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FARM. GAR.DEN

iunba~ limes -ienttnd

Iran issues warning as
U.N. watchdog prepares
to discuss suspect
nuclear program, A2

Sunday, March 5, 20o6,

Bluebeny School Advance counter-cyclical .payments availabl~
set f~r March 13-14

•

PIKETON - Ohio State
University E:»tension and
Michigan State University
Extension are joining forces
to provide Midwest b,erry
growers with an intensive
two-day training on berry
production and management,
with· a specitic emphasis on
blueberries.
The Ohio Berry/Blueberry
Grower Training Program
will take place March 13-14
at Ohio State University
South Centers at Piketon in
Piketon : Sessions on March
13 will run from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Sessions on March 14
'will run from 8 a.m . .to 5
p.m. Cost of the event is
$100, which includes sessions. notebooks with topics
translated in Spani sh. handson field practice to take
place in early, summer, and
catered.Junches. ·
Those who are unable to
attend the training program
may receiv.e a video of the
program, along with the notebook and handouts for the
registration fee.
Research specialists from
both universities will be on-

hand to discuss a wide variety of topics.
Topics
will
include
Integrated Pest Management
of insects , diseases and
weeds, plant growth and
development, insect and disease growth and development. weeds and soi ls,
cross-cultural
education,
principles of scouting, food
safety. pesticide safety and
regulations, use and management of insecticides,
• fungicides and herbicides;
leadership training, soil and
. plant ti ss ue sampling techniques, and monitoring and
management of insects, diseases and weeds.
Atten'&lt;:Jees with Private
Applicator licenses may cam
Applicator Recertification
·credits.
, For more ;,~fonnatirm ~ or
.to regisre1~ contact Brad

.GALLIPOLIS
The
2005
second
advance
counter-cyclical (CC) payments that producers ]]ave
requested may now be
issued, according to Tom
Woodward, Area Committee
Chairperson.
·Producers enrolled in the
DCP may receive countercyClical payments as authorized by the 2002 farm bill.
Producers ·are ·eligible for
· counter-cyclical payments
when effective prices fall
below target prices as specified in the 2002 farm bill.
The effective price equals
the direct payment rate plus
the higher of either:
( I) the national average
market price received by producers during the marketing
year; or

(2) the national average
loan rate for the commodity.
Second Advance 2005-crop
counter-cyclical
payment
Rates: The 2002 Farm Bill
allows prodl\cers to receive
counter-cyclical payments in
three installments:
· • The first in October (up to
70 percent of the total projected rate , less any amount
received in the first payment):
and
• The final payme1it after
the end of the marketing
year, which varies by commodity.
USDA issued the first 2005
counter-cyclical partial payments in October 2005. lhe
total projected and second
partial payment rates for 2005
are based on supply, demand
and price forecasts from

USDA's
report,
World
• Wheat, barley, and oatsAgriculture Supply
and May 31, 2006.
.
:
Demand Estimates. USDA
• Corn, grain sorghum and
issued the report Feb. 9, 2006. soybeans- Aug . 31, 2006. '
The total projected and secThe 2002 Farm Bill
and partial payment rates for requires that any overpay• ·
2005 corn are $0.40 Total ments to producer~ must b~
$0.28 Seco'nd Partial Rate.
repaid. Most producers in ouP
Producers of oats, soybeans counties choose not to
and other oilseeds are ineligi- ·receive the advance counter•
ble for second partial counter- cyclicalb'ecause of the provi~
cyclical payments because sions that they may have to
.effective prices of the com- repay. With the 2005 crop
modi ties are equal to or more · corn mar~eting season tlU.i
·· than their respective target far &lt;dong, the producers can
price.s.
come in now and get tht;
2005
Counter-cyclical- advance for the 2005 crop .
Payments: ·USDA determines and not worry as much ab~ .
final counter-cyclical pay- repay1ng .
ments after the. end of the ·Fur additional information;,
marketing year for each com- please contact ihe Farm '
modity. The end of the 2005- Service Agency ar 111
06 marketing year for each Jackson Pike o1· call (800)
.~ommod it Y. is:
;39 1-6638 or 446-8687.

Buffalo too powerful
for \Vhite Falcons, Bt

tne
. Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
CENTS • Vol. 55, No.

!lO

141

MONUAY, MARCH

ww\\ , mrdailysentinel.cum

6, 2006

·AEP fini~hes some preliminary site work at Great Bend

SPORTs·
.• Redmen take two from
Bears. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
. BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

GREAT BEND -Core
soil samples from American
Electric Power's· proposed
IGCC . power plant· site . are
now being tested, while
imother firm continues a
search for historic artifacts
in the area.
As AEP and . the pub! ic
await a decision from the
Public Utilities Commission
on the power company 's

Berge}'itrd
or
Charity
Crabtree at (740) 289-.
2071. or ·e-mail bergefurd. 1@osu. edu. Additional
i11.furmarion can also be
found by logging o111o
h rtp:l/so u rh cen re rs. osu. edu/
hart!.

proposed cost recoyery plan,
AEP continues to oversee
and perform site preparation
work, in order to keep the
proposed plant on a pre-construction schedule.
AEP
Spokesman
Jeff
Rennie sa id Friday the
drilling of soil core samples
was completed, and those
samples are now being tested. AEP is now overseeing
&gt;the completion of a stud;y of
the site's underlying geological structure . That is, ensur-

ing that the underlying geology can support the plant 's
·footprint.
An independent firm is
completing an hi stori cal survey of the 1,300-acre &gt;ite
near the Ravenswood, W.Va .
Bridge. That study determines that no signilicaht historical artifacts will be disturbed by the construction.
The se studies will be
required for the permitting
process throu gh the Ohio
Power Siting Board and

other permtttm g agencies.
including th e U.S . Arm v
Corps of 'Engineers. Wh'ei1
the work began la st falf.
Rennie said the preliminary
work is being completed
before the cost recovery plan
is· decided. in order to kee p
the five-year comtruction
plan on schedule.
The comment period on
AEP's· cost recovery plan
ended in October. and the
PUCO has not yet i&gt;sued a
final ruling on whether the

c11mpany can collect
construction co&gt;h before the
plant i' opera(i ona l - an
unu , ual re4ue.st for most
proposah .
AEP hopes the plant's
constru'ction can begin by
the end of thi' vcar. and that ·
it can be operatin g by the
m1ddle of 2010.
Rennie ' aid AEP knows
no more than the general
public as Ill when the PUCO
might rul e ''" the cost recovery plan.
pm~ e r

.Workshop presents Civil War lifestyle, gives
·previe~ of upcoming Morgan's Raid

Sight Center
hires teacher to
serve visually
impaired

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Br

·'

THIS WEEK'S FEATURES

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Wesley Earl Kelvington
• Harold H. Smith
• James 'Elmer' Kapp
• Ruth Louise Bowman
Sheward
. • Mary M. Swick
. • William Monroe
Watson

INSIDE
• Pakistanis flee unrest
after worst fighting in
volatile border region in two
years. See Page A2
• Birth announced.
.See Page A3
• Rankins announce birth
of son. See Page A3
• God's NET sets up prom
dress loan center.
See Page AS
• Kyger employee
receives service award.
See Page AS
• Council drapes charter
.for deceased member:s.
See Page AS
• Funding 'to clean up
pollution from coal mines at
risk. See Page AS

AP Photo
In this photo provided by Lee Reich, late winter is when the.
sap starts flowing in· maple trees , sap that ca·n be boiled down
into sweet syrup. A single tree could yield you over a quart of
finished syrup - a very special treat when you have collected
the sap and boiled it down yourself.

.MAPLE TREES ·SHARE
DIEIR SWEETNESS
·

BY

LEE REICH

FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Late winter is when the sap
starts I1owing in maple trees.
sap that can be boiled down
into sweet syrup.
Ideal conditions are sunny
days with tell)peratures ih the
40s. following nights when
the mercury dips into the 20s.
Even a single tree could
yield you over a quart of fin ished syrup - a very special
treat when you have collected
the sap and boiled it down
yourself.
Sun warming a tree con- ·
verts its ·starches. to sugary
sap. The tree pumps thi s
sugary 'ap at about 20
pounds per 'quare inch pressure up into the buds, down
towards the roots, and outwards towards the .bark.
Poke a hpllow tap - called
a spile - into the trunk. anti
out pour' some of that '"P·
It's that simple .
Buy spiles or make tradi- ·
tiona! ones from four-inch
length s of haJf,inch-thick.
hollowed out elderberry
stems. Sti Ck spiles into tight
~ol es that yo u drill in the
bark, each hole an inch,anda-half deep and pointed
slightl y upward. Don ' t make
too many holes, though: none
on a tree lei; than a foot
across. one for a tree a foot
across. an add itional one fnr
each additional &gt;ix in ch
diameter of. trunk.
No need to find a ; ugar

maple per s~ in order to make
maple syrup. You can also tap
sap from box elder, which is a
well as red
maple species,
maple ,
Norway
maple ,
wcamore maple, and silver
maple . Each tastes a little different. Not better or worse,
just different,
The sap from any of these
trees is only abqut 3 percent
sugar. so must be concentrated to make a tina! syrup of
about 63 percent sugar.
American Indians made thei.r
sisibaskwat !"drawn from
wood '' ) by skimming ice off
the frozen , collected sap. or
by repeatedLy dropping hot
rock s into wooden troughs of
sap. Large batches call for an
oLudoor kettle and fire. but
an indoor ; tove is fine for·
smaller batches. Just keep an
eye on the . sa p as it boi Is
because it tends to froth as it
nears ihe final stages.
The eas iest way t'o tell
when the sy rup is finished is
by taste and color. Finished
syrup is brown. thick. and
very sweet. If you prefer it
to be more quantitative,
;ri ck a. cand y thermometer
in your boilin-g sap. Finished
syrup will boil at 219
degree; Fahrenheit.
. Ortce you have drizzled
map le 'y rup over llapjac.ks to
yo ur heart \ content, what
else can you· do with it 0
Vermont Special is a punch
made from one part rhubarb
juice-. nne part maple sugar.
and two part\ rum.
·

as

2001 CIEVY COBALT
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Details on Page AS

INDEX .
Call 3 72·2844
Toll Free 1 ·800-822-041 7
Visit us online at
www~tompeden.com

Take 1·77to Atpley
FAIAPLAIN Interc hange
(exrt 132) Turn North

on Route 21.
Dealership IS
3 miles on lert

' Tam, lavs, fdle fees extra. Rebate indudd in selt price of new vehicle filled
where uppltcuble. On approved credn. On stltded mOdels.
NOI responsiblt for typographicalerroo. Prices good IMrch 3rd through March 5th

2 SEcnoNs - 12 PAGEs

.,...,..,
. . .......
.

•

~·

•

·"

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._-~--

475 South Church Slreet, Ripley • Monday - Saturday 9 am - B pm • Sunday I pm - 7 pm

Calendars

A3

· Classifieds

83-4 .

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather
© 2006 Ohio \'~tilt.!')

B Section

As
Publi~hintc .Co .

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

POMEROY - A glimpse
HO EFL IC H@MY DAIL YSE NT IN El. COM
of life in the 1860s along with
a spirited preview of things to
· POMEROY Vi sually
come thi s fall when Morgan's
'impaired Meig&gt; Countians
Raiders ret~w to Meigs ·
now have a new teacher to
County was given to those
prov1de se rvice s to them '
attending Saturday's Civil
through a program initiated
War period clothing and culby ·the Southeast · Ohio
tural workshop.
Sight Center ·
Women in period costum ing
The prog ram is being
greeted guests who mingled
funded initially by a startamong display s featuring·.
up
·g rant
from
the
weaponry, military attire,
Osteopathic
Heritage
period clothing and underpinFoundation of Nelsonville.
nings .and fabri&lt;;S from which
M i &gt;ty D. Mayle has been
they could be made. along
hired as a new teacher ·of
with children 's toys of the late
the blind for the Sight
mid-1800s. and books on the .
Center located in Athe"ns .
Civil War years from the
She will. be serving individ~
Meigs County Library.
uals with visual impairment
Keynote speaker for the
in
both Meig s and Athens
workshop held at Meigs High
County. Her office is locatSchool and hosted by the
ed
in Bui Iding B on the
Chester-Shade
Historical
Ac'
e
Net
Bu sine " Incubator
. Association was Darrell
Campus at 94 Columbus
Markejohn who portrayed
Road in Athens.
Confederate Gen. John Hunt
Mayle ~rad uateu from
Morgan in Ohio's bicentenniCha~ene
Hoefttch/
photos
Ohio
. Uni';e rsitv · with a
al reenactment of Morgan's
of · Science
Raid through Vinton · and · Sixth Ohio Cavalry members, Mike Church, left, and Darrell Markejohn display uniforms and · Bache lor
weaponry
of
the
Civil
War
at
Saturdays
clothing
and
cultural
workshop.
·
·
Dcg
rfC
in
Child
&amp; Family
Meigs Counties three · years
Studie&gt;
.
During
college
she
ago. He will be leading the
\'Oiun teered at 'a local nurstroops again when the reenacing
home and an a'Sisted
tors return for Morgan's Raid
livin!!
facilitv. After ~radu­
II Sept. 6-10.
ation'
,he tibta'illeu ' three
"We're going .to do it
year~ uf ca~e management
again."
announced
experience.
coordtnatin.g
Markejohn . He noted t h~t
.
se
rvice;
fo
r
childre
n with
planning for this year's raid
di , abilitie' in Davton .
has been goi ng on for a year
She i' curren-tly taking
and that about 300 horsemen
courses at Ohio
gra
duate
from 26 states will be taking
Uni1·er,il\
and enrolled in
part. He said they will camp in
the Hadl e1 School for . the
Wilkesville overnight on Sept.
Blind · Ji~tance lea rning
6 and begin their 60-mile ride
program
for profe ,sio na1
1
from there the next day.
'tuJent1 . She i&gt; prc&gt;ently
He encouraged residents
rccc
i\' inu intcn:-.in: 0 11 -thcw~o live along the route to
jn
h
tr:tinin)! under · the
"get out and experience the
s upen "I n n
of
Susan
'event." The exact route will
Thtlumart
in
.
Dire
,·
tor·
of
be published when the time
ClieiH
Servi
ces
.
gets closer, he said.
--~1i't" ha' the &lt;kill s to
As for activities. Markejohn
hec o me
an
·excellent
$a id on Thursday eve ning
!
teacher.
"
'aiJ
Thngmartin
.
(Sept. 7) the troops will camp
1 "She i' 1 cry in;ightful and
overnight at the Joe Hall farm
pi,·k, up on the need' of
after a scrimmage. Friday
the cl ient. We are \erv
morni'ng the cavalry ~ill head
'ple :"ed tu ha1 ~ her on nu'r
out to Peach Fork Road,
'tall ..
where in an open space the
\la' lc "ill host an open
riders wi II conduct programs
hllu 'e on Frida\·. March 17.
for school chi ldren.
.
"Friday morning we ' ll ride Owen Blackwood and his wife display toys of the late 19th century: Blackwood spoke on play- from I I a.m . in : p.m. at
.her ''ff1.:e on Columbus
into Chester and that night things of children in that time period.
Rt&gt;ad . ~1e anwhile questions
there wi ll be a dance on the
I or rekrral-. f \1f ... en i("e.; for
Commons, and on Saturday Fourth Wi sconsin Infantry
we ' II move on to Bash an and Cavalry's role in the Civil
1 j, u.illl impaired intlilidu where another sc rimmage will War. He to ld of the liardships
ah ma1 he directed' to her
take 'place on an actual Civil they endured. not unwnimon
I-XtlO-lJn 1)-.141JO
War battlefield ." said the · for military personnef of that
Th,· Soulhea't Ohill Sicht
reenactor.· He noted that a time. of the years they spent in
Sch uyle r Cone
Center rn ..\then' ,erve, the
.barn dance will take place that Louisiana and of the Battle of
models attrre
hlind :n\J 'i'uall &gt; impa ired
ni~ht.
·
BatonRouge in 1862 .
111 \\'a,hin~t,&gt;n. Vinton.
Sunday morning the cavalry
Schuyler
Cone.
Ohi o
weapons carrred
\1,&gt;rgan. Pcrr1. Hnc+.ing .
will heatl east to Portland .University
Professor · of
:lfltl
FatrficlJ
Cllu ntie,
by Crvrl War cav'
where there will be a reenact- Fashion and Retail . presentl'tl
undn a ~ra nt frnm the
alryn.len .. for ·
mcn t of the Battle of clothin!! fa,hions of the late
OhH' Bur~ au of St•ri. i ce~
speaker Mrke
Bullington Island . He said 19th Century describing
Church. reenac- . tn r lh,• \. r, uall: lmpa rred .
cftons are being made in get women's dress"es a' dc&gt;igned
Till' Srght Ccmer i ' a
'tor. Cone. an OU
permission to reenact lhe bat- with ruffles anti ribbons.
professo r. ta lked · ntmpwl it C:tH n munit } -ba,ed
tie on the actu&lt;.tl grou nd where hraid' and bows. fashioned
llrpnrt:ll lon thai help, pcoabout wome n· s
it took place.
with ti ers and tucks worn with
pk "ith m.1c·ui.u de gcncraperrod clotllrng.
Mike Church. a memnc·r of la yers of petticoats. ami
lion. J r.rt&gt;etlc·" retinllpath:.
' cavalry un1t. tOjlped with cape.s·and ···ltl''ks
the. s·1xt h Oh 10
' ~ ..
and nt hl' r -...c\l."'re· e\e di..,orwhich is planning the Raid.
Li L Golowenski. a designd
dcr' lead nwre rndependent ·
'di splayed un iforms nf the and seamstress. displayed
. J t iC'
l),·pe nd lng lln the.
Union and
Confederate penod garments and prescntle' d of ' . . ._.n i~..· c..., needed
Snltliers ;ilong with the vari - eel C&lt;Histruct ion te ch nique &gt;,
llk·re r- ncu alh nc&gt; charge.
ous weapons ihey carried .
01her
panicip&lt;mts
anJ
Hm1 ,., cr. .rn ai forJahle (oAnother reenac·tor. Dr. Mike cxh1bitnr' nn the program
pa:·mcnt 111:11 he reque,ted ·· ·
Martin of Wi sconsi n. diJ a
i n , 11mc ~. : ~t . . e. . . th~ Jge nL·y
Please see Civil War, AS
slide pre&gt;entati(&gt;n on the
I

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NAT ON··· WORLD
.

'

Monday, March 6, 2006

.

.

Community Calendar

IRAN ISSUES WARNING AS U.N. WATOIDOG PREPARFS TO DISCUSS SUSPEO' NUUFAR PROGRAM
in Tehran . " If they want to u., e age to the credibility of the
force. we will pursue our own counci I."
path."
"The longer we wait tO conVIENNA, Austria -· Iran
He said Iran had exhausted front the threat Iran poses:·
threatened Sunday to embark ·'all pe?ceful ways'' and that if Bolton said. "the harder and
on full-scale .uranium enrich- demands were made contrary more intractable · it will
ment if the . U.N. nuclear to
the
Nuclear · become to solve."
watchdog presses for action Nonproliferation Treaty, the
Russia and China share the
over its nuclear. program, and nation "will resist. "
concen1s of the United States.
the American ambassador to
Larijani said Iran will not France and Britain - the
the United Nations warned of . abandon nuclear research. or three other permanent council
the possibility of "painful back down from pursuing an members with· veto power consequences" for Iran.
atomic program that Tehran that Iran could misuse enrichThe comments came as the insi sts has the sole purpose ol ment for an anns program.
International Atomic Energy generating electricity with
But both have economic
Agency's board prepared to nuclear reactors.
meet Monday to discuss
!AEA delegates suggested and strategic ties with Tehran.
referring Iran to the U.N. the U.N. agency's board will While they voted with the
Security Council. but dele- not push for coilfrontation majority of IAEA board
gates · said whatever step the with Iran and said any initial members at a Feb. 4 meeting
council might take would stop decisions by the Security . to alen the counci I to suspifar shon of sanctions.
Council based on the outcome . cions about Iran 's · nuclear
John Bolton. the U.S. of the meeting will be mild. . aims, they insisted the council
ambassador to the Un ited
They said the most likely . do ··npthing until after this
Nations; said Sunday there action [rom the council would week's !AEA meeting in
·
was an urgent need to con· be ·a statement urging Iran to Vienna.
front Iran 's "clear and Linre-· resume its freeze on uranium
Russia is unlikely to agree
. an activity that to stron g action while it negoleming drive" for nuclear enrichmentweapons.
can make both reactor fuel tiates with Iran on a plan that
Iran "must be made aware· and the core of nuclear war- would move Tehran's enrichthat if it continues down the heads - and to incr~ase ment program to Russ_ian terpath of international isolation. cooperation with the IAEA's ritory as a way of increasing
'there will be tangible and probe of the Iranian program. · international monitoring and
painful
conseq uences,"
Even such a mild step cou ld ·reducing the chances for misBolton told the conference of be weeks down the road.
use in arms work.
the American Israel Public
Still. it would formally
begin council involvement
Affairs Committee.
But ltan:s government cau- with Iran's nuclear tile. starttioned that putting _the issue ing a process that could escabefore the Security Council late and culminate with polit. would hun effons to resolve ical and economic sanctions
the dispute diplomatically.
- although such action for
"If Iran's nuclear dossier is now is opposed by Russia and
referred to the U.N. Security China, which can veto
Council. (large-scale) urani- Security Cou'ncil actions.
urn enrichment will be . Bolton said a failure by the
resumed," Iran's top negotia- Security Council to address
tor, Ali Larijani. told reponers Iran would "do lasting damBY GEORGE JAHN

. Public meetings

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Monday, March 6
• LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m ., at office building .

'
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AP Photo

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675-3877

Monday · FREE Drinks

Youth events
Monday, March 6
POINT PLEASANT
Point Pleasant girls' softball
league sign-ups. 6-8 p.m.,
Point Pleasant High School
cafeteria. T-ball ages 4-6;
slow pitch ages 7-9 and 1318; and fast pitch 10-12, 1315 and 16-18. Sanctioned
USSSA. Sign-ups will be
canceled if school .is closed
due to' bad weather.

$5.99
Eri.Wiy · Platters $5.99
.

615-1812

Saturday, March 11
SYRACUSE - Sign ups
for Syracuse Youth League, 9
a.m. to I p.m., Syracuse Fire
Station.
'
RACINE - Sign ups for
Racine Youth League, II
a.m. to I p.m., Racine Legion
Hall.

Church events

1\Jesday, March 7
POMEROY
- Meigs
Cqunty Tuberculosis Clinic
open until 6 p.m. for skin
tests.

announce birth of son

Kayta Ann Sisson

Birth annoumed
MIDDLEPORT Rob
Kim
Sisson
of
and
Middleport. announce the
binh of . a daughter, Kayla
Ann. on Feb. I 3, at the Holzer
Medical Center. GallipoLis. ·
The infant · weighyd 6
pounds,
6
ounces.
Grandparents ar~ Mr. and
Mrs. Connie Mulford .of
Cheshire and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Sisson .of Rutland.

Kasey Allen Rankin

Proud to be apart of your life.

$7.99 · 10 Wmgs S3.00
Thursday - Half Chicken Dmner

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· Austin Bailey of Reedsville
and Margaret Mayes of Little
Hocking, who share Grant's
binh date.

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Grant Michael Martin

Go places with this ini·redible
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Gallipolis

~ li.ACYelE.

&amp; MEUICAI. EQUIJ•Mf,~ 1'.

REEDSVILLE Grant
Micttael Manin, who observed
his fust birthday on Feb. 26,
celeQrated the occasion at the
home of his gral)dparents,
Hugh and Pat Manin of
·Reedsville.
Joining the celebration were
his parents. Matt arid Amber
Martin, of Reedsville, his
grandmother Lisa Vansickle of
Parkersburg, his· great-great
grdltdmother, Edith Erdman, of
GaJlipolis, his aunt and uncle,
Angel and M;ichael Martin. of
Akron, and several ad9itional
· fanuly members and fnends.
His birthday cake was 'white
and decorated with balloons in
primary colors. Special guest~
at the binhday pany were

SWEEPSTAKES

WORKSHOP

......

Observes first birthday

Sundav - Pork Chop Dinner

713-5536

•

Wife can't shake the memory·
of husband and brother in bed

Other events

Thursday, March 9
RUTLAND Rutland
Youth L~ague ball sign ups. 6
- 8 p.m., Rutland Fire
Depanment.
·
POMEROY
Parent/teacher conferences,

: Grandp&lt;irents are John and
Connie Rankin and Jack and
Dottie Mays. all ·of Tuppers
Plains. Great-gmndmothers are
Mary Fryar of Cool vi lie,
. :Shirley Jones of Tuppers
:Plain s, Ida Boggs of Lottridge,
. and Ruth Mayes of Reedsville.
and ~reat-great grandmothers
are Gladys Rankin of Athens'
and Faye Stover of Guysville.

Saturday - Chicken &amp; Rib Dinner

www.hoize rc lin ic.com

Thursday, March 9
CHESTER- Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold its
monthly stated meeting, 7:30
at
the
hall.
p.m.
Refreshments.

Monday, March 6, 2006

DEAR ABBY: After 23
attend\ is a cJo,e friend of the
years of what I thought was a
bride tor groom ). Some attend
happy marriage, l came home
just to sample the ~ake . LESLIE A.. MORRISTOWN.
and caught my husband,
N.J.
"Wes," in bed having sex with
my brother. It was a shock, to
Dear
DEAR LESLIE A. : Your letsay the least. That evening ,
ter is one of many I received
they had gone to a bar and
Abby
from readers who vehementl v
di sag reed with my answei·.
drank heavily. Someone gave
them a pill of unknown origin .
This should teach me never to
Wes says he doesn' t remember
. disagree with Emily Post ~
anything until l walked in and ·
an important le,son. My
Mar-ch
6
started
slapping
some
sense
tion
are
current
or
former
hetadvice was well meant. but
Monday,
.
RUTLAND - Meigs Area into him.
erosexual spouses/partners of impractical. so I take it back .
We have stayed together.-We gay, lesbian, bisexual or tram- Sorry. folks.
Holiness Association indoor
camp revival at the Rutland · · haven't made love, however. I gender males and mixed-oriCONFIDENTIAL TO MY
Church of the Nazarene, can't seem to get the P.icture entation couples. They offer. READERS: As , 0 me of you
March 6- 12 with evangelist, out of my head. I feel hke my from the vantage , point of - may already know. March i'
Rev. David Canen, and life has been shattered . I love experience, personal , conft- National Colorectal ,Cancer
singers. "The Sissons." Wes and want us to have a dential suppon and resour~e Awareness
Month .
The
Weekday services at 7 p.m. productive life. How can I for- information that can help you. American Cancer Society recSunday service at 6 p.m.
§et? -C SHATTERED IN . The Web site is www.straight- ommends that if you are 50 or
RACINE
Revival,
OUTH AROLINA
spouse.org. Please don't wait older. it's time to get tested for
DEAR
SHATTERED:
One
to
contact them.
Pentecostal Assembly . on
· ·
·
colon cancer. Why o. Because
-r
d
R
d
7
h
thtng
IS cenam, you won't be
DEAR
ABBY:
Regarding
torna o oa ,
p.m. eac
bl
...
,
.
testing saves lives. If you have .
day beginning today through a e · to target unti 1 you get your reply to the "Confused
.
f . h'
the whole truth about what Bride" who asked if she is a amt 1Y IStory 0 1 co1on canMarch II, David Daily evand th
.
fi
cer - or other risk factors gelist, special singing each happene
at mght. I md it obligated to invite her colk
d
b
highly questionable that both workers to her wedding if they ta · to your actor a out getevening .
your husband and your brother gave her a wedding shower at ting tested at an ·earlier age.
· pt'II" the office, l disagree .with your
The American Cancer
wou Jd accept a. " magtc
Thursday, March 9
ROCKSPRINGS . - Rev . .from a stranger that suddenly advice. You told her that it co- . Society oft"ers a tree informaWalter Heinz will lead com- rendered two presumably workers throw a bridal show- tion kit to help you talk to your
munity. Lenten service at straight men bisexual. The er. · "good manners" dictate doctor about colon cancer testRocksprings
United question you should be asking .they be invited to the wedding, ing. Call toll-free: (800) 227Abby, at my office we have 2345. and let them help you
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m. isn't how you can forget, but
how
'long
their
affair
has
been·
many
wedding showers, and stop colon cancer -before it
Weekly services . .sponsored
.
·
by
Meigs
Ministerial going on. You need honest almost all are impromptu stans.
answers,
and
you
also
need
io
,affairs
a
week
or
two
prior
to
Dear
Ab'by
is
written
by
Association.
understand that you are not the wedding. How could any Abigail Van Buren, also
alone with this problem.
bride invite the 20 or so people known as }earme Phillips,
You and your husband are - along with guests - at and wa.f founded by her
overdue for marriage counsel- such a late date? By then all of mother, Pauline Phillips.
Monday,
March
6
ing, and for your own sanity,· the final plans have been Write
Dear Abby
at
·
. CARPENTER
- TB please contact the Straight made. Also, some of the show- www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Clinic
at
Columbia Spouse Network. The mem- ers at my company are quite Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
Firehouse, 5 to 6 p.m., and bers of this unique organiza- large. Not everyone who 90069. ·
returning from 5 to 6 p.m. on
Wednesday to read tests.

Tuesday - $1 .00 oft any Dinner
W9dnesday - Half Reick Dinner

Point Pleasant, WV

(Old Caroling Lumber Building Across
from CSX)
'&gt;I&gt;Al

. . Come in
"Daily Lunch
10:30 am - 2:00 pm
5 great sandwiches
to .choose from ...
only S2.99

Wednesday, March 8
POMEIWY
- Meigs
County
Ministerial
Association, 10 a.m., Pomeroy
United Methodist Ch~rch.

4 to 7 p.m ., Meigs High
School.

: ounce~.

Hours:
M-F lOam-Close · _ . .

IB

1\Jesday, March 7
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, monthly business
meeting, 7:30 · p.m. Bring
non-perishable food items for
Grand Master's Food Bank
Program . All Master Masons
invited. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers
Plains
Ball
Association , 6 p.m., fire
department. 667-7346 for
information .
·
CHESTER
Chester
Council 323, Daughters of'
America, 7 p.m. at the
Masonic hall. Good of Order
Committee to serve refresh;
mcnts and conduct games.
Take game prizes.

UPPERS
PLAINS
Jetfcry and Jackelyn Rankin of
Tuppers Pla!ns announce .the
bif\11 of a son. Kasey Allen.
born Dec. .11 at 0 · Bleness
Memorial Hospital of Athens. ·
:He weighed . 5 pounds, 12

Gallipolis, OH

lBO State Rt. 7 N. -Gallipolis, .OH

Monday. March 6
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134. OES. regular
meet in g 7:30 p.m. at the
·hall.
. - Meigs
POMEROY
'Band Boosters , 6:30 p.m. in
the band room . Parents
encouraged to a)tend.

~Rankins

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Wednesday, March 8
REEDSVILLE -O live
Township Trustee s re gular
session. 6:30 p.m .. office of
the clerk.
POMEROY .
Meigs
County Board of Health, regular meeting. 5 p.m., conference room Meigs C::ounty
Health Department. ' _·
Thursday, March 9
POMEROY Athen sMeigs Educatiotlal Service
Center, 7 p.m.. East Main
Street office.

11!1\VIMG G4U.IA fl
liURIOVMDING C:OIINTIEII

tAao-.., fro111 Po,t Offitc)

I

.

BY BASHIRULLAH KHAN

..

•

Iran ian women chant slogans during a gathering to su_pportlran's leaders and the nuclear program, as they gather at the mausoleum of the Iran's late revolutionary founder Ayatollah
Khomeini, just outside Tehran, Iran, Sunday.

Pakistanis flee unrest after
worst fighting in volatile
border region in two years
ed the nation's sovereignty.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Pakistan, a key ally in the
war on terror, has deployed
MIRAN SHAH, Pakistan about 80.000 security forces
- Hundreds of people lug- along the Afghan frontier to
. ging bags and bundles of try to assert control but says it
clothes fled a remote town does not allow U.S. forces to
after pro-Tali ban tribesmen · cross the border in pursuit of
and foreign militants battled Tali ban and al,Qaida fighters
security forces in northwestOn Sunday, Miran Shah 's
em Pakistan. leaving at least streets . and bazaars were
53 people · dead in the worst empty. Smoke billowed from
clashes in the lawless region a bank building hit by an
in two years.
. anillerv shell. Another shell
The ,onrest came amid tore a ·hole in the home of a
mounting anger over military doctor who lived on the
attacks against ai-Qaida and premises of a state-run hospiTaliban remnants, who have tal. Shells also pocked the side
beeti sheltered by heavily of tht hospital.
. armed tribes that have long·· Both sides were using marresisted the government 's tars and other heavy weapons,
·
and it wasn't known who hit
control. ·
.
Fighting started Saturday . the buildings.
Security forces fortified
and died down early Sunday
in the North Waziri stan themselves inside a heavily
region, anny spokesman Maj. guarded government comGen. Shaukat Sultan said.
pound that serves as their base
Sporadic tiring broke out Sunday after the fighting died
Sunday afternoon in the town do.wn. Troops fired into the air
of Miran Shah, the main if anyone came within 300
hotspot of the ·unrest: But the yards of them.
,·
fighters retreated from govHundreds of villagers -.
emment buildings they had · men, women and children occupied Saturday and sol- fled Miran Shah on foot ·
diers controlled the town Sunday, carry.ing suitcases
again, Sultan said.
and bundles of clothes.
The · foreign fighters were Vehicles weren' t allowed in or
. ·coming from neighboring out of the town. so people had
Afghani'stan and would be to walk nine miles to a securi·•confronted and eliminated," ty checkpoint to find transSultan said. He added a break- port.
down of how many were forNoor Nawaz, 25, who runs
eigners- who often cross the a· shop selling auto parts, said
porous border versus he and his family spent a
tribesmen wasn 't immediately sleepless night because of the
available.
fighting. Monar and anillery
The clashes were the worst fire thundered overnight, and
since 2004 when scores of heli copters could be heard llymilitants, · troops and local ing until dawn.
fighters died during similar
"People are extremely
unrest in · the neighboring scared. :-lobody has slept.
South Waziri stan region and Chi ldren were cryi ng.'' he
funher
underscored said. tleeing with his wife and
islamabad's failure to assert 'three children. His ~eiled wife
governme ntal control in the was carrying their 3-year-old
son·.
rugged region.
The weekend viole nce
The latest fighting occurred
erupted just three days after as President BL"h made a 24the army attacked a suspected , hour visit Saturday to the cap·
ai-Qaida camp in the vi llage ' ital of Islamabad. about 190
of Saidgi near the Afghan bor- mile s nonhca st of North
der. Military ofticials said 45 Waziri stan. and declared hi s
people, including foreign mil- solidarit y with Pakistan in the
itant\ . were kill ed in the war on terror.
attack .
The tribesmen and tt1 ifitantS
But the tribesmen - who might have waited until
· sympathize wi th the mi litants Saturday to st rik e hack at
- claim local people died, troops over Wednesday \
and the operation whipped up attilck on Saidgi because they
more anti-government anger wanted to embarrass the gov·
in the volatile area.
ernm en t. which frequently
A U.S._mi"i le strike on a claim.' ih cracking down on
village in Paki stan earlier thi s . terrorism .
.
The' dealh to ll from th~
year th at killed a relative of al·
Qaida's No . 2 leader Ayman fighting was 'Iii I undear.
The army . spokbman said .
al-Zawahri and a terror suspeGt. along wi th 13 resident'. 46 tighter' and fi,e 'uldiers
also drew outrage. ,Many died. "The figures arc not
Paki stani ' complai ned the fixed , It could be more."
Jan . 13 attack on Baj ur violat- Sultan said .

I•

Tuesday, March 7
CHESTER . - Chester
. :Township Board of Trustees
:regular monthly meeting, 7
p.m., Chester Town Hall in
Chester.
RACINE
Southern
Local School Board, g a.m.,
high school, special meeting.
· RUTLAND Rutland
: Village regular meeting . 6:30
p.m. in council chambers,
Civic Center.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m.
. at the home of Clerk Osie
, Follrod.
· SYRACUSE -Syracuse
Pool Committee. 6:30p.m. at
the home of Bob Wingett.

PageA3

BY·THEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

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�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 rrohibiting the
free exercise tlzereoJi or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of.the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

Pay Rates
Don't mauh cost if living
Dear editor,
The last ti me I was in Meigs County was when I was back
there in 1995 fo r my mother's funeral (June Glaze).
Besides .being depressed about .my mother's death I also ·
noticed it was not the Middleport I left in '77. It looked almost
like a ''Ghost Town ". When I was a kid I remember the hustle
and bustle of Saturday shopping downtown. We called it
"uptown".
.
· Living in a state (Idaho) that is rated 37th in individual
annual income (or lower, I'm not exactly sure as I've heard different.numbers). I can't beljeve some of the things I'.ve read in
the Sentinel lately.
For example: an article the other day said the reason
Middleport had a hard time hiring police officers is that the 5
out of 6 imerviewed laughed at the starting rate of $7. 78/hr. I
would too. Today, if I'm not mistaken, I read that Syracuse's
Cheif of Police is starting at $7.50/hr? PLEASE! This is
beyond ridiculous. I a m disabled and I get almost that much
from Social Security. I hope the cost of living there is next to
nothing but I know it' s not.
How can people li ve on those kind of wages? You can't raise
a fami ly on·that. There has to be some state. federal , or some
kind of help or something done to fix this problem. You must
have a police force. And a happy one at that. l just find this so
unbelievable. When I became disabled I was making just
under $ 12.00/hr and I was a cook at a Country Club. l also had
benefits 'like health and life insurance .. 401 k, free golf, etc.
And we in Idaho· complain daily about our "right to work
state" which keeps wages low.
Is it just police who make so little .money there or is it
every~ody 0 I'd really like to know, witho ut pryirg of course,
because I v,ouidn't want to embarrass anybody. But the police
departments are being embarra.ssed everytime an article runs
in the paper telling the world how little they make. This is
surely something that needs to be· addressed·.
Rick Glaze
Boise, Idaho
· Meigs County lover and homesick former resident

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is M.onday. March 6, the 65th day of2006. There are
300 days left in the year.
Today" s Highlight in History:
Two h~ndred years ago. on March 6, 1806, poet Elizabetli
Barrett Browning was bo rn near Durham. England .. .

LETTERS TO THE.
EDITOR
Lem rs ro the ediror are 1re/come. Th e\' should be less than
300 words. All lerrers a.re Si.fb)err rn ediiin g, musr .be signed,
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Monday, March 6,

Monday, March 6, 2006

2006

Obituaries

Ports and pitchforks
One of the weirder
a problem."
sideshows to open alnngside
And we're the xenophol:!ic
a main event- the proposed
pitchfork-wielding ones? No
operational transfer of six
doubt my old pal David
Brooks would think so. In a
major American pot:ts to a
firm owned by the United
New York Tim es column
Diana
unforgettably
called ,
Arab Emirates - is the
West
" Kicking Arabs in · the
growing chorus of road-comTeeth," Brooks seethes about
pany Zolas, "J' accusing"
the "collective mania," the
everybody opposed to the ·
"xenophobic · tsunami" that
sale of "xenophobia," "isolationist mass hysteria," "big- pliant port deal, would make threatens .to wash out the
otry," unativism," "panic," dee p inroads into global ports deal. "The oil -rich
and "prejudice" against inno- financial markets. 1 would nations of the Middle East,"
cent Ardby.
·
add, as Rachel Ehrenfeld and he writes, "have plenty of
Such accusations are sup- Alyssa A. Lappen have sug- places to invest their money
posed w make you hang your gested in The Washington and don't need to do favors
head m shame .. They make _ Times, '.'It 's time· for the for nation s that kick them in
me shake mme Ill consterna- United States to limit tinan- the teeth." Favors? What are
tion - wondering how. in cial transactions that involve we- the United Supplicants
of America? But I digress.
tarnatiM a hefty chunk of the American companies" Besides, he adds, "the Unite.;i
Amencan ehte h~ s the chutz- and the U.S. govemment .Arab
Emirates' is a modernizpah
to casttgate · the "to .governance by secular
'ing,
globalizing
place."
· ·
American people (64 percent laws."
This week, the UAE modof .whom, says a Rasmussen
Tut
tut.
Isn ' t
that
ernized
and globalized by
Poll, think .!he deal i s.~. Bad "lslamophobia"'l - a subseizing
I00 sixth-grade
!hmg) ~or.. xenophob1~ and ject Natmnal Review's Larry
preJudice on behall of a Kudlow denounces in· hi s social studie s textbooks at a
culture that is the embodi- defense of the deal. "There is pri vate American school in
ment _of xenophobia and no room for prejudice and Abu Dhabi. Wh y'l Becaus¢.
preJUdice. The words pre-' bigotry here," he writes. as the Khaleej Times Online
cisely describe the official Here ? What about there, in put it. the bo.oks "promoted
state of normal in the Arab- the UAE (a huge Hamas sup- Israe l as one of the few
Islamic world since at least porter, by .the way)? As the democracies in North Africa
1948, when the modern state Jerusalem Post reports, the a~d the Middle . East, and
UAE-owned firm , Dubai some Arab countries as sponoflsrael was founded .
Nonetheless, we' re the Ports World "participates in sors of terrorism."
Horrors . Or perhaps I
,"pitchfork-wielding xeno- the Arab boycott of Israel."
phobes" en route to the And why not? The UAE should say: xenophobes and
"Dark Ages," says The New doesn ' t even recognize Israel nativists. In a pro-book-bailYork
Time s'
Thomas - although it did recognize ning editorial called "What
Friedman. I'd say we' re the Taliban. which is about as . about damage that's already
heading in the other direc- prejudiced and bigoted as it done?" the UAE newspaper
tion, . trying to escape the gets. As a UAE customs said the books gave off the
· Dark Ages - as represented employee told the paper, "If "smell of racism," adding:
by the spreading intluence of a product contained even "The minimy mi ght have
sharia (Islamic law). which, some components that were withdrawn copies of the textin terms of the shari.a-com-· made in Israel :.. it would be · book. :. but will it be possible

For the Record

Wesley Earl Kelvington
to withdraw the information
already fed into the minds of
students'" Nobody will
know for sure until the kids
pick up their first pit~hforks.
· Of course, everybody gets
carried away sometimes;
After the Columbia shuttle
disaster iii 200.3: according CO
the Middle East Media
Research
Institute
(MEMRI), a UAE columnist
named Hamed Salamin was
moved· to write that the death
of israeli astronau t liaJJ
Ramon · was "enough .tp ·
arouse joy in every· heart that
beats Arabism am;! Islam.';
Then there's Ali Ai-Hamadi,
the founder of something in.
the UAE called "Tlre
Creative Thinking Center."
According to a MEM Rl
tran slation,
Ai -Hamadi
waxed rhapsodic in 20115
about mothers of Pale&lt;tin i.1.n
suicide bombers who. ~
maintained during an lqra
TV interview, actually ii.stc; n
in on their offspring's d~to ;
nation via cell phone {"'then
she utters cries of joy ... " ).
Maybe it 's nati vist or
tsu namis! to mention this,
bui I fo und a Creative
Thinking Center client list
online that includes - em
you guess&gt; - our pais at lite
·'
. Dubai Ports.
If that's modern and global, I'm sharpening my pitch' fork .

Dissolutions

POMEROY '- An action for dissolution of marriage was
'.' LETART, ·W. Va. Wesley Earl Kelvinton, 85, of
J:,etart, W.Va,, died Friday, March 3, 2006 at the filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Michelle
. Derenberger, Middleport, and Jerry A. Derenberger, Albany.
Rockspnngs Rehabll llatwn Center.
A dissolution was granted io Dennis D. Lehman ahd Terri
' · He is survived by hi s wife, Lily Staats Kelvington of
Letart.
.
·
·
K. Lehman.
' Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Foglesong-Tucker Funera l Home in Mason. Friends may
ca ll . noon to 2 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home.
Bunal wlll be m Old town Board Baptist Cemetery,
POMEROY - A foreclosure was granted' in Meigs County
·
Letart, W. Va.
Common Pleas Court to First National Acceptance . Co.,
against Biliie)o Sayre, and others.

Foreclosure

Harold H. Smith

.: Harold H. Smith, 83, of Pomeroy, died Saturday, March
fo urth, 2006 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.
Va ..
·· He was born Jul y 13, 1922, in Pomeroy to the late
f&gt;earl and Omah Smith.
·•. He was a truck driver for Pomeroy Food Company.
:. In addttwn to ht s parents, he is preceded in death by
three sisters, two brothers, and a grandson.
He is survived by hi s wife. Erma M. Gibbs Smith of
Pomeroy, sons Harold E. Smith of Pomeroy, and Robert
JN. and Barbara J. Smith also of Pomeroy, four grandchildren, and e1ght great-grandchi ldren.
:· Service will be at I p.m. on Tuesday, March seventh, at
the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, wit h Pastor Bennett
Luckeish officiating.
.. Interment will be at Heml.ock Grove Cemetery.
. Calling hours are Monday from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral
nome .

James 'Elmer' Kapp ·
',.'

Diana West is a columnist
j{1r Th e Washington 1i11w,s.

She can be contacted ' i#
diamHt-'est@ veri ~on.IU:' l.

Wolfes announce birth
LOGAN Ryan and
Vanessa (Compston) Wolfe of
Logan announce the birth of
their tounh son, Lucas Caner
Wolfe.
Born Feb.· 2 at Fairfield
Medical Center in Lancaster
he weighed 7 pounds, I0
ounces. Grandparents are ·
Larry and Gloria Compston,
Middleport, Erwin and Judy
Wolfe of Logan. Great-grandparents are Ralph and
Dorothy Gibbs of New
Alma
Haven ,
W.Va., .
Compston of Stow, Marian
Lucas Carter Wolfe
Bigham and Gertrude . Wolfe home by brothers, Trevor, 5,
of Logan. Lucas is joined ·at Justin 4, and Colin 2.

STOP

IRONIC
ISN'T IT?
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LITTER

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LETS K£1 .
OUR swr:

CLEAN·

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GIVE A
HOOl .

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OON'r PJL r.

Mary M. Swick

""'

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Mi.ifit San Francisco is just ahead of its ·time
It is said that we never·
and lesbians, the nerds itnd he bare ly passes the cou rses
really leave high school. The
hippies, the outcast and he con siders stupid arid irrellosers. He 's .the one · who evant - "the old par&lt;~di g m."
workplace is hi gh school
organizes ·a boycott of the he· says. He wants to break
with .cubicles. Our neighborcafeteria until it serves only new ground, invent . things
hoods are high school wiih
cocktai l parties.
Jo.an
organic and free-trade prod- no one else has thought posWhen I heard about the
ucts, who. collects food and
·
· San Francisco Board of
Ryan
winter jacke ts for the home- sible.
He can take himself tqo
Supervisors passing a resoless and who· spearheads a
seriously
sometimes. but . b.e
lution thi s week calling for
recall of the principal.
the impeachment of the presSometimes people dismiss is also a loadoffun . He ' iltry
ident, a move ihat followed he doesn't make any particu.- him as a kook or even a anyt hing. go any,vhere. Ill eel
one of the supes dismissing lar effort to look good. That frea k, but he ne ver doubts anyone . He can he irreverent
on national television the wou ld be shallow and, in his the rightness of his beliefs. and sill y.
need for a standing military, book, shallowness is about He thinks he can change the
He is the only child --- a
world. despite all evi dence little 'el f-ce ntered. · ,; lillie
I suddenly had an image of a the most serious sin.
high school made up of all
He sees himself as an to the contrary. For instance. indulged - of· a. g r~tciu u s ,
the major cities in the coun- intellectual, someone who is he thinks he can get the wealthy mother and a raco;l· try.
compassionate and sophi sti- white kids, black kids and
Just as every student plays cated, well .read and wen Asian kids to mix into one teur fat'her. So. he can tie .a
a role in the dynamic of a tr.aveled,' sociall y conscious happy, integrated student Windsor knot and ho x the
school, so does every bj,g .. and politically enlightened. body. But despite all his fav orite in th e s ixth at
city in the dynamic of a That not everyone sees him efforts and his social theo- Golden Ga te Field.s. He GliJ
nation .
· in the same way is of no c'on- ries. ·each gro up ·se parates deliver the most cicga11 t
Los Angele s is the cheer- cern to him. There is no itsel f from the · oth ers. toasts and tell the bawdi est
leader with the nose job and question in his mind that retreating 10 its own table ·in jokes. He's equally cnrnf,Htthe Juicy Couture. tank top. they are wrong, and he is the lunchroom.
able at opening ni ght at the
Chicago is the g09d-natured right.
·
Some fi nd hi s idealism ba llet and Halloween in tl«:
linebacker who is the go-to
Not surprisingly, he has refreshing and essential; oth, Castro .
guy when a keg needs tap- opinions about e'erything, ers , th ink it's childi sh,
In a high school populak.t.l
ping and isn' t above stuffing and shares them without impra.cticai and mind-numbby
major cit ies . Sclfl
the ballot box to become reservation and without wor- · ingiy predictable.
class president.
· · rying what. anyone thinks or
In trut h, he strugg le; with Francisco is the wild . hut
San Francisco is the odd him .
consistency. He is a commit - likable rud ical. He 's nully,
kid in the back row of the
Indeed, therc·is often more· ted vegan unti l he reads the rebe llious. smart . indul ge r)i.
classroom in the tattered vin- than a hint of condescension · . menu at Gary Dunkos . He Jrrog ~nL funn y. anJ gor·
· tage jeans and fuchsia scarf in hi s opinions, as if he is marc hes in every anti -what- geoll s. AnU as mul:h tl"' hi~
with a streak of orange in hi s trying hi s best to be patient ever parade, unless it con- classrmiles ridic ule hi s crar.y
hair. He doesn' t wear leather · while everyone else· catches ll.icts with his tri ps to Squaw ideas at~d out -there op ini u n~.
and explains with the verve up to hi s fo rward th in king. Valley or Kana. He be lieves more 1i me.s than 1101 . the
of an evangelist why not.
He has reason to feel a little deeply in tolerance but weird kid in thu back ('f th~
· He is of ambiguous sex ual smug. Many of his ideas th ol shouts down Republi can
· rnom v,ith the fuch ,ia sc.n1'
orie ntation and ethnici ty, seemed radica l when first da;;matc s.
though there's a clear Asian presented
recyc lin g
Few yue&gt;ti\m. howncr. " on to something.
influence: He has amazi ng garbage, for instan ce . or his facile &lt;\nd un , on vc ntion- . (.l oan Rwm i.\ .u C(l/r /l m lf \'1
bone structure. He is trim banning pesticide s from al mind . He challen ccs f(n· rht' -SwJ (· n il lf'i ~ nJ
and elegant without being playtng fields - ev ~n t uall y acce pted wi sdo m. So -he (ll rrmwlc. Sntd t '0 /1/IIlr'J I L\'
too polished. He carries him- became ·commonplace
blows everyo ne awa) with to IJ n .·ll l t 'Or e (:f'thi., n t H'\1'"·
self the way people do who · He's the one at the schuol his science-fair projcch and JU' r ur H: nd her e nwil a/
know they are beautiful: But who speaks up for the gays multimedia book reports. bul jua111 ya n &lt;h .ifclr r on h Ie. &lt;'IIIII . j
.
.
1

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'

I

I
.I'

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l
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God's NET sets up
prom dress loan center
POMEROY - As prom
time approaches. God';
NET is thinking about teens
who might like to borro,w
rather than to buy a prom
dress to reduce the financial stress load for fami lies.
So again thi's year God's
NET will have dresses to
borrow at the Mulberry
Commun ity
Center
in
Pomeroy. Currenti¥ the
Center is encouraging those
with dresses just hanging in
their clos et~ to consider

donating them to God's
NET. Not only are gowns
being accepted but accessories and even tuxedos.
Keith
Rader
Rev.
describes the prom program
as a way of sharing with
others. Dresses can be
dropped
off . Monday
throu gh Wednesday, 2 to 6
p.m. · and
Friday · and
Saturday. 5 to 10 pi.m . at
God's NET or 9 a.ni. to 3
p.m. at the Parish Shop at
the Community Center.

Council drapes charter for deceased members
CHESTER - - The charter
was draped in memory of two
past nati onal councilors.
Ali ce Weaver and Marian
Rush, at a recent meeting of
Chester
Cou nci l
323.
Daught ers . of America.
Jo Ann Ritchie presided at
the meeting which opened
wi th flag ple(lges. scripture,
and the National Anthem.
Reported ill was Goldie
Frederick. The death of her
son, Jack, was noted. Julie
Fleming was presented a past

councilor's certificate.
A card was read from Lora
Damewood . The Chester
DofA rally was announced
for April 29 at the Masonic
Hall . A valentine poem was
read by Ritchie. Others
attending were Everett Gr11nl,
lnzy Newe ll . Laura Mae
Nice , Mary Holter, Gary
Holter, Esther Smith , Doris
Grue se r, Charlotte Grant,
Opal Holl on , Ru th Smith,
Barbara Sargent, Thelma
White and Sandy White.

'

-Kyger
emp-oyee
Report: Investigation focuses on
whether officials got kickbacks receives service award

James "Elmer:· Kapp, 100, of Point Pleasant, died
Saturday Marc h fourth, 2006 at Pleasant Valley Nursing
and Rehab Center.
. ·
. He was borh. December J O,. 1905 in M;~son Co. a to the
late Oscar and Mary Baker Kapp.
·
. In addi ti on to hi s parents, he is preceded in death by
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
Brokers received $ 115 milhi s wife Grace Knapp Kapp.
federal grand jury investigat- lion in commissions from
He is survived by son Jame s, Oscar Kapp of Mantua iQg inyestments by the state's 1997 until -the bureau 's tractN.J..
.
fund for injured workers is ing desk was shut down in .
Funeral Services will be held on Tuesday March 7, trying to determine whether August. records show.
2006 at I p.m. at the Deal Funeral Home with the Rev. the ·agency's top officials got
Gasper, ,
59.
of
Ron E. Swiney officiat ing.
·
favors for directing business Worthington, who left the
Burial will be in. the Creston Cemetery: Leon, W. Va ..
to select brokers, The agency in . 2004, often
Friends may call at the Funeral Home one hour prio( to Columbus Dispatch reported .· received wine and other gifts ·
the service .
on Sunday.
from .brokers and would-be .
A key element of the investmen·t firms, the news-·
investigation is allegations paper said. Those gifts led
that Terrence Gas per, the the. bureau to issue a memo
Bureau
of
Workers' forbidding acce ptance of
Ruth Loui se Bowman Sheward, 87, of Jackson died Compensation 's forme r chief such gifts.
Sunday, March fifth , 2006 at her h ome.
fi nancial officer, had a handOhio Inspector General
She was born in Jac kson. March fourt h, 19 19 to the late written li st that specified 'fhomas Charles, part of a
·
Loren E .. and Maryetta (Jones) Call ahan.
how much each tirm was to tederal, state and county task
In addition to her parents, she is preceded in death by teceive in commissions for . force investigating the case,
first husband, Charles E. "Tad" Bowman in .
stock trades, sources familiar declined to com ment. U.S ..
She is survived by husband Delmer Sheward.
with the inve stigation in Attorne y Greg White in
Funeral seryice. will be at 2 p.m. Wedne sday, March 8, Cleveland told the newspa~ · Cieve!and would say on.ly
2006 at the Eisnaugle-Lewis Funera l Home with Rev. Bill per.
·
that investigators are making
Goodall officiating.
.
The commi ssions total ed progress.
Burial to follow in Fa irm o unt Cemetery.
about $ 15 million for 25 to
The grand Jury. one of
Friends may call 4-8 p.m. Tue sd&lt;\Y. March 6, 2006 at 30 fi rms ·wi th each broker three investigating .the scanthe fun eral home.
getting up to about $750,000, dal. is looki ng into the 'han· Online condolences may be emailed to www.e-k-lewi'S- a source with a copy of the dling of bureau investments
funerai. com.
list told the newspaper.
that include' a $2 15 million
The investigati on of the loss in a hedge fund . man.agency has revealed $300: aged by MDL Capital
million in investment losses Manage ment of Pittsburgh. ·
Fred Zigler. a senior
Marv M. Swick, 93. of Gall ipoli s, died Saturday, and led to the conviction of
Gov.
Bob
Taft
ort
ethics
vioinvestment
manager. who
March- fourth. 2006 at th e Hol zer Medical Center in
for
accepting
·go
lf
retired
from
the
bureau last
'
lations'
Gallipolis. Ohio. .
She was born on October 12, 1912 in Gallia Co. , Ohio games and other. gifts he did . y~ar,' said he to ld the grand
not report . Four former Taft jury that he was not aware of
to the late Mark and Cora Caldwell Burnett.
aides
also have been convict- .any li st.
She was a reti red School teacher.- a member of the Ohio
·ed.
Until the practice was
R eti red Teacher Associat ion, and a member of the Hope
· The investigation start ed ended last ye11r. the bureau
Un ited Methodist Church in Well ston Ohio.
She is preceded in death by her hu sband, Claude Swick. with problems with a coin used an internal trad ing desk
She is survived by two brothers Marshall M. and Buell dealer 's $50 million invest- that took req uests · from outmen! in rare coins. The deal- · side investment managers for
G. Burnett.
·
Private servi ces were held on Monday, March 6, 2006 er, Tom Noe, has been certain stock trades . The
indicted-on state charges of trades were exec uted by brawith Pastor Glen Herman officiating.
at least $ 1 million of kers on an approved list.
stealing
Burial was in the Vinton Memorial Park .
Zigler said bureau policy
.- Willi s Funeral' Home was 'in care of the ar rangements.· the coin investment and has
·
pleaded
not'
guilty
.
to
federal
:
used
to require that at least
· · Please visit www. wi ll isfunera ihome.com to send e-mail
charges
that
he
illegally
fun.
60
percent
of the business go
condolences.
neied $45 ,000 to President to Ohio-based brokers and at
Bush's re-election campaign . lea~t 10 percent io minority,
, Bureau spokesman Jeremx tirms. He said there was no
Jackson said he could not rule about how much shou ld
William Monroe Wat.son. 7 1, Point Pleasant Died comment on the existence of go te any one firm.
.Saturdav March fo urth. 2006 at Piea s•ant Valley Nursing a list because of the investiThe desk was shu t dow n in
gation .
pan over concerns that the
luid Rehab Center.
·
Me ssages see kin g com- bureau was paying too much
· He was born Apri l 13. 1954 in Clarksburg; W.Va. to' the
·
·
· ment were left with Gasper in broker's fees. Brokerage
late Walter and Ethe l Richardson Watson.
. In add i'tion to hi s parents. he was preceded in death by and his attorney. Terrence fi rms have disputed that the .
fees were excessive .
Grady. on Sunday.
brother Will y Watson.
.
.
He is sur vived by Forma l Wife Glora Carroll of Point
P leasant.
· There will be no Vis itation or Funeral Service. at his
•
request.
The Deal Funeral Home· is Servining.
' Burial will be at the convenience of the family.
WARREN (AP) - The city some citi7en' considered
will enact reforn1s recommend- th reaten in£.
Chief
John
ed in. a 30-page U.S. Justice Mandop0ulos said.
Department report prompted by
Other recommendation s in
complaint&gt; of excessive Ioree Thursday's repon included
Monday ...Cioudy. Rain mid 50s.
by p0iice ·and improper strip quanerl y meetings 'between
Wednesday night...Mosti y searches. the mayor pledged.
with snow likely in the mornpolice and residents. \ljxlated
·ing ... Then a chance of rain in cloudy wi th a 40 percent
Officers already are seeing pOl icies &lt;Uld procedures andre!he afternoo n. Little or · no chance of showers. Not as some of the refonils 'uggested train onicers on when and how
snow accumu lation. Hi ghs in cool with lows in the lower in the report. including to conduct strip searches. The
the lower· 40s. No rtheast 40s.
increased trai ning. updating Ju~tice Dep::u-tment also s ug~
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy legal decisio)lS and briefings ·gested that Mandopouio,; create
,winds around S mph. Chance
wi th a 50 percent chance of
~f precipitation 90 percent.
a panel to review all. incidents
Monday night ... A chance showers. Warmer with highs during roll call. Mayor Michael
O' Brien said. Also. tl1c depan- involving Jcacll~ force by
t)f rain . showers in the in the mid 60s.
T hursday nig h t...Mostly ment h&lt;!!&lt; removed from a com- police ;md reP.m Lii rcc· ti~ to
eve ning . Cloudy with.a slight
·c hance of snow ~ h ov~~ er s. cloudy wi th a 40 percent plaint form a warning that him .
Cold with lows in the upper chance of showers. Warmer
Prepare NOW for Memorial Day
20s. North wi.nds 5 to I0 wi th lows in the lower 50s.
friday ... Mo stiy
cloudy
mph . Chance of precipitation
ORDER MONUMENTS NOW! .
with a. 30 percent chance of
'30 pe rcent.
Payment Plans A' ailahle
· Tuesda y ... Mostiy sunny. showers . Highs in .the lower
Hi ghs in the upper .\Os . 70s.
Mausoleum Spedal
I
friday ·
night
and
North winch 5 tn I 0 mph .
2
araketslndaded
wllh
-11101eum
1
cloudy .
Tuesday nighLM ostl y Saturda y ... Purtly
.
.
pll'l't.._
- _,_J
clear. Cold with h&gt;WS in the Lows in th~ upper 40s. Highs
·
lower 20s. East wi~ci s clround arourid 70.
tlJeautiJuf ~ t{emories !,. l(cmorfa{ ~Pa~4o.
Saturday
night
and
. 5 mph .
Sunda)'
..
J'anly
cloudy
.
Wednesdu v... Pan ly cloudy
(740) 992-7440
wit h a ~0 percent chance of Low' in the lower -lOs. Hi ghs
Formerly Meigs Memory Gard,!!l!_
rain sho" er, . Hi'ghs rn the in the lower 60s .

Ruth Louise Bowman Sheward

--· .

Th~ Daily Sentinel ~Page As

· www.mydailysentinel.com

William Monroe Watson

Mayor pledges to enact Justice
Department's suggested refoims

Locai weather

.
I

CHESHIRE · - Wendell and advane~:d to an 'auxil' ·
A. Payne, a Mai ntenance iary equip111ent operator in
Mechanic-A at the Ohio 1978.
Valley Electric Corporation's
In 1981 Payne transferred
Kyger Creek Plant, recently to'the
Maintenance
received hi s ann iversary Depanment as ·maintenance
a','lard for 30 years of ser- hel per and. was promoted to
vice to the company, as a maintenance mechanic-C
announced by Ralph E. the following year. In 1986
Amburgey, Plant Manager.
he was prom oted to a
Payne joined the compa- Maintenance mechanic B
ny on Feb. 9, 1976, . as a and
in · 1999.
to
a
laborer
in
the
Labor Maintenance Mechanic-A.
Payne and hi s wife,
Department. In 1977 · he
became a utility operator in Brenda and stepdaughter,
the Operations Dep,artment ·. reside in Bidwell. ·

Funding to clean up pollution
.·. . from coal mines at risk ·
NEW
STRAITSVILLE
The &gt;late recei ves about
lAP) - A fight .between min- $1.5 million a year from .
ing companies and the state .is taxes paid by companies that
threatening Ohio's ability to remove rock; gravel and coal
clean up southeast Ohio from Ohio land . For every $4
waterways polluted by aban- the state spends. the ' federal
doned coal mines.
government contributes $6 in
Polluted watei coming .clean-stream funds.
from abandoned mines is perThere is no other reliable
vas ive in the 26-county source of state money and the
region. where there art; about compani es that polluted· the
13.300 entrances and air waterways have been gone
·shafts, thou sands of which for years.
Ohio' s quarry . and gravel
leak pollutants into about
1.300 miles of creeks. rivers pit compimies · contribute
and runs, The Columbus abo ut $ 1.1 million. but no
Di spatch reponed on Sunday. longer want to pay for cleanThe state estimates that ing up streams thev say have
there are 21 watersheds in the been polluted by coal compa-'
region damaged by acid-mine nies.
Coal companies pay about
drainage and sedime nts .
Restorin g eig ht of them $350.000 a year into the
would cost $49 mil lion , said state's Abandoned Mine
Mike Sponsler. chief of the Land&gt; fund. but that amount
Ohio D epanment of Natural is expected to drop too as pan
Resources' Minerai Resource of a larger tax deal with state
Managem,nt office. The cost re gulators that would rai se
for the rest has not been coal taxe s from 9 cents a ton :
to 2-t cents.
determined .

Civil War
from PageA1
were Owen Blackwood. a
.local inetal fabricator, who
talked on period children 's

toys; Arch ie Rose. a storyteller: Bobbie Reed. a professional seanistress. who commented on pattems and fabri cs : Rev. Alan Blackwood, .
who &gt;poke about edged
Union
and
weaponry.
Confederate : and Terry
McVey. anifact historian.

Ohio Herit~ge Mortgage Corp.
93 West Franklin Street Suite 302
Cen tervi lle. Ohio 45459
MB 6221

Toll-free: 1(866) 433-6462
Free mortgage consul.lation .

READ NOW
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�'

Page A6 • 1he U a tty ::.cntmeL

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, March 6, 2006

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bl

Scoreboard, B2
Buckeyes savor champion ship. B6
Puckett suffers stroke, B6

' '

NEWS ABOUT
SENIOR CITIZENS IN MEIGS COU-NTY

Monday, March 6, 2006
I
'

March for Meals set for March 30
"So no seni or goes hungry" is the theme of the fifth
annual March fo r Meals prog.r&lt;ini to be held on March
30 at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
The day will include a lunch of hot dogs. chips , macaroni salad. baked bea ns and dessert for $5 from II
a.m . to 2 p.m .. with home delive ry in town for a small
fee. Dinner will be st:rvcd from 5 to 6:30p.m. , also at
$5, and will include spaghetti. salad , garlic. dessert
and drink. At 6:JO p.m. a cake baking conte st will take
place with the winners being selected by celebrity
judges , The re will be enteminment from 6:JO to 7:30
p.m. by Joey Wilcoxon.
All of the proceeds will go to support the Meals on,
Wheels program of the .Meigs County Counci I on
Aging .
· ·
·

Activity Schedule for March 2006
The Meigs Multipurpose Center is operi Monday·
Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Regularly sched·
uled activities held throughout the week include
sewing, knitting, euchre, working puzzles, bingo
and much, nmch more! All ages are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
• Line dance practice is held each Monday at l p.m.
The cost is $1 per session.
·
• The Knitting Circle meets on Wednesday from I 0
a.m. until noon .
• Lunch IS served daily at II :45 a.m. The suggested
donation for the noon meal is $2 .for those age 60 and
older. The charge for those under 60 is $4.
· • A represenwtivc from the Athens Social Security
Office will be at the Meigs Senior Center to assist peo"
pie with Social Security problem s and/or to provide
information on March 8 and 22 from I 0 to II a.m. No
appointment is needed. but be sure to sign in at the
front desk.

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
fhe Senior Nutrition Meat I&amp; served Dally at 11:45

Mar-06

contact Sharon Mat.oo ..- n....ollon:lnko. Foo- JcM.t.t oo-1--um dlol, • olll hour rtGitC&lt;Id Is

;t lnlv,

"1
Tun~

Salad SandWicll
f'otstQ Soup
Tropical Fru~
Angel FOOd Cake

· Think yo~o~. for younupport,
S~tW~•t.d

dOI..cion for- HniOI"'

eo and okS« • S2:.00

W. ""111ft $4.00 for those

Breaded yeal Chop w/gravy
Mashlld f'otatoes
Pineapple
carrots
Wheat Brood

Roest Chicken
Mashed Potatoes

S&lt;:alloped Potatoes

Lima Beans
Strawbeny FluW

Plums

81$CU1t

Bread · ~

-13
p'

12

2111

Bru..... ooprouta

Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Bread

Roast Beef wlgravy
Mashed Potatoes
Mb&lt;ed Vegetables

Health and Fitness

• March 7 at I 0 a.m. - Karr Audiology will have a
representative at the Center to answer questions about
hearing and hearing aids.
• March 14- Linda Kin g will be in the conference
·
room with a prograin on "My Pyramid.''
• April II - Ohio University COM. will offer fasting cholestero l te stin g from 9 a.m.- noon. Fasting is
required for 9- 12 hours prior to the test. Appointments
are needed . Please stop by the Well ness Center and ·s ee
Bryan or Colleen to schedule your appointment, or call
them at 992-2 161. A presentation on .diabetes will be
held at II a.m.

Fun, Fun, Fun!

30

Fruit Cocktail

BY TOM WITHERS

Breed

Bisct.~it

Cornbread

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Broccoli
Rice Pilaf

· individuals or if you have questions, please call Kathy
Goble at 992-2161.

Trips 2006
• The Meigs County Senior Center and the Meigs
County Master Gardeners have scheduled a bus trip to
the Cincinnati Flower Show on Wednesday, April 26.
The cost is $50 and includes transportation , admission
to the show and a buffet dinner. Reservations and a
·deposit of $20 needs to be paid by March 15. You can
'stop by the Center and pay or mail it to : Meigs Senior
Center, PO Box 722, Pomeroy. OH 45769.
The flower show features landscapes and flower
exhibits •. container gardens, window boxes, dramatic
table settings and exhibitor booths and sales. For .more
information, contact Alice Wamsley, volunteer trip
coordinator, at 992-3938. or Debbie Jones, Senior
Center Activity Director, a.t 992-2161.
, • If there are enough people inierested in a trip to
Amish Country, it will be scheduled for late
September. In order to schedule a bus and make reservations, contacts need to be maJe 6-8 weeks prior to
the date . Cost for the trip will be approximately $50,
which will include a family style dinner. a visit to the
cheese factory and shopping at some of the local '
shops.
If you are interested in this trip. please let Debbie
Jones,' Senior Center Activity Director, know as soon
as possible.
·
~

Thank You for Your Donations
· We appreciate the financial support received
from the following churches, organizations and .
individuals:

..

.

HMC Sponsors Newsletter THANKYOU! .
A very

big thank you is extended to Holzer Medical
Center Community Health anq Wellness and Holzer
Medical Center Community Relations for sponsoring
our newslet\er "Pages for all Ages,." Thanks to Bonnie
McFarland , with HMC Community Health and
Wellness Department, for coordinating everything to
make this venture bec01ne a reality.

Meigs County Kinship
Navigator Program

Kinship care is an arrangement in which a relative or
• Nutrition Bingo will be held on March 23 and April non-relative adult has taken over the care of a child
when the child 's parents cannot, or will not, care for
27. You must bring at least one canned good to play.
• Bingo on March II is sponsored by Overbropk their child or children. · The Kinship Navigator
Center.
·
Program offers information and referral services tO
· • Bin go on March 25 i; spon sored by Rocksprings individuals in this situation to assi st them with meetRehab.
. · ing their needs. For more information about this pro• Bingo starts at I I a.m. on all dates.
gram, contact Kathy Goble at 992-2161.
• Euchre is pl ayed every Thu r;day at I 0 a. m. (Dr any
other da y you want to come).
• Paint cia;; is he ld every Friday at 9 a.m . with
Mi chel le Mu sser as ihe in struct0r. The re is a fee assoThe Home Ene rg y Ass istance Program (HEAP) is
ciated wit h thi ;, cla;s.
one of several pro grams offered by the Ohio
Department. of Deve lopment (ODOD) that help lowincome Ohioan s pay th eir utility hills. Hou seholds
mfly be eligible . for ass i ~tance if the household's
.
'
• The girl&lt;, from the Pomeroy Li brary will be at the income is at or below the 150% Federal poverty guideCenter o n Ma rch 2 1 to do crafts at II a.m. The girls lines . Li sted bel o w are the income guidelines for up to
have so me rea ll y cu te idea_., and are great to work with. tw o individual s in a hou sehold :
• Co me and jo in Ruth Ward to work on ceramics on
.• Size of hou seholJ : I. Total Grnss Household
March I h. Th e f'un &lt;t ~rt -' ~t II a.m .
Income up to $ 16,748
• Ma rch 2.'1 v. iI I be the da te fm the mon th! y birthday
• Si ze of ho usehold :. 2. Total . Gross. Hou sehold
·. parties . Co me ce leb ra te your bi rthda y with u, .
Income up to $22.45 J
.
.
• Choir practice i'&gt; he ld C\cry Thursday at I p.m.
If you need the income g ui cklin e~ for more than two

HEAP Information

Other Bits and Pieces

31

ApliCots

Exchange ·

• Tuppers Plains Church of Chri st
•
• Enterprise United Methodist Women
.•
••
• Rutland Church of the Nazarene
'
• St. Paul Lutheran Church
• Racine United Methodist Women
•..,
• VFW Olive Orange Memorial Post 905J · ' ·
'"
• Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
··• ·
In
• Eastern Star Harrisonville Chapter #255
memory of Carrie Gettle. Denver Rice. Audra Well;
Pauline Atkins and Myrtle Clark
•
• In Memory of Ruth Taylor - Gi!ry Smith, Roget ·
. Beegle, Paul LarJy Smith. Clayton and Shirley
Johnson
· • Thank ·you to the Pomeroy Flower Shop,for donat- ·
ing the flowers for Valentine 's Day that were given to
the King and Queen.
• Thank you to f\1cCullough and Riffle Drugstore for
donating two one-pound boxes of candy for the
Valentine 's Day event.

.

HEAP · '
Th e Home Energy Assistanc~ Program {I lEAP ), is one of several pr ograms
offered by the Ottio Departme nt of l:&gt;e velopme'n~ (OOOD) ·to hel p low·im:omc:
Ohioans pa)' the ir utility bil ls. l-lousehold5 may be cli~ible tOr ~!ls istunce if the
household's income is at or below the 150% fcd t."rlll poverty gu idelme:s.

Below are guidcl iriE"s for the 2005-20061-IEA~ program:

Si;r.e' of Household
I

l
J
4

5
6

7
8

Soum

Total GrOf!:; llouSt"hold l11 comt·
up to $1 6,748
up to S ~2 .4 53
up lo$ 28, 158
up to S 33,863
up to$ 39,568
up to ) 45,2 73
up Lo $ 50/178

up to i

~6 . 610

For houst! hold" wrth more th an Hmemt':&gt;ers, add i 5,705 per member

CLEVELAND - LeBron '
James ~cored 27 of his 37
points after halftime· and the
. Cleveland Cavaliers had one
of their best performances
since the All-Star break, a 91 72 win over the Chicago Bulls
on Sunday night.
· James scored eight points,
including a ridiculous dunk. as
the Cavs opened the tourth
with II straight points to go up
by l4.'He had 16 points in the
fourth, capping his nighi with
a long 3-pointer with 19 seconds left.
.
Playing all hut I minute, 33
seconds. James added nine
· rebounds and seven assists as
Cleveland went 4-0 a~ainst
Chicago this season. It s the
first time the Cavs swept a season series against _the · Bulls
since going 3-0 in the lockootshortened 1998-99 season.
Drew Gooden added 13
points and II rebounds and
Anderson Varejao added 13
boards for Cleveland.
· Ben Gordon had 17 points.
. and Kirk Hinrich and Luol
Deng .15 apiece for the Bulls.
After . blowing a 25-poin~
lead in a win at Chicago last
week. once the Cavs finally
opened a sizable advantage
they never gave it back.
The Bulls Closed within
eight after Cleveland's run to
start the fourth, but Eric Soow
. hit a baseline jumper and Flip
Murray buried a 3-pointer to
make it 79-66 with 4:55
remaining.
.
James fed Donyell Marshall
for nearly identical 3-pointers
from the comer late in the
third period as the Cavs
pushed their lead to 63-60
entering the fourth.
·On Cleveland 's second po.,session of the tinal period.
Marshall hit another 3 frorh
the same spot to put the Cavs
ahead by eight. Then James ·
.knifed between two defenders .
near .the foul line. blasted
down the lane and dunked to
make it 70-60 with I 0;33 left.
Led by Dariu s Songaila's 14
points &lt;md 56 percem shooting
from the floor . . the Bulls led
42-40 at halftime. But
Songaila didn't ~core in the
.second half and Chi cago
cooled off, too. going just t 2·0f-33 in the second half.
· Jame.s left heads.shaking in
the second quaner when he
sprinted down the ri ght side.
·filled the lane and soared for
an atley-oop pass from Snow
for a feroc-ious two-handed
slam.

·CONTACTS
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1.a:m.)
1· 740-446 -2342 ext. 33
Fax -

1· 740· 44 6·3008

,&amp;fad Sherman. Sports Editor
{740) .446·2342 e•t 33
bsherman@mydarlytnbune com
Bryan Walters. Sports Writer

II you need rm•rc rnformittr on r.rbou t tht' 11!-. AP Program. CQI1tact Jo...i~th~ l roblc at
the Mt•tgs Muhrpurp1,se Sen tor Cen\er ut 740-992-1 161 , If ) O U need ;~sr.rstan cc

with completing a HF. AP app lication, plea.o.e call to '&gt;Cht'dule !lll appoi ntment
Kathy r'i al~· avalluble to make home vrsns for individuals th11t arc di:ur.blcd or
home hound

.

E-mail - spons @mydarlysentrnel.com

(740) 44 6· 2342 e111 23
bwalters @mydallytnbune com

Larry Crum , Sports Writer. "
(740) 44 6·234 2, e •t 33
lcrum@ rtl ydallyre grstel com

down to the final ' econd. We
had a product ive nigh1 offen sive ly hut experienced some
defen, ive lapses whi ch
allowed the m 'ome easy basket, . . Buffali &gt;has an excep·
ti onally Ialc n!cd team and
they pr01·ed th ai toni ght.''
The Bl'on had four scorers
reach double fig ure s while
shoOiing be tter than 50 perPlease see Falcons, 86

Bobcats
cool off
.Redmen

Cavaliers
bully Bulls

c
Salmon Party

Other Happenings

AMERICAN M IDEAST C ONFERENCE

Rio Grande on Spring Trtp
·
College Softball
Rio Grande on Spring Trip

Chicken &amp; Noodles
Pea and Cheese Salad
Mandarin Oranges
Brownie

Support Groups Something for Everyone

I

their cage careers for the
Bend Area team and because
of them the future of Wahama
basketball is brighter than it
has been for over a quarter of
a century.
"I thought we played well
tonight and we have nothing
to be ashamed of." thi rd year
WHS coach James To1h said
following the loss. " We
received a tremendous all -out
effort from everyone righ1

Tomato Juice

Cottage Cheese
Apple Crisp

Garlic

Bakea Hain

COLLEGE BASEBALL

ment berth.
The White Falcons, de spite
putting forth a gallant effort
· for the full 32 minute contest,
·had its most productive hardwood season in 26 years
come to an end with Wahama
posting a t4- IO mark on the
2005-06 season. Five Falcon
seniors , Brandon Fowler,
Thorsten . Hornig, Clay
Roush, . Brandon Russell and
Kameron Sayre, concluded

Bean Soup

Cake

211

HURRiCANE , W.Va.
Any thoughts of a Wahama
. White Falcon upset win
over third ranked Buffalo
was quickly smothered
after a 14-2 Bison offensive
spurt early in the second
per·iod in the Region VI!
Section One championship
at
Saturday . evening

Hurricane Hi gh School.
The talented Buffalo squad
used its mhl~ticism to overwhelm a determined Wahama
team and claim its second
consecuti~e se&lt;.:lional title
with the 81 -63 win . Coach
Chuck · Elkin s'
Bison s
improved to 22-2 on the
year but more important ·
ly advances to regional
competition in its quest for a
second straight state tourna-

Saturday. March 11
College Baseball

2•:

.13

ltallanG~~·
Peaches

.

College Baseball

Rio Grande 5, Shawnee Stale 0
Rio Grande 4, ShaWnee State 2
Boys Tournament Basketball
Buffalo 81 , Waha ma 63
·
Winlield 77. Point Pteasaf)l 57
Sunday's rtsJill
Collufite Baseball
Ohio 13, Rio Gcande 2

Grape Juice

Jonnny Martetti

Fish Patty
OVen Brown p POffectloo salad
Pears

(Note the change in time). Shirley Hamm is the
Director and Debbie Fin law is the pianist. New mem·
bers are always welcome.
• Bible Study is held every Wednesday at I0 a.m. in
the conference room. The group is led by Bill and
·
Maxine Little.
• The Crochet and Knitting Circle meets every
Wednesday at 10 a,m. Bring your yarn and needles and
you will be in "stitches" before you leave. ·
. •, The TOPS group rneets at the Center every
Tuesday from 4:30 c 7:3frp.m.
• Yoga is held every Monday at 6 p.m. here at the
. • The Caring and Sharing Support Group will
meet on March 23 at I p.m. Lenora Leifheit is ~he Center. For more information on the class, contact Joy
coordinator for the group . This group is for caregivers Bentley at 992-2365.
. and their families to share their stories with those in
·
the same situation.
• The Stroke Support Group will meet on March
14 from I to 2:30p.m. Lia Tipton, from Holzer Rehab
• The Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit the Meigs
Cemer is the host.
Senior Center on March 15. Please note the time
• The Diabetes Suppl1ri Group wi II meet on March change: I :30-6:30 p.m.
,
16 at 10:30 a.m. Jane Stalev, from PVH, is the coordi- · • A St. Patrick's Day party will be held on March
nator. The support group~ meet in the conference 16 at the Center. Qon ' t forget to wear green!
room .
• March 28 will be a busy day' Julie Campbell, a
Mary Kay representative , will do makeovers at I 0
a.m. At II a.m .. the Golden Bell Choir, from the
Pla~t
Trinity Church, will perform. Come early and stay for
Hal Kneen and the Master Gardeners will hold their lunch.
annual plarit exchange on April6 at II a.m.
• April 13 will be the a.nnual Easter Dinner here at
This is the time of year that you can share your the Center. The Merry Maker Choir will perform at I)
perennials with others. All you have to do is bring in a.m.
• Ha¥e you ever wanted to be in a bell choir? Well,
your plants, preferably with their name arid where to
plant them . The plant exchange is a great place to get here is your opportunity. Dixie Sayre will be the
some wonderful plants and they are free. Hal and the in.structor for a bell choir that is forming here at the
Master Gardeners can also answer your que~tions Center. Practice will begin Tuesday, April 4 at I p.m.
about planting. pruning, mulching and just about any- All you have to do is show up and be ready to learn
thing you can think of when it comes to flowers .
how to "ring the bells." Contact Debbie Jones, at 9922161, for more infonnation.
. .

Annual

Stewed Tomatoes
Green Beans

Brea&lt;l

Au Gratlr) Potlltoes

-p-

Macaroni &amp; Cheese

M8Shed Potatoeo

Brood Pudding w!Raiolns

C8111omla Blend Veg.
Peanut Butt&lt;or Cookies

27

Swedish Meatballs

Blscu~

S.aturday 'a rPsulta

11

16

LocAL St:H EDULE
GALI:IPOUS - A sch&amp;dule or upcomi~g college
. ar;td high schOOI &gt;Jars ifv sporUng event!! iiWoi&gt;Jing
teams from Gallia, M.eigs and Ma so., countres

Tuna Noodle Cassercie
Garden Satad
Orange J.uice
Chocolate Chip Cake
Breac

15

21

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

10

9

Bauer1&lt;raul
Under the Baa Salad

Chicken Nuggets

Pimento Cheese San&lt;lwich
Cream Of Tomato Soup
PIJddlng

.

'

BY GARY CLARK

Hash Browned Potatoes
Tomato Juice
Stewed Prunes
Biscun

Chili
ColesiBW
Poaches
Pudding
Crackers

' ' BeaiStew
Vegetabies In Stew
Pineapple Juice

Cnonl&gt;erry Mold w/
Mandarln Oranges
Roll

201
BBQ Patty
Parsley Potatoes
Succotash
Honey Baa Ambrosia
Graham Crackers

Banane

.

1~

Tur1&lt;ey Totrazzlnl

Beans &amp; Franks ·
Cauliftower &amp; CheesePor1&lt;&amp; Beans
Banana
Breed

Sausage &amp; Egg Bake

8

7
Pori&lt; Chop
Seuoned ,Spinach

•

Bakea Turkey w/gravy
canaled Sweet Potatoes
G,_,Beens
Appl..auce
Roll

under 60. Thank You

6

Buffalo too powerful for White Falcons

Manus prepal'lld by Lindo Myors R.O. L. O:

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILHRIBUNE .COM .

ATHENS - Ohio scored
13 unanswered run s over the
final• seven innings to erase
an early Rio Grande lead
and win 13-2 in n·on-conference college baseball action
on Sunday al Bob Wren
Stadium .
Anthony Gressick allowed
just four hit s· over six
innings of work to annex the
win for the Bobcats. who .
even their record at 3-3, and
.cooled off a red hot Rio
Grande cl ub in Ihe process.
The Redmen had won nine
of their las t I 0, .but fell to
I 0-5 overall at the hands of
the NCAA Division I
school.
Willie Walker had two
h·its. including a bases-clear.
Brad Sherman/photo
Rio Grande's 'Brent Watterson throws a pitch to Shawnee State's .Je'remy Blackston during game one of Saturday's American ing triple in the fourth. for
Ohio. The Bobcms scored ·
Mideast Conference South DivisioJl doubleheader. The Red'men won the game 5-0, then won the second contest 4-2.
six run s in the fourth to
break a 2·2 tie and · cruised
the req of the way:
Jon Vondrell ·went 4-for-5
at the plate for the winners
BY MARK WILLIAMS
Senior ,centerfielder Mike Golom went er R.J. Niemer. Branon would later and D.erek Win al so Jogged
multiple hits.
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
1-for-3 and had two RBI, including a score to make the game 3-0.
·
Mike Gol om hit hi&gt; &gt;ixth
bases loaded walk in the second inning 'Shawnee State had scored uun in the
RIO GR'l'\NDE - After splitting a that niade the score 2-0.
fourth to cut the deficit to 3-1 and wnh home run of the &gt;eason for
doubleheader on Friday on the road at
Senior third baseman Kevin Dolan runners on first and second. Ashcraft hit Rio Grand e and · Mike
Shawnee State. the University of Rio went 2-for-3 with an RBI double in the a sinking line~drive to centerfield in Warren had an RBI Single to .
Grande Redmen swept the Bears clean three-run s.ixth inning that gave the which Go/om ~nagged and fired to sec- account for the two ·Redmen
in a double dip on Saturday afternoon at Redmen some breathing room.
ond to double off Jared Perdue whq had run ;. Kevin Do lan and
freshman Ken Amsbary' also
Bob Evans Field, 5-0 and 4-2.
Shawnee State (4-4 , 1-3 AMCS ) post- headed for third base.
Rio Grande (10-4, 3- 1· AMCS ) ed four singles against Watterson .
Junior rightfielder Nate Chau keyed ~ ing l e d .
Justin Greg ory allowed
received a masterful pitching perfor- Phillip Ashcraft collected two of the the Redmen in game two with a 2-for-.1
five
run' on fi,e hit&gt; in three
mance from senior lefthanqer Brent Bears hits.
game and three RBI. including a two-Watterson in game one. Watterson
Aaron Morrison (QcJ) lasted 5-pfus run single to start the scoring in the bot- innings 10 Jake rhe loss. Rio ·
improved to 4-0 on the season and fired . for the Bears and took the loss. He gave wm of the fi(Sl. · ·
·
Grande Lr sed six hurlers on
his second complete game of the year. up five hits and four runs with two
Branon, who scored twice, would add the d;rv.
He Sl:attcrcd four hits. struck out three strikeouts and seven walks in his stint a sacrifice fly in tile fifth inning to give
Oh i;, pia)' . host . to
and hit two batters in blanking SSU. At on the mound .
.
a 4-2 lead.
ClewiJnu Sial e Tue sday.
one poim Watterson set down 10 conGame two was a close game from the
Junior catcher Kyle Wells also had
Ri o Grande i, on its spring
secutive Shawnee State batters. outset and Shawnee State made some two hits for the Redmen.
trip until !\larch 2:1 when i1
Watterson has now pitched 19 1/3 critical mistakes that pay dividends to
Freshman southpaw Chris Stewan '· returns to Ameri ca n Mideast
innings this season wiJhout .giving up a the Redmen.
. picked up the win for the Redmen . Conference South play at
base on balls.
With the Redmen leading 2-0 'ill the Stewa'rt (2-0) went 5cplus innings. scat- Cedan·ilk . Th e Redmen
Junior left fielder Michael Warren third inning, Shawnee starter Kent tering four hits and yielding two run s return 10 Bob El'ans Field on
had the big bat for the Redmen in the Kobayashi struck out Michael Branon (one earned) with two strikeouts and March 2-l l&lt;l play h&lt;h l 10 the
tirst game as he collected two hits and on a pitch ,in the dirt, but he was able to
YellO\dacket ' in double two RBI's in four limes to the plate. reach base on a throwing error by catchPlease·see Redmen, 86
header ·acJion. .

Redmen take two from B·ears

I

•
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Ohio Valley Christian led
ttie entire way. but thi s
wa sn't
championship
decided until the fourth
quarter.
The Lady Defenders led
by only four entering Jhe
final period. then used an
8-0 scoring · ru.n and a
stingy defense to pull awav
for another dOLrble digit
victory.
The
Lady
Defenders al so won cohlfortably . 62-37. over
MonciO\a in the regional
tinaI.
·Adanis Couni\ Chnslian
employed a nian -Io- rnan
full ciiurt press t&lt;&gt;stirrt ihe
fourlh. bu1 Bumen \ team
easill· broke n and scored
..el'eral layup.s.
·
. Ono;e thev fell hehin u.
Ihe Ladv Ea ~l c' · &lt;&gt;ffen ,e
fell ;tp:ui.
"They 'iarteu n"hing
!heir shoh. we c·o11tinued lo
box out... sa id' Bu'mc11.
" We held !hem there about

CANTON - What started .as a goal h~s become
reality.
Or perhaps its more like
a. dream come true for lhe
Ohio Valley Christi •ln Lady
Defenders.
In a re-ma1 ch of last
year 's state title game.
Ohio Vall ey Christ ian
defeated Adam s Coumy
Christian. 51 -39. to win the
ACSI Single A girls baske\ball ' tme championship
Saturday on Ihe Lake
Center Chri slian Schoo l
campus.
" 'Thai was Ihe lirst goal
!hey sel a! Ihe heginning of
Ihe year." admilled fiN year Ohio Valley Christian
coach Chris Burnell.
II was Ihe tiN ACSJ 1i1le
for the Ladv Defetiders.
who llh i 4il-.l I in las!
Subm ltted photo
)
Ohio Valley Christran ·s Sarah Burleson Car 's ti na I. OVCS r rc \ i- !I ,.c mmut e~ without Sl' ()f·
sJy '""' back - lo - ~a c· k Ill £ .
takes her turn at cutting down the net after , ou
state~. .~.:ha mpi mr.. htp-. 111
OVCS &lt;lUt.'C'DrCU Adams
her Lady Defenders won the ACS.I state I'1 98-99 as. memhe r' ,,f Ihe Cnuni \ t9- 10 0\er lhe
trtle on Saturday.
WVCE.\ .
II naklghl minut~ &gt; ~ n roulr ,

to t~e victory.
Seniors Kristi Davis anu
Sarah Jenkins each ball
double-doubles to pace 1he
winners. Davis scored 1&lt;l
points and hauled in Ic
rebounds. while Jenkins
added 10 pL&gt;inis anu I i
boards.
Fell ow seni&lt;'r Sara h
Burleson added li"e pomh
while Kalce Edmond.s bad

uue

Bu1 OVCS ne\'er surrendered the lead and-was able
10 Jos s in a fe 11 huckets and ·
lake a four-poinl edge. 3329. im o Ihe fo urth: The
Blue anu Gold ,,·ored eight
cir' 1he liN IU in Jhe tinal
' "m;a and pulled ahead
( l llll f un ahh .

.

· The l..rdi Defenders ti n''h lhc' ,·:unparg n below
'ifMl al I 0- t ~ . bul !hal i&gt;
u 'solid g wm.~ with eight hec·ausc of a brUial Si.' hedpoint:-. :.md eti:! ht c arom ~ . uk c·arh in the season. Six
Jul ie Hu ssdl :lnd Richclk t)f t h L' II: fir..,t ei ~ ht came~
Blank en, hrp added ·four
\' t:n:
a~~lltbt"" 61gger
poinh each anu And rea OHSAA
s:·IM•Is
VanMeter chipped in l\\0.
,-~., a re, uti. !he aves
Al liso n . Welch and
Samamha Di smore paced re ~.· {\fU ' tP{ld l · ~. at
Adams Cnunl\ Chri sl ra n Chm11nas bre.tk.
··we "ancJ ''111 with
wi th 19 anJ · 16 poi nh
,
l'
ht1t)l.., 111lh.: h km.:er than
respe.:Ii vel\ .
Carol
us."
,,Iid 13 rrmelt. "We had
B ra ri d e nhu r~ anu Emr h
Pendell rou-nded llUI 1he al'&lt;,u t l\1o and a half week&gt;
,,tf fn r Chri,Ima;; we chal-.. cnrin'g \\ ith twn ear lt. .
aves ;tnrd. !irs! in !he k ngcu' tht.' _\:Jr].., to l'ome in
'r and IUI11 Ihe.
o/1enin ~ -.tan/;..t. , tdk.in t! and ~~· 1 hel!L
'(';j,\)n
.mn1nd
..
c ai m It&gt; a t ). 12 lead at 'Jii~
And hrs Icam dtd exactlv
liN 'i op . The lead ;tood
27.::: at halfumc . · ~ u1 th a i 0 \ 'CS "en1 4--l the
Adams \\ as ahle ln pull to rc ... t of' thc \\. a Y. culminal·
"it hi n a .siqgle ponll m the "'~ "ith a l;mc -awa ncd
third yua ncr.
..,L~Il' t.' hampinn -.. hlp.
''

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
PREP BASKETBALL
ACS! SINGLE A STATE CHAMPIONSH IP

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 52
ADAMS COUNTY CHRISTIAN 39
OHIO VALLEY CHRISnAN (10-12)
Jul e HusseH 1 2 2 4 Rtchelle Blankenshtp

2 0-0 4 Sarah Burleson 2 1 3 5 Andrea
VanMeter 1 o..o 2 Ka ee EdmoMs 3 2 3 8
Sarah Jenktns 4 2 4 10 ltndsay Carr 0 0
0 0 Krtstt Oavts 7 5 7 19 Totals '20-68 12

27 52

ADAMS COUNTY CHRISTIAN (15 7)

Carol Brandenburg 0 2 6 2 Samantha
Dismore 7 2 3 16 Alslon Welch 58 11 19
Emily Pende ll 1 0 0 2 Jordan Beas ey 0 0
0 0 Shanese Brandenburg 0 0 0 0 Totals

131 22039
OVCS
15 12 6 19 - 52
ACCS
12 10 7 10 - 39
3 pont goals-OVCS (none) ACC S 1
(Pendell}
BOYS CLASS A SECTIONAL ftN.lL

BUFFALO 81 YIAHAMA 63
WAHAMA(1410)
Casey Hamson 6 1 2 18 Brenton Clark 7

3 6 17 Brandon Fowler 5 2 5 12 Clay
Roush 3 0-0 6 KameroT1 Sayre 2 0 0 4

Brandon Russell 1 0 0 3 Kevm Wasonga 1

0 0 3 Thorsten Horn1g 0 0 0 0 Ke1th
Pearson 0 0-0 0 Gabe Roush Q 0 0 0
Totals 25 6 13 63

BUFFALO (22 2)

Oav d Rob•nson 6 8 10 20 Adam ScoU 8 2
3 19 Justm Wh1!! ngton 7 2 2 18 N ck
Hams 4 2 2 10 Josh G1lchnst 3 0 1 6
Chad Stotts 1 3 4 5 Just n Raynes 1 0..0 2
Jason Warner 0 1 2 1 Adam Hudson 0 0 0
0 Rav Parker 0 0 0 0 Brock Duncan 0 0
0 0 Totals 30 18 26 81
Wahama
16 11 16 20 - 63
BuHalo
22 20 19 20 - 81
3 po1nt goats-Wahama 7 (Hamson 5
Wasonga Ru ssell~ Buffalo 3 (Wh thngton
2 Scott)
Boys CLASS AA

SECTIONAl,

FtNAl

WINFIELD n POINT PLEASANT 57
POINT PLEASANT (4 20)
Stephen Walker 2 0 0 4 W II Slone 1 0 0 2
Jay Ells 3 4 4 1 1 Kenny Durham 0 0 0 0
Nathan R1mmey 3 0 1 6 Lasse Bartels 0 2
2 2 Josh Stover 7 0 0 17 Steven Perry 0
0-0 0 Stephen Brown1ng 1 0 0 3 Chase
likens 0 0 0 0 ChriS Campbell 0 0 0 0
Bobby Errett 3 6 91 2 Total s 2012 16 57

WINFIELD (18-5)

Lamar C ark, 3 0 1 8 :Jordan Kessler 3 2 2
8 To dd Hutch nson 6 1 2 15 Sam
Lemmerman 0 0 0 0 Charles Sm1th 2 2 2
7 Garrett France 0 0 0 0 Caleb Ashley 1
4 6 7 Wayne Pr tt 3 3 4 9 Scott Childress
0 0 0 0 Tyler Ham1lton 56 8 16 Jeff Nease
200 4 Totas 261826n
Point
8 11 18 20 - 57
Winfield
19 12 22 24 - n
3 po1nt goals-PP 4 (Stover 3) W 7
(Clark Hutchtnson 2) RebOunds-PP 22
(Slone Stover Errett 5) W 36 (Ham lton
11) Ass•sts-PP 11 (R1mmey Stover 3)
W 11 (Kessle r 6) Steals-PP 14 (Slover
6) W 12 (Ham11t on 3) Blocks- PP 2
(Stover 2) W (none) Team fouls - PP 21

w 16

0111o High Sch~ Bo~s Basketball
Sundays Reaults
Toumament

DIVISION I

Ctn St Xaver 58 Cm Ml Healthy 32
Clayton North mont 38 Kenenng Fa1rmont

27

Trotwood Mad1son 51 Lebanon 47
W Chester Lakota W 59 Cln Glen Este

"

DIVISION Ill

CMsapeake 68 W Um&lt;;&gt;n 54
Frankfort Ade na 54 Chillicothe Zane
Trace 57
Proctorv•lle Fa•rland 57 Albany Alexander

48

Wheelersburg 76 Chi hcothe Hunllnglon

59

Saturdays Results
Tournament
OIVISK)N I
Barberton 64 Akr F re;stonE 47
Brecksv lie Broadview Hts 48 Berea 44
BrunswiCk 61 Loratn Sot.J1hvtew 47
Centerv1lle 48 Beave cre ek 36
Otn E de 70 L berty Twp Lakota E 58

c

Cots Ready 76 Mano 1 Pleasant 60
Columbus Grove 54 Rossford 41
Doylestown Chippewa 45 Apple Creek
Waynedale 42
Gart eld Hts Trinity 63 Cle Cen Cath 44
Oak H I 54 Sc1oto McOermotl NW 50
Pla1n C1ty Jonathan Alder 5B Heath 44
S Euc d Reg1na 79 Cle VASJ 39
Vers a11 es 50 M ddletown Fenwick 39
Young blrsul ne 58 Brookf eld 38

C::tn LaSa lle 81
n Hughes 71
Ctn Oak Htlls 60 Ctn Moeller 51
C1n Pnnceton 63 Mason 52
Cle Glenvtlle 76 Chardon 52
Cuyahoga Fa Is 58 HudsQn 51
Eastlake N 48 Cle Collinwood 36
Elyna 68 Amherst Steele 50
Fatrborn 65 Xen a 53
Grove City 52 Thomas Worthington 33
H1ll19rd Dav dson 58 Dublin Scto to 53
Lancaster 64 Lewis Center Olentangy 32
MaSSillon Perry 44 Uniontown lake 4 l
Parma Normandy 60 Middleburg Hts
M1dpark 54
Reynoldsburg 67 Upper Arlington 65

20T

PageB2

DIVISION IV

19

GA

167
204
166
178
201

Saturdays Games
Los Angeles 3 Columbu s 2
Butla o 3 Boston 2
Hamler Patr ck Hen y 42 M1lle C•ly 25
onawa 4 Toronto 2
Holgate 45 Stryker 39
Atlanta 3 Wa sh ngton 2 OT
Jackson Center 33 C1n Seven H1ll s 28
Carohna 7 Pllt sburgn ::.
Mansi eld St Pete rs 59 Mansfield
Mo01real 6 Tampa Bay 2
Ghnstlan 38
Nev.. Jersev 2 N Y Ran gers 1
Mana Ste n Marion Loca 53 Ft Recovery
Dallas 5 Coloracro 3
N Y I slande r ~ 4 Ph &lt;JU&lt;&gt;Iph1a 2
McDonald 69 Columbiana 42
Detro11 .. Phoen1x 3
S Charleston SE 43 Covmgton 40
Calgary 2 Sa n J~.: se 0
Tol Ottawa Hdls 49 Tal Chnst1an 47
Sundays Games
Edmonton 3 Na sh .fllle 2 OT
W Va prep basketball scores
Columbus 3 Anahe1m 2 SO
Saturday s Results
Dallas 7 Ch cago 2
Boys Sectlonals
M1nnesota 5 Colorado 3
Bndgeport 65 Robert C Byrd 64 OT
St Lou1s at Vancouver 10 p m
Buffalo 81 Wahama 63
Monday s Games
Hamlm 63 Harts 32
Florida at Atlanta 7 p m
Raven swood 79 HerbElrt Hoover 49
NY Is anders at Washmgton 7 p rn
Wmf eld 77 Pollll Pleasant 57
Montreal at Ph !adelphia 7 p..rn
Carol f"la at NY Rangers 7 p m
Ottawa a,t Tampa Bay ... 30 p m
Tuesdays Games
Boston at Buffalo 7 p m
Ch cago at Co umbus 7 p m
New Jersey at N Y Islanders 7 p m
DIVISION
OVERALL
Phoenix at DetrOit 7 30 p m
WLPctWLPct
Tampa
Bay at Pittsburgh 7 30 p m
Rio Grande 3 ,
750 10 5
667
Montreal at Toronto 7 30 p m
Shawnee St
Co oradoat St Lou s
pm
CedarvUie
00000~1
Los Angekls at M nnesota B p m
0 Domtnlcan
Oa las at Edmonton 9 p m
Urbana
Mt Vernon
Nashvtl e at Calgary 9 p m
1 San Jose at Anal1e1m 10 30 p m
Tiff n

DIVISION Ill

Beve rly Ft Frye 60 Zanesv lie W
Muskmgum 48 OT
BUrton Berksh re 81 Andover PymatUn lng
Valley 68
Can Cen Cath 51 Rootstown 41
Cots Ai r centnc 54 London Mad son
Pla1ns 52
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 57 Cle Cen Cath

Denver
Utah
Mmnesota
Seattle
Portland

l
l

I

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

DIVISION IV

Bnslolv lie Bnstol 66 V1enna Mathews 46
Can Heritage Ch r sttan 56 E Can 46
Houston 59 Covington 58
M nera R1dge 55 Sahnevtlle Sou thern 53
Newbury 65 Mogadore 48
RIChmond HIS 85 Cuyahoga Hts 29
Rittman 68 K1dron Cent Chnsban 61
Shadyside 60 Hann bal Aver 55
Zanesville Rosecrans 69 Bndgeport 44

AMERICAN MIDEAST CONFERENCE
Sauth Dlvlf!IQn
DIVISION OVERALL
W L Pet

Ohio Hlgh School Glria Basketball
Saturday s Results
Tournam.nt

DIVISION I

W L

Pet

0 Domm1can 0 0

000 2 0

I 000

Rio Grande
Cedarv11 e
Maone
Mt Vemon
Shawnee St

000

2

1

667

000
000
000
000

1
0
0
0

3
0
0
0

250
000
000
000

a o
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

We ~sh

o o

Urbana

0

0

000
000

o o
0 2

000
000

PRo HocKEY

Amherst Steele 45 Elyna 31
Cm Mt Noire Dame 54 C1n Glen Este

46

National Hoc;:key League

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic DIVISion
W L OTPis GF GA

NY Rar~gers 36 16 8 80 196
Ph1 adelphia
33 18 10 76 199
New Jersey
32 ~ 7 71 176
NY Islanders 27 28 4 58 175
Pittsburgh
14 36 11 39 17 ~
Northeast D1vislan

I

Ottawa
Buffalo
Montreal
Boston
Toronto

Wl
40 14
38 16
29 22
25 26
27 28

OTPts
5 85
5 81
8 66
10 60
5 59

145
198
171
209
246

GF GA
238 143
197 166
172 185
176 189
185 206

Southeast Dtvls1on
Bay Village Bay 56 Warrensville Hts 46
Copley 44 RIChfield Revere 40
1 Carolina
42 14 4 88 23 1
Lex1ngton 44 Bellv•lle Clear Fork 28
Tampa Bay
32 24 4 68 184
lima Bath 50 Van Wert 46
Atlanta
28 27 6 62 203
Mentor Lake Cath 59 Jelferson Area 54
F Ortda
23 29 8 54 164
M1nerva 57 Canal Fulton NW 46
Washington
20 33 6 46 164
Sandusky Perkins 65 Deltance 48
Warren Howland 49 Salem 30
Central D1vls1on
W l OT Pts GF
Anna 56 C n Madetra 28
Detroit
4 1 14 5 87 218
Atwater
Waterloo
67
Peninsula Nas hvd~e
35 19 7 77 188
Woodndge 48
Columbus
24 35 2 50 152
Casta •a Mar.garetta 45 UP.per Sandusky Chtcago
19 32 9 47 f54
St Lou s
17 32 9 43 158
C1n H1lls Chnst an Academy 40 Hamilt on
Northwest DIVISIOn
Badm 37
W l OT Pts GF
Coldwater 54 Swanton 38
Calgary
35 18 7 77 159

WL OTPisGF GA

WESTERN CONFERENCE

DIVISION Ill

39

e

I

186

182
210
186
230

GA
150
176
215
2 11
215

GA
147

t9

267 23
G8
14 ,
16
19
22

28
31
32
37

GB

533
475 3
448 5
383 9

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
TOURNAMENT
America East Conference
Semifinals
Albany NY 67 New Hampshire 54
Vermont 66 Binghamton 59
Colonial AthleUc Association
Semifinals
Hofstra 58 George Mason 49
N C W•lrnmgton 69 Northeastern 54
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
SemHinals
St Peters 84 ManhaHan 74
M1d COillinent Conference
Quartert1na1a
Valpa ra so 77 S Utah 66
Missouri Valley Conference
Quarterfinals
S IllinOIS 59 Bradley 46
Nonheast Conference
Semifinals
Fa•rle gh Dick1nson 7 1 Robert Morr s 55
Monmouth N J 62 Cent Connect1cul St 1

GB

41 17 707
33
31
28
25

25
29
31
34

569
517
475
424

8
11

13 t
16 \&gt;

Saturdays Games
New Jersey 105 Toronto 100 OT
M1am195 Atlanta 93
New York 103 Milwaukee 98
San Antomo 101 Portland 81
Denver 110 Orlando 94
L A Lakers 105 Detr01t 94
Sunday s Games
Washmgton 117 Sacramento 107
Indiana 94 Ph1lade ~ ph1a 93
Phoen x 115 Dallas 107
Mmnesota 103 Golden State 90
Toronto 111 Boston 105
Cleveland 91 Ch cago 72
Houston 102 Portland 84
Seattle 113 Utah 8 1
Memphis 102 L A Clippers 86
Monday s Games
Mlamt at Chatlotta 7 30 p m
Sacramento at New Jersey 7 30 p m
Phoemx ~ s New Orleans at Oklahoma
C1ty 8pm
Orlando at Utah 9 p m
MemphiS at Denver 9 p m
San Anton1o at L A lakers 10 30 p m

Tuesday s Games
Boston at Washtngton 7 p m
N ew York at lnd1ana 7 p m
Golden State at Atl anta 7 p m
Toronto at Clevelancl 7 p m
H ouston at M1nnesota 8 p m
N ew Jersey at ChiCago 8 30 p m
Portland at Dallas 8 30 p m
San Anton o at LA Clippers l 0 30 p m

j PRO FOOTBALL

48

Patriot League
Semaf.nals
Bucknell 64 Arilencan U 50
Holy Cross 73 Leh gh 66
Southern Conference
Champaonshlp
Dav1d son 80 ChattanooQa 55
Sun Belt ConferencQ
Quarterfinals
Denver 58 Middle Tennessee 57
South Alabama 78 Ark Little Rock 53
W Kentucky 80 New Orleans 61

PRO BASKElB&lt;\LL
Nat1onal Basketball Assoclstaon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUantiC DIVISIOn
WLPct
GB
New Jersey
32 26 552
Ph 1adetph a
30 29 508 2
Boston
24 35 407 8
21 38 356 11
Toronto
New York
16 43 271
16 ,
Saulheast DIVISIOn
WLPct
GB

1

Arena Football League

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Dallas
Columbus
New York

II Phlledelphoa
I

Eastern Otvlslan
Wl.TPct
5 1 0 833
3 3 0 500
3 3 0
500

PF
329
249
33 1

PA
281
260
360

3 3 0 500 294 288

Southern 01v1s1an
WLTPctPFPA
Austm
5 1 0 833 311 272
Orlando
4 2 0 667 284 273
Tampa Bay
4 2 0 667 335 326
Georg a
3 3 0 500 324 259
Kansas City
1 5 0 167 241 287

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Central DIVIiiQn
W L T Pet
Colorado
5 1 0 833
Nashville
4 2 0
667
Ch1cago
3 3 0 500
Grand Rap1ds
2 4 0 333
Western Dlv1slon
W l T Pet
Anzona
2
Las Vegas
2
San Jose
Utah
Los Angeles

4
4
2 4
2 4
15

0
0
0
0
0

PF
341
319
320
290
PF

333 237
333 301
333 306
333 338
167 260

Co urtlbus 65 New York 54
Saturday • Gamea
Aushn 53 Georg a 52
Ar zona 51 NashVIlle 49
San Jose 65 Utah 50
Sunday s Games
Dallas 59 ChiCago 42
Orlanrlo 59 Los Angeles 34
Co orado 66 Grand RaP. ds 54
Tampa Bay 69 Kan sas Ctly 59
Las Veg as 57 Ph ladelph1a 49
Friday March 10
Geor g•a at Columbus 7 p m
Colorado at Ch cago 8 30 p m
Nashvtlle at Utah 9 p m
Orlando at Anzona 9 p m
Grand Aaptds at Las Vegas 10 30 p m
Sunday March 12
Dallas at Tampa Bay Noon
New York at Aust n 3 p m
Lo s AnQe es at San Jose 6 p m
Monday March 13
Philadelphia at Kansas C1ty 8 p m

PA
320
229
324
310
PA

280
335
319
351
336

Frktay s Game

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK -N FL labor
negot1at10ns took vet another
surpnsm g turn late Sunday
when the league and umon
agreed to po stpone free
agency another 72 hours g1v
mg the Sides more t1me to try
to reach agreement on a con
tract extension
NFL spokesman Greg
A1ello sa1d the delav would
g1 ve owners a chance to conSider the un1on s latest pro
posa l dunng a meeting
Tuesday m Dallas
Talks broke off earlier m
the day, leavmg dozens of
veterans m danger of becomIng salary cap casualtie s
before free agency was sup
posed to begm Monday at a
m1nute after m1dmght
The breakdown m talks was
typ1cal of the topsy turvy
negot1at10ns so tar Just
y,h_en thm gs seemed darkest
they got back on trac k and
when 11 appeared a deal could
be stru ck wlk s tell apan
The umon broke off
Sunday 's sessiOn
The talks ended after the
NFL g,l\ e us a proposal
wh1ch prov1ded a percentage
of re\ enues for the p!a)ers
wh1ch "- OUld be less than the}
re ce 1,ed mer the las t 12
years sa1d Gene Ups haw
executiVe d1rector of the NFL
Players Assocmtlon After
suggesti ng we ex tend the
y,,mer dead line from SIX
o clock to I0 th 1S evenmg
they gave us a ne"' proposal
wh1ch was worse than the1r
pnor offer Quite naturally
we re1ec ted that proposal and
saw no need to co ntinue
meetm g
But Harold Hende rson the
NFL s execu ti ve v1ce pres1
denl for labor rela1 10n' 'a 1d
the umon reJeCted a propmal
that wou ld have &lt;~dded $)77

AP photo

NFL Players Assoc1at1on Execut1ve D1rector Gene Upshaw talks w1th re porte rs m Detroit 1n a
Fnday Feb 3 photo
million tor players 111 2006
compared to 2005 and S I 'i
b11l1on 10 the s1x yea rs of the
extenSion II ' an unfonu
nate snuatlon for the player; ,
the Jan&gt; and the le.1g ue
Henderson sa1d
A mere tour hours later
thm gs l' ere flu 1d agam
After a con fe re nc e call
between ov. ners .md fe&lt;~ g u e
offlcmls 1nclud1ng comm 1s
S1011er Paul Tag l1abue lh e
league announced yet another
extensiOn - the second 72hou r respite 111 tree &lt;~gene)
wh1 ch on gmall y wa' to stan
Fnday
'The NFL anu the NFL
Play er' A;soc1.1t 10n h.1ve
ag reed to ex1end 1he ""rl of
the 2006 l c&lt;~guc year lor 7 ~
hour' ~ until 12 01 am
EST Thu r'd"\ M.~rch '-1 - m
order to .diem the NFI cluh,

to meet 1n Dall.J&gt; on Tuesday
to cn1b H.Ie1 th e NFL Pl a}cr&gt;
AsS&lt;Jclatlon s olfer the NFL
' did
Shortly aft e rW &lt;~rd Up&gt;haw
' a1d
Th e Nr I
ncgotlalt\r'
called u' ton1ght after ll UI
n egnt Jaltnn..,

h1 okC' ~tlf to

1nd1

catc thdt they 11 Il l t,Jkc our
complete p.tckage to the ow n
cr' tor &lt;I ll .1ppr01 at wk on
Tue,day Wo have therefore
tgreed to cxte nu the lrcc
a,genLv Jeddl1ne unttl 1111d
n1 ght Wednc sdd)' 111 order 10
proJVIUC !nne tor ill.! I 1ole to
he 1ccom pf"hed II 11 " the
~FL ' p1c1 10u' IeJection ol
llllf
r rnpn-..dl t.:d l lt ~ r !hi\
t:\Cil tn g lh It c ltt -..tLI the It]~..,
10 hrc.1k do11 11
The cko~cll ln c lo1 tc nm tn
he under lhe , ,li .tn L dp d/... fl
11 " pu , hcd h.1 d Tll o u ~ h

cuh had alread y started, the
cap ex tensi on cf1anged th1ngs
The Oakl.1nd
Ra1d ers
thoughl they woLild be torced
to lei qu&lt;~rtcl back Kerry
Coll in' go '·I' 1ng 59 2 mil
l1nn 111 c,Jp &gt;JJ.ICC, howe\CI
the delay ga~e them ,,
Cen ter
Ke\m
repn e1c
Ma11.1c w" LUI by lhe New
York Jet' tl thnugh he proba
hlv \\nu iJ have been gone
.ln y"'a' heco u'e he IS 35 &lt;1nd
1111,scd lhe lln&lt;~ I ' IO ga mes of
fa, l ''
1th a tnceps
lllJllr)
The W."hm ~to n Red, kms,
the tc,un hcl 1ncd to be' mthe
nm t L .tp lrouhfe 'a1d they

'""n "

h. td \ \o r ~cd out ~m ltLfC'l:lllt.: nt

to 111.1&gt;- c l1nch1dc-r I ,v,r
\rnn ~ wn
r thr c ~,.; 1Hllc.: P10
Ho\\ I ~ ~ lrH.: r 1 l ru~ d!!Lil l An

nii 1L1 d 11 11!1 1- n oo ~&lt;l n l !' c ool
the 11 Ill\ let loll lold The

Assooated
PresG
th.lt
Arnngton had ag reed to a
bU)Ollt that would 'ave th6
team cap space 1t wouldn t
ha ve had 1! 1t had cut h1m
Other b1g name' d!sO could
go 11 teams try to sq ueeze
under .1 sa!dry cap of $94 5
milliOn It a deal " reached
the cap could go as much as
I0 million h1gher - m other
w01ds , allowmg teams to
keep some of the players
A.m1d all the labor b,tck
and forth came new &gt; that run
mn g back Shaun Alexander
I' as staymg put The leagues
MYP agreed to 1eturn to the
NFC ' champ1on
Seanle
Seahawks for $62 milli on
over e1ght years, w1th $ 15 I
guaranteed accordmg to h1 s
agent, J nn Stemer
These negotiations were by
far the most d1ft1cult smce the
NFL and the umon f1r s1
agreed to free agency and .1
salary cap m 1992 ,, endmg
yea1s o f labor unrest that
mcluded player slnkes 111
1982 and I987 The contr.1ct
has been ex tended several
times smce I hen most of the
tune w1th c,J se
Eve n now the contract
doesn't ex p1re unt1l 200R bu1
th " would be th e last yca1 ol
&lt;1 salary cap - 2007 would
be unca pped '' h1ch could
Ie.1d to w1ld 'pc nd1n g by
some teams and l1llle by olh
ers lrec.t!Jng , l ha\c ~/ h ave not
situati on &gt;~mll ,u lo the one 111
baseball
One re.t, on the se lalks were
more cllfflcultl ' lhatthe pl ."
ers asked lor a ch mgc 111 the
system
Until no"' thev recel\ cd
the1 1 money p11111.1rlly from
tcicLI\1 011 and t1dc1 1c1
cnucs
I hi '
l i lli e
the\
lequL-..kd lhl'll -.. h ~~~ from 11ll
lt..:dlll n.:H.:IHt~"' JncluJ 1ng oui

Ofpee lfoaP-..f'

1

110

.
1

Hu.v\VM'tFJ)

•POLICIES*
Oh10VaUey
Publlahlng reserves
the rlghlto edit
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time
&gt;-Errors Must 81
~aportBd an 111e lira
~a~ of publlca11or

National Basketball Assoclallon
CH ICAGO BULLS-S1gned C luke
Schenscher to a 10-day contract
DALLAS MAVERICKS-Recalled F Josh
Po o,o; e I fr om Fort Worth o f the NB A
De\e opmer 1 League

Jond lho Trlbuno
tsentlnel Aeglste

jwlll

FOOTBALL

rosponslblo

be

LEARN
TO

DRIVE
NO EXPER ENCE NE CESS ARY
FULL T ME CL,ASSES
CDL TRAIN NG
FINANC NG AVA LAeLE

JOB PLACEMENT
ENROLLING NOW

or no more than th•

joccupled

by

tho

~rror and only t~1

to &gt;i.ldlllm n.u111ng n ghts
That led to cllfflcull negot1
atwn s 111 IMrl bec,Juse the
team s lhenhche&gt; are ha•mg
thc1r own d1spute mer that
monev bec.!Use of the d1spar
1ty m OUh1de mcome made by
lov. re 1enue leams l1ke
Buftd!o ,tnd lnd1anapol1 s and
h1 gh 1eve nue teams I1ke
Dallas Wa,h1ngton Ne\1
England ,1nd Ph tladelphl a
Un10n le Jders h.Jd suggested
I hat 11 "ould be hard to reach
.1g1eement on" labor contract
unt1l the owners &gt;C ttled the1r
own difference'
Bmh s1de' 'eemed read) to
compromi'e on Sunda)
largely becau&gt;e ol the pres
&gt;ure of 1mpend1ng fre e
,,gene) wh1ch w,ts supposed
bcg1 n
last
Fnday
to
Ho\\ eve r 11 w.1s put off for
three tJ,IyS SO the Sides Co uld
kee-p tal km g
Negot1.1t1ons .tppeared lobe
,\1 " stanus!l ll last Thur sd&lt;~y
when th e owner' took JUst 57
mmutcs to reJect the Limon s
lasI ol fer But &gt;even hours
la ter the 'Ides 1eversed
co ur se .md sta rt ed talk1ng
&lt;H!LII 0

'u p' h"" s,ud he still thmk s '
rC\ CilLIC ' h lflllg i ' the ke)
alth md • H c ndc~&gt; o n , ,Jill 11
""' ne\C l d"Ll'"ed Up, hall
.1bo &lt;d id the pl.lj ers "ou fd do
.1s Lie fI or hette1 ' t1ck111g with

~hall not be liable fo

WYTHEVILLE VA

~ent
Carrecuo~a
~Ill be made In 11M

Ion

j&gt;Box number ad1
pre always canflden

I

1-800-334 1203
.,._ allfl!nCEif!lc or1ra

!»'Current

rate can:

i"pplles
~All

.

Real

Eo tot

tadvertlsemenls ar

Joublect

lo

tht

!Federal

Fal
~oualng Act at 196&amp;

1»- This

newspape
ccepts anly hal
~anted ads meetlnc
DE standards

[)'We will nat know
ngly accept an
dvertlsement
1
lolataon of the law

r

GIVEA":w

10 month old Choc Lab
m1x Been spayed all
shots housebroken w111 s1t
and lay some! mes w II
stay and heel Ooesn t
JUmp upon people doesn t
beg at table r des well 1n
ear We eve her she
r.et~ds more room than
what we have (740)3&amp;8

9824
Female Black Lab pup 9
wk sold (304)675 5162
Mate
and
female
Japanese Ch1ns to a good
hOme
Beautiful dogs

(740)44 19894
Pupptes for g1ve away
appea r to be Lab/Boxer
m1x (740)446 3897
Rabb1ls 740 992 5550

r

lo,TANil
f(lliND

Female BlaCk Lab to a
good hOme 14 t 6 months
old very good natured
(740)4 46 7595
Lost
nale long ha~red
Ch huclhua tan &amp; wh te
wearn'lg red co lar w/Mtam
County dog lag last seen
Townsend Ad &amp; 68 1
ArthEtr" please cal 7 40
698 0448 or 937 524

2688
Lost 20ga Ruger over &amp;
over Shotgun near H1dden
Valley
Goll
Cour se
Reward (30 4)675 3832
Lost

Cell Phone Reward

(304)67 4 088il

r~
~

)AROSAIF
w,wnll

e COm

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood !ems
To $480/wk
Matenals prov ded
Ftee •ntormat1on pkg
24Hr

801 428 4649

1&amp;1

th t.: lll ll t.:ll l .H!Icc.:men t

Ll nde1 "~I p1e1 mu' cap
dgrceme m \\ L: t-ot JU.., t ]e..,..,
lh .m nO perce nt of all ol the
rc,cn ucs Th~ NFL now
'' .1111, u&gt; to cut tll.1t percent
.1gc to '"' tll 1n ~7 pe1c en1
G11 c n tile ~ 1101 mou' reventle
grm1til the NFI " ex penenc
111g I dill nor 4lbout to g 1vc
h tlk 1 1111.., \\ h1 ch \'.e hd\ t:;
mllk Ill til~ p.l't It 1\ clear 10
n~c th 11 11 c "rll do mucll bet
tcr unckr 1111 1 cuncnt CBA 1n
~()(16
lll U p.lll lL Uilri y Ill
-.tdt:
mont:\
gcn t.: ldt~d b\ ~0117 the llllc&lt;~ pp eu yea r
C\Ll\lh1n ~ lrtJ tll pal,llle Icc, l p-..l h l\\ "'d d

TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAIN NG CENTERS

lrst available edl

TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Recalled C

ALLIANCE

~iral Insertion W1
~ny loss ar expense
hat reaulta from the
p~bllcalkm or omls
lon of an advertise

HOCKEY

N ck Tarnasky and RW Darren Rmd from
Spr ngt1eld of the AHL

In Next Day • Paper

Publication

Sunday In-Column 1 00 p m
f'or Sunday• Paper

Sunday Display 1 00 -,;~;;•~!;
Thuraday for Sundays ,

• All ada must be prepaid*

{174

MOIItLE HoMES
lOR SALE
Experienced Window
Installer
Full t1me temporary posl
!ton w th poss1bt11ty ot full
t1me permanent H~r~ng
•mmed•atety
Resumes
accepted March 6th 7th
belween
10 ooam
2 OOpm Pease apply 1n
person to AI Tromm
Quality Wmdows Systems
Inc
37700 K ng H lis
Road
Pomeroy
OH
45769 Pay commensurate
With
expenence
NO

4 year otd Co omal on 3
acres approx 1 900 sq tt
3 bdr 2 ba th s 2 car
garage master bdr 1s
28x24 W th a J8CUZZ1 tub

$125 000 (740)446 7029

PHONE CALLS PLEASE

4BR Foreclosure only
$14 900 For bst ngs call
800 391 5228 ext F2 54

Jcost or lho tpoco

National Football League
OAK LAND RAIDERS- Named Tom
Walsh of1ens1Ve coord nator Jackie Slater
co otlens ve 1ne coach I rv Eatman co
offens•ve 1ne coach J m McE lwain quar
terback coach Ted Da1she~ special team s
coach Darryl Stms ass1stant defenslve line
coach Lorenzo Wa d ass •stant detens ve
backs and ass slant spec1a teams coach
Robert Ford quali ty control offense and
George Martinez quality con trol defense
Rel eased OB Kerry Colbns

MINNE SOTA
WIL:.D-C ia1med
RW
Matt1as We nhandl oli wa1vers trom t11e
New YorK lslanclers
PHOEN IX COYOTES-Reasstgned tW
Steve Ganey to San Antomo of the AH L
ST LOUIS BLUES- Recalled F Trmofe
Sh1shkanov tram Peoria of the AHL Paced
F Petr Ca]anek on n urad reserve

All Dlaplay 1::1 Noon 2
aualneaa Daya Prior To

An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Appl1cattons Are Bemg
Accepted
For
A
PT/Poss1ble FT LPN PT
Evenmgs
&amp;
F1 1t In
Competitive Starting Pay
Pa•d Vacation Pa1d Meals
Otscounts and Insurances
Available
lnteresled
App can1s May Apply
Oa ly 9 4
Ravenswood
Care
Center
1 11 3
washmgton wv
304
273 9236
Fax
References Requ red
Asphalt Exper1erwe Equ1p
Oper
Laborer
Dump
Truck Onver Resume PO
Box 3105 Hunt1ngton WV
25702
AttentiOn Dr1vers
A&amp;J
Truckmg 1s iook mg lor
Dnvers w/ 1 yr OTR
E.11.penence lor Regtonal
Hauls Average pay 40 s to
m1d 50s Home every
call
Kent
Weekend

(800)462 9365

AVONt All Areas • To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
D1al for dollars
Earn a
great hou r y wage plus
bonuses whtle contacting
possible clients lor med1cal
out sourc1ng company
Apply through WorkForce
West V rg n1a (304)675

0858
D1esel Mcchan•c w/Dump
TrucK &amp; Pav ng Eqwp
Exper a-t- Resume PO
Bm( 3W5 Hunt ngton WV

25702
Dommo s
P1z.za
Now
Hmng Sate Or vers Point
Pleasant
Gallipolis &amp;
Pomeroy local ons App y
ll Pe son
Drivers Needed
COL Onvers Wllhng to
duve lor local ready m1 x
conc rete company
Expenence IS preferred
but flO! necessary Med
msuranee &amp; other bene! ts
ava1 lab e atler wa1t1ng
per oo Dnver must be
w•lllng to do pre rna nle
nance on trucks &amp; eqwp
ment yard work &amp; other
miscellaneous chores
Experience ope B ng
equ pmenl &amp; extra sk1IIS
such as
weldmg a plus
Ca ll Robef1sburg
(304)937 3410
or Lak n(304)773 5234
Located tn Mason County
near Buffalo WV

mlluv

Absotule Top Dollar IJ S
Stiver and God Coms
Proo fsets Gold Amgs
P1e 1935 US Currency
Sohtture Diamonds M T S
Co n S.hoP 151 Second
Avenu e Gall pol1s 740
44 6 2842
1 buy Junk Ca1s (304)773

5004
wa nted To llu y
Me1gs
Coun ty
Sto e. Scnpt
Sto e Tokens and curr en
oy from Aac1ne Pomeroy
and M ddlepo rt Banks
740 992 6040

Dr vers Excellent pay free
health 1nsurance benel1ts
&amp; home t1 me 1 1 year trac
tor
tra ler
expenenc&amp;
requ1red Martm Transport
866 293 7435
Immediate
need
lor
Expenenced and recently
gradua ted
Med1 ca t
Transcr)pltomsts wanted
to work 1n state ot the art
otl•ce With fu~l production
and support cepab 1ty AU
the hnes you want 1n a
great workmg environ
men!
Apply th ro ugh
WorkForce Wes• V rg1n la

1304}675 0858

,

Now you can have borders and graphics
.IL..:1o
added to your classified ads
!r1'.
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

I '11'10\\11 ' I
.., , 1{\ II i ..,

ANNOUNCEliUNTS

BASKETBALL

Display Ads

Dally In-Column 1 00 p m
Monday- Prlday for J:naert:lon

Monday thru Friday
B:OO a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

r

Oea.r:l~;,~

Word Ads

••
JUST SAY
CHARGE li1

(304} 675-1333

40} 992-2156
Call Today••• (740} 446-2342 (7Or
Fax To
992·2157

PHILADELPH A PHILLIES-Released

NFL delays start of free agency again
BY DAVE GOLDBERG

Your Ad,

1\.egister

Sentinel

UI::tihune

To Place

RHP Kmth Bucktrot and RHP :Jared
B asdell

AHL

~e

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

Weekend Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
Amertcan league
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Released RHP
Ryan Jensen
CLEVELAND INDIAN S-Agreed to terms
w1th LHP C 1ff Lee AHP Matt Miller OF
Grady Sizemore and LHP Jason Stanford
on one year contracts Renewed the con
tract of INF 8 andon Philhps
KANSAS C TY ROYALS- Renewed !he
contra&lt;;:! of C John Buck
MINNESOTA TWIN S- Agreed 10 terms
RHP Scott Baker AHP Jesse Cra n RHP
Matt Guemer LHP Franc sco Llnano C
Joe Mauer 1B J~st1n Morneau and OF
l ew Ford
NEW YORK YA NKEES-ASSigned C
Jose G
RHP Jorge DePaula RHP
Steven Wh te and AHP Kns Wtlson to the1r
r111nor league camp
TORON TO BLUE JAYS- Asstgned C
Aobmzon D•az to their minor eague camp
National league
CINCINNATI REDS- S1gned a letter of
ntent to buy Sarasota of ihe FSI- from the
Boston Red Sox pendmg MaJOr League
Baseball app oval

National Hockey League
NHL- Suspended
Ch cago
D Jtm
Vandermeer two games w thOu! pay lor a
h1ghsr ckmg 1nc dent aga• nst Vancouver F
Dane Sed n n a March 3 game
ANAH EIM MIGHTY OUCKS-Ass1gned C
Zenon Konop~a lo Port land of th e AHL
CHI CAGO BLACKHAWKS-Recalted D
M1cha Bannka from N orlol k of the AHL
EDMONTON OILERS-S gned LW Rem
Murray to a one year contract Ass 1~ned
LW B rad Wmchester to Ham1lton of the

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m:rihune- SentinelCLASSIFIED

TRANSACtiONS

12

19 40 322
Pacific Dlvl&amp;lan

WLPcl

AMERICAN MIDEAST CONFERENCE
SOUTH DIVISION

1 3 250 4 4 500
667
0000012333
0000025286
0000000000
0000004 000

32
28
26
23

Phoenn&lt;
LA Clippers
l A Lakers
Sacrar;nento
Golden State

CoLLEGE BASEBALL

43

16

18 J

Northwest D1vlsian
WLPct

36

Perry 64 Je fterson Area 44
Warrensv lie His 75 Ravenna 44
Zanesv11 e 51 Dove 38

a

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
WLPcl GB
San Antomo
46 12 793
Dallas
46 13 780
33 26 559 13 ,
Memphis
31 27 534 15
New O r ear~s
27 33 450 20
Houston

20

39

DIVISION II

GF
206
209
114
181
180

3o

28 517
20 39 339
19 39 328
44
Central Division
WLPct
Detro1f
48 11 814
Cleveland
34 26 567
lnd1ana
30 26 536
M lwaukea
29 30 492
Chicago
26 33 441

20 1 194
187 167

s

38 20 655

Mlam1
Wash1nglon
Orlando
Atlanta
Charlotte

34 23 6 74 224 199

Two pomts lor a w n one pomt for over
t me loss or shomoutl oss

Bedford Chanel 57 Ashtabula Sis John &amp;
Paul 33
E Can 77 Dalton 51
Ft Loram1e 65 P1tsburg Franklin Monroe

Akr N 69 Streetsboro 56
Bay V1Uage Bay 69 Fa rv ew Park
FaiN ew 61 20T
BelOit W Branch 70 Navarre F'a1rless 52
C n Taft 74 F nneytown 63
C n Woodward 65 C•n McN1cho as 60
Cuyahoga Falls Wash Jesu1t 61 Pepper
P1ke Orange 46
Pa nesvtlle Harvey 74 Chesterland W
Geauga 51
Parma Padua 45 Pa rma Hts Holy Name

Cm Oak H1ll s 55 Day Ctiam1nade
Julienne 32
C1n Pnnceton 64 Centerv~lle 28
Cle J FK 57 Cia E Tech 54 OT
Fandlay 48 Marton Harding 43
Gahanna 47 HUhard Darby 29
Ketter~ng Fa•rmont 36 Cm St Ursula 34
Mentor 63 Pa1nesvtlle Aaverslde 32
N Can Hoover 65 Can McK1ntey 41)
P1ckenngton Cent 49 Reynoldsburg 48
P•ckenngton N 48 Oubl n Sc10to 41
Solon 68 Strongsville 47
Tal W81t9 53 Sylvanta Southvtew 47
W Chester Lakota W 54 Beavercreek 46
Wadsworth 64 Slow Munroe Falls 46

35 22 5 75 200 188

32 21 8 72
30 28
65
Pacific Division
W L OTPts
Dallas
40 18 3 83
Los Angeles
34 23 5 73
Anaheim
28 20 12 68
Sen Jose
28 23 8 64
Phoenix
28 29 4 60

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, March 6, 2006

Bascom Hopewe I loudon 48 Van Buren

DIVISION II

Gnadenhutten lnd an Valley 56 Magno! a
Sandy Valley 49
Johnstown Monroe 64 Grandv ew 42
Leav•ttsburg LaBrae 65 Gates Mill s
Gilmour 51
Rocky Rtver Lutheran W 51 Loram
Clearv ew 50
W Salem NW 80 Mass lion Tuslaw 44
Youngs Mooney 55 Ltsbon Oav d
Anderson 40
Youngs Ursuline 66 E Palest ne 44

Vancouver
Colorado
Edmonton
Minnesota

Monday, March 6, 2006

For a hm ted t1me make
50% selling Avon Call

AHentlonl
Local company otfe nng

(740)446 3358

NO DOWN PAYMENT

Home Health Agency now
accepting resumes fo r the
following pos1t1ons Home
Health &amp; personal care
atdes FuH t1me AN and
Scheduler we olfer day
shift hours beneh1s and
good work atmosphere
Please send resume to
Attn Office Manager P 0
Box 707 Galhpohs OH
45631 or call (740)441
1377

programs for you to buy
your home •nstead ol rent

ong

"

116

.
1

s

Home Health A1des
gn
On
Bonus
Horne
Healthcare of SE Oh1o •s
currently h1nng home
health a1des compet1t1ve
wages
Call (740)1362
1222

2056 or (304)593 0466 II

no answer please leave
message
Transitions lor Youth IS
seek•ng a part t me LSW
to license and rearu1t fos
ter homes end to dO public
relat•ons 'w th county agen
ctes Make your own hours
and work lrom home
Please send resume to
Trans)tlons tor Youth
5801 State Acute 141
Gallipolis Oh o 45631
No phone calls please

JOBS! JOBSt JOBS'
$8/hr
PoSitiOns Avatlab e
lmmed atelyl

NO EXPER ENCE
NECESSARY'

1-8n-463-6247 ext 2454
WWW lnfOCI_:iiOO COm
Local Bank 1s seek1ng
Pari T tme teller Must be
ava ~a ble Monday thru
Saturday Plea se torward
resume to Datly Sent1nel
PO Box 729 34 Pomeroy

OH 45769 EOE

Now hmng EMTs &amp;
Paramedics
Call
(740}354 5433 or 1 666

971 5433
Nurse

Hear tland ot Jackson part
of HCA Manor Care has
an exc 1ng ca ee opportu
mry ava•lable tor

RN/LPN
Full-time/Part-lime
Quahf•cahons mclude a
current AN hcense 1n Ohto
2 yrs ot long term care
expenence prefE: red
We after compettt ve pay a
compreh enSI\19 tlenef ts
package mcludtng 401(k)
With company
match
tu 1 on assistance .and
morel
Please forwa rd resume to
Heartland ot Jackson

866ll

St At 93 Jackson OH
45640 Fax 740 286

0295

www her manorcare com
EEO/Orug Free Employer
People Strength
Comm1ment

Chnst an
Owned
Company
OlfermQ
A
Home Managed Busmess
Part 11me or Full ttme Full
Support and Tram1ng Fully
ftnanced opportunity tf
qual fed
1 80()..946 7572 Pin 00 {II
no answer please leave
message)

r

MONEY
TO LoAN

All real estate advertllllng
1n thla newapaper Ia
aubject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise any
preference limitation or
discrimination based on
race color reUglon aea
f•mllhtl status or national
origin or any inlentton to
make any aucn
preference limitation or
dltcrlminatlon
Thta newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertiMmenb lor
eatllle which •• in
vtolation or the law Our
reeders llt'e hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper ere
available on an equal
opportunity be. . .

Country home m Jackson
Co Seven rooms 1 5 bath
hardwood floors full base
ment 2 5 car garaQe
11 27 acres two ba rns
mature p1ne trees PriCe

L ke workmg w1th num
bers?
oul
Accounting
c asses/programs 0
Galllpolis Career

Gallipolis Oatly
Tnbune Attn J1m
Freeland
825 Third Ave

Overbrook Cen ler IS cur
rently accepting applica
l1ons lor Nurs ng ASSIStant
Classes The classes w1ll
begm
March
13
Appli ca tions
wtll
be
accepted until March 8
Space IS hm ted All nter
ested applica nts shou ld
piCk up an application at
333
Page
St ee l
Middleport OH
NO

PHONE CALLS PLEASE'
EOE

Overbrook Rehab1htabon
Center s currently acc.ept
mg appl•cat ens lor LPN s
Available sh f1s are 7A 7P
and 7P 7A All tnterested
applicants should piCk up
an ap p11cat•on at 333 Page
Street Middlep ort OH
For further nformat1on
please cohtact Hall e at

740-992 6472 EOE

POSTAL JOBS
$15 67 $21 98/hr
now
h1 mg For apphcat on and
free governement JOb nfo
ca l Ame nca Assoc ot
Labor
1 913 599 8042
24/hrs emp serv
Reta1t Sa esC erk 20 10 30
hours a week at $'7 25 per
hour
Some evem ngs
P1ckup
appiiCat on
at
Sw1sher
&amp;
Lohse
Pharmacy Pomeroy
RIVER PILOT
Bluegrass Manne Inc s
htnng l me Haul P lots
Compet1 tlve pay 401 K
company patd med cal
dental STD LTD and L fe
Ins (270)575 40BO 24 nrs

EOE MJFN

Tak mg Appltcat ons tor
Mach n1st &amp; Welder
5
years expere nee
app y
7 30 4 OOprn
Ambros a
Mactllne Inc Route 2 Box
254 Pont Pleasant WV

25550 (304)675 1722

Cert1f1ed
Care
Home
ASSISted &amp; Non ASSISted
Persons meals &amp; snacks
'provided Excellent Care

(304 )882 3880

Computer Trouble Shooter
and Rep a r
Expert
Serv ce 740 992 2395
I m mterested 1n Pa1n11ng
and Papenng your lntenor
Walls call me (304)675
5857 or (304)593 2387
Lawn Care rn scellaneous
odd JObs free esti mates

Cal (740)446 6861

r

J'ROflN;ION,U
SERVlClli

•NOTICh
p _HIO

VALLEY PUB
ISHING CO recom
~ends that you do bus
~ 9ss with people lrjO
now and NOT to sen
floney through the mat
~ ntJ you have rweslloat
d the offermg

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

F1ve bedroom
3 5 bath
house n qu et ne ghbor
near
Pomeroy
hood
Hardwood floors
oak
doors and tnm t replace 2
ca r \jarage
deck
2
kitchens 2 hvmg rooms
storage room 3 000 sq
feet 5164 900 Cal 740
41 6 4765 aHer 4 00 PM

(740)385 7671

95 SKyline vmyl/sh•ngle
$169/ mo Call (740)385
9948
99 1 6x60 Schultz New
Generat1on V1nyl s•dmg
shmgled 2x6 outside walls
3 bedroom 2 bath mb
sta nd up
garden
tub
shower
k1tchen appl
antes central AJC heat
pump gas furnace 8x12
covered front porch shm
glad roof m1n1 barn

304

Doubtew de Repo 3BA 2
baths on Oh10 St Poml
Pleasant Land &amp; home
$59 500 Owner F1nance
(740)446-3570
L1ke new 2002 Cayton
14x52
$1 48Jmo
Ca l

(740)385 9948

N~e 1987 14x70 3 bed
room home Only $8 995
Will Mlp w th delive y Ca ll

Elane (7401385{)698

Used mob le homes lor
sale 14 &amp; 16 w de 2 &amp; 3
bedrooms 6 to choose
from 1996 mode &amp; up

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
/SSI?

(740)388 8017 (evemngs)
(7 40 )294 0460
(week
ends)

No Fee Unless We Wm '
1 888 582 3345

IH \ll\l\11

P10

HoMt.'i
IURSAU'

Home llstmg•
L1st ,.our nome by call -

3620

V1ew ph otos nto or line

3B A
2 Car attached
Garage on 1 Q6 acres

$62 000 (304}675 6331

3BR 2 l u I bath I 900
sq ft It-' I basement 2 car
at1ached ga age 3 acres
Chester Townsh1p Eastern
school d st riCt Of1 At 7
nea r Memor al Gardens
Can (740)985 4321 alter

6pm

1 6 acres on Oak H II Ad
Chester Oh o waler gas
electr c
on
property

$15 000

304

483 7550

Neeo to se 1 your home 1
Late on payments d vo rce
job transfer o r a death ? I
cM ouy your home All
cas h ana au ck clos ng
740 416 3130

www orvb.com
ong (740}446

3BR 2 bath den 8 rn es
from Ho zer Hosp1tal on
160
North
Owner
F nance FHA approved
(740)446 3570

Busmess Locat1on tor
Sate Located on Sandhill
Road Po n1 Pleasant WV
call 304 6 75 3423

\\,"IH&gt;
Newly re mode ed 3 or 4
bedroom'S central at lull
basement
hardwood
floors detached garage
large
cove red
pat1 0
fenced oack yard clOse to
schoo s Pomt Pleasant
$69
500 (740)709 1382
" -""

Home of D $1 n.._t 0'1
edroom 3 botn
cr e s 3 car 2 ;, tfll )
nattacheo ga1age ga
well free gas A l lar'ld
OH Call ~ 7 40) 74 2 32 30
f~!o ppomt men ts only corn

306

3&lt;11

5... ac re butld ng s te 1n
Ea ste rn schOol d stqct
close to Tuppe rs Pla1ns o
AT - Wth ut lil iES on Site
Contact Je t1 _,01 6la
Oo64
E ma
~J~.:sCul!e t I# yah.Q.Q c.QID

IH \1\1'

mi&lt;SALE
T6x80 mo b e home 3 bed
room 2 batl'l l'le8 t oump
Ve v n&lt;; e

'&lt; "

BA 2BA LA K h,;llB'l
eek&amp;Bu d ngs A r Se
t 676 Oshe l Ad w111 coo

Appilcat ons a e now bemg
accepted lo r small farm
house nea R1o Graride
$400/month plus uttlitles
bedroom
One
Background Check Nil be
pretormed Sec depos•t
reQu red Avatlable Apnl
1st For apphcar1on email
JH o op er2360@p e o
pleoc cgm
or
calt
(7 40 )245 0037/(304) 675-

7624

Attenttan 1
Local company otfenng

NO DOWN PAYMENT"

programs tor you to buy
your home 1nstead ot rent
100Dc t1nancmg
Less than perfect credtl
accepted
• Payment could be tt'le
same as rent
Mortg age
Locato rs
0000

(7 40)367

House for rent1n Clltton 3
Bedroo m S425 per Month
plus depOSII
740 742

1903
Ou•et rural locaton Just
mmutes tram GalbpohsiA•o
Gran de
Spac ous
3 BRI2Ba large LA OR
k:1tchen w bar heat pump
no smoktng please no
ndoor pets S5001mon th
ncludes water (740)379
9445~

!""" MOIIU.F HOMES
FOil RFNf

2 l;)edroom mob1le home tn
Rae ne $350 mo plu s
S350 dePQSit years te ase
no pets no calls atter 9pm
(740)992 5039
Mobt e home spaces n
Cou ntry Mob1le Home
Park (740)385--4019

1"'"'

A~'KIMI:O.-r.i
HlR R£'T

1 and 2 bearoom apan
ments
l t.Jrms hed
and
vnfurn shed
secunty
depos1t eaUJred no pets
740992 2218
18R
apt ~ 4
ent
5-t oll e
r et r g
waterltrash/sewe
pd
$225 mo (740 )367 701 5
(7 40)44 6 4 734

CPr1enary al ut t e5 oa1
except e ect c S..12~ Ci'!
(740)2"6 113"'

APART

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS AT

BUDGET

PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATE S 52 Westwooa
D 1ve from $344 to S442
Walk to shop &amp; rnov1es
Ca 1 740 44 6 2568 Equal
HOUSing ()p pOrtu n 1\o

2BR

Ne w
Bran d
Apart ments
Re f
Stove
Wa
Orv
HtPump WB Seo,o;er ncl
Close 0 R '" =iodne
Re
Pe

"'0

&lt;;&gt;"

"

~

~
J 4t

2 1
Bra nd new 2 8A apts or
Bob McCormiC~ l=ld Cau
fOI d,etaiiS (740}44 1 0 194
or { 740 441 1184

'

Moun £ Hlll\t~

Across f om Wal Mart
3BR LA k 1 bath TV
oom WID hookup cer tral
gas
heat l cool
back
porch/yard
No
pets
$450/ month plus utlittes
$4 50/depos t rete ence
m1n mum 1yr lease Phone
(7 40)446 9772 weekdays
9am 5pm

(740)388 8513 (dayt me}

Rt \1 [.,rm

75-0022

7 acre country home 3
bedroom 2 lull baths wid
refngerator ange e1ectrc
&amp; water pa1d free yard
mowmg propane heat &amp;
woodburncr newly remod
eled monthly pl us depos t
call belween 9 2pm at
{740)674 6951

ng

22 acre9 won&lt;:tertul v ew
ndgetop property close to
man highway per:fect lor 4
wheeler tra1ls (740 )707
210 9

Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam-or Shampoo
Free Est mates
'"Clearly Clean'

ll\\\(1\1

IJUSINt.'&gt;li
01'1'0KrliNffi'

2006 16 w de Spec• a!
Pnce
$181 /mo
Call

or (740)286 72 12

Would like to work as a
Farm Hand Can run mast
any equ p (740}44 1 01318
ask lor Chuck

lu

740 379 9189

$149 000 (937}515 8670

COllege
(740)446-4387
tJ00.214.Q452
12748

C~ub Car Gall Carts Gas
Wtlh Tops GOOd Shape
Pmes Htlts Golf Cou rse
$1 200 00 740 992 2720
or 740 992 6312

2004 16x80 Clayton v1nyl
s d1ng shmg les 3 bed
room 2 bath mb walk m
coset excellent condition

17401256 6427

,..1

Check

&amp;
The National Rlt16

Or

nRED OF GAS PRICES
6 COMMunNG?
CAREER DISTURBED?

ThsnlucnON

Socloty

Fpr 1mmed1ate
Cons~~:te at1o n call us at
e1ther
(740)446-7442 ext 2454

(740)367

rio~

ScH&lt;Joo;

Help ra1se money for'
non prof1t and poht•cal
organ•zat1ons tnclud•ng
The Amerlcan Cancer

Full benet ts package
ava1table as we ll as patd
tra1n1ng ho •days and
vacal1ons

HflJ' WM'tFJ)

T1red of Not Hav1ng
Enough Money to Make
Ends Meet or Go1ng to
Work For Someone Else?
Chr st1an owned Company
ot nearly 2 decades otter
ng a home Bus.ness
Opportun ty
(304)576

Home Heatthc are of SEO
1S Currently Accept ng
Appl1cal1ons For Full &amp;
Part ttme
AN s
Compet•t ve
Wages
Bonuses &amp; Benefits Call
Toll free 1 866 388 100

Association

&lt;ill 2006

www comics com

"
~
NEA Inc

100% f nancmg
• Less than pertect credit
accepted
Payment cou d be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
0000

1987 Oakwood 14x70
2BA 2 bath 10 excellent
condtt1on Ready to move
n set up on private ot lot
en! $125/month New pro
te ssmnally 1nsta led ca rpet
and v•nyl th oughOut 8x20
porch/ room
add ton
16)(24
garage
Worth
$2 1 000 must sacn f ce for
$14 000 (740)645 1968 or
(740)6 45 3440

1BR Ca bn a ll ut llles
pa1d Betwee r1 A o Grande
&amp;. Jackson
(740\441
01 17
3 Bedroom Hou se 1n New
Haven
SJ75 mon tn
$3 50 "'coc::t
"&gt;~ c Pels
1.1 lir.._ k ~
Stoo. rent nQ Buy 7 bed
room toreclosur e S18 000
Fo li st n ~s 800 39 t 5228
ext 709

CONVENIENnY LOCAT
&amp; ~FFORD~B LE 1
TownMu~e
apa rtments
and or small house s FOR
RENT Call f740)44 1 11 11
tor appl cet on &amp; nto ma
11on

ED

Downtown locat )
apt unt n "'lif'1
1ele e nce~
1..
(740 44€ 0139

BR

e~

Furn shea 1 Br Apartment
ve ~ n CE: $3501mon tt'l
304)675 2970

�Page 84 •

Daily

The

Monday, March 6, 2008

www.mydailysentin.el.com

Sentin e l

Monday, March &amp;. 2006
'i\LLEY OOP

r
Refrigerator
white
Whirlpool $125: relrigeraIOf white 641n h1gh 28w ,
washer GE $95, dryer GE
$95, range 30m $95.
Genes App l1ances 76 Vine
St.,
GallipOlis,
OH,
(740)446-7100
or
(740)709· 1101

bedroom aparlrnents at
Village
Manor
and
Riverside Apartments 111
Middleport. From $295$4
740-992-5064.
Equal

Housmg

Opportun itle
Modern 1 bedr

m apt, No

pets. $265 mo , $200
deposit. (740)446-3 7.

Sofa &amp; chalr 5100; sectional wl end recl1ners $100;
refrigeraior $100: Console
TV $100: RCA stereo $75:
Ab Lounger $100;, book
shelves S100 each. PI'!One
(740)441 -0988

Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applicati ons for

Th ompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
re-conditiof1ed automat ic
washers &amp; dryers, relngerators. gas and electr ic
ranges. a~r conditioners ,
9nd wringer washers. Will
do repairs on maJOr brands
inshoporatyourhome.

waiting list for Hud-subsized, i - br, apartment.
call 675-6679 EHO
WEEKLY AVA ILA BLE
I n c ! u ·d e s
Ae fr igera tor/ M ic1ow ave
. From $175 To $~50
College Hill Motel Call

{740)245- 5326
.

r
I

·

~.;:..;.;..;..;;.;.;;.....;....;..,

~

SPACE
FOR R ENT

room offiCe- $225fmo. , 2

room

· suite

$250fmo.

Security deposit requ1red
You ~ay utilities All spaces

·r

MlscJ.J..iANEOOS 1

16ft. Goldstar factory trail, er, 3,5ootb axles $900. '
63 mope! 600 Series Ford
dump truck . ready to go,
$2 ,500 . (7 4~)379-2351 ,.

Retail and office space
available m downtown
Point
Pleasant,
$500/manth ,
nelll
to
Courthouse. Contact JuliE!

Appliance
Warehouse
101 .
New and Gen~y
Used
Appliances
Washers ,
w/Warrantly.
Drye rs.
Refrigerators.
Locat ed ne)(t to the
Downtow n Ripley Post
Office. Open M-F. 304-

a
1
· polntpleasant _co mm_rent
al@yahoo.com
or

(7031528-0617

372-8186.
For sale: 4 Nextel Cup tickets. 4 Busch tickets . Bristol
Spring
Race .
' Call
(7 40)256-1304

JET
AER ATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; .Rebuilt
In Stock. Call Ron EYans,
1-800-537 -9528.

2
WhirlpoolS
washer.
Kenmo re dryer, burgundy
recliner; red cook stove.
warm morning coal/wood
bu rner_enrenalnmenl cent9r. Call (740)441 ·8959.
Bedroom furniture quality
five piece set $950.
~ecli ner $125. Curio cabinet $125. (740)256·1428.

fo.nobile Home Lot lor ren t
next to Method1s1 Church
1n kanauga. Pnvate. w/carport. (740)446-4782.

.1 - - - - , . - - NEW AND USED STEEL

See
be -sales.com tor pictures .
New ~erber carpet$6 .95!
.yard _ Remanents sta rting
at $25. Mollohan Carpet ,
76 v ine St.. GallipoliS.

(7401446-7444.
New Couch &amp; Loveseat.
$450.
Call
Molloha n
Carpet (740)446-7444.

r

BUILDING
Sui'I'I.IES

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
lintels.
etc.
windows,
Claude
Winters,
Rio

Grande. OH Call 740-2455121 '
Pole Sarn 30x·50x12 leet
painted metal, slider, tree
delivery. On ly S7,59S.
(937 )7 18·1471 ,
www . na1 i onwidepol ebarns.com

r

(3041675-1722.
4:()()pm

7:30-

while.
S400.
Ready
3/15106. Call (740)4 41-

2038

Load
TraiVLOad
Max
T ·' r ' a i I e r s •
Goose n ecks / D u mps /
Utilities.
Car michael

AKC Golden Re tr ievers.
. First shots and wormed.
light gold in color. $250.

Call (740)286-9808.

·

AKC Labrador Puppies, 3
chocolate , 2 black . . , 1st
wormer &amp; Dew Claw
rem~ved $250 (304)675, 3840 No answer Leave· ·
· Message
AKC Pomeranian l)uppies.
4 males &amp; 1 !Smale $350
each. (740)388-8642.
AKC registered .German
Shorthaired Pointers. Vet
checked, 1st shots, excel-'
lent bloodlines. Call anytime (740)388-9338_
CKC, 15 wk old male,
standard
Chih uahua
puppy, long-haired , lawn
and wh ite. $325 (740)992581 8
Full blooded Rat Terrier
puppies, blackita n, Yery
cute , 6 wks . old. (740)256·
1997.
Full blooded Rat Te rrier
pu ps. $75 each. Cal l

(740)245-9061.

(740)446-7300

$700. (740)742-2803

9110.

For sal e: Boer Goats .
Born in January, very limited number. Champion
bloodlines on. both sides,
al so. several p urebre d
breeding
age males.
Profess ional
b reeder.
Perfo rmance Bull sale,
Boyd Beef Cattle selling 65
Ang us
&amp; 15 Polled
Hereford Bulls. AH A.l.
S ired . At 6 : 30pm)\'~nday
3/6/06 at the New OK
Livestock Auction on the
AA H ighway, Maysville,

KY.

(6061~ ·5 194 .

ShelkKI Corn $3.50 per 50,
~ 2 % All Stock $5. 40 per
Other li\'estod&lt;; feed,
available. 740-698 -09 ~ 1.

so.

r

~~ .

1

For sate 5x5 round bales
· of hay, $ 17.50 . C all

1740)446-9777.

2412 or (7401645-oeoB. ·
IR\\..,I'! ll~l

\Ill)\

AUTOS

Yorkshi re Terrier puppy,
CKC registered, beautiful,
4 mo. old, fe male, 3 1/U .

FORSM.E
$5001 Police Impounds!

IIISIIIIIW.

2DYRj
UP. :

Cell 104 t 7·1 .l., l l
' '

I

f

I

I

'

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

A urn;

T!UJCKS

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

·'.

PL. CD. · 80.000 (moslly
highway) · miles. $8 ,500

080. Cell•

(74012~·0495

n

Olds Cutla ss does not
run OBO. H andmade clubhouse with porch. Aski ng

$1 50. (740)367-7204.
84 Mercury Gouger . 5 .0
runs good . $500 OBO.

93 Saturn SL2. 4 doors,
auto, clean, $1,000 down

For Sale 1985 314 ton Ford
Truck.
460
Engine.
Standard. Trans, 4-Wheel
Drive, Heavy Duty, com·
plete Tmck, for parts wino

lille (3Q4)773-6076

•:r-~--------------------------~----------~--------------------------~
••

;••
Wot-F'
: G~A/Ir'1/lr'1A~
•
II
II

I I II IS

r

! 0\1'1&lt;1- II·
( 0\SI Hl ( 110\

I'

·'"'

..
II

Co ncrete Removal
. a nd Replacem e nt

; -" .

WiflEWo1-F

' :: "(f-1,...,.,/:S"

Wot.F WEA{l

WoL.Ft••WHfflE t

II

:BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnliur~

I ASKED YOU

w-ww.dlbbercre.tk~CabinfJ'try~e'6r.n

FURST !!

r

1999 Dodge Durango, fully
loaded , excellent condl·
tion. 11 3,000 miles, $8500
OBO. (740)364-6384 leave
message.

0 80. (740)446·9632 .
97 Ford Explorer XLT with
·t rac co ntrol, V6, t uuy
loaded, 4x4. red, $4,500

Call (7401446.()350.

~~ 5

L

TRUCKS .
FORSALE

r

4x4

FOR SALE

recorded In Book 113, 1999 Olds E!ghly-Eighl
at Page 609 of said LS. Well maintained ,
Deed Records. Parcel load ed, newer tires, excel·
No. 16-01299, and 16- l&amp;nt condition,' 127K miles,
01300 and 16.01301 asking $4,000. (740)245currently set forth In : 5934.
Volume 169, page.
2001
Grand
Je.ep
187, recorded 05-20Cherokee Limited, wh1te,·
03 commonly k.nown
new tires, excellent condias:
227
Union
t ion . $ 12,500. (740)446Avenue,
Pomeroy,
4060 or (7401367·7762.
Ohio 45769
The Petitioner further 2001 Pontiac Grand Am
alleges that by reason G T. loa ded , 28K miles
of default of the garage kept '$9,800
Defendants(sl In the (3Q41882-2356
payment of a prornl ..
sory note, according · - - - - - - - Help Wanted
to Its tenor, th8 condl·
. t:telp Wanted
tiona of a concurrent
mortgage deed given
to secure the paymenl of said note and
convaying the . pramlsas described, have
been broken, and th8
MEDICAL ASSISTANT/LPN
same has become
Current l y accepti ng. resumes for a fu ll
absotLile.
The PetHioner prays . ti me - M edicai Ass istant/LPN . One-year
experience i n a physician office or hospital
that the Oefend~nt(o)
related area , worki ng w ith direct patie nl
named above
be
'required to answer
care required.
and set up their InterExce llent salary, ho lidays, hea llh i nsurest In said real estale
ance , dental plan ~d vacation .
or be forever bared
f rqm asSerting the
~me, for forecl011ure
Send resu mes to:
. of said mortgage, tho
Pleasant Valley Hospital
marshalling of · any
c/o Human Resources
liens, and the aale of
2520 Valley Drive
real estate, and the
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
proceeds of said sale
applied to the pay(304) 675·4340
ment of Petitioner's
AA/EOE '
claim In the property ·
www.pval lcy.or g
order of Its priority, ":=======~==~=====
and for such other Help Wanted
Help Wanted
and further relief ao Is
·just and equitable.
The
defendant(ol
named above are
required to answer on
or before th8 24th
day of April , 2006. By:
The law offices of
UNIT CLERK
John 0 . Clunk Co.,
Pleasanl Va ll ey Hospital is· current ly
LPA John d. Clunk
seeking a ful l-time unit clerk in the .
co., ~PA By : John 0.
medical!surgtca l depanment. Applican t
clunk ,0005376, Ted
must have excel lent customer reluLiun sk.ills.
A. Humbert 110022307,
Timothy R. Billick
Medical term inology and (:Omputer skil l s
10010390, Robert R
are required .
·
Hoose
10074544,
Holidays. health insura nce. single/family
Michael
L. Wlory .
plan, denta l plan, l i fe insurance. vacation
1100611898, Chorloo V.
long-term disabi l ity and rctireinent.
Gasior
110075946,
Jal,.ea C. Wrentmore
10046779 Attorney a
Send re sumes to : .
for
t he
Plaintiff·
Pleasant Valley H ospital
Petitioner,
5601
c/o Human Resources
Hud1on Dr., Sulla 400
25'20 V alley Drive
Hudson , OH 44236,
Point
Pleasant, WV 25550
(330)342-8203
(3041
675-4340
(2) 20, 27, (3) 6, 13, 20,
27
AA/EOE
www.pva lley.org

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

ROCKY'S TREE
SERVICE.

AI

Alf types o f roofing:

$13.500.

Call 740·9&lt;9·

22 17 unlil 7 pm.
2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson
500 ATV with 34 ·miles

$4900.
CARMICHAEL
EQU IPMENT. 1.740)446·
2412 .
89
Honda
Goldwing
w/trailer, 6cy l., 4~ . 000
miles, very good shape ,
well maintained . cover ,
extra liQhl s ·and chrome,
$7,150. (740)441-5540.

Help Wanted

Over JO: :w•ars
el'l'.perl cnt.·c
Ed Di iVll\\ nt'r .

(7 40) ·949-1405

R£QU(S\Et&gt; 0 1'\ \f\t: C:FFEc..\:)
OVT60U~Git-l&amp; WOULO flAIJE. 00
OUK OPH'.I'JIOI-\S !

P""

.

•

.

.

""'

t:&gt;Ot-1'1 OOti-IER wm l.if\1&gt;&lt;.1 ~ow,
w.owmLE.- r ~o LOI'\c&gt;t.R
!oll::£.t&gt; \ J !

P""

.

1988 Full size Bfonco,
parts Only. Joz... 8uto, set
of 33x~2 : 50. 36x~4:50
used . 'call'(740)379-9887

'
. ~.::·~·.. ·%ir~see
J

SIONS. Double bolted. All
types. (740)245-5677 or

(740)645-7400
C~\ IPEKS &amp;
MuroK Ho~m;

For sale Centu ry 8 tt High
Boy Fiber Glass Popper.
Excellent shape asking

$250 (304)773-6076
..,I In II I

10

'-1.

HO!'oU:
L\ti'ROVEMFNIS

Hill's Self
Storage

Unconditional
lifetime
guarantee. LOcal references
furnished .
Established 1975. Call 24
Hrs. (740)
446·0870,
Rogers
Basement
Waterproofing .

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

••

...

,.

:aiG NATE

"

ll!"llf' NARF '
('l~&lt;ollr ' Nf'.I'.F''.
t&amp;A~f ~
•

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTIO

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Oh io
45771

• New Homes
• Garages
• Com plete
Remodeling

740-949- ~217

'"i 8fZM'5'Jt10'

..e 10'll3Ct

•.

.PEANUTS
,.

740-992-1611

Hours
BASEt,!ENT
WATERPROOFING

' ,. .._

Stop &amp; Compare

7:00AM - 8:00 f&gt;M
111411 me . pd

YOUNG'S

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;

CARPENTER
SERVICE •

GENERAL

CONTRAcTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

Room Addition$ &amp;
Remodeling

work

, L---~--la~ L ----,- - - - - - . 1

New Gar.l'l gea
Electrical &amp; Plumbin g
Rootin g &amp; Gutter a
Vinyl Sid ing &amp; Paintillg
Pallo and Porch De cks

• Affordable Rates
• Referen ces
Availabl e
• Free Est imates
"Insured''
Call Ga ry St an ley

wv 036725
V.C. YOUNG
992-6215

740-742-2293

:SUNSHINE CLUB
A (C(JFlE.. OF U¥\ LL S1RJ;£"T
.S1ART£P A SMALL

~£RS

Ill

/I.I£.WSPAPER

"

Pomeroy Ohio
25 Yrars Loca l Expenenc -

• Le~ve a m essage

If

•
t

•

KQJto9
QJi07
K Q 10

3 2
J 5

~.

Soutb

West

North

2•

Pass

4•

,.
East

All pass.

From simple to
jump overcall
Last week we looked at simple - non·
jump - overcalls .. This wee~ let's take
the logical step of studying jUmp o11er·
calls.
'
A single-jump overcall used to be played
as strong, but that hand can be snown by
first making a takeout double, then bidding the su1t on . the second round.
Nowadays, everyone uses the weak
j ump OYercall, · which was Origina lly proposed by Oswald Jacoby in the 1930s, A
weak jumP OYercall shows a hand akin to
a weak-two open ing: a decent six~ard
suit and some 5·10 high~a rd points, Be
swayed a tad by the vulnerability. but yOu . ·
are permitted a degree ot latitude after
an opponent opens because it is likely
that his side has the balance of power,
and burning up bidding space 'might
make their life much harder.
In today 's deal, how woU ld you tr y to 'tand
four spades afte[ Wesl leads the heart
eig ht?
South ha'S a minimum weak jump over·
cail. Nortll, with 16 high-card poi nts,
three good trumps and a source of tricks
in that dia mond suit, wou ld be cowardly
not to raise to four spades.
You ha\le tour _losers (lwo hearts and two
clubs) and only nine winnerS (Si)( spades.
one hear t a,nd two diam~nds ). You must
establish a long diamond .lor your 10th
trick , which requires three dummy
entries: two lor dia"mond ruffs and one to
reach the new winner.
Wiri with dummy's heart ace, play ·a
trump to you r ace. cash dummy 's top dia·
mends. (e'ntry one), and rut! a dia.mond
high in hand. Play a trump to dummy
(en try two) , ruff a diamopd hig~ . lead a
trump to dummy (entry three). and dis·
card a l"}eart or a club on the diamond ·
eight.

•

? .

,·BoekY ~',fiJ"
. &gt;t~H~,a.,p(. .
IMPORTS

TR ANSM IS·

28 tt . Ea91e Jayko camper,
ellcellent condition , US!3d
only a few ti mes. $8.000.
Call (740)446-3438.

•

'"'I

I WJIO f'.t'll.E. TO fi\1\:J ~01'\E.Ot-\E.
01/E.KSE..\S TO CO~PL.ETE:. TI-\E.
R£POKT FQ&lt;. 1/o£ L ~T WEE.!&lt;. !

(740) 992-0472

r:~:s~aroosl
(7401446-1543.

·~
.
~
: I'VE. Fll'\1':&gt;1-\(0 n\( I&lt;E.I'ORT 'iOV

St'n·k•·

TRIM TREES &amp;
LAW N WORK

99 Harley Fat Boy, 9.400
m1les. lois of Chrome Eind
extras_(7 40) 446-9954

24ft . Pontoon boat . 48HP
engine. Nearly new trailer.

E mt'rJ,!:t:llt'~

l.ict'moed &amp; l n&lt;iUI'f'd

FREE.
ESTIMATES

7401388·S35B.
«J MOTORCVOB

.::

l .lhr

Will cui &amp; rento,·e i n:t'!l or
will tut into n re" ·ood.

BUDGET

1990 F250 7.3 liter diesel.
4x4. 5 speed, $6.,000.
2002 Yamaha TTR ~25L .
just li ~e new, $1,500.
Riding gear available.

I!

l.l. WrhiS81
lid.SOns

SINs
FOR SALE

a9 d $ 150.00 a Mo nth
~ide Selection, low down
2004 Chevy Trailb1azer
payments.
M&amp;J , Auto. · 4WD wltow pkg .. Kelty·
Monday-Sa1urday, 2:00·
B luebooks @ $22,000,
6:00 PM. 740-33B-9li93·, many extras 10,500 miles,
or,740- 742 ~ 2662.
excellent condition , garage
kept. ' $17,900 (3Q4)675·
96 Buick LE!Sabre 97,000
1408
mi.: needs body work and
radiator, new tires, batte ry,
brakes and rotors. $ 1,500

Insured
Free Es timates

New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Dow nspout .

East

Opening lead: • 8

••·
:FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(740) 992-0496

1:.!17J1..)1:JiiU9L:I!!!!:L_~

.6

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Both

Licensed Home Builder

Complete Tree Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.
OWner
Insured Free Est.

8 3 .

•

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

26 Years Experience·

•

•

Ow ner

10x10x10x20
992-1194
or 992-6615

AK865

South
4 A J 10 9 3 2
• 14 2

Playgro unds

304-675·2457

i%~l!~~ii¥~[
ii.~
-· _iii.\.&gt;Jtr.IC'

4WHEELEAS
2001 ·Dodge Ram tru ck
2500 SLT Heavy 01J iy, .
springs, camper special , · 1984 FLHTC- 1340CC
19,000 miles , B lklsilve r.
10- ply tires. $7.500. Call
$7.500 Fi rm . (740)286·
Ed (7401367.()624.
72 12 or {937)515-8670.
Chevy Colorado Ext . Cab
'05. Auto, 2WO, wfbedliner.
1995 Harley Dav1dson
excellent condition. Kelly· Oyna Wide Glide, 20,000
BlUe Book $ 14,600, will
miles, loaded. mus1 see
sell for $1 3.000. (304)523·
$12,000. (7401992-7758
1179
1999 Harley Dav1dson
Ultra Glassic. Loaded
Exce llent
condition.
29,o0o total miles. Price

. '

Estimales

A 6 5

t

A 9 8 7 4 2

Roads • Driveways • Streets •

740-992-697 J

(7401379-2930.

Very good mi xed haysq uare bale s. (74 0)446-

•

David Lewis

2002 Suzuki LX? 4x4, PW,

740-992-1493.

'

Regt,Jiar Bingo
Starts 6:30pm

(740)245-0485 a ~er 6pm.

Parking Lots • Ball Cou rts • Pri''~~p

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, ·OH
on State Rt. 124

•

Wesl
4 875
• aa
t 94

• SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

" Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

Tuesday &amp; Saturday
Middleport American
Legion
Early Bird Game 5 pm

17401286-5395.

1993 ·Dodge Shadow.
Ru ns good , stereo W/CD,
·s spee~.. $700.00, 30
mpg., 740- 416- 1472 or

,

BINGO

Ang us Bulls, two X-breds,
4 heifer&amp;. Excellent breed·
ing. S late Run Farm. See
www .slat,i rlJ nla r m .com,

C548.

in

I

9856..·

t 992 Honda Civic $500
Cars frorri $500. For listIngs 800'39 1-5'227 BX1

recorded

reservations
Hosted by PVH Community

9· 15 mo. Reg . Angus Bulls ·
and HeiferS. Reg . 4yr. BtJII
and Bred cows. (740}446-

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

992-5682

OS-o&amp;-06

4 KQ 4

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

LIMITED SEATS!
C~ll (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326 to make ,

AKC Cocker Spaniels,
male/females, vet checked
and shots utd·. $300-$350.
740-767-4875

3901

and

$200/per person
Based on double
occupancy Harrah's Casino
&amp; Resort
Private jet out of
Charleston, WV

I \H\1...,1 1'1'1 I I "
,\1 1\l ... l !ll l,

(7401446-

Registered Bord er Coll ie
pup s. Wormed &amp; 1st shots.
Imported bl ood lines, know
tor he aring instinct and
classic colors. (740)379- .

Volume 85, Pages 334
and
335 of
the
Records of Oeed of
Meigs county, Ohio,
al,s o t~e following
described Real Estate
Situated
In
Said
County of Meigs,
State of Ohio, and In
the
village
of
Pomeroy, to Wit:
A piece of parcel of
land 29·1/2 feet wide
and running . at the
width th8 full depth of
the Iof, or 101 feet and
being off the west
side of the following
descri bed premises,
to Wit:
Beginning at
the
Northwest Corner of a
lot which formerly
belonged to George
Stone on the street
known
as
Union
Avenue ; thence nort~
78 314 Degrees West
79 112 feet or tl\e .
Northeast Comer of .a
lot formerly owned by
Frederick Elbe"rfeld;
Thence South 16
Degree$, West 85 feat
to Tyler's Lot; thence
in a Southeasterly
direclion along the
ll.ne of Tyler's Lot, 91 .
flietto the lotformerly
owned . by George
Stone; Thence along
said Stone's lot 101
feet to the place of
beginning, being the
same ·real estate sold
and conveyed
to
Benjamin F. Biggs by
Burke Hysell by deed
dated November 30,
1900, and recorded In
Volume 87 Pages 71
and 72 of lhe Records
of Deeds of Meigs
County, Ohio. The
parts of lots hereby
described being 118
feet fronting on Un ion
Avenue and · running
back the. depth 100
feet, and being the
same premises conveyed to Alta Tracy by
BenJamin F. Biggs
and Annie E Biggs ,
his wife, by dsed
dated Augu st 13, 1904
and
recorded
In ·
Vol ume 92, page 30 of
the Deed Records of
Meigs cou nty, Ohio,
and thereafter conveyed by Alta Trecy
and J.E. Tracy, her
hus band. to
Ella
Parfitt (or Ella Parfitt)
by
Deed
dated
J;&gt;ctober 2, 19.16 and

May 12,2006
to May 14, 2006

Fire Wood - Seasoned
Ha rdwood
Split
and
De livered. Call 740-949-

in~;~ s· 800-39 1-5227 . ext.

Legal Notice:
John F. Barns, whose
last place of residence is known as
227 Union. Avenue ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769·
1049 but whose pres-·
ent place of residents
is unknown, Kimberly
V. Barns, whose 1st
place of residence Is
known as 227 Union
Avenue , Pomeroy, OH
45769-1049
but
whose present place
of ·
residence
is
unknown , will take
notice
that
on
November 10, 2005,
Mortgage Electronic
R e g I s t r a t I ci' n
Syslems , Inc·., acting
solely as a nominee
for United Financial
Mortgage Corp., filed
its
Complaint
in ·
Foreclosure in Case
No. 05-CV-118 in the
Cou~t
of Common
Pleas, Meigs County;
Ohio alleging that the
Defendants, . John F.
Barnes , Kimberly Y.
Barnes, have or ch;l lm
'to have an interest in
the
real
estate
described below:
The ' following real
esiat'e situated in the
Co~nty of Meigs and
State of Ohio and in
the
Village
of
Pomeroy and be ing
lwo lotS o,n Union
Avenue , described as
follows, to wit: One lot
bel ng 85-1/2 feei on
Un ion Avenue and
running back at this
Width 100 feet and the
other lot being on the ·
easterly side of the
firs t ·descri bed lot
herein and being 40
feet on Ufi1 ion Avenue
and r unning b:ack at
that width 100 feet
and
tor - f urther
description reference
Is · he reby had to the
plats of the City of
· Pomeroy
in
the
Recorder's Off ice of
said Meigs County,
· Ohio. being the same
property
formerly
owned, by. Jackson
Hysell.
Now
deceased , and so ld
and conveyed by
Mary Ann Hysell , et al ,
the widow and heirs
at law of said Jackson
Hysell to B.F. .Biggs
by
Deed
dated
November 29 , 1899,

Atlantic City Getaway

FOR SALE

AKC Bosto(l Terrier pub-pies. 2 brindle, 2 black and

No

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE ,

PETs

Steel Beams, Pipe ·Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, ' Flat
Steel
Grating
·Fo r · Drai ns.
Dr iveways &amp; Walkways .
L&amp;L Scrap ~etals Open
Monday,
Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam4:30pm. Closed Thutsday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.

Bar.

Phillip

Co mmercial Property &amp;
Building for Sale.
9.9
acres. Ambro.sta Machine
Inc . Route 2 Sox 254 Point
Pleasant, WV
25550. ·

Cars from $500. For l ist-

•

NEA Cro u wor d P u zzle
ACROSS

Alder

.

~ M ERCHANDISE .

very nice. Elevator. Call
(740)446-3644 for appointment

equipment.
Musical
Guitars. processors, key·
boards, drum machln.e,

TV. 1·8Q0-39B-3970.

1047.

Buy or sell . Riverine
Antiques, 11 24 East Main
on SR ~ 24 E. Pomeroy,
740-992-2526.
Russ
Moore, owne r.

Downtown Office Space- 5
roorn suite. $650!m6: 1

ANnQtJts

WANTED: Responsible
par ty to take on small
monthly. Payments on
High Definition Big Screen

..

Daily Sentinel • Page 85

The

BRIDGE

GraciOUS ll'oling. 1 and 2

i

www.mydai,ysentinel.com

Ast~o- .

Graph
-

'lllrthdl\v:

Tueaday, Mlne h 7, 2006 •
By Bernice Bede Oaol ,
In the year ahead, conditions are going to
make a number ot favorable tu rn s for the
better in ways that you can put to your
advantag6 ln!erestingly, you may· now be
successful in the yery same area where
you once met defeat. ·
PISCES ~Feb . 20-Marcn 20) - Critical
knowledge !Mat yolJ have learned from
past experience will be put to excep!ionally good use today. You'll foresee potential
pitfalls and be completely prepared to
avoid them . Know Wl'1ere to look lor
romance, and you'll lind it.
AR IES (March 21-A pril 19) - A career
matter, abou t which you have been appre·
hens1ve and uncertain , w1ll take a turn.
ThinQs will transpi re in ways tl'1at never
occurred to you
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Yoor great· _
est opportunities. and advantages today
are likely 10 come from situations where
you have good communication with others.
Be a 1eam player
GEMINI (May 21· June 20} · Where your
career is concerned, don't sit on opportu·
nit1es thai develop JUSt because there are
others lnYOived. Don't take that chance.
CANCER jJune 21-JuiY 22) ·_ You could
receive considerable attention today lrofTl.
a person you l;lidn't think was even aware
of your ex1stence. And it may be someone
on whOm you have an unrequil ed crush
LEO (Ju ly 23-AuQ. 22)- Measures can be
laken today to change a situat1on lor the
better that has a d1rect ettect upon you ,
yOU! work and those under yo ur car e. All iS
coming together now, which you 'll recognize .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - ConstructiYe
1deas w111 come tQ you tOday in rap1d successiOr). byt only 1f you surround yourself
Wllh positive thmkers '·who are apt to discuss 1ssues of mutual concern and 1nter- ·

1 Solemn.
.promiM
4 Look autlen
8 Quick tum
11 Help
1 burglar
13 Fictional ·
IJOV1m41. .

14 Blologlot'a
sggo
15 Pinch
16 Earthen Jar
17 Hallie
18 Wane
20 Many tayere
21 Blue shade
22 Test venue
24 Go along
whh
27 Alps locale
30 Farm '
newborn
31 Tot
of whiskey
32 Scer,ter ·
34 Fab ed bird
35 Herr's wife
36 Late-night
Jay 37 Bridge
towera
39 Not chic
40 El Doredo
loot
41 Koystone
Konstabte

42 Conttinet'l
45 Took 1
brook
4a S6L~

50 Reebok rival
53 Relieve
s.4 Apprehend
55 - - by

magic
56 Young ttdy
ofSp.
57 Tee olzoo
58 Add warmth 1.w=
5i Numskull

DOWN
1 Rockies ski
resbrt
2 Band
Instrument
3 Moistens
4 Shaggy
IIQwer .
5 P&lt;&gt;peye's
sweetie
6 Web alto
7 Beverage
8 Sector
9 John,
In Russia
10 Comedian's

. · Is served
23 Storflth
pert
24 Kenya's
loc.
25 Gunk
26 Suggeotive
27 Geologic
divisions
28 us lnder
29 Zillions
of years
31 007 foe
· (2 wds.l
33 Female

atoc•

anlelope

12 Fez dangler 35 Gill tag
19 Be frugal
word
20 Clnemax
36 Memory
rival
g1Hch8s
22 Where pol
38 Spanish

article
39 "Annabel
Lee- ~

41 Wrapping
paper
42 Hex
43 Siberian
river
44 Tolko on
ondon
46 Edible root
47 Is, to Pedro
48 Like
Beethoven
50 Exclamation
of dlogutl
51.Drow on
5_2 Woody'tlk

CELEBRITY CIPHER
,

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Ciphef cryplq;jrams are created !Tom ~~ons by IBIT'ous peop&amp;, past and pmenl
Eile11ltltter 10 toe~ sl¥ds tt.!PJ~hotr

Today 's clutt: P equals K

" U D X G L N. D B L P Z F N X C U ·!- K N Y A G Z F
XGC

NZ

WVXFZDJ .

V8PZ

KA , JZZ

YBO ." . -

KNZ

RHJK
KTA

MADYZD

CBCG ' K

AM

KNZY

CA C SZ. O L NHLP

LAGG .AOJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'In Hollywood, the w6men are all peaches.
makes one long 1or an apple occa~ionally .· - W. Somerset Maugham

.

'::i:t:~' S©tt&lt;ill :}A~ ell r... ~s lAIII
l&lt;ho~ &gt;, CI:I.Y I . 'Oli:I.N - - - - - 0 Reorronge. t.llers cl the·
four acrombled wordJ bo·
low to

form fovr $/m;·~

I

L OV EVE

I

GULEN

worda.

I

·l_,_.__S_N
I .__
I' J I'-Y-0'I- - '~~_,·
6

$

"!low wa.• your trip'" I
my neighbor.
Laughing he. said, ""l11c

~skcd

I
I I O

N AMK US

I•
•
I I• 1

•

WDID

lrouhle with travc.hng is !hat
)OlJ have lo keep ------ ."

•

•

•·

Comol• •• lho ch•ckle ·q,OH&gt;Md

b.,. IIU.n;

1n lhe II'UUiftQ

W\C)I'ds

yov df\reloo from sttD No _ 3 b.low.

PPIN1 NUM6fREO LE!HRI IN

lHf IE

~av•rfl

UNl( t AM&amp;l! A&amp;OV! l!Tif'l
TO

P!T

AN!W(I

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 313106
Sturdy - Thank - Ditto - Unwind- AUTHORITY
The new bos.• did not make a 'good imprtssion. "I

believe," one worker sighed. "some big shols cal.l passing
.the buck dclegaling AUTIIORITY ." .
·,

ARLO &amp; JANIS·

es t.

Shop
Classlfieds!

Help. Wapted

Beef $8.25
Beef $8.75
Corn $7.25/~ag
-Cra1cked Corn $8.25/Bag
-sovbean Meal S13.25/Bag
River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

"

LIBRA (Sept. . 23-0c!. 23) - Today yo u
may be endowed with the Midas touch. but
you need to recoQmze 11 first to use it. Be
mindftJI of your g1tts, and try to do lh1ngs
that wou ld produce large prof1ts
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22), - Should a
si tua tiO n aTISe" today I hat · warrants 1!.
fnends and co-workers Will tUrn tO you tor
leadership. Don' t hes1 tate to take the cems:
you'll live up to their expectaiiOns
S AGITIAA IUS tNOv. 23·Dec. 21)- As tar
'as general conditiOnS are concerned . thl~
may be a QUIEtt day for you 1n your eyes.
but 11 ISn't likely tb be an uneventful one
Good lh1ngs Y'lill t')appen w1U10ut you r •nsh·
gat1on or 1nput
CAP RICORN IDee 22-Jan "19) - Fr1ends
will be more that1 w1fil ng to take act1ve
rates loday to help you acNance your
llopes and wishes However. t:letore they
_ can do so. 11 w1ll be up to you to make your
needs known
AQUA,RIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.· 19) - It you are
determined enough . objecttves of real con·
sequen~e wrth prolil abte ootent1a1 can be
ach1eved today When thmg:S un lold
beheYe .in your ab1l11 1es and a1m !Qr worthy.
goals

.

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I..

photo ·

Buckeyes·savor championship
after surviving the bad·times
BY

RUSTY MILLER
AS SOCIATED PRES S

'

COLUMBUS- In the l&lt;tst
two yea rs. Terence Dials
watched Ohio State fire the
coach who . brought him to
campus. ban the team from
postseaso n play and face a
withering NCAA investigation .
What happened . ·Sunday
afternoon made it al l worthwhile.
Diais scored 20 points aml
the ninth-ranked Buckeyes
broke open ·the game with a
14-2 blitz to start the second
half to beat Purdue 76-57,
clinching . their first outri ght
Big Ten title in 14 years.
"Thi s is a joyous moment ,"
the' senior co-captain said .
"Espec ially becau se of all the
things the program has been
through."
O]Jio State fired ·coach Jim
o·Brien in June of 2004 fo r
what the NCAA determined
were rules violations. Despite
· winning 20 games a year ago,
coach Thad Matta's first
Buckeyes team was not per. mitted to play in the postseaso n because the school.'s
administration wanted to mitigate possible sanctions. The
NCAA may announce fi nal

penalties this week.
Going into thi s season , ·
almost no one thou ght the
Buckeyes would be much of a
factor in the Big Ten race.
. "No one gave us a chance,"
Dials said. "People across the
co un try forgot about ·the
Buckeyes it seemed. We didn ' t get the credit. we thought
we deserved, We wanted to go
out and prove a lot of naysav. ers wrong."
JJ. Sullinger had 16 points
fo r the Buckeyes (23-4, 12-4),
who have won their last five
ga mes and are the top seed for
thi s week's Bi g Ten tournament in Indianapolis. Jamar
Butler added 15 points.
.
, " We've kind of flown under
the rada r to thi s point,"
Su llinger said, referring to the·
Buckeyes' late appearance in
and slow rise in· the polls.
·'B ut you 've got to remember
Ohio State now when you talk
abou t (national) contenders."
In the waning moments,
with the outcome long decided, the Ohio State student section cha nt~ d , "B ig Ten
champs!" and "Thank you,
sen iors."
"It's a great life lesson for
these guys," second-year
coac h Thad Matta said. "If
Y\JU commit to something and

stay the course. anything 's
possible."
. The Buckeyes have prospered with a lineup that
includes three fifth-year players and another senior who
always seemed to make plays
when most needed .
" It was a good day to be a
Buckeye,'' Sullinger said. " It
was an even better day to be a
se
. m'or··
.
The Buckeyes were eighth, .
ninth and sixth the last three
years jn the conference.
The .outright title is the
school 's firs t since Jim
Jackson was the star in 1992;•
and only the second since
I 971. It also marked the first
time a Big Ten school has
captur.ed outright · titles in
men 's and women's basket ball in the same season. ·
Gary Ware scored 25 points
for Purdue (9· 1!l. 3·13),
which lost four in a row to
finish las t in the Big Ten for
the first time in 40 years.
Boilermakers coac h Matt
Painter offered hi s congratulations to the Buckeyes.
''They go t picked fifth or
sixth,-" he said of preseason
predict ions. "Who cares about
the rank ings? These guys
proved it''

ing distance of Buffalo to make the final tally 8 1-63.
· WHS actually held a 32-3 1
throughout the open ing period as Harri son dropped in advan tage on the boards but
eight tallies. in the period and Buffalo made the most of its
,from ~age Bl
Clark six hut Dav id Robinson . opportu nities by converting
numerous stick-backs for
cent fro m the floor and that scored eight o( hi s game high points off the glass. The
20
points
in
the
first
eight
was the difference . All White Falcons committed an
Sectional performer\ David minutes to pace the Bi sons to improved II turnovers with
Robi nson, Adam Scott and a 22-16 first quarter advanBuffalo turning the' ball over
,
Justin Whittington tota led 20, tage.
on
just seven occasions.
Buffalo scored seve n un an19 and 18 point' respectively .
"This
is a great bunch of
fo r Buffalo with Nick Harri s swered points to be gin the kids to be around and I've
markers. second canto and fo llowing a enjoyed it immen sely," said
adding
I0
Whittington also paced the pa ir of Clark free throws
Toth. "This group: especialBison on the boards with a &lt;•dded fi ve. more points to ly the seniors, has made an.
essenti all y put the ga me
team hi gh I I on the night.
enormous contribution to the
· Casey Harrison · led the away. The Bison lead rose to
basketball
program
at
White Falcons offensively as many as 15 points prior to Wahama."
with 18 pornts with Brenton the halftime break before a
Clark addin~ 17 and Brandon trey by Harrison and a bucket
Fowler 12. Clark also hauled by Roush cut the lead to sin down a team hi gh II gle digit s. Successive basket&gt;
rebounds with Clav Roush by Robinson and another
contri buting six p&lt;;int&gt; and lield go,a l by Scott to tinish
out the half pushed the lead
seven boards fonh e locals.
Wahama . had two player' back to 15 at the halfway
selected to the All-Sectional point.
The fimil two quarte rs was
squad in se nior fo rw'ard .
foug)lt
on , fairly even terms
Brandon Fowler' and JUnior
guard Brentcl,n Clark with wi th Buffalo stretchi ng its
Wesley Gue representing edge to 61-43 after three periHannan on th,e team. JY!ason ,ods.. The Iarges t advantage
County
cheerleaders was a 22 poi nt bulge at 78-56
Rae Lynn Grimm of Wahama with just under two minutes
and Summer Stm er from the remaining before Wahama·
Wildcats were chosen on the closed wi th " couple of three
All-Sectiona l cheer sq uad
point goals by Brandon
WHS ' 'tayed within strik· , Ru"ell and .Kev in Wasonga

Falcons

Redmen
from PageBl
one walk.. Fellow · freshm&lt;rn
Ryan Dw)cr pitched the final
tWo frcrm e' to not ch hi' first
D11-yer
collegi&lt;rte . save.
fanneu three incluuing freet ing Nathan Timberl ake to g.et
the fi na.l out.

•

Hall of Farner Puckett
hospi~zed after stroke

Ohio State's
Je'Kel Foster
(23) chases .
down a
loose ball in
front of
Purdue's
Chris Lutz
(4) during
the first half
of a college
baSketball
game,
Sunday in
Columbus.
Ohio State's
Ron Lewis
(12) lOOks
on in the
background
AP

Monday, March 6, 2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Shawnee had runners on
fifll and .&gt;eco nd when the
fina l out was recorded .
Kobayas hi W-I J pitched
"el l des pite being 5addled
with the loss. He went 1ix
innings, gi~ing up six hit s
&lt;rnd four runs. stnktng nut
fi\'e and walk ing one.
.'Jicmer led the Be~rrs ·
otfe,nsive effort, going 2-for2 with an RBI and he was hit
hy a prtch.

FORT MYERS, Aa. (AP) Hall of Farner Kirby Puckett
had a stroke at his Arizona
home Sunday and was taken to
a hospital fo r surgery, the
Minnesota Twins announced
from their spri ng tra ining
camp.
The 44-year-old . Puckett.
who led the Twins to World
Series titles in 1987 and 1991 ,
had surgery at Scottsdale
Healthcarc Osborn, the team
said, and was later moved to St.
Joseph·s Hospital and Medical
Center in Phoenix.
A s pokes':l'oman at St. ·
Joseph 's
confirmed
that
Puckett was there, but said the
hospital had t&gt;een asked not to
release any infomtation about
his condition.
'The Minnesota Twins and
major league baseball ask fans
to keep Ktrby and his family in
their thoughts and prayers,'' the
team ~aid in a statement.
Ron Shapiro. who was
Puckett's agent, said he had
been in contact with Puckett's
family Sunday.
" We're all praying for his
recovery." Shaptro satd.
Twins center fielder Torii
Hunter sat out Minnesota 's
exhibition game against the
Red Sox 'after learni ng of
Puckett's stroke.
After the game, team ofticials said they didn't immediately have any further inforination on Puckett's condition.
"The doctors said that if he
has good luck, he' II be all right.
You have to keep the faitlt,"
former manager Tom Kelly
said.
Said
manager
R9n
Gardenhire: "Our hearts and
our prayers are all with Puck.
We know it's a tough situation
out there."
Puckett, who broke in with

In new book, fonner
Guantanamo Bay
prisoner describes ·
beatings, fear, A2

Family: Doctor
accused of murder
used generosity to
fool people, A6

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 5:;, No. t42

'

'

something Ite hasn't done since
2002.
Another former Twins great,
Tony Oliva,-a special instructor
during spring training, said he
has been worried about
Puckett's weight
"The last few times I saw
him, he kept getting bigger attd
bigger and bigger." Oliva said.
"And we worried about him. i
saw him about five months
ago. He aJways tries to invite
me. · He . says, , 'Come to
Arizona, and we' II play some
golf."'
·
Puckett is divorced and has
two children.

www. m~d:oil~seutitwl . cum

TUESDAY, MAR('II 7, :wo6

SPORTS

Officials from .Racine and AMP-Ohio to meet this month

• Lady Buckeyes fend off
Purdue. See Page 81

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

BY BETH SERGENT

RA CINE
Racine
Council will meet with representatives from American
Municipal Power .(AMP) of
OhiO' at 7 p.m. on March 16 in
council 's · chambers for what
is described as a ·" friendly
meeting" to discuss issues relevant to tne village in relation
to AMP-Ohio's proposed
coal -fired power . plant in
nearby Letart Township.
meeting ·
was
The
announced at last night's regular session ofRacine Village
·
CounciL

Kirby Puckett
Minnesota in 1984, bad a
career batting average of .3 18.
Glaucoma forced the Gold
Giove center fielder and I0time All-Star to retire in 199t'i
after 12 seasons with the Twins
when he went blind in one eye.
Three years ago,' he . was
cleared of assault charges after
being accused of groping a
woman at a Twin Cities restaurant.
Puckett has maintained relationships with, many people in
the Twins' organization. The
teatn tried unsuccessfull y to ge t
him to come to spring training
as a special instructor this year,

,..

Mayor 1. Scott Hill said
topics of discussion will .likely be the impact of increased
construction traffic through
Racine and the · Racine
Volunteer Fire Department 's
response to any emergencies
at the power plant should they
arise.
·•we want to be as friendly
of a neighbor as they want to
be," Hill said about the vi 1lage's relationship with AMPOhio.
Council and the mayor
were also invited to a luncheon by AMP-Ohio to be
held at I p.m. on March 16 at
th e Wild Horse Cafe, and to

AMP-Ohio's open house
planned for 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. ·
on April 6 at Farmers Bank in
Pomeroy.
Al so discussed . at las t
night 's meeling was the fact
that Racine will hear the
"boom" of fireworks this
Fourth of Jul y which wi ll be
preceded by a parade earlier
m the day.
.
Hill said the Burea~ of
Alcohol.
Tobacc o
and
Firearms had already inspected the. village's magazine
from whi ch the firew orks wi ll
'be fired. Hill said the Racine
Voluntee r . Fire Department'
.will also be continuing its tra-

,. .

--

•

1\11111 i8t .... " .. " .... .'1?e
' Ailtset , .......... : '" ...
king set ..... .

FREE

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RESTONIC S1lP£JI PIUOW Till'

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'

'"&gt;• ...

1i1AIR
FURNITURE

"'IRAAm -

POMEROY - Those who
travel to Me xico and Canada
will req uire a passport to do
so by the end of this year. and
Clerk of court s · Marlene
Harrison urges·those who will
need pass ports for i nternq. tiona! trave l to apply early
because of some del avs in
processing passport applica'
tions.
Harri son's office serves as
the county's passport agency.
Application s for the documents are processed · in her
office. and due to the closing
of the New Orleans Passport
Agency as a. result of
Hurricane Katrina. some
passport applications have
been delayed as they. are sent
to other offices .for process-

OBITUARIES

• COmbined AT&amp;T,
BeiiSouth would cut up
to 10,000 jobs.
See Page A2
• South Dakota goverrior
signs legislation banning ·
most abortion.
See Page A2
• Past Councilors meet.
See Page A3
• Meigs.girts go to 4-H
conference. See Page A3
• Meigs County Court
news. See Page A3 .
• Meigs teens tackle worl.d
. issues at Conference.
See Page AS
• Trip to Cincinnati
scheduled. See Page AS
• University drops charge
in bike-sticker bomb scare.
See Page AS
• Rice named to OSBA
executive committee.
See Page AS
.

mg.

The Western Hemi sphere
Travel lnititati ve: scheduled
to go into effect at the end of
last )'ear. has been dela yed
until Dec. 31 , but many are
unaware of its requirements.
Harrison said. At the end of
this year. U.S. citizens will
need passports for air and sea
travel to the Caribbean .
Bermuda. Central and South

America.
Mexico ' and
Canada. At the end of next
year, the document will be
required for land · crossings
ac ross , American/Mqican
and Aincrican/Canadian bor~
ders.
Historicall y, those who
have taken Caribbean cruises
or vacations and those who ·
have crossed into Canada and ·
Mexico by automobile nave
not been req uired to present
passports. Now. Harrison
'aid. some travelers are ex pe'riencing delays in being re-

Piease see Travel, AS

'

II'UIUO'n1Rlt AT DJ!IOCltJNT PRICI!2I"

Rte 2 • Gallipolis Ferry, WY • 304-675· 1371

r

Please see Racine, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

-

Star Mill Park. light&gt; on th~·
stage at Star Mill Park and
li~hting around the walking
path,
Clerk -Treasurer
,,pave
Spencer reported the vtllage
rcce il'cd a letter from the
Mei~s County
Board · of
Elections stating the two vat\ng location s for Racine
precjnch had been combined
into one.
Vote" wil l no longer cast
the ir bal lots at the Racine
Municipal Building or the
Racine American · Legion
Hall. Voters who normally

Clerk: Passport requirements about
to change for continental travel

Page AS
• Donald Wendell
Frecker · ·

I

dition o(chicken barbecue on
the .Fourth of Jul y as we lL
However, there is no word
on whether there will actually
be a Fourth of July Festival in ·
Star Mill Park for the holiday.
Councilman Tom Reed
reported. the first meeting rif
the Racine
Parks anu
Recreation Committee recent·
ly took place and consisted of
mostly "organi zi ng~' efforts of
various entities that fal l within the committee.
.
Reed said some issues di scussed at the meeting we re
fhe •need for creative ideas to
raise fund s fonhe park board
to pure base new rest rooms at

iltltZ:I•

Mort&amp; Fri H •luo, Wid , TU,Sitt-5 • Dosed Sunday to b1 wtth family

WEATHER

Both Sorgont/ photo

Ch ildren visiting Holzer Meigs Clinic have been participating in the clinic's Willy Wonka coloring
contest where a lucky winner and their fa mi ly will rece ive free ·tickets to the River City Kids
upcoming performance of the musica l "Wi lly Wonk a and the Chocolate Factory:,. Here (from
left) Brittany Powell, 8. and Em ily Reynolds . 3. prepare to add their Willy Wonka portrait to the
pediatric unit's wall.

HOLZER CLINIC

·u rgent Care

.HOLZER CLINIC SPONSORING
WILLY .WONKA COLORING CONTEST Peoples 'Bank donates $1 ,000
to Civil War programming

Open 7 Days a wee,k, with
convenient locations in:

'

Details or1 Page A6

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MY DAILYS ENTINEL.COM

Gallipolis
Jackson
Athens
Meigs

740.992.0060
Medical Excellence.
LocalCaring.- ·
Everywhere

INDEX
2 SocrtoNs- 12 PAoF.s

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A.3
A4

Obituaries .

As

Spo~s

Weather

Hoofttchj photo .
Jeanie Ridenour. center. and Pam Schiltz accept a check for
$1.000 from Peoples ·Bancocp Fou ndatro.n. for the Chester
Shade Historrcal Associatro n 's educat•onal youth programs.
Making the presentatron IS Joan Wolfe. manager, Peoples
Bank of Pomeroy.
Cha~ono

B Section
A6

© aoo6 Ohio \ 'ollcy Puhlhddng Co.

POM EROY ·- You don' t
need a golden ti cket to see
Will y Wonka if you' re 12,
years old and under and are
the lucky winner of Holze r
Meigs Clinic 's Will y Wo nka
co)oring contest.
Diana Jeffers. clinic manager for Holzer Meigs Clinic
said the idea for the coloring
contest stem med from inspir·
ing interest in the upcoming
child re n's mu sica l "Willy
Wonka and the Choco late
Factory." presented by Meigs
County's Ri ver City Kids. . a
division of the Ri ve r City
' Players theatre troupe .
Holze r Clinic is sponsoring
the ·musicaL

. Jeffers sa id the colorin g
contest is open to all chi ldren
12-years old and under. not
~ust patients of Holzer Clinic.
Coloring forms can be picked
up at Holze r Meigs Cl inic and
when c hildren turn them ba,·k
in they are rewarded with.
what e lse. a small chocolate
bar. ·
The contest ends on March
15 with .th e winner being
drawn ·at random on March
16. The win ner wi ll .not onl)
win a tic ket for the rmelves
but f&lt;lr their fami ly. members
as well.
. The River City Kids production of ·'Willv W&lt;i nka and
the Chocolate Factory" will
take place at 7 p.m. 011 hoth
Friday. March 2-1 and
Satu rday. March 25 at ~kigs

'

Elementary
School
in
Rutland . A matinee performance wi ll begin at 2:JO p.m .
on Sunday, March ~() also at
the sdtO\ll
Ticket&gt; for th~ pe rforJnance'

go

nn

"a le

1h 1~

·BY CHARLENE HOEFI:tCH
HOEFL ICH@M YDAI l YS EN.T,l NEL. COM

POMEROY
~lei~'
Saturday
at
Hometown Cou nt\ studems wil l ~cr." J
~1arket during a promotional, broader \·icw c&gt;f the .:mlrm ·,
t'\Cllt and can al"o be found at ·
role in the Ci1 il w ,;r thrmigh
\1 idukpo rt
Department educational
prngramm1ng
Store. Dan \. Peopks Bank of financed with a $1 . (~)0 donaMiddleport and Farmer1 Bank tion from Peot1ics Bann1rr
,,f P&lt;•meroy. The price j, ~7 Foundation. ·
each .
·
Ae&lt;:c pting the Jnn,rtion
Thi' Saturdav the mu , ifrom People' nn behalf of the
cal's cc"t mem~rs will he at
Associ:ttion 11nc Jeanie
HomctO\\P \1ark.c! lo eel lhe
Ridenour
anJ Pam· Schatt
word ou t al&gt;&lt;•Ut tht• rcrfor·
whn
are
actil'el\'
in\'ohed 111
manccs and · Ri , ·~r Cit\ Ki&lt;k
the
Civil
War
'reenc&lt;tctment
D\tring 111·c ncnt · Will y
actrvitie; planned for 'rnng
and' summer.
Please see Contest. A5
!J

Part of 1he nwnev contributed to the Chester-Shade
Hl~1 urical .-\~!'-o~..· 1ation

will go

tnward a Ci' tl \\·ar "boot
ca111r'' 'cheduled fnr May 15
anJ 16 on the fo&lt;•tball lleld at
Ea1tern High School.
"The fiN dav of the 'hoot
t'amp· clemen.tary &gt;tudcnts
will b&lt;:' hrought in from all
three dt1tnct'. anJ the 'econd
Ja, 11 ill t&gt;c for' hi~h 'chool
, ,,iden t'... ""d Ridenour
· ·t-~ 'Cn lh tm! 1" Qcared to edu~
&lt;'.l trn p. th&lt;' ,"ht!dren in preparatJnn f{1r ~h1rga n ·.., . Raid II
" lli,·h 11ill tak&lt;' pla,·e tn
.

'

Please see Bank, AS

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16121">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16120">
              <text>March 6, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="338">
      <name>bowman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="90">
      <name>burnett</name>
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    <tag tagId="537">
      <name>kapp</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4254">
      <name>kelvington</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4255">
      <name>sheward</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
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    <tag tagId="368">
      <name>swick</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="469">
      <name>watson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
