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                  <text>Trustees elect

Ariel hosts
dance classes, A6

officers, A3

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;; o (I'\ IS • \ ol. :;-. "\o . ' I

SPORTS
• Moss denies battery ,
allegations•.See Page 81

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I 'Ill ;I{Sil \Y, .1 \il;li .\J{Y 17 , !.!IIIIH

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Rental inspection moving forward
BY BRIAN REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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MIDDLEPORT - While
some feel · Middleport's
rental inspection .program
has not yielded · enough
results, Building Inspector
Randall
Mullins said
Monday most landlords
have complied with inspections and repaired their
propenies as ordered.
Still, between 30 and 40

of the villa~e·s ~ental prpp· . · inspections or ordered enforcement of Mullins' erties deemed unsafe or
erttes remam umnspected a repairs were reported to the inspections and repair orders unsanitary and prevent
year after the inspection pro· former mayor,
Sandy have made the inspection landlords from renting them
grain began. They include lannarelli, but have not been program less effective than until they are repairep.
.properties Mullins considers cited to mayor's ' court for it ~hould be, and hlls said
However, Mullins said
"among the worst" in town, non-compliance, Mullins those landlords who have Monday night he cannot
and they have not been said. The program was put riot complied with inspec· cite non-complying landinspected because their two into place in early 2007, a tions or ordered repairs must lords to mayor's court, and
owners have not allowed · ye!lr after the village be fined in mayor's coun if that violations were turned
Mullins entrance into them.•· increased the landlords' per- the inspection program is to in·to Iannarelli.
There are 131 landlords,' unit fee to the village to $25 · be successful.
"It has been a struggle, but
owning 396 rental proper- per year.
Brown said Monday the it may not be as dire as we
ties in Middleport. Those
Council Member Sandy village should forcibly think," Gerlach said. "The
who have not complied with Brown has said the non - remove tenants from prop· program has potential."
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Expanded
Davis
. Center
neanng
completion

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, STAFF REPORT
NEWS!li&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

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Page 16 •

2008 Winter SeniorQ~erly

Wednesday, January 16, zoos

Page A5
· • Harold D. Clark, 75
• Victor Counts, n
·-Homer L Jeffers, ·at -··
• John M. (Mike) Tate, 40

INSIDE
• Perry graduates
basic training.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• Kennedy Museum
hosts School of
Art Faculty exhibit.
See Page A5 .
• Council offers
painting, photography
classes. See Page A&amp;
• MLK Day obseiVation
set at Rio for Jan. 21.
See·Page A&amp;
• 43rd annual winter
hike Saturday at park.
See Page A&amp;

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WEATHER ·

. ..

·•PLEASANT VALLEY HOME IIEAJ.;l'H
1011 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-7400
(740) 992-6916 (Pomeroy)
(304) 372-2022 (Ripley)
Serving limon, JtlChon. Putnam, Galli!l &amp; Meigs counties

-

The Keystone
BY

historic ·building which has
roOtS dating back tO the late
1800's when the adjacent
POMEROY · - Named Wildermuth Brewery and
for its historic keystone· ICe House · were booming.
arch, The Keystone, located Hanson, who is interested in
in the . former Me!gs the history of the building,
Cooperall~e ·
Pansh said she's been told it was
Building on Condor Street, built by the owners of Epple
has ,undergone .a year-long Grocery Store which sat in
transformalion on both the · front of the structure facing
outside and inside.
East Main Street. It also has
"It is a sort of revival on a basement enirance to the
Condor Street," owner Vicki underground tunnels on
Hanson said of her refur- · Condor Street though it is
bished property as well as filled up with din for the
others in the historic neigh- most part.
borhood named for The
Stepping inside the buildCondor, the first steamboat ing these days it is the
smell of new paint and new
built in .the United States.
Hanson purchased the fixtures. This mixture of
propeny last February and new · appliances and lights The Keystone owner Vicki Hanson stands in front of a
wall of ongm~l sandstone which was no doubt cut from
guesses she's spent around
the
Pomeroy hillsides.
·
$100,000 refurbishing the PIMse see Keystone, AS
BriH SERGENT

BSERGENT!li&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• •PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPICK
1Oll Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV'25550
(304) 675-7400
(140) 992-6916 (Pomeroy)

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INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Serving .MasOn. Gallio &amp; 'Meigs~

t ·

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

)!:ditorials
'

Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

A6

Sports ·

B Section

Weather

As

© aoo8 Ohio Valley Publllihlns Co.

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Det8111 'on Pall• A5

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Sereentfphotos

The old Meigs Cooperative Parish building has been refur·
bished Into The Keystone, an "upscale boarding house" which
will be open to potential renters next week. The building is also
open for tours by appointment.

RIO GRANDE - Ao
expanded cafeteria, new
student offices , meeting
rooms, student recreation
area and several other facilities will soon be seen in
t!Je
expanded
Davis
University Center at the.
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College.
The Evan E. and
Davis
Elizabeth . F.
University .Center. .is currently being renovated and
expanded, and 'the project
is expected to be completed
in early February.
Work on the facility's
expansion began in 2006,
and the buildin~ has
remained open whtle the
work has continued.
The workis about 85 percent complete, and the ne~
facilities in the building are
impressive.
"This is going to be a
great asset," said Dr. Greg
Sojka, ghe university's
interiin president.
Sojka explained that the
expan~ed building would
have numerous benefits ,
including a new portion of
the building that will be
used primarily by students
and will be open to them ·
throughout the day.
The Davis University
Center currently has one
main entrance , and the
expanded building will
have three, Sojka said.
The new student entrance
will lead into the area
where many of the student
meeting rooms and the
new Red Zone student
recreation center will be
located, and this entrance
will remain open at all
hours, Sojka said.
Students will be able to
gather in the Red Zone, use
wireless Internet services
in the building, hold meetings and take part in a wide
PINSI see Center, AS

And the walls came
tumbling down
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYS i:NTI NEL. COM

POMEROY - The Blaettnar
building on East Main Street
was torn down Wednesday following extensive damage in
three fires over the past month.
The fires, according to the
Pomeroy Fire Department, were
caused by winds blowing loose
roofing shingles onto electrical
lines. For the past several years
J.D. Story, owner, has used the
building and lot which extends
from Main to Condor Streets for
the sale of used cars·and as storage space.

It was built in 1888 by descen-

dants of Michael Blaettnar, Sr.
who came to Pomeroy from
Germany in 1852. He bought the
property and established a
wa~on and buggy 'business
whtch operated there until autos
came into fashion and the
Blaettnar family established a
new car sales agency.
The building was sold in tlie
.late 1900s to another car dealership and was later pu.rchased
by Story,
The demolition opens up
another riverfront property in
Pomeroy suitable for economic
development.

The demolition scene of a Pomeroy downtown bu1lneu bulkllnc.

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The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WoRLD

PageA2
Thursday,January17,2oo8

Clubs and
organizations

for the Virgin Islands. That
would be fine with
Schoenbohm, who said he is
WASHINGTON - The "tired of the coron&lt;~tions and
Republican presidenlial race staged events" of receni con- .
is so unsettled that some vent ions.
party officials are openly
But a deadlocked conventalking of a scenario that tion could be a nightmare for
seemed almost unthinkable the party. The Republicans'
until now: the first contested last multi-ballot conveAtion
GOP convention in 60 years. was in 1948, when New York .
Even if Republicans Goy. Thomas Dewey prechoose a nominee before they vailed on the third ballot. He ·
convene in Minneapolis-St. lost the general election to
Paul on Sept. I, there's il Democrat Harry S. Truman.
good possibility he will
The
last
contested
emerge weeks or even Democratic convention was
months after the Democratic . in 1952, when Illinois Gov.
nominee is chosen, giving Adlai Stevenson won on the
Democrats an advantage in third ballot. He later lost
fundraising, organizing and two elections to Republican
campaigning: Congressional Dwight D. Eisenhower. ·
Republicans
particularly
Contested conventions
wanted an early nominee to have never been kind to
draw voters' attention from their eventual nominees,
President Bush, whose low said G. Terry Madonna, who
approval ratings could hun has studied them as a public
the entire party in the fall.
. affairs professor and pollster ·
Bush's former top politi- at Franklin and Marshall
AP plloto
cal aide, Karl Rove, told College in Pennsylvania: A
Egyptian
President
Hosni
Mubarak,
·right,
shakes
hands
with
US
President
George
W
.
Bush
at
the
end
of
a
joint
press
conRepublican
officials deadlocked convention in
Wednesday that major chal- either party remains unlike; ference following their talks in Sharm ei-Sheikh, Egypt, on Wednesday.
lenges await "the moment ly, he said in· an interv-iew
our candidate s~cures the Wednesday, but it is more
nomination." As if they possible for Republicans.
needed reminding, Rove
Both parties' nominating
told those at the Republican rules have changed so draNational Committee's win- matically since the 1950s,
ter meeting, "the primaries Madonna said, that guideare far from over."
lines for resolving such an
BY ANNE GEARAN
Washington was to be a setting up an independent Egypt's treatment of Nour.
Democrats also face the impasse are far from clear.
AP
DIPLOMATIC
WRITER
The U.S. cheered a season
conference
call Thursday Palestinian state to the next
possibility of a long and cost- "This is something we've
of
relative political openafternoon
with
congresU.S.
president.
ly battle involvins Sens. never had," he said.
SHARM
EL-SHEIK,
sional leaders in both parMubarak's quarter-centu- ness that same year, includHillary Rodham Clinton of
Most convention delegates
New York and Barack Obama now are loyal to a given can- Egypt - President Bush's ties and both chambers to ry in power has seen multi- ing Egypt's tirst multiparty
of lllinois and former Sen. didate, not to the party itself, fast-track plan for a Mideast discuss a possible short- ple failed peace efforts and elections, but then the
over time Egypt has seen Mubarak , ·government
John Edwards. But officials he said. The Byzantine rules peace agreement got a wel- term stimulus package.
come
endorsement
Washington
The centerpiece . of the its status as the Arab retrenched .
attending the RNC meeting · governing delegates' powers
said Democrats seem likely to and obligations arf · nearly Wednesday from a nation most extensive Mideast world's main Mideast moved recently to put conmake their choice before a incomprehensible, he said. long seen as a key Arab trip of Bush's presidency · mediator slip to another ditions on aid, with a bill
clear winner emerges from But in the end, it might not mediator. Bush responded by was the ambitious go_al of a power player - Saudi thijt withholds a small porpulling his punches on the signed peace deal before Arabia. Still, Mubarak tion until Egypt stops 4he
.the pack of four or five still- matter much.
credible GOP contenders.
A deadlocked nominating human rights backpedaling he leaves office a year endorsed Bush's one-year smuggling of weapons from
"The way it looks now, it process would be obvious in Egypt that has cooled rela- from now. Talks have been timeline and offered to its land into the Palestinian
could end up in the conven- when most primaries end by tions with this longtime ally. fitful, with few tangible work
. "hand-in-hand" Gaza Strip via border tunThe
president
closed
an
tion," Ron Schmidt, South early May, Madonna said,
results
so
far.
On alongside the United States nels ·and makes other
eight-day
Mideast
trip
wellDakota's
Republican four' months before the party
Wednesday, Israel moved and other peacemakers to domestic changes.
fed
from
several
lingering
National Committeeman, conv~tions take place.
to dismantle two unautho- make it happen - a more
said of the party's nominat- Then there will be wheel- meals with his Arab hosts rized settler outposts, a enthusiastic statement than
ing process. "It's fasc_inating ing and dealing" among the and upbeat about what even sticking point in talks.
Bush received elsewhere.
if you're a political junkie." candidates and their surro- some of America's closest
Arab states were not shy , "I emphasized that the
In the major contests so far gates, he said, with possible allies say is an unexpected in criticizing Bush's arms- Palestinian question, of
- Iowa, New Hampshire deals including a vice presi- and ambitious drive. An length approach up to now. course, is the core of proband Michigan - three dif- dential spot for a contender Israeli-Palestinian agree: Mubarak was among those lems and conflict in the
ferent Republicans have fin- willing to step aside and ment has eluded U.S. presi- who told Bush he was creat- Middle East," Mubarak told
dents for decades, and Bush ing a larger problem by let- reporters after he and Bush
.ished first. If former resolve the question.
Tennessee •Sen. · Fred
On Wednesday, several didn't put much effort into . ting the issue fester and by met and had lunch at thi s
Thompson scores the win he Republican officmls said a trying for the first seven feeding the perception that Red Sea resort.
• FREE Z417 T.Chnleal Supt)Ort
hopes for in South Carolinil protracted primary season years of his presidency.
• lr~Stant Messaglng • keep your bLJOd'/ 11$!1
he is too partial to Israel.
Egypt was meant to be a
• 10 e..rnail addresSl!ll with Wabmall!
had
a
message
for
Bush
on Saturday, he would be the might add excitement to a
Bush 's strategy, formed test case for Bush's second• Custom Star! Paoa • new&amp;. weatt\el' &amp; morel
skeptical
Arab
states
whose
fourth first-place finisher. party that typically settles
over the last year, turns the term promise to push
Lr.help he needs to make any tables somewhat. It asks democracy in the Middle
Likewise, former New York on a nominee early.
(
Svrf vp lo 6X laster/ I
Mayor ~udy Giuliani could
That's not the tune they accord stick and who doubt Arab states to be ground- East. . Secretary of State
jufiiiJ rTIC#e -__;
be the fifth winner in the five were h11rnming last summer, the president's intention to floor investors in a plan the Condoleezza Rice chose
Sign Up Onl!ntl www.LoeaiN•t.com
contests if he proves wise in however, when they began personally shepherd a deal. Israelis and Palestinians will Egypt as the site of a major
:::\); 4ia::
Call Today &amp; Save!
picking Florida's Jan: 29 pri- worrying about potential ' "I mean what I'm saying," largely write themselves. It challenge to Mideast leadmary as his first'big stand.
losses at the congressional Bush said.
would set the terms of peace ers in 2005 - after delay- l«aiNef
In a brief appearance with but probably leave the job of . ing her trip to protest
Politicians had long and state levels. When a likeassumed the Feb. 5 "Super ly GOP nominee emerges by Egyptian President Hosni
Tuesday" primary, involvmg early February or so, Mubarak, Busil dealt gently
California, New York and 22 Republicans will "not have with the pace of political'
other states, would resolve the Bush monkey on our reform in Egypt, the issue
any doubts about either back," Rep. Tom Feeney, R- that has most distanced his .
administration from this
party's nominee. Democrats Fla., said at the time.
feel slightly less certain about
Rove told party officials historical partner, the first
that now, and Republicans Wednesday that the eventu- Arab state to make peace ..
are even more doubtfuL
al GOP presidential nomi- with Israel and the recipient
The GOP process could go nee has "four big things to of tlie most U.S. aid except
"right up to the point that we do" when the intraparty bat- Israel. He started with
dot;~'t have ll clear candidate
tle ends. The first, he said, is praise that had less to do
with enough electoral votes to "introduce themself to with Egypt's government
to win" the nomination when the American people," who than with its history and
the conventions start, · said pay far less attention to populace. He said he disHerbert
Schoenbohm, campai!lns than most politi- cussed the issue with
Mubarak, who himself said
Republican Party chairman cal aficiOnados realize.
nothing on the topic.
"Because of the predomi nate role you play, and
because I strongly believe
that' Egypt can play a role in
the freedom and justice
movement .. . my hope is
entranc~
that the Egyptian governBY JosH FUNK
about retaking the test since ment will build on these
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
the twins earned their per- important steps, and give
the people of this proud
fect scores.
BELLEV UE, Neb.
.tobacco users
The brothers are both nation a greater voice in
Brian and Ross DeVol are a good in physics and are your future," Bush said.
supportive
perfect match, genetically considering the University
He did not publicly menMEIGS COUNTY
and academically: The iden- of Nebraska or Creighton tion jailed political opposito hr&lt;~.:~~lll
Holzer Tobacco Prevention
tical twins earned perfect University in Omaha as tion leader Ayman Nour,
ACT score&gt;.
115 W. 2nd Street.
their college choices, but whose case U.S. officials
The seniors at suburban they haven't yet decided.
have pledged to raise each
Bellevue East High School
Ross DeVol said he wants time they' meet the
both "cored 36 on the col- to become a doctor or a psy- Egyptians.
lege entrance exam, though chiatrist. Brian De Vol has
As ~asoline and heating
Ross De Vol needed three said he wants to become an oil pnces soar at home,
tries. One of his earlier tries actuary.
Bush urged the OPEC oil
ne't!ed a 35.
The DeVols are only the cartel to consider boosting
an ont'II\J
The 18-year-old brothers third pair of students in the production. White House
have maintained straight-As past decade to earn perfect press secretary Dana Perino
quitting.
through hi gh school, and scores in the same year and said Saudi King Abdullah
both are in the running for share the same address, understood· the concern
on long-term freedom
class valedictorian.
ACT spokeswoman Kristin Bush raised Tuesday night.
tobacco, including
"We're pretty competi- Crouse said. Crouse could- But there was no apparent
tive," Ross DeVol said.
n't say whether the others commitment from the
r~ora~vea skills for
The twins have already were twins.
Saudis and no immediate
won household bragging
About one out of every move from OPEC.
right,. Th~ir older brother, 4,000 graduates who took
With the U.S. economy
John, earned a 33 the first the ACT last year scored a suffering from the effects
time he took the ACT and ·36. The average score in of high energy costs as
didn't try again.
Nebraska was 22.1, and well as a housing crisis,
Ross De Vol said his older the national average was one of Bush's first acts
brother has been joking 21.2.
upon
returning
to

6:30 p.m. Subordinate baking contest (peanut butter
cookies) to be held.
Monday,Jan.21
ATHENS - Southeast
Thursday, Jan. 17
POMEROY - American Ohio Woodland Interest
Cancer Society Meigs Group, 7 p.m., Athens
County Advisory Board. County Extension Office.
regular meetin g, noon , Jerry Hopkins, operations
basement conference room supervisor for ODNR state
of Pomeroy Library, lunch nursery in MarieHa as
"Ohio
provided, new members speaker.
welcome, 992"6626. ext. 24 Conservation Seedlings:
Planting Value in Ohio's
to RSVP.
.
Woodlands."
Information at
POMEROY
- ,Meigs
County
Community 59'3-8555.
Thesday, Jan. 22
Coalition;? .p.m .. Mulberry
POMEROY
-Meigs ·
Community Center, guest
Society
County
Humane
speaker Mike Bartrum, di sBoard,
5
p.m.
,
regular
meetcussion
on
youth
alcohol/drug abuse, door ing, 6 p.m. general member"
ship meeting, both at
prizes.
Pomeroy Library.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Development
Group, 8:30 .a.m ., Meigs
County Job and Family
Services. All board memThursday, Jan. 17
bers encoumged to attend.
RUTLAND
- Town
Saturday, Jan. 19
meeting, new mayor meet
SALEM CENTER and greet, di scuss residents'
Star Grange #778 and Star concerns.
6:30
p.m.,
Junior Grange #878 fun Rutland Civic Center, light
night and potluck supper, refreshments.

BY CHARLES BABINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Public meetings

AN·NIE'S MAILBOX
Monday, Jan. 21
POMEROY Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society, 7 p.m. at the fairgrounds.
·
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
with organizational meeting to be held preceding
regular session.
VVednesday,Jan.23
RACINE
~egular
meeting of state Financial
Planning and Supervision
Commission for Southern
Local School District,
10:30 a.m., high school
media room.

Birthdays
Saturday, Jan. 19
COOLVILLE- Leonard
Amos will observe his 80th
birthday Jan. 19. Cards may
be ' sent to him at 42316
Tucker Road, Coolville,
Ohio 45723.
Sunday,Jan.20
REEDSVILLE
Frances Reed of Reedsville
will tum 80 on Jan. 17. Her
family will host an open

house 2-4 p.m. on Jan . 20 at
Reeds ville
United
Methodist Church. Cards
may be sent to P.O. Box 75,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772. She
asks that gifts be omitted.
VVednesday,Jan.23
ROCKSPRINGS
Sylvia Midkiff of Pomeroy
celebrates her 90th birthday today. Cards can be
mailed
to
her
at
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center, '36759 Rocksprings
Rd., Room 133, Pomeroy,
4.5769.

Church events
. Sunday, Jan, 20
MIDDLEPORT - Jeff
Kassel! will sin~ at the Old
Bethel Freewtll Baptist
Church, Route 7 and Story's
Run, 6 p.m.
VVednesday, Jan. 23
MIDDLEPORT - Tiny
Tech Pre-School at the
Freedom Center Ministries
will have a winter musical , ·
7 p.m., at the school, 873
South
Third
Ave.,
Middleport.

Mubarak endorses Bush's hQpes
for quick Mideast peace deal

SUbmitted plloto

Recently elected officers for the Meigs County Trustee association are, from the left, Joe Bolin, Bill Spaun, Randy Butcher,
John Hood : and Opal Dyer.
·

Trustees elect officers
POMEROY - Bill Spaun secretary/treasurer; and Joe
was elected President of the Bolin, executive· officer.
Meigs County Township Randy Butcher was appointTrustee Association at their ed to the Issue 2 Board.
Marilyn
Ashcraft.
meeting held recently at the
Meigs County
Senior Southeastern Ohio liai son
for Auditor Mary Taylor's
Citizens Center.
Other officers elected office spoke briefly to the
were John Hood, vice presi- group conce rning the Public
dent;
Opal
Dyer, Records training that is

740·992-6260

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Airman Joseph S. Perry

Birth
announced

·I

The Arc of Ohio &amp;
Southeast Ohio Branch
. of The Arc of Ohio
present:

Ohio
Understanding the System:
·Supports for People with MR/DD

Saturday, January 19, 2008,9:00 AM·3:30 PM,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital Athens, Ohio
55 Hospital Drive, .Athens, OH 45701-2302

Featuring Keynote by 92nd District State Rep •
Jimmy Stewart
Chelr, Human Services Subcommittee, Member of the
Heallhcare Access &amp; Affordability Committee
9:00.10:00
Registration
10:Q0-11:30 , OP4'nlng Session
"State and Federal Pollttcattssues that wm Affect
the Quality of Life of Individuals with MRDD"
Speaker: State Representative Jimmy Stewart,
92nd District Chair,
1.

POMEROY - Jamie and
Terry Payne of Carbon Hill
announce the birth of a
daughter: Emilee Dawn .
She weighed 7 pounds, five
ounces.
Emilee has five brothers
and sisters at home .
Maternal grandparents are
Phyllis Floyd of Nelsonville,
and Dennis Aoyd of Logan.
Paternal grandparents are
Carolyn Sue and Arnold
Sears and the late Kenneth
Payne of Harrisonville.

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and Dorothy Roseberry, fiscal officer for Lebanon
Township, were recognized
'for their mlj.lly years of service. Both are retiring at the
end of this term of office.
Door prizes, donated by
local businesses, were
drawn for at the conclusion
of the meeting.

Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

him to ask?- Puzzled
Dear Puzzled: The Avon
lady told you where his
Dear Annie: I am a mother was? My, my, what
divorced father of a 13-year- personal serv_ice. H y~:m are
old daughter. Though her . certam· the mformat~on os
mom and I share joint cus- accurate, your relatove ts
tody, I have her most of the entitled to know. Tell him
time because my ex doesn't you have it, ask if he would
want her around. The vis ita- like it, and then follow his
lion clause in the divorce is wishes accordingly.
very liberal . and my ex is
Dear Annie: I was comtakmg advantage of it. She pletely appalled by your
claims she is always work- response to "Heartbroken."
ing and needs massive over- the young woman who was
time to make ends meet.
&lt;distressed about relocating
Every time I bring up the far from family to be with
subject of a set schedule, she her tiance.
becomes defensive and comTo state that "once you're
bative. She has not seen her · married, your husband ·
daughter for any significant should come first" is a page
amount of time in weeks. straight from the 1950s. What
~he thinks ~alling ~evetal about the young man's obligumes a day ts suffictent. II auon to see that his future
has reached the point where wife is happy? ,It seems to me
my daughter doesn't want to his family has essentially
see her mother.
'
bribed her to relocate (house,
, Reliable sitters are hard to business and wedding plans)
come by and her mother is in order to bring their son
against u. I have not had an closer to them.
evening to see my girlfriend
If his family has their
fortwo straight weeks. This is son's best interests in mind,
putting an intense strain on a they should work out a comserious relationship and it promise . .If the young man
J11ay already be beyond repair. can't stand up to his family,
Last month, I was invited then perhaps he is the one
to a very special family who's not ready for margathering that I was unable riage. - VVeiiOeet, Mass.
to attend at the last minute
Dear WellOeet: This isn't
because my ex had to work. a gender issue. When some! am reluctant to go to court one marries, the partner
to force the issue, but she is· should take precedence over
leaving me no choice. How the parents. Period. Missing
can I handle .this situation . her family, whom she can
and salvage my relation- visit, should not be more
ship?- Mr. Mom
important than his livelihood,
Dear Mr. Mom: Get you~ which may not be transact together, people. We feel portable. And her need for
sorry for your daughter, who family should not outweigh
is being treated like an his. Both families should be
unwanted shoe. If you need a given equal weight. She
sitter so you can go out on a knew what the deal was when
Saturday night, get one. You she agreed to marry him.
don't need your ex-wife's Compromise is always good,
permission. And if the ex but for the primary breadwi~­
cannot manage to spend any ner (male or female) to relotime with her daughter in cate because the spouse fears
"weeks," it's time to take her being away from Mpmmy
'to court. As for your girl- and Daddy. indicates the
friend, any woman who is spouse may not be ready to .
serious about • you must . commit fully to the partnerunderstand that, right now, ship. Our advice stands.
your daughter comes first. If
Annie's Mailbox is writyou want to see the girlfriend ten by Kathy Mitchell and
more' often, invite her to Marcy Sugar, longtime e.dihave dinner with you and tors of the Ann Landers
your daughter.
column. Please e-mail your
Dear Annie: Should I tell questions to anniesmailan adult relative that I've box@comcast.net, or write
found his biological moth- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
er? Adoption records are Box 118190, Chicago, JL
'sealed in this state, but 606JJ. To find out more
thanks to some key informa- about Annie's Mailbox,
tion from an Avon saleslady. and read features . by other
I now have the woman's Creators Syndicate writers
name and location. He had and cartoonists, visit the
only a slight interest in my Creators Syndicate Web
search. Should I .wait for page at www.creators.com.

POMEROY - Air Force Airman Joseph S. Perry has
graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air ·
Force Base, San Antonio, Texas.
During the .six weeks of training, the airman studied the
Air Force mission, organization, and military customs and
courtesies; performed drill and ceremony marches, and
received physical training, rifle marksmanship, field train. ing exerctses, and special training in human relations.
In addition, airmen who complete basic training earn
credits toward an associate degree through the Community
Colle~e of the Air Force.
He ts the son of ~andy Perry of Sandusky Drive S.W.,
Beach City, Ohio, and Freda Lewis of Neese Road,
Middleport, 'Ohio.
· Perry is a 2004 graduate of Fairless High School,• ·
Navaire, Ohio.

Emllee Dawn Payne

6:00pm

•

required for elected officials
during each term of office.
Ron Sowash of D &amp; D
Emulsions talked about his
product, and Pat Story,
Meigs County Prosecutor,
spoke concerning nonmaintained status roads.
Richard Bailey, fiscal offi-.
cer for Salisbury Township

When it comes·to child,
get your act together

Perry graduates basic training

Identical perfection: Twin
· brothers from Nebraska earn perfect
scores on college
test

•

Thursday,Januaryt7,2oo8

Community Calendar

Republicans eye possible
deadlocked convention,
mass uncertainty

•

PageA3

BY .THE 'BEND

The Daily Sentinel

11:00.12:30
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Lunch provided
CONCURRENT PRESENTATIONS
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SP4'akar: Gary Tonks, Execullve Director,
Tho Arc of Ohio .
Seulan t2: Protecting Your Son!Daughter's
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2:Q0-2:15'
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Speaker: "'ndy Kool-Tucker, Ph.D.;
Kaleidoscope Solutions, LTD.
BREAK
REPEAT OF ABOVE PRESENTATIONS

FamflyRndlvlduals with Dlub/lltles FREEl
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NATION •

WoRLD

PageA2
Thursday,January17,2oo8

Clubs and
organizations

for the Virgin Islands. That
would be fine with
Schoenbohm, who said he is
WASHINGTON - The "tired of the coron&lt;~tions and
Republican presidenlial race staged events" of receni con- .
is so unsettled that some vent ions.
party officials are openly
But a deadlocked conventalking of a scenario that tion could be a nightmare for
seemed almost unthinkable the party. The Republicans'
until now: the first contested last multi-ballot conveAtion
GOP convention in 60 years. was in 1948, when New York .
Even if Republicans Goy. Thomas Dewey prechoose a nominee before they vailed on the third ballot. He ·
convene in Minneapolis-St. lost the general election to
Paul on Sept. I, there's il Democrat Harry S. Truman.
good possibility he will
The
last
contested
emerge weeks or even Democratic convention was
months after the Democratic . in 1952, when Illinois Gov.
nominee is chosen, giving Adlai Stevenson won on the
Democrats an advantage in third ballot. He later lost
fundraising, organizing and two elections to Republican
campaigning: Congressional Dwight D. Eisenhower. ·
Republicans
particularly
Contested conventions
wanted an early nominee to have never been kind to
draw voters' attention from their eventual nominees,
President Bush, whose low said G. Terry Madonna, who
approval ratings could hun has studied them as a public
the entire party in the fall.
. affairs professor and pollster ·
Bush's former top politi- at Franklin and Marshall
AP plloto
cal aide, Karl Rove, told College in Pennsylvania: A
Egyptian
President
Hosni
Mubarak,
·right,
shakes
hands
with
US
President
George
W
.
Bush
at
the
end
of
a
joint
press
conRepublican
officials deadlocked convention in
Wednesday that major chal- either party remains unlike; ference following their talks in Sharm ei-Sheikh, Egypt, on Wednesday.
lenges await "the moment ly, he said in· an interv-iew
our candidate s~cures the Wednesday, but it is more
nomination." As if they possible for Republicans.
needed reminding, Rove
Both parties' nominating
told those at the Republican rules have changed so draNational Committee's win- matically since the 1950s,
ter meeting, "the primaries Madonna said, that guideare far from over."
lines for resolving such an
BY ANNE GEARAN
Washington was to be a setting up an independent Egypt's treatment of Nour.
Democrats also face the impasse are far from clear.
AP
DIPLOMATIC
WRITER
The U.S. cheered a season
conference
call Thursday Palestinian state to the next
possibility of a long and cost- "This is something we've
of
relative political openafternoon
with
congresU.S.
president.
ly battle involvins Sens. never had," he said.
SHARM
EL-SHEIK,
sional leaders in both parMubarak's quarter-centu- ness that same year, includHillary Rodham Clinton of
Most convention delegates
New York and Barack Obama now are loyal to a given can- Egypt - President Bush's ties and both chambers to ry in power has seen multi- ing Egypt's tirst multiparty
of lllinois and former Sen. didate, not to the party itself, fast-track plan for a Mideast discuss a possible short- ple failed peace efforts and elections, but then the
over time Egypt has seen Mubarak , ·government
John Edwards. But officials he said. The Byzantine rules peace agreement got a wel- term stimulus package.
come
endorsement
Washington
The centerpiece . of the its status as the Arab retrenched .
attending the RNC meeting · governing delegates' powers
said Democrats seem likely to and obligations arf · nearly Wednesday from a nation most extensive Mideast world's main Mideast moved recently to put conmake their choice before a incomprehensible, he said. long seen as a key Arab trip of Bush's presidency · mediator slip to another ditions on aid, with a bill
clear winner emerges from But in the end, it might not mediator. Bush responded by was the ambitious go_al of a power player - Saudi thijt withholds a small porpulling his punches on the signed peace deal before Arabia. Still, Mubarak tion until Egypt stops 4he
.the pack of four or five still- matter much.
credible GOP contenders.
A deadlocked nominating human rights backpedaling he leaves office a year endorsed Bush's one-year smuggling of weapons from
"The way it looks now, it process would be obvious in Egypt that has cooled rela- from now. Talks have been timeline and offered to its land into the Palestinian
could end up in the conven- when most primaries end by tions with this longtime ally. fitful, with few tangible work
. "hand-in-hand" Gaza Strip via border tunThe
president
closed
an
tion," Ron Schmidt, South early May, Madonna said,
results
so
far.
On alongside the United States nels ·and makes other
eight-day
Mideast
trip
wellDakota's
Republican four' months before the party
Wednesday, Israel moved and other peacemakers to domestic changes.
fed
from
several
lingering
National Committeeman, conv~tions take place.
to dismantle two unautho- make it happen - a more
said of the party's nominat- Then there will be wheel- meals with his Arab hosts rized settler outposts, a enthusiastic statement than
ing process. "It's fasc_inating ing and dealing" among the and upbeat about what even sticking point in talks.
Bush received elsewhere.
if you're a political junkie." candidates and their surro- some of America's closest
Arab states were not shy , "I emphasized that the
In the major contests so far gates, he said, with possible allies say is an unexpected in criticizing Bush's arms- Palestinian question, of
- Iowa, New Hampshire deals including a vice presi- and ambitious drive. An length approach up to now. course, is the core of proband Michigan - three dif- dential spot for a contender Israeli-Palestinian agree: Mubarak was among those lems and conflict in the
ferent Republicans have fin- willing to step aside and ment has eluded U.S. presi- who told Bush he was creat- Middle East," Mubarak told
dents for decades, and Bush ing a larger problem by let- reporters after he and Bush
.ished first. If former resolve the question.
Tennessee •Sen. · Fred
On Wednesday, several didn't put much effort into . ting the issue fester and by met and had lunch at thi s
Thompson scores the win he Republican officmls said a trying for the first seven feeding the perception that Red Sea resort.
• FREE Z417 T.Chnleal Supt)Ort
hopes for in South Carolinil protracted primary season years of his presidency.
• lr~Stant Messaglng • keep your bLJOd'/ 11$!1
he is too partial to Israel.
Egypt was meant to be a
• 10 e..rnail addresSl!ll with Wabmall!
had
a
message
for
Bush
on Saturday, he would be the might add excitement to a
Bush 's strategy, formed test case for Bush's second• Custom Star! Paoa • new&amp;. weatt\el' &amp; morel
skeptical
Arab
states
whose
fourth first-place finisher. party that typically settles
over the last year, turns the term promise to push
Lr.help he needs to make any tables somewhat. It asks democracy in the Middle
Likewise, former New York on a nominee early.
(
Svrf vp lo 6X laster/ I
Mayor ~udy Giuliani could
That's not the tune they accord stick and who doubt Arab states to be ground- East. . Secretary of State
jufiiiJ rTIC#e -__;
be the fifth winner in the five were h11rnming last summer, the president's intention to floor investors in a plan the Condoleezza Rice chose
Sign Up Onl!ntl www.LoeaiN•t.com
contests if he proves wise in however, when they began personally shepherd a deal. Israelis and Palestinians will Egypt as the site of a major
:::\); 4ia::
Call Today &amp; Save!
picking Florida's Jan: 29 pri- worrying about potential ' "I mean what I'm saying," largely write themselves. It challenge to Mideast leadmary as his first'big stand.
losses at the congressional Bush said.
would set the terms of peace ers in 2005 - after delay- l«aiNef
In a brief appearance with but probably leave the job of . ing her trip to protest
Politicians had long and state levels. When a likeassumed the Feb. 5 "Super ly GOP nominee emerges by Egyptian President Hosni
Tuesday" primary, involvmg early February or so, Mubarak, Busil dealt gently
California, New York and 22 Republicans will "not have with the pace of political'
other states, would resolve the Bush monkey on our reform in Egypt, the issue
any doubts about either back," Rep. Tom Feeney, R- that has most distanced his .
administration from this
party's nominee. Democrats Fla., said at the time.
feel slightly less certain about
Rove told party officials historical partner, the first
that now, and Republicans Wednesday that the eventu- Arab state to make peace ..
are even more doubtfuL
al GOP presidential nomi- with Israel and the recipient
The GOP process could go nee has "four big things to of tlie most U.S. aid except
"right up to the point that we do" when the intraparty bat- Israel. He started with
dot;~'t have ll clear candidate
tle ends. The first, he said, is praise that had less to do
with enough electoral votes to "introduce themself to with Egypt's government
to win" the nomination when the American people," who than with its history and
the conventions start, · said pay far less attention to populace. He said he disHerbert
Schoenbohm, campai!lns than most politi- cussed the issue with
Mubarak, who himself said
Republican Party chairman cal aficiOnados realize.
nothing on the topic.
"Because of the predomi nate role you play, and
because I strongly believe
that' Egypt can play a role in
the freedom and justice
movement .. . my hope is
entranc~
that the Egyptian governBY JosH FUNK
about retaking the test since ment will build on these
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
the twins earned their per- important steps, and give
the people of this proud
fect scores.
BELLEV UE, Neb.
.tobacco users
The brothers are both nation a greater voice in
Brian and Ross DeVol are a good in physics and are your future," Bush said.
supportive
perfect match, genetically considering the University
He did not publicly menMEIGS COUNTY
and academically: The iden- of Nebraska or Creighton tion jailed political opposito hr&lt;~.:~~lll
Holzer Tobacco Prevention
tical twins earned perfect University in Omaha as tion leader Ayman Nour,
ACT score&gt;.
115 W. 2nd Street.
their college choices, but whose case U.S. officials
The seniors at suburban they haven't yet decided.
have pledged to raise each
Bellevue East High School
Ross DeVol said he wants time they' meet the
both "cored 36 on the col- to become a doctor or a psy- Egyptians.
lege entrance exam, though chiatrist. Brian De Vol has
As ~asoline and heating
Ross De Vol needed three said he wants to become an oil pnces soar at home,
tries. One of his earlier tries actuary.
Bush urged the OPEC oil
ne't!ed a 35.
The DeVols are only the cartel to consider boosting
an ont'II\J
The 18-year-old brothers third pair of students in the production. White House
have maintained straight-As past decade to earn perfect press secretary Dana Perino
quitting.
through hi gh school, and scores in the same year and said Saudi King Abdullah
both are in the running for share the same address, understood· the concern
on long-term freedom
class valedictorian.
ACT spokeswoman Kristin Bush raised Tuesday night.
tobacco, including
"We're pretty competi- Crouse said. Crouse could- But there was no apparent
tive," Ross DeVol said.
n't say whether the others commitment from the
r~ora~vea skills for
The twins have already were twins.
Saudis and no immediate
won household bragging
About one out of every move from OPEC.
right,. Th~ir older brother, 4,000 graduates who took
With the U.S. economy
John, earned a 33 the first the ACT last year scored a suffering from the effects
time he took the ACT and ·36. The average score in of high energy costs as
didn't try again.
Nebraska was 22.1, and well as a housing crisis,
Ross De Vol said his older the national average was one of Bush's first acts
brother has been joking 21.2.
upon
returning
to

6:30 p.m. Subordinate baking contest (peanut butter
cookies) to be held.
Monday,Jan.21
ATHENS - Southeast
Thursday, Jan. 17
POMEROY - American Ohio Woodland Interest
Cancer Society Meigs Group, 7 p.m., Athens
County Advisory Board. County Extension Office.
regular meetin g, noon , Jerry Hopkins, operations
basement conference room supervisor for ODNR state
of Pomeroy Library, lunch nursery in MarieHa as
"Ohio
provided, new members speaker.
welcome, 992"6626. ext. 24 Conservation Seedlings:
Planting Value in Ohio's
to RSVP.
.
Woodlands."
Information at
POMEROY
- ,Meigs
County
Community 59'3-8555.
Thesday, Jan. 22
Coalition;? .p.m .. Mulberry
POMEROY
-Meigs ·
Community Center, guest
Society
County
Humane
speaker Mike Bartrum, di sBoard,
5
p.m.
,
regular
meetcussion
on
youth
alcohol/drug abuse, door ing, 6 p.m. general member"
ship meeting, both at
prizes.
Pomeroy Library.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Development
Group, 8:30 .a.m ., Meigs
County Job and Family
Services. All board memThursday, Jan. 17
bers encoumged to attend.
RUTLAND
- Town
Saturday, Jan. 19
meeting, new mayor meet
SALEM CENTER and greet, di scuss residents'
Star Grange #778 and Star concerns.
6:30
p.m.,
Junior Grange #878 fun Rutland Civic Center, light
night and potluck supper, refreshments.

BY CHARLES BABINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Public meetings

AN·NIE'S MAILBOX
Monday, Jan. 21
POMEROY Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society, 7 p.m. at the fairgrounds.
·
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
with organizational meeting to be held preceding
regular session.
VVednesday,Jan.23
RACINE
~egular
meeting of state Financial
Planning and Supervision
Commission for Southern
Local School District,
10:30 a.m., high school
media room.

Birthdays
Saturday, Jan. 19
COOLVILLE- Leonard
Amos will observe his 80th
birthday Jan. 19. Cards may
be ' sent to him at 42316
Tucker Road, Coolville,
Ohio 45723.
Sunday,Jan.20
REEDSVILLE
Frances Reed of Reedsville
will tum 80 on Jan. 17. Her
family will host an open

house 2-4 p.m. on Jan . 20 at
Reeds ville
United
Methodist Church. Cards
may be sent to P.O. Box 75,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772. She
asks that gifts be omitted.
VVednesday,Jan.23
ROCKSPRINGS
Sylvia Midkiff of Pomeroy
celebrates her 90th birthday today. Cards can be
mailed
to
her
at
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center, '36759 Rocksprings
Rd., Room 133, Pomeroy,
4.5769.

Church events
. Sunday, Jan, 20
MIDDLEPORT - Jeff
Kassel! will sin~ at the Old
Bethel Freewtll Baptist
Church, Route 7 and Story's
Run, 6 p.m.
VVednesday, Jan. 23
MIDDLEPORT - Tiny
Tech Pre-School at the
Freedom Center Ministries
will have a winter musical , ·
7 p.m., at the school, 873
South
Third
Ave.,
Middleport.

Mubarak endorses Bush's hQpes
for quick Mideast peace deal

SUbmitted plloto

Recently elected officers for the Meigs County Trustee association are, from the left, Joe Bolin, Bill Spaun, Randy Butcher,
John Hood : and Opal Dyer.
·

Trustees elect officers
POMEROY - Bill Spaun secretary/treasurer; and Joe
was elected President of the Bolin, executive· officer.
Meigs County Township Randy Butcher was appointTrustee Association at their ed to the Issue 2 Board.
Marilyn
Ashcraft.
meeting held recently at the
Meigs County
Senior Southeastern Ohio liai son
for Auditor Mary Taylor's
Citizens Center.
Other officers elected office spoke briefly to the
were John Hood, vice presi- group conce rning the Public
dent;
Opal
Dyer, Records training that is

740·992-6260

'
:
'

...

.•

,

••

•

"

t~

' •

•

Airman Joseph S. Perry

Birth
announced

·I

The Arc of Ohio &amp;
Southeast Ohio Branch
. of The Arc of Ohio
present:

Ohio
Understanding the System:
·Supports for People with MR/DD

Saturday, January 19, 2008,9:00 AM·3:30 PM,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital Athens, Ohio
55 Hospital Drive, .Athens, OH 45701-2302

Featuring Keynote by 92nd District State Rep •
Jimmy Stewart
Chelr, Human Services Subcommittee, Member of the
Heallhcare Access &amp; Affordability Committee
9:00.10:00
Registration
10:Q0-11:30 , OP4'nlng Session
"State and Federal Pollttcattssues that wm Affect
the Quality of Life of Individuals with MRDD"
Speaker: State Representative Jimmy Stewart,
92nd District Chair,
1.

POMEROY - Jamie and
Terry Payne of Carbon Hill
announce the birth of a
daughter: Emilee Dawn .
She weighed 7 pounds, five
ounces.
Emilee has five brothers
and sisters at home .
Maternal grandparents are
Phyllis Floyd of Nelsonville,
and Dennis Aoyd of Logan.
Paternal grandparents are
Carolyn Sue and Arnold
Sears and the late Kenneth
Payne of Harrisonville.

TO

•

and Dorothy Roseberry, fiscal officer for Lebanon
Township, were recognized
'for their mlj.lly years of service. Both are retiring at the
end of this term of office.
Door prizes, donated by
local businesses, were
drawn for at the conclusion
of the meeting.

Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

him to ask?- Puzzled
Dear Puzzled: The Avon
lady told you where his
Dear Annie: I am a mother was? My, my, what
divorced father of a 13-year- personal serv_ice. H y~:m are
old daughter. Though her . certam· the mformat~on os
mom and I share joint cus- accurate, your relatove ts
tody, I have her most of the entitled to know. Tell him
time because my ex doesn't you have it, ask if he would
want her around. The vis ita- like it, and then follow his
lion clause in the divorce is wishes accordingly.
very liberal . and my ex is
Dear Annie: I was comtakmg advantage of it. She pletely appalled by your
claims she is always work- response to "Heartbroken."
ing and needs massive over- the young woman who was
time to make ends meet.
&lt;distressed about relocating
Every time I bring up the far from family to be with
subject of a set schedule, she her tiance.
becomes defensive and comTo state that "once you're
bative. She has not seen her · married, your husband ·
daughter for any significant should come first" is a page
amount of time in weeks. straight from the 1950s. What
~he thinks ~alling ~evetal about the young man's obligumes a day ts suffictent. II auon to see that his future
has reached the point where wife is happy? ,It seems to me
my daughter doesn't want to his family has essentially
see her mother.
'
bribed her to relocate (house,
, Reliable sitters are hard to business and wedding plans)
come by and her mother is in order to bring their son
against u. I have not had an closer to them.
evening to see my girlfriend
If his family has their
fortwo straight weeks. This is son's best interests in mind,
putting an intense strain on a they should work out a comserious relationship and it promise . .If the young man
J11ay already be beyond repair. can't stand up to his family,
Last month, I was invited then perhaps he is the one
to a very special family who's not ready for margathering that I was unable riage. - VVeiiOeet, Mass.
to attend at the last minute
Dear WellOeet: This isn't
because my ex had to work. a gender issue. When some! am reluctant to go to court one marries, the partner
to force the issue, but she is· should take precedence over
leaving me no choice. How the parents. Period. Missing
can I handle .this situation . her family, whom she can
and salvage my relation- visit, should not be more
ship?- Mr. Mom
important than his livelihood,
Dear Mr. Mom: Get you~ which may not be transact together, people. We feel portable. And her need for
sorry for your daughter, who family should not outweigh
is being treated like an his. Both families should be
unwanted shoe. If you need a given equal weight. She
sitter so you can go out on a knew what the deal was when
Saturday night, get one. You she agreed to marry him.
don't need your ex-wife's Compromise is always good,
permission. And if the ex but for the primary breadwi~­
cannot manage to spend any ner (male or female) to relotime with her daughter in cate because the spouse fears
"weeks," it's time to take her being away from Mpmmy
'to court. As for your girl- and Daddy. indicates the
friend, any woman who is spouse may not be ready to .
serious about • you must . commit fully to the partnerunderstand that, right now, ship. Our advice stands.
your daughter comes first. If
Annie's Mailbox is writyou want to see the girlfriend ten by Kathy Mitchell and
more' often, invite her to Marcy Sugar, longtime e.dihave dinner with you and tors of the Ann Landers
your daughter.
column. Please e-mail your
Dear Annie: Should I tell questions to anniesmailan adult relative that I've box@comcast.net, or write
found his biological moth- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
er? Adoption records are Box 118190, Chicago, JL
'sealed in this state, but 606JJ. To find out more
thanks to some key informa- about Annie's Mailbox,
tion from an Avon saleslady. and read features . by other
I now have the woman's Creators Syndicate writers
name and location. He had and cartoonists, visit the
only a slight interest in my Creators Syndicate Web
search. Should I .wait for page at www.creators.com.

POMEROY - Air Force Airman Joseph S. Perry has
graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air ·
Force Base, San Antonio, Texas.
During the .six weeks of training, the airman studied the
Air Force mission, organization, and military customs and
courtesies; performed drill and ceremony marches, and
received physical training, rifle marksmanship, field train. ing exerctses, and special training in human relations.
In addition, airmen who complete basic training earn
credits toward an associate degree through the Community
Colle~e of the Air Force.
He ts the son of ~andy Perry of Sandusky Drive S.W.,
Beach City, Ohio, and Freda Lewis of Neese Road,
Middleport, 'Ohio.
· Perry is a 2004 graduate of Fairless High School,• ·
Navaire, Ohio.

Emllee Dawn Payne

6:00pm

•

required for elected officials
during each term of office.
Ron Sowash of D &amp; D
Emulsions talked about his
product, and Pat Story,
Meigs County Prosecutor,
spoke concerning nonmaintained status roads.
Richard Bailey, fiscal offi-.
cer for Salisbury Township

When it comes·to child,
get your act together

Perry graduates basic training

Identical perfection: Twin
· brothers from Nebraska earn perfect
scores on college
test

•

Thursday,Januaryt7,2oo8

Community Calendar

Republicans eye possible
deadlocked convention,
mass uncertainty

•

PageA3

BY .THE 'BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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SP4'akar: Gary Tonks, Execullve Director,
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Speaker: "'ndy Kool-Tucker, Ph.D.;
Kaleidoscope Solutions, LTD.
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PageA4

OPINION

Thursday, January 17, 2008

ALL BUSINESS: Emotion drives investors
to sell stocks over the slightest recession worry
BY RACHEL BECK

its biggest decline in that peri- own investment firm. "They guts of the report that told a
od since 1991. Monday's are making extremely emo- more upbeat story .. "The
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
rally emsed some of those tiona! decisions, which means . recession is likely to la&amp;t
NEW· YORK - "Get a losses.
·
every. bit of news is amp! i- about two to three quarters
neck
brace,"
is
what
Ed
•
There
are
reasons
for
fled.''
and show be relatively mild
Dan Goodrich
Yardeni
is
telling
his
investinvestors
to
be
worried.
Just
look
at
AT
&amp;T's
stock
by historical standards, with a
Publisher
ment clients now. The market Falling housing prices have selloff on Jan. 8. CEO cumulative declin~ in real
strategist says when share- . made it harder for homeown- Randall Stephenson blamed a GDP" of about half a percentr
Charlene Hoeflich
holders get emotional, they ers to borrow · against their weakening economy for an age point, it ·said in its report.
General Manager-News Editor
tend to take stocks on wild properties, which no doubt is increase in the number of its
Market participants also 31"\!
rides.
playing a role in the softness landline and ·high-speed choosing to largely downplay
That's just what has been of "COnsumer spending. And Internet customers not paying any good news. For instance,
playing out on Wall Street in that's spooking corporate their bills, which has led the there was a m~.&lt;ted reaction to
recent days .. Even the tiniest America, with many compa- telecom company to discon- Federal Reserve Chairman
Congress shall make no law respecting an
bit of news that investors nies already protectively nect their service.
Ben Bcrnanke:s pledge to
establishment of religiQn, or prohibiting the
think points to more econom- holding back on hiring.
"We're really experiencing slash interest rates as needed
free e~ercise thereof; '· abridging the freedom of tc weakness can send share . At the same time, increas- some softness on the con- to prevent housing and credit
speech, or of tlae press; or the right of the peo- prices plunging in a moment's ing mortgage defaults rates sumer side of the house from problems from plunging the
have caused lenders every- the ·economy," Stephenson country into a recession.
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the notice.
Case in point: AT&amp;T's where to tighten their bonrow- said at an investment conferInvestor sentiment is sufferGovernment for a redress of grievances.
shares tumbled immediately ing standards, for businesses ence, according to a transcript ing because of recession worufter its CEO mentioned and consumers. Citigroup provided
by • Thomson ries. The weekly survey by
the American Association of
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution "soften" and "consumer" in . chief U.S. equity strategist Financial.
the same sentence, even Tobias Levkovich thinks
He didn't give more detail Individual Investors found
though he made no changes to Federal Reserve 's February than that, and the !Xlmpany that nearly 59 percent of it~
the company's earnings out- loan officers' survey could declined to quantify the num- respondents were bearish, the
look. The market also sho~ banks tightening com- her of subscribers affected. most since 1990, according to
slumped after Goldman Sachs mercia! and industrial loan There was no change in the Bespoke Investment Group. '
Today is Thursday, Jan. 17, the 17th day of2008. There are forecast that the economy is growth by a net 30 percent company's earnings guidAt first glance, that sounds
349 days left in the year.
heading into a recession, since November.
ance, ·and analysts said the dismal for stocks. When thl!
Today's Highlight in History:
despite its view that an ecoShould such conditions comments simply reiterated AAll survey in the past has
On Jan. 17, 1945, Soviet and Polish forces liberated War~aw nomic pullback could be short result in a recession - which what Stephenson had said a gone bearish above 55 pe~­
during World War II.
and mild.
we wort 't know is happening month ago.
cent, however, the S&amp;P 500
On this date:
Investors aren't looking at until well after it has begunBut shareholders were has heen higher one year
In 1893, the 19th president of the United States, Rutherford the incoming data objectively it wouldn 't bode well for noAetheless unnerved, and later, Bespoke said.
B. Hayes, died in Fremont, Ohio, at age 70.
anymore. Recession worries stocks at least in the near bolted from the stock. Within
While the first half of 'a
In 1893, Hawaii's monarchy was overthrown as a group of are dominating their thinking, term. Recessions on average minutes of his comments, recession can punish stpcks,
businessmen and sugar planters forced Queen Liliuokalani to and they've taken to hunting last 216 days, or just over 7 · AT&amp;T shares sank 3.5 per- the second .·half tends to
abdicate.
for news -l'lr sometimes just months, and stocks post an · cent. By the end of the day, reward investors. During the
In 1917, the United States paid Denmark $25 million for the words - that can fit their average 8.64 percent decline they lost 4.6 percent.
nine recessions dating back 19
Virgin Islands.
gloomy view.
during the first half of the
A day after that, Goldman 1953, S&amp;P 500 stocks have
In 1945, Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, credited with
That's why this year has pullback, according
to · Sachs' economist~ issued a gained 13.17 percent on aver,saving tens of thousands ·Of Jews, disappeared in Hungary mostly started .off on a sour Citigroup data dating back to report saying they believed age in the latter half of a
while in Soviet custody.
note. The Standard &amp; Poor's 1953.
there was a 66 percent chance recession, according to
In 1961, in his farewell address, President Dwight 500 index's 4.59 percent ·
Some investors seem intent that the economy would slip Citigroup's Levkovich. ·
Eisenhower warned against the rise of "the military-industrial decline during the first eight on making such ugly into a recession. That was
Investors might want to
complex."
trading days was the worst prospects a reality, as has . higher than its previous reces- reconsider fleeing from
In 1966, a U.S. Air Force B-52 carrying four unarmed start for a year since 1982. been evi.dent by their overre- sian estimates of 40 percent to stocks. Holding tight could he
hydrogen bombs cra5hed on the Spanish coast. ·(Three of the The Dow Jones industrial · action to some news.
45 percent.
a daring move in these uncerbombs were quickly recovered, but the fourth wasn 't recov- average fell nearly 5 percent
"Investors are twitching,"
Mimy investors took that as tain times, but one that has the
ered until April.)
.
· ·
from Jan. 2 through Jan. II, said Yardeni, who runs his a sign to sell, ignoring the potential to pay off.
In 1995, more than 6,000 people were killed when an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 devastated th~ city of Kobe,
Japan.
· .
In 1997, a court in Ireland granted !he first divorce in the
Roman Catholic country's history.
BUT
Ten yea,rs ago: President Bill Clinton gave a deposition in
'IOV
Paula Jones' sexual harassment lawsuit against him; during the
PROIYI!SED
nearly six hours of sworn testimony, Clinton denied having
CHAN6E:.
had a sexual relationship with fanner White House intern
Monica Lewinsky.
One year ago: A year after disclosure of a domestic spying
program that President Bush · maintained was within his
authority to operate, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales
announced the administration had shifted its position and
would seek the approval of an independent panel of federal
judges. Pulitzer Prize-winning satirist Art Buchwald died in
Wa5hington, D,C., at age 81.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Betty White is 86. Singer-actress
Eartha Kitt is 81. Actor James Earl Jones is 77. Talk show host
Maury Pavich i.s 69. Former heavyweight boxing champion
Muhammad Ali is 66. Rhythm-and-blues singer William Hart
(The Delfonics) is 63. Rock musician Mick Taylor is 60.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Sheila Hutchinson (The Emotions)
is 55. Singer Steve Earle is 53. Singer Paul Young is 52. Actorcomedian Steve Harvey is 5 I.' Singer Susanna Huffs (The
Bangles) is 49'. Actor-comedian lim Carrey is 46. Actor Joshua
Malina is 42. Singer Shabba Ranks is 42. Actor Naveen
Andrews' is 39. Rapper Kid Rock is 37. Actor Freddy
Rodriguez is 33. Actress l!Joey Deschanel is 28. Singer Ray J
is 27. Country singer Amanda Wilkinson is 26.
Try this political pop quiz:
to be realized when President remark that infuriated many
Thought for Today: "I am always ready to learn, but I do not Can you identify the presiLyndon Johnson passed the African-Americans. 'Wheo
always like to be taught."- Winston Churchill, British states- dential candidate promising
Civil Rights Act of 1964, has "black" and "fairy· tale"
man (I 874-1965).
"a fresh start after a season of
when he was able to . get ever been mentioned in the
cynicism ... a president who
through Congress something same sentence?' asked Todd
LETTERS TO THE
can unite ,this nation, a presithat President Kennedy was Boyd, professor of AfricanGene
dent who puts aside the end.
hopeful to do, the president American
and Critical
EDITOR .
Lyons
less partisan bickering that
before had not even tried, but Studies at the University of
it took a president to get it Southern California."
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev should be less seems to gridlock our nation's
than 300 words. All letters are subject to' editing, must be capital, a president who puts
-done. That dream became a
When, indeed? You can
signed, and include address and telephone number. No the people first, a president
reality. The. power of that scrutinize Bill Clinton's entire
But no, I didn't find Obarna dream became real in peo- 500-word statement about
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in who lifts this nation's spirgood taste, addressing is.!ues. not personalities. Letters of itsT'
haughtily
condescending pie's lives because we had a Obama's shifting positions on
thanks to organizatio11s and individuals will not be acceptAnother clue: "I want you toward Hillary Rodham president who said; 'We are Iraq without finding any alh.ied fo~ publication.
·
to under1tand that I ean' t win Clinton during the New going ·to do it,' and aci:)Jally sion whatsoever to race. Not
without you. When you go Hampshire debate. People got it accomplished."
one. It's online at mediamat"ln other words," wrote ters.org.
,
out there and tell the folks make too much of these transitory
moments.
She'd
pro, where we stand ... when it
Marjorie Valbrun in the Post,
On "Meet the Press," Sen.
comes to bringing people nounced him "likeable," pret- '"I have a dream' is a nice Clinton found herself con(USPS 213-960)
together to get things done, ty much forcing him to call sentiment, but King couldn't fronted with video clips art,
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
and you tell them that the core her likeable back. I'd oall his make it reality. It took a more fully cropped to conceal the
Co.
Correcllon Polley
of this campaign is the inher- reaction one professional's practical and, of course, white context of both her owll
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
ent trust in the American·peo- wry acknowledgement of president, Lyndon Johnson, to remarks ·and her husband's.
th ro ugh Friday, ~ 11 Court Street,
ple, I believe it doesn't matter another's smooth handling of get blacks to the mountaintop. She defended herself well,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Seconcl-ctass postage
what political party they're in. a tricky question.
... Clinton manllged toinsidt a but that's not the point.
'In a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
Nor
do
I
credit
the
.rumor
They're
going
to
come
our
beloved
black leader in her Whatever hi s faults, Bill
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
reported
by
the
New
York
way."
eager
attempt
to insult a rising Clinton stood up for civil
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Post's
chronically
unreliable
Po1tmaster: Send address correcOK, it's a trick question.
black leader."
·iights in Arkansas back when
Our matn number Is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
Page Six that Obama entered
The
.
candidate's
not
Illinois
Except
that
King
himself
.
it was physically dangerous.
(740) 992-2156. .
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
a
Des
Moines
victory
party
to
once
told
LBJ,
"It
is
ironic,
·
Hillary was inspired by OJ;.
Sen. Barack Obarna, but
Department extensions are:
Texas governor George ·w. Jay-Z's misogynist rap "99 Mr. President, that after a cen- King as a high school girj.
Subscription Rates
Bush, as quoted by The New Problems": "I got 99 prob- tury, a southern white . Their reward was the insanely
By carrier or motor route
News
York Times in November lems but a b**** ai-n't one." President would help lead the scurrilous videotape, "The
One month
'1 0.27
Edl.tor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
2000. Actually, "folks" He'd have to be an idiot, and way toward the salvation of Clinton Chronicles," partly .
One year
' 115.84
Oatly
511'
the Negro."
mumted by Arkansas' last dieshould be a dead giveaway. Obarna's not.
Repc)rter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Senior
Citizen
rites
What,
then,
to
make
of
the
It's what poker players calf
Grow up, Ms. Valbrun.
hard segregationist, Justice
Reporter: Belh Sergent. Ext. 13
One month
'1 0.27
Likewise, New York Times Jim Johnson.
'
Bush's "tell," a sure sign he's controversy over Clinton's
One year
' 103.90
alleged
"racially
tinged
comcolumnist Bob Herbert
blowing smoke.
Leave this stuff to Rush
&amp;bscribers should remit in advance
. Advertising
ments"
as
one
Washington
accused
Hillary
of
"taking
Limbaugh
and AI Sharpton'.
But,
yes,
Obarna
2008
direct to the Daily Sentinel. No sub Out.l~ Satoo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Post
op-ed
writer
called
them,
cheap
shots
at,
of
all
people,
Democrats
indulge in raciat
sounds awfully like Bush
&amp;c ription by mail permitted in' areas
Out.lde Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is avaH2000, especially when he wordS "that could be taken as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther. demagoguery at their peril. (t
ClaoaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
wafts into high rhetorical either insensitive or patroniz- King Jr." Herbert further will surely backfire in the
mode, all · moonbeams and ing"? Citing Obama's relative accused Bill Clinton of insult- general election. .
Mall Subscription
lofty emotions. Exactly what lack of experience, Clinton ingly characterizing Obarna's
(Arkansas
Democrat•
General Manager
lnotde Molgo County
made
the
unexceptional
point
compromises
he'll
make
with
campaign as "the biggest Gazelle columnist Gene
Charlene Hoeflich, E~et 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
that
it
took
LBJ's
political
the
guns,
God
and
gdys,
bigfairy tale I've ever seen.''
Lyons is a rwtional magazine
26 weeks
• '64.20
skills
to
tum
Martin
Luther
52Weeks
'127.11
GOP
Virtually
every
"mainaward
winner and·co-autl!or
ger-wars/smaller-taxes
E·mall:
King
Jr.'s
idealism
into
law.
hardliners come 2009 - the
stream" publication and TV of "The Hunting of til~
news@mydailysenlinel .com
Outside Meigs County
Because Clinton's word~ network jumped in . Here's Presidenr" (St. Martin's
same ones circulating e-mails
13 Weeks
,
'53.55
falsely claiming he's a covert have been selectively edited, Newsweek's fonnulation of Press, 2(}()()). You can e-mail
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
Islamic extremist- Obama's it's worth quoting them in the racial insult Bill Clinton Lyons at genelyons2 @sbc·
52 Weeks
'214.2 1
www.mydailysentinel .com
full: "Dr. King's dream began "appeared" to deliver, "a g/obal.net.)
not saying.
M' BUSINESS WRITER

TODAY IN HISTORY

Erasing the race

The Daily Se,ntinel

--- ---·-------.--------------- ------·---------. ·-- - ·.. --- -·, ~

-

..........- ---.-.._....___. .... -

Thursday, Janu~ry· 17, 2~08

·Obituaries

Local Briefs

Homer L Jeffers
CLIFTON, W.Va. - Homer L. Jeffers, 81, of Clifton,
W.Va., died Jan. 16, 200S at the Holzer Medical Center.
Born on July 3, 1926, he was the son of the late Charles ·
A and Jessie A. (Burtrum) Jeffers. He was a retired coal
·miner from Central Coal Co., and belonged to the United
Mine Workers Local 9586 'and the Clifton Tabernacle
Church. He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy, World War !1.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by his wife,
·Alma, and a sister, Clara Lewis. He is survived by a daughter Candy (Charles) Van Meter, of Clifton, W.Va.; a ·son,
Carl R..(Vicki) Jeffers of Hartford, W.Va.; four grandchildren, Carla (Craig) Weaver, Summer Dawn (Todd) Hicks,
Josh Jeffers, and Chad VanMeter, nine great grandchildren,
a sister, Wilda VanMeter of Mason, W.Va.; ·a brother, David
Jeffer.s of Mason, W.Va.,. and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be held at the Clifton Hill
·Cemetery, Friday, Jan . 18, at I p.m. with Pastor Larry Gilland
officiating. Burial will be in the Clifton Hill Cemetery. In lieu
•o f flowers contributions may be made to the Clifton
Tabernacle Church Building Fund, Roberta Lewis, Clifton,
. W.Va.; 25260. There will be only private visitation.
. E-mail Condolences to foglesongtucker@myway.com

John Michael (Mike) Tate
, POMEROY- John Michael (Mike) Tate, 40, Pomeroy,
passed away Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2008, in Ohio State
University Hospital , after an extended illness.
Born in Athens on March 4, 1967 he was the son of John
R. and Frances Gillette Tate of Pomeroy. He loved Nascar
and was an avid hunter and tisherman.
In addition to his pacents he· is survived by his wife Sanr,ly
Lee Tate, a daughter Brianna Tate of Craig, Colo., stepchildren Scott and Brittany Chapell of Pomeroy, brother Greg
,(Heather) Tate of Flag Staff, Ariz., sister Melissa (Rod)
King of Glenwood Springs, c;olo., grandfather Charles
Patterson of The Plains, father and mother-in-law Lawrence
and Cora Lee of Pomeroy; three nieces, one great niece, tw 0
great nephews, numerous aunts, uncles and.cousins.
He was preceded in death by · a grandmother Marcella
Patterson and grandparents Harold and Mary Gillette.
Services will be Saturday at I p.m. at Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home with . Rev. Carl Radcliff officiating. Burial
will be in Ridgewood Cemetery, Wellston. Visitation will
be Friday 5-8 p.m. at the funeral home.

Harold Douglas Clark
RACINE - Harold Douglas Clark, 75, of Racine, Ohio
passed away on Jan. 16, 2008 at the Arbors of Marietta
He was born on May 7, 1932 in New Haven, W.Va. son
of the late Homer and Annie McCloud Cll!l'k. He was living at his daughter Phyllis' home in Southside, W.Va. until
he went to the hospital in October 2007. He was retired and
he enjoyed singing and playing the banjo with the Clark
Famil&gt;' Gospel Group in churches and nursing homes.
He IS survived by his: wife, Peggy Sue Clark of Racine;
three sons, John R. and Susan Clark of Southside, W.Va.,
Harold Clark 'k of Columbus, and Roger D. Clark of
Cambridge; four daughters, Phyllis and Ron K.inniard of
Southside, W.Va., Mary and Everett Coy of Pomeroy,
Margaret and Steve Carson of Rockport, W.Va. and Letha
Springer of Parkersburg, W.Va.; son-in-law, Roger L. Preast
of Albany; three step-children, Julie Flinn of Parkersburg,
W.Va., Patricia Owens of Parker~ burg, W.Va. and Anita and
Dennis Vaughan of Woodruff, S.C.; 20 plus grandchildren;
20 plus great-grandchildren; six step-grandchildren.
In addition tu his parents, he was preceded in death by: a
daughter, Rosemary Preast; sisters, Olga Yonker, Ella
Kerns, Elda McFarland, Leona Roach; brothers, Cleo
Clark, Charles E. Clark and Homer Clark, Jr.
Funeral services will be held on Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008
at Anderson Funeral Home, New Haven, W.Va. at 10 a.m.
with Pastors Mike Finnicum and Sam Anderson officiating.
Burial will follow at Jeffers Ridge Cemetery in Southside,
W.Va .. Visiting hours will be on Friday from 3-8 p.m. at the
funeral home. A registry is available online by visiting
www.andersonfh.com.

Victor Counts
SYRACUSE - Victor Counts, 77, of Syracuse passed
away at his residence on Jan . 15, 2008.
He was born on Nov. 8, 1929 in Kentuck, W.Va. to the
late Carrie and Elihu Counts. Victor was retired from U.S
Steel in Lorain, Ohio arid Nationwide Tnicking in Omaha,
Neb. He was veteran of the United States Army.
He is survived by his wife, Virginia Kathleen "Kiity"
·Counts; children, Robert and Anita Counts, James and Ida
Counts, Victor and April Counts, Jeff Counts, Van and Paula
Counts, Kelly Counts, Shannon and Many Wood, Jason and
Christina Counts; ~randchildren, James Ervin, Carrie Casto,
Brett Counts, Jamie Graham, Kesha Sarver, Brandi Dailey,
Joey Rupe, Alvin, Weston, Cody and Vada Counts, Jes*a
Yost, Tamecka Curtis, Stacey Everson, Clayton and Nikita
'wood, Sidney Grueser, Gag~ and Bradley Counts; a sister,
Eleanor Eaches; a brother, Roger. and Debbie Counts; 16
great-grandchildren, and several meces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents, two brothers,
Vernon and Edwin Counts, a grandson, Brandon Counts,
and a daughter-in-law, Luanne Counts.
Services will be held on Friday, Jan. 18, 2008 at 2 p.m. at
the Fisher Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with the Rev. Dennis Moore officiating. Burial will follow in
Meigs Memory Garden in Pomeroy. Visitation· will be held
from 6to 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17,2008 at the funeral homes.
Online condolences may be sent to www.flsherfuneralhomes .com.

State seeks
climate data
from businesses,
other groups
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio environmental regulators have asked I ,000 businesses and organizations to
volunteer emissions information to a group tracking
greenhouse gases across
North America.
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency Director
Chris Korleski recently sent
letters to the businesses, asking them to report the information to Climate Registry.
The business include those
already reporting emissions
to the state and those in the
Fortune 500.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Firemen embarking
on fund drive

will offer them a complimentary 8ll I0
color portrait to be taken at the fire station.
Those who do not receive a mailing
can call the fire station, 992-2663, for
details.

POMEROY The Pomeroy
Firemen's Association is sponsoring a
program to raise funds for equipment.
A spokesman for the department said
that in the corning weeks all homes in .,
the area will receive a request for a con·
POMEROY - The Meigs . County
tribution and the firemen in appreciation TB Clinic will be closed for Martin

Office closed

Local Weather
Thursday... A chance of
snow in the morning.
Cloudy with a chance ofrain. Highs in the lower 40s.
Southeast winds around 5
mph. Chance of precipitation 50 percent. .
· Thursday night. ..Cloudy
with a slight chance of rain.
A chance of snow with a
slight chance of sleet after
midnight. Cold with lows
around 30. South winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of precipitation 30 percent.
Friday ... Partly
sunny
with a 30 percent chance of
snow showers. Highs in the
upper 30s. West winds 5 to
10 mph.
Friday night ... Mostly

cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of snow showers.
Colder with lows around 19.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Saturday...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of snow
showers. Colder with highs
in the mid 20s. Temperature
falling into the lower 20s in
the afternoon .
Saturday night...CJoudy.
Colder with lows arounaiO
above.
Sunday... Partly sunny.
Cold with highs around 20.
M!)nday night and
TueJ.day...Mostly cloudy
with 'a 30 percent chance of
snow showers. Lows 15 to
20. Highs in the lower 30s.

Local Stocks
,. Ohio Valey Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
AEP (NYSE) - 48.48
Ak:lo (NASDAQ]- 75
-2&amp;
Aohland Inc. (NYSE)- 44.88
BIT (NYSE) - 28.19
BIC Loto (NYSE)- 14.49
Peopt" (NASDAQ)~ 23.1.8
Pepsico (NYSE) - 73.54
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 24.76
Bo,.Wamer ( NYSE] - 41.64
Premier (NASDAQ) - 12.86
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) - .
Rockwell (NYSE) -86.01
Rocky Booto (NASDAQ) - 8.U
48.07
Champion (NASDAQ)- 5.70
Royal Dutch Shell - 77 .&amp;1
Saara HotdinC (NASDAQ)Charmlntl Shops (NASDAQ)4.60
90.25
Wa~Mart (NYSE]- 47.49
City Holdtnc (NASDAQ) - 34.32
Wendy's (NYSE) - 25.85
Calllno (NYSE) - 63.48
DuPont (NYSE)- 44.30
Worthtncton ( NYSE) - 15.54
Dally otock reporto are the 4 p.m.
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.04
Gannett (NYSE) - 35.30
ET clostne quotoa of tranoacttona
for Jan. 18, 2008, provided tiy
Oenonol Elect~c. (NYSE) '- 34.86
Hortey.flavldlon (NYSE) - 39.63
Edward Jones ftnanclal advisors
loaac Millo.In Galltpolo at (740)
JP Morpn (NYSE) - 41.43
441·9441 and Loolay Marraro In
Kropr (NYSE) - 28.50
Point Ploaoant at (304)•674Umlted Brande (NYSE) -15.82
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 48.20 0174. Member SIPC.

Center

project is finished.
In addition, an outside
patio area has been added to
from Page A1
the building. Students will
be able to walk o~t of the
variety of events at all cafeteria directly onto the
hours, Sojka said.
patio to eat, but they will
Paul Harrison, vice presi- also be able to gather on the
dent of administrative and patio at all hours of the daY:
student services, explained The outside terrace is 90
that one of the most notice- feet long and 17 feet wide.
able improvements in the
The food service area in
building is in the cafeteria.
the cafeteria is also being
The ·cafeteria is being Improved, and already a
greatly expanded, ~s there · new ~alad bar and new servis much more ~oom for mg hnes are open for stuseating, food preparation dents. A new conveyor belt
and special events. The system will remove used
cafeteria currently has trays from the dining area.
enough seating for 350 Area residents are also
people, and it will be invited in to eat in the cafeexpanded to 500 when the teria, which provides lunch-

Luther King, Jr. Day on Monday. It
will reopen at 8 a.m., Tuesday.

Recuperating
. POMEROY - Wendell Eblin, 76',
recently hospitalized for the first' time
in his life, is now at home recuJierating
from surgery. Cards may be . sent to
him at 243 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Ohio, 45769·

Kennedy Museum
hosts School of
Art Faculty exhibit
ATHENS - A biennial Art. "It questions, · it
exhibition by members of inspire s, it amazes. The
the Ohio University School range of work, the variety of
of Art faculty features work styles ·show us that here in
by both new and seasoned Athens, art is alive and well
faculty members working in -and full of life!"
ceramics, graphic design,
School of Art faculty have
painting,
photography, exhibited in various muse. printmaking, sculpture, and urns across the country,
installation
art. including the Fogg Art
at
Harvard
Approximjltely 30 of the Muse.um
Ohio University School of University in Cambridge,
Art faculty members are Mass., the Museum of
sharing their recent Work Modem Art, New York, the
with the public in this free de Young Museum in San
exhibit that opens Friday . Francisco, and the Whitney
evening, Jan. 18.
Museum of Art · in New
· "It promises · to be an York. Many faculty memeclectic exhibition," says bers enjoy international
David LaPa)ombara, pro- recognition and are featured
fessor and director of the in various European museSchool of Art. "This is a urns and corporate buildwonderful opportunity for ings.
·
people in the Athens area
The exhibition runs until
and communities beyond to Sunday, March I 6. Gallery
see and celebrate the hours at the Kennedy
breadth and depth of the art Museum of Art are Tuesday,
produced by the School of Wednesday and Friday,
noon to 5 p.m.; Thursday,
Art faculty."
There is art from a wide noon to 8 p.m.; and
range of disciplines- print- Saturday and Sunday, I to 5
making, painting, photogra- p.m. Closed Mondays and
phy, soulptilre, ceramics, holidays.
graphic design, video instalAs always, admission is
lation, and performance art free.
are all represented.
Visit www.ohio.edu/muse"This show is an exciting um or call (740) 593-1304
one," says Sandra Sleight- for more information about
Brennan, interim director at the museum's current and
the Kennedy Museum of upcoming exhibitions.

es for area senior citizens
·
every day.
The food preparation area
is also being greatly
expanded, which will help
the kitchen staff as they prepare meals. Rio Grande has
more students living on
campus this year and the
expansion in the cafeteria is
helping the institu!ion better
. serve its students.
The cafeteria is · often
used for special events,
and new video equipment
has been installed for
PowerPoint presentations
and other visual · aids for
the events. Conference
Room C, which is also
used for special events, has
also been expanded and a

new food preparation area
has also been built for this
room.
New restrooms have been
built near the cafeteria and
in other places in the
expanded building, and several new offices have been
included. A new meeting
room for the board . of
trustees has also been
included in the building,
which will have numerous
benefits for students, faculty, staff and area residents.
A dedication ceremony
for the renovated and
expanded Davis University
Center will be held in
February.
,.,~:&lt;N CA,f

'!£

..s; .
ment which has the appear- place. ·rn a world of manuance of an urban loft with factured homes, Hanson
its brick walls and exposed s'aid places like The
beams on the ceiling. The Keystone were built to last
from PageA1
studio apartment also has which is part of the place's
appeal for her. .
is juxtaposed to the aged its own .outdoor deck and a
Beginning next week she
foundativn of sandstone, newly created bathroom hopes to rent the two floors
interior brick walls, origi- with glass brick on the which each measure over
nal plaGter and WOOdwork walls and all new fixtures. I ,000-square feet of space.
that has an appearance of Both floors have an unobHanson hope s anyone
craftsmanship not found in structed view of one of the with any hi storic infonnathe mass produced products location's biggest assets, tion on the building will
the Ohio River.
on today's store shelves.
Hanson has overhauled contact her at 591-0082, or
Hanson has turned the
at vhanson I @yahoo.com.
first floor into what she practically the entire build- The building is also open
calls an "upscale" two to ing with new plumbing, for tours by appointment. ·
and
cooling,
three bedroom apartment heating
complete with its own out- wiring and fixtures but has
door deck and sun porch. also tried to maintain the
Upstairs is the studio apart- historic integrity ·of the

Keystone

"'
'&lt;'t.

~

.....

~

'

I

\

.
I

. , _,.

.\
\

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. '
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,/

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:"7-:
·'· ~.'

P•: RroR.\11~(, .\JI.H (ESl'kf

Brittany's Prom
Review
Sunday, January 27.
2pm
Scrap Happy Saturday
February 2 at 9 am
RSVP by Jan. 28th
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

Registration DO\V open for
Entrance into the following Programs:
'

Practical Nursing
Surgical Technology
Pharmacy Tedmldan

~~9r~..

Buckeye Hills Care~r Center

If you want to make farm life less taxing, talk to
your people at H&amp;R Block. Our people can answer
questions about things like fuel credit, farm income
averaging, and casualty losses.
Caii1·800-HRBLOCK or visit hrblock.com
618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 457@

740-992-6674
Mon-Frl9:00 - 6:00
Sat. 9:00 - 5:00
Other hours by appointment

For information contact theAdult Center at .740;245-5334
Financial aid is available for those who qualify
•

C 2006 H&amp;A Blodr. Sr.rvioes, Inc.

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

PageA4

OPINION

Thursday, January 17, 2008

ALL BUSINESS: Emotion drives investors
to sell stocks over the slightest recession worry
BY RACHEL BECK

its biggest decline in that peri- own investment firm. "They guts of the report that told a
od since 1991. Monday's are making extremely emo- more upbeat story .. "The
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
rally emsed some of those tiona! decisions, which means . recession is likely to la&amp;t
NEW· YORK - "Get a losses.
·
every. bit of news is amp! i- about two to three quarters
neck
brace,"
is
what
Ed
•
There
are
reasons
for
fled.''
and show be relatively mild
Dan Goodrich
Yardeni
is
telling
his
investinvestors
to
be
worried.
Just
look
at
AT
&amp;T's
stock
by historical standards, with a
Publisher
ment clients now. The market Falling housing prices have selloff on Jan. 8. CEO cumulative declin~ in real
strategist says when share- . made it harder for homeown- Randall Stephenson blamed a GDP" of about half a percentr
Charlene Hoeflich
holders get emotional, they ers to borrow · against their weakening economy for an age point, it ·said in its report.
General Manager-News Editor
tend to take stocks on wild properties, which no doubt is increase in the number of its
Market participants also 31"\!
rides.
playing a role in the softness landline and ·high-speed choosing to largely downplay
That's just what has been of "COnsumer spending. And Internet customers not paying any good news. For instance,
playing out on Wall Street in that's spooking corporate their bills, which has led the there was a m~.&lt;ted reaction to
recent days .. Even the tiniest America, with many compa- telecom company to discon- Federal Reserve Chairman
Congress shall make no law respecting an
bit of news that investors nies already protectively nect their service.
Ben Bcrnanke:s pledge to
establishment of religiQn, or prohibiting the
think points to more econom- holding back on hiring.
"We're really experiencing slash interest rates as needed
free e~ercise thereof; '· abridging the freedom of tc weakness can send share . At the same time, increas- some softness on the con- to prevent housing and credit
speech, or of tlae press; or the right of the peo- prices plunging in a moment's ing mortgage defaults rates sumer side of the house from problems from plunging the
have caused lenders every- the ·economy," Stephenson country into a recession.
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the notice.
Case in point: AT&amp;T's where to tighten their bonrow- said at an investment conferInvestor sentiment is sufferGovernment for a redress of grievances.
shares tumbled immediately ing standards, for businesses ence, according to a transcript ing because of recession worufter its CEO mentioned and consumers. Citigroup provided
by • Thomson ries. The weekly survey by
the American Association of
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution "soften" and "consumer" in . chief U.S. equity strategist Financial.
the same sentence, even Tobias Levkovich thinks
He didn't give more detail Individual Investors found
though he made no changes to Federal Reserve 's February than that, and the !Xlmpany that nearly 59 percent of it~
the company's earnings out- loan officers' survey could declined to quantify the num- respondents were bearish, the
look. The market also sho~ banks tightening com- her of subscribers affected. most since 1990, according to
slumped after Goldman Sachs mercia! and industrial loan There was no change in the Bespoke Investment Group. '
Today is Thursday, Jan. 17, the 17th day of2008. There are forecast that the economy is growth by a net 30 percent company's earnings guidAt first glance, that sounds
349 days left in the year.
heading into a recession, since November.
ance, ·and analysts said the dismal for stocks. When thl!
Today's Highlight in History:
despite its view that an ecoShould such conditions comments simply reiterated AAll survey in the past has
On Jan. 17, 1945, Soviet and Polish forces liberated War~aw nomic pullback could be short result in a recession - which what Stephenson had said a gone bearish above 55 pe~­
during World War II.
and mild.
we wort 't know is happening month ago.
cent, however, the S&amp;P 500
On this date:
Investors aren't looking at until well after it has begunBut shareholders were has heen higher one year
In 1893, the 19th president of the United States, Rutherford the incoming data objectively it wouldn 't bode well for noAetheless unnerved, and later, Bespoke said.
B. Hayes, died in Fremont, Ohio, at age 70.
anymore. Recession worries stocks at least in the near bolted from the stock. Within
While the first half of 'a
In 1893, Hawaii's monarchy was overthrown as a group of are dominating their thinking, term. Recessions on average minutes of his comments, recession can punish stpcks,
businessmen and sugar planters forced Queen Liliuokalani to and they've taken to hunting last 216 days, or just over 7 · AT&amp;T shares sank 3.5 per- the second .·half tends to
abdicate.
for news -l'lr sometimes just months, and stocks post an · cent. By the end of the day, reward investors. During the
In 1917, the United States paid Denmark $25 million for the words - that can fit their average 8.64 percent decline they lost 4.6 percent.
nine recessions dating back 19
Virgin Islands.
gloomy view.
during the first half of the
A day after that, Goldman 1953, S&amp;P 500 stocks have
In 1945, Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, credited with
That's why this year has pullback, according
to · Sachs' economist~ issued a gained 13.17 percent on aver,saving tens of thousands ·Of Jews, disappeared in Hungary mostly started .off on a sour Citigroup data dating back to report saying they believed age in the latter half of a
while in Soviet custody.
note. The Standard &amp; Poor's 1953.
there was a 66 percent chance recession, according to
In 1961, in his farewell address, President Dwight 500 index's 4.59 percent ·
Some investors seem intent that the economy would slip Citigroup's Levkovich. ·
Eisenhower warned against the rise of "the military-industrial decline during the first eight on making such ugly into a recession. That was
Investors might want to
complex."
trading days was the worst prospects a reality, as has . higher than its previous reces- reconsider fleeing from
In 1966, a U.S. Air Force B-52 carrying four unarmed start for a year since 1982. been evi.dent by their overre- sian estimates of 40 percent to stocks. Holding tight could he
hydrogen bombs cra5hed on the Spanish coast. ·(Three of the The Dow Jones industrial · action to some news.
45 percent.
a daring move in these uncerbombs were quickly recovered, but the fourth wasn 't recov- average fell nearly 5 percent
"Investors are twitching,"
Mimy investors took that as tain times, but one that has the
ered until April.)
.
· ·
from Jan. 2 through Jan. II, said Yardeni, who runs his a sign to sell, ignoring the potential to pay off.
In 1995, more than 6,000 people were killed when an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 devastated th~ city of Kobe,
Japan.
· .
In 1997, a court in Ireland granted !he first divorce in the
Roman Catholic country's history.
BUT
Ten yea,rs ago: President Bill Clinton gave a deposition in
'IOV
Paula Jones' sexual harassment lawsuit against him; during the
PROIYI!SED
nearly six hours of sworn testimony, Clinton denied having
CHAN6E:.
had a sexual relationship with fanner White House intern
Monica Lewinsky.
One year ago: A year after disclosure of a domestic spying
program that President Bush · maintained was within his
authority to operate, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales
announced the administration had shifted its position and
would seek the approval of an independent panel of federal
judges. Pulitzer Prize-winning satirist Art Buchwald died in
Wa5hington, D,C., at age 81.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Betty White is 86. Singer-actress
Eartha Kitt is 81. Actor James Earl Jones is 77. Talk show host
Maury Pavich i.s 69. Former heavyweight boxing champion
Muhammad Ali is 66. Rhythm-and-blues singer William Hart
(The Delfonics) is 63. Rock musician Mick Taylor is 60.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Sheila Hutchinson (The Emotions)
is 55. Singer Steve Earle is 53. Singer Paul Young is 52. Actorcomedian Steve Harvey is 5 I.' Singer Susanna Huffs (The
Bangles) is 49'. Actor-comedian lim Carrey is 46. Actor Joshua
Malina is 42. Singer Shabba Ranks is 42. Actor Naveen
Andrews' is 39. Rapper Kid Rock is 37. Actor Freddy
Rodriguez is 33. Actress l!Joey Deschanel is 28. Singer Ray J
is 27. Country singer Amanda Wilkinson is 26.
Try this political pop quiz:
to be realized when President remark that infuriated many
Thought for Today: "I am always ready to learn, but I do not Can you identify the presiLyndon Johnson passed the African-Americans. 'Wheo
always like to be taught."- Winston Churchill, British states- dential candidate promising
Civil Rights Act of 1964, has "black" and "fairy· tale"
man (I 874-1965).
"a fresh start after a season of
when he was able to . get ever been mentioned in the
cynicism ... a president who
through Congress something same sentence?' asked Todd
LETTERS TO THE
can unite ,this nation, a presithat President Kennedy was Boyd, professor of AfricanGene
dent who puts aside the end.
hopeful to do, the president American
and Critical
EDITOR .
Lyons
less partisan bickering that
before had not even tried, but Studies at the University of
it took a president to get it Southern California."
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev should be less seems to gridlock our nation's
than 300 words. All letters are subject to' editing, must be capital, a president who puts
-done. That dream became a
When, indeed? You can
signed, and include address and telephone number. No the people first, a president
reality. The. power of that scrutinize Bill Clinton's entire
But no, I didn't find Obarna dream became real in peo- 500-word statement about
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in who lifts this nation's spirgood taste, addressing is.!ues. not personalities. Letters of itsT'
haughtily
condescending pie's lives because we had a Obama's shifting positions on
thanks to organizatio11s and individuals will not be acceptAnother clue: "I want you toward Hillary Rodham president who said; 'We are Iraq without finding any alh.ied fo~ publication.
·
to under1tand that I ean' t win Clinton during the New going ·to do it,' and aci:)Jally sion whatsoever to race. Not
without you. When you go Hampshire debate. People got it accomplished."
one. It's online at mediamat"ln other words," wrote ters.org.
,
out there and tell the folks make too much of these transitory
moments.
She'd
pro, where we stand ... when it
Marjorie Valbrun in the Post,
On "Meet the Press," Sen.
comes to bringing people nounced him "likeable," pret- '"I have a dream' is a nice Clinton found herself con(USPS 213-960)
together to get things done, ty much forcing him to call sentiment, but King couldn't fronted with video clips art,
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
and you tell them that the core her likeable back. I'd oall his make it reality. It took a more fully cropped to conceal the
Co.
Correcllon Polley
of this campaign is the inher- reaction one professional's practical and, of course, white context of both her owll
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
ent trust in the American·peo- wry acknowledgement of president, Lyndon Johnson, to remarks ·and her husband's.
th ro ugh Friday, ~ 11 Court Street,
ple, I believe it doesn't matter another's smooth handling of get blacks to the mountaintop. She defended herself well,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Seconcl-ctass postage
what political party they're in. a tricky question.
... Clinton manllged toinsidt a but that's not the point.
'In a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
Nor
do
I
credit
the
.rumor
They're
going
to
come
our
beloved
black leader in her Whatever hi s faults, Bill
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
reported
by
the
New
York
way."
eager
attempt
to insult a rising Clinton stood up for civil
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Post's
chronically
unreliable
Po1tmaster: Send address correcOK, it's a trick question.
black leader."
·iights in Arkansas back when
Our matn number Is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
Page Six that Obama entered
The
.
candidate's
not
Illinois
Except
that
King
himself
.
it was physically dangerous.
(740) 992-2156. .
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
a
Des
Moines
victory
party
to
once
told
LBJ,
"It
is
ironic,
·
Hillary was inspired by OJ;.
Sen. Barack Obarna, but
Department extensions are:
Texas governor George ·w. Jay-Z's misogynist rap "99 Mr. President, that after a cen- King as a high school girj.
Subscription Rates
Bush, as quoted by The New Problems": "I got 99 prob- tury, a southern white . Their reward was the insanely
By carrier or motor route
News
York Times in November lems but a b**** ai-n't one." President would help lead the scurrilous videotape, "The
One month
'1 0.27
Edl.tor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
2000. Actually, "folks" He'd have to be an idiot, and way toward the salvation of Clinton Chronicles," partly .
One year
' 115.84
Oatly
511'
the Negro."
mumted by Arkansas' last dieshould be a dead giveaway. Obarna's not.
Repc)rter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Senior
Citizen
rites
What,
then,
to
make
of
the
It's what poker players calf
Grow up, Ms. Valbrun.
hard segregationist, Justice
Reporter: Belh Sergent. Ext. 13
One month
'1 0.27
Likewise, New York Times Jim Johnson.
'
Bush's "tell," a sure sign he's controversy over Clinton's
One year
' 103.90
alleged
"racially
tinged
comcolumnist Bob Herbert
blowing smoke.
Leave this stuff to Rush
&amp;bscribers should remit in advance
. Advertising
ments"
as
one
Washington
accused
Hillary
of
"taking
Limbaugh
and AI Sharpton'.
But,
yes,
Obarna
2008
direct to the Daily Sentinel. No sub Out.l~ Satoo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Post
op-ed
writer
called
them,
cheap
shots
at,
of
all
people,
Democrats
indulge in raciat
sounds awfully like Bush
&amp;c ription by mail permitted in' areas
Out.lde Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is avaH2000, especially when he wordS "that could be taken as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther. demagoguery at their peril. (t
ClaoaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
wafts into high rhetorical either insensitive or patroniz- King Jr." Herbert further will surely backfire in the
mode, all · moonbeams and ing"? Citing Obama's relative accused Bill Clinton of insult- general election. .
Mall Subscription
lofty emotions. Exactly what lack of experience, Clinton ingly characterizing Obarna's
(Arkansas
Democrat•
General Manager
lnotde Molgo County
made
the
unexceptional
point
compromises
he'll
make
with
campaign as "the biggest Gazelle columnist Gene
Charlene Hoeflich, E~et 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
that
it
took
LBJ's
political
the
guns,
God
and
gdys,
bigfairy tale I've ever seen.''
Lyons is a rwtional magazine
26 weeks
• '64.20
skills
to
tum
Martin
Luther
52Weeks
'127.11
GOP
Virtually
every
"mainaward
winner and·co-autl!or
ger-wars/smaller-taxes
E·mall:
King
Jr.'s
idealism
into
law.
hardliners come 2009 - the
stream" publication and TV of "The Hunting of til~
news@mydailysenlinel .com
Outside Meigs County
Because Clinton's word~ network jumped in . Here's Presidenr" (St. Martin's
same ones circulating e-mails
13 Weeks
,
'53.55
falsely claiming he's a covert have been selectively edited, Newsweek's fonnulation of Press, 2(}()()). You can e-mail
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
Islamic extremist- Obama's it's worth quoting them in the racial insult Bill Clinton Lyons at genelyons2 @sbc·
52 Weeks
'214.2 1
www.mydailysentinel .com
full: "Dr. King's dream began "appeared" to deliver, "a g/obal.net.)
not saying.
M' BUSINESS WRITER

TODAY IN HISTORY

Erasing the race

The Daily Se,ntinel

--- ---·-------.--------------- ------·---------. ·-- - ·.. --- -·, ~

-

..........- ---.-.._....___. .... -

Thursday, Janu~ry· 17, 2~08

·Obituaries

Local Briefs

Homer L Jeffers
CLIFTON, W.Va. - Homer L. Jeffers, 81, of Clifton,
W.Va., died Jan. 16, 200S at the Holzer Medical Center.
Born on July 3, 1926, he was the son of the late Charles ·
A and Jessie A. (Burtrum) Jeffers. He was a retired coal
·miner from Central Coal Co., and belonged to the United
Mine Workers Local 9586 'and the Clifton Tabernacle
Church. He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy, World War !1.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by his wife,
·Alma, and a sister, Clara Lewis. He is survived by a daughter Candy (Charles) Van Meter, of Clifton, W.Va.; a ·son,
Carl R..(Vicki) Jeffers of Hartford, W.Va.; four grandchildren, Carla (Craig) Weaver, Summer Dawn (Todd) Hicks,
Josh Jeffers, and Chad VanMeter, nine great grandchildren,
a sister, Wilda VanMeter of Mason, W.Va.; ·a brother, David
Jeffer.s of Mason, W.Va.,. and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be held at the Clifton Hill
·Cemetery, Friday, Jan . 18, at I p.m. with Pastor Larry Gilland
officiating. Burial will be in the Clifton Hill Cemetery. In lieu
•o f flowers contributions may be made to the Clifton
Tabernacle Church Building Fund, Roberta Lewis, Clifton,
. W.Va.; 25260. There will be only private visitation.
. E-mail Condolences to foglesongtucker@myway.com

John Michael (Mike) Tate
, POMEROY- John Michael (Mike) Tate, 40, Pomeroy,
passed away Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2008, in Ohio State
University Hospital , after an extended illness.
Born in Athens on March 4, 1967 he was the son of John
R. and Frances Gillette Tate of Pomeroy. He loved Nascar
and was an avid hunter and tisherman.
In addition to his pacents he· is survived by his wife Sanr,ly
Lee Tate, a daughter Brianna Tate of Craig, Colo., stepchildren Scott and Brittany Chapell of Pomeroy, brother Greg
,(Heather) Tate of Flag Staff, Ariz., sister Melissa (Rod)
King of Glenwood Springs, c;olo., grandfather Charles
Patterson of The Plains, father and mother-in-law Lawrence
and Cora Lee of Pomeroy; three nieces, one great niece, tw 0
great nephews, numerous aunts, uncles and.cousins.
He was preceded in death by · a grandmother Marcella
Patterson and grandparents Harold and Mary Gillette.
Services will be Saturday at I p.m. at Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home with . Rev. Carl Radcliff officiating. Burial
will be in Ridgewood Cemetery, Wellston. Visitation will
be Friday 5-8 p.m. at the funeral home.

Harold Douglas Clark
RACINE - Harold Douglas Clark, 75, of Racine, Ohio
passed away on Jan. 16, 2008 at the Arbors of Marietta
He was born on May 7, 1932 in New Haven, W.Va. son
of the late Homer and Annie McCloud Cll!l'k. He was living at his daughter Phyllis' home in Southside, W.Va. until
he went to the hospital in October 2007. He was retired and
he enjoyed singing and playing the banjo with the Clark
Famil&gt;' Gospel Group in churches and nursing homes.
He IS survived by his: wife, Peggy Sue Clark of Racine;
three sons, John R. and Susan Clark of Southside, W.Va.,
Harold Clark 'k of Columbus, and Roger D. Clark of
Cambridge; four daughters, Phyllis and Ron K.inniard of
Southside, W.Va., Mary and Everett Coy of Pomeroy,
Margaret and Steve Carson of Rockport, W.Va. and Letha
Springer of Parkersburg, W.Va.; son-in-law, Roger L. Preast
of Albany; three step-children, Julie Flinn of Parkersburg,
W.Va., Patricia Owens of Parker~ burg, W.Va. and Anita and
Dennis Vaughan of Woodruff, S.C.; 20 plus grandchildren;
20 plus great-grandchildren; six step-grandchildren.
In addition tu his parents, he was preceded in death by: a
daughter, Rosemary Preast; sisters, Olga Yonker, Ella
Kerns, Elda McFarland, Leona Roach; brothers, Cleo
Clark, Charles E. Clark and Homer Clark, Jr.
Funeral services will be held on Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008
at Anderson Funeral Home, New Haven, W.Va. at 10 a.m.
with Pastors Mike Finnicum and Sam Anderson officiating.
Burial will follow at Jeffers Ridge Cemetery in Southside,
W.Va .. Visiting hours will be on Friday from 3-8 p.m. at the
funeral home. A registry is available online by visiting
www.andersonfh.com.

Victor Counts
SYRACUSE - Victor Counts, 77, of Syracuse passed
away at his residence on Jan . 15, 2008.
He was born on Nov. 8, 1929 in Kentuck, W.Va. to the
late Carrie and Elihu Counts. Victor was retired from U.S
Steel in Lorain, Ohio arid Nationwide Tnicking in Omaha,
Neb. He was veteran of the United States Army.
He is survived by his wife, Virginia Kathleen "Kiity"
·Counts; children, Robert and Anita Counts, James and Ida
Counts, Victor and April Counts, Jeff Counts, Van and Paula
Counts, Kelly Counts, Shannon and Many Wood, Jason and
Christina Counts; ~randchildren, James Ervin, Carrie Casto,
Brett Counts, Jamie Graham, Kesha Sarver, Brandi Dailey,
Joey Rupe, Alvin, Weston, Cody and Vada Counts, Jes*a
Yost, Tamecka Curtis, Stacey Everson, Clayton and Nikita
'wood, Sidney Grueser, Gag~ and Bradley Counts; a sister,
Eleanor Eaches; a brother, Roger. and Debbie Counts; 16
great-grandchildren, and several meces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents, two brothers,
Vernon and Edwin Counts, a grandson, Brandon Counts,
and a daughter-in-law, Luanne Counts.
Services will be held on Friday, Jan. 18, 2008 at 2 p.m. at
the Fisher Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with the Rev. Dennis Moore officiating. Burial will follow in
Meigs Memory Garden in Pomeroy. Visitation· will be held
from 6to 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17,2008 at the funeral homes.
Online condolences may be sent to www.flsherfuneralhomes .com.

State seeks
climate data
from businesses,
other groups
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio environmental regulators have asked I ,000 businesses and organizations to
volunteer emissions information to a group tracking
greenhouse gases across
North America.
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency Director
Chris Korleski recently sent
letters to the businesses, asking them to report the information to Climate Registry.
The business include those
already reporting emissions
to the state and those in the
Fortune 500.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Firemen embarking
on fund drive

will offer them a complimentary 8ll I0
color portrait to be taken at the fire station.
Those who do not receive a mailing
can call the fire station, 992-2663, for
details.

POMEROY The Pomeroy
Firemen's Association is sponsoring a
program to raise funds for equipment.
A spokesman for the department said
that in the corning weeks all homes in .,
the area will receive a request for a con·
POMEROY - The Meigs . County
tribution and the firemen in appreciation TB Clinic will be closed for Martin

Office closed

Local Weather
Thursday... A chance of
snow in the morning.
Cloudy with a chance ofrain. Highs in the lower 40s.
Southeast winds around 5
mph. Chance of precipitation 50 percent. .
· Thursday night. ..Cloudy
with a slight chance of rain.
A chance of snow with a
slight chance of sleet after
midnight. Cold with lows
around 30. South winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of precipitation 30 percent.
Friday ... Partly
sunny
with a 30 percent chance of
snow showers. Highs in the
upper 30s. West winds 5 to
10 mph.
Friday night ... Mostly

cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of snow showers.
Colder with lows around 19.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Saturday...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of snow
showers. Colder with highs
in the mid 20s. Temperature
falling into the lower 20s in
the afternoon .
Saturday night...CJoudy.
Colder with lows arounaiO
above.
Sunday... Partly sunny.
Cold with highs around 20.
M!)nday night and
TueJ.day...Mostly cloudy
with 'a 30 percent chance of
snow showers. Lows 15 to
20. Highs in the lower 30s.

Local Stocks
,. Ohio Valey Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
AEP (NYSE) - 48.48
Ak:lo (NASDAQ]- 75
-2&amp;
Aohland Inc. (NYSE)- 44.88
BIT (NYSE) - 28.19
BIC Loto (NYSE)- 14.49
Peopt" (NASDAQ)~ 23.1.8
Pepsico (NYSE) - 73.54
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 24.76
Bo,.Wamer ( NYSE] - 41.64
Premier (NASDAQ) - 12.86
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) - .
Rockwell (NYSE) -86.01
Rocky Booto (NASDAQ) - 8.U
48.07
Champion (NASDAQ)- 5.70
Royal Dutch Shell - 77 .&amp;1
Saara HotdinC (NASDAQ)Charmlntl Shops (NASDAQ)4.60
90.25
Wa~Mart (NYSE]- 47.49
City Holdtnc (NASDAQ) - 34.32
Wendy's (NYSE) - 25.85
Calllno (NYSE) - 63.48
DuPont (NYSE)- 44.30
Worthtncton ( NYSE) - 15.54
Dally otock reporto are the 4 p.m.
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.04
Gannett (NYSE) - 35.30
ET clostne quotoa of tranoacttona
for Jan. 18, 2008, provided tiy
Oenonol Elect~c. (NYSE) '- 34.86
Hortey.flavldlon (NYSE) - 39.63
Edward Jones ftnanclal advisors
loaac Millo.In Galltpolo at (740)
JP Morpn (NYSE) - 41.43
441·9441 and Loolay Marraro In
Kropr (NYSE) - 28.50
Point Ploaoant at (304)•674Umlted Brande (NYSE) -15.82
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 48.20 0174. Member SIPC.

Center

project is finished.
In addition, an outside
patio area has been added to
from Page A1
the building. Students will
be able to walk o~t of the
variety of events at all cafeteria directly onto the
hours, Sojka said.
patio to eat, but they will
Paul Harrison, vice presi- also be able to gather on the
dent of administrative and patio at all hours of the daY:
student services, explained The outside terrace is 90
that one of the most notice- feet long and 17 feet wide.
able improvements in the
The food service area in
building is in the cafeteria.
the cafeteria is also being
The ·cafeteria is being Improved, and already a
greatly expanded, ~s there · new ~alad bar and new servis much more ~oom for mg hnes are open for stuseating, food preparation dents. A new conveyor belt
and special events. The system will remove used
cafeteria currently has trays from the dining area.
enough seating for 350 Area residents are also
people, and it will be invited in to eat in the cafeexpanded to 500 when the teria, which provides lunch-

Luther King, Jr. Day on Monday. It
will reopen at 8 a.m., Tuesday.

Recuperating
. POMEROY - Wendell Eblin, 76',
recently hospitalized for the first' time
in his life, is now at home recuJierating
from surgery. Cards may be . sent to
him at 243 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Ohio, 45769·

Kennedy Museum
hosts School of
Art Faculty exhibit
ATHENS - A biennial Art. "It questions, · it
exhibition by members of inspire s, it amazes. The
the Ohio University School range of work, the variety of
of Art faculty features work styles ·show us that here in
by both new and seasoned Athens, art is alive and well
faculty members working in -and full of life!"
ceramics, graphic design,
School of Art faculty have
painting,
photography, exhibited in various muse. printmaking, sculpture, and urns across the country,
installation
art. including the Fogg Art
at
Harvard
Approximjltely 30 of the Muse.um
Ohio University School of University in Cambridge,
Art faculty members are Mass., the Museum of
sharing their recent Work Modem Art, New York, the
with the public in this free de Young Museum in San
exhibit that opens Friday . Francisco, and the Whitney
evening, Jan. 18.
Museum of Art · in New
· "It promises · to be an York. Many faculty memeclectic exhibition," says bers enjoy international
David LaPa)ombara, pro- recognition and are featured
fessor and director of the in various European museSchool of Art. "This is a urns and corporate buildwonderful opportunity for ings.
·
people in the Athens area
The exhibition runs until
and communities beyond to Sunday, March I 6. Gallery
see and celebrate the hours at the Kennedy
breadth and depth of the art Museum of Art are Tuesday,
produced by the School of Wednesday and Friday,
noon to 5 p.m.; Thursday,
Art faculty."
There is art from a wide noon to 8 p.m.; and
range of disciplines- print- Saturday and Sunday, I to 5
making, painting, photogra- p.m. Closed Mondays and
phy, soulptilre, ceramics, holidays.
graphic design, video instalAs always, admission is
lation, and performance art free.
are all represented.
Visit www.ohio.edu/muse"This show is an exciting um or call (740) 593-1304
one," says Sandra Sleight- for more information about
Brennan, interim director at the museum's current and
the Kennedy Museum of upcoming exhibitions.

es for area senior citizens
·
every day.
The food preparation area
is also being greatly
expanded, which will help
the kitchen staff as they prepare meals. Rio Grande has
more students living on
campus this year and the
expansion in the cafeteria is
helping the institu!ion better
. serve its students.
The cafeteria is · often
used for special events,
and new video equipment
has been installed for
PowerPoint presentations
and other visual · aids for
the events. Conference
Room C, which is also
used for special events, has
also been expanded and a

new food preparation area
has also been built for this
room.
New restrooms have been
built near the cafeteria and
in other places in the
expanded building, and several new offices have been
included. A new meeting
room for the board . of
trustees has also been
included in the building,
which will have numerous
benefits for students, faculty, staff and area residents.
A dedication ceremony
for the renovated and
expanded Davis University
Center will be held in
February.
,.,~:&lt;N CA,f

'!£

..s; .
ment which has the appear- place. ·rn a world of manuance of an urban loft with factured homes, Hanson
its brick walls and exposed s'aid places like The
beams on the ceiling. The Keystone were built to last
from PageA1
studio apartment also has which is part of the place's
appeal for her. .
is juxtaposed to the aged its own .outdoor deck and a
Beginning next week she
foundativn of sandstone, newly created bathroom hopes to rent the two floors
interior brick walls, origi- with glass brick on the which each measure over
nal plaGter and WOOdwork walls and all new fixtures. I ,000-square feet of space.
that has an appearance of Both floors have an unobHanson hope s anyone
craftsmanship not found in structed view of one of the with any hi storic infonnathe mass produced products location's biggest assets, tion on the building will
the Ohio River.
on today's store shelves.
Hanson has overhauled contact her at 591-0082, or
Hanson has turned the
at vhanson I @yahoo.com.
first floor into what she practically the entire build- The building is also open
calls an "upscale" two to ing with new plumbing, for tours by appointment. ·
and
cooling,
three bedroom apartment heating
complete with its own out- wiring and fixtures but has
door deck and sun porch. also tried to maintain the
Upstairs is the studio apart- historic integrity ·of the

Keystone

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Brittany's Prom
Review
Sunday, January 27.
2pm
Scrap Happy Saturday
February 2 at 9 am
RSVP by Jan. 28th
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

Registration DO\V open for
Entrance into the following Programs:
'

Practical Nursing
Surgical Technology
Pharmacy Tedmldan

~~9r~..

Buckeye Hills Care~r Center

If you want to make farm life less taxing, talk to
your people at H&amp;R Block. Our people can answer
questions about things like fuel credit, farm income
averaging, and casualty losses.
Caii1·800-HRBLOCK or visit hrblock.com
618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 457@

740-992-6674
Mon-Frl9:00 - 6:00
Sat. 9:00 - 5:00
Other hours by appointment

For information contact theAdult Center at .740;245-5334
Financial aid is available for those who qualify
•

C 2006 H&amp;A Blodr. Sr.rvioes, Inc.

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Eastern fall sports banquet recap, Page B2
Simpson bail raised to $250,000, Page B6
Bengals' Lewis turns to old friend, Page B6

/
Page A6 •

www.mydailysentinel.com
-........

The Daily Sentinel

--· _,

Ariel hosts dance classes
GALLIPOLIS - Get in
the swing of things this winter with ballroom dance
classes at the ArieL
Classes,
taught
by
instructor· Dr. Joe Li. will be
held on Tuesday evenings
at The Ariel-Ann Carson
Daier · Performing Arts
Centre both both couples
and singles.
Classes are $60 per person for a. six week session
and take place in the ArielDater Hall second floor
banquet hall at 426 Second
Ave,. Gallipolis.
There are two sessions on
Tuesday evenings, a 7 to 8
p.m. lesson for smooth
dance (includes the waltz,
foxtrot and tango) and an 8
to 9 p.m: class for Latin
dance (covering the rumba,
cha-cha and swing styles of
ballroom dance).
For more information or
to schedule a class, call The
Ariel-Dater Hall at 740446-ARTS (2787)

.

Christian Scott will also be Club and the Rio Grande
singing during the evening. Chaplaincy Office.
Scott is currently a teacher
"It is very important for
at Washington Elementary Rio Grande to hold this
School in Gallipolis. Rio annual .
observance,"
.
Grande student Elizabeth Armstrong said.
Miller will also be provid- . Many people may think
ing special music during the of Martin Luther King Jr.
evening .
Miller
was Day as just another holiday
crowned
Miss
Gallia or day off of work or
County 2007.
school, but she invites peoIn addition to the special pie to come to the celebramusic, Rio Grande students tion and consider the imporMichael
and
Marcus lance of the day.
· Hampton will perform an
"For the university and
_Philip Armstr~ng
interpretive dance presenta: the community, it's not only
"""''
~·. "
, _,
tion. The _)-lamp!'?lt brot\lfr~ a day of remembrance of
restaurants in eastern have done · mterprefive the thallenges" 'a:nd the
Oklahoma and lives in dance on campus previous· thing~ Dr. Kin~ worked so
T-Ill~.,,, . -~·• ,; ... ,.. .•,.,, . ;;. , ~.;.. }Y: and their pe"!o~m~nce hard for, but it ts also a day
This is the third year he wtll ' add'.t o the eWhtift'A1! ~'to encourage trs'·to never
has served as the keynote it?vocatiot? will also . be give up. o~ the fight for
speaker for the Martin gtven dunng the evemng, . human dtgruty and love for
Luther King Jr. celebration and Elaine Armstrong, dean all people," Armstrong said.
at Rio Grande, and he has of students at Rio Grande,
"The annual observance
become well known for his will lead the ceremonies.
of Martin Luther King Jr.
powerful . rendition
of
She invites all Rio Grande Day urges each of us to try
King's speech. Armstrong students and area residents to make a positive differalso has a wonderful to attend this special cele- ence in the hves of others,"
singing voice, and will pre- bration. Refreshments will she added.
sent some special music be served after the event,
For more information,
during the event.
and will be coordinated by contact Armstrong at (800)
Rio Grande alumnus the Rio Grande Women's 282-7201.

43rd annual winter hike Saturday at park
LOGAN -The spectacu- most popular wintertime
lar scenery of Hockmg Hills activities, drawing hundreds
State Park in southeastern of outdoor enthusiasts each
Ohio will be clothed in its year. The hike takes place,
. seasonal beauty for. the regardless of the weather.
43nd Annual Winter Hike,
Hikers should arrive at
scheduled for this Saturday. · the Old Man's Cave parking
"Hiking the trails at lot no later than I 0:30 a.m.
Hocking Hills State Park and preferably before 9 a.m.
during this annual event has Layered clothing and sturdy
become a seasonal tradition footwear are recommended.
for many people," said Dan Groups of hikers will start
West, chief of Ohio State down the six-mile trail to
Parks. "It offers a chance to Ash Cave at regular intershJike off the winter dol- vals until II a.m. The hike
drums and get outside for a is expected to take about
brisk walk through Ohio's five hours.
great outdoors."
A hearty lunch of bean
The hike is one of Ohio's soup, cornbread and hot

chocolate will be served at
Cedar Falls, mid-way point
of the hike. The pause · will
include presentation of the .
Heart of Hocking Award to
Bob Wells, a volunteer
camper host with Hocking
Hills State Park. The park's
friends organization and representatives of the Hocking
Hills Tourism Association
will also present the park
with a John Deere Gator
ATV during the lunch break.
Park officials will provide
return transportation from
Ash Cave to Old Man 's Cave following the event.
Pre-hike ·
activities,

including naturalists' programs, games and refreshrnents, will begin at 6 p.m.
Friday at the Hocking Hills
State Park Dining Lodge.
The event is free to the ·
public. Donations
are
encouraged for refreshments. Winter hike souvenir
patches and hiking stick
medallions will be available
for purchase.
Hocking Hills State Park
is located on Ohio 664 in
Hocking County, about 12
miles southwest of Logan.
For further information
about the hike, call the rark
office at (740) 385-684 .

Ariel Jr. Theatre plans Rand play production
GALLIPOLIS - · Where
were you the night of Jan. 16?
Swedish financier Bjorn
Faulkner of' Manhattan fell
to his death off ihe Faulkner
Building in downtown New
York on the night of Jan. 16.
Faulkner had built a financial empire largely through
finagling on a grand scale.
Karen Andre, Faulkner's

one-tirne mistress, has been ·
arrested for his de_ath. The
police suspect that Faulkner
did not jump to his death, but
rather was pushed off the bal~
cony of. his penthouse suite ..
The murder trial will take
place at the Ariel Theatre on
Friday and Saturday, Feb. 22
and 23, and Sunday, Feb. 24.
• Was it a cold-blooded

murder? Was it a suicide?
These and other questions
will have the audience on
the edge of their seats as the
Ariel Junior Theatre presents 'The Night of January
16" by Ayn Rand.
The play takes place in a
courtroom and is staged as a
murder case of the century,
complete with suspense,

intrigue and audience participation.
Performance times are 8
p.m: on Friday and Saturday,
and 3 p.m. on Sunday.
Tickets are now on sale and
can be reserved by calling
Ariel-Dater box office at
(740) 446-2787. The prices
are $10 for VIP seating, $8
for adults and $6 for students.

OU will host area student artists
ATHENS - The Ohio
University College of
Education presents an Art
Extravaganza and Silent
Auction today from 6 to 8
p.m. in the Furst floor lobby
area of the McCracken Hall Gallery.
Join
hosts
President ·
-Roderick J. M~Davis and
Dean Renee Middleton as
they welcome the artists,

2008

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Council offers painting,
photography classes

Good Works 6th Annual Walk
for the Homeless Raises awareness
and fUnds for IUral homeless
I

RIO
GRANDE
of
Rio
University
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College will
hold a. Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. Day ceremony on
Monday, Jan. 21 at 7 p.m. in
the
Berry
Fine
and
Performing Arts Center.
"A Celebration of the Life
of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr." will feature music,
remarks and a reading of
King's "I Have A Dream"
speech.
Gallia County native
Philip Armstrong will give
the keynote speech and also
do the recitatio'n of the
famous and moving "I Have
A Dream" speech.
Armstrong, who gradualed from North Gallia High
School in 1989, earned his
bachelor's degree in communications from Central
State University and his
master's degree in public
administration from the
University of Akron.
Armstrong
currently.
serves a&lt;_ the direc.t or ·o f
develn j'n . nt for Subway

Thursday, January 17,

MIDDLEPORT - Two new classes 'will be offered at the
Riverbend Arts Council. one in oil painting and the other in
photography, both beginning on Jan. 28.
Rhojean McClure will be the instructor for the oil painting classes to be held from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. on Mqndays.
The class work wi II include. techniques of creating skies,
clouds, distant trees, and the textures and shapes of ever_
.
green and deciduous trees.
Ballroom
. McClure is a certified instructor with Robert Warren's
dancing
Renaissance
Group and will be teaching that technique in
inst~uctor Joe
the
classes.
The
cost of $52 includes all supplies except
Li is seen
brushes.
The
first
week will include application and use of
here with his
mediums, how to create realistic skies and clouds; the sec- .
wife, Cheryl.
ond
week, trees, evergreen and distant trees, and the third
Li will be· ·
and fourth weeks, winter pine meadow. Students will paint
teaching ballthe winter landscape on a 12-by-16 stretched canvas.
room dance
·For more details and to register, call McClure at (74Q)
classes at the 992-3842.
I
,
Ariel-Dater
The photography class will deal with digital cameras and
Performing
will be taught by Sharon Dean of Racine.
Arts Centre.
The classes will be from 6:301o 8:30 p.m. on Jan. 2S,
Submitted photo
Feb. 4, Feb. II, and Feb. 18. The cost is $35. To register,
call Dean at (740) 949-1012 or (740) 441-0043.

MLK Day observation set at Rio for Jan. 21
.

•

their families and the university and Athens communities
to this inaugural event. The
exhibit showcases the work
of area school children from
Athens Hi&amp;h School, Meigs
County M1ddle School and
- Chieftain,
Chauncey,
Hocking Hills and Morrison
Elementary sc hools. Work
has been on display in the
college si nce last spring.

Paintings, photographs,
Tarnal a .Solomon, director
drawings and prints by over of events for the College of
20 artists in grades K-12 will Education, says tile art exhibbe auctioned throughout the it will be an annual event.
course of tile evenins. Meet . She is already planning for
the artists and erijoy an the next one, which will fca~
evening of live jazz and ture children's artwork from
refreshments a~ you stroll schools in the 29 counties of
through the gallery before the AP.falachia. Calls for entry
auction. Proceeds will be split WJI go out this month, and
evenly between the artist and the winners will be displayed
their school' s art program.
in McCracken Hall in April.

ATHENS- Hundreds of people from southeast Ohio are
expected to participate in Good Works' sixth annual Walk
for the Homeless on Saturday.
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with the sixth annual
Walk for the Homeless going from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
The event, intended to correspond to the themes of the
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend, will begin and
end at the First United Methodist Church in Athens. The
goal of the walk is to educate the public on the reality of
poverty and homelessness in southeastern Ohio and raise
funds for the Good Works' Timothy House, the only shelter
for the rural homeless in nine southeast Ohio counties.
Funds raised from the walk will benefit almost 200
homeless people that Good Works' Timothy House serves
each year.
·
"Good Works was established in rural Appalachia to provide
hope to people caught in the cycle of homelessness and poverty - . this is one of the poorest regions in the United States,"
said Keith Wasserman, who founded Good Works in 1981 in
his own basement and has since expanded his understanding
.of homelessness by living among the homeless himself.
,
"Considering two-thirds of the Timothy House's fundirrg
comes directly from .private donations, this walk is very
important to the homeless people whom we serve,"
Wasserman said.
· Last year, the event raised almost $38,000, which Good
Works used to assist'the rural homeless. This· year's goal is
to raise $40,000 from participants who are asked to find ten
people who will sponsor them by donating $10 each.
On the day of the event, participants may choose one
of two different, simultaneous walks, including:
• THE MYTH WALK -A unique experience that will
challenge commonly held beliefs about wealth and poverty. The 3-rnile walk experience will uncover some of the
untrue beliefs that many people have adopted about wealth,
poverty and homelessness.
• KIDS WALK - A 2-3 mile experience focused on
teaching children K-high school about what· poor and
homeless people face on a day-to-day basis.
Also included this year will be:
• THE MINI WALK - Citizens who have difficulty
walking can walk 100 feet to the First Presbyterian Church
to view a video and have an engaging discussion on issues
related to poverty and homelessness.
One of many of Good Works' outreach ministries, the
Timothy House sta{fs four full-time employees, several
part time staff and about 60 volunteers and provides the
only shelter available to homeless people in nine southeastern Ohio counties.
Anyone interested in participating in the walk can contact Good Works at (740) 594-3339 for a walk packet or
dow,load information online at .www. walkforthehomeless.tlet or www.good-works.net.

Entertainment Briefs
Speaker slated
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev. Henry Mosley, pastor of New
Hope Baptist Church in Ashland, Ky., will be the keynote
speaker for the annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration sp6nsored by the Southeastern Ohio NAACP Brand).
l'he observation is I p.m, Monday, Jan. 21, at Paint Creek
Regular Baptist Church, .833 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Light refreshments will be_served after the program .

Performing at Grill
POMEROY - The Frank Harrison Blues Group will be
performing at the Court Street Grill Saturday ni~ht. Harriso11
has been described as a "guitar God in the makmg."
.
On Monday night, Robert Childers of Modem Don Juans
fame, will return to Pomeroy with two bands, the 2013
Wolvesand Andy the Door Bum.

Travel guide available
CH'ARLESTON, .W.Va. (AP) - West Virginia's 2008
state travel guide is now available to the public.
Tourism Commissioner Betty Carver says the 240-page
guide is an essential resource for vacationers.
The guide includes feature stories, su~gested itineraries, a
calendar ·of events ·and background mformation. on the
state's nine regions. Information on accommodations,
campgrounds, restaurants. parks, shops, galleries and museums is also avai lable within the guide, alo"ng with phone
numbers and Web sites so that .travelers can find out even
more about particular attractions that spark their interest.
The Division of Tourism sends free guides to thousands of
callers and Web site visitors and distributes copies at welcome
centers and travel shows across the country and internationally.

Prep Basketball

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule of upcoming high
school varsily sport1ng 8venls Involving
teams from Meigs and Gallia counties.

Tbv!'lday Jjn 17
Girls 981ketball
River V&amp;lley at Coal Grove. 6 p.m.
SOuthem at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.'m.
Boys Basketball
Hannan at South Galtia, 6 p.m.
Frtcbv Jan 18

Boys Basketball
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6:30 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre. 6:30p.m.
Zanesvi11e at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.
Gl~a B81kelball
South.Gallia at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Gallia Academy at WSA2. Invitational
River Valley at WSAZ Invitational

Meigs at Eastero, 6 p.m.
Galtla Academy at Zanesville, 6 p.m.

Boyolooketball
River Valley at Wellston Tourney, 11

a.m.

·

Wraotllng
Gallla Academy, River Valley at WSAZ
Invitational
Moodoy. .lin. 21
Gl~l B81ketblll
River Valley at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Southern at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wahama, 5:45p.m.

Ohio Notebook

Scorer misses his.heroics, but McBride eventually gets his due
BY RUSTY

MILLER

AP SPORTS WRITER

It took a while for
Anthony McBride·to be recognized as a hero.
The Cincinnati Withrow
guard had a tip-in with 2
seconds left as Withrow
defeated Canal Winchester
58-57 Saturday before about
3,000 fans at Value City
Arena.
Center Yancy Gates, a
University of Cincinnati
recruit who had 25 points
and 12 rebounds, was originally credited with the basket, but coach Walt McBride
said his nephew actually
scored it.
·
Canal Winchester's B.J.
Mullens, a 7-0 Ohio State

recruit, had 16 points and 19
rebounds.
20,000 LEAGUES: In a
battle of Midland Athletic
League unbeatens, Tiffin
Calvert (I 0-2) allowed just
six first-half poinls in a 4230 win over Sycamore
Mohawk; and the upper
division of the Blanchard
Valley Conference has been
beating up on each other qut
those top five_ teams have
been beating up on the nonleague opposition even
worse going 31-0.
LIKE A PHOENIX:
After finishing 3-18 last season, Canton Timken has
turned its fortunes around,
compiling a I 0-0 record.
Bolstered
by
Canton
McKinley transfers Johnie

Davis and Christian Alston,
and 6-8 junior center
Cameron Howard, Timken
is on course to post its first
undefeated regular-season
record since the 1959-60
team went 18-0. That team
eventually lost to Cleveland
East Tech in the Class AA
state semifinals.
ANOTHER
· TURNAROUND: The Leetonia
girls basketball team, which
had won only ei~ht of its last
40 games entenng the season, is a surprising 10-3 on
the season and shares the
Inter-Tri County League
lower tier ·tead with
McDonald.
HIGH-WATER
MARKS: Cleveland St.
Ignatius coach Brian Becker

became the schooh wins school record with nine 3leader with 278 (passing pointers in a 35-point effort
John Wirtz who had 277) 111 a 66-58 win over New
when the Wildcats defeated Middletown • Springfield;
Youngstown Boardman, 52- Jessica Jenkins became
39; Mansfield Senior (Il-l) Marion Harding's career
hasn't lost at home since . scoring leader, notching 13
moving into its new gym poinl9 to give her I ,088 for
befpre the 2004-2005 sea- her career in a 71-25 victory
s~m, run':'ing off 36 cons~cu- over Kenton; Sugarcreek
uve wms headmg mto Garaway's girls beat Berlin
Saturday's
showdown Hiland 39-30 in overtime to
against un_beaten Warren , stop Hiland's 94-garne lnterHardmg; JUntor Chelsea Valley Conference winning
be~an:e streak dating back to Jan. 12,
Bowker .
Columbtana
Crestvte~ s 2002; Kate Stimpert set
career sc~mng lead~r wtth . Ashland Crestview's girls
I ,23 1 pomts, br~ak:ing the scoring record with 36
mark held by Ahsha Bab\e points at Norwalk St. Paul
Auer, who ts also Bowker s - matching the feat set by
volleyball coach;
her father Fred who holds
Lisbon David Anderson's
'
'
Emily Smith broke her own Pleese see Notebook. 16

RockHill
sweeps
Rebels

Tutadq. Jan. 22
Glrll Bukotblll

Hannan at aves, 6 p.m:

. Boyo Bolll&lt;otblll
Portsmouth at Gellis Academy, 6 p.m.
· South Gallla at Westf.ell, 6 p.m.
Hannan at OVCS, 7:30p.m.
Wahama at Meigs, 6 p.m.

Bv HowARD ULMAN
AP SPORTS WRITER

FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
Randy Moss said
Wednesday that allegations
he
committed
battery
against a woman are false
and that she made the claim
to get money from him.
"I want to make something clear," the Patriots
wide receiver said while
. surrounded by reporters and
cameras at his locker. "In
my whole entire .life of livBv RoB MAADDt
ing 30 years, I've never put
ASSOCIATED PRESS
my hand on one woman,
physically or in an angry
PHILADELPHIA -· Not manner."
.since John Chaney patrolled
Florida radio station
the sidelin~ has Temple WDBO reported that a
played so well against a bet- woman filed for an order of
ter team.
protection against Moss,
Dionte Christmas scored alleging he committed bat19 of his 23 points in the tery against her. The report
second half ·a nd Mark said a temporary injunction
tyndale added 22 to lead was issued, barring Moss
Temple to a 78-59 victory · from corning ·within 500
over No. 20 Xavier on feet of the woman and from
Wednesday night.
using
or
possessing
The Owls (7-8, 1-1 firearms.
·Atlantic I 0) beat a ranked
Moss, a former Marshall
op)l!lnent for the first time standout, gave no details of
in two years to earn their the alleged incident, saying
biggest win since Fran he was restricted by the
Dunphy replaced the. Hall.of legal case.
•Fame coach last season.
He said the woman was a
"This win means a lot for friend of II years and !hat
us going into the next she asked for "six figures"
game," Christmas said. "We for what Moss said was an
have a lot of confidence. We accident in which she was
know what we're capable hurt.
of."
"They're false . allegaThis was the type of domtions, something I've been
inating effort that became
typical on North Broad battling for like the last couStreet when Chaney gui4ed ple of days of threats going
Temple to 17 NCAA tour- public , if I didn't pay X
nament
appearances, amount of d6llars," Moss
NCAA said. "So before people rush
including five
quick to judgment I think
regional finals .
,
But the program had fall- you need to find out the
en on hard times in recent facts about, really, what's
years. Dunphy is doing his going on.
"This young lady by no
best to tum .things around.
means
is hurt. I didn't hurt
This could be the start.
her."
"I think it's just a matter
New England plays the
of time before they regain
San
Diego Chargers in the
their national prominence,"
AFC
championship game in
Xavier coach Sean Miller
said. "They have a great Foxborough on Sunday.
Moss, who set an NFL
coach. We respect them a
great deal."
· Pleese see Moss, 86
Derrick Brown had 14
points for the Musketeers
(14-4, 2-1), who had won
six in a row by an average
margin of 25.3 points since
losi!lg to then-No. ' 12
Tennessee on Dec. 22.
But Temple came re1dy to
play from the ~tart.
GREENVILLE, · N.C.
Luis Guzman scored all (AP) _.. Sam Hinnant had·
13 of his points in the first six '3-pointers, one a fourhalf to tie his career-best. point play, as East Carolina
Sparked by Guzman's per- overcame an . eight-point
deficit in the second half to
defeat Marshall 75-62 on
PI••• - Xlivler, II
Wednesday night.
The Pirates (7-8, 1-1
Conference USA) were
down 48 -40 · after Matt
Walls hit a layup for
Marshall
with
15:17
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
remaining. Ten seconds
Fu- 1-740-44!1·3008
later, Hinnant hit a 3 and
E·mlll- sporlsOrnydallysentlnel.com
was fouled and' made the
SQorta StaH
free throw to cut the lead in
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer half and begin the come(740) 446·2342, ext 33
back.
sporls~mydallysentlnel . com
J ames Legan's 3-pointer
tied the game at 56-all with
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
6:52
tO go. Then Darrell
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
.
bwalters 0 mydailylrlbune.o_:m
Jen kIDS • Iayup put t he
Pirates in front.
Larry Crum; Sport1 Writer
East Carolina hit 12 con(740) 446·2342, ext 33
lcrumOmydailyregiller.com
secutive free th rows in the

Christmas,
Tyndale lead
Temple over
No. 20 Xavier

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS®MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

AP photo

New England Patriots wide receiver Randy 1\:loss stands on the field while the team stretches before practice begins at the NFL football team's facility in Foxborough, Mass·.,
Wednesday afternoon. Earlier in the day Moss answered reporter's questions concerning
allegations that he committed battery on a woman he has known for eleven years, during
a media availability in front of his locker. The Patriots play the San Diego Charges In the
AFC Championship game at Foxborough Sunday afternoon.

Thundering Herd falls
to East Carolina, 75-62·

CoNTAcrUs

I

I.

last
two
minutes to
ice the victory.
'
Hinnant
finished
with
24
M .\RSI1 \1 .1. points and
Jenkins had
14 as he went 8-of-8 from
the foul line.
\
Darryl Merthie had t6
points to lead Marshall (!h
6, 1-2).

~

~

L-..Jv'--.1

EAST CAROUNA 75, MARSHALL 82
MARSHALL (9-6) -Humphrey 4·10 , _
4 9. Baines 2-4 1-2 s. Wal~ 3-5 o-o e.
Allldor'-Cespedes 2~3 o-o 5, Dorris 5·12
· 3·4 11;, Merthle 3-8 9-12 16, Jactcson .11 O·O 2, Williams 0-0 0-0 o, Wilkerson 1·
1 0· 1 2. Totals 21-44 14-23 62.
EAST CAROLINA (7-6) -Gagnon 0-0
o-o 0, Blair , -2 0-0 2, Farmer Q-4 0-0 0,
Hinnant 7-11 4-4 24, Jon~ns 3-8 8-814,
Logon 3-8 0-0 9, Young 2·6 8·10 12.
Abrams 2·5 0-0 4 , Fields 2·2 2·7 6,
Wynn 2~2 0·0 4, Evans 0-0 ().0 0. Totals
22-48 22-2s 75.

Marshall's

Mark
Dorris, ·
left, tries
to block
East
Carolina's
Brock
Young,
rlght, durIng the ·
second
half of a
~asketball

game In
Greenville.
N.C. on
Wednesday.
APphoto

PEDRO
Tyler
. Duncan scored 15 potnts
to lead his team, but the
South Gallia Rebels were
beaten by the Rock Hi II
Redmen 57-42 on Tuesday
. night.
.
With the victory, the
Redrnen completed the
:----.season
sweep of
the Rebels .
Rock Hill
defeated
s0 ut h
Gallia 5943
on
December
28.
It . was
the
first
---., game for
the Rebels
since winning their
first game
of the season
on
Friday
against
C r o s s
L a n e s
Cardwell
Christian ..
Micah Caldwell had I 0
points for South Gallia,
·including two of the
team's four three-point
field
goals.
Caleb
McClanahan added six
points, and John Wells had
five. Vance Fellure fin ished with four, and Justin
Shelton rounded out the
scoring with two.
The Rebels led 13-6
after the first quarter
against the Redmen and
seemed in good position to
get their second win of the
season. But the Rebels .
responded with six points
themselves in the second
quarter, and they trailed
21-19 at halftime. A close
third quarter had them still .
in the game at 35-32 after
three quarters, but Rock
Hill had a big fourth, scoring 22 while holding the
Rebels to 10.
No junior varsity results
were available at press
time.
South Gallia returns to
action tonjght when they
host the Hannan Wildcats
in a battle of West Virginia
versus Ohio.
, The JV game will tip-off
at 6 p.m . .
Racll Hll117, South Go111o 42
So. Gallla IJ 6 13 10 - 42
Aocl&lt; Hill

8

15

14 22 -

57

SOl/TH GALLIA (1 · 12) -John Wells 2

0-0 5, Micah Caldwell 4 0-0 10. Caleb
McClanahan 3 0..0 6, Tyler Duncan 7 0·
1 15, Vance Fellure 2 0·0 4, Justin
Shelton 1 0-0 2. TOTALS: 19 0-1 42.
Three·polnt goals: 4 {Caldwell .2, Wells,
Duncan).
ROCK HILL (7-6) - 5oth Kuehne 1 Q0 2, Wes Pierson 3 1·1 9, Nate
Oavenpon 8 7-8 23. MaU Ma1ney 2 0-0
4, Mark DePrMtat 3 1-3 7, Drew Kuehne
3 1·3 8, Aaron Buller 2 0·0 4. TOTALS:
22 10-15 57. Three·polnt goals: 3
(Pierson 2, D. Kuehne).

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Eastern fall sports banquet recap, Page B2
Simpson bail raised to $250,000, Page B6
Bengals' Lewis turns to old friend, Page B6

/
Page A6 •

www.mydailysentinel.com
-........

The Daily Sentinel

--· _,

Ariel hosts dance classes
GALLIPOLIS - Get in
the swing of things this winter with ballroom dance
classes at the ArieL
Classes,
taught
by
instructor· Dr. Joe Li. will be
held on Tuesday evenings
at The Ariel-Ann Carson
Daier · Performing Arts
Centre both both couples
and singles.
Classes are $60 per person for a. six week session
and take place in the ArielDater Hall second floor
banquet hall at 426 Second
Ave,. Gallipolis.
There are two sessions on
Tuesday evenings, a 7 to 8
p.m. lesson for smooth
dance (includes the waltz,
foxtrot and tango) and an 8
to 9 p.m: class for Latin
dance (covering the rumba,
cha-cha and swing styles of
ballroom dance).
For more information or
to schedule a class, call The
Ariel-Dater Hall at 740446-ARTS (2787)

.

Christian Scott will also be Club and the Rio Grande
singing during the evening. Chaplaincy Office.
Scott is currently a teacher
"It is very important for
at Washington Elementary Rio Grande to hold this
School in Gallipolis. Rio annual .
observance,"
.
Grande student Elizabeth Armstrong said.
Miller will also be provid- . Many people may think
ing special music during the of Martin Luther King Jr.
evening .
Miller
was Day as just another holiday
crowned
Miss
Gallia or day off of work or
County 2007.
school, but she invites peoIn addition to the special pie to come to the celebramusic, Rio Grande students tion and consider the imporMichael
and
Marcus lance of the day.
· Hampton will perform an
"For the university and
_Philip Armstr~ng
interpretive dance presenta: the community, it's not only
"""''
~·. "
, _,
tion. The _)-lamp!'?lt brot\lfr~ a day of remembrance of
restaurants in eastern have done · mterprefive the thallenges" 'a:nd the
Oklahoma and lives in dance on campus previous· thing~ Dr. Kin~ worked so
T-Ill~.,,, . -~·• ,; ... ,.. .•,.,, . ;;. , ~.;.. }Y: and their pe"!o~m~nce hard for, but it ts also a day
This is the third year he wtll ' add'.t o the eWhtift'A1! ~'to encourage trs'·to never
has served as the keynote it?vocatiot? will also . be give up. o~ the fight for
speaker for the Martin gtven dunng the evemng, . human dtgruty and love for
Luther King Jr. celebration and Elaine Armstrong, dean all people," Armstrong said.
at Rio Grande, and he has of students at Rio Grande,
"The annual observance
become well known for his will lead the ceremonies.
of Martin Luther King Jr.
powerful . rendition
of
She invites all Rio Grande Day urges each of us to try
King's speech. Armstrong students and area residents to make a positive differalso has a wonderful to attend this special cele- ence in the hves of others,"
singing voice, and will pre- bration. Refreshments will she added.
sent some special music be served after the event,
For more information,
during the event.
and will be coordinated by contact Armstrong at (800)
Rio Grande alumnus the Rio Grande Women's 282-7201.

43rd annual winter hike Saturday at park
LOGAN -The spectacu- most popular wintertime
lar scenery of Hockmg Hills activities, drawing hundreds
State Park in southeastern of outdoor enthusiasts each
Ohio will be clothed in its year. The hike takes place,
. seasonal beauty for. the regardless of the weather.
43nd Annual Winter Hike,
Hikers should arrive at
scheduled for this Saturday. · the Old Man's Cave parking
"Hiking the trails at lot no later than I 0:30 a.m.
Hocking Hills State Park and preferably before 9 a.m.
during this annual event has Layered clothing and sturdy
become a seasonal tradition footwear are recommended.
for many people," said Dan Groups of hikers will start
West, chief of Ohio State down the six-mile trail to
Parks. "It offers a chance to Ash Cave at regular intershJike off the winter dol- vals until II a.m. The hike
drums and get outside for a is expected to take about
brisk walk through Ohio's five hours.
great outdoors."
A hearty lunch of bean
The hike is one of Ohio's soup, cornbread and hot

chocolate will be served at
Cedar Falls, mid-way point
of the hike. The pause · will
include presentation of the .
Heart of Hocking Award to
Bob Wells, a volunteer
camper host with Hocking
Hills State Park. The park's
friends organization and representatives of the Hocking
Hills Tourism Association
will also present the park
with a John Deere Gator
ATV during the lunch break.
Park officials will provide
return transportation from
Ash Cave to Old Man 's Cave following the event.
Pre-hike ·
activities,

including naturalists' programs, games and refreshrnents, will begin at 6 p.m.
Friday at the Hocking Hills
State Park Dining Lodge.
The event is free to the ·
public. Donations
are
encouraged for refreshments. Winter hike souvenir
patches and hiking stick
medallions will be available
for purchase.
Hocking Hills State Park
is located on Ohio 664 in
Hocking County, about 12
miles southwest of Logan.
For further information
about the hike, call the rark
office at (740) 385-684 .

Ariel Jr. Theatre plans Rand play production
GALLIPOLIS - · Where
were you the night of Jan. 16?
Swedish financier Bjorn
Faulkner of' Manhattan fell
to his death off ihe Faulkner
Building in downtown New
York on the night of Jan. 16.
Faulkner had built a financial empire largely through
finagling on a grand scale.
Karen Andre, Faulkner's

one-tirne mistress, has been ·
arrested for his de_ath. The
police suspect that Faulkner
did not jump to his death, but
rather was pushed off the bal~
cony of. his penthouse suite ..
The murder trial will take
place at the Ariel Theatre on
Friday and Saturday, Feb. 22
and 23, and Sunday, Feb. 24.
• Was it a cold-blooded

murder? Was it a suicide?
These and other questions
will have the audience on
the edge of their seats as the
Ariel Junior Theatre presents 'The Night of January
16" by Ayn Rand.
The play takes place in a
courtroom and is staged as a
murder case of the century,
complete with suspense,

intrigue and audience participation.
Performance times are 8
p.m: on Friday and Saturday,
and 3 p.m. on Sunday.
Tickets are now on sale and
can be reserved by calling
Ariel-Dater box office at
(740) 446-2787. The prices
are $10 for VIP seating, $8
for adults and $6 for students.

OU will host area student artists
ATHENS - The Ohio
University College of
Education presents an Art
Extravaganza and Silent
Auction today from 6 to 8
p.m. in the Furst floor lobby
area of the McCracken Hall Gallery.
Join
hosts
President ·
-Roderick J. M~Davis and
Dean Renee Middleton as
they welcome the artists,

2008

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Council offers painting,
photography classes

Good Works 6th Annual Walk
for the Homeless Raises awareness
and fUnds for IUral homeless
I

RIO
GRANDE
of
Rio
University
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College will
hold a. Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. Day ceremony on
Monday, Jan. 21 at 7 p.m. in
the
Berry
Fine
and
Performing Arts Center.
"A Celebration of the Life
of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr." will feature music,
remarks and a reading of
King's "I Have A Dream"
speech.
Gallia County native
Philip Armstrong will give
the keynote speech and also
do the recitatio'n of the
famous and moving "I Have
A Dream" speech.
Armstrong, who gradualed from North Gallia High
School in 1989, earned his
bachelor's degree in communications from Central
State University and his
master's degree in public
administration from the
University of Akron.
Armstrong
currently.
serves a&lt;_ the direc.t or ·o f
develn j'n . nt for Subway

Thursday, January 17,

MIDDLEPORT - Two new classes 'will be offered at the
Riverbend Arts Council. one in oil painting and the other in
photography, both beginning on Jan. 28.
Rhojean McClure will be the instructor for the oil painting classes to be held from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. on Mqndays.
The class work wi II include. techniques of creating skies,
clouds, distant trees, and the textures and shapes of ever_
.
green and deciduous trees.
Ballroom
. McClure is a certified instructor with Robert Warren's
dancing
Renaissance
Group and will be teaching that technique in
inst~uctor Joe
the
classes.
The
cost of $52 includes all supplies except
Li is seen
brushes.
The
first
week will include application and use of
here with his
mediums, how to create realistic skies and clouds; the sec- .
wife, Cheryl.
ond
week, trees, evergreen and distant trees, and the third
Li will be· ·
and fourth weeks, winter pine meadow. Students will paint
teaching ballthe winter landscape on a 12-by-16 stretched canvas.
room dance
·For more details and to register, call McClure at (74Q)
classes at the 992-3842.
I
,
Ariel-Dater
The photography class will deal with digital cameras and
Performing
will be taught by Sharon Dean of Racine.
Arts Centre.
The classes will be from 6:301o 8:30 p.m. on Jan. 2S,
Submitted photo
Feb. 4, Feb. II, and Feb. 18. The cost is $35. To register,
call Dean at (740) 949-1012 or (740) 441-0043.

MLK Day observation set at Rio for Jan. 21
.

•

their families and the university and Athens communities
to this inaugural event. The
exhibit showcases the work
of area school children from
Athens Hi&amp;h School, Meigs
County M1ddle School and
- Chieftain,
Chauncey,
Hocking Hills and Morrison
Elementary sc hools. Work
has been on display in the
college si nce last spring.

Paintings, photographs,
Tarnal a .Solomon, director
drawings and prints by over of events for the College of
20 artists in grades K-12 will Education, says tile art exhibbe auctioned throughout the it will be an annual event.
course of tile evenins. Meet . She is already planning for
the artists and erijoy an the next one, which will fca~
evening of live jazz and ture children's artwork from
refreshments a~ you stroll schools in the 29 counties of
through the gallery before the AP.falachia. Calls for entry
auction. Proceeds will be split WJI go out this month, and
evenly between the artist and the winners will be displayed
their school' s art program.
in McCracken Hall in April.

ATHENS- Hundreds of people from southeast Ohio are
expected to participate in Good Works' sixth annual Walk
for the Homeless on Saturday.
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with the sixth annual
Walk for the Homeless going from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
The event, intended to correspond to the themes of the
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend, will begin and
end at the First United Methodist Church in Athens. The
goal of the walk is to educate the public on the reality of
poverty and homelessness in southeastern Ohio and raise
funds for the Good Works' Timothy House, the only shelter
for the rural homeless in nine southeast Ohio counties.
Funds raised from the walk will benefit almost 200
homeless people that Good Works' Timothy House serves
each year.
·
"Good Works was established in rural Appalachia to provide
hope to people caught in the cycle of homelessness and poverty - . this is one of the poorest regions in the United States,"
said Keith Wasserman, who founded Good Works in 1981 in
his own basement and has since expanded his understanding
.of homelessness by living among the homeless himself.
,
"Considering two-thirds of the Timothy House's fundirrg
comes directly from .private donations, this walk is very
important to the homeless people whom we serve,"
Wasserman said.
· Last year, the event raised almost $38,000, which Good
Works used to assist'the rural homeless. This· year's goal is
to raise $40,000 from participants who are asked to find ten
people who will sponsor them by donating $10 each.
On the day of the event, participants may choose one
of two different, simultaneous walks, including:
• THE MYTH WALK -A unique experience that will
challenge commonly held beliefs about wealth and poverty. The 3-rnile walk experience will uncover some of the
untrue beliefs that many people have adopted about wealth,
poverty and homelessness.
• KIDS WALK - A 2-3 mile experience focused on
teaching children K-high school about what· poor and
homeless people face on a day-to-day basis.
Also included this year will be:
• THE MINI WALK - Citizens who have difficulty
walking can walk 100 feet to the First Presbyterian Church
to view a video and have an engaging discussion on issues
related to poverty and homelessness.
One of many of Good Works' outreach ministries, the
Timothy House sta{fs four full-time employees, several
part time staff and about 60 volunteers and provides the
only shelter available to homeless people in nine southeastern Ohio counties.
Anyone interested in participating in the walk can contact Good Works at (740) 594-3339 for a walk packet or
dow,load information online at .www. walkforthehomeless.tlet or www.good-works.net.

Entertainment Briefs
Speaker slated
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev. Henry Mosley, pastor of New
Hope Baptist Church in Ashland, Ky., will be the keynote
speaker for the annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration sp6nsored by the Southeastern Ohio NAACP Brand).
l'he observation is I p.m, Monday, Jan. 21, at Paint Creek
Regular Baptist Church, .833 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Light refreshments will be_served after the program .

Performing at Grill
POMEROY - The Frank Harrison Blues Group will be
performing at the Court Street Grill Saturday ni~ht. Harriso11
has been described as a "guitar God in the makmg."
.
On Monday night, Robert Childers of Modem Don Juans
fame, will return to Pomeroy with two bands, the 2013
Wolvesand Andy the Door Bum.

Travel guide available
CH'ARLESTON, .W.Va. (AP) - West Virginia's 2008
state travel guide is now available to the public.
Tourism Commissioner Betty Carver says the 240-page
guide is an essential resource for vacationers.
The guide includes feature stories, su~gested itineraries, a
calendar ·of events ·and background mformation. on the
state's nine regions. Information on accommodations,
campgrounds, restaurants. parks, shops, galleries and museums is also avai lable within the guide, alo"ng with phone
numbers and Web sites so that .travelers can find out even
more about particular attractions that spark their interest.
The Division of Tourism sends free guides to thousands of
callers and Web site visitors and distributes copies at welcome
centers and travel shows across the country and internationally.

Prep Basketball

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule of upcoming high
school varsily sport1ng 8venls Involving
teams from Meigs and Gallia counties.

Tbv!'lday Jjn 17
Girls 981ketball
River V&amp;lley at Coal Grove. 6 p.m.
SOuthem at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.'m.
Boys Basketball
Hannan at South Galtia, 6 p.m.
Frtcbv Jan 18

Boys Basketball
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6:30 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre. 6:30p.m.
Zanesvi11e at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.
Gl~a B81kelball
South.Gallia at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Gallia Academy at WSA2. Invitational
River Valley at WSAZ Invitational

Meigs at Eastero, 6 p.m.
Galtla Academy at Zanesville, 6 p.m.

Boyolooketball
River Valley at Wellston Tourney, 11

a.m.

·

Wraotllng
Gallla Academy, River Valley at WSAZ
Invitational
Moodoy. .lin. 21
Gl~l B81ketblll
River Valley at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Southern at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wahama, 5:45p.m.

Ohio Notebook

Scorer misses his.heroics, but McBride eventually gets his due
BY RUSTY

MILLER

AP SPORTS WRITER

It took a while for
Anthony McBride·to be recognized as a hero.
The Cincinnati Withrow
guard had a tip-in with 2
seconds left as Withrow
defeated Canal Winchester
58-57 Saturday before about
3,000 fans at Value City
Arena.
Center Yancy Gates, a
University of Cincinnati
recruit who had 25 points
and 12 rebounds, was originally credited with the basket, but coach Walt McBride
said his nephew actually
scored it.
·
Canal Winchester's B.J.
Mullens, a 7-0 Ohio State

recruit, had 16 points and 19
rebounds.
20,000 LEAGUES: In a
battle of Midland Athletic
League unbeatens, Tiffin
Calvert (I 0-2) allowed just
six first-half poinls in a 4230 win over Sycamore
Mohawk; and the upper
division of the Blanchard
Valley Conference has been
beating up on each other qut
those top five_ teams have
been beating up on the nonleague opposition even
worse going 31-0.
LIKE A PHOENIX:
After finishing 3-18 last season, Canton Timken has
turned its fortunes around,
compiling a I 0-0 record.
Bolstered
by
Canton
McKinley transfers Johnie

Davis and Christian Alston,
and 6-8 junior center
Cameron Howard, Timken
is on course to post its first
undefeated regular-season
record since the 1959-60
team went 18-0. That team
eventually lost to Cleveland
East Tech in the Class AA
state semifinals.
ANOTHER
· TURNAROUND: The Leetonia
girls basketball team, which
had won only ei~ht of its last
40 games entenng the season, is a surprising 10-3 on
the season and shares the
Inter-Tri County League
lower tier ·tead with
McDonald.
HIGH-WATER
MARKS: Cleveland St.
Ignatius coach Brian Becker

became the schooh wins school record with nine 3leader with 278 (passing pointers in a 35-point effort
John Wirtz who had 277) 111 a 66-58 win over New
when the Wildcats defeated Middletown • Springfield;
Youngstown Boardman, 52- Jessica Jenkins became
39; Mansfield Senior (Il-l) Marion Harding's career
hasn't lost at home since . scoring leader, notching 13
moving into its new gym poinl9 to give her I ,088 for
befpre the 2004-2005 sea- her career in a 71-25 victory
s~m, run':'ing off 36 cons~cu- over Kenton; Sugarcreek
uve wms headmg mto Garaway's girls beat Berlin
Saturday's
showdown Hiland 39-30 in overtime to
against un_beaten Warren , stop Hiland's 94-garne lnterHardmg; JUntor Chelsea Valley Conference winning
be~an:e streak dating back to Jan. 12,
Bowker .
Columbtana
Crestvte~ s 2002; Kate Stimpert set
career sc~mng lead~r wtth . Ashland Crestview's girls
I ,23 1 pomts, br~ak:ing the scoring record with 36
mark held by Ahsha Bab\e points at Norwalk St. Paul
Auer, who ts also Bowker s - matching the feat set by
volleyball coach;
her father Fred who holds
Lisbon David Anderson's
'
'
Emily Smith broke her own Pleese see Notebook. 16

RockHill
sweeps
Rebels

Tutadq. Jan. 22
Glrll Bukotblll

Hannan at aves, 6 p.m:

. Boyo Bolll&lt;otblll
Portsmouth at Gellis Academy, 6 p.m.
· South Gallla at Westf.ell, 6 p.m.
Hannan at OVCS, 7:30p.m.
Wahama at Meigs, 6 p.m.

Bv HowARD ULMAN
AP SPORTS WRITER

FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
Randy Moss said
Wednesday that allegations
he
committed
battery
against a woman are false
and that she made the claim
to get money from him.
"I want to make something clear," the Patriots
wide receiver said while
. surrounded by reporters and
cameras at his locker. "In
my whole entire .life of livBv RoB MAADDt
ing 30 years, I've never put
ASSOCIATED PRESS
my hand on one woman,
physically or in an angry
PHILADELPHIA -· Not manner."
.since John Chaney patrolled
Florida radio station
the sidelin~ has Temple WDBO reported that a
played so well against a bet- woman filed for an order of
ter team.
protection against Moss,
Dionte Christmas scored alleging he committed bat19 of his 23 points in the tery against her. The report
second half ·a nd Mark said a temporary injunction
tyndale added 22 to lead was issued, barring Moss
Temple to a 78-59 victory · from corning ·within 500
over No. 20 Xavier on feet of the woman and from
Wednesday night.
using
or
possessing
The Owls (7-8, 1-1 firearms.
·Atlantic I 0) beat a ranked
Moss, a former Marshall
op)l!lnent for the first time standout, gave no details of
in two years to earn their the alleged incident, saying
biggest win since Fran he was restricted by the
Dunphy replaced the. Hall.of legal case.
•Fame coach last season.
He said the woman was a
"This win means a lot for friend of II years and !hat
us going into the next she asked for "six figures"
game," Christmas said. "We for what Moss said was an
have a lot of confidence. We accident in which she was
know what we're capable hurt.
of."
"They're false . allegaThis was the type of domtions, something I've been
inating effort that became
typical on North Broad battling for like the last couStreet when Chaney gui4ed ple of days of threats going
Temple to 17 NCAA tour- public , if I didn't pay X
nament
appearances, amount of d6llars," Moss
NCAA said. "So before people rush
including five
quick to judgment I think
regional finals .
,
But the program had fall- you need to find out the
en on hard times in recent facts about, really, what's
years. Dunphy is doing his going on.
"This young lady by no
best to tum .things around.
means
is hurt. I didn't hurt
This could be the start.
her."
"I think it's just a matter
New England plays the
of time before they regain
San
Diego Chargers in the
their national prominence,"
AFC
championship game in
Xavier coach Sean Miller
said. "They have a great Foxborough on Sunday.
Moss, who set an NFL
coach. We respect them a
great deal."
· Pleese see Moss, 86
Derrick Brown had 14
points for the Musketeers
(14-4, 2-1), who had won
six in a row by an average
margin of 25.3 points since
losi!lg to then-No. ' 12
Tennessee on Dec. 22.
But Temple came re1dy to
play from the ~tart.
GREENVILLE, · N.C.
Luis Guzman scored all (AP) _.. Sam Hinnant had·
13 of his points in the first six '3-pointers, one a fourhalf to tie his career-best. point play, as East Carolina
Sparked by Guzman's per- overcame an . eight-point
deficit in the second half to
defeat Marshall 75-62 on
PI••• - Xlivler, II
Wednesday night.
The Pirates (7-8, 1-1
Conference USA) were
down 48 -40 · after Matt
Walls hit a layup for
Marshall
with
15:17
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
remaining. Ten seconds
Fu- 1-740-44!1·3008
later, Hinnant hit a 3 and
E·mlll- sporlsOrnydallysentlnel.com
was fouled and' made the
SQorta StaH
free throw to cut the lead in
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer half and begin the come(740) 446·2342, ext 33
back.
sporls~mydallysentlnel . com
J ames Legan's 3-pointer
tied the game at 56-all with
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
6:52
tO go. Then Darrell
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
.
bwalters 0 mydailylrlbune.o_:m
Jen kIDS • Iayup put t he
Pirates in front.
Larry Crum; Sport1 Writer
East Carolina hit 12 con(740) 446·2342, ext 33
lcrumOmydailyregiller.com
secutive free th rows in the

Christmas,
Tyndale lead
Temple over
No. 20 Xavier

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS®MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

AP photo

New England Patriots wide receiver Randy 1\:loss stands on the field while the team stretches before practice begins at the NFL football team's facility in Foxborough, Mass·.,
Wednesday afternoon. Earlier in the day Moss answered reporter's questions concerning
allegations that he committed battery on a woman he has known for eleven years, during
a media availability in front of his locker. The Patriots play the San Diego Charges In the
AFC Championship game at Foxborough Sunday afternoon.

Thundering Herd falls
to East Carolina, 75-62·

CoNTAcrUs

I

I.

last
two
minutes to
ice the victory.
'
Hinnant
finished
with
24
M .\RSI1 \1 .1. points and
Jenkins had
14 as he went 8-of-8 from
the foul line.
\
Darryl Merthie had t6
points to lead Marshall (!h
6, 1-2).

~

~

L-..Jv'--.1

EAST CAROUNA 75, MARSHALL 82
MARSHALL (9-6) -Humphrey 4·10 , _
4 9. Baines 2-4 1-2 s. Wal~ 3-5 o-o e.
Allldor'-Cespedes 2~3 o-o 5, Dorris 5·12
· 3·4 11;, Merthle 3-8 9-12 16, Jactcson .11 O·O 2, Williams 0-0 0-0 o, Wilkerson 1·
1 0· 1 2. Totals 21-44 14-23 62.
EAST CAROLINA (7-6) -Gagnon 0-0
o-o 0, Blair , -2 0-0 2, Farmer Q-4 0-0 0,
Hinnant 7-11 4-4 24, Jon~ns 3-8 8-814,
Logon 3-8 0-0 9, Young 2·6 8·10 12.
Abrams 2·5 0-0 4 , Fields 2·2 2·7 6,
Wynn 2~2 0·0 4, Evans 0-0 ().0 0. Totals
22-48 22-2s 75.

Marshall's

Mark
Dorris, ·
left, tries
to block
East
Carolina's
Brock
Young,
rlght, durIng the ·
second
half of a
~asketball

game In
Greenville.
N.C. on
Wednesday.
APphoto

PEDRO
Tyler
. Duncan scored 15 potnts
to lead his team, but the
South Gallia Rebels were
beaten by the Rock Hi II
Redmen 57-42 on Tuesday
. night.
.
With the victory, the
Redrnen completed the
:----.season
sweep of
the Rebels .
Rock Hill
defeated
s0 ut h
Gallia 5943
on
December
28.
It . was
the
first
---., game for
the Rebels
since winning their
first game
of the season
on
Friday
against
C r o s s
L a n e s
Cardwell
Christian ..
Micah Caldwell had I 0
points for South Gallia,
·including two of the
team's four three-point
field
goals.
Caleb
McClanahan added six
points, and John Wells had
five. Vance Fellure fin ished with four, and Justin
Shelton rounded out the
scoring with two.
The Rebels led 13-6
after the first quarter
against the Redmen and
seemed in good position to
get their second win of the
season. But the Rebels .
responded with six points
themselves in the second
quarter, and they trailed
21-19 at halftime. A close
third quarter had them still .
in the game at 35-32 after
three quarters, but Rock
Hill had a big fourth, scoring 22 while holding the
Rebels to 10.
No junior varsity results
were available at press
time.
South Gallia returns to
action tonjght when they
host the Hannan Wildcats
in a battle of West Virginia
versus Ohio.
, The JV game will tip-off
at 6 p.m . .
Racll Hll117, South Go111o 42
So. Gallla IJ 6 13 10 - 42
Aocl&lt; Hill

8

15

14 22 -

57

SOl/TH GALLIA (1 · 12) -John Wells 2

0-0 5, Micah Caldwell 4 0-0 10. Caleb
McClanahan 3 0..0 6, Tyler Duncan 7 0·
1 15, Vance Fellure 2 0·0 4, Justin
Shelton 1 0-0 2. TOTALS: 19 0-1 42.
Three·polnt goals: 4 {Caldwell .2, Wells,
Duncan).
ROCK HILL (7-6) - 5oth Kuehne 1 Q0 2, Wes Pierson 3 1·1 9, Nate
Oavenpon 8 7-8 23. MaU Ma1ney 2 0-0
4, Mark DePrMtat 3 1-3 7, Drew Kuehne
3 1·3 8, Aaron Buller 2 0·0 4. TOTALS:
22 10-15 57. Three·polnt goals: 3
(Pierson 2, D. Kuehne).

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Thursday, January 17,

2008

Thursday, January 17, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

\!!:ribune - Sentinel -

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

ster

CLASSIFIED
Gallia ·
County,

OH
E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune .com

Pictured above are members of the TVC All-Academic Team from Eastern High School this
past fa ll. Kneeling in front. from left, are Kyle Rawson, Nathan Carroll, Kelly Winebrenner
. and Zach Moore. Standing'in back are Audrionna Pullins, Amanda Roush, Hannah Helgesen
and Andrea Buckley.. Absent were Tina Drake and Matt Friend.

\!!:ribune

Andrea Buckley. Varsity Gheen, Kyle Connery,
SPORTS@MYDAILYSEN TINEL.COM
advisor Sheryl Roush was Klint Connery, Devon
Baum, ' Ryan Amos and
also recognized.
TUPPERS PLAINS In cross country, Aaron Jordao Wood.
Eastern High Schoo!' honMartindale, Keith Aeiker,
Klint Connery won the
ored its fall sports athletes
Audrionna Pullins and Jule Best Back Award, while
in November during· a pair.
Draehn all received varsity Ben Buckley captured the
of banquets held at the high
letters. Martindale won the Best Lineman Award.
school gymnasium.
Coaches Award, while Hensley was named the
First, during the EHS
Pullins captured the Don Best Defensive Player and
volleyball banquet, the varJackson
Sportsmanship Rawson was honored as the
sity and junior varsity pro- Trussell, Shelby Smith and Award.
Best Offensive Player.
grams - as well as the Courtney Thomas. Head
Nick Schultz; Kyle Kimes won the . Coaches' .
seventh and eighth grade coach Jamie Robertson was ·Edwards, Nathan Carroll, Award and Daniel Buckley
programs •. were also recognized.
Zach Carson, Craig Jones, won . the Don Jackson
acknowledged for their
Memb.ers of the seventh Matthew Friend, Tyler Sportsmanship Award.
hard work and efforts dur- grade team. were Rachael Carroll and Jeremy Lee
Head coach Kevin Welsh
ing the 2007 fall season.
Markworth, Ally Hendrix, were all honored for their was also recognized, as ·
The varsity Lady Eagles Becca Caldwell, Larissa efforts during the golf sea- were
assistants · Dick
finished the 2007 campaign Cunningham,
Caitlyn son, along with head coach Tipton, Aaron Schaekel,
with a 23-3 overall mark, Cowdery, Krista Miller, · Brad Quillen. Edwards Ryan Dunfee, Wes Sanders,
including a perfect I 0-0 Hannah Adams, Shawna won the Coaches Award Jamie
Baker,
Chris
record in the Tri- Valley Murphy, -Larissa Riddle, and Friend was given the Buchanan and Brandon
Hocking Breanna Hayman, Emilly Don
Conference
Jackson . Gregory.
Division. EHS won its lith Wheeler; Addie Hill and Sportsmanship Award.
• The junior high football
consecutive TVC Hocking Kiki Osborne. The seventh
In fo.otball, 39 varsity squads were also honored
crown, as well as its 12th grade .coaches - Katie. players received certifi- at the banquet.
straight sectional title and Robertson . and
Kass cates and varsity letters for
Members of the eighth
fourth district champi- Lodwick- were also rec- their efforts in 2007. They grade team ·were· Christian
onship over the last five og!lized.
were Kyle Rawson, Zack Amsbary, Chris Bissell,
years.
·
·
At the other banquet, Newell, Alex Kuhn, Larry Shannon Brown, Tyler
Members of the varsity members of the football, Hess, Craig Hensley, Kyle Cline, Scout Fa~emyer,
squad were Morgan Werry, golf, cross country and Gordon, Josh Collins, Alex Seth Guthrie, Luke Kimes,
Kelsey
Holter,
Katie cheerleading squads were Burroughs,
' Daniel Tyler
Miller, .
Paul
Hayman , Amanda Eason, recognized for.their efforts Buckley, Justin Bissell, Morrison, Jacob Parker,
Ryan
Davis,
Megan
Broderick, Tresa · Swatzel, . this past 2007 fall season. Coel Williams, James Jeremiah Roush, Aaron
Starting with cheerlead- R~ssell, Morgan Powell, Shamp, Jon Young and .
Katie Wilfong, Brittany ing,
the reserve squad con- Zach
Moore,
Jordan Jacob "?:uspan.
Casto,
Morgan
Burt, sisting of Kayla Mollohan, Kimes, Zach Hendrix,
Members of the -seventh
Karissa Connolly and
Hall,
Kaity Derek Griffin, Action grade team were Alex
Lauren · Cummings. Head Morgan
Thomas,
Danni
Maxey.
Facemyer, Ben Buckley, Amos, Randal Davis, Troy
coach Howie Caldwell and Darci
Bissell,
Chelsi.
Kelly Winebrenner, Tyler Gantt, Bradley Goeglein,
assistant coach Debbie
. Phillip ·Garret Hall, Austin Lute,
Weber were also recog- Kearns and Tara Smith Sanders,
were
honored,
as
was
JV
Moorehead,
Jeffery Dylan Milam, Tim Minear,
nized.
Milhoan, Casey McKnight, Dylan Morris, Derick
Werry won the Coaches' advisor Betsy Kearns.
Members
of
the
varsity
Mike Johnson., Lonnie Powell, Kirk Pullins,
Award, while Broderick
were
Hannah Westfall, John Tegnolia, , Garret
Rit~hie,
Joey
came away with the Setter squad
Helgesen,
Sarah
Wachter,
Bnld
Stone.
·
·
Michael
Scowden,
Mark
Sheets
and
and
Assists
Award. ·
Tina
Drake-,
Amanda
Fulks,
Scyoc,
Brayden
Pratt,
Tim
·Tyler
Price.
Hayman received the Most
The banquet information
Kills Award, Swatzel won Amanda Roush, Amanda: Markworth, Josh Loscar,
Wolfe,
Breea
Buckley
a~d
Tyler
Hendrix,
Nathan
was
received late.
the Most Points Scored
Award and Broderick also
captured the Best Serving
Percentage Award.
Both Casto and Burt
shared the Most Improved
Award, while Davis and
Eason each received the
Don
Jackson
Sportsmanship Award.
Members of the reserve
team recognized were
Ravenne Reed, . Megan
Carnahan,
Beverly
Maxson, Ashley Miller,
Britney Morrison, Karissa
Connolly,
Lauren
Cummings,
Sammi
Cummins, Rachelle Davis,
Whitney Putnam and
Brittany Casto. JV coach
Kim Hupp was also saluted
for her efforts,.
Members of the eighth
grade squad were Brooke
Johnson , Hayley Gillian,
Submitted photos
Janae · Boy)es, Bay lee Pictured above are members of the Eastern football teann that won special awards during
Collin s, Emily Davis, the 2007 fall sports banquet. Kneeling, from left, are Zach Moore, Craig Hensley, Jordan
Brenna Holter, Kelsey Kimes and Ben Buckley. Standing In back are Zach Newell, Alex Kuhn, Kyle [lawson, Daniel
Myers, Savannah Moore, Buc.kley and Kelly Winebrenner.
·
•
Ashley Putnam, Autumn

0/.ftee !lowe-~

STAFF REPORT

HOW IQ WRITE AN . AD.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
1'\01 \l I \II 'IS

Ohio Valley
reserve•
tho ~ghtto 0&lt;111,
reject or cancel any

Pu~llshlng

ad at any time.
Must
the

·'

were made. He also said the
university should have any
records
involving
the
finances of the summer
camps it run.
Brown. however, ~clined
to say whether Rodriguez
removed or destroyed any
,documents, saying·that question would be addressed In
court documents.
After Rodriguez left last
month, WVU sued him to
collect on a $4 million buyout clause in his contract. On
Wednesday, the case was
transferred ·
from
Monongalia County Circuit
Court to U.S. District Coun
in Clarksburg.

l\egi~ter

r

Male Hu'sklyl Wotte mix.
approx. 1 year old, tree to
good home. call (740)541·
'3613
'
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Don Bunce. 740-992-02t9.
Registered male Cocker
Spaniel.
1·1/2 yrs. old.
blonde/white • has papers .
Very friendly. Ha~e to give
away - can1 keep. Call 304·

All Display: 1:Z Noon :;z
BU•Ines• DaY• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thureday for Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Mey-word • Include Complete
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• Include Phone Number And Address When Heeded
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

KIT &amp;

POLICIES: Ohio Valtey Publlthlng rnervn the rlgtlt to Mh, reject, or uncel an~ ad a1 any ti!N. Errors mult be reported on thlllrst dl~ Of
TrUtu,..s.nti,..A.gaster will bs rnponslble tor no more thin tht coat of the space occupied by the error and only the flrat Insertion. We shall
1081 or
thlt ruultt from the publlutlon or omission of an advartisemsn't Correction will be msde In the tlrat avaHable ediUon. • Box
are alwaye contldenu.l. • Currtnt raw. ctrd applies. • All real eetlla advtrtlsemenl• sre
to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thla
accep~s only help waniM ads mettlng EOE ttandards. We
I
1
law.

·en,.

••pen•

CARLYLE

r-------------------------------------~ . L~~~...~.SaEo
..UCTI
..L~--- ~1 L. ~rn·"~~s-~..- ~l r. M~s~

AucnoNAND

10

kltncarlyle@lcomcast.net

Riverside Aucfi'on Barn, At.
7 South, 5 miles below the
Dam. (740)256·6969. Huge
Sale Sal. Night @ 6pm.
Super Nice Wood Bunk Bed, ·
Baby Bed w/ changer an.,
Baby Items, Stove. Fridge,
BA Suite, Pots. Pans, Tools,
Movies , Computer-Stand·
Chair, Hu e Nice Sale

WI1Af~11/IIA1'r6R&lt;;
p..r.~ YW SA~W&lt;t YoU
N~'J~ ~O!!iR 1'11-U!

Wrf\-1' K11'rY ON II?'

WA~lllJ

0

TO IJUy .

,

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Prootsets, Gold Rings, Pret935
U.S.
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 151 Second
.Avenue, GaltipQIIs, 740-446·
2642.

D

Beagle &amp; Cocker
(740)992-9()51

~@2008 by

11'. 10

ll.10. .- . . . . . . . . . .
mix. •
HELP WANTED •

www.comlc.s.com

NEA, Inc.

HEUtWAr\flm

lli.IO......
Hru&gt; W
. .ANrED
. . . . .IIIIO
, .

..

JlwtWANfEU

A
Celebration
of . Earn up to $1200.00 per
Regional, Pneumatic Tanker
Found on 3rd Ave, while &amp; ·r 0
k
b come
to
I
Ohio Operating Engineers &amp; OTR driving Poslti"ons:
Lre .... ver brook Center, wee..
e
a ser AppreiJIIceshlp&amp;Training A&amp;J l1uck' g c
.
brow n (F) dog. Call 740·709·
located at 333 Page Street, parent. Contact Shelly at
Program
r In
ompany rn
6216
Middleport, Ohio is pl6ased (740) 794-0248 for details.
Loca118
Marietta. Ohio Is searching
1
tor qualified COL A Drivers
FOUND: Coon dog 6 miles 1o announce we are accep.
4-YOar Apprenticeship
to operate Semi-Dumps,
out Sandhill Ad. Call to ing applications for the fol· ECHO I VASCULAR TECH
·1· avat·1abl e. 2008 APPLICATION OATES p neuma1IC
- Bulk •1an kers tor
lowing positions to loin our FT or PT poslton
Identify 304·675-5774
friendly and .dedicated staff: (M-F) Outpatient Diagnostic Jan. 28,29,30 &amp; Feb 7,8,9 both r"eglonal and OTR
Full lime 7PM-7AM Nurse Center. Applicant should be
9:00am to 3:00pm
opportunities.
Qualified
and Part-time Nurses, both registered or registry eligi·
Operating El)glneers
applicants must be at least
shifts. Applicant's must be ble. Minimal •travel between
are the men and women
23 yrs, haVe a minimum ot 1
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
dependable, team players o~ices. Full benelils· avail- thwehoeqopulpe~elenlatnhdolrobupelldirs years of safe commerical
Announcement ............................................ OJO
with positive attitudes to join able for FT applicants.
'''
driving e~~:perience, Haz Mal
Antlques ..................... .................................. 530
us
in
pro~iding
outstanding.
Compensation
based
on
"Earn
~~~~~am"
CertificatiOn,
Clean MVR
Apartments lor Rent.. ............ ,.................... 440
.and. good job stability. We
Auction and Flea Market... ..........................DBO , quality care to our residents. experience. Call 304·522·
Stop by and till out an appll- 7000 to schedule intervieW.
We will be accepting
offer a full state of benefits
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .... :..................... 760
appHcatlons with a $10.00 plu"s 401 (k) and vacation
Auto Repatr ................ :................................. 770
cation or contact Hollie ECSONASCULAR TECH· cash non-relundable fee, at
pay. For information contact
Bumgarner. LPN , 81aH NICIAN: Full-time or PartAutos for Sale .............................................. 71 0
the following location
.Kent at 800·462-9365 or
I
t
D
e v e· o P m e n
time position available. (M·
LoglnTralnlng ·Center
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .....................: ....... 750
. 1or @740 -992 -6472 F) Outpatient Diagnostic
visil our web site at
Coor drna
30410 Strawn Road
Building Supplies ............. ,....: ................ ,, ... 550
~
1
11
www ritnJr,kjng com E.O.E.
anu come see or yourse Center. Applicant should be
Logon, OH 43138
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
th
k
diH
e erence you can ma e registered or registry eilgl·
1-888-385-25e7
Business Opportunlty .................................21 0
at Overbrook!!! EOE &amp; a ble. Minimal travel between
EOE
Retail Managerial Personnel
Buslne&amp;s Training .........................; ............. 140
participant of the drug-tree toea! offices. Full benefits - - - - - - - - position available. Must be
Camper~ &amp; MotOF Homes ........................... 790
workplace program.
available for lull-time appli· Ohio Valley Home Health, trustworthy. dependable with
Camping Equipment ...................... .'............ 780
cants.
Compensation based Inc. hiring STNA, CNA, e~~ 1 fe nt. customL
. er. sarviceto
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
A Local Manufacturer is on eKPBrlence. Gall 304- Home Heallh Aides and SN s. rwers rcense, au •
Chlld/Eide~y Care .................... ,.................. 190
andSend
drug testing
ElectrtcaVRefrlgeratlon ............................... 840
looking for EXPERIENCED 522-7000 to schedule inter- Personal Care Aides. Full, ins. · -...1
to
Welders. and Laborers that view
Part Tlme and Per Diem requlruu.
resumes
Equipment for RenL ..................................480
~:...__ _ _ _ _ _ positions available. Apply CLA Box JJI.1. c/o Gallipol~
Excavatlng ................................ ;.................. 830
can operate industrial Experienced lineman for
Tribune PO Box 469
machinery.
Apply
in
person
at · 1480 Jackson Pike,
•·
'
. Farm Equlpment... ....................................... 610
telephone work, local work, Gallipolis, phone 441 _1393 .Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Farms for Rent.. ...........................................430
at King Kutter II. 2150 home every night. lull time,
;!;!l
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. No
for Skilled Office or apply at 1Hme warner ~8
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
only experienced linemen 1456
~
Plk
h
,--- - ---·
phone calls please.
will be conSidered. send
Jal.&lt;f\son
e, P one
For Lease ..................................................... 490
'
•aka
Inbound
For Sale ........................................................585
resume to: -Dally Sentinel, 441-9263
C for
''
Passport/Private
are
..
customer
service calls
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590 • A Meigs County Office is PO. Box 729·31, Pomeroy, Otflce.Competltlve
Wages
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
looKing tor a part time office · Oh 45769 .
and Benefits including
for Fortune 100
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
help to work 15+/- hours a - - F-E-'0-E_R_A_L__ health i.nsurance and ~ompanies Including:
General Haullng ..........................................
week. Must be presentable
mileage reimbursement.
!Time Warner Cable
and have office skills Please
POSTAL JOBS
Glveaway ...................................... :...............D40
Happy Ads ........ ;...........................................
send resumes listing abill· 17.33-$27.58hu., now hir- overbrook
Center
PT
d
0"Y an
Hay &amp; Greln ...........................................: ......640
ties and sKills to The Daily ing. For apPlication and free Located0333Page
st.,
• FT I
Sentinel, PO Box 729·39, governement job info, call Mlddlepon, Ohio is pleased
.Evenlnga ahtftl
Help Wanled ......................., ......................... 110
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
American Assoc. of Labor I· to announce we will be hold·
available
Homelmprovements ...................................810
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. emp. ing an STNA, class, schede MedicaVDenta11401k
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
Will
Household Goods ....................................... 510
An E~ecellent way to earn serv.
uled to r FebruarY· Hours
• Prolessional Work
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
moneu.
The
New
Avon.
·
--~----- be SAM-4:30PM. If you are
1
Foater
Perenta
Needed
1
d
1
1
1
1
In Memorlam ................................................020
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
n1eres1e n on ng our
l-~a~.-w..
$30·$48 ·a day wi1h paid friendy and dedicated staff,
IHC: ..-9 ...-----..
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
respite, Training begins please stop by our front
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl ........................ 660
Appalachian Tire Products, January 26· Albany. Call office Mon.·Frl., 9AM-5PM
Llvestock ...................................................... 630
Environment
. current1y see k'mg an Oasis Foster Care to regis- and till out an application.
Inc. IS
Lost and Found ..........."................................ 060
. T1ech Ior our ter: Toll Free . 1-877-325- Space Is Mmlted. Full time
A•2 Servrce
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Point Pleasant, WV location. 1558.
and part time positions avail·
1-888-IMC-PAYU
Mlsceltaneous ...........................: .................. 170
Wages based on experience
able to those qualified indi·
Ext. 2347
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
and benefits including 401 K, Local Housing Company
.
Fu11 •1tme
in::foc~is:io~ni;i
·"'
:::m;::...l
·
viduals completing the L..::www:=·;:::
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Health Insurance. and Paid seekmg
are
also
avat'labfe
.
ExperienCed
Seryjce
class.
Applicants
must
be
.on
Mobile Home&amp; for Rent ............................... 420
V'catl
d nd bl (Att nde
· Upcoming certified nursing
nee lS
Mobile Homes lor Sale .............................. .-.320
V'f'd COL Requ'·red Please• Technician. Send resume to: epe l)a• e ·PIe
.. .a·ssistant class. Must have a
Money to Loen ............................................. 220
apply in person . For any CLA Box 104, c/o Gallipolis a mus ream ayers "" 11 high school diploma or GED
MotorcyciiiS &amp; 4 Wht~t~lers .......................... 740
rnformatron con lac1 Teddy Tribune, PO BoJC 469, positive attitudes to join us In to apply. Applications may
Lambert @ (304)675·3930. Gallipolis, OH "f5631
providing outstanding, qualiMuslcallnstruments ................................. ..
ty care to our residents. 11 be picked up at Lakin
Personals ........................................,............
LPN/AN's needed
for you have any queslioi'\S con· Hospital, Monday through
Pets lor Sale ...... .......................................... 560
rom Gallipolis or Pain Pedia1rfc Home Health care. tact Hollie Bumgarner. LPN, Friday,
8am-4pm.
Plumbing &amp; Heetlng .................................... 820
teasa nl area to do th
Par' time days/evenings. Staff
Dev,lopment Applications
must
be
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
ocessary legal work o
Contact Michele at Primary Coordlnator0740-992· received no' tater than COB
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 16Q.
ehalf of a Gallia County Care Nursing 800·518-2273 6472. Overbrook Center Ia 01/18108
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
hio property owner, i
or 614-764-0960
. an E.O.E. and a participant ------~S&lt;:hoota Instruction.....................................
etting the. abandoned rail MannnwAr is now hli-lng for of the Drug Free Workplace Walt person needed, Must
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertltlzer .............................. 650
oad right-of-way porperty,
~"""'"Program .
be dependable and available
Situations Wanled ....................................... 120 ·
rom the O.O. Mclntry
the following positions _....:.__ _ _ _ _ _ tor en" shift. experience is
.l
Prod tlon
'
AuIomo b1
Space lor Rent .............................................460
ark District.
reverte
e
u
POST OFFtCE NOW
opttonal, smiles are mandaack to the present owner. Workers in the Buffalo, WV
HIRING
tory. Come and be 8 part of
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
orne property owner
Area Benefi1s available Call
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
a winning team. Apply in
. SUV's for Sate .............................................. 720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
ave accomplished thi
Today 304- 757 -3338
$57K arYlUally
person at the Holiday Inn
Upholstery ................................................... 870
!ready. Fax reply to 912 NEEDED 1 Enthusiastic • Including Federal Benefits front desk. No phone calls
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
r;;;;36;;.·~87,;;82;;__ _ __.., Motor
Route
Carrier
and OT.Paid Training,
please.
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
MinersviNe,
Syracuse,
Vacations•FTIPT
-------AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
1•866•542 · 1531
Racine. Part-time work Full·
Welders needed. 1yr. experiSell. Shirley Spears, 304- llme pay $1250·$1350 mo.
Wanted To 00 .............................................. 180
USWA
once. Good wages &amp; bene675·1429.
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Contact St&amp;Vi Lush Oail~
ttts. Send resumes to: CLA
Yard Sale- Gatllpolls ....................................072
- - - - - - - Sentinel 740-992·2155. ttl
Box 103, c/o Gallipolis Oeily
Yard Sale-Pomeroy1Middle ......................... D74
Person for live in with elderly Court Street, Pomeroy,
Ttibune, PO Box 469,
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ D76
lady. Call740-367-7129
Ohio.
' - - - - - - - - ' Gallipolis, OH 45631

Aaron Martindale, left, and Audrionna Pullins.

11 0

;aso
oso

GOLF AWARD-WINNERS
Naihan Carroll, left, and Kyle Edwards.

The court filing indicated
Rodriguez had established
residency in Michigan by
the time the lawsuit was

filed.

filed through the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in
Richmond, Va., instead of
the state Supreme Court.
Flaherty said it would be
premature to comment on
whether the missing documents hud a11y possible bearing on WVU's · lawsuit
against Rodriguez.
Charleston attorney Sean
McGinley,
representing
Rodriguez, didn't immediately return a,telephone message.

"We're perfectly comfortable and happy to litigate
this case in any court," sold
Thomas
Flaherty,
11
Charleston attorner representing WVU. "This is not
unanticipated."
.
Tlie
move ' gives
Rodriguez ftve extra days,
until next Wednesday, to file
a response to the lawsuit.
The initial deadline was
Friday.
Associated Press writer
The jurisdiction move also Vicki Smith contributed to
means any appeals would be this story..
(

'

s

sro

oos

,so

FIND AJOB IN
THE CLASSifiED$

I

discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, sax
familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to

Exp. mother of 6 &amp;
GrandmOther of 10 would
like to care for your child in
my home weekdays. Have
ref. if you need them. 645-7631

melee any such
pref11anr:e, limitation or

discrimination."

Thil newspaper will not
George's Portable Sawmill,
knawtng/y accept
don't haul your Logs to the . advertisement• tor real
Mill jus! call304-875-1957.
estate which lsln
violation at the law. Our
d sare hereby
1!111
rea er
8~
Informed that all
Ol'foR1UNfl1:'
dwellings advertised In
~:::::::::
this newspaper are I
available an an equa
opportunity oa..a ...I
L..:::::;:;.:.;;;;;;.:.;;;;;;;;;;;.·

c-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
rtd

CLASSIFIED INDEX

CROSS COUNTRY AWARD-WINNERS

All reel eatateadwerttalng
In this newapaper ta
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makee It illegal to
advertise "any
preflllfl!nce, limllatlon or

All types of Home Repairs &amp;
Improvements. Call Rick
740..274·2338 or 992-2910.
r-17 .

--------

~======~

•

•NOTICE•

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recom1nends
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail unlil you

j

MONEY
ro LoAN

J'l

Borrow Smart. Contact
tho Ohio 0 ,.. 1, 1.0 n _,
•
Ul
Financial
Institution's
Offi ce o1 c onsumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi-

nan~e your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE.
of requests for any large
aavance payments of
fe effs or lnsuranceC. Call1he
0 ice o1
onsumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278·0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker or
lel)der
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing COmpany)

F

I'RIJ~ll;';IUNAL

SrRVIOO
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win1
1-888-582-3345
HI \ I I .., I \ I t

ji;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
riO
HOMI~
FOR SAU:
1.,,. . . ..-iililliiiO...-J
0 doWn payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740367·7129.

-----~-3BA, 3.5 bath, 2000 sq.h.
condo in F!orlda on
Clearwater Island. Water slip
&amp; garage. Must sell! 446·
1822
4 bedroom 3 bath manufactured homEJ. Over 2400 sq.
Jt.ln Leon WVA. just 10 minutes from the Toyota plant
end Pl. Ple...nl. Call Greg
or Rodger at 304-755--0909
DupleK tor Sale on Land
Contnict. 740-992-5858 .

01 Clayton 16&gt;&lt;80 MH, 3BR,
2BA, All apPliances slay ina.
WID. New carpet LA/hall. 20'
covered patio, 16x12ft back
deck. Too many extras to list
Must see to appreciate. On
rented lot. can stay or be
moved. (740)245-5839
14x65 • Graham GrandviReRedman MH. Includes stove
&amp; l0x1 2 out bldg. Located
on lot ¥2 Quail Creek.
Asking $9000. 740·2450631

2008 sectional home· 3
2 Bath delivered
and set up $38,695. 740·
365-9946.

Bedroom

2008 sectional home 3
Bedroom 2 Batr"l delivered
and set up $38,695. 740365-9946.
95 Single wide 14x60, 2
bed, 1 bath &amp; all appt.
$8700.740-208-1535
InventOry blow-out sale, slngles, doubles &amp; mods.
Payments from $299 and up.
16 Homes to choose from 0
down~ (740)446·3093 or
866-564·8679.
New3Bedroomhomesfrom
$214.36 per month, Includes
manu upgrades, de~very &amp;
1
set-up.
(740)385-2434

r

I

Two Story Appartment
House for sate In Racine Buikling For Sale $29.000
304·882·2793 or 304-882ar~a. Approx. 4 acres, all
23
6 :::m::..~-..,
professionally landscaped. ':;2~6,::oft::,:o::,r~
r.;
Ranch style house with 4
bedroomS: living room, din·
ing room, kitchen.large fam- ~. . . .ioiiliiiiiiiiiioo_.l
ily room , central air, gas heat
3 acres of Land fqr sate on
and l fireplace. Addition ot a Sandhill Ad 2s,ooo. 304•
large Florida room completely cedar opens onto a_9_5_-3_92_9_ _ _ __
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in Approx. 1 acre on east
g-ound pool enclosed by pri- Bethel ~oad • ·No septic.
vacy fencing and land- Close to town &amp; schools.
scaped. FiniShed 2 car $13000.740-446-9363
garage attached to house
and linished &amp; healed 3 car MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek
garage
unattached.
Excellent condition ready to Ad, 441·1111

s

I

~======~
**'"'OTICE**

,

Nice used 3 Bedroom 1 Bath
Home $5995 delivered 740For sale by owner .. 3BR 365·7671 .
Ranch, 1 bath, Family
Room, Stove/Fridge. WiD
BUSIN!X'&gt;
included. Asking $70,000.
AND BlJII.J)IN(;S
Call 740·709-6339
, --

Builder/Dealer
DtmlerOBrlghl.nel
740-222-6031

hav8 Investigated the
::oll;e:rfng=
. ====~

I

t975, 14 X 70 Governor, 3
Bd .. I 1/2 bath. 740·2470402.

Tollo

~
F.OUN
.., ....
n ~
-, .....

• ~

Gantpolla Career College
AHentlont
(Careers Close To Home) Local company otterlng "NO
Coli Today! 740.446-4367, DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
1-600-214-0.52
grams fOI' you to buy your
WVNt.gatlipolll!careercotlege.com
home instead of renting.
Accre(lited Member Accrediting ' 100% tinancing
Co_.,cll f\:11 lndependenl Colleges
' Less than perfect credit
and Senools 12748
accepted
Upcoming certified nursing • Payment could be the
assistan1 class. Must have a same a&amp; rent
Locators.
high school diploma or GED Mortgage
to apply. Applications may (7 40)367-0000

WMThll

·r

Wanted. 2 Herald Dispatch
2008 Heal1h Source Books.
4 X 5 black book pictures of 740-446-2996
Good Sam's Motor Club. lost
from auto,740-247·2014,
I \11'11 1\ \II\ t
small reward :
"" ' tn II I ...,

• ., . .

.,

be picked up at Lakin
Hospital, Monday through
Friday,
8:00am-4:00pm.
Applications
must
be
received no later then 'co"B
1/16/06

D

r,59;;3,.-1.;.55;.;6;;..- - - - - . wan! to buy Junk Cars, call
LosT AND
740-386-0864

~or;;arp~o:o:~~~neu~~~~~

Now you con have borders and graphics
lL-'
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l,!iilll
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

Dlsplay Ads

'All ads must be prepaid'

GIVMWAY

Free to good home Male cat,
very playful &amp; loving. litter
trained 304-675-7625

Oearll:irU"

Dally Jn ..Column: 1:00 p.m·.
Monday-Friday tor In•ertlon
In Next D,ay'• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For. Sundays Paper

.LEAMARKn

Free to good home, Alaskan
Husky &amp; BID Lab mixed
puppies. For more information call (740)446·4177

Pictured above are members of the 2007 Eastern volleyball
team that won special awards. Kneeling in front, from left,
are Brittany Casto, Tresa Swatzel and Morgan Bur.t.
Standing in !lack are Ryan Davis, Morgan Werry, Megan
!?roderick, Amanda Eason and Katie Hayman.

W.Va. stilllooking·into scope of missing football documents
student records, including
those of the football team,
are kept within the Office of
Admissions and Records,"
she said. "Those records are
secure."
Nell said 1he believes it
would not be unusual for the
head coach to have copies of
his own records to ensure
players are maintaining their
required arade-point averases or meeting scholarship
requirements.
Mike Brown, Rodrig~ez's
agent, has said current head
coach Bill Stewart should
have copies of each players'
strength and conditioning
tests because multiple copies

Sentinel ·

Word Ads

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

'

spokesman Mike Fragale
told The Associated Press on
Wednesday. ''There's a lot of
things I just don't know."
The flies were discovered
missins from the Puskar
Center, where Rodriguez
had a private office, after
WV U coaches returned from
the Jan. 2 Fiesta Bowl.
University 1pokeswoman
Amy Neil said the WVU
Office of Admissions and
Records maintains ~rade and
attendance records tn a separate location, so no studentathlete's academic career is
at risk.
"We're · not sure what
records are missing, but all

Websites:
www.mydi!ilyt(ibune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www. mydailyregister.com

(740) 446-2342 _{740) 992-2156 (304)' 675-1333

Pictured above are members of the Eastern volleyball team that won TVC All-Academic honors for the 2007 fall season. Pictured, from 'left, are Tresa Swatzel. Brittany Casto, Ryan ·
Davis, Morgan Werry, Katie Hayman and Kelsey Holter.

Eastern holds 2007·fall sports b~nquet

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - . An investigation
into missing files from former coach Rich Rodriguez's
office has revealed that the
academic
records · of
. Mountaineer football players are secure.
Still a mystery, though, is
the scope und imponance of
missing files, whether the
school hud backup files and
whether the files have any
bearing on a lawsuit that
WVU
filed
against
Rodriguez after he left for
Michigan.
"What's got to be determined is what exactly is
missing," WVU athletics

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

move in. $255.000.00, Call:
(7 4o 949 2217
) ·

riO

Rent to own, owner
HotBES
financed. 4 BA, 3 ba , 2
FOR RE:N'r
kitchens, gas heat, central ~. .-lliioiliiii.i..r
arr, $5000 down and
1BR cottage in Gallipolis. No
S530.77/month. Will accept
pets. Dep and references
trades. 740·339-3224
required. Call 446-2468

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Thursday, January 17,

2008

Thursday, January 17, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

\!!:ribune - Sentinel -

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

ster

CLASSIFIED
Gallia ·
County,

OH
E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune .com

Pictured above are members of the TVC All-Academic Team from Eastern High School this
past fa ll. Kneeling in front. from left, are Kyle Rawson, Nathan Carroll, Kelly Winebrenner
. and Zach Moore. Standing'in back are Audrionna Pullins, Amanda Roush, Hannah Helgesen
and Andrea Buckley.. Absent were Tina Drake and Matt Friend.

\!!:ribune

Andrea Buckley. Varsity Gheen, Kyle Connery,
SPORTS@MYDAILYSEN TINEL.COM
advisor Sheryl Roush was Klint Connery, Devon
Baum, ' Ryan Amos and
also recognized.
TUPPERS PLAINS In cross country, Aaron Jordao Wood.
Eastern High Schoo!' honMartindale, Keith Aeiker,
Klint Connery won the
ored its fall sports athletes
Audrionna Pullins and Jule Best Back Award, while
in November during· a pair.
Draehn all received varsity Ben Buckley captured the
of banquets held at the high
letters. Martindale won the Best Lineman Award.
school gymnasium.
Coaches Award, while Hensley was named the
First, during the EHS
Pullins captured the Don Best Defensive Player and
volleyball banquet, the varJackson
Sportsmanship Rawson was honored as the
sity and junior varsity pro- Trussell, Shelby Smith and Award.
Best Offensive Player.
grams - as well as the Courtney Thomas. Head
Nick Schultz; Kyle Kimes won the . Coaches' .
seventh and eighth grade coach Jamie Robertson was ·Edwards, Nathan Carroll, Award and Daniel Buckley
programs •. were also recognized.
Zach Carson, Craig Jones, won . the Don Jackson
acknowledged for their
Memb.ers of the seventh Matthew Friend, Tyler Sportsmanship Award.
hard work and efforts dur- grade team. were Rachael Carroll and Jeremy Lee
Head coach Kevin Welsh
ing the 2007 fall season.
Markworth, Ally Hendrix, were all honored for their was also recognized, as ·
The varsity Lady Eagles Becca Caldwell, Larissa efforts during the golf sea- were
assistants · Dick
finished the 2007 campaign Cunningham,
Caitlyn son, along with head coach Tipton, Aaron Schaekel,
with a 23-3 overall mark, Cowdery, Krista Miller, · Brad Quillen. Edwards Ryan Dunfee, Wes Sanders,
including a perfect I 0-0 Hannah Adams, Shawna won the Coaches Award Jamie
Baker,
Chris
record in the Tri- Valley Murphy, -Larissa Riddle, and Friend was given the Buchanan and Brandon
Hocking Breanna Hayman, Emilly Don
Conference
Jackson . Gregory.
Division. EHS won its lith Wheeler; Addie Hill and Sportsmanship Award.
• The junior high football
consecutive TVC Hocking Kiki Osborne. The seventh
In fo.otball, 39 varsity squads were also honored
crown, as well as its 12th grade .coaches - Katie. players received certifi- at the banquet.
straight sectional title and Robertson . and
Kass cates and varsity letters for
Members of the eighth
fourth district champi- Lodwick- were also rec- their efforts in 2007. They grade team ·were· Christian
onship over the last five og!lized.
were Kyle Rawson, Zack Amsbary, Chris Bissell,
years.
·
·
At the other banquet, Newell, Alex Kuhn, Larry Shannon Brown, Tyler
Members of the varsity members of the football, Hess, Craig Hensley, Kyle Cline, Scout Fa~emyer,
squad were Morgan Werry, golf, cross country and Gordon, Josh Collins, Alex Seth Guthrie, Luke Kimes,
Kelsey
Holter,
Katie cheerleading squads were Burroughs,
' Daniel Tyler
Miller, .
Paul
Hayman , Amanda Eason, recognized for.their efforts Buckley, Justin Bissell, Morrison, Jacob Parker,
Ryan
Davis,
Megan
Broderick, Tresa · Swatzel, . this past 2007 fall season. Coel Williams, James Jeremiah Roush, Aaron
Starting with cheerlead- R~ssell, Morgan Powell, Shamp, Jon Young and .
Katie Wilfong, Brittany ing,
the reserve squad con- Zach
Moore,
Jordan Jacob "?:uspan.
Casto,
Morgan
Burt, sisting of Kayla Mollohan, Kimes, Zach Hendrix,
Members of the -seventh
Karissa Connolly and
Hall,
Kaity Derek Griffin, Action grade team were Alex
Lauren · Cummings. Head Morgan
Thomas,
Danni
Maxey.
Facemyer, Ben Buckley, Amos, Randal Davis, Troy
coach Howie Caldwell and Darci
Bissell,
Chelsi.
Kelly Winebrenner, Tyler Gantt, Bradley Goeglein,
assistant coach Debbie
. Phillip ·Garret Hall, Austin Lute,
Weber were also recog- Kearns and Tara Smith Sanders,
were
honored,
as
was
JV
Moorehead,
Jeffery Dylan Milam, Tim Minear,
nized.
Milhoan, Casey McKnight, Dylan Morris, Derick
Werry won the Coaches' advisor Betsy Kearns.
Members
of
the
varsity
Mike Johnson., Lonnie Powell, Kirk Pullins,
Award, while Broderick
were
Hannah Westfall, John Tegnolia, , Garret
Rit~hie,
Joey
came away with the Setter squad
Helgesen,
Sarah
Wachter,
Bnld
Stone.
·
·
Michael
Scowden,
Mark
Sheets
and
and
Assists
Award. ·
Tina
Drake-,
Amanda
Fulks,
Scyoc,
Brayden
Pratt,
Tim
·Tyler
Price.
Hayman received the Most
The banquet information
Kills Award, Swatzel won Amanda Roush, Amanda: Markworth, Josh Loscar,
Wolfe,
Breea
Buckley
a~d
Tyler
Hendrix,
Nathan
was
received late.
the Most Points Scored
Award and Broderick also
captured the Best Serving
Percentage Award.
Both Casto and Burt
shared the Most Improved
Award, while Davis and
Eason each received the
Don
Jackson
Sportsmanship Award.
Members of the reserve
team recognized were
Ravenne Reed, . Megan
Carnahan,
Beverly
Maxson, Ashley Miller,
Britney Morrison, Karissa
Connolly,
Lauren
Cummings,
Sammi
Cummins, Rachelle Davis,
Whitney Putnam and
Brittany Casto. JV coach
Kim Hupp was also saluted
for her efforts,.
Members of the eighth
grade squad were Brooke
Johnson , Hayley Gillian,
Submitted photos
Janae · Boy)es, Bay lee Pictured above are members of the Eastern football teann that won special awards during
Collin s, Emily Davis, the 2007 fall sports banquet. Kneeling, from left, are Zach Moore, Craig Hensley, Jordan
Brenna Holter, Kelsey Kimes and Ben Buckley. Standing In back are Zach Newell, Alex Kuhn, Kyle [lawson, Daniel
Myers, Savannah Moore, Buc.kley and Kelly Winebrenner.
·
•
Ashley Putnam, Autumn

0/.ftee !lowe-~

STAFF REPORT

HOW IQ WRITE AN . AD.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
1'\01 \l I \II 'IS

Ohio Valley
reserve•
tho ~ghtto 0&lt;111,
reject or cancel any

Pu~llshlng

ad at any time.
Must
the

·'

were made. He also said the
university should have any
records
involving
the
finances of the summer
camps it run.
Brown. however, ~clined
to say whether Rodriguez
removed or destroyed any
,documents, saying·that question would be addressed In
court documents.
After Rodriguez left last
month, WVU sued him to
collect on a $4 million buyout clause in his contract. On
Wednesday, the case was
transferred ·
from
Monongalia County Circuit
Court to U.S. District Coun
in Clarksburg.

l\egi~ter

r

Male Hu'sklyl Wotte mix.
approx. 1 year old, tree to
good home. call (740)541·
'3613
'
Puppy Free. To good home.
Don Bunce. 740-992-02t9.
Registered male Cocker
Spaniel.
1·1/2 yrs. old.
blonde/white • has papers .
Very friendly. Ha~e to give
away - can1 keep. Call 304·

All Display: 1:Z Noon :;z
BU•Ines• DaY• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thureday for Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Mey-word • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • A"old Abbrevl.tlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Heeded
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

KIT &amp;

POLICIES: Ohio Valtey Publlthlng rnervn the rlgtlt to Mh, reject, or uncel an~ ad a1 any ti!N. Errors mult be reported on thlllrst dl~ Of
TrUtu,..s.nti,..A.gaster will bs rnponslble tor no more thin tht coat of the space occupied by the error and only the flrat Insertion. We shall
1081 or
thlt ruultt from the publlutlon or omission of an advartisemsn't Correction will be msde In the tlrat avaHable ediUon. • Box
are alwaye contldenu.l. • Currtnt raw. ctrd applies. • All real eetlla advtrtlsemenl• sre
to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thla
accep~s only help waniM ads mettlng EOE ttandards. We
I
1
law.

·en,.

••pen•

CARLYLE

r-------------------------------------~ . L~~~...~.SaEo
..UCTI
..L~--- ~1 L. ~rn·"~~s-~..- ~l r. M~s~

AucnoNAND

10

kltncarlyle@lcomcast.net

Riverside Aucfi'on Barn, At.
7 South, 5 miles below the
Dam. (740)256·6969. Huge
Sale Sal. Night @ 6pm.
Super Nice Wood Bunk Bed, ·
Baby Bed w/ changer an.,
Baby Items, Stove. Fridge,
BA Suite, Pots. Pans, Tools,
Movies , Computer-Stand·
Chair, Hu e Nice Sale

WI1Af~11/IIA1'r6R&lt;;
p..r.~ YW SA~W&lt;t YoU
N~'J~ ~O!!iR 1'11-U!

Wrf\-1' K11'rY ON II?'

WA~lllJ

0

TO IJUy .

,

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Prootsets, Gold Rings, Pret935
U.S.
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 151 Second
.Avenue, GaltipQIIs, 740-446·
2642.

D

Beagle &amp; Cocker
(740)992-9()51

~@2008 by

11'. 10

ll.10. .- . . . . . . . . . .
mix. •
HELP WANTED •

www.comlc.s.com

NEA, Inc.

HEUtWAr\flm

lli.IO......
Hru&gt; W
. .ANrED
. . . . .IIIIO
, .

..

JlwtWANfEU

A
Celebration
of . Earn up to $1200.00 per
Regional, Pneumatic Tanker
Found on 3rd Ave, while &amp; ·r 0
k
b come
to
I
Ohio Operating Engineers &amp; OTR driving Poslti"ons:
Lre .... ver brook Center, wee..
e
a ser AppreiJIIceshlp&amp;Training A&amp;J l1uck' g c
.
brow n (F) dog. Call 740·709·
located at 333 Page Street, parent. Contact Shelly at
Program
r In
ompany rn
6216
Middleport, Ohio is pl6ased (740) 794-0248 for details.
Loca118
Marietta. Ohio Is searching
1
tor qualified COL A Drivers
FOUND: Coon dog 6 miles 1o announce we are accep.
4-YOar Apprenticeship
to operate Semi-Dumps,
out Sandhill Ad. Call to ing applications for the fol· ECHO I VASCULAR TECH
·1· avat·1abl e. 2008 APPLICATION OATES p neuma1IC
- Bulk •1an kers tor
lowing positions to loin our FT or PT poslton
Identify 304·675-5774
friendly and .dedicated staff: (M-F) Outpatient Diagnostic Jan. 28,29,30 &amp; Feb 7,8,9 both r"eglonal and OTR
Full lime 7PM-7AM Nurse Center. Applicant should be
9:00am to 3:00pm
opportunities.
Qualified
and Part-time Nurses, both registered or registry eligi·
Operating El)glneers
applicants must be at least
shifts. Applicant's must be ble. Minimal •travel between
are the men and women
23 yrs, haVe a minimum ot 1
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
dependable, team players o~ices. Full benelils· avail- thwehoeqopulpe~elenlatnhdolrobupelldirs years of safe commerical
Announcement ............................................ OJO
with positive attitudes to join able for FT applicants.
'''
driving e~~:perience, Haz Mal
Antlques ..................... .................................. 530
us
in
pro~iding
outstanding.
Compensation
based
on
"Earn
~~~~~am"
CertificatiOn,
Clean MVR
Apartments lor Rent.. ............ ,.................... 440
.and. good job stability. We
Auction and Flea Market... ..........................DBO , quality care to our residents. experience. Call 304·522·
Stop by and till out an appll- 7000 to schedule intervieW.
We will be accepting
offer a full state of benefits
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .... :..................... 760
appHcatlons with a $10.00 plu"s 401 (k) and vacation
Auto Repatr ................ :................................. 770
cation or contact Hollie ECSONASCULAR TECH· cash non-relundable fee, at
pay. For information contact
Bumgarner. LPN , 81aH NICIAN: Full-time or PartAutos for Sale .............................................. 71 0
the following location
.Kent at 800·462-9365 or
I
t
D
e v e· o P m e n
time position available. (M·
LoglnTralnlng ·Center
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .....................: ....... 750
. 1or @740 -992 -6472 F) Outpatient Diagnostic
visil our web site at
Coor drna
30410 Strawn Road
Building Supplies ............. ,....: ................ ,, ... 550
~
1
11
www ritnJr,kjng com E.O.E.
anu come see or yourse Center. Applicant should be
Logon, OH 43138
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
th
k
diH
e erence you can ma e registered or registry eilgl·
1-888-385-25e7
Business Opportunlty .................................21 0
at Overbrook!!! EOE &amp; a ble. Minimal travel between
EOE
Retail Managerial Personnel
Buslne&amp;s Training .........................; ............. 140
participant of the drug-tree toea! offices. Full benefits - - - - - - - - position available. Must be
Camper~ &amp; MotOF Homes ........................... 790
workplace program.
available for lull-time appli· Ohio Valley Home Health, trustworthy. dependable with
Camping Equipment ...................... .'............ 780
cants.
Compensation based Inc. hiring STNA, CNA, e~~ 1 fe nt. customL
. er. sarviceto
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
A Local Manufacturer is on eKPBrlence. Gall 304- Home Heallh Aides and SN s. rwers rcense, au •
Chlld/Eide~y Care .................... ,.................. 190
andSend
drug testing
ElectrtcaVRefrlgeratlon ............................... 840
looking for EXPERIENCED 522-7000 to schedule inter- Personal Care Aides. Full, ins. · -...1
to
Welders. and Laborers that view
Part Tlme and Per Diem requlruu.
resumes
Equipment for RenL ..................................480
~:...__ _ _ _ _ _ positions available. Apply CLA Box JJI.1. c/o Gallipol~
Excavatlng ................................ ;.................. 830
can operate industrial Experienced lineman for
Tribune PO Box 469
machinery.
Apply
in
person
at · 1480 Jackson Pike,
•·
'
. Farm Equlpment... ....................................... 610
telephone work, local work, Gallipolis, phone 441 _1393 .Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Farms for Rent.. ...........................................430
at King Kutter II. 2150 home every night. lull time,
;!;!l
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. No
for Skilled Office or apply at 1Hme warner ~8
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
only experienced linemen 1456
~
Plk
h
,--- - ---·
phone calls please.
will be conSidered. send
Jal.&lt;f\son
e, P one
For Lease ..................................................... 490
'
•aka
Inbound
For Sale ........................................................585
resume to: -Dally Sentinel, 441-9263
C for
''
Passport/Private
are
..
customer
service calls
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590 • A Meigs County Office is PO. Box 729·31, Pomeroy, Otflce.Competltlve
Wages
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
looKing tor a part time office · Oh 45769 .
and Benefits including
for Fortune 100
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
help to work 15+/- hours a - - F-E-'0-E_R_A_L__ health i.nsurance and ~ompanies Including:
General Haullng ..........................................
week. Must be presentable
mileage reimbursement.
!Time Warner Cable
and have office skills Please
POSTAL JOBS
Glveaway ...................................... :...............D40
Happy Ads ........ ;...........................................
send resumes listing abill· 17.33-$27.58hu., now hir- overbrook
Center
PT
d
0"Y an
Hay &amp; Greln ...........................................: ......640
ties and sKills to The Daily ing. For apPlication and free Located0333Page
st.,
• FT I
Sentinel, PO Box 729·39, governement job info, call Mlddlepon, Ohio is pleased
.Evenlnga ahtftl
Help Wanled ......................., ......................... 110
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
American Assoc. of Labor I· to announce we will be hold·
available
Homelmprovements ...................................810
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. emp. ing an STNA, class, schede MedicaVDenta11401k
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
Will
Household Goods ....................................... 510
An E~ecellent way to earn serv.
uled to r FebruarY· Hours
• Prolessional Work
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
moneu.
The
New
Avon.
·
--~----- be SAM-4:30PM. If you are
1
Foater
Perenta
Needed
1
d
1
1
1
1
In Memorlam ................................................020
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
n1eres1e n on ng our
l-~a~.-w..
$30·$48 ·a day wi1h paid friendy and dedicated staff,
IHC: ..-9 ...-----..
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
respite, Training begins please stop by our front
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl ........................ 660
Appalachian Tire Products, January 26· Albany. Call office Mon.·Frl., 9AM-5PM
Llvestock ...................................................... 630
Environment
. current1y see k'mg an Oasis Foster Care to regis- and till out an application.
Inc. IS
Lost and Found ..........."................................ 060
. T1ech Ior our ter: Toll Free . 1-877-325- Space Is Mmlted. Full time
A•2 Servrce
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Point Pleasant, WV location. 1558.
and part time positions avail·
1-888-IMC-PAYU
Mlsceltaneous ...........................: .................. 170
Wages based on experience
able to those qualified indi·
Ext. 2347
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
and benefits including 401 K, Local Housing Company
.
Fu11 •1tme
in::foc~is:io~ni;i
·"'
:::m;::...l
·
viduals completing the L..::www:=·;:::
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Health Insurance. and Paid seekmg
are
also
avat'labfe
.
ExperienCed
Seryjce
class.
Applicants
must
be
.on
Mobile Home&amp; for Rent ............................... 420
V'catl
d nd bl (Att nde
· Upcoming certified nursing
nee lS
Mobile Homes lor Sale .............................. .-.320
V'f'd COL Requ'·red Please• Technician. Send resume to: epe l)a• e ·PIe
.. .a·ssistant class. Must have a
Money to Loen ............................................. 220
apply in person . For any CLA Box 104, c/o Gallipolis a mus ream ayers "" 11 high school diploma or GED
MotorcyciiiS &amp; 4 Wht~t~lers .......................... 740
rnformatron con lac1 Teddy Tribune, PO BoJC 469, positive attitudes to join us In to apply. Applications may
Lambert @ (304)675·3930. Gallipolis, OH "f5631
providing outstanding, qualiMuslcallnstruments ................................. ..
ty care to our residents. 11 be picked up at Lakin
Personals ........................................,............
LPN/AN's needed
for you have any queslioi'\S con· Hospital, Monday through
Pets lor Sale ...... .......................................... 560
rom Gallipolis or Pain Pedia1rfc Home Health care. tact Hollie Bumgarner. LPN, Friday,
8am-4pm.
Plumbing &amp; Heetlng .................................... 820
teasa nl area to do th
Par' time days/evenings. Staff
Dev,lopment Applications
must
be
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
ocessary legal work o
Contact Michele at Primary Coordlnator0740-992· received no' tater than COB
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 16Q.
ehalf of a Gallia County Care Nursing 800·518-2273 6472. Overbrook Center Ia 01/18108
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
hio property owner, i
or 614-764-0960
. an E.O.E. and a participant ------~S&lt;:hoota Instruction.....................................
etting the. abandoned rail MannnwAr is now hli-lng for of the Drug Free Workplace Walt person needed, Must
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertltlzer .............................. 650
oad right-of-way porperty,
~"""'"Program .
be dependable and available
Situations Wanled ....................................... 120 ·
rom the O.O. Mclntry
the following positions _....:.__ _ _ _ _ _ tor en" shift. experience is
.l
Prod tlon
'
AuIomo b1
Space lor Rent .............................................460
ark District.
reverte
e
u
POST OFFtCE NOW
opttonal, smiles are mandaack to the present owner. Workers in the Buffalo, WV
HIRING
tory. Come and be 8 part of
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
orne property owner
Area Benefi1s available Call
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
a winning team. Apply in
. SUV's for Sate .............................................. 720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
ave accomplished thi
Today 304- 757 -3338
$57K arYlUally
person at the Holiday Inn
Upholstery ................................................... 870
!ready. Fax reply to 912 NEEDED 1 Enthusiastic • Including Federal Benefits front desk. No phone calls
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
r;;;;36;;.·~87,;;82;;__ _ __.., Motor
Route
Carrier
and OT.Paid Training,
please.
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
MinersviNe,
Syracuse,
Vacations•FTIPT
-------AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
1•866•542 · 1531
Racine. Part-time work Full·
Welders needed. 1yr. experiSell. Shirley Spears, 304- llme pay $1250·$1350 mo.
Wanted To 00 .............................................. 180
USWA
once. Good wages &amp; bene675·1429.
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Contact St&amp;Vi Lush Oail~
ttts. Send resumes to: CLA
Yard Sale- Gatllpolls ....................................072
- - - - - - - Sentinel 740-992·2155. ttl
Box 103, c/o Gallipolis Oeily
Yard Sale-Pomeroy1Middle ......................... D74
Person for live in with elderly Court Street, Pomeroy,
Ttibune, PO Box 469,
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ D76
lady. Call740-367-7129
Ohio.
' - - - - - - - - ' Gallipolis, OH 45631

Aaron Martindale, left, and Audrionna Pullins.

11 0

;aso
oso

GOLF AWARD-WINNERS
Naihan Carroll, left, and Kyle Edwards.

The court filing indicated
Rodriguez had established
residency in Michigan by
the time the lawsuit was

filed.

filed through the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in
Richmond, Va., instead of
the state Supreme Court.
Flaherty said it would be
premature to comment on
whether the missing documents hud a11y possible bearing on WVU's · lawsuit
against Rodriguez.
Charleston attorney Sean
McGinley,
representing
Rodriguez, didn't immediately return a,telephone message.

"We're perfectly comfortable and happy to litigate
this case in any court," sold
Thomas
Flaherty,
11
Charleston attorner representing WVU. "This is not
unanticipated."
.
Tlie
move ' gives
Rodriguez ftve extra days,
until next Wednesday, to file
a response to the lawsuit.
The initial deadline was
Friday.
Associated Press writer
The jurisdiction move also Vicki Smith contributed to
means any appeals would be this story..
(

'

s

sro

oos

,so

FIND AJOB IN
THE CLASSifiED$

I

discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, sax
familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to

Exp. mother of 6 &amp;
GrandmOther of 10 would
like to care for your child in
my home weekdays. Have
ref. if you need them. 645-7631

melee any such
pref11anr:e, limitation or

discrimination."

Thil newspaper will not
George's Portable Sawmill,
knawtng/y accept
don't haul your Logs to the . advertisement• tor real
Mill jus! call304-875-1957.
estate which lsln
violation at the law. Our
d sare hereby
1!111
rea er
8~
Informed that all
Ol'foR1UNfl1:'
dwellings advertised In
~:::::::::
this newspaper are I
available an an equa
opportunity oa..a ...I
L..:::::;:;.:.;;;;;;.:.;;;;;;;;;;;.·

c-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
rtd

CLASSIFIED INDEX

CROSS COUNTRY AWARD-WINNERS

All reel eatateadwerttalng
In this newapaper ta
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makee It illegal to
advertise "any
preflllfl!nce, limllatlon or

All types of Home Repairs &amp;
Improvements. Call Rick
740..274·2338 or 992-2910.
r-17 .

--------

~======~

•

•NOTICE•

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recom1nends
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail unlil you

j

MONEY
ro LoAN

J'l

Borrow Smart. Contact
tho Ohio 0 ,.. 1, 1.0 n _,
•
Ul
Financial
Institution's
Offi ce o1 c onsumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi-

nan~e your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE.
of requests for any large
aavance payments of
fe effs or lnsuranceC. Call1he
0 ice o1
onsumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278·0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker or
lel)der
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing COmpany)

F

I'RIJ~ll;';IUNAL

SrRVIOO
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win1
1-888-582-3345
HI \ I I .., I \ I t

ji;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
riO
HOMI~
FOR SAU:
1.,,. . . ..-iililliiiO...-J
0 doWn payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740367·7129.

-----~-3BA, 3.5 bath, 2000 sq.h.
condo in F!orlda on
Clearwater Island. Water slip
&amp; garage. Must sell! 446·
1822
4 bedroom 3 bath manufactured homEJ. Over 2400 sq.
Jt.ln Leon WVA. just 10 minutes from the Toyota plant
end Pl. Ple...nl. Call Greg
or Rodger at 304-755--0909
DupleK tor Sale on Land
Contnict. 740-992-5858 .

01 Clayton 16&gt;&lt;80 MH, 3BR,
2BA, All apPliances slay ina.
WID. New carpet LA/hall. 20'
covered patio, 16x12ft back
deck. Too many extras to list
Must see to appreciate. On
rented lot. can stay or be
moved. (740)245-5839
14x65 • Graham GrandviReRedman MH. Includes stove
&amp; l0x1 2 out bldg. Located
on lot ¥2 Quail Creek.
Asking $9000. 740·2450631

2008 sectional home· 3
2 Bath delivered
and set up $38,695. 740·
365-9946.

Bedroom

2008 sectional home 3
Bedroom 2 Batr"l delivered
and set up $38,695. 740365-9946.
95 Single wide 14x60, 2
bed, 1 bath &amp; all appt.
$8700.740-208-1535
InventOry blow-out sale, slngles, doubles &amp; mods.
Payments from $299 and up.
16 Homes to choose from 0
down~ (740)446·3093 or
866-564·8679.
New3Bedroomhomesfrom
$214.36 per month, Includes
manu upgrades, de~very &amp;
1
set-up.
(740)385-2434

r

I

Two Story Appartment
House for sate In Racine Buikling For Sale $29.000
304·882·2793 or 304-882ar~a. Approx. 4 acres, all
23
6 :::m::..~-..,
professionally landscaped. ':;2~6,::oft::,:o::,r~
r.;
Ranch style house with 4
bedroomS: living room, din·
ing room, kitchen.large fam- ~. . . .ioiiliiiiiiiiiioo_.l
ily room , central air, gas heat
3 acres of Land fqr sate on
and l fireplace. Addition ot a Sandhill Ad 2s,ooo. 304•
large Florida room completely cedar opens onto a_9_5_-3_92_9_ _ _ __
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in Approx. 1 acre on east
g-ound pool enclosed by pri- Bethel ~oad • ·No septic.
vacy fencing and land- Close to town &amp; schools.
scaped. FiniShed 2 car $13000.740-446-9363
garage attached to house
and linished &amp; healed 3 car MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek
garage
unattached.
Excellent condition ready to Ad, 441·1111

s

I

~======~
**'"'OTICE**

,

Nice used 3 Bedroom 1 Bath
Home $5995 delivered 740For sale by owner .. 3BR 365·7671 .
Ranch, 1 bath, Family
Room, Stove/Fridge. WiD
BUSIN!X'&gt;
included. Asking $70,000.
AND BlJII.J)IN(;S
Call 740·709-6339
, --

Builder/Dealer
DtmlerOBrlghl.nel
740-222-6031

hav8 Investigated the
::oll;e:rfng=
. ====~

I

t975, 14 X 70 Governor, 3
Bd .. I 1/2 bath. 740·2470402.

Tollo

~
F.OUN
.., ....
n ~
-, .....

• ~

Gantpolla Career College
AHentlont
(Careers Close To Home) Local company otterlng "NO
Coli Today! 740.446-4367, DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
1-600-214-0.52
grams fOI' you to buy your
WVNt.gatlipolll!careercotlege.com
home instead of renting.
Accre(lited Member Accrediting ' 100% tinancing
Co_.,cll f\:11 lndependenl Colleges
' Less than perfect credit
and Senools 12748
accepted
Upcoming certified nursing • Payment could be the
assistan1 class. Must have a same a&amp; rent
Locators.
high school diploma or GED Mortgage
to apply. Applications may (7 40)367-0000

WMThll

·r

Wanted. 2 Herald Dispatch
2008 Heal1h Source Books.
4 X 5 black book pictures of 740-446-2996
Good Sam's Motor Club. lost
from auto,740-247·2014,
I \11'11 1\ \II\ t
small reward :
"" ' tn II I ...,

• ., . .

.,

be picked up at Lakin
Hospital, Monday through
Friday,
8:00am-4:00pm.
Applications
must
be
received no later then 'co"B
1/16/06

D

r,59;;3,.-1.;.55;.;6;;..- - - - - . wan! to buy Junk Cars, call
LosT AND
740-386-0864

~or;;arp~o:o:~~~neu~~~~~

Now you con have borders and graphics
lL-'
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l,!iilll
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

Dlsplay Ads

'All ads must be prepaid'

GIVMWAY

Free to good home Male cat,
very playful &amp; loving. litter
trained 304-675-7625

Oearll:irU"

Dally Jn ..Column: 1:00 p.m·.
Monday-Friday tor In•ertlon
In Next D,ay'• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For. Sundays Paper

.LEAMARKn

Free to good home, Alaskan
Husky &amp; BID Lab mixed
puppies. For more information call (740)446·4177

Pictured above are members of the 2007 Eastern volleyball
team that won special awards. Kneeling in front, from left,
are Brittany Casto, Tresa Swatzel and Morgan Bur.t.
Standing in !lack are Ryan Davis, Morgan Werry, Megan
!?roderick, Amanda Eason and Katie Hayman.

W.Va. stilllooking·into scope of missing football documents
student records, including
those of the football team,
are kept within the Office of
Admissions and Records,"
she said. "Those records are
secure."
Nell said 1he believes it
would not be unusual for the
head coach to have copies of
his own records to ensure
players are maintaining their
required arade-point averases or meeting scholarship
requirements.
Mike Brown, Rodrig~ez's
agent, has said current head
coach Bill Stewart should
have copies of each players'
strength and conditioning
tests because multiple copies

Sentinel ·

Word Ads

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

'

spokesman Mike Fragale
told The Associated Press on
Wednesday. ''There's a lot of
things I just don't know."
The flies were discovered
missins from the Puskar
Center, where Rodriguez
had a private office, after
WV U coaches returned from
the Jan. 2 Fiesta Bowl.
University 1pokeswoman
Amy Neil said the WVU
Office of Admissions and
Records maintains ~rade and
attendance records tn a separate location, so no studentathlete's academic career is
at risk.
"We're · not sure what
records are missing, but all

Websites:
www.mydi!ilyt(ibune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www. mydailyregister.com

(740) 446-2342 _{740) 992-2156 (304)' 675-1333

Pictured above are members of the Eastern volleyball team that won TVC All-Academic honors for the 2007 fall season. Pictured, from 'left, are Tresa Swatzel. Brittany Casto, Ryan ·
Davis, Morgan Werry, Katie Hayman and Kelsey Holter.

Eastern holds 2007·fall sports b~nquet

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - . An investigation
into missing files from former coach Rich Rodriguez's
office has revealed that the
academic
records · of
. Mountaineer football players are secure.
Still a mystery, though, is
the scope und imponance of
missing files, whether the
school hud backup files and
whether the files have any
bearing on a lawsuit that
WVU
filed
against
Rodriguez after he left for
Michigan.
"What's got to be determined is what exactly is
missing," WVU athletics

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

move in. $255.000.00, Call:
(7 4o 949 2217
) ·

riO

Rent to own, owner
HotBES
financed. 4 BA, 3 ba , 2
FOR RE:N'r
kitchens, gas heat, central ~. .-lliioiliiii.i..r
arr, $5000 down and
1BR cottage in Gallipolis. No
S530.77/month. Will accept
pets. Dep and references
trades. 740·339-3224
required. Call 446-2468

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

eo

.=r Ir M~~ftS Ir.__AP._~_RFJ;iiiiitrr_..l ...r_APAim.nNis_.UK_Ibmii i t_.ll r
Ellm View
,
ApartmentS

1 P&lt;lOilble 2br Houoo in Now t4x70, wheelchair accossi· 2BR, washer/Dryer Hook-·
Haven, totaf electric. No ble. AC. 5500/month S50Q up.

Poll, $300/mon

Close

lo

Hospital ,

·

$300/dep deposit. Porter, Oh. 740· (7401441-3702, (740)286·
388-8375 or 441 -2612
5789

304·882-3652
::-:--:----.,-- - -•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
2 bedroom furnished house 2 &amp; 3 BR available, No Pets, 2br. Apt. on 5th Street Pt. •Central heat &amp; NC
In Middleport, 1 car garage, , Water &amp; Trash Paid. Pleasant $375 ask for Don •WasherldryEir hOOkup
stove,
refrigerator, (740)441-7033
washer/dryer,
central
air/heating, CATV available, 2BR 10 Marcerville, includes
"" 8132 '
$525t utilities, reference water. 740 •2;.IU '

r7eq87u11roc, No pats, (7401593· 3BA ,
::--:------:
2BA house at 87 Spruce St.
$450/mo. Also Upstairs Apt.
on 2nd Ave. $325/mo. 446·

1.5

bath

on

Adamsv1Ue Ad. No Pets.
$375 1 month + deposit. Call

(304)812-4350

:___:___,,.-------Apt. tor 1\ent. No Pets. 740-

992-5858.
"'e.eut"'ttu""t""A_p_ts_
.a_t_Ja-c"'ka_on_
Estates. 52 westwood
Drive, from $365 to $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
--------Beech St. ,Middleport, 2 Br.
furnished apt, utilities paid.
no pets, deposit &amp; refer·
ences. 740-992·0 165.

4'"2 ft 5
74o- ""
-v· iJO.J a er pm
3br. 2 beth. No pets,
2_158
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Caruthers, Mobile Home
ParK 304 .675 .3818
3 br. house, Pomeroy, 2 full
bath, garage, full basement, Nr'ce 2BA at Johnso
· ns
new carpet, very clean, Mobile Home Park. 740-446.
hand1C8p
accessible. $635 a 200 3
month, {740)949-2303
'.ra1'Ier for rent, 3BA , 2 SA .
3br House 1or Rent or Sale, Call 367 .n 62 or 446 .4060
close to PPIS &amp; Lincoln Ave.
$525 plus deposit or
APARTMENI'S
$74,000
304-675-6757,
FOR RENr
304-675-6266 or 304·755· ~--iiiiiiliiiii;._.t
1 and 2 bedroom apart' 8744, lea\ie .message.
menls.
furnished and Unlur3BA, 1.5 bath house in
town. $575/rent + sec dep. nished , and houses in
446-3644
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required, no
3br, House in New Haven, pets. 740 •992_2218 .
total Electric, appliances '
- --------included,
No
Pets 1BA Apt, WID hookups,
$400/mon, $400/dep 304- internet/satellite TV incl.
982-3652
w/renl. close to hospital. Call
740·339-0362
4br House In Mason, Gas - - - - - - - hea~ appliances included, 1BA. Stove &amp; fridge furNo · Pet·s.
$425/mon, nished. ·waster, sewer, trash
$400/dep 304·882-3652
paid. $350/month _ Porter.
call 74 o- 339- 3224 or 367 ·
701 5

Immaculate 1 bedroom apt
New carpet &amp; cabinets,
I hi
. oc &amp; d
ed
res. Y pamt
, ecorat ,
WfD,hookup. Beautiful coun·
try sening. Only 10 minutes
from town. Must see to
appreciat9.
$325fmo.
(6141595 •7.773 or 1·BOO ·
798·4686. 740·645-5953

2BR renovated downtown
Gallipolis. C/A,HNA, water,
sewer, trash $525/mo +dep.
740·709-1 690

Nice 28R Apt, Fr~.
Stove:
·:;~
Water Pd. Centenaru
Rd.
No
·,
Pets, Call (740)446·9442
after 5pm.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

r

BARGAINS IN
THE CLA.SSIFIEDS
~========
Help Wanted

0

RESPIRATORY
1HERAPIST
Pleasant Valley
Hospital is currently
accepting resumes
for two Respiratory
Therapisrs
positions at our
hospital location
and also at our
· Home Medical
Equipment Office.
Must be a graduate
of an approved
Respiratory
Therapist program.
Current West
Virginia license
required.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley
Hospital
c/o Human

Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant.
WV25550
{304) 675-4340

Thursday, January 17, 2008

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Clean &amp; o•Jiet· apts. Rodney
&amp; Gallipolis area. Aefldep.
req. No Pets. Call for appt &amp;
app. 446·1271 or709·1657

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE! 1
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for application &amp; information.

One of the areas best places to
work, is currently looking for the
allowing:
Professional individual to join sales
staff.
Desire to make $45,000+ per year.
Benefits include:
Health insurance
401K

Life In surance
Disability Insurance
DiscoUnt on automotiye purchases and repairs.

·We are looking for individuals to join our
family that are self motivated, polite and can

communicate, well with other!&gt;.

·

Cashier I receptionist.
The person for this job should have good

communication skills along with a pleasant
personality. Some computer and multi
phone line skills are neces!mry. Advancement
within the organization is pvssible.
Please apply i~ person.

EOE

•All eldctric- averaging

$5G-$60/month
•Owner pays water, sewer,

trash

(304)882·3017
•

~~

Ir ~I riO

1 1 ~1.\...,l'tH~I I.

•

:=~~;E:J

Barns

30x50x10 675·5050

NO

ACROSS

Hill's Self
Storage

North

ROBERT
BISSELL

I'

.MONTY

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

-------~

j

:a~

+A9

Accountant: A successful candidate should

26 Years Experience

have ·a degree in accounting or equivalent

David Lewis

end and year-end financial statements. Three
years ~f general ledger and month-end closing

experience preferred .
Successful applicants must be -people oriented
and have good organizational skills. Positions
otTer all company benefits. including health
and life insurance. 401 (k). and paid vacation.

For immediate consideration, send your resume
and references to

740-992-6971
Very gentle Jersey milk cow,
bred back to beef stock. due
May 1. Angus organic fed
home grown calf, ready to
butcher. 256-6075

r·------_.1

304·675-6975

at:
www,pyal!ey.ol',l

Or apply online

-$-LI NCOLN

.MilCU,'ItT

195 Upper River Road, Gallipolis

740-446·9800·

AA/EOE

Diane Hill
Heartland Publica1ions
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 4563 t

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

32

Pass

34

.......

,..~
•

•

:PARNEV
SNUFFY•&amp; MAW CoME&amp; FER A VISIT-

. 'I'O•RE A

LUCICY
GAL,
LOWEEZ'l
II

38
37

John Hope Franklin, a professor ol hlsto·
ry at Duke Unive~ty. said, "We must got
beyond textbooks, go out into the
bypaths ... and tell the world the glories
o( our journey.n
This deal features two textbook plays,
one by a defender and one by declarer.
What are they? South is in lour spades,
and West leads the club aco.
Note North's two-no·lrump response
over West's takeout double. Since North
would redouble w~h a strong balanced
hand, two no-trump is used to show (at
least). a game-invitational raise in
SNUFF'{ GOT ALL TM'·
spades with tour or more trumps.
MANNERS IN TH' FAM&amp;'{ !! Then, perhaps East should risk bidding
r---l . thtee hearts because he hes such .prom·
~-r-n--1
Ising distribution. But the vulnerability is
unfavorable; end five hear1s doubled or
live clubs doubted costs 500, more than
the value ol1he North-South game.
First, a1 trick one, Eas1 should play hrs
club queen. This says that he has e~hor
the jack behind the queen or, much less
likely, a singlelon queen. West now
knows lha1 he may underload his club
king at trick two, and East will take 1he
Irick wHh ho jack (or by rutting). And that
is exactiy what Wes1 should do here, pu1·
ling Eesl on lead lor a heert shitt through
.South's ace-queen.
t&gt;O LOOK. LIKE.
Now we turn 1o declarer. A111rsl glance,
~"''€.0PLE
his · contract depends on winning one
pt~~
red-suit finesse. Upon closer examination, though, South should see that he
TO'&lt;OU?
can guarantee 10 tricl&lt;s. He wins with his
heart ace, draws 1rumps, and exi1s with
his remaining heart. Whoever wins the
lrid&lt; must either lead a diamond, finding
the queen, or·ooncede a ruN-and-stuN.

r- t

120fo All Stock

-o;;~ Astro~~ Graph

SIG .NATE

-

ULTIM"TEL'(, PEOPLE.,
'rOOA LIBERATES TKE
80D'&lt; AND
IT~ ASOUT

Plumbing
Roofing 6: Guners
VInyl Siding &amp; Pllntlng
Patio 1nd Porch Dtcks
wv 036725

*Reasonable Rales
*Insured
•Experienced
References Av~ilable!
Call Gary Stanley@

740-591-8044

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
· Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

V.C. YOUN G Ill

MAD AT ME ..

q92 G? 1 '•
&lt;~

Poll prov • ll 1u
(r 11 , n I I • 1 1

I'M TR'1'1N6 TO FIGURE
OUT HOW I CAN PUT

M'{ TEACHER'S

TI-lE BLAME ON YOLI ..

011

OK, WE'RE

J&amp;L

WOW, IT'S

Construction

APACKED
HOUSE'

• VInyl Siding
• Replaeement
Windows
• Roofing

GONNANEED

MOST OF
IT'S ALJl.EADY

WAY MOllE LOADED ON THE
FAKE BLOOD. CATAPULT

~~~r(

)

•Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

7 40-367-()544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

Owner:
Jamea Keesee II
742·2332

Manlay'a
Raa_y allng

~ARFIELD

GARFI f.I.P, WHY ARe
t,100 60 fA1 ?

I HAVe A
1"HeORY...

,---

I ~PilC.1" MI./ !10MAC.H 1!'1
PLO'ri'!NG 10 fAKE OVf.R 1He
WORL.!&gt;

works
58 Not
as sloppy
57 Nonshiny
tlnlsh
58 Besides
DOWN

by Luis campos
Today's clue: Tequals K
"J

EMXWC

JB

PEVW

XDJCT
HZ ·JSW

REZEVWI

XDHC

SJCRWCX

SHC

XDHX
HCI

XDW

-;,:c

QL E UP A
SA RB S

e
8

PR iNT IJUMBERED LETTERS IN

TttfSE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOV~ lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 1, 16- oa
Mannot - Verge - Sheep- Defect- THEM AFTER
My brother bas a very caring nature. He says it is not enough
to help the feeble up, but we must support THEM AFTER.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

I

'~e ~alltpohs iailp 'rihune

740446·2342
www .mydailytribune.com

Joint Jleasant legtster The Daily Sentinel

304-675-1333
740-992·2155
www.mydailyreg~ter.com www.mydailysentineLcom

By

dwelling on olcl errore, II.IMH or unproductive aottvllles, &gt;"OU will unoonaotouaty

ret:~eat thll bt1'11.vlor. Oet your neld
turnld around and live In tnt •nw,- or
'lutt.r lhl OOt'lllqUit'\011 Of being ntgl·

11ve.

IAQifT1'oAIU8 (NO\/, U•Dta . 81) Whom you normiiiY depend

won't De II'CIUnd 10 •111 VOLI Olttf /YII WhiM
you ntiCI tntmtl'le m011. The 1ooner y;u
flllllt you 11'1 on yoyr own, the bitter It
will Do tor you .

Wise Concrete

SOUP TO NUTZ

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

·--------- - ---· ...,______ -

I

,.

IHG."

TIIATDA1LT (lfi\)1) £1-,. .(~Q.8 WOlD
PUJIW p~ J.'QU ~~~ J,:I(J"~ SAME
. . . . . , - - - - EditH loy ClAY 1t. POllAN

Aeveru thll thinking.

All types of concrete
Owner· Rick Wise

VJRDZG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Things 1ha1 are done, it is needless to speak
about ... things lha1 are past, il is needless to blame." • Confucius

ere •• your ~'lllrsarlas Instead of ames,

~o~pon

PEVW

CJFDX

low 1a form four sltnple words.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan , 19) Adopting a poor attitude wur make
unpleasant tasks harder than they need
be or make diHicult jobs assigned to you
impossible to complete. The only way to
be productive Is to maintain a pOsitive
bearing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- It would
prO\Ie to be unwise to allempt to force
any changes that aren't c oming easy for
you. Remain patient and bide your time
until art the pieces of the .puzzle start
coming together on thelr own.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A cleyer
someone .might Impel you to accept an
agieement that benefits him or her more
than It does you. II you fall for this and
make a commitment, hono r your word so
you are not branded as unreliable .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) - It Is apt to
be one of those llmea when no matter
how hard others try Jhey won't be able to
piAase you; however, unless you turn
that around, you could d~mage a friend·
ship or two. Be gra!elul Instead o f critical
TAURUS (Aprll 20·May 20) - Be sure to
share the credit and benefits equally with
those who participated In the successful
com pletion of an endeavor. It you
anempt to take err the bows. there will be
no one around to help the next time.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) -Once you
b'gin a proj&amp;ct, do everything possible to
make certain you see II through to completion. If you lack the necessary tenl!llcl·
ty and sem1e of purpose, you won't !itlck
It out to any kind of succea!lful conclu·
!lion.
CANCER (June 21-Ju!y 22) • Innately,
you are e. bold and assertive person, but
you also h.111va a tendency to become
negative and withdrawn. II you don't take
charge of yourself, thl!i may be one of
thoSfl times where you will be fearful ol
paper dragons.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - It Is nice to be
kind to those !eM fortun~e then you , but
It you allow a friend to get too far indebt·
ed, it could hurt the friendship. If your pal
is avoiding you , it Is because he or she
doesn't have the funds to pay you back.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) • It l!i much
too ea!ly to contri~te to our own defeat
by trying to do things that oppose our
better judgment - and If you .111re not
careful, thl!l may be the caae for you . Be
mindful not to· function In this modus
operandi.
LIBRA (Sept. :23-0ct. 23) - Any problema with which you are now contending
will be easentlelly due to your own mak-

ThOH

XDW

FE .FO

Ing. It 11 apt to be becl.uee you see oth-

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

42 ~ion
inverse
43 Llvy's bear
44 Over with
47 Flecks
48 D'Artagnan
prop
49 Army
eddreso
51 Funy friend
52 Strong
soap
54 Average
grade

or:r::. . ~. ~;

'llrthda!Y: .

SCORPIO (Cot. 24-Nov. 2:il!) -

swingers
Wreck a car

41

Celebrity Ciph!!rcryplograms are created from qoola!lons by lamoos peopls. past ard pesent
Eacll letter in the clp~ef stanas for aromer

Some transformations In your 1\festyiA
will be foisted upon you In the year
ahead, which you might at first resist . But
as tim8 unfolds, you will discover they
are working to your benefit and ultimate·
ly be 8xaclly what you would have wan!·

PEANUTS

53 Ink shoollr s
55 Dryden

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Frld•y, J•n. 18, 2008
By B.rnlc. Bed• O.ol

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

verse
50 Sibyl

12 Cotton
seeders
17 Once called
1 Holy cowl
20 Te11
2 As It 21 Foollo\:kers
3 Hard but
22 Gets
ayrup base
easily
tanned
Flight dlr.
breakable
23 Whirlpool
Reduce to · 4 Son of Val
locale
wreckage ·
and Aleta
24 Woofs
Moves
5 Term of
25 Traveler
about
endearment
Marcoateallhlly
6 Mare's
28 Lls1 detail
Deddy's
morsel
29 Delightful
7 Sporty
sister
31 Solemn
Financially
vehicles
promise
solvent
8 Fiddling
32 Airplane
Creepydespot
wing flap
crawly
9 Wlthho1~
33 Depot info
Put in order 10 Sleek plane 37 Prior to
Large deer 11 Opposed
40 Jungle

ed,

*Prompt and Quali1y
Work

REACH 3 COUNTIES

East
Pass

Both sides make
textbook plays

dkhill@heanlandpublications.com, fax to
740-441-0578, or mail to

Orfax:

West North
Dbl. 2NT
Pass Pass

30

35

WHAT A DEAl!!
·Feed
$10.50/100

26
27

Opening lead: • A

Free

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
HAY &amp;
Unconditional lifetime gt,~arGRAJN
antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Ground Ear Corn bring Y.QUr Call 24 Hrs. (7401 448·
own sacks, also Ear Corn 0870, Rogers . Basement
Waterproofing.
304-675-2443 after 5pm

I

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

South

Advertise
in this
space
for
S&amp;O per
month

lhc position of Accountant for immediate

experience and should be proficient in Excel
and Word software. ResponsibiliUe5 will
include crca1ing and posting journal entries,
calculating inventories, and preparing month-

,.••

39 Most
be1oued
42 Kind of lent
45 Each
46 Inspired

16 Novelist 'Beattie
18 Tofu beae ,
19 Druids and
shamans
23 Maple

• 10 5

7~~\J.'t4'flJia

employment.

• 15
•QJ763

South
•KQt0963
•AQ

r~~:~=;~~~~~:~===;

I

wear

.96432

4A' K82

Guttering

I

14 Future
resident
- 15 Informal

East
• 7

• 8.
• K J 10 7
• ?6 3 2

I . . .: _________

C•'ine• And

eeason

• 94

West

...,...,...,.:;;.tt

j

beard
13 Beginnng
of growing

+KJt07

740·992·1671

r

OH7-Q8

• .P

Delivery sage.
AFTER 9PM . Leave mes·
29670 Bashan Road
.....:'------Racine, Ohio
PIITs
1999 Toyota
Gorolla,
• New Hom~s
45771
•
FOR SALE
exc.drivlng cond. 167,000
•
Garages
741).949-2217
Maytag disflwasher, approx
miles, book price $3300,
•
Complete
Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2 10·12 years old; good work· 2 Male AKC Boston Terrier selling price $2700. OBO.
Bedroom Ap1s. a1 VIIIage. ing condition, $100. Call puppies, 6 weeks old, good 446-9555 or 339-..,
"'15
Remodeling
M
d AI
'de A 1 ·
anor an
vers1
P s.1n (740)446-7937
mar.-;s, black &amp; white. [15
TRUCKS
f
$327
' ""'"""~---""""" !
Middleport, rom
• $250.""
740 ~'98·8743
~ "",.
E to1
vv
.. un. ~
H
$592. 740-992-5064. qua Mollohan Furnl·turo. Now
OUrs
Stop &amp; Compare
Housing Opportunity.
sofa &amp; loveseat. $400. Call After Christmas sate. Male
.
7:00AM. 8:00PM
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Cell 740-388.0173
AKC Beagles, 12 wks, tri·. 00 Chevy S10, red, loaded.
111411 mo. pd . . . . . . . .. .
color, up to date shots. $65. CD, cruise, bedlinar, 85,000 .__ _ _
~
446 390
.0
Sale: Berber Carpet $5.95 740·446-4172 or 256-16'19 miles. Excellent cond. $4700
New Haven, I Br. furnished yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up. ~KCAeg.Shltzupuppiesfor _obo_.7_40_-«_6-_31_a_s_ __
apt.
has
WIO,no Mollohan Carpet. 2212 safe. Only $400. Wormed 03 Red Dodge 1500, 4x4,
pets dep &amp;ref. 992·0165.
E ste n A·- Goll'pol's Oh
'
·
a r •..,,
I
I '
and 1st shots.
740-367· Quad Cab, 48,700 miles,_off
Spacious second-floor apt. 740-446-7444
7124
road package, new fires,
overlooking Gallipolis City
u - ... -~
$18,500. (740)367·5022
Park and river. L.A. den.
JnJ.x.r.•t~~
Border Collie puppies, 2F,
large kitchen-dining area
MmaiANDISE
3M. pBrents on letart Farm, 1996 Toyota Tacoma 411 4
purebred but no papers. 12 4cyl. air condition, gray,
with all new appliances &amp; - cupboards. 38 A. laundry Burg undy seclional couch weeks old, .shots started. 147,000 miles $4,000 304area, 2 112 baths. $900 per gooQ quality, 2 yr. old, asking Call between 6pm-Bpm, 593·1392
month. Cell 446·4425, or $795, (740)742·2660·
304-895-3328
.
~
SUVs
446-2325
CKC Aeg .. Pomeranian, 24
roR SALE
99 Beech Street
SeamlesS Gutters
·Ta'ra
Townhouse Computer lor Sate brand wks old.' Cream in color. Had - Mlddl
rt OH
Ro_ofing 1 Siding, Gutters
Apartments, Very Spacious. new, have receipts call 304· ali shots, house broken, 02 Ford . Explorer, Eddie
Insured &amp; Bonded
Bedrooms,
CiA,
675·7381
leave
message
$225
(740)379-2306
B
1 112
2
74 o- 653 _9657
Bath,, 'Adult Pdol &amp; Baby - - - - - - - - - CKc f!lgistered Toy Poodle 4WABS,
auer, 40,
Sunrool,
4WD, Luggage
AT, AC,
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. Huge replica •should see',
.
.
White Tail Deer shoulder pupp1es, ta11s dod&lt;ed, dew· Rack, 3rd Aow Seating,
N~ · Pets, Lease Plus mount, massive, 14 points, daws re moved. shots &amp; vet Power doors I windows/
Security Deposit Required, scores 193, Ohio Big Bucks. checked, colors black, apri· seats/mirrors, heated seats,
(740)367·0547.
Ideal for office or den $995 . cot &amp; cream, males $300 &amp; 6 dsc CD. 100,500 mi, one
Twin Rivers Tower is accept· Also, new orig. butt st()()( for females $350, (740)992· owner. $9800. 441·72·33
7007
ing applications for walling Remington Model 870 12 - - - - - - - - 2000 Chevy Blazer, 2DR, y.
Hst lor Hud·sub~zed, 1· br, ga. $95. 74Q-533·3870
Yorkle CKC 1 yr. old 2 mate 6. 4WD, 145,000 miles.
apartme'nt,for
the
$100 ea. Yorkie CKC 8 wks. $3600. Serious call only.
elderly/disabled call 675·
JET
old 3 mate S600 ea.,31emote 74 o-«1-0616
Hllr""""d
l'u....U.•re
6679
Equal
Housing
AERATION MOTORS
$800 ee Maltese CKC _7
l'llw
Ill
II J
rUfiUHI
Opportunrty
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In wks.
old
2male$800
4X4
...--.~ablnoti')".Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· ea .. Pomeroy 740·416·3736.
FOR SALE
aoo-537·9528.
~
01 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Moving Sate Household ~~--lllliiiiioiOiiiiiii-,..1· Larado, 4x4, good cond.
Furniture 304·675-4235
'
69,000 miles, gray ext, t;ack
17 month old Gelding $500 int. new tires, tune up, bator trade for Hay 304-895· · tery, etc. Clean car fax, nonHelp Wanted
Help Wanted
3943
smoker. 740-446-6115
I \ln t " ' 1'!'1 I I "
,\ ll\l .., l t H 1-.
Heanland Publications LLC; a fast growing
newspaper publishing company, with a regional
accounting office in Gallipolis, Ohio is seeking

i

1 Swtmmlngpool1oc.
5 Pursue
rslentlessly
10 Rugged
range
12 Pointy

.AJ 542

ca•m•m••

$6,795
Free
(937)718-1471

38 Call-~ab

Phillip
Alder

CALLS

~=..:.....:.:..:.:.c.="---

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

I

Pole

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Al!lllS

Building in downtown Pt. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Hyundai
Accent
Pleasant. 3,000 sq. ft Call For
Concrete,
Angle, 01
703-528-0617 for more Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
Information
Grating
For
Dr~ins, 65.310 miles. good . condi"'·~
Driveways &amp; WalkWays. L&amp;L tion. needs catalytic convert·
~~
.
Scrap Metals Op$n Monday, er. As~ng $2600. Call 740~------_.1. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 7011-6339.
...,
Friday, 8am-4;30pm, Closed - - - - - - - Want to rent house or trailer
1998 Pontiac sunnre 70,550
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
in Ea&amp;tern School DIS1rlct, Sunday. (?~)446-?300
actual miles. Excellent con·
clition: $3,500.00 Ph.(304)

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

L--•fOilliRO.SIIALEiiil-_.1

Newly renovated Comm. NEW AND USED SlEEL

~[

.

I HI\

Thursday, January 17, 2008
::4LLEY OOP

. I

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

eo

.=r Ir M~~ftS Ir.__AP._~_RFJ;iiiiitrr_..l ...r_APAim.nNis_.UK_Ibmii i t_.ll r
Ellm View
,
ApartmentS

1 P&lt;lOilble 2br Houoo in Now t4x70, wheelchair accossi· 2BR, washer/Dryer Hook-·
Haven, totaf electric. No ble. AC. 5500/month S50Q up.

Poll, $300/mon

Close

lo

Hospital ,

·

$300/dep deposit. Porter, Oh. 740· (7401441-3702, (740)286·
388-8375 or 441 -2612
5789

304·882-3652
::-:--:----.,-- - -•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
2 bedroom furnished house 2 &amp; 3 BR available, No Pets, 2br. Apt. on 5th Street Pt. •Central heat &amp; NC
In Middleport, 1 car garage, , Water &amp; Trash Paid. Pleasant $375 ask for Don •WasherldryEir hOOkup
stove,
refrigerator, (740)441-7033
washer/dryer,
central
air/heating, CATV available, 2BR 10 Marcerville, includes
"" 8132 '
$525t utilities, reference water. 740 •2;.IU '

r7eq87u11roc, No pats, (7401593· 3BA ,
::--:------:
2BA house at 87 Spruce St.
$450/mo. Also Upstairs Apt.
on 2nd Ave. $325/mo. 446·

1.5

bath

on

Adamsv1Ue Ad. No Pets.
$375 1 month + deposit. Call

(304)812-4350

:___:___,,.-------Apt. tor 1\ent. No Pets. 740-

992-5858.
"'e.eut"'ttu""t""A_p_ts_
.a_t_Ja-c"'ka_on_
Estates. 52 westwood
Drive, from $365 to $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
--------Beech St. ,Middleport, 2 Br.
furnished apt, utilities paid.
no pets, deposit &amp; refer·
ences. 740-992·0 165.

4'"2 ft 5
74o- ""
-v· iJO.J a er pm
3br. 2 beth. No pets,
2_158
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Caruthers, Mobile Home
ParK 304 .675 .3818
3 br. house, Pomeroy, 2 full
bath, garage, full basement, Nr'ce 2BA at Johnso
· ns
new carpet, very clean, Mobile Home Park. 740-446.
hand1C8p
accessible. $635 a 200 3
month, {740)949-2303
'.ra1'Ier for rent, 3BA , 2 SA .
3br House 1or Rent or Sale, Call 367 .n 62 or 446 .4060
close to PPIS &amp; Lincoln Ave.
$525 plus deposit or
APARTMENI'S
$74,000
304-675-6757,
FOR RENr
304-675-6266 or 304·755· ~--iiiiiiliiiii;._.t
1 and 2 bedroom apart' 8744, lea\ie .message.
menls.
furnished and Unlur3BA, 1.5 bath house in
town. $575/rent + sec dep. nished , and houses in
446-3644
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required, no
3br, House in New Haven, pets. 740 •992_2218 .
total Electric, appliances '
- --------included,
No
Pets 1BA Apt, WID hookups,
$400/mon, $400/dep 304- internet/satellite TV incl.
982-3652
w/renl. close to hospital. Call
740·339-0362
4br House In Mason, Gas - - - - - - - hea~ appliances included, 1BA. Stove &amp; fridge furNo · Pet·s.
$425/mon, nished. ·waster, sewer, trash
$400/dep 304·882-3652
paid. $350/month _ Porter.
call 74 o- 339- 3224 or 367 ·
701 5

Immaculate 1 bedroom apt
New carpet &amp; cabinets,
I hi
. oc &amp; d
ed
res. Y pamt
, ecorat ,
WfD,hookup. Beautiful coun·
try sening. Only 10 minutes
from town. Must see to
appreciat9.
$325fmo.
(6141595 •7.773 or 1·BOO ·
798·4686. 740·645-5953

2BR renovated downtown
Gallipolis. C/A,HNA, water,
sewer, trash $525/mo +dep.
740·709-1 690

Nice 28R Apt, Fr~.
Stove:
·:;~
Water Pd. Centenaru
Rd.
No
·,
Pets, Call (740)446·9442
after 5pm.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

r

BARGAINS IN
THE CLA.SSIFIEDS
~========
Help Wanted

0

RESPIRATORY
1HERAPIST
Pleasant Valley
Hospital is currently
accepting resumes
for two Respiratory
Therapisrs
positions at our
hospital location
and also at our
· Home Medical
Equipment Office.
Must be a graduate
of an approved
Respiratory
Therapist program.
Current West
Virginia license
required.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley
Hospital
c/o Human

Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant.
WV25550
{304) 675-4340

Thursday, January 17, 2008

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Clean &amp; o•Jiet· apts. Rodney
&amp; Gallipolis area. Aefldep.
req. No Pets. Call for appt &amp;
app. 446·1271 or709·1657

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE! 1
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for application &amp; information.

One of the areas best places to
work, is currently looking for the
allowing:
Professional individual to join sales
staff.
Desire to make $45,000+ per year.
Benefits include:
Health insurance
401K

Life In surance
Disability Insurance
DiscoUnt on automotiye purchases and repairs.

·We are looking for individuals to join our
family that are self motivated, polite and can

communicate, well with other!&gt;.

·

Cashier I receptionist.
The person for this job should have good

communication skills along with a pleasant
personality. Some computer and multi
phone line skills are neces!mry. Advancement
within the organization is pvssible.
Please apply i~ person.

EOE

•All eldctric- averaging

$5G-$60/month
•Owner pays water, sewer,

trash

(304)882·3017
•

~~

Ir ~I riO

1 1 ~1.\...,l'tH~I I.

•

:=~~;E:J

Barns

30x50x10 675·5050

NO

ACROSS

Hill's Self
Storage

North

ROBERT
BISSELL

I'

.MONTY

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

-------~

j

:a~

+A9

Accountant: A successful candidate should

26 Years Experience

have ·a degree in accounting or equivalent

David Lewis

end and year-end financial statements. Three
years ~f general ledger and month-end closing

experience preferred .
Successful applicants must be -people oriented
and have good organizational skills. Positions
otTer all company benefits. including health
and life insurance. 401 (k). and paid vacation.

For immediate consideration, send your resume
and references to

740-992-6971
Very gentle Jersey milk cow,
bred back to beef stock. due
May 1. Angus organic fed
home grown calf, ready to
butcher. 256-6075

r·------_.1

304·675-6975

at:
www,pyal!ey.ol',l

Or apply online

-$-LI NCOLN

.MilCU,'ItT

195 Upper River Road, Gallipolis

740-446·9800·

AA/EOE

Diane Hill
Heartland Publica1ions
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 4563 t

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

32

Pass

34

.......

,..~
•

•

:PARNEV
SNUFFY•&amp; MAW CoME&amp; FER A VISIT-

. 'I'O•RE A

LUCICY
GAL,
LOWEEZ'l
II

38
37

John Hope Franklin, a professor ol hlsto·
ry at Duke Unive~ty. said, "We must got
beyond textbooks, go out into the
bypaths ... and tell the world the glories
o( our journey.n
This deal features two textbook plays,
one by a defender and one by declarer.
What are they? South is in lour spades,
and West leads the club aco.
Note North's two-no·lrump response
over West's takeout double. Since North
would redouble w~h a strong balanced
hand, two no-trump is used to show (at
least). a game-invitational raise in
SNUFF'{ GOT ALL TM'·
spades with tour or more trumps.
MANNERS IN TH' FAM&amp;'{ !! Then, perhaps East should risk bidding
r---l . thtee hearts because he hes such .prom·
~-r-n--1
Ising distribution. But the vulnerability is
unfavorable; end five hear1s doubled or
live clubs doubted costs 500, more than
the value ol1he North-South game.
First, a1 trick one, Eas1 should play hrs
club queen. This says that he has e~hor
the jack behind the queen or, much less
likely, a singlelon queen. West now
knows lha1 he may underload his club
king at trick two, and East will take 1he
Irick wHh ho jack (or by rutting). And that
is exactiy what Wes1 should do here, pu1·
ling Eesl on lead lor a heert shitt through
.South's ace-queen.
t&gt;O LOOK. LIKE.
Now we turn 1o declarer. A111rsl glance,
~"''€.0PLE
his · contract depends on winning one
pt~~
red-suit finesse. Upon closer examination, though, South should see that he
TO'&lt;OU?
can guarantee 10 tricl&lt;s. He wins with his
heart ace, draws 1rumps, and exi1s with
his remaining heart. Whoever wins the
lrid&lt; must either lead a diamond, finding
the queen, or·ooncede a ruN-and-stuN.

r- t

120fo All Stock

-o;;~ Astro~~ Graph

SIG .NATE

-

ULTIM"TEL'(, PEOPLE.,
'rOOA LIBERATES TKE
80D'&lt; AND
IT~ ASOUT

Plumbing
Roofing 6: Guners
VInyl Siding &amp; Pllntlng
Patio 1nd Porch Dtcks
wv 036725

*Reasonable Rales
*Insured
•Experienced
References Av~ilable!
Call Gary Stanley@

740-591-8044

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
· Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

V.C. YOUN G Ill

MAD AT ME ..

q92 G? 1 '•
&lt;~

Poll prov • ll 1u
(r 11 , n I I • 1 1

I'M TR'1'1N6 TO FIGURE
OUT HOW I CAN PUT

M'{ TEACHER'S

TI-lE BLAME ON YOLI ..

011

OK, WE'RE

J&amp;L

WOW, IT'S

Construction

APACKED
HOUSE'

• VInyl Siding
• Replaeement
Windows
• Roofing

GONNANEED

MOST OF
IT'S ALJl.EADY

WAY MOllE LOADED ON THE
FAKE BLOOD. CATAPULT

~~~r(

)

•Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

7 40-367-()544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

Owner:
Jamea Keesee II
742·2332

Manlay'a
Raa_y allng

~ARFIELD

GARFI f.I.P, WHY ARe
t,100 60 fA1 ?

I HAVe A
1"HeORY...

,---

I ~PilC.1" MI./ !10MAC.H 1!'1
PLO'ri'!NG 10 fAKE OVf.R 1He
WORL.!&gt;

works
58 Not
as sloppy
57 Nonshiny
tlnlsh
58 Besides
DOWN

by Luis campos
Today's clue: Tequals K
"J

EMXWC

JB

PEVW

XDJCT
HZ ·JSW

REZEVWI

XDHC

SJCRWCX

SHC

XDHX
HCI

XDW

-;,:c

QL E UP A
SA RB S

e
8

PR iNT IJUMBERED LETTERS IN

TttfSE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOV~ lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 1, 16- oa
Mannot - Verge - Sheep- Defect- THEM AFTER
My brother bas a very caring nature. He says it is not enough
to help the feeble up, but we must support THEM AFTER.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

I

'~e ~alltpohs iailp 'rihune

740446·2342
www .mydailytribune.com

Joint Jleasant legtster The Daily Sentinel

304-675-1333
740-992·2155
www.mydailyreg~ter.com www.mydailysentineLcom

By

dwelling on olcl errore, II.IMH or unproductive aottvllles, &gt;"OU will unoonaotouaty

ret:~eat thll bt1'11.vlor. Oet your neld
turnld around and live In tnt •nw,- or
'lutt.r lhl OOt'lllqUit'\011 Of being ntgl·

11ve.

IAQifT1'oAIU8 (NO\/, U•Dta . 81) Whom you normiiiY depend

won't De II'CIUnd 10 •111 VOLI Olttf /YII WhiM
you ntiCI tntmtl'le m011. The 1ooner y;u
flllllt you 11'1 on yoyr own, the bitter It
will Do tor you .

Wise Concrete

SOUP TO NUTZ

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

·--------- - ---· ...,______ -

I

,.

IHG."

TIIATDA1LT (lfi\)1) £1-,. .(~Q.8 WOlD
PUJIW p~ J.'QU ~~~ J,:I(J"~ SAME
. . . . . , - - - - EditH loy ClAY 1t. POllAN

Aeveru thll thinking.

All types of concrete
Owner· Rick Wise

VJRDZG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Things 1ha1 are done, it is needless to speak
about ... things lha1 are past, il is needless to blame." • Confucius

ere •• your ~'lllrsarlas Instead of ames,

~o~pon

PEVW

CJFDX

low 1a form four sltnple words.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan , 19) Adopting a poor attitude wur make
unpleasant tasks harder than they need
be or make diHicult jobs assigned to you
impossible to complete. The only way to
be productive Is to maintain a pOsitive
bearing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- It would
prO\Ie to be unwise to allempt to force
any changes that aren't c oming easy for
you. Remain patient and bide your time
until art the pieces of the .puzzle start
coming together on thelr own.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A cleyer
someone .might Impel you to accept an
agieement that benefits him or her more
than It does you. II you fall for this and
make a commitment, hono r your word so
you are not branded as unreliable .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) - It Is apt to
be one of those llmea when no matter
how hard others try Jhey won't be able to
piAase you; however, unless you turn
that around, you could d~mage a friend·
ship or two. Be gra!elul Instead o f critical
TAURUS (Aprll 20·May 20) - Be sure to
share the credit and benefits equally with
those who participated In the successful
com pletion of an endeavor. It you
anempt to take err the bows. there will be
no one around to help the next time.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) -Once you
b'gin a proj&amp;ct, do everything possible to
make certain you see II through to completion. If you lack the necessary tenl!llcl·
ty and sem1e of purpose, you won't !itlck
It out to any kind of succea!lful conclu·
!lion.
CANCER (June 21-Ju!y 22) • Innately,
you are e. bold and assertive person, but
you also h.111va a tendency to become
negative and withdrawn. II you don't take
charge of yourself, thl!i may be one of
thoSfl times where you will be fearful ol
paper dragons.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - It Is nice to be
kind to those !eM fortun~e then you , but
It you allow a friend to get too far indebt·
ed, it could hurt the friendship. If your pal
is avoiding you , it Is because he or she
doesn't have the funds to pay you back.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) • It l!i much
too ea!ly to contri~te to our own defeat
by trying to do things that oppose our
better judgment - and If you .111re not
careful, thl!l may be the caae for you . Be
mindful not to· function In this modus
operandi.
LIBRA (Sept. :23-0ct. 23) - Any problema with which you are now contending
will be easentlelly due to your own mak-

ThOH

XDW

FE .FO

Ing. It 11 apt to be becl.uee you see oth-

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

42 ~ion
inverse
43 Llvy's bear
44 Over with
47 Flecks
48 D'Artagnan
prop
49 Army
eddreso
51 Funy friend
52 Strong
soap
54 Average
grade

or:r::. . ~. ~;

'llrthda!Y: .

SCORPIO (Cot. 24-Nov. 2:il!) -

swingers
Wreck a car

41

Celebrity Ciph!!rcryplograms are created from qoola!lons by lamoos peopls. past ard pesent
Eacll letter in the clp~ef stanas for aromer

Some transformations In your 1\festyiA
will be foisted upon you In the year
ahead, which you might at first resist . But
as tim8 unfolds, you will discover they
are working to your benefit and ultimate·
ly be 8xaclly what you would have wan!·

PEANUTS

53 Ink shoollr s
55 Dryden

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Frld•y, J•n. 18, 2008
By B.rnlc. Bed• O.ol

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

verse
50 Sibyl

12 Cotton
seeders
17 Once called
1 Holy cowl
20 Te11
2 As It 21 Foollo\:kers
3 Hard but
22 Gets
ayrup base
easily
tanned
Flight dlr.
breakable
23 Whirlpool
Reduce to · 4 Son of Val
locale
wreckage ·
and Aleta
24 Woofs
Moves
5 Term of
25 Traveler
about
endearment
Marcoateallhlly
6 Mare's
28 Lls1 detail
Deddy's
morsel
29 Delightful
7 Sporty
sister
31 Solemn
Financially
vehicles
promise
solvent
8 Fiddling
32 Airplane
Creepydespot
wing flap
crawly
9 Wlthho1~
33 Depot info
Put in order 10 Sleek plane 37 Prior to
Large deer 11 Opposed
40 Jungle

ed,

*Prompt and Quali1y
Work

REACH 3 COUNTIES

East
Pass

Both sides make
textbook plays

dkhill@heanlandpublications.com, fax to
740-441-0578, or mail to

Orfax:

West North
Dbl. 2NT
Pass Pass

30

35

WHAT A DEAl!!
·Feed
$10.50/100

26
27

Opening lead: • A

Free

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
HAY &amp;
Unconditional lifetime gt,~arGRAJN
antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Ground Ear Corn bring Y.QUr Call 24 Hrs. (7401 448·
own sacks, also Ear Corn 0870, Rogers . Basement
Waterproofing.
304-675-2443 after 5pm

I

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

South

Advertise
in this
space
for
S&amp;O per
month

lhc position of Accountant for immediate

experience and should be proficient in Excel
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include crca1ing and posting journal entries,
calculating inventories, and preparing month-

,.••

39 Most
be1oued
42 Kind of lent
45 Each
46 Inspired

16 Novelist 'Beattie
18 Tofu beae ,
19 Druids and
shamans
23 Maple

• 10 5

7~~\J.'t4'flJia

employment.

• 15
•QJ763

South
•KQt0963
•AQ

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wear

.96432

4A' K82

Guttering

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14 Future
resident
- 15 Informal

East
• 7

• 8.
• K J 10 7
• ?6 3 2

I . . .: _________

C•'ine• And

eeason

• 94

West

...,...,...,.:;;.tt

j

beard
13 Beginnng
of growing

+KJt07

740·992·1671

r

OH7-Q8

• .P

Delivery sage.
AFTER 9PM . Leave mes·
29670 Bashan Road
.....:'------Racine, Ohio
PIITs
1999 Toyota
Gorolla,
• New Hom~s
45771
•
FOR SALE
exc.drivlng cond. 167,000
•
Garages
741).949-2217
Maytag disflwasher, approx
miles, book price $3300,
•
Complete
Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2 10·12 years old; good work· 2 Male AKC Boston Terrier selling price $2700. OBO.
Bedroom Ap1s. a1 VIIIage. ing condition, $100. Call puppies, 6 weeks old, good 446-9555 or 339-..,
"'15
Remodeling
M
d AI
'de A 1 ·
anor an
vers1
P s.1n (740)446-7937
mar.-;s, black &amp; white. [15
TRUCKS
f
$327
' ""'"""~---""""" !
Middleport, rom
• $250.""
740 ~'98·8743
~ "",.
E to1
vv
.. un. ~
H
$592. 740-992-5064. qua Mollohan Furnl·turo. Now
OUrs
Stop &amp; Compare
Housing Opportunity.
sofa &amp; loveseat. $400. Call After Christmas sate. Male
.
7:00AM. 8:00PM
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Cell 740-388.0173
AKC Beagles, 12 wks, tri·. 00 Chevy S10, red, loaded.
111411 mo. pd . . . . . . . .. .
color, up to date shots. $65. CD, cruise, bedlinar, 85,000 .__ _ _
~
446 390
.0
Sale: Berber Carpet $5.95 740·446-4172 or 256-16'19 miles. Excellent cond. $4700
New Haven, I Br. furnished yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up. ~KCAeg.Shltzupuppiesfor _obo_.7_40_-«_6-_31_a_s_ __
apt.
has
WIO,no Mollohan Carpet. 2212 safe. Only $400. Wormed 03 Red Dodge 1500, 4x4,
pets dep &amp;ref. 992·0165.
E ste n A·- Goll'pol's Oh
'
·
a r •..,,
I
I '
and 1st shots.
740-367· Quad Cab, 48,700 miles,_off
Spacious second-floor apt. 740-446-7444
7124
road package, new fires,
overlooking Gallipolis City
u - ... -~
$18,500. (740)367·5022
Park and river. L.A. den.
JnJ.x.r.•t~~
Border Collie puppies, 2F,
large kitchen-dining area
MmaiANDISE
3M. pBrents on letart Farm, 1996 Toyota Tacoma 411 4
purebred but no papers. 12 4cyl. air condition, gray,
with all new appliances &amp; - cupboards. 38 A. laundry Burg undy seclional couch weeks old, .shots started. 147,000 miles $4,000 304area, 2 112 baths. $900 per gooQ quality, 2 yr. old, asking Call between 6pm-Bpm, 593·1392
month. Cell 446·4425, or $795, (740)742·2660·
304-895-3328
.
~
SUVs
446-2325
CKC Aeg .. Pomeranian, 24
roR SALE
99 Beech Street
SeamlesS Gutters
·Ta'ra
Townhouse Computer lor Sate brand wks old.' Cream in color. Had - Mlddl
rt OH
Ro_ofing 1 Siding, Gutters
Apartments, Very Spacious. new, have receipts call 304· ali shots, house broken, 02 Ford . Explorer, Eddie
Insured &amp; Bonded
Bedrooms,
CiA,
675·7381
leave
message
$225
(740)379-2306
B
1 112
2
74 o- 653 _9657
Bath,, 'Adult Pdol &amp; Baby - - - - - - - - - CKc f!lgistered Toy Poodle 4WABS,
auer, 40,
Sunrool,
4WD, Luggage
AT, AC,
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. Huge replica •should see',
.
.
White Tail Deer shoulder pupp1es, ta11s dod&lt;ed, dew· Rack, 3rd Aow Seating,
N~ · Pets, Lease Plus mount, massive, 14 points, daws re moved. shots &amp; vet Power doors I windows/
Security Deposit Required, scores 193, Ohio Big Bucks. checked, colors black, apri· seats/mirrors, heated seats,
(740)367·0547.
Ideal for office or den $995 . cot &amp; cream, males $300 &amp; 6 dsc CD. 100,500 mi, one
Twin Rivers Tower is accept· Also, new orig. butt st()()( for females $350, (740)992· owner. $9800. 441·72·33
7007
ing applications for walling Remington Model 870 12 - - - - - - - - 2000 Chevy Blazer, 2DR, y.
Hst lor Hud·sub~zed, 1· br, ga. $95. 74Q-533·3870
Yorkle CKC 1 yr. old 2 mate 6. 4WD, 145,000 miles.
apartme'nt,for
the
$100 ea. Yorkie CKC 8 wks. $3600. Serious call only.
elderly/disabled call 675·
JET
old 3 mate S600 ea.,31emote 74 o-«1-0616
Hllr""""d
l'u....U.•re
6679
Equal
Housing
AERATION MOTORS
$800 ee Maltese CKC _7
l'llw
Ill
II J
rUfiUHI
Opportunrty
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In wks.
old
2male$800
4X4
...--.~ablnoti')".Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· ea .. Pomeroy 740·416·3736.
FOR SALE
aoo-537·9528.
~
01 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Moving Sate Household ~~--lllliiiiioiOiiiiiii-,..1· Larado, 4x4, good cond.
Furniture 304·675-4235
'
69,000 miles, gray ext, t;ack
17 month old Gelding $500 int. new tires, tune up, bator trade for Hay 304-895· · tery, etc. Clean car fax, nonHelp Wanted
Help Wanted
3943
smoker. 740-446-6115
I \ln t " ' 1'!'1 I I "
,\ ll\l .., l t H 1-.
Heanland Publications LLC; a fast growing
newspaper publishing company, with a regional
accounting office in Gallipolis, Ohio is seeking

i

1 Swtmmlngpool1oc.
5 Pursue
rslentlessly
10 Rugged
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Free
(937)718-1471

38 Call-~ab

Phillip
Alder

CALLS

~=..:.....:.:..:.:.c.="---

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

I

Pole

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Al!lllS

Building in downtown Pt. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Hyundai
Accent
Pleasant. 3,000 sq. ft Call For
Concrete,
Angle, 01
703-528-0617 for more Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
Information
Grating
For
Dr~ins, 65.310 miles. good . condi"'·~
Driveways &amp; WalkWays. L&amp;L tion. needs catalytic convert·
~~
.
Scrap Metals Op$n Monday, er. As~ng $2600. Call 740~------_.1. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 7011-6339.
...,
Friday, 8am-4;30pm, Closed - - - - - - - Want to rent house or trailer
1998 Pontiac sunnre 70,550
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
in Ea&amp;tern School DIS1rlct, Sunday. (?~)446-?300
actual miles. Excellent con·
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r

www.mydailysentinel.com

L--•fOilliRO.SIIALEiiil-_.1

Newly renovated Comm. NEW AND USED SlEEL

~[

.

I HI\

Thursday, January 17, 2008
::4LLEY OOP

. I

�'
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Angry judge lectures .Simpson Bengals ·coach Lewis turns to old~
in court, raises bail to $250,000. f~iend Zimmer for defensive helP.
BY KEN RinER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS- An angry
judge
doubled
OJ.
Simpson's bail to $250,000
on Wednesday for violating
terms of his original bail by
attempting to contact a codefendant in his armed rob·
bery case.
Simpson, clad · in jail
attire, grimaced as the
amount was announced and
meekly acknowledged that
he understood.
" I don't know Mr.
Simpson what the heck you
were thinking - or maybe
that's the problem - you
wer-en't," Clark County
District Court Judge Jackie
Glass told Simpson.
.
· • "I don't know if it's just
arro~ance. I don' t know if
"it's 1gnorance. But you've
been locked up at the Clark
County - Detention Center
since Friday because of
arrogance or ignorance or both."
Glass said that the initial
court order to not - contact
other defendants was clear
and she warned that if anything
else · happened

'S impson would be locked
up.
Simpson wa~ picked up
by his bail bondsman,
Miguel Pereira of You Ring
We Spring, in Florida' on
Friday and was .brought
back to Nevada on allegations he violated terms of
his release.
The district attorney
charged that Simpson left an
expletive-laced phone message Nov. 16, telling Pereira
to
te II
co-defendant
Ciarehce "C.J ." Stewart
how upset Simpson was
about testimony during their
preliminary hearing.
"I just want, want C.J. to
know that .. . I'm tired of thi s
(expletive)," Simpson ·was
quoted as saying. "Fed up
with (expletives) changing
what they told me. All
right?"
Pereira testified d1Jring
the bail hearing but the
recording was not played
despite the prosecution 's
attempt to do so. Simpson
attorney Yale Galanter
immedtately
said
that
Simpson made t'he call a.nd
the JUdge did not allow the
recording to be heard.

Stewart and fellow codefendant Charles Ehrlich
did not have to appear for
the hearing and remain free
on bail.
The three men pleaded not
guilty Nov. 28 to kidnapping, armed robbery, assault
with a deadly weapon, burglary, coercion and conspiracy charges. A kidnapping
convictio~ could bring a life
sentence with· the possibility
of parole . An armed robbery
. conviction carries mandatory prison time.
Three other former codefendants have pleaded to
lesser charges and testified
against Simpson at a previous hearing.
·Simpson has denied any
knowledge about guns
being involved in the confrontation with memorabilia
dealers Bruce Fromong and
Alfred Beardsley. He has
said he intended only to
retrieve items that had been
stolen from him by a former
agent, including the suit he
wore the day he was acq\(itted of murder in 1995 in the
slayings of his wife, Nicole
Brown Simpson, and her
friend, Ronald Goldman.

Former champion Durant opens .with·
65 to share lead at Bob Hope Classic ·
PALM DESERT, Calif.
(AP) - Former champion
Joe Durant had a pair of
eagles on his way to a 7under 65 and a share of the
first~round lead Wednesday
in the Bob Hope Chrysler
Classic. ,
There was a logjam at the
top, with five players tied
for the lead and seven others just .one shot behind.
Ttm. Petrovic, Mathew
Goggin, Siege Maruyama,
and Omar Uresti also
opened · with 65s. Among
·those one stroke off the
pace were Kenny Perry, Lee
Jansen, Robert Gamez and
Steve Elkington.
Four of the leaders played
at the Classic Club, and
Uresti played at PGA West.
The first four days of the
Hope are a pro-am played at
four courses. Sunday's final

round, with the 70 lowscoring pros and ties, will
be at the Classic Club.
Durant, who won the
200 I Hope in record fashion, had a pair of eagles on
the opening day of the 90hole tournament this time.
Conditions were good,
sunny with not much wind,
for the opening round. Last
year, the tournament was
marked by chilly weather
and gusting wind.
Durant set the tournament
record seven years ago with
his total of 36-under 324,
good for a four-shot win.
That is one
his four
titles since he came ori the
tour in 1993. His most
recent victory was in the
'2006 Funai Classic.
Defending
champion
Charley Hoffman shot a 68.
He played at SilverRock

of'

Resort, a course being used
in the Hope for the first
time.
Back in the pack, Fred
Couples shot 69, John Daly
71, and David Duval 73.
Duval matched the PGA
Tour record with a closing
,59 to win the Hope in 1999.
Recalling his victory at
the Hope. the 33-year-ol~
Durant said, "It seems like a
long time, it really does."
Asked if he was on his
way to a.nother 36 under, he
smiled and said, "Oh, gosh.
I don't even know how to
respond to that one. I would
just like to get to 8 under
tomorrow at some point.
It's such a long tournament.
''I'm just glad to have one
good round under my belt.
But it's a marathon and you
have to treat it like that."

BY JoE KAY

It led the league in · four of the last five games.
turnovers in 2005, when
Cincinnati's
runnin'g
the Bengals had their only game was highly inconsisOne winning record under tent last season, forcing
CINCINNATI season into his first job as Lewis and made their only the Bengals to rely alrrioSt '
an NFL defensive coordi- playoff .appearance since exclusively at times on
nator, Mike Zimmer had a 1990. Otherwise, the unit Carson Palmer's passing.
problem.
has dragged them down.
"We ' ve got to go back
His Dallas Cowboys had
.During four of Lewis' and do the things that I
trouble stopping the run in five seasons as head want to see us do," Lewis
2000, so he visited some coach, the defense has said.
•
of his coaching friends to ranked 27th or worst in
One o'f'his biggest chal.get advice. One of his y,ards allo'' ed: After a 7-9 Ienges will be handlin.g ·
stops was
Baltimore, .finish Iast , season, Lewis receiver Chad Johnson,
where Marvin Lewis' fired coordinator Chuck who spent the last half of
defense had just helped Bresnahan and linebackers tlie
season
grousing.
the Ravens win a Super coach Ricky Hunley.
. Johnson · was upset over
Bowl.
Lewis
has
known criticism by fans and
"For a couple of days, Zimmer since the early media commentators for
we
talked
football," 1980s, . when they were his look-at-me antics and
Zimmer . said.
"Our assistant coaches in col- his on-field eruptions.
philosophies were very lege .
Later,
Zimmer
The . criticism started
similar. I learned a lot became the Cowboys' ' after he berated Palmer for
from him at that time, and defensive
coordinator, an interception during the
we became pretty geod keeping that job for seven first half of a loss to New
against the run after that." seasons before becoming England. Johnson kept at
Lewis' ·advice helped Atlanta's' defensive coor- it on the sideline and again
Zimmer, who. is now in dinator last year.
while the two of them
position to return the
With the Falcons still walked to the locker room
favor.
unsure about their next for halftime.
The 51-year-old Zimmer head coach, the assistants
Two days later, Johnson
was
introduced were free to leave. Lewis acknowledged that he was
Wednesday
as
the liked the idea of .hiring the one at fault on the play
Cincinnati Bengals' next Zimmer, in part because because he. ran the wrong
defensive
coordinator, he emphasizes toughness. route.
their third since Lewis
"I think you have to
Johnson went on ,a
became head coach before coach tough to be tough," national sports show la~t
the 2003 season. During Zimmer said. "You have to weekend, repeated that. he
Lewis' five years, he has have thilt mentality that didn't like the criticism,
failed to get the defense up this is ihe line in the sand, and suggested the Bengals
to standards.
and we're not letting guys should trade him if they
Picking the next coordi- cross it. I'm an aggressive think he's a problem.
nator was one of the most coach. I think most of the
Lewis listened to th.e
significant decisions of players would say I'm a interview and didn't find
Lewis' career. If the tough coach .
anything new in it. ·
defense continues to strug"Typically, I'm a little
"I didn't think he sail!
gle, Lewis ' coaching' repu- bit of a h()llerer and a anything different," Lew~
tation will take a huge hit. screamer and those kinds said Wednesday. "He felt
"It's an important hire of things. I'll be extremely like he was unduly chas'for me and for our pro- ·demanding."
tised or ridiculed for being
gram,"
Lewis
said
Lewis used Zimmer's this or that.
'
Wednesday. "The thing hiring to address a few
"But you have to go
he's kind of charged with other offseason issues. He back and accept what
is providing an identity to reiterated that the offense being a pro is, and that's
our defensive football is in for some changes, part of it with all of us,
team."
too, even though coordina- and we can go forward and
So far, the defense has tor
Bob
Bratkowski play. There will be no
been identified with noth- · remains. The Bengals trade of Chad.Johnson. We
ing but trouble.
failed to score 20 points in can repeat it again."
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

Moss
fromPageBl
record with 23 touchdown
catches this season, said he
spoke with coach Bill
Belichick about the matter.
Moss spoke to about 30
reporters in the locker room
after Belichick's regular
news conference at which
the ·coach wasn't asked
about it. .
Moss has avoided offfield problems this season
and has been hailed by other
Patriots players as an excellent teammate and leader. In

Notebook
fromPageBl
the boys mark of 42 in a
game;
At the end of the season
Hamilton B01din girls coach
Dan Purcell 1s stepping
down after 13 seasons and
more than 200 wins, including the 1998 Division II
state championship and
state runner-up finishes in
2000 and '04; Sarah Carroll
had 35 points, II rebounds

his previous nine seasons seven with Minnesota and
two with Oakland- he was
involved several incidents.
With Minnesota, he was
criticized by quarterback
Daunte Culpepper and oth· ers for leaving the field with
2 seconds left in a regularseason loss to Washington.
He bumped a traffic control
officer with his car in 2002,
verbally abused corporate
sponsors on a team bus in
200.1 and squirted a11 officia! with a water bottle in
1999.
He strongly denied the
latest allegations, breaking
his usual midweek silence.
and six steals to lead
Cincinnati Christian past
Clark Montessori 59-46;
and Tia McBripe had 24
points as Mount Notre
Dame beat Mother of
Mercy 64-47 - running
NO's record to 97-2 against
fellow Cincinnati teams
2

TISO.

sitpeJiho ~1/2
N
LINES: Brook Turson had
30 points, 13 rebou11ds, four
steals and four assists, but it
wasn't
enough
in
Plymouth's 66-62 overtime
loss to Collins Western
Reserve. Plymouth 's only

"It's very unfair to athletes if a person makes a
false claim. Yo1:1 know,
there's nothing that we can
do," Moss said. "The ·only
thing that we can do is
either pay up or sit back and
listen to what's being said
or what's being written.
"For someone to make a
false claim about me, I'm
kind of furious," he said. "It
kind of hurts me deep inside
for someone to do something like that because, you
know, I've always said t1me
and time again, I'm going to
stand up for what's right. If
I'm right, I'm right. If I'm
wrong, I'm wrong."
two losses this season have
been to Western Reserve.
SETBACK:
Quinn
McDowell, the leading
scorer (14.1) and rebounder
(5.3)
for
Cincinnat1
Moeller, is out at least three
weeks with a partial stress
fracture in his right foot:
Moeller is the reigning
Division I state champion
and No. I in the AP poll this
week. McDowell, a 6-foot5 shooting guard who
signed with William &amp;
Mary, also led Moeller in
scoring last year ( 15.1 ).

•
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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SPORTS
· • Meigs downs Lady
· Rockets. See Page 81

Rutland Coun~il hears from Miller, Burke
BY BETII SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - This week
during a special meeting of
Rutland Council, council
members and M!lyor Lowell
Vance formally heard from
former Mayor April Burke
and Police Chief Jeff Miller
about two checks which
were written to cash from the
viUage's Law Enforcement
Trust Fund (LETF).
Last week Rutland Council
placed Miller on unpaid leave

until the issue of two checks Miller was not present at to use the cash 'for underwritten from Rutland's LETF last week's meeting.
cover drug purchases.
was resolved. The two
Burke spoke first at this
. The statement then say's
checks, each written "to . week's special meeting of Burke gave him permission
cash" for $200. were written council with Miller arriv- to sign her name as a secOct. ·20, 2007 and Dec. 24, ing later in the meeting. ond signa~ure on the first
2007 and cashed at a local Burke began her remarks · check to save him a trip to
business,
according
to by referencing a typed Burke's home. It also says
Rutland Council.
statement which was given Burke 'gave Miller permis- ·
Miller's signature along to council prior to the sion to do this "in an emerwith Burke's signature meeting. The statement had gency if needed as long as
appears on · the canceled Burke's signature alpng he let me know."
checks. Last . week at the with the signature of a witAt this week's special
· regular meeting of council ness and in summary stated c«;&gt;Uncil meeting, Burke, in
Burke said it was not her Miller contacted her about reference ,to . the statement, .
signature on· either check. needing to write the checks told council she did sign a

Group ··
.p lans
village
cleanup

statement MiUer prepared but
it was not what was before .
council, calling it "reworded," saying it was "allli.es."
"I don't know what he did
after I signed the paper,"
Burke said. "The only thing
the paper said plain and
simple was that I acknowledge that ·he signed. my
name after the facts. This is
not the paper I signed."
Council then adjourned
into executive session to

Please see Rutland, A3

Dog shelter filing up
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT!l!MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

,,

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs County DOg Shelter
is filling up with dogs in
desperate need of adoption
at the facility;
"We are up to capacity,
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED!l!MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
but we're still taking more,"
Dog Warden Tom Proffitt
MIDDLEPORT - A vilsaid, blaming some of the
lage-wide cleanup effort
situation on the cold weathwill be scheduled in the
er which prompts more
spring to coincide with the
potential neglect calls and
demolition of a condemend
drop offs at the shelter.
Proffitt said the shelter
building in downtown
Middleport.
currently has puppies and
Meanwhile, the group
dogs of every shape and size
coordinating efforts to
ready for adoption which
secure grant""l'unding for
costs $15 with'·a $6 dog tag
downtown revitalization
fee. Hours of operation at
hope an upcoming sewer
the shelter are 8:30 a.m.- II
improvement project might
a.m., Monday-Saturday, or
serve as part of a local
by appointment by calling
992-3779. If no one answers
match for the third grant
application.
leave a message and · your
The
Middleport
call will be returned.
Wendi Miller of Racine·
Development GrouP. hopes
adopted a puppy, Rosie, this
to work with the vtllage to
facilitate the cleanup, which
week through the sheher.
Rosie, a mix ·between a
will encompass the downtown shopping district and
Labrador Retriever and
Chow Chow, . was dumped
the residential neighborhoods in town. ' Meeting ·
off but has found a home
with Miller who also is an
Thursday, the development
advisor to the Kids N K-9's
group discu,ssed a number
4-H group where every
of ways to continue workchild participates with a dog
ing on the group's mission
project for 4-H. Rosie will
statement while waiting out
belong
to Miller's daughter
another grant period.
The four-phase mission
but she herself .has already
. fallen in love with the pup
statement calls for efforts to
who is appreciative of her
make Middleport "a great
place" to shop, live, work
new home. Miller hopes
and play. Revitalizing the
more people come out to the
Central Business District to
shelter to make a little room
create a "great place to
for a dog in their lives.
shop" has been the developThe capacity crowd at the
S.l'flllll/plloto shelter is despite Proffitt
ment group's priority during
the past year, but efforts to · Rosie, a Labrador-Chow Chow mix was adopted this week through the Meigs County Dog and his volunteers finding
Shelter. She is one of the lucky ones with the shelter currently at capacity, filled with dogs
Plene see Shelter, A3
Please s• Cleanup, A3
awaltingnew homes.

INSIDE

..

·C

Xavier

the team's next 20 points.
Xavier made only one
Christmas hit two diffi- shot over a 6-minute span
cult 3:pointers a minute before Drew Lavender
from PageBl
apart to give Temple a 47- scored to end the slump.
43 lead. After a three-point
"We played as good a
by
Jason
Love,
play
as we can play on
game
formance, Temple. played
Christmas
nailed
his
fourth
.both ends of the court,"
. one of its best halves using
Owls
broke
it
3
and
the
Dunphy
said,
"We're
a 12-2 run to take a 27-21
open.
improving
as
a
team."
lead.
Ryan Brooks and Chris
Temple's last win over a
Xavier answered with six
straight points, including a Clark tini shed off a 10-0 run Top 25 team came against
thunderous dunk by Brown with consecutive 3-pointers, No. 6 George Washington in
off an alley-oop pass from extending the lead to 60-4 7 the quarterfinals of the A- 10
Stanley Burrell. Brown fol - with 9:02 left. Seven-footer tournament in 2006. A
lowed with two free throws Sergio Olmos excited the small-but-enthusiastic .
to tie it, but Temple took a crowd on the opposite end, crowd ran onto the court to
blocking shots on consecu- celebrate this victory -one
30-27 halftime lead.
Christmas, Temple's 'lead- · tive possessions.
of the few times they've had
Christmas then showed reason to cheer lately.
ing scorer with a 20.5 average coming in, had just two off his inside game, spin"It's a great builder going
field goals in the first half. ning and driving to the bas- into the A-1 0 games,"
He found his scoring touch ket for a tough layup to TYndale said. "It's a big win
after the break, getting 15 of make it 65-50.
for us."

· Divers find body of pilot
whose plane crashed
into I ake Erie, AS

The Puzzler inside
. today's Sentinel

•

: _. C;m1paign puts
: ,fQCUs on Mormons. '
Page AS
:·• PVH physician
: recertnied by Board
: of Internal Medicine.
See Page A2
• Sonshine Circle
:omakes donations,
:·plans projects. .
See Page A2
: • Annual King
Symposium slated
. for Huntington.
Page Aa

::see

.

.

with

Dr. Kelly Roush
Chiropractic &amp; Sports Injury Physician

· see

WEATIIER

Rice re-elected
Eastern board president
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYS£NTINEL.COM

Deblllo on PliO AS

Call .(740) 446-5244
TODAY!

2 SI!CI'JONS -

16 PAGIIS

Annie's Mailbox

A2

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A2

HOLZER

Classifieds

Bs-6

CLINIC

Editorials

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'B7

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•

.

I

.,.

TUPPERS PLAINS John Rice was re-elected
president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education
at the board's organizational meeting. Greg Bailey
will serve as vice rresident,
Howard Caldwel as le~­
islative liaison as Sheha
Taylor as student achievement liaison.
. The following committees
were appointed for the 2008
calendar year: Policy: Bailey
and Taylor; Building &amp;
Grounds:
Bailey
and
Caldwell; Finance: Rice and
Adam Will; Personnel: Rice
and Taylor; Public Relations,
Caldwell and Will.
The board approved the
bond for the treasurer at
$50,000 and authorized her
to provide bond satisfactory
to the board al the board's
cost. The board also ppointed a fmancelaudit committee to meet periodically with
board treasurer and superin-

tendent to monitor the district's financial status.
The board meeting will be
held at 6:30 p.m. on the
third Wednesday of each
month in the elementary
library conference room,
subject to change.
During the regular board
meeting,
the
hoard
approved the tax budget for
tax collection year 2007.
The board accepted the
resignation of Sue Arnold as
junior high track coach, and
approved Susan Parsons for
the supplemental position of
elementary . school choir
director. Sarah Lee was
approved as a substitute
teacher for the remainder of
the 2007-08 school year,
pending proper certification.
The following students
were approved for open
enrollment for the remainder
of the 2007-08 school year:
Thomas Connor, Courtney
Thomas, and Devin Dye.
Approved the following

Please see Eastern, A3

Accident injures two

St.t'l plloto

An accident between a tractor trailer and car yesterday afternoon resulted in two people
being taken to Holzer Medical Center for treatment of injuries. The accident occurred on
Ohio 7 near the Hobson .~Jxit. No names or further details about the accident were available at press time. Responding to the scene' were medics from Meigs EMS and emergency personnel from Rutland's Squad 44, Middleport Fire Department, the Ohio State
Highway Patrol. ·
·
~·

'

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