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..

Staff members
become certified
tobacco specialists, A3

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Coal companies
looking for new
generation of miners, A6·

Food Centers
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol.;,;,, No. t ;l:!

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MONDAY, FEHIUJARY :!0 , :!oo6

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Middleport Council may re-consider truck purchase

SPORTS
• East beats West, James ·
named MVP. See Page 81

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BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

POMEROY - Fanners
Ba11k President Paul Reed
·gave a speech at the Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce business-minded
luncheon last week on· the .
subject of how to ··wow" the .
customer.
Reed suggested that chamber members look at their
businesses as a custome~. to
see what the customer sees
and experiences in order to
make improvements.
· "Everything about our
businesses speak." Reed said,
pointing to signage. aesthetics and cus·tomer service as
examples,
.
Reed annou need that he
has . been . spea ~ing to
Chamber Coordinator Erin
Rou sh about developing a
ser\'ice improvement team
for· members : This · team
would help busine's owners .
see how their .bu,iness operates 1or fai Is to operate)
through the eyes of their customer'&gt; .
To join the chamher's·
impre"iun '1 commtttee mid I
or to sign up to be a part of
the "Mystery Shop" program
and busines' impre"tons ini- .
Chief CornStalk portrayed by Dan Cutler

Please see Reed, AS

.

21

halls or ba&gt;ebalb ''" Tucker's
experiment &lt;;tealt with the
t'ffect of gra\'i ty on softballs
RACINE - · The '~cond and ba&gt;ebalk Tucker i' the
annual science fair at daughter of Allen and
Southern Elememarv ,aw LIR Deanna Tud~cr of Letart ..
entrie s ;ubmitted - l'n the
Second runner-up went to
school's &gt;el'enth and .ei~hth Brea nna Taylor who;e expergraders.
iment dealt w1th AILheimers
Three of the cntrie' "ere Di,ea1e . Ta\ lor'' parenh are
chosen to represent the be't Gre.~ and ·Pall\ Taylor of
. of the school and be eli~iblc
..
.
•
RaL·ine
·
. to compete at the Ohio·
Th irJ runner-up' went to · .
University's fOUl Science Colbv Ro,ebern ~Nhose
Fair.
·
· d h
ome. Richard Coobe\. a "t - expenme.nt compare
ence te'aL'her :1t -Southern made anJ 'tore hought winElementary. said if hi ' ; tu- · dow cleane" to 'ce which
dents . choo'e tCl compete al · wa' the h~'t. Ro&gt;eberry is
the Ol! S'ience Fair the\ can the '"lll of TClm and Dena
mo"e on to the ,tate ,clenL·e R\i&gt;ehern of Svntcu,e.
fair in Columbu,.
Cook~e\ ;aid the scie'nce
Be't of Show wa' JWarJ - fair i' n,"n, a 1radit10n at
Beth Sergent/ pholo ed to Lvnt.ee Tuchr 11 hl"C Southern Elementary.
The best of stiow'·in Southern's Elementary Science Fair went to Lynzee Tucker ( right ) with · experi nicnt 11 as called.
All ,iudg.e&gt; were inJepe n·
Breann,a Taylor (center) taking second. and Colby Roseberry. third .
"Which goe' further.. "'ft - dent ,,f Southern Eleme ntary.
'
BY BETH SEI!GENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Details on Page A6

Service.

Reed speaks to ·
Chamber about
'wowini customers

Southern
. Elementary Science.Fair winners

Full

~

''However." Houchins said.
"I rcalite that any levy for
fire protectio n i' almoq
guaranteed to P"" ·..
There are now three levies
un th e · hook&gt; financing
liretrucks. with one of the
three up for renewal later
thi s year.
At hi' meeting with council lale Ja,t year. then-Chief
Da"t urged council to
approve the order in order to
avoid a cost inncase for the
n ~w truck. a decrea'e in the
value of the tr uL· k· to be
replaced and snld. and to
keep the department on track
with its replacement pro·
gram.

PAUL DARST

Please see Chief. ~5

i' t ,f//,&gt;"

atermg erviC
&amp; Delivery

replaced to another community.
"I understand the tru ck we
have ·now will be sold to
another community once ih
replacement has been delivered,'' Craig said. "lf ,we
have a truck thm's u;able in ·
another community, why do
we have to have a new ol)e?"
"As it stands now, we
can 't afford a fire truck plain and simple ." ·
· Council President Stl'phen
Houchins. who serve1 as
chairman of the C(lllncil's
tinance committee. sa id he.
too. would prefer to wait for
a levy to pass before ordering the truck. .

OBITUARIES

Skinner
Assorted
Spaghetti

Chicken Breast
Tenders

should be rescinded if a
lease purchase is planned .
Oiher' council members sugge,ted the village wait to see
if a levy for the truck's pur·
cha'e is approved before it is
ordered·. so the vil lage does
nol face additional debt.
Counci l Member Jean
Craig raised a number of
yuestions about the purchase.
She said co~ncil should seek
a legal opinion as to whether
it is legal · to order the truck
without assurance that levy
funds will be . available to .
pay for it. She also questiuned the need for . the truck
in light of the department's
plans to sell the truck to be

GALLIPOLIS Chief
Cornstalk paid a visit to
Gallipolis on Wednesday to
help give a glimpse of a, summer event.
Page A5
Cornstalk and four other
• Arthur Roy Reeves
hi storical figures will be part ·
. of Ohio Chautauqua in
. .• Mary 'Irene' Myers
Gallipolis. which is sched• John Denver Curtis
uled for June 20-24 in
• Julia Shawver Roderus Gallij101is City Park. Dan
Cutler portrayed Cornstalk
during Wednesday's press
conference.· and will return
INSIDE
for the Chautauqua this sum·mer.
This year's theme for Ohio
• Candy makers try to
Chautauqua is "War and
· cater to health-conscious
Peace." Cutler and those who
chocoholics.
pi ay the other parts are more
than just actors, he said.
See Page A2
"You really have to know
• Lawmakers call for
your character." he said.
overhauling FEMA.
"You have to imm~rse yourself into their atmosphere and
SeePageA2
times."
· • D'Bieness to offer
Cutler has studied and porbreastfeeding class. ·
trayed Cornstalk and other
hi storical ligures for about
See Page A3
eight
years, he said. Hank
• On Morehead dean's
Fincken
will
portray
list. See Page A3 .
Francisco. Pizarro, a Spanish
conquistador who conquered
• Overbrook Valentine
Peru and the Inca Indians.·
King and Queeri .crowned.
Karen Yuranch will depict
See PageA3 .
Clara Barton , founder and .
• Area gospel choir to hold first president of · the
American Red Cross. Gene
first rehearsal.
Worthington will teach about.
See PageA3
: Theodore Roosevelt , natural• ACS seeks teams for
ist, soldier and 26th president
of
the United States.
local Relay for Ute events.
Finally, Doug A: Mishler
See Page AS
will portray · Ernie Pyle,
• Prisons ask for
Pulitzer Prize winning World
War
II journalist. ·
aHematives to jailing
The Gallipolis Chautauqua
deadbeat·parents.
committee members are
See PageA6
excited about the lineup, said
Ray McKinnis, chairman.
"Basically, it 's going to be
free," McKinnis said. "There
. WEATHER
will be no charge· to get into
the big tent. We're going to
make this as friendly as we

Elbow Mal·aroni or

Previously Frozen

Since council approved 1he
purchase late last year, the.
fire department has begun to
consider a lease agreement.
instead, . according to Fiscal
Officer SusLul Baker. Council
will ask Fire Chief' David
. Hoffman. who took over the
department in January . . to
attend the Feb. 27 meeting to
discuss the 'fire department's
wishes and council's plans
fo_r the purchase.
The department now has
three trucks and a brush
truck in its t1eet.
At · last week's council
meeting ,
Counci lman
Ferman Moore said a motion
to approve the purchase

PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

-~F~R~If~;E~~~_..,......._j
~

BY

45 Oz. Jar

Buy One, Get One

REED

Chief Cornstalk helps give preview of Chautauqua

Ragu Pasta •
Sauce

I Lb. Pkg.

J.

MIDDLEPORT - Plans
made late last . year to purchase a new $300,000
firetruck for the Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department
may be put on hold until vi i!age council is sure there is
morrey to pay for it.
In November, . council
authorized purchase of a
$323,000 fire engine to
replace a 20-year old model
now in use. That truck. Fire
Chief Jeff Darst said, is next
up on a replacement rotation
schedule the department has
maintained for decades.

14 to 15 Oz. Box,

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BY BRIAN

BREED@MYQAILYSENTINEL.COt-1

.

Tl3t\LL S

Thursday &amp; Double .

GALAXY® FOOD CENTER
405 Pearl s
.. treet, M.iddlep'ort, Ohio 45760 .

·
Coupon Up to
-(
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Locally Owned &amp; Operated

. STORE. HOURS: 7 AM TO 11 PM, 7 Days A Week • Phone:' (740) 992;.3471
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11

PRicEo Gt;ooT~IioiVfFEtsliuARvr1c5TfHgRaCtFEB.RUARv 2~1~ 2o~6·
1

. .,

INDEX

Bt\ Sl::13t\1.1.

2 SECTIONS12 .PAGES
'•

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Valle&gt;' Puhll"ih.int~, Co,

�.

The Daily Sentinel
YOU'RE NEVER
TOO OLD - EVEN
FOR GYMNASTICS
AND DODGEBALL

·-

'

'

AROUND THE NATION .

PageA2
Mon,d ay, February 20,2006

Candy makers try to cater to health~conscious chocoholics

Community Calendar
,.

Bv ELLIOTT MINOR

For the love of
cocoa's flavanols

ASSOCIAT ED PRESS WRITER

ALBANY, Ga. - It's every .
chocolate lover 's \\Cish that
Chocolate makers are marketing
their
favorite
indulgence
the benefits of Havanots, an
Bv ROBIN HINDERY
antioxidant
found in cocoa beans
be
healthy
for
could
somehow
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
that is thought to be healthy. ·
them. Now, chocolate makers
NEW YORK _ Some 36- claim they have granted that
Measuring antioxidants
.
(9
Oxygen
radicill absorbance
year-aids hit the golf course wish.
capacity
(ORA C) ol foods
\
to unwind; Pearl Lin prefers
Mars Inc., maker of Milky
ORAC UNITS PER SERVING
fine-tuning his back flip.
Way, Snickers and M&amp;M canDark chocolate
Less than a year ago, Lin. a dies, next month plans to
New York City boutique launch nationwide. a new line
Blueberries
owner who had no childhood of products made with a dark
• • • • • • • • • 6.708
gymnastics training, could chocolate the company claims
Coca (natural)
barely master a forward roll. has health benefits.
Now. he 's defying gravity
Called Cocoa Via, the prodRaspberries
and his biological clock.
ucts are made with a kind of
• • • • • • • 6.895 .
Whether ·reviving a child- dark chocolate high in fluPecans
• • • • • • 5.382
hood passion or following the vanols, an antioxidant found
Walnuts
leads of their own children, in cocoa beans that is thought
,'
more adults are stepping off to have a blood-thinning
Milk chocolate
the side lines onto gym mats, effect similar to aspirin and
•
13,200
playing fields and .ice rinks. may even lower blood presAaislns
Small-town instructors and sure. The snacks also are
• • 1,215
enriched
with
vitamins
and
AP Photo
national sports organizations
·
·
M 1 •
· ad u1t parttc·
1. niected
.with chole. sterol-low- Kevin Tilley scrutinizes CocoaVia health bars . moving down a productiOn line at ars nc. s SOURCE : The Hersh&amp;y .Company • AP
report a sp1'ke m
"
ipation in sports generally ering plant sterols from soy. · Masterfoods plant in Albany, Ga., on Feb. 1. Mars introduced CocoaVia to appeal to health·
dominated by kids.
But researchers are skepti- conscious consumers who also enjoy fine chocolates.' The company says CocoaVia contains and highly polished floors
"I used to go 10 the gym but cal about using chocolate for higher levels of natural antioxidants known as flavanols than regular chocolate. Flavanols are where workers wear whae
it turned into a chore," said its mecticinal purposes and thought to have a blood-thinning effect similar to aspirin and may even lower blood pressure. suits or smocks, hair nets, safeDaniel Lewis, a 26-year,old experts warn it's no substitute Hershey, the nation 's leading confection'er, is also touting the health benefits of flavanols in ty glasses and white helmets.
New York University law for a healthy diet.
·
some of its products.
The health bars pass through
·student who attended a recent
"To suggest that chocolate growing segment of the $10 appeal to them, such as gourmet he said.
a machine that cools them,
gymnastics class with Lin at is a health. food is risky," said billion-a-year chocolate mar- chocolates, organic chocolates
The soy extract was includ- several· that cut them to size
'the Chelsea Piers recreation Bonnie Liebman, nutrition ket. Hershey reports that its and "functional" chocolates, ed in the products becau.se it and another that dribbles deccomplex on Manhattan's director for the Center for dark-chocolate sales have such as. CocoaVia, that may has been shown to reduce orative swirl s across the top
Hudson River . shore. "With . ' Science in the Public Interest. ·grown l'l.2 percent over the provide health benefits.
cholesterol, Cass said.
, and gives the underside.a final
gymnastics, you· re getting
Recent research has not past four years.
. Rachael Brandeis, a nationNorman Hollenberg, a pro- coating of dark chocolate. ·.
great exercise and also learn- · established a link between flaLast year, Hershey Co. al spokeswoman for the fessor at the Harvard Medical
The Well ness Letter, a
ing real skills."
vanols and a reduced risk of acquired San Francisco-based American
Dietetic School , told a recent cocoa health and fitness newsletter
Chelsea Piers' 25,000- cancer or heart disease, she Scharffen Berger Chocolate Association in Atlanta, said symposium that the Cuna published by the University of
square-foot gymnastics facil- said. And with obesity already Maker Inc., known· for its dark chocolate is a good Indians of Panama. who drink California-Berkeley, evaluatity advertises the largest adult a serious health problem, ''the dark chocolate with high source of flavanols, but so are tlavanoid-rich cocoa bever- ed Cocoa Via ·and advised
gymnastics program in the last thing we need is for cocoa· content and baking other foods such .as fruits, ages, have a 10 percent lower readers to enjoy the snacks on
country, attracting both first- Americans to think they can products, and plans to add vegetables a,nd whole grains. risk of dying of heart attacks occasion for pleasure, but nut
new dark-chocolate products.
"Dark chocolate can fit into a and a 20 percent lower risk of as a health fO&lt;id .
timers an&lt;) · profession'als. eat .more chocolate."
Classes are split nearly evenA paper published by the
Mars created a new division, healthy diet," .she said. The fat dying ,of cancer than average
"Cocoa Via' s benefits are
. ly between men and women, American Heart Association Mars Nutrition for Health &amp; in chocolate is a type that does Panan)anians.
still unproven ," the newsletter
instructors said. Participants concluded !iJat c~ocol~te con- Well-Being, to distribute not raise cholesterol levels, but
More studies are needed to said . "Eat it only if you like it
hail the sport's almost medi- tams chemtcals, mcludmg. fla-. CocoaVia. The company has it can add unwanted pounds if a determine . whether it is the and are willing to pay the pretative effects, but the regu- vanols, that have the potential to · sold the CocoaVia products person overindulges, she said. cocoa consumption or . other mium price."
·
Iars' sharply defined muscles reduce heart d1sease. But tt online for a couple years. They
"I would say if you enjoy factors that rnake them healthFruits and vegetables are still
added researchers still don't are already available at retail the taste of dark chocolate, ier, Hollenberg said.
point' up other benefits.
the best source of the antioxiOther activities focus more know enough about flavanols to stores in 34 states, selling for enjoy it," she said. "But you
"The data assigning it to dants found in dark chocolate
on fun than physical disci- make dietary recommendations. nearly $1 a bar. .
always have to be conscious one mechanism just isn 't and they also contain vitamins,
Other major chocolate com"Chocolate ... is the number of how much you're eating." there yet," he said.
pline. The Seattle-based
minerals, fiber and plant chemgroup Underdog Sports pa'nies also have started pi:o- one flavor ingredient iri the
Mars adamaruly defends its
Regardless of the research, icals not found in chocolate.
offers adult leagues for de- mating the flavanol content of world," said Jimmy Cass, health claimS"for Cocoa Via.
Mars' Albany plant is filled the newsletter said.
mentary-school . staples their dark chocolates, such as Mars' vice president of market- ' The company has done with the fragrance of dark,
CocoaVia was just an
dodgeball, kickball and flag Hershey's Extra Dark, inlro- ing. "Heart health is the No. I research studies that have warm chocolate. A seemingly expensive candy bar, concludfootball.
duced last fall with highlights concern of adults over the age shown it ca'n improve blood .endless
procession
of ed John Swartzberg, chairman
, Its kickball league, with on its label touting its 60 per- of 40 in every civilized nation. flow, said Mars' chief scien- Cocoa Via bars move along a of the newsletter 's editorial
members ranging in age from cent cocoa content and high Putting those two together is tist Harold Schmitz.
conveyor belt under the board and clinical professor
their 20s to 60s, had I 50 par- level of flavanol.
automatically a big idea."
"We believe ... there can be scrutiny of human and elec- of health and medical science
ticipating
teams
in
Dark chocolate, which con.With the growing number of a significant benefit around tronic eyes.
at Berkeley.
Washington last year, said its tains more flavanols than reg- baby boomers, 'the industry has blood pressure, but we have
It is a sterile environment of
"But it did taste good." he
director, Lawrence Martin.
ular chocolate, is the fastest been focusing on products that not conclusively proven that," gleaming stainless machinery said.
Underdog prides itself on a
laid-back environment where
players · can "let go of the
stress they find in their everyday lives," said Manin, who
ST. LOUIS (AP) Experts fear .bird flu could which is a whole new realm," tions of existing threats have in how people interact witl1 the
enjoys seeing the role rever- Humans risk being overrun by prove an exception. Recent' said Nina Marano, a veterinar- infected humans for the first environment in a more densely
sal of kids sitting in the diseases ·from the animal advances in the worldwide ian and public health expert time . Without speculating populated 'world that is grow- .
stands watching their parerits world,
to march of the HSNl strain have with the National Center for aboui earlier infection rates, ing warmer and in which travel
according
play.
researchers who have docu- rekindled fears of a pandemic. Infectious Diseases.
Woolhouse told reporters it is faster and move extensive.
The Sports Clubs Network mented 38 illnesses that have ·The virus has spread across
Bird flu has killed at least appears impossible the human M;u·anil sa id. Those changes
-which has 135 U.S. health made that jump over the past Asia into Europe and Africa.
91 people.- most of them in species could endured such a can ensure that pathogens no
centers - offers hip-hop 25 years.
Controlling bird flu · will Asia- since 2003, according rapid pace of new ihfections longer. slay Testricted fo anidance, a ballet workout and
Thai's not good news. for require renewed focus on the to
the
World
Health over thousands of years.
· mals, she added. Examples
"urban rebounding," exercis- the spread of bird flu, which animal world, including the Organization. , It appears to
"Humans have always been from recent human history
es on miniature trampolines. experts fear could mutate and ·.chickens, ducks and other kill ·about half the people it · attacked by novel pathogens. include HlV. Murburg. SARS
"Within the past live years, be transmitted easily among poultry that have been sacri- infects. However, should it This process has been going and other viruses.
we've started really seeing ,a people.
.
ficed by the tens of millions to mutate so it can pass from on for millennia. But it does . That prospect leaves open
lot of interest in childhood
There are I ,407 pathogens stem the progress of the virus, human to human, it likely will seem to be happening very .the question · of what future
activities being incorporated -· viruses, bacteria, parasites, experts said at a news confer- grow far less deadly, said Dr. fast in these modern times," threats await humans.
into exercise classes,", said protozoa and fungi- that can ence late Sunday at the annu- Stanley Lemon, of the Woolnouse said.
"It always surprises us ..We
Allyson Donnelly,' the net- infect ' humans, said Mark al meeting- of the American · University of Texas Medical
Woolhou,se argues that either think that avian 11u will be the
work's director of group Woolhouse of the University Association
for
the Branch at Galveston.
many of those. diseases and next emerging disease. My .
exercise. "It's the variety of of Edinburgh in Scotland. Of Advancement of Science.
·"It is very unlikely that it other aftlictions will not persist guess is something else mi ght
the activities, and the novelty: those, 58 percent .come from
''The strategy has to be would maintain that kind of in humans or that there is some- come out before that·,'' said
and there 's definitely an de- animals. Scientists consider looking at how to coniain it in case mortality rate if it made thing ~culiar today allowing Alan
Barrell.
of
the .
ment of escapism about 177 of the pathogens to be the animal world, because the jump," 'Lemoli said.
so many of them to take root in University of Tex as Medi'cal
them: You can go into a stu- "emerging" or "re-emerging." once you get into the human
Each year for the last 25 humans.
·
Branch at Galve ston. "It's
dio foranhour and be a salsa Most will never cause pan- side, you're dealing with vac- years, .one or two t:tew
Qnc explanation may be the very har&lt;) to an ti cipate what
dancet."
demics.
cines and antiret.rovirals, pathogens and multiple varia· recent· and wide-scale changes comes next. ..
· The ballet class offered by
the Spans Clubs Network,
the NYC Ballet Worko.ut, can
~preads
be done at home, too. Since it
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)
As far south as Texas, ice Farther west, Alliance, Neb., recorded in Allagash , Maine, deaths in the Northeast.
was created in 1997, more
Utility crews worked and freezing rain canceled bottomed out at 8 below, the while temperature &gt; dipped .to
Utility officials in New
than half a million copies of its videos and DVDs have Sunday to restore power to dozens of flights over the National Weather Service a low of I 0 degrees in York expected lo ha ve crews
been sold, along with ·thousands of homes and busi - weekend at Dallas-Fort Worth said.
Rochester and wind of ,up to workipg through the week to
I 00,000 instructional books, nesses from Michigan to International Airport, includIn the Upper Midwest,' the 8 17 mph made it fee l like restore power to the 31,500
said Dean na McBrearty, a Maine following a weekend ing 85 American Airlines a.m. reading of 2 below zero almost 10 below zero, weath·- customers still without elecrepresentati ve from , NYC winter storm, while slick flights , according to a compa- at Duluth, Minn., combined er service said.
.
. tricity· Sunday. That's down
roads
and.
heavy
winds
were
ny
spokesman.
with
!'7
mph
wind
for
a
wind
Ballet.
The t'ie'rce wind, including from a peak of 328.000 ·cusLittle Rock,· A~k., had a chill of 23 below.
a 143 mph gust re· corde·d on tom ers th ree day' ear 1·1er.
And with the influence of blamed
'd ·· for several deadly
the Winter Olympics and the acct ents.
Sunday mornmg low of 18.
A reading of 18 below was Vrermont's Stratto 11 Mou·nta·1·n
severa 1 s1aws : were operatFox TV network show
on Friday, knocked out ing shelters. providin g have ns
"Skating wjth Celebrities,"
power and toppled trees , with li ght and heat. for those
figure skating is becoming
which were blamed for four without power.
particularl y popular among
WASHINGTON (AP) - ated after the Sept. II attacks. be competing for dollars withadults.
. The Federal Emergency
"It's time for FEMA to go in a •department ccmc.erned
"We've · noti ced a real Management Agency should and to build something better, with prevention as well as
increase ," said Antonio be dissolved and rebuilt stronger within DHS to take response , said Davis. who
Conte, chair of the U.S . before the upcoming hurri - its place," Lieberman .said.
appeared with Lieberman on
Figure Skating Association's cane season, a Democratic
Homeland
Security ABC's "This Week ."
adult. skating committee. He senator said Sunday.
Secretary Michael Chertoff,
Chertoff said that is FEMA
said he expects about a I0
"FEMA has become , to in appearances on Sunday were tak en ou't of .his departpercent jump in participation many people in America, and morning talk shows, warned ment, "I predict with virtual ·
after the Olympics.
· particularly the Gulf Coast, a against overhauling FEMA certainty that we wHI be
"As a kid, you do an activ- joke, a four-letter word," said with hurricane season only much less · prepared in ·thi s
ity because you love it , not Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D- tliree months away.
, hurricane season than if we
because it burns calories," Conn ., and a member of the
"Nature doesn't wai t for .us keep the department together
said Conte, who first put on a Senate 'Homeland Security to do yet anoti)er reorgani za- and fi~ish the joh on inte·
pair of skates I0 years ago and Governmental Affairs tion." Chertoff told NBC's grating ."
when he turned 30. ''Adults Committee.
"Meet the Press."
Chertoff as well as FEMA
He favored keepin g the
Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., a and the Homeland Security
are looking for that. too.
People are li ving to be older. agency within the Homeland member of the House Department were roundly criti.and they 're rek indling thei r . Security Department. FEMA Homeland Security Committee. cized by a Hou se report i"ued
interest in something they was independent before it was said he favored making F~M A last week on the government
used to do· or have always folded into Homeland Security a Cabinet department.
respo11&gt;c to Hurricane Katrina
wanted to do."
when the department was ereDavis\a id FEMA ' hould not . la.;t 'ummcr. ·
.'

Clubs and
•. organizations
Monduy,Feb.'20
POMEROY - · Special
,meeting of Middleport LOdge
363, F&amp;AM for entered
apprentice practice and return
of fellowcraft examination.

·········~,260

....

Bird flu .possibly the latest in growing number of diseases able to jump to humans

Bitter cold

Wednesda~Feb,22

POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club noon luncheon at
the Senior Citizens Center.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411.
F&amp;AM, special meeting.
Work in the Master Mason
Monday, Feb. 20
. degree in preparation for . LETART FALLS - Letart
inspection, 7 p.m.
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., office building.
Thursday, Feb. 23
RACINE
- ·American
Tuesday, Feb. 21
Legion Auxiliary Post 602
RACINE
Racine
·regular meeting, 7 p.m . ·
Village Council, '7 p.m.,
POMEROY - Alpha Iota recessed session, Racine
Masters to have II :30 a.m. Municipal Bui·lding.
1\mcheon at Wildhorse Cafe.
Meigs
POMEROY
POMEROY
Meigs County Board of Elections,

Public meetings ·

.

.

You~~Chance,Jo WIN
0·.-

.

'

"'

'

Sunday, February 26th

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

Wednesday, Feb. 22
CHESHIRE - Board of
Directors · of Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency,
noon, Cheshire office.
SYRACUSE - · Syracuse
Pool Committee, · 6 p.m.,
home of Bob Wingett. All citizens who wish to help are
asked to attend.

Church events
Saturday, Feb. 25
PORTER -, Services 6
p.m. at Clark Chapel FWB
Church, Mike Harmon
preaching, singers welcom.
Sunday, Feb. 26
LANGSVILLE
Christian music group, "The
Grace men" sing at 10:30 a.m .
at the Langville Christian
Church. A buffet dinner will
follow the moringing worship service. Public welcome.

Submitted

Staff members become certified tobacco specialists
GALLIPOLIS . Three
staff members of the Holzer
Tobacco Prevention were
among 50 selected from the
State. of Ohio to receive
training provided by the
Mayo Clinic to bec.ome certified Tobacco Treatment
Specialists (TTS). ·
Todd Tucker, program
director and youth coordinator, Raina Garber. adult
and
Lora
coordinator,
Rawson. prenatal coordinatpr, attended the five day
intensive training program in
· Columbus.
.
Education included motiva-

tiona! interviewing, pharma, Use· Prevention and Control
cotherapy, and alternative · Foundation (TUPCF), which
treatment options to assist al-so . funds· the Holzer
patients in their . attempt to · Tobacco Resource Center,
stop using tobacco products. located at 2881 State Route
Post training testing of. I 60 .in Gallipolis.
knowledge and skills gained
. Holzer's
Tobacco
were required for certifica- Prevention Center is open 8
t.ion. Testing included video a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday
assessment, essay and multi- through Friday to provide
pie choice questions.
youth prevention and group
"The skills learned by staff and individual cessation
members will be a major counseling , for residents of
asset in helping patients Galli.a, Meigs and · Jackson
break free of nico{ine addic- counties. To speak with a
tion ," said Tucker.
coordinator, call (740) 446Training was funded by a 5940 or, toll-free at 1-866gran' from the Ohio Tobacco 855-8702.

FLATROCK, W.Va. -The
Mason County Area Gospel
Choir's first 2006 rehearsal
will be Monday, March 6 at 7
p.m. (weather permitting) at
the Good Shepherd United
Methodtst · Church
m
Flatrock, W.Va., the original
home of the Mason County
Choir back in 1981.
This rehearsal will be an
"all new" music rehearsal ,
with
some
review.
Indi victuals of all churches
throughout Mason, Gallia
and Meigs counties and nearby areas, ages 15 and up, are
welcome to participate. There
are no .dues .or auditions, and
initial music is provided for
new participants. Male tenors
and bass are especially needed, but all voice parts are
always welcome·.
.
Rehearsals begin at 7 p.m .
and conclude around 9 p.m.
All members .are voluntary.
The Area Choir is featured at
each gospel sing, along with
at least' one guest gospel
group. Also, soloists, duets,
. trios, etc., from within the
choir are featured from time
to time.
The first gospel sing, spon,
sored by the Area Choir and
hosted by the Good Shepherd
U.M. Church, · will be
Saturday,March 18 at 7 p.m.
tweather permitting). The
guest group will be the
Humphreys
Family
of
Dunbar, W.Va.
It is important that all cur. rent members and potential
new members attend the first
. rehearsal in preparation for
the March 18 sing. All members are refTiinded to bring
their music. ·
For more information
about participation, directions, rehearsals or sing
dates, call Carol Browning at
304-773-5689 or 'tl)e Rev.
Dennis or' Brenda Weaver at
304-675-5525. You also may
visit the Web site at
www.geoci ties .com/countychoir.

.Overbrook Valentine King Bloodmobile
visits Pomeroy .
· and Queen crowned

across much of the nation; thousands still lack power

. Lawmakers call for overhauling FEMA

8:30 a.m. to certify candid~tes.

photo
Raina Garber, Todd Tucker and Lora Rawson have qualified for certification as tobacco treat·
ment specialists. With them is Tracey O'Dell, RN, program manager for the Ohio TUPCF.
.

photo
Dana Blumenauer aod Bernice Wilson were crowned 2006
Valentine king and queen of Overbrook Rehabilitation Center at
the annual Valentines Day party. Blumenaur was presented a
trophy and a box of chocolates, and Mrs. Wilson received a
bouquet of roses and a box of chocolates. Entertainment was
provided by Wiloviene Bailey.
'

Monday, February 20,

2006

DEAR ABBY: I have a 3guests welcome . I offered
year-old daughter who has
breakfa\ l ' and co ffee and
been going to a home dayspent hours with them . After
care provider since she was
1 p.m., 1 finally decided to
an infant. The sitter is wonshower and dres s. 1 made a
Dear .
fre'h pot of coffee and
derful and I like the way she
cares for my daughter. Sh~
Abby·
offered our guew. more to
doesn ' t speak English very
eat. I took hetwee n 45 min weH, but we have been able
to communicate through her
uie&gt; and an hour to shower
12-year-old
daughter,
and dre » . When I emerged,
"Laurie."
I offered more coffee and
The issue that I'm having
food . They finally left hours
is with her daughter. Laurie explain to the woman what later.
·
plays with the children a lot her · daughter has been
A wee k later, illy hu sband
when she gets out of school doing . Your concern; are and l had . a huge argument
in the afternoons. Lately. my well-founded . It 's possible concerning how "rude" I
. h .
Laurie is mirroring
d'
d
daughter has been telll.ng m·e that
·
· h HER was 1or avmg 1sappeare
h ·
that they play school and w at IS gomg. on Wit
for almost an hour to , howthat Laurie is the "teacher." at school , and her mother·
shou.Jd be made aware of it. er and change. Abby. I did
My daughter comes home
Second, please re•1love everything possi ble to make
devastated · every
day
d
ht
1·
th ' our uninvited guests fe el
because Laurie tells her that your aug er rom
IS
home day- care situation welcome. Wa s l rude to
she is. getting failing grades 'and find a licensed and abandoQ our guests for thi s
send her to accredt'ted day -care center se If'ISh reason o. y our mput
·
and pretends
· · I' to ff'
1·s
for her. There are thin gs she much
appreciated .
the pnnclpa so tee .
Accof~dihng tohmykdadughhter, should be learning to pre- CHERYL IN ILLINOIS
none o t e ot er I s ave pare her for sc hool that she
DEAR CHERYL : You
t.o do th'ts. She also says that 1sn't being taught. A proper
she has to. eat her Junc,h · pre sc hool education can were not rude to go and ge l
alone for talk1ng. ·' don t give your' child an important Cleaned up . The people who
th~nk. the sltl!(r reahzes t~at . head start. As a .responsible were rude were .the "dropthiS ts gomg on. I hav~ tned . ·parent , it's up to you to see ins" who didn't bother to
to talk to Laune about tt, but that she gets it.
call and arrange . a conveshe denies doing 'it.
DEAR ABBY: On New nient · time before co ming
I'm afraid this will have a Year 's Day, my stepdaugh- over. As to your husband 's
. lasting effect on my . child ter and her husband dropped "snit ," I think he was angry
whe,n she . starts · school, I in unexpectedly. They live . because he was left alone to
don t want to change Sitters, two miles away. and we see. entertain them for an hour.
but I don't want to subject them fre,q uently. After a Too bad, so sad'
my daughter ·to this kind of very hectic Christmas, I had
Dear Abby is written by
behavior either. I need some been looking forward to a Abigail Vatt Buren, also
help here. What should I quiet, relaxing day with my
do?
MELODY IN husband. 1 had not even known .as Jeanne Phillips,
HOUSTON
showered
when
they . and was founded by her
DEAR MELODY: The arrived.
mother, Pauline Phillips.
first thing you should do is
Even though 1 · was Write Dear Abby at
find someone who speaks uncomfortable not having · www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
your day-care provider 's showered , and in my paja- Box 69440, Los Angeles,
, language to help you to · mas,· l made oul surprise CA 90069.

Area gospel .
.choir to hold
first rehearsal
.

.PageA3

Playing games at day care is taking toll on toddler

County American Cancer
Society Taskforce meeting ,
noon, basement conference
room, Pomeroy Library,
lunch provided, RSVP with
Courtney Sim. 992-6626 . .
HARRISONVILLE
Annual
inspection
of
Harrisonville Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM. - Dinner 6:30 p.m ..
followed by inspection in the
Master Mason Degree. Take
non-perishable food item for
the Grand Master 's Food
Drive.

'

··-····19,080

BY THE BEND ..

·fhe Daily Sentinel

Submitted

O'Bleness to offer breastfeeding class
ATHENS 0 ' Bleness ing a breast pump. and other
Memorial Hospi tal in Athei1s issues such as maintenance uf
will offer a class designed milk supply, and resou rces and
especially for working 1110thers products that . arc especially
who breastfccd their babies.
helpful to nursing mother' who
Breastfeeding Class for the work. Those who attend the
Working Mother will be held class will al;;o have the opporfrom 6:30p.m. until I:UO p.m. tunity to see :J demon,tration
Wedne sday, March I, in of the various breast pumps
O'Bleness ' Lower Level now available on the market.
Room 010.
Michele
Biddlestune.
The class. which is otl'ercd O' Bieness· international hoard
in addition' to the hospital-'s certitied lactation L:onsullllnt .
regular breastfceding course. will lead Breastfeeding Clttss
covers a wide variety of topks . f(lr the Working Mother. The
unique to working mothers class is free, Hnd no regJ,lrawho breastfeed includin g: tion is required. For more·
preparing· to go back to work, inlonnatinn or for a -schedule
returning to work, pumping of classe, , ·.contact · Michele ·
and storing breast milk, choos- 'Biddlestone at (740) 592-9364.

POMEROY . - . Forty-five
units of blood were. collected
for the American Red Cross at
last week's visit of the bloodmobile to the Meigs Senior
Center.
Donors by community were:
Pomeroy
Marsha
Barnhart, Marvin Taylor, Mary
Voss. David M. King, Roger
Gaul, Edward King, Roger
Dowell, Mary Davidson,
Charlene Wood. Janet Peavley,
Virgil Windon, Jane Harris.
Paul Marr, . Kathryn Johnson,
Harley Johnson, Donald May.
Gerald Rought, Steve Brickles,
Jean Durst, Bill Carswell,
Michael Taylor, Michael
Neutzling ·and Mary Burnside.
Racine ·- Gary Wilford,
Barbaru ·Dugan, Arthur Roush,
Sonja Justice, Paula Brown.
Middleport
. George
Harris,
Jr., Kax
King.
Christopher M1ller.
Bill
Brewer. Mary Hayman, Laura
Lethers. Robert Lethers,
Norma Wilcox, Jennifer Garey,
Timothy Smith and Donna
Davidson.
Langsville
Betty
Longstreth.
Long Bottom - Urban Gmf
and Delores Adams.
Syracuse - Cheryl Thomas.
GUYSVILLE - Nick P.
Reedsvi lle
Carolyn Weeks ' of Guysville was
B'arton.
named to th'e dean' s list at
West Virginia - Alice Pettit. Morehead Stale University
RSVP volunteers a&gt;sisting at for the fall semester. earning
the bloodmobile were . Mary . a grade point average of at
·
LOu Hawkins, Beuy Spencer. least 3.5.
Peggy Harris. Ken Harris,
Juani ta Rou~h . .Rita Buckley,
Carolyn Grueser,
Helen
Bodimer. and Polly Curtis. The
Red · Cross bloodmobile will .
retum on March 15 I:30 ~
· Subscribe today' 992-2155
tdO.

On Morehead
dean's list

· Proud to be apart of
your life.

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridgi11g the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble; a11d to petition
. the Government for a redress of grieva11ces.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

··clean
Tmstees faitlyUl to keep town clean
Dear Editor,
I would like to thank the Sutton Township Trustees for
cleaning out the ditches and fixing the road on Welchtown
Hill.
.
in· the past the rain wo.uld ·run down the hill mito our sidewalk and into our basement.
·

Mrs. Edward (Mary) Voss
Pomqoy

·PageA4.

·.

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·

Monday, February 20,

Maybe there's some rarifieil irony about the fact that
in a society increasingly
dependent on imagery, not
. words, to convey information, it is imagery that the
media have denied us 'in conveying the story of a Danish
newspaper's Muhammad
cartoons. But with a Gallup
Poll reporting that 61 percent of .u:s. respondents
believe that Europeans who
printed the caricatures of
Muhammad acted irresponsibly, it's nothing to shrug
off.
The rationale goes something like this: "Not 'Ill selfcensorship is a bad,.thing."
"Even if all the world had
.the right of free speech, I
still believe there are things
that should not be said."
"It's some weird presumption of modernity that says
because something can be
·done it must be done."
The above statements
carne out of my e-mailbag
after last week 's column my cartoon rage 2006, or, as
I like to call it, How a Proud
Press Bowed Its Head and
Submitted to an Islamic Law
against
Depiclions
of
Muhammad. These. letter- ·
writers, representing a small
but noticeable contingent,
rejected the submission
argument as a point of pride,
reading into their own contentment to "see no evil" that is, see no Muhammad
cartoons - an elevated sensibility: good manners, good
taste and self-restraint. This
may be highly commendable ·
- the good manners. taste

Diana

West ·

and self-restraint part _ but
it is entirely beside the poillt.
Which · is what \!raws me
back to this freak show of a
story ·one more time before
its narrative-memory is set,
and before the beginning of
the end of press freedom is
permanently· attributed to
kindly, responsible behavior,
not incipient dhimmitude.
In another context. 1
wouldn't disagree with the
readers' comments 1 quoted
above. Indeed, I've been
known to make similar arguments against all manner of
fetid cultural excess, from
lurid children's fictio'n to the
notorious
Sensation
Exhibition at the ·Brooklyn
Museum in which Dung
Virgin first came to fame in
1999. (Or was that infamy'?
It's easy to get them confused.)
The topic of Dung Virgin,
not to mention its companion piece in shock value,
Piss Christ, strikes the
Good~Mannerists as an
important marker in their
personal guides to press eliquette. Not grooving to such
"artistic"
attacks
on
Christianity, the GoodMannerists say they c;m
understand the consternation

of the Cartoon Ragers - al
least to some point shy of
death threats, arson and murder - and see media selfcensorship as a matter of
·
common decency.
Is the compari son, valid?
And is the politeness
deserved') Absolutely not,
and here· s one big reason
· why: Christianity and Islam
are not interchangeable
belief systems· inspired by a
generic ·divinity. One te levant distinction is the way
they operate in relation to
their societies. Christianity
abides by the sepamtion of
. church .and state; Islam
knows no separation whatsoever. As a result, the theological teachings of Islam as
revealed by Muhammad,
which form the basis of the
Islamic law (sharia) that drives Islamic societies. necessarily belong to the political
sphere in a way that
Christianity does not.
This is not to say that
Christianity should be, or
has been, · off the table.
Indeed, all the ink (no t
blood) spilled over assorted
Excrement
Icons . . only
enhanced their value, not to
mention . the reputations of
their artists (usi ng the word
· loosely). But the all-encom,
pass ing nature of Islam
underscores a special need
for open. critical exarnina'lion of the Koran and
Muhammad as political , and
politically violent. forces
that roil our times.
Let's take what are considered the most inflammatory
of the Danish Dozen: Bomb- ·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leners ro rhe ediror.are welcome. They shrn;/d be less rha11
300 words. All leners are su~jecr to ediring. must be sig11ed,
and include addres:1· and relepl1011e 11umbeJ: No unsigned letters .will be published. Leuers should be in good ·tasre,
addressing issues. no.t personaliries. Letrers oftlumks ro organizariolls &lt;md indivilhwls will nor b.e accepted for publication.

· The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

&lt;usPs 213-9&amp;o)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories ts to be

8.

accurate . If you know of an error in
story, call the newsroom at (740) !392-

2156.

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2)56.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12'
Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext 13

Advertising
Outside Salea: Dave Harns, E)tt. 15
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Exl 16

ClasSJCirc.: Judy Clark* E;xt. 10. .

.General Manager
Charlene Hoeltich 1 Ext. 12
E-mail :
news@ mydai"lysentJne"I.Gom

Web:
www. my.dailysentinel.com
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through F,riday, 111 COurt Street,
Pomeroy, Oh10. Second-class postage
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Poatma8ter : Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Coun Street,
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Obituaries

~AHlffi.
O!HE COLUMBuS

DID YOU
HIT YOUR

EROTHER?

Military releases names of 10 U.S. troops
killed in helicopter crash off Djibouti

Arthur Roy Reeves
head
Muhammad; and
Muhammad in the clouds,,
telling arnvmg suicide
bombers that Islami c paradise is plumb out of virgin.~~
What Denmark's cartoonists .
did in these caricatures Is
something few writers have
dared to do in words : They
made visual reference to the •
copious, historical and contemporary
theologica~
underpinnings of holy war
(jihad) and suiCide bomb•.
in~ s. What is offensiv'e here,
then. i' not the extremely
mild caricature. but rathet
those theological underpin!
nings of holy war and suicide bombings . When the .
widely influential Sheik .
Yusef a!-Qaradawi c;m
praise Muhammad as "an
epitome for religious war- ·
riors
(m ujahideenh"
Muhammad. a j ihad model,
shou ldn 't be a taboo subject
in the West, either in cariq-,_
ture or commentary, and ce~·~,
tainly shouldn ' t be super-, ·
sacrali zed, in effect, by .~
fearfully polite censorshi[11
The subject should be !aiel
out for all to see.
The valiant Dutch parliamentarian and ex-Muslim
Ayaan Hirsi Ali put it this
way: "You cannot liberalize
Islam without criticizing the
Prophet and the Koran .. !: '
You .cannot redecorate a
house without entering
inside." And especially
when you're not allowed to
see what it looks like.
..
(Diana Wesr is a columnist
for The Washing/on 7imes.
She can be conracred via
dianawesr@ t·uizon.rlel.)

~-

DISPATrH . . ,

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o

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...,

WE WERE PLAYIN6
NEXT DOOR, SO THEY SHOUlD
RELEA5E THE STORY. ·

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' POMEROY - Arthur Roy Reeves, 76, of Rocksprings
Rehabiitaton Center, Pomeroy, passed away Saturday, Feb.
1'8, 2006.
.
.- Born Oct. 22, 1929 at Albany, he was the son of the late
Worley R. and Jessie A. (Marshall) Reeves . He attended the
Rutland Church of .Christ, Rutland .
::He is survived by three sisters, Dorothea (Joseph) Salhaney,
1:-ady Lake, Fla., Faye (Paul) Hammond, Pataskala, Ohio, and
· Merle Johnson, Mesquite, Texas, along with several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
· Besides his parents, he was prececed by a brother, Merrill
Wayne Reeves.
·
. • Graveside services will be Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2006, at noon
at Wells Cemetery, Harrisonville, with Bob Werry officiating.
. Arrangements are by Birthfield Funeral Home, Rutland.

Deaths
"'

., .

Mary 'Irene' Myers

''LETART, W.Va. - Mary "Irene" Myers, 82, of Letart, W.
.Vii. died Saturday, Feb. 18, 2006 at Peasant Valley Hospital.
,She was preceded in death by her husband, Tobey Myers.
: Funeral services will be held at l p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 21 at
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home with Pastor Gregory CoJ.Iins
and Paul Chapman officiating. Burial will be in Board Baptist
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from noon to
I" p.m. Tuesday.
In Lieu of flowers donations
can be made to the Board Baptist Cemetery, 'Route #2, Box
117, Letart, W.Va . 25253
'

John Denver Curtis
· . RA&lt;:;INE - John Denver Curtis, 20, of Racine, Ohio, died
S.aturday Feb. 18, 2006.
·
'
· Arrangements will be announced by White's Funeral Home .
in Coolville, Ohio.

Julia Shawver Roclen1s
' GALLIPOLIS -Julia Shawver Roderus, 56. of Gallipolis. ·
Ohio died on Sunday, Feb. 19, 2006.
• Arrangements will be announced by Willis Funeral Horne .

Bv STEVE HARTSOE

one."
Timothy Ghormley. com- and Lewi s Sackett of Fall
The Pentagon said the manding general of the coun- Creek, Wi s.
Marines killed in the crash terterrorism force. "We
''She's
bruised
and
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. were:
mourn their loss and honor .&gt; wollen. and her arms and
-Ten U.S. service members
• I st Lt. Brandon R. their memory."
legs ·got hurt , but no broken
died when a pair of Marine Dronet, 33, of Erath, La.
John
McColley
of bones. " Pat Sackett said.
Corps helicopters from a unit
• Sgt. James 'F. Fordyce, 22, Gettysburg, Pa .. said .his son
She said her daughter was
based in ' North Carolina of Newtown Square, Pa.
was less than two month s not sure what cau sed the
crashed off the coast of
• Lance Cpl. Samuel W. away from being rotated out crash.
Africa, U.S. military officials Large, Jr., 21, 9f Villa Rica, of Africa and it was difficult
Military officials were
confmned Sunday.
Ga.
to wait for news after the first investigating why the aircraft ·
The two CH-53E choppers,
• Sgt~ Donnie Leo F. reports of the crash .. ·
when down in shallow water.
carrying a dozen crew and Levens, 25. of Long Beach,
"That news affected every · They said there was no inditroops from a U.S. countert- Miss.
member of the contingent, 40 cation of hostile fire, and viserrorism force, went down
• Cfl. Matthieu Marcellus, or 50 families," ·McColley, ibility was good with light
during a training flight 31, o Gainesville, Fla.
. said. "Every famj!y 's heart wind.
Friday in the Gulf of Aden,
•
Sgt.
Jonathan
E. sank."
The Combined Joint Task
near the . northern coastal McColley, 23, of Gettysburg,
Margaret Levens, of Long Force-Horn ·Of Africa, set up
town of Ras Siyyan in . Pa.
Beach, Miss.. said she was in the former French colony
Djibouti.
• Lance g,1. Nicholas J. proud that her son, Oonnie in June 2002 , is responsible
·Two crew members who Sovie, 20, of Ogdensburg, Levens, had a chance to do for fighting terrorism in nine
.
were rescued were taken in N.Y.
what he loved. .
. countrie s in the . region:
stable condition to the U.S.
• Capt. Bryan D. Willard,
"He was there to serve his Djibouti, · Eritrea, Ethiopia,
military's
Landstuhl 33, of Hummelstown, Pa.
country and to keep his fami, Sudan, Kenya. Tanzania,
Regional Medical Center in
Also killed in the crash ly and country ·safe,'' Uganda and Somalia in
Germany.
were Senior Airman Alecia S. Margaret Levens said . " It Africa and Yemen on the
'The aircraft and i:i~ht Good, 23, of Broadview was what he wanted 'to do. southwestern corner of the
Marines were from Marme Heights, Ohio, of the 92nd He was there for us ..: in fact Arabian Peninsula.
Heavy Helicopter Squadron Communications Squadron he had reenlisted for four
The impoverished region is
464, based at Marine Corps at Fairchild Air Force Base, . (rrlOre) years."
.
home to a sizable Muslim
Air Station New River. Two Wash.; and Staff Sgt. Luis M.
The remains of the eight ropulation. U.S. officials say
Air Force airmen killed were Melendez Sanchez, 33, of Marines and two airmen it has been used by terrorists
from bases in Washington Bayamon, Puerto Rico, of the were sent back to the United as a place to hide, recruit
state and Virginia. ·
I st
Communications States on :Sunday. task force operau ves and stage attacks.
. "We were devastated," said Squadron, Langley Air. Force · spokeswoman Maj . .S~san
The region has suffered
Marine Corps I st Lt. Paul Base, Va.
Romano told The Associated four attacks either claimed by
Tremblay, who is based at
"Our deepest sympathy and Press by telephone from or attrib.uted to Osama bin
Camp Lejeune, the huge post heartfelt prayers go out to the Djibouti.
Laden 's al-Qaida network ,
on the Atlantic Ocean that's family members, friends,
One of the two crew mem- including bombings of the
next to the New River air sta-· loved ones and co-workers of bers who were rescued was U.S. embass ies in Kenya and
tion. "It hits us very hard as our fallen brothers- and sis- Marine pilot Susan Craig, 28, l'anzania; and the 2002 attack
Marines when we lose any- ters-in-arms," said Maj. Gen. who called .her parents, Pat on the USS Cole in Yemen.
ASSOCIATEQ PRESS WRITER

Lawmakers call for overhauling FEMA; .
Chertoff warns against untimely changes
Bv DOUGLASS K. DANIEL

Parking lot ponds to act
more like natural wetlands

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
Federal
Emergency
Management Agency should
we approach storrnwater be dissol ved and rebuilt .
CLEVELAND (AP) . Mulch-lined ponds at the 'management," said Todd before the upcoming hurriedges of a new shopping cen, ·Houser, a stormwater special- cane season, a Democratic
ter being built south of down- ist with the Cuyahoga County senator said Sunday.
"FEMA has become, to
town could be a model for Soil and Water Conservation
many
people in America, and
treating storm runoff along District. "We're · changing
parking· lots and road~ across gears. We're not just looking . particularly the Gulf Coast , a
at it for flood · control, but joke, a four-letter word ,"
the state, city officials said.
sai'd Sen. Joseph Lieberman.
When rooftops, parking water quality !)'eatment.''
lot s and roadways take the
The mall's developer, First D-Conn., and a.member of
Senate'
Homeland
place of soil, rain no longer Interstate Properties Ltd. of the
soaks gently into the ground Beachwood, could include Security and Governfllental
but rushes in torrents to the ponds in future projects Affairs Committee.
drains, carrying along ·motor after seeing how these protoHe favored keeping the
oil; antifreeze and other pol - types work out, said R1chard agency within the Horne land
. lutants. Usually the water- Carlisle, vice president and . Security Department. FEMA
·collects in ponds at 'the edge director of development. .
was independent before it
of lots -designed to prevent
Similar ponds are planned was folded into Horne land
floods, not po!'lution - and ·for an expansion of the Security when the departdrains straight to rivers and Cleveland Art Museum and
ment was created after the
trail near a local bridge.
other waterways.
Sept. 11 attacks.
communities
The parking lots at the 91- . More
"It's time for FEMA to go
acre Steelyard Commons will statewide could soon be and to build something betslope gently toward basins watching the pond's success. · ter, stronger within DHS to
designed to scrub pollutants · The Ohio Departr)lent of take its place," Lieberman
from water by letting it pass Transportation in ·two years said.
·
through layers of mulch. soil will require communities
Security
Homeland
and sand, much like a natural with state · storm-water perwetland. The water then mits' to make developers
drains to pipes that lead to the show how construction sites
Cuyahoga River.
·
that disturb one or more acres
"We' re breaking the train Will not pollute water with
of traditional thinking in how runoff.

a

'"

·'
"

'"

.

."'

'

Boys find scifety at Tree~ouse
They slump in their chairs.
· ·arms crossed, heads cocked
slightly. to one side: the
armor of the teenage hoy.
They wear black, mostly.
Hooded sweatshirts, baggy
jeans. One has a rhinestone
cross the size of a hood ornament hanging from hi s neck
.and gold caps across hi s
front teeth . More armor.
There are just four boys
today around the tab·le in
Bungalow· 3, a portable
classroom behind Cesar
Coavez Elementary School
in the Mission District of
San Francisco. Usually there
are nine. One is sick. One
has soccer practice. The others have called to say they ' re
working. Maybe they are.
Whatever they ' re doing ,
Saul Hidalgo knows they' II
be back next Friday,
For more than two years,
the nine boys have been
showing up at Bungalow 3
almost every Friday a,fternoon to meet with Hidalg-o
and two other volunteer
counselors,. both men·.. They
call the after-school cl ub
"Treehouse," evoking a
makeshift refuge with a '·No
Girls Allowed'' sign nailed
to the door. In the privacy of
Treehouse, the boys arc
learning a ski ll not widely
practiced in the macho cu lture of the urban street, .
They're learning to talk.
They're learning it's OK
to ask for hdp. To acknowl edge lhey might not have all
the answers : To take a path
different from · their abu sive
or absent fathers anll differ.-

Joan
Ryan

And. as I wrote in a column las t month . boys
account for 86 percent of all
teen sui cides.
Yet there were almost no
support gro ups fo r boys
. when Hidalgo begaJ11ooking
around for one more than
two years ago. The Mi ssion
had groups in which gi rls
cou ld talk about girls' issues.
But boys pretty much had
after-school tutoring and
sports. The men's staff at
Jamestown struck on the
idea of Treehouse.
''Something amazing happens when you ·share with
mhcrs - you want to share
more." says Hidalgo. a m&lt;trriage-and-family therapist.
"We don ' t judge or question.
But we try to ed uc &lt;tte them
.1bout consequences and
alternatives."
The boys agree to all ow

,,

to ym1r homies. And they're
gonna say, 'Go ' smoke this.
You ' II feel better.' ·•
Next to him sits a slight
t.atino boy who looks about
12 but is also a· high school
freshman. I ask why h~
comes w T;eeho~se . .HF,
answers . 111 a sott vo1cej
avoiding eye contact. '' If ..
talk about problems to
friends who are guys. ther
ihink it's a joke," he says. ·
The young men know •
what 's said . at Treehouse,
stays at Treehouse. They carr··
think out loud about the pros
and cons of joining the corner gang or carrying a knife
'to school. They c'an conHde
their trepidation about
approaching a girl they like:.
They can ask about how to
shave properly or how to get
in shape.
·
Nine boys . Nqt many. If
. ·Treehouse saves every otie
of them. it will make barely
a dent in the problen1 of boys
and dru gs. boy s and vio- ·
lcncc . boys and suicide ,'
Hidalgo and his eolleagud
aren ' t trying to change the
world. They know they can 't
pull everyone onto the li fe
raft. But they can grasp who
they can and look for that
first sign of hope : the tightening grip of a young man
grasping hack .
·
!loan Rwm is a colw111risr·
fiJr r/11 San Francisco

ent from . their frie nds.
They're learning that sometimes the safest and bravest
tactic is to drop the armor a
little bit.
"Our young men grow up
building walls around them
just to be safe in these neighborhoods," said Hidnlgo, u
counselor
.with
the
Community
Jamestown
Center in-the Mi ssion . ''This
is a place they can drop the
shield, take all of thai burden
off their shouldets, even 'if
just for these three hours:· · me into Bungalow 3. gra ~ti ­
The boys in Treehouse are ng a brief' exception to the ir
in gangs or at risk of joining "no girls'' rule. But they
gangs. They have behayior slouch in their chairs and
problems. They have anger stare at their feel when I start
issues . All but. one has no asking,questions. a blum valfather in hi s life. The se boys idat ion of their prerequisite
are .the ones Hidalgo und his of absolu te trust and privacy
Jamestow.n coll eagues worry . in order to opeu. up . I don ' t
could be hurtling toward jai l fit the bi ll. Onlv Mo. the kid
cell s, or burial plots. Hidalgo with the rhinestone cross and
:knows boys and men are gold teeth. speaks up without
mLJCh more likely to be the prodding.
"IV1y first reaction is to
perpetrators and vic tims of
violence than , gi rl' and fight." Mo S&lt;t);S. He's a highwome n, that boys and men school freshnia n the siLe of
- particularly boys and men an NFL lineman . "I come
of color - fill our juvenik he re and hear other people ·s
jails and pri son,; a1 a di spro- opinion s abo ut if I should ChrfJ mc_:l£ Se11ll commenr.f
portionately higher rate than fi ght. If you · have nobody to her in ccu•e qfthis fi(' H'SfJG·their' representation in 1he like thi s io talk to about your f'el' r&gt;r .1end hi·r e-mail ar
gene,ral popul&lt;tlion . .
problems. you ' re gonna tulk. Jnanr\&lt;ln &lt;!! sfi-lrrmriclf .''""'·f.

Secretary Michael Chertoff,
in appearances on Sunday
morning talk shows, warned
against overhaulin'g FEMA
with hurricane season only
three months away.
"Nature doesn't wait for us
to do yet another reorganization," Chertoff told NBC' s
"Meet the Press. "
Rep. Tom Davis . R- Va., a
member of the House
Homeland
Security
Committee. said he favored
making FEMA a Cabinet
department.
Davis said FEMA should
not be competing for dollars
within a department concerned with prevention as
well as response, said Davis.
who
appeared
with
Lieberman on ABC's ."This
Week''
Chertoff said that is FEMA
were taken ·out of his depart.rnent, " I predict with virtual
certainty lhat we will be
much less prepare.d in this
hurricane season than if we
keep the department together
and finish the job on ,integrating."

ACS seeks teams for local
Relay·for Life events

Trooper shoots man who fired
·at him during trciffic stop
: WASHINGWN CH., (AP)
-: A highway patrolman shot
and killed a man who ftre&lt;l at
liim early Sunday after being
stopped on suspicion of drunken
driving. · '
1 Errol T. Baker II, 26, of
Jeffersonville. died after the tr.rl~
fie stop on state Route 753, south
of U.S. 35 in Fayette County.
· Trooper James Cress of the
Wilmington post stopped Baker
around 2 a.m. and asked him to

get out of the vehicle for sobriety
tests. Baker got out and then
struggled with Cress, according
to a release from the patrol.
Baker shot at Cress with a
handgun, missing him. Cress
then fired his weapon and hit
Baker in the upper body. .
Bl!ker j"as taken to Fayette
County Memorial Hospital and
later flowri to Grant Medical
Center in Columbus, about 40
miles northeast

POMEROY - Relay For
Life (RFL) · is the signature
event of the American Cancer
Society ( ACS) that brings
together teams from local
busine sses, schools. churches
and familie s for fun _ food.
music, entertainme.nt and a .
night under the stars.
Each Relav is a weekend
event held on a Friday and
· Saturday and lasts from 18 to
24 hours.· There are a variety
of activities including musical entertainment, games,
contests, various foods and
walking or running around a
track or designated area.
Special ceremonies and
activities are held for all cancer survivors.
"One of the reasons Relay
is 24 hours is because cancer
is 24 hours. Cancer patients
live with their di sease day
and , night," said · Christy
Williams, Public Relations '
Specialist for the American
Cancer Society.
Teams of I 0 to 15 people
rai se donations prior· to the

Relay with everything from
bake sales and car washes to
donations for casual Fridays
at their workplace. During
the event. teams bring food
and camping gear and many
of them decorate their tents
with an educational message
on how to prevent cancer.
''The Relay s would not be
successful if we didn't have
support from people . who
have a passion to cure can- ·
cer," Williams added.
Meigs County's relay will
be held at the Meigs .County
Fairgrounds at Rock Springs
May 12-1 3. JoAnn Crisp is
chairman of the event again
this year.
For more
information
about how to form a team.
call · the American Cancer
Society at 1-888-ACS-OHIO .
( 1-888-227-644.6). You . may
also reg ister your team and
get more inform atio n by
going. to the American
Cancer Society .relay web site
at www.cancer.org/relayonline

ing with the event will be
dressed in 1890s garb and
refreshments popular in that
era
will be available, he said.
from Page A1
Three
program s
are
' and as 1890s as we can." planned for each of t~e fixe
c,an
C hautauqua events were days of the event, McKinnis
said. Each morning will fear:~opular in the United States
from the end of the Cml War ture a youth program. The
until the 192.0s. when afternoons will have an adult
n1ovies. radio and other mod- · program. · During morning
ern forms of entertainment and afternoon workshOps, the
Pomeroy.
emerged. said Fran Tiburzio, scholars will not be in character,
McKinni
s
said
.
They
Other chamber announcedirector of public relations
ments inc luded : 8 a.m ..
For the Ohio · Humanitie s will answer que stions and
Tuesday,
Feb. 28, chamber
Council, which facilitates teach about each character.
from PageA1
The final eYent each day
board meeting; 10 a.m. to 4
five Chautauquas across the
will feature one scholar in tiatfve call Rou·sh at 992- p.m ., Saturd ay. March 4 at
state each year.
Meigs High School, . Ci"i l
· ihey started re-emerging character. he said. On 5005.
Tuesday, June 20, Cutler will
Also at the recent chamber War Period Clothing and
in the 1990s, she said.
On luncheon
of Cultural Workshop. contact
Director
"Th,is promises to be one of portray · Cornstalk.
Hi storical
the most entertaining and Wednesday. Fincken will Develop.mcnt for O'Biene's Chester-Shade
educatiomll events in Ohio play Pi za rro, while on ·Memorial Ho spital Debra Society fur more informaThursday, Mishler will depict Shaffer announced that tion: noon. March . 14. Wild
this su Ill iller," .,he said.
thanks to the hospital's anr1u- Horse Cafe. chamber\ busi The . Gallipolis Chautauqua Pyle.
Friday will fea ture Vuranch al givi ng campaign digital ness-minded
luncheon:
will have an 1890s feel to it
2-l - ~6 .
"Willy .
bequse that is the period as Barton and on Saturday. radiology technology would March
when the events peeked. Worthington will wrap up the be coming to its bran ch . . Wonka."will be·presented by
Meigs Medical Clinic in , the Ri1·cr City Kids.
·
event by playing Roosevelt.
McKinni~ said. Those help-

Chief

The Daily Sentinel ~ Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

'

Nonsense and sensibility

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Feb. 20, the 51st day of 2006. There are
314 days left in the year. This is the Presidents' Day holiday.
Todav's Highlight in History:
·
. On Feb. 20. 1962. astronaut John Glenn became the first
American to orbit th ~ Earth , flying aboard Friendship 7.
On th.is date:
In I 790. Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II died.
In 1792, !'resident Washington signed an act creating the
U.S. Post Office.
In 1809, the Supreme Court ruled the power of the federal
government is greater than that of any individual state.
In 1839, Congress prohibited dueling in the District of
Columbia.
·
.
In 1944, during World War II, U.S. bombers began raiding
German aircraft manufacturing. centers in a series of attacks
.
that became known as "Bi g Week. "
In 1965, the Ranger 8 spacecraft crashed on the moon after
sending back thousands of pictures of the lunar surface.
In 1981 , the .space shuttle Columbia. cleared the final major
hurdle to its maiden launch as the spacecraft fired its thre~
engines in a 20-second test.
.
In 2003, lire broke out during a rock concert at The Station
nightclub in West Warwi ck, R.I. , killing I()() people and injuring a.bout 200 others.
·
·
One year ago: Israel's Cabinet gave 11nal approval to the
government's planned withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and
four West Bank settlements. Former presidents Bush and
Clinton traveled to Lampuuk, Indonesia, ground' zero of
tsunami devastation "\'here they promised survivors that more
help would come. Jt:ff Gordon won hi s third Daytona 500.
Allen Iverson was selected MVP of the NBA All-Star game,
helping the Eastern Conference to a 125-115 victory. Actress
Sandra Dee died at age 62 ; musical aslfjr John Raitt at age 88;
and counterculture wnter HunterS. Thompson at age 67.
Thought for Today : "Cities, like cats. will reveal themselves
at night." - Rupert Brooke; E~glish poet ( 1887: 1915 ).

20o4

, Monday, February 20,

Reed

Fast-service medical clinics
• Q.h · h .
·
open zn 10 p QJ'1JlQCleS
COLUMBUS (AP) ·
encourage patients to find
Promi sing quick, convenient phy sicians and give them
and affordable health care. a names of doctors in their
Minnesota-based company is neighborh oods · that are
bringing its in-store medical · accepting new patients, said
clinics to Ohio pharmacies. · Dr. Jim Woodburn. medical ·
MinuteC!inic will open at .director for MinuteCiinic.
two CVS stores in the
But some physicians are
Columbus area on Monday wary of the in-store clinic
and has plans to open three concept.
"It's a retail · ploy tp
more sites.
Nurse practitioners will be . increase their rnarket share,"
on-hand to treat minor ill- said Dr. Elisabeth L.
nesses, such as sinu s infec.- Righter. president of the
tions, strep throat, bronchiti s Ohio Academy of Family
or ringworm .· They ' ll also Physicians , "It 's a gimmick
write .prescriptions . that to me . It's a way to get
patients can get filled on them inside the store to ·buy
site. .
··
more things.'"
Tim Maglione. spokesman
The company promises·
treatment in 15 minutes and for the Ohio State Medical
offers the motto: "You're Association, said . patients
sick. We're quick." · The ge t better care by seeing ·
clinics will feature a price their doctors.
''What may appear to be
list and allow patients io
pay cash· or the insurance trivial can be a very serious
c.opay for various companies health situation. and these
and Medicare, the federal clinics are not equipped to
program for people aged 65 handle that ," he said.
and over. The clinics will be
MinuteClinic opened its
open seven days a week and first . site in 2000 and now
has 71 across the country.
offer evening hours.
But unlike doctor. offices, Plans call for 300 in 17
the clinics have no running states by the end of . the
water - patients submitting year.
MinuteCiiriic is one of a
a urine sample will have to
in-store
clinic
use a bathroom across the handful
store . Practitioners keep providers m the United
Besides
c lean · with ami-bacterial States:
CVS;
lotion · .and wear latex Kroger. Wal-Mart and Target .
stores are trying them out in
gloves.
Nurse practitioners treat select markets.
In Ohio. doctors also nave
only a speciti c li st of minor
illnesses and refer patients seen simi lar in-store clinics
with serious or chronic con- in other pharmacies and groditions to urgent care cen- cery stores in the Akron
area. &gt;aid Heidi M. Gordon,
ters. · hosp itals~ or doctors.
"We 're treating the things a spokeswoman for the Ohio
of . Family
that don 't need the expen- Academy
sive e'nvironment ." sail) Physicians.
L1ke doctor's offices. the
Donna
Haug land.
a
MinuteClinic . nurse practi- MinuteCiinic' carry malinsurance.
tioner. "We do things folk s practice
don't need to disrobe for: Spokesman Brent Burkhardt
they can keep their clothes si1id none of the national
sites has ever received a
on."
·
Practitioners also will malpractice complaint.

,

..

OH • 992-3811

�··PageA6

OHIO.

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 20,

200~

Saturday's gamea
High achool boys baaketball
Oak Hill 70, South Gallia 66
Gallia Academy 44, Point Pleasant 42
Elk Valley at Hannan, ppd. (weather)

Prisons ask for alternatives
to jailing deadbeat parents
COLUMBUS (AP)
any new option thai encourPrisons officials are asking ages parents to pay up.
lawmakers to consider alter"In mmt drcumstances. the
natives to putting deadbeat county agency and the court
parents behind bars. where have · al~eady been through
they don't earn much money many steps with the obligor .
and continue failing to sup- and they have failed to comport their children.
ply." she said. "We are not
The 601 men and 24 throwing people in prison on
women sent to prison in 2004 the first try."
for not paying child support
In Franklin County, .there
made $12 to $18 a month were 51.000 cases with child
working prison jobs, while support court orders, Bond
taxpayers paid about $63 a said. Of those, 706 were sent
day for each prisoner's ·shel- to the prosecutor and 46 were
ter, food. clothing and med- prosecuted.
,
ical care.
. failure to pay child support
"We strongly think each · is a tlfth-degree felony, punchild should receive the sup- ishablc by six to 12 months in
port they are due," said prison. Repeat offenses rise to
Andrea Dean , spokeswoman fourth -degree felonies, which
for the Ohio Department of carry sentences of up to 18
Rehabilitation
and
Correction. " But we also months. ·
·About two-thirds of the
understand there arc going to
be some deadbeat dads or par- child:support prisoners from
ents for whom. if they had an 1991 to 2004 were white opportunity, an alternative : compared to half of the oversanction other than prison all prison population - and
would be a good option .''
about 60 percent had a high
About 2 _5 percent of school dip loma or the equiva:
inmates admitted to prisons in lent, according to prisons sta2004 were felony child SliP· ti stics. The average violator
port cases.
·
was a 37-year-old man.
Prisons officials want lawPrisoners say they didn't
makers to consider work pay child support because
release or other programs that .. they were unemployed or
would allow nonviolent child working part-time, had a job
support violators to work that paid minimum wage or
under supervision. They say had
second family and
those options could help aile· couldn't afford both, accordviate crowding and save tax- ing to state . documents ..
payers the $23.000 each pris- Nearly half had full-time jobs
oner. costs annually.
before going to prison, starisSome officials in charge of tics show.
collecting child support payAbout $2 billion in child
ments say they go through · support was collec1ed in Ohio
many options before cases are during the fiscal year that
even prosecuted:
. ended June 30, with another
The Franklin County Child $600 million that went uncolSupport Enforcement Agency lected. The state has about 1
tries punishments such as sus- million child support cases.
pending drivers' licenses, according to the Ohio
withholding money from pay- Department of Job and
che~:ks and seizing bank Family Services.
accounts
before
fi ling
Doug Missman, chief procharges.
agency
head bation officer for Delaware
Anthony Bond said.
County Common Pleas Court,
·'We've. exhausted every said his county has work
possible administrative and release and other programs,
judicial remedy before we do although not all· counties can
this/' he said.
offer !hem because such proKim Newsom Bridges, grams are costly.
director of the Ohio Child
"It seems silly to be spendSupport
Directors ing· money to lock up people .
Association, which represents so the state pays for them and
all 88 counties. said members they qn 't pay the people they
would be willing to consider owe,'' Missman said.

a

Local Weather
Todats Forecast

City/Region
High I Low temps

Forecast for Monday, Feb. 20

Youngstown •
31 ' 112'

Mansfield •
30' 112'

Dayton•~

~

'lt4'

High school girls basketball tournament
0!y!alon II - S8ctlonalllnal
Gallia Academy 55, Athens 47

31 '1 18'

Cincinnati

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS coRRESPONDENT

. . . Break
locAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS- A Eid1edule of upcoming co6ege
and high SChool versily ,l!.porting events involving
teams from Gallia, Meigs and Mason counties.

Mondev'l MMII
. Boys Tournament Batketball
Sheridan vs: Meigs (at Logan H.S.).. 7

p.m.
Miller vs. Southern (at Wellston) , 8 p m.
Boys Basketball
Roane Courity at Point Pleasant, 7:30
p.m

AP Photo

Arnold Glanemann crosses main s treet ,in Corning on Feb. 9. Glanemann hopes to someday work at a new min~ opening just
south of the town. The economically-depressed region around southern Perry County is looking at gaining coal-mining jobs as
Buckingham Coal Company expands a deep mine-operation.
'

COAL COMPANiES LOOKING FOR NEW GENERATION OF MINERS ·•

COLUMBUS (AP) - The more died i.n a conveyor belt mine that closed would love said Bums, who now owns a
demand for coal-mining jobs fire Jan . 19 at the Aracoma to return · to &lt;their former tire shop in Crooksville.
Arnold Glanemann, 36, a
in · Ohio remains strong Coal Alma No. I mine, also in industry .. But' United Mine
Workers
members
would
native
of Perry County, said
despite recent tragedies at West Virginia.
Those deaths haven't lose some bel)efits if they mioing is attractive becau~
mines in neighboring West
·deterred
coal-country take jobs in the new he· wants a respectable · job
Virginia.
nonunion mine· operated by that pays welL
Ohioans
looking
for work:
lndu.stry observers ex.pect a
.
"It might take away a little
Former miner Larry Burns Buckingham Coal.
surplus of applicants when a
"I would if I could. Coal min- of the hurt. And it beats Walnew mine operated · by said he and many others who
Buckingham Coal Co. opens worked in the Sunnyhill ing was the best job I ever had," Mart," he .said.
t hi s year in Perry County, 60
{hiles southeast of Columbus.
Ohio's resurgent job market
in the coal industry is being
fue led by an increased
demand for en'ergy and the
retirement of. , aging coal
workers.
Coal genera,tes more than
half of the U.S. ·electricity
supply and nearly 90 percent
of that used in Ohio.
"The workhorse in a mod- .
em economy is sti ll coal."
said Jacqueline Bird of the
Ohio Coal · Development
Oftlce. "When they cao run
the Marysville Honda plant
24 hours a day; seve11 days a
week and 365 days a year on
an alternative energy source,
that' II be great. .But until then ,
we need coal."
Ohio .sits in the northern
Visa Check Card
portion of the Appalachian
Coal 6asin, ranking seventh
nationally in res.erves.but 14th .
in production.
· Every mining job created in
the state can create up to II
other spinoff positions, Bird
said.
In Perry County. anticipa·
tion
over
the
new
Buckingham Coal ·mine is
higp.
The average coal miner
earns · $44,000 a year. not
counting
overtime, and
receives family health instlr·
ance and other benefits . .
A mine closure in 1990 dev'
astated the county's eco.nomy, Internet Banking
4 Drive- Thrus
· Free Checking
and many of those former
with e-Statements
miners are still . struggling,
said Tom Colli ns, . village
administrator in Crooksvi lle.
The county ranks among
the worst in the state in unemployment at 8 percent. Ohio' s
overall rate is 5.9 percent.
Member Folc .
And only 7 percent of county
I
, residents 25 or older have a
Point~l1·
Pomeroy
Tuppers
Plains
Mason
Gallipolis
college degree, compared to
21 percent statewide.
667.1161
771.6400
446.2261 c~Uloo
"2.2116
·Twelve miners died in an
explosion Jan . 2 at the Sago
Mine in West Virginia. Two

CONVENIENCE
•

Farnters
Bank

.·

Tueaday'a gamea .
Boya Tournament Basketball
River Valley vs. Oak Hill (at Athens), 6:15

p.m.

South Ga!lia vs. Eastern (at Wellston), ~
p.m
.
Glrte Tournament Basketball
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7 p.m.
BoYa Besketbal~
Sherman at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Wahama at Hamlin, 7:30p.m.

Wednalday'a gamaa
Boya Tournament Basketball
SherldanfMeigs vs. Warren (at Logan
H.S.), 6:15p.m.
Gallia Academy vs. Fairfield Union · (at
Logan H.S.), B p.m.
Miller/SoUthern vs. Trimble (at Wellston),
8 p.m.

Thurwday'a game•
Glr1a Tournament Basketball
PoinVPoca winner vs. Winfield (at Poca) ,

7 p.m.

Whiteoak vs. Eastern (at Jackson), 6:15
p.m

ao,_ Basketball

Wahama at Calhoun County, 7:30p.m . .
Friday'• gem11
Boya Tournament Basketball
River Valley/Oak Hill vs. Ale•ander (at
Athens). 6 p.m.
Boys l;lasketball
Wayne at Point Pleasant. 7:30p.m.
~irt County at Hannan. 7:30

P.m.

AREA Bovs BASKETBALL SrANp!Ncs'
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLEnC
SEO
ALL
lfWarren
B·2 ·
17·3
~!:Marietta

Jackson

Galfia Academy
Logan
Athens

~

tCe

Partly ·~~~ "w.'~ ····· ~

Cloudy

.

Showers

~

Rain .

•

*

Snow

•••••

·Weather Underground • AP

Presidents Day... Partl y
cloudy. Highs in the mid 30s.
West winds 5 to I0 mph.
Monday
night ... Partl y
cloudy. Cold with lows in the
mid 20s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in t!le lower 40s ·.
Southwe s~wi nd s 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday
night .•. Pa ~tl y
cloudy. Cold with lows in the
upper 20s,
Wednesday...Mostl y cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Wednesday night ... Mostl y
cloudy with a chance of ~ain
and show. Lows in the lower

30s. Chance of precipitatitm ·
30 percent.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of sn'ow. Highs
in the lower ·50s. Chance of
snow 30 percent.
Thursday night ... Mostly
cloud y. Lows in the lower
30s.
Friday
and
Friday ·
night... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 40s. Lows in the
mid 20s.
,
Saturday, .. Partly cloudy
with a chance of snow showers. Highs in the upper 30s.
Ch~1ice of 'now 30 percent.

VISit us online at
www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

HOLZER CLINIC

Open 7 Days a week, with
.convenient locations in:

12·8
11 -9

3·7

7·1 3
2-18

0·10

·2·8

Wellsto·n
Meigs

0-10

Hocking Division

TVC

#Trimble

8-2
8·2
5·5
5-5
3-7
1·9

If Fed Hock

· Eastern
Watertord
Miller
Southern

14-6
12-7
9-10
4-17
2-18

Hannan

aves·

Point P~easant

ABU GtRbS B,t.SK!IBALL StANDINGS

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
ALL
SEO

HWarren•

8·2

Logan
Marietta

7-3

Jackson•
Gallia Academy
Athens•

7-3
6·4

15·7
16-4
10-10
1H

0·10

4-19

2-8

Local Caring:

Everywhere

,, _,,

TAl-VALLEY CONFERENCE
Ohio Division.
TVC
ALL
#Alexander
9-1
W-4
Belpre•
7·3
11-10
Nels- York"
6-4
13-9
Vinton Co. •
6-4
12·9

Meigs" •
Wellston•
'·

1·9
1·9 ·

5-16
4-17

Hocking Division

TVC
#Waterford

9-1

Trimble

8·2

5-5
4-6
4-6
0-10

Southern•

ALL
174

18·3

10-11
10- 11

4-17
9-i 3

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
ALL

#South Point•
Fairland~

Rock Hil t•
Chesapeake•
River Valley•

ave

8·2
8-2

15·7

7-3
4·6

12·9
7-14

2·8

5·16

.1-9

3-,18

17-5

OTHERIINDE.PENOENTS
ALL

Pomt Pleasant
Wahama

11 -11

9·11
9- 12

8·1 2
1- 16

Hanna n

Medical Excellence.

14-6
11-9
11 -9
10·10
3·17

ALL

South Gallia
Wahama

ovcs

740.992.0060

ALL

15-5

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS

South Gatlia"

Gallipolis
Jackson
Athens
Meigs

7·13
1· 19

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
OVC
ALL
10-0
18-2
#Chesapecike
Fairland
5-5
10-1 0
South Point
5-5
10·10
River Valley
5-5
9-11
Rock Hill
4-6
10-10.
Coal Grove
1·9
6-14

#Coal Grove•

Urgent Care

12·8

6-4
5·5

CONFERENCE
Ohio Division
TVC
ALL
NAlexander
9·1
17·3
Vinton Co.
7-3
12-8
6-4
13-7
Belpre
Nels-York
6·4
1·2 ·8

Fed Hock"

Flurries

8-2

TR~VALLEY

Eastern
Miller

·~· c~v ~ Thunder-~

Monday, February 20, 2006

·Miller avenges Tornadoes, prepares for sectional rematch

FB

*Columbus

Bl

The Daily s-entinel

locAL ScOREBOARD

H --. League cttampron

• - season tinished

CONfACfS
.Phone- 1-740-446-2342 ex1 33
Fax....__ 1-740-448-3008

E-mail - sports@mydartysentrnel.com
$pQrts $~Qf1
Brad Sherman, SpOrts ·EdftOr

(7 40) '446-2342, ext. 33
bsherman@ mydartytribune com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer

(740) 446-2342 . • ,, 23
bwal ter s@mydarlytr~bu n e

com

larry Crum. Sporte Writer
(740) 446·2342, ""· 33

Ierum @ mydailyregrsler.com

HEMLOCK
Proverbially speaking, 'a
bird in the hand is worth
two in the bush.' Southern
already had its'bird', or
'should we say Falcon, when
It won a Friday the 13th
victory over Miller for its
first win just over a month
ago, 47-40.
Despite losing substantia,lly 66-41 at Hemlock on
Friday, Southern hopes a
second win is in the 'bush'
today when the two teams
meet in the rubber game of
the series, a sectional tournament match-up set for

. Monday night at R p.m.. at
Wellston Hi gh School.
The Southern game fol lows a first ro und match
between Sym mes Valley
and Ironton St. Joseph at
6:15p.m .
Southern r3-17) was certainly going for the win on
Friday, but didnft want to
show its Monday night ·
Johnson
McKnight
game plan . As a result ,
Southern stuck with it s season long g&lt;tme plan · and points, Wes Riffle eight,
also sub stituted ·freely. Jesse McKnight six, Weston
Hopefully, for Tornado Co~nts four, three each
fans , Monday will yield the ·from Co(bin Sellers, Brad
· desired results.
Crouch, and Josh Pape and
Nine of II Tornadoes two apiece from Bryan
scored Friday night led by Harris and Kreig Kleski.
Patrick Johnson with 10
Miller ( 10- 10) was led by

Dustin House holder with 24
point s, Kyle Fisher 17.
Shane Luning II and Cody
Baurer with six .
Not often does a team
shoot over 50 percent and
lose , but that is exactly
what
Southern
did .
Southern played delibl!rately and likewi se an aggressive Falcon defense produced 20 turnovers to limit
the num be r of Tornado
shots.
Miller edged to a 13-8
first quarter lead , and to' a
29-18 lead at the half. Kyle
Fisher had nine of his 17
points at the intermission to
lead the Falcons.
The third period wa&gt; the

.James, East rallies from 21 down to beat West
HOUS1'0N (AP) - A
push from the Detroit
Pistons, an MVP performance by l,..eBron James
and a putback by Dwyane
Wade decided an NBA
All-Star game that went
down to the final seconds.
Trailing by 21 points,
the East rallied for a 122120 victory Sunday night
· behind King James and the
Pistons' Fab Four.
·
With the score · tied,
Allen Iverson was offctarget on a jumper, but Wade
darted into the 1ane for the
rebound and the go-ahead
basket with 16 seconds
left.
Still , the East didn't
wrap it ·up until' h,ometown
hero Tracy McGrady of
the Hou ston Rockets
missed a jumper with the
clock ticking down. Kqbe
Bryant then had the ball
slip out of hi ~ hands for a
turnover, and It · hardly
mattered that Vince Carter
missed a breakaway dunk
on. the other end just
before the buzzer.
McGrady led all players
with 36 points. The 21. year-old James, in his second midseason showcase,
scored 29 and became the
youngest All-Star MVP · ·
"It was more impr~ssiv~
that we came from, at one
point. 21 points down an4
willed ourselves to a win,"
James said.
Detroit
teammates
Chauncey
. Billups,
Rasheed Wallace. Ben
Wallace and Richard
Hamilton, all selected as
re se rve s from the team
with . the league's best
record , came off the bench
together to help the East
rallv.
·
··j talked to the guys at
halftime and basically said

Ple..se see James, 86

decisive blow in the game.
Southern was outscored 2110 as Hou seholder blitzed
the visi tors fur 14 points in
the offe nsive ambush. Four
of House holderfs shots
were three pointers that led
to a 50-2R offset after three
rounds.
Miller marched on to the
66-41 triumph .
Mill e r won the reserve
game 46-24 led ·by Kyle
Hite with . 16 points.
Southern was led by We s
Riffle with six and Weston
Robert s with six.
, Southern plays in the sectional tournament at 8 p.m .
today · against the sa me
Miller Falcon club.

'
· . Prep Wrestling

Marauders
send pair
to districts
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

..,.r
•

AP photo

Cleveland ·caval iers' Lebron James (23) takes a shot
ketball game in Houston on Sunday.

i~

the fitst half in the NBA AII·Star bas-

THE PLAINS - Gallia
Academy brought home a
pair of in~vidual winners at
the Divi siOn II Sectional
Tournament
in
Athens
Saturday
during·
a
si xth place
team finish .
Du s. tin
Winters and
Justin
Saunder s
were both crowned champions of their weight classes,
with Winters remaining
' undefeated on the season
with a 5-4 deci sion over
Oney Snyder of Hillsboro to
take first ·in the 215 pound
class. while Saunders took
first in the 171 pound weight
class on a 6-2 decision over
J.G. Conley of Miami Trace .
Tile Blue Devils saw two
other competitors move on to
the di strict tournall)~nt , with
Joey Davis taking third i.n the
160 pound class on a 5-l
decision
over
Ryan
Wogoman of Chilicothe and ·
Phil Bokovitz taking a third
place fini sh in the 275 pound
class· when he · defeated
Ca&gt;Sidy Wilford uf Meigs in
a 7-6 decision.
.
Wilford was one of a pair
of Mei'gs wrestlers · to .
advance out of the tournament· with hi s fourth place
finish while Andy Legg took
fourth in the 130 pound class
when he lost by forfeit to
Ethan Depugh or" Chillicothe.
River Valley also saw two

· Please see Districts. B:Z

Oak Hill chops down Rebels, 70-66
neve r giv ing
it up despi te
only shooting
I 1· o f - 2 4
from
tile
charity stripe
in the final
eight
mtn·
utes.
D ~' p i.t e

B¥&gt;&lt;lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAI LYREGISTE.R .COM

MERCERVILLE
Sometimes a mighty oak tree
stands so tall not even Paul
Bunyan can chop it down .
Just ask South Gallia ..
TI1e · tough Runnin 'Rebel
( 14-6) · po\vc r was stopped
dead in their tracks Saturday
night when Oak Hill t4-16)
spoilea senior night in ·
Mercerville with a 70-6(\ victory.
"This ~~ a Di1ision Ill
'c huul With Di vision Ill kids
and they play in a Division Ill
league
,
, ) 'OU have e&lt;&gt;ot io
respect that. But sometimes it
is hard to tell the kids that."
, aid Snulh Gallia coach
rlonn ie S ~tunde r.s. "Our shoot-

'--~'--_..

percent 1~4-of- 5J) from the
field and 56 percent (~0-of­
361 fm111 the stripe . They also
dominHted the ~J ass with 46
hoards and passed their way
to I~ a'&gt;ists while grabbing ·
six 'ieals.and four blocks.
Th~ win giws the Oaks
~uite a hit of momel)tuin
heading into TuesdiJ\ ·s to ur-

trying to gi\e nament game against Ri ver ·

the
g;ome Vall.ev. "' Oak Hill and head
awa\ \,ith coacll Gary Harrison · grab
mi ssed .free throws. -Oai- Hi.ll their best finis h in three vears
held on to the lead thanb in . with four victories this s~ason
part to South G~llia·s pour 25 aftu Winning one game last
percclit ' 1~-o(:'J()) shouting )Car. and t\w in2t)03 ..
effort from the floor and an
Harrisml. whn i, one of five
equally bad 30 perc,·nt l ., .,,f. Galli a .-\cademv graduates
1()) elton from the smre 111 with 1 .oon po int ~ ,u]d the all the fmal quarter.
ltme leading ,wrer for the
South Gallia also hJJ little Blue Devi l~. "" '' grat&gt;s his
answer for cuard Gurl;md first win '"·cr an opponent
ing percentage wa~ terrible. ( Stiltner and hi, tw n hi ~ men with a winning r~cprJ in his
dun't kn ov. if it V.as our l·on .. Matt Crabtree and J D. Hal e. three vcac tenure "' head
centration but .J give Oak Hill Stiltner had JO point-. fi1 e ,·oach ;it Oak Hill
all the ,·red it. they stayed in 11 rebound~ an'Ct eigh1 a,.., ].,t&lt;.
"'G.1n 1" a tJ.0od ..:-tKl~h.· thev
while
Crabtree
added
I~
are
1·er1 · ntgani1ed ... · ,aid
early and played with a lot of
en nfi de nee ...
point' and 1~ re~out1d' and Saundc r~ "1 ha\ e been
AnJ c~mfidencc is deftantl) Hale po,tcd 17 po1nt' . II an•unu a ion ~ time and I
re'pe&lt;'t Oak Hili."
·what the Otlh showed rebound&gt; and three block&gt;.,
· Sawrda \ ni~ht.
· The) were joined hy Core) . .-\nd that re'pe,·t runs a little
Thc1 ·nc\er let s,)~th Gallia Farmer with five point' and deeper · nm1 with the upset
out n f' their ... ite:-. IH) matlt!r ci~~t rebounds. Garrett Davis , ktor)
Saturda~
during .
h1&gt;W man\ tum'' the l{ ebels w11h four points and fou r ,enior m~ht.
_
Larry Crum/photo
Lcad111~ the ,enior attac k at
South Galt~·s Curt Waugh (2 2) goes up for a shot over Oak tried tn ,·~c;•pe and t110k the rebounds and Brandon Pat!'
with
two
point,.
Hill defender Brandon Potts . nght. du nng Saturday's co11 lc ml for the lllst time w'ith
Please see.Rebels, 81
0 .1k Hill 'hot a tnwerin ~ 4~
6 ..1~ left in the fourth quarter.
test i~ Mercerville. Oak Hil l won 70-66.
Phillips

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

High School Basketball Scoreboard
HS BoYS BASKETBALL
Regular season
OAK HILL 70, SOUTH GALLIA 66
OAK HILL (4-16)
,
Garland Stlnner 11 7 10 30 Corey Farmer
1 3-6 5 Brandon Pans 1 0·0 2 Cody
M8SSI9 0 0-CI 0 Jarrod ttale 0 0·0 0, Matt
Crabtree 4 4·12 12, Chns Dupree 0 0-0 0
Cory Mtller 0 D-0 0 J D Hale 5 6 6 17,
Garrett Oa'.'ls 2 0 2 4 Enc Doan 0 0 0 0

3 9 Ryan Stamper 3 0 1 7 Ricky Kennedy
7 8·14 22 Jushn Puid1n 5 3·5 14 Enc
Fanntn 3 2·2 9 Totals 22 13·25 61

OVCS
Aces

50
61
3-Pofnt Goals-OVCS 3·8 (Coughenour 3)
ACC 4 (S1mpson Stamper, Pu1d1n, Fannin)
ReboundS-ACC 32 OVC 39 (Stinson 15

0 0 Derrick Beaver 0 0·0 0 Justin Triplett 0

o-o o. Curt Waugh 7 0·0 16

Dewey Cantrl:tll

2 0-2 6 Tyler Duncan 3 1).2 6 Aaron
Phtlltps 2 10 13 14 Steven Call 0 0·0 0
MIChael Pope 0 o-o 0, Josh Skidmore 1 1·1
3 Totals 22 15·25 66

Oak Hill
15 16 17 22 - 70
S, Gollla
12 20 19 15 - 66
3-Potnl Goals-Oak Htll 2 (Hale Sttltner)
SG 6 (Wnght Waugh , Cantrell 2) Fouled
Out-oak H1ll 2 (Patts Crabtree) SG 2
(Waugh Duncan) Rebounds-Oak' H1ll 46
(Crabtree 15) SG 30 (Waugh 7) AssiStsOak Hill 12 (Stiltner 8) SG 7 {Wnght 4)
Steals-Qak H1ll6 (Sti ltner Patts 2) SG 19
(Waugh 4 ) Blocks--Oak Hlll4 (Hale 3) SG
1 (Wnght} Team Fouls...:....OaK H1ll 21 SG

27
GALLIA ACADEMY 44,
POINT PLEASANT 42
POINT PLEASANT (2·18)
Stephen Walker 0 0-0 0 Will Slone 5 0·2
10, Jay Ellis 2 o-o 3 Nathan A1mmey 4 4-4
15 Josh Stover 3 1 5 7 Bobby Erre)12 2-4

Steals-ACC (n/a)

OVC

5

(Coughenour 3) Turnovers-ACe (nla)
OVCt4

HS GIRLS BASKETBALL
Division llaect!onalllnal

Tyler Porter 0 1 2 1 Ryan Getger 0 0-0 0

Lindsey N1day 1 o-2 2 Totals 20·52 12·21

55

ATHEN!; (4·19)

o-o

Becka Gnppa 0 tUl 0 Ab1e Salyer 1
3
Cara Gnppa 9 4·5 26 Beth Nostrant 2 0..()
4 Sam Zoulek 2
5 Elizabeth Russell 0
Kan Resler 4 1 3 9 Totals 18 44 58

o-o

47
Gallla

13 14 16 12 - 55
Athens
15 5
11 16 47
3 Pomt Goals- GA 3 1 0 (Wamsley 2
Elhott) Athens 6· 13 (C Gnppa 4 Salyer,
Zoulek) Fouled Out-None ReboundsGA 28 {Getger 8) Athens 33 (C Gr1ppa 11}
Steals-GA 14 (Ge1ger 5), Athens 3
IB Gnppa Resler C Gnppa) Blocks-GA 1
(Leslie) Athans 4 {Four Md wf 1)
Turnovers -GA 10 Athens 26

GALLIA ACADEMY (11 ·9)
Matt Mooney 0 0 0 0 Travus Stout 0 0-0 0

Saturday tournament results

Ft Lo ramie 67, N Lewisburg Tnad 33
Jackson Center 43 Sidney Fa1r1awn 21
K1dron Cen Chnslfan 49, LOU ISVIlle
AqUinas 39
Lowellville 38 Ktnsman Badger 29
Lucasville Valley 59 Portsmouth Sc1otov!lle

26

49

DIVISION I

'

w

MILLER (1Q-10, 3-7)
Shane Lumng 6 0·0 14 Jacob E1ng 1 0·0 2
Trevor Mclean 1 0·0 3 Kyle F1sher 7 3 7
17 Derek Bolyard 0 0 0 0 Cody Bauer 3 0
0 6 Dustin Householder 10 0·0 24 Totals

28 J.7 66
SOuthem

B

10 10 13 41
Miller
13 16 21 16 61
3 Pomt Goals-S 5-10 (Johnson 3 Sellers
Crouch) M 7 18 (Householder 4, Lunmg 2
McLean 1)

ADAMS COUNTY CHRISTIAN 81,
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 50
ovcs (4·17)
Brandon Coughenour 8 1-2 20 M1ke
Wtlltams 0 0-0 0 Michael Wnght 0 0 0 0
Nathan Brown 0 0..0 0 Zach Carr 0 ()..0 0
Zach Weber 6 0-0 12, Richard McCreedy 0
0-0 0 Luke Sw1ney 0 ()..O 0 Luke St1nson 6
2·2 14 Drew ~Outen 2 0 0 4 Totals 22 51
3-4 50

ADAMS COUNTY (nlal

Zach S1mpson 0

o-o 0

Glenn Pertuset 4 0·

DIVISION IV
Ashtabula Sts
John &amp; Paul 33,
Cornerstone Chnslfan 13
Bellaire St John 50 BeallsVIlle 42
Caldwell 69 Bndgeport 45
C1n Chnstaan 33 Mtamr Valley Chnstian 17
C1n Summtt Country Day 52 St Bernard
Corn1ng Miller 45 Willow WoOd Symmes

BrecKsvtlle·BroadVIew His 80 Macedonia
Nordoma 57
Cm Coleram 68 Ctn Withrow 46
Cm McAuley 58 Fa~r'f •eld 37
C1n Mt Notre Dame 35 Gin Se ton 2 1
Lyndhurst Brush 63 Cle Hts 50
Maple Hts 67 Cle E 41
Med1na 53 Kent Roosevelt 41
Umontown lake 50, Massillon Washington

o-o

10
Sard101B Eastern Brown 37, Coal Grove
Dawson-Bryant 21
Sc1oto McDermon NW 56, Peebles 49
Smtthvflle 43 Rocky R.ver Lutheran W 31
Versailles 74, New Pans National Trail 24

HS GIRLS BASKETBALL

Chns M1ller 0 2 2 2 Shawn Thompson 2 3·
5 7 Jeff Golden 3 1·2 7 Jayme Haggerty 4
2·2 11 Br8d Caudi ll 2 4·4 8 Alex 'Kyger 2
0-2 4 Shaphen Aobmson 2 0 0 5 Totals
1537121744
Point Pleasant 11 4 11 16 42
Qallla Academy 8 13 10 13 44
3·potnl goals-PP 3 (Rtmmey 3) GA 2
(Haggerty t;:labmson) Rebound&amp;-PP 14
GA 29 TurnQIJers-PP 18 GA 19 Team
fouls-PP 16 GA 18 JV s,core--GA 56 PP

Kre1g Kleski 1 0-0 2 Patnck Johnson 2 1 2
10 Jacob Hunter 0 0-0 0 Wes Rtffle 2 4-4
8 Josh Pape 1 1·2 3 Weston Roberts 0 0·
0 0 Corbtn Sellers 1 0·0 3 Bryan Hams 1
0-0 2 Brad Crouch t 0·0 3 Weston Counts
4 Jesse McKmght 3 0 0 6 Totals 15
2
6 8 41

C1n Purcell Manan 65 C1n Shrader 22
Columbiana Crestview 76 N Lima S
Range 64
G1rard 52 L1sbon Da\lid Anderson 46
lrontoh 45 Wheelersburg 27
Lora1n Clearvlew 45, Elyna Cath 33
Lynchburg-Clay 60 S Pomt 41
Minford 56 Chillicothe Zane Traca 53
New Middletown Spring 47 Roots\own 43
Oak H1ll 78, Nelsonville· York 51
S Euclid Regtna tl9 Gates Mills Hawken

21

6 Totals 16 37 7·15 42

MILLER 66, SOUTHERN 41
SOUTHERN (3-17, 1·9)

DIVISION Ill
Albany Alexander 55 Crooksville 45
Anna 70 Day Northndge 13
Arcanum 48 Brookville 45
Burton BerKshire 49, WICkliffe 29
Casstown M1am1 E 76 Preble Shawnee 27
Chtlllcothe Huntington Ross 31 Ba1nbndge
Parnt Valley 28
Cm HillS Chnshan Academy 52 FeliCity 51
Cln Madeira 36 Reading 29
Cm Manemont 48 C1n Clark Montesson

36

GALUA ACADEMY 55, ATHENS 47
GALLIA ACADEMY (11·11)
Jactoe Wamsley 5 1· 1 13 Leah Cummons
o 01 2 1 Br~nany Ell1on 6 1 2 14 Kayle
Perry 3 ;3·5 9 Joan Sojka 0 1 1 1 Alex1s
Ge1ger 5 3-4 13 Ryann Leslte 0 2·4 2

ooo

38,0T

14 22 -

Weber 12) Asslsts-ACC (nla) OVC 8

(Stinson 2)

Totals 24 20·36 70
SOUTH GALLIA (14-6)
Josl'1 Wnght 3 0 0 8 Berme Fulks 3 4 6 10
Seth Williamson 1 0·0 2 Robert Corey 0 0·

17 10 9
8 20 11

logan Elm 41
Zanes\lllle W Muskingum 40, Calltlndge

Cl'1ester Lakota W 66 Cm Mercy 40
Wadsworth 85 Akr Garf1eld 34
Youngs Boardman 56 Akr Ellet 20

DIVISION II
Bay V11lage Bay 62, Parma Hts Holy Name

30
Bellefontaine Ben,am1n Logan 48, Enon
Greenan 37
Can S 44 Can T1mken 38
C1n McN1c1'1olas 76, Cm Indian Hdl25
C1n Taft
New Richmond 51
C rcle\11lle 37, Washmgton C H 25
Clermont NE 54, Blanchester 4i
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 70 Akr N 24
Day Carroll 50, Lew1stown lndaan Lake 35
GallipoliS Gallla 55 Athens 47
Geneva 49 Conneaut 36
Lancaster Fa1rf1ald Un1on 55, Vmcent
Warren 35
lOUISVIlle 64 Akr SVSM 48
Mtllersburg W Holmes 54 Dresden Trl·
Valley 32
Mogadore F~eld 50, Alliance 39
Oxford Talawanda 52, Cm Wyoming 32
Parma Padua 41 Cle Hts Beaumont 27
Perry 37 Palnesyllla Hervey 29
Shaker Hts Hathaway Brown 49, Chardon

n,

NDCL 38
Sprmg Kenton Ridge 5 1 St Parts Graham

34
Urbana 54 T1pp C1ty Tippecanoe 49
Verm1l1on 50 SheHteld Brookside 38
Washmgton C H M1am1Trace 61, Cu'Ciev.lle

Valley 44 OT

33
McDonald 72 Leetonia 27
New Matamoras Front1er 44 Shadys1de 27
New Phtladelphaa Tuscarawas Cent Cath
57. Bowerston Co norton VBIIey 44
Newbury 2 Cle Max Hayes 0 forfeit
P1tsburg Frankl in Monroe 58, Tlpp City
Bethel49
Portsmouth Clay 65 Latham Weste~n 46
Rittman 39 N R1dgev111e Lake Ridge 30
Russ•a 74 Bradford 39
S Charleston SE 69, Hamilton New Mram1

19
S dney Lehman 57 MechaniCSburg 3B
Spnng Cath Cent 50 DeGraff Riverside

37
Torpnto 47, Strasburg·Frankhn 44
Troy Chnsttan 37 Cedarv•Ue 32
Waterford 70 Richmond Dale SE 20
Willoughby Andrews 49 Bloomfield 22
W1ndham 41 , Cuyahoga Hts 28
ZanesVIlle Rosecrans 57, Hann1bal Arver

27
Regular Season
Berea 72 Cle S 53
Columbus Grove 63 Pandora·G•Iboa 39
Doylestown Ch1ppewa 59 Canal Fulton
NW 57 1
E Can 54 Minerva 33
Green 47 Barberton 46 OT
Hamler Patnck Henry 72 N Baltimore 28
Hudson WRA 41 Streetsboro 33
Mansl1eld Temple Christian 51, Elyna F1rst
Baptist 28
Metamora Evergreen 25 Delta 23
PQrt Cl1nton 67, Sandusky St Mary 51
Spnng Emmanuel Chnstlan 48 GranVIlle
Chr stian 46 OT
Swanton 64 ToJ Ottawa Hills 49
Tol Chnst1an 73 Tol Maumee Valley 43
Warrens\ldle Hts 66, Bedford 56

OVCS .falls short against Eagles
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

WEST' UNION - Oh1o
Valley Chnstian had 11s ACSI
toumamenl run cut short
Saturday v.1th a 61-50 setback
to host Adams County
Christian.
The Defenders, who led 17-8
after etght minutes of act1on,
were ou!scored by the Eagles
53-33 the rest of the way,
mcludmg a 22-14 discrepancy
m the fourth quarter
That late surge allowed the
hosts 10 mcrease a slim 39-36
thud penod advantage mto a
comfortable 11-pomt vtctory
" There were also some late
fireworks down the stretch, as
fans began to show displeasure
with the offictatmg
One OVC fan was eJected
rmdway through !he stanza for
those arguments, rropelhng
Defender coach B!l Burleson
to ask why and what the fan
had done to be ousted
Instead of an answer,
Burleson was g1ven the gate
despne being assessed only
one techmcal toul m the contest A head coach need~ two
techmcal fouls 10 be eJeCted

Districts
from Page 81
compe111ors advance dunng
Saturday's actton, With Tyler
Canaday takmg fourth m the
103 pound we1ght class when

Rebels
from Page 81
South Gall1a was Curt
Waugh, who dropped 16
pomts. seven rebounds and
four steals and Berme Fulks
w1th 10 po1nts, four rebounds
and three steals
Also sconng for the Rebels
was Daron Phillips with 14
po1nts, four rebounds and
three steals, Josh Wnght w1th
e1ght pmnts, five rebounds
and four asSISts, Dewey
Cantrell and Tyler Duncan
w1th s1x pomls each. Seth
Will1amson
and
Jo sh
Skidmore with two po1nts
each and Tyler Porter w11h

That prompted another fan to
be ejected, and otherwise made
for a bad ending to a very competuve game
Ironically, the difference m
the contest came at the tree
throw lme. Adams County
(::hrisuan made 13-of-25 chanty tosses for 52 percent, while
OVC netted JUSt 3-of-4
attempts for 75 percent
Desp1te bemg d1squahfied
for the first time m hts career,
Burleson tned not to focus on
the negauve afterward. Instead,
he looked at the posime side
of his team's performance
"My kids really worked hard
tomght," srud Burleson "I was
pleased w1th theu effort and
they never quit throughout the
whole game."
After OVC jumped out to the
early nine-pomt edge, the hosts
responded w1th a 20-10 run to
close out the first half leadmg
28-27 ACC also outscored the
Defenders 11-9 in the th1rd
canto.
The loss also marked the
final game for semors Rtchard
McCreedy. Luke Swmey, Luke
Stinson and Zach Weber.
Brandon Coughenour paced
OVCS w1th 20 pomts and three
he fell to Jacob Gamnger of
M1am1 TracJ:, wh1le Jesse
Russel took second m the 119
pound we1ght class when he
lost by pmfall to Tommy
Armstrong of M1am1 Trace.
As a team, Rtver Valley
look 13th place and Me1gs
fimshed m 14th place of the
14 learns m attendance at the
one pomt
The Rebels shot 31 percent
(22-of-711 from the floor and
60 percent ( l5-of·25 ) I rom
the free throw hne m the
game They also came down
w11h 30 rebounds and
~rabbed 19 steals whtle passmg their '.lay 10 seven ass1s1s
Oak Hlll was tlrst to take a
lead 10 the gam~. gomg up 40 thanks m pan to' nme first
quaner pomts from Stiltner
as the Oaks held on for a 1512 lead !hrough e1ght mmutes
of play
In the second quarter South
Galha came stormmg back,
retakmg !he lead for only the
second ume m the game wnh
7 05 left to play m the half
and held on!o it through the
rest of !he quarter

steals Stmson and Weber each
had double-doubles m the1r
finale. Stmson had 14 pomts
and 15 caroms, while Weber
added 12 markers and a dozen
rebounds m the setback.
McCreedy and Swmey dtd not
score in their final hoops game.
Drew Scouten rounded out
the sconng w1th four markers.
Although Burleson hates to
see his upperclassmen move
on, . he 1s already looking at
what next year Will have to
work w1th
"We have a lot of these kids
retummg and we only lose four
semors th1s year," sa1d
Burleson "There 1s a good
nucleus here and we hopefully
have a good grou~ of eighth
graders conung up '
Rtcky Kennedy led the
Eagles and all scorers With 22
points Justm Purdm followed
wuh 14 pomts, wh1le both
Glenn Pertuset and Enc Fannin
had nme ap1ece m the tnumph
OVCS outrebounded the
hosts 39-32 and shot 43 percent (22-ot-51) m the grune
Oh10 Valley Chnst1an concluded ns season wnh a 4-17
merall mark
to urn amen!
M1am1 Trace took first
place. followed by Logan
Elm , Ctrclevtlle, Hillsboro
and Jackson
The d1stnct tournament
will be help at Goshen H1gh
School 10 C10cmnat1 The
two day event begms Friday
at 2 p m
They led by as much as
f1ve m the hall, but only managed 10 be ahead 32-3 1 headmg 1nto !he break !hanks m
pan to poor 1ns1de shoo!mg
ln fact, South Gallia turned
a number of easy basket
opportum11es mlo m1 ssed
&gt;hots when they rushed and
m1ssed easy lay-ups, while
Oak H11l seemed like they
could not miss w1th almost
every shot h1ttmg 1ts mark
By slowmg down the Rebel
offensive attack and forcmg
them 10 play a comlortable
Oak Hill pace. there was h!tle
that could be done from
!here
The Oaks 1mmeiJ1utely
retook !he lead to star! the
th1rd quarter and held onto It
through mo st of the next

Monday, February 20,

2006 ·

Monday, February 20, 2006

Blue Devils survive scare
from Point Pleasant, 44-42

www.mydallysentlnel.com

mribune - Sentinel - ~e
CLASSIFIED

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

GALLIPOLIS Most
fans 111 attendaflce at Gallia
Academy H1gh School
Saturday expected to see
the hos! Blue Devils wm
the!T semor mght basketball
contest agamst cross-nver
nval Point Pleasant.
They d1d, JUSt not in the
fash1on that most expected.
Galha Academy, wh1ch
defeated the Btg Blacks 5438 back on January 241h m
West Vtrgmta, needed every
second of a 32 minute war
to pull off a nail-b1tmg 4442 VICtory tn !IS 2005-06
regular season fmale
'
The Devils ( 11-9) led all
but 43 seconds of the second half and roughly three
quarlers of the game, but
never held an advantage of
more than etght throughout
the evemng
The Blue and Whtte also
trailed II -8 after etght mm utes and needed a strong
free throw performance (I
2-of- 17) to av01d bemg
upset, mclud10g a 7-for-8
effort down the stretch
In the end, ltowever, P01nt
found itself down 42-40
with 27 9 seconds left and
wtth possessiOn of the ball
Jay Ellis' tnfecta attempt
bounced unsuccessfully off
the nm and mto the arms of
Galha Academy's Jayme
Haggerty, who then converted two free throws for a
44-40 edge wtth 9 4 seconds remamu\g.
Josh Stover went uncontested for a layup to pull the
Btg Blacks withm two with
2.8 showing m · regulatiOn ,
then the guests stole the ball
at m1dcoun and released a
40-footer that bounced off
the nm, backboard and nm
agam before falling out
It wouldn't have maltered, the officials deemed
the shot to be after the
buzzer sounded
Afterward GAHS coach
Jim Osborne was thankful
to get out of there wah
career victory 496, but even
he covldn't help but be
pra1seful of such a great
performance by hts adversanes
·"I thought all the credit
should
go
to
Pomt
Pleasant," he satd "They
played mspired, they hustled, they defended and they
made us make bad plays.
They had a lot to do with
why we dtdn ' t play well and
we were very fortunate 10
w1n"
Pomt Pleasant (2-18) had
more field goals, more 3pomters, a better shooti ng
percentage
and
fewer
turnovers than the hosts, but
a 29-14 reboundmg discrep,~ ancy and 47 percent (7-of15) effort at the foul hne
ultimately proved to be the
back-breaker
The VISJ!ors m1ssed half
of Its SIX foul shots tn the
four!h quarter, mcludmg a
pau With l 13 left tratlmg
41-40
Nonetheless, PPHS coach
R1ch1e Blain was elated
with h1s club's heart-tel!
effort followmg a ternble
60-38 loss on Tuesday
aga10st Jackson
"The k1ds came here,
laced them up and flat out
got after )1," he commented
"We responded every lime
they made a run We JUSt ran
out of t1me and didn't score
enough pomts."
Blain was also Impressed
w1th hts opponent's gnt and
character during 1ts ln umph, even though Pomt
hkely had the better perfore1ght mmutes, unul Sou!h
Galha edged them m the end
51-48 heading mto the final
period of play
Agam Oak H1ll retook a
53-51 lead w1th 6 32 left to
play m the game and blew
thetr lead w1de open thanks
to a b1g ~-poin!er from Hale
From there, the Oaks Jumped
out by as much as seven
pomts w1th 4 12 lett 10 play
as the urgency besan to show
on the South Galha Sideline
They tned to close the gap
and came w1thm four of the
VISiting squad, unl!l a couple
of qUJck baskets opened up
the b1ggest lead for any team
on the mgh! as Oak Htll took
a 66-58 lead w1th only I 17
left to play m the game ·
W1th a lola! of 48 foul s m

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Bryan Waller9/photo

Gall1a Academy's Jeff Golden , w1th ball, goes 1n for a layup
over Potnt Pleasant defender Nathan R1mmey (2 2 ) dunng
Saturday s contest tn Gallipolis
mance
" I don't want to lake anythmg away from Gallipolis,
but I thought we outplayed
them," Bla10 sa1d "But g1ve
them credit When they had
to make a play, they made

Bobby Errelt and Elh s
completed !he B1g Blacks·
sconng w1th s1x and three
markers respectively.
The Will also allowed
semors
Stout, , Miller,
Kyger. Caudil l, Rob1nson
and Mal! Mooney to leave
the horne hardwood 111 style.
as we ll ·" f1111sh o tt a
tremendous second hall
surge afler ,, dtsm.tl 1-5

it."

Galha Academy started
the second penod with a 9·0
run, JUmpmg ou! loa 17-11
lead wnh 2 45 remmmng 111
the f1rst half The hosts held
a 21-15 mtermt ssiOn advantage
The Black and While
recaptured !he lead (22-2 1)
With 5 43 left 111 the th1rd
stanza.
but
Shaphen
Rob1nson s success ful 3pomter at !he live mmu!e
mark allowed the Devils !o
ma1ntam !he advantage lor
good
Bo!h te,tms dllemp!ed 37
field goals 111 the contest ,
With Pom! Pleasant makmg
16 shots lor 43 percent and
Galha Academy s1nk mg 15
lnes f01 41 percent The B1g
Blacks had one
le ss
lllrnover !han GAHS w1th
18 and trailed 3 1-26 al!er
!hree quarters of play
The Blue Devils had
seven players reach th'e
sconn g column, led by
Haggerty 's II pom1s Brad
Caudtll fo llowed w1th e1ght
markers, wh1le Shav. n
Thompson and Jeff Golden
each added seven marke1 s
10 the tnumph.
Robinson tacked on f1 ve,,
Alex Kyger had four ,md
Chns Mille( rounded out
the sconng w1th a pau of
made free throws.
PPHS had only f1ve players score in the con!est.
paced by Nathan R1mmey 's
game-high 15 pomts Will
Slone was next With 10 and
Stover contnbuted seve n !o
!he se!back,

start )

"These sen 10rs are .1 grea!
group of people, and I' m
sure they are gomg to be
very succe"ful bec.tuse
they undc1 stand hard work
and how to be dtsctplmed "
commented Osborne of hts
SIX depart1ng upperclassmen. "The one thmg they
may lack IS a l111le b11 of a
killer InStinCt Th,J! 's what
we have worked on and
thai 's what v.e ' ve gotten
betler &lt;~I They lw vc rc'alized
they are a lmle tougher than
!hey 011gm,ill y though!. and
1)1&lt;11 \ v.hy \\C h,ne won 10
of our l,"J J.) g.unes ·
Go~llld Academy cla1med a
senes sweep \1 1ih a 56-26
VICIOI) Ill th~ 111n10r VilfSIIV
Ill t
•
Cole l one' p,tccd GAHS
dlld all SCOICIS Wllh I~
pOints
while
S!ephe n
Brownm~ led Pomt wnh I ~
markers 'The hosb led 321~ at 1nte1mtss10n
The Blue De, il, f1111shed
the JV season 1.1·6 ovcrdll,
W1n111ng 12 nl 1h bs! I 'l
OUtiiH!S

Gail,,.

Ac.lllcm v st.trl' lis
DIVISion , II !(lUI n.uncnt
Wednesd.ty v.hen 11 tra ve ls
to Logan to take on
Fatrfteld Un 1nn al Kat1e
Sm 1th Gymn&lt;~stum T1r-oft
1s slated lo1 H p m
Poml Pleasant ICturns to
o~ct1on tod.t) when It hosts
Roane County "' 7 10 p m

the game, both teams were 111 Hill hn.illy 111.11l,lged to put
double-bonus very early 1n tnget hc1 enoug h point~ dl the
the fourth quarter .mel ch.tn ty ' tripe to 1:1ke the four
beca use of thai , Oak Hill plllnl VlctliiY S.&gt;tUHldy mgh!
spent much of !he rest of the
It \1 -ts not !he cnd111g the
mgh1 a1 !he line
'eve n Sm11h Gallt-t ,c'n101 s
Bul 11 was at the lme thdt h.td hoped flll lin thc1 r l d~l
the Oaks almos! gave the nt~h! 111 Mercel\ 1lk
game away, lll!SsiOg numer' t ICally &lt;~pprect,lle our
ous easy pmnt s and allowmg ~CnloP. . I thmk our p1ogrt~m
the Rebels 10 close the gap
Is on the n ght 11 .1ck said
South Galha closed w!1h1n S.~undc" ·Bul thts yea r s
four po111ts when Wnght h1t .1 g•oup ts a little up-dnd w1de open Cantrell for three dnwn A lc\1 cllort le"
poults but once agam 0-tk ~dille' .tnd !hC) l1nd nul what
Htll was sen! 10 the line fur n,tppens \lhcn th ey don'!
tv.o Th1s time, how ever pl.ty h,ud ·
·
Sultner sank both
South G,illl.t 110\1 tu1ns 11s
Like ,m tn&gt;ldnt rerl ,ty, the ,tttcnt tlln 1n tl1c posiSc,tson
Rebel' hll ,1nn1her ] -pumtcl Tue,d,t) when 11 lake' on
on a ra" hom Wnght tu E'otstCIIl .11 \\eli sion H1 gh
Cal\trell to dose the gap to School (,une tune '' sl,1ted
only three pmnts. bul Oak tor 8 r m

--------

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Avenue, Gallipolis 740-

I(Jil;-2842

I buy Junk Cars (304)773·
5004

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cratts,
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Matenals pro\llded
Free 1nformatron pkg
24Hr
801 428-4649
A keyboard player needed
lor
new
Christian
rock/pra1se and worship
band
We are not
teenagers and we are sea
Great
soned mus1c1ans
sound system and light
show w1th fog mach1nes
Stud10
wttl be 1n place
recordtng w1th CD sales tn
addition to live shows
7 40-367 7129 J1m
An Excellenl way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645
Applications can be p1cked
up duts1de the Roadside
Hotspol startmg Feb 15

2006

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale.. ......... ...... ............. 725
Announcement .................................... 030
Antiques ...... . ....... .. ... . . .... . ....... 530
Apartments tor Rent.......
440
Auction and Flea MarkeL ......................... 080
'Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .....
... 760
Auto Repair .............................................. 770
Autos lor Sale .. ....
.... . .. ....
.. .. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................ 750
Building Supplies...
. ... 550
Buslneu and Buildings ............................ 340
Business Opportunity . ..... . ..... . ..... 210
Buaineu Training ..................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes . .•. ........... 790
Camping Equipment. .. .. , ,...
.. 780
Cards ot Thanks............ ..... . ........... .... 010
ChlldJE!derly Care ........... ....
. 190
Electrocai/Ralngerallon ................... , , ...... 840
Equipment lor Rent. .
., .. ..
..480
Excavating.................................. ....... .. ... 830
Farm Equipment ......
.... . ......... , 610
Farms lor Rent ......... , .......................... ..430
Farms tor Sale .
. 330
For Lease ................................................490
For Sale
..... ,
... 585
For Sale or Trade.. ........ . .....
.. ... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....
..... 580
Fumlehed Rooms.......... ......
. ... 450
General Hauling . . .
.. .... 850
Giveaway ..... . . .....
....... . ......
.. .... 040
Happy Ads ................................................050
Hay &amp; Grain...
....
... ..... . .. .... 640
Help Wanted .............................................. 110
Home Improvements
.... . ....... . . ... 81 0
Homes lor Sale ........................................ 310
Household Goods .... ... ... .. ....... ..510
Houses lor Ben! ............ .....
410
In Memoriam.
..... . ......... .. ... 020
Insurance ......... .........
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. ..................... 660
Livestock ....
.......
.. .
....
...630
Lost and Found............... ........... ......... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage . .....
. .. 350
Miscellaneous............. .........
. ... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
...... 540
Uoblla Home Repair . .......
. .. 860
ftloblle Homes lor Rent . ..... . ................. 420
Mobile Homes tor Sale ...
..
... 320
Money to Loan
.... . ........................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.
. .740
.. ........ 570
Mus•callnstrumants ......
Personals
.• . ........ . .... 005
560
Pets tor Sale...................
Plumbing &amp; Heating .. ......................... 820
Professional Sarv!cea ..... .......
...230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .......................... 160
Real Estate Wan!ed ....
..
..... ...360
Schools Instruction ... , ........ , ...... . ... 150
. 650
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllzer
lluatlons Wanted ....... ,
.... 120
pace tor Rent
................... 480
Sporting Goods ........
..520
SUV's!or Sale
.... 720
Trucks lor Sale
715
Upholstery ....... .. .......
870
Vans For Sale . ...
... .. ....... .. ..... 730
anted to Buy .. .........
, .
090
anted to Buy· Farm Supplies. ............ .620
anled To Do .
..
.... . ..... .
180
Wanted to Rent ........ ... ........ ......... .. .. 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis
... . ....... .... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .
.074
Yard Soi•Pt. Pleasant.. ........ . . ......... 076

lli:LP wANfFj)

110

H\\\( l\1

I wnght2005@comcast nel

Attenl1on Dnvers
R&amp;J
Truckmg 1s look1ng for
Dnvers wf1 yr OTR
Expenence for Aeg1onal
Hauls Average pay 40's to
m1d 50s Home aver)'
Weekend
call
Kent

"-11&lt;\111 ....

GIVE-\WAY

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Jl~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

• start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prlc:a • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

To Help Get Response. ,

rAwwNQ~I

Oeacl~ire.s'

AUTOMOTIVE

Stop In and see us
at 380 Colonial
rive, Bidwell, Oh
or Ql\19 Barb
Peterson HR
Dtrector a call at
(740)446·5001 for
detatls

TECHNICIAN

Sec re ! a r y I Pe rs on n e I
Dtrector
Full T1me 2
Weekends Per Month
Must Possess 2 Years Or
More Expenence Must Be
Computer
Lt terate
&amp;
Prolfcfent
Must
Be
Depe ndable O rgamzed
Elftcfent &amp; Capable Ot
Multr Task tng Interested
Applicants May Apply By
Sendtng A Resume To
Sec ret a ry / Per so n n e 1
Director PO Box 307
Ravenswood WV 26164
References Are Requ1 red
Tak1ng Appltc a110ns tor
Machmtst &amp; Welder
5
years expere1nce
apply
7 30 4 OOpm
Amb ros 1a
Machine Inc Route 2 Box
254 Po1nt Pleasant WV

25550 (304)675 1722

At John Sang FordLincoln-Mercury we ve
established a 35 year
reputat1on of

m~~i:E~~:~?

a

110
.
1

110

HW'WANIED

.
1

and

1ng dealership m our
region we re addtng
techn1ctans to be11er
serv1ce our customers
Ford Serv1ce tratnmg
preferred but not
required

If yOIJ are

An Equal
Opportunity
Emplo er

1

techniCtan lookmg to
start a new career or
maybe you don 1 feel
re pa1d or treated
well as you should be
and tf you re ttred o1 1
work1ng for someone
who tsn t working lor
g1ve J1m Thomas
Brad Sang a
ca ll today
1·740·446·9800 or

1·80Q.272·5179
You may also apply 1n
person at
195 Upper RIVer AD
Gallipolis, Oh10

AVON! All Areas I To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears 304
675 1429

NO EXPER ENCE NECESSAI'1Y
• FULL TII.4E CLASSI:S
• COL TRA. NINO
' I'INANC NG AVAILABLE
• ..KJB Pl.A.CEMENT
ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1·800-334-1203
Data Entry ~osition
Ava1labe
Reqwred sk1lls
•Excellent computer skills
a must
•Word
•Excel
•M ust be able to work tn a
busy olltce enwonment
•Good
commumcat1on
sK11Is a must
Please send resume to
Fruth Pharmacy
Attn Human Resources
RAt Bo~~: 332
Pt Pleasant wv

GKN M•lntenance
TKhnlclan
GKN Smler Metals, the
world s leadmg manulac·
turer of powder metal com·
ponents seeks a motwat·
ed skilled Maintenance
Techn•cran for equ1pment '
process and fac•ht1es at
our Plant in Gallipolis
OhiO
QualifiCatiOnS
Sk11Jed at both correcti\le
and prevent1ve malnta
nance
A work1ng knowledge ol
tndustnal Electnclty
Expenence w11h Allen
Bradley PLC and servo
systems
Basic Welding and sheet
metal fabriCa!tOn Ski lls
Ab1ltty to read and understand hydrauliC system
prmts

Thts poSJtton wtll reQUire
th6 candidate to pass a
bas1c skrlls test pnor to

employment
Send resume or letter of
expenence to
gallipolis hrOgknsmter
metals com
or lax (740)441·3249
Refer to Job Opemng
Maintenance TechniCian

25550
D1al lor dollars
Earn a
great hOUrly wage plus
bonuses whtle contacting
posSible cite 1ts tor med1cal
oul sourc1 ng company
Apply through workForce
West V1rg1ma (304)675

Or~vera

Needed·

COL Dnvers wtlhng to
dnve for local ready·mtJII.
concrete comp any
Expenence ts preferred
but not necessary Med
msurance &amp; other benef1ts
available after walttng
perrod Dnver must be
wtllmg to do pre ma1nte
nanc e on trucks &amp; equ1p
ment yarcl work &amp; other
m scellaneous chores
Exper,ence operattng
equtpment &amp; extra skills
such as
welding a plus

for

lmmedtate
need
tor
Experienced and recently
graduated
Med tc al
TranscrtpttonJsts wanted
10 work tn sta te of the art
off1ce Wtth full production
anct support capabi lity All
the lines you want , m a
great wort.;mg envtron
Apply through
men!
WorkForce Wasl VfrQfnfa

(304)675-0858

Dnvers
Aeg1onalloads Great pey
co mparw
benefits
&amp;
bonus es CO L-A wl 1yr
ve r1 tractor lrl exp req
866 293 7435
Full ltme Medtcal Assistant
needed
for
busy
PhyStCflln S Office
Must
be dependable and p$t
sonable Send Resume
and References to PO Box
16 Pon1 Pleasant WV

25550

otzer
Sen1or
Car
enter IS a 70 bed Jon
arm care nurs1ng lacm
ocated m rural Gall1
ounty whose m1Ssto
ocuses on quality care to
ur res1denrs We have

o,

A Registered Nurse w1th
2000 hours of d1rec1
operational responsibility
tor a sen1or care lactltty

a,

A Baccal aureate degree
In nursmg marketfhg or
business admlnlstratton
and1date must posses
trong leadership co m
un cat ton markettng
nd ftnanctal sktlls an
ust atta tn and matntat
et1ned occupancy lev
Is It you are an ener
etc sell mottvated car
ng tndfvldual and want t
hedule a personal a
nttden!lal meeting wi1
eresa Remy LNHA

HA BSN AN Syste
dmmtstrator for Lon
erm Care call (740)446

1
Equal Opportuntty

OH • 45769
Local busmess needs
LabOrer must be at least
25 years old clean drtvmg
record and able to pass
drug test $6 SO 'hr Call
(740)388·9673 to PICk up
appllcatton
Local bus ness needs
Laborer must be at least
25 years old clean dnvmg
record &amp; able to pass drug
test
$6 50/hr
Call

to

pO;k up

appltCatfOn

1k u1 about our.

EW WAGE
RE

STRUC

nef1ts Include
• Competttrv~ Wages
• Experience Credit
•Regular Rate Increases
• He a II h / Den Ia II lii
nsurance
•40tk (after 1 year)
• Un1torm Allowance
•Vacat1on
orne be part of
OLZER d1flerence1 st
n and see us at 38
olontal Drtve B1dwell
hlo or g1ve Phyll!
antrell AN BSN o
eresa
Remy
MHA

Care

a

for Lon
call a

740)448·5001

I

eqUtrements lor th l
s1t1on rnclude
A liCens ed nursmg home
adminiStrator

Local Bank IS seek1ng
Part-T1me teller Must be
8\ISIIable Monday th ru
Saturday Please lorward
resume to Dally Sent1tiet
PO Box 729·34, Pomeroy

(740)388 9673

Holze

ssieted
Living
ackeon, Oh10

Em I

HOLZER SENIOR CARE
CENTER NURSING
OPPORTUNITIES

arm

Call (304)937·3410
locatOO n Mason County
near Buffalo WV

(740)992·5023

dmm1str~tor

Opponunlty

!rector

Help wanted at lhe Darst
Adult
Group
Home

NHA BSN AN Syste

Great Career

o1zer Health 8y1tem
• aeeklng an Executlv

0858

HW'WMmD

Home Health Atdes Stgn
Bonus
H ome
On
Healtheat~ Of SE OhtO IS
currently htnng
home
health a1des compettl1ve
waQes
Call (740 )662

1222
Home Healthcare of SEO
IS Currently Accepttng
Apphcatto ns For Full &amp;
Part t1 me
AN s
Wages
Compet1t1ve
BOnuses &amp; Beneltts Call
Tolltret 1:868·388 100
Nursmg Ass1slant C lasses
Begmn1ng March 1Jth
2006 It you enjOy elderly
people and want to
become a rnembe1 of our
care team please stop by
Aoekspr ngs Rehabthtatton
Center
at
36759
Rockspnngs
Road
Pomert7; Oh1o 45769 and
hll out an appliCatiOn 101
the classes Extend+ear8
Health Serv1ces Inc 1s an
equal opportunity employ
er thet encoureges won..
place diversity M/F DN

Local lot look1ng for e~~:pert ·
anced used car deta1ler
send resume to Datly
Senhnel PO Boll 729 32
Pomeroy Oh 45769

The
Tuppers
Plams
Chester Water D1stnct 1s
accepttng appllca110ns tor
poSII to n
Account/C lerk
The postlton Quahhcaltons
mclude a degree
m
accounting Know ledge of
Peacht ree
M::; Word
Excel and MS Explorer are
des1red You must be able
to work well wnh rhe pub
ltc You may p1clt up an
apphcahon
Monday
through Fr1day !rom 8 a m
to 4 30 p m at 39561 Ba r
30 Road which tS three
mtles south ol Tuppers
Pla1ns just off Stale Route
7 PMne Q
No
740 985
3315 Please state n the
appl cat1on what prof1c en
cres are as some var1
ances may be allowed
Truck.
Dr1\ ers
warted
Appltcattons bemg taken
N ~;&gt;w
Must have c lean
Dnv1ng Record With m1n1
mUm 2 yrs Experience
Home
each
ntght
Average pay $1 000+ per
week (304 )722 2184 Mon
thru Fn 8-4 30

I50

t"lSllUIQlO~

2006

Need someone tr, tr\11? • r
c~re Ltght house~ePDtt'fJ
run erram:t s f•ac ..om b
board Send 1nqu res ' to
P 0 Box 213 Hend~ rso n

.
\ J '"

Cats Gas

T, rb G::, d Snape

I/N25106

Pmt::. h 1s Goff Cou rse
S1 200 00 740 992 2720
or 740 992 6312

Now h1r ng EMT s &amp;
Paramedtcs
Cal l
(740)354 5433 or 1 866
971 5433

Mob le Home lot w car
port next to Method st
Church tn Ka nauga OH
Prtvate (740)445 4782

Ove riJrook Ce111er tS cu r
rently seekmg a beaut•ctan
to work m the Ja cd tty s
beauty salon Candidates
sHould possess a val c
managmg co smetolog :.t
ltc ense Sal.,sry 15 basi O
on cornm,sstcn !ntereS!t::O
candidates shOuld contact
adm1 n1s1rator
al
the

(740)992 64 72 EDE
011erbrook Re habtf,ta!lon
Cen ler tS currently accept
tng app llcattons lor full
lime STNA S 7A 7P 7 P
7A and 3A 3P ShillS are
ava lla b~., Interes ted appl
cents should l tll o ut ar
appltcatton at 313 Page
Street Mtddlepor t
No
phone calls please EO~

POSTAL JOBS
S1567S2 t 98/hr
no"
hmno For appl cat on and
lree governement jOb 1nto
call Amenoan Assoc. ol
}9135998042
l abor
2.&amp;/h(s emp serv

Chqst1an
Owned
Company
Ollerrng
A
Home Managed Business
Part 11me or Full t1me Full
Supporl and Tramrn.g Fully
hnanced oppo rtunity tl
qualtlted
1·800 946 7572 Pm 00 (ll
no answer please lea~
message)

r

MONH
TO Loo\N

Borrow Smart Contac
he Oh1o DIVfSton o
IF ina nc1a l InstitUtion·,
Pft1ce of Consume
ftans BEFORE yol
etmance your home o
btam
a
loan
~EVIARE ot request
or any large advancE
ayments ol lees o
Call th
nsurance
lotttce at Consume
J-"ffa rs toM free at 1

j866 278 0003 IO le"'
1 the mortgage broke
tJ r lender tS ~roper!
•censed (Th1s ts a pub
1c serv1ce announce
rn ent from the Oh t
t-Ja lley
Publtshtn

~ompany)

i

I'Rot~!&gt;'iA!.
SERVl(:E&lt;;

~IO

\IN III.I,H)lS
G~lf

JIRED OF GAS PRICES
&amp; COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED?

t 888 582·3345
Rl \I I .., I\ II

5555

Club Car

PUB

No Fee Unless We W1n•

Concealed P1stol Class All
States Ma1 1 1 2006
S75 00
9 ooam VFW
Mason WV Ph (7 4018 43

170

VALLEY

ISHING CO recom
ends thai you do bust
ess wtth people yo
now and NOT to sen
oney through the mar
ntt l you have tnvesttgat
d the oHer~n

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
/SSI?

A new career tn
Med1cal Off1ce
Admlrtl stralJon
start"&gt; "''tn cmee1
tra tmng @
Gallipolis Career
College
(740)446 4367
800 214-0452
12749

Mamtenan ce
posll on
opening at the Vtl lage ol
R1o Grande Pte~ up app11
cation at the VIllage Hail
t74 East College Street
AppltcatJO n
deadl re
5 OOpm
February 23

Middleton Estates •s now
hlnng tor 01rect Care Staff
ApplicatiOns wtll oe taken
at &amp;204 Carla Dnve (neKt
lo Cliffside Golf Course )
8 00 4 OOpm
Monday
Fnday No phone call s
please

S&lt;.llOOLS

•NOTICE•
Hl&lt;;l

Computer Trouble ShOot
E1.pert
ana
Reoa11
St~'VIC€ 7-40 992 23Cl5

Ho~ff:s
fUR S.-u.

3 bedroom hou se 1n
Pomeroy oH ma1n road
r1ver
vrew
$2 7 000 ,

(740)992 2593
3 beelroom 1 Datt'1 DR
LR k1ICI1en r'lew furnace
s ts on
1 acre on
Ne ghborhooa
Rd
562 000 1740}44 6 065()
3 4bd part a1brd. nouse
?acres 6J.6 Sand H1ll Ad
Pt Pleasant Needs some
reoa1r $75 000 (7 40)388

8366
3BR
2 Ca1 attached
Garage on t 06 acres

562 000 1304)675 6331
3B R 2 lui bath 1 900
SQ ti lull bas ement 2 car
attached garage 3 acreG
Chester Township Eastern
school d stnct Ott A1 7
near Memor1 al Ga rden s
Call ( ~40 !985·4321 after
6pm

t Jerrv Care
H ~me

~&lt;.Js

Coun Hy
be Mob 1e
SPacl..s

M eal.!'.&gt;
$BOO month
LO\Itng Cere

{304 )88 2

3880
Expet~ence d
ST NA
restor ttve aid to care tor
elderly or dtsablea m
home Please call Brandt
(740l388 9783

J&amp;C Tree ~s er v1ce &amp;
Excava!Fig 25 years eKP
Free est1mates 304 675
2213

36R 2BA log s1oed man
ufactUJea home near R1o
Grande
1 88
acres
S98 500 P 40)2 45 9851 or
t740)418 0104
4bd rm 2 5 bath hard
..., ooa floors ne w roof
appr01
3 OOOsq fl
.Rrverv1e...,
At 7 south
S 125 000 No land con
tracts (740)709·0299
4BR Fo recl osure only
$14 900 For ltst1ngc; cal f
800 391 5228 .e ~~: t 1=2"-.J.
New DoublewtOe ~~J~"­
neve' I yed
n
owne1
l tance on 1 3 acres 8
mtles north of Hol zer
Hospttal on t60 (740)446

3570

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

r
~

iO

r·o
L,~--FOR·

HOMES
tUR SALE

AtttnUonl
Local company ollermg
~NO DOWN PAYMENT"
programs tor you to ouy
your home 1nstead of rentlny.
• 100% financing
• Less than pertect credit

accepted
• Payment could be the

same as reni.
Mortgage

Ir

HOUSES
iiRENii
· ii
T'-.,J

Locators.

(740)~HJOOO

Beautiful 4 br., 3 full baths.
2 car garage, fenced in lol,
completely
remodeled
304·882-2391

All rnl "tate advertising
In thla newspaper Is
aubj4tct to the Federal

Fair Housing Act of 1968
.w hich makes It illegal to
adwertlae " any

preference, limitation or
dlacrlmtnation based on
race, color, ~ligion, sex
familial atlltua or national

3 bedroom, 2 1!2 baths, 2
car garage . furnished.
close to Holzer Hospital.
$850/ month
(740)441 •
0310.
4 bedroo.m, 1.5 bath, 5
mm . to Holzer hospital.
$850 plus 'depos it &amp; utili ties. (740)2 56-81 52.

96 ' Cloublew•de. Eastern
Schools, TPC water, 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. call
(502)943-0386
Anentlon !
Local company Qtlering
"NO DOWN PAYMENT'
programs lor you to buy
your home instead ol renting.
• 100% f1nancmg
.. Less than perfect credll
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators.
(740l367-0000

www.mydaliysentinel.com
APAKI1\IEN1S
1\lR RENT .

t

discrimination.''

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept

ad"erdaements 'for real

'*

estate which In
viOlation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
nr.tllnv- advertised In
thl• newspaper are
a"&lt;~all•bJe on ., -.ual
opportunity bates.

Syracuse. 3BR , anached
DBLGar, block utility bui ld- :
ing, new root . . 7 acre.
$85,000. 740-416·2786 or
740.949-1082

www.orvo.com
t'lome Listings.
Ust vour home by call ing 1740)446-3620
View photos/info online.

~~w

Haven,

WV.

lose to town. PRICE:c

0 SELL!· Code 6505 o
all (304 )882-3368

~ome

of Disfinc!IOn
~edroom . 3 bath.
cres . 3 car. 2 s~ar
nattached garage. ga
weiiJiree gas. Rutland;
~H . Call(740l740-3230.
· Appointments only Cod

MOBILE HoM~
FURSALE ,

16x80 homes starting at
$25995 .00. Includes vinyl
siding/ shingle root Call
Russ 740-385-2434.
1996 14x70 Indies Sultan
2 bedroom, 2 bath, vinyl
siQing , shingled
roof.
Asking $16,000. (740)44 1·
1547.
2006 16' wide Special
, Price
$181/mo.
Call
(740)385· 7671 !
'96 Fleetwood 3 BR On ly
$169/mo. Call (740)385 . 9948. '
98 Holly Park 14x70
Glenmore. 3bdr. 2bath.
. gas furnace &amp; new· stove,
new carpet. . C/A, new
underpinning &amp; wiring ,
shingled roof, se t-up on
private IQt. Exc611en t condition . (740)441-0953
Like new 2002 Ciay1on
14x52
$148/ma. Call
(740lJe5-9948.
New Doublewide Aepo,
never lived in. owner
fiafme. on 1.3 acres. 8
'miles north of · Holzer
Hospitar·on 160. (740)4463570.
Used mobile homes for
sale. 14' &amp; 16' wide 2 B. 3
bedrooms 6 to choose
fro m 1996 model &amp; Up,
(740)388-85, 3 tday1ime) .
(740)388-8017 (evenings).
(740)294-0460 · (weekends)
Very Nrce 2br 14x70 Heat
Pump, Detached Garage
75'x100' Lot $30.000 call
1304)882-2618

Lm~ &amp;

22 acres. wonderful vrew,
ridgetop property, close to
main highway perfect lor 4wheefer trails, (740)707·
2,09
Land tor sale: Ga111a Co. in
Morgan Townsh ip, on
Morgarr lane. approx 1
mire off ~A 325
Clay Township on Teens
Run Ad . owner financ1ng
·' available. (740)669·0143 .·
1740lB69-8614

RFAL

r

FOR

_R tNf '

uP

Neiw Couch &amp; loveseat.
$450. Call (740)446-7444.

1BR apt. stove/
retridg
water/sewer/trash paid.
$325fmonth .
2BR apt ,WI D hookup,
sewer/trash/wate r paid .
$400/month
(7 40)367 7015 .
(740)367-7746 ,
(740l446-4734.
1ST MON . FREE RENT
WITH PAID DEP. NEW
ElLM VIEW
. TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING'
SPACIOUS
2&amp; 3BEOROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp; .
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
"ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL ~C &amp; HEAT
"STOVE , REF,
"DISHWASHER
"GARBAGE DIS POSAL
"WINO BLINDS

"CEILING FANS
"WATER. SEWAGE, &amp;
"TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-3017 '

3 room &amp; bath . lurnished
ups ta irs. clean . reference
&amp; peposit required. Call
(740)446·1519

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp;, movie·s.
Call 740-~6-2568 . Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Brand new 2BR apts. on
Bob McCofmick Rd . Call
lor details (7 40)-4-41-0 194
or {740)441 - 1184

Town house apartments.
and/o r small hOuses FOR
RENT Call (740)441- 1111
tor appilcat1on &amp; 1ntOrma- ·
!iOn

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675·7388. For sale,
re -conditioned automatic
washers&amp;. dryers, refrigerators. gas and electric
ranges , air conditioners.
and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home. ·
Used Furniture StOre. 130
BuleviUe Pike_ Washers ,
gastelectric
dryers,
ranges, refrigerators , mat·
tresses. couches. dinettes,
ch_ests,
much
more.
(740)446·4782 , Gallipolis,
OH. Hrs. 11·3 (M·S)

·

1.

"---iriioiiiiiirOriiro_,..
3 Bedroom House rn New
Haven
$375/month.
$350/deposlt
No Pets
(3041882·36.52

Very good · mixed haysqua re bales. (740)44624 12 or (740)645-0608 .

Buy or sell. Riverine
Ant1ques. 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy,
740·992·252 6.
Russ
Moore, owner.

Factory Diamond Style
Toot Box for 2005 Dodge
Dakota , Truck.
Paid
5425.00 and 1st $225.00
Takes-it. It is in storage.
740-992-3176.
Firewood split an d de~v ­
erec:l. Call (740)256·9115. ·

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt
In Slo e~ . .Call Ron Evans:
1-800-537~9 528 .

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Reba r
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating , For
Drain s.
Drrveways &amp; Wrilkway s
l&amp;L Scrap Meta ls Open
MOnday.
Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam4:30pm . Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740l44&amp;-7300

Fi50
I

BUILDING
StiPPIJES

1999 Saturn 109k $3,495 . .
Small &amp; Full si2:e Trucks,
· Vans, Blazers, and other
Cars in stock. 3 morths,
3.000 Mile warrant')~. Cook
MotorS, 328 Jackson Pike,
(740)446-0103.
2001 Pontiac Grand Am

GT: loaded. 28K miles
garage

kept

(304)682-

2356
·2001 Suzuki Swift Gl
Hatchback, 59,000 miles,
New Tires, 37-40 MPG,
AIC, Stereo. S4,500.00.
For More Details call 304773-5390 .
2002 Dodge Stratus ArT
V6. sunroof •. remote er1try.
leather. power everything.
garage kept , red. 24k
$9,400. (740)379-2748.
2002 SuzUki LX7 4x4. PW.
Pl, CO. 60 ,000 (mostly
highway) miles. 59,500
OBO. Cell# (740)208-0495

97 Ford Explorer XLT with
trac control, V6, full')l
loaded, 4x4, red , $4,500
Ca11 (740)446·0350.

TRUCKS

1\lR SALE
1994 Dodge Ram SLT.
2WD, 318 Magnu m V8 ,
automatic.
long
bed ,
155.000 mites. Runs great
Asking
$3,000
OBO
leave
me ssage
at
(740l441-9378.
1999 GMC wfextended
cab. loaded. 305 engin'e,
auto transmissio n, 67,000
miles, good clean, solid
truck, excellent condition,
$8,500. (740)441 -1014.
2001 4dr V-6 Dakota auto·
malic, 90,000 mrles, 4WD.
$B,500. (740)3:19-1620 .
200 1 Dodge Ram truck
2500 SLT Heavy Duty,
· springs, camper special 1
1Q-ply tires. $7.500. Call
Ed (740)367-0624. .
ChevY Colorado Ext. :cab
'05. Aut o. 2WD. wlbedliner.
excellent condition . Kelly
Blue Book $14 ,600, will
sell lor $13,600 1304)5231179

SUVs

'

I

2004 Chevy Tra ilblazer
4WO w/ tow pkg .. Kelly
Blueboot.:s @ 522 ,000
many extras 10,500 miles,
excellent condition. garage
• &lt;ept. $17,900 (J04)675·

P!.'TS
F]jl()8
.__ mRSALE
_ _.._....
0
6 month old female Boston
Terrier, housebroke, CKC.
$250. (740l992-3357

Black Lab puppy;, rriale ,
'AKC. $195, friendly, love's
kids . (740)992·3506

GraCIOUS living. t and 2 ·
bed room apartments at
Village
Mano r
ahd
Gulbransen Spinet piano
Riverside Apa rtme nfs m
Middleport From $295· · for sale. Excellent condi·
lion $550 . After 4pm
$4-44 . Call 740-992-5064
740 446-4525.
Equal
Hous1ng
Opportu01!1es

Pleasant Valley Apartment'
Are
now
takmg
App11cat1 on.s tor 2BR, 3BA
&amp; '4BA . ApplicatiOns ate
taken Monaay thru Fnday.
from g·oo A.M -4 PM
Off1ce IS Loca ted at 1151
Ev·ergreen Drive Por nt
Pleasant. wVPhone Nd IS
i304l675-5806 E H.O

VE.GIITABLES
Gress Greens for sale at·
McKean
Farms.
556
Centenary
Road ,
'Galltpotis Picked $12 per
buShel or Pick your own $6
per ' bushel. (740 )446·
9442.

r___

4x4
FoRSALE

1996 Chevrolet Z71 , 4x4,
c~b
$5,,000
OBO. Ca ll (740)446-4355
or 17401645-6529.
eJite nd ~d

[730

VANS
FOR SALt:

1999 Harl ey Da\11dson
Ultra C1ass1c Loa~ed.
Excellent
condi t1on,
29 .000 total m•les .. Pr1ce
$13,500. Call 740-9492217 until 7 pm
2001 Pola ns Sportsman
90, $800 '
98 Honda XR70, $600.
1740 )446-2558
or

r_OR_s_,_u_:__,I· .i140l645-6786.

_

3 miles west of

Auio PARI"S &amp;
ACCESSORIES

1.

.

MOTOR Ho.\IDi

NOMAh-.col
WHAT YOU'RI
STYLL

1•

Ch uck

Pass

...THE
INE"WSjPA PER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

David Lewis
740-992-6971
[n..,urcd
Free Estimates

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

GIT-IT-OONE
All Types Home Repairs
25 yrs . Experience,
Free Estimates.·
24 Emergency ServiCe.
(304 )675-3733 or
·. (304l593-0129

· Room Additions &amp;

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

Remodeling
New Garaget
,
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Palio and Porch Decks
. wv 036725

11 ••

,

Commercial Property &amp;
Bu1ldmg lor Sale
99
acres Ambrosra Machrne
tne Route 2 A:ox 254 Po1ht
Pleasant, wy
25550
1304)675-1722
U04.00pm

2003 Suzuki 4WD Vrnson
500 ATV with 34 m1les
S4900.
CARMICHAEL
~OUJ PMENT 1740l448•
2412
99 Harley Fat Boy, 9,400
miles. lots of Chrome and
extras. (740)446-9954

NOTICES

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

"' g 7

,.,••.

East

North

Pass
Paas
Pass

Pass

Pass

5

Political columnist George

Home Builder

(740) 992-0496
WV#O 9714

I
BARNEY

Hardwood Cabine•ry And FurnitUre

MY MAW ALWAYS

www.rbbb-Wcl"eekeab-lne-ti'Y.ooJR

MAKES ME

\Nt:.,...

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

Judy Kay's Has Re-opened!
Stop hy&amp; check out our uew addition s to our
menv as ·well as your old favorites
Holl}cmadc desserts • Breakfast served all

• Daily lunch specials

195 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH
740-992-1622

At the bridge table, there is nat only over·
reaching . bu l also reaching aver .. To
counter the latt er, S.J. Simon devised the
gasper coup. (Gasper is slang for a cheap
cigarette.) When declarer leads low
toward an ace-queen on the board and
"finesses" the queen, his lett -hand opponent might well lean across the table,
ready to collect the trick beca use he
know s the .fi n~sse is losing. But declarer
holds· the king all along and is trying to
persuade righty that lefty has the king,
this "finesse " having just worked. To stop
le«y rrom leaning across the table.
declare r thrusts a packet of cigarettes
mto lefty's hand.
Why would you do th1s? We shall see.
What is the o9st line of play in six
spades? West leads hi s fourth-highest
diamond.
Yes. North probably should rebid one natfump.
After winning the first trick, take your tap
trumps- unlucky. Npw .you ~e~d to get
your heart laser away an the fo'urth club
. be lore East can ruff in. Here: 1 it . looks
impossible, but you can improve your ·
chances a tad . At triCk ro ur, play a club to
dum my 's queen, th e fake finesse, si multaneously offering West some t 'andy or a
bowl of nuts. Then. cast"l the club ace and
continue · with a low club, lookinQ like a
man about to ruff. If East buy S th is and
diScards, you wi n with your Club king,
return to dummy with a diamond, and
• throw yo1,.1r heart king on the foUrth club
whil_e East harmle ssly ruffs in.

,"~ · Graph

I

NOTiCE TO BIDDERS
STATE
OF , OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION

l)p
A LESSON PLAN
l&lt;,EALLY ....

~~
· Athens

~

r

F YOU LET 6LUE
t&gt;R'l' ON YOUil- HANDS
AND START TO PEEL
IT AWAY, IT LOOKS
LIKE YOu'VE. 60T

FLESH· EA.TII'&amp;G

---r,_,.,.,

CIISTRUCTIOII
PEANUTS

• Complete
Remodeling

'',; to 10·~·
Hours

DON'T EVEN
Tf&lt;INK IT!

140-992-1611

7:00AM -8:00PM
1114/1 mo

r

-..::,""•

ROBERT
BISSELL
• New Homes .·
·Garages

. IF I CAN 'T SA'&lt;
IT, I RAVETO
Tf&lt;INK IT ..

Stop &amp; Compare

Pd

SUNSHI~E

CLUB

,, '

.

.

GARFIELD
51MPt.E

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

MAN
Nt:EP

Shade River AG Service, Inc

WOMAN

35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831

Advertise in
this space
for$26
per month.

ROCKY'S TREE
SERVICE
W illl'Ut. &amp; remn\'1' tree~ ur
, will rul into firt'Wo()d.

TRIM TREF:S &amp;
I.AWNWORK

r

(740) 992-0472-

GRIZZWELLS
Now Avuilabll' At

BAUM LU~1BER
Scorpion Tractors
"Tnkin!( Tlw Sti11g Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid- Site 4Whcel Drive Tracloi
wi t)l Jll hp &amp; -10hp Kuholu Engines

i

f

!

By Bernice Bede Oaol
In the year ahead , you cou ld beCome
involved in a unique enterprise Handle it
carefully, becau se it has gooo possibilities
of being a turning po int in your life.
PIS9ES (Feb. ~March 20) - Don 't let
any persons with whom you ha\le dealing s
today believe that you are erratic or incon·
sistent, especially where your work is concerned . It would definitely hurt your image.
ARIES (Marc h 21 -Apri l 19) - If you're
doing any imporlimt mental work today,
have someone go behind you and, check
over what you've done-. A serious mistake
could slip through and ca use you a greai
deal of troubl e.
TAURUS (Aprlf 20-May 20) - Don't let
someone oH the hoo~ today who is obli·
gated to you JUSt because you are too
embarrassed ta broach th e subject. This
person will use your sensitivitie s to his or
h~r advantage.
G EMINI (May 21 -June 20) - ShOuld you
be saddled once aga m with an unreliable
ally today whO hasn't produced in all other
p r~vious involvements. don't maKe The
m1sta11.e qf thinking this person will do so

now

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
_per month.
·Economy Beef $7.35
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.1 0
·Whole/Shell Corn $6.45/Bag
·Cracked Corn $7.45/Bag
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
-Shade River Hog Feed $8.85

&lt;¥aur'lllr1hiii\Y:

TUesda~Feb.21 , 2006

8f-CTERIA!

f~v~·~

Sizes 5'x10'

a

41 Fragrant
wood
42 Mountain
curvet
43 Scoundrels
44 Not a alng~
· one
45 Countoaa'a

apouae

47 New Age
&amp;Inger
46 Confused ·
noises
51 Eaalem
phlloaophy
53 - kwon do

source

F. Will wrote.

eAstro-

7 40-949-2217

25 Windhoek's
cont.
26 Gl aid org.
27 Highway
division
28 URL sulll1
30 Eliminate
31 Pllllo' s H
32 Family
member
33 Mermaid '&amp;
domain
35 Crude
metals
36 Square
dance call
(hyph .)
39 Jowly
canine
40 Protein

es:

I

29670 Bashan Road
Rac ine , O hi o
45771

. Antwer to Previous Purzle

ing is the most adm irable and most
American of the many American excess·

I

Hill's Self
Storage

46 Urged on
49 TV"apola
1 Flake off
50 Go out with
5Seek
52 College
Information
crodlt
8 GPa
54 Funny
11 Aloe. Chllrfotto 12 Gozolll
55 By mouth
14 .A Genlhwln 56 Chatty
15 Wearing
otartlng
oomlllhlng 57 Soph.llld , ,
16 Arfijact
58 Part of LAX
59 Al~vlota
17 Pat on
18 .-ygaor
20 Martial art
DOWN'
12 wda.)
22 Fair-hiring
1 Garden
abbr.
hose plaalic
23 ' Bug
2 'k rl I I fish
repellent
3 Latin 101
24 Opera by
WOrd
Gounod
4 Pollta
27 Company
address
emblem
5 Comparab~
2S Conditions 6 Grassy
30 lnlroquency
surface
34 Acting
7 Oddball
moody
Gnlll
37 Sock fll~r
9 Firat version
38 Grabbed
10 "Jun~le
a cab
Book ' star
39 Proterrod
13 Inelegant
strategy
solution
(:lwda.)
19 Canv88 bed
41 High notes 21 Light
43 Bluaor~P'Mfl
In a tube
44 Tabloids
24 Stretch
"monster"
the truth

~Ame ncans are overreaching; overreach·

Publk .Notiffi in N;:::~':\:~fl
Your Kiahl to Kn11w, Uc:li vered Right ltJ

dated August'13, 190~
and running back at
that width 100 feet
and
recorded
In
and
for
further
VQium'e 92, page 30 of
description reference
the Deed Records of
ColUmbus, Ohio
Is hereby had to the
Meigs county, Ohio,
plats of the City of and thereafter conOffice ol Contracts
Legal Copy Number,:
Pomeroy
In
the
veyed by Alta Tracy
060132
Recorder's Olllc.e of and J.E. Tracy, her
Sealed proposals will said M!llgs County,
husband , to
Ella
be accepted from pre- . Ohio, being the same
Parfill (or Ella Parfitt)
qualified bidders at property
formerly
by
Deed
dated·
the ODOTOIIice of owned by Jackson
October 2, 1916 and
Contracts· until 10:00 Hysell.
.
Now
recorded In Book 113,
am on March 8, 2006. deceased, and sqfd al Page 609 of said
Project 060132 Is and conveyed by beed Records. Parcel
located In Meigs Mery Ann Hysell, et al , No. 16-01299, and 16·
County, USA 33·9.40; the widow and heirs
01300 end 16-01301
SR 7-6.17- Part 1 &amp; 2 at law of said Jackson
currently set forlh in :
and Is an Interchange Hysell lo B.F. Biggs
Volume 169, page .
project. Tha date set by
187, recorded 05·20·
Deed
dated
lor completion of this November 29, 1899, 03 commonly known
work shall be as set anc:;t
recorded
In
as:
227
Union
forth In the bidding Volume 85 , Pages 334 Avenue,
Pomeroy,
proposal. Plans ~nd and 335 of . the
Ohio 45769
·
Specifications are on Records of Deed of The Petition.er further,
file in the Department Meigs county, Ohio·, alleges that by reason
of Transportation .
also the iollowing of default of the
(2) 13, 20
Delendonts(s) in lhe
described Real Estate
Situated
in
payment of a promisSaid
Counly of Meigs,
sory note,. according
State of Ohio, and in
to its tenor, the condi·
Public Notice
the
village
·o f lions of a concurrent
Legal Notice:
mortgage deed given
Pomeroy, to Wit:
John F. Barns, whose
A plece of parcel of to secure the pay last place of resi- land 29·112 feet wide
ment of said note and
conveying the premdence is known as and running at the
227 Union Avenue,
widlh the lull depth of
Ises described , have
been · broken, and lhe
Pomeroy, OH 45769- lhe lot, or 1011eet and
1049 but whose pres- being oil the west
same has become
ent place of residents
absolute.
side .o f the .f ollowing
Is unknown, Kimberly described premises , The Pelltloner preys
Y. Barns , whose 1st loWit:
thai the Delendant(s)
place of residence is
named above be
Beginning
at the
known as 227 Union Northwest Corner of a required to answer
and set up their lnlorAvenue, Pomeroy, OH lot which formerly
45769-1049
but belonged to George est in said real estate
whose present place Slone on the street or be forever bared
of
residence
is knoWn · as
Union frorri asserting the
unknown, will take Avenue; thence north
same , for foreclosure
notice
that
on 78 · 314 Degrees West
of said mortgage, the
November 10, 2005,
l)'larshalling of any
79 1/2 feel or lhe
Mortgage Electronic Northeast Corner of a
liens , and the sale of
Registration
lot formerly owned by
real estate, and the
Systems, Inc., acting Frederick Elberfeld ; proceeds of said sale
solely as a nominee Thence South 16
applied lo the paylor United Financial Degrees, West 85 feet
ment of Petitioner 's
Mortgage Corp., filed lo Tyler's ·Lol; !hence claim in the property
Its
Complalni
In In a Southeasterly order of Its priority,
Foreclosure in Case directi.on . along the and for such other
No, 05-CV-118 in the line of Tyler's Lol, 91
and further relief as is
Court of Com.mon
feet to the lot formerly
Just and eQuitable .
Pleas, Meigs Cou.nty, owned by George The
defendanl( s)
Ohio alleging lhat the Stone ; Thence along
named above are
Defendants, John F. said Stone 's lot 101
required to answer on
Barnes , Kimberly Y. feet to the place of
or before the
24th
Barnes, have or claim beginning, belng .lhe
day of April , 2006. By:
. to have an interest in
same real estate sold . The law offices of
the
real
estate ' and
conveyed to John D. Clunk Co .,
described below:
Benjamin F. Biggs by
LPA John d. Clunk
The following real
Burke Hysell by deed co. , LPA By: John D.
estate situated in the daled November 30, ,clunk #0005376, Ted
County of Meigs· and 1900, and recorded in
A. Humber! #0022307,
State of Ohio and In Volume 87 Pages 7t
Timothy R. Billick
lhe
VIllage
of. and 72 of lhe Records
#0010390, Rober! R
Pomeroy and being of Deeds of Meigs
Hoose
#0074544,
two lots on Union
County, Oh io. The
Michael L. Wlery
Avenue, described as parts of lots hereby #0068898, Charles V.
follows, to wit: One lOt
described being 1t8 Gasior
#0075946 ,
being 85-1/2 feel on feet fronting on Union
James C. Wrentmore
Union Avenue and Avenue and running
#0046779 Allorneys
the
Pla intiffrunning back al this back lhe depth 100 for
width 100 feet and the
feet . and being the
Petit ioner,
5601
other lol being on lhe same premises ConHudson Or., SUite 400
easterly side of the veyed to Alta Tracy by
Hudson , .OH 44236;
llrsl . described lol Benjamin F. Biggs
(330)342-8203.
herein and being 40 and Annie E Biggs , (2) 20, 27, (3) 6, 13, 20 ,
feet on Union Avenue his Wife, by deed
27

g • 3 2

.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 6215
Pom ero y Oh1 0
25 Year~ Local bper1enLt'

•

Opening lead ; •

Wolfe

Own~r

West

Pass
Pass

''M;l4!1J ~ ori~:.

Unconditional
lifetime
gua ran tee . Local references
furnis hed ,
Established 1975. Call 24
Hrs.
(740) · 446-0870,
Roge rs
Basement
WaterprQofihg .

s2

J g

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
26 Ye~rs Experience

Q • 8

•

• K Q7
ofoK.B6

1.1· 1\IS

r'~~w~ :;

•

.K

( '11'\S IIU I 110\

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Eul

. A K 7643

( ' 0'\C'RI II

1"10

J

South

WOLFE~ ~
MANlEY'S
SELF STORAGE CONSTRUCTION~.:

"Middleport's only
Self-Storaxe"

A

10

South

Lic~nsed

•

West
•

45760

740-843-5264

2

8 4 3

• A Q 10 7 6
• 10 8 6 5
ofoJ10 3

992-5682

992-3194
or 992-6635

CAMI'ERS&amp;

I f:it!~~Middleport, OH
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

10x10x10x20

Varis size Tires like new
Will put on for $25 each
304 773-5004

'
~ONTV

Box 189

Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

2000 Neon 89k $3,995;
1999 Avenge r 68 k $4.995:

Downtown locatFon. 1 BR
apt, ·unfurnished, no pets.
references.
deposit.
(740)446-0 139

Nice one B~ unfurnis~ed
apartment. Range &amp; retrlg
prov1ded Water &amp; garbage
pa1d . Deposi t required .
Call (740)446·4345 after
·
6pm

r:

1999 Olds Eighty-Eight
LS. Well
maintained,
loaded, newer ti res, exce llent condition , 127K miles,
asking $4,oqo. (740)2455934,

i
I . __
, ' ...;F~U·R·S·AL·E-,..1

Block. brick. SI;!Wer pipes,
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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

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Monday, February 20, 2006

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Monday, February 20, 2006:

(

CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Str1ve to be
methodiCal and orderly whe re your work rs
concerned tOday. If your procedures are
fault)~, the en'd results will be as we ll causing a great deal or problems ro.r you .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Wishful thinking
mustn't be allowed to replace reaJity today
or else you could believe m something that
isn 't true and ,react as if it were . you'll .end
up berng a loser.
V IRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) - You could be
a disruptive facto r on the home front' today
1f you refuse to be cooperative and harmo·
nio'us wtth other relatives. It would affect
dome StiC tranquility tor the entire fam ily.
UBAA (Sept. 23-0tt. 23) - Be ca'retul
today that you don't get all excited about or·
1nvolved m Trymg to promote somethrng
that th e world doesn't want or need What
you h.ave to Oner·musl be useful and m6ke
sense.
SCORPIO
(Oct
24-Nov
22)
l,fritortunately, 1t won 't lake much to arouse
your e-.travagant Inclinations .today. so lry
·to k.e6p th1s for:emost in your mmd 1f you
should go sllopping. To be safe. leave your
credit cards home.
S AGITIAA IUS (Nov. 23-Det ~11 - Your
affairs aren't apt to run like a well-oi led
mach1ne today, so be prepared to deal w1lh
11le unexpected . If you 're on your toe s.
you're not apr to get fl uslered and · avo1d .
caus"1ng a rn 1shap
CAP.R ICORN (Dec 22·Jan 19)- Usually
you Oo n't re spond to hunc hes wtthout
overt ve rificatiO n. bLt t tod ay you could
rmpulslvefy respond to a m1sleadmg feel·
1ng JUSt because you like 11 and make a
costly mistake
AQUARIUS .( Jan. 20-Feb 19l -Be partiC·
ulilrly ca ref ul today In any d,eahngs you
have w1th fr1ends where money rs 1nvolved
There's a strong poss1b1hty thilt a misunderstanding could anse over some)hmg
unexpected

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by Luis Campos
Cel8brity ~cryptograms are created from quora!ICJ15 ~ ll!fi10IJ6 people, pas~ ili'V! ~
. Eacn l8ltlr 1n tM ciptiM starlds tor e~

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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 20,

www.mydailyse1_1tinel.com

BY BRAD

~

ACEnet offering digital
photo seminar, A3

award after leading
East comeback

SHE~AN

'

2006

Blue Angels beat Athens, adv~nce to dist.ricts James wins MVP
BSHERMA.N@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

LOGAN - No miraculous
fourth quarter comeback: no
upset this time either. Gallia
Academy refused to become
HOUSTON (AP) - "The many as 21 points early !!'
the latest vi ctim of a Bulldog
.
C
hosen
One" was an obvi- the period. '
attack.
ous choice for All-Star game
He grabbed a reboupd th~t
The Blue Angel s finally
MVP.
·
led
to Dwyane WadeS
ended Athens' surprising tourJames
led
a
big
.
jumper,
then dunked on the
LeBron
namem run . 55 -47 , in a girl s
second-half
co
meback
by
next
trip.
James then . had
Division II sectional final on
the · East on Sunday night, steal s on consecutive po5Saturday at Kati e Smith
taking a victory away from · session s. finding Allen
Gymnasium. Galli a Academ y.
the West and probably the Iverson for a jumper on the
in the process. advances to its
MVP award away from first one and then drammg a
third straight district tournahometown favorite Tracy 3-pointer that got the East
ment.
· McGrady.
wtthtn 85-78 wllh half the
The Blue Angels will· face
· James finished with 29 quarter left.
Circleville. which emerged
"I think Charles Barkley
points in the East's 122-120
from the upper Adena section- .
victory while showing the kick-started us," )ames sat?.
al. The Lady Tigers defeated
all-around skills that have " I heard at halfttme he smd
Washington Courthouse, also
Brad Sherman/photo
made him perhaps . tl)e the game was over. I'~ !ike
on Saturday.
Members of the Galli a Academy Blue Angels pose for a picture· after winning the Division II secNBA's most talented young to thank Charles for ktCkAthens (4-19), which only tional title Saturday at Katie Smith Gymnasium in Logan . GAHS defeated Athens, 55-4 7, to
player. The 21 -year-old starting us ."
.
won twice during t-he entire advance tothe district tournament. ·
James trails Kobe Bryant
Cleveland star became the
·
· ·regular season , earned two
youngest MVP of the game, and Iverson in the NBf\'s
Gallia Academy took eon- scoring column in the third
tournamerit wins. to make an cizing everything we were
·surpassing Oscar Robertson. most excttmg sconng race m
unlikely
appearance , in doin g," Estep stated. "The trol in the second stan7-a, period as &lt;3allipolis upped its
"1 was just showcasing my years, with all three averagSaturday 's sectional title tilt. uirls took it all to heart and though, as E;lliott out scored lead to double digits, 43-3 L
talent today and we got ing more than 30 potnts.
The Bulldogs outscored thev said , ·we're going to step Athens by herself. Elliott had entering the final stanza.
Both had already been
another win," James said.
Meigs 12-1 in the fourth quar- up and show some people that nine and her Angels used a
Cara Grippa hit four .3James added six rebounds, MVPs of the All-Star game,
ter to win on Monday before we can still play some basket- 14-5 scoring advantage to pointers, and scored all but
two assists and two steals. so perhaps it wa~ James'
upsetting. top-seeded Jackson ball.·
take a 27-20 lead at halftime. two · Athens points in the
He needed only two tries to turn.
two davs later.
Brittany Elliott led "a balThe Gallia Academy pres- fourth quarter, as the Bulldogs
win the MVP award of the
He was expected to be an
Athens was able to hang anced Gallia Academy scar- sure forced Athens into seven stayed ·within striking · disNBA's showcase event . He NBA superstar even in high
around again st a Gallia ing attack with 14 points t.urnovers in ,the pivotal sec- tahce and was able to pull to
. finished with 13 points last school, when he was tea;
within six 53'47 with 27 sec- '
Academy team . that had wht'le Jack-ie Wamsley and on d ·quarter.
year in the East's victory.
tured on a magazine cove~
already defeated it twtcc thts Alexis Geiger each added 13.
"We 'just knew after we onds remaining. Perry hit two
. The West was seemingly with the title ''The Chosen
season - but a fund amental- Geiger also had te. am. hifths watched Jackson play the free throws to round out the
in control of the game One." He went on to be tha
ly sound effort along .with a with eight rebounds and tve ,other d.ay against Athens, that scoring.
before James . took over. in No. I pick in the 2003 NBA
. added nt'ne we couldn 'tlay· ,back in a halfAlso for Gallia Academv.
t Is· · KaYla Perry
tenacious press by the Blue sea
•
the
third quarter. He did draft out of high school.
· t.
Lindsey Niday and Ry· ann
Angels quelled the latest P0111
On Sunday night , he
nearly
everything in a 10-0
s.
·
court
defense
and
play
that
1 d Ath sand
Leslie each scored two, while
C · G·
upset bid.
run
that
gave
the
East
a
proved
those expectations
en
way· for three and-a-half quar- Leah Cum mons and Joan
ara nppa e
It was the founh &gt;lraight all ·scorers
wjth 26 points, bur ters and expect to win the ball
chance after it trailed by as were deserved.
'
Sojka each made a free throw,
win overall for coach Duane didn't have much help, as
Sam· Zolek scored five
Estep ·s team. which got back Kari Resler's nine was the game," explained Estep.
"We knew we were going to while Beth Nostrant and Abie
to .500 at 11-11. This late sea- next highest total.
Athens Jed 15-13 after one come up here, and regardles~ Salyer went for four and three
son run is proving to be especially sweet in light of a rough quarter. thanks in large part to of who fouled out, we were respectively for Athens. .
Gallia Academy's district
midseason stretch that saw the . six points ·in the post from going to press the majority of
semifinal
game
versus
Gallians drop seven of nine . .. Resler and great work on the the ball game."
offensive·
boards.
The
Athens
turned
the
ball
over
Circleville
tips
at
6:15
p.m.
"It 's really exciting ·for our
program, considering thaUust Bulldogs hauled in seven 26 times in the game, com- Thursday at Southeastern
a few weeks ago we were 7- offensive rebounds and outre-' pared· tq only 10 for ·the win- High School. The winner · ·
. play s again March 2 for a
11 imd everybody was ripping bounded the Angels 9-3 over ners.
tl)at
span.
Five
Blue
Angels
found
the
regional trip on the line.
us and everybody was critiCLEVELAND (AP) three-hour event.
And extra scribbles, such
The 13 Sharpie markers
lined up next to A.J. Hawk as the . phrases "2002 ·
during a recent appearance National
Champs" or
at a . suburban Columbus "2005 Lombardi Winner"
mall were a testament to a cost another $15 each.
DAYTOl\iA BEACH. Fla. opportunity for NASCAR to win in Las Vegas last March ing for his chance to pounce.
Typically, players are
perk that comes ·to Ohio
It came with 141aps to go
(AP) - Jimmie Johnson gath- pull away victory if the thing when his car failed post-race
State
football
players
leavgive.
n a flat fee for signing
ered his team around him and is illegal," third-place finisher in spection. Knaus was sus- when he squeezed past teaming their alma mater- and appearances , and stores
pulleda folded-up fax from his Ryan Newman said. "It's dis- pended for two races, . but mate Brian Vickers to grab the . · their college eligibility charge for the autographs
pocket. ln the quiet few appointing. I think a lot of appealed and had tl1e penalty lead just as a caution came out.
·
based on the amount they
behind.
Johnson was at the front of the
·
moments they had before the Jimmie Johnson and his talent, reduced to probation.
Autograph
signings.
are
paying the players .
Then, following a . win in fiiM on the restart, the lead
start of the Dllytona 500, but I' m , pretty sure at least
which have boomed since
Mike Guinto, 21, was
Johnson delivered a message three of his last four wins have September at Dover, Del. , the driver in a single-file pack of .
the
Buckeyes
won
the
2002
happy
to hand over the
had conflictions with the cars No. 48 Chevrolet again failed cars· sprinting toward the end.
from their suspended leader.
national
championship,
can
$125
it
cost him to have
From his rearview window
inspection. Only this time
" It was just tel'ling them to being illegal.
earn popular senior players Hawk sign a jersey, a foot"You know, it 's not neces- NASCAR said Knaus had he could see Dale Earnhardt Jr.
do their best job ... get them
thousands of dollars after ball'and three photos at the
exploited a loophole in the rule slicing his way through the
· fired up for the race." Johnson sarily good for the sport."
the season end s.
Dublin appearance .
His car did pass inspection, book , and the sanctioning field, making a last, desperate
said. "It was something that
"He deserves it ," said
Underclassmen who get
push to mark the live-year
said, 'I believe in you guys, and with a bottle of chamc body quickly closed it. ·
paid for autographs face Guinto, who had driven
So with Knaus out of cam- anniversary of his I;&gt;ad's death
I've· trained you well.' do your pagne on hi s lap, Johnson
NCAA sanctions. But play, from Cleveland to be omi
defended his team and his win. mission for the foreseeable with a win at the track where·
ers who are graduating or of the first in line.
job."'
future and lead engineer he died.
have declared for the NFL · Kevin Schlos ser, who
Everybody listened.
"This is a huge Stfitement Darian Grubb acting as tempoBut
Jamie
McMurray
draft are free to tour a near- operates the Web site
Crew chief Chad Knaus was and something that I' m very rary head coach, the Hendrick wrecked with seven laps to go
ly statewide· circuit of pub- www.theosustore.com , said
forbidden by NASC.&lt;\R from proud of," he said. "We know . Motorsports team will try to to bring out one final caution.
he and pnvate autograph Ohio State players sign
participating in Sunday's race that th.ere are rules, a set of
It set up an overtime finish , but
rules.
Chad
broke
the
rules.
work
its
way
out
from
the
dark
shows.
, stacks of photos and souafter he was caught cheating
shadow the crew chief's no one was able to challenge
"Going to Ohio State. the venirs at private signings
during qualifying, but Johnson He 's admitted that . He's in actions have cast on them.
Johnson. A final accident
d
1·
older guys. talked about it,"
and his team raced on without Charlotte watching the race.
"There's been a lot of hating brought out the caution on the
said senior offensive line- an persona tze some as
him .and scored the biggest win He mi ssed the event. We're on the 48 team over the last last lap and allowed him to
man Rob Sims. "The requested by his customer.s
online.
in their five-year existence.
serving our penalty.''
year," Johnson said. "I kind of cross the finish line under a
national
·
champion
ship
Schlosser said 40 percent
"I knew deep down inside
There's probably more to look at is jealousy and yellow flag.
of
his business comes from
(year)
those
guys
were
my hean that this team could come. Johnson has indicated (Newman) doesn't hav~ a
Casey Mears was second
cleaning up . r m sure a big out of state.
.
still win." Johnson said.
that the ·team expects crew chief in there working and Newman, who wa' trying
player like A.J. could probAlthough. the money
Moments after the victory, 1\AS.CAR !O suspend l&lt;naus hard enough to get the job to give Roger Penske his first
ably do one every day. I
just go where. 1 fit in and migl:tt not be much when
Johnson's critics were already an additional tht'ee races. The done,"
Daytona win in 33 tries, finmake as much as 1 can."
compared to the millions o{
wondering if .he deserved an team will probably also be
Wi~ning the race required ished third.
·
"
dollars Hawk can expert
asterisk next to hi s name. docked points. knocking Johnson to stay calm and
Hawk,
Bobby
Carpenter
..~
Stewart was · fifth , rookie
and
Anthony
Schlegel
will
when
he's
picked
in
April'!
Knaus was thrown out last Johnson off the leaderboard.
avoid trouble,' including Tony Clint Bowyer was sixth and
be paid about $10,000 to NFL draft, the extra earnThe (eam has a history of Stewart, who eliminated three Vickers
week after NASCAR said he
was
seventh .
appear as a linebac.ker trio ings come in handy for
illegaliy altered Johnson's misdeeds and questionable contenders: Jeff Gordon, Matt Earnhardt wound up eighth
in March at the Cleveland some players.
Chevrolet before hi s qualify- conduct.·
Kenseth and himself. Then, after leading a race-high 32
Auto Show. with Hawk get"I have to pay the rent,'•
. mg run.
NASCAR accused Knaus of Johnson worked hi s way to the laps. Keri Schrader and Dale
t.ing the largest chunk, a said ·senior safety Nate ·
'Thi s could still be the tirst cheating following Johnson's front, staying in line and wait- Jarrett rounded out the top 10.
show spokesman said . Salley. who isn't taking
·
They will stgn
autograp hs classes this quarter, which
for
two
hours.
·
me ans his expenses aren't
for
free
O' Neal and Bryant, no longer starting lineup, Tayshaun
The West was s p&lt;~rked by
At other appearance s, covered by hi s scholarship.
feuding, sl1ook hands ·before .Prince. by writing '22' on the 26-·year-old . McGrady,
fan s are charged as much as "I'm glad we have . great.
·
appearin g in. his ~ ixth Alltipoff a nd laughed . when their shoes. ·
$25 for Hawk 's signature . fans and they're helping us
O' Nea l fouled Bryant in the
The Pistons were the talk Star garne. He said last week
· from Page Bl
At the mall signing in out a lot right now.''
firs t quarter. The 7-foot - 1 of the East locker room.
· that his performance has sufDublin in January, Hawk . Interacting with the fans
Neal. now with Miami ,
"They deserve it - and fered because of personal
that we were not as competi- O'
si~ned four photos. three at public signings is anoth- ·
took a spin as the East's point Tayshawi probably should. problems that he has
tive," said East coach Flip guard ·for one possession .
mmi-helmets.
two pro- er perk tor the players btdhave been here," said declined to discuss publicly.
Saunders of the Pi ~ton s. "I
grams
and
a
football
in one d1ng farewell to thetr
The' four Pistons, along Indiana's Jermalne O'Neal. But he seemed loose during
thought that the second half with · Boston 's Paul Pierce, who
three-minute span. At $25 a · Buckeye careers.
injured and did not the game. scoring 17 firstthey played e xception ally entered the game with 3:38 to , play. was
''It '&gt; amazing." defen sive
pop, that a·dded up to $250.
"Those five guys are a half points on 8-of-1 2 shootwell. In these type of games. go in the first-quarter and the big reason
At
the
same
pace,
he
end
!)&gt;like Kudla said after a
why they have the ing from the floor.
,
it takes a lot of time to get East trailing 24-21 . After best record in the NBA. I
could
have
signed
$5.000
signing
last week, ''People
"I've filially got .a peace ~f
used to playin g with guys. Phoe ni x's Shawn Marion think· it 's a huge thing for the mind."
worth of autographs· in an · get to see you without your
McGrady said during
Every guy did something in a scored on a layup to gi ve lhe league. I'm for any story that a halftime
hour and $15,000 worth helmet on , and it makes
t e levi ~ion inter- ·
very positive way:·
ove
r the course · of th e them su happy." .
We st a five- point lead, Pierce makes the NBA look good .' '
vi~ w. ''I'm coming· out here
The West took a 74-5 3 lead and the Pi stons closed the
Detroit center Ben Wallace and enjoying this weekend ."
2 minutes into the third quar- quarter on a 7-2 run .
said th e selection of four
The East rall ied in the third ·
ter. But the East responded
Defense: which has long Pi stons underscored the quarter, outscoring the West
With a 2R- 13 run ove r the been Detroit' s calling card. is. importance of the team con- 41 -2 7 hehind James of the
ne xt 6 minu tes as la me., rare in the All -Star game cept.
Cleveland Cavaliers to cut
scored 13 point s.
· but nnce the Pi ston.s entered
"I think it says a lot about the deficit· to 97-94 entering
The East grabboo a I 17- th e We,t strugg led to score. the league. that . yo u don ·t the final quarter. '·
1071ead with 3:2\lto go. The The East limited the West to ' ha ve to come out and try· to
Then the Pi stons provided
West made it 120-a ll on four poi.nts in the final J:JR dominate the ba, ketball and anothe r spark . The Ea&gt;t
Bryant's facleaway j umper after it had scored 24 points dominate the game in order pu lled e ven at 97 when
with 32 seconds remaining.
in the game's fir st 8 minutes. to have ind ividual 1ucce,s ." Billup' was fouled on a
That set up the fin al
"It was just fun for us,': he \.aid.,
lay up and c·onverted the free
sequence. After McGrady Hami lton said during an inBut the All-Star game i' all throw for a three-point play.
mi ssed. Bryant. lo-,t the ,ball game t e l ev i ~ i o n interview,
about indi vi dual , . And on And the East su rged ahead
and
Rasheed
W&gt;il lau' - The four Pi stons were the Sunday night. the Ea1t wa' on a jumper by Rasheed
grabbed it · wi th S seconds most on one All-Star team best.
Wall ace.
·
left.
·
After playing to a 2H-2R
The Pi ~ ton s · fii1c st moment
sinu; 1998 . . when Brya nt .
As is often th e case. the o· Neal. Nick Van Exel and fi rq-q uarter tic. the Wes,t cam e on a l-on- 1 fa,t hreak
All -S tar game had plent y of Eddie Jone,, represented the out scored the East 42-25 in that culminated in Billups' ·
subpl ots . Ex- Lm Ange les L c~ k er, . The Pi ston.\ honored the second quarter to take a layup to give the East a I05Lakers teammates Shaquil le the fi fth member of thei.r 70-5 .1 ha lftime lead.
101 lead.

Tornadoes lose rematch
against Miller, Bt

Middleport • Pom~roy, Ohio
:;o l' t-:NTS • Vol. :;:;. No. ~'"

I l . LS ll \\ . I· I II R l . \1{\

:! t .

'"'" . on~ ditil~ "·nt iowt .•.,,.,

:!OOh

Community Action program ·matches savings account funds

SPORTS

BY BETH SERGENT
asset such as a first home,
BSERGENT@MYDAI LYSENTtNEL.COM furthering ' education or
expanding or starting a
CHESHIRE Placing small business.
, .
money into a savings
Of these three choi.ce·s
account can be nearly one must be chosen up front
impossible for some people before the IDA is opened.
who find it financially diffiThe individual then opens
cult to . even pay their the IDA with a ·minimum
monthly bills but now deposit of $20 and ml\xithanks to a program offered mum of $50. After that iniby Gallia-Meigs Community tial deposit whatever the
Action Agency (GMCAA) individual
chooses
to
those individuals can not deposit
eac·h
month
only open a savings account GMCAA will match by doubut' have
their .funds bling and sometimes tripling
matched, in some c-ases by a the amount each . month .
three to one margin.
For those individual s that
This Rural Empowerment choose · to , open an IDA for
Achievement Program sets the purpose of purchasing a
up Individual Development home the program provides
Accounts (lDA) for lower a three to one match. If the
wealth individuals who wish individual saves $1,000 the
to meet purchasing goals .
program also provides a
These IDA's must be set $1 ,000 match for a down
aside for the purchase of an payment for the purchase of

• Sheridan wins easily
over Marauders.
See Page 81

.Autograph signings
earning money for
departing OSU players

a home.
For those wi shing to open
an IDA to further their education · or to start or expand
a small business GMC~A
offers a two to one match
ort funds .
The .savings account and·
reserve account (matching
funds ) are maintained separatly though both accrue
interest for the individuals
·
and their goals.
The matching money
from GMCAA goes into that
seperate, re serve account
that · the individual cannot
access until the end of the
program which last s for a
minimum of six months and
a maximum of two years.
The program is funded by
the
Ohio
Community
Development Corporation
which provides 50 percent
of the grant though locally

People s Bank of Middleport ~ i st ' of a mandato ry finanhas stepped up to pro vi de cia! ' lit cracv ci a.\ ' which
matching fund &gt; for three familiari ze, 'i ndi vi duals with
account s.
the banki ng system "' well
"I'm so excited we final. as how to budge t and s~ve .
ly got match ma ne¥ to open GMCAA also offers advice
these accounts. We couldn 't on credit i"ues ant.! . assets
do
it
without
then:· spec ific tra inin g such as a
GMCAA Pl anner Teresa home buye r d ass.
Varian said of locar spa nParti cipant s must al so
sors People s Bank which i' meet fin ancial c riteria to
also opening other account ; qualify for the prog ram such
for the program without
as falling .below the 200
charging a service fee.
Once the individual com- perce nt mark of poverty and
ple!es the savings program having $ 10.000 or l ess in
the money from the reser ve assets, excluding your home
(matching) accounl will be and one car. Some teenagers
di stributed . in chei::k form are also eligible to open an
not to the individual but to IDA though the.ir eligibility
the entity which will furth er . is .determined by their rami.
,
.
their purchase goal such as ly s ass.ets .
To !tnd out of youqualtfy
a bank if purchasing a
home. a university if furth er for the program call Varian
education , etc.
at 992-6629 as soon as pasThis free program con- sible as space is limited.

Ohio pandemic .
flu preparedness
summit held
.

·Johnson wins Daytona in wake of cheating scandal

POMEROY - An Ohio
Pandemi c Flu Preparedness
Summit wa&lt;: held las t week in
Columbus to address plans at
the state and local .]eveh to
ensure Oh io i' prep¥red in
the eve nt of an outbreak ...
Meigs County Health
Larry '
' . Cu mmi» ione r
, Marshall was in attendance
with many other public
health professional s as was
Go vernor Bob Taft and
United States Health and
Hum an Servic es · (HHSl
Secretary Mike Leavitt.
HHS has announced that
Oh.io will receive $3.2 milli on in federal fundin~ for
pandemi c planning effon s.
Al ong with Marshall more
than 500 health, emergency
management.
agriculture,

a

·'

James

v

N

.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYS ENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Julia Shawver f=loderus
• John Oenver Curtis
• Harold E Hager
• Marguerite F. Steams·

INSIDE
• Pledge of Allegiance
license plates available.
Page A5
• O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital to offer health
screenings.
See Page AS
• Home renovation
complete in time for Bush
visit. See Page AS .
• School collects stories
from World War II camps,
See Page AS

bu~ i n ess

see

WEATHER

Detallo on Page A6 ·

INDEX
. 2 SEcrtONS -

12 PA&lt;m•

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editor,ials

A4
A5

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© :.mo6 Ohio Valley Puhli"hinR, Co.

'

..
Charlene Hoentch/ photo .

Land is being cleared for an interchange at the intersection of U.S. 33 and Route 7.

Land being clearedfot ODOT'sRoute 33 interchangeproject
. BY CHARLE.NE H,OEFLICH

Transportat,ion. The interchange is expected to get
under construction this
POMEROY
spring and be completed in
Preparations for the con-· the summer of 2007:
struction of a $5.7 million
·Filson said that since the
interchange at the intersec- completion of the u.. S, 33
tion of U.S. 33 and State Athens
to
Darwin
Route 7 at · Rock . Springs Connector
and
the
are underway.
Ravenswood
Connector,
Trees 11nd bru sh on land ODOT has seen a steady
adjacent to the Route 7 · rise in traffic and that there
four lane highway, several is every e-xpectation the
hundred feet south of. the trend will continue.
current Route 33 Rock · "The U.S. 33 Corridor
Springs exit, are being projects
have
greatly
removed to make way for improved travel within the
building the new inter- southeast Ohio region by
change. .
providing a safer, more
The project will be sold time-efficient transportation
in Mar~h. according to system . For thi s rea son .
Stephanie M. Filson, public motorist s are using the
information officer, District route more frequently,"
I 0, Ohio Depa~tment of .said Philson .
HOEFLIC H@M YDAI LYSENTI NEL. COM

lld!lfr'

a llllrdt•..•

ttlllc..t=su••'

-""""""

·

''U*Ii'"'

"After the completion of
the up comtng U. S.. 33
Nelsonville Bypass. ~«e
expect even a greater jump
in' traffic count s along thi s
corridor.'·
she
adrled .

PIIUII'

"Constructin g a full interchan ge will improw safety
·
b) prm·idin g continuous
movement for ,l 1. S. 33
thmugh traffic."

Pomeroy man charged in alleged stabbing
BY BETH SERGENT ,

tance Ricky Fraley. 36. of
Middleport.
.
Pomeroy Chief of Police
POMEROY - A Pomeroy Mark E. Proffilt said that it
man will be in Meigs County. appears the 'alleged stabbing
Court today to face felontous · occurred inside the home of
'assault and persistent' &lt;)isor- Qualls on Butternut Avenue
derly charges as a result of an. and that alcohol may have
stabb•ng
that been a factor.
alleged
occurred shortly before 10:27
Proffitt said at this point it
p.m. last Wedne sday.
appeared the weapon was a
Dway,ne E. ,Qualls , 46, switchblade knife that' may
wa s arrested . by offi cers . of have belonged to Qualls:
the
Pomeroy
·Pollee
According to the Pomeroy
Departm ent for allegedly Poli ce Department after the
stabbmg and btung acquam- altercation Fraley walked in
BS ERGENT~MY DAI L~SENTI NEL.C Ofvt

-

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

the direction of the Pomeroy
Fire Department whe re an
unrelated indi vid ual returning from work spoke ,,.fth
him and phoned for he lp.
Fral ey sust ained mul tiple
stab and bite, wounds and wa'
transport ed
hy
Mei g'
·Em erge nc y· Medical Scr\ ice '
to Hnl 1.e r Medical Cent er,
Gallipoli&gt;. for trea tmc11t. He
was later released.
. Si11cc Qu alls' arFc''t he h ~'
be en he ld in the Noble
County, JaiL
The
Pomeroy
Po lice ·

·--------------------------·~------

Department received :Nistance on the ca'e from the
Oh io Bu reau of Cn mi nal
ln ,· e~ti ga t io n iBC]).
"For sc&gt;methin g th b ' ennus it. i' normal to L" allthcm:·
Pru ltott '&lt;lid ot cont ac t1ng
SCI iilld the1r as\l stance Jll
e' idencc ,·nll ec t•on
.
. 1he "" e' tt ga t•on remai ns
o n gt&gt; i n ~ .
...
The t\lO lm:ul otlt cer' " ho
intt ial l) •n'e'tigate t.l the
en me were Pomeroy Poltee
Sgt. Rt•n al d Spaun and
Patrolman Bren t Rthe .

- - - ---,. - - -·- __

:..__.__-

I

I
.I

and

cornmunir y

leader&gt; repre senting all parts
of Ohio attended the summit
held at the Columbu s
Con,·ent ion Center.
In addit.ion to Taft and
Leavitt &gt;ummit · speakers
i n L· lud~ d Dr. Julie Gcberding.
director of the Centers of
Dise ase
Control · and
Pre,·ent ion; Chet Lunner. acting director of , tate and local
government coordination .
U. S.
Department
of
Homeland Sec urit v: and Dr.
Susa n Sk orupski. :irea veteri nari an · in chcrge. U.S.
Depa11ment of A,&gt;: ric ulture .
State official&gt; . community
leaders and industry repre&gt;
'cntati ves ·part icipated in a
]l\l lle l di "· uss ion regarding
interagency approache s to
pandemic planning.
Duri ng the 1ummlt Taft
and Leavitt siencd an agreement dc t ailin-~ the federal
go,·ernment's rok .in providin g . planning a" istance to
states and tinancial resource s
for pandemic preparedn·e ss.
Before lea , · i n ~ for the
su mmit tv1arsha ll said he didn't think a flu pandemic was
"tari bly lik ely ri ght now"
but stressed hi' department
needed to be ready.
"The H5l\i I a\·ian intluen7a. al10 knuwn as bird tl u.
has rea.,. akened Ohi o. the
United State s and the world
cnmmunitv to the verv real
l'"''i hilit): of another in.tl uen-.
1 a· pand emic: · Taft ,aid.
"Real acti nti in response to a
future threat will come at a
local lnel and th i; summit
help' Ohi o\ key bu siness.
community and local governmcnt leade rs coorJinate and
n 1 a ~e pre paratio n, no w . to
pr(lte,·t our ci tizen, ."
,
Alnn~ wi th Ohio. receiv,
in" fund i n ~ to com ha t a flu
pa~1 dcmic \,e re all 50 states.
sC \ en terr itorie, and the
·
Plene see Flu. AS

--·------

'

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