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                  <text>Tuesday, January 31, 2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • TheDaily Sentinel

Cavaliers sm~sh lowly Bobcats

High Sc~ool . Basketball Scoreboard

Bush tries to take charge
of policy agenda with State
of Union address, A2

'

OINT PLEASANT 51 MEIGS 49
p
•SANT (7 9) '
POINT
PLE"'
~
Leah EddY 0 0-2 0· Anna Sommer 3 6 •6
14. Char Bibbee 3 2-3 9, Tnsta VanMatre 4

5). Assists-Easiern 7 (Katie Hayman 4).
SG 3 (Jessica Cantrell 2). Steals-Eastern

.,A
13 (Jillian Brannon 4), SG 6 (Jennhvr
Sheridan 3). Blocks(none). Team
Fouls- Eastern 12, SG 22

4-8 15, Brittany Clooch 1 0-0 2, Tessa
Wyant 1 1-2 3, .Joc:f'J Hartley 0 2·2 2.

Melissa Adkins o D-2 o. Devin Birchfield 2
0·1 4, Skye Smith 1 0·0 2. Totals 15·54 1526 51.

MEIGS (4•13)
.
Cayla lee o 2·2 2. Megan Clelland 1 0-0 2,
Joey Haning 6 1·3 13. Catie Wolle 4 12·16
· 20. Amber Burton 0 0-0 0, Amy Barr 2 2·4
6, Les fey Preece 0 3-5 3, Brittany Prea.st 0
0-0 O, Wt1itney Smith 0 0-0 O. .,_.,el1ssa
Grueser 1 1-4 3. Tol als 14-50 21·34 49.
Point
13 12 14 1.2 - 51
Meigs
16 13 6 14 - 49
3-Poinl Goals-PP 6-17 . (VanMatre _3,
Sommer 2, Bibbee), Meigs o-2 (none).
Fouled Out- Wolfe. Total Rebounds-PP
26 (Eddy 5, Sommer s. Hartley 5),' Meigs
51 (Barr 13). Offensive R:ebounds-PP 1 t .
Meigs 22. Steals-PP 11 {Eddy 4). Meigs
5 (Wotfe 2). Blocks-PP (none). Me1gs
(none). Turnovers,-PP 15 , Meigs 27.

E

NELSONVILLE-YORK 71 •
SOUTHERN 36

0•"·
· nne 54
T Ca&lt;&lt;oll 59, o~.
..., Chaml·nade·Jutoe
Oa".' Christian 62, YellOw Srvlnnc::
,.., ,.. 30
Day. Miami VaJI.w
45, Middletown Madison
~,
24

.

Katie Hayman ·1 6-8 B. Kaylee Milam 0 0-0

Day. Northridge 38 , Union ~ity Missinawa

v 11

SOUTtiERN (B·S)
Kristiina Williams 5 1·6 11 . Linda Eddy 2
[}-1 5, Whimey Wolfe·Aiffle 1 o-2 3, Ashley
Robie 0 1·4 1 , Aachael Pickens 0 0-1 0,
Emma hunter 0 1·2 1, Sarah Eddy 2 0·0 4.
Georgetta Brickles 0 0-0 0 , Virginia
Bridlles 4 0-0 9. Chelsea Pape 1 o-o ?
Totals 15 3-16 36.
NELSONVILLE-YORK {1D-7)
Kayleigh Bunting 1 2-2 4, Asti Powell 6 2-3
t4, Ashley Waller 0 0·0 0, Lisa Meade 3 00 6, McKenzie Walter 2 2·8 6, Megan
Edwards 10 2-2 22, Kim Kline 3 D-0 7,
Kourlney Kinn ison 4 3·8 11, . Jennller .
· Andrews 0 1-2 1. Totals 29 12·25 71
Southern
12 B
8 8
- 35
Ne!1onvilla 23 20 20 9 - 71
3-Point Goals-Southern 3 {V. Brickles,
Wolfe-Riffle, LEddy), NY 1 (Kline).

53 SOU TH GALLIA 36

EAST RN
•
· EASTERN (8-9, 4-4)

C!e. His. 73, Cle. John Marshall 57

Ohio High SchOol Glr1t BltketbiH
Mcnday'l Ra1ults

36

F~:in Furnace Green 44. s.Webster 28
Greenvill~ 88, Lemon-Monroe 59

Hannibal River 40, St1adyside 39
Jamestown Greeneview 59 . Spring. Cath.
Cent 56
Kettering A,lter 48. Mason 37
Kett9fing Fairmont 38, Bellbrook 33
Lees Creek E. Clinton 53, WlllmmsPurg 50
lewistown Indian Lake 79. Milford Center
Fairbanks 31
Lima Cen1 . Cath. 58, Haviland Wayne Trace

4o

Unsley (W.Va.) 60, Bridgepqrt 50
Logan 44, Albany Alexander 41
Lowellvill-e 70, Berlin C\lnler Western
Reserve 40
McDonald 72, Sebring McKinley 32
Metamora Evergreen 50, Tal. Rogers 32
Miamisburg 55, Ri'olerside Stebbins 28
Middletown Fenwick 43. lebanon 33
Minford 64, Oak Hill61 ,
Mt. OeChantel (W.Va l 80, Youngs. Aayen 48
Navarre Fairless 47, MassillOn Tuslaw 45
New Boston Glenwood 60. Chesapeake 48
New Knoxville 60, Houston 2 1
New Matamoras Frontier 58, Caldwell 53
OxlordTaleWanda46, Franklin32
·Philo73, Stewart Federal Hocking 36
Proctorville Fairland 72, Portsmouth 60
S. C1'1arteston SE 61, Spring. Greenon 45
Saral'1sville ShenanOOah 63, Beverly Ft. Frye

Akr. Cent.-Hower 63, Alu. SUchtel 51
0. Ryan Davis 0 0-0 0, Amber Willbarger. 0 Akr E. 43, Akr011 N..35
2·2 2, Alyssa Newland 0 0-0 0 , Morgan And~r Pymatuning Valley 31 , t(insman
Werry 0 0-0 0, J1llian Brannon 3 3-4 9. Badger 16
Georgana Koblentz 0 0-0 0. &amp;in Weber 2 Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 58, Northwood
12-14 16, Janna Hupp 1 3-4 5, JesSica 34
·
Hupp 2 6·6 13. Totals_:. 9 34·40 53
Bellaire St. John 72. Barnes'olille 55
SOUTH GALLI~ (8-9)
Berlin Hiland 37, Millersburg W. Holmes 24
52
.
.
Kristen Halley 0 0·0 0. Cnelsea Stowers 1 Brookfield 64, Cortland Lakeview 53
Springboro 90, W. Carrollton 28
0-2 3, Ashley Clar~ 3 2-2 9. Jessica Cadiz Harrison Cant. 50, Winters'olille Indian St. Clairsville 64, Belmont Union Local 49
Cantrell 1 2·3 4, Jill ian Swa1n 1 0·0 2. Creek 24
Swanton 52, Gorham Fayetle 44
Chelsea Canaday 4 9-1 8, Natasha Adkins · Camtxidge 52, Old Washington Buckeye 1vi Christian 81 , N. Baltimore 38
o 0-0 o. Jennifer Sheridan 4 0-0 B. l acey · Trail 40
ToL Ottawa Hills 40, Oregon S1ritCh 28
Lester 1 0-0 2. Totals- 15 4-8 36.
Camden Preble Shawnee 56, Carlisle 39
Troy Christian 50, Xenia Christian 24
eaalern
17 8
10 18 - 53
Cin. lncfian Hill 55, Cin . N. College Hiil47
Union City(lnd.) 53, New MadisonTri-Village
s. Gallla
11 10 7
8
- 36
Cin. McNicholas 60. Gin. Anderson 50
44
3-Point Goals- Eastern 1 (Jessica Hupp), Cin. MI. Healthy 50, Gin. Aiken 25
Warren Harding 55, Youngs. Wilson 16
SG t . (Chelsea Stowers). Fouled Out- Cin. Seven Hills 62, New Miami 37
Weir (W.Va.). 39, Tornoto 35
Eastern (none), SG 2 (Jessica Cantrell, Cin. Summit Country Day 53, Cin. Wellington 49. Sullivan Black River 38
Chelsea Canad3y). Rebounds-Eastern Finneytown 52
·
· Wooster Triwey 43, Can. Timken 30
38 (Erin Weber 14), SG 21 (Lacey Lester Cin . Tat! 64, Hamilton Badin 62 (OT)
Youngs. Christian 70, Youngs. G,haney 45

players sign to · play at the
next level. "He 's the second
one that I've had to go to Rio
Grande and the sixth kid that
from Page Bl
I've had in the last six years
&lt;o sign to college to play
I'm excited to play and I'll baseball , which we're proud
get to play more than one of, here." Allen said.
position .
.
Lawhorn will be a pi&lt;cher
''I'm happy about that." he for the Redmen and will also
added . "I like to play the be a position player. Allen
tield and I like to pitch, too, feels that he will be up for the
so I kind o( wanted &lt;o do challenge . "He'll be a fourboth."
year starter for me thi s
Lawhorn said he liked the spring, plays short, second,
campu s and the size of the third. he's been my number
school. "I went' and visited one pit cher the past two
and I liked the campus, it's years," Allen said. " He 's
not too big of a school , I did:. won 15 games the last three
n't reall y want to go to a big years and he's also hit about
school ," Lawhorn · said. "I .370, he's very ver&gt;at1le, a
already know some people great athlete. he can pretty
that go to Rio and mY family much help you anywhere on
can come to most of the the tield."
games, so that's a plus."
. With
thi s
sijlni~g.
The right-handed prospect Warnimont is contmmng
relies on · four pitches, fast- . with his plan to bring in the
ball , curveball, knuckleball best talent from southeastern
Ohio that he possibly ·Can.
'ani! change-up. ,
ZTHS head coach Ron "Cody played way back in
Allen is no stranger to having our fall league," Warnimont

Redmen

Eastern
from PageBl
and I0 rebounds and Jessica
Hupp had 13 points, three
steals and was a perfect 8-of8 from · the foul line to lead
the Lady Eagles.
But even with the strong
shooting from Eastern , South
Gallia would not let the visitors escape. The Lady Rebels
kept the score at only 17- 11
after the tirst eight minutes of
play and put up a solid I0
points in the second quarter
to close the gap to onl y four
points at the break.
From there , the Lady
Rebel s closed the gap to one,
but could not get any closer
as Eastern pulled away at the
foul line in the final two
quarters. including I 0 points
from Jessica Hupp in the
tina! eight minutes to seal the
Lady Eagle victory.

Meigs
fromPageBl
Poi nt
Ple'asa n&lt; 's
Tri sta
VanMatre nailed back-toback threes to erase a fourpoint halftime deficit and
give the Lady Knights their
first lead at 31-29.
VanMatre was Point's leading scorer off the bench with
15 points.
.
"Trista has been coming off
the bench all year and doing a
great job." explained Point
coach
Mitch
Pleasant
Meadows. "S he ' II come in.
hit some threes, and make
. people pay for guarding some
of our ot her players . And
that·, what she did tonight. ''
VanMatre will likely be
seeing more action the ne~t
few games. as starting point
guard Skye· Smith left the
game with an eye injury in
the second quarter and did
not return . After the game.
Meadows said the severity of
the injury was 'till unclear.
"She always plays really
hard for lis and she· s a
senior." Meadows added·.
"Hopefu ll y she recovers
quickly."

said. " He's shot up a couple
three inches and put on a
good 20 pounds since, bu&lt; as
far as his athletic abili&lt;y, he
could be a starting pitcher for
us, or he could be our starting
shortstop.
"We're going to have to see
right now, where he's best
going to suit the program,
he 's very athletic, he also has
the arm stren&amp;lh , mound
presence and he s a leader,"
Warnimont added. "Those
are the type of kids you're
looking for.
"He' s a three-sport athlete.
we're · very anxious, to ge t
him · settled into baseball ,
year in and year out. get him
in the weight room ;"
Warnimont said. "He's as
strong as a horse, as far ·as his
maturity goes, he's still
growing, he's going to be a
quite ;t player for us."
Lawhorn plans to major in
dentistry.
Cody is the son of Herb
· and Kacy Lawhorn of
Chillicothe.

'

Eastern also had a dominat- Rebel s only made 4-of-8.
Eastern was. led bv Weber.
ing game on the boards with
Hupp
and Hayman, .followed
38 rebounds , while South
Gallia could only come down ·by Brannon with nine points
with 21 boards. The Lady and four steals, Jenna Hupp
five ·poi nts,
'six
Eagles were led by Weber with
and Hayman, while Jillian rebounds, three steals and
ad&lt;!'ed
seven three assists and Amber
Brannon
rebounds ·and Jenna Hupp Willbarger with two points in.
.
came
down
with six the game.
South Gallia was led by
rebounds.
South Gallia was led by Clark with nine points . and
Lacy Lester with five four rebound s. Chelsea
rebounds and Ashley Clark Canaday with eight points,.
· with four boards, while six Jennifer Sheridan with eight
other players had two points · and three steals,
Jess ica Cantrell with four
rebounds .apiece.
Eastern also managed a points and two . assists.
total of 13 steals and passed Chelsea Stowers with three
their way to seven assists, . points, l ill ian Swain wi&lt;h two
· while South Gallia could poin&lt;s and Lacy · Le ster with
~ml y pick six and pass their two points and ,five rebounds.
Following the win, Eastern
way to three assis&lt;s.
South Gallia did manage a returns to action 7:30 p.m.
better 30 percent (15-of·50) Thursday when they travel to
nigh&lt; of shooting compared Trimble while South Gallia
to Eastern's 26 percent (9-of- returns to the hardcourt
34). but were trumped by the February 6 when Dawson34 free throws as the Lady Bryant comes JO tO";n.
Meigs managed to tie · the
game at 31 afte r a Wolfe
score. then pulled even for a
final time at ·3 5 apiece .
Point's Tessa Wyant came up
with a steal and converted a
layup, though. and gave the
· Lady Kni ght s a lead the y
never lost.
Point ou&lt;scored Meigs 14-6
· in the pivotal third quarter.
It was the second Point
Pleasant (7-9) victory over
Meigs (4-13) thi s season.
Monday 's mee&lt;ing was much
closer than its predecessor.
.though, as Point won by a 6534 score back· in .late
December.
Meigs coach Carl Wolfe,
while not happy about his
team's lith loss in its last 12
tries, was very pleased with
the effort.
"I was just pleased with the
effort our kids gave us. "
Wolfe said. "We played hard
- that's the hardest we've
played for awhile .
''We've made some pretty
good strides, the on ly thing
we lack is the abi li ty to shoot
the ball at crucial times."
Mei gs '"ored on ly l,hree
fi eld goals in the f@urth quarter, and jus&lt; one after Wolfe
fouled out with two minutes
to play. Two of those makes

belonged to joey Haning.
who scored 13 points in the
loss. Amy Barr scored six
points and co ll ec ted 13
rebounds.
· Point Pleasant' s Char
Bibbee scored all nine of her
poil)ts in the second half, and
four important markers in the
fourt h period . He jumper
with 6:15 \.e ft in the game
he lped keep the Lady
Kni ghts on top after Meigs .,
had cut the lead to a · sin gle
point.
Also fo r the wi nners.
Devin Birchfield scored four
points, Tessa Wyant went fur
three while Brinanv Clonch.
Jody Hartley and Skye Smith
all chipped in two.
Lesley Preece and Melt ssa
Grueser both· scored three
points for Meigs. Cayla Lee
and Mega n Clel land each
. added two.
In the junior varsity game,
Meigs picked up a 31i-33 victory. Alex Cullums cored I I
for the winners while Te"a
Wyant had I0 for the Lady
Kni gh ts.
Poini Pleasant plays host to
Roane County on Thu r&gt;day.
Meigs en tenains Nel sonvilleYork . also on Thursday.
before wrapping up the regular .season nex t week .

James
scored
seven
straight poilits ::_ two long
ASSOCIATED PRESS
jumpers, ·a dri ving layup and
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
a free throw - in a 9-0 run
Soaring after an impressive
that gave Cleveland a 49-32
win over Phoenix, the
lead. It sapped what little
Cleveland Cavaliers weren't
energy the injury-depleted
about to come crashing back
Bobcats had and they never
down against the Jow ly of business early, got a big made another run the rest of
lead and just extended i&lt;."
Charlotte Bobcuts. .
game.
.
LeBron James scored 30
James . shot 11-of- 19, the" lnjuri
e~ are pan ot ,.the •
points in three quarters to including an alley-oop dunk game." guard Brevtn K~1ght
lead the Cavaliers to a 10:1- ·from Eric Snow that warmed said. "We need all our p1eces
91 victory over the gimpy the crowd up and· a th ird- to win. but we' ll keep tightBobcats on Monday night. It quarter reve rse dunk on a inn and we can turn ibis th ing
e
.
. ..
· 1 . .breakaway that f broug!ll
Cl eve Ianu·" s
was
stxtJ
E 1the
.
around
and
get
a
wm.
.
straight will, four of which fans to their eeL ar rer· The Bobcats got a slight
. onday, James said he
came on .the road - . the most M
\if! · in the second quartec
since the Cavs' won five declined &lt;he NBA's request when Kareem Rush returned
straight away games in April to participate in the All-Star after missing 13 games with
dunk contest.
.
1998 .
·
f 1h 1h.
1 ·
James, who will cempete a sprained index finger. Rush
0
"One
e mgs · pornt- in the All -Star skills chal - shook otr the rust 8 seconds
ed out to the guys was that it
was a good win against lenge. said he's not a good aft er checki ng in by making
Phoenix, but if we turn · enough dunker to pu&lt; on a a21 -footjumper. He fini shed .
wit h nine points.
.
around and go to Charlone show.
But
his
retu
rn
coi
ncided
and lose that ballgame, then
"I don ' t predetermine what
beating PhOenix the night I'm going to do," he said. with yet another player going
guard Raymo nd
before doesn' t really mean 'That's why I'm not a good out ·
Felton,
the
only Bobcat to
anything," coach Mike dunk participant. I don ' t
play
in
all
46
games this seaBrown said. "Of!r guys were know what I'm going to do
son. The rookie landed hard
focused enough to come into until I jump." ·
'ld'
d
w"
With Cleveland leading. on his backside in the first
the bur tn g an get a ·
83-57 at the end of the &lt;hi rd half. Although ~e came back
The Cavaliers improved to_
James pulled on a bri efl y in the second half, he
5-0 aga ·tnst 1he B0 bcats and quarter,
blue T-shi11 and settled in on left with back spasms.
extended Charlotte's franFelton tinished with just
.'chi se record losi ng streak to &lt;he bench to watch the. final
12 games. The Bobcats ha,ve 12 minutes.
.
.three poin'ts in 12 minutes
nor-won a game since a dou"I' ve been struggling with before joining four other
ble overtime win against playing LeBron too many injured Bobcats on the sideminutes and I haven ' t gotten lines.
Houston on Jan. 10.
"The reality is the teams comfortable siuing him
"He didn't wan&lt; to. come
we are playing are better bas- down yet," Brown said. " It out «might. but I think ihat is
ketball teams than we are," Was good to limit hi s playing where we ·have to use some
Charlotte coach Bernie time a little hi&lt; today."
discretion so he can live to
Bickerstaff said. "I do think" James disagreed.
tight
another
day,"
with all our co mponent s,
''I'd rather play, but with us Bickerstaff said.
we'd be a pretty good basket- being up tha&lt; many points,
Notes: The Bobcats aren' t
ball team. 1 have. no reserva- there's no need for me to be expecti ng forward Emeka
out &lt;here," he sa id .
tions about that."
James, who scored 44 in
Zy drunas ll gauskas fin - Okafor to return from a
.Sunday's win over Phoenix , ished with 19 points. Donyell sprained anklt for at kast
continued his . trend of Marshall had 14 and· Drew another five weeks. He's
it!ready nlissed. 19 games ....
improvi n'g every time he Gooden had 12 rebounds.
Cle've\and
forward
Ira
plays agains&lt; the Bobcats. In
Alan
Anderson
led
all tive meetings . he's steadi- Charlotte with 14 points , Newb le sat out with a
ly increased his scorin g from while Melvin Ely and .Matt migraine headache. :.. Browri
19 points in the first ga me to Carroll scored 12 each. spen t th ree seasons as an
assistant under Bickerstaff in
30 this time out.
·
Jumaine Jones had II .
"This was an important
Cleveland held a 15- point Washington . . ·'· Among the
game." James said . "We did- lead early in the second quar- celebrities turning out to see
n't want to win a big game ter, only &lt;o see Charloue trim James' show was rapper
like we did yesterday, and it to 39-32. So the Cavaliers Nelly. a part-owner of the
come in here and not play as put the ball in James' hands Bobcms, ami NASCAR team ·
well as we can. We took care !O retaj&lt;e control of the game. owner Teresa Earnhardt.
BY

JENNA FRYER

It's Time To

I)INE&amp;
·
u
--.. .

Race tor the Nextel Cup Preview

Fe ruar.v11, 2006

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

J
;) 0 (

SPORTS
• EC!stem slips past
Crusaders. See Page 81

OBITUARIES
Page AS
· • Dale Call

INSIDE
• Gardeners h1:1ar
about caring for birds.
SeePage A3
• 'Freedom From
Smoking' cessation
classes offered.
See Page A3
• Family Medicine.
See Page .AS
• ·Get out of the
house and into art.
See Page AB

'

• Caretta Scott King,
widow of Martin Luther
King, dies at 78
See Page A7

were fi·led on Jan . 18 and . the one percent raise for
· tha&lt; both the board and comteac hers. The rai se was
mission have received the . agreed upon by the b()ard and
paperwork.
rejected by the commission
These types of complaints in NoYember.
At it~ recent meeting the
from public employees are
fil ed · with th e. Ohio State Southern Local School Board
Emplo yment
Relations voted lo take the one percent
Board (SERB).
pay raise back to the commisOhlinger said &lt;Ilat the com- sion for reconsideration.
pla.ints were fil ed because her
"We decided we can' t not
organi zation believes the gtve
them
something,"
. board and commi ss ion. are Southern Local School
· not honoring a fairly nego&lt;i - Board
Preside nt
Susie
a ted contract between the Grueser said in a 'previous
SLEA and board in regards to interview abbut taki ng the

.
pay rai se issue back before
the commission.
" It might ao some good, it
might nut ." Grueser added.
Ohlinger sa id she appreciated the board's decision to
take the pay raise issue !lack
to the com mi ss ion but
explai ned she would prefer
that the board enact it.
''.I'd like 'to see them (the
board) make a stan d,"
Ohlinger said abou t enacting
the raise despite the comm ission's objection .
However, the board has t ~ld

'

'

Ohlinger that ttiey. are bound
hy the commi ss ion 's deci sions concerning financial
matters in the distri c&lt; even
though the SLEA contract,
wit h the raise included, was
ncgntiateu with.the board.
Ohlinger stated that this
·'catch 22" has left the SLEA

·wondering what en&lt;ity they
work for- the board , or the
com mi ss ion"
At thi .s particular time
Ohlinger said the ' SLEA has
Plene .s ee Teachers, A5

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Merchant
survey to begin
in Middleport
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOA ILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A8

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Ca lenda rs

16 PAG-ES

A3

.Classifi eds

,B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries

B Section

Sports

A8

Weather

___,__:__......:__.__ _ _-:'_·_~---'-o-~-'----~------,---+

BSERGENT@MYQAILYSENTINEL.COM

Please see Ccial, AS

675-1333

~---·------"--

.
Bv BETH SERGENT

POMEROY -, The cleancoal tech nology employed by
the IGCC process would
allo w . AEP to use locallymined coal , but AEP has not
discussed 'Dr determined
where it wil l ge t the coal to
operate its new plant if permission is, indeed. gran ted to
build it.
Local oftic ials hope a new
$1 billion AE P clea n-coal
plant and another plant proposed
by
American
Muni cipal Power-Ohio, in
Letart Township. will j umpstart the local econom y. One
way that could happen would
be a re~ itali zation of the coal
mining industry in the region,
Eco'numic · Deve lopme nt
Director Perry Varnadoe said.
"The availahi li ty uf coal i&gt;
being recon&gt;idered throughout Sou&lt;heastern Ohio and
ucro~ s the river in Wes t
Virginia," . Varnadoe said.
"It 's not just a matter of fueling these two proposed
plants. ln(lustry is taking
another look at the re2ion as
a source of .::oal."
'
" With new tec hnological
advances and c lean-coa l
methods, the de mand for coal
may again lead industries to
. this reg ion for coal as fuel."
There is mineable coa l
throu ghout
Southeastern
Ohi(J. and Meigs Count y ts

Joint lalea,aut i\e:gt,ter

Advertising Deadline is February 9, 2006

Southern teachers file unfair labor practice complaints
.

Bv BRIAN

446-2342

Don't miss out on this great opportunity
to have your business included!

\\WW. m~dail~-.·nliowl.mm

I , : ! HOC.

Meigs.coal
supply may
get second
consideration

&lt;lalltpoli'.)Bail~ tltrtbune

992-2156

\\'FII\11-.SII \ \ ', FFB\{l lt\R\'

It&lt;)

RACINE - The Southern
Local Education Association
(S LEA ) recently tiled unfai r
lab.or practice complai nt s
agains t &lt;he Southern Local
School · Board of Educa&lt;ion
and the Financial· Pliinning
Supervi sion , Com mi ssion
which oyersees all financial
decisions made .by the distric&lt;
currenil y in ti scal emergency:
SLEA President Ann
Ohlinger said the co)Tiplaints

C)

-- ---·

'1·. !\TS • \ 'ol . ;,;,. :"\o.

WEATHER

The Daily Sentinel

EHS Students of
the Month, AS

:wu6 Ohiu \'QIIey l'uh,l i... Ju nK Cn.

··.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport merchants and
downtown building · owners
will be asked to complete a
survey otnlining the reta il
climate as. part . of plans to
see k funding for dow ntown
revi tali zution.
The
Middleport
Developmelll Group wi ll
apply for Tie r II downtown
rev itali zat ion funds through
the Ohio Departme nt of
Dev elopment this year. A
first applicatron is due: in
late May. and a final applica tion in OcLoher The group
will know by year's end
whether the proJec t has heen
awarded funding .
May
deadline
The
rc£Juires a number of steps
to be comp leted. includtng
the surv.ey of property and
business owners. w hi ch w'i\1
be di's'tributed &lt;o busine"
ow ner" -..omet im e next
week·. The group n1u st ahiJ
complete a deta il e&lt;J stud y of
the condition anu '""' of
downtown buildi1igs. and
Please see Survey. AS

Diane Pottorlfj photo

Members of the Point Pleasant Vol unteer Fire Departme nt and Mason County Emergency Med ical Services work to extricate th·e
body of La ntz Bricker of Sale,m, Oh io, afte~ his plane crashed next to U.S. 35 near Henderson Tuesday morning.

man

in plane crash U.S.35

DtANE. PoTTORFF

with the power lines.
'· He did .not have enough speed to take
off and too much speed to stop," Green
said about the accident.
Green said that he wi ll be coord inati ng
the accident investigation with · Luke
Schiata of the National Transporta&lt;ion
Safety Board.
Stover sa id that Bri cker tried to. take
off Sunday. after gelli ng some .fuel but
could n&lt;il hecause the grou nd was too
wet. He let him park the plane on hi s
property until the ground had dried.
Sto,·er said.
"Thi s morning I loaned him a pickup

trol wh ile' emergency crews were working at the scene.
, Both lanes of U.S .· 35'were closed for
HENDERSON , WVa. - "A man about an hour then had opened to onew~s ll ying hi s airplane and lost his lane oi' traffic until investigators with !he
life." Darrell Stover said as he wa&gt; Federal Aviation Administra.iion from
ho lding back tear&gt; fnr the fr iend he had Charle'ston arrived. Then both lanes sh ut
;ust made.
down wh ile thev conducted their inves ti . Stover, who is the owner of Stover ga&lt;ion. Lincnicn · wii h Appalachi an
Trucking Company located on U.S. 35 iti Electric Power inspected the electric
Hendersqn. was used to hel pi ng stranded lines . The area did not lose electricit y
motorists along &lt;he highwa y an(! had fo ll owing the accident.
"I had helped him afte r he ran out of
been helping Lantl Bricker. 25. of
Salem. Ohio, si nce Sunday after Bri cker gas," Stover said. " I gave him some gas
made an emergency liinding in Stover's and .loaned him vehicle.s to get back
cornfield af.ter hi s Piper PA-2ll- \ ~ I. also . and forth ."
.known as a Cherokee, ra n low qn fue l. .
They deve loped a friendship in the short
Around I 0:15 a. m. Tuesday morning. time that Bricker was in West Virginia.
as he was taking off from the lield. &lt;he
''He was a nice guy." Stover said of
wing on Bri cker' s ·p lane hit a fence post Bricker who had promised Swver an airand electric lines. then crashed on the plane ride when he came back to West
other side of U.S. 35. He died inside the Virgin ia.
plane after the accident. Bricker was the
Bricker had been flying over Mason
onl y one aboard the plane.
. County Sunday whe n the plane ran ow
Emergency crews from · the Mason on fuel. Dave Greeh, aviation safetv
County Sheriff's Department, the Mason inspecior of .t1i ght operat ions with the
County Detachment of the West Virgi nia FAA' s oftice in Charleston. · .said. He
State Police. Point Pleasa nt Volunteer mnde an emergency la nding in the fielu.
F.tre Department and Mason County
Green said the preliminary investigaEmergency Medical Services rushed to tion showed that after refueling, Bricke r
the ' scene. Workers With the West began his takeoff and struck some obs.taVirginia Division .of Highways. Mason cles · along hi s path. which inc ludell a
Garage. al,'tJ responded .for traffic con- ·fence post. before comi ng imo cot1tact
BY

OPOTIORFF@MYDAI LYREGISTER COM

tmck ~o he cou ld !:!0 and Qel some ·avia-

tion fuel over al the Gallta County
Airport." Stover said Tue,sday.
When Bricker returned to the plane.
he drained the ga&gt; from the fuel tank
and put the av iation fueJ. in. Stover
said . Then. Bri cker prepared the ai rplane for take off.
"We pulled it out in to the tield so he
could get a better run." Stover said. "I ·
wen\ and blocked the drive.way so · no
one cou lu get in . The nex t thing I knew
the plane was com ing toward me . It
banked to the left but he cuu ldn ' t pull it
back out."
StoveF said he heard the piane striking
Pletse see Crash, AS

Karr named new board chainmin at Rio Grande Community-College
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAicYSENTINEL .COM

cJmpu:-; cnmmunit)",_
w·e
ca n con tin u~

RIO GRA"'DE - Thomas
to
tmpro\·e
Karr of· Pomero y ha:-~ been
our ..,cn·icc to
named the ne\\o chairma n uf
the re£!.tnn.
the Rio Grande Com mun ity
~aid -Ka: 1 ~r.
College Board of Tru,tec, .
The
new
Karr. who prevtou,\y 'er\'eu Thomas Karr ,' 11 a i r 111 " n
as vice chairnian of the Board.
~b~lllll('J
hi~
succeeds Dr. Hem1an Kobv. po,ition during the Bnanf,
who stepped dt&gt;wn from hi, ..,pccial m~etin g hckl on Dec .
!Xl~ition t lf L:h:1innan to hecom~ .2H. 200:\
intc:rirn prc~ilicnl of Rio
Karr he . :amc .1 member of
GranUe Co 1 nmunitv 'Co lk ~e .
till: Board of Tru..,te6 in .
··V.,'c ha\'C a-g rc L;l board" that 2001. n:rr~'cnting Meig~
truly l'are~ about thi~ region . . Cnunt) . During hr~ t'cnurc. h~
Work ing in partnership \\lth ha.., wilne'-l'l'd many impro\e~
the Univer&lt;rtv of Rio Grand~ !lll'l11' in the cnllel!c. inl'iml · Board of Trustee ' and the 111!; be tter uutrea~ h In the

high s.: hools in the area. a . continues working 0 n current
i;,ues and be,gins setting new
youth panicipilnts at. area g&lt;&gt;ab . The expansion of the
countv fat.r'. anJ incre-ased Rio. Grande \oleigs Center will
effon~ to r~lh..'h nontrat!itinnal be a major pan of the Board's
.;;tudCnt.;;, throuch addit ional \l,:ork durin\! Karr\ tenure .
~l·hnlar~hip-., l:Hl...d ffiore tlexi'-,
"I'm grC:Hly plca&gt;ed that
our ex.pan . . ion iri M~igs
hie cour'e offering, .
"With toda\ \ rising c·ol- County i' moving forward."
·kgc tuition l.'thb. Rio Grande .· &gt;tated
Ka rr.
"We are
is an aff&lt;ordahle. yet inntH'a- · rc''P&lt;'nuing w ihe needs and
ti\L', in . . tilll tion." Karr ''-lid . ft?'4llt'~h of the ('Ommunity.
"'The Board mu~l l'lll1 linuall\ and thi' j, what a comm unitY.
apprai:-.c the :-.i tuati(m both ol1 l'llllcgc need" to-do to contiriand off l:ilmpu":-. . tn dett~rmine ue to he ~Lu.:ces~fu l. ··
hm\ R in G rund.~ ~o:(111 b~.:tter
Karr ~~ married 10 Dianat ·
C\'nl\·c anrJ 'ervc our 'tul!ent-. and the\ h:rvc two children,
and the areJ ...
a '0n. \\'esley. and a daughA!' thl' Ill:'\\ chainnan. Karr ter. \\'h itne\. a student at
·
is reall) to lead .tile Board"' H R"' Grande .·
:-.ch0larship pn.1gr\.lm tn hont)r

'

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�I

The Daily Sentinel

p

Bush tries to

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NATION

~ednesday,Februaryt,2oo6

BY TERENCE HUNT

v
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c
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PageA2

WASHINGTON
A
politically
weakened
President Bush decl ared
Tuesday night that America
must break its long depen- .
dence on Mideast oil and
rebuked critics or' his stay·
the-course strategy for the
unpopular war in Iraq.
"America is addicted to oil ,
which is often imported from
unstable parts of the world,"
Bush said as he sought to
drive the election-year agen. da in his annual State of the ·
·
Union address.
Rejecting calls for 1he
withdrawal of troops from
Iraq, Bush said, "There is no
peace in retreat." He also
slapped at those who complain he took the country to
war on the erroneous ground s
that Iraq possessed weapons
of mass destruction.
" Hindsight alone is not
wisdom." Bush said. "And .
second-~ue s sing is not a
'
strategy. '
·
In an unscripted moment,
anti-war activist Cindy
Sheehan. the mother of a fallen soldier in Iraq, was taken
in\O custody by police in the
House g~llery just before
Bush spoke to a joint,session
of Congress. She was escorted from the visitors gallery
after she caused a disruption,
a Capitol Police official said.
With Congre ss facing
in
midterm
elections
November. there was a p,arti·
san mood in the chamb~r as
Bush, hampered by big budAP Photo
get deficits, offered a modest Vice President Dick Cheney, left, and House Speaker Dennis Hastert of Illinois watch as President Bush delivers his State of the Unidn address on Capitol Hill
program.
·
in Wash ington Tuesday. ·
Democrats . stood and
cheered when Bush said that
"The federal government urged bringing 30,000 math bers of both parties. "Tbis not offer any timetable for ing peace ."
Congress did not aq &lt;\ year should serve the American and science professionals · terrorist surveillance program bringing American troops
Bush said the United States
ago "on my proposal to save people," the newly elected into the classrooms to teach.
has helped prevent .terrorist home from Iraq. There are and its allies were united in
Social Security:" Bush shook governor said. ' ~ But that mis- ·'... "We need to enc~urage attacks," the president said .
about 138,000 U.S. troops in insisting that Iran not develop
his finger and continued, "yet sion is fru strated by this children to take more math
As he has in every State of Iraq, down from about nuclear weapons. Speaking .
the rising cost of entitlements administration ·s poor choices and science and make sure the Union ·address to some 160,000 at the time of the directly to the Iranian people,
is a problem that is not going and bad management.
Bush looked toward a differthose courses . are rigorous extent, Bush said the United January elections.
aw.ay."
·
Despite. recent elections in ent future ·for their country
Bush's address came amid a enough to compete with other States must curb its reliance
Switching gears, Bush changing of the guard else- nations," the president said. · on foreign oil imports.
.Jraq, · Lebanon and the and said the Unit.ed States·
asked lawmakers to join him where
He called for more research · Palestinian territories that "hopes one day to be the
Bush went before the
in
Washington.
in naming a commission to Conservative judge Sall)uel nation after the toughest year on batteries for hybrid ~nd h~ve given rise to religious- closest of friends with a free
examine the impact of Baby . Alita was sworn in as a new of his administration. His job electric cars and work on based parties with views and democratic Iran." ·
Boom retirements on Social Supreme Court justice, replac- approval rating is in the ane- alternative fuels.
The president renewed his
sometimes hostile to the
.
Security, Medicare and ing Sandra Day O' Connor, mic high 30s to low 40s.
·~our goal is to make this
West, Bush pressed Saudi oft-stated goal for Congress .
Medicaid spending.
who has been a moderate
Health care is a priority for new kin&lt;:! of ethanol practical A(abia and Egy'pt - long- to n1al\e '· permanent the tax .
He declared that the "the swing vote. The Senate also both parties, particularly and competitive .within six time allies that Washington is cuts enacted during his presistate · of our union is strong" confirmed Ben Bernanke to since nearly 46 million years," the president said. loath to challenge too aggres- dency.
despite Americans' anxieties be chairman of the Federal Americans lack insurance. "Breakthroughs on this and sively - to · provide greater
·'Jf we do nothing,
about the war in Iraq, the Reserve, replacing Alan Democrats say that in 200'5 other new technologies will freedoms to their citizens.
American families will face a
economy and soaring energy Greenspan after 18 1/2 years alone, the number of unin- help us reach another great
H.e urged Hamas to "rec- massive tax increase they do
costs. Oil prices are inching in the influential job.
sured grew by nearly a mil- goal: to replace more than 75 ognize Israel, disarm , reject not expect and will not weltoward $70 a barrel, throwing
Alita was in the House lion.
percent of our oil imports terrorism and work for last- come,' he said. .
a cloud over the economy ·chamber, alongside new
"Keeping American com- from .the Middle .East by
and pinching Americans' Chief Justice John Roberts, petitive requires affordable 2025.
pocketbooks .
By targeting only Mideast
another · Bush nominee , . and health care," the president
Bush called for increased Justices Stephen Breyer and said.
oil, Bush was ignoring the
federal research into alterna- · Clarence Thomas. The presiBush proposed .greater tax largest sources of American
tive fuels such as ethanol , dent was applauded 58 times benefits for health saving petroleum consumption made from weeds or wood in a speech that ran slightly accounts, the high-deductible Mexico and Canada. Imports
chips instead of corn.
more than 50 minutes.
health care plan that allows of oil and refined product
Virginia Gov. Timothy M.
Facing budget deficits that people to contribute money from the Persian Gulf make
Kaine, chosen to deliver the may approach or exceed tax-free to 40I(k)-like health up less than a fifth of all
response for the Democrats, $400 billion this year, Bush savings plans, as a way to imports and II percent of total
scolded Bush on the soaring had no room for expensive, expand their use. He said consumption, according to
national debt, . the frustrated new initiatives.' .
lawmakers also must allow Energy Department statistics.
effort to rebuild the hurri"
Bush divided his address
But . Bush did call for . workers to take the coverage ·
cane-battered Gulf Coast, greater public spending on · with them as they change · between problems at home
Medicaid cuts and other basic science · research and jobs.
·
and abroad.
issues. On Iraq, Kaine said · more money for math a~id
Many Republicans cheered
With the war in Iraq about
that Americans were given science education .
Bu sh when he detended his to e111er its fourth ·year and
"inaccurate -' information
He proposed an initiative to program of surveillance in more than 2,240 American
Sm~el Now you can own the piclufe Ot that unlorgettatne.
about the reasons for invad- train 70 ,000 high school the United States without troops killed, Bush said the
moment captured in 1he newspaper. Pholos become ~me less
ing" and .that troops were teachers to lead advanced- warrants to combat terrorism nation must not falter in what
when Jramed or printed on amug or mouse pad.
given body armor 'that was placement courses in math - a program whose legality he called the central front in
.inadequate.
Vistt www.mydailysentlnel.com and clid&lt; the blue bunoo
and science. In addition, he has been challenged by mem- the war on terror. Bush did

.

'

• The resources available to the C8 Health Project will allow up to 70,000 eligible-·
·participants. When that number is reached, no more questionnaires will be accepted ..
,

'

·'

• All eligible participants whose questionnaires are accepted will be processed. ,
·With more· than 67,000 questionnaires on hand, .
participation in the CB Health Project has
exceeded everyone's expectations. Brookmar, Inc.
wish~s to express its sincere appreciation
for .the
.
ongoing community cooperation and support in
.
completing this project.
'

The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

Smart people look for love in more of the right places

\Ve4flesday,Februaryt,2006

DEAR READERS : A'
ever. I have complained to utes she &lt;&gt;aid. "Why don ·t
promi,ed, toduy I'm printing
our supervisors that I don' t American' do what the) do
my own tried-and-true list of
want anything other 'than in Europe ''"
how to meet a potential mate.
I a &gt; k e~ her what that wu'&gt;.
work-related issues· to do
(Becuuse some of my suggeswith June . They have notified and she to ld me tha t
tions have already been
her of my complaints, and European '&gt; take a regula r da y
Dear
offered by others, I'm abbre she is getting the him.
off fro m d ri ving - which nnt
viating this list.) Read on :
Abby
Outside of work is another only ' ave' ga' but al"' brin g'
Simply put, decent people
story. I "forgave" June many fami lie' clo,er together.
are found where decent peoyears ago, but I still do not What an excel lent idea for
ple gather. You will never
wish to have her as a friend or peopl e here in -the United
meet anyone sitting at home;
acquaintance. Please tell me State,.
so get out of the house ,und o'r health club . Do some . how to get rid of her. I ha vc . I think it is a 'imple ;olubecome involved. Enroll in entertain ing and ask your considered a re stra ining tion to a growing probl~:m
an adult education class, take friend s to bring along a order, but · she hasn' t done and could make a huge differa class in auto mechanics, friend . If you have children, anything threatenin g.
ence. Do yo u think thi' i'
welding, computer training, join
H ..
Parents
Without BEING
STALKED
IN poss ible'! -· JIM
KOKOMO
.
saqing, navigation, golf. ·
NAPLES,
FLA
.
Partners.
Volunteer your services.
DEAR JIM H. I cenainl)
· You may not meet "The
DEAR BEING STALKED:
There are plenty of under- One" right uway, but you ' ll The next time June approach- do. When people are deterprivileged, di sabled, elderly make new friends - and one es you outside of work. if you - mined enough. anyt hing i'
and teens who could use a of them may have a friend haven't already done so, tell possible. We may not be abk
friend. Get involved with who's perfect for you .
her exactly what you have to control gu' price' . hut we
your church or a civic organi DEAR ABBY: A former told me. If that doesn't do the can . decide how \.\e wa nt to
zation . Join a political party friend I'll caii"June" was the trick, change your routine .spend our money. For thmc
and volunteer to help at a cat1 se of many important the places or the hours that who need to econom ize .'
polling station. (You'll meet relationship breakups in · my you shop, go for exerci se, etc. walking, ridin g bicycle.\. rideeveryone in your district' ) life - · one of which is mend- If the 'woman still pursues sharing.and public tru n,pon aJoin a professional organiza- ed now. We hadn ' t spoken for you, then do inform the police tion are sensibl e solutions.
that you are being stalked by
. Dear Abby is written by
tion - Rotary, Chamber of years.
Commerce , manufacturing
About seven years ago , someone who appears to be Abigail Van Buren, also
organization or any organiza- June was hired at the place unbalanced, because that may known as Jeanne Phillips,
. tion having to do with your where .I have worked Jar the be what the woman is, ~nd get and was joUtrded by her
Saturday, Feb. 4
·
profession.
past I! years. She now tries it on record.
mother, Pauline Phil/ips.
Wednesday, .Feb. 1
TUPPERS PLAINS
Take
dancing
lessons
·
to
find:
and
make
up
excuses
DEAR
ABBY:
I
was
sitting
Write
Dear Abby
at
MIDDLEPORT - · The Signup s for the Tuppers
to
converse
with
me,
both
in
with
a
friend
today,
and
www.DearAbby.com
or
square
dancing,
line
dancing.
we
P.O.
Middleport Literary Club Plains Youth Baseball and
will meet at 2 p.m. at the Softball.program will be held ballroom or salsa. Take up and out of work. I ignore her. began talking about the rising Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
Pomeroy Public Library. from 9 a.m. to noon at fishing or hiking, join a gym I am. not mean or rude,; how- · g;,~s pri ces . After a few min- 90069.
Jeanne Bowen and Dana Eastern Elementary school.
· Kessinger will review "The Child's birth certificate
Same Sweet Girls" by required. MarGh 4 is registraCassandra King.
tion deadline.
Thursday, Feb. 2
Thesday, Feb. 7
CHESTER ChesterSYRACUSE - Caring for t,he saucer for drainage and it bathing, she ·aid.
spring county meeting wo uld
TUPPERS PLAINS Shade Historical Association Tuppers
our
feathered
friends
using
is
complete.
It
only
costs
pen
Many
other
items
can
be
be he.ld April .'l at the lihrary
Plains
Youth
. will be held at 7 p.m. at the Baseball/Softball recycled materials was the nies to make and the birds used as birdbaths , such as· and that · Wildwood . Garden
Chester
Courthouse. Association, monthly meet- educational topic for a pr'!- wil'llove it, Roush assured.
flowerpot saucers and garbage, Club would serve refresh Discussion will include . ing, 6 p.m., tlrehouse.
gram presented by · Sarah
Other'Suggestions included can lids . with some pebbles ments. Members 'answered
ongoing restoration work of
Rou sh at the recent Wildwood fillin g small mesh sacks or and water added in places roll call by naming a favorite
the Chester Academy. 2006
Garden Club meeting.
discarded knee-hi gh stock- which ·cannot be reached by winter bird. Beautification
events, including uipcoming
Roush informed members ings with ! thi stle seed to cats. Suet feeders were also Chairperson Joy Bentley
period dress and culture proof various ways to recycle attract flinches. usin g coffee discussed and suggestions for reported that the S,yrac use
Sunday, Feb. 7
gram, period dance workcommon hou sehold materials can s or other large c&lt;ms to making suet included usihg ·Park de coration s had bee n
BIDWELL - Gospel con- that we normally toss away to make feeders.
shops, progress with granr
. yellow cornmeal, outs, peanut taken down .imd stored :
cert
by the Forgivers 4 at 6:30 create bird feeders and bird(unds, and fundraising for the
Rou sh also talked about butter and wild birdseed . The Members al so di scus,cd the
p.m. at the Poplar Ridge Free baths. She said empty plastic how to the make humming- mixture needs to be boiled to planning of the fa ir fl ower'
upcoming Morgan 's Raid.
Will Bapti st Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS containers such as milk jugs, bird feeders. as Well was the cook . into a soft mixture . ·show and decided to meet on
VFW Post 9053 Ladies
soda. laundry detergent and nectar to attract the birds pressed into suntlower heads Jan. 13 to begin pl ans.
Auxiliary, regular meeting, at
juice bottles can be used after using a mixture of four parts and hung from a tree or bird
Peggy Moore reported th at
the hall.
being · thoroughly cleaned. He water to one part sugar boil feeder.
.
"Now is the Time" to incre&lt;be
Saturday, Feb. 4
suggestion Simply cut a large . until the sugar di ssolve.s . .She
Tips were also given on humidity for hou &gt;ep lants .
Wednesday, Feb. I
HARRISONVILLE
opening
in
the
side
of
the
botaid
cbanging
the
nectar
every
how
to attract orioles. to dis- plan you r garden layout. order
RACINE - American Red
Harrsonville Lodge 411 , 7:30 · Cross bloodmobile to vi sit tie. fill it with seed up to the two or three days is needed courage squirrel s from rob- seed catalogs. place poinsetp.m . at the hall . Members to Southern High School to col- openin g, and hang it up usin g and any leftover nectar should bing bird feeders , an how to tias in sunny window,. order
take non-perishabh! food for lect blood. I 0 a.m. IQ 2 p.m. fisping line or wire from . a be stored in the refrigerator. · make a scoop to use in pour- seeds, service power equi ppantry.
Birdbaths · are easy to ing birdseed inio feeders.
ment. order fertilizer and lime
Sponsors National Honor tree limb , clothesline, or a
Friday, Feb. 3
child's
swing
set.
.
improvise.
said
Roush
~vho
Roush
concluded
her.
pre.
and
plan the spring _landscape
Society.
POMEROY
- . Meigs
Even an old tennis ball co111 showed pictures cut from sentation by emphasizing design. She also said we
County PERl Chapter 74, 12
tainer c'an be fashioned into a Birds· and Blooms magazine . make -your-own feeders or -should avoid using sal t whe re
· noon, Meigs Senior Center,'
runoff might injure planh .
bird feeder, she said. Just drill She suggested na11ing ' clean birdbaths.
wit~ Diana Coates speaking
four holes near the bottom of cans near the feeders and fiJI. . Shirley Hamm opened the
The'next meeting to featu re
Friday, Feb. 3
about disaster preparedness .
the container, then attach it in.g
them · with
water. meeting with devotions titled · techniques of basic fl ower
Guy with a·wood screw to a plastic Chickatlees , nuthatches and "The Farmer and
REEDSVILLE MIDDLEPORT - · OHthe arran g in~,;. will be held at 6:30
KAN Coin ·Club to have Calaway will observe hi s flowerpot saucer.
Add a juncos will love these small Preacher." President Peggy p.m. at the home of Jl)v
exhibit of coins and currency 93rd birthday. Cards may be• hanger and drill small 'holes in containers for drinking and Moore announced that the Bentley Feb. 9. •
and do free appraisals from 9 sent to him at 4R 184 S.R.
a.m . to 3:30 p.m . at the 681 , Reeds vi lie, Ohio 45772.

Public meetings

AP WH ITE HOUSE CORR ESPONDENT
'

PageA3

.

'

CSHEALTH
I,I~C)JI:CT

Conducted by:
lr dopu! dor rt H&amp;alth Projecl

BROOKMAR,INC.

Peoples f'!ank lobby 111
Middleport. Drawings for
r
prizes.
door
Wednesday, Feb. I
Saturday, Feb. 4
PAGEVILLE Scipio
SALEtljt CENTER - Star
Township trustee s, regular
Grange
#778. Star Junior
meeting, 6:30 p.m. at
Grange
#878
meet in regular
Pageville Town Hall.
session with potluck supper
Thursday, Feb. 2
POMEROY - Salisbury at 6:30 p.m., followed by ·
Township Trustees, , 6:30 meeting at 7:30. Degree team
practice. Final plan s for
p.m., township hall .
March 12 soup dinner. ·
Monday, F'eb. 6
Mnnday, Feb. 6
RACINE
Racine
RACINE
Racine
Village Council, regular
meeting , 7 p.m., -Racine Chapter 134, OES regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Mock ini Municipal Building.
tiation.
All officers asked to
Rutland
RUTLAND attend.
Refreshments.
Council meeting, 6 p.m. in
Thursday, Feb. 9
village council chambers.
CHESTER
- Shade River
SYRACUSE
- Sutton
meet at 7: 30
Lodge
453
will
Township Trustees, regular
at
the
h&lt;lil.
monthly meeting, 7 p.m., · p.m.
Refreshments
.
Syracuse Village Hall.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
RUTLAND
-Rutland
Township Trustee.s meet iQ Garden Club. 6: 30p.m . at the
regular session at 5 p.m ., home of · Joy Bentley.
Program on techniques of
Rutland Fire Station.
basic !lower arranging.

Clubs and
organizations

School events

Gardeners ·hear about caring for birds

Church events ·

Other events

Birthdays

'Freedom From
Smoking'cessatlon
classes offered
POMEROY
The
Tobacco Prevention Center of
Holzer Medical Center will
offer an eight wee); smoking
cessation clinic with the first
session "Thinking about quitting" to be held on Feb. 9 m
the Pomeroy Lib~ary.
Freedom From Smoking ,
developed by · the American
Lung Association •. is an eight
session stop-smoking clinic ·
~ponsored
by the H MC
Tobacco Prevention Center. . ·
A professionally trained
instructor will create a . supportive environment to help
break the smokiilg addiction.
. Each participant . who joins
Raina Garber
·,
. the clinic will develop an
approach to cessation efforts.
·individual plan for quitting.
In the din.ic, long-term ullowing participants to work
freedom from smoking will on the process of quitting nDt
be the emphasis, according to only individually, but as a
Raina
Garber,
Adult group. said Garb~r.
During the clinic. Garher
Coordinator
at
HMC's
Tobacco Prevention Center. will teach step-hy-s tep methinstructor. The clinic includes ods for changing behavior.
the latest improved skill s for and quitting smokin g. The
studying the habit. building group approach uses positive
motivation , coping with thinkin g. one-o n-one help.
urges. making a plan. recov- rewards. and gruup support
ery and suppon. stress man- to help participant\ ' top
agemenr. wei ght control, smok-ing.
Tltt;re is nn clwr,~e to attn ul
exerci se, .assertive communi-.
cation and relapse prevention: th e session .,·. For mo re il!fin·Freedoi11 From Smokin g 'mativn or ro · re~ i "i lf r Jfn· ·rill·,
offers a more systemati c cli11ic. call 1NO J-N 6-59-10.

Jackson wildlife officer wins award

JACKSON - In keeping
with their commitment to
wildlife' law enforcement. the
Nationaf . Wild · Turkey
Federation named ·Wildlife
Officer Lee Van Allen of
Jackson as the Ohio Wildlife
Off1cer of the Year.
.
Allen will be recognized
during . the NWTF's 30th
annual Conventio'n and Sport
Show in Na, hville. Tenn ..
Feb. 23 to Feb . 26 .
The NWTF creat ed their
to
pro gram

acknowledge top officers from poaching is the other.
such as Allen across North Wildlife officers played a
America.
huge role in the comeback of
All en and other state win- the wild turkey. This is our
ners are eligible for the way of saying thanks to those
NWTF' s
Natiorl'al
Law officers."
Enforcement Officer of the
For 10 years. Van Allen has
Year award, which will be been a respected officer with
announc.ed during the Awards the Ohio Division of Wildlife
Banquet at the Convention .. (ODW ). In that time. he has
and SJ?ort Show.
.
made countless wildlife cases
"Trap and transfer ts one mcludmg a recent case that
part of the success story of the inv.olved the theft of hemlock
wild turkey:· said Rob J&lt;;eck. branches from public huntin g
NWTF CEO . "Protection lana that the suspects sold for

profit.
Van Allen is abo an aY id'
hunter who supports ' port&gt;·
men and con,ervation group,.
such as · the NWTF. and
spends time in the ouid•'or'
with hi s children .
··omcer Van Allen i' on&lt;' ,,f
those officers who -:an ,ee the
big pil'lure . a' well a' problems from every angle: · smu
Brvan Po,tk thwa it. ODW
wiidli fe offi .:e1: 'upen i" H.
'· He' s a \ C r~ we ll -rounded
offi c ~ r. ..

UPCOMING LIBRARY EVENTS
FOR KIDS AND ADULTS
POMEROY -· Upcomm g
events pla.nned by the Metgs
County
Distri ct
Publi c
Library will reach out into the
county as well as reach out to
residents of all ages .
An Adult Cra ft Program
will be held from liOllll 'to 2
p. m. on Saturday. Feb. 4 at the
Pomeroy Library and prov ide
adults with an opportunit y to

create their own Valcmine·s
Day card using scrapbooking
techniques, Supplies will be
furnished .
Adulls and children are al so
invited to a Famil y Craft
'li ght fleginning at 5 p.ryi . on
ThuNil'Y· Feb. 9 at the R.acine
Library. This ncnt Will allow
parti cipants to create their
own _personali zed val ent ine

bear card box or valentine
qoor hanger-. Supplies will be
furni shed.
The library's spring stor y
tim ~
sessi ons have a lso
be gun . Story time is open for
chridren of all ages. For a
complet e li_:;t of story tim e
da ys and hours contact th e
Meig s County Library at
992 -58 13.

,.
Fr8_mll:l th !'ll ne""sP flpe&lt;
phoh) O&lt; pr1n t 11 on a

mug o r mo&lt;r!U'! Dl'.ld

www.mydaitysentinel .com

"Trust me-being unable to hear
is a lot more obvious than a .
hearing aid."
~

Krandi t&gt; '\om't'. " \. ( '('( ·- \

.lane Ann Karr Aant"..,lad. \1 -\ . t ' (
l.kenwd AudiolnJei"'t

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

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Coorc:inatot8. aS6igned the 1a9k al collee1irg health n klrmatlon and blood tes~ng .

The Daily Sentinel

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(.740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

CongreS$ shall make no law respecting ait
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
ofspeech, or of the press; or the right of the
peopk 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 is Wednesday, Feb. I, the 32nd day of 2006. There
are 333 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
..
On Feb. I , 2003, the space shuttle Columb1a broke up during re-entry, killing all seven of its crew members.
On this date:
In 1861, Texas voted to ~ecede from the Union. ·
In 18,93, inventor Thomas A. Edison completed work on the
world's tirst motion picture studio, his "Black Maria," in West
Orange, N.J.
.
In 1920. the Royal Canadian Mounted Police came into
existence.
·
In 1943. one of America's most highly decorated military
units of World War II, the 442d Regimental Combat Team ,
made up almost entirely of Japanese-Americans, was authorized. .
.
,
In 1946. Norwegian statesman Trygve Lie was chosen to be
the first secretary-general of the United Nations.
In 1960, four black college students began a sit-in protest at
a lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C., where they'd been
refused service.
. In 1968, during the Vietnam War, Saigon's police chief
(Nguyen Ngoc Loan) executed a VietCong officer with a pistol shot to the head in a scene captured in a famous news pho. tograph.
In 1979, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini received a tumultuous welcome in Tehran as he ended nearly I 5 years of exile.
In 1991 , 35 people were killed when a US Air jetliner
crashed atop a commuter plane on a runway at Los Angeles
.International Airport.
Ten years ago: Both· houses of Congress voted overwhelmingly to rewrite the 61-year-old Communications Act, freeing
the exploding television, telephone and home computer industries to jump into each other s fields.
.
Five years ago: John Ashcroft won confirmation as attorney
general on a 58-42 Senate vote, completing President Bush's
Cabinet over strong Democratic opposition.
One year ago: Pope John Paul II was hospitalized for
. breathing problems and the flu. Character actor John Vernon ,
who'd played nasty Dean Wormer in "National Lampoon's
Animal House," died in Los Angeles at age 72.
Today 's Birthdays: .Actor Stuart Whitman is 78. Former
Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin is 75. Singer Don Everly is
69. Actor Garrett Morris is (/9. Singer Ray Sawyer (Dr. Hook
and the Medicine Show) is 69. Actor Sherman Hemsley is 68.
Bluegrass singer Del McCouty is 67: Jazz musician Joe
Sample is 67. Comec)ian Terry Jones is 64. Actor-writer-producer Bill Mumy is 52. Rock musician Mike Campbell (Tom
petty &amp; the Heartbreakers) is 52. Rock singer Exene
Cervenka is 50. Princess Stephanie of Monaco is 41'. Country
musician Dwayne Dupuy (Ricochet) is 41. Actress Sherilyn
Fenn is 41. Lisa Marie Presley is 38. Comedian and actor
Pauly Shore is 38. Jazz musician Joshua Redman is 37. Rock
musician P.atrick Wilson (Weezer) is 37. Rock musician Ron
Welty is 35. Rapper Big Boi (Outkast) is 31. Country singer
Julie Roberts is 27. Actor Jarrett Lennon is 24.
· Thought for ·Today: "Every ten years a man should give
himself a good kick in the pants."- Edward Steichen,
American photographer (1879-1973).

· LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters ro the editor are welcome. They should be less.tium
300 word.1. All letters are subject io editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number No. unsigned let:
ters will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga.nizatinns ar1d individuals will not be accepted for publication.

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VVednesday,Februaryt,2oo6

. Wednesday,. Feb:n~ary 1,

Most of America's xoung
girls typically don't get to
celebrate Phyllis Schlafly
during women 's history
month, hut they should. The
conservative Schlatly not
only had the right idea when
she fought the Equal Rights
Amendment during the 70s,
but prediction s she made
back then are still accurate
tqday.
Schlatly was head of the
National Committee to Stop
ERA. And stop it she did - ·
the U.S . Constitution was
not amended. She argued
that a federal Equal Rights
Amendment was not necessary, claiming that, "the fact
is that wornen already enjoy .
every constitutional · right
that men enjoy and have '
enjoyed equal employment
opportunity since 1964."
Even though Congress
overwhelmipgly approved
the ERA in 1972 - passing
the House 354-to-23 and the
Senate 84-to-8 - and the
amendment would subsequentlx be ratified . by more
tha!) 30 states (but not by the
38 its supponers needed).
Schlafly fought the nonsensical
Equal
Rights
Amendment to its ·death in
1982.
.
While explaining why the
big push · fur the federal
Equal Rights Amendment
ultimately failed, in her

.

...J

••
•

I REALL'i DON'T

THINK THE SADDAM

TRIAL NEEDS A
WARm-UP ACT.

.

Dale Call , 46, of Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Jan . 31, 2006, at
Holzer Medical Center Emergency Room.
Services will be held at 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 2, 2006, at
the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. There will be
no visitation.
A complete obituary will be published in the Thursday
Sentinel.

Local Briefs .
Trustees organize
ALBANY - Columbia Township ·Trustees will meet at 7
· p.m . on the tirst Thursday of each month. Donald Cheadle
was elected president and Marco Jeffers vice president at the
trustees' recent organizational meeting.
.

Officers elected
TUPPERS PLAINS -Orange Township Trustees re-elected Roger Ritchie president and Wilbur Robinson vice president during their recent organizational meeting. David Sheets
is the third trustee.
The regular .meetings will be held at the home of the fiscal
officer, Osie Follrod. on the first Tuesday of each month.

Advisory issued
POMEROY -Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has
issued a boil advisory for Summerfield Road, the tirst I ,000 feet
of New Hope Road off Ohio 7, and Ohio 7 from Eastern High
School to New Hope Road. The high school is not included.
Customers in the area are advised to boil cooking and
drinking water for three minutes before con,,uming it. The
advisory is in effect ·until 10 a.m. on Wednesday.
on the basi s that the commission is "prohibiting the enactment of a fairly bargained contract",in the words of Ohlinger.
from PageA1
In October a fact-finder
not voted to strike if the raise with SERB ruled in ' favor of
the SLEA pay raise duririg a
is not enacted.
"I'm not even sure who fact-finding hearirtg attended
we'd strike against," she by representatives from the
explained. 'T m not sure who · district and SLEA.
The pay raise will effect 56
we work for."
Rather than · strike, if ·the employees.
Southern Local School
commission once again denies
the pay raise. request the SLEA District had the lowest paid
may tile a lawsuit against .the teachers in the state in '2005
Ohio Department of Education and has been in tiscal emer· that oversees the conunission gency longer than any district. .

.Teachers

Truck drivers who were traveling on US. 35 also stopped
to give aid with ftre extinguishers.
he said. Two fu-efighters
from Page A1
then arrived along with a mflll
the fence post. Then the plane ·.who had retired from the FAA.
who calmed Stover down. ·
struck the power pole and lines. They tied the airplane to a tree
"When the wings hit the . to keep it from flipping.
power lines, l knew he was in
He said' an off-duty emer· gency medical technician
trouble," he said.
Immediately, Stover called who also had arrived took
. 911. then stayed with his Bricker 's pulse, then shook ,
friend at the acci dent site his head . indicating that he
until help arrived. He said had died. The body was taken ·
Bricker was still ali ve · when to the Medical Examiner's
he reached him.
· oflice in Charleston.
"I would talk to him and he ·
It was the first plan~ crash
would mo ve· his right arm," he had witn.essed, qnd Stovet
Stover said. "l was holding said he does not care to see
Lantz and the seat back when another one.
I saw smoke coming out of
''l don 't want to go through
the engine companment.''
that again,'' he said.

Crash

.'

Survey.·
from PageA1

Saving for a (non) rainy day
I painted some bookshelves over the weekend,
and »'hen l cleared the
shelves I realized I had
become a' pack rat. There
were books there l haven't
Jim
looked at or read in years.
Mullen ·
A 1994 AAA guide to
•---Arizona. I like Arizona. So
do a lot of .other people.
That's why a few gazillion
Am l every going to read it
people have mo v.ed there
since ' 1994. And while .I again? No. But l liked it and
doubt that the Grand Canyon it got me to reading other sea
and the Petrified Forest have stories. Like " Moby Dick."
changed much in the geolog- Which is basically a retelling
ical snap of the fingers we of "Jaws:·. In "Jaws" this
call · 12 years. I' 11 . bet the crazy captain is searc hing for
hotel and restaurants sure a great white shark, and in
have. There are probably "Moby Dic'k" this crazy captain is searching for a great
even a few new road~·. I'm
AAA member. They' ll give wh ite whale. In "Jaws" the
me a new. up-to-date guide shark destroy' the ship and
for free . Wh y am I holding kill s &lt;1lmost everybody on
on to thi s book as if it were board . in "Moby Dick" the
some kind of good luck whale destroys the ship and
leave, one ' urvivor. Wh y
charm ''
I pulled uown a ratty, this Melville guy thought he
paperback copv of "Jaws." could get away with ripping
There was a strip of'fadin.g off Peter Bench ley by changmasking tape holding the ing a few words. I'll never
spine together. The pages know.
Here·s a box of cassette
were yellow and brittle. the
tapes.
My cur stereo ori ly
comers of the pJge' were
·hanging on like chads on a lakes C"Ds. Wh y am I saving
Florida ballot. Wh y am l · these things'' I uoubt they arc
keeping this? They printed goi ng to get better with age .
600 . mill!on co pie; of If we li ve in a disposable
"Jaws." It's about"·' rare and soc iety, why am I nol disposIng '' b there something
valuable a;, a 2006 pe.nn y

an

wrong with me? Why am I friend Gene bought a new
not doing my part?
house, ·a lixer-upper that he ·
· My last cassette player has ·was going to .repair all by
been in the b:1scmcht for himself. I went to see him
seven years. I don't even the other day and there was a
want to think about what's in trash dumpster on his front
the basement. It 's full of lawn, full to the brim, ready
things that aren't worth tix- to be taken away.
. ing anymore. Computers.
"Wow, a whole dumpster.
tuners, DVD players. If one Who could believe there was
breaks. it 's cheaper to buy a so much junk in one little
new one than have the old house?" I said.
o.ne repaired.
Gene glared at me. ·
I've got a box of wires and
"Thi s is the seventh dumpcables anu connectors and ster." he said. "These peop'lt&lt;
adapto rs for all the gadgets never threw anything away.
I've bought over the years.
Do you know what I found
Like all thai 'tuff that· c(lmes
in there? Piles of old newsiD the box with your new
answerjng machine that let 's papers and paperbacks that
you mount it on the wall. haven't been touched in
I've 11'e ver seen or heard of years. Wires for things th&lt;\t
anyone ever mounting their don 't even exist anymore,
answering machine on the magazines that time forgot. I
wall. but if you wanted to, had to walk through little
here's a plate ami a few tunneh of old newspapers in
every room. One room . was
sl"re w ~.
·At lirst. I was very good full of old, \lroken radios and
about labeling all ·the wi res · stereos. What kind of person
and power cable&gt; with those · would live like that?"
There was only one thing I .
boxy tran , fonners on' the
could
say.
end. I'd write the name of
" It \ a desperate cry for
lhc gadget on a label and
attach it to (he ' cord . All !he . help. they must be deeply
ink ha., faded. l don 't know tlisturbed ."
~Jim M1Jien. i1· d-.:' mtlnr 1{ ''lt
what goe' with what. Will I
1(ik'!i olilk(~'r! ldxt: Cmvh:a!DJg dlt'
ever .thr_ov- them out '' No .
But jusl wl1en I thought. I Sinv&gt;ie Life " cold "&amp;b\'.5 First
w'" h:td . I heard ah&lt;.&gt;ul some- lidttxJ. ., M.tt ~w1 nt:K11. !rim en
body that was worse . My jim.JIUJk1r@ll~~.rrmm)

•

FAMILY MEDICINE

Acute labyrinthitis a common
disorder with an.uncommon name

Dale Call

·women,' Using the term Left keeps trying to revive
·sex ' demands same-sex the old loser. As late as last
marriage because banning it year, the ERA was reintrowould be denying rights duced in both the U.S.
House of Representatives
based on sex." ·
Agree or disagree with her and in the Senate.
Kathryn
Sheila Cole, now a senior
politics, Phyllis Schlafly was
Lopez
right - the Hawaii supreme House staffer, wasn't alive
court was the tirst, in 1993, yet when Schlafly was first
to rule that its' state ERA taking on the ERA.. but
mandated same-sex · mar- worked with Schlafly as
executive director of Eagle
book "Feminist Fantasies" riage.
At the time of the big Forum in the late 1990s.
(Spence. 2003 ) Schlat1y
reprinted some of her old ERA fight, of courSe, you . Cole remembers, "One of
objections: "ERA would put might have thought she was the things l learned from
'gay rights' into the U.S. nuts. "Hey, Phyllis, your watching Phyllis is that you
Constitution because the sheet is showing," a always have to think like a
cartoon chess player when dealing
word in the amendment is Doonesbury
'sex,' not 'women .' Eminent "joked." Famously. during a · with the radicaJ .feminists ."
Nowadays, Eagle Forum
authorities· have stated that debate at Illinois State
is
content that the Equal
ERA would legalize the University in 1973, feminist
granting of marriage licens- mother Betty Friedan angri- Rights Amendment is dead
es to same-sex couples and ly declared. "!·consider you as a viable national movegenerally implement the gay a traitor . to your sex, and .ment, despite Ted Kennedy's
and lesbian agenda."
• Aunt Tom ." Freidan said hopes (the ERA is his bill in
And guess what? In the that she wanted to burw the Senate) for its revival.
latest example of Sch lafly's . Schlafly at the stake. For Now Schlatly . &amp; Co. are
prescience, ori Jan. 20, 2006, Schlafly, Freidan's fury· more specifically concerned .
a Maryland court struck came in handy. As Donald with protecting marriage down the state's same,sex T. Critchlow recalls in in part from the damage
marriage ban based on the "Phyllis
Schlafly . and done by , .state · ERAs .
Old Line State's. Equal Grassroots Conservatism~ ' Meanwhile, when Women's
Rights Amendment. As (Princeton, - 2005), Schlafly · History · Month
comes
Jessica Echard, ·who works replied, ''I'm glad you said around in March, how about
with Sch latly at ·Eagle that because it just shows a lesson starring · a wise
Forun'l (the public-po,licy the intemperate nature of woman like Schlafly?.
nonprofit Schlafly heads) proponents of the ERA."
·. (Kathryn Lopez is the edipoints out, "The Maryland
The Schlatly-was-right tor of National Review
ERA language is very simi- point about the . ERA and Online
(www.nationalrelar to the federal ERA, marriage is worth noting view.com). She can be conwhich refers to no discrimi- not just for hi storical-accura- tacted at .klopez@nationalre:
nation based on 'sex' not cy reasons but because the view.com.)

seek vi ll age council's adoption of the revita li lation
plan by village council.
Other steps required by the
May application deadline
have been completed. The
Local
Institute
for
Government Administration
and Rural Development at
Ohio Universi~y' r~l~ased a
strategic plan for the project
last month. That plan will be

Th e Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

-.Deaths

Equal rights for whom?

The Daily Sentinel

®ur

PageA4

Question: A few weeks
ago my wife woke up very
dizzy. When she tried to get
out of bed, she was so dizzy
she almost fell down. She
went to the doctor and was
told she had an inner ear
infection, He gave her some
medicine and told her to stay
quiet until she felt better. She
is better but still dizzy. How
long will this· last ? What
caused this? Are there other
things she can do to make the
dizziness go away?
Answer: .It sounds like
your wife h'\d what doctors
call acute labyrinthitis. This
disorder gets its name from a
part of the inner ear called the
vestibular labyrinth. A brief
description of a healthy
vestibular labyrinth and how
it works will help you better
understand what can cause
the type of dizzines s you
describe.
· The vestibular labyrin th
located behind the eardrum
contains three interconnected
semicircular canals or tubes.
The three canals are hollow
and contain a fluid that
moves in response to head
movement. On the inside

surface of these canals are dizziness. Acute labyrimhiti&gt; lasts for several weeks fol special hair-like nerve fibers . is usually self-limiting. but · lowing the acute phase. or if
and tiny calcium stones. many people continue to suf- the dizzine ss i&gt; ;evere. your
When you move your head fer through periods of dizzi - doctor may recom mend
or stand up, the hair cells are ness for weeks to month s vestibular therapy. Thi&gt; conbent by the weight of the. .after the acute .episode has sists of home excrci;e; to
stones or the movement of subsided. In some people, the strengthen the vestibular sy,.
the fluid . This movement of acute illness may .have nau- tem and thu ; le ssen· .the
the hair cells transmits a sig- sea and vomiting associated diaine" . Mo&gt;t people make
a full reco very from ac ute
nal to the brain that it can with the dizz.iness.
interpret as the movemei:H
' Diagnosi s is usually made labyrinthiti s. The most comand position of the head. by a thorou gh · physical . mon compl ication of thi; ill With this information your exam . This may include nes' is bone fracture from
brain is able to maintain some head moving maneu- fall s due to the dizziness.
vers to see what positions. or
proper balance.
Family Medicine ® is a
In acute labyrinthiti s some- . types of movement bring on
thing goes temporarily wrong the dizziness. Many tirnes weekly collltnll. To mbmit
with this complex system. the doctor. wi II order a head q11estions, write to Martita A.
The exact cause is not under- .cT scan or MRI, especially Simpson, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
College
stood, but it is a · relatively if ther.e has been recent head U11iversity
of
common medical · prQblem . trauma, if there are extreme Osteopathic Met(icine, P. 0.
This disorder u s ~ally follows symptoms, or the illness is Box 1[(), Athem, Ohio 45701,
or via e-/IIQil to readerqllesan upper respiratory infec- prolonged.
tion, such as a cold, and is . If everything points to acute tior~s @familymedicillellews. o
significantly more common labyrinthitis, then medica- rg. Medical irrformntion i11
in women. While it can occur tion s to calm the dizziness this col11tn11 is provided as an
, at any age, · the incidence and help with the nausea are ed11cational service only. It
increases in the ;'IO 's and usually prescribed. A few does not replace tlte judgmelll
day s of bedrest will help the of your perso111il pl•ysicum,
beyond.
G~nerally this il'lness has ;i, di zzine ss to resolve. Avoiding who should be relied 011 to
sudden onset, such ·as you alcohol and smoking are usu- diagnose arrd recommend
describe with your wife. You . ally advised as well. Some treatmellt for any medical
wak!.! up one morrting and the · people need to be h9spitalized conditio11s. Pa~t col1111111S are
· available online at www.jamnormal movement of getting if the vomiting is severe.
In the event the dizziness ilymedicillenews.org.
out of bed causes severe

ery and construction.·
promise in the potential
AEP is the nation 's largest
AEP Spokesman Jeff
Rennie said AEP has not yet user of coal. and for 30 years. ·
considered
where the coal to mined its own coal.. in Meigs
from PageA1
fire the plant will come County for use at the General
now exception, according to from, and probably will not James M. ·Gavin Plant and
consider the matter unless other AEP facilities. The
Meigs County Commissioner the
Public
Utilities power company sold its mine
Mick Davenport.
Co~missiOil of Ohio and the propeny in Salem Township
"We know from the results Ohio Power' Siting Board t&lt;J Consol Energy just before
of geological surveys of authorize the plant's con- the mines closed in 2000. AEP
Meigs County that there is struction . While AEP has has since abandoneu its coal
still plenty of coal to mine in begun some site preparation mining operations all together.
Meigs County," Davenport work at the plant and has
''AEP has not discussed or
said. "Then; is a lot of begun to map transmission determined a coal source for
routes, the: pjant will not be the plant,'' Rennie said .,
built unle ss the PUCO and "That will not be a consider. Wh1le traffic was St~?pped OPSB tho ·ze cost recov- ation unless we get the goon U.S. 35 due to the acc1dent.
· au n s
deputies who were ·at the
scene were called to investigate an accident after a tractor-trailer rear-elided a car.
Ulrich H. Gaertner, ~3. of
Centerville, Ohio, told Chief
Deputy Charlie. Steams that
the 2002 International Estes
Express Lines truck of
Morrisville, N.C., driven by
Dwayne Ray Herring, 41, of
Huntersville, N.C., had ran
into the back of his 2003
Chevrolet. ·
.
No injuries were reponed
by either driver or by their
passengers.
Stearns is investigating the
accident and . had issued
Herring a citation for failure
to maintain control.

Coal

··

·

I

ahead from the state to build
the plant ''
Rennie said the Lebanon
Township &gt;.ite AEP plans to
usc for the plant was deemed a
first choice because of its easy
river access. which would
allow the company to easi ly
receive coal by towboat. .
While coal is considered a.
cheap fL1el. the IGCC process
allows the use of even cheaper bituminous coal. 'such , as
that found here to fue I the
process. Coal. water and oxygen are converted into a gas
before being burned to tire
the plant.

used as the basis for the revi - gram, and Fanners Bank anu
talization grant application . Savings Co. has announced it
Other admini strative require- will mak~ low-interest loans
ments. including the estab- available for the ·business
lishment of an architectural owner's share of the work.
design review board , and · At least 20 percent ·of busicompletion of a market study, ness owners in the targeted
area, from Rutland Street to
tmve also been completed.
The Development Grtiup is South Fifth Avenue, must
also faced with a more press- agree to participate in the
tog challenge. thai of con vi nc- program in order for the vii- .
ing business and building own- lage to qualify for grantfunders that they should participate ing .· Meeting Tu esday, the
in the .progmm. Their invest- Development Group disment in code-related upgrades, cussed expanding that target
facade improvements anu area to include businesses on
other renovations will be South Third . Avenue and
matched through the grant pro- General Hart inger Parkway.

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The Daily Sentinel

PageAq

The
Daily Sentinel
.
.

VVednesday, February 1, 2006..

Envoys at London conference vow to maintain support for Afghanistari
LON DO ~- Envoys from
n~a rh&gt; 70 nations and interna-

tionai bodies vowed Tuesday
to maintain their fina·ncial
support for Afg hani stan,
wh1ch i' &gt;ti ll plat;ued by viok n c~ and poverty more than
ro ur \cars afte r the fall of the
Tali h.an.
Speaking at the sta11 of the
two-day meetin g. Secretary
of State Condnleezza Ric e
said the Bush admini sm ttion
pl anned to ask Congre" for
$ 1.1 hill io n .i n aid fo r
Afg hani stou1 ne xt ye:Jr.

"Jh e tran , furmation of
Afc han1 stan is remar ka ble
bui inco m p ler~ ... Ri ce said
before t ravc l i n ~ hac k to
Wash ington for Pres ide nt
Bush's .Slate of the Union
speec h Tue,da) ni ght. "A nd
it is e&gt;scntial that w e all
increase our s'upp011 for the
Afghan people."
Bri tain an'nounced $800
m11lion in new aid over th e
n~ x l three years. an d Prime
Mini,ter Tony Blair sa id see-

,

(

AP Photo

11

··narco-state ."''

BY ERRIN HAINES

'

a

Bv ROBERT H. REID

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER S

I

.I

RAMALLAH . Weq Bank
- A sen10r Hamas offic1al
said Tuesdav the Islami c militant group Is already looking
for new sources of fundin g
after th e international community threatened to cut off
aid. warning that Hamas will
not be "blac km ailed. "
Osama Hamdan. a member
of th e group's exiled leader. ship. spoke .a day after imernational donors said millions
of dollars 1n aid could be in
jeopardy if Hamas docs not
change its violent ways.
Harnas willlikelv find it diffic ult to persuade Musl im
nations to make up a shortfall
from a Western aid cut. and the
threat or no monev remains
th e international coinmunity 's
best weapon to get Hamas to
moderate its ideol ogy.
l-lamas. wht ch has killed
'hundreds uf Israeli s in · su ici de att acks over the paq
decade. is poised to lead the
nex t Pa lestinian govern ment
after a landslide win in pc~r ­
IJamentary elec tions.
"We are lookin g fo r alternative sources and we will not
allow ou rse lves 10 be blackmailed." Hamdan said in a
telephone inte rview with The
A'SOCJa led Pre'' frn m Beiru t.
Lebanon. "We wdl not accept
an y conditions from anybody.
At the same ' time. we are
ready for dialog ue. "
l-la mas
official '
sa1d
. Tuesday th e gro up already is
in tou ch with potential
donors in Arab and Mu slim
natio ns.
Th e
o ffici al s
dec! ined to be id entified
be&lt;:ause the contac ts are at 'an
earlv stet!le.
· Hamas' al 'o coll ects doha·
tions from Islam ic chari ties
and commu nities around the
world. espec iall y lnclone,ia.
Malays ia and Saudi Arab Ja.
where people gi'e gc ncrou'ly dur ing co llect ion drives
after Friday pra) ers.
· Sti ll. the group too k a
financial hlo"" in reel' Ill \'e ar"
afte r a po;t-Scpt. II c-raci.J own on in ternatio nal money
transfer, to terror groups ·
Monda\··, mcetin" of the
" t" of
;&lt;&gt;-&lt;:a iled. "Quarte
\1J&lt;Je&lt;hl peace m ~ 1 l.er s ~ the
Eur-opean l 'ni on. Lnitcd
·S tate:-. Ru"ta und Unt tcd
"'ation s - stopped short ul
1 ~-..u ing i.lll outnght lhr~at t(,
H ~ un.t""

· ll ut thn s,ud 11 1s
''inc', ituhlc",thatl uturc aill to a
il.l111a'•J..:U
UO\ CJ'n llll'lll

British soldier killed'by roadside bomb;
German hostages appear in new video
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP Photo

Hamas leader Kl1aled Mashaal , right, talks to ' reporters in
Damascus Tuesday whi le receiving a Jordanian delegation of
Islamic par ties headed by Abdul-Majeed Zneibat , the General
obser ver of the M'usltm Brotherhood party in Jordan. The delegation came to Damascus to congratulate Hamas on its vtc·
tor y in parliame ntar y electio ns. Mashaal said he wil l start a
tour on the Arab and Islami c countries to raise support for the
Palestin ian people. Mashaal satd that Hamas will not yield· to
Western pressure to give up its fundamental principles .
I

"would be rev ie wed" if stop the monthl y transfer of
l-lamas fai Is In renounce vio- ~55 million in taxes and cuslence. recognize Israel and . tom s 1t collects
from
accept exisii ng ·agreements Palestinian workers and m ~r­
betwet&lt; n the Paleslimans and chants to the Pal estinian
lsrae,l . European fi &gt;reign min- · Authorit v 1f a Hum as uovern isters issued si milar conditions ment is· installed . The ne xt
at a gathering in Bntssels.
payment is due Wednesday,
We s t~ rn donors. led by the
and Israel ha s not said
U.S. and EU. funn el abol,lt wheth er it will transfer the .
S900
·milli on · to
the monev. If i10t. the Palestinians
Palestinians each year. most of mi ght not be aole 10 make
it for reco n. . l ruc rion projec ts in their payroll Thursday.
the tmpo veri shell Gaza Stnp
Hamas leaders, who have
and We'l Ban k. Both li st tried to portra y a more modH ama~ &lt;.t\ a terror grou p. mak,~
erate . image since t·he elecin·g it di i'lic ult. if not .J!Iegal. tJun . . ., ought to a..., ~ ure ·the
for the m to gi\'e money to a donors that aid would go onl y
(o ordinary Pal es tinian~ and
government led by Hamas.
Israe l also has said it would not be used for attacks.:

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BAGHDAD, · Iraq - A
bomb exploded alongside a
group of Iraqi men waiting
for work in eastern Baghdad
on Wednesday, killing at least
ei ght and wound1n~g more
than 50. as a new video from
kidnappers threatened to kill
two German' hostages if
Germany fails to stop cooperating with the Iraqi govern ment.
.Witnesses said a man
placed a bag full of expi(Ysives near a cart that sold tea
to the workers as they waited
for daily construction jobs.
said Col. Ahmed Abboud.
chief of police in the New
Baghdad area where the
explosion occurred.
''The people did not suspect him when ·he first came
with the bag becau se all
worke rs carry their food in
bags." Abboud told The
Associated Press.
The. attack
happened
around 7 a.m. at c~n intersection crowded w.ith bystanders
near a Sunni Mp s!Jm
mosque. Abboud and another

police
official ,
Capt.
Mohammed Jassim Jaber.
said at least eight people
were kille&lt;Yand more than 50
wounded.
In a· series of apparent se;::tarian killin gs Tuesday.
police .found the bodies of IIi
handcuffed and blindfolded
yoll11g men around 'Baghdad.
and gunmen shot' dead the
wife and tvlo son s of n Sunni

Arab cl eric north of the cap ital. A road side bomb al so
killed a British soldier m
southern Iraq .
Kidnappers threatened to
kill Thom as Nit zscbke and
Rene Braeunlich if Germany
does not close it; emba&gt;Sy in
Iraq , withdraw all · the
Gernian companies from Iraq
and stop cooperatin g with the
Iraqi government w1thin
three davs.
The videotape aired on AI·
Jazeera televi sion showed
Braeunli ch speaking .· a·nd
clasping his hands in front of
him as if begg ing. No audio
was heard .
The two men were abducted las t' week in the northern
mdustrial ·city ,of Beiji.
The video came a day after

Jill Carroll. a 28-vear-old
freel&lt;~nce r for the Christian '
Science Monitor also held .
hostage. appeared veiled and .
weeping in foow ge on AI- '
Jazeera. U.S. official s said
they, have rukd &lt;iut ~1 eeting
the kidnapper'· uemand tO'
release all Iraqi women in
detent ion.
·,,
"Every thing is being done
to work with those wh6
mi~ht hal'e int1uence. and '
th ere are "n awful lot of peo'- '
pk who are calling for he~ ·
release." U.S. Secreta'ry of
State Condol eezza Rice said
·
Tuesday.
More than 250 forei gners '
have been taken captive since '
the war started and at least 39
ha ve been killed .
· Reporters Without Borders,
an inl·ernalional journalisf·
ad vocacy group. said it
~N o uld send representatives to
the Middle Ea,t to promote a
campaign in the Arab media
·for the release of Carroll,
~Nbo wa, seized in Baghdad ·
011 .Ian. 7.
Tbe father of a k i dnapped~
Can adian Chrhtian activi st
urged the release of his son
and three

Alito wins Supreme Court confirmation after partisan Senate fight
Later Tuesday. Ali to joined
Roberts and fellow Justices
Stephen Breyer and Clarence
WASHINGTON
Thomas'·at the Capitol to heat
Samuel AI ito took his place Bush 's State of the Union
on the Supreme Court address. Alito's wife, MarthaTuesday after winning Senate Ann
Bomgardner,
also
confiqnation, a personal tri - attended.
·
umph for the son of an Italian
Alito' s confirmation has
immigrant and a political been a certainty for days. and
milestone in President Bush's all Republicans except Sen.
camp!lign to give the judicia- Lincoln Chafee of Rhode
ry a more conservative cast. . Island voted for him : Only
The 58-42 Senate vote was four of 44 Democrats voted
largely along party lines as in favor of contirmation , the
Democrats regi steree over- lowest iota! in modern histowhelming opposition to ry for an opposition party.
~ush ' s choice to replace
. "There is no consensus that
JJ,lstice
Sandra
Day he will' allow the court to perQ'Cotinor, whose. rulings form its vital role in continuhave helped uphold abortion ing the march of progress
rights, affinil3tive action .and toward justice and equal
Olher legal precedents of the opportunity,"
said Sen .
r)ast 50 years. ·
·
Edward M. Kennedv. leader
: Bush hailed A lito as "a in a fin al attempt to derail the
brilliant and fair-minded nomination that exposed
j(ldge who strictly. interprets DemocratJc divisions in stead.
Roberts wa &gt; confirmed by
t~e Constitution and laws and
does not le~i s late from the . a far wider margin. n -22.
late last year. replacing the
b,ench ."
" It is a seat that.i s reserved late William H. Rehnqui st.
Republicans were u.nani ~
for few but that impacts millions." said Senate Majority mous in voting for Robert s.
Leader Bill Frist moments and Democrats had split
before the Senate sealed evenly. 22 in fttyor and 22
,
Alito's place in history as the opposed.
Roberts was viewed ·by
riatiol)' s !lOth justice.
; A lito, 55 and a veteran of Democrats as one conserv&lt;tI:S years on the appeals court, tive replacin·g another. By
· watched on television along- · contrast, Alita is' seen by
ouhiue
sjde Bush at the White House Democrat s and
groups aligned with them as a
a~ the Seii'atc voted.
con scrvati\'e
•·He was sworn in about an R c a g &lt;~n -e ra
hour later'in a low-key cerc- repl&lt;tcemcnt for a mode rate
'rnony at ·~h e Supr~me Court justice whose opinions kept
building across the street the court L'Cnlered .
The con ,ervati vc . F&lt;tmil y
(rom the Capitol. Chi~f
.Council scud it welRescarcli
Just1ce John Roberts. Bush s
t1rst nominee for the high comed ·Aiito's c o~ti r mation
·court, administered the oath on hehal f of those whose
"wearine' s nver: lhe court \ ,
of office.

c oll e a g ue~ .

·. Appoinhne~••• ·

. I CB ·----- ·-· ..',
! PII~~TH

READ THIS
·BROCHURE!
Pick one up today at your
local senior center, library,
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C8 HEALTH
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House counsel Haniet Miers

BY DAVID ESPO

to the O'CoJ'Inor seat. but she

AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

Before Your
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Gov. Jimmv Carter ran for
president. When an integra tion dispute at Caner 's Plains
''ATLANTA
Caretta
church creat ed a furor,
Scott King, who worked to
Coretta Scolt Kin g cam keep her husband's dream
pai gned at Caner's side the
alive with a chin-held-high
next day.
grace and serenity that made
She · later was named by
h.er a powerful symbol of the
Carter to serve as part of the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s
U.S. delegation to the United
creed of brotherhood and
Nation s, where Young was
nonviolence, died Tuesday.
·
the ambassador.
she was 78 .
In 1997, she spoke out in
The "fibit lady of the civil
favor of a push to grant a trial
rights movement" died in her
for James Earl Ray, who
sleep during the night at an
pleaded guilty to killing her
alternative medicine clinic in
husband and then re~ anted .
Mexico, her family said .
"Even if 'no new light is
Arr11ngements were being
shed on the facts concerning
m,ade to fly the body back to
my husband's assassination,
A,tlanta.
at least we and the nation can
She had been recovering
have · the sati sfaction of
from a serious stroke and
knowing that justice has nm
heart anack suffered last
its course in thi s tragedy," she
August. Just two weeks ago,
·
told a judge.
she made her first public
The trial never took place;
appearance. in a year on the
Ray died in 1998.. "
e~e of her late husband's
King was born April 27.
birthday . .
1927, in Perry County, Ala.
poctors at the clinic said
Her father ran a country
K,mg was battling advanced ·
store. To help her family durovarian cancer when she
ing the Depression, young
arrived there on Thursday.
Coretta pic ked cotton. Later.
The doctors said the cause of
she worked as a waitress to
de.ath was respiratory failure.
earn her way through Antioch
, News of her death led to
College in Yellow Springs,
tributes to King across
.Ohio.
A,\fanta, including a moment
In 1994, she stepped down
.
AP Photo
of silence in . the Georgia
as head of 'the King Center,
Capitol and piles of flowers Caretta Scott King ponders a reporter's question in front of a painting of her late husband, civil-nghts leader Martin Luther King, passing the job to son Dexter,
placed at · the tomb of her Jr., in this Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2003 file photo in Atlanta. Caretta Scott Kihg, who turned a life shattered by her husband's assas- who in turn passed the job on
died Tuesday morning. .She was
78.
slain husband. Plags at the sination into one devoted to enshrining his legacy of human rights and equality,
to her other son, Martin Ill. in
.
'
King Center - the institute
2004 .. Dexter continued to
devoted to the civil rights success in I 9S6. In 1969 she Bush hailed her as "a remark- rest and be with family, with her husband in his finest serve as the center's chief
hours. She was at his side as operating officer. Martin Ill
leader :s legacy - were low- founded the Martin Luther able and courageous woman according to Young.
Jr.
Center
for
right'
leader."
Caretta
Scott
was
studying
King
and
a
great
civil
he recetved the Nobel Peace ' also has served on the Fulton
ered to halt'-staff.
After her stroke , King . voice at the New England Prize in 1964. She marched County (Ga.) commission
"She wore her grief with Nonviolent Social Change in
grace. She exerted her leader- Atlanta and used it to con- missed the annual King cele- Conservatory of Music and beside him from Selma, Ala., and as president of the
ship with dignity," the Rev. . front hunger, unemployment, bration in Atlanta two weeks planning on a singing career into Montgomery in 1965 on Southern
Christian
ago but appeared with her when a friend introduced her the triumpham drive for a Leadership Conference, coJoseph Lowery, who helped voting rights and racism.
"The center 'enables us to children at an awards dinner to King, young Baptist min- voting rights law.
found the Southern Christian
founded by his father in
go
out and struggle against a few days earlier,. smiling ister studying at Boston
Only days after hi s death, 1957. Daughter Yolanda
Leadership Conference with
the evils in our society," she from her wheelchair but not University.
she flew to Memphis with became an actress and the
King's husband in 1957.
speaking. The crowd gave · "She said she wanted me to three of her children . to lead youngest child, Bernice,
Former Atlanta Mayor often said.
She also accused movie her a standing ovation.
meet a very promising young thousands marching in honor became a Baptist minister.
Andrew Young, one of
and
TV
companies,
video
Despite
her
repeated
calls
minister from Atlanta," King of her slain husband and to
Martin Luther King 's top
In 1993, on the 25th
aides, said Corella . Scott arcades,. gun manufacturers for' unity among civil rights once said, adding with · a plead for his cause.
anniversary of her husband's
"I think you rise to the death, King said the war in
King's fortitude rivaled thill and toy makers of promoting groups, her own children laugh: "I wasn ' t interested in
over
violence.
have
been
divided
meeting
a
young
minister
at
in a crisi s,'' she once · Vietnam that her husband
occasion
of her husband. "She was
King became a symbol in whether to sell the King that time. "
said. "I thi'nk the Lord gives oppo;ed' '.'has been replaced
·strong if not stronger than he
her own right of her hus- Center to the National Park
. She ·recalled that on thdr you strength when you need by. an undeclared war on· our
was," Young said.
.Caretta. Scott King was a band's struggle for peace and Service and let the , family first date he told her: "You it. God was using us - and central cities. a wat being
supportive lieutenant to her brotherhood, presidiqg with focus less on grounds mainte· know, you have everything I . now he's using me , too."
fought qy ·gangs with guns
Her husband 's womanizing for drugs ."
husbal)d during the most dan- an almost regal bearing over nance and more on .King's ever wanted in a woman. We
message . Two of the four ought to get married some- had been an open secret dur''The value of life in our
gerous and tumultuous days· seminars and conferences. ·
were
strongly . day." Eighteen moriths later, ing the height of the ci vii cities has become as chea:p as
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, . children
of the civil rights movement,
. rights movemem. In January, the price of a gun,'' she said.
m 1953, they did.
and after his assassination in who was .with her husband against such a move.
The couple moved to a new book, "At Canaan's
Gov. Sonny Perdue ordered
In London, she ' stood in ·
Memphis, Tenn., on April 4, when he was a~sassinated,
1968, sh~ carried on !)is work said Tuesday that she under- flags at all state buildings 'to Momgomery, Ala., where he Edge" by Taylor Branch, put 1969 in the same carved pulwhile also raising their four . stood that every time her bus- · be flown at half-staff and · became pastor of the Dexter his ·infidelity back in the spot- pit in St. Paul 's Cathedral
band left home, there was the offered to allow King's body Avenue Baptist Church and light. It said th at not long where her husband preached
children.
.
"I'm more determined thari . chance he might not come to lie in repose at the Georgia helped lead ' the 1955 before he was assassinated, five years earlier.
"Many despair at all the
ever that my husband's back. Jackson pronounced Capitol. There was no imme- Montgomery bus boycott that King confesseq a long-standing
affair
Parks
set
in
motion
to
his
.
wife
while
Rosa
"freedom
fight.
e
r."
to
the
offer,
and unrest and disorder
diate
response
evil
her
a
dream will be.come a reality,''
·
she
was
recovering
from
a
when she refused to give up
"Like all great champions the ~overnor's oftice said.
in the world today," she
the young wtdow satd soon
.
Kmg died at Santa Monica her seat on a segregated bus. hysterectomy.
she learned to function with
preached. "but I see a new
!liter his slaying.
The King family, especially . social order and I see the .
She pushed and goaded · pain and keep serving," he Health Institute in Rosarito With that campaign, King
politicians for more than a said, adding: "She kept Beach, Mexico, south of San began enacting his philoso· Corella Scott King and her dawn of a ·new day."
Associated Press writer
decade to have her husband's m·arching . She did not Diego, said her sister, Edythe phy of nonviolent, direct father-in-law, Martin Luther
Scott Bagley of Cheyney, Pa: social action.
King Sr. , were highly visible Mark Donahue in Chicago
birthday observed as a flinch."
Over the years, . King was in 1976 when former Georgia . contributed to this report.
In Washingion, President She had gone to California to
national holiday, achieving

'.

BY MOHAMMED
DARAGHMEH AND LARA S

VVednesday,Februaryt,2oo6

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The development plan say~
ing Afg hani ~t an bec ome a British Prime Mmister Tony Blatr, right. offers his hand to ·Afghanistan 's President Hamid, Karzat, left, during the opening speech·
stahle democracy w;ts " in the es at a conference on Afghan tstan in London Tuesday.: Envoys from nearly 70 nations a nd international bod1es gathered in tac kling drug production will ·
interests of the whole interna- London, Tue·sday to· keep ~P the flow of support to Afgha nistan , which is still plagued by violence and poverty more than four be a priority for Afghanistan .
years afte n he fa ll of the Taliban. The conference delegates. who also included U.N. Secretary·General. Koft Annan, issued a and lays out a strategy comtional cOJilmunity."
"Thi s is a struggle for free- five-yea r blueprint for the troubled Central Asian nation 's security, economic deve lopment and counter-narcotic efforts.
hining better interdiction and
· law enforcement with rur&lt;il
dom and for IJlOderation and
development that gives farm - '
for uemuc racy and we will be 200 I co nleren ce in Bonn . conflict to stanJ today as a has snared from 900.000 to 5 problem .
wi th you ... he told Afghan Germa ny. establishing a beacon of hope to our peopl e million and many 'of the new
About I,600 people were crs better wa ys to earn theif
President Hamid Karzai .
pol itical
process
for and the world," the document students are girls. who were killed last year in mJ!itant vio- living th an growing opium. .
barred by the Islamic regi me lence, including 91 U.S.
The conk rcncc dcleQatcs. Afuhanistan after a U.S. -Ied said.
Karzai predicted it would
··our people. in particular from attending classes.
inclmlin g U. N. Sec re tary- 'co,!iition overthrew the bardtroops. making 2005 the dead- take at least I0 years to eradJ
our c hildr~n. now have real
General Kofi Annan . .issued a lin~ Tali han regime.
Most Afghans rem ain liest year since 2001. The past icate the drug trade. saying .i t
.&lt;\ fg h;__~ni s tan promi..,es to
hope of living in a time of mired in poverty, and the four months have seen an had resulted from decades of
five-yea r hl tte prinl for the
.troul:&gt;led
ce ntral
Asian strive to disarm illegal mili - peace, stahi lity jnd·economic country still has some of the unprecedented spate of20 sui- desparation
tn
rural
nati on\ "ecuril y. econ omic t w ~. uuard human ri ~ht s. cut development. "
highest mortality rates in the cKie bombings. ·rai sing fears Afghani stan. '
Billion; of dollars in aid world. Many have grown of fu11her bloodsheu.
deve lop mqlt 'and co unter- 'l&gt;tll'c rty and tackle the dru g
The compact set s oui a'
trJde . while international have brought new. hospitals, fru strated with the aid effort,
narcotic effort s.
The fighting has left parts series of targets for Karzai's
and
road s
to compl4ining that n1uch of the of southern and eastern government. They include
The plan. dubbed · the donors vow to provide sup- clini cs
Afghanistan stnce the Tali ban money flowin g in from · re gions off-limits to aid tripling the Afghan ar~y to ·
"Afghani st an Compac t. " is port.
intended as a successor to the
"The .A fuhan na11on has wa~ ousted by a U.S.-Ied abroad has been wasted.
workers . while a series nf 70.(100 troops and disbanding
deal reached ut a Decemher emergeU rr~ml the a"h es of invasion. School enrol lment
Secunty remains a maJor attack s on sc hool s have all il)egalmilitias by 2007 .

Hamas leader says group searching for
new-donors in face ·ofWestern threats

NATION

(OREITA SCOTI KING, WIDOW OF MARTIN LUTHER 'KING, DIES AT 78

fo rced many to close.
Annan said the violence
"serves as ·a &gt;ad reminder of
the fragile state" of the country's progress.·
"
Bush said thi s month h~ ·
plan s to cut U.S. troop ·
strength in Afghanistan frot;rr·
19,000 to 16,500 during tht ~ ,
year as . the NATO fore~ ,
~xpands.
·
.
,
Rice said Monday it would
be wrong to interpret that as.a
sign the United States plans to
walk ~ way from Afghanistan: '
She said Washington ' ha~·
learned a lesson from th~;
chaos that wracked the country itfter the United State~
fail ed to help it rebuild following the withdrawal Or
Soviet forces in 1989. ·
·
Afgh&lt;lnista(t
quickly :
became a haven for terrorists:'
The boomin~ trade in·
opium and herOin is another .
major challenge for Karzai ;s
govermpent. Afghanistan is·
the &gt;OLtiTe of nearly 90 per:'
cent of the world's opium and
heroin. and many warn ttle'
country is fast becoming :t '

BY BETH GARDINER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA7

For more tn lormation. please vistt

www. c8healthproject. org
.,

'

drew fierce opposition from
conservatives who .worried
that she would not be reliable
enough on issues such as abortion . Abandoned by Senate
conservati ves. she withdrew.
Bush picked AI ito to replace
her. tuming to an appeals court
judge with unchallenged intelligence and sterling c6n&gt;er\'a'
tive credentials.
Alito graduated ' from·
Pnncetun and Yak Law
School. th en worked as a fed eral prosecutor 1n "'ew
Jer&gt;e) . He held two po,itinns
in the Rea gan admini,tration
over a period of se,·era l
years. and in 19t\5. ' eekm'g a
promotion. he wrote a memo
th at hecame the has i, for
Democratic oppos ition to hi s
nomin;ni on
AP Photo

U.S. Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, left. stops to shake hands wtth newly appolllted
Supreme Court Justi ce Samuel Allto . right, before the start of the President Bu sh's State of
the Un1on add ress to a JOint session of Congress Tue sday in Washington. Also in the photo are
from left to right, Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Clarence Thomas. Justice Stephen Bre1·er
and Chairman of the Jo int Chtefs of Staff Gen. Peter Pace'.
embrace of jud il'ial ac ti\ is m . th e Supreme Court in the
rallied voters · ac'ro ss the mold or Justices Thoma; and
country in pursuit of a new Antonin Scal ia.
COL!-fSC .:·
'
The t \\'ll men are anio ng
Apart from plat:it]g Robcns the c•&gt; urt \ minori lv that Ita's
and Alito on the nine-mem- ,·oteu to tlve rturn ·the landber Supreme , Court: the marl. 197.1 court ruling that
Senate has confirmed Bmh e'tabl ish a woman ·~ n ght to
appointees to ..\2 of 179 tota l an abortion. th e i" ue rcprcseals on the federal appeals . ., entall ve of a politi cal and
courts. Several of those were· ntltu ra l di \' ide that has perconfirmed in brui sing politt - sisted fnr owr }() w ar, .
lud g in~ I ro m · the co urt
cal battles that bro u ~ ht the
Senate to the ve ;ge of politi-' Joc·ket. tt1e tl r' t ca;c A,lito
cal meltdown .
w1U hea r Irom hi ' ' ea( at th e
Bu sh has long said he far right end of the hcnch will
hoped to appoi nt members 11f in m )1e a pair of c h a ll en~e'

to Clean Water Ac'l reg ulaLi o n ~. appe.tl ... from ca..,e ~
filed by la nd&lt;&gt;" ncr' · anJ a
paper mil l.
· AIJto \

L' llllflnlwl i o n

capped a ;e\'CtH llotllh drama
that began when O'Conn or

In it . he , aid there was no
constituti&lt;'llal ri gh t \0 an
abort i,,n. He reinforced the
,·iew after he won th e job.
writing a legal memo sug~ e st ing
the · · Just ice
bepanlnent ir! in chip away
at ahortion rig hts rather th an
mutJ lll an all -nu l a'saul t
· Alno walked into hi s .:unfinnauon hearing,.: wJth all'
the ' upport he ll&lt;)~ded among
majnril) Repu hi ic.m,, and no
C\ 1J e n1

~unong
.: h a n e~u tn

hac k. er..,

Dc n((lcrat, . Litile
the Int erve ning dav''. as
an nourK eJ :-.he \\ i. HJld rellrc. Demoaa ts c h al kng~d him
. . ip n'a ling tl11..' tir~t !..' han~e lH1 nn h ~ \' iew' and anac kcd
Lh e cnurl in ,l Jntcn ,- ~~l r " . him for his member, hi'p in a
Bu ' ll namc·J Roher!, to l 'l1 !l :o.CT\ atl\ e
Priilceton
rrp l;tL'l' her. hu t Rehth.J UI't · Al umni organ ilat ion and fo r
dted hcforc the Sen:ne could hi" deri..,ioll to rul e. in J c a~e'
ll &lt;&gt;ld hean ng'. The r resiJcnt 111, oh i n~ 3 cnmp a n~ 1n
" "t'tl ) 1c~ pped Ruhei·ts to 'he "hkh he held nn c'tme nt,,
JC,J'I tC,I I ~-ye~ u·-oJd r n, mi 'c
chief ju,tic'e .
Bu' h then named Whi te Jh )( tn .

�-.

·.Page AM

LOCAL • STATE
Upcoming produce
EHS Students of the Month

· The Daily Sentinel
.

Wednesday, February 1,

2006

Monday'• games
Boye Basketball
annan 58, Grace Christtan 53
lssonvil1e 58, Polnt Pleasant 49
astern 59, Parkersburg Catholic 58 OT
iver Val ley 47. Coal Grove 44
thens 63, Meigs 61

·auction meetingset

•

TRIMBLE
The Beriy Speciali st from South
Chesterhill Produce Auction Cent ers in Piketon. will make
and Rural Action Su stainable a prese ntation on berry proAgriculture will be hosting a duction . Light refreshments
presentation and disc ussion will be served.
For more in fo rm ation,
on buying and sell ing at the
Chesterhill Produce Auction please contact Jean Konkle at
or· Tom
on Feb'. 6 at 7 p.m. in rooni 740-554-7338.
141 of the Riecker Building . Redfe rn at 740-742-4401 or
tomr@ru ralaction .org.
in McConnellsville.
Rural Ac tion is a memberThe results and experiences
of the first year of the Produce . ship-based nonprofit organiAuction will be di scussed . zati on working to revi talize
Sandy Kuhn, OSU Extension Appal ac hian Ohio.

..

College News

•

'

·Named to dean's list

.

Submitted photo .

These seniors have .been na med Farmers Bank/Wild Horse Cafe Students of the Month at Eastern High School since the beginning of the school year: front, l·r, Autumn Hauber, Chris Davis, Nick Kuhn , Dyana Hawthorne; back,Brittni Hensley, Brian .Castor,
Brandon Bartee, Derek Roush, and Taylor Russell. Sara Wiggins is not pictured. ·
·

Dean's List announced

November at the Riverbend
Arts Council building.
At the end of four weeks of
MIDDLEPORT - During in struction a . student will
the winter months sitting at have a completely fini shed
home curled up on the couch work 6f . art and each four
is a big temptation but now · weeks the area of emphasis
the Riverbend Arts Council is will shift to include land.hoping to change that somescape, fl oral and still life.
what by .enticing people out
Tho se that are interested
of the house and into creating
may sign up for as many of
· their own:works of art.
fo ur week projects as
the
"Everybody can enjoy the·
process Of applying painl on the y like by contacting
canvas." · pa i~ting instructor McClure at 992-3842 or e. mail at rv m@lvoyager.net.
Rhojean McClure said.
McClure will be teac hing The cost is $40 per mon th
ongoing painting classes with ( I 0 hours) and the Classes
acrylic paints from I p.m. to are structured for older teen,
· 3:30p.m. beginning Monda y, adult beginner and intermeFebruary 13 and continuing diate level.
every
Monday through
McClure will be working
BY BETH SERGENT

)

\

with beginners for '30 minutes before each class begins.
She will be instructing these
students on &lt;iifferent techniques and color mixtures.
"Xou can 't do it (painting)
wrong," McClure said about
what she tells all her students,
including those with no previous painting experience.
McClure also hopes to con duct the classes in a positive,
relaxed atmosphere.
.
Although McClure has no
degree in art, she has been
painting since the 1980's and
has recently studied under
Robert Warren in Canal
Winchester.
"I hope this acrylic painting class will stimulate more

county and surrounding
area," McCI ure said of her
reasons for teaching the
classes.
She added that she is hoping to concentrate on the
landsc,apes in Meigs County
for some of the four week
classes.
Students will supply their
own paint and brushes.
Canvas or other surfaces
must be purchased by
McClure.
Twenty percent of the proceeds from the classes go in
suppon of the Riverbend Arts
Council. The acrylic painting
classes are a new feature of
the council's art department.

POMEROY - Joshia Rawson of Middleport. Dustin J.
Ervin and Andrew R. Smith, both of Racine. were named t:p
· the dean's li st at the University of Northwestern Ohio in Lima.
They earned a grade point average of 3.5 or better. .

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Wednesday, Feb. 1

Toledo•
45° 128°

Youngstown • '•· '
46• I 27°

Dayton • ~
48° I 29' t:___::)

*Columbus
48' I 30"

Cincinnati
• 53" 128"

~
. L..:)

City/Region
High I Low temps

· Portsmouth •

51 ' 1~eo

~"

. . . . . Steak
LocAL. SCHEDULE
f
GALLI POLIS- A schedule of upcoming college
·and high sChool varsity !! por1ing evi!inls involv1ng
laams !rom Gall1a. Meigs an_d Mason couil\19!;.

Thursday·• gampa

Boy_s Basketball
OVCS at Hannan, 7 30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Roane Co. at Point Pleas ant. 7:30p.m.
Nelso nville-Yo rk at Meig's, 7:30 p. m.

East ern at Tnmble, 6 p.m.
Rive r Va lley at South Poi nt, 7:30p.m.

Wate r1ord at Sou thern, 6 p.m.
Frlday't games
Boys Basketball

•

Gallia Ac.ademy at Logan, 7:30 p.m.

Meigs at Vinton County, a p.m
River Valley at Chesapeake. 7.30 p.m.
Cross Lanes at OVCS, 7 p.m.

Iron ton St. Joe at South Gallia. 7:30p.m.
Southe rn at Tr imble, 8 p.m .
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at Logan, 7:30p.m.
OVCS at Cross Lanes, 5:30p.m .

~

HOLZER CLINIC

New CT Scan
Now Available
The Multi-Slice CT Scan
provides the most
comprehensive imaging
available. The new CT is
currently available at Holzer
. Clinic Gallipolis and Holzer .
Clinic Jackson.
Gallipolis (740) 446-5289
Jatkson (740) 395-8854

•
'

Steelers trainer
Ariko Iso breaking
gender lines
DETROIT (AP) _. When
Ariko Iso was a trainer with
the Portland State football
team, She heard ihrough a
mutual friend the Pittsburgh
Steelers had an opening for a
summer internship:
She spoke to head trainer
John Norwig .about the posi tion and sent· in her resume.
What could it hur\'?
"John told me. · I don't
know how lon g it's going to
be un~il we get back t!! you
because we have a lot of. people who want to do this,"' !so
said. "I wasn't .really expect,
ing to hear from hin1 ri ght

lvtedical Excellence.
Local Caring:
Everywhere

A year later. Norwig called
back and hired lso as an
intern in 2000 and 200 I. She
became the first. full -time
female trainer ·in the NFL in
2002 when the Steelers hired
her.
Going into Sund ay 's Super
.Bowl, she is still the only
female trainer in the league .
"I think the athletic training
profession is trying .to estab. !ish that we are th e health
care provider." !so said . "Yes.
I'm shorter, I' m probabl y
weaker and maybe I mi ght be
causing a burden to people
who are helping me but I try
to do my best. not to compete
with males and JUSt do my
job."
· Iso grew up in Japan and
came to United Stat es in
1989 to go to school at
Oregon State. She started out
with Portland State as an
assi stant trainer and before
beginning wo rk with the 1AA football team in 1997.
Her father' is co ming in
from Tokyo on Friday for the
game. the n going back
Monday.
Iso.said 'the biggest way to
get more women into her
rank s is for more of them to
be hired for internships. She
reviews appli cation s · and
resumes fo r those spots with
the Stee lers - of the 100200 they rece ive, she said
more than hal f are from
fem'al e ath letic trainers.
" I don't think an ybody is
just hired out of nowhere,''
she said. "That mea ns some body needs to be ex posed 'to
an internship opportunity. but
I do n't think all .n rea1m are
hiri,1g females fo r interns.
Without that kind of ex per ience and ex posure . it 's hard
.to have a cha nce tu apply for
a job."

CONfACfS
Phone - 1-740-446-2342 ext 33
FBI -

1-7 40-446 -3008

E-mail - sports@myda!lysentinel.com
Spo• t~ S\~H
Brad Sherman, Sport s Editor
(740) 446-2342. 9)(1 33
OSher man@ mydaitytrrbune com
Bryan Walt ers. Sports Writer
. (740 ) 446-2342. e.-t. 23
t&gt;wa lters.@ mydallytnbu ne.com
Larry Crum , Sport&amp; Writer
(740 ) 446-2342, eld 33

Ierum 0 mydarlyregrster com

- ----- - - - - - - - -·-·-----

WALT~RS

.W e

s t
Vir g in i a ,
. did
not

BWAlTERS®MYDAILYTAIBUNE.CO M

TUPPERS PLAINS Those who forget history are
destined to re peat it.
In 1993, the University of
Mi chigan men 's basketball
team came within a possession of winning the natibnal
champitmshi p.
Unfortunately. in trying to
get organized for a last- second strategy, Chris 'webber
committed one of the most
memorable blunders m
hoops history.'
He called a timeout when
the Wolverines didn't have
any to call.
The resqlt was a teehnical
· foul that allowed North
Carolina to step up to the
free throw line and claim the
college basketball crown.
Parke rsburg Catholic head
coach Joe Garrett, who
coached Belpre to th,ree state
appearances ove r · hi s 20plus year tenure, now knows
what Webber must have felt
Iike after Eastern's thri Iling
59-5 8 ove rtime victory
Tuesday in non -conference
act i011

. Trailing the hosts 58-56
with I 0 .seconds left in the
extra sess ion, Seth . Ullman
dribbled the length of the
fl oor :md went in un contested for a layup to tie the score
at 58 for PCHS .
· Immedi ately following t he
l yi1ig
ba sket,
the
Parkersburg Catholic bench
reque•ted a timeout with
three seconds -left.
·
Since the Crusaders (106), the No. 5 Class A team in

away."

e::;'-

Kroger - 18.40
Ltd. - 23.66 '
NSC- 49.84
. Oak
. Hill Financial 32 ..20
OVB- 25.30
BBT- 39.04
Peoples - 29.70
Pepsico - 57.18
Premler - 15.64
Rockwell - 66.07
. Rocky Boots - · 21.10
Sears -120.75
Wai-Mart - 46.11
Wendy's - 58.95
. Worthington - 20.63
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the prevlous
day's transactlo·ns,
provided by Smith
Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

BY BRYAN

Easte rn at Miller. 8 p.m.

·
.
,L ~.....
.1.u;.'
uni versit y cards and informa- something that people can Ohio. The victims then often
• '
1·~ .f.
..l '
K'f.
become depressed, lose their
tion to give out telling stu- do," Neutzling said.
dents what to lo()k for with
Even though Rio Grande is self-e steem and become
unde r -~ Flurnes
ICO
. a small campus, the faculty angry. The problem needs to
stalking behavior.
~ Ckl~y ~ Thslorms
· . .··
~
•• • :-..
r~ ..
-;.&gt;~
"Stalking on . campuse s and staff still need to watch be dealt with objectively,
,,,,,"C.__ ._) ., . .
Partly Q
/,~ .-,~ /
across the country has for the problem, just as the though , and there is help · Cloudy
Showers
""
,
Ram
• .-.
SnOw
7: .~ ::
''"
become a •real big problem, general public need to watch anilable for people who are
Weather UndergrOund • AP
just as it has with the general for it.
peing stalked.
public," Neutzling said.
"We've got the same probAt
the . present.ation,
Wednesday... Partly cl oud y. Hi ghs in the upper 40s .
Many people blame them- . !ems that the bigger campuses Carlson-Rheim
discussed . Warnl'er with highs in th e Chance ol rain 70 percent . .
selves if they are being have," Neutzling said, adding actioQs that victims can take, lower 50s. South win(ls 5 to
Saturday night ... Cloudy
stalked. or they do not know that Rio Grande has had a few including reporting their situ· 10 mph with gusts up to 20 with a chance of rain and
how to deal with someone . cases of stalking in recent ation to the police, keeping a . mph .
.
snow showers. Lows in the
Wednesday night ... Partl y lower 3 0~ . Chance of precipiwho is stalking them through years.
·
file of the stalking , working
constant e-mai'ls. calls at all
According to Action Ohio, with victim ad'vocates, keep· cloudy. Low s in the lower tati on. 50 percent.
Sunday:.. Cioudy with a 50
haws of the day and night, nearly 90 percent of all stalk- ing all e-mails and phone 30s. Southwest winds 5' to I0
percent chance . of snow
and making a nuisance of ers are male, and 83 ·percent messages from stalkers and mph.
Thursday
...
Mostly
cloudy
showers.
Cooler with highs in
themse lves. While most peo- of all stalking victims are seeking as much assistance as
with
a
20
percent
chance
of
the
mid
30s.
pie will stop this behavior if female . While most stalkers possible .
night...~ o&gt;t l y
they are confronted .about it, are nonviolent (violence
Any students who feel that rain showers. Highs in the · Sunday
mid
50s.
South
·winds
around
cloudy
with
a 40 percent
the emotionally unbalanced occurs in 25' percent to 35 , they are victims of stalking
mph.
5
chance
or
snow
showe rs.
people will take the stalking percent of the cases), at least can talk to Neu[zling in the
Thursday
night
...
Cioudy
Cold
with
lows
in
the mid
behavior further.
.• half of all stalkers threaten Health Servi ces office, or ta.lk
"Those are the ones we their victims.
to faculty, staff or Campus with showers likely. Not' as 20s .
cool with lows in the lower
Monday... Mostly cloudy
Most stalking victims first Police for assistance. ·
want everybody to be aware
40s. Southeast wind s around with a chance of sno w and ·
deny the problem and then try
For more information ori 5 mph . Chance of rain 60
of," Neutzling said .
rain showe rs. Hi ghs in the
· At the Jan. 13 presentation, to bargain with their stalkers, the Health Services office at percen[.
UjJp~r JOs. Chan ce~of precipiCarlson-Rheim presented a even agreeing to meet with Rio Grande, call Neutzling at
Friday..•Mostly
cloudy tation 30 percent.
wide range of information for the stalkers one last time, 245-7389 or (800) 282-7201: with a 50 percent chance of
Monday
night...Partly
facul ty, staff and Campus which sets a bad precedent. For additional information 0 11 showers. Highs around 50.
cloudy with a 30 pe rcent
Police about what to watch The victims tend to suffer the wide range of academic · Friday . night. •. Showers chance of snow , howers. Cold .
for with stalking.
··
from apxiety from worrying and professional programs likely. Lows in the mid 30s. wit h lows in the mid 20s.
"Thi s is basically getting about what the stalker will do offered by Rio Grande, log Chance of rain 70 perce nt.
Tuesday ... Partl y cloud y.
the message out that there is next, according to Action ·onto www.rio.edu.
Saturday... Showers likely. Highs in the upper .lOs.

Local Stocks
ACI- 86.72
AEP -37.32
Akzo- 48.41
.Ashland Inc. - 65.92
BLI-13.37
Bo.b Evans - 26.70
BorgWarner - 55.13
CENX - 34.08,
Champion - 4:28
Charmlng Shops12.15
.
City Holding- 37.26
Col- 46.92
DG -16.90
DuPont- 39.15
.Federal Mogul.- .34
USB- 29.91
Gannett - 61.80
General Electric 32.75
GKNLY- 5.15
Harley Davidson 53.53
JPM- 39.75

Eagles fend off Parkersburg Catholic in overtime, 59-58

o( an interest in art in the

Campus ·seminar discusses stalking issue
RIO GRANDE - Stalking
may see like something that
only happens big cities, but it
is a problem here in southern
Ohio just as it is around the
country.
. A!thougl) Rio Grande
prides itself on it s safe and
friendly campus. stalking was
the theme of a recent presentation at the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College, where
campus offi cials are taking
action to help protect students
against stalkers.
The Friday, Jan . 13 presentation was for faculty and
staff to help them assist students with potenti al stalking
.problems. A future presentation for . student s is bei ng
planned. ,.,
Sponsored by the Health
Services, Student Services
and Campus Police at Rio
Grande, the presentation was
led by Phyllis Carl son·Reihm
of Action Ohio.
Dot Neutzling. director of
Health Servi ces at Rio
Grande.
explained · . that
Action Ohio contacted her
·. office last year and gave the

High School BaskEtball

Wahama at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Logan at Point Pleasan t, 7;30 p m.

Get out of the house and into art · Local·Weather

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTI NELCOM

VVednesday,Februaryt,2006

l ogan at Gallia Acade my, 7 p.m .
OVCS at Hannan, 6 p.m.

WHEELING, W.Va. -· Renee S. Bailey of Po m e ro~ was
named to the dean 's list at Wheeling .J esuit University for tile
fall quarter. The university is the onl y Catholic institution of
higher education in West Virginia.
·
.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

l..ocAL SCOREBOARD

have·

a

tim eout to
use,
the
Eagles (9 · ·
· 6) ' sent
se n 1 or
Nathan
Cozart to
Coza.rt
the line to
shoot th e
pairoflechnical free throws.
Cozart
sank
1-0f-2
attempts, giving EHS a 5958 lead, and the Green and
White held on after a 40footer from Wes Tracewell
came up just short from
going in.
· That awkward fini sh
ended a night where both
teams . battled through II
lead changes and three ties.
It al so mar~d a'Green and
White comeback from dou ble-digits behind midway
through the second period .
Eastern coach How ie
Caldwell thought his dub's
tenacity and heart truly
showed as .the evening pro- ·
gressed ..
"We could have given up
seve ra l times. We were
down by II twice, but we
didn 't gi ve up. " he said.
'T m very proud of our
effort tonight . It was a total
team effort."
The Eagles held their
biggest lead of the game, six
points, twice in the opening
period, the latter comin g on
Michael Owen ·s bucket
Bryan Wattenilphot9
Eastern
defe
nder
Alex
McGrath
(14)
guards
Parkersqurg
Catholic
's
Za
ne
Sch
neide
r during over·
with I :55 remaining· for a
lime of Tuesd ay's non-league contest in Tuppers Plains. McGtath and the Eagles rallied back
Please see Eagles. 81
from a pair ·of 11-po int deficits to claim a 59-58 overtime victory over the Crusaders.
·

Home Equity Rates
"~ A'
F
11·
~
~
~
r~ a tng
~

'

~

0

(.Q

Athens
edges
Meigs

~

.

.

· At Farmers·Bank.
7

STAFF REPORT
SPORT~@MYDAILYS[NTINEL . CO M

THE PLAINS - Athens
saw a 12-poi nt fou rth
quarte r lead melt away. but
the Bulldog&gt; regain ed
their comp os ur e
and held
off
a
M e i g s
rally to
win 63 6 1 boys
basketball
victory on
Tuesday . .
VanMeter
· Ath e ns
held th at
dozen-poi nt cushion with
around fi ve minutes to go.
hut the Marauders rallied
to clo&gt;e to within 60-59
with 20 seconds to play.
Brad Bentley and Jason
Ri ):!g&gt; hit free throws for
Athens to close it out.
The win was onl y the
'econd for Athe ns (2- 1) )
a' hoth teams en tered the
rray with just a single win
under the1r h ~lts. Me1 gs ·

~ -

DISCOUNTED lNIT~L RATE/APR ,

One Year Fixed Discounted Rate!

a

•

*Offer available for home equ1ty loans of mp1 mum $10.000 or more vvth a loan to value ratio of 80% or less. The advertised d1scount
5.75% APR,irate Wf~
l
ange aher the first .12 months. Without th~ discoun' the rate would nave been 6.75% APR bqseo on pr1me rate
as publ.ished in th . I Street Journal Rate .is subject to change annually As or I0 I70.5. and Annual Percentage Rate IAPR! ranged
fro m 5 75% to 6.75
erms are for 10 years ·Minimum monthly payme~% of balance or SI00. whichever 1S greater APR for
home equity lines will not exceed 18%. Customary closing costs for fioo
rmnat1on search. title exam and record1ng fees vvll be at
least S 193. Please consult ycur tax adv1sor regard1ng deductibility of Inter~· Advertised APR based on loan amount of SI0.000
Annual memberShip of $501$irllposeG on ann1versary. waived first year Transaction fee Of $10 1n excess.of rve advances per monttl
Property Insurance w111 be requrred Frnanc ,~g rs subtcr to cred1t approval Some restrictions apoly

p~

\, -

0

~·

p

o.;aw it ~ fr U ~ t rati nb!, .._e~I ..,O n
cnntin ue as the . . Maroo n

and Gol d sli pped to 1- 15.
.Rohe11 Elmore pac:ed the
wi'nner1 with 22 \Joi ms and
I I rebounds whi e Bentley
ab o reached double fi~­
·ure., with 14 poi hts. · '
Eric VanMeter scored a
Eame -high 24 points for
lvtefg&gt;. while Dave Poole
\vith 1.1 mar kers wa' the
only other Marauder in
double digits. Aaron
Cordell hi1 t• ight free
'

Please see Edges, 82

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

'

.

·farmers Bank
Member FDIC
'

.

• Pomeroy • Mason • Gallipolis • Tuppers Plains
992.2136·

773.640b

446.2265

667.3161

.
8

�www. mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • 1l1e Daily Sentinel

High School Basketball
Cols Ready 52, Cots. Watterso'n 47
Gols. Eastmoor 96, Cols. W. 55
Cols . Tree of Life 66, Manon Cath 52
Cols. Hamilton Twp. 54, Bloom-Carroll 43
RIVER VALLEY 47, COAL GROVE 44
Cols.
Wal nut
R1dge
62 ,
Cols.
Cols Indepen dence 83, Cols. Walnut
COAL GROVE (S-11, 0-7 OVC)
Independence 5.5
R1dge 32
Zack Murphy 3 0-1 7. Evan Melvin 1 3·4 5. ,Columbiana Crestvi~w 67 Columbiana 49
Cols. Manon· Franklin 71, Cols. ~"riggs 28
Matt Melvin 4 0-0 8, Randy Wise 3 4-7 10 ,
Copley 67. Tw1nsburg 57
Cols M11flln 76, Cols. BeechcroH 21
Tyler Branch 1 2-2 4 , Adam Bare 4 2-4 10
Coshocton 42, Gnadenhutten Indian
Columbus Grove 60, Cary-Rawson 38
Totals 16-36 11·18 44 .
Valley 41
,
Copl~ 67, Twinsburg 46
RIVER VALLEY (7·9, 3-4 OVC)
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 58, Na'.'arre
Danville 52, Mt. Vernon Academy 21
Cory Ehman 2 3-4 7, Jason Jones Q 1-2 t , Fairless 41
Delaware 64. We$terville Cent. 52
· Bryan Morrow 6 4-5 t7 , Matt N1bert 3 0-t
Danvill ~ 55, Newark Cath. 48
Delaware Bu ckeye Valley 67, Spa'r ta
8 , M1chael Cordell2 4·6 8 , Tyler ThO mpson
Day. Cham 1nade·J1Jhenne 48 , St. Bernard Highland 53
1
2, Ryan ·Henry 0 0-0 0, Marc!Js Roger Bacon 40
oeraware
Christian 49
Northside
Frazier 1 0-1 2. Scot Ward 1 0·0 2. Totals
M.ddl 1
'
Day. Miami
a
ey 53.
I
e
own CMstian 33
16-5012- 19 47.
.
9
Christtan 4
Delphos St. John's 52 , Van Wert
4
Coal Grove
8 18 6 12 - 4
Day. Oakwood 56, Waynesv1lle 50
Lincolnview 33
RlverValley
4 ' 19 13 tl 47
bb
"D
1144
Day. le ms oo, ay. arro
Dublin .Coffman 57. MI. Vernon 37
3-Poinl Goals-GG 1-4 (Z .Murphy), AV3D
S·
94 D N ih ·d 70
ay. 11\l~rs
. ay. or n ge
Eaton 45, New Madison Tri -VIIIa'ge 34
13 (Nibert 2, Morrow) . Fouled OutD
T
d Mad 1·son 69 Da11 Col.
1'
. E.Metvin, Wise. Total Rebounds-CG 22
ay. ro 1w00 •
Ftndlay Libe rty -Benton 54, McGuffey
43
{W1se 7), RV ·33 (Thompson 12). Offensive Whi te
Upper Scioto ,Valley 47
Rebounds-cG 6 (Bare 4), RV 16(Cordell
Dover 5 1· Warsaw River VIew 3 1
Frankfort Adena 43, Richmond Dale SE
6). - Steals- CG 6 (Z.Murphy 2). RV 6
Dresden Trl -Valley M, Thornville Sheridan 25
·
'
(Morrow 2) . Blocks-CG (none). RV 48
Fredericktown 48, Bellville Clear Fork 45
{none). Fouls- CG 19, AV t 7, Turnovers ,.. E. Palestine 5t, Hanoverton United 46
. Ft. Jennings 53, Deliance Ayersvil!e 38
-CG 13, AV 11.
Edgerton 50."'!· Unity Hilltop 4 5
Granville 45, Whitehall-Yearling 31
i
Edon 58, Hamilton,. Ind. 57
.
Grove City Cent Crossing 73 Galloway
· ATH~NS 63, MEIGS 61
Fuchs Mizrachi po, N. Ridgev11le Lake , Westland 18
·
'
59
MEIGS (1·15)
A•dge
c· A d
P
Grove City Christian 52, Fairfield Christian
Aaron Cordell 0 8-9 6. Michael Blaettner 1
Gahanna
ols. ca emy 7 6 · owe 11 45
·
Village Academy 56
.
· 0·0 2, Eric VanMeter 9 3·5 24, · Dan
rfi
ld HI 73 Cl 6 ed. 1. 71
Hamler Patnck Henry 64, Van Buren 42
.
d K.
3 O O B I 0 a 19
S.
, e. en IC IllS
Bookman 1 0-0 3, An y 1nnfj.n
, . Geneva 3 . Madison 26
Heath 40, Hebron Lakew~d 29
Andy Garnes 0 1-31, Dustin Van lnwagen
GeorgetOwn S4, Bethel-Tate 43
Howard E. Knox 46, Mt. G1lead 31.
0 ·a-o 0, Casey A.ichardson 0 0-0 0, Brad ' G hen 52 Lees· Creek E. Clinton 31
Hudson WRA 45, Shaker Hts. Hathaway
os
. ,
.
Brown 4.1
Ramsburg 2 0-0 4, Da'.'e Poole 5· 3-3 13.
Totals 21·4S 15·20 61 .
Grand~1ew 54, W Jefferson 53 ·
K,alida 63 ,. Spencerville 59
ATHENS (2-151
.
Granville 69 : Ut•ca 63
Kansas Lakota 52, Old Fort 35
Corey Poches o 0-0 o, Ke'.'m La~rence 1 1·
Hamler Patnck Henry 61 , Delta 42
L f
tt All
E
L'
p
4a
54 1
' m~ erry
2 3, Derek Waters .t O·O 2, Raben Elmore
Hannitial River 64 , O ld Washington
L~ aylye ~
0
1
5 11·15 22, Jason Riggs 1 2-4 4, Brad Buckeye Trail 59
~ er
en er
• e a
Bentley 3 8·10 14, Alan Still 2 1·4 5,
Hunting Valley Univers tty 51. Akr. Hoban
L1ma Cent. Cath. 62, Oola Hardin
Thomas Simpson 2
4, Steven Ebert s 3 46
·
Northern 32
1-4 7, Kurt Roberts 1 0·0 2. Totals 19·6t
Jamestown Greeneview S7, s. Charleston
London 75, Hillsboro 7f-1, 30T
24-39 63 .
SE 35
Madison Christian 56, OHio Deal 26
Meigs
to 11 12 28 - 61
Kent Roosevelt 62, Ravenna SE 60
Mansfield Christian 85, Merion Cath. 34
Athans
7 16 19 21 63
l.citham Western 68, Portsmouth Clay 45
Mansfield St. Peter's 59, Collins Western
3-Poinl Goats-Meigs 4- 11 (VaQMeter 3.
Leetonia 55. Lisbon An'd erson 49
Reserve 40
•
·
Licking County Christian 57 , zanesville
Marion Harding 48, Kenton 30
Bookman ), Athens 1-12 {Elmore ).
Christian 51
Marion Pleasant 98, Cols. Wellington 7
SISSONVILLE 58, PT. PLEASANT 49 LocKland 64, Cin. S91Jen Hills 57
Maumee 42, Rosslord 31
Loudonvil le 52', Millersburg W Holm~.s . 51
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 48, Bucyrus ·
. POIN.T PLEASANT (2·13)
I
Madison Christian 53, Ohio Deal 34
Wynlord ';34
Stephen Walker 1 3·5 5, Will Slone 3 0-Q 6,
Magnol1e
· Sandy
Valley
75,
N. Can . Hoo'.'er 63. Youngs . AustintownJay Ellis 2 1·2 5 , Nathan Rimmey 3 0-0 9,
Josh Stover 3 0-0 6. Bobby Errett 4 1.0.. 14 Newcomerstown 40
Filch 19
18.-Totals- 16 14·21 49
·
Malvern 65, W Lafayette Ridgewood 55
N. Robinson Col. Crawford .56, Bucyrus 48
·~ISSONVILLE (n/a)
Marys'.'ille 67, Plain · City Jona than Alder
New Washing'ton Buckeye Cent. 67, Lucas
Lance Walker 4 0-0 11, Miles Henson 9 3- ~
N
.
•
3 22. Snyder 1 0-0 2. Adam Lowe 3 3-8 9.
McComb 54, Carey 36
Newar~ Licking 'Valley 8'3, Gahanna Co ts.
, Hogan 1 0-Q 2 , Fisher 1 0·0 2 , Boggess 2
McDonald 63 .. Sebring McKinley 30
Academy 18
0-0 4, Bordman 3 0-0 6. Totals- 24 6-11
Norwalk St. Paul 59, Tiffin Calvert 49
Miamisbu rg 61 , Franklin 46
58.
Mineral Ridge 64, N. lima S. Range 57
Oak Harbor 62, Bellevue 52
Pt Pteatant
14 11 10 14 49
Miner'.'a 75, Alliance Marllngton 59
Ontario 52 . .Crestline 41
Sinonville
7 21 14 13 58
Mogadore Christian 61. Fai th Christian 38
Orrville 79, Can. Cent. Cath. 62
3-Point Ooals-Sisson ... ille 4 (Lance
Morenci, Mich. 38. Metamo ra Evergreen
Ottoville 62, Elida 45
Walker 3). Point . Pleasant 3 (Nathan 35
Pemberville
Eastwood
63,
Ti lfin
Rin:tmey 3).
Morral Ridgedale 66. Mario·n Elgin 61
Columbian 50
N. Lewisburg Triad 66, Spring . Catt). Cent. · Perrysburg 39. Holland Spring. 30
HANNAN 58, GRACE CHRISTIAN 53
61
Pickerington Cent. 50, Cin. Hughes 34
GRACE CHRISTIAN (5-8) .
·
New Al~any 60, sunbury Big Walnut 54
Port Clinton 44. Fostori&lt;l3.4
New Concord John Glenn 78 , New . Reading 41 . Cin . Wyomi ng 34
Devon Selbee 1 0-0 2, Marty Clay 6 0-0 13,
Jed Horton 0 · 0 0, Jared Locke 0 o-o 0· · LeXington 58
AoPVnol"sburg 68. Upper Arlington 67
Zach Fisher 0 0-0 0, Adam Howerto112 1... ,
"'
5 5, Zach Huff o 0-0 O, Cale1J Perry o 0·0
New Middletown Spnng. 90 · N. Jacksof)
Sandusky Perkins 56, Sandusky 34

o-o

v 11

s

c

5

t" s4

11

o-o

°

o, Josh Williams 8 1·3 20. Stephen Wray 1 JacKson~Milton 43
1·1 3. JO Thompson 1 0·2 2, Tim Brekke 3
2-5 8 . Totals- 22 5- 16 53. .

HANNAN (7-4)

.

New Riegel 60 · N. Baltimore 49
Newbury 68 . Cuyahoga Hts. 34
Northwood 58, Lakeside Danbury 47, OT
Oregon Stri~ch 73 · Tol. Emmanuel Baptist

Kevin Blake 9 3-3 24, Ryan Canterberry 9
2-3 20. Aaron Payne 1 0-2 2. Joe Kinnard
3J
Painesville Harvey· 84, Mentor Lake Cat h.
2 4·4 6 , Jared Taylor 0 2-2 ?. Travis
48
Bowman o 0-0 o, Patrick Flora 0 2-2 2, Joe
Pamesville Riverside 67, Eastlake N 62
Kelly 0 0 0 0 J ·n Easlon 0 0 0 o·
· u
·
Parma 56. Austinburg Grand River 41
- Totals- 21 13-t5 58.
Grace
11 17 13 12· 53
Parma His. Holy Name 71 , Mayfield 49
1
0
9
;
Hannan 3 (Kevin Blake 3). Fouled Out- Memorial42
Grace 1 (Tim Brakke), Hanna,n (none).
Pickerin gton N. 48. Worthington Kilbourne
Rebounds--Grace 41 (Adam Howerton 43
11 ), Hahnan 39 (Ryan Canterberry 13).
Pioneer N. Cent. 60 , Monclova ChriStian
Assists-Grace 3 (Marty Clay 2), Hannan I 37
6 (Kevin Blake, Joe Kinnar? 2). StealsPowell Olentangy Li berty 64 . Milford
Grace 7 (Devon Selbee, Ttm Brokke 2); Center Fairbanks 54
Hannan 5 (Kevin Blake 2). Blocks-Grace
Richmond Hts. 53 , Chagrin Falls 51 . ,
2 . (A dam ~owerton 2). Hannan 1 (Joe
Ridgeville Christian 49 , Day. Jefferson 46
K1nnard) . Team Fouls- Grace 16, Hannan
Rocky River Lutheran West . 87 . Lorain
12Clearview 42
Salem 50, Poland Seminary 36
EASTERN 59:
Sidney Lehman 56. Jackson Center 43
PARK. CATHOLIC 58, OT
Solon 69, Cle. Hts. 48 .
·
PARKERSBURG CATHOLIC (1 0-6)
Spring.
Emmanuel
Christian
73,
Wes Tracewell 5 0-0 11. Zane Schneider 3 Center.ville Spring Valley 44
0-Q 7. Ryan Jones 0 0·0 0. Garrett lang 3
Spring. N. 68, Kettering Fairmont 52
1-2 10. Seth Ullman 4 1-2 9 , Chris Boelter
Spring. NE 70. Cedarville 61
8 3·6 19, Michael Gissy 1 0-0 2. Josh
Spring. Northeastern 70, Cedarville 61
Westbrook 0 0·0 0. Totals : 24-54 5·10 58.
Spring. Shawnee 52, Vandalia Buller 46
. EASTERN (9-6)
Springboro 52. OxtOrd Talawanda 49, OT
Bryce Honaker 0 4·5 4, Nathan Cozart 9 4- .S,trasburg·Franklin 53, New Philadelphia
6 27 . Ale;.c McGrath o 5-6 5, Michael Owen Tuscarawas Cent. Ca111 . 33
1 0-0 2, Mark Guess 2 0-0 4, Nathan
Streetsboro 61 , E Can _52
Carroll 2 2-2 6, Derek Rou~h 4 3-4 11 .
Sugar G rove Berne Union 77 , Fairfield
Totals: 18-47 tB-23 59.
Ch ristian 58
Catholic
10 ~6 15 9 8 - , 58
Sugarcreek Garaway 68. Bowerston
· eastern
15 7 14 14 9 59
Conotton Valley 38
3-point goa.ls-PC 5-14 (Lang 3.
Summ1t Stat1on Lick1ng His. 76. Millersport
Schneider. Tracewelt) , E 5-13 ~Cozart 5) .
49
Total rebounds----PC 25 (Bbelter 9) , E 30
Tol. Cent. Cath. 51 . Tal. Woodward 47
(Rawson 8). Offerisive reOOu nds-PC 8
Tol . ChnstJan 74, G1b.sonburg 60
(Boelter 3), E 9 (Carroll), Assists-PC 9
Tol. Ottawa Hills 61, Tal. Maumee Valley
(Tracewell 3) . E 7 (Guess 3). Steals-PC
10 (Schneider 6) . E 7 (McGrath 3) . 42
Tal ScOtt 66. St. Franc1s Q1
Blocks-PC 4 (Ullman 2) , E 2 (Cozart
Tol. St . John's 59. Tol . Bowsher 32
Honaker). Turnovers-PC 14. E 18. Team
fouls-PC 17. E 14 . JV score-PC 4 1, E
Tol Start 58, Tol. ROgers 41
20
W. Carrollton 55, Germantown Valley View

St'

Wednesday, February 1, 2006

Wednesday, February. t,. 2006

Sissonville pushes past
Point Pleasant, 58-49
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

SISSONVILLE, W. Va.
A long trip
to
Sissonville did not turn out
as planned Tuesday night
as th e Black Knights
dropped a 58-49 contest to.
the Vikings.
The loss drops Poi.nl
Pleasant to 2-13 on the seaso n despite winning two of
the\r . last five , games.
including a win last week
over Wayne .
But 'Tuesdays loss was
not all bad ; as the Black·
Kni ghts led ear.ly in the,
contest until a second quarter
surge
pushed
Sissonville past Point
Pleasant.
Point was also plagued
.by 28 turno vei-s and a poor
29 ' percent shooting effort
from the floor. ·
Led by Bobby Errett, the
Bl ack Kni ghts gral:ibed a
14-7 edge after eight minutes of play, bul a 21-point

Edges
from Page .Bl
throws and Andy Kinnan
added six points.
Brad Ramsburg chipped in
four in the loss followed by
Dan Bookman with three,
Michael Blaettner with two
and a free throw from Andy
Garne~.
·

.

Undefeatgd Willard loses one of its top players
MtLLER

champion Upper Sandusky
90-73. The injury , is not
expected to limit Oney in the
. One of Willard's top players future - he's expecled 10 sign
with Ashland University on
1s now the team's No. I fan.
Wednesday
to play football.
Brandon Oney had his
PRODUCTION LINES:
career ~ut short when a blood
In
Bellaire's 75-43 victory,
clol in his right shoulder was
Nate
· Davis
outscored
discovered. Oney, a three-year
Wheel
ing
(W.Va.)
Central
by
letterman and the second-leading scorer and rebounder for five points; East Liverpool 's
the unbeaten Crimson Flashes, · Andrew Bobalik set a school
had surgery to remove the record with 47 points while.
clot. He wi II have more hitting 23-of-27 free ihrows in
an 82-79 loss to Cleveland
surgery in a few weeks.
East Tech: l.,ewistown Indian
"They' ll have to take a rib Lake's Jcnna Smith scored a·
out and repair the vein so it school-record 46 points in an
doesn' t happen again," Oney 83-54 victory ove r Benjamin
sa1d. ·
·
·
Logan recently ; Cleve land
Oney .then sat on the bench Villa Angela-SI. 'Joseph 's
and rooted his teammates on David Lighty, a meri1her of the
as Willard knocked off Thad Five recruiting class at
defending Division Ii state Ohio State, scored 44 points
BY RUSTY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lance Walker with I I ·
points , Adam Lowe . with '
nine points, along With
Bordman with six points ,
Boggess with four point s
and Snyder, Ho ga and
.fi sher two poims each.
Point was led by the dou- :
ble-dou ble of Bobby Errett .
with 18 point s and I 0 .
rebounds, Nathan Rimmey
Errett
Stover
with nine points, Josh
Stover with six points and
output f rom I he In dians 10 rebounds. · Will Slone
trumped Point Pleasant's with six poi ills and Jay .
II
points,
givi ng . Ellis and Stephen Walker
Sissonville a narrow 28-25 with five points each.
edge head.ing into the
Sisso nvill e also grubbed
break.
a victory in the junior varFrom. there I he Indians si ty mal ch with a 55-49
h k
h
did just enoug to eep t e win led by Noah Fisher
lead . away from Poinl with 12 points. while Point ·.
Pleasant , as Sissonville Pleasant was paced by .
po sted 14 point s in the Timmy Durham with II ·
and
· Ste phen·
third quarter and 13 in the po int s
Browning
with
I
0
points . ·
fourth to take the nine
The Black Knights will
point victory.
Sissonville was led on return to action 7:30 p.m . .
the eveni ng by Miles Frid ay when 'they return ·
Henson with 22 po int s, home to face Logan .
Meigs led 10-7 after the
first quarter, but Athens
seized control over the middle two frame s. The Bulldogs
· outscored the Maraui:lers 3523 over that span and held a
nine-point edge entering the
fourth .
Meigs fell into a deeper
hole early in the final canto ,
but &lt;\id rally to close to within a point before ullimately
falling short.
In I he junior varsily game,

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www .mydailysenrinel.com

and had six rebound;,, six
steals and four ass ists in an
overtime loss to Lakewood Sl.
Edward;
and
Upper
Sandusky 's Jon Diebler, who
also has conunittecl to Ohio
Stale, had 30 points, nme
steals, eight rebounds - in
the first half - before taking
the rest of the night otT in a 9339 win ·over Bucyru s.
Reigning Mr. Basket ball
OJ. Mayo had 40 points, 12
rebounds and sev~n assists as
North College Hill beal
Charles1on (W.Va.) Woodrow
Wil son, giving Mayo a
school-record I ,850 points;
Hamilton Little Miami 's
Danny McKeehan had 39
points in an 86-76 · win over
Norwood; and Zanesvil le
Rosecrans' Megan Dolling s
scored a career-high 34 points,

making all 18 free throws, in a Dame.
72-60 win over Beallsville.
WIN NO. 600: Coach Bob
NEVER TOO LATE: Walsh earned his 600th ~areer
Massillon Washinglon picked victory Tuesday 111 Elyria\
up the school\ 1,1501h win on 58-50 win over North
Michael Porrini's putback as Ridgev ill e. He. then received
time expired in U61-60 Win Ut tWO technical fOU(S a Will
Massillon Perry; Zanesville Friday over Medina, forcing
Maysvi lle's Justi n Corder hit a him to sit out two games.
·50-foot bank shot to force
The next gafT\e as·Walsh sat,
overtime- the video and call Louis Tumblin scored a
of the shot made ESPN's Play school-record 45 points in a
of the Day - in what ended 90-46 win over Parma.
up as a 69-68 overtime loss to Coincidentally,
assistanl
Zanesville West Muskingum; coach Brett Larrick, who set
Paul Raterman hit a 3-pointer · the previous record of 43 in
in the fina l seconds to lift' 1'993. took Walsh 's place on
Cincinnati Elder past Moeller the bench.
68-.66, extending lhe Panthe.rs
Walsh, in his first year at
best start since 1971 -72 ; and Elyria, has coached at Lorain
Cincinnati St. Ursula's Katie Clearvicw (where he won the
Kortekamp made a 65-foot 1974 state championship).
heave to end the lirst quarter Oberlin (where ·he won ·one in
in a 44-35 loss to Mount Notre 1986). Vermilion and Elyria

Catholic.
NOTEWO RTH Y:
Nc"
Bremen hil 13 3-pointcr' in a
68-66 win over Ver,ailb:
Carey's Kant Windua had a
triple-double with 12 points.
17 rebound&gt; and I 0 'teal' '"
the
Blue
De1 i(,
heat
Sycamore M9hawk 5H-4H:
Springboro boy' coacb Troy
Holtrey earned his 150th
career victorv wilh" win over
M.iddleto·wn:
M &lt;~ddi&lt;'
McGarvey
became
Zanesville \ alllimc le&lt;Jding
scorer regardle" of gentler
with I ,453 poiJ1t'. 'c11ring 27
points in a 76-5.1 win over
Wheeling Park (W.Va.):
Georgetown. girl&gt; coach
Berlji e Cropper won h(, 300th
career game: Dan Pu rce ll.
girl s coach at Ham ilion Badin.
collected his 250t h win .

Super Bowl Sunday
february 5, 2006
Pittsburgh vs Seattle

Derek Waters scored a dozen
for Athe ns. which won 413 1. Ben Coppick had I I for
Meigs.
·
The Bulldogs were winners in the fres hmen tilt as ·
well, which went to double :
.overtime before Athens won
59-58. Matt Witten scored 13
for Athens and Eric Toler led
all scorers with 20 in the loss..
A thens is at Marietta
Friday, while Meigs goes to ·
Vi nlon Coumy·,
·

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Sandusky St. Mary 51, Monroeville 50
Shaker Hts. · La urel . 43 , Willoughby
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Shelby 64. Mansfield Madison 39
Sherwood Fairview 35, Paulding 32
Sldn~1 Fa,·rlawn 55 Sl Paris Graham 34
~
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•
·
Sugar Grove Berne Union 57, Millersport
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Summit Station Licking Hts. 34, Lancaster
Fisher CB.th. 34
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~~~~~~GoaiS-Gr~:e (~O~~ ~illi~s ~, :~~~~~~~ 0~ ~~i1d 6~~~·a~~~=~o~~~ins J:~~~l~~~11 L:gemonl 52, Ashtabula Sts.

)

I

l
,I

Ohio High School BoYs Basketball
Tuesday 's Results
Akr. Buchtel t05. Akr_Ellet 45
Akr. Central-Hewer 60. Akr. Gartlel d 48
Akr.' coventry. 59. Norton 55
Akr. E. 63. Akr Firestone 59
Akr. Spring. 53. Mogadore Field 39
Alliance 53. Louisville 51. OT
Atwater Waterloo 68. Garrettsville Garfield
49
Au rora 57 . Kirtland 40
Barnesville 77, Bridgeport 62
Beavercreek 63. Huber Hts. Wayne 60
. Berlin Center Western Aese.rve 71.
Lowellville 61
Beverly · Ft
Frye
71 . Sarahsville
Shenandoah 4t
Burton Berkshire 76, Beachwood 45
Byesville MeadowbrooK 45 , Uhrichsville
Claymont 26
Cambr idge 62, New Philadelphi a 58
Campbell Memorial 86, 'ioun~;~s . Chaney
77
.

Cal'). McKinley 83, Massillon Wash1ngtori
i
Can. S. 5'5: Beloit W. Branch 31
Canal Winchester 64 Westerville N. 56
Canfield 69. Warren Howland 38
Carro llton 62. Canal Fulton NW 51
Centerburg 57 , Galion Northmor 25
Centerville 81 , Spring. S. 49
Chagrin Falls Kenston 56, Oates Mills
Hawken 37
Chesterland w. Gaauga 69 , Orwell Grand
Valley 39
. Chillicothe 72, Circlev ille 67
Cl n. Anderson 54, Cin. NW 43·
Cin.. Moeller 51 , Kettering Alter 44
Cin. .Oak Hills 62 , Cin Elder 51
CIM. Sycamore 56 , Milford 44
ClaytOr'l Northmont 48. Piqua 34
Cle. E. 75. Cle . E. TeCh 66
Cle. Glenville ~5 . Cle . Uncoln-W. 29
Cle. Heritage 54, Mentor Chr 2e
Clo. JFK, 88, Cit . S. 58
Cit. VASJ 72, Cit Can. Cain . !14
Collinwood 72 , Cle Max Hay11 55
Cole. Alrlcentric 75, Cola . 5 84
Cola. Brookhaven 91 . Coli. Linden 51}
Cole. Centenrnal 84. Cola. Whelelone 52
Cole. OeSalea 78 . Worthlogton Christian
73
.
.

66

Cola E.utmoor 50, Cols. w 49
Cola Hartley 56, Zanesvill e Roeecrana 45
Colt. Harvest Prep 89, Cola. Wi.lhngt01'1,11
Coli High Street Ch risti an 97, Gahanna
Christian 46
~
Cols. Marion-Fra nklin 82 . Cols Br1ggs 82
Cols M1ffhn 66. Cols Beechcroh 56
Cols. Nor1hjand 57. Cols E 47

Upper Sandusky 69, Sycamore Mohawk
35
. W.Jefferson40.CaledOniaRiverValley19
W. Milton Mlllon-Union 63, P itsbu rg
Franklin-Monroe 53
Washmgton C.H. Miami Trace 50,
Greenfiel d McClain 42 .
Wauseon 31 , Defiance Tinora 25
Westerville N . 51, Gahanna 47
Youngs. Boardman 74, Massillon Jac.kson
45

'/;

W.Va . prep basketball scores ·
Tuesday's Results

Gi11s

Berkeley Sprmgs 36. Marti nsburg 29
Braxton County 53, Lincoln 47 ·
Bridgeport 57, Philip Barbour 33
Buckeye Local. Ohio 39 . Brooke 26
Burch 50, Matewan 16
Clay County 94, Webster County,22
Cross Lanes Christian 49. Wood County
Christian 40
Doddridge County 60, Ravenswood 37
Elk · Valley Christ1an 48, Parkersburg
Chnst1an 47
•
·
Elk1ns 73 . North Manon 47
Fairha'.'en Christian 48 , Calvary Baptist 34 ·
FayetleiJille 43, Midland Trail 37
Franktort sp, Keyser 39
Grace Christian 44 , Mercer Christian 24
Greenbrier East 81, Westside 32 .
Hedges'.'ille 70, Musselman ' SO
Hun dred 66, Clay-Ballel le 41
Lewis County 42, Liberty Harrison 23
Liberty Raleigh 83. Mount Hope 29
Logan 63, Wayne 44
Morgantown 100. Buckhannon-Upshur 40
W. Chester Lakota w. 61 1 Middletown 51
Oak Hill 55, Shady Spring 48
W. Liberty-Salem 54 . Mechanicsburg 42
Parkersburg South 70, PocahOntas
. Wellsville 56 ~ alinev 1 lle Southern 47
County 31
'.
Wester1J1IIe Cent. 71 Cols . Hamilton Twp
56 .
Petersburg 37, Moorefield 34
Pike View 75 . Bluefi61d 58
Wheele rs burg 79. Waverly 43
Roan e County 45, Calhoun 34
W1ckltffe 61 . Fa1rport Harbor Harding 30
South Harri(;on 58. Trinity 19
W1ndham 92. Rootstown 77
Tucker County 51. Pendleton County 29
Woodsfiel d Mon roe Cent. 83, New
· Tygarts Valley 71 . Harman 53
Matamora s Frontier 47
'
Umversity 64 , Fa1rmont Senior 60
Wooster Triway 90. Ak r Manchester 55
Xenia Chnst1 an 47; Troy Christian 34
Williamstown ' 58. St. Marys 49. OT
Yellow Spnngs 68. Day. Christian 51
Wirt County 62 , Gilmer County 38
Youngs . Moo ney 74. Chardon NDCL 40
.Bovs
YoungS . Ursuline
Steubenville 41
Bellaire·. Ohio 71 . Cameron 67.·0T
YQungs . Wilson 72. Youngs . Ch ristian 42
Bluefield 58. P1keView 39
Zanesville 62. Cols Be)ltey 50
Brooke 68 . Wheeling Park 63
Zanesv1lle Maysville 67 . Crooksville 38 ·.
Brooke 68. Wheeling Park 63
Za ~ esville W. Muskingum 62. Ph1lo 48
Buffalo 86, Van 51 ·
· Zoarville Tuscarawas Val ley 52. Massillon
Burch 55. Matewan 30 ,..,.,
Tuslaw 43, OT
Cross Lanes Christian 70. Wood County
Christian 61
Ohio High School Girts Basketba ll
Eastern . Ohio 59. Parkersburg Catholic
Tue,day 's Results
. 58, OT
,
.. ·
Amanda-C!earcreek
52.
lancast.e r
E'lk Valley Chri stian 81 , Parkersburg
Fatrtield Union 50
Chris tian 45
Anna 63. Bethel 23
Fort Hill, Md. 64. Peter'S1Jurg 45.'
Arcanum 51 , New Paris Nat1onal Trail 36
George Wash1ngton 59. St. AIIJens 44
Archbold 52 . Pettisv1tle 51
Gilbert 96, Harts 89, OT
'
Arl ington 68, Ridgeway R1dgemont 30
Hamlin 69, St. Joseph Central 49
An•ca Seneca E. 46. GreenwiCh S. Cent.
Hannan 58. Grace Christian 53 •
44
Hunt1ngton 88, Princeton 60
BainbridQe !)aim Valley 66. Piketon 34
Jefferson 64, Hampshire 35
Baltimore Liberty Union 61 , Cola. Harvest
lincoln 83, Nicholas County 59
Prep 40
Logan 68, Chapmanville 49
·
Br ookville 33, Carlisle 9
Madonna 73, Bishop Donahue 37
Burton Berksh1rEi 58, Aurora 42
Man 65, Tug Valley 62 ·
Can McKinl ey 61. ~nlontown Lake 48
Meadow Bridge 64, Co\lington , Va. 30
Cardington-Lincoln 38. Centerburg 31
Mounta1n State Academy-68 , Mount Hope
Centerv ill e s'p nng Valley 60. Sprtng.
5~
Emmanuel Christian 28
Musselman 73. Berkeley Springs 47
Chardon 49. Euclid 33
Oak Glen 67\ Bea'.'er Local, Ohio 45
Chillicothe Hunting ton 80, Wlll lamaQort
Aa:-;enawood 64 , Williamstown
20T
Westfall 32
Richwood 6!, F•yettiiJIIII 50
Ch illicothe Zene Trace ~3 . Chillicothe
Robert C. Byrd 59. Grafton 41
Unloto 47
Scon 79, Sherman 35
Cln. Chrlltian 41 , Cln . SCPA 3~
Slasonvllle 58, Po int Pltaaan1 4;9
Cin Madeira 46, Batavia 37
South Char leston 75. Cabell Midland 62
Circlev1ilt 4Q , Ashvill e Teays Valley 40
Sp r~n g Valley 70, Nitro 64 , OT
Elm 48, Canal
Circlevill e Logan
Wlncnester 43
Summers County 81 , Greenbriar West 50
Cle E Tech 73 , Cle. E. 24
Tol&amp;18 64 , Will iamion 4Q
Cle Glon'.'llle 63. Cte: Lmcoln-W 20
TriMy 8B. VaiiQy Wetzel 47
Cle_JFK 86, Cl e S 46
;rucker County 49, Weatmar, Mel 48
Cle. MLK 58 , Cle_RMOIS 53
Un vera1ty 61 , John Marshall 5fl
Cola. Alncentr1c 88. Cola. S. 39 ·
We1r 63 lnd1an Creek, Ohio 52
c 'o la. Bexley 49, New Albany 34
Wnee11ng Central 56, Tyler Consolidated
44
Cols Brookhaven ao. Cols. Linden 40
Cols Centennial 58 . Cols. Wnetstone 30
Wlnlteld 62 Wayne 55
Cols E 55. COIS NorthlaM 26
Wyon·11ng East 58. Liberty Rai81QI"' 44

.

n.

eo.

lET US HELP YOU GET READY FOR THE BIG GAME
·THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2ND ·- SUNDAY FEBRUARY 5TH.

'·

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Bryan Walters/photo:

Eastern head coach Howie Caldwell. center, talks strategy with the Eagles during a timeout ·
in overtime Tuesday in &gt;uppers Plains.
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Eagles

fecta wi th two seconds the trium ph. including a 9-8 ;
remai ning. pulled the Eagles edge on the offensive glass. :
wilhi n five (41 -36) headed
Cozart ied Ehstern and all :
into
the
stretch
ru
n.
scorers with 27 points. while:
f':'Om Page 81
Ea,tern conlinued its hot Rawson fol lowed with II •
hand in lhe fourth , going 011 markers and a tca ni -high :
15-9 edge.
a 9-3 surge for its first sec- .eight carom,.
Catholic tacked on a late ond half lead· of 45-44 with
Nathan Carroll was nex t ·
free throw to end the first 4:38 left,in regulation.
wi th six points . Alex :
eight minutes down 15-1.0.
Garrett Lang quickly McGrath added five and :
Over the next six minutes countered with a 3-pointer both Bry ce Honaker and :
of lhe second stanza, the 16 seconds later, reclaiming Mark Guess ended up with :
Crusaders went on a 16-0 the lead for PCHS at 47 -45. four ap iece. Michael Owen ·
run to hold il s biggest lead of
Parkersburg Catholi c led rounded Ollt the scoring with
the game of II points (26- 50-48 wi th 1:33 remaining. a basket.
.
15) with I :59 left until half- . but Kyle Raw son tied the
Chri s Boelter paced ··
time.
game al 50 on a layup ' with Parkersbu rg Catholic with :
EHS, which mi ssed its 48 seconds left. Regulation 19 points and nine rebounds.;
first nine shot attempts of the elided with the score notted · Tracewe ll and Lang were:
second quarter, tinis.!Jed up at 50.
ncxJ with II and I 0 markers,· ·
the tirst half with a 7-0 run to
The lead changed hands' · re spectively.
·
pull to within 26-22 at inter- five times in the extra four
The Cru saders had four
. mission.
minutes , but a 7-qf-8 perfor- less turnovers than the hosts
ifhat late surge proved to mance al the charity stripe with 14.
be extremely beneficiiiJ for negated the Crusaders' 3-ofEastern is now 2-0 th is:
the Eagles, who finished the 7 shooting effort. Eastern season in overtime games.:
first half by shooting 8-of-26 made half of its two ShOts in Eastern · also
defeated:
from the field for 31 percent. the overtime.
Alexander. 62-61, back in ·
"Between the tirst and secEHS, for the game, shot late Decemtier.
ond quarters, we went over 18-of-47 from toe field for
Parkersburg Catholic did .
eighf minutes without scor- 38 percent, including 5-of- salvage a split with a 41 -20 ·
ing a point ," commented 13 from behind the arc for 38 win in the' junior varsity outCaldwell. "It's very difficult ·percent.
ing.
:
to go that long without a
Catholic, on the other
Richard. Christy led the:
poinf and stay in the game . hand , was !ilightly better Crusaders and all scorers:
We were very fortunate to from the field with a 24-of- with a dozen points . PCHS :
only be down four at half- 54 showing for 44 percent. l~d 22-16 at the break,
time."
The Crusaders hit 5-of-14
Josh Collins and Natha'n ,
Catholic, convei;sely, was three-point tries. .
Carroll
paced EHS with si!l .·
.
11-of-25 from the field (44
The difference in the game ap1ece ..
percent) in the opening 16 came at the foul line, where · Eastern returns to . action:
minutes.
· the Eagles. nailed 18-of-23 Friday when it travels to :
· The guests stormed out of attempts for 78 percent. Corning for a Tri- Valley :
the halftime gates on a 13-6 PCHS hit JUSt ha lf o.f its I 0 Conference
Hocking
run for a 39~28 advantage opportunllle,.
··
Division matchup With
with I :53 left, but a late 8-2
The hosts also outre- Miller. Gam~ time is slated : ·
run . .capped by a Cozart tri- bounded Catholic 30-25 in for 6 p.m.

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February l, 2006

www. mydailysentinel.com

Hornets to return to Oklahoma
City for most. of 2006-07 season
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)
- The Hornets will play most
· of their home games in
Oklahoma City next season
with New Orleans still recovel'ing from Hurricane Katrina.
·The
N BA
announced
Tuesday that the Hornets will
· play 35 g;~mes in Oklahoma
: City and si~ in New Orleans in
' 2006-07.
NBA commissioner David
Stem sttid in a statement the
league remains committed to
returning to New Orleans, but
· "for now, our collective inter: ests are best served by having
: the team play the bulk of its
· 2006-07 schedule in Oklahoma

pty.

"However, we are hopeful
AP photo
that the team will be in a posi- Oklahama City' s Ford Center is pictured in th1s Sept. 21, 2005 file photo . The New Orleans
lion to return to New Orleans Hornets will ,Play most of their games in Oklahoma City next season with their hometown still
full time beginning in the recovering from Hurricane Katrina. The NBA announced Tuesday that the Hornets will play 35
· 2007-08 season."
· The agreement reached games in Oklahoma City and six in New Orleans in 2006-07 .
between the state of Louisiana people expected to attend.
said earlier Tuesday. ·'When bring it."
and the Hornets allows the
"The pennanent identity of you have a college atmosphere
The decision takes the
team to amend its lease agree- New Orfeans as an NBAc!ly is am! you have a young team. Hornets in the opposite direcment with the New Orleans important to the economy of this is what they like to play in · tion of the NFL's Saints. NFL
Arena.
our entire region," Blanco said. front of."
commissioner Paul Tagliabue
"The agree ment reached "New Orleans has always been
After the Aug. 29 hurricane has said he expects the Saints
· toda)' will ensure the Hornets a great city for big events, and devastated New Orleans, the to return to ~ew Orleans for
~taptlity
while the New we are confident that we can Homets scheduled 35 games in the1r eight horne games next
Orleans market fully recovers quickly negotiate a deal ·to Oklahoma City and s1x others season , after splitting last seaand. at the same time. main- bring the All-Star Game to at LSU in Baton Rouge. But son between Baton Rouge and
after fans filled onlv half of the San Antonio.
tain.s our presence in the New Orleans."
NBA,"
Louisiana
Gov.
In 19 games at Oklahoma LSU arena for a- December
This weeke nd, Hornets
City's Ford Center this season, game, the Hornets moved the owner George Shinn · quesKathleen Blanco said.
. Stem also said the NBA will the Hornets have averaged remaining five games - two tioned whether New Orleans
enter exclusive negotiations to . 18.549 fans, including I 0 sell- to Oklahoma and three· to the was ready .to host a 41-game
bring the 2008 All-Star Game outs. The surprising young New Orleans Arena in March. NBA home schedule.
to New Orleans.
team is 22-22.
The Hornets are 13-7 in
'There's no real winner here.
"From everything we have
Last season playing in the Oklahoma, including one win Somebody's going to lose,"
seen and heard, we have little New Orleans Arena. the at
the
University
of Brow n · said before the
doubt that New Orleans will Hornets averaged a league-low . Oklahoma 's Llqyd Noble announcement. "You don't
know who that's going to be.
soon regain its rlace among the 14,221 fans and tinished with a Center.
world's premtere cities for franchise-worst 18-64 recotd.
"The fans have been won- It's tough. As a player, yo u' re
hostingmajor sportingevents,"
"I think the energy in the derful," veteran center P.J. very sensitive to the fans ' feelStern said.
crowd has been a tremendous Brown. a Louisiana native, ings and you want to make
The NBA has also agreed to boost to our team. We've got a said after the Hornets' rractice · them happy. You want to make
hold its annual marketing lot of young guys and they feed Tuesday. "We don't wm a lor them feel good as much as pos·
meetings in New Orleans in off that type of energy," of those games at home with- sible on and off the floor. It's a
October, with some 300-400 Hornets coach Byron Scott out those guys. They really tough situation to be in."

Cavs Newble treated for facial abscess
)

CLEVELAND (AP)
Cavaliers forward Ira Newble
was treated for a facial abscess
Tuesday at the Cleveland
Clinic and was listed as doubtful for Wednesday night's
game against the New Jersey

Nets.
Newble, who misseq the first
23 games this season with a tissue inflammation in his right
foot, sat out Monday's game in
Charlotte with a migraine
headache. He did not return t6

the bench after halftime.
The· Cavaliers said Newble's
facial abscess was not reiated
to his migmine. The team did
not say if Newble, who did not
participate in Tuesday's light
workout at Quicken Loan s

Arena, woNld be hospitalized
overnight.
Newble, primarily a defensive stopper, is averaging 1.3
points and 13 minutes per
ga me for the Cavs, who have
won six straight.

BY BRAD SHERMAN

CHESH IRE
River
Valley coach Gene Layton
has found an effective motivational tool for getting his
basketball team to box out.
"We gave up 17 or 19
(offensive rebounds) to
Meigs Saturday night," he
recalled. "We told them in
practice last night, any offensive rebmmds over I 0 - we
were running five 'stairs' for
each one . . ·
"They don't like running
those stairs:·
Obviously not. Thus. there
is good news for the Raiders
- trey' ll be no ·stairs· the
res,t of th is week, hoys.
The Raiders dominated the
boards, and that was a big
reason they held ,on to defeat
upset-minded Coal Grove 4744 in Ohio Valley Con terence
ac tion on Tuesday.
Tyler Thompson grabbed
13 caroms as River Valley
owned a 33-2.2 advantage in
total rebounds, and 16-6 011
the offensive end .
Despite a soclfld rebo unding edge, River Valley still
trailed the entire tirst hal f.
Hut the home team added
some stellar defense in the
third quarter to ·take the lead,
then meshed · clutch free
throws in tile fourth to keep it.
The Raiders made 7-of-8
from the line in the final period.
Bryan Morrow, who led all
scorers with 17 points. made
all four of his fourth quarter
attempts. His final pair of free
tosses came with 40 seconds
remaining and made it 47-44.
On its ensuing possession,
Coal Grove missed a golden
opportuni ty to cut the lead to
ime when Adam Bare was
unable to handle a bounce
pass . near the baske.t, whic h
would have likely resulted in
an easy layup. The ball fell
out of bou nds for a turnover.
Ri ver Valley, however.
gave the ball nght back. A tno
of Hornet defenders tied-up
Morrow and the altemating
possession favored the visitors.
With 10 seconds to go, a
potentially game-tying three
by Coal Grove ·s Matt Melvin
was off the mark. Ty ler
B. ranch grabbed the otTensi ve
rebound and got it to Bare.
who fired up a two-pointer,

which was
off the mark
as
time
expired.
The win
was the second straight
Ri ver
for
Valley (7-9,
3-4 OVC)
since a frusMorrow
trating span
that saw the
Silver and Black drop seven
of ei~ht. Coal Grove (5-11)
remams the only wi nless
league team at 0-7.
Morrow was the lone
Raider in double figures.
Michael Cordell, who made
3-of~4 clutch free thrpws· in
the fou rth,· scored eight
points, as did Matt Nibert.
Cory Ehman added seven.
Bare and Randy Wise
scored I 0 each for Coal
Grove. But that total was a
modest one for ·Wise, who
scored 19 in the first meeting
between the teams, a 76-59
Raider win. River Valley's
Jason Jones and Ehman
guarded Wise most ·of the
night and held the point guard
to ju~t four free throws in the
second half.
"He's dangerous," Layton
said of Wise. "Our game plan
was to defend him when he
gave the ball up -. we tried
not to let him get it back."
In fact, Layton's entire
defense stepped up after halftime. River Valley outscored
Coal Grove 13-6 in the third
quarter to tum a three-point
halftime deficit into a fourpoint lead by the start of the
fourth .
The Raiders made 16-of-50
floor shots on Friday.
"We feel like our defense
has been improving as the
season has· progressed," he
continued. "and tonight I
think it showed. We've gotten
to the point where our
defense is able to step up and
win games for us."
The Raiders also won the
junior varsity game 59-39.
Ryan Eggleton scored 12
points for the winners while
Shannon Goodwin's nine
markers paced the Hornets.
River Valle}&lt; is at Ohio
Valley Conference leader
Chesapeake on Friday, while
Coal Grove plays host to
South Point.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

CI 4ASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMI&lt;::NT
Notice or ~ien Sate
The personal properly and contents olthe
following

storage

units will be auctioned for sate to satIsfy the lien of
Hartwell Storage.
The sale witt be held
at

the

Hartwell

Storage facility, 34055
· Laurel Cliff Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohio

on

February 11, 2006 at
10:00 a.m.
Unit #6 Owner:
Shannon Bare 30875
Bowles Rd., Dexter,
OH 45741 , UnH 129
Owner: Jennie Wilson
3

Peach

Circle,

Box
131
West
Columbia, WV25287,
Unit IHIO Owner: Jaye
Mitchell PO Box 159,
Syracuse, OH45779,
· Unit 1167 OWner: Tony
Connolly 114 Brick
St. Pomeroy, OH
45769, Unit 87.3
Owner: Paula Clark
7501/2 Sycamore,
Middleport, OH45760
Unit 194 Owner:
Elizabeth Ollar 736
3rd Middleport, OH
45760
(1)25(2)1
Public Notice

Middleport, OH45760,
Unit 146 Owner:
Veronica McCarty,
200 · N OgdenAve.
Columbus, OH 43204,
Unit 149 Owner:

AIR QUAUTY PERMIT
NOTICE
Notice of Application
Notice lo given that
AppalachIan Power
Company,
a

Deena Hardwick Rt.1,

Corporation

Help Wanted

has

Help Wanted

'

applied to the West
VIrginia Department
of
Environmental
Protection, Division
of Air Quality, -lor
Class
II
Administrative
Update for a materiel
handling systems
and a diesel engine
located near New
Haven,

in

Mason

County, Weal VIrginia.
The applicant estimates the potential to
discharge the followIng Regulated Air
Pollut•nta will be:
Particulate Matter
Controlled
22.6
ton/year Particulate
Matter &lt;10 um, 6.4
ton/year
s'ulfur
Dloxi.de, 0.04 ton/year
Nitrogen .Oxides, p.ss
ton/year

Monoxide,
ton/year,

Carbon

0.12
Volatile

'
this 1st day
of
0.00 ton/year
February, 2006.
Startup of operation By:
Appalachian
is planned to b'egin Power Company
on or about the 1st of Mr.
Mark
C.
December,
2006. McCullough
Vice

Organic Compounds,

Written

comments

will be received by
the West Virginia
Department
of

President 1 Riverside

Plaza,
Columbus,
Ohio 43215 (2) 1,5

Environmental
Protection , Division

of Air Quality, 60157th Street, SE,
Charleston,
WV
25304, for at tease 30
calendar days from
the date of publication of this notice.
A!'IY
questions

regarding this permit
application should be
directed to the
Division

of

Air

Quality at (304) 9260499, extension 1227,
during normal business hours. Dated

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAL

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

DIESEL TECHNICIAN

IIi~~~~~THE
TEAM!

.\1

TRAINING...
• Two week initial &amp;

orientation classes with
ongoing
MANAGEMENT•..
• The best management
team In the counb'y to
8 SSISI J OU .

COMPENSATION...

Bonuses, Flat Rate,

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 honest
products on the market and as the fastest
growing dealership in our region. we' re adding diesel technicians to better serv1ce our
customer. Ford Service training preferred
but not required
If you are a professional techm coan lookin g
to start a new career or maybe you don't'feel
you' re paid or treated as we ll as you should
be and if you're tired of working for someone who isn't working for you. gi ve Jim
. Thomas a call today 1-740-446-9800 or
1-800-272-5179. You may also apply 111
nerson at 195 Upper R1 ver RD .
~~~=~O~h:_:i~o . Monday-Fnday

Health Care, DisabJllt)l,

Long Tenn Care and

. . .ut LI~CO L: "f

. •

MI~CUR'I'

Equal Opportun1ty Employer

Help Wanted

~

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

COUPONS
CURRENT EVENTS

O'BLENESS

~ ~\emm ial Hnapita l

Respiratory Care Practitioner · ·
O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL currentl y ha&gt; fulltimd and part-time opemngs m our Cardiopulmonary
Departmem The'e posiu on&gt; are rotating sh1ft. The
Cardwpulmonary De partment provides all aspects of res piratory
therapy services. We· are seekmg licensed Res p1ratruy Care
Practit ioner&gt;. We offer compet1t1ve ' alary and comprehensive
benefil package. For more infu rmauon please contact·
Human Resources
55 Hospital Dr.
O' Bieness Memoria l Hm pit c~ l
Athen,. OH 45701
11" w.oblcness.org
Phone: (740i 592·9227
rax: !7401592-9444

EOE

Wednesday, February 1, 200Ei

www.mydallysentinel.com

Raiders edge Hornets
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

TECHNOLOGY

COMICS SPORTS

ENTERTAINMENT
AU ·.
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_.,
...to

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'

The Da'i ly Sentinel • Page 85

\!Cribune - Sentinel - l\egt~ter
CLASSIFIED

Mt'ip Cou nt y OH

We Cove
Melg•, Galli.,
And Maaon

. CountJet Uke

NoOn•

' 1!1M Cen1 ·
G ~ lll,.

Coun ty, Oli

In .One Week With·Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
AD NOW
PLUS
To Place
\!Crtbune
Sentinel
3aegtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 '(304) 675-1333
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
m,-C_a__;_I_I_To
__d_a_v_._·_·,.--_,...o_r....Fa_x To (740) 44&amp;-aiilooii!a;......_ __:o:..:.r.:...Fa:::.x:....;l.:.o..!.:(7_4..;.:ol..:.9.:...92_:-2:..:.1:..:.s7___

'.

Oftfee 11o~~

Word Ads

\\\Ol \(I \II \ I '

r

PI:HSONAI.S

rI

~~D

responsibl e
lor
debt s
Incurred by Vu; tor L. Roush
II, as of January 30th, 2006.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics soc for small
$1.00 f«?r large

it;e

All Dlspl• : 12 Noon 2
Buslnesli Daye Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1 : 00 p.m.
Thursday for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid'

• InClude Complete
De•criptlon • Include A Prlc:e • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Nu!llber And Addreu When Needed
• Ada Should Run 7 Dayt·

· - - - - - - - - ' Female Black Lab to a good
home 14 - 16 months _qld.
SWM
seekmg
SF for very
good
natured .
Romance aild more Please (740)448-7595
mad p1oture and number tO
P.O. Box 1177 . Galltpolts, Lost. Purse @ Spring Valley
OH 45631.
Cinem a. Return w ith no
questton asked. Any information please call (740)339-

• I, Altcta Roush, am no longer

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

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword

It·

GET'YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
AD

Oeatllfirt!4

POLICIES : Ohio Valley Publllhlng re1erv.. the right to edit, reject, or cancel an~ 11d 111 llrl~ time. Errora muat be reported on the first d&amp;y ot p ubll c o~t i on 111nd
Trlbun•Sentlnei·R~~gieter will be reaponalbte for no mora lhan the coat ot the Space occupied by the error and only the f•ratlnaertlon . We lhall not be 11able
any to .. Of' expenae that reault.lrom the publle~~tlon or omiaaion ol en advertlaament. Correction will be made 1n th1 lirst available edition. • Box ,'~;~':.;,':.~: ~
are alwaya confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All reel estate adver1laementa are eubject to the Federal Fa ir Hous1ng Act ot 1968. • Th11
accepta only help wanted ada meeting EOE at11ndarda We will not knowingly accept any ad\lertlalng 1n violation olthe law

KIT&amp;. CARLYLE

1

%~

...,.--:-~~=----:-----_;_

_ __;.__ _ _ _...., '

l.wright2005@comcast.com

~

AND

Ft£\ MAtoo:r

Searching for a job with a
fixed work schedule and

I \11 ' 1 fl \ \ II ' I

great benefits?

"" ' I.C \ It I "'

H you are lookmg lor a
better caree1 opportunity
we may have a posit1on for

..,

you

***************

We offer:
·Up to $8/hr
• Full-time &amp; Part-time

GtVFA\VAY

r

Boxer mnc needs good ...,.
home. Great wtth k1dS Ab solute Top Dollar. U S.
Needs to be love d.' Call 740· Stiver and Gold Coms.
Proofset s, Gold A tngs, Pre379·2153.
1935
US
Currency
Two Female kttlens
On e Solil atre Diamonds- M T S
light gray stnpped and one Co1n Shop 15 1 Second
black wJgray. 9 weeks old Avenue, Galltpolls, 740-446·

740-698-2334.

r

lo."I' ANil

FOI.NJJ

$75 Reward for return of
White Jack Russell Te mer
Mtssmg .stnce 1/1!06 from
Bunce Ad area Please call
: (740)4;\6-4706 leave message.

2842

req
Call Today!

'l- - I

5004

wood

11e~s

Wanted To Buy.
Meigs
Count)/· Store Scnpt. Store
80 1·428·4649
Tokens, and currency from
Racme
Po meroy,
and A GREAT PLACE
Mtddleport Banks 74Q-992- WORK ...

6040

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announeement ............ ..... :.................. .. ...... 030
Antiques ...........................:.:......................... 530
Apartments for Rent ...:...................... :........ 440
Auction and Flea Market... ............... ...........080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..... :............................................770
Autos for Sale .............................................. 7t0
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppiles...................... .................. 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity .................................210
Business Training ....................................... t4'0
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .. .................. ................ 780
Cards of Thanks ..........................................Ot 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 19Q
EtectricaVRefrlgeration ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent ..., .................................480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment... .................. .'.................... 610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ........-..................................... 330
For ~ease ........................................... .......... 490
For Sale ............................ ............................ 585
For Sale or Trada .........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .............-............. ,.........580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Giveaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
l:fome lmprovements ................................... 81 0
Homes for Sale ............................................310
Household Goods .... ................................... 510
Houses for Ren\ .........................:.....: .......... 410
In Memorlam ................................................. 020
Insurance :.................................................... 130
Ulwn &amp; Garden Equipment. ..... .................. 660
Livestock ......................................................630
Lost and Found ................................ ........... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous ....................................:.........170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ......... :............. 540
Moblla Home Repalr .................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320 ·
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wh~elers ........................... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals ..................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Servlces .................................230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repa lr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoolslnstructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ..............................650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Spece for Rent .......................-......................460
Sporting Goods ....... ·············:·.. ··········:····....520
SUV's for Sale ..... .......... :......... .....................720
Trucks for Sate ........................................ ,... 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .................. 620
wanted To Do ............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent.. ..........................................470
Yard Stile- Galllpolis ........, ...... ..................,.072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant... ............................. 076

1tO

To $480/wk
Matenals provided
Free •nformation pkg 24H r.

TO

.
1
Drivers Needed: ·
COL Drivers wtlllng to dr•ve

for local ready·mJx·concrete
company Expenence •s
preferred
but not necessary
MACHINIST. sktlled
Med insurance &amp; other
4 or more years. recent bepeflls avatlable after wattmach1nlng experten ce req 'd. tng pertod Drtver must be
w•lltng to do pre·matnte·
Job •s in Ashton, WV near
nance
on trucks &amp; eqwp·
Pt Pleasant and Hunttngton
men!,
yard work &amp; other
Non·SrTJOking campus
miscellaneous chores.
Experi ence operating equipFAX re;:m me with cover lener
ment &amp; extra skills such as
lo 866· 23 1-2567 or ceii B66weldtng e plus
231 -2476 ext 1061o request
Call (304 )937-3410
an appli catiOn.
Located in Mason County
near Buffal o WV
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call_Marilyn 304-882·2645
- - - - -- - Ortvers·
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
Aeg1onal loads Great pay.
Sell
Shtrfey Spears, 304company be(leftts &amp; bonus675-1429.
es COL- A w/1yr vert !~ac tor·
trl exp req. 866-293-7435
ExpeMn ced
light
duty
' wrecker operator Clean
dnvmg ' record
Call

(740)388-8545.
' NO EXPERIENCE NE C~S SAR¥

' FUll-TI ME C\.ASSES

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAININ G CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE V"-

1-800-334-1203
~. alllallCelrac!ortraller

HEIJ' WANTED

Gallta Co unty Council on
IS
seektng
an .
Agmg
Ellecut•Ve
Directo r
Respons1bilttte s
mctude
Under New Management
Implementation of policies
Russ Mu(dock, General
and programs. staff employManager
ment/development.
It scat
management,
proposal
preparalton, program evatu - 'Has openmgs for 3 Sale
SSOCIQt8S
alton, maml atn rel at1onsh•(1s
Top
Performers earn a
wtlh other agencies, ex·off•·
verage $80.000+ Yr
Co
nly
u
.c1o mem 0er o 1
5 day wo rk week· 40 hrs
Coun cil .
Closed on Sundays
Beneltls include. Health,
Bachelor's degree 1n Soctal
lueCross Blue Sheel
Ser v tc e/ Busl n e~s or related
ed1ca l.
dental. eye
held With a mtntmum of three
D1K
years social serv•ceslbustness expenence required
a)( resume to (740)446
,Basic kn owledge ot sen •or
599
cet•zen needs and ava•lab le
semce s
needed.
If you are looking for a
Demonstrated organizatiOn·
~
al, managerial. adm m1stra- ~.c
11
!tve expenence required
Com puter. skill s mcludlng
M1crosott Word and 1nterne1 jleporter
nav•gabon requtred Musl be
General As5lgnment
bondable and have a vahd
Reporter to yatte and
dnver'S lic ense:
develop feat ures, cover

.

••••••••...•.L••••••t•••tk5.l

Submit applicatio ns WiltJ.
resume to GCCOA Ann
Coun cil Presedent , 1 t 67
State Route 160. Gell1poi1 S,
45631
by
3·30pm on
'Febr uary 17, 2006 GCCOA
IS an Eaual Opportunity
E11pene nc ed o1Hce help Employer
needed lor busy chtropracttc - - - ' - - -- - : : - - ofl ice 25 hours per wee k.
Help Wanted . Start yo u
Mo n-Frtday 'Ple ase h~nd Own Internet Business For
deliver resume to Back to
deta11s ema11
Health C/1• ropracl tC, 750 szmensan@aol cqm
First Avenue 1n Oall•polts - - - - - - ---:--::-::
Resume w1ll be acc epted
through February 3, 2006
Home Health Ca re ot SE
Oheo IS cur rently h1rm g
Home
Health
A 1des
Full time position
Ca ll
Competitive "wage s
E11pene nced
O lftce
Assi stant w1th co mputer
sk1 lls For more tnlo call
(740)441 ·7295 or !740)3792245.

' CDL TR AINING
' FIN.... NCING AVAILABLE
' JOB PLACEMENT
• ENROLLING NOW

com

•
ECKHANOSI
fngre
arge Co Will be accept
ng appl ications at th
apt. for Employmen
erv tces 225 S1xlh Street
oint
Pleasant.
WfJs
•rginia, on
2/7/200
hroug h 2/8/2006 fro
ooam til 3·00pm. MUS
AVE 2 years heavy labo
otk e11pe nence (t e far m
ng logg1ng, const ructiOn ,
tc ) Generous datly wag
net
exce llent beneft
acka e EOE , M/FlV
Desk Cte r ~ neSderJ P:ease
apply
at B udget
Inn ,
Jackson P1ke. Galltpol•s No
phone calls please
Local•busmess looking for
Secr8tary/Aece pt•onest
Must h ave good telephone
skills &amp; goO&lt;l w1th tho pu blic,
~ nowle d ge 111 computers &amp;
co mputer accountm g ' pro·
grams. &amp; all other off•C !l
machtnes Hours · Bam·Spm
8· t 2
MoMay- Fnday
Saturday
Send res ume to
Local Bus•ness
P O eo~ 775
Galhpohs 0 ~ 4563 1

In Meigs County.

Must be self·
st•rter, service
oriented and •ble
to work well with
the public. Must
have v•lld Cjrlver's
licente and rell~
able transportation . Position
otfert all company
benefits Including
health, dental,
vision , 1nd life

Insurance, 401K,
paid vacation, and
pers onal days.
Please send

resume to:
CLA Bo• 200

c/o Pomeroy D•lly

lenUnel
PO Bo• 728

Pomeroy, OH

.5768
Aes •dent• al
Treatment
Fact llty taking appl•cattons
for you1h worker Pay t&gt;aSM
on
expe nence
Pa ed
Insurance Cell . b9tween
9 OOa rn 1 OOpm MondayFru:lay \740)379·9083

www" m1octslon Co m

© 2006 by NEA,

www .comics.com

740·662· 122 2
Local Company
Gall•polts based company Is
seeking candidates tor ful l
and part-ti me posit1ons
We ofler compe!lttve sal ary
and compl ete benefits
pacKage
Applicants must send
resume ~o
Personnel
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

news events a. tld handle
some l ocal government
reportmg for daily new spape r in sou tb ea1tun
Oh io Experience pre·
ferred, bu t entry !eve!

l!

acc;ptab!e.
Send resum e a.nd chp s to
K evm Kelly, Managmg

Ed1tor, Qbto V11.Uey
Publishing Co 826 Thml
Ave. Gallipolis, Ohto

40631. Phone (740) 446·
2342 ext. 18.
The Ch ildren's Home soctety 11 WV Reg •on II off•ce has
an open tng tor a Youth
Serv1css Soc•al Worke r •n
Mason County Th1 s IS a
WVDHHR Coo l,acl Posol,on
Posrt•on
reqUire ments

tncluda Bachelor's degree
tn a Human Servtces f•eld
Soceal Work L•c ense or
Tempo rary Social Wor k
lrcens e eli g1 Die prev tou s
exper1ence w or ~ m g Wll ri
ch•ldren and tam111es ts pre·
!erred TO be cons•dered lor
11"'l.~.~.or:.-:.~.:-:~•'=•"l•:":•~ th•s pos1\lon . quall f•ed appl1·
Tlfed of wQrk tng al l
cants shoul d subrrt1t letter ol
th8 hOlidays?
trite rest. and resurh e to
Arney G1 ll
Tored ot workmg long 12
hour sh•fts ?
Cabell Co DHH A
Come home and JOIO us at 2699 Park Ave Su ite 11 0
MedJ -Home Health! · Hllnt1ngton WV 25704
-.10pen 1ng tor a Full Ttrtl e
B~
close el Ousmess
AN , fu ll benefits package
February 5 2006 EOE

..

1ncludmg 401 K , Sign on I
Bonus $2,500
..r Ope n•ng lor a Pa rt T1me
AN Sign on Bonus

$1.500
Call Judle Reese , AN . C,
Clinical Manager, a1
{740)441 -1779 Of
1·800-481-6334.

·e··········

I

in this newspaper is
, subJect to the Federal

Fa1r Hous•ng Act of 1968
which mak eS It Illegal to
advertise " any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
r11ce, color, relig ion , sex
familial status or nattonal
origin , or any intention to
make any such
discrimination ·

1-877-463-6247
ext. 2458

~
Inc.

******"'*********
Assemble crafts.

I buy Junk Ca rs (304)773·

r

MoNEY

TO LOAN

All real estate advertising

preference , limitation or

C all today to l •nd ou1 now
you can JOin our team ,

866-713-2778 '
www.crstmalone.com

100 WORKERS NEEDED

oNOTICh
HIO VAL LEY PU BLISH
!NG CO recommends tha
ou do bus1ness w1th pea
le you know and NOT 1
end money through t
ma i l ~u nt•l you have 1nvest1
ated the offenn .

shifts
• Weekly Paychecks +
weekly bonus potential
• Pald.vacatlonl Pe ld
holidays .
·Friendly, professJone l
ortlce environment

Home 3-4 Ttmes Weekly
COL-A/ 6 mos OTR elC.p

Ho1u:s
mKSALE

0PI'UKruNrrY

appreciated and under
paid?

Will buy JunJ.! Cars for Scrap
S60 00. Call 740-59 1-8936.

to

BtJ~lN~:·;s

to

Tired of being under

Wanted. Saw mill with power
un•t. Call (740)245-9393 or
(740)441 -4883

Auction House at Glenwood Ortvers. COMPANY
040'
WV beside Glenwood Post
Dedicated Roundtrips
Off•ce, lots of new lurntture
In th e Coalton , KY area
household goods &amp; m1sc
41c Per All Miles+
5· 7 week-old Blue Healer Fn. Feb. 3 starts af 6pm
Benefits
pups. tails docked 304· 458Apx 2350 miles weeky

1860.
WANllill
- - - - - - - -- - - - - L . . . . .
ro._B.~--~

11\\'\(1\1

HEl.P WANTFJJ

.

~200~8~--------~
~r.'o..Hu1
. ·.. .
w.~
.....p
AucnoN

r

lhO

arroW Smart. Contac
he Oh io DiviSIOn o
Fmanc1al
inSt• tution·
of
Co nsume
ff1ce
t1atrs BEFORE you reit
ance your hqme o
btam a IOfl n BEWAR
1 reque sts for any targ
dvimce · p a yment ~ o
ees or msu rance C al
he Ot11ce · ol Con sume
11a1rs toll free at 1-866
78-0003 to learn 1f th
or tgage
bro ker
o
IS
prope r!
e [lder
tcensed (Thts rs a publt

Wanted ·
School Food
Se rv1ce Data Collectors
Abt Assoctates Inc. a soctal
science research company,
is seektng data collectofs for
a school food servtce study
be1ng conducted in schools
in your area for 310 6 wee ks
PROFF..&lt;;SION-\L
dunng Mar thro ugh May
SERVK1~
Knowled ge of . food se rvtee
procedures a pl us Must be
TURNED DOWN ON
detailed- onented, able to
work independently, and SOCIAL SEC URITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W•n!
have ow n trans Portalton
1·888·582·3345
Mu st be able to travel to 4day ·patd tratning 2 /28-314.
HI II I S l\11
expense s
cove red
Excellent pay w11h mtleage
10
H oMES
re 1mbu1sement
Sel ected
FOR
cand1dates w111 be employed
by RSW
Fax resume to
1995 Doublew1de Jbr, 2ba
lynn 71 5·549-55 12 EOE
w/ att aolled
Garage.
150
Breezeway &amp; Barn . 1 56
Smoot.~
acres Sandhill Rd $72·000
(304)895·3068

SALE

IN:&gt;TRLcnoN

This newspaper will not
knoWingly accepl
advertisements for real
fl!'tate Wh1th is 1n
vtoiatlon of the law Ou c
readers. are hereby
. - informed that al l
dwellmgs advert ised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opporhmity bases .

Country setiH\Q 1n Oal ll a
County' 3 bedrooms. 2
b_aths. , l trpplace $85 000

(740)709-,

166.

House tor sale 1n Pomeroy o
land contra ct (740) 992·

5858

MOBILE Ho.\ 1ES

mRS., I r .
10 use d homes unaer
S3 OOQ DO. Must Go Ca ll
Ela 1ne 740-385·0€98
1

16x80 homes sla rt .ng at
$25995 .00 Incl udes v1nyl
Stdtngf Sh in gle roof Ca l!
Russ 740-385-2434 . ·1964 1Ox50 Rembrandt w•tll
fu rmshtngs $ 1.000 0 B 0
(937)981 2111 days
--~------'--­

1968 Mob1le Hom e Approx
10X50 Needs work Aslo mg
Concealed P1stol Class All
20 acre farm 'ol.ll h oustom 2 $500 00 Musl move ASAP
States Feb
1 1 ·2006,
story home built 1r 1 99~ . 740-949-7322 atter 5 PM
S75 oo
9 OOa m ·v Fw
located bet.Neen R1 0 Grande ----~--­
Mason WV. Ph (740)843and Jacksor 3 m• tes oH At t 979 Schultz t 4X70 mobile
55"'5 '
• Sa , CA
35
s2a9 ooo . 70::.0- 384 . "''ome 2 Bd
Must sse to ap~:r e c 1 a te
5
t82
Gallipolis Career College
$8.000
0 80
740·992·
(Ca reers Close To Home l
3 Bed room . 2 Bath w1th 41 46
. Call Todayl 740-44 6·4367
Firep lace m R•o Grande · --~-----­
l-800-214 -0452
area 8 acre s m/1 40x60 1989 Belmont 14x 70 New '
www ga llopoil sc;~ree&lt;college com
barn $ 120 000 t740) 709 f'leatpump rur nace hotwaA ~c redrled
Membe r Accred11lng
:el tank Mu st oe moved
Couhcol to. lndt&gt;pen9en1 CoHeges t t 66
Ver y
clea r
'S 10 BOO
ana Scttools 12748
3BR. 21ull batll , 1.900 sq tt t740J:Ila-s3?5
t70
lull
bas ement
2
car - - - -- -- - , Ml'iLfl .I ANf:Ol;l'
attached garage 3 acres 1996 Skyhne 28). 64 . 3BR
Cheste1 Tow.,sh •p Eas te rn 2BA f rep lace cathearal
sc " col d1str rct Off Rt i near ce111ng 535 000 1740)7092 lots With va ults
Ca ll , ·166
Mem or tal Gardens PriCe Mcm onal Gardens
1740)985 4321 alte r 6pnJ
- - - - - -- neg (7 40)992·3"9
2006 16 Wide Spec •al P·1c e
7BR 5BA Fo reclosur e only St8t •m o ca n \i 40\ 385Lesage Mini Storage
For all your storage needs S18 000 For. ~ls tt n gs ca ll 7671
- - - - -- - m · 80Q-39 1-5228 exl F254
I
0
2BR mob1le home for sa le or
5x10 ,10x1 0. 10x20.201130
Ahenlion•
land contract $3.000.$ 1 000
boats.RV's, campe rs cars
Loca l co mpany .ofler•n g "NO ' down (740 )446-4 107
truclot.s , fe nced OUJS•de park·
DOWN PAYMEN T' pr o- - - -- -- - Ing ' 1st mon. free wrth 4 grams lor you to ovy you f '96 Fleetwood "3 BR Only
month lease Hours Sa m .home mstealj ol rentmg
$169/mo Ca ll (7401385 ·
dark 304 -762-i117 or 304·
• 100°•e linancmg
9948
638 -5981 or 304·762-2014.
• Le ss than pe rfect cred1t - - - - - - - Good clean u ~ed mot:Mie
• .,..,.._..,.,._ _ _ _., accepted
• Payment . c;o ll ld be the homes
tor
sale
O a~
1180 ·
WAJVIl'll
(7401388·8513
Eve nm gs
.
Do
same as rem
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _,~ Mortgag e
Locato rs (740)388·80 17
367 0000
17
Compute r Tro ubl e ShOot
l1°l Great 1opat1on 3br 3br
ard Repa1r Expert Serv•ce Be aut1lul 4 Or 3 lull bat lls 2
1•acre LR FR DR many
740-992- 2395
car gar age tenc ed 1n lot. e:dras (304 1593·0852
comple te ly remooeled 304.House Cl ea n•ng Serv rces 9r
882-2391
L ke 'le w 2002 Claytor'
Sitting w1tll Elae rl y •n thtw
$ t48 rno
Ca ll
1411 52
home In Ma son County
(7401385 "9948
area Call p 04)895· 321 7 to
Home U 1tlnga
leave message or for •nfor Mobile Home 12-65 7br all
l 1SI your 'lom e b ~ cal)tng
maMn
Ch eaP (30..1. 1675 EleGtrrc
(740 )«6·3820
3927 before 9pm·
J&amp; C
Tree
Serv1c e
S

,

'"

'

Tc:i

www.orvb.com

E11 cava11ng 25 years exp
Free es11mat es 304-675·

f340

New Haven WV 4
Bed room 2 B a t ~ 2 Car,
W1ll care for elderly I hi&gt;Ve Garage OumUifdmgs Close
relerenc es
Please call to 1own PR ICE D TO SELL 1
Beverly at 304-6 75- 1084
Cooe 6505 or call 304 )882 3368

2213

Houses tor sa e on New·
Haven 4 br or&gt; Mavo Dr
$85 ()(X) 1rern'ode 1ed '
4 b• Qn ~a ve (\ HetQhts
$7 9
11emodeted1
J b1 on M•d ~"&gt;ay D r~ ve
S ' 10 000 1neVI canst 1

0&amp;:

Jl'l.;-882-3 131 882 r:&gt;8

Bl 'SN X'i

"ll BllUJI~ ~-

For Aen\ 3 Butldmgs lor
BUSiness Use
LOCated 1n
Pomeroy
Also 2 Upsta1r!!
l!nturn•sr ea
Apts
n
POmer oy for Rent Cat ~ JC
589·7 122
S ale ·
Law i ca •e
Bus1ness ah eQL •D 97 3 4
Four
Power s:rok e
tur
Gravely 260-Z Gra\lety Pro
50 16 tra1ie' (7 401742 -8504
E!Vf!n•nqs .
Fo·

�••

Wednesday, February 1, 2006'

www.mydailysentinel.com
HIR Rt:~T

Are now taking Applications
for 2BR, 3BR &amp; 48R .
tak~n
Applications
are
Monday thrU Fnc:lay, trom
9.00 f'. M.-4 P.M. Olhce 1s
apt. close to Holzer Locatec:l at 1 151 Evergreen
hookup. Dcpasll'reler- Onve Po1nt Pleasant, WV
tequ1red (740)3J9 - Phone No IS (304)675cell number.
5806. E.H 0

RFAL~:,nm

I BR
WID
ence
Need to sell your horne ? 0362
Late on paymems, d1vorce.
1ST MON. FREE RENT
JDD transfer or a death? I
WITH PAID DEP NEW
can buy your h.ome All cash
ELLM VIEW
and qu1ck. clostng . 740·416·
TOWNHOUSE/APT$
3130
NOW LEASINGI
lU'\1\IS
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
1"10
HOlSt';;
TOWNHOUSES
HlHRENI'
AVAILABLE
'ALL ELECTRIC
"CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
2 Bd Rm. house w1th l.arge
'STOVE REF..
kitchen . Otj street parking
'DISHWASHER
and storage
Askmg
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
5425.00.
Poss1ble HUD.
'WIND BLINDS
740~243'5811 '
· 'CEILING FANS
2 Dr 1 Da .. 7 miles on Rt 2
' WATER , SEWAGE . &amp;
North from PT Plea s:.nt rent
'TRASH INCLUDED
S375., dep 5300. no pets
PE TS CONDITIONAL
304 -675-238-1
(304)682·301-7

w-.."m)

2 or 3 Bd. Rrn . house .in
Middleport 5425.00 M ..
$200.00 Oepos1t. 740-9492025 or ·740-949-0007
HUD Available.

L"'

.h·~~··~Cirr•c·•-·

Tw1n Rivers Tower IS accept·
1ng applrcatiOilS tor wait1ng
lrst tor Hud-subsized. 1- br.
apa rtm'erit. can 675-6679
EHO

SPACE

'/ I

2 bedroom apa1 tmen.t Meigs

2 bedroom Apt available 1n
5200 depos11
4BR house m town, near Syracuse.
1" 70
school. $700/mo _ deposit &amp; S350 per month rent . Rent

ROCKY HUPP

740·992-8153

IND FINAJICIIL
'SEIVICES
P.O.Bn119

:ROGER HYSEll
GHRHGE
i

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on Stale Rt. 124

Buy
or
se ll. Riverine
Antiques. t 124 E8st Main
on SR 124 E, Pomeroy. 740RLiss Moore .
992'·2526
owne r.

MlSCt:J.L\NEOUS ·
. MERCtl·\ NUL'E

Border Collie pups $125
(304)895-3328

30

VANS
FUR SALt:

m Henderson, WV.

Pre2BR apt
washer dryer owned Apphcanes starting
HI I.E Ho) 1•~~
hookup, close to hosp1tal, at $75 &amp; up all under
FOR Rt:~T
also
halle
also lOx I 2 storage bldg. Wananty.
HousehOld
Mise Items
{740).141 ·0117.
2 oedfoom mobile home in
start ing at .99c
&amp; up
· Rac1ne. S375 mo. plus $375 Beautiful 2-story townhoLJse 1304)675·7999
·
depoSit , years lease . no overlooking Gallipolis C1ty ~~~~-~-~pwk..
Kitchen.
D.R
.
LR
..
· pets. no calls arter 9pm.
G .E. washer heavy duty
study. 3BR. 2 bathS, laundry $95; G.E dr·yer $~5 : retnger~
(740)992-5039
area. References required, ator 2 door lrost free $125;
2 Bedroom Trailer $400 pe r security deposit, no pets. Maytag washer like f)ew
month and $400 deposit. $900 mo. Call (740 )446- $1 6 5. Genes Appliances 76
Water and Sewer. Garbage 2325 or (740)4 46 -4425
Vme St. (740)446-7100 or
,nctuded. Carport.
and
(740)367·7886
Porch. All Electric Ret. and BEAUTIFUL
APART·
AT
BUDGET l ongaberger
For
sale
Stove 1ncludea , No Pets. MENTS
In town Aac1ne . References PRICES AT JACKSON Baskets and Pottery Call
reqwed .
740-949·2217 ESTATES.' 52 Westwood 740·446-3168.
Drive from $344 to 5442
7.00 A.M . to 7 00 P.M.
Walk to shop &amp; mo1,1ies. OaU Mov1ng Sale- Quality bed·
Equal room. l1vingroom turhiture .
2BR house for rent Ssqo per 740-446-25'68
console organ and more.
mo. S500 deposit. In \!Ouslllg Opportunity
(740)256· 1428 See
KanatJga. no pets. {740)446CONVENIENTLY LOCAT.- bc-sales.com lor pictu res
4107
EO &amp;: AP:FOAOABLE!
and mfo.
2br Mobrle Home tor Rent all · Townhouse
apartments. :---:---:---'~~
Electric
m
Mas on, and/or small hOupes FOR New Furniture S450. Call
S300/month pluS: Deposit NO RENT. Call (716)441-1 111 (740)446 -7444
PetS (304)773-57.51
for applicatiOn &amp; 1nlormation
Thompsons Appliance 8.
Repair-675 -7388. For sale .'
Gracious
11vinQ.
1
and
2
bed·
2BR, furnished, no pets .. ref automatic
-erence $375 mo. $300 room apartments at V1llage (e-cond1t1oned
and · Rrvers1de washers &amp; dryers, re frigera deposit. water pa1a Phone Manor
tors . gaS ariO electric
Apartrr~ents 111 Middleport
(740)44 ·1·0829.
.
From 5295-$444 · Call 740- ranges . air conditioners , and
3 bedroom mobile home' m 992-5064 . Equal Hous1ng wrmger washers. W ill do
country. (740]256-6574
Opportun111es
repaits on mafor brands in
shop or at your home
3Br. Refndg &amp; Stove Washer Middleport 1 and 2 Bedroom
&amp; Dryer Included (304)576- furmshed Apts . No 'pets. 520
2934
depOslt., an~ prev1ous rental
.\rl WillS
references 740-"992 -01.65.
Mob1IE! home s pac~s in
Country Mob1le Home Rark . Modern 1 bedroom 8pt· Mathews Solo Carr arrow
(740)~ 4 6·0390
web. ' extreme sigh t S
1740)385-4019
arrows 223 Ha.nd1 R1fle newl
Newer· -2 Bd Am . tra1 ler Modern 1 bedroom apt No &amp; Bushliell scope . 30-06
Cemrat
heat and a1r. pets. $265/.,o ll"lC,ud es Mark X &amp; scope Kn1ght LK
Covered porch and patiO. water.
$200
dep osit 50 cat. &amp; scope . (740)446Partly turn 1shed
S425.00 · (740)446·3617 •
36S2.
740-243-5811
New Haven.
bedro om Mauser Bol t Act1o n Rille ."
N1ce 2 Bd Rm trader 1n unfurnished apar tment. n'o 7 62 mm (:~08 Cal) Good
M1ddleP,o rt
$350 .00 M . pets . depos1l &amp; p rev1 ous ShOoter. Span1sh Creston
.;;2cio 00 deposit . 740-949- rental references. (7'40)992 -· Cleceiver S200 1304)6752025 or 740-949·0007 HUD 0165
2558
A.va1lable
N1te one BR unfu•n1shed
Tra 1ler lot Rent 2b{. all apartment. Range &amp; refrig
$3001mon th, prov1ded Water &amp; garbage
Elecmc AC
ol us u11 1111eS. Deoos1t. No pauj, Oepos1t reqwed Call
1740)446-4345 alter 6pm
Pets (304 )675-4874

SI'ORnN&lt;;

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Late Kenny Stewart. 43724
Carr Road . From SI.At 7 in '
Tuppers .Plains. OH take Sl
Rt. 681 West . Go Appro~ . 7
I'V11Ies to Elk A1Jn Road Turn
right. Go 1/2 miles to the tee
in roao. turn right on · Carr
Road 1st mobile home on
left, Everything wi ll be sold.
1994 Buick Century 4 door.
Water bed . dining room and
living 10om tab le s and odds
and ends. Tools computer

w;p•nte
•I
r, othe r co m p u1e,•,
and PC's.

-

Car's. Pickups, Vans. SUV':;, BUDGET
TRANSMIS·
For Sale- Black Angu S bull. Jeep Wra nglers . Ma ny to SIONS, All types. (740)245·
aprox 1.200 lbs
Call choose from $ 1.000 to 5677'or 7.40 645·7400
$7.50Q.
("4_0)446·25 14. .
CAlliPERS &amp;
8&amp;0 Auto Sales
MOTOR H0\11::&gt;;
Hwy 160 N.

. · --S·A-LE.:. .~
... . . . . ·UR·

1997 Hornet 231! . 5th wheel.
w/air, awning, self-co ntained. hght w~ig ht,. $6.090
OBO
(740)245-9109 . or

1985 Chevy 1-ton dump
truck. new motor, cab &amp;
paint. Used da1ly. Asking
$3,000. (740)256· 1253

~

15

TRUCKS

2001 4dr V-6 Dakota a utomatiC, 90,000 miles. 4WD
$8.500. (740)3~9- 1 620.

t

-~~~~~~--

Dealer : North

~S?u~!~4
F:RANK &amp;.·EARNEST

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

G~A/&lt;'lltt1A~

Hill's Self
Storage

•

••&lt;

.

.. '

101-L W~EVIL
'

'

JOLt- Mtl&gt;Vtl-

'

BOLL liGVIL

' . slael(ii '
to 11))!AA: . .,.l

'CUZ GRANNY

1 STILL GOT AN
EYE FER A WEL.L.nmNEJ) AN(I.E !I

W'-'&gt;1\J

LET ME LOOK NO

HIGHeR!!

r

Alaskan Malamute pvppies
for sale Can't r'eg1ster. but
we have both parehts ..
(740)256-64 14 or (740)645~ .
2381

.

PERMONTH!

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH
10x10x10x20

Rool1ng &amp; Remodeling Co. ,
. Rubber RoOfing. Room •
Addllior;s Decks, Shingles.
S1dmg . Wrndows, Pole Sarns

740·245-o437

,.

h_....,

Lic..,...,:l l - -

~·-b•l-

30Y-.

THE BORN LOSER
li'W)W n~e: m~'&lt;""

~

00, (ct-\E 01'\, W.'Vr:J!
D0!-1\ &amp;.I&gt;. \)l'o,e,'!' ~

rW&gt;l:) "'¥£ 1-\IG*\, WI

992-l194
or 992-66l5

1'*""16 YCIU'IJE. 60TTO TUfitlo\

_,__, !, vP1J\£ ;(E.f\T!

." Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

II'~ 1'\0\ I ~"AI

-;r

1'-10? 1fl.E.RE ~~
ICE.&amp;.R6S I\.1 me:
GOLI:&gt;FlSfl. 5QWL .1

5,..,1:&gt; .1

Roc~ ''RJ,;
Hupp.

"SPtTSY C ANNOT
FII.LL A SLEEP UNLESS.
HE t S LI STENING TO
THE STIRR1N&amp; VOCALS

Shop the
Clas.sifieds!

OF POP sUPEI'.STAR.
CLA.Y AIKEN ••

Athens

.Meigs Co. Residents!!!

BUCKEYE.SanitaUon
SEPTIC TANK Pi/MPING $95.00
PORTA8lE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
591·8757
-Economy Beef$7.35
-Shade R1ver Beef S8.1 0
-Whole/Shell Corn $6.45/Bag
•Cracked Corn 57.45/Bag
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag ·
-Shade River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

•

REA NUTS
: DIDN'T CATC~ -mE
POLAR BEAR . I-JU~?

-

For more information. contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing
office.
,

MAKf
SOMfONt'S
DAY/ .

Mini ~lorage

740-992-6396
740-992-2272
Units 10x20 10x12
'

.

~«llipolis13«ilP Q::nblllll:

(740) 446~2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

tuoiut lJlr«s«nt

A·J

NEWS
I

l~rgistrr

(304) 675-1333 .

•

GARFIELD
GeE, t HOI:'E OUR FACE~
170N'T' FREEZE LIKE 1"1-·US

0

Complele Tree Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand Sl.
Gallipolis , OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.
Owner
Insured Free Est.

Now Available AI

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractor.s
"TakiliJ: Tir e Sti11g Our Of
/lard Work! "
Mid-Sih' -1W heel Driw Tract or
w i1h .~O it p &amp; -IOitp Kubola, Engine,"

BAUM. LUMBER .
·St. Rt. 124 C hesler 91:15-330 I

DO NOW?

rr's (J&gt;o8U;.

.I

Now Renting

GOING TO

1J.ll;.'( '5/W

35537 St Rl 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-383i

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04.:
per month.

NO, I DON'T KNOW W~AT
A MOOSE TASTES LIKE

ARE 'r'OU

SUNSHINE CLUB

CLASSIFIED$
aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday.
provide a Tbank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.

W~AI

•

Shade River AG Service, Inc
THE

...

only two points, his hand !las excellent
playing potential opposite four hearts and
a singleton club (a pos~ible Ea st holding).
North is nearly wortll a three-spade
rebid, but he has seven losers South
might have made a three-diamond game·
try (which North would have accepted by
j~J mping to four sp_ades,, but with only
seven losers (Which counsel jumping to
game), he decided not to give free infor·
mation to his opponems.
You mUst not COf1C€de a trump trick..
Normally, with nif')e cards missi!lg the
queen, you play off the ace and king:
eight ever (~always~ finess e), nine nearly
never. But remember the bidding. Ea st's
takeo ut dpuble guaranteed at least three
'cards tn eac h ol the unbid suits. So, you
should lead a sPade to dummy's ace.
then play a spade to your jack .
Always analyze the au ction.

AstroGraph

$89·.'

GRIZZWELLS
SMACK! ~AT
'liM :rHo F\1-lEST
'llrS!1 It-\6

'CJ.RCA??

.rvc m~
~At' !

nickname

40 Pretend

1 Free rldeo
6 - over

41 Rocket
trajeclory
42 RR terminal
43 Sounds
cream
of heoi1atJon
15 Grand Tour 44 Qty.
site
46 St. Louis
16 Satirical,
time
maybe
48 Cruise stop
17 Extreme
· 51 Breathlo
degree
55 Have plans
18 Law ,
56 Reunion
to Caesar
attendees
19 Yon maiden 57 Choir
21 Cyber!Jpace
members
11
letters
58 Bear down
23 Those
. 13
elected
DOWN
19
26 - chi
27 Consumer
1 Notam .
20
protection
or mecl.
22
2 Deblmemo
org.
28 Bumps into 3 .Gilt-tag
24
30 Elev.
· word
31 Gl hangout 4 Juicy steak 25
32 Famous
(hyph.l
racetrack
5 Fall mo.
26
33 Gave as an 6 Whale's diet
examplft
7 Dublin 's
27
35 Business
land
28
. mag
8 Glues
37 Overtime
9 Hosp.
29
reason
employee
38 Roas1
34
10 Inventor
· cookers ·
~ Whllney
(lalntedl
12 Peanut
14 Fudgy Ice

Ca,.ndlr
abbr.
Flxeo up

36 VItamin B
. component .
42 Small
Oi!l"s11ve
earrlngo
fluid
43 Knockou1
Bat swinger
gao
Orchestra 45 Ridt;tr's
member
handhold
Honey
47 Fabric
source
sample
Zeno
4ll Robin 'o
followers
beak
Kind
49 Wheel buy
ol11lad
(2 wda.)
Leala out
50 City rtea.
PC
52 Excellent
alternatives 53 Gu~ariat

Prooter'a
word

- Paul
54 Slalom run

Puts
In

·

a box

b.-1--+-+-+--

sions. North opened one club because
his hand was a tad shy of the values for
one no- trump. East had a clear-cut take·
out double. Now South, with 1'0 points,
might have started with redouble, but he
preferred to search for a ~ulnerable game
rather than try to penalize nonvulnerable
opponent~. I think West should have bid
two hearts at th is point. Although he has

BARNEY

45771

740-949·2217

· Garages, New Homes
Residential &amp; Commercial

Pass

39 Family

contract could be made . Today's deal features a well-known suit com bination, but
is the a priori percentage play right or
wrong? You are in four spades . .West ,
. leads a heart, East taking two tricks 1n the
suit before shifting to a diamond. What do
you think of the bidd ing ? "
The auction contained several close decl·

''
•

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

MANLEY.S
SELF STORAGE

Pass

Veslerday's deal highligh ted a safety:play· ·
success whenever ihe' ·

WV#

• Complete
Remodeling

Pa:ss
Pass

East
Dbl

that guaranteed

(740) 992-0496

• New Homes

1A

North
I. .
2•
Pa:ss

From a safety-play
to a bidding play

. INSECT

Licen sed Home Builde,r

·Garages

West

Opening lead : ¥ 7

Owner ·

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICnON

South
4•

. Chuck Wolfe

Chevy Colorado Ext Cab
'05. Auto. 2WD, wibedlmer,
excellent cond1tion . Ke lly
Blue Book $14.600. will sell
!OI S13.600. (30 4)523- 1179

1993 Chevy 4x4 $4,695:
1998 GMC Jimmp' 4x4
55,695:
1997 . Dodge
Block, bnck. sewer p1pe s, Ra&lt;n 150
$3.695.
1998
wihdows. lintels, etc Claude Honda Odyssey van $5.995:
W1nlers. R10 Grande. O H 1998 Chevy Metro $2.995: 720
SUVs
Call 740-245 ·5 121
2000 Cav,alier .$~ , 995 Othe1
FOHSALE
truck:; , vans and cars 1n
I'El'i
stock 328 Jackson Pike,
FOK S,\u;
Chevy Tra'ilblazer
Cook Motors , · (740)446- 2004
~WD wltow pl&lt;.g.
Kel ty
0103
2. F:ema le Shar-Pe1 pups 9
Bluobooks
@ · $22,000
weeks old
Shots and 1995 Chevrolet Lumina LS many extras 10,500 miles,
WOrrQeO 5150 .00 740-992-. for sale. Ru ns but needs, excellent condition, garage
work . $500 080. Galt kept
9105. May call.un Sunoay.
$ 18 .900 ( 304)675(7 40)446· 7005.
1408
AKC Lab pups. f1eld and
waterlowl hunl1 ng Dlood·
lines calm and fam11y anentad, excellent pups. ~xcellen t
pnce (7 40)418-8388

. StPI'UtS

K J H a
9 3
K Q J 8

... 52

IMPORTS

· 2001 Dodge Ram truck
2500 SLT Heavy Duty.
springs. ca mper spedaJ.o1 0·
ply !ires. $7,500. Call Ed
(740)367-0624
-~~~~~~~­
98 Chevy ext. cab 4x4. 350 r...-,;;;--;--;--;-~~--,
Vortec 5-speed. 57.500
080.' Must sell . (740)2566772.

10' 4 J

Vulnerable : Nor1h·South

10

BASEMENT
WAT·ERPROOFING
Unconditional lifet1me guarantee. LoCal references fur·
nished : Established 1975.
Call
24 HrS. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproot1ng .

•

... A 7

•
•

(7 40) ~46-6865 .

Auros

¥ A K J 6

South

•(!ijiiQiJiiiji(ifW

ssaoo.

BLILIIINC;

AlU:SSORIFS

C548.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
S5oor PcMice Impounds!
Repaired. New &amp; RebUilt In Cars from SSOO. FOr listings
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- 800-3s:l 1·5227 €)(! 390 1
800·537-9528.
'98 2Dr Black Explorer
Spor! 4x4. Pwr. every1hing
New and Used Furnaces. rear vent. . 94k mi.
Installat ion
avai labl e 709-1276eve . 446- 11 13day
(7 40)441-2667.
198i: chevy van make good
NEW ANO USED STEEL work va n $800
Steel Bea ms. P1pe Rebar 1SfL Cluat axle ca r frailer
For
Cor'lcrete,
Angle. w1re floor. NeW lues. small
Channs l. Flat Bar. Steel w1nch. good shape. S800 .
Grating
For
Drams. (740)379·9297.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Cadillac
Sedan
Scrap Metal s Open Monday, 1992
061,11116.
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Great condition
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed 95.000mi., leathe• interior.
Thursday.
Salurday
&amp; CO player and system. runs
great 52 .000 (7401446Sunday (740)446-7300
7820 or (740)709·9532.

ON THIS PAGE FOR
ASLOW.AS

$26.00

Ll~mx:K

FUR SALE

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS
.

r

East
• Q' 8

10
Qt 0872

• 7 ,
... 9 ' 8643

MIKE MARCU

2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinl&gt;~:m
500 ATV with 34 miles.
CARM IC HA EL
$4900.
EQUIPMENT.
1740)44 6·
2004 Jeep liberty, eMcellent 2412.
concl1tion, less !han 15,000
mile ~ ; , $ 17,000
Ca ll Harley
Davidson
1999
(740) 446·4028
, X~883 Sp.ortster wt extras
$5.500 080. Ca ll (740)245·
1"\IHI Sl 11111 II S
. 94 Hond a Accord. $700. 5165
.
&amp; 1.1\ I ..,I&lt;H h.
Cars from $500, Ford list·
60 AL1'0 PAR'IS &amp;
~-=:o------..., ings 800-39 1-5227
ext.

O'.l OJ-o6

A 6 52
54
A 6 5
K Q J 10

WeRt
•
¥

Stop &amp; Compare

· 2BR apartments. Sta rt11 g at

Warehouse

'

MONTY

740-992-1611

2bd upstairs apt stove ,
\II'IH'II \\DIS!'
fridge furnished wa!erl trash - : - ; : ; - - : - : - - - - - - ,
pa1d . . $325 tmonth
plus J510
HOLISEHOLD
deposit.
Goo!~
Stop ren)ing BtJy 4 bedroom
3bd house 5350/month plus
fo reclosur~ $15.000 Fo r list·m gs 800-391·5228 ext . deposit (740}446-7620 or
(740)441·9872
1709
Th ree b'edroorn House 1n $375/month . Loc8ted on SA
Po.meroy Rent IS $450 and 160.
SR
850,
Bob
deposi1 1s $450. References McCorm 1ck
Ro .
Call
requrred
Gas heat and (74QJ44 1·0 194 or t740)441electric a1r 740-388-8277
1184.

t
•

Pta• Col You aanvi'
E-mail
we can 1e1~1111 rbiPII@IIriiiii.H.etll

Locatcrs

-~~~~~~~~

•
•

MldiiiPin.DMI
Phone: 740-143-!1214
Fill: 148-843-1214

lew Medicare Drug

4x4
FOil SALE

2001 Ford Expedll!on, Eddie
Bauer Edition. fully loaded,
moonroof. runn1rig boards,
10
t\ UJnS
PF.IJ;
67.500 mites. greal shape.
FOR. SALE
FOR SALE
red and tar1 exter ior. ta n
leather
interior.
asking
AKC
Siber ian
Husk ys. 1995 Ford Cr.own Victoria $1 9,500. Call441-14l7 ·afte r
6weeks old, blue eyes LX 135k miles. good condi- 5pm or leave message.
Black!wh1le.
Drown/white tion. new t1res, $2 ,600 Calt
$300/each . white $350/each 1740)441 -9282.
Bl,ac~ 1994 ForQ Fi 50, 5.8L,
first shots/Wormed. Call
short bed , great condition .
(740)286-9855.
$3,500. (740)367-7245

North

INSURANCE

lazar Backhoe

r

w,~-m&gt;
TO RI:N'r

No mcludes water. sewer. trash
No pets. Sul11cient im::ome
needed to qualify 740-378- ResponSible non-smok1ng
couple looking to rent house
4br
1n .
Syracuse. 6111
or mob1le home 1n northern
$6001mqnth &lt;\ Deposit.
Water/Sewer 1ncluded. No 2 bedroom apt. WID hookup. Meigs County. Must De in a
Water , trash , sewer pd. country setting and allow
Pets (394)€75-5332 ,
$400.
pels. Please cal l late after·
Attentio n!
1 bedroom apt relrig. stove. · noon or evening (740)591Local company ol1ering ' NO S325. water . sewe1. trash pd. 9843
DOWN PAYM ENT" pro- (740 )367-7746· 1740)367- c-----~--~:-'-~
Small 6 member hun!ing
grams for you to buy y·Ju r 7015- ~140)446-4734 .
group looking to lease
home instead of -9ntlng
2 room !urn1shed elfic1ency Gall1a. Me1 gs. or near-by
' 100°o financing
apartment .. clean down·
~
county farm for turkey or
· Less man perfeq credit
s~a 1 rs.
utilit1es
paid. de er hunting. Contac t John
accepted •
19~'~~- 201-407-4835.
6 ._1 _
5_
· Payment could be the _(7_4_0_14_4_
referneces reqUired .
pets (740)388- 11 00.

BARN
REMOVAl

992-5682

Downtown. Office Space- 5
room su1te $650/mo: 1 room
office.· $225/ mo.; 2 room
sune $250/ mo. Secunty
deposit requ1red. You pay
ut1htles. All spaces very n•ce:
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
lor §f!Q_Ointment

i7 4 1J ) 9~2-2979

)i

Phillip
Alder

mR Rt:~;r

.,,

· NEA Crossword Puzzle ·
ACROSS

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

Tara
Townhouse
Apa rtments. Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Poo'l, Pa t1o. Start $395/ Mo.
No
Pots . . L~ase
Plus
Security Deposit Requ1red.
(740)367-7086

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7 ·

BRIDGE

Last
Word

Shadylawn
Apar tment
StudiO &amp; 1 bedroom apartments. Deposit requi r6d .
Apply
at
Johnsons
Supermarket 1n ~allipolis

COI,.lllty, very nrce . clean
3 to 4 bedroom home in $425 per . month plus
Po meroy HUD ava1lable . depos11 no pets. references
$450 mo . $450 depos1\, call requ1red. (740)992-5174

same as rent
Mortgage
(140}367-0000

Good
to the

Pleasa~t Valley Apartment

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments. furniShed and unfurnished. secunty depos1t
requ1red no pets_ 740-9922218

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP

Alt~Rl'llt~VI'S

AI•AR1'MF.I&gt;1S
FOR Rt:~;r
2:2 acreS, wonderful view ,
ndgetop property. close to
ma1n h1ghway perfect tor 4·
wheeler trails {740!707:2109

Wednesday, February 1, 2006

-

'lllrtbda,y:

Thursday, Feb. 2; :W06
.
By Bernice Bede Osoi
Dare to be a bolder and more ente rpns1ng
·person m the year ahead. Cou rageously
establ1sh definite objectives financially and
professionally in areas where you can
make it big. and don't be afraid to try
methods others don't endorse.
AOL!A~ IUS (Jan. 20-Feo. 19) ~Try not to
be reluctant today about shanng what you
have with ano!her. If you stop and remem.
ber what ft11s perSOn mrghl hav~ done for
yoU. you'll have no trouble having · a
change of heart.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)- You could
be greally in'lluenced by the co;11pany you
keep today. Fortunately, you'll be assoc1at·
ing mos tly wi!tr nice people. but if one hap· ·
pens to be a bit sellish. stick w11h the
malority.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19)- If there IS a
major amb1t1on you 're desJrOllS of brmg1ng
to fru1tion today, do not al(ow you rsell to
gel Sidetracked by emo~ol"lal outside 1nflu·
ences . Focus your eye on your own target·
TAURUS (April 20~ M ay 201 - Don't let
someone stir Jhrngs up and create complrcat1ans f.or you tod&lt;:~y JUS! because th1s person d9esn'l like· certain people you 're
mvolved With . It's hiS or ht'H probl~m . no1
yours.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 201- There are a
few people who would tove lo trrP you, uD
today and may eve,n try. but they'll have no
success A l1t1le def1 maneuvenng on your
part w11t enable you to skrp nghf over them
CANCER (Ju ne 2 t -July 22)- T\Je reason
you 've been unable to resolve a certain
P.robrem could be due 10 the angte !rom
which you've. been viewing 11 A trash slant
can pr01,11de. that elu _
s1ve answer you've
been seeking
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) - Dbn'l snarl
lhings !or yourself today by seek1ng a complica ted answer to a career matter tfiat's
bothe rrng VOU- Chances are r1's some little
hrdden thi['IQ that IS at the ~ore and can b"'
easrly f1xed,
VIRGO {Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - 'r'our per·
lormance levelrs apt to be up a lew nolches today, $0 tiy to make tt-Je most of 11 Yes.
you might make a boo-boo or two but they
can easily be corrected as you move
along .
,
' ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ) - Something
you thought could be eas11y acco:mptished
loday may conta1n a snag or two and
untess you realize. 1t's only that. you could
comp11cate things. Keep everyt!·ung in perspective .
·
SCORPIO (Del . 24·Nov. 22 ) - In order to
further a personal rnterest toda)', you may
be reQuired to teke a chance. now and
then . If you teet the odds are .1n your favor
don't be alraid to gamble on what you thmk
is right.
SAG ITI~ A IUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21) - l.h1S IS
on e Ot those days when l't Is imponant 10
keep tne sates · slips andl or warranty ot
anyth ing )'Ou buy, especially if il Is expen .
S1ve . There "a a strong ch ance ' you may
need one or both
CAPRICORN (Dec 22·Jan · 19) - Vou
mey be mort Interested Ill !urtherlng a per·
sona1 Interet\ today thtn you ""' 111 be at
mtklnQ frlendt Howtver. if you put you r
mind to 11. you can at 111 do both w1th tQuat·
ly good ruulta

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Ceietlnty Qpl\er ~raiTI! ar~ c ~atl!lllr(.n q~ by famous people, pas1 ard priMI'l!
Each lttte1 1n tt1e Ct!lMr stands !of antllhe&lt;

Toriay's due · R eQIJ81s H

" AIYNAXYSATX

VYGGO

ME

XWDWG

JWGW.

AS ,

NT

J W

JAKK

ST

TUSWX

J T G K. C E
PMS

JASRTMS

XTJRWGW .

YESGTXTIWG

V Y GK

E YN YX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·Happiness is when wha1 yoo think . wha1 you say.
and whal you do are tn h8rmony." :.._ Mahatma Gandht

~~~i:~:~' S©\\~~-~"Btr~· liMI
llited by C~Y l . POLL,AH - ' · ----0 four
Reorrcr~Q' lette r' of
s::romb!ed wordJ
WOlD

lew

I

10

lc•m lour s.lmple wofds

N·Y-KODE

I
I

ANESN

I

THN0 C

I

I I Is I

~

J

tax is paid on what
goes into yQur w~llet and
In co me

s;:tles tax is paid on what .you

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

~

-.-·~"TS_ f.l.,r.U_T,-,-Ir-11
6 I: I
0

I I 1
_

_

_

_

_

L...l_.L....J_..L~L_J you

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of it!
lit.ll6

Ccl'lpl e ~e :he churkl ~ t::lJo led
by hlli ng in !he ~. ~~srr~~ .... orcil
develop !rom :ilep No .3 b ~Jc .,., ,

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS I.IJIXl6
Fruit - ·rnrew Fourtl1 - MOUTH S!IUT

Nirn~u' -

"Tit usc \\ itlt a gooiJ com.mand of their'language, •·

tlie professor in funned his class, "must know
when to keep their MOtJrH SHUT."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
'NU.~•.IF THAI'!&gt; 't'OUR.IC{A
0!= ~IN ICl., YOU CAIJ ,))';f

CAUCU.. /lo.Y ACCOO~T. 1

\

�I

Page BS • The Dhlly Sentinel

'

Patrols, radar increase on
highway to Super Bo~l
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Super Bowl runs through
Ohio for Pittsburgh Steelers
fans - at least those driving
to the game in Detroit
The Ohio Turnpike is
quickest route for the 4 1/2hour, 285-mi le trip from the
Steel City to the Motor City.
With that in mind. the Ohio
State Highway Patrol is gearing up for the anticipated
Black-and-Gold caravan.
State
troopers · have
increased
their
patrols,
including more radar to help

enforce the speed limit , said
Sgt. Tony Bradshaw, a
spokesp1an for the highway
patrol.
·
,
He insisted it isn't a plot by
disgruntled
Cleveland
Browns and Cincinnati
Bengals fans
to
slap
Pittsburgh fans with speeding
tickets.
··we· re out there to make
sure traffic is running smoothly regard less of whatever
alliances someone may have,"
he said. "We want everyone
to get to where they 're going

smoothly and safely."
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette cartoonist Rob Rogers noted in
his online sketch journal that
he saw seven troopers with
radar guns when he made the
trip Monday afternoon.
Turnpike
spokeswoman
Lauren f1akos said the agc,ncy
will increase staffing at a few
key interchanges leading into
Michigan to collect tolls.
Pittsburgh fans taking the
most direct route wi II puy
$6.55 for a one-way toll.

Hasselbeck enjoying Super Bowl
DETROIT (AP)
Oh, Roeth)isberger was ·asked
brother. This was the 3,456th what he Jislikes abou t going
question already this week play ing away fro m P1ttshurgh
asking
unuer-appreciated for a· fourth c-onsec utive
Seattle about being a four- game .
.
point underdog to . Pittsburgh
"My dog, .. he said, speakin the Super Bowl.
ing fondly of the Rottweiler
But instead of the rote, pat named Zeus that stayed back
response of "whatever," Mall in Pittsburgh. "If I cou ld have
• Hasselbeck used the tired my doo.here it would be perquery during media day feet. abut Coach Cow her
Tuesday to add to a season m · wouldn' t let me bring him."
It 's al l laughs now for
which he has risen from
.unknown to the NFC passing Roethlisberger, after a playoff
leader and Pro Bowl starter.
flameout and acknowledged
He put ,standup comedian "fatigue ended his rookie seaon his resume.
son of 2004.
With his team cap on backIt 's also all fun for
wa rd.
the
dry-witted Hasse lbeck. thanks to 24
Hasselbeck exci ted ly spread tou chdown passes, just nine
his arms wide to pantomime interceptions - · his careerexc itement. His high voice - low for an entire i"nj ury-free
"You kn ow. kind of like ... a season - and a 66 percent
girl." according to his playful compi&lt;!tion rate.
antagonist, teammate Robbie
''It al l came together this
Tobedc -. climbed higher.
.s·easnn and. he has had his best
·"Do we in the locker room season." HolmgreAsaid.
even say, 'OK. We're favored
But it wasn't always a gas
by 2 1/2 points. All right !'? for Hasselbei:k in Seattle.
No, no one does that ."
In 2001. the joke was on
Hasselbeck said. shaking lli s him .
·
bald head fo r emphasis.
Holingren. in hi s third sea"As
Coach
(Mike) son coaching Seattle after
Holmgren likes to say, all that leavino Green Bav, had just
stuff is minutia. I don 't know tradect"with the Packers to get
what that means, but I hear Hassdbeck to be his starting
him say it."
quarterback . He had j ust finNext came the inevitable ished hi s third season learning
intrusion by roving t~ l evision behind Brett Favre .
"reporter" and comedian
Hasselbeck had zero career
Gilbert Gottfried.
starts. He was a sixth-round
"Oh ,
hi
Gi lbert," draft choice from Boston
Hasselbeck droned. feigning Col lege. Holmgren 's Packers
annoya.nce.
were the onl v team to call him
The comedian loud ly asked for a pre-drah tryout - yet he
Hasselbeck for a joke.
now acknowledges he was
Without hesitation , the arrooa nt and difficult to
quarterback said: "There are coacl1.
three kinds of people in this
But
Holmgren
loved
world. :rhere are people ·who Hasselbeck 's intelligence.
know how to count. And there
Those brains got a beating
are people who don't.''
in hi s second game as
Silence. And blank stares Seattle's
200 I
starter.
-even from Gottfried.
·Phil adelphia hit tile new quar"Anybody else?" he asked. terback so often in a 27-3
"That was pretty good, eh7 Eag les' win the Seahawks
Just made that up. Thank you. almost had to peel him off the
Tharik you very much."
turf at old Veterans Stadium.
'Hasselbeck was n·t the on ly
The following week, he
quarterback crack ing jokes strained a groi n muscle. He
during Amateur Hour at Ford sat the nex.t two ga 01eS behind
Field.
Trent Pilfer. Hasselbeck
Pittsburgh' s
Ben eve ntually returned for nine

Wednesday, February l,

www.mydailysentinel.com

more starts- live were losses- before he hurt his passing shoulder.
"Instead of people sayin~,
' Hey, I feel bad for you,' tt
felt more like people were
applauding ... No, it didn't
feel that way, it WAS that
way," Hasselbeck iraid. "lt
was tough. It was very, very
toug h.''
..
Before 2002, the Seahawks
.kept Pilfer from leaving as a
free agent by promlSing he
would start. But in the first
p~eseason game, Pilfer hurt
hts knee. Hasse lbeck came
back again. And struggled
again. Pilfer returned in Week
2.
.
Then, on Oct. 27, 2002, at
Dallas, Pilfer tore an
Achilles·. tendon. Hasselbeck
entered and led the Seahawks
·to a IJ- 14 win. He started the
final nine games, pas.sing for
300 yards four·times and over
400 yards twice .. both
Seahawks' season records.
He 's started ever since.
"Well. it' s taken a litt·le
while,"
Holmgren
said
Tues.day. "But right now we
are in a very, very ·good
place."
, Hasselbeck completed 67
percent of. hi s throws with
three touchdown s and no
interceptions in two playoff
wins: He almost single-handedly took over the di visionalround wir over Was hingtot;~
after leag ue MVP Shaun
Alexander le ft in the fi rst
quarter with a c"oncu~sion .
''He's just matured," said
receiver Bobby Engram, who
arri ved in Seattle with
Hasselbeck in 2001. ;.'He's
taken hi s lumps like any star
quarterback. but he 's d ~a lt
with it ext re m ~ly well .
.
"He is the leader of this
team.''
Tuesday, Hasselbeck was
their leade r in laughs.
Especially at his own
expense.
.
"A nybody losing your hair,
you can root for us, too," he
said . "Anything to get the
home-field advantage here in
Detroit.''
'

These backup QBs can do super things

Steelers~fans

2006
'

'

ringing up registers.
around Browns, Bengals country

W.Va. governor asks for
halt in coal production
for safety checks, A7

Icenhower
returning to Ariel, A6

I

BY JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Karen Crawford is one
Cleveland· Browns fan in
Ohio who doesn't mind that
· ·the Pittsburgh Steelers are in
the Super Bowl.
Sales of Steelers jerseys,
hats aild shirts are booming
at her sporting goods store in
Findlay - hometown of.
Pittsburgh quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger. But it's not
just the Big Ben items that
are popular.
"It ' s Stee lers stuff, too. ·
That's ' what's so weird ,"
Crawford said. " If you're at
all a Browns fan, it's tough to
root for the Steelers." .
' Sales at sports stores all ·
over the state are booming
because of the Steelers hated rival of both the
Browns and Cincinnati
Bengals.
Hotels in the Toledo area
are expecting to see an
increase in business too from
fans who plan to wat~h the
Steelers play the Seattle
Seahawks on Sunday at Ford
Field in Detroit, about an
hour 's drive north.
Plenty of black and gold
AP photo
"got ben7" T-shirts and Tel[lvision reporter Edson Jorge Zuniga carries around a
Terrible Towels were for sale Pittsburgh Steelers hand puppet as safety Troy Potamalu watchthis week at the Tower City es during Super Bowl XL Media Day at Ford Field in Detroit
mall
in
downtown Tuesday. Super Bowl XLwill feature the AFC Champion Pittsburgh
Cleveland.
Steelers against the NFC Champion Seattle Seahawks.
"For every I0 Steelers
items we're .selling, we're week. 1 only have about four l1e grew up and his ·parents
selling ·one Browns item," left," said Chris Koch, owner still li ve. trying to prevent
said Scott Jefferson, who of Koch Sporting Goods in too ti1any onlookers. "That's
runs· a kiosk in the mall.
Cincinnati.
what we're afraid of," said
One store owner in the
" I tried to order more Al issa Simpson, spoke small who was keeping his ·
shelves free of Pittsburgh shirts, but the manufacturer woman for visitors bureau.
And they're not mentionmerchandise said he . mi ght is all sold out," he said.
ing
that most folks around
have to make an exception · Restaurants and retai I
town
are Browns fans.
thi s week.
shops in Findlay hope that
" I need , heat," said Jeff ·plenty of Steelers fan s stop "We're trying to keep that
Wade, adding that lie would- for a vi,sit in Big Ben 's under wraps," Si mpson said
n't feel good about .sell ing hometown on their way from wit h a laugh. "It' s just insane
Steelers stuff Hl don't thiflk Pittsburgh to Detrott -even to see everyone one in a Ben
any Browns fan is happy see-. if .it means an h our or two jersey or a Steelers shirt."
Crawford, who runs the
ing that crap."
' dnve out of th~tr way.
Even in Cincinnati, some
The lo~al vtsrtors bureau House of Awards &amp; Sports ·
stores don ' t have euough has taken out ads on Steelers sporting goods store ·downSteelers gear. That might fan Web sues. Employees town , said sales of Steelers
come as a surprise given that have gtven dtrecttons to fans merchandi se are comi ng dur- ·
the Steelers road to the Super who want to see hts htgh ing what is usuall y otie of the
Bowl began with a 31-17 school stadium and a down ~ store's slowest months.
playoff v ictory over the . town billboard picturing· "People ar6 finding that ·
Bengals.
Roethlt sberger tn h1s old extra cash.'' she said. "You
never know when it 's going
. "I didn't have a lot of the Findlay uniform .
jerseys to begin with, but I
But. they' re not givin g out to come this close to home
probably had a dozen last directions to the house·where ilga111. "

Lewis says .he will deal·with Henry
CINCINNAT I (A P) Receiver Chris Henry'.s
arrest has clouded his future
with the Cincinnati Bengals.
The third -round draft pick
wa s arrested in Orlando ,
Fla.. over the weekend in
. what police ·sa id was an
altercation. The third-round
draft · pick from West
Virginia already was facing
dru g charges that resulted
from a traffic stop last
month iri the Cincinnati
area.
Coach Marvin Lewi s said
in a statement Tuesday that
Henry 's arrest "is unfortunate and does not shine a.
· good li ght on the Bengals
organization," adding that
he "will deal with Chris in
re lation to his standing on
our football team. "
Lewis benched Henry for
one game in December after

Henry moved toward a
limousine in the street and,
threw the gun inside the car,
the report says. The officer
pulled Henr:r away from the
limo and pushed hi m to the
ground. acco rding to the.
. report.
Police
sa id
Henry
appe;ired to be preparing: to
fight wit h a group . on the
the receiver's arrest on drug sidewalk. Officers fo und a 9
charges . . Henry; the team 's 111111 Luger on the hack seat
No. 3 receiver, was- charged of the li mo usine .· and a
w.ith posse ssion of mariju a- loaded magazine in a gutter
na fo ll owing a traffic stop in where Hcn.iy was standing,
northern . Kentucky. Those the report says. The Pasco
charges are pending.
Cou nt y Sheriff's Office had
The latest charges fol- li sted the gun as stolen.
lowed his arres t ear ly
Henry was charged with
Saturday in Orlando, where · fe klrly count s of possessio n
police said he pulled a 9 mm of a conceakd fire arm ,
pistol on a group of reve lers.· improper exhibition . of a
An officer directing traffic firearm ,1nd aggravated
aimed hi s gun at Henry and assault· wilh a firearm. He
ordered him to drop the pis- posted $3,000 bai l and was
tol, the police report stales . released .
·

DETROIT (A P) - A dis- should the defense r~lax. he make .
combobulated kic.ker made can air it .out.
The Bengals' defense was
the most surpri si ng flin g in
"Whe never he is in there, so
flummoxed
that
Super Bowl history - (iaro he is a threat and you never Roethli sberger had two
:Yepremian's oar-Of-soap pass know what he is going to do ," receivers wide open downattempt that resulted in a offensive coordin ator Ken fie ld. Hi s 43 -yard touchdown
fumble and provided a comic Whisenhunt s~i d . "That gives pass to Cedrick Wil son put
ending to Miami 's perfect you more of an element of the Steelers in control.
1972 season.
· · unpredictablli·ty." .
Whisenhunt. trusts Randle
· A co uple .o f . undersized
Only 5-foot-1 0 with elusive El with anything . .
players who know how to moves, Randle El was one of
"He is so much more of a
grip the laces could provide the toughest playe rs to catch threat because he is a fullthe most unexpected throw in college. At Indiana, he was . time starter:" he said. "He is
- or catch - in the .latest the first Division l-A player on the field a whole lot more
You've worked hard for your
title game.
to throw for 6.000 yards and than in the past. You can put
Pittsburgh :s
AiHwaan run for 3,000. The Steelers him in anywhere, and whatmoney. Will it return the favor?
Randle El and Seattle 's liked the way he returned ever you need him to do he
Seneca Wallace are the "X" kicks, and. turned him into. a can do those things . lt gives
The gap between Wall Street and Main Street has gotten
factors in Super Bowl XL.
receiver to get him on the you an extra element."
· smaller. Investing isn't just.for business tycoons and
"You never know." Randle field more .
So, what tricks are in
supermodels anymore.
El said mi sch ievous ly.
Occasionally. he'll line up Sunday's game plan?
And that 's the point. behind center - an ol d,
'·Next question," Randle El
I'll work with you to develop a plan for maximizing your
During the playoffs. both of familiar spot - for a direct said, breaking into a knowing
financial futu re, regard!ess of your resources.
therri stun ned defenses and snap. Every so often. he' ll get smile .
put their imprints on 'oome of a handoff and take off. And.
Wallace suggests that the
the NFL's biggest ga me s. occasionally, he'll make a Seahawks are going to play it
Randle El set up a trick play napping defense pay for tor- straight on Sunday, which
steqe · ~
in a first- round win ove r ge tting that he's sti ll a quar- means he' ll be on the sideline
· Cincinnati. ·and Wallace had terback at heart.
as · the No. 2 quarterback . (740) 992-3381 or Toll-free (800) 454-1096
the sweetest catch in the NFC
l-Ie took a handoff from instead of lining up as a
title game.
·
Duce Staley and threw a 51- stealth receiver - which is
"Some guys can do it. &lt;tnd yard touchdown , pass to .. exactly what he did in the
PILOT.
some guys can't do it.'" Hines Ward in a Nov. 13 win conference
champion ship
Randle El said Tuesday. " You over Cleveland. In four NFL- game.
Wallace , a third-year quarcertainly .can't force it on ,easons. ,Randle El is 7-for-8
+ Investments &amp; Annuities
them. and you can't teach it. for 8} ya rd~ and a pair of terback out of Iowa State.
Jf they' ve got it. they can do touchdowns as a passer. . sometimes lines up as a. + Retirement Plans for Individuals and
it. If not , then they can't.'.
In the playoff wi n at receiver and a defe.nsive1back
Businesses
These two defini tely ha ve Cincinnati , he showed off his during practi ce. Coach Mike
it .
arm in another way. He rook a Holmgren sen t him in as a
+ College Funding
In hi s fourth &lt;&gt;cason. Randle Ji rect ' nap from center, ran receiver in .the NFC title
El has developed into th e ri ght. then turned and threw a game against Carolma. and . + Life Insurance
Steelers · most versatile play- beautiful lateral across the he set up the Seahawks' first
er. The former lodi ana quar- fi eld to quarterback Ben touchdown by puttmg a douterback return s punh and Roet hli , berger -. the kind · ble move on Ken Lucas to get
starts as a rece iver. And . that on ly a real passer could open along thes tdelme.

Ui .{7~~~~~7~~

en
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o &lt;"l ·:l\:·Js • Vol. ;,;,. No. 1:!0

""" ·"'"lad) " 'ntuwl .&lt;·"'"

TIH II&lt;SD.\Y , I' EBRli .\HY :!, :!ooh

CS panel seeking participantS for long-term study

SPORTS
• Three more Tart:Jiooders
will be wearing scarlet and
gray. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

samples to the project, asking
them to authorize a scientific
panel to contact them for
POMEROY - Those who more information for a long,
partic;ipated in the C8 Health term health study.
Project are now being asked
VI sitors to the Pomeroy C8
to provide addi tional . infor- . testing site and three others
mation to a sc.ienti fic panel.
are now being asked to conB~ookmar, Inc., the firm
sent to provide additional
operating the C8 Health in formation to the C8
Project, has. begun to mail Science Panel, composed of
informatio"n and release · three epidemiologists who
forms to those who provided will conduct a communit y
health hi stories and blood s~udy incorpora!ing the data

collected during the CR
Health Project, as well as
other information .
The Science P'anel is asking participants to agree to l)e
contacted at a later date in
order to obtain continuing
information
for
health
longer-term stqdies iiHo the
possibl e health ·effects of
exposure to the chemical.
used by DuPont in the manufacture of Tenon anJ other
products.

In formation ·
c·olle cted tamers in the Parkersburg.
through the CK project is con- W.Va. area who were exposed
fidenti al. but those who con- Ill the c~ chem ical through
se nt to give their names and thei r water suppl y. While
addresses to the Scie nce there has been no ' oiTicial
Panel may be con tacted at a · determination that C8 causes
later Jate for more informa- health com plication'. the
tion. In some cases. they will study is dc&gt;igned to deterbe asked for additional access . mine if there i' a link between
to their health records for the C8 exposure atid illness.
purpose of the stud y.
Earlier thi s week, the ·cs
The C8 Health Project is a
result of a class-action lawsuit Healih Project announced it
filed against DuP.ont by CU.\Please see C8 study, AS

.Spring.story time sessions ·undenvay at libraries · Seats filled

.
on Rac1ne
Council

.
BETH ~ERGENT

.

BY
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES .
Pag!! A5
• Philip Del Call, 46
o JackL, Frederick, 56
'

INSIDE
·• Civil War groups hear
about 'March to the Sea.' .·
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS.
• For the Record.
See Page AS
o Death toll climbs to
eight in postal .worker's
rampage. See Page A7
• Transfers P.osted.
See Page AS

PO"lEROY
Spring
story time sessions are now
going on at all Meigs County
District Public Libraries and
BY BETH SERGENT
will continue through Apri l BSERGENT@MYDA"ILYSENTINEL.COM
27 for children of all ages.
· Story time sessions are a
RACINE - The problem
chance f~r parents to intro- of empty council seats was
duce their children to reading solved shortl v before the tirsl
while· those childre n make regu lar ses i ion of Racine
new friends and· create ,their Vil la£e Council last month
own craft project s.
whe11' Ja,.on Shain_ Ivan .
This week during ·story Powell. James Harmo n and
time Bostic Ea,on. 2. and Tom Reed were appointed to
Jeffrev Dolan. 4." li stened as a four year terms.
With these appointments,
new story was read to them at
al
l
,ix se at ' · on- Racine
the
Pomeroy
Libtary.
Afterwards the boys colored. Counci.l ha1 e. now been
cut out and con structed a filled. The other two seats are
paper octopu s that they could .held by Councilmen Ike
hang in their bedrooms. and Spencer- and P:IUI Cardone:
Tom Lane. who also
learned that the word octopus
e xpress~d an interest in a
be gi ns with the letter "0."
Emily Sanders. who is council seat was appoi nted to
Children's
·Services the Racine Board of Public
Coordinator for the Meigs Affairs by Mayor J. Scon Hill
County
Di strict
Public to complete the term vacated
Library. .said that crafts that by Doug Rees, The term is
follow story time change for two years.
from ·'week to week, with
Please see Racine, AS
Valentine's Day being the
theme of the next &gt;torv time
craft. . ·
· Time&gt;, Jates and locations.
ft1r
sto rv time arc as follow s•
2 p.m .·. Mondays. Racine ·
Library: 2:30p.m.. Tuesday,.
Eastern Library: 2 p.m ..
Wednesdays.
Pomeroy
Library: 2 p.n1 .. Thttrsdays .
Middeport Lihrary.
Beside, stnry time . the
Bet~ Sergentj photo
Jeffrey Do lan,4·, (left) son of Jeffrey and Jennife r Dolan of Pomeroy completes a craft project Meigs County District Puhlic
BY DiANE PoTTORFF .
alongside Bostic Eason, 2, son of Huey and Susan Eason of Pomeroy fo llowing story time at Libraries are tllfering the fol- DPOITORFF@
MYDAIL\'REG!STER .COM
the Pomeroy Library.
Piease see Libraries, AS
I POINT
------~----------------------------------------------~------------------PLEASANT. ·
I W.Va . - Offic ial s are crmtin1 uing their investigation into
Tuesda \ \ pl ane crash that
killed an Ohio· man.
LalllL Bruce Bricker. 25. of
Have you noticed the
Salem. Ohio. who " ·as pilot-.
walls of dirt being creal- ing the 1981 Piper singleed near the constrwction en~ine that is also known as a
of the new bridge?.The
Cl~erokee. Ji ed following the
walls are officially catted ' cra.,h after he had tried to
an 'Earthen de rm" and · · take off frnn1 a make; hift
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
ar.e constructed as a
ru nw a1• alun~.. U. S.. 3:i . LB .
I
sort of dam to catch
I INt ra n c~ .-\~~nc1 Inc. of
GALLIPOLIS - Gall ia
falling debns from tile
Camcin. Ohio~ i' J(qed a' the
and Meigs counties are par. hillside . Yesterday the
plane ·, .,,,·ner.
taking in a statewi de pro;
"Earthen derm " did its 1 A team from "the Federal
gram aimed at endi ng
job and made a nice
A\iat i&lt;'n Aclm ini,tration
homelessness in our part of
catch when these rocks I ,and
the
'irti11 nal
Ohio.
were unexpectedly
Tra n,p&lt; n lati •lll
SMet•·
The
Rural
Homeless
knocked loose from
B&lt; wrd i' cund uctin ~ inYesInitiative is a program of the
excavating work on the
li~&lt;lliCIIb int"o tile acci detll .
Osteopathic
_ · Heritage
'H'' f1C .-\ lex anJ~·r. an indch1lls1de above . In add 1Foundations in conjunction
t,on to the strategically
r~nJ~Ill claim ., aJju, ter. &gt;aid
with 17 local Continuum of
placed wails of dirt are ·f that her in'e't\gation into the ·
Care Commi ttees and the
concrete barriers to pro-' 1 ""''dent \\as .J USt hegmnmg .
National :A-lliance to End
teet motonsts on nearby : She" as althc~ .\ tasDnCount:
Homelessness, said Terri
west Ma 1n Street .
AlrJ'•'rt \\ ~ Jilt·, dal &lt;n'pcct',.

WEATHER

Details on Page AS

INDEX ·
2 SECTIONS -

16 PAGES

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
Places to go
A6
Senior News
A2
Sports
B Section
Weather
AB
,© 2006 Ohio VIt tl e~· :ubli!'hing Co.

Gallia, Meigs
part of Rural
Homeless
Initiative

Please see H!)meless, A8

"•

Investigation
under way
into fatal
plane crash

I

..

Nice catch!

1

Beth Sergent j photo

Please see Crash, A8

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