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HO

3 Savile Row to
play at Court Grill
Saturday night, BS

GM, Delphi and UAW
agree to buyouts, A5

IN THE:

Ill

..

1.9

at

e

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
THURSDAY, MARCH 2;~, 2006

50 CENTS • Vol. 55, Nn. 154

TP sewer board still in·place

SPORTS

Division I Men's Bracket
Opening Roond Game· Mardl14

• O.J. does it again, .
named Mr. Basketball.
See Page 81

Mol .. ~ WI. Halnpllaft
Wlml!f plo}'lo llll.,ov•
In Arwt Rlculd

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS
Three members of the
Tuppers Plain s Reg ional
Sewer Di.strict's board remain
in place , but will likely
remain for only a few weeks.
Earlier this year, ihc board
sought volunteers to fill the
board's fi ve seats, but nobody
has
come
forward.
Secretary/Treasurer Loretta

Wuhlngton, D.C.
Ca..Oh
Wlllllllla 8t

Murphy, who was appointed
lo fill art unexpired term on
the l'&gt;oard, sa id Wedne sday
she has agreed to remain for
.90 day.\. Her tertn expired on ·.
March 13 .
Two other board members,
Charles Calaway and Ina Van
Meter, have agreed to remain
on the board , as we ll , even
though they had planned to
resign, Murphy said. There
are two vacant seats 011 the
board. most recently occu-

pied by Randy Kidder and
Nancy Rames. who resigned.
Accordi ng to Murphy, the
re-establishment of a permanent board is ·necessary if the.
dist rict's operations lirG to
remain under the community's controL Without a permanent board. the sys tem
wi ll operate umupervi sed
until it malfunctions and the
lagoons · ove rtlow
with
untreated sewage.
"The EPA has notitied us

ww ... mydailym·ntinel.&lt;·nm

but only temporarily
that. if a board is not in place
and nObody operates Ihe 'System, (EPA) will wait· unt il the
district is in an unsanitary and
hazardous condition. and will
then give control of the district to . the county commis. sioners, who will be responsi'
ble for o·perating it, and fi xing
anything that is broken - at
the expense of· distri cl customers." Murphy said , ·
She said the EPA wou ld
likely wait uotil there . is raw ·

Indianapolis··
April3

Indianapolis

Aprll1

Please see Sewer, AS

Portland
food pantry
moving to
Racine

Indianapolis

.Aprtl1 .

·..,ewage in home.:-.. on slreets in
1hc community or on private
proper!) hefore the · bhio
Anorncy General is contacted
and ihe di"rict i' placed in the
county\ control. In the meantime. withoul a board to supervii.e the diqrict, there will be
no billing dcrk to collect
momhly bilb. and no maintenance employee to oversee the
mechanical operation.

1

National Champlort

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGEN)"@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Minneapolis ·

Oakland

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• lzora Johnson, 93

INSIDE

The Plrple Turtle

FLAIR
FURNITURE '

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371

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.

446-1998

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(740) 992-2136

Holzer Clinic of Weal Virginia
. 1605 Jackson Avenue

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(304) 675-4498

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Nursing c;enter
."Helpi11g you get back 'home"

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Holzer Meigs tUnic
88 East Memorial Orive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Scenic Hills

Holzer Clinic
90 Jackaon Pike ·

3004Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant. WV

Mason, WV
(30~)

Gallipoli•, Ohio 45631

773-6400

Member
F.D.l.C.

fife.,

• Father of murdered
child supports Ohio
sex offender bill.
See .Page A2
• Planned Parenthood
tb sponsor parent forum:
See Page A3
• Family Medicine. ·
See Page A3
• Federal advisers
reject strongest wamings
on ADHD drugs.
See Page A6
• Tourist bus accident
in northem Chile
kills 12 Americans .
See Page A7
·• Planning begins for .
f;lomeroyalumni reunion.
See Page AS
• Meigs County 4-H
· News. See Page AS

Thppers Plains
(740) 667-3161
Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-2265

809 VIand Street Point Pleasant

675--4132

252 Upper River Rd
Gallipoli s, OH 45631 '

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Civil War
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·~ gathering

returning·
in April

'

-

CONNECTICUT

McClure's
Restaurant
356 [. Main St. General Hartinger · 8iOJackson Pike
Pomeroy, OH
Parkway
.Gallipolis, OH
992-6292
Middleport, OH 446-3837
992-5248
203 W. Main St. McArthur, OH
596-934~9.

$10,000 from AEP finishes gym floor at Mulberry Center .an~~i~~~;~,L:~c ~0~;: t~~~

MASON
.FURNITURE CO.
"Your Complete Home
Furnishing Store"
2nd Street Mason, WV

pa"acj1 lnatlonwlde.com

Nursing Center

a

KKELLY@MYDAILY'fRIBUNE.COM

JON W. PARRACK II

Scenic Hills

Pomeroy's Post 39
celebrates Legion's
87th anniversary

'

(740) 446·5411

·PLEASANT.
VALLEY
. HOSPITAL

'RACIN E - The Friends
and Neighbors Food Pantry
·formerlv located at the
Portland CommUiiity Center
will begin operations out of
the
Racine
Municipal
Bui lding starting April 25.
The pantry wil l be open
from 5 - I p.m. on Tuesdays.
Accordin~ to its director.
Lisa Roberts of Coolvitle.
Friends and Neighbors is
funde&gt;f by private dona tions
· and when in Portland served
22 shu t-i n&gt; and 250-280 local
Charlene Hoafllch/ photos
~lient.' per monlh .
Fifty-year Post members presented plaques by :·om Ande.rson, vice commander, left , at the Legion birthday party were from
Friends and :-.ieig hbors
the left, Mickey Williams, Ph 1lli p Ohlinger, Gu ido Girolami, Robert Burton and Guy Ginther. Back right is Frederick W. Goebel. partners with the food bank
post commander.
·
in Logan to pro1·ictc a "choice
food pantry.''
The "choi ce" means that
clients get 10 pick what they
need as opposed to being
handed. pre-packaged box
of supplie s.
.
A client\ eli2ibilitv is
determined by USDA guideline; thou~h c l i~ nt s do not
have to pre-,ent proof of their
income. onl) 'ig n a paper
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
\·erifying
Ihe amuunl.
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Roberts 'aid if for some
rea,on a client Iires above the
POMEROY -. Recognition of conlributions made by members of Drew Webster Post 39 to the American Legion proPlease see Pantry. AS
gram was a highligh1 of the organi?ation's 87th birthday celebration held Tuesday night at th e post home.
John Weeks , pasl commander ami recently appointed post
chairman for Buckeye Boys State, was presented the
Legionnaire of the Year trophy. In making the preseritation. Joe
Struble, adjutant. reminisced' about the late Frunk Vaughan's
dedication to the.Legion and il s Boys State program and commended Weeks for being willi ng to slep into that position .
Members recognized for 50 years of membership devoted to
the idea ls. principles. and programs of the. Legion were presented plaques by Tom Andcr, on, vice commander. They went
to Robert Burton. Guido Girolami. Guy Guinther. Philliip
'
.
Ohlinger. and Mickey Williams. who were there. Qualifying
John Weeks; right. was the rec ipient of the Legionnaire of the
for plaques but unable to altend were Kenneth Braun and
Year award at Tuesday night's celebration marking the 87th
Donald Hun nell. Recog nized for 60 years of membership was
anniversary of ·the American Legion . Mak ing the presentation
Please see Legian, AS
on behalf of the post was Joe Struble, adjutant.
BY KEVIN KELlY •

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
-------- - - - - -- - -

Queen .,,

'·

INDEX
2 SECTIONS~ 16 PAGES

~--

DAIRY
QUEEN
BRAZIER

700 2nd Avenue • Middleport

Calendars

A3

Classifieds
· Comics

B4 -6

Dear Abby

AJ

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

Aq

Places to go

B8

Sports
Weather

B7

· B Section
AS

tf! :.1:006 Ohlu Vu lle:r l•ubllshing Cu.

'

,

I

Details on Page AS

WEST VIRGINIA
Dairq

PLEASANT
VALLEY .

fo ueht on both sides of the
·
cedes the final in ,pection of An1eri,·an Ci,·il War will
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM
the first fl oor's permanent · again he on diwlay April l'Soccupancy perm il.
"The sky is the limil. .. . ~ 0 in life Gallip&lt;1Ji, City Park .
POMEROY - The gy m
· tena
· 1 mem
· h
..tl ' A when Hthe annual
floor at the Mulberry
M e ·1 g~ .M'mts
er 1 F Th
·
1
1 ·"nm omecummg
·
D
h
·d
·
th
C&lt;
~ra
Commu ni1y Cemer has been .
Bnan un am ~u1 o 1 e
.
·
.
'bTt' 1
T
return, Ill the park. whtch
.
given a new lease on life
mhany Possl 1 I te' o Utll/l' 'en eli "' a militarv depot
thanks to a $10.000 donation
1 e gvm.
·
.
.
·
.
Those pos&gt;ihilitie, mav Junn~ th,, confll,'t.
from American · Electric
·
1
d
·
th
·1·t
Dnlb
.
.
trllllcn
dcnKm,tra·
·
Power ( AEP) of Ohio .
mc u e us1n!!. e 1al.'l 1 \ 1~)r 1· .
·
.
community ~ theater. rnore IH1ns. a sham hallie and penTo fini sh ihe gy m fluor of
ph ysica l activitie' for I he ' ,,d cnckel malche' .. ·"ill be
the
former
Pomeroy
1n
Ekmentary School
three
vou th aI G(xl .,:"\ NET ant.1u ~1.nu I amon
. ~~ the ;lltrac·tlnns.
.
·
.
'·
!
·;~Jdlli!lll 111 perfom1ances bv
coals of epoxy painl with lev thhe gym ~s lhelkne'&gt;' hohmc 01 ·l lhe Plln snHJuth-haseJ Blue
eler were applied. with the
1 e center s wa ·mg pat . .
( " ·1 "'
B. d
1 r:
1" nar an ·
cost of the paint and the labor
"I real!'' think lhis "Yill will I ' 11 " vra~
.
)
e.
\1 hiL'll Will alstl 'Cr\C as the
to ;1pply · it coming to just
tn &gt;rease our number' . at
111 ·rta · 111 , 11 f . pe ·od
und er $ 10.000.
God\ NET." Dunh am atldeu . 1 ~ If ' :~ 1 cl k or a
n
' Prc,id ent of 1hc Me igs
AEP Ohio 'aid in a 'tatea 111 c par · ..
S..th Sergent/ photo
. .
.
The h,)lllc,·nmlng weekend
Ministerial Assoc ia tion Rev. AEP Ohio recent ly donated $10'.ooo to the Mu lberry ,menl: .. AEP Ohw
1' plea,ed 1 i' 'P&lt;llb&lt;)red b\ the Gallia
Kcilli Rader said he had sub- Community Center for complet1on of its gym floor. .P1cturea to support tht' tmponant j Cmnm Cnlnention and
mitted a lc11cr to AEP Ohiu (from left) Jon Buck. Frank Pifer and Tim Seyfand. all from AEP communll~' cHon to &lt;ene the VisilnJ:, Bure&lt;lll and hosted
ex plaining the need f~,r ihc Oh io, Ke1th Rader. Brian Dunham of the · Meigs Ministerial Cll llens ol Mc1g&gt; County. \\c , 1 th e 'J 1, Ohio V( 1unteer
11
1
1
111lHit'V and the \'ariety ()f '\er· , Association and the Mulberry Community· Center.
·
bel1e1·e th at ."·e sho~ld lnlesl 11ifantn C11 II \\'ar · reenactvice,·
1hc
Mulberry
111 COI11111Uilll) .. JlroiCLI' tl1a!
lllCill ~in up
Community Center pn 11 iJc,·. for funuing beca u'e ilK' ce n- AEP·, communi t\' atfair' man- pro1·1de henel1h In . man\
0\ fmcmhcr Jim Oi ler of
Tim Seyfang. dis tribulion te r follnv" ihe guidi.ng prin- ager. audcu to ihe explanation people tur a n\tmhcr nl ~L'ars . Thurman. the Cl'ent cnnrdinasyslcm manager' for AEP\ ci pal of commun it y ~erv i cc .
nf why the cenler was cho~n . and our supp1'n nt the IPr. s;nd ihc ht1111e,·oming is
A then' · .Di., .trict n pia ined
Rauer txpi;H neu the curn- Mulberr) C'llll)munll} Cent,·r
'Thi' will l:x· here 1(1r man)
that tlw proJect' "a' chose n year' Ill clllllC ... · Jnn . Bud... pkli&lt;lll &lt;'I the. &amp;)'Ill tl'"'r pre · . dearly nmche.s Jh at vision ."
Please see Gathering. AS
BY BETH SERGENT

I

I

•

�..

PageA2

Thursday, March 23,

Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Mark Lunsford
wipes away his
tears as he
speaks to the
Senate Judiciary
Committee
Wednesday in
Columbus.
Lunsford, a
Dayton native ,
riveted a committee hearing
as he recounted
the story of his
daughter's 2005
· kidnapping and
murder in
Rorida. He
spoke as part of
a campaign for
tougher penalties for sex
offenders.

ASSOCIATED .PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS When
Mark · Lunsford . heard his
daughter's alarm clock going
otT he didn't pay muc!J attention. He figured 9-year-old
Jessica , always up firs t. ju5t
hadn ' t turned it off.
Then Lunsford discovered
Jessica\ bedroom empty and
began a frantic search for the
youngest of his five children,
the girl· he ·described as hi s
best friend.
Lunsford. a Dayton nati ve.
riveted a committee hearing
Wednesday as he recounted
the story of his daug hter's
2005 kidnapping a nd murder
in Florida. He spoke. as part
of a campaign for tougher
penalties for sex offenders.
The Senat€ · Judiciary
Committee heard testimony
from Lunsford in support of a
bi ll that would require judges
to sentence defendants convicted of raping. children
under I :Y to at least 25 years
in pri son.
·•tf you put them away for
25 years. that's 25 years they
can't hurt one of·our kids."
Lunsford said .
The bill. sponsored by Sen.
Steve Austria. would also
require a mandatory sentence
of 15 years for defendant s
conv icted of g n~ss sex ual

AP Photo

imposition, a· lesser ·offense
that can include sexual
assault that stops short of
r~pe.

The legislation is one of at
least 19 pending bills trying
to toughen laws regarding
sex offenders in Ohio.
The proposals for the most
part have been making their
way · through the General
Assembly for week s or
months but gained recent
urgency following publicity
about a judge\ decision to
sentence a man to probation

for repeatedly assaulting two
small boys.
"We · re sending a stron g
message to individuals out
there that' if you commit these
crimes, you' re not going to get

a second chance," said Austria,
a Dayton-area Republican .
"We're going to send you
away for a long time."
The long mandatory sentence has raised concerns by
some, including Sen . Marc
Dann ,
a
Youngstown
Democrat. that ~ex offenders
will turn down plea deals and
risk a jury trial in the hopes of
being found not .gui lty and
going free .
·
. The state's top criminal
prosecuto~ acknowl ~dged the
issue shou ld be addressed.
"There is a balance that has
to be looked at in terms of
being strong on se ntencing,
but also allowing prosecutors·
to do their job," said James
Canepa. Ohio deputy chief
attorney general for criminal
justice..
Lunsford, in a Coca-Cola
baseball cap and wearing a
novelty tie bearing pho"
tographs of his daughter,
wiped away tears frequently ·
as · he recounted his daughter 's · di sappearance
in
February 2005 and the subse-

quent di scovery of her body
three weeks later just 150
yards away.
A registered sex . offender
faces trial on charges of kidnapping , assault an'd murdering Jessica, who was at ive·
when buried in garbage bags.
Florida lawmakers quickly
passed a· bill requiring a
mandatory 25 year sentence
for sex offenders who prey on
children under 13. Dubbed
"Jessica's 1aw," it's similar to
the measure proposed in Ohio.
After Lunsford 's testimony, Sen. Kimberly Zurz '·s
voice wavered as she

Public meetings

thanked hi 111 for his remarks,
Craig Hedric; a Butler
County assistant prosecutor,
foug ht back tears after hearing Lunsford's story.
Like others on the committee, Dann was visibly moved.
"The reason 1 was too
shocked to speak is I have an
.JJ -year-old daughter named
Jessica.'' he sa id after a few
minutes. ·
Lunsford, 42, left his job as
a truck driver after his daughter 's death and now works
full time encouraging state
lawmakers . and Congress .to
toughen sex offense penalties.

Friday, March 24
POMEROY
-Meigs
County
Commissioners
meeting changed to II a.m .
Friday, this week only.
Monday, March 27
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.,
117 Memorial Drive.
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
!OWnship building.

Clubs and
organizations
ThurSday, March 23
RACINE
Racine
American Legion Auxiliary,
Post 602, 7 p.m. at the hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 at 7 p.m. at
the halL
Monday, March 27
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m.. Pomeroy
Library. New officers elected.

-Ei.iLEiiiCT.......~ Pr·imary

Youth events

Your Vote Needed and Appreciated!

Saturday, March 25
SYRACUSE -·
Youth
League signups, II a.m to I
p.m. at the ball . field . For
more information call' Eber

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - A bill
reshu!Ding some of the $51
billion in the. current twoyear state budget is headed
for the Ohio Senate, but one
key provision - an extJansion of tax break~ for Ohio's
nine foreign trade zones - is
going to need more work.
The Hou se · voted 91- 1
Wednesday to approve the
bill
afte r
majority
Republicans shot down all I0
amendment s offered by
Democrats.
The bi II adds $685 million
dollars for school construction and reappropriates $ 1.7
billion for state construction
projects. It also adds $30 million each for this year and
next for ·co llege tuition
grants.
Rep . Chuck Calvert , a ·
Medina Republican who
steered the bill through hi s
House Finance Com mittee.
said Gov. Bob Taft must have
the bill on his desk by April I
or the ' state risks losing
money for some construction
projects.
Ca lvert's
committee
added
the
exe mption
Monday for Ohio's fo reign
trade zones. most of them
consisting of business sur-.
rou nding Ohio's air freight
operations. · Any trade-zone
business with more than
$100 mi llion in annual sa le s
and that exports more than
half its products out of O hio
wou ld not have · to pay
Oh io's new 0.26 percent tax ·
on gross ·receipts.
Taft has threatened to veto
that provision if the threshold
is less than $500 mil lion in
annual ., a les.
However.
Speaker J!ln 11usted said . he
hoped to reach an agreement
with Taft and the Senate on a
compromi., e .
"We believe the provisions
. we have in this bill are better
public policy than curren t
law," Hu sted. a Dayton-area
Republican. sa id after the
House session.
Taft said he realit.e' the tax
is hurting some large-volume
busin esses. bu t the House
threshold is too low.
"We recogmze something

has to be done to address that.
but I believe it should be j ust
as nai-row as we possibly can
make it in terms of the
exemption," Taft said.
The Democratic amend- .
ments would have repealed
the commercial activity tax
on food .. shifted $25 million
in federal money to a hmne
weatherization program for
families,
low-income
restored a $2.2 million supplement to Shawnee State
and Central State universities
and deleted doctors' reporting
requirements about
women who receive abortions, among other thin gs.
One Republi can amend.ment sponsored by Rep . Bill
Seitz of. Cincinnati that was
adopted allows some nursing
homes to be reimbursed for
construction costs if they
began building before June.
30, 2005. Seitz said the
state 's freeze on nursing
home reimbursement rates in
the budget that went into
effect July I crippled constructi on projects that were
under way.
The. bill also nullifies a
plan by Taft to consolidate
dozen s of the state's boards
and com mi ssions. Backers
said it was necessary fo r the
commissions, mostly professional oversight boards, to
retain their independence ..
It also incl udes an expansion of eligibility for the
school voucher program by
including students from poorly performing schools that
don ' t ye t carry the worst ·academic rating . The proposal
wou ld ali&lt;,Jw students from 50
school s in academ ic watch
for three years to app ly for
the voucbers.
The original version of the
voucher· program passed last
year created up to 14,000
slots for studen ts whose
buildings hav'e been in academic emergency th cee years in
a row. If the proposed change
takes effect, that will like ly
increa'e the number of avai lable slot&gt; at private schools
around Ohjo beyond 8,000.

ATHENS - In recognition of ~·ta lk to Your Teen
Month" Planned Parenthood
of Southeast Ohio will
sponsor a parent forum and
panel discussion 7 to 9 p.m .
March '30 at the Athens
Community Center.
The program, for ~arents
only, will aid pare nts 111 confronting and .overcoming the
challenge of engaging teens
and pre-teens in positive
dialogue about health y sexu-

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992-2155

LocaiNef

Birthdays
Saturday, March 25
RACINE
Verneda
Hartung will celebrate her 99th
birthday Saturday. An open
house -will be held that day
from II a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
home of her daughter, Vena,
45481 , Pomeroy Pike. Racine,
Ohio 45771. Cards may be
sent to her at that address.
Thursday, March 30
MIDDLEPORT - Freda
Edwards will observe her
94th birthday on March 30.
Cards may be sent to her at
the Hol zer . Senior Care
Center, Room 136-A, 380
Colonial Drive, Bidwell ,
Ohio 45614 . ·

as sociate pastor of First for co ntinu ed communicaPresbyterian Church; Kate tion," said Susan Quinn,
Huebner. L.S.W.. community chair of the PPSEO Board of
ed ucation and outreach coor- Directors, J ane Woodrow,
dinator, PPSEO; and Lindsay PPSEO board member also
Johannes. Ohio University added, "We are ·all excited
graduate student.
·
about this forum . The speak"Thi s forum is de si gned to ·ers are excellent and ready to
give parents the information respond to · any questions or
and encourageme nt they comments from parents." . ·
need to broach this topic
The prog ram is free and
with the1r children in a way open to
the
public .
that is comfortable for eve ry- Refres hments
be
will
one and sets the frame work served.

Family Medicine® is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, write to Mail~ A.
Simpso11, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopalhic Medicine, P.O.
Box JJO, Athens, Ohio 45701,
or via e-mail to readerquestions@jamilymedicinenews.o
rg. Medical infonnation in
this column is provided as an
educational service only. It
does 110t replace the judgment
of your personal physician,
who should be relied on to
diag110se' and recommend
treatment for any medical
condiiions. Pasl columns are
available online a1 www.familymedicinenews.org.

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(740)992·6260

Thursday, March 23
POMEROY - AA open
discussion, 7 p.m., Sacred
Heart Church. ·
Saturday, March 25
POMEROY - . AA closed
discussion , 8 p.rri. , Sacred
Heart Church.
Sunday, March 26
POMEROY ·- AA closed
12 &amp; 12 study, 7 p.m. , Sacred
Heart Church.

MONTHS

Sunday - Pork Chop Dinnj:3r

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Support groups

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ality and health y relationships. A .panel of area professionals who work with
teens on a variety of fronts
~ill lead the program and
discussion which will be
rounded out with it question
and answer period:
Paneli sts include Jared
Sheets; 'MD, pediatrician and
internist; Heather Alvarez,
profc;,ssor
of
associate
Clinical Psychology, Ohio
University ; Bethany Fulton, '

Question: I have very dry
Frequent
handwas hin g. it is dirty. Try doin~ one load
skin. The tips of my fingers where the nails first become of dishes a day. While thi s is a
crack in winter even though I wet then are dried is a major longer exposure to water; it is
use a very good hand cream. cause of brittle nail s. Washing only ofle episode of "wet to
I also have brittle nails. I was di shes and doi ng housework dry.'' :Wear gloves when doing
wondering what causes this? where hands are in contact hou sework th at involves conAre there some supplemerlts I with water and chemicals also taci with chemicals.
could use? Is there anything weakens nails.
During your daily bath,
else that might help? 1 am 67 · · There are several things that however, it's a good idea to
years young.
you can do to moisten your thoroughly Soak your nails and
Answer: The good new s is fingertips and strengthen your immediately afterwards app ly
that brittle nails and dry. skin · nails, ·even in the winter. First a moisturizing cream to the
are not usually caused by any is to keep you nails short 'and skin around them. This helps
underlying medical condition free from snags and rough keep the nails and the area
or vitamin deficiency. Brittle edges. Filing your nail s daily around them from dryi'ng out.
nails do get more common · can help prevent splitting and You needn't choose one of the
with age, however. Also, if breaking. Moi sturi ze your expensive moisturizers. Plain
the fingers and fingernails are nails and hands frequ~ntl y. up old han&lt;! cream or petroleum
dry, cracked and brittle but to 20 times a day. In fact, jelly will work just as well.
the toes and toenail s are fine, · every time yo u wash your
Calcium. in any form , is
then there is usually a factor hands or they are exposed to good for your nails. Whether it
external to your body that is wa1er. you should follo w up be low-fat milk. calcium supthe cause of the problem.
by using a moisturizer.
plements or cl!lcium-enriched
These environmental facWork the hand cream in · foods. be sure your calcium
tors can range from · the around your nails and cuti- intake is adequate . Many peoweather to ' the kind of work cles. Al so moisturize your . pie have fo und the supplement
you do, whet!Ier in the home ·nail s after yo u have filed Biotin to be helpful for nai ls,
or on the job.
them. Many people use a nail but it can take a whi le to see
This time of year the weath- hardening nail ·poli sh in the resu lts . .Other supplements
er is often a major culprit. winter and have found t.his to such as gelatin may help - a
fe llow physician friend of
This is primarily because win- be helpful for brittle nail s.
ter is usually associated with
Avoid frequent exposure to mine says that he recommends
low humidity. Thi s external wa;er a nd chemicals. Try to daily ge latin to all hi s pati~nts
dryness causes many people decrease your hand washing who have arthritis, so you may
to have dry red, cracked hands and dish washing: Many peo- get some additional benefi t
ple wash every dish as soon as fro~ trying ge.latin.
and brittle nails.

Diane McVey

• Ghem•cals .!!. Supplies

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Church events·

Church. Election of officers
to be held .

'Wet to dry' 'episodes worsen dry skin

Medical Excellence.
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Pickens, 992-5564.
Tomek, pastor.
Saturday, March 25
CHESTER - The Shade
River Lodge 453 will have a
'BIDWELL· Gospel sing
roadside · trash
pickup at the Poplar Ridge Free Will
Saturday, 8 a.m. Breakfast Baptist Church, 7 p.m. featuring Gloryland Believers
. will be served. ·
and the Christian Echos..
MIDDL EPORT - . Dan
Hayman and. the Country
Hymntimers will sing at 7
Thursday, March 23
p.m . at the Middleport
POMEROY
- Rev. Church of the Nazarene .
Robert Robinson leads com- Refresh ments will follow .
munity Lenten service, 7:30 Allen Midcap, pastor, invites
p.m.. at Pomeroy . United the public .
Methodist Church.
Sunday, March 26
Friday, March 24
MIDDLEPORT - Billy
POMEROY - Stations of Zuspan wil l be installed as
the Cross, 7 p.m ., Sacred pastor of the Middleport First
Heart Church.
Baptist Church at 2 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM - 24- Sunday.
hour prayer ·vigil begins at 8
Monday, March 27
·a.m., Mt. Olive Church, Mt.
REEDSVILLE - Spring
Olive Rd., Long Bottom·. revival at the Eden United
Public invited to spend time in Brethren Church. services 7
. prayer at the church, or send p.m. March 27 to April ·2.
prayer intentions to Mt. Olive Evangelist,
Eric
Ross·.
Community Church, c/o Carol · Singers,
March
28,
Bush, 50515 McKenzie Ridge Crossroads, March 380, The
Road, RaCine. Information at Jarvis Family, and March 3 1.
985-3471.
The Crownsmen . Church
RUTLAND - Weekend located on State Route 124
·revival will be held at the bet ween Reedsv ille · and
Community Church, Main Hocki ngport. For more inforStreet, Rutland, 7 p.m. Friday mation call Adam Will, 740through Sunday. Evangelist · 378-6244.
.
will be Rev. Eric Isbell and
Thursday, March 30
smgers, · the Eric Isbell
POMEROY- Crusade for
Family. For more informa- Christ meeting, 7 p.m. at the
tion call 740-992-9796, Steve First
Southern ·Bapti st

FAMILY ·ME'DI CINE

. ~rench City

Keeping
Meigs County
informed

BY THE BEND

Planned Parenthood to sponsor parent forum

House approves budget fix
Bv JOHN McCARTHY

.. .

'

Community Calendar

J•u~11.:1S OUNTY AUDITOR
Will use the Auditor's office to explore ways of
keeping real estate taxes as low as possible.

·

..

'

2006

you want an
who
research ways
to keep.real estate taxes as low as possible?

Rep,ub·

..

The Daily Sentinel

OHIO
Father of murdered child sup.ports Ohio sex offender bill

The Daily Sentinel

'

.

'

PageA:3
Thursday, March

23, 2006

Victims who report crime help
police more than they re~lize ·
DEAR ABBY: I'm a deputy
sheriff. Last week, I was in a
department store outside my
jurisdiction and overheard a
conversation between two or
the clerks. One of them had
Dear
her car broken into the night
before, and several valuable
Abby
items and her house key had
been stolen. This woman said
she didn ' t call the police
because there was nothing
they could do.
rant. and I'm printing your lett identified myself as a ter a~ written with no ·~diting. · ·
deputy and told her she Although there is no guarantee
should contact her · police that anyone won't become a
department immediately for crime v1ctim. we do not have to
the fo llowi ng reasons:
take it in silence . As my third( I ) She was a victim of a grade teacher used to say. "The
crime. Her hou se key was policeman is your friend .'' If
. taken by someone who had we do not report a crime when
already demonstrated that he one has been committed.· then
or she was a criminal. If the the bad guys have already won .
perpetrator came back and
DEAR ABBY: I am 22 and
robbed her hou se, or worse the mother of four beautiful
yet, harmed her, the police · ch ildren , ages 3 and under.
would have more to go on to . Recently. my hu;band consolve that crime. 0 also fessed that he'; had several
advised her to have her locks affairs while I was pregnant
changed immediately.)
·w ith our last · daughter. I
(2) . Her car may not have thought I cou ld get over it ,
been the only o ne broken but it's ' difficult because he
into. If a pattern was develop- gave me an STO.
. ing, the police could increase
He thinks I should fo rgive
patrols in her area. But they · him and forget it. We arc sepacollldn 't know to do it if the rated now because of this. and
incident went unreported.
he wants to come home. I keep
(3) In the course of serving saying no because he hun me
search warrants or making so badly. I have started divorce
other arrests. we often find proceedin ~s. but &gt;ome of my
propc;rty that obviously doesn't family thmk it' s a mistake .
belong to the suspect. (After They think because we have
all, who owns multiple TV four kids that I ,need to try to
sets, stereos, DVD players. work things out with him. · '
digital cameras, etc.'l) But if
I know I' ll never be able to
nobody reports a theft, we trust him ' again or forg ive
have no way o f knowing him . Every fl are-up I&gt; a
whose property it is. Without reminder. What would you do
that knowledge, we can't if yo u were me' ' - STAY OR
return property to its rightful LEAVE IN MISSOURI
owner, nor can we charge the
DEAR STAY OR LEAVE:' '
suspect with additionalcrimes. I'd shelve the divorce for .a
(4) Suspects often. pawn while and see if intensive
what they steal. Our detec- marriage counseling could
rives regularly check. pawn help to overcome yo ur anger
shops for items !hat have and di sappointment. Please
been reported stolen and can understand that other couples
recover them for the owner as have made it past a crisi&gt; like
.well as pay a visit to whoever the one you are experiencing.
sold them. Many crimes ·have Your hu sband made a hu ge
been .solved in this .manner.
mi stake, but he obviously
Please,' Abby, urge your wants t~ make amends. Only
readers to report all crimes of if counseling didn't work
which they are victims.. Even would I end the marriage.
if it appears the police are
Dear Abby is writte11 /ly
taking little action , they are. Abigail Van . Buren, also
in fact. doing far more than is known as jeanne Phillips, and
.readil y
'apparent.
was founded by her TTWther,
DEPUTY PETER N. SPAG- Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
NOLO. PAYETIE. IDAHO
Abby al www.DearAbby.com
DEAR DEPUTY SPAGNO- or P.O. Box 69440, Los
LO: Your message is impor- Angeles, CA 90069.

. Smile! Now you ca.n own the ptct;Ln of thar unJorgenat:lle
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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, March 23, the 82nd day of 2006. There
are 283 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
'
On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry made his famous call for
American independence from Bntain, telling the Virginia
Provincial Convention. "Give me liberty. or give me death!"
On this date:
In 1792, Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 94 in G Major (the
"Surprise'' symphony) was performed publicly for the first
time. in London. ·
·
In 1806, 200 years ago, explorers Lewis and Clark, having
reached the Pacific coast, began their journey back east.
In 1919, Benito Mus,olini founded his Fascist political
movement m Milan, Italy.
In 1933, the German Reichstag adopted the Enabling Act,
wh1ch effect1vely granted Adolf Hitler dictatorial legislative
powers
In 1942, during World War II, the U.S. government began
evdcuatmg Japanese-Americans from their West Coast homes
to detention centers.
In 1956, 50 years ago. Pakistan became an independent
republic withm the British Commonwealth
In 1965, Amenca's first two-person space flight began as
Gemm1 3 blasted off from Cape Kennedy with astronauts
Virgil I. Grissmn and John W. Young aboard
In 2003, a ll S Army mamtenance convoy was ambushed in
Iraq; ll soldiers were killed, seven were captured, including
Pvt. I st Class Jesstca Lynch. who was rescued on April I.
Ten years ago: Tatwan held its frrst direct presidential elections; incumbent Lee Teng-hui was the victor.
. Five years ago: Russia's orbiting Mir space station ended its
15-year odyssey with a fiery plunge into the South Pacific.
Russta said 11 was expelling 50 U.S. diJ?lomats in retaliation
for the expulsion of 50 Russians by the U.S. Newspaper
colummst Rowland Evans died in Washington at age 79.
Greenpeace International co-founder Davld McTaggart died in
Umbna, Italy, at age 68.
One year ago: A federal appeals coun refused to reinsen
Terri Schtavo 's feeding tube and the Florida Legislature decided not to intervene m the epic struggle over the brain-damaged
woman; Schiavo's parents then filed a request with the
Supreme Coun. An explosion at a BP oil refinery in Texas
City, Texas, killed 15 people. Truck driver Tyrone Williams
was convicted in a federal coun in Houston for his role m the
2003 deaths of 19 illegal immigrants he was smugghng across
Texas.
Today's Binhdays: Comed~an Marty Allen is "84 Movte
director Mark Rydell is 72 Singer-producer Ric Ocasek is 57
Smger Chaka Khan 1s 53. Actress Amanda Plummer is 49
Actress Hope Davts is' 42 Comedian John Pmette is 42. Actor
R1chard Gneco IS 41. Country musician Kevin Griffin
(Yankee Grey) ts 41. Rock singer-musician Damon Albarn
(Blur) 1s 38. Actress-smger Melissa Emco is 36. Rock musician John Humphrey (The Nixons) is 36. Actress Keri Russell
is 30 Actress Nicholle Tom is 28. Country .singer Paul Martin
(Marshall Dyllon) ts 28.
Thought for Today: "I speak the truth, not so much as I
would, but as much as I dare; and I dare a little more, as I grow
older.''- Michel de Montaigne, French essayist (1533-1592).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be s•gned,
and mclude address and telephone numba No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should b'e in good taste,
addressmg 1ssues, not personaiilles. Letters of thanks to orga·
nizations and indiv1dJw/s will not be accepted for publication.

The -Daily Sentinel
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.. .. . 1107 1o
1214 21

Thursday, March

23, 2006

Democrats should declare censure move 'irresponsible'
The best thmg that can be
smd about the call" by Sen.
Russ Feingold (D-W1s.) to
censure President Bush is
that practically none of his
colleagues is backing him
up
Democrats are not, as he
charges, '·cowering" in the
face of poss1ble Republi~an
allegatJons that they are proterronst. Rather. they don't
\~ant to distract attention
from the main Democratic
assaults on Bu'h and the
GOP- that he's "incompetent" and that Republicans
are in "disarray."
Moreover, as The New
York
T1mes
reported
Thursday. Femgold's move
is
be1 ng
us~d
by
Republicans, right-wing talk
show hosts and conserva~
tives in general to mot1vatc
the base.
'
It's suddenly occurring ro
Republican'
that
if
Democrats capture control of
e1ther chamber of Congress,
they'll use their subpoena
power to make life pure hell
for Bush and the GOP over
the next two years.
And, if n's the House that
Democrats carry, it's not out
of the question that impeachment proceedings could be
launched agamst h1m m a
Judictary Committee chmred
by firebrand lefty Rep. John
Conyers (Mich.).
demoralized
However
Republicans are abour Bush
and the state of the country.
the prospect of seemg hm1
p11loried should help bnng
out GOP voters. ·
Moreover, the 1dea that
Democrats might impeach
Bush could ti.J1 n off ordmary
voters, much as the Impeachmerit of President Bill
Clinton did in !998. That
cost Repubhcan,s four House
seats, a loss that led to the
ousung of then-Speaker
Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.).
Feingold himself has said
he thinks Bush has ~omm1t~
ted ail tmpeachable .ottcnse
by ordering· ''secret'' and
"i llegal" National Security
Agency Wiretaps of ''domes~
t1c" · terrorist targets He
clatms. he's being "moderate'' by moving to only cen-

the NSA wiretaps or that
Bush has ordered them for
some nefarious or political
purpose.
Femgold wants tQ censure
Morton
Bush - · and personally.
Konclracke believes 1t's impeachable for, at worst, an excess of
diligence in protecting the
country from terrorists who
have vowed to k1ll millions
sure Bush.
• ot us if they can. This is
In fact. the whole enter- scarcely a "high crime" or
prise is irresponsible - and even a "crime."
I'd like to believe that's
Femgold ha' the reputation
another
reason
why of be1ng a sincere and princiDemocrats are ducking pled civil libertarian, liberal
endorsement of Femgold's and foreign policy dove. So,
action, even though no party it seems he's being honest in
leader has actual!~ used that his irresponsibility.
word 111 pu biic.
On the other hand, what
Wh1le Democratic leaders he 's doing is also .pohtically
don't want to endorse · advantageous, short-term.
Feingold's move. they also for h1s presidential pro,pects,
are evidently cowering at the even as it's politically disasprospect of bemg further trou s for the Democratic
savaged by lett-wing Web Party as a whole . I'd say it's
loggers who already are also politically polarizing
denouncing the111 for being and dangerous for the coun·
try.
"soft" on Bush
Feingold hunself admits
·Feingold hopes to distlnthat he favors wtretapping guish himself among all the
terrorists and would not stop other male candidates chasthe program Bush has u~der- mg
front-running
Sen
taken , wh1ch .he says "can Hillary Rodham Clinton (DeasJiy be done" under exist- N.Y.) - and steal some of
ing law.
the ardent lefties who might
If that's the case, then the \ltherwise support her and
responsible thmg for a sena- who now see him as more
tor to do - especially some- courageous than she .
one who wants to be pres1Feingold wants to become
dent - would be to lind a the leadmg 2008 cand1date
way to adjust the law to of the antiwar !eli of the
enable the government to Democratic Party - the
find out what terronsts are up wmg that nominated another
to. rather than pumshing a sincere, pnncipled antiwar
president who believed he liberal,
Sen.
George
had to sk1rt the law to do it.
McGovern (D-S.D.), in
In any event, Bush d1d 1972. He lost 49 states to
report what he was doing to Pres1dent R1chard Nixon that
congresswnal
leaders. tall
·
including Democrats. so it . Feingold's move reinwas not ent1rely "secret" It's forces the pany's image as
not clear - because details "McGovermte" - weak on
of the program are secret national secunty - at a time
why Bush believed he could when Bush's inept Hurricane
not comply w1th the Foreign Katrina response and the
lntelhgence Survet!lance Act Dubai ports d1saster have
and obtam warrants for the given Democrats an opemng
taps. If FISA procedures are to ·knock Bush on homeland
too onerous, the 1esponsible security.
,thmg would be to make them
Democrats seem to underless so
stand the danger of repeatmg
Moreover, there's no ev1- the McGovern mtstake.
dence whatsoever that any That's why they rejected
mnocent Amencans have now-Democratic National
been harmed as a result ot Comm1ttee
Cha~rman

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Howard Dean as their 2004
nominee and picked V1etnam
War veteran Sen. John Kerry
(D-Mass.) as an "electable"
alternative. R1ght now, most
Democrats are similarly shying away from Feingold's
censure initiative, deeming it
too far out.
On the other hand, Bushhatred and partisanship is so
intense among Democrats
that their leaders often go far
out themselves, as when
House Minonty Leader
Pelosi
(Calif.)
Nancy
embraced the proposal for a
rapid withdrawal from Iraq
by Rep John Murtha (Pa.),
and · when Senate Minority
Leader Harry Reid (Nev.)
GOP
labeled
vanous
Senators as corrupt and had
to apologize.
Such conduct is a gtft to
Republicans. As Sen. Lamar
Alexander (R-Tenn.) told
me,
"every
time
us
Republicans gel into trouble,
along come the Democrats to
help us out:"
Still. if Femgold's move is
another gtft to the GOP, it's
not a gift to the country. The
more left-wing activists pressure Democrats and nghtwing activists pressure
Republicans, the less chance
there ts that the two parties
can come together to win the
country's wars and solve Its
problems
The latest bipartisan
George
Washington
University Battleground survey snows that the pubhc
hates this back-and-forth.
Asked whether they preferred that Members of
Congress possess "strength
of values and convictions" or
"willingness to find practical, workable solutions,"
respondents favored '·workable solut10ns" by 58 percent
to 38 percent.
This suggests that the
country hungers for a real
"uniter'' not "divider" as
prestdent m 2008. And that .
would not be Russ Feingold.

·Deaths
I•

Bv DEE-ANN DURBIN

COOLVILLE - Izora K Johnson 93 of
Coolv~lle died Wednesday, March 22.'2006 at
Arcadta Nursmg Center, Coolville.
She was preceded m death by her husband,
Walter Johnson.
Services will be held I0 a.m. Friday, March
24, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home
Coolville with John Butcher officiating. Buriai
will be 1n the Coolville Cemetery.
Fnends may call at the funeral home
Thursday, from 6-8 p.m.

DETROIT - In one of the
largest buyout programs ever,
more than 125,000 hourly workers of General Motors Corp. and
auto supplier Delphi Corp. are
being offered up to $'J 40,000 to
give up their jobs to help cut the
compames' crippling labor costs.
GM did not say how many
workers it ex.pected to accept the
offer, but it is aiming to slash
30,000 ho,urly jobs by 2008.
Some workers wasted no time
in declaring the deal "fantastic"
and started calculating what they
would get. based on years of serVICe, if they accepted the offer.
GM and Delphi have said that if
enough workeJS sign up for buyouts or early retirement, their operatlng costs would drop significantly Analysts warned that it still
mtght not be enough to restore the
companies· fmanctal health or
avoid a paralyzmg strike.
Under the program, about
113.000 GM workers w11l be eligible for early-retirement incentives or buyouts of between
$35,000 and 5140,000 dependmg
on how long they" were employed
and whether they want to keep
health care and other benefits. At
Delphi, GM's former pans division and largest supplier, 13,000
U.S. hourly workers will be eligible for a lump sum payment of
$35,000 t\l retire. Also, up to
5,000 Delphi workers will be eligible to return to GM.
The deal comes at a critical time
for GM, wh1ch mcreased by $2 billion 1ts repotted 2005 loss to $1 0.6
blllion last week. The world's
largest automaker has been los.~ng
U.S market share to Asian
automakers and is saddled w1th
labor agreements that make u difficult to close plants or cut workers.
The plan also ts crucial for Delphi,
the largest U.S. auto pans supplier,
which is reorgan.tzing m bankruptcy court alier filing for Chapter II
protection in October.
The companies made no predictions of how many employees
might accept the offers or exactly
how much they would sa~e moperating costs. GM ha' a goal of cutting 30,000 hourly JObs by 2008.
David Cole, chairman of the
Center f01 AutomotiVe Research
and the son of a former GM president , said the deal IS of historic
proporttons
"It's 'huge. far more than I
ex.pected," Cole satd. He smd the
deal could go a long way toward
helping GM return to protitabihty

Local Briefs
Bazaar p·lanned
TUPPERS PLAINS - Spnng bazaar, with a
a bake sale, and serving of soup and sandwic~es, .w'll be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
Apnl l 111 the basement of the St. Paul United
Methodist Church u"l Tuppers Plains, sponsored by the Mission Outreach Group.

State finds no health risk in ·
contaminated groundwater
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) -A contaminated groundwater plume m Jackson County
does not appear to be a public health hazard,
the Department of Health and Human
Resources sa1d Wednesday.
The groundwater plume, wh1ch contams
tetrachloroethylene, known as PCE, was added
to the federal Superfund prionhes list in
September 2004.
Three of five munictpal wells tn
Ravenswood are contammated with PCE.
the U.S. Envtronmental Protection Agency
has satd.
Prolonged exposure to PCE, whtch is commonly used in dry cleanurg and metal degreasing. ts believed to cause dizziness, headaches.
nausea and dtfticulfy speakmg.
The cuy treats contaminated water to
remove PCE, and blends it with water from
uncontaminate~ wells. The wells are located
within about four acres of downtown
Ravenswood, supplying drinkmg water to
nearly 8,000 residents and five schools.
A public health assessment conducted by the
state Bureau of Public Health found that exposures to PCE in the groundwater and pubhc
water supply "pose no apparent public health
haz.ard for the past or present," the DHHR said.
'"Should future data show PCE levels are
increasing irr the groundwater or public water
supply, WVDHHR will make recommenda·
tions to msure that exposures to this chemical
do not present a risk to the public's health," the
agellcy satd.
The wells in the Ravenswood PCE
Groundwater Plume sue are near three former
dry cleaning facilities. a metal scrap heap, a
former electrical power plant, two former
dumps and a former hosp1tal.

'r Mm ton

Kondracke ,
executive editor of Roll Call,
the new&lt;paper of Capitol
Hill J

Squabbling Democrats fear demagoguery

Legion

•'

from PageA1

'.

Recent b1ckering among
Democrats about W1sconsm
Sen. Russ Feingold's motion
to censure President Bush
over illegal, warrantless
National Security Agency
wiretaps of Amencan citi~
zens reminded me of one of .
my favorite "The Far Side"
cartoons.
In it, a nuclear mushroom
cloud looms above a cuy
skyline. Motorists !lee. bugeyed w1th !error. In the toreground, a dog w iddles on a
fire hydrant as a second dog
barks furiously from a car
wmdow. The caption reads
something like: ·'S uddenly.
Fred spotted somethmg that
caught h1 s attention "
Civil war looms in Iraq,
where Bu sh memordbl~
declared v1ctory dunng h1 s
2003
" Mission
Accomplished" a1rcratt earner pho.to-op. Renilered
wary by three ~ears of tnumphal rhetonc and bad predJctJons, s1x m I 0 Amencans
now say invading Iraq was
never worth the effort. A
recent poll of U.S soldiers
in Iraq showed that 72 percent think they should be
Withdrawn w1th 111 the year
Bush responded with yet
another speech vowing to
make Iraq "a strong democracy that will be an msplrauon throughout the Middle
East" and a "partner in the
global war agmnst the terror-

Gene
Lyons

a nation also
umn~olved 111 Sept. II, ho')tile to Sunni Arabs. and seve' al limes larger than Iraq.
Playmg to his own political
"base.'' Iran' s pres1dent
appears eager to ass1st the
charade. Th1s sce nario may
have been what Gen.
William E. Odom, the former NSA d1rector under
PJeSJdent Reagan, had in
m1nd when he warned
invadmg Iraq could bnng
abou t "the greatest strateg1c
disaster 111 U.S. history."
Domesttcally, there are
stgns of schism among
Republicans. No less infatu·
ated a Bush cult 1st than Wall
Street Journal columnist
Peggy Noonan recently
called the president a "liberal" due to rumous budget
Conservative
deficits.
dogma. understand . can't be
wrong ; 1t can only be
betray.ed.
Also red1scovenng arithmetic was Bruce Bartlett,. a
former Reagan Wh1te House
offic1al and formerly a felists."
low &lt;~t the Scrooge McDuck
Everyone who believes 111 Center for Plutocratic Tax
Tinkerbell , clap your hands
Rehel. a Dallas-ba;ed "think
All that stufl about tank." (Not Its real name )
Saddam Hussein being Bartlett.· alas. did so'me actuinvolved 111 the Sept. II &lt;tl thinkmg and wrote a book
attacks~ Bush now says he. titled
"hnjlostor
How
was careful never to say that. George W Bush Bankrupted
He can't imagme where you Amenca &lt;tnd Betrayed the
got the idea
Re.tgan Legacy.' 1Rea I
Besides pratsing tts own IItle .! The thmk tdnk fired
steely resolve, the admin"- h1111
tration 's other tact1c has
Dunng a recent forum at
been to mtllate a propaganda the Cato lm,tttut c 1n
campaign against .ne1 ghbor- Washtn~ton , Bartl ett vari•

mg Iran -

ously described the Bush
administration as "unconsCJonable," "irresponsible,"
"vindictive" and "mept.'' He
then wro1e a very odd col- ·
umn in The New York T1mes
maki'ng a1Ib1s for his intellectual. cowardice. See, it
had been easy for T1mes'
colummst (and Princeton
economist) Paul K~ugman
- whom Ban lett once compared unfavorably to Uncle
Scrooge's irascible nephew,
Donald Duck - to tell the
truth about Bush's fantasucal budget numbers As a
tenured academic, Krugman
enJOyed JOb security.
ln Washington, that's what
passes for an apology. You
m1ght want to keep it in
mind when evaluating the
pronouncements of the res1dent mtellectuals at the
McDuck Foundation for
Godly Journali sm, and the
McDuck
Institute
of
Strategic Studies.
Meanwhile, a recent survey by the Pew Center .for
the People and the Press
found that only 33 pen;ent of
Amencans approve of
President Bush' s perfor· ·
mance in office. The commonest one-word de,crip(1ons of the communder m
ch1el were "mcompetent."
"JdJot" and "!Jar."
Am1d all th~s bad news for
· Repu?hcans. It was only natural lor Democrats to begm
hark mg funo~sl y at one
another '!"~at s how you
know they re Democrats.
The prnx1mate cause was
Fe1n gold's censure resolu-·
tJnn. a purely symbolic ges·
ture
M&lt;li1Y
Senate
[)cmocrats scnously considered censuring Bill Clinton 's
sexual ant1cs after the GOP's
lmpeachment effort tmled,.
but they hesitate to chastise
Bush for dec! an ng monarchical powers m defiance of
l h~ Consti tution

•

Almost no Democrats
agree wtth Bush's brazen
defiance of the !978 Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance
Act, wh1ch requ1res a secret
court's approval to spy on
Amencan ciuzens. If the
law's cumbersome, amend
it. Most suspect the administratton IS up to no good, a
suspicion enhanced by U.S.
News &amp; Wodd Report's revelation that the Whue House
also claims the president can
order secret physical search·
es the Fourth Amendment
specifically forbids.
No one thmks the constitutwnal clause mak1ng the
president "commander in
chtef of the Army and Navy"
makes hun a wartime dtctator. Apan from savants at the
Me Duck School of Law. few
Republican' think so, e1ther
But few want to vote on
Bush 's power grab m an
election year. They resent
Feingold's gmng off halfcocked, and they · r~ fearful
of . demagogic attacks on
the1r patnousm Unless FBI
agents get caught searchmg
Jenmfer Anniston's under·
wear drawer, they ~ u spect
the co nslltuuonal argu·
ment 's too abstract for many
voters.
Yes, 1t's pttiful to see
Democrats
(and
Repu blicans) too timid to
defend the Bill of Rights.
But the Bush administra!Jon' s political fate won't be
d
. db
bol'
etermme . Ysym Jc gestures. •
(Arkansas
~emocrat­
Gazette colummst Gene
Lyons 11 a "~1/0IWI maga:me a&gt;t ard Wlllller and coauthor of "The Hunting of
the PreJident" (St. Martm 's
Prers, 2000 ). Y011 ca11 e-mail
Lvons at genelyoll &gt;2@&gt;bcglobill.net.)

•

GM, DEIPm AND UAW AGREE ro· BUYOUTS

lzora K. Johnson

I

Harold "Peck" Jones. also
unable to attend.
Also recognized were past
commander' of the post, along
with the current officers.
Gladys Cummgs. auxiliary
president, spoke 'briefly and
introduced officers and members of the unit along with the
Buckeye Girls State representatives. Brooke O' Bryant and
Amanda Windon.
The bell choir of Cris Kuhn.
E:astem H1gh School teacher,
presented a program of con-

Gathering
from PageA1
not only instructiOnal hut
serves as a memoria I to the
contl1ct's foot soldiers
"We're not honoring the
war. bLJt the sold1ers," Oiler
smd. "There used to be
reumons here m lhe park .
wh1ch is what the homecoming also celebrates"'
Among the new features
the homecommg offers is the
appearance of the Blue and
Gray band, which will stage a
concert at noon and at 4 p.m.
on Saturday, April 29. The
band will also perform for the

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

AP AUTO WRITER

AP Photo

Delphi Corp. employees leave the mam entrance of the plant after a
sh1ft change Wednesday tn Dayton . Workers and un1on leaders at
Ohio's Delphi Corp. and General Motors Corp. plants saio early rettrement buyouts announced Wednesday in deals with the United Auto
Workers wtll bring a measure of rel1ef to those who can retire, but
uncertainty rematns.
and to speeding Delph1's exit from
bankruptcy. Cole said he expects
many workers will take the buyout.
"For our members, thts 1s fantastic," satd Dan Fatrbanks. pres,
ident of Umted Auto Workers
Local 1618 in Lansing. "There's
some huge incentives here." ,
Michael Balls, 49, a pipetitter
at the Delphi steering systems
plant m Sagmaw, was more cautious about h1s own options after
readmg details of the agreement.
"I feel a lot better, but I'm still
quesuonable about some things,"
said Balls, who with 30 years of
service is ehgible to retire and
would get $35,000. He said he
might take the offer - or might
return to GM if they will offer
him a sk1lled trades job.
Under the plan, GM would pay
for the Delph1 early-rettrement
incentives and assume some
post-retirement benefits for
Delphi employees who go back
to work for GM. GM spokesman
Dan Flores said GM didn't yet
know the full cost of the plans,
since it's unclear how many
workers will panicipate.
Himanshu Patel , an auto analyst with JPMorgan, said GM
will likely pay around $2 b1llion
for the Delphi buyouts based on·
recent financtal filings, whtle
Merrill Lynch analyst John
Murphy said GM will probably
pay "well in exces s of $1 billion"
for its own buyouts.
Several analysts questioned
how much GM and Delphi wtll
save Most workers that retire
w1ll get full benefits, wh1ch doesn't relieve GM's stzable pension

obligations, Goldman Sachs analyst Robert Barry sa1d in a note to
mvestors Barry added that savmgs gamed from the retirement
of younger workers w!ll be offset
by GM's assumption of· Delpht
retiree benefits.
Analysts said u's also unclear
what will happen to the bulk of
Delphi's 34,000 hourly workers.
Delphi remains in negotiations
w1th OM and its umons to lower its
labor costs, wh1ch 11 puts at $75 an
hour m wages and benefits. Delphi
has threatened to ask a bankruptcy
judge to cancel its umon coimacts
if It fails to settle by March 30. If
the judge does cancel those con·
tracts, the unions could call a strike
that would cripple Delphi and GM.
"With a looming strike, they
had to do something, but how
they're going to address plaqt closures for Delphi and remainmg
workers' salaries are the two
loose ends here," srud Rebecca
Lindland, an auto analyst wnh the
consulting firm Global Insight.
Lindland added she's pessimistic about the number of people who will opt for the buyouts,
especially younger workers who
have no other health insurance.
Some older workers also m1ght
not be persuaded, she sa1d
"! feel hke people are gomg to
look and say, 'Can I gtve up my
JOb for $35,000'"' Lmdland satd.
GM shares rose a penny to
close at $22.0 I on the New York
Stock Exchange.
The Delphi plan must be
approved by the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court. Delphi satd it will ask a
JUdge to consider the plan April

7. GM's plan doe~n ' t requ1re
approval. and Flores s•Jd reurements could begin as earl y as
June 1. Workers Will have up to
52 days to dec1de whether to take
the buyouts once they learn
details in plant meetings.
Detroit-based GM sa1d the plan
will move It 10ward its goal ol
cutting 30,000 hourly JObs by
2008. GM has slightly more than
113,000 hourly workers companywJde, but only UAW-represented workers are e1Ig1ble for now.
Flores said The automaker "
negotiating wnh the InternatiOnal
Umon of Electromc WorkersCommumcatlons Workers of
Amenca on a s1milar deal
Salaned workers won't be gettmg
the buyout optiOn, Flores added
"We said we· d be working wnh
UAW leadership to develop an
accelerated attrition program that
would help us achieve needed
cost reductions as rapidly as possible. while at the same ume
respondmg to the needs of our
employees." GM Chairman and
CEO R1ck Wagoner sa1d m a
statement "We are pleased that
this. agreement Will help fulfill
that 1mponant ObJecuve.''
In a memo sent to local uniOn
leaders, UAW Pres1dent Ron
Gettelfinger and V1ce Pre s1dent
Richard Shoemaker sa1d they
will ask the bankruptcy court to
approve the Delphi plan
"Working out th1s agreement
required an inordinate amount of
time and patience due to the complexities posed by Delph1 's bank·
ruptcy filing." Getteltinger and
Shoemaker said tn a statement
The number of workers covered by the GM-Delphi huyout
offer IS enormous. but not
unprecedented. For example. 111
2003, Venzon Commumcat10ns
Inc made a buyout offer to
152,000 workers, about half of
them uniomzed techmc1ans and
call center operators and the
other half nonunion managers
About 21 ,600 of those employees
accepted the deal, nearly double
what the company had sought.
While the deal wtth the UAW
would no"t be offered to as many
workers, the dollars bemg offered
are much richer than in most past
buyouts, said John Challenger of
outplacement firm Challenger.
Gray &amp; Christmas Inc.
''It's unparalleled in terms of
the potential for the amount of
money t~at will be patd out to
blue collar workers ,'' he srud
Assocwted Pres• ~&lt;Titer Adam
Geller in Nev.- York ( Olltributed
to th1s report.

temporary and 1patriotic music
for the more than a hundred
veterans and guests gathered
to celebrate the founding of
the American Legion in 1919.
Kuhn spoke of the dedi cation of the students who
come to school an hour early
every day to bell choir practice She thanked the legionnmrcs for allowmg her group
to be pan of the celebration.
The program closed wllh
"God Bless Amenca" to
which the audience gave a
standing ovation.
A dinner prepared and
served by the leg1onnmres at
tables decorated in red, white
and blue preceded the pro-

gram. Post · Commander
Frederick W. Goebel conducted the opening and closfrom PageA1
ing ceremonies, with Jtm Fry,
chaplain, giving the invocallon and benediction.
"If that happens, the disFor near! y two years, the trict's lagoons will overflow
legionnaires have leased a and the lift station motors
section of the old Salisbury will be ruined," Murphy
school building for meetings. satd. "That's what will hapThat sectwn was included m pen. and that's what would
some of the renovation which .have happened tf the dtstook place to conven the trict's board had dissolved.
structure into offices for the That's why the three remamMeigs Local School D1strict. mg board members have
The Legiou recently had the agreed to remain m place for
auditorium area painted in the time being.''
Murphy said her conunued
blue and wl11te and rearranged
the "wall of honor•· to service will be only temporary. and she expects the other
enhance its meeting place

two board members to serve
for the shon term, as well.
"Thts distrtct has · worked
too hard to keep the system
operating just to ruin H."
Murphy said. "It would be
unfair for the county commissioners to come in and
charge the residents for
something that shouldn't
have happened to begin
With."
Murphy said the remainmg
board members have met
w1tp the EPA, Ohio Public
Works Commisston, and
Buckeye
Hill s/Hockmg
Valley
Regwnal
Development Di strict to
secure fund s needed for
repa1rs and expansion of the

period ball from 7 to 10 p m.
Saturqay. The band's mus1c
will help m setting 'the mood
for the homecommg by perfonmn g mu sic from the war
era.
An artillery demonstration
slated for 10 a m and I0 p.m
Saturday will be conducted
by the Ohio First L1ght
An1llery Battery. usmg two
of the four 12-pound
Napoleon cannons from the
Ohio Statehouse, which Otler
smd are rarely allowed to be
used elsewhere.
Cncket matches "Ill be
'held at 2:30 p m Saturday,
demonstratmg a sport that
soldiers used as recreation
durmg encampments.

"Cricket was more popular
m that time becau se 11 was
the pre-basebaO days,'' 01ler
said. "It was a common recreation for both Union and
Confederate soldiers."
The matches Will be run by
Tom Melville of Milwaukee.
Wis., a cncket player, author
and' leadmg authonty on the
history of Amencan cr1cket.
Melville said cncket was at
the height of its popularity m
the 1850s and ·60s.
Sponsorship of the homecoming has come locally
from Paul Dav1es Jewelers,
John Sang Ford-LincolnMercury and the V1etnam
Veterans of America Chapter
709.

Additional sponsors are
sought, espec1ally to help m
covering the cost of the Blue
and Gray band's performances Anyone mterested in
being a sponsor can contact
Oller at 245-0134 or jailer@ zoomnet.net.
For the reenactors. Bob
Evans restaurants . provide
breakfast and special prices
are avmlable for them at the
nearby Parkfront Diner and
Bakery.
The homecommg's ftrst
day is Friday. April 28. and
has traditionally ,allowed for
school tours to come m and.
sample the Civtl War era·s·
mtlitary expenence. A full
slate of activJtJes will be held

Saturday. w htle Sunday's
events will be highlighted by
a I0 a.m. church serv1ce. The
camp closes at l p m. ·
· Oiler noted that the homecommg IS one of several
events 10 the area's reenactor
season, to be h1gh!Jghted 10
September w1th the return of
Morgan's Ratd reenactors to
Vinton and Me1gs counties

Sewer

extstmg system to accommodate new construction in
the di strict.
The d1stnct ser,es 221 customers m. the Tuppers Plam'
community, most!) pn vate
residents who pay between
$27 and $50 per month for
sewer sen 1ce The d1stnct
was first established m I 99 2.
in · order to lift an EPAimposed building ban.

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Roberts
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there
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need for donated material s to local government.
the baskets call Roberts
get the Raci ne pantry 1nto
guidelines they Will be served operat1on.
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These donations include
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Friends and Nc1ghbors also
the v1llage and are responsi- operate s a food pantry 111
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�ACROSS THE NATION·

The Daily Sentinel

f~deral
BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

W~s}f l~(JTON
FeCJef.JI, health advisers said
Wedlfesct!y thill Ritalin and
other drugs for attenl ion
deficit hyperactivity disorder
should not carry strong
"black-box .. warnings about
potential cardiovascular .and
psychiatric risks.
Rather. the Food and Drug
Admini stration
pectiatric
advisory committee recommended that the drug Iabe Is
include warning language
written so people cim understand it. "I wouldn 't use the
word 'tougher.' said panel
chair Dr. Roocrt Ne lson, of
the Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia. "'Clearer."' .
· By rejecting the black-box
warnings in ·a consensus deciM

sian. the ad,i sory panel
broke with another wmmit. tee that voted ju't last nwnth
to include them on some
ADHD drugs.
The . FDA was poised

Wednesday to follow the more
recent recommendations.
"I think we are likely to follow them, yes," said Dr.
Robert Temple, director of the
FDA's office of medical poli!=Y· following .the meeting.
Any updated language may ·
not appear on labels until
pharmaceutical companies
begin using a, recently adopted
format. something that could
take several years. And the
FDA mily yet require blackbox warnings on stimulants to
treat ADHD that would alert
adults to incteased risk of
heart attacks, strokes and
other , similar problems,
Temple said.
Nearly . 3.3
million
Amerlcans age I 9 and
younger used an·ADHD drug
I;Lq year. according to Medco
Health Sol uttons Inc., a prescription drug benefit program manager. ,
Psych iatri sts and others
had urged the commi.ttee to
move cautiously before reca ni mending strengthened

warnings associated with the tion of how to communicate Strattera, which is pr~duced
drugs.
the potential nsks assocmted by Eh L1lly and Co.
In February, the FDA's wi.th ADHD drugs. It now
Earlier Wed'nesday, FDA
Drug Safety and R1sk appears hkely the warmngs otfic1als say pallents and docManagement advisory com- wtll come tn the form ot tors should be aware that the
!Jiittee voted to recommend highlighted language. on drug small. n~l)lber of .reported
the ~gency ad~ the strongest la!Jels, as well a~ gu tde~ dts- psycht.atnc events, mcludmg
possible warnmg to sm:ne of trtbuted - admittedly mfre- hallu~matmns, could reprethe drugs regardmg thetr · quently, FDA officials satd sent stde effects of the d.rugs,
althou~h they cannot pomt to
potential cardio.vascular risk. - to patients.
The FDA then asked the
PsychJatnsts and mental a defmt(lve hnk.
pediatric p~nel to examine health advocates said leaving
The new labels should coun;
that same 1ssue, ·as w~ll as the d1sease untreated could sel parents to watch for such
reports that psychoSIS or nval the nsks the drugs may events and to both.talk tQ their
mania can occur ·in some . pose.
doctors and constder halttng
juvenile patients at normal
"It is important to· nqt let treatment, Nelson said.
doses of any ADHD drug.
the discussion of ADHD
McNeil Consumer &amp;
Adding black-box warn- medications overshadow the Specialty Pharmaceuticals
ing~ to some or all the drugs, public
health cro sts of said. in briefing documents
wh1ch also mclude Adderall 1 Untreated mental health d1s- that tt I S customary to we1gh .
and Strattera, could cau'se orders in children," said the "theraf:'l!ut!~ benefits a nd
more harm than good, some · Cynthia Wamscott of the potential nsks ot treatment .
experts told the panel. .
National Mental Health . The · uni t of John son &amp;
. "I suggest ~onfu~i&lt;?f!• polariz- Association: Her 16-year-old Johnson. makes Concerta. a·
mg v1ewpotilts, mmal press granddaughter ~as ADHD.
long-acting
form
?f
hysteria. But then what?" asked
Ritalin is manufactured by methylphenidate, the drug 10
.Julie Zito, a University of Novartis Pharmaceuticals Ritalin.
Marvland associate professor Corp. and in generic form by
Novllrtis believes current
in pharmacy and psychialr)i.
other companies; Adderall is · Ritalin labels are adeq~ate,
~ The FDA has struggled made
by
Shi re company med1cal sa(ety
since last year with the ques- Pharmaceuticals Inc. ; and director Dr. Todd Gruber said.

Bush administration finalizing update
of fuel .economy rules for SUVs, ·pickups
. BY KEN THOMAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
on

better

gas

mileage, the Bush adm inistration is expected ·to complete
its overhau l of fuel economy
iules for pickup trucks. minivans and most sport uti lity
vehicles nexl week.
: The rules. first proposed
last August, would require
the auto ind ustry. to raise
standards for .li ght trucks
beginning in 2008 . All
automakers wo uld have to
comply with the new
Corporate Average Fuel
Economy (CAFE) system by
20 II , the most significant
. change to the program in
three decades.
: Under the current system,
automakers must maintain an
average of 21.6 miles per gallon for 2006 model year Iight
trucks, a number that grows
to 22.2 mpg for 2007 ve hifles. Passenger cars. which
would not be covered by the
hew rules, need a 27.5 mpg
~verage .
·
~ The proposal issued last
&gt;ummer would lead to a projected tleetwide average of
~4 mpg by 20 11. · a total
improve ment of 1.8 mpg
over four years. Automakers
would need to meet fue l
economy target s based on
their mix of vehicles.
Nearly two mo.nth s after

2006

President. Bush declared that
:·America is addicted to oil,"
environmental groups said a
stronger plan could help the
administration advance its
goal of reducing the nation 's
dependence on imported oil
amid high·gas prices and worri~s about energy security.
·"This will be a real test
about how serious he is about ·
ending this addiction." said
David Friedman, research
director of the clean vehicles
program for the .Union of
Concerned Scientists.
Bush. in a news conference
on Tuesday, did not mention
fuel econom y changes but
expressed interest in working
with Congress "to advance an
. agenda that will make us less
dependent on foreign oil, an
agenda that includes hybrid
cars and advanced ethanol
fuels and hydrogen cells."
The plan would move away
from a sin gle standard for
light trucks and create different mileage goals for six
·sizes of vehicles. In 2008,
smaller SUVs like the Toyota
RAY 4 would need to reach .a
target of 26.8 mpg while
large · vehiCles such as the
Chevrolet Silverado would
have to hit 20.4 mpg. ·
. . The auto industry, which
has fought past attempts to
raise fuel economy standards,
but expressed support for the
plan's direction, said the ney;

.system would mean seven
straight years of higher gas
mileage requirements.
-"Those standards will be a
challenge but automaker~ are
committed to meeting them,"
said · Eron Shosteck, a
spokesman for the Alliance of
Automobile Manufacturers.
General Motors Corp. and
Ford Motor Co. have said the
current system puts them at
strategic
disadvantage
against their competitors
because .sales of l[lfge SUVs
must be offset by the sale of
smaller light trucks to comply with fuel economy rules .
The adt)linistration said last
summer that the reforms
would save more fuel than
any previous rulemaking in
the history of the light truck
program, or about I 0 billion
gallons of oil over the lifetime of the vehicles sold during the span.
Environmental groups have
sought a higher fleetwide
average and increased oil
savi ngs and reduced greenhouse gas emissions. The oil
savings represent only a fraction of what Americans consume each year, they' noted.
"We hope they · take the
opportunity to save oil and
not aim low here," said Eric
Haxthausen, an economist
with Environmental Defense
who has recommended · a
fleetwide average of 26 mpg.

BY TOM HAYS
ASSOCiATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK -A bouncer
with a . long rap sheet has
been charged with murder in
the slaying of a graduate student who was raped, strangled and .dumped last month
in a desolate section of
!Jrooklyn, ·two law enforcement
offici als
. said
Wednesday.
.
: An announcement of i1
murder indi ctment against
Darryl Littlejohn , 41. ;,
expected Thursday, the ollicials said. speaking on condi-

BY GINA HOLLAND

·and search the home of a
Georgia lawyer
in 200 I even though the
WASHINGTON - The man 's wife invited him in.
Supreme ·Court
ruled
Janet Randolph called
Wednesday that police .can- pol.ice to the ·home in
not search a home when one Americus, Ga., and - over
resident invites them in but her husband's objections another tells them to go away, led the officer to evidence
provoking a strong objection used to charge Scott Randolph
from the new chief justice with cocaine possession. That
about the possible impact on charge has been on hold while
battered women. . .
courts considered whether the
The 5-3 deCision put new search was constitutional.
limits on officers who want
The state of Georgia had ·
to . search for evidence of a the bac king of the Bush
crime without obtaining a administration and 21 other
warrant tirst.
states that·argued cooperation
If one occupant tells them with ·law officers should be
no, the search is unconstitu- encouraged.
tional , justices said.
·
The case turned on the
Chief Justice John Roberts Constitution 's ban on unrea'
wrote his first dissent, pre- sonable searches - with a
dicting severe consequences twist. Justice s looked at the
for women who . want police rights of people who share
to come iii but are overruled their homes.- a common sitby abusive husbands.
uation in America where
The (jecision ended a trend of many households include
one-sided rulings by the court. extended families .
About two-thirds of the 30 rul- · "The law acknowledges
ings under the leadership of thin although we might not
Roberts have been unanimous, expect our friends and family
a high number on a cQurt that to admit the government 'into
has in the past been polarized common areas, sharing space
along ideological lines.
entails risk," Roberts wrote in
The court's liberal . mem- a dissent that was almost as
bers , joined by centrist long as the main opinion.
Justice David H. Souter, the
Anthony M. Kennedy. said
that an officer responding to a . court's only unmarried inemdomestic dispute call did not ber, wrote the majority opinhave the authority to enter .ion. ''We have to admit
we are
.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI'fER

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drawing a fine line," he said.
· He said that because there
was no evide nce of wrongdoing, Janet Randolph's invitation to enter did not trump
her husband's refus;~l to let
police co nduct a search.
"Assuming that both spouses
are competent, neither one is a
master possessing the power to
override the other's constitutionhl right to deny entry to
their castle." Justice John Paul
Stevens wrote in a side opinion.
In all , the eight members
who participated in the case
wrote six different opinions,
swapping barbs. Conservative
Justices Antonio Scalia and
Clarence Thomas wrote separate dissents.
h was surprising, considering that the court in recent
months has been harmonious
on emotional issues including
abortion limits, religious
freedom and a prolest of the
military's "don't ask, don 't
tell .. policy on gays. ·
Souter called Roberts' concerns abo ut domestic violence a "red herring." .
"This case has no beari ng
on the capacity of the police
to protect domestic victims,"
Souter wrote . "The question
whether the police mi~ht
lawfu ll y enter over objectton
in order to provide any protection that might be reasonable is easi ly answered
. yes."

.ASpecial Section ·In The
• ®alllpoHs Jlailp ·m:ribune
• ~olnr~Iea~ant ~egister

Spring Savings
Russell Stover
Cream Esss
Res. 49¢
o .niY 34¢

. small-tow n

20061

tion of anonymity because at the jail where he is being
the indictment was still held on a parole violation,
sealed.
that police "have the wrong
Poli ce have said blood person.'' ·
fo und on the plastic ties used . He said he was asked to
to bind lmette St. Guillen's escort the woman out of a
hands behind h.er back bar where she had been
matched Littlejohn 's.
drinking just before closing ;
A call to Littlejohn's attor- his attorney did not allow
ney was not immediately questions about what hapreturned. His lawyer has said pened next.
.
he was . bei ng scapegoated
Littlejohn provided a
because police could not find DNA sample when' asked ,
·the real ki ller'.
· he said .
Littlejohn has denied . .. , cooperated full y," he
killing St. Guillen and said said iri the interview, conWednesday in an interview ducted Tuesday and aired
with WCBS-TV, conducted . Wednesday evening.

Cold PoP
20oz Bottle
OnlY 71¢

Jacqueline . Bessner of
lshpemmg, M1ch .. smd her
daught.er, Leanne, 15, hanged
herself last year two mon~hs
after startmg treatme.nt wtth
Concerta. Bessner satd more
black-box ~arnmgs.would be
useless. wtthout mcreased
co~nsehng andmomtormg of
pa,~Ie?t s. .
.
.
It s bemg handed out hke
it's candy," B~ss,ner · satd .of
ADHD dr~?s . . It s too eas1ly
accrss1ble.
.
A dtfferent . FD~ panel
planned to cons1d~r on
Thursday an apphcatoon by
Cephalon Inc. to sell . ,Its
sleep-disord.er dru~ Prov1gtl,
or modafi~tl. as an ADHD
treatment tor chtldren.
The FDA wa nts membe~s
of 1t s psychnpharmalogtc
dr~ gs advi~ory comm~ ttee to
examone that request, mclud:
mg whether senous skm
rashes seen Ill ch.lldren treated wllh modaftntl should
merit special . warnings, fol·
low-up stud1es and steps to
limit the risk.
·

Supreme Court limits police searches in fractured ·ruling

_.Law enforcement official: Bouncer
charged with murdering graquate student ·

•

Thursday, March 23,

advisers reject strongest warnings on.ADHD drugs·

AN~REW BRIDGES

Focusing

PageA6

REAcH UVtl&lt; 18,000 HUMES
IN THE TRI-COUNTY AREA!
Advertising Deadline: .
THURSDAY MARCH 30, 2006
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 2006

• ~aUipo[(g l'ailp
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AROUND THE WORLD

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PageA7

Thursday, March 23,

2006

TOURIST BUS ACCIDENT IN NORTHERN (HII.E KU.lS 12 AMERICANS
BY EDUARDO GALLARDO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SANTIAGO, Chile - A
· bus carrying cruise ship
tourists plunged 300 feet
down a mountainside in
northern· Chile Wednesday,
killing 12 Americans, U.S.
and Chilean officials said.
Two other U.S. tourists and ·
two Chileans - the dd ver
and the tour guide - were
hospitalized in serious condition following the crash
along a rugged highw~y near
the Pacific port city of Arica,
1,250 miles north of
Santiago, said Juan Carlos
Poli, an . Arica city hall
spokesman.
"We have confirmed that
all the VICtims were
American citizens," Poli told
Thursday, but the departure
the Associated Press by telewas postponed in the w~e of
phone from the hospital.
the accident, police said. He
The tourists were "returning
said it isn't clear when it will
to ·Celebrity · Cruises: ship
leave.
Millennium, docked in Arica,
A statement by Celebrity
from an excursion to nearby
said the tourists were
Cruises.
Lauca National Park.
sai
ling
aboard Celebrity
The driver reported that he .
Cruises' Millennium, but. it
lost control of the bus while
was an independent private
swerving to avoid a truck
not affiliated with the
tour,
approaching on a collision
AP Photo . cruise line.
·
course; Poli said. The bus
Chilean
police
officers
inspect
a
bus
crashed
in
the
.highlands
of
northern
Chile
near
Arica
2,000
kilometers
(1.250
mileS)
north
The
ship
was
sailing
a
14went off the narrow highway
and tumbled down a steep of Santiago, near the border with Peru and Bolivia in Chile, Wednesday. A bus carrying tourists from.a cruise ship plunged more night South American cruise
than 100 meters (yards) into a ravine. Officials said 12 people were killed , most believed to be U.S. citizens.
that departec! Valparaiso,
mountain s id ~.
Chile.
on March 19 and was
He said the bus, which had
sc heduled, .to conclude in
a capacity of 16 passengers. miles northeast of Arica on necting the coast with the John Vance, who also con- consular officers to Arica.
The ship was scheduled to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on
firmed the 12 U.S. deaths,
the road leading deep into the Bolivian capital of La Paz.
"was totally destroyed."
for Peru early April 2.
U.S. Embassy spokesman said the embassy was sending leave
The accident occurred 25 high Andes Mountains, con-

.

Victory at last in 'Lion Sleeps' case
, Dean's tac ti cs included
winning a court order last
year freezing Disney's rights
to income in South Africa
from legendary trademarks
including Mickey Mouse,
Donald Duck and Winnie the
Pooh pending ·resolution of
lhe dispute : That appears to
have bee ~ a turning point,
though Disney never was
sued. in the court case.

when apartheid laws robbed One mris a home-base4 gro. blacks of negotiating rights, eery. The other recently lost
Linda sold worldwide copy- her job · cleaning a doctor's
JOHANNESBURG, South right to Gallo Records of office and supports a daugh· Africa - Three impover- South Africa for I 0 shillings ter who gets occasional work
ished South African women, . - less than $ 1. 70.
cleaning homes.
whose father wrote the song
The song became one of
Linda's . fourth daughter
known as "The Lion Sleeps the best known songs in the died of AIDS in her 30s in
Tonight," h~ve won a six- world as "The Lion Sleeps 2002 as the lawsuit dragged
year battle for royalties in a Tonight, " attributed to on, without money · to buy
case that could affect other Georgi: Weiss, Hugo Peretti drugs that could have saved
musicians.
.
and
Luigi
Creatore. her life.
The story surrounding the American singer Pete Seeger
Kevin Chang. a Jamaican
song that never seems to go adapted a version that he reggae expert, said the case
out of date amounts to a rags- called "Wimoweh," making means that "musicians living
to-riches tale, replete · with · it a folk music staple.
in poverty, and other artists,
racial overtones.
Owen Dean, South Africa's may finally be rewarded for
No one is saying how mat)y leading copyright lawyer, their work."·
millions will go to the daugh- argued successfully for
Chang believes the deciters 'of the late composer Linda's family that' under the sian could be applied to an
Solomon Linda, who died in British Imperial Copyright ongoing British court case in
poverty from kidney disease ·Act of 1911, which was in which Carlton Barrett of Bob
m 1962 at age 53. But the force in South Africa at the Marley and the Wailers is
family's settlement last time Linda composed his · suing Marley's estate for roymonth with New York-based song, all rights revert to the alties, arguing songs he coAbilene Music gives Linda's heirs, who are entitled to authored are being credited
heirs 25 percent of past and renegotiate royalties.
only to Marie:,:.
Web sites list hundreds of
future royalties and has broad · "Now the way has been
shown," Dean 'told The versions of the "Lion,"
implications. ·
Linda composed his now- Associated Press. ·"Others in including many top . of ·the
famous song in 1939 in one similar circumstances can pops over, the years. Folk,
of the squalid hostels that . fight such injustice, ·and I swing, minstrel, big band,
· housed black migrant work- have no doubt that there are reggae and R&amp;B version s
ers
in
Johannesburg, other people in this position." have been sung over the
The 1911 act affects all · years. The New Zealand
According to family lore, he
wrote the song in minutt:s. countries that were part of the Army had it as a favorite tune
in spired by his childhood British Empire at that time- for a while.
In the 1970s, Linda 's
tasks of chasing prowling a third of the world. ·
It remains to be seen bow widow signed over the rights
lions from the cattle he herded . He called the song the settlement witli Abilene, to Abilene.
whicp holds the copyright to
The song 's captivating
·Mbube. Zulu for lion.
It was sung, in true Zulu the popular songs that grew rhythm poured from the
tradition, a cappella. Linda's from Linda's composition, soundtrack in Disney's
innovation was to add his will affect his family. Abilene blockbuster musical "The
falsetto voice, an overlay of couldn ' t immediately be Lion King" - one of at least
15 movies in which it 's been
haunting "eeeeeees," to the reached for comment.
Of Linda's three surviving featured. .
baritone and bass main line.
. 'To this day, this style is called · daughters, only the youngest
"The musical. was netting
has a job, as a nurse, and she million s of dollars and
Mbube in South Africa.
The song sold more than still lives in the family home Solomon Linda's daughters
I 00,000 .copies over a in Soweto, a satellite suburb were tryi ng to · survive as
decade, probably making · it set up for · bl ac k workers domestic ·servants. not earn •.
under apartheid. Her sisters ing enough to feed their famAfrica 's first big pop hit.
· In the 1950s, at a time never reached high school. ilies," Dean told the AP.
Bv.MICHELLE FAUL ·

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

Aruba·reportedly has lead·in
missing Alabama teen case

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

eat£

The Daily Sentinel

,.

SAN JUAN, Puerto . Rico
(AP) - Aruban au thorities
reportedly have a new witness
in the disappearance . of
Alabama
teen · Natalee
Holloway and plan to conduct
another search for her body on
the Dutch Caribbean island. .
The witness provided spe·
cifi c
information
that
prompted investigators to
organize the search in sand
,dunes along the northern ~ip
of the island, Gerald Domptg.
Aruba's deputy chief · of
police, said in an interview
· with CBS television's "48
Hours· Mystery" .program.
Dompig said investigators
will .use cadaver. (logs to
search near a lighthouse and
believe that someone took
steps . to carefu lly hide
Holloway's body.- perhaps
buryi ng her twice .

"I'm just waiting to see it
The witness "wanted to
talk about the fact that .he Sato,trday night." she said.
Holloway, 18, was last seen
knew more about the whereabouts of Natalee," Dompig May 30 leaving a bar with
said. according to a partial three young Aruban men. No
transcript of the interview, one has been charged in her
which is scheduled for broad- disappearance and the invescast on Saturday. "The infor- tigation has prod uced a numI'mltion that thi s perspn gave ber of false leads. '
Aruban investigators. how was too specific to just be a
story that was just. made up · ever. have continued to work
the case. In January, they .
by someone."
Aruban
authorities searched sand dune s on the
declined to commef!t on the northwest coast of the island
with more than 50 otlicers.
report Wednesday.
At the time, Dompig said
Holloway's mother, Beth
Twitty of Mountain Brook, police . have considered the
Ala,. said She's aware of the dunes a place of interest since
program, but had "no idea" . the investigation began anti
had searched them before. ·
how it would be presented .

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APRIL 14, 2006

'

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population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your
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Representative.

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LOCAL • ·STATE
DofA rally plans discussed MEIGS COUN1Y 4.:.H NEWS

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March

the charter will be draped
and members were asked to
wear white.
Installation was held for
Marjorie Fetty and Janet
Depoy. Cards were read
. fro m Julie Fleming, Goldie
Fredrick , and Etta Will. The
deaths of Julie Fleming's .
son, J. D. Curtis was report ed. Charlotte Grant thanked
those who eall at funeral
homes when deaths of

CHESTER - Plans for a
rally to be held on April 29 at
Chester were made during a
recent meeting of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America. held at the hall.
A practice for the. rally wi ll
be held at April 29 meeting.
Members were reminded to
take groceries for baskets
and gifts for tables at the
rally. Luncheon that day will
be $12 . Also at that meeting

members occur.
Quarterly
birthdays
observed were those of Gary
Holter. Opal Hollon, Marge
Fetty and Jo Ann Ritchie.
Jean Welch was reported ill.
The good of the order committee served refreshments
and games were pl ayed. ,
Prayer, the pledge to the
fla g and singing of the
National An'them opened
the meeting.
"

Planning begins for Pomeroy alumni reunion
A social hour will be held are no application form s.
POMEROY - Plans are
being made· for the annual fro m 5:30 to 6:30p.m. in the Those applying are to send a
Pomeroy Alumni Banquet tq hi gh school cafeteria fol- resume, transcript of grades,
be held May 27 at Mei gs lowed by the dinner. A dance letter of application, a current
with George Hall at the organ . photo and a notation of relaHigh School.
·
The alumni oft1cers for this will follow frmn 9 to II p.m. tionship t() a Pomeroy High
year are Bill Young. president: · Again this year scholar- graduate to the Pomeroy
Mary Jane Wise. first vice, ships are offered to students Alumni · Association, P.O.
president; Marcia Arnold, sec- who are either a child or Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
ond vice-president. and Carol grandchild of a Pomeroy 45769. The application deadHi gh School graduate. There line· is May 19, 2006.
Kennedy. secretary-treasurer.

Man indicted in fatal shooting
of neighbor boy who walked on lawn
told officers ·he'd had several
if convicted.
Police said that ~ rossing disputes with neighbors
Martin's yard was what got about walking on his . grass,
Mugrage killed Sunday after- but hadn't called police since
2003, Uhion Township police
noon.
•·1 just killed a kid," Martin Lt. Scott Gaviglia said.
Martin. a retired Ford
said to a 911 dispatcher,
Motor
Co. worker with no
according· to a recording of
the call released by police in criminal rewrd ; told the disUnion Township , near thi s . patcher that Mugrage nad
city about 20 miles east of been "making the other kids
harass me and my place·, tearCincinnati.
Martin. whq lived alone, ing things up ."

BATAVIA (AP) - A grand
a man
jury
charged
Wednesday with fatally
shooting a neighbm poy in a
dispute -over the man 's wellkept lawn.
A Cie'rmont County grand
jury indicted Charles Martin.
66, qf Union Township, on
one count of aggravated murder in the death of IS -yearold Larry Mugrage. He could
be sentenced to life in prison

23 , 2006

Lakeside
Leader's·
4-H Club

S~1~
Refreshments • . Prize Drawings
John &amp; Bel inda Dean .
Manager &amp; Stylist
Paula Harri s

Rocky Boots - 25.71
Sears .....: 132.27
Wai-Mart - 48.10
Wendy's- 64.47
Wo~thlngton - .18.22 -_
Dally stock reports are

Local Weather
Today's Forecast
Forecasl'for Thursday, March 23

city/Raglan

·

.

High I Low temps

.AiCH ·

~

Mansfield •

t:___:)

37' I 21 "

Deyton •

42' 123'

6-.,
~

Youngstown •
39" I 22"

~ · ;;'
~

*Columbus

~2' 122"

Cincinnati

·• 48° I 24'

~

'

~

Portsmouth •

44"1 21 '
020011

r;r.....

.~

Pa rtlY '

Cloudy
'

Cloudy , ~

"t"'-~':5

Thunder·~ Fl~r. ries ·~
storms

•
~ Showers ~
//7;~,

'

~

'

.

100

~ ~~~
,, ,,\
Aa1n

•

*

· ·~·· ·

Snow

~. •.

•••••

•

Weather Underground • AP

Thursday.,.Partly cloud y
in the morning .... Then becoming mostl y cloudy. Highs in
the upper 40s. Wes1 winds
around 5 mph .
Thursday night ... Mostl y
cloudy. Cold with low&gt; in the
upper 20s. North west wind&gt; 5·
to 10 mph.
·
Frlday ... Mostly
cloudy
with a 20 percent c hance of
rairi showers. Hig hs ·in the
lower40s . ;&gt;.lorthwes't winds 5
to 10 mph.
'
Friday
night ... Mostly
cloudy wi th a chance of rain
and snow shqwer&gt;. Cold wi th
lows jn th e upper 20s.
Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph .
Chance of precipitation 30
percent.
Satu rdav ... Mostl v cloud v
with ·a chance of· rain and
snow showers. High\ in the
lower 40; . Chance of prcc.ipi•

tation 40 percent.
Saturday night...M ostly
cloudy. Cold with lows in the
mid 20s.
Sunday and Sunday
night ... Partl y cloudy. Hi ghs
in the upper 40s. Lows in the
upper 20s.
.Monday ... Mostl y ; unny.
Hi ghs in the mid 50s.
Monday
night ... Partly
cloud y with a 30 percent
chan ce of rai n showers. Lows
in the mid 30s.
Tuesday... Mostly 'cloudy
wil h a 40 percent chance of
ra in showers. Highs in the
lower 50s.
Tuesday night. .• Mostl y
ulciudy wi th a 30 percent
chance of rain showers. Lows
111 the lower 30s.
Wednesday ... Par II y
cloud y: Hi ghs in the lower
50s.

Warrant" issued for Randy Moss' agent, B4

'

the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the. previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons In
· Giilllpolls.
-

-..1-'"'''J lists·Trudy

Lyons, Lois ~"~ '-'..,..

&amp; Jan ice Grimm

S.

2nd Ave. • Middleport, OH
740-992-2550

Thursday, March 23,2006

.Bartrum-Brown football camp moving. to Edwards Stadium
'

20, at Mars hall 's Joan C.
Edwards
Stadium
in
. HUNTINGTON , W.Va: - · Huntington.
The
Bartrum-Brown
Mike
Bartrum of the
Philadelphia Eagles, a Pro Football Camp, sponsored by
Bo~l player in 2005, and First
Sen trY Bank of
Troy Brown, whe has 1hree Huntington, · is qpen to chiiSuper Bowl rings with the dren and teenagers, bqys and
New England Patriots, are girls, fmm the first through
proud to announce their the 12th grade . Thi s year, the
annual camp for children in camp will move 'to the field
the Tri-State area is moving that Bartrum and Bwwn and
to their alma mater, Marshall . the 1992 Thundering Herd
University:
won the NCAA 1-AA
The
highly-successful National Championship over
ca'mp, which has been ,held at Youngstown State, then
Huntington -area hi gh schools coached by Ohio State's Jim
for the past four years, will Tressel, by the score of 31take place on Saturday, May 28.
BY WOODY WOODRUM

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS- A SChedule of upcoming college

and high school W.rsity s;&gt;orting events involv1ng
teams from Gallia, Meigs and Mason oounties .

Today's games
Baseball
Roane County at Point Pleasant , 4:30

p.m.
.

College Baseball ·

Rio Grande at Cedarville (DH), 1 p.m .

Friday '• · gnmes

Baseball
Wahama at Huntington St. Joe, 5 p m.

Softball

v;tayne at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p. m.
Poca at Wahama, 5 p.m.
College Softball
Geneva at Rio Grande, 2 p.m.

U.S.A. Kids

Local Stocks
Gannett - 59.05
General Electric - 34.53
GKNLY- 5.70
Harley Dbvldson - 49.70
JPM- 42.05
Kroger - 20.82
Ltd.- 24.37
NSC- 54.73
Oak Hill Financial·- ·
30.74
OVB- 25.20
BBT .- 40.19
Peoples - 28.25
Pepsico - 59.82
Premier- 15
Rockwell ...;. 72.15

Soriano play' left tieJd for Nationals, 8 3

Bleedin' Green
4-H Club

New Ownel's

ACI-71.13
AEP' -35.06
Akzo- 52.14
Ashland Inc. - 68.05
BLI-13.99
Bob Evans -' 29.89
BorgWarner - 60.20
CENX -35.56
Champion - 5.90
Charming Shops - 14.52'
City Holding- 3'1.01
Col....,; 55.10
DG -17.51
DuPont- 43.16
Federal Mogul - .35
USB- 31.19

Palmer expects to play in NPL opener, B2

Whiz Kidz
·
4-H.Club

The next meeting will be at ty report ~n "Safety Tips o~
Weddle 's on April 9, 2006 at Domg Thmgs by Yoursell
I p.m. Plans are to check was given by Brcanna
progress on project books Hayma n.
Football was enjoyed for
The · Whiz Kidz 4-H Club and discuss dates for demonrecreation and the Powells,
mel on March 19 at · the strations to be done .
Aurumn
Hauber,
New&gt;
Lutes
and CMdwells providBuckley home with nine·
ed refreshments.
members and two advisors Reporrer
The· next meeting will be
present.
on April 23 a 4 p.m. at .the
The following officers were
Reedsville Church.
'
elected: Morgan Werry, presiAbbl'
Cui/illS ,
News
dent ; Tyler Lee, vice presiRepurter
dent ; Megan Broderick, secretary ; Ryan Davis, treasurer;
Cassie Hauber, news reporter;
The Lakes ide Leader 's 4Casey Ridenour, safety offi cer; Amanda Eason, · health H Club me t on March 19 at
Reedsville
IJnited
officer, and Cheyenne Doczi, the
The Bleedin' Green 4-H
Methodist Church with 3 1
recreation otlicer.
Club
met qn March 3 at
members,
4
advi
sors
and
21
Doczi served refreshments.
Eastern wi(h nine memhers ·
The next meeting will be at visitors present.
.
The
following
business
and
three advi sors present.
Buckleys on April 9 at 2 p.m.
. Th e following officers
Fundraisers , ordering T-shirts was discu ssed: Collection of
were
elect ed:
Sarah
enrollment
cards;
tastefully
and demonstrations will be
Lawrence
,
president:
Katie
simple fund raisers; a $200
discussed.
vice · president;
Cassie M. Hauber, Ne ws donation from. the Ayres Keller,
Rac
h
~
l
Mark
wmth, secrefamily
to
be
used
toward
Reporter
·
·
livestock scales; purchasing tary; Olivia Shuler, treasurer.
T-shirts for new members Bleedin ' Green was chosen
and livestock members: as a new name fqr the 4-H
camping at Forked Run group and a recreation adviThe U.S.A. Kids met on State Park, June 13- 17 ; sor was chosen.
Sunday, March· 12th at· the Cloverbud day camp and the
Elizabeth Lawrence was
Weddle ·home with nine fair theme.
re spon sible for refresh ·
members and three advisors
A health .report on "Tips ments.
present.
Samantha Cline, News .
About .the Flu" was given by
·Election o'f officers was Kayla Hawthorne and a safe, Reporter
held and rules of 4-H and
date s for upcoming 4-H
events were discussed.
The advisors made sure
OPEN HOUSE
that everyone received their
books so they cou ld start
working on them for the next
meeting. Joyce Weddle proSaturday-Marc~!' 25 2-4pm
vided refreshments.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Saturday's games
Baseball
Point Pleasant at Logan , 3 p.m.

Poca at Wahama. 5 p.m

Softball

Point Pleasant at Winfield. noon

·

Track' and Field

Point Plea~ant at Capital , TBA

'

· College Baseball
Cedarville at Rio Grande (DH), 1 p.m.
College Softball
Malone at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.

Groza, 11 others
headed to high
school HOF
INOIANAPOLIS (AP) - Pro
Football Hall of Farner Lou
Gro:w. tormer Hdsman Trophy
winner Terry Baker and fonner
NBA player Jon Suhdvold were
among 12 peqple . selected
Wedne.•;day for the National High
School Hall of Fame.
They will be inducted by the
National Fedemtion of State High
School Associations during a
June 29 ceremony in Orlando,
A a.
Gluza, who died in 2CXX), was
a high school football and basketball star at Mal'tins Ferry. He
played briefly at Ohio State, then .
served three yeats in the milital)'
during World War II betore a 20year career with tlre Cleveland
Browns.
Nicknamed " The Toe." Gruzll
was nine:time Pro Bqwl selection who played until age 43. He
scored a then-record 1,608 points,
and his 640 extm points and 233
field goals are still the most in
Browns history. Groza was .
inducted Into the Pm Football
Hall of Fame in 1974.
Baker. a three-sport star at
Jefterson High School in
Portland. Ore , won the 1962
Heisman Trophy at Oregon State
and was the ftrSt plaver selected
in the ,1963 NFL dfafi, by the L.ch
Angeles Rams. He played quartcrl:xlck and running back for the
Rams for three years. .
Sundvold scored 2,175 point&lt;;
in a three-year career at Blue
Springs (Mo.) High School ;md
I,597 point&lt;; in helping Missouri
to four straight Big Eight titles in
1980-83. He then pfayed nine
years in the NB A ·With Sean! e.
San AniO(liO and Miami.
The others selected to the High
School Hall qf Fame are: Blaine
Lindgren, a high hurdler at
Magna (Utah) Cyprus High
School 'who later won a silver
medal at the 1964 Olympics:
Nancy Cole, field hockey coach
at Ward Melville High School in
East Setauket. N.Y.: Duane
Twait- former footb!ill coac,h at
Emmetsburg (Iowa) High
School; Irving Black, tr.tek coach
for 35 vcars at Ne\v Britain
(Conn.) "High School: official
Peter Webb of Houlton, Maine;
lonjllime otlicial and . fo':lner
Umvers1ty of Idaho athletJc·d1rec •
tor Paul Ostyn; Wayne Taylor, an
athletic director ;md coach in
Aor.ida for more than 30 vears:
Rich Edwards. editor oi· ·the
Forensic Quarterly publislred by
the NFHS sin&lt;.'C 1980: and tormer Kentucky High School
Athletic Association commis5iOiler Louis Stout

a

CONTACI'S
Phone- 1·740·446-2342 ext. 33
Fax""'""'"":" 1·740·4:46·3008
E·,maU - soorls@mydwly sentmel com

Snor!$ S!PH
Brad Sherman. Spor1a EditOr

1740) 446·2342 . .... 33
bsharmanOmydallytribune.com

Bryan Walters , Sports Writer
(7 40) 446· 2342 , e111 . 23
bwalters @rnyd allytpbune com

Larry Crum, Spor11 Writer
(740) 446·2342. ewl 33
lcrumOmydaily reg,ster com

title in football and just the
second national title in school
history. The Herd went on to
win
two
National
Championships, se ven conference titles and earn seven
bowl berths in eight years on
that field under coaches Jim
Donnan and Bob Pruett
between 1991 and 2004.
·~ we are extremely pleased
to be able to move the camps
date w early in the year," said
Bmwn, "as the June date was
always a problem for vacationing parehts; plus the now
three-week summer workouts
allowed for high schqoJ foot-

date al so allows more of the
fmmer Marshall players and
others who are currently in
the National Football League
to attend the camp. and thi s
has always been a very
important part of our camp
... the chance for youngsters
to meet and learn football
skill s and life lessons from
ihese heroes they see every
week of the fall on tele vision
in the NFL."
The camp has funde.d youth
program s and charitie s in
both Huntington , where .
Brown has made his hqme
with his family. since coming

O.J. does it again, .named Mr. Basketball
Bv RusTY

MI.LLER

COLUMBUS
Imagine fans show UJ? for .
your games and are dl~ap­
pointed if: a) your team
doesn't win by SO points,
b) you don ' t score 40, and
c) you don 't meet their
minimum requirement of
dunks and 3-pointers.
Welcome to the world of
O.J. Mayo, The Associated
· Press Mr. Basketball in
Ohio for · the second ·
straight year.
"I can ' t worry about
that," he said when asked
about the unreal ~xpecta­
tions of spectators . ." If I
· did; .I don 't know where
my head would be ."
Mayo, a 6-foot -5 junior
at North Col lege Hill Hi gh
School in Cincinnati, measures up to most expectations. He 's a typjcal kid off
the court , he 's a brilliant
and creative artist on it,
and he and his runnine
mate and friend BiU
Walker, drive one of the
nation's best prep te'ams.
Mayo averag,e s 28.8
points, 8.8 rebounds, 5.8
assist s and 5 steals for the
three-time defending AP
poll champion Trojan s
(24-1 ), who will be seeking their second consecutive Division Ill state
championship this week at
Ohio State 's Value City
Arena. With just two losses in three seasons - the
one thh )'ear came last
month against national
powerhouse Oak Hill ( Va. )
Academy before more
than 16.000 fan s at U.S.'
Bank Arena in Cincinnati
- North College Hill is
considered one of the top
1ive tea'ms in the land.
Walker is Robin to hi s ·
Batman . a dominating big
man who is as physicaqy
intimidating as Mayo is
smoolh ~mel una~suming ..
Mayo frequently refers to
··we"'

and

··us'"

· Please see Mayo. Bl

in Pomeroy, where Bartrum
has a home in .the. off-season
with hi s family.
Marshall University will
also profit further from the
closer associati on qf the
camp at the home of Herd
football. "Marshall received
about $10.000 last year," said
Brown, ··and we anticipate,
with the chance to come to
carnp on the Herd 's new
FieldTurf and the earlier date,
this will up both the number
of c0;1mpers and the amount of
money split between MU and

Please see tamp, Bl

COLUMBUS . (AP )
Bob Huggin s i&lt;. a coach
without a cqllege team . but
he could end up with two of
Ohio 's top bas ketball players no matter where he
lands.
' O.J . Ma yo. Ohio's. twotime Associated Pre ss Mr.
Basketball. sa id Tuesday
· that he and Cincinnati North
College Hill teammate Bill
Walker - both juniors may go wherever the former
Universi tv qf Ci'ncinnati
coach gm!s. ·
. ·
'·That eq uid be· right ,",
Mayq said of the rumm that
he and Walker wquld gq
with Huggi ns as a package
deal. "That could be a possibility At the same time, we
don·, want to go w a raw
program. "
Mayo is a 6-foot-5 swingman and Walke r is a 6-6
pmv er for ward fo r North
College Hill. the defending
D i ,·i~ i o n Ill state champions
in Ohi'll and ranked as one of
the wp team;. in the nation
by several publi cat iqns.
NBA ru le s pre"en t players
from m aki n ~ themse lves
available fo r t he draft until
they are at lea;.t a year qut of
high &gt;c hool.
28.8 ·
Mayo a,·eraged
point;,, S.R re bou nds. 5.8
assist' and 5 steal s during
the regular 'eason ior the
Trojan, (2 ~-1 ). whq de fe nd
theiJ title thi s wee kend ·in
CqJumb u,. Walker a\eraged
22A poi nt&gt; ag.ains t a 'cliedul e that included teams such
as nati onal powerhouse Oak
Hill 1Va . I Academy. wh ich
gaw the' Troj ans their qnl y
loss. an&lt;J defending Ohio
big-,c·hvo l state ch ampion
Canton Mc Kinl ev.
" II c·ou id ' be a· great thing .

'·

when

answering questions, as if
he and Walker - also a
first -team All -Ohio se lection by the AP - cannot

.

Mayo, ·
Walker
• •
may Join
Huggins,
somewhere

ASSOCIArEO PRE SS

Wahama at Butfalo-Guyan Valley, noon

Gallia Academy, River Valley, South Gallia
at Warren Fairweather Relays, 9:30 a.m.

'

It was MU 's firs1 national ball in West Vlrginii . This to Marshall in. 199, I, and also

AP photo

North College Hill High School star O.J . Mayo. center, drives between Taft High Schpol
defenders Edd 1e Gray, left, and Monsanna Torbe rt, right, in a Monday, Jan . 16. file photo at
Xavier Un iversity in Cinci nnati. Mayo has been named The Associated Press 2005 Mr.
Basketball on Wednesday.

Please see Hucglns, Bl

Cavs skin Bobcats in OT
. CLEVELAND !API
who got the ball atthetopof the
LeBron James sa1cd his .be~t kev wnh the cnm J rom1ng He
tor last - twice.
dllhhbl i111'' a rlwthm before
James hit the game:\\'inning firin~ a 21-f,l&lt;&gt;te r tliat mttled the
shot with nine-tenths of a sec- nm ;mel \\L' Ill in a' hi' team·
Ollll left ur overtime. finishing mare, mt,bhcd hJm.
with 37 poinh and his ninth
··Jt felt· g,•xl. " 'a ill James.
career triple-double in . the adding that'lw pm' nn attentirm
Cleveland Cavaliers· I ~0-11 X to crilic' "hn c·l.tllll he meeklv
victor\ u1w the CharlcHte pa"~' itHead ,,f hnldl~ 'hooi- ·
Bubc;its on Wedne'd''' ni ght.
mg ' ' ith the ecunc nn the line.
"Game. set. match. ·1 knew it
'· J n~,·,·r lt'i 11 alf~ct me ... said
was o1er." Ca , alier' uu'ard 1hc .".11-S'ur e:une '1VP. who is
Damon Jnne' saiJ ·.,r the' final "' er;~ging '\O.x point'. "My
pia).
lcamm,\lc' J..no" I ,·an make
It came alter Jamc,. \\'h\l al "' ,_'feat 'h&lt;&gt;l' ,lfld that \\a' a prime
had 12 as; i,t&gt; ;md' I,I rebc,und'. example nt it ...
.
maJc a cnsp pas&gt; that led In,,
If nnt fpr lime,· pinpo'int
game-tyinQ ~-point er by Rip pa" at tht• end ,,f re~ul ation .
t&gt;,lurrav wnh tour-tenth &gt; 0! ;!" hn\\ CI'l'f. ·CIL',dmd would
o-ewnd t\l play in regulation
il;i\L' ""t
'
Rookie R;~ ,· mond Felitm
Trapped h~ the Bohcats'
-.coreJ 30 p..&gt;iilb In kad ,i, '"·annmg dctcn't' . nt•ar mldplayc~&gt; in Jnuble ligul\'' for ,c·nun . .i:lnw' l&lt;wnd Murra)
Charlotte. wh1ch '"" "ll hllllt · ,litlllL' in I ill' tar cnmcr fnr a 104kaJ in~ ....wcr Gaald Walla,·c· allti&lt;'.
and . . t;u111h! pomt guarJ Bn:-,·in
··11 m~ t...~~t n ml,ttt.~\. arc open.
Knight. Fclt&lt;ln ;~deled IOa&gt;SI,h. l"m """'" It&gt; uci tlkm the ball ."
AP photo
,e,cn rchuunJ,. liH' "eals and Jam~' ,:ud. ',.Flip ""' wide
Cteveland'Cavaliers' LeBron Ja1 10 s is fouled by Charlotte Bobcats' Jake Voskuhl during over· ''orcd the B,&gt;txat.\ ti na! 10 ·~x· n ..
·
time in NBA basketball action Wednesday in Cleveland. Ja111es scored ·37 pomts, including poi nb.
Please see Cavs, B4
He cmildn't ll1dll'll .lanll~,
a field goal .wi th less t11a~ a second lett 1n overtime
. to give Cl eveland &lt;:1 120·118 win.

1---- - - - --. - ------- - -· - .

'

•

�'
www .mydailysentinel.com
.

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 2;J. 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 23.

Palmer expects to play in NFL season opener

photo
CinCinnati Bengats quarterback Can;on Palmer talks to reporters
during a news conference about his knee surgery at Paul Brown
Stadium in Cincinnati ·Wednesday. The quarterback suffered
three torn ligaments during a playoff game against Pittsburgh.
A(&gt;

CINCINNATI (AP)
looking at vetefl!ll free:agent
Bcngals quarterback Carson quarterbacks JUSt m easy.
Palmer still faces many uncer"If I ha&lt;l a crystal ball, we
tainties as he rehabs his left wouldn't be going through this
knee .
backup quarterback thing
How many games - if any we're going through," Palmer
- will he miss this fall? And said.
who might fill in for him now
The Bengals have former
that former backup Jon Kitna Bears starter Craig Krenzel
signed as a free agent with under contract, signed former
Detroit'1
.
Atlanta and Tennessee 'backup
"I wish I knew when I was · Doug Johnson last month and
coming back ,'' Palmer said are believed to be looking at
Wednesday. "The last thing I other free agents.
need to do is push anything too
Palmer called his injury
early and push· back the date "heart-breaking" . because he
that I can really step on the felt so helpless and .unable to
·field 100 percent."
·
help his teru:nmates as they fell
Parmer tore lil}aments in his to the Steelers.
left knee when ne was hit by
"I think I learned how quickPittsburgh 's
Kimo
von ly things can be taken away
Oelhoffen on his first pass dur- from you,'' said Palmer, a
·ing the Steclers' 31-17 playoff Heisman Trophy winner and
victory in December.
the overall No. I pick in the
Palmer estimates his rehab is 2003 draft. "I'II ta)&lt;e something
one-quarter complete and that from this, and it will be you
he is "exactly where I should can't take it for granted."
be at week 10" of his program. . A team spokesman conHe met with Cincinnati media firmed during · Super Bowl
for the first time since his Jan. week. that Palmer had been
I0 surgery appearing confident barred from talking about his
and upbeat.
·
injury and sur~ery. But Palmer
Minicamp in spring is out of said the decis1on was at least
the question, he said. Training partly his.
camp not very likely and the
"The Bengals do a phenome'
preseason iffy. Palmer expects nal job of protectin~ their play•
to play in the regular season ers,' Palmer said. 'They said,
opener, but the Bengals are 'Do you want to be talking

Cleveland doubles up Houston, 2-1.:
KISSIMMEE. Fla. (AP)Under the cover of darkness,
Paul Byrd, not ~xa&lt;tly known
for his blazing fastball. lit up
the Houston Astros.
Cleveland
Byrd, . the
Indians· No.4 starter, had hi s
best performance of the
spring. allowing just one hit
in five innings of a 2-1 win
over Houston on Wednesday
night.
He retired the first' 12
Astros in a row. most of them
on routine plays. before giving up a si ngle to Morgan
Ens berg leading off the fifth .
In all, the right-hander set
down 14 of the 15 batters he
faced .
. "!felt good,'' he said. ''I'm
not sure the batters could see
the' ball with this beirlg a
nigh! g&lt;Jme. I was' throwing

fastballs by guys, so I'm not
going to be fooled by that.
When I threw a couple . by
(Craig) Biggio and (Jeff)
Bagwell, I knew something
was wrong.''
the
Indians'
Perhaps
bigge st offseason acquisition,
Byrd signed a $14.25 million . two-year contract in
December. Cleveland had a
big hole to fill after righthander Kevin Millwood
signed with the Texas
Rangers.
Byrd was 12-11 wit~ a 3. 74
ERA for the Los Angeles
Angels last season.
The 35-year-old Byrd, who
, relies mostly on change-ups
and breaking balls, had no
walks and four strikeouts in
·his second Win of the spring.
He said his numbers were

helped by his defense, partie- with four strikeouts in five
ularly left fielder Jason innings. Nieve gave up four
Michaels, who went back to hits and no runs and struck
run down a couple of fly out three in four innings.
balls.
. Neither has pitched in a
"One of the reasons I major league game.
signed here was because of
"Both of them pitched
the way this team played on
11 " A
defense,'; Byrd said. "Jason we '
stros manager Phil
.set the tone with some ·good Garner said. "Both of them
catches.,
did a fine job."
While· Cleveland settles in
Buchholz said he's feeling
with Byrd as its fourth starter, '"wonderful" after struggling
the race for the fifth spot in .with some anli problems in
the Astros' rotation got even the past.
more muddled.
"I felt really good out
Taylor Buchholz and there," he said. "!just tried to.
Fernando Nieve, two of the stay within myself. In the
three candidates for tht&lt; job, past I've gone , out there ,
had solid outings. Also in the .overthro\\ln, getting behind
running . is lefty Carlos guys and getting myself in
Hernandez.
·
trouble. But today it just felt'
.Buchholz got the start and real .comfortable out there
allowed six hits and two runs and I made my pitches."

Texas braces for West Virginia's 'Fun-n-Gun' ·
ATLANTA (APJ - West
Virginia's 1-3-1 zone defense
and fondne,;s for having its 6foot- 11 center shoot 3-pointers make the Mountaineers a
difficult NCAA tournament
draw - even for a. coach
who already survived the
challenge in the regular season.
Texa,;
beat
the
Mountaineers 76-75 on Nov.
2 I in the Guardians C lassie
in Kansas Citv. Now the second-seeded Longhorns are
gearing up for a rematch
against No. 6 seed We.st
Virginia on Thur,;day in the
Atlanta Regional semi fi nals. ·
Pulling out the tapes' of the
earlier matchup didn't seem
·to embolden Texas coach
Ri ck Barnes. who was asked
Wednesday whether devising
a game plan for West Virginia
coul&lt;:f be compared to a football coach preparing for a
wishbone attack .
Barnes said the comparison
with the old-school wishbone
offense doe&gt;n ' t fit West
Virginia.
''I don't know if I would
call it a wishbone more than I
would call it that Fun-n-Oun
becau se the y spread you
out:· Barnes said. 'They're
going to shoot 25 3s. They
make more 3s than any team
in the c0 untry. It's almost like
playing again&gt;t a no-huddle
, offen se." . · .
·.
' . South carolina footbaU
coach Steve Spurrier ruled
the Southeastern Conference
at Florida through most of
the 1990s with his innovative
· Fun-n-Gun offen se.
· West Virginia ranks seco.nd
in the nation with I 0.1 3poiiller; per game. and · its
total of 322 3-pointers broke
last year '; s,hool record of
319.
Senior
center
Kevin
Pinsnogle is second in the
school record books, shooting 40.9 percenl on 3-point
attempts for hi; career. He
leads We't Virginia with 19.3
poinh a game and ha' made.
86 3-pointers.
Pittsnogle said he has spent
more time under the basket in
recent ga mes.
"I tltink ns of la te we
ha ven' t , rel ied on the J a;

given our size, our quickness,
things like that,'' he said.
Beilein has West Virginia
in the round of 16 for the sec,
ond straight year after last
season's team was a tournament surprise by finishing
one win shy of the Final
Four.
"Had I known we were
going to do what we did last
year, I would have kept a
journal to try to duplicate
what we did ... but I didn't do
that,'' Beile.in said.
Beilei n said . last year's
NCAA tournament run. was a
bigger surprise ·but . said
returning to the round of 16 is
a bigger accomplishment
"because 'o f the expectations"
created by last year's success.
An overtime loss to
Louisville kept West Virginia
out of the Final Four last
year.
While West · Virginia
thrives on the 3-point shot, it
was last in the Big East with
·aminus-9.4 rebounding margm.
"We want to get rebounds,
there is no question," Beilein
. said. "We work like crazy to
try to get rebounds, and with
our recruiting needs in the
future. we tried to address
that ."
'
AP photo
West Virginia's weakness
West Virginia , guard Johannes Herber (5) drives on on the boards contrasts with a
Northwestern State forward Clifton Lee in the first half of their Texas strength . In NCAA
NCAA me'n•s second round college basketball game Sunday in tournament wins over Penn
Auburn Hills , Mich.
and North Carolina Suite, the
.much as we normally do," Mounraineers led the Big Longhorn s posted a comPittsnogle said. "We kind of East with their plus-7 .44 · bined 80-49 advantage in
relied . more on . penetration turnover ratio, and they allow rebounds.
Texas i~ 26-2 when it outand kicking it out and getting 63 .1 points a game.
Texas struggled against rebounds .opponents, includ15-foot jump sho\S."·
M1ke Gansey, a 6-4 for- West Virginia's zot;~e defense ing its 41-22 advantage on
ward, is second on the tea'm and committed a season-high the boards in the win over
witb 72 3-pointers and .16.8 24 turnovers in its . narrow West Virginia.
point&gt; per game. Patrick victory in November. West
."They definitely helped us
Beilein, the coach's son, has Virginia led 40-35 at halftime win that game, and we will
made 63 3-pointers.
and 75-72 with I :30 left definitely look at !hat coming
··You know they're proba- before missing three straight into this game, to try to do
bly goi ng 10 shoot 25 3s. and one-and-one free throws. that," said Texas forward P.J.
they're capable of making Pittsnogle had two of the Tucker. who averages 16.3
more than half · of them .'' misses.
points and 9.3 rebounds.
Bames said .
"If we turn it over 24 times
Texas, which advanced to
There \ nothing gimmicky now, we , won't have a the Final Four in 2003, is in
Jbo~t We'l Virginia \ ; ll(: - chance." Barnes said.
the round. of 16 for the fourth
ce". ·which' is .built on more
Beilcin say, his 1-3 -1 zorie time in th e last five years.
than the 3-point shot.
"i1 not a gimmick ."
Two years ago, Texas lost in
Coach John Beilein al;o
"lt'sju;t a thin g that we try the round of 16 to Xavier in
' tre"es strong dcfen,, . The to do to have a unique sty le·, the Georgia Dome·.
'

aJ;lout this for_ the next three
months?' I sa~d no. 1 could
. answer questions about this
every sinllle day~ 10 times a
day all the way until the season."
He understands the "media
commotion" over his injury, he
said. Still, he is a little surprised ·- and touched - by
the fuss and outpouring of fan
support the injury created. •
Football players sometimes
get hurt, right?
.
"It's riot like l''ve got cancer
or lost a limb," Palmer said.
"It's just ·knee surgery.'' .
Palmer said he holds no
grudge against von Oelhoffen.
And tt makes no difference that
von Oelhoffen has left the
Steelers to sign with t)le New
York Jets.
The Steelers are still the division rival that Cincinnati wants
to· beat most.
"When I s'tep on the field to
play Pittsburgh, I'm not goin ~
to think,· 'Where's Kimo," ·
Palmer said.
WR Henry pleads ·guilty

to marijuana charge
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) Cincinnati Bengal s wide
receiver Chris Henry pleaded
guilty Wednesday to marijuana
possession, avoiding jail time

after completing a drug rehabilitalion program .
Henrv. who still faces
tircann·, ·~harges in Florida,
paid a ~250 tine and court
~osts, and prosecutors dropped
a speeding charge from his
Dec. 15 arrest here.
In Kenton County District
Court, Henry told JuQge Ann
Ruttle that he has leamed from
his arrest and the 28-day drug
treatment program he went
through.
·
"I see that I am responsible
to my' team and my coach and
to all Bengals fans to be cornrietely drug-free," Henry said.
To all of them, I can only say
.
that I'm smry.' '
Henry could have faced up
to a year in jail. Jason Reed, a
Kenton County prosecutor,
said prosecutors wou'ldn't normally seek jail time on the.misdemeunor ·charge for a firsttime offender with no prior
record.
They had considered a diversion program for Henry, but
dropped that after Henry was
mTested Jan . 28 in Orlando,
Fla ., on felony counts of possession of a concealed firearm,
improper exhibition of ·a
firearm and aggravated assault
with a firearm. That case is
pending.

Mr. Basketball List~ ,.·
.

av THe Assoc•An:o PRESS
2008 - O.J. Mayo, Cinclnnali North College Hill, 6-toot-5, junior. Averaged 28,8 poll\18,
8.8 rebouncjs, 5.8 assls18 and 5 sletlls for Jearn ranked No. r in state for lholhlrd i'NJin
a row. Only loss was to national power Oak Hill (Va,) Academy before more than 16,0PQ
IR Clnclnnatl. Led Trojans back to S1ate tltte defense. Becomes only fourth player to~
Mr. Basketball more than once, joining Jkn Jackson , Greg Simpson and Le6ron Jan..
2005- O.J. Mayo, Clnclnnaff Nor1!1 COllege Hill, 6·5, sophomore. Averaged 28.9 pol'11t,
7.8 rtJbounds, 7.7 aoists and 3.4 steals for team ranked No. 1 In state both of his varW-

ty seasons. Becomes only second sophomore to win th&amp; aWard, behind Leeron Jafna.
Led Nonh,COIIege Hill to first state tournament appeBr8ne.e in 16 years, and ft'm .._..
championship.
·. ·
2004- Jamar BuUor, pma Shaymee, 6·2, sr. Averaged 31 .6 poinls, 8.3· UIIOUI, M
rebounds. 2.8 steaJs per game while &amp;hooting 44 percent from the lield, 37 percent on 3"

pointers. Scored more than 2,400 points in his career, 10th best alltime In Ohio.

Slate.

·

· ·

·

·

Ohio

2003 - LsBron James, Akron 51. Vincent-St. Mary, 6·8. sr. Averaged 31.6 points. 9.6
rebounds, 4.6 assists and .3.4 steals a game. First three-tlme Mr. Basketball wintler. Led
team to fourth straight state tournament appearance. Won Oivfsion.ll title. Drafted with
Ill• Hrst pk:k olltle 2003 NBA draft by lhe Clovelan~ Cavaliers.
·.
2002 - LeBron James, Akron SJ. Vincent·St Mary, 6· 7, jr. Averaged 29 pointe: 8.3
rebounds, 5. 7 asslols and 3.3 steals a game while shoaling 63 pert:ent from tho field.
Third two-time Mr. Basketball winner. Led team to third straight state tournament appa~r
anoe. Won DiviSion Ill !lite 89 frt~stman and aophon')ore.
2001 - ••Bron Jamos. Akron 51. Vlncenl·Sl. Mary. 6·6 112. soph., 25.6 polnlll, 7.5
rebounds~ 7.0 asalsts per game. First sophomore to win Mr. Basketball ~ward.
,.
2000- (tie) Tony Stockman, Mec;lina, 6-2, sr., 25.4 points, 6.1 aSSists, 4.7 reboundl, 3.2
steals per game; SO.S.percent field goals, 84.3 percent free throws. 39.7 percent 3-polnt..
ers; and Chester Mason, Cleveland SoUth, 6·3, sr., 25 points, 13 rebounds, 11 Uliltl
per game.
.
1 ~
1tll9 -Emmanuel Smith, Euclid, 6-3, sc., 28.4 points, 8.3 rebounds, 3.5 IS8illo. 4.5

•.

steats a game.

1918 -'-William "Sonny" Johnson , Gartield Hls., 6·5, sr.. 34.0 poinls, 1,7.6 rolrouf1!ls Pf'r.

0"'""·"
'
11197 ; ·Kenny Gregory, Columbus lndeper)denco, 6-4, st., 25 .1 points, 8.8 oei&gt;Oyndo,

3.1 usrst~ 1.8 steals per geme; 84.7 percent from the field, 43.2 percenl 3-poinlerB.
1918- Jason COH!er, Springfield cam. Con!., 7-0, ·sr., 25.3 poln1S, 13.4 reboundo, 6.6
bloCf&lt;ed shot&lt;, 4.8 ...!siB per game; 62 .t percenl field goals, 37 percent J.polntora..
1~- Damon Stringer, C""'land Hls., 5-11, sr., 24.5 potnts, 7 assls1S, 5 . - per

game.

,

.

The Daily Sentinel ~ Page 83

2006

.

19114- Aaron Hulehins, Lima Cenlral Calholic, 5-10, "'" 25.8 points, 7.8 . - , 5.1
steals per game; 61 percent field goal, 57 percent J..po!nters, 82 percent tree
1893 - Geno Foro, Camb~, S-9, sr., 35.9 polnls, 4.5 rebo\Jnds, 4.5 888il!8 per
game; 2 1680 career points, second highest In Ohio. . ·
,
,
. 1912- Greg Simpson, Lima Senior, 6-1 , sr., 35.3 i&gt;ofnls, 6.7 rebounds, 5.5'1111101S, 3;1
stoats per game: 52.9 pen:enl field goal, 51 percent 3-pointers. n.4 percent kee throws;
45 or more ,points six ffmes; fina110 gam.. averaged 41 poln1S 011 59 percerrr 11hoo11&lt;111t881- Grog Simpson, Lima Senior. 6· 1, Jr., 32.3 polnlS, 6.7 rebo\Jnds, 6.7 . - _ 5.1
&amp;1oals per [IIIITl&lt;l; 50.~ percerrr field goals, 47.2 percenl 3-pointers, 72 pert:8lll frio
throws; 13 games with mor&amp; tnanOO points.
·
.
ttiO- Bob Patton, Voungelown Ubeny, 6-Q, sr., 21 .6 poinls. 8.3 assiS1S, 4 rebounds pet
game; 62 percent field goal, 88 percenl free lhrow percentage.
1Qit-JimJackson, Toledo Macomber, 6-6, sr., 31 .5 points, 11 .2 rebound$, 6.2 1S81ata, ·
3 steals per g....,.
.
1 • -Jim Jackson. To1edo Macomber, 6-6, jr., 26.7 points per game.

·Soriano plays left field for ·Nationals

Beauty of NFL system is that it works
as long as the money rolls in

JUPITER, Fla. (AP) Alfonso Soriano jogged in a
few sl!!ps to catch a routine
fly ball by Albert Pujols, then
BY TIM DAHLBERG
that, often at a high price to tho'e unfortuthrew to second base to douASSOCIATED PR~SS
nate enough to suffer career-ending injurie'
ble off David Eckstein.
or whose performances . like Allen·,, were
by
the
Nice
start
The Dallas Cowboys got the receiver iheir just declinmg. Many others. though , have
Washington Nationals' relucfans loved to hate. The New England made it up on the other end with ' igning
tant left .fielder.
Patriots gave away the kicker their fans bonuses that Jagliabue estimates make up
Soriano agreed to take his
hated to lose. ,
hl!lfthe league's $3.4 billion in annual playnew spot irt the outfield for an
Both moves were baffling, at best. And not ·er costs.
exhibrtion game Wednesday,
And it's hard to argue when the am(,unt of
.
just
because it matters what fans think,
two days after refusing to
beQIIuse
in
the
end
it
really
doesn't.
money
each team can spend on player&gt; has
move from second base.
·
Coaches
and
general
managers
can
huddle
gone
up
$35 million in the las t live yea rs.
"It's a relief for everybody,
in darkened rooms for weeks, emerge blindThose payrolls will skyrocket even more
it really is," manager Frank
by
the
light
and
still
do
something
stupid.
now
because the NFL blinked earlier thi'
ed
Robinson said before the
Owners
can
fall
in
love
with
players
and
month
and agreed to a contract that wi ll add
Nationals played the St. Louis
hand out millions no matter what the poten- nearly a billion dollars in player cos11 in
Cardinals.
tial for disaster may be.
·
exchange for six years of labor peace.
"We get the distractions
The
greatest
thing
about
free
agency
in
the
The agreement increase,; the &lt;,alary cap
away from here and we can
NFL, though, may be tbat teams can recover from $85.5 million to $102 million for next
focus on baseball . now and
from their mistakes quickly,
year, and teams didn ' t wait long before &gt;Wrtgetting this ballclub tuned up
So what if Terrell Owens goes berserk and mg to spend the money.
and ready to go for opening
tackles
Bill Parcells for taking him out of a , Owens got his. and so did Edgerrm James.
day," he said.
~arne.
Alii!
costs the Cowboys is $10 mil- who 1s guar:mteedat least $14.75mrlhonof
Soriano did not comment
money
Jerry
Jones can quickly make up · a four-year $30 milhon pact he signed With
hon,
before the game. He was all
by
charging
more
for nachos and beer when the. beleaguered ,Arizona Cardinals. And '
smiles as pi ayers stretched
the new stadium ·opens ,in Arlington.
Steve Hutchmson got. the nche:' t deal ever
AP photo
and took batting practice, and
That's
because
Owens'
$25
million
confor a guard, $16 mtlhon guaranteed and a
he also signed several auto- Washington Nationals Alfonso Soriano looks away white signtract
with
the
.
Cmvboys
really
isn'
t
a
$25
possible $49 million over seven· years from
graphs.
ing autographs for fans before his team's springtraining basemillion conlract. If the Cowboys don't want the Mmnesota Vtkmgs .
Soriano was an AL All-Star ball game against the St. Louis Cardinals in Jupiter, Fla
TO
after a year, they simply let him go and
Adam.Vinatieri won't get nearly that. much
ihe last four years at second Wednesday. Soriano. agreed to play left field Wednesday and
are
out
nothing
but
a
$5
million
signing
because,
well, he 's a kicker. But h1s s1gn111g
base, and played there this was in the Nationals' lineup for ~is first spring training game.
bonus and a $5 million first-year salary.
by th.e Indianapoli s Colts was a good exams·pring · for the Dominican two days after refusing to move from second base.
Which
is
what
happened
Monday
to
Larry
pie
of why fans should never g~l too attached
. Republic in the World
·
Allen, the guard who was the last link to the to players, no matter what they ve done tor a
Baseball Classic. He has against the Dodgers . But after Struggles at his new position .
Cowboys' glory days. He became disposable team.
never played the outfield in a being listed on the lineup card All he wanted to see was
because of his age and the fact he was due ·$2
Viriatieri won two Super Bowl s for the
in left field, he refused to effort.
major league game.
million n~xt week and was going to count (&gt;atriots on last-second kicks, qnd helped win
Th N · 1
s
·
play
"Just knowing him for a
Bo. wden had threatened to bne
· f peno
· · d o f ttme
·
I I'ee II·rke
altona s got
· $7.5 million toward nexl season's salary cap. t~e 2001 · AFC semifiMal on. a memorahle
in ·ane offseason
trade,onano
with
. All Dallas had to do was show Allen .the ktck through .sw1rhng snow wrth 32 seconds
Texas and general . manager put Soriano on the disquali- he 's going to go out there and
way to the door and wish him good luck . . left against the Raiders.
Jim Bowden and Robinson fied list, which would pte vent give it
II 0
percent,"
And.
hey; if yeu want to come .back at a
He's probably the best clutch ki,ker in the ·
have been trying to persuade him from playing , accruing Robinson sui~. "We're not
cheaper price let us know.
'
history of the game . And, by all accounts. he
. him to switch positions -since service time and receiving his talking about a Gold Glove or
This' isn't baseball, where George probably would have stayed with the Patriots
then. Washington already has $10 million salary.
anything like that. just go out
Steinbrenner ate Kevin Brown's $16 million tl they had shown hrm a lrttle love.
an established second baseBowden said he'd explore a there and do the best you possalary the last couple years, and h\IS to pay
Yet New England let him go. declining to
man, three-time All-Star Jose trade if it would benefit the sibly can.''
Vidro.
Nationals.
Robinson said Soriano
Randy Johnson even more until he collects pay him a paltry $3 million or so de spite ·
Social Security.
·
reportedly having some $20 million in
"My preference would be to never really took 'a "defiant"
Robinson said he consid,
Almosl left out in the tributes to the unused cap money. Maybe an alarm went off
ered the position move per- keep him, you're a much bet- stand in conversations · wjth
departing Paul Tagliabue .last week was the when they real_ized they could buy ·I0 kick:
manent, saying he doesn't te~ te~m wi,th him," Bowden the team. He said it just took
fact that he has - with help from the play- ·ers at Vmatre.rr s pnce.
even consider. Soriano lhe said. But I 11 never close the time for the team's desire to
Indianapolis, meanwhile. didn't mind
ers' association - kept in place a system
bac~up at second base.
· door - ever- on an oppor~ sink in.
· that rewards performance and comes close to ·shelling out a few million to get him, . not
·:we're doing it for the sea- tu'lrty .. to make everybody
"I told him you have to
forcing players to actually play for-pay.
wrth memones strll fresh of the k1ck M1ke
son," Robinson said. "We did- happy.
understand our side of it, and
Signing bonuses may be huge, but with no VanderJagt mrssed rn the playoffs that would
Robinson said he gave I t~ink n_ow.. he does,"
n't ask him to do it for today,
guaranteed contracts there's rarely any com- ,have gotten the Colts mto overt1me &lt;Jgarnst
that's not .the answer we Sonano the opuon of !JOt Robrnson sard. It makes us a
placency among players. The system, tied Pittsburgh.
·
.
.
wanted."
playing Wednesday and mak- · much better ballclub."
together with a salary cap, works, unlike
The Cowboy s took a gamble on TO . The ·
Soriano flied out to lead off ing his outfield debut on
Despite the chaos, Bowden
baseball's dysfunctional labor division.
Patriots took a gamble of their own.
against the Cardinals. He later Thursday for a home game. sa.id he docs not regret mak-.
In the NFL, though, rolling the dice isn't
Tagliabue said at the Super Bowl this year
doubled and scored the · Bu.t he said Soriano wanted to ing the trade..
that the philosophy on guaranteed contracts so hard. More money will be pouring in next
Nationals' first run in the get started now.
"The risk is always there ,''
goes back to the founders of the league, who year, and there will be plentY of time for
"All I wanted to know from Bowden said. "When I made
fourth. .
believed that a significant portion of pay those smart enough to correct any mistakes.
In the bottom of the fourth, him was, was he willing to the Ken Griffey Jr. trade with .
should be for performance.
And that, really, is the beauty of the sysSoriano made the play to dou- play left field," Robinson Cincinnati, everyone said this
•;ouatanteed contracts, within the context tem.
·
ble off Eckstein, who wan- said. "He said he was ready to was one of the best trades in
of
a
safary
~ap,
just
take
money
from
a
playder'ed far from the. bag.
go. he wanted to get at-bats baseball, congratulations; and
er who is not playing and take it away from
he was hurt for four years and
Soriano had been scheduled and get out there and p)ay."
Tim Dahlberg is a 11ational sports colum a player who is playing," Tagliabue said.
to make his first spring
Robinson said he 'd be it was a horrible nade .
nist for The Associated Press. Write to !rim at .
appearance on Monday night patient with Soriano if he
'That's part of the game.''
·
Players /lave generally gone along with tdah/bergap.org

"rows. ·

Mayo

Rumors seem to surround
the Trojans .
t'This has been one of the·
most difficult seasons .I've
from PageBl
had." Mayo said of the phys.ical setbacks and the turmoil .
be separat.ed. ·
.
''At the same time, we've
"We've played all right this gotten through it as a · team
season." Mayo said: ''We've and we'.ve given ourselves
gotten more help from our another chance at winning
team this year. so we didn't the Division III state champihave to do as much."
on ship:·
Last year's Mr. Basketball
College choices: 'Mayo and
plaque stays at Mayo's moth- Walker, unlike most juniors
er's home in Huntington. i1i high school, haven't narW.Va., while her son attends rowed the field imd aren't
school in Cincinnati. He is clo&gt;e to making a decision
watched over by relatives. where they' ll go (separately
friends, NC H coach Jamie · or as a tandem) to college. ·
"We'd like to wait and see.
Mahaffey and hi s teammate s.
every1hing goes,". Mayo
how
"OJ. has matured a lot,''
said.
"There's a couple of
Mahaffey said. ··on the court,
he's a more con sistent and . coaching changes going en.
he'.s shooting the ball a lot We want to see how recruitbetter. He's played the major- ing goes before making a
ity of time at the (shooting decision."
The two have close ties
guard spot), but in our type of
offense, any of four guys can with former University of
coach . Bob
be a point guard at any time. Cincinnmi
Huggins
bul
aren't
close to
He's handled that' responsibility and has taken more of a making up their minds.
''They 've looked into cerleadership role on the team.,.
Still, this hasn't been a tain things but they probably
slam· dunk of a season for won 't make a decis10n until
Mayo or for the Trojans. For after the season n.ext year,"
Mahaffey said.
.
example:
for the time being; winInjurie s and sickness: ·
Mayo has two stress fractures ning a staie championship is
in his left foot that will enough for Mayo.
"The thing l try to do is to
require surgery when the season i~ over. He also has been play as hard as I can every
battling a nagging chest cold time I 'step on the floor,' ' he
.
that; even after several said .
weeks, still leaves him
Olher candidates for the
coughing . ·
20th annual 'Mr. Basketball
Defections and discipline: awa rd included Canton
Turmoil seems to cling to McKinley's Raymar Morgan,
North College Hill's program Bellaire\ Nate Davis, Jon
because of the superstars Diebler of Upper Sandusky,
drawn to it and the sudden Dante Jackson ofGreenfield
success and national acclaim McC lain :. Solon's Dallas
they brought. Keenan Ellis.' a -Lauderd ale and Javonte
6-11 shooter and shol-block- Clamon of Reynoldsburg.
er. joined the team in midSCitMayo will receive a plaque
son a year ago and helped the in tl1e shape of Ohio. He has
team win the ~ tate tit le. But a chance lo match LeBron
he wa1 kicked off the team ·Jamc' mark of three Mr.
midwa y through thi &gt; &gt;ea,on . Ba,kctha ll awards next year.
'

'

Huggins

· everything is great."
· Huggins was forced · out
last August after 16 years as
from PageBl
Cincinnati 's coach . ' He
accepted a $3 million: buyout after a public struggle
to happen," Mayo said of with new Cincinnati presi. going to play for Huggins . dent Nancy Zimpher, who .
"At the same time·, we have disagreed with the way ··
to see where he ends up, Huggins ran the Bearcars
what the school's fan base is program .
He has denied that he has
like, see what the fans think
about him and make sure any kind of an ·agreement'to

Camp .
from PageBl
the other organizations we
fund . . We are •glad to have
Marshall on board.''
A website , www.bartrumandbrown .com, has preregistration forms and other
information on the camp, the
charity auction and golf outing for the camp.
Former Marshall players
and other NFL players whp
are confirmed to be in attendance at the camp this year
include: Marshall Heisman
finalist .and quarterback of
the New York Jets, Chad
Pennington ; former MU and
Indianapolis Colts and
Philadelphia Eagles tackle,
Steve Scuillo; former Herd
long-snapper Chris Massey
of the St. Louis Rams; ~ . R.
Jenkins, former Herd and
retired Baltimore Ravens
kicker: former St. Alb'ans
Red
Dragon,
Georgi.a
Bulldog and Marshall tighl
end Jason Rader of ihe
Miami Dolphins; former
Herd Ail-American defensive end John Goddard, of
the Indianapolis Colts: New
Orleans Saints rj:ceiver Nate
Poole , who finished with the
Herd in 2000; and former
West Virginia running back
who now plays for the
Cincinnati Bet)gals, Quincy
Wilson .
Players who are scheduled
to be at camp include : Mike
Barber. Herd wide receiver
who played for the Bengals,
Arizona Cardinals and San
Francisco 49ers and entered
the
National
College

have Mayo and Walker join
him when he takes a college
coaching job. ·
Speaking at a luncheon in
Canton on Monday, Huggins
said he hoped to . return to
college coaching.
Asked about Mayo arid'
Walker, he said. "They're as
good as advertised."
·A message for Huggins
was left Wednesday with his
attorney.

Football Hall of Fame last Bowens of the Miami
summer; Carl Lee, Herd · Dolphins. There will be at
safety who was a member of least two additional Patriots
40th
Anniversary' teammate s of Brown's,
the
Minnesota Vikings team, a including former teammate
12-year pro a-t cornerback Adam Vinetari. the kicker
with the Vikes and Saints, as who won the Super Bowl for
well .as the former coach at New England and just
WV State 'University (where signed with the Colts. and
he is now fund-raising); for- two more teammates of
mer MIJ safety Rogers Bartrum·s from the Eagles,
Beckett.- who played for the NFC champions in 2004.
The chari ty auction and
San Diego, Chargers and
Cincinnati Bengals; former dinner is on Saturday night
Barboursville and Marshall at the Radisson Hotel in
Huntington .
center Jason Starkey, who is downtown
· retired from the Arizona Tickets are available for thi s
Cardinals; Darius Watts, the event on the website, as well
former Herd receiver who is as in :Stadium Frame and Art
now with the Denver on Third Avenue, acro ss
Broncos; former Cleveland from the Marshall' Football
Brown s
safety
Chris Stadium . More than 750
Crocker, who was just traded item s are expected 10 be aucto the Atlanta Falcons: for- tioned off, raising in the
mer
All-Mid-American neighborhood of nearly
Conference . center John $ 100,000 for the camp.
Wade , who is the starter at
The
Bartrum-B'rown
for . the · Tampa
Bay Celebrity Golf Classic will
Buccaneers after playing at be Sundlly, May · 21, at
Jacksonville ;
Byron Esqu ire Country pub in
Leftwich , who fini shed six th Martha . W.Va. Tliere are
in Heisman· voting in 2002 numerou s sponsors hip level ; .
for MU and now 4uarter- . for golfe rs .
backs the Jack sonville
The
Burtrum-Brown
Jag uars; and last, but cer- Football Camp. sponsored
'.tainly not least, is a Rand, by FiN S_emry Bank. comW.Va. native who played at mince inclulle s: Ri ch and
DuPont High School. then Mary Gannon. Steve Morris .
became a 1-leisman finalist Kemmeth Rivers. Rich
and · winner of the ·Paul Worner. Mike · and . Vicki
Warfield ·
and
Fred Chan&lt;;ey. Cuffy York . Dave
Biletnikoff receiving awards Miller. Stev~ Brown. John
as an All-American in 1996 Justice. Trov Brown. · Mike .
and 1997 at Marshall. Randy Bartrurn . John Montanez
Moss. Moss is now wilh the and Wood y Woodrum.
For information. visit the
Oakland Raiders. after being
drafled in the first round bv weh-.,1te . al : www.hartru - ·'
Minhesota in 19lJ8.
· m&lt;Jnclhrnwn .co m or call
Former WVU QB Mark Ric h Gannon (30-1-697 Bulger of the St. Louis 5640). Mik e c:'hanccy (7 40Ram; , is ·expected to be at l)&lt;J2-21 :I HI nr Ste1·e Morri'
the camp, as is David ( .10-1-52X-h-ll :; !
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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday; March 23. :zoo6

www .mydailysentinel.~om

Thursday, March 23, 2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

:A tournament for all the players Warrant issued for
PONTE VEDRA BEACH.
: Fla. (AP) - The Players
· Championship is the perfect
name for this tournament
known as golf's fifth major,
: for no other reason than it
offers equal opportunity to
every player.
Just look at the diverse list
of winners.·
One year it was Justin
· Leonard, who doesn't hit tt
· very high or very far but
: makes do with hts irons and
putting. The next year it was
· David Duval, im eltte power
player "ho rose to No. 1 in
the world when he won The
Players Championship in
1999 Adam Scott won at age
23. Fred Funk won at age 48.
Hal Sutton conquered the
TPC at Sawgrass with his
accuracy. Tiger Woods won
on his way to completing his
. own version of the Grand
Slam in 2001.
About the only thing they
have in common is they drive
courtesy cars.
'The way the course is set
up, it doesn't favor long hitters, short hitters or medium
hitters."
Duval
said
Wednesday morning on the
practice range. " It favors
good play:·
That's largely true any
week in golf, although the
Pete Dye-designed Stadium
Course does the trick without
having to-be tricked up - at
least beyond what's already
there, namely that tsland
green for the par-3 17th.
. For all the hysteria about
distance in golf. the PGA
Tour has never put Saw grass
on stewids. Since it became
the permanent home of The
Players Championship in
1982, Sawgrass has been
lengthened by a mere 236
yards.
And It remams as demandtng as it was 25 years ago.
"It's not a bomber's par. adise," said . Scott Verplank,
: who finished one shot behind
· Funk last year. "If you miss it
stdeways, it seems the penal. ty ts more severe than a lot of
: courses we play. You can
· miss it by a yard or 20 yards
: on some courses and might
· have to wedge out. If you
. mi~s tt by 20 yards here, you
have to re-tee."
The richest event on the
. PGA Tour - an $8 million

CLASSIFIED

Randy Moss' agent

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - A warrant has been
issued for C~arleston lawyer
Dante DiTrapano for fail mg
to appear in court in Pinellas
County, Fla., a clerk for the
county's 6th Judicial Circuit
said Wednesday.
DiTrapano, who serves as
the agent for Oakland
Raiders wide receiver Randy
Moss, was arrested last week
at a St. Petersburg, Fla., hotel
on a felony charge of possession of crack cocaine. His
wife Teri and three other people were also arrested.
Hote I staff had calle(l
police to report a disturbance

Cavs

AP photo

Ann Leonard, of' St. Louis, Mo., waits for players from a spot overlooking the 17th green,
while her husband Randy, left, and son Kyle, right, sleep, at Sawgrass Wednesday during the
practice round of the The Players ChampionshiP golf tournament 10 Ponte Vedra Beach, Fl.

from Page BJ

winners do not have a maJor
champtOnshtp to thetr credit.
But there's always room for a
surpri.sc. such as Craig Perks.
an unknown from New
Zealand 1\'hO went eaglebirdie to take the lead. and
chipped in for par to finish off
his sorpnsing win.
"I love thts place," Brad
·Faxon said. "It's one of the
few courses that makes you
think off the tee. Angles have
a lot to do wtth tl. Guys who
like to hu dnver everywhere
are gomg to have trouble."
The l?ar 5s are not automatic birdtes, even though most
can be reached 10 two. The
II th has a split fairway fbr
the approach, separated by
water. A lake guards the right
side of the 16th. Even the
"dry" par 5s- Nos. 2 and 9
- have so many clumpy
mounds and deep bunkers
that it's easier to get close
from 80 yards with a sand
wedge than from just off the
green.
"This is not power golf
over here," Vijay Singh satd.
"You don't take on the golf
course like you do on othe'r
major events. It plays very
much like Harbour Town Into the trees. out of the trees,
small greens and the rough ts
very thick. It's a test of golf
where everybody· comes in
play, and you never kno"

James' final two assists .set
up Jones and Murray for 3pointers in overtime. A fa~t­
break slam by James with 1:30
left put Cleveland ahead 116lll.
Bt'tt Felton hit a 3 from the
comer and seconds late~ added
two free throws for yet another
tie.
"! had it gbing," Felton srud,
"but LeBron is one of a kind."
James, who went 16-for-23
from the line,' followed wtth
two free throws for a !!8-1!6
lead. Felton then spun his way
· to the hoop to tte it forthe 16th
and final tune at I t 8 wtth 20
seconds left.
Cavaliers coach Mtke Brown
satd James called his own number for the winner.
"! wanted LeBron to drive
and have a guy to kick the ball
to," Brown srud of the play he
onginally designed during a
timeout. "On his way out,
LeBron told me he would
make the shot and wasn't gomg
to ea~s it.
' I'll live with him taking the
shot at t)le end of every smgle
game."
Cleveland (39-29) has won
three straight at home after a
three-game road losing streak
and is three wins shy of la~t
season's total with 14 to play.
The
Cavaliers
lead
Washington by four games in
the battle for the fourth seed in
the Eastern Conference and
play three of their next four at

purse with $1.44 million to
the winner - gets started
Thursday with a few chances
of rain during the week, but a
forecast that is bright enough
for the tour to believe it might
fimsh on schedule. Three of
the
last
six
Players
Championships have been
dectded on Monday because
of rain.
If tt stays firm and dry,
chances are it will feel like a
major. Lee Janzen won at 5under 283 when the course
played like a U.S. Open, and
Duval won in '99 at 3-under
285 under similar conditions.
Woods plays Thursday
afternoon without the benefit
of an extra practice round. He
was absent Wednesday to fly
to California and check on his
father's he'alth.
This will be the first time
all year that all the top l 0
players have been assembled
at one tournament. Sergio
Garcia skipped the Match
Play Championship, while
Scott did not play at Dora!.
That doesl) 't mean any of
the top l 0 will be holding the
Waterford crystal trophy at
the end.
Woods and Scott are the
only players from the top 10
who have won ·this tournament. The roll call of champions is impressive - only ,six

who is going to win:·
No one expected Funk.
that 's for sute.
He was two years away
ftom the Champions Tour, a
self-descnbed "He rbie the
Love Bug" 10 a field of
Ferrari 's. But he kept it tn the
shott grass, had a great week
wtth the putter and stood 5
feet from the cup with a par
putt on the final hole to win.
When he made it. Funk
removed his cap and slung it
to the ground.
He ltves in Ponte Vedra
Beach and spends plenty of
tttne practtcmg on the
Stadium Course. There is
nothing better than seeing the
road lined with banners of
every winner from The
Players Champtonshtp:
'Th
d
· e money gets spent an
all the other things you kind
of forget about," Funk said.
"But when l drive up there, I
wtll always be remmded ol
the tact that 1 was a Players'
champion in '05."
Who's next?
There are 144 players in the
field, so it could be anybody.
"Everyone who comes here
thinks they have a chance,"
Davis Love Ill said. ''You
have to do everything well.
You can't JUSt drive it well.
You have to putt tt well ... you
have to do tt all

and the officers allegedly saw
cocaine in plain sight in the
room. The officers said they
seized 73 pieces of crack
cocaine and 21 grams of
powder cocaine .
DiTrapano, 43, was scheduled to appear in court
Tuesday morning to discuss
the conditions of his bond,
according to the unidentified
clerk .
DiTrapano couldn't be
reached
for
comment
Wednesday and a message
left for one of his law partners at DiTrapano, Barrett
and DiPiero was not immediately returned.
home, where they are 25-10.
The top four clubs in each conference get home-coun advantage m the tirst round.
James tmproved to 6-0 over
the second-year the Bobcats,
but it wasn't easy. CharlDtte
battled back from a 13-point
deficit after being outscored
13-2 at the foul line in the frrst
' half.
"We listened to the official,"
coach Bernie Bickerstaff said.
"He said the Cavs were getting
fouls because they were going
to the basket, so we attacked
and were rewarded for it."
Charlotte outscored the
Cavaliers from the line 21-12
after halftime.
Drew Gooden ·and Murray
scored 19 points apiece for
Cleveland. which is 9-0 when
James gets a triple-double.
Notes: When Bobcats G
Kevin Burleson made a thirdquarter layup. it ended a streak
of 33 stratght missed field
goals by the rookie in 19 games
since Jan. 13. ... Bobcats rookIe G Alan Anderson had season
htghs of 17 points and stx
rebounds. ... Cavs G Larry
Hughes, who had finger
surgery Feb. 14, IS "progressing tine," according to Brown.
Hughes remains on a timetable
of 8-1 0 weeks to retum, which
could enable him to play in the
playoffs... . The Bobcats are ~
29 and have lost 18 of their last
20 on the road. ' ... Charlo!le
used its 24th different starting
lineup .... Wallace. who had 27
points Tuesday night. sat out
w1th a sore left calf. Kmght
missed his second straight
game wtth a grom stram.

~egister

(304) 675-1333

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

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

' The Home National
: Bank will auction the
· following Items on
: Saturday, !.larch 25,
. 2006 at 10:00 a.m. at
; the bank's parking
tot:
· 1999
HYUNDAI

Is, with no warranties

expreoaed or tmplled.
For an appointment
to see, call 949-221 o,
ask lor Sheila.
(3} 22,23,24.

A C C E N T

KMHVD14N1XU43790
1
1986 FORD F150
1FTCF15NOGLA4869
3
2000 CHEVY TAHOE
4

X

4

1GNEKt 3T5YJ102211
1999 CHEVY SILVER·
ADO
4X41GCEK19V6XE18618
9
The Home N'atfonai
Bank reserves lhe
right to reject any and
att bids. All vehicles
are sold, as Is where

Public Notice
Syracuse VIllage wtll
be accepting bl~s on
a 1990 Jeep 4 Door -4
wheel drive Cherokee
until noon on April 6,
2006. Blda will be
opened at the council
meeting.
The vehicle will be
sold "AS IS" Ieos fire
and oalety equipment
and hao no written or
expreoeecl warranty.
Minimum btd accepted for thla vehicle witt
be ssoo.oo.
Bids

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

must be sealed and
marked "Jeep Bid."
Council reserve&amp; the
rtghl to reject any
and/or all bids.
For an appolntmant
to see the vehicle call
740-992-7777.
Bids may be mailed
to Clerk's office at
P.O.
Box
266,
SyraCUM, Ohio 45779
or dropped off at
2581 Thtrd Street.
(3} 23, 30

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
County: Meigs
The
following
applications and/ or
verified complaints
were received, and
the following draft,
proposed, or final

modification or ' revocation of licenses,
permlla, leases, variances, or certificates ;

and the approval or
disapproval of plans
and spectllcations.
" DRAFT ACTIONS"
are written statements of the director
of
Environmental
Protection's
(Director's} Intent
with respect to the
Issuance, denial, etc.
Ol I permil, license,

order, ate. Interested
persons may submit
wrllten pomments or

a

actions were isaued,

meeting

regarding

by

Draft
Actions
Comments or public
requests
meeting

the

Protection

AEP - PHILIP SPORN

emergency orders);
the Issuance, denial,

request

Ohio

Environmental

.

(OEPAJ last week.
"ACTIONS" Include
the adoption, modlfl·
cation, or repeal of
orders (other than

Agency

public

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

American Electric Power Company's
Philip Sporn Plant, located in New
Haven, WV is seeking personnel in the
Operations Department. Minimum
· qualifications are an Associate
/Technical and/or equivalent. Regular
full-trme positions. Overtime and
rotating shift schedule as required.
Entry leyel wage rate of pay is $15.48
per hour. Benefits include medical,
dental, vision, 401 k and retirement.
Interested candidates should submit
their resumes to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pleasant
Valley
Nur s1ng
and
Rehabilttat10n Center '' a I 00-bed longterm care fact!ity that prov1dcs intermediate
and sk1lled care needs to residents Come
JOin

our health care organrzauon where we

prov1de excellence tn care Applicant "Il l
function as an LPN with additional dull es as

a treatment nurse Long term experience

P.O. Box 389

preferred .
POSITIONS AVAILABLE·
LPN- Fu llt1me
RATE
WILL
BE
BASED
ON
EXPERIENCE
Benefits include
• Flex scheduling (mc ludmg 12 hour sh1 f" )
• Sh1fl d1ffercnt~al
• Weekend pos1110ns

New Haven, WV 25265

• Tra1mng prograQl for new

AEP-PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Attn: Human Resources

Resumes should be received no later
than: March 31, 2006 '
An Equal Opportunity Employer
M/F/DN

graduate~

• Health Insuran ce single/fam ily plan
• hpen ence pay and recent upgrade 111

rales
APPLY IN PERSON OR CALL
Angela Cleland, DON

(304) 675-5236

pti)

AAIEOE

. . . ,.

.-&lt;aa··-•

Environmental

lng. or ranewing

within 30 days of
notice of the Draft
Action . "PROPOSED
ACTIONS" are written

Protection Agency,
P.O.
Box
t049,
Columbus, Ohio
43216-1049
(Telephone: 614-6442129).
" FINAL ACTIONS"

permit,

of

the

PLliMBICRS &amp; I'IPEFITTERS LOCAL
#168 .Joint o\pprenticeship Training
Committee is recruiting a ne"' class
of apprentices.
Applications will he given out from I :00 PM
until 5:00 I'M, Monday through Friday from
May 8th through May 19th at the Training
Center, 119 Wood Str&lt;el. Marietta, Ohio.
Applkanls musl be IM )ears of age and be a
high school graduate or have aGED
equi••alency. All applicants will be requir&lt;d
In take applicahle a,ptitude tests in
accordance with the p~ocedure eslablished
by the apprenticeship committee. i\n
administralinn fee nf Hflt't'n 1$15.1HII dollars

must accompany ea&lt;:h returned apphcation.
The apprentic~ t~rm is 5 ~ears. &lt;.'onrsisting of
nn the job training as well as rrlatt&gt;d nening

clas.sroom training. and result'i in the final
status of Journe~ man Plum her and/nr
l'tpefitter. i\11 applicant'"'" he wnsidcn•d
regurd tu

g~ndcr. race, rolor,

relii!:IOn or nationaj or1~in.

. . --.

license,

•

r

a

1

Proposed

We are mixed breed ( 1
male and 1 lemale) dogs,
black wtth tan marktng and
btg, mqutnng eyes We are
lool&lt;~ng lor a home wtth a
famlly who will love us as
much as we love the m We
hsten well, learn qwckly,
enjoy walktng and playing
Please call (740)379·9142
to meet us

(7401446·8217 5pm·9pm

number ada
alweye conflden

)lOBo:~

n11

lat.
&gt;-Current rate card
·

Root Eo1o1e
dYertlaament• art
ubjact to
tho
ederal
Fal

~All

wtll not know

Found Tuesday 3-14 small
whtle dog, tn Cemp Conley
area call to tdenttfy '3o4-

Male Cocker Spante l at
Metgs Primary

School

CALL 740-992-5066

r~~rl
Cross

Creek

Auctton

Buff1IIO
Frt ntght 7 pm Country
band Star-Light S5 DO
adr'niSSIOM
Sal 6pm large auctton
seller Ron Price + lots or
used merchandtse

740-992-4169

Child/Elderly Care .................................... 190
ElectrlcaVAefrlgeratlon . ,,.....•..•..••...•.... ,•,,... 840

Buotneoa Opportuntty ................................. 21 0
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...... ................ ~ .. 790

Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanke .......................................... 01 0

Equipment for Rent .••............. ;·······-··-·· ..... 480
Excavating ..••••.. , .... .......... .......................... 830

Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
Farms for Rent ............. ................................ 430
Farms for Sale ......................................... 330
For Lease .................................................... 490
For Sale ....................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade ....................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... sao
Fuml1hed Rooms ..................................... :.450
Oener•J Hauling ................................... ....... 850
Glveaway ...................................................... 040

Heppy Ado ........................................... ........050
Hay a Gratn ..................................................640

Help Wonted .................................................110
Home lmprovements .................. ................. 810

Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Gooda ....................................... 510
Hou1e1for Rent ......................................... 410
In Memortam ................................................ 020
lnsurance ...... .... ....... ... ........................... .. .... 130
Lawn le Garden Equlpment .•.........•.•. ......... 660

Llveotock ......................................................63~ .
Loat and Found ...... ,................................... 060
Loti &amp; Acreage ............................................350
Mlacellaneoua ..............................................170
Ml1cellaneoua Merchandise ......................540
Mobile Home Repalr....................................860
Mobile Homeafor Rent •••••••••••••••....••... ....... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ...... ..................... 320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .............. ,........740
Mualcatlnatrumenta ... .•....••.•..•.•........•..... ..• 570
Per8onala ..................................................... 005
Pete tor Sale .... .. ,, ................................. ... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .......................... .......... 820
Proteaalonal Servlcea ........ ............. ............ 230

ad uln Memory"·

of • loved one.
For more lnforma-

tlfln. conYct your
loc.l Ohio Valley
Publlshln8 offlca.

~nllipolis

MAKE
SOMEONE'S
DAY!

Radio, TV 6 CB Repair ......................... 160
Reel Eatate Wllnted ................................ ,..•• 360

SChoolalnstructlon .....................................150

SHCI • Plonl 6 Fertilizer ............................. 650

Situation• Wanted ..................... .... ....... ....... 120
Space for Rent ••••.•••..•• ,..............................460

Sporting Goodo ......................... ,..

mml!• m:ribUnF

.. ..... 520

SUV'e lor Sale.:.................................. ......... 120

(740) 446-2342

Trucks for Sale ................................... ... .. 115

The Daily Sentinel

vans Fo'r Sale ................. ................... ........... '730

(740) 992-2155

Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .... .............. 620

Upholotary .. ·.........

.. .............................. 870

wanted To Do .................................... ....... .. 180
Want,&lt;~ to
y~ Sat.

~3()~~~6~75-1333

..,-- Yard

Ront ................ ................. 470
Gottlpotlo....
. ................... 072

a...-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074

Yord S.le·PI. Ptoooont ................. ., ............ 076

..

'

5

HA~ A CHANa; OF
(2.t;;:A4'\t~ f/fii/Z. SI(IN·

6472 EOE
Overbrook Aehab tlttatton
Center ts currently accepttOg applicatiOns for a AN
Supennsor
Compehttve
pay scale and benettt
The
package avatlable
avatlable Shtft IS 7P· 7A'11ilAII
tnterested
applicants
should piCk up an apphcatlOn at 333 Page Street ,
Mtddleport, OH For further mformatt on, please
contact Hollte at 740-992·

HElP WAiml&gt;

LEARN
TO
)-'-J

DRIVE

~';t

• F'INANCING .I.V.I.IL.t.SLE

6472 EOE

l.ho

110

' JOB PLACEMENT
' ENROLLI~G feN~

.
1

HELPWArmD
ELECTAIANS

TRACTOR TRAILER
T RAINING CENTERS

WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800-334-1203
100 WORKERS NEEOED
Assemble Crafts,
wood ttems

To $480/wk
Materials provtded
Free tnformatmn pkg
24Hr

601-428-4649
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·8B2·2645
Attentton Drtvers
A&amp;J
Trucktng IS lookmg tor
Dnvers w / 1 yr OTA ,
Expeqence for Aegtonal
Hauls Average pay 40's to
mtd SO's Home every
Weekend
call
Kent

(8001462·9365
AVON I All Areas 1To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears, 304·

675·1429
COORDINATOR·

The

Metgs County Chamber of
Commerce IS accepttng
resumes for the postlton of
Chamber
Coordtnator
Thts positton requtres
excellent wntten and ver ·
bal commumcatton skills ,
organtzattonal skills and
sell mottvat10n The candt·
date must possess strong
leadershtp sktlls
Send
res umes to 238 West Mam
Street
Pomeroy Ohto

OSCO lndustnes
Inc.
Jackson
Otvtston has
openmgs lor electnctans.
All applicants must have
knowledge and e~eperlence
tn a manufacturing environment , be wtllmg to work
any shift and have at least
2 years expenence m
tndustnal matntenance
Pay
$16

rate

Darst Home needs help·
3-1 1 shtft, 4 days a weeK

(740)992·5023
Driven Needed:
CO l Ortvers w'l lbng to
drtve tor local ready-mtx·
concrete company
Expenence IS preferred
but not necessary Med
msurance &amp; other beneltts
avatl&amp;.ble after watttng
pertod Dnver mu st be
wdltng to do pre-matnte·
nance on truc ks &amp; equtp-mE!nt yard worj, &amp; other
mtscellaneous chores
Expenence opera ttng
equtpment &amp; extra skills
such as
Welding a plus
Call Aobertsburg
(304)937·3410
or lakm (304 )773-5234
Located tn Mason County
near Buffalo WV
Ht nn g part-ltme Server,
Dtshwasher &amp; Kttchen
Prep Apply tn person
Jlmanettls Ptzza Buckeye
Htlls Ad Rio Granae

$14 875

Painters wanted,' With
eKperle nce or wtlhng to
learn Leave message

Complete benefits package tncludmg medtcal,
dental tnsurance and penston plan

Insurance Agency IOOktng
for a, mot1vated licensed
Ohto Property &amp; Casuafty
Producer, wtlh a proven
track recofd Salary, commtsston and beneftts.
dependant on expertence
Interested
producers
please subm tt resume to
The Datly Sentinel. PO
Box 729-6, Pomeroy&lt;
Oh tD 45769
local Insurance office
(Meigs Co) seektng moll·
vated person for staff post·
!ton
Expenence helpful
but not reqUired Please
send resume to Sentmel,
P 0 Bo,.. 729-3 Pomero)l,
Oht ~ 45769

Send resume to
OSCO lndustnes , Inc

PO Box 327
Jackson. Ohio 45640
Expertenced Grtll Coo,k &amp;
Food Prep App ly m per- ,
son . Parkfront D1ner, 314
Second Ave, Galllpolts
For a hm1ted ttme make
50% sellmg Avon Call

(740)446·3358

Dtrector
Mamthnance
Overbrook Rehabthlatton
Cent~T IS now accepting
resum es for the posttion of
1
Mamtenance Dtractor. The
qualtfted candtdate must
possess strong verbal and
wntten
communtcatlon
sktlls tric ludtng techniCal
report wnttng and record
keeptn9 Must l'lave expe1

Now accepting apphcaIIOns for Cake Oi!co.rattng
pos•tlon and expenenced
Produce
Clerk
Send
resume to
Eastmans
Foodland, c/o Ohto Valley
Supermarkets, P 0 Box

769, Galhpohs, OH 45631
Now htnng
Paramedtcs

to
(865)675-o432
ATTN Geoff Haas

CPS. Inc EOE
Fuel truck dnver posttton
available Stratght truck ,
local roufe Competlitve
'pay Good hours, good
beneftts. None Hazmat &amp;
tanker endorsements will
be
constdered
Ma tl
resume and copY ol dnvtng record to CLA Box 555,
clo Galltpolts Tnbune, PO
Box 469 , Galltpolts, OH

plumbthg, electncal tele1
phone a d cable tnstallatlon , p tnttng , ground
work.
e aluatton
and
tnspech&lt;m I emergency
equtpment. 1em assembly,
and botler system opera!ton
Must have knowledge o1 OSHA ltfe Safety
' Code
Long Term care
expertence preferred but
not requ tred
Ouahfted
candtdates may send
resume to Charla BrownAN
LNHA.
McGut re
Adm iniStrator 333 Page
Street. Middleport, Oh io
45769 EOE

Fu ll, lime Medical Clatm
btller No experience nee
assary Must be d~Hatled ,
orgarllzeel, good corpputer
and typtng skttl s Please
apply m person at Famtly
Oxygen, 70 Ptne Streel ,
Galltpolts No phone calls
please

Medt
Home
Health
Agency Inc seektng PAN
Speech
Therap tst lor
Galltpolts, Ohto and sur·
roundmg area licensed
both tn Ohto and West
Vtrgmta prelerred We offer
a
compet tttve
salary
E0 E
Please
send
resume to 352 Second
Ave nue, Oall tPohs, OH
4563 1 Ann Judte Reese
or ema il JreeseOmsacorp com

Greenhouse Laborer and
Sales Person wanted ,
starling tmmedtately 740· -

Medt- Home Pnvate Care
tS IOOktng tor a Part-Ttme

'

350·3104

AN

Help
want6d
Cooks
Cashters &amp; Ortvers Apply
Wlth!n PtZZB PIUs. 1044
Jackson Ptke. Galltpolts,

Must have an Ohio AN
Ltcense ApohcafiOns may
be piCked up at 430 2nd
Ave Galltpolts Oh to Ask
for John Kearns

Ware house / Deltver 'i
Posttton lmmedtate open·
mg full-lime Apply at
Lifestyle Furn tture 3rd and
Olt"e Galltpohs 9 30arn5 OOpm no phone calls

Needed
Exper ienCed
Off1Ce ASS IStant Book
keeptng &amp; computer skills
necessary (740)441-7295
or (7401379-2245

&amp;

EM'f.s

Call

(7401354·5433 o• 1·866·
971-'5433
NOW HIRINGIII
lnfoCts ton'" Galhpolts has
postiiOns avatlable starting
at S81hour We 'TTlake calls
on behalf of non-proltf and
poltttcal organtzaMns

NO EXPERIENCE
necessary!
oHealt/1 Beneltts
oPatd Tratntng
oAet:rement plan
oWeekly pay
oWeekly bonus plan
oFtxed schedules
oCompeltltve wages
oProfesstanal atmosphere
Cell to schedule an
Interview today!

(740)4,46-7442
ext. 2456

~=~= t~cl~~~:~a~~~~:~;

$16 7B/Hr PT Contract
posthOn for local Federal
Olllce tt;lroug h FY06 1
Yr Operai(H exp
reqwed
Apply online at
www conc6rdps com
CPS lnc,or fax resume

45631

(7401367·7680

Hru&gt; Wi\N'IID

to

125

~5769

Courter, FT Mu st have
perfect drtvtng record
Resume to PO Box 33
Gallipolis, OH 45631

www.comlcs.com

&lt;e 2006 by NEA, Inc.

• NO EXPERIEN CE NECESSARY
• FULL TIME ClASSES
'COL TRAINING

Wenled to Buy....................... ..... .. ...........090

f,)omt :t}alFa!Snnt ll.\t&gt;gi!StFr

AR£1'1' r fA/lid 'IIlEy 'RE So
"'ft-11 c;~ MY Ct-il1111) [)oli'T

ALLIANCE

Bualnesa and Buildings .........•..............•.. 340

You. and place an

110

675·6639

Building Supplies ... .................................... 550

provide • Thank

--f~£ f-lQIV'/ WINT5R rt!Trw

Overbrook Rehabilttat1on
Center IS currently acceptIng applications for a AN
Supervtsor Compettttve
paY scale Bf1d beneht
The
package avatlable
avatlable shtft ts 3P-11P
All tnterested appbcattOns
shCJuld ptdl: up an appltcatton at 333 Page Street,
Mtddleport OH For further tnformatton , please
contact Hollie at 740-992-

I \ 11'1 ()\\11'-l
.., 1 H\ II I ..,

Found the most well
behavetl young dog found
on Par~ Dnve phone to
claim 304·675-5265

or Per·sm1s
Breaking into house on Cook
Road. Please return or call
about blue lock box.

aren~t only for
buylne or. selllna
lt•rns,. you can use
, thla widely read
section to vtrlah
someone •
Happy Birthday,

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Wanted To Buy
Metgs ·
County
Store Scnpt,
Sto re Tokens, and currency from Ractne. Pomeroy,
and Middleport Banks

ly. (740)379·9142

Auloa for Sale ....... .. ..................................... 71 o
Boals &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750

CLASSIFIED$

Should Run 7 Days

Beauttl ul black/tan dogs
wtth collars and btg tovmg
eyes looktng for thetr famt-

Auto Repalr .................................................. no

THE

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Pt.lbllshtng re. .rvee thll right Ia ldlt, retect, or cancel ln~t ~ at any Ume. Error• mutt be reportH on tne flrtt
Trlbu,...S.ntlnei·Reglster will b. respon.lble for no more then the cost of the ep.~ occupied by IM error end only the flrtt in...-tlon.
not be II
any IOM or expen.. thllt rnufll ffom the publlcMion or omlu lon of an IKtv.rtiMmtnt. Corr.ctton will be made In the flrlt IVIilabla .ctltion. • Box ";;~":;::.~:~
ar. alwaye conlkMnllal • Current l'l!te card app/IM • All rMI ntata advertisement• .,.. subj.ct to the -Feder•l Fair Housing Act of 1168 • Th 1s r

Absolute Top Dollar U S
St iver and Gold Coms,
Proofsets, Gold Rmgs,
Pre-1935 US Currency,
Solltatre Dtamonds- M T S
Cotn Shop, 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis, 740·
446·2842

1.

4x4's For Sale ............................... ............... 725
Announcement ...............• ...•....•..........•..... ... 030
Antiques ................ ......... .............................. 530
Apartments for Rent ................. ,•. .....•.....••.. 44D
Auction and Flea Market................•........... ,oao
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorlea .......................... 760

Nog~~~

B··-···

740.992·6040

CLASSIFIED INDEX

1-'P.rsn,n

~ds

tJi

..

1 mate, 1 female Sheltte to
lovtng homes, ma1Ure,
house
tratned
Catl

- ~~~

Aclion,

....

r

ngly accept an
dvertisamant
I~
lolatlon of the law.

variance which Ia not
by
a
preceded

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Buslne•s Paya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00
Thuraday for Sunday•~

Now you can have borders and graphics
AL-t.
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 5011 for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

• All ads must be prepaid•

~r: ~.mMw.~.v. .~l . r:~....~.~-B.m.__.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

)-This newspape
ccepta only he~~
wanted ada meetln
EOE otondanlo.

or

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p .m.
Monday-Frld•y for Ineertlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-C olumn : 1:00 p . m .
Frldav For Sundays Paper

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

).We

may be appealed to
the ERAC by filing an
respect
to
the
appeal Wllhln 30 days
issuance,
denial,
are actions of lhe
of Issuance of the
modification, revocadirector which are
final action. ERAC
tion , or renewal of a
effective
upon appeals must be filed
~rmit, license, or
issuance or a stated
with : Environmental
variance.
Wrillen
effective
date . Review
Appeals
comments
and . Pursuant to Ohio
Commission,
309
requesls for a public
Revised
Code
South Fourth
meeting regarding a Section 3745.04, a
Street, Room 222,
proposed action may final action may be Columbus,
Ohio
be submitted w'ilhln appealed
to
the 43215. A copy of the
30 days of notice of Envlronmenlal appeal
must
be
the Proposed Action. Review Appeals
served on the direc.An adjudication hear- Commission (ERAC) tor within 3 days after
Ing may be held on a (formerly known as filing the appeal with
proposed action 11 a the
Environmental
the ERAC.
hearing request or Board Of Review} by
Approved Permission
objection is received
a person who was a lor open burning
by the OEPA within party to a proceeding OACChapter 3745-19
30 days of Issuance before the director by Columbia Twp. Vol .
of the proposed filing an appeal with· · Fire Dept.
action · Written comIn 30 days of nollce of 30605 State Route
ments, requests for
the Final Action . 143
public meellngs, and Pursuant to Ohto Albany, OH
adjudication hearing rev1sed code section Action
Dale•
requests must be
3745.07,
a Final 0310612006
sent to: Hearing Action Issuing, deny- Facittty Description:
Clerk, Ohio
ing, modifying, revok- Atr
Identification
No.:
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
OB-06-53-28
(3) 23
statements

director's Intent with

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

Display Ads

DeltliPtlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

:

.....CWO . . . . . . . '"'"9._._ .::.. ....... .-_

subm1HeCI

must be

wilhnut

.

l...t.la.c-1••

.....

Word Ads

AD. • Star1 Your Adt With A Keyword • Include C:ompl4!te

Housing Act of 1968

.~.._ • •, • • ~~ · 1""-01 . . . . . . . &amp;.:;' .... _
1'&gt;-=11.....-~-__,.::a
~

._,.tip Cow.ftl)' OH

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

pjJllOB.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

1-877-463-6247
ext. 2456
Ohta Valley Home Health,
htrlng Full Time AN
and1 Per Otem MSW
Acceptmg appltcattons tor

Inc

LPN. CNA, STNA, CHHA,
PCA Competittve Wages,
Mileag e and beneftts
tncludmg
Health
Insurance Apply at 1480
Jackson Ptke, Galhpolts or
2415 Jackson Avenue
Pomt Pleasant WV or
phone toll free 1-866-4411393
01'110 Valley Home Health
Inc htrtng Full Ttma AN
Case
Manager
Compettltve Wages and
Benefits 1ncluatng Health
Insurance Apply at 1480
jackson Ptke GalhpoltS or
2415 Jackson Aven ue WV
or phone ton free 1·866441·t393
Overbrook Aehabtillat ton
Center IS curre~tly accept·
mg applications for a RN
SupervtSOJ The avatlable
shth IS 7P·7A All Interested appliCants should ptck
up an apphcatlon at 333
Page Street Mtddleport
OH For tur1her tnformatton please contact Holl te
at 740-992 ·6472 EOE
AN s neetlecl tO prow:1e
ftrst·&amp; td .!11 construct ton
sties between Cheshtre
ancl New Haven FT-PT

F

r

S

t

Atd/EAIOccupatlonaiiSatet
y expenence helpful Call

(888)269·6!!44

ParHtme bartender needed for Good Ttmes ,
Pomeroy, must be 21 to
apply.

POSTAL JOBS
$15 67-$2~ 98/hr
now
htrtng For appltcatton and
tree governement Job tnlo
call Amencan Assoc of
Labor
1·913-599-8042,
24/hrs emp serv
AN/LPN (Home Health)
Pa rt or Full ttme, per ViSit
or Murly, 401 K, cafelena
plan mtleage, Untform
allowance , CEU retmbursement. Sam s Club,
Health &amp; Ltfe Ins , PTO
whiCh accumulates !rom
!1rst work day
Top pay tn Tn-State
Stgn-On Bonus

The Metgs County Health
Department Is accepting
epphcatlons
for
the

lnterayslem Coordinator
of the Melg• County
Family and Children
Firat Council. Duttes
tnclude but are not ~tmtted
to development, tmple·
mentatiOn and evaluatiOn
of cOunlywtde servtce
coordtnattO!i and other
plans, prog ram rnonttonng,
wo(ktng wtt h commumty
groups,
represenhng
Fam1ly and Chtldren Fnst
Counctl at reqwed meet·
tngs and tra tn tngs and
occasiOnal travel

Qualifications:
The successful candtdate
will possess the lollowtng
• Mtntmum of Bachel ors
Degree
Masters preferred, tn related lteld combtned wttl;l expenence
workmg tssues mvolvtng
chtldren and thetr famtltes
• Strong communtcatton,
management and organt·
zallOnal s~tlls
• Able Ia multttask
• E1tperttse tn grant wr tttng
• Competent compuler
sktll s mcludmg use ot
M tcrosoft Offtce app hc a·
ttons
Benenta.
The Metgs C:ounry Health
bepartment otters employ·
ees a competttt...a benefits
package PostiiOns ts full ·
ttme wtth starttng salary
dependent on educatton
ana expertence
Interested
cand tdates
sMuld send a tette r ol
tnterest resume, complet ed ct..,. tl serviCe appltcatton
and three letters of refer ence lo Larry 0 Marshall
Health
Commtsstoner
Metgs
Coun t
Haat'th
Department . 1, 2 East
Memonat Dr Su1te A
Pomeroy Dh 45769 Ctvll
sel'viCe appltcattons may
be p1cked up at tl'le Health
Department or oh the web
at the lollowtnQ address.
http ljwww das ohto ooytbr
dlpdf 'lobapo2 odf
The
pos1t1pn wil l rematn open
ur'llll ftlled
Position avatlable lot Farm
and Lawn Parts assoctate
Healtl'l and rettremem benefits \lust have cmnj;:IJ:er
s~tlls Pre ter !arm oack grouna Sena resume lo
CLA
Box
566
C/0
Gs lltpolts De tty Tno une
PO Box 469 Galllpolt&amp;,
OH 45631

1740)992·5023
Needed
tmmed talely
babysttter 1n my home
Afternoon shift vano us
days
mclude s • some
weekends
Mu st
b&lt;&gt;
dependable. reltable and
trustworth'j Prefe r nonsmoker, Must be good wtth
children REFERENCES A
MUSTttt Ca ll 740-2450321
lor
questiOns
Senous mqutres only
, , , , , ( 1\1

800·759·5383
EOE

Substttute $6 20/hr 18
yrs of e.ge &amp; "High School
Otploma required , Send
Resume
to
Early
Educat ton Statton 2122
Jefferson
Ave
PI
Pleasant, w,v 2555o
• Tired of Not Havm'il
Enough Money to Make
Ends Meet or Gomg to
Work For Sor;rteone Else?
Chnst1an owned Company .
of nearly 2 decades offer·
tng e. home Bus tness
Opportunity
(304)576·
~056

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
MEIGS COUNTY
FCFCINTEASYSTEM
COORDINATOR

Darst Home has rooms
avatlabl'l for those m need
of
aSSISted
IIYtnQ,

or !3041593-{)466 If

no answer please leave
message

Concealed Ptstol Class
OhiO, WV, Aprtl 8, 2006. ·
$75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason WV Ph (740)843·

5555 ,
Gallipolis Career

College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740446·4367
1·800·214-Q452
_.....galllpohacaree rcollega com
A.cc redlti&lt;l Member

Accnrd,tmg

;:'~~:~",O:f~' Cotle~a

160

1

RADio, TV
I
&amp; CB REP..nt

Ron 's TV
Repatr
WareMuse
7999 .

Sales and
App ltance
(304)675

OHIO

•NOTICEe
VALLEY PUB

ISHING CO recam
mends that you 00 bust
ress With people yO
now amt NOT to sen
rnoney tlirough the mat
nttl you have lnvesttgat
the offertnQ
'

b_

r
~orfow Smart Contac
he Ohto OtvtSlOn a
tnanc tal lnst ttutton'
P!_
ftce of Consume
~ffaus BEFORE yo
etmance )lOUr home o
~btam
a
loan
~EWARE of request
or any large advanc
payments of fees o
nsurance
Can th
Office of Consume
ffatrs toll free at 1
66-278·0003 to leer
t the mortgage broke
r lender tS proper!
teensed (Thts 1s a pub
IC ser•11ce announce
ment from the Ol"l ir:
alley
Publishmg

Co~pa~¥)

=~~
SER\

r

~0~\L
lCES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY

/SSI?
No Fee Unless Wr:. Wtn 1
1-888-582·3345
1{1 \1 I "d \II

Two year old laytng Mns
for sel~ · 50 per hen 740-

985·3956
w~vrnl

To Do
Certtlted
Care
Horne
ASSISted &amp; Non- AsS ISted
Pers ons, meals &amp; snacks
prov tded Exoellent Care

10

Ho,~&gt;:-;

mRS·\ U:
1001 Kenf'\~ c: ( Be ~mo J1
,Htgh School) 3 8€'drooms
full dry Bas e,en t all
Ha rdwood
F.oors
Excellent
Cof'ldl!IOI'I
$81 500 call (3041675

3123 (304)675·0032

(3041682 3880
Computer Trouble Shooter
and Repatr
Exoert
Servtce 740· 992-2 395
ow -

DIS ure

Carpet-Cieamng
Brand New Method
Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam -or Snamooo
Free Esttmates
"'Clearly Clea'1' ••
304 75.0022
Top
Notch
Bu tldtng
Contractors
New
Addl!lons
Pole Barns
Hardwood
Floor
and
CeramiC Ttle tnstauat10n
Custom
Decks
new
Roots new COnalruct ton
Ltc enset1 a..,a lnsurea
WVI 036667 (304)675·
3042 or (304 )593·1115
Wtll care lor Elderly 111 the1r
Home Have References
Cal l ( 3 0 .:1~895 3217 for
lnfonra11on
Wtll do Babysttttng tn my
nome
State CerttftecJ
Non-Smoker
Have
References Cal l 740-949·
, 135

2 oedroom 1 Oath lt vtng
room dtnntng room ba,:;e
ment
M tddlepo rt

$36 000,!740)992·3057

2Q acre farm wtth barn &lt;ina
4 bedroo m 3 batn home
Located tn Lawrence Co
Call
lor
mforrnat1on
,740)643 0518

4 ye8r olo CoiOntal or 3
acres approx 1 900 sq 11
3 bdr 2 baths 2 car
garage master bdr 1s
28x.24 Wlth !' 1e:cu zz t tub
$125 ooo (7 4m 446·7029
7BR SBA For£tclcsure
onl'f S18 000 F1)r hst,ng&lt;:.
call BO O :_1"9' ....'d-= u)''
F254
909 Mossman Ctrc te Pt
'Pleasant WV JBR t oatn
lull basement $88 000

1304 1675·6804

�Page B6 • The Daily
16

Senti~el

0

1

' NO DOWN PAYMENr
programs fo r you to buy

m
Home listings.
L1 st your home by
Ill (740)446-3620

JOU r home instead ot ren t-

ing.
,

a~pted

br.apt. all ulil. paid
$350. 00 also commerical
space bOih on Main St. Pt.
Pleasant 740-446·2200
1ST MO N. FRE E RENT
WITH PAID OEP. NEW
ELLMVIEW
TOWNHOUSE/APTS
NOW LEASING I
SPACIOUS
2 &amp;3BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
. TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
"A LL ELECTRIC
"CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE, RE F.
"DiSHWASHER
"GARAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BLINDS
"CEILING FANS
"WATER. SEWAG E &amp;
TRA SH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-30 17

Hl'\l\1'

• L.f ss jh~n pertect cred1t
·

• "'ayment could be the
$~e

as rent .

Mortgage
t Locato rs
(7"ifl6H' fl 0

3 large bedrooms, 1 bath,
very·
clean..
porch
Ava ilable
immediately,
SSOO/d4i!pDSil , $500/month ,
3 references , no pets.
(740)388·95 15 ask for

Colonial Brick fl anch. Tara
Estates. 3 bedrooms. 2 lull

baths, spar"ling home
$ 128 .900.
(7 40)367-7008.

P hone

Amy.
3BD, 1ba, 17 acres, Green
schools, $650/month piUs
utilities. plus deposit.
(740)256·8152.
All real estate ad11enis ing

4br
in
Syracuse,
$600/month &amp; Deposit.
Water/Sewer includec1 , No
Pets (304)675-5332

In thla newspaper is
· eubject to the Federel

Fair Howlng Act ot 1988
wh.lch makes It illegal to
ad'tlertlse " an..preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion , sell
familial s..tus or natkmal
origin, or any intention to
make any euch
preferenc e, limitation o r
discriminati o n."

thts newspaper will not
knowingly accept
ftdvertlsements fo r real
eatate which is i n

· violation of the law. Our
re11ders are hereby
intormed that all
• dwellings advertised in
lhla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.
Crab
Creek
Road
Picturesque , · 01 ~ Cape
Cod home.Oak ·construe·
tion 3-4 be droom 1 bath.·
big country kitchen . lots of
cabinets , plus .c11ning room .
sP.~Cious ·living room &amp;
study on 3.2 acres.
Beauti fu l roll ing lawn
w/mature shade 1rees &amp;.
new pond &amp; dock, iuce
worKshop plus 4·outbulld·
ings &amp; carport. $68',500.
(304)675-4680
a han nin g @c harte r ..net .
Sorry No Land Contracts
Homes for sale. 7 roomS .
frame. k6pt mafntairied .
outsict.e garage. large lot,
natural gas. $50.000.
Gallipolis
Ferry,
WV.
Mason County Corne see.
make offer. {304 )675 2942.
Sandhill 3b r. 2ba. skylight.
paintec1
in teriors.
LR.FA .OR , garden tu b,
·applainces . washer. dryer.
1+ acre, walk in closet.
landscapi ng &amp; outbuild·
ings. Must Set! $7.8.000
OBO (304)593-08 52

www.orv .com
Home Listings.
List your home by call Ing {740)446 ~3620
View photos/into on line
ew Haven, WV,
' edroom, 2 Bath , 2 Ca
arage, Outbuildings,
lose to lawn. PRICE
0 SELL! Cod e 6505 o
all (304)882-3368

on

SAVINGS

20 M OBILE Hom:s
mRSALE

Attention!
Loca l company offering
··NO ' DOWN PAYMENr
programs for you to buy
.yo ur home instead of rentin g.
• 100% financing
' Less ttlan pe r1ect credit

15 Now Slnqtewides

In Stock &amp; Ready
For Deliver,y 1
Call (740)365-9948
16x80 mobile home 3 bed room. 2 Oath, heat pump,
5x8 deck . Very n1ce !
(740)388-9170.
1970 Hill Crest Mob1le
Home Two Bedroom. has·
new carpet. was bought
new and lived in ror 30
ye ars bY olc1 er coup le.
Great Starter Home or
Rental
Unil.
In
Harrison11ille. 51 3.600.00.
740-742 -40 1L

• Payment could be the
· same as rent
Mortgage
Localors.
' (740)367'0000

200 1 doublewfde on 1.6
acres on Prospect Church
Ad . 3BR, 2BA w/hreplace
$80 .000 (7 40)709· 11 66.

House lor Rent in Point
Pleasant (304)675-6224
leave message
'
Immaculate 2 bedroom
house in country, sits on 1
acre lot newly remodeled
inside &amp; out, new carpet.
flreshly pain ted , laundry &amp;
storage rooms, $450/mo _
(6 14 }595·7773 or 1·800·
79 8-4686.

2006 16' Wjde
VinyliSI'Hngle
Only $18 1.00/mo.
Call (740)385-7671

Small house at 608 Firsl
Ave nue. AC, washer/dryer.
stove.lfr.idge,
screened
porch $375/mo plus utili·
lies. (740) 446-0260.

MUST SELL
2002 Clayton 14x52
· Pmts. bt$ 169/mo
Caii(740)3Jl5 -9948 .

Stop' renling Buy 4 bedroo m ldreclosiJre $15, 000.
For' lis tings 800-391 ·5228
ext. 1709.

N1ce 1987 i 4x70 3 bedroom home. Only $8,995.
Wi ll help with delivery. Ca ll
El aine -(740)385-0698
Used mobile homes for
sale 14 ' &amp; 16' wide. 2 &amp; 3
bedrooms 6 10 choose
trom 1996 model &amp; up.
(7 40)388-8513 (daytim e),
(740}388-801 7 (evenings),
(740)294 -0460
(weeKends)

fMO

8USINFS'i

ANU Ruu niNe.~

10 miles up At 62.' towards
Bu ffalo. Toyota Pl ant.
Currently being used as a
2 Bay Aulo Center. with or
without all Equipment 1 .
ac re lot Business at same ·
location lor 50 years
304 586-4666

Lms&amp;
ACREAGE
1.6 acres on Oak Hill Ad ..
Chester. Ohio, water. gas.
· 'e leCtric
on
prope rty, ·
$ 15.000, 304·483·7550
22 acres. wonderfu l view.
ridgetop property. close to
main highway perfect
4wheeler trails. (740)7072109

tor

Mason County Ac reage for
Sale {918)455·3301

Shop
Classifieds!

For rent 2-br. house 2111
Lincoln Ave. dep.&amp;· ref. no ·
pets $400.00 a mon 304·
675-2749

Rental proper ty w/ 1.5
acres ._ wlmobil e ho me.
annual income $4 ,200.
Chesapeake
area,
$17.000 for all (740)2566522.

""" Moun.E HoW'S
FORRrNf
2 bec1room in country. CtA,
absolutely No Pets Inside.
$350/month, $350 deposit.
(740 )24 5- 9491
before
9:00pm
2BR 5 minutes from town ,
$400/monlh , aepo sit &amp; reference requ i r~d. No pels.
1740)446-9342 after 6pm.

Anentlon ConstruCtion
Workers. Fully furni shef;l
·2 bedroom. 2 baths. very
nice. Located In qtJlet residential area in Pomeroy,
Ohio.
740-992· 1517 or
740-992-0031.
Beaulilul singlewide o n
2.28 acres of Uat land .
Refric1gerator &amp; range
included. New plumbing,
new decks. Move in co ndition. Q ui~t/peacef u l neighborhood . Call 304 ·4 2~4554, Mitzi White/Old
Colo ny, Apple Grove WV.
Mobile home sites for up to
16x80 in CoUDtry Homes .
1740 )385-4019.

t

FUR RFNr

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ment s, furnished and
unfurnished.
security
deposit required. no pets ,
'7 40-992-22 18.
1 Bedroorn apt. Stove ,
refrig. water, trash , sewer,
pd·. $325 ( 7~0)4 46-4 734 .

Make Someone Feel
'EGGS'-TRA SPECIAL ....
a Daily Sentinel

starting at .99e · &amp;
(304)675·7999

Refrlge"rator, white, $25:
Whirl pool washer, white,
$95; dryer, white, $95:
. Fridge, like new, $175. The
i\ppliance Store, 76 Vine
St. G alli polis (7 40) 4467100.

2 apartme nls for rent.
Racine. Ohio (short drive
from po w~r p!ant) Deposit
requi red ,
no
p ets.
(740)992 ·5!7 4
or
(740)441-0110.
avail able in Syracuse.
$200.00 deposit $350.00
per month rent.
Re nt
includ es water, sewer,
trash. No pets, Sufficient
Income needed to qu alify.
740·378-6111 .

2 br.upstairs apt. $400.00
a mon. +· dep &amp; ret. no
pets,
washer/ dr Yer,
refric1ge/stove included in
Pt . Pleasa nt . 304-5933542

663 Third, Gallipolis. 2BR,
w/appliances, pay own ulit·
ities, $350/monlh plus
$350/depos it. (7 40) 245,9595 leave message.
Beautilul2 bedroom apart·
ment In country, b eautiful
setting , laundry room &amp;
appliances included , very
clean. $400/mo. (614)595·
7773 or 1·800-798-4686.

~1 .

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are
· now ' ta king
Applications·for 28A , 3BA
&amp; 4BA,, Applicatio ns are
taken Monday thru Friday,
from 9:00 A.M.-4 FI.M.
Office is Located ' at 1151
Evergreen Drive Point
Pleasant, WV Phone No. is
(304)675-5806. E.H :o
Small Apartment on Laurel
Cliff Road, Pomeroy. For
Info. Call 740·992 ~63 96 .

TarB:

Townhouse
Very
Spacious, 2 Bedrooms.
C/A, 1 112 Bath, Adult
Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Patio.
Slart $425/Mo. No Pets. .
Plu s · Secu'rily
Lease
Re quired ,
Oepos •t
1740)3&amp;7-7086.
Apart m~nt s ,

WE EKLY AVAILABLE
.n c l u d es
'Ref n ger at o r /M icro wave
From $17 5 To $250
College Hill Motel Call
(740)245-532 6

iL,~--FUR-·RENiiiiji,;.r-'
SrAO-:

• Actual Size 1x3

"•

Run date Fri.,

April 14,2006
,t

Deadline Mon.

April 10, 2006

E.van &amp;.. Adam Rodgers
Happy Easter
&lt;;
Love, M om 3.. Dad
'

Mail to P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OH 45769
·or drop off at The l;)aily Sentinel
111 Court St. , Pomeroy, OH 45769
,.

·

.

······ · ·· · ~·-·· ·~ ··· · ······ · ··· ·· · · ~······-~· ·· · ·· · ~· ··· ·· ··· ·

1

Downtown Office Space- 5
room suile $650/ mo: 1
room office- $~5/mo : 2
$250fmo .
room suite
Security deposit requ1red.
You pay utilities. All spaces
ver y nice. Ele'Jator. Call
{740)446-3644 fo r apPointment
Retail anC! otftc e space
available in downlown
P'oint
Pleasant.
$500 /month.
next
Ia
Courthouse. Contact Julie

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt
jn Stock. Call Ron Evans,
1-800-537-9528.

t

BUHDING

or

Pole Bam JO)I50x12 feet
painted metal, slider. free
delivery. Only , $7 ,595.
( 9 37)7 18 - 147 1 ,
www . nationwldepole·
barns.com

t

PETs
FOR SALE

AKC Bo)ler puPs. 7 mates.
all colors, shols &amp; wormed.,
$300. (740)379-2668. '
AKC German Shepherd s
pups &amp; adults. working
dogs 304-937-3059

From

1510

_GOOil'i

: · Address'
Ph one#

.

HousEmM.Jl

Ads

Mu s t B~

Pre pa1d
.

' · · ··· ·- ~ l·-· · ·· ··· ··· ·· · ··' · · ~ · - ····· · ~····· · ·· ·· ~·· · ······ · ···

New Berner ~ r pe t $6 95/
ya rd Aemanents startrng
at $25 Mollohan Carpet,
76 Vin e St. GaU1pohs,
. (740)446-7444

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

For sale Good mixed hay,
never wet. Large . bales
$20/ba le. (740)446-1 909
Of (740)446-9 160.

AKC Reg. l ab pups, shOts
&amp; papers . Born 2!8/06 .

' $200. (740)441 -0931

Labrador Retrievers AKC
regis lered. Different colo r.
ages &amp; price . (740)2 566463 or (7 40)645·6527.

r

~~~

I

Fender
and
Gibso n
.Epiphone acoustic guit9rs,
ne..., in box, your choice
$150 cash. (740)3792801.

only
Self·Storege•

ACE TREE SERVICE
~Oyrs.

Aurus

FARM

4(1 A 2

17 Scoreboard

•

Tree
Ckg'reasi ng- Boats~
Trirhming ~ Acration- Cam pers - Tr uc k s -· DeCk
Fenili ~a t ion- pl anting·
stai ning or pa inting
SpCci al rates !'or
Mulchin g
Truc t.ing companies
trr&gt;c• E :-&gt; llf11dh .., GtJ,li.H1h'i'C l, W·", l Prltt'-

~;,;,~5~91;·~43:4ll;;;;:;
~

H.l. Wrllesel
and SOlS
L:

I!

Hardwood·CabilleiryAnd FUI'Iiture
www.tlall&gt;ererMkcabinetey,oolll

740.446.9200

cm...............

2A59 St Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

-·BARNEY
I'M VERY UPSET, MIZ SMIF !!
YORE JUGMAID HAS BROI&lt;EN .
EV'RY RuLE IN MY CLASSROOM !!

l.l

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

Ill

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

THE BORN LOSER

. Licensed Home Builder
1999 Honda 300 EX ,
m.iny new part s. Asking
S 1,650 OBO. 2000 Suzuki
AM 125, many aftermarket
part s ASking $1 ,600 0 80 .
Both too~ and run great !
Call (740)388-9021.

(740) 992-0496
WV#

3

714

99 Harley Fal Boy, 9,400
miles, lots of Chrome and
ex tras. (740)44 6-9954.

do8()ATS &amp; M&lt;ITORSI

.

roRSALE

.

1984 Sea Ray Cuddy.
140hp, 19ft. Interior in
good shape, ru ns great.
can
$3,300(neg.) .
(740 )99 2-7478
or
(740)4 16-1903
94 Seadoo SPX 2 passenger jet ski. excellent co ndi·
t1on ,
incluc1e s 'trailer,
$1.300. (740)388-1579 .
700

A!JI'O P~RlS &amp;
At:CI:l&gt;."''KKES

r

2001 Blaze r LT 4K4,
91 ,OOOmi , loaded. New
Goo dyears.
Onstar,
Le&lt;!- ther , All Power, $7,900
(740)2 45-92 45, (740)367 ·
062 4.

CAMPERS

&amp;.

MaroR HoMES

18 ft. camper, covered
porch, located river fron t at
Lone Oa ~ Camp-G round
$ 11 00 .00 lo t rent extra
$5 00 .00 Includes wate r,
electric &amp; sewer 304-882·
3237 .

98 Ford Windstar 92,000
miles, quad · seats. dual
heat/air,
new
fuel
pump/battery.
S4.500
(740)367-039 4.

I

MmOI«.'YU.Ii.'J

Honda 919 1 2,200
mil es with ~ove r and lank
bag.
Greal con c1 1tlon
Asking
$4,500
call
(7401446·409 6

.~02"

2003 Jayco Eagle 34 · 5th
wheel w/s lide out. New
condition. $22.000 OBO
(740)339-0218
New 2002 Rockwood popup camp er. A1rlfu rnace. 2
queen w/heated mattress,
1 twin , $5.000.
Lance truck camper 10.6
ft ., mint conc1 ition. a'ir,
refngerator. lull bath .
awnmg ,
queen
bed,
$4, 900. 1740)256-6522.

1998 Yamaha 350 Warn or
great condition K&amp;N air filter $2300. 740-245 ·5770
or 245 -92 14

'-~I IHII

10

I '-

HOME
h!I'KOVEMEN r.:i

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
~ n conc1i t lo na i
l1fet 1me
gu arar tee . Loca l refer·
ences
lurn1shed
EstabhshM 1975 Call 24 ·
Hrs
(740) 446·0870
Rogers
Basement
Wa lerptOOflnQ

-

I,, .

.

.

'

~

t:&gt;OE.~~-&lt;'T

TWEWTY ... HMM ... SO
WHEN J:'M TWENTY ,
m•YLL l!oE , .. UMM ..
LET~ SEE

93 Columbus Rd.

Athena

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan

Road

Racine , Ohi o

• Garages

~··

Hours

• Complete

Tt-!AT'S

THEli:E'

ALL n•\
ASKING'

PEANUTS

Remodeling

l FEEL GOOD MENTALL'(,
AND I I=~EL GOOD PJ.IV51CALLV ..
THIS 15 THE MOST
CONFIDENT I'VE EVER FELT...

lCO-oo2-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

I.H\ IS

YOUNG'S

• .(1\(1{111 ·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

! '0'\SIIH! I l!l'\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

'• ;VI;(If'l)\les Of c · .
~W~ .
26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
ln ~ un:: d

417/

OPEN

MIND 1

t1ATH

• Nevti Homes

Sblitt5'X10!:·
' to 10'x31h
....,,

~QUI(.

C.ONSTIIU~nll

..

,J

LtTTLE
HELP \olfTI1

.lUST
KEEP fW

BISSELL ·

45771
740.949-2217

&gt;·'· ""'"\

NEED A

ROBERT

Frt&gt;c E...tim;ttcs

Room Additions &amp;
Ffemodellng
NewGarag"
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing 6 Gutt•r• .
VInyl Siding &amp;·Painting
PaUo and Porch D•cka
wv 036725

YOU'VE GOT GRAPE JELLV
N '{OUR SHIRT ..

SUNSHINE CLUB
J UD li£.R GlAAT "1

RfAU.Y "-E£D£D WAS
A Df.SI~AIED IIJIFG

'tVIiJ '

992-6?1 5
Pomeroy lll11o
25 Yc.1rs Loc al brenrnL c

~

~z

I ••

•,.
0

'

tjlll..

GARFIELD
!10, GARFIEL!7,
!71P YOU 5AVE ROOM

FOR !7eMeltf?

FOR RENT-. MEIGS COUNTY

GRIZZWELLS

BAUI\l LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
•'Taking Til e Sting 0111 Of
/lard Work 1"
Mid -S i ze -I Wheel Dri ve T ra c l o r

w ith .10hp &amp; 40hp Kuhn ta Engines

BAUM. LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 C hester '185-3301

-- ··----

WAH-HA!HA!HA!HA!
\1

1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547
Now Available At

Barks

!lOY' I llAVE\:i'T 1-if.tl AI" El~P\.IAHT EA'K
tt-l YE,I&gt;,~S

scones

7 Ram, In
astrology

16

39 Mal de40 Boarding
school
42 Yucky
44 Not theirs
46 Foretell

This week, we are loOking at the negative
double. This· is made by !he reSponder
after his partner ha s opened w1th one of
a suit and the next player has overcalled
in a different suit. Its primary job is to find
a fit 1n an unbid major - but whal if there
is ·no Llhbid major?
Ideally, the responder is at least 4-4 in the
minqrs, but sometimes, when he must act
but has nothing bette r to do, he will be
forc ed to double without the textbOok
holding. Then, he must hope that he lives
to tell the ta le.
In this deal, after North shows hi s' min orsu it length, South bids wh at he hopes he
can make. But how can the defenders
defeat fou r hearts after Wes,t leads the
spade king?
Since East has only two spades, he must
overtake with the ace and return hiS sec·
ond spade. West cashes a third ' tripk in
the suit, East discarding the diamond two
(or 1he club three) . Wha1 now?
West knows thaf if South needs a cl ub
finesse, it is wo rking. And declarer must
have the diamond ace,' both. lor h1s tour'heart rebid and becaUse East aid not
make an encouraging discard in the suit
So, since th~ · defense is not getting "'
minor· suit trick, West should continue
with a fourth spade. If East is in midseason form . he will ruff with lhe heart 10,
which uppercuts declarer's trump hold·
ing. West' s hearl jack is promoted· to the
defense's fourth trick .
Wheil you've taken all possible side-surt
liicks, concede a ruff -and-Sluff. Your only
hope for another tri ck is in trumps. Th is
play may undermirie declarer's trUmp
holding.

18

(JIIrtners

ayllables

48 Hu,...,.•a

27 Speaker

·

..s...
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qu8rry

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30 Your,

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old· atyle

32 Sugari:ane 52 Tarun
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produc1
lrlllnd
zeta ,
:14 Grill, maybo 53 Palarll
Scl·lllander 37 Bt oe&lt;• aslocl ·· . lpCII

20 'Uncagod

38 Hackers•
machines
41 Butter

2t Gav,f·

bangor's
cry

54 Sox-

quantity

by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipnor Cf)'PU1911m5 11re Cl'lllllecl tram QUOI.I!ions ~ fiiTIQUS people. pat
Eact11enef il1 the cipher S~a~G tor anomer

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "She (C orena Scott King) was a woman bom
struggle; sho has struggled and she has overcomo.'- Andrew Young

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THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMelE ABO VE l ,ETlERl
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SCRAML!TS ANSWERS 3122101
Vacant - Oasis- Shce11- Ravine · HAVE ONE
"The only people who should be atlowod to clwlcelbeir
mmds." the overconfiden1 fellow opined, "art 1he otit ' 1

who HA VI 01\"E!""

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IC!Ombled words b•
low fa foNJI fovr ll"'p'- words.

Friday, March 24, 2006
By Bernice Bede Oaot
In order to realize all of the reWards you
are capable of ~ hieving In the year
aheaa , use a combinatron of aeterm ina,tion
and patience so you don't become overwhelmed by insignificant setbacks,
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - With the
weekend upon you, don't prematu rely let
your pteasutable interests usurp the time
and attention you . should be devoting tO
mor9 s erious concerns. If 'you .ptay, yo u'll
pay. Get a JUmp on life by understanding .
the influences. which are governing you in
the year ahead .
TAURUS (Apni20-May 20) - What resis t·
ance you encounter is apt to be caused by
appraising situations from a se lfish point of
view. Try broadening your co nce rns lo
includ e others. and watch co nc11tions
1mprove.
GEMINI (May 21-June. 20) - Should you
and your mate take c11ametrically oppo sing
QOSitlons and ne1ther IS willing to yielc1 .
. understand ihat if someone Ooesn't g1ve.
there will be b1g trouble.
.CANCER (June 21-July 22) - A venture
may requ ire tar IJ')ore resources than you
have at your Oisposal. Unless you have a
well-heeled an gle to help. y01i may have to
throw m
towel.
LEO (July 23- Au g. 22) - LooKing at a situatiOn purely !rom a negative point of View.
will make 11 so. Try seeking sunshine
ins tead ol only shadows. and things will
turn out much more pleasantly tor yOu
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) -You may not
like 1!, but 'you wilt stilt hav e to daat w1th a
respOns•b1!1ty tha t h as been th rus t upon
you Comp1aln1ng or moanmg will do noth,
mg but make rt far more difticutt tQ hand!&amp;
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - tt your des1res
are m conflict wrt h tile WISh~s of the ma1or·
lly ot your Peers, it wttl bE! up to you to
adrust you r t h inki~g rather than askmg the
'· entire group to change thetrs. Be flexible.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - It you teel
you are due some sort ot spec1a1remune r·
allon or benelrt where your wo rk is con·
cerned , rl will be up to you to speak up and
ask tqr it. It wo n't be g1 ven voluntan ly.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov_ 23.- tlec. 2 1) Someone With an opposrng vr8w m1ght try
to intimidate yoG into see1ng thi ngs h1s/her
way. II you reject 11 1n an equally trrm man·
ner. chances are th 1s person w1i l get off
you r back.
·
'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. t9) - A situa·
lion, which has presently Oeen unpr ol·
ilable: can be rect1lred and turned around if
you take a more rmagmatrve approach
Get out of the rut and be more .adventut·
ouS
AQUARIUS (Jan 20·Feb 19) - tt you ru n
1nto strong opposiiiOn . don't attemp t to
meet rt head·on You'lt be able to work
th1ngs out ta r easrer 1t you use ct1ptomacy
and tact to gel around the obstruc tion and
hOstility
PI SCES · '( Feb. 20-Marct')
20)
Unlortunallly, your inltlal tendanclea might
drive you. to anempt th ings tha hard way.
When you see this happening, sto p and.
look lOr other paths that offer tar teas
resistance

t,j(l~T

43 Lout
45 Rocky
23 0\lon godgol
Mounr.ln
24 Cat's-oye
JIIIOII(e
kin
47 SlileNn
25 Inquiring
rl-

22 Jeans

' CELEBRITY. CIPHER

me

V,C. YOUNG Ill

2000 Camp lile by Damo n
pop up camper steeps 8
22'x7' , fu rnace, 3-way
refrig 8'- t 2' self stori ng
awning Jacks &amp; levelin g
systems. spare tire &amp; carri·
er. 2 bru ner pr opane ·
po rtable stove . In . very
good condition only used 3
times, Asking $4000 ·call
at1er 7pm (740)949· 2908

4WHEEI.ER~

36

t::;:~:~'

lfl 4/1 mo. pd

I

Pass

BIG NATE

7:00AM ·8:00PM

BUDGET
TRANSM IS·
SiONS. Double bolted. All
types. {740)245-5677 or
(740)645-7400.

.

1-JE:.Ll, 1 51&gt;.'{, Tf\E:. SQUEAK'&lt;
I
WI\E.t.L C£T~ !':EPLN:.E.t&gt;
.,
1-liTI-\ 1\ Wf.\E.E'.L Tf\I».T

2005 CRF250R barely rid·
den, never raced. $3,900
OBO. (740)24S-581 5.

Fiberglass truc k topper
w /sliding windows . Fit s
Fo rd Range r or Chevy
5 10. $100 (740) 446·1 327

~

P"'

""ow:.F, l 001'1'1 II'ITOit&gt; ro
~fOP ~KI""-' fO"' 1\
~~~E. TILL l G.E.T
01-&lt;E.!

jQUE.I'\K!

2000
Yamaha V·Star
Motorcycle 87;00 miles.
black &amp; .c,hrome with
·leather. Many extras, Must
See. $4,200 304-6751094 or 304-593-8886

l

ON TH' OTHER HAND, .IT'S
TH' FURST PAPER HE'S
COMPLETE))
ALL

~2u~f.~J%.

(740) 949-1405

E•st

Pass

When there is
.no unbid major

YEAR!!

FREE
ESTIMATES

Pass

Dbl.
Pass

OROning lead: • K

All lyMS of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamle ss Gutter
Downspout

).-.

4•

(~40)99l - 0496

1999
Jeep
Grand
Cherokee Limited. Good
co ndition, tow mileage,
$9,800. (740)2 45-5757 or
(740)339-0885,
No
answer. leave mes sage.

-

I •

Homes· Decks ~
Driveways - Equipment

Mowi ng-

,fWesl · North

South

shoner

6 Drinks with

8 lmpract1Cal
(hyp~.)
9 Coustaau'•
31 Ru1t away
summer
33 Tennis shot 10 Hibernate
34 Elicits,
11 Ostrlchllke
· a chuck!e
bird
35 Zoo staffer 12 Collact

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

(740W9l-4100

FoR SALE

-~--

t AQ
... 2

Chuck Wolre/M gr.

1982 Inter. Cab Over 400·
B:ig Cam. Jake Brake , 13
SPD., Wetline, ' Good
True ~. $2 ,500 OBO. 740.
992-5617.

--

• J 6 4

EIP.

\

1 Knack
2 Popslnger
-Adams
3 Uris or
. Spinks
4 Chill boan
5 Farm

machine
23 -kwondo
26 In a hurry
26 Source
of Iron
29 Bloke's
" You bet!"

97513

. A K . Q9876

experience '

96 Buick LeSabre 97.000
ini. , needs body work and'
radiator, new tires. battery,
' brakes and rotors, $~ ,500
080. (740)446·9632.

--·

'

DOWN

19 Vegas

• 86532
.

droplelo
58 Flounder
coualn1

data

10

South

Ed. Dill/owner

95·Z·28 Camara T~Top s
Lealher 350 Aulo l ooks
an d Runs Great $4700.oo:
92 • Corsica 4 door. New
P'a1nt lots of New Parts.
Runs and loo ~ s Great
$1,800.00. 740 -742-4011 .

---------'-·--

I

LAWN CARE

95 Camara, ~ a&lt;:k , T-lop,
auto, $1,800 . (740 )2 56 1818 or (740) 256-6200 .

200 1· 600 Gri ZZly Auto
Le ss Tnan 350 m1l es on 11
$4000.00 740- 742 -4011 .

&lt;

~

"' K ·J 6

Over JU yeRrli

I-1WUU:f1.:1!!1\R!:"U!!::"L!:! '

Massey Ferguson 1125 4
4WD dre.St;!l. good cond.
. $7800 304-675 -4110

C• •II :JIJ.I b" I .J:J1 I
'o

• J

Servic.-e
Licensed &amp; Insured

2002 Cavalier 40, $3,895:
~ 999 Malibu $3,295; 1998
Metro LSI $2. 995; 1 ~g6
Monte
Carlo $2,995.
Others in stock slarti n'g at
$1 ,aoo. Cook Motors, 328
Jackson Pike, {740)44 60103.

1999 Harluy Da111d son
Ultra Clas sic l oaded
Excen en1
con01Mn
29.000 lolal m1les. Pnce
$1 3 500
Call '740-9 4922 17 until 7 pm ,

.._____

F.ast

20YBS

l4hr Emergency

2001
G rand
Jeep
Cherokee limitea, white.
new tires, excellent condi·
tion. $12,500, (740 )446-

41

304-675·2451

(7 40) 992- 2804
(740) 5 17·6883
Jeff Stet hem - Owner

good. 740-~ 16-1472 or
740-992- 1493.

Load · Tr ait/Load
Ma)C
Tr a i l e r s Goos en ec k s / 0 u m p s i
Car m1cha ef
Utilitie s
E,QUipment
(7 40) 44624 12.

--~ ~

Parking Lots • Baii·Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •
- Free Estimates Playgrounds

POWER WASUING

Rick Johnson , Jr.
Owner
Insured · Free Est

r.
r10

exp.

Gallipolis, OH

1995 runs
.C rown
Vic
torilooks
a,. 4 .
dbor,
good,
and

r

MONTY

TRI -STATE mOBILE POWER WASH
AnO lllWn CARE

omp t!le rae are

I I{ \ \" 1'1 Jill \I Ii 1\

04 Dyna Super Glide , iuel
InJected, serria rea, lots of
FoR SAl.£
chrome . . 2.400 [Tii les,
beautiful b1.ke, ·garage ,
Orfando/Disney· area. 7/6 , kept Can Mon-Fri am
(740)446-941 6. weekend
nights stay, Paid $600 sell
&amp;. evenmgs (740)441for $199 good fpr 1 yr
· 1724

I \ U \ 1 ' l 1'1'1 II "
,\ ll\l '-, 11111..

West
. K Q t 097
• J 53

.+

•SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

CIIIEICIU.
llSIIIIIIIIl

"Middleport'~

Very good mixed hay.
Square bates. Carmichael
Equipmont
(740)446241 2 .

www,Tristatek~9. cor:n

: , Child ·s N a m e
Your Name

Middleport, OH .

GRAIN

1999 GMC w/extendea ,
· cab, loaded, 305 engine,
automalic. 67.000 miles,
30" X 48' X 9' Pole Ba;n
good clean. solid truck ,
Painted Steel Sides and
excellent condition, $8,500
Roof, 3' Entry, 14'X9'
080. (740 )441 · 1014.
·S liding door, lnsui. Roof,
Gutter, Erected Price
89 C-70 Dump truck,
S10 ,750.00..
24'X
43,000 original miles, 9fl.
32 'X9'4" ?olq Barn Painted
telescopin g dump. air
Stee! Sides and Roof. 3'
bra kes. 427 Allison autoEntry, 2·1 0' X8' Overheads,' matic. $6,500. {740 }3 68·
insulated Roof, Overhang,
1579.
Seamless Gutter . Erected
$10,450.00.
740-742'
Chevy Cotoraao Ext. Cab
401 ~ or 1· 800· 3 96~3026 .
'05. Auto, 2WD, wlbedliner,
excellent con~ i tion . Kelly
Block. brick. sewer pipes.
Blue Book $14,600. will
wint1ows. lintels, etc.
sell for $13, 000. (304)523·
Cleuae Winl ers.
Rio
11 79
Grande. OH Call 740·245·
4x4
5121 '

1..,~--F.QlJII'M_,iiiiiFNriiiio-"

!703)528-0617.

97 Beech Street

HAY&amp;

SUPI'LIES

poin1Pieasant_c.o rilm_ra ni
al@yahoo.com

SELF STIIABE

12 Mateo flzzy

oo,23-06

8 s· 3
4 2
K 10 9 7
... A Q 10 8
•
•

5-4 Exprolllon
55 Unlocked
56 Wandered
57 Forms

13 Strongtailing
14 Oamael
15 Modol"l
need
16 Fluency

MANLEY'S

~10

6 No longer

wild
NQr1h

51 Military
g.-..tlng .

1 Comeo to
the reaeue
11 Survived
(2 Wdl.)

4060 or 1740)367-7762.

i

a

Reg . Angus Bulls and
Heifers
with
EPD 's.
(740)446-9856
or
(740)446-7421 .

r

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

. .

Phillip
Alder

L FORSALE

Buy Or sell . . Riverine
Antiques, 11.24 East Main
·on SR 124 E. Pomeroy,
740·992·25 26.
Russ

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ACROSS

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair·675-7388. For sale,
re -conditioned automatic
$500! Police Impounds!
washers &amp; d r ~ . refriger·
Cars from $500. For list·
ators, gas an d electric
1f.Qs 800- 391·5227 ext.
ranges: air ·co nditioners. , 3901
an·d wringer washers. Will
do repairs on majOf' brands
04 Oldsmo bile Alero. 4
in shop or at your home .
door, auto, V6, PW. PL,
PS. rea r spoiler, air, CD
Used Furniture store , 130
player, excell ent condilion.
Bulaville Pike. Was hers,
$9,800, (740)388-1579 .
dryers,
gas/
electric
ranges ,
mattresses,
1993 Cad illac Deville
couches, dinettes, chests,
64, 000 miles. good shape.
much ·
more .
Grave , $4,000. (740)645-0626. .
Monu ments
(740)446~
1994 Ford Escort LX 5
4782 . Gallipolis, OH, Hrs.
spd. about 140.000 mites
11 -3 (11.1-S).
Needs engine. $800 obo.
(740)339-2 356

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Un~oln Ranger 25 0 welder
D·rive lrom . $344 to $442.
with miQ att 8chmenls 100
Wa!k to shop &amp; movies:
·
Call 74Q-446·25 68 . Equal ·· foot of lead $2800.
Hendy
14"x6
foot
Lath~:!
Housing Opportunity.
sirjgle-phase \$2000,call
304·675-4144 it no answer
Brand r ew 28A apts. on
,leave message. ·
Bob McCormick ·Rd. Call
for details (740)441 ~0 194
NEW AND USED STEEL
or (740)441-1 184
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Concrete , · Angle .
For
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Channel, Flat Bar, · stee~
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Grating
For
Drains.
Townhouse apartments,
Driveways &amp; Walkways.
and/or small 'houses FOR
l&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
RENT. Call (740)441 · 1111
Monday;
Tuesday,
for application &amp; informaWednesday &amp; Friday, 8a:mtion .
4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
For Lease: AHractive,
Sal urday
&amp;
Sunday.
unfurnished, one bedroom
(740)446-7300
8pt., 2nd floor. corner
Prom Dresses: 1 Tiffany
Second and Pine. N o p:ets
pink si te- 8 $150: 1 Alyce
Reference
required.
pink size-6 $150; 1 rf;!cl/sil·
. Security deposit, $300 par
ver size-2; 1 Atortiori navy
month . water included.
size- 314 $25. (740)441 Call (740)446 -4425 or
07
12
(740)4A6-3936.

Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riversi de Apartments in
Midl!:lleport. From $295·
$444. Call 740-992· 5064.
Equal
Housing
Opporluniti es.

U AAM"'f IN'n&gt; MOe),,

Angus Bulls. two X-breds,
4 heifers. Excellent breedIng. Slate Ru n Farm. See
www.slater unlar m.com ,
(740)286-5395 ,

up

Moving Sale! Uvirlgroom/
. Dinning room turn., -mtn
bike. Welder weight room
(350# + lree) Housewares.
P'riced to move ! 3120.3/24.
Call soon for more selec·
tion . (7~)446-2 846 .

Twin Rivers Tower is
accep.ting applications for
waiting list tor H ud·sub·
slz.ed , 1· br, apartment,
call 675-6679 EHO

GREETING!!

'

in Henderson. WV. Preowned Appltpnes starting
at S75 &amp; up all under
Warranty,
also
have
Household Misc. Items

.til

Modern 1 bedroom
(740)446-0390.

APARTMENTS

Appliance
Warehouse

2 Bedroom Apar tmen t

j:~cce pt ec1

2000 Oakwood mobile
home 161(80 vinyl/shingl e.
4 bedroom, 2 baths. CIA.
(740)245·000 1. Must be
moiled.

www.mydailysentinel.com

~ I..Ulll HilS u.MIIo\~

NBed to sell your home?
Late on payments, divorce,
10b transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All
cash and quick closing .
740-416-3130

Loca l compan y oftenng

• 11J"k firt$ncing

Thursday, March 23, 2006
ALLEVOOP

~l;;;fl;~;;sru;;ALE;;~l t

Attention!

Thursday, Ma~ch 23, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

a

a

�Spring Home
Improvement edition
inside today's Sentinel
'

i

PJt 88 •,The Dail y Sentinel

: _ ,1 f

) -

www.mydailysentinel.com

'-"'-

•

- - ---

Thursday,

~arch 23, 2006

-

,-..

Children's Choir
to perforn1, A6

-

e

Briets
Photo display at FAC in March
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS - "A Lifetime o(Photography," an exhibi tion of the \vorks Galli a County nati ve Robert Eugene Wallace.
will be presented at the French Art ,Colony March 8-3 L
Wallace is a photographer and author ' of "Anxieties in the
Outhouse." The display is sponsored by Gallipclis Career
College. Saunders Insurance and Thomas Do-It Center.
An opening reception and book sign ing will be held at the
FAC on Saturday. March II from ·10 a.m. until noon for
Wallace's new book, "B uttercups in Her Hair."
The FAC galleries are open Tuesday through Fridayfrom 10
a.m. until 6 p.m .. and Sunday from I to 5 p.m.

,)0 ( ' FNTS • \'ol. :;,) , ~o. 1:; ,;

• Redmen split pair with
Cedarville. See Page 81

RUTLAND - The River City Kids production of "Willy .
Wonka and the Chocolate Factory'' will take place at 7 p.n\. on
both Friday, March 24 and Saturday, March 25 at Meigs
.
Elementary School in Rutland.
A matinee performance will begin at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday,
March 26, also at the schooL
·
Tickets for the perform ~nces are 011 sale at Hometown
Market, Middleport Department Store. Dan 's, Peoples Bank of
RIO GRANDE - Excitement is in the air
· Middleport and Farmers Bank of Pomeroy or at the door the
for those who enjoy Broadway musicals, as
days of the shows. The pri ce i&gt; $7 each.
.
they anticipate attending the delightSpcnsored by· Holzer Meigs Clinic, the cast numbers 90, 60
ful musical comedy, "Marne," known for its '
of which are children. New sets have also been constructed to unbelievable run on Broadway for three years and eight months.
accommodate the ompalompas.
The Valley Artist Series will bring the Broadway cast of almost
40 people to the stage of the Fine and Performing Arts Center at
the University of Rio Grande at 2:30 p.m. this Sunday.
Vl\S season' subscribers have their tickets for this unique production. Tickets for the general public will be available for pur, JACKSON - The Lillian :Jones Museum, 75 Broadway St., chase at the door, preceding the performance.
.
Jackson. will host an exhibit of World War I memorabilia April · As VAS President Gary Stewart points out, ''Seldom do you
3 through May 31.
have the opportunity to see one of the liveliest,·happiest and must
The museum is currently accepting items on loan for this entertaining musicals of Broadway's golden age right here at
display, and welcomes photos ,of World War I soldiers, uni- home, without having to travel to New York City or a large metforms, medals, memorabilia from theater of'operations, mem- ropolitan area.
,
.
.
.
orabilia from th~ home front , etc .
"The Valley Artist Series is proud to bring such a production
· All possible care is taken with items loaned to the museum, to the local stage at the University of Rio Grande, and we antic~
and participation in this exhibit is welcomed .
ipate an enthusiastic crowd," Stewart added.
·
. Conracr rhe Jones Museum fo r more information at (740)
As ·one review stated, "'Marne' shows little sign of aging, 33
286-2556 or lillianjones@dmgrmbbs.com.
.
years after its birth and impressively long Broad~ay run."
Another said, '"Mam.e ' is a story of a woman of spirit, told with
spirit and embellished with pleasant song ... a good time all
around is to be had in 'her company." And still another said,
.
.
"Laugh and 'sing with 'Marne,' one of the' m.o~t stylish and pic'
NELSONVILLE - St.uait's Opera House in Nelsonville turesque madcaps·you ever m·e t.... a song and dance hit."
·
presents the only Ohio screening of the new movie about song~
Tickets will be available at the door for $30, or may be
writer Townes Van Zandt called "Be Here To Love Me," at 8 reserved in advance and picked up at the Fine and
p,m. Friday and Saturday.
·
Performing Arts Center within the hour before the 2:30
The ultimate songwriter's songwriter. Townes Van Zandt show time Sunday afternoon.
·
·
had a profound impact on generations of musicians from Bob
As Stewart emphasized, "What a rare opportunity to
Dylan to Norah Jones, yet he avoided the commercial success see a full Broadway production at a fraction of the cost
enjoyed by many of his own fans.
of a ticket in New York! We hope area residents will
For more informaricm, call (740) 75}c f924 or on the web at take advantage of this unique chance to see MAME
www.sruarrsoperahouse.org.
locally, made possible through the Valley Artist
Series." ·

·Sunday

POMEROY - The C8
Health Project has stopped
acce pting health qtiestionnaires, but will make
appointments for all those
whose questionnaires were
successfully su b1.ni tted.
. "We want to let people
Page AS
·know that we have not run out
• Virginia Jordan
of money, we are using the
• Roberta Humphrey Kerce! .. fund s as the settlement directed, and are continuing to
complete our goa l of 70,000
participants.'' said Art Maher,
one of the project directors .
Those participants who
were seen at C8 testing sites
• Cbmmunity Center
befo re Dec . 4 , 2005 , a(e
elects officers, plans
asked io sign an additional
form provided by the
consent
events. See Page A2
Sci ence. Pane!. Those early
• Ea5tem bell choir
· participants hve received the
perfonns. See Page A2 form in the mail , Those now
go in g through the testing
• 'FFA Week' at Racine
process are given the form Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory's
Southern chapter.
during their appointment.
formances at Meigs Elementary School.
See Page A3
The C8 Science Panel has
• UMW diseusses project been engaged to conduct a
· community study cif t11e health
. work. See Page A3
project dat~ and other . infor• Holzer Recognizes
mation coll ected. The Science
Panel
is asking participants to
.t:Jational Nutrition Month.
agree to be contacted at a later
See Page A3
date in order to obtain contin· • World War I film
uing health information for
longer-term
; tudie s.
·
series coming to Pomeroy
BY BETH SERGENT
To date, nearly 90 percent of .
Library. See Page AS
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
those asked for the informa• Transfers posted.
tion have agreed to participate.
RUTLAND - Beginning tonight and
See Page AS
continuing through the weekend big
• Local briefs.
kids and little kids alike will have a
to sample the mysterious world
chance
See Page AS
of
even
more mysterious candy . m,aker
• A Hunger For More. ·
Willy Wonka during the musical theater
See Page A6
production of Willy Wonka and the
Chocolate
Factory performed by the
• If you do not forgive.
River
City
Kids.
See Page A6
Tonight's performance begins at 7
p.m. at Meigs Elementary Sc hool; with
a show at 7 p.m. on Saturday and a matinee at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday. also at

trical. plumbing. and he(tting
and air conditioning systems.
and 'uni tary health and environn1emal standart.ls. including
an inspection for rodent.s.
Ren tal ccrtilicates would be
issued once a succe,s ful
inspection as completed. .
The new ordinan ce which
wi ll be &gt;ubmiltcd for coun:
cil's lir'i reading ne,xt week
increases the fee to $20 a
year. and prol'idc' for addi tional fees and fines in those
cases where a second or third
in spection is required.

0BITUARIFS

INSIDE

Photo

cour~esy

Oompa Loompas .take a moment to rehearse a catchy t.une
·
·

for

of The River Ctty Kkll

this weekend 's per-

·'Willy
and the Chocolate.
factory' opens tonight

To reserve tickets in advance, call (740)
245-7364..

3·Savile .Row to play at
Court Grill Saturday night

WEATHER

OSU students
to develop
colon cancer
screening plan
with MCCI
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM

•

· Details on Page A2

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

3 Savlle Row

16 PAGES

Calendars
A.3
· Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies ·
As
NASCAR
B3
Obituaries
AS
Sports
B. Section
Weather
A2
© aoo6 Ohio Volley Puhllshtng Co.

'

in the village.
A number of rental proper~
ties were among those properties identified as unsafe or
unsightly, and i rental property on South Second Avenue
in particularly poor condition
was discu&gt;sed at a council
meeting earlier this month.
The owner of that property
has been ordered by the village to clean it up after two
dead rats were seen in the
front yard . ·
If approved by council, the
inspections would include ,elec-

STAFF REPORT

..

.

landlords
attending
Wednesday 's meeting agreed ,
and questioned the need for
an inspection program at all.
The fee increase would help
the village pay for an annual
inspection of all 400 apartments, hou ses and mobile
homes cented in the village .
The inspection program, proposed by the Planning
Commission and Building
Inspector Randall Mullins, is ·
designed to enforce building
·and safety cpdes and improye.
the quality of rental housing

NEWS@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

Opera House slates film showing

'

property owners to attend the
~lin g in hopes of reaching
compromise on the propcsal ,
which would increase the
annual fee charged to rental
property owners from $12 to
$20 per year.
The fee increase and
. inspection pl an were first
introdu ~e d in January. but the
proposed ordinance was
tabled after two readings,
because some counci l members felt the fee increase from $12 to $25 at that time
- was excessive. Several

Appointments ·
planned for all
C8 applicants

War exhibit slated at Jones Museum

MINERAL WELLS. WVa . - With spring quickly
approaching. the first annual Lawn and Garden Exp? is right
POMEROY -· · The 3 Savile Row, a group of area
around the comer.
musicians.
who got together to pay homage fa the Bemles,
Saturday, April I , marks the start of what is expected to be a
will
be
performing
at the Court Street .Grill at 9 p.m .
·. we.ekend full of exhibits, vendors. children's activities, guest
Saturday.
.
·
.
.·
speakers and demonstrations. The show will be held on
The m_usicians' story is one of a touring bassist from
Saturday from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m . and Sunday. April 2, from noon
Texas,
a Lennon lookalike, and the rh ythm section 'from a
to 5 p.m. at the West Virginia Interstate Fair and Exposition
successful
jazz combo getting together last year to recreGrounds in Mineral Wel.ls right off exit 170 on 1-77.
The expo 'will feature a flower arrangement contest featuring ate the music. of one of the most influential bands of the
three categories as well as a fashion show run by the friends of 20th century.
3 Savi le Row returned this week from London, where
Blennerhassett Island and the Juli ana Square District that will
they played a show. According to Nick Michael of Savile,
showcase full historic costumes.
The· flower contest will have three categories, "Dried Flower they hooked up with .Richard Porter, "The Beatie Brain of
Arrangements," "Boxes in Bloom" and "Creative Containers" Britain" and pr~s ident of the British Beatles Fan Club.
"He set us up with a gig at the Carlton Tavern. It was a ·
and will be judged prior to the show. Along with the three contests, there will be a People's Choice Award that will be hand- great show and we played to a packed house," said Michael.
Early last y'ear, open stage veteran Michael, formerly of
ed out Sunday afternoqn. allowing the public to vote throughLiquid
Crystal, was approached by educated percussionist
out the entire show.
The fashion show. which will take place on Saturday at 2 Jon Jones and local singer/songw riter Nathan Wood about ·
p.m. along with the flower arrangement contest, is sure to starting a Beatles tribute band. Shortly after this fortu bring IT)Uch more to the program. Along with the fas hion show itous meeting, they,started rehearsing as a trio with Jon on
·
and flower arrangement contests, there are many other speak- drums, Nathan on bass, and Nick on guitar.
ers and demonstrations on the age nda that will cater to every-_ In the fall of 2005. they were introduced to Texas native
and bass guitar guru Jay Godeaux. After switching Nathan
one .
.
·
Little Kanawha and Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation Wood to rhythm guitar, the line-up was set.
3 Savile Row performs a well-rounded mix of Beatie
and Development (RC&amp;D) Councils, West Virginia Extension,
a small group of volun.tecrs and Results Radio are involved in classics, ranging from the touring days of Beatlemania all
the way to the .studio masterpieces of Abbey Road. While
the·show activities . ·
For more information ahour rh e }Ctshion ~how 'or for enrr:c paying attention to detail of the originals, the band adds
forms ro the flowe r arrangemenr com esr. call Dina Braniff ar their own sound and flair to the music of the Beatles set- ·
ting them apart from all other tribute acts out there today.
(304} 422-4597.
.
''You won't · see the costumes, wigs and the' vintage
For more informarion on rite· Lmm and Garden ExpiJsirlon,
instruments
when you ·see us.. You' II see working class
comact either of the RC&amp;D ojjice.1, Bol&gt; Firsr with Buckeye
Hills RC&amp;D, 21330 Ohio 676, Suire D. Marie rra. Ohio 45750, guys playing some of the greatest rock songs ever written.
(740) 373-7926 or 'Kurr Simon ll'irh Lirrle Kanawha RC&amp; D, I'd like to think that we play the s&lt;;Jngs the way The Beatles
Mo'unrwoad Park. Rowe 2. Box 56,. Wm •erlr. WVa . 26184. would play them today if they could tour again," says
Michael·.
. (304) 679-3639

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM,

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Courcil
w.i II propose a $20 annual
rental property fee at next
week's meeting, after three
committees met together with
landlords on Wednesday
evening to disc.uss a proposed
rental inspection program.
. Village council's building
and planning committee, ordi. nance committee a11d Planning
Commission invited rental

Rio Grande
stage this

'Willy Wonka' comes to Meigs

W\\w.mydail~st•ntint'l.t·uru

FRIDAY, I\1ARCII 24, 200(&gt;

Rental fee hike, inspection program back to council table

SPORTS

eMarne'hits

For more infomwrnm. conracr rhe FAC m 446-3834.

Lawn
and Garden
.
Expo ·opens in April.

....

POMEROY - Graduate
students from The Ohio State
University School of Public
. Health will be arriving in
Meigs C&lt;iunt y nex) .month to
develop a co lon cancer
scree ning progn1m for the
community with help from
the Meigs Cou nty Cancer
In itiati ve (MCC I).
Mira Kat z, assistant professor with the OSU School of
Public Health said her students wil l be arriving in the
county to take a hands-on
apr,roach on layi ng the
ground work for the program.
The hand s-on approach is
crucial to the students developi ng their theory based not
onl y on ab s tra~ t county cancer rates but on what they
·personally observe durin g
their visits to Meigs Count y. ·
The student s have incentive to complete 'the program
by. the end June to compll'te
their course.
"The coalition will hope,
fully benefit from my s!udents' work," Katz ex pl ained.
addi ng th;Il a benefit may

Please see Screening. AS

Meigs Elementary School.
Tickets are $7 each and c311 be purchased
at the door or at the following locations:
Hometown
Market,
Middleport
Department Store. Dan's, Peoples Bank of
Middlepon and Farmers Bank of Pomeroy.
Sponsored by Holzer Meigs Clinic. the
cast numbers 90. 60 of which are children. New sets have al.so been constructed to accommodate the bompa Loompas.
This version of Roald Dahl's children's novel is based on the 1971 Gene
Wilder film.
At the heart of the story is Charlie
Bucket who along with four other golden ticket winners get to experience the

·Chester
postmaster
honored for
•
semce

tour of a lifetime through Willv Wonka' s
chocolate factory.
'
'
Besides Wonka and a host of Oompa
Loompas, Charli e is accompanied by .
the spoilcd-rbt·ten . Vcru..:a Salt. gl uttonous Augu stu s Gloop. · gum-chewin g
Violet Beaureuarde. and te levi sion
junkie Mike Teavee.
They travel through not only the factory but life lesson' . put to song and
lyrics by Lesli e Bricu'&gt;se and. Anthony
Newley. The story wa., adapted for the
stage by Lau ra Blum. ·
This is the second prod uction for The
River City Kid' 1\hich i, a di'i,inn of
The River City Pla: ers th ~atre troupe .

AMP-Ohio adds-to
London Pool fund

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER - For service
during nearl y 44 years of
employment at the Chester
Post Ofllce; Opal Eichinger
of Chester has been selected
as .one or nine postal workers
Opal' Eichinger
in the Columbus Performance
Cluster of the Postal Service
the Postal Service in their own
to be honored thi s year.
The women were .honored by uni que v.ay. their ach·ieveand unyielding dedicathe Postal Service as an obser- ments
tion
to
the Postal Service.''
vance of Women's History
Eichinger. now 80. began
Month. Photographs and a brief
her postal career on July I ,
biography of each one js now 1962 as a clerk at the Chester
on display in the Colun,1hus Post oflic~ . At the time of her
Main Post Office retail lobhv employment. her' husband.
as we ll '" in the cafeteria at the Henry R. Eichinger was the
Citygate Process ing and postmaster. He served from
Distrillution Center.
Aug. 7. 1961 u ntil his death
Selection o.f the honorees on Nov. 29. 1967. Two
was made . according. to a months later hi s wife was
news release. on the basis of
"tremendous contributions to
Please see ·Service. AS

Belh Sergent;photo

judy Williams (center) of the London Poo l Steenng Committee
accepts a $1500 donatio n from Jo lene Thompson (left) and
Kent Carson . representatives .o! Ame ncan Muntc tpal Power·
Ohio (AMP.Qh io). The donation w1tl go towards reopenmg the
London Pool.

'I

•

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