ·!he trailer a "total
-1:\6 p.m. . Llll Tuestlav. The lo&gt;S .
trailer "~" loc·atecl at ":155-1()
Snen firefi~htcr&gt; from
HARRlSON~ILLE A King Rtd;:e Road. home to Scipio re;poqJed ILl the
fire destroyed ·a · trailer on Belhi\n\ 1\.ing who wa~ 1101 'l:t.:'nc anU wen: a:-."--i~~~:J h\
Tue,da)
afternoon on King .home ~it· the ti me ,,f thL' fir~ lirdfghter'
r,,,m the
I
. Rid g ~
Road
between thou gl1 Whede r ·';t id 'h~ Rutland
\'olunteer
Fire
· i:hrrri .,onv illc and Paige vi I \c . wa, nearby 'at a ll~ tg hhor'' Dc:partm cnt .
Scipio Volunteer Fire residetice. ·
Thi s 11 " ' the Sci rio
Department
Chief · Carl
No in,ju rk' wcr~ rL·pnn~d V&lt;•lum~cr Fire: Dt·panmcnt\
Wheeler said that lm ~md the fir~ remaith und~r ·fiN .,·ail ''' thc 1&lt;'.1r. · The
t\cp;trtmcnt rcc~ i h: d a ,·a il 1111~'11!!.11"'" ·
\\'hc:c:k;r &lt;kp,trt mc'tll h;" 12 ' m cm ~r,
BY BETH SERGENT

A3

Editorials

A4

· Obitua~ies

As
B6

Places to Go

J.

POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioners
expect to approve their
2006 general fuhd budget
at . their
tnecting
on
"
Th urs d ay.
The $3.613.342 budget
was ·~o mpletcd lat e lJ ,t
week, and includes operating funds for courthouse
offices.
Commissioners
base th eir approwiatinns
for ge nera l fund depart•
ments on an ticipated rev'
emte as calculated by tlic
Me igs Coun ty
Budget
Lomnt ission. and
past
financial needs and expenditures.
. Commissioner
Mick
Davenport said last month
the re would be no major
changes in funditig to
cmtrthouse
offices.
although some expense'
are expected to rncrea se
this year. . including costs
insurance. the
0 ( health
co unt y's pub\ ic defender
contract• and !he county's
share of public a~sistanc·e :
Propo sed ~ppropriat io n s
for ge neral fund offices
.are:
Commissioner&gt;.
$ 1·47.6 10:
Auditor.
178,.186:
Tre a, urer. .
102.000;
Pr ~sec utin g

The calendar says
January, but
Wednesday's
weather .said
'springtime. With
temperatures in the
60's, it seemed
hard to belteve that
winter is here. but ·
few were complaining. For many. it
seemed like a good
day to get out and
enjoy the January
sunshine. Students
in grades 3·6 at
Mid·Vglley Christian
School took a stroll
along South Third
Avenue on their
way to the
Midd le port Library.
Meanwhile. Shawn .
. 1 Zora and Cameron
Roush were taking
a walk in Syracuse
yesterday after·
noon , white the
weather allowed.
Enjoy the weather
while .you cantemperatures are
expected to return
to the· 30's on
Thursday.

2 SEntONS ·,- 12 PAG.Es

Calendars

·

Commissioners to approve
office budgets Thursday
. BY BRIAN

.

•

"We've got a long road
ahead of us but I think if we
can work together it can
happen ," ThOmas said about
making the village look bet:
ter and gettin g the financial
outlaok back in black .
"I guess the main thing is
to just see the town come
out of the red," Ro.binson
agreed with his fellow
councilmen on prioritizing
their goals for the new
admi nistration ...
Robinson, who is origi nal ly from Findley has lived
in Rutland for four years.
"I am optimistic but it 's
·going to take a Jot of tim e
and it's somethin g that
won't happen overnight,''
Robinson added about the
village's financial condi tion. "I think it can be
brought out of the red and
into the black .''

BREED@MYDAIYSENTINEL .COM

INSIDE
• Sharon suffers lifethreatening
stroke; power
'
transferred to deputy
See Page /1.2
• TOPS awards lpsers .
See Page A3
• Bush, GOP l?wmakers
dump Abramoff donations
as party worries about
election impact.
See Page AS
• Alito receives 'well
qualified' rating from ABA;
friends, foes plan ad battle.
.. See Page AS
• Judge considers
evidence in teen's
.
deportation case.
See Page AS
• Ohio wooing Toyota for
possible assembly plant.
See PageA6
·
• Condemned inmate
says he won't ask.
govemor for clemency.
See PageA6

·

\\\\\\ , lll~•lad_,..,,.tllllh.'ln,ul

Council members ~worn in at Rutland

SPORTS

Bu sch tossed in 14.
ODU shot the hall well
also. nailing 49 pe.n:;ent (26of-53) &lt;if its' attempts. The...-.. ·
Panthers were 5-of-12 (41.7
percent) from beyon.d the
three~poi rit arc and 13-of-18
( 72.2 percent) ftom the free
thr(JW stripe . ,
' 'Rio our-rebounded OD,U. ·
27-25 a~d commi t.ted tive
more turnovers (I 5-l 0).
The two teams Wi ll hook
up again it1 the return
match. Jan. 31. The Redme n will look to
l'iui ld o n ·the wr n on
Saturday with a road trip to
Canton to tangle with the
Malone , Pione~rs. Game
time is set for 7:30 p.m .
number of miscues. ODU
tota led 27 turno·vers and
Rio posted 24.
T)le two teams wil l
rematch Jan . J I
tn
Columbus.
Rio will tra vel to a place
·that has been a trouble spot
·over 'years on Saturday
when it ventures to Canton
to play Malone. Game time
is set for 5:30 p.m.

· Couple in caged
children case say
they're willing
to change, A6

Sports ·

B Section

Weather

A6

~ ~ :.wo6 Ohio' Vulll'Y Puhli.~hlng r ·o.

Beth Sercent/ plloto

BSERGENT@MYDAI l YSE NT INEL.COM

••

Yesterday ·the long a'watted new entrance to Beech Grove
Cemetery was put into place ,· The ·setting of the posts and
placement of tile structure has been a joint effort between
Pomer9y vtllage wslfkers a~d Gheen lndustnal of Pomeroy.
However. Qheen ·s des tgned. assembled and patnted the piece
whrle Pome roy Councilman Todd Norton helped oversee the
project on beha lf ' of the vtllage. Although the final dollar
amount fo r the new entra nce has· ye t to be determi ned. it ts
expected to be near $2 .000 wtth levy rnoney ·trom the village·s
.
· ·
cemetery fu~d foottng .the bt\1. ·
,

.

..

�.

·NATION • WORLD·

The D~y Sentinel

SHARON SUFFERS UFE:-THREATENING
STROKE; POWER TRANSFERRED TO DEPU'n'
BY STEVE WEIZMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JERUSALEM - Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon suffered a massive, life-threat- ·
ening stroke Wednesday and
· un4erwent lengthy surgery
to drain blood from hi s brain
after falling ill at his ranch.
Powers were' transferred to
his deputy, Ehud OlmerL
Doctors placed Sharon on
a respirator and were trying
to save his life only hours
before the hard-charging.
overweight, · 77 -year,old
Israeli leade&amp; had been
scheduled to undergo a procedure to seal a hole in his
heart that contributed to a
mild stroke on Dec . 18.
_ 'Sharon's cerebral hemorrhage, or bleeding stroke ,
came at a time of upheaval
among Palestinian factions
in Gaza and in the midst of
both Israeli and Palestinian
campaigns .
election
Sharon's absence would halt
momentum toward further
peacemaking · with
the
Palestinians and leave a major vacuum at the head of
his new Kadima party, wh.ich
was expected to head a government after the March 28
vote.
In a writte-n statement,
President Bu sh praised
Sharon as "a man of courage
AP Photo
and peace." saying _he and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Vice-Premier Ehud
first lady Laura Bush "share Olmert attend a session 111 the Knesset, Israel's parliament. in
the concerns of the Israeli
people ___ and we are praying th is Tuesday June 14 file photo . Sharon was rushed to a hospital late Wednesday, his office said, after feeling unwell, less
for his recovery."
Israeli Chief Rabbi Yona than three weeks after suffering a mild stroke and just hours
· Metzger called on ·Israel is to before he was to undergo a heart ·procedure. A hospital offiread Psalms and pray for cial says Sharon has suffered a "significant-" stroke. If Sharon
Sharon. "We are very, very were to be incapacitated Vice Premier Ehud Olmert would take
worried," . he said, and over the· government.
prayed for · ·'mercy from
Goldstein. director of Duke security perimeter. Later,
Heaven ."
Pan-Arab satellite televi- Unive.rsity's stroke program. they surrounded Olmert's
"Bleeding i•1 some areas of re si dence in Jerusalem.
sion broadcasters beam ed
_t
he
brain. if it \ caught early Under Israeli law, Olmert is
out largely straightforward.
nonstop live coverage from enoug h. you can ac tu &lt;illy to serve as acting prirrie minoutside the hospi tal where have not a bad outco_me." he ister until Sharon can resume
his powers.
Sharon a particularly said .
Cabinet Secretary Yisrael
If it occurs around the
despised figure among many
said
Sharon's
Arabs - struggled for hi s brain or in a back area Maimon
authority
was
transferred
as
the
cerebellum,
it
to
known
life.
can
..
be
drained
more
easily,
01
mert
because
the
premier
A radical Palestinian
leader in Damascus , the often through a· hole in lhe was unqer general anesthet,
· Syrian capital, ca lled the skull. 'Bleeding deep inside ic .
the brain can require openOn Dec. 18, Sharon was
stroke a gift from God .
"We· say it frankly that in g the \kul l tu operate , he taken to Hadassah Hospital
from his office after sufferGod is great and is able to said. ·
Bul tn eenera l. _,uch . in~ the mild st roke. Doctors
exact revenge on thi s butcher. ... We thank .God for this stroke' ha1·e : , poo•' progno- satd he would not suffer
long-term effects, b~t they
gift he presented to us· on sis. Go ldste in said.
Sharon
,,-a:_
put
in
an
·discovered
a birth defect in
this new year.",Ahmed Jibril.
leader o f the Syrian-b•Kked ambulance :11- hi' ranch in the his heart that appa rently confaction Popular Front· for the ~C~L'\. f)C-.,L'r t after CO ill - tributed to the stroke.
fe eling
Sharon had been schedLiberation of · Pal estin e- pJaining · aiJlJUl
unwelL
The
stroke
.happened
uled
to check into the same
General Command. a s_mall
hospital
Thursday for a pro,)
radical group. told The during the hourlong drive to
Hadassah
l;lospital
in cedure to repair a tiny hole
Associated Pre ss.
_But a Palestinian con1men- Jeru,a lcm. ·Dr. · Shm ue l between the upper chambers
iator o·n the Saudi-owned Al- Shapira 'll i the hllspital told of his heart Doctors said the
blood clot that briefly lodged
Arabiya network offered Channel 10 TV
Sharon unexpected praise as · Dr. Shlorno Mor- Yosef: in Sharon's brain last month,
qf · Hada ssah- caus ing the mild stroke,
"the first Israeli leader who direL·tor
Ho&lt;pital.
said
Sharon su f- made its way through the
stopped claiming Israe l had
a · right to all of the fered "a siunificant stroke.'' hol e and from there to a craPalestinians· .Jand:- a refer- ''dding that 'he was _"under nial artery.
Sharon first came to
ence to Israe li 's recent wit h- anc..rhctic and r c'CC t\ : tn~
as an army offiprominence
. drawal from the Gaza Strip. breathin~ a""i"tance :" A fc\\:·
"Alive Sharon is bener for minule ' later.· Mor- Yusef cer, setting up a unit that
the Palestinian s now, despite emerged to say that initial fought Palestinian infiltraall the crimes he has co m- te&lt;ts showed Sharon had suf- · tors in the 1950s . Advancing
mitted against us." said fered a cerebral hemorrha~e . through the ranks · of the
army, he served as commanor bleGdin¥ in hi,_ brain ._ ~
Ghazi al-Saadi.
Mor- Yosel sa t&lt;! Sharon der of the Gaza region after
Sharon's personal physician said e"arly Thursday that had ·'massive bleeding and Israel captured the territory
he expects Sharon to emerge was bein g tran sferred to an in the 1967 war. launching
·
puni shing raids.
operating'theater··
'
from surge ry ''safely._"
After serving in the 1973
Shapira tha t· Sha ron· wa.s
"The prime mini ster is
· currently in surgery, it is taken to an operating rooin Mideast war, Sharon left the
proceeding properly," sa id to drain the blood after suf- -military and entered politics,
Dr. Shlomo Segev. "We need fering what he termed a forging the hardline Likud
to wait patiently. I expect "massive stroke .·" Israeli TV - Party,- which came to power
him to emerge from it safe- said the operation would in 1977.
. As defense minister, he
likely take several hours.
ly."
: Channel 2 TV said Sharon
Doctors checking Sharon directed Israel' s ill-fated
was suffering from para lysis late las t month said he · invasion of Lebanon in 1982
: in his lower body.
· weighed 260 pounds at· the and was forced to step down
Doctors who have not time of the first stroke but by an Israel i commission of
examined Sharon but are had sin ce lost mo're than six inquiry,, whic h found him
experts in the field said his pou nds and wa' otherwise in indi rectly responsible for a
chances of a full recove ry good he alth. Sharon i' about massacre of Palestinian s in
two l'efugee camps by
5-foot-7_
are slim.
"It's among the most danThe prime minister had Christian Phalangist so lgerous of all types of been raking blood thinner' dier, _
Sliaron re-eme rged as
strokes," with half of victims si nce the first stroke to preprime
min i,ter in 200 1, ai1d
_dying within a month. said vcm another clot. but such
Dr. Robert A. Felbcrg. a neu- drugs also rai s€ the risk ol two year; later he reversed
rologist at Ochsner Clinic 111 cerebml hemorrhages·, whic-h hi' course of decades of supaccount lor unlv abou t I 0 port fur Jewish settlement
New Orleans.
- "The fact that h ~'' on a percent of strokes. Other - con\lruction and e/(pansion
respirator
means
it 's possible causes of cerebral 111 the West Bank and Gaza,
extremely serious," said Dr. hemorrhages . a r~ .. ruptured promut in·g a plan for unilatPhilip Steig, chair of neuro~ blood vessels, an aneurysJn, eral 'wilhdrawal from Gaza
surgery at Weill-C orne l! or bulge in a vessel wall that a-nd part of the West Bank .
Medical Center in New bursts. or even chron ic .high The pullout was completed
· . in September.
York. However. he said that blood pressure.
The wi thd rawa l fractu red
Bluo_d thinner' niay not
depending on the seven ty of
his
Likud party. and he left it
the stroke, doctors may be have caused the latest stroke
able to sustaiD Sharon 911 a · but could hal'e made the Ill fmm Kauima with a platbleeding v.or'c and m;t)· form ol 'eek-ing a compro respirator for wecb,
Doctors rus hed ' Sharon accnun&lt; for its \~y crily. S1cig lll t'e f&lt;&gt;r peace wjlh th e
PaJc,tinian,. He wa; putting
into surgery. which could be said .
a good or a bad 's tgn ,
Security agents and police togethe r a list of candidate s
depending on the extenl, ' pread ou t .. around the · for the p,arli'amentary e.leclocation and duration. of lhe Jeru s:tlem htt'-pilal before lion when he fe ll ill
Wednesday ..
bl~ed ing. ,a id . llr. l-arry ShJ r'on :.trril'ed, 'elling up a
•

Page·A2

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 5, 2006.

Public meetings

BY VICKI SMITH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TALLMANSVILLE
With their , escape wutes
blocked by heavy smoke,
most of the 13 miners caught
in an explosion did wh;!t they
were trained to do:'-Jrhey
· retreated deeper into the mine
and hung a curtain,like barrier
to ~eep out toxic gases while .
they waited for rescuers to
find thern, officials said
Wednesday.
All but one were found
dead more than a day and half
after the blast.
The
miners'
families
learned of the 12_deaths during a torturous night in which
they were mistakenly told at
first that 12 of the men were
alive. It took three hours
before the families were told
the tiuth, and their joy turned
instantly to fury, with one man
lunging at coal company offi.cials.
It was tile nation's deadliest
coal mining accident in more
than four years.
The sole survivor, 27-yearold Randal McClo~, Jay in
' '
AP Photo
critical .condition wtth a col,
lapsed lung and dehydration This is a photo provided by the family of Randal McCloy, the
but no sign of brain damage sole survivor of the mine explosion in Tallmansville, W.Va. with
or carbon monoxide poisoning his son Randal Jr, taken in 2003. McCloy, lay· in critical condi·
after being trapped for more tion Wednesday with a collapsed lung and dehydration but no
than 42 hours, a doctor said: · sign'of brain damage or carbon monoxide poisoning after being
McCloy was one of fhe trapped for more than 42 hours , a doctor said. McCloy was
youngest miners in the group. one of the youngest miners in the group. Ben Hatfied, chief exectiti ve
of
mine
owner cy.
nicating with other moveInternational Coal Group Inc.,
"They felt the percussion ments.
said that the company did the and heard the noise," Hatfield
The · miners had · been
best it could under extreme said. '"We believe they proba- trapped 260 feet down since
stress and exhaustion, and that. bly encountered heavy smoke Monday morning in the Sago
officials "sincerely regret'' the and the ventilation system Mine. about I00 miles nonh-families were -left to believe was obstructed. They then did east of Charleston. As rescue
for so long that their loved what skilled miners do."
workers tried to reach the
ones were alive,
McCloy and the II others men, families waited at .the
. "In the process of being were found at the deepest Sago Baptist Church during a
cautious, we allowed the jubi- point of the mine, about 2 'I/2 grueling vigiL
lation to go on longer .than it miles from the entrance,
The mine has one ; haft with
should have," a choked-up behind a fibrous plastic cloth two shafts extending off 10 the
Hatfield said.
stretched across an area about left, forming a giant backward
He· s&lt;t\d the initial mistake 20 feet wide. to l&lt;;eep out dead- "F." One of · the dead was
resulted from .a: miscomrnuni- Iy carbon monoxide gas, found near the second left tum ·
· cation among the rescue ·Hatfield said. Such curtains, in the mine: the others were ·
crews. Another. ICG execu- called battices, are used · in found at the far end of the
tive, vjce president Gene mines to direct air flow, and shaft forn1ed by the top of the
Kitts, suggested the misunder- miners are trained to use them_ backward "F."
standing resulted because · the in an emergency.
Federal and state authorities _
rescuers who reached the vicEach of the miners in the said they would investigate
tims were wearing fuU-face barricaded area also had a
oxygen masks and used radios . breathing · apparatus that purl- the cause of the blast~ But coal
to report their findings to their fies the air and had been able mine explosions are typically
base.
to use it, according to mine caused by buildups of naturally occun·ing methane gas ~x
The last of the 12_ b&lt;;Klies officials.
were taken out of the mine at
The outlook for the · men highly cornbu,tible coal dust
midmorning. A former ele- appeared bleak on Tuesday in the •m.
Dav.id Dve . who heads the
mentary school owned by morning, whGn rescuers found
Mine
Sat'e1y and HealJh
·West Virginia Wesleyan deadly -levels of• carbon
Administration.
· said the
College was converted into a monoxide - a byproduct of
temporary morgue, where the combustion - in the mine , inve st igation wi II include
miners' families went to iden• and got no response when · ·'how emergency information
was relayed about the trapped
tify the victims.
they banged on a steel pipe.
The roadway leading to the
Hatfield refused to say _miners condjtions.''
MSHA alleged 208 violaschool was blocked by fire · whether the miners wrote
tions
of federal mine rules at
trucks to keep away sight- notes to their families.
seers. After identifying the
ICG's Kitts said the res- Sago in 2005, a number
. bodies, family members. were. cuers realized McCloy was "higher than what we would
driven from the school in alive when , they heard . his normally issue for a mine that
,
moans. Kitts said McCloy . size." Ray McKinney. adminpolice vehicles.
One of the dead was discov- may have been the farthest istrator of the age ncy's coal
erect seve!"dl hundred teet from away from the · bad air. division, said Wednesday. .
The mine's injury rate
where the others had barricad- Doetors said McCloy's youth
ed themselves in the .maze- may also have helped' him among employees per hours
like mine, officials said. survive; -most of the other · worked has also been higher
than the nmional average, he
Hatfield said the miner, found miners were in their 50s.
near a belt used to move coal
McCloy was in intensive said.
enforcement
The 208
to the surface, was apparently care at West Virginia
killed by the force of the blast University's Ruby Memory actions included 18 orders
The other men were appar- Hospital at Morgantown. shutting down parts of the
ently deeper into the mine at undergoing dialysis because mine until alleged violations ·
the time and survived the of damage to his kidneys from · were corrected, MSHA offiblast. But the mine company dehydration . Dr. Lawrence cials said, adding that none
said
!'vlcCloy were considered serious
would not say exactly how Roberts
they died or how long they squeezed his wile's hand on enough _to shu(ter 'the entire
survived, citin~ family priva- Wednesday and was commu" operation.

-AEP contribution. fully
funds its pension plans
COLUMBUS- American our pension plans,but · we
Electric Power. made a $320 believed it .was very imorm'illion cash contribution tant to invest in the future
Dec . 29 to . fully fund its financial well -bei ng of our '
pension liabilities. The com- employees, retiree ~ and their
pany announced plans in . dependents. Fully funding
early 2005 to fully fund its our pension plans also will
pension program by the end ·- enhance our . balance sheet
of the year.
and reduce our tax liahili "As lawmakers' debate . ties."
how to address growing
AEP contributed : approxi pension insurance liabilities, mately .$626 million to it s
we are very pleased to have pension funds in 2005 to
achieved our goal of full fully fund the plans . The
fundin g our pension pro- AEP retirement trust curgram ,". said AEP .Chairman . rentl y holds more than S4.1
Mi cha el G. Morri s_ " We · billi on in asse ts, covering
weren't required to make pension obl ig ations for more
additional ,investments _into than 40.000 individuals .

·BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

OFFICIALS: 12 MINERS ·
HUNG A CURTAIN AND.
·WAITED TO BE RESCUED

'9.95~

!

4!' lClCCP ,
~ ;
( Surf up 1o 6X la.~!!!0 1
jlJit u mont

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S'en Up Onltn•l www.LocaiNet.~om

•

Friday, Jan. 6
Bedford ·
POMEROY Township Trustees organizationa! meeting, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Jan. 7
CHESTER
-Chester
· Town'ship Board of Trustees
2005 year-end meeting, II
a.m., with 2006 organizational · meeting following , at
Chester Town Hall.
PORTLAND -· Lebanon
Township Trustees, 9 a.m.,
township building.

Village Council, regular sesMIDDLEPORT - Bethel
sion, 6 p.m., council's cham- 62; International Order of
bers.
. Jobs Daughters, semi-annual
installation of officer&gt;. 2:30
p.m.
Lindsey
White.
installing officer. -Kristen
Davis, honored queen elect.
Ope_n meeting.
Thursday, Jan. 5
SYRACUSE - Wildwood ·
Monday, Jan. 9
·
POMEROY
-· Meigs
Garden Club, 6:30p.m. at the
home of Joy f!entley. ,· Sara County Republican Party,
~oush to present program on 7:30 p.m., courthouse. _Pian$
"Constructing _Birdfeeders for Lincoln Day Dinner.
from Recycled Materials."
- Mei gs
POMEROY
TUPPERS PLAINS Band Boosters , 6:30 p.m.,
T
PI ·
VFW band room .
uppers
ams
Auxiliary, 7 p.m. at the halL
.· CHESTER ChesterThursday, Jan. 12
Shade Historical Association
CHESTER- Shade River
will meet at 7 p.m. . at the - Lodge 453, stated meeting,
Chester Courtouse.
7:30p.m. Refre shments.
RACINE
- Racine
Friday, Jan. 6
Chapter 134, O.E.S., 7:30
HEMLOCK, GROVE
p.m. at the hall . _
Meigs County Pomona
Grange, 7:30 p.m., Hemlock
Grange Hall.

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Saturday, Jan. 7
Saturday, Jan. 7
PORTER
- Mike Harmon
SALEM CENTER -Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior will be -preaching at 6 pi.m at
Grange #878 , regu'lar ses-- the Clark Chapel Freewill
sion , potluck supper at 6:30 Bapti st Church. Bad weather
cancels. For inforamton call
p.m. \ meeting at 7:30.
Clyde Ferrell, pastor, 388' Sunday; Jan. 8 .
8075.

Monday, Jan. 9
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Water Beard, 7 p.m. at village hall.
RUTLAND - . Rutland

-.TRANSFERS POS'fED
'

'

POMEROY
- Mei~s D. Jay Rees, to Dwight Hill, George Knight, Marcia J.
Knight, to John Blake; Janet
County Recorder Kay Htll · Lorna Hill , right of way.
Jeffrey A. Napier, Nancy Blake, sheriff's deed, Village
rep011ed the following trans- fers in real estate:
A. Napier, to Raymond E. of Middleport.
Robert King to Carol S.
Keith A. Collins, Marjorie Haren, Kriss T Haren, deed,
Brewer, Darrell W. Brewer,
L. · Collins, to Ernest Rutland. '
Gregory McCall, Debra J. deed, Salisbury.
Calaway, Teresa Calway,
Norman
Hamlin
to
McCa-ll , to Tuppers Plains~
easement, Orange ..
Phyllis R. Cirde, Orbis Chester Water District, right Columbus Southern Power
Co., easement, Lebanon.
Enterprises, LLC, James G. of way, Bedford.
Patricia L. White, Paul D.
Circle Living Trust, to
George Mather. Munch a .
White'
,
to
Columbus
Bashan Road Partnership, Mather, to TP-CWD, right .
of way, Chester: ·
Southern Power Co., ease'
· affidavit, Stitto'n.
- Bashan Road Partnership,. . Opal Mather to TP-CWD, ment, Bedford.
Jeff A. White, Debora
Orbis Enterprises, LLC, right of way, Chester.
to · Colnmbus .
William White, Carolyn White,
Phyllis R. Circle, James G.
Circle Living Trust, Phyllis White, to TP-CWD, right of Southern Power Co., easement. Bedford.
R. Circle Living Trust, to way, Chester.
II if J. Hess, Betty Hess, to
Joseph
P.
Roderus,
Amber
Phyllis R. Circle, James G.
D. Roderus. to TP-CWD, Columbus Southern Power
Circle, deed, Sutton.
Co .. easement, Sali sbury.
Phyllis R. Circle, James G. right of way, Sutton.
Terry Brewer to Columbus
Michael
Wolfe,
Lora
Circle. to Darin J. Roush,
Power Co., easeSouthern
Wolfe, to TP-CWD, right -of
deed, Sutton. ·
ment, Salisbury.
Wells
Fargo
Bank , way, ·Bedford.
Brian Full\, Deborah Fulk,
James J. Presutti, Barbara
Ceqificate
Holders, - to
Charles F Chancey, deed, A. Presutti, to TP-CWD, . to - Nathan . Brady, Terry
Brady, Daniel Puskas, Ricky
right of way, Chester.
Rutland.
.
George W. Stout,• Pauline Brady, Darrell -Clark, deed,
F.
Sayre,
Charles
deceased, to Thomas P. Stout, George Stout, -to TP- Salem,
Brian Fulk, Deborah Fulk ,
Morrisey, Anita J. Morrisey,_ CWD, right of way, Scipio . .
to
Terry Grady, Nat han
Donald
W.
Crabtree, .
deed, Chester.
Daniel
Puskas,
Irene M. Blake; deceased, Barbara J_ Crabtree, to TP- Brady,
Donald Rollin s, Daniel
to Charles J. Blake, deed, CWD, right of way, Scipio.
John W. Tillis, Patricia B. Henry Fulk, deed, Salem.
Olive.
Leland .Shumway, Jr.,
Delmar Quickel, Hilda Tillis, to TP-CWD. right of
deceased,
to ·
Phyllis
Quickel, to Lesa Quickel. way, Scipio.
certificate,
Scott Lallier, Jill Lallier, to Shumway,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
,
Jeffrey A. Gibbs, Joyce A. TP-CWD, right of way. Chester.
David
F.
Campbell,
David
Gibbs, William E. Gibbs, Scipio.
Donald E. Brooks , Judy !;): Campbell, to Edward E.
· Lorraine M. Biggs, to David
B. Owens , Linda .Owens, Brooks, to TP-CWD, right Patterson, Jr.. deed, Village
of Pomerov.
of way, Scipio . .
deed, Salisbury. · Guy Sargent to Gary I.
Diane Lee Bachtel. Ronald
Michael L. Proffitt to
Homer L. Proffitt, deed. Bachtel, to Willis Durst, Carmen, Jeanette V Carmen,
Sharon S. Durst, right of deed, Bedforct'. .
Sutton.
Gary I. Carmen, Jeanette
Robert King to Carol S. way,' Village of Pomeroy.
Donnie Ray, Crystal Ray. V Carmen. to Guy Sargent.
Brewer. Timothy J. King,
Connie Caines, Andrew deed, Sal is bury. _
' deed. Salisbury.
Paul A. VanMeter, Angela
Freda Carpenter, deceased, Caines, to Connie Caines.
Irene
Kennedy, to Keith G.
Andrew
Caines,
deed.
· to Greg P. Garretson, deed,
Kennedy, deed, Rutl and .
Salem.
Lebanon.
Everett T Calaway to
Homer W. Belt, deceased .
·Mary Jane Armes, Roy K.
Robert
J. Lawrence, Julie. A.
Armes. to Cllfol A, Taylor, . Shirle~ G. Belt. deceased, to
Carol A. Cundiff, deed, Chrisune D. Robinson, a!li- Lawrence , deed. Lebanon .
Joseph D. LOftis. Cora ·A.
davit, Lebanon.
Village of Syracuse.
Loftis,
to Mark D. Peart.
Charles
D.
Fridley.
Nancy
· Elizabeth C.
Horton.
'Elizabeth C. Dalrymple , , to E, Musser, Nancv E. Hill , . deed. Scipio.
Green Tree
Financial
Dale F: Dalrymple, deed, Loretta M_ Wagner, Loretta
Scipio.
· M. Severn, ·Mark Severn. Servicing. Conseco Finance
Troy L Bearhs to Ryan Deibert W. Fridley, . Larry Servicing. to Rocky J. Hupp.
Combs, S.tefani Combs, Fridley, Joy Fridley, to Mark Emily E. Hupp , deed.
E. Casto, Bulah G. Casto, Village ol Pomeroy.
deed, Chester.
. Rodney R. Rou sh to J.P.
·.
Harry E. Stobart, Sr., deed, Salisbury.
Morgan Chase Bank, Bank
Barry
W.
McCoy,
Deborah
deceased, Harry E. Stoban,
One.
Block
Mortgage
deceased, to Mary M. L. McCoy, to Bruce W.
Fisher, deed, Suuon.
. · Finance, sheriff's deed.
Stobart, affidavit, Letart:
Village, of Middleport.
Neale
'
G.
Kni
ght,
Ne;\le
Tina M. Rees, Jay Rees.

For the Record
Marriage licenses Highway ·Patrol

Proud to be apart of
· your life.

• ln$11m Melaagii'IQ . Keep your ltUddy lllt1
• 10 HNIIddl'ttMt wftll Wttlmllll
• FJU:E TtcMiCII $\lppor\
• CUlton~ Stln Ptgt - New~ Wuhr &amp; I!'O"'i

Thursday, Jan, 5
SYRACUSE - Syracuse _
Village C.ouncjl, 7 p.m . at
village hall,
SYRACUSE - · Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
Syracuse village hall .
.
RACINE
Racine
Village Council. 7 - p.m. ,
- organtzauona 1 meeting with
. regular council meeting to
_· follow at municipal building.

POMEROY - Marriage
licetises JM!ere issued in
Meigs CoJnty Probate Court
to John Leon Jeffers, 36. and
Marion Sue Shulaw. 40, both
of Syracuse; Kenneth Louis
Crossman , 55, and Belinda
Mari e Bailey, · 32, both of
·· Reedsville; Matthew ·William
Mullin s, 21, and Nicole
Ashley
Burman,
18 .
Pomeroy ;
Donald
Ray
Lambert. 21, and Tiffany
Michelle
Manley, , 19.
Racine: and Joel Tyson
Harris, 20, Gallipolis, and
Bdll any · Lynn Settles, p.
Pomeroy.

PageA3

TOPS awards
losers.

:thursday, January s.

2006

.Gay son .wanting to adopt is
puzzled by parents' opposition
beliefs . However, it might be
DEAR ABBY: I am a 43helpful if you were to ~ontact
year-old gay male who has
P~FLAG (Parents'and Fnend&gt;
always wanted to be a father.
of
Lesbians and Gay') and
Last night I informed my parget their· literature to share
ents about my decision to
with yow p~rents. Yo.u can
adopt a boy who is 7 _
Dear ·
contact P-FLAG. by going to
My parents reacted as if I'd
Abby
www.pflag :org or writing to
walked in and told them that I
1726 M Street
N.W..
had murdered someone. My'
Washington. D.C. 20036. .
mother said she was di sgustPlease don't ppt it otT
.ed and became almost physiWhile
it's not impossible to
cally ill. My father was le ss ·
teach an old do g new trick, , il
· dramatic but no less diswith both of your parents and can take time 'to broaden lhe
pleased.
I have no past history that make sure they understand . horizon s of people who&gt;e
would cause them to react that according to an article minds have been closed for
thi s way, nor do I have any published by the American . half a century or more . My
criminal past (or present) that Academy of Pediatrics back advice is to start ASAP. I
would cause them to react so in 1994, .''Most child abuse wish you luck . .
DEAR ABBY: When 111 )
vehemently against adoption. appears to be committed by
I don't understand what their situational child abusers who father ilnd I -are in his car and
present themselves as HET- he's taking me 'omewhere. he
problem is.
·
.EROSE~UALS.''
(The italics tries tO· scare me by touching
I. know they worry that the
child will come with familial ·are mine. ) Also, "Children my knee and sayin g. --BOO'"
baggage and I'll be expected raised in gay or le sbian I have told him I don't like it
to support others -. or that households do hot show any and asked him not to do it
any inheritance I receive will greater incidence of hdmo-. anymore. but he keep' on
go "outside the family." sexuality or gender identity doing it. He thinks it's funny.
hut I don't. Am I overreactHowever, my blood family issues than other children."
Further, according to the ing 0 - - UNCOMFORTA-BLE ·
ends with me, whether or not
American .
Psyc hological IN MONMOUTH. ILL.
I adopt.
·
DEAR
UNCOMFO RT.
My parents are c,onsider- Association, '" there is no eviably older. Is there something dence 'to suggest that lesbian s ABLE: No),, J.OU are not. Your
I am not aware of from the or gay men are unfit to be father's behavior is inapproWorld War II era that would parents or that psychosocial 'priate and a little sadistic. He
cause my folks to be ·so development among children shouldn't be touching you in
opposed · to adoption° I'd of gay ·men and lesbians is a way that - you have askedappredate some advice, as I compromised in any respect . .him not to . Tell your mother
. navigate this difficult time.- relevant to that among off- that he' s making -you unco[llTAKEN ABACK IN GEOR- spring of heterosexual par- fortabl e. and if that doesn't
GIA
.
ents. ___ Indeed, the evidence end it, tell a trusted teacher or
DEAR TAKEN AllACK: to date suggests that home counselor at schooL
Dear Abby is wriNen by
Your mother could _ still environments provided by
believe the homophobic and gay and lesbian parents are as Abigail Van Buren, also
mi staken notion that a gay likely as those provided by ktrown as Jeanne Phillips,
man adopting a boy means he heterosexual parents to SUP- and was founded by her
will molest the child. That PORT and ENABLE chi!- mother, Pauline Phillips.
Dear _ Abby
at
· would explain her extreme dren's psychosocial growth ." lti·ite
(Italics
are
mine
.)
www.DearAbby.com
or
P.O.
negative reactjon to your
Not knowing. your parents, Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
good news.
I
don
't know the_basis of thei'r 9()(169. .
. My advice is to ialk frankly

Experts: Study brings big
advance against ovarian cancer
BY UNDA A. JOHNSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Pumping heavy doses of
chemotherapy drugs right into
the abdomen boosted survival
of women with advanced ovarian cancer by 16 months in what
experts call the first big advance
in more than a decade against
one of the most lethal cancers in
women.
There's a high price, though:
The treatment 'is so tough that
nearly 6 in I0 women in a study
could not endure it and
switched to standard intravenous chemotherapy. Side
effects included abdominal pain
from bloating and problemswith the catheter used to infuse
the dmgs.
- Still, the National Cancer
Institute is urging, doctors to
begin using the procedure. its
first el]dorsement of any cancer
treaunent since 1999. Six medical groups focused on ovariancancer joined in the recommendation.
·The study was reported in
Thursday's _ New England
Joumal of Medicine.

Dr. Steven A. Cannistra of
Harvard Medical School wrote
in an editorial that the 16-month
jump in-survival "is one of the
largest benefits ever. observed"
from a new therapy for gynecOlogic cancer.
About 80. percent of women
are diagnosed after ovarian cancer has spread because early
symptoms are so mild. It is the
top killer among gynecologic
cancers in this country, Last
year. about 22,200 American
women were diagnosed and
about 16,200 died from it.
according to the cancer institute.
Fewer than half its victims survive_five years after diagnosis.
To improve oo that, doctors at
doze\'[S of U.S. hospitals. led by
-Dr. Deborah Armstrong at
Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer
Center, compared chemo regimens in 415 women. Each had
surgery to remove ovariatl
tumors. but some hard-to-reach
cancer c~lls remain in the
abdominal cavity. It's tough for ·
IV chemo drugs to reach those
cells, and there 's a limit to how
high a dose can be given
through the bloo:lstrean1.

AdvantraRx

Half the women in' the studv
got standard intravenous
chemotherapy with Taxol and .
cisplatin. The others got IV
Taxol, then abdominal infusions
of cisplatin and more Taxol at
high doses.
· The drugs were given ·
through an implanted seal wiL'l
a catheter. or tiny tube. hanging
_down into the abdominal cavity.
The women rolled back and
forth to bathe all the cancer cells
in the mixture .
·Median survival was about
four years and two months for
. women who received only IV
chemotherapy. but was just over
5 112 vears for women who also
got at least some of the abdom- ·
ina! chemotherapy.
.
But only 42 percent could tolerate all six cycles of abdominal
chemothempy.
·
"It's not perfect. but it is certainly a major improvement in
outcome." the biggest -in {)varian cancer since Taxol ~·as introduced nearly 15 years ago. said .
Dr. Richard Barakat. chief of
gynecologic oncology at
Memorial
Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Cem~r.
'

HUMANA.

. COOLV ILLE - Shurnn
HARRiSONVILLE
Powell
was . named wecklv
Chelsea R. Noel. 16. 41135
Gibson Road . Albany. was best ' weight-loss winn.er
cited for failure to control hy and Jodi Bailey t11e quarthe Gallia-Meigs Post of 1he te rl y he't weight-los&gt; winner al Tuc,.Jay\ meeting of
State Highway Patrol follow -. TOPS !Take Off Pt\und, .
ing ·a one-car accident
Sensibly} Chapler - #OH
.
- '"""" for .,.,
Tuesday on Ohio 143.
2013.
Troopers said Noel was
May Fmst and Sandce
northbound
in · -Scipio
Wri ghl
·recci\'cd
pin~
Township at 4 p.nl. when 'he earned in the grape contest
lost _co ntrol of lhe car 'he
and Wright wa' presented
-drove. which then went off
a special KOPS I Keep Otf
Qual it~ Prescription Sen-ic~
the. right side of the road ,md Pound' Sensibly) pin hy ·
Kenneth McCullough, R. P~.
HOURS
at Comp&lt;•tive Prke'
into a ditch.
Charles Riffle R. Ph.
leader l':tl Snedden
Mon • frt 8on1 • Spm
The car had disabling dam. Prescription Ph. 992-2955
. The gruup mcc1 . :~ e\ t'l"}
l.;tilil~ Pa~· ment~.
Sot. 8om · 5 pm
age, according to the teport. Tucsdav at Torch Bapt i,l
Ill East Main Street
Mot!- Sat Ham-6pm:
Sun. CLOSED
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sal. !lum - 3pm
Churcl1. \\'eigh-i.n i' from
5:15 ttl 6:15 [1 .111 \\ilh "'
Open .Weeknighis 'TillS • Fi'lendly Service
mecli ng ,,t 6:30.

Proud to be apart ofyour life,

l-.f

'.·

rammunity
'CareR)( .

�j

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The ~aily Sentinel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publ.ishing Co.

Jt

~I .

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich .
General Manager-News Editor
•

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

TODAY IN .HISTORY
Today ts Thursday, Jdn 5, the ftfth day of 2006. There are
360 days lett m the year
Today's Htghlight m Htstory
On J,m 5, 1896, the Austnan newspaper Wtener Presse
reported the dtscovery by German physiciSt Wilhelm
Roentgen of a type of radtatton that came to be known as Xrays
On this date:
In 1589. Catherine de Medtct of Frimce died at age 69.
In 1781, a Bnttsh naval expedition led by Benedtct Arnold
burned Rtchmond. Va
In 1895, French Capt. Alfred Dreyfus, convicted of treason,
was publtcly stripped of hts rank: (He was ulttmately vmdicated.)
In 1925. Nellie T. Ross succeeded her late husband as governor of ·Wyoming. becomtng the first female governor in
U.S. history
.
In 1933, the 30th prestdent of the Umted States. Calvin
Coolidge, died m Northampton. Mass., at age 60.
In 1949. in hts State of the Umon address, Prestdent Truman
labeled hts adnumstration the Fair Deal.
In 1981. Bnttsh poltce charged truck dnver Peter Sutcliffe
wtth murder. he was later convtcted of ktlling 13 women as
the "Yot kslme R1pper ..
In 1994. Thomas P. "Ttp" O'Netll, former speaker of the
U S House ot Representattves, died in Boston at age 81.
In 1998. Sonnv Bono. the 1960s pop star-turned-politician,
v.us killed when- he "ruck a tree whtle skting m South Lake
Tahoe, Caltf, he was 62
Ten ye&lt;uS ago An end to a thtee-week-old partial govern. ment shutdown was 111 stght as the House acted to restore the
JObs and wages of hundreds of thousands of federal workers.
Lawyers for Hillary Rodham Cltnton released sought-after
b1lling records that were discovered the day before m a Whtte
House office Japanese Pnme Mtmster Tomitcht Murayama
restgned
Ftve years ago In a bltzzard of last-m mute_ executtve
orders, Prestdent Clinton curt&lt;ttled road butldmg and loggtng
on federal forest lund
One year ago Prestdent Bush opened a new drive for caps
on medtcal malpractice awards, contendmg the llmtts would
lower health care costs The bodies of 18 young Iraqi Shittes
.taken off a bus and executed m December 2005 were found m
a field near Mosul Cpl. Wassef All Hassoun, a Manne
charged wtth desertton m Iraq after mystenously dtsappearmg
from his post was again declared a deserter - thts ttme for
,
failmg to repon to hts U S base.
Today 's Btrthdays Former Vice Prestdcnt Walter F.
Mondale ts 78 Actor Robert Duvall is 75. Football Hall-ofFame coach Chuck Noll ts 74 King Juan Carlos of Spain ts
68. Talk show host Charlie Rose ts 64. Actress-dtrector Diane
Keaton ts · 60. Rhythm-and-blues musi&lt;nan George "Funky"
Brown (Kool an,d the Gang) is 57 Rock mustcian Chris Stein
(Biondie) ts 56 Actor Clancy Brown ts 47 Singer In s Dement
i!i 45 Rock music tan Kate Schell en bach (Luscmus Jackson) ts
40 Actress Heather Paige Kent ts 37. Rock smger Marilyn
Manson ts 37 Actress January Jones ts 28
Thought for Today "Wtsdom is dtvided tnto two parts: (a)
havtng a great deal to say. and (b) not saying tt ·• Aoonymoo•
1

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EDITOR
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Inside Meigs County
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26 Weeks
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52 Weeks
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Thursday, January 5,

. Look to.'06for Bush's agenda to rebound

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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'

Pagei\4. .

WASHINGTON - . The
Whtte House ts working this
week on Prestdent Bush's
2006 legislative agenda, even
tliough m0St, of his maJOr recommendattons wtll be last
year's leftovers
That's because a dtvided
Congress, marked by post·
election btckering at its worst,
couldn't agree on some of
Bush's most atnbttious proposals: Social Secunty and
immigrauon reform, making
hts tax cuts permanent,
extending the Patnot Act 's
anti-terronst provtstons for
another four years, and minuscule five-year budget cuts to
keep the deficit on a down·
ward trajectory.
Congress dtd accomplish
some important things last
year, despite the political
trench warfare among Senate
Democrats, who used the fillbuster to block votes they
knew they could not win
under majority rule.
The Central Amentan Free
Trade Agreement (CAFTA)
gave the free·trade agenda a
much-needed push. The confmnallon of John Roberts to
be Supreme Court chief justtce
moved the htgh court in a
more conservative direction
There were other preliminary votes that suggested
maJOnty support for Bush's
remaimng objecuves, includmg an early Senate vote to
dnll for ml 111 the Arcttc
Nattonal Wildlife Refuge

(which was blocked in the
Senate's final days last month
on parltamentary grounds),
and House approval of Bush's
captial gains and dividend tax
cuts
But tt was ii dtsmal legtslative year overall that earned
poor marks from voters,
marred by numerous distractJons: House· MaJonty Leader
Tom DeLay's presumably
temporary resignauon under
trumped-up charges of cam·
paign money-laundering, the
White House's focus on the
CIA leak mvestigation that
turned out to be· much less
than It appeared; the Catastrophic damage intltcted by
Humcane Katnna that led to
gleeful tinger-pomting by
Democrats: and a funous
Democrattc offensive on the
Iraq War agamst a Whtte
House that for months seemed
to have lost tt~ zest for political
battle.
OK, that wa' last year and
this is now. The White House
has certainl'y regamed the
offensive on Iraq, as witne.ss
Bush's 10-pomt surge m his
JOb approvaj polls. The economy is strong, wtth a welltimed Conference Board survey last week showing a sharp
mcrease in consumer confidence gomg mto the new year.
Gas prices have fallen So
have home pnces, as the overheated housing boom cools
somewhat Even mortgage
rates, defying all predtctions,
have declined in recent weeks.
which ts good news for home-

buyers.
Now Bush has a chance to
take advantage of this sunny
wmdow of opportunity to
make the case for enacung the
administration's unfini ~ hed
agenda and maybe win one or
two new initiauves sti II on the
drafting table
Iraq and the war on terrorism remam at the top of hts
agenda and wtllloom over the
year's events Vistble success
in Iraq will strengthen hts
hand in Congress and hts
party's credibility on national
security, too, as they prepare
for the midterm elections.
Certainly Soctal Security
reform, which dominated last
year's domestic debate, is
going nowhere for now, but
that clears the deck for other
d\)able legislation.
Making the tax cuts perma. nent ts paramount. It is the si~­
nature economtc tssue m
Bush's presidency, tt's responsible for the 4 percent growth
we're expenencing, and if the
lowered rates are allowed to
expire at the end gf thts
decade, just about everyone's
taxes will go up.
Republicans are virtually
umted on this tssue ttnd there
are a number of Democmts,
especially in the Senate, who
do not want to vote for higher
taxes m an electiOn year
Broader tax reform proposed by last year's presidenttal commtsston, which · is
bemg redrafted at the U S.
Treasury. ts a tar btgger challenge. But Bush loses nothmg

Thursday, January 5, 2006

www.mydatlysenttnel.com

2006
•

by .puttmg it on his agenda,
identifymg hts party with
income tax stmplificahon and
pro-growth rate reductions. Jl
is a populist issue to ron on
&lt;md use agamst the Democrats
who define tax nefo11n as raising the rates.
Finally, getting control of
spendmg and chipping away
at the deficit is still an impor-·
tant issue to many Americans,
particularly in the GOP's base.
The $39 bilhon House-passed;
budget-cutting bill isn't going
to pass the Senate in tts pre·
sent form, but the votes are
there for gradual year-by-year
reducttons in the rate of spend·
mg increases. Bush needs to
make this a bigger tssue than
he has in the past.
,
Meanwhile, two sea-change
reforms will take place this
yern; no matter what happens
to Bush's ag~nda
FlfSt, the Medicare prescnption benefits program gets
gmng in earnest, with a major
government effort to make th~
available chmces clearer to
seniors. That's going to have
very positJve tmpact on one &lt;!f
the nation's pivotal votmg
blocs that could give the GOP
the edge in November.
Second, Supreme Court
noromee Samuel A. Altto Jr ,
will be confmned, moving the
court further to the right, just
as Bush planned to do. If he
accompltshes httle else this
year, that will stand as a
ground-breaking change in ttie
htgh court's makeup for many
"
years to come

a

cmtt, BUT 'ttXltL
UAVE 10 GET USED

nm:

10 IT BACK
UNTIL WE CArOl
TJ.IE TERROR!~ ...

Obituaries
·Violet Larkin
NEW MARTINSVILLE, W Va. - V10let Larkin, 77,
passed away Monday, Jan. 2, 2006 tn New Martinsville,
W.Va. after an extended til ness.
She was born on July 9, 1928 in Cheshire to the late Alex
and Glenna Rtfe Shuler.
She Worked at the Wtlltams Shoe Company for many
years.
She is survtved by her husband, Bill Larkin of Hannibal ,
sister, Altce (Charles) Baker of New Boston , mece, Kay Baker
of Columbus
•
In addttion to her parents she was preceded in death by two
brothers, Ross Shuler and Davtd Shuler.
. Services will be at II am on Friday, Jan. 6, 2006 at the
Fisher Funeral Home tn Mtddleport. Bunal will follow at the
Gravel Htll Cemetery m Cheshtre. Visitation wtll be held from
2 p.m to 6 p.m on Thursday, Jan. 5. 2006 at the funeral home.

Archie Lee

TUPPER.S ~LA!NS .- Juppers Plains Regional
IS seekmg .volunteers to appear on its
board election ballot Feb I
.Candidates. must be a property owner and restde wtthin the
dtstrict or a business owner within the district and be sub·
scribers in good standing A linnt of two bus mess owners can
stt on the board at one time
.
be taken the first mectmg m March.
The oath of ottice
Those mterested should contact Tuppers Platns Regtonal
Sewer Dtstnct. PO. Box 175. Tuppers Plums, Ohto 45783-

Sewer D1stnct

"''II

.

0175.

Do Americans still have the guts for democracy?
most Amencans understand
The way TV news works,
the need to find out what the however, many Americans
enemy's thinkmg ·•
would only get to hear Bush's
Well, no ktddmg No sane dtshonest sound bite - as
person opposes that kind of phony in tts way as Bill
surveillance A couple of years Cl tnton 's de mal of "sexual
Gene
ago, I found my self recetvtng , relattons wi th that woman,
Lyons
suspect messages emanattng Monica Lewmsky," a techrusomewhere m the Mtddle Ea~t cally truthful statement calcu· using a hijacked. defunct e- ' lated to decetve
matl dcldress I went dtrectly
See, there have to be ' reaguns, can we'l
to the FBI. Who wouldn't'! sons the admtmstration kept
Far-fetGhed? Today. maybe. For that matter, I'm pressmg its actions htdden Right now•.
Tomorrow, maybe not. Thts the authonltes to shut down we don't know what they are.
drugstore cowboy won 't be my own pet stalker - a But we do know that Acting
prestdent forever, you know nameless coward maktng Attorney General .James
Anyv.ay, I take It to be rough- what he imagmes are anony· Corney, who'd personally
ly those thmgs Republtcan mous threats
prosecuted AI Qaeda terrorSen. Chuck Hagel, a Vtetnam · Of course, the secret Ists, refused to stgn off on the
war veteran, meant whet\ l1e Foretgn
lntelltgence White House scheme, as,
emphastzed that " I took an Surveillance Act (FISA) court
apparently,
did
former '
oath of office to the required by federal law to ' AttOtney General John "Let
Constitution. I dtdn't take an authonze wtretaps would
oath of office to my1 party or tsslte a wtUTant 111 30 seconds the Eagle Soar" Ashcroft It's
up to Congress, the courts and
to my prestdent."
fhn to mom tor AI Qaeda-relat- .
But there are a great many cd commumcauons - even a httheito eastly- mttmidated
'
Americans who either don't sev~ral days after the fact It's tree press to lind out why.
Urder Gonzales, the Justtce
comprehend what's at stake. reJected roughly a half-dozen
Depattment
now plans to
or cannot bnng themselves to of almost 20,000 appltcattons
beheve tt And ,there are many stnce tt was set up tn response mvestigate the whistleblowers
in Congress. Democrats and to the Ntxon admtmstrallon ·s who exposed Plestdent Bush '~·
Republicans. who hesitate to tllegal spying upon war pro- wtllful defiance of the rule of
order breakfast wtthout con· testers. CIV Il nghts acllvlsts law. A more upstde·down situallan can hardly be tmagmeq.
sulttng optnton polls Th.tt'• and puhttcal opponents. ·
How can a lew thousand
the reason fur Prestdent
Indeed. the White House
stateless
fanattcs htding in
Bush's calculatedly decepttve h.td to ·'d artly" the prestdent\
sound btte during a recent .1emat b whtch he repeated caves have bmught thts great
vtsit to an army· hospital tn &gt;everal ttmes Bush's tile gal natton to such a pass? Have
S.m Antonto, where he wtnetaps are known to moni- Amencans sttll got the gutS
clauned that the only commu- tor both incommg ,md outgo- for democt acy? What' ever
mcattons
the
Nattonal mg calls, but are exponenttally happened, I wonder, to "the
Secunty Agency morlttor• dre l.trget tn 'cope A' The land ot the free and the home
·
. from foretgn terronst cells to Washtngton Post lms reponed. of the brave?"
the Umted States
(Arkan1111
Democrat'
NSA has not only been "dataAdoptmg a pseudo·tolksy mmtng'' mtllions of commum· Ga~eue cnlwnmst Gene Lvorr~
tone that makes hun sound .IS. cattons foretgn .md domestiC, 1.1 " narwrral maga~me a;vartl
if he's readmg "My Pet Goat" hut p,ts"ng on the result' to 11 urne1•11d co-author of "7711}
to thtrd gr&lt;~der&lt;. , Bush allowed other government agctlCICS Hwwn g of rill' Pre11dent" (St
as how '' ll ; omebndy from AI &gt;uch as the FBI. DIA, CIA Martm'\ PreH. 2000) You ccur
Qaeda ts callmg you we'd and De1Mrtment of Homeland e-mail L) om at !'(ene•
ltke to knov. why.. I thmk Scc,unt y
I\Om2@,/x xlohal net )

BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

11na Lee Tiny Bug' St. Marie

Seeking board candidates

Flu shot clinic
REEDSVILLE - An Outreach Flu Shot Chnic wtll be held
from 9 a m. to II a m today at the Reedsville Volunteer Fire
Department. Bring Medtcatd or Medtcare cards if applicable.
$ 10 fee for all others. Cit me sponsored by the Meigs County
Health Department

Straw giveaway for pet bedding
MIDDLEPORT - The Metgs County Humane Soctety wdl
gtveaway free straw tor pet beddmgJrom 10 am to 2 p m. on
Saturday behtnd the Humane Souety Thn ft Shop

Congressmen give away money
from lobbyist_who alleges bribes ·
or hts Flonda gambltng boat
!leer. called SunCruz Ney
spokesman Brian Walsh says
WASHINGTON - Rep the $6.500 giVen to the lndtan
Bob Ney's olftce stud ch,mty represents $3.500 Ney
Wednesday he gave av.ay got from Abmmoff or htS wtfe
about $6.500 m campaign con· and $3.000 from Scanlon. but
tnbuuons from lobbytst Jack Federal Election Commtsston
Abramoft· and hts panner, who documents onl y show $3.000
allege that they bribed the from Abramoff and hts wtfe.
Oh10 Republican and other
In &lt;tdditton. Abramoff's for·
mer Washington lobbying
lawmakers
In plea agreements wtth finn. Greenbetg Trau11g LLC.
government
prosecutots. ga•'e Ney $2.000 whtle
Abmmofl andpa11net Michael Abtdmotl wa• worktng there
Abramoff also g.tVe another
Scanlon agree&lt;.! to tell the FBI
52.500 to Ney 's politt cal
about the alleged bnhes
The campatgn money w&lt;ts actton cumnuttee, Amencan
dondted ttl recelll weeks to the Ltberty PAC, .tnd Walsh smd
Amert cdn lndtan College Ncy dectded Wedncsd.ty to
F.und. Ney spokesmdn Bn&lt;1n also gtve that to chanty
Walsh Sdtd A lund spokesman Fumlly. SunCnuz Casmos gave
satd Wednesd.ty th.n Ney told Ney ·$4.000. accordmg to the
the nonprofit tlut he w.ts m.tk-' nonparttsan
Center
for
mg the don.ttton l.tst week. hu1 Responstve Politics.
Abramoff .tcknowledged
tt has not been pt ocessed yet.
Abramofl s.t)' 111 hts plc.t btlkmg several ' lndt.m tnbes
agreement documents' that .1 "'hen he pleaded gutlty
represenWttve tdenttlied else· Tuesday to lr.tud. corruplton
where as Ney ,,greed to sup- and tax evaston charges tn,
port legtslattun, some mvolv· !Vashmgton On Wednesda)
mg help for lnchan tnbes. 111 he ~~.~d gutlly In ft aud
emmmg from lm
exch~nge for gtft' Ney demes · charg
plllchase of the SunCntz bo,Its.,
wrongdoing.
The $6.500 IS shy of the v.htch he s,Iy&gt; Ney helped htJII
$7.000 Nev's electton cam- complete by attackmg the pre·
patgns have rccctved stnce vwus ov.ner 111 statements -on
2000 from Abrampfl. hts wtfc the Congressamul Record

BY DAVID HAMMER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

••

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

B'!,sh, GOP lawm~kers dump Abramo!! ·
donations as party worries about election impact

WASHINGTON
President Bush and numer·
ous lawmakers hasttly Jettl·
soned campatgn donations
linked to lobbyi st Jack
Abramoff. on . Wednesday as
Republican Party offtctals
pondered the tmpact of a
spreadmg scandal on thetr
2006 election prospects
"I wish tt hadn' t happened
because tt's not going to help
us keep our maJOrity," conceded Rep. Ralph Regula, ROhio.
As Abramoff pleaded
gUtlty to a second set of
POMEROY - Ttna Lee "Ttny Bug" St. Mane, 81, of felony charges m as many
Pomeroy, passed away Tuesdav. Jan. 3, 2006 at Rocksprings days, this time in Flonda,
·
Rehabilitatton Center
official~ satd Bush's 2004 reShe waScborn on May 26, 1924 to' the late Etotlla Ltncoln election campatgn mtended
Cassell and Dr. Roy L. Cassell tn Mansfteld.
to g1ve up $6,000 in donaShe was a member ot the United Methodist Church in tion s from the lobbytst, Ins
Pome10y. She was also tn the Medics Corp tn World War II, wife and a ,;hent
Transpoit Group 111 the Korean War, reured as a clerk from the
Former House MaJonty
Cadiz News Agency, was a member of the Metgs Sentor Leader Tom DeLay of Texas
Cttizens Center, a lurmer rest dent of the Maples and she vol- - facmg legal problems of
unteered at the Semor CttiZens Center. Her name IS honored hts own - took stmiiar
on the women 's World War II Monument m Washtngton D.C. steps; as -dtd hts leadership
' She ts survtved by a daughter, Nancy Clark and Thurman successor, Rep Roy Blunt of
Hanmg, Pomeroy. a granddaughter, Jerica Clark and U M1ssoun , and Rep Enc
Mttch , Mtddleport; two · great granddaug ht~rs, Kylee Milch Cantor of Vtrgtma, another
and Kymber Mttch , two brothers. Tom (R uth) Cassell, Ada, member of the GOP leaderand Rtley(Dot) Cassell , Cadtz, an aunt, C:: harlotte Lincoln, shtp.
Eaton; and several meces and nephews.
"Whtle we ltrmly believe
In addttion to her parents, she was preceded tn death by the contnbuttons were legal
husband, Cectl "Bob" St Mane and brother, John Cassell
at the ume of recetpt, the
Servtces wtll be he.ld at 4 p m. on Friday, Ja1,1 6. 2006 at plea indicates that such conllasher Fqneral Homes in Mtddleport. Officiating wtll be the trtbuttons may not have been
Rev Jonathan Dunham. Vtsttatton wtll be held two hours prtor given ' m the sptrit in which
IV the servtce. Gravestde scrvtce wtll be conducted at Mound they were recetved." said
Htll Umon Cemetery tn Eaton at 2 p m. on Saturday, Jan 7. Burson Taylor, a spokes~006. Milttary services wtll be conducted at the funeral home
woman for Blunt.
by Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy. In Lteu of tlowers donaIn all, three dozen lawmakttons may be made to the Metgs Sent or Citizens Center. 112 ers - three-fourths of them
Memonal Dnve, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or The United Republicans
have
Methodtst Church Pomeroy. 112 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, OH. announced plans this week to
I
45760
return donattons , mostly
Fnends may send on-lme condolences to www tisherluner- fu nds that came from
alhomes com
Abramoff or lndtan tnbes he
represented. Among the
Democrats ts Sen. Htllary
Rodham Cltnton of New
Archte Lee. 95 , ol Syracuse. passed away Wednesday, Jan York
4, 2006 at the Holzer Medtcal Center m Galltpolls.
Arrangements are incomplete and are being handled by the
Ftsher Funeral Homes 111 Pomeroy

Local Briefs·

Every time George W Bush
gets caught tn a light spot, he
does the same thmg: he plays
the Sept, II fear card, wraps
himself in the flag, emits Jawdroppmg falsehoods, and all
but accuses hts cnucs of trea§on. So it js wtth the stunning
revelation that the White
House has ondered the tllegal,
warrantless wtretappmg of
Amencan citizens in brazen
defiance of federal law and
the U.S Constitutton
If allowed to stand, Bush's
actions wtll have taken the
United States a long way
down the road to mtlitary dictatorship. Indeed, that's essentially what hts legahsttc
enablers,
starting
with
Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales and Vice President
Cheney, argue . that m
wartune, the commander m
chtef can take any action he
deems appropnate to protect
the natton bypa~smg
Congress and the courts to
a~scn the primacy of the presidency unttl declanng victory
tn the "war on terror."
As terronsm IS not an
enemy. but a tactic ~ a vile,
cowardly tactic, but. by definttion, not subject to being
defeated - the metaphoncal
war agamst it could last mdeftnitely And a~ long as It lasts.
the commander in chief roles
by fiat. Our constitutional
nght~ extst at hts sufferance
If the president, any president, can umlaterally declare
the Fourth Amendment (forbtdding unreasonable search
and setzure) null and vo1d,
why not the Ftrst Amendment
protectmg a free press' Why
not the Second Amendment?
We can 't let terrorists have

•

Rep Bob Ney. R-Ohio,
"'ho faces legal scrutiny for
his links to the lobbyi st,
jomed in the rush. Others
who satd they would give up
Abramoff-related donations'
mcluded Reps. Bill Shuster
and Meli ssa Hart, both
Pennsylvania Republicans.
And a political action com·
mittee controlled by Senate
Majonty Leader Bill Frist
satd it planned to return
$2,000 from the Saginaw
Chippewa lnd tan Tribe.
The Repubhcan rush to
shed cash that once was
eagerly sought underscored
the potenttal poltucal problem the party faces at the
dawn of an election year.
"You can't have a corrupt
lobbytst unless you have a
corrupt
member ' (of
Congress) or a corrupt staff,"
former GOP House Speaker
Newt Gmgrich said m a
lunchtime speech. "Thts was
a team effort.''
Gingnch, who battled
erhtcs charges near the end ·
of his tenure tn Congress,
also told reporters he thinks
Republicans should elect a
permanent replacement for
DeLay. In addttion to links
with Abramoff, the Texan is
battling campatgn finance
charges in his home state. '
Regula. who came to
Congress m 1973 and sur·
vived post-Watergate elec·
tions that cnppled hts party,
satd the tmplications of .the
Abramoff plea deals could
be devastattng for tl\e GOP
"I was in the minority for 22
years and the maJority for II.
and havtng tri ed tt both
ways, I definitely prefer the
majority."
Fri st tssued a statement
placing ethtcs tssues on the
Senate agenda for the year
He said he mtends to "exam.
me and act on any necessary
changes to tmprove trans-

parency and accoumabtltty
for our body when it comes
to lobbymg.'
For thetr part, House
Democrats have stgnaled
they intend to make ethics an
element in their drive to gam
a majonty m next fall 's elec·
tions
. "It's more important for
these Republicans to come
clean with the American people about ... what (they) did
for Jack Abramoff and hi s
special interest friend s m
return for those campaign
contributions," said Sarah
Feinberg. a spokeswoman at
the House Democratic cam·
paign organization
Federal prosecutors, armed
wah subpoena power and a
newly cooperative witne ss .
want answers to stmilar
quesuons, accordmg to the
guilty plea that Abramoff
entered on Tuesday m U S
District Court in Washington
In a section of court papers
headed "corruptton of' public
officials,"
Abramoff
acknowledged
he
had
worked to provide "thmgs of
value to public offictals in
exchange for a senes of offi.
cial acts and influence."
Among' others, the matenal
refers to Rep. Bob Ney, ROhio, and his former chtef ot
staff, Netl Volz, as well as to
Tony Rudy, who was a top
aide to DeLay at the time of
the events descnbed 111 the
papers.
DeLay and Ney, who have
both declared thetr mnocence
of wrongdomg, announced
separately they would gtve to
charity money they recetved
as campatgn donattons from
Abramoff or hts cltents .
Republtcans scrambled 10
dtstance themselves from
Abrarnoff on the day the lobbytst pleaded gutlty m U S
Dtstnct Court 111 Mtamt to
consptracy and wtre fraud

stemmtn~

from hts 2000 pur.
chase ol SunCruz, a gam·
bling boat tleet.
Court papers say Ney
placed a statement related to
SunCruL.
drafted
by
Abmmoff\ partner, Michael
Scanlon .
111
the
Congte"Jonal Record The
statement, the court papers
say , wa' calcu lated to pressure the owner of SunCruz to
:-ell on tenm favorable to
Abramoff
People lamiitar wtlh the
tnvestt gatton satd federal
inv est tgalors .ue tnlerested tn
questtontng Abramoff about
hts dealmg s wtth DeLay and
Nev as we ll as other lawmaker; and offtCials Those
include Rep John Dooltttle,
R-Caltf. Rud y and Sen
Conrad Burn,, R-Mont, a~
wel l as former deputy
lntenor Secretary Stephen
Gnles and former lop Bush
admmtstral ton contract officer David Safavtan , accord·
mg to the soutces. who
spoke on condttton of
anon} mtty
because
Ahramofl"s tnf ormatton ts
ltkely to be suhmmed to a·
federal gtand JUl Y
The money bemg returned
paled tn c omp&lt;~rtson to the
totals rat sed
The prestdent '• campatgn
ratsed more than $300 million 111 all fa t the 200-l campatgn
Ahramoff raJ&lt;ecf $100.000
01 more . but a spoke,woman
, at the Republtcan 1\atJonal
Commtttee said that would
be kept apart · from the
$6.000 betng g1ven to the
Amencan Heart Assoctal!on
"At thts pomt. there ts
nothmg to mdtcate that contnbuttons from those tndivtdual donor&gt; represents anythmg other than enthustasttc
suppon tor the BC-04 reelection campatgn,.. satd
Tracey Schmttt

Alito receives 'well qualified' rating from
ABA; friends, foes plan ad battle
BY JESSE J. HOLlAND

- quote - gold ~tandard for
evaluaung JUdtctal nominees."
Democrats, the Senate's
WASHINGTON - Judge minonty party, contend Alita
Samuel Alito on Wednesday is too conservau ve and could
gamed the Amencan Bar undermine alJ9rtion rights.
Assoctation's htghest rating They are expected to be
for a Supreme Court nommee, Altto's toughest questioners at
givmg htm a boost before next the hearings that begm
week 's Senate confirmat ion Monday
heanngs.
''The ABA ratings do not ,
Interest groups now w1ll try take tnto account whether a
to help or htnder Altto 's judge's JUdtcial · phtlosopliy
chances by spendmg hundreds and vtews are tn or out of the
of thousands ot do!lars on broad mamstream." satd Sen
televtsmn. radto and Internet Charles Schumer, D-N Y
ads nattOnwide and 111 the "That ts the $64,000 question
states ot key senators, before with Judge Alito and we will
and dunng the Senate have to wait for the hearings
Judtciary Commtt1ce ·s hear- to get a better answer."
mgs.
For more than 50 years, the
Thts tS the second ttme the ABA has evaluated JUdictal
ABA. the nation's largest nommees' credent13ls, though
lawyets' orgamzatton. has the 01g.mtzatton has no offirated Altto. "'ho was nommat- ctal st,mdmg tn the process In
ed by President Bush on Oct 2001. Bush ended the ABA's
31 as the replacement for preferent t,II role 111 vettmg
retm ng Justtce Sandra Day prospecltve nommees and
O'Connor.
ret'used to gtvc the group
·The ""'ell qualified" rattng ad;ance word on names under
- the htghest - ts the same constderation.
,
one that Altto earned in 1990
The
ABA's
Standmg
when Prestdent Bush's fdther. Commtttee
on
Federal
George H.W. Bush. nommat- Judtct.lry c&lt;tme up wtth the
ed htm to the 3rd U S Ctrcutt t.tllng aftet confidenttal mter·
vkws \vtth hundreds of Alito's
Court of Appeals
Embracmg the latest r,ll!ng. colleagues and a re'lew of hts
Wntte House spokesmdn Scott wnttngs. Thetr opllons were
McCieii.In . stud. "~eadmg well-qualtlied. qualtfied and
Senate Democrats h.Ive smd not qualtlied.
.
"The commtttee ts of the
111 the past thai the A8A ts the
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR'tTER

unanimous optmon ,that Judge
Samuel A. Altto Jr ts wellquahfied." satd Stephen L
Tober, chainnan of the ABA
panel.
One member of the com-·
mtttee abstamed from voting.
Tober said. He did not explam
why that person dtd not vote.
The group will tesufy dunng
Altto 's confirmatton hearing
about how it arnved at the rating
The rating wtll not stop
some people from anackmg
Alito. said Sen. John Cornyn.
R·Texas, a member of the
Senate Judictary Corruruttee.
"Unfortunately. the hard left
groups dectded long · before
these ratmgs were announced
that they "'auld oppose hts
nonunatmn,'' Cornyn satd
· Interest groups have spent
much less on TV commerctals
on Ahto's nommatton than
they dtd "'hen Bush elevated
John Roberts to the htgh
court. satd Deborah Goldberg.
dtrector of the Democrac}
Program at the Brennan
Center for Jusnce.
Goldberg esttmated th &lt;tt
such groups spent Sl 3 mtl·
!ton dunng the l'Ontirnlatton
process for Roberts. now the
chtef jusuce About $325.000
was spent on Hamel Mters'
nommation before the Bush
at de "tthdrew from conSideratton and before thts \\ ee k.

about 5650.000 on Alito's
nommation. Goldberg said.
At least 1wo li beral groups
MoveOn.org Political
Actton
~
and
lndept;ndentCoun org - plan
.1o take to the atrv.aves this
"'eek to try to butla pubhc
momentum agamst Altto.
MoveOn org IS spendtng
S150.000 tor an ad atrtng
nattonwtde on C;\IN. and 111
the home states of GOP Sens.
Lmcoln Chafee of Rhode
Island and Mtke DeWine of
Ohto. begmnmg Monday
a
lndependentCourt org.
coalttton of dozens of ltberal
mterest group•. IS begmnmg a
naltonal TV ad The group
retuses to sav ho\\ much the
ad buv \\Iii be but It ts
expected to be more than
S I00.000 on cabl e televt&gt;ton ·
TI1e lndependentCourt org's
campmgn .Jiso wtll h"' e a local
componelll tatlured to Vlmne.
the home ol GOP Sens
Oly mpta Sncmc dnd Susan
Collms. ,md -\rkan ,,t~. "hose
senator,; .trc Democrab Mark
Prvor dnd Blanche Lmcoln
The con sen a111 e group
Progr~ss lor Amenc·a ha, &lt;pent
more than other orgamzatmns.
ruimtnc n.tttonal TV ads from
the tir;t ua' of the o\hto nonu·
n.tttorl
group ha' saad tt
\\Ollld spend a' much S18 mtllton to pu'h Bush &lt; JUdtctal

The

tlt.1 !11111t:'t."~

Judge considers evidence in teen's deportation case
Bv M.R. KROPKO

.t&gt;ked authmtttes lor pernm- summer. le:nmg Bartsch
SIOil to spedk wtth htm
behmd so he could grddudle
Bartsch took part m the
. Bart'Ch recent I) contacteu
CLEYELA:-.ID
All he.mng thtuugh a vtdeucon- U S tmnugrauon du llwnlte'
llllmtgratton JUdge refu,ed lerence
Grant w._r-, Ill 111 Cleveland '-"hen he couldWednesday to rele.he trom Alex.mdn.t. Va . &lt;~lturne)' n't fmd documents about hts
]Uti .1 teen.tger who l.t.:e' \\e re tn a lederal butldtng m restdenc) He ha' been J.I tled
deportatton to hts nali\C Clevel,mu ,1nd Btntsch wu' 'lnce the Chnstmu' \\ eel- Germ . my. sd)' mg 1t wd-..n 't 111 ].!II 111 Bedloru He1gh1 s. a end. prompting prutesh from
clear whether he h.Id the Clc1 el.md 'liburb
hts lnends 111 the c·ommunll\
,1utho11ty to do so
Drc..,,cd 111 ..111 orangL'. )(111 On Fndd) . Leoppld pet Judge M
Chnstopher I"U~d JUillp\Ull B&lt;~rtst h ...,uadeU another IllllllJ t:rdt ioll
G1 ant ,,nd he would consJdet q,uell Jnlentl) ,11 a c'dlllCta 1udge to ''a! depc,rt.!l to n
ev tden ce th&lt;~t mt ght .tllo" but dtd not te ,lllv
AI p.. ,ue \VeJnc,d~t\ "' d"'
htm tn ltee 18-ye,u -old
Gr.tnt ul ntlllucd the hc,Ir- whether Grant h.tJ IIIc
Manuel B.I rh ch 10 lllli'h · tn ~ ''' Jan I \ .mu will denue c1uthont' to deude .tll\ t hm~
lu~h ,,hnol wtth hiS f11 e.nds
111 the· La'e Go' cri11n~n-t
\1 11eth~r .1 t11p Bartsch,IIMUC
;'The judge IS lnnkmg .tt 10 C.\n&lt;td a '' llh hiS slcp- .Itt orne\..., drcucd th dt he
the C\ tdcnce Thai IS the st g, gr.mdl.l!hct and ,l \\ll other l,tcked jun,Jtcllon
ntftc.mt thtng that h.tppened nwn "&lt;HJid .tllect B.u tsc h s ·, When B.Irhch c.tme to the
today,'' satd Dav1d Leopold '!alliS Cl!(lU~ h to .tll o\1 Gtunt -I:Jntted State'. he h.1Li " '"''
In set .t bon'u
\\a11cr. \\htLh enltl lcd h1111
Bartsch s l.t\1 ye r
Bameh wants to stay tnt he
B.trt,ch. botn 111 bsc'lh.tch bnlv to u 90-d.t' ''·" .mu
'
'
:.m:
uppt'dldiH. C
US unttl he gradu.lle' lhts Germ &lt;~ t\1 h,tu t hou ~h t he W;)JVed
spnng from Pandora-Gtlbo.t v.,ts a L! S l'llllen H;, 'tep- hef~1rc an 11111111 g rdttun JUdge
Grant dskeu "h ethn ~~
Ht gh School 111 Putnam ~t.mdl,uh~t - .t l S CIIIICII
B,trto..,l·h\,
c,t,e th e r~ \\\1\ .t
County 111 nmthwest .Oh.to
\\ h&lt;' \\ a' h1-. \.!.Ui.liJ Jttn
The Ass(lL' Iall'c.l P~t: -.., h tl ~ I Cill!lle"U to (n:t!n~m\ Jl1 the hunMnltttn,m JC .t,nn IPI lu-.,
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

rele,l\e lu Gtlt'nd 'L'hool and
g:raduate

lmmt gtJtJnn ,md

Custom'
Entor,ement
l,t\1 , ,,, Vtc·ton,J Chn,ttan
s,ud the i,JL\ th,tl led ro
B.trhch , dctentwn '' -:lear

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�PageA6

OHIO

The Oaily Sentinel

.

ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

WAKEMA (AP) - A couple accused of abusing some
of their II adopted speci alneeds · children, by_ making
them slee p In cages defe nded the deci ~ion but · sa id
they'd be willing t o give up
the enclosures to get the
children back.
Michael
and
Sharen
Gravelle said rhe v would be
more lenient and "would send
the home-schooled children.
who have a host of health
and behavioral problems. to
public school.
''I will do whatever is nee"
essary to get our children
home." Michael GraVelle
told . The (Cle,eland ) Plain
l)ealer on Tuesday · at the
couple 's home outside thi s
northern Ohio town .
A ll uro n ·County j udge
ruled Dec. 22 (luriilg a custody • hearing that some or
'the chil dren had ' be~ n
abu sed. The j udge also
decided to keep the ' children.
. ages l to 15. in foster care.
In an interview with. the
newspaper. the Gravelles
defended their .- initial dx ision to make some of the
chi ldren sleep in:. wooden
cages without mattresses ur
.pillows. They said the enclosures were nece ssary to keep
the children from harming
themselves or one another. ·we did it fo r their safetX," Michael Gravelle said .
·Those were the final product s of everything we did .''
The children have problems such as fetal alcohol
sy ndrome and a disorder tha.t
involves eating nonfood
items.
The Gravelles ha ve not
been charged with a crime.
BuJ
Huron
Coun ty
Prosecutor Russ Leffler sa id
he plahs to go to a grand
jur~
to pursue crim inal

since 1999, when Ohio
resumed carrying out executions.
Benner was convicted of
kidnappin g, rapin g and· murdering Cynthia Sedgwick. 26,
in August 1985 in woods · at
the Blossom Mu sic Center
near Akron where she had
atteml.ed a concert.
talking
with
After
Sedgwick in a parking lot
after the concert, Benner took
her into nearby woods where
he raped and then choked her,
according to a I '18~ state
Supreme Court ruling . that
upheld his death sentence.
Benner also was convicted
of raping and murdering a
friend , 2 1-year-old Trina
Bowser, in Akron in January
1986 . Bowser 's body was
fo und in the trunk ·of her
burning car in January 1986.
according to . the Supreme
Court document.
.
Benner was also ~onvicted
of raping :and trying to kill
two other wome n in the
months
between
those
killings .
.. ·
Willie Williams Jr., executed in October for the 1991
killings of four ·people at a
Youngstown housing project.
also refused to ask for
clemericy.
The pam le board· s job is to
review the case, including
any new fac ts, and make a
recommen dation to the governor, said board spokeswoman Andrea. Dean .
" It is not the job of the
parole board to look at justice
with mercy, or mercy with
justice." she said.
Benner' s attorney Kate
McGarry said clemency is ·
worthless unless the governor
considers more than just the
.facts.
"Should it only be a stopgap measure for someone
who's innocent or shuuld it
be something for people who
have other things to offer?"
she said Wednesday.
The use of clemency has
changed over. time, wi th governors today much less likely
to recommend mercy fo r condemned killers, said Jeff
Holcomb, a Bowling Green
State University criminal ju stice professor.
"Our current political climate is that gove rnors should
use cleme ncy power very
j udi cious ly. only in those
cases where they feel there
won't be a lot of political fallout and it's justified py the
fac ts o.f lhe case," Holcomb
said.

COLUMBUS - A man
scheduled to die next month
for raping and murdering two
women 20 years ago says he
won't ask Gov. Bob Taft for
clemency.
Condemned inmate Glenn
Benner says he doesn't
believe the clemency process
take s into • consideration
whether an · inmate has
changed in prison.
" I know that . I have
changed, and I am now a new
person, but sadly I am unable
to change the past, so there
does not seem to be point
(sic) in participating in such a
hearing," Benner sa.id in a
Dec . 28 letter to Michael .
Coll yer, a state assista nt
attorney general.
Benner also says he doesn't.
want to cause further pain to
the fami lies of his vicl!ms.
" I just want them to know
that I will do nothing per~un­
a lly to add to their pain,"
Benner said in the letter,
which was al so sent to memAP Photq/ The Plain Deater, Scott Shaw bers of the Ohio Parole
Share n, left, and Michael Gravelle s it in their chapel during an inte rvierw at their Wakeman Board.
.
home Tuesday. The Grave lies lost. custody of 11 adoptive, special needs child ren in December
Taft said Wednesday he
2005, after it was discovered they made some sleep in cages. The two defended their actions wa&amp; not familiar with Benner
but said they'd be willing to give up the enclosures to get the ch ild ren back.
or his case .
When considering clemencharges this month ..
much for the Couple .
accou ntable."
, cy, "We look at all factors in
The Gravelles co uld regai n
Sharen Gravelle said she
The children. were taken a very comprehensive way,"
custody. wi th some restric- doubts the children will be from the Gravelles in Taft said. "The inmate's contions, af.ter Huron County able to return. Her husband September after a social ser- duct whil e . in prison , the
Ju venil e Judge Timothy hasn't given up.
vices investigator .visited the extent of remorse for the
Cardwe ll considers the case
" I use my faith," he said home and exami ned · the criwe, in addition to the ciras he sat in a chapel the cou- wood and chicken-wire cumstances and the ev iagain in a Jan. 18 heari ng.
Those restriction s could ple built at their home . "We cages she likened to a ken- dence."
include concessions regard- have been knocked down. nel.
. Benner was "justly tri ed
ing discipline. One of the not destroyed."
A sc hool-age Gravelle and convicted of the brutal
children 'testified last m0 nth
Cardwell found no clear chi ld testified last month rapes and murders of two
that hi s .pareNts made him evidence that the Gravelles tl\at the couple forced him to young women:: said Petro
sleep in a bathtub for more neglec ted to provide the stay in' his ''box'' for up to spokeswoman Kim Norris.
than two month s because he children with adequa.te food , two weeks' for taking peanut
Since·Ohio resumed execuwet the bed .
clothi ng, · shelter or special- butter, bread and cereal from tions in 1999, the parole
Michael Gravelle said he ized serv.ices. But he said the kitchen. He also testified board ha s recommended
is wr lling to alter some dis-- that the · children's psycho- · that he liked the Gravelles as clemency just once, for
cipl ine methods, "but the logical. behavioral and parents and felt safe in their Jerome
Campbell,
a
chi ldre n have to be held health problems became too home.
Cincinnati man conviCted of
stabbing to de ath a' man .
who'd befriended him .
: n 2003, Taft set aside
.
.
.
Campbell \ - death se ntence
BY ANDREW
Those so uthwestern Ohio no'~ plan s to build new faciii- acres, the other about : .2W. over concerns about evidence
sites are .· · accessible to ties. but that could change if
WELSH-HUGGINS .
The rural co unt y has ••· presented to jurors.
AP STATEHOUSE CORRE S PO~D ENT
Benner, 43 , of Summit
Tovota 's current network of sales stay strong .
·number of things to utTer trn
County.
has been on death
in
nQrthern ·, Michigan is also pursuing automotive compan y, includ supp liers
'
COLUMBUS - Gov. Bob Kentuckv and offerimmedi; any new Toyota plants. ing land. access to several row since 1986 for the
Taft said Wednesday the state , ate access to skill ed auto Vanov says it 's com mon for highway s including Interstate • killings that took place dur- .
is aggressively pursuing pos- workers. Taft said in the let- states to ap proac h the compa- 70 and a strong work ethic, ing a five-month stretch in
sible Toyota eng ine and ter: He also offered the possi- ny with incentives fqr locat- Hartman said. A third of the 1985 and 1986.
assembly plants for Ohio . bility of a free site and $30 ing new fac iliti es.
Benner's execution is set
county's ·work fo rce already
Th( governor has already million in gran ts.
For now, Toyota is concen- . works in manufacturing, he for Feb. 7 and his attorney
says she expec ts it to -prooffered Toyota a free site and
·.·we are defini te ly cumpet' trating on new plams in Texas said .
·'
annual grants of $2 mi.ll ion ing aggressive ly for that pro- and Canada, he said.
Ohio competed . unsuccess- ceed. He would become the
fo r 15 years to build in Ohio. ject."' Taft said Wednesday.
"When the time is right. we fully in 20Q2 .fur a $ !, billion 20th man executed in · Ohio
The state is loo king at · The state would buy the mav consider it," Vanov said.
Hyundai manufacturing plant
potential sites for plants and tand for Toyota under such a
The state as ked Preble that would have employed
promoting its updated tax . deal. said Development County about large sites for
system as an advantage for Department
spokesman some type ·of an automotive 2,000, losing out to Alabama.
Theword is out that Toyota
locati ng Ill the state , Taft said, Merle Madrid .
· project before Christmas ,
may
cons ider a North
Possible sites include areas
Toyota is operat ing beyond said Jon Hartman. the county
in . Clinton . Fayette and . its current Nort h American economic development direc- Ameri can engine • plant,
which means an assernbl
The Daily Sentinel
Preble counties. according to piant capacity, with 1.45 mi l- tor.
facility
wouldn't
e
r
an Oct. 19 letter Taft sent to ·li on cars and. trucks built in
Subscribe today • 992 -2 155
" It was stressed the state
Kim
Hill.
as
ocibehind,
said
Seiichi Sudo, president and the United States throu gh was trying to work a big
www.mydailysentinel.com
chief executive officer of Nove mber. up from 1.41 mil- . deal ,"
·Hartma n
said ate director of the Center for
Automotive Research in Ann
Kentucky-based
T(lyota li (l11 for all nf 2004.
Wednesday.
Company
· spokesma n
Motor Manufacturing North
Preble County has two pos- Arbor, Mich.
America .
Victor Vano v say s there are sible sites. one about 500

Ohio wooing Toyota for possible assembly plant
'

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PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE..

.

Local weather
Thursday ... CI~)ud y with a
20 percent chance· of. rain
showers. Much cooler with
hi ghs in the. upper 30s.
West wi nds around l 0 mph .
Thursday night...Cloudy
Wit h a sl ight chance 0f
· snow showers .. .A chance of
freez ing drizz re with a
slight chance of rain show. ers, Lows in the upper 20s.
Northwest .winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of precipitation 20 percent. ·

•

Friday ... Ci oudy with a 20
percent chance of snow.
showers. Hi ghs in the mid
30s. North winds around 10
mph .
nighL Cioudy
Friday.
wi th a 20 percent chance of
snow shower\. Lows in the
lower 20s. Northwest winds
5 to 10 mph .
Saturday ... Mostl y cloudy.
Highs m the mid 30s.
Saturday night through
Monday ... Part ly
c loudy.

Lows around 30. Highs in
the upper 40s.
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy with a . 40 percent
chance bf rain showers.
Lows in the mid 30s.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
rain shO\vers. Highs in the
upper 40s.
Tuesday
night
and
Wednesday ... Partl y cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s.
Highs _in · the upper 40s .

Local stocks
ACI -

84.59

NSC
Oak
OVB
BBT

AEP -37.30 ..
Akzo - 47.78
Ashl.and Inc. - 59.65
BLI - 12.19
Bob Evans - 22.99
BorgWamet - 60.93
CENX- 28.84
Champion - 4.42
Charming Shops - 12.84
City Holding - 36.34
Col - 47.49
DG - 18.57
DuPont - 42.82
Federal Mogul - .35
USB - 30.39 '
Gannett - 62.90
General Electric
35.32
GKNLY - 5
Harley Davidson - , 50.70
JPM - 39.62
18.75
Kroger Ltd. - 22.05

- 43.55
Hill Financial · - 32.81
- ,25.30
-' 42.64
Peoples
28.83
Pepsico - 59.73
Premier .15.20
Rockwell - 60.71
Rocky Boots - 20.33
RD Shell - 63
Sears. - 116.01
Wai-Mart - 46.32
Wendy 's - 54.70 .
Worthington - 19.77
Dall'y stock retiorts are the 4 p.m. cloS'
lng_ quotes of the previous di!y's transactions , provided b·y Smith Ananclal
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis;
'

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et mis~~~·d
urlm1c
•

Welcome to ·our Team
'

Asha Yellamaraju, M.D.
Internal Medicine
·Physicians associated with the
O'Bieness Health System are available
. by appointment at .our clinic at
113 East Memorial Dr. in Pomeroy.

• Gastroenterology

• Obstetrics and Gynecology

Office hours on Tuesdays

Office hour·s on Tuesdays and
Thursdays ·

·.Internal Medicine
Office hours on Mondays and
Tuesdays

Wednesday's games
High school boye basketball

Condemned inmate says he
won't ask governor for ·clemency
BY

• Podialry and Podiatric Surgery
Office hours on se c·o~a and fourth
Saturdays

Coming Soon - Cardiology ond Family Practice

·o;liiiN'f:ss ~
HEALTH SYSTE M

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

LocAL SCOREBOARD

Thursday, January 5, 2006

COUPLE. IN CAGED CHILDREN CASE
SAY THEY'RE WILLING TO CHANGE
'

.

Wahama 54, St. Mary:S 41
High school girls basketball

Guy an Val ley

49,

Wahama 37

Thursday,Januarys,2oo6

Wahalila boys win fifth straight with rout of St. Marys'
BY GARY CLARK

"

Ma s on
County
cagcrs wi1h
its
second
win in a~
many days
followin g a
6 8 - 2 8
thumping of
Ohio Valley
Chri stian on
. Fowler
Tuesday. The
triumph was also the Falcon s
fifth straight on the 2005-06
season and their first road
victory i.n two tries this year

SPORT~ CORRES~ONDENT

. . . . BiVflk
LocAL ScHEDULE
GA,LLIPOUS - A schedl!le ol,upcom1ng college
and high schOol v ars ~ y &amp;porting &amp;V4inls involving

teams from Gallia, Meigs and Meson counties.

Thursdiy's garnet
Girls Basketball
South Gallia at Han nan, 6 p.m.

Alexander at MeiQs, 7:30p.m
· MarieHa at Galli a Academy, 7 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m .

River Valley at Chesapeake, 7:30 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.

Frido's games
Boys asketball

ST. MARYS. W.Va. - For
the second night in a row,
Coach James Toth's Wahama
White Falcon basketl;&gt;all team
turned up the defensive pressure iri the opening .half to
build a commanding lead
before coasting in the final
two quarters for a 54-41 victory over St. Marys.
The unusual back-to-back
Wednesday night hardwood
outing provided the Class A

as
they Harrison suppli ed us with
inflate their enough offense to allow us to
record to 6- jump in front by a comfortI.
able margin .''
·
"We did .a
Wahama secured a 17-8
good
job edge in the opening quartf r
defen s ive ly as a hustl ing Fowler tallied
.in the open- 10 of his ~ a rn e high 17 points
ing
half," in the imtial penod . Fowler
WHS coach received plenty of scoring
James Toth ass istance
from
Casey
Roush
Harrison once second ~arter
stated fol - 1ay resume d as the 'hite
lowing the win. '"We held ·~a1con &gt; ex ten d c d
theu·
them to just 13 points durin g · advantage to a 22 point marthe first 16 minutes and gin at 35-13 at the midway
Brandon Fowler and Casey st~ge of the contest.

.

Harri son was forced "to exit
the game after pill')' in~; only
two quarters du e to an .InJury.
The sophomore point guard
was in ihe midst of having his
best n'ight offen sively in his
brief varsit y career. Harrison
fini shed the night with 13
point s on four fie ld goals, one
trey and two of three from the
line. His injury did not appear
to be of a serious nature and
he is expected to return to
action F ii.day night at home
Please see Wahama,
B:Z
,
""

.

Ha nnan at Wahama. 7:30 p . m ~
Trimble at Eastern , 8 p.m. ·

Chesapeake at River Valley. 7:30p.m.
Meigs &lt;it Nelsonville· York, 8 p.m
Point Pleasant at ~a venswood , 7:30p. m.
Gallia Acade:my at Marietta. 7 :30 p.m.

LONGHORNS· 41, 'l'R()wJANS 38

OVCS at Teays Valley, 3 p.m.
South GallIa at Ironton St. Joe, 8 p. m.

Girts Basketball
OVCS at Teays Valley. 4:30p.m.
Point Pleasa nt

atPoca . 7:30

p.m

·
Wrealling
Point Pleasant. Meigs. Waham a at JCI

Texas unseats
Trojans for .
national title-

INSIDE

BY

RALPH Russo
ASSOC IATED PRESS

.• Johnson keeping to
himself for playoffs.
See Page 82
• Oh1o State has largest
athletic program in nation.
See Page 82

Patrol pulls coach's
safety posters after '
DUI arrest
ATHENS (AP) ~ Th e Ohio
State Highway Patrol has
stoppeo distributing posters
promoting , safe dri l'ing that
feature a football coach. cbn:1victed of drunkei1 dri ving. ·
Ohio coach Frank Solich.
hired last year to turn around
the footba ll prognrm. entered
a no contest ·plea on Nov. 28.
two days after police found
him slu mped over his steering
whee l.
The patrol chose him for the
poster last summer because of
his standing in the communi ty. Solich appears in the poster
with two iroopers and the slogan. •'Save the aggrc sj ion for
the 11elu. not the road.''
That standing also leu to
widespread attention to his
arrest. said Lt . Tom Dean.
commander of the patrol's
Athens post. The patrol has
not di splayed or di stributed
copje s bf the poster since
rhen .
•. ·
Soli ch"s license was su_,_
pended for six month,. and
the. uni versity required him to
participal e· in alcohol-eJucation pn.ig ram ~ nn c ampu ~ to
keep his job.

CONTACTS
Phone :.... 1-74() -446-2342 ext 33

Fax -

1-,7 40-446 -3008

~-mall - sports @ myda1 1ysent1n el cor"

Sport.s Sta.l1
Brad

Sherman. Sports

Editor

(740} 446-23 42. ext 33

bshe.rman@ my_da 1lytribune com

Bryan Walters . Sport&amp; Writer
(740) 446-2342 . ext 23
bwalters@ my dalty•nbune co~

'
'
Larrv Crum , Sports
Writer
1740 ) 446-234 2. ext 33
lcrum@myda1lyreg1S ier com

capped a perform ance that
Texas fans will remember
forever by scorin g the final
PASADENA , Ca li f.
TO ar1d running for a 2Virice Young and Texa s are point conversion
" It 's so beautiful,'' Young
second no more to Southern
Ca li f6 rnia and it s Heisman said as he received the
Trophy twi ns. Reggie Bush MVP crystal. "Don ' t you
and Matt Leinart.
think that 's beautiful? It's
With the national ch&lt;)mpi - cam ino home all the way to
· .
onship down to a fin al play: · A u s tin~ Texas .'"
Young sc rambled for an 8With the two highest
yard touc hdown o n fo urth scoring teams in the coundown with 19 seconds left iry. many figu red it would .
and the No . 2 Lo nghor.n ' come down to wh ich team
stunned th e top-rank ed had the ball last. It basicalTroja ns 4 1-38 in the Rose Iy did. and USC was denied
Bowl u n Wednesday night. it s .unprecedented · third
The high-scoring game stra ight titl e.
everyo ne expected to see
Texa s players streame1
brok e out in the seco nd half un to the field wi th the
- ye t it wa s' a defen sive Longhorn s' fir st · outrig ht
stop that was the key to national title si nce 1969.
Texas ending U;')C' s 3 ~- Young stood on the side lin e
in a sea of fallin g confetti ,
game winni ng streak . ,
When USC coac h Pete ar'nh raised toward the
Carrol l
gamb led.
the crowd. and senior tackle
Longhorn s stuffed LenDale William Winston unfurled a
White on , a fourth-and-2 at bi g. white Longhorns fla g.
midfield with 2:09 left.
The Longhorns ( 13-0)
· Young. bitterly di sap- won their :!Oth in a row,
pointed at lo si ng the overcoming the 38-26 lead
He isman to Bu sl1. then LC SC ( 12- 1) held with 4 112
· AP photo
wo und up wi th the ult i mat~ minutes \eft.
Texas quarterback Vince Young (.10) rus hes for a gain against Southern California in the sec· revenge . On a night when
Whi le the Longhorns '
ond quarter of play as Texas meets Southern California in the Rose Bowl, the national cham- he ran for 200 yard s and
pass ed lor 261 !'nore. he Please see Lonpoms. B:Z
pionship college fo otbal l game in Pasadena , Calif. , Wednesday.
·

-Lady Falcons fall to Guyan Valley, 49-37
BY LARRY CRUM
LC RUM @MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

BRANCHLAND. W.Va.
- With three players in double figu res, Guyan Valley
overcame an early Wahama
lead to pull
away tovi e-a
49-37
t o r y
Wednesday
night.
A
few
· defensive
mistak e s
and a poor
n

i g h

The hoine squad finally put
it away in the fourth with a
strong 17 point period as
Guyan Valley held on fo r the
12 point win.
Wahama stru gg led all ni ght
shooting the ball. hitting onl y·

33 percent from the field as
the· Lady Wildcats .managed
to convert on · the mi." ed
sho".
Guyan Vall ey was led on
the.evening by Da,·idson and
her 16 points. fol lowed by

Carme n Raynl's with 12
points . Ka ygan Hu tchin son
with II point s. Karah
Pri charJ and Heather Wi le}
added four po ints and
Brittan y Likens posted two
· s.
.pornt

Waham a was led by
Keiih.Ann Sayre. who posted
a game high 17 points. fol·[owed by Beth Keyes with
. nine poinb . Jess ica Hoffman
Please see Fit!lcons. B:Z

r---------------------------------~----------------------------------------------,

t

sho o t ing
Sayre
from
the
f i e I d
proved a
problem for
the Lady
Falcons all
game long .
as Wahama
allowed a
four point
lead al'ter
the
fi rsi
' Keyes
period
was te away to a three point
de fici t. on e the L&lt;rd y
Falcon s could not make up.
Gu yan Val ley. !ti d hy
l!.ac y DaviJS&lt;\ n witl1 16
p11inl ' . added I 0 more
points in the thi rd qu artl'r ·
' and linlit ~d Wahama to only
six as the Lady Wildcah
, low lY be gan to pull a" ay.

Patients at Pleasant Valley Hospital w uld &gt;pend
.
.
·r
;
•
,..
•
.
'
less time. in,~e'Pi"til'lgr~ that)ks to .a~wly in stalled
'1M " •,

.

' •

I

.

Pictur·e Archiving &amp; Commp'.'itations System .

PACS; a$,~~
I~' known, aii~Ws·. PVII'
,. 010re common
.
'

physi.:ial!il'tqsee a pati.cnt's radiolog) imageS-and test
~

'

.

-

.

of the l&lt;e~ hoard.
I ns~t ~vailabilitY:,or x-rays ahd reports mean , less

results ~th ~- stroke
'

.

f..

~

·••

'

1\aiting tlmefor ,o~pati enb . .
. . .
'
PACS is setti,ng the standard for quality scmcc and

-

.

.

'
.
Pleasant Va l k~ Ho~pitll is utilizing its k aturc, .

PLEASA~T

VALLEY HOSPITAL

.Raq'iol'o!! Oe;a!'lll(urt
2520 Yallev. Dri\·e .

. Point

Pleasant. WV' 25550

301-675-1310

�Thursday, January 5, 2006

Page 82 • The Daily Senhncl

Thursday, January ·s, :wo6

www. mydailysentinel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\egister

Chad Johnson keeping to himself for playoffs
BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCI NNATI - Now th.it
Chad Johnson has reached the
NFL's btggest stage, he's got
nothmg to say.
The Bengals' top receiver
and best showman, tJJtimated
agmn Wednesday that he·,
been mutned bv .1 head coach
trymg to get ht ~ team foc used
for ns first playott appearance
in I ~ years.
Usually the center ot allenlion In the locker room,
Johnson declmed mtet VIews
wtth a sorrowful shake ot hts
head He was a sohtat y figlll e,
eatmg a plate of chtcken and
rice whtle teammates talked freely about their first-wund
game Sunday agamst the
AP photo
Pittsburgh Steelers
Ctnctnnatt Bengals wtde recetve r Chad Johnson reacts dunng
Asked tf he would talk to the1r NFL football game aga tnst the Detrott Ltons Sunday, Dec.
the med1a at all , Johnson sa1d, 18, n Detro1t. The Bengals' top recetver and best s howman
"Only tf you pay my tine "
tnttmated agatn Wednesday that he's been muffled by a head
That was tt And that was coach trymg to get h1s team focused for tis ftrst playoff appearfme w1th coach Mat vt n
Lewis, who has tned vanous ance tn 15 yea rs
'
Marvm
Lewts m that deCIF1 nally, silence
ways to subdue a player who
1
sion.
Good
dec1s1on by Chad
' Wow After 17 weeks
keeps mvenung new ways 1
Lew ts
sa1d He wants to focus on the
a Pepto-Btsmol shtpment, a M,ln "
Ternble Towel btb - to Wednesday. breaktng uno a week, and that's good "
John son ms1sts 1t's not hts
huge sm1le "Don't put
tweak the next opponent

idea
Earlier 111 the week, Johnson
told reporters that "h1gher
authortty" - hts code words
for the head coach - ordered
htm to keep qutet all week.
Nothing
had
cftanged
Wednesday
So, while rece1ver T.J
Houshmandzadeh gave hi s
mstghts mto the game at an
ad;mmng locker, Johnson sat
by himself and ate lunch. The
AFC's top recetver wore a
Bengals stockmg cap, an AFC
North Champions T-shtrt and
a glum expression.
He didn't interact with
teammates or watch what was
happemng around htm m the
locker room. When reporters
allproached, he merely shook
hts head. The only ttme he
talked was when someone
called htm on hts cell phone
It was totally out of character.
"Hopefully he ' II have a lot
to say after the game,"
Houshmandzadeh said.
Everyone else wtll have a
lot to say leadmg up to it.
The Bengals ( ll-5) and
Steelers ( 11 -5) spht thetr season senes, each wmmng on

the other tea m's field
Cmcmnati took control of the
diVISIOil With a 38-JJ Will at
Hemz Fteld on Dec 4, leavmg
the Steelers 111 danger of missmg the playoffs.
Pittsburgh won 1ts Jast four
games, buildmg momentum
along the way. By contrast. the
Bengals lost their last two
games by ·a combined 72-30,
ratsing concerns and promptmg Lewis to get tough.
Johnson's Silence wasn' t the
only change Wednesday
Lewts compared the playoffs
to an alley brawl and had the
Bengals pracuce m their pads,
hopmg to get back that edge.
"Marvin told us we'll be m
pads today and we ' ve got to
get our mmds ready to go to
work," offenstve tackle Willie
Anderson satd "It's not vacation ltme We're not laymg
off Marvm's gomg harder
"We haven't been m pads
(on a Wednesday) for at least
five weeks. He said that today
and we were hke, 'Oh, we
know what kmd of day n's
gomg to be."'
For Johnson, tt will be an
unfamth ar kmd of week.
He was m customary form

CLASSIFIED

before the two regular-season
games agmnst the Stee lers,
pr31smg thetr defense wh1le
repeatmg that he ·s too good to
be stopped by anyone He had
fom catches for 94 yards 111
the 27- 13 loss 111 Cincmnau,
and five catches for 54 yards
mthe vtctory at Hemz F1eld.
Before
that
re match,
Johnson wore a Ternble Towel
as a b1b tor ht s m1dweek
medJa sesston and promtsed
an 1ron-themed touchdown
celebrauon After the Vl&gt;tory.
he said the Stee lers' dommauon of the dtvlsion was a thmg
of the past, hke black-andwhtte televtston.
Now, the guys 111 black-andgold are back wnh a chance to
show Johnson they're not
obsolete.
"He's gomg to say some
random things and speak
what's on h1 s mmd,'' quarterback Carson Palmer sa1d
Wednesday "To say that what
he smd puts more pressure on
us or IS bulletin-board matenal, none of that 1s needed Thts
IS a b1g enough game m
itself."
One that's m1ssmg a certam
chatter

DISp,lt ch
The Buckeye s' top nval,
Michtg.lll, pl aced third on
the li st dl $78.4 mil !Jon, fo llov.ed by Flonda ($77 4
mtllt on) and Wt sco nsm
($75 3 mdlwn).
Ohto State has the most
athletes and teams among
the NCAA's D1vi s10n I
schools.
'You always want to be

the biggest and the best,"
satd athlettc dtrector Gene
Smtth. 111 charge of a selfsufftctent department that
has more than 900 studentathletes tn 36 sports
Oh10 State sports receive
no money from the government or the university.
Ohto State dtdn 't rank
fir st in every category,
determined by reports filed
annually urrder the Equtty

in Athletic s Di sclosure Act
Teams that don't produce
revenue decreased proftt at
Oh10 State to slightly more
than $120,000 Georgta had
the nation's most profttable
college sports program ,
making $23.9 million more
than it spent.
Texas was tops in footb all
revenue with $53.2 milhon,
better than runner· up Oh10
State's $51.8 mtlhon

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

l\egister
(304) 675-1333

from Page Bl

•

band blared "The Eye s of
Texas" 111 front of a sea of
burnt orange , the USC
players ~ooked star tled
Some put the1r hands to
thetr heads, others took off
thet r helmets
"Well , we coul dn ' t stop
them when we had to ,"
USC coac h P~ t e Ca rroll
satd. "The quarterback ran·
all over the place
"Tht s is thetr mght." he
sa td "H's wonde rfu l do mg
what we ' ve been domg We
didn 't ge t 11 done .''
Satd Lemart. " I sttll thmk
we ' re a better football ,
teaJII. they JUSt made the

Mo,nday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE

\'\ot \(I \ fl \ I '

r

GtVEAWAV

r
I

·------·

Free to good Home
Lab/Coon
Dog
m1x
Spayed, 8 M Old and
Tratned to Leash
7 40·

Falcons
from Page Bl
had SIX p01nts, Amber Tulley
and kayanna Sayre put up
two po111ts and Mary Kehler
managed one potnt m the
loss
The Lady Fakons return to
acllon after nearly a week otl'
when they travel to face Wlrt

Wahama
from PageB1
when the Falcon s welcome
neighboring Hannan to the
Bend Area.
St. Marys began somev. hat
of a comeback fo llowmg the
mtermtssion break behmd the
sconng of Gavm Renner and
Donald Butcher. The Blue
Devil s outscored Wahama
16-10 in the thtrd penod to
close the gap to 45-29 before
taking a 12 -~ dectston 111 the
fmal quarter
"St Marys really got phystcal m the second half and as
a result were able to cut mto
our lead a little b1t." Toth
satd. "After los mg Hamson
we lost some of our ball handling skt lls and as a resu lt we
were forced to slow thmgs
down a little " Although tnmming the Falcon lead tn the
second hal f the Blue Dev1ls
never got any closer than the
13 potnt fuial deficit
"We're gettmg some quality play from our personhel
nght now," commented Toth
"Clay Roush has been as
sohd as a rock for us wnh h1s
scon ng and reboundm g
whtch ts near double ftgures

G1veaway female Black
Lab
3
month s old

(&gt;40)256 i233
Gtveaway Cute kttten to a
good home
(740)4 46·

9279
M edtum StZed dog free to
.good home ~Jery fnendly
Please call (740)44 6-.
4 177

r
2

P1gmy Goats both
females m1ssmg stnce

6 30 PM on

andlor Jane Doe, Real

109.89 Feet Along lha
centerline ol said ~
county road 10 to a
point , Thence North
Devisees, Legatees,
Admlnstratlors , 14 Deg 47' 20" East
Executor•
and
t65 09 Feet to an Iron
Assigns of Pauline F
Rod, passing an ~ron
Davis, deceaad, will rod at I 5 feet for ref·
take notice that on
eranc::e; Thence East
221.95 Feet to the
October 6, 2005, Wells
Fargo Bsnk, National · point of beginning
Association,
as containing
1.18
Truatae for Morgan acres, more or less,
Stanley Capital I Inc., excepting all legal
rights of way. The
Trust
2004-0P1
Mortgage
Pass- bearings 1n the above
description are baaed
Through Certificates,
Sarles 2004·0P1, C/0 on tho reference deed
Option One Mortgage volum 127, Page 122.
Description
per
Corporation,
flied
their Supplemental Survey of Robert H
Complaint In Case Eason,
Registered
Number 05-CV-Il23, In Survayor Ohio R.S
the Court of Common
No s-06546, dated
Pleas
ol , Melga April 1984. Premises
Co~nty, Ohio, alleg·
commoQIY known as
tng that the defen· 35646 Carpenter Hill
dent(s) John Doe,
Rd . Langsville, Ohio
Real Nama Unknown, 45714. The Plaintiff
the Unknown spouse further alleges that by
It any, of Paun,.a F reason of default In
Davis, and John Doe the payment of the
and/or Jane Doe , Rul
promissory
nota,
Names unknown, the
according to Its tenor,
Unknown
heirs, the conditions of a
deviaaa1, lagataaa, concurrent mortgage
adrhinstratora, execu~ dead given to eecure
tors and aaatgns ot,
the payment of aald
Pauline F
Davia,
note and conveying
deceased heva or
the
premises
claim to have an
described, have been
lnterell In the reel
broken and the aame
estate
described haa
become
below. Situated In the
abaolute
Township of Salem,. The plaintiff demands
County of Meigs , and
that the defendants
State of Ohio: Situate named above be
In Salem Townahlp , required to an•war
Meigs County, Stale and set up their Interof Oh lo and being In est In said real eelate
Section 5, Town 8
or be forever barred
North, Range t 5 West
from asserting the
of the Ohio Purchaae same, for forctoauro
end being deacrlbed ot aald mortgage, tho
aa
followa:
marshaling of any
Beginning at an Iron
IIana, and the aala of
Rod Well about 2640 aald real estate , and
feet and south about
the proceeds of aald
1095 Feot from the
sate applied to the
Northeast corner of
payment of plaintiffs
Section
4B0,5 ; claim In the proper
thence South 9 dog
order. of Its prlonty
18' 20" West 151 .45 and for such other
fe8t to an Iron rod;
and further relief as Is
then,ce South 28 Deg Just and equitable
41 ' 20" weal 163,11
The
defendants
feet to a point In the
named above are
centerline of County
required to answar on
Road 10, p'asalng an
or before the 16th

narnas J.lnknown, lha
unknown
Hairs,

Serlas 2004-0P1 C/0
Option One Mortgage
Corporation Mark A
Poland
(0071988)
Attorney for Plaintiff
Carlisle, • MeNellle,
Rlnl, Kramer &amp; Ulnch,
LPA, 24755 Chagrin
Blvd ., Suite
200,
Cleveland, OH 44122,
216-360-7200 Phone,
216-360·7210

Facsimile ,
mpotand@ carllsleiawcom

(12) 15, 22, 29, (1) 5,
12. 19

Public Nottce
Advertise for Budget
hearing for Southern
Local School District,
Meigs
County
Summary ot amounts
required
from
General Property Tax
approved by Budget
Commission,
and
County Auditor's estimated ratas. The
meeting
w1ll
be
January 9th, 2006 at
6:30 p m following
the
organlzallonal
meeting at 6 00 p m.
Dennie E Hill
Interim Treasurer
(12) 21, 23, 26, 27, (1)
3, 5

Public Notice
NOTICE TO THE PUB·
LIC 5 YEAR PLAN
PUBLIC
HEARING
MEIGS
HOUSING
AUTHORITY
The Meigs Housing
Authority will conduel a Public Hearing
ot the Fiscal Year
2005- 2009, 5 Year
Plan on Wednesday,
Jan. 18, 2005 at 7.00
p.m. at the office of
the Meigs Housing
Authority sl 117 East
Memo r ial
Drive ,
Pomeroy, Ohio
The porpose of the
public hearing Is to
gain public comment
and Input on the pro·
posed Meigs Housing
Authority 5 Year Plan
The Plan addresses

Assistance program
Copies of the MMHA
Five Year Plan are
available for public
rev1ew at the Me1gs
HOUSing
AulhOflly
office at 117 East
Memonai
Dnve,
Pomeroy,
Oh1o,
between the business
hours of 9·00 a m
and
4: 40
pm,
Monday
through
Friday The MMHA 5
Year Plan is available
at the Pomeroy Public
Library, the Me1gs
County
Commissioners
office, the Dept of
Jobs and Family
Services, and the
Me1gs
Health
Department
Written colf'lments on
the Plan may be
mailed or delivered to
the MMHA, 117 East
Memorial

Onve ,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
prior to 4 •00 p m. on
Jan 18, 2005
Jean Trussell
Executive Director
Melga
Hous1ng
Authority
(1) 5, 9,13

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Meig s County
Board of Revision will
meet for an organizational session on
Monday, January 9,
2006 at 10 00 am In
the Meigs County
Auditor's
Office ,
Second
Floor,
Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The meellng will be
held to conduct an
election of officers
and to con older Rules
of Procedure for the
2006 County Board ot
Revision
Meigs Coonty Board
of Revision
Nancy
Parker
Grueaar, Secretary
(I) 5

12-29-05

Daugh ter's
Chnstmas
Present Please return or
call wtth 1nformatton 74()416 1369 Bashan Road
around Carma I Road

1-~•

1

--------

Mn

4
yea r
old
Lostbrown/brtndle
co lor
spayed lab mtx female
stnce 12130/2005 .~ down·
town Ractne
tf fo und
please return or call

r~:::::=::=:

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Buslneea Daya Prior To
Publication

Sunday In-Column: 1 .00 p . m .
For Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid •
~nclu de

il!rg

13041675·1683
Lost Syr old Choc La b
mtsstng s1nce Dec 26 from
2279 vanco Road !I you
have tnfo or ha\18 seen her
ca ll (740)245·0710
Lost little light brown
Corgt
Last seen on
M organ Cen te r Road
Childs pel answe rs to
ROSI9 (740)388·9478

anv loss or ••penH that re1utte trom the publication or omlttion of an edvtnltement.. Cor...ction will be made In the f irst tvetttble edition • 801
are always eonll dantlal •Current rate e~~rd appllee. •AU real ntale advertlMfT'IInta ara aubject to the Fedet"al Fa1r Houalng Act of 1968 •This .,.,,..,. ., .
accepta onfy help wanted adt mettlng EOE atlndardl
will not knowingly tccept 1ny actvenltlng In violation ot the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Pomeroy

I WA'? \&lt;'1/Jt&gt;A Hoffrlb
\1' lfloV vr&gt; 1AI'-6 t.otJt':::!~R..
1~Po.f'l 1111'7 Fof!, ~I&lt; 10
6~11i~

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4"s For Sale......... .. .. .......................... 725
Announcement ............. ...................... 030
Antiques......... . ..
. ................... . 530
Apanments for Rent
. .................... 440
Auction and Flea Markel............... .. .
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories..................... . 760
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale .......................................... 710
Boals &amp; Motors for Sale .......................... 750
Building Supplies .................................. 550
Business and Buildings ... ............... . .. ~40
Busmess PPP9rl~Ott;y..,. .....•... . ,\ ~· · ~· ·~····2.1Q
Business Training ...... .................
.140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes....................
790
Camping Equipment ............................... 780
Cards of Thanks ..................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care
.. ........................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................ 840
Equipment for Rent............. • .
... ....480
Excavating. .. ..
. ................
830
Farm Equipment.................. .
......... 610
Farms for Rent..................... . .........,.......430
Farm s for :;ate ............................................. 330
For Lease. .. . .. ..................................... 490
For Sale
. .. ... ............... .. ............. 585
For Sale or Trade............. . . .. .. .. ............590
Frolts &amp; Vegetab1es...........
.. ...........580
Furnished Rooms...........
. ................. 450
General Hauling.................. ... .. ................850
Giveaway....................... . ... .. ................040
Happy Ads....................... • ...... ................ 050
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
" Home lmprovemenla ................................... 810
Home• for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods .................. .. ...... ,........... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance ................................................ 130
l.awn &amp; Garden Equipment . .. ................ 660
Livestock ................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................ 060
Lots &amp; Acreago ............................................ 350
Mlocollanoous............... ....................... ... .170
Mlacallaneouo Merchandlse....................... 540
Mobile Homo Repalr .................................... 880
Mobile Homes tor Rent .... ........................ 420
Mobile Homes tor Sale . . ................ . • 320
Money to Loan........ .. . .. ..................... .. 220
MQtorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ............. .
740
Mullcallnatrumentl..... .
.. ............ 570
Peraonat1 ............................................ 005
Peto tor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................. 820
Professional Servlce1 ................................. 2ao
Redto, TV &amp; CB Repair .............................. I 60
Rest Estate Wanted .................................. 360
Schools tnatructlon ...................... . .. ... . .150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .. .................... .. &amp;SO·
Sltuallona Wanted . • ... ..................
120
Space tor Rent. .. .. • . ............... ...
.460
Sporting Goodl . . . . ... ...............
520
SUV'a tor Sale
.. ...... ....... . . .
720
Trucks tor Sale .......................................... 715
Upholstery ............................................... 870
Vena For Sale ............................................. 730
Wanted to Buy ...................................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Fa{m Supplies....... ...... .620
Wanted To Do ...
. .. ...........
180
Wanted to Rent
. ... . . .....
470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis... ......
,.... 072
Yard Sale-POIJlOroy/Middle.......
074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ..................
076

.

ISH ING CO recom
ends that yqu do bust
ess With people yo
now and NOT to sen
oney ttlro t.Jgh the mat
nttt you have tnvesttga:
d the oHenn

oF AU- HtR

r

446 2842
I \11'1 C)\ \II\ I

..,,,nu '"

110
I•

'i

tJig

~
II:) 2006 by NEA, Inc
110
1

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An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Cal l Man lyn 304 882·2645

AVON I All Areas' To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears 304
675 i429
Babysttler ne eded for 1
chtld Approx 5 eveln•ghts
per month Call Ivy lor
more delatls @ (740)645·

4539
Career Op portunity
6 F1gure 1ncome poteniiBI
strong closer Great work
environment no 1ra11e1 full
benefits medtcal dental
401K 5 day wol'k week
Fax res ume (7 40 )446

3599
Ortvers COL A wt th 1 year
verlfia~le Tractor Tratler
expenence
required
Reg1onal Runl Great pay
benefits bonuses home

ilme l MARTIN TRANS
PORT 866·293 7435
Expenenced patn t &amp; bOdy
man
needed
tor
Aestorat•on Shop contact
Htlls
Classtc
Cars

(740)949·2217 7am·7pm

JOBS NOWII
Up to $8/hour fulltlme
Make calls on behalf of
the NRA. and other con
servatNe Pohltcal organ•·
zattons
•Patd tratntng
•Patd holidays
•Patd vacat iOns
• Outstand •ng work
envtronment
Start making a differ·
ence
todsyt

1222

Truck Mechantc Needed

Call (740)388 8547

EQUIPMENT
we lders
Backgro und tn od f•eld well
servtce and dnlhng ngs a
plus Full beneltls pack
at~e 1ncludmg health den·
ta l and long lerm d1sabtltty
msurance retire ment plan
and
patd
vacatio ns
Appl iCations available al
The Otelmson Corporation
lnlerstate 77 &amp; A t 21
R1p1ey
wv
25~71
PhOne-304·372·91 11
E
matt resume
debbteCdiCktrson com

www lntocislon com
Local bustness tookmg lor
Secretary/Receptton•st
Must have good telephone
sk1lls &amp; good wtth the pub
he knowledge Ill comput
ers &amp; computer accounltng
programs &amp; all other ot'ftce
machtnes Hours aam
5pm Monday Fnday 8·12
• Sal urday
Send resume to
Local Bustness
PO Box 775
Gall polts OH 45631
Mach tmst
Accept tng appltcattons tor
EXPERIENCED Machtntst
ior evemng shtft Ful l ben
ellis package mcludmg
health dSntal and long
term dtsablllty tnsurances
retirement plan and pard
'w'aca110n
Appltcatlens
available at The D1cktrson
CorporatiOn Interstate 77
&amp; At 21 Rtpley WV
2527 1
PhOne 304 372
91 11 E-matl resume to
debbie@dtc~trson com
Medt
Home
Health
Agency Inc seektng a full·
ttme RN Pat1ent Care
Coordmator or Account
EKecultve lor Galltpolts
Ohto and surroundtng
area Dulles tnclude eslab·
ltshmg and mamtatnuig
open lines of communtca
ton w tth area physlctans
and heallh care facllmos tn
lhe delivery of Home
Health servtces We otter a
competll t'w'e salary and
be netlts package tor lull
tt me EOE Please send
resume to Judte Reese
Ctmtcal Manager
352
~econd Avenue Galhpohs
OH 45631

f\1. 35

Adult V•de o &amp; Book
Sffire need Mrdnlght pe r~
Fullltme (304\937 4900

orrow Smart Contac
he Ohto D1vts1on o
manc1al lnst ttutto n
fftce of Consume
ffa~rs BEFORE yo
efmance your horne o
btam
a
loan
EWARE of reque st
or any large advanc
ayments of tees o
nsurance
Call th
fftc e of Consume
Haus toll free at 1
66 278 0003 to lear
1 lhe mortgage broke
r lender tS properl
•censec:l (Thts ts a pu b
lC servtee announce
ent rrom the Oh1
alley
' Publ tshtn

EXPERIENCED HEAVY

1-8n...t6J.6241 ext 2301

Home
Health
Atde
Classes· Agency •s look
Ohio Valley Home Health
tng tor people tnlerested m ,..
Inc htrtng Full Ttme AN
havmg a career n the
and Per 01em MSW
home health fteld Classes
Ac cepting applicatiOns lor
w•l1 last 2 weeks and help
LPN CNA STNA CHHA
w tth 10b placement Class
PCA. Competttr ve Wages
start date ts Jan 16th
,.,.,1leage and
beneftts
Please call { 740)44 1 1377
tnc ludlng
Health
or
(740)992' 0990
lor
Insuranc e App ly at 1480
detatis
Ja ck son Ptk.e G alltpohs or
24 15 Jackson A'w'enue •
Home Health Care of SE
Pomt Ple asant WV or
Ohto Is currently htnng
phone toll tree 1 866 441
Home
Health
A des
Compet•t•ve wages
Cell
1393
7~0.662

Welder Excene dced
Heaw EQ U!pmen!
Accepl tng applicatiOns 'for

MONEY

TOLoAl~

Concealed Ptsiot

Class

J an 14 2006 $50 00
9 00 am VFW Mason WV
Ph (740)843 5555
Gallipolis Career

Co IIebe
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740 44 6 4367
1·800·214-0452
WW'N ~a

POSTAL JOBS
$15 94 S22 56/hr
now
hmng For applrcatton and
free governement JOb mfo
call Amenca n Assoc of
Labor
1 91 3·599 8220
24/hrs amp serv
Smger and Muslctans
needed For more tnforma
liOn contact Pastor James
Wtreman C (740)446
8613
.

...........-.
,

T1red of work ng all
the holidays?
Ttred of work.tng IOf"'Q t.2
hour shtfts?
Come home and tom us
at Medi-Home

HeaJtb'
.IQpenlng lor a Full
Ttme AN lull benel!ts
package
.ncludmg 401K Sign on
Bonua S2 500
.-'Qpemng for a Pa rt
Ttme AN Sign on
Bonua $1 ,500
~

Call Judie Re11e, RN ,
C, Clinical Menag•r, at

.

(740)44;.1779 or
i 800.481-6334

••••••••••••

FIND
AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

I pOl so:;~reercolle~et corn
Acc redlled Member Accredtttng

Courx11 lor Independent ColleQes
and Schools 12NB

Shoto'
Kan
Karate ClaSS!iiS beg1nn1ng
Monday the
16th at
Carelton
School
tn
Syracuse
Classes are
Monday and Thursday
hom 6 00 to 7 00 PM
every week
For more
tnformatton contact Kenny
Tolhver at 740-378-6144 or
Steve Kempton 740 667

3039

WMmD

ToiJo

Asststed ltvmg care open·
•ng 1n my home Pnvate
room bath 3 hot meats

(7401388 01 i 8

l~Alj
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY

/SSI?

No Fee Unl ess We W tnl

i B88 582 3345
IH \I I ..., I \II

1995 Doublewtde 3br 2ba
w/atlached
Garage
Breezeway &amp; Barn 1 56
acres
Sandhtll
Ad
$72 000 (304)895 3068
3 Bedroo m Hause 1 2 acre
near Potnt Pleasant" walk
out basement
2 acres
opt tonal
(304 )675 15.36
orvb com code 9905
3 Bedroom 2 Bath w•th
Ftreplace rn A to Grande
area 8 acres mil 40lo:60

only

8 Acres Chalet Stytie Log
Home
4 Be1 128ath
ACIFAF tree gas Eastern
hltgh Schoo l by Shade
Atver on Route 7 and
Barn $159 000 304 863
3610

1ng

Om.D'EulF.Rt.\
C•tu'

Bonn1e s Pnyate Chtldcare
Now
has
Ope n1ngs
Con11ente ntly loc ated by
new highway on SAT 7
Call 740 985 4326

(740 )709 1166
log Stded 3 bedroom 2
bath manufactu red home
1 8 acres tn country Ato
Grande area Many amant
1105 $98 500 (740 )245

6851 . (740) 418 Oi04

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
10 used homes under
S3 000 00 Must Go 1 Call
Ela tne 740 385 0698

1996 Skylme 281.64 3BR
2BA fireplace ca lhetlrat
cethng S35 000 (740)709
1166
~)"- )¥ "tt.' t t\itt:•" I
2001 16.,56 Clayton 2
bedroom 1 ba th open lay
out
great
cond•t•on

$i2 000

Call 17401256

1879
2006 161&lt;70 3 Br/2 bth
Vmyi/ Shtngle
-S229/mo
Call (740)385 9948
'91 Skyltne 16x80 3 Br 2
8th
S t 45 mo
Ca ll
1740)385 7671
96 Fle etwood 3 BR 2 Btl'
St691mo
Includ es
De livery Call (7 401 385

9948

34!1

Bt 'S~'&gt;L'&gt;'i
AMl BLlUJINGS

Call 740 589·7i22

Foreclosure

Do you need a Care Gtver
Compan•on?
I Have
Aelerences Call Be~Jerly

IIIQ

Country setttng tn Ga!lta
County! 3 bedrooms 2
baths ftreplace $85 000

800-391 5228 ext F254

4BA

Attention I

Wtlt take care ol woman m
my home for more 1nfo1
malton call {740)38$·8193

opportun ity bases

$14 900 For hsttngs call

\ i66

Local company ollenng

George!) Portable Sawmill
Cl(ln t haul your Logs lo the
Mtll jUSt C811304·675 1957

Thts newspaper Will not
knowingly aceep1
advertiMments for real
estate which 1s In
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
mfo rmed that all
dwelling• advertised In
this (\ewapaper are
available on en equal

For Rent 3 6Utldtngs lor
Bustn ess Use Located m
Pomeroy
Also 2
Unfurn •shed
Upstatrs
Apts 1n Pomeroy lor Rent

ba1n $120 000 (740)709-

Computer Trouble Shoot
and
Repatr
E1.pert
Servtce 740-992 2395

(304)675·1084

All real eltete advertl81ng
1n this newtpttper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fa ir Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advwrtiH ·any
preference limitation or
dlserlminatlan baaltd an
race color, religion. sex
familial status or national
ong1n, or any tntentlon to
make an~ auel"l
preference limitation or
discrimination '

FOR SALE
1900 square loot 3 bed
room 2 bath Muse for
sale sets on 3 aoes off of
St8'te ' At' 7 tri Chester
Townshtp Eastern School
D1stnct 2 car attached
garage
2
out
bUtldtngs Call (740)985
4321 after 6pm

• 100 01o financing
Less than perfect credtt
accepted
• Paymdnt could be the
same as rent
Mortoaoe
locators

Wanted tan:d ln Metgs
county to Lease tor hunt
1ng
Ca ll 6 OOPM to
7 30PM and ask !or Ertc or
leave message 304 .372

6745

Need to sel l your home?
Late on payrnents dtvo rce
job transter or a death? I
can buy your home Alt
cash and ~ u •ck ctostng
740-ol1 6 3130

IU ' I \I...,

(740)367 0000
Immaculate .3 bedroom
great netgh borhood co1·
ner lot completely remod
eled all new appliances
new heat pump r.~ew rooi
when weatheJ Orea~s pe1
tec1 pleoe lo Start a fam1ly
bus stops tn front of house
Potnt Pleasa nt Sc hOols
JUS! outs1Cie of town ask

1ng S79 900
3542

(304 1593

full basemem
garage
Central Heat and Central
Atr
all
appltances
$550 00 a month and
Depostt
In Syracuse
740 992·0167
3 4

bedrooms
washer/dyer
furnished
$500/month
S500/depostt references
and applications reqwred
(740)446 7723 alter 5pm
sto~Je!fndge

Attention!
Local company offerm g

NO DOWN PAYMENT"
programs for you to buy
your home tnstead of re nt
IOQ

• 100g1o ftnanc1ng
• Less than pertect credtt
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Localors
(740(367 0000
Beautiful
3
bedroom
house m counlry laundry
room large ltvmg room
apohances
tncluded
$400/mo (614)595·7773
or 1 800 798 4686
For rent 2 bedroom 1
bath tully renovated
apphances 1940 ~astern
Avenue
$475/ month
$475/deposti
Ca ll

au

(740)446 348i

Off Jackson Pike 3BA 1 5
bath house 2-car garage
$600/mo plus sec dep
You
pay
utlltt tes
References and min 1 yr
lease
reqwed
Call
(740 )446 3644 to r more

'"lo
Responstb!e couple to rent
tw o nomes tocateo approx
1 m•te from CJt)' on St At
588
No mstde pets
Reference and depoSit
requ•red $350 per month
S.350 depos t (740 1446·

34i3
Small 2 Bedroom "'O pers
WID hook up
S350 00
monlh $300 00 cte~s•t
304 773·9192
Stoo renting Buy 7 tted
room foreclosu re S 18 000
For ltsttngs BOO 391 5228
ext 1709

Two &amp; tf'lr ee bem oom tn
Pomeroy ana Sy, acuse
(740 )9.92 3702 or 416
5547

!""' MnRIU HO\IES
mR Rv.'T
1 4)(70 moOt!e Mme $425
rent $425 depos tt Call
(74 0)445·4060
0/
(7401367-7762

2 bedroom etect rtc tra•ler
No pets

S2501m o

Ca ll

(740 )446·0722

"NO DOWN PAYMeNT"
programs fo1 you to buy
your home tnstead of rent·

n

740

3 Bedrooms 1 &amp;1'2 baths

161.80 homes starttng a1
S25995 00 lrx:lud es vtnyl
stdtng/ shtngle root Call
Russ 740 385 2434

HO~IES

No Pets

992·5858

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUB

Absolute Top Dollar US
S1lver and Gold Cotns
Prootsets Gold Atngs
Pre-193~ US Currency
Sohtatre Dtamonds M T S
Com Shop 15 t Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740

LEARN
. TO

FORRI-."11'
2 br 3 Bearoom House

cl-\!&lt;:1 SIMAS roys

HELP WA!mill

Hwst:s

HoME&lt;;
FOR SALE

I wrlght2DO$®Comcast com

Furniture App liances lots
of Mtsc End of Jencho
Ad
Turn rtg ht 3rd
Drweway on lett across
from A pohsttc Church

Lost Wht te Jack Russell
Terner wtth bl ack collar
Bunce Road area Please
call (740)44&amp;-4706

CLASSIFIEDS

10

11\\\li\1

Pr. PLEASANT

.
1

I

Trlbun•Sentlnei-Regleter will b. r..pon1lble tor no more than the coet of the apll(:,! occupied by the error 1111d only the tlrat msert10n We shall not btl I

YARD SALE-

Lo r;;t Set~ of k eys wtth
Mtlltary dog tag S N
35848 119 Contact Peg
Oavts (740)446 7194

SHOP

Now you can have borders and graphics
IL-'
added to your classified ads
_s,~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
It!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlahlng reellf\fel the right to edit, reject, or c.ncel 1,.ny Ml at any tim• Error• mull be reported on thl t1r11 d1y of

Complete

(740)949·2933
Red/White He aler
lost
fe male last seen on
Redman Rtdge/Salt Creek
If found
please ca ll

Sunday t)lsplay: 1:00 p.m.
Thuraday for Sunday•

YARDSALE

ALLIANCE

•

Dally In~Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday-Fri day for ln•ertlon
In Next Day ~s Paper

Ducrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl1tlon1

(740)245 9082

75 Pme

Pisplay Ads

• Include Phone Number And Addrets When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 D•v•

Free 2 month old puppte s
Mtxed
breed
Call

Free to good home a
chocolate male &amp; a black
spayed fe male 5 years old
Lab couple must stay
together very friendly lovable call (740)949 2933
ettgtble fm AKC regtstra·

N c'"'N J~U J&gt; ~ •·,...

~o:

Word Ads

• Stllrt Your Ads With A Keyword •

Found Little While older
Male dog, Gallipolis Ferry
Klem Hill Area (304)675
2476

St Rto Grande

ly, Te"a&gt;' ftnal TD ·came off the fte!d as Young trot - scramble, he mtsf1red on futilely looked toward offtplays m the end ·•
two passes to set up a Cial s, hoplng they'd say
after
Its defen stve stand
ted on.
They sure d1d ,
"If you make that first fourth-and-5 at the 8.
Young stepped ou t of
USC deci ded to try to
Leman dtd hiS part 111 h"
The TroJans brou ght bounds
ftna l co ll ege ga me wh1le sed ! the game with Its down , you' re squatttng on
Bu sh was less than lm beq va unted offense, dubbed by the football to win the pressure, as they dtd all
USC had one last chance
Le1 nart pa ssed to r 365 many the be st to ever play game," Carroll said. "We mght, but Young brok e and 11 wasn ' t a good one
free, found a lane and raced On the las t play of the
yards. and h1 s 22-y ard TD college foot ball , and keep JUS! mt ssed tt By what to the nght pylon
stnke to Dwyane Jarrett put the ball out of Young's two mches'"
ga me from JllSt be yond
The Longhorns erupted,
USC ahead 38-26 wtth 6 42 hands But tt came up mchYoung stood in the pockes short from convertmg on et
and
passed
the one pounded the turf as he m1dfi eld , Letnart' s pass
left
Earlier, Bu sh soared mto the fourth-and-short, and Longhorns to a ftrst -and-10 Jay face down on the turf, sailed h1g h ove r Jar rett 's
the end zone on a 26-yard the Texas de fe nse charged at the 13 After a 5-yard whtle the shocked TroJans head around the 25
run , part of h1 s 82 yards
rushmg He al so had 95
yards on stx catch es- and
a boneh eaded lateral that
P u b l i c Not.lce s In
sw ung mom entum Texas'
Your RIKht Eo
D e l i v e r e d Righi
Vcu ....
wav tn the f u sr halt
.:It' s bee n a great run
day of February, 2006
the proJected needs
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Loans, Inc.
dba Unknown,
the Iron rod at I 43 feet for
We ve done some specwl STATE
Thence Wells Fargo Bank, of the Sect1on 8
OF OHIO
America's Whotasate Unknown Spouse If reference;
thm gs," Bu sh smd. " I don't DEPARTMENT OF Lender
National Association,
AND any, of Pauline F. north 46 Deg 58'30"
households served
Mortgage Electronic Davia, whose 181t Weal 99.68 feet along as Trustee for Morgan
by the Me1gs housmg
th 1nk
we
should be TRANSPORTATION
Registration known addre11 Ia the centerline of said Stanley Capital I Inc., Authonty and the
Columbus , Ohio
as hamed abo ut anythmg ,.
2004·0P1
Office of Contracts
steps that the MMHA
Systems. Inc. c/o 35646 Carpenter Hill county Road 10 to a Trust
In a game that produced Legal Copy Number Countrywide Home Rd. , Langsville, Ohio point ; thence North Mortgage
Passwill Implement In the
over I, I 00 yards, amazmg- 062000
Loana, Inc. flied IIi 45741 , and John Doe 53 Deg 43' 10" West Through Certificates,
Section
8
Rental
Sealed proposals will
Complaint In the
be accepted from preCommon Pleas Court
qualified bidders at
of • Meigs County,
County Thursday. Januar) the ODOT Office of Ohio
In Case No
II.
Contracts un111 10 00
05CV093 , on
the
am. on Janua'Y 11 , . docket ol the Court,
GUYAN VALLEY 49, WAHAMA 37
and the object and
2006 Protect 062000
WAHAMA (4·5)
demand for relief of
1s located 1n Athens
Ke1thAnn Sayre 7 0 D 17 Beth Keyes 4 1
County, USR
50·
which pleading Is to
2 9 Jess1ca Hoffman 3 0·0 6 Amber
10.34Nanous and IS a foreclose the lien of
Tulley 1 0·0 i Kayanna Sayre; 1 0 0 2
Rest Area•proJect The
plaintiff's mortgage
Mary Kabler 0 1·2 1 Totals- 16 2 4 37
date set for complerecorded upon the
GUYAN VALLEY
tion of lhls work shall
following described
Lacy Davidson 5 6 8 16 Carmen Raynes
real estate to wit·
be as set forth In the
5 .22 12 Kaygen Hutchinson 513 11
bidding
proposal
Property
Address:
Karah Pnphard 2 0 0 4 Heather Wiley 2 0
33356 Crouser Road ,
Plans
and
0 4 Br t1any L1kens 1 0·0 2 Totals-20 9Rutland, OH 45775
Specifications are on
13 49
and be1ng more par·
f1le In the Department
WahAma
11 8 6
12 -37
of Transportation.
llcutarly described In
Guyan
7
15 10 17 -49
(12) 29, (1) 5
plaintiff's mortgage
recorded In Mortgage
Book 163, paga 25,
everv nl£ht out "Kameron
Publtc Notice . Instrument
No
played probabl y h1 s best
200300000400, of this
defensive effort wh 1l e Fowler Court of Common County Recorder's
Me1gs County, Office
and Haii JSOn both had one of Pleas
Ohio
The above named
thetr best performances Countrywide Home defendant Is required
Brenton Clark, desplle only Loans , Inc. dba to answer within
(28)
sconng fo ur points agamst Amarlca s Wholasala twenty-eight
days
altar
Lender
AND
last
publiSt Marys, has g1ven us a Mortgage Electronic cation, which shall be
sol1d effort every gdme "
Reg is trat i on
published once a
Fow ler paced the Bend Systems, Inc. c/o week for six consecuHome
tive weeks, or they
Area team m sconng Wi th 17 Countryw1de
Loans , Inc. Plaintiff,
might be dented a
pomts on the mght followed VS
hearing In this case
Lerner,
Paul
Barthelmaa,
et
Sampson &amp;
by Ham son w1th 13 and Clay
at Defendants Case
Rothfuu Allorneys
Roush wtth 12 Butcher led No 05CV093
lor Plaintiff P 0 Box
the Blue Dev1ls offensively Judge Fred W Crow 5480, Cincinnati, OH
Not1ce
45Z01 · 5480 (513) 241 ·
w11h 13 markers w1th Renner Legal
3100 anyemall@tsr·
Notice In So It For
contnbutmg I0.
Foreclosure
of
law.com
(12) 22, 28, (1) 5, 12,
Wahama wtll return to Mortgage
Kathleen Day, 19.26
actiOn on Fnday when the ·- Mary
whose last known
Bend Area cagers entertam address IS 27526 • - - . - - - - - Public Notice
North State Route 7,
Mason County ne1ghbor Cheshire,
OH 45620 ,
Hannan T1p-off tune fo r and the unknown Legal Notice In the
JUntor vars tt y action IS 6 p m heir•, devisees, lega- Court of Common
tees ,
executors , Pleas, Meigs County,
w1th the vars11y encounter to admlnlstratlors
, Ohio Wells Fargo
Bank,
National
follow at 7 30 p m
spooses and aoslgna
Association ,
and the unknown
as
guardians of mlnbr Truatee for Morgan
WAHAMA 54, ST MARYS 41
and/or Incompetent Stanley Capital I Inc.,
WAHAMA
Branoon Fowler 8 1 1 17 Casey Hamson
heirs
ot
Mary
TrUll •
2004·0P1
5 2·3 13 Clay Roush 3 6·8 12 KamerorY
Kathleen Day, all of
Mortgage
Paso
Sayre 2 Q..O 5 Brenton Clark 2 0 0 4
whose residences are
Through Certlflcatea,
Kev1n Wasonga 1 0 0 2 Justm Arnold 0 1 •
unknown and cannot
Serleo 2004·0P1 C/0
2 1, Total2110-14 54
by reasonable dillOption One Mortgags
STMARYS
genes be
aecerCorporation Plaintiff
Butcher 5 3 6 13 Renner 3 2 2 10 Foster
tamed . Will
take
VS. Ronald E Davla1
... 4 0 0 8 HICkman 2 a 2 4 De~ms 2 0 2 4
Corbltt0222 To1al167· 1441
"
not1ce that on the
at al , Defendant Casa
Wah•ma
17 16 10 9
54
19th
day
of
No· 05-CV-Il23
St Marys 8 5 16 12 41
September,
2005 ,
Detendant(a) , John
3 Po1nt Goals - Wa hama •2 I Ham son
Countrywide Home Ooe , Real
Name
Sayre) St Marys 2 (Renner 2)

Art AJ2

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

The Longhorns al so had
the most profitable football
program , makmg $38 7 mil lion after expenses Oh1o
State was etghth 111 that category with $26 1 million.
Ohio State was I Oth 111
men' s' basketball revenue
($ 11.4 mil !ton) and etg hth
in profit ($7.3 mtlhon)
Its women' s basketball
program spent nearly $2
m11lion more than It took 111

K.no~.

Oead'~itfhf'

O{fee !!oar~

985·4428

Longhorns

Mtlp Cuunty OH

c.nu County OH

Ohio State has nation's largest athletic program
COLUMBUS lAP)
Ohto Sta te 's athle tt c pro
aram 1s the nati on s top co lfegl ate sports money make1.
a newspaper reported
Ohio State made 589.7
million from ti cket sales,
royaltie s.
advert iSing.
broadcast agreemen ts and
other so urces dunng the
2004-05 academt c yea r, tng to US Depart ment of
about $50 000 more than Educatt on stati stic s anasecond- place Texas, accord- lyzed by The Co lumbu s

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

1 12
Vmtor
Court
Galltpolls OH 3 Bdrm t
bsth Cntrl A C W/0
RefrtdQ' &amp; St ove 1nctuded
City School S500 month
$450 deposrl No Pets
Ref Requ•r ed t304 )675·
8453

2 Bed room MOI:ltle Home
m M tddleport All ElectriC
S375 00
740-416
3194 3
Ho me
$425 00
740·4 16
.3194

Plus aeposn
or 992
Bedroo m Mot:nle
tn
M•ddl epon
Plu s Depos rt
1354 or 992
1 354

2 oedrcom moo de !'1ome
CMtenery no oets refer
ence $37 5 montrl plus
depos•t l740144 6 7:275
2 Bed room All ElectriC 4
mil es_ from Hot ze1 nea r
160 S350tmo plu&amp; secun
ty oepcs tt &amp; re.1erences
(7 40)37 9 2923
or
( 7 40]446 6865

2 bedroom 1 1 2 bath
exc ellent condttton rlO pets
ret er ence
eoUtred
Sa ndh I Pd t30-l 6/ !'!.
3834
3 bedrqor-t m Dblle Mom&amp; tn
th e Sha de area Water
sew er
trash InCluded
S325
a month pl us
depos t No pets allowed

(740\385 4019

�\

Thursday, January 5, 2006

www. my~aijysentinel.com
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted
Moone hOme spaces In
Country Mobile Home

FORRENT

deposit reqUired , no pets ,

740-992·2218.

THE WINNING TEAM!
TRAINING...

· 1- 2br Apartments tor Rent
in Pt. Pleasant (304)5931-9 94
("V

• Two week inirial &amp;
orienl;llion classes with

continued ongoing
training.
MANAGEMENT...
• The best management
leam in the counlry to
assist you in sales.
SALES SUPPORT•• .
• Superior sales support.
including a full or pan
time personal secretary,
full or part time personal lot assistance.
COMPENSATION ...
Co mmi ss ion. bonuses.
spiff's. Heahh Care.
Disabilicy, Long Term
Care, Great sUlfting
' compensation and

• 2 bedroom apartment
Meigs County very nice.
clean , S425 per month
plus deposit no pets, ref-

reqLu red,

(740)992-5174
2bedroom
apt.
WID
hookup. , water.· sewe r.
trash pd. $400!month .
~bedroom apt w/retrig &amp;
stOve, 'water, sewer, trash

pd .
(740)367-7746(740)367-7015- (740)4464734.
4 rooms and bath ,
stove/refrigerator, utilities
paid. $425/month. no pets.

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
1/ 14/1 mo. pd

•i

,,,

.

-{j}

LINCOLN

.IO&lt;UCUU

c.n f.l"""r

.\dril hnr""

l'c4nll!r
lflilirtio!-loCofl'

(II'(M!l'r.

c..o.ler

ooH""'!lo&lt;iir

...

looo~HI!!III Jr.
1.ktwd r••ra~

illilm E. Hum~~!
lm&lt;dl""

....

Drive from $344 to $442
to shop &amp; movies .
Calf 740-446-2568. Equal

r

APARTI\1EN1"S

Housing Opportunity.

Twin

Rivers

.ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Wal~

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
1;0 &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse apartments,
and/or sma ll houses FOR .

HOUSEHOLD
Gooo;

FOU REr&gt;T
Tower

is

acceptmg applications for
waiting list for Hud-subsrzed. 1- br, apartment.
· call 675-6679 EHO

j

I

SPACE
mR RFNf

rron .

( 7~0)446:9209

Gracious livrng. 1 and 2 ·
bedroom aparlments at
Village
Manor
and
Riversrde Apartments in
Middlep ort. From $295$444. Call 740-992-5064.
Equal
Hous ing
opPortunities.

Modern 1 bedroom · apt

(740i446-0390.
NEW ELLM VIEW

TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING!

SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
·ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEA1
"STOVE. REF .
"DISHWASHER
"GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
'WATER, SEWAGE, &amp;
"TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304i882-3017

Furniture

·r

(740)379-2923.

Downtown Office Space· 5
room suite $650/mo; 1
room office- $225/mo., 2
room
suite
$250/mo.
Security deposit requir'ed .
You pay utili!ies. All spaces
very oice. Elevator. Call
(740)446-3644 for appoint·
ment
Ponieroy - Off1ce. or Retail
Space. (740)992-3702 or ·

ANilQUF$

JET

.

AERATION MOTORS

\ II Kl ll\ ' 111...,1

Antique Haywood . and
Wakefield
table
and
chai rs. Ca ll for more
details. (740)446-6962 or

(740)446-2896.

Appliance
Warehouse
in Henderson, WV.

paid. Deposit requ ired .
Call (740 )446 -4345 alter
6pm.
One bedroom . nicely furnished apartmen t, quiet
area. suitable tor 1 adUlt.
private driveway w1th carport , new washet a,nd
dryer. (740)446-4 782.

Preowned Applicanes starting
.at $75 &amp; up all under
Warranty.
also
have
Household
Misc. Items
starti ng a1 .99a:

&amp;

up

(304i675-7999
Dining room table with 6
. chairs &amp; matchirtg buffet
$150 . Call alter 5pm .

StOOl Bea ms, ~ipe f:I~IJar

For Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Drive ways &amp; Walkways.
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monda'y.
Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Frielay. Sam·
4:30pm. Closed litlursday,
Saturday
&amp; Su nday.

1740)44&amp;-7300
Oak Church Pews Good
Condition (304)S75-5162
Of

(304i675-2563

.

Vent Free 3-Ptaque
Propane Gas Heater, Man
Control (Was $~43 . 95)
Now $122.36 Save15%
on all other Gaa And

Electric Heaters

Tara
TownhOuse
ThompSons Appliance &amp;
Apartment s.
Yery
Aepair-675-7388. For sale,
. Spac ious, 2 Bedrooms ,
re-conditioned automatic
CIA , 1 1/2 Bath , .Adult
washers &amp; dryers, refrige r·Poo) &amp; Baby Pool, Patio,
ators, gas anel electric
Start- '$395/Mo. No Pets, .
ranges. air conditione rs,
Lease
Pius ' Security
and wring'er washers . Will
Deposit
Requi red.
~o repairs on major brands
(740)36NOB6
in shop or at your. home.

(Limited to Heaters in
stock) ·

Paint Plus Hardware

675-4084

r

BUIIJ)iNG
SlJPI'LIIS

&gt;Block, brick. se.wer pipes.
windows,
lintels,
etc.
Claude
Winters .
Flio
Grande. OH Call 740-245·

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

FOR SALE
AKC Boston Thrrier pups.
7 weeks old, first shots &amp;
WOrmed
$250
each.

AKC Labrador Retriever
With field and waterfowl
hunting bloodlines that are
calm and family oriented.

NEW AND USED STEEL

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

(740)41 8-8388.
AKC
M iniature
Schnauzers. · · Pa r9nts
under 15 lbs, 1 male. 1
female. Born 1213/05. Call

(740)388-0435.
Collie
puppies
AKC
SableM'hite (F) eyes certi·
ti ed $450.00 each. Bo~~:er
AKC Male puppy, Brindle
$350 OQ.
Black
mask
Shettie
puppiB!\) AKC
81./Wh. (males) very small,
fu ll white collar $400.00 .
Miniatu re Schnauzer AKC
puppies
. Black/Sliver,
saiVpepper $400.00 each .

200 1 Dodge Ram" TrucK
fully loaded 60,000 mites,

$14,000.

2003 Chevy

Cavi ler $7,000.00 . . C all
. 740-985-4291.
2002 yellow. Lancer OZ,
automatic, 28,000 miles,

red, with body kit, automatic, air, 24,000 miles,

$8,000 OBO. (740i256- '
1618.

90 Volvo

240DL, no rust.
runs great. totally reliable.

OBO.

97
Cavalier
needs
Transmi ssion $800 090
call (304)862-2616 after

5pm ·

1

.

BARN
·REMOVAL

·.,

t

ON THIS PAGE FOR

1990 GMG_ Safari Cargo
minivan. 169k mites, AIC
works . new tires, run s
great, dependable $2,200
OBO. Ask lor Steve

TRANSMIS·
AU

' types .

AStOWAS

$26.00 PERMONTH!·
The Daily Sentinel.

992·2155

Barry .
Hamm

1991 red Mercury Topaz
GS. Low mileaQe, excellent
Condition .

$1 .650 (7 40i367 -0889 ,

7.3 Diesel, '90 F·-250 XLT.
Cruise , f~tir , Heavy Duty,
Pull Anything, $3950 080.

see at 6586 SA 554.

(740)245-9142

r

4x4 .
1991 Toyota Celica. 4cy1. .
auto. sunroof. spoiler. hid~
FOR SALE
den headlights. good interior and ,body. 153,000 , o2: Dodge ' Dually 1-toi-J
miles. $1,700.
·
extended
cab,
4x4.
6HP Go-Carl like new
Cumnii ns Turbo diesel,
$500. (740)379-9297
21 .000 miles. excellent
conditio n, garage kept
1998 Bui ck Pa rk Ave
$25 .000 firm . (740)286·
Loaded sharp $4995.00.
0257 .
1998
Buick
A~gat
Supercharged
leather
95 F250 4x4 Supercab
loaded
'
$6495.00
Heavy -Duty New trans·
Riverview Motors 2 '81ockS
miSSiOn, QOOsenec~ lOW·
above
McDonaltts ,
ing package 79 ,000 miles
Pomeroy, Ohio, (740)992·
Greai shape $8.000 080
3490.

(740)245-9142 .

1-

p-CI-\If.r, [

WOI2J2.~ 'il-\~-i '10\J

Ot-&lt;L'&lt; LOOK. /&gt;-.\ U FE

Jeff

~

"''

II

TO '&lt;00 MQ~U-t&lt;:.\L'L

~1-'./&gt;-.VE '(OU &lt;::.VEIZCO~SIOCI'£\)...._ P"~E:.S- [
H\E. \/1&gt;-.LUE. Of" JUS\ S'iOWIJ-.IC.
TO
mE IZOSE.S 7

PP..'&lt; SOME:ONE \0 ~
STOP 1&gt;·-1'-1\:&gt; St-1\E.LL T\-\( rost.S
FOR t-1\E.!

~IG NATE

W~terproof 1 ng .

.

-

PEANUTS
A TRUE OR FALSE
TEST ? YES, MA'AM

'-,.,w_ Cattle'$7.75
:cono Beef $6.85
Corn $S.251Bag
!-Cracked Corn $7.251Bag
-16% Hog Mix $8.751Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

25 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured

Free Estimates

Cornerstone
Electrical
Service

DO YOU MINI/ IF MY
DOG TAKES THE TES~

TOO'"' YOlJ KNOW, Jl!ST
i=OR TI-lE F.UN OF IT ...

.

l~'M~;~
C.ret 'WI)~·

1

IT l l GIVE 14 1M
~

50METI41N6 TO

~OW

DO YOU
MAKE ''T'S "
AND ''F'S "?

SUNSHINE CLUB

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N •

• FOR ALL YOUR

Ohio 45769

ELECTRICAL NEEDS.·
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
• ROOF '• PAINT
OKlO LICENSE # 38244

~

740~367·0544

740·367-0536

~

li!"C.OLN . •

MIICUIY

...........

Gallipolis, Ohio

,..,.....

- - ••••••

GARFIELD

•u••-740-446-9800

For
ANew Home?

T.rY the

C lassifieds!!

"A'O

L.OOK , GA~FiE:L.PI

A RUBSER MOU 51 E!

FE:-TCH '1Tl

..
11

Snodgrass' Upholstery
Racine, OH

740-949-2202

·

Custom Window Treatmen ts
. · .&amp;( Upholstery
Now Available &gt;\t

BAUM LUMBER

GRIZZWELLS
ru.t\~

Scorpion Tractors:

;6ET"'ll

"Taki11g The Sti11g Orrt OJ
liard Work!"
Mid-S ize 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

Wli\1

BAUM LUMBER
, St. Rt. 124 C hester 9H5-330J

.·

· 5f£0HP 6A'Ot
;}).'31-\\~t: .,.

•

TWCM

J

KNR 'CGBWGRKG

'

three-spade cue-bid

indicated ~ maximum and· asked East to
bid thr~e no·trump with a spade stopper.

MLG . FHGJM
·

Meltzer (North) made an imaginative use
of Roman · Key Card Bl ackwood, ·which

300, and l,ISA 1 gained seven

AstroGraph

5 MINUTES LA. TER

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Made
SR 124 between
Racine &amp; Syracu·se
949-2734 '

West's

imps.

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

Summer Sausage

information.

minus

:10 ~--

Wrapped

Today's clue: t equals K

hearts, one diamond and one club fo ~

•

Unconditional
lifetime
. guarantee . Loca l re,l erences
fu rni~hed .
Established 1,975. Call 24
Hrs
(740)
446-0870,
Rogers
Basement

by Luis Campos
Celebn!y C1pher cryptograms are cre&amp;le&lt;l !rom oootatJOns Dy !aiTli)US peoote . pasl and preSent
Eacl'l le~er 1n tne ocner stards ror anomer

look away the opponents' bidd1ng space.
In five spades doubled, Hayden lost two

111&amp;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

CELEBRITY CIPHER

showed six-plus clubS afid 11-15 points.
East's two diamonds asked for more

THE BORN LOSER

' $'soot Po lice lmpaundsl ·
Cars from $500. For listIngs 800-391 ·5227 ext .

:*

spade on the board, and ran the cl ubs.

dummy 's hearis ran: plus 600.
. In this room , West's two-club opening

or

'98 2Dr. Black Explorer
· Sport4x4. Pwr. everything.
rear vent. 94k mi. $5800.
709- 1276eve
4461113day.

AUNTS

THAR !!

~e~id;::~:s':~3';'ercial

Unn- l I M -

FoR SAl£ '

SIONS,

3901 .

Hayden.
On this deal from the final, at ihe first
table, Sontag (East) and We~hsel had a
free run to five clubs . Nor1h led a spade,
South taking two tricks in the suit before
shifting 10 lhe diamond JOCk. Judging lhe
pos!tion pe rfectly, Weichsel rose with his
ace, drew tru mps, ruffed his remaining

Rubber Roofing. Room
Additions, Decks, Shingle&amp; ,
Siding, Window5, Pole 8am5 ,
Garages New Home$

VANS

BUDGET

. ,,;_

THAR'S GONNA
BE A LOTIA

8EST YA JEST
DO I "'AFTA
GIT USED TO A
WEAR THESE
Lt'L PINCHIN',
DRESS-UP
JUGHAID !!
SHOES TO TH'
FAM8L Y REUNION,
AUNT LO ?
THE'&lt;

Rooll'ng &amp; Remodeling Co

140-992-0153
Dozer IICUiot!

'

~

this time ware Roger Bates a~ Garey

DIVISION

MIKE MARCUM

tAl~~~

I I&lt; \ "\'-1 '1 IH I\ 1111 \

Weich sel, also Wdn the 2001
Bermuda Bowl title. The other two players
Peter

Self·Storage•

Gold Retriever AKC pup s. · 01 green Ford F150 XLT
l si shOts &amp; wormed.
4dr, auto, ·5.4L, V8 . bed2002 Yamaha Dirt Bike
Ready lo Go (740i256- cover. 6CO player. sun125LP, like new $1,550.
2764 or (740)441 -5 190 ·
roof,
good
con dtllon , .
(7 40)388-8358
- 71 ,000 miles, 18/21 mpg,
Reg . AKC adorable Lab
$13,000 OBO. (304)2882003 Suzuki 4WO Vinson
puppies. Born 11/11 /05.
3335.
500 ATV with 34 mi les.
vet checked, 1st shotS.
$4900.
CARMICHAEL
1985 Chevy 1-ton dump
Y~llow/blacklchoc .
price
EQUIPMENT. (740)446- '
$300. (740)446-1062 .
truck, new motor, cab &amp;
2412.
paint. Used daily. AskihQ
Shar-Pei puppies, 6 ~ks.
$3,000. (740)256·1253. .
Custom
yellow
2000
old, (740i992·9105
1989
Dodge
Dually
Harley Road King Classic.
Cummins turbo diesel
Windshield,
back
White Pit Bu ll puppy, 7wks
2WD new batte'rles . Good
old for sale. Parents on
rest.13,000 mile s $17,000.
condition. Flu ns excellent
304-773 -5379 or 693premises. (740)388-8901.
$5,500. (740)446·3413.
3137.

,\ I I\ I '- II U .._

ADVERTISE
YOURr
:
·
r
,
:
-BUSINESS·

·

740 388- 1520.

TRUCKS
mRSALE'

I \tn t -.. t 1'1'1 II -...

5121'.

'

BARNEY

• G'arages
·Complete
· Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

2003 HondQ Civic 2 ~oor,

740-696-1085

.,

36 Men sl&lt;illlul
39 Baja snack
43 Amateur
radio
roperator.s
44 Mo.
Dtnesan
45 Sicilian
landmark
46 Red Inside
47 Australian
rockers
49 Decay
51 FBI
acronym
52 Cornhuoker
st.
53 Koch and
· Wynn

dOwn seven wilh a trump suit of A-7.6-2
opposrte ;o:s- and USA1 recorded a
213-190 victory. Four of the team, Rose
Meltzer, Alan Sontag, Lew Slansby and

• New Homes

"Middleport's only

Db!.

Pass
Pass

9 Comics'
Miss KeH
10 Mix the
salad
14 No sweat!
DOWN
15 Dupe
17 Arguman1
1 Deep
(hyph.)
19 More than
distress
2 Philippine
uptigh1 ·
volcano
ZO -savant
3 VCR button 22 Not up yet
4 Picked up 24 MD,
familiarly
the tab
5 Desert
25 Cancat
lerraln
26 Jockey's
6 Jost
need
ocrapes by 27 Dove
she~ar
7 Phys ed
a Muddy the 29 Chow dawn
• 34 Sticky
. wa1ora

two disasters in the final session- seven
no-tru mp down five and six diamonds

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIIPDON

740-992-1611

30+ mpg, $5,500 OBO.
(740)256-1618
· or
(740)256-6200.

25mpg $3,000
(740)245-9142.

.

frenchcityhomes.com

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992·6635

Pass

&lt;NT

North, who had to retain the diamond
king , was forced down to two hearts. so

WV#039714

Al.JTOS .

1·800-537-9528:

(740)441-2667.

TI~E=
~ACHINE

PINC"'
!!

(740) 992-0496

PVH Wellness Center
(304) 1:175-7222

(740i388-8743.

(740i446-45S6.
Maytag washer and dryer,
good condi tion, 5250/set
(740)441·8299
or
(740)44t·5472 .. \1,

$2/PVH ~mployees &amp; members
$3/non-members

Repaired, N9w &amp; Flebu ilt
In StocK. Call Ro n EvanS,

New and Used Furnaces.
Install ation
available.

· ·

,

East

38 Promote
40 Frank
Herbert
saga .
41 Off-tangent
42 Metro RRo
43 Scurry
along
46 Dolly user
48 Far afield
50 Gasoline
rating
54 Big house
55 Faked out
the goa lie
56 Large
aquarium
fish
57 Some
herm~s ·

USA 1 was expected to win the final of the
Seniors Bowl against Indonesia. But after
32 of the 96 boards, the Asians were
ahead by 53 international match points.
W ith 16 deals remaining, though, the
score was 161-161. The Indonesians ha.d

Chuck Wolfe
· ·Owner

Licensed Home Builder

$100-Call- (740i367-7591

CARE

2.

Nortb

Pass

From well behind
to atad ahead

fA.NliL.Y .
VACATioN
.. IN THE

landscaping jobs such as pJanting and mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRIW

4:30pm

Elli ptical Exe rciser- Pro,
Form 485e low impact.
trac1s calories, taps. speed
time and distance in miles.

416-5547

~RANK &amp; EARNEST

(Commercial and Residenlial)
Mowin$t Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraytng of fence line5, leaf Removal, a5 well a5 small

Mondays &amp; Wednesdays

Buy or self. R iverine
Antiques, 1124 East Maih
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
740-992-2526.
Russ

between 6 and 9pm.

LAWN

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

---

t

Nice one BA unfurnished
apartmEint. ~ange &amp; refng .
provided. Water &amp; garbage

Step Aerobics with
Weight Training

by and check .us oul

2

Opening lead; • A

~Qu~f.~J%.

&amp;

Appliance
Store,
130
Bulaville
Pike,
Gallipolis,OH (740)4464782, Hrs. 11-3, M-S. Stop

.

Gallipolis
city
area .
Upstarrs. 2bd. 2 ba. dtsh- . Commercial Property, 240
Upper
River
Road,
washer,
wasner/ dryer
Available
2 _1_06
hookup,
$550/monlh.
$550/deposit, references
1740 )446 - 6865
or
required .

Used

Pass

(Comm!rcial and Resid!ntial)
,
Mobile Hom.es, Hou-ses, l og Home5, Decks, Driveways, 1
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
J
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Alum inum brightening.
•·
Special rat~ to Trucki ng •nd Dump Trucking Companies.

591·8757

PVH Wellness Center

West

i oto

Pass

30 Yrs: Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones

POWER WASHING

· $2/PVH employees·&amp; members
$3/non-members

8 , 5

8 4

'"'

Top • Removal ; Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

~""'

Mondays &amp; Wednesdays

•

6 5
A K J 3

AKJ963
• 8 H
South
&lt;I&gt; AKQ42

Soutb

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883:

pm

6
A Q4

. •
•

"' Q 5

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Love Alwayst
Mom, Dad &amp; Kids

10

• J 10 &amp; 2

TRI - STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

$900 mo. Call (740)446-

•

Tree Service

Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675.-2630 !ii!! El ~

~ -

10 9 7

•

JONES'

Cc.OINr
rodS!mury .

SEPTIC TANK PUMPING $95.00 .
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY

mammals

15 Sends
a check
16 Truisms
18 Vegas
leed·ln
19 Humor
21 Sponge up
22 Helper
23 Gridiron
gain ;
25 Equator
segment
28 Newlywed
30 Outback
Jumper
31 !&gt;refix
lor claaslc
32 Want-ad
abbr.
33 Have
- - at
35 "Oh,
ahut upl"
(2 wda.)
37 .Banned bug
spray

K 9 3

Deal~r: West
Vul~erable: East-West

n... 5,.,.

•

QI097 5 2
East

•

PllllllfHIIIIIVP
WI C:ll 1111011 . riiiiii@*I. .IIM.CIII

1701 JefferS0n Blvd .

~t'~

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON

MONTY

.......c.....

·Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

.

.
West

t
.

Pomeroy, Ohio

J 8 3

•

1 Bumps
on a frog
6 Ma)eatlc
wrtder
11 Mol
production
12 Temple cH~
o1Japan
13 Time olthe

OJ 05-06

•

+

IIID FIIUCIM
SEIIICES

(740) 992-5232 .
SxiO, 10x10,

Jlinet Jeffers

R&lt;l&lt;rl Llallml!i u

on his birthday
January 5, 1975

2325 or (7 40)446-4425.

Phone

" Whfn Qua'lit)·,Co;,ponion A:nd lnttgrily Come Togtther"

~

North

INSURIJICE,

33795 Hiland Rood

•
•

Christopher Lee

Beautiful 2-story townhouse
Overlooking
Gallipolis
City
park ..,_
Kitchen. D.R, L.A., study,
3BR . 2 baths, ·, laundry
·area. References required .
· security deposit. no pets.

Storagti

Hours

In Memory

In Memory of Our Son

ROCKY IIPP

IOxlS, 10x20,
10x30

~

In Memory

llgll and Dry

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740.949-2217

Equal Opportunity Employer

Beautiful · 2-s1ory townhouse .
overlooking
Gallipolis
city
park .
Kitchen . DR, LA , study, 2
_baths.
laundry
area .
Reterences
requireel .
security Clepos1t, no pets
$900 mo. Call (740)446·
2325 or ( 740)~6-4425 .

for application &amp; in lorma-

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

•

more~

46 Olive Si. (7401446·
3945.

RENT. Call (740)441-1 ;; 1

. BRIDGE

'

Hi ll's Self
Storage

~rossword t'uzz·lt~

N.I!:A

.

At John Sang Ford-Lincoln-Mercury we've
established a 35 year reputation of honesty,
integrity and outstanding customer servicebefore and after the sale. With the hottest
products on the market and as the fastes t
growing dealership in 011r region. we're add- ·
ing sales professionals to help expand our
market penetration and to help maintain our
extremely loyal customer base. .
If you are a professional looking to start a
new career or maybe you don't feel you ' ~ ·'j
paid or treated as well as you should be and ·
if you're tired of working for someone who
isn't working for you, give Brad Sang a call
today 1-740-446-9800. You may also apply
in person at 195 Upper River RD ..
Gallipolis, Ohio
Monday-Friday

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and
unt~.Vn i shed .
secur tty

erences

AL.LEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

SALES
. CONSULTANT

APMOMENll'

~

www.mydallysentlnel.com

..

PROFESSIONAL

Park. (740)385-401"9.

r

Thu!._sday, January 5, 2006

Help Wanted

-

'lllrtl1doiY:

JRX '

MLG

JHG

FNARF

VNHPX ."

ONOGRMWO

DWCAKJP

FHGJM

KLJRFGC

AR

MLHNWFL
CARFGH

NY

VG

M L.G

CLJEAHJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I d1dn1 fighllo gel women out from behmd the

vacuum cleaner to get themonto the board o! Hoover."

- Germa1ne Greer

T~m:~' 'O©~~lA.;.~t-tr~·

WOlD
U~l

- - - - - - l4ita4 ~y CU.Y I . POllAN

~i1o11 ol . 1)1o· """""'" ~.OII!P'!!"o...",........_
0 ltorrongo
lour ~erambltd """d' below 10 lorm lour limplo ...,d,_

Frida~Jan . 6,2006
B~ Bernice B~e Oaol
Before starting any new ventUre in the
year ahead , be sure tO complele 10 your
salisfactiOn atl thOse whi ch you al ready
have in motion . Your garden will overflow if
you fiist reap !he old harvest be fore sowing new seeds.
. ,
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - ·You
won't have any tolerance for those who try
to .boss you around today. yet. ironically. ·
this co uld be the exact taclic you'll altel')'lpt
to use in your dealings with cohorts or
associales.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20· Feb. 19) - II doesn 't
hurt to be a chantable listener today. II you
are unwilling to liSten to the other guy's
stories or points at vie w, you can bet your
bol1om dollar that th1s person will tune you
au! as well
PISCE S (Feb. 20-M arch 20) -When out
on the town today with friends whose
budge ts are far more elastic than yours.
don' t go into a hole attempting to keep up
with !hem There is much merit iil living
withm your budget.
ARIES (March 21-Apn l 19) - Try to minimize you r 1n&gt;~o1Vement with strong-willed
associates today. You won 't appreciate
anyone trying to chart a course you don 't
wish to follow.
T~U RU S
(April
20-MaY
20)
Unfortunately. you may Mave a knack
today lor put11ng your loot in !he glue and
getlmg Sll,ICK. Be extra care ful so that you
don't creale problems lor yourself that can
easily be circumvented .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Mmd your
own business loday. especially getting
overly cur1ous about a complica 1ed problem of a tnend. Your pat may use your
mterests ~san excuse to dump the en11re
burden onlo you
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - When 1!
c omes to a dehca te career matter today. ·
th1nk and speak in terms of "we" 1nstead of
just "I " II you appear too self-cen tered , a
c ohort may saw off that fragile limb you're
Sitting on .
LEO {July 23-Aug . 22) - You 'll get a
response . all righ l. t!ul not !he resulls for
which you are hoping today it you aMempt
to impose y~lU r 1dees on ·your co -wor~ers .
Let everyone tnink for him/herself.
VIRGO {Aug . 23-Sept. 22 1 - Be e~&lt;treme ·
ly wary today of a propo$il1on that o H~Hs
you a lot 01 "pie in the sky.H Proposals ol
!h1s-natu re are more than l1kely lo be JUS! a
prece of burnt crust' that yoCJ'U have to eat
LIBRA (Seot. 23-0ct. 23) - You would be
w1se to comply wtth any unreasonable
demand made upon ' you by you r mate
todaY i nste?~d of f•ghltng It ln do1ng so. 11
will muft!e rumtlles that m1ght otheiWtSe
occur.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Today 11
you expi;lcl lo insp1re perlect ron 1n your co ·
wo'rk.ers or assoc1a1es. you had bel_te r fi rst
set the nght e~&lt;am p le . Associates will en;u tate only me actions anel tleha'-Jtor they
admrre.
SAGITTARI~S {Nov 23-0ec 2 1) You
have a tendency toward gambling arid
today thiS urge could be qu1te Slro.n g 1n
you. so guard yo ur resources Don 't oet orl
lonQ sh ots . whether 1t's on horses. people
· or stocks

RODETI

Fl:.YTO

I I rI
A XF [ F

The·man was struggling with
the directions . He final ly
L-....L...-1-...J.....J.....J :S mumbled to his wi!e,"lt's easier
,.....--,----,---.. ]o read a map Ihan to • : .. - -~

~

DA!Nll

I0

_1---jr-_-.j~S-_•-rj-.-~r-6"""Tj_,

I

.
_
.
L..._..i..;...J......J._

.
.
_.__,__

yow

rl. PII N1 NUMbHEO LE11ERS IN
'01 THm SQUARES

(o,.olo••

!he chuclle

~ooled

by lr ll1n lil m the mhs in~ .,..o1d1
develop from step No. 3 below.

l • )

1_1

0:. ,~;:~N!.!Ef.:c: :.:~ ~: .Bi! ~-LEi_TE__Rs_T_o.JI~...I.....~·\_· _·..
SCUM-lETS ANSWERS.

l

!141!!6

Mutiny- Water- Steep- Hawker - THEY SEEM
. · 'Ddn't believe everything . you see and hear: Mom

. told me . 'I've learned that most th1ngs are seldom what
THEY SEEM."
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUPTO ·NUTZ
Suc H ResfbNses
Le.ave 1'\e UN eMfblo.leReD at&gt;Ul
""JRGINaLi z e.o .

I

�Miners left farewell
·notes assuring loved ones
they didn't ~uffer, As
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

'

At
' atch Point'
'

I
I,

I

I

. I

Floral design show set at
Columbus .conservatory .

COLUMBUS
On Jan . will go towards the conserva13-15 ,
Franklin
Park tory.
,
Conservatory visitors will
AIFD is · an organization
have the opportunity to view dedicated to excellence in floarrange ments cre,ated by some ral design whose members
of the most noted designers in . range
from
small·town
~y CHRISTY LEMIRE
AP MOVIE CRITIC
Central Ohio dunng the flori sts to consultants for the
Ameri can Institute of Flonil Rose Parade . ·
Since it ftrst screened at the
Designers (AIFD) Floral
With only 1,200 members
Cannes Film Festival in May,
Design Show.
worldwide it is a selective
"Match Point" has been
Held in the Grand Atrium of and estee:ned organization.
hailed as a return to form for
the conservatory, the show .For more information· on
Woodv Allen. his best fi-lm in
runs from I 0 a ..m. to 5 p.m. AIFD. go to www.aifd.org.
a decade.
.
·
datly and en,t~ ts covered by
Franklin Park Conservatory,
Anything had to have been
. · · located at 1777 E. Broad St.,
general admtsston .. ·
better than Allen's recent
During the Floral Destgn Columb~s. offers unique
offerings
including
Show,. flower arrangements botanical collections, gardens,
"Melinda and Melinda,"
that utthze a vanety of un1que -.aterfalls and educational
"Hollywood Ending," "The
and tradtttonal destgn maten- programs designed to foster
-Curse of the Jade Scorpion''
als and are created by local life-long learning and appreand "Small Time Crooks'' AIFD members wtll be on . . ·
display. In keeping with ctalton of plants.
,
.
which have felt slight whether
Franklin Park Conservatory's
The. conservatory_ feature s
that was his interition or no\.
cum~rll
exhibition "The an ong111~l Vtctonan . glass
With
"Match
Point,"
Amazing Chocolate Tree" and· house but It tn 1895 . and
though, it's as if critics and
upcoming orchid
show. 73,000 squ-a~~.feet of gre~n ­
fans of hi s long and esteemed
"Jewel s of the Jungle," the house's and classrooms SttUatfilmography want to see
arrangementS wrll feature ed. m a 90:acre urban park J,ust
something that isn't there:·
maybe it's wishful thinking.
chocolate themes and orchids. !11111Utes- from downtown. As
On Sunday, Jan . 15, AIFD part of tts _umque _ focus on
the power of suggestion. sheer
members Noreen Drake and combuung fme art s wtth hor-.
osmosis, whatever.
Elements of the film cer'Frank Feysa will demonstrate tic_ulture. the conservatory _ts
tainly do recall the best of
floral design techniques from the only botamcal garden Ill
Allen's work. with its intellec2 to 3:30 p.m. Afterwards, a the world to own a stgnature
tual. cultured characters (vissilent auction will be held and collectton from the mternaiting musetims and attendirrg
visitors can purcha.se · the tionally ~cdaimed glass artist,
.
AP Photo arrangements created during Dal e Chthuly. 'For more mlorthe opera in London. rather
than his usual setting of New In this photo provided by Dream Works, Chris Wilton (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) finds hims.elf irre.v- the demonstration .
mation on the conservatory,
York) and its complicated ocably drawn to the beautiful and seductive Nola Rice (Scarlett Johansson) 111 Woody Allen s
All proceeds from the sales visit www.fpconservatory,org.
romantic en~a n g l emen t s.
new drama '·' Match Point."
·
Jon;Hhan Rhys . Meyers
.
.
.
plays a social-cli mbing tenni s and our tendency to justify Iri shman surrounded by mon- his babies. She is buying love ,
pro who befriend~ a wealthy some of our transgressions as eyed Brits, reads Dostoevsky. but she probably means well.
.
.
'
student at the club (Matthew being less severe than others. visits the Tate Modern and is deep down and seems · to
Goode) and marries his sister "Match Point ,'' .i11eanwhile, cmly too happy to tag along know no other way of relating
(Em ily ·Mortimer). all the repeatedly hammers home .the . when his new friend: Goode's ' to people - and as the only
while pursuing a ' torturous idea that l'uck dictates our fate dashirlg Tom Hewett, invites truly decent person in the
affair -with hi s fiancee through the metaphor of a ten- him to his family 's box to see film , she wtll of course be
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here Art Center. Militarv Rd ..
(Scarlett Johansson) .'As'AIIen nis ball hitting the top of the "La bloody Traviata,'' as he punished.
.
is a list of current and upcom- Zanesville.
·
Nola and Chns seem to ing Ohio festivals and events:
himself once remarked in net, in voiceovers and by hav- calls it, and to' weekend visits
jan. 10
regard to his own personal ing his ch.aracters say so out- at the count~ estate. Yes, it'_s understand
each
other
Through
jan.
IS
Mm.cow
Festival
Ballet in
life, "The heart wants what it right to each other. After a all as annoy111gly smug as tt because they b.oth come from
Central
Ohio
Recreational
Giselle,
Vern
Riffe
Center
For
t "
while it' s like we get . it . sounds.
nothtng and fmd themselves
w~u~· there is one specitic already.
'
Meyers proves he's capable infatuated with the idea _of Vehicle Boat &amp; RV Show; · The Ans. Portsmouth .
Jan. 11
til in of his that "Match Point"'
As the' writer-director turns of smoothly transformtng what the Hewett famtly Bricker Building, Ohio Expo
Center,
Columbus.
Lunch
&amp;
Learn Series :
resembles most: "Crimes .and 70. he's taken a glossy, almost · himself for whatever the allows them to?~· Johansson ,
Through Jan. 16
Evergreens at Civic Garden
Misdemeanors,'' one of his cynical approac h to the mate- · soc tal setttng dictates. But at the characters darkest and
Trains,
Trees
and
Holiday
Center.
Civic Garden Center.
best. which only reveals how rial -· as if he 'd aotten so then the character behave s tn booztest, conttnues to reveal
Traditions,
Western
Reserve
Reading
Rd .. Cincinnati.
inferior this is by comparison. caught up in lhe stylistic trap- ways that see~1 totally out of depth
and
intelligence
Ri
chard
Lewi s. Southern
Historical
Society,
East
Blvd.,
· Allen revisits some of the pings' of his new surroundings character-. lirst when Chns beneath her sex appeal as she
Theatre, Columbus ,
. , Cleveland..
same plot points and themes that he neglected any sem - . bra1.enly h1ts on Johansso·n's;&gt;nature s as an a.~tress_.
Through
Jan.
21
Jan. 11-15
from that Oscar-nominated blance of substance or depth. s.ultry Amen can actress Nola
As for what, Mater Pomt.
Playwright'
s
Festival.
Miami
Valley
Hom e
1989 movie (Johansson fills
"Match Point" has the sty!- Rice ("Did anyone ever tell reveals, the moralt sn, t: Don t
in for Anjelica Huston as the ish look of a sexy, psychologi- you, you h,ave very sensual cheat on your wtfe. It s: If you Curtain Players Theatre, Improvement Show. Hara
Complex. Shiloh Springs Rd ..
demanding, doomed mistress) cal thriller - the work of cin- lips''" he asks within seconds do cheat on your wtfe, and Harlem Rd. , Galena.
Through
Jan.
27
Dayton.
·
but · he does so in the most enwographer .
Rcmi of meeting her) and most glar- you're lucky. you won't get
Exhibition-Neill
Dorr:
A
Jan.IJ-15
. Adefarasin - and Allen's ingly again at the film's ali- · caught.
superficial way.
W.Va. Sports Spectanrlar.
·
"Match
Point,"
a Su.btle Magic, · Ma ssillon
With
"C rimes
and 'heavy usc of opera often pro- max.
Museum,
Massillon
.
Big
Sandy Superstore . Arena,
Misdemeanors.'' Allen trul y vides a tense. dramatic underMortimer 's clueless Chloe. Dream Works Ptctures release.
Through
jan.
28
Huntington,
W.Va.
.
seemed interested in .delving current. though at times it feel s meanwhile , just .· wants to. is rat~d R for 'some ,sexuality.
Exhibit: Food Fantasies.
North Coast Golf Show,
deeply into the ideas of free amped-up and smothenng.
ensconce Chns tn one of Runntn g t1me: 124 mtnutes.
Ohio
Art
League.
N.
High
St.,
Franklin
County Veterans
Meyers· Chris Wilton. an Daddy's companies and have Two stars out of four.
will. personal responsibility.
Columbus.
Memorial. W. Bro&lt;Jd St ..
Th_rough Jan. 29
Columbus.
Woodworking
Show.
Exhibition-Borrowed Time:
The Photograph ,as Music Voinovich Livestock &amp; Trade
Album Cover, Cincinnati Art Center, Ohio Expo ··center,
· bo. nclthat tran~cends ' label' and deeply touches them both.
Museum , Eden Park Dr.. Columbus.
BY CHRISTY LEMIRE
CinCinnati.
Covington RV and Camper
AP MOVIE CRITIC
· But who is he, and what does he want from this new world?
Through jan. 30
Show.
Northern · Ky.
"Here, the blessings of the earth are bestowed upon all.
Market Gardening Series at Convention Center, One W.
A bit of advice before embarking upon "The New Wo~ld ":
None -need go poor," Smtth states iri a voiceover when he first Civic Garden Center; Civic · Rivercenter Blvd ., Covington,
Take a nap, stock up on candy and possibly caffeine pills. but sets foot on Virginia soil, a remark that sounds more like the Garden Center of Greater Ky.
avoid the coffee and soda. You're going to be in your seat for
regurgitated optimism of someone else. . ·
·
Cincin(!ati, Reading Rd. .
Winterfest
along · the
long· while. but your perseverance wi ll be rewarded.
(Meanwhile. Capt. Newport, the colonists' leader played by . Cincinnati.
Portage, downtown bu.sinessTerrence Malick settle s in and take; hi s time telling the story Chri stopher Plummer, talks of wanting to "create a fresh
· Throu.gh ;Jan. 31
es. wo·odvi.llc, Pemberville.
of the settleme'm of Jamestown, probabl y a half-hour longer
exanmle for humanity," but clearly there's nothing humane
Winter Festival of Art !V. Elmore.
'than he needed. We've wme to expect this sort of deliberately about the presumptuous, cruel way in which they fight the Art Cella~ Gallery, W. Thtrd
Jan. 13·22
·.
languid pacing from the writer-director from just the few film s . natives fo r their lan'd.)
St, Manslleld.
.
Cincinnati Travel, Sports
he.'s tnade over the past 30 some-odd yea rs, including
And who is Pocahontas -besides the favored daughter of
Through Jah. 31 (Fn.and Boat Show. Cinergy
"Badlands" and "The Thin Red Line .'· If' yo u know hi s work,
Sat)
Cincinnati.
I dtan, .,
. .' ,.
p k Center.
Clevcla'
nd Mid-A merica
AugustSchelle.nberg's ChiefPowhatanand beyon d th.en
you know what you' re getting yourself into.
.
rincess legend - and how does she feel about betng taken
Santa s Hohda) 111 the ar ·
P
Malick has been ·dreaming of makin g "The New World" for
. · d'' Sh
James
Ranch
·Park Boat Show. IX Center,
e seems F ·
d Rd X ·
' Riverside Dr.. Cleveland.
the past quarter-century. and it often feels as if he's telling the from her people and her home and ang IICtze ·
· Jan. 13-Feb. 18
story in .a dream . The arri val of the English. on Virginia's merely to acq uiesce as she's removed from her buckskin dress atrgro~~rough F~~~i9
.
. ..
.
Exhibit: Michael · Mercil;
Visual., Arts of Africa, The
shores 400 years ago, the hesitant. way in which they and the and placedm a corseted frock and heels.
Her relattOnshtp wt~h another man, though, helps del me her. Columbus Muse um of Art, E. Schumacher Gal)ery, E. Main
American Indians (or "natural s'' as they ' re called here) initial St-.. Col umbus.
ly regard each other, the se nsual dance of di scovery between When Smtth goes off on an expedttton. 111 steps Joh n Rolle Broad St., Columbus .
(Chri
stian
Bale).
a
newly
arrived
English
aristocrat
who's
Through
March
1
Jan. 14·
Capt. John Smith and ·Pocahontas - all the potentially dry
Passages and Tributes: 3-D · Westfield Belden Village
stuff of history books. captured wi th hypnotic beauty and ·instantly smitten by her. He means well but there just isn't the
same chem istry she felt with Smith .
Narratives , Zanesville Art Bridal
Sliow.
Westfield
grace.
Military
Rd .. Belden Village Mall . Canton.
" You do not love me now," Rolfe states candidly. even after Center,
It 's actua\l y a rare and daring thing Malick does, something
Zanesville. .
Wimer Hawk-Raptor ID
to be celebrated in a cinematic land~capc in which speed and they've married and had a child . ''Someday, you will."
It 's a rare moment of -substanti ve directness in a film that's
Through March 5
bay. the Wilds. lnternationfll .
noise are the norm . Working with cinemat9grapher Emmanuel
Exhibi_tion : The Innovative Rd .. Cumberland .
Lubezki ("A Little Princes,." "Slee py Hollow") anu shooting more li kely to stay wi th you for its impressionistic imagery.
. . Arts Alltance, _Zanesvtllc Art
Cocoa Therap·y with Origins.
.on location iA the colonial region, he's almost created a silent if you're' siill awake at that point, that is.
''The New World." a New Line Cinema release, is rated PG- Center.. · M1lttary
Rd .. Franklin Park Conservatory, E
film. the dialogue is so sparse. Mood i&gt; paramount. created
13
for
;orne·
intense
battle
sequences.
Running
tifl'\e:
150
minZanesTvlhlle
..
h
M
h
II
Broad St .. Columbus .
through the crurich of earth underfoot. wind blowing through
.
Th
.
.
.
,.
f
·
roug
arc
.
Ahtique
Show/Auct ion.
. tall grass. sun'light strea~ing between treetop' and the conutes . ree stdrs out 0 ou~.
Exhibit-Arthur Leipzig: On Fairfield County Fairgrounds ..
stant, distant chatter of b1rds.
As signment.
Columbo ~ AAA Building. Lancaster.
Malick 's repeated use of the trancelike "Vorspi el" from
Mu,eum
of
Art,
E.
Broad St.
Ohio Youth Rodeo. Robert s
Wagner 's "Das Rheingold." wh1ch layers t~nd builds upon
Columbus.
Arena.
state Route 7'30.
itsel f. swirls around the whole picture. Characters confide
Through March 2006
Wilmington. ,
their thoughts through breath ~ voiceovers th~t come in stream Exhibit : "Tominv:- The
Winter Hike. Hocking Hilb
of-consciousness , nippets - "I loved her ... "He '' like a
Amazing
Journey."
The
Rock
State
Park, state Route 664 S ..
G - General audiences, All ages admitted .
tree" .:·. "She weaves all things together."
and Roll .Hall of Fame and Logan . . ·
.
PG - Pa renta l guidance suggested . .Some material
Either you're going t.o. fee l completely mesmerized and go
Museum. Cleveland.
Winter Hike, Mohican State
may not be suitable for ch ildren.
with it or view it a&gt; a pretentious, lumbering mess. The correct
Thr~ugh May 30, 2006
Park.
slate
Roule
3.
answer~ probably equal amounts of both . Yes, tlte film" beauPG·13 - Special parental guidance strongly sug-.
Millionaire 's ' Row : The Loudonville .
tiful but it's also lackin g in fundamental elements _like narragested for children under 13. Some material may
Legacy of Euclid Aven ue. . Winter Rike , Sycamore
tive drive and cha racter de velopment - almost defiantly so.
Western Re&gt;erve Hi storical 'State Park. N. Diari1m1d Mifl
be inappropripte for young chi ldren.
.
Smith (Co lin Farrel l! is understandably dauled by the e~ ot.:
Society.
East Boulevard. Rd ., Trotwood.
R - Re stricted . Under 17 requires accompanying
'ic and much younger Pocahon tas (Q'Orianka Kilchcr. who
Cleveland
.
Backyitrd Syrup Production
pa'rent or adu lt guardian.
was then 14. in a ' tunningly confident film debut). and their .
Through Aug. 6
Workshop. Malabar Farm
NC-17 - No one under 17 admitted.
time together in the woods has a playfu l purity about it It's not
Cowan Pottery:' -Shining State Pmk . Bromfield R~ .:
roma'nric love but it 's not just friend,hip either - more like a
De\ i~n Exhibit. Zane"·ille
Lucas.
.

MiddlepQrt • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)II

('1-: NTS • \'ol. .).). :-.Jo.

'The New Wotld' ·

a

Motion Picture Association of ·
· America rating definitions ·

1-'Hfi&gt;.\Y , .1 .\:\'l '. \R'

101

.

'

Buckley elected president, Peterson appointed to empty seat in Syracuse

SPORTS

•

·•

t

'

I

'

'

'

nominated · for the open seat of offtce after her nomination
along with resident 'Joy was approved .. Her term will
Bentley. Peterson received be for four years.
SYRACUSE- Last night yes votes on her nomination
.However, Buckley asked to
Syracuse Village Council met from Councilwoman Jenny reserve Bentley 's name in
in its ftrst regular session of Hatfield and Councilmen case .Qf another vacancy on
2006 and saw Councilman Buckley and Mike Vanmeter. council. .
, ·'· .
Kenny Buckley elected as Pet~rson received one , no
Mayor Eric Cunningham,
Pro Tempore of Council vote from new Councilman who was ill last night and
while former Councilwoman Mike Jacks who was elected could not attend, asked
Donna Peterson was appoint'- to hts freshman term as a Clerk-Treasurer
Sharon
ed to the village's vacant councilman in the November Cottrill to relay his recomcouncil seat.'
general election .
mendation to approve Floyd
Peterson , whose council · . Peterson was present for · A. Graham for the vacancy
term expired on Dec. 31, was the meeting and .took the oath on the Syracuse Board of
BY BETH SERGENT
·
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

•.Lady Marauders fall
short. See Page 81

Public Affairs ~hich council
approved .
·
Buckl ~y sat . in as head of ·
cou ncil Ill the mayor' s
absence.
Cottrill also relayed a resi- ·
dent complaint that golf carts.
four-wheeler~ and motorcycles were run~tng amuck m
.the ~tllage whtch led to a dr scuss10n about the la~k of
local law enforcement tn the
village.
The Syracuse Police Force
was laid off by Cunningham

due to lack of funds in
December.
All council ' 'members
expressed a concern that the
vi ll age . needed local law
enforcement to return but
there were no answers as io
when that might happen. .
Hatfield had a suggestion
that the village use licensed
ofticers that would work not
for money but to keep their
commission.
Please

~

Syracuse, AS

·Commissioners
·to approve
county budget
next week
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BTIUARIFS
Page AS
• Archie E. Lee, 95

INSIDE
• The time has come ....

See Page A2 ·
• A Hunger For More.

See Page A2
• Collegians gather to
discuss faith·, black
culture. See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Surviving miner
moved to Pittsburgh
hospi\alto,r oxygen
treatment. See Page AS
• Hamm birth announood.

·See Page A6
• McCain graduates
from Army basic training . .

See Page A6
• Open house to
honor Rio Grande's
Dorsey. See Page A6

WEATHER

POMERO:Y - The ' Meigs
Coun~ Commission decided
to approve the county's 2006
general ' fund budget riext
week as commission members had not received the
final ftgures 'froth the Meigs
County Auditor's Offtce by
the close of yesterday's regular meeting.
The S3,613,342 hudget was
completed late last week with
no major changes in funding
predicted for 2006.
Commission members will
meet at 1'0 a.m. on Monday
for a special organizational
meeting to reappoint county
·
personnel.
Also during . yesterday's
meeting bids were unsealed
for a new truck for the Meals
on Wheel's Program which'is
overseen by the . Meigs
County Council on Aging
(MCCoAJ.
Three bids were received
and read by Commissioner
Mick Davenport. The bids
were as follows: Hot Shot
Cha~ene Hoenlch/ photo
Systems.
Deli ve ry
These scale model creations of Pomeroy's freight and passenger stations. and the vacated Pomeroy Junior High School build-, Bloomingtort. Ill :, $30,187; ·
ing made by David and Nathan Rob inette are on. display at the Meigs Museum. Here Angie Parker arranges the models which Don Tate Motors, Pomeroy,
will remain on exhibit for several weeks.
$35,714.95: · Barnett Ford.
Jackson , $30,962.
The spe~i fications were
not for a full-size truck but
for a Chevrolet S- 10 modiBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' Po91eroy, and . ~he , ,Pqn:i~~oy, .. ~e ries of the ,pictures of the
.i ng at ,it as much as I enjoyed
Please see Budget. AS
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM . Junior · lf~l! ,..')t1iool whtch
old freight station taken from trying to make it look just
has stooil vacant along East several angles. The .di splay like the sc hool, so many
· POMEROY
Main for many years.
· includes the · 'train tracks attended." Plans are to evenConstructing HO scale fliOdThe passenger station was . which ran behind the station tualty tear down the structure
el s of Pomeroy landmarks is used during the heyday of complete with model trains.
built in 1929 and vacated in
a hobby of Davia and railroading in Meigs County
David Robinette built the 1970 when the Pomeroy.
· Nathan Robi(lette and three and was torn down during the scale model of the junior high Rutland and Middleport
of their creations are' current- 1930s when the parking lot · school usi ng the blueprints pf · schools consolidated into the
ly on display at the Meigs was built .
.
the original building. He said Meigs Local School District .
BY CHr\RLENE HOEFUC.H
County Museum.
In placing hi s creations at HOE FLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
The freight station which . he started it .in August 2004,
They are replicas of the served Pomeroy for ' many took three month s off for the the Museum where the public
·passenger station of the years and then sat vacant for holidays , and finished it in can view them for the next
POMEROY - The Meigs
Hockin g Valley Railroad many m.ore years fell under May 2005:
several weeks, Robinette County . 'Treasurer's office
which stood for many years the wrecking ball when it was
"I just wanted to pre serve commented that "perhaps the scored high in getting resi·,
on the upper parking lot in torn down to make way for a some history of Pomeroy," · display will give people dents to . pay back taxes,
downtown Pomeroy, the old McDonald' s
restaurant. said Robinette, •·and I just something to talk about according to tigures provid;
freight station in lower · Accompanying the model is a hope that others· enjoy look- besides the weather.''
ed by Treasurer Howard
Frank :.
The total . of delinquent
taxes paid last year tqtaled
$987,675.68. The amount,
accordinQ ·to Fiank. repre, Although it may be cold and
sented $]5.'534.76 from tirst
gray right now eventua lly spring
half 2005 ·personal property
will get her.e and for residents
taxes. S l) .2{;7.09 from 2005
second half personal property
of Rutland they will have a new
spot to sit down and take in the tax~ &gt;: $705.162 .45 from
200-l flrsl half real estate
view at BicenteMial Min1-Park
t;t.xes paid 111 2005. and
on Main Street. Us ing funds
Sl65.966.37 from 2004 sec·
from an O.hio Nature Works
Grant the Village . pu rchased two nnd half real estate taxes paid
in 2005 : $62.985 .37 from
gaivanized swings and a trash
-::oos first hal r trailer taxes.
can for the mini-park. Funds
anJ $26. 759.6-l . from 2Qq5
from the Ohio Nature Wo rks
·
'econd half tmiler taxes. . 1
. Grant were also used to purln addition tn collecting· a
chase playground equipment at
near
record in delinquent
Vennari Pa rk. The grant totaled
'taxes in 2005 .. Fr,ank paid
nearly $27.000. This year
int\&gt; Meigs County's general
Rutland will a lso be applying fo r fund from public funds
. another Oh io to~ature'Works
which arr inves-ted. a total
Grant to install a walk ing tra11
of
$165.928 08
That
and shoutd know by mid-summone v. ac cording· to the·
mer if it was approved for the
trea su.rer. goe' into general
funds . Here !from left) Nikk ie
operating fund'- including
Walker. Rutland Fiscal Officer
seltlemetlt&gt; for political
Debbie Whitlach and Mayor
subdivisions and schools.
April Burke try out one of the
muc h of which they have
new swings .
already received

Museum displays models of Pomeroy landmarks

Treasurer collects
nearly a million in
delinquent taxes

MINI-PARK

FACEUFT FOR RUTLAND'S BIC ......

Details, on Page A6

INDEX '
2

SEnroNs-

12 l'AG&gt;:s

· A6

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics .

B3-4

Dear Abby

A6

Bs

Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As.
Obituaries
As
B Section
_Sports
Weather
A6
c :zoot. Ohio

Valle~:

Beth Sergentj photo

l"ublishing Co.

~

..

"'"'· m~d:tih-.·nrint· !. tut u

h. :!OOh

.

Calendar ·of Ohio
festivals and events

,,

•

Thursday, January 5, ~906

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

Lady Falcons fly
paSt Southent, Bt

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

________ -- ---

......:..,

•

Please see Treasurer, A5

.,

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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>larkin</name>
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      <name>lee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4236">
      <name>st. marie</name>
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</item>
