<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3695" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3695?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-08T20:36:04+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13610">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b46cc2941f1aa560ca562e3b34ea56f6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7f60e23c8ec696fc1f8227335f9b835a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13147">
                  <text>..-•

added IS ~ for USC
l22- l3), wh~~:b is starting tQ
- ~ tile more thwl just 11
footba.ll schoollllldu rollCb
•·• . . BI
Twt Floyd.
'0 QliN 13, ~ 7t
.Pfde g.- to tlllll poiut.
BOISE. ~ (AP) • 1ia lumlau bil a 3- Kim ~lish Clime off the
~ b ~ ~- but bend~. ro ""pinch shoot~ 'for
~ fttlllie SQt alllyup ro the hurting J.T. Tiller and
101 ia and ~n lui rwo
~..L. t • - ...~ws 1111·....
dlmws. fuca. 53-44 "'ad
~--~ft-; lift ~
Jli QQt): \ :42 tewai.nillj.
TtgerS.
· Xavier didn't mai.e he-ld
It was quite an encore fur
&amp;QilbtheftrSttbreemin- En~&gt;t 1· ~ ... w'"- ~ l5
'*s of ~ se&lt;:ood half ,. ,..._ ""
~eD 81 dunk. attempt by point~ during ~ 4 l/2
t ~v. "'-··--~-" ~&lt;&amp; •'-' "'nl
tninllte Slnlll:h in the firsl
....... ~ """""'""' "" ""' "
balf and belped tbiJd..see;Jed
- a.s. tho: 8a.dg«s opene&lt;t Mlnou {:30-6) lUnl 11 si;ll.ll
deficit inw a
fur the Mt poill~ oJ the
~ ~Nea.llllatcbed Ills
~- tfn spun 3W degrees
30 ·
fW IOOtber layup that put · ~ higlt widt
poolts

NCAA

55

a.

~ o!"! =~~:~:; ~int

l~point

the bench.
After getting tn:lltmeat
fur dritydra.a and · · ·
COillleCtkufs
game, Calhplm C'ol.llle' bad
and DeY« had tQ wony, The
Hllsti6 ~ the fust W
points and k.ept pulling
awa.y.
Stante~ Robinson bad 12
!'Qin"· ·- •'"·· tnn-seoeded
H~ (~). ·-:ho. will
play Purdue- in the We-s.~
Region
~miliaals. in
Gleadlde-.Aril.

ftrS=

·Additional bridge
dedication scenes, A6
Bl.ibd.
let.lbirlg

.....

pw'Ufar

thtlllefl'$

'NCAA. cot•ketbal

Sl
. ~Wil~riso~~
. bed

~

~
T~xas A&amp;M with 12 pointsThe No. 9 seed 1\ggies. (24- ·

ment

ThulstJ&amp;y·
In Daytoo.

~=~=

::
for~ se-coad straigbl ~~·
PviiDuE l'l, W•••ltllt 74
PORTLAND Ore {AP)

MickUeport • Pomeroy, Ohio
·

' Xll'&lt;iit
="au~i~;~~~~~~
~~~;::~ . 22 ~U:~~w= 'Qbio.State men's team looks ahead·
with 17: IS tetlin the- e~en wilh ()&gt;mink James bloch in the lina.l tninlltus
~-

•

.

~M . _ ~ 43

• MINNEAPOUS (AP} ~ Aldricb poste-d a tripleiblNe with 13 poin~. 20
ld!ol•nds and IU blod.ed
Ulots. to lead defending
""'-"""- K
t II th
~· msas fXIS
-

seeded Da~too.

~tOOt· II Jayllawks
~AAnear:.t:-~~

·_ 'Thil

.:..::......._. ~:......,_,·l&lt; in u g~~mt
•.....,... '"' .,...... ~
Of ·u set by Shaquille

~!~ ~:dl';y.~.: ~~~

J9!il for BYU ·
·
· Sherron Cullins had. 25
points to pace the 7third- ·

SeededJ~tyhawks (27·

).

· ·chris Wright h~d 10
Points for Daytoo (27-8).
The Flyers shot a woeful
22.2 percent~~~ lowestscoring game Ul ""'season.
ZIIMA 71. Cl.lvluND Sr 57
MIAMi (AP) - Nic Wise
and 12th-seeded Ariwna
· again adapted well tQ its
spot as a tournall\t)nt long
si\QI. building an early 14~nl lead und eliminating
peveland State.
1 t
ppe
;~. .The w·td
''as are u ur·
illg in the tQurunmt"nt for
tile 25th year in a row, two
slty Qf the ·rel.wd. But
~y 've never been seeded
so lQw and drew critidsm as
ondeserving of a b&lt;:rth.
Wise scored 21 points to
lead
four · double-figure
~IS fOf the Wildcats (21 -

fifth.see;Jed.Piudlle- bdioff
COLUMBUS tAP) - and WuHam Buford 11.11d
The Bud.eyes hid oo
frantic clwie from After a quid;. kood;oot in the ~ E~an T~..
Si.'.ntl)(:; Ill! the ro&amp;ter. :so they
~
n:;:: W!ISIIiaaiQQ.
NCAA tottmi:llllent. for the
Turner and Bufocd indi&lt;:at- ~tlllkfimtely be lll&lt;:n e~
f:~ base,!~ on
The 8oiJiinuU.ers · (27.I}) third 'leaf in a mw the big ed imn~tely after Friday ·s . n... nce-.1 .next year. Tumer
E.ft.l:lish's du.t~M.Qul sllots. advanced . to their fust . questioo surrounding QbiQ dl.lt•blt-Qvertime l""s to \liould g1ve . Mt~.ttll a centerwtJ the Golden &amp;lgles were regiooa.l s.emifill8!ls since State's : program i~: \Vlll he . ~tlll:l dta! they were return- ,~.... oo ~tlense_. He- led .~
.,__ .. lA "ool. leQ Lyoos . 2000 The Bi" Thn tooma- . Silly or WIUhe go?
• . 1%! to Oluo S!att". But tl&gt;' tilly ·~ r ...n Ill ~~%: tmd '!lr:l
'"'~""' v "
•
"'
_
Coo.cll
Thall
Matti!
1s
· p.~rent l.'an at~t . reenag...t-:&gt; til&lt;.' go-ro ~uv m the WW~~~~g
__. ...
1
llUlde two fOOI'e !tee throws me!ll champt~s ~ 0 t"" awlliting Qffkill.l wool as tQ sometimes chang&lt;' th&lt;"lr monwll.ls ot every dOO:t
to i~:e the game and . enure game~ vut ne-ar Y whether fre~en BJ. minds.
g~m1e&lt;: handling the bWI._ driMiss.oori moved onto the b~w a 14-poolt lead~ the Mul~m and William Buford
Mullens. sai\1 he was hliW) \ing to the hoop and &lt;"IIIIer
West Regional semlfma.ls to des~111te, .
detemuntd and ~~nore Evan Turner with his tirst year at Ohio shooting or feeding the bllll
play Memphis.
Hu, ·es (26-9). ·
will be bad;.
· Stalil but almo&lt;"t no one to a te-ll.lnnulte.
E T~aun Moore scored
All he lloows for sure is thinlts he 'II be bad. .
Post
play_er
DallllS
VUAtiovA 88, UClA 69
I~ ~mts and made- t~e thai the lllrOOve-r in players He- is a 7-tOOI tower of L~ude-rdale, _polllt gua.rd PJ.
PHILADELPHIA tAP} dtn~:hing ~ throws wtdt ends up hurtin~ his team promise who had a wry up- H1ll , ~ootmg gutlld Jon
Dante Cwtningham 55 seooads remaining fw: when a game comes oown and-down season with the- Diebler a~ ~ufOrd - .dtt
scored 18 points Saturday, Purdue.
the stretl.'h. IS it did in Friday Bu•;:leyes. He ttv~r&lt;~goxl S.S ,·on!eren'-.:: s lre~m,an of the
helping Villanova re~b the
l~llh ~ swred 24 ni~hfs dooble-ov~ime 1u5S points ~ 4.7 I~OOtl!lds a year after aven.g•ng . 113
round Qf. 16 for the .fourth PQtnts. Quml.'y Po.ndexter to'Siena.
game- wh1le m•ttng ~ per- pomts u ~m11e&lt; "7 JM:OVtde a
time in live years widt an had 20 with 10 rebounds · · "Hnving guys oo the lloor ,-ent from the lidd. Tllt:n &gt;ohd W!\". kr..,nue Sill1lll?ns.
89-69 ~kiQI)' over UCLA and Jon Brocli:man added 20 that llnve been in theSe situa- again.lle ~ldom sOOt farther tllld Walter Ollu~t · proVIdt:
that ended the Bruins' bid points widt 18 reboonds..... tioos ~ou koow withoot n than 5feet from the rim. with su~ o.n th~ penrnete~..
for 1 foonh straight Final the wm and linal doob1e- doobt 1t's sometbillg tllnt is most of his points coming on
Trying to hll. Mllllern. stJFoUr apptlll'll.lll:e .
dooble ot his cttreer - fOf udv&lt;mlageoos:· he said at\er uno.'OIItested dw\Ls on· buck- ltble shoes ~•I! he 7-~01?1
Corey Fisher and Re@Sit Was.hington, the , regular- the 74·12 lois thnl ten his. door IJ8.;'&lt;ses.. · .
.
UAB
1111ns.ler , Z!s.1s.
R~"·"
h had 13 nmnts sel!son champion of the team at 22-11.
An elue ret:l'llll out ol sub- Sankopouh~ a~ 6-8 Jll_lllor·
fo':"""fll~a~.· third-seeded Pnc-10:
·
1\vQ years ~. fre~men 11rban Columbus. he was i.'ollt-ge trans.ler . Ntk.ola
Wildcats. (28-7), WI\Q
UNC 14, LSU 70
Greg aden. MiChael Conley Voted the l~p siMh man in the Ktei~Wl, who lind.SIX rn•!IIS
advanced tQ the round of 16
GREENSBORO. N.C. Jr. and Daequan Cook l~ft Btg Ten th1s season but nev~r nnd !!ve ~tmds m I mmin the East Region.
(AP) - Ty Laws.Qn got QhiQSt~tteal\ertheirsinglllar renlly . embraced Mutta s l!tes m. h1s only .appearance
Jo~ Shipp led UCLA bad just in time to help season - which laMed all the defensive ten&lt;"'s ._ which lor Otuu S!a~e ~hts pl!St &amp;eawith l8 points. and Darren ·top-seeded North ClllOlina way tQ the nationnl chan1~i- e11.plt1in~. why he ulwuys Sl'.'' bt-fun: I\1Jitnug tt. knee.
Collison had 15 , It's the ear- wm befOfll a friendly ouship game - to mu e Crul_le oft tile beoch. He ~turt- . Ill&lt;&gt; most 1m~rt~~~ .t;._~~d• d
t~m~lves uvllilt~.ble tbr the edjust two gmnes.
. mg player wt ....: ~VI
liest e~t for the six.tll-seed-. crow ·
.
.
NBA drnft.
·
But SQITie mock drat!~ hnve Lighty, the te!Ull cnptatn and
ed Bruins (26-9) sin~-e II
Tile Atlantic
Coast . A·year ago. Kootn Kook~:\.~ him goin~ in the top 15 NBA most e.xpent-nced player
first·rowtd loss in the 2005 Conference .~layer of th~ spent a year as a ~'tlllege picks. whll.'h likely means the l'llmitl~ mto the 2908~9 se~­
NCAA tournament,
year had m1ssed the p!ISI player belore also lenving.
pros can flas.ll enough green- son. Ae bl\lke h1s loot m
Backed by a raucous. !hree ga~es . after ~e
Now. before Mnttn c11n backs in his fnce to mal(e hi!'l Dece-mb&lt;:r
nnd
never
hometown crowd at their Jam~ed h1s nght toe m really stan planning for nell.! the fifth Ohio State player 10. re!ltmed . causmg ~ntta to
oil-campus
· home. praetlce two days before tbe &amp;eason. he 'II wnil for wQI'd three years to take the money th1nlt ubout what m1gllt have
Villunovajumped on UCLA regular-senson
finale from fres.llmen BJ. Mullens lllld nm . .
been, ·
early
and that
hardlystarted
let up.five
A ugainst
Duke. Agllinst LSU,
19-2 run
L~twson scored 23 points
bact fronu foot injury.
Laur Havww ~.........

11 ·

a.ft':

1~).
.
minutes in put tbe Wildc~dts thand "!.~~-"}~y.o,int play
. -B r a,. 1c e t . . b u s t 1 n g ahead 28·11 betbre the m1 •
at s..., ...,.. a ._...s.lve ~­

Cleveland State (2()-11), point of the first half. and ond-halfrun.
· was seeded I ~th and strug· the Bruins never seriously
Wayne Ellington scored ·
aled to sol~e Arizon~'s tone threatened.
23 points to lead tbe Tar
DuKE 14, TUAS 69
Heels {30-4).
ill:fense. Norris Cole st-'llred
17 points.
GREENSBORO, N.C.
Marcus Thomton SCQred
SYRAcUSE 78, ASU 67
( AP) - Gemld Henderson 2.5 points to lead the eighth·
MIAMI (AP) - Eric finally will find out what lhe seeded Tigers (27-8).
Devendorf hit a pair of 3- second weekend of the
With the Tar Heels uhelld
fl!:!inteJS less thun. a minute NCAA tol.ll1lllll1ent is like,
64-63, lawson split two
ajwt to hnll u big Ar\l()na
Henderson s~-ored 24 defenders after u turnover
State rally, und .the third- points and hit three free and drew a foul while lobseeded Orange held on 10 throws in the final minute to · bing a s.llot to the rim. The
iclvwK:e.
help ·Dille heat TexiS in the ball hung there for a
· · Devendorf lini~ed with sel.'ond roul)d of the East moment before dropping
~l points nd Andy Ruutins Regional.
through. t1 three-point piny
added 17 for Sym~use (28Kyle Singler added 17 tllllt sent North Carolina to a
9), which moves QR to play points and Jon Scheyer 74-6.1lead,
second-seeded Oklahoma added l3 for the · secondGONZAGA 83, W. Kv. 81
(29-.5} in Memphis on seeded Blue Devils (J0.6).
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)
PJid1 y.
'
·
They reached the round llf 16
Freshman Demetri
Riha.rds Kuksiks scored a foc the first time since 2006 Goodson streaked the length
cereer-higll 20 points, and and will lill.-e Villanova on of the CQIIrt and made a
Ty Abbott ulso linished with Thursday night in Boston, · short. running bunk shot
2() fOf the sixth-seeded Sun
AJ. Abrams scored 17 wit~ 0.9 ~econijs Ieft.lifting
Devils (25-10). Jnmes points an S·for-13 shooting fourth-seeded Gon~ugaover
Hlll\len. thl: Puc- 10 player for the No.7 seed wnghoms Western Kentucky,
of the year. was held to 10 (23-12). woo rallied from u
Gonzugu (28·5) udvan•'ed ·
points - ull in the second late IO.point deficit to tie it to the South Region semifihalf - on 2-for-10 shoot- twice in the final 2 minutes. ntlls to play Noith Carolinu
Nolan Smith hit two free on Friday in Memphis, Thnn.
·
ln&amp;·
79 St
72
hro
·th 47 "~nd 1 ·ft
Steffphon Pettigrew hit a
• LOUISVILLE
• ENA
'
t WS WI
-~~u S e t~
' in for the 12th-seeded
DAYTON
(AP)
to put Duke up 71-69. and
. ,
tlltoppen; (25-9) that heel It
,...._nee Williums had 24 the Loo.,homs missed two
·~·"
"'
at 81 with 7.2 seconds left.
points and 15 rebounds, nil- chances m the linal 40 Sel.'· . But Goodson took the
lying top-seeded louisville onds to tie it.
inbounds pass and went
in die final minutes for u 79- MEMI'IIIS 89, MARYLAND 70 straight to the basket with lit72 win over Siena in the
KANSAS CITY, Mo, tle resistance, hitting 11\)m
&amp;ccond rouml of the NCAA (APl "'"' l)'reke Evans dose on the letl side.
tournament S•.mday.
scored 19 points and the
Western Kentuc.ky. which
. Louisville
00-5) Tigers shotu siizling 70 per· made a surpri&amp;e ntn to the
advanced to the round of 16 cent in the first half. awaken- regional semifinals last year,
fOr the second straisht yenr. .ing from their first-round was ted b)l Orlando Mende:iTbe Curdinals will play slumber 10 belt the Terps.
Valdez wul\25 points.
:J2th-sellded Arizona in the
Roburt Sllllie. the surprise Ol&lt;u.HOUA 73, MICHIGAN 63
Midwest Regionul on hero of Thursduy's hurdKANSAS CITY. Mo,
fought victory over No. IS (APl - Bulling through
firiday in lndianuPQlis.
. • Siena (27-!!) overcnme a seed Cui State Northridge, double teams and soaring
}2-point deficit in the sec- came oft' the bench and k.ept in for vicious dunks,
OiKf half ~tnd led by four up his )-point onslaught by Blake Griffin finished
~fore Williums took over, h!ltinfhisfirstthree,making with 33 points und . 14
- hitting 3s.·getting rebt;lunds., htm 3-for·l?. for th~ IQllr- rebounds · to
power
and starting fast brenks with I ner. ,He fimshed Willi 13 Oklahoma past Michigan . .
poT~~·second-~ded Tigers Still· sore from bei·ng
P!le-handed pusses.
~AN STATE 74. USC 811 (JJ. 3) knocked the Terps dumped by Morgan Stute 's
.. Ml!'INEAPOUS !APl (2H 4l on the ropes with a Ameer Ali in the first
~avts .WaltQn ~~ored . a 9 .o run in the opening min- round, Griffin dominated
~r-htgh 18 pumts to hi\ utes and led by as many us the undcrsi~ed Wolverines
tile second-seede.d Sp.llflans 23 while mounting u 53·33 · to help t~e second-seeded
Jilto the. rou~d ol 16 tor the halftime
lead.
Shuwn Sooners (29-5) udvunce to
lliahtll tlme.m 12 years .
Tuggat:t had a double-double neJ(t
week's
South
. ; -l&gt;urell Sum!llers added II with 14 points and 11 Regionul
semifinuls
points and e1ght rebounds rebounds .
against . the Syrncusef9' Michigan Suite (28-6). Gn:ivis Vusquez had 18 Arizona State winner,
The ·
lOth-seeded
which has ndvnnced to the JXlints to lead Maryland .
iigional semifinuk~ more UCONNII2,TIXASA.M66 Wolverines (21-14) pulled
iiines in the lust do1.en years
PHILADELPHIA (AP) off a mild upset in the
iJ\an uny teum but Duke .
. - A.J . Prke scored 27 opening rom\d by witb; :rhe Spartans will pluy p11ints. Jeff Adrien had 23 standing · Clen,son 's
.INrd-seeded Kansas un und ' UConn dominated relentless pressure. but
Fl'.idlly in Jndimmp~&gt;lis .
Texns A&amp;M from the open· couldn't hnndle Griffin's
• 0\l(ight Lewis scored 19 ing tip with Hull or Fume tenacity to make i·t two in
}lOin* and DeMar DeRozan coach Jim Calhpun back on a row.
·
·

11

••••••·i·••••••••••••••••••
ANY KUBOTA'S A
GOOD CHOICE!

KUBOTA RTVSOO
Utility Vehicle ;, Herel

--••
•

~~~

1 ' ! .... • \

-,s

"\.,,

1s 1

ll 1 ' ' ) ' ' .

~1 .\Kl ' IJ

:!-4 . :.!tH.HJ

Ct.JIB !bore. S.. Pl&amp;eBI

Bv lknt SERGENT

OBITUARIES
.
.

Page AS
.• Kathy Adkins. 4$
• ~Coates. 73

.INSIDE
.. Senate looks into

..- -....
...v~~ng Arne,:r,,_.
.•'1-"1' tR

'

~~A2

• U.S. plans census
outreach to displaced
homeowners.

Above: West Virginia.
Gov. Joe Manchin Ill
(left) along witb Ohio
Gov. Ted Strickland
unveil a commemorative sign dedicating the
Bridge of Honor during
a dedication ceremony.
yesterday In Pomeroy.

See'*&amp;eA2

. • DAR Chapter
observes 101st
· anniversary. .

SeePageA3

Right: Members of the
Middleport American
. Legion Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 give a 21-gun
salute followed by a
rendition of Taps during
the Bridge of Honor
dedication.

See Page AS

• Ohio Highway Patrol

llelh ~Vpnololl

· ~tch center
: Consolidations under
·way. See Page AS
: •: Local B(lefs.
See Page A!

.B 'I BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOt.IVOAILVSENTIN~. COM

BY BETH SERGINT

BSERGeNTOt.IVOAII.YSENTtNeL.COt.l

INDEX .
. a .~:riONS- 18 PAGES

BUS RT. 33 SOUTH OF LANCASTER
lANCASTER, OH
740·653·2827

•rour FrienJ/y OutJoor Power Equipment anJ Traclor Superstore" .

,

· Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
83-4
Comics
Bs
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

As
B Section

.
.
.«l aOO!I
. Ohk• Vatlor
. Publlahl. . Co.

- - - ' - - - ...

·--·-·

---·-·- - ·-·----'-----l

.IL
.

;

POMEROY ...;. "We both benefit by this
Gov. Joo Milnchin lll of West
Virgmin told reporters yesterdu~ during u
joint press conference held by h1mself and
Gov. Ted Strick lund of Ohio.
"We've got to get people to ·work,"
Strickhmd agreed. talking ubout the
bridge and, what it meuns to the people
and the neurly 11.000 vehicles which Ira·
verse it everyday.
Stric.klund talked about the "hearty
folks that live in this re~ion in Southeast
Ohio nnd in West Virgin1a." He said these
peop.le have already learned to sacrifice
for the common good und "our people"
nn:· able to deal with 11 recession beller
thun those th111 have uot due .to past hurd·
ships in the urea,
· Still. Strickland promised "prosperity
will retum" us the new $65-million Bridge
of Honor sat ill the background.
"We hope development occur.; on both
sides of the bridge." Mnnchin added.
.The goverQllr.; were 11lso uskod ubout the
bridge's honorees tmd the high rate of mil·
itary service by residents of both st.utes .
Strickland suid he felt it wus appropriate
the bridge was dedicuted to the veteruns
brid~e."

Detalla on Page A3

VISIT OUR NEWEST LOc:ATIONI

!ISERGENTOMYOAILYSeNTINeU:;Qt,l
.
POMEROY - "This is the
· . day the lord has. mall&lt;'. let· us
rejoi~-e in: it." Ohio Gov. Ted
Stri&lt;:Uand said with ll mi~ of
rev1vnl and pep rully at ytsterday's dedication of the Bridge
ot Hoour.
. Strickland W&lt;ls joined l&gt;y
West Vin:iniu · Gov. Joe
Mt~.nchin fit ut yesterday's
ofticial dedication of the $65million structure. Both men
spoke of the bridge ·s honorees, the sunitice of locul
veterans and what the bridgo:meuns to the economic \levelQpment of both states.
The l'eremony began with
Meigs County Commissioner
Mid\ Duvenport n:murling on
how fitting the dedicution ceremony was held on the
approach fiw the old bridge
where lll(lSt people in the Bend
Areu have sat, whiting on the
· lig~t 1~ change to cross the
Oll1o R1ver.
"This gmnd new structure
tlliQws this continuous bond
(between West Virginiu und
Ohio) und its sheer beauty
enubles it to also be u destination."
Following_ Duvenport was
Ohio
Dl:partment
of
Trunsportation Director Jolene
Molitoris who suid: ·'OhiQ was
in chnrge of ~ui!di~g the
bridge and now 11 1s m your
(West Virginia's) grenl hands
to tukc care of it lor genera·
lions to come."
Molitoris then introduced
Stri.:klund to the podium. Or
the three honore.-s, the lute
Gen. James V. Hartinger. CpL
Edwurd A. Bennett and Smfr
Sgt. Jimmy G. .St·ewtlrt.
Strickland suid they were
''truly representutivc of the
people of this region with their
l.msclfish. unyielding efforts .:·
Strickland ulso acknowledged
the etl'orts of nil v~tcnms on
both sides of the Ohio River
and how those efforts should
never be forgotten..
"Muy uH who no~s this
bridge remember these veteruns. uil vetcnms. from both

sides of
addl.'\1.
Wh.:n
. podium
seen Sl'

tht" river:· Stril·kland
.,
Mtull·oin took the
he lll&gt;t~d he'd n~ver
many BtK·kews and
Mountt~.ine~rs in one pluceunless at ~~ ~porting ~wnt and
then "w~ !\' usually 1\lllting
agltinst e-uch l&gt;ther. but not yesterduv . . Munchin added that
yestenhiy the st.1tt's w.:re llllt
wmpetin~ u~ainst each other
but workm~ 'to~eth&lt;"r to muke
"a better Al1u:·ri&lt;:u."
Remarking on th~ \kvelupmt"nt of infm~mtcture and the
Bridge of Honor which has
b&lt;:mme ml a~sthetic t(l&lt;:ul pvint
for the Bend An:u. Mluti.'hin
Sltid: "Then: ure no tmtlk jums
whelt you go the exlr&lt;~ mile ."
Manchin then s!tid th&lt;· Stute
of Ohio put u "little bit more"
into the $6.5-million bridge
than West Yirginiu di,t. joking ·
"Ted': paid . for ttbout thn:e·
q1mrters o( the wuy u.:ross and
"we took it from then: ."
As Strickland had n:l'ited.
the uccon1pltshments ol
Middleport nutives Harting&lt;.·r
and Bennett , Mam:hin spoke
of West Columbia . W.Vtt. \
Stewurt ~tnd the lnrge p~r.:ent ­
uge of pupulntion from both
states thut serve in the nrmed
forces :
Both
govenibrs
then
unveiled the •·ommemomtive
sign dcdknting the Bridge or
Honor and pussed out c.om·
menll&gt;mtive signs mude by the
W~st Vir!!inin Department of
. Transportution to th&lt;&gt; Stewurt
· und
Hurtin~~r
families.
Ahh(lllgh no huntly members
of Bennett were in nttendtml'e.
n lnrger. commemonllivc sign
wus given to the Middleport
Amerknn Legion Feeney Bennett Post 128 in memory
of him. Th&lt;' post &lt;~lso ~uve a
21-gun sulute unll prov1ded a
·rendition of Taps l\) L'lost· the
ceremony.
The River Blend Quartt•t also
performed the Nutionui Anthem
und God Bless Amcrku during ·
the dedil'ution. The dosing
pruyer was giwn by a mcmher
of the Nt"w Hav~n. W.Vu.
Ameri~·un
Le~ion
Smith·
Cupehtlrt Post l-ib.

Governors
Senior nutrition progra•ns ,
talk economic receive
boost from sti•ttulus
.
development,
veterans

WEATHER

ONE MILE WEST OF
ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH
740·593·3279/ .800·710·1917

~·nd ,,d, ... ~... ntt{h ' lc..·,~m

~~bl&amp;altS

offers new progam.

ALLPOWER ·EQUIPMENT

" ''"

SPORTS

• ·United Methodst
·Women hear
retreat festival plans.
See Page A3
• Rocksprings Rehab

a.

..•

~~·,

I

PIHH '" Gowmon, As ··

POMEROY
.
U,S.
Department of Health and
Human Services will release over
$3.5 million for Ohio senior dtizen nutrition programs as part of
the Nutionul Recovery . and
Reinvestment Act.
.
The Meigs County Counc.il on
Aging is one agency providing
meals through its home-delivered
meals progrum - ubout I00 duily.
and another 100 nt the senior center. That progrum operates on pub·
lie funds. donmions from clients.
und agency fundru isers.
The funding comes m u critkul

time. U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson.
D-Bridgep~&gt;rt. suid Ml&gt;nlhty. us
.ugenl'ies pmvidin~: nutrition pro·
gntms t\)r oldc~ citizens feel the
pinch of rising food costs.and the
demund fi&gt;r st•rvi~es increases
due to tb.: tough .:&lt;;onomk d i·
mtlle . und u fusH:mwing p(lpuluti(&gt;n of senior l'ithL·ns .
Ohio will rccciv.: $3.7~-1.651
f(ir senior ·nutrition ussistunctl us
purl of th~ Rt'l'(\vt&gt;ry A1·t .
'"The funds will pmvide me'uis
to seniors in need . restl&gt;rt' nutrition servil:es thut huvc b.:en cur
und restore positions whid1 n111y
have bet'n diminakd . 't&gt;r ·
reduced:' Wilson said .
"Tliruughout Oluo·s Sixth
'

Congressional Di&gt;trict. sociul
service~ ai-c bci~1g ,,•verely Cllt
because of our c•·l\numy." Wilson
suid. "This niti&gt;·ul investment
.will help case the puin caused by
thest· l'tlls. hrlp Ill maintain some
of the jobs nsStx:iuied with curing
for our 'eniors und ht'lp our
seniors 1hnintnin.!hcir i1ealth nnd
inder.emknc·c :·
·
Wtlson also em:uumgcd ,.,,m.
munitics to uppi y tnr funding
under the Rcroverv Act's
C(&gt;lllmlmity Oricntc'u · 1\&gt;lking
S~r\'il'C S hidn~ C!'atlt pn)~rHIH .

Ac·(·()rding the' U.S. Dq1urtmcnt ·
of Justice. this is u wmpt•titiw

Please see Nutrition, AS

Eastern board approves spring sports contracts
STAFF REPORT

' · .

t.IDSNEWSOt.IYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
TUPPERS

PLAINS
Su~plementul
contrucls for
'spnng CQuching pus it ions were
approved when the Eustern Lot·ul
Board of Educulion met in regulnr session.
The following (.'Ontructs Wt't'C
uwurded: Chris Curroll. pssislunt
varsity truck coal'h: Fred
Connery. junior high truck couc:h ;
Ken Amsbury, us~istunt vmsity
busebull t'on~h: Jcssku Hupp .
volunteer 11ssistunt vur.;ity track

..

coach: Shtltm Coltmum. volunteer
Ussistunl busebull COUl;h,
Murilou Mc·Ciung und Oinu
Pines were uppnwed us sul&gt;stitutt•
teucher.; for tht• remainder of tlw
school yeur. John Helgesen und
Gregory ~uncrtkltl w~re uppmved
liS substitute c'ustodums tor the
rem11inder of the s~hool ycnr.
Sundm Butcher wus uppl\lvcd us a
sullstitute teu.:hcr 11ides .
The bourd approved th~ follow·
ing studenttc!~ehcrs for the spring
term: M,•gun Alcxunder. hi);h
school scient:c; Cilristoph&lt;'r
Wiemcrs, h~gh school social stud'

ies: Jumk Les~ky, miudk sdu&gt;nl
social studies .
Thehmrd ulst&gt;:
.
• Approwd dwngcs to the
nmended permunent appn&gt;printion resolution and submit c·st.i- .
muted revcnut· to tho c·ounty
uudtt(&gt;r.
• Approved April H und 'l us
c:uinnuty muke-up duys .
• Aj1prnv&lt;:ll un amcndmctlt to
pnwil c 11 Sc1·ti1m I ~:i l'lun with
OAPSE Luc·ui #4-\X .
• Set thl.' n&lt;&gt;,xt meeting for 6:30
p.m. on April I:i in tlw dl.'nienwry librury c:onfcrcnce rpom.
,.

�The Daily Sentinel

Mexico otters $2 .million
for top drug lords
BY AI EUNDRA Ol.SON

La Familia. which operates
ASSOCIATED PAESS WRITER
in centr.U Mexico and was
~ considered a gang that
MEXICO CITY
an&amp;wered to the GUlf cartel.
Mexico ·s ~overnment on
Calderon's government
Monday utTered $2 million has attributed fn&amp;ctures in
each for information. lead- the cartels to the military
ing to the arrest of 24 top crackdown. saying the
drug lords in a public chal- arrest of drug kingpins has
lenge to the cartels· violent set ofT internal battles fl&gt;r
grip on the '-"Ountry.
l'Ontrol that have led to
The list indicated that Mexico's sharp surge in
~g $angs have splintered violen(.-e. lt dismisses sugtnlo SIX mam cartels under gestions by some U.S.
~ure from the U.S. and officials that Mexico is
Mexican governments. The losing control of some of
two most powerful gangs its lerritoty.
the Pacific and Gulf cartels
The list sends a mess.tge
- each suffered fractures that Mexico is us.ing all it
that. have given rise to new resources to root out drug
cartels. according to the list traftickers days before · a
publi~ by_ the Attorney
visit from U.S. Secretary of
General s otltce.
State Hillary Clinton and a
The list offers 30 million month · before President
pesos ($2 million) in Barack Obama visits, said
rewards for 24 top members George Grayson. a Mexico
of the cartels and 15 million e~~rt at the College of
pesos ($1 million) for 13 of W1lliam · &amp; Mary in
their lieutenants.
Virginia.
.
Mexico's ·drug violence
Mexican otlicials "have
has killed more than 9.000 been quite defensive about
people · since President all the talk about Mellico's
.Felipe Calderon took office being a failed state Wid that
in December 2006 as gan!lS the cartels are controllin~
battle each ot~r for territo,- more and more territory,
ry and fight oft' u govern- Grayson said. "I see this as
ment cracltdown. Some. of an acceleration of Calderon ·s
that violence is spilling policy but with one eye on
over into the United States. the upcoming visit of the
especially the Sopthwest. Amencan leaders."
where kidnaps and killings
However.
monetary
are on the rise.
rewards have not proved
The rewards are the crucial to the capture of .
largest . Mexico has ·ever Mexican drug lords in
offered for top dru~ lords. recent years. Calderon's
said Ricardo NaJera. a government has not granted .
. spol;.esmun for the Attorney rewards for any of the kingGeneral's ollice. Some of pins arrested on its watch.
the men. such as suspected Najera said.
.
Pacific cartel leaders
Stephen Meiners. u Latin
Joaquin Guzman and America analyst for the
lsmael lambada. are tar- U.S. intelligence · service
geted by separate $5 mil- Stratfor. said many arrests
lion reward offers from the are likely based on anonyU.S. government.
mous tips from cartel leadThe new list appeared to ers trying to get rid of rivals.
be the first offering rewards
"So far that's been
for all the most-wanted cltr- enou!lh inceriti ve to phone
tel memberS at once. The in these tips," Meiners said.
government could be trying "I kind of doubt that the
to signal its determination · people milking these calls
to take on the cartels at the would want to come forsame time. rather than one ward to claim reward
or two at a time as past money,"
administrations have done.
1\vo of the people named
said Andrew Selee. director were captured last week:
of the Wilson Center's Vicente Zambada, the son
Mexico Institute.
of lsmuel Zumbada. and
"It tells you a little bit Sigifredo
Najera
about Calderon's thinking," Talamantes, an alleged Gulf
Selee said. "He really sees cartel hit man suspected of
this as something he wants organizing an attack on the
to eradicate. He"s willing to U.S.
consulate
.in
take them all on as a unit." .Monteney. .
The document offered
No reward money was
insight into the reorganiza- granted for either capture.
tion of the . cartels more said Najera; the spokesman
than two years into · for the Attorney General's
Calderon's military crack- office. Zambada 's arrest
down against them,
was the result of an anony.The Beltran Leyva and mous tip that only alened
authorities to the presence
Carrillo Fuentes gangs once considered affiliated of armed men at a certain
with the Sinaloa group location, he said. Najera
·under the Pacific cartel Talamantes's arrest was
alliance - were listed as not based on outside infortheir own canels. So was mation.

Senate looks into
expanding AmeriCorps
WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate agreed Monday
to take up legislation to
triple the size of the
. AmeriCorps program and
open up opponunities for
more people to serve their
commumtles.
·
Lawmakers voted 74-14
to move to the legislation
that
would
expand
AmeriCorps from its . current 75.000 positions to
250.000 over the course of
eight yeurs. Sixty votes
were needed to bring the
bill to the lloor. The measure is expected to come up
for a final vote in the Senate
sometime this week.
Sen. Edward M.Kennedy.
0-Muss .. who is being treat·
ed for brain cancer. made a
rare nppearance on the Senate
floor to vote for the bill thut
he co-sponsored with Sen.
Orrin Hatch. R-Utah .
The legislation would
also create five groups to
help poor people. improve
· educution. encourage en~r­
gy effi~iency. strengthen
uCI;ess to health care und
· ussist vetemns.
Sen. Barbura Mikulski. a
Muryland Democrnt. said
the proposal is un invest·
ment thut "will pny divi,
dcnds long beyond nnything
thm w¢ can imagine:·
The House last week
pnssed n similar bill to add

-·

I'

175.000 participants to
AmeriCorps and other
national service programs.
President Burack Obamu
backs the legislation and
has said he is eager for
Congress to pass a bill so he
can sign it.
Both bills would set up a
fund to help nonprofit organillltions recruit more volunteers and establish n Summer
Qf Service program for middle and high school students.
who would earn a $500 education award. Each measure
would' also create fellowships for older people who
get involved in public service. Both . would ulso
increuse the education
awards of AmeriCorps participants, whose work ranges
from teaching young people
to responding to disusters.
After completing their
service. AmenCorps participunts can receive up to
$4.725 to help pay for college or pay off student
louns. The Senate und
House bills would increase
that uward to $5.350 und
require that it mulch uny
future · increases in Pell
Gmnt scholarships. Unli.ke
the House bill. the Senate
version would allow older
AmeriCorps members to
transfer their educution
awards to their children or
. grandchildren.

:

.. ~:
I

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

NATION •WORLD

Ho~

it's possible to be 'lonely'with him

second . But I love him with
all my heart, and other than
this we get along wooder~ar Au~: I married · fully. I hoped things would
"Eddie .. after getting preg- change when the children
nant "at Ill. We have two were out of the h9use. but
children and have been they haven't.
At 50.1 feel! have wasted
together for 32 years. For
the past 20. we have not my life. I am on medication
slept in the same bed. It for depression. We have no
beg-.m when Eddie started friends. Every dinner out
fallin~ asleep on the sofa has to im:lude the children.
watchmg TV. Then he sim- We only take vacations
pl)' began going to bed on. where Eddie wants to go.
Forget ~ounseling. He
the couch.
The only time he would thinks people who get protouch me was when he fessional help are weak. He
want..-d sex. When 'my ·never opens up and won't
father died eight years ago. discuss our problems.
I cried myself to sleep and leaving him is not t1nannever once did Eddie try to cially possible and I'm not
comfort me. If I asked him sure I would. l still love
for a hug, he thought it had him. What can I do? t~ lead to sex. At that point. Lonely With Him
Dear Lonely: We're not
I decided to cut sex out of
my life entirely. I told him I sure how "wonderfully"
need to feel dose tirst. t&gt;ut you get along when you are
it made no difference . I miserable and he refuses to
have redecorated the bed- discuss it. Since you want to
room trying to entice him stay with 'him. we recomb&lt;Kk mto my bed so we mend yoo tell him you are
could have the intimacy I tremendously unhappy and
need. bnt he just heads over . would like him to go for
counseling so · both of you
to the cou~:h .
Eddie has been a great can present your side to a
father to our children, but professional. If he reflises,
he told me earl~ on that I go without him and find
am his third pnority. with better ways to cope. Also,
the kids commg first and get involved in activities
just about anything else. that bring you some sense

BY KATH'V Mm:tiEU

WASHINGTON - The
Obama administr.ttioo aimed
squarely at the crisis clogging
t~ nation's credit system
Monday with a plan to take
over up to Sl trillion in sour
mortgage securities with the
help of private invesloll&gt;. For
Oll(.'t, Wall Street cheered.
The announcement. closely stage-managed throughout the day. filled in cmcial
blanks in the uGininistration ·s financial rescue pad.age and formed what
President Barack Obama
called ''one more critical
element in our fec()very ."
The coooiinated
by
the Treasury Department, the
Federal Reserve and the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. relies on a mix of government and private lllOile)l
- mostly from institUtiooal
investors such as hedge funds
- to help banks rid their baJ.
ance sheets of real-estate
rellited securities that are now
extremely difficult to value.
The goal. said Obama. is
to ~et banks lending again.
so 'families can get biWc ·
consuunerloans.autoloans,
~tudent loans. (tind so) that ·
small busmesses ate able to
tinance themselves, and w&amp;
ctm start gettin!l this ei.'OIIQmy moving agam."
It was a hug&amp; gambit and
one that came ,like ~ tonic t~&gt;
Wall Street, wh&amp;ch had .
panned an &amp;artier outline of
the rro!lram that lacked
detai .
Stocks soared, the Dow
Jones industrial average
shooting up nearly 500 points.
thanks to the bank-assets plan
Md a report showing an IUieXpected jwnp in home sales.
.The introduction of the
plan was closely choreographed so that the ~si­
dent - rather than Getthner
- would be the first administration ofticial to appear
on camera at midday to discuss it. Geithner met earlier
in the day. before markets
opened, with a group of
reporters at the Treasury
Department to go over
specitics. But Cllllleras and
broadcast-quality
audio.
recorders were barred.
It was the reverse of what
happened Feb. 10. Then,
after Obama had · helped
raise expectations toward
Geithnet and the plan, the
treasury secretary went
before cameras and bombed.
The Dow ~lunged about 300
points arrud investor confusion about details.
.The fleshed-out · plan is
designed to help fix a value
on damaged mortgage loans

AND MARCY SUGAR

.-.

..

erroo

Fn.ncls Mc:KttnZie

Celebrates 90th

AP!IM*
President Baracll Obama smiles in the Ro6sMlt Room of the White House in Washington;
Monday. Joining him. from Jell are. Trea&amp;wy Secretary Timothy Geithner, the president,
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bemanke and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) Chair Sheila Bair.

MASON. W.Va. - Francis McKenzie. formerlv of
RtKine , (.'elebrared her 90th birthday recently with 11i"ends
and family at the home of her nieo.:e. Pamela and her husb:md. Patrick Simpkins, in Mas(ln, W.Va.
She wus born Murch 17. 1919. to John and Mayme Coe
Roberts. Also attending were ller sister. Betty Ross: a special cousin. Terry Coe: a nephew. Dwight and Gayle
Haskins. Madison. Lauren und Emmu; nephew. Ralph and
Sally Ross: nephew. Kevin and P..&amp;ulu Roush and Kane:
Charles Yeager; 11iece. Karen and Paul Johnson: Mike
Marshall: Bobby. Jenna and Mary Marissa Marshall:
Shawn. Che.ryl.. Ct\leb. tmd Hannah Ross; Tom. Amy and
Alyssa Cremeans; Corey. Andi. Lexi nnd Brinna Roush:
'Juson. Hollie and Jayla Sirt1pkins.
Francis now rusiqesat Rocksprings Reh;1bilitation and
· Nursi~~ Facility in&lt;IPomeroy ~md enjoys receiving cards
and ~1s1tors.

and other toxic securities.
government, The rem~;~ining • Geithner said taxpayers
If the vulue of the sec uri- S86 wuuld be.covered by a still could .lo~e money on
ties goes up. the private · government·loan. ·
the deal to .souk up bad
Tbe plan was introduced assets bllt there wj\S no tixinvestors and .taxpayers
would share in the gains. If ahead of a summit next ing the system without risk.
the values go down.• the _gov- week in London of 20 major . Other options. such as
ernment
and
pnvate . and developing econom1es having the government ~­
investors would incur IQ.sses. strUggling with the global chase the ·securities outright
or letting them languish on
"This will help banks recession.
Obama is trying to get bank balance sheets. would
clean up their balance
sheets and make it easier for other wealthy countries to pose even greater vulnet.lthem to raise capital." do l1lQI'I: to stimulate their bil ities. he said. and it was
Geithner said.
economies with government important to find the right
The plan will take $75 bit- spending. as the United blend of risk versus reward.
"I run very confident this
lionto$100billion from the States has done. However.
sclleme
dominates all the
government's existing $700 . other countries, partieitlarly
billion Troubled Asset ones in Europe, are resisting alternatives for trying to
Relief Pro$.ram. The gov- U.S. clllls for tnQre stimulus lind that buhmce:· he suid-,
The
sentiment
was
ernment wtll pair this with · and would prefer to see
echoed
by
congressionul
private investments and . more intert~Attonally coordiDemocrats. who said risk
loans from the FDIC and nated bank re~ulation.
the Fed to generate $500 · The admimstration .wus seemed inevltuble with anv
billion in purchasing power. expected to outline its plan plan big enough to wor~. ·
Geithner said purchases for financial . regulation . But House. Rer.ubhc.an
Whip Eril' C.mtor ot Virginia
eventually could grow to $1 overhaul later this week .
trillion - rough I~ half of the
Federal Deposit Insurance called Obmnu 's plnn u ·'shell
.estimated S2 trilhon of toxic Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair game" thut hid the true cost. ·
assets on bank books now. ··said she expects her agency
He Silid he hoped the
On the hot seat, Geithner will finance as much as udministration would conhas a lot 'personally tied to $500 billion in purchases of sider instead an earlier
the success of the new pro- residential and commercial. Republican proposal to set
gram. His performance in real estate loans.
up u government-sponsored
the Cabinet, including his , Bair said the program insurance program for mortslowness in learning about should help bunks clean up gage-related securities.
multimillion dollar execu- their balance sheets and
The administration phm
tive bonuses paid by insur- raise .fresh capital. though "seems to otter linle incentive
ance giant AIG after tuking she added that "there may for private investors to particbailout money, has been be some banks beyond ipate unless the subs1dy is
severely criticized by some 'help." The agency has said made so lien that it comes m
in Congress.
before it expects more hank the expense of'the taxpayer:·
Geithner testifies on failures, she said:
Cantor said in n stutement.
TUesday before the House
A joint statement by the . The new pwgmm marks a
Financtal
Services . Federal
Reserve
and remm by the government to
Comll'littee,
.Treasury Department said a strategy of ncquiring toxic
Under a typical transac- the Fed should play a "cen- securities. Henry Paulson,·
tion,. for eyery $100 in tral role" in preventing who was treasury secretary
soured . mongages being future financial crises. That in the final days of the Bush
purohased from banks, the implied a wish that Con~ress administration. abandoned
private sector would put up expand the Fed's authonty in plans to purchase these secu$7 and that . would be re11ulating all financial insti- rities. largelr. because .they
matched by $7 from the tuuons. not just banks.
were imposs1ble to price. '

.DAR Chapter observes

Cumberbatch, census coor·
dinator for New York City.
Testifying before a House
panel, officials with the
Census
Bureau
and
Government Accountability
Office cited high . risk
~roups
of hard-to-find
llllmlsrants. non-English
speakmg residents and displaced homeowners who
make Up roughly 14 percent
of the U.S . populution.
To ensure an accurate count,
census ofticials said they were
devoting $250 million from
· $1 billion in stimulus money
for outreuch that will include
stepped-up canvassing of
addresses. to identify residences with multiple dwellers
and homes now abandoned
due. to mortgage foreclosures.

The money will also ,be
used to boost the bureau's
advenising budget by $80
million. of which $26 million would target the fastgrowing Asian and Hispanic
populations in television.
radio and online spots.
Another $10 million would
be spent on the undercounted black communitY.·
·
The money w11l flow
mostly towurd.dense coastal
cities thattraditionnll¥ huve
been more rudully d1verse .
But places such as Iowa.

I.
I
I

.

Community Calendar
Clubs and

organizationS

· Pre-nursing program offered
NELSONVILLE - The Liten~~:y Center. in partner,;hip
with ABLE. Hocking College. und Tri-County Adult Curuer
Center. has created a pre-nursing preparation progruln thnt
will ht-lp mlults prepme for nursing school entrance tests.
Cluss,•s will be held ut the Tri-County Adult Career
Center, in Nelsonville and are sclleduled to begin on
Tuesday. April 7. Students will meet every Tuesday and
Thursduy. from 9:30 11.111. - 12:30 p.m., for ten consecutive weeks. These clusses ure being offered ut no cost. und
enrollment Is limited to a maximum ofl5 adult students.
7i• n'gister. 11r .filr mort' injimnathm. 1'11/IIIICI Cwulv
81'ronm71t~ Wm·k Sration. 74{1-797-1405 1lr 111 Tri-Comuv
A(illlt CM~er Center. 740-753-5400.

Local Weather
Mostly doudy with &lt;l 40 percent chance of. show~rs.
Lows ip the lower 40s.
Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph .
Thursday •.. Mostly
cloudy with a 40 per~:ent
dmncc of showers. Highs in
the lower 60s.
Thursday night and
f'riday ... Mostly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower . 40s.
Highs in the lower 60s .
Friduy night ... Mostly
l'h&gt;udy with u 40 pt:rcent
t·hunce of showers. LllWS in
night, .. th~ lnw~r 40s.

Tutosday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s. E&lt;lst
winds 5 to Ill mph .
Tut-sduy night ... Mostly
cloudy. A slight c· hunce of
showers nncr midnight. Not
as COlli with lows in the
upper 40s. Southenst winds
5 to 10 mph . Chnnte of min
20 percent.
Wl•dnesday ... Showers.
Cooler witb hi~hs in the
upper 50s. South winds Ill
to 15 mph . Chance of rain

!.
I
I
I

~() fX'I'CClll.

· Wednesday

ALFRED - President
Mary Jo Barringer presented information about the
United· Metllodist Women
spring retreat when the
Alfred UMW met recently
m the ~:burch .
The retreat will be held
April 18 at The Plains
United Methodist Church.
The focus is spirinml
growth retreat and leadership tmining.
.
HmTin~er also read wmmunicauons ubout the
Asbury Camp and Retreat
Center of Thurman and the
Footllills District Camp
Partnership with Camp
Otterbein .
The Festivul of Sharing
will be Oct. 10 ut Otterbein
College at \Xesterville. The
group will be making kits.
West Ohio Coi\ferunc~ will
be June 7-11 and the tllem.:
is "Love il) Action
Developing Leaders."
Burrin~er reud the purP"'e
UMW and the sec· rctmyofhad
n;.U cull. with 136
fricnd~hip culls reported .
Minutes were rcud und the'
treasur~r's report was given.
Helen Wolf pi~ked Katie

Meigs CountyTuberculosls Clinic

- 2.03

1.57

Participating offices:
1818 Eastern Avenue
114 1/1 Main Street
407 Third Avenue
318 Main Street

Pltlll clip &amp; bring ad In to participating locallont.

L----------~-~~-~-------~-~
•

"

Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.60
Charmtn11 Shop a (NASDAQ) -

ttl East Memorial Drive Pomemy; Ohio

740-992-3722

I

Public meetings

Other events

Thursday, March 26
POMEROY - Meigs
.and
Water
. Wednesday, March 25 · Soil
MIDDLEPORT - Free Conservation District Board
community dinner. 5-6:30 of Supervisors. 11:30 a.m.
p.m., Mi.ddleport Church at the district office. 33101
the Nazarene . .• Menu is Hilund Road .

is a preliminary estimate.
passenger service.
'{he House and Senate a~
Gov. Ted Strickland has
estimated the passenger rail currently workin~ out detai Is
plan between Cincinnati. of a transportation budget
Columbus and Cleveland that would enable the state to
will cost $250 million in fed- compete for federal stimulus
eral stimulus money. but that money for the project.

'

.

Clly Holdtng {NASDAQ) - 30.29
Cotllno (NYSE) - 33.28
DuPont (NYSE) - 22.33
US Bank (NYSE) - 15.99
Gennett (NVSE) - 2.35
General Electric (NVSE) - 10.43
Harley·Davldson (NVSE) - 1.4.16
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 28.86
Kroger (NVSE) - 21.08
Llmtted Branda (NVSE) - 8.76
Norfolk Southtrn (NVSE) 33.35

•

Kinne of Den~er. Colo .. for
the prayer calendar birthday
card. · She is a missions
worker from the Kentucky
district. Jtmice Weber will
have April's card.
The group decided to ·
send a donution to the
home-delivered meals program ut the Meigs County .
· Council on Aging for the
Lenten offering.
Knthy Corbitt · had the
program, "Native American
Mission
Study.
The
Potluck: Listen and · Leurn
Around the Table." Ruth
Brooks read scriputure, and
Saruh Culdwell read the
opening prayer.
Barringer. Osie Follrod
and Weber participated in
readings. The group did the
"Truditionallroquots Pruyer
Responsive Reading." ·
As n dosing activity. each

J

member was given the following: a clay pot as a
reminder that we came from
the earth and we return to
the earth; soil. as we are
similar to the earth, we need
to care for ourselves if we
are to be healthy. human
beings. and likewise, to
have a healthy earth. we
need to care for the soil;

•

Ohto Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 21 .25
BBT (NVSE) - 19.06
"--plel (NASDAQ) - 14.47
Pepsico (NVSE) - 51 .63
Premier (NASDAQ) - 5.40 '
RockMII (N'VSE) - 24.70
Rocky Booll (NASDAQ) - 3.04
Royal Dulc:h Shell - 47.36
Sea"' Holding (NASDAQ) 42.88
Wai·Mart (NVSE) - · 51 .48
Wendy'a (NVSE) - 5.39 .
WeaBanco (NVSE) - 23.77
Worthington (NYSE) - 9.12
Dally atock reportl are the 4
p.m. ET cloalng quotoa ol Irani'
actions lor March 23, 2009. pro·
vldt&lt;l by Edward Jonet llnanctat adllltora laue Mutt ln.
. Galttpollt at (740) 441-9441 and
Lealey Marrero In Point Ple~tanl
at (304) 874·0174. Member SIPC.

•

Taking Applications

Jrl f
fill

'

HUD Subsidized
Etflclency/1 Bedroom
SOyrs or qualifying disability
·/;/
Low Income priority ·

'' '
~ll
'/
IJTllrTllS

t

740-992-7022
ii.. ~11,\ ~~~
Silverheels
• ?o//;1'1'~ A Realty Company-EHO

•
'

The Meigs Band Boosters wish to express tlteir !incen appreciation to the
comm1111i1y for the support shown to our ba11d during our ·recent Tag Day.
We also K'ish to thank the following businessts for their generous.donations ·
wltich greatly contributed to the st1ccess of o11r Mardi Gras Ball:
·

The Added 1\&gt;u&lt;h. Middkpon

Evans R ~.,.,luurnnt. Muson

Cushltmd. P01ncroy
Clurk's Jewelry. Pomeroy
Duiry Queen. Middlepon
O&lt;·nwill&lt;r True Vulue Lumber. Pomen&gt;y
Domino's. Middlopon/Gullipolis
The FubriC Shop. Pum&lt;roy
Funncrs Bnnk ?k Stwings Co.
Ficl\111 S"lon. Muson
Fox.'s Pizzu lkn. Pomeroy/Ruthmd
Fruncis Floris1. Pomeroy
Ginu's. Muson
The Hair Station, Pllmeroy ·
Jmncs Schmoll, o:o .. Middleporl
KI'C/Long John Silvds. Pome~&gt;y
Muin Sirc.!l Puny Supplies. Pomeroy
Mnki n' Mr:mlll'ks l )ll thf.' Rlvcr. l~omeroy
Ml·CIUI'C \ Reshaumnts.
Pome n\y IMidd lcJ'kli't !Gulli pt.1lis
Millllll~Jltll't Tn)J&gt;hil·.~

&amp; Tt.•cs

Nuils By l'um. Middleporl

'·

•

The Maples

·~

~ob

Frame thai newspaper
pnooo cr priN ~ on a
mug or mousa pad.

Seeds. as we, too. are seeds.
are we willing to plant our- .
selves where there is. a need
on this earth; and water. As
we pour water ou the soil,
we remember that the water
of our buptism sustains us
as Christians.
The progrum ended with a
prayer. The next meeting
will be April 14.

•

Hun's l'arly Burn . PlHUemy

AEP (NVSE) - 28.47
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 43.80
Athland Inc. (N'VSE) - 8.27
Big Loll (NVSE) - 20.85
Bob Evana (NASDAQ) - 22.60
BorgWarner (NVSE) - 20.57
Century Aluminum {NASDAQ)

DRAW FROM JACKSON HEWITT'S POT OF GOlD
AND YOU COULD WIN:
f)(SCOUNTS UP TO 50% OR $20.00 CASH.OR A
ROll OF GOLD COINS.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio
Chesapeake, Ohio
Pt. Pleasant. WV

,

Athtmu Gram! Cint·mu. Athens
AttitudeS Sulon &amp; Tanning. Pomeroy

Local Stocks

Each year is designed to build public awareness that
Tuberculosis toduy remuins in much of lhe world,
causing the deaths of I .6 mill ion people each year. ·

II :30
a.m..
Millie's sausage grdvy and biscuits.
pancakes. scrdmbled egg·s.
Restaurant .
sausage.
bacon. juice. cofMonday, March 30
POMEROY - Oh-Kan fee and milk .
Coin Club. regular meeting.
7 p.m .. Pomeroy Library.

United Methodist Women hear retreat, festival plans

WORlD TB DAY· MARCH 24, 2009

World TB Day, March 24th . _

was insulted that her sisterin-law did not · open her
housewarming
present
right away.
In many cultures (e.g ..
most Asian wltures), ~n­
ing a present when it is gtven
is considered extremely
rude. It implies you are more
interested m the gift than the
visitor. Moreover. should
~ou be disappointed. openmg it in front of the giver
puts both of you in an ~wk­
ward position. Even worse
are situations where one person·s gilt will be compared
to another's.
From this perspective. it
is polite to ignore the gifts
and open them later in p.rivate. - Da~is, Calif.
Dear Davis: Many thanks
for the education.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Katlty Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtinle edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
fJIItstions to annitsllta~l­
boxcollteast.nfl, or wnte
to: Anllit''s Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chieago, IL .
60611. To find 0111 111on
about Annie's Mailbox,
aiHI nod featun&amp; by IHher
Cnalors Syndicate writers
1111d cartoo11ists, ~isit rite
Cnators Syndicate Web
page at www.cnators.com.

Board OKs ~unds for Ohio passenger.rall cost study

with its rapid growth of
Hispanics, or Maine, with
its sizable Somali JX'pula·
lion. will also see additional
outreach. the bureau said.
"A year from now. the
populace will have seen and
heard more nds · in nationul
und lm;ul media tllun in any
prior census." said Thomas
M~senbourg. tlie ucting cenSl)S director. "Our goul for
the 2010 cei1sus is to t'Ollllt
every one. no muller how
difficult or chnllenging th~
tusk may be."

luck for NEW clients

101st anniversary

·

r-------------------------,
I March is full of good I

!

of fulfillment and consider
volunteering at your local
hospital. perhay~ in the
pediatric unit. Al that affection shouldn't go to waste.
Dear ADDit: I am 12
years old and have had
braces for one year. My
orthodontist ls a very nke
man. but he has horrible
breath. Every tim~ I see
him. I dread the 10 minutes
of doom when I let my
nasal cavities be exposed to
such an odor. Some of my
friends are patients of his
as well. and they agree
when I say his breath
smells lit-e a dead rat.
The doctor doesn't wear a
mask, so there is ·nothing
blocking the smell from
reaching my nose. How can
we tell him his breath stinks
without hurting his· feel. ings? -:- Gaqlna Patient
~ar Gauma: You can
ask one of your parents to
speak .to the orthodontist.
but if they won't, you'll
have to be brave enough to
do it. Offer him a breath
mint and say as kindly as
possible. ''I hope you don't
mind. but I have a very sensitive nose... (We trust he
won't !live your braces extra
tightentng.)
Dear Annie: This is for
"Miffed in Miami.'' who

Pomeroy Library. Open to
.public.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053. 7 p.m. at
l'hursday, March 26
the hall .
POMEROY - Recognition of long-time members was a
HARRISONVILLE
CHESTER
Shade
teuture of the recent celebmtion of the lO lst anniversary of Meigs County Women 's · · River Lodge ·453. special
the founding of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Republican Party. 6:30 p.m. mee.ting. 7 p.m. for the purDuugntcrs of the American Revolution (OAR.)
·
Scipio Township fire pose of conferring the
Members of the Chapter met ut the Meigs County at
. Door prizes and Fellowcraft degree on one
Historicul Society's annex for a luncheon preceding the department
refreshments.
candidate. Refreshments.
meeting condiK"tcd by Re11ent Dawn Love Ruhinen . She
POMEROY
Annual
·MIDDLEPORT
presented 1:ertificates m1d p1ns to Mary Rosr. a m..-mber for
46 years: Mary K. Yost . 33 yem-s; Mary Powell. 32 years: meeting of United Fund lor . Alpha IOTA Masters
· Patriciu Cook, 2l ·years; Patricia Holter 21 years: Sharon . Meigs County. 6 p.m ., Sorority, regular meeting,
Jewell 21 yeurs. and Mrs. Curol Sission. 10 yeurs.
La Rae Sonell. Ohio South East DAR director. talked on
the Life of Abmham Linwln to the local members and
guests from the Marietta. Athens, Gallipolis and
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Transportation asked the
McConnelsville l'hupters. Jt1mes Smith of the Meig,s
legislative
panel . has · stute Controlling Board on
Count,y Sons of the Americun Revolution also attended.
approved
$450.000
to study Monday to approve the
Ruhmen and Rose member cut the inscribed cake decothe
l'ost
of
establishing
pas- funds for a California-based
mted in red, white and blue and feuturin~ the DAR symbol.
consulting firm to study
seng~r mil service along
with Opal Gru~ser. vice regent. serving 11.
what . it would cost to use
· The Chapter is seeking new members und any woman Ohio's major cities.
existing
freight tracks for
·
The
Oh10
Department
of
interested in joining may cont&lt;K·t the Chester Court House
for information .
The luncheon as served by the Historical Sqciety with
Yost, •·hapter chaplain. gi~ing the prayer.

U.S. plans census ·outreach to displaced homeowners
WASHINGTON (AP) With the 2010 census looming. tens of millions of residents in mostly dense urban
areas such as Los Angeles
and New · York are at high
risk of being missed due to
·languase problems and a
deepemng economic crisis,
government officiuls . said
Monday.
.
The challenges are creal·
in~ consternation in some
ciues. whiCh say timf' and
state budgets for outreach
are short .
"While the census is a
federal responsibility, there
must be earlier and ongoing
· and
communication ·
nccountability to local go~ernments and communi·
ties:·
said
Stacey

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

..

I~~

PageA3

Ohio Vulley Bunk . Pomeroy/Gallipolis
Peking 'Butl'ct. Musnn
Peoples Bunk ·
. PLu.u Hut. Pomeroy
I\ltn&lt;:roy Fll'wer Stlt1p
Pomemy Md)onuld 's

Powe-U!.' Ft~l Fnir, Primemy
Rin Brl\v~1 M~xi ..·~m R~shtun\nt. Mu~l)l\
Ri'.'t'T City Spurt Bnr. Pnmeroy
Rivor!iidc Food Man . Pomeroy

Rullund Dep1111mon1 S10re
The Shue Pla&lt;e· Locker 2 1~ . Middlcporl
Speedway, Middl&lt;•pon
Subwuy. Middlepon
Suns~t Home Construe lion, Poml•my
Swisher &amp; Lohse Phnnnii•'Y. Pomeroy
TNT Pil Slop. MiddleP&lt;&gt;rt

Tuz's Mnnuhon , Pt1meroy
TWin Oak ~ Convenien('e Store. Pomeroy
Unique Anti4ucs. Pom~roy
Wnl-Mun , Mnst1n
Wendy's, Pnmc.:roy .
Willl Hmse Cafl', l'omCI1")

•

�The Daily Sentinel

Mexico otters $2 .million
for top drug lords
BY AI EUNDRA Ol.SON

La Familia. which operates
ASSOCIATED PAESS WRITER
in centr.U Mexico and was
~ considered a gang that
MEXICO CITY
an&amp;wered to the GUlf cartel.
Mexico ·s ~overnment on
Calderon's government
Monday utTered $2 million has attributed fn&amp;ctures in
each for information. lead- the cartels to the military
ing to the arrest of 24 top crackdown. saying the
drug lords in a public chal- arrest of drug kingpins has
lenge to the cartels· violent set ofT internal battles fl&gt;r
grip on the '-"Ountry.
l'Ontrol that have led to
The list indicated that Mexico's sharp surge in
~g $angs have splintered violen(.-e. lt dismisses sugtnlo SIX mam cartels under gestions by some U.S.
~ure from the U.S. and officials that Mexico is
Mexican governments. The losing control of some of
two most powerful gangs its lerritoty.
the Pacific and Gulf cartels
The list sends a mess.tge
- each suffered fractures that Mexico is us.ing all it
that. have given rise to new resources to root out drug
cartels. according to the list traftickers days before · a
publi~ by_ the Attorney
visit from U.S. Secretary of
General s otltce.
State Hillary Clinton and a
The list offers 30 million month · before President
pesos ($2 million) in Barack Obama visits, said
rewards for 24 top members George Grayson. a Mexico
of the cartels and 15 million e~~rt at the College of
pesos ($1 million) for 13 of W1lliam · &amp; Mary in
their lieutenants.
Virginia.
.
Mexico's ·drug violence
Mexican otlicials "have
has killed more than 9.000 been quite defensive about
people · since President all the talk about Mellico's
.Felipe Calderon took office being a failed state Wid that
in December 2006 as gan!lS the cartels are controllin~
battle each ot~r for territo,- more and more territory,
ry and fight oft' u govern- Grayson said. "I see this as
ment cracltdown. Some. of an acceleration of Calderon ·s
that violence is spilling policy but with one eye on
over into the United States. the upcoming visit of the
especially the Sopthwest. Amencan leaders."
where kidnaps and killings
However.
monetary
are on the rise.
rewards have not proved
The rewards are the crucial to the capture of .
largest . Mexico has ·ever Mexican drug lords in
offered for top dru~ lords. recent years. Calderon's
said Ricardo NaJera. a government has not granted .
. spol;.esmun for the Attorney rewards for any of the kingGeneral's ollice. Some of pins arrested on its watch.
the men. such as suspected Najera said.
.
Pacific cartel leaders
Stephen Meiners. u Latin
Joaquin Guzman and America analyst for the
lsmael lambada. are tar- U.S. intelligence · service
geted by separate $5 mil- Stratfor. said many arrests
lion reward offers from the are likely based on anonyU.S. government.
mous tips from cartel leadThe new list appeared to ers trying to get rid of rivals.
be the first offering rewards
"So far that's been
for all the most-wanted cltr- enou!lh inceriti ve to phone
tel memberS at once. The in these tips," Meiners said.
government could be trying "I kind of doubt that the
to signal its determination · people milking these calls
to take on the cartels at the would want to come forsame time. rather than one ward to claim reward
or two at a time as past money,"
administrations have done.
1\vo of the people named
said Andrew Selee. director were captured last week:
of the Wilson Center's Vicente Zambada, the son
Mexico Institute.
of lsmuel Zumbada. and
"It tells you a little bit Sigifredo
Najera
about Calderon's thinking," Talamantes, an alleged Gulf
Selee said. "He really sees cartel hit man suspected of
this as something he wants organizing an attack on the
to eradicate. He"s willing to U.S.
consulate
.in
take them all on as a unit." .Monteney. .
The document offered
No reward money was
insight into the reorganiza- granted for either capture.
tion of the . cartels more said Najera; the spokesman
than two years into · for the Attorney General's
Calderon's military crack- office. Zambada 's arrest
down against them,
was the result of an anony.The Beltran Leyva and mous tip that only alened
authorities to the presence
Carrillo Fuentes gangs once considered affiliated of armed men at a certain
with the Sinaloa group location, he said. Najera
·under the Pacific cartel Talamantes's arrest was
alliance - were listed as not based on outside infortheir own canels. So was mation.

Senate looks into
expanding AmeriCorps
WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate agreed Monday
to take up legislation to
triple the size of the
. AmeriCorps program and
open up opponunities for
more people to serve their
commumtles.
·
Lawmakers voted 74-14
to move to the legislation
that
would
expand
AmeriCorps from its . current 75.000 positions to
250.000 over the course of
eight yeurs. Sixty votes
were needed to bring the
bill to the lloor. The measure is expected to come up
for a final vote in the Senate
sometime this week.
Sen. Edward M.Kennedy.
0-Muss .. who is being treat·
ed for brain cancer. made a
rare nppearance on the Senate
floor to vote for the bill thut
he co-sponsored with Sen.
Orrin Hatch. R-Utah .
The legislation would
also create five groups to
help poor people. improve
· educution. encourage en~r­
gy effi~iency. strengthen
uCI;ess to health care und
· ussist vetemns.
Sen. Barbura Mikulski. a
Muryland Democrnt. said
the proposal is un invest·
ment thut "will pny divi,
dcnds long beyond nnything
thm w¢ can imagine:·
The House last week
pnssed n similar bill to add

-·

I'

175.000 participants to
AmeriCorps and other
national service programs.
President Burack Obamu
backs the legislation and
has said he is eager for
Congress to pass a bill so he
can sign it.
Both bills would set up a
fund to help nonprofit organillltions recruit more volunteers and establish n Summer
Qf Service program for middle and high school students.
who would earn a $500 education award. Each measure
would' also create fellowships for older people who
get involved in public service. Both . would ulso
increuse the education
awards of AmeriCorps participants, whose work ranges
from teaching young people
to responding to disusters.
After completing their
service. AmenCorps participunts can receive up to
$4.725 to help pay for college or pay off student
louns. The Senate und
House bills would increase
that uward to $5.350 und
require that it mulch uny
future · increases in Pell
Gmnt scholarships. Unli.ke
the House bill. the Senate
version would allow older
AmeriCorps members to
transfer their educution
awards to their children or
. grandchildren.

:

.. ~:
I

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

NATION •WORLD

Ho~

it's possible to be 'lonely'with him

second . But I love him with
all my heart, and other than
this we get along wooder~ar Au~: I married · fully. I hoped things would
"Eddie .. after getting preg- change when the children
nant "at Ill. We have two were out of the h9use. but
children and have been they haven't.
At 50.1 feel! have wasted
together for 32 years. For
the past 20. we have not my life. I am on medication
slept in the same bed. It for depression. We have no
beg-.m when Eddie started friends. Every dinner out
fallin~ asleep on the sofa has to im:lude the children.
watchmg TV. Then he sim- We only take vacations
pl)' began going to bed on. where Eddie wants to go.
Forget ~ounseling. He
the couch.
The only time he would thinks people who get protouch me was when he fessional help are weak. He
want..-d sex. When 'my ·never opens up and won't
father died eight years ago. discuss our problems.
I cried myself to sleep and leaving him is not t1nannever once did Eddie try to cially possible and I'm not
comfort me. If I asked him sure I would. l still love
for a hug, he thought it had him. What can I do? t~ lead to sex. At that point. Lonely With Him
Dear Lonely: We're not
I decided to cut sex out of
my life entirely. I told him I sure how "wonderfully"
need to feel dose tirst. t&gt;ut you get along when you are
it made no difference . I miserable and he refuses to
have redecorated the bed- discuss it. Since you want to
room trying to entice him stay with 'him. we recomb&lt;Kk mto my bed so we mend yoo tell him you are
could have the intimacy I tremendously unhappy and
need. bnt he just heads over . would like him to go for
counseling so · both of you
to the cou~:h .
Eddie has been a great can present your side to a
father to our children, but professional. If he reflises,
he told me earl~ on that I go without him and find
am his third pnority. with better ways to cope. Also,
the kids commg first and get involved in activities
just about anything else. that bring you some sense

BY KATH'V Mm:tiEU

WASHINGTON - The
Obama administr.ttioo aimed
squarely at the crisis clogging
t~ nation's credit system
Monday with a plan to take
over up to Sl trillion in sour
mortgage securities with the
help of private invesloll&gt;. For
Oll(.'t, Wall Street cheered.
The announcement. closely stage-managed throughout the day. filled in cmcial
blanks in the uGininistration ·s financial rescue pad.age and formed what
President Barack Obama
called ''one more critical
element in our fec()very ."
The coooiinated
by
the Treasury Department, the
Federal Reserve and the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. relies on a mix of government and private lllOile)l
- mostly from institUtiooal
investors such as hedge funds
- to help banks rid their baJ.
ance sheets of real-estate
rellited securities that are now
extremely difficult to value.
The goal. said Obama. is
to ~et banks lending again.
so 'families can get biWc ·
consuunerloans.autoloans,
~tudent loans. (tind so) that ·
small busmesses ate able to
tinance themselves, and w&amp;
ctm start gettin!l this ei.'OIIQmy moving agam."
It was a hug&amp; gambit and
one that came ,like ~ tonic t~&gt;
Wall Street, wh&amp;ch had .
panned an &amp;artier outline of
the rro!lram that lacked
detai .
Stocks soared, the Dow
Jones industrial average
shooting up nearly 500 points.
thanks to the bank-assets plan
Md a report showing an IUieXpected jwnp in home sales.
.The introduction of the
plan was closely choreographed so that the ~si­
dent - rather than Getthner
- would be the first administration ofticial to appear
on camera at midday to discuss it. Geithner met earlier
in the day. before markets
opened, with a group of
reporters at the Treasury
Department to go over
specitics. But Cllllleras and
broadcast-quality
audio.
recorders were barred.
It was the reverse of what
happened Feb. 10. Then,
after Obama had · helped
raise expectations toward
Geithnet and the plan, the
treasury secretary went
before cameras and bombed.
The Dow ~lunged about 300
points arrud investor confusion about details.
.The fleshed-out · plan is
designed to help fix a value
on damaged mortgage loans

AND MARCY SUGAR

.-.

..

erroo

Fn.ncls Mc:KttnZie

Celebrates 90th

AP!IM*
President Baracll Obama smiles in the Ro6sMlt Room of the White House in Washington;
Monday. Joining him. from Jell are. Trea&amp;wy Secretary Timothy Geithner, the president,
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bemanke and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) Chair Sheila Bair.

MASON. W.Va. - Francis McKenzie. formerlv of
RtKine , (.'elebrared her 90th birthday recently with 11i"ends
and family at the home of her nieo.:e. Pamela and her husb:md. Patrick Simpkins, in Mas(ln, W.Va.
She wus born Murch 17. 1919. to John and Mayme Coe
Roberts. Also attending were ller sister. Betty Ross: a special cousin. Terry Coe: a nephew. Dwight and Gayle
Haskins. Madison. Lauren und Emmu; nephew. Ralph and
Sally Ross: nephew. Kevin and P..&amp;ulu Roush and Kane:
Charles Yeager; 11iece. Karen and Paul Johnson: Mike
Marshall: Bobby. Jenna and Mary Marissa Marshall:
Shawn. Che.ryl.. Ct\leb. tmd Hannah Ross; Tom. Amy and
Alyssa Cremeans; Corey. Andi. Lexi nnd Brinna Roush:
'Juson. Hollie and Jayla Sirt1pkins.
Francis now rusiqesat Rocksprings Reh;1bilitation and
· Nursi~~ Facility in&lt;IPomeroy ~md enjoys receiving cards
and ~1s1tors.

and other toxic securities.
government, The rem~;~ining • Geithner said taxpayers
If the vulue of the sec uri- S86 wuuld be.covered by a still could .lo~e money on
ties goes up. the private · government·loan. ·
the deal to .souk up bad
Tbe plan was introduced assets bllt there wj\S no tixinvestors and .taxpayers
would share in the gains. If ahead of a summit next ing the system without risk.
the values go down.• the _gov- week in London of 20 major . Other options. such as
ernment
and
pnvate . and developing econom1es having the government ~­
investors would incur IQ.sses. strUggling with the global chase the ·securities outright
or letting them languish on
"This will help banks recession.
Obama is trying to get bank balance sheets. would
clean up their balance
sheets and make it easier for other wealthy countries to pose even greater vulnet.lthem to raise capital." do l1lQI'I: to stimulate their bil ities. he said. and it was
Geithner said.
economies with government important to find the right
The plan will take $75 bit- spending. as the United blend of risk versus reward.
"I run very confident this
lionto$100billion from the States has done. However.
sclleme
dominates all the
government's existing $700 . other countries, partieitlarly
billion Troubled Asset ones in Europe, are resisting alternatives for trying to
Relief Pro$.ram. The gov- U.S. clllls for tnQre stimulus lind that buhmce:· he suid-,
The
sentiment
was
ernment wtll pair this with · and would prefer to see
echoed
by
congressionul
private investments and . more intert~Attonally coordiDemocrats. who said risk
loans from the FDIC and nated bank re~ulation.
the Fed to generate $500 · The admimstration .wus seemed inevltuble with anv
billion in purchasing power. expected to outline its plan plan big enough to wor~. ·
Geithner said purchases for financial . regulation . But House. Rer.ubhc.an
Whip Eril' C.mtor ot Virginia
eventually could grow to $1 overhaul later this week .
trillion - rough I~ half of the
Federal Deposit Insurance called Obmnu 's plnn u ·'shell
.estimated S2 trilhon of toxic Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair game" thut hid the true cost. ·
assets on bank books now. ··said she expects her agency
He Silid he hoped the
On the hot seat, Geithner will finance as much as udministration would conhas a lot 'personally tied to $500 billion in purchases of sider instead an earlier
the success of the new pro- residential and commercial. Republican proposal to set
gram. His performance in real estate loans.
up u government-sponsored
the Cabinet, including his , Bair said the program insurance program for mortslowness in learning about should help bunks clean up gage-related securities.
multimillion dollar execu- their balance sheets and
The administration phm
tive bonuses paid by insur- raise .fresh capital. though "seems to otter linle incentive
ance giant AIG after tuking she added that "there may for private investors to particbailout money, has been be some banks beyond ipate unless the subs1dy is
severely criticized by some 'help." The agency has said made so lien that it comes m
in Congress.
before it expects more hank the expense of'the taxpayer:·
Geithner testifies on failures, she said:
Cantor said in n stutement.
TUesday before the House
A joint statement by the . The new pwgmm marks a
Financtal
Services . Federal
Reserve
and remm by the government to
Comll'littee,
.Treasury Department said a strategy of ncquiring toxic
Under a typical transac- the Fed should play a "cen- securities. Henry Paulson,·
tion,. for eyery $100 in tral role" in preventing who was treasury secretary
soured . mongages being future financial crises. That in the final days of the Bush
purohased from banks, the implied a wish that Con~ress administration. abandoned
private sector would put up expand the Fed's authonty in plans to purchase these secu$7 and that . would be re11ulating all financial insti- rities. largelr. because .they
matched by $7 from the tuuons. not just banks.
were imposs1ble to price. '

.DAR Chapter observes

Cumberbatch, census coor·
dinator for New York City.
Testifying before a House
panel, officials with the
Census
Bureau
and
Government Accountability
Office cited high . risk
~roups
of hard-to-find
llllmlsrants. non-English
speakmg residents and displaced homeowners who
make Up roughly 14 percent
of the U.S . populution.
To ensure an accurate count,
census ofticials said they were
devoting $250 million from
· $1 billion in stimulus money
for outreuch that will include
stepped-up canvassing of
addresses. to identify residences with multiple dwellers
and homes now abandoned
due. to mortgage foreclosures.

The money will also ,be
used to boost the bureau's
advenising budget by $80
million. of which $26 million would target the fastgrowing Asian and Hispanic
populations in television.
radio and online spots.
Another $10 million would
be spent on the undercounted black communitY.·
·
The money w11l flow
mostly towurd.dense coastal
cities thattraditionnll¥ huve
been more rudully d1verse .
But places such as Iowa.

I.
I
I

.

Community Calendar
Clubs and

organizationS

· Pre-nursing program offered
NELSONVILLE - The Liten~~:y Center. in partner,;hip
with ABLE. Hocking College. und Tri-County Adult Curuer
Center. has created a pre-nursing preparation progruln thnt
will ht-lp mlults prepme for nursing school entrance tests.
Cluss,•s will be held ut the Tri-County Adult Career
Center, in Nelsonville and are sclleduled to begin on
Tuesday. April 7. Students will meet every Tuesday and
Thursduy. from 9:30 11.111. - 12:30 p.m., for ten consecutive weeks. These clusses ure being offered ut no cost. und
enrollment Is limited to a maximum ofl5 adult students.
7i• n'gister. 11r .filr mort' injimnathm. 1'11/IIIICI Cwulv
81'ronm71t~ Wm·k Sration. 74{1-797-1405 1lr 111 Tri-Comuv
A(illlt CM~er Center. 740-753-5400.

Local Weather
Mostly doudy with &lt;l 40 percent chance of. show~rs.
Lows ip the lower 40s.
Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph .
Thursday •.. Mostly
cloudy with a 40 per~:ent
dmncc of showers. Highs in
the lower 60s.
Thursday night and
f'riday ... Mostly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower . 40s.
Highs in the lower 60s .
Friduy night ... Mostly
l'h&gt;udy with u 40 pt:rcent
t·hunce of showers. LllWS in
night, .. th~ lnw~r 40s.

Tutosday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s. E&lt;lst
winds 5 to Ill mph .
Tut-sduy night ... Mostly
cloudy. A slight c· hunce of
showers nncr midnight. Not
as COlli with lows in the
upper 40s. Southenst winds
5 to 10 mph . Chnnte of min
20 percent.
Wl•dnesday ... Showers.
Cooler witb hi~hs in the
upper 50s. South winds Ill
to 15 mph . Chance of rain

!.
I
I
I

~() fX'I'CClll.

· Wednesday

ALFRED - President
Mary Jo Barringer presented information about the
United· Metllodist Women
spring retreat when the
Alfred UMW met recently
m the ~:burch .
The retreat will be held
April 18 at The Plains
United Methodist Church.
The focus is spirinml
growth retreat and leadership tmining.
.
HmTin~er also read wmmunicauons ubout the
Asbury Camp and Retreat
Center of Thurman and the
Footllills District Camp
Partnership with Camp
Otterbein .
The Festivul of Sharing
will be Oct. 10 ut Otterbein
College at \Xesterville. The
group will be making kits.
West Ohio Coi\ferunc~ will
be June 7-11 and the tllem.:
is "Love il) Action
Developing Leaders."
Burrin~er reud the purP"'e
UMW and the sec· rctmyofhad
n;.U cull. with 136
fricnd~hip culls reported .
Minutes were rcud und the'
treasur~r's report was given.
Helen Wolf pi~ked Katie

Meigs CountyTuberculosls Clinic

- 2.03

1.57

Participating offices:
1818 Eastern Avenue
114 1/1 Main Street
407 Third Avenue
318 Main Street

Pltlll clip &amp; bring ad In to participating locallont.

L----------~-~~-~-------~-~
•

"

Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.60
Charmtn11 Shop a (NASDAQ) -

ttl East Memorial Drive Pomemy; Ohio

740-992-3722

I

Public meetings

Other events

Thursday, March 26
POMEROY - Meigs
.and
Water
. Wednesday, March 25 · Soil
MIDDLEPORT - Free Conservation District Board
community dinner. 5-6:30 of Supervisors. 11:30 a.m.
p.m., Mi.ddleport Church at the district office. 33101
the Nazarene . .• Menu is Hilund Road .

is a preliminary estimate.
passenger service.
'{he House and Senate a~
Gov. Ted Strickland has
estimated the passenger rail currently workin~ out detai Is
plan between Cincinnati. of a transportation budget
Columbus and Cleveland that would enable the state to
will cost $250 million in fed- compete for federal stimulus
eral stimulus money. but that money for the project.

'

.

Clly Holdtng {NASDAQ) - 30.29
Cotllno (NYSE) - 33.28
DuPont (NYSE) - 22.33
US Bank (NYSE) - 15.99
Gennett (NVSE) - 2.35
General Electric (NVSE) - 10.43
Harley·Davldson (NVSE) - 1.4.16
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 28.86
Kroger (NVSE) - 21.08
Llmtted Branda (NVSE) - 8.76
Norfolk Southtrn (NVSE) 33.35

•

Kinne of Den~er. Colo .. for
the prayer calendar birthday
card. · She is a missions
worker from the Kentucky
district. Jtmice Weber will
have April's card.
The group decided to ·
send a donution to the
home-delivered meals program ut the Meigs County .
· Council on Aging for the
Lenten offering.
Knthy Corbitt · had the
program, "Native American
Mission
Study.
The
Potluck: Listen and · Leurn
Around the Table." Ruth
Brooks read scriputure, and
Saruh Culdwell read the
opening prayer.
Barringer. Osie Follrod
and Weber participated in
readings. The group did the
"Truditionallroquots Pruyer
Responsive Reading." ·
As n dosing activity. each

J

member was given the following: a clay pot as a
reminder that we came from
the earth and we return to
the earth; soil. as we are
similar to the earth, we need
to care for ourselves if we
are to be healthy. human
beings. and likewise, to
have a healthy earth. we
need to care for the soil;

•

Ohto Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 21 .25
BBT (NVSE) - 19.06
"--plel (NASDAQ) - 14.47
Pepsico (NVSE) - 51 .63
Premier (NASDAQ) - 5.40 '
RockMII (N'VSE) - 24.70
Rocky Booll (NASDAQ) - 3.04
Royal Dulc:h Shell - 47.36
Sea"' Holding (NASDAQ) 42.88
Wai·Mart (NVSE) - · 51 .48
Wendy'a (NVSE) - 5.39 .
WeaBanco (NVSE) - 23.77
Worthington (NYSE) - 9.12
Dally atock reportl are the 4
p.m. ET cloalng quotoa ol Irani'
actions lor March 23, 2009. pro·
vldt&lt;l by Edward Jonet llnanctat adllltora laue Mutt ln.
. Galttpollt at (740) 441-9441 and
Lealey Marrero In Point Ple~tanl
at (304) 874·0174. Member SIPC.

•

Taking Applications

Jrl f
fill

'

HUD Subsidized
Etflclency/1 Bedroom
SOyrs or qualifying disability
·/;/
Low Income priority ·

'' '
~ll
'/
IJTllrTllS

t

740-992-7022
ii.. ~11,\ ~~~
Silverheels
• ?o//;1'1'~ A Realty Company-EHO

•
'

The Meigs Band Boosters wish to express tlteir !incen appreciation to the
comm1111i1y for the support shown to our ba11d during our ·recent Tag Day.
We also K'ish to thank the following businessts for their generous.donations ·
wltich greatly contributed to the st1ccess of o11r Mardi Gras Ball:
·

The Added 1\&gt;u&lt;h. Middkpon

Evans R ~.,.,luurnnt. Muson

Cushltmd. P01ncroy
Clurk's Jewelry. Pomeroy
Duiry Queen. Middlepon
O&lt;·nwill&lt;r True Vulue Lumber. Pomen&gt;y
Domino's. Middlopon/Gullipolis
The FubriC Shop. Pum&lt;roy
Funncrs Bnnk ?k Stwings Co.
Ficl\111 S"lon. Muson
Fox.'s Pizzu lkn. Pomeroy/Ruthmd
Fruncis Floris1. Pomeroy
Ginu's. Muson
The Hair Station, Pllmeroy ·
Jmncs Schmoll, o:o .. Middleporl
KI'C/Long John Silvds. Pome~&gt;y
Muin Sirc.!l Puny Supplies. Pomeroy
Mnki n' Mr:mlll'ks l )ll thf.' Rlvcr. l~omeroy
Ml·CIUI'C \ Reshaumnts.
Pome n\y IMidd lcJ'kli't !Gulli pt.1lis
Millllll~Jltll't Tn)J&gt;hil·.~

&amp; Tt.•cs

Nuils By l'um. Middleporl

'·

•

The Maples

·~

~ob

Frame thai newspaper
pnooo cr priN ~ on a
mug or mousa pad.

Seeds. as we, too. are seeds.
are we willing to plant our- .
selves where there is. a need
on this earth; and water. As
we pour water ou the soil,
we remember that the water
of our buptism sustains us
as Christians.
The progrum ended with a
prayer. The next meeting
will be April 14.

•

Hun's l'arly Burn . PlHUemy

AEP (NVSE) - 28.47
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 43.80
Athland Inc. (N'VSE) - 8.27
Big Loll (NVSE) - 20.85
Bob Evana (NASDAQ) - 22.60
BorgWarner (NVSE) - 20.57
Century Aluminum {NASDAQ)

DRAW FROM JACKSON HEWITT'S POT OF GOlD
AND YOU COULD WIN:
f)(SCOUNTS UP TO 50% OR $20.00 CASH.OR A
ROll OF GOLD COINS.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio
Chesapeake, Ohio
Pt. Pleasant. WV

,

Athtmu Gram! Cint·mu. Athens
AttitudeS Sulon &amp; Tanning. Pomeroy

Local Stocks

Each year is designed to build public awareness that
Tuberculosis toduy remuins in much of lhe world,
causing the deaths of I .6 mill ion people each year. ·

II :30
a.m..
Millie's sausage grdvy and biscuits.
pancakes. scrdmbled egg·s.
Restaurant .
sausage.
bacon. juice. cofMonday, March 30
POMEROY - Oh-Kan fee and milk .
Coin Club. regular meeting.
7 p.m .. Pomeroy Library.

United Methodist Women hear retreat, festival plans

WORlD TB DAY· MARCH 24, 2009

World TB Day, March 24th . _

was insulted that her sisterin-law did not · open her
housewarming
present
right away.
In many cultures (e.g ..
most Asian wltures), ~n­
ing a present when it is gtven
is considered extremely
rude. It implies you are more
interested m the gift than the
visitor. Moreover. should
~ou be disappointed. openmg it in front of the giver
puts both of you in an ~wk­
ward position. Even worse
are situations where one person·s gilt will be compared
to another's.
From this perspective. it
is polite to ignore the gifts
and open them later in p.rivate. - Da~is, Calif.
Dear Davis: Many thanks
for the education.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Katlty Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtinle edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
fJIItstions to annitsllta~l­
boxcollteast.nfl, or wnte
to: Anllit''s Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chieago, IL .
60611. To find 0111 111on
about Annie's Mailbox,
aiHI nod featun&amp; by IHher
Cnalors Syndicate writers
1111d cartoo11ists, ~isit rite
Cnators Syndicate Web
page at www.cnators.com.

Board OKs ~unds for Ohio passenger.rall cost study

with its rapid growth of
Hispanics, or Maine, with
its sizable Somali JX'pula·
lion. will also see additional
outreach. the bureau said.
"A year from now. the
populace will have seen and
heard more nds · in nationul
und lm;ul media tllun in any
prior census." said Thomas
M~senbourg. tlie ucting cenSl)S director. "Our goul for
the 2010 cei1sus is to t'Ollllt
every one. no muller how
difficult or chnllenging th~
tusk may be."

luck for NEW clients

101st anniversary

·

r-------------------------,
I March is full of good I

!

of fulfillment and consider
volunteering at your local
hospital. perhay~ in the
pediatric unit. Al that affection shouldn't go to waste.
Dear ADDit: I am 12
years old and have had
braces for one year. My
orthodontist ls a very nke
man. but he has horrible
breath. Every tim~ I see
him. I dread the 10 minutes
of doom when I let my
nasal cavities be exposed to
such an odor. Some of my
friends are patients of his
as well. and they agree
when I say his breath
smells lit-e a dead rat.
The doctor doesn't wear a
mask, so there is ·nothing
blocking the smell from
reaching my nose. How can
we tell him his breath stinks
without hurting his· feel. ings? -:- Gaqlna Patient
~ar Gauma: You can
ask one of your parents to
speak .to the orthodontist.
but if they won't, you'll
have to be brave enough to
do it. Offer him a breath
mint and say as kindly as
possible. ''I hope you don't
mind. but I have a very sensitive nose... (We trust he
won't !live your braces extra
tightentng.)
Dear Annie: This is for
"Miffed in Miami.'' who

Pomeroy Library. Open to
.public.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053. 7 p.m. at
l'hursday, March 26
the hall .
POMEROY - Recognition of long-time members was a
HARRISONVILLE
CHESTER
Shade
teuture of the recent celebmtion of the lO lst anniversary of Meigs County Women 's · · River Lodge ·453. special
the founding of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Republican Party. 6:30 p.m. mee.ting. 7 p.m. for the purDuugntcrs of the American Revolution (OAR.)
·
Scipio Township fire pose of conferring the
Members of the Chapter met ut the Meigs County at
. Door prizes and Fellowcraft degree on one
Historicul Society's annex for a luncheon preceding the department
refreshments.
candidate. Refreshments.
meeting condiK"tcd by Re11ent Dawn Love Ruhinen . She
POMEROY
Annual
·MIDDLEPORT
presented 1:ertificates m1d p1ns to Mary Rosr. a m..-mber for
46 years: Mary K. Yost . 33 yem-s; Mary Powell. 32 years: meeting of United Fund lor . Alpha IOTA Masters
· Patriciu Cook, 2l ·years; Patricia Holter 21 years: Sharon . Meigs County. 6 p.m ., Sorority, regular meeting,
Jewell 21 yeurs. and Mrs. Curol Sission. 10 yeurs.
La Rae Sonell. Ohio South East DAR director. talked on
the Life of Abmham Linwln to the local members and
guests from the Marietta. Athens, Gallipolis and
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Transportation asked the
McConnelsville l'hupters. Jt1mes Smith of the Meig,s
legislative
panel . has · stute Controlling Board on
Count,y Sons of the Americun Revolution also attended.
approved
$450.000
to study Monday to approve the
Ruhmen and Rose member cut the inscribed cake decothe
l'ost
of
establishing
pas- funds for a California-based
mted in red, white and blue and feuturin~ the DAR symbol.
consulting firm to study
seng~r mil service along
with Opal Gru~ser. vice regent. serving 11.
what . it would cost to use
· The Chapter is seeking new members und any woman Ohio's major cities.
existing
freight tracks for
·
The
Oh10
Department
of
interested in joining may cont&lt;K·t the Chester Court House
for information .
The luncheon as served by the Historical Sqciety with
Yost, •·hapter chaplain. gi~ing the prayer.

U.S. plans census ·outreach to displaced homeowners
WASHINGTON (AP) With the 2010 census looming. tens of millions of residents in mostly dense urban
areas such as Los Angeles
and New · York are at high
risk of being missed due to
·languase problems and a
deepemng economic crisis,
government officiuls . said
Monday.
.
The challenges are creal·
in~ consternation in some
ciues. whiCh say timf' and
state budgets for outreach
are short .
"While the census is a
federal responsibility, there
must be earlier and ongoing
· and
communication ·
nccountability to local go~ernments and communi·
ties:·
said
Stacey

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

..

I~~

PageA3

Ohio Vulley Bunk . Pomeroy/Gallipolis
Peking 'Butl'ct. Musnn
Peoples Bunk ·
. PLu.u Hut. Pomeroy
I\ltn&lt;:roy Fll'wer Stlt1p
Pomemy Md)onuld 's

Powe-U!.' Ft~l Fnir, Primemy
Rin Brl\v~1 M~xi ..·~m R~shtun\nt. Mu~l)l\
Ri'.'t'T City Spurt Bnr. Pnmeroy
Rivor!iidc Food Man . Pomeroy

Rullund Dep1111mon1 S10re
The Shue Pla&lt;e· Locker 2 1~ . Middlcporl
Speedway, Middl&lt;•pon
Subwuy. Middlepon
Suns~t Home Construe lion, Poml•my
Swisher &amp; Lohse Phnnnii•'Y. Pomeroy
TNT Pil Slop. MiddleP&lt;&gt;rt

Tuz's Mnnuhon , Pt1meroy
TWin Oak ~ Convenien('e Store. Pomeroy
Unique Anti4ucs. Pom~roy
Wnl-Mun , Mnst1n
Wendy's, Pnmc.:roy .
Willl Hmse Cafl', l'omCI1")

•

�0PINIO

:The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • F'Qmeroy, Ohlo

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-21 57
www.mydallysentlnel.com

If y&lt;&gt;U thm!.. btpamsansht p ts a lusty . ~pody­
goody colll:ept out vf phas..:
wath tod.ay·s urgent realttaes. "tnsidt"t the tmpendmg l&lt;tllout llom the
Amenc:m
llllem&lt;ttaondl
Group bt&gt;mas tlap
The pctpubt trenz)
.tg.unst AlG. channeled by
Republtc·.ans
.agauast
Pt est dent B.u .td&lt; Ob.nna.
could well smk ch.mces 0t

Ohio Valley Publishing Ca.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Edrtor
-~-----~------·-----.....,__-

Congress shall make 110 /,m• respecting an
tstablishment ~f rt'ligion, or prohibitin.~ the
.free r.wrdse thrrr'!_J; or abrid&lt;~ing tht }rerdom
of spw:h, or t~J the press; Qr tl•r r(~ht Qf the
peoplt praw1bly to a:&lt;stmble, ltnd to petition
1he Government }or a redress '!fgrievanus.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
1

TOl)AY IN HIST()R_Y
Today ts Tue"l.ty. M.trch 2~. lht&gt; XJ1d d.ty ot 2009 The1e
are 2B2 d,tvs left m tht&gt; ve.1r .
T.x!.ay's ·~hghhght Ill . ~lislor) On M.nth 2&lt;-1. llJ~lJ . tht:
;;upertanket Exxon V&lt;~ldt•z tan .t~Iol\nd (Hl .t 1cd' Ill Alaska ·,
Pnm:e Wilham SQund uud bc·g.m kakm~ II mtllttlll gdllons
. ot rrude otl
On lhts dme·Jn 17~5. Bntam t•n,Icled the ()uattt•nn~ Al·t.
'requtrmg Amenl'&lt;lll t'&lt;&gt;lomsts to prov1d~ temporury htiusm~
to Brmsh ~oldtet·s
In 1882 . Germ.m 'cicnllst Rol&gt;ert Kne·h .mno un c~d 111
· Berlin that he h~d dt,cowred tht• t&gt;.t~tllus rt·sponsible Itt\
wbt·rculos1s.
ln !909. lnsh .lllthor .md pl.t~1111ght J.M S~ngc· ( \'h,·
,PI.tyboy oftht• Wt•stein Wt&gt;rld") dted Ill Dttbltn.tt .t~e 37
ln 1934. Pre.stdent Fr.mklin D Roose1 d t st!!ned .1 t&gt;IIl
gtuntmg futme mdepcntknce to the Phdt~&gt;pmes
In 1944. 111 n.:cupted Rome . tht• N.llls ext.'cutcd mme
than 300 CIVI\t.liiS m tepnsal tor .m ,tlt.tck by lt.ilt.m puttl sans the day before that h.acl killed 32 Germ.m soldtt'Is
ln 1955 . the Tennt'sstlt' Wtiii&lt;Inis pl.I\ "C.1t on a Hot l1n
Roof' opened Ol\ Broudw.1y
In 1958, Elvis Presley was mducted Into the Attll.Y 111
Memphts , Tenn .
In 197~, the president ot Atgt'nlma. ls.Ibt:l Peron, w,ts
tkposed by her t'Otmtry\ tntlitat )
ln 1980. one of El S&lt;ilv.Itlor's most tcSpl.'c'ted Roman
c;.ttholic church lc.tdet s. All hbtshop Osc.tr Arnulto
"Romero. w~" shot to de&lt;~th t&gt;y guttntcn .1s he "ekbt,tted
Mass in San ·S.tlv.tdol
In 1995. llt'tt•t 20 ye.!fs. Bllltsh soldit:Js stnpped mutme
patmls m Bdt.tst. Nmthern lie land
Ten ) ~.n s d~o
NATO I&lt;I unch.:d .lltstltkt• s .1~.1\llst
c
'
Yugoslav!&lt;~ . mmkmg the ftr,t lllllt' m 1ts 50-)e.tr ex1stem.e
that tl had evct atlachd a soveretgn countty Thuty-mne
people were ktlkd when tne eruptt'd m the Mont Bl.mc
· ttmnel m l'nitl&lt;"e ,md but ned lot twt• d.1vs l'he Nauomtl
-Tr.utspmt&lt;Itt\tn S,!lety Bmud com;lutktl 'th,tt Bne111g 737
rudtlet problems caused two I dldl aulme nashcs und nearly tnggerc·d a thtrd
Five )C,us ago: Fonuct lt&gt;p tCIWHsm dlhiscr Ru;h,u·d
Clarke. tesufymg betore the fedt•tal 9/ll Comnusmm.
· lKCUsed tht' Bush dthnmtstl &lt;tit on t&gt;t sc,IImg bm.:k the c.tmpaign against Osant.l bin L.tdcnlx:lorc the ,ltl,tt"ks and tmdeimmmg the ftghl agmnst tctmnsm by nwadmg lmq The
European Umon slappt-'&lt;1 Mtnosott wtth a $61 1 mtlhon fme
for .tbusively W!dchn~ 1ts Wmdows solt\,dt'C monopoly.
Today's Bitthd&lt;~ys F&lt;Ishltm ,md cQstume destgnei Bob
M.tckie ts 70 Actor R. Let• Ermey 1s 6:'- Movie dnt•llot
Ctn1lS Hanson 1s 6-l Conlt'dtdn Loute Andetson IS 56
Actor Robetl Cuwdme ts 55 1\I.:IIcss Kelly LeA1ock 1s 4\l
TV petsonahty Stat Jones 1s 47 Rt)(:k stngt'l-llll\Sil'Hll\
Sh.tron Corr (The Cons) ts .W Ac·tl\'SS l.md llynnlloyk 1s
.19 Actress Al)son Haumgau IS 35 Colts ()B Pe)ttm
.. Munmng ts 33. &lt;\(·tress Ketsh.t C.tstk-Hughcs ts 19
Thought for Tod.ay: "M,m must ccusc attnbutmg hts
problems to ht s en\lwnmcnr .•md btrn .1gam to cxercts~
'has wtll - hiS persotMltcsptHI&lt;Ibihty 111 th~ rc&lt;tlm of fatth
·and momls." - Albe1 t S•hwettlcl. GctnMn-bot 11 mtsslol1.u-y ,md Nobel lnw eate (I R75 - 19M)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Dt'sp'tte .m lntent.lttonal
Cumuml Co111t wanunt lor
ht'\

an~·st to1

wur (.'ftnlt~"'- and

ntmes ugu tnst hum.mtty .
Sudan\ president, Gen
Omm llasS&lt;ut AI - B .~s hu,
Nat
11\lc'nds to c"t&gt;tlllllliC U\11d Hen toft
Ill~ to fnt'mlly Anti&gt; and
Alm:an tmllons and Chtna.
llut. s,t) san dtde. the w.mted mminnl "will be surrounded by &lt;ts much secrecy .ambassltdor to the Umted
.1s
possible "
(Sudan Nattons.
Trit&gt;nnc.
M,uch
12)
Suwe ht: h.as be.: omc
Me.mwhde , h1s cx.pcliin!! of p.1rl of th,· Ohama te,un .
llU )S l I Hh:' lll~lt H)llal hllllMI\1t h~ 1t' h.ts b,•en no 1111 thc1
surVIVUI"

(&gt;I ht s ~~tttKtdt• mtmmmcnt
f.t•tto 1 to tlw eclllm cut' ll
7hn 1/um/d be h·" nc~d tll -lood . wmcr mtd
tl11111 300 ll orc/1 All /ellen we lllbjcil to eduuig. must I&gt;•· mcdtcall'are•.
\/~lied ciiUI uu lude &lt;tdcltns and rdet&gt;lume 1/lllllhfl. No
Because Sudan is a so\ ·
111/1/~lled lnten 11 ill /tr f'l t/JI!IIwd l.etre n 1hould be 111
clcll!ll stnlt'. the U.N
g()( •d U/lte, 11&lt;(&lt;/tflllllg 1\1/l t'l, tli&gt;r I" notw lllln . Lerren'c(i Se~unty Co un -: al ; while
tlulllkl ro otgwu:mtot/1 al/{/ 111dntdua/1 H'i//nor be 111, ept- vc rb al~y
tep11mandtn g
·,,d fm pu/J/1, at toll
AIItC&lt;l s littlet . wtll not ·
tttt erve ne
wtth
lnr.:c .
-·-·-- -·-.- ~------- although AI -Bash1r
whose dl&lt;II~cs tndude
nlllldt't .
CXICillllllllfltHl.
lnicihk
IIUttsle
t (nl e·Ivtl(USPS 213·960)
Reader Services
1.111
popul&gt;!IH&gt;ns),
toiilltt.'
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
and
rape
1s
nnw
conPublished overy morning Monday
Our mam concern 1n all ~ I ones 1s to
demning even mo1c t&gt;f the
through Friday 11 t ' Cour t Street
be RCCU!ate II you know oi an error
black Muslims m Dm lur to
Pomeroy Ohro Second class postage
m a story c"ll the newsroom at (740) parr1 at Pomt~ r oy
death For yc.ars , I've
992 2156
MemtMr The Assocrated Pross ancl
1eport cd on thts slowthe Ohro Newspaper A, ssoc ~ a tr on
motion genoctde , and the
Po1tmaa11r: Send address com~c
Our main number Is
only
reali st t~ wa y l sec to
t10ns !O The Dally SMIInu! PO Bmc
(740) 992·2156.
endtng
thc•sc hmrot s c.ame
729 Pomeroy, Ohro 45769
Department extensions are
f1om
a
M.urh
5
Subscription Rates
W.1sht11gton Post ...,,lumn
By cnrrler or motor route
(" (,ti&gt;llnd in~
Sttdan',
News
4 weeks
'11 30
KIIJcr,").
h)
lct
lllll'
l An
Editor : Charlene Hoeflich E.1C 1 12
52 weeks
'128.85
l 1mc t: h i~ I ol st.dt ( l'llJtlReporter . 6nan Reed Ext 14
Dally
. . .. SO'
Reporter . Beth Serg ent b:1 13
Senior Citl1en rates
1994) Gcn Mett Ill A
26 wooka .. . . • .· ...' 59 61
Mc Peak. "ho Co-chauc·d
52woeks
'11690
Ba1ack Ob, Ima·, p1cstdenAdvertising
Su bscnb~.\r s should ren ul rn advance
11111 e&lt;Impa_Ign
Outalde Sa lee. Dnve Hams Ext 1r:; drro...1 to ThfJ Darty Soutrn~ No sub
W11h l't&gt;-.tuthot Kurt
Out1lde Sat4ta . Brenda DaviS Ext 16 !H.arp hon Uy mail perr rultod In rueas
R&lt;
t,sue•nt·t . a sc ntor a"ot:lWh f.J t€1 h0 1110 CRII IOI SOIVICO IS HVE\IIablo
ClaaaJCirc. · Jl•CfY Clark Ext 1o
,11,• ·ol tlw D\.'mtJCflliiZHtion
Malt Subscription
l'oltt'Y Coun-:tl. McPeak
Inside Meigs County
General Manager
stron g ! ~ .tthoc,tlc' crcattng
I 2 Weeks
'35 26
Charlene Hoeflrch E)(! 12
,t no-llv tone Ull' l' AI26 Weeks
' 70 70

The Daily Sentinel

S? We(lkB

~·1 4 0 I I

E~ mall

nldsnews@ nryr1aJiysen1111C'I c ur11

Outside Meigs County
12 WHok~
'56 55

Wob ;

?.6 Weok s

) 11360

www rnydatlys&amp;QIInel co111

52 Wook•

' 227 2 1

- ------- -------- ---'

Tuesday. March 24• &amp;009

'

·obituaries

_....,AAIB

funds can't sell short and
drive ~tock values intol the
celtar tmless a stock prke
bas fit-st had an "uptick."
Clearl)l . Obama and Ryan
areo 't gomg to agree on
su.:h polu:tes as a 25 percent top tax rate Ql' zero
capu,tl gains taxes. but the
mtdkt·tual
exchange
between two smart people
would be enhglttenang for
both.
An Obanm Cabinet member t&lt;tld me that Obama and
White House Chtt:f of Sta.ll'
R,•hm
Emanuel
felt
.. ,lapped •n the- face" when,
&lt;~lkr personal vasits, onl&gt;;
t h r~e
Congressional
Republtc.ms voted for hts
stimulus p,Kkag~
Stnce then. the mantr.t
t1u1n the Whtte House has
bc-en Rush LJlltbaugh 1s th"'
k.Idt'I
ttl the GOP,
Rcpublte·,ms ;ue "the pm1)
ot ntt" anti ,tnyone who
ctpposes Ob,una 1 ~ the tool
ol spect,al uHerests The
meS&gt;uge ts: Wt: tnell postparttsanshtp,
but
Reptll&gt;lac,ms wtm 't pl\ly.
Asked about the: "party of
no" ~h11rge, Alt:Mmder told
me. "Purtl)
true . If
President ObanM suggests
takmg .tw.ty the secret ballot in unton elections m borrowm~ $1 tnlhon for thmgs
th ut don 't stunul,tte. our
•mswet is no . Part ,,four
JOb ts to hold the ndnumstratton accountable.
"But ,mother purl ol our
JOb 1s to ofth better adeus.
and w"' 're work.mg hard to
do that." he said. rmng
energy
polwy
where
"msteud ot higher taxes tmd
mote subsidies tor wmdm1lls. our plan would be
100 new nuclear plants,
mot-e natuml gus, clean coal
and mcrease research on
alternatives"
As Alt'xander noted,
Senate M1nonty Leader
Milch Me{'onndl, R-Ky .Ill
Jtmuttry made u broad otTer
to work w atlt Obamn on
Socwl Secunty ami other
enutkment retorm.
Ami Alexander said
Senate Republte&lt;tns are
re.tdy to help wtth educt~-

tton. health care and
Afghanistan policy, a&amp; w~ll .
l'be probl~m is thai Busbstyle mutwd suspicioo is
taking bold. Alex.:mder said
that the White Hoose is
~ about visits and COl'·
t)l, but that "w~n tt
comes
to
engaging
Republican ~natots on the
merits of our ideis, oot
much hllii ha~."
And he sal. Obama will
really np it if~ uses budget
re~:ondliatioo ntles to. nun
health care n:fonn and ener·
gy taxes through the Senate
on a Sl-vote basis.
Moreover. he said, Obam.a
probably will fail.
Ryan told me that, where
the House is. COJICemed,
"there's 110 rollaboratioo 01
exchanges of ideas.. They
have tsolated and ostraciled
Rept:tbhcans and lhe)l've
dectded to go solo.
· "If so, they 'll have to go.
solo on the next l'QWld of
TARP. whtch as no.w called
'tar-ptt ' around here," Ryan

a

sa~d.

On Tuesday. Obama said
that "with the mv.gnitude oJ
the ~:hallenges we face right
now, what we need in
Washington are not more
political tactics - we need
more good ideas.
"Wei don't need more
pomt-scoring - we need
more problem-so.lvmg. So
tf there are members of
Co.n$ress who. o.bject to
spec• fie pohcies or proposals m my budget. then I
ask them to be ready and
willing to propose con·
strucuve alternative solutions."
He added. "'Just sa~ oo'
as the right advice to gtve to
your teenagers about drugs .
It is not an acceptsble
response to whstever eoononuc polic)l is proposed by
the other party,"
Indeed . But Obama and
has pruty have to pluy theu
part. too - by listening to
nlternative ideas and taking
them senously.
(Morton K(mdrc~&lt;:ke is
e.\t'CUtll'f fdllor of Rull
C(ll/, the newsp&lt;~per oj
Capitol Hill.)

•

Sudan: Sovereign state of evil

Sud.ll! It·~~' t'"' the

,-----------·-

r~m~(llber

all those ''postpartts.m"
t:ampatgn
se\. urm.g. mo1e money -pwmises
o!
hts
1111d lind
pc·t h.tps $750 btl hon or j, I wavs
to
listen
to
tttllton - to bu) up to~t&lt;' Repub!H::uts und an:ommv·
b.111k &lt;L'-sets &lt;~nd s.tv~ the d.tlc sorne ot th~1r tde!ls.
tinanu,1l '' skm.
Obam.t ~•ught to take up
The ll ouse \ No J GOP an ttlea thai I he.trd former
le.1de1. ltll!servatne Rep Sen Da vtd Boren , D·Ok.l.t .
M1k
Pt·nce
(lnd ). put fmw,ml the other d.1y .
ckd.ued on Tuesd.tv " No qutt' tly huld "'me btparhs.m
nrme
batlttuts · Tht' sk.ull sessttHl' on se h:ct~tl
\n tt'ltl'dn pc·oplt&gt; have had topllS to hush OUt Ideds ,Uld
11
l'hc• y want
th ts e-redlc .1 pwblem-"•lv1ng
Cttn~res.s to get b:te·~ to
.tt mosph~I&lt;'
the bdief th.lt the hc·cdom
lt1 th•' c.1se ot the bank
It&gt; 'ucceed mclud~&gt; the e t tSl !:&gt; ~ ~md ntht'r ,lfeas ot
ft ee·dnm to t,ul ··
ee·o norntc policy. too ~
•\nd he tsn 't aktnt· The ObatJW .md h1s top advtsSenate\ N,, ) GOP k.lllcr. e" ought to mt \ at up te~u ­
modt&gt;t.tte Sen
l amar l.trly wtth e·onservatiV&lt;'
Ak.xandet (Tenn ), tnld me i{ep Paul Ryan, R-Wts .
m an uHet vtew th .tt. atkt who. they would d1scove1.
b&lt;·tn~ om· ,,t ,, h.mdtul ot
h"' some um,twe·ttvt:
Rq&gt;ubltc ,,n, vottn!! t\\ ll'&lt;' tdeas that Ob.un.1 1111 ght
tP tc k.aw t&gt;.mk b,ultntt .tdopt
tum". hc· lt~cll won 't dt• 11
Such as ln ste.td of
,\ thtttli lllll'
li1Je.:[ing Vdst new c.P.;h
"I thlll~ tl Pn:sitknt mto the t&gt;.mks. llbtttute a
Ob.un.I h.td s.ud. ·rm !!oing S)..,h.•m \)t goVf'lllllH!'Ilt
til t 1x the b.mks und &gt;!&lt;'t llhUrdu c~ guat .lntee~ to
cted1i llowtn~ and I'm ptotel'l
asset-holders
~om~ Ill 'nn~~ntr.tte tHl that
ag&lt;~ •n st losses. Also. tn&lt;~gc
:1, .1tnst plllltiiy.' he 'd h,l\l.' tht• t&gt;.mks .tnd t·ommtmce .t
,:c&gt;tlen "h.ttevt'l Republi~ .t n Rt•solutwn Trust Corp suppt&gt;rl
hi:'
needed:· \tylt: liqtHd.It ion of those
'\kx.tmkl s,ud
that ran't bt• s;ned.
· I thtttk 11 V\tlltld be very
Rv.m also h.ts long advotlittandt now," ht' said, I.: dt~d pmtly suspending the
.tttet Obctnut put pttortty mutk -tn-m.Irket Iule f01
tn st~a d on stunulus und
valumg b.mk ,\si&gt;ets. rhe
onu11bu s speitding balls c u1 rent lU.:I.:ounttng mle
r~&lt;Jlllllllg $ l trillion 111 new
p&lt;'gs secunttes at ze10 tf no
burrow 111g.
one will buy them, even
The t.t.:t ts th,tt wh1le though. smce most people
RepuhlK .ms hd\e next to pay theu mortgages on
nll pnv. et 1n the House .md ttme . the dsset' nctually
me dose to l&lt;ILklllg fili - hme vnlut·
Super-mve , tor Warren
buster p"we1 Ill the Senate,
they can se1ze on popul.tr Buttt'l ,Idvot:ales the smne
moods .md thwart Obanw's c:hangt' And Ryan also has
.t\!,enda - ,uwthcr b.mk been utg tng th&lt;1t the
r;snit' bean~ the p111ne Set:u11t1es .1nd f,xc·hangt•
example ,
Comrntssttm cnlorce the
"uptK·k
1uk" so that hedge
It's wne fm Oban1&lt;1 to

t diUtn Ul).!~llll t dtlons tlom

"'"""f

The Daily Sentinel• Paae As

'Post-partisanship' isn't dead
yet -but its very close

The Daily Sentinel

I

PageA4

'

wotd f1om B1lkn on adu-

.dl v dotn !.!. MmH.:thln~ to
end th e \~e noc 1 d e 'And

R 1 ~:c . •t 1)ncc-p,isswnatc

ndvoc,tte of tntenmtionul
mtcrvenllon. now prefers
toltr'i tully sllengthen the
U.N · Ainrun
Union
(UNAMlD) peucekeepmg
forct• on the ground there .
Hnweve 1,
she
udds
(Nat 1onul Public Rmhn .
Mart:h 6). " It thai doe' not
SUI.:Ceed . thcn Wt• ' Jl llet•d [O
lukc a look at all tht• leve rs
,1tour JI ~ J\osul ··
Wh1le we wait , mme
,1bandoned Darturtdns will
die
M, Penk ;md Bus suene1
emphusize that "air power
plays a centrul role 111 AlB&lt;tshir 's tmliHu y strntegy."
H1s helt~opte·I g un s htl~'
ckar the wuv tot B11shu '
Janj.tweetl \ inurtkrs, m,tss
wpe·s .md lliltt1~' ol vii·
l a~cs i\ml the· Sud.tn A ll
Ftlrt·c bt•mhs hoth td&gt;~ l
sit~~ and the ,·m nl" of l&gt;nitall y
dt spi,II:Cl
blad
Mushms in Durfur.
G~;ltlng
contn&gt;l
1&gt;l
Bushar 's dllspace menns
b~ing ;1ble to shoot down
hts \Jic~ne' th&lt;~t vtolate the
no-f y w nc nm must
mvolvc . the l\\o (;lliiCIIt nofl y zone advnuttt•s mukc•
B .t,htr' ~ klllm ~ ~ltlll llds
cb u·. "N;\ lO .Iml l'uiclpe.m
I ht' dt'cl't' t' htllll:ll ll l.lt tdll Ll tllon .dht•, 111 Jl.lrltcul.u
Illkt\ clltlllll \1',\' ptoposcd l't.tlllt' . \lllldl h,Is .1 sutl.lhlcI.Isl yea\ t&gt;y out cun enl vt~c mtlidd .tt Ahc•chc. tn e.Islpr•·sidcnt. .Inc B1dcn, .md cut Chad."
Su~an Rtce. nm'
US
01 .til Eutnpeun Je,tders.

Franrt' 's Prestdent Ntwlas
Sm koL y hus shov. n the
degree ol deep-seated mdtg·
IU\HI&gt;tl at othl.'r t'otmtnes ·
wm mmcs agmn&gt;t their
own people to very likely be
an .tt:H v~ pllrtlcipmll m this
no-tly tone. And on March
11. he doclared that Frant:e
wtll become a full member
11f NATO . mcluding its integrated tn1lttary command,
mm-e than· 40 years after
Gen Chm les de Gaulle
pulled out n1 anger over
Ameltt:Hn mflut•nce in
bntlpe (Fume· ~ hus contlllued Ill ,·ontnbute ltmds und
troops 10 NATO . t&gt;ut now
tt's d liUlJllr lmcc).
Whlll ltbout Amencun
involvement m the no-fly
zone? Dunng his pte,idenual campa1gn . Obama
urged an end to the atrocittes Ill Durfur. And on
Mardi 10 . the Sudan
T11bune repot ted that hiler a
wtth
U.N.
mee tmg
Senetmy-Geneml Ban KIMoon , Obamll "utges a
,uong.
umhed
'land
agatnst Suchm 's expulsion
last week of 13 humamtan·
m1 ugent:tes that had pro·
vidcd the majority of aid in
Durfur."'
However, if President
Obamn is expecting realttme , acal-ltte U.N. invoh e·
mcnt - ,t, tde lrom clouds
t&gt;l \\01 tis - to end the
g~mx:tde , he ts, us old-ttme
tthlll

lll~ollliL CIS Ust~J

to sdy,

t.tlldng p1c 111 the sky Four
d.t)' he fm c Obanm and KiMulln 'olemnly conferred,
"the U N Secunly Coum;tl
fm let\ to ugree on even a
nonbm1.hn~,: stntement nbout
the exr,ulsloll of the aid
gn&gt;ups. ' (Mml'h 10 , Sudnn
Tt11&gt;ttttt',).
But tl NATO and other
Fu1up''llll fot ws supplied
II !!Ith.:r ant:tnlt lt&gt;r the proJ&gt;I&gt;Sed no'ily wnc. McPeak
and Bassucner msist that 1111
Amettt:uu
contribution
would be essenttal. "especiully of ueriul refuelers

und comm&lt;md-and-control
1urcruft. About ll squadron
of each type of aarcraft
would be more than
enough to end the i(llpunity
Sudanese military aviation
now enjoy."
They recognize that a
political solution will still
be necessary fm Sudan to
reJOIIl civilization, but "by
takmg away the Sudanese
government's freedom to
use atr power to terrori~e
Its population, the West
wottld ftnnlly get enough
leverage wath Khartoum to
negotiate the entry of a
stron~er
U.N. ground
force.·
Furthermore,
notes
Nicholas Knstof. who has
tactually been on much of
the ravaged ground in
Darfur (New York Times.
Murch 8): "Sudan cares
deeply about maintaimn~ its
uir force. partly because 11 is
preJ?unng for renewed war
ugmnst South Sudan." And
mside the government in
Kh~rtoum. there is growing
dissent against Al-Bashir 's
further disgracing Sudan by
expelling the humanitllfian
ugencies that had been
keeping
millions
of
Darfurians ulive.
What, if anything. do
you huve to say, Presadent
Obama, nbout helptng to
energi1e the creatmn of a
no-fly zone so that. on
you1 wnti:h, we can finally
'ay "never agatn" - and
mcun it"' McPeuk , whv
strongly udvocutes u no-fly
zon~:, huvmg been co-chair
ol Obuma 's presidential
cumpuagn, should speak
darectly to the president
ubout the plan.
· (Nm Hemojj is " rwtionitl/1· renowned amhoritv on
rlre Fmr Amendment · Clnd
rlre 81/1 of Right.! . He is "
member f~/ rlre Repvrter s
Commma for Freedom oj
tire Press. fmd the 'Cow
lrrstitme. where lte i.1 "
.1mior jellow.)
•

Rocksprings Rehab offers new program
care- providers. The trelllment
program. is ':overed b~ most

POMEROY - Kldh.y Ann Adkins, 48. of Pomeroy.
passed away on March 21,2009.
s
She- was. born on Feb. I, l%1 in Millwlllllee. VI~SC-. f
daughter of Randy Adkins. of Pomeroy and the t . MillY
Hendrix Adkins.
She is Slll\'ived by her: daughle\", Sboom Habtead oJ
Motgantown. W.Va.: two grandi;bildren, Emma Miller and
· Ayden Willard: t'ather. Randy Adkins of l'llmeroy: brothet.
To.oy AdkUIS of Augusta, Ga.: sisw. Bed:)! (H~&gt;wie)
Catliwen 1.11· Tupper&amp; Plaias: ni~ Wld nephelfi~ Ashley.
Jacob and Morgan Adkins of Augustll. n.r.:y (CIMI.«) Lind
of Fayetteville. N.C., and Kelly w-~ ofTu~ .
Plain~ 'great nephew. Jordan Adkins;; special friellds. ~
Lou .k&gt;lies, Tn;:ia Rock and Brian Joaes. of Grove City:
. veey special au._nt~ Linda Lou A~ of ~y: many
aunts. uncles, ntetes. nephews, COIIS1II8 and ftiead$,
· In addition to her motfler,Mary AdkiM, she was~
· ed io death by her $rand~
A memorial ser&lt;tce wtU be he-ld at S p.m. oo Thursday.
Mareh 26, 2009. at Victory Baptist Chllich io Mi~
with Pastot James Kessee Offtciating •
Memorial donation may be matlr: io C~~re of: Becty BY Sic liEN llt.JORS
Caldwell. 408:78 Old Roote 7, Reedsville, OH 4Sm.
ASSQCIAT£0 PRtsS WRI'fi:R
A registry is. availsb1e on-line at www~
daniel.rom.
COLUMBUS -· Mo.re
than a half-m.illioo unemployed wod.ers in Ollio and
several other states are
POMEROY - Alva J. Coates, 73, Coolville. passed massing out on weeb of
away Sunday. March 22.2009.atCamdell-ClarlMeioorial additional money because
of the way laws m thetr
Hospital in Parkersburg , W.Va.
He was born Sept, 30, 1935. m Calhoun County. W.Va., states are written.
Changing lhe laws would
son of the late Sam and Ermel Webster Coates, He was.
enable
roughly 540,000
retued, and was. a veteran of the U.S. Navy during theunemployed
workers to.
Korean Conflict, 19.52-1956.
qualify
for
13
to 20 weeks
Surviving are his wife o.f 54 yellll;, Mary; daughters,
Calhy Coates of Coolville and Barbara (Lewis) Pulver Of of extended federnl bene tits
Coolv tile; a son, Roger (Diana) Coate$ of Pome::!r tv&lt;o atler they've ex.hausted
grandsons, Joey (Ttsh) Coates. Cof Long BottQm
Staff t heir state and emergency
. Sgt. Samuel Pulver of Warrensburg, Mo.: a granddaughter• federal benelits. accooling
Amanda (Ryan) Dill of Pomeroy: great grandcllildren: to the National Employment
Zachery. TreY., Britaney, Alexis and Tessa Coates and Ryan Law Project. Without the
and Jenna Otll; sisters-io-law md brother&amp;·in-law and sev- change. workers whose fed·
era! benelits run out this
eral nieces and nephews •
Besides his parents. he was. preceded in death by his step- mooth or nex.t month could
he left withQut any paymother. Gladys Morgan Coates.
Friends may cll.ll .from 7-9 p.m. oa Tuesday at Ewing ments in the midst of a
WOISening job .market.
. Funeral Home . Pomeroy.
Under the federal economic stimulus pad.v.ge,
the federal governJ~~tnt will
pick up l 00 percent Cof the
tab for the extended benefits . Normally. the cost is
split between the states and
the federal government.
CHESTER - The Shade River Lodge will have a trash
There are two ways in
pickup Saturday beginning at 8 a.m.
which states with high

providers. t.ndud·
ing Medicare, 11 was,~··With )Otnt replacem;.-nt
becoming
increasingly
common. our program was
developed to help manage
pam and·get peQple bact on
thet~ f~t moo: quick.ly ..
satd Cleland, "We .,.. ant the
communtiy and our llrea
medicat professionals to.
mow we are COIMUtted to
quality &lt;:are and prosress.tve
therapy te~:hmques . Our
new treatment program for
jl&gt;mt replacement is just
another exii!Uple ot tha.t
ongoing romnutment ."

lJISUfliDii:e

States missing·out on extra unemployment benefits

•

Local Briefs

Trash pickup planned

.Annual benefit 8IUlOUIICed
CHESTER - Tbe.IUlllual be.nefit dinner and auction for
the Chester co.urthouse will be held Friday. April 3 at the
Meigs Hagh School Cafeteria. The meal will be served aI
6;30 p.m . the price is $15.
Ttckets are avmlable at Farmers Bank in both Tuppers
Plains and Pomeroy, Baum Lumber and Summeriields
· Restaurant in Chester.
Items for the auction are needed and donations can be
tat en to the Chester Courtbo11se or brought to the dinner on
· the night of the auction.
Funds raised from the annual event go into improvements
and maintenance of the Courthouse.
·

ne~~rly

For the Record

Dissolution

Intel leader Grove to
get Inventors Hall honor

Governors rrom Page Al
and that "we are a patriotic holding the commemorutive
people und we' re proud of bridge sign given to he r
with her brother's name on
that fact."
it.
Thou~h Donohue didn 't
Just oil' to the side of the
governors· press con{er- hellf Strtckland's remllfks l
ence, Josephine Donohue of she soid site will ''feel it in
Chester. sister of the late her heart" each time she
Staff Sgt. Jimmy Stewurt sat crosses the Bridge of Honor.

gumt program, UJ? to $ l btllion in grant fundmg will be
uvuilable fot the hiring and
rehiring of addational cureer
haw enforcement officers.
The fundang wall go
directly 10 law enforcement
lJgencies huvmg pnmary
nuthontv to creute nnd pre-

'

ery act resoun:es to ma'l.tmlle the benefit to
Ohioans."
The other states tmssing
oot on extended benefats. for
the-ir unemployed worle.-s
are Alabama . Arilona.
Californta.
Florida.
Georgu1. llhnois. Kentucky.
Maine.
Massassappi,
Mtssouri. New York. Ohio
and Tennessee.
A few states wuh
Republican governors. such
as Louisiana. have balked at
changing their state unemployment benefits laws to
receive more federal stimulus money. They have said
that increasing the amount
of the beneftts. or enabling
more workers to become
eligible. will place an sdditional burden on the state in
future years.
The Natio11al Employment
Law Project said states mali.tng changes io their laws to
receive extended . fedeml
benefits. can include a clause
that erases the change at the
end Cof the year. The federal
sttmulus package only
requires the federal government to pay l 00 percent of
the benefits through the end
of this year.

"Ther. felt li.k.e the~
cooldn t have a life.·
Blosser said.
The new system, which
will 1&gt;1: fully functional next
)lellr when the Lancaster site
be~ins operatmg. brings
Ohto in hoe with the majority o.f state highway patrols
around
the
country.
Superintendent
Richard
Collins recently wrote on
the patrol's Web site,
Florida, for example.
reduced its communications
sites several years ago to
seven from about 47,
"Although we have our
own -unique application o.f
this concept. it 1s more common to have a communications center environment
than a lone dispatcher.''
Collins wrote,
Ohio's system. which
uses GPS. maps. computers
and 800-megahertz radio
systems to coordinate and

keep in touch with far-flung
trooper&amp;, has irritated some
of the patrol's 297 dispatchers who have had to com·
mute more than an hour to
their new workplace. sever·
al P!trol officials said.
'They're not happy about
that at all. and that s totally
understandable." Blosser
said.
The patrol first shtfted
dispatchers las.t yellf to a
center in Bucyrus in north·
central Ohio and continued
the consolidation m other
pans of the state through
e~~rly March. satd Lydia
Wagner. the patrol's dis·
patche~ manager,
No one has lost their job
in the moves. and the state
has saved money o.n technical equipment, she said.
One consolidation in ellSt·
ern Ohio brought dispatchers from the patrol's
Zanesvtlle
and
New

Philadelphia posts to the
newly centraliled office in
Cambridge. And in southern
Ohio. dispstchers. from
Athens. lrontoJI, Gallipolis,
Chillicothe and Portsmouth
now report to work m
Jackson .
Jackson as more than an
hour's drive sway from
Ironton. and resident Vickie
Gillam. 50. said that's wor·
risome.
"This is a veey rural area.
and there's hills and hollers
arid dead-end roads," she
sa1d . "l just feel like tf
someone wasn't from thts
area, it would be hard for
them to dispatch help out."
But the same dispatchers
that worked at the- Ironton
post will usually be handling the radio traffic for
that area, and the- same roncept applies to the other
communications centers.
Blosser said.
'

P&amp;G reaches into retail despite rough economy
BY DAN SEWELL
AP BUSINESS WRITER

MASON. Ohio.- At the
Mr. Clean car wash, kids
can shoot suds at vehacles
moving through the 160foot wash tunnel while
adults enjoy free coll'ee and
watch sports or news on
tlat-screen TVs.
"The~ love commg here,"
said Knstin Nelson. u tun of
Mr. Clean household .-leaners who urrived in a
Cudallac Escalude Wtth tlve
kids, ages 6 to 10, including
three of her own .
Co~mer
products
maker Procter &amp; Gamble
Co. plans to expand the servace-intensive
business
nationwide in spite of the
tough economy. P&amp;G won't
disclose its goal for the
e~pansion, but SJl?kesman
Jeff LeRoy satd it is
licensed to opemte in 41
states and the company
plans to "make it us htg as

we can."

P&amp;G revved up the
expansion
wtth
the
Al
annoum:ement last month
serve jobs and to increas.e that it bought At lantu-based
their community policin g Curnelt's. which operated
~apacity and crime-preven - 14 Cllf washes. und put that
tion ell'orts.
, com puny's founder Bruce
Ajlp/ications for CHR p Arnett in charge. And it has
grcm/.1 wrll be (l(;cepted on/ \' hired veteran frunchising
thmugh the COPS Officf execmive Jim Amos to heud
web.11te: www.t.'OJlS mdoj ,~o v a new subsidiary that overthmugh Apri/14. Wilso11 sni1I. sees frunchising

Nutrition rrom Paae

,Oli.io's unomployment
rate is 9.4 peteel)t. md it ts
among the- 13 states. plus
the- DIStrict Cof Colwn'bia.
that woold qualify fot the
program IIOW if it lldopted
the latter method,
"I don't see why Ohio
doesn't jump on this," said
Karl Schafer of West
Liberty. Ohio. who was laid
off from his manufacturing
job at Nav istar m October
2007. ·'Look.. nothing ts
coming out of our po&lt;:ket.
Let's get this done to help
out the unemployed.''
Schafer, who has. 11 \\ ile
and three children, satd his
emergency federal benelits
will run out in mid-Aprit
He wrote all ,Democmtlt·
state Hoose representatives,
as well as Rep. David
Burke. the Republic&lt;m who
represents hts distract, asking the-m to change the law.
Gov. Ted StriciJand has
begun conversations about
the change with legislative
leadership, said spokeswoman Amanda Wurst,
"He believes. it's a common sense and necessary
change," Wurst said. "The
governor's spproach is to
maximi1e all federal recov-

Ohio·Highway Patrol dispatch center consolidations under way

COUiMBUS (AP) - A
completed moneysaving initiatwe to conso.lidate the State Htghw ay
Patrol's dispatch posts has
cut down on forced overtime but has irritsted some
workefS' who have seen
their commuting time
increase.
a
patrol
siJilkesman said.
The 21 new regional sites
typically have several dispatchers on duty al one
time, making it easier to
share information, take
bteats and leave work 011
time, patrol s~kesman
Oarrin Blosser swd.
POMEROY - A dissohltion was granted in Meigs
Under the ·old system, in
County Common Pleas Court to William Richard Barnett which a single dispatcher
and Mad$le Lsura Barnen, The eliSe was iiiCOI'II!Ctly report.. was always on duty at each .
ed ss a dtvorce action,
of the 56 posts where troopers are based. a dispatcher
could be required to stay
four hours past the end of
their eight-hour shift if
someone else called in sick.
AKRON {AP) - Longtime Intel Corp. leader Andy
Grove will receive a lifetime achievement award from the
National Inventors Hall of Fame at its annual induction ceremony, the Akron-based hall said Monday.
The hall will present the award May 2 in Mountain View
Calif. F1fteen inventors will be inducted as the halll1\lll'k.s'
the 50th anniversw-y of the integrated circuit.
Grove will be honored for his commitment to innovations
m the semiconductor industry. He participated in the found mg of Intel in 1968 and served us Intel's president, CEO
and chamnan .
.
''The world we live m 100\IY ts scurcely imaginable without the contribution~ of Andy Grove and all 15 of tht s
year's inductees," said James Pooley. chuinnan of the .
Nntionallnventors Hull of Fame.
"So muny of the technologies we take for grunted nowu days. includmg ever}day consumer electromcs hke ce ll
phones . computers and DVD players, rely on semkonduc tot technologies that only ellist thunks to their hard work
nnd spin I of invention "

WlemJ)).~&gt;yment rates. can
qualif)l fur elltended henefits. Under one. a sta~ can
qualify if t~ numbet Cof
people receiving stste
unomployment payments is
more lhan 5 percent o.f lhenwnbet of e(llployed worte.rs m the- state. This typkally has. been the more difficult threshold for states to
reach. yet seveml still have
laws requinng them to lollow this method.
It's likely that Ohio currentl)l at 4 5 percent and other states hit partaculllfly hard by the economy
eventually will meet thst
threshold. But thousands of
workers still could be lefl
withoot ass.1stance unhlthat
happens. according to the
law project. which advocates policies and programs
that ~nefit workers.
A second method availsble to ststes to qualify has
a threshold easier to meet. A
state als.o can qualify for
extended federal benefiis if
its unomployment rate is
above 6.5 petcent for three
coasecutive months. Just ll
states with high unomploy ..
ment rates have this option
written into their laws,

The new venture comes
as most households are cutting discretionary spending
- including such items as
the $15 to $24 car washes at
Mr. Cletm - and as other
major consumer •·ompumes
are focusing inward. P&amp;G
forecast 1\ week before tt
announced the e-xpansaon
thut us total sale-s wall full
for the current quarte-r and
perhaps the vear.
And the clir wash indumy
is hurtmg.
"This is a very uifftt:ult
time to enter the car wash
busine~s," said Donnelly
Eunck. executive director
of the Lunsmg. Mtch.-bnsed
Midwest
Cnrwash
Assoctall(ln. "It's an optional servtce, money is light,
the future is uncertum .''
By comparison. The
Home Depot Inc., which in
Januarr began closing four
home-tmprovement retail
suhsidianes, operates Sill
car washes alongside service .stallons in its parking
lots. It has no plans to
e~pund its car wash business .
,
"We're still evaluating the
co.ncept ," said spokesmnn
Ron DeFeo.
But executives with
Cincinnuu-blased P&amp;G suy
themusculnr,
whtte·
browed. smooth· hemled Mr
Cleun 's bmncl ts so strong
thut building a natmnal car
'

wash chain around it makes
solid sense. Even in the
recession, they sny, many
time-short people will seek
out Mr. Clean to make their
curs look. good.
"Consumers want to
k.now that they're going to
get a consistently superior
wush." said Nuthan.Estruth.
P&amp;G vice prestdem for
P&amp;G 's FutureWork.s division. "We sturt ·with an
mcredibly powerful brand.
whtch as qtute 11 .dtfference
vetsus the rest ol the ~:ur
wn'h mdustry."
P&amp;G sees spt'cml poten·
ttal becmase the $35 btl It on
industry is very frngmcnt ed. Estruth said. The com·

pany says the reGession
could build opportunity
because real estate prices
are down and communitaes
are eager for new businesses that bring 40 to 60 jobs
- as euch Mr. Clenn does .
For proof. P&amp;G officmls
tum to tmllic figures lbr the
Ct\r wash in thas northern
Cincummi suburb. Its revenue has risen lO percent und
volume 20 percent m it~ set.··
ond yeur - helped by a $5
mornmg spet:iul on exterior
washes, manngers here smd.
Twtce tn January, when
t\mem:nns were in tt posthohduy spendmg hold-down .
at drew more thun I ,000 customers on 11 smgle duy.

Preschool Registration
The Athens-Metgs Educational Service
Center Preschool registmtion tor the
2009-2010 school year will be held
Monday. Aprtl 20, 2009 at
Bmdbury Learning Center and
Monday. May II. 2!l09 at
Southern Elementary.
Appointments are necessary.
To schedule an appointment contact

Betsy at 740-992-2165.
'

�0PINIO

:The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • F'Qmeroy, Ohlo

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-21 57
www.mydallysentlnel.com

If y&lt;&gt;U thm!.. btpamsansht p ts a lusty . ~pody­
goody colll:ept out vf phas..:
wath tod.ay·s urgent realttaes. "tnsidt"t the tmpendmg l&lt;tllout llom the
Amenc:m
llllem&lt;ttaondl
Group bt&gt;mas tlap
The pctpubt trenz)
.tg.unst AlG. channeled by
Republtc·.ans
.agauast
Pt est dent B.u .td&lt; Ob.nna.
could well smk ch.mces 0t

Ohio Valley Publishing Ca.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Edrtor
-~-----~------·-----.....,__-

Congress shall make 110 /,m• respecting an
tstablishment ~f rt'ligion, or prohibitin.~ the
.free r.wrdse thrrr'!_J; or abrid&lt;~ing tht }rerdom
of spw:h, or t~J the press; Qr tl•r r(~ht Qf the
peoplt praw1bly to a:&lt;stmble, ltnd to petition
1he Government }or a redress '!fgrievanus.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
1

TOl)AY IN HIST()R_Y
Today ts Tue"l.ty. M.trch 2~. lht&gt; XJ1d d.ty ot 2009 The1e
are 2B2 d,tvs left m tht&gt; ve.1r .
T.x!.ay's ·~hghhght Ill . ~lislor) On M.nth 2&lt;-1. llJ~lJ . tht:
;;upertanket Exxon V&lt;~ldt•z tan .t~Iol\nd (Hl .t 1cd' Ill Alaska ·,
Pnm:e Wilham SQund uud bc·g.m kakm~ II mtllttlll gdllons
. ot rrude otl
On lhts dme·Jn 17~5. Bntam t•n,Icled the ()uattt•nn~ Al·t.
'requtrmg Amenl'&lt;lll t'&lt;&gt;lomsts to prov1d~ temporury htiusm~
to Brmsh ~oldtet·s
In 1882 . Germ.m 'cicnllst Rol&gt;ert Kne·h .mno un c~d 111
· Berlin that he h~d dt,cowred tht• t&gt;.t~tllus rt·sponsible Itt\
wbt·rculos1s.
ln !909. lnsh .lllthor .md pl.t~1111ght J.M S~ngc· ( \'h,·
,PI.tyboy oftht• Wt•stein Wt&gt;rld") dted Ill Dttbltn.tt .t~e 37
ln 1934. Pre.stdent Fr.mklin D Roose1 d t st!!ned .1 t&gt;IIl
gtuntmg futme mdepcntknce to the Phdt~&gt;pmes
In 1944. 111 n.:cupted Rome . tht• N.llls ext.'cutcd mme
than 300 CIVI\t.liiS m tepnsal tor .m ,tlt.tck by lt.ilt.m puttl sans the day before that h.acl killed 32 Germ.m soldtt'Is
ln 1955 . the Tennt'sstlt' Wtiii&lt;Inis pl.I\ "C.1t on a Hot l1n
Roof' opened Ol\ Broudw.1y
In 1958, Elvis Presley was mducted Into the Attll.Y 111
Memphts , Tenn .
In 197~, the president ot Atgt'nlma. ls.Ibt:l Peron, w,ts
tkposed by her t'Otmtry\ tntlitat )
ln 1980. one of El S&lt;ilv.Itlor's most tcSpl.'c'ted Roman
c;.ttholic church lc.tdet s. All hbtshop Osc.tr Arnulto
"Romero. w~" shot to de&lt;~th t&gt;y guttntcn .1s he "ekbt,tted
Mass in San ·S.tlv.tdol
In 1995. llt'tt•t 20 ye.!fs. Bllltsh soldit:Js stnpped mutme
patmls m Bdt.tst. Nmthern lie land
Ten ) ~.n s d~o
NATO I&lt;I unch.:d .lltstltkt• s .1~.1\llst
c
'
Yugoslav!&lt;~ . mmkmg the ftr,t lllllt' m 1ts 50-)e.tr ex1stem.e
that tl had evct atlachd a soveretgn countty Thuty-mne
people were ktlkd when tne eruptt'd m the Mont Bl.mc
· ttmnel m l'nitl&lt;"e ,md but ned lot twt• d.1vs l'he Nauomtl
-Tr.utspmt&lt;Itt\tn S,!lety Bmud com;lutktl 'th,tt Bne111g 737
rudtlet problems caused two I dldl aulme nashcs und nearly tnggerc·d a thtrd
Five )C,us ago: Fonuct lt&gt;p tCIWHsm dlhiscr Ru;h,u·d
Clarke. tesufymg betore the fedt•tal 9/ll Comnusmm.
· lKCUsed tht' Bush dthnmtstl &lt;tit on t&gt;t sc,IImg bm.:k the c.tmpaign against Osant.l bin L.tdcnlx:lorc the ,ltl,tt"ks and tmdeimmmg the ftghl agmnst tctmnsm by nwadmg lmq The
European Umon slappt-'&lt;1 Mtnosott wtth a $61 1 mtlhon fme
for .tbusively W!dchn~ 1ts Wmdows solt\,dt'C monopoly.
Today's Bitthd&lt;~ys F&lt;Ishltm ,md cQstume destgnei Bob
M.tckie ts 70 Actor R. Let• Ermey 1s 6:'- Movie dnt•llot
Ctn1lS Hanson 1s 6-l Conlt'dtdn Loute Andetson IS 56
Actor Robetl Cuwdme ts 55 1\I.:IIcss Kelly LeA1ock 1s 4\l
TV petsonahty Stat Jones 1s 47 Rt)(:k stngt'l-llll\Sil'Hll\
Sh.tron Corr (The Cons) ts .W Ac·tl\'SS l.md llynnlloyk 1s
.19 Actress Al)son Haumgau IS 35 Colts ()B Pe)ttm
.. Munmng ts 33. &lt;\(·tress Ketsh.t C.tstk-Hughcs ts 19
Thought for Tod.ay: "M,m must ccusc attnbutmg hts
problems to ht s en\lwnmcnr .•md btrn .1gam to cxercts~
'has wtll - hiS persotMltcsptHI&lt;Ibihty 111 th~ rc&lt;tlm of fatth
·and momls." - Albe1 t S•hwettlcl. GctnMn-bot 11 mtsslol1.u-y ,md Nobel lnw eate (I R75 - 19M)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Dt'sp'tte .m lntent.lttonal
Cumuml Co111t wanunt lor
ht'\

an~·st to1

wur (.'ftnlt~"'- and

ntmes ugu tnst hum.mtty .
Sudan\ president, Gen
Omm llasS&lt;ut AI - B .~s hu,
Nat
11\lc'nds to c"t&gt;tlllllliC U\11d Hen toft
Ill~ to fnt'mlly Anti&gt; and
Alm:an tmllons and Chtna.
llut. s,t) san dtde. the w.mted mminnl "will be surrounded by &lt;ts much secrecy .ambassltdor to the Umted
.1s
possible "
(Sudan Nattons.
Trit&gt;nnc.
M,uch
12)
Suwe ht: h.as be.: omc
Me.mwhde , h1s cx.pcliin!! of p.1rl of th,· Ohama te,un .
llU )S l I Hh:' lll~lt H)llal hllllMI\1t h~ 1t' h.ts b,•en no 1111 thc1
surVIVUI"

(&gt;I ht s ~~tttKtdt• mtmmmcnt
f.t•tto 1 to tlw eclllm cut' ll
7hn 1/um/d be h·" nc~d tll -lood . wmcr mtd
tl11111 300 ll orc/1 All /ellen we lllbjcil to eduuig. must I&gt;•· mcdtcall'are•.
\/~lied ciiUI uu lude &lt;tdcltns and rdet&gt;lume 1/lllllhfl. No
Because Sudan is a so\ ·
111/1/~lled lnten 11 ill /tr f'l t/JI!IIwd l.etre n 1hould be 111
clcll!ll stnlt'. the U.N
g()( •d U/lte, 11&lt;(&lt;/tflllllg 1\1/l t'l, tli&gt;r I" notw lllln . Lerren'c(i Se~unty Co un -: al ; while
tlulllkl ro otgwu:mtot/1 al/{/ 111dntdua/1 H'i//nor be 111, ept- vc rb al~y
tep11mandtn g
·,,d fm pu/J/1, at toll
AIItC&lt;l s littlet . wtll not ·
tttt erve ne
wtth
lnr.:c .
-·-·-- -·-.- ~------- although AI -Bash1r
whose dl&lt;II~cs tndude
nlllldt't .
CXICillllllllfltHl.
lnicihk
IIUttsle
t (nl e·Ivtl(USPS 213·960)
Reader Services
1.111
popul&gt;!IH&gt;ns),
toiilltt.'
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
and
rape
1s
nnw
conPublished overy morning Monday
Our mam concern 1n all ~ I ones 1s to
demning even mo1c t&gt;f the
through Friday 11 t ' Cour t Street
be RCCU!ate II you know oi an error
black Muslims m Dm lur to
Pomeroy Ohro Second class postage
m a story c"ll the newsroom at (740) parr1 at Pomt~ r oy
death For yc.ars , I've
992 2156
MemtMr The Assocrated Pross ancl
1eport cd on thts slowthe Ohro Newspaper A, ssoc ~ a tr on
motion genoctde , and the
Po1tmaa11r: Send address com~c
Our main number Is
only
reali st t~ wa y l sec to
t10ns !O The Dally SMIInu! PO Bmc
(740) 992·2156.
endtng
thc•sc hmrot s c.ame
729 Pomeroy, Ohro 45769
Department extensions are
f1om
a
M.urh
5
Subscription Rates
W.1sht11gton Post ...,,lumn
By cnrrler or motor route
(" (,ti&gt;llnd in~
Sttdan',
News
4 weeks
'11 30
KIIJcr,").
h)
lct
lllll'
l An
Editor : Charlene Hoeflich E.1C 1 12
52 weeks
'128.85
l 1mc t: h i~ I ol st.dt ( l'llJtlReporter . 6nan Reed Ext 14
Dally
. . .. SO'
Reporter . Beth Serg ent b:1 13
Senior Citl1en rates
1994) Gcn Mett Ill A
26 wooka .. . . • .· ...' 59 61
Mc Peak. "ho Co-chauc·d
52woeks
'11690
Ba1ack Ob, Ima·, p1cstdenAdvertising
Su bscnb~.\r s should ren ul rn advance
11111 e&lt;Impa_Ign
Outalde Sa lee. Dnve Hams Ext 1r:; drro...1 to ThfJ Darty Soutrn~ No sub
W11h l't&gt;-.tuthot Kurt
Out1lde Sat4ta . Brenda DaviS Ext 16 !H.arp hon Uy mail perr rultod In rueas
R&lt;
t,sue•nt·t . a sc ntor a"ot:lWh f.J t€1 h0 1110 CRII IOI SOIVICO IS HVE\IIablo
ClaaaJCirc. · Jl•CfY Clark Ext 1o
,11,• ·ol tlw D\.'mtJCflliiZHtion
Malt Subscription
l'oltt'Y Coun-:tl. McPeak
Inside Meigs County
General Manager
stron g ! ~ .tthoc,tlc' crcattng
I 2 Weeks
'35 26
Charlene Hoeflrch E)(! 12
,t no-llv tone Ull' l' AI26 Weeks
' 70 70

The Daily Sentinel

S? We(lkB

~·1 4 0 I I

E~ mall

nldsnews@ nryr1aJiysen1111C'I c ur11

Outside Meigs County
12 WHok~
'56 55

Wob ;

?.6 Weok s

) 11360

www rnydatlys&amp;QIInel co111

52 Wook•

' 227 2 1

- ------- -------- ---'

Tuesday. March 24• &amp;009

'

·obituaries

_....,AAIB

funds can't sell short and
drive ~tock values intol the
celtar tmless a stock prke
bas fit-st had an "uptick."
Clearl)l . Obama and Ryan
areo 't gomg to agree on
su.:h polu:tes as a 25 percent top tax rate Ql' zero
capu,tl gains taxes. but the
mtdkt·tual
exchange
between two smart people
would be enhglttenang for
both.
An Obanm Cabinet member t&lt;tld me that Obama and
White House Chtt:f of Sta.ll'
R,•hm
Emanuel
felt
.. ,lapped •n the- face" when,
&lt;~lkr personal vasits, onl&gt;;
t h r~e
Congressional
Republtc.ms voted for hts
stimulus p,Kkag~
Stnce then. the mantr.t
t1u1n the Whtte House has
bc-en Rush LJlltbaugh 1s th"'
k.Idt'I
ttl the GOP,
Rcpublte·,ms ;ue "the pm1)
ot ntt" anti ,tnyone who
ctpposes Ob,una 1 ~ the tool
ol spect,al uHerests The
meS&gt;uge ts: Wt: tnell postparttsanshtp,
but
Reptll&gt;lac,ms wtm 't pl\ly.
Asked about the: "party of
no" ~h11rge, Alt:Mmder told
me. "Purtl)
true . If
President ObanM suggests
takmg .tw.ty the secret ballot in unton elections m borrowm~ $1 tnlhon for thmgs
th ut don 't stunul,tte. our
•mswet is no . Part ,,four
JOb ts to hold the ndnumstratton accountable.
"But ,mother purl ol our
JOb 1s to ofth better adeus.
and w"' 're work.mg hard to
do that." he said. rmng
energy
polwy
where
"msteud ot higher taxes tmd
mote subsidies tor wmdm1lls. our plan would be
100 new nuclear plants,
mot-e natuml gus, clean coal
and mcrease research on
alternatives"
As Alt'xander noted,
Senate M1nonty Leader
Milch Me{'onndl, R-Ky .Ill
Jtmuttry made u broad otTer
to work w atlt Obamn on
Socwl Secunty ami other
enutkment retorm.
Ami Alexander said
Senate Republte&lt;tns are
re.tdy to help wtth educt~-

tton. health care and
Afghanistan policy, a&amp; w~ll .
l'be probl~m is thai Busbstyle mutwd suspicioo is
taking bold. Alex.:mder said
that the White Hoose is
~ about visits and COl'·
t)l, but that "w~n tt
comes
to
engaging
Republican ~natots on the
merits of our ideis, oot
much hllii ha~."
And he sal. Obama will
really np it if~ uses budget
re~:ondliatioo ntles to. nun
health care n:fonn and ener·
gy taxes through the Senate
on a Sl-vote basis.
Moreover. he said, Obam.a
probably will fail.
Ryan told me that, where
the House is. COJICemed,
"there's 110 rollaboratioo 01
exchanges of ideas.. They
have tsolated and ostraciled
Rept:tbhcans and lhe)l've
dectded to go solo.
· "If so, they 'll have to go.
solo on the next l'QWld of
TARP. whtch as no.w called
'tar-ptt ' around here," Ryan

a

sa~d.

On Tuesday. Obama said
that "with the mv.gnitude oJ
the ~:hallenges we face right
now, what we need in
Washington are not more
political tactics - we need
more good ideas.
"Wei don't need more
pomt-scoring - we need
more problem-so.lvmg. So
tf there are members of
Co.n$ress who. o.bject to
spec• fie pohcies or proposals m my budget. then I
ask them to be ready and
willing to propose con·
strucuve alternative solutions."
He added. "'Just sa~ oo'
as the right advice to gtve to
your teenagers about drugs .
It is not an acceptsble
response to whstever eoononuc polic)l is proposed by
the other party,"
Indeed . But Obama and
has pruty have to pluy theu
part. too - by listening to
nlternative ideas and taking
them senously.
(Morton K(mdrc~&lt;:ke is
e.\t'CUtll'f fdllor of Rull
C(ll/, the newsp&lt;~per oj
Capitol Hill.)

•

Sudan: Sovereign state of evil

Sud.ll! It·~~' t'"' the

,-----------·-

r~m~(llber

all those ''postpartts.m"
t:ampatgn
se\. urm.g. mo1e money -pwmises
o!
hts
1111d lind
pc·t h.tps $750 btl hon or j, I wavs
to
listen
to
tttllton - to bu) up to~t&lt;' Repub!H::uts und an:ommv·
b.111k &lt;L'-sets &lt;~nd s.tv~ the d.tlc sorne ot th~1r tde!ls.
tinanu,1l '' skm.
Obam.t ~•ught to take up
The ll ouse \ No J GOP an ttlea thai I he.trd former
le.1de1. ltll!servatne Rep Sen Da vtd Boren , D·Ok.l.t .
M1k
Pt·nce
(lnd ). put fmw,ml the other d.1y .
ckd.ued on Tuesd.tv " No qutt' tly huld "'me btparhs.m
nrme
batlttuts · Tht' sk.ull sessttHl' on se h:ct~tl
\n tt'ltl'dn pc·oplt&gt; have had topllS to hush OUt Ideds ,Uld
11
l'hc• y want
th ts e-redlc .1 pwblem-"•lv1ng
Cttn~res.s to get b:te·~ to
.tt mosph~I&lt;'
the bdief th.lt the hc·cdom
lt1 th•' c.1se ot the bank
It&gt; 'ucceed mclud~&gt; the e t tSl !:&gt; ~ ~md ntht'r ,lfeas ot
ft ee·dnm to t,ul ··
ee·o norntc policy. too ~
•\nd he tsn 't aktnt· The ObatJW .md h1s top advtsSenate\ N,, ) GOP k.lllcr. e" ought to mt \ at up te~u ­
modt&gt;t.tte Sen
l amar l.trly wtth e·onservatiV&lt;'
Ak.xandet (Tenn ), tnld me i{ep Paul Ryan, R-Wts .
m an uHet vtew th .tt. atkt who. they would d1scove1.
b&lt;·tn~ om· ,,t ,, h.mdtul ot
h"' some um,twe·ttvt:
Rq&gt;ubltc ,,n, vottn!! t\\ ll'&lt;' tdeas that Ob.un.1 1111 ght
tP tc k.aw t&gt;.mk b,ultntt .tdopt
tum". hc· lt~cll won 't dt• 11
Such as ln ste.td of
,\ thtttli lllll'
li1Je.:[ing Vdst new c.P.;h
"I thlll~ tl Pn:sitknt mto the t&gt;.mks. llbtttute a
Ob.un.I h.td s.ud. ·rm !!oing S)..,h.•m \)t goVf'lllllH!'Ilt
til t 1x the b.mks und &gt;!&lt;'t llhUrdu c~ guat .lntee~ to
cted1i llowtn~ and I'm ptotel'l
asset-holders
~om~ Ill 'nn~~ntr.tte tHl that
ag&lt;~ •n st losses. Also. tn&lt;~gc
:1, .1tnst plllltiiy.' he 'd h,l\l.' tht• t&gt;.mks .tnd t·ommtmce .t
,:c&gt;tlen "h.ttevt'l Republi~ .t n Rt•solutwn Trust Corp suppt&gt;rl
hi:'
needed:· \tylt: liqtHd.It ion of those
'\kx.tmkl s,ud
that ran't bt• s;ned.
· I thtttk 11 V\tlltld be very
Rv.m also h.ts long advotlittandt now," ht' said, I.: dt~d pmtly suspending the
.tttet Obctnut put pttortty mutk -tn-m.Irket Iule f01
tn st~a d on stunulus und
valumg b.mk ,\si&gt;ets. rhe
onu11bu s speitding balls c u1 rent lU.:I.:ounttng mle
r~&lt;Jlllllllg $ l trillion 111 new
p&lt;'gs secunttes at ze10 tf no
burrow 111g.
one will buy them, even
The t.t.:t ts th,tt wh1le though. smce most people
RepuhlK .ms hd\e next to pay theu mortgages on
nll pnv. et 1n the House .md ttme . the dsset' nctually
me dose to l&lt;ILklllg fili - hme vnlut·
Super-mve , tor Warren
buster p"we1 Ill the Senate,
they can se1ze on popul.tr Buttt'l ,Idvot:ales the smne
moods .md thwart Obanw's c:hangt' And Ryan also has
.t\!,enda - ,uwthcr b.mk been utg tng th&lt;1t the
r;snit' bean~ the p111ne Set:u11t1es .1nd f,xc·hangt•
example ,
Comrntssttm cnlorce the
"uptK·k
1uk" so that hedge
It's wne fm Oban1&lt;1 to

t diUtn Ul).!~llll t dtlons tlom

"'"""f

The Daily Sentinel• Paae As

'Post-partisanship' isn't dead
yet -but its very close

The Daily Sentinel

I

PageA4

'

wotd f1om B1lkn on adu-

.dl v dotn !.!. MmH.:thln~ to
end th e \~e noc 1 d e 'And

R 1 ~:c . •t 1)ncc-p,isswnatc

ndvoc,tte of tntenmtionul
mtcrvenllon. now prefers
toltr'i tully sllengthen the
U.N · Ainrun
Union
(UNAMlD) peucekeepmg
forct• on the ground there .
Hnweve 1,
she
udds
(Nat 1onul Public Rmhn .
Mart:h 6). " It thai doe' not
SUI.:Ceed . thcn Wt• ' Jl llet•d [O
lukc a look at all tht• leve rs
,1tour JI ~ J\osul ··
Wh1le we wait , mme
,1bandoned Darturtdns will
die
M, Penk ;md Bus suene1
emphusize that "air power
plays a centrul role 111 AlB&lt;tshir 's tmliHu y strntegy."
H1s helt~opte·I g un s htl~'
ckar the wuv tot B11shu '
Janj.tweetl \ inurtkrs, m,tss
wpe·s .md lliltt1~' ol vii·
l a~cs i\ml the· Sud.tn A ll
Ftlrt·c bt•mhs hoth td&gt;~ l
sit~~ and the ,·m nl" of l&gt;nitall y
dt spi,II:Cl
blad
Mushms in Durfur.
G~;ltlng
contn&gt;l
1&gt;l
Bushar 's dllspace menns
b~ing ;1ble to shoot down
hts \Jic~ne' th&lt;~t vtolate the
no-f y w nc nm must
mvolvc . the l\\o (;lliiCIIt nofl y zone advnuttt•s mukc•
B .t,htr' ~ klllm ~ ~ltlll llds
cb u·. "N;\ lO .Iml l'uiclpe.m
I ht' dt'cl't' t' htllll:ll ll l.lt tdll Ll tllon .dht•, 111 Jl.lrltcul.u
Illkt\ clltlllll \1',\' ptoposcd l't.tlllt' . \lllldl h,Is .1 sutl.lhlcI.Isl yea\ t&gt;y out cun enl vt~c mtlidd .tt Ahc•chc. tn e.Islpr•·sidcnt. .Inc B1dcn, .md cut Chad."
Su~an Rtce. nm'
US
01 .til Eutnpeun Je,tders.

Franrt' 's Prestdent Ntwlas
Sm koL y hus shov. n the
degree ol deep-seated mdtg·
IU\HI&gt;tl at othl.'r t'otmtnes ·
wm mmcs agmn&gt;t their
own people to very likely be
an .tt:H v~ pllrtlcipmll m this
no-tly tone. And on March
11. he doclared that Frant:e
wtll become a full member
11f NATO . mcluding its integrated tn1lttary command,
mm-e than· 40 years after
Gen Chm les de Gaulle
pulled out n1 anger over
Ameltt:Hn mflut•nce in
bntlpe (Fume· ~ hus contlllued Ill ,·ontnbute ltmds und
troops 10 NATO . t&gt;ut now
tt's d liUlJllr lmcc).
Whlll ltbout Amencun
involvement m the no-fly
zone? Dunng his pte,idenual campa1gn . Obama
urged an end to the atrocittes Ill Durfur. And on
Mardi 10 . the Sudan
T11bune repot ted that hiler a
wtth
U.N.
mee tmg
Senetmy-Geneml Ban KIMoon , Obamll "utges a
,uong.
umhed
'land
agatnst Suchm 's expulsion
last week of 13 humamtan·
m1 ugent:tes that had pro·
vidcd the majority of aid in
Durfur."'
However, if President
Obamn is expecting realttme , acal-ltte U.N. invoh e·
mcnt - ,t, tde lrom clouds
t&gt;l \\01 tis - to end the
g~mx:tde , he ts, us old-ttme
tthlll

lll~ollliL CIS Ust~J

to sdy,

t.tlldng p1c 111 the sky Four
d.t)' he fm c Obanm and KiMulln 'olemnly conferred,
"the U N Secunly Coum;tl
fm let\ to ugree on even a
nonbm1.hn~,: stntement nbout
the exr,ulsloll of the aid
gn&gt;ups. ' (Mml'h 10 , Sudnn
Tt11&gt;ttttt',).
But tl NATO and other
Fu1up''llll fot ws supplied
II !!Ith.:r ant:tnlt lt&gt;r the proJ&gt;I&gt;Sed no'ily wnc. McPeak
and Bassucner msist that 1111
Amettt:uu
contribution
would be essenttal. "especiully of ueriul refuelers

und comm&lt;md-and-control
1urcruft. About ll squadron
of each type of aarcraft
would be more than
enough to end the i(llpunity
Sudanese military aviation
now enjoy."
They recognize that a
political solution will still
be necessary fm Sudan to
reJOIIl civilization, but "by
takmg away the Sudanese
government's freedom to
use atr power to terrori~e
Its population, the West
wottld ftnnlly get enough
leverage wath Khartoum to
negotiate the entry of a
stron~er
U.N. ground
force.·
Furthermore,
notes
Nicholas Knstof. who has
tactually been on much of
the ravaged ground in
Darfur (New York Times.
Murch 8): "Sudan cares
deeply about maintaimn~ its
uir force. partly because 11 is
preJ?unng for renewed war
ugmnst South Sudan." And
mside the government in
Kh~rtoum. there is growing
dissent against Al-Bashir 's
further disgracing Sudan by
expelling the humanitllfian
ugencies that had been
keeping
millions
of
Darfurians ulive.
What, if anything. do
you huve to say, Presadent
Obama, nbout helptng to
energi1e the creatmn of a
no-fly zone so that. on
you1 wnti:h, we can finally
'ay "never agatn" - and
mcun it"' McPeuk , whv
strongly udvocutes u no-fly
zon~:, huvmg been co-chair
ol Obuma 's presidential
cumpuagn, should speak
darectly to the president
ubout the plan.
· (Nm Hemojj is " rwtionitl/1· renowned amhoritv on
rlre Fmr Amendment · Clnd
rlre 81/1 of Right.! . He is "
member f~/ rlre Repvrter s
Commma for Freedom oj
tire Press. fmd the 'Cow
lrrstitme. where lte i.1 "
.1mior jellow.)
•

Rocksprings Rehab offers new program
care- providers. The trelllment
program. is ':overed b~ most

POMEROY - Kldh.y Ann Adkins, 48. of Pomeroy.
passed away on March 21,2009.
s
She- was. born on Feb. I, l%1 in Millwlllllee. VI~SC-. f
daughter of Randy Adkins. of Pomeroy and the t . MillY
Hendrix Adkins.
She is Slll\'ived by her: daughle\", Sboom Habtead oJ
Motgantown. W.Va.: two grandi;bildren, Emma Miller and
· Ayden Willard: t'ather. Randy Adkins of l'llmeroy: brothet.
To.oy AdkUIS of Augusta, Ga.: sisw. Bed:)! (H~&gt;wie)
Catliwen 1.11· Tupper&amp; Plaias: ni~ Wld nephelfi~ Ashley.
Jacob and Morgan Adkins of Augustll. n.r.:y (CIMI.«) Lind
of Fayetteville. N.C., and Kelly w-~ ofTu~ .
Plain~ 'great nephew. Jordan Adkins;; special friellds. ~
Lou .k&gt;lies, Tn;:ia Rock and Brian Joaes. of Grove City:
. veey special au._nt~ Linda Lou A~ of ~y: many
aunts. uncles, ntetes. nephews, COIIS1II8 and ftiead$,
· In addition to her motfler,Mary AdkiM, she was~
· ed io death by her $rand~
A memorial ser&lt;tce wtU be he-ld at S p.m. oo Thursday.
Mareh 26, 2009. at Victory Baptist Chllich io Mi~
with Pastot James Kessee Offtciating •
Memorial donation may be matlr: io C~~re of: Becty BY Sic liEN llt.JORS
Caldwell. 408:78 Old Roote 7, Reedsville, OH 4Sm.
ASSQCIAT£0 PRtsS WRI'fi:R
A registry is. availsb1e on-line at www~
daniel.rom.
COLUMBUS -· Mo.re
than a half-m.illioo unemployed wod.ers in Ollio and
several other states are
POMEROY - Alva J. Coates, 73, Coolville. passed massing out on weeb of
away Sunday. March 22.2009.atCamdell-ClarlMeioorial additional money because
of the way laws m thetr
Hospital in Parkersburg , W.Va.
He was born Sept, 30, 1935. m Calhoun County. W.Va., states are written.
Changing lhe laws would
son of the late Sam and Ermel Webster Coates, He was.
enable
roughly 540,000
retued, and was. a veteran of the U.S. Navy during theunemployed
workers to.
Korean Conflict, 19.52-1956.
qualify
for
13
to 20 weeks
Surviving are his wife o.f 54 yellll;, Mary; daughters,
Calhy Coates of Coolville and Barbara (Lewis) Pulver Of of extended federnl bene tits
Coolv tile; a son, Roger (Diana) Coate$ of Pome::!r tv&lt;o atler they've ex.hausted
grandsons, Joey (Ttsh) Coates. Cof Long BottQm
Staff t heir state and emergency
. Sgt. Samuel Pulver of Warrensburg, Mo.: a granddaughter• federal benelits. accooling
Amanda (Ryan) Dill of Pomeroy: great grandcllildren: to the National Employment
Zachery. TreY., Britaney, Alexis and Tessa Coates and Ryan Law Project. Without the
and Jenna Otll; sisters-io-law md brother&amp;·in-law and sev- change. workers whose fed·
era! benelits run out this
eral nieces and nephews •
Besides his parents. he was. preceded in death by his step- mooth or nex.t month could
he left withQut any paymother. Gladys Morgan Coates.
Friends may cll.ll .from 7-9 p.m. oa Tuesday at Ewing ments in the midst of a
WOISening job .market.
. Funeral Home . Pomeroy.
Under the federal economic stimulus pad.v.ge,
the federal governJ~~tnt will
pick up l 00 percent Cof the
tab for the extended benefits . Normally. the cost is
split between the states and
the federal government.
CHESTER - The Shade River Lodge will have a trash
There are two ways in
pickup Saturday beginning at 8 a.m.
which states with high

providers. t.ndud·
ing Medicare, 11 was,~··With )Otnt replacem;.-nt
becoming
increasingly
common. our program was
developed to help manage
pam and·get peQple bact on
thet~ f~t moo: quick.ly ..
satd Cleland, "We .,.. ant the
communtiy and our llrea
medicat professionals to.
mow we are COIMUtted to
quality &lt;:are and prosress.tve
therapy te~:hmques . Our
new treatment program for
jl&gt;mt replacement is just
another exii!Uple ot tha.t
ongoing romnutment ."

lJISUfliDii:e

States missing·out on extra unemployment benefits

•

Local Briefs

Trash pickup planned

.Annual benefit 8IUlOUIICed
CHESTER - Tbe.IUlllual be.nefit dinner and auction for
the Chester co.urthouse will be held Friday. April 3 at the
Meigs Hagh School Cafeteria. The meal will be served aI
6;30 p.m . the price is $15.
Ttckets are avmlable at Farmers Bank in both Tuppers
Plains and Pomeroy, Baum Lumber and Summeriields
· Restaurant in Chester.
Items for the auction are needed and donations can be
tat en to the Chester Courtbo11se or brought to the dinner on
· the night of the auction.
Funds raised from the annual event go into improvements
and maintenance of the Courthouse.
·

ne~~rly

For the Record

Dissolution

Intel leader Grove to
get Inventors Hall honor

Governors rrom Page Al
and that "we are a patriotic holding the commemorutive
people und we' re proud of bridge sign given to he r
with her brother's name on
that fact."
it.
Thou~h Donohue didn 't
Just oil' to the side of the
governors· press con{er- hellf Strtckland's remllfks l
ence, Josephine Donohue of she soid site will ''feel it in
Chester. sister of the late her heart" each time she
Staff Sgt. Jimmy Stewurt sat crosses the Bridge of Honor.

gumt program, UJ? to $ l btllion in grant fundmg will be
uvuilable fot the hiring and
rehiring of addational cureer
haw enforcement officers.
The fundang wall go
directly 10 law enforcement
lJgencies huvmg pnmary
nuthontv to creute nnd pre-

'

ery act resoun:es to ma'l.tmlle the benefit to
Ohioans."
The other states tmssing
oot on extended benefats. for
the-ir unemployed worle.-s
are Alabama . Arilona.
Californta.
Florida.
Georgu1. llhnois. Kentucky.
Maine.
Massassappi,
Mtssouri. New York. Ohio
and Tennessee.
A few states wuh
Republican governors. such
as Louisiana. have balked at
changing their state unemployment benefits laws to
receive more federal stimulus money. They have said
that increasing the amount
of the beneftts. or enabling
more workers to become
eligible. will place an sdditional burden on the state in
future years.
The Natio11al Employment
Law Project said states mali.tng changes io their laws to
receive extended . fedeml
benefits. can include a clause
that erases the change at the
end Cof the year. The federal
sttmulus package only
requires the federal government to pay l 00 percent of
the benefits through the end
of this year.

"Ther. felt li.k.e the~
cooldn t have a life.·
Blosser said.
The new system, which
will 1&gt;1: fully functional next
)lellr when the Lancaster site
be~ins operatmg. brings
Ohto in hoe with the majority o.f state highway patrols
around
the
country.
Superintendent
Richard
Collins recently wrote on
the patrol's Web site,
Florida, for example.
reduced its communications
sites several years ago to
seven from about 47,
"Although we have our
own -unique application o.f
this concept. it 1s more common to have a communications center environment
than a lone dispatcher.''
Collins wrote,
Ohio's system. which
uses GPS. maps. computers
and 800-megahertz radio
systems to coordinate and

keep in touch with far-flung
trooper&amp;, has irritated some
of the patrol's 297 dispatchers who have had to com·
mute more than an hour to
their new workplace. sever·
al P!trol officials said.
'They're not happy about
that at all. and that s totally
understandable." Blosser
said.
The patrol first shtfted
dispatchers las.t yellf to a
center in Bucyrus in north·
central Ohio and continued
the consolidation m other
pans of the state through
e~~rly March. satd Lydia
Wagner. the patrol's dis·
patche~ manager,
No one has lost their job
in the moves. and the state
has saved money o.n technical equipment, she said.
One consolidation in ellSt·
ern Ohio brought dispatchers from the patrol's
Zanesvtlle
and
New

Philadelphia posts to the
newly centraliled office in
Cambridge. And in southern
Ohio. dispstchers. from
Athens. lrontoJI, Gallipolis,
Chillicothe and Portsmouth
now report to work m
Jackson .
Jackson as more than an
hour's drive sway from
Ironton. and resident Vickie
Gillam. 50. said that's wor·
risome.
"This is a veey rural area.
and there's hills and hollers
arid dead-end roads," she
sa1d . "l just feel like tf
someone wasn't from thts
area, it would be hard for
them to dispatch help out."
But the same dispatchers
that worked at the- Ironton
post will usually be handling the radio traffic for
that area, and the- same roncept applies to the other
communications centers.
Blosser said.
'

P&amp;G reaches into retail despite rough economy
BY DAN SEWELL
AP BUSINESS WRITER

MASON. Ohio.- At the
Mr. Clean car wash, kids
can shoot suds at vehacles
moving through the 160foot wash tunnel while
adults enjoy free coll'ee and
watch sports or news on
tlat-screen TVs.
"The~ love commg here,"
said Knstin Nelson. u tun of
Mr. Clean household .-leaners who urrived in a
Cudallac Escalude Wtth tlve
kids, ages 6 to 10, including
three of her own .
Co~mer
products
maker Procter &amp; Gamble
Co. plans to expand the servace-intensive
business
nationwide in spite of the
tough economy. P&amp;G won't
disclose its goal for the
e~pansion, but SJl?kesman
Jeff LeRoy satd it is
licensed to opemte in 41
states and the company
plans to "make it us htg as

we can."

P&amp;G revved up the
expansion
wtth
the
Al
annoum:ement last month
serve jobs and to increas.e that it bought At lantu-based
their community policin g Curnelt's. which operated
~apacity and crime-preven - 14 Cllf washes. und put that
tion ell'orts.
, com puny's founder Bruce
Ajlp/ications for CHR p Arnett in charge. And it has
grcm/.1 wrll be (l(;cepted on/ \' hired veteran frunchising
thmugh the COPS Officf execmive Jim Amos to heud
web.11te: www.t.'OJlS mdoj ,~o v a new subsidiary that overthmugh Apri/14. Wilso11 sni1I. sees frunchising

Nutrition rrom Paae

,Oli.io's unomployment
rate is 9.4 peteel)t. md it ts
among the- 13 states. plus
the- DIStrict Cof Colwn'bia.
that woold qualify fot the
program IIOW if it lldopted
the latter method,
"I don't see why Ohio
doesn't jump on this," said
Karl Schafer of West
Liberty. Ohio. who was laid
off from his manufacturing
job at Nav istar m October
2007. ·'Look.. nothing ts
coming out of our po&lt;:ket.
Let's get this done to help
out the unemployed.''
Schafer, who has. 11 \\ ile
and three children, satd his
emergency federal benelits
will run out in mid-Aprit
He wrote all ,Democmtlt·
state Hoose representatives,
as well as Rep. David
Burke. the Republic&lt;m who
represents hts distract, asking the-m to change the law.
Gov. Ted StriciJand has
begun conversations about
the change with legislative
leadership, said spokeswoman Amanda Wurst,
"He believes. it's a common sense and necessary
change," Wurst said. "The
governor's spproach is to
maximi1e all federal recov-

Ohio·Highway Patrol dispatch center consolidations under way

COUiMBUS (AP) - A
completed moneysaving initiatwe to conso.lidate the State Htghw ay
Patrol's dispatch posts has
cut down on forced overtime but has irritsted some
workefS' who have seen
their commuting time
increase.
a
patrol
siJilkesman said.
The 21 new regional sites
typically have several dispatchers on duty al one
time, making it easier to
share information, take
bteats and leave work 011
time, patrol s~kesman
Oarrin Blosser swd.
POMEROY - A dissohltion was granted in Meigs
Under the ·old system, in
County Common Pleas Court to William Richard Barnett which a single dispatcher
and Mad$le Lsura Barnen, The eliSe was iiiCOI'II!Ctly report.. was always on duty at each .
ed ss a dtvorce action,
of the 56 posts where troopers are based. a dispatcher
could be required to stay
four hours past the end of
their eight-hour shift if
someone else called in sick.
AKRON {AP) - Longtime Intel Corp. leader Andy
Grove will receive a lifetime achievement award from the
National Inventors Hall of Fame at its annual induction ceremony, the Akron-based hall said Monday.
The hall will present the award May 2 in Mountain View
Calif. F1fteen inventors will be inducted as the halll1\lll'k.s'
the 50th anniversw-y of the integrated circuit.
Grove will be honored for his commitment to innovations
m the semiconductor industry. He participated in the found mg of Intel in 1968 and served us Intel's president, CEO
and chamnan .
.
''The world we live m 100\IY ts scurcely imaginable without the contribution~ of Andy Grove and all 15 of tht s
year's inductees," said James Pooley. chuinnan of the .
Nntionallnventors Hull of Fame.
"So muny of the technologies we take for grunted nowu days. includmg ever}day consumer electromcs hke ce ll
phones . computers and DVD players, rely on semkonduc tot technologies that only ellist thunks to their hard work
nnd spin I of invention "

WlemJ)).~&gt;yment rates. can
qualif)l fur elltended henefits. Under one. a sta~ can
qualify if t~ numbet Cof
people receiving stste
unomployment payments is
more lhan 5 percent o.f lhenwnbet of e(llployed worte.rs m the- state. This typkally has. been the more difficult threshold for states to
reach. yet seveml still have
laws requinng them to lollow this method.
It's likely that Ohio currentl)l at 4 5 percent and other states hit partaculllfly hard by the economy
eventually will meet thst
threshold. But thousands of
workers still could be lefl
withoot ass.1stance unhlthat
happens. according to the
law project. which advocates policies and programs
that ~nefit workers.
A second method availsble to ststes to qualify has
a threshold easier to meet. A
state als.o can qualify for
extended federal benefiis if
its unomployment rate is
above 6.5 petcent for three
coasecutive months. Just ll
states with high unomploy ..
ment rates have this option
written into their laws,

The new venture comes
as most households are cutting discretionary spending
- including such items as
the $15 to $24 car washes at
Mr. Cletm - and as other
major consumer •·ompumes
are focusing inward. P&amp;G
forecast 1\ week before tt
announced the e-xpansaon
thut us total sale-s wall full
for the current quarte-r and
perhaps the vear.
And the clir wash indumy
is hurtmg.
"This is a very uifftt:ult
time to enter the car wash
busine~s," said Donnelly
Eunck. executive director
of the Lunsmg. Mtch.-bnsed
Midwest
Cnrwash
Assoctall(ln. "It's an optional servtce, money is light,
the future is uncertum .''
By comparison. The
Home Depot Inc., which in
Januarr began closing four
home-tmprovement retail
suhsidianes, operates Sill
car washes alongside service .stallons in its parking
lots. It has no plans to
e~pund its car wash business .
,
"We're still evaluating the
co.ncept ," said spokesmnn
Ron DeFeo.
But executives with
Cincinnuu-blased P&amp;G suy
themusculnr,
whtte·
browed. smooth· hemled Mr
Cleun 's bmncl ts so strong
thut building a natmnal car
'

wash chain around it makes
solid sense. Even in the
recession, they sny, many
time-short people will seek
out Mr. Clean to make their
curs look. good.
"Consumers want to
k.now that they're going to
get a consistently superior
wush." said Nuthan.Estruth.
P&amp;G vice prestdem for
P&amp;G 's FutureWork.s division. "We sturt ·with an
mcredibly powerful brand.
whtch as qtute 11 .dtfference
vetsus the rest ol the ~:ur
wn'h mdustry."
P&amp;G sees spt'cml poten·
ttal becmase the $35 btl It on
industry is very frngmcnt ed. Estruth said. The com·

pany says the reGession
could build opportunity
because real estate prices
are down and communitaes
are eager for new businesses that bring 40 to 60 jobs
- as euch Mr. Clenn does .
For proof. P&amp;G officmls
tum to tmllic figures lbr the
Ct\r wash in thas northern
Cincummi suburb. Its revenue has risen lO percent und
volume 20 percent m it~ set.··
ond yeur - helped by a $5
mornmg spet:iul on exterior
washes, manngers here smd.
Twtce tn January, when
t\mem:nns were in tt posthohduy spendmg hold-down .
at drew more thun I ,000 customers on 11 smgle duy.

Preschool Registration
The Athens-Metgs Educational Service
Center Preschool registmtion tor the
2009-2010 school year will be held
Monday. Aprtl 20, 2009 at
Bmdbury Learning Center and
Monday. May II. 2!l09 at
Southern Elementary.
Appointments are necessary.
To schedule an appointment contact

Betsy at 740-992-2165.
'

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

BRIDGE DEDICATION

Tuesday, Much~ aoo9

Inside

The Daily Sentinel
, : ,,..m

NCAA wll-.•''u

Bl

•

Thesday, Man-b. 24,2009

t .)Miy Falc:olw split
SC&amp;9JIIl0fl!IMF

Prep Baseball- Mason County Roundup

Wabama whips Wirt County; Point falls to Chapmanville

8Y llri'M WMBRS
IIIIW.Ta~Se~cw

sacks witll White Falcons.
Garren Underwood ground-.
ed into a lielder choice to
drive in Henry with the
gll!lles first run and the
l)gers escaped tile bases
loaded. no OU:t jam without
any further damage.
lsi the fourtll the Bend
Area team blew the contest
wide open by sending II
men to the plate. Five hits,
and a couple Of · walks
resulted in seven runs crossing the plate as the locals
lead ballooned to 8-0.
Wabama concluded the
diamond aftilir in the bottom
half of the fitlh by adding
two more tllllies to its total.
Henry. Zuspan ·and Roach all
walled to fill the sacks with
the
Underwood scoring
Falcons.' ninth run with a
sal·rifice tly. Bond ended
the outing seconds later with
an RBI s.~ngle back. througb

the middle to give Wahama
the 10-0 victory.
The lone Wirt County
saJety came with 1wo outs in
the Tiger tifth when Thomas
singled to center.
·
The White Fal~-ons will be
Idle until Satunlay when the
Muson County · nine travel~
to Calhoun County for a
.noon twin bill with the Red
Devils.

two--out. two-run homer
spoiled Point Pleasant's se8son and home opener
Monday during a ~- l seta!l~inst
visiting
back
Chapmanvtlle.
Tbe two-run homer came
in the first inning by
Chapmanville';;
Josh
Easter! ing off of Point's
starting pilcher Brock.
McClung. Point closed the
gap during t!le second inning
WAKAMA 10, WIRT COUNTY 0 wben Phillip Allen mn home
off of a hit by Mc'Clung .
51NNIOIGS
While there was n\l \core
Wirt CQ
000 00 - 0.·, 0
change in tbe third inning.
Wal\ama
001 72 - tO ~ 0
Chapmanville
slow!) ·
WtRT COUNT'! (Q.1 ): Slack. Sell (4), padded their lead by one run
Brend&lt;l (5) ana ~·
m both the tourth and fifth
WI&gt;HAMA
{1-01:
ZIJspan
an&lt;l
mnmgs.
Puint
held
u-.woo&lt;t.
WP - ZIJspon: LP - Slade
Chapmanville from scoring
for . the fullowing two
CHAPMANVILLE 4,
innings but were unabh:: to
PoiNT .PlEASANT 1
put any more runs on the
POINT PLEASANT - A

M111e SHioundup. B2

BALTANAS. Spain (AP) Bruyneel sill.d on his Twitter
- With the road narrowing · feed there were no compliand cyclists piling up in cations in the break. and
front of him. lance suggested Annstrong c.ould
Annstrollg tumbled hard off be nding soon.
·
his bik.e.
"Clean collarbone fracHe was lett with a brok.en. ture :·
Bruyneel
said.
collarbone that will need "Should be fast recovery ." .
· surgery and questions about · Added Astana spokesman
wbether he ·n be able to con- Pili Iippe Maertens: "We are
tend for an eighth Tour de contident he can still race
tbe Tour de France. of
.france title in July.
''I'm alive!" he wrote on course. He will be oil the
bis .Twitter feed. "Broken bike. bui he can still do conclavicle (right). Hurts like dition training."
hell tor now. Surgery in a
Annstrong was tossed oil
couple of days. Thank.s l'br his bike during a pileup 12
all the well wishes."
·
1/2 miles from the stage's
. Armstrong will fly back. w · finish Monday. The Te11an
the United States after being ·was grimacing and trying to
knocked out of the first hold his right arm as he
stage of the Vuelta of ente~d an ambulance.
"I've never had this hapCastilla and leon.stage ntce
in Spain.
·
pen before; it's rretty
"The crash has put my painful."' he said. .. feel
up~.-oming clilend&lt;lf m jeop- really miserable ...
ardy. but the most important
After falling off his bike.
thing for me r.ight now is' to Am1strong sat in the gmss
get back. home and rest up beside the road. his right
and begin my rehab:· he shoulder slumped and his
said in a statement.
wrist resting on his right
Armstrong is scheduled to thigh. When help arrived. he
compete in the Giro d'ltalia motioned toward hi;; right
from May 9-May 31. then shoulder. Annstrong eventuthe Tour de France from ally walked to the ambuJuly 4-26.
lance and climbed into the
"I think for the Giro it's a back.
very
big
problem." · Astana teammate levi
Armstrong said as he l~fl Leipheimer describe.d the
Valladoltd · Umverstty ptleup on h.s Twttter teed.
H\lspitai. "For now. the
"l&lt;tnce was involved in a
biggest problem is just the huge cmsh as the road narp11m."
·
· rowed and became very
Am1strong won seven ruugh.'' leipheimer wrote .
straight Tours from 1999- "He waso 't far from the
2005 before retiring. He front. as he was riding top
AP plloiO returned at\er 3 112 y~ars. 10 all day .··
·
Lance Armstrong of the U.S. is. see.n in an ambulance as he arrives at Hospital Clinico in and at 37 was ho.ping for
Armstrong said the •·m.•h
Valladolid, Spain, on Monday. Armstrong fractured his collarbone Monday in a crash dur- &lt;tnother triumphant ride was no one ·s fmt!t .
ing the Vuelta of Castilla and Leon race, disrupting the seven-time Tour de France cham- through Paris.
.
Astann team leader Johnn
Please ate Lance, B2
pion's comeback.
WIRT COUNTY

11le Middleport Amerlc:~~n Ltglon Feaney B~ PQat 121 ~ Stfie \•ta~tara .~a a
commemorative brlclga algn on blhalt ~ hla poat anc1 thl late Cpl. EdWard A. Blflnatt ~ Gov.
Joe Manchln Ill and Gov. Teet StriCkland. All -'ana WI CMtecl aMI clclnatecl by thew..\ Yltglnte

'
Governors Joe Manchln Ill and Teet ~-nd catch u, with
~ conversation willie Wilting on the cladlutlon ceremony

. ~~~

.

.

'

. Dlpartment of Transportation.

.

··

.

.

.

.

•

wtrteo

w.no""'

2, WAHAMA 0

ooo · 200

o - 2e 1

000 000 0 -

os 2

BOSTON (AP) - From
Schilling enriched thut
bloody sock to bum shoul- history throughout a cureer
CNA.(CH): .~li• Riygs an&lt;l Oeidra
der. Curt Schilling rarely left that began with Baltimore in
~-Ceo: U'- Riggs.
the Red Sox spotlight.
1988 when he retired the
On
the
field.
the
husk.y
first
major league batter he
'WA!w~A 11, WIIIT CDUHTY.6
tjght-hander pitched through faced. Boston's Wade
WtrtCo
m
01 - 661
pain to help end the club's · Boggs, on a groundball. He
w.hamo
S33 Ox - 11 7 3
86- year
championship threw his last pitch in 2007.
WIRT COUNTV {1·1): 'Co&gt; and
drought in 2004 - then con- a ball on a full count to
H·~·
tributed to another World Colorado's Todd Helton in
WAHAMA (1·1)' AI.. Wood &amp;nd
Series
title three years later. Game . 2 of Boston's World
~
~--LP-Co&lt;.
Off the field. the opinion- Series sweep.
.
ated observer appelll'ed at a A shoulder injury and
congressional hearing on surgery sidelined him for all
sign
steroids use and cam~igned of 2008. Then, at age 42. he
for fonner President George had to weigh long hours of
David
W. Bush.
rehabilitation against the
From
a
Thank.s.~ivinl! din: alternatives - ' spending
:: CLEVELAND (AP)
ner in 2003 at h1s Anzona more time with his wife nnd
:Wide receiVer David Patten home where Boston general four children and focusing
has . rejoined ·the Cleveland manager Theo Epstein lured on his video game comp~~ny.
Browns, signing a free- him oock. to the team tbat
So Schilling. a free agent,
agent deal with his former drafted him in 1986 to his scrapped his idea of possibly
team.
retirement
Monday. sigmng with a cpntender in
· .Patten. who play¢d for the Schilling mude his mark. in a the second half of the seaBrowns in 2000. s~nt the citr, of demanding fans .
son.
~t two seasons With New
'I think. in the end. we
As su~-cessful as he had
~leans.
· .
really didn't need to sell it," been in 20 years of pitch ins
· The signing Monday of Epstein ~aid Monday .. "The tbr Baltimore, Philadelphia.
the 34-year-old Patten gives Red Sox were perfect for Houston, Ari2onn and
the Browns a veteran pres- him. because-he Iiles the big Boston. us competitive and
stage. the ·history of the driven as he was on the
elli:e.
Patten has also played for ' game . He likes to be the'Cen- mound, he had stood on it
the New York. Giants. New ter of attention. It wus 11 for the last time.
good fit."
The $8 million. one-.year
England, and Washingtt)n.
WIRT COUNTY
Herdlargor

(1'0):

Cox

tn&lt;l

....

· .Browas
WR
Patten

Gov~ ·Joa Minchin Ill (left) and

Gov. Ted StrlckllnCI atop to talk with students from Mld'hllley Chrltt~n Sc:hool tnd pose for photOt.
·

•

The River Bland .Quartet alnp the National Anthe'm at yeat.ntay'a

Bridge of Honor cladlcatlon. ·

•

Schilling retires after 3 World Series titles

#

contntct.he signed before ihe
2008 seas\ln was his last.
"It is with zero regrets that
I am making my retirement
otTicial."' s.·hillin¥ wrote on
his blog. "The thmgs I was
allowed ttl experience. the
people I wus able to call
friends. teammates. ment\lrs.
conches and opponents. the
travel. all of it. are far more
than anything I ever thought
possible in my lifetime."
Schilling pitched brilliantly in Game 6 of the 2004 AL
championship series against
the New York Yankees just
days atler surgery to suture a
loose tendon to his . right
ankle.
The proc~dure was repealed bel'ore another outstanding outing in Game 2 of the
World Series sweep of St.
Louis as Schilling led
Boston to the title in his first
season with the Rt:d Sox
after he was acquired in n
trade a few days at'ler
Th1mk.sgiving.
.
AP photo
In both games. blood In this Oct 25. 2007 file photo, Boston Red Sox pitcher 13urt
s~cp.,'\.1 through his sock.
Schilling tips his hat as he walks off the field alter being
"I think people will defi- taken out of the game during the sixth inning in Game 2 of
the baseball World Series against the Colorado Rockies at
Piust s• Schlllln~o 12 Fenway Park in Boston.
I

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

BRIDGE DEDICATION

Tuesday, Much~ aoo9

Inside

The Daily Sentinel
, : ,,..m

NCAA wll-.•''u

Bl

•

Thesday, Man-b. 24,2009

t .)Miy Falc:olw split
SC&amp;9JIIl0fl!IMF

Prep Baseball- Mason County Roundup

Wabama whips Wirt County; Point falls to Chapmanville

8Y llri'M WMBRS
IIIIW.Ta~Se~cw

sacks witll White Falcons.
Garren Underwood ground-.
ed into a lielder choice to
drive in Henry with the
gll!lles first run and the
l)gers escaped tile bases
loaded. no OU:t jam without
any further damage.
lsi the fourtll the Bend
Area team blew the contest
wide open by sending II
men to the plate. Five hits,
and a couple Of · walks
resulted in seven runs crossing the plate as the locals
lead ballooned to 8-0.
Wabama concluded the
diamond aftilir in the bottom
half of the fitlh by adding
two more tllllies to its total.
Henry. Zuspan ·and Roach all
walled to fill the sacks with
the
Underwood scoring
Falcons.' ninth run with a
sal·rifice tly. Bond ended
the outing seconds later with
an RBI s.~ngle back. througb

the middle to give Wahama
the 10-0 victory.
The lone Wirt County
saJety came with 1wo outs in
the Tiger tifth when Thomas
singled to center.
·
The White Fal~-ons will be
Idle until Satunlay when the
Muson County · nine travel~
to Calhoun County for a
.noon twin bill with the Red
Devils.

two--out. two-run homer
spoiled Point Pleasant's se8son and home opener
Monday during a ~- l seta!l~inst
visiting
back
Chapmanvtlle.
Tbe two-run homer came
in the first inning by
Chapmanville';;
Josh
Easter! ing off of Point's
starting pilcher Brock.
McClung. Point closed the
gap during t!le second inning
WAKAMA 10, WIRT COUNTY 0 wben Phillip Allen mn home
off of a hit by Mc'Clung .
51NNIOIGS
While there was n\l \core
Wirt CQ
000 00 - 0.·, 0
change in tbe third inning.
Wal\ama
001 72 - tO ~ 0
Chapmanville
slow!) ·
WtRT COUNT'! (Q.1 ): Slack. Sell (4), padded their lead by one run
Brend&lt;l (5) ana ~·
m both the tourth and fifth
WI&gt;HAMA
{1-01:
ZIJspan
an&lt;l
mnmgs.
Puint
held
u-.woo&lt;t.
WP - ZIJspon: LP - Slade
Chapmanville from scoring
for . the fullowing two
CHAPMANVILLE 4,
innings but were unabh:: to
PoiNT .PlEASANT 1
put any more runs on the
POINT PLEASANT - A

M111e SHioundup. B2

BALTANAS. Spain (AP) Bruyneel sill.d on his Twitter
- With the road narrowing · feed there were no compliand cyclists piling up in cations in the break. and
front of him. lance suggested Annstrong c.ould
Annstrollg tumbled hard off be nding soon.
·
his bik.e.
"Clean collarbone fracHe was lett with a brok.en. ture :·
Bruyneel
said.
collarbone that will need "Should be fast recovery ." .
· surgery and questions about · Added Astana spokesman
wbether he ·n be able to con- Pili Iippe Maertens: "We are
tend for an eighth Tour de contident he can still race
tbe Tour de France. of
.france title in July.
''I'm alive!" he wrote on course. He will be oil the
bis .Twitter feed. "Broken bike. bui he can still do conclavicle (right). Hurts like dition training."
hell tor now. Surgery in a
Annstrong was tossed oil
couple of days. Thank.s l'br his bike during a pileup 12
all the well wishes."
·
1/2 miles from the stage's
. Armstrong will fly back. w · finish Monday. The Te11an
the United States after being ·was grimacing and trying to
knocked out of the first hold his right arm as he
stage of the Vuelta of ente~d an ambulance.
"I've never had this hapCastilla and leon.stage ntce
in Spain.
·
pen before; it's rretty
"The crash has put my painful."' he said. .. feel
up~.-oming clilend&lt;lf m jeop- really miserable ...
ardy. but the most important
After falling off his bike.
thing for me r.ight now is' to Am1strong sat in the gmss
get back. home and rest up beside the road. his right
and begin my rehab:· he shoulder slumped and his
said in a statement.
wrist resting on his right
Armstrong is scheduled to thigh. When help arrived. he
compete in the Giro d'ltalia motioned toward hi;; right
from May 9-May 31. then shoulder. Annstrong eventuthe Tour de France from ally walked to the ambuJuly 4-26.
lance and climbed into the
"I think for the Giro it's a back.
very
big
problem." · Astana teammate levi
Armstrong said as he l~fl Leipheimer describe.d the
Valladoltd · Umverstty ptleup on h.s Twttter teed.
H\lspitai. "For now. the
"l&lt;tnce was involved in a
biggest problem is just the huge cmsh as the road narp11m."
·
· rowed and became very
Am1strong won seven ruugh.'' leipheimer wrote .
straight Tours from 1999- "He waso 't far from the
2005 before retiring. He front. as he was riding top
AP plloiO returned at\er 3 112 y~ars. 10 all day .··
·
Lance Armstrong of the U.S. is. see.n in an ambulance as he arrives at Hospital Clinico in and at 37 was ho.ping for
Armstrong said the •·m.•h
Valladolid, Spain, on Monday. Armstrong fractured his collarbone Monday in a crash dur- &lt;tnother triumphant ride was no one ·s fmt!t .
ing the Vuelta of Castilla and Leon race, disrupting the seven-time Tour de France cham- through Paris.
.
Astann team leader Johnn
Please ate Lance, B2
pion's comeback.
WIRT COUNTY

11le Middleport Amerlc:~~n Ltglon Feaney B~ PQat 121 ~ Stfie \•ta~tara .~a a
commemorative brlclga algn on blhalt ~ hla poat anc1 thl late Cpl. EdWard A. Blflnatt ~ Gov.
Joe Manchln Ill and Gov. Teet StriCkland. All -'ana WI CMtecl aMI clclnatecl by thew..\ Yltglnte

'
Governors Joe Manchln Ill and Teet ~-nd catch u, with
~ conversation willie Wilting on the cladlutlon ceremony

. ~~~

.

.

'

. Dlpartment of Transportation.

.

··

.

.

.

.

•

wtrteo

w.no""'

2, WAHAMA 0

ooo · 200

o - 2e 1

000 000 0 -

os 2

BOSTON (AP) - From
Schilling enriched thut
bloody sock to bum shoul- history throughout a cureer
CNA.(CH): .~li• Riygs an&lt;l Oeidra
der. Curt Schilling rarely left that began with Baltimore in
~-Ceo: U'- Riggs.
the Red Sox spotlight.
1988 when he retired the
On
the
field.
the
husk.y
first
major league batter he
'WA!w~A 11, WIIIT CDUHTY.6
tjght-hander pitched through faced. Boston's Wade
WtrtCo
m
01 - 661
pain to help end the club's · Boggs, on a groundball. He
w.hamo
S33 Ox - 11 7 3
86- year
championship threw his last pitch in 2007.
WIRT COUNTV {1·1): 'Co&gt; and
drought in 2004 - then con- a ball on a full count to
H·~·
tributed to another World Colorado's Todd Helton in
WAHAMA (1·1)' AI.. Wood &amp;nd
Series
title three years later. Game . 2 of Boston's World
~
~--LP-Co&lt;.
Off the field. the opinion- Series sweep.
.
ated observer appelll'ed at a A shoulder injury and
congressional hearing on surgery sidelined him for all
sign
steroids use and cam~igned of 2008. Then, at age 42. he
for fonner President George had to weigh long hours of
David
W. Bush.
rehabilitation against the
From
a
Thank.s.~ivinl! din: alternatives - ' spending
:: CLEVELAND (AP)
ner in 2003 at h1s Anzona more time with his wife nnd
:Wide receiVer David Patten home where Boston general four children and focusing
has . rejoined ·the Cleveland manager Theo Epstein lured on his video game comp~~ny.
Browns, signing a free- him oock. to the team tbat
So Schilling. a free agent,
agent deal with his former drafted him in 1986 to his scrapped his idea of possibly
team.
retirement
Monday. sigmng with a cpntender in
· .Patten. who play¢d for the Schilling mude his mark. in a the second half of the seaBrowns in 2000. s~nt the citr, of demanding fans .
son.
~t two seasons With New
'I think. in the end. we
As su~-cessful as he had
~leans.
· .
really didn't need to sell it," been in 20 years of pitch ins
· The signing Monday of Epstein ~aid Monday .. "The tbr Baltimore, Philadelphia.
the 34-year-old Patten gives Red Sox were perfect for Houston, Ari2onn and
the Browns a veteran pres- him. because-he Iiles the big Boston. us competitive and
stage. the ·history of the driven as he was on the
elli:e.
Patten has also played for ' game . He likes to be the'Cen- mound, he had stood on it
the New York. Giants. New ter of attention. It wus 11 for the last time.
good fit."
The $8 million. one-.year
England, and Washingtt)n.
WIRT COUNTY
Herdlargor

(1'0):

Cox

tn&lt;l

....

· .Browas
WR
Patten

Gov~ ·Joa Minchin Ill (left) and

Gov. Ted StrlckllnCI atop to talk with students from Mld'hllley Chrltt~n Sc:hool tnd pose for photOt.
·

•

The River Bland .Quartet alnp the National Anthe'm at yeat.ntay'a

Bridge of Honor cladlcatlon. ·

•

Schilling retires after 3 World Series titles

#

contntct.he signed before ihe
2008 seas\ln was his last.
"It is with zero regrets that
I am making my retirement
otTicial."' s.·hillin¥ wrote on
his blog. "The thmgs I was
allowed ttl experience. the
people I wus able to call
friends. teammates. ment\lrs.
conches and opponents. the
travel. all of it. are far more
than anything I ever thought
possible in my lifetime."
Schilling pitched brilliantly in Game 6 of the 2004 AL
championship series against
the New York Yankees just
days atler surgery to suture a
loose tendon to his . right
ankle.
The proc~dure was repealed bel'ore another outstanding outing in Game 2 of the
World Series sweep of St.
Louis as Schilling led
Boston to the title in his first
season with the Rt:d Sox
after he was acquired in n
trade a few days at'ler
Th1mk.sgiving.
.
AP photo
In both games. blood In this Oct 25. 2007 file photo, Boston Red Sox pitcher 13urt
s~cp.,'\.1 through his sock.
Schilling tips his hat as he walks off the field alter being
"I think people will defi- taken out of the game during the sixth inning in Game 2 of
the baseball World Series against the Colorado Rockies at
Piust s• Schlllln~o 12 Fenway Park in Boston.
I

�---.,.-

•

www.myd ''PI llinel.com

Tuesday, Mareh 24. aoog

«ribune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

No. 2 Scarlet Knights cruise past Auburn; Purdue avenges UNC
PISCATAWAY. N.J. (AP) Epipbanny Prince scored 27 points
liOd seventh-seeded Rutgers beat
No. 2 seed Auburn 80-52 on
Monday night in the second round
of the NCAA t~¥~tDament.
The Scarlet Knights advanced to
Oklahoma City to play Purdue in
the regional semifinals Sunday .
Rutgers (21-12) has made it out of
the second round five straight
years.
Rutgers benefited from playing
at home in the NCAAs for the first
time since 200 I. Seniors Kia
Vaug)m and Heather Zurich
wouldu •t let their final game on
campus end in defeat. Vaughn had
15 points and II rebounds and
Zurich added 12 points to lead four
Scarlet Knights in pouble figures.
DeWanna Bonner~ srored 17. to
lead Auburn (30-4). which saw
another season end in disappointment.
Pl.uiE IS, NoRnt CARouHA 70
CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. (AP)
- Lindsay Wisdom-Hylton and
Brittany Rayburn scored 18 points
each to lead five Purdue players in
double digits.
The Boilermakers (24-10). who
lost to North Carolina twice in the
last three NCAA tournaments.
advanCed to the regional semifinals for the third time in four years.
Lakisha Freeman scored 16
points for Purdue. and FahKara
Malone .and Danielle Campbell 12
apiece.
. North Carolina (28-7) had dominated the series between these
teams coming in·and had won the
past three overall. The Tar Heels
failed to reach the regional semifinals for the first time in five years.
ltalee ~ucas led the Tar Heels
with 21 points. and Jessica Breland
added 15. Senior forward
Rashailda McCants finished with
six =ts on 3-for-15 shooting.
UURGK 65, GoNzAGA 60 .
SEATTLE (AP) - Shavonte
Zellous scored nine of her 24
•

points in the final 4 minutes. and
Pittsburgh
capitalized
on
Gon2aga's youthful mistakes in the
closing minutes.
The 12th-seeded Bulldogs made
life extremely difficult for the No.
4 s.eed Pmthers. but it was Zellous
and Pitt's experience coming
through at the end.
Zellous scored on a pair of drives off Gonzaga turnovers in the
final 2 minutes then hit a pair of
free throws to put the Panthers up
63-60 with 15.9 seconds left after
another Gonzaga mistake. When
Janelle Bekkering's 3-pointer
missed with 6 seconds left, the
Panthers were beaded to the
regional semifinals for the second
straight year.
OHio ST.u 54,
''sses
PI $1;uE 58
COLUMBUS (AP) - Jantel
Lavender had 20 points and Ohio
State scored its fmal 10 points on
free throws.
.
The Buckeyes (29-5) advanced
to the regional senilllnal to meet
Stanford on Saturday.
Star Allen added 12 points and
10 rebounds, saving her best for
last. She rebounded a missed free
throw with 15 seconds left and
then added two Clinching free
throws for Ohio State, which has
woo 10 in a row and 15 of 17.
Tysheka Grimes scored 20 of her
·22 points in the o~ning half for
Mississippi State (23-10). which
was seeking the schoors first trip
ever to the Sweet 16. Alexis Rack
aQded 19 points for · the Lady
Bulldogs.
s - 77, SAN Duo ST• .g
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Freshman
Nnemkadi Ogwumike dominated
inside with· career highs of 27
points and 13 rebounds to lead the
Cardinal.
The next road trip for Stanford,
which has won 18 straight games.
will be across San Francisco Bay
to Berkeley for the regional semifinals .

Hall of Farner Stallworth joins
Steelers ownership group

The Cardinal (3 1-4) is forging a
new identity without Candice
Wiggins. the All-American guard
who left after carrying Stanford to
last year ·s national cbampionsbip
game. a 64-481oss to Tennessee.
Ohio
This Cardinal team i~ deep and
big. with Ogwumik.e and PdC'-10
State
Player of lhe Year Jayne Appel
guar:d
anchoring one of the counlry 's best
Samantha
frontcourts.
P~ahali$
AllllOM Sm£ 83.
(21)
.
Fl.-STAn 58
waves to
DULUTH. Ga. (AP) - DanieUe
the crowd
Orsillo's 3-pointer gave Arizona
to cete- ·
State the lead with 32 se~.-onds left.
brate as·
Followillg Orsillo"s 3. Mara
Ohio .
Freshour missed a 3-point attempt
State tJI!at
for third-seeded Florida State with
Mississlpp
22 seconds . remaining. Briann
~ State 64January, who' was slowed by foul
58 in the
trouble and a sore ankle in the
second-,
game. Kat~ Engelbrecht and
IQIJnd :
Orsl1lo each added two free throws
women's
for the Sun Devils in the final 20
NCAA .
seconds to protect the lead.
.
college
Sixth-seeded Arizona State (25basketball
S) will play the winner of
tournaTuesday's Texas A&amp;M-Minnesota
ment
gllQle on Sunday in Trenton, NJ.
game
Freshour led Florida State (26-8)
Monday in
with 15 points. Courtney Ward
Columbus
added 12 points.
CALJFOIIUo 99, YIIGIUo 73
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ashley
Walker scored 20 of her careerhigh-tying 32 points in the fust
half, and California used its strong
inside game to· advance lo the
NCAA tournament's final 16 for
the fii'St time in school history. .
Devanei Hampton had 22 points
and II rebounds and junior Alexis
Gray-Lawson added 22 points for · YAMW u 74, KAf!IAS Sr. &amp;1
between Maryland and Utah .
the fourth-seeded Bears (27-6). ALBl:JQU~QUE, N.M. (AP)
Ashley Sweat led the fifth-seed- ·
who advanced to the Trenton -:- JenruteJ:Risper~_ac~r- ·ed Wildcats (25-8) with 17 points
Regional se.mifinals Sunday in high 27 pomts and Christma Wtrth while Marlies Gipson scored 16
New Jersey. They·n play the win- added 24 to lead fourth-seeded and s 1 L · h d 10
h&lt;1 e~ ebmng . a
·
.
ner of Tuesday's . game between Vanderbilt beat past.Kansas State.
Connecticut and Florida.
The
Commodores · (26- 8 ) . Vanderbtlt ~on twtce at The Pit
Monica Wright scored 26 points advanced to the semifinals .o f the . m last season s NCAA tournament .
for fifth-seeded Virginia (24-10), · Raleigh regional, where they'll Now. the Commodores are 4-0
seeking its first trip to the regional play next weekend a~ainst the win- over the past two years m
semifinals since 2000.
ner of Tuesday mght's contest All)uquerque.

the career wins list and his ·having him pitch' that year.
3,116 strikeouts ranks 15th
Eventually. both sides
overall. He won more than agreed that surgery was best
20 games three times from and he had it on June 23.
fmmPageBl .
2001 through 2004.
'~I talked to him about a
PmSBURGH (AP) .- Steelers Hall of Fame wide
All th11t may not be week ago." Dr. Craig
receiver John Stallworth is among three new partners added nitely remember that, but I enough for him to get to the Morgan. who performed the
operation to repair his right
to Pittsburgh chairman Dan Rooney's ownership group, would say three champi- Hall of Fame.·
onships
is
a
pretty
big
deal,"
But there ·s much more on btceps tendon and labrum.
one that may expand further before it is finalized m seversaid Yankees outfielder his resume: an 11-2 postsea- said Monday. "He said his
al months.
Johnny Damon, a member ' son record, the best of any shoulder felt fine . He's just
Rooney and son Art Rooney II, the Steelers' president, . of
the 2004 Red Sox. "It
have added six partners to help them acquire all or part the was a nice career. The writ- pitcher with at least 10 deci- enjoying being with his
shares held by Dan Rooney ·s.four brothers. The three new ers will think about it in a sions. with a 2.23 ERA in family. And the other thing
Jq career starts. He also was he told me was he wasn't
partners were approved Monday by NFL owners.
.
few years if he's Hall (of co-MVP of the 2001 World quite sure he wanted to put
The restructuring agreement was finalized several Fame) material. He defimo.ntbs before the Steelers won their record sixth Super nitely took advantage of Series with Randy Johnson the time commitment and
while in Arizona. ·
do four to six hours of exerBowl last month and was required to meet NFL rules that a ·what he was given."
Tben
there
was
his
focus.
cises
every day. which is
primary owner have at least a 30 percent stal\e in a team.
The bloody sock from the Red Sox manager Terry what's required to come
The Rooney family agreement originally called for the World Series is now in the
Franoona rarely spoke with . back to pitch.''
transaction to take J?lace by March 31. but that deadline Hall of Fame.
Schilhn~ was 9-8 with a
was pus~ed baclc U.nlll May because of the possible addition · "It was freezing, raining. him the day he pitched.
the
better,"
3.87
ERA m 2007 when he
"The
surlier.
of other mvestors.
cold as hell. and the guy just Franoona said. "The few SJ?I'nt s.even weeks on the
bad open surgery on his times where he did speak, I dtsabled list with shoulder
Boston designated remember thinkin11. 'He's tendinitis. But he was 3-0
possible in order to take the ankle:
David
Ortiz satd. "A · not ready to pitch.""
hitter
with a 3.00 ERA in the
start on the Giro."
lot
of
people
come
up
to
me
Schilhng's
shoulder
postseason.
This · was Armstrong·s
and ask. me. 'Hey. be wus injury came to light early in
"(He) never backed
first stage race in Europe bleeding for real~' I'll tell
fromPageBl
since winning the 2005 you what, man. He showed February 2008 whe.n he dis- down from · any chalclosed on his blog that he lenge :· Epstein said. "One
Tour. Armstrong started his
"Toward the end of the comeback
me
a
lot
of
guts.
I
bad
a
.lot
and the team disagreed . of the things people didn't
at the Tour Down
race people started getting Under in Australia in of res~t for Curt."
ubout the best way to treat realize about Schill is that
excited, a bit of wind, some January, where he finished
Scbtlling finished with a it. He preferred surgery be was reully motivat~d by
hills and everybody wanti- 29th overall, 49 seconds 216-146 record and a 3.46 while the team wanted him fear. Fear of failure."
ng to be at the front," . be behind winner Allan Davis ERA. He is tied for 80th on to rehabilitate it in hopes of · He wasn't afrnid to
said. "A couple of guys of
Australia. He ihen fincrashed in front of me, I ished seventh in the Tour of
crossed my wheel. then I hit California in February.
them and over the top."
On Saturday, Armstrong
Armstrong was.first taken raced
in the Milan-San
to Rio Carrion hospital in
Remo
cycling
classic and
,Paleneia. then to the hospital in Valladolid. In his finished 125tb, 8 minutes ,
statement, Armstrong said 19 seconds behind winner
he bad "been lucky 10 avoid Mark Cavendish.
The mainly tlat first stage
one of the most common
of
the Castilla and Leon
cycling injuries" in his 17covered I09 miles from
year career.
"It bas been a pity to lose Paredes de Nava to
Lance because we see him Baltanas. It was won by
with desire of doing a ~ Joaquin Sobrino Maninei
preparation in this race," of Burgos Moournental in 4
. said Alberto Contador. hours, 31 minutes, 53 secArmstrong ·s teammate aJJd onds aftera sprint finish. He
biggest rival for the role of was followed by David
team leader. "Now ~ only I Vitoria of Rock Racing and
can suppOrt him and wish Jose Joaquin Rojas of
him to recover as soon as · Caisse d'Epargne.

Schilling

Lance

express his opinions .
In July 2007, he said on
HBO's ·"Costas Now" that
the refus&lt;Jls of Barry
Bonds and Mark McGwire
to· address speculation
about steroids use are tantamount to admissions .
Lust September. he_ said
during a radio &lt;ippeatance
· that former teammate
Manny Rumirez "was
alw ays kind and nice f?r
the most purl. but he d
show up the next day and
say. 'I'm through with this
te!lm.I,.want out now:··
Now .Schilling is out leaving behind a distinguished career and movine
on to a life away from
spothght.
"The game was here
long before I was . and will
be here long after I am
gone." he wrnte on hi s
blog. "The only thing I
hope I did was never put in
question my love for the
game. or my passion to be
counted \lU when it mattered most. I did everything I wuld to win every
tune I wu s hunded the
bull." ·

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
P.LUS YOUR AD N..O.W ONLINE

www.mydlilytriblme.coin
.mydlilysenllnel.com

www.mydlilyregistef.com

JUSl.SA.Y

CHARGE 11.1

OfP»H~

Mowyaucan how bor*rsud orophlcs

),(

Monday thru Friday

Gcldecltoyourclossllledods
. . . . .1'1 $3.00/perad
GrapNcs SOt for small

8:00 ·a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

·---,
···------~~

'''

~,\

N&gt;lishing -

lhoriglttlo .....

rejoct or CIIICtlany

ad otllly - Errors Must
~OIIaclonlho

~

.. ,

_,.,

..

~

.

......

To Help G4lt R•po•~• ..

Olllo 'lalloy

~

S1.00for-lorQe

•" StiNt.___.
WWt&amp;wa, • .,.. •
•illtiM•I'MIIIMAIIItte•Awllt'l&amp;l tcltU

HO~W TO WRITE AN AD
Slice
'WI Ads
. , S~wM&amp;~c~· lachllle T"-e n-

'&lt;

1.;1.

'

Yard Mowing an&lt;! v.o
!rimming. Reliable and
d&lt;&gt;J)en&lt;lable . No yard 10
!!NO~T~IC~E~O~H;;;IO~V;;;;A;;ll"!E!"Y big
or
to
small.
.............
·-

co.

c:r:40-:2~56=-62~51E=:: ·--~.;;;;~;...;;;;;;;;;
Col....
Golllpollo

PUBliSHING
·rocommends that · you do
Olh.r S. uiua
business with people you
know. and NOT to send Pet
CremaliC71$.
Call
rnQtiOY througll ltl&lt;l mail T4&lt;J.4A6·3745

Call Today! 740-446-4367
H!00-.1 tol-0452

. unti.l you have il'lvestigat~
ing tTl~ otklring.

.l.cc~ ~r Atcrd-

res

hftebeen
plactdln Ids 11
tilt Glitupolls

Dally nlbUne
must be plc:kecl
within 30 days.
Any plcttnS
that ere not
plcMd up will be
diSCIIded. .

PfMaaionol S. •i=lt
TURNED DDWN ON
SOCIAL SECI.IRITY SSI
No Fee lJr&gt;less We Win!

(Carvers Close To Home)
g81111ipollac1~tgt.ld!.l

lllY CQunci !Qr ~
Colleges and Schooe 12148

t -588-se2'-3345

541&gt;tic . pumping ~lfia ---;;.-..~;;Pw;;~;;;;;~
Co. QH an&lt;! Mason Ca. ':
WV. Ron Evans Jack· Female Hus.i&lt;y 2 yrs old.
SOl\ OH. 800-~7~95&lt;8
APR registere&lt;! all wllil&amp;
~ !lieg. 740-2()8·71150

t- ._;

the

Wo

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
Trai~rs

........AI.
....
oti~qu;;•;..;;;;;;;

-~
304-615-

3168

~'No s~

Roundup
fromPageBl

board.
Beside . . the hits by
McClung and Allen, Titus
Ruuelll, D.W. Herdman,
and Tyson Jones also made
hits for the Red. Black, and
White. .
CHAI'tiANVILLI 4,
Chapmanville 's Jordan
PoiNT
PLIASANT 1
Banks contributed to three
of the team's 10 hits, c.....,.,.,.... aoo 110 o - • 10
inCluding an RBI which 2Point Pituln1 010 000 0 - ·1 $ 3
added to Ch11pmanville's
lead during the game. C~PMANVIlLE (1-0): ~ - Pojlorlo.
Johnson ($) . Ryan Bonaon (7)
Easterling also added two C!llg
ond Jordon ~Irk.
·
.hits to the team's \()tal .
POINT PlEASANT · (G-1 ): Brock
Eric Roberts came in to MeCiutlg, Eric: Roberlt (0) and B.J.
pitch durin~ ·the sixth lloyd.
WP - Poporia: lP - McClung.
mning. allowmg only two HR: C - Jooll Eaotorllng (filii Inning,
hits,
while
holding · .,. on. two out).

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

Carmiehl8l

74:tl-4~46-~382=-5~s:::

2007

Molorc)dll
H.D.

soft-tall,

:::~~~ip~'S'~~~:
To....,.n Hll

I BR upartnltnl ll\l' rtnl
dnwnto,.·n

Poinl

~~~ear

Pk~to.\Utl.

AA·-~~~
.11U~ .IW-OI6.1 .

Hobby / Hvnl &amp; Sport

304-675-5156.

GUN SHOW &amp; SAlE •
GAlliPOliS. OH Holiday Inn Sal 9-5 &amp; Sun
A.....
9·3 Mar. 28 &amp; 29 State ~~...;~~--"'""'
Rou te

7

$4.00

Ilea""

Fro nt

S1ght

0(lity

Adm . 01 Pontiac Grand

Tables $25 GT. white, 95000 mi.

security dePosit AJqUire&lt;!.

Possibility of rental

74Q-339-9492

Promotioos , tra clean, S4950 or make 2br apt. Rodney area. No

pets. o.p!Rel
74tl-446-1271 .
709-1617

offer. 740-388·0332
~

7~170

tumishacl
and
unlur·
nisht&lt;l. and houses in
Pom&lt;lroy and Middleport.

rio pots. 74G-99l!·22 18
t BR Apt WID hookups.
satellite . TV incl. w1rent.
PriJt .close to hOSpitaL Call

ex·

$t1Mo-Youtnt
At
V.lloy View Aponments
800 Srate Route 325
Thurman. OhiO .tS685
1·2 Bedroom ~rtmenls
with apPliances tumlsh&amp;d
On site ~und"' tacility.
Call lor details or plcl! up
applicalion 01 rental
. ot!lc:o.

-day=Sa"'le"'s"'·==="'u"'o- :~:; ::- ~~ex: ~1·and~·":2~bed"':'",...•m--a-.pts-.

=

lLC 74Q-6E7~04t2

Chapmanville scoreless the
rest of the game.
Point Pleasant was runner
uf in the CliiSS AA division
o state tournament play
during the 2007-2008 sea- ,
son.
The Black Knights look
to get their first season and
home win against Roane
County today at 4:30 p.m.

:

at

Counl"' living· 3-56R,
2-3 BA on poaperty. .

AJqulr&amp;d.
or

Many

floor plans! Easy

Financing! We own the
bank.

Call

,today!

861&gt;-215·5774
GOII1 Funds available
F•rst time· buyers who
oWn land or family land
·D- down no closlng cost
your lancj. is your credit

877-31Q-2577

·AA" Country living

assistance.
Equal Housing
Opportunity
TOOt 419-526~0.66
~This i11Stitution ~ an
Equal Opportun~
· Provid!ir and Employe
. .~

3 or 4 8ed1'9Qm 2 Bath
Owner will Flnai'\Ctl
Call to be ~re Qualified

74G-423·9n8
'Tho Proc!Q"'ille
Oittore~·

M
St and a deed Is all you
~~ alill\l, e•ec. e&lt;&gt;nd. ~~~----!'ugh . miles. weN matn· 2aR APT.Ciose to Hot·
need to Own your dream
tainod $2000.00
zor Hospllal on SR t 60
hOme. Coli Now•
Jot Aeration Motors re- 304·937·2343.
CIA. (740) 441·0194
Freedom Homes
.
888-565-0167
patred. new &amp;. rebuin 10 ~~~~--~~ Apartm9nt available now Spacious
seconti'third ~~~.:;;;;;;:.;;;;....,"""""
stock. Call Ron Evans. 2007 PT Cruiser 46,000 Aiverbend
Apts.
New flOor
apt
overloQking
1·800-53 7-9528.
miles
$7500
080. Hav&lt;&gt;n MI. Now acoet&gt;t· Gallipolis City Park and
256-6877 or2S6·12E1
in~!
ael&gt;ticallons
lor Rivvr. l R. den. I~
Fo
(4)
hot 1 b
HUD-subsidized,
""" Kitchen-dining area with
ur
perton ,
" · 99 Honda EX c:oupo Bedroom Apls. Utll~los al !lOW ~lances &amp; A
Jnllo'l/ Fin..odal
on !jOOd shape, several 1851&lt; {newer engill8 35k) ineluded. Based on 30% cupbOards, 3 BR. 2
new parts. Leasure Bay exctllent , ,
cooditton ol adJ~ted Income. Catt baths,
laund!'1
area. A~nlln~:·
Full·lime
~~ ~~~~-~ater and $4200 call 74Q-645-5896 30t-882-3t2t . availallle $900 per montll. Call posilioo ·_busy ac080 call ~·-675,2"'".
""" 5 pm
~ Senior and O..Oillerl «5·2325 or U6-&lt;1'25
• &lt;OUII~og ot!lc:o on Galipo~
~
lis for lmmedllto employpeopto.
Tara
TownhOUOA mern. AC&lt;:OUI1tlng degree
0 t Pontloc Sunil"' $3200
Apartments - 2BR, t .5 and o•porie""" AJquir&amp;d.
"'
080, 01 Chl)'$ler
~~~~ bat!\. baCk petiO. pool , Mus! havv !jOOd orvan·
"'""'"Wiii..,.&amp;T;i;o;i;luy~.... bring
S3200 oeo.
I
playground. (trash . ..,,.. lzatlooal · skills and lhe
..
256·6169
GATED
&amp; AFFORD- ago,
water
. pd.) ability to . work .lndopond,
Absolute Tap Dollar · sllABlE! Towmouse apart- $42SI,.,nl.
$42!i/sec . ontty · with strong anen·
ver/gold
cotns.
any 1\•lio..'t lmp.&gt;on\h' Cars. f""11 ments.
and/Or · smatl dep. Caii740.367·0S47
!ton to def&amp;;~l. Please

-..!IO!!!!IO!!!!IO!!!!IO!!!=e

10Kf14KI18K
elry, dental

1935

.
proo I/mmt

\Js

Sa·

gold jew- ~~~
tk•nd~&amp;.C'Il\''·~)~~r)., houses tor rent CAll
gold,
h •nh.&amp; l111..m:'. fl•r h)o.uns~ 74().441 - t111 for ap!)lt·
pre ~lt.I.(&gt;~I.Jl'?ton V-'J5
' catfoti &amp; Information.

cur"'"cy.

·

.

Houaes For Rent •
Sl99/nt.''

..&amp;

l&gt;e\1.

~

1

nallipolisaccountantC

halh , ~

sets,
dia·
Wflltt To 1uy
Fum1shed apartment 2nd H11.nt Rtpo~' l~G- &lt;klwn 1~
mendS. MTS Coin Shop.
A.Vf!. upstairs all utilltle~ ) tUN. sq
1 flu 11 ,; 1 n ~~
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· Want to buy Junk Cars, paid 1BR No Pets GaUl~ lUJ)..b.))..N.&amp;bo.\ R0 ) 7
pol~. 446-2542
caii74Q-388-0884
pols. 44'6-9523
•

wR

send resume ar'ld refer·
ences to
g_
ma!l.com
or mail to CLA 101. PO
BoK 469. Gallipotis. OH

45e31

�---.,.-

•

www.myd ''PI llinel.com

Tuesday, Mareh 24. aoog

«ribune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

No. 2 Scarlet Knights cruise past Auburn; Purdue avenges UNC
PISCATAWAY. N.J. (AP) Epipbanny Prince scored 27 points
liOd seventh-seeded Rutgers beat
No. 2 seed Auburn 80-52 on
Monday night in the second round
of the NCAA t~¥~tDament.
The Scarlet Knights advanced to
Oklahoma City to play Purdue in
the regional semifinals Sunday .
Rutgers (21-12) has made it out of
the second round five straight
years.
Rutgers benefited from playing
at home in the NCAAs for the first
time since 200 I. Seniors Kia
Vaug)m and Heather Zurich
wouldu •t let their final game on
campus end in defeat. Vaughn had
15 points and II rebounds and
Zurich added 12 points to lead four
Scarlet Knights in pouble figures.
DeWanna Bonner~ srored 17. to
lead Auburn (30-4). which saw
another season end in disappointment.
Pl.uiE IS, NoRnt CARouHA 70
CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. (AP)
- Lindsay Wisdom-Hylton and
Brittany Rayburn scored 18 points
each to lead five Purdue players in
double digits.
The Boilermakers (24-10). who
lost to North Carolina twice in the
last three NCAA tournaments.
advanCed to the regional semifinals for the third time in four years.
Lakisha Freeman scored 16
points for Purdue. and FahKara
Malone .and Danielle Campbell 12
apiece.
. North Carolina (28-7) had dominated the series between these
teams coming in·and had won the
past three overall. The Tar Heels
failed to reach the regional semifinals for the first time in five years.
ltalee ~ucas led the Tar Heels
with 21 points. and Jessica Breland
added 15. Senior forward
Rashailda McCants finished with
six =ts on 3-for-15 shooting.
UURGK 65, GoNzAGA 60 .
SEATTLE (AP) - Shavonte
Zellous scored nine of her 24
•

points in the final 4 minutes. and
Pittsburgh
capitalized
on
Gon2aga's youthful mistakes in the
closing minutes.
The 12th-seeded Bulldogs made
life extremely difficult for the No.
4 s.eed Pmthers. but it was Zellous
and Pitt's experience coming
through at the end.
Zellous scored on a pair of drives off Gonzaga turnovers in the
final 2 minutes then hit a pair of
free throws to put the Panthers up
63-60 with 15.9 seconds left after
another Gonzaga mistake. When
Janelle Bekkering's 3-pointer
missed with 6 seconds left, the
Panthers were beaded to the
regional semifinals for the second
straight year.
OHio ST.u 54,
''sses
PI $1;uE 58
COLUMBUS (AP) - Jantel
Lavender had 20 points and Ohio
State scored its fmal 10 points on
free throws.
.
The Buckeyes (29-5) advanced
to the regional senilllnal to meet
Stanford on Saturday.
Star Allen added 12 points and
10 rebounds, saving her best for
last. She rebounded a missed free
throw with 15 seconds left and
then added two Clinching free
throws for Ohio State, which has
woo 10 in a row and 15 of 17.
Tysheka Grimes scored 20 of her
·22 points in the o~ning half for
Mississippi State (23-10). which
was seeking the schoors first trip
ever to the Sweet 16. Alexis Rack
aQded 19 points for · the Lady
Bulldogs.
s - 77, SAN Duo ST• .g
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Freshman
Nnemkadi Ogwumike dominated
inside with· career highs of 27
points and 13 rebounds to lead the
Cardinal.
The next road trip for Stanford,
which has won 18 straight games.
will be across San Francisco Bay
to Berkeley for the regional semifinals .

Hall of Farner Stallworth joins
Steelers ownership group

The Cardinal (3 1-4) is forging a
new identity without Candice
Wiggins. the All-American guard
who left after carrying Stanford to
last year ·s national cbampionsbip
game. a 64-481oss to Tennessee.
Ohio
This Cardinal team i~ deep and
big. with Ogwumik.e and PdC'-10
State
Player of lhe Year Jayne Appel
guar:d
anchoring one of the counlry 's best
Samantha
frontcourts.
P~ahali$
AllllOM Sm£ 83.
(21)
.
Fl.-STAn 58
waves to
DULUTH. Ga. (AP) - DanieUe
the crowd
Orsillo's 3-pointer gave Arizona
to cete- ·
State the lead with 32 se~.-onds left.
brate as·
Followillg Orsillo"s 3. Mara
Ohio .
Freshour missed a 3-point attempt
State tJI!at
for third-seeded Florida State with
Mississlpp
22 seconds . remaining. Briann
~ State 64January, who' was slowed by foul
58 in the
trouble and a sore ankle in the
second-,
game. Kat~ Engelbrecht and
IQIJnd :
Orsl1lo each added two free throws
women's
for the Sun Devils in the final 20
NCAA .
seconds to protect the lead.
.
college
Sixth-seeded Arizona State (25basketball
S) will play the winner of
tournaTuesday's Texas A&amp;M-Minnesota
ment
gllQle on Sunday in Trenton, NJ.
game
Freshour led Florida State (26-8)
Monday in
with 15 points. Courtney Ward
Columbus
added 12 points.
CALJFOIIUo 99, YIIGIUo 73
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ashley
Walker scored 20 of her careerhigh-tying 32 points in the fust
half, and California used its strong
inside game to· advance lo the
NCAA tournament's final 16 for
the fii'St time in school history. .
Devanei Hampton had 22 points
and II rebounds and junior Alexis
Gray-Lawson added 22 points for · YAMW u 74, KAf!IAS Sr. &amp;1
between Maryland and Utah .
the fourth-seeded Bears (27-6). ALBl:JQU~QUE, N.M. (AP)
Ashley Sweat led the fifth-seed- ·
who advanced to the Trenton -:- JenruteJ:Risper~_ac~r- ·ed Wildcats (25-8) with 17 points
Regional se.mifinals Sunday in high 27 pomts and Christma Wtrth while Marlies Gipson scored 16
New Jersey. They·n play the win- added 24 to lead fourth-seeded and s 1 L · h d 10
h&lt;1 e~ ebmng . a
·
.
ner of Tuesday's . game between Vanderbilt beat past.Kansas State.
Connecticut and Florida.
The
Commodores · (26- 8 ) . Vanderbtlt ~on twtce at The Pit
Monica Wright scored 26 points advanced to the semifinals .o f the . m last season s NCAA tournament .
for fifth-seeded Virginia (24-10), · Raleigh regional, where they'll Now. the Commodores are 4-0
seeking its first trip to the regional play next weekend a~ainst the win- over the past two years m
semifinals since 2000.
ner of Tuesday mght's contest All)uquerque.

the career wins list and his ·having him pitch' that year.
3,116 strikeouts ranks 15th
Eventually. both sides
overall. He won more than agreed that surgery was best
20 games three times from and he had it on June 23.
fmmPageBl .
2001 through 2004.
'~I talked to him about a
PmSBURGH (AP) .- Steelers Hall of Fame wide
All th11t may not be week ago." Dr. Craig
receiver John Stallworth is among three new partners added nitely remember that, but I enough for him to get to the Morgan. who performed the
operation to repair his right
to Pittsburgh chairman Dan Rooney's ownership group, would say three champi- Hall of Fame.·
onships
is
a
pretty
big
deal,"
But there ·s much more on btceps tendon and labrum.
one that may expand further before it is finalized m seversaid Yankees outfielder his resume: an 11-2 postsea- said Monday. "He said his
al months.
Johnny Damon, a member ' son record, the best of any shoulder felt fine . He's just
Rooney and son Art Rooney II, the Steelers' president, . of
the 2004 Red Sox. "It
have added six partners to help them acquire all or part the was a nice career. The writ- pitcher with at least 10 deci- enjoying being with his
shares held by Dan Rooney ·s.four brothers. The three new ers will think about it in a sions. with a 2.23 ERA in family. And the other thing
Jq career starts. He also was he told me was he wasn't
partners were approved Monday by NFL owners.
.
few years if he's Hall (of co-MVP of the 2001 World quite sure he wanted to put
The restructuring agreement was finalized several Fame) material. He defimo.ntbs before the Steelers won their record sixth Super nitely took advantage of Series with Randy Johnson the time commitment and
while in Arizona. ·
do four to six hours of exerBowl last month and was required to meet NFL rules that a ·what he was given."
Tben
there
was
his
focus.
cises
every day. which is
primary owner have at least a 30 percent stal\e in a team.
The bloody sock from the Red Sox manager Terry what's required to come
The Rooney family agreement originally called for the World Series is now in the
Franoona rarely spoke with . back to pitch.''
transaction to take J?lace by March 31. but that deadline Hall of Fame.
Schilhn~ was 9-8 with a
was pus~ed baclc U.nlll May because of the possible addition · "It was freezing, raining. him the day he pitched.
the
better,"
3.87
ERA m 2007 when he
"The
surlier.
of other mvestors.
cold as hell. and the guy just Franoona said. "The few SJ?I'nt s.even weeks on the
bad open surgery on his times where he did speak, I dtsabled list with shoulder
Boston designated remember thinkin11. 'He's tendinitis. But he was 3-0
possible in order to take the ankle:
David
Ortiz satd. "A · not ready to pitch.""
hitter
with a 3.00 ERA in the
start on the Giro."
lot
of
people
come
up
to
me
Schilhng's
shoulder
postseason.
This · was Armstrong·s
and ask. me. 'Hey. be wus injury came to light early in
"(He) never backed
first stage race in Europe bleeding for real~' I'll tell
fromPageBl
since winning the 2005 you what, man. He showed February 2008 whe.n he dis- down from · any chalclosed on his blog that he lenge :· Epstein said. "One
Tour. Armstrong started his
"Toward the end of the comeback
me
a
lot
of
guts.
I
bad
a
.lot
and the team disagreed . of the things people didn't
at the Tour Down
race people started getting Under in Australia in of res~t for Curt."
ubout the best way to treat realize about Schill is that
excited, a bit of wind, some January, where he finished
Scbtlling finished with a it. He preferred surgery be was reully motivat~d by
hills and everybody wanti- 29th overall, 49 seconds 216-146 record and a 3.46 while the team wanted him fear. Fear of failure."
ng to be at the front," . be behind winner Allan Davis ERA. He is tied for 80th on to rehabilitate it in hopes of · He wasn't afrnid to
said. "A couple of guys of
Australia. He ihen fincrashed in front of me, I ished seventh in the Tour of
crossed my wheel. then I hit California in February.
them and over the top."
On Saturday, Armstrong
Armstrong was.first taken raced
in the Milan-San
to Rio Carrion hospital in
Remo
cycling
classic and
,Paleneia. then to the hospital in Valladolid. In his finished 125tb, 8 minutes ,
statement, Armstrong said 19 seconds behind winner
he bad "been lucky 10 avoid Mark Cavendish.
The mainly tlat first stage
one of the most common
of
the Castilla and Leon
cycling injuries" in his 17covered I09 miles from
year career.
"It bas been a pity to lose Paredes de Nava to
Lance because we see him Baltanas. It was won by
with desire of doing a ~ Joaquin Sobrino Maninei
preparation in this race," of Burgos Moournental in 4
. said Alberto Contador. hours, 31 minutes, 53 secArmstrong ·s teammate aJJd onds aftera sprint finish. He
biggest rival for the role of was followed by David
team leader. "Now ~ only I Vitoria of Rock Racing and
can suppOrt him and wish Jose Joaquin Rojas of
him to recover as soon as · Caisse d'Epargne.

Schilling

Lance

express his opinions .
In July 2007, he said on
HBO's ·"Costas Now" that
the refus&lt;Jls of Barry
Bonds and Mark McGwire
to· address speculation
about steroids use are tantamount to admissions .
Lust September. he_ said
during a radio &lt;ippeatance
· that former teammate
Manny Rumirez "was
alw ays kind and nice f?r
the most purl. but he d
show up the next day and
say. 'I'm through with this
te!lm.I,.want out now:··
Now .Schilling is out leaving behind a distinguished career and movine
on to a life away from
spothght.
"The game was here
long before I was . and will
be here long after I am
gone." he wrnte on hi s
blog. "The only thing I
hope I did was never put in
question my love for the
game. or my passion to be
counted \lU when it mattered most. I did everything I wuld to win every
tune I wu s hunded the
bull." ·

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
P.LUS YOUR AD N..O.W ONLINE

www.mydlilytriblme.coin
.mydlilysenllnel.com

www.mydlilyregistef.com

JUSl.SA.Y

CHARGE 11.1

OfP»H~

Mowyaucan how bor*rsud orophlcs

),(

Monday thru Friday

Gcldecltoyourclossllledods
. . . . .1'1 $3.00/perad
GrapNcs SOt for small

8:00 ·a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

·---,
···------~~

'''

~,\

N&gt;lishing -

lhoriglttlo .....

rejoct or CIIICtlany

ad otllly - Errors Must
~OIIaclonlho

~

.. ,

_,.,

..

~

.

......

To Help G4lt R•po•~• ..

Olllo 'lalloy

~

S1.00for-lorQe

•" StiNt.___.
WWt&amp;wa, • .,.. •
•illtiM•I'MIIIMAIIItte•Awllt'l&amp;l tcltU

HO~W TO WRITE AN AD
Slice
'WI Ads
. , S~wM&amp;~c~· lachllle T"-e n-

'&lt;

1.;1.

'

Yard Mowing an&lt;! v.o
!rimming. Reliable and
d&lt;&gt;J)en&lt;lable . No yard 10
!!NO~T~IC~E~O~H;;;IO~V;;;;A;;ll"!E!"Y big
or
to
small.
.............
·-

co.

c:r:40-:2~56=-62~51E=:: ·--~.;;;;~;...;;;;;;;;;
Col....
Golllpollo

PUBliSHING
·rocommends that · you do
Olh.r S. uiua
business with people you
know. and NOT to send Pet
CremaliC71$.
Call
rnQtiOY througll ltl&lt;l mail T4&lt;J.4A6·3745

Call Today! 740-446-4367
H!00-.1 tol-0452

. unti.l you have il'lvestigat~
ing tTl~ otklring.

.l.cc~ ~r Atcrd-

res

hftebeen
plactdln Ids 11
tilt Glitupolls

Dally nlbUne
must be plc:kecl
within 30 days.
Any plcttnS
that ere not
plcMd up will be
diSCIIded. .

PfMaaionol S. •i=lt
TURNED DDWN ON
SOCIAL SECI.IRITY SSI
No Fee lJr&gt;less We Win!

(Carvers Close To Home)
g81111ipollac1~tgt.ld!.l

lllY CQunci !Qr ~
Colleges and Schooe 12148

t -588-se2'-3345

541&gt;tic . pumping ~lfia ---;;.-..~;;Pw;;~;;;;;~
Co. QH an&lt;! Mason Ca. ':
WV. Ron Evans Jack· Female Hus.i&lt;y 2 yrs old.
SOl\ OH. 800-~7~95&lt;8
APR registere&lt;! all wllil&amp;
~ !lieg. 740-2()8·71150

t- ._;

the

Wo

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
Trai~rs

........AI.
....
oti~qu;;•;..;;;;;;;

-~
304-615-

3168

~'No s~

Roundup
fromPageBl

board.
Beside . . the hits by
McClung and Allen, Titus
Ruuelll, D.W. Herdman,
and Tyson Jones also made
hits for the Red. Black, and
White. .
CHAI'tiANVILLI 4,
Chapmanville 's Jordan
PoiNT
PLIASANT 1
Banks contributed to three
of the team's 10 hits, c.....,.,.,.... aoo 110 o - • 10
inCluding an RBI which 2Point Pituln1 010 000 0 - ·1 $ 3
added to Ch11pmanville's
lead during the game. C~PMANVIlLE (1-0): ~ - Pojlorlo.
Johnson ($) . Ryan Bonaon (7)
Easterling also added two C!llg
ond Jordon ~Irk.
·
.hits to the team's \()tal .
POINT PlEASANT · (G-1 ): Brock
Eric Roberts came in to MeCiutlg, Eric: Roberlt (0) and B.J.
pitch durin~ ·the sixth lloyd.
WP - Poporia: lP - McClung.
mning. allowmg only two HR: C - Jooll Eaotorllng (filii Inning,
hits,
while
holding · .,. on. two out).

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

Carmiehl8l

74:tl-4~46-~382=-5~s:::

2007

Molorc)dll
H.D.

soft-tall,

:::~~~ip~'S'~~~:
To....,.n Hll

I BR upartnltnl ll\l' rtnl
dnwnto,.·n

Poinl

~~~ear

Pk~to.\Utl.

AA·-~~~
.11U~ .IW-OI6.1 .

Hobby / Hvnl &amp; Sport

304-675-5156.

GUN SHOW &amp; SAlE •
GAlliPOliS. OH Holiday Inn Sal 9-5 &amp; Sun
A.....
9·3 Mar. 28 &amp; 29 State ~~...;~~--"'""'
Rou te

7

$4.00

Ilea""

Fro nt

S1ght

0(lity

Adm . 01 Pontiac Grand

Tables $25 GT. white, 95000 mi.

security dePosit AJqUire&lt;!.

Possibility of rental

74Q-339-9492

Promotioos , tra clean, S4950 or make 2br apt. Rodney area. No

pets. o.p!Rel
74tl-446-1271 .
709-1617

offer. 740-388·0332
~

7~170

tumishacl
and
unlur·
nisht&lt;l. and houses in
Pom&lt;lroy and Middleport.

rio pots. 74G-99l!·22 18
t BR Apt WID hookups.
satellite . TV incl. w1rent.
PriJt .close to hOSpitaL Call

ex·

$t1Mo-Youtnt
At
V.lloy View Aponments
800 Srate Route 325
Thurman. OhiO .tS685
1·2 Bedroom ~rtmenls
with apPliances tumlsh&amp;d
On site ~und"' tacility.
Call lor details or plcl! up
applicalion 01 rental
. ot!lc:o.

-day=Sa"'le"'s"'·==="'u"'o- :~:; ::- ~~ex: ~1·and~·":2~bed"':'",...•m--a-.pts-.

=

lLC 74Q-6E7~04t2

Chapmanville scoreless the
rest of the game.
Point Pleasant was runner
uf in the CliiSS AA division
o state tournament play
during the 2007-2008 sea- ,
son.
The Black Knights look
to get their first season and
home win against Roane
County today at 4:30 p.m.

:

at

Counl"' living· 3-56R,
2-3 BA on poaperty. .

AJqulr&amp;d.
or

Many

floor plans! Easy

Financing! We own the
bank.

Call

,today!

861&gt;-215·5774
GOII1 Funds available
F•rst time· buyers who
oWn land or family land
·D- down no closlng cost
your lancj. is your credit

877-31Q-2577

·AA" Country living

assistance.
Equal Housing
Opportunity
TOOt 419-526~0.66
~This i11Stitution ~ an
Equal Opportun~
· Provid!ir and Employe
. .~

3 or 4 8ed1'9Qm 2 Bath
Owner will Flnai'\Ctl
Call to be ~re Qualified

74G-423·9n8
'Tho Proc!Q"'ille
Oittore~·

M
St and a deed Is all you
~~ alill\l, e•ec. e&lt;&gt;nd. ~~~----!'ugh . miles. weN matn· 2aR APT.Ciose to Hot·
need to Own your dream
tainod $2000.00
zor Hospllal on SR t 60
hOme. Coli Now•
Jot Aeration Motors re- 304·937·2343.
CIA. (740) 441·0194
Freedom Homes
.
888-565-0167
patred. new &amp;. rebuin 10 ~~~~--~~ Apartm9nt available now Spacious
seconti'third ~~~.:;;;;;;:.;;;;....,"""""
stock. Call Ron Evans. 2007 PT Cruiser 46,000 Aiverbend
Apts.
New flOor
apt
overloQking
1·800-53 7-9528.
miles
$7500
080. Hav&lt;&gt;n MI. Now acoet&gt;t· Gallipolis City Park and
256-6877 or2S6·12E1
in~!
ael&gt;ticallons
lor Rivvr. l R. den. I~
Fo
(4)
hot 1 b
HUD-subsidized,
""" Kitchen-dining area with
ur
perton ,
" · 99 Honda EX c:oupo Bedroom Apls. Utll~los al !lOW ~lances &amp; A
Jnllo'l/ Fin..odal
on !jOOd shape, several 1851&lt; {newer engill8 35k) ineluded. Based on 30% cupbOards, 3 BR. 2
new parts. Leasure Bay exctllent , ,
cooditton ol adJ~ted Income. Catt baths,
laund!'1
area. A~nlln~:·
Full·lime
~~ ~~~~-~ater and $4200 call 74Q-645-5896 30t-882-3t2t . availallle $900 per montll. Call posilioo ·_busy ac080 call ~·-675,2"'".
""" 5 pm
~ Senior and O..Oillerl «5·2325 or U6-&lt;1'25
• &lt;OUII~og ot!lc:o on Galipo~
~
lis for lmmedllto employpeopto.
Tara
TownhOUOA mern. AC&lt;:OUI1tlng degree
0 t Pontloc Sunil"' $3200
Apartments - 2BR, t .5 and o•porie""" AJquir&amp;d.
"'
080, 01 Chl)'$ler
~~~~ bat!\. baCk petiO. pool , Mus! havv !jOOd orvan·
"'""'"Wiii..,.&amp;T;i;o;i;luy~.... bring
S3200 oeo.
I
playground. (trash . ..,,.. lzatlooal · skills and lhe
..
256·6169
GATED
&amp; AFFORD- ago,
water
. pd.) ability to . work .lndopond,
Absolute Tap Dollar · sllABlE! Towmouse apart- $42SI,.,nl.
$42!i/sec . ontty · with strong anen·
ver/gold
cotns.
any 1\•lio..'t lmp.&gt;on\h' Cars. f""11 ments.
and/Or · smatl dep. Caii740.367·0S47
!ton to def&amp;;~l. Please

-..!IO!!!!IO!!!!IO!!!!IO!!!=e

10Kf14KI18K
elry, dental

1935

.
proo I/mmt

\Js

Sa·

gold jew- ~~~
tk•nd~&amp;.C'Il\''·~)~~r)., houses tor rent CAll
gold,
h •nh.&amp; l111..m:'. fl•r h)o.uns~ 74().441 - t111 for ap!)lt·
pre ~lt.I.(&gt;~I.Jl'?ton V-'J5
' catfoti &amp; Information.

cur"'"cy.

·

.

Houaes For Rent •
Sl99/nt.''

..&amp;

l&gt;e\1.

~

1

nallipolisaccountantC

halh , ~

sets,
dia·
Wflltt To 1uy
Fum1shed apartment 2nd H11.nt Rtpo~' l~G- &lt;klwn 1~
mendS. MTS Coin Shop.
A.Vf!. upstairs all utilltle~ ) tUN. sq
1 flu 11 ,; 1 n ~~
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· Want to buy Junk Cars, paid 1BR No Pets GaUl~ lUJ)..b.))..N.&amp;bo.\ R0 ) 7
pol~. 446-2542
caii74Q-388-0884
pols. 44'6-9523
•

wR

send resume ar'ld refer·
ences to
g_
ma!l.com
or mail to CLA 101. PO
BoK 469. Gallipotis. OH

45e31

�Plge B4 • The Daily Sentinel
..

Food
Scol'lem CJoo Solut1oos. -

Servil."t

·Worker

Inc.
a
OQt-I'Or-proht

parl'brne. On-&lt;1111
Apply tn perchenuc;aJ ~IJII at !:ha Ur.. ~a•Sit.., of

~

treatment

-?

_,oulotltoridllnlo
theM \oulgtt KOIIICNiic

pnva~ 'or SocJe~o

~RI;;,o,;G;;;r•;;,",;;;,
de ...,...,!!!!!!!!!!!
agoocy rs see1&lt;11rg a full ~ WCiftlod • G.Mral
twn@

'~~~rift tuwtntkts tn Galba Need ~ ladles ro sell
County. Job rl&lt;Jhos rn· A... on call 7.tO....W.S..:.33SS

. r:iJdo. but nor lwnil!!rl "' ~~~~~~~~
~ent
treatment Local compan"V seektng
plannlllQ..
tndlvu:lua1
·COUn~tng, group COUI1·
sehng,
'case
marlagS·
I'Y1el"lt ~ cns~s tntervoo
bOO. SO\JIIIern OhiO Solu-

tor an tn·

appil&lt;:-l'l.nl~ tor me posttion ot btll'utg cterk &amp;.

w-

Get A. Jump

on

Complete Senehts
Par;l&lt;aQ&gt;l

hrs or more a week) at
ArQUtSthOns Frne Jewelrv
15 t

2nd Ave

lnfoC1S10n namW one o f

Ohio must. computer knQ.wl45631 . You may also talc edge needfld ConflOI$·
to
r40-44t'-29 ro
Of seur Med1a IS an Equal
&amp;-mail
to: Oppo1tuMy
Employer
Call
304-399-Y603
or
t;scai@OIIbh.org.
Dead- · Fax
resume
to

Pleznntv.ley ttnpiW
qo"'==~

1510 \'IIIey lk, Pt. PINsHt. wv 155.50
1M call (lCM) 675-4340
. Fu to (304) 615-691$ Of
illpply oot-liM illt WWW-!IIf,cq

R.LHOlLON

Sunset
Homes

tRUCKING

Dump truck
•

seMCe
Wt do •i•e••ts

5

Jo

l)uel·~ .

!

sidioc. ttt.

un

748-742-3411

comp l~e- M:rYk~

thang~'. ~mall

Classifieds!
1----'-----'

.idvertise. your ;.
ess . Qn th.is page··
.

, 'for as loW as

.

.

~

,

•'

AUTISM AWARENESS
&amp; SUPPORT GROUP

March 25, 2009
3 p.m.
. Wellness Center
Aerobics Room

. co.

•

Rtsilhatill
•fmEd. tes
t7*llt9l-5M

3 NT

FRANK a EARNEST

.t WA/11110 TO 6fT }.
; ~YfOAtj.f~6fNIC 1)06.
BUT .t FOcJNl&gt; · ~

··-~

P~IG.E

WAS ALSo

tl0Tt41N6 TO

'S

Harlro:Od CDileCry ... hi ....

Dr. William Capehart

www..tflliku

·BARNEY

a

10-..

naiac in .....,., I ""'JI(:( p!Kl!llo ol

plolting
~·
This week ... nloal&lt;ing lllrt'lorsos. In

an li'Ctlllt

'.

'IUdion. ..,_,·s rebid

is I reverse U IQrt:es rMpOI tder !0 go 10
tile tloaa le&gt;4el tO show pnlttonce lor
oponer's first-filmed !Wit.
Also •• rt'IIISt is

Cell: 740-41&amp;-5047
email:
jrahadfrm«taol.com

vw~,c.l-\ "~ ~&gt;~tc.~~.~

l~ ~I'(T'&lt;·I\1.~ ~~

Of'F06... , _ - -

1-il'ff\ 1&lt;\K t\GII.'N ~C.Wi
C.IWK( Of PRELl Pl\l&gt;.iiO!t..

Metal &amp;

CI .ASSIFIEDS

,;~·~:~:~~:~.~s

'~!:t~~' $©\t~lA-~ £~Ss

BIG NATE
Lilli'¥" , lW\tf

'"*"· Mwb

IMl

lm:IIJt: eve!)'

eral new· venues that you never would
have tried previously.

NOTICES

F~

lil,.ured
b tinmks

ROIERT
IISSEll
CIISTIUCDOI

Notie&lt;~ is hereby. given Each bid must be acthat the annual meet· companied by either a
lng olthe shareholders bid bond In an amount
ot · Farmers
Bane· of 100% ot the bid
&amp;hares, Inc. will be held amount with a surety
• N~w Homes
at
the
Middleport satisfactory lo the
Churc)l of Christ Fam· · aforesaid
Meigs
• Garages
lly Lite Center, 437 County Commission·
• Complete
Main Street. Middle· ers or by cartilied
Remodeling
port, Ohio, on the third check. cashiers check,
wedneacley ol Aprll15. or letter ol credit upon
2009, at 4:00 p.m. ac- a solvent bank In the
cording to Its bylaws. amount ol not less
Stop &amp; Compare
for the purpoae ol than 10% ol the bid
electing directors and amount In lavor ol the
the transaction olauch aforesaid
Meigs
other buslnau as may County CommlsslonCORNER STONE
·properly come balore ers. Bid Bonds shall be
said meeting.
: accompanied by Proof CONSTRUCTION
Jo Ann Crisp. Socre· ol Authority ol the olfl·
lary
cial or agent signing
Roofing. Siding,
(3) 24 (4) 5. 14
the blOnd.
Soffit. Decks.
Bids shall be sealed
Doors. Windows ..
and marked as Bid lor
Electric, Plumbing,
·Public Notice
Syracuse Ball Field
Drywall, .
Lighting Project and
Remodeling,
Room
'NOTICE TO CONTRAC· mailed or delivered to:
Additions
TORS
Meige County CommlsSealed proposals tor sioners
Local Contractor
the Syracuse Ball Field Courthouse
740-367-()544
''~~~i:~ Lighting ProjeCt· Meigs Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Free Eatlmelea
11
County Ohio As per AHention ol bidders is
740·367-()536
spoclllcatlona In bid called to all ol the repackel will be received quirements contained
by the Meigs County in this bid packet, par·
Commissioners at their ticularly to ths Federal
ottlce at the Court· Labor Standards Provl·
house , Pomeroy, Ohio sions and Davls·Bacon
45769 until 1:00 'p.m.. Wages. various insurAprll 2. 2009 and then anco · requirements.
al1 :15 p.m. at said of· various equal opportu·
Ilea opened · and rood nlly provisions, and the
aloud tor the following. requirement lor a pay·
Specifications: and bid ment blOnd and per·
forms may be secured lormance bond lor.
J&amp;L
at the ottlco of Meigs 100% ol tho contact.
Construction
county Commission· price. No bidder may
era,
Courthouse, withdraw hia bid within • VInyl Siding
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 thirty (30) .daya aHer · Replacement
Phone 740.992·2895. A tho actual dale ol the
Windows
deposit ot 0 dollars will opening ther•ot. The
·Rooting
·be required lor each . Meigs s County Com·
set of plans and specl~ missioners reserve the ·Decks
II co lions. check mode right to reject any or all • Garages
• Pole Buildings
payable to -. The lull bids .
amount will be re· Mick Davenport
• Room Additions
turned within thirty (30) Meigs County CommlsOwner:
days after receipt of sioners
James Keesee II
bids.
(3) 19, 20, 24
742·2332

140-992·1m

cutt comment or spur-of-the-moment
offering from a friend will serve to forge
tt'l6 relationship. At the 11ery least, It wm
warm vour heart in .a way that only a pal

PEANUTS

can make happen.

cull: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
For: • Chain Link Fencing &amp; Wood
Fencing • Room Additions • Gurnges
•

'/Es. MAAM .. I'VE BEEN

OOIN6 M'1 RE6ULAR WORK

• Vinyl and Wood Siding • Roofing
Pole Bnrns • Putio 's, Porches and Decks

GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- Vour mind
i$ Sharp and your muscles strong, so
don't let your Industriousness 00 to
w•ste oh useless activities. A im fo r
achieving objeetlves that demand excel·

l-IE LOVES
COLORIN6
BOOKS ..

NO, MAAM, I I-IAVEN'T
BEEN WASTIH6 M'i
liME COLORIN6 IN
A COLORIJ.I6 BOOK ..

fence ol purl)&lt;)Se.
CANCER (J upe 21.July 22) - The abili·
ty to make pot&amp;ntlal prospects want to
deal wllh you may come more easily
than normal. It'll be that spec ial way you

MilE W. •CII,IWia
~723 9 Riebel

dlspla.y latent and

Roud. long Bottom. OH

Cetl: 740·~ lf&gt;.l834
Nlll uflilu! ti.l wl!h Mi~e Mat'l'um Rooting&amp;: Remodeling
f'l'ft 11•"-«~

· 15+ vean ex rienct

. Johnson·~

Guttering

BOY
,cow
; . .:. .;.;. and
.______
,

tree

Servia!
GoUipolls, OH 45631

Seamless Gunors
Rooting, Siding. Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded

ln.•urod,Frte

Eslloniotos, 20)'rs Exp.
740-441·9387
Rkk J..RSOR·Owntr

740·653·9657

,...,..._..,..._____..., r------.,...--,
I'M SC~I!ED. COW. IF
THE ECONOMY OOESI(T
PICKUP SOON. WILL
..,.._-..!''~HAVE TO SELl.
THE Fl&gt;/lM?
IS
WHAT

'""""
H1'\!""r-~;r~~
TO US?

r------~-;,;:'1

DON'T WOQIIY,I1ECESSIONS
COME AND GO. WE .lJST
H~VE TOI1EMEMBEHHAT
IF WE I&lt;EEP OUI1 HEADS
AND DON'T PANIC,
THEN WE'LL

GET T"""'
"'"
n~IJI...Q'1...

CtJre For )!mr Tret•s '')

II

'

I

I

,,

Srutt 1.• SIIMln
ISA Ctrllfltd Arborl\il,
Crrtlfltd Ortlllmtntal &amp;:
LllndM:apt' Professklnal
liallipulls, Oil

GAR..

'I'HE MICE ~ROUNP HERE A.RE
Gri!'I'I'INGt F'REfTY !IR~ZEN

flf~P

740-44fi.l01~

Replacement

Windows und
Vinyl Siding
Spt.'Ciulists, LTD

(740) 742-2563
• Siding o Vinyl

Windows o Molal
und Shlnal• Roofs
o Uec:ks o Addillons
0 EIH·trlcal
o

Plumbing

• l,ole Horns

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
' Pmmpl und Quuliry
Work

*Reusonuble Rates
*Insured
• Experienced
References Avnilnble !
Call Gnry Sranley @

740-591-8044
Please leave messa e

.

SC'RAM -Lr:TS ANSWERS Jll:WO

Enroll - bUlge .. KioO&lt;ck -· Adjoin - GOOD ON E

"Ther&lt;O's. no way to be a perl'o!et person," the wife rold
perfectionist husband, "butrhere are a million ways
to be u GOOD ON£ .''

Iter

ARLO&amp;JANJS

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) -

Tratn("' d .1nd ln!&gt;uH•d
"' '

ditlons may do a sudden turnabout, so
be alert for fresh opponunlttes you didn't
expec;\ to happijn - espe&lt;;lally when it
comes to dullngs ol a monetary nature.
VIRGO jAug. 23·Sepl. 22) - Because
you
will be sharper than usual with

conceive a much Dener way of perform- ·
ing impor1af!l work.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - A chance
meeting mav tntroduce a new lrlendshlp
that w\H proiJe to be eliciting and stimu·
latlng. This relatlof"\Shlp might tum out to
be one ol vo ur ll)Ore tun associations .

Krlow it."dqt• ..-.ble E )I pt&gt;ru•nr;:••rl ,
I

that makes

regard to details. lhls is an esp&lt;ocially
good oay to enter lnro any kino or s;gnll·
~ant agreement. Finalize onvthing vou
have in the WO/'U .
LIBRA !Soot 23·0et 201- 0o not pur
reins on your ImaginatiOn ber:euse It is
capable ol unuSUOI deduclions and lor·
mulallons There's a chance vou mlghl

Tree Care Specialists
" \~t·

knowted~e

· you d&amp;sirabte.
lEO iJu~ 23·Aug. 221- TroubHng ton·

740-985-4141

a.

...

I I I' I

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -An otl·the-

_.AII'IYJies or
C011trete Work

740-992-697 I

MUDHI

out how to use what they are telling fou.

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

.Da,·id Lewis

_I I I I I'

You shouldn't have any trouble tigurlnQ

lll\,IIH l I Ill\

29 \'c3rs Exptrience

F CAT J E K

ARIES {March 21 -Aprilt9) - Pay atten·
tion to your hunches Of' Intuitive percep·
tions because they could be ,ex.tra sharp.

I I \1 I'
lll\liHII

bir·

low' !O form four simpl$ wQrd~.

SOme powerful lessons learned have
tlught you how to ai/Oid making those
seme mistakes again. In lhe .year ahead.
suceess ls just around the comer in sev-

$Ill per lb C•sh only

of tMe

words

av--ooor

174UI742-2S63 .

Shiplnt:'l1t ~

PUBUC

iarnm
0 foua'eatronge
r scramblod

_ _,,llorch 25, 200t

I

WOlD
GAM!

- - - - '·- - - 14111d b) CLAY R. POLLAN

Pmt is 1\"\lllifl:t.l in ~anct

EMPLOYMENT

CELEBRITY CIPI1ER

West lelds the lllldo queen against
three no-lnlnp. (Note lhat live ol lilher
by Luis Clmpos
c-.~~·•Cftlll:lld lrom ~..sDYtwncus pq~a pa.rn nwt
minor tail$.) HoW should South plan tilt
~ rer..' ~ lhtCIOI\tr SWIQ$101' ntntl
. play?
. roo.r.sc~ue · K0Q11flsD
Declarer has sev.en top tricks: rwo
spa&lt;les, tour (j&amp;monds and one club. " PC JZ JHPR CVE RSZ GVGZIIR· JSZII
Evon Wthe missing clubs split 3-2. Soulh
. ooes not have time 10 play &lt;llllhat suit. Z U Z E FRS P II Y , H. A WV X0 AZ X F
bealuse Ita would looe lw!l 5P'Ides (al ·
least). one Ilea~ end two clubs. lnsread,
ZUZEFRSPIIY PW EZHKF , JZ WSHXX
da&lt;larer must go alt81 the heart suit And
lite only sensible play lor two heart lrlcks
is to~ low to dummy's 10. SOuth must IIZUZE AZVPII ." • PUHII AOEYZIIZU
hope that West has the jack.
Take lite best ctoance lor your contract
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. · ~ God wanted women lo understand men. football
- and donl betome paranoid.
would ,..,.., have been t ttaled." • Roger Sirt'Oln ·

THE BORN LOSER
· rTII.t C.U~~t.t..\TTE~~

at-•

Now St'lling:
• Fonl &amp; Mulun:ruft
Trun~mission s
• Ah~mmr~t:l
Rcpho~cmont Short

·,

J.D. Salingw Slid. , wn lrinrl ~ a pa:a-

good 10.poilthalld.

E!H!ines.
Transt't•r C'~lst·~ &amp;

.

Forcing partner
with a reverse ·

be&lt;aU58 partner has prornlsad

Paris •

'be 119alhpolls 1\ailp Qtrib~ne
'be .joint ~leasaut l.e«f~ter
The Daily
... Sentinel

Piss

row.)
Opener's ....,.. lllltr ' iw&lt;&gt;oYtr«~e
_..., may be sloadod by lw!l or
three points, but is game-Jordng.

..

Stay Informed...

Poos

- . btl this · - COI1Iortlng your
aucticn. ·~ - - has.
sqo..t1 sys1om tloel I w'4l C~Ntr tcmor·

• Room Additions 6
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical 6
Plumbing
• Rooting GUIIers
• VInyl Sieling 6 .
Painting
• Patio and Porch

. Owners:
Jon Van Meter I
Paul Rowe

Sentil,let ·

'Piss

points. In llct, tloe simptrlollg!HI 1101 I is
thai a teVI"'t IS gllllt-lofdng. You ·
rniftrt ovortlid wlttn ft6PORller is vtr'l

t•tba&amp;a7.-

Racine, Ohio 740.247~2019

.&gt;fl....... ;

Piss

3•

.......,....... -~:shoos 18-20
pci!1tS (01 1 good 17) 'IIICI tilt portrttr·
s~o~p CXlUid toave • combined 25 or 26

Sat. ~ :O(hun · 12
1\'t' apprrt:iutr JWMr

WV036725

·l

Eooa

I •

lalting--

51'JfE:Zf AT.

Decks

'"4-~;.;"

43

Opening lead: • Q

CUstom Homo: Building
S""'l Fr•n"' Bui~
Building. Remodeling
Gon«aat&lt;poir

17-10)517~ .

Poos
Poos
Poos

l •

Mon· Frl
B:OO '"" · ~: 30 pm
iiNS .H

• ' 4

6 K QJ

..... _

16

~1dal•

C·m

Stth Clll'ltton
(740\ ;; 17-5&lt;132
J•lf St&lt;tbtm

We ~n· ll.·t and
"in it-riLe tx'~&lt;n s and
RV',,
O.Jil) 9'12-5.\+1

-

P&lt;o • roy, OW.

• 1'\&gt;Wtr WasJiina

Special Guest Speaker
Director ol Special Education
Mason County Schools
Public is encouraged to attend
Far more information please
call
PVH Outpatienl Rehabilitation
Services.
(304) 675·8639

BANKS

CONSTRUCTION

• tllllttsnplna

repl.ur.

&lt;tA·e n

DNior: Saulb
.
V\IIDenble: East-West

RtSideatill
FrH Esllmai.ts
• lawn 1\laial~

t'ngtne-

-

6 AU

LAWN CARE
C9"' udal&amp;

vil

6 I I ii !

••
• A QJIO

CUTTING EDGE

lig.h1

-

6 A K T

;;: --.....

ttll'l.:hanil· \\·ork..

Shop

A tt 't

addilioas• . ,....

(5 l'llim&gt;l
New &amp; US&lt;\! Tire&gt;.
We buy u.sc-J rin:s.
i:vrnputer wheel
;.~i gn m~nts. Wft atsn

::~;
E::
Mechauica

s4

J '

• TI 3

buiMi.

Wtttiul

...._...~.OH

hnp:/I!Gk ~ lfOc ision. cem

...

~pole

U.e--.Gmel

If K Q II T
•JC1 5!
&amp; Hl

•Q ~ll,

C...IIIIill
llo-,rool!i,

w-....,...

.._.,MC..,..YU
Ellt 2457

AH

IIQ=·-

l &amp; ll'll'l' Bara
444187
Rd.

Applv Tooav•

tollCi!ICAREQCOM

Phillip
Alder

Dirt- Ac li

pass YOU b~ 1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

740-915

·q
tor subm1ssron is :XW.-~960S
ServiCe Techn1cian pos1·
~ 4:00 pm on March 3t . ;;.;.;~~~-::::~-- hon available for diesel
: 2009. SOS is an EQUal
Ev.nlng otfk:t
ano hydraulics. Exper~·
• Opportum~
Employer
Cleaning
ew;:;e
necessary.
• that otters e:.cellent comM~ W+F 1n GallipoliS or
Heattn.'Renremenl
&amp;
~esa~ke
Benehts. Fax resume to
P9titlve
salanes
and
"'"
"'""' ·
benatits.
Call1. 30 · Spm. M·F
7~0- 446-9104 or a-mad

..

Sen&lt;! resumes to:

Don't lei t111s opportunity

GallipoliS.

1.000·611·0497

Pleasant valley is . c:urrendy ac.upcinc
resumes for 08 Registeted Nurse.
Applicants must have a cunent West
Virginia license. ~us 08 ~~~

thl::l Top 5 Employtirs lf1
tn-c State of OhiO I

Ga!hpoi!S

The Daily Sentind • P8ge B5

08 REGlmRED NURSES

SA.vtNGS

tor part t!rnij: posttiOn ( 14

phen 1&lt;.. Thomas. Execu- 9:30am..Jpm Mor'.
Fr1
nve Director, Southern musr have reltacle ~ans­
Otlio Solutions. Inc. , PO po119oon, dependat&gt;lily a

145 .

at lhe catetena. Can
rnak.e up tQ $1 0,85 per
hr

Fun &amp; Protvss1ooal
Work1ng E.rrwonment

~~~=~~~~
Now acceptalg r9SI.lmes

Change preferred.
No phone calls please.
Please submit resume.
cowr litnef and three re-t· ReceptiOrliSt
neeOEld
erences by matl to Sre· GalliPOliS area tl'rs
&lt;=~rf'

Box

1 Pav&amp;

Son uses

pro- 45631

vtding cognitive behav·
101'31 therapy and rnohva·
bona! , tnt'eNI8wtng tS pre·
hwred. WQrk!ng knowledge ot ltle Stages 01

Sode•o Rlod Somcn at
Rro Grande: Um'Verstty 1s,
now taNng apphcatlons
tor a CQOi.. Must have ex!2ene~ , appty 10 person

W. poy up ta $12.25rltr
ollet sill manilla

OriStte Doctor

=•

R ,_

www.myc' Myn IIIIIILcom

ALLEYOOP

0

Mlddle-

""""" calls please.

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

dNtdual who at rTlNttmu; n Please send rwsumes to
CLA Bv" 104 P0 Bo:c:
holds an LCOC II JJ- 469.
Galhpolts.
OH·

(,'ef15er. E;q:tertetlCe

yau.t'

H1nng FuM Ttme
PoSitiOns (2· ll pm)

111

Send r~umes to
RS 106 N. &lt;nd Ave. Middleport. 011 45 760 No

IJQrt

TM--.Isjusto

must posses ltte tonowtng. e.._cel~1t organtz-c:t
t&gt;onaJ slolls. detaored. Mr·
c-tosolt
o~
sktlls.

sto~

phone

TUnd8r, "nell M, 2001

....., •.,••hid

ac&lt;eQIInq ....,..
~ tune QflsrtKJn at
local electroniC &amp; c-eU

l-00-

~~~~~

wiw

for

-«1'-ts•to
rt
fwnMy?

CO\.IflS8Ior to wor•

tiOnS tS looking

.._..r-tJ :

~Waded ~ Gaaul

t

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

i!

I

I

t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GRIZZWELLS

Once you take aim at a target you won't
toy with altamatlves because your focus
Is sharper than usual. Oes.lrable resulls
are In the making as long as you keep
your ayes on the prize.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan, 19) Atthough a strong emotion or sudden
teeHng may dominate your desires. It
won't cloud your Judgment w htn ana lyz·
Jng what situati ons can provide the
greatest happiness and success .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fa·b. 19} - Now Is
the timejo e~~:panQ upon and develop all·
uations that could be maan!nQful to you
In materiel waYs. You are sharper than
usual In these areas, and you're likely to
ganera1t substantlall'ltuma, ·

PISCES

IFe_
b.

20-Molth 20) -

Don't

hesitate to go It alone If others don't see
things as yo u do. Your drive and lore·
eight ate particularly In tune , and you
equid derive large benel!ls from ,your

actions right now.

.11-\\Ff.' 'ffAAI AA\'t

SOUP TO NUTZ

)bU !SEE~ RI~Ut!A
A~U\tt)

ll-\ THIRS'Il/ ... Go

liP

GeT Me

a SODa ...

PSI CONSTRUCTION
H&lt;w&gt;m Additions, Ht•modellng, Metal &amp;
Roors, New Homes, Siding. Docks,
llnthroom Hemodl'ling.lk'enst'd &amp; Insured
Shln~le

WV II llill'l'&gt; I

C1 ' ll ,' H' II b .''lh{l

/ HI IJlJ ) L1. HI

••

______

I
,_

,,

�Plge B4 • The Daily Sentinel
..

Food
Scol'lem CJoo Solut1oos. -

Servil."t

·Worker

Inc.
a
OQt-I'Or-proht

parl'brne. On-&lt;1111
Apply tn perchenuc;aJ ~IJII at !:ha Ur.. ~a•Sit.., of

~

treatment

-?

_,oulotltoridllnlo
theM \oulgtt KOIIICNiic

pnva~ 'or SocJe~o

~RI;;,o,;G;;;r•;;,",;;;,
de ...,...,!!!!!!!!!!!
agoocy rs see1&lt;11rg a full ~ WCiftlod • G.Mral
twn@

'~~~rift tuwtntkts tn Galba Need ~ ladles ro sell
County. Job rl&lt;Jhos rn· A... on call 7.tO....W.S..:.33SS

. r:iJdo. but nor lwnil!!rl "' ~~~~~~~~
~ent
treatment Local compan"V seektng
plannlllQ..
tndlvu:lua1
·COUn~tng, group COUI1·
sehng,
'case
marlagS·
I'Y1el"lt ~ cns~s tntervoo
bOO. SO\JIIIern OhiO Solu-

tor an tn·

appil&lt;:-l'l.nl~ tor me posttion ot btll'utg cterk &amp;.

w-

Get A. Jump

on

Complete Senehts
Par;l&lt;aQ&gt;l

hrs or more a week) at
ArQUtSthOns Frne Jewelrv
15 t

2nd Ave

lnfoC1S10n namW one o f

Ohio must. computer knQ.wl45631 . You may also talc edge needfld ConflOI$·
to
r40-44t'-29 ro
Of seur Med1a IS an Equal
&amp;-mail
to: Oppo1tuMy
Employer
Call
304-399-Y603
or
t;scai@OIIbh.org.
Dead- · Fax
resume
to

Pleznntv.ley ttnpiW
qo"'==~

1510 \'IIIey lk, Pt. PINsHt. wv 155.50
1M call (lCM) 675-4340
. Fu to (304) 615-691$ Of
illpply oot-liM illt WWW-!IIf,cq

R.LHOlLON

Sunset
Homes

tRUCKING

Dump truck
•

seMCe
Wt do •i•e••ts

5

Jo

l)uel·~ .

!

sidioc. ttt.

un

748-742-3411

comp l~e- M:rYk~

thang~'. ~mall

Classifieds!
1----'-----'

.idvertise. your ;.
ess . Qn th.is page··
.

, 'for as loW as

.

.

~

,

•'

AUTISM AWARENESS
&amp; SUPPORT GROUP

March 25, 2009
3 p.m.
. Wellness Center
Aerobics Room

. co.

•

Rtsilhatill
•fmEd. tes
t7*llt9l-5M

3 NT

FRANK a EARNEST

.t WA/11110 TO 6fT }.
; ~YfOAtj.f~6fNIC 1)06.
BUT .t FOcJNl&gt; · ~

··-~

P~IG.E

WAS ALSo

tl0Tt41N6 TO

'S

Harlro:Od CDileCry ... hi ....

Dr. William Capehart

www..tflliku

·BARNEY

a

10-..

naiac in .....,., I ""'JI(:( p!Kl!llo ol

plolting
~·
This week ... nloal&lt;ing lllrt'lorsos. In

an li'Ctlllt

'.

'IUdion. ..,_,·s rebid

is I reverse U IQrt:es rMpOI tder !0 go 10
tile tloaa le&gt;4el tO show pnlttonce lor
oponer's first-filmed !Wit.
Also •• rt'IIISt is

Cell: 740-41&amp;-5047
email:
jrahadfrm«taol.com

vw~,c.l-\ "~ ~&gt;~tc.~~.~

l~ ~I'(T'&lt;·I\1.~ ~~

Of'F06... , _ - -

1-il'ff\ 1&lt;\K t\GII.'N ~C.Wi
C.IWK( Of PRELl Pl\l&gt;.iiO!t..

Metal &amp;

CI .ASSIFIEDS

,;~·~:~:~~:~.~s

'~!:t~~' $©\t~lA-~ £~Ss

BIG NATE
Lilli'¥" , lW\tf

'"*"· Mwb

IMl

lm:IIJt: eve!)'

eral new· venues that you never would
have tried previously.

NOTICES

F~

lil,.ured
b tinmks

ROIERT
IISSEll
CIISTIUCDOI

Notie&lt;~ is hereby. given Each bid must be acthat the annual meet· companied by either a
lng olthe shareholders bid bond In an amount
ot · Farmers
Bane· of 100% ot the bid
&amp;hares, Inc. will be held amount with a surety
• N~w Homes
at
the
Middleport satisfactory lo the
Churc)l of Christ Fam· · aforesaid
Meigs
• Garages
lly Lite Center, 437 County Commission·
• Complete
Main Street. Middle· ers or by cartilied
Remodeling
port, Ohio, on the third check. cashiers check,
wedneacley ol Aprll15. or letter ol credit upon
2009, at 4:00 p.m. ac- a solvent bank In the
cording to Its bylaws. amount ol not less
Stop &amp; Compare
for the purpoae ol than 10% ol the bid
electing directors and amount In lavor ol the
the transaction olauch aforesaid
Meigs
other buslnau as may County CommlsslonCORNER STONE
·properly come balore ers. Bid Bonds shall be
said meeting.
: accompanied by Proof CONSTRUCTION
Jo Ann Crisp. Socre· ol Authority ol the olfl·
lary
cial or agent signing
Roofing. Siding,
(3) 24 (4) 5. 14
the blOnd.
Soffit. Decks.
Bids shall be sealed
Doors. Windows ..
and marked as Bid lor
Electric, Plumbing,
·Public Notice
Syracuse Ball Field
Drywall, .
Lighting Project and
Remodeling,
Room
'NOTICE TO CONTRAC· mailed or delivered to:
Additions
TORS
Meige County CommlsSealed proposals tor sioners
Local Contractor
the Syracuse Ball Field Courthouse
740-367-()544
''~~~i:~ Lighting ProjeCt· Meigs Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Free Eatlmelea
11
County Ohio As per AHention ol bidders is
740·367-()536
spoclllcatlona In bid called to all ol the repackel will be received quirements contained
by the Meigs County in this bid packet, par·
Commissioners at their ticularly to ths Federal
ottlce at the Court· Labor Standards Provl·
house , Pomeroy, Ohio sions and Davls·Bacon
45769 until 1:00 'p.m.. Wages. various insurAprll 2. 2009 and then anco · requirements.
al1 :15 p.m. at said of· various equal opportu·
Ilea opened · and rood nlly provisions, and the
aloud tor the following. requirement lor a pay·
Specifications: and bid ment blOnd and per·
forms may be secured lormance bond lor.
J&amp;L
at the ottlco of Meigs 100% ol tho contact.
Construction
county Commission· price. No bidder may
era,
Courthouse, withdraw hia bid within • VInyl Siding
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 thirty (30) .daya aHer · Replacement
Phone 740.992·2895. A tho actual dale ol the
Windows
deposit ot 0 dollars will opening ther•ot. The
·Rooting
·be required lor each . Meigs s County Com·
set of plans and specl~ missioners reserve the ·Decks
II co lions. check mode right to reject any or all • Garages
• Pole Buildings
payable to -. The lull bids .
amount will be re· Mick Davenport
• Room Additions
turned within thirty (30) Meigs County CommlsOwner:
days after receipt of sioners
James Keesee II
bids.
(3) 19, 20, 24
742·2332

140-992·1m

cutt comment or spur-of-the-moment
offering from a friend will serve to forge
tt'l6 relationship. At the 11ery least, It wm
warm vour heart in .a way that only a pal

PEANUTS

can make happen.

cull: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
For: • Chain Link Fencing &amp; Wood
Fencing • Room Additions • Gurnges
•

'/Es. MAAM .. I'VE BEEN

OOIN6 M'1 RE6ULAR WORK

• Vinyl and Wood Siding • Roofing
Pole Bnrns • Putio 's, Porches and Decks

GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- Vour mind
i$ Sharp and your muscles strong, so
don't let your Industriousness 00 to
w•ste oh useless activities. A im fo r
achieving objeetlves that demand excel·

l-IE LOVES
COLORIN6
BOOKS ..

NO, MAAM, I I-IAVEN'T
BEEN WASTIH6 M'i
liME COLORIN6 IN
A COLORIJ.I6 BOOK ..

fence ol purl)&lt;)Se.
CANCER (J upe 21.July 22) - The abili·
ty to make pot&amp;ntlal prospects want to
deal wllh you may come more easily
than normal. It'll be that spec ial way you

MilE W. •CII,IWia
~723 9 Riebel

dlspla.y latent and

Roud. long Bottom. OH

Cetl: 740·~ lf&gt;.l834
Nlll uflilu! ti.l wl!h Mi~e Mat'l'um Rooting&amp;: Remodeling
f'l'ft 11•"-«~

· 15+ vean ex rienct

. Johnson·~

Guttering

BOY
,cow
; . .:. .;.;. and
.______
,

tree

Servia!
GoUipolls, OH 45631

Seamless Gunors
Rooting, Siding. Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded

ln.•urod,Frte

Eslloniotos, 20)'rs Exp.
740-441·9387
Rkk J..RSOR·Owntr

740·653·9657

,...,..._..,..._____..., r------.,...--,
I'M SC~I!ED. COW. IF
THE ECONOMY OOESI(T
PICKUP SOON. WILL
..,.._-..!''~HAVE TO SELl.
THE Fl&gt;/lM?
IS
WHAT

'""""
H1'\!""r-~;r~~
TO US?

r------~-;,;:'1

DON'T WOQIIY,I1ECESSIONS
COME AND GO. WE .lJST
H~VE TOI1EMEMBEHHAT
IF WE I&lt;EEP OUI1 HEADS
AND DON'T PANIC,
THEN WE'LL

GET T"""'
"'"
n~IJI...Q'1...

CtJre For )!mr Tret•s '')

II

'

I

I

,,

Srutt 1.• SIIMln
ISA Ctrllfltd Arborl\il,
Crrtlfltd Ortlllmtntal &amp;:
LllndM:apt' Professklnal
liallipulls, Oil

GAR..

'I'HE MICE ~ROUNP HERE A.RE
Gri!'I'I'INGt F'REfTY !IR~ZEN

flf~P

740-44fi.l01~

Replacement

Windows und
Vinyl Siding
Spt.'Ciulists, LTD

(740) 742-2563
• Siding o Vinyl

Windows o Molal
und Shlnal• Roofs
o Uec:ks o Addillons
0 EIH·trlcal
o

Plumbing

• l,ole Horns

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
' Pmmpl und Quuliry
Work

*Reusonuble Rates
*Insured
• Experienced
References Avnilnble !
Call Gnry Sranley @

740-591-8044
Please leave messa e

.

SC'RAM -Lr:TS ANSWERS Jll:WO

Enroll - bUlge .. KioO&lt;ck -· Adjoin - GOOD ON E

"Ther&lt;O's. no way to be a perl'o!et person," the wife rold
perfectionist husband, "butrhere are a million ways
to be u GOOD ON£ .''

Iter

ARLO&amp;JANJS

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) -

Tratn("' d .1nd ln!&gt;uH•d
"' '

ditlons may do a sudden turnabout, so
be alert for fresh opponunlttes you didn't
expec;\ to happijn - espe&lt;;lally when it
comes to dullngs ol a monetary nature.
VIRGO jAug. 23·Sepl. 22) - Because
you
will be sharper than usual with

conceive a much Dener way of perform- ·
ing impor1af!l work.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - A chance
meeting mav tntroduce a new lrlendshlp
that w\H proiJe to be eliciting and stimu·
latlng. This relatlof"\Shlp might tum out to
be one ol vo ur ll)Ore tun associations .

Krlow it."dqt• ..-.ble E )I pt&gt;ru•nr;:••rl ,
I

that makes

regard to details. lhls is an esp&lt;ocially
good oay to enter lnro any kino or s;gnll·
~ant agreement. Finalize onvthing vou
have in the WO/'U .
LIBRA !Soot 23·0et 201- 0o not pur
reins on your ImaginatiOn ber:euse It is
capable ol unuSUOI deduclions and lor·
mulallons There's a chance vou mlghl

Tree Care Specialists
" \~t·

knowted~e

· you d&amp;sirabte.
lEO iJu~ 23·Aug. 221- TroubHng ton·

740-985-4141

a.

...

I I I' I

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -An otl·the-

_.AII'IYJies or
C011trete Work

740-992-697 I

MUDHI

out how to use what they are telling fou.

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

.Da,·id Lewis

_I I I I I'

You shouldn't have any trouble tigurlnQ

lll\,IIH l I Ill\

29 \'c3rs Exptrience

F CAT J E K

ARIES {March 21 -Aprilt9) - Pay atten·
tion to your hunches Of' Intuitive percep·
tions because they could be ,ex.tra sharp.

I I \1 I'
lll\liHII

bir·

low' !O form four simpl$ wQrd~.

SOme powerful lessons learned have
tlught you how to ai/Oid making those
seme mistakes again. In lhe .year ahead.
suceess ls just around the comer in sev-

$Ill per lb C•sh only

of tMe

words

av--ooor

174UI742-2S63 .

Shiplnt:'l1t ~

PUBUC

iarnm
0 foua'eatronge
r scramblod

_ _,,llorch 25, 200t

I

WOlD
GAM!

- - - - '·- - - 14111d b) CLAY R. POLLAN

Pmt is 1\"\lllifl:t.l in ~anct

EMPLOYMENT

CELEBRITY CIPI1ER

West lelds the lllldo queen against
three no-lnlnp. (Note lhat live ol lilher
by Luis Clmpos
c-.~~·•Cftlll:lld lrom ~..sDYtwncus pq~a pa.rn nwt
minor tail$.) HoW should South plan tilt
~ rer..' ~ lhtCIOI\tr SWIQ$101' ntntl
. play?
. roo.r.sc~ue · K0Q11flsD
Declarer has sev.en top tricks: rwo
spa&lt;les, tour (j&amp;monds and one club. " PC JZ JHPR CVE RSZ GVGZIIR· JSZII
Evon Wthe missing clubs split 3-2. Soulh
. ooes not have time 10 play &lt;llllhat suit. Z U Z E FRS P II Y , H. A WV X0 AZ X F
bealuse Ita would looe lw!l 5P'Ides (al ·
least). one Ilea~ end two clubs. lnsread,
ZUZEFRSPIIY PW EZHKF , JZ WSHXX
da&lt;larer must go alt81 the heart suit And
lite only sensible play lor two heart lrlcks
is to~ low to dummy's 10. SOuth must IIZUZE AZVPII ." • PUHII AOEYZIIZU
hope that West has the jack.
Take lite best ctoance lor your contract
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. · ~ God wanted women lo understand men. football
- and donl betome paranoid.
would ,..,.., have been t ttaled." • Roger Sirt'Oln ·

THE BORN LOSER
· rTII.t C.U~~t.t..\TTE~~

at-•

Now St'lling:
• Fonl &amp; Mulun:ruft
Trun~mission s
• Ah~mmr~t:l
Rcpho~cmont Short

·,

J.D. Salingw Slid. , wn lrinrl ~ a pa:a-

good 10.poilthalld.

E!H!ines.
Transt't•r C'~lst·~ &amp;

.

Forcing partner
with a reverse ·

be&lt;aU58 partner has prornlsad

Paris •

'be 119alhpolls 1\ailp Qtrib~ne
'be .joint ~leasaut l.e«f~ter
The Daily
... Sentinel

Piss

row.)
Opener's ....,.. lllltr ' iw&lt;&gt;oYtr«~e
_..., may be sloadod by lw!l or
three points, but is game-Jordng.

..

Stay Informed...

Poos

- . btl this · - COI1Iortlng your
aucticn. ·~ - - has.
sqo..t1 sys1om tloel I w'4l C~Ntr tcmor·

• Room Additions 6
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical 6
Plumbing
• Rooting GUIIers
• VInyl Sieling 6 .
Painting
• Patio and Porch

. Owners:
Jon Van Meter I
Paul Rowe

Sentil,let ·

'Piss

points. In llct, tloe simptrlollg!HI 1101 I is
thai a teVI"'t IS gllllt-lofdng. You ·
rniftrt ovortlid wlttn ft6PORller is vtr'l

t•tba&amp;a7.-

Racine, Ohio 740.247~2019

.&gt;fl....... ;

Piss

3•

.......,....... -~:shoos 18-20
pci!1tS (01 1 good 17) 'IIICI tilt portrttr·
s~o~p CXlUid toave • combined 25 or 26

Sat. ~ :O(hun · 12
1\'t' apprrt:iutr JWMr

WV036725

·l

Eooa

I •

lalting--

51'JfE:Zf AT.

Decks

'"4-~;.;"

43

Opening lead: • Q

CUstom Homo: Building
S""'l Fr•n"' Bui~
Building. Remodeling
Gon«aat&lt;poir

17-10)517~ .

Poos
Poos
Poos

l •

Mon· Frl
B:OO '"" · ~: 30 pm
iiNS .H

• ' 4

6 K QJ

..... _

16

~1dal•

C·m

Stth Clll'ltton
(740\ ;; 17-5&lt;132
J•lf St&lt;tbtm

We ~n· ll.·t and
"in it-riLe tx'~&lt;n s and
RV',,
O.Jil) 9'12-5.\+1

-

P&lt;o • roy, OW.

• 1'\&gt;Wtr WasJiina

Special Guest Speaker
Director ol Special Education
Mason County Schools
Public is encouraged to attend
Far more information please
call
PVH Outpatienl Rehabilitation
Services.
(304) 675·8639

BANKS

CONSTRUCTION

• tllllttsnplna

repl.ur.

&lt;tA·e n

DNior: Saulb
.
V\IIDenble: East-West

RtSideatill
FrH Esllmai.ts
• lawn 1\laial~

t'ngtne-

-

6 AU

LAWN CARE
C9"' udal&amp;

vil

6 I I ii !

••
• A QJIO

CUTTING EDGE

lig.h1

-

6 A K T

;;: --.....

ttll'l.:hanil· \\·ork..

Shop

A tt 't

addilioas• . ,....

(5 l'llim&gt;l
New &amp; US&lt;\! Tire&gt;.
We buy u.sc-J rin:s.
i:vrnputer wheel
;.~i gn m~nts. Wft atsn

::~;
E::
Mechauica

s4

J '

• TI 3

buiMi.

Wtttiul

...._...~.OH

hnp:/I!Gk ~ lfOc ision. cem

...

~pole

U.e--.Gmel

If K Q II T
•JC1 5!
&amp; Hl

•Q ~ll,

C...IIIIill
llo-,rool!i,

w-....,...

.._.,MC..,..YU
Ellt 2457

AH

IIQ=·-

l &amp; ll'll'l' Bara
444187
Rd.

Applv Tooav•

tollCi!ICAREQCOM

Phillip
Alder

Dirt- Ac li

pass YOU b~ 1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

740-915

·q
tor subm1ssron is :XW.-~960S
ServiCe Techn1cian pos1·
~ 4:00 pm on March 3t . ;;.;.;~~~-::::~-- hon available for diesel
: 2009. SOS is an EQUal
Ev.nlng otfk:t
ano hydraulics. Exper~·
• Opportum~
Employer
Cleaning
ew;:;e
necessary.
• that otters e:.cellent comM~ W+F 1n GallipoliS or
Heattn.'Renremenl
&amp;
~esa~ke
Benehts. Fax resume to
P9titlve
salanes
and
"'"
"'""' ·
benatits.
Call1. 30 · Spm. M·F
7~0- 446-9104 or a-mad

..

Sen&lt;! resumes to:

Don't lei t111s opportunity

GallipoliS.

1.000·611·0497

Pleasant valley is . c:urrendy ac.upcinc
resumes for 08 Registeted Nurse.
Applicants must have a cunent West
Virginia license. ~us 08 ~~~

thl::l Top 5 Employtirs lf1
tn-c State of OhiO I

Ga!hpoi!S

The Daily Sentind • P8ge B5

08 REGlmRED NURSES

SA.vtNGS

tor part t!rnij: posttiOn ( 14

phen 1&lt;.. Thomas. Execu- 9:30am..Jpm Mor'.
Fr1
nve Director, Southern musr have reltacle ~ans­
Otlio Solutions. Inc. , PO po119oon, dependat&gt;lily a

145 .

at lhe catetena. Can
rnak.e up tQ $1 0,85 per
hr

Fun &amp; Protvss1ooal
Work1ng E.rrwonment

~~~=~~~~
Now acceptalg r9SI.lmes

Change preferred.
No phone calls please.
Please submit resume.
cowr litnef and three re-t· ReceptiOrliSt
neeOEld
erences by matl to Sre· GalliPOliS area tl'rs
&lt;=~rf'

Box

1 Pav&amp;

Son uses

pro- 45631

vtding cognitive behav·
101'31 therapy and rnohva·
bona! , tnt'eNI8wtng tS pre·
hwred. WQrk!ng knowledge ot ltle Stages 01

Sode•o Rlod Somcn at
Rro Grande: Um'Verstty 1s,
now taNng apphcatlons
tor a CQOi.. Must have ex!2ene~ , appty 10 person

W. poy up ta $12.25rltr
ollet sill manilla

OriStte Doctor

=•

R ,_

www.myc' Myn IIIIIILcom

ALLEYOOP

0

Mlddle-

""""" calls please.

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

dNtdual who at rTlNttmu; n Please send rwsumes to
CLA Bv" 104 P0 Bo:c:
holds an LCOC II JJ- 469.
Galhpolts.
OH·

(,'ef15er. E;q:tertetlCe

yau.t'

H1nng FuM Ttme
PoSitiOns (2· ll pm)

111

Send r~umes to
RS 106 N. &lt;nd Ave. Middleport. 011 45 760 No

IJQrt

TM--.Isjusto

must posses ltte tonowtng. e.._cel~1t organtz-c:t
t&gt;onaJ slolls. detaored. Mr·
c-tosolt
o~
sktlls.

sto~

phone

TUnd8r, "nell M, 2001

....., •.,••hid

ac&lt;eQIInq ....,..
~ tune QflsrtKJn at
local electroniC &amp; c-eU

l-00-

~~~~~

wiw

for

-«1'-ts•to
rt
fwnMy?

CO\.IflS8Ior to wor•

tiOnS tS looking

.._..r-tJ :

~Waded ~ Gaaul

t

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

i!

I

I

t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GRIZZWELLS

Once you take aim at a target you won't
toy with altamatlves because your focus
Is sharper than usual. Oes.lrable resulls
are In the making as long as you keep
your ayes on the prize.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan, 19) Atthough a strong emotion or sudden
teeHng may dominate your desires. It
won't cloud your Judgment w htn ana lyz·
Jng what situati ons can provide the
greatest happiness and success .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fa·b. 19} - Now Is
the timejo e~~:panQ upon and develop all·
uations that could be maan!nQful to you
In materiel waYs. You are sharper than
usual In these areas, and you're likely to
ganera1t substantlall'ltuma, ·

PISCES

IFe_
b.

20-Molth 20) -

Don't

hesitate to go It alone If others don't see
things as yo u do. Your drive and lore·
eight ate particularly In tune , and you
equid derive large benel!ls from ,your

actions right now.

.11-\\Ff.' 'ffAAI AA\'t

SOUP TO NUTZ

)bU !SEE~ RI~Ut!A
A~U\tt)

ll-\ THIRS'Il/ ... Go

liP

GeT Me

a SODa ...

PSI CONSTRUCTION
H&lt;w&gt;m Additions, Ht•modellng, Metal &amp;
Roors, New Homes, Siding. Docks,
llnthroom Hemodl'ling.lk'enst'd &amp; Insured
Shln~le

WV II llill'l'&gt; I

C1 ' ll ,' H' II b .''lh{l

/ HI IJlJ ) L1. HI

••

______

I
,_

,,

�~

.

..

.

•
Jps &amp; B6 • The Daily SentueJ'

-.mydailysentinel.com

Fate of Titanic, its

Big names rule this NCAA tournament
Only one severe tumble
so far. and that was Blake
Griftl.n getting flipped onto
his back. Other than that
scary sight. make this
NCAA toumament a monster's ball.
Defending · champion
Kansas . Big East bombers
Louisville. Connecticut and
Pittsburgh. The Tobacco
Road twosome . Tyler
Hansbrougll and a bevy of
AU-American big men. Jim
B0eheim and a bunch of
cOacbcs with rings.
No room for the little guy
at this party. Siena. Butler,
Cleveland State? Not a
George Mason among 'em.
A year after every No . I
seed reached the Final
Four, so much for parity in
men's college basketball:
For !he first time , the top
lhree seeds in every region
advanced.
Hardly an upset, hardly
anyone upset at the selection committee. .
. "l'm .not an expert, but I
lhoilght this year, for some
reason, it seemed the easiest to pick 64 teams,"
Villanova coach Jay Wright
said before Monday's practice. "I thought it was pretty ·clear this year more than
most years: When you look
at how it's ended up, I think
they proven to themselves
they did a very good job."
So did any fan who
played the chalk in ths:ir
pools. ·.It worked for
President Barack Obama he correctly picked 14 of
.the 16 teams still competing.
· Griffin picked himself off
the floor and helped the
Sooners hammer Morgan
State. Oklahoma and its
s1ar now are surrounded by
power .teams from· proven
conferences.
"The teams that are all on
top ... have done a good Job
being the teams they ve
been all year and haven't
given up anything." Griffin

Wahama 's 'fully
named all-state
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Huntington St.
Joseph senior guard Jill
Pulley could not have
scripted the final days of
her high school basketball
career any better.
Pulley, who led the
Fighting Irish to their first
girls basketball title 10
days .ago. was honored us
the captain of the West
Virginia Class A all-state
first team.
It was the second straight
year that Pulley garnered
first-team notoriety and the
final of several awards for
the 5-9 guard from the
2008-09 basketball season.
In addition to this honor.
she was also named as. a
McDonald's All-American
nominee while. also making
the all-tournament team at
the state tournament earlier
this month.
Pulley averaged . 12
points and six rebounds on
a team that consistently had
four double-figure scorers.
but she took over the team
during the championship
run . . .
· In Huntington St. Joe's
six postseason contests,
Pulley averaged 18 points,
nine rebounds and 4.5
steals.
St. Joe teammate Dusti
Chapman also mad~ the
first team for the third con.secutive year after averaging 10 points, five assists·
and five steals.
'
In addition to the St. Joe
duo, Wahama senior Amber
Tully (24 .7 . points, 7.3
rebounds) and St . Marys
~ophomore
Kelsea
Fickiesen (22.6 points, 9.0
rebounds) also were repeat
selections to the first-team.
Fayetteville's
Cayla
Rhodes (20 points, 16.8
rebounds) and Pocahontas
County's Chelsea Gum
(12.5 points. 6.3 rebounds)
· received first-team accolades in their final high
school seasons.
Parker,5burg
Catholic
junior Maggie B~~lter
(17.1 _pomts . 4.1 ass1stsl
continued the strong trad1 ·
tion for the Crusaderettes
and Williamstown freshman Liz Flowers (21.2
points, 4.0 assists) burst
onto the scene to round out
the Class A first team .

said.
.
At No. 12_ Arizona is the
lowest seed left. Other than
that, it's No.5 Purdue.
And once again. March
Madness bet:omes a tale of
two tournaments: The first
wedcend is for the bracket
busters. then it's time for
bruising matcbups.
· AU those early forecasts
this event was wide open?
North Dakota State, East
Tennessee
State
and
Morehead State gave good
accounts. up to a point. But
going into the round of 16.
it's more like invitation
only.
Sure, Louisville lost to
Western Kentucky earlier
this season, Syracuse fell to
Cleveland
State
and
Gonzaga lost to Portland
Slate. That was before the
calendar flipped to this
month of mayhem.
"It's a little deceiving .
because there were a lot of
close games," Gonza~a
coach Mark Few satd
Monday. "A missed -shot
here or there and another
team could have broken
through."
Few said he thought the
pod system, which rewards.
top seeds by letting them
play closer to home. was a
ractor in them advancing.
He likes the concept. especially after the fourth-seeded Zags. from Spokane,
Wash ,, opened the tournament in Portland, Ore.
Siena gave it a good try.
beating Ohio State in overtime in the first round and
leading Louisville · with 7
1/2 minutes to go Sunday.
That's when coach Rick
Pitioo delivered a simple
message and his Cardinals.
the overall No. I ·seed.
tumed their panic into production.
"I said, This is not
pushover city, this is the
NCAA toumament. and we
played in the Big East for a
reason, to prepare us for
lhese moments,"' he said
after the 79-72 win.
Having made a nice dent

·-·

judge's bands, A2

8-ANAPOINT.Oilif.(AP)
- The Steelel'S get their
opening-night sho~case as
Super Bowl champlOIIS. The
oldest rivalry in fOotball has
a first-week reoewal in prime
time. An old AFL-style ·dou. bleheader closes out the
weekend.
Thai's how the NR. will
begin the 2009 season, starting with as juicy a matchup
as possible: Pittsburgh hosrlng the Tennessee Titans,
who merely had the league's
best record in 2008 and who
beat the Steelers 31-14 al
Heinz Field in the 15th game
£10pethe::mg . kickoff
is

AP plloto

.
. reacts du nng
. a second -round
Ouk.e coach Mike Krzyzewsk1
· against
men's NCAA college basket.ball tournament game
Texas in Greensboro, N.C., on Saturday.
in a national setting. it was lost. last year's title game to
time for the Saint~ to go Kansas in overtime.
Arizona. with its own
home to upstate New York.
"When I first got here championship pedigree,
everybody knew we were also has aspirations of win·one of the worst teams, ning twice this weekend
probably. in America," star making it to Ford Field in
Kenny Hasbrouck said. Detroit. This is the 25th
th w·td
"Now I'm proud to say we ·
straight
year
e I cats.
made it to the second made it to the tournament,
but their lowest seeding.
round."
.
Making it that far certain"I think they get them
ly won't satisfy the likes of right probably 99 percent of
Mike Krzyzewski, · Roy the time.· and in our case
Williams. Bill. Self, Jim
our record coming in,
Calhoun , Tom lzzo, Pitino lwith
· r·s · probably· .correct,''
or Boeheim - the seven
coach
Russ
coaches left in the tourna- Arizona
"But
once
you
Pennell
said.
ment who already have
won championships. John start playing the games,
Calipari is eager to join seeding. I think you can
them, too, after his throw it out a lot of times;
Memphis Tigers missed a because it really comes
slew of late foul shots and down to one-game seasons ."

Thursday night, Sept. 10 011
NBC. which also gets the
I 78th meeting between the
Bears and Packers, in Green
Bay on Sunday night; Sept.
13. ·
For those surprised that the
Cowboys. who open their
palatial new stadium this season, are not featured in a
night game in Week I, well,
baseball got in the way. So
Dallas. the NFL's biggest TV
draw. which is moving to
Arlt'ngton, 11exas, near the
Rangers' ballpark - the
Rangers ru:e home that weekend _ will have to wait until
the second week, when the
Cowboys are expected . to
host the Sunday oighter.
· "We have the chance to get
on the national game the second weekend wuh not being
able to get on the ~IJ'St w~· end." Cowboys v1ce prestdent Stephen Jones said
Mondatat the owners meetinjlS. " e're having to work
wuh tl)e ' league on some
things.''
The Cowboys .and Lions
· a1
gel to keep their trad'thon
Thanksgivmg hosting slots.
The Lions go back to meeting the Packers that day. a
rnatchup that occurred every
year from 1951-63 and .will
happen for the 19th time. The
Raiders will be. at .the
Cowboys following that, and
the NFL Network mght game
will feature the New )_'ork

Gianls at Denver.
"The 1banksgiving game
is a tradition and' we're proud
to have it and to continue it in.
the new stadium.- Jones said.
ult's very important to us .~
Commissioner
Roger
Goodell acknowledged tJ:tere
continues to be discussions
about
rotating
the
Thanksgiving aftemoon contesls.

••
..

.

SUJ.d, adding the league's
··
and broad t
compebtton
cas
committees were loolcing
into the matter.
. The Monday night doubleheader on ESPN on sept. 14
will feature Buffalo, with
Terrell Owens, at New
England. with, the Patriots
hope. a returning Tom Brady.
That game will be followed
by San Diego at Oaldand all original AFL franchises.
While the AFL began play
in 1960 and is not 50 years
old i.mtil 2010, the NFL has
chosen to observe the 50th
season o~lay blthose franchises.
ce ebratioo of
that
merged
·th league,
the NFLwhich
· 1966
and
·WI
m
. ·
be gan par
1 as· one enb't
ty m
1970, begms with the Sept.
14 doubleheader;
Goodell said he was hopeful a proposal for an expansion of the regular season to
either 17 or 18 games could ·
be presented to the owners at
the May league meetings in
Fort Lauderdale. The league
is considering dropping one
or two preseason games and
di th
1
bed
exten ng e regu ar sc ule, but remaining within the
current 20-game format,
although not likely before
. 2011 ·
· to do so will involve dis·
cusstons
wt'th the p1ayers
union and the league's media
panners. Of course, the collective bargaining asceernent
with the players exptres after
the ~010 season, so a longer
schedule is just one of many
issues in getting a deal done
with the NFLPA.

on

www.mydailysentinel.com
.

Bv BRIAN J. REm
SAEEOOMYOAILVSENllNEL.COM

POMEROY
Charles · S.
Williams, 39, of Wood County,
W.Va., has been charged with the
February murder of Doris Jackson
of Tllpf!Crs -Plains.
A cnminal complaint was filed
Tuesday in Meigs County Court,
charging Williams with a single
count of murder. Jackson, 83, was
. found strangled in .the dinin~ room
. of her Tuppers Plains subdivision
borne on Feb. 26.
·
A session of the Meigs County

now in the North. Central Regional
Jail in Greenwood, W.Va., on a
parole violation .. He and Garnes.
3.9. Pomeroy. were charged with
receiving stolen property and tampering with evidence last week.
Games is in jail in lie11 of a
$50.000 cash bond.
Relatives first reported Jackson
and her car missing on Feb. 23.
Her car was recovered in Athens a
week later. and the charges filed
last week against Williams and
·
. Garnes related to its theft.
Jackson's body was discovered in
the dining room of her home in the

Arbaugh Addition in Olive
Township by sheriff's deputies ellecuting a search warrant in search of
evidence relating to her whereabouts. An autopsy named strangulation. a stab wound and blunt trauma as the causes of death .
The Ohio State Highway P.atrol
cited Williams for failure to control
and driving under suspension the
day before deputies discovered
·Jackson's body. and Williams never
appeared on the charges. He was
not driving Jackson's vehicle,

Pluse see WIHia..s, AS

injured in .

altercation
BY Brnt' SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OsrruARIFS
··PageAS
&lt;.; Kathy Adkiris. 48
,o Dorothy RoUsh, 91

..

INSIDE
·. • f~Jnds poor
SeePageAl
Chartene Hoelllcl\lphoto

• Bookman completes·
· . Air Force basic training.

SeePageA3

Congregate meals are served at the Senior Citizens Center Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m: Last year
7,218 senior citizens enjoyed the luncheons prepared in the Center kitchen, as did 16,585 homebound seniors who
receill9d home-delivered meals.
·

-. Pleasant Valley
Hospital Health
Foundation.

S~ulus

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEfl.ICHO MVOAILYSENTINELCOM '

POMEROY -While the Economic
Recovery Bill includes $3.7.million in
funds to help feed Ohio's ~isadvantaged senior citizens. there is no timeline as to when the money will be distributed to the counties.
'
Mindy Caton, planner for the Area
Agency on Aging 8, said that the
Agency has received notification of
funding designated for. nutrition programs, but that's all.
,
Asked about when agencies, such as
the Meigs County Council -on Aging,
can ex peel some money from -the
recovery gran~. she said the "Area
Agency has no direction at this time as
to distribution of the mo~tey." .
··
She. added that the Older American
Acts Program Division of the Ohio
Department of Aging will release

SeePage AS
• WHOISSU8$
.1)eSSimistic global ~
· report. See Page A6
::. China calls for
· new global currency.
· .See Page A6
. .

!. .

fWtds target senior nutrition

·1 A •
•
·
ted' ,t0 beneifit
lYlelgS
program
exnec
.
.
r

SeePageA3

• Local Brie~.

.

WEA1HER
'
.

The new federal money. it has been
reported, is designed for providing
meals to. semors m need, to restore
more information. at ·the local' level nutrition services which may have
once they have had time to learn more · been cut. and to restore positions
about the distribution and reporting which may have been eliminated or
requirements.
· .
. reduced due to those cuts.
According to a release from the oftice
Good nutrition always plays a role
of U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, Ohio will in seniors maintaining their health and
receive $2,502,60 I in funds for the con- independence. Beth Shaver. director
gregate meals program, and $1,232,050 of the · Meigs County Council on
for the home delivered meals progmm. · Aging. ,said that the congregate meals
He said the funds are to be used to pro- and the hom'e delivered meals to
vide meals. to seniors in group st;tungs homebound seniors here is a "vital
and to those who are homebound.
pan of keeping seniors in their homes
Aging services .in Southeastern Ohio and out of costly nursing facilities."
have been hit hard by rising food costs
Last year the Meigs . County
at a time when demand for services is Council on Aging delivered 16,585
increasing due to the economic down- meals to homebound seniors. At the
.tum iind the growing number of older Center there were 7,218 congregate
adults. The need for more services is meals served. Shaver says the total
being felt by the Meigs County cost for nutrition services in 2008 in
Counci~ on Aging which _has an Meigs County was $350.453.
aggresSIVe volunteer fund-rUlsmg P.CO- Revenue for that program inCluded
gram to supplement state and federal
funding and local levy funds . .
. Ple•se see Nutrition, AS

.POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark E.
Proffitt wa~ injured yesterday when a suspect allegedly tried to tlee in their truck.
According to the Pomeroy
Police Department. Proffitt
was assisting Sgt. Brandy
King on an arrest Oil' Court
Street when a person passing
by told .Proffitt a woman drivmg a pickup on CoW1 Street
was driving without a license.
Proflitt approached the driver
of the small pickyp. Alicia
·Small. 28. Parkersburg.
W.Va. and asked her to shut
off her engine. Small allegedly refused to comply after a
second warning and when
Proffitt reached into the ·
truck's cab to shut off the
engine. Small allegedly twk
off in the vehicle. drdgging
Proffitt until he could free .
himself.
Small then tumed right
from Court onto West Main .
Street and was pursued by
Code Enforcement Officer
Man Smith and Proffitt who
had by then gotten back to his
cruiser. The two officers
eventually pinned Small in on
Second Street behind Farmers
_Bank. Small then allegedly
refused to get out of the vehicle and· was fmally removed
and arrested by Proffitt.
At press time charges
were still being tiled against
Small who is to appear in
Meigs County Coun today.
As for Proffitt. yesterday
evening he was at Pleasant
Valley Hospital for tests
and had possibly injured
his back.

MiddJeport
approves
Cakes needed; reaction slow to rise for auction $2 million.
'09 budget

We can help!
.. '

.

Grand I ury bas
been scheduled
for April I. While
those proceedings
are secret until
indictments are
· returned.
the
grand jury will
likely consider
the Williams case
and, perhaps, that
CINirle8 S.
of Williams' coWHllams
defendant oo lesser charges, James I.A:e Garnes. .
. Prosecuting J\ttOrlley Colleen S.
Williams
.
. said .Charles Williams is

Police chief

See. Page AS

...

.

.

SimpJe. Affordable. Effective.
Upgrade Your Business Listing for as low as $420/annually*
•

• SILVER upQ&lt;adt

patka~.

ASk about GOLD &amp; PLATNUM.

Pte~ymeflt

discounts available.

More online advertising opportunities are now available at MyOailySentinel.com
Contact your sales consultant to to help you set-up you FREE listing and more information a.bout
Upgraded Business Listings.

Call now!

to set-up vour

FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

740-992-2155·
•

Th9 Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679
'

The cak~ judging and from a box recipe. Jones
Debbie Jones is obviously a
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
little nervous. Jones said auction are part of the stressed cakes do not have to
Detella on Pllge AS
last year's 96 cakes brought March . for Meals "Drive be made from scratch. Cakes
POMEROY - Last year in around $5,500 for the Out Hunger" · campaign should be submitted in a dis- Bv BRIAN J. REED ·
there were 96 entries in the Meats on Wheels program wl'!ich . includes a spaghetti posable. non-returnable con- BREED@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
cak~ judging c91\test and
and with only eight cakes dinner. also held tomorrow tainer/pan .
MIDDLEPORT
aucuon held for the local registered for the contest, at the Meigs Senior Center.
This year the five cuke
'
. :-'
Middleport
Village Council
' :·
Meal~ on Wheels program, she ~s also obviously wor- Cakes are to be at the center categories are: Chocolate.
&gt;. .a SI!CPONS
18 PAGES
I . . this year, so far only eight ried the auction won't bring hy 3 p.m., dinner starts. at 6 which is any cake made adopted a 2009 budget in
' " .
cakes have been registered. in nearly that much. The p:m. and at 6:45 p.m . the with chocolate; cakes made excess of $2 million at
:Annie~s'Mailbox ·
.· With the cake judging ~nd . auction helps benefit the cake winners and auction with fruit or vegetables Monday evening:s regular
, .·•
aucuon tomorrow, Metgs · program whtch offers home will begin . .
Calen~ars
such as carrot. apple. meeting .
Entry into the cake contest
The · annual process of
County Senior Citizens delivere~ meals to, seniors
Pleaso
see
·c•kes.
AS
.
is
free
and
cakes
can
be
made
adopting
a vil1:1ge budget
Center Activities Director that quahfy.
.
Classifteds
began for Middlepon late
last year. when .temporary
(:omics
..
...
appropriations
were
approved, allowing the fiscal
Editotihls
officer
to pay bills ·and conJanuary·s
reading
of
14.9
after
posting
8
percent
in
for last month was released
BY. KEVIN KELLY
Obituaiies
As MOTNEWSOMYDAILYTRISUNE.COM Tuesday by the Ohio percent .
duct
tinm1cial
business while
January. Lawrence also rose
That placed Meigs among two-tenths of a percent from a final, b~dget .was prepared .
Department of Job and
Sports
.B Section
The v!llage now has a
GALLIPOLIS
An Family Services.
sill other counties with a job- 7.6 in January to 7.8 last
deadline
of April I to submonth.
Washington
County's
in Ohio's unemGallia County, which had less rate topping I5 percent
Weather
As increase
mit
its
permanent
budget to
ployment rate for· February been at 8.7 percent in unem- or more - Adams ( 16.1), rate rose six-tenths of a percen.t. froni 9.3 in January to County Auditor Mary Byer~ ~009 Ohio v.O.,. PubU.ht1111 eo. was reflected throughout ployment for January, rose Crawford (15.3). Huron 9.9 in February.
HiII. Fiscal Officer Susan
most of southeastern Ohio. nine-tenths of a percent to ( 18), Morgan ( 16.5). Ottawa
Baker said.
Howev.er,
decreases
were
.
.
where the jobless ligures for 9.6 percent in February. (16.6) and Van Wert (15.2).
The ' permanent budget
seen m two. area counties :
Gallia and Meigs counties Meigs County was reponed
Athens County saw a Jackson
dipped three-tenths includes a $627,944 general
also went up.
at 15 .2 percent. up three- slight increasl! in joblessness
Plene see Bud1et. AS
Plo•se s~ Jobless, A~
'County-by-county data . tenths of a . percent from with 8.2 percent in February
Bv BETH SERGENT

iNDEx

..

February jobless rates post increase for area

.

..,

'

tti~ ~

'

• Area students score
high in competition. ·

Easy to setup, upgrades available!

Pria.lld""

R~ydod ~wsprillt ~. . .

SPOKts

resf,loi Sl to wage
·:cOmplatnls.

Free on~line busineSs Listings

--

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

"We did · not feel it was

-~ate al this time." he

Attention Business Owners

_...
--_............
-----

Arts Council hears
consultation, A3

beasures in US

•

...... l

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="554">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10005">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13149">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13148">
              <text>March 24, 2009</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="83">
      <name>adkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1124">
      <name>coates</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="648">
      <name>halstead</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
