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GA1t11ENING

iunba~ Qtfme~ -ientinel.

H• varieties
Bv DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

PageD6

in

Where

they'll shrug off salt." Oslund Bob Solberg. &lt;m owner of West along a line from Metro
said .. "They can handle more Green Hill Farm, Inc., in New York to San Francisco,
. water than people think. too.'' Chapel Hill. N.C. "They take vou can safely plant hosta in
direct sunlight. Solberg said.
Host&lt;1 varieties welcome up a lot of space.''
"Down South, though, like
spring or fall dividing._Jnaking ' First -time hosta buyers
them good choic·e f(lr garden- olten are people who have around here (North Carolina).
ers seeking to build on their spots in their lawns where you have to .keep them in the
investnient. They're tolerant,of grass won't grow, he said. shade," he said. "You have to
. add or alkaline locations "Hosras fill those right away," keep them cool."
Hostas don't make . good
although they perform best in Solberg said. "And then, (lnce
houseplants,
Solberg said. "You
good old-tashioned garden din. these people get a few hosta
"They'll likely need.a little plants, they tend to get more . can bring them in for a month
or so. But they need hi gh
·care in their first season but They start· to collect them.''
That isn't to sav host a col- humidity. They also need to go
they can stand some neglect,"
Oslund said. ··once estab- lectors are just collectors of dormant. You could put them in .
lished. they require little hostas, he said. Hosra . a refrigerator for a while but
&lt;lttention. Just see that they get ·fanciers tend to mix them they do much better when left
water when they need it and with other shade tolerant' outside in the garden."
'1-!ostas rank among the
plants like Virginia bluebells.
some slow release fertilizer."
Hosta cultivars are more anemon'e, ferns and wood- nation' s top-selling herbapopular for their foliage than land primrose. "Plus. as you ceous perennials but that
their flowers although a f~w get older, hostas don't require doesn't mean they come number of reasons -· surv iv·
are purchased fur their mu lti- all that much work. That 's a cheap, Solberg said. · ,
ing problem g ro~¥ing are;ts,
. ple rows of blooms.
good combination: att raUive
"They range anywhere eye appeal. disease resistance
from $4 to $400," he said. "A and ease of maintenance.
··some people like the ·and low mai ntenancc.''
A great many hosta will 'Jot are reasonably priced in among others. It isn't uncom·
flowers. Others just cut.thern
off.'' Oslund sa id. ''It doe~n't weather a full sun, making the $15 or $20. range . New mon to see 600 to 1,000 difharm the plant."
·
them choice border plants. If introductions ro utinely sell ferent hosta varieties while
strol ling through a coll ector's
·'1-!ostus are like having you li ve north of Interstate 80, for $50 to $100 each."
Hosta grow on you for any garde n, Solberg said.
shruhs in your garden." said which nm s generall y East-

WASECA, Minn. - Gordy
Oslund is a botanical version
of Mr. Goodwren&lt;:h. He raises plants that do well in problem growing areas. particularly are')s that are sun~
peprived. Most of th e perennials in his figurative tool kit
are hosta. althoug h he also
sell s several vilrietics of
.yucca, carex. brunnera and
dicentra from hi' Shady Oaks
Nursery in this south- c·entral
Minnesota· community.
The business got its stan
' because his father. Clayton, an
author, nurseryman and·former
professor of plant biology.
lived in a Waseca home sHaded
by oak trees. Too well shaded.
. "He had dit1iculty getting
flowers to bloom there without
~teady . ~unlight so he started
collecting different shade-tolerant plants frOn) around the
nation." Gordy Oslund said.
~' He began specializing in
shade loving plants . That
evolved into ferns and hostas.'' .
. 1t also evolved into a sizab le retail , catalog · and
,whotesate operation ,e tting
specialty plants to garde ners
and nurseries nationwide.
Hosta is a diverse plant. v&lt;irying a great deal in size. color.
&gt;hape .and texture. Varieties
range from ankle-high miniatures to flowering stalks more
than 3 feet tall and 5 feet across.
Plants can come with variegmed foliage or in a tlashy tlo~s- ·
cent. Sori1e emerge with leaves
that curl or fold. A few are fragrant. Most are' fast growing.
Despite their shady reputations, m~ny do well under a
full sun. Hosta is a hardy
· plant, attractive in containers
or whe n massed beneath needle-dropping .conifers. They
· also show well in woodland
and water gardens. providing
depth and interest when
growing against rocks. bordering streams or crowded
around a split rai l fence.
"Hostas also can thrive
along driveways where

At least 69 Iraqis die
in violence, including a
U.S.-backed raid
in Baghdad, A2

Sunday, March 26, 2006
Gordy
Oslund is a
banker
turned nurs. eryman who
specializes
in raising
plants that
thrive in
shade. His
Shady.Oaks
Nursery in
Waseca,
Minn., is one
of the
largest hosta
growing operations in the
United
States.

a

AP Photo

" Hostas are about color,"
he said. "That's what catches
yom eye. They give good,
solid perennial color through
the entire summer. People
collect all sizes, shapes and
colors. Put them anywhere in
a bed and they look good.
That's th e magic of hosta."

I

.

Meigs students excel at
Tech Prep showcase, A6

•·
.

..

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
MONDAY, MARCU 27, 2006

..ww.myd"iiY"'"tincl.mm

Progress report on new Racine Water Treatment Plant

SPORTS
.

-

.

fiO CENTS • Vol. 55, No. t:;b

.

· • Final four set.
SeePage ~1

working last month and have
so far poured the concrete ·
tloor for the detention tank
RACINE - Although it that holds the backwash .
appears as if a large ground·· Downing has .also poured the
. hog is loose in· Racine, it is forms for the wa ll s· for the,
actually progress in the form detention tank.
of new ly dug water line leadHolman sa id he ant icipated
ing hi th e vil lage's new wate'r that Downing woltld ne xt
treatment plant.
pour the walls for the detenThe new. water lines are tion tank and then start on the
nearly completed with Roses brine storage tank. •
Excavating having two more
Comractors Mid-Atlantic
li ne tie-ins to make. Street Storage Systems had a bid of
Commissioner John Holman · $502,R70 for installation of
said Roses is wait ing on the the storage tank and huve
weather to warm up to finish already completed the fauntheir ponion of the $2.5 mil· dation for the two clear wells
liOI) project.
that will be located at the
Roses ' bid was $206,735 plant at 602 Pearl Street.
for water tran smission/distriLate last week Midbution (line work). This work Atl antic began construction
included replacing well pipe . of the actual water storage ·
from the well field to the new tank located at 47665
water treatment plant and lay- Greenwood Cemetery Road. ·
ing conduit.
· The tank will hold 27 1,000
· Downing · Constructi on, gallons of water while the two
whic h put in a bid of clear wells will hold 47,000
$1,086.000 for construction
of the act ual plant, besan
Please see Racine, AS
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGEII!T@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~-----------------------------:-'---:---:------,:----:h-~-:/-:-h:------:.--------,

It's no secret, Holzer Clinic offers comp,rehensive hearing ea t. care m.
Oh ·
Southeastern
10
The Audiologists at Holzer Clinic's Hearing Aid Center are licensed .
audiologists providing the following services:
*Comprehensive Audiologic Testing
*Latest. technology
in hearing aids
.
(Conventional, programmable, and
digital) .
*Hearing aid repair (~my brand)
*Hearing aid batteries .
*Hearing protection
·*Assistive Listening Devices

.

HOLZER
CLINIC

Wo~

Beth Ser!lont/IIMW

is progressing at the site for tile new Racine Water Treatment Plant that will service 360 customers.

To schedule an appointment callorfor more information:
Jackson

Gallipolis

740-395-8801'

740·446·5135

Athens

OBITUARIES

'

740-589-31 00

Page AS ·
• April Lynn Cazad
• Ralph D. Shain ·
• Mildred Zimmerman
-;· Roger W. Hysell

INSIDE
• Prosecutors rest
Moussaoui case, but their
best' witness may be yet to
come. See Page A2
• Evangelicals seek
Ohio's political common
ground. See Page A3
• Retired teachers hear
talk on Civil War.
SeePageA3
• HMC volunteer donates
'
to Holzer Hospice.
SeePageA3
• Thousands gather in
Columbus to protest .
immigration proposaL
See Page A3
• Residency laws making
· it tougher to track sex
offenders. See Page AS

Beth Sergent/ photo
Submitted photo

Bill Baer.. left, and Jennings Beegle d1splay the plaques they were presented by the Oh1o
Quarter Horse Racing Association for their wins in the 2005 season.
.

horses

best

In 2005. Reubcns Luck. Ohio
Horse of the Year in 2004. hild
broken the track record at River
RACINE - Two local hors-. Downs, where he won an
es received honors at the recent· allowance race and ran third in
annual awards ceremony of the tl]e John Deere Challl'ngc.
Ohio Quarter Horse 'Racing stakes ral·e. In their only stan
Association.
together. Reubens Luck defeatReubens Luck. owned by ed the 2005 h9r.se of the ye&amp;:
Jennings Beegle, W&lt;~s named however, he had fewer starts.
champion three-year-old. and . due. to an injury. and accumuStriking Dream Bug. a ge lding: latcd fcwer ·racing points.
In 2001 , Reuben's half sisowned by Bill Baer. was chosen. reserve champion two- ter. also owned by Beegle. had
year-old. Horses earn these set a new track record at River
awards by garnering racing Downs and was the tirst horse
points in official American to run AAA time on that trdck.
Quarter Horse Assoc:i:llion
Su.iking Drc&lt;Uli Bug 1vas
sanct ioned races.
nw11ed reserve champion twoSTAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

a

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SEE YOUR TOYOTA DEALER BY MARCH 31ST!
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at 0 buyatoyota.com
.
'

3101 EAST SEVENTH STREET • PARKERSBURG, WV · ·304·424·5122

EPA ESTIMATED HIGHWAY MPGfOR 1005 MOOU&gt; CAMRY 1S !l I IPHD AUTO. CO ROllA 1801. SIE NNAS3261WD. lRUNNER 86&amp;4 SRS Gi l WI 10~ HIGHL\IiDtR HYB~D MD0tl6960 ACTUAl MILEAGE Wi ll VARY. . PURCHAicRI CAN RfWVE CAIH BAC~ 'RJM fO\'Dfl JRCJirlfPl ycA)jl BACK TO
DOWN PAYMENT J'o APR fiNANCING UP TO l\ MONTHS. J.9'o APR fiNANCING UP TO 59 MONTHS, AND 19% API&lt; fi NANCINGUP TO 60 MONTHS AVAILABLE TO OUAUfiED BUYERS THRU TOYOTA flfiANCIAl SERVICE S TO Til fiNAN CED CANJIG!EXCTE 0 MSRP,, u~ OPfiGN\ l'HND .fCfH\EfEES.
0%=36 MONTHLY PAYUEn Of IIi 18 fOR EACH Sl'l00 BORROWED 3 9'.;=60 MON THLY PAYMENlS Of S18l7 fOR ·EACHtl000 BORROWED19'..,60 MONTHLY PAYMEN TS Of.m91 fOR EACH SIUOO BORROWED NOT All BUYERS Will QUALIFY. MW GEPER lANK! UL-r ALCULA JED BY
MULnPLYING EPA HIGHWAY ES'TiMITED MPGBY fU[, TA~' CAPACITY ACTUAL Ml~EAGE Will VARYANO DEPENDS UPONMANY fACTORS NO I CO~\IDERED INEPA TESTS. 'ALL LEAS[ OFFERS: CUSTOMER IS RESPGNSIBLE fOR EXCESSIVE WEAR BASED ONTOj01A S1ANOARDS fOR NORMAl US[ AND,
15 CENTS PER MIL[ OVER lUOO MilES YOUR PAYMEN TMAY VARY BASED ONfiNAl NEGOTIATED PRICE NOULL CUSTOMERS Will QUlliFY.CAMRY 4-CYl AUTOMATIC MSRP S19.85l TUNDRA DCAB SR\ MSRP 111.91\ fOR DErAilS CAll I 8004!110YOlA All OffERS ENDliMo

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SI~CriONS- 12 PMiE.S

Calendars

A3

. Classifieds

B3-4

Com ics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

. Obituaries

As
B Section

POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Comm issione rs
approved a bid friday for
mason ry repairs at the
Ches te r Academv.
Meeting in re gular se., sion. the hoard reviewed a
bio.l from Stanley R. Greer
of Jackson . in· the amount
of $4.000. The . work wil l
be paid through a grant
by
the
uhtained
Che&gt;ter/Shadc
Historical
;\sM•ciatinn. but commj,_
~iofle r~

mu~l

Jpprovc

Weather

ttlt•

· A6 · hid ill'cause tlte hisHiric
&gt;c hool budding is. owned
h)
th e
wunty.
The
. .c_ ' :.tou6 Ohiu \ ·aile}· l'uhlishin~o: Co.

J

Cake·auction this week.

· year-old largely due to his spectacular come-from-behind effcllt
in a dose second in the Buckeye
Futurity. the only stakes race
offered exclusi\'eiv for Ohio
horses. He W&lt;b sired by Beegle's
slallion Stliking Colors.
·
Baer wa; a newcomer in .
racing in 2005. Beegle. who is
Baer's neighbor. says it took
him 20 years to Tun second in a
stakes race. yet Baer did it in ,
hi s first tn .
No doubt .1
impressed hy' hi, outstanding
tirst racin~ sea.son, the Ohio
Quarter " Horse
Racing
Assoc·iation recently elected
'
Please
Horses, AS

The c-a~c au&lt;:tinn is pan
the Fifth An nual MarL' h
for ~leal, .thi' Thu r,Jay at
th e senior cent er. The even t
POMEROY - " ] need henefih the \1ci g, \kal s nn
cakes'"
Mc ig,
Senior WhceJ , Pro~ram ~&lt;hi.:h
C~:n tcr Activ itle, DircL'tor · allempt ' to k~"c p a n~ se ni or .
Debbie Jones '&gt;aid .from 20 in~ hungr, .
Jone s i&gt; lookin g fu r cake'
Aft'c r "t he -c ~ke' are
bccau1e you can~·, ha1·c a jud ~ed thn "il l he auccake auction '' ithou t them ·uuned ,,Jl io · t&gt;c·nd1t meals
and a~ o f now ~he i" rL~rmin~
low on entries.
•
Please see Auction, AS
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL CO

,;f

PVH do71ates to London pool

see

Commissioners award bid for masonry repair

Details on P"ge AS

Sports

R1ta Buckley, 82. of Middleport was one of many sen1ors who
celebrated their birthday this month and was treated to a birth·
day cake at the Meigs Senior Center. Alt ho ugh the center has
plenty of birthday cake it IS in need of entries mto 1ts ca ke contest and auction th1s Thursday at the ' center.
·

,
,o

Academy is located adjao:ent
to
the
Chester
which
tlt c
Court hou se,
county also owns.
Bids for additional work
were received from (ireer
and Jerry Custer nf K"cntL' .
hut a&lt;:tinn on those bi;[,
was tabled pending revi ew
hy Gnmts Admin is trator
Jean Trus,ell.
Comm ],.., ~inne r.., . .tf . ., u:
• Apprmetl a SlJtJ(l annu;il appropriat ioi1 to the
Alhany
ln.dcpcndcnt
Agnnlltural Snl·iet) for ihc
Alb:my Fwr. ·
• Rc\'i12wed a hid fur hitult~ i nou -. matcri ah for Apnl
from A'phalt i\1at,·riah n.

Marietta. and referred the
hid to . Engineer Eugene
Triplett .
• Appm 1eli a .fund t r~im­
kr . for the economic de velopm ent : office
111
the
anl(lunt t• f S:i.lKlO.
• Approved payment nf
hiJJ, in the an.w un t nf
':&gt;.1.12. 71 6 53 .
• Appro,\ eo. c1 tnntraL'I
\lith Th~ "c n/ Krup,p·l(., r clc' a tor maimcn~tll(l" for the
Departmen t nr Jnh . and
~amil )

Sen' tl'l'' .
am nut1t \,f '-J.I .1. ~ .
Pn.~" c:nl

Cnmmi-.-.i\lllL'P•

1n

lh~?

·
\\ ere
~1\l...' k

0 .11 cnpt&gt;rt and Jnn Sht'~t.'
and Clerk (lii1ri" ~ !"'''

I
I

·

Brtan

J .· ~eed ; photo

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tat presented $500 toward r,epa~rs at the
London Pool 111- Syracuse. P1ctured at the PVH Middleport CIJ111C
are Amber Ohlmger. community relat1ons ass1stant. Tony Hawk
of the pool steenng comrn1 ttee . Syri;lcuse Councilman M1ke
Jacks. and Sutton 'Townsh ip Trustee Jerr y Hayman . ·

'

�.The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

.NATION • WORLD.

Monday, March 27, 2006

Public meetings

Bv STEVEN R. HURST

ric of Iraq since Feb. 22 when in the country are Shiite orgaa Shiite'shrine was blown apart nizations - the Mahdi Army
in Samarra, north of Baghdad. of al-Sadr and the Badr
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Police
Much of the recent killing is Brigades, the an11ed wing of
found 30 more victims .of the seen as the work of Shiite mili- the Supreme Council for the
sectarian slaughter ravagin·g tias or death squads that have Islamic Re\•olution in Iraq.
Iraq- most of them beheaded infiltrated or are tolerated by Both have ties with Iran.
~ dumped on a village road Iraqi police under the control
Hours before the raid in
north of Baghdad on Sunday.. of the
Shiite-dominated Baghdad near Sadr City, alAt least .16 .other Iraqis were Interior Ministry.
Sadr personally was the apparkilled in a U.S .-backcd raid in
Many of the victims have ent target of a tnortar attack at
a Shiite neighborhood of the been found dumped, mainly in his home in the holy city of
capital.
·
Baghdad, with their hands tied, Najaf, 90 miles south of
Accounts of the raid varied. showing . signs of torture and Baghdad.
Aides to the Shiite cleric shot in the head.
At least one mortar round
Muqtada .al-Sadr and .lraqi
In an apparent effort to
police both said it took place at clamp down on police wrong- struckwithin yards of al-Sadr's
a mosque, with police claiming doing, American troops raided . home, wounding a guard and a
22 bystanders died and al- an lmerior Ministry building passing child, said Sheik Sahib
Sadr's aides saying 18 . in no- and. brielly detained about I0 al-Amiri, an aide to the cleric.
Shortly after the attack. alcent men were killed.
Iraqi policemen after discoverThe Americans said lmqi ing 17 Sudanese prisoners in Sadr issued a statement calling
special forces backed by U.S. the facility, Iraqi authorities for calm.
"I call upon all brothers to
boops killed 16 "insurgents" in reported.
a raid on a community meeting
The report was reminiscent stay calm and I call upon the
AP Pllolo
· hall after gunmen opened fire · of a similar U.S. raid last Iraqi army to protect the pilon approaching troops.
· November
that
found grims as the Nawasib (mili- An Iraq i boy cleans the debris of his damaged house , fo llowing a bomb explosion, in Baghdad,
"No mosques were entered detainees apparently tortured. tants) are aiming .to attack Iraq, Sunday. A bomb exploded in front of a house in the central Baghdad Sunday, killing one
or damaged during this opera- That discovery set off a round Shiites every day," he said , woman and wounding two of her sisters and a man next door, police said. Elsewhere, a 13-yeartion," the military said. It said a of international · demands for referring to Wednesday's com- olq Iraqi student was killed after a roadside .bomb exploded in front of a school Sunday in the
non-Western hostage was investigations and reform of memoration marking the death city of Basra in southeast Iraq . Photographs of Imam Hussein, grand son of prophet
Mohammed is seen .
freed, but no name·or national- Iraqi police practices to 'ensure of the Prophet Muhammad.
ity was provided.
observance of human rights.
Associated Press videotape
In this case the Americans
showed a tangle of dead male quickly
determined
the
bodies with gunshot wounds Sudanese were held legition the floor of what was said mately and had not been
by the cameraman to be the abused, said Maj . Gen. Ali
imam's
living
quarters, Ghalib,· a deputy interior min:
attached to mosque itself.
ister.
The tape showed 5.56 mm
The U.S. military command
shell casings scattered about. here had no immediate com·
the floor. U.S. forces use that ment ·
caliber ammurtition. A grieving
The raid in Baghdad came a
man in white Arab robes day after · U.S. Ambassador
stepped among the . bodies . Zalmay Khalilzad spoke out
strewn across the blood- on the n~ed to cap the sedansmeared floor.
an, militia-inspired killing,
Employees, Independent Contractors, Vendors and their immediate family not eligible .
A total of at least 69 people saying "More Iraqis are dying
were reported ki\led Sunday in today from the militia violence
one of the bloodiest days in than from the terrorists." He
weeks. Most of the dead ·did not say which militias he
appeared to be victims .the meant nor did he tlefine who
~Uque &amp; Cra~ .Mall
~ , &amp; 'IEUICAL t~CJlllrMENT
· shadowy Sunni-Shiite _score- the.terrorists were.
700 East Main Street
: settling that has tom at the fab. The two major militia forces
Pomeroy, Ohio
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PHARMACY
Open I'II·F 9 am· 7 pm
195 Upper River Rd.
Bv MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN
Tobias. ''But he has a right to
740-446-000.7
Sat9 --5 pm
t14a zad. Aw. GalllpoU., OR
Gallipolis
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testify.'' .
991-1536
Toll Free 877-669-0007
740·44. . . . .
Moussaoui 's consistent posi740-446-9811
Store Hours:
Open Mon-Sal 10-6: Sun 1-!
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
ALEXANDRIA - After tion for the past three years is
7am-10pm • 7 Days A Week
three rocky weeks, prosecutors not hard to understand, but it is
wound up on a strong note as fraught with legal peril.
they rested their case for exeHe pleaded guilty last April
cuting al-Qaida conspirator · to conspiring ·with al-Qaida to
Zacarias Moussaoui. But the fly planes into U.S. buildings.
Diane McVey
~I.A . , CCC-A
witness who could prove most He ha' said consistently he
Ownt'r &amp; Audiuloi!ist
valuable for them has yet to was not part of the Sept II
take the stand: the defendaht operation but was training to
himself.
hijack a 747 jetliner and fly it
For most of the trial. lawyers into the White House if the
Monday. FREE Drinks
for the only man charge&lt;\ in U.S. refused to release a blind.
Juoaday$1.00 off any Dinner
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We&lt;tne!!day- HaH Rack Dinner
Sept. II , 200 l , seemed to be oned for life for other terrorist
·Nail Care ·Helix Cut&gt;
$7.99. tOWings $3.00
. making more points than' the plots in New York.
· facials &amp; Waxing
Thursday . HaH Chicken Dinner
government from the prosecuOn
July
18,
2002,
·Massage • Body Wraps
$5.99
tion's witnesses. 'But former Moussaoui tried to plead
• Spa rackages • ChemiC&lt;ll reels
E!:iW. Platters $5.99
FBI agent Aaron Zebley and guilty to some charges.
• Microderm Abrasions
Saturday - Chicken &amp; Rib Dinn~r
federal aviation security offi- Brinkema decided Moussaoui
$9.50
326 Sec.ond Avenue
·
Sunday . Pork Chop Dinner
cial Robert Carnmaroto fi nail y did not understand his legal
Gallipolis, OH 45631
1 pc . $5.99 2 pc. $7.99
managed to -get across the situation and stopped him
HBS:JI.o.n.:S.t. 11.~;m_Svn._tUnLc.Um
(740) 446• 293 3
prosecutors' main points late then, but not before he said:
1308 EASTE~Ii AVE. G.4WPOliS. 01/ 45631
•'"" " """' ""'' mr.,.,
last week - even though a
"I have no participation in
Hours;
~"4"-446
2487
(')p~:n Mun · Thu r~. ~ : 30-5pm
legal shadow lingers over their Sept. II. but .. . I have certain
M·f lOam-Close '-'--.;..'.;..
.· .;.v·..;..:.;;._.;;..;..;.;.__....J L---+IAI.l).&gt;LIIb.allll!Jl----l
testimony
knowledge about Sept. II. and
Then the once-volatile I know exactly who done it. I
Moussaoui, who remained know which group, who par·quiet through court sessions ticipated, when it was decidsince the trial began March 6, ed.''
reafftrmed that he still intends
. Longtime federal prosecutor
to do what he has !x:en trying E. Lawrence Barcella Jr., now
to do for three years: tell his in private practice. said in an
story in his ·own words.
interview.- "If Moussaoui says
Come in
The 37-year-old Frenchman that on the stand. he may well
HDaily lunch
of Moroccan descent seized rescue victory for the prosecu10:30 am-2:00pm
his customary moment , a tion from the jaws o.f defeat."
5 great sandwiches
. recess. The judge and jury
The jury in this sentencing
to choose from ...
: !llways leave first: marshals case has to i:)loose between
only S2.99
· keep Moussaoui at his sepa- . execution or life in prison
: rate table until they are gone. without a chance for release.
That is when Moussaoui usu- To obtain a death penalty,
675;.1812
: ally mutters or shouts some- prosecutors must show that an
Point Pleasant, WV
: thing like . •"God curse act of Moussaoui's led directly
· America" or "God bless al- to at least one ·of the nearIy
713-5536 .
Qaida."
3,000 deaths when al-Qaida ··
At the recess atier prosecu- flew four planes into the
tors rested. he yelled: "I will World Trade Center, the
testify, Zerkin, whether · you Pentagon and a Pennsylvania
want it or not."
field .
Gerald Zerkin ·is one .of the
That ad, according to proselawyers appointed to defend cutors, wa; lying to FBI agents
Moussaoui when U.S. District . after he was arrested while
West VIrginia Jabs
IEIMNG GALLIA U
Judge Leonie Brinkema decid- taking pilot . training in
Foundadan
IVUOIINDING COVNTIES
ed Moussaoui was too abusive Minnesota on Aug. 16. 200 I.
Complete AbOve &amp; lnground Replur
to continue representing him- · But the case they have laid out
Aboy;e Ground &amp; lnground Sales
&amp; Installation
self. Moussaoui has refused to goes beyond that.
~~ ·
• Openings
~ltJJntot
cooperate with hi s defense
Their most compelling wit• Chem.c als &amp; Su pphes
•.Ciosmg s
S.rilhc.t
team.
nesses were . Zebley and
• Lmers
• Free Waier Analyses
•
f
•nanc1n9
Avarl
able
•
Pumos
It is no secret that defen'-1! Cammarota.
• F•llsrs
PCILflRIS
Ovw 25 Ye•r.
&amp;
lawyers
do
not
want
Zebley &gt;pelled out how FBI
Medical
Excellence.
·
YAlAHA
418
U,
J
llflll
Moussaoui on the · stand com- agents c!l uld have taken inlor·
Local Carine.
IIIDD IIIW IYJR IPRIIIIif
plicating their case.
mation .about a money transfer
124 HIGHLAND AVE.
lllll&amp;llls..IH
EverYwhere
"His behavior i&gt; 10 erratic Mott&gt;Saoui got by wire from
PT PLEASANT, WV
740-441-98~6
041)-2240
{Old Cawhna Lumber Butldmg A cross
it's hard to know what hi' te;- · Germany to trace ·bu smess
380 State Rt. 7 N. •Gallipolis, OH
l r0111 CS X1
· timony will mean for hi s record ' and ultimately identify
11•
HIYClE
. www.holzerclinic.com
(304) 675-3877
case ," said Unive r,ity of 11 of.the 19 Sept. II hijacker'
IIIII!IJI&amp;Ufll hlllla.nm
Richmond law professor Cflfl \.:tthin wee ks
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

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•••

. Powelrs

[french City

FOOD FAIR

Prosecu'tors rest Moussaoui
case, but their best witness
may be yet to come

t]a111 i lt1

· ·· OXYGEN

LOW

OHIO

VALLEY
BANK.

ov

•

Todar's Number as
•

•

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL .
304-67 5-4340

HOLZER
CLINIC

E•~'-rK:t

BY THE BEND
Co-worker's caustic remarks
deserve management's notice
Monday, March

Community Calendar . .

At least 69 Iraqis die in violence,
Including a U.S.-backed ~aid in Baghdad

'

Pagc A3 ·

The Daily·Sentinel ·

' ~·

tJii.

0

BINGO
Now Plavinu Ever,-

tL._ Frtdav Mondav Nights

.Monday, March 27
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commi,sion, 9 a.m.,
117 Memorial Drive .

RACINE - Racine Area
Community ·organization
will meet at 6:30p.m . at Star
Mill Park. Potluck. New
members welcome.

POMEROY - Enterprise
United Methodist Church
and Pomeroy Church of
Christ will hold a community
prayer and praise service at 7
p.m. at the Church of thri st.
Special mu sic will be presented by Lawrence Eblin.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
. PO~TLAND - Lebanon Pool Committee to , meet at
: Township Trustees. 7 p.m., .6:30 p.m. at the' home of
Bob Wingett .
· township building.
Southern
RACINE
Local School Board. regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m. , high
school.
Meig s
. POMEROY
· County Library Board. 3
· p.m. at Pomeroy Library.

Clubs and
organizations

Th11rsday, March 30
POMEROY - Crusade
for Christ meet·ing , 7 p.m. 'at
the First Southern Bapti st
Church. Election of officers.

Youth events
Wednesday, March 29
MIDDLEPORT .
Middleport Literary Club, 2
p.m.: Pomeroy Library. Alice
Wamsley will review "Li ght
on Snow" by Anita Shreve.
Norma Torres wi II be the
hostess .

CHESTER
- Rev.
Jonathan · Noble speaks at
community Lenten . service,
7:30 p.m ., Chester United
Methodist Church .
Friday, March 31 .
POMEROY - Stations of
the Cross . 7 p.m.. Sacred
Heart Cl)urch.

Church events

Monday, March 27
Monday, March' 27
. POMEROY - OH-KAN
REEDSVILLE 7 Spring
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy . revival at the Eden United
Library. New ofticers elect- Brethren Chu rch. 7 p.m.
ed.
through April 2. Evangeli st,
Eric Ross . Singers, March
POMEROY
Meigs 28, Crossroads. March 380,
·County Right to Life, regular The Jarvis Family, and
meeting, 7:30 p.m., Pomeroy March 31 , The Crownsmen.
Library. changed to fourth Adam Will at 378-6244 for
Monday .of month.
information.
Thesday, March 28

Birthdays
Thursday, March 30
MIDDLEPORT - Freda
Edwards will observe her
94th birthday pn March 30.
Cards may be sent to.her at
the Holzer Senior Care
Center. Room .136-A. 380
Colonial Drive , Bidwell,
Ohio 45614.

Wednesday, March 29

GALLIPOLIS
Diz'
Richards, a registered nurse
. for 43 years at Holzer
Medical Center and. a current
: volunteer ,at the Hospital for
: the past 14 years, recently
· celebrated her 80th .birthday.
At ;1 ce lebratio n held .in her
honor. those attending were
· asked by Mrs. Richards not
: to give her gifts but instead
· : to make donations to Holzer
: Hospice . Thanks to her
· efforts and those of her ·
guests. a total of $350 was
raised.
"Everything I have seen
.
: with Hospice has heen won. derful."
Richards
said.
: "Hospice is great and wi 11 do
·· anything for their patients
and families."
.- Holzer . Hospice serves
patients regardless of their
S~Jbmttted photo
~bility to pay. with life- limit- Diz Rtchards at a celebration of her 80th birthday asked
. ing illnesses in Gallia, guests to not bring gifts for her but instead to contribute to
:Jackson, Meigs. and sur- Holzer Hospice. Here she presents the $350 dorjated to Jan
: rounding fOU nlies.· "We truly Holcomb, clinical director.
· appreciate the efforts of Ms.
Richards and the donations tor for Holzer Hospice. "We pay. making ·donations from
from her gue sts," said Jan provide care for our patients our community so important
· Holcomb. clinical coordina- regardless
of their ability
to to the hospice program ."
.
.

Evangelicals seek Ohio's political common ground
Bv JUUE CARR SMYTH

of his own about the religious
right and said the movement is
speaking less and less 'for the
COLUMBUS - Jim Wallis evangelicals he knows.
: and Russell Johnson have
'The right wants to narrow
: much in common: Both are the · mofal questions to only
: evangelical. ministers who care two: abortion and gay mardeeply about politics in riage," he said. "That's the
AmerK:a. Both want to see God biggest mistake they ever
: at t)le country's moral center.
made. because now they are
Bpt at a town hall-style dia-. unable to control the moral disIogue 011 faith in politics cu ssion. Evangelicals care
Sunday, what observers were about abortion and gay mar·: likely to see was th.eir differ- riage, but they also care about
. ences. said John Green. a polit- sex trafficking and Darfur. and
. ical scientist the University of HIV/AIDS, and global poverty
Akron . .
.
. and domestic poverty, tmd the
"I think. this event will show environment. There's been a .
something very important, preny narrow discu s~ion going
: which is that the evangelical on in Ohio under the se
: community i&gt; not monolithic," . groups."
• Green said last week "I think
For the record. Wallis supthey disagree on many things·. potls minimizing abortions but ·
and I think that will surprise stops short of labeling hinNlf
people. A lot of people believe pro-life or pro-choice. He says
evangelicals speak with one he is pro-family :md supponive ·
voice and showing thill isn ' l so of gay and lesbtan ri ghts.
: serves the long-term goals of
Johnson opposes tlbortlon
:both men"
w1d gay ~amage . and :1rgues .
Wall is, founder of the .that the miJ,JOnty ol Ohtoan' clo
Chri ,lian social justice mintO?,. .
istry · S~joumers . said before
I thtnk we show people that
· the event he wanted the publtc we can dtsagrec and do that
.. 11 y. an
: d mav beth·at's. d'tft'crforum to expand Ohio's "con- . c1v1
ent
than
· whai's going on in
. versation on moral values"
: beyond hot-button issues such Washington riglll now.'' he
: as abortion :u1d gay marriage. · said. "I think the president i;
He see' poverty. health care lighting a war on terror. and
and the environment as more · t.n~1ny on the academic ·leti. an(!
in the media. have .dectdeu tn
pressing ..
light
a war on .tho: . p1-e,ident
Johnson . chairman of the
We
need
to he etlect1 ve agattht
. politically · active
Ohio
: Restoration Project. hoped the the ti1rces or evil ami right now
: public di alogue could clear ltp they (the kfl) have tunwd it '
mi sconceptions -:- and what he into a political chess match
'ees as outright distortions .instead of an effective. united
about the religiou s right that he front ." . ·
Wallis. who voted for
says are contributing to politi. cal gridlock &lt;!I the national Democrat John Kerry in 200·t
opposes the war and pu shes the
: level.
: "I lulJ~ people can see that point that God is nnn -parti ,an.
'The heat1 of what I w:lnt ·to
· Bible-bclievine Christian&gt;.
· people of faith. are · compas- _ say on Sunday i' rdi gion
sionate people. arc canng. he should not he a wed ge to
: said . ''There 's been an attempt di\iUe u~. h~~t a hri~ ¥e to ~ r i n~
- bv 'manv on the left to margm- u' tugethe r. he '&lt;trd . ··\',h at I
: aiize what. they call the 'rcli- want to make cle~1r is that God
is not a Rc puhl ican or · a
: gious extreme ri ght." ' . .
: Walli' acknowledge' gnpes Democrat. nc religi nus ri~ ht

has implied, or outrightly said,
that God belongs to one political party and that's a heresy"
Johnson said Republicans
often beuer reflect the values of
h,is coalition . and that the
Democratic party is too closely
tied to the radical left. whith
has "declared jihad on acts of
religious expressio.n in the publie square."
·
But lie agreed with Wallis
that it is ultimately not about
party lahels. .
.
"They accu se us of being a
puppet of the Republican party.
but you know God was pro.- life
before there ever was a
Republican party. God was
pro- tradittum~ marriage in the
G:1rdcn ol Eden." he said.
Green said Ohio's fall eleclion stands to be the most religion-infused since the 19S~
presidential ra~e. when · the
Rev. Jesse Jackson ran as a
Democrat and the Rev. Pat
Robertson as a Republican .
In the Buckeye Stale .
Secretarv or State Kenneth
Blackwe'll . who often focus ses
his public talks on biblical val·
' ·
bl ..
ucs. tsd a ·leadmg
Repu
t'
·
u1c.ms
conte,n er nr governor. . .
R",P·
Stnck lan,d.. the
Demn': t.llt ~ lr&lt;mtrunner. 1.'- .t
llllnt, ter "!m mentions &gt;tnp
t:.tre tt.l the ltN ,P!Iragraph oil~ ~
c.unpa1gn htography. Attontc.)
Generttl Jnn Petro. Blackwell :
GOP II V~tl tn the M.ty pnm.lt} .
also has .sought to cmpha,ttc
the 1111ponance he pl ace&gt; on
huth.

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

·:!"d.

DEAR ABBY: A new cobecau'e I predi ct she will be
worker seemed to be a nice
history.
person and potential friend
DEAR ,ABB Y: I am the
was
hired. ·
when she
you nge" of four ,·hi ldren. M)
However, after a few· months,
eldest brother dteJ when he
she began making comments
wa&gt;an infant. But in our fa mDear
to me or about me in front of
ily it is li ke he neve r ex i&lt;tcd .
Abby
others. Sometimes they' are
Mv father alv. as ' de,nit-&gt;c '
good-natured, but more often
us' as hi ., three c·hil dl'cn. hut
they are insulting - although
my mot her " ill talk .. d,,.ut
presented as a "joke." I fe el
him a lit tle .
thi s is inappropriate. especialh it s om~t h i n g I can menly in the workplace . ·
you · un comfort able . If he r tion whe n "' ked. ··J j, 1 "u
I have heard that this is a "witticisms" fall under a pro- have an} ' ibling\•· · Ca;, I
type of bullying where. if the tected category (gender. reli" ment ion 111) i111 i&gt;iblc hrolh victim objects. then the per- gion. race, sexual orient a- er:! Shuulu I say I an t the
petrator belittles bim or her as tion). she ~ ould he creating a yo un ge't of four anu k a1·e 11
being "oversen sitive, " thus hostile work en viro nment and at that. ur 'hould I go Wtth
. adding salt to the wound . I management need s to be what my pare nts ha1 e a.l way'
have noticed that people who made aware of it.
sa id - the yo u ngc&gt;~ &lt;&gt; I three !
play this little mind game on
DEAR ABBY: I have been . - L: NSL'RE 1\' RRF: MERothers can dish it out but divorced for two vears and TOt\: WASH.
can' t take it when .someone am now dating a lady I' II call
DEAR UNSL' RE: It IHJuld
retaliates. I've seen this hap- Heidi. I have tickets to a rock be less co n fu s i n ~ if. vou 11 erc ·
pen in families where one concert in Las Vegas. I work to rep I) the wa)~ your parentsibling is scapegoated and and earn ~ mode;t incom e. do that you ·arc the
picked on.
Heidi works and al so make s a youngest of three chi luren
· I don ' t want to was1e ener- modest income. Heidi thinks When yo u e-et to kno " people
gy playing games. but I don't I should pay for her airline better. to the point that I llll
want to be a victim , either, so ticliet or not go to the concert . get to know ' their famil1 hi&gt;·I have decided to ignore the . I want to go, and I want her tury. you can then cli , L·u&gt;s the
comment s and/or interrupt .blessing , but I can't afford tragedy your parc tm facc·d
her by changing !be subject her airfare. Is she being jeal - wh en thc v lo't thei r fir' t
or making an excuse to leave · ou s and controlling? Arc · child .
·
the room. Ha~e you any other there any single women out
P.S. l am guc, in!! that yo ur
suggestions'' - NOT A VIC- there who wou ld like to go parents uo not disc u" theit
TIM
ami pay for their own airline firstborn becau \e the ; ubiect
DEAR NOT A VICTIM : ticket ? Help! - STUCK IN is still painfuL
.
When someone is ridiculed in VIRGINIA
Dear Abby is written bJ
the wo(kplace. it usually isn't
DEAR
STUCK: The Abigail Van Burert, ttlso
intended to be a joke. nor is it answers to your questions are known as jeanne Phillip.&gt;,
funny. It is intended to make yes and yes. However, if and was founded by her
the person appear le~s effec- another woman accompanies mother, Pauline Phillips.
tive. I do have ;mother sug- vou to that concert. you will Write
Dear Abby
at ·
gestion . Report it to your no IangeL have to concern www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
supervisor or office manager, yourself with whether Heidi Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
and· explain she is making is jealous or controlling 90069.

Retired teachers hear talk on Civil War
POMEROY - Local histo"
rian Michael Gerlach talked
on the Civil War in Meigs
County at a recent meeting of
the Meigs Cou~ty Retired
Teachers at Trinity Church.
Gerlach told of the diverse
population of Meigs County
and the role they took during
the Civi l War: Gay Perrin
presided at the meeting and
gave devotions. "Colors in the
Heart." Officers gave reports

~

Bv JoANNE VIVIANO

The heated debate .makes lit- Mexico. she said. but they can't
tie sense to 13-year-old Keilah visit him because they lack
Elder of Columbus. who won- , proper documentation and
COLUMBUS Nearly dered at Sunday's two-hour might not. be allowed back.
3JXXl people, many wrapped in rally why people from Mexico
"E,erybody thin k' we arc
Mexican flags ; rallied Sunday are treated differently tram peo- terrorists. and 11 e &lt;tre working ·
at the Statehouse in suppot1 of pie. bam in the United .States.
guys. They don·! giw me a
immigrants; rights, part of a
"It's not fair," she said. "Thev · ch:mce:· said Juan Samiago. 32. .
series of demonstrations across come here to get a bener lite
who works it\ heating and coolthe country over the weekend.
and some people treat them like ing and is married \o an
More than 500,000 people they're nothing." .
American .
·
marched through downtown
Alicia Duane. 40. wiped
Los Angeles on Saturday. and away tears at the Columbus
Wendy Martme? · ~ 2. an
groups of .1 0.000 marched rally as she explained that ·she American-born health care
through
Phoenix
and and her husband. · Pedro worker from Columbus. ;:tid
Milwaukee as President Bush l\·1.lt1me7. haven't seen the1r 18- she's concerned about a proposand the Senate prepared to year-old · son in five vears. al that would require medical
wrestle over what to do al~Jut Thev' ve lx'en · in the United personnel '" 1ciif' a patient" s
· the estimated 12 million illegal State;. 1c1r 10 years and help pay ·. immigration -t:!lus bclore
immigrants in the United State.s their son\ tuition tor college in administering Gtrc .
"Here in Ohio. we are the
fastest-growing ethnic group."
Do you want to put a veteran
said Ruben Herrera of the
Latino Leadership Initiative in
in the courthouse?
Columbus. who helped organize the event. "We. want people to know . we· re here and
were willing to stand up for
our rights.
MEIGS .COUNTY AUDITOR
"People ar(' listening to us.
A ve1eran with 3 years active·duty,
Politiciw1s are listening. to u&gt; ..
2 in Germany
The message is geuing out."
President
Bush
wants
)(mr Vote Cowm!
Congress to create a .progr.un to
allow foreigners to ·gain legal
status for a set wnount of time ·
to do specific jobs. ~'hen · the
time is up. they would be
required to retum home without
an automatic,path to citizenship.
. But Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist, R-Tenn .. says the pni-nary concern with immi,gration
should be national securitv.
Proposals under consideraAII~Qies ol earpet an ••••••••:
tion include making it a felony
''
'EIIJI
CARPET, UXOJ(T CAnET,
to be illegally in the United
TI~CUi,. · CA&amp;PET, IU'V CAIPIT, LEVEL
State;. imposing. new pcn &lt;~ties
on employer; who hire illegal
tOOP CA&amp;PET aad SC.ULn'VID CAIPET.
immigraol\ :md erecting t~nces ·
Ne_..cbarpfotr.an! ~~ ·
along one-third of the U.S ·
Mexican border.
•

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

Memorial Day

l'~!.~~~n~?a~~k

·

I'

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H

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an(l

~~ister

·

.

"St•ninr .tteigs Co. for Ol't'r 3 l'fU!L~

llJcautiJuf ,!,.l(cmories .!,..l{orlUments
t .111.1167 5-ltlt;

Jull Fref

HJ7 -liJIJ. JMHI

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. .....
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, ...... 11!1. . . . ..........
,_.• fl'ee . .:..., 1daa ......

for a free monument

l~tl J•rk""' A•e.
Point Plt·ll~unt . \\'\'

Teachers Association\ sprin2
· conference in Athens March
29. Debbie Roush rejl&lt;med
that
the
Health
Care
Stabilizati on Futid date lm
been extended from ~ 01 8 to.
2021.
Door priLe., donated bcRoush was v. on by Vin a, Lee
and Barbara Trip. r\ext meeting will be April 20 at Trinity
Church. A luncheon preceded
the meeting.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~I ail or present this ad for IO'ff discount
ij

and members were .encouraged to donate to the scholarship fund. New program
books were distributed. membership was di scussed and
those who volunteer were
encouraged to" keep track of
their hours. Members reported ill were Martha Hoo,cr.
Martha Greenaway, Maurita
Miller and Helen Maag.
Perrin reported I0 members
will attend the Ohio Retired

71wusands gather in c;olumbus to protest immigration proposal

ji'::===~===~==~:;=?==~:='iiiiiiil

repare NOW jQr__

27, 2006

ij .

~~OM t:u~l• Ridge Rd . '

Pomero,·. OH

1740199i-7440

'

-

AndersOn's
liiJ ;H!UIJ ;!* M ij !M:@t1''·' 3W 3J
w

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.
...... OH • 992·3671

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111- Court Street o Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise there'?[; 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

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Today is Monday, March 27, the 86th day of 2006. There
are 279 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
..
· On March 27. 1977. 582 people were ktlled when a KLM
Boeing 747. attempting to take off. crashed into a Pan Am747
on the Canary Island of Tenerife.
On this date:
.
In 1513, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon sighted
1
'
Florida:
In 1794. President Washington and Congress authorized
creation of the U.S. Navy.
In 1836. the first Mormon temple was dedicated, in
Kirtland. Ohio.
,
In 1917, the Seattle Metropolitans 'became the tirst U.S.
team to win the Stanley Cup as they defeated the Montreal
Canadiens.
In 1958, Nikita Khrushchev became Soviet premier in addi:
ti&lt;in to First Secretary ef the Communist Party.
In 1964, Alaska was rocked by a powerful earthquake that
· killed 114 people. ·
.
. In 1968, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man to
orbit tlie earth, died in a plane crash .
In 1980, 137 workers died when a North Sea floating oil
field platform, the Alexander I. Keilland, capsized during a
storm.
In 1998, the Food and Drug Administration approved the
anti-impotence drug Viagra, made b;v Ptizer.
. Five years ago: In its first spec tfic · accusation against a
detained U.S.-based scholar, China said Gao Zhan had cohfessed to spying for foreign intelligence agencies. (Gao, who
had been detained Feb. II . was released ihe following July.) .
California regulators approved electricity rate hikes of up to
46 percent. An empty train riding on the wrong side of the
tracks crashed into a crowd~d commuter train in central
Belgium, killing eight people. ·.
, ..
One year ago: Pope John Paull! delivered an Easter Sunday
blessing to tens of thousands of people in St. Peter's Square,
but the ailing pontiff was unable tc? speak and managed only ·
to greet the saddened crowd with a sign of the cross. In a live
Internet interview with the . Rev. Jesse Jackson, Michael
Jackson declared himself "completely innocent" of child
molestation charges, and said he was the victim of a conspir·
acy.
. ·
·. Today's Birthdays: Blues musician Robert Lockwood Jr. is
91. Fonner newspaper columnist Anthony Lewis is 79. Dance
company director Arthur Mitchell is 72. Actor Julian Glover ·
is 71. Actor Jerry Lacy is 70. Actor Austin Pendleton is 66.
Actor Michael York is 64. Rock musician Tony Banks
(Genesis) is 56. Actress Maria Schneider is 54. Rock musician
Andrew Farriss (INXS) is 47. Movie director Quentin
Tarantino is 43 . Rock musician Derrick McKenzie
(Jamiroqyai) is 42. Actress Talisa Soto is 39. Actress Pauley
Perrette is 37. Singer Mariah Carey is 36. Rock musician
Brendan Hill (Blues Traveler) is 36. Actress Elizabeth
Mitchell is 36. Hip.-hop singer Fergie (Black Eyed Peas) is 31.
Actress Emily Ann Lloyd is 23 . Actress Taylor Atelian is II.
Thought for Today: "Out of love you can speak with straight
fury." - Eudora Welty. American author _( 1909-200 I).

.

PageL4

.OPINION

Monday, March 27,2006

Q: What's worse than
Afghani stan's barbaric prose~ution of Abdul Rahman
for the Islamic crime of converting to Christianity? .
A: The muffled ·U.S. reaction.
The president is "troubled,
deeply. troubled," a response
that doesn't exactly ring the
red phone ~ and the State
Department really isn't troubled, deeply or otherwise. On the contrary,
responding to this Afghan
assault on freedom of conscience . (indirectly enabled
by the best intentions of the
U.S. military} , Foggy
Bottom actually tried to look
on
the
bright
side:
"'Previously, under the
Taliban. anybody considered
an apostate was subject to
torture
and
death,"
spokesman
Sean
McCormack said. "Right
now," he coritimied, "you
have a legal proceeding
that's
underway
in
Afghanistan." Which means,
I guess, thaoks to Uncle
Sam, nobody has to submit
to "torture and death" anymore without .first getting his
day in court. .
Welcome to U.S.-Iiberated
Afghanistan. a place where,
as far as freedom of conscience goes, the shariabased constitution is well
worth the paper it 's written
on (nothing}, · and process
trumps principle every time.
"It's a constitutional matter,"
McCormack explained, "so
it's a legal matter. So what
that tells you is that there are
two sides to this."
Two sides - meaning that

Oiana
West

Rahman may or may not be
guilty as c!Jarged? H's hard
to
believe
that
any
American, even , a State
Department
spokesman,'
could buy into a "proceeding" · that makes religion a
matter of state control. Oti
the other hand - and this is
, where things get. truly
shameful - no representative of the Bush administration has denounced, critiqued or even questioned
U.S.-liberated Afghanistan's
right to try, let alone take the
life of, any person for leaving Islam.
Instead , we ialk about
Afghanis,tan's . "judicial
case" - as if it had one and the need for "transparency" -as if it's nut clear that
Afghanistan is merely
enforcing sharia (Islamic
law). We also tend to "hope
very much," as Under
Secretary of State Nicholas
Burns put it, "that ... freedom of religion will . be
upheld in Afghan court. " But
how can freedom of religion
be upheld in Afghan court
when t(eedom of religion
isn
't . . written
into
·
Afghanistan's constitution?
Yes, the constitution's preamble talks up the ,United
Nation 's
Universa)

Declaration of Human
Rights, whose Arti cle 18
guarantees freedom of conscience; and yes, Article 2 in
the Afghan constitution
guarantees limited freedom
for
non-Mus lim-born
Afghans (although anyone
promoting a religion other
than Islam is thrown out of
the country, said the Rev.
Giuseppe
· Moretti ,
Afghanistan's lone Catholic
priest). But here's the salient
point: According to Article
3, "no law can be contrary to
the beliefs and provisiol)S of
the sacred religion of Islam ."
Because Islam's "beliefs
. and provisions" prohibit
Muslims from leaving Islam
on pain of death , and
because the Afghani stan
constitution is bound to fol .Jow Islam ic law, converts
from Islam have no freedom
and 'no protection under the
U.S .-supported Karzai government.
Similar
provisions .
entrenching sharia are
included in both the Iraqi
and.
the
Palestinian
Authority constitutions, two
other U.S.-assisled exercises
in nation-builcling - or,
rather, Islamic-nation-building'. Maybe now, thanks to
Abdul
Rahman, , more
Americans wil'l see that the
se~ds of Islamic theocracy
are planted when a nation's
founding document is rooted
in sharia, thu s outlawing
what we think of as "universal" human rights. It could
be that, having signed off on
such Islamic-nation-bui lding
-. inspired by a heady mix
of optimism, confu sion or

naivet, - the United States
isn 't working itself into a
liberty-affirming lather over
Rahman from a sense of
strategic ri.~ignati o n , or even
embarrassment over the
results.
. But that shouldn't condemn us 'to indefinite and
deferential silence about the
chasm that opens up when
basic lsbmic law overrules
fundamental Western liberties . Rather than sinking into
a "deep! y troubled" and non·:
communicative funk, rather
than pretending the Afghan
co nstitution doesn't contam
a blueprint for a sharia state ,
tl1e president and hi s people
should explain the fundamental conflict between
emerging Islamic democracies and the Western world
- a conflict that looms larger than any military front in·
the so-called ."war on terror": Shari a and liberty don't

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EDITOR

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addressing issues, nor personalities. Let(ers oft/wnks In orgahizations and indi l'iduals ll'illnot he accepted for pub/ ication.

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Ralph · D. Shain
R'alph D. "Barney" Shain, 89, Antiquity Community,
died Sunday, March 26, 2006, at his restdence.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the
·
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, Ohio. .

Mildred Zimmennan

Rahman may avoid prosecution by being declared
mentally incompetent. That
might defuse the immediate
crisis·. but not the long-term
conflict - and it certainly.
wouldn 't ·
guarantee
Rahman's safety. (It's· grisly
to imagine him in an Afghan
mental hospital for Christian
converts and ot her statediagnosed lunatics.) Nor
would it guarantee ours.
Sugarcoating sharia and
underplaying liberty doesn't
win any wars. It just wins
more sharia and le ss liberty.

. Mildred Zimmerman, 84, of Proctorville, Ohio, died
Sunday,March 26, 2006 in Saint Mary's Medical Center.
She is preceded in death. by her .husband, Robert Pierce
Zimmerman. .
.
Hall Fu·neral Home. in Proctorville is· in charge of
arrangements, which are· incomplete at this time .
.

Roger

Hysell

Q: If I am stopped by the
police after I've had a few
drinks, what should I do?
A: First, pull to the right
side of the roadwa,y as soon
as you can do so safely. Keep
your hands on the steering
wheel. Do not begin to
search for paperwork until
. the officer asks you to. After
providing your identifying
information, you have a right
to politely inform the officer
that you will not answer any
further questions without
first speaking to an attorney.
Q.: . If I've said I' won't
answer further questions
without an attorney, and the
officer tells me to get out of
the car, do I have to comply?
A.: Yes. You must get out
of the car if ordered to do so.
If you do not, you could be
charged with crime.
.
Q. : What should I do if the
officer wants to give me a
sobriety test?
.
A.: Once you are out of
your car, _you have the right
to politely refuse all. roadside
sobriety tests. You are not
required to perform roadside
sobriety tests and it is not' a
crime to refuse to perform
the roadside sobriety tests.
Q. : What happens if the
officer af(ests me?
A.: If you are arrested, you
will be asked to submit to

a

DELAWARE (AP) . Sex offenders who move
frequently or .are homele ss
are presenting a challenge
to authorities trying to
track their movements ,
NEW HAYEN -A chicken noodle dinner will be held in especially in the wake of
memory of Mrs. Bill James Friday at St. Paul Lutheran tougher enforcement of
Church, Fifth Avenue, New Haven, W. Ya. Lunch and dinner l.aws .preventing offenders
will be served starting at [,1 a.m. Carry out and delivery are from living near schools.
available. The cost is $6.. Donations are also being accepted.
At least 14 states, includ-.
ing Ohio, have laws regulating where offenders can
live, and many .of those
states are seeing problem s,
said Scott Matson , a
research associate. for the
Center for · Sex Offender
POMEROY - Marriage · licen ses were ' issued in Mei~s Management, a MarylandCounty Probate Court to James Aron Forshey, 32, and Stacte based .nonprofit group
Marie Watson, 21, both of Parkersburg, W. Ya.; Larry Sherman funded
by
th.e
U.S. ·
Hoschar, 37, and Terri Lynn Rose , 35, both of Pomeroy; Department of Justice.
David Joseph Wolfe, 22, and Sharlene Marie Chapell, 21, both
Matson . said forcing
of Coolville; Brian Lee Young, 26, an.d Candy Darlene offenders to move and then
Bradshaw, 20, both of Langsville; and Jason Robert Peckham,. register multiple time's
20, Pomeroy. and Brandy Lange Shea, 20, Shade.
makes them virtually Iran-

Benefit dinner planned

For the Record

Marriage licenses

.

·,

Local weather .
Monday ... Mostly sunny.
Not as cool with highs in the
upper 50s. Light and variable
winds ... Becoming southwest
around 5 mph in the afternoon .
Monday
night... Partly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
mostly cloudy with a chance
of ,showers after midni~ht.
Lows in the upper 30s. Ltght
and. variable winds. Chance
of rain 40 percent.
. 1\Jesday .. .Showers likely.
Highs in the mid 50s.

Home team_p.Jays ball
imposs ible mandates of the
No Child Left Behind law
until lhe final bell releases
htm 'from hi s teaching
duties . Then he leaps out of
his polo shirt' and khakis.
~nd into a_too-tight nylon
uniform that show s off his
spare tire as well as hi s still -·
great legs .
Scuffing new black tenni s
· shoes in the din. tuggi ng at
the bill of a new black cap
embroidered. with a ·gold
"H... he becomes our very
own Tomm y Lasorda. spouting the wisdom of long-gone
heroe .s
Ted · Williams,
Mickey Mantle and Jackie
Robinson.
· Our small town doesn't
have a regulation baseball
fi eld . 'o all the Dragons'
g&lt;imes must he rla yed nearly
three . hnurs . :twav. For the
next six Friday ilight s, my
I1Usband. who is nearly el igiblc for Social Securit y, wil l
wrap himself in a sleeping
hag and camp out on the
. "J1posing team' s i)ardwood
gy m rlonr. chaperoning a
bunch of teenagers .
Like I said . bas'e b~tll is
child \ play.
(Log mt l o

H' lnr. radbar-

tilm l.\ .,.om to rrwl TAD 'S
!1/,00 &gt;
r•u 111a1 ulw u•)·1re
Ill 7inl d o Tlw Wrmll' n
.\nulimlr'. PO. /Jox I0/61J,
· Co/111nhia. Mo . ()52115)

Auction
from PageA1
on wheels.
Cakes are to be submitted into the following categories.: Chocolate cake s
(any cake made with chocolate); cakes made with fruit
or vegetable s (examples,
carrot, apple, applesauce or
spice); decorated cakes; any
yellow or white cake; coffee cakes, crumb and pound
'cake. '
All cakes must be si ngle
or double lay ers..
.
All entries mu st have the
entrant's name on the bottom of the · plate or pan so
that it can not be easily
revealed to the pub Iic .
The entering exhibitor
shou Id make· a II baked
goods .
All baked goods should
be on or in a disposable
contain er. as they wi II . be
auctioned after judging .
,Cakes will be judged : 30
points for appearance; 30
. points for texture; 40 point s·
for taste .
All judges' decision s
\will be fi nal.
'. First and se·cond place
.. awards will be give n in
eac h category with a best
and reserve champion cho-

Southwest winds 5 to lOmph.
Chance of raio 60 percent. ·
Thesday
night...Mostly
cloudy Wtth a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in .
the mid 30s. West winds
around 5 mph . .
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Wednesday night...Mostly
. clear. Lows around 40 .
Thursday and Thursday
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 70s, Lows
around 50.

one or more chemical tests BAC of at least a.08 but le'' (double the 30 days' mtm(breath, blood. and/or urine) than .17. Is there a difference mum hecause you refused
to measure your BAC. You in the minimum amount of te-ri ng).
can choose whether or not to time each of us might spend
Q. : I' ve heard that some
submit to a' chemical test, but in jail?
cities in Ohio are tougher on
you should be aware that ,
A.: According to Ohio law, OVI offense' than others. Is
under certain circumstances, if you have been convicted that true '
refusing the test itself may of an OVI offense within the
A .: y es: 11· ts
· true t hat t h e
be a crime. Al so, if you past 20 years, and you refuse code; of 1ome Ohio municirefuse to submit to a ehemi- to submit to a chemical te st. palit ies 3 re stricter ihan the
cal test, you face the poss i- you ri sk doubling the mini - State Code. When that is the
bility of a longer admini stra- mum · amount of time you case. the municipality's code
tive li~:ense suspen sion might spend in jail. That take' precedence over the
(i\.LS).
"minimum time" you may state\ code . For example ,
C
Further, if you have been face depends on how many 1h C
· ·
h
e
olumbus
City
ode has
convicted of another drunk OVI convteltons
you ave what is ca ll ed a "lifetime
driving offense within the had within the past six year'
lookba ck" period . Thi s
last 20 years, the mandatory
minimum jail sentence may · If this had been only your mean ' tha t. in Columbus ,
be doubled.
first conviction within the any pr ior OV I. ·no matter
On th.e other hand . if you past six years, the minimum· how many years ago it was,
submit to a chemical test and sente nce would ha ve been will be co nsidered when
test results show you were three day s in jail or a 72- dec idin g pena lties .
LliH' You Ca n Use is a
over the legal limit , you arl:' hour Driver Interve ntion
more likely to be convicted Program . Since this is yo ur weekl1· consumer legal inforof an OVI than if you refuse second conviction within six mutwn m lumn proviqed by
to take the te st. In most years, you would normall y tile . Ohio
Stare.
Bar
cases, the test results will be face a minimum j ail sentence Assocwtrnn . T!HS article was
used as evidence of your of I0 days. However, · prepared by attorne y Jon 1
guilt. Also, if you take the becau se you refu sed testing , Saw . a parmer 111 . the
test and you have a BAC of you face the possibility of C?lumhuJ lawfi.rnl, Saw . &amp;
more than .'17, the mandato- double that time (a minimum Ptatt. PLL. Articles appearry minimum jail· sentence of 20 days in jail ), whereas iiiR in this column are
will be doubled.
your friend, who submitted i11tended 10 pro vide broad,
Q. : Let's say I have one to testing, would face a min- gen eral iofo rma.tio n about
prior OVI conviction and imum ,of Only 10 day s.
the law. Befo re applying this
refuse to subm it to testing.
If this had been your third iufor.mation .10 a specifi&lt;·
Myfriend , who also has . conviction in six years, you legal problem, readers are
oneprior OYI conviction, would have faced ·a mini- urged to seek advice from an
submits to a test and has a mum jail sentence of 60 days attome\'.

Residency laws making it tougher to track sex offenders.

Local Briefs

(Diana West is a columnist
for The Washington . Time.,.
She can be cont(J(ted . ria
d imun.vest@ 1·e ri ;;un.ne t.)

10 SHUl DOWN AND

sound effeCts."
My husband dropped the
Why does he love it ..,o
bomb in an e-mail:
·much '!
"i:m the . new assistant
.'·Because
· high-school
higb-school baseball coach."
baseball
is
li
fe
played out in
he wrote. ''I will mow the
seven innings.'' he said.
lawn, power-wash the house
Tad
speaking slowly. as to a
and build closet shelves after
Bartimus kinder~artn e r. "All importhe season's over. Until then,
tant lessons occur in baselet's discuss this like adults."
bail: opportu nit y, s uc~ess ,
''Adults" and "basebaU"
failure. dreams , disdpline.
aren't often used in the same
sentence: Baseball is for the signed a $50 million con- Joy is a home run: disapchild in us; my husband has tract. My husband 's Little pointme nt- is a strikeout. At
a lot more of it than l .do, League and high -school the end of a game, nobody's
which is why I' ve been wail- baseball experience. wasn't died and everybody gets to
ing all these years for the about steroid use, overpaid eat. The next day we do it all
other cleat to drop.
.
underachievers, scandals · over again."
A decade ago, my hu sband and Congressional tcstimoEvery Apr.il through
· volunteered to coach a high- ny.
October, throu gh all the
school team . He . became so
He remembers he ."always decade s of responsibility.
.. totl ch- my' · husband has mentally·
enamored of the experience mad.e il pomt ol·_lirsl
that he went to graduate in g home plat e, a me re worn an outfielder 's glove
school for three years to depression in the gravel and on his left hand fro m openbecome a certified teacher so clay field we played on ." Hi s ing day thr(mgl:t the World
he cou ld continue to coach sandlot team' s .ba seball s'· Series .
baseball. Unfortunately, the . were "'usually hardened by
Thi s yem. ·when h!; got an
little school that hired him moisture and time. and wh en unexpected ' hot at a.hst hurdidn 't have enough eligible thc leather cover wore out rah : he ignored hi.1 arthritic.
students to field a team .we wrapped them with elec- shoulder and creaky knees
until thi s year.
trician's tape one of us had and became the batting and
My husband's body inay nicked from hi s dad' s tool- pitching coac h for the Hana
be 64 years old, but hi s heart box."
Dragons - a)l II ' of them.
is 17. That 's when he last
"There were no fans . no including a girL He refuses
p!ayed America 's game, umpires. no uniforms:· he to ~omment abou1 the ice
. when "my bat made a certain · recalled of happy days a bags he drape s over his anm
sharp sound . a CRACK. and ,half-century di stant. "Mm.t and legs after every practic-e .
it meant I'd struck the ball of us hadn't started readin g
I've nc,c r see n him "'
fir'mly and had a hit."
the· -spelrt s pages ye t. so w~ 1orc &lt;lllu ex hau"cd -~ pr
I found ·that yo uthful li stened to radio hroadcash happi er.
Every Ja y. he sr cnds nine
memory in an essay he wrote of away games. where the
the day Alex Rodri guez ;innouncer made up hi s own hour' sloggi ng througl1 the

.

Roger W. Hysell, 60, of Pomeroy, died Sunday, March
26, 2006, at his residence.
Arrangements are under the direction of Birchfield
Funeral Home in Rutland, Ohio..

Me; BGBJ AN
~Rm\&lt; AT-rnr; PORT
T"r; RJl&lt;T Wl LL ·NtfD .
~SiAR{fV

w.

•••

Use: What

~pril Lynn Cazad, 31, of Huntington, W. Ya., died
Fnday, March 24,2006, in Saint Mary's Medical Center.
She was born April 21, 1974 in Cleveland, Ohio
daughter of Thelma Ins~o Cazad of Huntington and the
late Charles E. Cazad.
In addition to her father, she is preceded in death by a
brother, Alan Dale Cazad.
She is survived by her son. · Scott Alan Gazad of
Huntington.
.
. Funeral service will be at I p.m., on Tuesday, March 28,
at Ha)l Fu~eral Home wilh Pastor Carl Black officiating.
Bunal wtll follow tn Mtller Memorial Gardens · in Miller
Ohio.
· . '
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. on Monday at Hall
Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio.
Pallbearers will be Marshall Cullum James Cazad
~ichael Cazad, Granville Scarberry, Rodney Rose, and
B1lly Ray McClary.
Condolences may be expressed to the family at
www.timeformernory.com/hall

mtX.

The Daily Sen tinel • Page As

.

April Lynn cazad

nu;~&lt;t

Bb

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

Obituaries

Sharia and liberty don't mix

.

'•

1\Jonday, March 27,

Friday
and
Friday
night...Mostly cloudy with a
50qercent chance of showers.
H' h
d
Lo · h
tg 5 aroun 70 · ws 111 t e
upper 40s.
Saturday ... Mostly cloudy'
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
60s.
S t d
· ht .
d
a ur ay
mg
an
Sunday ... Mostly . cloud~.
Lows 111 the mtd 40s. Htghs m
the mid 60s.

sen from ~he first place Simpson;
Director of
cakes. The best of show Extended Care Mica Rees;
winner will receive a tro- WB.YG personal ity Tom
Ohio
by Payne;
phy
sponsored
RockspriJlgs Rehabilitation Repres,entative
Jimmy
Center.
.
Stewar_t; . Meigs County
Cakes need to be at the Commtsston·er,
Mtck
Meigs . Senior Center by 4 Davenport; The Daily
· p.m. this Thursday. Judging Sentinel reporter Beth
will begin at 6:30p.m. after Sergent.
the spagheni dinner.
Admission to the Fifth
There is no limit to the Annual March for Meals . is
number of cakes entered by $5 and includes the cake
contest, entertainment by
an exhibitor.
Celebrity judges will Joey Wilcoxen and the
include WSAZ Home and spaghetti dinner..
Garden Expert John Marra;
Advance tickets are on
Swisher
&amp; · Lohse sale now or you can pay the
Pharmacist Chuck Riffle; · day of the event. ·
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Call 992-2161 for more
Administrator
Candy information ,

sie nt and much harder to
monitor. "It defeat s the
purpose of .registering ," he
said. ·
.
But authorities say the
extra work is worth . it to
keep sex offenders away
from children .
Whether the offender s
are forced to move by court
order or choose to on their
own, the'y generate more
paperwork and . take more
time to track, Delaware
County Sheriff Al Myers
said. The sl)eriff's department has one employee to
keep tabs on the 62 sex.
offenders registered in the
county.
"We have to go out and
confirm the place s they're
staying at really exist,",
Myers said. "aut it' s more
than worth. the labor to
keep them away from the

sc hool s."
In Fairfield County, registered sex offenders who
are homeless must call the
sherjff's office every night
to report where they are
staying.
In Ohio, it 's illegal for
regi stercd sex offender to
live within 1,000 feet of a·
school. Authorities can
seek evictions against those
who refuse to comply.
David Slack, 65, now
considers himse lf homele ss
after a court order forced
him to move because .he
lived too close · to an elementary
schoo.l
111
Delaware.
· Slac.k's lawyer. S.tephen
John so nGrove of the Ohio
Justice and Policy Center.
said his client is staying
with a friend for, now, but
worries he will end up li v-

i n'g in hi s car.
"Mr. Slack's case is just .a
perfect example of why
thi s law is iuational aod a
detriment to community
sa fety," JohnsonGrove said.
" It's JUSt creating c)1aos." ·
Some cities are enactin&amp;
even tougher laws, which
prohibit offenders from liv:
i ng near. parks. playgrounds
or pool s.
Evicting se x offenders
can ca'use extra work for'
pro sec utors. but it gives,
parent s a peace of mind(
Delaware
County
Prosecutor Dave Yost said.
"Parents have to send
their kids · to school. It's
important for them to know
the y're not playing on the'
playground next tp a sex
offender," he. said. "A law
that is not enforced is no
law at all. "

a

Horses

Racine

· from Page A1

from Page A1

Baer a director.
The 2006 racing season
opened for Beegle and Baer
today at Beulah Park . Reubens
Luck and Striking Dream Bug
will again be dashing to the
finish line in times measured in
hundredths of seconds in the
world's fastest horse races.

each.
This worl\ on · the tanks
should conclude in two to
three Weeks.
The whole project is
scheduled to be completed in
nine months , putting a completion date sometime in
November.
. "So . far everything has

been . going fine," Holman
said. "As soori as warm
weather gets here things will
be moving even quicker."
. The new plant will service
360 customers and is·estimated to cost $2.583,559.44. The
plani will be paid for with a
varietY. of grants and a loan
the vtllage bo.rrowed in the
amo unt of ·$1,251.559.44
from the Ohio Water an&lt;! .
Development Authority at ·
one and one- half percent
interest for 30 years.

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�PageA6

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March

27,2006

.
MEIGS STUDENTS EXCEL AT TECH· PREP SHOWCASE
.

.

.

\

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bl

,,

Baseball ...... .. ... : .. B2
Golf ..........•...... B6

BY CtiA!uNE HoEFucH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·Monday, March 27, 2006

POMEROY All of the
Meigs students competing in the
IT-lnteracti ve Media projects at
the 2006 Washington-MorgrnlMeigs Consortiwn College Tech
Prep shuwca-;e received superior'
ratings on their pmject,.
It was a "tii-:;t," according to
teacher, Suzanne Bentz.
The competition was held at
the
Washington
State
Community College in Muiietta
and included st~d~ nts from the
Washington County Career
Center, Morgan High School and
Meigs High School They participated in eight different showcase

Redwomen open AMC with sweep of Malone
BY MARK WiLLIAMS

LocAL SCHEDULE
GAl.LIPOl.IS - A schedule of upcom1ng conege
and high school 11af'Sity sporting e~~&amp;nts irl\lolving
teams from Gall1 a, Ms1gs and Mason cou n11es.

Monday's games
Baaeball
Eastern at Rilter Val ley, 4:30
· Softball
Gallia Academy at Eastern , 4:30 p .m.
Marietta a! River Valley. 4:30p.m.
Logan at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Coal Grave, 4 :30 p .m.
Tennis
· ·
Point Pleasant at W infield, 4 p.m.
College Softball

p.m.

are:.L'l.

· According to Bentz. all first
place showcase winners will be
invited to participate on a thn."eday uip to a Cleveland lndi&lt;ms
game. Cedar Point in S&lt;mdusky.
and the Columbus Zoo in May.
Carissa Anderson. Tech Prep
Coordinator at Washington State
Community College. reported an
unprecedented increase in scored
projects. especially in the junior
health category which had the
largest increase with 37 enuies.
Interactive Media, the sec
· ond

'
'
'
I'

I

I

Submitted PJ,otos
Good ratings in the Tech Prep contest went to front. ·Nikki
Ginther, Jill Harrison, Amber Haning, Cassi Whan , Amanda
Schartiger, and Jil l Reeves; second row. Brittny Casey, Ashley
Ashworth. Jessan Steinmetz, Maria Thodos, Kristin Trade, and
Ashley Zielinski; and back. Lacey Bap[st, Michael Blaettnar.
Adam Wilson, Dustin Knapp, Bobbi Smith, and Sarah La ntz.

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RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
Red women ·softball team
opened the American Mideast '
Conference South 'Divi sion
portion of the schedule wi th a
of
doubleheader
sweep
Malone, winni ng the first
game 8-5 and , taking game

two by a 4-1 score.
Rio Grande ( 11-5., 2-0 ·
AMCS) re~t;iv cd help from
the Malone defense, which
was guilty of four errors early
in the' ball game that turned
the tide in favor of the
Redwomen .
Rio cranked up the otTens~
late in the game 10 total 11
hits in . the contest. Senior
rightfielcler Jenny Olding led

the Rio attack with a 3-for-4
performance at the plate,
knocking in a run and scoring
two more runs. Senior third
sacker Brandi Jones added
two hits, two runs scored and
an RB I triple .
Sophomore
· catcher
Whitney Harless and sophomore leftfielder Jenny Phillips

Please see Sweep. Bl

Redwomen swept at Fairmont State
BY MARK WIU.IAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

FAIRMONT. W.Va. - It was a · tough day for the
University of Rio Grande Redwomen softball team as they
dropped a · doubleheader in a non-conference tilt versus
Fairmont State. losing the first game. 3-1. and dropping
~lease

see Swept. Bl

Rio Grande at Salem. 1 p.m.

Tech Prep IT-Interactive Media students awarded superiors on their projects at the' recent
Other superiors were earned by with "Bulimia''; Jessica Fisher competition were left to right, front, Brooke O'Bryant, Becky Rader, Kandis Hu miphrey, Sabrin a
Sabrina Oldaker. Becky Rader, and Angel Welsh with "Mental Oldaker. and Kayleigh Haning; second row. Matt Landers. Chris Runyon . Sarah Engle, Chris
and Kandis Humphrey with Health": and Alisha Compson, Harmon . and back, Dane Eichinger, Cody Hysell, Casey Richardson, Josh Kennedy and Matt
· "' ·
" Sh owca,mg
utc hes" ; Katie Rodehav_er, and Kayla ,Boyd. Those receiving superiors but not pictured are Ashley Savage and S heila Zeigler.
casey R'ICvveavmg
h d
J
ar soh.
osh Diddle with "Going Under the
Kennedy, and Matt Boyd with Knife."
largest category. listed 21 scored "Showcasing Clark's Jewelry"·,
S de
· ·
·
f
projects; senior health had 18:
tu nts rece1vmg a rabng o
automotive, 16: horticulture, 15: and Kay leigh Haning with goOd were Adam Wilson for
·
13; network'·mg.,,J;
' "Showcas,ing
House."
electronics with "lnfr.ared .
I
eectromcs.
A be . Hartwell
B
S
and medical office management
m r
urton, · onny Motion Detector with Integrated
(business). I.
.
Folmer. and Bridget Humphrey Light Circuit"; Ashley Zielsinki
. . 1~1rst scored an excellent and first for and Sarah Lantz 'or
Me1.gs studen ts wmmng
,, horu·culture
place in their categories with a their business (medkal ·office wi th "Wishing . Well with
superior rating included Cody ' Jmmagement) project, "In the Land
· " B bb' S 'th d
Know - I;'atient Education."
scapmg : o 1 m1 an
Hysell and Chris Hannon for
Jill Reeves for Horticulture with
. "MS:
Package Deployment
Other stu(ienl~ eaming excel- ''() ts'de
11 bl 'th Landsca "
Ients incl'uded Tyson GeOrge and . u 1 3 e.w 1 ·.
pe. ;
bcross a Network" in the IT- Josh Bolin fo.r · IT- Network • an~ for the Jumor health Jessann
Network Systems category &lt;md
St.e
Du
Kn
d
Ashley Savage and Sbeila Systems
with
"Hardware
m~tz,
stm .. a~p, ~ •.
Zeigler with their "Butterflies Fuewalls vs. Software"; Adam Krisl.i.n Trader With BI-Polar ,
· with Landscape" in the horticul- .Grossnickle and Ray Sargent for Mana Thodos .:md Ashl~r
ture category.
.
IT-Network Systems with Ashworth With Pregnancy ,
Other Meigs students earning . "Wireless Networking": Chris Michael Blaettnar, . Bnttany
superiors included Chris Runyon Curtis and Bill Hess for electron- Casey, and Jill Hamson with
and Sarilh Engle in the horticul-. ics with ··custom Am'p "Emerg.~ncy
Room
and
ture category with ·'Adirondack Systems"; Shade Caldwell and Trauma : Amber Hamng and
Chair with Landscape" and for Rick Stin for horticulture with Cassie Whan with "Open Heart Meigs students receiving excellent ratings on their projects in the recent Tech Prep contest held
IT-Interactive Media category " Pi~nic
Tables
with . Surgery"; and . Lacey Bapst, at Marietta College were left to right, front, Renee Edmonds. Bridget Humphrey, Katie
Dane
Eichinger.
Brooke Landscaping"; and for junior Nikki Ginther, and Amanda Rodenhaven, Angel Welsh, Laura Runyon; second row, Ray Sargent, Kayla Diddle , ~onny Folmer,
O'Bryant. and Matt Landers with health Laura Runyon, Renee Schartiger with "Neonatal Alisha Compson. Heather'Eiam arid Shade Caldwell; and back. Bill Hess . Adam Grossnickle , Chris
"Showcasing Wild Horse Cafe." Edmonds. and Heather Elam Intensive' Care Unit."
Curtis, Josh Bolin, Jessica Asher, Amber Burton and Rick Stitt. Not pictured. Tyson George.

•

SPECIAl. TO THE SENTINEL

~f' ' '' -~.-,~.,

/-·•·, • ~ot •

&lt;:-&gt;r· r' •)-., S?"•O \11o-~

\ r$' 1 ~&lt;' •• 1:-,1,(

"
• 'i&amp;:\)!

YOU CANTGET ANY BETTER:'

Tuesday 's game•
Baseball
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 4:30p.m.
Winfield at Point Pleasant. 5:30p.m
Southern at River Valley, 4:30 p.m.
Symmes Valley at Sou th Gallia, 4 ·30 p.m
Meigs at Fairland, 4:30p.m.
Softball
ROck Hill at GaUia Academy. 4 :30 p.m.
Williamstown at Point Pleasan t, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern. 4:30 p .m .
Southern at River Valley, 4:30 p.m.
Wahama at Charleston Catholic . 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Southern .al Belpre . 4 p.m
Tennis
Gama Academy at Jackson, 4:30p.m
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood-. 4 p.m.
College Baseball
Ohio Valley at Rio Grande. 2 p.m.
Wedne&amp;d.tly'a games

Baseball
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking. 4:30 p.m.
River Valley at Point Pleasant, 5:30pm.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 4:30p .m
Miller at Southern, 4:30p .m.

Softball

.

Ga11ia Academy at Fairland, 5 p .m .
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 4 :30 p.m.
Hanniln at South Gallia. 4:30p.m.
Nelsonville-YOrk at Meigs. 4:30 p,m.
Miller at Southern, 4:30p.m.

Track and Field
Point Pleasant at Ripley

.

.

N .C .A A M l ·.: N '' s TouRNAMENT
-~----~----

George
Mason
shocks
UConn

Florida
topples
Villanova
BY DAVE CAMPBELl.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS - Joakim
Noah and the re&gt;t o( .Florida's
· sophomores were s imply tOo
stron¥ for the la't No. I seed
standmg.
With a 75-62 win over topseeded
Villanova
in
the
Minneapolis
Regional
on
Sunday. · the young Gators are
going to the Final Four a lot
sooner than anyone would have
thought . ·
Noah had 21 poinis. 15
rebounds and five blocks to lead
the third-seeded Gators. Fellow

BY JOSEPH WHITE

Rio posts
'impressive
efforts at
Wake Forest
BY MARK Wnl.tAMS
SPECIAL TO TH E SENTINEL

WINSTON· SALEM. N.C.
- The University of Rio
Grande men's an&lt;J women ·s
track and field squads de li vered some impressive performances at the Wake Forest
Open this weekend held at
Kentner Stadium. It was the
thi rd meet of the outdoor season and the second non-scoring meet.
.
Junior thrower Gastin Green
contin ueu his impre&gt;Sive season as he produced &lt;i Jrd place
fin ish in the di sc us With a
heave of 144 feel C\'en. Green
also placed 6th in the hanimer
throw with a top toss of 134
feet, one inch .
Terrance Allen placeu in the
top 10 in the long jump. tlnishing 9th overall wi th a jump
of 20 feet. 0.25 inches. Matt
Sherman ti ed fo r IOth with
Brent Bolz of Capital. in the
long Jump, with a best effort of
19 feet. II
inche ~. Sherman
also fini shed 33rd in the 200meter run (24.20).
Gall ipolis product David
Broduer finished lOth in the
javelin with a measurement of
155 feel. six inches. Junior
\printer Branuon Baston was
12th in the 400-meter ru n
(5 1.8) and tied for 12th in the·
200-meters (22.891 with Chris
. Gardner
of lndiana-PA.
Freshman distance man Paul
Webb fini .1 hed 14th in the
3,000-meter run (1.}:29.40) a11J
freshman Nolan Hill was 14th
tn the javelin ( 13o feet. nine
inches).
·
Other Redmen results: Brad
Gi lders, 21st in the 800- meter
run
(2:0 i .I 0):
Corev
Culbertson, 25th in 'the. 800-

n

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
-.
George Mason is no longer
the cute little underdog .
The PatriOt&gt;, by goll y, are
going to the Final Four.
The suburban commuter
school from Fairfax. Va. ,
beat
·
top-seeded
Conneclictt t 86-84 in overtime Sunday 1n the
Wa shington
·. Regional
final. endin g the stran glehold that big-time programs ha ve enjoyed for 27
years in co llege · basketbal l's biggest showcase.
They lacked in siLe, athleticism and history . relative to their opponent, bu!
the I I th -seeded Patriots
made up for it with tenacity.
Buoyeu by a partisan
crowd and playing some
I 20 miles froin their campus. George Mason ra llied
after trailing by 12 late in
the first half and nine earlv
in the second. They hi t six
straight 3-poinlers in the
second half. shut 5-for-6 in
overtime· and outrebmmded UCo nn 37 -34 even
though the Huskies have
three starters taller than
an y of the Patriots' frontcourt pl ayers.

Please see Shocks, Bl

Please see Florida. Bl

LSU,UCLA
upset winners

AP photo

George Mason 's Jai Lewis. (55). ce lebrates after the 86-84 ·win over Connecticut dunn'g the
fourth round game of the NCAA basketball tournament in Washington Sunday.
'

ATLANTA IAPJ- The y'\'e
known each other si nc e they
were kids. drawn to£ether at
the IJa sketba ll court. ~
Now. LSU's homegrown
Ti ~ers are headin~ to the Final
Fo'ur to~cr her. Glen Davis scored 26 points,
incJuding a decisive 3-pointer
in overtime. and Tnu, Th omas
added 21 poini, and 13
rehounds . Saturuay. leadi,n g ·
LSU to it s. fir't Final Four
since lliS6 with a 70-60 \'iclon · over Texas in the Atlanta
Regional final .

Please see· Upset. Bl

Cavaliers edge
Rockets in overtime

HOUSTON (AP) - LeBron
James scored 36 poi nts. including, the .go-ahead .dunk with
.1:24 left 111 ove11ime. and the
Cleveland Cavaliers beat the
Houston Rockets 104-102 on
Sundav.
·
James got a victory over the
only team in the NBA he'd
never 'beaten rn1d helped the
Cavaliers move closer to their
first playoff berth sin ce 1998.
Cleveland
has won five
Please see Track. 82
straight.
·
The Cavaliers were ahead
I03-10 I when Damon . iones
hit the seco nd of two free
' throw s to stretch the lead. He
CONTACfUS
finished 'with 22 points and
made five of six 3-pouners.
OVP Sec reline (5 p.m .-1 · a.m.)
Hou,ton·s Rafer Alston
1· 740-446-2342 ext. 33
made th e first of two free ·
throws with less than a &gt;econd
or 992·5287 (Meigs Co.)
let\ and intentionally missed
·Fax- 1 ~740· 446-3008
the second one. but the ball wa.;
E·mall - sporls.@ myt!ailysentmel C01l1
thrown out of bounds.
Spo~ta Statr
The Rockets diun't lead in
O\'ertime, but tied it twice lln
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
ba&gt;kets by . Yao Ming before .
C;40) 446·2342. ext. 33
'
bsh!'Hman·@ myda11y1r1bune com .
James' Junk.
James forced O\'ertime when
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
he made a layup followed by :1
(740) 446·2342, ext 23
free throw after being fouled bv
bV.alters@ myda~tytri~UnE com
Yan with n sewnJ&gt; left. Ya(J
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
had a chance for the win. but
!740) 446·234 2 ext :)3
lost the ball ju't uut,idc the
Ierum C myc:1a 11yreg1S1er com
Iime .unuer he;ivy pressure .·

Zydnmas llgauskas added~ I
points for Cleveland and was
all over Yao all day. forcing
him into 9-of-2 1 shootilll!.
In a game that fcatu t:Cd I ~
lead changes. the Rocke r, h&gt;ok
the lead with a bu.:kt-1 hv
Luther Head with 3.:1 s~com.fs
remaining and stretched the ir
.
AP photo
advantage to ·91 -8R alk F two
Kurt
Busch
(2)
begirs
to
pull
past
his
old
teammate
.
Matt
Kenseth
(17).
with
four
laps
remain·
free throws by Juwan Howard.
. Yao led Houston with 27 ing to take the .lead and go on to wtn the Food City 500 on Sunday at the Bristol Motor
points and Alston added 22 : Speedway in Bristol . Tenn .
'
·
The Rockets fell to 3-20 withour Tracy McGrady. who could
be out for the season with back
problems.
James . opened the . fourth ·
&lt;JUarter with an I H-J\101 jumper
Per1...-ke·, leam :t·l thl.~ "tart nf
Kc•\ in H.ll\ JL" ~ fini,hed .
luilOwed by twn free throw, tli 1·
B Y JENNA FRYER
the . . ca,on ant.! ! tlk.IIH! ~Her . . cconU anJ \~.t.., fclllo\\ed h\
~iYe the Ca\'aliers their Jlrst '
•ssoc &lt;rED PRESS
fead of the second half. oH-67. · ~--.-.::.:_:_c....:..:._:_...:..:.::__
the f~u111..'d ~· u 2 Dl~d~e that 1-sc n,t•lh., \1 lw L1decl hac· ~
BRISTOL Tenn . - \ie" nin~-ltme Bri':..tnl ~\Jnncr :111L'I' Bu ~ch·,· p a.._,,· and Ure\\. '
Houston used a 14-4 n111 tti
open the third quarter to stretch team. new .car. 'a mt· olJ Rustv W&lt;il i:Ice drcn~ ·13usd1 1lw tre ,,J Jell Gordon after
a two-poim halftime lead to 62- . result' flir Kurt Bu\L'h at .:dchrated his 'ich'r' b' makitH! l'onta~i \'ith him
.j(), The Rocker- were behind 1 Bristol 1\lntor SpeeJwa!.
,iumping from his car. 'g rah- that ,;111 Gordon spinning
by 'ix in the tirst half. but took
Bu,ch hra shly humpeu hing the checkered flag and Gnrdo11 plummeted all the
advantage of a scoring drought 1\Lott Ken,eth - his old do ing .. ,now ange" " on the 1'&lt;1) 10 a ~ 1&gt;1 ,-place finish.
by James that stretched · trom leammate - nut of hi" wnv fini'h lme as a nod to the then stalked Ken&lt;eth. on pit
'1:3~ in the second until he 1 wi·th fnur laps 10 g&lt;.l Su.n da\·
weather
th at 1\lJJ .
made a dri,·ing lav up with 2:27 i I&lt;' "1n· I he· F1'0d CitY 500. winter\"
plagued rhe trac·k ali weekKeiheth appmacheu him
remainin g in the 'thiru. to take I
hi'
ftflh
'lL'IOr\'
111
1hc
las
I end
11
tth'
hh arm' ·11u1 "' if he
the lead.
nine
·rac·cs
\lll iht' hal l- mile
..
Thi'
I'~
llll'rea
l."
ht'
\
i.
l
lJ
.
"·" tn 1ng tn npJ,Iin the 'itAfter the layup hv James . the
trad..
''['m ju&gt;t "' happ' w be ahie u&lt;illltn. hul '(lnrd''" ga1e him
Cavalier~ out»&lt;.'(\recl Hou,ton HB.ut thi' wa&lt; his fir'l win 10 ha\'.e thi1 c·ar and . ha' e
2 in the last two minutes of the
Please see Busch. Bl
third 10 get withm 67-M.
.J nini n£
R o~~ r 1{\l gcr'~oo rrl\ ilege tn dn , o _·:

Busch bumps past Kenseth

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Graves, Indians bury Reds, 9-2
•

BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WINTER HAVEN Fla
Danny Graves has a new look
and a totally dtfferent outlook
With a mop of htghhghted
hrur tumbhng to the top of h1s
shoulders, Graves struggled
through his one mmng Sunday
dunnll the Cleveland Jndtans·
9-4 vtctory over the Cmcmnau
Reds, the team that cast h1 m
astde last season
It was the first shaky appearance thts spnng tor Graves,
32, who ts competmg wtth
Steve Karsay for a spot m the
Indtans' bullpen
"I've pttched well enough
that tf unfortunately I don' t
make the team here, I'll have a
chance somewhere else ,"
Graves srud "My pertormance
has been the best I' ve had m
any spnnF '
Graves career bottomed out
on an ugly afternoon tn
Ctncmnatt last May, when he
got Jeered after another poor
performance and made an
obscene hand gesture to one
unrelentmg fan
The Reds cut thetr ues wtth
him a day later, ctttng hts 7 36
earned run average The Mets

Sweep
fromPage81
also added RBI htts for the
Redwomen Semor shortstop
Kristen Chevalier was 2-tor3 wtlh a run scored
Malone (5 10 1-3 AMCS)
started qutckly, sconng tv. o
runs m the first mmng as the
btg bats of Sarah Sv.ettzer
and Kathryn Bzdafka npped
back-to-back
RBI
htts
Swettzer was 3-for-4 with
two runs scored and Bzdafka
was a perfect 4-for-4 with
three RBI and a run scored

Florida
from PageBl
sophomore AI Horford added
12 pomts and 15 rebounds and
Taurean Green scored 19
pomts for the young Gators
(31-6), who wtll play No II
seed George Mason next
Saturday 10 the n~ltonal semt-

Swept
from Page 81
game two by an 11-4 score
Rto Grande ( 11-7) held a 10 lead gomg mto the fifth
mntng of the ftrst game
Faumont State !ted the game
wtth a smgle run m the stxth
and won the game on a tworun home run 10 walk oft
fashton 111 the bottom of the
seventh
The Rto offense was held
tn check as freshman second

Track
from Page81
meter run (2 05 90) and 26th
m the 1,500-meters (4 22 16)
Randy Cook. 26th m the 400-

Shocks
from PageBl
The Patnots became the
second double-d1gtt seed to
make the Fmal Four matchmg LSU'&gt; run, also as an
lith seed, m 1986 The
Coloma! Athlettc A;soctatton
team ts the first true outstder
to crash the Fmal Four ~tnce
Penn and lndtana State both
got there m 1979 The
Patnots, whose at Iarge
selectton was roundly cnttctzed, celebrated after the
final horn by standmg on the
press row table and wavmg
thetr sh trts to the 1r fans
Patnots guard Tony Skmn
satd coach Jtm Larranaga
fued up hts players by tellmg
them that UConn's players
dtdn't even know which conference George Mason ts m
"That's a ltttle btt of dtsre
spect," Skmn satd "Coach
told us the CAA stands for
'Connecticut
Assassm
Assoctatton '"
Larranaga led one of the
school's fam1har chant s
yelling "George'" to the

·-

gave hun another chance, but
he had a 5 75 ERA m 20
appe.trances and was released
Fmall). the lndtans offered
htm a mmor league contract m
De~ember, a chance to resurrect hts career wtth the organt
zatton that drafted'htm
He has grown hts hatr, added
tattoos and gotten the btte back
on hts smker, hts most mdispensable ptt~.:h
"1 feel hke l' m back to nor
mal more mentally than anythmg," Graves satd "I feel
more hke a baseball player
agam All I wanted was th~
opportumty to play agam Thts
was the perfect spot So far,
everythmg ts workmg out
v.ell '
Headmg mto Sunday's
game, Graves had allowed
only three earned runs m II 2
3 mnmgs, forcmg the Indtans
gtve a lot ot thought to one of
thetr ftnal roster dectstons
Karsay has been mconststent,
gt vmg up etgh,t earned runs m
13 mnmgs
Karsay allowed a pau of htts
m a scoreless third mnmg
Sunday Graves followed and
rettred the first tWO batters on
stx pttches Then, the mmng
Rto countered the Malone
start wtth four unearned runs
m the bottom of the ftrst
mmng thanks to three errors
by the Malone defense
Bzdafka was the los10g
pitcher, giVIng up etght runs
(three earned) m stx mmngs
and struck out two batters
Sophomore Mtranda Laws
(6-1) scattered I I htts over
seven mnmgs whtle giVIng
up five runs Laws fanned
seven and walked one
Rto put the game away
with three runs 10 the bottom
of the fourth mmng thanks m
part to back-to-hack extra
base htts by Oldmg and
finals 10 Indianapohs
Thts marks the first ume
smce the field was expanded
to 64 teams tn 1985 that no
top-seeded team advanced to
the F10al Four, and the second
ttme m tournament htstory.
Villanova star Randy Foye
fouled out wtth 28 9 seconds
left and walked slowly to the
bench to hug hts coaches and
teammates wtth tears strearnmg down hts face He earned

b.1seman Shannon Abbott
went 1 for 3 wtth a double
and knocked m the lone Rto
run Semor nghtfielder Jenny
Old10g also went 1-for-3 tn
the game
Sophomore hurler Mtranda
Laws (6-2) took the loss She
pttched 6 1/3 10nmgs, yteldmg five htts and three runs
She fanned three and walked
two
The Redwomen scored first
10 the second game on a solo
home run by semor shortstop
Knsten Chevalter Chevaher
had an outstand10g game
meter dash (51 4) and 27th m
the 200 (23 60). Chns Peale}.
27th, m the 3.000-meter run
( 10 44 80)
and
Troy
Howd) shell 35th m the I ,500
(4 40 50)
On the women's stde freshman Shannon Clarke ran well

Monday, March 27,2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

went bad Austm Keams htt a
wmd-blown homer to nght
the first of tour conse~uuve
hits that accounted for three
runs
AJterward, manager Enc
Wedge smd Graves pttched
better than the numbers
showed
' He was down m the stnkc
zone today and threw a couple
good smkers and a couple
good breakmg balls," Wedge
srud The end result wasn't an
mdtcatton of how he pitched
For "'hatever reason, the ball
ts really tlymg out ot nght
fteld here thts year
'We're 111 an nnportant pat1
of spnng tratmng when tt
comes to that competttton
Every day ts tmportant not
JUSt thts one It's still ve ry
1

close"

The lnd1ans scored stx runs
off left-hander Brandon
Claussen. who lasted tour
mnmgs Grady Stzemore had a
two run double, and Travts
Hafner htt a wmd blown
homer to nght Stzemore later
drove m another run wtth hts
fifth tnple of the spnng
For both teams, the locus
was on lookmg at players to
Jones
In game tv. o, semor hurler
Andrea Lotycz (4-4) pttched
a tremendous game m get
tmg the complete game vtctory
She went seven
mnmgs, allowmg only ft ve
has and one run whtle strlkmg out ftve and walkmg
four
Malone agam scored first
when Bzoafka squeezed
home Knsten Cochran to
gtve the Ptoneers a 1-0 lead
Malone would mount threats
m the 3rd, 5th and 7th
frames only to have Lotycz
dance off the hook e\ ery
ttme
Rto took the lead for good

the Wtldcats (28 5) for the
second ttme m three days.
wtthout any help from fellow
semor Allan Ray
Foye had 25 pomts Ray
scored II pomts, on 5-for- I 9
shootmg
Thts v. as Flonda s etghth
stratght tnp to the NCAA
tournament under ~oach Billy
Donov.an. but so many of hts
preHous teams - mmus the
nattonal runner up 10 2000 -

gmng 4 tor 4 wtth tv. o RBI
and a double Her perfor
mance, however, wds n~er
shadowed by the loss
RIO led 2 1 headmg mto
the thtrd mnmg and then
Famnont State erupted for
etght runs m the bottom of
the thtrd frame to run off the
leave the Redwomen, en
route to the II 4 vtctory
Sophomore leadoff httter
and centerftelder Jesstca
Ross was 1-for-4 wtth a run
scored and Laws was 1-for-4
wtth an RBI Sophomore first
baseman Jenna Gauthter was
m both the I00 and 200 meter
dashes She ued for 6th place
wtth Sandy Hamson ot
Wmston-Salem State m the
200 (26 61) Shannon was 8th
m the 100-meter dash ( 12 86)
Fellow freshman Bnttany
Dtxon fimshed lith 111 the 400-

crowd s' Mason' as he wattGeorge Mason (27 7), hav
ed hts turn to cut down the mg by far the best season m
net Then he climbed the lad- school htstory, had never
der and worked• tlte sctssors won an NCAA tournament
wtth a sm1le, then waved the game unttl tl beat halt of l.tst
net htgh m the atr to more year's Fmal
Four
cheers before sltppmg the Mtchtgan State and No 3
nylon around hts neck
seed North Carolma- back"!feel so good through my to back 111 the first two
own sadness
for Jtm rounds Nov. 11 can s.J) tl h&lt;~s
Larranaga " UConn coach beaten the last two natmnal
Jtm Calhoun satd "Piaymg at champton s - Connecttcut
that le&gt;e l ts not easy 1 can and North Carolina
only 11nagme the feelmg they
Rudy Gay scored 20 and
must have on that campus, m Jeff Adnen had a career h1gh
that locker room
It's 17 pmnts for Connecticut
somethmg they probably (3 0-4) whtch never could put
never 1magmed We 've 1mag together a complete game 111
toed tt, and we'1e done tt the tournament The Hu sktes
They could ne1 er have Imag- had to rally from double d1g1t
med tt "
second-half deficttl to beat
All ftve Mason starters fm- Albany and Washmgton and
tshed tn double ftgures Jat barely held off Kentucky
Lewts had 20 and Lamar
Folallll Campbell's tough
Butler and Wtll Thomas each baselme tadeaway gave the
scored 19 Larranaga's team Patnots an 84-80 lead tn
kept the same ft\e players m overttme, and UConn 'udthe game from the 10 37 denly looked ltke a rattled
mark of regulation to the very underdog from a mtd-maJor
end of oventme Butler was Rashad Anderson tossed up
chosen as the most outstand- an atrball 3-polllt attempt that
mg player of the reg10nal. could have cut the lead to
and he and hts father were m one, and Adnen mtssed one
tears as they hugged at length of tw6 free throws 1n the !mal
on the court after the game
30 seconds

figure mto the tin.tl spots on
the 1ostct - guys hke Graves
He wot ked h.trd m the ott season and showed up re&lt;~dy to go
thts spnng knuwmg there was
no margm for eiTOr
The l&lt;tst seven or etght
}eat '• I used sptutg trammg to
get ready fot the season," he
s&lt;11d "Thts ye.tr I dtd all the
thmgs before 1 got here
becdusc I knew I had to w1n a
spot It you don t come read),
your c h.mce' dren t ,ts good
' 1 kmd ot 111sh I'd done 1l
the ldst etght yeats But when
you're voung aoo dumb you
don ' t thmk you need to do
those thmgs
When he went out to wann
up befo1e the game, a fan m
the bleachers Cdlled htm over
and asked htm to stgn a D,mny
Graves bobblehead, one of the
promottons 11om hts days
pllchmg for the Reds
1\sked tf he would ever constdcr rctu1 nmg to Cm~mnatt,
Grdves s.ttd, "l don't thmk that
ctty wants me hack qUite yet
But )OU ne1er know l don't
hold any grudge agamst the
orgamzatton Some unfortuna~ thmgs happened, and tt
was lime to go"

m the bottom of the fourth
when JU11lor catcher Mtchele
Dettwiller dnlled a hne
dnve base hit 10to Ieftfteld to
score Jenny Phtlltps to put
the Redwomen up 2- I
Heather Jones dtdn t pttch
badly m the loss for the
Ptoneers In s1x mnmgs she
scattered stx htts and y1elded
four runs wtth ftve stnkeouts
and two walks
Oldmg
paced
the
Red women oftense, go10g 2for-2 wtth a run scored, a
double and an RBI Jones
v. as I -for-3 wtth an RBI and
Laws added a sacnftce tl)
Swettzer v.as 2-for-3 to
lead the Malone offense
failed to fulfill thetr potential
m the postseason
Thts ught group of sophomores led hy tile fiery, pony
tat led Noah, Vowed to change
that when thev bonded durmg the1r ltrst few weeks on
campus Desptte a secondround loss 10 the tournament
last year to Vtllanova the
Gat\)rs are a natton-best 15-1
m March over the last two
ye,trs

1 tor 3 at the plate w1th an
RBI
Sen tor And1 ed Lotycz (4 5)
suflered the loss for Rto
Grande She ptt~hed stx
mnmgs, gtvtng up 12 htts ant!
all II runs I nme earned) wtth
four stnkeouts and two
walks
Rto wtll stay out-of-conference and hook up wtth Salem
International on Monday, m
the second of three consecutne doubleheaders versus
West Ytrgmta Conference
schools Monday's contest ts
set to begm dt I p m
meter dash ( I 0 I 4) and 19th
111 the 200 (2R 10)
Other Redwomen results
S.1shd Cl.1rkc tin1shcd 20th 111
the 200 ( 2g IlJ)
Next up tor the Rto track ts
the Bobcat lmnattonal March
li "Ap11l I .tt Ohto Umvers1ty
But M.1son gave UConn .t
chance to Will with poor free
thrqv.
shoottng
Lev.ts
mi sSed three attempts 111 the
tmal 15 secon ds - the last
tv.n v.1th h I 'econds to go g1vmg the Husk1es a !mal
possesston to tte or wtn
Denh&lt;tm Brov.n, who made
the reverse layup at the regulation buuer to &gt;e nd the
game to overtime v.as off the
mark from the left Will~ wtth
a potcnllal game-" mmng 3poonter .n the buzzer
Tl11 oughout the game,
chants ot G-M-U and
'1 et s Go M.1son' ' reverberd!ed oil the cetltng of the
Venzun Center Green and
gold a, expected, were the
domtnant co lors and the
butldmg reached a new-le~el
dm of enihu stas m when
Sktnn tT)ade a 3 pomter to tte
the game at 2I m the ftrst
halt
The preg.nne mannemms
of the coaches also rellected
the dtt!et ent state of the two
progr.uns L1rr.tn,1ga looked
like somt'one runnmg tor
mayor shak111g hands wtth
e\eryone and h1gh t11mg the
cheerleader s
pompoms,

Busch
t'rom Page 81
.1 h,trd shove that knocked
htm back several feet The
two were quH;kly separated
by NASCAR otltctals
"Th,ll was my fault, tt v.as
an acc1dent and 1 didn't
mean to do tt," Ken seth satd
of hts contact wtth Gordon
"1 would be hot, too He
raced hatd all day long for
lm th11d place ftn!Sh and
11 got taken away from
htm I probably should
have known better than to
go over htm "
Carl Edwards !tntshed
fourth dnd Bobby Labonte
was lttth Mark Marttn
and Greg Btftle were stxth
and seventh putttng
four of Rou sh Rac1ng's
ftve dnvers tn the top
seven
Kyle Busch, v.ho won
Saturday's "Buscft race,
was etghth Ryan Newman
was ntnth and Kasey
Kahne, last week's wmner,
rounded out the top 10
Bnstol 1s alv.ays a race
of attntton, wtth dnvers
hoptng to avotd the
numerous acetdents whtle
tempers
keeptng
thetr

Upset
from Page 81 ,
When the horn sounded
Davts marched to the front
of the scorer's table, laced
the gold-and-purple-clad
conttngent and saluted
Then he let out a huge
scream pounded hts masstve chest and was mobbed
by Thomas, who v.as named
the regton s most outstand
mg pl.t) er
The portly Davts answers
to the mckname "Btg Baby'
- whtch ts only appropn
ate tor. tht s group No 4
seed LSU (27-81 has three
freshmen,
111clud1ng
Thomas and the sophomore
Davts m ti s starttng ltneup
Darrel M1tchell ts the lone
semor ,tmong the starters
Three of those guys .tre
from Baton Rouge pr.tctt
cally m the shadows ol the
LSU campus Another grew
up tn nearby Denh,tm
Spnngs and Mtt~hell ts
from nght down the road tn
St Mattmsvdle
We re It ke brothet s '
Mllchell satd "Brotherhood
and togetherness
They II get together ag.11n
tn lndtanapol1s, lacmg
UCLA next Saturday 111 the
national semtftnals
The ltnal margm wasn t
tndtcattve of a game that
\\as close all the way The
lead changed hand s II
tnncs and there were seve n
ttes No one had a doubledtgll lead unttl the end
But No 2 seed Texas (30
7) whtch v.as try1ng to
become the !trSt D11tston I
school to w1n n.lttonal tttles
tn footb.dl and men s bds
ketball 1n the same academ
1c yea1, fell apart tn over
tnne They \1 ere dov.n
seven b) the ttme they got
off the1r l1rst shot ol the
extra peitod
l'e xas couldn't 01 ercome
whtle UConn s all busmess
Calhoun stood v.tth folded
arms and an expresston tlldt
suggested a man !tghttng
stomach cramps
UConn started 'I tor-I 0
from the lteld yet couldn t
pull away from the tenacious
Patnots who somehow man
aged to pull down and chase
rebounds desplle thetr hetght
diSad1 ant age
When the
Husktcs v.ent cold, mtssmg
seven stratght fteld goals
George Mason pulled even
The second ot back to back
steal s by Sk1nn led to twu
free thtows by Thomas that
put the Patnots ahead 29-28
thetr only lead ot the ftrst
half
But the Husktes responded
wtth a 15-2 run, mcludtng
four 3-pomters from four
players o~er the fmal three
m•nutes of the f1rst halt The
lead was 12 when George
Mason got a boost JUSt before
Campbell's
hallttme three p01nt play wtth le ss
than one second remammg
cut the deftctt to smgle dtg1 ts
43-34. at the break
Mason
dutrebounded
UConn 16- 15 111 the halt but

Monday, March 27, 2006

tntact Thts one was no dtfferent except that the usual
temper t.Jntt urns weren't m
pl ,ty unttl very late m the
ra~e Instedd shoddy dnV In ~ sktlls seemed to contnb'i.ne to most of the 18
cautwns
The many acctdents led
dozens ot torn up race cars
_ dt one pomt, a ptece of
s he et metal from Dale
J drrett s c;,tr tlew mto the
sta nds and was qutckly
Slt.ttched up as a souvenu _
and only 21 of the 43 cars
tmtshmg on the lead lap
Still, the event wasn't
tmmune to ret11button and
retaltatton Gordon spun out
Malltn Truex Jr late m the
race and Truex tned to get
even by b.mgtng alongstde
Gordon s Chevy Truex was
a lap down , Gordon was m
the lead pack, and the
shenantgans were holdmg
up Tony Stewart
Stew,trt, stck ot watchmg
the games m front of htm as
the leader s pulled away,
r dmmed 10to the back of
Truex to send htm mto a
1ace end1ng sptn Truex
then got ,, tongue-lashmg
0\er h1s radto from h1s
crev. chtef who was trate
th.lt ht s rookte dnver
allowed frustratiOn to blow
" decent tmtsh

'.

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pplles

Real

Eetat

NO EXPEA ENr. E NECESSAR't'
FULl T ME CLASSES

' COL TRAINING
FINIINCING AVAILABLE
JOB P ACEMENT
ENROLLING N(m

dverttsements ar
ubject to the Fadera

air Housing .let o
968

This
newspape
ccepta only hal
anted ads meetln
OE standards

3358

ALLIANCE
TFIACTOFI TRAILER
TRAINING CE NTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800-334-1203
allr'ICfllrliiCIOflra 1e

For a hm ted t1me make 50"o
selling AVon Call (740)446

Horse Tratmng appren t1ce
needed
Must be able to
break and tra n Horses No
W~ekends 740 949 206.7

Insurance Agency oo~mg
lor a mot1vated licensed
Oh o Property &amp; Casualty
Assemble crafts
Producer w1th a proven
wood ttems
track record Sa ary com
To $480/wk
mtss1on
and
benet ts
Matenals prov1ded
dependant on exper•ence
Free tnformat•o n pkg 24Hr
Interested producers please
801428-4649
submit 1i8sume to TheDa ly
An Excellent way to earn Sentmel PO Box 729 6
Pomeroy&lt; OhiO 45769
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Local
nsurance
olf1ce
Asst Manger Retail fectlity 2 (Me1gs Co) seek1ng mot1vat
ed person for staff pos1tton
years retatl exp Salary neg
h1gh y motwated person Expenence helpful but not
Please send
good
personality
Send requ1red
Sentinel P 0
resume to CLA Box 570 c/o resume to
Ga hpohs Oa ly Tnbune PO Box 729 3 Pomeroy OhiO
Sox 469 Gall polls OH 45769
45631
Mamtenance
Dtrector
Attentmn Drivers
R&amp;J Overbroo~
Rehab 1tat on
Trucktng IS lookmg lor Center IS now accept ng
On11ers
w/1
yr OTA resumes tot the postl1on ot
Expenence for Aegtonal Mamtenance D rector Tt1e
Hauls Average pay 40 s to quahfled candtdate must
mrd 50s Home
every possess strong verbal and
Weekend
ca I
Ken! wntten communiCalton sktl s
{800)462 9365
•ncludmg techmcal report
wnttng and record keepmg
AVON• All Areast To Buy or
M ust have expenence n
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304
genera maintenan ce mclud
675 1429
mg carpentry
plumbmg
electrical
te
ephone
and
Couner FT Must have per
feet d tvmg record Resume cable 1nstallat1on pa ~ling
to PO Box 33 Galhpol s ground work e11al uat•on and
mspect on of emergertcy
OH 4563 1
eqwpment 1tem assembly
Darst Home needs help 3 and bO ler system opera11on
11 shtfl 4 dews a week Must have knowledge
of
(740)992 5023
OSHA Ltfe Safety Code
Long Te m care e)l:pe ence
Dog G roomer 'wtth some
preferred but not reqwed
exper ence needed 1mmed1
Qualified oandtPates may
ately tn Raven swood WV
send resume to
Charla
304 273 2165
Brown McGuire RN LNHA
Oo_rn
_o_no-s~P-zz_a_n_G_a_llo_po_l_s Admrntslrator 333 Page
WNW

c&lt;Sm

100 WORKERS NEEDED

&gt;We will not knowln

accept any adver

lsement In vlolatio
1the law

19~6

UCLA ( 11 6 J wtll play m
next Saturday s semtfmals
aga111st LSU
0dttus Wd , htngton h
scored 11 potnts to lead the
Ttgci s (13 4) v.ho saw
the1r seve n game wmnmg
stredk end aiQng wtth the
ca1 cer ol C .11 ney, a posstble
NBA Iotter) ptck who
hoped to play hts fmal
g.une tn h1s hometown of
lndtanapolt s tor the Ftnal
Fout
C.11ney "" ' held to ftve
pomts on 2 lor-12 shootmg
tn ht s ttn.tl college game
Altl,tlo sw.1rmed Carney .tt
eve1y ch.tnce only two
ddys
alter
defcndtng
natiOn a l scort ng leader
Adam Mormon

r

GJVF.AWAY

~~-------_.
1 male 1 female Sheltle to
IO\IIng
homes
mawre
house
tra ned
Call
(740)446 82t7 5pm 9pm
- - - -- - - - G1veaway to good home
only bnndle Bo&gt;eer m x Ca I
!740)446 4437 or (740)794

0477
------~--

Pupptes lor g1ve away
appear t o be Lab/Boker m1x
(740)446 3897

A

We are m1xed breed (1 male
and 1 fema le) dogs bla,c~
wtth tan marking and btg
nqumng eyes We are look
lng lor a home wtth a lam ly
who wtll love us as much as
we love them We listen well
learn quiCkly enJOY walktng
and playmg Plea se cal
(740)379 9142 to meet us

t

the Husktes shot 57 percent,
w1th Adnen gomg 5 for-5 for
I0 pomts
The P.tlliOls pulled wtthm
one earl\ 111 the second half
with an 8-0 run Campbell htt
a "1 p(Hntcr d!ter a grttt)
rebound
by
offenSive
Thomas .1ncl Skmn made a
dm mg ldyup despite losmg
COJliTOI of the ball and chang
tng h.mds 111 mtd-dtr Then ,
\\lth 12 31 to play Campbell
h1t .motheo I pomter that tted
the g.11ne ai 49 The next
mtlcstonc c.tme wtth II 09
remau11ng v.hen Butler sank
another "1 to gtvc Mason a 5251 lead
For th e next stx mmutes.
the teams punched and countei punched wtth ne1ther
leadtng by more than two
until Skmn \ 3-pmnter with
ftve mmutes tfl go put Mason
Marcus
ahead
6 7-61
Wtlltams steal and threepomt play cut Mason's lead
to 71-70 \\ tth 4 7 seconds
remal mn~. an('! the Patnots
went 2 ot-5 from the foul hne
tn the fm,il mmute to gtve
UConn the chance to send the
game to overttme on Brown's
buzzer-bcaung layup

Lair AND
~OlNI)

Beaultful blaclvtan dogs with
collars and b g lov1ng eyes
look ng tor th et r lamtly

(740)379 9142

Found White &amp; Tan smal
dog fo\Jnd beh1nd unemploy
Ohm now h1nng 10 safe dnv Street
Mtddleoort Oh o
ment off ce n PI P easant
ers apply m person 1200 45769 EOE
304 593 1778
Jaclot!Son P1ke
Med1 Home Heallt'i Agency
Inc seek1ng PRN Speech
Drivers Needed
FOund St Bernard w1th 5
blackJwhlte
pupptes:
•n COL Dnvers wtllmg to dnve Therapist and Occupat onal
Btdwell area Ca I (740)388 for local 1eady m x concrete Therapist lor Galltpol s Oh o
surrou nd ng
a ea
and
company E11per enco IS
9515
preferred but not necessary L1censed both m 01110 and
West Vtrg•n a prelerred We
Mad Insurance &amp; ottler
Lost Dog small white &amp; tan
beneftls avatlable after wa1t offer a compet ttve salary
fema e 1n Matn St/downtown
1ng penod Dnver must be E 0 E Pease send resume
area
Answers to Punky
to 352 Second Avenue
wtl tng to do pre mamte
Reward {3041675 6037 o
Gallipolis OH 45631 A.ttn
nance on tru cks &amp; eq utp
(304)593 1884
Judte Ree se or ema1
ment yard work &amp; other
JreeseOmsa corp com
miscellaneous chores
Lost
German Experience operat1ng equ1p
Medt Home P11vate Core IS
Shepard/ Husky
lappa
ment &amp; elctra skillS such as
look ng for a Pa I T me RN
G een Colla r 12 years olct
weld ng a plus
Must have an Oh10 AN
Selz1,1re Prone
Langsvtl e
Cal AotxmsburQ
L cense Appl1catJons may
740 742 4250
Area
(304)937 3410
be ptcked up at 430 2nd
Please•
or Laktn(304)773 5234
Ave Ga lipolts Ohto Ask tor
Located m Mason County
John Kearns
nea1 Buffalo WV
YARilSALE

r
"'"l

YAHIJ SALI- GAIIII'Olts

Movmg from stale \7 40 )446
6602 2 freezers ward robes
clothes chests books he t
wood desk w/cha1r h1de a
sala 2004 Dodge Intrepid
w&amp;edeater Anterfatnrnent
cen ter

,

•

Now accept ng appl cat ons
for
Cake DecoratlflQ pos1t10n
Dr vers
F(ee
Heallt1
h sura nee Excellent pay and e~~:per anced Prod\Jce
bonuses &amp; nome !lme 1 1 C erk Send resume to
Eastmans Foodland co
year tractor tratler exper
ence
req1,.ureo
Ma Jm Oh o Valley Supe n arlo;ets
P 0 Bo~ 769 Gall pot s OH
Tra nsp ort 866 293 7435
456 3 1
Green Muse Lab o er a nd
Sales Person wanted start Someone tor Fa rm Work
1ng tmrned ate~y 740 350 $5 00 per Hour 140 949

3104

2067

coord nate
mom tor and
manage a variety of hscal
management and control
dulles and asststtng other
agency personnel wtth ftscal
control tasks Add•t onally
the Ftscal Olf1cer prepares
mamta1-ns and oversees the
preparalton ct venous fts
calff1nanc al reports stud e:s
and records
Qualifications
~
T he successfu cand date
wtll possess the followmg
*Complet on of undergrad
&lt;0 2008 b~ NEA Inc
uate maJor core coursevoork
tn
accounttng
f1nance
110
ftnanc1al management or
,
IIELP W~NliD
1
like academtc f1e ld !hat
1ncluded at least three
courses n accountmg and
POSITION
one course 1n f1r:~ance
ANNOUNCEMENT
Or two courses or twelve
MEIGS COUNTY
months
expenence
m
FCFC INTERSYSTEM
accounting two courses or
COOROINATOR
twa ve months experience n
The Me1gs County Health
fmance one course or s1x
Dep ar tment 1S accept1ng
months expenence tn bus1
apphcattons
lor
the
ness admln strat1on one
Intersystem Coordinator
or the Melga County course or SIX mon1hs exper1
Fam1 ly and Children First ence 10 wr nen commumca
t1on for busmess one course
Council Dulles 1ndude but
or
SIX months expenence n
are not ltm ted to develop
public
relat ons an one
ment 1mptementatton and
evaluatiOn of countywtde course or SIX months expert
ence 1n typmg keyboardmg
serv1ce coordmatton and
or word processmg to
other plan~ program mont
mclude
generation
and
tor ng workmg w•th commu
spreadsheet
n1ty groups represenllng
'Or educahon tra1ntng
Fam1ly and Ch ldren Ftrst
and/or expenence tn an
Counc1 at requued meet amount
equal
to
the
mgs and trarn ngs and occa
M ntmum QuallftcatJons stat
s ooat trave
eel above
Qualifications
Competent computer sk lis
The successful cand1date
1nclud1ng use of MICtosoft®
wrll possess the followtng
Off1ce applications
• Mm mum of Bact1etor s
Benefits
Degree Masters preferred
The Metgs County Health
m re ated 1eld com btned
Departm ent offers employ
with expenence worktng
ees a competittve benefits
1ssues tnvolvtng ch1ldren and
packagO Pas tton IS full hme
therr tamrl e~
w1th starting salary depend
Strong commun cal on
enl on educatiOn and exper
management and organtza
ence
ttona sk1lls
nterested
cami dates
Able to mull task
should send a etter of 1nter
Expertise m grant wntmg
est resume completed .CIVtl
Competent computer sktlls
serv ce appllcat on
and
mcludmg use ot Microsoft
three letters at eterence to
Ofl•ce apphcat ons
Larry 0 Marshall Health
Benefits
Comm1ss1oner
Me•gs
The Me1gs County Health
County Healtl1 Department
OefYartment offe1 s employ
112 East Memonal Dr
ees a compettt1ve beneftts
Sutte A
Pomeroy
Oh
package Pos1t ons s full
45i69 C v1t servK;e app 1Ca
1 me wtth start1ng sa ary
ttons n ay tie ptclo;ed up al
dependent on educat1on and
the Health Depa tment or on
expenerce
the ~eb at the tollow1ng
Interested
candtdates
address
shOuld send a etter of mter
ntt
dns ob10 goy hrdfp
est resume compleled c1v t
~01 The pas t1on
se ~tee app catiOn
and
w II remam open until !1 led
thre,te letters ol reference t6
Larry D Marshall Health
Comm•ss1oner Me1gs Count
Warehous e / Del ve ry
Health Department
112
POSition lmmed1ate ooen
East Memona Dr Su tc A
ng
full ltme
App y a1
1"-'omeroy Oh 45769 Ct\ I
Lifestyle Furn lure 3rd and
sa v1ce a~pltcat• o ns may be
Olive Galllpohs 9 .;30am
ptcked up at tt1e Health
5 OOpm no phone calls
Depa tment or on the wet~ at
the
follow ng
aadress
hnp llwww oas oq1o goy/brdf
IN.'-1'11tl!C110N
pdl. IObap.QZ_JJdt The pos1
!ton \\ II re ma•n open w t I Concea ed p stol Class

..

OSCO lndustnes Inc
PO Box 327
Jackson Oh10 45640
ro uc on
nc
ccquntant Expenence 1
11 aspects or Accountm
r:td
lamtltar
ccount ng
referred 8$ wtth maJOr I
ccount1ng Send Aesum
ax to (304)682 1187
ma11 Qlp_mmarker@!ron
erne! net

Pos!tmo Announcement
Cert1f1ed
Care
Home
MetQS
County
Ganeral Assrsted &amp; Non Ass sled
Health D1stnct F1scat Off1cer Person s meals &amp; snacks
p ov ded
Exce lef:lt Care
TM Me1gs County Health (304)882 3880
Department 1s accepting
appllcat ens for a Fiscal Computer Trouble ShOoter
Officer Dulles tnclude but and Repalf Expert Sorv ce
are not 1m1ted to pertorm 740 992 2395

A J&gt;¢1' Wol'il\

Send resume to
IIELPWANtHJ

310

10

foDo

'

)Box number ads a

must be prepaid'

WArm-J&gt;

Two bottom Plow wt!h three
potnt hitch for small Ford
Pay rate $14 875 tO $16 125
tractor Reasonable 740
985 4485 Wanted To Buyt
Complete benefits package
I \II 'I I I\ \ II '\ I
1nclud1ng med1cal dental
, ,I{ \ I(, ...
tnsurance and pens1on plan

1.

Publication
Sunday Display: 1 00 p.m
Thur•day for Sundays

IIELPWA!mD

S lver

*POLICIES*

All Display· 12 Noon 2
Business Days PriOr To

110

\\'I H \t I \II ' I...,

r

Now you can have borders and grophtcs
added to your classtfied ads
Borders $3.00/per od
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1 00 p . m
Monday· Friday for Insertion
In Nex.t Day s Paper
Sunday In COI\.Imn 1.00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

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

poor games by tts two leadtog scorers P J Tucker was
held to I0 pomts on 4-of- 11
shoottng
LaMarcus
Aldndge was domtnated m
the he~d to head matchup
wtth Da1 ts makmg only 2
ol 14 shots to ftntsh wtth
tour potnts
UCLA 50, Memphis 45
OAKLAND Caltf (AP)
- The most stoned program 111 college basketball
ts back m the Fmal Four
Arran Atflalo, coach Ben
Hov.land and the rest of the
Bn11ns
ha&gt;e
returned
UCLA to the Iotty level ot
tt~ glory yeats
A I!Ia lo scored 15 pomts
,111d shut down Memphts
le.tdutg scorer Rodney
C11 ney helpmg No 2 seed
UCLA deleat tlte top seeded TtgeiS and eai n a tnp to
lndldnapolts tor tts ftrsl
Ft n.tl Four appearance
sm ce the school s 1995
NCAA ch,tmp!Onshtp
Rvan Hollms added 14
potnb n1ne rebounds and
drew two charges on
detense .ts the cold-shoottog Bru111s won thetr II th
straight game 111 the lowestsconng reg1onal ftnal smce
the shot clock era began m

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

I'

tO

HEll' W \Nl'Eil

Ohto Valley Home Health
Inc htffr:tg Full T1me AN and
Per D em MSW A cce ptmg
apphcat1ons for LPN CNA
STNA
CHHA
PCA
Compehttve Wages M11eage
ai')P
ben~f1ts
me udmg
Health Insurance Apply at
14BO
Jackson
P1ke
Galhpolts or 2415 Jackson
Avenue Potnt P~easant WV
or phone toll tree 1 866~4 t
1393
OhiO Valley Home Health
Inc htrmg Full T me AN
Case Manager Compett!JVe
Wages and Benefits 1nc\ud
tng Health Insurance Apply
at 1480 Ja ckson Ptke
Gallipolis or 2415 Jackson
Avenue WV o r phone toll
free 1 866 441 1393
Overbrook
RehabtlltaltO rl
Genter •s currently accept1ng
appl cat 1ons
lor a AN
Super vtsor Compet1I1Ve pay
scale and benettt package
available The avat lab e shtft
IS 3P 11 P
All n h:~rested
applteattons should l)!ck up
an appilcat1on at 333 Page
Street Middleport OH For
further mlormat on please
contact Hollie at 740 992

6472 EOE
Overbrook
Rehab htahorr
Center s currently accept ng
appl cat ons
for a AN
Supe VISOr Compet1t1ve pay
scale and benet t padiage
ava labl e The avallab e shtfl:
1s 7P ?A
All nte re steo
applicants should p ck up an
application at 333 Page
St eel M•ddlepo I OH F"o
further mfo(mat1on please
contact Halle al 740 992
6472 EOE

We are NOT your Typical
Telemarketing!
m&lt;~ke a d•tferenc e
by ca ltng on behalf of the
na t1on s lead1ng N on Prof t
and Pol lltcat organtza t ons

We help

NO Cred t Card Calls

NO PrOOucts Sales
NO B1ll CoUect•ng•
• convs:ntertt Schedu es
Every Friday &amp; Saturday

OFF1
•Co mpet hve Wages
$7 $8/hr FT
•weekly Pay w Bonus
•P adVacatom; EVERY 6
Months
• Patel HolidayS! PAID
TRAINING
• Med1caVDentalN•s •on
Bereftts
Call NOW to start your 'ie'.\&lt;
career!

(740)446 7442
ext 2454
or
1-877-463-6247
www lntocls•on com
Tt ed ol Not Hav ng Enough
Money to Make Ends Maet
or Gomg to Wo II. For
Someone Else ~
Ch stan
owned CompAny of nearly £'
decades ollenng a hOme
Bus hess
0Cportuntty
!304)576 2056 or 130 11593
0496 If no answtJi please
leaye message

~

awww

1150
SL11001.~
1.-------,.J

ltl ed
A N/LPN (Home Heath)
Part or Full t me per VISII
or hourly 401K caleta a
plan m1leage Un torn
allowance CEU re•mburse
menr Sam s Club Health
Life InS PTO watch accu
mulates 1 om I rst worlo; day
Top pa~ 1n Tr Slate
S1gn On Bonus
BOO 759 5383

a

EDE

Oh o WV Apnl B 2006
$75 DO
9 oqam VFW
Mason WV Ph ('7'40)843
5555

ow 01s ure
Carpet-Ctean1ng
Brand New Method

Home L1s t1 ngs
L st your ho ne by ~.-all no

{740)446 3620
V ew photos tnto on\ ne

4 ~ear old Colon a o 1 3
acres approx 1 900 sq f 3
bd r 2 baths 2 car garage
master bdr s 28x24 w1th a
laCUZZI
tub
S 125 000
! 740)446 7029

ew
Haven
WV
Bed oo n 2 B&lt;~th 2 Ca
a rage
0 lbu d n gs
lose to cv-.r Pt:1!CE
0 SELL Cua€- 6505 o
all 304 882 -1J6Q

48A
Fo "'closu re
only
S 14 900 For
st ngs c~ll
L--""'~==::....-J BOO 391 5£28 e•t F254
Top
Notch
Bulldmg
AHentton'
Contractors New Add l1ons Local company offer ng NO
Pole Barns Hardwood F oor DOWN PAYMENT
pro
Ceram•c
T le grams lor vou to buy your
and
Installation Cus1om DecKs home Instead ol rent1ng
new
Roofs
new
100 ~ f nancrng
Construclton L censed and
Lass tr an pertect creatt
Insured
WV# 036667 accepted

{304)675 3042 oc (304)593
111 5

11110

CHtwiEIDERLY .
CM&amp;

wwworv com
Home Ltsttngs

L st your home oy
call ng (740)446 3620

V ew pnotos nlo onl1 e

cres 3 ca 2 sto J
nattac:hed garage ga
ell fr~e ga~ Rut anp
H Cal 74Q) 7 J.~ J :30

Payment cou d be the
same as ent
Mortgage
Locato s

J740o36- 0000

.
Ranc h s~ e he ne -.BO
bath 2 car ga aye
uge
wor~s "l c p
Mste
OH
COd
146 (740)742 3230

Darst Home has rooms
ava1 able tor those m need ot
aSSISted 1\ ng (7401992
5023
Needed
babys Iter
Afternoon

1mmed ataly
home
sn 1ft
vanous

m my

days 1nctudes some week
ends Must be dependab e
reliable and trustworthy
Prefer non smoker Mu 6 t be
good wtth chtloren REFER
ENCES A MUST I Call740
245 0321 lor quest1o ns
Senous 1nqu res only

i'iii:-".;...'=',;..___.,
10

DLSJI\'ESS

()ppoRtL'Nm

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do busmess w th pea
e you know and NOT t
end money through th
all un111 you have tnvest
ated the offeqn

Charmmg bnck ranch R o
Grande
Quant fr endly
netghborhood 3 blocks from
URG Custom bw!t m 2002

~;::;:::::;::::~
\lomr t Ho\IF:\

,.,,H. S \U

ntenor open and a•ry
15 New Smgl~.w!Q.u
TradJIIoral
natural
oa;(_
In St ck &amp; Redov
NOOd~\orK througbout
3
Fo OP.I ve ~
bedrooms 2 lui baths
Cat ( ~ ..., JP5 Qq&lt;4,a
Large k ' Chen w th d r ng
pant y d spo sa l m crow,. e
b IFo
I
!c'
Ap p 1ancr:•
nc uded 16xH0
r0 ...~11
t '1. 1
1 ~U &lt;nj:.
Great nom
dP S 9"
"' J"o
au ted ce hng &lt;~nti gas h e &lt;.i~ 8 d -- ~ \
p lace w th OdK rr amle 1'40)38
Mas1er SU e N
h &amp; her
1970Hi l E
m"'
oath tnc l wh r poo tub
Two 8edroorr '1a ~ e. ~ ar
showe 2 walk n clo~ets
oet was bo:..~c111 neVI pnc
skylight 2 car garage land
1 vea tn 'or 30 year.s tv oiO!:'
Low cost heat couple G eal S!a le Home
scap ng
ng/coolfng
Lyntron cs or
Re nt al
Un t
tn
Secur t~ System 1700 sq It Harrtsonvllle
S P 600 op
$179900
740 742 401 1

u-

Estates 3 bedroo ms 2 1ul
Oaths
soarKhng
'lome
Si28900 Prone
4 1 36

Oak"

2000
~om e

16'8

~ eo

,....roo

r

(,

.... C!? .,

200 1
Jc e&lt;..
Rd 38....

' UA
580 ()()(} (7 40 (;JC.

orrow Smart Contac
Qh 0 DIVISIOn Q
nanc al
lnsttlut•on
ff•ce ot Cor"~sume
tlatrs BEFORE you re11
ance you home o
bta n a loan BEWA.R
f reqUe sts tor any larg
dva nce oaymen ts n
ees o r nsurr1n ce C&lt;1l
he Otf1Ct; •f Corsume
!fa rs to r t t! t:: d 1 866
78 0003 t 1ea r&gt;
h
ortgage
br oke r
o
ender
s
P"Pi'! I
censed (Th s ~ 2 pub•
he

PN.on~'iiON \I

S• R\ K.'loS

1.--iliiiiiiiiiii;;.,..;,.i
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W n
, 888 582 3345

IU \I I'd \II
Gallipolis Career College
(Caree rs C ose To Hamel
Ca ll Today 740 446 4367
, 800 214 0452
www g• lpo~$08 ee co ~~ ~om

wwworv com

All real e5tate advertlsmg
In th1A newspaper IS
subject to the Federal
Fa1r Hous ng Act of 1968
wh1ch makes 1t Illegal to
advertiSe any
preference limitati on or
d sc n nahon based on
race color rei g1 0n 5(')
familial sta us or nat ona
or 9 n or any mtent on to
make any such
prefere ce hm1tat On 01
d scr mmat on
This newspaper Will not
know ngl'!l accept
advert1sements lor rea l
estate whtch rs fl
v1olat on of the lew Ow
readers are hereby
mtorm&amp;d that al
dwellings advertised In
th1a newapapef are
a'olallable on an equal
opportunity bases

L......;.;;;,;,.,;;;.,;,;.,;;;.;.;.,_~ .

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V riy Sh r&gt;gl.,
Only $1b1 OOm ~,.
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Ace eo lea Me mOfl Ace &amp;&lt;II rg
H1gtt
Schoo 1 J Boo oo s
Cou c 1 1o1 lnoependtln Col eges
lu 1 dry Basement
a
!!I'd 5choolfl 121•B
Ha owood Floors Excel ent
Cond t1on
$8 t 500
cal
1304 )675 3123 1304 )675

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aha nn ng@ cha te ret
Sorry No Lane Cent Sets

22 apes wOf'd&amp;rlt.d v &lt;:t"W
dgelb~ orope ty dOSP tc
2 bedroom 1 batl't I v ng
F•ve b:eOrcorn
J 5 tlaltl mar .., ghwfl ~ perte.::t tor 4
room dmn•nQ roorr base
J1ouse n qu et ne gt1borh0od w~eo e
a s
74 0 70'
ment
Mtdd epo rt
nea Pomero~
HarelwC~Od ?109
S36 000 &lt;''0&gt;992 3057
l lr"'lors OB I.. &lt;loors and t m
il
ga age
4bdrrn 2 " b!lth ha dwoM 1 r ~ c ace 'l
\\ \\.llll
e • ~ '&lt; !Cl'"l"'S t. vng
lloors re'o\ o
\000
JOOOsq 1 F1 n f \
~d~ I
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at Neeo
... unt acb
..100 Late~
c1
ng For appllcat on ana tree
--- f M
00 11a n ~e u 1 J ~d
governement oo mlo ~. aH Wan!ed to Se t Horse 909 M os smar C rcle Pt
can bl 11 yal r hor1e A as h
lo
Compost Pleasa nt VN 3.BR 1 bath House 1or Sa le ) m tee:. Jut
A.mencan Assoc of Laoo 1 Manu re
andquckdosng
40416
$88 000 Sanelh I Road 1 Bec!tOOI"l
913 599 S042 24 'hrs emp $10 00 a pd&lt; up truck toad fu 1 baseme'11
3130
1 Bath t30J)6 5 250"~
740 949 2067
(304)675 8804
serv

Ron s TV Sales and Repa~r
Warehouse
Its Mus! Mve co mputer Apphance
304)675· 7999
.
sk liS P ele tarm back
ground Send resutTle to
CLA Box 566 c/o Galllpol s IIU 1\'{tsLUJ_&gt;,NfUl!i
Da1ly Tr bune PO Box 46 9
Ga ltpol s OH 45631
Two year old lay ng hens to
sel
50 pe1 hen ""40 9A ')
POSTAL JOBS
$t567$2196hr no..... t11 395ti

RHih l\11

�Private party will pay CASH
for your trust deedf2nd
Mortgage note. Please call
(740)441·5540.
Rl ' I \ I '

...

Attention Conatrucllon
Workers Fully furnished -2
bedroom . 2 baths. very nice.
Located in quiet residential
area in Pomeroy. Ohio 740·
992·1517 or 740·992-003 1.

Monday, March 27, 2006
ALLEYOOP

~----_.1
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE\
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or smalt houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441·1, 11
for application &amp; information.

.For Lease: ~nractive, unlurnished, one bedroom apt.,
2nd floor. corner Second
and
Pine.. No
pets.
Reference required. Security
deposit, $300 per month,
water
included.
Call
Household
Misc . Items '"---~iiiiitiiiiiiii-_.1
(740)446·4425 or (740)446starting at .99t: &amp; Up '
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
3 large be&lt;lrooms, 1 bath, ~....
::;;.;,;.;.~.;_;----, . 3~36.
(304)675-7999
AI'AKTMENTS
-''-"-----~windows, lintels, etc. Claude
very clean, porch. Available 1·-::
immediately, $500/deposit,
toUR R ENT
Gr~~ious living . 1 and 2 bed- Maytag
washer
$50: Winters, Rio Grande, OH
$500/month, 3 references,
room apartments at Vi llage Frigidaire
dryer ~ $90; Call740-245-5 121 .
no pets. (740)3B8·9515 ask
and 2 bedroom apart ~ Manor
"and
Riverside General electric 13,800 BTU
tor Amy.
ments, furnished and .untur- Apartments in Middleport. air conditione r $150. Call Pole Barn 30x50x12 teet
painted metal ; slider, free
nished , security deposit From $295-$444. Call 740- (740)709-1758.
3BD, 1ba, 17 acres. Green required, no pets. 74o- 992 _ 992 -5064. E.qual Housing
delivery.
Only
$7.595 .
schools, $650/month plus 2218
Opportunities.
New Berber carpet $6.951 {937)718·147 1, www.n8tionyard. Remanents st arting al widepolebarns.com
utilities,
plus
deposit.
(740)256-8152
1 b.edroom apt. close to New 2BR apts. Watson Rd. $25. Mollonan carpet. . 76 l!jrii-:;,;;;;;;;~;.;.;.--...,
town. Quiet location. ref. &amp; Rodney Pike/850 area . Vine
St.
Gallipolis,
PETs
Attentionf
dep. required. (740)446- Reference/
Deposit (740)446·7444.
liOR SALF.
Local company offering "NO 2957 ,
required, no pets. (740)44&amp;DOWN PA.Y,M ~ NT" pro1271 . (740)709·1657.
RefrigerBtor, wMe, $25; 1yr. old Jack Russell inside
grams tor you to buy your 1 br.apt. all ut1l. pa1d $350.00
Wh irlpool washer, white, dog housebroken , to good
home instead of renting.
also commel"ical space both Pleasant Valley Apartment $95: dryer, white. $95; home only
304 •773 -606 3
• 100% financ1ng
on Main St.PI. Pleasant 740· Are now taking Applications Fridge, like new. $175. The
for 28A. 3BR &amp; 4BR. , Appliance Store. 76 Vine St. AKC Boxer pups, 7 ~ales.
• Less than perfect cred1t 446·2200
are · taken Gallipolis (740)446·7~00 .
Applications
all colors, shots &amp; wormed.
accepied
1ST MON.-FREE RENT
Monday th ru Friday, from
"' Payment. could be the
WITH PAID OEP. NEW
Thompsons Appliance &amp; $300. (740)379-2668 .
9:00 A.M. -4 P.M. Office Is
ElLM VIEW
same as rent.
Located at 1151 E V~ rgree n Repeir-675·7388 . For sale, AKC German Shepherds
Mortgage
Locators.
TOWNHOUSE/APTS
Drive
Point Pleasant, WV re- conditioned automatic pups &amp; adults, workirig dogs
(740) 367&lt;1000
NOW LEASING!
Phone No. is (304)675- washers &amp; dryers. refrigera- 304-937-3059
For rent 2-br. house ~ ~ 11
SPACIOUS
tors, gas and electric www.Tristatek-9.com
5806 E.H .O
Lincoln Ave. dep.&amp; ref. no
2 &amp; 3 aEDROOM
- - - - - - - - - · ranges, air conditioners, and - - -- - - ----c
pets $400 00 a mon 304BOTH FLATS &amp;
' Tara
Townhouse wringer washers. Will do Labrador Retr ievers AKC
675-2749
TOWNHOUSES
Apartments. Very Spacious, repairs on major brands in registe red . Different co lor,
AVAILABLE
2 Bedrooms , f:./A, 1 1/2 shop or at your home.
ages &amp; price. (740)256-6463
Immaculate 2 bedroom
·ALL ELECTRIC
Bath , Adult. Pool &amp; Baby
or (740)645-6527.
house in country, SitS on 1
"CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
White CKC registered male
acre lot.' newly remodeled
"STOVE. REF.
No Pets , Lease Plus
Toy PooOie. 9 wks . old,
inside &amp; out. new carpet.
·DISHWASH ER
·red
., D po••t Requ 1
SeCun., e ""'
•
$400. more info (7 40)37 8freshly painted. laundry &amp;
. .
· "GARAGE DISPOSAL
(740 )367-7086 .
or se II . A1ven ne 6525 ·
Buy
storEige rooms. $450/mo.
' WINO BLINDS
Antiques, 1124 East Main
(614 )595 -n73 or 1·800"CEILING FANS
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- on,SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 74QM l.SCAL
798-4686.
"WATER. SEWAGE &amp;
ing applications tor waiting 992·2526. ·Russ Moore ,
~UMENTS
TRASH INCLUDED
list lor Hud-subsized. 1- br, ~ow;n[!:e::_r.'-!------., ~
SR 75- 4BR. 1 bath .homePETS CONDITIONAL
apartment, call 675-6679
garage . . basement, river
MISCELlANEOUS
Fender
and
GibSon
(3041682-30 17
EHO
aocess. Propane heat, win~OIANDJSE . EpiPhone. acoustic guitars,
dow AJC . $650/mOnth rent-• new in box, your choice
WEEKLY AVAILABL!=
$650 sec. dep., you pay util·
n c ·. 1 u d. e s COmpound a 1/4 miter saw.
ities. Available t st week in
April . Call (740)446-3644 lor 2 apartments for rent. R e frige rato r/M icroWav e 9 AMP - $75.00. Hu st;~varna
Racine. Ohio (short drive From $175 To $250 College walk behind powered tiller ;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:~-,..;.;;...,
an applicatiOn.
from power plant) Deposit ~~~6 Motel Call (740)245· $40.00. 740-985-3571
"ARM I
Stop renting Buy 7 bedroom
reqwred
,
no
pels.
(740)992=~-~~---.,
r.
foreclosure $18,000. For list5174 or (740)44 1-01 10.
SP"CE
Diamond
rings
&amp; pierced
~
earrings
$70
ea;
VCR
's
$25
..
ings 800-391-5228 ext.
1709
5 rooms &amp; bath, range &amp; ref. L.---FOR-iiRENriiiiilit
·
(740)245-560 1 leave mesfurnished . W/0 hookup. Off
sage.

r·--illiiiiiiiir;;._,.r

j

r

I
I

I

·I
I

r

-_.1

st. parking . 2nd floor. very Oown1own Office Space- 5
Twq
separate
honies, clean. in town. (7 40)441- . room suite $650/mo; 1 room
Appliances. nice yards. 0596 .
office· 22 s/mo .; 2 room
Rent $475 .00 per month.
suite $250/mo. Security
$475.00 Deposit each. 740- Beautiful 2 bedroom apa!t- deposit required . You pay
ment
in
coun
try,
beautiful
992-5421.
utili ties. All spac"es very nice.
se,tting, laundry room 8.
Eleva1or. Call (740)446·3644
appliances included. very
clean . $400/mo. (6 14)595- for appointment.

s

2BA 5 minutes tram town.
$400/month, deposi~ &amp; reler-

ence requi red . No pets.
(740)446-9342 after 6pm.
2BR, all etecHic. $360
month plus security deposit,
no pets. 4 miles north of
Holzer.
St. Rt.
160.
(740)379-2923 or (740)4466865.

2br. w/add-on. On Crab
Creek Rd. No Pets' n.ed'·ng
a neighbor. Re nf is Neg
(304)675·1206

I

dance Is known as
227 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, OH 45769·
I 049 but whose pres·
ent place of residents
Ia unknown, Kimberly
V. Barna, whose 1st
place of residence is
known as 227 Union
Avenue, Pomeroy, OH
45769-1 049
· but
whose present placa

of
residence
is
unknown, will take
notice
that
on
November 10, 2005.
Mortgage Electronic
Registration
Systems, Inc •• acting
solely aa a nominee
lor United Financial
Mortgage Corp., flied
Ita
Complaint
in
Foreclosure . in Case
No. O&amp;,CV-118 In the
Court of Common
P18aa, Meigs County,
Ohio alleging 1ha11he .,
Defendants, John F.
Barnas, Kimberly Y.

Barnes, have or claim

to haVe an interest in

described p.remises,
to Wit:
Beginning
at
1ha
Northwest Corner ·of
a lot which formerly
belonged to George
Stone on the street

known

as

Union

Avenue; thence north
78 314 ,Degrees Wast
79 112 feet or the
Northeast Corner of a
lot formerly owned by
Frederick Elberletd ;
Thence Soulh
16
Degrees, West 85 feet
to Tyler:s Lot; thence
in a . So~theasterly
direction along the
line ol Tyler 's Lot, 91
teet to the lot formerly owned by George
Stone; Thence along
said Stone's lot I 01 .
teet to the place of
beginning, being the

husband,
10
Ella
Parfitt (or Ella Parfitt)
by
Deed .
dated
October 2, 1916 and·
recorded in Book 113,
at ·Page 6Q9 of said
Deed Records. Parcel
No. 16.01299, and 16·
01300 and 16-01301
currently set forth In :
Volume 169, page.
187, recorded 05-20·
03 . commonly known
as:
227
Union

Avenue,

Pomeroy,

Ohio45769
The Patitloner further
alleges that by reason
ol default ol the
Defendtints(s) In the
payment of a promla. sory note, according
to Its tenor,' the condi·.
tlons of a concurrent
mortgage deed given·
to secure the pay·
mont of said note and
conveying the pram·
ises described, have
been broken, and the

same

has · become

abso1ule.
The Patltlonor prays
that the De.l endant(s)

named

above

be

required to answer
and set up their Inter·
est in said real estate
or be forever. bared
frorn asserting the
sam!B , for foreclosure ·
of said mortgage, the
marshalling of any
liens, and the sale of
real estate, and the
Avenue, described as
· proceeda of seld sale
tonows, to \vlt: One
same real estate sold · applied 10 1ha paytot being 115-112 \feet
ment of Petitioner's
and _conveyed to
on Union Avenue and
claim In 1ha property
Benjamin F. Biggs by
running back at this
order of . Its priority,
Burke
Hysell
by
deed
wfdth I 00 !set and the
dated November 30 , · and for such other
other lot baing on the
and further relief as lo
1900, and recorded In
•aatarly side of the
just and equitable.
Volume, 87 Pages 71
flrat deacrlbod lot
defendant(s)
The
and 72 of1he Records
herein and t:Jelng 40
teet on Union Avenue of Deeds of Meigs named above are
required to anawer on
Co&lt;~nty. Ohio.
The
and running bee~ at
or befora lhe
24th
paris of lots hereby
that width 100 feet
day
of
April
,
2006.
described
being
1
18
and
lor
further
By: The taw offices of
feet fronting on Union
dlacrlptlon reference
John D. Clunk Co. ,
Avenue and running
11 hereby had to the
LPA • John- d. Clunk
back
the
depth
I
00
plata of the City of
co., LPA By; John D.
feet , and being the
Pomeroy
in
the
clunk il0005376, Ted
same premises conRacordlr'a Office ot
A. Humbert f0022307,
veyed to Alta Tracy by
aald Malga County,
Timothy R. Billick
Benlamln- F. Biggs
Ohio, being, 1h• same
10010390, Robert R
and Annie E Biggs,
property
formerly
Hoose
10074544,
his wile, by deed
owned by Jackson
Michael
L Wlery
dated Augus113, 1904
Hysell.
· Now
and recorded In 10068898. Chsr1eo v.
dace81ad. and sold
Gasior
100759•6,
Volume 92, page 30 of
and
conveyed
by
James c. Wrentmore ·
the Deed Records of
Mary Ann Hysell, at
10046779 Attorneys
Meigs county: Ohio,
al, the widow and
the , Plaintiff·
hetra at ·law ot said ' and thereafter con~ • for
Petitioner,
5601
veyed
by
Alta
Tracy
Jackaon Hysel11o B .F.
Hudson Dr., Suite 400
a nd J .E. Trac-y , her
Biggs by Deed dated

the
real
estate
described below,;
The following real
eetate situated in the
.County of Meigs snd
State of Ohio. and in
the .
VIllage·
of
Pomeroy and being
two lots on Union

--·-

Hudson, OH 44236,
(330)342-8203
(2) 20, 27, (3) 6, 13, 20,
27

Public Notice

The Stewart-Johnson
L.adies Auxiliary to
VFW Post 9926 wl11 be
ho1\flng election of
oHicers for the year of
2006· 2007 at the April
4 , 2006 meeting at
7:00 at the post. All
Ladles
jt,uxlliary

mambera

In . good

alandlng are invited
to come out .a nd vote.
Mar. 27
·

ump

on
SAVINGS

lB

Free Esl ulral£'", Gtl ,l l .l!llel'd l

Heating
Cooling
Refrigeration

(740 ) 992·2804

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

&lt;JWI'C..l P r1cf'S

(740) 517-6883

Jeff S1e th e m - O w n e r

·BARNEY

Hardwood hblneiry And Furnlillre

THIS CAI&lt;NIVAL
IS BOJ)ACIOOS,
PAW!!.

:www.dmbercreekoabbi_,...,.;m

YEP!! MAKES
ME FEEL LIKE

Al(f'D

'TIL 1 GIT ONE' A THEM
LI'L REMINDERS THAT
1 AIN'T!!

AG'IN !!

All types of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter •
Downspout

I

~

"0 2 ~ Honda 919 . 2.200 miles

with cover an d tank bag .
"Great . condition. Asking
$4 ,500 oa II (740 )4"46 -4096

~gu~f.~ J'L·

FREE

C huc k Wolfe

ESTIMATES

~~l!_~~~

THE BORN LOSER .

. Owner

• New Homes • Additions ·
• Remodeling

STANLEY TREE

TRIMMING &amp;

GENERAL
CONTRACT! N(i

I'"

Licensed Home ,Builder

I

(740) 992-0496

I

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
" Insure d "
Call Gary Stanley

.

m1.:

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

-==~=====~==~====::,
r
~

~
Valley

Hospital

P leasanl
Va ll ey
Nur&gt;ing
and
Rehabilit ation Ce m er i' a 100-bcJ l ong term care faci lit y that provides intcrniediate
and skilled care needs t o rc sid e nls Come
join o ur health ~ arc o rganization w here we
provide excellence in care. Ap pli cant will

function as an LPN with additional dutie s a!oo

Long

te r m experien ce

preferred .
POSITIONS AVA ILABLE :
LPN · Full ti me
RATE
WILL
BE
BAS.ED

0\'

• Weekend posi tions

• Training program
new graduate:-.
• H eal th I nsurance singlc/fami lv· plan
~Experie n ce pa y nnd re ce nt upgrade i n p;J)'
rate s

APPLY IN PERSON OR CALL
A.n gela Cleland,

DON

(304!' 675-5236
AA /EO E

296 70 Bash an Road

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONST8UCnOI

Racine, Ohio

Remodeling

1

' to10 X30'

140-992-1611

Hours

&amp;

2QOO Camptite by Damon
pop up camper sleeps 8

YOUNG'S

CO \I 1{1 . II·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Ill"

Concrete R e mov al

M01UR IJUM~
18 ft . camper, covered
porch . loca ted river front at
Lone Oak Camp-Ground
St 100.00 lot rent extra ·
$500 .00 include s water,
electr1c &amp; sewer 304-882_32_3_7_ _ __ __ _

1.1.\\IS

and Replacement

. AD~~

or

-Conaete .Work

Room Addltlonl &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
ElKtrlcal &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pelio and Porch Oecka

David Lewis

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-6971

2~'x7' . furnace . 3-way refrig .
8'- 12' self storing awning
Jacks &amp; leveling systems.
spare trre &amp; earner. 2 bruner
· propane por1able s! ove '"

wv

0~6725

992-62 15

Insured
4f710

btimatc~

PomProy Oh1o
25 Yf!MS Local E~per1ence
I

·Economy Beef $8.25
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.75 .
-Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag .
·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

very
rtion$4000
only
used 3good
t1mes.cond
Askmg
ca ll aft er 7pm (.740)949 · : : : Jayco Eag1e 34· 51h
wheel w/s hde out. New c.on·
dition . "$22 ,000
080.
17 40)339·02 18 .

GARFIELD

Shade Ri ver AG Service, Inc

·35537 S1

R1

DO IT ...

SUNSHINE CLUB

26 Years Experiem;e

r:rec

JUST DON'T
GET NERVOUS ..

KNOW I CAN

Stop &amp; Compare

8;00 PM
' L.---...;;".;;";;;".;.m
:;;o;.:pd
:;;:.j
7 :00AM •

&lt; O'SIRl I

ALL T~E PRESSURE
15 ON ME, E!UT f
CAN DO IT! I

• Complete

·'sliliss'•to•
1:

•,

PEANUTS

·New Homes
• Garages

45771
740-949· 2217

7 N • Porneroy,
740·9'85-3!131

Ohio

fll-EEN BUL."rWIGER ...
l HAP 6UCH A CRUSH
ON HfR

45769 .

HU"1E
J~U'IIOvt~\IENI ~

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
. ) -4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury• Also HUD

wA~:;::~;;tNG
u ncondillonal llfo!lme guar·.
amee Local ,.rereoces lur·
nished Established 1975
. Call 24 Hrs 1740) 446·.

12 hour sh 1 ft ~l

ror

Hill's Self
Storage

0870,
F1ogers
Wa!e1proofi
ng. . Basemen\
N ew to the area Gasto
Contracting . 1B vrs $ll.pen·
ence Deoendable honest,
Call
affordable
rates
(7 40)446·0308

Also Comm.ere.ial Space

.740·416-5547 .'

~====~~~~~~~~====!
~

BUSINESS
IN THE .
CLASSIFIEDS

Tractors

/lard Work! "
Mid- Sit.L' 4\Vh ce l Drive Tr~clor

JOhr &amp;

40hp Kub o ta Eng in e'

BAUM L UMBER
~t .

1\Jeaday, March 28, 2006
By Bernice Bede 0.01
Make a concerted effort" to jqin the fun ·
events all around and there will be a
marked improvement in your social life in
the year ahead . wh1ch include lots of excit·
ing activities, shared with a raft o f new. fun
acquaintances and.lnends
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19) - Someon..e
Important to your immediate plans shou ld
be accessible today. Keep try ing to make
the connection , because you will eventually connect. Know where to look for
romance, and you'll lind it.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) - A concerned and kind friend w111 step 1n and help
you today in a Si1uation wt1ere you are feeling quite alone and abandoned. This person's Intervention will set th if"!QS r1ght with
you once again
GE MINI {May 2 t -June 20) - You can be a·
better friend today to .someone if you look
tor a way to lift some of the buroensome
responsibilities an this person·s shoulder. II
doesn't have to be something hard .
CANCER (June 21-July 22} - Yo"ur
chances for fulf1ll1ng your material obJec·
twes are exceptionally good today it you're
will ing to work lor them . Use yout 1nltia11ve
and be assertive, not aQgressive, whe n
needed.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22 ) - Trea t serious
matters conscientiously today, but don 't let
this same somberness spill onto your fu n
pursuits and activities The entire day
doesn't have to be all work and no pia~
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - TodaY. much
to your credit , you will be more dedicated
"to do1ng things for those ,you l.ove. rather
than doing th ings tor yourself. You 'll· diS·
cove r good tHings happen to good people .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23)- Betore makmg
a major deciSion ·taoay. don"! take any
gambles : carefu lly weigh au the pros and
cons and be sure you know what you're
doing. II unsure. don't comm1llo anyth•ng
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-NOV. 22) - It you are
not alraid to assume more responS 1b 1 llt~es
concerning you r work or career, conditions
will beg1n to grow more promts1ng tor you
startmg today. Go tor 1he gold.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec 21)- T"e
best way to get arl" uncooperative person
to be support1ve 1S by klddmg hlrnlher 1nto
1t. Warmth , wit clnd good humor Will cal m
and soothe troubled waters
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) - In all
your Involvements wittltllOse you love. t r~
to gi11e mo re than ·you. eKpect back !rom
them, beCause your real JOY w1l l com e hom
do1ng !h1ngs tor those who are soec1al to
you.
AQUARIUS (Jan , 20-Feb 19 ) - When
ma~mg soc1al plans today w1th a new and
exCiting pat. make sure your old tnends are
ln\llted to come ar ong. 11 you don't, others
w1ll qu•ckly start to feel unapprec1ated and
dropped
·
PISCES {Feb. 2Q-March 20) -Your oosslbilltles tor personal ga1n look better tha n
uau.al today. but not necessarily through
Mw cl'lannels ot acqutslllon . Tnese mea and·llue on es may strn be the bener PJO·

SOUP TO NUTZ

" Takirlf( Tire Sti11g Out Of

wi1 h

I-IE:RE, 'i'OU1D SEiTER
USE A BAT ..

'lllrthde,y:

due era

BAUl\1 LUMBER

ADVERTISE
YOUR

GRIZZWELLS

Now Available AI

Scorpio~"!.

East

"It's got to be, I Some bridge for me, ( A
game each. day: I A joy to play." J.P.
Reese. Amarillo, Texas.
The op9ner bids one of a suit and the
nell.t player makes a high-level jump overcall in a suit. Up to what level should a
double by responder be negative?
This is a matte r for partnership agreement. Some like two spades, more prefer
higher: perhaps four hearts. I usually go
for seven spa_desl
A key point is e)(hibited by today's North
hand. After South opens one diamond
and West overcalls lour spades. what
should North ~o?
With 13 high-card points, North must not
p$ss. But since he has no ser.~sibje bid
available, hEi can ~n,ly double. rhis says
that he has too many points tci pass, bul
nothing better to do. It is not purely lor
penalty. Unless West is undisciplined,
South cannot expect North to hOld .
numerou s trump tricks. South passes
with a (relatively) balanced hand, but bids
when unbalanced, confident that useful
caids wi ll appear in the dummy. Here,
South continues with live clubs, which
North passes.
Note that lour spades doubled goes down
only 300 .
WeSt leads the spade ace, then cashes
the spade king. Let's aSsume he conti nues wi th a heart .
The tr ump suit must be played . without
· loss. When you have nine trumps missirig
· only the queeh .. normally you pl ay far the
drop: eight ever. mine. nearty never. But
hei'E! you kriow that West has eight
spades to East's one . This swings th e
odds solidly in favor of a second-round
club finesse . Play a club to dummy's ace ,
then run the club jack th rough East. Bingo
- plus 400 .

-

Fiberglass tr uck topper
w/sliding windows. F1ts Ford
Ran ger or Chevy S10. $~00
(740)446-1327.
~:::::---:::----::-.,

10

4•

North
?'

AstroGraph

04 oyna Super Glide. tuel
injected. serria red , lots of
chrome, 2,400 miles, beauti·
ful bike , garage · kept. Call
Mon-Fri am (740)446-9416,
weeke nd
·&amp;
even1 ngs
(740)441-1724

CA&gt;\IPHt~

I•

BIG NATE

a message

1998 21' Marada MX-3
(Gord Package) open bow
boat. Mercury V6 engme,
lOOHP, with iust 1 10 hours
of Use. Custom tops, track
1999 Harley Davidson Ultra and accessories. EKce tlent
Classic. Loaded. Excellen,t condi tion $9,700 080. Call
condition. 29,000 total miles. aHer 6pm (740)446-4066
Price $13,500. Call 740.
949-2217 until 7 pm
94 Seadoo SPX 2 passen1999 Honda 300 EX, many ger jet ski . excel lent condine w parts. Asking $~ ,650 tion. includes trailer. $1 .300.
OBQ_'2000 Suzuki AM 125, (740)386·1579 .
many aftermarket pans
fiO A lJIQ P .\J('I'S &amp;
Asking $1,600 OBO. Both
A&lt;~'t~WlR1F:S
look and run great! Call
(740)388·9021 .
BUDG ET
TRANSMI$ ·
2001 ·600 Grizzly Auto Less StONS, Double bolted. All
Than 350 miles on it types. (740)245 · 5677 or
$4000.00 740-742·4011
(740)?45:7400

~

HOW C.Of'\E. PsPI'LD I&gt;OK'T
1-\f&gt;,\/t. 'I-IU\~ITION (..01'{\E:.NT
U's&amp;.L~ "?

WV#039714

740· 742-229l
• Leave

West

A negative double
· goes how high?

A'd

4x4

EXPERIENCE
B enefits include :
• Flex sc hedulin g (including'
• Shift differential

Shop the
Classifieds! ·

(f~~(

•
•

South

Opening lead : • A

and SOns

1994 Ford Escort LX 5 spd.
about 140,000 miles. Needs
engine: $800 obo. (7 40)339- 2002 yellow HarleyOavidson
Classic.
Chromed
up!
2356
13,000mi Detachable wind1995 Crown Victoria , 4 door, shield/rear Seat backrest.
ru ns good, ~nd looks good, Garage Kept. $15.900. 304$1 ,250 . 740-416-1472 or 773-5379.
740-9g2-1493.
2005 CRF250R berely rid2002 Cavalier 4D, $3,695; den, never raceP . $3.900
1999 Malibu $3,295 , 1998 08 0 7 0 245 5815
·( ~ )
'
·
Metro LSI $2,995 ; 1996
89
Honda
~oldwing
w/tra ilMonte Carlo $2,995. OtherS
in stQGk Starting at $1 ,300 . er. 6c:yl.. 45.000 miles, very
Cook Motors, 328 Jackson good shape, well maintalned. cover. extra lights
Pike, (740)446 -01 03.
and
.ch rome,
$7 . ~ 50.
96 Buick LeSabre 97 ,000 (740)441 ·5540.
needs bOdy work and
radiator. new l1 res . banery, 99 Harley Fat Boy, 9,400
brakes and rotors. $1 ,500 miles, tots pf Chrome and
OBO. (740)446-9632.
e~e tr as . (740)446-9954 .

nur~e.

Dealer: South

H omes· Decks Driveway s - Equipment
Mowing - Tree
Degreasing- BoatsTrimming - Aeration - Campers- Trucks - Deck
Fcrti li£a i!Oil- planting staining or painting
Special rules for
Mulching
Trucking companies

H.L. Wrhesel ,

loto.4 WM~~om I

1993 Cadillac Deville 64 ,000
miles, good shape, $4,000
(740)645-0626.

a treatment

EIP.

•

24hr Emergl'ncy

I

Pleasant

II

I

9632 .

+

l~ic~n~r~ctnsurrd

2o61
Blazer LT 4x4,
91 ,ObOmi, foa ded , · N ew
GOOdyears. Qnstar, LE;iather,
All Powe~. $7,900. (740)245. 9245. (740)367-0624. ·
---,.- - - - - - 2002 Dodge Ram 1500,
crew cab. 4 whe'el dr. au toinatic, power everything
109,000 miles, lots of eldras
$13,500 (304)675·7256

04 Oldsmobile Alero, 4 door,
auto, V6, PW, PL, PS, rea r
spoiler, air, CD player, excellent condition. $9,600.
(740)388-1579

Public Notice

~

Chevy Colorado EXt. Cab
'OS. Auto, "2WD: wtbedliner.
e"cellent condition. Kelly
Blue Book $ 14 .600 , will sell
tor $ 13,000. (304)523- 1179

$500! P:olice Impounds!
Cars from $500. For listings
8(}()-391-5227 ext 3901

Notice
Is
hereby
given that the annual .
meeting of the ohareholders ol Farm.e rs
Bancsheras, tnc. wll1
be
held
at
the
Middleport Church of
Christ. Family Life
· Center,
437
Main
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio. on ·the third
Wednesday of April,
2006, ill 4 :00 p.m.
according
to
Its
bylaws, for the purpose· ·of
electing
directors and the
transaction of such
other: · business. as
may properly come
before seld meeting._
JoAnn
· Crisp,
Secretary
(3)27, (4)2,12,18

'

.

... Q 4 3

A Q J 10 7
... K 10987

21YIS

LAWN CARE

Free Est.

Ovl'r 30 year s
._. 111 no•rienCl'
L' d rl.lilllowne
•
r;..
(740W92-41110
-Chuck Wolfe/Mgr.
94 Dodge Ram , 4x:4, stan-'
(740)992-0496
dard , tool .bo,;, CD player,· L--"'5"9~1-;;:4:;:3;::48::..,._ _.
$2 ,950. (740 ) 4·4~-74 44 or
1:~'1SU:l!:1t.:UOII..,s_~ Ill
1:
(740)388:9649

5757 or (740)339·0865. No
answer. leave message

·

8 5
6

POWER WASHING

.Hf,fi4Nt'4t

89C·70Dumptruck,A3,000
original miles, 9tt. telescop1ng dump, air brakes. 427
Allison automallc. $6,500.
(7 40)388· 1579 .

Disney/Beach area. 716
niQhts stay. Paid $600, sacri- "ti~;;;;.;.:,;.;;;~:.;,;;~;.;;.o,
. e tor $199 Good lor 1 1i
tiC
·
year. (6i4)590-0381 .
LIVIiStOCK
:___ _ _J_E_T____ ~-------_.1

,

•
•

South
• 6 3
• A

TRI-STHTE mOBILE POWER WHSH
nno Lnwn cnRE

Complete Tree Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
20yrs. exp.
Gallipolis, OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.

1999 GMC w/extended cab.
lOaded, 305 engine, automalic, 67,000 miles. good'
clean·, solid truck. excellent
condi tion, $8 ,500 080.
(740)441·1014.
:_________

1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Limited. Good co ndition, lo.w
mileage, $ 9,800 . (740)245-

n

Cell 3\H b r,)
I'

AKJI09874 .Q
tO 4
• •r98 52

i

.

304-675-2457

Owner

FOR SALE

Playgrounds

.
•

nume.r

Rt. I 24 Cheste •· 9M5·3301

·--1

___ :_r----··- ,_ --- '· •-

··--- -------,--~ -----'----

connector

8 Auet heroine
12 Campus
building
13 Geologic
time
division
. 14 Filion ears
15 Wave away
16 Aug. and
Feb.
f7 Immense
18 Does the
floor
20 Makes public
21 Diner
sandwich
22 XXI times C
23 Mosaic
26 Cisco Kid

Vulnerable: Neither

f:!Oflle

i

November 29, 1899,
and
recorded
in
Volume 85, Pages 334
and
335
of · the
Records of Deed of
Meigs county, Ohio,
also · the following
described Real Estate
Situated
In
Said
County of
Meigs,
State of Ohio, and in
the
village
of
Pomeroy, to Wit:
A piece of parcel of
land 29·1/2 feel wide
and running at the
width the lull d~p1h of
the lot, or 101 feet and
being off the west
side of the following

- Free Es1ima1es

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

Insured

AERATION MOTORS
8 year old AQHA Sorrel with
RePaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In blaze mare . Well trained. 4·
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- H/state show horse . t,.ight
7773 or 1·800·798-4686.
Retatl 'and office space avail- 800·537 -9528.
rt;~outh and leg ques. $3,500.
BEAUTIFUL
APART- able in downtown Point
(740)441-101 3.
MENTS
AT
BUDGET PIEiasant, S5001month, next
PRICES AT JACKSON . to Courthouse. Contact Julie · Lincoln Ranger 250 welder Angus Bulls, two X-breds, 4
ESTATES. 52 Wes1wood ·a
t with mig attachments 100 heifers. E"celtent breeding .
Drive from $344 to $4~2 . pointpleasant_comm:...rental foot of lead $2800.
State Run Farm. See
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call @yahoo.com or (703)528· Hendy 14"ll.6 toot Lathe sin- www.slater u ntar m .co m,
Equal 0617.
gle-phase S2000.call 304· (740)286-5395.
74Q-446-2568.
Housing Opportun ity
675·4144il noanswerleave
. ,
WANTFD
message.
Shelled Corn $3.50 per 50,
Brand new 2BA apts. on
10 JbNr
~2% All Stock $5.40 per 50.
Bob McCormick Rd. Call for
Prom Dresses: 1 Tiffany pink Other" livestock feed avail7 0)44 · 94
1' 01
details ( A
or Responsible N.C. hunte; size- 8 $150; 1 Alyce pink able. 740' 698-0 911 ·
7
40
44
1
184
&lt;
)
-·~
wants !o lease 100-200 ,,·,e·" $150· 1 re d/si lver
u.
&amp; · ·.
v
·
,
~~IN
Modern 1 bedroom apt .. acres for 2006 deer season. size-2; 1 Atortiori navy siZe- .
:"""'
. (740)446-0390
ph# 336-581-3932 anytime . 314$25. (740)441-0712
"~-------·

Legal Notice;
John F. Barns, whose
last place of resi·

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • .Streets •

East

We st

MONTY

• SEAL COATING
•PATCHING

10x10x10x20
992-3194 .
or99l-6635

K 4

,fo A J 52

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

~

--=--------

UBLIC
NOTICES

•

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

TRUCKS

iiO
Ii
'"--·EQu!PMENT·----,.r

U3 ·2Hl6

• 5 2
.KQ 763

t..--·FO·R-S;;:i\LE:;.·-,.1

i

r

I
Nortb

95·Z·28 ' Camara T-Tops
Leather 650 Auto Looks and
Runs Great $4700.00. 92 •
Corsica 4 door. New Pain t
lots ol New Parts. Runs and
$1,800.00 .
looks Great.
740-742-4011 .

~15

ACROSS
39 Sardine-can
·
opener
1 Forum attire 40 Library sec;!
5 Tango
41 Poles'

Phillip
Alder

89 Pontl,.c"Grand Prix, runs
great, high mile~ . $800
OBO (304)593-8900 or
(304)675 -3957 •

ANn~

r

til·

I

2·98 Ford Mustangs ; 99
Dodge 4,;4 Quad cab pll
$6,200; 00 Ply. Voyager
$3,500; Do Gran Voyager
.$4 ,000; 00 Dodge Stratus
$3,400; 00 GMC Sonoma ex
cab $4,500; 01 Chev Malibu :
98 Chev. Monte Carlo
S2,800; 01 Ford F1:ji)
$4,500 ; 98 Ford Contour
$1, 100; 96 Dodge Stratus
$2,300 ; 97 Chry. Clrus
$1 ,800; 00 Dodge Dakota
ex. cab $4,200. B &amp; D Auto
Sates.
Hwy.
160
N.
(740)446-6865.

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Ang.le.
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Appliance
Driveways &amp; WalKways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Warehouse Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
In Henderson, WV. Pre·
owned Applicanes starting Sunday. (740)446--7300
at $75 &amp; up · all under IIIli'-"":~----,
Warranty,
also
have
BUILDING

ib

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

r·o
tJoo;EIIOU)
~~---~Gooos:;;:;~--,.1

B1dwell area , clean 2 bedHOl.SES
room $400/mo. includes
FOR RENT
water/sdwer. Reference &amp;
deposit required. No pets.
(304)576-4037.
3 bedroom house. Excellent ~M:.:o.:;bi:.:le_h:.o_m:.e:.s-,t-es_f_o_r-up-to
locatiOn in town. No pets.
16ll.80 in Country Homes.
(740)446-1 162 ·
(740)385-4019 ,

The Daily· Senlinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

movies

43 Harm
4li The brass,
lor short
47 Shuttle
48 Metric unH
50 NY ballpark
51 Solar
52 Nonstop
53 Gets some
sun
54 Yeasty brew , '-'-'!.L"ss· Knock flat
20 Top. and oz.
DOWN
22 lee cream
treat
1 OB quests
2~ Actor
2 -and aaiis
- Holm
3 Develop .
24 MoiiCoW
4 Tiny
turndoWn
swimmers 25 King in s.
5 En1ic,e
play
6 Serenades, 26 Was In debt
maybe
27 Chase

29 Skippers·
okays
30 Nocturnal
away
~- Add·birds
(elrtres)
28 Young lady
31 Gonzalez 's
8 Suggestion
ot Sp.
gold
.
9 12 months 30 Follow
orders
33 PBS Iunder 10 Laird 's
34 Assist
daughter
32 Above, 10
11 Shipboard
35 Winsome
tennyson
36 Tracked
direction
34 Tol)"notch
19 Cathedral
down
plloiS
town·
38 Vow venue
35 Hidden

37 SUff..:oated

dogs
38 Focus
40 Sthch
. loosely
41 A Khan
42 Mutant
heroes ol

comics
(hyph.) ·
43 Fencing

match

44 Sholl out
4S Utll. bi11
4li Denver hro.
47 Win-- ·
nose
49 Sitcom
planet

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetrlf)' Cipher cryplogl~ms

~rt aeallld

OZVGZTA

AFZ

from quotllhons D)' [an\:)JS peope. pat IW'Id iJesert.

Eac'1 rener '" t'"le ~ starm !Of ariQ!rler
Tcday's due · G equals P

" C

JWBHGCTV

HSTF

AJ. TJHGZAZ

LZZW

C TQX

CXPSOZN

RZ

DXN

DA

VMDAZO

C

AJJ

NJX ' ~

HB " RZ"VA . " HCTFZWWZ

MKDX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·she (Wendy Wasser~~n) was one of tile brightest
ligh1s on Broadway and w1ll be deeply, deeply rmssecr • Jane ~lexander

T:~~~t::' :...:::.._= lo l•ool ~ , CLAY
____

S©\\(llA-lGt-trs· ::::

0 leur
Rearra nge. lener1 of
JCrombltd word1

l . '0UAN _..;__ _,...._ _.

the
be-

lo..- lc fo rm foiJr 1imple word1

' r__,.,..R, O_N..,..:--1..,T..:.E,--:.i·l
. ~rlll'l.

I

lCEUJ

I

., .

A WE T H

I

5

b

I. I

'I

I

··Why are you pouttng?·• I
asked my 1rrnd seher son. He

:::·==·==·==·=~., have a ····· ...:·
~--rl-;:-r,A'-N,,_R. . ,:;IEsr-Trl---l·l

r

replied, " Because our neighbors

;

L-.!....--l.-.J.-.J.-.J.'--..1-

6

lllicomo'"' rne '""'"'

by fil lm~ i&lt;1
yo~ de-.r_e lop !rom

qu.;,od

the mtsslnQ words
ST!p No. 3 below.

PR IN T NUMSE~ED
'1
tET;E&lt;S IN SOU.ARES

SCRAML,ETS ANSWI!RS ~
&amp;urvy- Lapel - Datum - Nestle · SMALL in CARS
"Have you ever ll0tit1:d," tbe gent quizzed. "thaa ccoo·
orny sire means extra largt in detergents but mean ex1l1
SMAlL in CARS'/"

ARLO &amp; .JANIS

�•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 27,' 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com
'
'

Lopsided games mark.
state championship games
who has signed to play at Thursday morning . "But we
ASSOC IATED PRES5
Michigan State next season. did the job tonight."
McKinley became the first · Mayo hit I0-of- 15 shots
COLUMBUS - If there big school to win back-to- from the field including half
was a surprise Saturday at back titles since 1972 and of hi s six .3-poi,!lt attempts.
the 84th state' boys tourna- nnly the sixth ever.
He made 11-of-15 · fre e
ment, it was what rnul s all
In Di vision II. Dunbar throw s and had ei ght
four champion ship g\llnes proved that it was more than . rebounds and· seven assists.
were .
just player of the year
Teammate Bill Walker. the
CantOJl McKinley won its Daequan Cook.
tournament 's outstanding
"People never realize that player, added 22 points, 10
second consecutive Divi sion
I crown with a 63 - 33 victory Dunbar basketball is not just rebounds and · six ass ists.
over
TrotwoodcMadi son , the Daequan Cook show," Andre Evans came oil the
Dayton Dunbar rolled over said Cook , a 6-foot -5 Ohio bench to go 9-for-9 from the
Woo ster Tri"!ay 73-46 in State recruit who averages 'field and .6-of-6 at the line
Divi sion II. Cincinnati 25 points a game. "We've for 24 points for the Trojans
North College Hill - with got four other players who (26- 1), Associated Pre ss poll
OJ. Mayo - had little trou - can step up at any time. I . champions the last three
ble with Cleveland Villa hope they (those people) get years and considered one of
Angela-St. Joseph, 90-73, in it now."
the top handful of teams in
Division IlL and South
Cook fini shed with 23 the nation.
coasted
past points, but three others hit
Ohio State · signee · and
·Webster
Columbus Grove 83-65 in double figures and Darran first -team all -s tater David
Division IV
Powell had nine assists.
Lighty '!lnd Darryl Rushton
Trotwood-Madison coach
The title was . Dunbar ' s each had 20 points for VASJ
Ike Thornton could have first in 19 years. At the same (21 -6).
been speaking for all the time, it was another heartIn Division IV, . almost
vanquished when he said, . breaking close call for the exactly two years removed
"I ' m trying to figure out Titans. who lost in last from their most painful
what happened - . what we year's championship to defeat. · South Webster's
ran into ."
Upper Sandusky; 94-86.
Jeeps celebrated their greatIn the big-school game,
Only three other teams in est victory.
AII-Ohioan the tournament's 84 years
Led by Nick Aldridge and ·
first-team
Raymar Morgan . hit for 25 have finished second two Brigham Waginger, the
points and the top-ranked years in a row.
Jeeps more than made up for
Bulldogs made quick work
"We came out and gave it a semifinal loss in the 2004
of Trotwood-Madison.
all we had but we just ran state tournament.
"I could sense all week out of horses," coach Keith
"That was a lot of mot ivation for our kids," coach
that they .were ready," coach Snoddy said .
In Division IlL Mayo Marc Kreischer. " As a play·
Dave Hoover said. 'They
were like a Kentucky thor- showed up late for North er, you use that to psyche
oughbred. The'y knew what College HiH's trip to the yourself up. "
was there."
state tournament but made
The Jeeps hecame the first
team from the S&lt;,Jutheast
Ricky Jackson and Marcus up for it with a quick start.
Two days after he was pre- District to win a state title
Parker each added II points
for Canton McKinley (25-2), vented from playing ia the since Portsmouth ·in 1988 .
which won its 17th game in semifinals for missing three ·Aldridg,e , a 6-foot-7 senior
a row.
classes, Mayo scored 34 headed
for
We stern
The 33 points was the points to power the top- • Carolina: scored 34 points
fewest by a team in a cham- ranked Trojans to their sec- and Waginger had 20 .
since ond title in a row.
Second-team AU-Ohioan
pionship · game
Columbus East beat Marion
"It's been a big up'and- Kyle Meyer had · 18 points
Harding 41-32 in the 1963 down week ,'' said Mayo, for Columbus Grove (21 -6).
Class AA final.
who confirmed after the wh\ch was trying to become
" We came out ready for game that he was held out. the 67th sc hool to win a t.itle
anything," said Morgan, a · for mi ssing German , anato- in it s first trip to the state
mobile · 6-foot-8 swingman my and algebra classes on tournament.

'

Senate panel
•
·approves sweepmg
immigration bill, A2

Members recogri.ized
· for long service, A6

BY RUSTY MILLER

"

AP photo

Stephen Ar;nes, of Canada, reacts after hitting an eagle putt on the 16th green Sunday during
the final round of the The Players Championship golf tournament in Ponte Vedra Beach., Fla.
Ames finished 14 under par for the tourament win.

Ames blows away
golf's toughest field
•

BY DOUG FERGUSON

pion, the winner of the tourna- 75. Next up for Woods is the
ment considered golf' s fifth two-day Tavistock Cup at his
major because of the strong home course in Isleworth,
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, tield and demanding test.
then off to the Masters ne~t
Fla. - Stephen Ames went
His victory on a sun-baked Monday - depending on his
from making fun of Tiger afternoon was reminiscent of ·father 's health.
.
Woods to winning like him.
some of Woods' dominant vicAs for that guy he pumAmes delivered a major per- tories in the majors - build a meled at La Costa 0
formance Sundav on the lead early. and let everyone
"That's golf," Woods said.
treacherous tPC ai Saw grass. else collapse trying to chase "Each week is so different.
blowing away the strongest him.
Stephen didn't really play all
field in golf with a S-under 67
ViJay Singh, Sergio Gatcia that well when he played
· to
win
The
Players and Mike Weir stumbled against me in the M~ti:h Play.
Championship by six shots early. Ernie Els collapsed late. The great thing about this
and earn an unlikely trip to the Goosen got within two shots game is it starts over the · very
Masters.
of him at one point oil the next week."
Ames made only one mis- back nine. but that didn 't last
This tournament tends to
take. a double bogey on the long.
start on the back nine. Ames
lOth hole when he took two
Comin g off hi s double needed only a few · holes to
shots to get out of the bunker, bogey at ~No. I0. Ames blis- end it
and ·it looked as if he would tered hi s tee shot and hit a
"It was pretty close at one
have to battle his nerves along !lawless approach into the stage. but he played awethe s'ary back tiine of the par-5 II th for a two-putt some ," Goosen said. "He ran
Stadium Course.
birdie from 15 feet. On the away with it at the end. We all
Instead, he poured it on with par-3 13th. his tee shot caught probably thought 9 under
impeccable
shots
that the ridge and rolled to 2 feet would be a good score."
stretched his lead so much that for another easy birdie, and he
Firm and fast · after three
the tiny island of a 17th green knew
The
Players straight days of dry. sunny
was on I¥ ano th er ho Ie on h1.s Championship belonged to weathe'r, Sawgrass was an
way to a dominant victory.
him with a I5-foot par save on accident · waiting to happen.
•"Except for the 1Oth hOle. 1 the 14th.
Ames staned from the inside
played a flawless round ,"
Instead of playing it safe, pote. with a one-shot lea,d over
Ames said . " It fel t like a walk Ames played without fear.
Singh and Garcia.
He
made
a
10-foot
birdie
Fans didn ' t have to wait
in the park."
Ames fini shed at 14_under putt on the 15th, where the until the back nine to see the
· was lllcked on the left big wreck.
274, ;ix shots clear of two- hole
Weir, three
. time U.S , Open champion &gt;ide.h From the first cut of
· sh&lt;lts out of the
Retief Goosen. who closed roug on the par,S 16th. he lead when he staned, hit into
. average went after the !lag and narh the water on No. 4 and threewith a 69 . The sconng
was 75.37R, the second-tou gh- rowly deared a bunker by t e putted for a triple bogey, never
·
est Sunday ·m Sawgra&lt;&gt;s
histo- lake. making the 25-foot to be heard from agai.n.
. He
eagle.
The
only
conservative
wound
up
with
a
79.
Garcia
ry. Despite playmg in. the final p 1ay -came .on th'e 17 th, t he tried a new putting grip that
group. Ames was etght shots notorious islantl green. Ames didn ' t cure his woes. He threebetter and had the best score
went for
the middle
of. the putted for bogey on the easy
ofHe.earned
the day.
f
d
$ 1.44 million for green, ound Ian . and two- . par-5 second, missing a 2puned for par. .
.
footer. took bogey o.n No. 3
And with a s1x-:shot lead ·from the bunker and went into
his second PGA Tour victory·.
and al so got a · three'year playing the final hole, Ames the water for a double bogey
exemption to the Masters.
li ved up to hts naine.
on No. 4 on his way to a 78.
First up is a fami ly vacation
He took dead aim .
Singh might have been the
to Orlando with his two chi I"Oh. ymijust hild to go at it. biggest surpri se, .the local .
dren and wi fe. Jodi . who is didn ' t you ·r Robert Ames, his favorite who has ·a house
recovering · from lung cancer b h
d
dd '
d d
h
1
d
d
that was detected a week after . rol er an ca Je , tease
own t e _coasta roa an_
him.
makes his home on the range
the British Open.
Col ombian rookie Camilo at Sawgrass. He was hardly a
Vill egas. who got into the daunting sight for A,mes in the
And the Masters"
'T ve got to sit down. and tournament when Chris final group. as Singh made
think about th at at th i; time." DiMarco wi thd re w, nearly consecutive bogevs, hit into
Ames said.
made it into the Masters. He the water for a double bogey
Only a month ago. the 41 - cl o.;~d with a 7.1 and fini shed on No. 9 and didn't make a
year-old from Trinidad wa; in a four· way tie for third at birdie until the II th hole. He
J·ampooned for tea,ing Woods 283 to earn $3 84.000 . He shot 77 .
before faci ng hip1 in the first moved up to I I th on the , E.ls went out in 32 and was
ro und of the Match Play money li ; t - only the top 10 at 7 under through II hole s Championship. say in g any- are eli gibl e for the Maste rs ~. three shots out of the lead and
thing he could happen . "espe- coming up S9-l.97 1 ; horL
two hours ahead of the final
cially where he's hitting the
"I gave it my best. and it group - when he mis~ed 12ball."
look s like it's not going to foot birdie putts on consecuWoods read hi s remarks, happen ,"
Villegas said . tive holes, made bogey on the
then sent Ames into the record "Hopefully, there will be plen: next two and then hit irto the
books with a 9-and-8 victory. ty of Masters for me in the water on .the 16th and 17th.
For all his work , he wound up
the shortest match mathemati - fu ture."
call y possible over 18 holes.
Tiger Woods was never part with a 71 .
Ames was reminded of of the eq uation . He twice
It all afford Ames a wide
those comments throughout made double bogey from the smile as he walked along the
the Florida swing. but not any- middle of the fairw ay. on Nos. frightening closing hole s.
more. He's The Playe r\ cham- 10 and 14. and d o&gt;ed with a arms rai sed when he fini shed .
ASSOCIATED PRES S

'-

•·
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CENTS • Vul. ;,;,. No. 157

SPORTS

Rise in BWC insuran_ce stalls Pon1eroy wage increases

• Lady.Eagles fall to Gallia
Academy. See Page B1

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - For months
· now Pomeroy Council has
been developing a plan to
give the village employee s a
wage increase but that plan
stalled when the village
recently received an unex pected $40,000 increase in its
Ohio Bureau of Workers
Compensation
(BWC)
Insurance prc'mium.
· The village,'s BWC insurance premium was roughly
$15 ,000 last year but jumped
to $53 ,000 this year. The

0% A.P.R. Financing
For U To 36 Months On All Products*

i'ng safety issues..
As for addressing the wage
increases, all council members and Mayor John Mu sser
agreed that a solution must be
found.
·'Our superv isors are critical .people," Arnott .sai c,t "We
need to make our best effort to
solve thi s so that they be fair~
ly compensated and the
hourly employees should al so
realize a living
wage
increase."
Arnott asked council to
work together on the issue
·and to ''not sit on it" but make
a move on the solution .

Musser said he wants the
salary ·increase s to happen thi s
year.
·
In other business:
Council approved the ·second reading of ordinance 719
to create a code enforcement
officer.
· Council approved resolution 6.06 acknowledging the
sale of the village's cable television franchise from Charter
Communications to Cebridge
Communications.
Council passed resolution
· 7.06 tran sfen:ing $8,000 from
the general to the street fund s,
and , increasing the 2006

WEATIIER

Non-profit agencies receiving .
financial support from the
United Funq for Meigs County
received final checks from
the fund's 2006 campaign at
Monday evening's annual
meeting. President George
Hawley and 2006 Campaign
Chairman AI Dettwiller distritr
uted final quarterly disburse·
ments to representatives of
e1ght non-profit, public ser·
vice agencies serving Meigs
Qounty residents. Payroll
deductions make up a large
part of the fund's annual
fundrais1ng efforts, but the
UFMC re lies each year on
· fundraising events and indi·
vidual one-time gifts.
Members of the United Fund
board hosted a dessert buf·
· fet at the Riverbend Arts
Council in Middleport Rev.
Keith Rader of the Mulberry
Community Center and Tom .
Reed. Director of
Gallia/ Meigs Community
Act1on Agency, accept contri·
butions from Hawley and
Dettwiller. Board Member ·
Betsy Nicodemu's and her
daughter, Mallory, view a dis·
play of UFMC activities .
through its years of service.

Dr. Shrikant K. Vaid~a. MD. poses with his patient Jose
Delgado of Middle'port during the Men's Health Clinic at the
health department. Pleasant Valley Hospital and Home
Medical Services provided physician serv1ces and supplies for
the clinic. Vaidya was joined at the cl inic by Dr. Timothy
Metzger, DO.

PVH and healt11 department
unite for men's health clinic

Brlan J. Reed/photo

Bv· BETH SERGENT
PVH pnl\ iJeJ physicians
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN ELCOM Shrikant K. Va idya and
Timothy Mt'!Lgcr ·to perfonn
POMEROY
Given examinat.i ons at the ,·Jinic·.
Meigs County 's unique situa- and pro,ided phlebotomy ' ertion in regards to health care ,·ke &gt;. While Plea,ant Valley
options . .the recent Men\ Home Med ic·al Equipm ent
Health Clini c provided a ,·ital pro\'ided oth ~r medi cal test· service to keep resident s ing ki b for the clin.- .
healthy at a di scounted co't
Th~ cl ink incl uded low
and without those resident; cost pro,tate. e\ anb . includtraveling out of the count) .
ing th e- prn~t ~He ")pel·iti c ant iThis year the Men 's Health gen bhmd te, J. he ig hl. " eight
Clinic happened thank s to and hlooJ prt·,sure ;malys i; .
cooperation between the
MCHD
A"i 't ant
Meigs
Count)
Heailh AdJ'nini , trator Cn uri n~ ) Sifn
Department tMCHDI and said th ai -1.1 men pan1cipated
Pleasant Valley Ho, pilal
· Pleilse see CliniC. AS
tPVH ).

BY BRIAN · J. REED
BR EED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

INDEX
·
.
'

2

·. "Your Friendly Outdoor Power Equipment
and Tractor Superstore"
'10 d~MI a'\ APA b"' ""'"l br term • up 10 :M mortlo• " "'l obl o lt•rn'llh Jul&gt;( I(; ~ooe l • l"'~'' ~ J, m~··m
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tnro. ~ n ~~~011 :"d l CGr~ornon

'"l-1

1J 5 A l ubrtc'll
t Ollro;ll St~m l '"tOit~Mt 100h [·,g.bfo r;• ,,1,, 11
lO a ~ ts.:xi 8~ tm B~ l~ . et 228 ~nGI! S~l:r.ll: Bnl AlUJ 8~ loiX !()XII 0~ Mt 'lO'l MllOO \lllii"J .
Mit'OO MIQ'Il M~5DSC.~DSC C I.I I O'l S~C S ~ OC SDS(;..SOSCC Mt tli &amp; \ol l/0 .\'1 ~~tr .,.,. ~ ~Olfl " ' t ' "~
OfCI&lt;l oHI Q..alr!y lor JJ IO""'

g"" /1. ~~ bMn"'" II G• oP to 'l m&amp;n~~l

SEtTIONS-

I'AGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

A5

Sports

S.1 f00' ~11 1 11 ·~~ CO"&gt;gLtto d• lo· 1

12

Weather

Albany. and Stale Senalllr Joy
"We fnunu repre s'entatives
Padgett, , R-Coshocton, along of both power co mpan ies tO
with officials from American be very upbeat and ' ery optiPOMEROY - A delegation Electric Power and American mi stic about their plans to 1
8Y TIM MAlONEY
from Meigs County returned Muni cipal Power-Ohio, and build here. " Davenport said . TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
Thursday after two days in the the Ohio Power Siting Board "We want to make sure that I
POINT PLEASA NT. W.Va.
state capital , meeting with leg- regarding the status of two we ' re tloing all we call J o Jo
Point Plea,ant High School
islators and officials with two proposed $1 billion po"er he lp in the process."
power companies which plan plants. and how county govDavenport said they al so Principal Rick Nonhu p h;Js
to locate here.
ernment can assist in locating di scussed how the county can been su,pended without pay
Meigs
County the plants here.
hel p pre pare a re'a dy work - after being accuo,ed of dri ,·ing
.Mick
They also di scussed the· fore~ for tht&gt;~e plants once wi th a blood akc,hol le,·el mo~
Commi«ioners
thari thn:e times the lccal limit.
Da\'enport and Jim . Sheets upcoming state .c apital budget the\· arc operatin g.
·
No11hup 's suspension began
make one or two trips to bill ;md how Me.ig; County . "We di,cul\eJ the train ing
!\1onday
and could last until the
Cl\lumbu s ,each year to meet can benefit from its appropria~ nccessarv ftir work in an
end
of
the
school vear. Ma, on
with state-le vel ofticial s and ttons, Davenport said.
IOCC phnt. and how the
- Sc·hoob.
Davenport· said the del ega- count) ,·an he lp prepare local County ·
promote Meigs County's eco'nomic development and . local tion met with representath·es worker; for tho;,c jobs." ·superintendent Dr. Larr)
government
agendas . · of AMP-Ohio. a whole,alc Davenport 'a id. ··we want Par~un~ ~ai d .
"It 's reall y JU &gt;I precautionCommunit )
Improvement electricity provider V.·hich r.l eig' Cnunt ) people to have
Corporation President Patd plans to build a power g ~ner- even oppt&gt;rtunity to he com- an·," PaNm&gt; said. "II'&gt; in the
Reed,
llconom1c aJin g
plant
in
Letart ret i tl\ ~ and pre pareu for tho'e bi,t inte rd t of ,mr employee
Development Director · Perry Township. and with Kevin job' when tht• time nll ne, ."
and our ' tudent,."
Nonhup. 5S. \\as c·hargeJ
Varnadoe and Joh and Famil y Walker. · president or AEP · Accord in &gt;! tt&gt; Sheet' . the
Servi ces Diret: tor Mi ch;icl Oh io. to discuss the &gt;latus of twO-)'C.!r ,~c rti ficat i o n pm- wit h tiN -ofl'en&gt;e dri )ing under
Swisher al so made the trip.. ' tht' two projct:ts and what the ~ram for traini ng 'IGCC the inlluence March 21 after
·hi &gt; truo: k alleged!) muck a
The delegation met w1th ' companies need from the local
St:olc Rep. Jm1111\ Stewart . R- gow rnmenl .
Pluse see Caplhtl, AS
par~eJ l'ar 111 Point Ple;I,ant.

Principal at PPHSsuspended

1

Detail• on Page A6

ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/ 800-71'0-1917

Please see Wages, AS .

Beth Sert1011f/pholo

Delegation discusses plant·proposals~ ·
budget needs in capital visit

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

appropriation ' in the general
fund by $1 5.656.
Counc il accepted a bid ·
from Terry Congo to ll10W and
weed eat Beec h Grove
Cemetery for up to 13 mowings . at $ 1.000 each for n(')
more than a total of $ 13,000.
, . Robert Burton and Steve
Vanmeter approached council
about parkin g violation ri ckets being given on Monkey
Run . The ti cke ts were for
improper
parking
and
VanMeter . 'u ggestcd giving
residents (who had been park-

Page AS
• Ralph Douglas
'Bamey' Shain
oiCiarence Evans '
• Roger Hysell
• Blaine Riggs, Sr.

• Afghan man see.ks
asylum alter case against
him for converting to
Christianity dismissed.
See Page A2
• Grants available for
advanced education.
See Page A3
·.• Posts transfers.
See Page A3
• Community Calendar.
. See PageA3
• DAR American History
Contest winri~r announced.
See Page AS
• Pomeroy contains brush
· fire. See Page A6
• Club members hear
about 'Beautiful Jim Key.'
See PageA6
• Historicai.Association to
hold benefit dinner.
See PageA6

No Money,Down

BWC payment is due on May
15. .
Clerk-Treas11rer
Kathy
Hysell and Councilman
Shawn Arnott, who is also on
the village's finance committee, explained the increase
was caused by what the insurance company · deemed an
"excessive
amount
of
claims:·
Those' claims numbered 2 1,
making the village of
Pomeroy a "high risk" client.
Arnott and Councilwoman
Ruth Spapn agreed this
increase would result .in the
village focusing and address-

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

Spring.Into Savings!

"w'' · m~duilywntint'l .t·um

TUESilAY, MARCil 211, 2oofJ

B Section
A6

I

..

then co)nli nued 1111 without
stopping.
Police 'a1d :\onln1p·, bloodalcohnl I~' el " "' 0 2) 7 per·cent. The kga l li mn i' 0.08 percent .
Nonhu p has hcen the p1i ncipal at PPH S for 1111lre than I0
'ear&lt; . He al' n is a cantlidate for
ihe
\1" " "1
Co untv
Conuni;,ion in the Ma~ 9 pnmar, elccttot1 .
. p,; int Plea&gt;ant Set. Jimmv
Ta' lor arrNed \ o11hur on the
e ,· e ni n ~ nf March 21 after a citite n c;lled 9- 1-1 In report a
true ~ dri ' in ~ emltlcall\ in the
area nf LtnL·nln AH· nu('.
Whe n nlliccr' am,·ed. lhe)
fntm\l lhal a true ~ had ' tru e ~ a
,·ehtde par~eJ in frnnt oi a
home 111 the 2600 hlock nf
Linculn Alcnue . Taylor caught
up " ith :-.Jnrthup and placed
him under arre't

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