<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3878" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3878?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T19:11:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13797">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/846adffa0f144a664910b10e138e5783.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1e1ef141f9f8299778cb14f45e0b00d8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13727">
                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

•

Monday, March 10, 2008

Hideki Matsui returns to Yankees' lineup; Randy Johnson ready for spring debut
. BY THE

A~OCIATED

PRESS

Hughes said. "1 just hope I Surprise, Ariz.
don't waste all of the good
Dempster spent nearly all
Hideki Matsui returned to innings during spring train- of the past four seasons in
the New York Yankees' ing."
the bullpen and saved 85
lineup Sunday, and Randy
Johnson plans to make his games for the Cubs from
Johnson is ready to get back first start of the spring 2005-07. Now, he is hoping
on the mound for Arizona. Monday against the NL to become a starter again
Playing in his first game champion
Colorado and fill one of two vacansince November surgery on Rockies in Tucson, Ariz. cies in Chicago's rotation.
his right knee. Matsui went The left-hander is expected
"There's a lot of talk
0-for-3 with two groundouts to pitch two innings, anoth- 'about it, but I' don't concern
and a !1yout as New York's er sign of progress as he myself with it," Dempster
de~ignated hitter in a 6-4 returns from back surgery.
said. "1 feel good stamina~·Everything's gone on wise and arm-wise. I threw
victory over the Minnesota
Twins at Fort Myers, Fla. · schedule," Diamondbacks a lot of good 'sinkers, kept
"Even though it's been manager Bob Melvin said the ball down around the
awhile, I didn!t have any Sunday. "This is right knees."
Dempster, who walked
problems," Matsui said around, the first date that we
through a translator.
thought that he would two and struck out two, had
He said he didn't think it potentially take the mound major elbow surgery in·
would "take too . long" to in a game."
2003- with Cincinnati, and
return to the outfield.
The 44-year-old Johnson the Cubs made him a closer
Phil Hughes was sharp, went 4-3 with a 3.81 ERA in 2005. He won 39 games
pitching four hitless innings in 10 starts for Arizona last as a starter with the Reds
for the Yankees only season, the last on June 28, and Florida Marlins from
months after they offered before undergoing his sec- 2000-02 before the operahim to Minnesota as part of ond back operation in less tion.
a proposed trade package than a year.
"I felt like I was a pretty
for ace Johan Santana.
Melvin said he hasn't pro- darn good starter before I
"He's doing everything jected Johnson's first regu- got hurt," Dempster S!lid. "I
that he has to do to be sue- tar-season start. The Big believe in myself. I know
cessful," New York manag- Unit enters the season with what I did."
er Joe Girardi said. "It 284 career wins.
Royals outfielder Jose
seems he's growing as a "It's all going to be outing Guillen made his first
pitcher."
to outing," Melvin said. appearance this spring and
The 21-year-old right- "With him, we're not even went 0-for-3.
bander, who went 5-) with a close to that yet."
The Los Angeles Dodgers
Ryan Dempster looks just also have an open spot in
4.46 ERA . as a rookie in
2007, retired his fir.st nine about ready for the Chicago their rotation, and Esteban
batters before walking two Cubs' rotation - if that's Loaiza is making a strong
ln the fourth. He struck out where they want to put him. bid to lock it up.
The right-hander pitched
Facing some of Boston's
one and threw 56 pitches.
"I was locating the fast- four innings of Qne-hit· b~l . best hitters and outpitching
ball. That was No. I. The and Daryle Ward went 4- Daisuke Matsuzaka, Loaiza
breaking ball was about for-4, sending Chicago to a delivered what he and manwhere I want it to be, so I 13-1 victory over the ager Joe Torre catled his
was happy with that," Kansas City Royals in best outing of the spring

Sunday.
The 36-year-old rightbander
worked
three
innings, allowing two doubles and two walks in a 4-0
victory ove1 the Red Sox at
Vern Beach, Fla. He struck
out four of his 13 batters.
including David Ortiz.
Manny Ramirez and Mike
Lowell.
"I just want 10 go out
there and throw strikes and
put the ball tow, and 1 got
people out today," Loaiza
said after his third appearance this spring.: "There
d bl b h
were two ou es, ut t ey
were good pitches."
Loaiza started the spring
with a rough outing after
t ak'ng h's
delivery two
we t . 1
days earlier, but scr~pped
those "Changes _and pttched
two scoreless mmngs during his second start last
week against Washington.
Torre likes the improvenient, especially consideting who Loaiza faced on
Sunday. But the manager
said others aie still in the
mix for the fifth spot that
would have gone to Jason
Schmidt, who has felt
fatigue in his arm and won't
be ready for opening day.
"(Loaiza) has got the
experience, and he's gotten
better each time out," Torre
said.
.
.
. In other sprin~ training
games:
Brewers (ss) S,
Athletics 2
At Phoenix, Joe Blanton
~ave up a run in five sharp
mnings for Oakland. He

about the Goodyear tires
afrer blowing a right front
and hitting the wall hard the
previous week in Las Vegas,
was even more upset after
Sunday's race.
"Most pathetic racing tire
in my career," he said after
climbing out of his Toyota.
Stewart ~dded, "If I were
Goodyear, I'd be really
embarrasse&lt;l about this
weekend and what they
brought us here. It didn't
keep us from winning the
race, but how we got to second, I don't know."
Two-time reigning Cup
champion Jimmie Johnson
had another so-so day, coming back from a lap down
twice to finish 13th, the last
driver on the lead lap.
Busch, who started the
season with .a pair of fourths
and an 11 th-p1ace run, was
dominant for much of the
325-lap race. But it looked
as if his team might have
made a mistake by leaving_

the laps went on . and
Edwards finally pitted on
lap 275, his race over.
That left Busch, who took
over the series points lead
from Edwards, on top, and
that's where he stayed.
"There's been a lot of
stuff said, but I think this
shows we have a fast car
and they're going to have to
deal wtth us every week,"
said Edwards.

Busch
fromPageBl
on Atlanta's 1.5,mile oval
since Jeff Gordon won in
1995 at 23 years, 6 months.
After climbing out of his
Camry, Busch said, ''This
guy here, Steve Addington,
the boys ori the 18 car from
the beginning, and the 18
has always been the car to
beat here at Atlanta for
many, many years when the
place was redone with
Bobby Labonte. This means
so much to come back and
do this and Jimmy Makar
coming up and givin~ me
congratulations made It set
in.
Stewart
and
Dale
Earnhardt 1r. both passed
Greg Biffle in the final laps
to take second and third,
with pole winner Gordon
fifth.
Ste.wa,rt, who complained

Cavs
from Page Bl
high.
Danny Granger had 19
points, Marquis Daniels
and Troy Murphy each
scored 17, Ronald Murray
had 13 and Mike Dunleavy
II for the Pacers, who
never led in losing their
third irl a row.
The Cavaliers were on
top by as many as 21 points,
with James scoring 18
points in the third quarter to
put them up 77-04.
. "LeBron is a tough guard
for anybody," lndtana
coach llm 0' Brien said.
"He's the best offensive
player in the world. He got
very hot ·at the .beginning of
the third and when he's
making 3-point shots like
that he's virtually unstoppable."
James hit 5'of-8 shots
behind the arc - including
two big ones down the
stretch after the Pacers had
clawed their way back. ·
"I wanted io stay aggressive," he said of his thirdperiod surge. "Once I'm in
a zone like that it's tough
for anyone to stop me."
The Pacers made things
interesting with a 7-0 run to
draw to 92-87 . with 3:46
left. But Granger fouled out
at that point and the Pacers
were short-handed the rest
of the way.
James went ·scoreless in
the final period until there
was 3:35 remaining. He
then hit a 3-pointer from the
right wing and assisted on a
Varejao basket inside to
push the lead back to 97-87.
Daniels and Murphy hit
3-pointers for the Pacers to
cut the ~ap to 97-93 before
James hit a stepback 3 from

in front of the Pacers bench
at the I :21 mark.
James had to be treated
by a trainer for cramps in
hts left thigh in the final
minute.
West hit two foul shots
with 32.8 seconds left and
Varejao added another to
close the scoring.
"Toni~ht was a product of
us gettmg more familiar
another,"
with
one
Cleveland coach Mike
Brown said. "It showed on
the offensiv• side tonight
. for sure."
The Cavaliers continued
their mastery of the Pacers.
They've won the last seven
meetings and 10 of the last
II, including seven straight
at Quicken Loans Arena.
The victory gave the
Cavaliers their first season
sweep over Indiana since
1992-93.
Cleveland dominated the
opening half, rolling to a
34-17. lead after a quarter
while the Pacers stru_ggled
on offense. They hit JUst 7
of 23 from the field for 30
percent, while the Cavaliers
were making !59 percent (13
of22) of their sliots.

the No. 18 on tracl&lt;: after a
caution flag came out on lap ·
232.
.
Busch, Gordon and Clint
Bowyer, who wound up
sixth, all stayed out on lap
233 while the ·other lead-lap
drivers pitted.
With four fresh tires,
Edwards, still smarting
from being knocked out of
the points lead earlier this
week when NASCAR hit
his team with a big penallY
for a missing oil tank lid at
Las Vegas a week ago, shot
out of fourth place on the
restart on lap 236. He drove
into the lead on lap 240 and
started td pull away, building a lead of more than
seven seconds before ihe
next caution flag flew on
lap 262.
Edwards was .still in conrol and appeared to be
pulling away again after the
next restart on lap 268, but
smoke began to spew from
the car. It became thicker as

struck out five. Brewers Bergmann pitched . four
He
prospect Cole Gillespie hit scoreless mmngs.
a three-run homer.
allowed two hits and struck
. Angels 6, Rangers 4
out four.
At Tempe, Ariz., Michael
Padres 12, White Sox 3 ·
Young went 2-for-2 and has
At Peoria, Ariz., after failsix hits in his last 12 at-bats. ing to get out of the first
Angels right-hander Ervin inning in either of his first
Santana allowed six. hits two starts while piling up a
and four runs in four 40.50 ERA, Randy Wolf
innings.
worked three innings and
Rockies 10, Giants 2
allowed two runs and five
At Scottsdale, Ariz ., hits while striking out five
Franklin Morales gave up and walking none .for San
one run in four innings for Diego.
Colorado.
Tigers 9,
Brewers (ss) 2,
Pirates 7, 10 innings
Mariners (ss) 0
At Lakeland, Fla., . Nate
At Ph
·
Cl d' Robertson faced the mi·n,·V
oemx,. . au IO
argas ma~e his strongest mum 12 batters in four
. case yel that he ~eserves to scoreless innings. He gave
b~ mM1lwaukee s rotation, up one hit and struck out
pllchmg
five
hitless four.' Freddy Guzman hit a
innings. Ichiro Suzuki went three-run homer off Casey
·O-for-3 and is O-for-17 this Fossum in the lOth.
spring.
·
Blue Jays 9, Phillies 4
At Clearwater, Ffa., Ryan
Mariners (ss) 10,
Diamondbacks 7
Howard hit his second
At
Tucson,
Ariz ., homer of the spring. Vernon
Brandon Webb made his .Wells had four RBis and
third spring start, allowing Aaron Hill hit a two-run
four runs and eight hits in double for the Blue Jays.
four innings. Chris Burke
Mets 3, Astros 0 ·
doubled twice and drove in
Port St. Lucie, Fla., John
three runs for Arizona.
Maine pitched four hitless
Braves 12, Cardinals S · innings and Jose Reyes hit a
At Kissimmee, Fla., Tim leadoff homer for New
Hudson allowed three hits York. All-Star closer Billy ·
and two unearned runs in Wagner struck out two. ·
·
four innings for the Braves.
Orioles 7, Marlins 3
St. Louis closer Jason
At Jupiter, Fla.; Ricky
lsringhausen yielded' three Nolasco pitched three perhits and a walk in one feet
innings
before .
inning. He struck out two.
Baltimore jumped on him
Nationals (ss) !l,
for three runs and four hits
Indians (ss) 0
in the fourth. Jeremy
At Viera, Fla., Cristian Hermida hit a three-run
Guzman homered from both homer for Florida off Adam
sides of the plate and Jason Loewen.

e

I

NY governor Spitzer
linked to high~end
•
•
•
prostitution
nng,
A6

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
:;o ( ' I N I'S • \ nl :;~. i'li o . I h:!

SPORTS
.. District 13 games held
at URG. See Page 81

:n

"'"' · "'"tail~ -.·ntin ..t.cmn

' I ·.S ll.\ \ . \I \I{( 'II 1 1, :.:ooli

Political signs ordinance back to committee
BY BETH SERGENT
failed. Musser, who was
BSERGENTii!lMYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM absent from the last meeting
due to illness, was back durPOMEROY
- An ing council's regular session
amendment to the existing last night. Musser asked
political signs ordinance in council members why they
the Village of Pomeroy has supported or didn't support
been sent back to committee the ordinance's amendment
for some compromising as written . .
Council woman
Mary
after it failed to pass its third
and {inal reading.
McAngus said sh e had a
At its last meeting, coun- problem with the amendcit deadlocked on the vote men! because it stated politiand without Mayor John cal signs could not go up on
Musser there to break the tie, private and village property
Villl!ge Solicitor Chris until 21 days prior and seven
Tenaglia said the motion · days after an election. She

said she understood the ordinance pertaining to village
property but not private
property.
Councilman . George
Stewart said the existing.
ordinance has the same
wording as the amendment
with the exception of the
time-frame being different
Musser added there are also
existing ordinances that
have to do with private property in terms of noxious
weeds, trash, wrecked cars·
and he didn't see a difference in having guidelines for

political signs on private · sign can be put" up 45 days
property.
'
before an election but viiAll of council agreed that Iage ordinances supersede
political signs should be pro- that sta\ute. If a compromise
hibited from village ptoper- is reached. the amendment
ty, with several mentions of will require three readings
the walking path, and that and a final vote.
the time frame should be
In other council business:
changed
somewhere
Musser
said
the
between the proposed 21 Community Improvement
days and the existing 45 Corporation now had the
days. Musser suggested the deed to . the property at
ordinance go bac;k to the . Monkey Run and added the
ordinance committee to be CIC's property management
tweaked and to meet a com- committee would. be meetpromise. The state has a
statute mandating a political
Please see Signs, AS

Syracuse
prepares to
reopen pool
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· OBITUARIES

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Council is taking steps to
ensure the reopening of the
· Page A5
London Pool which will
• Cecil Dillon Jr.
welcome swimmers in May.
On April 28. Pool
Masters of Vienna, W.Va.
will be opening the pool,
including preparing it with
. chemicals, for $4,050.37.
. • Vatican updates its
Council also voted to advertise for lifeguards, pool
thou·sha~·notlist:
manger and assistant pool
Genetic manipulation,
manager. Applications must
pollution, mind-bending
be turned mto the village
clerk by March 31.
drugs. See Page A2
In other news, council
• Easter highlights UMW
approved a bid of $24,500
program. See Page A3
from Banks Construction
for a metal roof for the '
• He's sober, but watch
municipal building and the
your kids. See Page A3
fire
station. · Grants
·~ Governor picks
Fred
Administrator ·
Hoffman
is
applying
for
a
Southeast Ohio native
grant
through
the
for RSC Commission.
Governor's Office of
See Page A3
Appalachia to cover 50 percent
of the cost.
• ·Lydia Circle
Cha~ane Hoefttch/photo
. Mayor Eric Cunningham
This tw9 story frame house at the corner of Condor and Spring Avenue was heavily damaged in a fire Monday morning but and
. plans spring events.
Chief of Police
the four people inside escaped without Injury.
· See Page A3
Shannon Smith spoke about
their appreciation to resi• ODofA to discuss
dents, village ·. staff and
dairy product labeling.
members of council who
~Page A5
supported the recent police
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Chief, reported. He said his officers upstairs bedroom and quickly spread . levy.
• Obama, Clinton ·
HOEFLiCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
were first on the scene and gave assis- . into two other upstairs rooms and an · "We're going to try to
joining with McCain on
tance to the family as did two walkers attached garage. li was mainly con- continue ·· to operate the
POMEROY - Three children and on the Pomeroy riverfront path who tained to the upstairs although there police department in an effiopposing earmarks puts
Republican, GOP leaders their mother, Amber Roberts, inside saw the fire and came to help. Roberts appeared to be extensive smoke and cient manner," Cunningham
their home at the corner of Condor was examined by the medic squad for . water damage on the ·first floor. said. "It's not an about writon spot. See Page A5
Street and Spring Aveitue in Pomeroy possible burns, but was . immediately Blaettnar described the house as ing tickets, it's also investi• Air Force to bid
when it caught·fire Monday morning. released.
"being heavily damaged and probably gations."
·
injury.
escaped
without
Since the cause could not be defi- not repairable."
Smith said no citations
farewell to .F-117 stealth
But despite quick action by the nitely determined, Blaettnar said the
Firemen,
called
to
the
~cene at II
were
issued last month but
fighter. See Page A5
Pomeroy Fire Department the two- state fire marshal was called in. Proffit a,m., were successful in quickly bring- during that time 'he drew up
story frame house owned by Roberts reported late Monday afternoon that ing the fire under control preventing it 50 new bench warrants, sent
was heavily · damaged, probably the state fire marshal examined the site from spreading to nearby .houses. out 50 letters to those with
beyond repair. The house was insured, and will release an official report later They were on the scene for 2 I/2 hours outstanding fines and con WEATHER
according to RiCk Blaettnar. Pomeroy this week. However, he added that it with three trucks and nine men. tinued to do regular patrols.
Fife Chief.
was generally agreed by the investiga- Assisting were the Middleport Fire According to Smith, the vii- ·
A five year old and a set of twins tor, the Pomeroy Fire Department and Department with four men, and !age has $12,120 in outwere brought out of the house by their the Pomeroy Police Department that Syracuse with five firemen. Also on standing fines.
Council decided to advermother who awoke to find the house the fire was accidental.
the scene were Medic 5 and the
tise Engine 31 for sale
on fire, Mark Proffitt. Pomeroy Police
The fire apparently started in an .· Syracuse Emergency Squad.
because parts could not be
found to fix the steering
.
problem. If the truck doesn't sell ih 30 days. it will
then be sold for scrap
though the ti.res. which .arc
BY BRIAN J. REED
Baker told the committee donations from local resi"There are still holes still good, will be &gt;pared
.BREED@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM about a ·meeting last week dents and businesses to downtown that the commu· and sold . This leaves
Detalto on Pa&amp;e A8
between herself, Mayor purchase ornamental pear nity association could not Syracuse with one engine
Gerlach. trees for the downtown afford to fill with trees and one brush truck. ni'aking
MIDDLEPORT - The Michael
Craig . shopping district some when the others were pur· it dependent on Pom~ rny or
. Villa~e Councilman
Middleport
Council's finance commll- Wehrung and his wife, years later.
said. Racine to haul extra water if
chased," · Baker
tee will recommend that Texanna, and Ann Bonner,
Additional mone~ from "(Bonner) also suggested needed. Fire Chkf. Bill
2 SI!CI10NS - 12 PAGES
money on deposit for trees ao urban forester with · the "tree fund'
was that the village add other Roush and Hollman are cur·
in the village be taken out ODNR The group toured pledged as part ofthe local types of trees in addition lo rently in the process of
Calendars
A3 of the investment program the village to assess the match needed for the the pear trees , because ii searching for it grant to help
and put to use for plantings condition of.trees in public Middleport Development reduces the risk of disease pay .for a new truck.
Classifieds
B3-4 in the villag~:.
places and to determine Group's application for and other problems.'"
:fhe roof and truck multi
where trees are needed.
downtown revitalization
Meeting
Monday
aftetBaker
sard
Bonner
has
all
used as a match for
Bs noon, the · committee ' ~is­ At the time of the ODNR funding, which has been suggested a matching the be
Comics
$300.000 Di stre' ' Grant
a certificate of grant · award, a "tree com- twice denied.
financial program for local Syracuse is .. .l ~mptin£ t'1
Annie's Mailbox
A3 cussed
deposit of $4,659 with mittee" of· citizens was
Finance Committee Rae residents who will commit apply for. Hoffman saiJ the
Peoples Bank, and other appointed to study the need Moore suggested that a to planting additional trees next likely meeting on the
Editorials
A4 CO's
about to mature: The for tree planting s and to new committee be appoint ~ on their properties.
grant may fall in April.
CD
balance
for
the
tree
determine
what
trees
were
ed
by
Mayor
Gerlach.
and
Bonner
also
discussed
a
After a visit from a Sutton
Obituaries
A5 fund is ·what remains of a
best for the village streets. that a planning process need for pruning' of trees in Township Trustee. council
Ohio However, no trees were begin, with the committee Dave Diles Park and othe'r agreed to mow and weed- ..
from
Sports
B Section grant
Department of Natural purchased at the time. considering
additional public spaces. particularly eat a small. older cemetery
Weather
to on Rustic Hill whkh conpruning
A6 Resources for tree planting·' Instead, the Middleport J?lantings for the downtown interior
in the village.
Community Asso~iation streetscape, and. for village streogthen the trees against
PI•••• see Pool, AS
Fiscal . Officer Susan used part of the grant and parks.
© ooo8 Ohio Valley Publilhln&amp; c...
.storm and ice ,damage.
•

INSIDE

ANY. KUBOTA IS
'

A GOOD CHOICE

James had 14 points and
seven boards by halftime,
with Varejao adding 12
points and 12 rebounds JUSt one off the Quicken
Loans Arena record for a
half.
As has been his routine
lately, he closed the half
with a· tl01,1rish, driving the
lane for a reverse dunk with
· less than a second left for a
51-37 lead.
"He's been making them
lately from · all angles and
all ranges;" said Smith,
· acquired by the Cavs just
before the trade deadhne.
"I'm still getting used to it
because you just don't see
it. I just stand there and say,
'Wow,"'
Notes: The Cavs are 21-4
this season when James has
a d()uble,double .... James
has scored 25 or more
points in 21 straight ~arrtes
and 20 or more 10 39
straight games. ... He now
has the longest stretch of 25
or more points since Allen
Iverson's stretch of 27
straight from Jan. 12 to
March 9, 2001. ... The Cavs
had 23 offensive rebounds
to just eight for the Pacers.

Four escape Condor Street house ftre

Middleport 'tree fund' _to be put to use

.

LEGAL NOTICE

INDEX

The Public Utllltlea Commlaalon of Ohio haa aet
for public hearing ·Ceae No. 07·221·GA·GCR, to
review the gaa recovery ratea of Columbia Gaa of
Ohio, Inc., the operation of Ita Ptuchaaed Gaa
Adjustment Clauae, ·and related maHera. Thla
hearing Ia acheduled to begin at 10:00 am on
Tuesday, April 1, 2008, at the offices of. the
Commlaalon, 180 E. Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio. All Interested pertlea will be given an
oPpod,unlty to be h•ard. Further lnformtlon may
be obtained by contacting the Commlaalon'a
Hotline at (800) 686·7826. The hearing Impaired
can reach the Commlaalon via TTY·TDD at (800)
686-1570 or, In Columbus at 466-8180.

'

Fish and wildlife
showing adverse effects
ofdrugcontarrrlnation
m waterways, A2

l

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
. ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/ 800-710-1917
"Your Friendly Outdoor Power Equipme11t aud Tracto~ Superstore"

'I

I

•&gt;

�The Daily Sentinel

~NATioN· •

PageA2 _

WoRLD

Tuesday, March u,

2008

AP IMPACT

BY THE BEND
Tuesday,M:!~~~
·, -----------~::::....-=---=-====--==-=~:..=.---...!.!!!:~!!!!:!:!!.!!.:..:~
· -Community Calendar
Lydia Circle plans spring events
The Daily Sen~inel

Fish and wildlife showing adverse effects of drug contamination in waterways
duce and die at the mouth of
what amounts to a 30-milelong dn!inage system that
starts within the. toilets and
sinks of the casinos, hotels and
homes of Sin City.
Some 180 million galloQS of
effluent are discharged into the
.. channel each day from three
wastewater treatment plants.
The daily sewage discharge is
expected to increase to 400
million gallons a day by 2050.
The USGS and U.S Fish and'
Wildlife Service tracked the
channel from its origins, before
the inflow from the sewage
plants, to where it empties into
Las Vegas Bay in the lake.
Their findings: The amount of
endocrine-disrupting compounds (including hormone
treatments and other chemicals
affecting
reproduction)

EDITOR 'S
NOTE
Second of a three-pan series
on drug tmces in America)·
drinking water supplies - and
growing concerns about their
f!ifects . .

BY JEFF DONN,
MARTHA MENDOZA
AND

JUSTIN PRITCHARD
ASSOCIATED 'PRESS WRITERS

LAKE MEAD. Nev. - On
this brisk, glittering morning, a
flat-bottomed boat glides
across the massive reservoir
that provides Lils Vegas its
drinking · water. An ominous
rumble growls beneath the
craft as its two long, ela.'lrified
claws extend into the depths.
Moments later, dozens of
stunned fish float to the surface.
Federal scientists scoop
them up and transfer them into
50-quart Coleman ice chests
AP photo
for transport to a makeshift lab Duane Moser, an assistant research professor with Desert Research Institute, collects
on the dusty lakeshore. Withio water samples from the Las Vegas Wash in Henderson. Nev.. Thursday, Oct. 18, 2007 .
the hour, the researchers will
club the seven-pound common ed positive. for an =Y . of inland waters and aquatic life. lation of a common vulture vircarps to death, draw their pharmaceuticals. analgesics, 'There's enough global infor- tually disappeared after the
blood, snip out . their gonads anhbwhc~, anhdepressants, mation now to confmn these birds began eating carcasses of
and pack them in aluminum , antihistammes, anu-hyperten- contaminants are affecting cows that had been treated
wi.th an anti-inflammatory
foil and dry ice.
s1on drugs and anh-se1zure organisms and wildlife."
The specimens will be flown med1cahons.
While some researchers drug. Scientists, in a 2004
across the country to laborato-That research follo',VS a have captured wildlife and. study, ·said they eventually
ries where aquatic toxicolo- 2003 study m north~m Texas, · tested it for phannaceuticals, determined that the birds' kidgists are studying what hap- when: every blueg!ll, black many more have brought neys were failing.
'The death of those vultures
pens to fish that live in water crappie and channel c~tfish wildlife into 'their laboratories
the fact that you could get a
contaminated with at least 13 researchers caught hvmg and exposed them to traces of
complete
collapse of a populadifferent medications - from downstream of a wastewater human P.harmaceuticals at levtion
due
to
pharmaceuticals in
over-the-counter pain killers to treatment plant tested positive els similar to. those found in
prescription antibiotics and for the_ acllve mgredients m water, aquatic plants and ani- the environment - that was a
powerful thing," said Christian
mood stabilizers.
two Widely used anlldepres- mals.
The results' have been trou- Daughton, an EPA researcher
More often than not these sants -_ one of th~ firSt times
in Las Vegas. "It was a major
days the laboratory tests bring the residues of such·drugs were bling.
.
unw~lcome results.
detected in wildlife.
Freshwater mussels exposed ecological catastrophe." , ·
In November,' at the annual •
A five-month Associated
-In several recent studies to tin¥ amounts of an antideSociety
of Environmental
Press investigation ha' deter- of soil fertilize&lt;;! with livestock pressant's active . ingredient
mined that trace amounts of marture or With the sludge released premature larvae, giv- Toxicology and Chemistry
many of the pharmaceuticals product from wastewater treat- ing the next generation lower meeting in Milwaukee, 30 new
we take to stay healthy are ~ent plants, American scien- odds of survival; in a separate studies related to pharmaceutiseeping into drinking water ' usts found earthworms had lab study, the antidepressant cals in the environment were
supplies, and a growing body accumulated those same com- also stunted reproduction in presented - hormones found
m the Chicago River; abnortiny fresh water mud snails.
of research indicates that this pounds, while vegetables malities
in Japanese zebra·fish;
When researchers slid
could harm humans.
mcluding com, .·lettuce and
ibuprofen,
gemfibrozil, triBut people aren't the only potatoes had absorbed hydras - a tiny polyp that
. ones who consume that water. antibiotics. 'These result' raise under a microscope looks like closan and naproxen in the
There is more and more evi- potential human health con- a slender jellyfish - · into lower Great Lakes.
Many of those studies refer
dence that some animals that cems," wrote researchers.
water tainted with minute
to
the heralded research at
live in or drink from streams
-Blood and liver samples amounts of pharmaceuticals,
and lakes are seriously affect- of bull . sharks in Flo~ida's their mouths, feet and tentacles Lake Mead. There, on a recent
ed. ·
Caloosahatchee River, a nurs- stopPed growing. While the morning, Steven Goodbred
Pharmaceuticals in the water ery area for juvenile bullsharks hydras are minuscule, , the struggled to hold a large wrigare being blamed for severe and home to six wastewater implications . are
grave: gling carp with both hands. On
reproductive problems · in treatment plants, are being test- Chronic exposure to trace lev- the outside, the carp looked
many types offish: The endan- ed for the presence of an array els of commonly found phar- fme, vibrant and strong, but the
gered razorback sucker and of .medip!tions this winter. Of maceuticals can damage a U.S. Geological Survey scienmale fathead minnow have the first ten , shalts sampled, species at the fQundation .of a tist assumed the worst
"Typically we see low levels
been found with lower sperm nine tested positive .{or the food pyramid.
of
sex steroids, limited testicucount5 and damaged sperm; active ingredient in an antideTmy zooplankton, another
lar
function, low sperm count,
some walleyes and male carp pressant.
. sentinel species, died off in the
have become what are called
;_And · in Colorado's lab when they were exposed to that kind of thin~," he said slipfeminized fish, producing egg Boulder Creek, 50 of the 60 extremely small amounts of a ping the fish mto a holding
yolk proteins typically., made white suckers collected down- common drug used to treat flmk and closing the lid. "We'll
only by females.
stream of Boulder's waste- humans suffering from internal have to wait and see about this
Meanwhile, female fish water treatment plant were wormsandotherdigestingpar- fellow."
These carp live, eat, reprohave developed male genital female, compared to about half asites.
,
organs. Also. there are skewed of them upstream.
In a landmark, seven-year
sex ratios in some aquatic popElsewhere in the world study published last year,
ulations, and sexually abnor- from the icy streams of researchers turned an entire
mal bass that produce cells for England to the wild game pristine Canadian lake into
both sperm and eggs.
reserves of South Africa their laboratory, deliberately
There are problems with snails, fish, even antelope, are dripping the active in~ient
other wildlife as well: kidney showing signs of possible in birth control pills mto ij1e
failure in vul~res, impaired pharmaceutical contamination. water in amounts similar to
reproductiOn in mussels, inhib- For ellample, fish and prawn in those found to have contamiited growth in algae.
China ell posed to treated nated aquatic life, plants and
"We have no reason to thirik wastewater had shortened life water in nature.
After just seven weeks, male
that this is a unique situation," · spans, Pacific oysters off the
says Erik Orsak, an environ- coast of Singapore had inhibit- fathead minnows began promental contaminants specialist ed growth, and in Norway, ducing yolk proteins, their
with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Atlantic salmon exposed to gonads . shrank, and their
Service, pulling off rubber levels of estrogen similar to behavior was feminized gloves splattered with tish those fo4nd in the North Sea · they fought less, floating pasblood at Lake Mead! "We tlnd had severe reproductive prob- sively. They also stopped
pretty much anywhere we .lems.
reproducing, resulting in "ultilook, these compounds are
More than I 00 different mately, a near extinction of this
ubiquitous.".
pharmaceuticals have been species from the lake," said the
· For example:
detected in surface . waters scientists.
- .In a broad study still throughout the world.
While the Canadian study
under way, tish collected in
"It's inescapable," said was prompted by human interwaterways near or in Chicago; Sudeep Chandra, an assistant vention, similar die-offs have
West Chester, Pa. ; Orlando; professor at University of occurred in the wild.
Dallas; and Phoenix have test- Nevada, Reno who studies
Iry Pakistan, the entire popu-

increased more than 646 times.
Not far from the mouth of
the drainage channel - amid
the fishing boats and sightseeing tours -. water is sucked
into a long pipe, destined for a
·drinking water treatment plant.
then Las Vegas - thus beginning the cycle all .over again.
· Other communities in
Nevada, as well as locales in
California and Ariwna, also
draw on Lake Mead.
"Lake Mead is a fortuitous
worst-case scenario" for study,
said environmental toxicologist Greg Moller, holding a
bottle of Lake Mead water he
planned to take back to his lab
at the University of Idaho.
"You've got the wastewater,
you've got the documented
impact on wildlife, and you
have drinking \j'ater uptake."

,,....

·VATICAN CITY - · In
old~n days, the deadly sins
included lust, gluttony and
greed. Now, the Catholic
Church . says pollution ,
mind-damaging drugs and
genetic experiments are qn
its updated- thou-shalt-not
Iist.
Also receiving fre 'h attention by the ·Val ic;m was
social inju sl ice, alon g the
lines of the age-old maxi111 :
"The rich get richer while
the poor ge t poorer."
In the Vatican's latest
updat e on how God\ law is

being violated in tod&lt;)y's
world,
Monsignor
Gianfranco Girotti, the head
of
the
· Apostolic
Penitentiary, was asked by
the Vatican newspaper
L'Osservatore
Romano
what, in his opinion, are the
"new sins."
He cited "violations of the
basic righ)s of human
nature" through genetic
manipulation, drugs that
"weaken the mind and cJ,,. &lt;J
intelligence," and th~ i,,
ance between the rich ancl
the poor. ·
· "If yesterday sin had a
rather individualistic dimen sion, today it has a weight, a

resonance, that's especially
social, rather than individ- ·
ual," said Girotti, whose
office deals with matters of
conscience and grants absolution.
It's not the firsnime that
the Vatican has sought to put
a modern spin on sin. Last
year, the Vatican took on the
problem of highway acci- .
dents, issuing a kind of "Ten ·
Commandments" for drivers
again;! th e •.in s of road rage.
«ko hol '" , ~ and eve n
rudene;s bchmd the wheel.
Vatican officials, however,
stressed that Girotti's comments broke no new ground
on w~at constitutes sin .

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, March 11
SYRACUSE
The
· Syracuse
Community
Center Board of Directors, 7
:.p.m. ·at the Community
Center.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville 255 , O.E.S.,
7:30p.m. at the hall. Ladies
to take decorated hats.
POMEROY - 'Meigs
High School winter sports
banquet, 6:30 p.m. at the
. cafeteria. Take vegetable
. and dessert.

Hostesses, Edie Hubbard
and Blondena Rainer.
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30 p.m .
Refreshments .
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9953, 7 p.m. Meal at 6:30
p.m.
POMEROY -Alpha Iota
Mast.ers, luncheon and·
meeting , II :30 a.m . at the
home. of Eleanor Thomas,
Lincoln Hill.
., Saturday, March 15
POMEROY -Christian
Motorcycle Association,
"Delivered" chapter, regular
meeting, 5 p.m., Common
Grounds.

Church events ·
Thursday, March q
FOREST RUN - Rev.
Kerry Wood to speak at
community Lenten service,
7 p.m., Forest Run United
Metho.dist Church.
Friday, M"rch 14
LONG BOTTOM
Faitli Full ,Gospel Church,
gospel sing, 7 p.m., followed by fellowship.
Sunday, March 16
SYRACUSE Forest
Run,
Minersville, · and
Asbury United Methodist
Churches unified worship.
at Asbury Church, Sunday.
Guest, George Howard,
director of Connectinal
Ministries of the West Ohio
Conference. Worship II
a.m., Fellowshp dinner fol lowing. Bob Robinson, cir- ·
cuit pastor

MIDDLEPORT - The
Keith Reynolds Family will
be singing 6:30 p.m. at the
Hobson
Christian
Fellowship Church pastored
by Hershel White . .
Monday, March 17
RUTLAND - Revival
services will be held at the
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Church, March 17-21, with
services at 7 p .m. each
evening. Dave Shugg will
speak Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday; Theron Durham,
Wednesday and Friday.
Special
singing
each
evening.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community
Church,
Second St, Syracuse, will
have
revival
services,
March 17-23. 7 p.m. each
night, with evangelist Maca
Pritt. Singers, Martie Short,
Debbie Dodrill, Voic.e Of
Faith, Sid and Carol
Hayman, The Blackwell
Sisters, Sandra Wise, Pastor
Joe Gwinn.

Other events
Tuesday, March 11
POMEROY
Jerri
Dahler, field representative
for U.S . Rep. Charlie
Wilson,
. D-Bridgeport,
holds office hours 4-6 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library. ·
Saturday, March 15
TUPPERS PLAINS Free clothing giveaway, 9
a.m . to noon, Bethel
Worship Center, Route 7.
Clothing for newborns to
chiluren's si£e 14. Contact
churi:h at 667-6793.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

He ssober, but watch your kids

·Actual Size 1x3
Person wad
Run date Sun.,
larch 23, 2008

Wed.
·March 19, 2008

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY $UGAR

. Caleb Jones
Happy Easter
Love, Aunt Beth

· Mall to or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'I

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

Ads Must Be Prepaid

For Example 011/y

Contact Dave
or Brenda at
740-992-2155

ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

Wednesday, March 12
POMEROY ·- Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
at the town hall.

GREETING!!·

to pubficize your upcoming 'Easter i£vent!

Bv FRANCES D'EMIJ,.IO

Tuesday, March 11
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., township garage.
CHESTER Chester
Township Board of Trustees
will hold its regular meeting
7 p.m. at the Chester Town
· Hall .

Thursday, March 13
SYRACUSE
.
Wildwood Garden Club,
6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Joy
Bentley to give program on
hydrangeas.
RACINE
The
Sonshine Circle, 7 p.m. at
the
Bethany
United
MethOdist Church. Easter
basket "meal exchange."

51. specia{ section in tlie 1Jai{y Sentine[

Vatican updates its thou-shalt-not list: Genetic
manipulation, pollution, mind-bending drugs

·Public meetings

to have your
church included or
for more
information.

Name of Church
Dot~

Sunday Sunrise
Service
Morning Service
Evening Worship
7:00p.m.
Pastor's Name
Address of Church

II

Dear Annie: Last year,
my boyfriend was caught
soliciting a · 16-year-old ·
girl over the Internet.
"John" was drunk and
high on cocaine at the
time. He was an addict and
I was aware of it. I chose
to stay with him anyway.
John has to register as a
~ __ sex
offender and the
; ; ·felony will never be
:··erased from his record. I
· ~ have three children- two.
· ; .older teenagers and a 9: ~' year-old boy. I don't have
'; : 'custody of my son, and
~ : 'although the boy saw John
l: weekly for the first three
:. '· ·months he was
in rehab,
.
: : that's over now. My son is
no longer allowed to see
John at all , and he misses
his "second dad."
My son hasn't been able
to stay overnight with me
.or even visit unless John is
~omewhere else. I've barely seen my child in seven
months. Do I have to
choose between them? My
. kids matter, but I also love
: · John dearly. I've never
'. been ireated so well. He is
: : a different person now that
: · he is sober. What should I
. do? - Torn
· Dear Tnrn: We're glad
John is ·sober, but your
child's welfare must come
; . first. We are assuming
: ·: your ex has custody of
: . your son, but he cannot
: · legally keep the boy away
: · unless it is court mandat. ed . Have you spoken to
· • your lawyer? If there is
,. nothing you can do to
· change the
visitation
.. setup, we recommend you
arrange to see your son as
· : · often as you can, without
' · John. Your child needs to
know you will not aban. don him.

NGSILEI

r

We Now Have Autos That Won 't Break Your Budget
Affordable Pre-owned Units. :·. Ready For Instant Delivery!

1

04 Dodge Intrepid- Fully loaded, clean car........... ' 4,495
00 Kia Sportage-4x4, Loaded, Sharp ................... .'4,995
00 Pontiac Grand AM, AT, AC ............... ,............. .'3,995
OL Dodge Neon- Fully Loaded, Gas Saver............-" -"'"'·"'"
98 Dodge Neon- Gas Saver, Sharp ....................... .'2,495
96 Ford Taurus- SW, AT. AC ................................ .' I,795
92 Mercury Cougar Brougham-local Trade, l ow Miles, Clcan .. 1 1,995
00 Buick Century, 30 MPG, Sharp....................... '4,495

Located in

prayer b~ Suzie Will, president. Officers reports were
given along with card and
sunshine gift activities for
the month. Lydia Council
books were given to the
members. Devotions were
by Sherry Sha,mblin and
Jane Hysell , hostesses .
Theme was tea and decoralions . featured
teapots .
Shamblin talked about tea,
the different kinds, and their
histories; and gave instruclions on how to make the
perfect cup of tea. She read
2 Timothy 3:16, with Hysell
reading from the book "Tea
Time
with
God ."
Refreshments were served.
Attending were Gerry
Lightfoot, Brittany Collins.
Christi Will, Brenda Bolin,
Phyllis
Baker,
Caitlin
W'll'
N
M
·
1 ~amson, ancy orns,
Neva Chapman, Sherry ·
"Hearts Quilted Together Smith, Madeline Painter.
with Love" with decorations Paula · Pickens,
Cherie
to feature quilts.~ A signup Williamson, Jan Hendricks,
sheet was circulated to get Jackie
Reed,
Carolyn
the committees appointed . A . Nicholson, Suzie Will, Jane
signup sheet will be on the Hysell, Becky Amberger.
bulletin board for the Eva Millir,on, Ruth Durst.
potluck meal.
Dtana Max well, and Sherry
The meeting opened with Shamblin.

Volunteers are needed to
help with the new building
project.
The book swap-give away
project went well, it was
reported, with left-over
books being taken to Lakin
Correctional
Institution
Kitchen item supplies need•
ed are coming in and a list as
to what is still needed was
circulated. The ladies shopping trip was set for" March
18 with the group to go to
Lancaster and 10 Penny 's
Outlet.
Vacation Bible School will
be held on June 16_19 with
the theme to be Miracles of
Jesus'. On April 6 a meeting
will be held to get work!!rs
organized. Pillions ~e being
made for a "ladies day banquet" on May 10 at noon at
the church. Theme will be

Governor picks Southeast Ohio
native for RSC Commission
COLUMBUS -Gov. Ted
Strickland has appointed
Bill Bauer, an associate professor at Marietta College,
to the seven-member commiSSion of the Ohio
Rehabilitation
Services
Commission (RSC), the sole
state agency charged with
assisting Ohioans with disabilities to obtain and retain
employment.
Bauer, a certified rehabili. tation' counselor, served as
chairman of the Governor's
Council on People with
Disabilities from 1998· 2000. Last August, Gov.
Strickland presented Bauer
the
council's
Maureen

Fitzgerald
Leadership
Award. Bauer and the late
Maureen Fitzgerald cofounded the Ohio Youth
Leadership, Forum for students with disabiliiies.
Bauer recently served on the
Ohio
Legal
Rights
Commission.
The Ohio native is a lifetime resident of Marietta.
Dr. Bauer is an associate
professor in the education
department at Marietta
College. He earned a bachelor's degree in special education and a master's degree in
special education administration, both 'at · Ohio
University. At The Ohio

State University, Bauer
earned a master's degree in
rehabilitation counseling
and a doctorate's in rehabilitation serv.ices . .
Ohio's RSC commissioners serye for seven years.
Other members of the. commission are Joyce Young,
chair; David Daugherty;
Karen Dewine; Jacqueline
Romer-Sensky;
Joyce
Rogers and David Williams.
Bauer and his wife, Mary
Ella, live in Marietta with
iheir children, Grant, a
senior at Marietta High
Scho.ol, and Maddie, a freshman at Warren High School.

group of the spring district
meeting on April 19 . in
Lancasier.
Easter Cards were signed
for the troops in Iraq and for
our pastors. A Birthday Card
was signed for Terri Goodin
of Corrytown, Ind. chosen
from the prayer calendar
book. Joanna Weaver, president, conducted the meeting
which opened with prayer

and group reading of the
UMW Litany and Purpose.
Attending were Pastor
Kathy
Corbitt,
Joanna
Weaver, Betty Chevalier,
Connie and Mary Rankin,
Anna
Rice,
Kim
Householder, Terri Soulsby,
Barb Roush, Judy Kennedy,
Kas Seckman, Sharon Louks
and a new member Barb
Summerfield.

Easter
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
program on Easter highlighted a recent meeting of
the Tuppers Plains St.. Paul
United Methodist Women at
the church.
Joanna
Weaver
and
Sharon Louks presented the
program which emphasized
the blessings we enjoy by
livin~ in the United States. a
misswn collection · was
received as an acknowledgment of those blessings to be
sent to less fortunate countries such as Darfur or
Zimbabwe. The program
closed with a movie clip and
a reading stressing the fact
that Jesus is not here but he
is risen.
Connie Rankin had the
response -moment giving
highlights from an article
"Hope for the Women of
Africa" by Paul Jeffrey.
Joanna Weaver informed the

.Keeping
Meigs · '.

Tax Preparation Service
1Accurate and affordable service year-round
I bperienced, trained tax professionab
1Convenient evening and weekend-hours
.t

I Audit assistance
· I Eiectronic filing·

' 0()Unty ,·

· ·informeif ··
-ct ~

" .'

t

'

.. Thepii#y
~~~·,
'·
;~.\!J::;,.

;,i..~--'-r

;r,'

Sldctllle- &gt;
' 992-2156

! t&lt;;

'·.

i18 EaSt Mail St
.PuriefOY, OH 45769'

' . 740.9921674

'•' '

/(\.

SYRACUSE RESIDENTS
Based on the needs that have been completed by Syracuse nrsidents at this date', the following top
six priority -needs for the village of Syracuse are:
·

R&amp;R i\uto Sales

•

Advertising Deadline: Monday, March 17, 2008
Date of Publication: Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Dear Annie: Last year, ance agents ~ould upset
my husband and I moved your brother, but a mature
our life insurance policy person would have hanto a new company. For the died it more gracefully.
previous 19 years. my Save the car.d in case you'r
brother had been our parents accuse you of cutinsurance agent. When we ting him off, but' otherswitched, he became irra- wise. let the dust settle:
tionally angry, which Maintain as much contact
made us decide to remove . as you can handle, and
all our insurance business stop expecting your relafrom him.
tives to be nicer to you. It
My brother is known doesn't seem likely.
for his temper and immaDear Annie: You printturity, but his actions still ed a response from
really surprised us. What "Wellfleet, Mass.," who
hurt even more is that my took you to task for sayparents
also
became ing, "Once you're married,
angry. There was a nasty your husband should come
blowout when my parents first." She said that's a
came to OIH home one day page straight froll) the
and treated my husband as '50s.
if he didn 't exist. They
Just a question for her:
haven't spoken to him What was the divorce rate
smce.
in the '50s, and what is it
I still believe in the
today? Perhaps we should
importance of family. I've
sought therapy in the past take more pages from that
Leo in Hemet,
.regarding
relationship era. Calif.
f
issues with my parents and
Dear Leo: Now, now,
siblings and have worked
let's
not quibble. One of
hard to improve thing s, to
the
reasons
the divorce
no avail. Frankly, I feel
much ·better when I have rate was · lower back then
nothing to do with any of was because, many women
were trapped in lousy marthem.
At Christmas, I sent riages anu unable to- get
cards to everyone, and my jobs, We 'w ouldn't want to
brother's
came
back turn back that particular
marked, "Refused. Return clock.
Annie's Mailbox is
to Sender." · My hu sband
written
by Kathy, Mitchell
thinks I should tell my
and
·Marcy
Sugar, longparents about thi s. Annie,
my parenls have coddled time editors of the Ann
my brother all his life . He Landers column. Please
is in his mid-50s and still e-mail yo/Jr questions to
eats breakfast with them a11 niesmailbox @comevery ·morning. I doubt cast.net, or write to:
they will ever see his A11nie's Mailbox, P.O;
faults . What do you . Box 118190, Chicago, IL
. 606/i. To find out more
advise?- Sad Sister
Dear Sister: It won't do about Annie's Mailbox,
any good to tell your par- a11d read features by
ents their son is a spiteful other Creators Syndicate
jerk. Even · if they agree, writers and cartoonists,
the
Creators
they will defend him . Of visit
course, you should have Sy11dicate Web page at
realized switching insur- www.creators.com.

POMEROY -Easter services, a revival, and a Haiti
mission
project
were
among spring activities
announced at the recent
meeting df the Lydia Circle
of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Members were reminded
that there is a signup ~heet
posted \)n the church bul16tin board for those who
want to contribute something to the Easter breakfast.
A church cleaning day was
set for March 15 beginning
at 9 a.m. Revival with
George Hall was announced
for April 13-16 at 7 p.m.
each evening at the church.
It was noted that peanut
butter is coming in for the
Haiti mission . project. The
}lOUth will contmue collectmg this through· March 30.
The next mentoring program
will be held on April30 with
the lesson being on home. made
noodles.
Youth
enjoyed a bowling party on
Feb. 23 with 25 attending. A
nature
outing
was
announced or April 26, as
was a work day at the
Darwin Camp on April 12.

Demolition of Abandoned structures---------------------------Street Repairs----------------~--------........------Fire Equipment and Facilities __________________________.__
Community Center __________________________
Parks and Recreation----------------------------------------Sidewalk Repairs ___________.____-'---------------------Syracuse residents are beipg asked to complete this form and provide specific locations within the
Village that can benefh any of the above needs. Funding for the slatelprojecls may be included in
the CDBG Distress application soon to be filed.
Residents may leave completed forms at the Syracuse Water Office prior to April4 . 2008.
Eric Cunningham, Mayor

Plains, OH • (740) 667-3330 • (740) 591-0646

•

'

'

•

,,

�The Daily Sentinel

~NATioN· •

PageA2 _

WoRLD

Tuesday, March u,

2008

AP IMPACT

BY THE BEND
Tuesday,M:!~~~
·, -----------~::::....-=---=-====--==-=~:..=.---...!.!!!:~!!!!:!:!!.!!.:..:~
· -Community Calendar
Lydia Circle plans spring events
The Daily Sen~inel

Fish and wildlife showing adverse effects of drug contamination in waterways
duce and die at the mouth of
what amounts to a 30-milelong dn!inage system that
starts within the. toilets and
sinks of the casinos, hotels and
homes of Sin City.
Some 180 million galloQS of
effluent are discharged into the
.. channel each day from three
wastewater treatment plants.
The daily sewage discharge is
expected to increase to 400
million gallons a day by 2050.
The USGS and U.S Fish and'
Wildlife Service tracked the
channel from its origins, before
the inflow from the sewage
plants, to where it empties into
Las Vegas Bay in the lake.
Their findings: The amount of
endocrine-disrupting compounds (including hormone
treatments and other chemicals
affecting
reproduction)

EDITOR 'S
NOTE
Second of a three-pan series
on drug tmces in America)·
drinking water supplies - and
growing concerns about their
f!ifects . .

BY JEFF DONN,
MARTHA MENDOZA
AND

JUSTIN PRITCHARD
ASSOCIATED 'PRESS WRITERS

LAKE MEAD. Nev. - On
this brisk, glittering morning, a
flat-bottomed boat glides
across the massive reservoir
that provides Lils Vegas its
drinking · water. An ominous
rumble growls beneath the
craft as its two long, ela.'lrified
claws extend into the depths.
Moments later, dozens of
stunned fish float to the surface.
Federal scientists scoop
them up and transfer them into
50-quart Coleman ice chests
AP photo
for transport to a makeshift lab Duane Moser, an assistant research professor with Desert Research Institute, collects
on the dusty lakeshore. Withio water samples from the Las Vegas Wash in Henderson. Nev.. Thursday, Oct. 18, 2007 .
the hour, the researchers will
club the seven-pound common ed positive. for an =Y . of inland waters and aquatic life. lation of a common vulture vircarps to death, draw their pharmaceuticals. analgesics, 'There's enough global infor- tually disappeared after the
blood, snip out . their gonads anhbwhc~, anhdepressants, mation now to confmn these birds began eating carcasses of
and pack them in aluminum , antihistammes, anu-hyperten- contaminants are affecting cows that had been treated
wi.th an anti-inflammatory
foil and dry ice.
s1on drugs and anh-se1zure organisms and wildlife."
The specimens will be flown med1cahons.
While some researchers drug. Scientists, in a 2004
across the country to laborato-That research follo',VS a have captured wildlife and. study, ·said they eventually
ries where aquatic toxicolo- 2003 study m north~m Texas, · tested it for phannaceuticals, determined that the birds' kidgists are studying what hap- when: every blueg!ll, black many more have brought neys were failing.
'The death of those vultures
pens to fish that live in water crappie and channel c~tfish wildlife into 'their laboratories
the fact that you could get a
contaminated with at least 13 researchers caught hvmg and exposed them to traces of
complete
collapse of a populadifferent medications - from downstream of a wastewater human P.harmaceuticals at levtion
due
to
pharmaceuticals in
over-the-counter pain killers to treatment plant tested positive els similar to. those found in
prescription antibiotics and for the_ acllve mgredients m water, aquatic plants and ani- the environment - that was a
powerful thing," said Christian
mood stabilizers.
two Widely used anlldepres- mals.
The results' have been trou- Daughton, an EPA researcher
More often than not these sants -_ one of th~ firSt times
in Las Vegas. "It was a major
days the laboratory tests bring the residues of such·drugs were bling.
.
unw~lcome results.
detected in wildlife.
Freshwater mussels exposed ecological catastrophe." , ·
In November,' at the annual •
A five-month Associated
-In several recent studies to tin¥ amounts of an antideSociety
of Environmental
Press investigation ha' deter- of soil fertilize&lt;;! with livestock pressant's active . ingredient
mined that trace amounts of marture or With the sludge released premature larvae, giv- Toxicology and Chemistry
many of the pharmaceuticals product from wastewater treat- ing the next generation lower meeting in Milwaukee, 30 new
we take to stay healthy are ~ent plants, American scien- odds of survival; in a separate studies related to pharmaceutiseeping into drinking water ' usts found earthworms had lab study, the antidepressant cals in the environment were
supplies, and a growing body accumulated those same com- also stunted reproduction in presented - hormones found
m the Chicago River; abnortiny fresh water mud snails.
of research indicates that this pounds, while vegetables malities
in Japanese zebra·fish;
When researchers slid
could harm humans.
mcluding com, .·lettuce and
ibuprofen,
gemfibrozil, triBut people aren't the only potatoes had absorbed hydras - a tiny polyp that
. ones who consume that water. antibiotics. 'These result' raise under a microscope looks like closan and naproxen in the
There is more and more evi- potential human health con- a slender jellyfish - · into lower Great Lakes.
Many of those studies refer
dence that some animals that cems," wrote researchers.
water tainted with minute
to
the heralded research at
live in or drink from streams
-Blood and liver samples amounts of pharmaceuticals,
and lakes are seriously affect- of bull . sharks in Flo~ida's their mouths, feet and tentacles Lake Mead. There, on a recent
ed. ·
Caloosahatchee River, a nurs- stopPed growing. While the morning, Steven Goodbred
Pharmaceuticals in the water ery area for juvenile bullsharks hydras are minuscule, , the struggled to hold a large wrigare being blamed for severe and home to six wastewater implications . are
grave: gling carp with both hands. On
reproductive problems · in treatment plants, are being test- Chronic exposure to trace lev- the outside, the carp looked
many types offish: The endan- ed for the presence of an array els of commonly found phar- fme, vibrant and strong, but the
gered razorback sucker and of .medip!tions this winter. Of maceuticals can damage a U.S. Geological Survey scienmale fathead minnow have the first ten , shalts sampled, species at the fQundation .of a tist assumed the worst
"Typically we see low levels
been found with lower sperm nine tested positive .{or the food pyramid.
of
sex steroids, limited testicucount5 and damaged sperm; active ingredient in an antideTmy zooplankton, another
lar
function, low sperm count,
some walleyes and male carp pressant.
. sentinel species, died off in the
have become what are called
;_And · in Colorado's lab when they were exposed to that kind of thin~," he said slipfeminized fish, producing egg Boulder Creek, 50 of the 60 extremely small amounts of a ping the fish mto a holding
yolk proteins typically., made white suckers collected down- common drug used to treat flmk and closing the lid. "We'll
only by females.
stream of Boulder's waste- humans suffering from internal have to wait and see about this
Meanwhile, female fish water treatment plant were wormsandotherdigestingpar- fellow."
These carp live, eat, reprohave developed male genital female, compared to about half asites.
,
organs. Also. there are skewed of them upstream.
In a landmark, seven-year
sex ratios in some aquatic popElsewhere in the world study published last year,
ulations, and sexually abnor- from the icy streams of researchers turned an entire
mal bass that produce cells for England to the wild game pristine Canadian lake into
both sperm and eggs.
reserves of South Africa their laboratory, deliberately
There are problems with snails, fish, even antelope, are dripping the active in~ient
other wildlife as well: kidney showing signs of possible in birth control pills mto ij1e
failure in vul~res, impaired pharmaceutical contamination. water in amounts similar to
reproductiOn in mussels, inhib- For ellample, fish and prawn in those found to have contamiited growth in algae.
China ell posed to treated nated aquatic life, plants and
"We have no reason to thirik wastewater had shortened life water in nature.
After just seven weeks, male
that this is a unique situation," · spans, Pacific oysters off the
says Erik Orsak, an environ- coast of Singapore had inhibit- fathead minnows began promental contaminants specialist ed growth, and in Norway, ducing yolk proteins, their
with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Atlantic salmon exposed to gonads . shrank, and their
Service, pulling off rubber levels of estrogen similar to behavior was feminized gloves splattered with tish those fo4nd in the North Sea · they fought less, floating pasblood at Lake Mead! "We tlnd had severe reproductive prob- sively. They also stopped
pretty much anywhere we .lems.
reproducing, resulting in "ultilook, these compounds are
More than I 00 different mately, a near extinction of this
ubiquitous.".
pharmaceuticals have been species from the lake," said the
· For example:
detected in surface . waters scientists.
- .In a broad study still throughout the world.
While the Canadian study
under way, tish collected in
"It's inescapable," said was prompted by human interwaterways near or in Chicago; Sudeep Chandra, an assistant vention, similar die-offs have
West Chester, Pa. ; Orlando; professor at University of occurred in the wild.
Dallas; and Phoenix have test- Nevada, Reno who studies
Iry Pakistan, the entire popu-

increased more than 646 times.
Not far from the mouth of
the drainage channel - amid
the fishing boats and sightseeing tours -. water is sucked
into a long pipe, destined for a
·drinking water treatment plant.
then Las Vegas - thus beginning the cycle all .over again.
· Other communities in
Nevada, as well as locales in
California and Ariwna, also
draw on Lake Mead.
"Lake Mead is a fortuitous
worst-case scenario" for study,
said environmental toxicologist Greg Moller, holding a
bottle of Lake Mead water he
planned to take back to his lab
at the University of Idaho.
"You've got the wastewater,
you've got the documented
impact on wildlife, and you
have drinking \j'ater uptake."

,,....

·VATICAN CITY - · In
old~n days, the deadly sins
included lust, gluttony and
greed. Now, the Catholic
Church . says pollution ,
mind-damaging drugs and
genetic experiments are qn
its updated- thou-shalt-not
Iist.
Also receiving fre 'h attention by the ·Val ic;m was
social inju sl ice, alon g the
lines of the age-old maxi111 :
"The rich get richer while
the poor ge t poorer."
In the Vatican's latest
updat e on how God\ law is

being violated in tod&lt;)y's
world,
Monsignor
Gianfranco Girotti, the head
of
the
· Apostolic
Penitentiary, was asked by
the Vatican newspaper
L'Osservatore
Romano
what, in his opinion, are the
"new sins."
He cited "violations of the
basic righ)s of human
nature" through genetic
manipulation, drugs that
"weaken the mind and cJ,,. &lt;J
intelligence," and th~ i,,
ance between the rich ancl
the poor. ·
· "If yesterday sin had a
rather individualistic dimen sion, today it has a weight, a

resonance, that's especially
social, rather than individ- ·
ual," said Girotti, whose
office deals with matters of
conscience and grants absolution.
It's not the firsnime that
the Vatican has sought to put
a modern spin on sin. Last
year, the Vatican took on the
problem of highway acci- .
dents, issuing a kind of "Ten ·
Commandments" for drivers
again;! th e •.in s of road rage.
«ko hol '" , ~ and eve n
rudene;s bchmd the wheel.
Vatican officials, however,
stressed that Girotti's comments broke no new ground
on w~at constitutes sin .

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, March 11
SYRACUSE
The
· Syracuse
Community
Center Board of Directors, 7
:.p.m. ·at the Community
Center.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville 255 , O.E.S.,
7:30p.m. at the hall. Ladies
to take decorated hats.
POMEROY - 'Meigs
High School winter sports
banquet, 6:30 p.m. at the
. cafeteria. Take vegetable
. and dessert.

Hostesses, Edie Hubbard
and Blondena Rainer.
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30 p.m .
Refreshments .
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9953, 7 p.m. Meal at 6:30
p.m.
POMEROY -Alpha Iota
Mast.ers, luncheon and·
meeting , II :30 a.m . at the
home. of Eleanor Thomas,
Lincoln Hill.
., Saturday, March 15
POMEROY -Christian
Motorcycle Association,
"Delivered" chapter, regular
meeting, 5 p.m., Common
Grounds.

Church events ·
Thursday, March q
FOREST RUN - Rev.
Kerry Wood to speak at
community Lenten service,
7 p.m., Forest Run United
Metho.dist Church.
Friday, M"rch 14
LONG BOTTOM
Faitli Full ,Gospel Church,
gospel sing, 7 p.m., followed by fellowship.
Sunday, March 16
SYRACUSE Forest
Run,
Minersville, · and
Asbury United Methodist
Churches unified worship.
at Asbury Church, Sunday.
Guest, George Howard,
director of Connectinal
Ministries of the West Ohio
Conference. Worship II
a.m., Fellowshp dinner fol lowing. Bob Robinson, cir- ·
cuit pastor

MIDDLEPORT - The
Keith Reynolds Family will
be singing 6:30 p.m. at the
Hobson
Christian
Fellowship Church pastored
by Hershel White . .
Monday, March 17
RUTLAND - Revival
services will be held at the
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Church, March 17-21, with
services at 7 p .m. each
evening. Dave Shugg will
speak Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday; Theron Durham,
Wednesday and Friday.
Special
singing
each
evening.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community
Church,
Second St, Syracuse, will
have
revival
services,
March 17-23. 7 p.m. each
night, with evangelist Maca
Pritt. Singers, Martie Short,
Debbie Dodrill, Voic.e Of
Faith, Sid and Carol
Hayman, The Blackwell
Sisters, Sandra Wise, Pastor
Joe Gwinn.

Other events
Tuesday, March 11
POMEROY
Jerri
Dahler, field representative
for U.S . Rep. Charlie
Wilson,
. D-Bridgeport,
holds office hours 4-6 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library. ·
Saturday, March 15
TUPPERS PLAINS Free clothing giveaway, 9
a.m . to noon, Bethel
Worship Center, Route 7.
Clothing for newborns to
chiluren's si£e 14. Contact
churi:h at 667-6793.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

He ssober, but watch your kids

·Actual Size 1x3
Person wad
Run date Sun.,
larch 23, 2008

Wed.
·March 19, 2008

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY $UGAR

. Caleb Jones
Happy Easter
Love, Aunt Beth

· Mall to or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'I

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

Ads Must Be Prepaid

For Example 011/y

Contact Dave
or Brenda at
740-992-2155

ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

Wednesday, March 12
POMEROY ·- Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
at the town hall.

GREETING!!·

to pubficize your upcoming 'Easter i£vent!

Bv FRANCES D'EMIJ,.IO

Tuesday, March 11
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., township garage.
CHESTER Chester
Township Board of Trustees
will hold its regular meeting
7 p.m. at the Chester Town
· Hall .

Thursday, March 13
SYRACUSE
.
Wildwood Garden Club,
6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Joy
Bentley to give program on
hydrangeas.
RACINE
The
Sonshine Circle, 7 p.m. at
the
Bethany
United
MethOdist Church. Easter
basket "meal exchange."

51. specia{ section in tlie 1Jai{y Sentine[

Vatican updates its thou-shalt-not list: Genetic
manipulation, pollution, mind-bending drugs

·Public meetings

to have your
church included or
for more
information.

Name of Church
Dot~

Sunday Sunrise
Service
Morning Service
Evening Worship
7:00p.m.
Pastor's Name
Address of Church

II

Dear Annie: Last year,
my boyfriend was caught
soliciting a · 16-year-old ·
girl over the Internet.
"John" was drunk and
high on cocaine at the
time. He was an addict and
I was aware of it. I chose
to stay with him anyway.
John has to register as a
~ __ sex
offender and the
; ; ·felony will never be
:··erased from his record. I
· ~ have three children- two.
· ; .older teenagers and a 9: ~' year-old boy. I don't have
'; : 'custody of my son, and
~ : 'although the boy saw John
l: weekly for the first three
:. '· ·months he was
in rehab,
.
: : that's over now. My son is
no longer allowed to see
John at all , and he misses
his "second dad."
My son hasn't been able
to stay overnight with me
.or even visit unless John is
~omewhere else. I've barely seen my child in seven
months. Do I have to
choose between them? My
. kids matter, but I also love
: · John dearly. I've never
'. been ireated so well. He is
: : a different person now that
: · he is sober. What should I
. do? - Torn
· Dear Tnrn: We're glad
John is ·sober, but your
child's welfare must come
; . first. We are assuming
: ·: your ex has custody of
: . your son, but he cannot
: · legally keep the boy away
: · unless it is court mandat. ed . Have you spoken to
· • your lawyer? If there is
,. nothing you can do to
· change the
visitation
.. setup, we recommend you
arrange to see your son as
· : · often as you can, without
' · John. Your child needs to
know you will not aban. don him.

NGSILEI

r

We Now Have Autos That Won 't Break Your Budget
Affordable Pre-owned Units. :·. Ready For Instant Delivery!

1

04 Dodge Intrepid- Fully loaded, clean car........... ' 4,495
00 Kia Sportage-4x4, Loaded, Sharp ................... .'4,995
00 Pontiac Grand AM, AT, AC ............... ,............. .'3,995
OL Dodge Neon- Fully Loaded, Gas Saver............-" -"'"'·"'"
98 Dodge Neon- Gas Saver, Sharp ....................... .'2,495
96 Ford Taurus- SW, AT. AC ................................ .' I,795
92 Mercury Cougar Brougham-local Trade, l ow Miles, Clcan .. 1 1,995
00 Buick Century, 30 MPG, Sharp....................... '4,495

Located in

prayer b~ Suzie Will, president. Officers reports were
given along with card and
sunshine gift activities for
the month. Lydia Council
books were given to the
members. Devotions were
by Sherry Sha,mblin and
Jane Hysell , hostesses .
Theme was tea and decoralions . featured
teapots .
Shamblin talked about tea,
the different kinds, and their
histories; and gave instruclions on how to make the
perfect cup of tea. She read
2 Timothy 3:16, with Hysell
reading from the book "Tea
Time
with
God ."
Refreshments were served.
Attending were Gerry
Lightfoot, Brittany Collins.
Christi Will, Brenda Bolin,
Phyllis
Baker,
Caitlin
W'll'
N
M
·
1 ~amson, ancy orns,
Neva Chapman, Sherry ·
"Hearts Quilted Together Smith, Madeline Painter.
with Love" with decorations Paula · Pickens,
Cherie
to feature quilts.~ A signup Williamson, Jan Hendricks,
sheet was circulated to get Jackie
Reed,
Carolyn
the committees appointed . A . Nicholson, Suzie Will, Jane
signup sheet will be on the Hysell, Becky Amberger.
bulletin board for the Eva Millir,on, Ruth Durst.
potluck meal.
Dtana Max well, and Sherry
The meeting opened with Shamblin.

Volunteers are needed to
help with the new building
project.
The book swap-give away
project went well, it was
reported, with left-over
books being taken to Lakin
Correctional
Institution
Kitchen item supplies need•
ed are coming in and a list as
to what is still needed was
circulated. The ladies shopping trip was set for" March
18 with the group to go to
Lancaster and 10 Penny 's
Outlet.
Vacation Bible School will
be held on June 16_19 with
the theme to be Miracles of
Jesus'. On April 6 a meeting
will be held to get work!!rs
organized. Pillions ~e being
made for a "ladies day banquet" on May 10 at noon at
the church. Theme will be

Governor picks Southeast Ohio
native for RSC Commission
COLUMBUS -Gov. Ted
Strickland has appointed
Bill Bauer, an associate professor at Marietta College,
to the seven-member commiSSion of the Ohio
Rehabilitation
Services
Commission (RSC), the sole
state agency charged with
assisting Ohioans with disabilities to obtain and retain
employment.
Bauer, a certified rehabili. tation' counselor, served as
chairman of the Governor's
Council on People with
Disabilities from 1998· 2000. Last August, Gov.
Strickland presented Bauer
the
council's
Maureen

Fitzgerald
Leadership
Award. Bauer and the late
Maureen Fitzgerald cofounded the Ohio Youth
Leadership, Forum for students with disabiliiies.
Bauer recently served on the
Ohio
Legal
Rights
Commission.
The Ohio native is a lifetime resident of Marietta.
Dr. Bauer is an associate
professor in the education
department at Marietta
College. He earned a bachelor's degree in special education and a master's degree in
special education administration, both 'at · Ohio
University. At The Ohio

State University, Bauer
earned a master's degree in
rehabilitation counseling
and a doctorate's in rehabilitation serv.ices . .
Ohio's RSC commissioners serye for seven years.
Other members of the. commission are Joyce Young,
chair; David Daugherty;
Karen Dewine; Jacqueline
Romer-Sensky;
Joyce
Rogers and David Williams.
Bauer and his wife, Mary
Ella, live in Marietta with
iheir children, Grant, a
senior at Marietta High
Scho.ol, and Maddie, a freshman at Warren High School.

group of the spring district
meeting on April 19 . in
Lancasier.
Easter Cards were signed
for the troops in Iraq and for
our pastors. A Birthday Card
was signed for Terri Goodin
of Corrytown, Ind. chosen
from the prayer calendar
book. Joanna Weaver, president, conducted the meeting
which opened with prayer

and group reading of the
UMW Litany and Purpose.
Attending were Pastor
Kathy
Corbitt,
Joanna
Weaver, Betty Chevalier,
Connie and Mary Rankin,
Anna
Rice,
Kim
Householder, Terri Soulsby,
Barb Roush, Judy Kennedy,
Kas Seckman, Sharon Louks
and a new member Barb
Summerfield.

Easter
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
program on Easter highlighted a recent meeting of
the Tuppers Plains St.. Paul
United Methodist Women at
the church.
Joanna
Weaver
and
Sharon Louks presented the
program which emphasized
the blessings we enjoy by
livin~ in the United States. a
misswn collection · was
received as an acknowledgment of those blessings to be
sent to less fortunate countries such as Darfur or
Zimbabwe. The program
closed with a movie clip and
a reading stressing the fact
that Jesus is not here but he
is risen.
Connie Rankin had the
response -moment giving
highlights from an article
"Hope for the Women of
Africa" by Paul Jeffrey.
Joanna Weaver informed the

.Keeping
Meigs · '.

Tax Preparation Service
1Accurate and affordable service year-round
I bperienced, trained tax professionab
1Convenient evening and weekend-hours
.t

I Audit assistance
· I Eiectronic filing·

' 0()Unty ,·

· ·informeif ··
-ct ~

" .'

t

'

.. Thepii#y
~~~·,
'·
;~.\!J::;,.

;,i..~--'-r

;r,'

Sldctllle- &gt;
' 992-2156

! t&lt;;

'·.

i18 EaSt Mail St
.PuriefOY, OH 45769'

' . 740.9921674

'•' '

/(\.

SYRACUSE RESIDENTS
Based on the needs that have been completed by Syracuse nrsidents at this date', the following top
six priority -needs for the village of Syracuse are:
·

R&amp;R i\uto Sales

•

Advertising Deadline: Monday, March 17, 2008
Date of Publication: Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Dear Annie: Last year, ance agents ~ould upset
my husband and I moved your brother, but a mature
our life insurance policy person would have hanto a new company. For the died it more gracefully.
previous 19 years. my Save the car.d in case you'r
brother had been our parents accuse you of cutinsurance agent. When we ting him off, but' otherswitched, he became irra- wise. let the dust settle:
tionally angry, which Maintain as much contact
made us decide to remove . as you can handle, and
all our insurance business stop expecting your relafrom him.
tives to be nicer to you. It
My brother is known doesn't seem likely.
for his temper and immaDear Annie: You printturity, but his actions still ed a response from
really surprised us. What "Wellfleet, Mass.," who
hurt even more is that my took you to task for sayparents
also
became ing, "Once you're married,
angry. There was a nasty your husband should come
blowout when my parents first." She said that's a
came to OIH home one day page straight froll) the
and treated my husband as '50s.
if he didn 't exist. They
Just a question for her:
haven't spoken to him What was the divorce rate
smce.
in the '50s, and what is it
I still believe in the
today? Perhaps we should
importance of family. I've
sought therapy in the past take more pages from that
Leo in Hemet,
.regarding
relationship era. Calif.
f
issues with my parents and
Dear Leo: Now, now,
siblings and have worked
let's
not quibble. One of
hard to improve thing s, to
the
reasons
the divorce
no avail. Frankly, I feel
much ·better when I have rate was · lower back then
nothing to do with any of was because, many women
were trapped in lousy marthem.
At Christmas, I sent riages anu unable to- get
cards to everyone, and my jobs, We 'w ouldn't want to
brother's
came
back turn back that particular
marked, "Refused. Return clock.
Annie's Mailbox is
to Sender." · My hu sband
written
by Kathy, Mitchell
thinks I should tell my
and
·Marcy
Sugar, longparents about thi s. Annie,
my parenls have coddled time editors of the Ann
my brother all his life . He Landers column. Please
is in his mid-50s and still e-mail yo/Jr questions to
eats breakfast with them a11 niesmailbox @comevery ·morning. I doubt cast.net, or write to:
they will ever see his A11nie's Mailbox, P.O;
faults . What do you . Box 118190, Chicago, IL
. 606/i. To find out more
advise?- Sad Sister
Dear Sister: It won't do about Annie's Mailbox,
any good to tell your par- a11d read features by
ents their son is a spiteful other Creators Syndicate
jerk. Even · if they agree, writers and cartoonists,
the
Creators
they will defend him . Of visit
course, you should have Sy11dicate Web page at
realized switching insur- www.creators.com.

POMEROY -Easter services, a revival, and a Haiti
mission
project
were
among spring activities
announced at the recent
meeting df the Lydia Circle
of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Members were reminded
that there is a signup ~heet
posted \)n the church bul16tin board for those who
want to contribute something to the Easter breakfast.
A church cleaning day was
set for March 15 beginning
at 9 a.m. Revival with
George Hall was announced
for April 13-16 at 7 p.m.
each evening at the church.
It was noted that peanut
butter is coming in for the
Haiti mission . project. The
}lOUth will contmue collectmg this through· March 30.
The next mentoring program
will be held on April30 with
the lesson being on home. made
noodles.
Youth
enjoyed a bowling party on
Feb. 23 with 25 attending. A
nature
outing
was
announced or April 26, as
was a work day at the
Darwin Camp on April 12.

Demolition of Abandoned structures---------------------------Street Repairs----------------~--------........------Fire Equipment and Facilities __________________________.__
Community Center __________________________
Parks and Recreation----------------------------------------Sidewalk Repairs ___________.____-'---------------------Syracuse residents are beipg asked to complete this form and provide specific locations within the
Village that can benefh any of the above needs. Funding for the slatelprojecls may be included in
the CDBG Distress application soon to be filed.
Residents may leave completed forms at the Syracuse Water Office prior to April4 . 2008.
Eric Cunningham, Mayor

Plains, OH • (740) 667-3330 • (740) 591-0646

•

'

'

•

,,

�•

,

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel ·

A major Ohio political
leader
recently told me:
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
"Obama
will never carry
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Ohio. Some people call it the
www.mydailysentlnel.com
Bradley effect, but how do
you think the guys who work
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
at the GM plant in
Youngstown are going to
Dan Goodrich
vote? For a black? I don't
Publisher
think so."
I didn't believe it, but sure
Charlene Hoeflich
enough, race - nearly a torGeneral Manager-News Editor .
gotten
factor in
the
Democratic presidential contest during Sen. Barack
Obama's long run of primary
Congress shall make no law respecting an
victories - evidently came
back to . help Sen. Hillary
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Rodham Clinton win Ohio,
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom Texas
and Rhode Island on
of speech, or of the press; or the· right of the
Tuesday.
And; unfortunately, it could
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
be a factor again in
the Government for a redress of grievances.
Pennsylvania and if
Obama survives Clinton's
- The First Amendment to the U:S. Constitution renewed onslaught to win the
Democratic nomination -.in
the general election.
The "Bradley effect" - the
tendency of voters to tell pollToday is Tue.sday, March II, the 71st day of 2008. There sters they'll vote for an
are 295 days left in the year.
African-American candidate,
Today's Highlight in History:
then vote against him in the
On March II,. 1942, as Japanese forces continued lO booth - certainly was eviadvance in the Pacific during World War II, Gen. Douglas dent in Ohio and Texas.
MacArthur left the Philippines for Australia. (MacArthur, Clinton outperformed prewho subsequently vowed, "I shall return," kept that promise election polls by 3 points in
more than 2 I /2 years later.)
.
Ohio, 1.5 in Texas and '8.3 in
On this date:
,
In 1.81 0, Emperor Napoleon I of France was married by Rhode Island.
Moreover, exit polls in
proxy to Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria. ·
In 1861, the Confederate convention in Montgomery, Ala., OhiQ showed . that fully 20
percent of primary voters
adoptc;d a constitution.
In 1888, the famous "Blizzard of '88" began its sweep acknowledged that "the race'
through the nol'!heastem United States, resulting in some 400 of the candidate" was' "important" in deciding their vote.
deaths.
In 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law And Clinton won this group
the Lend-Lease Bill, providing war supplies to countries by a big margin - 59 percent
fighting the Axis.
·
·
·
to 39 percent. .
In 1957, Charles Van Doren's 14-week run on the rigged
Clearly. this represents
· NBC game show "Twenty-One" ended as he was defeated· white . prejudice against
. by attorney Vivienne Nearing; Van Doren's take was Obama because he is an
$129,000. He later acknowledged that he had been given African-American and not the
answers by the show's producers.
.
In 1957, American explorer Richar&lt;) E. Byrd died in
Boston at age 68.
·
In 1978, 37 Israelis were killed as Palestinian .guerrillas
went on a rampage on the Tel Aviv-Haifa highway.
In 1985, Mikhail S. Gorbachev was chosen to succeed the
late Soviet President Konstantin .U. Chernenko.
In 2004, l0 bombs exploded in quick succession across the
commuter rail network in Madrid, Spain, killing 191 people
in an attack linked to al-Qaida.
Ten years ago: The' International Astronomical Union
issued an alert, saying a mile-wide asteroid could zip very
close to Earth on October 26, 2028, possibly colliding with
it. (The next day, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said
there was no chance the asteroid would hit Earth.) A Florida·
appeals court restored Joe Carollo as mayor of Miami after
charges of voter fraud on absentee ballots.
Five years ago: A U.S. Army helicopter crashed near Fort
Drum in upstate.New·York, killing II soldiers. Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, the leader of Turkey's governing party, was named
prime minister. After a four-day walkout that cost New York
City $10 million, Broadllo!ay musicians settled the rust strike
on the Great White Way in nearly 30 years.
One year ago: President Bush, continuing his tour of Latin
America, met with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe.
Newborn Mychael Darthard-Dawodu was found safe in
Clovis, N.M., a day after she was abducted from a hospital
in Lubbock, Texas. (The abductor, Rayshaun Parson, was
sentenced to 20 years in prison.) Actress-singer Betty Hutton
died in Palm Springs, Calif., at age 86.
Thought for Today: ':Because things are the way they are,
things will not stay the way they are." -· Bertholt Brecht,
With preparations begun
Gennan poet and dramatist (1898-1956).
for the rust military·commis- .
sions trial for detainees at
LETTERS TO THE
Guantanamo - six "highlevel" prisoners who could
EDITOR
get the death penalty - the
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less customary attacks on the fairthan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be ness of the-proceedings.there
signed, and include address and telephone number. · No are mounting here and
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in abroad. Adding tb the discord
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of is the refusal of Brig. Gen.
thanks to organizations and-individuals will not be accept- Thomas Hartmann, legal
ed for publication. .
adviser for the military commissions, to exclude liRY evidence against the defendants
that has been extracted
through waterboarding.
(USPS 213-960)
Panicularly troublesome to
ReCllder Services .
Ohio Valley Publishing
the Bush administration's
· Co.
Correction Polley
continued insistence that
Published every afternoon, Monday '
Our main concem in all stories is to
there are careful standards of
through Friday, 111 Court Streel,
due process at Guantanamo
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomaroy, Ohio.
Second-class
Bay was the resignation last
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
992-21543 . .•
October
of Col. Morris Davis,
Member: The Associated Press and
fanner chief prosecutor for
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Pottmaeter:
Send
·address
correc·
the military commissions at
Our matn number Is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
Guantanamo. In an article for
(740) 992·2156.
. Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
the Los Angeles Times (Dec.
Departmen! extensions are: ·
10), he wrote he had "conSubscription Rate•
cluded that full, fair and open
By carrier or motor rout•
trials were not possible under
News
One month
'1 0.27
the current system.':
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
Precipitating Davis' act of
Reporter: B~an Reed, Ext. 14
Senior
Citizen
rates
conscience
was the superviReponer: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
'10.27
sory app&lt;iintrnent over him of
One year
'103.90
Defense Department General
St.llocribels should iomit in advance
Advertising
Counsel William J. Haynes,
- No sub·
Outolde Saloo: Dave Har~s . Ext. 15 dlrec:l Ill the Doll)/ long 'criticized for having
scription ''by mall permitted In areas
Oulolde Saleo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 wherl! home carrier service is avaiJ..
been instrumental in authorizCI...JCirc.: 'Judy Clart&lt;, Ext. 10
ab~ .
ing what are euphemistically
called
"coercive interrogation
'
Mall Subscription
techniques" on terrorism sus- ·
General Manager
lnalde Malga County
peelS, some of which are purChar1ene Hoefl ich, Ext , 2
13 Weeks
'32.26
portedly
tOrttlfl:.
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Before Haynes became
E-mail:
Davis'
supervisor, Davis,
news 0 mydailysentlnel.com
Outalde Meigs County
'
.
·while still chief prosecutor,
13 Weeks
'53.55
had told Haynes there might
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107 .10
be some acquittals during the
52 Weeks
'21 4.21
www.mydailysentinel .com
Quantanamo Bay trial. But,

TODAY IN HISTORY

Morton
Kondracke

racial solidarity that regularly
wins him 90 percent of the
African-American vote,
It was the Ohio equivalent
of Pennsyl-vania. Gov. Ed
Rendell's observation in early
February that, "You've got
conservative whites here, and
I think there are some whites
who are probably not ready to
vote for an African-American
candidate."
The Clinton campaign didn't overtly stir· up racial animosity in Ohio or Texas. It
didn't have to.
Rather, the Democratic
contest was "racialized" back
in January, when Clinton
compared Obama to Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. .and
herself to President Lyndon
Johnson, and when her husband, Bill, likened Obarna 's
South Carolina primary Victory to the Rev. Jesse Jackson's.
Before that, Obama was
seeking to run as a "postracial" candidate - the political equivalent of . Tiger
Woods.
Ever since the Clintons elevated the racial issue, however, blacks have been lining up
strongly behind Obama and
whites. to varying degrees,
behind Clinton.
To be sure, Obarna has been
able to carry white males in
many states, including working-class white males in

some, enabling him to win I 2 ·
straight contests. \lfter Super
Tuesday and amass a delegate
I~ over Clinton - perhaps
an msunnounta~le one. .
But the brilliant electtons
analyst Jay Cost. blogging for
RealCiearPolitic~.c~m, has
devefoped·a convmcmg the&lt;;&gt;ry . about the Democrat~c
metal factor: Ob~ wms m
states with maJonty-black
Democratic turnout, like
South Carolina, Georgia and
Louisiana and in states' with
few blacks like Wisconsin
Washingtod and Vermont. '
He also has won in states
with mixed populations .
where white family income is
high, such
Maryland and
Vuginia.
I!ut Clinton, Cost contends,
wins in states where blacks
constitute a major minority,
but where average white
income is lower, such as New
Jersey,
Massachusetts,
Tennessee and Ohill.
So, m largely white
Wisconsin, Obama carried
white males by a margin of 63
percent to 34 percent. But in
Ohio, Clinton won, 58 percent to 39 percent.
And Clinton has been winm~g m states ~tth large
H1spam~ populations, ~tke
Cahfomta, New Mextco,
Arizona and Texas. Hispanics
and African-Americans often
regard themselves as rivals
for jobs, advancement antl the
status as America's foremost
minority.
In Texas, Latinos, 34 percent of the electorate, supported Clinton by a margin of 67
percent to 31 percent.
Nineteen percent of voters
said that a candidate's race
was an important factor, and

as

1

Clinton carried this grriup by
52 percent to 47 percent. ·
In Rhode Island, another
heavily working-class state.
race wa~ important to 20 percent of the electorate, and thi s
group went 56 percent for
Clinton.
Of course, many other faetors besides race were
involved in Clinton's victo·
· Wh't1 ~ al 50 I'd
·ty
1 an ..
nes.
e ~m e
w~s. key.
NAFTA-gate,
ratstng · questions about
Obama 's sincerity on trade,
was important in Ohio:
_
Also, medta scrutmy ol
Obama ramped up &lt;Jfter a
"Saturday Night Live" skit
lampooned its previous soft.
treatment. And Clinton's "red
phone" TV ad, questioning
whether Obama has the expe·
rience to handle an intemational crisis, may have
changed minds in Texas:
But race is a factor and is
likely to remain one, aiding
Clinton in Pennsylvania and
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
in No\!ember if Obama is the .
Democratic ~ominee.
McCain is too decent ever
to raise the issue and the
Republican
' National
Commiltee is unlikely to
repeat its counterproductive
.·
effon to race-ball former Rep.
Harold Ford Jr. (D) m
Tennessee last year. .
But 1~ ~ttom-feedmg slugs
are wtllmg to send out
Internet messages lying about
Obama's religion. there's
probably nothing they won't
stoop to.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

NOW YoU'RE:

our .

60NNA. f\NP
· WMY IT'~ CAU.eP

"PENNC3YLVANlA
AVENUE"

~

_ _ - -·....

~

...........

--

-·---·-·--·

11, 2008

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
.
Cecil Dillon Jr.

Air Force to bid farewell to F~117 stealth fighter
BY JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·

an F- I 17 in combat, during
the I 989 invasion of
Panama that led to the capture of dictator Manuel
Noriega.
The Air Force decided to
accelerate the retirement of
the F-117 s to free up funding to modernize the rest of
the fleet . The F-117 is being
replaced b~ · the F-22
Raptor, whtch also has
stealth technology.
Fifty-nine F-117s were
made; I 0 were retired in
December 2006 and 27
since . then, the -Air Force
said. Seven of the planes
have crashed, all but one in
the United States. One F1I 7 crashed in Serbia in
1999.
Stealth technology used
on the F-117 was developed
in the 1970s to help evade
enemy radar.
Other U.S: fighters used
jamming devices or would
fly with escort planes carrying more powerful jammers
to combat the problem.
Other jets would deploy
chaff, a material designed to
deflect radar signals.
But wind could make
chaff unreliable, jammers
weren't very powerful and
using support planes to jam
often required a great deal
of them, said · Dick
Anderegg, director of Air
Force history and museum
programs at Air Force head-

quarters in Washington.
"We weren't trying to do
anything cosmic, except
disappear
on
radar,"
Anderegg said.
· While not invisible to
radar, theF-117's shape and
coating greatly reduced its
detection.
The F-117 was produced
at
Lockheed's
Skunk
Works, the company ' s
secretive advanced-projects
division. The flight of the
first plane occurred June 18,
1981, overthe Tonopah test
range. Existence of the aircraft was kept from the pub-lic until 1988, when the Air
Force released a grainy photograph of the plane in
flight.
"It stayed top secret for a
long, long time," Feest said.
"Nobody spilled the beans.
If someone knows you have ·
a technology, they' re going
to look for a way to defeat

tiona! pull and maneuvers
that churn the stomach , The
plane was designed to fly
into heavily defended areas
undetected and drop its payloads with surgical precision.
"It's not a dogfighting
machine; it' s a bomb-dropping machine. That's what it
was made for, and that's
what it did very well," Feest
said. "It was one mission, so
the pilots who flew that aircraft were good at what they
did."
A total of 558 pilots have
flown the F, 117 since it
went operationaL They dub
themselves "bandits," with
each given a "bandit number" after their first flight.
Feest, who is Bandit 261,
also Jed the first stealth
fighter mission into Iraq
during J?esert Storm in
1991.
He said the fire from sur.face-to-air missiles and
anti ,aircraft guns was so
intense that he stopped
looking at it to try to ease
his fears.
"We krit:W stealth worked "'
and it would take a lucky
shot to hit us, but we knew a
lucky shot could hit us at
any time," he said.
· Incredibly, not one stealth
was hit during those missions, he said. ·

BELPRE - Cecil Vermont Dillon, Jr.• 84,Belpre, forDAYTON - The F-117
merly a of Reedsville, died Monday, March l 0, 2008 at his stealth tighter, which spent
residence.
27 years in the Air Force
His survived by his wife , Flossie Nellie Bowman Dillon. arsenal secretly slipping
surviVes.
,
through hostile skies from
Servi~e will bt; at I P.M., Thursday, March 13, 2008 . at Serbia to Iraq. is headed for
Ree~s vtl~e Church of Christ with Mark Tonkery officiating. storage and t~e history
books.
Bunal wtll be m the Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call S-8 p.m. Wednesday at WhiteThe inky black, angular,
Schwarze! Funeral Home, Coolville. You can sign the radar-evading Nighthawks
at
www.white - are being retired to Tonopah
online
guest book
schwarzelfuneralhome.com .
Test Range Airfield -in
Nevada,
Wri ght-Patterson
Air
Force Base in Dayton,
which manages the F· 117
program, will have an informal, private retirement cere, mony Tuesday with military
leaders, base employees and
POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Department repre sentatives
from
.will offer a childhood immunization and adult flu shot clin- Holloman Air Force Base in
ic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. today.
New Mexico.
The last F-117s scheduled
to fly will leave Holloman
on April 21 , stop in
it."
Palmdale, Calif.• for another
Feest, deputy director for
retirement ceremony, then
force application at the
arrive at Tonopah on April
Pentagon, first flew the F22.
117 in 1988. The shape of
the aircraft shocked him.
Bv VICKI SMITH
The government has rio
tn I 928 with Grasse'lli
"It isn't aerodynamic," he
__A_ss_oc_IA_TE_D_P_R..:.Es:..:s..:.w. :.R. :.tT..:.E. :.R_ -Chemical Co., a forerunner plans to bring the fighter out
said. "It takes a computer to
of a DuPont chemical depart- of retirement, but could do
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. ment.
so if necessary.
fly it. Without computers, it
A group of West
The residents, who had
"I'm happy to hear they
would drop ljke a rock."
Virginians who won nearly sued over pollution-related are putting it in a place
Feest said the F~ ll7 , a
$400 million in damages in a damage to livestock and where they could bring it
·single-seat aircraft, handles
.DuPont pollution case are crops, accepted the settle- back if they ever needed it,"
like other jet fighters except
now asking · the state ments in exchange for their said Brig. Gen. Gregory
it has no afterburner, which
Supreme Court for a little promises not 'to sue in the Feest, the first person to fly
can produce high-gravitamore.
,
future.
Lawyers for plaintitl's who
But in the 1920s, the genlive near a former zinc· era! public did not know the
smelting plant in Spelter cancer risks from the toxins
filed an appeal Monday argu- surrounding them, and Barr
ing Harrison County Circuit . argues "there's a public poliJudge Thomas Bedell erred cy argument that can be
in keeping 300 people out of made" today.
$342 million in pet projects McCain ally in the fight of2-to-l or so.
BY ANDREW TAYLOR
a property cleanup plan .
"You shouldn't be able to
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRI
TER
for New York and Pelosi against pork, is the main
Now, with Obama and
'While those residents are settle with someone in 1928,
obtained
$94
million
for
sponsor
of
a.one-year
ban
on
Clinton
endorsing the idea
entitled to medical monitor- and that release lets you forearmarts, the tenn lawmakers . and Pelosi poised to go along
California. .
WASHINGTON
lng awarded by the jury, cv,er pollu~e their property,
use fo~ the pet projects they with demands by 1-louse
"We
can
no
longer
accept
a
Democrats
Barack
Obama
plaintiffs' attorney Brian from here into eternity, no
slip
into must-pass . legisla- Republicans to call a tempoand
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton
process
that
doles
out
ear_Barr said they face a continu- matter what they do," he
tion.
rary halt to earmarking,
Monday
joined marks based on a member of
ing risk from the arsenic, said. "We think an exception on
A
vote
is
coming
this'
week
Congress'
·seniority,
rather
momentum is clearly on the
Republican
presidential
cancadmium and lead that cont- should be made. DuPont
as
the
Senate
debates
its
annuthan
the
merit
of
the
project,"
side
of 'anti-earmark refonndidate
John
McCain
and
a
aminate their properties. shouldn't get a free ride and
al
budget
plan.
McCain
is
small
band
of
GOP
senators
Obama
said
in
a
statement.
ers.
Cleaning it up would cost continue to be able to coma''This should be a no-brainDuPont about $5 million, he minate these people's proper- in making a run this week "We can no longer accept an expected to give a floor
speech
to
rally
Republicans
against
the
billions
of
dollars
earmarks
process
that
has
er
for Republicans. It shows
said.
.ties ."
·
behind
!lle
idea
and
to
make
in
home-state
pet
projects
become
so
complicated
to
you
how dysfunctional some ·
Bedell ruled in September
In October, jurors convicttime
in
his
.
busy
campaign
navigate
that
a
municipality
of 'these folks are that this is
that the land owners were ed DuPont of wanton, willful Congress funds each year.
schedule
to
cast
a
rare
vote:
or
non-profit
group
has
to
hire
not a complete layup," said
Obama,
locked
in
a
head. bound by valid and enforce- . and reckless conduct in its
''The
jig's
up
on
earmarks,"
high-priced
D.C.
lobbyists
to
former
GOP Rep. Pat
to-head
battle
With
Clinton
for
able settlements they signed operation of the smelter.
DeMint
said . Monday. Toomey of Pennsylvania.
the Democratic nomination, do it."
was the first to declare
McCain, the Republican . "McCain not only supports
"If they let this fail, and
through
a
spokesman presidential nominee-in-wait- the moratorium but he's going then Nancy Pelosi gets out
Monday that he would sup- ing, has fought -and lost- to veto any bill that comes to and gets to the right of the
port a one-year moratorium many battles over earmarks him with earmarks in it. And Republicans on earmarks, ·
on so-called earmarks when it before, bui his new status has so, any Republican at this then they can just forget about
comes up for-a vote later this longtime rivals in his own point should say, 'It's time for being the majority party for
week. Clinton followed shon- · party rethinking their posi- us to take a time out."'
well into the future," Toomey
·
senior said.
Old-school
·
ly afterward through a tions.
REYNOLDSBURG - positio·n, arguments, or con- spokesman.
Republicans
such
as
fanner
The moves by Clinton and
The Ohio Department of tentions in writing, other
The poobahs of pork in Obama have also put Senate Appropriations Committee
!-'t'·N
' C'1.?
Agriculture will host a pub- than at the public hearing, both parties as well as their Majority Leader Harry Reid Chainnan Thad Cochran of
~
·. ·t
lic hearin~ for the purpose may do so by either mailing Senate leaders suddenly and other Democrats in a Mississippi have long teamed
~
' · ' ;~ a
&lt;
'I ~ ...
~
of accepttng testimony on their written · commenis to found themselves on the spot quandary. Reid issued a state- with Democrats to block
!.o.l
(
-··-h ;;
the proposed administrative the Ohio Department of after stalwartly defending ment early Monday reiterat- moves by McCain to cut ear~ / ··' .... .
rule that relates to the label- Agriculture, c/o Legal lawmakers' practice of steer- ing his support for Congress' marks, typically by margins
FERFOimi~G ART~ u:,'ITII~.
Section, 8995 East . Main ing federal dollars to their . right to direct money back
ing of dairy products.
The hearing· will be held Street, Reynoldsburg. Ohio home states.
home for roads and other proRevised Date/Times
Wedne sday, March 12, 43068; or by transmitting by
Democratic Speaker Nancy jects.
beginning at I 0 a.m. at the facsimile at (614) 995-4585. Pelosi had signaled privately
McCain is among only six
Charlotte's Wlilb
department' s · Bromfield. Written comments sent by tu fellow Democrats thai she members of the Senate who
Sat March 15 0 3 &amp; 7 piTi
Administration Building. mail shall be postmarked no supports an ele'ction-year don't ask for pet projects.
Sun March 16 0 3 pm
. Auditorium, 8995 E. Main later than the day of the break from earmarks as she Obama does, though his.
St., Reynoldsburg.
· hearing . Written comments follows the lead of House requests are generally modest
when compared to more
Oklahoma April 11 &amp; 12
· Speakers will be limited to transmitted by facsimile GOP leader John Boehner.
shall
be
received
no
later
senior
senators
like
Illinois
Obama
joined
with
other
a five-minute testimony
@7:30pm
·each.
Any person who than 5 p.m. on the day of the lawmakers last year to obtain colleague Dick Durbin, a fel.
almost $100 million worth of low Democrat.
wishes to present his/her hearing.
Box Olllce: 428 2nd Ave.
South Carolina Republican
earmarks tor Illinois. Clinton
Qalllpolla,
DH (740) 446-ARTS
wo*ed with others io win Jim DeMiht, a first-term
$2,591.56 in parking meter
money, tickets, fines and
.Residents must · provide
passes was collected.
their own tables.
Then meeting then went
from PageA1
Cunningham ·
also
into executive session for
expressed
appreciation
to
from PageA1
ing soon to decide where . personnel r_e·asoris to discuss
Emergency Management'
the new road in the area will the promotion and demotion
Agency Director Bob Byer
tains
12
to
IS
stones
.
The
- stay.
He
also
told of employees in all departtownship will fence in and for gettin~ a grant to pro'•
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun ments.
.
•
vide
the
vtllage
with
several
reset
the
old
stones.
Auto - Home - Life - Health
the dumping of pipe and dirt . Pnor to the meetmg
two
for
the
radios,
including
Council
decided
to
apply
~
from the Lincoln Hill water .msurance agent Dona_ld
project would be cleaned Vau~han spoke I? the vii- the same rules as last year fire department's new boat
Farm· Business
. out. In addition he said there lage s. health msurance when it comes to roadside and a base radio for the vil,
. was a "theory behind the commtttee thou&amp;h notht~g yardsales. The yardsales in lage and water truck.
Bill Davis was hired at $7
· dumping" on Monkey Run was dectde~ or dtscussed m the roadside park may be
an
hour to assistant Mike
held
by
Syracuse
residents
.
which had to do with posst- regular sessiOn.
Ralston,
maintenance
an&lt;!
a
$25
deposit
on
a
only
bly putting in a connecting ' Also pnor to the meetmg,
Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
·
supervisor,
when
needed. .
road from Ebenezor to the Village Administrator. John permit is required and can
220 East Main Street
Clerk Treasurer Sharon
. new road at Monkey Run Anderson wanted restdents be obtained at the village
992·l600
with both possibly one-way. of the Sugar Run and clerk' s office. If the area is Cottrill reported the vilwww.reedbaur.com
· One possibility is the road Naylor's Ru~ area to know cleaned · after the yardsale, lage's general fund had a
going up into Monkey Run ·there are engmeers workmg 'the $25 fee is returned. balance.of $37,200.
would be the new road and for the village surveying
the old road would be the property in the area for the
I would like to thank everyone
way out to alleviate traffic. sewer upgrade project:
The Mayor's Report for
Also in attendance was
who supported and vQted for
· February was approv~d Street Superintendent Jack
Republican C:aadldate
with $13,695 collected m Krautter and Chief of Police
me on· March 4, 2008.
fines and fees. A total of Mark E. Proffitt.

Local Briefs

Immunization clinic

W Va. plaintiffs appeal ruling
-in DuPont pollution case

Obama, Clinton joining with McCain on opposing
earmarks puts Republican, GOP leaders on spot

ODofA to discuss
dairy product labeling

'/i~""'

--~--···

Guantanamo trials fail the Nuremberg test

The Daily Sentinel

_Tuesday, March

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

·Sorry to say, race is back as foetor in Democratic contest

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

Nat

Hentoff

as Davis told The Nation
(March 10, 2008), Haynes
response was:
"Wait a minute, we can't
have acquittals. If we've been
holding these guys for so
long, how can we explain letting them get off? We've. got
to'have convictions."
Indeed, a military lawyer,
Navy Lt. Cmdr. 'Charlie
Swift, told me that when he
was assigned to a detainee at
Guantanamo Bay, he was
ordered to represent him by
obtaining a confession from
him. This presumption of
guilt at Gtiantanamo (not only
in that case) hardly squares
with how we describe our rule
of law to the world.
Was Defense . Secretary
Robert M. Gates, a marked
improvemeQt over Donald
Rurnsfeld, comfortable over
the . resignation of former
chief prosecutor Davis?
There's been no comment. As
Attorney General Michael
Mukasey is finding out. it's.
hard .to maintain one's own
reputation for fairness while
serving in'this· administration.
Davis recalls that Haynes
told him that the forthcoming
military commissions trial
"will be the Nuremberg of our
time" - reli:rring to the 1945
tribunals where the dread

..

defendants included such cutor Thomas Dodd said of
prominent Nazis as Hermann that trial: "This was a demonGoering, Albert Speer, stration of judicial process
Joachim von Ribbentrop and honestly at work. I saw it take
Rudolf Hess.
place - this moral victoryIn Sen. Christopher Dodd's from day to day, slowly but
superb book, "Letters from surely in the dock and at the
Nuremberg: My Father's defense tables."
Narrative of a Quest for
But the B11sh· administraJustice:· (Crown, 2007), he
quotes his father, Thomas tion (reported in the Feb. 16,
Dodd, who became the No. 2 2008, Economist) has actualprosecutor in the American ly · authorized the State
Department, "in a memo to
team at Nuremberg:
"Those of us who were American embassies.'' to sugprivileged to serve at the gest that the military commisNuremberg Trial are proud of sions "be oompaned to the
the entire proceeding. ...· Nuremberg trials, · partly
E &gt;ery right of the defendants because no one fussed when
was scrupulously observed. the Nazis got the death penalThey were given every possi- ty and partly because, say the
ble opportunity to make every generals, legal protections (at
explanation and every possi- Guantanamo) will be greater
ble defense.
.
than at Nuremberg." Doe.s
"Witnesses were obtained
for thein merely at their Condoleezza Rice really
.
request. Docume.nts were believe that?
In
a
lead
editorial
(Feb. 12),
made available, library .faeilities we!,!! at their disposal, and Financial Times nailed
throughout every hour of the Guantanamo as "a surrender
trial they were afforded every · uf the rule of law in the face
opportunity to answer every of jihad 'totalitarianism. The
charge."
shameful collusion of the
As others and I have report- U.S. Congress in helping the
ed, the procedures at administration revamp the
Guantanamo - by glaring military tribunals after the
contrast - are the very oppo- Supreme Coun revoked them
site of those at Nuremberg . · (Hamdan v. Rumsfield, 2006)
The Nazis had vigorous cannot disguise that." And
lawyers waging their defense;
this is bbing done 'in our
they were able to talk to
name.
lawyers in private without a
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally
video camera watching; and
all their correspondence and renowned authoriry on the
notes were not handed over to First Amendment and the Bill
of Rights and autho.r of numy .
the military.
And that's only part of the books, including "The War on
utter mockery of due process the Bill of Rights and the
at Guantanamo. But at . Gathering
Resistance"
Nuremberg, American prose- (Seven Stories Press, 2004 ).)

Signs

' ' ''' H0000'0'0'''H'o o•o

Pool

...

.

:...

:

Peggy Yost
lor

Mayor
Chief Smith
**************
the Committee &amp; Levy supporters
Cu~nirigharr!,

1

wish to thank Syracuse
Village Residents for their
·
support·&amp; passage of the Police Levy.

Special Thanks to:
Mike Bartrum
Eric Cunningham
Bob Hartenbach
Shannon Smith
Jim Soulsby
Curtis ,ones
Manning Roush . Ben Davidson
Charlotte &amp; Richard (Dick) Wamsley-Chairman
Carrie Wamsley

MelpCounty
Treasurer
GreCJtly appreciates your
support during the recent
primary election.

Paid rur by the rommluee ror the passage ofthf Syrarust Polltf Levy

.**************

Paid for by candidate

•

�•

,

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel ·

A major Ohio political
leader
recently told me:
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
"Obama
will never carry
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Ohio. Some people call it the
www.mydailysentlnel.com
Bradley effect, but how do
you think the guys who work
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
at the GM plant in
Youngstown are going to
Dan Goodrich
vote? For a black? I don't
Publisher
think so."
I didn't believe it, but sure
Charlene Hoeflich
enough, race - nearly a torGeneral Manager-News Editor .
gotten
factor in
the
Democratic presidential contest during Sen. Barack
Obama's long run of primary
Congress shall make no law respecting an
victories - evidently came
back to . help Sen. Hillary
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Rodham Clinton win Ohio,
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom Texas
and Rhode Island on
of speech, or of the press; or the· right of the
Tuesday.
And; unfortunately, it could
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
be a factor again in
the Government for a redress of grievances.
Pennsylvania and if
Obama survives Clinton's
- The First Amendment to the U:S. Constitution renewed onslaught to win the
Democratic nomination -.in
the general election.
The "Bradley effect" - the
tendency of voters to tell pollToday is Tue.sday, March II, the 71st day of 2008. There sters they'll vote for an
are 295 days left in the year.
African-American candidate,
Today's Highlight in History:
then vote against him in the
On March II,. 1942, as Japanese forces continued lO booth - certainly was eviadvance in the Pacific during World War II, Gen. Douglas dent in Ohio and Texas.
MacArthur left the Philippines for Australia. (MacArthur, Clinton outperformed prewho subsequently vowed, "I shall return," kept that promise election polls by 3 points in
more than 2 I /2 years later.)
.
Ohio, 1.5 in Texas and '8.3 in
On this date:
,
In 1.81 0, Emperor Napoleon I of France was married by Rhode Island.
Moreover, exit polls in
proxy to Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria. ·
In 1861, the Confederate convention in Montgomery, Ala., OhiQ showed . that fully 20
percent of primary voters
adoptc;d a constitution.
In 1888, the famous "Blizzard of '88" began its sweep acknowledged that "the race'
through the nol'!heastem United States, resulting in some 400 of the candidate" was' "important" in deciding their vote.
deaths.
In 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law And Clinton won this group
the Lend-Lease Bill, providing war supplies to countries by a big margin - 59 percent
fighting the Axis.
·
·
·
to 39 percent. .
In 1957, Charles Van Doren's 14-week run on the rigged
Clearly. this represents
· NBC game show "Twenty-One" ended as he was defeated· white . prejudice against
. by attorney Vivienne Nearing; Van Doren's take was Obama because he is an
$129,000. He later acknowledged that he had been given African-American and not the
answers by the show's producers.
.
In 1957, American explorer Richar&lt;) E. Byrd died in
Boston at age 68.
·
In 1978, 37 Israelis were killed as Palestinian .guerrillas
went on a rampage on the Tel Aviv-Haifa highway.
In 1985, Mikhail S. Gorbachev was chosen to succeed the
late Soviet President Konstantin .U. Chernenko.
In 2004, l0 bombs exploded in quick succession across the
commuter rail network in Madrid, Spain, killing 191 people
in an attack linked to al-Qaida.
Ten years ago: The' International Astronomical Union
issued an alert, saying a mile-wide asteroid could zip very
close to Earth on October 26, 2028, possibly colliding with
it. (The next day, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said
there was no chance the asteroid would hit Earth.) A Florida·
appeals court restored Joe Carollo as mayor of Miami after
charges of voter fraud on absentee ballots.
Five years ago: A U.S. Army helicopter crashed near Fort
Drum in upstate.New·York, killing II soldiers. Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, the leader of Turkey's governing party, was named
prime minister. After a four-day walkout that cost New York
City $10 million, Broadllo!ay musicians settled the rust strike
on the Great White Way in nearly 30 years.
One year ago: President Bush, continuing his tour of Latin
America, met with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe.
Newborn Mychael Darthard-Dawodu was found safe in
Clovis, N.M., a day after she was abducted from a hospital
in Lubbock, Texas. (The abductor, Rayshaun Parson, was
sentenced to 20 years in prison.) Actress-singer Betty Hutton
died in Palm Springs, Calif., at age 86.
Thought for Today: ':Because things are the way they are,
things will not stay the way they are." -· Bertholt Brecht,
With preparations begun
Gennan poet and dramatist (1898-1956).
for the rust military·commis- .
sions trial for detainees at
LETTERS TO THE
Guantanamo - six "highlevel" prisoners who could
EDITOR
get the death penalty - the
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less customary attacks on the fairthan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be ness of the-proceedings.there
signed, and include address and telephone number. · No are mounting here and
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in abroad. Adding tb the discord
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of is the refusal of Brig. Gen.
thanks to organizations and-individuals will not be accept- Thomas Hartmann, legal
ed for publication. .
adviser for the military commissions, to exclude liRY evidence against the defendants
that has been extracted
through waterboarding.
(USPS 213-960)
Panicularly troublesome to
ReCllder Services .
Ohio Valley Publishing
the Bush administration's
· Co.
Correction Polley
continued insistence that
Published every afternoon, Monday '
Our main concem in all stories is to
there are careful standards of
through Friday, 111 Court Streel,
due process at Guantanamo
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomaroy, Ohio.
Second-class
Bay was the resignation last
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
992-21543 . .•
October
of Col. Morris Davis,
Member: The Associated Press and
fanner chief prosecutor for
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Pottmaeter:
Send
·address
correc·
the military commissions at
Our matn number Is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
Guantanamo. In an article for
(740) 992·2156.
. Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
the Los Angeles Times (Dec.
Departmen! extensions are: ·
10), he wrote he had "conSubscription Rate•
cluded that full, fair and open
By carrier or motor rout•
trials were not possible under
News
One month
'1 0.27
the current system.':
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
Dally
50'
Precipitating Davis' act of
Reporter: B~an Reed, Ext. 14
Senior
Citizen
rates
conscience
was the superviReponer: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
'10.27
sory app&lt;iintrnent over him of
One year
'103.90
Defense Department General
St.llocribels should iomit in advance
Advertising
Counsel William J. Haynes,
- No sub·
Outolde Saloo: Dave Har~s . Ext. 15 dlrec:l Ill the Doll)/ long 'criticized for having
scription ''by mall permitted In areas
Oulolde Saleo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 wherl! home carrier service is avaiJ..
been instrumental in authorizCI...JCirc.: 'Judy Clart&lt;, Ext. 10
ab~ .
ing what are euphemistically
called
"coercive interrogation
'
Mall Subscription
techniques" on terrorism sus- ·
General Manager
lnalde Malga County
peelS, some of which are purChar1ene Hoefl ich, Ext , 2
13 Weeks
'32.26
portedly
tOrttlfl:.
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Before Haynes became
E-mail:
Davis'
supervisor, Davis,
news 0 mydailysentlnel.com
Outalde Meigs County
'
.
·while still chief prosecutor,
13 Weeks
'53.55
had told Haynes there might
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107 .10
be some acquittals during the
52 Weeks
'21 4.21
www.mydailysentinel .com
Quantanamo Bay trial. But,

TODAY IN HISTORY

Morton
Kondracke

racial solidarity that regularly
wins him 90 percent of the
African-American vote,
It was the Ohio equivalent
of Pennsyl-vania. Gov. Ed
Rendell's observation in early
February that, "You've got
conservative whites here, and
I think there are some whites
who are probably not ready to
vote for an African-American
candidate."
The Clinton campaign didn't overtly stir· up racial animosity in Ohio or Texas. It
didn't have to.
Rather, the Democratic
contest was "racialized" back
in January, when Clinton
compared Obama to Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. .and
herself to President Lyndon
Johnson, and when her husband, Bill, likened Obarna 's
South Carolina primary Victory to the Rev. Jesse Jackson's.
Before that, Obama was
seeking to run as a "postracial" candidate - the political equivalent of . Tiger
Woods.
Ever since the Clintons elevated the racial issue, however, blacks have been lining up
strongly behind Obama and
whites. to varying degrees,
behind Clinton.
To be sure, Obarna has been
able to carry white males in
many states, including working-class white males in

some, enabling him to win I 2 ·
straight contests. \lfter Super
Tuesday and amass a delegate
I~ over Clinton - perhaps
an msunnounta~le one. .
But the brilliant electtons
analyst Jay Cost. blogging for
RealCiearPolitic~.c~m, has
devefoped·a convmcmg the&lt;;&gt;ry . about the Democrat~c
metal factor: Ob~ wms m
states with maJonty-black
Democratic turnout, like
South Carolina, Georgia and
Louisiana and in states' with
few blacks like Wisconsin
Washingtod and Vermont. '
He also has won in states
with mixed populations .
where white family income is
high, such
Maryland and
Vuginia.
I!ut Clinton, Cost contends,
wins in states where blacks
constitute a major minority,
but where average white
income is lower, such as New
Jersey,
Massachusetts,
Tennessee and Ohill.
So, m largely white
Wisconsin, Obama carried
white males by a margin of 63
percent to 34 percent. But in
Ohio, Clinton won, 58 percent to 39 percent.
And Clinton has been winm~g m states ~tth large
H1spam~ populations, ~tke
Cahfomta, New Mextco,
Arizona and Texas. Hispanics
and African-Americans often
regard themselves as rivals
for jobs, advancement antl the
status as America's foremost
minority.
In Texas, Latinos, 34 percent of the electorate, supported Clinton by a margin of 67
percent to 31 percent.
Nineteen percent of voters
said that a candidate's race
was an important factor, and

as

1

Clinton carried this grriup by
52 percent to 47 percent. ·
In Rhode Island, another
heavily working-class state.
race wa~ important to 20 percent of the electorate, and thi s
group went 56 percent for
Clinton.
Of course, many other faetors besides race were
involved in Clinton's victo·
· Wh't1 ~ al 50 I'd
·ty
1 an ..
nes.
e ~m e
w~s. key.
NAFTA-gate,
ratstng · questions about
Obama 's sincerity on trade,
was important in Ohio:
_
Also, medta scrutmy ol
Obama ramped up &lt;Jfter a
"Saturday Night Live" skit
lampooned its previous soft.
treatment. And Clinton's "red
phone" TV ad, questioning
whether Obama has the expe·
rience to handle an intemational crisis, may have
changed minds in Texas:
But race is a factor and is
likely to remain one, aiding
Clinton in Pennsylvania and
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
in No\!ember if Obama is the .
Democratic ~ominee.
McCain is too decent ever
to raise the issue and the
Republican
' National
Commiltee is unlikely to
repeat its counterproductive
.·
effon to race-ball former Rep.
Harold Ford Jr. (D) m
Tennessee last year. .
But 1~ ~ttom-feedmg slugs
are wtllmg to send out
Internet messages lying about
Obama's religion. there's
probably nothing they won't
stoop to.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

NOW YoU'RE:

our .

60NNA. f\NP
· WMY IT'~ CAU.eP

"PENNC3YLVANlA
AVENUE"

~

_ _ - -·....

~

...........

--

-·---·-·--·

11, 2008

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
.
Cecil Dillon Jr.

Air Force to bid farewell to F~117 stealth fighter
BY JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·

an F- I 17 in combat, during
the I 989 invasion of
Panama that led to the capture of dictator Manuel
Noriega.
The Air Force decided to
accelerate the retirement of
the F-117 s to free up funding to modernize the rest of
the fleet . The F-117 is being
replaced b~ · the F-22
Raptor, whtch also has
stealth technology.
Fifty-nine F-117s were
made; I 0 were retired in
December 2006 and 27
since . then, the -Air Force
said. Seven of the planes
have crashed, all but one in
the United States. One F1I 7 crashed in Serbia in
1999.
Stealth technology used
on the F-117 was developed
in the 1970s to help evade
enemy radar.
Other U.S: fighters used
jamming devices or would
fly with escort planes carrying more powerful jammers
to combat the problem.
Other jets would deploy
chaff, a material designed to
deflect radar signals.
But wind could make
chaff unreliable, jammers
weren't very powerful and
using support planes to jam
often required a great deal
of them, said · Dick
Anderegg, director of Air
Force history and museum
programs at Air Force head-

quarters in Washington.
"We weren't trying to do
anything cosmic, except
disappear
on
radar,"
Anderegg said.
· While not invisible to
radar, theF-117's shape and
coating greatly reduced its
detection.
The F-117 was produced
at
Lockheed's
Skunk
Works, the company ' s
secretive advanced-projects
division. The flight of the
first plane occurred June 18,
1981, overthe Tonopah test
range. Existence of the aircraft was kept from the pub-lic until 1988, when the Air
Force released a grainy photograph of the plane in
flight.
"It stayed top secret for a
long, long time," Feest said.
"Nobody spilled the beans.
If someone knows you have ·
a technology, they' re going
to look for a way to defeat

tiona! pull and maneuvers
that churn the stomach , The
plane was designed to fly
into heavily defended areas
undetected and drop its payloads with surgical precision.
"It's not a dogfighting
machine; it' s a bomb-dropping machine. That's what it
was made for, and that's
what it did very well," Feest
said. "It was one mission, so
the pilots who flew that aircraft were good at what they
did."
A total of 558 pilots have
flown the F, 117 since it
went operationaL They dub
themselves "bandits," with
each given a "bandit number" after their first flight.
Feest, who is Bandit 261,
also Jed the first stealth
fighter mission into Iraq
during J?esert Storm in
1991.
He said the fire from sur.face-to-air missiles and
anti ,aircraft guns was so
intense that he stopped
looking at it to try to ease
his fears.
"We krit:W stealth worked "'
and it would take a lucky
shot to hit us, but we knew a
lucky shot could hit us at
any time," he said.
· Incredibly, not one stealth
was hit during those missions, he said. ·

BELPRE - Cecil Vermont Dillon, Jr.• 84,Belpre, forDAYTON - The F-117
merly a of Reedsville, died Monday, March l 0, 2008 at his stealth tighter, which spent
residence.
27 years in the Air Force
His survived by his wife , Flossie Nellie Bowman Dillon. arsenal secretly slipping
surviVes.
,
through hostile skies from
Servi~e will bt; at I P.M., Thursday, March 13, 2008 . at Serbia to Iraq. is headed for
Ree~s vtl~e Church of Christ with Mark Tonkery officiating. storage and t~e history
books.
Bunal wtll be m the Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call S-8 p.m. Wednesday at WhiteThe inky black, angular,
Schwarze! Funeral Home, Coolville. You can sign the radar-evading Nighthawks
at
www.white - are being retired to Tonopah
online
guest book
schwarzelfuneralhome.com .
Test Range Airfield -in
Nevada,
Wri ght-Patterson
Air
Force Base in Dayton,
which manages the F· 117
program, will have an informal, private retirement cere, mony Tuesday with military
leaders, base employees and
POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Department repre sentatives
from
.will offer a childhood immunization and adult flu shot clin- Holloman Air Force Base in
ic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. today.
New Mexico.
The last F-117s scheduled
to fly will leave Holloman
on April 21 , stop in
it."
Palmdale, Calif.• for another
Feest, deputy director for
retirement ceremony, then
force application at the
arrive at Tonopah on April
Pentagon, first flew the F22.
117 in 1988. The shape of
the aircraft shocked him.
Bv VICKI SMITH
The government has rio
tn I 928 with Grasse'lli
"It isn't aerodynamic," he
__A_ss_oc_IA_TE_D_P_R..:.Es:..:s..:.w. :.R. :.tT..:.E. :.R_ -Chemical Co., a forerunner plans to bring the fighter out
said. "It takes a computer to
of a DuPont chemical depart- of retirement, but could do
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. ment.
so if necessary.
fly it. Without computers, it
A group of West
The residents, who had
"I'm happy to hear they
would drop ljke a rock."
Virginians who won nearly sued over pollution-related are putting it in a place
Feest said the F~ ll7 , a
$400 million in damages in a damage to livestock and where they could bring it
·single-seat aircraft, handles
.DuPont pollution case are crops, accepted the settle- back if they ever needed it,"
like other jet fighters except
now asking · the state ments in exchange for their said Brig. Gen. Gregory
it has no afterburner, which
Supreme Court for a little promises not 'to sue in the Feest, the first person to fly
can produce high-gravitamore.
,
future.
Lawyers for plaintitl's who
But in the 1920s, the genlive near a former zinc· era! public did not know the
smelting plant in Spelter cancer risks from the toxins
filed an appeal Monday argu- surrounding them, and Barr
ing Harrison County Circuit . argues "there's a public poliJudge Thomas Bedell erred cy argument that can be
in keeping 300 people out of made" today.
$342 million in pet projects McCain ally in the fight of2-to-l or so.
BY ANDREW TAYLOR
a property cleanup plan .
"You shouldn't be able to
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRI
TER
for New York and Pelosi against pork, is the main
Now, with Obama and
'While those residents are settle with someone in 1928,
obtained
$94
million
for
sponsor
of
a.one-year
ban
on
Clinton
endorsing the idea
entitled to medical monitor- and that release lets you forearmarts, the tenn lawmakers . and Pelosi poised to go along
California. .
WASHINGTON
lng awarded by the jury, cv,er pollu~e their property,
use fo~ the pet projects they with demands by 1-louse
"We
can
no
longer
accept
a
Democrats
Barack
Obama
plaintiffs' attorney Brian from here into eternity, no
slip
into must-pass . legisla- Republicans to call a tempoand
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton
process
that
doles
out
ear_Barr said they face a continu- matter what they do," he
tion.
rary halt to earmarking,
Monday
joined marks based on a member of
ing risk from the arsenic, said. "We think an exception on
A
vote
is
coming
this'
week
Congress'
·seniority,
rather
momentum is clearly on the
Republican
presidential
cancadmium and lead that cont- should be made. DuPont
as
the
Senate
debates
its
annuthan
the
merit
of
the
project,"
side
of 'anti-earmark refonndidate
John
McCain
and
a
aminate their properties. shouldn't get a free ride and
al
budget
plan.
McCain
is
small
band
of
GOP
senators
Obama
said
in
a
statement.
ers.
Cleaning it up would cost continue to be able to coma''This should be a no-brainDuPont about $5 million, he minate these people's proper- in making a run this week "We can no longer accept an expected to give a floor
speech
to
rally
Republicans
against
the
billions
of
dollars
earmarks
process
that
has
er
for Republicans. It shows
said.
.ties ."
·
behind
!lle
idea
and
to
make
in
home-state
pet
projects
become
so
complicated
to
you
how dysfunctional some ·
Bedell ruled in September
In October, jurors convicttime
in
his
.
busy
campaign
navigate
that
a
municipality
of 'these folks are that this is
that the land owners were ed DuPont of wanton, willful Congress funds each year.
schedule
to
cast
a
rare
vote:
or
non-profit
group
has
to
hire
not a complete layup," said
Obama,
locked
in
a
head. bound by valid and enforce- . and reckless conduct in its
''The
jig's
up
on
earmarks,"
high-priced
D.C.
lobbyists
to
former
GOP Rep. Pat
to-head
battle
With
Clinton
for
able settlements they signed operation of the smelter.
DeMint
said . Monday. Toomey of Pennsylvania.
the Democratic nomination, do it."
was the first to declare
McCain, the Republican . "McCain not only supports
"If they let this fail, and
through
a
spokesman presidential nominee-in-wait- the moratorium but he's going then Nancy Pelosi gets out
Monday that he would sup- ing, has fought -and lost- to veto any bill that comes to and gets to the right of the
port a one-year moratorium many battles over earmarks him with earmarks in it. And Republicans on earmarks, ·
on so-called earmarks when it before, bui his new status has so, any Republican at this then they can just forget about
comes up for-a vote later this longtime rivals in his own point should say, 'It's time for being the majority party for
week. Clinton followed shon- · party rethinking their posi- us to take a time out."'
well into the future," Toomey
·
senior said.
Old-school
·
ly afterward through a tions.
REYNOLDSBURG - positio·n, arguments, or con- spokesman.
Republicans
such
as
fanner
The moves by Clinton and
The Ohio Department of tentions in writing, other
The poobahs of pork in Obama have also put Senate Appropriations Committee
!-'t'·N
' C'1.?
Agriculture will host a pub- than at the public hearing, both parties as well as their Majority Leader Harry Reid Chainnan Thad Cochran of
~
·. ·t
lic hearin~ for the purpose may do so by either mailing Senate leaders suddenly and other Democrats in a Mississippi have long teamed
~
' · ' ;~ a
&lt;
'I ~ ...
~
of accepttng testimony on their written · commenis to found themselves on the spot quandary. Reid issued a state- with Democrats to block
!.o.l
(
-··-h ;;
the proposed administrative the Ohio Department of after stalwartly defending ment early Monday reiterat- moves by McCain to cut ear~ / ··' .... .
rule that relates to the label- Agriculture, c/o Legal lawmakers' practice of steer- ing his support for Congress' marks, typically by margins
FERFOimi~G ART~ u:,'ITII~.
Section, 8995 East . Main ing federal dollars to their . right to direct money back
ing of dairy products.
The hearing· will be held Street, Reynoldsburg. Ohio home states.
home for roads and other proRevised Date/Times
Wedne sday, March 12, 43068; or by transmitting by
Democratic Speaker Nancy jects.
beginning at I 0 a.m. at the facsimile at (614) 995-4585. Pelosi had signaled privately
McCain is among only six
Charlotte's Wlilb
department' s · Bromfield. Written comments sent by tu fellow Democrats thai she members of the Senate who
Sat March 15 0 3 &amp; 7 piTi
Administration Building. mail shall be postmarked no supports an ele'ction-year don't ask for pet projects.
Sun March 16 0 3 pm
. Auditorium, 8995 E. Main later than the day of the break from earmarks as she Obama does, though his.
St., Reynoldsburg.
· hearing . Written comments follows the lead of House requests are generally modest
when compared to more
Oklahoma April 11 &amp; 12
· Speakers will be limited to transmitted by facsimile GOP leader John Boehner.
shall
be
received
no
later
senior
senators
like
Illinois
Obama
joined
with
other
a five-minute testimony
@7:30pm
·each.
Any person who than 5 p.m. on the day of the lawmakers last year to obtain colleague Dick Durbin, a fel.
almost $100 million worth of low Democrat.
wishes to present his/her hearing.
Box Olllce: 428 2nd Ave.
South Carolina Republican
earmarks tor Illinois. Clinton
Qalllpolla,
DH (740) 446-ARTS
wo*ed with others io win Jim DeMiht, a first-term
$2,591.56 in parking meter
money, tickets, fines and
.Residents must · provide
passes was collected.
their own tables.
Then meeting then went
from PageA1
Cunningham ·
also
into executive session for
expressed
appreciation
to
from PageA1
ing soon to decide where . personnel r_e·asoris to discuss
Emergency Management'
the new road in the area will the promotion and demotion
Agency Director Bob Byer
tains
12
to
IS
stones
.
The
- stay.
He
also
told of employees in all departtownship will fence in and for gettin~ a grant to pro'•
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun ments.
.
•
vide
the
vtllage
with
several
reset
the
old
stones.
Auto - Home - Life - Health
the dumping of pipe and dirt . Pnor to the meetmg
two
for
the
radios,
including
Council
decided
to
apply
~
from the Lincoln Hill water .msurance agent Dona_ld
project would be cleaned Vau~han spoke I? the vii- the same rules as last year fire department's new boat
Farm· Business
. out. In addition he said there lage s. health msurance when it comes to roadside and a base radio for the vil,
. was a "theory behind the commtttee thou&amp;h notht~g yardsales. The yardsales in lage and water truck.
Bill Davis was hired at $7
· dumping" on Monkey Run was dectde~ or dtscussed m the roadside park may be
an
hour to assistant Mike
held
by
Syracuse
residents
.
which had to do with posst- regular sessiOn.
Ralston,
maintenance
an&lt;!
a
$25
deposit
on
a
only
bly putting in a connecting ' Also pnor to the meetmg,
Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
·
supervisor,
when
needed. .
road from Ebenezor to the Village Administrator. John permit is required and can
220 East Main Street
Clerk Treasurer Sharon
. new road at Monkey Run Anderson wanted restdents be obtained at the village
992·l600
with both possibly one-way. of the Sugar Run and clerk' s office. If the area is Cottrill reported the vilwww.reedbaur.com
· One possibility is the road Naylor's Ru~ area to know cleaned · after the yardsale, lage's general fund had a
going up into Monkey Run ·there are engmeers workmg 'the $25 fee is returned. balance.of $37,200.
would be the new road and for the village surveying
the old road would be the property in the area for the
I would like to thank everyone
way out to alleviate traffic. sewer upgrade project:
The Mayor's Report for
Also in attendance was
who supported and vQted for
· February was approv~d Street Superintendent Jack
Republican C:aadldate
with $13,695 collected m Krautter and Chief of Police
me on· March 4, 2008.
fines and fees. A total of Mark E. Proffitt.

Local Briefs

Immunization clinic

W Va. plaintiffs appeal ruling
-in DuPont pollution case

Obama, Clinton joining with McCain on opposing
earmarks puts Republican, GOP leaders on spot

ODofA to discuss
dairy product labeling

'/i~""'

--~--···

Guantanamo trials fail the Nuremberg test

The Daily Sentinel

_Tuesday, March

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

·Sorry to say, race is back as foetor in Democratic contest

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

Nat

Hentoff

as Davis told The Nation
(March 10, 2008), Haynes
response was:
"Wait a minute, we can't
have acquittals. If we've been
holding these guys for so
long, how can we explain letting them get off? We've. got
to'have convictions."
Indeed, a military lawyer,
Navy Lt. Cmdr. 'Charlie
Swift, told me that when he
was assigned to a detainee at
Guantanamo Bay, he was
ordered to represent him by
obtaining a confession from
him. This presumption of
guilt at Gtiantanamo (not only
in that case) hardly squares
with how we describe our rule
of law to the world.
Was Defense . Secretary
Robert M. Gates, a marked
improvemeQt over Donald
Rurnsfeld, comfortable over
the . resignation of former
chief prosecutor Davis?
There's been no comment. As
Attorney General Michael
Mukasey is finding out. it's.
hard .to maintain one's own
reputation for fairness while
serving in'this· administration.
Davis recalls that Haynes
told him that the forthcoming
military commissions trial
"will be the Nuremberg of our
time" - reli:rring to the 1945
tribunals where the dread

..

defendants included such cutor Thomas Dodd said of
prominent Nazis as Hermann that trial: "This was a demonGoering, Albert Speer, stration of judicial process
Joachim von Ribbentrop and honestly at work. I saw it take
Rudolf Hess.
place - this moral victoryIn Sen. Christopher Dodd's from day to day, slowly but
superb book, "Letters from surely in the dock and at the
Nuremberg: My Father's defense tables."
Narrative of a Quest for
But the B11sh· administraJustice:· (Crown, 2007), he
quotes his father, Thomas tion (reported in the Feb. 16,
Dodd, who became the No. 2 2008, Economist) has actualprosecutor in the American ly · authorized the State
Department, "in a memo to
team at Nuremberg:
"Those of us who were American embassies.'' to sugprivileged to serve at the gest that the military commisNuremberg Trial are proud of sions "be oompaned to the
the entire proceeding. ...· Nuremberg trials, · partly
E &gt;ery right of the defendants because no one fussed when
was scrupulously observed. the Nazis got the death penalThey were given every possi- ty and partly because, say the
ble opportunity to make every generals, legal protections (at
explanation and every possi- Guantanamo) will be greater
ble defense.
.
than at Nuremberg." Doe.s
"Witnesses were obtained
for thein merely at their Condoleezza Rice really
.
request. Docume.nts were believe that?
In
a
lead
editorial
(Feb. 12),
made available, library .faeilities we!,!! at their disposal, and Financial Times nailed
throughout every hour of the Guantanamo as "a surrender
trial they were afforded every · uf the rule of law in the face
opportunity to answer every of jihad 'totalitarianism. The
charge."
shameful collusion of the
As others and I have report- U.S. Congress in helping the
ed, the procedures at administration revamp the
Guantanamo - by glaring military tribunals after the
contrast - are the very oppo- Supreme Coun revoked them
site of those at Nuremberg . · (Hamdan v. Rumsfield, 2006)
The Nazis had vigorous cannot disguise that." And
lawyers waging their defense;
this is bbing done 'in our
they were able to talk to
name.
lawyers in private without a
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally
video camera watching; and
all their correspondence and renowned authoriry on the
notes were not handed over to First Amendment and the Bill
of Rights and autho.r of numy .
the military.
And that's only part of the books, including "The War on
utter mockery of due process the Bill of Rights and the
at Guantanamo. But at . Gathering
Resistance"
Nuremberg, American prose- (Seven Stories Press, 2004 ).)

Signs

' ' ''' H0000'0'0'''H'o o•o

Pool

...

.

:...

:

Peggy Yost
lor

Mayor
Chief Smith
**************
the Committee &amp; Levy supporters
Cu~nirigharr!,

1

wish to thank Syracuse
Village Residents for their
·
support·&amp; passage of the Police Levy.

Special Thanks to:
Mike Bartrum
Eric Cunningham
Bob Hartenbach
Shannon Smith
Jim Soulsby
Curtis ,ones
Manning Roush . Ben Davidson
Charlotte &amp; Richard (Dick) Wamsley-Chairman
Carrie Wamsley

MelpCounty
Treasurer
GreCJtly appreciates your
support during the recent
primary election.

Paid rur by the rommluee ror the passage ofthf Syrarust Polltf Levy

.**************

Paid for by candidate

•

�.PageA6

NATION • WORLD
NY governor Spitzer linked to high-end prostitution ring

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March u, 2008

Inside
Federer beats Sampras In exhibition,
PageB2

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'

BY AMY WESTFEI.DT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Gov. Eliot
Spitzer's political career
teetered .on the brink of collapse Monday after the com~p­
tion-fighting politician once
known as " Mr. Clean" was
accused of paying for a romp
with a high-pnced call girl.
The scandal drew immediate call~ for the Democrat to
step .vn. At a news conference' before about I00
reponers, a glassy-eyed
Spitzer, his shellshocked wife
at his side, apologized to his .
family &lt;md the people of New
York.
.,
"I have disappointed and
failed to live up to rhe standard
I expected of myself," said the
48-year-old father of three
teenage girls. "l must now
dedicate some time to regain ·
. the trust of my family."
He did not discuss his political future and ignored shouted
questions about whether he
would resign. And he gave no
details of what he was apologizing for.
Spitzer was caught on a federal wiretap arranging to meet
in a Washington hotel room
the night before Valentine's
.
AP ph"o
Day with a prostitute frOm a New York State Gov. Eliot Spitzer is joined by his wife Silda
call-girl business known as the as he makes a statement to reporters during a news conEmperors Club VIP, according ference following a report that he wa!i involved in a prostito a law enforcement official tution ring Monday in New York.
who spoke to The Associated
Press on condition of
anonymity because the inves- 5-feet-5 inches, and 105 the latest scandal raised quespounds," named Kristen.
tions about whether ·he would
tigation is still going on.
The scandal came 16 make it through a second year.
The governor ha1 not been
months
after Spitzer stonned
"He has to step down. No
charged, and prosecutors
would not comment on the into the governor's office with one will stand with him," said
a historic margin of victory, Rep. Peter King, a Republican
case.
But an affidavit based on the vowing to root out corruption congressman from · Long
wiretap told of a man identi- in New York government in Island. "I never tiy to take
fied as "Client 9" - Spitzer, the same way that he took on advantage or gloat over a peraccording to the law enforce- Wall Street executives with a sonal tragedy. However, this is
ment official- paying $4,300 vengeance while state attorney different. This is a guy who is
·
so self-righteous, and so unforin cash, some of II credit for general.
future tiysts, some of it for sex
But his fJrst year in ·office giving."
with a "petite~ pretty brunette, was marred by nmnoil, and
Democratic Assemblyman

Local Weather
Saturday and Saturday
night...Rain likely. Highs
in the upper 50s. Lows in
the mid 30s. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Sunday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 40s.
Sunday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s.
Monday ... Partly -sunny
with a 30 percent chance of
rain showers. Highs in the
mid 50s.

Local Stocks
43.36 .
Big Lots (NYSE)- 19.70

Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 26-92
BorgWamer (NYSE) ~
40-42
Century Aluminum ( NAS.
DAQ) -64.22
Champion (NASDAQ) 4.85 .
Channing Shops (NASDAQ)
-4.99
City Holding (NASDAQ) 34.75
Collin&amp; (NYSE) - 56-40
.DuPont (NYSE) -44-21
US Bank (NYSE)- 30.59
Gannett (NYSE) - .28.63
General Electric (NYSE) 31.70
'
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 34.75
JP Morpn ( NYSE) 36.48
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.32
Umlted Brands (NYSE)14.82
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)
-5.1.14 '
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ)- 25
BBT (NYSE) - 30.10
r:&gt;eoples (NASDAQ).
20.73
Papaleo (NYSE) -69-02
Premier (NASDAQ)11.76
, Rockwell (NYSE)- 51.76
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 5.08
Royal Dutch Shell- 69.03
' Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
-91
' Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.85'
Wendy's (NYSE) - 23.54
Worthington (NYSE) - 16
Daliy .stock reports are the
4 p_m_ ET closing quotea

..

Temeka Rachelle Lewis, told
a prostitute identified only as
Kristen that she should take a
train from New York to
Washington for an encounter
with ~lient 9 on the night of
· Feb. 13, according to a complaint. The defendant confrrmed that the client would
be "paying for everything train tickets, cab fare from the
hotel and back, mini bar or
room service, travel time, and
hotel."
The prostitute met the client
in Room 871 at about 10 p.m.,
according to the complaint.
When discussing how the
payments would be arranged.

Client 9 told Lewis: "Yup,
same as in the past, no question about it" - suggesting
Client 9 had done this before.
According to coun papers,
an Emperor's Club·llgent waS
told by the proslitu~ that her
eveJiing wi~ Client 9 went
well. The agent saiQ, she had
b~n ·• 'iold· •that t1ie client
"\\toulllllsl( ymJ l(l do things
that · .. ,.y¢u ~~·.not think
were safe . ·...;, .. very basic
things," acoor\}ing to the
papers, but Kristen responded
by saying: "I have a way df
dealin~ with that ... I'd be,
lilke, hsten dude. you really
want the sex?"

Gold Wlrigs anct Ribs Festival
38509 State Route 143

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Effective February 25th 2008 the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival committee
· has decided to suspend the festival indefinhely. We want to thank everyone
that. has supported the festival over the. last five years. We appreciate everyone who
traveled to attend as well as the local community for coming out and enjoying our
efforts.
The festival goal has always been to promote our local commun~y and improve our
economy by bringing in tourism. We think .we have accomplished our goal and I hope ·
the community has benefited from our efforts.
We would like to thank all the local businesses that helped by purchasing program ads.
We also would also like to thank all the vendors that have helped us during the last five
years; they have helped to make the festival enjoyable for everyone.
We would also like to thank the village of Pomeroy and Mayor John Musser for their
support, without their backing we would not have been able to put on the festival.
'

\

The co~m~ittee would fike to extend a special thank you to the sponsors that have
stepped up and helped us .with monetary donations which have allowed us to operate.
Below is alist of our most recent sponsors:
· • H.o.nda ~UZ\1,~, ~)ackson Ohio
• Meigs County Eoonomic Development Office

Tuesday ... Mostly sunny. Lows in the mid 30s. South
Highs in the mid 40s. West winds around 5 mph.
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tbursday ... Partly sunny.
Tuesday night ... Partly Highs in the mid 60s.
cloudy
in
the
Thursday
evening ... Then becoming night...Mostly cloudy with
mostly cloudy.
Lows a 50 percent chance of
around • 30. . Southwest showers. Lows in the lower
winds 5' to 10 mph.
40s.
Wednesday ... Partly
Friday ... Cloudy with a
sunny. Highs in the lower · 40 percent chance of show50s. West winds around 5 ers. Highs in .the mid 50s.
in ph.
Friday night...Cloudy
Wednesday wjth a 50 percent chance of
night...Mostly
cloudy. showers. Lows around 40.

AEP (NYSE) -40.29
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 80
Ashland Inc. ( NYSE) -

John McEneny said: "I don't
think anyone remembers anything like this. The fact that
the governor has a reputation
as a reformer and there. is a
certain assumption as attorney general that you 're
Caesar's wife. It's 11 different
element than if you were an
accountant."
Democr~tic Lt:Gov. David
Paterson would become New
York's first biack governor if
Spitzer were to resign.
The allegations were outlined in papers filed in federal coun in New York.
A defendant in the case,

of tralllllctlon• for March
10, 2008, provided !lY
Edward Jones financial
advisors leaac Mills In

Gallipolis at (74o) 4419441 and Leeley Manero
In Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Tribe edges Tampa, Page B2
Drivers unhappy with tires at Atlanta,
PageB6

'

Alex Rodriguez gets 2 hits in Yankees' 4-Q win over Cincinnati

Bengals agree
to terms with
free agent LB
Blackstock
CINCINNATI (AP)
The Bengals agreed to
terms on a one-year contract Monday with un'res'tricted free agent linebacker Darryl Blackstock,
his agent said.
Agent Brad Blank would
not discuss terms of the
deal, but said the 24-year~
old Blackstock planned to
sjgn Tuesday.
.
The 6~foot-4, 244-pound
Blackstock has 44 ·career
tackles and .four sacks in 46
games with · the Arizona
Cardinals, who chose him
in the third round of the
2005 draft. He had 21 tackles and three sacks last sea$On.

The player had a difficult
time choosing between the
Cleveland Browns and
Cincinnati, but the Bengals
made him feel' more wanted, with coach Marvin
Lewis calling him personally, Blank said. Blackstock
visited
Cleveland
on
Wednesday and Cincinnati
the next day.
The Cardinals last month
declined to tender an offer
to Blackstock, who played
with · Bengals linebacker
Ahmad Brooks at Virginia.

~ ,. ~FP..,0!1!9 ..... "'··

•
•
•
•
•
•

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Faimers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
G&amp;J Bottling Athens, OH (Pepsi Bottling Co.)
PDK Construction Co.
The Eagles Club, Pomeroy
AMPOhlo ·

•

As the chairman of the festival I want to thank the festival committee for their tireless
efforts over the last five years. I know that it has seemed at times that our efforts were .
unappreciated by some, but you can all take pride in what we have done and I thank
you all.
Paul Darnell
Chairman

Thesday, March 11,2008

•

•

Browns sign
versatile OL
Rex Hadnot
•
to 2-year deal

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) Alex Rodriguez was a little
rusty at third base. His swing
is still sharp, though. .
Rodriguez, limited to DH
duties the past few days by a
sore right shoulder, made an
error on his first defensive
chance but went 2-for-3 with
an RBI double in the New
York Yankees' 4-0 victory
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Monday night.
.
"I felt good. No pairi,"
Rodriguez said. "I didn't
throw anything over 70 percent. I want to ease back into
it a little bit and not be stupid."
The shoulder had only
bothered Rodriguez when he

threw the ball.
A-Rod has six hits in 12
at-bats this spring. He was
charged with an error for ll
bad throw to first that
allowed Jay jlruce to reach
in the first inning .
Yankees catcher Jorge
Posada also played defense
after being slowed by a sore
back muscle. He went ! -for3 with two strikeouts and
has one hit in 13 at-bats this
spring.
''I'm fine ," Posada said.
"I've got to keep treating it."
Both starting pitchers
reached their pitch limits in
the third. .
, New York right-hander
Joba Chamberlain gave up

allowing two 'runs and six
hits during a 59-pitch outing.
"That's a pretty ~ood lineup," 'Bailey said. 'Make the
slightest little mistake and
they make you pay for it. My
changeup is getting better.
I'm definitely progressing."
Reds right-hander Edinson
Volquez yielded two runs
and six hits but struck out
eight in four innings.
'~Those guys are throwing
the ball well," Reds manager
Dusty Baker said. "Homer
was throwing the ball great
early. Then kind of got out
of sync, out of rhythm there
for a couple innings. He still
threw the ball well there."
Yankees closer Mariano

Rivera pitched a perfe ct
founh. He has retired all six
batters he 's faced this sprin g.
Johnny Damon started in
center for the Yankee s, who
rested Melky Cabrera. New
York manager Joe Girardi
said Damon, who normally
plays left, is not expected to
get much playing time in
center during the regular
season.
"I am not anticipating it."
Gira[di said. " I think it's
important he get s out there
in !i!Jring training ."
· IJamon made a running
catch on the warning track to
retire Joey Votto during the

District 13 .basketball games held at Rio Grande

Berlin Hiland
defeats No. 1
Africentric iri
girls state final

BY BRYAN WALTERS
. BWALTERS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

·

two hits in 2 1-3 scoreless
innings, throwing 31 of 49
pitches for strikes. He stru9k
out Edwin Encarnacion on a
14-pitch at-.bat in the second.
"Everything felt good,"
Chamberlain said. "I'd have
got more innings if it wasn' t
for Encarnacion ... 28,000
pitches."
Cincinnati's Homer Bailey
also lasted 2 l -3 innings,

Please see Cincinnati, Bl

RIO GRANDE - The
best of the area's best gathBv RusTY MtLLER
ered Monday night at Newt
ASSOC IATED PRESS
Oliver Arena on the campus
of the University of Rio
COLUMBUS - Berlin
Grande to panicipate in the
Hiland
came out harried.
2008 Distnct f3 Basketball
hurried
and back on its
Coaches Association Allheels. In other words, the
Star Game.
Hawks weren't themselves.
In all, 38 seniors - 15
Then fir st-team Allgirls and 23 boys - comOhioan
Jena Stutzman stanpeted one last time on the
ed
asserting
herself and basketball hardwood, prosuddenly - the Hawks
viding ,.. one entertaining
were back, bigtime.
evening for all who paniciStutzman directed traffic
pated in the annual event.
and
scored 14 points and
In the girls contest,
No. 2 Berlin Hiland rode a
Division IV was divided
24-0 run in the middle of the
evenly between divisions II
game
to a 44-37 victory
and Ill to make up the allover
top-ranked
Columbus
. star teams playing. By
Africentric on Monday in a
night's end, the Division II·battle.
for state supremacy in
IV team came away victoriDivision
IV.
ous with a 65-59 triumph
The
showdown
between
over the Division III-IV
the top small-school teams
squad.
in the title game was decidThe victors were led by
ed
when the Nubians (25-2)
Warren's Lakin Horner,
failed
to score for more than
who poured in a game-high
13
minutes,
watching a 15-5
18 points en route to winlead transform into a 29-15
ning Most Valuable Player
deficit.
honors. Jarin Wasch of
In other girls state chamJackson and Carissa Bosch
.pionship games:
of Logan were next for the
winners with a dozen points
Versailles 51,
each .
Sugarcreek
Garaway 33
South Gallia's Niki Fulks
was next with nine points,
Justine Raterman scored
followed
by
. Vinton
17
points but did much,
County's Jessi Harkins with
much
mQre to guide topeight and Chelsea Stowers
ranked
Versailles past
of South Gallia with four
defense-minded Sugarcreek
markers. Danielle Blair of
Garaway
51-33 on Monday,
Ironton St. Joe rounded out
givin~
the
Tigers their first
the ·winning score with two
Diviswn
Ill
state champipoints .
onship.
Nelsonville-York's Lisa
The Tigers, at 28.-0 the
Meade led 'the DiVision 111only
unbeaten left standing
IV squad with 17 points,
in
the
state, had gone home
earning the MVP award f0r
disapp'
ointed after losing in
the losers. T' Ann Mayo of ,
the semifinals of their three
South Point was next with
previous trips to ihe state
14 points, followed by Oak ·
,
Bryan Wattera/photo
Not this time.
tournament.
Hill's Kaylin Marshal! with Meigs' senior Chris Goode , center, falls backwards after receiving an entry pass as Federal
Hocking's Cory Vales defends during the District 13 Basketball Coaches' Association .AllPIHse see Dlstltd I:S, Bl Star
Please see State, Bl
Game Monday at Newt Oliver Arena in Rio Grande.

CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Browns
added some depth up front
by signing free agent offensive lineman Rex Hadnot to
a two-year contract.
The versatile Hadnot
made 55 stans the past four
years with the Miami
Dolphins. The 325-pounder
started 34 glunes at right
guard, 19 at.center and two
afleft guard. r
"The Browns are . fortuCLEVELAND (AP) - Being able to watch it, the · on the dunk and find Wallr,
nate to add another quality LeBron James is playing at fans are probably watching on the shot," James said. 'I
lineman to our existing such a high level, not even a the best basketball player in grabbed some rebounds. We
group,'' Browns general triple-double impresses ltim the world. It's arguable pretty much put the game
manager Phil Savage said . an.rmore.
'
between him and Kobe away in the last 2 1/2 minMonday. "With his versatil'As an individual, I didn't (Bryant), and I'm goin~ to .utes."
ity and experience, we feel feel I played /artic11larly argue for him every day. '
The Trail Blazers accomgreat about havin,g Rex on well,'' he sal after the
James, who has scored 20 plished their strategy of
· . bur team. He bnngs ~ize, Cleveland Cavaliers beat the or more points in 41 straight making James give up the
~trengih and has a physical Portland Trail Blazers 88-80 games, also recorded the ball, but that worked to the
sty\e of play."
on Monday night. "If you lOOth double-double of his Cavaliers' advantage.
· ·The 26-year-old Hadnot didn't play well and you career.
"We tried to do some
s~aned 16 games at right ·have a triple-double, some"LeBron obviously was . things to take the ball out of
guard last season with thing is wron~. I CO\lld have phenomenal,"
Cavaliers LeBron's hands, but he did a
f&gt;tiami. He was originally played better. '
coach Mike Brown said.
good job getting it to his
drafted by the Dolphins in
Just about everyone · else
The Cavaliers were down teammates and they made
the sixth round of the 2004 who saw the game would by 13 points in the second plays," said guard Brandon
Clraft.
beg to differ.
quarter and didn't take t~ir Roy. "When they play well
James had 24 points, 10 fltst lead until late in the off him, they're a tough
rebounds and 11 assists in third. Szczerbiak's two free team to stop down the
'
his seventh triple-double of throws with 8:03 left broke a stretch:"
~NTACrUS
the season as the Cavaliers 69-all
tie and .gave
Joe Smith, playing in
rallied in the second half. It .Cleveland the lead for good. place of Ben ·wallace, who
1-740-446-2342 elrt. 33
is the 17th triple-double of
James hit a key 3-pointer missed the second half with
his career.
and made .six free throws back spasms, scored 12 of
!"u - 1-740-446-3008
James was in the minority down the stretch. His bounce his 18 points in the second
Lmoll- aportoO mydallysenllnel.com
••
when
it came to his assess- · pass in the !;me led to half.
,
6oorta Steff
..
ment of his performance. Anderson Varejao's dunk,
LaMarcus Aldridge led
~r:lc Randolph, Sport• Writer
Wally Szczerbiak, . who giving Cleveland a six-point Portland with 25 points and , r..a..,
{140) 446-2342, ext 33
joined the Cavaliers in a lead with I :16 to play. On had 10 rebounds. Roy added
aportsOmydallysentlnel.com
Feb. 21 trade, laughed when Clevel and's next possession. 15 points.
Bryan Walters, Sporta Writer told of James' comments.
James found an open
The Cavaliers forced
(t40) 446-2342, oxt 33
"It's scary, it really is;" he Szczerbiak, who hit a 15- Portland into a shot-clock
bwaltersOmvdallytribune .com
AP photo
said. "It's pretty special footer for an 85-77 lead with violation and two turnovers
'
.
Cleveland's LeBron James, left, shoots inside Portland;s
being on this team and see- 42 seconds left.
Larry Crum, Sport• Wrllar
.
LaMarcus Aldridge (12) during the second quarter of an
ing him day in and day out.
"I was able to find Andy
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
Please sn lames, Bl
lcrumOmydallyreglster.com
NBA basketball game Monday in Cleveland.

James ·gets triple-double as Cleveland bel)ts Portland

•

..

'

r·-isoo"F'
F
--1
r·s1oooFF"-l
r·
s1so oFF . ~r-s2oooF"F"-l r·s2so oFF
AND . I
II
SlSOo-11
cup

SA Vf

instantly when you spe~d $499- instantly when you spend SHioo.ll imtantly when you spend $1500-11 instantly when you spend
instantly when you,spend $300().1
I smonLaneFunuture II $1499onLaneFumiture II $2499onLaneFurniture II $2999onLanefuruilure II urnrOI'eonlaneFumiture I
IValid lrom Feb 28 ·March 17th.Good II Valid from Feb. 21· March 171h. GoodIIValid from Feb. 28 · Marcil 17th. Good IIValid from Feb 2~ . March 17th. Good I I lr001 Feb. 28. March 17th. Goodl
only al partrcrpallng dealers. Coupon 1,
al partrcrpating dealers. Coupon I Ionly al parnc1pallng dealers.
a1 participating dealers. Coupon I I at part1c1palmg dealers. Cooponl
requrred for drscount
required for discount
001 reqUired for d1scooot. .
for ~scounl.
required for discount

...

~........:....

-------

---

•

�.PageA6

NATION • WORLD
NY governor Spitzer linked to high-end prostitution ring

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March u, 2008

Inside
Federer beats Sampras In exhibition,
PageB2

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'

BY AMY WESTFEI.DT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Gov. Eliot
Spitzer's political career
teetered .on the brink of collapse Monday after the com~p­
tion-fighting politician once
known as " Mr. Clean" was
accused of paying for a romp
with a high-pnced call girl.
The scandal drew immediate call~ for the Democrat to
step .vn. At a news conference' before about I00
reponers, a glassy-eyed
Spitzer, his shellshocked wife
at his side, apologized to his .
family &lt;md the people of New
York.
.,
"I have disappointed and
failed to live up to rhe standard
I expected of myself," said the
48-year-old father of three
teenage girls. "l must now
dedicate some time to regain ·
. the trust of my family."
He did not discuss his political future and ignored shouted
questions about whether he
would resign. And he gave no
details of what he was apologizing for.
Spitzer was caught on a federal wiretap arranging to meet
in a Washington hotel room
the night before Valentine's
.
AP ph"o
Day with a prostitute frOm a New York State Gov. Eliot Spitzer is joined by his wife Silda
call-girl business known as the as he makes a statement to reporters during a news conEmperors Club VIP, according ference following a report that he wa!i involved in a prostito a law enforcement official tution ring Monday in New York.
who spoke to The Associated
Press on condition of
anonymity because the inves- 5-feet-5 inches, and 105 the latest scandal raised quespounds," named Kristen.
tions about whether ·he would
tigation is still going on.
The scandal came 16 make it through a second year.
The governor ha1 not been
months
after Spitzer stonned
"He has to step down. No
charged, and prosecutors
would not comment on the into the governor's office with one will stand with him," said
a historic margin of victory, Rep. Peter King, a Republican
case.
But an affidavit based on the vowing to root out corruption congressman from · Long
wiretap told of a man identi- in New York government in Island. "I never tiy to take
fied as "Client 9" - Spitzer, the same way that he took on advantage or gloat over a peraccording to the law enforce- Wall Street executives with a sonal tragedy. However, this is
ment official- paying $4,300 vengeance while state attorney different. This is a guy who is
·
so self-righteous, and so unforin cash, some of II credit for general.
future tiysts, some of it for sex
But his fJrst year in ·office giving."
with a "petite~ pretty brunette, was marred by nmnoil, and
Democratic Assemblyman

Local Weather
Saturday and Saturday
night...Rain likely. Highs
in the upper 50s. Lows in
the mid 30s. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Sunday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 40s.
Sunday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s.
Monday ... Partly -sunny
with a 30 percent chance of
rain showers. Highs in the
mid 50s.

Local Stocks
43.36 .
Big Lots (NYSE)- 19.70

Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 26-92
BorgWamer (NYSE) ~
40-42
Century Aluminum ( NAS.
DAQ) -64.22
Champion (NASDAQ) 4.85 .
Channing Shops (NASDAQ)
-4.99
City Holding (NASDAQ) 34.75
Collin&amp; (NYSE) - 56-40
.DuPont (NYSE) -44-21
US Bank (NYSE)- 30.59
Gannett (NYSE) - .28.63
General Electric (NYSE) 31.70
'
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 34.75
JP Morpn ( NYSE) 36.48
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.32
Umlted Brands (NYSE)14.82
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)
-5.1.14 '
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ)- 25
BBT (NYSE) - 30.10
r:&gt;eoples (NASDAQ).
20.73
Papaleo (NYSE) -69-02
Premier (NASDAQ)11.76
, Rockwell (NYSE)- 51.76
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 5.08
Royal Dutch Shell- 69.03
' Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
-91
' Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.85'
Wendy's (NYSE) - 23.54
Worthington (NYSE) - 16
Daliy .stock reports are the
4 p_m_ ET closing quotea

..

Temeka Rachelle Lewis, told
a prostitute identified only as
Kristen that she should take a
train from New York to
Washington for an encounter
with ~lient 9 on the night of
· Feb. 13, according to a complaint. The defendant confrrmed that the client would
be "paying for everything train tickets, cab fare from the
hotel and back, mini bar or
room service, travel time, and
hotel."
The prostitute met the client
in Room 871 at about 10 p.m.,
according to the complaint.
When discussing how the
payments would be arranged.

Client 9 told Lewis: "Yup,
same as in the past, no question about it" - suggesting
Client 9 had done this before.
According to coun papers,
an Emperor's Club·llgent waS
told by the proslitu~ that her
eveJiing wi~ Client 9 went
well. The agent saiQ, she had
b~n ·• 'iold· •that t1ie client
"\\toulllllsl( ymJ l(l do things
that · .. ,.y¢u ~~·.not think
were safe . ·...;, .. very basic
things," acoor\}ing to the
papers, but Kristen responded
by saying: "I have a way df
dealin~ with that ... I'd be,
lilke, hsten dude. you really
want the sex?"

Gold Wlrigs anct Ribs Festival
38509 State Route 143

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Effective February 25th 2008 the Gold Wings and Ribs Festival committee
· has decided to suspend the festival indefinhely. We want to thank everyone
that. has supported the festival over the. last five years. We appreciate everyone who
traveled to attend as well as the local community for coming out and enjoying our
efforts.
The festival goal has always been to promote our local commun~y and improve our
economy by bringing in tourism. We think .we have accomplished our goal and I hope ·
the community has benefited from our efforts.
We would like to thank all the local businesses that helped by purchasing program ads.
We also would also like to thank all the vendors that have helped us during the last five
years; they have helped to make the festival enjoyable for everyone.
We would also like to thank the village of Pomeroy and Mayor John Musser for their
support, without their backing we would not have been able to put on the festival.
'

\

The co~m~ittee would fike to extend a special thank you to the sponsors that have
stepped up and helped us .with monetary donations which have allowed us to operate.
Below is alist of our most recent sponsors:
· • H.o.nda ~UZ\1,~, ~)ackson Ohio
• Meigs County Eoonomic Development Office

Tuesday ... Mostly sunny. Lows in the mid 30s. South
Highs in the mid 40s. West winds around 5 mph.
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tbursday ... Partly sunny.
Tuesday night ... Partly Highs in the mid 60s.
cloudy
in
the
Thursday
evening ... Then becoming night...Mostly cloudy with
mostly cloudy.
Lows a 50 percent chance of
around • 30. . Southwest showers. Lows in the lower
winds 5' to 10 mph.
40s.
Wednesday ... Partly
Friday ... Cloudy with a
sunny. Highs in the lower · 40 percent chance of show50s. West winds around 5 ers. Highs in .the mid 50s.
in ph.
Friday night...Cloudy
Wednesday wjth a 50 percent chance of
night...Mostly
cloudy. showers. Lows around 40.

AEP (NYSE) -40.29
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 80
Ashland Inc. ( NYSE) -

John McEneny said: "I don't
think anyone remembers anything like this. The fact that
the governor has a reputation
as a reformer and there. is a
certain assumption as attorney general that you 're
Caesar's wife. It's 11 different
element than if you were an
accountant."
Democr~tic Lt:Gov. David
Paterson would become New
York's first biack governor if
Spitzer were to resign.
The allegations were outlined in papers filed in federal coun in New York.
A defendant in the case,

of tralllllctlon• for March
10, 2008, provided !lY
Edward Jones financial
advisors leaac Mills In

Gallipolis at (74o) 4419441 and Leeley Manero
In Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Tribe edges Tampa, Page B2
Drivers unhappy with tires at Atlanta,
PageB6

'

Alex Rodriguez gets 2 hits in Yankees' 4-Q win over Cincinnati

Bengals agree
to terms with
free agent LB
Blackstock
CINCINNATI (AP)
The Bengals agreed to
terms on a one-year contract Monday with un'res'tricted free agent linebacker Darryl Blackstock,
his agent said.
Agent Brad Blank would
not discuss terms of the
deal, but said the 24-year~
old Blackstock planned to
sjgn Tuesday.
.
The 6~foot-4, 244-pound
Blackstock has 44 ·career
tackles and .four sacks in 46
games with · the Arizona
Cardinals, who chose him
in the third round of the
2005 draft. He had 21 tackles and three sacks last sea$On.

The player had a difficult
time choosing between the
Cleveland Browns and
Cincinnati, but the Bengals
made him feel' more wanted, with coach Marvin
Lewis calling him personally, Blank said. Blackstock
visited
Cleveland
on
Wednesday and Cincinnati
the next day.
The Cardinals last month
declined to tender an offer
to Blackstock, who played
with · Bengals linebacker
Ahmad Brooks at Virginia.

~ ,. ~FP..,0!1!9 ..... "'··

•
•
•
•
•
•

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Faimers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
G&amp;J Bottling Athens, OH (Pepsi Bottling Co.)
PDK Construction Co.
The Eagles Club, Pomeroy
AMPOhlo ·

•

As the chairman of the festival I want to thank the festival committee for their tireless
efforts over the last five years. I know that it has seemed at times that our efforts were .
unappreciated by some, but you can all take pride in what we have done and I thank
you all.
Paul Darnell
Chairman

Thesday, March 11,2008

•

•

Browns sign
versatile OL
Rex Hadnot
•
to 2-year deal

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) Alex Rodriguez was a little
rusty at third base. His swing
is still sharp, though. .
Rodriguez, limited to DH
duties the past few days by a
sore right shoulder, made an
error on his first defensive
chance but went 2-for-3 with
an RBI double in the New
York Yankees' 4-0 victory
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Monday night.
.
"I felt good. No pairi,"
Rodriguez said. "I didn't
throw anything over 70 percent. I want to ease back into
it a little bit and not be stupid."
The shoulder had only
bothered Rodriguez when he

threw the ball.
A-Rod has six hits in 12
at-bats this spring. He was
charged with an error for ll
bad throw to first that
allowed Jay jlruce to reach
in the first inning .
Yankees catcher Jorge
Posada also played defense
after being slowed by a sore
back muscle. He went ! -for3 with two strikeouts and
has one hit in 13 at-bats this
spring.
''I'm fine ," Posada said.
"I've got to keep treating it."
Both starting pitchers
reached their pitch limits in
the third. .
, New York right-hander
Joba Chamberlain gave up

allowing two 'runs and six
hits during a 59-pitch outing.
"That's a pretty ~ood lineup," 'Bailey said. 'Make the
slightest little mistake and
they make you pay for it. My
changeup is getting better.
I'm definitely progressing."
Reds right-hander Edinson
Volquez yielded two runs
and six hits but struck out
eight in four innings.
'~Those guys are throwing
the ball well," Reds manager
Dusty Baker said. "Homer
was throwing the ball great
early. Then kind of got out
of sync, out of rhythm there
for a couple innings. He still
threw the ball well there."
Yankees closer Mariano

Rivera pitched a perfe ct
founh. He has retired all six
batters he 's faced this sprin g.
Johnny Damon started in
center for the Yankee s, who
rested Melky Cabrera. New
York manager Joe Girardi
said Damon, who normally
plays left, is not expected to
get much playing time in
center during the regular
season.
"I am not anticipating it."
Gira[di said. " I think it's
important he get s out there
in !i!Jring training ."
· IJamon made a running
catch on the warning track to
retire Joey Votto during the

District 13 .basketball games held at Rio Grande

Berlin Hiland
defeats No. 1
Africentric iri
girls state final

BY BRYAN WALTERS
. BWALTERS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

·

two hits in 2 1-3 scoreless
innings, throwing 31 of 49
pitches for strikes. He stru9k
out Edwin Encarnacion on a
14-pitch at-.bat in the second.
"Everything felt good,"
Chamberlain said. "I'd have
got more innings if it wasn' t
for Encarnacion ... 28,000
pitches."
Cincinnati's Homer Bailey
also lasted 2 l -3 innings,

Please see Cincinnati, Bl

RIO GRANDE - The
best of the area's best gathBv RusTY MtLLER
ered Monday night at Newt
ASSOC IATED PRESS
Oliver Arena on the campus
of the University of Rio
COLUMBUS - Berlin
Grande to panicipate in the
Hiland
came out harried.
2008 Distnct f3 Basketball
hurried
and back on its
Coaches Association Allheels. In other words, the
Star Game.
Hawks weren't themselves.
In all, 38 seniors - 15
Then fir st-team Allgirls and 23 boys - comOhioan
Jena Stutzman stanpeted one last time on the
ed
asserting
herself and basketball hardwood, prosuddenly - the Hawks
viding ,.. one entertaining
were back, bigtime.
evening for all who paniciStutzman directed traffic
pated in the annual event.
and
scored 14 points and
In the girls contest,
No. 2 Berlin Hiland rode a
Division IV was divided
24-0 run in the middle of the
evenly between divisions II
game
to a 44-37 victory
and Ill to make up the allover
top-ranked
Columbus
. star teams playing. By
Africentric on Monday in a
night's end, the Division II·battle.
for state supremacy in
IV team came away victoriDivision
IV.
ous with a 65-59 triumph
The
showdown
between
over the Division III-IV
the top small-school teams
squad.
in the title game was decidThe victors were led by
ed
when the Nubians (25-2)
Warren's Lakin Horner,
failed
to score for more than
who poured in a game-high
13
minutes,
watching a 15-5
18 points en route to winlead transform into a 29-15
ning Most Valuable Player
deficit.
honors. Jarin Wasch of
In other girls state chamJackson and Carissa Bosch
.pionship games:
of Logan were next for the
winners with a dozen points
Versailles 51,
each .
Sugarcreek
Garaway 33
South Gallia's Niki Fulks
was next with nine points,
Justine Raterman scored
followed
by
. Vinton
17
points but did much,
County's Jessi Harkins with
much
mQre to guide topeight and Chelsea Stowers
ranked
Versailles past
of South Gallia with four
defense-minded Sugarcreek
markers. Danielle Blair of
Garaway
51-33 on Monday,
Ironton St. Joe rounded out
givin~
the
Tigers their first
the ·winning score with two
Diviswn
Ill
state champipoints .
onship.
Nelsonville-York's Lisa
The Tigers, at 28.-0 the
Meade led 'the DiVision 111only
unbeaten left standing
IV squad with 17 points,
in
the
state, had gone home
earning the MVP award f0r
disapp'
ointed after losing in
the losers. T' Ann Mayo of ,
the semifinals of their three
South Point was next with
previous trips to ihe state
14 points, followed by Oak ·
,
Bryan Wattera/photo
Not this time.
tournament.
Hill's Kaylin Marshal! with Meigs' senior Chris Goode , center, falls backwards after receiving an entry pass as Federal
Hocking's Cory Vales defends during the District 13 Basketball Coaches' Association .AllPIHse see Dlstltd I:S, Bl Star
Please see State, Bl
Game Monday at Newt Oliver Arena in Rio Grande.

CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Browns
added some depth up front
by signing free agent offensive lineman Rex Hadnot to
a two-year contract.
The versatile Hadnot
made 55 stans the past four
years with the Miami
Dolphins. The 325-pounder
started 34 glunes at right
guard, 19 at.center and two
afleft guard. r
"The Browns are . fortuCLEVELAND (AP) - Being able to watch it, the · on the dunk and find Wallr,
nate to add another quality LeBron James is playing at fans are probably watching on the shot," James said. 'I
lineman to our existing such a high level, not even a the best basketball player in grabbed some rebounds. We
group,'' Browns general triple-double impresses ltim the world. It's arguable pretty much put the game
manager Phil Savage said . an.rmore.
'
between him and Kobe away in the last 2 1/2 minMonday. "With his versatil'As an individual, I didn't (Bryant), and I'm goin~ to .utes."
ity and experience, we feel feel I played /artic11larly argue for him every day. '
The Trail Blazers accomgreat about havin,g Rex on well,'' he sal after the
James, who has scored 20 plished their strategy of
· . bur team. He bnngs ~ize, Cleveland Cavaliers beat the or more points in 41 straight making James give up the
~trengih and has a physical Portland Trail Blazers 88-80 games, also recorded the ball, but that worked to the
sty\e of play."
on Monday night. "If you lOOth double-double of his Cavaliers' advantage.
· ·The 26-year-old Hadnot didn't play well and you career.
"We tried to do some
s~aned 16 games at right ·have a triple-double, some"LeBron obviously was . things to take the ball out of
guard last season with thing is wron~. I CO\lld have phenomenal,"
Cavaliers LeBron's hands, but he did a
f&gt;tiami. He was originally played better. '
coach Mike Brown said.
good job getting it to his
drafted by the Dolphins in
Just about everyone · else
The Cavaliers were down teammates and they made
the sixth round of the 2004 who saw the game would by 13 points in the second plays," said guard Brandon
Clraft.
beg to differ.
quarter and didn't take t~ir Roy. "When they play well
James had 24 points, 10 fltst lead until late in the off him, they're a tough
rebounds and 11 assists in third. Szczerbiak's two free team to stop down the
'
his seventh triple-double of throws with 8:03 left broke a stretch:"
~NTACrUS
the season as the Cavaliers 69-all
tie and .gave
Joe Smith, playing in
rallied in the second half. It .Cleveland the lead for good. place of Ben ·wallace, who
1-740-446-2342 elrt. 33
is the 17th triple-double of
James hit a key 3-pointer missed the second half with
his career.
and made .six free throws back spasms, scored 12 of
!"u - 1-740-446-3008
James was in the minority down the stretch. His bounce his 18 points in the second
Lmoll- aportoO mydallysenllnel.com
••
when
it came to his assess- · pass in the !;me led to half.
,
6oorta Steff
..
ment of his performance. Anderson Varejao's dunk,
LaMarcus Aldridge led
~r:lc Randolph, Sport• Writer
Wally Szczerbiak, . who giving Cleveland a six-point Portland with 25 points and , r..a..,
{140) 446-2342, ext 33
joined the Cavaliers in a lead with I :16 to play. On had 10 rebounds. Roy added
aportsOmydallysentlnel.com
Feb. 21 trade, laughed when Clevel and's next possession. 15 points.
Bryan Walters, Sporta Writer told of James' comments.
James found an open
The Cavaliers forced
(t40) 446-2342, oxt 33
"It's scary, it really is;" he Szczerbiak, who hit a 15- Portland into a shot-clock
bwaltersOmvdallytribune .com
AP photo
said. "It's pretty special footer for an 85-77 lead with violation and two turnovers
'
.
Cleveland's LeBron James, left, shoots inside Portland;s
being on this team and see- 42 seconds left.
Larry Crum, Sport• Wrllar
.
LaMarcus Aldridge (12) during the second quarter of an
ing him day in and day out.
"I was able to find Andy
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
Please sn lames, Bl
lcrumOmydallyreglster.com
NBA basketball game Monday in Cleveland.

James ·gets triple-double as Cleveland bel)ts Portland

•

..

'

r·-isoo"F'
F
--1
r·s1oooFF"-l
r·
s1so oFF . ~r-s2oooF"F"-l r·s2so oFF
AND . I
II
SlSOo-11
cup

SA Vf

instantly when you spe~d $499- instantly when you spend SHioo.ll imtantly when you spend $1500-11 instantly when you spend
instantly when you,spend $300().1
I smonLaneFunuture II $1499onLaneFumiture II $2499onLaneFurniture II $2999onLanefuruilure II urnrOI'eonlaneFumiture I
IValid lrom Feb 28 ·March 17th.Good II Valid from Feb. 21· March 171h. GoodIIValid from Feb. 28 · Marcil 17th. Good IIValid from Feb 2~ . March 17th. Good I I lr001 Feb. 28. March 17th. Goodl
only al partrcrpallng dealers. Coupon 1,
al partrcrpating dealers. Coupon I Ionly al parnc1pallng dealers.
a1 participating dealers. Coupon I I at part1c1palmg dealers. Cooponl
requrred for drscount
required for discount
001 reqUired for d1scooot. .
for ~scounl.
required for discount

...

~........:....

-------

---

•

�•

·Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March

www.mydailyscntinel.com

www.mydailysentlnel.com

11, 2008

IJ',,

Tampa's Kazmir encouraged by bullpen
session despite team's loss·to Cleveland
Bv

'

FRED GooDALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Pete Sampras, left, comments as he and Ro·ger Federer, right, speak at a news conference
in New York Monday.

Roger Federer beats Pete Sampras in
exhibition at Madison Square Garden
NEW YORK (AP) Roger Federer. in his ultra'
modern all-black getup. and
Pete Sampras. in his oldschool all-white outfit,
showed off the ski lis that
earned them a combined 26
Grand Slam titles and more
than a decade of No. frankin s.

~

Tt was an exhibition, yes,
but Federer still nicked his
fancy strokes from all
angles, just the way he does
on tennis' grandest stages
these days.
Sampras st ill smacked big
forehands and bigger aces,
just the way he dtd back in
his day.
Federer is closing in on
Sampras' record of 14 major
tennis championships, a
mark that \ruly exists only
in black in white. written in
a record book. For nearly 2
1/2 hours. before an appre, ciative and occasionally

raucous gathering of 19,690
at Madison Square Garden.
these two Jiving, breathing
greals of the game shared a
court.
Pistol Pete vs. The
Federer Express.
The Past vs. The Present.
· .And. as one might expect,
youth was served.
'Current No. I ·Federer
beat former No. I Sampras
6-3, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (6) in an
encounter that certainly
doesn't settle . the "Who is
better?"' debate, given that
one participant is 26 and the
other is 36, and nothing
more than braggin~ rights
was on the line. It dtd, however, raise tennis' profile,
make both men some
money - $1 million for
Federer, Jess for Samprasand, well, allow people to
say they saw Sampras; the
best of his generatwn. face
Federer, the best of his.

Cleveland is already playing without center. Zydrunas
Ilgauskas, who has missed
the
past five games because
· from Page 81
of a strained back.
Wallace doesn't know if
in the final 2 minutes.
the back will keep him out
"Their defense tightened of any further action.
up and we couldn't score,"
"I really can ~t tell right
Portland
coach
Nate now," he said. "We'll have
McMillan said. "You can't to work on it and see if we
turn the ball over or come can loosen it up."
down with as many empty
Notes: The Cavaliers (37trips as we did in the second 27) are I0 games over .500
half."
for the first time this season.
After the Cavs trailed the ... James thinks Miami star
entire game, Varejao's 3- Dwyane Wade made the
point play with 9.2 seconds right decision to sit out the
· left in the third quarter gave rest of the season·because of
them a 62-61 lead. Roy's a recurr.ing knee injury.
free throw tied it going into "With the situation they're
in, they're not going to
the fourth.
Portland Jed the entire make the playoffs, so I think
first half. Portland's biggest he should shut it down,"
lead came at 27-14 early in James said .... Greg Oden,
the second quarter. Aldridge the No. I pick in last year's
scored 17 points in the half draft who played one season
at Ohio State, watched the
on 8-for-12 shooting.
Wallace was scoreless game in street clothes. He's
with five rebounds in 15 out for the season because
minutes in the first half. of knee surgery ..

James

District 13
from Page 81
eight
markers
and
Chesapeake's Rachel Harris
with seven.
Brooke Long of Rock Hill
added five points, while
both Ash leigh Tornes of
Sarah
Waterford
and
Ashworth of Symnies
Valley each scored three .
Katie Hayman 'of Eastern
rounded things out with two
points.
In the boys contest,
. Division II took on a team ·
made up of players from
Division Ill and Division
IV. The extra help did pay
off as Division III-IV
claimed a commanding 9068 victory over the Division
II squad.
The Division III-IV team
had 13 players score in the
victory, including four in
double figures. Ironton's
Marc Carter Jed the charge
with 13 points, earnin_g
MVP honors during the triumph. Cory Vales of
Federal Hocking, Dustin
Bumgardner of Fairland and.
Derek Hoge of Waterford
all followed with I0 markers each.
.Chesapeake."s .
Tyler
Shoemaker added etght
points to the winning cause,
followed by Beau Weed of
South Point and Issac
Standley of Trimble with
seven apicc.e. Eastern's
Kyle Rawson and Matt
Tibbs of Symme&gt; Valley

also chipped in six points
each.
Rock Hill's Nathan
Davenrort and · River
Valley s Marcus Frazier
each scored four, while
Jacob Johnson of Symmes
Valley contributed three
points. Tyler Duncan of
South Gallia rounded out
the win with two points.
Division II had four of its
10 players reach double figures, with Ryan Stewart of
Vinton 'Count;Y and Cole
Biehl of Manetta leading
the way with 13 points
apiece. Wlj!Ten teammates
Craig Call and Sam Majoy
followed with 12 pomts
each. Call was named the
MVP of the. losers.
Logan's Lucas Wright
was next with six markers,
followed by Steven Hunter
of Warren and Aridy
Buescher of Jackson with
three poit)ts each. Gallia
Aeadeniy's David Rumley,
Chris Goode of Meigs and
Evan Stacy of Jackson
rounded out the scoring
with two points apiece.
All 38 players that participated in the dual event
scored.
· Southern
sophomore
Kasey Turley won the girls
three-point shooting competition, while Chesapeake
freshman Nathan Copley
won the boys three-point
contest. Fed Hock senior
Cory Vales defeated twotime defending cham.pion
Nathan Davenport' in the
Slam Dunk Competition.
District 13 participants
were selected by the coach'

No one can say they saw
Ali face Tyson in a boxing
ring. Or Hogan face Woods
on a golf course.
Tiger Woods, who happens to be pal s with Federer.
sat in the front row Monday.
part of a sellout crowd that
Included Donald Trump,
Regis Philbin and Anna
Wintour. They sat around a
blue, hard court, set up
where the ·NBA's Knicks
and NHL's Rangers play.
, "This is maybe why · so
many people came out: You
don't often get the No. 1· in
his prime playing against
maybe the greatest player of
all time," said Federer.
After Monday's match,
Federer referred to Sampras
as "my childhood hero.'
It was the fourth FedererSampras exhibition; Federer
won two of their three
encounters in Asia late last
year.

Cincinnati
from Page 81
second. Damon left after the
third, one inning after fouling a ball off his foot.
"It's sore. but nothing to
worry about," Girardi said.
Notes: Yankees DH
Hideki Matsui, coming off
knee surgery. went 2-for-3
in his second game this
spring . .. . The Yankees
signed C Chad Moeller to a
minor league contract. and
invited him to spring training. "We need some depth
at catcher," Girardi S:j.id.
"He provides that."
Girardi said C FranCisco
Cervelli, who broke his
right wrist on a collision at
the plate Saturday, .will be
re-evaluated Tuesday in
New York. Cervelli will
likely miss at least eight to
10 weeks.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
- On a day when Tampa
Bay allowe.d 12 runs and 14
hits in a high-scoring loss to
the Cleveiand Indians, the
Rays actually got some
encouraging news about a
key pitcher.
Scott Kazmir. sidelined
the past two weeks with an
elbow strain, threw a
bullpen sess ion before
Monday's 12-1 Qdefeat and
hopes 10 make his first
spring training start as soon
as Sunday against Det~oit.
The defending AL strikeout champion also thinks he
still has plenty of time to get
ready for an opening-day
start.

,.

run fourth. The right-hander
allowed five runs and four
hits in four innings, including B.J. Upton's two-run
homer that put Tampa Bay
ahead 5-2 in the third.
Travis Hafner had an RBI
double and run-scoring single off Tampa Bay starter
Jason Hammel , and Wyatt
Toregas hit a solo homer off
Grant
Balfour ,
for
· Cleveland. The first seven
runs in the Indi ans' big
inning were charged to
Hammel , while James
Houser allowed the last two .
"There was a Jot ofh(tting
going on," said Indian s
manager.Eric Wedge, whose
pitchers yielded II hits.
Hafner was 2-for-2 and is
batting .400 with six RBis
this spring.

·

"Sure, it's a goal for me.
"He's really done a good
But I'm not going to 'rush job, doing a lot of work 'On
anything. Whatever hap- the side, working to get
pens , happens," Kazmir himself going and find his
said. "I realize it's not going swing," Wedge said. "I've
to be that big of a differel'lce really been pleased the last
going from opening day to week with the way he's
maybe Game 2 or Game 3. ·been swinging the bat."
We're just going to take our
Byrd gave up a single and
time and mak e sure that two walks to load the bases
everything is strong and we in the first. Upton drove in
stretched it out and didn't Tampa Bay's first run with a
rush it."
sacrifice fly. and ClitT Floyd
· Paul Byrd weathered a f~llowed with a double.
shaky first two · innings to
"I thought after that tirst
get his . first spring win.. inning he threw a lot better.
than~s to Cleveland's nine- He was just missing a fe,v

State
from Page81
After pounding No . . 2tanked South Euclid Regina
75-60 in the semi on Friday,
then hanging around their
hotel room for two days
waiting out a winter st9rm
that postponed the finals 48
hours, they ·Finally picked
up the elusive champi.
onship trophy.
Raterman, a first-team
' Associated Press AllOhioan who has signed to
go to Dayton, ~it 3-of-5
shots from the field, 11-of13 free throws and also had
I 0 rebounds, two assists
and four steals in 32 minutes.
Mellan Campbell added
I0 pomts, with several other
players making massive
contributions.
Laura Bardall, another
· first-team all-stater, had 18
points for ninth-ranked
Garaway (25-3), which
came into the state tournament permitting just 23.8
points a game.
Kettering Alter 60,
Hathaway .Brown 46

Asked after the game if
she is usually such a good
3-point shooter, Ashley
Christie said, "I'm kind of
streaky.."
·
Then . co-coach Christina

Hart interjected: "She , can
SHOOT.''
reconsidered.
Christie
With a smi le, she said, "OK.
I can shoot."
She scored 20 points, hitting three consecutive 3pointers as Kettering Alter
built a 14-point lead, and
the Knights closed the game.
on a 21-6 run to beat Shaker
Heights Hathaway Brown
60-46 on Monday to win the
Division II state championship.
The game was. played
before 3,091 at Ohio State's
Value City Arena, two days
after it was postponed
becaus·e of heavy snowfall.
It was the first girls basketball crown for the
Knights (25-3), who were
ranked No. 7 in the tina!
regular-season Associated
Press poll.
· Chnstie, a senior, hit 7-of10 shots from the field. 3of-4 3-pointers and also had
two assists and four steals.
Christie's sophomore sister, Nicole, added 12 points,
as did Mary Bruner.
Second-team AII-Ohioan
Courtney Chihil only scored
two points but h:i.d . five
assists and six rebounds.
First-team AIJ-Ohioan
Mylan Woods Jed · No. 10
Hathaway Brown (22-5)
with 14 points. Alexis
Dobbs added II points.
Cin. Mt. Notre Dame 69,

Lakota West 67

of tlmsc pit.:hes early on,"
Wedgl' said . "I was really
pleased with the way he lln ished ltp."
•
Kazmir, an All-Star in
2005, strained his elbow
warming
up for
an
intrasquad game two weeks
ago.
The Rays plan to have
him throw batting practice
on Thursday. and the 24year-old Jeft-hander is hoping he' ll be given the OK to
throw 60-65 .pitches. If all
goes well, he could make
his spring debut thiS weekend .
·
'·My release point was off
a littl e bit. but everything
felt free and easy." he said
about Monday's bullpen
session. "I 1hrcw about· 20
fastballs and 15 or 20 breaking balls. slider~ and
changeup•. It felt good, real
good. I just have to.continue
. ,
'
progressmg.
..Notes: The Rays made
their first cuts. OF Ferna11do
Perez, LHP James Hogscr
and C John Jaso were
optioned to the minors. RHP
Wade · Davis, LHP Jake
McGee and C Matt Spring
were reassigned to' minor
league camp .... Tampa -Bay
.JNF 8en Zobrist broke .his
thumb Sunday and will· he
sidelined four weeks.

freshman guard Kathryn
Reynold? hit a layup at the
buJ.Zer - it'll be debated
for years that it may have
come after it - to give
Cincinnati Mount Notre
Dame its third consecutive
Division I state championship on . Monday night
with a heart-stopping 69-67
victory over West Chester
Lakota West.
Video replays ·appeared to
show that the ball was st ill
in Reynolds· hand as the
neon light on the backboard
- which usually coincides
with the final buzzer Jlashed on.
The basket touched off a
wild celebration by MND
(26-2), the state's No. 2ranked team. The Cougars
became the first big-school
team in the· state to win
three consecutive champ,ionships. They have won
four of the last five titles.
losing in the championship
game in 2005.
Tia McBride Jed the
Cougars with 24 points,
with Smith adding 14 and
Fowler II.
Alexis Rogers scored 24
points and 2008 Associated
Press Ms.
Basketball
Amber Gray had 23 for
Lakota (26-2), which was
ranked No. 3 in the final
regular-season ranking and
was seeking its first state
title.

es . from Gallia. Meigs,
Jackson, Vinton, Hocking,
Lawrence, Athens and
Washington counties.

UCribune -Sentinel - l\e

.",;

'

CLASSIFIED
Galli a
County
OH

E·mall
classified@ mydailytribune.com

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

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

To Place
UCribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, · · (740) 446-2342 (7~0) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call TOday... ·

or Fax To (740) 446·3008

Word Ads

Ohio Valley
Publishing re11rvea
tho right to edit,
re}ect or cancel any
ad at eny time.
Errors Must B
eported on the fl
.y of pubUCitton a
he Tribune-Sentinel
•ulster
will
aponslble for n
ore then the cost o

he apace occuple
the error and onl

e tlrtt lneertlon. W
hall not be liable to
ny 1011 or expen
hat reautls from th
ubllcatlon ar amla

ton of an advert!

nt. Correctloni wll
modo In the llro
velleble edition.

r

r=.~::;::;:~
YARI&gt;SAt.E

1

GIVFAWAY

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Pl.lt:tllthlng rtHNtt tne right to tdlt, re)Kt, or Ancel anw ad at MIY time. Errort mull be reported on the llrtt day of
Trlbune-Sentlnti-Rtgltttr will be raapontlbltlor no mora than the oott·ol the tpace occupied by the trrOJ and only thtllrtt lnurtlon. Wt
eny lo.. or 11p1ftulhtt r'"Uib lrom the publication or omlulon of an tdYtrtiMmtnt. Correction will be made In tnt first tlllallable edition.
art alwtwa confidential. • Current rt1e card appfln. • All rNI tttllt adv.tl•tfntnta . . tubltctto tht Fedtral Ftlr Housing Act of 1MB. • Thlt
acceptt only halp wamtd adt mHtlng EOE ttlndtrdt. Wt will not knowingly accept any advtrtltlng In vlolttlon of tht ltw. ·

_____, . . -.....--v-.._.:::.kltncorlylegc~mcllt.net

r

4NV
.....,..
..,._.,~~()~ f6 WftA r
,, .., 11 D~''(

1
I'H'"v

AetJI)J

1

newapape
ccepta only hel
· anted ada meetln
OE llllndards.

&gt;We wUt not knowing
accept any adver
lament In vlalatlo
flhe law.

currency, proof/mint sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop1
'151 2'nd Avenue. Gallipolis.
446·2842

Lost F. German Shepherd
last seen Jan. 30 w/st1tches
m belly &amp; red collar,
Carpenter/Dyesville, $250
for safe return, (740}6982267

Small Church needs small
P1ano call 304·773-5166 or
304-675·.2338
-------Unrestricted land from large
lot to 1 acre, Apple Grove
WV or South on At 2,
(3(}4)576·2000

1 Acre , Flat Lot Spacious

Olvlalon II-IV 65, Division 1n-1v 59

0·111/IV
D·IIIIV

26
33

33
32

59
65

DIVISION III-IV - T' Ann M~yo (S . Point)

6 0.0 14, Rachel Harris (Chesapeake) 2
1·2 7, Brooke Long (Rock Hilt} 1 2-2 5,

Kaylln Marshall (Oak Hill) 3 2·4 8, Lisa
Moede (Nets-Yor k) 7 3-5 17, Ashle1gh

Tornes (Waterford) 1 1-2 3, Sarah
Ashworth (Symmes V.) 1 1-4 3, Katie
Hayman (Eastern) 1 0-2 2 TOTALS· 22
1Q-21 59. MVP- Lisa Meade.

Basement, located outside
of Rio Grande in a beautiful
wooded location . $199,000.
2 Gas Furnances ·$100.00 Call for an appt. 740·245each, 50gat. Hot Water Tank 0125
·
$50.00 174014413·4060
------1
3BA. 1 bath. LA. FR. OR.
11111
WANIID
Kit., Full Basement. 1.5
Do
acres Securoly System,
~w--liiioiiiooo-rl Gallipolis. 740-645-4500

Co) 2 4·5 8, Jarln Wascn (Jackson) 5o1 12, Carissa Bosch (Logan! 5 1·3 12,
Chelsea Stowers (S. Gallla) 2 0-0 4, Nlkl
Fulks (S. Gallla) 3 3-4 9, Damelio Blair
(Ironton· St. Joo) 1 0·0 2. TOTALS: 23 1421 65. Three-point goals: 5 (Horner 2,
Wasch 2. Boaqh). MVP- Lakin Hornor.

{

~

~;®;2008==b~y:N:E:A:':In:c~.:-;;=:::====:-;;w;w;::w:.c:o:m:lc:•:·:co:m::~
1110
•

HELP \\'ANTED

1110 HELP WANI'F.D 11 110
•

•

•

·

'

I

Hi:LP WANIED ,

Regional, Pneumatic Tanker
&amp; OTR driving Positions:
R&amp;J Trucking Company In
Marietta, Ohlo Is searching
for qualified COL A Drivers
to operate Semi-Dumps,
Pneumatic Bulk Tankers for
both regional ·and OTR
opportunities
Qualified
applicants must be at leas!

CLASSIFIED INDEX

George's Portable Sawmill, 7 7 Hawthorne Ln. , Pt.
don't haul your Log_s to the Pteasant, 3br, 1ba. tms/SF

. DIVISION IIHV - Tylor Shoemaker
(Choaapeake) 4 0·2 8, Cory Voles (Fod
Hock) 4 2·2 10, Nathan Davenport
(Aock Hill) 2 0·0 4, Marc Carter (Ironton)
5 0·0 13, Beau Weed (S. Point) 3 0·0 7,
Marcus Frazier {River Valley) 2 ()..() 4,
Duslln Bumgardner (Fairland) 5 0·1 10,
Kyle Rawson (Eastern) 3 o-o 6. l'yler
Duncan (S. Gallie) 1 0-Q 2, Derek Hoge
(Waterford) 4 1·1 10, Issac Standley
(Trimble) 3 0-1 7, Jacob J9hnson
(Symmes V.) 1 0·0 3, Mat.! Tibbs
(Symmos V.) 3 0·0 6. TOTALS: 40 3· 7
90 Three·point goals: 7 (Carter 3,
Weed, Hoge, Standley. Johnson) . MVP
- Marc Carter.
DIVISION II - Lucas Wright (Logan) 3
0·0 6, Craig Call {Warren) 6 0-o 12, Sam
Majoy (Warren) 5 2-2 12, David Rumley
(Gallia Academy) 1 0·0 2, Ryan Stewart
(Vinton Co.} 5 0·0 13. Cole Biehl
· {Mariella) 5 0-0 13, Chns Goode
(Me1g·s) 1 0·0 2 Steven Hunter (Warren)
1 0·0 3, Anqy Buescher (Jackson) 1 0·2 '
3, Evan Stacy (Jackson) 1 0·0 2.
TOTALS· 29 2-4 66 Three-pOint goals· 6
(~tewart 3, Bieri 3. Hunter. Buescher).
MVP - Cr"ig Call.

everyday cleaning, or Spring
"
·
·
cleaning, Resldenttal or 9 room 2500 sq. ft. ranch.
Commercial 446-2313 and Bailey Run Rd., Pomeroy.
osk for Kay
· Ohio, $105,000, (740)992·
9363, 304·722·3894
Roofingall
types .:..:..:.:..:..:..:_...=..:__ _~
Commerciai-Aesldental, 20
Attention!
yrs eKpenance in all types Local company oHering ~No
metal
roof1ng ,
Bnan DOWN PAVMENr pro·
{740)992·2910
grams for you to buy your
·
d ot renting.
·
h orne 1nstea
1) ro._, ro.JV
11 '-'mLU't:..UlERtV • 100% financing
1 • Less than perfect credit
CARE
8.ccepted

Wanted to buy Junk Cars.&amp;
23 yrs, nave a minimum of 1 Child care done in my horo.e.
4x4 '1 For Sale .................................. : ........... 725
Farm Machinery call 74Dyears of safe commerlcal infants welcome, meals
Announcement .......................................;... 030
3BB·0884 Can Call Collect
driving experience, Haz Mat included, lots of activities for
Antiques .......................................................530
Certification, Clean MVA your child, days, n1gt1t and
Apartments lor Rent................................... 440
Wanting to Buy Junk Cars.
and good job s!ablll!y. Wo weekends. $2 00 per hour.
Auction and Flea Markel.............................
3(}4·675·2 t 76
offer a full slate of bel\eflts Call 256·1438 ask for
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 780
! \11'1 0\'11 \I
plus 401 (k) and vacation
Auto R•palr ..................................................770
..,I H\ II I . .,
pay. For information contact
Autos lor Sale ..............................................710
Kent at 600 _462 _9365 or ~~~~---.,
Boats &amp; Motors far Sale ............................. 750
111r
110
10
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
ViSit our web site at
BllSINESi
HELP WANTFJl
WWWrilruckjog
com
E.O.E.
0PPORTIJNf11'
Business and Bulld!ngs ............................. 340
Buslneaa Opportun!ty ................ ;................ 210
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Repair Technician needed . Home Interior· contact
Business Training .......................,............... 140
Assemble cralls, wood
Ability to wort&lt; without direct Rosalie Unrue al (304)273·
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Supervision a must Self
·
2969. limited lime Join and
Camping Equipment ................................... 780 . ilems.To $480/wk Materials
· t
,.
starter and detail Oriented.
Cards of Thanka .......................................... oto
provlded Free 1n orma mn
Receive $500 merchandise
pKg 24Hr 801 428 4649
Traveling Involved Monday
, , . Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
··
·
:
thur Frl. Malt resume to:
_'o_ro_n_Iy_$~99_____
Electrlca~Relrlgerlllon ............................... 840
'A
LOCAL
manfacturer
IS.
P.
0
.
Bo.lc
339
Ravenswood,
Mary Kay Consultant Buy,
: : Equipment lor Rent .....: ............................... 480
looking tor EXPERIENCED Home
Care
Company
WV 26164
Soli. or Host. Earn Free
Excavatlng ................................... ,............... 830
Uig
.
Welders accepting resumes for CAS
---~---- Products, Call Angie (740)
: : ~ Farm Equlpment ..........................................610 .
and E X pER 1EN E 0 and delivery Technicians.
AN's needed to provide. 2, 5 5206 (740 ) 578 1051
.1 • Farma for Rant... ..........................................430
Operators
ol
brake
presses
·Please
forward
resumes
to
bas1c
first aid at Industrial "' or
·
1•
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
and shears. Apply in person CLA BoK 3 c/o Point
site in Point Pleasant, WV.
•NOTICE• .
For Laan ..................................................... 490
Operator Part and .Full time. INTER· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHat King Kutter 11 2150 Pleasant Reg1ster 200 Main Owner
, ·~~ For Sate ........................................................ sas Eastern Avo, Gallipolis. No St. Pt. Ploasanl, WV 25550 Opportunities:
A&amp;J ESTINGI LOW STRESS! lNG CO: recommends
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Phone Calls Please.
- - - - - - - - Trucking . Marietta, Ohio Call 888-269-8344 or fa~e that you do bUSII'leSS with
Fruita &amp; Yegetablea ..................................... 580
- - - - - - - - Homemaking
•nd has oppor.tunities available resu me to 740..266-6671
people you know. and
• Furnlahed Roome ........................................ 450
An . E~ecellant way to earn Personal Care Attendants for Owner Operators within
NOT 10 serM:t money
; · • Generot Haullng ...........................................850
money The New Avon.
Training: Local Agency now the region . We feature
through the mail until you
' :; Glveaway..........................................., .......... 040
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
accepting applicatiOns fo r weekly settlements and trailIIM'MII-""".·..v...
•
have investinated the
classes to be held March 17...._ •v~.-·
•
, • Happy Ada.................................................... 050
All Areas llio 8 uy or 21st CHHA'I, STNA'a, er
r.ental
Operators
shOUkt
~off;•r:in:g·:;:;:::==~
A....'~NI
v
have
newer
equipment
and
. :: "ay &amp; Graln ........, ......................................... 840
' 1 Sp
304
PC •
Se11 · Sh lrey
:' Help Wanted .................................................110
ears,
· CNA's and
As we1come frame type trailers For more
.; · orne lmprovements .......... :........................ Bt 0
675·1429.
to apply. Please ca ll information_ contact oennls
Take inbound customer
~'
MoNEY
- - - - - - - - : - (740}44t·1377 for more a1800_, 62 •9365
sorvlcocallsfor
[
rol.oAN
·omea for Sale ............................................ 310
ccount1ng Clerk needed for Information
Fonune 100 Companies
::
oueahold GoodR ....................................... 510
last
paced
office
Computer
,
· - -............- ...
·~- Houses lor Rent ....... ,.................................. 4t 0
POST OFFICE NOW
Including:
skills with a high levol ol IT Tochnlclan. Must havo
Time w 'arner Cable
~~""OTICE~*
;·.: In Memorlam ................................................ 020
HIRING
...
accuracy requi red. Must expenence. Fa~e resume to
1 ••
fnaurance ..................................... ,........;...... 130
possess e~ecellent data entry 74o-446·9 l0 4
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
: :: tawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ &amp;&amp;O
skills and be able 10 meet - - . , . . - - - - - $57Klyr, includes
• Up to $8.50/hour
Borr.Qw Smart Contact
: •• ldveatock ......................................................630
Federal Beneflts, OT.
the Ohio Dtvis1on ot
deadlines punctually and ManpoWer is now hiring for
:. ~ toot and Faund ...........................................
display a strong attention to the
following
positions Offered by Exam Services,
Now Hiring:
Financial
tnslltution's
·•
oil &amp; Acreage ............................................350
detail. accuracy •and conti- Automobil e
Prodution
not offered wf USPS who
Full Time Day Shift
QH1ca
of Consumer
• Mlacellaneoua..............................................170 • dentiallty. ExptJrience in pay· Workers in the Buffalo, WV
hires.
Full Time Evenings. Shift
Affairs BEFORE you rellMiscellaneous Merchand!ae .......................540
raP &amp; benefits prel~med but Area Benefits available Call
1·866·542-153~
nance your home or
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
not required. Send resume. Today 304-757-3338
CalllnfoCielon Today! obtain a loan. BEWARE
•
ci
p
·
PI
t
POST
OFFICE
NOW
of requests !of any large
¥oblle Homes for Rent ...............................420
I0 CLA""' 0 om1 easan Middleton Estates is accept·
G
: : Mobile Homes for Sale................................320
HIRIN
1
•aa.tMC·P·•"''
advanco payments ot
AegII
5 er 200 M81.n St · pt · ing annlications for a Full
Avg. pay $20~
-a
"'' u
,..,,..
"''or
fee" or insurance. Call the
' • • Money to Loan .............................................220
PI
t Wv 25550
_oa_sa_n_
._
·
time
Medical
Coordinator.
Ext
2347
•
~
$57Kiyr, includes
•
Office
ot Consumer
' - : Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Whoelera ..........................740
toul'!sl~e
Bar
&amp;
Gnll
now
Must
be
proficient
in
Federal
Benefits,
OT.
www.infocision.com
Affairs
toll free at 1-866·
• Musical lnetrumen1s ................................... 570
..•: . ereonala .....................................................005
taking applications for eKpe- Microsoft and Excel. 11 you Offered by Exam Services,
278-0003 1o learn it the
.
rlenced grill and fry cooks. would like to take advantage
not offered w/ USPS who
The Charlelton Gazette
mortgage
broker or
·...
fot· Sale •.•..••...••••••••••••.••..••••••••••••...•••••• 560
Apply in person or call of th1s opportunity, you may
hlres.
Independent Conlractor
lender
properly
5
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng" ..................................820
(740)441-9371 to set up an apply at 8204 Carla Drive.
1·866-403-2582
Carrier Needad·For
licensed. (This is a public
• Profeaalonal Servlcea.................................230
interview. 308 2nd Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio, . Monday
Newspaper Delivery At. 35·
service announcement
· • Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapa!r .......................... ,.... 160
Gallipolis.
through Fnday, Bern- 4pm · Post Office Now Hiring!
Stave Branch-5&amp;20 MI. Ad·
from the Ohio Valley
• Real Estate wan1ed ..................................... 380
, - - - - - - , - - - or by email1ng a resume to:
Avg. pay $20/hr. 57Kiyr,
Buffalo Area Earn about
Pub+ishing Company)
Schoolalnatructlon ..................................... 150
Experienced ha1r stylist. rharrison@rescare.com
inct. Fed. ben. , OT. Offered
$1,600 monthly before
~;:;:::::::=~
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
brmg resume to Modern
by Exam Ser\llces. not aff.
eKpenses Approximately 4 111
SHuat!ons Wanted ....................................... 120 •
T
Mi,dnight Clerk needed at At
·
t10
d 0
ndable
PRo
1
Space lor Rant .............................................480
35 V1deo &amp; Bookstore 3041-·.. Sporting Gooda .......................... :............ ,•.• 520
93!-4900
800-982·6397 EKt. 1709
-SUV's lor Sale .............................................. 720
FEDERAL
New Carry Out/Delivery Resumes as applications for - - - - - - - TURNED DOWN ON
Trucks far Sale ............................................ 715
.
M
d L'feguards
at Truck Drivers COL Class A
1
P OSTAL J OBS
Restaurant
in Po1nt
anager an
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
... Upholatery ............................. ,,. ................... 870
.
tor the Syracuse London Pool Required, minimum of 2
No FoetJ..loss
Wo Winl
$17.89·$28.27/hr , now hir· Pleasant
H1rmg,
••
Vans Far Sate ............................................... 730
.
d
'"'
for the 2008 Season are years
drlvjng
exp.
1. 888. 582 . 3345
ing. For app II cahon an 1ree 1nterv1ew ca 11 ..,.,.... 593 · 3120
Wanted to Buy ............................ .-................ 090
being accepted. Resumes Experience
on
1 1 d
gOvernement lOb 1nfo, celt or 304·8 t 2~88
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
oan
be
delivered
to
the
office
Overdeimenslona
oa
s.
American Assoc of Labar 1- d· 1
Wanted Ta Do .............................................. 180
.!•'on 1"usl of tho Clork·Treasurer at Must have nood nv ng
••
id.
Sal
Pos
Out
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. emp.
s
I
.,
"
•
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
serv.
have experience w1th oper· 2581 Third Street or mailed record . · Earn up to $2.000
Yard Sat.. Golllpotte.................................... 072
- - - - - - - - at1ng farm equipment and to PQ.BQ)( 266, Syracuse. weekly. For application Call
Yard Sat ..Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
M·F
Help wanted at .Darst Home computers. Fax Resume to OH 45779 on or before (304)722·2184
Yard Soli-Pl. Pteoaent ................................ 076
March 31, 2008
8:30am-4pm
Group Home. 740..992·5023 740-446·9104

oao

f

·-iiliti i i i i i t-,.1

,.

~:~i~s~~~~~7 ~~667 _~~:;rs

.

.

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern 's Katie Hayrnan, center, attempts a shot during the District 13 Basketball Coaches
Association All-Star Game Monday at Newt Oliver Arena in Rio Grande. ·
I

'

w~;~~5~:~9~ ~f·

~~~:a ~us~~LL

New 3 Bedroom homes from

Mill just call304·67o·1957. · New floor coverings, fresh $214.36 per month, Includes
h 1
1 1
Need a help1ng hand lor pan· new
ea pump many upgrades, delivery &amp;
579 000 304 674 3698
SOI·Up. (740)385·2434

..

oao

Dlvlolon ·m·IV 10, Dlvlolon 1118
0·111/IV
41
49
90
0-11
36
32
68

NEW 2008 4 BA·2BA
1,700+ sq ft $49,989
trom $397 Month
Midwest 740-828·2750
mymidwesthome.com

~

VVf'"'""\

1...

BOYS

from $199 Month
New 2008 Singtewide
M1dwest 740-828-2750
mymidwesthome.com

· To

-;-11

·------,.1

DIVISION II~IV Lakin Horner
(Warren) 5 6-8 18, Jessi Harkins (Vinton

Cod. 4/5BR. 2 bath. F•n $4,000, (740)247·0402

1

c

GIRLS

16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
Vin0 Siding. Shingle Rool.
$230 per month. 740·385·
9946
------'-2008 3 bedroom 2 bath soc·
llonalhome' S279permonth
740·385·7671.

~.:~~ ~~1e::ndenl Col~~ 2000 Custom built Cape 3 br., 1 112 bath, ati elednc.

1987 Mercedes Benz 190.E.
Found-small black Dog . 4 Cly, gas. 2.3 for parts.
Baifey Run Ad. 740-992- Phone 740-256·1102 ask tor
Jr.
3968.

Found: Red and White
BasSett Hound, Tycoon Lake
Vlcimty, found on 2120 4419443

--------

I.

3BA, 2BA, Lg. Kit &amp; LA, DR.

ilr=~~---,
170 Uoo~
.,.,_,.~ I
1._._~.t!.LL'U"Q!.UU)

--

on MI.Oilve Ad . Please call verlgold
coins,
any
10K/14KI18K gold jewelry,
740•388•9839
- - - . , - - - - - - dental gold, pre 1935 US

0 down payment 4 bed·
rooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attadtod garage. 740·
367-7129.

~

~RES~

Den wl Fireplace , 2 car 2008 sectional home 3
attached Garage Rodney Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
Galllpolll career COllage $115.000 (740) 245·9125
and sol up $38,695. 740·
(Careers Close To Home)
385-9948.
Coli Todayl 740·446-4367. 2.600 sq. II. 4br. 2' ocros - - - - - - - wlpool. in
New Haven 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Owner
1-1100·214·0452
$139,500 304-593-8871 call finance. $275 per month .
www.galllpoUscareelcollege.ed"
740 446 3570
Accr6d•ted Member Accutd•llng after 6pm
·
-

roBuv

Found: Mmiature Plnscher Absolute Top Dollar · sil·

n&gt;R SALE

r

.II'DJKUCDON"

.Fu:A MARKET _

Lab/Shepherd miK puppies. ~~••;::m;:.•'-~:----,
Call256·6169
. WANtlD

If'~

ScoooLs
t .. ..-..

Free Lab mi~e puppies. 74o-· 11th Annual Pot of Gold ,
245-0 125
Antique Show &amp; Sale, East
Carter
M1ddle . School,
Free to good home. 6 mofllh
old mixed breed puppies Grayson, KV, Mardl 15-16,
Sat. 8-5, ·Sun. 10·4, Over 60
part ~nhound Please call
Dealers, $3.00 Adults, 12 &amp;
(740) 256·t445
under Free, Free Appraisals
Free to good homes. Wlfh admission (limit 2

r

•

ll:io

~~~~J.,G$ ·

iiji"-~----...,
AUCI10N AI'IID

~'{

l\'..::11""1
"""' .,.,.,
/A'/

lr..,ll!'u-~--....,
HoMES
I

Welders needed. 1yr. experienco. Good wagos &amp; bono·
lits Sond resumes to: CLA
Box 103, do Gallipolis Dally
Tribuna, PO Box 469,
Gotlipolis. OH 4563t

If I '(frif&lt;.'G rPIJ I

...,
Moving Sale Hou se &amp;
Garage full of furnitur &amp; tools
Camp Conley call 304·675·
5057

lfw&gt;WAimD

•

v

YARD SALE·
L.-•Pioiir.titl'uAsiOiiiliiANfll
. ;.,,J

__

ro

Kri_T_&amp;_c_A_R_LV_L_E_._ _..,..._ _ _~-~~--~~

u

1yr old mixed breed. t&gt;kllan
mad . frame dog. would like
fenced yard In the country.
Great watch dog. 446-7644
-------7 wk old 112 Beaglo pups.
Will make excellent pets or
hunters. 446-7644 if no
answer, lea~ a message.

Publication
sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sunday• P • t -·J .

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days ·

\ \ \I ll \ t I \I I \ I "'

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•ln••• Days Prior To

Friday For Sunday• Paper

• Start Your Adl With AKeyword • Iilclude Complete
Detcriptlon • J"c:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
· To Help Get Response ...

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~,
,..,.,
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Sunday In-Column: t ': oo p.m.

8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

*POLICIES*.

Oearl~ir~

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for ln•ertlon
In Next Day•s Paper

· Monday thru Friday
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

or Fax To (740) 992·2157

·

r

s::AL

• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367·0000
r----::~--'1

G:t
=
·

All realest.te advertl&amp;ing
In this newspaper is
subject to the Federtl
Ftlr Housing Act at 1968
which makes It llltflll to
ad~~rertlse "any
f
11 11a11
pre erence, m
an or
cUtcrlmlnatlan bated on
race, color, religion, HX
familial status Of national
arlgln, or any lnlent Ion,to
mtke any such
preference, llmltallon ar
dllcrlmlnatlan."
Thia newapeper will not
knowingly oecopt
advertlaements for real
estatt which lain
violation of the law. Our
readeraers hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• edvenlaed in
thlt ntwapaper are
available an an equal
· appartunltybatet.

USED HOME SALE
Nice 3BR Singlewides
lrom $2900 Down Pmt
· Midwest 740·828-2750

r

LoTs&amp;
ACREAGE

1 acre lot on E. Bethel Ch
Rd. No Septic, Great flat tot
with driveway, close to town
446-9383 Asking $13,000
26 acres with timber, Mason
Co. wv. 10 minutes from
bridge. 740 _709 _1166
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
Ad. 441-1111
Prime reSidential building lot
in Rio Grande on Lake Dr
$24 ..900. Phone 260·4955114
HI \I \I "

rio

,

HOUSEli
IURRENT

$400 month, $400 Sec.
Deposit. Up-Town, 1·BDAM
Leave
(304)675·7381
Message
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, CIA &amp;
Gas Heat, WID hook-up,
Stove &amp; Refrigerator included,
Water/Sewer/Trash
Included, S450/mo &amp; 1 mo.
deposit reqUtred. No pets.
References Aequ1red. In
Gallipolis City limits. Call
(740)256·9, 90

2BA in Evans Height. City
Schools. Small pets considered. $450/month. Dep. Rei.
Duplex for Sale on Land 339-2494
Contract. 740-992·5858.
2br, in Pl. Pleasant. Deposit
House for sale In Racine required $450 month , 304area. ApproK. 4 acres. atl 593-5363 or 304-593-0128
professionally landscaped
Ranch style house with 4 3 BR. 1 bath. FA, Basement.
bedrooms, living room . din· 2 cer garage. At 141 2 m.
ing room, k1tchen , large fam· from town, $700 includes
ily room , central air, gas heat wtr/swrl1rash $650 dep. 446·
and t t1replace. Additionofa 4624

~~~~~~~~

large Floridp room . com·
pletely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool eree. Healod in
grou nd poo1enc Iosed bY pn-·
vacy fencing and land·
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house
and tlnl shed &amp; heated 3 car
unattached.
garage
Excellent conchtton ready to
move in. $255,000.00. Call:
(74 0)949·2217.
M:o:i'll:a::ls:'!rno~m::'e::lo'l':':oo~nl::ar:ll
. &amp; Lelah Sergent,
ooms 2 tult baths,
ca
2

=~g~.P s:~tt~h~r~t~~~·

ence on corner lot. 201
oreS! St. Henderson W
04-675·6411 or 304·674
70

MOlin F. HOMI'li
·mKSALE
3 bedroom. 2 bath. Take over
pa~ments . 740-446-~

'

'

~3B-R--ho-u-se~._N_o_p-ot-s.
$ 5 00/month
$350/Dopos,·l.
after 6 pm.

rent.
'41 · t489
"

"--'---,--~-

4 Bedroom House for Rent
(740) 446-4060 or 367-7762
4BA, 2BA on SA 279 near
Centerville. Stove &amp; Fridge
Included. 2 car carport and
outbuilding Sec. Dep Aeq
Gall 740-742-.2376

~

Bedroom House 1n

Syracuse $500/month +
depostt HuCI App. No Pets.
(304)675-5332 weekends
740.591-0265 '
Small 4 room house tor rent
at 1934 Chatham. $300 per
month + utilitieS and depOsit.
446·3890

SH P
CLASSIFIEDS

�•

·Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March

www.mydailyscntinel.com

www.mydailysentlnel.com

11, 2008

IJ',,

Tampa's Kazmir encouraged by bullpen
session despite team's loss·to Cleveland
Bv

'

FRED GooDALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Pete Sampras, left, comments as he and Ro·ger Federer, right, speak at a news conference
in New York Monday.

Roger Federer beats Pete Sampras in
exhibition at Madison Square Garden
NEW YORK (AP) Roger Federer. in his ultra'
modern all-black getup. and
Pete Sampras. in his oldschool all-white outfit,
showed off the ski lis that
earned them a combined 26
Grand Slam titles and more
than a decade of No. frankin s.

~

Tt was an exhibition, yes,
but Federer still nicked his
fancy strokes from all
angles, just the way he does
on tennis' grandest stages
these days.
Sampras st ill smacked big
forehands and bigger aces,
just the way he dtd back in
his day.
Federer is closing in on
Sampras' record of 14 major
tennis championships, a
mark that \ruly exists only
in black in white. written in
a record book. For nearly 2
1/2 hours. before an appre, ciative and occasionally

raucous gathering of 19,690
at Madison Square Garden.
these two Jiving, breathing
greals of the game shared a
court.
Pistol Pete vs. The
Federer Express.
The Past vs. The Present.
· .And. as one might expect,
youth was served.
'Current No. I ·Federer
beat former No. I Sampras
6-3, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (6) in an
encounter that certainly
doesn't settle . the "Who is
better?"' debate, given that
one participant is 26 and the
other is 36, and nothing
more than braggin~ rights
was on the line. It dtd, however, raise tennis' profile,
make both men some
money - $1 million for
Federer, Jess for Samprasand, well, allow people to
say they saw Sampras; the
best of his generatwn. face
Federer, the best of his.

Cleveland is already playing without center. Zydrunas
Ilgauskas, who has missed
the
past five games because
· from Page 81
of a strained back.
Wallace doesn't know if
in the final 2 minutes.
the back will keep him out
"Their defense tightened of any further action.
up and we couldn't score,"
"I really can ~t tell right
Portland
coach
Nate now," he said. "We'll have
McMillan said. "You can't to work on it and see if we
turn the ball over or come can loosen it up."
down with as many empty
Notes: The Cavaliers (37trips as we did in the second 27) are I0 games over .500
half."
for the first time this season.
After the Cavs trailed the ... James thinks Miami star
entire game, Varejao's 3- Dwyane Wade made the
point play with 9.2 seconds right decision to sit out the
· left in the third quarter gave rest of the season·because of
them a 62-61 lead. Roy's a recurr.ing knee injury.
free throw tied it going into "With the situation they're
in, they're not going to
the fourth.
Portland Jed the entire make the playoffs, so I think
first half. Portland's biggest he should shut it down,"
lead came at 27-14 early in James said .... Greg Oden,
the second quarter. Aldridge the No. I pick in last year's
scored 17 points in the half draft who played one season
at Ohio State, watched the
on 8-for-12 shooting.
Wallace was scoreless game in street clothes. He's
with five rebounds in 15 out for the season because
minutes in the first half. of knee surgery ..

James

District 13
from Page 81
eight
markers
and
Chesapeake's Rachel Harris
with seven.
Brooke Long of Rock Hill
added five points, while
both Ash leigh Tornes of
Sarah
Waterford
and
Ashworth of Symnies
Valley each scored three .
Katie Hayman 'of Eastern
rounded things out with two
points.
In the boys contest,
. Division II took on a team ·
made up of players from
Division Ill and Division
IV. The extra help did pay
off as Division III-IV
claimed a commanding 9068 victory over the Division
II squad.
The Division III-IV team
had 13 players score in the
victory, including four in
double figures. Ironton's
Marc Carter Jed the charge
with 13 points, earnin_g
MVP honors during the triumph. Cory Vales of
Federal Hocking, Dustin
Bumgardner of Fairland and.
Derek Hoge of Waterford
all followed with I0 markers each.
.Chesapeake."s .
Tyler
Shoemaker added etght
points to the winning cause,
followed by Beau Weed of
South Point and Issac
Standley of Trimble with
seven apicc.e. Eastern's
Kyle Rawson and Matt
Tibbs of Symme&gt; Valley

also chipped in six points
each.
Rock Hill's Nathan
Davenrort and · River
Valley s Marcus Frazier
each scored four, while
Jacob Johnson of Symmes
Valley contributed three
points. Tyler Duncan of
South Gallia rounded out
the win with two points.
Division II had four of its
10 players reach double figures, with Ryan Stewart of
Vinton 'Count;Y and Cole
Biehl of Manetta leading
the way with 13 points
apiece. Wlj!Ten teammates
Craig Call and Sam Majoy
followed with 12 pomts
each. Call was named the
MVP of the. losers.
Logan's Lucas Wright
was next with six markers,
followed by Steven Hunter
of Warren and Aridy
Buescher of Jackson with
three poit)ts each. Gallia
Aeadeniy's David Rumley,
Chris Goode of Meigs and
Evan Stacy of Jackson
rounded out the scoring
with two points apiece.
All 38 players that participated in the dual event
scored.
· Southern
sophomore
Kasey Turley won the girls
three-point shooting competition, while Chesapeake
freshman Nathan Copley
won the boys three-point
contest. Fed Hock senior
Cory Vales defeated twotime defending cham.pion
Nathan Davenport' in the
Slam Dunk Competition.
District 13 participants
were selected by the coach'

No one can say they saw
Ali face Tyson in a boxing
ring. Or Hogan face Woods
on a golf course.
Tiger Woods, who happens to be pal s with Federer.
sat in the front row Monday.
part of a sellout crowd that
Included Donald Trump,
Regis Philbin and Anna
Wintour. They sat around a
blue, hard court, set up
where the ·NBA's Knicks
and NHL's Rangers play.
, "This is maybe why · so
many people came out: You
don't often get the No. 1· in
his prime playing against
maybe the greatest player of
all time," said Federer.
After Monday's match,
Federer referred to Sampras
as "my childhood hero.'
It was the fourth FedererSampras exhibition; Federer
won two of their three
encounters in Asia late last
year.

Cincinnati
from Page 81
second. Damon left after the
third, one inning after fouling a ball off his foot.
"It's sore. but nothing to
worry about," Girardi said.
Notes: Yankees DH
Hideki Matsui, coming off
knee surgery. went 2-for-3
in his second game this
spring . .. . The Yankees
signed C Chad Moeller to a
minor league contract. and
invited him to spring training. "We need some depth
at catcher," Girardi S:j.id.
"He provides that."
Girardi said C FranCisco
Cervelli, who broke his
right wrist on a collision at
the plate Saturday, .will be
re-evaluated Tuesday in
New York. Cervelli will
likely miss at least eight to
10 weeks.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
- On a day when Tampa
Bay allowe.d 12 runs and 14
hits in a high-scoring loss to
the Cleveiand Indians, the
Rays actually got some
encouraging news about a
key pitcher.
Scott Kazmir. sidelined
the past two weeks with an
elbow strain, threw a
bullpen sess ion before
Monday's 12-1 Qdefeat and
hopes 10 make his first
spring training start as soon
as Sunday against Det~oit.
The defending AL strikeout champion also thinks he
still has plenty of time to get
ready for an opening-day
start.

,.

run fourth. The right-hander
allowed five runs and four
hits in four innings, including B.J. Upton's two-run
homer that put Tampa Bay
ahead 5-2 in the third.
Travis Hafner had an RBI
double and run-scoring single off Tampa Bay starter
Jason Hammel , and Wyatt
Toregas hit a solo homer off
Grant
Balfour ,
for
· Cleveland. The first seven
runs in the Indi ans' big
inning were charged to
Hammel , while James
Houser allowed the last two .
"There was a Jot ofh(tting
going on," said Indian s
manager.Eric Wedge, whose
pitchers yielded II hits.
Hafner was 2-for-2 and is
batting .400 with six RBis
this spring.

·

"Sure, it's a goal for me.
"He's really done a good
But I'm not going to 'rush job, doing a lot of work 'On
anything. Whatever hap- the side, working to get
pens , happens," Kazmir himself going and find his
said. "I realize it's not going swing," Wedge said. "I've
to be that big of a differel'lce really been pleased the last
going from opening day to week with the way he's
maybe Game 2 or Game 3. ·been swinging the bat."
We're just going to take our
Byrd gave up a single and
time and mak e sure that two walks to load the bases
everything is strong and we in the first. Upton drove in
stretched it out and didn't Tampa Bay's first run with a
rush it."
sacrifice fly. and ClitT Floyd
· Paul Byrd weathered a f~llowed with a double.
shaky first two · innings to
"I thought after that tirst
get his . first spring win.. inning he threw a lot better.
than~s to Cleveland's nine- He was just missing a fe,v

State
from Page81
After pounding No . . 2tanked South Euclid Regina
75-60 in the semi on Friday,
then hanging around their
hotel room for two days
waiting out a winter st9rm
that postponed the finals 48
hours, they ·Finally picked
up the elusive champi.
onship trophy.
Raterman, a first-team
' Associated Press AllOhioan who has signed to
go to Dayton, ~it 3-of-5
shots from the field, 11-of13 free throws and also had
I 0 rebounds, two assists
and four steals in 32 minutes.
Mellan Campbell added
I0 pomts, with several other
players making massive
contributions.
Laura Bardall, another
· first-team all-stater, had 18
points for ninth-ranked
Garaway (25-3), which
came into the state tournament permitting just 23.8
points a game.
Kettering Alter 60,
Hathaway .Brown 46

Asked after the game if
she is usually such a good
3-point shooter, Ashley
Christie said, "I'm kind of
streaky.."
·
Then . co-coach Christina

Hart interjected: "She , can
SHOOT.''
reconsidered.
Christie
With a smi le, she said, "OK.
I can shoot."
She scored 20 points, hitting three consecutive 3pointers as Kettering Alter
built a 14-point lead, and
the Knights closed the game.
on a 21-6 run to beat Shaker
Heights Hathaway Brown
60-46 on Monday to win the
Division II state championship.
The game was. played
before 3,091 at Ohio State's
Value City Arena, two days
after it was postponed
becaus·e of heavy snowfall.
It was the first girls basketball crown for the
Knights (25-3), who were
ranked No. 7 in the tina!
regular-season Associated
Press poll.
· Chnstie, a senior, hit 7-of10 shots from the field. 3of-4 3-pointers and also had
two assists and four steals.
Christie's sophomore sister, Nicole, added 12 points,
as did Mary Bruner.
Second-team AII-Ohioan
Courtney Chihil only scored
two points but h:i.d . five
assists and six rebounds.
First-team AIJ-Ohioan
Mylan Woods Jed · No. 10
Hathaway Brown (22-5)
with 14 points. Alexis
Dobbs added II points.
Cin. Mt. Notre Dame 69,

Lakota West 67

of tlmsc pit.:hes early on,"
Wedgl' said . "I was really
pleased with the way he lln ished ltp."
•
Kazmir, an All-Star in
2005, strained his elbow
warming
up for
an
intrasquad game two weeks
ago.
The Rays plan to have
him throw batting practice
on Thursday. and the 24year-old Jeft-hander is hoping he' ll be given the OK to
throw 60-65 .pitches. If all
goes well, he could make
his spring debut thiS weekend .
·
'·My release point was off
a littl e bit. but everything
felt free and easy." he said
about Monday's bullpen
session. "I 1hrcw about· 20
fastballs and 15 or 20 breaking balls. slider~ and
changeup•. It felt good, real
good. I just have to.continue
. ,
'
progressmg.
..Notes: The Rays made
their first cuts. OF Ferna11do
Perez, LHP James Hogscr
and C John Jaso were
optioned to the minors. RHP
Wade · Davis, LHP Jake
McGee and C Matt Spring
were reassigned to' minor
league camp .... Tampa -Bay
.JNF 8en Zobrist broke .his
thumb Sunday and will· he
sidelined four weeks.

freshman guard Kathryn
Reynold? hit a layup at the
buJ.Zer - it'll be debated
for years that it may have
come after it - to give
Cincinnati Mount Notre
Dame its third consecutive
Division I state championship on . Monday night
with a heart-stopping 69-67
victory over West Chester
Lakota West.
Video replays ·appeared to
show that the ball was st ill
in Reynolds· hand as the
neon light on the backboard
- which usually coincides
with the final buzzer Jlashed on.
The basket touched off a
wild celebration by MND
(26-2), the state's No. 2ranked team. The Cougars
became the first big-school
team in the· state to win
three consecutive champ,ionships. They have won
four of the last five titles.
losing in the championship
game in 2005.
Tia McBride Jed the
Cougars with 24 points,
with Smith adding 14 and
Fowler II.
Alexis Rogers scored 24
points and 2008 Associated
Press Ms.
Basketball
Amber Gray had 23 for
Lakota (26-2), which was
ranked No. 3 in the final
regular-season ranking and
was seeking its first state
title.

es . from Gallia. Meigs,
Jackson, Vinton, Hocking,
Lawrence, Athens and
Washington counties.

UCribune -Sentinel - l\e

.",;

'

CLASSIFIED
Galli a
County
OH

E·mall
classified@ mydailytribune.com

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

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

To Place
UCribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, · · (740) 446-2342 (7~0) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call TOday... ·

or Fax To (740) 446·3008

Word Ads

Ohio Valley
Publishing re11rvea
tho right to edit,
re}ect or cancel any
ad at eny time.
Errors Must B
eported on the fl
.y of pubUCitton a
he Tribune-Sentinel
•ulster
will
aponslble for n
ore then the cost o

he apace occuple
the error and onl

e tlrtt lneertlon. W
hall not be liable to
ny 1011 or expen
hat reautls from th
ubllcatlon ar amla

ton of an advert!

nt. Correctloni wll
modo In the llro
velleble edition.

r

r=.~::;::;:~
YARI&gt;SAt.E

1

GIVFAWAY

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Pl.lt:tllthlng rtHNtt tne right to tdlt, re)Kt, or Ancel anw ad at MIY time. Errort mull be reported on the llrtt day of
Trlbune-Sentlnti-Rtgltttr will be raapontlbltlor no mora than the oott·ol the tpace occupied by the trrOJ and only thtllrtt lnurtlon. Wt
eny lo.. or 11p1ftulhtt r'"Uib lrom the publication or omlulon of an tdYtrtiMmtnt. Correction will be made In tnt first tlllallable edition.
art alwtwa confidential. • Current rt1e card appfln. • All rNI tttllt adv.tl•tfntnta . . tubltctto tht Fedtral Ftlr Housing Act of 1MB. • Thlt
acceptt only halp wamtd adt mHtlng EOE ttlndtrdt. Wt will not knowingly accept any advtrtltlng In vlolttlon of tht ltw. ·

_____, . . -.....--v-.._.:::.kltncorlylegc~mcllt.net

r

4NV
.....,..
..,._.,~~()~ f6 WftA r
,, .., 11 D~''(

1
I'H'"v

AetJI)J

1

newapape
ccepta only hel
· anted ada meetln
OE llllndards.

&gt;We wUt not knowing
accept any adver
lament In vlalatlo
flhe law.

currency, proof/mint sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop1
'151 2'nd Avenue. Gallipolis.
446·2842

Lost F. German Shepherd
last seen Jan. 30 w/st1tches
m belly &amp; red collar,
Carpenter/Dyesville, $250
for safe return, (740}6982267

Small Church needs small
P1ano call 304·773-5166 or
304-675·.2338
-------Unrestricted land from large
lot to 1 acre, Apple Grove
WV or South on At 2,
(3(}4)576·2000

1 Acre , Flat Lot Spacious

Olvlalon II-IV 65, Division 1n-1v 59

0·111/IV
D·IIIIV

26
33

33
32

59
65

DIVISION III-IV - T' Ann M~yo (S . Point)

6 0.0 14, Rachel Harris (Chesapeake) 2
1·2 7, Brooke Long (Rock Hilt} 1 2-2 5,

Kaylln Marshall (Oak Hill) 3 2·4 8, Lisa
Moede (Nets-Yor k) 7 3-5 17, Ashle1gh

Tornes (Waterford) 1 1-2 3, Sarah
Ashworth (Symmes V.) 1 1-4 3, Katie
Hayman (Eastern) 1 0-2 2 TOTALS· 22
1Q-21 59. MVP- Lisa Meade.

Basement, located outside
of Rio Grande in a beautiful
wooded location . $199,000.
2 Gas Furnances ·$100.00 Call for an appt. 740·245each, 50gat. Hot Water Tank 0125
·
$50.00 174014413·4060
------1
3BA. 1 bath. LA. FR. OR.
11111
WANIID
Kit., Full Basement. 1.5
Do
acres Securoly System,
~w--liiioiiiooo-rl Gallipolis. 740-645-4500

Co) 2 4·5 8, Jarln Wascn (Jackson) 5o1 12, Carissa Bosch (Logan! 5 1·3 12,
Chelsea Stowers (S. Gallla) 2 0-0 4, Nlkl
Fulks (S. Gallla) 3 3-4 9, Damelio Blair
(Ironton· St. Joo) 1 0·0 2. TOTALS: 23 1421 65. Three-point goals: 5 (Horner 2,
Wasch 2. Boaqh). MVP- Lakin Hornor.

{

~

~;®;2008==b~y:N:E:A:':In:c~.:-;;=:::====:-;;w;w;::w:.c:o:m:lc:•:·:co:m::~
1110
•

HELP \\'ANTED

1110 HELP WANI'F.D 11 110
•

•

•

·

'

I

Hi:LP WANIED ,

Regional, Pneumatic Tanker
&amp; OTR driving Positions:
R&amp;J Trucking Company In
Marietta, Ohlo Is searching
for qualified COL A Drivers
to operate Semi-Dumps,
Pneumatic Bulk Tankers for
both regional ·and OTR
opportunities
Qualified
applicants must be at leas!

CLASSIFIED INDEX

George's Portable Sawmill, 7 7 Hawthorne Ln. , Pt.
don't haul your Log_s to the Pteasant, 3br, 1ba. tms/SF

. DIVISION IIHV - Tylor Shoemaker
(Choaapeake) 4 0·2 8, Cory Voles (Fod
Hock) 4 2·2 10, Nathan Davenport
(Aock Hill) 2 0·0 4, Marc Carter (Ironton)
5 0·0 13, Beau Weed (S. Point) 3 0·0 7,
Marcus Frazier {River Valley) 2 ()..() 4,
Duslln Bumgardner (Fairland) 5 0·1 10,
Kyle Rawson (Eastern) 3 o-o 6. l'yler
Duncan (S. Gallie) 1 0-Q 2, Derek Hoge
(Waterford) 4 1·1 10, Issac Standley
(Trimble) 3 0-1 7, Jacob J9hnson
(Symmes V.) 1 0·0 3, Mat.! Tibbs
(Symmos V.) 3 0·0 6. TOTALS: 40 3· 7
90 Three·point goals: 7 (Carter 3,
Weed, Hoge, Standley. Johnson) . MVP
- Marc Carter.
DIVISION II - Lucas Wright (Logan) 3
0·0 6, Craig Call {Warren) 6 0-o 12, Sam
Majoy (Warren) 5 2-2 12, David Rumley
(Gallia Academy) 1 0·0 2, Ryan Stewart
(Vinton Co.} 5 0·0 13. Cole Biehl
· {Mariella) 5 0-0 13, Chns Goode
(Me1g·s) 1 0·0 2 Steven Hunter (Warren)
1 0·0 3, Anqy Buescher (Jackson) 1 0·2 '
3, Evan Stacy (Jackson) 1 0·0 2.
TOTALS· 29 2-4 66 Three-pOint goals· 6
(~tewart 3, Bieri 3. Hunter. Buescher).
MVP - Cr"ig Call.

everyday cleaning, or Spring
"
·
·
cleaning, Resldenttal or 9 room 2500 sq. ft. ranch.
Commercial 446-2313 and Bailey Run Rd., Pomeroy.
osk for Kay
· Ohio, $105,000, (740)992·
9363, 304·722·3894
Roofingall
types .:..:..:.:..:..:..:_...=..:__ _~
Commerciai-Aesldental, 20
Attention!
yrs eKpenance in all types Local company oHering ~No
metal
roof1ng ,
Bnan DOWN PAVMENr pro·
{740)992·2910
grams for you to buy your
·
d ot renting.
·
h orne 1nstea
1) ro._, ro.JV
11 '-'mLU't:..UlERtV • 100% financing
1 • Less than perfect credit
CARE
8.ccepted

Wanted to buy Junk Cars.&amp;
23 yrs, nave a minimum of 1 Child care done in my horo.e.
4x4 '1 For Sale .................................. : ........... 725
Farm Machinery call 74Dyears of safe commerlcal infants welcome, meals
Announcement .......................................;... 030
3BB·0884 Can Call Collect
driving experience, Haz Mat included, lots of activities for
Antiques .......................................................530
Certification, Clean MVA your child, days, n1gt1t and
Apartments lor Rent................................... 440
Wanting to Buy Junk Cars.
and good job s!ablll!y. Wo weekends. $2 00 per hour.
Auction and Flea Markel.............................
3(}4·675·2 t 76
offer a full slate of bel\eflts Call 256·1438 ask for
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 780
! \11'1 0\'11 \I
plus 401 (k) and vacation
Auto R•palr ..................................................770
..,I H\ II I . .,
pay. For information contact
Autos lor Sale ..............................................710
Kent at 600 _462 _9365 or ~~~~---.,
Boats &amp; Motors far Sale ............................. 750
111r
110
10
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
ViSit our web site at
BllSINESi
HELP WANTFJl
WWWrilruckjog
com
E.O.E.
0PPORTIJNf11'
Business and Bulld!ngs ............................. 340
Buslneaa Opportun!ty ................ ;................ 210
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Repair Technician needed . Home Interior· contact
Business Training .......................,............... 140
Assemble cralls, wood
Ability to wort&lt; without direct Rosalie Unrue al (304)273·
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Supervision a must Self
·
2969. limited lime Join and
Camping Equipment ................................... 780 . ilems.To $480/wk Materials
· t
,.
starter and detail Oriented.
Cards of Thanka .......................................... oto
provlded Free 1n orma mn
Receive $500 merchandise
pKg 24Hr 801 428 4649
Traveling Involved Monday
, , . Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
··
·
:
thur Frl. Malt resume to:
_'o_ro_n_Iy_$~99_____
Electrlca~Relrlgerlllon ............................... 840
'A
LOCAL
manfacturer
IS.
P.
0
.
Bo.lc
339
Ravenswood,
Mary Kay Consultant Buy,
: : Equipment lor Rent .....: ............................... 480
looking tor EXPERIENCED Home
Care
Company
WV 26164
Soli. or Host. Earn Free
Excavatlng ................................... ,............... 830
Uig
.
Welders accepting resumes for CAS
---~---- Products, Call Angie (740)
: : ~ Farm Equlpment ..........................................610 .
and E X pER 1EN E 0 and delivery Technicians.
AN's needed to provide. 2, 5 5206 (740 ) 578 1051
.1 • Farma for Rant... ..........................................430
Operators
ol
brake
presses
·Please
forward
resumes
to
bas1c
first aid at Industrial "' or
·
1•
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
and shears. Apply in person CLA BoK 3 c/o Point
site in Point Pleasant, WV.
•NOTICE• .
For Laan ..................................................... 490
Operator Part and .Full time. INTER· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHat King Kutter 11 2150 Pleasant Reg1ster 200 Main Owner
, ·~~ For Sate ........................................................ sas Eastern Avo, Gallipolis. No St. Pt. Ploasanl, WV 25550 Opportunities:
A&amp;J ESTINGI LOW STRESS! lNG CO: recommends
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Phone Calls Please.
- - - - - - - - Trucking . Marietta, Ohio Call 888-269-8344 or fa~e that you do bUSII'leSS with
Fruita &amp; Yegetablea ..................................... 580
- - - - - - - - Homemaking
•nd has oppor.tunities available resu me to 740..266-6671
people you know. and
• Furnlahed Roome ........................................ 450
An . E~ecellant way to earn Personal Care Attendants for Owner Operators within
NOT 10 serM:t money
; · • Generot Haullng ...........................................850
money The New Avon.
Training: Local Agency now the region . We feature
through the mail until you
' :; Glveaway..........................................., .......... 040
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
accepting applicatiOns fo r weekly settlements and trailIIM'MII-""".·..v...
•
have investinated the
classes to be held March 17...._ •v~.-·
•
, • Happy Ada.................................................... 050
All Areas llio 8 uy or 21st CHHA'I, STNA'a, er
r.ental
Operators
shOUkt
~off;•r:in:g·:;:;:::==~
A....'~NI
v
have
newer
equipment
and
. :: "ay &amp; Graln ........, ......................................... 840
' 1 Sp
304
PC •
Se11 · Sh lrey
:' Help Wanted .................................................110
ears,
· CNA's and
As we1come frame type trailers For more
.; · orne lmprovements .......... :........................ Bt 0
675·1429.
to apply. Please ca ll information_ contact oennls
Take inbound customer
~'
MoNEY
- - - - - - - - : - (740}44t·1377 for more a1800_, 62 •9365
sorvlcocallsfor
[
rol.oAN
·omea for Sale ............................................ 310
ccount1ng Clerk needed for Information
Fonune 100 Companies
::
oueahold GoodR ....................................... 510
last
paced
office
Computer
,
· - -............- ...
·~- Houses lor Rent ....... ,.................................. 4t 0
POST OFFICE NOW
Including:
skills with a high levol ol IT Tochnlclan. Must havo
Time w 'arner Cable
~~""OTICE~*
;·.: In Memorlam ................................................ 020
HIRING
...
accuracy requi red. Must expenence. Fa~e resume to
1 ••
fnaurance ..................................... ,........;...... 130
possess e~ecellent data entry 74o-446·9 l0 4
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
: :: tawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ &amp;&amp;O
skills and be able 10 meet - - . , . . - - - - - $57Klyr, includes
• Up to $8.50/hour
Borr.Qw Smart Contact
: •• ldveatock ......................................................630
Federal Beneflts, OT.
the Ohio Dtvis1on ot
deadlines punctually and ManpoWer is now hiring for
:. ~ toot and Faund ...........................................
display a strong attention to the
following
positions Offered by Exam Services,
Now Hiring:
Financial
tnslltution's
·•
oil &amp; Acreage ............................................350
detail. accuracy •and conti- Automobil e
Prodution
not offered wf USPS who
Full Time Day Shift
QH1ca
of Consumer
• Mlacellaneoua..............................................170 • dentiallty. ExptJrience in pay· Workers in the Buffalo, WV
hires.
Full Time Evenings. Shift
Affairs BEFORE you rellMiscellaneous Merchand!ae .......................540
raP &amp; benefits prel~med but Area Benefits available Call
1·866·542-153~
nance your home or
Mobile Home Repair ....................................860
not required. Send resume. Today 304-757-3338
CalllnfoCielon Today! obtain a loan. BEWARE
•
ci
p
·
PI
t
POST
OFFICE
NOW
of requests !of any large
¥oblle Homes for Rent ...............................420
I0 CLA""' 0 om1 easan Middleton Estates is accept·
G
: : Mobile Homes for Sale................................320
HIRIN
1
•aa.tMC·P·•"''
advanco payments ot
AegII
5 er 200 M81.n St · pt · ing annlications for a Full
Avg. pay $20~
-a
"'' u
,..,,..
"''or
fee" or insurance. Call the
' • • Money to Loan .............................................220
PI
t Wv 25550
_oa_sa_n_
._
·
time
Medical
Coordinator.
Ext
2347
•
~
$57Kiyr, includes
•
Office
ot Consumer
' - : Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Whoelera ..........................740
toul'!sl~e
Bar
&amp;
Gnll
now
Must
be
proficient
in
Federal
Benefits,
OT.
www.infocision.com
Affairs
toll free at 1-866·
• Musical lnetrumen1s ................................... 570
..•: . ereonala .....................................................005
taking applications for eKpe- Microsoft and Excel. 11 you Offered by Exam Services,
278-0003 1o learn it the
.
rlenced grill and fry cooks. would like to take advantage
not offered w/ USPS who
The Charlelton Gazette
mortgage
broker or
·...
fot· Sale •.•..••...••••••••••••.••..••••••••••••...•••••• 560
Apply in person or call of th1s opportunity, you may
hlres.
Independent Conlractor
lender
properly
5
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng" ..................................820
(740)441-9371 to set up an apply at 8204 Carla Drive.
1·866-403-2582
Carrier Needad·For
licensed. (This is a public
• Profeaalonal Servlcea.................................230
interview. 308 2nd Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio, . Monday
Newspaper Delivery At. 35·
service announcement
· • Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapa!r .......................... ,.... 160
Gallipolis.
through Fnday, Bern- 4pm · Post Office Now Hiring!
Stave Branch-5&amp;20 MI. Ad·
from the Ohio Valley
• Real Estate wan1ed ..................................... 380
, - - - - - - , - - - or by email1ng a resume to:
Avg. pay $20/hr. 57Kiyr,
Buffalo Area Earn about
Pub+ishing Company)
Schoolalnatructlon ..................................... 150
Experienced ha1r stylist. rharrison@rescare.com
inct. Fed. ben. , OT. Offered
$1,600 monthly before
~;:;:::::::=~
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
brmg resume to Modern
by Exam Ser\llces. not aff.
eKpenses Approximately 4 111
SHuat!ons Wanted ....................................... 120 •
T
Mi,dnight Clerk needed at At
·
t10
d 0
ndable
PRo
1
Space lor Rant .............................................480
35 V1deo &amp; Bookstore 3041-·.. Sporting Gooda .......................... :............ ,•.• 520
93!-4900
800-982·6397 EKt. 1709
-SUV's lor Sale .............................................. 720
FEDERAL
New Carry Out/Delivery Resumes as applications for - - - - - - - TURNED DOWN ON
Trucks far Sale ............................................ 715
.
M
d L'feguards
at Truck Drivers COL Class A
1
P OSTAL J OBS
Restaurant
in Po1nt
anager an
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
... Upholatery ............................. ,,. ................... 870
.
tor the Syracuse London Pool Required, minimum of 2
No FoetJ..loss
Wo Winl
$17.89·$28.27/hr , now hir· Pleasant
H1rmg,
••
Vans Far Sate ............................................... 730
.
d
'"'
for the 2008 Season are years
drlvjng
exp.
1. 888. 582 . 3345
ing. For app II cahon an 1ree 1nterv1ew ca 11 ..,.,.... 593 · 3120
Wanted to Buy ............................ .-................ 090
being accepted. Resumes Experience
on
1 1 d
gOvernement lOb 1nfo, celt or 304·8 t 2~88
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
oan
be
delivered
to
the
office
Overdeimenslona
oa
s.
American Assoc of Labar 1- d· 1
Wanted Ta Do .............................................. 180
.!•'on 1"usl of tho Clork·Treasurer at Must have nood nv ng
••
id.
Sal
Pos
Out
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. emp.
s
I
.,
"
•
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
serv.
have experience w1th oper· 2581 Third Street or mailed record . · Earn up to $2.000
Yard Sat.. Golllpotte.................................... 072
- - - - - - - - at1ng farm equipment and to PQ.BQ)( 266, Syracuse. weekly. For application Call
Yard Sat ..Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
M·F
Help wanted at .Darst Home computers. Fax Resume to OH 45779 on or before (304)722·2184
Yard Soli-Pl. Pteoaent ................................ 076
March 31, 2008
8:30am-4pm
Group Home. 740..992·5023 740-446·9104

oao

f

·-iiliti i i i i i t-,.1

,.

~:~i~s~~~~~7 ~~667 _~~:;rs

.

.

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern 's Katie Hayrnan, center, attempts a shot during the District 13 Basketball Coaches
Association All-Star Game Monday at Newt Oliver Arena in Rio Grande. ·
I

'

w~;~~5~:~9~ ~f·

~~~:a ~us~~LL

New 3 Bedroom homes from

Mill just call304·67o·1957. · New floor coverings, fresh $214.36 per month, Includes
h 1
1 1
Need a help1ng hand lor pan· new
ea pump many upgrades, delivery &amp;
579 000 304 674 3698
SOI·Up. (740)385·2434

..

oao

Dlvlolon ·m·IV 10, Dlvlolon 1118
0·111/IV
41
49
90
0-11
36
32
68

NEW 2008 4 BA·2BA
1,700+ sq ft $49,989
trom $397 Month
Midwest 740-828·2750
mymidwesthome.com

~

VVf'"'""\

1...

BOYS

from $199 Month
New 2008 Singtewide
M1dwest 740-828-2750
mymidwesthome.com

· To

-;-11

·------,.1

DIVISION II~IV Lakin Horner
(Warren) 5 6-8 18, Jessi Harkins (Vinton

Cod. 4/5BR. 2 bath. F•n $4,000, (740)247·0402

1

c

GIRLS

16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
Vin0 Siding. Shingle Rool.
$230 per month. 740·385·
9946
------'-2008 3 bedroom 2 bath soc·
llonalhome' S279permonth
740·385·7671.

~.:~~ ~~1e::ndenl Col~~ 2000 Custom built Cape 3 br., 1 112 bath, ati elednc.

1987 Mercedes Benz 190.E.
Found-small black Dog . 4 Cly, gas. 2.3 for parts.
Baifey Run Ad. 740-992- Phone 740-256·1102 ask tor
Jr.
3968.

Found: Red and White
BasSett Hound, Tycoon Lake
Vlcimty, found on 2120 4419443

--------

I.

3BA, 2BA, Lg. Kit &amp; LA, DR.

ilr=~~---,
170 Uoo~
.,.,_,.~ I
1._._~.t!.LL'U"Q!.UU)

--

on MI.Oilve Ad . Please call verlgold
coins,
any
10K/14KI18K gold jewelry,
740•388•9839
- - - . , - - - - - - dental gold, pre 1935 US

0 down payment 4 bed·
rooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attadtod garage. 740·
367-7129.

~

~RES~

Den wl Fireplace , 2 car 2008 sectional home 3
attached Garage Rodney Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
Galllpolll career COllage $115.000 (740) 245·9125
and sol up $38,695. 740·
(Careers Close To Home)
385-9948.
Coli Todayl 740·446-4367. 2.600 sq. II. 4br. 2' ocros - - - - - - - wlpool. in
New Haven 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Owner
1-1100·214·0452
$139,500 304-593-8871 call finance. $275 per month .
www.galllpoUscareelcollege.ed"
740 446 3570
Accr6d•ted Member Accutd•llng after 6pm
·
-

roBuv

Found: Mmiature Plnscher Absolute Top Dollar · sil·

n&gt;R SALE

r

.II'DJKUCDON"

.Fu:A MARKET _

Lab/Shepherd miK puppies. ~~••;::m;:.•'-~:----,
Call256·6169
. WANtlD

If'~

ScoooLs
t .. ..-..

Free Lab mi~e puppies. 74o-· 11th Annual Pot of Gold ,
245-0 125
Antique Show &amp; Sale, East
Carter
M1ddle . School,
Free to good home. 6 mofllh
old mixed breed puppies Grayson, KV, Mardl 15-16,
Sat. 8-5, ·Sun. 10·4, Over 60
part ~nhound Please call
Dealers, $3.00 Adults, 12 &amp;
(740) 256·t445
under Free, Free Appraisals
Free to good homes. Wlfh admission (limit 2

r

•

ll:io

~~~~J.,G$ ·

iiji"-~----...,
AUCI10N AI'IID

~'{

l\'..::11""1
"""' .,.,.,
/A'/

lr..,ll!'u-~--....,
HoMES
I

Welders needed. 1yr. experienco. Good wagos &amp; bono·
lits Sond resumes to: CLA
Box 103, do Gallipolis Dally
Tribuna, PO Box 469,
Gotlipolis. OH 4563t

If I '(frif&lt;.'G rPIJ I

...,
Moving Sale Hou se &amp;
Garage full of furnitur &amp; tools
Camp Conley call 304·675·
5057

lfw&gt;WAimD

•

v

YARD SALE·
L.-•Pioiir.titl'uAsiOiiiliiANfll
. ;.,,J

__

ro

Kri_T_&amp;_c_A_R_LV_L_E_._ _..,..._ _ _~-~~--~~

u

1yr old mixed breed. t&gt;kllan
mad . frame dog. would like
fenced yard In the country.
Great watch dog. 446-7644
-------7 wk old 112 Beaglo pups.
Will make excellent pets or
hunters. 446-7644 if no
answer, lea~ a message.

Publication
sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sunday• P • t -·J .

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days ·

\ \ \I ll \ t I \I I \ I "'

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•ln••• Days Prior To

Friday For Sunday• Paper

• Start Your Adl With AKeyword • Iilclude Complete
Detcriptlon • J"c:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
· To Help Get Response ...

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~,
,..,.,
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Sunday In-Column: t ': oo p.m.

8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

*POLICIES*.

Oearl~ir~

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for ln•ertlon
In Next Day•s Paper

· Monday thru Friday
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

or Fax To (740) 992·2157

·

r

s::AL

• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367·0000
r----::~--'1

G:t
=
·

All realest.te advertl&amp;ing
In this newspaper is
subject to the Federtl
Ftlr Housing Act at 1968
which makes It llltflll to
ad~~rertlse "any
f
11 11a11
pre erence, m
an or
cUtcrlmlnatlan bated on
race, color, religion, HX
familial status Of national
arlgln, or any lnlent Ion,to
mtke any such
preference, llmltallon ar
dllcrlmlnatlan."
Thia newapeper will not
knowingly oecopt
advertlaements for real
estatt which lain
violation of the law. Our
readeraers hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• edvenlaed in
thlt ntwapaper are
available an an equal
· appartunltybatet.

USED HOME SALE
Nice 3BR Singlewides
lrom $2900 Down Pmt
· Midwest 740·828-2750

r

LoTs&amp;
ACREAGE

1 acre lot on E. Bethel Ch
Rd. No Septic, Great flat tot
with driveway, close to town
446-9383 Asking $13,000
26 acres with timber, Mason
Co. wv. 10 minutes from
bridge. 740 _709 _1166
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
Ad. 441-1111
Prime reSidential building lot
in Rio Grande on Lake Dr
$24 ..900. Phone 260·4955114
HI \I \I "

rio

,

HOUSEli
IURRENT

$400 month, $400 Sec.
Deposit. Up-Town, 1·BDAM
Leave
(304)675·7381
Message
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, CIA &amp;
Gas Heat, WID hook-up,
Stove &amp; Refrigerator included,
Water/Sewer/Trash
Included, S450/mo &amp; 1 mo.
deposit reqUtred. No pets.
References Aequ1red. In
Gallipolis City limits. Call
(740)256·9, 90

2BA in Evans Height. City
Schools. Small pets considered. $450/month. Dep. Rei.
Duplex for Sale on Land 339-2494
Contract. 740-992·5858.
2br, in Pl. Pleasant. Deposit
House for sale In Racine required $450 month , 304area. ApproK. 4 acres. atl 593-5363 or 304-593-0128
professionally landscaped
Ranch style house with 4 3 BR. 1 bath. FA, Basement.
bedrooms, living room . din· 2 cer garage. At 141 2 m.
ing room, k1tchen , large fam· from town, $700 includes
ily room , central air, gas heat wtr/swrl1rash $650 dep. 446·
and t t1replace. Additionofa 4624

~~~~~~~~

large Floridp room . com·
pletely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool eree. Healod in
grou nd poo1enc Iosed bY pn-·
vacy fencing and land·
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house
and tlnl shed &amp; heated 3 car
unattached.
garage
Excellent conchtton ready to
move in. $255,000.00. Call:
(74 0)949·2217.
M:o:i'll:a::ls:'!rno~m::'e::lo'l':':oo~nl::ar:ll
. &amp; Lelah Sergent,
ooms 2 tult baths,
ca
2

=~g~.P s:~tt~h~r~t~~~·

ence on corner lot. 201
oreS! St. Henderson W
04-675·6411 or 304·674
70

MOlin F. HOMI'li
·mKSALE
3 bedroom. 2 bath. Take over
pa~ments . 740-446-~

'

'

~3B-R--ho-u-se~._N_o_p-ot-s.
$ 5 00/month
$350/Dopos,·l.
after 6 pm.

rent.
'41 · t489
"

"--'---,--~-

4 Bedroom House for Rent
(740) 446-4060 or 367-7762
4BA, 2BA on SA 279 near
Centerville. Stove &amp; Fridge
Included. 2 car carport and
outbuilding Sec. Dep Aeq
Gall 740-742-.2376

~

Bedroom House 1n

Syracuse $500/month +
depostt HuCI App. No Pets.
(304)675-5332 weekends
740.591-0265 '
Small 4 room house tor rent
at 1934 Chatham. $300 per
month + utilitieS and depOsit.
446·3890

SH P
CLASSIFIEDS

�Page 84 ~ The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

~ l~.r__APAJm_FO_Ri i iDiri wvn;i io .l.~__
.t APAKIMoo's_FOR_RENr
_ _..lr ~

t

.

2BA on Private lot ·on IBR, WID hook-up, stove &amp;
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis fridge furn .• water &amp; trash
city schools. $550 ren t included. No pets. Ref. Req.
Includes all utilities. $500 740·367-7453 or 645-7214

deposit. 740-446-2847 or
545.1668
2Br apt. WID hookup. water
pd. close to hospital &amp; col28R, on private lot $450 lege On Centenary Ad, no
dep. + $450 per month rent pets, 446·9442 after Spm
In Addison Twp. call (740)
645-3413 or (740) 367-{)654 28A apt. Also 38R House

lor Rent in Rodney (740}
2BA, on pnvate lot S550 441·0t94
dep. + $550 PI&gt;' montll rem
~
2BR apts 6 mi from Holzer.
I 'dd'
n ~ 1son (740)
,wp. call
(740) Some utilities pd.$400+dep.
645-3413or
367-&lt;1654
7_4o_-4_1C'8C'·5,.2BB
_ _-:--3br, 2ba. med storage build, -

Dep. req. Gallipolis Fe"", No Buuttful Aptl. 11 Jackson
Inside pets, Ref req,~ired Estates. 52 Westwood
$450 month 304 _576 •2296

Drive, from $365 to $560.
740-446·2568.

Equal

Renters Wanted Now! Free Housing Opportunity. This
Credit app. New 3BR, 2BA, mst11u110n 1s an Equal

spaclous horue. Application Opportunity Provider and
Deadline 3-11-2008. 740· Employer.

r

594-7962

~=..;.;~.........,
...._

APARlMFNTS
FOR Rf.Nr

::.:..::.='------Beech St,. Middleport 2 br.
fu rnishe d apt .. no pets.
dep.&amp;
ref.
required,
(740)992 · 0165

I and 2 bedroom apart· CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ments, furnished and unfur- ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
nlshed, and houses in Townhouse
apartments,
Pomeroy and Middleport, and/or small houses FOR

. . Ellm View

Il'

6

rent

for

·r~,a~-----~------.,1
FARM
EQuiPMENT

,Mollohan Carpet 2212
Eastern Ave , Gallipolis, Oh 2006

• Owner pays watE!"r, sewer,
trash
~

ACROSS

i

Phillip .
Alder

. $6800. 446-2815

Nice quiet 2BR apt In
\,1\if\
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
•
Gallipolis. Depoolt, no pets. 800·537·9528.
H 0 ME S TEA 0 E R
446·1271 or 709-1657
. NEW AND USED STEEL CARGO/CONCESS ION 2004 Ch- Silverado, 4x4.
TRAILERS B W GOOSE
-·,
Taking "applications tor mod- Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
· +
• short bed, 32.000 mlfes
ern
1BR,
no pets. For
Concrete,
Angle , NECK
HITCHES. wfadd on extras, $15,400,
For Lease: 2nd floor. spa- $285fmonth Includes water. Channel. Flat Bar, Steel CARMI CHAEL
EQUIP- (304)576·2000
cious, . 3 bedroom, unlur- $200/depos/1. 446-3617
Grating
For
Drains, MEN T / C A AM 19 H A E L ::=::-;:-:-:-::::::-::---::-cnished apt. m v 1ctonan '
Orlvew9iys &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA- 2004 Ford F·350 Super Duty
'house on' C1ty Park, Twin R•vers Tower IS accept· Scrap Metals Open Monday VICE. SPECIAL 20FT . Pickup, 1 ton va Crew Cab,
Excellent condition. HVAC. l~g applications for waiting Tuesday, Wednesday
GOOSENECK FLATBED XLT, (4WD} 65,000 miles,
Off
street
parking. ll~t for Hud-subslzed, 1- br: Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE 6.0L, VB. Turbo Diesel
·ne, F!'ber Glass ca·p', 8"
apartment for
the
TRAILER INVENTORY AT Eng1
$600/monlh plus . utilities.
•
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
"
n
Security and key deposit elderly/disabled Can 675- Sunday.("]40 )44 s-7300
WWVJ .C AAMICHAEL·. bed, Trailer Towing &amp;
required .
No
pets. 6679
Equal
Housing
TAAILEAS.COM 740·446- Camper Pkg, Aluminum
Re rerences req uired. 740- · opportunity
Tiffany gown , ivory w/ gold 3825
Wheels, Power Seats. 304446-4425 or 446-3936
....:.;_ _:___ _ _ _ overlay. Size 4, Mermaid .,..----.,--.,--.,--.,.--- 675-3753
Very nice 1BR, St At 588f-tave you priced a John "-11~:":'"------o:-~
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, 1/2 mi from style. lo$100. Also, Precious Deere lately? You'll be surMoroRcva..ES'
school. Has appl. $400! mo Prom rmal gown, ivory w/
.
W
Upstairs, AU Utilities pd .
bea iful
prisedl Check out our used
· 4 UEEI..ERS
$400/dep. + utilities. Must
ut embroidery &amp; train.
~-itiiliiiiiiiiiiiii;._pf
IBR, No Pets, Gallipolis, have ref. No pe,ts 645-7613 Si ze 4$2 50.446-2815
inventory
at

SPACE

~
.._ .'

n.-.....
FOR ~.I

- til
•

information.

I

-

kl

I

r16

H

II w

(~:s:::ID

in stock) We have Melting

$3500. 304-674-5053

I

HAY &amp;

GJwN

a

Ii4064lil------=-----..,
r
---,---,-,-.,-----

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

CIISTJicnON

_,..
IQ"_tcrJralr·
Jll.-"""'-

·

I
HIE -• ...,IE-'1
• • rm

;:~:;:~a\1dson Ultra

Plus Hardware 304·675· BOOt round bale Hay. 740- Classic Elec1ra Glide, new
388·8950~
custom paint, $12,000 OBO,

(740)416-1588

Mlddl

Cali 740·446.1168, leave a Mixed breed, free tc goOd
$7,500, (740)992·75JO
I R \\" 1'1ll&lt;! I\ Ill 1\
home, 7 wks old, med size.
2005 Honda 400 EX, asking
446-2896
~mr---~----..,
10
AliiOl
., . payoff, (740)593·6564

- -·ali FOii Ri i iSALEii i io'•·
i

·

Hyundai
Accent
Hatchbacl&lt;. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, gciod condi·
01

9 month old gray Parrot tion. needs catalytic .convert·
ff)male, starting to 1Bik, whis- er. Asking $2600. Call 740.
tle, w/caga. 740-742·3706. 709·6339.

r

4.· whaeler 300EX, $1 ,000
(740)446·4060

CAMI'ERS &amp;

I

2

rms. of carpet cleaned &amp;
recei11e $20.00 gas cash back.
rms. &amp; you're automatically
f et1te1red in a drawing &amp; a chance
to win $150. Gas cash ..

I

CAPTAIN STEAMER
Exp. 3/31/08
1-888·338· 7847

Toll free

,....
•••

$64
r~f

ross

wANTS

TO PASS Tttf

W'WW.tlm'bla 01•1 ke1biiM'b7.coaa

YOU FILLE'D IT, 'SESSIE

.,,,.

MOWR H&lt;IME'l

spad~s

2-2 Story Homes "side by
side" available tor extended
family or Rental property. At
. 62 . Hartford, WV, beside
Community Center. close to
Mountaineer Plant &amp; New
Haven Coal Mine. Would be
interested in trading for
Farm acreage or tor other
Rentals 304-675·2481 or

cell 304·5tl3·148t

GOOD JOB I!

5839

-------2004 Chevy Silverado, 4·3
V-6, auto, AC, CO, 45k

miles. Asking $9000. 080
645·8712
-------2004 Ford Ranger Edge
4X4,20,222 niles-extended
warranty,
lots of extras,

$13,250 call 740·992-6282.

f' liJH'I'&gt;-{
('&gt;

WHOOP• DE'DO, MAW!!
THAT'S TH'
LI'L
PAIL !!

. SSMMM !! SHE AIN'T
MUCH LATELY, AN' I TV"'I''T WANT
HER TO Gil 'DOWN ON
-z,r-- . . , ~HERSELF !!

II

\

()t)lt
II

•

THE BORN LOSER
P"f-\E.RE!:&gt; I&gt;J.i ~ H&gt;i! 1\ ':£11\.IW...'f.:"l ~ 1\L~ti-&lt; 1/Jo\~ lbW iO \)Q~ . "WAAT l W~i TO li--KO'N i~ f-\OW"''
, 01'\ f-\0\HO ~OUR MOt-It'&lt;
~ · &amp;0 FUR\1\E.Ii:. . ~-=---

iAAT...

iO KE-El' OUR"'-~'( ~WUI

.

Local Contractor

740·367-0544
Free Esllmates

740·367·0536

J&amp;L
Construction

WE WANT

IBB

TAURUS {April 2Q-May 20) - Be careful
not to be too harsh with people or too
stem of a disclJ)11narian with those in
your charge. Overreactihg can CBuse you
to lose a relationship with those you
need and/or care a great deal about.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Don't be so
· gruff that It causes you to size LIP situations only from a negative perspective .
People 's behavior or oondiUone might r'lot
be optimal, but With a little encourage. men!, things can be corrected.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Be extra
careful in your social InvolVements so
that you don't come off as stingy or as a

T~E

TEACHEii: T~AT I
JUST DIDN'T KNOW.

D06?

'

freeloader With your friends. Make certain that you p!clc up your end of e~epen s­
es so pals don't think Ill of ~u .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 - More than a
few obstacles could be placed In your
path at this time, so you might have to be
8. bit thicker skirlned In order to cope With
things it you want to achieVEJ your objec-

. COW and BOY
EVEN IF WE TRIED TO
~ECYCLE DAD'S 01:.0
CELL PHONE, THEY'D
PROBIIBLY SHIP IT TO
SOME THIRD
!:~-.
WORLD
COUNTRY ...

... WHERE IMPOV~ISHED
VILLIIGE~S WOULD
SMELT IT FOR PI1ECIOUS
I

IF ONLY THE~E WERE

M~ED~~f~ ~AJS
HIGH·TECH TOYS.

J

__)

WHAT'RE YOU GOING TO
00 WITH YOUII HALF
OF T~E SMELT?)
THIS IS \c •)
WRONG...

tives.

JACBYF .KC

·'=~:.~' S@~\'\-lt£~s·

low to form lour otmple 'N()rda.

SAHAB

I

I

1...--l .

~----,.....
! ,..,_.,.---,

"I:':,'
~

My bJ'Qiher-in-law is a very .
patient pel!OD. My husband

.,,..........I_,M...,..U~N-:T:-Y,.--,1

'-·r-r-r--r::-r-,~

, , I I Ia I I
.

.

.

•

.

•

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

8

be a lad&lt; o( - - · .

m.

Comploto
dtuckl• quoted
~y filling In tho mioslng wor~

diVeiotl !ram llop No. 3 below.

f9 PRINT NUMSERED

LETTERS IN SQUARES

says that patience may just

I

SCRAMUI'S ANSWIRS 3 -1 g-o e
Chorus - Swift - Began -Richly - WAY for OTIIERS
A good teacher is like a candle, it consumes itself to light
fhe V(AY for OTHERS•

ARLO&amp; JANIS

ions. If what you say cannot be substan·

tiated or if your actions are suspicious,
others will readily discredit you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Unleu you
exactly what you are dealing with
and/or what You can expect from a flnan·
clal arrangement run flW8Y from It as fast
as you can. ll you miscalculate, It'll coat

know

(
WHAT KIND
OF PRECIOUS
METALS

plenty.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -When

you

things Involve an Important career decl·
slon, rely only upon. yourself and what

you

; GARFIELD
t.

I

.f

I
f

I

know.

When

It comee

to depending

upon othe~ lor facti, help or 1upport,
none are apt to be forthcoming .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0eo . 2,) Ntgatlve thinking will be the oauH of
your downfall and produoe only uncer- .
talnty and anxiety, ••peolally whert~ your
wt1rk 11 oonotrned . Don't ma!w: much of

·nothing.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. I i) - \bu
will end up u an •leo-ran lnltead of a
wlnntrdt you ~mble on eltuatlonl, people Of thlngl about which you•,.. totally
unfamiliar. Be eure lhlt you have home·
field advant.ge
gam11.

befort~

you play any

AQUARIUS (JI.n . 20-Feb. 18)- It

won't

be •mart to r..urreot a volatlleleeue wl1h
your mata btoauaa ati lt wlll procluot 11 a
110latlte battlefield. No one will win, but

both will 1nd up being nHdl111ty miHr•

'~t ~all~olis matlp ~rl~une
740-446·2342
www.mydai~tribune.com

able and angry.

~oint ~leasant legt~er The Daily Sentinel ,
304·675·1333
740·992·2155

01001 ~101&lt; ~Dill. lliJ' IlEA.'""
- co:nw:."""'~-eao·

...

www.mydai~regilter.com

•

WOlD
lAM I

Roarra11110 let!oro of lho
0 four
,.rambled ..,..a, b.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Your wor·
th lness m ight be under close scrutiny as
to how you present yourself or your opin·

··I'

ZVM

_,_ __.;._ l&lt;lltod by ClAY l P O L W I - - - - -

-'lllrlhdotl':

~harp

AH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"What other peo~e may loo in poetry or art
museums, I find ln'the flight of a good drive."· Amold Palmer

Graph

A

JBZFX

XBZCFNCBZLAVM ."

Astro~

something fun .

XAH

consider a purchase.

'SWlM ....

Seamless Guners
Roofing, Siding, GuHers
• Insured &amp; Bondori
. 740·653·5857

discards througt'lout, you take those 12
tricks.

IAUB ,

salesperson will spot you as an Impulsive buyer if you give any signs of being
one and won't hesUate to palm off hardto-sell merchandise on you. Take time to

•rru

Guttering

DT

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) -

LIKE DID
JE5U5 Eiii:R
OWN A

(.IBJMBC)

dummy's diamond ace and, ~ necessary,
take· a diamond finesse. Here, though,
you run the dubs. If West ruffs, he must
lead a diamond Into your king -jaok. If he

quacy. Do

50 I HAD TO TELL

XBZFX

S Z H K V 8 K U F X B E R C B H F W K.T H K U

on your shoulders in the year ahead. but
you'll be more than up to the task. The
rewards and feelings of a Job well done
w~l provide you with a great deal of self·
satisfacllon and pride.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-Me.rch 2 0) - ll you're
out of sorts and down in the dumps, don't
attempt any tedious tasks that you hate
doing. The added misery will cause fur·
ther depression and feelings of lnade·

PIYIII111P Pllt:ES Ill

-·-·11'
1
111111
.H&amp;H

SAFX

If West proves to have f11Je -clubs, he
must have only one diamond. Cash

By Bernice Bede O.ol

POIJ'T

••sa.·rtt
•••n.•u•o
1. .2. . .

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentine~ And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri·Councy Marke~lace!

"SKCLAVM

Greater responsibilities might be placed

·PEANUTS

:
. _••·n............

by Lula Campos
Celebri!V C'Ph• ~ograms are eniSled trom qi./O(alions by I!IITIOUS pql&amp;. pest and pteterW.
.
Each letter '" tile c1~ stlll"ds lor aJOihtl
Today's cltie: E equals P

WHn••day, M•rch 12, 2008

THE
ANSWER,

Manley' a
Recycling

CELEBRITY CIPHER

the best play.) Then draw three rounds of
trumps, seeing the splh on the second.
Cross to the board &gt;Mth .a clup and rulf
the fast heart, geHing that ·suit out of .
West's hand. Now coollnue clubs.
·

TO KNOW

• VInyl Siding
• Replacemenl
Windows
• Roofing
• Dei:ka
• Garagea
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Addltlone
• Owner:
Jamea Keesee II
742·2332

... 1111111., ........... ..
. . . . . . . . .1HI ..

You seem to have 12 tricks: five spades,
one hea~ , two diamonds and four clubs.
But East's pre-empt suggests that there
will be bad breaks around. What if West
has four spades?

•

BIG NATE

Roofing, Siding,
· Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows;
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

.• crack at

after East opened with a weak

After wirlning with dummy's heEirt ace,
immediately ruff a heart in your hand. (It
is not necessary with this layout, but nis

11)

',!I [ -pi r"

booking
57 Crone
58 Take

Then a winning diamond finesse would
·provide an extra trick.
But what if West has the diamond queen

'

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

REACH 3 COUNTIES

fr

gymnaultl
51 Typo ollldl
52 Swann whh
55 Bleachers
shout
56 Rockband

as well?
He can be caught in an endplay.

Pltlo •nd Porch Dicks
WVOH725
V.C YOUNG Ill

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Pass
All pass

66

monster
45 Goller
Lorena48 Hinder the
growth ol
49 like

drive for slam when partner overcalled
vulnerable at the two-level.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

2000 Chevy 1/2 ton. 63,000·
miles. $8900. Call 740-245-

Pass

4 NT

44 -Ness

two-bid, which showed a decent six-card
suit and 6·10 high-card points. West
1Sads the heart three. How would you
plan the play?
MhouQh North did not have great spade
support, he did hold 18 prime points, so ·
it would have been pusillanimous not to

YOUNG 'S

Room Addition• &amp;
AemodtHng
N•wGir•gn
Electrical&amp; Plumbing
Rooting I GuH•I'I
VInyl Siding 1: P1lntlng

li;j For Safe or Trade

s NT

UCLA
47 Prehistoric
5 Swtmsuit
48 Not chic
piece
50 Ink shooters
8 Moo goo - 52 Barge
pan
pusher
11 Spring up 53 Swtg
12 Make public 54 It may be
13 Popular
keen
columnist 59 Improve,
15 Highly rated
as akllla
(hyph.)
60 Bridal
17 Pedealal
notice word
18 Fritz, to
61 Bluffer
himae~
62 Devoured
19 "Envna"
63 Beret
novelist
64 Like
16 Trash
21 Dismiss
souffles
hauler
(2 wds.)
20 lckl
24 tunnel
DOWN
21 Bough
25 Dash widths
22 Peter
26 Sn.ake River 1 Sitcom allen
Gunn's girt
toe.
2 August kid, 23 Belgea
27 Evaluates
maybe
24 Rang up
30 Type of van 3 -Claire,
28 Skin
·
32 Fellow
Wis.
softener
33 TV chef
4 Fresh
2g Where to
Grahamgrowth
spot UFOs
37 Ms.
5 Hot soak
31 Devotea
Myerson
6 Estuary
34 Geologlc81
38 Pamptona
7 Brought to
periods
· yell
c011rt
35 Dell loaves
39 Seesaw
8 Yaks
36 From
(hyph.}
9 Subside
memory
40 l:t Greco's 10 Pear Gynt
41 Dlnny'a
city
creator
rider
43 Allertaxea 14 Cravings
42 Mullcalwa1&lt;
1 Laqers

cases, observe it"
··This deal is au about overcoming unfa·
vorable suit breaks. You get into six

Hardwood ClbjneWJ And f'lmiHure

1-i,J

Pass
Pass
Pass

East

2.

44 Part of

Julius Caesar said, ~If you must break
the laW. do it to seize power. In all other

. JCfTCttlJP.

9(~'-!

North

The breaks are bad,
but so what?

TO JCNOIN If
YOIJ'~f GOING,

-========~=~~====~

each. First shots &amp; wormed.
446-4105 after 4pm.

West

Opening lead: • 3

r

wks old, (M) and (F) $t25.

Dealer: East
Vulnerable : Both

South

per
month

Golden Retriever puppies. 9

10 B 4

•

message.

r.~-

• 7 6 53
4AK Q52
• 6
t K J 7 2

~

0

tO 9 4

sm,ch

Adverti"Se
l'n thr"s
space

99 Beech Street

.. 3
• KQJ
• 9 6

.. 9 2

Hay for Safo: 250 sm. sq. ~~----,-.,.-FOR SAIJ:
oa'vidson
Bales, orchard grass mixed, 2003 Harleu'
Burgundy floral print couch.
good qualiry,. $4.75 ea. {740} Sportster 883, 2500 miles,
Excellent · Condition. $300. 5 cute, cuddly puppies. 245 -0485 after 6 p.m.
new saddle bagslhelments,

PF:rs

5 Shih-Tzu puppies $250
females, $200 males, 2 112
yrs old female Shih-Tzu
$200 304·675·6899

REVIVAL
with Rev. Rob Grady
at the Cheshire Baptist Church
March 13-15, 2008 7:00 pm
Special Mu~ic Each Night
Public Welcome

Wtst
• J 10" 6
" 7 5 3
t QHJ84

MONTY

10r

2000 Yamaha Wolveri ne,
lots of extra's, $3,500 080,

A a2
A 5 3
.. A K Q J
East

+

Stop &amp; Compare
~~~~~~~~~

•'

03 u -oa

9 7 4

•

140-992-1671

:;::=:;;;;;;"~
t4/;\:m:•·:•~
'

All Work

•

• Garages
• CoTplete
Remodeling

~

Hours

7: OO AM • 8:00 PM

North

• New Homes

'

..__. fxjf:

Massey Ferguson 50, 4 new lots of extras. $12,800. 256-·
tlres, good cond. ask.lng _'8:::7::t-o:::r3_3_9,.·20_9_2:::---c-c--

a:r--~~~----.,

ROBERT
BISSEll

7~94S.2217

W W W· C A R E 0 · C 0 M 04 Harley Davidson Super
Vent
Free,
3-Piaque Carmichael Equipment. 740- Glide. 8,863 miles, del. sadPropane Gas Heater, Man. 446·24 12
die bags, det. windshield,

Control (Was 5143.95) Now
Retaii/WarehousaiStorage $122.36. Save 15% on all
Location In Gallipolis 1600 other Gas and Electric
. ., d H
sq. ft. buMding $400 mo. off HeaIers. (L lm e 1o eaters

Hli!·s Self
Storaqe
45771

&amp;

r!ii

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

44
f:ORXSALE
·--iiiliiiiiiiiiiioo-"

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

warrenty.lots · of extras.
B7800 $13,250. Caii 740-992-62B2

6 75

(304)882·3017

www.mydailysentinel.com

4X4. 20:000 miles-exte"nded

P P ~~•~.75·3100or304·
AERATIONMOTORS
s
~•
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuih In TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
St-. ~. Call Ao-n Evans, I· EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,

r
~~;d~.~~~~~g~~:'r\::n~~ ~ ~~=;a~;g:i~dst=d~a:~; ~

(740)367-0547.

Kubota

'

2004 Ford Ranger Edge

Newly renovated apt. local- '"740·446·7444
wlloader - 30 hp- 4wd ·turf "1511"". .'"":!~':"""--'"'"1
ed In R1o Grande, walk to
tires • 11-' hours. $12,500.
SUVs
campus. $A50/montn.•Dep.&amp; lr'l::"~MNE..LAN~------EOUS---, 256-1871 or 339-2092
FOR SALE
Ref. 339-2494
,
MFllOfANI&amp;
-:cc----,--.,---- ·--iiiiiiiiiiiiiioo.
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
1
Nice br. appliances fur2001 blk lsuzu Rodeo, •wo,
ilish&amp;d, $350 +deposit, near
JET
~~~·s E I LIVE SY~L~~ 6 cyl. Super clean, good

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AIC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•All electric- averaging
$50-$60/month

· security deposit required, no RENT. Call (740)441· 1111 Call 446·9523
Lll
pets, 740-992-2218.
, for application &amp; infOrmation. G 1
racous vng 1 and 2
1BA Apt, WID hookups.' Cute 2 br. apartment, w/d Bedroom Apts. at Village
. internetlsatellite TV incl. hook-up, no pets, $370 a Manor and Riverside Apts.ln
w/rent, close to hospital. Call month plus utilities, deposit Middleport, from $327 to
required, ask for Marge, $592. 740-992·5064. Equal
740·339·031!2
Housing Opportunity.
(740)992·4 119
, BR Cabin, stove &amp; fridge
Townhouse
furnished. Thurman vicinity. Tara
All utilities pd . Call 740-441· Apartments, very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 available. All utilities paid
3702 or 286-5789
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby except electric. March Rent
1BR, 1 bath upsta irs garage
Pool. Ratio, Star'! $425/Mo.
apt.
$285/month. No Pets, Lease Plus Special $100 oft Rent.
Please call304-674·0023 or
$285/depoo~. Call 740·446Security Deposit Required, 304.61 0·0776 . for more

3481

Tuesday, March 11, 2008
ALLEY COP

..

Downtown yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.

Middleport 740-9BS.3646

r.~--~iiiiii~-ALE-...

H=n

Newly remOdeled apartment Sale' Berber Carpet $5.95

Apartments

'

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

-----

�Page 84 ~ The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

~ l~.r__APAJm_FO_Ri i iDiri wvn;i io .l.~__
.t APAKIMoo's_FOR_RENr
_ _..lr ~

t

.

2BA on Private lot ·on IBR, WID hook-up, stove &amp;
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis fridge furn .• water &amp; trash
city schools. $550 ren t included. No pets. Ref. Req.
Includes all utilities. $500 740·367-7453 or 645-7214

deposit. 740-446-2847 or
545.1668
2Br apt. WID hookup. water
pd. close to hospital &amp; col28R, on private lot $450 lege On Centenary Ad, no
dep. + $450 per month rent pets, 446·9442 after Spm
In Addison Twp. call (740)
645-3413 or (740) 367-{)654 28A apt. Also 38R House

lor Rent in Rodney (740}
2BA, on pnvate lot S550 441·0t94
dep. + $550 PI&gt;' montll rem
~
2BR apts 6 mi from Holzer.
I 'dd'
n ~ 1son (740)
,wp. call
(740) Some utilities pd.$400+dep.
645-3413or
367-&lt;1654
7_4o_-4_1C'8C'·5,.2BB
_ _-:--3br, 2ba. med storage build, -

Dep. req. Gallipolis Fe"", No Buuttful Aptl. 11 Jackson
Inside pets, Ref req,~ired Estates. 52 Westwood
$450 month 304 _576 •2296

Drive, from $365 to $560.
740-446·2568.

Equal

Renters Wanted Now! Free Housing Opportunity. This
Credit app. New 3BR, 2BA, mst11u110n 1s an Equal

spaclous horue. Application Opportunity Provider and
Deadline 3-11-2008. 740· Employer.

r

594-7962

~=..;.;~.........,
...._

APARlMFNTS
FOR Rf.Nr

::.:..::.='------Beech St,. Middleport 2 br.
fu rnishe d apt .. no pets.
dep.&amp;
ref.
required,
(740)992 · 0165

I and 2 bedroom apart· CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ments, furnished and unfur- ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
nlshed, and houses in Townhouse
apartments,
Pomeroy and Middleport, and/or small houses FOR

. . Ellm View

Il'

6

rent

for

·r~,a~-----~------.,1
FARM
EQuiPMENT

,Mollohan Carpet 2212
Eastern Ave , Gallipolis, Oh 2006

• Owner pays watE!"r, sewer,
trash
~

ACROSS

i

Phillip .
Alder

. $6800. 446-2815

Nice quiet 2BR apt In
\,1\if\
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
•
Gallipolis. Depoolt, no pets. 800·537·9528.
H 0 ME S TEA 0 E R
446·1271 or 709-1657
. NEW AND USED STEEL CARGO/CONCESS ION 2004 Ch- Silverado, 4x4.
TRAILERS B W GOOSE
-·,
Taking "applications tor mod- Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
· +
• short bed, 32.000 mlfes
ern
1BR,
no pets. For
Concrete,
Angle , NECK
HITCHES. wfadd on extras, $15,400,
For Lease: 2nd floor. spa- $285fmonth Includes water. Channel. Flat Bar, Steel CARMI CHAEL
EQUIP- (304)576·2000
cious, . 3 bedroom, unlur- $200/depos/1. 446-3617
Grating
For
Drains, MEN T / C A AM 19 H A E L ::=::-;:-:-:-::::::-::---::-cnished apt. m v 1ctonan '
Orlvew9iys &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA- 2004 Ford F·350 Super Duty
'house on' C1ty Park, Twin R•vers Tower IS accept· Scrap Metals Open Monday VICE. SPECIAL 20FT . Pickup, 1 ton va Crew Cab,
Excellent condition. HVAC. l~g applications for waiting Tuesday, Wednesday
GOOSENECK FLATBED XLT, (4WD} 65,000 miles,
Off
street
parking. ll~t for Hud-subslzed, 1- br: Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE 6.0L, VB. Turbo Diesel
·ne, F!'ber Glass ca·p', 8"
apartment for
the
TRAILER INVENTORY AT Eng1
$600/monlh plus . utilities.
•
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
"
n
Security and key deposit elderly/disabled Can 675- Sunday.("]40 )44 s-7300
WWVJ .C AAMICHAEL·. bed, Trailer Towing &amp;
required .
No
pets. 6679
Equal
Housing
TAAILEAS.COM 740·446- Camper Pkg, Aluminum
Re rerences req uired. 740- · opportunity
Tiffany gown , ivory w/ gold 3825
Wheels, Power Seats. 304446-4425 or 446-3936
....:.;_ _:___ _ _ _ overlay. Size 4, Mermaid .,..----.,--.,--.,--.,.--- 675-3753
Very nice 1BR, St At 588f-tave you priced a John "-11~:":'"------o:-~
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, 1/2 mi from style. lo$100. Also, Precious Deere lately? You'll be surMoroRcva..ES'
school. Has appl. $400! mo Prom rmal gown, ivory w/
.
W
Upstairs, AU Utilities pd .
bea iful
prisedl Check out our used
· 4 UEEI..ERS
$400/dep. + utilities. Must
ut embroidery &amp; train.
~-itiiliiiiiiiiiiiii;._pf
IBR, No Pets, Gallipolis, have ref. No pe,ts 645-7613 Si ze 4$2 50.446-2815
inventory
at

SPACE

~
.._ .'

n.-.....
FOR ~.I

- til
•

information.

I

-

kl

I

r16

H

II w

(~:s:::ID

in stock) We have Melting

$3500. 304-674-5053

I

HAY &amp;

GJwN

a

Ii4064lil------=-----..,
r
---,---,-,-.,-----

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

CIISTJicnON

_,..
IQ"_tcrJralr·
Jll.-"""'-

·

I
HIE -• ...,IE-'1
• • rm

;:~:;:~a\1dson Ultra

Plus Hardware 304·675· BOOt round bale Hay. 740- Classic Elec1ra Glide, new
388·8950~
custom paint, $12,000 OBO,

(740)416-1588

Mlddl

Cali 740·446.1168, leave a Mixed breed, free tc goOd
$7,500, (740)992·75JO
I R \\" 1'1ll&lt;! I\ Ill 1\
home, 7 wks old, med size.
2005 Honda 400 EX, asking
446-2896
~mr---~----..,
10
AliiOl
., . payoff, (740)593·6564

- -·ali FOii Ri i iSALEii i io'•·
i

·

Hyundai
Accent
Hatchbacl&lt;. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, gciod condi·
01

9 month old gray Parrot tion. needs catalytic .convert·
ff)male, starting to 1Bik, whis- er. Asking $2600. Call 740.
tle, w/caga. 740-742·3706. 709·6339.

r

4.· whaeler 300EX, $1 ,000
(740)446·4060

CAMI'ERS &amp;

I

2

rms. of carpet cleaned &amp;
recei11e $20.00 gas cash back.
rms. &amp; you're automatically
f et1te1red in a drawing &amp; a chance
to win $150. Gas cash ..

I

CAPTAIN STEAMER
Exp. 3/31/08
1-888·338· 7847

Toll free

,....
•••

$64
r~f

ross

wANTS

TO PASS Tttf

W'WW.tlm'bla 01•1 ke1biiM'b7.coaa

YOU FILLE'D IT, 'SESSIE

.,,,.

MOWR H&lt;IME'l

spad~s

2-2 Story Homes "side by
side" available tor extended
family or Rental property. At
. 62 . Hartford, WV, beside
Community Center. close to
Mountaineer Plant &amp; New
Haven Coal Mine. Would be
interested in trading for
Farm acreage or tor other
Rentals 304-675·2481 or

cell 304·5tl3·148t

GOOD JOB I!

5839

-------2004 Chevy Silverado, 4·3
V-6, auto, AC, CO, 45k

miles. Asking $9000. 080
645·8712
-------2004 Ford Ranger Edge
4X4,20,222 niles-extended
warranty,
lots of extras,

$13,250 call 740·992-6282.

f' liJH'I'&gt;-{
('&gt;

WHOOP• DE'DO, MAW!!
THAT'S TH'
LI'L
PAIL !!

. SSMMM !! SHE AIN'T
MUCH LATELY, AN' I TV"'I''T WANT
HER TO Gil 'DOWN ON
-z,r-- . . , ~HERSELF !!

II

\

()t)lt
II

•

THE BORN LOSER
P"f-\E.RE!:&gt; I&gt;J.i ~ H&gt;i! 1\ ':£11\.IW...'f.:"l ~ 1\L~ti-&lt; 1/Jo\~ lbW iO \)Q~ . "WAAT l W~i TO li--KO'N i~ f-\OW"''
, 01'\ f-\0\HO ~OUR MOt-It'&lt;
~ · &amp;0 FUR\1\E.Ii:. . ~-=---

iAAT...

iO KE-El' OUR"'-~'( ~WUI

.

Local Contractor

740·367-0544
Free Esllmates

740·367·0536

J&amp;L
Construction

WE WANT

IBB

TAURUS {April 2Q-May 20) - Be careful
not to be too harsh with people or too
stem of a disclJ)11narian with those in
your charge. Overreactihg can CBuse you
to lose a relationship with those you
need and/or care a great deal about.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Don't be so
· gruff that It causes you to size LIP situations only from a negative perspective .
People 's behavior or oondiUone might r'lot
be optimal, but With a little encourage. men!, things can be corrected.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Be extra
careful in your social InvolVements so
that you don't come off as stingy or as a

T~E

TEACHEii: T~AT I
JUST DIDN'T KNOW.

D06?

'

freeloader With your friends. Make certain that you p!clc up your end of e~epen s­
es so pals don't think Ill of ~u .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 - More than a
few obstacles could be placed In your
path at this time, so you might have to be
8. bit thicker skirlned In order to cope With
things it you want to achieVEJ your objec-

. COW and BOY
EVEN IF WE TRIED TO
~ECYCLE DAD'S 01:.0
CELL PHONE, THEY'D
PROBIIBLY SHIP IT TO
SOME THIRD
!:~-.
WORLD
COUNTRY ...

... WHERE IMPOV~ISHED
VILLIIGE~S WOULD
SMELT IT FOR PI1ECIOUS
I

IF ONLY THE~E WERE

M~ED~~f~ ~AJS
HIGH·TECH TOYS.

J

__)

WHAT'RE YOU GOING TO
00 WITH YOUII HALF
OF T~E SMELT?)
THIS IS \c •)
WRONG...

tives.

JACBYF .KC

·'=~:.~' S@~\'\-lt£~s·

low to form lour otmple 'N()rda.

SAHAB

I

I

1...--l .

~----,.....
! ,..,_.,.---,

"I:':,'
~

My bJ'Qiher-in-law is a very .
patient pel!OD. My husband

.,,..........I_,M...,..U~N-:T:-Y,.--,1

'-·r-r-r--r::-r-,~

, , I I Ia I I
.

.

.

•

.

•

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

8

be a lad&lt; o( - - · .

m.

Comploto
dtuckl• quoted
~y filling In tho mioslng wor~

diVeiotl !ram llop No. 3 below.

f9 PRINT NUMSERED

LETTERS IN SQUARES

says that patience may just

I

SCRAMUI'S ANSWIRS 3 -1 g-o e
Chorus - Swift - Began -Richly - WAY for OTIIERS
A good teacher is like a candle, it consumes itself to light
fhe V(AY for OTHERS•

ARLO&amp; JANIS

ions. If what you say cannot be substan·

tiated or if your actions are suspicious,
others will readily discredit you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Unleu you
exactly what you are dealing with
and/or what You can expect from a flnan·
clal arrangement run flW8Y from It as fast
as you can. ll you miscalculate, It'll coat

know

(
WHAT KIND
OF PRECIOUS
METALS

plenty.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -When

you

things Involve an Important career decl·
slon, rely only upon. yourself and what

you

; GARFIELD
t.

I

.f

I
f

I

know.

When

It comee

to depending

upon othe~ lor facti, help or 1upport,
none are apt to be forthcoming .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0eo . 2,) Ntgatlve thinking will be the oauH of
your downfall and produoe only uncer- .
talnty and anxiety, ••peolally whert~ your
wt1rk 11 oonotrned . Don't ma!w: much of

·nothing.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. I i) - \bu
will end up u an •leo-ran lnltead of a
wlnntrdt you ~mble on eltuatlonl, people Of thlngl about which you•,.. totally
unfamiliar. Be eure lhlt you have home·
field advant.ge
gam11.

befort~

you play any

AQUARIUS (JI.n . 20-Feb. 18)- It

won't

be •mart to r..urreot a volatlleleeue wl1h
your mata btoauaa ati lt wlll procluot 11 a
110latlte battlefield. No one will win, but

both will 1nd up being nHdl111ty miHr•

'~t ~all~olis matlp ~rl~une
740-446·2342
www.mydai~tribune.com

able and angry.

~oint ~leasant legt~er The Daily Sentinel ,
304·675·1333
740·992·2155

01001 ~101&lt; ~Dill. lliJ' IlEA.'""
- co:nw:."""'~-eao·

...

www.mydai~regilter.com

•

WOlD
lAM I

Roarra11110 let!oro of lho
0 four
,.rambled ..,..a, b.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Your wor·
th lness m ight be under close scrutiny as
to how you present yourself or your opin·

··I'

ZVM

_,_ __.;._ l&lt;lltod by ClAY l P O L W I - - - - -

-'lllrlhdotl':

~harp

AH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"What other peo~e may loo in poetry or art
museums, I find ln'the flight of a good drive."· Amold Palmer

Graph

A

JBZFX

XBZCFNCBZLAVM ."

Astro~

something fun .

XAH

consider a purchase.

'SWlM ....

Seamless Guners
Roofing, Siding, GuHers
• Insured &amp; Bondori
. 740·653·5857

discards througt'lout, you take those 12
tricks.

IAUB ,

salesperson will spot you as an Impulsive buyer if you give any signs of being
one and won't hesUate to palm off hardto-sell merchandise on you. Take time to

•rru

Guttering

DT

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) -

LIKE DID
JE5U5 Eiii:R
OWN A

(.IBJMBC)

dummy's diamond ace and, ~ necessary,
take· a diamond finesse. Here, though,
you run the dubs. If West ruffs, he must
lead a diamond Into your king -jaok. If he

quacy. Do

50 I HAD TO TELL

XBZFX

S Z H K V 8 K U F X B E R C B H F W K.T H K U

on your shoulders in the year ahead. but
you'll be more than up to the task. The
rewards and feelings of a Job well done
w~l provide you with a great deal of self·
satisfacllon and pride.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-Me.rch 2 0) - ll you're
out of sorts and down in the dumps, don't
attempt any tedious tasks that you hate
doing. The added misery will cause fur·
ther depression and feelings of lnade·

PIYIII111P Pllt:ES Ill

-·-·11'
1
111111
.H&amp;H

SAFX

If West proves to have f11Je -clubs, he
must have only one diamond. Cash

By Bernice Bede O.ol

POIJ'T

••sa.·rtt
•••n.•u•o
1. .2. . .

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentine~ And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri·Councy Marke~lace!

"SKCLAVM

Greater responsibilities might be placed

·PEANUTS

:
. _••·n............

by Lula Campos
Celebri!V C'Ph• ~ograms are eniSled trom qi./O(alions by I!IITIOUS pql&amp;. pest and pteterW.
.
Each letter '" tile c1~ stlll"ds lor aJOihtl
Today's cltie: E equals P

WHn••day, M•rch 12, 2008

THE
ANSWER,

Manley' a
Recycling

CELEBRITY CIPHER

the best play.) Then draw three rounds of
trumps, seeing the splh on the second.
Cross to the board &gt;Mth .a clup and rulf
the fast heart, geHing that ·suit out of .
West's hand. Now coollnue clubs.
·

TO KNOW

• VInyl Siding
• Replacemenl
Windows
• Roofing
• Dei:ka
• Garagea
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Addltlone
• Owner:
Jamea Keesee II
742·2332

... 1111111., ........... ..
. . . . . . . . .1HI ..

You seem to have 12 tricks: five spades,
one hea~ , two diamonds and four clubs.
But East's pre-empt suggests that there
will be bad breaks around. What if West
has four spades?

•

BIG NATE

Roofing, Siding,
· Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows;
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

.• crack at

after East opened with a weak

After wirlning with dummy's heEirt ace,
immediately ruff a heart in your hand. (It
is not necessary with this layout, but nis

11)

',!I [ -pi r"

booking
57 Crone
58 Take

Then a winning diamond finesse would
·provide an extra trick.
But what if West has the diamond queen

'

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

REACH 3 COUNTIES

fr

gymnaultl
51 Typo ollldl
52 Swann whh
55 Bleachers
shout
56 Rockband

as well?
He can be caught in an endplay.

Pltlo •nd Porch Dicks
WVOH725
V.C YOUNG Ill

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Pass
All pass

66

monster
45 Goller
Lorena48 Hinder the
growth ol
49 like

drive for slam when partner overcalled
vulnerable at the two-level.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

2000 Chevy 1/2 ton. 63,000·
miles. $8900. Call 740-245-

Pass

4 NT

44 -Ness

two-bid, which showed a decent six-card
suit and 6·10 high-card points. West
1Sads the heart three. How would you
plan the play?
MhouQh North did not have great spade
support, he did hold 18 prime points, so ·
it would have been pusillanimous not to

YOUNG 'S

Room Addition• &amp;
AemodtHng
N•wGir•gn
Electrical&amp; Plumbing
Rooting I GuH•I'I
VInyl Siding 1: P1lntlng

li;j For Safe or Trade

s NT

UCLA
47 Prehistoric
5 Swtmsuit
48 Not chic
piece
50 Ink shooters
8 Moo goo - 52 Barge
pan
pusher
11 Spring up 53 Swtg
12 Make public 54 It may be
13 Popular
keen
columnist 59 Improve,
15 Highly rated
as akllla
(hyph.)
60 Bridal
17 Pedealal
notice word
18 Fritz, to
61 Bluffer
himae~
62 Devoured
19 "Envna"
63 Beret
novelist
64 Like
16 Trash
21 Dismiss
souffles
hauler
(2 wds.)
20 lckl
24 tunnel
DOWN
21 Bough
25 Dash widths
22 Peter
26 Sn.ake River 1 Sitcom allen
Gunn's girt
toe.
2 August kid, 23 Belgea
27 Evaluates
maybe
24 Rang up
30 Type of van 3 -Claire,
28 Skin
·
32 Fellow
Wis.
softener
33 TV chef
4 Fresh
2g Where to
Grahamgrowth
spot UFOs
37 Ms.
5 Hot soak
31 Devotea
Myerson
6 Estuary
34 Geologlc81
38 Pamptona
7 Brought to
periods
· yell
c011rt
35 Dell loaves
39 Seesaw
8 Yaks
36 From
(hyph.}
9 Subside
memory
40 l:t Greco's 10 Pear Gynt
41 Dlnny'a
city
creator
rider
43 Allertaxea 14 Cravings
42 Mullcalwa1&lt;
1 Laqers

cases, observe it"
··This deal is au about overcoming unfa·
vorable suit breaks. You get into six

Hardwood ClbjneWJ And f'lmiHure

1-i,J

Pass
Pass
Pass

East

2.

44 Part of

Julius Caesar said, ~If you must break
the laW. do it to seize power. In all other

. JCfTCttlJP.

9(~'-!

North

The breaks are bad,
but so what?

TO JCNOIN If
YOIJ'~f GOING,

-========~=~~====~

each. First shots &amp; wormed.
446-4105 after 4pm.

West

Opening lead: • 3

r

wks old, (M) and (F) $t25.

Dealer: East
Vulnerable : Both

South

per
month

Golden Retriever puppies. 9

10 B 4

•

message.

r.~-

• 7 6 53
4AK Q52
• 6
t K J 7 2

~

0

tO 9 4

sm,ch

Adverti"Se
l'n thr"s
space

99 Beech Street

.. 3
• KQJ
• 9 6

.. 9 2

Hay for Safo: 250 sm. sq. ~~----,-.,.-FOR SAIJ:
oa'vidson
Bales, orchard grass mixed, 2003 Harleu'
Burgundy floral print couch.
good qualiry,. $4.75 ea. {740} Sportster 883, 2500 miles,
Excellent · Condition. $300. 5 cute, cuddly puppies. 245 -0485 after 6 p.m.
new saddle bagslhelments,

PF:rs

5 Shih-Tzu puppies $250
females, $200 males, 2 112
yrs old female Shih-Tzu
$200 304·675·6899

REVIVAL
with Rev. Rob Grady
at the Cheshire Baptist Church
March 13-15, 2008 7:00 pm
Special Mu~ic Each Night
Public Welcome

Wtst
• J 10" 6
" 7 5 3
t QHJ84

MONTY

10r

2000 Yamaha Wolveri ne,
lots of extra's, $3,500 080,

A a2
A 5 3
.. A K Q J
East

+

Stop &amp; Compare
~~~~~~~~~

•'

03 u -oa

9 7 4

•

140-992-1671

:;::=:;;;;;;"~
t4/;\:m:•·:•~
'

All Work

•

• Garages
• CoTplete
Remodeling

~

Hours

7: OO AM • 8:00 PM

North

• New Homes

'

..__. fxjf:

Massey Ferguson 50, 4 new lots of extras. $12,800. 256-·
tlres, good cond. ask.lng _'8:::7::t-o:::r3_3_9,.·20_9_2:::---c-c--

a:r--~~~----.,

ROBERT
BISSEll

7~94S.2217

W W W· C A R E 0 · C 0 M 04 Harley Davidson Super
Vent
Free,
3-Piaque Carmichael Equipment. 740- Glide. 8,863 miles, del. sadPropane Gas Heater, Man. 446·24 12
die bags, det. windshield,

Control (Was 5143.95) Now
Retaii/WarehousaiStorage $122.36. Save 15% on all
Location In Gallipolis 1600 other Gas and Electric
. ., d H
sq. ft. buMding $400 mo. off HeaIers. (L lm e 1o eaters

Hli!·s Self
Storaqe
45771

&amp;

r!ii

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

44
f:ORXSALE
·--iiiliiiiiiiiiiioo-"

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

warrenty.lots · of extras.
B7800 $13,250. Caii 740-992-62B2

6 75

(304)882·3017

www.mydailysentinel.com

4X4. 20:000 miles-exte"nded

P P ~~•~.75·3100or304·
AERATIONMOTORS
s
~•
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuih In TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
St-. ~. Call Ao-n Evans, I· EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,

r
~~;d~.~~~~~g~~:'r\::n~~ ~ ~~=;a~;g:i~dst=d~a:~; ~

(740)367-0547.

Kubota

'

2004 Ford Ranger Edge

Newly renovated apt. local- '"740·446·7444
wlloader - 30 hp- 4wd ·turf "1511"". .'"":!~':"""--'"'"1
ed In R1o Grande, walk to
tires • 11-' hours. $12,500.
SUVs
campus. $A50/montn.•Dep.&amp; lr'l::"~MNE..LAN~------EOUS---, 256-1871 or 339-2092
FOR SALE
Ref. 339-2494
,
MFllOfANI&amp;
-:cc----,--.,---- ·--iiiiiiiiiiiiiioo.
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
1
Nice br. appliances fur2001 blk lsuzu Rodeo, •wo,
ilish&amp;d, $350 +deposit, near
JET
~~~·s E I LIVE SY~L~~ 6 cyl. Super clean, good

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AIC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•All electric- averaging
$50-$60/month

· security deposit required, no RENT. Call (740)441· 1111 Call 446·9523
Lll
pets, 740-992-2218.
, for application &amp; infOrmation. G 1
racous vng 1 and 2
1BA Apt, WID hookups.' Cute 2 br. apartment, w/d Bedroom Apts. at Village
. internetlsatellite TV incl. hook-up, no pets, $370 a Manor and Riverside Apts.ln
w/rent, close to hospital. Call month plus utilities, deposit Middleport, from $327 to
required, ask for Marge, $592. 740-992·5064. Equal
740·339·031!2
Housing Opportunity.
(740)992·4 119
, BR Cabin, stove &amp; fridge
Townhouse
furnished. Thurman vicinity. Tara
All utilities pd . Call 740-441· Apartments, very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 available. All utilities paid
3702 or 286-5789
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby except electric. March Rent
1BR, 1 bath upsta irs garage
Pool. Ratio, Star'! $425/Mo.
apt.
$285/month. No Pets, Lease Plus Special $100 oft Rent.
Please call304-674·0023 or
$285/depoo~. Call 740·446Security Deposit Required, 304.61 0·0776 . for more

3481

Tuesday, March 11, 2008
ALLEY COP

..

Downtown yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.

Middleport 740-9BS.3646

r.~--~iiiiii~-ALE-...

H=n

Newly remOdeled apartment Sale' Berber Carpet $5.95

Apartments

'

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

-----

�•

•

P~e B6 • The Daily Sentinef

Tuesday, March u, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com
'

]).rivers agree Atlanta tire wasn't great, but Stewart went "overboard"
Bv JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DARLINGTON, S.C. A day after Tony Stewart
assailed Goodyear for the
tires it provided at Atlanta
Motor Speedway, three
other drivers echoed his
complaints - but without
the same venom.
·
"I think he went a little
overboard,"
four-time
series
champion · Jeff
.Gordon said. "He kind of
made it personal.'·'
_
Gordon , breg Biffle and
Ryan Newman all tested
tires for Akron, Ohio-based
Goodyear ·Tire &amp; Rubber
-Co. at the newly paved
Darlington Raceway on
Monday, and all agreed the
rubber at Atlanta wasn ' t
favorable for driving conditions.
But none was as angrv as
Stewart,
who
said
Goodyear gave him "the
most pathetic racing tire

I've ever been on in my
profession-al career."
.
Goodyear officials partieipating in Monday 's test
refused comment, and the
garage was closed to media.
Still. Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
Martin Truex Jr. , Casey
Mears
and
·Brad
Keselowski crashed the test
and took a spin on the new
surface in an SUV.
But the tire . company
issued a statement defending its Atlanta product,
while promising to retest
the rubber before the series
returns to the track in
October.
"We provided w· ha ~ we
believed were the best passible products for the races
this past weekend," the
company said. "We believe
that
our engineering,
research a_nd tire development is second to none. We
accept that . drivers will
have their own opinions
about tires.

Baker's
eyes on
prospects
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
- Cincinnati Reds manager Dusty Baker says he
would rather not know how
· high a player .was. drafted,
what hts on-base-percentage is or how old -he is. ·
Jay · Bruce has 18 at bats
in seven games since he
missed four games with an
. injury. His main competition for centerfield veteran
Ryan Freel and Norris
Hopper have 21 and 22,
respectively, and haven't
missed a game.
Baker wants to see what
Bruce can do.
The manager has a repu~
tation of favoring older
players over young players.
One example used is Corey
l"atterson, who was drafted
high and given a "can't
miss" labeL His original
organization, the Chicago
Cubs gave up on him.
Patterson had no job until
the Reds signed him to a
minor league contract on
March 3 along with former
Cub, Jerry Hairston.
"He (Patterson) . was
where Jay Bruc.e is now,"
Baker said. "People were
asking where is he? Where
is he? He had some success,
then when he failed, they
wanted to run him out of
town and get someone else
in. Quite frankly I get tired
of hearing young or old. I
really do." .
Baker recognizes the tal- .
ent that Bruce has and
thinks he will be a star for a
long time. It has nothing to
do with age.
·
"I like to give guys two or
three chances. You throw.
out the bad one, throw out
the good one and you come
up what you think. might
be," Baker said.
Another example is righthanded pitcher ·oaryl
Thompson. He was a minor
leaguer in the trade with the
Washington Nationals that
brought the Reds Gary
Majewski and Bill Bray for
Austin Kearns; Felipe
Lopez and Ryan Wagner,
former No. I draft picks.
Thoinpson, Montreal's
eighth-round pick in 2003,
made his first appearance of
the spring and struck out
the side.
"Tqompson was great. He
looked like he· d been out
there awhile . Especially a
guy from A ball who hasn't
pitched at all because of the
number of pitchers in
camp," s_aid Baker.
Matt Belisle started the
- l!ame. He pitched out of a
Jam in the first inning but
walked the first two batters .
in the second inning. Baker
went to the mound.
"Like Dick (Pole) and
Bake said just focus on that
last inning. That's the way
you want.to throw. Walking
the first two in the second
inning was just unaccept. able. Dusty told me basically to forget what happened
before· and get after it,"
Thompson said.
"I told him , hey man,
throw it to the catcher. He
was aiming a little bit. The ·
next inning was his best
inning," Baker said. "He
came at them hard .''
'

air

' "Even
though
both try to give the folks that ~e. Probably. Did Tony overreGoodyear and NASCAR doing their jobs the ability act? Probably."
Goodyear also defended
were satisfied with the and constructive criticism
in to try to do it better."
itself against accusations
tire 's
performance
Atlanta, if the drivers are
Newman agreed with Stewart made that the tire
not happy, then Goodyear's Stewart's sentiment that the company was chased from
not happy."
hard compound made the several other racing series.
Stewart, who wrecked tire difficult to drive on
"They got run out of
two races ago in Las Vegas around Atlanta's abrasive Formula One. They got run
when his right front tire surface. But' he cited out of CART, the IRL. They
blew, was unhappy all Goodyear's emphasis on got run out of World of
safety in saying Stewart Outlaws sprint cars. They
weekend in Atlanta.
Gordon said he spoke overreacted in his assess- got run out of USAC diviwith the two-time champi- ·ment of. the tires.
sions because they couldn't
"The tire thing is a little keep up and make a quality
on before Sunday's Cup
race, and "could tell he was blown out of proportion," enough product," Stewart
pret(y wound up about it." Newman said. "Thel'e's a said.·
After the first green flag · lot of things he said that
Goodyear
called
run, when it became clear were true. Obviously, he Stewart's remark an "errothat grip was lacking on the took it to another level. neous comment" and said it
tires, Gordon knew Stewart That's Tony. Everybody is decided to leave other raeing series "only because of
would be irate after the different.
race.
"But I don't know ofany- the escalating costs &lt;;&gt;f com"We were all pretty out of body who popped a tire, or petition."
control out there," Gordon · that had a tire issue to the· . Goodyear is the exclusive
said. "I don't disagree with point where we had tire tire provider for NASCAR
him as far as the comfort problems. Is there a grip and not subjected to comlevel in the situation we tssue? Borderline. Yeah. Is • petition from rival compawere in. But we ha-,;e to there justification in some nie's. Goodyear also handlook at all sides of this and of Tony's comments? picks the drivers who par-

Obama beats Clinton
in Mississippi·
Democratic p~ary, A2

ticipate in each tire test, and
mamtains it rotates its
choices through teams and
manufacturers.
But in bringing three
cars to Darlington representing ·
Chevrolet
(Gordon),
Dodge
(Newman)
and
Ford
(Biffle),
Toyota
felt
snubbed by its exclusion.
Stewart drives aToyota but
the · manDfacturer said
Goodyear-selec,ted the participating teams before
Stewart's complaints.
Sprint Cup program
d G
'd
manager An Y raves sat
he unsuccessfully .lobbied
NASCARinfor
included
theToyota
test. to
· be

Howell retires
from WIC, A6 ,

•
'·

;;o 1'1·.1\i'l'S • \ 'ol. :; ~. ' " - tlq

"It feels like it puts us: as

at a little disadvantage,"
. Graves said.
·'
Goodyear said the manu·facturer needs only two to
three teams for collecting
daia, and the exclusion. of
Toyota wasn't deliberate.

•

•

Middleport • Pomeroy,. Ohio
r

.

'"' " -"""·"h "·nlin.-1 ."""

\\ 'l·. DNF.SDAY, Mi\1{(.' 11 t:! , :!ooH

Long-term pJan·approved for sewer improvements

SPORTS
• Red Sox Beckett
unlikely to make Japan
trip. See_Page 81

WIN UP TO $1,000
PLAY COVERALL

'

•••
'''
BINGO

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - .A proposed $2.4 million sewer
project in Middleport is
ready for the final planning
stage, but is not expected to
be completed until 2014, an
engineer said.
The project involves a
new system for treating and
conveying material from
the village's combined sanitary and stoim sewers to
the outfalls in the Ohio
River. The project is a

more-affordable altemati ve
to separating the two systems, according to Michael
Froernmer of the engineering fum URS.
·
F[oequner met with
Middleport Village Council
Monday evening to secure a
resolution approving a longterm control plan for submission to the Ohio
Environmental Protection
· Agency. Froemmer said the
Ohio EPA h!ls approved preliminary plans for the pro. ject, with some scheduling
adjustments.

The resolution will allow
the renewal of the village's
permit to discharge into the
river. Survey work and
work at the actual outfalls to
measure the amount of rain
water discharged will follow, Froernmer said. That
work iS expected to be completed in early fall, and the
project will then go 'into a
final design phase.
Froernmer said the cost of
the project will decrease if
the water flow from the outfalls is less than expected.
Froemmer said the pro-

ject is contigent upon the
availability of funding.
URS will work with the
village to seek grants and
loan funds for the project,
he said. ·
Other business
During open discussion,
Council discussed an
increase in enforcement ·
efforts against properties in
need of cleanup.
Council also:
• Accepted the resignation of Jim Brewer as a dispatcher and mayor's ch:rk,
effective March 17.

Chamber
hears about
wellness in
the workplace

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYOAILYSEKTINEL.COM

OBI'fUARIFS

A One Stop Shop For
All Your Medical
Equipment Needs/

It's Just

Around The
Corner

S.,l•

A SHOwS~
)4,/DJit

~.,

Phon•

c._,••.

Aemtliltd 111M

Two locatlqm -

Joiat

1/4 mile nor1h of Pamero., -M•aon
Bridge, U.1on, WV

773-5721

TO DAY'S
NUMBER IS:
Rebecca

Brashears,
Au.D., CCC-A

"""'

215-A Sildt Street
Pt. ....... wv 2555t
JN.4i7S. 7136
Fu: JN.4i75-7387
tha
'! • ' a
!:!

'

_Page AS
o Harry S. Franklin, 82
o Royce A. Newell, 69 ·
• Ruth Betty Steffel, 79
o wunam Zerkle, as

•

INSIDE
Home School
4-H Club fanning. ·
See Page A3
o 4-H workshops
to be offered.
See Page A3
o Grangers learn all
about daylight savings
time. See Page A3
o State proposal
vote expected today.
See Page A5
o For the Record.
See Page A5
o Museumto
feature coin, token
and photo collection.
See Page A6 ·
o

WEATHER

•

435'/, Second Avenue
(740) 446-7619

ATHENS
275 West Union Street
(740)' 594-3571
1i

lr:...- .

MIDDLEPORT
Demolition was expected to
begin early Wednesday on a
condemned and unsafe
building in Middleport's
central business district.
The village will accomplish -something it has been
unable or unwilling to do
. since the building was first
condemned. Mayor Michael
Gerlach said Monday plans
were to tear down a building owned by Alan Ervin of
Pomeroy, located on North
Second Avenue between
Race and Mill Streets. The
work is to be CO~ll()leted by
Jeffers Excavatmg of
· Pomeroy and was to begin
at 8 a.m. today.
Ger\ach said village
council has consulted with
Solicitor Jennifer Sheets
to ensure that notification
requirements had been
met before executing a
contract with the demolition comeany.
.
The building has been a
worry for the village since it
was first condemned. Two
years ago, after he bought the
condemned building from
local real estate agent Jack
Carsey, Ervin said he planned
to restore the building, and
provided a letter from an
Athens architect claiming the
building could be salvaged.
The village's design review
board extended a demolition
order allowing Ervin to
demonstrate financial ability
to co~lete the worlc, but
Ervin fatled to do so.
Gerlach, however, said a
recent engineer's assessment of the building confumed whai village officials
Middleport
and
the
Development · Group has
believed all along - the.
building is unsafe, and
beyond repairing.. ·
Since three neighboring
buildings damaged by fire

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;IIMYOAILYSENTIN El. COM

POMEROY- Health and
wellness in the workplace
was served up at yesterday's
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's
BusinessMinded Luncheon.
Amy McGuire of Holzer
Clini&lt;; spoke about how her
organization can help keep
employees healthy through
a variety of programs which
include everything workers
compensation injury management, to immunization
clinics. to physicals, to
rehabilitation services, to
drug testing.
·
McGuire 's presentation
alluded to the need for a
business to have a wellness
program by citing a statistic
that businesses pay out an
estimated $102 .billion in
lost productivity, accidents.
employee turnover, and
related problems due to
alcohol or other drug use.
McGuire said Holzer '
Clinic and an employer can
negotiate a price for standardized, personalized, services. She e~plained that in
terms of drug testing an
employee's results are
screened with a five-panel
Please see Chamber, A5

Demolition set to IJe&amp;ln today
v;ere demolished at their Association's application for
owners' expense, Ervin's downtown
revitalization
b.uilding has only three funds last fall. While the
exterior walls.
ap{llication for funding was
Gerlach said Ervin will ulumately denied at the state
ultimately be responsible for level, the money provided as
paying the cost of demoli- a local match for the demolition. Private funding for the tion work was still available,
demolition was secured in Gerlach said. The village
conjunction
with
the will not pay for tl}e demoliMiddleport
Community tion using taxpayer money.

OUTJJT, INC.
f•AII'IIJ fkc.itiWr!
· IIC.,.IIIII.c.
lii!W1C W•lllitW

INDEX
2 SI!CilONS -

ia PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds
. '

B3-4

Annie's Mailbox

Comics

B5

~ditorials

A4
A5

Obituaries

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© ooo8 Ohio Volley Pobllablns Co.

Merchants
to host Easter
egg hunt

"The village will recover
the· money it spends on
demolition," Gerlach said,
noting that some . options
Bv CHARLENE HoEFI.ICH
include a civil judgment, tax
HOEFLICH&lt;IIMYOAILYSENTI NEL. COM
liens on the property. or a
direct transfer of the properPO~EROY
The
ty to the village.
Pomeroy
Merchants
"He will be responsible in
the end for the demolition of Association will stage a
his building," Gerlach said. · community Easter egg hunt
on the Pomeroy football
field on the Saturday before
Easter, March 22.
Jenni Dunham was named
chairman for the event dur.ing a planning session held '
-The Veterans' of
Tuesday at Peoples Bank.
~..,. •I Foreign Wars Post
The hunt will begin at II
9926, Mason, W.Va., a.m. The children will be
donated a new
divided into three age groups
American flag on a
hunting eggs in different
stand to the
areas of the stadium. All
Overbrook
children will receive small
Rehabilitation Center prizes for the eggs they find .
in Middleport
Larger prizes will go. to the
Tuesday. Accepting
finders of the golden egg in
the flag for the Center each of the age groups.
,
were Linda Johnson,
The Association has spondirector of housesored the egg hunt for the
keeping and laundry,
past several years Thi s year
left, and Charla
the .Easter egg hunt budget
McGuire, administrawas increased to $300. As in
previous years the Easter
tor. The presentation
bunny will be there to welwas made by, from
come the children.
the left, Robert
It was decided at the
Caruthers, state com·
meeting
to order more of
mander of VFVI/ of
the ornamental glass bulb'
West Virginia: Ray
an etching of the
featuring
Varian, Post 9926
new
bridge
if a date of comcommander; and
plelion
can
be confirmed.
Ernest Imboden, Post
It
was
reported
that plans
9926 quartermaster.
~-/pllolo
PIMH- Ea hunt. A5

·VFW Post 9926 donates flag to Overbrook

IWJILT'S

• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of.
$11 ;920.14.
• Approved reports from
the finance, · income tax ,
public works and refuse
departments.
· • Met in executive session
to discuss employee compensation.
Present were Mayor
Michael Gerlach, Fiscal
Officer Susan B&lt;!kcr, and
members
of
council:
President Jean Craig, Rae
Moore, Sandra Brown, Julie
Proctor and Craig Wehrung.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="541">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9992">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13729">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13728">
              <text>March 11, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="77">
      <name>dillon</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
